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bv Dick Cavalli

.

WINTHROP

'

WHY 15 "THE 5LIN WARMER

IN THE 6UMMER lHAN

IT 16 IN "THE WIN fER,~

WHAT ARE CLOWDs, AND
~W

Meigs boxer
new state champ

Buckeyes advance
in NCAA tourney

Cou·11 ty A gent \
Cornc·r......

Page 3

Page ·4

Paw· IU

"

e. .

00 1HEY
HAPPe-4 ~
'

Vol.31 ,No .226

•

at y

•

ehttne
I Section, 10 Pages 20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Marc-h 21, 1983

Copyrighted 1983

••

More signs indicate recession over
.\NHY 00-'t't:JWc:::fET A

: DON'T AeK ME... !

- '

H5ADACHE WHENYOLJ

!:AT ICE CREAM TOO FAen

•
'

i'

·•.

{' ~

'

vU5T~HERE.

.'

'

Ed Sull·i van

Priscilla's Po
ON nilS, OUR FJRSr PAY OF
SPRING. I THOUGHT WE SHOUL,D REJOICE IN THE 60JNIIES
OF A NEW BEGINNING.

WHO CANNOT HELP
6UT 6E AFFECTED BY
THE 5URE SIGNS 0::
SPR"I NGTIME"'?

THE

GREENING

THE

.

SIN61NG

0:: 61RD$· ..

Ol= RELPS"'

.THE

THE

?HAGGING
CF FUES"•

RUSHING

· OF

5TREAM7···

PRINTED IN CANADA

USTY CHAPS
WiRE JlhT ~~otJ~ rM
L~lt-1" FOR~ 'fVE: COt-!~ #olD

by Art- &amp; Chi

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

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

NO, ReALl~! LIGI~t-1 ...

U6T WEEK '{a) ?OCKERE:D
Me INTO lHINI&lt;l~ H~ - -

T,Atb~T c::cQ..~'(

c.a&gt;J,.D AOO...'PJ'~

T'~~fZ. QO~$TIOW$,

tJoT CDt·h-llt-lb ME ,,
AbAit-l!

Sansom

CCDLE't' I WJ.IAT COJgr(S
A~es

''

~ CKA'i I NON''' WHO LED
'ffiE '(~KEES Il-l ~g~·
Il-l 19~1 ~

'

.

...TAAt~ ~OLD~..;fEiD!t-l1 HIM

Llt.l~ HE CAN ~ V«TH A•BAAK..

I

Groundbreaking ceremonies for
construction of'a building- to house
the new HS computerized torno. g-raphy head and spine body
scanner for Holzer Medical Center
will be held atll::ll a.m. Tuesday.
A crew from Karr Construction.
Chester. has begun work at ihe sitC'
and has set Nov.llasthetargetdate
lor completing construction.
Planned construct ion includes
the closing of-the moat. the open
area beneath the main entrance
walkway to the hospital !hat
roMects •to the • radiology
departI
ment, a HMC spokesman sald
today.
The spokesman said with a cr
scanner- identified as a Plcker600
model- beingmadeavailablelater
this · year, area residents will no
longer find Its necessary to travel 50

Main st.,

near Modern Supply,
when he went left of Center and
strock a utility pole. Thabet was
taken to VeteriiiL'! Memorial by the
Pomeroy Emergency ~uad. He Is

••

..

.

percent in Frbruary .
Retail sales have also been sluggish for several
months, and gains in Americans' personal income
have been small.
The Commerce Department sa id last Friday that
income and personal spending rose only tiny amounts
in February, a report that economist Robert Gough of
Data Resources Inc. called "a disappointing piece of
news that should !I' m per the optimism."
Still, he and other analysts said the recovery was
indeed underway, and they were expecting-r ising real ·
GNP for the first quarter.
The figure fell sharply in the last three months of ·
1981and the first quartero(1982, tllen increased a Islow
rates in the second and third quarters. Despite those
gains, officials and &lt;'COnomists sa id the recession was
continuing - a view that was borne out by tlle new
·
decline at the end of the year.

Ruckelshaus
accepts EPA
assignment

WASHINGTON (AP) -William D. Ruckelshaus, who shepherded the
Environniental Protection Agency through its first years. today accepted
President Reagan's request to try to lead the agency out of its worst crisis,
White House sources said.
Ruckelshaus met with Reagan and with senior White House aides this
morning to seal the agrE&gt;ement that wUI put Ruckelshaus back at the head
of EPA .
Reagan was to make the formal announcemenl of Ihe appointment later
today.
Ruckelshaus met with Reagan this morning- following a breakfasl
session with Chief of Staff James A. Bak&lt;'r llJ and Presidenlial Counselor
Edwin Meese. chief deputy White House press secrelary Lar!Y' Speakes
said.
After ihose meetings , White House sources confirmed that Ruckeishaus
. had ag-rrect to take the post. vacated March '9 when Anne M. Burford
resigned amid growing allegations of mismanagement and conflicts of
interest at the agency.
Ruckelshaus said Sunday that Reagan had asked him to consider taking
the post. .
White House officials said -over the weekend that Ruckelshaus, 00, has
agreed "in principle" 10 succeed Burford at EPA. But R eagan and his
SPRING ARRIVES - Although It'• hard to leU, spring officially .. aides were tight-lipped Sunday when pressed for details.
arrived at II: 59 p.m. Sunday, However, the northern part of Ohio has
Asked about the matter as he returned from Camp David. Md .. the
. been hit by several Inches of snow while heavy r.linfaU hit Ute
president said only, 'Til see you in the press room in a few days."
GaU!a-Melgs area Sunday night. Some snow was expected today and
Chief deputy press secretary Larry Speakes said Reagan was referring
snow Ounies are predicted Tuesday.
to plans to hold a brief press conference la ter in the week and not to an EPA
-announcement.
Ruckelshaus. senior vice president of law and corporate affairs a t
Weyerhaeuser Co., a timber and paper products finn in Federal Way,
Wash., near Seattle, headed the EPA from its inc(•ption in 1970 until1973.
One administration official, insisting on ilnonymil)', said Ruckelshaus
likely would meet with White House aides to iron out fina l de ta ils bdorean
announcement was made. There was specula lion it couldcomeasmrly as
.
By The Ass6clated Press
today.
A spring snow storm was moving through the Ohio Valley today
"!just don't think anything's hOlding this thing up, " tllis official said. "I
and spreading wtnter-llke weather from the mid -Mississippi
just think it's the nonnal process" of background checks and paperwork
through the Great Lakes region.
required before an announcement could occur.
Winter storm warnings were posted for sections of Wisconsin-.
"The guy has not even been in Ia see anybody yet ." the official added. " I
lllinols, Michigan, Indiana and Ohio.
would think this is the kind of thing they would not do over the phone.''
•:11 doesn't look toogood. lfyoudon't have to beaut, be home." said
The official disagreed with suggestions that one Item left 10 be negotiated
Sgt. Logan Tisdale of the Michigan state police post at Eri£&gt; ..
was how much independence Ruckelshaus would be given in
"(Today's) the first day of spring and we're getting our winter
appointments and otller matters .
now," said Alger County Deputy Sheriff Henry Brey in Munising, in
"When you are talking about people like that , you are talking about
miles to another hospital for this
· the state's Upper Pen!rl,;uia where. according to the National
people who are g-oing to do things their own way," the official said. " To
advanced diag-nostic SC'rvice.
Weather Service, 21 inches of snow piled up between Friday and
even suggest his name, they've gol to know he 's a prell)' s trong guy ."
'
The end result will be additional
Sunday,
convenience for potential patients
Cold air continued to flow across the Plains states, trailing the
and a savings of time. money and
storm. Temperatures early today were in the teens and 30s from the
elimination of a possibly leng-thy
Northern Plains into the Texas Panhandle.
hospital · stay. the spokesman '
Snow. sleet and freezing rain were e)lpected to move into western
added.
. New England later today.
Participating in Tuesday's ceMeanwhile; a cold front brought showers and thundershowers to
By The Associated Press
kins, 38, Columbus, in a tWO-VC'hicle
remonies will be Louis It Ford Jr ..
much of northern California. Snow was expected laler today In the
accident on a cit)' street in Franklin
Traffic accidents claimed six
chairman of the Holzer Hospital
higher elevations of the state as the system moved further inland .
County .
lives in Ohio over the weekend, the
Foundation board • of trustees;
In contrast, temperatures in the low 80s were predicted for
NEW PHILADELPHIA
Highway Patrol said. Two persons
Merrill L. Evans, board treasurer
'
southern Florida.
StevC'n L. flarmon, 32. DundN', in a
died in on'e accident.
and building committee chairman;
In Cleveland, just as spring was officially beginning, cars.skidded
The patrol counts weekend traffic
motorcycle accidmt on' a coun ty
Hugh P. Kirkel, HNiC president;
into each other on major highways in northeastern Ohio whUe
road in Tuscarawas County:·
deaths between 6 p.m. Friday and
officials struggled to keep autos off the icy roadways.
Dr. Charles E . Holzer Jr .. hospital
SATURDAY
midnight Sunday.
· By midnight, multiple-car accidents were reported on Interstate
medical staff pll'sldent; Dr. Saied
TIFFIN- Theodore T . Cree. 11, of
MK Hojat, radiology department
~.Interstate 71, Interstate90and Cleveland's Interbelt, said pollee
The dead:
Republic, in a one-car accident on
chairman; and Robert W. LaTour •.
dispatcher Patricia Rafter.
SUNDAY
Ohio 228 in Seneca County .
president of Bosch &amp; LaTour, PA.
She sald officials closed sections of highways in some sugurbs and
CINCINNATI - Michael' Sma,lFRIDAY NIGHT
Cincinnati, the · projecl's design
were trying to close roadways In otl!e'r· areas.
lwood, 24, Cincinnati, In a on~ar
DAYTON- Paul Lee, 00, and Adell
engineer.
Freezing rain was falling at midnight at a temperature of 31
accident on a city street In Hamilton
Lee. 50, both off;outhfield. Mich .. in
degrees.
·
.
,
County.
a on£&gt;-car accident on lnterstate7o in
The weather forecast tonight calls lor occasional snow with lows
W.
AdCOLUMBUS - · Carlos
Montgomf'ry County .
between 15-20. Tuesday's weather should be mostly cloudy and cold
wtth a chance of flurries.
It wtll be fair Wednesday with a chance of snow Thursday and fair
Confined to the special care unit.
Friday.
·again
Pollee sald he will be charged with
Linda Wilkinson Johnson also Welfare Dep1Jrtment . Officials will
· reckless operation.
known as Linda Williamson, for- know later today if J ohnson will
The Pomeroy Fire Department
merly of Minersville and Syracuse, waive extradition to Ohio.
was on the scene in case the car
Saturday. sheriff's deputies were
is being ~eld in the Chautauqua
burst into flames and electric
' '
and 'that the one-story house· was · County Jail, May\!ille, N. Y,. on notified by Mark Gmssnickle, Rt . 1.
servicetotheWestMainSt., part of
FAIRBORN, Ohio (AP) - A
heavUy damaged. .
.
fugitive charges from MelgsCounty Reedsville lhal his 1971 Dodg-e
town and Monkey Run was dis· FalrboMl couple and a child
According to the Meigs County Charger had been stolen from a ·
tupted untO about 7 a ,m. this perished and two Other children ·
He said the cause of the fire had
not
been
determined.
sheriffs department, Johnson was residence on MI. Olive Road.
morning when work on replacing were injured In a bouse fire Sunday
Officials were withholding names -recently indicted by the Meigs
the pole was ci&gt;mpleted. Cable morning, firefighters said.
The vehicle was recovered
television service was alSo disFire Capt. Geoff Billows said
of . the victims pending- positive
County Grand Juf)l on fraud p.'!rked along Mt. Olive Roadjusfoff
rupted by the clipping of the utUity' smoke was pouring out windows Of
charges as a result of obtaining county road 28 at Keno . The vehl£' I£'
Identification and notification of
their relatives.
money ,from the Meigs County was nol damaged ,
pole.
the house when firefighters arrived

Spring storm moves
through Ohio Valley

Groundbreaking
for Holzer CT
scanner tomorrow

Pomeroy Pollee .-eported that

I
'~~

. WASHINGTON iAPi-lnitslast
gressional conferees also will meet
week of work before a 10-dayEaster
to iron out tlle dllferences between
recess. Congress is rushing to send
the versions of . that measure
President Reagan two majorpfeces adopted by eac-h chamber.
of legislation - Social Security
For the'rnost part. the Senate has
reform and a multibillion-dollar
been following the lead of the House
emergency jobs program.
and sticking close to the recommen ·
The Senate was resuming work · datlons of the National Commission
this afternoon on the $165 blllion
on Social Security Reform for
Social Sfocurity rescue plan with
higher payroll taxes. a six-month
Senate Majority Leader Howard H.
freeze on benefit increases, a levy on
Baker Jr., R·Tenn .. saying he hoped
the benefits going to more amuent
f01&gt;a Dna! vote late today.
retirees and mandatory Social
Meanwhile, congressional negoSecurity COVE'ragE' for new federal
tiators were set to meet this
workers.
afternoon · to hammer out the
The lightest remaining Senate
differences between the $4.9 billion
battle involves the provision that
jobs bill passed by the House and a
would extend Social Security cover$5.2 billion version passed by the
age to all new federal employees
Senate. The major dl!ference Is a
after Jan. 1.
$1.2 bUHon provision in the Senate
Sen. Russell B. Long-. D-La., Is
bill to speed up revC'nue sharing
leading the fight for an amendment
payments to states by three months.
to delay mandatory coverage until
The legislation also provides for Congress approves a supplemen·
food and shE'ItC'r for the needy and
tary pension plan for civU se1vants.
other types of recession relief. It
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan .. the
also includes an additional $5 billion
Finance CornmittE&gt;e chairman
In federal subsidies to help '1:1 states guiding the biU through the Senate.
and the District of Columbia pay argues that some legislators supunemployment benefits to millions porting Long's move only want to
ofjoblessworkerswhosechecksare keep federal workers from having
due this week.
to pay into the system. He fears th~t
After tl)e Senate finishes work on If Long is successful, the delicate
the Social ~urity packag-e, con- rescue package may unravel.

Thabei was travi!ltng west on West

I

.

1981. But that-rapid expansion gave way to the worst
downlurnsinceWorld War II.
Jack Lavery of Merrill Lyncti &amp; Co., who had
anticipated the first-quarter gain, said in advance of
the report, "I think we'll have a bumpy and
saw-toothed recovery."
·
The strong first-quarter increase s hould be followed
by :•a more muted" gain in thesecondquarler, a very
strong third quarter and then slower progress again
near year's end, he said.
Recent goverrunent reports have shown enough
improvement to indicate real GNP would be up in ohe
first quarter. But the reason consistent big gains won 't
show up an through the year, analysts agreed, was
that some parts of the economy were still weak.
While industrial production was picking up and
housing was rushing ahead, for example, business
spending for modernization and expansion still was
declining. And unemployment was still high - 10.2

Soc Sec reform;
jobs' program ·
face congress

John F. Thabet , 20, Mason, W.
Va., . '1\'85 In stable condition at
Veterans Memorial ~ospltal as the
result of multiple Injuries received
In an accident on West Main St.,
Pomeroy, at12:01a.m. Monday.

I

J

denator, rising at a mere 2.8 percent rMe during the
first quarter. compared with a3.7 percent rate during
last year's final quarter.
The nash estimate is a very rough calculation of
economic activity that often is revised sig-nificantly as
more infon'nat-ion is gathered.
The Commerce Department also reported thai
economic activity during the last three months ofl982
declined by less than had been estimated previouslY:
The department 5aid inflation-adjusted GNP fell a1 a
1.1 percent annual rate, rather than dropping 1.9
percent as had been reported earlier.
Jt added that pre-tax corporate profits during the
fourth quarter ofl982 declined at an annual rateof0.8
percent from the third quarter, reversing two straig)lt
quarters of gains. After tax-profits showed no change
in the fourth quarter, the department said.
· Theestimat~GNPgro\vthistheg-reatestsincea7 .9
percent rate was recorded in the first three months of

Six die on Ohio roads

Mason motorist stable

11

6

,,

WASHINGTON IAPl -In the broadest sign yet of
economic recovery, the g-overnme nt estimated today
that the economy g-rew -at a 4 percent annual rate
during the first three month of the year, the strongest
performance in two years.
The Commerce Department's SO·called "nash"
estimate of.inflatloh-adjusted gross national product
showed the largest Increase since the first quarter of
1981 and underscored the near-unanimous view of
· economists that the severe 1981-82recessionended last
December.
- White House spokesman Larry Speakes called the
figure "excellent news and the most conclusive
indication the economic recovery has begun and is
proceeding- at a healthy rate. We thinR this Indicates
we are moving rapidly to an excellent recovery from
recession."
·
In another positive development. the nash estimate
showed · inflation, as measured by the GNP price

"

.

Woman faces fugitive charges

House fire kills couple, ·child

•lj

I·

tl

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

�-

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 CuuriStr~t
Pnmtr~ 1y , Ohlu
u~m-2156

llEVOTEO TO THE INTERF..ST or THE-: MEIGS.MASON ARF.A

~OBERT

L. WINGETI .

Publlshrr

BOll HOEFLICH

BAT WHITEHEAD
A1'isisLI!nt l,uhlisht'r/Cuntrullt·r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
"Nt'*li Editor

A MF.MBER uf Tht' Assut•htllt'd Prt'!iS, lnhllld Oa~ilv Prt'sS A:.:;.•datinn i!nd tht'
A mt'rit'HII Nt'¥1Spa1Jt"r Publisht·o AliStN.'illliun.

·

l .t:11"ERS OF OPINION !lrt' 'oH'l&lt;'tlmt!'d. Th!!)l !ihUUid bto less th11n JOI Ytnrtls lnnl(. All
ldtNl'l urt• subjl'" l 111 ~ilin.: attd mus t !Me s ign~ with namt'. addrt'SS 11nd lt'lt'phullt'
numbt-r . Nu uru;il!l~d lt'ltt- r:; will bt- publi!iht-11. ~lten tdtuuld be In ~tMid Lllsk. atddrYSsiet«
iss1Jt11:. nul pcr!ttWIJilitli.

Letters to the editor
To set the record straight
With regard to the letter from
Betty Wells. Presidt&gt;nt of C.OAL ..
whieh appeared in the March 16
edition. I wouldliketoset the record
straight on several things she said.
First of all . we insta lled and began
to operatt&gt; tht&gt; first longwall section
at Meigs Minf' No. 2 in December
1978. Therefore. Mrs. Wt&gt;lls' statemt&gt;nt on behalfofC.OAL. that "this
new longwa ll method is just
starting" is a completely inaecura It&gt;
statement designC'd to mislead the.
public. Furthermore. modern long·
wa ll mining has becngoingon in this
country for 20 or mort&gt; yt&gt;a rs. and
t&gt;arlier w r sions of the longwall
mining method were used :;o or
more years ago in this county , as
was rc&lt;:enlly indicated inoneofyour
lettt&gt;rs to the editor. Latest esti·
ma tes show that tht&gt;re art&gt; apprxoi·
mately 112 modern longwalls oper·
a ted by22 different companit&gt;S in 11
coal m ining sta tes.
Next, C.O.AL state- that tht'
"SOCCo posit ion is: - do the
damages: - buy the property; and move on." This again is a
completely inaccurate stateme nt
since thf' only landowne r of those
affected who has settled with
SOCCo. still owns his land and has
indica ted to me that he is com·
pletely satisfied with thf'settlt&gt;ment
he received. Furthermort&gt;, it is my
unde r standing that tht&gt; otht&gt;r ian·
downers afft&gt;eted have also bef'n
offt&gt;red sett lements which would
allow them to keep their land if they
so desired.
Another inaccurate statt&gt;ment in
Mrs. Wells' letter is that when the
coal was purchased there was no
understanding that damagt&gt; could
occur. If COAL would bother to
look at the deeds rerordlng these
sales, tht&gt;y will discover that the
majority . if not a ll. contain a clause
releasing thr purchaser from liabil·
ity for damages when t&gt;xtracting the
roal.

Also, C.OA.L. reft&gt;rs tothestrikt&gt;S
which have occurred at the mine in
an attempt to prove "howhardithas
bef'n' ... to deal with SOCCo." This
comparison is the most misleading
of all for , if C.O.A.L. is referring to
contract strikes, SOCCo and our
local union! have littlt&gt; to do with
them s inceourcontract isnt&gt;goatied'
at the national level and not locally.
If C.O.A.L. is referring to the
"wildcat strikes" which occurred In
1977 and before. manyoftht&gt;St&gt;wcre
dut&gt; to pickets from other mines and
had nothing to do with local
problems . Furthermore. those
"wildcat strikes" which wert&gt; over
local issues ceased to be a problem
after 1977 beea use we, tht&gt; union and
the company, have qealt fairly with
each other over the last six years
· slnt-e "wildeat strtkes" were a
common problem in the coal
industry.
While th(' Union believes ian·
downers who hav(' damages as the
result \)f longwall mining should be
treated fairly, we do not believe
C.O.A.L. is concerned that the
members of my Union, other
SOCCo cmployt't's, and the local
eoonomy be treated fairly. State-ments by C.O.A.L. members and
their at1orneys that stopping tht'
longwalls will not put SOCCo out of
business and us out of jobs art&gt; false.
Longwall mining is the only way
these mines can produce coal
eoonomlcally at a competitive price
and without the longwalls thert&gt;will
be no mines . We miners also have
spent a lifetimeworkingforwhatwe
have and mining has ' been a
tradition in manyofourfamilies for
generations. Wt&gt; will not sit Idly by
and watch as C.O.A.L. and their
attorneys attempt tod('troyourway
of life.
Genf' C. Oiler
President
Local Union 188&gt;

Today in history
Today is Monday, March 21, the !11th day of 1!1l3. There are 275 days left
In the year. ·
Today's Highlight in History: ,
On March 2l. 1979, the Israeli cabinet approved the U.S.·sponsored
peace treaty with Egypt, clearing the way for a signing ceremony in
Washington.
On this date:
In 1685, composer Johann Sebastian Bach was bortl' In Germany.
In 1'190, Thomas Jef1erson beca!ll&lt;' the first Secretary,-of State.
In 1829, an earthquake In Spain killed about 6,00l people.
·And In 1891, a marriage In Kentucky ended the feud between the
'
Hatflelds and the McCoys.
,

.

