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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
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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

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

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ern Ohio Coal, called two witnesses
~. Elmer Templeton, Ma·
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4 LBS. FOR

$149

$1

8 PAK. 16 OZ.

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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. ·

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MIDDLEPORT. OH.

· We lnerve the llgt!t to Limit Quantltlel.

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

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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,
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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

.

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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

•

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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
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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.

�Page--2-The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy-Micldler*t, Ohio

..
Wtd!lelefay, March 7, 1,...
IMPORTANT SAVINGS NEWS FOR AMERICA'S VALUE-WISE FURNITURE BUYER$1 REAl) ~VERY WORD AND PLAN NOW TO JOIN. THE CROWPS THUIIiDAYII ' '·'.

TO~ORROW,

IT'S HERE!

MASON
FURNITURE

IN· MASON, W. VA.! · ,., . ·..~
1' TO 12 ..
ThursdtJ, March ,, 1...,

co.

It Htre Whtn Tilt

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Bad times for bench &amp; bar

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court street
Pomeroy, Olllo

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DEVOI'EU TO THE IN'I'ERI!M' OF THE MEICJ8.MAIION ~EA

,_

"'~ ........,,_..,.,,_....

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ROBERT L. t;fiNGETT
Publli\ler
PAT WHITEHEAD

COAST
TO COAST
AND BORDER
TO .BORDER!!

OSS AMERICA

TO.MORRDW·!·
.· ... ·

A MEMBER Of The Auoclaled Pl'ell,lnlud Dall:r Pl'ell Auocla·
lion aad lhe Amerleaa Newopaper PabU.her "-elaiiOII.

~

ONAL" EXPANDED LAST YEARI

Ptlun1~re1b of stores offered incredible savings!

SAVE
40%, YES
YOU'LL SAVE UP TO 60% OFFI

lSSETr PIONEERS' THE NATIONAL SALE!
~~~=:..:1:.:.1w::a::s:,::A:;uu!!:u:=st~1982 ·the original Bassett National Sale!

.12 INCREDIBLE HOURS!

rrttfiHuftbOMI

'61~mi SET!

Newt EciUor

AS ANNOUNCED ON
NATIONAL NETWORK
TELEVISION!

PLAN NOW TO JOIN THOUSANDS OF
.VALUE WISE HOMEMAKERS &amp;SAVEl

Just _got to move this Baby!!
Been here too long. Norwalk-Two
piece Mediterranean. Rust &amp;
green cut velvet cover. Solid oak
base and oak arm ends•JMIIWJ
sultel Reg. 51195.00 • 1,
00
Our Cottl
•

DALE ROTHGEB, IR.

eTOMORROWI

NEW! BIGGER! BmER!

' .·

THURSDAY!
12
NOON
TO
12
MJDNIGHT
HURRY!
ne Can B~ Admitted Before The Noon Open Thursday!
•
CREDIT TERMS
AVAILABLE!
(EVEN AT
SALE

FAMOUS,BRANDS AT
SALE REDUCTIONS!!

"BASSEn INDUSTRIES ARE PROUD TO HAVE
MASON FURNITURE AS OUR SELECT .
PARTICIPANT IN THE NATIONAL SALE FOR
1984 IN THIS AREA. EVERYTHING (NOT JUST
BASSETT PRODUCTS) WILL BE OFFERED AT
IMPORTANT PRICE REDUCTIONS THURSDAY!"

Stoneville 7 piece metal dinette;
brown vinyl covered chairs.
Formica top · tablel •TA,9,!e,6
chairs. Reg. S249.95 $1J~.oo

• BASSETT • LA·Z·BOY
• BROYHILL . • BUSHLINE
• BERKLINE e,SEALY
e LANE
•'ZENITH
• NORWALK e.r~unMY MOMJ
1

Five piece set Reg. S189.95. S99.00

!rft't'lflu!~FAI

•

BuutiiYI multi colored stripe full
size sleeper . Traditional style.
Sofa by day . bid by nlghtJ. Reg,

'3l9.oo

~99.95

• vfffDWd'lJM .SUITE!,
Solid Cedar 6 piece bedroom.
group: Outstanding grelnege,
bllautlful finish . Sot ln.c l'*t
poster bid, chest, drnw &amp;
hutch mirror, end night stllld.
Must Itt to blllltve ~~- I!IIWth
Reg. 5899.95.
.
UlJ,-

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Reg. 1195.00 Lehigh chtrry •·PlKt

Atg . l1395 .00 Bauttt 9 pltct

sultt. Buutltully styltd with br111
trim lnd hardware. L~rgt drnw
with twin mlrron, flvt draw"tHH.&amp;t.

trldltlontl dlnlno suite. Beautifully

dttelltd In dlstr,slld pecan. Llgnttd
hutch, tlblt. S sldt chi In ·&amp; 1 arm
chair . Plddod OMia.
00
Stnsetlon.l Value I
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Reg . 11195,00 BIIMtt Pathway pi~

1795

finish 5·Pitct SUitt. ICCtntld with
gold trim and dtnttl molding ,

Reg. 11995.00 Magnificent Cochrane

Oresw, Hutch mirror, s.drawer

chtst, poster hu~rd &amp; night

solid Olk 1 piece dining room suite
with claw toot center, ptdestel
formica top tablt; ·ughttd hutch, and
tour bow ~ck 10lld 01\ l'~~~IP.t. 00
Tremendous Value!
~::JU.

stand. Bunt Solid. Bassttt OwJitllat

.'. ,... -~....~ ..::rNEW ANO EXCITING!

WiitiiEo srn
Solid pine 2x6 bunk bed set. Made
sturdy for rugged use. Bed
separates for use as twll).~
Reg. 5199.99
.
$~!~ ...,;
Bedding extra.

Three piece section of con temporary styled units in
rosewood finish . Available In
open unit, door unit, &amp; drop lid
:1!: ~ach section 30x11J2i.'i·

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SUITES I
Reg . 11595.00 Kayllne Ear ly
American l piece suite In burnt
orange. 100 Pet. nylon. Solid Color .
Beautiful head roll. styti"IBgs ,oo
Reg . 1979.00. La ·Z·Bov traditional
queen size sleeper. Clove color cord.
Herculon Fabric . T~Quai~a!gg,oo

.....

Reg . 5995 .00 Sofa &amp; Chair by Nor .
walk . Extra fine quality with
warranted fabric . Choice of dark
brown or beige. 100 Ps:t nx_lon
fabrics . Solid colors.

149,.•·

Reg . Sl895 . Bushline sofa, chair ,

loveseat. Coverrd in beaullful beige
chenlel plaid. Wood over the back
Nilh wood post arms'. ~l§!l""­
base.
$
IV

1111111

Reg . SA89.00 Red velvet! La.Z.Boy
All Positjon Reclina .wav
1lG::f.
Outstandin~ Value!

1f1i.lwetie

•

· Reg . S29 .9S to 1129.95 Table lamps In
brass. wood, glass, and many, many
combinations. Every site, shape,
style and t11f11h ~.can .!JVaglnel

Prl_cedfrom .

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MASQN~.~FuRNiruRE·
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, Today Is Wednesday, March T, the67thdayofl984. Thereare299days
lett In the year.
Today's HJghllghlln History: • ·
.
. On.Miirch 7; 11167. AII!XIIIlder ,Grnhan'l BeD ~lved a patent fOr the
telephone.
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HERMAN GRATE, OWNER
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...i,.;.,...,_,w'. Va..: ·
· "' . _·Mason,
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We think along.wlth a lot of other
people that Ash dld a tremendous
Job last year as coach.
We for 1wo people were very
disappointed In the vote' of the
school board. - Gene and Sharon
Wise, Middleport, Ohio.

.

ca.

'

would welcome It to our area with
open hands, not closed ones. It
means more Jobs, more people,
more newspaper ads, and most of
all, better business for aU. Meigs
County Isn't dyln&amp;. We're growing
and well must pulih to keep these
new Jobs coming. So come on,
Melgs,l(!t's push all thewayfornew
business and Industry. - Floyd H.
Cleland, Box 144·F, Middleport,
Ohio 45760.

• · ,hJstory
•
·
.
0
ay
,
m
T d

••• ,... - · · .... 111111

.

'

always thought the ·board had
concem for the kids and what was
best for them but from the article In
the paper we·can see where politics
was used Instead.

$399,00

Concord Hall
. .'Early American bedroom by

•

Letters to editor

This lett(!r concerns the way we
think Rick Ash was done very
wrong by the school board. We

Kemp oak bedroom 'suite. This
suite has a 9 drawer dresser,
vertical mirror, chest &amp; headboard. ~ots of drawer space.
Reg, $699.95

On this date:
In 1854, Charles MWer of St. Louis patented a seWing machine that could
stitch buttonholes.'
In 1926, the first successtul trans-Atlantic radio-telephone conversation
took place, between New York and London. ·
In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered ~ troop,s ,to march Into the ~.
brealtlng the Treaty of Verslillles arid the Lociatno Pact.
. And' In 1985, state trOopers In Selina, Ala.,.uaed tear gas to break up an
a~tl!li eM! rlib!l.ffi!il'Ch to f$n~. . .
· . _· ·

andw~t

'

'995.110

...
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.• ' -- -

'

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In past months I have written
many letters about things In our
county and about the city of
Pomeroy. I believe that only a
person In our county with mWtoris
could buDd and operate a business
here. Let's push for new Industry In
our county. The more stores and
businesses we have, the better oft
everyone wiD be.
I'll bet the store owners here are
scared of a Mall going Into. Well, I

•

Honey pine door cocktail &amp; two
square commode dflfr.gli'ties .
Beautifully grained. •1 '· Hi

72 I"FICIUI ·

'.
,.~li;t

Whenever legislators speak ol the posslbWty ot reducing real estate tax
benefits you generally bear an Immediate rustle ol acUvlty from p~
owners and syndicators.
The acUvlty Is spontaneous. It Is Instinctive, as much as that of parents
cocked, and
protecting their children. The wagons are circled, the guns
a call goes out for help.
It Is for this reason, among others,that few lawmakers dare tamper with
real estate tax deductions In an election year. The leglslatcr who tries to do
so may even find himself accused of anU·Amerlcanlsm.
The elections will be (1'oler by next year, and there are Indications that
some sort, of congressional activity will develop. Already, real estate
people are preparing their defentes. No way, they say.
Craig Hall thinks dlfferentb', a quallty he seems to have had at least from
his college days, when he bought p1 opet'tles that nobody else seemed to
want, fixing them up and renting them out at a prollt.
In his mld..1ls, be stW buys pl'Opertles, thouglllesa c:J. the flx·up kind. His
DaiJas.based Hall Real Estate Group buys and operates otmce buildings
and thousands of apartment units for Investors.
·
Even so, HaD Isn't worried about what legislators will do, not ever. tr U.oey
reduce tax bl!nefltsor, as has been suggested,reduoetheabllltyc:J.states to
Issue tax·free bonds for housing developments.
"Long tenn, It sOOuld have a healtey Impact em the apartment Industry,"
HaD states In his annual outlook. His reasoning Is that a reduction c:J. tax
benefits will force apartment rentals to more reaUstlcally reflect costs.
That means higher rents, because the belief Is almost axloolaUc among
· owners that rents have not as yet risen suflldentb' to reflect the actual
costs of buDding and the Umlted supply of good rentals.
·
Moreover, be reasons there very well could be a sliJ1lf'ISe effect from
legislation, a Slllllfl8e In the sense that It could woriJeJI what be sees as a
developing shortage of apartments.
''The only cm~peUtlon entering the apartment business today Is tax
motivated," he states. "It Is driven by syndlcaUon for shellel' or for
tax-exempt Investment, rathll!r than cas1t flow-driven."
He says If laws remove tax-exempt financing and cut tax shelter
boo,ef(ts, "we~wllllrmnedlately see less new conslnlctlon."
The law c:J. supply·and demand backsupHaU'sconcluslon that ''thevalue
of existing properties will Increase dramatically."
Hall recognizes. of COW'lle, that not everyone In the real estate business
will agree with him. For example, S}'lldlcators who rely heavily on the
tax·shelter aspect of their operations probably will find legtslatlon
devastating.
.
In fact, ~ on the rumblings and gnunbllngs already coming from the
lnduslly, you can bet that most real estate people w111 vehementb' owose
any change In the law that reduces their benefits. They will flgllt It to the
end.
In going his own way, however, HaD may only be doing what be began
back In his collegoe days at Eastern Michigan, which Is to make money
where others thought there was oone to be made.

Politics, not concern

Reg . 1269.85 Pilllod 3 piKe set,

can testify that Burger's charge :ts
well-founded . It Is an embarrasslQg
experience to watch an Ill· prepared
attorney present oral argumeiJt .
before the Supreme Court All rw
often, as Burger said, Inexperienced counsel will turn a olle-{!ay
or twCH!ay trial Into a week-long
trtaL AI least two criminal cases
this tenn Involve allegations of
Incompetent counseL
Burger Is of the old schooL He
finds It distasteful lor lawyers
publicly to advertise their avallabolty. To some extent this adveJ'Iii48g
probably has contributed to tile
tides of litigation thai are
Ing our Judicial system. Some ofJhe
advertising probably Is as ga~
as Burger's fictional examplell;
and though only about 10 percenl uf
all lawyers advertise, the ovetaJJ
Image has been damaged.
The law's procedures lor Self·
discipline contribute to the pri»
lem. Burger touched upon this, too.
There Is growing public oplnlon, he
said, that the legal professional "Is
lax In dealing with the Incompetent
lawyel' or the errant and dishonest
lawyet"."
Except lor one fleeting reference,
Burger did not touch the matter of
the erranl and Incompetent Judge.
This aspect of the problem should
not be Ignored. Down In Texas last
summer. a woman wrote a letter to
a judge complaining that her two
sons were being railroaded through
his court. The Judge ordered he to
apologize In court for her temerity,
and then sentenced her to 30 days In
jail for contempt
•· ·

economic need comes the frivolous
lawsuit Burger cited two examples
- the parent who sues to get a
child's school grade raised from a C
to a B, and the football !an who sues
to revise a referee's ruling on a
disputed forward pass.
The relative lnexpertence of so
much of the bar contributes to
another problem the chief justice
has addressed many times. Many
lawyers plainly are nol qualified lor
the specialized taks they assume.
As a newspapennan who has spent
much of his life covering courts, r .

Reduction in real
estate tax benefits

.1110 MUCH, IIUCH MOREl

Re!g . 1249.95 Pulaski Curio Cabinets.
Lighted with glass shelves. Makes
beautiful display piece . Available in
tour different cabinet llnistrJ..&amp;B.oo

number approxJinately 650,IXXI. "It
has been reported," said Burger.
"that twc&gt;thlrds of all the lawyers In
the world are In the United States,
and of those, one-third have come
Into practice In the pasI five years.·'
Given this remarkable level of
lmmaturlty and Inexperience, It
may be no wonder that problems
have developed. We have too many
lawyers lor the amounl of una void·
able litigation In prospect II
follows, therefore, that lawyers wUI
churn avoidable litigation In order
to make a living. From this

Ia-.

Let's push for industry

Imperial 312 coil Mattress with
matching Box Spring. Quilted top
for a good nights rest. Buy the
mattress or box spring; Ill~~ be
bought separately.
U
00
Full or twin size.
•
Each Plect

WASHINGTON - There Ia a
saying that troubles often come In
bunches, like grapes, and the
saying applies regrettably these
days to the bench and the bar. The
legal profesllon Is In trouble. It has
problems both of perfonnance and
of public relations. They merit a
look.
In his address last month to the
American Bar Association, Chief
Justice Burger dwelled upon famlllar themes. He opened with a couple
of staUsUcs that go to the heart of
the matter. American lawyers now

, , ]ames]. KilpatrWfc

LE'I'TEJIII OF OPINION are welco...... TlleJ- be 1-11uuo . . • loal. Alllellero are Hbjeello edllloa 11d OMaj bealped wh• oomo, ...,......
lelephooo umber. No ualpetl lellon wW be ,.6Ua•ed. Lollon be II
loocllllllle, addreoolo1
IIGI ,..... aulleo.

369

• Oillnl SITS!
• IICUIUS!
•IIIllS!
• OlliS!
•lAMPS!
•IOOICISISI
• OiliNG lOOMS! •ICCISSOI!ISI
•IIOIOOMSI
•lllii!SIOISI
•IOCIUSI

Reg. 5-'29.95 Banett, solid pine 10
gun cabinets, double glass display
doors with locks and locked storage
compartment. Choice of "f~J'f~oo

Reg. S89.9S Five drawer maple or
white open stock chest. Great·~~~~~­
kldsl
1
10

•

&gt;

'2t:r.

OFFERI
THAT EIITIRE HOUSEFULL
OF FINE FURNITURE YOU
NEED CAN BE YOURS! BUY
3, 4, 5 OR MORE ROOMS
FULL' AND SAVE HUNDREDS
OF
NDWII

EVERY ITEM 'II
CURRENT SELECTION
WILL BE ON SALEI
* SOfiSI
. . IOOIIGI
•lOll SIAl$!
• l!YtR; lOOMS!
* CHIIRSI
* SliiP'WISI

LIVING

Reg. 11695 .00 Brown striped Early
American, l piece suite with lots of
• wood trim . Nicely Tailor'tgS ."

-~

~fU~S!

Reg".-So469-.9-5_o._k_..
...;.v•;..n_p_
lec-e-1e
wood dinette 11t. 42" tx·
Zenith TV's all rtductd
tension tebl.e with 21.-IAanA
especially for this Natlonwldt
6sldechalrs.
'.1lll.~
Sale. Avalltblt In 13", 19", 25"
Reg. $579.95 Maple seven
mOdels. Greet 11iectlon of S~t
piece wood dinette 11t. Six
Command mOdels. Extt:Jt Sftlll
bllautlful splndle.alet back
... Zenith 13" Color
00
dialrs 'and 1'!.'' table top.
00 • • • • • • • • • •. . .
Table extends to 66'1
SUPER BUY
• r

BOBHOEIUCH
O•enl llu!IJer

A11lllanl Publllher/ Conlroller

... A MAGIC
DAY OF
IMPORTANT
PRICE"
REDUCTIONS •
011 EVERY
ITEM IN ..
PARTICIPATING
HOME
FURNISHINGS
STORES!! '

1'hl Daily Sentin~I-Pag• 3
~ Middleport, Ohio
WICintlday, March 7, 1984

'V~~~· NlaOOO~HY-. NICiPMtERS.
5-.rl-,l!lUr LONG ON 1~. VIS. Witt 1'10. I

WASJUNGTON. - Conscientious
Pentagon employees trying to save
the taxpayers a few million dollars
often wind up cuttlOg their own
throats Instead of costs.
That's what happened to David
Lambert, a Defense Logistics
Agency watchdog at the IBM planl
In Manassas, Va.
Lambert's Job Is to keep an eye on
the tax dollars that now Into the
plant. But when he blew the whistle
on what he thought was waste and
mismanagement In handling
hundreds of mllllons of dollars·
worth of defense contracts, he was
slapped down by his Pentagon
bosses.
In fact, my associates Indy
Badhwar and Donald Goldberg
have learned that Navy Cmndr.
Hugh D. Ames Js proposing to fire
Lambert for being openly critical of
higher authorities - specifically
Ames himself and Lambert's su-

pervlsor, John Stumpf - In a letter
he sent to Ames.
The commander has accused
Lambert of "Insubordination" lor
critlclzlng his superiors and lor
giving copies of critical reports to
the Pentagon's Inspector general
and the OOice of Special CounseL
That office was set up expressly to
prevent retaliation agalnsl whistle
blowers.
"You charge me wllh being
dishonest, Immoral, unscrupulous,
lrrespnslble, Incompetent ... Your
letter Is replete with gratuitous
Insults ... " Ames wrote Lambert.
Lambert Is admittedly no diplomat He expresses himself In blunt
language. In the letter to which
Ames referred, lambert accused
his superiors of being unfit 10 serve
In the U.S. government
Over the past 18 months Lambert
has recommended ways to save $24
mllllon on IBM contraciS worth $167

mUllan. And he made no secret of
his belief that even more could be
saved l.f his bosses would get their
aciS together.
All of the Issues raised by
Lambert have not been resolved
yet But the Pentagon's famed
cosl-culter, Ernest Fitzgerald, who
now serves as the Air Force's
deputy for management systems,
has l'e\iewed Lambert's documen·
tation and believes Lambert Is
right
Fitzgerald said he l.s "outraged"
over the proposal to fire Lambert,
whom he considers a conscientious
auditor.
Here are some of the Issues
Lambert has raised:
- He signed a complaint to the
Pentagon charging that Stumpf had
ordered him to use a rubber-stamp
auditing technique Instead of lore·
lng the contractor to justify expenditures In detail. He charged that

this resulted In excessive cos~.
Fitzgerald says he Is ready to bacli
Lambert on this Issue. And .;aJl
Initial Investigation of this chaPge
by engineering supervisor MaJ. :
George Olson substantiated La)n;
bert's concern on this Issue.
·
- Lambert signed a COOJplami:
that Stumpf had recommended ·
labor costs that were rou~y :
SlOO,IXXI higher than the contractor:
deserved. This Is one of 5ev!!fi!l:
charges under Investigation by llle·
Inspector general. Fitzgerald sj,id;:
"On a prima faclebasls, Lambert' Is:
accurate on this Issue."
:
- In a letter to Ames- anO a:
report to Rep. Clarence l..cJ!Ig.:
O.Md. - Lambert suggested IIJjlt;
Ames had known about a ·seri&lt;ius·
backlog In un-negotiated contraeiB, :
but had done nothing to clear It up.:
The Pentagon routinely allows'
contractors to go ahead with :
expenditures pending flqal :

_u_w_ing....::::.:.:....~t~

The Ohio River_______

ne_goti_ar:we_
·

When I was a young boy living
with my Grandmother on Pension
Ridge the Ohio River was not like It
Is today. We lived about half a mile
from the river, just a hoot and a
holler away, close enough we coUld
hear and recognize the steamboat
whistles but not close enough to
cause Grandma lo wony thai I
would slip oft and go swimming on
my own. Indeed, the first promise I
remember making was that I
would never cross the Strlnghurg
road unless I was with an adult.
Strlngburg was the name of the
group.of houses nestled under the
hill from upper Apple Grove to near
Saxton at the mouth of Tanners
Run. It wasn't exactly what you
would call a community because
the church, school and stores were
located high and dry on the Ridge.
But they did have a wonderful
access to the river which flowed by
their front yard or · back yiiJ'(I,
depending on which side of the road
they lived. The boys probably drove
their mothers crazy but they
learned toswlmandrowa John boat
long be1ore I did. In the summer
when the river was low there was a
wonderful sand bar In the middle of
the river at Strlngburg which
attrcted bathers from all over
Letart ToWnship and was the~ne
of .m anya Sundaypl,cnlc. The river
~tat the upper end of the bar with
a deep channel on ·each side so It
wasnecessarytogotothebeachby·
bo{it unless a ~non was an
exceptionally good Swtminer. Sars-

lor their living. Some fished and
kept their catch In !Ish boxes al
their landing ready for the occasional customer bui most worked
on the tow boats and packet boaiS
which carried the merchandise and
produce lor this section of Ohio and
West VIrginia.
Although the river was a peaceful
and beautiful recreational area and
fishing stream much of the year. It
could be a nasty neighbor too. I can
remember going with Grandma to
Great·aunt Minnie Crary'&gt;home at
Strlngburg when the Great Flood of
1913 was at Its highest Aunt Min
lived with her son, Herman, and
daughter, Jessie, well above any
flood danger with a splendid view of
the river so we had a grandstand
seat at one of the most awesome
floods of the century. There was
hardly a minute when one or more
homes were not In sight as they
were swept down the river carrying
with them all the worldly possessions and dreams of folks upriver
who were unlucky enough to have
built within the flood's reach. Along
most of the river the 1913 flood

record still stands although farther
down the river at Pomeroy and
Middleport the 1937 flood crested a
lew Inches higher, held back by the
rush of water from the Kanawha
River at Pt. Pleasant
People who lived along the rirer
were accustomed to floods In those
days and generally took uiem In
stride regardless of the damage
and Inconvenience they caused.
Thai was before the average river
resident had ever dreamed of
conservation dams on the trlbutar·
ies or soil conservation to slow the
runoff. Floods then were an ac·
cepted facl of life and It was not
until FOR and the New Deal came
along thai any attempt wsa made to
stop the yearly damage. Even after
the new Lock and Dam 23 was built
at Apple Grove and covered the
Strlngburg sand bar, others were
constructed far up the river to
Pittsburgh, the wickets were lowered during high water and the
rlfer was left as free as It had been
over the centuries. I can remember
one winter not too long ago as
lifetimes are measured when the

merchants of Pomeroy were forced·:
out of their stores three times by :
floods. It was an expensive and •
damaging nuisance.
:
Folks who live along any riv!!f:
know that when an unusual amount'•
of rain falls It must go somewhere.:
That somewhere might even
their homes or business places but ~
they wouldn't live any place
There Is something about a riyer:
that becomes a part of their tlfe. :
Now we Uve within three mila 1lf•
the famous Suwannee which Is 'oft!!:
of the few free rivers in the coun~. :
It Is different and beautiful bur r
wouldn't swap It for the Ohio whleh :
Is exciting and beautiful In : a :
different way.
You can look lor this old liver l)t:
back soon!

lie=
elSe::

(USPS 145-KCI)

A Division of

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through Friday, 111 Court Strt"£'1, by t~

Ohio Valley Publlshlnjit Company Mul:
timedla, Inc .. Pom&lt;'roy, Ohlo45769. 99~
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No subscriptions by mall permilled tn
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Multl~!~edht.,

Published E"VC'ry afternoon, Monda;

meroy, Ohio.

=Y=T"=;! ·
wu

·:~: ~

.,

·:The Daily Senrinel

