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                  <text>Page~ 14-The

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

!)aily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 26, 1983

Time runt;ting short for · reduction talks Film spells out Dems
Kvitslnsky heads the delegation
GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)U.S. negotiator Paul H. Nltzehad
The United States hinted at possible
signaled Reagan's new stance at the medium-range rnlssUe talks,
compromise, but the Krernl!n's
earlier, teUlng reporters here the . whlch have been running parallel to
negotiations on strategic, or Inter·
chief delegate to themedlum·range
president "certainly 1S .not locked
nuclear rnlssUes reduction lalks
Into" a nuclear arms reduction plan continental, nuclear forces. Those
talks are scheduled to resume Feb.
repeatedly rejected'by tbe Soviets.
said American and Soviet negotia·
2.
tors are running out of time for
The lalks resume here Thursday
The Soviet delegate urged the
reaching an agreement .
after a two-month recess and a
United States to show Its wUUngness
Soviet negotiator Yull A. Kvlt·
stepped-uppubllcrelationsdrlveby
"to come to.an accord" amtsakl the
slnskypredlcteda "newroundofthe
the Soviets to Influence opinion In
arms race" lf the two sides fall to
Western Europe - where 572 new · Issue of nuclear arms In Europe "Is
U.S. nuclear rnlssUes are slated to bei;oming Increasingly urgent and
reach an accord on reducing
accute.''
Intermediate-range nuclear arsebe based.
He said the offer last. month by
naiS 1n Europe.
Kvitslnsky told reporters Tues·
Soviet
leader Yurl V. Andropov
1n Washlniton, President Rea· day: "The time Is approaching
"provides
an opportunity" for
gan hlntedstronglyinhlsStateofthe · when a cho!cew!U have to be made
negotiated setUement
Union address Tuesday that he 1S
between an agreement on joint
Andropov offered to reduce the
. prepared to compromise at the
steps to reduce the level of nuclear
nuinber of Soviet intennedla~
negotiating table if the terms are confrontation,orllnewroundofthe
range nuclear rnlssUes aimed at
. right. ·
arms race."
Western Europe to 162 lf NATO
scraps plans to deploy new U.S.
rnlssUes. The United States has
rejected the · plan as giving the
Soviet Unic;m a nuclear edge.

Adjustments needed,
·say Ohio c·o ngressmen

lasi year proposed his
"zero option/' which
provides for the Soviet Union to
Reagan

dismantle SS.~ mlssUes aimed at
WestemEurqlelnexchangeforthe
United States scrapping plans to
deploy the 572 new Pershing 2 and

WASHING'I'ON (AP) - De.
mocratlc Party leaders, trying to
blunt Republk;an crttic!sm that
!hey don't haVe an alternative
economlcprogram,havespelled
out proposals to ,_.
.,.onn taxes ,
reducelnterestratesandcontrol
spe!!dlng.
During a :!S:mlnute turned
response to President Reagan's
State of the Union address
Tuesday night, the Democrats
described the economy as "slid·
!ng · back war d s . towar d
catastrophe."
But earIY In the rum , Sen.
JQSeph Blden Jr., 0-Del., said:
"It's time we put up or s h ut up. "
Produced atacostof$12ll,OOJ,

~rulsemlsslles ln NATOcountrles.

The president said In
his address
· also
Tuesd
ni ht that "
ay
g
we
are
prepared to carefuliy explore
sertous Soviet pioposals."
Reagan's remarks apparently
were aimed at Western Europe,
where pressure 1S building for
pursuing a compromise with the
Sovl ts that might fall h0 rt 0 f the
e
s
"zero-Option"
plan but
would
sharply reduce mlssUe arsenals.
At the same llrnl&gt;, however,
oaled to the N 0 rth
ncagan Treaty
appe Organization allies
Atlantic
nottobuc kle!nthe!rcomrnltrnentto
deploy the new
negotiations faU.

u.s.

mlssUes lf

Meigs cage teams
prepare for big
.weekend of games

economic package

so-palled

r

three major commercial televl·

s!on networks shorUy after the ·
presklent's ~h. Democratic
members of Congress described
18' alternatives. to Reagan's .
po'Ucles.
"'
AtabrieflngeatUer!ntheday,
Rep. Tony Coelho, · D-Callf., 1 • , 1
acknowledged the Democrats ) • 1 1
believed they had to counter the .1•
claim from the 'president and .'·
olher Republican&amp; that only the ·!1
· GOP was offertng a program to .j
deal with the nation's econorillc '.·
problems.
:1
"Our poUs ha
. ve lodlcated the
people just don't know we have
alternatives," sa!dCoe!ho,cha.lf·
man of the House Democratic

Page3

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BOOTS AND SHOES .

(from top to bottom)

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A burst of Diamonds with fiery Rubies .
Emeralds surround center Diamond.
A starburst of Diamonds and Sapphires,
Very chic! Single Diamond and Emerald.

PRICES
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HARTLEY SHOES:

Mon.·Thurs.·Sat. 9-5
Friday 9·8

at y
Pomeroy

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992,5272

.'

•
~, enttne
I Section, 'i 2 Pages
IS Cents
A Mullimedia Inc . Ne wspaper

Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 27, 1983

Longwalling creates
division
in
.
Vinton County mining country
..

WINTER CLEARA E
SALE CONTINUES

30°/o ....;....40°/o-50°/o

•

'

'

-----------i

u.s.

Page 6

'

V9l.ll ,No. I 89
Copyrighted 1..08J

~=th:e:Democ==:ra:tl:.c:mm=··:a:tred;::o:n:th:e::::::Cam::::palgn::::::co~mm=:'ttee=.===~
Colorful array
of fine. Gemstones
and Diamonds
in 14 Karat Gold

Camera club seeks
historical photos
Page 8

.

e

Winning Ohio lottery number

WAsHINGTON (AP) - Presl·
However, I'm wUI!ng to walt an~
dent Reagan's spending freeze
See," the Akron l)emocrat said:
proposal could beunlalrtOdomestic
Se!berUng said there 1S "a lot of
CLEVELAND (AP) - The
of $904,354.50, whUe holders of
programs and the Midwest, con·
sheer waste" in the $1.6 bUllon winning number drawil Tuesday
winning tickets were entitled to
defense buildup pfOposetl by Rea· night In the Ohio Lottery's daUy
share$l82,687,ci!ticialssald.
gressmenfromOh!o!;QY.
gan over !lveyearsand that the $55 game, "The Ntimber," was 612.
1n the parimutuel "Pick4" game;
Reagan In his State of the Union
address Tuesday night, called for
bUllon reduction the president
1n the "Pick 4" game, played
sales totaled $Z'B,47J!.50. Holders of
·standby taxes and an itemized
proposed Is " just a rtpple."
three times a week, the winning
winning tickets were entitled to 45
spending freeze within 5 percent of
Rep. Dennis Eckart•.a Democrat
number was 7179.
percent, or $100,899. Any wlnnlng$1
this year's budget to curb spiraling
from Lake County, said the freeze
The lottery reported earnings of
straight ticket earned ~.47J!, and
deficits .
proposal "Is going to have some
$121,667.50 from the wagering on Its
any winning $1 boxed ticket earned
1n Columbus, Democratic Gov. rough sledding unless It's a fair ,.._d_a_U:.,y:.ga_m_e_.E_a_rnln
_ _,gs,..c_a_me_o_n_sa_les
_ _$369
__.
Richard Celeste· said Reagan profreeze."
vided "Stand-pat trade policy,
Federal spending has been tilted
standby tax policies and stand-in·
to favor Sun Belt states at the
the-Une unemployment benefits,
expense of the Northeast and
not one stand up solution."
Midwest and a freeze at the 1982
I
Rep. Louts Stokes, a Cleve- budget levels "could be disastrous"
land Democrat, said that despite for Ohio, said Eckart.
limits 'Wll1ounced by Reagan, de- ~-------------1
tense spending will increase ahout
14 percent whUe domestic proCLOSED SUNDAY
grams are to be held at about 5
MONDAY,
THURSDAY
percent.
MORNING AND SATURDAY
"There is a basic unfairness in
having domestic programs bear the
OPEN 9-5
brunt of his efforts to balance the
REST OF THE WEEK
budget,'~ said Stokes.
Rep. John Seiberling questioned
ANN'S
whether it was possible to put a
freeze on federal spending and still
CAKE DECORATING
pay for massive increases in
SUPPLIES
defense In addition to the other
programs Reagan mentioned.
Rt. 7
Tupp~s Plains
"I don't think the figures add up.
STORE HOURS

Sports World
mour.ns .death
of Bear Bryant

WILKESVILLE. Ohio lAP) - Its exterior walls are twisted, many of its
floors have buckled and the weU on the back porch has gone dry. Lavern and
Mary Jordan's 100-year·old farmhouse is the victim, its owners say, of a
coal·rnlnlng process called longwaUing.
Longwa!Ung has divided residents of southeastern Ohio's coal country,
pitting them against coal companies that for years brought jobs and
sometimes prosperity to a part of the state where both have often been In
short supply.
Caughl In the middle is the United Mine Workers union, which says the
dispute 1S threatenl~g jobs in an industry" already decimated by laY.offs.
For·the Jordans it has meant sleeping in a mobile home, afewyardsfrom
their farm)IOuse.
"We were afraid of fire," Mrs. Jordan said. "We were afraid of it pulling
apart the electrical wires."
1n longwa lling, a huge shearing machine removes coalfrom the face of a
wall as much as 500 feet wide in aboul 22 minutes . The machine then
advances into the coal face and repeats the process.
_ Industry officials say it is one of the safest methods for mining coal
because the machine provides its own ceiling, a canopy of steel, within the
mine.

,

It also provides a more efficieitt means of removing coal. In traditional
room-and -p!Ua r mines, only about 55 percent of the coal in a vein can be
mined. Longwalling allows for recovery rates (}f up to 90 percent, mining
officials say.
But lh&lt;&lt;Jordans and other residents are worried aboul another aspect of
iongwaU!ng- rapid collapse of the earth above.
In traditional mining, pillars of coal are left behind after the mining is
done,,and they suppon the ceUing so that subsidence is so gradual il often
goes unnoticed . In longwall mines, the ceiling behind themachinecoilapses
almost immediately as I he machine moves forward.
The effects above ground . according to sonle residents of Meigs County,
are just as Immediate- and costly.
Three years ago, Mark Spezza purchased a 57·acre farm with its own
woods, a pond and a barn he could use for his business; pottery making.
Today, the brick foundation of Spezza's barn splits a long a mortar joint,
and a yard·wlde concrete sla b in the middle of the barn floor sinks into a
three-feet crater. A slx·lnch crack runs the ieng\h of thefioor. The buUdlng's
· walls, which Spezza says were once plumb, now bend.
. "You know. I'm not even motivated to do things around here any more;''
Spezza said during a walk around hts property. "I used to com e down here
and try to clean things up. Bu l anymore, It just doesn'l seem worth the
trouble."

The Southern Ohio Coal Co., which has owned much of the coal beneath ·
Meigs County land for a quarter-century, began mining beneath Spezza's
property last year. Before operations began, the company shored up the
barn with cables and braces.
Spezza says he noticed changes within days.
"I walked in the barn, and I noticed there was a crack iri the floor about an
inch wide .. . and then !looked a I the wall and there was a crack there ahout
an Inch wide, " he said. "I went to sleep, andlgot up in !he morning and !twas
two Inches wide."
. Residents of Meigs County , where longwaU!ng Is belngusedin two mines,
have !onn a protest group, Citizens Organized Against LongwaUing
!COAL!, to fight the new mining method. The UMW says they should be
aware of the consequences.
"We want to make fully sure that people knowwhattheimpacl would be if
longwallillg were not allowed," said Tony Bumbico, a UMW District 6
official. "The effort to stop It jeopardizes 2,!XXl jobs at a time when the area
can iU afford any more layoffs."
"Our position has been: If we're going to mine, we'Ucausesomedamage.
And If wecause damage, we'll pay for it," said RobertRine, an official of the
Amelican Electric Power Service Corp. which includes Southern Ohio
Coal.
''Whatever's going to happen, happens ... in a fairly compact time span,"
he said. "II 's observable and can be fixed.
Rine said "98 percent" of the cracks that appear in the earth eventuaUy
close up, "and most water supplies come back."
But there are problems that. can't be fixed, such as the Jordan house. AEP
offi cials admit the house is damaged beyond repair and are negotiating to
replace it.
In Spezza's case. AEP officials belipvethe barn can be saved, although a
settlemenl with him has not yet been reached .
State officials must decide by May whether to aUowSouthemOhioCoalto
continue longwalling in Meigs County.
Bob Rothw!lll, an official with the·state's .Division of Reclamation, said
there may be little the state can do.
"We're sort of caught' in an area ;yhere our jurisdiction mlghl be
questionable, " he e"Jllalned.
Current state law governing subside nce requires companies to control it
''to the extent technically and eronomlcaliyfeaslble." But Rothwell pointed
out that language In the la w does not govern planned subsidence.
Because the subsidence effects of longwall mining are predictable, he
said, some com panies conlend.th e~ effects are planned a nd consequently
not covered by state law.

SUPERIOR

BIG REG BOLOGNA ........IJI; .. $1.()9

G-J-M Center Board supports Dr.Niehm

HOMEMADE

HAM
SALAD ................1,8... $1.59
•

By JEFF GR!\BMEIER
OVP staff

ECKRICH 1 LB. FRESH

ROLL SAUSAGE ........ ~ ...~~L~ .. $1.97
II GAlLON TIOPICAIIA 100% PURE

HE~D

ORANGE JUICE m.. $1.75

LETTUCE ... ~!~~. 69'

OHIO COLBY LONGHORN

CHEESE ...........lA.. 51.99
CLEARFIELD 01.0 &amp; SHARP

3 LB. BAG YELLOW

CHEESE ...........L.L $2.39

ONIONS .....nil. 69'

END OF THE MONTH
CLEARANCE SALE
OF WINTER CLOTHING

The hoard of
the Ga lll a ·
Jackson , M e !gs
Comm unil y
M'ental Health
Center voted 84
Wednesday night
Nielun
hot to ask lor the resignation of its
execu ti ve directo r, Bernard
Nielun.
1n a report lo be delivered to the
Departrnenl of Mental Health
today, center offi cials said a
recommendation by a state inves·
tlgatlve panel lhat Niehrn resign
was "arbitrary and unsupported ."
The center boarc:j met for nearly
three hours in secret session to
discuss the recornmenda lions of

\

FOR MEN, CHILDREN, WOMEN, BOYS &amp; JUNIORS
........... !~i •.

$}.19

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ- The recovery pmctices.
Public Utilities Commission .wants
Earlier this week, Acting Energy
to know mQre about expensive~
Director Lee Wurster added his
out-of·state fuel purchases by the
voice to those who say Collll;nbia
state's utiUt!es and why they aren' t
should increase its purchases of
buy ing more Ohio gas a nd coal.
Ohio gas.
.
Chairman Michael Del Bane a nd
He said the company could
Commissioner William H. Brooks
increase the amount from the 1.8
slgne&lt;:l an order WedneSday for a n
billion cubic feet it hought In 1982 to
lndepend~nt management audit of
5.8 bUUon this year. The higher
Columbia Gas of Ohio.
figure would be the same amount as
The order came amid complaints
in 1979 when Ohio purchaseS began
!hat Colwnb!a buys out-of·state gas
to decline.
and passes up the ct .nee to buy
cheaper gas produce&lt; .n Ohio.
Columbia, which Is permitted by
'law to pass these costs along to
consumers, S&lt;~ ld it is forced, In
many lniltances, to buy the more
Federal funds for.important loca l
expensive gas as a result of its
construcilon
projects will not be
long·tenn contracts. ·
Withheld
from
Meigs County due to
' Under Wednesday's order, In·
any
air
poUutlon
violations.
· !tiated by Del Bane, the utU!ttes
This Is the word from James M.
commission .staff Is to , dra' IP ·
questions within 60 days to se. .he Jennings of ·Jennmgs Associates,
area economics consultants,
outline for the audit.
Stuart Vosler, commun!cattons Columbus.
· Concern had been e"Jlressed
director for the commission, said
locaUybyC.E.
Biakeslee,executive
the contract for the audit wiU be
director
of
the
Meigs County
awardlid through bidding.
Regional
Planning
Commission,
of
Resaid theaud!ttslndependentof
the semi-annual studies by the the withholding of such federal commls!on of the utility's gas cost funds after Meigs County was listed

SWEET PEAS .....•.• ~~~s.... 3/$1.00
GENERIC 300 CT.

. PKG.
99¢
COlTON SWABS ····~··········
··
30 COUNT GENERIC
PAPER TOWELS ..........R~~L.... 59e

OZ. HUNT'S

lOMATO JUICE .......... ~~~ .•.. 9ge
PORK BARBECUE ....... m.. Sl.39
Per~

FOLGER'S COFFEE .; ••.• m.. S3.09 .
10% OZ. CAMPBELL'S

CHICKEN GUMBO SOUP C~Nj 2/79'
1'fl OZ. CARNATION

SPREADABLES ··~ ······~o,. Sl.29
COLD
........... ~m.. .39

49 OZ. DETERGENT SOAP POWDER

.,

•

Wurster said the increase "would
s!gnlfcantiy help In getting cheaper
Ohio gas to Ohio consumers." At
· that. it would represent only aboul3
percent to 4 percent of Columbia's
annual purchases.
Del Bane,elevated tothecomrnis·
sion chairmanship recently by
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste,
said he also wants to know more
about the decision-making process
through which coa!·burning electrl·
cal utilities buy higher priced

out-of-state coal.
Although no formal actions were
taken, Del Bane d irected the staff to
look at i,he policies of these firms to
see if greater use of Ohio's high
sulfur coal Is possible.
The chairman noled that the
utilities have to atso pay higher
transporta lion costs forout-of-siate.
adding even more to consume rs'
monthly bills.
"We have a lot of coal miners out'
of-work," Del Ban'!' commented.

,,

'

Federal funds won't be withdrawn

lP .OZ. VIENNA
I LB. Re&amp; .• Drip, Electra

members wrote.
Indicated in the review group's
Staff members sa id the panel's report, board chainnan Charles
32·page report contains "vague
Howard said.
charges and ofte n erroneous data "
The center hoard's vote comes
concerning the center a nd Niehrn.
two days after the 648 board voted6 '
"The release of the report by the
to 5 to request Plurnrtler's resignaDeparunent (Of Mental Health)
tion. Plummer has already refused
without first checking Its accuracy
to step down.
is inexcusable of the Department
Howard said the center board
and has already caused serious
was "not at all influe nced by the &amp;18
damage to the center's credlbll·
board' s decision."
ity .. . " the response said.
Board members said they supOne of the state panel's charges
port the staff's responses to the
was center staff spent "a great deal
revie',V group report. While the . of time gatheling (and ) throwing ·
board agreed there were some
dtrl on the 648 board."
problems a t the center, one
The staff's response denied the
member said they were "not of the
allegation.
nature that would require we ask
Center employees were "calling
for Dr. N!ehrn 's resignation."
attention to 648 abuses," the
The board will work to solve
response said, "In the interest of
those problems al the center trulv
(Continued on page 12)

·puco checks out-of-state gas purchases

GENERIC 16 OZ.