-~-~-,Ga
__y_,7Ma
~~~2~1:,~I~9~83;-~~;;~;;;;;;;;;----;~:-----------~P:ome:=r~o~y::~M:~:d:le~po=:rt~,;O:h:io~--------------------------------~~T:he:!Da~ily~~=n~ti:ne~I~Pa~g~e::3~;: :

Pa9e-2-The Daily Sentinel ·
Pomeroy---;-Midcllepolt, Ohio •
Monday, March 21, 19$3

Wailing for Georgi

BERLIN - We are all vaguely
famlliar with the arrangements,
bui having just today laid eyt&gt;S on
them for tre first time, I think you
would want to be reminded.
First there Is shoulder-high
mortar and concrete. Tht&gt;n there Is
astretchofearth.aboutlOyardsof
It. It is advertised that there are
land mines burled here and there.
although we are · for obvious
reasonsnotglvenaguldeastothelr
exact location. After that trere are
concrete tank-stoppers, which look
like a knot of barbed wire, made of
concrete, and magnified 100 tinnt&gt;S.
Then there Is another stretch of
earth, about five yards, where dogs
____

ruil, Alsatians trained to

bar~k'.-=:and~~l;-::es:::-=:fr:-::o:::m~g:::o:-.ln:::g:::o:::u:-.t.-------:see=.'so:lmll::;;;:a-:rl;::y:-,::w:-e-;:ll;::v:-e-;in__a_wo_r7Id;-

bite. Then there' Is a concertina of
barbed wire, some of It very rusth
In appearance, some looking as if
made of stainless steel. Either way,
enough to serve Its purpose. And,
finaDy, The Wall.
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, the
most Impenetrable wall in modem
history. It Is to be distinguished
frorri otht'r fort111cations in !hat It Is
very nearly unique, havtng no
analogue save in prtson walls. It Is
intended not to keep people from
coming in to disturb the security
and serenity of the .waD's custodi·
ans. Its ft!nction Is to keep people
who are Inside the wall's boundar·

Thus, 17 million East Germans

are prevented from doing. the kind
of thing they were doing before the
wall ws created: leaving a totalltar·
tan soc~ty and heading to Wt&gt;St
Berlin. There they would arrive
With a suitcase of old clothes and
baby pictures, and notlilng else.
But freedom. In tht' month before
the waD went up on August 13, 1961,
25,00) Germans had Oed Commu·
nlst Germany.
A doctor onee remarks that it is
unfortunately true that many doc·
tors and nurses have a way of
habituating themselves· to human
pain, so much of It do they routinely

!'lfiL.
'1,fllftl

JUSTICE IN "EL &lt;i:~\.VA'OOR,

Hoover~s

smear

WASHINGTON - The Justice
Department today will put into
t&gt;ffect "clarifications" that will
relax ltsguidelinesforthe investiga·
tion of suspected subversive groups.
Amongotht&gt;rthings, therestrictions
on undercover informants wiil be
loosened.
Ironically, today also marks the
opening of a trial that involves this
very point: the FBI's handling of an
informant involved in the slaying ol
a civil-rights activist, Viola Uuzw,
18 years ago this week. Intt&gt;rnal FBI
documents on tht&gt; case show that, if
anything, the government's investi·
gations of political groups should be
under even tlghercontrol'- and the
control should start right at the top.
Liuzza, a 39-yt&gt;ar-old white
mother of fivt&gt; from Detroit, was
killed on March 25. 1%1. assht&gt; and a
,l9·year-old black man were driving

Redus breaks slump wit~ grandsiam

William F. Buckley Jr.

Slow pace for
Ohio lawmakers
Ohio's lawmakers appa rently are going to be satisfied this year just to
try to keep the sta te running while rooting it on most of the social issues.
Nearly three months into the session. the House and Senatt&gt; havt&gt;
enacted only two significant bills- a 90 percent increase in the incomt&gt; tax
along wit h some other smaller tax increases and a measure implementing
a voter-approved statewide housing program.
The House goes into its Easter recess Wednesday (until April6) and the
Senate will put a moratorium on floor sessions from March 29 until Apri17.
There probably will be somt&gt; interim committee meetings in both
chambers, howt&gt;ver.
Although Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste's two·year budget will not
beintroduced until March 30, some advance work begins this week as
agency heads a nd others explain what they project as their needs to tht&gt;two
finance committ t&gt;eS.
One top leader said privately that the slow pace this year is deliberate
becauSE' lawmakers feel a low profile is best right now.
New laws often mean new programs and tht' Democrats, who control
both houses . do not want voters to think taXI'S were raised for that purpose
rather than out of absolute .need.
Sen. Stanley J . Aronoff, R·Cinclnnatl, following Celestt&gt;'s State of the
State spet&gt;eh to a joint session TUesday, noted that the governor plans to
look at the possibility of still more taxt&gt;s - this time on business.
Aronoff. who said the incomt&gt; tax hike by itself is excessive, said "it
soundt'd like there will be a serie; of.business taxes to jack up the spending
levt&gt;l."
Aronoff and otht&gt;r Republicans who voted against the permanent tax
increase asserted it will create a surplus instead of only erasing a current
deficit of $511 million and kt't'ping bills paid in tht&gt; next biennium.

--

tactics~

between Selma· and Montgomery,
Ala., after the famous civil-rights
march organized by Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr. Four members of
the Ku Klux Klan pulled up
alongside the Liuzza car on a lonely
stretch of road and loosed a volley of
shots. Mrs. Liuzzo was killed. Her
eonnpanion was not hit: he survived
by playing dead aft£'r the car ran off
the road into the fence.
One of the four men in the Klan car
was Gary Thomas Rowe, an FBI
informant. His testimony later
'helped convict the three otht'r men
of federai £'ivil· rights Violations, but
it ·was nevt&gt;r established t&gt;xactly
who shot Mrs. Liuzza. ·
The Liuzza children are suing the
government, c laiming tht&gt; FBI was
negligent in it s handling of its
Informant. Thomas Rowe.
My associatps· Tony Capokccio

and at a time when human pain
becomes so mundane, we cease to
give It particular notice.
The means by which we get used
to barbarism Is worth tht' kind of
attention Joseph Sobran, the brtl·
!ant essayist and columnist, devotes to the question in a recent
review of Georgi Arbatov's book, .
"The Soviet VIewpoint." Arbatov Is
the Kremlin's of11cial 'America'"
expert, and he is eommlssloned
simultaneously to advise the Krem·
lin on what are the most giarlng
current weaknesses In )he West,
and then egg on the West to
rooperate In Its decline. .
Sobran does a trenchant job of ·
Isolating the expressions used by
Arbatov In his riew book. The point
here is to demonstrate how the
. SQviet Union is given to trading on.
liberal ~liches. From Arbatov
nowadays, you do not hear· about ·
workers' revolts ·(there was quite
enough of that at Gdansk), or
violent and bloody revolutions.
Nothing so ..'. uncouth. What has
happened is nothing less than too
transform a tlon of Communist Rhe- :
torte, or at least that much of it ·
directed to the outside world, into
the cliches of liberalism.
The foilowtng is only a short
compUation from Sobran's .much
longer list. But pray stay with me,
even If you want to start biting your
fingernaUs , because the exercise is
instructive.
What does Arbatov talk about?
He talks about "mutuaDy accepta·
ble solutions." About "avoiding
confrontation." About "new real!·
ties" and the need to 9Void any
"mood of nostalgia." About "hard·
liners in Washington given to saber
rattling."

\

pitch that way."
The Philiies had only t&gt;igh t hit s,
but twowt&gt;re doubles byTonyPerel
a nd B111 Robinson.
Ed Farmer pitched the final 22·3
innings for Philadelphia, striking
out four and allowing no runs.
Cincinnati is ~-!i. P hiladelphia is
3-7.

Takes LPGA event
KAANAPALI , Hawa ii (API
Kathy Whitworth sank a 30-foot putt
on the final holt&gt; to win the LPGA's
$200,000 Women's Kemper Open
Sunday with a 4·under-par 288.
One stroke behind was Da le
Eggeling of Tampa , Fla., who
started the final round with a
l-over-par and shot a 69 Sunday on
the par-73 6,23.5 yard Royal Kaana·
pa li Nort h course.

/Willer's Luningjoins Rio Redmen
RECRUD' INKS WITH REDMEN - Jay Luning, a 6-5 forward
from Miller High School, has signed al)aslletballlettt&gt;r-&lt;&gt;f·inten(toattend
Rio Grande Coilege. Luning averaged 23.9 points and 14 rebounds per
game last season. He is pictured at a J:'t'rellt press eonferene.. for the
signing With Rio Grandt&gt; head roach Jllhn Lawhorn.

'

Mel·gs boxer becomes
'

new state

ch~pion

Meigs' Brian Nitz was crowned
. the Ohio State champion among

now.~

______Ja_c_k_A_nd_e_rs_on

and Indy Badhwar have examined
hundreds of interna I F'BI . docu ·
ments, which make clear that the
FBI's behavior gOt'S shockingly far
beyond negligence.
Evid('ntly aware of the embar·
rassment the FBI would suffer from
tht&gt; presence of it s undereover
informant in tht&gt; murderers' car.
Oirt&gt;etor J. Edgar Hoovt&gt;r mar·
shaled the burt&gt;au's ·resourct&gt;S to
blacken the dead woman 's reputa·
lion. This came at a time when the
bureau was also trying to smear
King and find links ix'tween King's
Southern Christian Leadership Con·
ft&gt;renee and the Communist Party.
Within 24 hours of Mrs. LhiZZD's
murder, a summary document
prepared for top FBI officials
reported : "Mrs. Liuzza had punc·
turt&gt; marks- in ht&gt;r arm Indicating
recent useofahypodermicneedle."

TAMPA, Fla. lAP) - Gary Jeff Jones, Ron Oster and Alex
Redus said after slugging·a g rand Trevino on base.
slam homer in the Cincinnati Reds'
Concepcion , who also singlro
. 9·3 t&gt;xhibition victory over the twice and drove in two runs, has now
Philadelphia Phillit&gt;S that he's knockro in eight runs in nine games.
worked himSE'If out of a slump.
Redus struck out six times in his
"I am lucky, but it's always
previous two games.
important to hit, even in spring
" I don't know why, but the for last
training, beeause we are having
couplt&gt; of days, I just wasn't ready.
spring training to get us togethe r,"
My concent ration had broken down.
Concepcion said.
I had to stop striking out and so I had .
Right-hander Mario Soto, ,who
to concentrate on that," ht&gt;said.
will pitch the National Leagut&gt;
. Redus, who will lead off for- the
opener agains t lht&gt; Atlanta Braves
Reds, said, "I am used to hittlhg
April4. pitched six innings to get the
third or fourth and whenever T hit
victory. He walked one and struck
home.runs, I'm not usually trying to
out
five while a llowing one run and
do it. When I try, l don't hit them."
four hits.
' David Concepcion's solo homer
was among 14 hits as the Reds won
their fourth con'*!Cutive exhibition
"I was kind of worried about
gamt&gt;.
·· myself," said Soto. who had a bad
Redus' grand slam keyed a outing against the St. Louis Cardl·
six· run fourth inning and came with
nals last week. "Notxxly likes to

" I stated the man himSE'lf .
(LiuZZDl doesn't havp too good a
background, and the woman had '.
indications of.nt'ed!(' marks in her
arms where sht&gt; had bet'n taking
dope; tha t s he wassittingvery, very
close to the Nt&gt;grO in the car; that it
had the appearance of a necking
party."
Hoover's diligent efforts to depict
Mrs. Liuzzo as a junkit&gt; were shot
down by the autopsy report a week
later, however. Atelegram from the
Mobile. Ala .. FBI Offlee to Hoover.
dated April1. 1965. s tated:
"The a utopsy report was turned
over and s hows no findings which
would in any way explain the
puncture marks appar~ntly made .
b~· needle which appear in !;huzo's
arm . The medical t&gt;xamint&gt;r Is
being rt'COntacted and this matter
will be discussed with him
specifically."

q~allty for the nationals, held in

NewMexlco.Whlttingtonistheonly

RIO GRANDE ..:. Jay Luning, a
6-5 forward from Hemlock, has
s igned a basketballletter-of·intent
to attt&gt;nd Rio Grande College.
L~ning was a three-year starter
at Miller High School where he was
twict&gt;named to the all-district team
and last season was district player
of the year. This· year he was also

~::ed

Rio Grande head coach John school records for career points and
Lawhorn . "Jay is a proven shooter, rebounds an&lt;! points in a season.
and rebo\mder andweweleomehim ·
He will join a Rio Grandt&gt; team
to our program. "
that finisht'd 26-11 this St'ason and
Luning averaged 23.9 points and earned the runner·up spoJ in the
14 rebounds per game last season Mid·Ohio Con fert&gt;nce regularwhile shooting 53 pereent from the season standings, MOC tourna·
floor andffipercentattht&gt;freethrow m en! , and NAJA District 22 cha m·
line. Miller went 15-6 last season pions?ip. In each case, the Redmen
wert&gt; runners-up to Walsh College,
13 the nation's second-ranked team .
He is the son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
rebounds per game as a junior and
Francis
Luning of Hemlocfl.
13pointsandllcaromspercontest

'

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prices apply to dog food,
tool Just compare our price
. r,•r pound with other leadng brand a and, In most
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POMEROY
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un~:r~:~~::~qs;:~~~·and

to the Class A AU' State

"We're pleased to sign a quality
player and person like Jay,'' said

25 LB.

c~sT~M~e~~;~~e~r~in~the~open~~c~la~s:s·~------------------------------_:a~s_:a~,~so:p:h:o:m:o:r:e.~L~u:n:in~g~h:o:ld:s~--------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~

in the inU5thepound
Friday night
Colllmbus
Regional Golden Gloves Championship held at Cooper Arena at the
Ohio State Fairgrounds.
· Nitz knocked out Columbllss'
Angelo, Brown Brown in the first
round to become the !ll'W champion.
Nitz defeated Anthony Payton of
Dayton the night before to qualify
for the finals. Tht&gt; local boxerwon by
decision over tht' Dayton fighter .
·The bouts were sanctioned by the
Ohio Association of the United
States of America Boxing Federa·
tiqn (USABF) .
The new state champion had ·
gained entrance into the state event
when he decis!Oned Ohio Unlversl·
ty's Tim Wolfe in winning the gold
medal in the sectlomil meet at
Trimble a week earlier.
Also going to the state bouts after
winning gold 'medals in the Trimble
sectlonals for the local boxing club
were 85 pound Mark Fai'I'OW, lffi
pound Brian Wtllis, 119 pound Bud
Farrow, and 147 pound Charlie
Whittington. Marshail Green won a
bronze medaL
In the state, Bud Farrow losi a
decision to Tyron WaUs of Colum·
bus While Whittington was declSi·
oned by Elbert Nelms of Columbus,
both in the opening round of the
competition.
Only open class boxers could

Selling our birthrigi.,.L.h_t_____L_ow_el_lW_i_ng_ett.
While Northerners are shivering
with tht&gt; cold and anticipation of
their monthly fuel bill , comt&gt;S word
that Secrptary of the Interior James
Watt is .st&gt;Jiing our government's
reserves of coal for 3.5cents per ton.
With coal selling on the mark('t at
$3) per ton and up, it is enough to at
least make them hot under the
collar'
Watt is vastly accelerating the
amount of federal coal propertif'S
leased or sold regardless oft re hug&lt;'
oversupply of coal on the' market. In
1982 federal coal salt'S in Wyoming's
Powdt&gt;r Ri&gt;Jer Basin , the govern·
men!' s receipts average only 3.5
rents per ton, far below the 19 cents
per ton which Watt had reeeived in
tht&gt; preceding 18 months for
comparative tracts In the same
region. Although independent esti·
matt'S of ihevalut&gt;of tht&gt; tracts wt&gt;rt&gt;
$250mi1Uon, tht' Watt sale garnered
only $55 miUion for tht' Federal
treasury. He is now all SE't to
expeditt&gt; the sale of almost 11 billion
more tons of.federal roal, in spite of
tht&gt; curent glut on the market. With
no pun intended, Watt is overseeing
the biggest "firt&gt; sale" of federal
reserves and resources in the
nation's history .
In our nation's federal forests,
Watt and the administration plan to
doub)e the amount of timber cut
unt ll the year 2(XX], dt&gt;Spite the three
year surplus 'bf government timber
that is bought a.nd not yet out. Thi;i
plan would removt&gt; trees from the
natioinal forest faster than nature
can replenish them. Right now, with
a world-wide oil glut, Watt is
determined to lease virtually all our
coastal waters to oil eompanies, 25
timt&gt;S the amount of acreage teased
since the program began in 1953. He
is trying to opel\ our last rerriaining
wilderness areas to oil and gas
drilliJ'Ig despite studies that show
less than one percent of the lower·48
states' potential on-shore preserves
are In wilderness areas.
.
What is driving the richest nation
in the worJd tb conduct a gigantiC
fire sale, gotng-out·of·buslness saie
or bankruptcy sale of the national
reservt&gt;S and resources we have

accumulated over 200 years? It is
the fanatical idrology of Secretary
Watt to tum our resources over to
private interests and the desire of
President Ronald Reagan to makt&gt;
his administration look good finan·
ciaily and take cart&gt; of business
interests. Tying up our national
rt&gt;Serves by sate or lease is folly
compafable to tht&gt; drunk who hooks
his shoes to buy a bottle. They will
both mL~s them when they sober up
and can't get them back.
Since the time of George Washington, 11 has bef'n every administration's policy to add to our natural
reserves and leave a richet· inherit·
ance for our desc£'ndants. It is tht'
height of arrogance for thisadminis·
traiton to begin a systematic
plundering of the resourct&gt;S accum·
ulated ovt&gt;r 200 yt&gt;ars. Before Watt
was appointed to his present
position, he was a Colorado lawyer
for the Sagebrush Rebellion, an
organization seeking to return
federal lands to thestates . ForY.ears .

.

he had battled the department he
now heads. Wh&lt;:'n their political
entitles changed from Territorii'S to
J t.c.. cS ,
the state governments
wanted no partofmillionsofacresof
unproductive lands which they
vit&gt;wed as a futurt&gt; drain on stat£'
coffers to administer. Th£' federa l
government actually assumed con·
trot of vast areas ofWt&gt;Stem lands
by dC'fault . When these lands began
to promise riches in natura l
resources. thr sta ll'S wanted them
back. Henct&gt; the appearanee on the
'federal scene of tht&gt; Sagebrush
Rebt'llion and James Watt.
The Sagt&gt;brush Rebellion states
and the ir businpss interests have no
lt&gt;ga l or moral claim to th£' acres
tl)ey had relinquished. They simply
saw big mont&gt;)! and wanted to cash
in. Now. with th&lt;:'ir govt&gt;rnmental
gadfly h('ading the Interior Depart·
men! , why not expand their
opportunistic efforts to include all
national natural accumulation of
· 200 years was theirs for tht&gt; taking?

That Is jus t what theadministratlqn ~
and James Watt Intend to do! Tiley ,
are going to attt&gt;mpt dominatiOn of '
froeral r('S()urct&gt;S for vast plundering that w11l bt' felt centuries from
now If Congress dOt'S not makesomt&gt;
attempt to rein in the opportunists.
Unless Congress acts decisively,
lands and resources held in trust for
future generations will be frittered
away without our heirs having any •
voil-e in the hlture of their ;.
inherita nce.
~
I ha vt&gt; lived through quite a few
administrations but, never have I .
seen an administration that cares
less about what happens 1o the ~:
country. Their haste to take in the ·;
sheekels while they arcstlll in power : .
is rt&gt;miniscent of somt&gt; of tht' .'•
powerful political machines whiCh ,'
r~ n our cittt&gt;S a few decades ago. ;,;
The cities got smart and kicked tht' ~ •
rascals out .
,
:;
When is thecountrygoingtoget'as ·
smart as its cities?
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�Page

4-The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~ntinel

MondQy, March 21, 1983

Monday, March 2l, 1983

. The Pai_ly Sei!tinel

Reaves continues impressiVe showinUSFL

Utah upsets UCLA; Buckeyes, Memphis State "M,n
As Atlantic Coast Conference
By~R.BARNARD
champions,
North Carolina State
AP Sports Writer
appears to have more .solid credenUtah and North Carolina Sta te
tials than Utah, but the Wolfpack
meet Thursday night in the final
was only 17-10 in the regular season
fitting session lor this year's glass
before three straight victories in tbe
slipper at the NCAA basketball
ACC
tournament gave it an autotournament.
matic
berth in the NCAA.
The Wallpack challenged the
North
Carolina State edged
Utes for the Cinderella tag Sunday
69-67 in the first round
Pepperdlne
with a last -gasp 71-70 victory over
before
upsetting
Nevada-Las Vegas
sixth-ranked Nevada-Las . Vegas .
on i&gt;foot-11 center Thurl Bailey's
Uta hand North Carolina State meet
rebound basket with four seconds
In the West Regional semifina ls at
left. Bailey tipped in the rebound of a
Ogden, Utah .
·
- Of the 16 teams remaining in the missed 20-footer by Deil2Ck Whittennational championship tourna- burg to give North Carolina State Its
fifth close victory in a row.
ment, 13 a re seeded , with Iowa ,
Nevada-Las Vegas led 52-40 with
Utah and North Carolina Sta te the
11
:
40 remaining, but the Runnin'
only unseeded teams.
Rebels allowed the Woifpack to
Utah, whOse 18-13 record is now
the worst in the tournament , beat come back by missing several
layups and free throws.
-No. 7 UCLA Saturday after opening
"We haven't been a good free
the tournament with an upset
throw
team ail year and it came .
triumph over lllinois.
back
to
hurt us in a big game, " said
Jn othe r games Sunday , St. John's
UNLV
Coach
JerryTarkanlan.
beat Rutgers 6!&gt;5:i and Ohio State
Nevada-Las
Vegas, UCLA and
defeated Syracuse 79-74 in the East
Regiona l, Memphis State ousted No. 10 Missouri are the only seeded
Georgetown 66-57 and . Iowa teams (and theontyones in the Top
swamped Missouri 77~ in the Ten) who aren't among the 16 who
Midwest . Lou is ville toppled Tennes- advaneed to regional semifinals
see , 70-57 and Indiana whipped with victories on Saturday and
Oklahoma 63-49 in the Mideast and Sunday.
Greg Stokes scored 22 points as
Boston College stopped Princeton
Iowa
easily handled the Tigers in
51-42 in the West.

~ NIT

the Midwest Regional at LouisVUle
to advance to the next round against
No. 13 VUlanova at Kansas City of
Friday.
In tlle first game of the Midwest
doubleheader,' Keith Lee hlt eight of
11 shots from thP field and had 28
points and 15 rebounds to lead
17th-r;mked Memphis State past
No. 20 Georgetown. Georgetown's
sophomore star, Patrick Ewing,
had24polntsandninerebounds. but
he was In foultroubleformuchofthe
game _and also misSiild four dunk
·
shots.
Memphis State meets top-ranked
Houston In the other Kansas City
semifinal.
.. , Third-ranked -St. John's, the top
seed in the East, got 24 points from
Chris Mullin to defeat Rutgers
despite a shaky first · half at
Hartford, Conn. The Redmen fell
behind 2!&gt;19 while shooting only 39.4
percent in the first 15 minutes, but
then went ahead 29-28 at halftime
despite 74-percent shooting by
Rutgers.
In Sunday's East opener, Tony
Campbell scored eight of his 17
points on rebound baskets in a span
of7: llln the second halftoleadOhio
State over Syracuse.
IntheEastRegionalsemifinalsat
Syracuse on Friday, St. John's

meets Georgia and OhloStatefaces
North Carolina.
In the Mideast doubleheader at
Evansville, Ind., Ch¥ies Jones and
Lancaster Gordon scored 18 points
apiece to lead No.2 Louisville past
Tennessee, the 30th victory In 34
games for the Cardinals, Including
the last 14 in a row. An ll-2 spurt
midway through thesecondhalf'Put
LouisVIlle in control after Tennessee cut a seven-point · halftime
deficit to4:;43.
"~ thought we did a good job of
keeping the ball outofEI!ls' hands,"
Louisville Coach Denny Crum said.
Dale ElUs, an All-American, was
held to 13 points - 10 under his
average.
Fifth-ranked Indiana got22polnts
on 10-of-17 shooting from Randy
Wittman and effectively used delay
tactics in thelinall4 minutes to beat
Oklahoma.
Louisville takes on Arkansas and
Indiana meets Kentucky in t)le
Mideast semifinals at Knoxville,
Tenn., on Thursday.
After the N\)rth Carolina Sta te
upset of Nevada -Las Vegas, Boston
College held Princeton without a
field goal in the firstl4~ minutes of .
the second half to turn a close game
its way. Jay Murphy scored 17
points for the 11th-ranked Eagles.

who led 41-30aftertheTigersmlssed
their first 12 shots from the Door
after halftime.
'
Bostoit College meets VIrginia,
the top-seeded team In the West
Regional, in ·the other half of
Thursday's doubleheader.
In Saturday's games, Georgia
edged Virginia Commonwealth
56-54 and North Carolina bomt:Jed
James Madison 68-49 In the East, .
.Virginia outlasted Washington
State,54-40 and Uiah upset UCLA
67-&lt;illn the West, Houston whipped
Maryland 60-50 and Villanova
nipped Lamar 60-~ln tl;l.e Midwest,
and Arkansas beat Purdue 78-(ll!and
Kentucky topped Ohio University
57-40 in the Mideast.