~~~~~!mQO!JIIIOngthepver

then as weD aS shoals which. cut
down on river tramc dUring the
summer months.
.~· river then was beautiful and
peaceful but a few . days rain
~Iii the 'mountalhs of Pen·
nsylvanta aJij! West VIrginia could
tunJ It Into a .torrent almost over
nl8bt: To , try to harness these
sudden floods and provide water tot

Ten years fi&amp;O: East Germany
'Gem1any ag'reecl io estaWsh
permanent dlplcinlltlc mlaslons In each other's capitals.
.
then bUuding locks 8Jid .d8ms
· Flve'~aao.: PresldentJtmtnyOarterlettW~fortheMlddle
farther down therlVI!r.I m~thave
East, lqlln&amp; to coociiJ!Ie a ~ treaty ~ F.iiYPt IJid Israel.
Ileal elil\t or ten yeari old bef~
One year · aao: ·The UJS, ~thollc ,Cultelence·the ,Reagan · Lbck 23
built at A~ Grove.
admln~tlon to. ~. !ts EJ . ~ .pq~~cY-w locuS 011
political · :. MQJ~t ~ the famllleS tn Stt:lilgllurg
' ''
depeJided tn some way on therlve~
,settleme!lt there.

a

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~atchdog

MAlL

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�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Pvmeroy-Micldleport, Ohio

,Wednnday, March 7, 1984

Willford in state meet
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs' four- overtime at the Dresden regional
year veteran senior wrestler Mike semi-finals and finished third to
WU!ford takes the mat Thursday In quality for the state bid. The top
St. John Arena for the most ' four from each regional of each
Important match of his Ule as the weight class earn the trip to
Marauder participates In the Ohio Columbus. No Meigs wrestler has
Class "A A" state wrestling won a match at the state tournatournament.
ment, although a handful over the
Wllllord, 36-1 on the vear, lost In past years have tried.

North Gallia has
•
two m
state event
The SVAC wiU be represented at
the state wrestling championship In

St. John's Arena later this week.
North Gallla advanced two
wrestlers to thestatetlnals vtaapalr
of runner-up victories In the regional
tourney at Washington Court House
on Saturday.
Mark Foreman, 175pounds, takes
a fine 24-4 record to the state
tourney,
Foreman, a junior,
defeated the Southwestern Ohio
district champion, Ron Wells (18-3)
of Middletown Fenwick with a first
period pin. He then won by default
over Chris Wernert (14-5) of Sidney
Leman.
Foreman lost to ADen Schell of
Bishop Ready In the regional finals .
Schell (29-4) Is ranked first In Ohio.
Both wrestlers advance as two
players In each weight class to
quality for state competition.
Senior Matt Kemper, heavy
weight (22-3) who Is In his first
season on the mat at North Gallla
Improved as the season progressed

and on Saturday defeated the
Southwestern district champion,
Paul Bryant (~1) of Lockland High
School.
ln an earUer match Kemper
pinned Bill Wise (20-4) of Covington
In only eight seconds. Kemper bst to
Bishop Ready's Jeff Happ (21-1) to
take runner-up honors In the
regional.
The duo of North Gallla begins
state competition atll a.m. Friday.
Trimble was represented by two
fine wrestlers. Jeff Glng, 132 pounds
(23-1) whowastheMVPoftheMelgs
round robin tourney did not place.
Dan Lackey, 185 (13-3) placed fourth
but faDed to advance. Federal
Hocking was represented by Ron
Russell, 112pounds (9-0) whodidnot
place.
The state championship begins
Thursday at 4 p.m. North Gallla Is
coached by Ted Lehew, former
Meigs ·Marauder and Capital University wrestler.

I Final Meigs statistics

G Fp-FIPJ1 Fr.-Fim Reb
. Jay Carpen!Pr .................... 22 204-90
66--10
182
. Mille Chancey ..................... ... 22 319-141 64-38
225
Jay Evans ......................... .22 ll-97
43-24
00
Dave Fisher ..................... 19
18-8
14-8
ro
Mike Kennedy .................. 14
9-3
17-14
4
Lee Powell ....................... 22
19-38
11-3.1
Ill
Nick RJgp .. .... .... .............. 22 329-149 110-l:iti
76
Jactde Welker ................... 19
17-3
20-11
7
RJck Wbe ......................... 22 mGt!
!'1).34
~1
TOrALS ........... ................ U 1141-111 41Hl0
111

To
44
40
18
4
6
tO
87
13
62
1114
11315 llli

OPPONENTS .•.•.••..••••.•.•••• U 1%18-11111 ._133
Overall Rro&gt;rd- 11-11; 9-9 ITVC!
Meigs 29t..oRan 25 IAih&lt;ns f&gt;moiew1
M&lt;'IJ&lt;S 62 Fod&lt;orat-Hocklng 52
MelliS 49 Mlller :13
Nolsonvllle- York 54 MeiJ&lt;S 411
Mel~

51

Trimble 70 Meigs illlai"I
Belpre 64 Meigs 61 !ai"I
Alexander Ill Meigs 66
Warren 511 Meigs 54
• Meigs 73 Wt_&gt;llston ~l
•

Mel~s

: MclJlS 73 Nelsonvillf.&gt;- York 5.1
• Meigs 63 Wahama 58
· Trimble 79 Mel!!&gt; 63
' Belpre 00 M&lt;'IJ&lt;S 511
; Molgs 73 Alexander 59
. Wa!Tt'll 70 Meigs 53
, Meigs 83 Wellston ~
• Wahama Ill Meigs 00
' Meigs Q) VInton County 50
: Meigs 54 FedPrai-H()('kinu !12

Pomen&gt;y Bowlin&amp; Laneo
T1oeoday Trlpllcaleo
Febnlary Z1, IIIII

W.L

Ebersbach HardwarP ................. .... 32 24

1'18.
. .... 890

1. Nick RJgp . .. ... .
2&lt;Je!r Tyo .. . . ..
. .... ....... 814
3: Bob Ashley . . ..
. .............. ......... 7111
4: StE."Ve OhllnRer .. . .
. ............... ... 6-'.i!
5, Mlck Davenport .......... ....... ..... .... .. 53)
6&lt;Kenny Young ................................ 511
Randolph ................. ....... ...... 509

1:·s'"""

WMPO ........... .............................. ll 26
Crow's St{'ak HouSP .... .......... .. ......... 26 l)
Hl~h Individual gam£' -

Carolyn Bachner

190. 184; Draema Knlghl 166.
High S&lt;'rles - Carolyn Bachner 510; Belly
Whitlatch 477; Norma Andrews 411.

Team high game- UJtra-Oean 4.5R.
Team hJgh seri(&gt;S - WMPO lB.

r&gt;odson ..... ............................ 468

9. ·Mitch Moadows ........... .. ..................140
10. Terry Qualls .... ........ ............. ... ..... 426
:
SINGLE SEASON SCORING
~..

1: Nick RIW ............

(

Slaadtnp

~

1'18..

............. .41J!

2. Bob Ashley .................. ..... ............ l';l
3. Mlck Davenport . . .. . .

... - ~

4: Kenny Young ........................... .....328
5. Mike Chancey .. . .. .. .
........ ..Jl!ll
CAREER KEBOlJNDS
~er
No.
I. Bob Ashley .................................... 570
2. Steve- Ohlln~f'r ............................. ... 383
3. I&gt;oxk&gt; Walters ..... .... ........................38)

1- Je!r Tyo ......................... ................ 358
5. Milch Meadow• ............................... 351

•
•

..
I

Pomeroy Bowlin&amp; l..aneo
Wednel!Ciay Mixed L e -

~a::~-G~~'Sh;;i;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.~

Friendly Tavern ...
....... .3!1
Eagt.,. _Ciub ... ....................... .... ... ......... :11
Tony's Carry Out ................ ... ............. :v&gt;
Smith-Nelson Motors ........................... 24

Southern High School basketball
tans are going to honor Coach Carl
Wolfe In recognition of~ victories.
Through Wolfe's efforts, Southern
High has been on top of the SVAC for
eight consecutive years; has been
section champions for eight consecutive years; won district championships in 1979, 1981 and 1982 and won
regional championships In l!m and
1982; has been state semi-finalist In
1981 and states runnerup In 1982.
Southern teams have not lost at
home for the past five and one-half
years and 56 straight games.
The committee in charge of the

it·'

BATI'UNG FOR A SHOT - ctevelaacl JM!-' C11teJ1er ctuta
Balldo Mrap8 on his ahln pards u he prepared tar lllicMher ci8J or hard
work ai the team's Tucson, Arizona' ll!lliDI tralldar camp. Budo,
youqerbrotheroflonnermaJorlearuerreat.SIIIBudo,lladlhlnl8ell
sqUIII'ely In the middle thla sprtar, baU1Jnr ftve-;ye11r veteran Ron
H888ey and rookie phenorn JetTY Willard tor a spot 011 the I'Oiter. ( AP
Laserphoto ).
~

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Cleveland Indiana catcher Chris Banda
has a new attitude as he works tQ ·
stay with the American Le81Ne
team of his hometown, says
Manager Pat Corrales.
"LaSt year, the Impression I got
was that Chris w&amp; just happy to be
with the club. Now, that attitude has
changed and he's more aggressive.
His skWs are excellent," Corrales
said.
· Banda says his faith In God halj
helped him galn a more positive :
attitude about lite.
"It's a maturing process. Day by
day, the Lord buUds you up. I feel so
rell!xed this year. The Lord has
really worked In my lite and I'J71 ,
excited, whatever Is In his plans,"
Bandosald.

Banda, who has played nearly the
last 21h years with the lndtans, Is
competing with six-year veteran ·
Ron Hassey and brUUant rookie .
prospect Jerry Willard for the .
catching Job.
Corrales has repeatedly 5ald he
wiU keep only two catchers, which
means that one of the trio wUI be .
traded, or that either Banda or. ·
Willard may be sent to the minor
leagues.
"I think they'll trade one of us
beforelheysendonedown.AUthree ·
of us are major league catchers and
there are a lotofte~ that can Ulll!a
catcher. I think tliey•u trade one of
usforapltcher,"Bandosald.

DeP auI humbles ..oe lndl~~~~~~d~~t!:
By The Associated l're88
The defensive denizens for DePaul's fourth-ranked Blue Demons
were dominating.
"DePaul made us look Uke a poor
basketball team," lamented Pan
American Coach Lon Kruger after
DePaul crushed his visiting Broncs
62-29 In college basketball Tuesday
night.

"Our kids were Intimidated early.
We were surprised by their size and
quickness," Kruger added. "We
played poorly, no question about It,
but DePaul had a lot to do with It ."
In other games Involving Top
Twenty teams, No. 6 Oklahoma
downed Missouri 72-00 In the first
round of the Big Eight Conference
tournament, No. 11 Purdue heat
Wlsconsln61-48andTulsaoutscored
Indiana State 110-99 In the opening

I Southern fans to honor Wolfe

New York Clothiers .... .... ............... :11 18
Ultra-Oean ................................... 36 !1

CAREER SCORING

~ - Dan

24 24 1.3
2 6 :Jl 1.4
7 24 49 2.2
36 6J ~ 18.5
4 16 17 0.9
21 62 170 7.6
no 371 lSI% 111.6
Its 4111 1m 111.5

Local bowling
'!dl

· Meigs 411 Sheridan 4.1
,- Ga llipolis 51 Meigs 44

l'lio'er

m

m

51 Miller 41

-

I
2
28
l
35
lSI
107

PI Tp Av
64
10.0
66 3l!ll 14.$
46 84 3.8

6. Jell Morris .. .. .. ..
. ..... .... 3.11
7. Tony Vaughan ... .. .....
..........:m
8. Joe Myers . ... .. .. .. .. . .. .
. ..... -~
9. Terry Qualls ...................................248
10. Dan Dodson ................................... 234
· SINGlE SEASON KEBOlJNDS
Player
No.
1. Doxie Walters ............ ..................... 284
2. Bob Ashley ...................... .............. .
3. Milch Meadows ...............
......... 237
4. Jell Morris ................................... 2.ll
5. Mike Chancey .
. ... .... ... .... :Ill;

Seuoalletults:

VInton County 55

A S
l1 63
24 19
$ 17
1 1

Another Meigs senior, Danny
Davis, wound up fifth In the
reglonals and will serve as an
alternate. As of Tuesday, Davis had
not received word whether he'll be
able to go to the state. As an
alternate, Davis would go It one of
the four region•' wrestlers ahead of
him could not :-.,tcr ~ WUlford has ~massed a tremendous array of championships over
the past two years. Included among
them are the Meigs Round Robin
Tournament champion, two-time
Gallipolis Tournament champion
and Most Valuable Wrestler both
years, the Trl-VaUey Conference
champion this year, theTVC's Most
Valuable Wrestler, the Southeastern Ohio Athletic League champion
last year, sectional champion In
1983, and district champion this
year. (Sectlonals were not held this
year.)
Wllltord, who also was the Most
Valuable Player on the 1983 Meigs
Marauder football team as a
cornerback, Is the youngest of three
brothers who have all been fine
athletes. Mike's older brothers are
Ray and Van. They are the sons of
Mr. and Mrs. Blll Willford of
Rutland.
Wlllford has put together a career
record of 98-24 with 66 pins. The
rough and tumble Marauder recorded 22 pins In his 36 wins this
year.
Meigs Coach Larry Grimes,
himself a ne.ar-state champion and
a Division ill NCAA All-American
wrestler, has coached Mike all four
years of his high school career.
Grimes "Is considered a master
teacher of the sport and was picked
to coach the Ohio representative
team to the Junior Nationals In
Iowa last summer.
"Mike has to wrestle very hard
because now he knows he can be
beat. If he wrestles like I know he
can, he wlll place high In the
tournament," commented Grimes.
Willford will battle Tony McCormick of Columbus DeSales who Is
28-4 on the year. The tournament Is
slated to start at 4 p.m. Thursday
with Willford to take the mat at
approximately 5 p.m.
The state-bound Wlllford and 14
others will have their hands full as
the defending state champion
(Swanton) will be attempting to
keep his crown.
One of the Ohio state wrestling
champs to make the big time
Includes Cincinnati Reds' centerfielder Eddie Milner of Columbus
who won his wrestling crown In the
late 70s.

Dando .··
has new :
attitude

round of the Mlssourt Valley
Conference tournament.
DePaul, 25-2, which closes out the
regular season with Marquette
Saturday before advancing to the
NCAA tournament, did not want
Pan American pulling any slowdown shenanigans, said Blue
Demon Coach Ray Meyer.
"We took tnem out of It In the first
four or five minutes because we
dldn 't want them to get lntQ the
game and hold the ball," Meyer
sald.
DePaul raced to an 8-0 lead, then
Increased It to 22-6 and held a 32-14
advantage at haltllme.
Tyrone Corbin and Jerry MeMOlao scored 12 points apiece for
DePaul and Kevin Holmes tossed In
11. Marty Embry grabbed 19
rebounds In 29 minutes for the Blue
Demons.
The losers, from Edinburg,
Texas, sUpped to 13-13.

staff.
"I'm excited about our pitchers,"
he sald. "We havt&gt; a lOt of young:
strong arms who are throwllig the
ball well. There'salotofcompetltlon
going on and It's tun catching those
young arms."
Banda said he's not worried about
his own competition.
"I'm golngtodothebest I can and
put It In the Lord's hands," Banda
said.

MULLEN INSURANCE

•

·•

recogltlon Is asking Individuals and
businesses to become "~ VIctory
Appreciation Donors" by contributIng to a gift tundfortheWolfefamUy.
Donations can be given to Grace
Grtftln at the high school and at the
district tournament game on Wednesday, tonight, committee
members, Linda Hut, Jan Cardone,
Jenny Rees and Sue Beegle wiU be
avaUable to accept contrtbutlons.
Donations may be maUed to the
Carl Wolfe Appreciation Fund,
Southern High School 47725 SR 124,
Racine, Ohio, 45771.

·'

NoHJ~h ··;M~ --~ ·-Cha;it~·- v~~ --M.~t~~- -~ ,----------------------~

Isabelle Couch 543; Bob and Debl Hensley 535.
JtiJ{h ~aiTI(&gt;- Charlie Van MN£&gt;r 223. Debl
Hell.'II£&gt;Y m. Russ Carson, 0\arll(' Van Me-tf.&gt;r
and Isabelle Couch 196.
Team seriPS- Roach 's Gun Shop 1975.

.

Team game- Roach's Gun Shop 713.