4~

-

thE' Community Services Review
Group. II was their third mp· 'ing
since the release of the group's
report Jan. 7.
The panel, fonned by the former
director of mental health in Oc·
lOber, caileq for the resignations of
Niehm and Maxine P lummer.
executive director of the Galli a·
Jackson-Meigs &amp;18 hoard.
Niehm a nd Plummer · were
blamed by the review group for the
bitter conruct between the mental
health center and the 648 board.
However, the staff's written
response presented to the hoard
said Nlehm Is nol responsible for
·
the conflict.
"When (Nielun ) took over opera·
tlon of the facility he Inherited
controversY and he has confronted
it rather than backing down," staff

. I

'·

on one of25 Ohio counties not having
an approved plan lor air pollution
control. It was reported that llsted
· counties were subject to the
Imposition of federal sanctions.
Jennings contacted the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency
In regard to the matter and as a
result Meigs County Is now cons(·
dered by the Ohio EPA tci be In
"attafnment" ..thJs means no plan is
requlred·:for all major air poilu·
tants except suspended partlcu·

lates. Also because at least eight
calendar qUarters have shown no
local violations of the primary air
quality standards for particulates,
the Ohio EPA Is currently request·
!ng a formal redeslgnatlon of Meigs
County to be considered In "attain·
·ment" for particulates also.
Jt&gt;nnings advises that unless
somethlhg unforeseen takes place,
the sertous threattoMelgsCountyin
regard to receiving needed federal
funds has been removed.

A CRACK IN THE LAND- Mark Spe72a kneels next loa crack In
the hlll behind his Wllkesvllle, Ohio bam. Spezza believes lhe crack was
caused by longwall mining of coal beneath hl.8 57-acre tract. The cracks
In the land nm through his century old barn, In backgroand, causing lhe
floor I crack open six Inches. ( AP Laserphoto)

Lighting systems
will be replaced
in Eastern Local

The Eastern Board of Education
the activity fund which include
Wednesday nigh t agreed to spend
elementary music and French
$5,00) to upgrade and replace
Club.
lighting systems in schools in the
The board agreed to have the
district.
policy m a nuel printed, obtain help
Richard Roberts, superintend· · from SEOVEC to set up a computer
ent, said this is the firsl phase of I he
for billing elc .. a nd to purchase 300
program. He a lso added thai
chairs for the high school.
between $50,00) and $60,000ilas been
The board gave its approval for
set aside for the entire lighting
four board members to attend the
project. Money for the project is
President' s Conference In Zanesderived from the levy passed last
\11le, granted professional leave to November ·
James Wilheim to attend Ohio
Roberts reports he had been
Music Education Association Coninformed by George CoUins, county
vention, Feb. 4, a nd lor Thomas
treasurer, thatallleviespassed lasl
Kelly to attend a guidance workyear, in June and November, are
shop in Chillicothe on Feb. 11.
now on the tax duplicate a nd are
Job descriptions lor I he guida nce
included in the property tax now
counselor, athle tic direclor and
due. Also included in the tax
student council advisor were also
assessment are township levies as
approved.
well as the healt h department levy.
The board gran ted permission to
Teachers added to the substitute
I he home economics department to
list were Betty Hutchison, Jeffrey
include individual extended expe.
Werry, Polly Sandenburgh, John
rience which includes home visits
Haggerty and William Lake.
and proj ects.
·Nola Young was added to the list
The board agreed to accept bids
of substitute cooks.
,
for the sale of a lrampoline, a
In other business, the board
dishwasher and a Wheelhours
agreed to purchase a 48 inch mower
riding mower. Bids must be
for Chester E lementary, a 42 inc h
submitted by Feb. 17. The bids will
mower for Tuppers Plains and a five
be opened at the Feb. 171h meeting
· foot mower lor Easlern High
at 7p.m.
SchooL
Attending were William Buck!ev
president, .Jimmy Ca ldwell. ;o~~
The board also approved partie!· president. Dorsel Larki ns, Bc:•mard
patton in educa tional TV out of Shrievers a nd Roger Gaul, board
Atheris along with new accounts lor
members and Roberts .
• _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;,_..__._ _.,;..______..

Weather forecast
Partly-cloudy tonight. Low 20·25. Winds easterly to northE'asler!y
less than·10 mph. Considerable sunshine Friday. High around 40.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Chance of rain Saturday. Fair on Sunday and Monday. Generally
mUd . ffighs In the 40s lo low 50s Saturday and Sunday and In the
mid-lOs 1o 11!1d·50s Monday. Overnight lows mostly in the 20s early
Saturday and mostly In the 30s SURday a!'d Monday.

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
HICuuriSirt't'\
Pumrrnv. Hhitl

&amp;If-99:i-21Si

•

I,E\' fiH~ D TO TilE INTERF.ST OFTHt: MEI(!S.MASON ARf.A

ROBERT L. WINGETT
J&gt;ubl i:o:ht•r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

DALE ROTHG EB, JR.
Nt'WtO

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t:dit ur

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i. .s u t· ~. n••l p: r~•nalilit's.

A hole in the ice
for the Pentagon

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 27, 1913

Southem-Eastent game lacks usu~l ingredients?

•

· By SCOTI'.WOLFE
good defensive year, whlle Mike
hama White Falcons Tuesday, 69- whUe Roger Wells and Randy I,ayRACINE - Friday night many Collins, Tlm Probert, Troy Guthrie, 64. The loos was the Highlanders' ton had 20 points each In SWHS' five
of the lngredlentl. ··1r a spectacular and Rob Malson also have come lOth.stralghtfollowing four opening point loss at Mason .
Eastern-Southern roundball game through In picking up the slack.
wins.
Saturday night, Coach Carl '
will be absent, but nevertheless the
Game time Is 6:30 for the reserve
Rob Brumfield .and Jeff Barnes Wolfe's Tornadoes.play the SEOAL
main Ingredient remains, thus set- tilt, while the varsity tile follows
paeed liT's victory over Eastern Chieftains led by 6-3 senior Jim Gill
with 18 and 14 points respectively
and ~ senior guard jeff Morgan.
Ung the stage fora potential packed around 8 p.m .
house and another exciting high
In other games, North Gallla, a .--~------'------------------­
school basketball contest. Of much Improved ball. club In"recent
course, the main ingredient that weeks, takes Its ~ record to Chestlll exists Is "A good old-fashioned shire for another crack at Coach
rtvalry." ·
'
Keith Carter's Kyger Creek
For Southern, everything Is on Bobcats.
the line as the 12-1 Tornadoes, curThe Pirates fell to KC earlier this
rently ranked seventh in the state's season at Vinton and were a four
AP poll, have a reputation to main· point loser, 54·50 In the Gallla
taln besides defending Its SVAC"tl· C()unty Holiday Tournament's
""., tie and
game home winning championship game.
· streak.
·
Q!ach Bruce Wilson's Pirates
On the other hand, Eastern is are .ied by junior center Matt
loose and Its enthusiasm high, des· 'Kemper and senior forward Mike
plte Its w!l)less()-14 record.EHSiost Mays.
to HaMan Trace Tuesday.
Kyger Creek, 11-3 overall and 4-2
The upset-minded Eagles have In the SVAC, has received solid ofplayed their best basketball against fenslve support from 6-5 center J .
Its toughest foes and perhaps are D. Bradbury, 6-2 senior forward
" ... when only the finest will do."
saving their best game for this Jeff Moles, guard Keith Clark and
Friday.
.
forward Brent Love.
Southern flaunts an explosive of·
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
fenslve attack led by Senior guard
Trace Wlldcats, 53-47 winners over
Zane Beegle and sharpshooting Eastern Tuesday night, seek their
Rod Littlefield. Beegle paces the ninth victory against the Highland'
Tornadoes with a 23 point average ers of C&lt;iach Lloyd Myers .
'
whlle Lltllefleld owns a 16 point
Southwestern fell prey to the Wa·
clip. Both had fine games last week 'i;;;;;;;~~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;~
·.··
Express a loving thought
aglllnst Kyger Creek as Llttlefleld I
and
make someone'&amp; day.
led the way with 22.
OtiLDREN'S
Nick Bostlck, Kevin Cur1man,
~------------------1
and TYrone Brtnager have been
GOE!j wrm: REooUND - Ellsteq~'s Becky Ambrose looks for
producinggreateffortsfortheTorEACH .
I
someone to pa8S off to after coming down with a rebound In Tuesday's
nacjoes as well as complementing
~22 victory over Federal Hocking. Teammate Dee Dalley Is shown at
ihe team with speedy addtlions to
CHILDREN'S SHORT SLEEVE
the right. In between Is the Lancers' Irene Bennett, (12). ScoU WoUe
Southern's blitzing fastbreak.
.,.,,.MCC"""'"·
•.••. ' , ...... """'·•.•• t
photo.
Ronald Haning, R. Ph .
This season, an aggressive slow·
Mon thruS11t a:oo • .m . to9p .m
sundaylO ·JOtoi2 · Joand5fot m
down garhe has been the Eagles'
FOR
PH "l·lUS
I PRESCRIPTIONS F nendly Ser11ice
greamst offensive sting, while floe
I e Milm
Pomeroy, 0 .
defen~e has kept the Inexperienced
I
Open Nlght1 fill 9
•
BAILEYS SHOES
crew close In several tilts.
~-r~llicll,·porl
OH
Sophomore Jay Carpenter has
been maturing and Improving with t-=====;=
each game, and has picked up the
slack left by the injured Roger Bls•
By KEml WISJOC;UP
The Meigs reseiVes, much better sell, who hopes to come back this
A big weekend of basketball fa·
than their 0-7 league record would r~~~~!_N~ew~e~ll!..!!has~.!!J~~..!a~
ces the Meigs Marauders as the ImIndicate, are coming off a 4846 win
proving local five play their final
over Wahama to raise their overall
SEOAL road game Frtday against
record to 3-9.
league-leading Ironton. On SaturSophomore Jackie Welker
day the Federal Hocking Lancers
scored .six straight points In the final moments In leading the little
come tot~ Ina non-league affair.
Ironton's Tigers have won six
Marauder with 13, ihe first time
straight SEOAL games and hold a
this year the top scorer for the
full game lead over second . place
Meigs reserves has not been either
Athens. The road ahead may be a
freshman Mike Chancey or Rick
rough one, however, as after FriWise.
day the Tigers have the remaining
Starting for the Marauders will
four league games on the road.
be jupior Nick Riggs and senior
Rick Edwards, guards, seniors
Coach Greg Drummer's Ma·
Rick Chancey and Greg Taylor,
rauders, winless In seven loop outforwards, and senior BIU Holcomb,
Ings, on the other )land, have all
four of theil; remaining SEOAL
center.
games at horne.
MEIGS BA.!!KETIIALL SOORING
(VARSli'Y)
Ironton Is coming off a67-42walkPlAVEII
G FG Fr '11' AVG.
away over a crtppled Waverly five.
Ntck Riggs
12 51 51 153 l2E
12 fll 35 t39 11.6
The Tigers whipped Meigs 78-34
Rtck Edwards
12 ?I 10 Sol 7.0
earlier In the year.
Rick Cha"'-"Y
Greg Taytoc
12 26 23 75 6.J
12156363;(}
"They're very strong inside.
Jay Evans
12 12
9 ··33 2E
We'll have our hands full J&lt;eep!ng
But HotCOOlb
Mike Kennedy
114190E
them off the boards. They have 1 . • George Hobson
10
o. 4 4 0.4
11
2 24
Otllers
been a very consistent team," com·-.
12 2111 131 517 411.6
mented coach Drummer about the
rorAU;
!RESERVES )
Tigers.
Mike Chancey
12 Ill 19 157 13.1
Rick Wise
12 fll 24 128 10.7
Ironton lsS-7 overall and 7-11n the
11 23 10 56 5.1
Srott Gheen
league. The Tigers' overaU record
J a.::kie Welker
12 16 12 44 3.7
Dan Thomas
12 13 15 41 3.4
Is deceiving since the Lawrence
Dave Fisher
12 13
5 31 2.6
Countlans have played the Ukes tJf
Nick Bush
12
6 U 23 IS
Ashland, Russell, Greenup Co. and
"lrey Cassell
8
0
0
0 0.0
THE SUNSTREAM.
Otllers
l
o
2
Boyd Co., all fine Kentucky teams.
rorAU;
12 193 911 t112 40.1
Saturday's rematch should prove
Interesting as the flrst game saw
the Lancers win In overtime,' 54-52. I
"We should have won the first
UNEMPLOYED? OUT OF WORK?
OMNt85 '
game. Federal Hocking has ImTEMPORARILY LAID OFF?
proved all along and we'll have to
play much better than we did to win
this one," said Drummer.
The SEOAL earned an Image
NEED SHORT TERM HOSPITAUZATION COVERAGE
booster In the past week as fifth
place Galllpolls • upset powertul
Wheelersburg 44-39 and second
BROGAN-WARNER INSURANa SERVICES, INC.
place Athens defeated always
214 EAST MAIN ST.
though Chillicothe 61-54.

The role of Mr. ·BushL--·___W_ill_iam_F._B_uc_kley_Jr.
In a few days, VIce President
George Bush will be traveling,
rather conspicuously, to Europe,
there to- do what? That question
does not appear to . be bothering
anyone in particular; and that too Is
Interesting. What appears to be
clear Is that this is not ·intended
simply as a trip in which good old
Europeans are supposed to meet
· good ol&lt;,l (;eotge. In the first place,
good old Europeans know good old
George, as do a lot of not so g ood
Europeans, whose telephone mes·
sages, one hopes, CIA Direetor
George Bush · at one point ac·
quainted himself with. No, George
Bush Is going .to Europe to Insert
himself, in some way not yet exactly specified, In the whole disar mament business. Why?
Well, to begin with, ·because Mr.
Reagan decided he should go, Mr.
Reagan being in charge of such
matters. But · Mr. Reagan's decision to send the vice president appears obviously to be motlva ted by
the general commotion on the mat·
ter of disarmament. The prevailing
superstition is that if some Ameri·
can of very high standing goes to
Europe to talk to the leaders there
and to profess American devotion
to peace and disarmament, this
eases the perception of an America
bedeviled by an intransigent pres!·
dent. It Is generally conceded that
Mr. Bush's tr ip to Europe w!U be
taken to mean: " See? Ronald Rea·
gan ls not all that intransigent. My
presence ·here Is evidence ·of this."
There are those (I am one) who
fear precisely that this will be the
Impression taken away !rom Mr.
Bush's visit by lnfluentlal Europeans. The point here is really quite
simple. It Is that Mr. Reagan.
should be Intransigent. He should
not be intransigent if caught asking
for something entirely unreasonable. If he had said that he would not
postpone the deployment of theater
nuclear. weapons in Europe until

President Reagan 's federal spending freeze - with a hole in the ice for
th~ PentagOn - is a repackaging of the budget contro! .campaign he has
been waging ever since he came to the White House.
- The c hange is in title and slogan. not in the substance of what Reagan
proposed in his Stat~ of the Union message Tuesday night.
It was a catchier way of saying what he has been saying:
He wa nts domestic spending curbed because it ls out of control and feed s
dangerous deficits in the fed era l budget.
He wa nts Pentagon spending Increased because without a defense
bu ildup, the na tional security Will be ln jeopardy.
Those goals. a nd, indeed, many of the spending curbs drafted earlier by
budget director David A. Stockma n, lit into the kind of selective freeze
Reaga n wants Congress to approve.
In weighing the president 's budget, congressional leaders partic ularily the Democrats- will probably seek better balance between
military and domestic programs tha n Reagan proposes. Under his freeze
plan, defense spending would increase by about 14 percent, while domestic
programs would get about 2 percent more.
Not long ago, Stockman and other budget advisers were lined up against
the idea or a spending freeze, deeming it impractical and saying it wouldn 'I
work. But the idea ga ined credence In Congress in the face of soaring
deficit projections . And Reagan n~ a dramatic g,esture to counter the
fact that the deficits he had said would be dectintJg lzy•now are soaring
instead.
Budge t-makers don 't like freezes because they want room for change,
adjustment , and, they hope, 'improvement on what went before. An
WASffiNGTON - In the past
outrig ht freeze would amount to a replay of the last budget, and nobody
two years, 86,000 mentally Imargues that was even close to perfect.
paired Americans have lost their
[&lt;lo point in doing that again.
Social Security disability benefits
But a flexible freeze provides a slogan, an understandable
and have been cast adrift in a world
adirunistration goal, a nd a catchword Reagan and his allies can invoke
that Is sometimes beyond their
again and again, as they will in the months ahead.
rognltlon.
And a flexible freeze is the kind Reagan proposed.
This Is the tragic story of just one
Under the Reagan freeze plan, it will continue to do so, spending more
of them: Kathleen McGovern. Her
money next year than this year. The new element is in Reagan's proposal
!raglle world of TV soap operas and
that the rate of increase be no greater than the rate ·of inflation.
dependence on others began to
The administration ligures that will be in the neighborhood of 5 percent
crumble In August 1981. T hat' s
tor: the j'Jeriod involved. That is the leeway and if spending, as expected , · when she learned that her $29'7-a -·
winds up at about $8Xl billion, it is $40 billion worth of leeway.
month disability payments 'would
Actually, given the far higher inflation rate of the previous budget year.
be cut off: Social Security Adrnlnls·
the Increase in federal spending between Reagan's first and second years
tratlon bureaucrats had decided
in offic e comes close to fitting the freeze formula he proposed Tuesday
she could hold a job and support
night.
'
hersel!.
There is further maneuvering room in the fact that Reagan's freeze
Mrs . McGovern was stunned by
applies·to the bottom line on federal spending. It is not across the board,
the decision . Since 1973, she had
item by item. Total federal spending 'would be frozen to an increase within
been "consistently diagnosed as a
the infla tion rate. But the applica tion of that curb to individual programs
paranoid schizophrenic; "s he had
would vary widely.
·
·
been hospitalized at least eight
times thereafter. Deemed unable
to work, she became one of
hundreds of thousands of mentally
Impaired individuals receiving So-

Intermediate mlssUes In place.
will give a Utile. Why should he give
the Soviet Union had destroyed all
Slrx:e
then, the number of Soviet
a little when he IS talking about desUos on Russian terrltory, then It
rnlssUes has Increased by over 100
ploying such force as Is necessary
CO\lld be said about him that he was
percent. And, In between, came
to protect American troops In the
being intransigent. H he had said
event of a Soviet salient In Europe?
that he would deploy theater nu· · Afghanistan and Poland. For Mr.
Reagan to prove less than lntranslAnd (next question), what good Is
clear weapons unless the Soviet Un.
gent
at
this
moment
Is,
one
takes
It,
supposed to come of the Inevitable
Ion had free elections next August
!or hlm to suggest that President . Impression that Mr. Bush IS In Eu·
supervised by El Salvador, then he
Carter was being too tough In 1979.
rope to "reassure" the Europeans?
might be held to be going just a little
What Mr. Reagan has said on the
Reassure tt~em of what? That Mr. ·
bit too far.
matter was .that he would forego
Reagan will find, on meditation,
We should hear In mind that Mr.
deploying theater nuclear weapons
that President Carter acted lrnpul· :
Reagan's reiteration ofhisdeterrnl·
I!
the
Soviet
Unlon
destroyed
Its
Inslvely
when he called for theater
nation to deploy theater nuclear
ventory
In
the
field.
weapons
In EurOpe? In the last :
weapons comes almoot four years .
In
response
to
this
proposal
the
analysts, the .b asic position of the '
after Jimmy Carter expressed his
United States ought oot to be stated :
determination to deploy said wea- Soviet Union has done nothing but
as being any more compUcated ·
pons, at the advice of m!Utary com- play games; suggesting a contraction of Its missile deployment to a
than In fact It Is. That position Is
manders, at a time when the Soviet
that acned aggression by the SoUnion had approximately 150 level that exceeds that level which
caused President Carter to call for
viet Union will be resisted. And that
westward-oriented Intermediate
Western counterdeployrnent In the
we will take.parns to see that resistmissiles In place. Since then, the
first
place.
And
yet
the
pressures
Is effective.
ance
number of Soviet Unlon had apare
on
Mr.
Reagan
to
show
that
he
proximately 150 westward-ortented

:n

- ~fff~A ®

Letters to the editor
Response to editorial

I

unwelghed. For .instance, is It any
less wasteful for center staff to
"have spent a great deal of time
gathering/ throwing dirt on the 648 ·
board" than It was for two 648 staff
members to rent those now notorIous tuxedos?
To suggest, as does the Tribune
editorial, that the center has been
"tainted" by the controversy dismisses the Telegram's contention
that "Meaningless arguments and
petty back-stabbing have shaped
the Center over the ~ears : This
time It got out of hand ."
And finally, the Tribune's being
· "far less convinced of any ImproprIeties on the part of Niehm and his
staff" - if this were true why did
the Review Group ask for both
resignations?
In calling for responsl.ble I!Ctlon,
one must consider whether an act
of misjudgment, or several acts of
mlsju~gement, from an admlnlstratlon of accompUshrnent, Is ·as
much or more damaging than an
administration which Is "dysfunc- •
tiona!, fragmented, Ineffective and ·
Inefficient."
At least one comrhlssloner has
been quoted In the media as feeling
the first to be more sertous than the
second. That of course is his prerog'
atlve. It remains to be seen what
others determine after thoughtful
consideration.
On the surface at least, and at
this time, It would seem the two
directors involved are not the only
om!s.who can be' charged with "not
facllitat(lng)" or . " directly at·
tempt(lng) resolution of the many
issues which dlvlde them and the
community."
Patricia A. Houck ,
(Houck Is public Information officer for the Gallla-Jackson-Metgs·
Mental Health '648' Board).