(USPIUI·. . )

_, DlvWD• or Mla!Utnedla, lac.
Published every afternoon, Monday

. ·.

Chicago gave George Allen tlle
: cold shoulder.
•
. ' The coach of the Windy City's
· entry In the United States Foo{ball
League brought tlle Bittzlnto snowy
Soldier Field Sunday, and barely
one-third of the 68,000 seats in the
ancient edifice were filled.
.And the Denver Gold left !lie Blitz
with a cold, empty feeling,- too.
Quarterback Ken Johnson swept
into the end zone on a fourth'&lt;lown,
1-yard keeper with 18 seconds
remaining to defeat Chicago. The
16-13· defeat was the second last. minute loss by the Blitz in two
: week~Qds.
' "It's like a doctor doing a let of
things properly and then the patient
dies," said Allen .

through Friday, Ul Court Street, by
the Ohio ValleyPubU.hlqCommpany

· Multimedia, Inc .• Pomeroy, Qhio ,
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paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

ctau postare

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Outside Ohio

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tournament's quarter final games set tonight

everything. "
By The As.ociated Press
The Privateers are led by Mark
When you're trying to build a
Pettaway, a !&gt;7 senior who aver:basketball reputation at a littleages 17.8 points and 7.6 rebounds a
known school. you don't complain
game. Charlie Sitton, one of the few ·
when the Nationallnvitation Tourholdovers from last year's NCAA
nament ships you halfway across
quarterflnalists,
leads the Beavers
: the count ry.
with
an
19-point
average.
• "We wUl go anywhere and play
But Carl Tacy of Wake Forest
: anyone at a ny time," says Don
isn't as happy to be on the road. He
' smith , whose New Orleans team
thought the Deacons would get to
will play Oregon State Monday
play at home after going to Murray
night in Corvallis, OrP. "This is a
State.
chance for us to get exposure in
Wake Forest beat Murray 87~
.another part of the country."
while
Vanderbilt was downing East
· Smith' s Privateers, 23-6, didn't
Tennessee
at home, where It has a
: have to go far for their first victory ,
14-2 record this year. But ,Vandy
: traveling up to Baton Rouge to beat
' Louisiana State. 99,94 in overtime.
'that gave them some prestige in
·their hom e state: now they're
seeking it at a national level.
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP I- Jodi
"One coach told me they may be
Rot
h no longer isarecruitingsecret,
the most underrated club in the
not
after her record-shattering
count ry," said Lanny Van Ema n,
in leading Shelby to its
performance
an assistant coach at 19-10 Oregon
first
Cla~s AAA state girls basketState. which downed Idaho 77-59 in
ball title.
its first-round game.
The 6-loot senior forward set
In other NIT quarter-final games
three girls state tourna m ent reMonday night, Iona will be at
cords
and tied another with 13 field
Nebraska: Virginia Tech at South
goals.
8 free throWs and 34 poin!s. lt
:carolina. Fresno State at Michigan
helped
Shelby ·ambush favored
' state, Wake Forest at Vanderbilt,
71-69 Saturday.
Barberton
South Florida at Mississippi,
All
Roth
did in the championship
Northwestern vs. DePaul at Rosegamt&gt;
in
St.Johil
Arena was sink 13
mont , Ill ., a nd Texas Christian at
of
16
floor
shots,
8
oliO free throws
, Arizona State
'
and collect 16 rebounds.
: "They' re an interesting ballclub
Roth's performance wiped out
; and they play under control ,"
six-point leads by· Barberton in the
- Oregon State Coach Ralph Miller
- says of New Orleans, to whic h Smith opening . moments of the fourth
quarter , giving Shelby a 27-1record.
concurs: "we do a little bit of

Coach C.M. Newton says, "We'll
have to play better than we did
against East Tennessee.''

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utll!t!es Commission .of Ohio has set
for pu bl!c hearing C&amp;se
No . 62 - 162 - EL - EFC
(Subf!le A), to review the
fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company,
t:.he operation of Its Electric Fuel Component and
related matters . This
hearlng Is scheduled to
~eg!n at 9:30 a .m . on
Ma~c h 25, 1963 at the off!cee of -t:.he Pu bllo
Ut111t1es Commission of
Ohio, 375 South HJgh
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215.

· The !aria-Nebraska game has
suddenly kindled basketball spirit in
Lincoln, Neb., where football has
always been king. The Cornhuskers
downed Tulane 72-&lt;i!ilast week and
fans lined up all weekend to buy
tickets for tonight's game.
"Driving to the Tulane game. l
saw a sign wishing tile basketball
team good luck and ·that's the first
·sign I've seen like that in 17 years,"
said Coach Moe lba.

Roth leads Shelby to state title
The Magics,-led b~ Valerie Parks'
19 points. suffered their first defeat
in 28 games this season.
In the other championship
games, Zanesville Rosecrans
scored a bittersweet second straight
Class A title, routing 1981champlon
Mansfield St. Peter's 70-:rl and
unbeaten Huron t28-0i celebrated
it s first CiassAAchampionshlpwith
Chagrin
F ails,
a 52-45 victorv
. over
.
.

77-65, the
while
in the second
::eontest
the s hirts
among
over-the-hiUers
: cover 301, Gold came from behind to
:P&lt;lge Maroon, '9-49.
- Lonnie Coats led the winning
Skins five with 12 tallie« while Bob
Ashley and Chuck Kennl'liy added
· lOa piece.
: JeffWa y l and l ~ the loserswith 14
:while Dan Dodson chipped in with

~ - '! · lU: f' . H&lt;.~gw&gt;rt _, .
' IUI'.U.~ :U. 11-09.

~ ·1~ :

New
liwing Rm. Suite

. Reg. $239

$}4995
SAVE '90

Naw

Top, lnnl!rspring

FIRM

MArrRESSES
TWIN
FULL
•neg.$89.96 Reg . $1ull.liiJ

$5995
$7995
Ea. Pc.
.
Ea. Pc.

THE PUBLIC. UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk ,
Secretary.

ne

Paytnent Plan.
love it in Januawsy
as you did in June.

,.

·Alumni games successful
: The Meigs 'Athletic Boosters
:a lumni basketball games held at the
;Larry Morrison Gymnasium Saturdav night has been declared
:Successful.
" In the opening game among the
under 3iJ grads. the Skins raced by

All Interested parties
wtl1 be given an opportunity to be heard. Further Information may ba
obtained by contacting
· the Commission.

n. Au.lt 1-ll-2.

MAROON (-19) - TannC'hill ,J - ~- HI: Cum ·
mlngs 11-1·1: WISt• .1-4·10; Harrl..;on 7 -!"l-- 1~ ;
01'('nner 1-1 -3; B. M V&lt;'I'S 1-H-2; Hovattrr0-2-:l:
.Johruion Hl-2. T&lt;YJ'AI..~ 17-13-19.
8~

quart&lt;--rs:

fi&lt;Jld ... .. ..... " ....... '" ............ in :!0

1j

16---fB

Maroon ............................. Hi 1n 7 10-49

r~rt~~~~~~~~iii~
631 JACKSON PIKE- RT. 3~ WEST
4-4ec4524
lJAifOAW MATJHfES SAT &amp; SUN
AlL

S~ATS

.

S2.00

AOMfSSION EVfR'( niESDA'f 11.00

- ~3.

: In the second game. the Gold's
Ron Logan regained a shooting eye
that made him an all-SEOAL first
teamer in 1%6 with 13 points while
·Larry Rupe added 10 for the
winners.
Phil Harrison , a member of
Pomeroy's last SEOAL championiihip squad · of 1958, paeed the
Maroon team with 19 while Middleport's Gene Wise and Mark Tannehill helped out with 10 eacli.
~

aUftr.« ( i.»nw

.

· SHffi'I'S (6-1) - [)odo;;on !'"J-.1-t :l; Mf'a&amp;ws
.1.J.9: Miller o..J-2: .Judw 1-0-:!; BN:-kC'I'" ~~~;
Wavland .l S-14: Rail~ :l-0-H: Smith .1-H-h:
l&lt;&lt;'th·l-0-:t Sw&lt;.~ n :! - 1 -~. T(JI'i\1_..., 'U-17-63.
• -~HJR..TS (71) - Ful 2- 1 - ~: D. Krnnro~­

-The Equal Payment Plan takes the surprises out of your
electric bill.
You know in advance what the amount will be.
And you know it will be the same. II won '1 fluctuate with
the seasons.
With ,the Equal Payment Plan, the amount you pay each
month is based on your average yearly electric usage.

-t-0-~ : Sn(M-dC'fl ~.l!l : AshJ~· -J.:!- 111: B. Dodo;; on

"-U--1 · OavC'flJXl1 :l-1-fl: Mur!ln 1-2-t C.
Krn~~· :l.fi-10: r o:ll :- . -t-4-1:!: Walt('rsl -0-:!: Cl.
J&lt;rnn~·

B

:HI-fl. TOTtU...'\29-1&amp;·'!7.
........,.,.

Shlr~sq......................

. ... H 1;1 1K 17-ffi

Skins ..................... .......... .. 1:! 1~1 :l;! '!~- Tl
SF.f'ONJ) GAME
.. (.OW (5H) - M . W&lt;'I'T)'' 1-0-:l: R. Wrrry
1·1·.1: LoJ?;an ~:Hl: P. Ault -t-1-lll: &lt;;h,il~ '.!-0---1 ;
Prl('(':.!-:\.fi; .J. M~·&lt;'rs Hl-2; N(llson l -:l.ti: Rupc-

WITH WARM WEATHER COMING UP, A NEWSPAPER
ROUTE IS AGOOD IDEA! YOU EARN MONEY WHILE BEING OUTSIDE, WINNING GREAT PRIZES, AND MEETING
GREAT PEOPLE.
ROUTES IN POMEROY, MIDDLEPORT. SYRACUSE.
CALL US TODAY AT

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156

Your account is reviewed every six months to s"" that your
budget payment is still as close as possible to your average use.
And the twelfth month you receive a senle-up bill or credit.
So fur your own peace of mind, get on the Equal Payment ·
Plan.
,
First step is to clip this coupon and mail it today.
We'll take it from there.

. . - - -- - - - - CLIPANDMAIL•-

1 · 0

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Yes, I'm interested in the Equal Payment, Plan.

----- ,

Name ----------~----------------------------~--~---------------Address ~
· ~~------------~~--------~---~--~---------------------

City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ State _ _~_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ZiP'------~ Signature
Account Number · - - - - - - - - - - - - Mail coupon to: Markcting!&lt;;:uatomer Services Dept. • Ohio Power Company
'301-305 Cleveland Avenue, S.W. • P .O. Box 400 • Canton, Ohio 44701

---------------•

I : I .I

lt••r•eaL

I

I·

I

--- ~

ByBRUCELOwrri'
AP SportsWrller

..

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•

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'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

In SUiiday's other games, unbeaten Tampa Bay routed winless
New Jersey 32-9 as John Reaves
threw three touchdown passes and
tllf! Bandits shut down Herschel
Walker, and the Boston Breakers
edged winless Washlngton 19-16 on
T1J,n Mazzetti's 29-yard field goal
with 27 seconcts'to play.
On Saturday night, OaklaiJd
outlasted Michigan ~27 and Arizona defeated Los Angeles 21-14.
Tonight, I'hlladelphia v isits
B!rmlngltam.
Denver Coach Red Miller said he
never considered playing it safe.
going for the "sure" three points
with a field goal and then hoping for
a shot at victory In overtime. "We
didn't think 'kick' at ail," Miller
said. "I didn't want to ile. We
wanted to win- and It was a big, big

win for our young · · · '11. ''
Johilson drove Dt, ver 70yards to
Its winning touchdown , passing
·twice to tight end Bob Niziolek for
gains of 14 and 13 yards, the second
completion putting the baU. at the
Chicago 3-yard tine. Three plays
gained just two yards, setting up the
·
fourth-and-1.
"I took a good lookatthegoalllne
right before the play," johilsonsald.
"It looked Uke a yard and a half
away." ;'\nd with the snow and the
· wind, the footing was treacherous.
But Johson crossed up the defense,
sweeping around left end and
scooting over a goal line he couldn't
see because of the snow. .
Greg Landry's 42-yard touchdown pass to Lenny Wlllls and field
goals of 27 and 38 yards by John

Breakers 19, Fedei'!Ull6
Roveto accounted for the Blitz
scoring. Harry Sydney set up a field · A tiny home-openlitg crowd o!l8,430
in nearly as tiny Nickerson Field
goal by Brian Speelman witb a
(capacity: 20,535) saw Tim Maz36-yard run, then sprinted 30 yards
zetti continue Ills sizzling perforfor the first ID by the Gold.
mance fat the Breakers with four
Bandits 32, GenenU!9
field goals. Mazzetti had a meteoric
Walker had been only mediQCre In
rlseandfall with Atlanta In the NFL
. the Generals' first two games, bo)h
a few years back.
on the road, by rushing tor 65 and
But the real hero of the game was
then 60 yards. And In front of a
Boston's
nose tackle, Jeff Gaylord.
home-opener crowd o~ 53,370 - the
largest attedance In the USFL 's · He lined up opposite Federals
center Dave Pacella, a replacethree-week history- he carried the
ment for regular long-ball snapper
ball 19 times for only 39 yards
Bruce Byrom. Two of Pacella's
against a Tampa Bay defense that
snaps- one on a field-goal attempt,
keyed on hlm all day.
the other on a punt- were bungled,
Meanwhile, Greg Boone carried
leading to a touchdown and the
the ball18 times for 72 yards and a
game-winning field goal by the
scoreforTampaBay. Reaves threw
Breakers.
for the Bandits' otherTDs- 3yards
Invaders 33, Panther.; 27
to Boone, 25 yards to Eric Truvllllon
Oakland quarterback Fred Beand 10 yards to Lewis Gilbert ..

The Daily Sentinei-Pa~S

sana ruined Michigan' s home
opener, completing 24 of 30 passa;
for 341 yards and three touchdowns,
two of them to Wyatt Henderson.
It a lso overshadowed a sparkling
comeback enggineered by Bobby
Hebert , the Panthers' quarterback,
benched early. Hebert retu medIate
In the third period and threw three
ID passes to Derek Holloway.
Wrangler.; 2!, Express 14
.
Jim Asmus, who had climaxed
Arizona 's comeback against the
Blitz a week ago with a last -second
field goal, kicked two field goals
against the Express, one of tnem a
57-yarder to drop Los Angeles from
the unbeaten ranks .
The Wranglers' other points
came on rookie Alan Risher's
45-yard pass to Jackie Flowers and
Darryl Clark 's 1-yard dive.

�Page

~The

Calendar
MONDAY
·RACINE- -

Auxiliary of
Racine Post 602, American
Legion, will meet at7:30Monday
a~ the hall. A representative to
Buckeye Girls State will be
selected and plans will be
completed for the birthday_
party.
. POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club will meet Monday
a( 7; 30 p.m. at tbe home of Ruth
'4oore. For ron call members
are to take a brown bag for an
auction.
POMEROY -There will be a
Bible Prophecy lecture at the
Pomeroy Seventh-Day Advent·
ist Church. 7 p.m. Mone\ay.Topic
will be "What Is 11 Lil\e to Die?"
Music will be by Tessie .Evans
and Toni Andrew: public is
invited.
Chester PTO will meet Mon·
day, 7: :JO p.m .. at the school. Cub
Scout Pack 235, Den 4, will have
the opening ceremony. There
will be a bOOk fair and members
of Shirley Carpenter's Dance
Studio present the program.
Refreshments will be served.
and child care will be provided.
RUTLAND - Rutland Elementary School will present a
spring musical Monday at 7
p.m. at the Rutland . Civic
Center . Students , kindergarten
through grade six, will be
participating. The musical is
ut)der the direction of Mrs. Chris
Rouse. The public is Invited.
·cooLVILLE. - There wiU be
a revival at Ireland Community
Cllurch, Coolville, CR 59, beginnlhg Monday with evangelist the
Rev. Eddie Boyer. Services
begin at 7:30 p.m . nightly. The
Rev .. Ed Hickman, pastor, Invites ihe.publlc to public.
Run.AND - The Men's
Fellowship of the Church of
Clu-lst will meet at the Rutland
Church Monday at 7: 30p.m.

TIJESDAY
POMEROY - American As1soc1a1non of University Women
meet Tuesday in the Meigs
at 7:30p.m. A sUent auction
be held.

RACINE -

Southern Local
Scl~ool Board wiU meet Tuesday
6: 30 p.m. In the high school
cafeteria.

1

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363 F &amp;AM will meet
Tuesday_at 7 p.m . Work will be
ltiE.A. degree . The Fellow Craft
Club will meet at 6:30p.m. for
election . of otflcers. Refresh·
ments will be served.

~~----~--~--~~----~----~~-·

The Daily Sentinel

Methcxlist Women meet
Plans for decorating the altar
with lilies for Easter were made at
the Tuesday night meeting of the
Pomeroy United Methodist Women
a i the church.
The UMW also discussed the
annual mother-daughter banquet
and decided to prepare cookies for
the May Day serv ice.. A r£'Ceptlon
for Louise Williams. who 'has been
acting minister since the death of
the Rev. Robert· McGt'E'. and Mrs.
McGee. who will move soon to her
home at The Plains. was planned for
March'n.
Sixty-nine sick and shutin calls
were reported. It was announced
ihat the youth of the church will

spOnsor a revival with the carry· in
dinner on Friday, tobefollowedbya
message !rom t:·:, Rev. James
Clark, and music t.,, &lt;he Carriers,
who will also have charge of the
Saturday evening service and the
Sunday morning service.
Evelyn Lucke presided at the
meeting, with Dorothy Downie ·
giving devotions using scripture ·
from Matthew 26, The prayer and •
self-denial program was centered .
on theworkofthedeaconesseslnthe
church and their role -in working
. toward a world of peace and justice.
Margorie Reuter · and Evelyn
Lucke served refreshments follow·
ing the meeting.

Births and Birthdays
Smith, Hecht
Birthdays
The birthday of Giles Smith.
Rutland, and his granddaughter.
Laura Hesch! of Eleanor, W. Va.
was celebrated Sunday at his home
in Rutland.
Attending were Margaret Ed·
wards and sons Danny and Rick,
Rutland, and Mike of Musklngurrt
College. ·· Cambridge; Charlotte
Hesch! with David and Laura of
Eleanor, W.Va .. and Roma Harris
of Eleanor, W.Va .. Cathy Delong
and Angie Hatfield. Pomeroy.
Unable to attend was Smith's
son-in-law Larry Edwards, who
was Ill. Mrs. Edwards and Mrs.
Hesch!. are daughters of Smith.

James. Jeremy and Sarah, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reid. David and
Rodney, Pataskala; Mrs. Virginia
Smith and Joshua ofMcArthur; Mr.
and Mrs. B ill Spaun , Shannon and
Julia Ann, Pomeroy; Mrs. Roscoe
Fife, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Markins,. Racine; Garold
Giikey, A!hens, and the hosts.

James Olive Dean celebrated his
fifth birthday recently at the home
of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Dean, Wolfe Pen Road. The
birthday of his great-grandmother,
Mrs. Kenneth Markins, Racine,
was also observed at the dinner
party with gifts being presented to
the hOnored guests.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
John Walter Dean, parents of

'

i

·,

supervisor with the~th CommunIcations Group.
Her husband, Wallace, Is the son
o! Madeline Chafin of 168 Mulherry
Ave., Pomeroy.
The sergeant Is a 1973 graduate of
Maryvale High . School,
Cheektowaga.

-·

. .PUT ALL

YOUR EGGS
IN ONE

POMEROY ~ Ohio Eta Phi
Cllapter of Beta Sigma Phi will
meet at 7:30 Tuesday night at
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church for the annual ritual of
jewels. Members will also vote
on the gtrl of the year. The social
c ommitte e will serve

a

TuesdaY at Meigs Junior Hlgh
School.

IN MEMORY
In the deepest loss and
Iovine memory of Mom.
Ruth Stlele, will passed
rgy 6 years 1110. March
21, 1977. Even though you
are nat in sight in this life
any11101e, you are in my
mind and near my heart
each and everY day of my
life. I lleasure the memories we spent toeelher and
my son has pown up and
now knows he had another
grandma and tells me he
rows her.
Sadly Missed
Daughter,
Becky Broderick

An&lt;! one monthly pr.rmant. One that'a prob&amp;bi,J sotns to be
om&amp;Uar Ula.n the tote.! ofpe,ymanw JOU're m•ttng now.
p1111118.

11aJbe :fiiU'te thlnttnfl &amp;bot!\ a m..!or Jllll'tlbase. Let's PIIY off
wbat :f11U owe now and throw In that extra. you need., too.

'1'_.._...._.-.r.o-wqo.

How muoh:rou De8d. clepende on boW muoh you owe. And
7f1U7 oredlt llmtt with ua depend8 on you, too. Por exa.mple,lt
you own :your home, we oanloanyouup Into the thouaa.nd8
bue&lt;l t~n YOU!' ICl\ll~.

lo••••·
Theeooneryougetallyour •U•In one
sooner :fiiU oan ot&amp;rt seeing tll!nlls "ll\llll\Y aide up"! .

b&amp;altet, the

.·

~Li.U+

NOncETO ·
CONTRACfORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbul, ONo

Sealed proPJsals w 1ll be
received at ltle off1ce of the
D~rec ta r of the Oh10 Depanment of Transportat•on. Columbus. Oh•o. until 10:00 AM ..
Ohio Standard Tirne, Tuesday,
march 29 . 1983. for Improvements in:
Adams. Athens. Bro'h'!1 . Gal l•a. Highland . Jackson. law·
renee.. Meigs. Monroe. Morgan, Noble. _P1ke. Ross. Sc•oto.
Vinton and Washington Counti es. Ohio. o n va r1ous locat1ons.
by applytng retroreflective polyester pavement markmg
matenal for lane hnes and
cente r li nes .
Pavement W idth - Varies

Projectlength - O.OOfeet or
Various feet

B•·

.... c.....

,._,109

~·

, .,. ..... Go-_

JIJ 211 1.11en flllh

Ar.W.DIM
. . ._

...
7U

"'-

IN ...... t~_.

. . . loten
U7 1 ..1-

"''",.

111.. 1ono1

111'

o-...... _
"•'"'''-·
... .__
U..1e1tW..• ·. n....
...,...,,_..,...
U..lell-• .

1300

1100
11CICI

,,. _ _ . _ . . . _ .....1

eo-".,..,., ..,

p leo'10
"· Ot'

PUBUC NOllCE
Not1 ce rs hereby g•venthat the ·
Publtc Uttlttt es Commtsston of
Oh10 has opened an 1nvest1gat•on proc~ed1ng. docketed as
Case No 83-3 10 -TP- COI. the
purpose of wh1ch 1s to coiis1der
what act 1ons rnay be necessary
both to assu re I hat all telephone
subscr1bers 11"1 · th1s' sta te' con·
llnueto haveaccess toapnmary
telephone 1nStrument and to
msure that embedded c u sto m er prem 1ses equ•pmenl
teased tram tel ephon ecom pan·
1es w1ll be mamta.ned and
repa1red 1n a proper manner
The scope o f the 1nqwry shall
1nclude. but not necessanly be
hmtted 10. the questto n of
whether 11 IS approprtate to
req urretelephon ec6mpan1 es to
conllnue 10 off er Jar lease. and
10 ma 1nla•n-repa•r . a pnmary
telephone IOSHument. at the
subscnbers option. lot some
specifically determ1ned per1od

or Var10 us m •les.
''The date se t for completion
of this work shall be as set fqt'th
in the bidding proposal. ~
Each bidder shal l be req uired
to file wUh hts bid a c erttfled
check or cashier's check tor an
amount equal to ttv. per c.rt
of hit bid. but 1n no event more
than fifty thousands. or.a bond
for - per cent of hlo bid,
payable to the D1rector.
S. dders must appty. on the
proper forms. for qualrficat1on
at least ten days pnor to the
date sel" for open1ng btds in
accordance w1 th Chapter 5525
Oh•o Rev•sed Code.
Plans and specificatrons are'
on file in th e Department of
Transportation and the office of
the D1str1ct Deputy Director.
The D1rector reserves the
nght to re ject any and all bids.

A_.,.

Net ftmd s on

76.455 55
SUMMARY OF
CASH BAI.AI'!IICES.
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDfTURES
BaiMCe
Jan. 1, 1982
GPI\f'l rll F1tnc1
16.033 311
M otn r Veh tl 11 ' ll&lt;~P.n:'l f'
Td x hand
10. 124 39
G .~ ,, ul 1 nr: ral(

Secre~arv

lie

1------------1 .f P&lt;~1ll'1.r,111111 R•1 '1 ·vr·h1ntl
naaf'
Printed Pattern

(3) 8. t 5. 22. 3tc

j. Description of Pro ject The

proposed project would utilize
the existinQ c;orps of Engineers·

prelirriinary permit is 12

3 1.0020 1 :

Gr nnr 011 Fun tl
M o to1 V r ! lldf)

4 ]. 10 2 05

L rc~n :; f'

. la:K.F11 nd

G&lt;~snr•n "
Fund

'

22067.B1

r,. ~

31. ~ 1 48

Ro.ul .lfld 1'\ndr w
Fw1d

r ''"d

tOO~ ~ t r;~

Dec. 31 . 1982
To111. f H11ol

13.fit1 0 71
1 · ~~ ~ ~ ~

14 H13D /

(i. •'-l(l lll\1 ' l,,.o;

11 7 b 7 1 ~1

· rll •ld
Rl). l• 1 . 11 l' I il1 F I• l"
f11 1H I
h '&lt;li ll 111 l~ r ·v ~ ' I l l~&lt;
S ho~r 1 r 1 q l w 1d
l n tal

I •

___,___. ________,___

:~ 11 30!1

2/

'2 Xi ] 5e

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

Farm Equipment ·
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Pomeroy,

Authorized John Deer,

New Holland, Bush Hog

Oh . .

Ph. 992·2174

., 5I 1
.

Address--------

The Dcaily Sentinel
a 243 1111t 11 ~1_... Y.t, n

Phone----------------

The liahtest ol littina lor
~ip of a S&amp;Jndress and tulip10011. l'ritol dl[, MIDIESS,
sleeted iocket. Optional ruiUes. DP, SIZE, . . sm.£ IUIIIEl
MULTI-SIZE pattern aim IOU 4
High clothin' prkes hM IOU
sizes on one tissue. Choose criS!J
down! Get 1 hh, send lor NEW
cotton blends.
SPRING-SUMMER PATTERN
. Printed Pottern 4667: Women's CATALOG. o.er 100 styles, choose
Sizes (34, 36, 38, 40), (42 , U, one pattern tree ($2.50 ••h.e).
46, 48). Order reaular ~ze.
' Catalot, $1.50.
$2.50 for .... ,.atlm. Adll
AU. CMT 1011as ..sz.ao •
for ... (llltlnl "' . . .
Dlllill

*

121·--...
l!E:· ~:.·

UO·
fllltills-Sbl Jl-56
• Books snd Catailltl - add SOl

ll ·ll·tfc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Swm Doo&lt;O
•Storm Windows .

•Replucom.,..t Window•
•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772

J.2-l mo.

RADIATOR

STRIP
COAL

SERVICE

We can repair and ,._
t'ldiltol'l and heater coras. We can el110
acid boil end rod OUt I'll·
dillon. We el110 repair
Gas Tanka.

PH.

ATON

992-22BO

BACKHOE

G~VE

COni

PAT HILL FORD

US A TRY

992·2l96

742-232B

Middleport, Ohio

l·l'l·tl(

3-t0-1 mo.

YOUNG'S

AND

CARPENTER
SERVICE

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

and """"' ...... .
--&lt;..-..
iC ... Wille

--.....and

ala Ideal we*

(frM Estlmatft)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

3·11·1 mo. pd.

271W. lllin

co.

,.,_,OH.

!1·26-tft

1Thet'a rlghtl When you .uae a column
,Inch or more In newspeper edvertlelng.
' be It dltlly or cleallflecl, you reach
'houilndt of potential buyeri that ere
't11ger to receive vour money-.eevtng
· me11age.
'

Daily
S~ntinel ..
.

·----.. ---

For all your ,Virlng
nHdl," .4urnaces ,..
'
pair IIII'Vica and In·
etallation.
