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                  <text>Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

e.

OSP .cites driver
following wreck

, Yoi .30,No.239
c;=erlphtM 1912

kerson, 25, Rodney, was traveltlng
A two-vehicle accident In Meigs
westbound on U.S. 35 at 7:W p.m .
County late Saturday afternoon rewhen her vehicle struck and killed
sulted ·In a citation lor one of the
a deer which had run Into the path
diivers, according to the Galllaol her auto. The car su!lered modMetgs Post of the state highway
erate damage. :
patrol.
According to the report, two vehi·
1be patrol said Thomas F . Cumcles were both southbound on Ohio
·mlns, 16, Rt. 2, Racine, backed onto
Ohio 124 at County Rd. 28 and col- 7, live-tenthS of a mile south of Ohio
218, at 9: 15 p.m. when one of the
lided with an eastbound vehicle
vehicles, driven by Gary L. St.
driven by Melodi J.Cundl11, 17, SyrJohn, 37, Mount Vernon, attempted
acuse, traveltlng on 124.
to pass the one ahead of him, driven
'There was moderate damage to
by Roger L. GUbert Jr., 20, Rt. 2,
the Cundltl vehicle and slight to
Crown City.
Cummins' auto, and Cummins was
GUbert's vehicle then turned Into
cited lor Improper bacldng.
the path of St. John's, and they colIn an otherwise quiet weekend, a
lided, causing sUght damage to
series ol minOr wrecks kept the paboth cars.
trol on the go, particularly on
In a similar kind ol accident at
Saturday.
12:10 a.m. Sunday on 7, troopers
1be day began at 12:45 a.m. on
said Louise E . Fife, 51, Eureka Star
Meigs County Rd. 36whena vehicle
driven by Dixie L. Bealr, 18, Ches- Route, tried to pass a northbound'
auto driven by·WIWam F. Rogers,
ter, lost control on a curve, went oil
51,
Chesapeake, and collided when
the left side ol the road and struck
Rogers
made a left turn Into the
several trees.
path
ol
Fife's
auto.
1be vehicle then came to rest on
F!fe's
vehicle
was severely damIts right side. The driver was not
aged
and
the
Rogers
vehicle had
Injured and the vehicle was modersUght
damage.
ately damaged.
1be patrol reported no Injury alRichard E. McDonald, 22, Pol'l'IE!-ter
a vehicle driven by Deborah L.
roy, was travelling on U.S. 33 at the
W, Athens, laUed to negoBrown,
Intersection with Ohio 681 at Dartiate
a
curve
on Meigs County Rd.l,
win at 1 a.m. when he lalled ID
four
miles
north
ol124, at 11:45 a.m.
make a curve, drove right and
struck a signpost and ditch, causing Sunday, drove oft the Jell side of the
road and struck a fence, causing
sUght damage to his vehicle.
The patrol said Cynthia K Ful- moderate damage to her vehicle.

Training held Sunday
· FIRE TRAINING - About 75 Meigs County volunteer
firemee participated in fire training Sunday at Syracuse
by bUrning au old twHtory bouse, formerly lmowo as the
Flaoagam home, along Route l24. The traloiog program
lasted some five hOUI'II and included practicing with air
masks, blaze containment and extinguishing fires inside
the slx·room frame structure that was about 100 y~rs old.
The Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department, headed by
Chief Gene Imboden, hosted the lraloiog session. Other
departments participating were Pomeroy, Racine, Middleport, Salem Township, and Chester.

Ellen Anna Frye

-

Meigs County happenings •.
Probe complaints
Meigs sheriff's deputies are ln-

vesUgatlng a brealdng and enterIng at the Portland School.
Several.locks on doors were damaged In t1Je Incident which occurrred sometime between Friday
evening and noon Sunday. A pop
machine In the building was broken
lniD.
The department Is also Investigating the complaint of Earl
Young, Route 3, Pomeroy, who notIfied the department that Saturday
evening, the rear glass was broken
out of bls station wagon. There was
sound equipment In the vehicle but
nothing was taken.

Money action filed
The Kentucky Mortgage Co.,
Inc., Lexington, has tued a foreclosure action against Robert F.
Brown, Langsville, et al. The plalntlfl charges that' there Is due from
the defendants $22,1J73.90 plus Interest on mortgaged real estate In RuUand Township.
In the same court an action
charging breach of lease has been
llled by the Trahan Petroleum Co.,
EUtngton, N.Y., IV(alnst HUand OJ
and Gas Enterprtses, Inc., Girard;
the East Ohio Gas Co., Cleveland,
and Leo Story, as executor of the
estate of tucllle Story, Leo Story
and Janice Stary Lochary.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Larry
Grimm, Mason; Woodrow Himdrlx, Sr., Syrscuse; JohnR!chaRis,
Minersville.
Saturday Discharges--George
Kautf, Bess Ellis, Avice Frecker,
Shirley Ables, James Fisher.
sunday Admissions--Homer
Young, Middleport; Walter
France, Rutland; Shirley Harrls,
Reedsville; Lorena Laudermnt,
Middleport; Evelyn Maynard,

Best diUlcers chosen
Best dancers were selected durIng a dance contest held Friday
night In conjunction with a teen
event at the Rutland Civic Center.
Best girl dancer was Debbie Por·
ter, John Russell was the best boy
dancer and the best couple was
Penny Mtuer and Paul Riggs. La·
test 45 RPM recordings were given
as prizes.
Over 100 teens attended Friday's
dance. The next dance will be at 8
p.m. Friday at the center with
music by the Itomlc D.J . Only students In grade seven and above are
eUglble to attend the dances.
Anyone Interested In renting a
room at the center Is asked to call
Je'rry Black, Rutland.

Meeting Tuesday
Past Matrons ol Pomeroy Chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will
meet at 7: 30Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Thelma DIU In Syracuse.

Scholarship available
The Crawiord-Gray-Lewis Scholarship Is avauable ID Meigs High
School graduating seniors this
spring who are residents of Middle:
port. Letters of application should
be malled to Mrs. Lowell Beaver,
Middleport, or may be left at the
high school principal's o!!lce.

.

House·will debate public.utility policies .
ity Democrats and touched of! a
COLUMBUS, OIUo (AP) partisan clash, that ended when DeHouse Democrats S!'Y they plan to
dissect ·a Republlcan bill revamp- , mocratlc leaders walked off the
foor and refused to vote on the blll.
Ing the state's publlc utUity policies
which passed the Senate last · Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord, the bUI'schlefsponsor, denied
month.
Rep. Ronald H. James . D- Democratic charges that the
amendment would give the utllitles
Proctorvllle, chairman of the
a blank check. He said It was
House Uttlltles Commission, said
he wants the measure to deal only drafted to conform language In the
with some procedural matters and bUI with language In existing law.
Under the amendment, utilities
the way state utilities commissionwould
be allowed to pass to their
ers are chosen.
customers
any expenditure not de"We're going to take everything
termined
by
the utilities commisIn the blll that deals with ratesion
to
have
resulted from
making and put It Into a separate
imprudent
management.
biU," said James, wllose commit·
tee begins hearings Tuesday.
He said It is Important that Ohio
During four grueling hours of demove expeditiously to change the bate, Senate Minority Leader
structure of the Public UtUities Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown, said
Commission. u his committee tries the amendment changes present
to deal with rates at the same time procedures and that the utilities
"! just think the bill would bog down have to come In and document their
and we wouldn't pass anything," he e xpenditures before the
said.
commission.
One thing that is sure to go Into
Under the amendment "they
the new bill Is a Senate Republican
(commissioners) would have to go
fioor amendment dealing with In and examine the companies'
costs utUitles can 'p ass along ID their books, and they say they don't have
customers.
enough time now to half way keep
The amendment angered minor- up with their caseload," Meshel

Five die in traffic mishaps
By The Assoclaled Pre88
Tralflc accidents claimed live
lives In Ohio over the weekend, the
Highway Patrol said. The deathS
occurred In sej:larate, single-car
crashes.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities !rom 6 p.m. f'rtday until midnight Sunday.
The dead:

SUNDAY
CLEVELAND - 'Howard Jones,
50, ol Cleveland, In a ohe-car accident on a city street.
HAMILTON -ClementHale,49,

of Hamilton, In a one-car accident
on U.S. 127 In Butler County.

SATURDAY
ELYRIA - Bradley A. Smith, 28,
of Elyria, In a one-car crash on a
City street.
GREENVILLE- Robert E . Wit·
ters, 24, of Union City, In a one-car
accident on Ohio 571 In Darke
County.
TOLEDO - WUIIam J. Hurley
Jr., 27, of Genoa, In a one-car accident on Interstate 475 In Lucas
County.

Special meeting
A special meeting of Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday. Work will be In the
fellow craft degree. All members
are asked to attend. Refreshments
wiU be served.

Emergency ru,_
Only one call was received by the

Cheshire-

Meigs County Emergency Medical

Sunday Discharges--Eugene
Smith, John RJchanls, Anna Koenig, Robert Moore, LaiTy G;lmm . .

Service Sunday.
The Tuppen1
Plains Unit at 7: 24 p.m . treated
Sally Pooler, at' her Route ,7 home.

..

at y

•

enttne
1 Section, I 0 Pat••
1S Cents
A Multlm.dla Inc, N•wipap...

. Pome~oy-Middle~rt, Ohio, Tuesday, March 23, 1982

Governor orders
more budget cuts

Area deaths
Pleasant.
Friends may call the funeral
.
borne
tomorrow from 2-4 and 7-9
Ellen Anna Lee Frye, 51, New
p.m.
Haven died yesterday at Holzer
Medical Center.
She was born Jan. 25, 1931 In
Maggie.
Jo Ann Hetzer
She was a membe·r of the St.
Mark Lutheran Church.
Jo Ann Hetzer, ReedsvUle, died
Surviving Is her husband, ChaSaturday
at Camden-aark Hospl·
rles CecU Frye, New Haven; one
tal
In
Parkersburg
foUowlng an exdaughter, Atricla L. Hoffman, New
tended
Illness.
Haven; one stepdaughter, Pamela
Mrs. Hetzer was a daughter of
s. Herdman, Letart; father, Harrl·
the
tate John and Velma Kessler.
son H. Robinson Sr., GalllpoUs;
mother, Clara N. Staats, New She attended the White Chapel
Haven; two sisters, Emma L. Bos· Church.
Survlvlnll are her . husband,
wen, Point Pleasant and Clara Jo
warne;
three sons, Kenneth or eoGordon, New Haven; three brothers, Harrison H. Robinson Jr., Clif- lorado Springs, Colo.; Kevin, at
ton, Charles K. Robinson, home, and Kary of Reedsville; a
Honolulu, Hawaii and Earl W. Ro- daughter, Plane, Columbus, and
binson, Gaillpolls, Ohio and lour six grandchUdren.
· Services will be held at 2 p.m .
grandchildren.
at tlle White Funeral
Tuesday
Funeral services wiU be held on
Home
In
C()Oivtue with the Rev.
Wednesday at t::lO p.m. at the FoRoy
Deeter
ofticlatlng. Burial will
glesong F)meral Home, Mason.
be
In
the
Heiney
Cemetery, ReedsRev. John Campbell will officiate
vtue.
Friends
may
call at the tUnand burial will be held at the Kirkera!
home
at
anytime.
land Memorial Gardens, Point

•

Teamsters settle Kahn's contract
CINCINNATI (AP) - As more
than l,&lt;ro workers rallled outside
the Kahn's. Meatpacklng Co. on
Sunday, union representatives
worked secretly, reaching a contract agreement with ·the company
,for 37 dock workers and truck
drivers.
Galrald Kiser, presideat of 'the
Teamsters Local 100, reached
agreement with Kahn's at a time
when he was scheduled to be at the
raUy.

The Teamsters union agreed to a
60-cen!-per-hour wage cut and
other concessions In return lor a
promise that Kahn's would provide
a dlstlbutlon facUlty In the Clncln·
nat! area lor four years regardless
.of the outcome ol negoUBtlons with
the meatpackers union.
The workers wiU receive a $400
bonus per person.
At the rally, civU rights 1eailers
and union leaders showed their support lor the meatpackers.

'

.

said.
:James Indicated be agreed with
Meshel. In any case, he said the
amendment "certainly deals with

rates."
The utilities chairman said he
also Intends to shift Into the new blll

provisions restricting the passthrough by utilities of their media
advertising and charitable donations except If they show that such
donations directly benefit !hell:
customers.
Left In the Senate bill wiU be a

provision Increasing the number of
commissioners from three to live
and requtrlng the governor to lUI
vacancies !rom names sent·hlm by
a 12- member ~omlnatlng
commission.
That body would consist of representatives of groups such as senior
citizens, farmers, labor unions, businesses and others.
Currently, the g()vemor Is free to
name anyone to the commission although confirmation by the Senate
Is required.

ELBERFELDS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes, whUe pushing
for a tax hike, has ordered another
spending cut that money experts
say threatens education and state
payroUs.
Rhodes onlered another $180 mUliOn In state government spending
cuts Monday, saying, "This ji percent cut Is going to be felt. We are
past the fat, we are ln!o.the bone."
He repeated caUs lor a tax hike to
help recession;drained · state govemment, but said legislative support Is 1acklng.
.
Last January, when Budget Dlrector Howard L. Collier disclosed
a projected $1 bUIIOII budget deficit,
Rhodes called for a o~ent sales
tax boost and Increase$ In other
taxes to IIU the revenue gap.
Senate and House leaders who
presided over a $1,3 bUll on tax Increase only two.months earlier said
there was not enough support to approve the package.
Senate ~!dent Paul E . Gil!mar, R-Portptnton, who was with
Rhodes at a news conference Mon-

day, Satd that hasn't changed.
, Rhodes and the Legislature earller this year cut spending for the
current llscal year by 4 percent.
That was an annual retroactive
slash ol10.4 percent.
· The latest cut'pushes that total to
34.4 percent for the balance of the
current fiscal year ending June 30,
except for prisons, mental health
and welfare, whiCh hilve escaped
spending cutS.
CoWer said a $56 01UIIon shortlall
In revenues In January and February, growing welfare caseloads, Increased needs for higher education
funding and demands on the school
loan fund were responsible lor the
new cuts.
He ~ld the state needs another
$56.8 million for welfare during the
rest of the fiscal year, another $11
mllllon for higher education and an
additional DJ mllllon to assist
money-troubled school districts.
Collier said be was worl,&lt;lng on
aUocatlng the cuts and that they
would be presented ID the Controlling Board within two weeks, but

thSt tMy will not be

across~the-

board because o1 social program

exemptions ,
He said the public schools will be
hurt, however. There are, or soon
will be, requests for more than $40
million for school loans with only
about $6 mUIIon In the sclioolloan
fund.
·Part of the new cuts wllllree DJ
million for Joan appllcatiohs from
about 200 of Ohio's ~15 school districts, he said.
The loan fund fiuctuates as loanS
are repaid. The current $6 million
balance does not necessartly reflect
the lund's tOtal assets.
Collier said some state agencies
are going to be hlt so hard by the 6
percent cut they may not be able ID
meet payroUs later this spring.
He said they c811 •t save much
•wUh layo!ls because clvll service
and other laws would require selectlve layo!ls and extend the layoff
process Into the next biennium.
State law requires the budget to be
In balance at the startof _every tiscal year.

Mayor outlines plans for water system
tlmate lor the water tines tS$166,&lt;ro
By BOB HOEFLICH
and
for the water tank, S230,&lt;ro and
Mayor Fred Holtman outlined
these
figures do not Include the enplans for the new $500,&lt;rowater sergineerlng
lees which would push
vice Improvement and an easethe
HUD
funded
project to around
ment on the Jlm ,Brewer property
$500,000.
lor the water tank which Is a part of
Mayor Hoffman said the autothe Improvement was approved
matte turnon and turnoff at the
wljen Middleport VU!age CouncU
tank will be a big ad~antage. This
met In regular session Monday
must be handled manuaUy at the
night.
present water tank.
·
Using drawings on the project,
Mayor Hollman oulli11ed the per·
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that
manent easements which have
the Improvement wiU Include lnbeen secured on the Brewer oroPstaUatlon of 10 Inch lines In the
erty. In all, the easements tolal
areas of Beech and Gratlt Sis. and
about .9 ol one acre and the village
new meters and new taps lor water
will have a temporary easement
customers on Beech and Grant Sts.
over aU of the Brewer property durThe large line wiU go up Vine St.
lng' the cona~tlon period. Brewer
and, there will be lour new water
hydrants lnstaUed In the system. ·. will receive up to 8,000 g'anons ol
water free of charge each month as
Tile system will Include autoa part ol the easement and wUI rematic control lor both high and low
ceive a cash payment ol $4125.
water levels at the water tank site
The agreement provides lor cleaon the Brewer property. The 200,000
nup
ol the Brewer property followtan)&lt; will he mostly underground
lng
the
completion of construction,
and will be made of concrete reinthe
mayor
reported. If the property
forced with steel. 'I:he engineer's es-

Is sold the free water service will be
to residentiaL This actiO!) was
discontinued according to the
taken at the request ol the Middleagreement approved by councU
port PlaMing Commission.
last night. Bids on the project are
After a lengthy discussion Is was
expected to be opened Apri!2.
agreed to proceed with a new street
CouncU was given a llst of live
lighting plan drafted by Columbus
more properties which are.ta be reand Southern Ohio Electric Co. The
habllltated In the town under a
plan wUIInclude cbanPti over th!l
HUD ph:,;;!'am and approved going . present mercul}' vapor lights to
ahead with one of the homes which . high pressure sodium street lights.
does exceed the $9000 Umlt estabThe recommended chjlllge comes
llshed . earlier lor each house
alter the company had demonworkedon. 'Ibeadditlonalcostover
strated the slftngth of the new
the limit to the property In question
lights In a couple areas of the town.
Is not to exceed $500 more.
The plan, however, does call for the
COMMUNITY MEEtiNGS
eUmlnatlon of 17 street lights tn varMayor Holtman anrtounced that . lous locations of the town.
two meetings on the suggested
CouncUman AU~n King objected
community union for a uniform gas
to the removf-1 of IIOIIle ol the presrate have been called by the Co~suent Ughts statlnil that they had been
mers CouncU. One Is a\ Lancaster
plact:d as a result of need over long
on March 24 and the other at Rio
years of experience. H~ said that
Grande on March 31. Any o!!lclal
the more light that Is In the iown,
interested may attend.
the less trouble there wUI be. He
Council gave a first real:llng to an
cited on Instance In an alley where
ordinance which rezones the area
a light Is scheduled to be removed.
southwest of Page St. from special
(Continued on page 10)

Good news- inflation smallest -in 18 months
WASHINGTON (AP) - Tempered by falling gasoline prices, lnfiatlon rose at an annual rate of just
3 percent In FebrUary, the smaUest
gain since July 19!ll, and much the
product, economists said, of the
sharp recession.
In advance of today's report by
the Labor Department, some econ·
.omlsts even predicted the recession, a worldwide oU surplus and
abundant food suppUes mlgh$ actually produce small dectlnes In the
Consumer Prlce Index In the comIng months.
For February, the department

reported-today, lntlatlon rose a seasonally adjusted 0.2 percent, off
from the0.3 percent of January, untu last month the smallest advance
since tile summer of 19!ll.
February's gain was well under
the 1 percent Increase of February
1981. If last month 's figure held for
12 straight months, the annual rate
would be 3 percent.
For all oll981, lnfiatlon rose 8.9
percent; well below the.12.4 pe~ent
ol19111 and the smaUest Increase In
four years·. Most analysts are forecasting an Increase ranging from 6
percent to 7 percent lor all of this

year.
Consumer prices rose 7. 7 percent
In the last 12 months, the smallest
yearly advance since the period·
ending In June 1978, the department said. In another sign of the
slowdown In lntlatlon, the .department also said consumer prices
had risen at an annual rate of 3.7
percent for the three months endIng In February, the lowest gain
since .the period ending In May 1976.
Today's report said food prices
climbed 0.6 percent Ill February, a
little lower than January's 0.7 per·
cent. Housing costs were up 0.4 per-

'

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I
I

\

Shorts S-XL
Shirt S-XL

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
j .

REWARDS - 'l'bele f_. Melli o..ty ,_. pr1' ' .......... llle rubbei'J ud lanled Ia tile
peeple reeehed ·,ewanl dleda fnm a.lk 0. II . _ , . letlle lluL 11eee1.t11 tlletr renrdl rr- Bllb
" - " M.-ley . , . . _ Ia .,.ec:I8U. fer lllelr • Miller, Malty ud - . alfleer oC Jillk Ole, are,
'-'Y• illlpla)ed ibi 11J ........... tile ni*rJ II· _..., AD ... Blltcb Grover, ... mocHnc, I to r,
tile bul'1 Ta;pn 1'111111 BnwiL 'l'lle1 r.-..t.t TGa)'RJalactaudDeiCaD.
Ia tile wlleft &amp;we .upeell were •

..7,•

cent, about In line with the gains of
the last three months.
Energy costs, however, tumbled,
as did prices for new cars due to the
rebate programs offered bydomes(lc automakers.
Gasotlne prices feU 2.3 percent after a 1.7 percent drop In January.
The drop was the biggest since the
2.7 percent drop of Aprtl1981. New
car prices were down O.B percent,
following a 0.1 percent fall In the
previous month. Used car prices
were up 0.5 percent, compared with
the 0.3 percent of January.
Housing costs were up 0.4 percent, renectlng the 0.4 percent rlse
In home prices and a 0.2 percent
decline in mortgage rates. Rent
rose 0.4 percent. Fuel oll prices and
electrlclty costs were doWn while
natural gas prices rose, but at a
slower pace than In January.
Prices for food bought at grocery
stores rose 0.8 percent, ·a little less
than the . 1 percent advance of
January.
Economist Allen Sinal, anticipatIng February's moderate rate,
said, .. We're seeing the benefits of
the severe recession" on lnfiatlon .