By The A"Odated Pral

·-Olin

.:w:~~':=~=:o~

runs and hits during baseball spring
training games ..
And that's what hapeened when
the Cactus League season started
Tuesday as the Oakland A's, with 12
hits, downed the Milwaukee Brewers, with 11, by a 6-5 count In 10
Innings.
.
BW Almon's two-out single In the
bottom of the lOth drove In pinch
runner Tom Romano from second
bUe with winning run, pinning the
la,s on Chuck Porter. The A's had
tied the game ill the ninth on Mitchell
Page's solo homer oft Pete Lade!.
Reliever BW CaudW, acquired by
Oakland In an off-season deal with
Seattle, pitched two perfect Innings
for the victory.
CecU Cooper, Charlie Moore and
Jim Gantner each had three hits for
the Brewers, who took an early 5-0
lead. Cooper knocked In two runs
with 'nrst-lnnlng double 81\d a
third-Inning single.
Milwaukee starter Mike Caldwell
tossed three shutout Innings before
oakland bounced back on a threerun homer by Carlos Lezcano In the
sixth and Dan Meyer's three hits.
Inothersprlngtralnlnggames,aU
In Florida, Dave Parker and Dave
Concepcion homered as the Clnctnnatl Reds topped the HoustonAstros
6-5.
Parker, signed by the Reds as a
tree agent, homered In his first
at-bat for Cincinnati, which was

II 1111

-ADS}

playtng tor the first time under new
ManagefVernRapp.
Houston raked Cincinnati starter
Marlo Soto for five runs In three
Innings. Alan Ashby doubled In two
of the runs, But the Reds rallled to
win agalnst reUever Joe Samblto,
who was making his first appearance In nearly two years after arm
surgery. Tom Lawless tripled home
Paul O'NeW with the tie-breaking
run In the seventh.
Craig McMurty and three Atlanta
relievers combined on a four-hitter,
and Terry Harper scored the
game's only run on a seventh·lnnlng
throwing error by Bob BaUor, as the
Atlanta Braves nipped the 1...0s
Angeles Dodgers 1-0. Fernando
Valenzuela pitched three scoreless
Innings for Los Angeles.
Wade Boggs and Jim Rice
cracked consecutive triples during a
three-l}lll first Inning agalnst Jack
Morris that carried the Bos.ton Red
Sox to an 8-4 triumph over the
Detroit Tigers.
Steve Kemp and Butch Wynegar
deUvered RBI singles as the New
York Yankees scored four runs In
the first Inning and went on tQ beat
the Montreal Expos 7-3. John
Montefusco was the winning
pitcher.
Julio Cruz belted a two-run double
ott Baltimore starter Scott McGregor as the Chicago White Sox beat
theOrloles4-1andToronto'sGeorge
Bell singled In the tying run and
scored the game-winner as the Blue
Jays topped the PhUadelphia Phillies 2-1.

CHILUCOTIIE - Tony Hatfield
rebounded a missed shot and laid In
the game-winning bucket as Paint
Valley upset the state's fifth ranked
class "A" Rlchmondale Southeastem 39-38Indlstrict semi-final action
here Tuesday.
Palnt Valley, who will play
tonight's Peebles-Southern winner
saturday at 7: :K) p.m., trailed 38-37
with three minutes to go and
worked the clock down for a final
shot.
That shot missed a target, but
Hatfield, whO was the game's
leading scorer with 20 and rebounder with 14, came out of
na.wttere.to put tn the game-winner.
The Panthers led ~29 with six
and a half minutes to go, but made a

AND

.

few costly turnovers and Paint
Valley's patient offense took
advantage.
Paint Valley will go Into the
district championship with a 17-6
mark while Southeastern bows out
with a 20-3 slate. One of Southeastern's losses was a 62-57 decision to
Southern's Tornadoes.
By quaners:

MATINEES So4T. SUN
AU SEATS 1100
ADMISSION EVERY TUESLWY 12 00

H1rh SdwM&gt;I
St~t h) Ha).

Hr-...

BIG BATS- The Cincinnati Reds' Dave Parker,
rtgltt, conKJ'8lulates Dave Concepcion alter his home
run In the third Inning against the Houston Astros

TAMPA, Fla. (AP)- Outfielder
Dave Parker says he was hurt by
critical remarks made about him In
a book by his former teammate,
WUUe Stargell, but sald he he won't
helleve them "untO I hear it from his
own Ups."
He was so furious he hit a home
run and made a superdivlngcatch IIi
Monday's 6-5 exhibition opener
victory over the Houston Astros.
"Yeah, I hit that one for Pops
iStargeU," Parker said. "Ineverdid
anything but praise and preach
about that man ... and to think, I was
going to wear No. 8 (StargeU' s
numben over here. I'd be tearing
that thing off my back today," said
Parker.
Parker, formerly with the Pittsburgh Pirates, was described as a
chronic complallier In a book
co-authored by Stargell: "WU!ie
StargeU: An Autobiography."
"I didn't look like a guy who hates
baseball, did I•" Parker said after

Meanwhile. New

I

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Mans. S!.PK&gt;r's 52, Mapk'lon J7

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Aqutnu

"I'm Hurt ." said Parker. "I've
never done a nythingf but praised the
man as a un 1versa 1 1gure an very
humane Individual. Apparently, he
has chosen to set our friendship, or
what I thought was our friendship,
aside as a means of selling books or
to further discredit me with the
Plrateorganlzatlon.

a.ill A Taurnammt.!l

a..MT...,.....,.

"'Lwt.M llr

DISHES

Wam'll Kmrlf&lt;!y -17, fi lrard

away a lot of the respect I had for the
man," said Parker, adding he was
unable to contact StargeU.
He was most upset by the
Indictment that he had played out of
"hatred and revenge."

te=~~rotethathewouldhave ~

retired sooner but Parker had asked
him to "hang around and hetp me
work through a few things ."

Lexln~t~on's

..........,.".,..

Akron St.V·SI.M

StargeU wrote that Parker became a "chronic complainer" and
wouldn't take advlee from

"I don't know. This just takes

As In most final shots a I the
buzzer, controversy followed the
Bearcat two-pointer. Southeastern
Coach Larry Jordan thought the
shot came after the buzzer and that
the wrong official made the call.
Paint Valley Coach Jim Cook said
he just couldn't tell If II beat the
buzzer or not.

Tourney results .
Ml~ark

the game.
Stargell, who retired atterthe1982
season, said Parker, his roommate,
became aloof toward fans and
teammates after becoming a $1 ,
million-a-year player In 1979.

.... _... .4 10 18 h18
Pain! Valley ... ....... .. .. ..... .... 8 10 10 U-.11

powerful Lady Panthers return to
the tournament trail Thursday at
6:15p.m. at Lancaster High School
In first round regional tournamenr
play.
New Lexington's opponent will be
Riverview !22-2). The lady Pantht&gt;rs, winners of both the Athens
sectional and district, are 18-5 on the
year.
In the second game at8 p.m., two
unbeatens lock horns when Portsmouth (23-0) goes against West
Holmes (24-0).
In district championship play
Saturday, New Lexington whipped
Waverly 77-55 and Portsmouth
edged Ironton 51-49 In overtime.

~GEL

Laserphoto) .-

Parker hurt by Stargell's remarks

Rosecrans will battle Garaway
LANCASTER- Defending girls'
class "A" state champion Zanesville Rosecrans will battle Garaway for the right to go to the state
semi-finals Frtday at 7: :Kl p.m. as a
result of wins here Tuesday night In
opening round regional play. Zanes·
ville Rosecrans (23-1) ran past Zane
Trace (19-5) 91-63 despite Beth
Meddler's 41 potilts for the Pioneers. In the second game, Garaway handed Huntington 1Ross)
their first loss of the year, 58-33.
Garaway Is 24-1 and Huntington,
who defeated Southern's Tornadoettes In the district finals 62-49,
end their year at 24-1.

Hully wood Hoot. ....
byNI .. hl.

during spring training In Tampa, F1a. (AP

~theastml ..... .. ..... ..

0... AM T•I'Mmf'IIIM

8 Et. to 20Ft

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

runs help
Reds stop Astros

Southeastern upset

DOWNING-CHI LOS
113 SECOND AVE.
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· .· · '·
,,

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CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675·1244 ·
-~·

•

SPINACH ............~~~~ 2/S1.19

td 100%ch09P'dbetf•t•llk·

. Gallipolis..

TOMATOES~~~ ...... 99¢

..,__

j
. ...

.,,

~

'

.a

OXYDOL ................~~~ ...... 99¢
GALLONS OF

Jug ·
99¢
M ~AGI·c·~ Bl-EACH • ·•••••••••••••
•
•

• SPRING SHOES ·ARRIVING DAILY

'

·. HARTLEY'S SHOE STORE, INC.
, 21 0EClat M_qin
Pomeroy
-- 992-5272

773-5554
I

oz: DETERGENT SOAP POWDER

"

:59
4 OZ. FOLGER'S .

INSTANT C-QFFEE ..J.a!•••• S2.49

�•

SMIItMfTANT SAVINGS NEWS FOR AMERICA'S

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EVERY WORD AND PLAN NOW TO.JOIN TH!"Jil$11'0., ~~-.-..

IT'S HERE! TOMORROW, IN GALLIPOLIS, OHIO!
12 NOON TO 12MIDNIG

.,

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By The Bend

THURSDAY. MARCH 8,19841
CLOSED TODAY! BE HERE
WHEN THE DOORS
OPEN AT
I

COAST
TO COAST
AND BORDER
TO BORDER!!
... A MAGIC
DAY OF
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~~~~=~~
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ug:!.:u:st;_;1982
:
- the original Bassett National Sale!

HURRY!
REG.
1999.95
MAGIC SAVINGS!

DINmE SET!
TABLE &amp;

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REG.
1699.95

Antibotics and the flu season

By EdWard Schreck, D.O.
AIIIManl Prof_.
of Family Medicine
Ohio Unfvenlb' Collece
of OMeopathJc Medicine
QUESTION: Why don't antibiotics such as penicillin help cure the
nu?
ANSWER: As many of us are
finding out from 1
personal expe·
rlence, the In·
fluenza season Is
well upon us. As
we struggle with
mu scle aches,
sore throat, upset stomach, tired·
ness and other dlscomlorts, we
wonder why there Isn't a '"miracle
drug" that could help us feel better
sooner. Although there Is progress
In drug research, for some time to
come we're all likely to have to deal
with the nu by "'suffering through ...
Antibiotics, Including penlciUin,
are medications which are effective
In treating diseases caused by
bacteria. lnfiuei)ZS Is caused not by
bacteria, but by several different
strains of viruses. Consequently,
antibiotics don't help the nu. A virus

(I
,, . r &lt;})

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i I ~J v'~ -

BURLINGTON HOUSE

2087 CONCORD HALL

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IN TO ASSIST YOU IN QUICK AND EASY BARGAIN BUYING THURSDAY!
BE DROOM
BAR GAINS!

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$98888

~1E1';,., 5
c-DiNETTEI~..;.:.:::_...:.::.....i

DI NIN G ROOM
SUITES!

Is a parasite

that lives and
reproduces In the cella of the host In this case, In human cells. It Is
very difficult for medications to get
Into our cells to destroy the
lnOuenza virus without harming the
cells themselves. BecaUie the virus
can Infect all the cells of the body,
various tissues and organs become
ln1tated, making you feel bad all
over. Scientists have reported
limited success on developing
antiviral agents, Sl,lCCiflcally for
herpes virus Infections. Research
on Interferon, a natural body
chemical that has antiviral properties, also shows promise. But until
drugs are developed that specifically tight nu, the best we can do Is
treat the symptoms.

QUESTION: What are some
ways to treat nu symptoms?
ANSWER: One general principle
Is to take plenty of water and other
nulds. This helps to thin secretions
In the respiratory tract and eases
congestion. Fluid Intake Is also
Important If you are running an
above normal temperature with the
Influenza, as body fiulds need to be

Calendar
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The annual
Lenten breakfast, sponsored by
the women of Trinity Church, Is
Wednesday, 7:45 a.m. at the
church. Women and mlnlsteries
of all area churches are Invited to
attend.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F. and A.M., will meet
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Loud shirt night will bi&gt;
observed. Oyster stew will be
served at 6: :ll p.m. with the
meeting to be held at7: :ll p.m .

4 SWIVEL CHAIRS

p.m. at the church. Mary Wise
and Jennifer Harrison are
hostesses.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange wUI meet Thurs·

day night at the Grange Hall.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughtets of the American
Revolution wU meet Friday at
1: Il p.m. at the First Baptist
Church, Pomeroy. Ray Swick
of Parkersburg will present the
program , "'Heritage of Our
Country, Blennerhasset Island."'

POMEROY - Ash Wednesday services at Grace Eplscoapl
Church Wednesday beginning at
7p.m.

MIDDLEPORT - Ladles
Auxlllary. of Middleport United
Pentecostal Church will hold a
. chicken noodle dinner Friday,
lHURSDAY
serving from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Cost Is $3 per dinner and the
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
menu will have chicken and
County Humane Society will
noodles, green beans, slaw, rolls
meet 7::ll p.m. Thursday at the
and choice of pie. Dinners may
LaSalle Hotel.
be taken out with tree delivery
by calling 992-3824 or 992-5981.
RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters wUI meet Thursday at
7::ll p.m. In the band room.

SATURDAY

1900.00

F~ onllld of plno and IOikl plnlln 1 rnldlum tone .
flniiiL

plus much. nmch more!

NEW AND EXCITI NG'

Pine
• A MAJ OR OfFER!

• BUNK BED SET!

. _._ _L_I_V-SUITES!
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1949.95

S!222 2
Flexsteel

Sofa, Chair, Otto.

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REVOLUTIONARY SPECIAL'

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:

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SUPER SINGLE. QUEEN OR KING
FULL FLOTATION MAnRESS

$299

Special

95

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• COMPLETE ROOM!
SOFA, CHAIR, ROCKER
2 ENDS. 1 COFFEE TABLE

S888 8

Sofa, Chair

2 LAMPS

$88888

11099.95

Sofa, Loveseat
r1E1Ggg, 95

DINING
ot.t-

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ROCKERS &amp;
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S

Rocker Recliner
Leather.Mate
Recliner Rq. 1799.95

s

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0-ES~C~-PI-ION-1
,

S6888._
8JI_
RG_:_AIN:_:
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f _:_fVE_:_RV_:TY_:_
PE_:_AH_O

.. . plus much. much mora!

SOM E ARE LIMITE D QUANTITY . SOM E ARE

ONE -OFA-KINO! EVtRYTHINO

~

* OlNm f SfT St

REOU CEOI

¥2 OR MORE OFF
2 SCHOOL HOUSE

DESKS

$99

95 EACH

Odd Dressers. Chests,
Ni&amp;ht Tlbles, lleldbon,
... plus mUch. much mO'rtl

BUY ONE GET IIATCHINE

FREE

lf2

3 GIOups ' - Tlbl.s
•
11.

Lamps
Group Pictures

Floor

72

-lf2

... plvt much. much morel

@)

.

TO PRESENT ACCO UNTS!II

$

s

. plus much. much morel

·REG. •79.95

: ~Vanity

REG.

•ssuo

Stools .............. ~_....,•• ···LILli

Solid Maple Dresser, Mirror .. ..
Com1DIIte Bunk 8ed ............. $-,~~.~~...,

.

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Table, 6 Chairs, Oak, Pld~ Chairs ..............:Q
"'- ~c ~

MAX'S INC.
In Middleport

MARCH 8

5:30-9:30
Pro&lt;&amp;eds Will Go To

GALLIA CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
We will serve
American &amp; Mexican Chili .

Please Stop In and Help

In Black Patent
and Navy

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Nex1 to ·Eiberfelds In Pomeroy :

RIO GRANDE - "'Suicide"' will
be the topic of a workshop to be
offered this spring by the Commun·
lty Educational Counseling Center
at . Rio Grande College and Com·
munlty College.
According to Sharon Toothaker.
Director o~ the Center. the work·
shop lnc;ludes facts about suicide. as
well as~hattodoandwhat not to do

when someone you know Is contemplating self-destruction.
The workshop is scheduled for
May2 from 1-4 p.m. in the James A.
Rhodes Student -Community Center. There Is no charge to attend the
work.!: hop.
For additional information or to
register, contact Toothaker at 1614 l
245-5353, extension 275.

R. C. COLA
BPAK

Oz. Btls.

$129Pius

Limit One

_ ,:

~-~

'I

Ellecullve liming In

.

'

Table; 6 Chairs,- ~lnt Finish., .............. $

.

..

tured bract~! .

I14UO

DR. PEPPER
Pak
·· Oz. Btls.

BULOVA

- ~. · C. K. SUP-ERMARKET ...

~!t!J!!!y
H.nva

ONI CIIIIAT 'ifACI

89¢ Limit
Plus
One

With This Coupon
Good Friday, Mar. 9, Only

::

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.

paMerned dlil. lex·

More than 30,000 times faster-a sec·
ond I ·Becjiuse its heart Is ~ quartz crystal.
And ea.ch Bulova Quartz movement
keeps time to within 60 seconds a year.
It makes technology beautiful! And gift·
giving so easy.

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Suicide topic of college seminar

Oz. Btls.

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REG. S699.95

covered will be reviPWs of special
cases of sudden death. and chldren
and death."
The workshop will be held April
25from 1-4:30p.m. in The James A.
Rhodes Student-Community Center. There Is no cost for the
workshop.
For additional information or to
register. contact Toothaker at 1614!
245-5353, extension 275.

PEPSI-COLA

Table, 6 Chairs .................................. ""~~·"
-~"REG •. '776.95

Pvt . Harvey M. Thomas, son of
Donna J . Thomas of Route 2.
Letart. W.Va .. has completed basic
training al Fort Dix. N.J .
During the training, students
received instruction In drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map reading. tactics. military courtesy.
military justice, first aid. and Army
history and traditions.

With This Coupon
Good Friday, Mar. 9, O~ly

WOOD DINETTES
REG. '329.95 . ·
S ·
Table, 4 Chans, 01k Finish................ 199
REG. •999.96 .

Cedar Chests In Stock ......... 1!2-

RIO GRANDE - "'Death and
Dying,.. a workshop that covers the
emotional stages of dying and
grlevlng, will be sponsored by the
Educational Counseling Center at
Rio Grande College and Commun·
ity College this spring.
""This workshop covers the emotional stages, how to cope with
death personally, and how to help
others cope," said Sharon Toot ·
haker. Director of the C!'nfer. "'Also

Pak

Roll Top 'Desk ................... •a.JIIiJIIOP

ALL' LANE

Basic completed

Death, dying class at Rio Grandel-=c=H=Iu=o=IN=N=E=R::;I

8

TV Stereo, Cabinet .. ~MWIL
Hoover SWeeper .................. .

for the meeting attended by tlKx;e
those named and Mrs. Dorsel
Larkins, Mrs. Paul Hauber, Ada
Bissell and Kenneth, Mae McPeek,
Ernestine Hayman, Tom Hayman
and Harold Brewer.

C.K. SUPERMARKET

. $.
Table, 6 C.hans, Maple Finish.......,..... 2xxe 1

.UPRIGHT OR CANISTER

was discussed and anyone with one
to donate Is asked to call843-5446 or
985-4275.
It was announced a natural gas
cook stove In good condition Is for
sale for $50. Officers reports were
given and nwnerous bUJs approved
for payment. A donation was noied
from Martin and Margaret
Nesselroad.
Francis Andrew, Harold Brewer.
Paul Hauber, Harlan and Alta
Ballard, Sue Hayman, Dorsel
Larkins, Melody Hoberts were
commended for their efforts In the
various programs. New amend·
ments were read and discussed for
the bylaws to be held at the June
meeting.
Ernestine Hayman was hostess

HUTCH. MIRROR. DOOR DRESSER
DOOR CHEST, BED .

S449.

.R~G. J499.9~

A plaque honoring Mrs. Leona
Hensley, who donated the land for
the Long Bottom Community Assoclatlonbulldlng,washunglnthenew
facility during a recent meeting of
the group.
It was noted the land had been
given to Mrs. Hensley by her father,
A. F. Swan, longtime businessman
in the Long Bottom community.
Alsohungdurlngthemeetlng, was a
framedplctureoftheAmerlcanflag
and the pledge brought by Harold
Brewer.
Dorsel Larkins gave the trustees'
report regarding rental of the
building noting a new organization
In the community Is interested In
using the building on a regular basis
during the year. Theneedforaplano

BEAUTIFUL BEDROOM!
BASSETT RUSTIC OAK

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Posture Ill QuHn

~a\.95

prevalent strains of viruses and again.' ! all kinds of nu , but has beef)
decide which strains will most preventive against many types. To .
likely cause flu each year In our work, II must be taken orally twice ·
country. Then vaccines against a day for the entire period durtne these particular vira l strains are which an individual might be :
produced and distributed. lmmunl· exposed 10 I he influenza viM. :
zations are especially recom · Because of some side effectS. "
mended for people at high risk of currently AmantadinP is recom; :
mended primarily for use to "
encountering complications from
nu - the elderly, and people with hosptitalized patients during a nil :
epidemic or as an aliernative or
respiratory or heari conditions.
There Is a recent development supplement to immunization for :
that seems to help prevent nu after high-risk people during a commu,; :
a person has been exposed to the liy outbreak of infiuen7.a. It shouJa :
not be used by pregnant women ot •
virus. A drug called Amantadine.
used primarily for victims of nursing mothers.
Parkinson's disease, seems to ..----------~ .
protect against Influenza Infection
for some cases 1nd lessen symptoms In others. It is not effective

ASTONISHING SAVINGS!