Residential
8a Commercial

will

be

O~rector

of 1he Oh&lt;o Departmont of Transportation. Col umbus. Ohip. un1d 10:00 A.M ..

l Announcement
'

1

l1

I. - - - -- 2.

I 3.
1 4.
I s.
I 6.
I 7.
II 8.

I

.
'.
~

'

CLASSiflfDS
''

.

..

I'
I
I

tI

I' ·shington Counues, Ohio. on

1: Aikyd / Male&lt;c thermoplasllc
l1ne pavement mark mgs.
19,
I lanePavemen1
W&lt;dth - Var&lt;es
20.
I
Project Lenglh- o.oo feel or
1 o.oo mite.
21.
Work Leng1h -' Vanous lee1
22. _ __ _.......,.:_ 1
or various m11 es.
I
'The date set for camplet&lt;on
.23. - - - , - - - 18.

1
I

I

l~

for

_,.~
· -'---:

32.

33.
34 . . - - ~------

16.

'
The Deily Sentinel

111 court st ..
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

1

15

Schools
Instruction

..•.
~

Karate the ultimate In aeH
defence all private teesona,
Men, Women. &amp; children.
Instruction thru black beh.
Also evallable Kar1t1 unl·

•.

bl!gs. an~ protective equip- 1
ment. Jerry Lowery • A110• •
ciatea Karate Studio, 143 . ,.
BurHngtol't Rd.. Jacklon, ..

Oh. Call 61 4·286-3074
614-384-8160.

or

•·

'
•

!.ost and Found

with aaYeral stones. lo1t in

vincinlty of Stiver Bridge
Plaza. Ponderosa. Jones
Boys end Foodland At. 36 .

Cetl446·4612.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Genlral Hauling and Traah a._
remove! Service. Reliable "

and depondoble. Coli 441- ••
3169.
. ..

•

lawn Mowil)g no yerd to big
or small. Reliable and depen·
da ble. For estimate call
446-3169.

.~

~

Small engine repair, lawn
mowers, riding mowers, ro· ' .,,
totillera. Reaeontlble ratH:
3rd. llo Olive St., GolttpoUo; ~

~:~';';~:~:s

:-i'"'rreww".e,:'ci
used merchandise olwoya
w'atcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 275·3089 .
AUCTION every Seturdoy
night, Mt. Alto. wv. 8 p.m.
Consignments welcome.
F.mm• Belt ouctionaOT.

Jamae H. Holley. Celll14-

:

Odd a and end• job1. Reno·

"'

9

22 Money to Loan

Wanted To Buy

OPEN 9 Ill 5 liON. thni SAT.
All Trpos of Auto Rtpoir,
Brakes. luno- Ups, 11c.
SPECIAL
TRANSMISSION FtlTI:R
AND FLUID CHANGE

ONLY 131.95

1·14•e

PRICE
CONSTRUCTION
R f' S ·t·
00 mg, pou mg
Complete Home
Remodeling
-14 Years hperience
All Work Guaranteed

VInyl &amp; Aluminum

Lona Bottom, OH.

N
BISSELL
SIDING CO ,

BUILDERS
HOME BULDING ·
ROOM ADDITIONS
REMODEL!
NG
ROOFING &amp; SIDING
'"FREE ESTIMATES"
REFERENCES

SIDI. G

'"Beautiful, Custom
Built Gerqes"
C1ll for frN sidingestimltiS, 949-2801 or

949·2860.

No Sunday Call•
3-1J.ttc

Plan s and specifications are
on file in the Depanment of
Transportation ~nd the office of
.the Distr•ct Deputy Director.
' The D irector reserves the
r igh t to reject any aod all bids.

WARREN J. SMITH
DIRECTOR

Rev. 8- t7 -73

/Sears/ .
FREE
EXTIMA TIS

'Chain uu flftce
'C.r;ttlna 'PII•tina

/Sears/ ·
CATALOG MBOIANT

Po-o,,OH.
a--. PH.
&amp; l'rlllr ...........
992·2118

TIUQ(

RINTAL &amp; ONI-WAY
l.cal..t ~.liM IIIII.
top llllinlllned trucU. RWrt
Iiiii, 11811 equipment. Hand
tnlcb. llimllln ..
tionwlrll Rood Semel. llcJv.
I~ Iiiii and -...:..

Riverside VW Inc.
446-9800

Gllllpolls, ·Ohio

..
·.

rate. Leader Mortg~~ge.

num. Gold and Sliver prlcea gaga Joa-.a. Equity Reeour~
are th• higheat In two~" cat . In Ohio 1·800-982a
check our prlcea on gold a -~ 23&amp;1 . out. of Ohio

tllver. scrop ;-otry. BuylnJI j 1·800-841 ·6288.

Okl coin1. SCriP ring1 •
silverware . Dally quotas

•

23

•'
Professional
Services
supplies fo.: aale. Spring .
Volley Trading Co .• Spring - - - - - - - - - Volley Ptoro. 446-8025 or
446-8028.
Clio L Bookkeeping
•:

avollible. Alto coine a. cain

~

Tax Return a &amp; bookkeeping . ·

We pay cath lor late model for Individuals &amp; bu1lneasea.

Clean uaed cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene John aon

Short forma $6.00
Long forma $20.00 end Up ' ~

Carol Neol

'

wheels. 379·2322.

SWEEPER and sewing ma ~
china · repair, parts, end
supplies.

delivery ,

Pick up and
D•via Vacuum

George• Croak Rd .
446-0294 ..

Coli

448·3882

_.

Profa ..ional Electrolyeia ·
Clinic Professional Building· t
Room 1. A.M .A. and F.C.C. :
approved. Doctor referr111,
y appointment. Phone 304·

676-666B.

-·
dol- . =;:~~==~~=== •
. ~

BEDS·lRON, BRASS, oid
furnitu,.,, gold. silver

.

ters, wood ice boxes, atone 31 Homes for Sale

jere, antiques, etc .. Complate houaeholds . Write :

,.~

M.D. Miller. Rl. 4. Pomeroy, Excellent condition •
Oh. Or 992-7760.
locedonu all ready for mme-

Gold, silver, sterling. jewelry, rings. old coins I
currency. Ed Burkett Barber

•

diate occu pancy-- lnteraet
rates are down and probably
won't be lower.

'
•'
•

Higley's Barbershop, Upper.
At. 7, Open 8 daya, 8 to
Shop. Middleport. 992 - Home and or rent•l •
11:30. Holrcuto 13.00.
3476.
Brqadway-Middleport,
•
PRIDE IN TOBACCO An·
tique • Flea Market. Hun· Wanted to buy. Investment · Modern business bldg . 58 ;
tington, wv. Go North on property. Call 614-992· Coun St .. Go!lpolto.
· •
28th St. Outside and intlde 6856.
every Soturdoy llo Sundoy.
112 + acrea with 2 hom"
8AMto6PM. Over150,000 Wanted old Pianos. Paying Gallia
County
oq.tt. and getting bigger 120.00 end 140.00 each. 1 - ~· ····~········ - ~·-·····
.. ~
every woitk. Electronic ... f!rst f~oor only: Write 9iVing C;ll992· 3267 or676-2611 :•
advance re•rvation

•

d•rect1one. Wttten P1anoa. evenings

for sotoctod spots. Rondom
opott ovoltoblo upon arrival .
Can atort tot up Fridly

Bo• 18B Sordis, Ohio
·
43946. Phone 614-483 - Owner dosporate to sell· 2
1606.
bdr. home.larpat through-

evening
6 up
till 13.00,
9PM. Merch
apecialaet
table•
&amp; racks for rent . Crafte

Wan1ed to Ieete tobacco, out, FP. "h ere. gardln, City·

people

welcome. Some~

thing for everyone. Door
prizea. for more Information
coll304-623·2131 .
WANTED-Students for be·

26c per lb. 3Q4·676·2276.

Lodwick. Con 986·3692 or
988-4118 .

4

. Givnway

i FEMALE

port Collie llo Ger·
mon Shephord, good wotch
dog, 304-875·2017.
PUP. solid blook. Terrl!or i,
Paadte mlxod 304·8754095 or 8711·5123.

THREE puppleo, port Hus·
key, port Shepherd. 'heohhy.
304-178·27118.

~

!

ochools, 6 mt . from . 1own:: '
Can assume 9W% mortgega whh only t2,500 down · '

3 bedroom modern home ." :.
carpetin~. out building. i
acre, dr1lled well, ciOM to
mines on Vlnton~Eno Rd:
Call 614·3BB-8418 bofoN . ..

noon 1· evening. Children or
adutta. lnatructor Juanita

773~&amp;882. aak for Betty

•
•

- - - - - - ..

CluMt every Fridlv otter-

RIVERVIEW Pertonol Care
Center n- taking opplicotlon lor ombulltary potientt.
For lnlormotton phon• 304·

"

MOTORCYCLE trailer, must paymet:~ta under $260 mo: - ~
be in fair condition, 304- include• taxet &amp; insw-anct .' ., ..
882-2722.
Coli 446·8881 .

ginning oil painting cl..a.

Mercer.

[IJ
*.,.,.

nebla rotes. Coli 814-742- •
2502.
-

HOME LOANS 12% flxod .,
n E.
446-3169 or 268·1987 In Stste, Athens, Ohio. 1·814·
692·3061 .
the evenlnga.
.'

ture and Antique• of all
kinds. call Kenneth Swain.

Mobile home axles. tires It

3 Announcements

curity,

74 2 • 2324
773-56B4

246-5849. No S~ndly colla.

WANTED TO BUY Old furnl·

4149.

J ESCO

of hill bid,

Ohio Revised Code.

35 . .. - - -·- - - -

Mill This Coupon with Remittance

ton per -

payabl.e to the Director.
.
Bi dders must apply. on the
proper forms . for qualification
at least ten davs pri or to the
date set for opening bids in
accordance witt:l Chapter 5525

. ~1. - - -- - - -

Are you paying to much for •
your ho•pitai·Mi hh lnau· ·· ..
ranee . Caf'l Carrol-l ~
Snowden. 446-4290.
{

18 Wanted to Do

era. Prefer 1986 and up, Call

r----------+--------- -1---------than f ifty thousands, or a bond

29.

.....----------.
-------.-·---.......,.
,,

-·•

vanc;tus locations. by applying

30.

115.
I

Me•gs. Tuscarawas and Wa -

Call 742-31

oft his work shall be asse1 fMh
in the bidding proposal."
1: Each bidder shall be required
PH . 985-4141
26. - - - - - - 1 to lile w11h h1s bid a ce~•fied
~ ch eck or cas h1er's eheck for an . t . - - - - - -·;;..''"::';;..1;;;"':.:";;;·. J
27 . ~----- I amount equ al to five per cent,.
28.
I of h1o bid, but 1n no event more

9,

I 10.
I 11.
1 t2.
I 13.
I u.

ana. Galha. Hock&lt;ng. Jefferson.

17. ~------ · 11

24.
25. _ _ _ _ __

Good comp1nion for older

Bueball card1 . Call 446-

~=========~-=========~

Ohio Standard
Ttme.
March
29, 1983.
for Tuesday.
1mprove- _.~
ments 1n:
Athens. Belmont Columb•·

I

JFor Rent

I

Your N~~ds

l..ogol't:opy

recetved at the offi ce of the

-..-.....

for A!l

.MillER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

No. 83-223
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACT
Sealed proPOsa ls

.''

CHECK THE

NOTICE TO
CONTRACfORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTA110N
C&lt;*nnbue. Ohio
Mordt 4. 1983 .

c--

I

:

12 YEAR old Border Collie form• puchlng and kicking

. 614-446·0176 .

t---,-------+--~-----,---+-----------1

'

Co. haa offered

nrvicet for fire insurance •"'

PIANO TUNING 11o REPAIR
Good uMd pickup truck. Call Bill Ward for appoln1~
· Coli 446-4063.
ment, Ward's Keyboard~ . ,
448·4372.
. •
Pay cesh for u1ed mobile - - : - - : - - - - - - · '
homes or travel travel trail- PERMANENT Hair Romovol ,

-Adclons and .......Inti .

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Oewoyne Wltllomo
• Scottie Smith
AU Makes tnd Models
Anltnna Instillation
House Calls and Shop
Service Avail.tlblt

.•

aurence

B.,Ying Gold. Silver. P!ofl· Buoln111 &amp; Second Mort·

SERVICE

"Lowest Rates
Around
"Friendly Service

2·23-tft

S&amp;W TV

.•

.•

231,

to good home In the country.

1-3·\tc

2-26-tfc:

Cleaner. one half mila up

.... Adllts
Pllltlnt Dept.

Bo•

446-0089

Wri te your own ad and order oy mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results.' Money not refundable .

7fi . tl ~~ !)b!)

Mid~leport .

REWARD lost lodiea ring

.AL TROMM'S

12-l().tft

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

SUCCESSFUL
.BUSINESS
IS A CINCH
IF YOU USE
THE INCH!

~.The'

Route 1
Lona Bottom. OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992•3067

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash .for .
Claislfleds and
Savell I

Balance

U . P . C ..

6

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILL£, OHIO

·r

r Hll·l 111 ./l !lr , bO

Gr •i \P! .II f tu ld
,M n tt )I Vr • l~ r d P l-11

,:,.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MINE RUN

$3()00

Roofirw &amp;Sidirw eo.

H ,, ,d o~ n d H11d• 1' ;
f 11 n d
I f'l lr ·t .~ l H· ·vr ·I H,I

l uJal

S4.99

19 ~

___________

3824. To g et the t ime of
leuon you want. call now.

!•Iter 6 p.m.. 304-676·
;6702.

From he Smollest Heattr
Core to the laraut Radii·
lor.
Radiator Speciaist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

New Homes - Extensive
Remodelinc.
•Insurance Work
•iuGiom Pole Bldas.
arages
•Roofing Work
eAiuminum &amp; Vilt)1 Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7583
or 992·2282

H ·l mo.Pd

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

E_..titur•
•
C'J~ • IIf·lo~l f 11nd
i'!} ,:~ !15 34 ·~ •
Mut•ll V• •llu;lr • I •~ 1"!11'-'1 "
...,.
1.1x l •rllll
7~ !) 3 90 ··~
Go~ ·.;ofmr&gt; L•·

experienced teacher can be
aent to your home by limply

.'TWO
- =-:-----puppies. mixed. call

BOGGS ·

SANOY AND BEAVER In· •

Phone 3B8·B690.

Also Transmi.ssion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

COMPLETE '
RADIATOR SEIMC!

- - - - - - - ."
-'

1-:-----:------ ;

becau1e of your lac:;king In
of the Word of
God? A FREE of chuge
Home Bible Study courn
can give you ·a clear under·

J.2Uic

Insurance .

Afraid to anend Church

Coll614·387-7888 .

Small,

J.27 -2 mo.

13

covereges ere , IVIIIabll to "
meet individull naedl. Con•
tact Eugene Holley, agent ...

coiling 986-3684 or 992-

MARY C, KESLER-OWNER

-4'

To give 3 puppies fem 1le.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Businesses &amp; Partnerships

cere for

coverage l n Galli• Count¥

618 E. Main, Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 992·3795 .
We Do Booldrllf!Pi~ For

Lalli and Corponta

Room,_ board •

elderly only. Ro~tantlblo. ;,
814· 992 ·8022- or 114-' 1
992-6748,

with 6ft. long by.3ft. high. for elmoat a century. F•rm ...
.h ome and pertonal .Property
Ca11448·2310.

knowl~dge

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Situation•
Wanted

To ·give away display case

standing of tha Word of
God. With ~o obtlgetlon an

Rl'chard Garft'eld

'Patios
Reasonable Rates
R1 3 p
OH
PH: S1:~~S~44&amp;4

Kitchen Cabinots - Roof·
inc - Sidin&amp; - Concrote
Patios - Sidewalks N.. Construction - A•·
modtlina - Custom Pole
Barns.

7( i (,-1800 ·:"
1 2{) , 8~ 7

Sholl n Il l

&amp; CARRY

2 puppies. Coli oher 5,
87&amp;·5702.

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

10·6-lte

INSTALLED

•

S h.1ttnq f11 nd
l o t o~ l

CASH

!13 ?30 13

f0C"1 f'l. \l Rr•VI' IIlll•

$}295 PER YARD

RUBBER

14

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
. SERVICE .

CEMENT
FINISHER

L
'Parkin&amp; ots
oDrivtWiyS
•sasernlnts

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
:~~~~·191.

KITCHEN CARPET
STARTiNG AT $8.99

..

LAFF·A·DAY

1983

graphs: A4ai A4d. B. C end D2
m. PurpoM of Project A
preliminory permit. if iasued.
does n6l -outhoriie construe·
lion. The tarm of 1he propoud

23.066 24

3-4-2· mo. pd.

To 1 good home lomote
German Shepherd, 1 y&lt;. old.
Call614·258·1919 .

7-- .

- - - - - - - f - . . . , . . - - - - - - - - + - - - - - - - " ' - - + - - - - - - - - - - 4 Auction every Fri. night at
the Hertford Commun~y 446-3169 between 9 ond 8. ••
Canter. Truckloods of new Gun Rebluing contact •

lnsulatd •Do&amp; Houses

STARTING AT

')wanted
&gt;For Sale

h. Con tact Person: Mr. Michael Francis. City of New
Martinsville. Brenner &amp; Francis.
P.O: Dr.B'Nf!r 98. Ne.N Martinsvi lle. West Vi rgin•a 26 155 ,
!. Comment Date:" April 20.

L Thia nottce also consists of
the following standard para,

I I 9 11 3 48

ALL CARPET
INSTALLED
WITH PAD
FREE

10

eoch lor postaae and handiina.

Power Act. t6 U S.C SS79 t(a)
- 825(r) I -

would be ~25.000.000 kWh.
k. Purpose of Project The
energy ~erillod at the'propooed
project would be utilized by the
'Applicant
.

To-.. F.. nct"
G,l·s nluif&gt; l .r,
G~tdq n

3-4·1 mo.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POlE BULDINGS

614-992·2181 .

t ?.8 :l7

.m &amp;.lane.

· · - - s.tlll:

d . Applicant City of New
M artinsvil le. W est Virgin1a
e, Name of Prjoect: Belleville
locks and D am
f. Location: on the Ohio Ril.ler
in Wood County. West Virginia
and Meigs County. Ohio
g. Filed Pursuant to: Federal

Call: 949-2263
Or IJIY:Z-::1:7'1

6~

02 . Agency Conwuentl Federal. State.- and local agen ct8s are invit ed to file com·
ments .on the descnbed
appl1catton . (A copy of the
applicatiOn may be obtained bv
agenc1es dtrectly from the
Apphcant.l If an agency does
not f1le commen ts within the
time spec1t1ed l or f1ling com ments. it w1ll be presumed to
have no comments. One copy
of an agency's commen ts must
also be sent to the A~ licanl's
representatives.
Kenneth F. Plumb
Secretary

Alf Work G.uarantnd
"Free Estimates"

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Size't!r~~.;:~· Up

13.71 100 .
10 7 29 t 44 .•
Total l!ec:eipls

copy of any not1ce of intent.
competing appltcaflon or mo·
non to intervene must also be
served upon each represenla ·
tive of the Applicant spec1fied 1n
th~ particular appl ication,

doors and windows.

•

Fo1r lf' l ,il R r' vf' ll i U'
S h llnllq F1111d
f , tl ;11

DocurtWttl! -

inc and paintine, storm

~

FtHHI

of

downspouts, autter clean-

Sizes slut from 12'xl6'

27.068 71 '""

Ro.ad .tlld

208 RBat the above address. A

would consist of: (1) .a proposed poMrhouse conta ining ·
two or more generating units
having a total rated capacitY of

21.728 t2

C ~t'll /11.1 1 ru11d

Fund'

and the Project Number of the
parttcular application to whtch
the f1hng is 1n response . Any of
the .above named documents
m ust be filed by prov• dmg the
anginal and the number of
coptes requ ired by t~ CommisSion's regulatiOf'IS to : Kenneth F. Plumb. Secretary. Fed eral Energy Regulatory
CommiSSion, 825 North CaPitOl Street. N.E.. Wash •ngton,
D.C. 20420. An add1ttonal
copy must be sent to : Fred ,E.
Spnnger. Chief. Applications
Branch. DIVISIOn of Hydropower Ltcensing, Federal Energy
Regulatory Comm tss1on. Room

1982

-·

M oiOr V.;l)l~ If' I.J CP.I1 ~t ·

MENTS". "NOTICE OF INTENT
TO FILECOMPETING APPUCA·
TION". 'COMPETING APPUCATION", "PROTEST' or "MOTION
TO INTERIIENT'. as appl&lt;eable.

c . Date Filed: December 1.

~

All types of roof work. new
or repair, &amp;utters and

II THAJJJE t - --

POMEROY
LANDMARK

"Somethilll New"
RAVENSWOOD FABRICS.
Now Has Faohlon
Outlet Quality
Clothing:
•Jeans
'Blouses
"Swim S1its
'[venin&amp; Gowns
Etc. ·
Open Tues.·Sit.
10:00 to 5:00
204 Washinaton St.
Ravenswood. W. Va.

ROOFING

00
605 75 ,,.
ToWIR~a
_ :

r, ll.ll

Ughtly Does It!

ALL OTHER APPLIANCES

•

2-1·2 mo.

does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for ule
may piece ..., ad In this
COium,-.. Tt1are will 1&gt;e no
charge to the adveniMr.

people. Cell 304-676 -

H. L. Writesel

LAW

WE ALSO WORK ON

8.882 90

f"llr H1
Ro.1d ·;1ndBt 1dqt·
lund

Any filings must bear in all
capital Jeners the 11tl e "C OM-

'

&amp; HOTPOINT

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Sidina
.
'Rooflnc
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodelina
20 Years Experience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843·5425

Industrial, Commercial,
Residential , lnlerior and
Exterior.
Pointing
Sondble!lting
Momorb..!itlng
Perking Lot Stripping
&amp;prey Peinting
Texture Coetin.ll•
F"IJ 1111111111-Frw llllitnl
CAU 614·949·2616

12

ANY PERSON · who h11
enythlng to give ewoy ond

EUGENE LONG

GHEEN'S
PAINTING INC.

Giveaway

r----------------+--------------~~----------------+----------------46768 .

Housing
Headquarters

~ENERAL ELECTRIC

76 4 55 55

Mature Quail now beinc
sold. Eus available with
notice after May I. Day old
chicks available with depo·
sit after May 25. 3-2-1 mo.

4-S.ttc

$79.500.

FACTORY SERVICE

"''· · ~ ·

PARTS and SERVICE

54 Misc. Marchand! ..

7fi. t 32 73

':~~~1, .

•Refrigeretors
•Dryers •FrMzere

FARM - 97 acres, iree gas
with mrome or will d~Kle. 7
room fa&lt;m house. 117 baths.
furnace, modem kilchen. basement, barn and other bidgs.

74.9 32 73

DPpostt
T(liLtl Assr.t s
LIABILITIES
Fu nd 8 :-1l nncr·s
Tot~l
.
l 1aluhtlf!S

~/,

Makes
•WuhOfl •Dlllhwethero
Rongea

RACINE - One floor modern
looking one bedroom home
with bath, gas furnace and nice
lev~ lol lor $i4.500.

AUTHORIZED

Long Botttm, Oh.
Ph. 985-4345
Clelf LaBonte, Sr.-Owner

All

me throucf1 my •ilhlh moiflf ~ion In ten years.
Sincerely, Iris Myers KeHon
Rt. 2, Box 379
Quinton. Va. 23141

lnac tiVf!l
.80.693 .01
LP.sS ChP.r:ks Ot,lst.:m d 1nq
5.2fi0 28

QUAIL FARM

985-3561

BUT ON · TIME - $5,000
dOwn, HY'!oint., 180 paymoois
al $29538 · with price ol
·$32.500. Three bedroom home
on linroln Hill.

helped

1·12·3 mo. pd .

LaBONTE' S

KEN'S·
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

$56.950.

me

·

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

ONLY 5 YRS. OW - Th~
home has a large family room,
3 bedrooms. 2~ baths. dining
with glass dO()(l; to a large
sundeck. 2 car garage w~h
soop area 'and one acre.

showed such concern for me yo.. proyn ond cor~:em

- Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo·Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
- Septic Systems .
LARGE or SMAU JOBS
PH. 992·2478

4

r---------~----------~-----------+----------~

$13.500.

Coonty. who cartd so much, ond

ASS rT S
Ca 5h on

THE PUBLI C UTILITIES COM MISS10N OF OHIO
By Mary Ann Orl1nsk•.

(31 31.

FRESH AIR ;,- High on ahill in
the count!} on C-28 in letart
Township. Motile home 12x60,
c~lar and 2.79. acres lor just

t foe! I howe boon doopiy
blessed witlt friends in lleip

H;Jnd
$ 1 200 00
D~PCJSIIOty 11utancr•s
(Ac~NF! &lt;.m d

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES .
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•lAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK
BONDED &amp; WOilK GUAIAIITEED
. PHONE Jill CLIFFORD
992-7201 3-l ·fk

YOUR FUTURE HOME QJod 6 r!l}m home w~h llh
baths, naturalgas furnace, nice
kic hoo. carpeting lull base·
ment on large lot with garage.
Asking $32,500. ·

-

Tel. No.
614-669-3091
SCHEDULE I
CASH BALANCE
SHEET DECEMBER
31. 1983

Any person 'w ho des1res to
submrt wntt en comments must
do so by not 1a1er than 'Apnl 18.
1983. Furth er 1nformat1on may
be obtarned by conta cung the
Pubhc Utd1ttes CommiSSIOn of
Oh1o. 375 South H•gh Street.
Columblis. Oh•o 43215 . Atten !IOfl Mary Ann Orl 1nSk1

determ1n1ng the
appropnate action to take. the
Commission Will consider all
protests or other comments
filed. but only those file a
motion to mtervent •n accordance 'Nith the Commisseon's
Rules may become a party to
. the proceedtng . Any comments. protests. or mot1on s to
intervene must be rece1ved on
or before lhe specified comme~t d.ate . for the particular
appitcanon.

ond -

March 7. 1983

I C&lt;Wtily 1he following """"'
to be con'ect.
.
Bonnie Scott '
Township Ctert&lt;

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

CONTRACTING

1-(614)·992·3325

ciation for tlte cards. ·IItten.
!Iowen. phone cans ond lifts
duriltl my oocent hospilllizlltion

Longsviita. Ohio

J&amp;F

VI .RGIL 8. 5~.
2to r. 2nd st ..
Phone

1'wislt to oxpooss my~ appre-

2!1239 t..e9iori Rd.

The Dcaily S.ntlnai-Pag1

Business
senicffl
1------....

CARD OF THANKS

MeiGoCountv

oft•me

{ 1982). tn

Fling

ANANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
Solem Toiwnlhip

83-320-TP-COI

C.F.R. SS385'.210: 2tt . 2t4

C.

Public Notice

Public Notice

AA yp ne may submtt comments.
a · protest. or a mot 1on to
1ntejVene m accordance w1th
th e requi rements of the Rules
of Pr act1ce and Proc edure. 18

Applicant estimates that the
average anhual energy output

502 Second Street
Phone. 446-4113

y-

Qwpo~o;.,

n .u....-- •

Motions to Intervene -

(31 'V&gt;Purtenant tacilities. The

In GallipC&gt;lis:

nJ ..........,.

1.:1
3111

.... "·"....

minary permtt for a proposed
project at .an exist1ng dam or
natural water feature oroiM~t
n1ust submit the compet1 ng
application to the Commission
on or before 30-days after the
specified comment date for th e
particular application (_see 18
CFR 4.30 to 4 .33 (1982)). A
notice of in tent to file a
competing appli cation fo r pret i,minary permit will not be
accepted for fil1ng.
A4d SubmiSSIOn of a ttmelv
notice ol tntent to t1le an
application for prelim.n ary perm1t allows an interested person
to file an acceptable competing
apphcat1on for preliminary perm1t no later than 60 days alter
the spec1fied comment date for
. the part iCular appllcat• on.

utility transmission "li nes; and

The Middleport. Business .and
Professional Women's Club will
meet at 1: 30p.m .• Mond&lt;cyatthe
MkJdlepOrt Ubrary.

.,.... ,-...._,
ArllioCW.304

~

J•

11-o--111~

competmg~applicationforprel i-

63.000 ..W: (2) existing public

BPW to meet

II

• . ww

.,.,.......
1--------'--'--------j
I I · HICWCIIIoiW ...........

13-U...t ....
I'I·H!ot'loGoM"
• . ...lllloF~ilil.-

A4a . E)(lstin9 Dam or Natural'
Wate r Feature ProJect Anyone desoring to file a

Beii!MIIe Locks &amp; Dam .and

L•ra• HoiMown•r Lo•n• up to !,1°,111

0

IJ....................

$300.000 .

b. PrOject No. 6900-000

.

11·- 1

11·'-•"''""
.......
'
u .w.... ,...
I'Y

under the preliminary permit
~auld 1nclude economiC analy sis. preparalion Qf preliminary
engineering plans. and a study
. of environmental 'inwaots .
Based on resu lts of these
stud1es Appl tcant would decide
whether to proceed w1th more
:detailed studies. and the prepa ra tion of an application for
t1cense to cOnstruct and oper ate the proJeCt . App l1cant estimates that the cost o f the work
to be performed under the
prelim•na!Y permit would be

Ta ke notic e that th e following
hydroelectric applicat •on h as
been fi led ......-ith the Federal
Energy - Regulalory CommisSIOn and is available for public
•nspectlon:
a. Type of Application: Preli minary Perm it

'l'ou'IIW8~1a.U'IIultn ~ OJml.,..,

·~

~c

J. ailoa..,..

Public Notice

wtth the CCHiilbiiiiC4i
(Februlty 11.19831

ltJOU're like moatfollla theae ~.you haft a. ca.r Joan.
aome medlctJ billa, e. be.nl&lt; crt&lt;dlt oe.rd. or two,an&lt;l thellstsoea
on. That' a a lot ofb~ ' .· . a.lot ot"loans."

IHfJll "~&lt; ,.,.,., . , " " '

...., ... u. ..

P-11~

. .

c-.-.~

A7·W..ttltolll..,.

UNITED STATES
OF AMERICA
FEDERAl. ENERGY
REOUIATOIIY
COM MilliON
Nota vf A;; I c don Fhd

____ ...,_,.e ......

-.~

...[......,_..,."-

,•...__,..,•c•",•••..-,.o..

l l·klilllalo

Public Notice