Arrest trio
for break-in
Three men ·were arrested Monday by Sher1!f James J . Prollltt on
charges of breaking and entering.
Arrested were Doyle Brooks, W,
Tuppers Plains, Robert Scott
Sprague, 18, 1\ippers Plains, and
Ricky David Srnlth,.21, Reedsvtue.
They were arrested In connectlong
with the allepd brealdng and entering ol the Portland Elementary
School, the Tom Hayman Garage
In Long Bottom and a summer
cabin In Long Bottom !!Wiled by
Jim Ryan, Athens.
.
In other activity, a number o1
· tooiA, vallle!S at over ,$1,&lt;ro were
stolen !rom the Richanlaoft San4
and Gravel Co. over the weekend
and the InCident Is being IDVetttpted. Anyone having any lnlormaUon reprdlng this theft Ia uked 1o
contact the sheriff's olllce.

.
Accident victim. in stable ~ondition
Candy Lynn Caughey, 14, Pomeroy, Is In stable c ondltlon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital where she was' taken by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad Monday alter being struck by a car on! West
Main St. Pomeroy Pollee said that the girl ran In front of a vehicle
driven by Gene A. Davis, Coltumbus, traveling east on Main. The
accident Is still being Investigated.

Space. shuttle on daily schedule
CAPE CJ\NAVERAL, Fla. -Columbia, Its tall brolled by the sun,
soared almost !lawlessly through space today, Its astronauts eager
to guide the ship through a demanding series Qf tests.
Doctors who spoke by radio with astronauts Jack R. Lousma and
C. Gordon Fullerton belore ihey rettlred for their first night reported
"they're enjbylng what tl)ey're doing."
.
On the astronauts' schedule today were extensive checks of the
50-foot mechanical arm, fiexlng Its metallic muscles ; the llrst serious attempts at processing drugs In orbit, and thermal tests, subjecting the craft to the high heat and deep chill of space.

Charges leveled against Soviets
WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration charged Monday
that Soviet-supplied chemical weapons have killed more than lO,&lt;ro
people ill Afghanistan, LaC$ and Cambodia and appealed to other
nations to join In condemning such practlces.
A State Department official, Gary Crocker, said there are also
reports ol an unknown and unseen "mystery agent" being used
against anti-Soviet rebels In Afghanistan. He said It kUis so swiftly
that It freezes the dead In the positions they are In when It strikes .

U.S. living standards decline
PARIS- Uvlng standards in the United States, Britain and the
Netherlands are decUnlng compared to other non-communist lndustrtallzed natlons, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
The OECD, whose members Include the major Western Industrial
!zed nations_and Japan, Issued ligures Monday covering 19'7S-19!ll
The staUstlcs were based on "purchasing power parity," which th1
OECD said eliminated distortions caused by exchange rates ant
provided a more accurate picture of what people can buy with theh
Incomes.

Promises to release prisoner
CAIRO, EGYPI' - Israel had given Egypt the names of nine
Egyptians held In lsraeU jails for non-poUtlcal crimes, such as smuggling, and promised tofreeoneofthemln a week, a Foreign Mlnlstry
spokesman said.
Egypt first asked Israel for the names when normalization talks
between the ~0 former roes started three years avJ after they
signed a peace treaty, the spokesman said Mopday.
He said '!sraelllnally handed over the list last week in Tel Aviv to
visiting Egyptian Foreign Minister Kamal Hassan Aly.

Winning Ohio lottery number .
dra~

CLEVELAND- The winning number
ay night In the
Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number"' was 572.
1be lottery reported earnings of $438,539.50 from the wagering on
Its daUy game. 1be earnings came on sales ol $1,002,445.50, whUe
holders of winning tickets are entitled ID share $653,906, lottery officials said.

Weather foreoost
Clear tonight. Lows 35-40. MosUy cloudy WE!(Inesday. Highs In the

low 608. Chance ol precipitation near zero percent tonight and W
percent Wednesday. Winds variable 10 mph or less tonight. .
E'dellded Ohio FOI'eClllt
~unday

lhroalh I!Murday:

.

.

: c-J••fllble llloov'h,.. wl&amp;b a ehMoo of llhowen Thurlday and
Frldar. PariiJ clowdy twurdaJ. mp. In tile 111111 lltaleWkle Thursday, 111ea alllde cooler friday 111111 Salurday with highllln the 40o
iiOrth lo low ........ Ovenqllt lowJ Ia the •

�f'.

Tuesday, Mardi 23, 1982

Commentary
Doorjambs and

111 C.rtStreft

P-nr,OIIIt
llHft.llll

DEVOTED TO 11IE IJI'I'ERI!STOP 111E HEIGS-HABON AREA

..

~lh

.

ts:m~ ~._-T·~=·""'
~v

ROBERT L WINGE'IT

'

Poablloo..r ·

PAT WHITEHEAD

I

--...

BOB HOEFUCH

AD .. &amp;1111t Pvblhlher!CuatroUer

DALE R0111GEB, JR.
New• Edit«

A MEMBER II Til&lt; A; _loled ........ lalo..t DoUy ...... AP«Iollto uoJ Ill&lt;
Am~rba New11 .. per PubU.kn

An ocwu...

LE1TER8 OF OPINION 1re W!!lromed. Tiley .a-Id be leu diu- ........ A.U
ietkn arr Ab)ed 10 MJ&amp;tq ud mullt 1M slped wttb •JM, aMra~ ad ~
~a~mber. NoUMlped &amp;enenwUJ beJ*bUIIted. Letwndould belaJood tote, aM:
i.e
Ju.llet, aet penou.IItlel.
• ...

Hopefuls jockey
for ·post position.
Although the first presidential primaries are stlll two years off, hopefuls
have. begun joCkeying for position from that most frequently used of all
launching pads- the U.S. Senate.
1be growing roll of possible 1984 contenders already rivals the size of the
Senate's club of have-runs: Barry Goldwater, R ·Arlz.; Robert Dole, R~. ; Stron:' Thurmond, R-S.C.; Robert C. Byrd, O.W.Va.; Uayd Bent·
sen,!).Texas; Lowell Welcker, R·Conn. ; Henry )'d. Jackson, !).Wash.; and
p.arles Percy, R-Dl.
· And two senators clearly fall on both the past and prospective liBts:
De.riocr11t Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts and Republican Leader
Howard Saker of Tennessee.
While pubic announcements are still months away, the signs of bu!ldlng .
candidacies are unmistakable: formation ot "exploratory" committees,
vlsts to New Hampshire and other key primary states, a sudden IDcllna·
tlon to Issue ·press releases on every national ~ue that comes alolig.
In addition to Baker and Kennedy, the speculative roster for 19&amp;11D·
eludes four Democ;rats: Alan Cranston of California, John Glenn of Ohio,
Gary Hart of Colorado and Ernest F . Hollings of South C8rollna.
C~ston, the Senate Democratic whip, and Holllnp, the·Budget Committee's ranking Democrat, both have campaign exploratory committees
taking political soundings.
. Former astronaut Glenn has been presiding over an lssue-ortented
"Foreign Polley Group" and Hart, a former campaign aide to 19'72 Demo- "
cratlc presidential nominee George McGovern, has Issued his own "na·
\lonal agenda" for economic recovery.
· All have been making speeches around the country. ·
· "There's a general feeling among senators tllat, siDce the last two
presidents have run as "outsiders," this time there's a good chance the
voters wtll elect an "IDslder,'' someone already IDslde government," saki
one top Senate Democrat.
Being frequently mentioned as possible darkhorse prospects for 19&amp;1. or as vice presidential posslbWtles -are four more Democrats: Sens.
. Joseph R. BldenJr. of Delaware; Daniel Patrick Moynihan of New York;
Pale Bumpers of Arkansas; and Bill Bradley of New Jersey.
And whUe the GOP ranks of possible candlates are much thinner with a
·Republican now ID the White House, arch-conservative Sen. Jesse Helms,
.. R-N.C., must be IDcludi!d on any rundown of presidential hopefuls.
. . While .the HouSe seldom produces as many presidential candidates as
. the Senate, each presidential year at least one seems to come forth. This
time out, Rep Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., may be that chamber's offering.

..

,..,.

Letter to the editor

3:
..."·
~
...
~-

Stop the holocaust

~·
~-

::: At the close of World War II many
; : ·notorious Nazis were brought to trial
:.:• for the murder of six million Jews
) • while a shocked and outraged world
::: demanded justice. How much more,
...-· then, should we, as decent,
· Christians be shocked and outraged
over the senseless murder of over 10
mUllon innocent, unbom hwnans
s!Dce 1!m's Supreme Court ruling
allowing abortion on demand.
As many in this area already
knOW; there is now a local chapter of
the Right To ure Society. Our Immediate goal i5 passage of a Hwnan
Ufe Amendment to the Constitution.
' Many well-Intentioned people
would be happy to have this amendment paas. Sad to say, however, this
will not come about through wishful
thinking. It is going to take letters
from our citizens to senators and
congressmen on ,the state and
national levels and working through
local chapters of Right To Ufe or
Birthright, Etc.
Even If you are unable to attend

meetings due to health or .conflict in
schedule, your help can be Invaluable. Our moat pressing goal is
our telephone survey.If It Ia not completed in time, the amendment is
dead.
Congressmen and senators must
be informed about the will of· the
majority. The citizens must be made
aware of who are the pr().llfe
congressmen, senators, and candidates.
Our next meeting is Tuesday
night, 7:30 p.m. at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. Building
in GaillJI'?Us. If not a member,
please come and join our effort to
save these helpless, Innocent, tiny
hwnans or contact me or our
president, Judy Zimmerman.
If already an a~ve member, we
urge you to attend as urgent
business will be diacuaaed. Help us
stop this modem day holoc&amp;U8t.
Regina Akers
Rt.3Box172
GalllpoHs

WASHINGTON. - The Supreme
Court II at It again. In Ill blundering,
blindfolded effort to pl'OYide unilentandable guldellnea for the "ex-.
cllllionaty rule," the court atll1 is
groping through what Justice Powell
baa termed ''this benighted area of
the law." If the nine members of the
court put the.i r miDda to It, surely
they can do better than they seem to
have been doing lately.
For tlioise who may have just come
on, the n:cuslonary rule Is a rule
govern!Dg the admlaslbillty . of
evidence ID a crltillnal trial. If a
presiding judge concludes that certaiD evidence has been obtained in
violatiOD of the Fourth Affi!mdment,'
the evidence must be ezcluded: Tbe
result Ia that ID such cases, a patenUy guilty defendant often goes scotfree. .
To be sure, only a handful of ~
In a hundred tum on the rule, but
these may he highly sigglficant
cases: John HIDckley_Jr., charged
with attempted assassination of
President Reagan, ·may yet go free
because evidence ·of his sanity was
seized without a warrant. Significance to one side, the intolerable ·con·
fusion surrounding the rule makes
life miserable for arresting officers.
As an e888yist in the current issue
of "Judicature" makes clear, we
have drifted far from the original
purpose Of the rule. This was to
protect the Integrity of the courts, by
preventing them from contributll)g
to violation of constitutional protections. A secondary justification for
the rule then took root: 11le rule
would deter pollee officers from
trespassing upoti our Civil Uberties.
If the cops understood that evidence
wrongly seized could not be admitted at trial, the cops would be
more careful.
In ~ent years the Supreme Court

_ _....:;__

_

_ _ _ _ _.J..:....._ __

.,.

~ . success .

;:!

NEW YORK (AP) - While the from one person up who live at one
overall population of the United address - had declined to about 73
States grows, there are fewer mllllon, a loss of 832,001 units.
households now than there were
1be number has rtsen since then,
two years ago.
but only to 73.6 million, a minor adPeople are doubUng up - par· vance ID vieW of the population
entS with children, children with bulge of young, 'household-age peopanints, students with students, ple now working Its way through
young singles with other singles.
the economy ..
This reflects many things: a poor
The latest "U.S. Housing
economy, lost jobs, energy conser- Market" quarterly, pubHshed by
vation, hl«h rents and carrying Advance Mortgage Corp., a private
charges, acceptance of fewer erea- . lender, found turther eVIdence In Its
ture comforts and, It would seem, regular quarterly analysts of the
lowered expectations.
·nation's major housing markets.
While the dec)lne Is In the
In Boston !!found "Students - an
hundreds of thousands, It seems enormous factor ID this market likely that mtlllons of people are af· last year moved back to dormitofectecl, not Just those who have been ries. This year, commuter students
crowded ID on; but landlords, real move back With famWes."
estate agents, furniture and apIn Washington, D.C., where fedpliance manufacturers and sellers, eral cutbacks are being felt, It
and fuel suppliers.
found "Sunday paper has five coSlndllnger &amp;: Co., a Media, Pa., lumns of ads to share units."
research and marketing organizaIn Detroit, center of an area that
tion that has traced household sta- some economists maintain Is ID a
tistics for nearly 30 years,
dePression,' it found "Doubling-up
attributes the decline millnly to eco- Is enormous." In Atlanta,
nomic necessity.
"doubllni·up Is heavy." The same
By means of dally telephone sur· report comes from San Francisco.
veys, Sindlinger estimated the
Even In Dallas, where bulldiDg
number of American households at and other economic activity Is
73.8 mUllan ID May 191Q. In that stronger than ID most of the nation,
month, It concludes, there were the report fiDds "some doubling-up
more households than ever before In North Dallas young adult
or since.
market."
By August 1981 the number of In·
The Advance Mortgage report
dlvldual households- any number shows occupancy rates generally

tlemen, welcome to the hit television

show, Guerrilla of the Week, brought

to you direct from the u: S. State
Department, by a grant from the
Central Intelligence Agency. Ed,
will you bring out our latest
guerrilla."
"Dean, this II Hernandez Juan
Pica, a CUban-trained Nicaraguan,
who 111'81 captured ID the jungles rl.
El Salvador after making a
perachute drop from Ethiopia Into
Honduras, carrying a Soviet-made
bazoOka.''
"It's good to have you on the show,
Juan. They aay you're a real tough
Manlst lnnbre. "Tell 111, Juan,
how long have you been a commie

__

By sam WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - Monday evening
in the Eastern High School gymnasium Eastern's boys and girls
basketball teams were honored with
an excellent dinner and awanls
ceremony. lncluded in honors at the
fete were Eastern's boys and girls .·
varsity basketball teams that completed outstanding seasons during
this past year.
!;lev. Carl Hicks gave the invocation preceding an excellent
meal, provided by the Eastern High
School Band boosters.
School principal Jim Page served
as master of ceremonies and , in:troduced various- coaches who
presented awards to their respective
teams.
Junior High girll!' coach Pam
~ :Douthitt praised her team for a fine
""·-season and presented awards.
::,: · Seventh grade Coach Scott W~lfe
·n:'ll~e presentations to his team after
,.., .;g1vmg a word of thanks and a talk
::: ;:about Eastern's stars of the future.
:::.1' While looking to the future Wolfe
;:-; . ')nade a "challenge" to his boys and
. ·expressed his confidence in their

l: :

Larger population, fewer households

"Good evening, ladles and gen-

ootUylni

_

lias veered woazily away from both clear view on a deSk eight feet away.
premises. Instead, the court has 'lbe Supreme ,Court of Washington
ruled that the evidence had ta be ex·
become preoccupied ' - obeeS&amp;es
eluded ~use the officer had
might be a better word - with the
paused in the doorway before enkind of jeau!Ucal hair-splitting
beloved of theologians the world tering the room. Tbe u.s. Supreme
Court reversed. No Fourth Amendover.
On Jan. 13, a bitterly divided court ment violation here.
Dalled away at \lie "cear view ex- . On March 1 the court heard
ceptlon" to·the e:ttlusionary rule. A argument .in one more case in an inpollee officer at W&amp;shingtOO State termlilable series of cases involving
University, having lawfully arrested the "automobile exception'' to the
a student for openly carrying a bot- exclusionary rule. The lminedlate
Ue of giD, accompanied the student l.saue had to do with a·paper bag conto his dormitory room to get the taining marijuana. The bag had
student's identification card. While been taki!Jl from the trunk of the
standing In the doorway, leaning defendant's car.
In what Ia knoWn as the Chadwick
against the jamb, the officer aaw
marijuana seeds and a pot pipe in case of 19'17, the court ruled that a

locked footlocker taken from a car
trunk could not be opened without a
warrant, even If It smelled· to high
heaven of mariJuana.
During . the March 1 argwnent,
Justice Stevens wanted to know If It
would have made a constitutional
difference If the paJ!Cf bag had been
stapled shut. Or suppose a blanket
lay over everything in the trunk:
Could the pollee lift the blanket?
Justice O'Connor wondered if the
bag had been on the back seat of the
car, or in the glove compartment.
What then?
Trunks. Back seats. Door jambs.
Jacket pockets. Garbage bags. The
policeman's lot is not a happy one,
but this court is making it worse.

.

Today Is Tuesday, March 23, the82nd day of 1982. Thereare283daysleft
ID the year.
Today's highlight ID history:
On March 23, 1933, the German Relchstag granted Adolf Hitler sweeping
powers.
On this date:
In 1775, U.S. statesman Patrick Henry made a plea for American free. guerrilla?''
dom from BrltaiD, declaring, "Give me liberty or give me death."
In lllll, Russia's Tsar Paull was assassinated, and was succeeded by
Alexander I.
'
-In 1919, Benito Mussollnl founded a new fascist pollUcal movement ID
Italy.
In 1942, $e United States began Its program of moving Japanl!le' ·
Americans from their homes on the West Coast to Inland campe durlnl
. World War U.
· ,
'
Ten years ago: The United States called a temporary halt to VIetnam
peace talks ID Parts.
Five years ago: 1be Conao aovernrneni IIIIDOI1IICed a Ro!fWI Cathollc
archbishop, CardiDal Emile Blayenda, had been '"'"'uted,
One year ago: 1be U.S. Supreme Court ruled thatunclel-certalnclreum·
stances a state may subject a doctor tocrlmlllal charps for performiDa an
aborUon on a teen-age girl without
ber parents.
Today's blrlbdays: Fonner Atlanta Mayor Mayurd JackiOIIII U years old. Irish clvtl rlghls leader Bernadette Il!!vUn Ia !!.
__

bags"-'1:...__~----J,am_e_sI_._K_ilpa-:--t-ric_k

between 95 percent and 98 percent
ID major cities, an extremely dlffl·
cult market for apartment seekers.

.

Were It not for doubling up, It
might be even worse.

Status·of legislation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Here

clown by the Ohio Supreme Court,
expanding powers of atlomey genpending ID the 114th Ohio Qeneral eral to conduct Investigations and
Assembly:
'
' authorizing court-ordered wiretapPRISONS - A $599 miUion pro-· ping. Pending ID Senate Judiciary
gram for construcUon and renova- · Committee.
Uon of prisons. Different versions
ABORTION - Requires certain
passed by House and Senate; pend- ·Information to be given to women
Ing in jo!Dt conference committee. before they consent to abortions.
REDISTRICTING -Draws new Passed the Senate; hearing 'ruesboundary lines for Ohio's congres- day In House State Government
sional districts, reduced from 23 to Committee.
21 this year. Different versions
SCHOOL FUNDING - Propassed by House and Senate; pend- . posed constitutional amendment
Ing ID jo!Dt conference committee.
and school aid bW to shift local
PUCO - Restructures the' public funding of schools from sole reutilities commission, making It a liance on property iaxes to a mix·
five-Instead of three-member panel ture of propertY and personal
and changing appointment pro- Income levies. Awaiting Senate
cess. Passed the Senate; Ilea~ ·vote.
Tuesday In House Public Utilities
MANDATORY SENTENCING
Committee. ·
- Imposes mandatory prison
HIGH-SPEED RAIL - Pro- terms for people convicied or cerposed constitutional amendment
tain felonies. Passed Senate; hearIDcreas!Dg sales tax to pay for
Ing TUesday ID. House Judiciary
bulld!Dg a multlb11llon-doll;lr · raU
Committee.
system linking Ohio's biggest cit·
LiVING wn..ts - Allows the ter·
les. Passed House; awaiting Senate
rninaUy ill to direct that life prolongvote.
Ing measures be used , withheld or
ORGANIZED CRIME - Pack· discontinued. Passed House; hearage or bllls reinstating an
Ing Tuesday In Senate Health and
organized-crime statute struck
Human Resources Committee.

Eighth grade mentor Coach
~ George Gagai talked of his club's ·
':':': season and presented awards.
: · Freshman Coach Don Eichinger
·,,• • . 'praised his club for a season of hard
. work and presented awards.
Cheerleadi!lg advisor Jan
Eichinger presented awards to
Junior high cheerleaders, reserve
:.. · cheerleaders, and to the varsity
~ • .cheerleading squad for a great
:season. These girls created much
, . • exci~ment and boosted scliool spirit
.: : throughout the entire season.
• ,. - Melissa Thomas received. the most
,:;, . outstanding cheerleader award;
.:• Brenda Calaway, most spirited, and
...1. PaulaFrecker, most improved.
· • · : · Girls' Coach Sue Thompson introduced her reserve club, then introduced her sectional cham·
pionship varsity team that earned a
berth ·in the district tournament.
Special awards went to Rhonda
Riebel for most improved ; Sarah
Goebel, best rebounder; Tammy
· Hudson, best fool shooter; and
Becky Ambrose for best field goal
percentage.
Coach Arch Rose gave a fine talk
about his reserve club, awarding
members of his team.
· Next head varsity coach DeMis

Is the status of major leglsla tlon

r

Eichinger concluded the ceremonies
with an enthuasistic talk of the past
seasori, his team, and the teams ol
the future at Eastern High School.
The Eagles completed another fine
season of IU, its second outstanding
season in a row:
Coach Eichinger individually introduced and praised his playeni
before the entire team returned to
its seats with a long round of applause. Special awards went to
senior players. .
Cha~Ue' 1\itchle eante4 the best
free throw award, .Mike Bissell was
named best defensive player, tim
Dill unanimously claimed the best
rebounding award, and Greg Cole
was awarded for moat assists.
Coach Eichinger received a sur·
prise gift from members of the fifth
and sixth grade basketball players.
The benediction was given by Rev .
Hicks.
Honored were:
Eastern Varsity

JUNIOR HIGH GIRLS

Joy Brannon. Kim Dent, Michelle
Wilson , Lorle Buckley , Kri sti Hawk,

Erica Kessinger, Tonya sa"oy and
Be"erly Wigal.
Managers - Michelle Capehart,
Jody Schaekel and Janel Werry .
Cheerleaders
varsity
Brenda Calaway. Pam Murphy,
Melissa Thomas, Synthia White,
Paula Frecker and Terre Wood.