Posture Ill Full Sets

1759.95

eluding viral pneumonia. Diabetes
or heart disease patients also may
need their medication readjusted
while they are suffering from a
severe case of the nu. VIral
lnfiuenza also may weaken body
defenses so lhat other Infections
caused by bacteria develop. In
these situations, antibiotics can
help treat the resulting Illness .
QUESTION: Is there any way to
keep from getting the nu?
ANSWER: Because so many
different kinds of viruses can cause
nu symptoms, ll"s difficult to be
completely protected, but Immunization can greatly reduce the risk of
Influenza. Immunization Is a complex process. Public health agencies study the patterns of the most

no help

Long Bottom group has meeting

REG.

$18995
Rtl.

LAMPS

II~---, WELCOME! A SPECIAL CREDIT TEAM ~i~ ~~c0o~~~~Ar~o0ci~~

I

Wood Rocker, Dark Oak
~1Efg. 95
sgg95
Wood Rocker,

$14995

RUTI.AND - The Impact
Team, a group of teen-agers
from the Central Ohio District
Nazarene Churches," will be
singing and giving testimonies
about peer pressure and the
Christian at a meeting at the
Rutland Nazarene Church, Saturday, 6::1) p.m. The meeting Is
open to both youth and adults.

replaced. Aspirin or aspirin substitute~~ like Tylenol or Datrll will help
bring down a fever and also ease the
general aches and pain that come
with the nu. ' It you have a dry.
hacking cough that doesn't bring up
phlegm, you may also want to take
a mild co~gh suppressant.
QUESTION: Should I go to the
doctor It I think I have the nu?
ANSWER: Although most people
recover from nu symptoms In a
short time, for some people lnnuenza can be a very serious
problem. It you feel very sick, 1
would recommend notifying your
doctor. The flu Itself may produce
severe symptoms that require
medical help, or lnfiuenza may
develop Into other conditions, In·

Its heart beats
faster than ·yours

ROCKER!

IISIIATCHED

)

POMEROY - Elanor Circle
of Heath United Methodist
c;hurch will meet Thursday, 7: :ll

AMAZING SELECfiON'

QUEEN SETS

EVERY ADVERTISED ITEM (PLUS HUNDREDS MORE) GUARANTEED TO BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN AT
L -_.,J· _ Y

J

MATTREss
. SETS !
- •

FULL SIZE SETS

.._______.

or Cloth lllcliner
.... '299.95

a
~

• S! HP so r~~~·

TABLES!
LAMPS!

ssoooo

lEG.

11239.95

• BfDOINGI
to lllllN(, HOOMS'

* OESKSt
* TA8US
• BOOKCASE S'
• lAMPSt
* DINING ROOMS• * ACC€SS0Rt(S'
• BlOROOMSt
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• CEDAR
AN D MUCH. MU CH MOR f '

$788

Swivel Rocker

MATTRESS SETS

1

w I Motchlng l...,._to

Vinyl

* SO FA.St
• AlCLIN£RS1

3 STYLE SLEEPER

~1E21lgg.95

4 ONLY KINO SIZE
POSTURE

EVERY ITEM IN
CURRENT SELECTION
WILL BE ON SALE!
• l OV[ Sf AfS!
* CHAIRS!

$588

f9Efa.oo

S788 8

Sofa, Loveseat

~1Etg9.95

KINCAID OPEN

FLEXSTEEL CAMEL

'Sofa Loveseat,

REG.

: WANTEO STYLlS'

Special

SCIPIO 1WP -Special meet·
lng of Scipio Township Trustees
at 7 p.m. Thursday at senior
citizens building, HarrlsonviUe.
for puJll05e of forming a fire
department; publlcwelcome.

lEG.

REG. 11999.95

Wednesday, March 7, 1984
Page-7

Family Medicine:

NEW! BIGGER! BETTER!

The Daily Sentinel

ANOTHIII

,

.'

C.K
..
SUPERMARKET
.
Ptf. 99-2-3480
'

N. 2ND AVE

~--MIDDt!PORT-;-OH .

'JI

'·

�..,....
Page-S- The Daily Sentinel

Wednnday, March 7, 1~

Pomeroy-Middlef,ort, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page

. Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio

.

r·:

Y U(AN
STANDOUT
INA CROWD •••

LL

· i l - n.. l'loht To. um1t Quentftlel.

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH .
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., MAR. 10, 1984

. . Pooler

f~olk~ birthday
· Blllee Reae Pooler recently
· ~ed l)erfourth birthday with a
. ~katlng party at the Skate-A-Way
Rink at Che61er.
A Knight Rtller cake made by her
aunt, Bobi!!Nuleywasservedwith
other refreshlnenta.
· AttendiJit were Bob, Pat and
· £IIzabeth !llrrls, Barbara, Angle,
Chrlst!na ..id Michelle Pooler,
~and &amp;ather Pauley, Jamie
: and 1Brlan .Warner, Elnora and
Sbalin Ingell, Linda Mohler, Lena
Belle l'ulu. Inez Pooler, Henry,
Mary and Torn Hunter, Susan
BaileY,. Rudy and Usa King,
Wallllley, Brian and Becky
·
T~ . Pooler, Kevin Late
her parents, BUI and Sharon

Steak/Roast ...L~

l&gt;ooler.

: • SCIENCE FAIR JUDGING- Shane Engle, Meigs
Junior High School eighth grader, received an
. ".excellenl rating on his electromagnets science fair
: project. Engle demoll'llrales Ids project for Ralph

Martin of Ohio University, Alhms, one of the Judles,
left, and Rusty Bookman, Meigs science teacher,

cenler.

First Science Fair held in junior high
: Nearly 200 projects were entered
In Meigs Junior High School's first
~lence fair Monday at the school.
.: Jesse Vall and Rusty Boolonan,
ictence teachers, organized the fair
which was highlighted by presenta. txm ofcertlflcatesandanopenhouse
:tOr parents and friends Monday
. night. /
:: The projects were judged by Russ
Moore, of the Meigs County Board of
~duc~tlonofflce; JohnMora,Melgs
Junior High School principal; Tim
~e5her, Meigs Junior High School
:gtiidance counselor and Ralph
· ~ln. Ohio University assistant
professor of curriculum and
bistructlon.
: : The six projects receiving supertor ratings will be entered In district
:cempetltion to take place at OU on
:March 30. Students receiving super:kit ratings for projects were Sean
~. from waste to energy;

Susan Sandy, solutions; Brad Little,

volcanoes; Audra Houdashelt,
electric pro:luctlon; Scott Hanning,
darns and Lisa Newman, solar
homes.
Receiving excellent ratings for
projects were Shane Engle, electromagnets; Dee Dorst, earthwonns;
Usa Frymyer, pinhole camera; Bill
·Brothers, dinosaur extinction; Charles Hudson, electronic siren; Mike
Hooper, slearn engine; Jodi Brown,
harnpsler training and Roland
Morris, seashells.
Sam Rife, engines; Gina Scarberry, uses of the tongue; Angle
Sloan, leukemia; Eric Spencer,
turbine engines; EddleBaer,effects
of smoking on lungs; Erek Daniels,
acid rain; Mike King, bass life
cycle; David Pettry, oU wells; Eric
Wilson, 250 mlillon-year-old puzzle;
Mandl Fry, horses.

Kevin D. King, cave formation;
Kim Calvert, mouse maze; Jonathan Dunn, work; Melissa Clay,
connection between rain and dew;
ClndyBaUey,fooUngthesenses; Joe
Hall, how to make crystals;
Mayrene Thomas, telegraph; Gary
Hysell, volcano; Lisa Miller, neutralization; Scott Oberholzer, lnsulator:s; Usa Patterson, originators
of jet propulsion.
Jerry Derenberger, possible life
on.-Venus; Kenda Carsey, generators; Michael Bartrum, electricity
and sound waves; Margie Baker,
mesesolc era; Richard Hale, how
rainbows form; Donna Sergent, sun
fusion; Jo Ellen Crane, grafting
plants; Laura Cobb, electronic ·
motors; Sherrie Cooper, mercury
vapor lights; Scott Williams, ponds
and Laurie Shenefield, heat
movement.

ith Our FULL TIME ADU·L
TRAINING PROGRAMS

you can •••

HAVE A SKILL! with tralnin·g

Chuck Roast ..L~

in less than one year •••
' Marvin - ' Sheila Taylor, Chester, annou~ the birth of their first
;chud, a Stwl, Michael Aaron.
· The lnflmt was born Feb. 16 at
Holzer Medical Ce!ter. He weighed
6 pounds, 5 ounces and was ~
lnchess long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Bailey, Tuppers
,Plains an4Peternal grandmother Is
; Mrs. Ru•TtYlor, Chester. Greatgrandparellts are Mrs. Estel SarnpStwl, Coolville and Harley Linthicum, ReedsvWe.

LaSalle

:Breakfast
·~eeting held
. 'file Men's Brotherhood break·
fait of the First Southern Baptist
efiurch, Pomeroy, was held Sunday
nu&gt;rning at the home of the Rev.
aJid Mrs. David Hunt.
:Breakfast was prepa(ed by John
YQ!son a!KI f!e\1 . .HI!!I\, whO gave
devotions form Luke 10 with
emphasis on home missions.
! ;I'here was prayer for special
needs by those attending Including
~v. Hunt, Wilson, Richard Fetty,
:Bbb Mills, .Troy Zwilling, Marty
:Spangler, Jack Needs, John Riley, .
'Jet!. Needs, Duke Kennedy and '
·Mark Michaels.

by: Union Fork &amp; Hoe •

~SHOVELS

•RAK:ES
•HOES &amp;

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W. _VA.
1{·. II! •

."' l

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4,100

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ADULT ~DUCATION. DEPT, ·
· · Rt. 1; State 'Route 691 ·
Nelsonv·ille;. Ohio-·

-,;
•'

membei'S cit Ohio's V.F.W. District
12 }Yill meet at 1 p.m. M~trch ·1~ at
v:t.w. Post 9893 Albany. The
' ~lf!gat!on, headed by District 12
~ander, Dori-Balley of Nelson,. Yllle, will dlacuss Issues pertaining
•lo.Vetera~~t~~tltlements . and Na• tloJ!al ~-Also expected to.lle
; dl8cussed Is 'the move In Ohio to'
• change Memorial Day from ~ay 30
· to the last ~Y In May.
; · District ·u 1s comprised of 24
: y.F.W. posts from throughout
: Jtosa. VlnW.,: 1\thens, f&gt;lke• Jack; llbn, Metp, Sdoto, Lawrence, and
. billa~~r. of

•
.• ''·I .

...
~-- '
~·

·••

3 LB BAG

•

BROUGHTON
0

•

2Yo M1lk .......... .

CAR.NATION EVAPORAT-ED

/89¢
2

GALLON

$}S9

PARKAY

Margarine

LB.

••••••• ••

MII k••••••••••••••
ZEST BAR
BANQUET
59¢
·soap • ••••••••••••••• $} 59 TV Dinners .... !~.o~..
13 OZ. CAN

'

.

'

PKG. OF 4 BATH SIZE

•

CHARMIN

D__QMlNO SUGAR

g·9¢ .

SWJion.
: State Qrgadll!tlon.
'.

..

9¢
Omons ..........·.... 7

YELLOW

- -7North-~ HW,the.DePirtmenttl-.·£:!-·. -TOilE-T- TISSUE
. 0· II
~ bt Ohio
will repreeent !he
4R

,• .

Phone 61~753-35
'

room

·April 7.
•
· At the ~- representatives
:tram Marietta · clubs wUI present
:slides shawlne the work of Clvitans
·in the presellt International Special
· Olympics. Nomination of officers
will be held llild a proposed budget
· and constltudon and by-laws will be
· presented by rommlttees appointed
·at the last meeting. DeSsert and
· cotreewill be served.
Tonight's D.,ettng Is ·open to both
men and woman who are Interested
·In an orgaftlzatlon designed for
community service.

'

. t .~--- -j___:._ _ __ _.:___ _ _ _ _ _ _~---------------- ·--·-- " ---'----'V

meeting

VFWto
meet
•
.
Delegates -represenlpg over

'

.

Wieners • • • • • • • • • • • • 99
12 OZ. PKG.

Purpo~e of the meeting will be to
:provide lnlbrmation and Increase
·charter meli.JI)eishlps Into the new
:¢lub. Weekiy,aEetlngs will continue
:untO Charter Night Is observed on

FULL TIME ADULT PROGRAMS
- BUSINESS DATA PROCESSING
- WELDING
- AUTO BODY REPAIR
-MACHINE TRADES
- BUILDING MAINTENANCE
- INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE
. - ELECTRICITY
- CARPENTRY
-OFFICE SERVICES
~FOOD SERVICE
- AUTO MECHANICS
-INDUSTRIAl ELECTRONICS

Tri-c·o unty
ocation~a I Sc~h.ool

Lawn &amp; Garden Tools

SUPERIOR FRANKl E

Middlepol1.

---INFORMATION-,

Phone ..... ..... ... .. ..•...•...........
Mail to : Adult Education
Tri~County · vocational School
Nelsonville, Ohio 45764

$}9 9

The Bl&amp; Be!ld C!vitan Club wut

FINANCIAL
AID IS AVAILABLE
Spring Quarier

demonstrating her project for Russ Moore of the
Meigll County Board of EdiiClllion Office, one of the
Judges.

LB

meet at Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the

'WE MAKE THINGS HAPPEN!

. : 'GENERATING' AN EXIDBD' - Kenda Clll'!ley
· received a superior rating for her science fair projecl
~ lhe use of gmerators. Here she Is pictured

•

Civitah club
• meets,Tuesday

There are programs for everyone.
Give us a call, tell us your Ideas.

1 would like more informat.ion about your
adult vocational programs. Check one or
more.
Your Name ...................... . .... .
Address • ..••.........••........•... . ..

•••••••

.•

Round Steak ..L~-.

Taylor birth

You can draw unemployment benefits while
attending Tri-County.

REGISTER IN PERSON OR
MAIL IN THIS COUPON

USDA CHOICE

Sbeiia Taylor and 1011

NOW IS THE TIME TO MAKE YOUR
MOVE •••

March 26th

$}S g

USDA CHOICE BONEL S

LB.

79¢
F1sh Port1ons ..·..

BA!TER DIPPED

With the lob market today • • • only the
qualified are getting the good lobs.

.•

M·IXED

Fryer Parts

•Auto Body Repair •Auto Mechanics •Building
Maintenance •Carpentry •Electricity •Industrial Maintenance •Food Service •Machine
Trades •OHice Services •Welding •Buslneu
Data Proceulng. •Industrial Electronics
Are you now out of work? Have you checked all
the lob prospects and find that you are not
qualified for any of them?

$}19

FRESH PORK BUTT

Slb.

Bag

Pkg.
Umit One Per Custom
Good Only At Powell' a
,..._,,,., '"""'••• Mrrch 10. 1984

•·.

$}59

•
Limit One Per Customer
•
Good Only At Powell's ·
• Offer Expires Mirch 10, 1984

•

.,

•

•

DOWNY

• FABRICSOFT&amp;NER 960z.
Jug

$269

: 15

,.

oz. --

Cans

.

Limit One Per Customer
•
Good Only At Powell's
• . Offer Expires March 10, 1984

s
51 1

: JO 80 DOG FOOD

Limit Five Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
• Offer Expires March 1 0, 1984

••

,

�·--------------~ ---·-

10-The

----

Sentinel

•:

7; 1984

Injunction ruling expected
(Continued from page 1)
not deprtving persons of oil and gas.
It contends the oil and gas wUI be
there after the coal Is mined.
Defendant's wltne88es
Taking the stand tor the defendants were TI!omas WUson, Corning
Ohio, president of an engineering
tire at New Lexington, and TI!omas
Crtsp, vice president and stock
holder of Magnum Drt111ng.
Magnum has, according to testlmOJ\Y, been dr!lllng oU and gas
wens since the taU ot 1981. They have
dilled between ~90 wells In Meigs,
Athens, and GaUla counties and In
Pennsylvania.
Magnum and Royal have obtained 11 leases from residents In
Rutland and Salem Townships to
drtUoUandgaswens. Theleasesare
for a six months period and wUI
_ explrebyJulyofthlsyear.
It was brought out that the
defendants have applled for permits

to drtU 93 ou and gas wens In Rutland
and salem Townships. The leases
were acquired after SOCCO purchased lt'scoalrlghts. Seventy of the
permits have been JUanted.
The defendants testlfled that the
landowners have the right to
develop on and gas properties. The
land owner Is entitled to one-eighth
share In the weU as well as free gas.
Columbia Gas wUl transport the
gas, approximatley eight mllUon
cubic feet a day, according to
testimony.
It was also brought out.ln Crtsp's
testimony that they have purchased
three additional drtU rtgs at a total
cost of$625,(0) and pipe for the wells
In the amount of $188,(0). The
Income from the four rtgs would run
between $16,(0) and $al,OOJ per day.
The defendants contended that It
would be a very economical area to
drill wens and that wells drtUed In

LAFF·A·DAY

champion awards. Trophies will be
presented each day and an entry fee
will be50cents. Classeswlllbesetup
based on the weight of the
participating children.
William Downie, president, was
lnchargeofthemeetlngattendedby
14 board members when plans were
completed for the construction of a
new swine building on the fairgrounds. It Is reported that ground
will be broken any day for the
building which will be completed In
time for use at the fair In August.
The board also discussed enter-

: Mayors terminate court cases
Three defendants forfeited bonds
_' and four others were fined In the

.court of' Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night. ·
Forfeiting were Judy A. Anspack,
Pomeroy, $50, assured clear distance; Warren Callaway, Reedsville, $40, speeding, and James K.
·' Powell, New Haven, W. Va., $450
·.. driving while Intoxicated.
· Fined were Brenda 'K. Haley.
~ Middleport, $25 and cost, tratflc
light violation; Mark McCloud,
.. Middleport, $50 and costs, disor., derly manner; $ax! and costs, 10
days In jaU, resisting arrest and$100
- and costs, destruction of property;
Lester W. Wise, Reedsville, $25 and
cos~ expired license plates, and $50
and costs, contempt of court, and
:· Pat! J . Hatfield, Dexter, $ax! and
- costs and 10 days In jail, resisting
arrest, and $100 and costs, Indecent
exposure.
George McDaniel, Middleport,
was given three five day jaU
sentences on three disorderly
' manner charges.
: . Ten defendants forfeited bonds In

the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
They were Steven Stout, Middleport, $53, speeding; James Wamsley, Pomeroy, $43, assured clear
distance; Charles Curfman, Racine, $43, Improper backing; Wendell Barker, Mason, $375, driving
whtle Intoxicated; Mathew PhlUlps,
Pomeroy. $43, assured clear distance; James Circle, New Haven,
$50, speeding; Karl Keith Krautter,
Pomeroy, $43, speeding; Bonnie
Roush, Middleport, $48, speeding;
Leonard Koenig, Pomeroy, $51,
speeding; Vicky Hayes, Clifton, W.
Va., $32, speeding.
Fined were Joe Vadlsh, Pomeroy,
$113and costs, Intoxication, and$213
and costs, trespassing; Frank
Robinson, Pomeroy, $213 and costs,
trespassing; Greg Sheets, Pomeroy, $213 and costs, assault; $63 and
costs, disorderly manner; $313 and
costs, destruction of property; Tim
Davidson, Pomeroy. $213 and costs,
assault; $313 and costs, destruction
of property; Becky Davidson,
Pomeroy, $213 and costs, destruction of property.

Meigs County happenings•.
Emergency runs
Three calls were answered by

:·; local units Tuesday, the Meigs
· Coonty Emergency Medical Servl. ces reports. At 9:03a.m., Pomeroy
" took Caryl Cook from Lincoln
Terrace to Veterans Memortal
.· Hospital; 12: 13 p.m., Pomeroy
• treatedKathrynDUesat376E.Maln
~ St., and at 8: 59 p.m. Syracuse took
Kathleen Francis from Dusky St.. to
Veterans Memorial.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Kenneth Sw&lt;!rtz,
Pomeroy; Nlchole Evans, Middleport; Caryl Cook, Pomeroy; Shirley
Smith, Rutland; Edward EV(lllS,
Middleport; Nelson TI!omas, New
Haven; David Ramey, Shade;
George Greene, Sr., Hartford;
Linda Davis, Athens; Mary Francis, Syracuse; Fred Russell,
Pomeroy.
Discharged--Cheryl LaudermUt,
Nlchole Evans.

· Meets Saturday
The Meigs Retired Teachers wUI
meet In regular session at the
· Masonic Temple In Middleport
: Saturday,March10,at12:~p.m.A
state officer will be the guest
: speaker.

' Tax refund doubles

Lodge meeting set
The Shade River Masonic Lodge
at Chester will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday at the temple.