~~~~=t~~~:;

atit&gt;
~
.

:~

-..-

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

14·.,_..T,.......
1

;~

Uraui/it•tl

,.,,,.,.;,.. ft•Pt•ti/'WIIt ' t '.ft ·ft"IIJtf '~ . ..

Pomarvy-Middleport, Ohio

Card of Thanka

CARD OF THANKS
To the doctorl and nUI18S
at Vetnns Hospital, Po· ll!e(OY, llso, at Holzer
Medical Center, Ewinc Funeral Home for their effici·
'ent S81vice, nei&amp;ftbors,
, friends. and relatives, for
, prayers. cards and fl~.
·To Pastor William Mid·
· dlesworth for his help,
also. the o~p~ist and so. loist and the men who
took care of the grave. The
family of Elizabeth M. Yost
•expresses their thanks and
·appreciation to MryOne
for their kindness and
help .
E.R. Yost and Family
Mrs. Nellie r.l.- Price

74---~

.. ,. .......Of ..... .

1 ;).lllluQN:II

n -llli

_.....
....
-. ..... . .

41 · Hooo•oto.ll.,,
41·Maobh ...... MI•"..,'

~

.

-

Apr1114 meeting of the PI\Uathea
women of the Middleport
Church of Christ. The meeting
will be preceded bya6: 30potluck
dinner. Clyda Allensworth gave
the report ' of the -nominating
corrunlttee at a recent meeting of
tiJegroup.

...

,,U .....
.,..
;lo oUIIMIOIIw.......

))

Rev. 8-17·73
(3) t4, 2t . 3tc

POMEROY- Chapter' l7 of .

Nora Rice and Beulah Roush

~

WARREN J. SMITH
DIRECTOR

refrestunents.

wtil install the new officers at the

••.,.,·"..............
···...... --.
............
·-·-·..,.
I LMI . . I F.,..ftl

No. 83-218
UNIT PRICE
CONTRACf .

ctegree.

Philathea Women

J2·.......,1ol.-

l.ogll Copy

James Oliver Dean

PHONE
992-2156
0. Write Doilly S..tioel

.,....
•ii·CI.
,...........,..o.o...
1J.1noeto•-TV I Ill.,._ I II..,_,.
7:t.¥•• ••.o
i:J.AIII. . . .
;i :J.,.....iloNI ....... "
'"'MI• ..._.,..,...lp
...._..__
...__
,
"" ..,.....
..............
,...
,...... .....
31 -M...-tG.I ...
..,
.....
.......
lJ·••·"-·····
, ..
............
..,. . . ............. 11··-~
.•. ........ .
...,Of ..... ,...
..................
,..,
ll-lllh
,.
..-................. .

:11 -- o o . . . t u . ,ih

• . a....-..

0.00
mle.
..--------------'---------------1
Work
Length .,

F &amp;AM wUI meet in spec!al
session Tuesday at , 7:30 p.m.
Wock In the master mason

'POMEROY - Past Matrons
ot Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order
of the Eastern Star, wm meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. in the home
of Mrs. Thelma Dlll. All Past
Matrons are invited to attend.

•••-u~·----•
J .... - .
~~·-··

Morch 4, 1983
ControciU.

Sgt. Chafin reinlists m USAF
Staff Agi. Lynette D. Chafin,
daughter of Howard J . and Irene C.
Nau of 95 Nokomis Parkway,
Cheektowaga, N.Y., has reenlisted
in the U.S. Air Force at BoWng Air
Force Base, Washingion, after.nine
years military service.
Chafin 1s a telecommunications

___

,c......

1

Public Notice

\

1

Clusifio&lt;l ~111 Coo!t St .. -..,. Ollio 457"

months. The work p!oposed

Dean birthday

ttACINE - Racine Lodge 461

POMEROY - The ladles
aUxulai-y of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will meet Tuesday at 1
p.m. There will be an executive 1
meeting at 12:30 p.m. in the
CQDference room. All members
are urged to attend.

Monday, March 21, 1983

Monday, Mard-121, 1~

Pamt!fOY Middleport, Ohio

Ocaily Sentinel

noon. 614-245-9418 oher .
noon.

'

Bartender needed . Imme- Save thouaanda $ by buyi'lg ··
diate opening. Male only. from · owner . Aeauamble ..