JV
Lisa Collins, Renee Buckley,
Benitta Deeter, Tonya Fortney and·

Tara Guthrie.

Junior High
Delani Baker, Lea Ann Robinson,

Amy Young and Angle Young.

Scoreboard

-·_

•
_..,""._
........
w
.,..o....

fb101'1~. ~4
~ 2

MlnnHott. 4, LQI

Toronm s,.Ollcaao s

Tim Dill, Mike Bissell, Charlie

w~

Ritchie, Greg Cole, Bryce Buckley ,
Gaddis, Jim Newell, . Tim Probert

Detrdt at CJUcqo
Lot Aqrles at WIMipeg

Eastern Reserves

Tim Probert, Cliff Griffith, Trov
Guthrie, Jim Newell , Mike Collins,

Coloriclo at Vancouver

Mike Jones and Robert Maison.
Managers - Ra-v Maxson, Dennis
Robinson, Krisli Baddis.

NIT results

N..._....,.._,...,...._

Melanie .Bailey ,

Eastern Girls Varsity
Tammy Hudson, Sarah Goebel.
Cassie Sheets 1 Becky Ambrose,
Rhonda Riebel, Lisa Collins, Janelle
. Ely, Dee Dailey; Kris Wilson, Kelly

Bn.IBPy 8&amp;, Okllhoma 611
~

Whitlacl! a_nd Angie Spencer.
Eulern Girls Reserve
Ann Diddle, Tammy Capehart,
Mary Hibbs, Henr ietta Thomas,

N.a-1

w-•
Purd...e
vs.

US.l31

.....,..o....
ft

I

,._.

•

I

-·-

dm

No aames tciMdlaled

Cl!Yeland at New York
WuhlrWton at Atlanta
San D6l!&amp;o at SuJ Antonio

Flck, Ronnie Hensley,

lUton at ClUcqo
tlouMon at Utah
Dlllu at Lal Anples
MUwaukee at Portland
Plloen1x at Golden State

John Miller. Mike Pulman. Kenny

Riggs, Karl Smith, Keith Stout , Jim
Watson and Jim Weber.
Managers Terry Sharp and

WtdleiM,.. Gat..
t1eveW.nd at Emton
NI!W .Ieney at PNI.Idl!lpllla
~ WlJhtnitoo at lndla.M

Junior Hjgh Teams

Seventh Grade

AWARD WINNERS - Membel'li of Coach Sue
Thompson's championship girls' team, who received
special awards, were Becky Ambrose, beot field goal

h :'.antl at Kanaaa Q ty
Sift A.ntooo at Denver

Mitc hell Barringer, Eddie Collins.
Oarri n Drenner, Danny Leonardr
Brent Norton, Kennv Ritchie, Jeff
Sayre and Todd Wilson.

.

(a.~O l

NBA results

Freshman Boys
Jeff Bissell, Jay Carpenler. Paul

Mall Hensley.

61, Georila 60

BracDcy

Teresa Wilson, Lea Ann Gaul , Melin·
da Mank in, Beth Berkhimer and
Lori Hudson .
Stats - Becky Eichinger, Dar lene
Barton and Pam Dav is.
Ke~Jin

--

8&amp; I' I
At New Ycft

Carolyn Bowen and Karen Jacks.

Collins,

•

at Hartfon:l

New Yon: Rll'ifilen at Pltul:lW'it'l
St.Laull a t Toronto

and Troy Guthrie.

Statisticians -

at NeW York lalanclers
I

~

Paul Sprague; Roger Bissell, Mark

.

SPECIAL AWARDS - Receiving special awards year head mentor, were (no order given), Charlie Rite'
for Coach Dennis Eichinger's Eastern Eagles, who chle,lree throw award, Greg Cole, aRSist award, Coaeh
completed another succesoful oeaoon omder the second Eichinger, Tim DUI, rebounding award, . and Mike
Bissell, most steals.

NHL results

DtJlu at Pboenlx

MUwaukrt at Set,rur

.

Eighth Grade

MET cage action continues

Kev in Barber, Royce Bissell, Jim·

my Caldwe ll, Tony Chapman, Jeff
Che"aller, sean Clemson, Jolin Rice
and Joe Runvon.

Managers -

In the seml·flnal sixth grade, MET
action, Rutland defeated Syracuse

Jeff Caldwe ll and

Jason Drenner.

37·24..

valenzuela will report
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Holdout
pitcher Fernando Valenzuela said
• •· 'lday he would report to the '-&lt;OS
;eles Dodgers on Tuesday and
lid play under the agreement
club had renewed without hts
&amp;Sent.
{ alenzuela, IDslating that he
•uld sign no new contract, said:
.'hey have decided what the conact says. we have been treated
oee children.
"I am only 21, but I am a man to
be considered wl!h dignity."
The Dodgers unilaterally renewed Valenzuela's 1981 contract
earlier this month under provisions
of baseball's Basic Agreement, and
· gave him a raise the club said made
the lett-hander the highest paid
second-year player ID baSeball his. tory. He reportedly will receive
$350,001.
. Valenzuela, who made $42,500
last year when he won both the Cy
Young and Rookie or the Year

pereealage, Rhonda Riebel, moll lmpr!&gt;ved, hrab
G&lt;Jebel, best rebounder, and Tammy HudSG!I, best free
throw pereeptage,

awards In the National League, had
been asking for $1 million In hts
ortg!Dal demand. He was said to
have lowered his figure to $850,001.
"The Dodgers say If I report they
will Improve my contract,'' Valen·
zuela said, speaking In Spantsh
with a translator, at news conference. "I do not want a reward for
good behavior. I will not sign a 19112
contract. This season I will play
under the renewed 1981 contract."
Valenzuela, ID his rookie season
last year, posted 'a 13-7 record and
2.48 eamed run average In ·the
strike-shortened campaign.
He won his first eight games,
leading the Dodgers to the top In the
pre-strike era that put them Into the
playoffs.
In postseason play, he beat Houston, Montreal and then the New
York Yankees ID what proved to be
the tunJng po!Dt of the World S.,rles after the American League
team had won the first two games.

High scorers for Rutland were
Mike Bartrum 17, Joey Snyder 10,
SLeve Quillen 6. High scorers for
Syracuse were John Riffle 12, Chris
Baer 8.
In another game, Eastern drum·
ped Riiclne 57·29. High scorers .for

Eastern I were Brent Blssell2'1, Jeff
Caldwell 10, Brian Durst B, Allen
Tripp 6. High scorers for Racine
were Shannon Rifne 10, David Am·
burgey 11, Chris Diddle 7.
Consolation game will be tonight
between Syracuse and Racine at
5:30 p.m. Championship game lx!t:
ween Rutland and Eastern 1 at 7
p.m.

Nobody can protect your

a

1

HOME

anr lllattar than we can!
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very attracllve rate~. doscounts. and valuable addltlonai
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CHEERLEADER AWARDSClleerlead!Dc awarda PftHDted
by advllor Ju Ekllllller were to
Mellua Tboma• for m01t outolaJidiDC cbeerle~der aDd Breuda
Calaway lor moat spirited. A~
oent wa1 Paula Frecker, who wao
awarded lbe 11101t Improved
cbeerle11der.

•

..

Art Buchwald

And now, here's Juanie·

Tod·ay in history

1.

Eastern basketball teams
honored at annual banquet

Page 2-.The Daily Sentinel
Pomercrr Middleport, OhM&gt;·
Tuesday, Mardi 23 1982

The Daily Sentinel_

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Ponierof=Middleport, Ohio

~====~~--~-------------"I am not a guerrllla. hm a ralsiD were not trained by the Cubans In for Fresno?"
picker from J\18AZ, Mexico."
Ethiopia with Soviet weapons to
"Juan; we don't give out gfelln
"Ha, ha,lhlit'sa good one, Juan. It overthrow the legal govenunent In .cards on 'Guerrilla of the Week.'" ;
aays right here you
the leader EISalvador?"
"That's too bad. T!Us Ia the fourth
· of the Fl_rst of May Che Guevarra
"Si, senior, I have never been out offiC'e they've sent me to. Maybe you
Brigade, and fought ID Angola with of Juarez. But I have a cousin who · know aomeone who will let me pick .
the Fifth of October Fidel Castro Sid lives in Fresno, and he win guaran- raisins in Fi'esno. I will light a canTroops."
tee me a job If you would just give dle for the Secretsry of State every
"That's not me. I am a ·raisin' me a green card."
day."
:
picker. See I filled out all the
"All right, let's knOfk off the play·
"There · seems· to be a mizllp
papers." .
•
acting, Juan. Just tell us how you somewhere, ladies IIJlll gentlemen.
''Then what are you doing on this hate the grlngoes In America and Don't tum your dial ... Ed, where tlie
show?"
what the KGB told you about the hell is tile real Pico?"
.
"I do not know, senor. I came to United States." '
"I just checked with the Cl~.
the State Department to apply.for a
. "I love the' United States, senor, Dean. SOmeone Issued him a green
green card, so I could pick raisins from sea to shining sea. Thl8 land card while he was waiting in tlie
and the lady senl .me ID here. I wu made for you and me. I. am a Blue Room, and the last anyone sa'w
promile, llir, I wiD go home u 10011
Yanllee doodle dandy, a Yankee of him, he got a job driving a taxj •t
as the rallln eealon Ia over.''
doodle do or die. Please, sir, can I National Airport."
,
"Are you.~ to tell me that you · have a ~ - card and catch a bus ___.;.
___,

are

..

____

_

DOONESQURY
fi6HT/
f(6HT/

fi6HTI
.............

NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
Pursuant to Section 1551.07 of the Ohio Revised Code, the Ohio Department of
Energy is reQuired to hold public hearings and solicit public·comments on the State
Energy Conservation Plan Progress Report. Hearings are scheduled for the date,
time and place liS listed below. Copies of the 1982 Ohio Energy Conservation Plan
Progress Report are on file In each County at the designated Depository Pub! ic
Library. If you are uncertain as to which of the libraries in your county Is the
designated Depository, or If you wish to obtain a copy of the Report, call .the Ohio
Department of Energy toll ·free telephOne line, 1·800·282·9234. Because of .the
brevity of the 1982 Progress Report, the Report lt~lf shllll also constitute the
executive summary. All Ohioans are invited to submit verbal or written comment
at the public heci~lngs . Written comments for Inclusion in this year's Progress
Report will be accepted until April29, 1982 ot the Ohio Department of Energy, 30 E. ·
Broad Street, 34th Floor, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
TOLEDO
Main Library
325 Michigan Street
Toledo, Ohio 43624
Apri126 2:00 P .M.·S : OO P.M.
CINCINNATI
Federal8uildlng·Room 5413
550 M11in Street
Cincinnati, Ohio 45202
Aprll27 2:00 P.M.·5 :00 P.M:
CLEVELAND
Frank J. Lausche State Office Building
2nd Floor Auditorium ·
615 W. Superior
Cleveland Ohio 44114
Aprll27 2:00 P.M. -5:00P .M.

COLUMBUS
Rhodes State office Tower
Small Hearing Room in the Lobby
of the State Office Tower
30 E . Broad Street
Columbus, Ohio 43215
April28 2:00 P.M.·5 :00 P .M.

.

'•

I

MARI~TTA

You might need money for a lot of good reasons-to
take care of unexpected bills, to fix up your home,
or perhaps to tllke a well-deserved
vacation. Whatever the cause, City Loan
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Davis Avenue
Marietta, Ohio 45750
Apri!.28 5:00 P .M.·8:00 P.M.

LOAN

money for yourfavorite cause. Because

!lobodY knows you like we do. ·
~~.Control D.\"' Comj)o\ny

OHIO DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Rollert C. Malonar. Director

---

EST 1912

.

Pomeroy 125 E.MainSt.

,,

~-2 171

I

'

�11

~

I

Tuewday, Mcudt 23, 1982 '

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel'

T!HIIIj,uy, March 23, 1982

Diddle birth

Southeastern girls top
OVC All-Stars, 51 to 44
Led by Ironton's Teresa Sweeney,
the Southeastem Ohio League girls
defeated the Ohio Valley Conference
girls 51-44 in the third annual all-star
game at Ironton Monday night.
Sweeney ·tallied 10 points in
leading 14 girls into the scoring
colwnn as every one in unifonn
scored for the SEOAL.
South Point's Melissa Moore
scored 12 points and Debbie Taylor
of Rock Hill added 10 in a losing effort by the players of the Ohio Valley
Conference.
The SEOAL team, coached by Tim
Smith of the champion Athens

Bulldogs, led 7-9 alter one quarter,
trailed 21-18 at intermission, and
pulled back on top 32-28 after three

stanzas.
The winners connected on 18 of 65
from the field, converted 15 of 23 at
the charity stripe, and grabbed 46
rebounds, six each by Sweeney and
Wellston's Kim Mullen.
The OVC girls hit 16 of 54 fielders,
made 12 of 15 free throws, and
snared 41 rebounds, six by Rock
Hill's Peggy Justice.
By virtue of Monday's triumph the
SEOAL now leads the three year
series 2-1.

Sara Marie Seyler Diddle, Middleport, is announcing the birth of
her son, William Max ~ Diddle.
The infant was born on Feb. 20 and
weighed seven pounds, 14 ounces. He
was over 20 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and ·Mrs. Robert Max Pooler. Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Waid Lee
Diddle, Presontsburg, Ky.
Matemal great-grandparents are
Mrs. Marie Roy and the late Claude
William Roy, OVal Diddl~, and the
late Sarah Diddle, ail Of Racine, and
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Pooler,
Chesterhill.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
a11d Mrs. Richard Denver Seyler, I,
Pomeroy. The late Mr. and l'v!rs. Sy
Seyler are the infant's greatgrandparents .

The box score:
SEOAL ISH- Saran Evans 0·5·5:
Shari Howard 1-0·2; Kristin Anderson 2-0-4; Pam Cook 3·0-6;
Teresa Sweeney 0 -10; Janel
Walker 2-H ; Kathy Juhasz 0-2-2;
Yock Emerson 2-2-6; Joy Null 1-o-2;
Bobbi Sow.ers 1·0-2; Tami Maple 1-02; Kim Mullen 0-2·2 ; Lori ROberts 01·1; Cindy Fitts 1-o-2. TOTALS 18- 15·
'

Sl.

ov&lt;: 1441 - Cheryl Spears 0-2-2:
Susan Dillow. 2-0-4; Kim Crager 1-1J; Debbie Toy lor 5-0-10; Mary Jane
Wilds 2·3-7; Teresa lson Q-2-2;
MelisSa Moore 5-2· 12; llickj Gibson
1·0·2; Molly Large 0-2·2 TOTALS 16·
U-44.
Score by quarters:

SEOAL

ovc

7 11 14 19-51
15 7 16--«

Mr. and Mrs. Ryan Dill, Rutland,
are arinouncing the birth of their
second child, a daughter, Leeann
Christine, born on March 3 at the
Holzer Medical Center.
She weighed seven pounds, 10 ounces and was 20 inches long .
Grandparent&lt;! are Clyda Michael
of Bradbury, Guy Bing, Middleport ;

SEO~L

Members of the Southeastem Ohio
League boys team outscored the
Ohio Valley Conference boys alistars I~ during a lour minute span
late in the fourth quarter Monday
night to post a 66-59 victory in the
third annual ail-star game played at
Ironton.
A rebound goal by South Point's
Selin Miller put the OVC team on top
5f&gt;.50 with 4: 16 remaining in the con-

Ies!.
The clock showed 2: 31 remaining
when PhU King of Gallipolis swished
' a pair of free throws to knot the
score at 55-55.
Thirty-five seconds
later ,
Wellston's John Derrow canned a
pair of free throws, and followed
with another gratis shot 25 seconds
later, giving the SEOAL a 58-55 lead.
At the 44 second mark, Ironton's.
Rick Fritz scored on a layup,
followed 20 seconds later by a pair of
free throws by Marty Glenn of
Gallipolis.
Phil King stole an OVC inbounds
pass 11nd hit a layup with 20 seconds
left to give the SEOAL a 6+li5 lead
and first ever post-season victory in
the; three year-old series.
SEOAL Coach of the Year, Jim

Osborne, Gallipolis, stated after the
game, " It certainly feels good to end
your season with a victory."
The GAHS Mentor praised the
nine seniors on his squad for their
line defensive game, especially in
the final four minutes when the OVC
managed just lour points.
Three players named to the
SEOAL squad were unable to play
because of illness or previous commitment&lt;! - Mike Crocci of Athens ;
Bob Ashley of Meigs, and Jimmy
Morris of Ironton.
Coach Norm Persin, who guided
the Oak Hill Oaks to an OVC C()o
championship with Rock Hill, was
disappinted over his team'sinability
to get the ball inside.
The former GAHS assistant coach
said, "We really had them going in
the fourth quarter, but otir shooting
just died. Their defense forced us to
shoot from outside.''
Wellston's John" Derrow led ail
scorers with 19 point&lt;! with Phil King
adding 16.
Chuck McKnight, who averaged 26
points a game lor Coal Grove during
the season, led the OVC with 14 points, 10 in the second hall. Rock Hill's
Andy Markel added 11.
The winners connected on 23 of 59

GIFl'S - SoutbeQI High &amp;boo! l'rlneipal Jim TOW'II8lllenl · Friday from Pomeroy bulueluoe'l
Adams, center, recelvet'l two gifts of money for ex- · Larcy Powell and Greg Glbbe. Powell lllld Glbbe 1»penses of the Southern Tornado basketball team and dlcated that although !hey do DOt live Ill lbe Southel'll
the ~heerleaders who will be atleodlllg the Ohio Stale District, they wanted. Ill show their pride In tbe •~
compllshments of the Soulbem team.

Murray 0-0-0; Doug Morris J-1·7;

Matt Bonzo0-0·0. TOTALS 23·20·46.
OVC 159), - Chuck McKnight 7· 014; Kyle McKnight 0·0-0; G~ry Ellis
J· H; Jeff Dunn 0-0·0; Andy Markle
4·3-11 ; Shaun Harris 0·0-0; Kevin
Crager 2·0··ii Mike Barner 2·0·.4 ;
Tony Zornes 2· 1-$; Mike Allen 3-0-6;
Sean Miller 4·0-8; Jim Shepherd 0-00. TOTALS 27·S· S9.

Dick Ver·
saCe, basketball coach at Bradley
University, would ltke to forget the
things he said about the NCAA
tournament.
Alter the tield for the NCAA tournament was announced March 7,
and after Bradley was ·not among ·
llicise chosen, Versace became
InCensed.

His team had won the regularseason title In the Missouri Valley
Conference. then was picked io the
National Invitation Tournament

field. He criticized the NCAA selection committee for bypassing, his
team, and he told his Braves to play
"angry" In the NIT.

"I hope I've put that to rest," Versace said Monday night after hts .
team earned a berth in the NIT fl.
nal against Purdue. The two teams
wtli be meet Wednesday night at
Madison Square Garden.
"I don't want to belabor the potot.
I don't care to discuss it anymore,
and I don't want it to overshadow

Soto pitches with fear
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)
- Mario Solo Is trying to conquer a
pl(l:her's fear - that troubled feellnll; that comes with an unexplainable twtnge tn the arm.
The Cincinnati Reds' rlghtha(lder had an odd feeling in hi.&lt;!
elbow alter throwing a pitch during
a winter baseball game. He's tried
to overcome the soreness - and the
worry - to get ready to be the
· Reds' No.2 starter in the 1982
season.
·~The first day (of training camp)
I was supposed to throw batting
practice. I warmed up and went to
the mound ready to pitch to the first
hitter," Soto said. "But I had to get
out of there because my elbow hurt.
~ It was nothing serious. They
todk some X-rays. Right now I feel
pretty gooct.l'mabletothrowsome
fastballs."
Solo was careful in his first two
spring tratntng outings. when he

wasraked for 10 hits and six runs in
just six Innings. He didn't throw a
slider tn those games.
But he got some therapy for his
fears Monday, throwing all of his
pitches and striking out six batters
in five innings of a 7-3loss to the St.
Louis Cardinals.
Although Soto surrendered tour
earned runs and six hits, he was
relieved thaI he could throw nor·
mally without stUfness In the right
elbow.
"I feel a lot better. I was able to
extend my ann all the way today,"
he said. "I threw some good lastballs. I feelltke now I'm g11ttlng everything together."
Soto, who was 12·9 last season,
has good reason to be sensitive
about elbow problems. He suffered
a fracture In the elbow eatly In his
career, but had eXJ)ertenced no
further problems until he was pitch·
tog this winter.

Unearned runs defeat Reds
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)
- Keith Hernandez' two-out single
snapped a tie in the fifth Inning and
Tommy Herr drove In three runs, .
powering the St. Louis Cardinals to
a 7-3 exhibition .baseball victory
Monday over the Cincinnati Reds.
St. Louis: third straight victory
was tempered by the announcement that veteran catcher GeneTenace su!fered a broken rtght thumb
two days earlier In a game against
the Boston Red Sox. Manager WhiteY, Herzog said Tenace would not
be placed immediately on the
club's 1!klay disabled !lsi.
·
The Cards, Improving their record to 7·5, trailed 3-2 after Ctncln·
natl erupted for all Its runs In the
fourth against Steve Mura, who
went six Innings.
'
Ron Oester doubled to trigger the
Reds' uprising. Ed Milner drew a
walk, Johnny Bench rapped a tworun double and Paul Householder
an RBI bloop single to center.