HOODED SHIRTS

I

$488

II .

SHIRTS

3

Meigs prepares ·.'
for big weekend

eta! Securtty dlsabtllty benefits.
The agency faUed to Inform fhe
40-year-old woman that her appeal
should have been handled Immediately by a judge. Instead, shewas
subjected to an Improper, seven·
month " reconsideration" process.
As the SSA now admits, "Mrs.
McGovern's case was mishandled
In tenns of recognizing the appllca·
ble appeal procedure."
Worse was to come. Because of a
"transcription error," McGovern's
file Incorrectly noted the date on
which she had first become eligible
!or benefits.
Twice during her appeal process
- once in an interview with a doc·
tor paid by the Social Securtty Administration - McGovern gave
indications t)lat she was consider· ·
lng suicide because of the cutoff.
But the agency did nothing. (Bela!·
edly, the agency conceded that It
"should have secured ~.. ·re lnfor·
matlon about Mrs. ~ : • ..;overn's
mental condition.")

In December 1!*11, the doctor
made these diagnostic notations on
McGovern's condition: "Totallydependent. Unmotivated . Cannot
shop lor sell. Cannot prepare meals
except very rudimentary Items."
Despite this clear evidence of
McGovern's helplessness, the government used the dcictor's report
as the basis for Its conclusion two
weeks tater that there were "no
marked restrtctlve qualities to her
day-to-day Uving." (The agency,
now admits that "in llght ofthe con·-'
flictlng statements It Is clear that
further Investigation was
warranted.")
Last February, McGovern lost
her appeal. Ju4g_ed by a per1unctory review of her vocational skills,
she was deemed capable of working as a waitress. The evidence that
led to this decision included "wage
records showing several years: experience as a waitress, and a &lt;~es­
crtptlon of the job of waitress as lt
appears" ln a government diction-

ary of Job titles.
After the government reaffirmed
the denial of her dlsabWty benefits,
McGovern was hospitalized brle!ly
for depression . On June 2, she was
found dead In her Philadelphia
apartment. The coroner ruled her
death due to natural causes. '
Though it's too late to help
McGovern, the Social Securlty Ad·
ministration has modified the
procedures It uses in Its accelerated
ellglb!Uty reviews. Some have been
denounced by Commissioner John
Svahn and. again, in a preliminary
General Accounting Office Investigation equested by Sen. John
Heinz, R-Pa .
Also a f¢Qeral judge in Mlnne·
sota, reviewing the Midwest Region's policy, issued a blistering
attack on the bureaucrat's Dicken·
stan penny-pinching procedures,
calling thel)'l "arbitrary, caprl·
ctous, Irrational and an abuse of
discretion."

A better ide_____..;________A_rt_B_uc_hwa----:-ld
The Northrop Corporation Is now
using newspapers and consumer
magazines to advertise Its new fighter plane, the "F-20 Tlgershark."
There was a four-color spread in
Newsweek just last week.
From the ad It looks !Ike one h&lt;ick
of a plane, but I'm not certain I!
they want me to buy one or just
admlre it.
According to the advertising
copy the Tlgershark is a new Mach
2-class tactical air defense fighter
designed to deter or defeat the
enemy. II can operate around the
clock In all sorts of weather. It was
financed by Northrop without government funding "In response to a

Valentlne's Day·
Cards &amp; Gifts

.

She could handle.it?..________J_ac_kA_n_de_
·rso_n .

we have been the object of at
lea~t two editorials in the past
week: The first in the Wellston Telegi.am (l-19·83) and another in the
Gallipolis Tribune (1·21-83).
The Tribune piece calls the team
studying the problem an "investig- .
atlve panel." The Telegram calls it
a : review group. " (Official title
''Gallia-Jackson-Melgs Commun·
lty :Services Review Group.")
. The Tribune editorial speaks to
"tl]e litany of inaction !nat has
characterized t he respective
boards' attitudes since release of
the, report." We will leave it up to
the board members to respond to
thtS, pointing out that the boards In
question are volunteer boards and
we know they I@ e spent many
hours examining the infonnatlon .
A sweeping statement too gen·
eral to be checked,·and thus proved
or disproved, Is made In the Trib·
une wrtting. " The panel has simply
ronflrmed what many area residents have always known ..."
Many? Always?
·
The Telegram editorial - writ·.
ten by someone who ought to know
since tis seJVed both as a 648 Board
member and a Center employee points out the bias apparent ln the
report and the possibility of unbal·
anced "facts" for whlch."thepubllc
does not have a complete explana·
tion " at this time.
The Tribune editorial wrtter
can't see what the problem Is ln
executing the review group's rerommendation that both the 648 Dl·
rector and the Center Director be
asked to resign. "What Is the rea son for the Board's delay?" It appears said writer Is admittedly
ronvlneed o! guilt and· finds It difficult to understand why anyone
mould bother to lOOk at both sides.
Questions remain unanswered :..

~~------------~~~~~~!e~~O~h~io~----------------------------------T~h~e~Da~ily~S!en~t~in~e~I~~P~a~g~e~--~3 :•

27

U.S. government call for prtvate
development of a tactical fighter
specially suited to fuHIII U.S. mutual security policy objectives."
It so happens I'm in the market
for a new 1983 tactical fighter, and
the looks of the Tlgershark really
appealed to me.
But my wife announced last
Christmas that l couldn't buy a new
plane until we paid for the child·
ren's orthodontist work.
I agreed with her, but I was so
lmpessed with the ad that I showed
It to her.
"It's a beautlful aircraft," she admitted, ''but l think we should
make do with the old F -5 we have

now until the economy Improves."
"But the F-5 can't do hall the
things the Tlgershark can can," I
protested. "I'll be the laughing
stock of the neighborhood I! I'm
tooling around In an F-5 wttlle everyone else IS doing Mach 2 at OO,OXJ
feet. ' '
"I don't understand why every
tiine you see a new fighter plane In
a magazine, you have to buy it."
"I don't want to buy every fighter
plane I see in a magazine. But the
Tlgershark appeals to me. You can
put an air-to-ground misslle under
each wing, flip It over on Its back in
a dogfight and drive off anything
twice its size in the sky. If ~Ie

like myself don't buy one we'll
never get the economy on Its feet. "
"Where do I and the children
sit?" she wanted to know.
"It's not a family al11&gt;lane . It's a
one-seater, aimed at the type of per·
son who reads Playboy."
"I thought as much. Al you want
Is a new toy for yoursel! now that
you're tired of playing with your
Apple computer."
"That's not fair. I can defend our
home, and the homes of everyone In
the neighborhood with the Tigershark. It says right here that It's the
best deterrent that money can

II

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

CAU 992-6687
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

Redwomen defea, ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Shawnee State
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Colleile's Redwomen broke open a
clOse game with six unanswered
points midway through the second
half Tuesday night as they reCorded a 72-ID victory over the
Shawnee State Rangerettes.
The win moved roach J amle Ian·
nl's Redwomen to 1~ on the seaSon, 3-2 In the GOAC.
Kathy DetU!Ion led the Redwomen with Z! points wttlle Sue Canip
added 18 and Robin Hagen 14. Hagen also pulled down eight
rebounds.
JUue Garringer pac~ the Rangerettes with 26 points whUe Mitzi
Howard tossed In 11.
The Redwomen held a 30-25 edge
In field guals and made 12 tree
throws to Shawnee's 10.

ISiiy' "

"They're advertising It In Newsweek. They're not going to waste
money on a four-color spread I!
they're not prepared to sell you
one.' '

"Maybe they 're aiming the ad· '
vertisernents at Third World coun·
trtes who can't afford a more ·
expensive fighter plane." ·.
"That's ridiculous. If they were ·
doing that they would take space In · ·
Third World publications. This particular ad Is directed at people like
myself who can't alford a new
Mercedes-Benz, but stU! want the
speed and engineering that goes ·
·
Into one."
"I'm sure the Pentagon wUI fl.
nance it for me. After all, It's ln
. their Interest . for me to buy an
ArneJ;lcan fighter plane. The more
they can sell, the cheaper Northrop
can build them."
"Well, If you want to Indulge
yourseU at the expense of the chUd·
ren's teeth, go ahead and buy one.
What are you going to do with your
F-5?"
.
''I'll give It to Joel. Then he won't
be borrowing m y Tlgershark every
Ume he wants to go on a mission ."

:;

SPEOALS

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OHIO
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842 2nd Ave.
446-1405
O'Dell True Value
Lumber
Vine &amp; Third.
446-1276
'

Jackson
Energy Center, In c.
At. 93, North
286-2715
CHS-TV &amp;
Home Supply
188 Main St.
. 286-6880
Middleport
)Iaiiey Lumber
555 Park St.
992-6811 .

WEST VIRGINIA
Mason
Pickens Hdwe.
103 S. 2nd St.
773-5583
Pl. Pleasani
Hardman Home
Center
At. 2 )3ypass
675-4692
Craddock's
'County Gardens
1 t 11 Viand St.
675-2702

'J

�The Dai

Thursday, Ja11uary 27, 1983

Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S ·

uisville
emp is State,
'•. scare in New York
survive
with 21 points, each scored four for
By Associaled Press
the Tigers durtng that span.
Two of the nation's Top Ten
Memphis State's first 15 oppocollege t&gt;asketball teams visited
nents had averaged only 61.4 points
New York a nd learned that It's not
a game and Coach Dana Kirk called
·•
always Fun City.
lana "the first team we've had this
Fifth-ranked Memphis State and
year
we couldn 't contain
No.8 Louisville had to fight for their
offensively.
''
lives before coming away with
hard -earned victories over Ion a and · In the nightcap, Louisville Coach
Denny Crum said he thought it was
Rutgers Wednesday night In a
obvious . why ·he ordered the .
Mad ison Square Garden
Cardinals to freeze the ball with a
doubleheader.
51-49
lead and more than eight
First, Memphis State held off
minutes
left.
lana !14-88 behind Ke ith Lee's 28
points, including a pair of free
throws with three seconds left when
Rutgers' Tom Young said his
lana called a timeout a lthough it had
players didn't challenge Louis·
none remaining a nd was hit with a
ville's stall "because we were tired.
I wa nted to restourplayersandthen
bench technical.
Then, Louisville froze the ball for come out and foul w.lth two minutes
. more than seven minutes late in the
to go. Who figures they're going to
game a nd nosed out Rutgers 54-49 stall against us for five minutes?"
for its eighth consecutive triumph .
The slowdown finally was inter·
In other games involving The rupted ~;1th 31 seconds left when
Associa ted Press Top Twenty, Scooter McCray was fouled and
second-ranked Indiana outlasted
made two free throws. Sophomore
Northwestern 78-73. No.6 Virginia Milt Wagner led the Cardinals with
trou nced George Washington 5944, 22 points, including two baskets that ·
ninth-ranked Houston clobbered gave them a 5147lead .
Rice 7!).4(), No.l2 Arkansas nipped
In Chicago, Ted Kitchel scored 29
Texas Tech 62-59. No.13 Missouri points alter being he ld scoreless for
defeated Kansas 76-63 and No.15 the first nine minutes and led 15-1
Georgetown crushed Seton Hall Indiana over Northwestern In a Big
Ten game. The Hoosiers tra iled
71-48.
Top Ten
throllgh moot of the first half, but
Memphis Sta te. 1!)-1. took ad van· finally went a head to stay early in
tage of foul problems by lana 's top the second half on a three-point sho.t
two scorers - Steve Burtt had 31 by Kitchel a nd a basket by J im
points ~.nd Gary Sprtnger added 15 Thomas. Randy Wittman added 25
- to move from a 61-59 lead to70-61. points for Indiana , while Art Aaron
Lee a nd Bobl:ly Parks, who finished . topped Northwestern with 21, in-

.

eluding a trio of three-pointers.
Kitchel , who connected on four
three-point shots, said he doesn't
like the new rule.
At Charlottesville. Va .. Virginia's
Ralph Sampson scored 16 points,
grabb&lt;;!d 16 rebounds and blocked
four shots and the Cavalier$, 16-2,
pulled away from George Washing·
ton in the final sev~n minutes.
Reserve J im Milleradcled 11 points,
all in the second ha lf.
Houston's Abdul Akeem Ola·
juwon scored 20 points,,pulled down
eight rebounds and rejected four
shots to lead the Cougars, 162, over
Rice in Southwest Conference
action.
SocondTen
In another SWC game a t Lubbock, . T exas, 161 Arkansas used
clutch free throws down the stretch
to fend off Texas . Tech. Darrell
Walker had 18 points' for the
RazorhackS, who converted 16 of 24
free throws in the second half.
At Lawrence, Kan., Steve Stlpanovich scored 25 points and Jon
Sundvold poured in 18 of his 221n the
second half as Misscuii eased past
Kansas in a Big Eight ga me. The
Tigers are 1!&gt;-3 overall, 3-0 in league
play.
· ·
At Landover, Md .,'Pa trickEwing
had 22 points, 11 rebounds and four
b locked shots as Georgetown, 14-4,
pummeled Seton Ha ll . The Hoyas
scored the first eight points of the
second half as part of a 22-2 blitz that
broke OJ?€n a close contest.

'

Falcons,· OU remain in first place
By The Associaled Press
When told that Toledo had just hit
24 of 27 field goal a ttempts in the
second ha lf against his team. Jim
McDonald just Laughed.
"I didn 't think they missed a ny,"
said the first-year Kent State coach.
who had just seen his Golden
Flashes absorb a 98-61 pounding a t
the hands of the Rockets.
It was the only thing Me Dona ld
could laugh about in his first trtp
back to Toledo since leaving there
as a n assista nt for the head
coaching reins a t cross-state Mid·
American Conference rival Kent
State.
Eiswhere in the MAC Wednesday
night, Bowling Green a nd . Ohio

University remained in a first -place
deadlock going into Saturday's
showdown a t Athe ns. The F a lcons
whipped Western Michiga n 63-48,
while .Ohio got by Central Michigan
77-72.
Miami stayed one game behind
with a 71-67 triumph over Eastern
Michigan. Bail State beat Northe rn
Illinois 58-48, as the rest of the league
is at least three games behind the .
leaders.
Mitch Adamek made 14 of 18 field
goal a ttempts as Toledo hit a school
record 69 percent for the game,
including their first 13 shots of the
second ha lf. Toledo also outrebounded Kent ~28.
Adamek finished with ll points.

'

:'
',•

'.
Brian Honde•belt, Lee Powell, Sbawa Baker and ;:
MEIGS FRESHMEN - 'lbe Meigs Marauder
Park Long. SW!dlng, left lo rllbt, are ScoU PulllnA, '
Freshmen basketban learn, pictured above, are curDave Warih, Brian Kom, Chris Kennetly, Rodd flar.
rently 7-G &lt;in the year. Tbls hustling crew Is being
oounted upon heavUy In Marauder cage lortwaes bt . rison and coach Tim. Saunders. Not pictured waa ._
manager Lonnie LeMaster.
.
the future. Kneeling, lefllo right, are. Chris Shank_,

I

Smllh -Nelson Motors

14

Fetty '$ Trt;'f' ServiCf'

8

Eagles Club
'
~
• tiJ gh SCrlt'S - Speed R\!SS('Il 5:&gt;1. Belty
Smith 519: Bob Couch 551. Pa l Carson 510.

J;tomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tuesday 1'11pUcale League
$1andlnp
January ~ 1983

Plo.

Team
Lart'}·'s Grocery

'

Meigs Jnn

walg cross &amp; scm

1
6

6

JBL Construction.