814-992 · 9901 or 992- loon 11 Y:.%. 3 bdr. ronch,
6891 . Alit lor Mike. ·
1 Y, ~ths. built in kitchen, ·' '
laundry rqom, larg. llvi'lg·· '
Cleen, reapec1abla lady to room with brick fifiP ..oe.
live In or stay at nights With new above ground pool

eldoriJ- womon. 304·875· gord., spoco, homo it 3 yra:
old. 4 mi. from Ga!Upollt, ,
8767.
BABYSITTER wonted , :'7~o;t In SO's. Cel 448·
Clifton -Woo! Columbl•l---------11110, ~04-773-5137.
Fa&lt; uto 4S ecrM. 40 ocr• '•
dmber, 4 room • lllth ·
houoe, bom ond other bulk!·
lngo. Price '36.000. Coli
12 Situations
814-379-2666.
Wanted
Large contemporary famity

Mala. rock vocalist avellable
for work. Alto hive acouatlc
guhor Mid electronic ~•y·

Puppy, Germ., Shepherd,
bo•d, 304·811·7198 .
304·871·7271 '

home

overlookng

Ohio.

Rlvor .. Woodo, 5·20 ocr•.
tennte coun, city achoolt.
448-3554 or 1-813·423·
892B. Ownor· Agerit.

�Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, MarCh

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---·

.. ' ......." .
........

31 Hometl for Sele
In Middleport. newly rtmo·
deled home with flreplece.
pooolble woodbumer, clou
to· echoolo •
ohopplng .
814-992 ·8941 . .

151

AUCTION • FURNITURE
&amp;2 Olive St. , Oelllpollo. King
cool • wood hHttro with
ton f489, oil box oprlng •
mottreea *100, firm •120,
oofo·lovoMot • choir f199.
love Mots *70, new cool &amp;
wood heatera aa low aa
f399 \Nith blowero, uoed
coal a. wood h•tera. new
dlnll otto 11 00 • up,
,.frlgereton. ranges, bunk
beda complete f199. bun·
klesmattreaaee *40, che.ta,·
dreooero. TV'a. Cell 448·
3169 .

Cozv 2 bedroom home,
large outbuilding on 1 nice
acre . GoOd ttaner hc;Jme.
Rutland. 814· 742·2390 .

4 acn,a. 6 room house. For
more information 614-9863876 .

THREE btdrom hou.., , full
basement. well insulated.
coal or wood tu"'ace, aluml -·
num siding, new roof. 607
3rd . St . Now Hoven . Con·
tact Glenn Harrah. Parkersburg, 304·422-3117 .

Mlac. Merchandlae . KIT

'N' CARLYLE••

bY L1ny wr1g111 74

Cut up elebe for firewood
t1 !I plok up lood . CoR
814·241·1804.
.

1 g11

Honde 480 OUitOIIt

VieWing

.exo. ooncl. Col 441·2380. ,
1110 Hondo

c•

121111 ox.
oend., t7DO. Coiii14·ZII·
137g,

1 ooffee toblo
47fu18'Atx1 ·111'!1 ln . oncl 1
end toble 21x181'!1x20'At
with light welnut flnloh UO,
32xll3· 174 pltcto ....,_
underpinning to.r o mobile
home uoe&lt;! jun 1 yur etllll
off 1 14x70 mobile home,
long plecee mlioure 32",
ohort pleceo 21 " and 1 0
lnchao ocroea, entertoi:lt In 1
.metol frome. wood greln
flnloh. Coil ofttr 8PM, 448· ·
3085.

Woi!o

TMAT.S CIWIIIiLED
DAME
by Hen_rt Arnoiq,anO aoti Lee

Television

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

HOUHhold Goode

I WAIN

Couml'/ home for oele. 7
rooma, barn. 2. 7 acre1. S1r1
Rem•y, AI. 3, Pomeroy
Pike. 110,000 . u is.

II ..

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9 ~

Ohio

3/21/83
.
- ·.
EVENING
11:00 • (f) (I) • (I) ()D • &lt;II
Newo
(J) Tic Tee Dc!u9h
I]) Futuro Sport
Cll Andy Griffith
(I) Newo/Sporto/Weether .
(I) (]]) 3 · 2 · 1. Contoc:1
CN!rlle'e Anoelo
8:30 D (f) (I) NBC Newo
(f) MOVIE: 'The Atomic .
Cefe'
(f) MOVIE: 'Thtt Deldllen
Sin'
I]) Pony'o People In

1174 Yomohe Enduro dirt '
bike, 2,800 mllet. Coli 4118·
1117.

e

GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
• w ..hera, dryers, refrigere·
toro, ranges. Skaggo Ap·
pllances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Creat Motel.
446 ·7398.

WE COULDIJ'T HAVE COME
UP WITH A SETTE fl. AN&amp;. s
O~fi.~E:LVfS IF WE ~lfi.EP
~ HOLLYWOOD $CR IPT\11
.

NOW ALL YOU HAVE TO PO II/HEII
YOU MAKE YOUR 5PEECH IS. TO ,
REALLY WOW 'EM. LET. THEM HAVE
IT! YOU'Re A NATIO"'AL HERO.
THEY'LL 61: HANCiiNer 0~ I'OU!l.
E.VEI!.V WORD.

~rta

'

.

Cl) Gomer Pylo
(I) Newo
IIJ (I) ® CBS Newa
(I) Dr. Who
(]]) Over Eeay
II (jJ ABC Newo
7:00 II (J) P.M. Mogozlne
I]) ESPN't Horeo .Roclng

Wlcly.

71
LOW down payment, 8112
percent assumable loan .

p"yments et $276 month
includes taxes 8t inslrance.
Nice 3 bedroom ·home with
garage &amp; basement. Phone
304 · 676 -3030 or 676·
3431 .

1 Y2 acre with 5 rm . house.
with basement, need some

5-20 Acres woods, overlooking Ohio River, city
schools. 448 -3554 or 1.
51 3 · 423 · 892B .
Owner I Agent.

Furniohed opt. 1
4th Ave. Golllpollo.
$225 mo .. utilitia paid.
446 ·4416 after 7PM .

Lata for sale in Racine.
614-949-2340 or 61 4·
949 -2671 .

3 rm. and 4 rm. unfumlohed
apartments. Utilities paid,
no pets. no children . Call
448-3437.

work on houl8 . $7 .500 . Call

614-246·921 1.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TAl - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 -7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 446-7274 .
Windsor, ·14JC70 eoach with
7x22 8xpendo , three bed ·
room, two fuH baths, full

carpets. central air, underpinrwd. total electric. co vered patio, built in ttero

and microwave . storage
building, tee maket', storm
windows, and more. Pur·
chase with -without furni -

ture . Set up on rented lot,
app~

109 ACRES mon1 or leu.
wooded, 8 m.llao out Tribble
Road at Arbuckle, $30,000
304-675-1838.

36

Buying houaes a"nd ~part­
menta. Need properties with
favorable price and terms.
Box 1109 Galipolis, Oh .
46631 .

land with Mobile Home,
write to: P.O. Box 533,
Gallip.olis, Oh 46631.

1980 14x70 Buddy Mobile
home. fumilhed, 2 bdr ..
largo beth w~h garden tub,
built·'ln ltero, round kitchen
with double ovens, central
eir and wood building in·

eluded . Located in Green
Terrace Mobile HOme Court.

Call 448-94B6 .

41

Houses for Rent

2 bdr. unfurn. houoe, $1 76
mo., sec.. deposit required. Call 446-4303.
par

3 bedroom h a me located
near Golf course. Shown by
oppointmem Rent $276.
depoolt UOO. No peU. Coli
448·2573 or 446·1 171.
Modern 3 bdr. ranch, garage, carpet, Rodney area .
Deposit &amp;. refertJlcea re:
quired. $286 per mo . Black·
burn Ree~y. Call448-0008.

1 975 Holly Park Mobile House for rent $160 mo.
Home. 14x70 with control , $75 depoait. Cell 614-246·
air, new drapes. new carpet . 9316 .
Owner willing to lease pres·
ent loc:etion, inctudi"g pas- 4 rooms and bath. full
tu no on SR 554, Bidwell. basement. all new paint,
Call 446 -9786. 8 :30 ·3:30. .carpetap. No inside pets.
Deposit and 6 months lease
Evening•. 387-7150 .
required. 614-992-3090.
Being transferred. Willucri 2 bedroom houM . Large
fico 1980 14x70 wlh,7x21
expando. 3 bedrooma, 1 Y2 livilg rogm. kitchen &amp; both .
Furnlst;ed . Overlooking
bllths, central air . 614-742Ohio River. Aduha only .
.3163 or 742-272B .
Brown's Trailer Park. 814Clean 19'72 14x60 · Kirk· 992-3324.
wood Mobile home. gas
3 bedroom houeo, Middle·
heat. 1 JA baths. front end
roar bedrooms. 87900. Call port area. t276 month .
Fenced yard, air condition,
614 -992 -5732 .
corpoted . 614-742-2436.
t2,960 . up used mobile
2 bedroom home fumlahed,
homes for sale. 2 bedroom,
completely furnished . located below Hitching Post
Ready to move in . Brown's on St. At. 2 . You poy
Trailer Park. Minersville, Oh . utilities. $150 . per month.
• 100. deposit.. 304·676·
614 · 742·3324.
9084 between g. 1 2 or
evening 7-9 .
Corner lot with mobile
home. New carpet. C8f1trel
.ir. lllrge patio, large build ing . &amp;th • Pearl, Racine, Oh .
61.&amp;-949-2719.
USED MOBILE
576-2711 .

HOME .

1 977 14x70 Windsor, 2
bedroom unfurnished . 304 675·6930 or 675· 3346.

1972 12x:65 mobile home.
2 bedrooms. $4,000 or best
offer, 304-675-5694 .
33 Farms for SaiB
Farm for sale 26 acres
mo•tly lev~!. good hay
fieldo, $45,000 . Mull aell,
reaaonable offer. 3 bdr.
home . new furnance,
county water new bath
carpeted , new alum . siding
coal 8t wood burning stove.
Good barn &amp; other out
bldga. garage . Located on
old 16"0 near Porter. Call
614 · 3B8·9060 .

207 acre farm. Lengavllla.
mln1or11 rltel Included •. no
houoe f1 2,000 down wil
cerry ret1. 81 4·3BB·9348 .
123.02 ocre term. 2 gel
welle, 'h mlnerel rig hta. 2
pond•• woterwell. Approx·
imllleiY 22 ecreo forming
belonce timber. e31,000.
81 4-99,·8909.
53 .29 "'; re grosaland &amp; nice
.mature timber. AU · mineral
righu, ~ gas wells, free gas
hoolwp, 20 bV 40 2 stol'!lile ·
bloi:lt bf'lldlng, other out·
bulldlnga, weter · top .
f41.l . 11 4-892·8908.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. large trailer partially
fum .,1 mile out of Gallipolis
of At . 588. Call 614·246·
9170 .
Eureka: Riverfront lot, 1
bedroom, fum ., aduhs. Ref.
• dep. f100. Coll614·643·
2&amp;44 .

:;:;::::;=::;::;:=:::;;;::=
69

For Sale or Trade

A-1 cond. , neW paint
n1tlonal 2¥2 ton ·
cha11ie, long Wheel
$2,600. Will conolder
ing on anything of ve""·l
·Call 614·379·2617 .

~8~ft~.~m;e~artt~~;;.;,,~8Btft;f~~~~

1976 Buick Electro 2 dr .,
PS, PB, AC, AM·FM 011ro
11,8110 or trod• for cettle,
form equipment of equol
volue. Coli 446·4537.

.. - .. .
-

14ft. produce c11e.

miac. store equipment.
61 4·367-0378 between
&amp;4.

Firat floor furlnahed
utilitiea paid; dep01it &amp;
required. Adulta, no pete.
Call at 631 Fourth Ave ..
GaiHpolio.

'

For Solei 10 new
built · 4 •xa•
signa·. Complete
Call collect, Mr .
602·663·9928 .

Real Estate
Wanted

on Rodney-Cora Rd. Mutt

1 9BO Redman 14x70, 4
bdr. *326 down, $158 mo.
Mull have good credit. Call
614-3S8·9776.

Garlmatlc No. 9
new. NeVer been uud.
614·388·9681.

road . $8,200 . 614-992·
2603 .

see to appreciate. Call 614246 -9229 after 6 :30.
colt and under. Call 448 9682 . Kanauga Mobila
Homea Salea, Kanauga, Oh.

~a;;;~;-;;;-;-;;;.;, 18247.

6 ecres land . Spring water,
sewer, electric. On good

1111 miles from Rodney

New 14x70' s being aold at

Nice 4 pc. trodltlonol bed· Pototoea U.S. No. 1, 18.00
room oulte. Coil 448-1429 100· lb . beg, 13.25 50· lb.
or 446·0840.
bog . 304-8715-3782 or448·

Lot in Northup on concrete
Rd. 127'x1 20 ' , $4,BOO ,
Call 446-6264.

PUtoppero,
colore and aiHI. t75 to
t135 . · 8 •
0 Motoro,
446·7322.
Ulod 2200 Ditch Witch
'trencher. Call 1-614-7842.

2 bdr. apartment park front
view, part turn .. water peid.
$176 mo .• CaH446·3919or
446·0021 .

Honda 760 K, Suzuki TS
.&amp;00, ten ft. aluminum John
boot, Cell614· 245·6211 .

Apt. for rent. Half double-2 ~~;:~:::::::====
bd.room Apt. Adults pre- ~ 2
fornod . No poto, 614·992· 5 . CB,TV, Radio·
2749 .
Equipment

1 bedroom furnished apt.
614-992-6434 .
23 channel Cobra 85 for
- - - - - - - - · l e - 845. 23 chonnel Cobra B9
For rent·two bedroom mod· with power mike *70. Set of

ern Apartment over double
garaga In Middleport. Car·
peted, 11ovo and refrlgerota&lt;
furnished. w·B&amp;llar-dryer
hookup . Well ineulated.
•torm windows, low utili·
·. tin. e·190. per month. Se·
curity depoait month. of
1100. Available Aprl 1.
Adultl only. Phone 81 4·
992·5292 . after 6 p.m .

1 0 gallon ecquarium with
floh, 2 hematero, 2 Chiclid
fish. 448-8832 .
Firewood, oplit, $30 .00 a
trucklood. $36.00 deli·
verad . Ph . 181 4} 992-2770
or 13041 B82-2194.
· lc-

Moonraker beams with rotor
bo~. coax. tower fo $225 .
Telephone type C.B. mike
*10. All in axe. cond. Roger
Jeffero, 614,992·6232.

55 Building Supplies

54

Building materials
block, brick. 1ewer pipea.
windowa. lintels. etc .
Claude Wintera, Rio Or~~nde,
0. Call614-246·6121.

Misc. Merchandise

400 locust fence posts . At

Shade, Oh. Clyde Smith,
Furnished apt . 31erge ;ooma 614-696-1283 .
and beth. All utiities paid.l-- - -- - -- - , lnquWe at 584 N . 2nd. Ave. Antique Oak Reproduction
in Middleport after 6 p.m . furniture, full line in stock.
No children 01 peta.
1110 Antiques. Paul Conkels
Antiquea, Tuppers Plains.
3 bed. opts. All include
individual carporuwith ltor- REPOSSESSED SIGN I Nothing down! Take over pay~ge ~uilding• • fenced back
yards. Rental to ault all ment.• $68.00 monthly. 4•8
budgeta. 304· 273·3344 in flashing · arrow aign . New
f'avenewood between 9 · bulba, lettel'l . Hale ligna .
Call FREE 1 ·800·826·
a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
7446, anytime.
Apartmento . 304-675·
Kenmore auto. washer and
6548 .
~
G.E. Dryar-$160 . Aloo FrigiAPARTMENTS , mobile daire Refrig . self defrosting.
homea, houtea . Pt. Pleaaant 186. 742 -2362 .
and Gallipolis . 614•44B·
TROYBILT ROTOTILLERS
8221 .
Discounts. Avoid April price
UNFURNISHED apertment lncreaae. Free Hiller in·
for rent, 1 bedroom, eluded . Immediate lhip$180.00 Coli Automotive ment. Parts, anginas. Trade
Supply, 8-6 . 304 · 676- In• eccepted. 703· 942 ·
3871 HlckOI'/ Hill Nuraery,
2218, 675-6753.
Rt. 1 Box 390 A , Fi1hori·
ONE bedroom apartmento ville, VA 22939 .
to·r the elderly. All u1ilities
paid . Tenenta pey 30 per- Prom dreues or Wtldding
cent of their .tjultlld in· a«endan.tssi1e 9-10-1 1-12.
come in ihio HU D ouboidlzed For eppointments 304-675·
:apanment building. Twin 2045 .
Rivera Tower, phone 3046'76·6679 . Equal opportun· SEARS Kenmore washer. 7
years old, $25 .00. Coat
ity housing.
e&amp;O . to be fixed. Cell
304-675-2296 evenings.
45 Furnished Rooms FLOWERED 3 piece
room suite &amp;. brown
Sleeping room 1116, utili· couch, 304·896· 3319.
ties pd. lingle mala. share
beth. 919 2nd Ave .. Gallipo·
lis. Call 446-4416 titer
7PM.

TO ALL CONTRACTORS·
We are able to give contractors price on all building
materials. Delivery availabe.
Gollipolio Block Co., 1 23'h
Pine St., Gallipolio. Oh 446·
2783 .

56

.

-

.... _

~
&amp;

'

....

.

2 bedroom 1 2x60 In ottrec·
tive country ~ettWig near
Coolvilo. City water. Free
gu. Waohtr &amp; drYer hoo·
kupe. 614· 867-3838.
2 bedroom trollor. Fur·
nlohed . Adultl only .
Brown'o Trallor Pork. 81 4·
992 ·3324.
14x70 THREE · bedroom
partly furnished, oil el81.tric
trailer, built on room. wood ·
coal burning stove. one acre.
out build in g . $25 0. 00
month. f1 00. depoolt,
..,., Run Roed. 304-8711·
23118.

For ule or tredo 1978
Plymouth Vololro 1Jood
cond . Coli 814-379-2718. ·
For Mit ar !redo 1978
Plymouth Fury good cond.
Coli 814·379-2728 .
·
80 T Slrd AM·Fm coHtttt.
new radial•. bnkea. ••·
heun. Coli 114-387-0467.
1 878 Iuick Centul'/ 2 dr ..
outo, PS, Am·FM nero
CIIMtte. exc. concl. Will Mil
below wholeoeleo. Cell441·
2133.
79 Ftlrmont ltltionwegon,
8 cyl., PS. PI, AC. crulu.
cleen. 12,8911. Coli 448·
2469.

1980 light brown-crum
Couaor .XR7 with oil optlono
Including otero, tit - 1 .
Loader-Maa.ay Ferguaon 1 crulu, AC. po-r ollltb,
w11. 368 with Iorita. Call velour lnt-r, deluxe wheel
81 4-2411·1804.
COYWI. R__...on, btlne
oold to hlghttf blddor • Formoll Cub with cultivotoro minimum *1,000. All bldo
ell exc. cond. , *2.200 firm . wll be o - d on Mondoy
Coil otter I, 8 14·379·2168. April 4th; Con be - n ot the
Gelllpollo Hlgh-y Petrol
NEW • Uud Horvil1ore Poat. Contoct Lt. Wlggle'e·
Structure•. Autometed H· -rth to oubmlt bldo It
veatock feedlng-compUJer Petrol Poll or coil 448f-ero. Coli collect 114- 2433.
686-2280~ John L. Be~o .
1881 Mercury Copri PS,
AC. eunroot, clocl&lt;, AM-FM
62 Wanted to Buy
rodlo, I oyllndtr, 23,000
mlleo, excellent condition .
Coil 448·343S.
Tobocco ' poundoge. Coli
1879 Pontile Trono-Am
446-1437.
1Oth Annlv-ry-Only o
Wonted 198 3 tobocco f - mede. T·top, AT. PS,
poundogo, peylng.26 ctntl. PB, EW, DH. low mllel.
gar- kept. c.a 448·9271.
Coil 114-266·1379.

61

Farm Equipment

63

Livestock

Southuatem Ohio Polled
Hartford Aoeocllltlon 13th
Annuel Selt. ' Fridty Night
Morch 26, 1983, oi
7 :OOPM , Pomeroy, Ohio.
Contoct: Judith Miller, Rt. 2
Box 372, McArthur, Oh
4111111 or1·814·11911·111184.
.G
I '
h
.
rove y ottoc mento·rotlry
plow 1260, tiller 1300,
ridlng oulky 1711. Coli 446·
4149 .
Beby Holateln coif f&amp;O . Coli
446· 2614.

Pets for Sl)le

For oo'lo 2 Reg. Anguabullo1
yr . old ond 3 Anguo .holfero 1
HILLCREST KENNEL . yr. old . Call 114·2118·8210.
Boarding ell brtedo .. AKC
Reg. Dobermono pupo ofd 4 R•giotered Polled Here·
ford Bulla br-Ing - ·
Doberman Stud SeNice. 441·2108
.
Cell 446· 7795 .
- - - - - - - ·110900
Reglottred Ouortor Horae.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY Ruth
Ree-. Aloo · grede.
• K~NNEL. AKC Chow pup·
Saddlll,
brldlto, winter
pieo, CFA Hlmeloyan, Per·
horae blanketa. Weatem
aian and Siame11 kittens.
booto. 614·18B·3290.
Call 446-3844 after 4PM .
2 mole full blooded b..gle Stud service. Registered
puppies. 6 weeks old. $150. blondo Bolglen Stillion.
Reoonoble retes, 814·949·
614-992-3544 .
24115 .
AKC registered Shetlend 5.0 leying hena for Alt.
Sheepdog, 1 year old, mole,
eoch. 614·742 ·
• , 26 . 304-875 · 3538 .
3146 .

u.oo

INKC regi1tered Peek-a-Poo
puppiea. 2 males. 7 weeks.
had ahota &amp; wormed. WiU
oelllor beat offer. 304-SS2·
2382 .

1977 Dodgo Colt AT, vtnyt
top, ct..n. excellent
mlleoge. Coli 61 4·3889808 or 114·318·991 1'.

u••

19ao· Pontioc Phoenix, 2
door, front drlvo. eulomotlc.
em·t m, a.c .• aharp. Econom!col. Only UIIDO. 441·
7431 ..

1---------197S Chtv. Monze, excel.
cond.,· 4 •--'· 12,700.
P.hone 441·2174.