Mura later worked out of a noneoul jam In the top of the sixth after
Milner pad an tnlleld single, stole
second and moved to third on
catcher Darrell Porter's thrOwing
error. In the bottom of ,the Inning,
St. Louis scored three unearned In·
surance runs In a rally highlighted
by Herr's bases-loaded single.

TIJESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Chamber ot
Commerce, Tuesday, 7 p.m.
Lasalle Hotel.
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy,
7:30p.m. both junior and senior
units.
MEIGS Area
Holiness
Assoc'iation, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene. The Rev. Herbert
Grate, speaker.
POMEROY
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Tuesday at 2
p.m. at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Rbonda Dailey, R.N.,
will give an in-service talk on
isolation patients. Each member
is asked to take a toy lor an older
child. Hostesses ,will be Carrie
Kennedy, Ethel Hatfield, and
Katie Mees.
'

Score by quarters :

SEOAL

14 21 13 111--66
12 15 20 12-59

NFL okays contract

· POMEROY - The Harrisonville Golden Age Club will meet
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the townhall.
Each family is to take a covered
disb and their own table service.

Scnlin~.l
ILilPSJCHII}
ADl\ll"lun ol M'wltimedll, lae.

The Oaily

PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - The network joined NFL coverage In
the performance of my team (In the
National Football League Iormally 1970 with the advent of prime-time
NIT). Righi now, I'd like to talk
approved the most expensive con- telecasts, w111· cover a Super Bowl,
about our players and the 25 wins
tract In television history Monday, specltlcally Super Bowl XIX In Jan·
we had thts season."
a tlve-year package with NBC, CBS uary 1985. The Super Bowl rotation
Bradley's 84-tiS victory over Okla·
over the U!e of the contract is NBC
and ABC worth about $2 billion.
homa In the NIT semifinal Monday
The contract, valued a_t almost (next January In Pasadena, Calif:),
night gave the Braves a 25-10 retrtple the package which expired CBS, ABC, NBC and CBS.
cord. Purdue downed Georgia 61-60
The contract with the three maafter the 1981 season, was approved
In the other semifinal.
unanimously by the 28 clubs barely jor network forestalls , at least
Senior fmward Mitchell Ander·
an hour into the league's week-long through the life of the contract, the
son scored a team-high 25 points for
Involvement In live telecasting by
spring meeting.
Bradley and teamed with forward
cable
companies for the next flve
Although the teague would not
David Thlrdklll and guard Barney
years.
' disclose details of the con_tract and
Mines in a 13-3 run early In the seThe payments over .thetlve years
NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle
cond halt that broke open a close
of
the contract wlli be graduated
said at a news conference that
game.
with
each team averaging about
some previously publisned figures
Oklahoma, 22-ll and runner-up in
$14
mUtton
a year in TV revenues.
were inaccurate, it Is known that
the Big Eight Conference tournaAsked why it hatl taken so long to
CBS wtli pay between $700-$750 mtl·
ment, traDed by onnly one point,
lion, ABC will pay $650-700 million come to an agreement with the net38-37 at haltllme, and the SoonerS
and NBC $600-650 mllllon for the works (the negotiations were con·
still were only one behind, 42-41,
rights to telecast preseason, eluded Sunday), Rozelle said
when Bradley's game-breaking
simply: "Gatvey ." He later exregular-season and postseason
burst started.
plained that when Ed Garvey, head
games (Including the Super Bowl
Mtnes, a junior, hit a three-point
of the National Football League
and Pro Bowl ali-star game)
play, and Anderson hit two tree
Players' Association, began talking
through the 19!16 season. That puts
throws to made it 47-41. Alter one
several weeks ago about a potential
the total package In the $1.95 billion
free throw by Oklahoma's Les
$2 billion contract, It temporarily
to $2.1 billion range.
Pace, Thlrdklll' scored a pair of
scared of! one of the networks.
ABC, !or the first lime since the
baskets to make It 5142. David Ul·
tie hit tbe second of two tree throws
!or Oklahoma, and Anderson and
Mines !tnlshed ott the run with a
NCAA Flnal Four
basket each to make It 55-44 with
At Ntw Orleam
Mareh n
14:45 lett.
Lootrn.Ue (1\-9) vs. Georgetown. D.C.
Bradley stretched its lead to 19,
North Carollna ( ll-~) . vs. Hou.5ton (25-7)
at 65-46, by . scortng nine straight
Mareh ..
points, and the Braves led by as
National Championship
many .as 22, 76-54, on a pair of
baskets by senior center Donald . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
Reese with 4;04 to play.
"We felt like we were struggling
In both halves," Oklahoma Coach
Bllly Tubbs said. "Offensively, we
were never really In the game. If It
hadn't been !or Chuck Barnett get.
531 JoOCKSOI&lt; PIKE · Rt . 35 WEST
ttng hot in the first half, we'd have
PhoM 446-4524
been out of it then."
IAAOM!I MATINEES ON SAT .S SUN
Barnett scored 23 of his team's 37
AU SEATS JUST 11.50
ADMtSSION EVERY TlJESDAY SUO
potnta In the first half and wound up
with 31. Mines added 18 for Brad·
ley, and Reese had 13.
In the other game, sophomore
GT-,00~
center Russell Cross took a feed
!rom Dan Palomblzio along the
baseline, pump-faked and put up
Purdue's winning points with four
seconds lett.

Published t:vt:ry aflemooo. MoOO.y throua:h
Friday. 111 Court Street, by the Ohio Valley
Publi.shln~ Company • Multimedia, Jnt., ·
Pomeroy, Ohio ~769, 992--ll:i&amp;. Set.'OOd class
posta~e paid 111 POmt!roy, Ohio.

dat•ghter, Sarah Beth, with a party
jn observance ol her first birthday.
DeeoraUons featured a clown
theme. A clown cake was bilked and
decorated lor the occasion by her
mother, Deana Larkins. Attending
besides her parents were her sister,
Angel8 Larkins, Mr. and Mrs. Pete
Peck, Angel and JeMy Peck, Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Peck, Mrs. Clara
Peck, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Frye, Mr.
!Yld Mrs. Clarence Wolfe, ~r . and
Mrs. Donald Podunavac, Jeremy
Podunavac, Mr. and Mrs. John
Nichols, Mark and Megan Nichols.

Mrs. Evelyn Circle, Columbus,
fonnerly . of Racine, wa~ honored
with a birthday dinner at the Jai Lai
RestalJrantrecenUy. She was joined
at the dinner by her sisters, Mrs.
Betty Krider and Mrs. Anna Cleland
and by her sister-in-law, Mrs. David
Circle and two nieces, Laura and
Melissa Circle. A stereo radio was
presented to her by those attending.
Miss Circle is retired from the Fan-

.,
Dill

Call birth
Mr. and Mrs. Donald. Call of Middleport announce the birth of a son,
Donald Harley Call II, born on Mar-

Beverages will be provided.
MEIGS COUNTY Cancer
Crusade kickoff meeting, 8 p.m.
tonight at Veterans Memorial
Hospital; training session for
volunteers;
program and
refreshments.
PAST MATRONS, Pomeroy ·
Order of Eastern Star, 7:30 this
evening at home of Thelma Dill,
Syracuse.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery
24, and Pomeroy Chapter 80,
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, with mark
master and past master degrees
to be conferred .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or MolurRoute
Ont!week ............. .. .. ... . , •... $1.00
Ollt! Month ...................... . .. $4.to
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may rEmit itl adVIllll'e dlrt!ct to The Dally
~ntincl on a 3, 6 Gr 12 month baaiii. Credat
will bt ~.:iven carrier each month.

.

Honor ,rolls
BR~ORUR"r' - The Bnulbury Elemenlary
School honor roll fol' the (DL.II'Ih !llXweeki wradlng
~rllld has bl~n announet.'d . Thosf •Nklng a
)!ride or 8 or abOve in all their sub}ecta t·o be
named to tht roll arc:
Fifth grade. Charlene Cadle. Sean Gibba. Anl)'
Lockeydoo. Ell.!e Meier, Scott NeiJ!ler.
Sixth ttrade, Marjorie Baker, Sherry Cooper,
Leah Danner, 09vld OodJon, St.-on Haning,

David Smlth.
EMR,

Darst birthday
Christopher Doug Darst
celebrated his first birtl)day with a
party held at his home recently. A
Mickey Mouse theme was carried
out for the party.
Cake, ice cream, chips and punch
were served. Attending were his

_ ftEASON #2: Free brochure
about the new tax laws.
If the recent tax law changes have you conflllsed, we can
H&amp;R Block is offering a free brochure on the Economic
IRei~O\I'el'rv Tax Act of 1981 . We'll show how you can benefit
the new tax ct]anges.

Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Larkins of
Middleport recently honored their

H&amp;R BLOCit

CORRECTION

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

SUNDAY'S BAKER FURNITURE
AD SHOULD HAVE READ
Bt:DDING ~Full Sizes) .
VALUE 1259

OPEN
9·5 MONDAY
THRU SATURDAY

17 reasons. One sma~ dEK;ision.
618 E. Main St.
2nd &amp; Brown Sts.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Mason, WV. 25260
992-3795
.773-9128

992-3307
FOR EVENING
APPOIIITMEIIT

Hours :
Mon.-Fri. 9 to 6

Hours :

Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9to 6

Sat . 9tos

Sat.9tos

.'

HOMEMADE
FRESH

PORK

SAUSAGE

STEAK

$ 29
LB.

No subscriptions by mail pennitted in town~
wht!l~ home carrier ~~l'\llc~ Is avi~ilable .

MAILSUBSCRIPI'JONS
"
Ohlu ••d w.. t Ylr!IDla
3 MiJnth ... .. ..... ... ........ ..... U2.JS
Six month ... , ........ , . .......... QUO
I Yc~tr •........... . .......•• ..... t:Mt.OO

I

Rate. Ollllde Ohio
and We11 Vlrglnll

JMonth ............... . .......... 113.00
&amp;Month .......................... 123.40
I Yeur ............. , ........ . .... f44.»

1

DAIRY SAVINGS
VALLEY BELL

VAUEY BBL

2% MILK

ICE CREAM

'$ 79

FESTIVAL

Sl 491

/2 GALLON

ROYAL CREST

VIT. 0 MILK
lfz GALLON

.,
''

'-

JUMBO

EGGS
DOZEN

-·

..·'

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

,I

'I

: Sale"'"' until ~jHil5, at Jho lollooiq Echo Oult!.

0

-

J
ll

Pomeroy,

'l

0~.

·• I

'
••'

Front End Alipmentost Cars

Billte Semct

'

2001.

240Z.

BANANAS
$}00

VIMCO

MACARONI

3 LBS. FOR

JLB. BOX

~ 149

99(
APPLES ...••••••• ~.
3 LBS

SEED POTATOES••~!!~ '5~

-~DAILY$

UDAY .91010

CABBAGE••••••••• ~······~;.19C

W. .... 1ltt

0

'·

HOLSUM BREAD

DELIC~US APPLES}.~... 99C

YELLOW '

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
Ph. 992·2094

89¢

3 LBS.

ECHO

606 E. Main St.

FRENCH FRIES
2LBS.

·15.00 om

'

Nikki Searls celebrated ter fifth
birthday Jan . 16 at Kyger Town Hall
with a party.
Refreshments ' were setved and ·
games played.
Attendin~ were Searls' parents,
T~rry and Mary Searls, Shaiyn, her
sister, Clarence and Edna Searles
and Cledith Bass, grandparents,
Bonnie Bass, Stanley Searles, Pat
and Chris Elliot, Michelle and
Heather Conkle, Mary Lou, Lisa and .
Bonnie Rupe, Beth Bradbury . Debbie and Don Wamsley, and Cindy
and Joann conk! ~ .

lhe

POSTMASTER : Send addreY to The Daily
Scntint!l. Ill Court St .• Pomeroy, Ohio ta769.

Buy this Echo
Grass-Trim,m . . ·
at

..

Searls birthday

Mr. and Mrs. Rick Wilson are announcing the birth of their daughter,
Jessica Lynn, borp on Feb. 19. The
10 pound, nine ounce infant was 23
inches long .
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Riffle, Racine, and Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Morris, Middleport.
Great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Don Eynon, Reedsville, and
Evelyn B. Thomas, Middleport.

TWIN CITY SHRINETTES,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the home
of Mrs. Harry Moore, Middleport.

York. New York 10017.

,,...,

.CORRECTION
INTODAY'S
INSERT

Wilson birth

TIIURSDAY

Advertl~ln l.( Representative , Branham
N~wspaper Sales. 733 Third Aven&amp;M!, New

PRICES
Dclily ............. .

Darst

ny Fanner candy Co. in Columbus
where she worked lor a number of
years.

no!!! ancts or ~bu..-.ts-........-~~-~

Member: The A.uociated Preas, Inland Dai·
ly Pl't:SS A~i:~odation and the Amertcan
Nt!w~pa~r Publishers Aslioci~:~tion, Naliooal

NCAA pairings

SHbULD IE: Auorted
Print /SOlid/Checker
WASH CLOTHS 2 for •1
Not Dlah Towels as Stated

parents, Danny Darst, Sherri Darst,
his brother, Corey, his grandparents, Bud and Wanda Vining, his
grandmother, Bonnie Darst, greatgrandmothers, Goldie Graham and
Gertrude SUvers, Homer and Rita
Smith, Delilah Darst and Dawn. Sending gilts were Jim Kauff, Btu,
Lena, Julie, Beverly, Beclti and Bertie Napper, Debbie Searles and sons,
and Anna Jane Kincaid.

Circle birthday

Social Calendar

FIVE STAR - AI 1D outdoor
school assembly attended by blgh .
school students joined by a llllJDo
ber ol parents, memben ol lbe
cbampioDBblp Southeru High
· Scbool Toroadoes ballle&amp;baU
team painted In tbe fourth star
·noting their aeeompllshmenla
this season. Tbe Toroado funnel
shaped sign Is attached to lbe
front of lbe high school and
denotes lbat tbe 191% team .bas
become SVAC champs, won In
the sectional and district tournaments and M_oDclay's star added by team memben noted that
the team • woo Ill regional co..
petition. Tbe fifth 1tar, deooUog a
state ebampioDBhip, Is tbe goal ol
an assembly next week. Seulor
team member, Rlebard Wolfe, is
pictured adding a bit of gold patnl
to the reglcmal star Mouday afternoon. Shown are Southem
Principal Jim Aolams and
Richard Wolfe, a member of the
varsity squad.

The box score:
SEOAL 1661 - John Derrow 7-S19; Eric Brletenbach 2· 2-6 ; Rick
Fritz 3-2-8; Phil King 6·4·16; Marty
Glenn 0·4·4; Jim Angle 2·2·6; Randy

·Bradley, Purdue in championship
NEW YORK lAP) -

--------,

fielders, made 20 of 29 free throws,
and claimed 39 rebounds with Fritz ·
gelling 10.
The OVC made 27 of 61 from the
floor, just five of 21 free throws, and
snared 31 rebounds, led by South
Point's Sean Miller with six.
Following the contest, another
visiting coach congratulated Coach ·
Osborne on his team's fine foul
shooting (20 of 29) prompting the
veteran .mentor to quip, "that's the
only thing we didn't practice on Sunday ."
A total of 42 personal fouls were
whistled, 23 against the OVC and 19
against the SEOAL. Each team was
guilty of 14 turnovers.

OVC

ch 2 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The infant weighed nine pounds, 10
ounces.
Maternal grandparents are
Charles li!ld Betty Pugh, Long Botloin, and the paternal grandparent
is Grace E. Call, Middleport. Viola
Middleport, is the mater-

Dill birth

•

boys rally, whip
OVC All-Stars, 66 to 59

Bobby Dill, Pomeroy, and Nettie
Booker, Michigan.
Mrs. Florence Baer of Minersville
and Mrs. Annie Dill of Middleport,
are great-grandmothers.
Mr. and Mrs. Dill have another
hcild, a son,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Middleport. Ohio

Pomeroy

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TO 10 PJI.
To limit

�•

'
-: "Pag• 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tllftday, March 23, 1982
.

I

.

1982

'

Ohio

•

5.·Meigs County· organizations' meettng notes
SWlShlne fund was taken by Betty
Bishop. It was announced that the
Amesville Chapter will be host for
the Roberta Circle, April 16.

""' - Middleport Lit Club
".•• ; · : "0 Rugged Land of Gold" was the
book reviewed by Mrs. Marvin
Wilson at the March 17 meeting of
" •Middleport Literary Club held at the

Han1sonville in.spection was announced for May 12.
Games were played with prizes
being awarded. Others attending
were Pearle Canaday, Pauline
Atkins, Ruth Erl~, Kim Pauley,
Gina Pauley, Paul Pauley, and Don
Wiison. Mrs. pauley ·asslsted by her
daughters sserved refreshments.

"~r· -bomeofMra.RobertFiaher.
).': :. ' ·The book, written by !11artha-Mar"'' _ . tin, is the true story of a time when
' ' • 'she and her hUBband prospected for
···:.:;: gOld along the rugged coast of
Alaska. It lelia of a woman, left
."•• - alone during the winter and having a
baby alone and how abe reacted to
"the emergency. Mrs. Wilson con·'cluded by reading a poem, "Slow Me
...., ' .Down, Lord."
"'.'.', ,, For roll call each member named
.. ;., .· .a courageous woman. Mrs. Ben
Philaon presided at the meeting with
a thank you note being read from
'"
Juanita Bachtel for a fruit basket
'~~ent
to her during her conr '' t.
-· valeacence.
· Refreshments were served
' ' · · following the meeting.

'
,~;;:--

Chester PTO
The purchase of fans for each
classroom and window shades for
the gymnasium was approved at the
Monday night meeting of the
Chester PTO.
Pat Schaekel presided at the
meeting during which time a
nominating committee was selected
to present a slate of officers at the
ned meeting. A spring operetta was
announced for April2 and a book fair
for the April meeting.
.
The safety patrol conunittee
reported on a dance for fourth, fifth
and Sixth graders and signup day for
tee ball, peewee and litUe league
was announced for Saturdfay at the
flre station.
Plans were made for a family
9katt!!g party to be held Sunday at
the ~a-way rink from 5 to 7:30
p.m. Cost will be $2 per person
without skates and $1.50 per person
with skates.
Jan Eichinger's third grade won
the room count. The fifth grade
room mothers sserved refreshments.
Carl Hysell, Meigs Juvenile of.
ficer, and Cindy Schneider presen- .
ted the program.

Group II

"~" was the theme Of the
devotions . given by Mrs. Harry
Moore at a recent meeting of Group
U of the Middleport First United
, . - Presbyterian Church held at the
" borne o1 Mrs. Francis Anderson.
Mra. Paul Haptonstall presided at
the meettng with both a thank of.
" '" . , ferirlg and a least coin offering being
" ' ,. ·taken. There was an article on
"
Bangladesh by Rina Das given and a
study on a chapter of the study book
.. ,_.. with several members par.. -c
ticlpatiJ)g.
Cleanup day at the church was set
for MOnday. Prayer closed the
· ·: · meeting and Mrs. Anderson and
;:;" '· · Mra. Harley Brown served refresh- • menta.

Middleport
Amateur Gardeners

""" . Past Matrons
'

~ ~

'.~"·

Mrs. Lois Pauley hosted a meeting
of
the past matroru of Harrisonville
"I • ' '
"' . , .Chapter 255, Order of the Eastern
- '"· Star, held Monday night at her
home.
•• , , Avanell George, president, cor&gt;ducted a gBl'le, "Find Your Mate",
'"1'
with Gracie Wilson, Marjorie Rice,
Betty Bishop and · Joan Kaldor
taking part. Winner was Mrs.
.... , ..Kaldor and she was presented a gift.
.... , , The door prize was won by Mrs.
' ;•; ·:·•Rice. Round robin card were signed
· "·' · for those members who are ill, Bernice Winn, Allegra Will; Donna
Nelson, and Ruby Halliday. The

Mrs. William . Slavin was
welcomed as a new member when
the Middleport Amateur Gardeners
met recently at the home of Mrs.
Edgar Reynolds with Mrs. · Erroll
Conroy assisting.
Miss Erma Smith presided at the
meeting. Guests were Mrs. Lewis
Sauer and Mrs. Madhu Malhotra,
Middleport librarian, who showed
films entitled "Blackbird Family"
and "Summer Bike-Hikes."
Devotions were given by Miss
Smith who read from "Somebody
Loves" by Helen Stein~r Rice the

. •'

meditations, "Faith in Flower" and
" My Garden Prayer." For roll call
members nsmed their favorite bird.
A thank you note was read from the
Middleport Library for books
presented to the library in memory
of Pearl Reyhol~. Mra. Slavin won
the hostess prize, and Mrs. Sauer,
the door prize. A glft from the club
was presented to Mrs. Malhotra.
Hostesses for Aprll will be Mrs.
Eddie Burkett and Mrs. Carol SwanSOil with Mrs. Nolan Swackhanuner
to have the program.
Refreshments were served.

and the contest was won by Mrs.
Ruth Francis.
Mrs. Audr8 Well reported on
propagation of the jade plant, and
Mrs. Francis on propagation of
hardwood. Mrs. Belva Willard eondueled roll call on propagation Of
perennials with each member taking
part. Arrangements were displayed
by Mrs. Francis and Leota Smith
using a St. Patrick's Day theme.
A contest on the anatomy of a garden club ·was given by Yvonne
Young.
Mrs. Ada Mora of Chester was
also a guest.