2

Blue Ta .. Jm

2

knowledge that he was a candida te
Sugar Run Ashland
1
•
High
ind
ividual
game
Carolyn
Bachner
in Los Angeles.
HJgh galllf:&gt; - SjX"ed Russell m, Isabelle
184. 180; Kelly Wilson 165.
At a news conference a t the
Couch HJ7: Bob Couc h 1~ . Betty Smith 188.
HJ gh series - Carolyn Bachner 514: LeTeam
seriesZlck&gt;'s
Sport
Shop
~1.
nora McKnight 458: Kelly Wilson 422
Seahawks' Kirkland . Wash .. offi·
Team gam('- ZldE&gt;'s Spon Shop 785.
Team high game - M{'\gs tnn 4.'fi.
ces, he said . "Idon'twanttodiscuss
Team high series - Meigs Inn 1249.
Early Wednesday Mixed League
whatatiJeroptions !had.That would
January 19, 1983
be a slap in the facetootherpeople."
Tuesday~:.;
League
Team
Pts.
January 11 , 1983
The a nnouncement _came only
No.6
24
ZIOO's SIXln Shop
24
four ' hours after he stepped off an
~e::: cross &amp; Sons
~4
Tony's Carry-Out
, 20
a irplane from Buffalo via Chicago
Meigs
1nn
12
Smith-Nelson Motors
14
Sugar Run Ashl and
7
Fetty's Tree Service
8
at Seattle-Tacoma Internation al
Eagles
Club
.
.
6
Airport.
HiRh series - John Tyree tro, Carolyn
Blue Tartan
6
Knox, who has a 91 -51-1 NFL
BachrtQr 541: Ray Ra:ach 552, Deb! Hensley
JBL Construction
4
515.
High Individual game - carolyn Bachrier
record, refused to say why he left
High ~arne - Jotm Tyree 216, Carolyn
194 . 176; Kelly Wilson 155.
Buffalo with one season remaining · Bachner
191: Ray Roach 212. Deb! Hensley
HJgh series - Caro lyn Bachner 514: Franand
Betty
Smith
Hll.
on a six-year contract.
kle Hunnel 43l; Kelly Wilson 379.
Tea m serk&gt;s =- No. 6 2073.
He said he had " no complaints
Team gilmt&gt; - Zide' s Sport Shop 720.
r.:~~~~~~-=-~;,;or~r;;'lon •l8.
about Ralph Wilson, " the Bills'
r
Ea ~ y Wednesday Mixed Leaguo
'lllcsday TripUca&amp;e League
owner. There were reports that
January 5, 1983
standings
Knox was unhappy with the Bills for
Telllll
Pb.
January 18_,1983
failing to keep top players such as
Tony 's Carry OUl
12
Team
.Pts.
1'Pam No.6
10
Wald Cross- Sons
18
Linebacker Tom Cousineau , Buffa·
Zlde 's Spon Shop
10
Larry's Grocery
15
Ia's first-round draft choice in 1979.
Smith-Nelson Motors
6
Sugar Run Ashland
13
Fetty's Tree Service
6
Meigs Inn
12
Cousinea u went to Canada and was
· Eagle!i Clu b
4
JBL Construction
8
traded to Cleveland in 1982.
High series - Ray Roach 559, lsatx'lle
Bltlf' Ta rtan
6

Larry'sGrocery

H:igh game - RaY Roach 223, Isabell-;:

Four Red pitchers go to arbitration
negotiate a con tract with the Reds.

Couch 182: Larry Dugan 212, Deb! Hensley
a nd Pat Carson 175.
Team se rle~S - Zlde'!:i Sport Shop 1983.

Team game - Tea m No. 6 747.

·.

the quarter marks .
Other scorers were Donnie
Becker, stx •. Jesse Howard, four,
Todd Hysell, Tim Cassell, and Phil
King, each with two, and Rex
Haggy had one. Russellled the little
Lancers with 15.
Coach Bookman pointed out the
superior defensive effort by the entire tea,m and their run and gun
offense.
.
SEVEN111 GRADE
· With all16 players seeing at least
two quarters of action, the Meigs
seventh grade defeated Federal

Hocking~~.

JUDGES INTERVIEW ......... ........ :.. .. .......... 35%
,In a 10 minute interview with each Junior Miss, judps look for
,.perception, a sense of values, clarity of expression, concern and
ability in human relations.

•

.
'
.''

PubUsbed every afternoon. Monda)'
through Frtday. Ul Court Str(t(&gt;{, by the
Ohio ·Valley

Publishing Company

·

ca n Nt'Wspaper Publisher.:! i\Ssoc;tatioo,
National Adve rtls ln~ Representative.
Branham Newspape-r 'Sale-s, 7l.1 Third

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~

•,.
'••
'

1983 MEIGS COUNTY 'JUNIOR MISS .
CYI'ITHIA LYNN CROO~S

""
•I

SUIISClUPnON RATES

By Ca nWr or Motor Route
Orx&gt; Week .......... ........... , .. .. ........ $1 .00

'•

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SOUTHEAST
OHIO
JUNIOR MISS
INCORPORATED

ln!ddf' Ohio

..

13 w....k ,
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OI'K' Month ..... .. ... ...... .. .... .......... . $11 .&lt;40

Ont&gt; Year ............... ................... S52.Ill
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Da lly ...... ........ ...... .

Th e Spo rts leader

•
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Subsclibcn; not ck&gt;slri~ to pa y tht&gt;(oarrter
may remit In ad~a ncedlreCt to The DaUy
5(-nUnel on a 3, 6or 12 month basis. Credit
will br f! lvcn earner each mont,h.

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!owns whef'(' homr ~arrter service 1s

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avallablC' .

Southeastern Ohio

WMPO-fM
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OLDS.-CAD.-CHEVY, INC.
E, MAIN .

EBERSBACH
110 W. MAIN ST.
PH. 992-2811

HARDWARE
· SINCE

1929
Pomeroy,Ohio
M-S 8:00 to 5:00

..:' We love Ya &amp; Wish You The Best

"...

rGRANDMA
&amp; GRANDPA
•
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.

OPEN WEEKDAYS
9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M.
SATURDAY 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
PHONE 992-3795

W. MAIN

POMEROY

HOMER; NANCY
GREG &amp; GEN·ECOLE

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH ..

'

\

WE ARE PROUD OF YOU! '

.
. "

K&amp;C JEWELERS
N. 2nd

1,# -

/ t

'
Front Row - Cindy Crooks - 1983 Meigs County Junior Miss and
Scholastic Award Winner
'
2nd Row- Julie Spencer, 1st Runner-Up; Tonya Salser, 2nd RunnerUp; Tracy RlfOe, Poise and Appearance Winner; Andrea Batey, Spirit
. and Youth Fitness Winner, and Michelle Johnson, Spirit Winner. ·

MR. &amp; MRS. CHARLIE CHANCEY
RICK &amp;MICHAEL
MR. &amp; MRS. PAUL AMBERGER
DEBBIE BffiiNG
ELEANOR WERRY
DIANA TAYLOR
RON VANCE
MEIGS HIGH GIRLS

FARMER'S BANK
·AND SAVINGS COPJIPANY

POMEROY

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
570 W. MAIN

POMEROY

BEST OF LUCK, ONDY

DEE, DANNY and
·ROBERT BROWN
WE ARE PROUD OF YOU!!

DAN, JEANETIE;
DANNY &amp; KATHY THOMAS
ROYAL CROWN
BOTTLING COMPANY

tUW YORK
CLOTHING .HOUSE
126 E. MAIN
'

POMEROY MILL ST.
'

HARTLEY SHOES

2nd E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY

.

GENE COLE

BEST OF WCK, CINDY!

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
106 BUTIERNUT

PH. 992-6669

'

.

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NOlA and BILL SWISHER

BEST WISHES!!

.

'

MIDDLEPORT

MEIGS HIGH
.CHEERLEADERS
. MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

PAULA, VELVET

POMEROY

POMEROY

.221 W. 2nd

.TEAM

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

POMEROY

E. MAIN

PENNY COMPTON
MINDY HILL
DONNA ROSE
JOYCE QUILLEN
PAULINE REUTER
RALPH WERRY

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POMEROY

ELBERFELDS

OTHER SUPPORTERS

W2nd

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FAMILY RESTAURANT

VIUAGE PMARMACY
MIDOlS'ORT, OH.

POMEROY

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SIMMONS·

••
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When your doctor prescribes medl·
cation that's Important to your
health, take It td us ... where we
take special care to see that your
prescription Is accurately filled.

I

POMEROY

SECOND AVE. ·

.....

Fill It Here

1-Lb.
ONLY

*

MEIGS INN &amp;
PIZZA SHACK·

,!1

Klus

.

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN INSURANCE

H&amp;R Block preparers have received special training to
help you this year. Old you know there ere two different
short forms, Increased deductions for an IRA, and in·
creased child care credits ... and many more changes?
you
We've done our homework on the new tax laws,
don't have to.

N. 2nd

MIDDLEPORT

E. MAIN

~,

UNCLE GEORGE, AUNT CINDA,
and P. J. HARRIS

CENTRAL TRUST

BEST WISHES, ONDY!

•

\

GOOD LUCK!!

.,.

,.,.

"I have
a very
different
a ttitude ..
the Reds
this
yea r," Pastore
about
said. "It's different now because I
have a quality agent. Last year, 1-.

ROACHES, WATER
BUGS. PALMETTO
: BUGS, ANTS, SILVER
FISH .

I

PAT HILL FORD

:1

Team high .series- Larry's Grocery 1275.

·~-.1.'
D-CON
,
PROACH pRUFE

..

.•

''

'

$2399

was conne&lt;l. "

MIDDLEPORT

992-5523

.,

High irxllvldual game- Carolyn Bachner
196: Diana Ash 167. 166.
High series ..:. Diana Ash 489; Caro ly n
Bac hner 477; Charldene Hanning 417.
T eam high game - Larf)''s Grocery 440.

-KILLS ROACHES·

BAKER
PHOTOGRAPHY

MAIL SUBSCRIP110NS

7~~;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;~~;"';;"';s~. .;. ~·";'";. .;.;. ;. .;..;. .;. .;. ;.~;·g •
c•1.:·os· EOUTS
."'.

Woody Woodward, assistant gen·
era! ma nager. said arbitra tion was
avoided in the case ef infielder
Rafael Landestoy and pitcher fUch
Gale. Both agreed to 1983 contracts.

30,000 VOLUNTEERS
America'.s Junior Miss is a non-profit corporation with
headquarters in Mobile, Alabama. It is supported by concerned
parents, educators, civic groups, business and goVernment. ::
Approximately 30,000 volunteers conduct local and state Junior
Miss competition.

•

POS'T'MASTER : Send address to The
Dally 5endnel. Ul Court Sl .. Pomeroy,
OhiO 4.'l769 .

I

. CREATIVE &amp; PERFORMING ARTS ........ ..... 20%
Judgifll is based on originality, technical ability. appropriate- ·
; ness of selection and costume, stall! presence during perfor·
: mance of a stage presentatioo of a vocal, instrumental, painting,
dance, etc:. ·

I

Avt'nue. New York, N~· York 10017.

I

POISE &amp; APPEARANCE ............. ....:...... .... 150/o
· Grace. poomina, poise, posture and carriage is considered along
. with appearance, coordination and composure.

''

Mul timedia, loc., Po~roy , Ohio 45789,
!82·2156. Second class . postage pakl a1
Pomeroy. Ohio

$2.5 MIWON IN AWARDS
More than $2.5 million in college scholarships and other
awards are presented to participating Junior Misses at local,
state and national levels each year. Awards vary in each commlllity and state. National awards exceed $100,000 with a
$25,000 scholarship to the college of IHir choice to the girl
selected as America's Junior Miss. In addition to our national
sponsors, many businessmen, civic organizations, colleges and
universities contribute to the list of scholarship awards.

- PHYSICAL FITNESS ........ ...... ... ,.. .. .. .. .. •.. .. .. 15 o/o
Coordination, stamina, qility, posture and carriage are consi·
dered in an overall evaluation of health and physical well-being.

(USPS I - )

A DIYMion of MYMIII ell1 Inc.

.... IT'S AIMS
By presenting college scholarships and other awards to
Junior Miss participants, the program seeks to focus attention
on the constructive achievements of all yout~. to encourage
· excellence and enkindle a sense of dedicationi of the future.

'•

:rhe ·Daily Sentinel

Dally ?ril"SS Assoclatloo and thP Amert·

Your
Station
For
High School
Basketball
And Ohio
University

SOIOLASTIC ACHIEVEMENT ..................... 15%
· A panel of qualified educators review and rate transcrips of
pades and score of scholastic tests and college entrance
examinations.

~::::::::::::::::::::~

After falling behind 10-G alter one
quarter, Meigs led 16-14 at the half
and outscoi-ed Federa l 15-2 In the
third quarter to put It out of reach.
Michael Bartrum led Meigs with
10, Scott Wllllams had eight, Paul
Melton slx , Don Dorst five, Joey

The Junior Miss program is open to high school senior girls
under 19 years of age: Local Junior Miss winners advance to
state competitions· which determine the candidates for the
national title. In many states "ai large" candidates are .consi. dered in instances where no local Junior Miss competition is
conducted.

At all levels of the Junior Miss program judging standards
and basis of selection are t!ljl sanie. lhe emphasis is on excel,lencti in schoW'shi(. personality, character, physical-well beinc,
creativity and in dealinp with fellow humans.

"

Loving, James Norman, Mike ·:
Roush and Chuck Pullins each :
scored two, and, John Sisson had :
one.
,.
Tate led Federal with 19, lnclud- ;
lng ali 14 of his team's polns in the ~
firSt half . Coach Ron Drexler gave •
the defensive player of the week :
award to his entire team lor their :
effort against Jackson, a one-point ;
loss. Meigs is now 4·7.
The Meigs Junior high teams will :
play at Athens next Monday at 5 ~
p.m.

Member: ThP ASsocicued Press. Inland, ·

1

Pomeroy 8owlin« l..ane!i
Eariy w~ Mixed League
January 12, 19113
Team
Pts.
No. 6
16
Zld&lt;&gt; 's Sport SliOp
16
Tony 's Carry Out
14

... .IT'S S'OPE

Young Marauders post double _ wins ·~
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
Mara uder J unior High teams garnered a double win here Wednes·
day. night.
EIGiml GRADE
The Meigs eighth graders fast·
braked to win their 11th win against
one defeat as they ambushed the
Federal Hocking eighth grade 5941.
Coach Rusty BOokman's crew
was led 1:&gt;y J . R. Kitchen witll 18
points while Huey Eason added 14
and controlled the boards. Steve
Musser added .10 for the little
Marauders ,
Meigs led 13-6, ll-17. and 44·29 at

The America's Junior Miss program, now in its 27th year, is
a nationwide scholarship activity to recognize, reward and encourage excellence in our young people. At Mobile, Alabama,
each year since 1958 it has selected the nation's outstanding
high school senior girl from among thousands who take part in
all fifty states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

HOW
JUNIOR MISSES
ARE JUDGED.•..

,•

Local bowling

Couch 48J; Clyde Sayre 532, DebbleSayre47J.

CINCINNATI (AP l - The Cln·
ctnnati Reds haveslgned infielder
Wayne Krenchicki and is near
signing pitcher Frank Pastore and
Infielder Ron Oester.
Four pitchers filed for salary
arbitration - Pastore. Joe Price,
Ma rio Soto and Bruce Berenyi. But
Pastore and his agent. Allen
Hendrtcks, sa id that was a formal·
ity and that they expected to

·'•:
:·•'

while Ken · Epperson had 19,
inc luding ali seven field goal tiies.
Dave Zeigler led Kent State with 21
points.
Bowling Green tipped off a 20-2
streak late in the second half to blow
open a cloSe game. Keith Taylor
scored 19 points to lead the Fa lcons.
Tim · Waum had 11 points and
Cordell Eiey 10 to pace Western
Michigan.

Knox takes job with Seahawks
SEATI'LE lAP)- ChUCk Knox
was na med coach 'of the · NFL's
Seattle Seahawks on Wednesday
just a day afterresigningascoachof
the Buffalo Bills.
Knox, 50, would not disclose the
terms of his contract nor its length.
"Nobody in this business is a
miracle worker," Knox said. " We
have not set any timetable to win
this or win that.
" But we will be competitive. I can
promise you that. We expeCt to tum
this football program around . We
didn't come ·(his far not to tum it
around ."
The namingof Knox as the third
head coach in the seven-yea r
history of Seattle's Nationa l Football League franchise surprised
many who expected him to return to
Los Angeles to fiU the vaca nt Rams
job.
Knox. a 10-year NFL head
coaching vetera~ . refused to ac-

WHAT THE JUNIOR MISS PROGRAM IS

'

83 MILL ST.

. MIDDLEPORT · •

.,.

�Thursday, January 27, 1983

Thursday, January 27, 1983

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Po

corner of the country.

Brya nI , four w&lt;&lt;&gt;ks to the day
a rter he shuffled off into retirement
a s the winningest coach in . the
his lory of his sport , died Wednesday
of a heart attack. a death tha i
s1 unned Alabama' s followers and
reduced strong your.g alhletes to

tears .
"Quit coaching? I'd croak in a
week," he once said .II took a lmost a
month.
The enti re 1982 Alabama football
team- a squad thai slruggled loan
un -Bryant -like 84 record but
capped the Bear's career with a
21-15 victory over Illinois in his final
ga me at the LiberyBowllast Dec. 29
- will serve as honorary pallbear-ers al funeral services Friday.
Eight will be selected to carry the
casket of Bryan! , who . ea rned his
fabled nickname as a youth when he
wreslled a bear in a tra veling
circus. He will be buried at
Elmwood Cemetery in Bir·

.•

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hard , but loved, taskmaster. Patr!otic to the core, devoted to his players
and inspired by a winning spirit that
would not quit, Bear Bryant gave
this country the gift of a life
unsurpassed."
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace, ordering flags at the capitol
lowered , called Bryart " a man
among m en who brought great
fa me and honor to Alabama. "
Bryant captured the imagination
of many by sending his often small,
a lways well-disciplined teams to the
top of the rankings, winning
nat ional titles in 1961 , 19&amp;1 and 1965.
Later he would add two more- in
1978 and 1B79 - and closed his
career with a 323-85-17 record. He
·passed Amos Alonzo Stagg's mark
of 314 career victories in 1~1. .
Bryant's death was unexpected,
even though he suffered from mild
heart trouble in recent years .
His doctor, William A. Hill, said
Bryant's heart stopped at 12:24
p.m., CST, Wednesday and efforts

to restore his heartbeat bega n
!nuned!ately.
"We did put a pacemaker through
b!s chest a nd were able tD restore a
weak heartbeat" for about an hour,
Hill said. Bryant was declared dead
at 1: 31 p.m .
Hll,l said Bryant suffered "a
sudden cardiopulmonary arrest"
only momentS after appearing in
good sp]rilj;, joking with nursesaild
maklngplansforaduckhuntingtrip
to his native Arkansas. He said the
cause of death was "a massive
coronary occlusion."
Members of Bryant's family,
Including his wife, Mary Harmon
Bryant, were swnmoned.to Druid
City Hospital ·and were present
whenhewaspronouriceddead.
·

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Monday-9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
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Friday-9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
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hyperiens!on or loss of kidney

ANSWER: Recurrent infections
problem?
In theinselves are no particUlar
problem as long as t!Jey are treated
corrected. But If they are not
treated adequately, the Infection
often goes on to Involve the kidney.
The kidney is an Important struc·
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materials from the body. Recur·
rent kidney infections can result In

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of the kidney and the ureter.
!ncludlng cysts or· absence In the
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lor .,. ~" 1 - ~- or •taM)&lt;&gt;
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!JJ_., •.,.. •• •

nary tract !nfeetlons a serious

GIRLS' LEV·I'S

X-ray, alsoknownasaniVP.Inth!s
procedure, a dye is usually Injected
into the vein d. an arm and then
X-rays are taken at precise intervals to detennlne how the dye is
going through the kidney and Into
the Ureters, the tube-like structure
that connect the kidney with the
bladder. This X-ray !~£'Ips to detect
any abnonnallties In the structure

I( ......11 ... IISU. I ~q., Ctw:am ~ll

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,ou • ~..,..