Ex-EPA head killed

ON SPRING

share $'107,252.&amp;l.

FERTILIZER
AND •
SPRINGFIELD
SEED
BALER TWINE
POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992·2181

" I eentence you to live
but no1 al one or thooe courrlrYI
club prisons 1"

3 Announcement&amp;

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
627 lrd Avt.. Gallipolis. Oh ..
PH. 446·1699

Ills 11014 lloc. Dryors, A!IIQ. lith·
lrt. Ills 104 lite . ....... ltfrl·
~

p&lt;a111t, IV Mit.

:

BISSELL

N S
TJ.f.;H.m.JiH
fPPLI
Sot~MI/,~
r.1.
.

,o,.

SIDING

Real Eatate General

E. Mal.nW..
POMEROY,O.
992-2259
LISTING - Rutland
mo~(\e home
-v~en, 3
bedroon• ...,.\J~ iilr~ room,
•=·:·:·_ c:c· underpin·

VIIIGIL B. 511.
216

talnrnent features fqr the "hUl"
stage which was put Into use last
year for the first time. The board
hopes to have adequate entertain·
ment both during the day and
evening hours of this year's fair.
Groups and Individuals having acts
are Invited to register to perform
during the fair. There will not be
payment for the entertainers but
they will have the exposure expertence of their performances. Individuals and groups wishing to be
scheduled for the stage are to
contact Mrs. Murtel Bradford, fair
board secretary, at 98.S-3974.

Eugene R. Jeffers
Eugene R. Jeffers, 63, of Dexter,
died Monday at the residence of
WOllam Hayes In Dexter.
Born August 26, 19al, In Mason,
sonofthelateCharlesM.andHattie
F. Wamsley Jeffers.
Also preceding him In death were
one sister, Mrs. Grace J . Easter;
two brothers, Frederick E. (Doc)
Jeffers and Harry Herman Jeffers .
Hewasaretlreddeckhandforthe
G &amp; CTowlngcompany. He served
In the U.s. Army during World War
II, a member of the StewartJohnson VFW Post No. ....., of
""""
DAV
Mason and a member Of the
Chapter No. 53 of Pomeroy.
Surviving are several cousins. .
Graveside services will be held
Thursday at 11 a.m. at the
Adamsville Cemetery In Mason
with Chaplin Bernard Neutzllng
officiating.
Graveside rites wtU be conducted
by the mtlltary.
·
There will be no visiting hours and
arrangements are under the direction of the Foglesong Funeral Heme
In Mason.

MAJOR SUPPLY - Columbia Gas of Ohio has
contracted for a .W.,or new Ohio gas supply from
wells located In a natural gas field near Athens.

IUpply.

'

Fire guts home

PHONE
992-2156
Wrilt Dl;tiJ Stlllliht ClnsHM. Dt,..

,.-,. . .

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111 tom St. - . .1. o.~o 45711

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PROBAtE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EVA ERNESnNE
MOODISPAUGH,
DECEASED
CaM No. 24311 Docket 12
400
Plge NonCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On· December 13. 19B3. in
thO' Me•g s -- Co~ntv Proba.te
Court. Case No, 24316. ~onnie
Scheiderer. 35593 Ball Run ..
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769 'was
appointed Administratrix with

·PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
ESTATE OF ELBER L
RIEBEL DECEASED
COM No. 24339 Docket 12

=~OF
APPOINTMENT

. OJ FIDUCIARY
On Ja uarv 11 .' 19B4. in the
Me•gs Couniy Probate Court.
Case "'NN:"' 24339. Roger 1.·
Riebel. Route 1, Long Bottom.
Ohio. 45743 was ,8ppointed·
Executor of lhe estate of Elber L.
Riebel. deceased. late 'ol Route
Will Annexed of the estate of 1.. Long Bottom. Ohio 45743.
Eva Er!l&lt;lSiine Moodispaugh.
Robert E. Buck. ·
deceased. late of Middleport,
Probate Judge
phio 457~0 .
By: Lena K. Nesselroad
Robert E. Buck
Clerk
Probate Judge
BY: Lana K. Nessolrood. t:il 7. 14. 21 . 3tc
thetuneral home'I1IUr!ldaYtrom2to
Clerk
4and7to9. .
.
1317. 14. 21 . 31c

HARRISONVILLE -Approx.
100x200 tot with water tap,
electric. and is all cleared.
No sept1c. $3.500.00.

96 ACRES - fi bank bam
with shed, crib, 4 bedrooms.
furnace with free gas, porch
and ~ $60,!XXl.

NEAR POMEROY - 1~
acres ol level ground for a
big garden and yard. Plus a
nice 3 bedroom ranch w1th
new carpet, equipped
kitchen, woodburner, stor·
age building, and a ·patio.
$36,900.00
REALTORS
Henry Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Jo Hill 915-4466

IIIITWID-2bedroom
frame on qliet street. Gas
furnace, bath, carpeting. pane~

·in&amp;. carport- and nice kll for
$27,(XX).

CALL
HEL£11, BRUCE
SUE MURPHY
IILTDII ROUSH

C3
.

992-3325
Ho11sing

Headquarters

AW

Re1l .Estate

£
MCGK£
1"'\
·
"'0.. .. ..1• .
V"""'

'R.co'Yf-

Gener~l

I . L."Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Cheryl Lemley,
Meias County Associate
Phone 742·3171
I Co.

Real Eatate

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A•u COtloll4

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2M o.,o,..,OII!
IU - AHIIIeOIII

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7U "Cool.,llo
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Public Notice.

No Sundey Calla
lll -tlc

GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Holllnd. Bush Ho1
firm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

MEIGS INN
36 CLEAN. SAFE. MODERN
ROOMS. CABLE TV. STEAM
HEAT. AIR CONO. Rates as
low as:
r10 A Nieht or
140 Weekly

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodellna
Insurance Wort
Cu1to.m Pole Bldas.
&amp; 6111111

II£11NG ROOIS filE TO
NON PROfiT ORGANIZATIONS
Wt Aceommodltt YP to 250 people
for ptrtlts and dances .

YOUNG'S

Bring This Coupon In

PIONEER CARPET

10%

&amp; UPHOLSTERY

•Washers •Dishw11hers

•Ranges

CALL 992-3629

Lost and Found

FOR

4·5·1fC

- Concrete work
- Plumbing Mid electrical
WOfk

169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.

V. C.·YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992.7314

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

CLEANERS
35185 Oak Hill Road
Long Bottom, OH. 45743
PH. (614) 985-4212
We Use Von Schrader
Equipment Recommended
by Leadinc Carpet Manufacturers.
'FREE ESTIMATES"
2·27·1 mo.

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

tFroo Eotimotoo)
REDUCED WINTER RATES
Pomeroy, Ohio

OFF

ANY SERVICE
Expires March 17

- Addons and r..-nodeUng
- Roofing end gutter work

PH.

992·2725

2-6·1 mo.

•. f

WRITESEL
ROOFING CO.

Ph. 614-662-5311

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

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

1

949·2263

1 mo.

4H - l ""
111 ' "'"''-O•n ..
J)J ~ ....
Ill · flo• ",.~.,
an · lulloln

'.'

""
""""

Public No~lce

Merch 7, 1976. Still greotly
mloood by hlo wlfo. Alton•
and tont Paul &amp; Horace Kerr

col·

doughtero, Kethryn More
e. grondchildron. Bloooed
ore tho dNd, who dlo In the

&amp;

Lord. from hence forth now,

Seith the Spirit. they moy

GUN SHOOT
r~--~-----

-'--------·
- --- --.....

1

Curb Inflation II
1
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I
own -8d
and orort" by mail with this

· Write your

coupon. Cancel your ad bV phone when you ge1
, results. Monev not refundable.

Nam•-------------------

•'

I
' I

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER--985-3307

.

Bu4

Co.
. l ."BIId" lcGhtt.
loss of _property."

4 Family Sale. Friday 9th
from 9 to 4 . Centenary
Townhouse.

Middleport

chine repair. parta, and
suppliet.
Pick up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

Celt

Vacancy: Julia'a Peraonal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Convalescence
Home. 18 years experience.

MILLER
ELECTRIC·

.. Racine Gun Club hat discontinued Gun ahoott until

pleaae write
CARPORT SALE:Intorooc- IfThointerested,
P.O. Bx
tion of 143 end 7. Litdo of 262,FriondohipCiub,
Tupporo Pleino, Dh,
everything, garden plows &amp;
implements. Sale. Weds , 46783.
Thuro. &amp; Fri . Cell992-7463.
MAGIC SHOW. Needing on
entertainer for your party or
social group 1 Why not have a
magician entertain you . For
more information call 814·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

992-7362.

13

SANDY AND BEAVER ln-

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hanford Community
Canter. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conaigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynold&amp;
Auctioneer . 304 - 276 ·

Phone 814-388-B690.

S.ERVICE
For all yo~r wirin&amp; ·
needs; furnaces repair ·
service 1nd installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195

Mt. Alto Auction . Every
Saturday 6 p.m . Consign·
menta accepted 1 :00 till uta
time. Emma Bell auctioneer.

4288177 Uc. 429-B4.

Or 992·5875

.

-

-,.'!--

"

______

7_ _ _ _ _ __

··-----9. _ _ _ _ __

29. _ _ _ __

1
-_
--_
- _11. 0
_.
_
_
12. _ _ _ _ __
" 1i . · -~~---

1~. - - - - - -

15. - - - - 16. - - - - - -

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni·
turo, 446-3169. 3rd. &amp;

Olive St .. Gallipolis, Dh.

Wanted to buy square dancing clothes. Size 10. any

typo. Call 446-4637.

Used Mobile Homes &amp;
Campers. Travel Trailers.
Want to lease Hunting rights
on approx. 500 acre
Will do babysitting in my

30. _ _ _ __

31. - - - -32. -~-==~~

33.=====
:M.

35. _ _ _ __

The Dally Sentinel
m C:Dilrt st:

PomeroyJ Oh•.45169

••

end dopondeblo. Coli 4483169 between 9 and 6.
Will do houaecleaningl
Homaa. office&amp;, building&amp;.

etc. Cell 614-246-9600.

Wathings &amp; Ironing&amp; done.

Cell 992-8822.

FinanCial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends
tHat you do buaineu with

people you know. ond NOT

to aend money through the
mail until you have invetti·
gated the offering .
For Sale or Lease. Country
Carryout &amp; Deli. Upper River

Rd . Gollipolio, Ohio. Coli
614-446-2192 or 614-446and dependable. Call 446- 9171 .
3159 between 9 end 6.
Complete Chimney Sweep
Will do housecleaning!
Homes. offices, buildings.

coot. Call 446-7136.

etc. Call614-246-9500.

Puppiea to giveaway. Call

Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti·
onaaring service. Call

Call

Rodney Howery 614-6987231 .

Buying daily gold, silver
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins. large currency . Top prices. Ed. Bur·
katt Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

business

for

sale.

Call

614-379-2668, anytime.

Own Y.our own Jean ·
Sportswear, ladiea apparel.
combination, accettories.
large size store . National
brands: Jordacha. Chic, Lee.
Levi. Vanderbilt, lzod .
Gunna Sax. Esprit, Brittania.
Calvin Klein, Sergio Valente.
Evan Picone , Claiborne .
Members only. Bill Bass.
Organically Grown. Health-

lex, 300 others. $7,900 to
$24,900. inventory, air Cell 81-4.-.2_66faire . training . fixtures .
1945.
- - Middleport, Oh . 614-992- grand opening, etc . Mr .
Keenan !305)678-3639.
4 puppies to give away. part 3476.
Pook-e-poo. Cell992-6981 . Cash paid for fancy iron or
heavy iron beds. $160 and 22 Money to Loan

2 female puppiet, amall
mixed breed with curly long

hair. Very adorable. Celt
eftor6 p.m. 614-742-3104.

up for certain Meigs Co.
stone jars . Old time cup-

floor

only.

Write

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES Balow market rates .
Fixed conventional FHA VA . Leader Mortgage ,

Athens, collect 614-6923051 .
N.L. Stevens &amp;: Associates
hive real eatate loans with a
9 % interest rite . · Call Jeri

Allie at 614-379-2789.
23

giving

Professional
Services

1 yoor old dog. mod. omolt, directions. Witten Pianos,
oxc. with children. 304- Box 188, Sardis Oh 43946 . PIANO TUNING Lower
675-1786 or 304-676- Cell 814-4B3-1606.
priced regular tuninga discounts to Senior Citizen a,
4013.
Churches &amp; Schools. Werd'o
Benjle typo cfojj with lo~r.
Keyboard. 304•676·3824.
Elllpluytllent
six wnk old puppleo, any or
Serv lt:es
alt. 304-&amp;76-7833.

Real E:;Ltlt:

6

Mail This Coupon with Remittance

General Hauling and Trath
removal Service. Reliable

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

Giveaway

board . call 1-304-882 2711
17. - - - - - ·
18.
I 2 malo port lob pupploo, 2
HOUSEHOLDS
19,
I· port olkhound pupploo, 8 yr. COMPLETE
FURNITURE. Bods, iron,
20 - - - ' - - - - - 1 old malo neutered pug . Coli wood. cupboard&amp;. chairs.
·
1 614-992-6606. Humono chests. baskets. dishes,
21 .
I Society.
stone jars. antiques. gold
22
sliver . Wrlto -M.D.
·I 6 pupploo mother Blue Tick end
23 ·
Miller. Rt.2, Pomeroy. Ohio
·
I t4ihor Collie. Coli 614-9B6- 46769
or cell 614-9922~.
1 4120 .
7760.
~I ----~--~~~
2 block e. ten houndo,
26
old pianos. Paying
·
I femoloo muot go together. Wanted
$20. and $40. oech. First
27. -_ Coll814-742-2027.
28.
____

,

18 Wanted to Do

3069.

4

~oyeoble .

~- ----­
5.
_ _ _ _ __
~------

surence Co. has offered
aervicet for fire inaurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
coverage&amp; are availabJa to
meet individual needt. Conteet Eugene Holley, agent.

home. Cell 446-002B.

·2-Fomolo pupploo, 9 wko old.

'·------

Insurance

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm . An ·
tique &amp; liquidation sales.
Ucensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

September.

German Police Dog .

2. _ _ _ _ __

Interior and exterior paint·
ing, sandblasting. water blatting. paper hanging end
drywall finlthing . Free etti·
mates. fully intured. Cell

814-992-6022.

Clifton, W.V. 304-773 - 614-446-0175.
6B73.

814-446-3171 .

&lt; )Announcement
&lt; )ForRent

Mercer's Riverv iew Per·
sonal Care Home ha1 vacen cies for elderly per10n1.
Betty Mercer owner. 304·

446-3672

SWEEPER end oowing ma-

Goorgoo Crook Rd.
614-446-0294.

Situations
Wanted

Vacancy for elderly per10n .
Room. board. and cere. Cell

&amp; Vicinity

Jim Mink Chev.- Oids Inc.
Bill Gena Johnson

614-388-8419 oftor 6 pm.

I
I
I

12

·---·- rii)mei-ov ········· 814-949-2688.

3 Announcements

Mixed puppioo, 6 wko. old,

( )Wanted
( )For Sate

Trainee for amall businett
leading to manager position.
Contact Job Service in
person, 226 8th Street.
Point Pleaaant .

773-6882.

clean used cars .

614-256-1381 .

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
·•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

MAIN STREET. RUTLAND, OHIO
· HOUSEHOLD: Sears wood and -coal bur~er, RCA stereo console, smell fy_el gjl heater, 22,000 BTU a11 cond1110ner. electric fin radio, dishes, pqts and pans.
·
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTABLES: 188~. silver dollar. organ
. stool, cash register, wooden porch chair, bottles.
MiSC. Pop machine, counters an~ shelves, Re_gency scanner, Conn trombone, 36 inch Everlast punchmg b~g _and
gloves, pocket knives, ice skates, 2 sleds . W1zard cham saw,
dress·and drapery material. Also other m~cellaneous 1tems.
REAL ESTATE: Commercial .building. Greit investment.
Downstairs is laree 20'x60' room with bath, 4 room apartl!lent with bath upstaiis..To see property call Cheryl Lemley,
Sties Assoct•t•;.Bud f,lcGhee.R.ealty, 742:3171. Jo tfe ~old
with confirmation of owner..
.
·

······Giiiifi&gt;oils·-·······

their worko follow them .

wit&amp; known as puppiet.
Make your child happy at no

Phone·-----------------

per week . Part time . Good
hourly wage. Contact Pom•·
roy Heahh Care Canter.

Will cere for the etderty in my
home. Lots of reference&amp; .
Men or women . Call 814·

Yard Sale

9 Wanted To Buy
---------

FREEl Bundle of love other-

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

on Duty

TERMS: PII'IOIIII troperty-cllh 'or positive 1,0. Rill Es·
lite $1,000.00 Clih or certlfltd check at tlmt of sale.
Closlna must bt within 30 days.
Silt conductid by Jim Clmlhln. Aldlonter, 949-2708..

In Memoriam

mother·collie. father-?. Call

Personal Property 10:00' A.M.
Real Estate 11:00 A.M.

7

614-367-7101 .

In Memory of Purley T. Ken,
who paased away 9 yra . ago

We Hove A Full limo
Shop Technician

OWNER: AMOS TILLIS ,

1,395.00

Announcement s
2

Phoylcel Theroplot 6 doyo

304-675-4180.

We pay cash for lata model

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Do&amp; Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
10·6-tlc

SATURDAY, MARCH 10, 1984

hill!

LOST black female Gorman
Shepherd with lea ta
enswertto Char. REWARD .

WVe . 304-773-5786 or
304-773-9185.

CHIMNEY KING
CHIMNIU SWUP

Babyaltter wanted In GrMn

School Dlotrlct. Coli 814448-0492 ofter 8pm .

Harper' s Adult Care Home
Auction every Tuesday hat a vacancy for another
night. Pt. Pleasant, WVa . resident . elderly parson. Call
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth 304-675-1293.
Center Bldg .• Camden St r

rett from their laboun, for

UTILITY BUILDINGS

AUCTION

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

814-843-6346.

8

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

••1

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes St1rt From 12'x16'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Lost female. Fox hound.
Ught red &amp; tan on back .
White ring on neck, white
legs a. cheat. Has collar. but
hal wrong ph . no. on it. Lost
in Bald Knob eree . Cell

&amp; Vicinity
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Help Wanted

867-3402.

PARTS and SE RVtCE

POIIEROY. OHIO

11

82

•Dryers •freezers

MEIGS INN

11

Loot : on Neighborhood Rd .,
medium-olzeJ mole dog, 814-992-8808.
white with block • brown,
heocheinonochod.enoworo Fuller representatives
for Meigs &amp; eur~0 ]!~er f;1~ :~ 4 "448 . needed
rounding counties. Call814·
742·2126.

•Refrigerators

For Resesrvations

Guysville, Ohio

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
W4'd lib to Introduce JOU lo
· EnPCt-A·Car, the modern
to drtn the vohlclo of JOUr
choico.
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
ltx, 326
Pomtroy, DH. 45769
Fw F11t11 Strvlco
C.ll 614-992-6737

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985 -3561
All Makes

Roofina Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
16 Yeera Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992· 7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tfc

PDQ SATELLITE SYSTEMS

Oener~l

FARM HOME - Wood &amp; coal stove heat, 4·5 bedrooms &amp;
bath on 4 acres, garden space, orchard &amp; pasture, lounda·
. tion for 2 buildings .. Asking $25,000.
APARTMENT FOR RENT- I bedroom. kitchen. living room.
furnished, $150.00 month. water. sewage, you pay gas &amp;
electric, deposit required.
To Buy or Sell
Call Nancy Jaspers
949·2901

WeHatethe
lowest Rates

ROUSH

PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

Rt. 329

Also Transmission
PH . 992 -5682
or992 -7 121
_ .tfc
3 24

J.J .IIc

Only

NEW USTNG - Well kept 2 bedroom home, V-shaped
kitchen, basement can easily be made into tamlly 'room, 2
·nice size porches, I car garage, level tot. Call for details,
don't miss this one. Asking only $21.000.
·

AL TROMM
742-2328

Parts &amp; Service

G&amp;W

Gas &amp; Water Pipe
Regulators &amp;
Fitting a
Volume Drips
Sewage Pipe
Gaa Appliance•
Bus. Ph. 985-3813
Res. Ph. 985-3837
Longllollom, Oh .

Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

. AND OlHER MAJOR BRANDS

PROBATE COURT OF
PROBATE COURT OF
ME1G8 COUNTY, OHIO
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO .
ESTATE OF JOliN PICKENS, ESTATE OF KENNETH D.
JR'.. DECEASED
EWS, DECEASED
CaM No. 24248 Docket 12 · CaM No. 24312 Docket 12
peg~388
.
Plge397
NOTlC! OF
NOnCE OF
•
APPOI~ENT
APPOINTMENT
OF F1
IARY
OF FlDICUARY
On December 29. 19B3. 1n
.On December 2. 19B ~. 1n1~e
the Me1gs · ~01Jnty Probate _Melgs
..Cliudty_F!J:obata Court.
l:ouri. Case No. 211T4B. Bruce· Case N
243 12. Lou•.se Ellis.
D. Pickens. 25B1; Smith Ridge Reule 3.o.Albany.
Meigs Courj)y.
Road, Portland. Ohto. was Ohto 45·710; was appqlnted
appointed Aclrrtinistrator ol the Adm1n1stratnx ot the estate 10f
eslale ol John' P1ckens. Jr.. Kenneth 0 .flits. deceased, l ~to
deceased. lale of Portland. ·a! Albany. Ohio 4571,0.
OhiO.
' Roberl E Buck.
Robert E. Buck.
. ~rebate. Jud)le
PrObate Judge
By· Lena K. Nesselroad.
BY: Lena K.,Nosselroad.
Clerk
T,
Clerk · t31 1: f&lt;f."21: :J1c
I
13)/. 4; H:-31c·
- '

'

949-28o0

BACK H0E
WORK

u' s' RT ' 50 ·EAST

12 Gauge Shotguns

CENTRAL REALTY

Moon" Co , W\1
AtNCOtlolO.

1 ..

CO.
"Beautiful, Cuatom
Built Oaraaea"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Baohan Building
EVERY
SAT. 'NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke

1••// .. uin Jl l• •l•·f •I•" '" ' '":'..J''W il&lt;'• .

I .

Public Notice

MIDDLEPORT - 5 Room
ranch w1th 3 bedrooms.
equipped kitchen. patio.
storage building, barbe~ue
pit fenced yard and mce
sh;ubbery. Good location.
Just $31.900.00.

IIIITWID - Uke new ranch
with full basement carport,
sllnge. 3 bedrooms. carpeting
lnd 2 acres.

1'/•., •ifi•·•II"'Jl''' ,.,., •·r 1 /, , .

U ·h&lt;lMN

Public Notice

NEW LISTING -Near Port·
land - Approximately 22\\
acres of land with a 14x70, 2
bedroom mobile home, all
electric. A new barn. root
cellar. Some fencing for pas·
ture and tillable acreage.
$24,000.00.

IIIIERSVIUI - Very reasonable 3 bedroom home with
bath, furnace and carpeting,
VN!W ol the river.

8

71·1""''
.....,.
JJ.,...,,,•wo

,.,,

RACINE - 2.53 acres. 3or 4
bedroom rice older home near
hi;! school. Bath, gas furnace,
blsement. and prage. AsiUng
$40,00),
.

POIEIOY - Remodeled 3
bedroom all carpeted home.
Nice bath, basement. patio,
prden and prage. $34,!XXl.

Meigs man changes
plea in Gallia court

Or

NEW LISTING - Miners·
ville - Mini farm . Approx. 9
acres with a 2 bedroom ni·
cety remodeled home with
lots ot cabinet space. barn,
mitkhouse, fruit trees. fenc·
ing, and a good garden area.
$22,500.00.

SYRACUSE - 2 klls. 7 rms.,
bath. furnace, woodbumer, 4
bedrooms, all utilities. Just
$25,(0).

COLUMBUS- Columbia Gas of gas possible when It Is ecoi)Omlcally major field, located In Delaw~
County and operated by Industrtal
Ohio (COH) has obtained a major feasible, Lee said.
"This Is the second time In recent Natural Gas Corp., In the faU of
supply of Ohio gas from a natural
gas field near Athens.
months that we have been able to 1983. That field also Is expected to
James R. Lee, vice president for obtain a very substantial source of provide about a billion cubic feet of
natural gas per year to Columbia.
supply planning for COH, said a gas near our marketing area "In order for Ohio gas purchases
contract has been signed to eventu- almost In our own back yas:d." Lee
ally buy nearly one billion cubic feet said.
- to be advantageous to COH custoGas began nowtng from the other mers, the gas field should be
of gas a year for COH customers
reasonably close to our markets,
from wells being drtlled by produ ·
cerEdward E. Alha.
have a sufficiently high heat
content, and of sufficient quantity, "
"All Columbia customers In Ohio
Lee said. The Athens gas meets all
will benefit from this gas supply,
the necessary crtterta, he said.
which will cost considerably less
than a comparable amount of gas
GALLIPOLIS - A Tuppers
from other parts of the United Plains man, who earlier entered a
States," Lee said.
not guilty plea to an Indictment
Weather forecast
"We are pleased that this field charging assault has changed his
can produce a substantial enough plea to gunty. Michael L. Bissell, a!,
Becoming cloudy ·again tonight
supply that we will be able to made the plea change In Gauta
with a chance of snow late tonight.
purchase from It for many years. County Common Pleas Court. He
Low around 25. 'Easterly winds 5-10
To put In perspective the amount of was secretly Indicted for allegedly
mph. Thursday. occasional SI\OW
gas we will be obtaining, one billion knifing Randy L. Daniels, a!, Rt. 1,
mainly In the morning with ~
cubic feet of gas annually Is enough Crown City, durtng an altercation In
accumulations likely. High ~­
th supply the needs of a town of Mercerville last December9. Judge
Chance of Snow 50 pept ton~Abt
25,00) population."
Richard Roderick ordered that a
and 90 percent Thursd~.
Initially, the company will ~- pre-sentencing report be prepared
Extended 01*1 Forecast
celve about one-third of a billion by the adult parole authortty and set
Friday through Sunday:
cubic feet of gas a year. As gas from a sentencing date for March 29.
Chance of snow llurrles northeut
more wells becomes available. the
early Friday. Otherwllle fair 11!111
annual amount will Increase to the
cold through lbe period. Momng
blllipn cubic foot level In about two
lows ~15 Friday and Saturday and
and one-half years, Lee said.
The trailer home ·of Wayne
·~25 011 Sunday. Highs IIIOIItb' In lbe
Atha already has drtlled 14 wells Cleland on the Dexter Hoad was
al8 Friday. mld-201! to mld-3is
In an area east of Athens. near
.
Saturday and mld-:.18 to mld4B
oiJ '
1 1h
guttedbytlreat9:28a.m. Tuesday.
Guysvllle. The w.,.
s are n e Rutland firemen were at the scene
Sunday.
townships of Canaan, Carthage,
Tuesday morning and returned at
Lodl and Rorne.
35 p.m. when the fire rekindled.
A three- Inc h d larneter P1pe11 ne 7:
Causeoftheblazeand the monetary
wUI be built to tie Into the COH
Mam'ADie la'cense
-e
system 1n Athens. eo mp1euon 1s losses were not determined today.
At 9:03 p.m. the Rutland Fire
ed I tl
I
th 1 ttl 1
expecht 0fn mfe orth e nfl aid DepartmentalsowenttotheElwood
A marriage license has beEn
pure ase. gas rom e new e
wnson residence on the New Lima Issued In the Meigs County Probafe
by swnmehr.
h
Hoad where 11 was thought a Court · to Brent Arnold, 23, and
1
The At ens gas pure ase s a · chimney fire might be developing. Denise Elaine White, a!. both of
significant success In Columbia's
Pomeroy.
·
·
b
11 the Ohl
However, noflrewas located.
ff
r--o-ngo-ln_g_e_ort_s_to_u_y_a_ _ _ _o - - - - - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , . .

Hobert E. Day

r

.

IIEW USrlfiG - Southern
schools. 3 bedroom. full
besement. large fenced tot.
bath, .woodburner . Only
S35.!XXl.

Columbia Gas signs deal
I Area deaths I for Athens area gas field
Mrs. Barbara McGinnis, 101. the
former Barbara Graber of Meigs
County, died Wednesday at her
residence at 4000 German H.idge
Road, Huntington, W. Va.
Shelssurvlvedbyadaugher,Mrs.
Edith Blatt, Huntington, four grandchildren, two great-grandchildren,
and several nieces and nephews.
She was preceded In death by her
parents, two sisters, two brothers,
her first husband, Lewis Neutzllng
and her second husband, Thomas
McGinnis.
Services wUI be held at 10 a.m.
saturday at the Sacred Heart
Church In Huntington. Burtal will be
In Sprtng Hill Cemetery, Huntington. Frtends may caU at the Reger
Funeral Home, al15 Adams Ave.,
Huntington.

r. . 2nd 51.

Phone
1·( '14 )-992-3325

Including IIIII well being drilled near Guynllle. All
Columbia of Ohio customers wiD benefit from the PI

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL fORD
992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-U-tlc
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum'
SIDING .

TEAFORD

Barbara McGinnis

6

poodle.
In vicinity
of JockLoot' little
girl'o dog.
black
t;::=======::;'1r;:=======~rr:=~~~;;~==~;::=======ll
.--,.------,
.
BOGGS
DOZER
oon Pike, if found -dollvor to
ORDER AND TAKE
· RADIATOR
Roger Hysell groundo.
Golll• county Jr . Falr enoworo to 'Nicky' .
DELIVERY
SERVICE
SALES &amp; SERVICE
AND
GARAGE
Coll814-448-4120.

the area 40 years ago are sUI
producing and there Is no depletion
of gas In the area.
The state requires, according .to
the defendants' tesllrilOJ\Y, one acre
spacing for drilling. The defendants
may drtU on 10, 15 and 20 acre
spacing.
The defendants did not feel that
the drUllng of gas and oil wens would
Interfere with the safety or development of coal.
It was brought out that the
number of wells drilled In the area
could go as high as 150 wens.
Others taking the stand for the
defendants were Jack Crtsp and
Gary Gindlesperger, vice president
of expiration development.
Gindlesperger dlsageed that
there would be depletion of oil and
gas he felt they would be very
economical wells andn a good
return on an Investment.

Hobert E. Day, 61, Rt. 2, Coolville,
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. died Tuesday In Medina Hospital,
" COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Department of Taxation re- ( AP) -The former head of the Ohio
Medina following an extended
ports that the average state Income Environmental Protection Agency,
Illness.
tax refund so far this year Is more Wayne S. Nichols, has died In a
Mr. Day was born at Flora, Ohio
car-truck accident about five miles
than double that of last year.
the son of the late Evert and Clarice
Department figures show that west of here.
Qulvey Day. He was also preceded
Nichols, 61, of Worthington, Ohio,
· · through March 2, a total of
In death by twin daughters and two
: $47,387,931 was authorized for pay- was killed Tuesday when the 1983
~rot hers.
.' ment to 534,900 taxpayers for aJI Cadillac he was driving was struck
He was a veteran of World War II
aVerage refund of $88.60. The broadside by a 10-ton .dump truck
a member of DAV Post 53,
agency said this compares with loaded with gravel, the Broward . Pomeroy, and a member of the
.. $13,109,852 paid to 311,365 taxpayers County Sheriff's Office said.
Church of Clirlst. He was employed
The accident, which was under for tlie past ID years ·at Ohio ·
~ foranaverageretundof$42.11lnthe
lnvest:.gatlon, happened at about
similar period of 1983.
University as custodian supervisor.
10:47 a.m., sheriff's spokesman
He Is survived by his wife, Retha
George Crollus said. He said Nichols
M. Day; one son; Jetrrey A. Day,
died of massive hel!(l and Internal
Spokane, Wash.; one daughter,
Ohio lottery winner
Injuries at Florida Medical Center In
Mrs. Donald (Clarice) Mae Ran·
Lauderdale Lake. ·
dolph, Wadsworth, Ohio; one sister,
CLEVELAND (AP) The
Betle Dorst, Baltimore, Ohio seven
winning number drawn Tuesday .
. grandchlldren and one_ great,
_:. nlJht In ·the Qhlo Lotte.y!s dally ·
. graildchlld.
~ game, "TheNumber,"was684.
F.unliral services will be . held
• In the ''Pick 4" game, played
Frtday at 1 p.m. at the White
~' Monday through Friday, the win·
FUneral Home In CoolvUle with
•' Jllngnwnllerwas0148.
John
Whlteotficlatlng. Burtalwlll be
The lottery reported earnings of
In
Cherry
. Ridge Cemetery near
$465,315.&amp;l from wagering on Its
Alfred. Graveside mUltary rites wm_
dally game. Eamlngscameonsales
~ conducted. FJiends may call at
. tl $1,172,~. · wblle holders .ot

·. wlnllllli tickets were entttled to

Business Services

· 154 Mlac.

Fairboard discusses new attraction
Plans for a brand new attraction
designed for children were made
when the Meigs County Fair Board
: met Monday night at Rock Sprtngs.
The new attraction to be featured
· at the annualfair for the flrsttlme Is
" Augustlsachildren'stractorpuUlng
contest. Three types of tractor
· replicas - aU without motors and
.' moving depending upon the
strength oftheparticlpatlngyoungs. ters through the use of pedals- will
· beusedforthepuU. Eventswlllbe
• held each day and on saturday,
flnaUsts will compete for grand

The

Ohio

Lost and Found

11

Help Wanted

Found: Shetlond Sheepdog.
In vicinity of Rotllng Acreo e.
Sondhllt Rd. In Pt. Pt..oont. Sell tho boot, soli AVON .
Hoo,_ block coller. no togo. Morch Special- a low otartup foo. Cell 814-448-3358.
Colt 314-87&amp;-16151.

31

Homes for Sale

Four room houM on comer

lot at 2330 Lincoln Avenue .
Phone 304-676-343&amp;.

�,
~

-

...

. ..

..

The Daily

Ohio
12- Tbe
31

Sentinel

·Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Homea for Sale

151 Hou11hold Goode

47 Wented to Rent

Mobllo homo. 21oroo bdrm ..
fumlohod, oorpot, nloo !lot
2.1111 ooroo lond. Oorogo,
potlo, oollor. 2 mlloo from
Rt. 7, Orovor Rd. Choohlre.
Coli 111 4· 317· 7870.

Wontod to ront .or with
option to buy 3 bdr. homo in
alty oohool dlltrlat or Oreon.
Oorogo o muot. Cell 441·
2108.
Wontod to ront, Hoy bot·
tomo In Rutlend eroo. Coli
e 14· 742-29211.

For 8olo: Now 3 IR houoo,
1332 oq. ft. with 31oto. 400
ft . rood frontogo by 1 20 ft.
doop, fontootlc buy *112.000
for all or will ooll any port.
Call 1114-4411-17118.

Couplo nood1 houoo or
oportment. Profor Middle·
port oroo. At looot 2 bdr. Cell
982-1111811 iftor !1:30PM ..

Homo Muat Selll Outotanding Buyl Deoll Deoll Doell
Middleport. Coli 814-8928941 .

For Leese'

Boum oddltlon, 3 badrooma,
2'h botha, A.C.. Iomily room
with fireplace. 2 acrea.
t87 .600. No down payment, owner will carry at no
interell for 5 yeara. Loao.
ooaumptlon pooolblo. 8149B6-4387.

51 Household Goods

9 86-4 387.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Five bedroom, 2VJ baths,
one acre, pool. children• 1- - - - - - - -- playground equipment.
large living room, garage. 12x60 2 bdr. oil electric
stove, refrigerator, dis - trailer, part. turn .• $5,000.
hwasher, washer a. dryer. Call 614-247·4666 .
gao hoot. Mull soli. job
move. 992-3643.
33
Farms for Sale
For 11le. House in Miners-

ville on Welahtown hill. Coli
61 4-9B6-4301 .

110 acre farm ; 40 acres
tillable.rest pasture. Good
fences. 7 RM remodeled
house. 2 car metal garage. 2

Four bedroom all electric
brick home. for aale or trade.

pond a. 2 borna. 10,870 lb.

2 baths, large living room

yearly

with fireplace. dining room .
2 car garage, on 1 acre. 1
milo North. of Chootar Rt.7.
Twenty minutea from Bel pro. $65,000. coll304-7735319 or304-773-5421.

$112 ,000. Call 614-2681922.

tobacco

base ;

114 acre farm on Roush
Hollow Rd . Has house, barn.
silo. other buildings. Call

614-388-8626 .
1Ox50 mobile homo 2 bdr .•
patio, ahed, aet up on 2 Iota,
river view, cioN to stores
and gas at~tion. Air cond.,
price $8,500. Coli 9922026 .
7 rooms and bath by owner
in Woat Columbia. W.Vo.

34

Business
Buildings

lnves.tment property in Rio
Grande. apartment building,

1 yr. old. 3-2 bdr. apt's.

Having work in other state
will ule at reasonable price.
Will be in on weekends or
can be contacted at 412 -

Good monthly income,

452 -4468. Owner John
Albright.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Newly romodolod houao,
llvo rooms ond both. 2602
Uncoln Avenue. Priced to

1011. $22,000.00. 304-87112888.

$42.600 . Call 446-8038 .

One -Third of an acre lot in

Village of Vinton. S1 .200.
Call 614-2511-1690.
lots for sale. Racine. Re-

Twin aingle. Apt. Bldg .
304-8711· 7641 ovonlnga.

duced prices. Call 614-9492340 or 949-2671 .

3 br homo, lorgolot, gordon
spot, 2805 Uncoln Avo.
$52.000. 304-875-5047
oftor 6 p.m.

Home sites. two thou sand
down. Paul Simon. 5 Points,

1 4x70 '81 model. 2 badrooms. bath and lA. ready to

live in. K &amp; K Mobile Homoa.
304-875-3000.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS,
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
1114-448-7672.

Rt. 7. Pomeroy. Ohio. Call
614-992-2571 or 992 3830 .
Acreage tor solo. 304-6757641 evenings.A

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

1 bdr. opt. $175 . 2 bdr.
house. 1 bdr. apt., 1 bdr. apt.

furnished trailer on private

~978 Shultz 14x70 control

6 room house for rent at 44
Olive St., inquire at 918
Second Ave.

4 bodrooma 14x66 plus
12x20 room . fireplace. cen tral air. storage bldg .• porch
&amp; awning. excen,nt condi-

tion. French City Brokorogo
Services. Coli 448-8340.
1·4x70 new disploy model
'muot ooll' 3 bdr .. 2 botha.
cathedral ceiling 'unbelieva-

3643 .
14x70 total electric 3 bdr ..
lot, 10 min.lrom town $200
mo. Ref. &amp; dep. required.

Call614-266-1393.

Small 4 rooms . &amp;

bath,

furnished. loe. 735 rear 3rd.

Ave.. Gallipolis. Call 4463870 or 446-1340.
Furnished 1 bdr. cottage.

55% Garfield Ave .. Gallipolis. No pets, one small child,
reference and deposit
required.
House for rent 2 or 3 bdr. in
Pomeroy, nice. Days 992 -

2381 . eve. 992-2609 .
Three bedroom house for
rent Point Pleasant, 304 -

882-3329 or 304-676 7112 .

80 Footer. new 14x80
Schult-Muat sao. French

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Brokerage

12x80 2 bdr. modern fur-

1974 Community mobile

or 4411-4434.
1979 fully underpinned .
14x70 3 bdr .. 2 full botha.
approx. Yt acre. well shaded
lot. Mid S20's. (;all 614388-8967 otter 6:30PM .
3 bedroom. 2 bath. central
.air, basement garage, recreation room, large kitchen
&amp;. living room. green school
district. close to Holzer.

$64.995. Call 448-4428.
1·971 Vindalo 12X66 Trailer
with expondo. Coli 814379-2124.
78 Bayview. 12X80 with
largo 12X8 expendo, stove,
refriger,tdr. 2 BR. 1 lli'tli; ax. cond .. nowly carpotad,
Central Air. anchorod &amp;
underpinned. olao Included
Iorge 1 8X8 UtHity buHdtng.
Ownora must a$o,fodtemp
Uood 2 bedroom · mobile
homeo. furnished. 1Ox60
and 12x62 ilzeo. Your
chonce to own o comlorto·
flli hiiil'io. Browns ttoller
Coult. Mlrierovlll. Olr. 814·
882-3324.

depoait raq . Call 614-4488668 .
2 bdr. trailers. no city taxes.
beautiful river view in Ka nauga. FOsters Trailer Park.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St., Golllpollo. New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stoves.
8 piece wood living room
suite with 8 inch flat erma
S399, bunk beds complete
with bunkies *199, 2 piece

antron livingroom suites
$199. antron recliners $99,
other recliners $80, maple

dinette aeto $179. box
spring s &amp; mattress twin or
lull $100 sot regular-firm
8120, mople dinotto cholra
8 35. waah atonda $34,
maple rockers $69, 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149. 6
piece dinette set $99. used
bedroom suites. refrigerators, rangea, chest. dreuers,
wringer washers, TV's, dry-

era. &amp; ohooa. Coli 81 4-448·
One bedroom furnished mo bile home. located outskirts

Hondorson. All utilitieo ineluded $246 .00 month
304-675-8730.

3159.