TOPS
Officers were electeb at a recent
meeting of TOPS OH 1466, RuUand.
Elected were Shorty Wright,
leader; Melva Eblin, co-leader;
Judy Eblin, secretary: and Lynda
Adkins, treasurer.
Mrs. Wrigh; was honored as the
best weekly loser·and was presented
a dollar, a ribbon and members sang
in her honor. Runners-up were Mrs.
Adkins and Mrs. Eblin.
Nellie H8ggy was appointed as
weight ~corder with Gloria Oiler as
co-weight recorder. Installation of
the officers wili be held at the next
meeting. WordS and points were
given for the puzzle. The meeting adjourned and . Mrs. Wright led the
group in exercises.
Information on joining the club
may be obtained by calling 742-3062.

Philathea Women

Walk-In Garden Club
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour and Mrs.
Mace! Barton of the Chester Garden
Club wer2 guest arrangers at the
recent meeting of Walk-In Garden
Club held at the ho_me Of Mrs. Helen
Carper, president.
The two displayed nine
arrangements including mass dried
pieces, an oriental design, and
spring flowers in traditional design.
The arrangemeQts were discUBsed
by the two guests along .with possible
alternatives in the design Of each.
They were pre~ented with gifts Of a
potted African violet with green
blooms and a gloximia.
Devotions were by Mildred Ziegler
on moving the seed, different types
of soil and the results, using scripture from Mark 4 and Luke 8.
A report was given on the
February meeting held at the home
of Mrs. Mary Dorst. At that meeting
attende'd by 11 members, program
plans for the year were completed,

New officers were elected at a
recent meeting of the Pliilathea
Women of the Middleport Church of
Christ held at the church.
Elected were Dorothy Roach,
president; Cathy Erwin, vice
Betty McKinley,
president;
secretary; and Farie Cole,
treasuret. they will be Installed. at a
meeting to be held April 8 following
a potluck dinner at the church. Sar&gt;dy Gibbs and Becky Loving will
have charge of the program, and
Nora Rice, Cathy Erwin, Frances
Roush, and Farie Cole will arrange
the tables.
RoUBh Introduced Kathryn Evans
who presented a program on
ceramics. She was given a gift
following her talk.
Refreshrrients were served by Mitzi. Saltsman, Martha Childs, Ella .
Mae Da~ghterty, Mabel Walburn,
and Mary Bailey, to Clyda Allensworth, Clara Conroy, Cathy Erwin,
Martha Haggerty, Grace Hawley,
Mildred Hawley, Lula Mae Quivey,
Betty McKinley, Debbie Melton,
Gertrude Miller, Helen Reynolds,
Rose Reynolds, Nora Rice, Dorothy
Roach, Frances Rouah, Regina
Swift, and Becky Loring. Guests
were Eleanor Lohse · and Mrs.
Evans.

Announcement
Applications for a swinuning ir&gt;structor and life guards will be accepted by the Middleport Recreation
Commission until Aprll 1. Applications can be picked up at the
Middleport village hall.

1 -- ArinOuncements

Senrices

··-

.

Annual membership fees in the
Meigs County Food Co-op are
payable now.
Initiated by the Meigs County
United Methodist Churches, the Coop's objective is to provide
nutritioUB, low-cost food to the
people of Meigs County regardless of
age, race, sex, marital status,
religion or income .
For those under 60 years Qf age,
the annual fee is $6, while for those · '
over 60, the annual fee is $3. The
dues may be paid to 'Mrs. Mildred
lhle at the Senior Citizens Center
any 11lursday, I to 3:30 p.m. or
mailed to her at 48030 Morning Star
Road, Racine, 45771.
.
The Co-op has been authorized to
accept food stamps for Co-op food
orders.
Three food purchase plans are
available through the Co-op. They
are the $3.25 bag which consists
ev,ery delivery dale of one loaf of

Roman meal bread, one loaf of
wheal · bread, eight ounces of
American cheese, and a dozen of extra-large eggs; the $6 bag which is
different each time depending on
what is the best buy on the ma~ket,
and bulk items.
An example of the $6 hag order ...
three pounds bananas, three pounds
Jonathan apples, three pears, two
pi'nk grapefruit, three navel
oranges, one pound carTOts, one
head . lettuce, two pounds red
potatoes, one bunch broccoli, and
one pound tomatoes.
Available in bulk items are frozen
foods, cheese, flowers and grains,
along with many other
miscellaneous items.
For those interested in renewing
their membership or joining the
Food Co-op, the form below should
he filled out and mailed to Mrs. !hie
or given to her Thursday afternoon
at the Senior Ci:i7Alns Center. ·

,._,.
, ...

• Dump Trucks

• Lo-Boy
eTrencher

warer·Sewor·Eiectric
Gas Lln~Ditchet

• Wilter

WAter Line Hook·ups

=~~~t'ines
·t~~~!~~'.:,'!'1Lobs
PH. n 2_2471

P". 36 7-7S60

"

New shipment radres
slacks S7 .99 and blouses
$8.99. Mens Wranglers an

7 11

Baileys Shoes, Middleport.

•

. .. • •

•• • •

, • , , • .. . ,

ROOFING
And Home Maintenance

• Rootl~g of all (ypes
eSidlng
• Remodeling

Block pump house 10x10 at
Rodney . Call256·6260.

I ·Card of Thanks (pai d in itdvanc e)
2 Cc1rd ot Thanks (pa id 1n r.dvttn ce )
j . Announcements
4·Gi veaWliV

.

6·Lost and Found
7 Yard Sale (pa id Jnitdvancp)
8· Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction
9·Wanted to Buy

21 ·Business Opportuni1~
22·Monev to Loan
2J·Professional Sc rv1 ces

Real

Estate

31·Homes tor Sale
32·Mobile Homes for Sale
33·Farms for Sale
Jot· Business Buildings
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 · R~al E state Want ed

51 · Household Goods
52·CB , TV &amp; Rad iO Equ ipment
53 -Antiques -·
54 Misc . Merchandise
55· Building Supplies
56· Pets tor Sale

'"

Beautiful kittens In need of

~

..

good home. Free to pet
Iovino ownen who ap·

'

·iw

SMITH NELSON
NOTORS INC.

FREE

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
2·26-lfc

ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011
8·20·flc

as a young business Penon

and earn good money plus
some great gifts es a Sen·

6
Losund Fo,u,nd= -FOUND large, young
female dog. All black with
small amoun1 of wh ite on

57 · Musci~llnstruments

58 · Fruits &amp;'vegetables

59· For Sale or Trade

I ';''·" •'
I'

·~"' ''

11 -Help wanted

I

12·Sifuation Wanted
13·tnsurance
14· Business Training
lS·Schools Instruction

','• ',~

.... . ' '
~.

,.

. j' &lt;,
./ '.

...: .. '

4l ·Houses tor Rent
d2·Mob ile Homes for Rent
A3 ·Farms for Rent
44·Apartment for Rent
4S·Furnished Rooms
46·Space for rent
d7 ·Wanted to Rent
48·Equipment for Rent
49· For lease

16-Radio. TV&amp; C.B Repair
17·Miscellaneous
18-Wanted To do

"'""-· ' ' ---;:-=
= = =-Public Notice

... ' .

NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS
VENOORS:
Sealed bids will be
• ' '* .. · received by the Board of
Meigs County Com ·
missioners, at the Com missioners Office, located
In the Court House, in the
Village of Pomeroy, Ohio
untl l 12 noon on the JOth day
of March, 1982, and the bids
will be opened at I :30 PM
on the 30th day of Moren
1982, for the furnishing of
~ bituminous materletls for
lhe Meigs County Highway
Department. estimated
quantities Of liquid asphalt
re~ulred,
approximately
500 1100 gallons.
s'PECIFICATIONS FOR
THE BIDS, AS FOLLOWS,;
1 ~ Bid _price t&gt;Or galloh
, .'
f.o.b. venDor 's plant, and
, the price per gallon
··delivered to the vendor's
portable tank to any
location within the county,
designated by the County
Engineer, for the various
grades of bituminous
, ~,
materials which may be
' required by the Meigs
County Hlghwily Depart·
ment, which shall conform
to the pertinent State of
Ohio, Oef!artment oj the
Highway Con,tructlon and
Malerlal Specfflcatlons.
2 - w1111 respect to the
" •· aforementioned estimated
qua~tltles,
the vendors
... ·· · s'hall understand that no
guarani"" Is given to the
actual quantifies of
bituminous materials to be

Bl ·Home Improvements
82 -Piumbiflg &amp; Healing
BJ ·Exca'Vatino
I:W ·Eiecrical &amp; Refrigeration
BS ~ General Hauling
86 ·M .H. Repair

6 \·Farm Equipment
62 ·Wanted to buy
63 livestock
64 Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

telepho~e

following
Gallia County

at the Candlelight rnn. 12·4

Mon . thru

weekly . Write Box 729·D, ,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

------

LOST · Black &amp; while kitten,
black spot on chin, · hall

grown, area of k &amp; K,

••
•

childs pet. 30H75-2048 .

Are.1 COde 614
446-Gallipolls
367-Cheshire
JU-VInton
24s-Rro Grande
256-Guyan Oist.
643-Arabia Dist.
379-Walnut .

87 -Upholstery

992-Middteport
Pomeroy

•as-chester

34J-Portlai'ld

247-Letart Falls
949-Raclne
742-R utland
667-Coolville

89s-Letart
937-Bullalo

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE

insen1on .. .....

Up to 15 Wor&lt;ls ... Onl'day
Up to 15 Words ... Six day

insertion ............ .$7 .00

Co a I Power Inc. does
hereby make public notice
of Its 1ntent to request per·
mission to mine within 100'
'Of Countv Rd . :lO iit thP.ir
propo.sed mine site locatey
m section 2 of Sutto(l Twp .,
Meigs Co., Ohio. All mining
procedures wi II com pi v
with ODNR Division at
Reclamation regulations.

(3) 23 , 30 141 6, 13, 41c
Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

'public Notice for Coal
Power Inc., M iners'Vill e,
Ohio 451~ . An Application
is at the Mei9s County
Recorder's Off1ce. for a
strip mine operation . Sec·

•' .
'.

tion 2; T-2·N; R-13-W, Sut-

ton Township, Meigs County , Ohio. Interested people
can see these forms and
maps at the Meigs County
Recorder's Office anytime .

'

''

.SJ.OU

Reel Eetete ·- Oenerol

insertion ... ..... .. ..... 1.4 .00

HOBSJETTER REALTY
Georges .-Hoti ~ IC'Ilt'r

(Average 4 words per line)

furnished , but each successful vendor shall be
required to furnish all or
any part of the Meigs Coun-

Public Notice

1N THE
couRT OF

Kav Sands and Editn Har·
per, addresses unknown;
you are hereby · notified
that YOU have been named
defendants
actoon
entitled
JonInM.a legal
Grueser, el
al ., plaintiffs, ·vs· E.R.
Hoffman aka Elza R. Hoff·
man, ef. at., defendants .
This action has been
assigned Case Number
18.084 end is pending in the

COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
'
ty Hlghway Department
Grueser, et. al.,
actual requ1rements as or- Jon M.
Plaintiffs,
-vsdered dur ing the bid year.
3 - Prices on this shall E. R. Hoffman aka Elza R.
be firm and in effect from H.ffm.n et .I
•
·•
Aprll1.1982toAprlll. 1983.
Defendants.
~ All bidders must
NOT:i:a~eB~o. 18•084
agree to furnish any
bituminous materials, as
PUBLICATION
requested In Item 1 at the
To E.P. . Hoffman aka
some prices to a l1 town - El za R· HOIf man, Rosa
ships of Meigs County Hoffman, R. D. Harper,
during the bid year.
Neva Dresher aka Mrs.
s- On the envelope con· Walter Dresher, Raymond
talning each bid the name
and address of the vendor

must be plainly marked

s. Hoffman , Marion E . Hof·
fman, Doris Hoffman,
Rachel Smith aka Mrs.

Public Notice

Court of Common Pleas of
Meios Countv. Pomeroy,
Oh io45769.
. The object of the Com·
plaint is a partition action
concerning the oil, gas and
all other minerals un·
derlying the following
described real estate:

contalnlng 10 acres

SECOND
TRACT:
Situated in Fraction 36,
Town 4, Range 12, Ohio

Companv's

Purchase .
Commencing In the center
of the road leading from
Sumner to Keno on the
el!st line of said Fraction

36; thence south on said
fraction line146 rOd.s and 311-J

feet ; thence west 1 rod;
thence north to center of
said road; thence following
center of said road to place
of beginning, containing
-46 "115 square rOds, more or
less.

THIRD TRACT: Situated
in Fraction 6, Town .t,
Range 12, Ohio Company's
Purchase. Beginning 33
rods and 16'1, links south of

Herbert A. Smith, Roy Hoi·
Situated in the Township
"Bituminous Bids."
6 - Proposals are . to be !man, Charle• Clifford Hoi· . of Orange, County of Meigs
H0 11 man, andStateofOhlo:
the northwest corner of
returned on bid forms sup- I man , ed na'
FI 8~ ST TRACT: In Frac· ~id&gt;
plied by the Meigs cou~ty Charles L. Hollman.
Fraction 6; thence
Robert
Hollman,
Zelma
lion
6,
Town
~.
Range
12.
east
47 rOds and 13 links;
Commissioners,
wh1ch
may be obtained through Hoffman, . Jerry Hoffman, Ohio \..Ompany•s Purchase. thence south 105 rods and
the office of the Meigs Kay Sands, Edith Harper Beginning at the southwest 811&gt; links; thence west 47
County Engineer. or Board and the u~known heors. corner or said Fraction 6; rOdS and 1J links; lhence
of Meigs County Com· next of k1n, devisees, thence north liJ rods and · north 105 rOds and 8'h links
missioners. and will be r e 9 ~tees. •••cutors. ad· 10 links; thence east 1691!, to the place of beginning,
opened on the date and m 1n1strators, guardians, rods; thence south 113 rods contalnong 31 acres and 28
successors, assigns and and 10 links; thence west rOds, more or tess.
place SP!!Cifled above.
Said thtee parcels of real
7 - The Meigs County SPOuses, If any, of E.R. 16911&gt; rOds to the place. &lt;If
CommissiOners reserve the Hollman aka Elza R. Hoff · beginning. Said tract of estate are sublect to all
right to accept or reject man, Rosa Hoffman, R.O. land as described contains easements and highways of
any or all bids or any part ~~'f.':r·,:~~:ror~~=~haekr~
r:.~d T~~0lra~o;&lt;J~ r~cord.
thereof.
Deed Reference: Volume
Ray,mond S. Hollman, land to be conveyed by this 236, Page ·57j Volume 277,
Marion E. Hoffman, Doris deed Is 10 acres off the
Mary Hobsteller,
Page 5.5 ana Volume 281.
·Hoffman, Rachel Smith thwest corner of the above Page 689, Meigs County
Clerk
aka Mrs. Herbert A.
Smith, described land: Beginning Deed Records. ·
Meigs County Board
H be t A Sm 'th 0 o Hof
at the northwest corner of
of commissioners
er
r
·
'
'
·~
Y · the above·descro·bed land,· and the prayer Is lhat the
,!man, Charles Clollord
Hollman, Edna Hoffman. !hence south 61 ·7/13 · rOds; above ducr bed estate ..,
(3) 16, 23, 2tc
. Char los L. Hollman, thence easr 26 rOds; thence partitioned; that the In·
Robert Hoffman Zelma north 61-7113 rOds: !hence terests be set ott or ordered
Hoffman, Jerry _H_ojfman, to the place of beglnnl.ng, sold if It cannot be Paf·

:n'1r:c,;;.•

nor-

t

·-•

Public Notice

ter the last publicat1on of
this notice Which will be
published once each' week
for she; ( 6) successive
weeks . The last publication
will be maoe on March 30,

any part of the actual
1982, and the twenty-eight
requirements, as ordered
(281 days for ·answer will
during the bid year_
commence on that date .
·
3 - Prices on the bid
In case of your failure 10
shall be firm and in effect
an!twer
or
otherwise "I Clll'l .help IIDoclt owr the from Aprll1, 1982toAprill,
respond as reQuired by the
1983.
'
Oh1o
Rules · of
Civil
4 - All bidders mull

.r

Procedure, judgment by
default will be rendered
again$t you for the relief
demanded in 1he Com·

plaint.
DATE : 2/ 18/82
Larrv E. Spencer

Meigs County
Common
Pleas Court

C2t 23 CJJ 2. 9, 1i..'n JO. 6tc
Public Notice
NDTICETO
AGGREGATE
VENDORS:
Seated bids will be
received by the Board Of
Melts counry com missioners at the County
Commissioners Office,
located In the Court House.
In the VIllage of Pomeroy,
Ohto unll 13 noon On tlie
30th
dayblds.wlll
of Ma~':i
and the
at 1:45 PM !'.!'. lf!e . .. !lay

ments. One 2 bedroom

furnished,
one J
bedroom unfurnished.
Has separate utilities.
Call for more details.

2 - With respect to the

twenly ·eighl &lt;211 days af·

'*'* ... ..,.,..,_,w -.

jury duty."

... • '

agree

to

aggregate

furnish anj
materials as

requested In Item 1, at the
of Meogs County durihg the
bid year.
~ - On the envel~ containing the bid, the name
and address of the vend&lt;?f ·
must be shown and plainlY,
mark~ "Aggregate Bids. •
6- Proposals are ro ~
returned on bid forms su~
ptio!cl by tn.. vendor, a~·
will be opened on the dat
and place opeclflecl f!IOve.
7 - The Meigs ICCiuntY
Commissioners r""""" the
right to accept or relect
any or all bids and/or any
part lhereot.
same price to all townships

Mary Hobsterter,
Clerk
Meigs County , .
' •
Bderd Of
Commissioner~ _
CJJ 16, 23, 2tc

On

riverfront
in Mid ·
dleport.
Investment
property witfl two apart·

pea or shot grave/, Which is
an ungraded material .
aforesaid, estimated Quan·
titles, the vendors shall understand that no guarantee
is piven to the actual quantitieS of aggregates to be
furnished, but each vendor
Shl!ll be required to furnish

1 ~0J

NEW LISTING -

Public Notice

titioned ; for an allowance
of attorney fees herein and
costs .
You are required to an·
swer the Complaint within

Jr.

Rro~ ~ r

Of r i C( 142

~ ~ _ _!'~b}r~Noti{e :=:-::::::

Point

Asking $35,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT

.,

Lovely

.. .
I .•'

...
....'L,. .
~

"

,,

'"
r.t•

'

....

.
'&lt;
'

riverfront

VIRGIL B. SR . ',!"!,~~~
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
l-1614)-992-3325

E. Mai·n•
POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING
NEAR CHESTER

NEW LISTING - Level
lot in Middleport, 50&gt;c94.
Good for trailer or

82 .5 Acre farm with JO
acres tillable, 27 .5

nouse. want only ss,ooo.
NEW LISTING - Small

pasture. mostly fenced .

Several sheds and bar ·
ns . Nicely remodeled
three bedroom home .
Even an old mill.

country home with bath,
natural gas heat, new
addiiton
with
full
basement be ing built
and 1''-4 acres . Leading
Creek water.

$89,500.00.
NEW LISTING

Remodeled
three
bedroom home on a
tevel lot. Cute as a but·
ton and a bargain at

REAL NICE -

)

15-20

acres

$62,000.00.
NEAR MINE f 1- Two
was

~as

1.8

mineral rlgh,ts. 3 tractor

equipment shed .and
large 2 story barn. Sells
for $68,000.00.
OWNER FINANCED In Pomeroy . Large
brick home with
spacious
rooms.
3

bedrooms, 1'1-J baths,
formal dining room. kit·
chen and f-lu'llly room

combo. EXCELLENT
terms. Only S5,DOO.OO
down and 1'"' interest
on balance! Cell tor ·
more details. Selllnq
price Is $22,500.110.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc,
Ph-742-3171 .
velma Ntclnsky, Assoc.
. Phone742·~

Here is one you can
afford . Small down
payment and move in .
Has several bedrooms,

new bath.

basement.
roOf
and
a

$24.900.00.
FOUR BEDROOMS
Langsville

with

FINANCING

-

acres which part are
fenced , -a cellar with
building over and a
gar.age .
Reduced

new
workshop on a large lot .

Only $32 ,500.
300 ACRES Cattle
farm and hay land. 10

a

large kitchen, family

$19,500.00.
ASSUMABLE LOAN -

negotiate· on this onel
Asking $26,500.00.
FARM-4tlacreswith5
yr. old, 4 bedroom
horne. 2 baths, extra
nice kitchen. All

$32,000.
OWNER

home which
recently

remodeled .

-----.n.-ur.nc;-,---·

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Res ld en Iia I
. &amp; Commercial
Ca11742·3195
3

room farm home with 2
baths. Large family
room, modern kitchen,
lots of good carpeting,
free oas furnace heat,
basement, and large
wrap · o~~round porch. Will

Home is on a nice street
in Middleport. Has sht'
rooms and is a l'h storv
frame with a nice pot"ch,

sell tor tess than lhe appraisal. Try me.

MIDDLEPORT - 20 yr .
olq ~ bedroom home .

storage building over
garage. Has tots of
closet space. $29,900.00 .
NEW LISTING REEDSVILLE
12'x60' Mobile home
with 12'X31' r11atchi~g
addition. MMIIy fur ·
nished - good con·
dillon. 170'x1110' tot .
$19,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI
m -6191
Jean Trussell 949-266G
Dottle Turner m-MH
Office
m-HJt

Laroe

family

Rl'ck &amp; Bill Cogar
OWners
BRAKES·TUNE·UPS
OVERHAULS·
DIESEL·EXHAUST
OpenMon.·Sat. •-s
3-S-1 mo.