Aoother test that your physician
may want your daughter 'tD un·
dergo is called a vo!d!ng cystourethrogram. In this tes~ a dye is
Injected Into the bladder and then
Into the ureters. Tills helps to detect
such frequellt abnormaUt!es as
wine flowing back up into the
ureters from the bladder. Instead d.
directly down from the kklneys into
the bladders,
,
QUESTION: Are chronic uri·

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QUESTION: My daughter has
had about three bladder infections
In the past year. Soould we be
alarmed?
ANSWER :
Recurrent urinary tract !nfect;!ons are not uncommon !n
young girlS . Such
infections are far·
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at least partly because In girls the
· urethra (the opening from the
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infection Is still presen ~ J.Uur
daughter needs to continue with
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QUESTION: Are there any other
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mlne my daughter's problemS? ·

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By Edward Schreck, D.O.

A·h*ent Profeasor
ol Family Medldne

'

r-;::::::::::::;:::::::=::;1
l

WEEKEND SPECIALS
AT THE MEIGS INN
..

''•.

bama star and New York Giants
coach who was picked to succeed
Bryant last month, learned of the
death while on a recruiting trip in
&lt;!'lorth Carolina and planned to cut
short h15 trip a nd return to
Tuscaloosa .

~
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Page

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mlnghamaftersemcesattheFlrst
Methodist Church in Tuscaloosa.
Many of the foremost figures in
college football are expected to
attend, many of them Bryant
disciples who played or coacbed
under him during the course of his
record -setting38-yearcareer.
Bryan t's death, caused by a
sudden massive hear! attack at a
hospital ·one day a fter he was
admitted with chest pains. left
Crimson Tide .followers in tears.
Some wepl on the air as radio
stations broke off regular programming to open ·call-in shows about
Bryant .
The death was also mourned-at ··
the highest levels of government.
Reagan eulogized Bryant as " a

The Daily Sentinttl

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Family medicine: .no alarm found tn three bladder infections
..
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r-;=====================::;,.,''
NOTICE -

Legendary coach Bryant ·dies
T\;SCALQOSA,Ala.IAPI -As a
youl h, he wres1led a bear. As a man ,
hPwrestled wit h somethingelse-a
drivp for per.fection the world of
college foolball had never seen
before.
Paul William "Bear" Bryant craggy-fac ed , gravel-voiced, the
ioughesl kind of field master, the
softest touch to friends in need - is
dead a169.
·
F lags al lhe Ala bama Sta te
Capilol in Montgomery flew at
··na if-sta ff today as though a nationa l
, hero had fallen. And for many,
including the president oft he United
States . one had .
" We America ns los1 a hero who
a lw~ys seemed larger than life,"
Pres'idenl Reagan said as e ulogies
for Brya nt came in from every

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy

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non~~

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Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ja

Thursday, January 27, 1983

Helen Help Us

i]

..··

27 1983

The Daily Sentinel

She isn't what she seemed, but i~ she right? JJ

I.

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SHERIFF'S - The residence of Meigs ,CoUllty's sheriff will be
among lhe,plctures tncluded ln a slide show p~otationof older M~lgs
County homes and bulldlngs being prepared b)! the Meigs Co\mty Im·age Srekers Camera Club.

· ' CHESTER - 'l1ds shot of Meigs County's early courlhouse In
C)leSter and youngsters of yesteryear will be a part of the slide show
presenallon of the Meigs County Image Srekei'SCamera Club. The club
Is expected to come up with a wealth In photos of older homes and .all
. MelgsCountlans are Invited to enter their home for possible selection In
the SbOW, the firSt of Its kind.
.

·· Seek entries for Big
Bend historical show
The Meigs County Image Seekers Camera C.lub is hoping to
. come up with a wealth of older phOtographs as members move into a
new project.
.. The project will he preparation of a slide show to be presented by
. the Meigs County Historical Society on Heritage Sunday, observed
annually at the Meigs Museum In conjunction with the Big Bend
Regatta. ·
_ . The group is particularly looking for photos of older homes. Slides
will he made from t he 'homes selected for the final presentatlon.
·J'here will be a brief narrative on each older home which Is used and
.:;. black and white. print will also be made and kept on record in the
.

.

~ mu~um .

Anyone interested in having their home considered for the slide
·. should complete the form In today's Paily Sent inel.

.•.

HOME SLIDE SHOW

...... ........... ............ .............. .. .....................................
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Location .... ... ...... ..... .... ............... .... .......... .. .. .. .. ... ... ..... ... ..... .
Phone No..... .. .. .... ... .... ... ....... :...... ... ..... .. ......... .... .. ..... , ........ .
Descriptlon of Home .... ..... ........ .... .... .... .... ............ ..... .......... ..

... ..... ,•..........···············' ......... ........ ., , .. .... ......... ........ ............ .
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Hi~tory. of Houses, if known

Short

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

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Mall to: The Image Seekers .Camera Club, c/o Randy Houda·
shelt, Box 67, Rutland, Ohio 45775.

Calendar
THURSDAY

POMEROY - A soup supper
will he beld friday from 5 to 7

POMEROY Pickup of
pnodu~ and bulk items ordered
through the Meigs County Food
Co-op will be from 3 to 4 p.m.
today at the Senior Citizens
C:ertter.

p.m. at Pomeroy Elementary
School by the Safety Patrol.
Vegetable soup, hot dog, and
beverage will be $2 with dessert
extra. Soup will also be a'Vallable
for carry-out at $2 a quart.

• MEIGS BAND Boosters will
meet Thursday at 7 p.m: in the
band room. Final plans will he
made to send students to Six
Flags over Georgia In April. All
parents are urg€9 to attend.

RACINE - Rev. John May- .
na rd of Beauty, Ky., wlll speakat
Racine Church of the Naza rene
at special servi~s to be held at
7:.39 Saturday and 10:30 a.m .
There wUI also , he special
singing.

FRIDAY
POME;ROY Lodge 164, F. and
A.M.. wUl meet Friday at the 7
p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. All master masons are
inVIted to attend: The master
mason degree will be conferred. ·

SA'TIJRDAY
• RACINE - A square. dance
will he held at Racine American
Legion h.all Saturday night, 8: 30
to midnight. Music wUI he by
'!'rue Country and Red Carr will
be the ea,Uer.
-~

POMEROY
Pomeroy
~ 164;F. and A.M., will meet
FrtdaY at 7 p.m. at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.·The degree of
· master mason will be coilferred
a candidate. All . master
l'I'I8.S(IliS are invited to attend.

on

·-

SUNDAY

MT . . CARMEL BAPTIST
Church: Laymen'sLeag'ue, Bidwell, wiU be holding an all day
service Sunday. Sunday School
will begin at 9: 30 a .m. followed ·
by morning worsh,lp at 10:45. AI·
ternoori services will begin at 2
p.m, teaturing music will he
"Walk In the Light Full GOspel .
Truth Choir" from Dayton.
Dinner will he served followtng
morning worhslp.
Tl:IE .JANU AR Y Meig s
County United ·Methodist Youth
Bible Qujz will be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The quiz In·
.valves children ·and youth
through the age of 19. Only two
or three players are needed to
form a team.

SUE
DE;AR HELEN AND SUE:
i\,bout the so-called psychologist
who thinks all homosexuals are
sick, subversive, dangerous, prosely~g. "far out In left field, " potential Communists. This ts a
professional therapist.
·
Gays come in all varteties, just as
do heteros, To generalize the m as
antlestabllshr!lent "threats" Is as
silly as saying all p~ychologisls are
jargon-spouting eggheads.

KITD:
I'd guess Diedra kept qulet about
her past because she considered It
dead - and she didn't want two
strikes against her In a brand new
ballgame . .WhY be bothered about
something as simple as that? -

. R.T .
HEU,N AND SUE:
Jim. the psychologist, says a ll
lesbians ha te men .. I like men, as
frtends, occaslon&lt;!lly as more. How·
ever, i 've foun&lt;'! lhatwh~mmendls­
cover a woman Is gl!y, they're so
affronted theY begin to hate HER.
- LE$j3IAJ'l
1I

. (GCYT A PROBLEM? Or a sub.
ject for discussiOn, two-generation
·style? Direct your .questions to
ettber Sue or Helen Batte! :_ or
both, if you wa;nt a combination
mother-daughter answer .;..In care
of th1s neWspaper.)

HELEN AND SUE:
I totally agree with Him; . who

Mr. and Mrs: Terrance Brewer
MiddiePOrt, are announcing th~ ·
birth of a daughter, Melissa Marle
born Nov. 2 in Holzer M~tcal
ter. The Infant weighed flvec.
pounds, 14 ounees aqd was 18inches.
long.
Maternal grandpa~ts 'a te Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Buckley M!MrSvtlle, and the paternal g;.andparents are Mr. and Mrs. James
Brewer, Mid&lt;;ItePort.

een:

1 ·C:-"' of t -o t.... in Mtn!OCol
2·111--..
{ll-lillb•Miv;;...,~l

3-· --··
,.,,,.rc.und
..
,
...........
. • ,OOC1_

62-CB, TY

• · o..-~

""

i7-Mw .....-lnt_nlo

1'·""'''
n .,.. .........~.

U ·F•!Oilf l\1.,.,......_

71·Ca,.....E.,....,_

l l· fOJ

.\

~ • · w...t••••...,

1:/au ifir•!/
/,.fl, , ~o~ ·f n Jl

7i·-•• • Meioro

....... to•5 ...

, ...,.1

1

!We

7s-v.. •••wo
.,,.-,.e,-

u .• ,........., ~

7 -'h riiS...I,.....,. -

••
"
"' i
,,' '
::
'•
'·

'U·1nodoo

.... c-.
...... c..... u

,.,~~~ep..,

a.-t••do .

,, .....,..,__.

U'· lii...... w......

····-·T·. . . .

,,~

.
IS-h...,... _
14-(lilciJO:.a.lo A.! .... ot;.,
11· 0..•~ K - .
.

1 4·Hoy 1o

....,..

1 7·Mnc--. .
11_.- - T D Doo

......

n.,..._,. ......,..

u .u.......

44-A...,, ..,..,,,_, R..,t
:$1,fwr•iihecl lloom o

IS·IchMio .. .
1•-lllNio, T\llo CI ' ! -

o...,.,·o ....

,,. .......

I J. Joln~~tof•.,•

~

D oll~

. ... . . . hroMI•• ·

At-Oisf

··-·o.
.:.,an

..1--..; ,

'leo

.2u

!rN••"C". WV

falls

'M Ra e•.,.
"142 · A"''-""
U "1 Cool. ~lot

17-Uploo!M...,

CA,.r-oo4

••,· I

.

.

. ..

•n

lHft
~ C•a.-

...... .

7 "13 Moo&lt;~"
18Z N-fl.••""
Ill.

$20,500.00.

l"lloti.

Geltla Co . Co.on Club
opo-ri"'l Shooting .Metch

0 old , silver. at• rll "I ;

Federal· end State in come
taxea . Quarterly rep,o rts ,
W-2 forms. Done bY ep·
polntment. 8.1 4-992· 2272

or eee Wendlt Eblinet .4 1000
lAurel 'C tlfl Rd .. Pomeroy.

.

NEAR D£XTER- 45 acres of ground with all minerals. and
all fenced. Six room house wrtb 4 bedrooms, 2 enclosed
JlQrches, ahu.ge barn with hay loft and a garage with work·
sh~ . Asking $50,000.00.

-~~• -•• til l

.

•&gt;

jewelry, ring1, old coinl
cur'"CV· Ed Bur~ott Barbo} , ·
Shop, Middleport.
3476. .

I

t92, ,
•

.

Beglrlnin"g end advanced

t ] OO
01 00
5700

Wanted To BIIY ·

II\ICOME TAX SERVICE .

.

SYRACUSE.- Here is a pr~erty !hal shoult be sold. I I+
story older home with 3·5 bedrooms, two IOOxlOO lots in a
gooo neiillborflood. Owner wants an offer. ·Asking only

11!1 "~"Ill-··
IN

C""' tl.,
143 ' ...........d

$51,9:&gt;0.00.

Aooo Ci&gt;d • )0:4

Upiti l!;-lto
0ftollo,~ ..... Up lo I Ii O!"&gt;Uk ·ll'l,.. 41yM_ II...,
\lpte11W"'ft , Si •""• .,.....,.

16-llllll _ .. .....,,

II· Et~wiP"'*"' htr • •"'
41-Fo t LMM

!l'i12

·

llia Oo -

lllill
U J

1 1· 11-1¥

.......,................., ,.._.

13·1 - -

v-~

2•

41 ·11"" ... """ .....
4l·llll-oK...,HIIW .. MI

, ,.. ·c..,. ll4

~·

~17

.

....... c .... ..,.,

a.lioC.,.,.ty

NEW LISTING- Lot is block to block~ and is level. Lar
shllle trees , pretty shrubbery and unusual dormers make
this home picturesque. It has ~ bedrooms, full ~asemenl,
. garage apartment, ·and a garage with a workshop.

lnllfi'II• 'IOI "r•f rho•
lf'l ~"t•lru /II ' o•.rf'lurtt $.'1 ·~ .'..

9

1983.

PH.992·2259

,,.,._...liio,...

a IIMIIo E.._...,

3 Announcement•

every Sat"! rdeY ltlrtlng at
&amp;PM . 12 gauge onty. K~iner
R!l, oft At.- 218. Jon . 29 ,

~.

, 54-MiK. -ct.&amp;oodr. .

• L..

•'

~

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Dtpl.
i tJ. ~ourt St.. Po~~troy, Ohio 45769

_,_ ---

il ·tl ... ~olfOoMo

I ·H-y Aa

PHONE
992-2156
Or ·Wrill Dailly Slntiftil ctassif._d

' · '' '"':"i·- ~
.
~-. .
. _...

U · AMO.-

r

you want it ...
you ·ve got it ...

1111

I
'

Pu.blic Notice

Public Notice

knitting clasMs •tertlniil Feb.
2 •. Far ma.re Information
contact Sue Zirkla614· 992 ·

3006.

Earn extra money and .
receive frea houaehold
products everyone uaaS:
deity . Supply 3 - 11 , Call
446-1988 .
.

-~------'---'

HAVE FUN payln,g your ;
Holiday billa. Sell Avon ontfo ,

earn good 81 •· meat nice

peopto . Coli 814 · 843·
2982, 614 - 388·9046,
814·992·3.8 90.

l
•'

I·

Oh iO.

.

.

Each btdder mu st 1nsure that
all empioyees ·and applicants
for employm ent are not dis·
cnmtnated aga1 nst because .of
ra ce. color. relig 1on. se,x. or
nat1or.al · O f1g ~n :
Attentcon· of -'fhe B1dder 1s
d1re"cted to the spec·tal Constructio n .. regulati OnS Included
here1n· relat1ve to s.peo1al reQUirements l or procurement of
labor. the spec1al 1nformat1on
Q1ven 1n .the lnf orl'f!.C!t,ion ro

The esti(ilated constr uttiD rt
cos t l or thiS prO JeCt IS

...I

Utt 1s piece of the

'

i

~· ClrtiiMI hdpe
.. bft OlopJ Okll..

far..,'*
.... .....'*'*'
.
'*"-

Cop1es of Drawmgs. Speccf i"
catcons and Contra ct documents maybe obta1ned or
ex amcned
of Floyd

.

cmr..r

30,000 BTU
90,000 BTU
150,000 BTU
Prices

. .,.

•ill/'*~~ ordn.

---

.'

aood-,
...............
______ ._. ___ d
nws ctllfll

«IIMtucllr ''*~

PH: 992-5432

228 W. MAIN ST.

6l4·992·2l8l

215 Mulbeny Avenue

II

'

VELMA NICiNSKY
Associate

*FREE* $10.00 Gift Certificate

SMOKING JACKET
SIZE-SMALL

Orig.. '30.00
NOW

-iC

$300

-"

•

S30.00 OR MORE!

•

FOR FUlURE USE:'

·y

Cllest•. Ohio

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residentia 1
&amp; Commercial
Call

Pit 985-4269 oj 985-4382
Dowoyno Willa ...
&amp; Seattle Smith
All mek• end models

742·3171

Antenna hwt.IIUn
HouM cajlo and oi'&lt;&gt;p
savir.a available
1·5·1 mo

.
.. 1
·--------~------·-----·--

...

FOUND: Engliah Sheep Dog
with red collar, call 304·
876·4502.

waahers •Ranges

,;T~s~doFs"""'eoR'!v
..
lcE·
PAR
an

====·S·::"'=18

WVaStetec~:r~~n~~:.A~u~ct~~i·:

918&amp;.

..nsulation
•Storni· Doon
•Stann Windows
•Replacement WindoWs

AuctiOn e.v ery Fri. nlg ht at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandiae every week .
Consigrrienr~new and
uaed. merchandise always
welcome. Richard Raynokta

•Now Roofing

. 'FREE ESTIMATES

992-2196

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

Middlaort. Ohio

1·13-tfc

&amp;

one8r Rick~
antiquea, farm. houaeholct..
Licenaed Ohlo-WVa. 304·
773 -6785 or 304-773-

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Auctioneer. 275-3069.

12·31·1mo.·

Orig. '185.00

'

pay, life insurance, retirement Plan. that will teach
you • valuable job skill, plus
help with 1 college or
Vo·Tech 8ducJ~tlon1 There' a
on·ly one around I Hi9h
School Seniore or gredUates, yOu mav even quality
~or • C81h bonus. Contact
the West Virgi,n ia Army
National Guard. For more
information ~;all SergBent
Sergee'lt Lutton at 304-

I

12

.

Situations
Wanted

l~110ns.

Joni Carrino·

~

Dump truck for hire. Will
haUl gravel or most any-

"'

Ohio-61 4-992-5971.

~

·'•
•'
' ;l

Wanted to buy Square
Dancing outfits. All 1i1es,
4:1.~ 3;~ women's. Cell

.....

·'••
, 'l
,.
,.

5

..:I

Will pay caah for uaed

I0

Tho~ cosh

.•••.,

·

( )Wanted
( ) For Sale

.,..•

( )Announcement
( l.f _or Rent

....·'
..,.
;i

•

. 22 .

..·:

,•, (
. :1

I

~

B.

9., _

10.

:t l

•(

1

11 .'

' 'l
r
,, I
~I

'.~;
'''I

. .;l
•••

.......,.
·i '
o!

12.
.13.

.

!r'
;,

_ _ _ __

14,

.

16.

------.

27 .
~· 29.
30.

--~-,----- ~!: _--··- -.
·
-----~ ~: . -- - ~35 . . __ __

Mall This Coupon with Remittance . ·
· · The Dally Sentinel
IT 1 CourtSt.
· Pomeroy, O_h. 45769 . · 1 . .