1---- - - -- - -

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sola, choir, rocker, ottomon, 3 tobloa, (oxtro hoovy
by Frontier), $885. Solo,
chair ond loveaeet, 8 2711 .
Solos ond cholro priced from
44
Apartment
$285. to *895. Toblao. *46
for Rent
ond up to *125. Hide-oboda,$440 . ond up to
$526 .. Recllnora, $175. to
Furnished efficiency. $146 . $375 .. 1.8mpo from UB . to
Utilities poid. Shore bath . 875.6 pc. dinot1oa from
607 2nd. Gallipolia. Coli 199 .. to 436. 7 pc. $1B9
448-4418 otter 7 PM.
and up. Wood toblo with alx
choirs $426 to $745. Dolk
$110 up to $225. Hutchea.
JACKSON ESTATES 1660. ond up, maple or pine
APARTMENTS (Equal linlah . Bunk bod complete
Housing Opportunity) haa with mattresses. $260. and
one and two bedrooms. rent up to $396. Baby boda,
starting at $157 for one

$11 0 . Mattresses or box

bedroom

apringa, full or twin, $68.,
firm. $88. and $78. Ouaon
aota, 1195. 4 dr. choato.
$42 . 5 dr. choata, $54. Bod
lramea, UO.ond 826 ., 10
gun - Gun cabinota, 8350.
Goo or electric rongaa $376.
Baby mottro-•. 825 &amp;
$36, bad lramoo $20, 82&amp;,
&amp; $30, king lromo $110.
Good ooloction of bedroom

and

$193

per

month for two bedroom,

with $209 deposit locotod
near Foodland and Spring

Valley Plozo, pool and TV
ant. Coli &lt;148-2745 or loavo
message.

Attic apt. furnished S175 .
Utilities poid. Shore bath,
men only. 919 2nd. Ave.
Gallipolia. Coli 446-4416
altar 7 PM .

auites . cedar cheats .
rockers, metal cabinets.
awivel rockers.

2 BR apt .• Gollipolia and 1
BR trailer, Eureka. Ref. •nd

Dop. Coli 614-256-1629.

Sm•ll efficiency apart .• central air 8t heat, 1 professional

type gentleman only. 4480338 .

Uaed Furniture -- Bar &amp; 2
stools, ranges. chaira, dryera, refrigerators and TV' a. 3

miloa out Bulovillo Rd. Open
9am to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri ..
9om to 6pm. $at.
814-446-0322
TV &amp; Applioncoa. 827 Third
Avo., Gollipolia, 614-4461899. Spin waohoro, gao &amp;
electric dryer a. auto

washers.
Furniahed apt., near HMC . 2

bdr .. S235 . utiltlleo pd .. 243
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis .
Call446-4416 after 7 PM .
1 bedroom Apt. $196. mo .
including utilities . Equal
Housing Opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apts .

814-992-7787.
Riverside Apta. Middleport.
Special

rates

for

Senior

ing Opportunities . 614-

992-7721.
-lc2 bedroom apt .. S160. per
month. 860. deposit. You
pay utilities. Racine area .

Call 614-949-2271 .
Furnished · apartment for
rent in Syracuse. Call after

5:30 p.m. 992-7689.
In Middleport. 2 room eft.
apt . Call 1-304-882-2668 .
New 1 bedroom furnished
apartment in Middleport.

Call 614-992-6304 .
Apt. lor rent, call 614-9926908 .
Apartment for rent . Call

Cleland Realty. 992-2269 .
homes. houses . Pt. Pleasant

nished · trailer, convenient
location, Upper River Rd.

muat aell now. Call after
&amp;PM &amp; weekends 448-7619

and references. 304-676·
2464.

and Gallipolis . 614-448·
8221 .

Coli 448-9340.

moahor, AC. all carpeted.

2 bedroom unfurnished. pri vate Jot. in Burdette Addn .
$200 plus utilities, deposit

APARTMENTS . mobile

Services.

home, refrig .. stove, trash

S176 .00 MONTH . 304 576-2711 .

Citizens. S130 . Equol Houo-

ble price' . French City Brokoroge Sarviceo. Coli 4489340.

City

wide all electric mobile
home, setting on lot ready to
move into. $200.00 down

2 bdr. apt. Utilities partiafy

fum . Coll304-676-5104 or
304-675-6386.

1 977 1 2x80 mobile homo, 2
(&gt;dr .• furnished. good cond ..
$8,300. Coli ofter 4 and on
waokonds. 814-258-8818 .

Holley Pork 1973. 14k80. 2
bdr.. aldrting &amp; storoge
building, excellent condition . French City Brokerogo
,.Services. Call 448-9340.

WITH OPTION TO BUY. 14'

t166 mo. All utilities poid.
Deposit &amp; Ref. 446-3045 or
448-2602.

Nice 2 bdr. home. fireplace.
new kitchen. city school
district. Call Jim Cochran at
the Wiseman Agency. 446-

¢ond. on rented lot. Coli
.veninga 4411-2076.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished Eff. Apartment.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL(IY MOBILE HOME SALES.
It MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
fiT 36. PHONE 814-448·
7274.

air, all new furniture. ex.

ltory ond Clerk plono ond
bonoh. exo. oond. •too
firm. 304·1711·7412 or
1 4-44e-eeo3.

r•nges,

gas &amp;

electric

refriger.atOrs,

EVENING

Knouff Firewood Pickup or
Dellvarod. 1 2" ·22" otocked
In yord. HIAP vendor,
prompt dollvory. 814-2111·
112411.

8:00 • I}) I]) Cl l]) ® Cll (j})
New•
I}) MOVIE: 'To Cotch A
King'
I}) MOVIE: 'Scovongar
Hunt'
CII Now Treaaure Hunt
(]) Fl1hln' Hole 'FIIhing for

TV

seta.

lt7·:1HI.

c

Annlvaraory Solo Sovo up tp
26% from March 4 to 17.
Wood World 21108 Grand
Control Avo .. Vlanno. WYo.
304-295-8133.
1,000 gol. underground luol
tenk axe. cond. Would even
make a good culvert •3&amp;0.
Call 448·41137.
2-8:711x18.11 tubalaaa .retreodo with atuda *20 eoch.
Alao aix 9:110x18.6 coalnga
aultoble lor rocopping. 8 ply
rating $2.110 each. Coli
448-4637.
1 0 opaod biko, hog creta·
58"x38"x30". hoovy duty,
now. Coll814-2118-11i61 .
Carda by tha box. Birthday,
all occasion, get-welt, sym pathy, anniversary. Sale by

Socot Slatero In Chriat. Call
268-1749. If no onawor
268-6833.
Antiquo Mohogony sac tlonol bookcue. Blonde
dook ond choir with file
drower, Studio couch with
choir. Coli 1114·448-3788.
Grovety, oloctrlc.. atort, duol
whoola. good C:ond .. *800.
Call814-2118-1989.

55 Building Supplies

41ft mi. west of Gallipolis; on

largo private lot. • 176/ mo ..
pluo dep. &amp; utilities. Ref.
required. Call 446-2876.

ments, water heater, atept,
windoWs, doort, f•uceta,

braokers. otc . HotPolnt
hoovy-duty electric dryero.
thla month only *278.
Kingsbury Homo• Porto ond
Acce11ory Store. 900 Eoot
Moln St.. old Bookmobile
building In Pomeroy or coli
882-51187.
-lcCOUNTRY OAK FURNI-

1-- - -- - - TURE ;

Cupboards.

Sofoa.

Round

Tobloo.

Chairs, piu1 many

more

For sale, 5 mth . old Kirby
LITICIAN SPECIAL .
Sweeper. Coli 992-853p.
6,000 Imprinted matchoa.
or 1100 bumpor, otlckora
30 inch Frigidaire electric e1 00.00. All charges, Union
range . Avocado green. Good modo. H. 0 . "BAM" Some:
condition. $76 .00. Auto· rvlllo, 304-8711-3334, Point
motic oven. Coli 814-992- Plaonnt (oinco 1884 W.Ve.
6706.
Ucenood).

Judy Toylqr Grooming. Call
814-3117-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Profea-

slonol All-brood grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boordlng tocllltlaa. Engllah Cocker Sponlol pupploo. CoH 1114-3819790.

For rent Sleeping Rooms

city, completely furnished,
gao turn. &amp; olr, potlo &amp; off

and · light houao kaoplng
rooms. Pork Central Hotel.

hove~~C~o~lli8~1~4~-4~4~8~·~0~7~6~8~.~~

street
parking.
Muot
ref.
&amp; dep.
Call 448-4168.

on Rt. 36, ' Dop, &amp;
required. Coli 814-4411· .
4389 or 304-8711-9780.

room e1111.
. ·snore liitn, --"'i,l:i-lf-&amp;. rafrlg.
Oalllpollo.
ofter 7 PM .

Mobile home for ront, In
Roclne. Call 814-387 7148.

46 Space for Rent

,.Mobile home lor reot. 2
bedroom. nlctf lot, Roush
una, Cheahli i. 304-773IIBB2,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork; Route· 33, North of'.
Pomeroy. U.roo lot1. Coli
814-882•7479. '

8:00

Alradole T""ier pup1. Loyol,
protoctivo. lntetllgont. family poto. Good atock. AKC.
8176. lncludoa ahoto. Coli
814-592 -2170.
.

Dachshund ,

Pomeranian

pupa, AKC roglltorod. 304895-385B.
57

Musical
Instruments

i878 Pontioc 1.8Mono. VI,
oir-cond .. AM-FM. 87.000
mllaa. 304-8811-3371.

Gibson

guitar

with

new

1--.........,;..------

181111 Chovrolot, 4 door.
117,000 orlglnlol mlloo.
•aoo.oo. 304·1811· 3138
ofter llpm.

cooa. 30 yra. old. 882-3342.
Wurlitzer fun meker. 2 cuetom dlgltol muaic ayotom
O&lt;gon, llko n-. ON. Good
~uy. 304-875· 1 8B2.

72

Truck• for Sale

f ,;r 111 S,illl'll'"

,., I lVI'
61

:·11.~

Farm Equipment

I've spent all daLJ

Troy-Bilt tlllora. Chock our
apociol prlca boloro you buy
ony tlllora. lwlohor Implement Co. St. Rt.7 N. Galllpolia.OH. Coli 1114-4411·
04711.

Farmall

73

Cub cultiv•tora.

55 Building Supplies

Vana

&amp;4

W.O.

1878 Plymouth Troll Duotor
auto.. rodio. good tlroa,.
priced to aoH. Coli 448·
9340.
111B1 Chivy G-1 1von, e cyl ..
otondord,, rodlo, •4.4811.
John'o Auto Seto1, Bullville
Rd.. Oolllpolla. Coli 4411·
4782 . Opon till dark.

Livestock

Purabr.od Nubion Buck. 2
wka. old, dlabuddod. $3&amp; .
Popera ovoilable. Coli 614·
742-2708.
64

What do
this button
do, uran'pa
Skeezix?

Truck 77 FO&lt;d pickup, F100,
3 opood. low mlleoge. 304BB2-3330.

plowo. mower, *2.400.00.
Phone 304-678-2328 or
678-26011.
63

out my bill6 for
the tall man!

1881 Chovy·c . 10 PU, 8 ayl ..
otond .. with toppor, 11. - r
window, PI, Pl. Coli oftor
IIPM, 814-UII-IIIIi8.

WHEEL HORSE AND
WORK HORSE 1.8wn ond
Gorden Troctoro ond Acca1.
Quolity ot on offordoble
price. Sao us for o complete
line of porte and oorvlce.
.Jividen's Farm Equipment.
Call 4411·1 11711.

83
CITY• • .

OOZ!all
Henna.

HER MAIN
CONCERN WILL

8E. THE SAFE
RETURN OF HER

1874 Dodge von • I cyl.,
atondord, *4110. $moll utU·
lty troller. n - tlroa 8300.
Call 1114: 948-2719.

Hey &amp; -Grain

HlJ5MND.

Good condition hoy for ula.
Call 814-948-2B70.
Lorge round or aquora baleo.
Good quo lily. Opol Fltzpotrick. 814-1188-43711.
74

4000 bolo• of hoy. olfollo,
clovor. timothy, &amp; orchord
groos. ·*1 .110 por bole. 1114843-613B.

Motorcycle•

1877 Hondo 11110 Four·K,
vory good cond., .new tlreo
ond tune-up, hooder plj,ea,
wind jomor ond moro extroa.
Will aon for •aoo.oo: ,Coli
304-11711-31170 0&lt;304-88'113388 eftor 5pm.
·

Ground oar corn e8.60 par
100. Bring own contolnor.
304-876-3308 . No Sundoy
Ill ea.

19711 OL1 000 Ooldenwlng . .
32,000 mlles.'e1200. 304B911·38111.
.

71

Yomoho IT1 715 ond
XBIIIIO. 'both v,rv
condition. 304-773-11

Autos .for Sale

I::;::;=:;;======

TOP
loto
model C"'SH
uaod pold
cors. forSmith
. Blllck-Pontioc. 181 1 Eoot·
orn Avo.. Oolllpoll1. Coli ,
114-4411-2282.
.
1870 Codllloc Ambulonco.
Good cc'"d .. 411,000 mlloa,
""w batto,.Y. good tlra•.
e1
. • Phone 4411·

~--

o Time
I})[)) National Geographic
Special 'Return to Eve•UJ·
Tonight's program J'l't'ff~ .
sents a special tribu'lv to
Sir Edmund Hillary , .,, -the
30th anniversary tn his
climb of Mount Everest.
(60 min .) [Closed Captioned]
®
NCAA
Basketball:
Mlchi&amp;!'n ot Iowa
Gl ll2l Billy Graham
Cruoode
fJl NCAA Baakotball: SEC
Tournament
8:30 Cl I]) Mama Malone
(PREMIERE) Father Jose
tells Mamo that Frankie
has been accused of st ealing another boy's lunch
money.
8:00 DCil C!J Facta of Lila
I}) MOVIE: 'Ragtime'
(]) Dovo Muolc Awards
I]) Ill (j}) Dynooty
Cll]) MOVIE: '10'
I}) Secreta of o Daurt Sea
[))Ingrid
9:30 II Cil C!J Night Court
9:45 Cil TBS Evening Nowa
10:00 DCil C!J St Eloowharo Dr
Craig is livid when a TV documentary casts him in an
unflattering light ond Rosenthal undergoes a breast
implant operation. (60
min .)
I}) MOVIE: 'Friday tho
13th'
C!J Vintoge Baooball Film:
Tho Old Ball Game
I]) Cll (j}) Arthur Hailey's
Hotel Peter is shocked
when he hears he's the
!ether of a four-year-old
son and a singer kicks a
drug habit. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
I}) MOVIE: 'Banenos'
®Air Wolf
fl) NCAA Boaketball: SEC
Tournament
10:30 [)) Ready When You Are
Mr. DeMille Producer/
Director Cecil B. DeMille,
one of the pioneers of
American cinema , is profiled . (R) (60 min .)
1 1:00 II I}) I]) ® Ill li2i News
(]) Another Lite
(]) SportaCenter
Cil All In tho Family
C!J News/Sporta/Woothor
11 :16 C!J ESPN'I SportsLook
1 1:30 II I}) C!J Tonight Show
(]) Boot of Groucho
Cil CotUna
I]) Bonny Hill Show
Cll]) News
® All In tho Family
Cll (!}J Nlghtlina
11:45 I}) MOVIE: '48 Hours'
I}) MOVIE: 'The Socrot
Policeman'• Othar Ball'
C!J NCAA Basketball:
Michigan at lowe (This
game is ssubjact to blackout)
·
I}) Something'• Got To·
Give
12:00 (]) Burns &amp; Allen
Cil MOVIE: 'Requiem For e
Hoavywolght'
I]) l'fulhtllna
CIJ MOVIE: 'Jomalcan
Gold"
® MOVIE: 'On• Summer
Love'
Ill (j}) Eyo on Hollywood
•ounamoke
12:30 8 (lJ C!J U.to Night with
David Lottorman
IIl ~ack Bonny .Show
I]) ~ on Hollywood
, •(!}J Newa
1:00 (]) I Marriod Joon
I]) Entortelnment Tonight
.(j}) CNN Hoodllno New1
Thlcko of the Night
1:1 II I}) MQVIE: 'Mogla'
1:30 I}) On Locotlon: Corlln at'
CorMg_le
(]) Love Tho! Bob
&lt;Il Newi/Sign Off

I [j

tHIALAD

Cordo"o
1114· 3.87-

'"~·.

'
- ·--

·------'----

WH 05E 150Y-

Ffi: IEND KEPT HEFI:

(]

WAS.

Now """"''" tho circled letters to
fonn lho eurprioo answer. as suggested by tho cortoon.

I I I I I I )"( I XXt

u:A(

(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday's

Jumbles IN EP1

BAKED AN EMI A TRUSTY
Answer: Sal es res ista nce is t he t riumph of this MIND OVER PATIER

I

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Asleep at the switch
NORTH

.,..

J-7-14

32

~

important team match. The
bidding was the same at
both tables •and both Wests
led the spade queen. ducked
in dummy. At table one.
East sleepily signaled comeon.
West came on. but the
boat had sailed. South won
t hat sec ond spade i n
dummy, drew trumps and
played ace and 10 of clubs.
West could score only one
diamond, one club and one
spade. and game was made.
At the other table East
was wide-awake. He put his
king of spades on West's
queen and returned a
diamond. West took two
quick diamond tricks and
waited to score the setting
trick with his king of clubs.
I like Kelsey's title even
though Rip Van Winkle is a
New York state character
and Hugh Kelsey is a Scot
who probably has never
been ln the Catskill Mountains.
East should have seen
exactly what would be coming if he ducked that first
spade and also that there
was no danger in playing his
king. West clearly needed
the Q-J of spades for his double of one heart.

.Q8 7
• 10 3

.Q 7 32
WEST
.QJ9
•to 2
tAQH
.KJ9 Y

EAST
• K 10 6 4

·~

U8642
+8&amp;4
SOUTH

•a

1
.AKJ9643

+K 7

+A 10
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

w..t
Dbl.
Pass

I.4•

Eut

Nortll

2•

SootJo

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: ~

By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby
Kelsey titles today's hand
"The
Van
Winkl e
Syndrome." The maxim ·-·
" Keep awake on defense."
The hand decided an

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~,."by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS

I Statutes

1 Embankment
Z In the least
3 Won hands
down

5 Eye exu-

dation
9 Eskimo
seWement
10 Giant with
IOOeyes
1% Popular
singer
13 More slim
15 Wapiti
I&amp; Justa - !
17Italian

4 Andress film
5 Natural gift
6 Construct
7 Moslem ruler
8 Meet boldly

Yesterday's ADSwer

JITranquil
14 Ward off
16 Dismissed

23 Trident, e.g.
Z4 Gave a
nasty glance
25 Indonesian
island
27 Solidify

19 Rich source

2% Julie

three

18 Factor
ZO In the know
21 By-of
2% Consonant
23 Misrepresent
25 Deli item
Z6 Soccer giant
27 Dear
lady (It.)
28 Electric -

Christie
role

29 Burr TV rol~
30 "GWI'W" star
31 Glorify

3i Marsh
plant genus
37 Before tee

~r,--,-;--r.;-

t:-.--+--+--

%9 Mixture;
medley
3Z Nigerian
33 Fifi's friend

t:;;-+-+--1-

34 Assess
35Emend
37 NapoleQD's
exile isle
38 Cattle

breed
39 Do business
40 Rave
n Let it starid,
in printing

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how to work It : .'
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters:
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words ore all
hints. Each day the code !etten are different.

CRYI'TOQUOTES

QBI

QA

NUI

LPTGHNHIC
C UHF

,. e

·I,~

WHA'T THAT PRETTY
~ l ~ l..

WA ITI N~

e

AEROBIC SLEEPING !

...

r )

I I

Ill I]) Ona Day ot

1974 lmpolo, 3110 outo .. 1
owner. eeee. 30'4-11711111118.

AKC Raglstorod Beegle. Coli
814-843-111114.

C!J Newo/ Sporta/Woother
I}) Dr. Who
[)) 3-2-1. Contact
fJl Buck Rogoro
D Cil C!J NBC News
(]) Rlllomon
C!J ESPN'o SportoLook
I]) Corol Burnon
I]) Cll (j}) ABC Nowo
Cl l]) ® CBS Newa
I}) Buslnooo Roport
[)) Everyday Cooking
D Cil PM Mogezlne
(]) Hera Como tha Bridoa
C!J SportoConter
I]) Hogan'o Harooo
I]) Ent-lnment Tonight
C!J Chorllo'o Angol1
Cl ilJ WhMI of Fortuno
I}) [)) MocNell/1.8hror
Nowohour
® Now•
Cll (j}) People's Court
fJI Joffersons
D Cil Tic Tee Dough
(]) lnlide the PGA Tour
I])
NBA
B01ketball:
Attanto at Dotrolt
I]) 01]) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortuna
(j})
Entertelnmont
Tonight
fJI Ono Day at a Time
D Cil C!J Rool Peoplo
I}) 10 Yaara of People
Magazine Thi s spacial features Brooke Shields. Ron ald Raogsn, Miss Piggy
and other celebrities.
I}) MOVIE: 'A Family
l!J&gt;aido Down'
CII I Spy
(])
NCAA
Basketball:
Michigan et lowe (This
game is soubject to blackout)
I]) Foil Guy When Colt arrests a convicted murderer,
the man's father kidnaps
Jody and threaten s to blow
up a hospital. (60 min.)

,_._~.,._...

m

78 T·Bird. 1 - -· A·1
condition. Loodod with oxtroa. Low mlloogo. eeooo.
1114-882-11100.

Drogonwynd Cottery ·
Kennell. AKC Chol" puppies, CFA Hlmoloyon. Per·
lion ond Slomooo klttano.
Coli II 14-4411· 3844 oftar II.