~=======·7:-t:fc~~=========~

Fishing License on sale.
ment of 1982 Fising ROds,
Reels, &amp; Lures. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring

Come and see our new ship·

valley Plaza, 4~·8025.

Turkey Hunters we have

H. L WRITESEL

room

Eastern. Has old 7 room
house, extra nice 2
bedroom Schultz trailer ,
12x52, garden
and
several buldings. Just

some acreage cleared
on the river for camp
sites. Gas and oil rights .
bedroom

7

and lever rot 66x150. L.C.
water. Only $28,000.
II ACRES - Rl. 7 near

tillable.

work,

will

com ·

13 -

ROOFING

remodeled
carpeted
home. Modern bath.
nice kitchen with range,
dining. lllrge carport

$17,800.00.
NEW LISTING - ON
THE RIVER - 75 Acres

room , living room,
garage, and over an
acre of level yard and
garden .
Reduced.

Owner

share

949·2129 or 742·2573.

porches. .4 bedrooms,
dining room, one bath .

laundry . Needs a little

to

Tree
trimming
and
remove! . Free estlml!ltes.

tn

property with two large

-N

P1 .

tortable 2 bdr. hou..,, gOOd
tocatron . Call 245·5639 after
7PM.
'

with a one story home .

'

_ P~~Ii~~O!i~e - _ -··

l,nclined,

C-19.

====-===-:::-';:!;;:-.;:.
Situations Want'!!__

Female

13) 23, 30 (41 6, 13, &lt;tc
Up to 15 Words ... Three day

mechani c ally

12

wv

882-New Haven

"- -----~-M o

ELDERLY man needed,
Pleasant Register,
Pleasant, WV .

..•' .

Area Code 304
dis-Pt. Pleasant
451-Leon
576-Appte Grove
773-Mason

F.ult or part time RN for 7
to 3 shift. Full or pert lime
RN or LPN tor 11 to 7.shlft .
Call Nancy VanMeten
Pomeroy Health Car( Cen·
ter . 992·6606 .

Wrlte· .Box

••
•••

Mason Co.,

Set ~

Adult to clean downtown
Pomeroy office . Minimum
wage, maximum five hours

•
'•.•

Meigs County
Area Code '14

---------

maids,
experiencenecessary . Apply In person

..

exchanges.

tlnel route carrier. phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992-2157.

chest. Garfield Ave. area .
Security guards and Bar·
Call446·4249.

Classified pages cover the

73 Vans&amp; 4 WD

Help Want_o'-"-d -

Need a paid vacatron from

GET VALUABLE training

••
•....

74 ·Motorcycles
75 ·8oats &amp; Motors
76·Auto Parts &amp; Accessories
77·Auto Repair
,
78·Camping Equipment
f&gt;'

11

preclate melr beauty. Lit· housework? Earn good SU
ter trained . 992·2531 . Sup· · and
meet nice people. Call
ply llmiied .
446·3358.
BOTTLED gas floor fur· Babysitter needed In my ·
nace, blowers &amp; pipes. Por· homeS
days per week . Call
ch glider. 30H75·54Sl.
•~· 2959 after s.
PUPPIES &amp; ')'Other dog, we are now hiring, evenlnO
small breed, JOo-675 ·4234.
.cooks, front deSk$ clerks,
night auditors . Apply In
person. Holiday Inn. EOE .

Signed ...... . . .. ..... ..... . ..... . ... . ... ... ................. .

71 -AUIOS for Sale

IBM cards. Watch this
paper for location.

·~· 0706.

Phone No . ... ........ .. .. .. .... ... . ...... ...... .. . ..... .. . ...... .

72 · Trucks for Sale

afumlnum cans, aluminum
siding, sheets &amp; c.ast alum.,
coPper
wire ,
brass ,
radiators, auto batter res &amp;

Wanted timber . We cut,
paying OOOd prices. carr

~·

To • • • •

Bill Gene Johnson,
446·00.19.
Antique furniture, old cup-

Giveaway
writing , &amp; old egg basket..
ANY PERSON who has Call 367·01311.
anything to give away and ROSENBERG RECYC I I·
does not offer or attempt to NG Opening APRIL 2 in
offer any other thing for Gallipolis. Specializing in
sale may place l!ln ad In this
column. There w ill be no
charge to the advertiser.

• Free estimates
• 20 vrs. experience

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

"o.," r

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.

boards. $tone jars With blue

..'

Silver,

4

Address .. . . . .. . ..... •. ... .. . . .. ••........ .. •. .. ... ... . ... . .. . . ..

PHONE 992~2156

Gold,

sale . Spring Vattev
Trading , Spring \Iaiiey
Plaza , •~· 8025 or 446-8026.

c!:::!cc~~~~~~
c~~~~r~~8~.

OHIO VALLEY

.'

5-Happy Ads

' ... ..~
" "' ' ....

q...

Buy ing

P.tatinum , old coins, scrap
rlnos &amp; silverware. Dailv
quotes available . A lso
coins &amp; coin supplies for

Name .. . .............. . ..... .. . .. . : ... ....... .. ...... . Age----

I

-' '

'' I '

eDo•ers
• Backhoes

Meigs County Food
Co-op fees are due

The Daily Sentinel

• •

. ..

Buick· Pontiac, . Gallipolis,
OhiO. Call 446·2282.

?

• . , 11 ,

f l f t.

model used cars. Smith

$10.00.
and
Purses
blue
leans
$12.99 Mens
pr. Ladles
western boOts.
~~;;~~~~===j=;:::::~~l-~17~-~1;m~o~.~=~~~;~~l~-l~l-~l~m~o.-pd~.~Pr=-~~~~~1~-~-~~fc~ children

Gleuoa Trio, a full.llme
gruup, wlllappear at the Mlddleporl Cbarch of the Nuareae at 7 p.m.
'lbanday. Tbe P'OOP bai apteared In almolt all of the A states 8lld
aeveral oveneaa couatrles. Gleason, DI8D8ger. 8lld emcee, playa· the
plano 8lld 1illp barftoae. He bu composed buDdreda of b)'IDIII 8lld
g01pel1&lt;111p 8lld from 1913 to 1JM WBB plulst for the RCA rectli'IIIDp
of the Jllackwood Brothen Quartet Ron Dougialll, tbe tenor sloger, Is
also a composer. Pamela Ream 1s lead vocalist 8lld plays baas galtar.
Tbe public ls lavlted to attead tbe Thursday nlgbt program by Pastor
JtmBreome.

I'

J

.and Antiques of all

call Kenneth sworn.
&gt;446·3159 and 256·1967 In the
~ l nds,

..

..

,':

nltur~

-

PH. tft.ua or tft·2316

'

'" ' ' T

WANT TO BUY Old fur·

CASH PAID for clean, late

CAN HELP YOU
BUILD YOUR DREAMS!
•
New Coilstruct1011
and Remodel .Ing.
FROM CONCRETE TO ROOFING
AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN.

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeory, Ohiii4S769
,,

----

w~

,..

I 1 \&lt;~

----~

FOWLER CONSTRUCTION

•,, •.

. '

--~

even ings.

. ,.,,.

'\•

-

•Mobile Homo Situ
•1 /oter &amp; Gas Lines
•Spring Oevelopments

All types of root work,
new or repair gutter and
downspoutS, · gutter

cleaning and painting.
All work guaranteed.
Free Estimates

"Sm&lt;11l Jobs A

Reasonable Prices

Specialty"

Call Howard
949·2263

mouth

callS,

'slate

easter candy Prices, $1.60
lb. SUO lb . for full case.
Dl's Craft Supply, Spring
valley Plaza . Call446·2134.
Gun Repair
We stock

a.

Hot .Bluing.

modern rifles,

lot

above

WE NEO OUR HOME
TO SELL. IF NO SALE,
NO CHARGE. TRY US
POR BEST RESULTS.
tn-R76NOW.
.
Realtors; Gordon,
Helell, Virgil:&amp; Sue MurJIIIy.
I

riOll.\lllff

fit .nlctuatll'r.\

-

-

Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conslgments of new . and
used merchandise always

Estates,

SAVE MONEY
MAKE YOUR OWN
EASTER CANDY
"Lurn Haw Free•·

Ont Simple Closs

•Summer Coatings
•A complete line of
Molds &amp; Candy

Supplies

•W111on Cake

Decorating Supplies

Something Special
101 Woshlneton st.
Ravenswood, w. Va.
PH.304-27H141
3·!9·1 mo.

SOUTHEAST
CONSTRUCTION
•Roofing &amp; Gutter

•VInyl Siding

•Carports 1 Patio
Co"ers
•Concrete work

from ••24"

Utility Buildinp
Sizes from 4 ro • 11111 •II

wood bullcllnes 24x36.

lniUIIItd Dot HOUIIS

PIS BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Bo• S4
Roclne, Oh.
Ph. 61H4J-25tl
6·15-lfc

Insurance Work
Wind, Water, or Flrt

Karate

Studio , • 143

Jac~ton ;

Burlington Rd.,

.
---·Casto's "S1udlo

Oh. Call286 - 307~ .
Ml K k 1

211 ", 6th St., Pt. Pleasant,
WV 304-675·6664. 675·tl39 .

Classes for children, teens
&amp; adults. Ballet, Tap, Jazz,
Modern
dance,

Cheerleadlng,

Baton ,

Karate, Dancerclse, Dan ·
cet~erobi c s &amp; Ballroom .

9__ _!f.f!!ed IO_!I,!!L __

paper tor location.

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, Old
furniture, gald, sliver Housec leaning.
dollars, wOod Ice boxes. om.

Special rates on Wedding
cakes, cahracter cakes,

Complete
h_ouseholds. Limestone lor drlvewavs,
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt . ~ • will spread. Call379 · 26~2 .
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992·7760.
.. . - ... ·--- ,... -.--- -

brlthday and annlversity

- --- - --

can en oung
For Fait Service
915-3561
PARTI AND st•vtCl

._,....,.,
.o,.,,.

.ILL MAte IS

eDit,...lt
eDIII9wa•Mn
eMet YUitr Ut'IU

equipment. Jerry
&amp; Asso ciates

aluminum cans, aluminum
siding, sheets &amp; cast alum .,
copper wire.
brass,
radiators, auto batteries &amp;
1BM cards. Watch this

cakes. For esrimates call
CALL: 992·6323
67S·5527,
2·19·1 mo. P,!l,_

......

f.arm,

tive

Lowerv

-

+

- - - - - - - - -

11 - -~ ~~n~d iO Q~ ~ ~
Call

367·

stone jars, antiques, etc.,

•Room Additions

BUILDINGS
Slzesat~rt

.antiques,

ROSENBERG RECYCLI · household. Licensed Ohio·
NG Opening APRIL 2 In · wv . Buying antiques. 304·
GalliPOliS , Specializing in 773-5785. 773 · 911~.

all

welcomed .

--- --- L.E. Near Auctioneer Ser· 1l - Tciiooili'iiitruciien - ·
vice
Estate · Farm · Karate the ultimate In self ·
Household-Misc. We sell Ill defence
all private le~ons,
Licensed &amp; bonded Ohio &amp; Men, women,
&amp; children.
wva. 367-7101.
Instruction thtu black' bell.
Also available Klirate
Auction every Fri. night at uniforms puchlng ~ and
the Hartford Community kicking bags. and protec·

------

large patio, garage and

large

&amp;Auction

---~

shotguns. &amp; hand guns. All welcome .
Richard
JIM LUCAS
muzzle loading gun• &amp; ac- Reynolds Auctioneer. 27S·
949-2160
cessories. Best prices In 3069.
f&gt;H.
2·2Hfc
the area . Riverside Gun
1
=======~~:::4-:
":-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:--:--:--:--:--:--:--:--:-:'~I 614-886·5194.
Shop. Rl. 7, Athalia, Oh .. Rick Pearson, Ex ·
~
perlenced AUCTIONEER .

room,

flOOds. Natural gas furnace, 2 full baths and
beautiful view. Asking
SH ,000 .
Offer

boJC

calls. camo gear &amp; decoys
In stock . Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

sANov AND BE-AVEP In·
YARD sale, Inside, starting surance Co. has offereo
March 22, at 212 Walnut services for fire lnsur.ance
Street, Henderson, across coverage rn Gallla county
from Church of Christ . New for almMI a ceri~ury .
&amp; used merchandise. also Farm, home and perton.o111
drapes, bedspreads &amp; property coverages • are·
l!Vllllable to meet; In·
blankets.
dlviduat needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, •tJ•nt. Phone
379·3318.
8 - - - 'Pu-bTicsare - .- -

'J

"e

F lnanelal

Gold, si Iver. sterll ng,
jewelry, rings. old coins~
currency. Ed Burkett Bar'
ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476. .

21

OLD FURNITURE, beds,

Business. Call 30073-5651.
__ ---------

iron, brass, or

wOod':

KIf-

Racine FIre Dept. sponsors chen cubbards of all types.
a Gun s~oot, Sat. nights Tables, round or square.
6:30p.m., Bnhan. Factory Wood Ice boxet. Old desks
and boOkcases. Will buy
choke 12 gauge sholgun.
complete houaehold. Gold,
old money, pocket
e ·a ster candy-learn to sliver,
chains, rings, and
watcn..s,
make your own hollow or
Indian Artifacts of all
solid chocolate Bunnys. etc.
types . Also buying baaeDall
Filled easter eggs and cards.
Olby Martin 992·
much more. Frn candy 6370.
making demonstrations.
carouser
Good used babybed. Call
I
304-675·43'18 after 4PM.

~v.

·- ·-----..

Business

---~~unll
Cigarette
Vending ·

f2- -· ~-. ~ MGne
-

io Lcwin·- -

--REF 1NANCE or purchase
your home . 30 year fixed
rate . wva . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St.,
Athens. Oh. 592-3051 .

----=-=:::::===:=
-·
Professronll--

23

Services

Plano
Tuning
&amp;
Repelr.Call Bill Ward for
appointment. W3rd's
Keyboard, ~~ · 4372.
--~---~

�Sentinel
13

s1 ·- - HousefiOidGiiOds-

44

They'll Do It Every Time

service s ___ -~

C &amp; L Bookkeeping . In·
com e fa )( returns f or in:

A P ARTME NT S :

divi dual s &amp; busi nesses.

bed r oom , • r en t starts

c a ro l Nea l «6·3862

at

S152 per m o. &amp; 2 bedroom
star ts at $188 per. mo.
Special r at es for SenJ or

STARKS Tree &amp; Lawn Ser ·
vice, all types trimm ing &amp;

C itize ns . Ca ll446·2745.

2010.

------2 bdr. apt . HUD excepted,

Fl RS T.

ki tchen turn, util i t ies par tia ll y p d . • excel l e nt

rem ov ll l, Insured, 301111·576·

and

sec ond

morgages, land contracts,
lind receivables purc hased .

Real Estate

1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call «6·701 5 afte r
5:30p.m .

32

----------1975 Memory, 12x60, underpi nning and 2 porches.

742·2156.
HOME .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Call

304·576·2711 .
6 rm . house attached
garage, good condit ion . 3.45

East Broadway, ( Rt . 351,
Jackson . Pric e only
S12,000. 286·6305 .
House tor sale i n Gallipoli s
near Holz er , city schools, 3
bdr ., all
bl"ick ,
lOo/o
assumable inter es t on

SSJ.OOO. Catl 446· 7080 or 675·
2990 .
2 bedroom cottage on Blue
Lake south of Gallipol is
just off of Rac coon Creek ,

S175 per mo .• $175 deposit.
Call 286·4346.
NICE well kept home with
full basement on 1.2 acres
in rural setting. S min.
from Gallipolis. Includes 2·
story garage . S39,000. Call
«6 ~ 8285 .

NEW INCOME LIMITS . If
you earn between $9000 to
S15,000 a year, you may be

able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)

5 rOoms and bath down. 6
rooms and bath up . Can be
used liS 2 llpts. or house.

Large

lot ,

out ot

high

For sale 2 &amp; 3 bedroom
trai lers, furnished , with

a ir . Call304·773·5651.
1981 AL L ELECTRIC 12'
WIDE .
2 BEDROOM
inobile hom e setting on tot,
ready to move into. $8995.

10% down , BANK FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE , 304·
576·2711.
14'

WIDE ,

bedroom

3

mobile home, S8995. All
State Modular Hom es, 304-

576 ·2711 .
1973

bedroom mobHe
home on 2 acres, Jerry's
Run

2

2

Rd .,

storage

buildings, 30076·2664 .

1979 LIB E RTY mobile
home, 14x60, 304-675· 7337 .
1972

12X65

SHULTZ,

3

bedroom , gas he.at, par-

tially furnished . Call
675·2907.

304~

Detroit, 14x70. Someone to
take over payments and

$2,000 . down . Pay
s 10,000. 304·458·1825.

off

1973 GRANDVILLE , 14x70,

3592 after 7p. m.

882 ·2820 . .

PRICE reduced, sale by
owner . 2 Story house, 13
rooms . Ideal for large
family or rental property .
Needs s'ome repairs. In the

20's as is. Phone 304·675·
7353 after 5 p. m .
ONE owner house, 1211
Main St . 6 rooms , 2 story
br ick, custom built. 304-675·

1970 King, 12ll:60, ex c. cond .

Call 304·895·3584.

HOUSE . Meadowbrook Ad ·

675-7198.
Lillie.

ne w .

3 bedroom

house . 300 ft . from krodel
Par.k. 90% furnish ed ,

$27.000. Call675·6230.
32

====----= ::-::--

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Ga llipolis. Price
reduced,

used

mob i le

nomes . CALL 446·7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST . GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 . PHONE 446·3868 .
12x60 2 bedroom

Buddy

mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots. gas heat, rural
water. close to town, finan-

cing avollable . Phone 446·
1294.
microwave,

stero,

wood

Utilities pd._, one child ac -

Cher ry, $795.

cepta ble . Ca ll446·4416 a fter
7PM.

c omplete with mattresses,

Bunk bed

Nice 1bedroom apt . in Mid·
d leport, c lose to school.
Util ities furni shed. $235.

Apartm en ts. 675-55 48.

APARTMEN TS,
h o m es,
Pleasant

FA~M

FOR SALE

A nice 4 bedroom home
with 8 acres of pasture garden space, barn , nice out
buildi ngs. Located one mile
from State Rt . 7. Call 256·

6663 .

124. 742 ·286o after 4 p.m .

----- -----·- -

JS
_ L~t~&amp; ~c_!ea~ _
For sale eight acre building
site, rural water 5 mile
from town. Phone 446· 1158.

Lot 100x177 Midway Dr .
(State Rd .), New Haven,
WVa . Phone 304-882-1344 or

304-882 .2525 .
One hundred acres with
frontage on SR35 west of
Ja c kson .
Beautifully
wooded and adjacent to
lully
d e v e loped
recreational fac ilities (i .e.
swimmin g , c ano e ing ,
hlk i ng ,
mu ch
more) .
Several eM:clting financing
plans available to meet individual needs. A rare op·
portun i ty . Call us today at

992·6696

or

Call «6·3547 .
1970 mobile hom e Elcona
with e)(pando. Large lot i n

Will
sale on land contra c t. Call
4-40·8012 between 6 &amp; 7.

Corner lot . 7th and John St .
Syracuse, Ohio . Call 304 675·6269 after 4 p.m .

------- ---- ---------------

35 _ ___l:!!s &amp; Acreag_l!_ _

n

1981

14x70 Shannon . All

electric, 3 bedrooms. Call

A·l. SlOOO. 992· 3798 after 5.
.. _____ -· __ _ ____

teed 'Automotive . Behind
ArcadF on Court St. in old G
&amp; J alley, Gall ipolis .
·

F rigada i r e dryer avocado,
S90 . Kenmore washer 2
spd., avocado, $90 . Both

guaranteed . Call256·1207.

mobile

hou ses.
P t.
and Ga llipol i s.

-

54

5 room house with bath .
Lar ge lot near Ra cine . 992 ·
5858 .
4 bedroom . central a ir and
heat, city water, fireplace,
unfurnished except kit -

chen .

S300

month

plus

utilities. Reference and
r equired .
In
d eposit
Ra cine. 9-49·2293.

apar t m ent s,

Nice 2 bedroom home in
Pomeroy for rent . Stove,
refrigator furnished . S185
plus utilities and security
deposit.
Adults ,
no
children, no pets . AV'allable
about April 2. Phone 992·

5292 alter 5 p.m.

fur ·

ni shed, 304· 675·4378.
NEWLY
decorated , 2
bedroom apartment. close
t o Hospital, deposi t a nd
r eference r equi re d, 304-675·

1962.
For rent Small furn ished
a pt ., unfurnished apt.
Refer ences. Ca ll675-1365 .
45

---- --··-- -- - -- ·-- ·-- ------~·

Furnished Rooms

6 room house in
dleport,
t otal
conditioning . Deposit
references requ i red .
2676.

Midair and
992-

S LEEPING ROOMS and
I ight hou se keeping ap t .,
P ark central Hotel.
..... -·--- ------~
---- --..,...
46 _ - ~~~ !_f~,B~n_! __

- -- ---·--·--

Park, Rout e 33, North of
Pomero y. La r ge lots. Ca ll

992-7479 .
47

Would like to rent or buy
garage and lot in Middleport, Pomeroy or M ason

~ .. ---Y~~ ':._e~ - - -

sl - - HoU-SjihotdG oods___
of

Apri l,

adults only, no pe ls. 304·
675-4469.
F or Rent Unfurnished J or
4 bedroom , 2618 Madison

Ave. Pl . Pleasant, WVa .
Large garden &amp; yard . Pay
own utilities, S225 per mo.,
SlOO deposit, 1 year lease,
ref erenc es. 302-863-5995 . No
collect call s.
42 - • - Mobile HOMeS
for Rent "
-- --

-

--~----

All electr ic mobi le home, 2
bdr ., adults only, no pets.

Call367·7438.