'

I

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE .

Now Acceptilll New
Clients
low Rates·
15 Years Experience
Ali Work G~mranteed
. To Be Done Ri&amp;frt and
On nme
' CAll992-6273
or 992-6206 ·

B h B ·1·d·
· as an Ul mg
EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
facto!Y ChOke 12

Gaqe Sllotguns Only,

AUTOMATIC
TAANSMISSION co.

614-949·2263 or 614992-2791 .

,

'

Insurance

&gt;
I

SANDY AND BEAVER

'

13

171 w Main

Weekly tr•sh pickups in
Middleport, Bradbury,
and Leadina Creek Area.
"You

Call, We'll

Haul."

PH. 992-3194

992-3305

or
1

No Sunday Cells

IVl0/ 1 ....

'""'"""· OH.

(~ .'
• ~
- ·
v

.

''

9!10~.

Wentad to buy tobacco
poundage . .Call Joe Coli et
814-258-8024.

· · .mo.

_. 11

II
II
I'
I

DISCONTINUED
PERM . .STOCI(

Slm .start trom 1ri16'

·sl1oo
NOW THRU MARCH 5th

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizos

Insulated Doa

992·2725'

· . Hi!fi·l

.
riO

Housos

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

169 N. 2nd

MII)DLEPORT, OH.

from 6'x&amp;' Up

to 24'136'. ,

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
'

I·.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

..

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTI'ON

New Homes - tJJtensiYe
!OtiiOdolin&amp;
o£Jectrlc woli
-custom
Pole - ·
&amp; Glrlps
ollooliniWorl
11\luminum &amp; Vinyl Sid!""

15 GR!G
Yoirs Exporilnct
ROUSH

Rt. 3, Box 54 .
· Roclne, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-2591

PH. 992·7513
.. 992·2212

JL---"---.;..::::-;:;...t

·I"'

,_

. .. .
. ...
-................
'

3 AnnounC:einl!nta

.

rance, 446-9340.

'

15

Schools
lnstr~Jction

BEDS·IR'ON, BRASS, old

Oh.

Or 992·

I

Cle111er, one hotf mile up
Geor811 Creek Rd • .Cot!
441-0294 ..

!

"

3074 or 814, 384·6160.

to Do
pinel18~;;;:;t.;d1:;-o.;;--·

. co. 814·992·3889.

BUYING old and now comic
bookl, otter ll .p .m 304·875·
8239.
.

''

Karate' the ultimate in aelf t
defence ·all private leasorls. . '
Men, women, I. children .
Instruction thru black belt~ 1Y
Also svaiJeble Karate 1'
uniforms puch'lng and ~
kicking baga, lind protective "
eq uip~a~. Jerry lowery •
Auoctates K1rete Studio

want to buY-stindlna
timber in Meigs or MAson

SWEEPER ond sowing BUYING old and new comic
maah,na repalr. ·parts. 1:1\d · boolco, after 6 p.m. · 304·
oup.pllu. Pick up and 8711·1239.

'••
I

furniture, gold, 1ilver
dollen, woOd lea bo~tea .,
1tone jars. antlquea. •tc., .· 143 Burlington ·Rd •• Jick:·
Complete ho·useholdl.
Write: M.D. Mitior, Rt. 4, aon. Oh. Cell 814·286Pomeroy.
7780.

.d ellviry, DaviJ ·Vacuum
ll ·ll·tfo

10·6·tfC

·

our comprehantive mobile •
me coverage with
anyone . Foremost Insu-

amount .. Coli, 814-3B8·

on~v ''31 .R&amp;

•
:

\

red oak, walnut, pOplar. Any

TRANSMISSION ALTER
AND FLUID CHANGE

, . ._. .

N!OBILE HOMES Compare

Standing timber. White oak,

· pf.c~· Tunt-Ups. etc..

•
• .

Buv raw fur and beef hides.

Athens., Oh.

OPEN 9 to s MOtl. tlwu SAT.
All)llls ol Auto Rll!llir,

~

agent. Phone 388·8690.

·deer hides and gin11r:ag and
trapping suppliea. At . 2.

~~-~

·. •

614·367·01 38 .

George Bucklay, 814·664·
4761 . Weekdays 6 to 9,
weekenda 12 noon to 9PM .

- 5-~l~m~o-~-·~====:=======~:===~
~I ::::::::::::~1~3~1~~~:::::::::::::::::;~;:::::::=:::~1~
SALE
I
I
I

-------.----~.:::~

''

.PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT

RACINE .
FIRE DEPT. ·

23.
I
24.
I,
25.
I
26. ---~-,- . 1

::

GUN SHOOT

18.
20 .
21.

'''

·

17,
19, - - - - : - - - -

•.

'I! ~

rates

Include discount

'

.

~

mobile homea . Demegea, Insurance Co. hu offered ' :
repossed or insurance sarvices for fire lnlurence•
claims considered . Call l ·c•ovo•rall• In Gellia CouOty • .
448-0176.
for almost a centwy. Farm.
home and personal property, . 1
· Old 1toneware j~rs. jugs, coverages are available to ~
crockl &amp; milk pitch ere, also meet individual needs . ~ !
old wlchor bukota. Catl Contac1 Neal lna . .Agency, ·

t

•'.\
'I
••
'I

,,~~

.

•'

Gutters-Downspouts· New·
Repair-Gutter Pllntlng -... · *'
Storm Doors &amp; Window•."· . .
Free E1timate1 . Phone

I

• 4

'

•'•
f

'I

'·

•

HOWARD l , WRITESEL
ROOFING COMPANY'.

•

/

'

$3.00 par yard. Call Mary "'
Ki·ng at Rt. 1 Mineraville

:~

,'

~

•

WILL DO RUG WEAVING.

•,,

·

""
"'
"

'
&lt;
~ ,,

$3950

~·...

876·39&amp;0 or call toll free :
1-800-642-3619.
'

ton . 698·3290.

I'

1/2 .PRICE

Employer-AA Plan·M·F·H

thing. Calt 614·992· 3859.

~

'. '

December 1 6. Salary negotiable. Equal Oppor·t u,.lty

..••••

'

(

Welt Vi~glnlo 26305, by

:'

....

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS ............ 1/3 .OFF
ALL MEN'S
OUTERWEAR .... ~ ... 1/3
OFF
I
.
ALL LEATHER COATS ............ 1/3 OFF
MEN'S SWEATERS ................ 1I 3 OFF
MEN'S ALL WEATHER COATS l/3 OFF
MEN'.S ,INSULATED VESl ....... 1/~ OFF .

Street, East, "Chilrletton,·

Art

l

*These Items Do 'Not Qualify For The
Use of The Free Certificate.

NOW

Hansberger, M.p.,. Di..ctor

of Heolth, 1 800 Wuhington

GINGER BREAD STUDIO.

.'

SIZE 42 REGULAR
NOW

Welt . Virginia Department of Health is aeeklng a
luU-time Hotpltel Admlnis·
trator for itl Fairmont.
Emergency Hoapitel, lo- •
cated In Fairmont , Welt :
Vlrgir'lia. Requiremenu: •
Baccalaureate degree plu• :
two years of experience In • ·
hospital or health ••rvlcel, ·
or busine,. administration. ~
Thia 44-bed facility providu ~
long-term ~killed nursing ~
services and outpatient j
clinic . servicet. Appllc:anta :
ahould .,brrtit resume• and ~
epplicittiona to:' L. Clark

''

$ 00

.

Call 614 -992·
.

,

•

Orig. '*115.00

delivery.
7090.

Call 446· 8067 .

I

1 SPORT

SIZE 46 LONG

Wen.t ed teleiphone sales
people. Also ' person wiih
smell car for light envelope

.

VALUES TO '49.50

1 SPORT COAT

E.O .E.M•F, H.

Will'-do babysitting in my 'l.
~oma. ' Prefer evening• or '
midnight.· t:'fave references . :

'

CORDUROY PANTS
$599 ·

for more information.

'

14 PAIR

. NOW

tared. lnterest~d persons
may cell Pereonnel Dept. at

To .Buy

COUPON EXPJRES HB. 5, 1983

Orig. '14.98

degree in Medlcel Techno!·
ogy &amp; be A.S .C.P. raglo·

LOOKING FOR A PART
TIME JOB thot hu gQod

Auction
P~JbliC
Sale

4

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

SERVICE

Lost and Found

reward. 614·992-5101.

•Washilrs •Dish·

We can repair and
recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanka.
PAT HILL FORD

6

LO.ST:Yallow "fiber glas•
handled Crimping tools. In
Porrieroy area. n. 126.00

985.3561
•
All ·Makes

RADIATOR

repolra.
· 5860
after
6 p.m304-876
.
·

FOUND Blod Oog Found on
Roush Hollow Rd. Coli
814·388·9930 .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
'SERVICE.

Phone 882·3121
New Haven, W: V.

end

Sears portable dishwasher,
Seers washer, Tappen
electric unge. all neild

9

1 Gift Certificate Per Family)

NOW

APPLIANCE

45760

~iate

Phone

l.!!J
"''"''"'m''"•

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

S&amp;W 1V
AND

· CHERYL LEMU:Y

Home Ph. 742-3092

THIS FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY MORNING!
THE RRST 10 OJStOMERS THRU OUR
OOOR EACH MORNING WILL RECEIVE A
$10.00 GIFT CERnRCATE WH!Oi CAN
BE REDEEMED ON ANY CASH' SALE OF

mo.

SERVICE

II

1 ONLY

P_,eoo,, Ohio

~eegt•

part Shepherd. 304·678·
2286. .
.
.

Ir'=========-l-=========~========~====·

''•

''

8 year old apricot I. white
female Peek · e-Poo. N-ot
good with children. Would
~ nice for ol~er parson for
companionship. Cell 6 1 4-

..--------'11
"CUT OUT

Tfic h.,oiQ_g iat-Laboret.o ry.
Jackson General ·Hospital ,
R;ipley, W.V. ia hoW inte~· 1
vlew,nu for an _a lllltant \.
C~ief Technl)logist for tt\a
leborat~,Y . · Job will reqUire
ability to work in e_lelereea of
the lab, acheduling &amp;
training, euist i_n writing '
procedUre manuals. main·
.t~tinilig quality control
,,cords. meinte,ence lif
equipment • .ir1cludlng minimal repair • calibration ·•
•om~ weekend work, ·nu.u~
·tied person·wm have 2 years
of eKperience in • Medical
Laboratory, have • B.S.

304-372-2731 M9n:-Frl. ·

742·2380.

.

~

MARY c. KE8LER-OWNER

Ge«ge S. Hobsretter, Jr., Broker
RESID[NTIAL and COMMERCIAL
OFFICE llld HOME - 992·5739

.,

Free to good home.

MaYor

renting 2.5 one-bedroom a..arrment units .
renting for ~o percent of your odjusted lncom~
undor tile Pepartrnent of HOusing &amp; Umn
Pevelopment section 1 program. All utlllfles
lncludtld. .
·
·

We Do Bootketpinc FOJ
Small. tap and Corpome

.

HOBSTmER REALTY

'I

Plncher ,' Phone 593-8804.

REALTOR

·

1·27·1

'!

'SEMI-ANNUAL

FRI.

I

R.e al Estate General

,,'

dogi. Parente ere half registered German Shepherd,
helf registered Doberman

[H

NOw

&amp;isinessas &amp; Pirtne~hip$

•''

-~

SElVICE ·

~

POMEROY, OH .

1 male black end tan puppy.

Office ,............................. ,......................... .992-~259

RIVER BEND APARTMENTS
HOUSING FOR THE ELDER'L

618 E. tbin, Pomeroy, OH.
· PH. 992·3 795

very good

8 months old. Good watch

GAl ............................ 992·619) .
Je111 Truuell· ..... ............................ , ............ 949·2660
Dottie Turner ..... .......................................... 992·5692 .

Fred H'o ffman

Jan. 20 27

childre~.

watch dog, full grown, Call
4 •4 6·3992.

Jr.,

THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDL EPORT. OHIO

BOOKKEEPING

Start At

POMEROY
LANDMARK

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT .

B•utlfut white dog. good

with

REALTORS

Henry E. Cleland,

bidd ing.

TRI·COUNTY

Sl99.95

a-JI ....................

CfHI OPtiO F£1. Ml, 1113

AI\IY PERSON who hu

SPACE HEATERS r-------------~----~------------------~------------~----~----------------~~

11.11

' Gil .. tlil
.Unlit 0111

en'ything to give aWay ahd
does not offer or anempt to
offer any other thing for sale
m•v .Place ali ad. i·n this '
column. There will be no
cha·r ge to the advertiser. ·

Business Services·

SALE ON.

$53.000.00.

POMEROY -Large 2 story .frame with 3 bedrooms, dining
room, huge family-room, big foyer, nice level lot. In sulated
and has storms. $31 ,900.00.
·

. Giveaway ·

Puppjes. Part

ap p u rtenances .

15-PIECE
CARRY

4

POMEROY - Three bedroom house, two story, fireplace,
bath, gas hot water heat. $8,900.00.

81dders. to the Spec ial Reowe ments for wage rates. th e hours
of emPloyment as ascerta1ri ed
and d etermcned by the Dep8r1:ment of lndustnal Aelat1ons M d
prov1ded for in the ·laws of the
Stat e of Ohio.
Ttie Owner reserves the nQht
to re1ect a·nv or all bi ds and to
watve ar. y 1nfor ma·l1 ties .1n

ASSISTANT CHIEF

AI'h STORY frame home with aluminum siding, dining room,
2 bedrooms, and full basement, with 3 lots. Asking
$19.soo:oo.
·

POMEROY - Older home on Main St. that could be 2·3
apartments. Has 10 rooms, with 5·6 bedrooms, Ill baths,
and a block garage. $14,900.00 .
·

Public Notice

Chec k.s··shall )Je made payable tQ the VtUage o f Middleport

Browne As sociates. .limited
Consu lttng Engme er s be ·Planners. 1'S 1 So uth M atn
Street. Marlon. Oh•o 43 30 2 .
II
of
A twenty·f•ve' ·dollar (S25 .0 0 )
. Me1g s County.
depOSit we ll be: req)Ji red for
the off 1ce of the Mayor.
eac h set of Drawings, Speci fiI M tddtepOn . Ohto.
P.M.. Februarv B. cat•ons and Cor.tra ct doc uments taken kom the above
and tt1 !'ln publ!c ly
ooened and r.ead al oud fo r the off1ces. thee fu ll amou nt of
Wh1 ch w1ll be refund ed upo n
cbr\stn,ctooon of
retu rn of sa me Withi n th1 rty (30)
STORM DRAINAGE
days after the 91d open mg. -The
I MPROVEM~NlS
s_
uccesSftil ~ 1 dd er may reta m
CONTRACT NO. 8
. The ·proposed work urfder · h1s Drawmgs for funher !.,'Se.
th1s Contrac' cons csts of the and h1s depos1t r e lu r. ~ ed
C' ons tr uct ion of approx1m"a tely
82 5 lineal feet of 30" pipe,
rn a n h o. t e s a n d a I I 54 Misc. Merchandise

TO

Announce birth
·

Real Estate General

(

Church elects
new officers
New officers of Middleport First
Baptist Church have been elected.
Elected for one year terms were
Donna Grueser, church clerk,
Cindy Iiartenbach, assistant; AI,
wilda Werner, church treasurer,
Sarah Fowler, assistant; Janice
Gibbs, church organist, Dorothy
Anthony , assistant; Sara h Fowler,
church school secretary and treas·
urer with Chris Rouse as assistant;
and Alwilda Werner, Chureh missions treasurer with Sue Metzger,
assistant .
Named to the various boards of
the chur ch for three year terms
were the following members:
Board of Christian Educa!ion:
Chris Nichols, Peggy Lewis, Ma·
r ilyn Williams, Jerry Colef(lan,
David Darst, and Rosemary Lyons.
Board of Trustees: Cathy Riggs,
Kenneth Imboden, Terry Moore,
John Fultz, Russell Mills, Dreama
Hudson, C)Jatles Anderson, Jant~
Daniels, and Tony Fowler.
Bollrd of Deacons: Da le Walburn, Fred Klein, Bob Parker, John
Riebel, Manning Kloes, Randall
DaVIs, Randy'Hays , Dan Riggs and
Lacy Bar\on.
Board of Deaconesses: Ancil Van
Matre, Sue Imboden, Flora Marie
Gibson, Carolyn Davis, Martha
Klein, and Fran Parker.
Elected as trustees of the Rio
Grande Association were Katheryn
Metzger, Ancil Va nMatre, Alwllda
Werner and John Werner. Named
. to the finance committee were
Peggy Moore, Jim Grueser, Dan
White. · Carroll CieiaiKI, Nancy
Anderson, lind John Werner.
Ushers elected for a year were
Charles Anderson, ·Joe Ailthony.
Bob Campbell, Carroll Cleland,
Randall Davis, John Fultz, Jim
Gruesser, Milton Hood, Gene Gray,
Gene Hudson, Kesnneth Imboden,
Fred Klein, Russell MillS, Terry
Moore, Chris N'tchols, Rob Parker,
John Riebel, Johmile Riebel, Dan
Riggs, Jeff Snowden, and Dale
·
Walburn.

.. - ..... . 0

h11tes gays, loves America. I too ·h
would never let a homosexual.illto ;I
my home. - MILDRED
!I
(We bet you.have- many t1tnes ::
- unknoWingly. - HELEN AND !'
SUE )
:!

Loved your answer to hjm,
Helen! That's ·telling the. guy!

--.--

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

•

'I

.BY HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
..Diedra seemed so sweet, shy and
naive when she ftrst came to our
school. I fell for her like a ton of
bricks. We'.re together a lot but we
never gQt past kissing. We talked
about tl;lat and decided we'd wait,
as she wasn't ready. Iflgur edttme.a nt she was a virgin, though she
never said so. Guess I kind of put
her ort a pedestal.
A guy from her former school
d ownsta te enrolled here this
month . She seemed very nervous
about htm, and finally she told me:
Her family moved parily to get ber
away from the gang she was going
·with. She had started with drugs .to
he popula r, and there were several
guys,·and .things were going dOWn·
hill pretty fast before she left. ·· ·
· She won't touch dope or booze
now, and doesn't wan( sex untU
she' s s ure she "has her )lead
straight.'~ that's OK by me. Ial5o
Jove her as a frtend.
But I'm bOthered because slle
didn't trust me enough to tell me
about her "pase· until she was
forced to. Did she think I was the
type who'd pounre on her and demand sex if I knew others had . How
do 1 get over this vague, letdown,
left-out feeling ? -KEPT IN THE
DARK .
DEARKITD:
Tty honest self-analysis. Could
your words, "I'm bothered that she
didn' t trust me enough .. .'' he ·hid·.
ing a touch of . disillusion you're
ashamed to admtt.
Disappointment,. even worry, are
okay feelings when the girl "on the
pedestal" suddenly reveals a less
than perfect past. Acoept these
emotions as natural and they'll
soon go away; S11ppress them and
they may stay Inside until they fester Into suspicion and a possible
break-up.
I've an Idea Diedra longs for real
talk. Here's your chance to learn
mu~ h about each other, so dredge
up those Innermost thoughts and Jet
the truth bring you closer together
than ever. - HELEN

Ohio

General Hauling and Trl!shremoval Service. Reliable
on d dapendibte. Call 446·
311i9 .aftitr 6PM 266·1987.