1---------78 Couger XR7, 302 euto-

ohorp. 814 ' 882 ' 7408 ·
1977 Ford Mulling Ohio.
V-8. eutometic 302, olr
conditioning, powor 11-·
lng, power brekeo, luggage
rock. N - rtdlele, low ml·
~ge. Coil 814·992·2127
oftw II, .o r 814-992•2318
do""-·
r•n•~ ·

1982 Douun 200SX .
Loaded. 814· 992-&amp;137.
HARTS Uud Ctro, New
Haven Weat Virginia. Over
20 lell oxpenoive coro In
atock.

1-=--------JEEP, 1878 CJ8, 28,000 ,
mlleo, n - point, excehnt
condition, f3800. Conolder
trode, phone 304 · 273·
3574, 3004·372·9329.
1978 COUGAR XR7 ,
loaded. low mlltego, 304·
&amp;76-38118.

19811 CORVAIR, priced on
inopoctlon. 2801 Uncoln
Avo. P1. PluMnt, wv.

Motors Homea
8a Campera

19711 Concord 20 ft. trevel
troller, lllf contolnod, oxtru
condition, uaed 4 tlmea,
f3,250. Coil 1114·387·
7242.

IPfJL~

72

Trailer IPICe for rent. Sand
Hlil Rd. Approx y, mile out .
304 -675-2949 .

FIRST quollty, 2nd. cutting
hey oleo Timothy hoy. 304·
~73-3447.

47 Wanted to Rent

66

Open roll~ng paatunt lend Of
weod lend for farming in the
Vinton •rea. WIU fanAize l!t
lime. Coli 81 4·388·9300.

Seed

8a

Fertilizer

LEASE-OPTION TO BUY 3
bedroom hou11. For lntor·
mellon cell 304-871·118S8
ofter 4:30 p.m.

Would like to rent lufl'llohed
or unfurniahed hou• or
t,.ll• In country., Cal 892·
8418.
.
. .

81

Truck• for Sale

BEE~

W1114

MA'/ I 9-.'flllAT I~
ll\AT TIME: I MN7E:.

M\AZIN~! ... A~D MlbHTI
ADD, ~lbHL'1

C.O/JM~IJCI\B'L 1: !

•• /F 1/G WORIIERS liRE

06SOlETE L/1/E Yl/11

rs tiii/5E (j{JY5

~v, 1

YOU'HE g£VffW.
PfCIIPES &amp;EHIND
THE TIME!&gt;. OOVE!
IF WE WERE TO

LIKE Yal !'fliNT T'
IIVTOMI1TE
STOP ALL THE EXIST/HI!,
fVEffYTII/Nt$,1
OOTOMATIOO RltiHT HOW.

•. tH EHERI.iY, COMI.tiiCAT/ONG,
TRAN5FI'JIHATION, BANHINI.i
s~RVICEG. m ...A6 WELL
INDUHRY1YOU'D rtHNK
WERE LIVING 6ACK IH

THE 570/'/f1/Qf!

SpecleUzlng In Zenith end •
Motorolo, Quuor, ond
hou• cello. Cell 878· 2318
or 441; 2464.

·,.

Wotar Weill. Commorclol
ond Domeotlc. Tilt holto.
Saito ond Service.
304-19&amp;·3102 .

p._,

your k - t In lhip

ahepe. Wiler removel, FlU!
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTIAN
STEAMER 114·448·21 07. '.

Plumbing

Motorcycl11

18711 Buli:lt Electra 2 dr.,
PI, PB, AC. AIII·FM ot:oro
f1,a•o ar 1nHM for 011111, 1874 luauld 2110 dirt bile.
form equlp1-t of equel 1171
. . Good•running ocindl·
v81ue. Cell 4-M-41:17.
tlorl. S14·141·:SOD.

. e

Excavating

Lonnie Bogga Excevttlng .
Dozer, be.c khoe, dump·
truck. Work by hour or job.
Cell 441 · 7903.
~;::::::;:::==

.,'

Electrical
Refrigeration

VIE

... THAT'G IT, FtCIO?! YEf7.1 R/GIIT
"6Eflfl CL8W'S fiA' WHI;RE II()Ne'(MS
Fl!t'QfR'

5fllll!T 1'1115, fllfNIE.'

Newa

SEWING Mochlno ropolro.
oervlce. Authorl•d Singer
8olee • Servlco Shorpen
Scloooro . Febrlc Shop ,
Pomeroy. 982·2284 .

B~RNEY

. I'M
FIXIN'

TO BAKE
A CAKE

General Hauling

WHAT KIND

15 IT-·CHAWKLIT,
~EMON. 9RAN6E,
I

B·I·R ·-

ANGEL FOOD?

drivew~~y1,

(!) Nowo/Sporti/Wuthor
(JJ DIIYt Allen Ill Lorge
(]]) Sign Off
• Benny Hill Show
11 :111 Cll All In the Femlly
11 :30 II (J) (!) Tonight Show
(J) No1 N-...rily The
Newt This show promises
· to be everything the current ·
news is .n ot.
(I) MOVIE: 'Conftlllone
of a Driving lnetructor'
(J) Another Ufe
•
(I) Benny Hill Show
IIJ (I) Trapper John M .D.
An earthquake in San Fran·
cisco loaves Tropper and
Gon~o in a serious predica·
mont . If!} (60 min.}
(I) Sign Off
(ll All In the Femi!Y
D (jJ Nlghtllne
11 :411

DEPENDABLE WASHER ·
DRYER REPAIR. Gueron·
teed work. Coli anytl1111
814·2111·8820 or 814·
268·1207.
'
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Ctl Jim Lenler, 304-8711 ·
7387.
,.

..

Upholateiy

'I
. r

•.ounomoke
Cll MOVIE: 'Ufe

. Top'

PEANUTS

HERE'$ HOW IT IS~.~HUCK ...
OUR T.EAM 15 THE
ALL ~E 816-LEAwE TEA/1151 ''PELICANS," RIGHT ? WELL.
HAVE MASCOTS, li:l6f.IT? . WI: HAI/E THIS COSTUME
WE WANT YOU TO WEAR ...

\

.

.

.tt~
Worcs .
12:30
(J) (!)Lito Night With
.

a.nnr,:::. ..

Dlvld~ .. . .
(I) .....
I]) NCAA
.
Ill
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from
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river
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men

II Ollie's
partner
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• Biblical

llon

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of Mlfl(l'

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fabric
31 Money (sl.) •
1'1 Salubrious
311 young bird
st Church part

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411 Nigerian

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

AXYDL,AAXR
LONGFELLOW

-~

\

One letter elmply otanda for another. In thia sample A 1a :..

uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letteri '••"

epollrophto, the len~th · and formation of the worde are oli ·.
hlatL Eoch day the code letters ore different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

, LCQIIGWKK ,t !LL .BL

CEH

DGW

' L Q I L C B C Q ": H

D W 8-H J W B Z E

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---1---1--i--1

111 the.

12:00 I]) MOVIE: 'The Amateur'
(J) Burne &amp; I'll..,
I]) ESPN SIIC)I'tiC-r
(I) Nlghtlne
(ll MO\fiE: 'Tht Bon Of

TRISTATE
, ·:
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
· 1
11 83 Soc. Ave .. OoiHpollt . • ;
441·7133 or 448 -1833.
1
MOWREYS Upholltery Rt
f 8ox 124, P1. Pluoent
304· S78·41 114.

r.--,r-rr""'r.'--

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DEPENOABLE WASHER·
DRYER REPAIR. Oueren ·
t•d work. Cell enytlmo
814-288·11820 or 814·
2118·1 207 .

87

BRIDGE

derneath "1he basement of an
eccentric in\fentor.
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
I]) ESPN SportoCemer
Cll Bob Newhart Show
()) IIJ (I) Fernily Feud
()) Buain•• Report
®You Asked For It
IJj) lnolde Bualneoo
make the i&gt;est play. Others
II (jJ Emertolnment
are so complicated thai not
Tonl9ht
more than a corporal's
8 :00 D (J) C!J Uttle Houoo: A
NORTH
3-21-83
guard
of players would know
N- Beginning Malthew
the
best
one."
Rogers meets his real father
'10 9 7
Oswald:
"Here is a hand I
and a world-famous author
· tAK872
saw
played
by one of the
comes to Walnut Grove. 160
.AJ986
supposed auction bridge
min .)
authorities in an auction
'II'EST
EAST
(f) MOVIE: 'Tho legend of
bridge ~arne at New York's
+Q
tAU
the Lone Ranger'
Cavendish Club back in 1928 .
r!'AKQ6
•ast2
(I) MOVIE: 'The Jericho
· +JU3
tQ108
The actual contract was four
Mile'
~Q542
.Kl03
spades arrived at after
(l)ISpy
North bid and rebid his
I]) 2nd Annuli Legendary
SOUTH
Pocket Billiard Staro
minor
suits almost ad infini·
+KUOII7113
CIJ MOVIE: ' Breaking Up'
tum. I have substituted conCll
II
(jJ
That' 1
tract bidding to modernize .
lncredlblel Tonight's pro·
' it. "
gram fearures a blind wai·
Jim: " I assume the
Vulnerable: Both
tress and a man who won
··· defense started with three
the world's largest slot ·
. Dealer: North
roundS of hearts and that
machine _payoff. 180 .rnin.}
after rutting the third one
Weot
Norlll Eut
Soutb
Ill I]) (1!1 Charlie Brown
South led his kin~ of spades,
tt
Pass
Special 'Someday You'll
smothered West s singleton
Pass
Pass
Pass
Find Her, Charlie Brown,'
queen and romped home."
Charlie Brown continues his
Oswald: "You are partly
quest for the little red ~
Opening lead: ~
South did ruff the ·
righl.
headed girl. IR} ·
third hearl. Then he led his
(JJ IHl F.rontline
jack of spades and was one
Soviet Debate,' Tonight's
down. He w~s so irate that
program follows an Ameri~
he never knew that he had
can debating teem during its
made a 'nothing' play."
tour of tho Soviet Union .. (60
· By Ollwald Jaeoby
min.}
·
. Jim: "A play that could
ud James Jaeoby
g
MOVIE:
'Double
only lose as .a~ainst the king
Indemnity'
O.wald: "How about some play that mtght win and
8 :30 D ()) Clt Smell &amp; Frye An
bands Illustrating single suit would have won. Knocking
old flame tries to make Nidt
out a singleton ace with the
plays?" .
her 'patsy,'
·
jack
would still leave the
Jim: "Why not? There are
. 9:00 II (J) (I) MOVIE: 'Coward
guarded 'lueen as a defenbulidredl
of
them.
Some
are
of the County'
· so simple tbat almost every· sive trick. '
(1)700 Club
body would automatically
1]), USFL Football: Phiia·
delphia at Birmingham ·
()) G (jJ MO:VIE:
'Intimate Agony'
IIJ (I) (1J Allee Tommy
joins his college roommate
in a round of partying that
causes trouble . ··
()) Great Performances
by tHOMAS JOSEPH
'Rubinstein at 90,' In celeACROSS
II Belgian
bration of his 90th birthday, ·
Rubinstein performs · sOme
1 tnulate
river
•'
special selections . IR} 190
5Man's
min .}
•
nickname
DOWN
IJj)
Be Announced
1 PUncture'
9 :30 Ill (I) ()D One o.y et a
&amp;Woodwind
Time Barbara· s high school . tVJalmu's
ZGreekcoin
• sweetheart stops by for a · earthly
3GiobaHy
visit. .
·
Important
form
10:00 (J) On · I..Ocatlon:
An
Evening Robin · Wlllltms
13 Knowledge 4 Shelter
Yesterday's Answer
The famous comedian per-' 14Decipher
5Spanish
forms live at San Francisco's
15 Buildiilg .
dialect
12 Prepared
27 Vintage
Great American Music Hall.
wing
•
&amp;Happening
(I)
MOVIE:
'Funefel
16 Torrefy'
auto make
Home'
;11 Storage box 7Ali
19 Egyptian
29 Less common
Cll TBS Evening Newt
-Grew
solar disk
33 Different ·
IIJ Cll ® Cagney &amp; Lecey ·17 Grape-like
,.
10Much
fruit
21
Descend
34 Gaze
illJ Newowotch
GINN Nowo
Visited
18Cow
22 Oregon city 36 Old note
10:30 ill Star Time
Fiery
places
%3
Misplace
37 Lincoln's
()) (]]) View from the
11
Untoward
.
2
1
Fide118ta
~Face
(sl.)
secy.
Stondplpe IRustrator John
Faker is prof~ed .
leader
In Surch of....
23 Italian
11 :00 . . (f) (I) • (I) ()D • (jJ
.,

:ro

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh end Plf,MI
Phone 4411·3BS8 or 448 ·
4477

Now houllng llmanone foi
top Mil for yerda
• fUI dirt. Cell 114-367·
7101 .
'

1878 CHEVY Blozer Kll,
eutom•tlc tranamlaaion,
3011. excellent condition,
low mlloogo , looded,
18,000. 304-773·1184.

Jurflltte loalt.No. tl, containing 110 puzzles, Ia •••liable for$1 .95 potlptkt
tram Jumble, do thla newlplper, BOlt lot, Norwood , N.J. 07648. Include your
name, edcltMa. zip code and m•k• checka p1y1bll to Newepaperbooka.

..

73

1978 Ford cullomlzed PI,
PI, AC, R. tlreo, 4 Clpt.
ll•to toblt. bed, Ice box,
AM·FM radio tope pl•yer
l·tnck. Coli 4411·3348.

(Answers tomorrow)
S.tun:lay'el Jumblea : KNIFE CHALK ACCENT BUSHEL
Answer: What you'd expect people wllh no money In
.
the bank to wrlle- BLANK CHECKS

t~~

a. Heating

JONES BO'tS WATER SER·
VICE. Colla814·387-7471
or 11 4·387-0681.

Van1 8a 4 W.O.

gesltd by'the above ca~oon .

....,..t

in1ured, free eetlmetea .
Phone 814-387·083&amp;, cell
otter 1 .

85

Now a"ange 1he circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug-

·u.s.-

rlenced roofing, lndudlng '
hot tor epplicotlon, cerpem· •.
t•. tlectrlclon, mooon. Coli ~ •
304-8711·2088 or en.
.&amp;leo.
·'

8a

50T i06ETHEI&lt;: FOR.

••

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpe· ··•
~~---------------

84

I)

COIN

.7

- - - - - -.
RON'S Teltvtolon Service.·',

83

tUKLER

WHAT

CO~LECTO~S ALWAY5

'J3
••

Morcum Roofing • Spout.
lng. 30 yeerooexperlence,
epeciollzlng In built up root. ' .
CaM 814·318-9BII7.
;

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, 01ump
,.....Vol. Cell 8711-1331.

t
t
I J I

I ~RYJ'f J

... .

ANNIE

PAINTING · Interior ond
exterfor, plumbing, roofing,
aome remodeling. 20 yre. •
oxp. Cell 114-3S8·ge&amp;2.

82

.

Cl) Canol Burnett
(I) Entertoinment Tonight
(!) Chert it' 1 Angell
D ·Cil Tic Tac Dough
.
(I) (]]) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
()D News
II (jJ Peoplo'o Court
Star Trek
. 7:30 II (J) Ue boteC1or
(J) Frogglo Rock Vis~ the
world of Fragglo Rock un-

II

The romper stumbles

STUCCO PLASTERING
tuturtd ceilings commtr·
clel ond reeidentlal, tree
lltlmotao. Coli 814-2118·
1182.

Got

' '

... BUT FI&lt;OM ION OIJ,WE:.'Ll.,
'1'R'f 1D Be: MORE C.ARER.JL.,
IM)t.J 1TWEE !?r----_.

ClJ L'( OIJE THJ'i
MISTAJ(E:!

•

19112 Honde C 1710 CUI·
tom. Creth bore, odjuotoble
beck reat, cruloo control,
cuahion grlpa. 111 4-849·
2734.

Backhoe endloeder digs S
ft., Iorge bed pick up houlelple, op•~tt youreelt. *90.
per dey. 304·888·3141.

'bJ

16 '1EAF&lt;?, ~R. ... AIJD

.'

Home
Improvements

18711 Dodgo P.U. with
topper. Yo ton 2211 II cyl.
Stondord. 814·948·28117.

74

Equipment
for Rent

fiAI/E

117S, 21 ft. Motor Home,·
l11o thon 10,000 mlleo,
cleen, outomotlc, PS, PB.
AM·FM 8 trock, 4 opeokere,
reduced to 12.000 or bell
offer. 304-882 · 2730.

ED'S APPUANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli City Fumlturo
304-8711-2808.

46 Space for Rent

48

79

metl c, o.c., p .a.. p.b .. rul E • R Tree S.nrice, fully

79 PONTIAC Sunbird, 4
cyl., 4 - - ' · with olr,
AM·FM, *2888. 114-448·
1387, 448·1084 .

2 bdr. mobile home ref •
dep. req. Call 61 4-256·
1922.
2 bdr. trailer for rent, all
electric. Call 446-.&amp;480.
- - - - - - - ·lc2 bedroom Mobile Home In
Racine . $200. month,
t100. dap . Youpoyutilitiea .
~ Kitchen stove &amp; rafridgerator turn ., rett unfurnished.
814-367-02B8 .

Autoa for Sele

[X ,

.

.

ZE H F RHLC ':

~

ZEFWFZCHW .
E H I J H

~.

.

1
(

· Y~lerda;y'l, er,ptoquOfe: THAT MAN IS RicHEst WHOSE . :_,
~ARE THii: CHEAPEST.-HENRY THOREAU . . .

,.

�Page-l 0---The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County agent's corner

Beef dinner·slated · tonight ·
By ,JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture, Meigs County
POMEROY -Coming EventsMonday evE'ning, March 21. th&lt;'
Meig, County Beef Cattle Associ a t i·
oni will haH• a dinner meeting at tht'
Meigs Inn starting at 7:15 p.m .
Everyone is welcome. Speaker will
be Harold· Bennett , Field Represen·
tative of Central Ohio Breeding
Assbciation, who will ta lk on heat
synchronization and reproductivr
ma nagem ent.
Wednesday. March 23 - Meigs
FFA Banqu~t at the high school at
6:30p.m.
Special !eei:\cr sa les at the Ohio
Va lley LivE'Stock in Ga llipolis on
Tuesdays, Marth 29 and Aprill2 a t
7:30 p.m . Cattle will be reeeived
from 8a.m. to:lp.m. on the day ofthe
sale.
Don't Pasture Too Soon . .With
warm weather coming we would all
like to quit feeding hay to our
livestock as soon as possible.
However. don't start too soon.
Pasture that is grazed too soon will
not · give you the production you
would like to have. Bluegrass s hould
be up four inches. Tall grass such as
fescue and orchardgrass should be
eight to 10 inches high. A tall grass
with legume such as clover and
alfalfa should be at least 10 inchE'S
high . Do not graze the bluegrass ·
down a ny closer than two to two and
one-half inches high, the tall grass
two and one-half inches, and the tall
grass and legume two and one-hali
to three Inches.
As soon as you have reached this
level let the pasture rest30ro35days
before re-grazing. If pasture gets
ahead of this and can be cut and
baled. rule any excess pasture
growth.
As a sidelight you might be
interested in when you mow or
graze you never get 100 percent of
what you attempt to harvest. The
closest we come to harvesting the
entire crop is when we harvest it a s

_ Obi~_

legislature
now moving slow

grass silage. We can recover 8S to94
percent. When we harvest it as hay
we recover 78 to 85 percent. If we
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API- After
rotationally graze our pasture, not
nearly doubling the state Income
only will the pasture produce more
tax because of financial woes,
for us but we will recover more of it
lawmakers say this year is no time
as well, up to 60 or 65 percent. If we
to push costly social programs.
permanently graze animals on a
· One top leader saidprivatelythat
pasture field we can expect to only
the s low pace this year is deliberate
recover 50 percent of the forage that
because lawmakers ieel a low
Is there. So much is lost by
profile Is best iight now.
tramping, uiine and manure.
Niow laws often mean new
what About Dormant Oil Sprayprograms and the Democrats, who
When I S!IY a dormant oil I am not
control both houses, do not want
talking about some dirty old motor
voters to think taxes were raised for
oil that you have saved, I am talking
that purpose rather than out of
about a superior oil. Superior does
absolute need.
not meap a high grade of oil but a
.Nearly three months into the
type of oiL Superior oils are contact
session, the House and Senate have
insecticides that interfere physi·
enacted only two significant billscally with insect respiration. They
a 90 percent increase in the income
are used to kill scale insects, mites,
tax along with some other smaller
plant bugs, psyllids a nd certain
tax increases and a measure
moths.
implementing a · voter-approved
Early Spring Strawberry Carestatewide housing program.
As soon as new growth starts to
The House goes into Its Easter
develop on s trawberry plants, it's
recess Wednesday (tintil April 6)
time to begin removing the winter
and the Senate will put a moratomulch so the plants can come
rium on floor sessions from March .
through. Place the mulch between
29 until April7. There probably will
the rows. as this controls· weed
be sbme interim committee meetgrowth, conserves moisture, and
ings in both chambers, however.
helps keep the fruit clean. If there is
Although Democratic Gov. Ri·
a danger of frost after the beriies
chard Celeste's two-year budget
begin to bloom , some of the mulch ·
will not be introduced until March
can be-raked back over the plants.
30, advance work begins this week
And So It Grows - Those of you
as agency heads and others explain
who have been over-anxious to get
their needs to finance committees.
your shrubs a nd landscape trees
pruned can get with it now.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, R·
The best time to prune is just
Cincinnati, following Celeste's State
before new growth begins in the
of the State speech to a joint sesSion
spring. That would be February,
Tuesday, noted that the governor
March, April and even May for
some plants. All woody . plants,
including roses, should be pruned at
this time. A lot of people think roses
should be pruned in the fall, but that
Is wrong. Also, prune all everThomas G. Parker, Kate A.
greens. ornamentals. shade trees
Parker to Board ofCountyCommlsand other landscape plants, includ- sioners of Meigs County, Right of
ing your fruit trees. Pruning of Way;Salisbury.
flowering shrubs should be done
Lydia pel.ong, Harriet Thompafter the spring bloom.
son to BoardofCountyCommlssioners of Meigs County, Right of Way,
•
I
Salisbury.
Ruby M. Spurlock, deceaSE'd,
Rockford Spurlock, Affidavit,
Mlddletiort.
expansion of minority businesses
Mutual Fedf'ral Savings and
and suggested a one-stop licensing
Loan
Assoc. of Zanesville and
center for the state's small
Logan
Fed. Sav. and Loan Assoc.,
businesses·.
Cert.
of
Merger, Pomeroy.
The governor said specifics about
Robert E. Shain, RuthE . Shainto
job training and changes in business
W. Floyd, Donna M. Floyd,
Orland
taxes will be spelled out in the days
one-half
aci-e. Sutton.
before he present~ his budget
Willard
Hines, Elsie Hines to
proposal to the legislature on March
Emery
G.
Haggy,
Lelia J. Haggy,
30.
Lot. Pomeroy.
WayneO. Cobb, Patricia A. Cobb.
Donna J. Branham, Bobbie Branham to Gregory Keith McCall,
MeetS.tonight
Debra JoMcCaU, Parcels, Bedford.
Diamond Sav. and Loan Co. to
Middleport PTO will meet this
Frank Houser, Terii Houser, .35
evening at Middleport Elementary
acre, Rutland.
School at 7: :JJ p.m.
William H. Welsh to Regina Y.
Welsh, .55 acre, Olive.
Rita J. Whitlatch to Terry Shawn
Whitlatch, Lot, Middleport.
Marriage licenses
Cariie E. G rueser to Don K
Marriage licenses were issued In
Grueser, Parcels, Sutton.
Meigs CQunty Probate Court to
William B. Ledlie, Emma A.
Michael Lawrence Triplett. 22, Rt
Leadlle to Richard L. Fetty, Glenna
2, Pomeroy, and Barbara Rae
M. Fetty, one-hali acre, Rutland.
Custer, 17, Middleport; cllarles
Merrill O'DeU , deceased, to Vera
Edward Johnston, Jr. 19, Racine,
B. O'DeU, Cert. of Trans.,
and Deborah Ann Lyons, 23,
Middleport.
Racine: Kenneth Robert Harris, 27,
Village of Syracuse to General
Pomeroy, and Mary Cathern
Telephone Co. of Ohio, Easement,
Crossen, 25, Gallipolis.
Sutton.