P last ic Sepr ic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1,000

ga l. l a nk, pri ce $340. Other
si zes in stock, haul in your

&amp; speake rs .

record p layer. AM·FM B·
trac k. Ca ll 367·7793.

1775.

For slae Homelite chain·
sa w ,
b u sin ess
cash
r egister. antique rocker.
good used piano. Call 245-

9172 .
Ref r ige rator like new,
stero&amp;AM -FM radio, air
conditioners 10,000 BTU
casement. sliding window

-------

addition to a FREE rotary

992·2205 .

Swisher I mpleri'lent, Inc ..

or

recl i ners $80, bunk beds
SlOO, bunkie matt r esses
$40, maple rockers $49,
maple dinett sets from $125
to S175. bedroom suites
Sl50, J pc . living r oom
· su ites $199, 2 · pc. living
room suites $140, love sea ts
$70, owl lamps $25, ring er
wa sher s
$7 5.
drye r s,
s everal
r ef r ig erator s,
util i ty
ca bi ne t s ,
mechanic' s tool s, beds,
silver stone, TV ,s, wood ·
burners, stero's and l ots
more. Open lOam to 5pm ,

John

1·12'

Deere wheel

16 ft. stock trailer $2,200,

614·256 ·6534 .

100 e gg Incubator SJ5. Call
614-742·2738 or 742·2178 .

10 FT . PICO wheel disc.

healer ,

clock , 4 radial tires, 2
radios, water filter housing
and ele ment, and water
tank , phone 304 -675·5375.
55 .. _ Bu_~l~f!9_~1!Pf!l~e~-- __
Build ing mater ials block,
brick , sewer pipes, windows. lintels , etc . Claude
Winters , Rio Grande, 0 .

Call 245 ·5121.
LUMBER

with 18 in. discs, notched in
front, smooth in rear. S600.

FIRM .

388 ·9996

Call

evenings and weekends.
8N Ford tractor with loader
$1 ,500. Power spra-;oer trac·
tor drive. suitable for

DRA GONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Coffee table &amp; e nd tables. Chow
puppies , CFA

titi..Cc-REST- -KEJN"E"L~ .

Boarding all breeds. clean

or-

d ition.

985 ~ 3537

or 985 4131

after 6.

7220.

3324.

STUCCO P LASTERING ·

75 Monfe Carlo. Call 304·
458·1775.

textured ceilings commercial and r esidential.
free esti mates. Call 256- ,

5 room house. 2 bdr., $200.

72 __ .!~£k~1D_!_ ~.!!_
__

1977 Ford pickup. good
cond . 6 cyl. Call446·4554.

Sale Massey Ferguson
To35. Front end Loader,

JOHN Deere, 13 hoe grain
drill, model FB -B and a
Kools 54" forage blower,
304-675·4308 .

'3

--

LivestOCk ____
~-- - - - -- · -

- --

acceptable.

bed, S500 or best offer. Call

256· 1528.
1977 Ford 6 cy 1.. 3 spd.
trans ., with topper, new
tires, V G cond .• $2 , 195. Call
446 -4554 , no answer 4464141 .
1980 DATSUN pickup, 304·
671·4568 .

Jeep CJ5. 6 cyl .. 3 spd ..
lock · in hubs, high back.
bucket seats. AM· FM 8·
track, roll bar, 12x15 tires
with white !POke rims, runs
good &amp; easy on gas. LooKs
sh~rp, priced to sell. Call
367·7671 or 367 ·7560.

1978 Jeep CJ ·S, hardtop.
PS, AT, 25,000 easy mi., 4
0449 after 5PM.

·

Blue &amp; Silver 1975 DOdge

1978 Blazer tow mileage , in
lock-out lock hubs, ex .

Redecorated , range &amp;
refrigerator turn . 446-4416

Apartment for rent. Call

alter 7PM.

4-40·0390.
2nd.

floor eltiency

Adults onl-;o, no pets. Brad·
bury Apartments, 446·0957.

Road Farm at the Meigs
county
Fairgrounds ,
Pomero-;o Ohio, March 26,

the SEOPHA sale .

---- - - - - -----

3 room unfurnished apart·
ment, adults only, no _pets;

A· l shape, phone 304·675·
3625.

1978 CJS Jeep Renegade, V·
8, with extras, 37,000 miles.

- ------- - - - --

-----------

All used bikes reduced at
Betz Honda, check with us
before you pay to muc:h .

Call4o40·22&lt;0.

64 --~=- E~-i-G!:•IIl::. ==

Hay for sale. Call 379·2424.

need to sale $1 ,800. Call «6·
8655 after 5:30PM .

..........
. . . .......
.. ...
.... , ....
~.

1978 KawasaKi 650. New
chains and tires, gOOCI con -

dition. 1978 RM 400. good
condilion. 992· 7382.

,

79 HONDA Custom 500 CX ,
Autos for Safe

excellent condition, full
faring , new tires, $2,100.

PB, air. low miles . 1979

VW, 4·spd. air cond. Call
«6· 2599.

125 KTM Motorcross, like
new, never raced, rOde

very little, 304-882 ·2695 .

--

.

only . Gene's Deep Steam ·

~~~~n~~~fna~~~~~- 63~~urd. ,
Wanted to do: remodling ,
inter ior aod exterior pain·
ting , p l umbing , and
roofing . Free estimates. ·

GASOIJNE ALLEY

985·4121 .

Throuqh You have to
the come out some·
blinkin' time, Rover' r-,-,...,..,·
--~h-r-rr-,
door,
ma'am!

Trouble

RON ' S Televi!.ion Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar. and
house calls . Phone 576·2398

with

Bowser?

or 446·2454 .

75,000 miles. $800. Call 388·
8769.
Ford

Thunderbird.

white with blue Interior,

PB,

PS, AM· FM 8

stereo.

Excellent

condition . SJ500. 992·7735.

stump removal . 675·1331.

2088 or 675·4560.
Water we lls . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

LOCKSMITH
Se rvi ce.
Residential, automotive .• '
Emergenc-;o servi ce. Call

882 ·2079 .

----· ·---

.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

111

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

chains and fires, goqd con·

dillon. 1978 RM 400, good
condition. 992·1312.'

19 HONDA Custom 500 CX,
condition,

full

2

unfurnished

new parts, perfect con-

l:IS Kl'M Motortross, liKe
raced,

OF THEM ...

I

PEREZ •. •

lA) (60 min .)

()) D &lt;D

-

TABLECLOTH
AN' ALL!!

VO'RE GITTIN'
A GOURMET

SEWING Machine r epai r s,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

SUPPER

TONIGHT,
TATER·- ·

Pomeroy. 992 ·2274 .
N Air condition service,
commer cial , i ndustr i al .
-

•• -

rode

very little. 304·812· 2695.

•

85 _ .

.... _ _

I

..._

~·

! lone'
())Benny· Hill Show

D ())

,i_ .

fj~~r!fH~ul~~g~ ~-;

l

I!::-:.:· _

UphoiSieoi = ~- =
TRt STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP .• ,
1163 Sec. Ave .. Galtipotisli.'
_:

~~

MOWREYS Upholste ry Rt. I
I Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304· 1

~~~~-·- --- --- =-- ·:

i

60T A'D MINUS'
IN HISTORY...

AI~ Alice sees a

storv on ·sixtv Minute• ·
about a dioappearad mobs-

PEANUTS

JONES BOYS WATER .
SERV ICE . Call 367·7471 or
367-0591 .

~_:7~3~~ ~-40· 1833~

Hart to Han

good name . (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned)
®Newa
10:30 ()) Sing out America
(llJ Top of the Wond
11:00. (}) ()) . . ()) ( j ) . ~
Nowa
(I) N•hvilla RFD
(I) All In the Family
(I) Nawo/Sports/Woather
()) Firing Une
®Hitchcock
11 :30 8 (}) fi) Tonight Show
Johnnv is joined by Ricky
Schroder.
(I) Another Ufo
(]) MOVIE: 'American
Pop'
(I) MOVIE: 'Boota Ma·

BARNEY

84
Electrical ...
_ _ _ ~ ~e!r!9er~ti~n _ ·-

•

.

9:30 (])
MOVIE:
'Chapter
Two'
·
()) II &lt;D Too Cloae for
Comfort
9 :45 • C1J TBS Evening Nawa
1 0:00 D
(I)
(I)
S.rbara
Mandrell and the Mandrell Slatara Barbara and

The Hans are entwined in
a ules fraud and murder
which could damage their

Gallipol is Diversified Const. Co . Custom dozer &amp;
bac khoe w ork . Special
farm rates . Call us for f ree
estimates. 446·44-40.

-

Skating from
Peking Two of Amertca 's '
most popular skaters jo in
an international troupe of
figure skating stars at Peki!!g ·s Capital Arena.
(I) Ill (D Happy Daya AI
proposes
to
Chachi" s
mother. !Closed Captioned]
0
())
(j)
Q .E.D.
IPREMIERE) An American
science professor · who ·s
far ahead of his time goes
to Engfond in t9t2 and be ·
comes involved in various
escapedes . 160 min.)
()) Ufe On Eanh ·Hunters
and Hunted.' Host David
Attenborough explores the
world of carnivorous mem·
mala with a look at predators and their prey . (60
min.) (Closed Captioned]
8 :30 ()) Ill &lt;D Joanla Lovaa
Chachl T~is new series
stars Erin Moren and Scott
Baio In the title roles.
[Closed Captioned]
9:00 8 (}) (1) Flamingo Road
Field finds out that he and
Sande are being · black mailed by Michoel Tyrone
and Skipper elopes with
Alicia. 160 min.)
(1)700 Club
())
II
&lt;D Threa' a
Company Jack gives a
cooking demonstrat ion on
a TV talk show . !Closed
Captioned]
1J ()) (lD MOVIE : 'Oflvar
Twfat'
()) American Playhouse
·pilgrim Farewell .' Michael
Roemer's script involves
the changes in the life of
an independent women
who alienates her family
ond friends by her foilure
to offer or accept support,
when she discovers she
hlla cancer. (60 min.)
(Closed Captioned]
® Ufo On Eanh 'Hunters
and Hunted .' Host David
AMenborough explores the
world of carnivorous mammals with a look at predators and their prev . (60
min )(Closed Capt ioned]

her sisters are joined by
Brenda Lee, Paul W illiams
and Meadowlark lemon.

E !_c~.!_i'!_L

l

,.

/?lt!Wr,l

HE 5/A/P ONCE. THEY GET A
FOOT IN THE I700R rT'S ALMOST
/MP055/11tE TO RID yOf.JRSELF

--------··- ·- -- -·--- -- -___ _
_ _ _ ·t

- --

teed work, 304-11'15·3826.

need tosafe$1,800. Call «6·
8655 after 5:30PM .

I'Jh'er

THENHKOI?
I'YtVEZ WAS

.. ,

gOOd condition, w/extras,

new,

... I CAU6HT
7AFFR SNOOPING
IN YOUR
OFFICE!

.

Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 4-40·3888 or 446·4471
8~

TO

.JAIJAR, t&lt;EMEIIfl
STUDENTS Ml7 SE~10R

-------- -- ,
- --------- - - -· ,

82

HATE

APP TO YOUR PI?08LEMS .. . ~UT, WHILE
YOU WERE OUT M~I'TIIIi•G I

certified, au types Of 1
wiring, loW rates, guararl·· •

apartment in Crown City .

dillon. 1969,11495. 742·3063.

WINNIE, I

-------'--.1...'•.I

1980 Honda 750 custom.

Nova,

new paint, ffllfe putty,161 of

WINNIE

304-895· 3802.

EL.E CTR !ClAN . li ce nsed &amp; :

excellent

Nobod4 will
..;.....,,j,_see! You
can
chanqe
in the
bai;h·
room!

K Tree T r immi ng,

before you pay to .(11 UCh.
Call446·22..0. ·
:1

Land Contract in town, or

'

~·

Phone 882· 2079 .

country.
Call
Really, 446·0008.

Call256·6520.

-·

'·

Betz Honda, check with us

cutlass wheels, great tlr:.@s,

bedroom

:----

Spec i al March and April

WELL, THEY'RE ALL

GONE! SOMEBODY
LET 'EM lOOSE,
GUZ. IS BLAMIN'
00P FOR IT!

JACKS REFRIGERATID·

Motorcyctes

350, 4, barrell, 4 · faring, new tires, S3, 100.
speed,
oversize
cam, 304--158·1763.

Strout

Bell Contracting General
plumbil"!g service, home
r emode ling &amp; repairs. Free
estimates. Call446·4002 .

- -

1977 Trans Am , auto. PS.

AC,

AWFUL 1 RE·
MEMBER ALL
THOSE LI'L
DINOSAURS
WE CAUGHT:'

HEY, BOMBA! DtDJUH
GET 10TH ' BIG ZOO
OPENING"

'

304·458·1763.

1977

ALLEYOOP

- ~

utilities paid . Call «6·3437 .
Homes for Rent, Lease or

French City
Pa in t i ng
residential &amp; comm ercial ,
interior. exterior., paper 1
hanging ,
&amp;
teM:tured '
ceilings . Call 367·7784 or ·

1978 CHEVROLET, 'I&lt; ton,
4·wheel -drlve, 23,000 miles,

1980 Honda 750 custom ,
gOOd condition, w/extras,

track

S rm. house In Gallipolis.
Call «6·3945 after SPM.

Call «6·2107.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE e x·

7_! ___ ~~~gcl!_s_ _

1974 Mavrick 302, 3 spd.,

apt.

Haffelt Brosthers Custom ·
Carpets. Free estimates.

perienced mason, roofer ,
elec tri c ian ,
carpenter ,
general r e pairs and
remodeling. J)hone 304-675·

1978 KawasaKi 650. New
porch ,

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by

cond . Call256· 1397.

4H and F FA heifers . Call
614-247·2704 or see Country

71

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex·
perience, spec ializing in \

367 ·7160 .

Geographic

~lot
(J) lea

PAINTING · interior and
exterior.
plumbing ,
roofing, some r:emocteling.

F &amp;

$4800.00, 30-4-882·3128.

ter 4.

for Rent

min.l
(I) National

69 Ford pickup truck, flat ·

Polled Hertords for sale.
Yearling bulls, bred cows,

conditioning, p.s . ond p.b.
Will sell cheap. 446·4260 af·
Apartment

Maverick is accused of
murdering 'the sheriff. (60

buill up roof. Call 388 ·9857 . ·

74

44

ANNIE

1182.

1977 XR 75 Honda. very
good condition , $175 : call
304 ·675·2884.

condition. Call 446 ·1552.

Brown's Trailer Park . 992·

304·675·6628.

rovements __

2712 .

Large round bales . Phone

675·2372 .

8

1976 Dodge Sportsman
van, bucket seats In front,
2 big seats in back . Calll79-

614·985 · 3887 or contact
Albert Parkeralter6 p.m .

GE r efrigerator $100 ,
couch &amp; c hair $100. Both in POODL E GROOMI·NG .
good cond ition. Call 30.C· Call Judy Taylor at 367·

d

-Home
---- '

Pontiac , 400 cu. in . engine
&amp; automatic tran smision.

John Deere 4010 A-1 con-

For sale 19 cu .ff . gold K en - BRIARPATCH KENNELS

tnrlJ Se pt . 1983, less than 2 Call 388 ·9790.
years old, SJOO. Call 675·
3769.
Good c lean horse s for sale.
Call 388·8623.

cyt, standard. LWB . 1968

van, good cond. Call 3792701 evenings,

Solid ceda r chest &amp; w ar - indoor-outdoor facilities .
drobe, exc. cond. Call 67 5· Al so AKC Reg . Dober·
man s . Call446·7795.
7176after 5PM.
more r efrigerator , frost Boarding and grooming.
Gordon setters ,
free, automatic ice maker. AK C
extended warranty , goOd English Cock er Spaniels.

In·

chard or bush spray, SSOO.
Callafler 5, 614-286·2394.

and

446 3159 .

74

extra tires, S4,300 . Call 367 -

Back end winch . Call 992·
7678 .
1" x6"

VALIANT .

-- -

net for parts. Must sell ,
need space . 949·2488 .

Coleman

1969

ternational travel, 4-wheel drive. 1979 Dodge" truck , 6

7_! _ _ Vans &amp; 4 W. D..:. _ _
disc, 1-set of John Deere 4
bottom 16' semi mount
plows, l ·Hillsboro tri·a)(le
goose·neck 28' trailer. Call ,

BED .

special.
CIJ NBA
Basketball:
Waahlngton at Atlanta
. ()) II ()) Fomlly Feud
(I) L.ovomo and Shlrlov
()) Buolnau Report
(j) Richard Simmons
(ll) MOVIE: 'Bird of
Poradfoa'
II &lt;D Face tho Muolc
8:00 II (}) fi) Brat Maverick

8617 .

tiller. · Outdoor

Gallipolis. Call 446·0475 .

wash e r. S90. C,all446·818 1.

Conl e y, 304-675·21 33.

Gra11ely Tractors, pur·
chase a new Gravely in
March and get a special
early Spring discount, in

E xce lsior Oi l Co.• 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.

Pa rk. 992·3324.

home. adults only, no pets,
reference r equ ired, Camp

~I~ ~.,_'I'!!P.'!'~I:=

61_

New &amp; us·e d Troy built
litters . Bulk garden seed.

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp; FOLEY saw filling equip·
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St., m en t for sat e. Phone 304·
Gallipol is. New sofa beds 576·2293 .
$250. used sofa beds SlOO.

savings , vacations for life
improvements
are a few subjects in this

and home

20 yrs. exp. Call 388·9652 .

$20. Call 446-7762.

body in good shape . 72 Hor·

; Camping
; Equipment

miles. Want someone to
assume payments. 614 ·«6·

SJ .200. Call675·2835 .

A ntiqu e cha ir for living
room , needs reupholstered ,

For sal e : Gas di"yer, like
new. 173 Chevy Caprice

~

78

1975 MUSTANG II , 39,000

1964 Volkswagen con v ertibl e,
completely
restored . With Baja kit.,

Equipment Sales. Jet. Rt. 7
&amp; 35, Gallipolis . Ph . «6·
3670. Open weekdays 9 to 5,
Saturdays 9 lo 1.

2 bdr . trailer fur r. ished.
adults only, Brown Trailer

rH R E E bedroom mobile

Call 304·458·

plow

Must see to . appreci a te, Himalayan, Pers ian and
reasonal be. Ca ll 446·3937 .
Si am ese kittens . Call 44638.44 after 4 p.m .
Real ni ce Speed Queen auto

TWO
b e dr o om , un ·
furnished. One bedroom effi ciency . 304·675 -2722 .

-- - ---- - ----- -

Ca ll 446 ·0990 .

446·7398 .

Sr. 7.

Musical
Instruments

Electric guitar, case, amp,

pliances , Upper Riv er Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel. 56 ·- _ _ t_~S__!_o_r_
S~e~~=-

2 bedroom, child eKcepted ,
no pets or drunks, utilities
paid, John Sheets 3 and 1!2
miles south
Middleport,

FINCHES S10.99 each,
parakeets S15.99 each,
cockalails $50. Fish Tank
Pet Shop, 2413 Jackson
Ave. 304·675·2063.

Gr and Pri x stero system,

2 bedroom on Kerr -Bethe l

required ..Call446· 4229.

$25. 992·9981.

57

1"x8"x6' thru 16' Poplar
sheathing, air dried. Mill
GOOD
U SE D
AP · Wood Inc. Yard near inPLIANCE S
wash e rs. tersect ion us 33 and wv 2.
dry ers.
r efrig erator s, 304-273 ·2522 . M·F 8·4:30,
rang es .
Sk agg s
Ap · Saturday 8-l.

2 bdr., part furn ., mobile
home , on Rt. 35 . Re f. &amp; d ep .

ACK

pi ckup trucK. Call 61086·
5930 , Ja ckson , Oh . RON
EV AN S ENTERPRISES

For sale or r ent . 3 tr ailers1 wt family rm . &amp; firep lace .
House on REt. 7 above
Eureka on River. Call 388·
8683 tor i nformation .

Rd . No pets. Call446·3371.

1964 FORD. 2 door. 4 speed,
SJOO .• phone304 615·4399.

sale

ar ea . Call773·5905.

requ ired . call 304·675·2497

A\lailab le first

For

German Shepard puppies.

-

··- - -----------

Ave .

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .

--------Misc. Merchandice

Wanted to Rent

- --·----- - - -

Professional office &amp; co m·
merc ia! spa ce avail able at
ALMOST new, 3 bedroom . 362 Jackson Pike. Ca ll 446house. Fully carpeted, air 0_149 or 446· 1819.
cond itioned , fam il y room
with fireplace, one and one·
half baths. References
MeFenandlse

LINCOLN

fully

- - · ---- --- --~---

COUNTRY MOBI LE Hom e

2 bedroom house for r ent.
completely furnished , with
air cond ., all utilities paid.
S350. month plus deposit in
Ra cine. 949·2801 .

aquarium

Alakan
Malamute puppies also 5
year old female &amp; 9 year
old maf@. Call446·?319.

playe r, SJOO .OO. Call 379·
231 4.

Houses for Rent

base ment, $150 mo. Call
675·5104 .

2 bedroom 10 x 50 trailer.

()) Mu~t Show
News
())Dr. Who
® Ullao, Yovo and You
II&lt;DABC Naws
7:00 IJ (l) p .M . Magtzlno
(I) John Ankorberg
()) Carol Burnett and
Frienda
())Entertainment Tonight
(I) Happy Days
II ()) ne Toe Dough
()) ® MacNeif· Lehror
Report .
®News
II tD Family Feud
· 7:30 II (l) You Aakad For It
(I) Another Ufo
(]) MONEY Mattera Tax

II ()) {lll CBS

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

13 Chevy Statlonwagon, air

12 X 60 ' trailer .

Furnished , air conditioned,

CIJ Gomer Pyle

Call «6 ·6310.