BOdy men for "hire, own
tools. 10 yrs . ex.perience.
Call 446·3972.

1'

''
',
'•'

•

• I

••

..

�Sentinel

27 1983
44

21

Bu•ines s
Opportunity

61

Apartmen1
for Rent

876-1302 .

Si ne r, P . O . B ox 19.48 ,
Parkersburg. WVa. 28101 .

OWN

y o ur

o wn

OPTIONAL 2 o r 3 bedroom.

ltove &amp;

J ean -

retr~,rator

FOR. rent. furnished apart-

k n o wn br a nd s s uch as

J orda c·he . Chi c. Lee, Levi.

mont. 304·876-1302 .

V ande r bil t , Calv i n Klein ,
Wrangle r o ver 200 oth9i'
brond s. • 7 .900 t o $16,900
in cludes beg inn ing inven·

COMFORTABLE. fur ·
niohod, 1.. t&gt;!'clroom aport·

ment, utllit111 Included .
304-876-3788.

t o r Y. a ir far e f o r o ne to
Fashio n Center. tra ining.
fiJcture a, grand o pen ing

FOUR room upstairs apart·
manta. Hendanon Trailer
Par"k , e126 month. Trailer
Space1. Phone 304-675·

promotions. Catl. Mr . Kee -

nan 305-678-3639 .

Colll14-2111·1207.

2946 . .

72

T.Ncka for Sale

6 ;00

0

For sawe lump coal &amp;
firewood . Zinn Coal Co ., I

76 Ford %T Ranger XLT.
1750. Coli 448· 0940.

Inc. Coli 446 -1408.

cordo. Coli 814-266-6246 .

Slabs cut-up $16 full length
$10 PU load, round wood,
large truck load . Call

70.000 actual miles, aome ..

-'~

rutt, mochanciolly A : 1. Coli
814-388-9060.

,.

c ondition , will 1111 l.ower

23

than book price. 304· 372·
2987.

Professional
Services
C&amp; L Bookkeeping

614-387-7329.

448 -3432.

14• 70, 1 'It belhl, 3 bed·
room mobile home. 2x6's,

3 Roomo&amp;both, complltoly

KOUNTRY MOBILE Home

furnished . No peta. no
children, Garner Ford Road

Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Cell

neor Rio
2223 .

Nicely furnished . 2 bdr.
trailer. Inquire at Sheppard•
Sales &amp; Service , Firat e.
Olive St, Golllpollo.

2 bd .room furnished mobile
home. We pay utilitlea .
Adults only or family with
one child. No peu. Deposit
required . Located 2 mllaa

Farms for Sale

814·246· 6804.

eKcellent
to 1111.

heet1 2500 oqft. Will sell lor
'It price. Coli 814 -2681216.

..,it:

1972 DATSUN truck w ith

Exaallent
topper
and condition,
boat reck .

3 bedroom Mobile Home.
Approximately 5 mi ..a from
Pomeroy or Middleport .

carr'y rest. 614-388-9346 .
Homes for Sale

814-992-6858 .

34

Home

end

or rental

Business
Buildings

446 · 3432 .

... ···.

Court! St .. Galli polio.

candy ouppli01. Col 814992 - 8342 or 814-992-

----- ... --- ---...-

Modern business bldg . 68
1 1 2+ acres with 2 homes
Galli• County .

........................ .
Coll992· 3267 or675 -2516

=::::;::::;:====

::::6~6~0:::1:::.
1
35 Lots &amp;

Acreage

House for aela or rent . 7
rooms &amp;. beth . Gas furnace.
wood burner, car port. In
Racine . Contact Wayne
Wilson at 247 -3522.

House, ell atectrM:, 6 rooms
end beth, enclosed front and
back porch. full basement
and garage. Acr011 from
Poot Otli011 . Mt. Aho, WV.
304-896-3388.
'

PARK Drive. Onettory with
finiohod goroge. 304-6754444 oftor 6 p.m .

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

CLE·AN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
11'1 MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36 . PHONE 448·7274 .

Mobile home &amp;lots for sale,
1967 Buddy mobile home
1 4x80. 2 bdr. gal heat. nual
water. 11t up with 2 or 4
'loto. Coll448 -1240.
1974 Schultz mobHe home.

2 bdr ., axe . cond ., 12x.85
with 4•10 expando. 9x24
·awning . central air, dla·
hwasher, range , refrlg.,
Includes new carpet &amp;
dropn•• 8.700. C'811 814.
317-0691 .

1979 Bayview "12x60 with
1 2x8 explndo, e~tc . con d .,
energy uving total electric.
c.ntrel air. 1wning e. patio.
8x8 utility bUilding . Call
448-9416 .

Good used 2 bedroom
mobile hom11 . Furni1hed .
Brown's Treiler Park, At .
124. Minersville , Oh.
814-992-3324.

'

12•10, 1972 Arlington
Mobile homo. 2 !Jdr. good
cond. Call 814· 387-7176
ohe&lt;IPM .
1974 Kirkwood 12•60. 1'11
botha. totol electric, 12•11

room edded on~ . 2 porchn.
underpinning . ex~. c~nd .

114-247-3195.
·1 971

Sur

1 hiO . 2

bd.room WUh stove. refrig .•
e .c . • LP gas . porch and
-a wning . Vary good ' cond .
Sat up on ,-.nted lot.
ti.IIOO.
11141 .

Coli 114-992 ·
'

USED MOBILE HOM~ .
87S· 2711 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Golllpollo. King
coal 6 wood heaters with
tan . •469. aat box sprln_g &amp;
mettron 8100. firm n20.

- waaha,., dryer1. ratrigera·
tors, rangaa. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd ..
btaida Stone Crtlt Motel.

chair and lovaseat. *276 .
Sofas and ehaira priced from

1----------

or 875-5386 or 676· 7788.

Modern 3 bdr . ranch.
garage •. carpet. Rodney
area . DepoaH &amp; referencn
required . $286 per mo .
446·

to loy . 11 .60 each . Cell
614-742- 2926.

and up. Wood table with six

HUD ovolloble. A-One Real

choir• t425. to f746 . Deok
8110 up to U26. Hutcheo,

income is e1 0,000 or len
Eatatea, Carol Yeeger,

Realtor . Call 304-676·
6104 or 87&amp; - &amp;3B8 or
876-7786.

2 bdr. unfurnished apt.· in
er-n City . Coli 814-268·
6520.

U9 .. tot436 . 7pc .. t1B9.

$560. and up. maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattranes. •2&amp;0. and
up to t396. Soby bodo,
$1 1 0 . Mattresses or box

1pring1, full Or twin . tl8 ..
firm, e68. ond t78 . Ouoon

seta, *195 . 4 dr . ch.eata,

erns &amp; other build t ng
motorial. Call 1114 - 533.OB48.

8 rm . houoe 'In Country' 2'1t

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

mi . from town, au in
kitchen. L. room . W· WOOd
burn•. 3 bedrooma. utlity
room and bath. carpet
thru-out, min imum 1 yr.
laeae and deposit . Call

3rm. and4rm.unfumlshed
apartmenu. UtllitjH paid,
no peta, no child en . Call
448 -3437. ·

448-3045 doyo, 445·2802

evenings .
Pom•oy -2 bd.room unfurnished house . •195 . mo .
Sacurhy depooh. t100. plus
utiQtlos. Alter 8-call 614·
!192-2288·.

In Pomeroy t175 . month
pluo utlldoo. t&amp;O . dopoolt.
Coii614-992-72B4.

1--- -- - - - - -

Furnished Apartment •226 .
Utllltl .. pd;, edultt. 1 BR.

243 Jackson Pike, Gellipolio. 441·44Hiolter 7 p.m.

POMEROY-2 bedroom
unlumithod opt .. t160. 2
bodroom house t18S .
Depooit e100. Coli 614992-22B8 .
. Holt
double-2
Apt. for rent
bd.room
Apt.
Adulto
preNo poto. 814" 992•

Jz";:::

6pm, Mon. thru Fri ., 9am to
lpm, Sat.
448-0322

Berreta model 960 pistol
22SR , litt price 11B9 .95,

sale price •160 . Spring
Valley Trading Co ., Spring
Volloy Ploze, 448-8025.

Chrome gla11 coffee table •
end tables with matching
lamps for 11le. e226 . Call
448 -1066.
446-0002.

ledie'a bro'(ln winter coat,
fur collar. size 18 . $26 .
Lldie' a yellow rain coat 1ize
16. e10 . Call alter 3PM
446-1329 .

Burn off tat without dieting
Glucomennan at Fruth
Ph

1--"-""-'-"_Y______
Firewood, 835 . truck lood.
•&amp;&amp;. 8 cord . Split ond
delivered . 814 ·843, 3603 :

Firewood. •30. pickup load.
split 8. delivered . Call
814 - 247·2192
949-2029 .

or 814·

Firewood, oplit, 830.00 1

truckload,

2 ·color TV cosole, 24'

36,0008TU.86,000BTU .
Call 304 - ~73-~013 or

to Molfo High School. For 5&amp;48 . ·,
Rent: rolor Spoce. 1 1 4 · 1 - - - - - - - - - 992-7257.
APARTMENTS, mobile
hom ea. hou HI. Pt. PMeunt
3 bedroom home in country. ond . Oollipollo. 1114-441·
Deposit and references 8221 .
Nqulred. Phone 814-9927201 . .
2 · room effiCiency 1pt .
1-304-882-251111 or 1-814THREE bodroom houM for 992-72011.
- t. nice locotlon. 3041178-1090.
.
UNFURNISHED oportmont

SMALL houaa on Lincoln
Ave. 304-875·18114 oltor 4

p.m .

for

rent,

1

bedroom,

t180. 00 Coli Automotive
Supply, 8·1 . 304· 87&amp;·
2211. B71-1713.

EIGHT room hou• for rent. FURNISHED 4 room cot·
ot Rollin•-•· 304-1811- tag e . edult• . ·no ·P it I,
34311.
304-117~·14113.
'

71

,

Be

,,•

Camperi

'· •

Autoa for Sale

refrlg. coppertone.

household items. Moving,

•150, rofrig. opt.lize 3 yn.
old t160 . loungor •45.
mobile homo bod e35.

muot 1011. 304-676-7438 .
WRINGER Moyteg waoher,

Skaggs Applianc11, Upper good condition, 3 gas
River Rd.- Gelllpoli1 . Call heating 1tove1 . Phone
304'•175· 8199

'

I~~=========:Jl:=========J
with Major Hoople

1 2 paaaenagtr Fo rd vian
1976 mod41l , auto , , air,
uero - rildio , $2,096 . Call
448-4&amp;114.

puppin. CFA Himalayan ,
Persian end Siameae kit·

e1,950 or trade for cattle,
farm equipment, or mobile
home of equal value. Call

tono. Coli 448 -3844 otter
4PM .

448 -4537.

74 Gremlin, good mileage.

Coli 448-860B.

C.llll14-245·&amp;.4 9&amp;.

11 wk. old puppio t "
ocpoo,
color blond. Coll446 -3648.
Price tao.oo.

1979 Oido Doha 8B Royal

air, AM - FM 1tero. electric
door locks, rear window
defogger . Coli 1114-379·
2320.

1977 Mercury Monarch air,

6 week old puppiea . YJ:
registered elk hound - 1ft
collie. look liko olk hound.
,,5,00 . 814-949-241111 .

PS, P8 . Alklng •2.000 . Coli
814-379-2320 .

1974 Grand Prix model
J-400 onglno, rodio, 8 trock,

67

441-9330 oftor 4 :30.
7&amp; Dodge Cornett , price
t4&amp;0 . 'Coli 448-9224 oltor
SPM .

Musical
lnltrumenta

78 Dodge Magnum T-top.
400 onglno. t3.296. 7&amp; VW

Alvarez e~ctrk: guitar with
fitted case, looks end pleya a
Leo Paul by Glboon . looded

with cu's tom goodlu. Call
448-7781 o!tor 8PM.
JVC otero amp. JVC AM·
FM atero tuner, Sanyo atero

CISMHe deck, 2 BON 301
apaeken. all In eK.cellent
cond . Multivox M~-20
electronic plano , brand new.
Coli 676 -7198 .

8 piece Ludwig drum set ,
304-676-6295.
6B

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetable•

POTATOE t&amp; .OO 100 lb .

beg No. 1 Wiaconlin Auaaet.
Coli 446 -B247 or 117&amp; 3782.
59 For Sale or Trade
1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr ..
PS. PB , AC, AM-FM storo
• 1 ,910 or trade for cattle.

farm equipment. or mobile
home of equiil value. Cell
4411·4&amp;37.
4-18"
PLOWS . Call eltorll
p.m .. 304-17&amp;-2443.
..:..__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Super Beetle. aun roof.
t1,295. 87 VW Bug with
homom•d• bojo kit.

nn.

C•ll for further details
441 -0499 bot-on 8 &amp; 5 or
441 -IB97 oltor &amp;:30.

1973 Pontiac Catelina 4 dr .,
PS. P B . oir . vory good
condition . Coli 448· 4048 .

YEAH ! C:'MON , l..ET'S

G ET TI-IAT S UCKER
WITI-1 TH' MEI.ON!

I HIWE· A FEELING THIS
SILLY GAME NOW SUDDENLY
IS NOT THE SI&gt;.ME!

have
no leqal
claim! He
isn't even

''

And the wat.J
I fiqure it, at
four dollars
an

adopted!

304-8911 -31102.

... that comes to about
sixty thousand dollars
she owes us! -----'

~

'

ESTIMAT.ES. FURNITURE '
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 814 -448-2107 . •;
~--------- :~)

•.

82

•.

Plumbing
Heating

,.

GRAPEVINE HAS IT THAT

''

CARTER' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

MISS WINKLE 15 LOOKING
FOR SOMEONE TO HEAD
THIS DIYISION.

':·
,

YOU
MEAN

SOME·
ONE

TO

REPLACE

W~NPY?

good cond . t82&amp; . Coli
814-98&amp;-4124 .

•,.
SEWING Machine repaira• . f
service. Authorized Singer '
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen ~ :.
Sciaaon . Fabric Shop .. -

82 Dotoun 4 whool drive. .P.o,.oy..992-2284-.•. .
White with bluelntorlor .
Alplnoetoroo. 14,000mllos. ED' S APPLIANCE REPAIR _
4 opeed . t7 , 100 . Coli SERVICE coil City Furnhure , :·
• • •'
1114· 992 · 7358 or 814· 304 -175-2808 .
992-11031 '

,.,.

BARNEY

MVTEA
.lEAFS
SAV,
MAW?

,.

86

For ule or trade· 1971 Ford
wagon. 1973 Chrysler
wogon . 304-773 -6013 or
304 · 773 · 53111.

1978 2 door Chevatte .
Automatic, good condition .

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Collo&amp;14-387 - .,
7471 or 814-387-0&amp;91 ,
'•

boloro Ill Hoy equipment,
· bolo feiodoro • movoro,

SOME

MONEY

'•

Need aomathing hauled
awey or something move~ 1 ,•

We'lldoit . Call448 -3169or : &gt;'
114-261-1917 alter 6 .
::

I•••

,.

In case . people in thi,. ;:
communlry don 't know. I'"{· ,,
still trucking. Call 448-..il"...lP

-----

1172 PONTIAC. 304·&amp;71127.71 .

tobacco ·~•. w.gons.
rotary tllloro • cuttenr,
M:tdera. bladM, dltq, ,

VOU'RE FIXIN'
TO COME INTO

'•,•

Haven Wesl Virginia . Over
e;~~penalve can In

CARS 11001 trucko 1761
Av .... ble It IDCIII govern·
mont eoloo.Colllrehondoblel
1·119•&amp;11f-0241 .

::

.
"::

HARTS Uood Core, Now

_.,_ock_.-

General 'Hauling

GLORY BE!!

WHAT DO

4B51 , LeRoy Coldwell for

free estimatea.
-

- - - -- ' - - - -

.I

.,

'PEANliTS

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Cell Jim Lanier, 304 ·876- .. ,

,,
••
.,.,

7397.

:,
I'

74 Toyotl Corona. Needs
motor work. 304·87&amp;15490.

·

An . . ua to let 1 .c omp..tti
llno of , _ • NNicol
USED·· IH 71, MF 1311. Ford
110. FOrd Jubilee,
Ford. IN Ford, 10. MoHorrlo Ponoy, JD h1y teddor,
ooDry hoe, plowo, &lt;110, JO

87

Upholatery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
aonditlon, low mileage
t1200. firm. A Tu11 cor . 11113 Soc. Avo., Gol(lpolio
441-7833or 4411 -1833. ;
304·8111-31112.

''••
'·
,.'•'

73 Cedllloc. ucollont

eoo

-·

.

-

17 PONTIAC Flroblrd: MOWREYS Upholotery Rt . .,.,
Olld• oomo.wo,., 304-171· 1 lo• 1 24, Pt. Plaeunt ' ~~
304·11711·4114 ,
• ::
711119 or 117&amp;-4230.

a round

hay b..... corn pioneer.

I .

.,

- ~·--

-- --- ~_

,.,·,.

...

l\

~--- -~

-

:.-

- ·-

......

-·

-----

--

~--

~

w ould have wa sted no ti me.
He would simply have taken
and lost the heart finesse.
After that star t, East
. would have led back the j ack
of diamonds and the defense
would have wound up wi th
two diamonds, one hear t , the
ace of spades and - sa lified
smiles.
Pete would have seen that
as usual when he was dec lar-

NORTH
1-27-83
+Q84
• A7 5
t A7 64
+QJ 3
WEST
EAST
f97 2
+A 10 53
.K4
•sa
t K93
• J 10 8
K 10 9 8 7
+6 5 4 2
SOUTH
+KJ6
.QJ10982
• Q5 2

+

er, all finesses were wrong .
Pete ' s study f ina lly
showed him a line of · play
that would give him game
and rubber irrespective of
the location of the red kings
pr ovided that West hadn' t
led thai 10. spot from a
seven-card suit and that
spades would break better
th an si x ~one.
He led a heart to dummy •
ace at trick two and disca r ded a diamond on the queen
of clubs at trick thr ee. West
scored his king of clubs for
the. second defensive tri ck
but Pete had time to get ~
second diamond discard on
the club jack and end the

+A

North

East
Pass

Soatb

Forest

Pass
Pass

1 NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

4•

1+

1•

Opening lead : +10

By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby

.

rubber as a winner.

'

Not e that had Wes t
opened a trump, Pete w ould
have had no way to devel op
that play of swapping t w o
dia mond loser s for one c lub
loser.
'

Pessimistic Pete let the
club lead come around to his
ace and studied the dummy
for some time before leading to the second trick. A
l ess pessimistic declarer

(NEWSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN.)

banking .
9:00

0 (I) Cll Gimme a Break
Samantha learns that her
father is not lik e the police. men she sees on television.