Phone 304-876-6879 .

home. ex. location within

8:30

7:00

cond .. AM · FM otoreo,
cruloo. tilt whaol, 3011 V-1,
$3,300. Coli 304· 11711·
111111 .
.
·lc18711 AMC Gremlin Auto ..
*400. Coli 1114.742· 27011.

percent of adjusted income.

Very nice 1 bdr. mobile

A

air

Pie

Heavy Duty Whirlpool hoop, aizo 7, paid 11711.00
woohor &amp; dryer $150. Coli will soli $100.00. Phone
614-379-7127.
304-676-420B.

Furnished Rooms

HAVI~'

Cf:Liil!f(ATION!

woe ,., ..._ u t .._ •

Man1, 2 door. auto."

812,300. Renting lor 30

45

'IOU'Rf:

1878 Pontloc Orond 1.8·

Baby blue prom dreea with

dryer hookup. Exc. cond .
aiid neighborhood. Rot. required. 304,876- 1962 .~

TOWN ARI! OUT
OF WORK AND

7:30

Mobile home suppliea: non-

toxic antlfraozo-•&amp; .110 por
gollon. Wotor heating ele-

l'ove .. Gallipolis, 448-1 171.

Apartment first floor, 3
rooms. bath. washer and

POI. ITI C A~

HAl-F THE:
PEOPl-E IN THI S

1977 Monorch. 4 D. outo,
air, good cond ... nood1 vinYl
top. Coli 114-4411·430'7
oftor II pm. ·

1r r1 11 sp11 r 1.1111111

3 BR •.12x70 mobile homo. 2
full boths. located approx.

OUR

PIFFERENCES UNTi l.
AFTEP: THE CEI.E&amp;RATIOt.J , IVA N l

Brook Trout in the Fawn
River.·
I]) Andy Griffith

1974 Ch
2dr.Cultom
AC. Cruloo,
•
Ployor, 714 2nd Avo. floor.
Call 1114· 448-13411.

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boordlng ell breoda. H11tod
Indoor-outdoor focllltlas.
AKC Dobarmon pupplea:
Stud Sorvlco. Coli 1114· 441177911.

Coli 446-1802.
2 BR mobile home. Cell
448-0390,

CAN 'T W&amp; SH A!&gt; IPt=

71

Building motorlolo
block. brick. oe"'!ar plpoo,
wlndowo . llntolo , etc .
Cloudo Wlntera. Rlo Orondo,
0. Coll814-2411 -11121 .

1- - - -- - - - --

Sofa, chair. refrigerator. gaa Four prom droasoa slzo 6 &amp; 7
range, upright freezer . Cor- in a11orted styles. colora and
bin &amp; Synder. 956 2nd . prices. 304-876-2864.

Sompleo

Wf: WAN T
TO TRf:AT
OUR GUESTS
TO THE !lEST
WE' VE GOT·
DON'T WE

t;,~;::~~~~;;:;~T;~=:;:==;=~:;::j iii-~1ir;;n;-~..:...~.~~-

mioc .. Rt. 218. Call 814268· 1561 .

WORLD BOOK ENCYC LOPEDIA SALE. Reg. $499 .
Sale e374. Save *126.
Couch &amp; chair good. cond. Term a *1 0 .00 down ';
1200, coffee tabla &amp; end 822.00 o month. 304-875·
toblo 826. Call 446-7887.
3775.

shadoa.

MAV 8 1: HE:
WANH- TO S&amp;j;
~OW TH E: Rf:A~
PEOPl-E IN THI S
TOWN l- IVE -

;

roll hog wire. 2

Hordly been uaed. Coli 4462839 or 446-0617.

Custom draperies, 1" venetian . blinds. vertical blind.

I I!IOOI&lt; f: D A ROOM
FOR VOU AT A I.OCA~
MOT &amp;~ IN WI GI!i i-V
TOWI-J .

electric fences. lota more

condition.

eatimoto. P. A. Sayre. 304468-1078.

than

Hand toofo, woldlng mechine. torch and gaugee.

Horveat Gold Matched poir. B. &amp; R. WOOD SHOP. Potio
Call614· 266-1207.
fumlture. picnic toblaa ond
novaltloo. Call 304-875Used portable dryer Seers 6406.

elderly

with en

Stop ond soo ot French city
Mobile Homoo. Call 4489340.

Several to choose from , One

shown at your home. Free

less

CAM
lll'lVICJ,
fit. 10, Coolllllll. Oh

home parts and ecce11orie1.

tora, rongas. Skaggs Ap- 10 to 20. 32 to 48. $10.00
pliancoo. Upper River Rd . and $12.00. Allie Blouoo
beside Stone Croot Motel . Slocka.
814-448-7398.
Two atool otorm doora. Coli
Used Waahora &amp; Dryora. 814-992-281111.

Apartments now available to
of

Moving Solo- MIIC. mobile

Summer blouse arrived. Size

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Romon

a.· diubled

Willtrade
oonoldor
mobllo homo
••
in.

Washers. dryers, refrigera-

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
income

IUI'l clJTTI!

IALIII •

ready to move

Into. *211.1100. Alao gorogo1
&amp; boumontl. Coli Potrlot
Homea Bulldora 4411-8038.

more ontiquaa, mioc. Paul
Conkel. Rt. 7, Tupper Plaina.

A· 1

•.

BuUt on you lot o now home
you con afford. over 1 ,1 00
aq. ft .~ e room• &amp; bath.

Plowa,

rJ r J

3/7/84

154.Miao. Merchendlll

1--------- -

Kenmore,

WEDNESDAY

e

carpeted,

j-----------r---------~

,-----r:===::::::::::~

Will cut ond dollvor tirowood. Coli 814, 21111·1112B.

Baum addition, 3 bedrooms.

ment, owner will carry at no
interest for 6 years. loan
a11umption possible. 614 -

Television
Viewing

L1rry Wrlj#

Umootono, Bond, Orovol.
Dellvorod In Meson, Melga.
Golllo or pick up ot Rlohord•
&amp; Son. Call 4411-77811.

Mercllan!II SI!

2'h botho, A.C., Iomily room
with llroploco. 2 acrea,
$87,500. No down pay-

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®

13

'

HC

OQ C N
QA
NQ

YITPNHAPG:

N Z PI

AZHIBX·

PBXIZCNTBX:

TBX
NQ
YI
PBXIZCNQQX. - CIIUV'l'
Yestenlly'eCryploquote: A DECISION IS WHAT MAN MAKES'
WHEN HE CAN'T GET ANYOiiE TO SERVE ON A.
COMMITTEE.- FLETCHER KNEBEL

�l'age--14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednetday,

•
•
House-Senate hammer out raise
compromise
•

COLUMBUS, Ohio iAPI-Ittook
just a half-hour for a House-Senate
conference committee to hammer
out a compromise on a compromiS('
pay-raise btU for state employees.
The action cleared the way for a
. possible vote by the full Legislature
today. Passage would send the
measure to Gov. Richard Celeste,
whose signature would Impose the
raises Immediately for 86,(0) staw

government, county welfare and
university blue-collar workers.
TheSenatehadrefusedtogo along
with House changes In the pay-raise
bill Tuesday, sending It to the
six-person conference committee.
Headed by Sen. Wllllam F. Bowen.
the group met at6p. m. and emerged
short ly afterward with the $61.8
million compromise.
The measure retained the raise of

:it cents per hour or 5 percent ,
whichever was greater to an
Individual employee, that was
contained In the House version. As
passed by the Senate, the bill
provided a 43 cents-per-hour pay
raise.
The btU keeps most of the $5.3
mllllon In disability-leave reductions that Celeste had sought.
The state will pay 70 percent of a

rch

r; 191f

TRY OUR DELICIOUS B.Ot'ED

worker's salary during disability
leave. up from the two-thirds the
House proposed and down from the
75 percent the Senate wanted.
Health Insurance premiums wlU be
paid by the state for those on
disability leave, but pension contributions will not start until an
employee Is disabled for at least
three months.

FILLET OF'
CATFISH.
$3.99

DINNER

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

228 W. MAIN

PH. 992 -6432

POMEROY, OH.

Tornadoes eliminated

DeMolay Week

Story on Pap 3

See Page 6

Huck, Herd in area

Market reports ...

Photo on Pap 5

SeePage 14

aily

USDA
.CHOI·.CE

Vol.32, No .231
Copyrlthted 1914

U.S . GOV'T GRADI:D CHOICE '.
GRAIN FED BEEF ,

•Guaranteed Fresh.
•Guaranteed tender.
•Guaranteed to be full
of iuicy flavor .•

Tail-Less
T·Bone Steak

$

All Tha't Or Your Money Back
ADVERTISED ITEM POliCY

lb.

loch o l theto adwol111od itemt It requ ir ed to be reodilr o wooloble l o 1 ,ate
on each lhoeor Store ouept 01 tpodfocollr noted on tho1 ad II we d o •un
ovt of on od ¥11 rth•d iflln'l w• woll oH11r .,o.,. ., • .,. , t ho oc • o f o co n'I,Oroblo
•'•"' whon o•o iloblo reflectint tho 10'"11 IO ••ntt or a ro onch•d• """' '' "'
w oll ontotl11 yo"' to p11 fl h0111 th11 od.,ortitod ,,.,., ot '"'• od•••••••d P"' 0
wothon lO dor• Only one ••ndor coypon woll be Ouo ptod P•• · '' •"'
pu !C I'Iolod

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
GRAIN FED BEEF

Bone·less Top
Sirloin Steak

Campbell's
Tomato Soup .

78

$

LIMIT 6 PLEASE

Injunction forbids coal field drilling

f

KROGER

Homogenized

119 SHEETS PER ROLL

Single
Roll

u.s. NO.1

ROUND'· WHITE

Potato
:;lb. $Jl8
::;lb.$28
::;1~... $88

.. M~i
... ·:.,1/1"'. ""

.Milk ' . ~

c

Gal.

88

Jug

COftYittCHT 1914
THf KROCIR CO ITIMS AND PRICU
C OOO SUNOA 't MARCH .4 IHROUCH SATURDAY MAR CH
I 0 1914 IN Glllipolls lnd Pomeroy.

FRESH

Stre~wberries

$ 88

California

o....

By AMOOiatecll'reM
Walter Mondale, telling southerners "I really need your help," Is
accusing Gary Hart ot being soft on civil rights, whlletheColoradosenator
Is almlng his words at President Reagan and sounding more and more like
a front-runner in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Hart, too, acknowledged that southern votes have become Cl1lcial to
malntaJnlng his campaign surge, and he was appearing today before the
Alabama Legislature followed by a meeting with Gov. George Wallacejust as his rivals have done.
"It's Important that I be able todemonstratevotersupport In the Sooth,"
Hart said while campalgnlng In Huntsville, Ala., on Wednesday.
Mondale, honing a new; tougher Image In light of his three-In-a-row
losses to Hart In New England, appeared before ihe Alabama Legislature
oo Wednesday and held his meeting with Wa}lace, the one-time
segregatlon!Bt Who Isn't endorsing anyone In the Demdcratlc field.
Wallace sald Mondale was paying Just a courtesy call and had not asked
rm:~hls endorsement. 1M, W~_ sald, ."I (Jel very kindly toward hlnj."
Sen. John GleM and the Rev. Jesae Jackson also have made s!mllar
calls on Wallace and addressed the state's lawmakers.
Hart, Mondale, Jackson and Glenn all are fOCUIIng oo the Sooth because
or primaries In Alabama, Georgia and Florida oo 1\lesday - three of the
nine states selecting delegates that day: The Mh candidate, fanner Sen.
George McGovern, remained In Massachusetts where he Is gambling on
that state's primary.
·
Jackson was In Mlsslsslppl today after spending Wednesday In Dllnols,
where he hlt Hart's "new Ideas" theme. The only new thing about Hart,
Jackson said, Is that he "lowered his age and shortened his name."
He was referring to Hart's shortening or his name from Hartpencemore
than ~years agd, and to earller Incorrect llstlngs or his age as 46. He Is 47.

I·

PINT RETURNABLE BOnus
' TAB, SPRITE ,

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola. .

W£ RESUV£ I H£ RICHT TO liMIT QUA NTITIU NONI \010
TO DIAUIS .

Stock prices fell broadly again
Wednesday as Investors grew more
concerned about the massive federal deficit and the prospect of
hlgner Interest rates.
Meanwhile, the Senate ·Finance
Committee, working for a $100
bllllon package or deficit cuts, Is
considering a new restriction on
Income averaging - a tax-saving
device used by many middleIncome Americans.
And consumers' confidence In the

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Federal Emergency Management
Agency today denied a request for a
federal declaration or a snow
emetgency In 26 CQUntles of lllirthern Ohio as a result of last week's
snow!rtorm.
A ·federal assessment team visited the area Feb. 29-March 1 and
lntonned the Ohio State Disaster
Services Agency of Its decision.
The FEMA statement said the
storm was not beyond the resources
at the local and state level for
recovery. Other details on the

economics of Meigs, VInton, Jackson, Gallia, Athens
and Mason counties.
"Further, such proposed drilling and the corresponding possibility of natural gas escaping Into the
underground mines presents a tremendous risk to the
safety of miners engaged In underground mining and
Is a risk which should not be Imposed on the miners."
The statement was Issued by Orley Vore, president or
Local Union 1.886, Charles Chambers, president of
Local Union 1890 and Mark Ballenger, president of
Local Union 1957.

SAVE YOUR VJSION WEEK - Professor Clifford McCalt!ly,
rep-er:tallve Jolynn Boster and Dr. Susan Quinn, 1-r, dl8play the
~ and llnalbit po!ltel's for the Save Your VIsion Week poMer

coatest. 1be winning poster (top left) was deoipell by VenD Ramalah,
nmoers up were cornpcl8ed by (clockwl8e top rtg!K) Jennifer ftu!je,
Belpre, Lisa Pouln, Mlddlepori and Jennifer Jagers, A&amp;heos.
See story 011 Page 14.

economy fell slightly In February
after rising for five straight months,
according to the Conference Board,
a business-sponsored research
organization.
On the New York Stock Exchange, the Dow Jonesaverageof:ll
lndustrlills fell8.90, to 1,143.63, after
tumbling 12.67 on Thesday. Losers
swampedgalners7to2ontheNYSE
overall In trading volume or 90.~
million shares.

Analysts said Investors' concerns
were wol'!lelled by remarks by

Federal Reserve Chairman Paul
Volcker, who reiterated that the
budget deficit was posing growing
risks to the economy since enormous government borrowing
needed to finance the shortfall puts
upward pressure on overall lending
charges.
Volcker also said the economy Is
now "very strong In a number or
directions," but that too has Wall
Street worried, since as long as the
economy continues to show strong

expansion, the central bank Is
ur.:tkely to relax Its credit policy so
as to avoid higher lnfiation.
And It the Fed does not relax Its
policy, or moves to restrict credit
availability further, Interest rates
are not llkely to fall.
In money markets Wednesday,
short-term rates rose and bond
prices feU, some by as much as $5 to
$10 for each $1,(0) In face value.
The Bank of New York said It
expects a "series of small, early

tightening moves by the Fed"
starting this month, and further
restrictive action later this year.
The result, the bank said, was that
the federal funds rate - that
charged on overnight loans between
banks, and a key Indicator of other
short-term rates - would cllmb to
10~ percent by year's end trom Its
current 9')1, percent.
The Conference Board said Its
Consumer Confidence Index, measuring the results of a survey of 5,(0)

rr~~ere . was tree cheese for
I!V!!I'Yone qualifying for It In Meigs
CountyWedllesday, theCommunity
ActiOn Agency w!llch was ln,charge
of ~t!CII repm'ted .
. 'lbere were lB,axl pounds avaltabie tor dlatrlbutlon at three points In
Meip 'County by the ~ , and
._· tl1liie
at . 1\a~ Pl81na,
~ . and the Rock .Springs .
Falrjrewldi. The IUpply In Racine
beCaJ111! exhausted at 11 a.m.
wedJieldaY. However, the supply
remalneid good a!theother klcatlons
'with 10 Cales or :1) pounds per .c ase

reason for the denial were not
Immediately available.
The storm which began Feb. 'l1
dumped up to 2 feet of snow In some
areas ot Ohio and was blamed tor at
least 22 deaths. On Feb.. 28, ·Gov.
Richard Celeste declared a state of
emergency imd activated the O!llo
National Guard and the state's
emergency operations center to
coordinate.recovery efforts.
Celeste also made a request to the
federal government for a declaration ot a snow emergency to assist In
recovery.

·were

1!0' caB whlcl) W!!i'e.
uadlltrlbutAid
. In GaWa County .were

. '

taken to the Gallla-Melgs Community Action Agency In Cheshire where
additional dl$trlbutlon · to those
qualifying was blilng made today.
MrS. Hazel McK'elvey of the
Gallla-Melgs Community Action
.Agency l8ld that the Excelsior salt
Co. wu lnstnunental and helpful In
C8I'IIYini .out ·tl\e tree · cheese
PI'OIII'iJh by~lts1!i!lvy1!q\Up=~-­
ment to unload t1\e cheese within a
two hour time SPIUI after Its an1val
so that dlstrlbu~n could be made
quickly In accordance with regu!atlons. This Is tile barth time that
·Excelsior salt hal provided the free
servlcie to . the pqram, Mrs: .
l,fcKelvey sali;l.

'

households nationwide, feU three
points to 95.4 In February from 98.4
the previous month.
The Senate Finance Committee's
plan would make It harder for
people whose earnings rise sharply
trom one year to the next to reduce ·
their taxes by averaging their
Income over the good and lean
years. The same proposal has been
passed by the House Ways and
Means Committee.

Pay raise
bill goes
to Celeste
OOLUMBUS. Ohio lAP) - A
long-debated bill giving pay raises to
86,(0) state, county welfare, and
university blue-collar workers is on
Its way to Gov. Richard Celeste lor
his expected approval.
Final legislative passage came
Wednesday when the Senate and
House voted, 31-1 and 94-1. respectively, to accept a jolnf conference
committee report.
Raises of 50 cents an hour, or 5
percent, Whichever is greater, will
take effect during the pay period
that started Sunday If approved by
the governor soon.
The conference committee report
also provided that top political
appointees - who had been
excluded from the House versioncan receive raises If sufficient funds ,
can be found within their

Succcessful cheese . giveaway

not blllnadlltrlbulld. ~lOcues

I

support of Southern Ohio Coal Company's position In
seeking a permanent Injunction restraining Magnum ·
DrUllng, Inc .. and Royal Petroleum Properties, Inc. ,
from drllllng through coal owned by Southern Ohio
Caol Company In Rutland and Salem townships, ·
Meigs County.
" It Is the local unions' position that such drllllng
presents a potential risk or loss of Jobs to
approximately 1,!nl workers at Southern Ohio Coal
facility and IITeparable damage to the local

Disaster loan rejected

a1a111 wltli

I

occur 8,(0) acres or coal, worth according to the
plaintlfts more than one bllllon dollars at present coal
prices, would be sterilized. In addition, Soothern Coal
contended Jolls would be lost.
FoUowlng Judge Bacon's decision Wednesday,
United Mine Workers or America, District 61ssued the
following statement.
" It Is hereby resolved by the ott!cers of the United
Mine Workers or America, District 6, local unions
. 1886, 1890 and 1!m that the unions Involved are In fUll

Mondale seeks
help in South

~y 1be AMoclated Pl'E!l8

ScotTowels
Arts &amp; Flowers

2 Sections, 14 Pag•s
20 Cents
A Mwltim.dKI In(. N•wspoper

. . .
.
Stocks fall after Volcker's d ef ICit warning

Kroger Welcomes
Your federal
food Stamps

10.75·01.
Cans

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 8, 1984

Judge John C. Bacon Wednesday Issued a
preliminary Injunction which forbids Magnum
Drilling, Inc., Rutland, and Royal Petroleum
Piopertles, Inc., or Cleveland from drWlng In areas
questions Soothern Ohio Coal Company's suit against
the defendants.
Soothern Ohio Coal Company filed suit asking for
$2.500,(0),(0) mlnumum damages If the defendant
canpanles proceed In drilling oU and gas wells
throogh coal &lt;M'III!d by Soothern Ohio Coal Company.
Soothern Ohio Coal contended It drlllinR would

3 Way Guarantee

•

department~.

FELL-~IbreefeethiP,tlfeetlnleagt}lwda&amp;

lbe ._. oUIIe home of Mr. 8lld Mn. Mll'k TIIIDehlll
8lllf,y ~ mw .... All repr eae ~,ttye
of the 0b11J _
nep.ilmer:t ~ vlllted the

ool!.,_.

or

· lriPav 1*'5.di,ylllllllllflcli&amp;e!l aiiOIINIJ!PiewW

be taken. 1be area of the collapsed waD 011 MufbeiTY
Avenue, Pomeroy, has been UDder !ICftdlny for a
number of yean due to sUppaces wblch have taken
place In the hllllllde, pCIII8ible due to undeJ'III'OUIIII mine
waters.

. The bill .will cost $129 million this
biennium, but It also contains a
series of cuts recommended by
Celeste In the disability leave
program.
It requires newly hired employees
to work for a year before becoming
eligible for disability leave benefits.
They now are Immediately eligible.

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