All used bfkes reduced at

5 room 'house,

underpinn ing, set up on lot
In Middleport.

Auto Repair

Rd . Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .

. Rt . 'i. Call304-675·2373 after
5.

afler 4: JOPM WeeKdavs
and all day Sat. 8. Sun .• 446·
-4065.
exc ellent

Over Ea.-r •
8:30 I) (l) fi) NBC News
(I) $50,000 Pyramid

thru Fr i. , 9am to5pm , sat.
446~0322

Fish

I

I ENMOY
I I I (]
rHYNOAl

ter and recoginizes a custer
mar from the diner. (R)

A''D MINVS " IN EN6LISH,
A ''D MINVS"IN MATH ..

AND A

''·o MINVS '' IN

SOCIAL STVDIES ...

THE5E AREN'T 6AADE5..
ARE COLLECT19L.E5!

ITU . . . .

IDILBOEb
I I r
Arlswerhere: HE

a..,. •

Street'
ill P8S L8te Night

e

Ill Fanteay ll..nd A
couple retuma to their hjgh
IChool da'fl and 1 IIOidiir
ttittl to find the fOIImain of
Youth. (R) (80 mfn .l

•

COU"-DN'T

CAiC.H

UP Wf'TH THE
P'ICKP'oC.KET.

.I

Now arrange the circled letters to
fonn the SU(Prise answer. as sug·
gested by the above canaan .

r I 1 I I] ( XXX1
{Answers tomorrOw)

Yesterday·s / Jumbles : TULIP

CHALK OXYGEN

QUIVER

Answer: How to dress on a very cq ld day- QUICKLY

BRIDGE
Where's. the queen?
,..---- - ---,

By Oswald Jacoby

and Alan Son lag
NORTH

1·23-81

+ K J 10

Here Is an attempt to
show a situation iri which
South will have an absolu(e
guess as to the location of
the queen of spades when
playing a normal grand
s lam contract.
The contract is norma l
enough. North knows that
South needs all. four aces for
his bid and that there will be
13 top tricks if South holds
four cards in either red s uit.
It turns out that South has to
· pick up lhe queen of spades
and has two ways to finesse
for it.
Furthermore, once South
falls to claim after dumm y
a ppears the pla yer who
does n't hold the queen of
spades knows th a t tt is,in his
partner's hand . Therefore, in
a normal good game; South
will run clubs and eac h
defender will throw a red
card . South wil~ash his red
winners and when he ge ts
down to playing spades he
will know that they will split
3-3 and it will be an absolute
guess.
Neverlheless, South may
have some clue. In a similar
situation some years back ,
Oswald Jaeobr came down
to the nltty· gfltty with what
he considered a sure thing
that turned out to be jus t
that.
East was one of those
unlucky experts who neve r

.K QJ
tKQJ
. +KQJ IO
WEST

EAST

.Q 7 2

•s 4

• 98 6
;~ 2

.. 9 73
t 10 9 B3
• 853

• 6 2
+9 4 2

SOUTH
.A 5 13
.. A 10 8
t A7 5
.A 7 6
Vulne rabl e: Both
Dea ler: South
Wel!ll

North

Ea11t

Pass

7 NT

Pass

Soutb
I NT
Pn!l.s

Pass
Ope nin g lead: tl 0

managed to win. He had a
tre mendous proble m on the
fourth club lead, but finally
chuc ked a diamond. He had
an equa l problep1 on the
third di a mond lead before
let ting a heart go. Finally,
wh e n the jac k of spade&gt;~ was
led from dummy he showed
some slight ne rv ous ness.
J a coby pla y ed his ace,
fin essed aga inst Wes t a nd
made the slam .

~~-wd'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Just'IIB.good

201d
marketplace

3 Polite IItle

5 Help out
II Shirley

f Before
Temple's ex
~Declare
IZ Blackeye
&amp;Hut
13 Took a cab
7 Modern
14 DeCoy;
Caesar
enUce
8 Useless
15 Macaw
9 More
18 Foundation
dependable
17 Barrel
ION.J.
18 Spillane's
city
sleuth
lllncUnatlon
ZO Do one 19 Billiard
(cheat)
shot
21 Leal~utter
ZO Senile
2% Butter's rival
Individual
23 Insolence
23 Burned
Islang)
28 Unrelenting
27 Cornish
and others
28 Andress film
zt Toward
sheller
31 Merited

Yeoterday's AJIIwer

24 Assist

32 Roman
In a way
official
%5 Still on
33 Giver
the table
35 Wast~
.
Late potentate
allowance •
28 Wlthdra w
38 Daughter ·
from
of Cadmus
31 The " final"
38 - out
rope
(renege)

za

34Wet
35 Exclamation
31 French king
37 Hit the hay
39lnvent
48 Balanced
41 European
city

tzSignlfy
43 Gaze
DOWN
1 Mlle11 from
Ef181and

7~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE 18

Here's how
·.tXYDLBAAXIl
LONGFEI,LOW

to work It :

One letter simply stands 'for another. In thla sam p le A Is
used for the three L's, X for the tw o O's , e tc. Single letten .
apootrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hlnto. Each day the code letters arc dlll'ere nl .

'

.

c&amp;YPTOQtiOTES

&lt;lD

MOVIE: ' Hello- Good·
bye'
D (lJ Nlghtllna
12:00 (I)
Allan
()) Nlghtlfn&lt;i
D ()) MOVIE: 'McCloud:
Shlvllrae On Delancey

WHY iHE COP'S

J I I (X)

®

Auto Trim Center, 446· 1968.

For sale 5 acres on Hickory
Chapel Rd, less miles off

child

()) ABC News ·

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles .

equiped with evervthing
even fi sh, $20.00. ·Cafl 2561322 after 5PM.

Ofly

Cll. 3-2-1, Contact

1 yr. old Cocker Spaniel,
spaded &amp; also toy poodles .

TWO

see Charles Tony Jordan,
Crab Creek Rd.

One

Noww
(]) MOVIE: ' Oily
Oxenf-'
'
()) Andy Griffith

CAPTAlN EASY

guar'anteed work, also ,
small engine &amp; lawnmower
rep.a ir. 4-46-9159, Guaran ·

Vinton, Oh . Call245-5818.

614·286·2177 .

Evenings call614 -286-4058.

41

8:00 I) lil Cil G Cll &lt;lJ II &lt;D

1970 DODGE ChallengeT
parts. phone 304·458· 1882 .

Mercerville. Call 446·0827
after 5.

- - - -·House trailer on lot.

EVENING

Call «6· 10) 1.

floor in kitchen, full bay
window, furniture, SU,995.

3/23/82

Auto Parts
&amp; AccessOries

- - - - - --- -- - - 1960 Chevy. 3 speed. 6 c ylin der. 50,000 original miles.

For Sale Beautiful floor
mode l cons ol e stero, AMFM 8-1rac k &amp; record

'

F arm 76 acres . Good
house, barn, work shop,
smal l chi cken house. 1 mile
west of Langsv i lle on Sr .

dinett set,. Living room
suite. Used - ranges and
"T:"V 's . 3 miles out B1,1lavill e

614-446·8221 or 614-245·9484.

2710

SMALL

TUESDAY

992·3301islter 5PM.

Wood table with 4 ch"irs,

House contain ing two apar tments. Cheap price . Will
sell land contract . Ma i n St.,

6 rm . house with bath, fob .
barn &amp; 1200 lb. tob. base. on
40 ac·res on Sl. Rt. 218, Only
7 1/ 2 miles from town,
$47,000. Call 245-9222 alter
6.

18 ACRES, price $8,000 .•
·1979 Winsor 14x70, 3 bdr .•

3 bdr . house delu xe, 2
fir epl ace , central a i r ,
g a rage, carpet. Ref. 8. dep.
Call 675·5104 or 675·5386.

after 5:00p.m.

1542.
THREE b edroom home. 5
acres, 9 miles fro m town .
Phone after 6 :00 p.m . 304 -

Mounta i neer pickup truc k
camper, self contained.
fully eqv lped, $800. Call

Wi ndshield broken? Call
Southern Glass . Insurance
claims welc ome , fre e
mObile service available.

month. 992·3190.

33 - - .-Fa rmsfOrsaie - -

2381.
dltion, 3 bedroom , fam i ly
room with frieplace, cen·
tral air, basem ent, 304-675-

SJOO . Call 446-7265 or 446·
0644.

1981 INDEPENDANCE by

water. Pri ced cheap. 992·

Middleport, Sr.7 .

Motor Home
&amp; Campers

mapl e or p i ne fin i sh .
Bedroom suites - Bassett

~·

3 bedroom mobile home.
Must be moved. phone 304·

J bedroom ~ 2 acres, har·
dwood floors, large garage,
2 bedroom rental . Make me
!!In offer In Mason . John
Sheets, 3and 1h m i les South

Large house for rent In
downtown
Gall i poi is .
Ava i labl e immediately ,

------;--------~- - - -

for as little as S135 a month.
No down payment . Call 992·
7034 .

79

Furnish ed apt . 2 bdr .. $230.

985·3350 or 985 ·3351.

terest credit Subsidy may
1254 after 5 :00

Sofa s and c ha ir s priced

fr om S2B5. to $795. T abies,
SJB a nd up to $109. Hide-a ·
beds,$340.• queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
La mps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc . di nettes from $79., to
SJBS . 7 pc ., S189. and up.

Television
•
•
VIewmg·

76

Unfurni shed 5 room Apt.

garage, assumable loan 8

reduce payments. Call 256·

1977 XR 75 Honda . v e ry
good condit ion, S175. ca ll
304-675·2884.

$219 up to $495 . Desk $110.
Hutches . SJOO. ahd $375.,

Mobile Homes

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

- --- ------ - - -- -

super
firm,
matresses
, $25 $95,
&amp; $35,baby~==========::;:==========~
bed
CUSTOM AUTO BODY .
framesS20, S25, &amp; SJO. U!ied
- ·--------- -~ _ - - - - - - - -- WORK &amp; PAINTING Free ,
Furniture· bookcase, S pc . 56
Pet5 for Sale
71
Autos for Sale
estimates . low r ates . '

for Sale

1/ 4%
Farmers
Home
Financing available, In·

The

74 - - · iiiotorc vc les- ·· -

LAv N E's FURNI TURE
Sola, c ha ir , rocker, ol·
loman, 3 tables. S500. SOfa,
ch air a nd loveseat, S275.

$250. a nd up lo SJSO. Cap·
la in' s be ds. S275. complete.
Furnished upstai rs aprt., 4 Ba by bed s. S99 . Mattresses
rms. &amp; b ath . Clean , no pet s, or box springs, full or twin,
adults, dep . &amp; r ef . req . Ca ll S58., firm. $68 . and S78.
Queen s e ts . S195. 5 dr.
«6·151 9.
c hests, S49. 4 dr . chests,
S42. Be d frames. S20.and
3 bedroom unfurn ished S25., 10 gun.· Gun cabinets.
apartment. 992·5434 or 992· S350:, . dinette c hairs S20 .
5914 or 304·882·2566.
and $25. Gas or electric
rang es. S295. Orthopedic

Homes for Sale

For sale by owner. In Rod·
ney II , new carpet, large
kilchen &amp; LR, 3 bdr .• 1 c ar

by Larry Wright

KiT 'N' CARLYLE ' "

1982

location . Call 675·5104 or
675·7284.

614·«6·4113.

31

Morch

Ohio

. ------ -Professional

J ZF J
NBI.H

J ZB .

TFA

FIUAB
TBFABNJ

EUFDCPA

I P WB N

GZU

'

IPW BN

TUVJFJ

HUV
HUV

R AUC A .

TPII · BV
IF YOU WISH TO PRESE R VE
YOUR SECitET-, WRAP IT UP IN F RANKNESS.-AlEXANDER SMITH

Yetl&amp;erda)"t Cryptequote:

�-

·Page- 1a-:.The l)aily Sentinel

l

Two file for court positions

Area deaths

·Pearl M. Otto

Dora Heaton

, Pearl M. Otto, 85, 411 Second St.,

Mrs. Clarence (Dora) Heaton, 96,
Pomeroy, died TUesday morning at
Veterans Memortal Hospital.
She was a daughter of the late
George and OUve Ridenour Woode.
She was also preceded In death by
her first husband, Charles Rice;
her second husband, Clarence Hea·
ton; a sister, a brother, three chlldren, Franklin Rice, Maxine Rice
and Audrey Betzlng and a grandson, Don Betzlng.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Edward (Ruby) Baer, Pomeroy; a
stepson, C. Wtlllam Heaton, Los An- .
geles, Calif. a son-In-law, Roy Betz·
lng, Pomeroy; two grandchlldren,
seven great-grandchlldren and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Thursday at the E~g Funeral
Home with burial to be In the Ches·
ter Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home after 10 a .m .
Wednesday.

Marietta, died Sunday at .the
·Ciuistian Anchorage Nursing Home
in Marietta .
. • She was born Dec. 20, 1896 at Elm
· Grove, W. Va ., a daughter of the late
William H. and Elenora Scott For·
pyce. She was a member of the
Woodsfield Church of the Nazarene
a~d was preceded in death by her
husband, John N. Otto, in 1960.
· Surviving are a son, Keith Otto,
Ocean, N. J .; three daughters, Mrs.
l';dward (Virginia) Dowling, New
Orleans; Mrs. Elmer (Helen)
Wheeler, Marietta, and Mrs. Ronald
(Dorothy) Kennedy, Middleport.
Eight grandchildren and six great@randchildren also survive.
· Services will be held at 2:30 p.m .
Wednesday at the Woodsfield Chur·
Ch of the Nazarene with the Rev.
William Graham officiating. Burial
will be in the Oak Lawn Cemetery.
:Friends may call at the McClure. Schaefer Funeral Home in Marietta
noon Wednesday when the body
· will be taken to the church.

Two candidates '! or judicial post·
lions In OhJo have recently an·
nounced their candidacies In the
June primary.
Columbus attorney Robert D.
Holmes Is seeking a seat on the
Ohio Supreme Court, whlle Judge
Lawrence Grey of the .Fourth District Court of Appeals Is running for
reelection. Both are Democrats. ·

LAWRENCE GREY

Mrs. Clyda Allensworth, Middleport, has received word of the death
of Mrs. James Shields, the former
Duana Joan Han\llton, 00. at a Naples, Fla., hospital recently followIng a short illness.
Mrs. Shields who lived at Marco
Island, Fla., resided In Middleport
with her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Longstreth, and an
aunt, the late Nelle Ohlinger, a
number oY years ago. She was a
1940 graduate of Middleport High
School.

Oencil Ray Hudson
-Memorial services for Dencil Ray
. Hudson, 50, Mason, also fonnerly of
,'Syracuse, were held today at the
:Foglesong Funeral Home .
In the obituary for Mr. Hudson, it
was reported that he is survived by
three brothers. He is survived by
'two daughters, Nancy and Becky.
·Erroneously listed as a daughter
;was his wife, Jean, who~urvives.

.......
..

paper oolumn, " A Judge's Opln·
ton," feels he's done a good Job on
the oourt and has helped people un·
derstand the worklrigs of the legal
system.
The fourth district Grey represents Includes GaWa, Meigs, Jack·
son and Lawrence countles.

1123-1812

ELBERFELD$

Share Easter Joy

·'

Easter is coming-.Sunday, April 11. Remember
your family and friends with a spedal wish during
the Easter seaspn. Choose a thoughtful Hallmadl
card from .our wide selection of Easter greetings.

••sn THE LION'S SHARE

OF ·THE SAYINGS AT OUR"

Will meet tonight
The General James Hartinger
Four Star Celebration Committee
will meet at 8 p.m. this evening In
Middleport to outline addltlonal
plans for that celebration. All inter·
ested partl~ are Invited.

ROBERT D. HOLMES

:Mayor outlines

lice Department, and later as a
staff attorney with the Cleveland
Legal Aid Society.
Returning to Athens, he served
as City law dlrec;tor and publlf defender In the county before takiJig
his seat on the appeals bench.
Grey, who writes a weekly news-

Holmes , 58, a pracUclng attorney
for 32 ·years,' holds degrees In accounUng from Ohio State. University, In economics from George
Washington University and In law
from the Harvard Law School.
"The decisions of the Ohio Supreme Court shape the law of Ohio
In different tax matters, compU"
cated public utility regulation and
many other areas of vital Interest to
all Ohioans," he said.
· Outing the past three decades,
Holmes has practiced before local,
state and federal courts, Including
the U.S. Supreme Court.
Grey, 42, an Athens resident, Is
·an Ohio University graduate and
received a doctor of law degree
from Cleveland State University.
Under the honor law graduate program, he w?rked with the u.s. Jus-

Mrs. James Shields

;until

1Continued from page I)
: CouncUmen and Mayor Hoffman
· pointed out thl!l new lights can be
placed In any1ocatlon which proves
a problem after old Ughts are re.moved. Passage of the motion to
Install the new street light system Is
,subJect to change depending on
what the need Indicates later.
Fire Chief Jeff Darst discussed
!Ire department Insurance needs
wtth council.
At present day prices, equipment and the headquarters are under . Insured, Darst
pointed out, and It was agreed to
refer the matter to the Insurance
committee composed of Jack Satterfield, Bill Walters, and Bob
Gilmore to work out recommendations on increasing the
covera~e . _
Mayor Hoffman reported that a
HUD audit had been completed and
no findings were returned.
Councllman Gllmore suggested
thllt a plan be worked out with the
Middleport Chamber of.Commerce
on securing new street ·signs for the
town and he will bring the matter
.before the chamber. It was also reported that the recreation commission has been paying a S54 monthly light bill at the community park

ALL I IT.ES
.1101111
WAVEILY .
ltAITIH
WELLSTII
WEST 111•

Tuetday, March 23, 1982

'I

~

ELBERFELDS IN POM

fr
'

although lights have not been used
since last fall. · Mayor Hoffman
reported that the monthly minimum
fee has now been reduced to $5.09 a
month.

'

Open Daily 10-9;
Sunday 1-6

Wed.• Thru

.1

s·at.

'

FRIDAY AID SATURDAY

MARCH 24, 25, 26 &amp; 27
(23)

.save

. (2~)

Savt

1.37 ~~~

1.87 ~~~
20-lb. • Weed 'n Feed
Heavyweight 10-6-4 weed
control and lawn ·food.
• Net WI .

Scott'• Turf Builder
For thick,
healthy
grass; covers 10,000 sq.
ft. lawn. ·

40-lb. • Manure
Composted · manure is
odorless. weed-free .

' 40·Lb.' Organic Peat
For Iown. garden. shrubs

"Net wt.

6.97 ~-~~
.

(24)

20·1b. • Super' K-Gro •
Fmmulo 27·3·3 fertilizer
covers 5,000 sq. ft. Save.

•

(25)

97~

Our
1.37

22.88 ~~~7

Potting loll

WMelbarrow

For healthy indoor plants. 8-qt. bag.

Rugged garden ·
type . 3-cu. ft .

(26)

(27)

1.47 ?~~
Top Dr..1lng Soli
Cultivated dressing
rich in humus.

is

GET
8.97 ~0~~7

Get your atart In the
exciting world ot pereon at computer•
whh our affordable
Model
Add a cu·aatta r.ecordar and
our $24 .95 aaltpacad lnatructlon
couraa (26·2015),
and you'll be writing
your own progrema
In BASIC In no
tim a. It 'a tun and
educ8tlonall

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A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

(28)

Colorado Blue Spruce
1 gallon contain~r . Ready
to be planted.

• lncludee Reference
And Entertaining
lnatructlon Manuela
• Expand aa Your
Skllla lfiCrHH

(29)

1.97 ~~~

loay Mix Concrata
All
Just add

(30)

Trua Tamper Shovel
Round . pointed shovel,

2.77·

Our 8
ox
3.27 . ol5

(31)

Jobe'a " Food Splkea'"
Choose tree: fru\t or shrub

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

I

Our 74c -81 c., 6" Pot or Saucer ........
Our 1.941"CiayPot ••••••••••••••••
Our1 .341"Saucer ••••••••••••.••••
Our 2 ! ~710" Clay Pat • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Our 1.83 1011 Saucer ••••••• • , ••• , • • •

(32) .. • ....... 2/'1
(34)
(35)
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(37)

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for
SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
RADIO SHACK STQRE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAl STORES AND DEALERS

.

WEDIESDAY, THURSDAYP.

NOTICE TO SYRACUSE
RESIDENTS &amp;
PROPERTY• OWNERS

Syracuse Village Council urges persons
·having knowledge of uncompleted or unsatisfactory repairs, that resulted from in·
· stallation of sewage lines in the town, to file
· their comments in writing by AprilS, 1982, with
Clerk Janice Lawson, Syracuse Municipal
Building, Third-St., Syracuse, Ohio.

4 BIG DAYS
.

AIRS COMPLAINT
Council heard · a complaint that
bags of garbage are being dumped
on Broadway St. and action wUI be ,
. taken In that direction. Councu at
the suggestion or King agreed to
take whatever steps necessary to
get help with the erosion of the riverbank. King said' the town Is
washing Into the river. Mayor Hof·
!man said that he has made nurner·
ous contacts over the years In an
attempt to get help, but has had no
success. He said that he would be
glad to make more contacts If he
knew who could or possibly would
help with the problem. It was
agreed to send a letter to Presldeni
Reagan on the matter and to discuss the rnlltter at every upcoming .
councU session untU something Is
accomplished or untU It Is decided
that nothing can be done,
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Jon Buck,
CouncUmen Dewey Horton, Carl
Horky, Walters, Sattertleld, Gilmore and King.

. ~.

.

$1

Our
41c-44c

(38)

"" Cloy Pot or $oucar
Classic clay flower pots

(40)
Our Reg. 3.84

our Reg. 4.57

2.37 .

3.27

24"

1
Your Cholca of 24" or H" P..ntar iox
For a head sta.rt on your summer garden.

30"

'

'

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