Property

Baseball meeting
Adults interestE'd in assisting with
the Racine Baseball Summer
League program are invited to
attend a meeting Tuesday , March
~2. at 7 p.m. at Racine Elementary
School.

·•

Area deaths
Laura Lenora Spencer

Carl W. McQuirt '

.

Emergency runs

AT
CROW'S
·fAMILY
RESTAURANT

Over 10,000 Palrslll
Direct From Factory To Youl

GIGANTIC

Faetory lrreplan. ·

·ANTIQUE SATINS
·OPEN WEAVES
·INSULATED l MORE
·MADE IN AMERICA .

Saturday Admissions--Clara Riley, Middleport; Carl Schultz, Jr. ,
Racine.
Saturday · Discharges--William
Kennedy, Albert Hostetter, Bill
Kennedy, Elizabeth Roush, Helen
McCle.llan.
Sunday Aqmissions -- MIIdred
Fisher, Pomeroy; Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy.
SundiiY Discharged--None.

Plnch·Pitettd

DRAPERIES
Reedy to her.;
VIIUII · from
124.00 to S1~ . 00

TaUortcl

ShMr

PANELS
~ · WIO.• •

a.··

long

Reg . t\1 .00

KITQIN
CURJAINS
Reg . II to 12-i
ON SALE

Twln1,
Fulla,
Queena, I&lt; lngs
RIG. 136. Ia 1110.

•2.10 UP 1
Now '310
•

Clip

e."'-'""' Ad lor on oeldltlonoi!Dpor-tllvlnvo.

Ptllll Plnunt, W.

. GALVANIZED
FENCE FABRIC
.

$325

Served with Whipped Potatoes,
chicbn Gravy, COle Slaw, Hot
Roll, Butter and Coffee.

Sony. No substitutes exc:ept bevefii&amp;IS which 11M an additional

FREE ESTIMATES

price.

Every Wednesday 'Night

*FENCE INSTAll AllONS
*HOUSE PAINTING .
*AWNINGS INSTALLED

BAKED STEAK DINNER
DINING ROOII ONLY

Served with Mashed Potatoes,
Choice of Salad, Roll, and
Drink.

AuthoriZed CataiO&amp;IIercha.nts

·

'

.,.... TUESDAY ONLY, MARCH 22rtd FREE P•RKING bON'T MISSIT·
ftllltll lQ A.M. TO 5 P.M.
OPENTOTHEPUBLIC
Pl•c•t POINT PLEASANT NAnONAL GUARD AIIIIORY • Rt. IZ Narljl •

FENCING

FOR JUST

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

BEDSPREADS

Craw's
Family
Re~urant
228 W. Main
PH. 992·6432
Pomltroy, Oh.

Greg.&amp; Patty Gibbs
108 W. MAIN ST .. POMEROY, QH.
HOURS:·
PHONE: .
Mon.·TIItii.-Wed.' Frl. 9:30 to 6
(Ohio)982-21 78
Thul8. 9:30 to u
Va.) 773-9577
s.t. 8:30 to 2

cw.

.

.,

Pa!-('t&gt; 10

-e
. Voi.Jl,N0 .227
C.py•ighted I 983

•

•

at y

enttne
2 Sections, 18 Page~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, March 22 1983

20 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. New1pape1

•

No imprOvement fouDd In Syracuse test well
By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff
A new water test well drilled recently by the village
of Pomeroy on Its property located in Syracuse
showed no improvement over the present wells
according to reports Issued at Monday's bi-monthly
session of Pomeroy Council.
Larry Wehrung, councilman, said tests made by
Ohio Drilling Company and water ~upertn tendent
Reed Will, showed the water to be as hard as the
present water.
Wehrung reported Kim Shields had suggested that
thE' viilage try to obtain additional property in
Syracuse eith&lt;'r from Jack Williams or Carroll Norris
to drill other wells. ·
If council is unsuccessful in obtaining other
properties, Shields suggested council approac,h EPA
with plans to rebuild the old water works and rerum
to using water from the river.
Wehrung Indicated funds from the grants that
council has In reserve mu~t be committed or the

mon~yw!ll

have to be returned by the end oftheyear.
The reserve money from the three grants can only
be- used for wat~r or sewage or related problems,
Wehrung said he has been Informed that none of the
reserve funds can be used for the restoralion of
·Pomeroy.
Again, it was reiterated that the EPA requires
council purchase a certain amount of ground which
would allow only one well to be drilled on each site. It
was noted additional ground is needed at the well
sites.
·Wehrung suggested council, members of the Board
of Public.Affairs, Shields and the drilling company
meet to .dlscuss alternatives. Purpose of drilling new
wells Is to try to get softer water.

Leonard reported it would cost approximately
$92,400 to build ,new lines on Second Street from
Butternut to ,Simmol)s Oids, plus.the removal of 16
lights (400 watt) on Main Street.
In addition, it . would cost $53,630 to establish
underground lights, 40 lights 100 watt, on Main Street.
Leohard said the report was a preliminary one and
added, if council decided to go ahead with the project
his company would. develop a detailed cost a nalysis.
Leonard asked that someone represent council on
the lay out to work with the electric company. Bill
Young, counciiman Is to meet with the electric
company representative time and date to be
determined later:
Young suggested that Instead of lights being on the
parking lot they be placed in the area where th&lt;'
railroad tracks are located.
Last month, representatives of General Telephone
Company met with council to answer a complaint
filed by the village.

· Meets with cooncil
Lonnie Leonard of the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., present!'Q a cost estimate for
changing the street lights in the downtown area as
part of the renovation project.

RepresentativPs of the phone company wen' a gain
present at last night's meeting.
. According to phone company representatives,
problems aired at the February meeting have
Improved and the company is working on all
problems. A spokesman for the company.tntroduced
Gary Bates, who will be the new superv ior for the
Pomeroy area .
It was announced that new directories would be out
in July a nd it was suggested that a new nwnber be
considered for the police department along with an
additional line.
Council will consider the cost for a n additional line
and notify the company. The phone company, in tum ,
will keep council posted on its progress as I hey go
along.
Mike Noel. architeet from Athens. m et with council
in regard to the renovation of the second and third
floor of the present city building in order that they
may be leased for office space.
(Continued on page 6)

Gov. Celeste outlines jobs plan
·cLEVELAND (AP) ·...:. Gov. Richard Celeste says his biennial budget
Includes $1.6 billion to create new jobs and keep the ones now in the state.
In a briefing for business and labor leaders in Cleveland on Monday,
Celeste said the state hopes to attract more tha.n $1 billion In federal and
piivate money to pay for most of his jobs creation plan.
The job program calls for spending nearly $1.6 billion over the next two
years. Celeste said the state would put up $335 million. most from the
general revenue fund.
.
"Our obligation is to lay a solid foundation on which we can build a
steady recovery for the state of Ohio," Celeste said. "We ni.-ed to be
cautious, conservative and prudent about what we have to deal with in
Ohio.
"It Is tempting to leap to the assumption that tomorrow Is going to be a
neW day for Ohio. It is very important to have In mind where this state is
and where we're going with it," the governor said.
. Celeste proposed:
-Increasing from $1 million to $5 million the amount spent to push
travel and tourism.
-A $15 million fund to spur cooperative efforts between business and
colleges and universities.
·
-Adding $25 million to the state loan fund for minority business
expansion and venture capital.

-Establishing one-stop Ucenslng centers for small businesses and
.
creating smaU business action centers.
· ~Teams made up of executives on loan from companies, who will be
.
assigned to help troubled businesses.
-Setting up coi!Offiunity adjustment programs for areas h1t ha rd by
·
plant and business closings.
-Reorganizing the state's international trade efforts.
.
-Creating an information base ·from Ohio industries anq educational
research.
The plans are part of the governor's two-year budget. which he will
present to the Legislature March 30 . .
Celeste talked about his "Buy Ohio" program.
"Did you know that our own road map was made out of state last year? I
can't believe we don't have printil)g firms in Ohio who can do that job," the
governor said.
Frank Valenta, district director for the United Steelworkers of America,
said he was pleased Celeste offered his plans before fE'deral job-crea I ion
legislation is enacted.
Celeste said hopes of getting the $1.2 billion are realistic. "Most of these
dollars are set aside in formulas that Ohio has not taken advantageof in the
past," he.said.

Pomeroy pilot dies ·in plane crash., son injured
EXPLAINING THE INVESTMENTS- Gov. Richard Celeste ·
holds a cban explalnlnl his plans for spending the state's new re.- ; .
venues from a tax lncreBJJe. Celeste apeared In Toledo, Cleveland, '
Lbna and elsewhere In a swing around the state to explain his 1
plans. ( AP Laserphoto)

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
. CHICKEN YOU ·CAN EAT

•1111 SU. &amp;Colon oRIIIIJ To llln1
TREMENDOUS BARGAINS:

Page 5

Veterans Memor-ial

Every Tuesday Night

Brin1 Window Mt~~~~rements

Page 3

Meets

TUESDAY ONLYl

Qullity, FICtory a-outs,· and

New clothing shop
will open Friday

wishes

PUBLIC NOTICE

1111 MerchMdlse MUST Be Sold M
MlU WHOLESALE PRICESII SM
Up To 7K Below Rtllil On 1st

Hoeflich's Beat
of Bend .....

Easter

. ·'

Drapery &amp;
Bedspread

Hepatitis bout puts
Householder in bed

.*'''--l.

Laura Etta CornwcU. Charles
Edward Wildermuth to Melissa
Ann Ihel, Lots 33, 34. Sutton.
Garth Sovel, Dixie Sovel to Garth
Sovel, Lots 11 and 12, Olive.
James R. Reeves. Bernice M.
Reeves to Charles E. Wheeler,
Martha K. Wheeler, Parcels.
Scipio.
Dolphus Burke, Jr. , Wanda C.
Burke to 'Thomas E. Thompson,
Nancy J. Thompson. 30 acres,
Columbia.

•·

•

plans to look at the pos$lbility of
more taxes -this time on business.
Laura Lenora (Babe) Balley
(:arl W. McQuirt, 61, 26500
Aronoff, who said the income tax Spencer, 73, Route 2, Pomeroy, was
Rutherford Road, Rt. 3, Albany,
hike by Itself Is excessive, said, "It dead on arrival at Veterans
died of an apparent heart attack
sounded like there will be a series of Memoiia) Hospital where she was
whileworidngathlsfannSaturday.
.business taxes to jac;k up the
taken by the Pomeroy Emergency
Mr. McQulrt was preceded In
spending level."
Squad early Sunday morning.
death by his parents, Walter and
Aronoff and other Republicans
Mrs. Spencer was bam May 17, Edith Holycross McQuirt, twf?
who voted against the permanent
1909 In Meigs County, a daughter of brothers, Ernest and Gerald, and
tax increase say It will create a
the late William anq ·Sadie Wan- three infant brothe~s and sisters.
surplus instead of only erasing a
dling Bailey. ShE: was a retired
He was a retired truck driver for
current deficit of $511 million and . employe of Veterans Memorial
Consolidated · Freightway, a
keeping bills paid In the next
Hospital.
member of Teamsters Local . 413,
biennium.
Surviving• are a sister, Mary E.
Columbus and an Anny veteran.
Celeste and his budget advisers
Shaeffer, Pomeroy; a brother,
He II\ survived by his wife, Lulu
say the recession is far from over: Wilbur Bailey, Pomeroy; three
Mae Puckett McQuirt; one son.
The governor said in speeches late
brothers-in-law, Guy Jones, PhoRo~rt. Columbus; three grandin the week that unemployment will
enix, Ariz.; Lester Spencer, Woos- children; four brothers, Richard,
remain at least 12 percent or more
ter, and Francis E. Shaeffer,
Robert, Donald and Harold all of
for many months and 't hat welfare
Pomeroy; a close fr-iend, Joseph · Columbus: one sister, Vada Ash;
costs are continuing to rise.
McNabb, Pomeroy, and several Jacksonville, Ark.
•·
Depending on whoie projections
nieces and nephews.
Friends may call at the Bigony.are accurate, and no one's has been
Besides her parents, she was Jordan Fruneral Home in Albany
the last two years, Ohio either will
preceded in death by her husband,
this evening from 7 to 9. Funeral
have a surplus of $3.5 billion at the
Chester Spencer, a brother and a ser-Vices will be held Wednesday at i
end of the next biennium or will
sister.
·
p.m. at the 0. R. Woodyard Co., 255
·break about even with increased
Funeral services will be held at 2 E . Stat eSt., Columbus with the Rev.
revenues from the income tax of
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral Jerry Leonard officiating., Burial
about $2.5 billion.
Home with . the Rev. Richard ·wtll be In Obetz Cemetery. Friends
Veteran Rep. Robert E. Netzley,
Rothemich officiating. Burial will may call at 0- R. Woodyard Co.,
R-Laura, a conservative and
be In the Mount Herman Cemetery. Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to9.
·
member of the House Finance
Friends may call at the funeral
Committee, made the $3.5 billion
hOme from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
estimate. "The income tax grows
Tuesday session
today. ·
even during a recession," he said.
Cristina Sale, director of the
The American Legion Auxiliary
Office of Budget and Management,
of DrewWebsterPost39, Pomeroy,
said that had the Income tax
will meet at7: 30p.m. Tu~yatthe
Eight calls were answered by
increase not been approved, the
hall. Mayor Clarence Andrews will
state would end the 19&amp;H!lffi local units over the weel\end. the
be the speaker.
Meigs County Emergency Medical
biennium with a $2.5 billion deficit
SerVIce reports.
On Sunday, at 4:18 !l.m., the
71 ~n-ed dinner
Pomeroy Unit took Lenora Spencer
from Cbester Road 'to Veterans
Ell Denison Post 467, American
Memorial Hospital Mrs. Spencer
Legion, Rutland, presented a char·
Anna F. Nease to John E. Lyons, being dead upon arrival; Racine at
ter to Sons of the American Legion,
Janice M. Lyons, Lot 6, Racine.
1:31 p.m. went to the Leonard Stone
a new auxiliary group which has
Elmer Tom, deceased, to Carl resident In Letart fora structure fire
been formed, following a dinner
Tom, Harold Tom, Grace K TOm, and was on thescenefor25minutes;
Sunday afternoon at the post hOme
Affid. for Transfer, Bedford.
Pomeroy at 5: 55 p.m. took Norma
In Rutland . Dinner was served to71
Goodwin from her ·home on Brtck
persons attending.
Grace K. Tom, deceased, to
St., to Veterans Memorial.
Harold Tom, Carl Tom. Affld. for
Saturday, at 10:lla.m., Pomeroy
Transfer, Bedford.
iook Stanley Bass, Monkey Run, to
Alfred Yeauger, Hilda E .
Veterans Memorial: Pomeroy at
Yeauger to Alfred Yeauger, Hilda
2:03 p.m. took BiU Bly, Chester.
E. Yeauger, Lot, Sutton.
Road, to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Jay Hall Jr., Lillian Marlene Hall
Racine at 5:12 p.m. ·took Carl
to Mitchell H. Meadows, Debra F.
Schultz. Jr.. Mile Hill Road, to
Meadows. Parcels, Middleport .
Veterans Memorial; Rutland at
· Mildred Maxine Dyer to Herald
5: 15 p.m.. went to Columbia
Oil and Gas Co., Right of Way,
Remember friends and
Township for Carl McQulrt who
Rutland.
loved ones with a
died of a heart attack while
Mildred Maxine Dyer to Herald · operating a tractor; Pomeroy at
Hallmarl&lt; catd ·on
Oil and Gas 'Co., fUght of Way,
8: IJ7 p.m . took Eva Dessauer from
Sunday, April 3.
Rutland.
Cave St., to Holzer Medical Center.
~~--&lt;fJo. (~
Edda J . Thompsons, Beverly
·7.t.:Fl
;=;···-r
Thompson. Phillip Tl1ompson to
tonight
Leading Creek Conservancy Dlst.,
Right of Way, Pomeroy.
Racine Village Council will meet
Richard w. Vaughn, Ruby A . •
Vaughn to Donald E. Vaughn, this evening In recessed seSsion at 7
Pamela L. Vaughn. Parcels, p.m .
Pomeroy.

transfers~ •. ·

Governor discusses jobs plan
CLEVELAND, Ohio (API Gov. Richard Celeste today said his
plan for spending nearly $1.6 billion
in the next two years on a variety of
jobs projrets will get Ohioans back
to work .
In a briefing for business and
labor leaders In Cleveland, Celeste
said the state will spend $335 million
of its own funds to generate
rnalching federal and private .
money for the projects.
Among specific proposals he
made · was a pledge to boost
spending for travel and tourism
from $1 million to $5 million and
create a $15 million fund in 1984 on
cooperative efforts between business and state colleges and
universities.
He also proposed putting $25
million more in a s.tate loan fund for

Monday, March_21' 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Eastern, ,Meigs
juniors chosen
for ·girls'.state
years, played basketball one year,
hadfouryearsofband,andhasbeen
active In both the Girl Scouts and the
4-H program.
She is a member of the Freedom
Gospel Mission Church where she Is
active with the youth chorus and the
:youth group.
Jenny Meadows, d&lt;lughter of Dan
:Meadows of Middleport and Ina
i Mea~ws of Florida. Is a junior at
·Meigs. She is oh student council,
·active with the Spanish Club and the
'yearbook staff. She plays varsity
volleyball, basketball and softball.
Pam Riebel, ~laughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Riebel Sr., Baum
Addition, Is a junior at Eastern. She
is a member of the National Honor
Society, the marching, concert and
pep bands, and pas been selected to
be In the all-county band this year.
She has played volleyball. three
years, IS on the yearbook staff and
the prom committee.
She was a girl scout seven Years
and this is her, ninth year as a 4-H
member. She was ·selected as the
4-H girl to represent Meigs County
. at the state leadership camp .at
Utica. She Is' a member of the
Middleport F]irst BaptiSt Chureh
and Is employed by the Valley
. Shopper and the Skate-a-Way.
l&lt;ris WUson, daughter of Gall and
Dennis Eichinger, JteedsvWe, Is ,
active In sports at ;Eastern having
lettered In basketball two years and
played sottbi!U and volleyball. She
has been in band for nve y~. and~
Is actlv'e In tpth scouting and 4-H.
. (Continuec1 on page 6)
•

Ronald J. Browning, 48, well·
known Pomeroy resident, was
killed Sunday night when the plane
he was -flying crashed into the side of
a mountain near Crossville, Tenn.
Browning's son Kim, was injured
and is confined to the Cumberland
Medical Center at Crossville with
bums of the hand, abrasions and
other possible injuries.
Cumberland County Sheriff Charles Shad!Jen said ,the Brownings
were flying from Louisiana to the
Mason County, W. Va.,alrportinthe
Piper Cherokee 140 single engine

plane owned by the elder Browning,
who was an experienced pilot and
had served as a flying Instructor in
this area.
•
Sheriff Shadden reported the
plane apparently ran into a weather
front and Browning was attempting
to fly under it .when the plane
crashed into the side of Hinch
Mountain. Browning was apparently killed In the crash which
resulting In the plane's cockpit
burning.
Kim was a pparently thrown from
the plane when it crashed and \"as

CHERYL RIFFLE

B~ADEFI'ER

TERRE WOOD

knocked unconscious. Regaining
consciousness, he apparently found
his father's body in the plane. He
started walking off the mountain
and came onto an unoccupied
A-frame home in the mountains. He
crawled under the porch and spent
the night there.
Sheriff Shadden said that although no one obServed the crash,
the plane had gone down between 5
and 6 p.m. Sunday. Kim had lost
consciousness several times, but
again on Monday morning, started
walking to locate help. He was

PAMREmEL

RHONDA JEFFERS

spotted by a worker who was
enroute to a Federal Aviation
Authority observation tower in the
area. The worker took the younger
Browning to the Cumberland Medical Center.
It took deputies and the Cumberland County Rescue Unit about one
hour and a bali getting to the
mountain side where the plane had
crashed. Browning's body was
removed from the wreckage and
was taken to the Cumberland
Medical Center.
(Continued on page 6)

TERRI TIIOMA'&gt;

KRf'l WILSON

'
.I

'(

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