(]) Battle for the Family .
0 (f) ® Simon &amp; Simon
®
Myst~l
·Sergeant
Cribb: Murder Old Boy.' In·
spector jawett goes to his
school reunion and finds
something which he feels
deserv es the help of Sergeant Cribb . 160 min.)
ICiosod Captioned]
11!1 (j)) Too Close For
Comfort
9 :30 0 (l) Cll Cheers Sam is in
for a few surprises when he

throws a party for a friend .

,.

&amp;

PesSimism on·parade

Wesl

·

Hero
@I MOVIE: 'Jezabel'
8:30 (I) MOVIE: ' Rollover'
(f) NCAA Basketball: Ohio
State at Iowa
CID Enterprise 'The Buck
Stops in Brazil .' Tonight's
program looks at the high
stakes world of international

Water Wells . Commercial :
lnd Domestic. Teat holes .
Pumps Sales and Service .

304-876-4S43.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

I Spy
@
NCAA

a loOk at what's happening
at the mOVI6S .
IB Gil Greatest American

,

i

BRIDGE

with a Samurai warrior and

F &amp;. K Tree Trimming , stump
romovol . Coil 17&amp;-1331 .
-;

:~v~c:.e~~:~~~!bf!•::.~:

Jumble Book No. 20, cont•lnlng 110 puul11,11 avallableiOf $1.95 postpaid
from Jumble, do ttl It "ntwa"paper; Box 3-4, Norwood , N.J. 0~~ ~f'_C~~· your
name, addreu, dp code 1nd m1k1 c::hec:kB 'pavabt e to Newsot gerbooks.

ill

his culture. (60 min.)
CiD Sneak Previews Jeftrey
Lyens and Neal Gable r take

:·

Long trecto,., VermMr

manure 1pre1der

DIDJLIH CHECK
'IWI.T? WHAT
'Ill' KECK'S
GOING ON?

RON ' S Television Service . ~·~
Specializing in Zenith and '1
Motorola . Quazar . end •'
houoo c.ollo . .Coli 6711 -239B : 1
or 4411-2464.
•:

Call any day efter 1 p.m. ,

J

,
(Anoiwero tomorrow!
Jumbles: DRO ~ E ·HAREM TANDEM BUNION
Answer: That guy on the football team Qot hurt when
1hls occurred- THE TEAM WAS ON HIM

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

Cll MOVIE: ' Mackenna' s
Gold '
(j) Rhoda
0 (f) ® Magnum. P.l.
Magnum becomes involved

OOP

.

Get your karpeC in ship
shape: Waterrernavet. FREE

Yesterday's

Now arrange the drcled tenant to
fotm·the surprise answer, as auggaoted by lhe above cartoon.

r I I .XI I I I I I J

easy to handle. (60 min.)
(}) MOVIE: ' Middle Age

Basketball:
North .Carolina at Wake

1971 TR· II, •1 . 500. 1974
Cor . Fourth and Pine
'
Jup (robulltl, t2,800 . Phone 4411-3q88 or 448 · :,•
1977 Dodgo Royol Monoco 4477
&lt;~
11 &gt;600 . 19115 Muotong --~"----- . ',
U ,OOO. 1981 Chovy Von
·:
t4.800 . Konougo Mobile 84
Electrical
Home Salea . Call 441 ·
Be Refriger•tion
9882 .

JIVIDEN'S FARM
EQUIPMENT
448- 11175

--·--·

FEEL ALL

~

RINGLE 'S SERVICE o•po·

® l:ast Chance Garage
@:
Entertainment
Tonight
0 (}) Cll Fame A retarded
s inqer falls in love with Julie
ar, David Reardon finds

llil

Crazy'

lNG . Deep lt. .m ciNnlng • . ,
Scotchg•urd. Free e1ti - ,
matea. LOw rates. &amp;14 ~992 8309 .

Answer here:

be1ng a sex symbol is not

Call 614 -388-9867.

AM · FM tope deck &amp; CB .
C.ll448-8816 .

1974 Ma.,erick 4 door, p.s .,
auto .. a .c .• good tire1. body

at Marahall

8 :00

Marcum Roofing • SpoutIng . 30 yearuexpertence, ~
spedelliling in built up roof . •

4 1p"d .. trans, good tire1.

~0

aultlvo-. plow. •

OTIIEff WOFIP?
"61/fiS~ AAHE

••P· Coiiii14-3S8-98&amp;2.
· •.
.. - -

Coli 114-992-7403.

Farm Equipment

Y' USE~

exterior, plumbing, roofintlr~ ~
aome remodeling. 20 yra ...: :

1984 Ford fllrlono &amp;OOV-8 ,

....·.. .
-...-··-----......
81

VECH! COlA.[)

KEPT SHOfmN'
Ol/7.1•• BUT I'VE
GOT ALL TH' BIJGG
OUT 0' HIM NOW!

PAINTING · Interior ond- :

304 - 117&amp;· 2018 or 675 - : :
4680.
• '

low mileage. Uke new. Cell

YEP! Hlfl CIRCUI'[!;

-------~ ·-'

_:..._~-----.,

[)

Iii Charlle'f

Angels
(f) Tic Tao Dough
(f) ®
MacNeil- Lehrer
Report
® Eyewitne"'' News
llil (j)) People' s Court
7 :30 D (l) ® You Asked For It
(I) Inside the NFL Len
Daw son and Nick Buoniconti
analyze this w eek's NFL ac·
tion and look ahead to . next
w eek's games.
@ ESPN SportsCentar
Cll Andy Griffith
(f) 0 (f) Family Feud
(f)
NCAA
Basketball:
Tennessee Ch&amp;Uanooga

textured ceilings commer ~""
cial and retidentiel, free ...;
;~~'2~1110. Coli 114 -268-- ~;

1981 Chevotte 4 dr., 4 opd ..

AKC Irish &amp;etter pupa, 2

__

,.. ,

"•
'• ... '
STUCCO PLASTERING · ·,

C.ll 44B -8087.

exc . cond ., $1,000 firm .

~04 ·

'

rienced rooting. includ ing ;..,
hot tar eppllcatk&gt;n. carpen- • ~o~.
ter. electrician , meson . Cell '

AKC Gorman Shephord
pup• tSO. ooch. 304-458165&amp; ... 304-675 -7641 .
.temola only. 060 .00
773-5638 .

AN' ~HY
5HOlJL/1N'T

GENE'S CAJPET CLEAN- ' •'

Siamese kitten , pruebred .

11le. Call 441 -0370.

~----l

..

Home
Improvement•

THEN IT WA5 FJOO
WHO'S BEEN 5TOII1PIN'
~17 OIJTS!l1E
'fji'fll ALL 1110$E
FLAG!I IN' LIGHTS?

JUST U~E

•

l-------- -

'

1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr ..
PS. PB. AC. AM · FM otero

otovoi. rwfrlg . •175. month
pluo u•lltiN. Col 814-949·

Unfumiahad 5 room houae 2234.
with bath. 7 acres. b a r n · l - - - - - - - - - '- garag•. outbuildings, cloH Apartments . 3 04 · 675-

..
.. '· .. .........
.........

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow

304-773 -6398 .

•n.
electric.rongo40'
30" ELECTRIC ttove .
bed complete t46, '""""''I Whirlpool refrigerator. misc .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

POOD.LE GROOMIN9 . Coli
Judy Taylor ot 814-3877220.

vered . Ph. (8141 992-2770
or (3041882-2194.

tenon 8150 eo . 6 pc.
bodroom ouite •196, Ko·

448-7398.

Rag. Doberman• pupa efd
Doberman Stud Service .

•36 .00 deli-

For nla or tteda ~ 2 .Warm
Morning bottle gas heaters.

more auto washer like new
.150, Mayt.ag euto Wllher

S
eta or • 1e

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding oil breodo . AKC

3 bd .room houaa for rent on 1 - - - - - - - - - Lincoln Hgtl . All neW 2 bd . room Apt. , partly
carpeting and paint . Oepoeit turnlshed-bd .room suite,
requlrod. 114·992-3090.

__________·"'-'...

-

f

Rag . Blue Heller puppy for

&amp;14 -949-2160 or 614 ·
742-2834 .

for

Gre.i n

1- - - -- -- - - I:=:::;;;===== = =

B026 .

from .. 820, $26, • UO.
king frame 060 . Good

Bulovllle Rd. Open 9om to

p

66

Spring Valley Trading Co ..
Spring Valley PlaZI, 44t-

home, lurniohed. Moln St .. 1- - - - -- - - -Cheohlre. Oh . Cell ·614· ht . floor pert . furnlohed

•election of bedroom tuites.
c.clai' Cheata. rockers. metal
ceblnata. swivel rockers.
Used Furniture ·· bookcase,
ranges, chein, end tables .
washers. dryers, rafrigeraton end TV't . 3 miles out

(I)

0

81

8190, oala prico •139 .78 .

Firewood cialiverad S60 . a
cord . Coal delivered t45 .
ton. Call Tom Ho1kina

I

Motorcyclea• .. ..... . :

,•

Chilled ohot •10 .99 per

up to · $376 . Baby matre11ea, •2e &amp; $36 , bed

Coli 114-268·1413.

l!t

WHAT 50ME
DF!:EAM80AT5

END UP A 5 .

()) Entertainment Tonight

..·

Coli 446· 7796.

wotM &amp; electric pd , t200
mo . Coli 448 · 4416 alter

6 room houae. completely
remodeled , 3 miles from 1----..:______
Addison. SecuritydepotitS.. Furnished apt . *146no
raferencM . Call 448-3775 . . utilities pd. 3 room•. 701
4th Ava . , Gallipo 1il . Call ·
2 bdr. houae unfurnlahed on 448-4416 after 7PM .
lower Rt. 7 . Dep. required. I!Y:~~~~~~;;;;Io;

'•

Ell- FJ fJO 50UN05

port, t1 ,800. Coli 814-3870857.

req. Call 614-24&amp; -&amp;329.

apt . Utilttiel paid, refernce
required. Inquire at 831 4th
AVe .. Gallipolis.

Hay

'

Furnished apt: ·bdr .• 920
4th Ave .Galllpolla . Adults,

246-6818 .

64

tSHORKEI

Cll Gomer Pyla

HONDA 80 model CR- 125-, ..;~
tiiOO . 304 - 676 - 2771 -'' '
between 4 · 9 p.m.
, •'1r

I.

J

vs. l os Angeles.'

&lt;

76 VW camper. atoWI, sink .

Tri · a•le tag 1r"aller with
rempa for equipment trans-

3 bd . farmhouse new doxol
gaa furnance, dep . 6 ref .

7PM .

74

r

I I

NFL Films 'Su per Bo wl
'X IV' Highlights: Pittsburgh

•,.

1971 4 whHI dr, CliorokH,
.1 .000. C.ll446-2692 .

oloopo 4 . C.ll 448· 9368.

•42 . 6 dr. chnto, t54 . Bed
fromoo, e20.ond U8 .. 10
gun ·Gun coblneto, S350..
dlnoitecholro UO. end t26 .
Gas or electric ranges. $326

·-1-0oooo-.-...
---

(l) Newocenter
. (l) Big Cats This documan·
tary capt Vre~ vanis hing

C!l

J'
' ~==;===========i
··
79 Motors Homes
·• •

Adklno Lumber Co .. Wo Mil
bllmt, garage, houae pitt·

•7ts . 5 pc . dlntttal from 7 gla11 display cues . Cell

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Aport·
ments e200 per mo. or il

4 Rooms and bath for rent,
Lowli'r Rt. 7 .. Phone 448·
4940 betwein 5 &amp; 9 p .m.

8286 . to 8895. Tobleo, e45
ond up to 8128. Hid•·•·
bedo • • 440. ond up to
S626., Rocllnon, •175. to
t360 .. lompt from 02B . to

[)-

cial.

,.

446 -7668.

Call1 -614-889-6311 .

bicycle, 1h11 carpet with
pad . Cel14411-81118 .

by Frontier! . U86. Solo,

Very nice 2 bdr . duplex
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CA ,R S .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALl448-7872 .

'toung chicken1ju1t atarting

. •.

tion . Cell after 5 :00 PM ,

Reglltere~

CloudeWintoro. Rio Orondo.
0 . Call 814-246·5121 ,

.,,.

&amp; 4 W .O.

1978 Jeep CJ5. loir condi·

..

Grade •nd

Vana

~-

Registered Quarter Horse.
Ruth Ree.,ea . Alao grade.
Saddlee , bridles. winter
hone blenkets . Western

wi n dow a , llntelt , etc .

cond ., Villi Master exercise

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Strout Reolty, coli
0008 .

17 ft. tandem axle trailer,
floor width 7ft . e~ttra good
con d. 10 ply trailer tlrea .

Chartered Arms~ revolver 38
speciel 2 in. barrell.l'st price

Rent

'·

For oole und 8000 BTU air

Sofa. chair, rocker, otto man, 3 tablee. le•tra heavy

Good location $126 mo.
A-One Real Estates, Carol
Yeagar Realtor. 876 · 6104

ries , good co., • 200. Call
446-1168.

GOOO USED 'APPLIANCES

44

Livestock

Bolglono , Aloo 72 Dodge
Dart, ond 74 Dodgo Colt.
Coll814 · 949-2466 .
Building meteriala
block, brick, sewer pi pea, 1 --------~-­

8 ft. pool table 8. ICCaiiO·

aaning on lot, r•dv to move
into, tor tent with option to

Houaes for Rent

Building Supplie1

·(

Corn led boo! . Coli 614246-6895 .

446-7398 .

41

66

Valley Pluo, 446-8025 .

pony. MAKE AN OFFER . 30
roy. 6_14 - 992 - ~ 133.

614-245-9319 .

3159.

3 bedroom hou• for sale.
New carpeting throughout.
Located on Bashan Rd. ind
sits on 3 acres of land .
Excellent terms to right

83

booto, 1114-1198-3290.

New Persian rug. 3x5. Call

electric , mobile home.

buy. 304-578-27.11.
1-_:_---~--0NE bedroom mobh homo.
8160. 304-676-4164 .

evenings.

year financing available .
Contact Bank One af Poma·

814-258-1146.

IOfa-IOveMAt &amp;·chair *199, 1 Olb . bag. Spring Volley
love nata $70, new coal &amp;. Trading Co .• Spring Valley
wood heaters n low 11 Ploze. 4411-8025.
814-992-1&amp;1 o.
•399 with blowers. uaed
TWO mobile homM for rent coal &amp; wood heatera. new Smith &amp; Wen on 1,000
on Rt. 2. about 6 minutes dinat 11ta $76 &amp; up. refriger - auto. shotgun, 20 gauge, 28
from town. C•ll after 8 . · ators, ranges, bunk bed• in. vent rib modified berrtll .
304-6715 -6277.
complete $179 , bunkies Uat price •469 .96, sale
mattreaaes $40 . chests, price •321 .46. Spring
ALMOST now 14•70, all drautrl, TV' s. Call 446- Valley Trading Co .. Spring

For rent downtown office
space with parking . Call
Butine11 for aale in Middleport. Carouael Confectionery. Cake decorating and

Broadway-Middleport .

2 bedroom• i.n Middleport.
Furnished. •1 50. per month
plua deposit and references.
Pay own utilities. Call

SWIMMING pool, 24 lt.x4'.
ft .• above gro"und. with
·deck. •900.00. 304-8823872.

Locust post for aale. For
further information cell

Backhoe e.n dloeder digs ·8
ft., larga bad pick up
haufable. operate yourself.
890 . . par day. 304-8963841 .

64 Misc. Merchandise

73

Rifle .223 rnini-ri, atainl111
ateel new cond ., (31 30
mega, 36 boxa• factory HP
am mo. carry caae •4&amp;0 .

J'

:1

11,5&amp;0 .00 firm . 304-876·

Mon-Fri.

Wood floor. Rtimpo. light.o.
Muot oell. Coli 814-388·
9060 .

TO COMPLETI=·

1979 Ford

New coal burning furnan.ce '

Equipment
for Ren1

48

out on SR . 143. 614-992·
3847.

house. •12.000 down . Will

Excellent condition &amp;
location -· all ready for
immediate occupancy -Interest rates are down l':'d
probably won't bel ow-er.

992 -7479 .
1..:..::..::..
_______

2 bdr. unfurnished mobile

MOBILE home bock of leon.

33

Grande. 448·

home, 12•10 on Rt. 36 . C.ll
448-4229 .

207 acre fllrm . Langsville.
Mineral rights induded. No

31

For rent downtown office
apace With parking . Call

JUST like new, take over
payments, 1982. all electric,

REM OVAL - Profenional 10x60, New Moon. needs
ElectrOlysis Center, Inc. , work. $2.000. can alter 4
A . M . A . Approved. Dr . p.m . 304·675·7677
Referrals. Gift Certificates .
new hours. By appointment.
304-675 -6234.

1- - - - -- - - -

2 bdr . trailer in Cheahire ,
adutl1 pref.erred . Call

Tax Returns &amp; bookkHping 16 .. on center, beat home
for Individuals • businesses . made . 304-937 -2398 or
304-676-2711 .
446· 3862
Carol Neal
1 976 Nashau mobile home,
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR 1 2 ft . x 60 ft. central air.
Call Bill Ward fo r appoint· excellent condition. 304ment. Ward ' s Keyboud, 696 · 3884 or 304-876446-4372 .
2420 .
PERMANENT HAIR

Space for Rent

l'YI: GOT MEPITATtOIII:!&gt;

PU% ton . 304'-773 -601 o; • •.
304-773-6398.

·

THIS'Eb

D

(l) MOVIE: 'Julia'
(]) Tic Tac Dough
(!) ESPN' s SpO(tofonum
Cll Carol Burnett
Cll 0 Cll llil (l)) News
Cll News/Sports/Weather
(f) 3·2· 1, Contact
® Eyewitness News
® 3 -2 -1 Contact
Iii Wonder Woman
6 :30 0 (I) Cl) NBC News
(]) MOVIE: 'The Come On'
(!) NFL Story : line By line
Cll Bob Newhart Show
(f) 11i1 (j)) ABC News
Q (f) ® ·CBS News
(f) Dr. Who
® Over Easy
7:00 D (I) P.M. Magazine
(I) Making Love Batter
Compare your views w it h
the e:~t p erts on thi s HBO spe-

NO TA.KINc&gt; , PLEA$5 .

For ule or trade-19159

mont . Coli 614-367 · 0378
between 1 OAM a. 3PM.

conve·l:=========
I·
46

I

beasts defending the m ~
selves against human hunters.

77 Chevy 4 -WD 8 ft. bed ., 1
$350 4 spd . one owner. ,•

Firewood apllt , scut to
le·n gth . you pick up . We
deliver . .We accept HEAP

~c=-='"~'"=··~::·•:•:'"':::::•:••:"":::;:::::::::======~
~
miac. grocery store equip·
1145 anytime.

·12•60
fumiohed
, River
fient location,
Upper
Rd . S ec . d ep . req . C • II
448-8668.

lour ordlnery -

1/27/83 . '
'

byHonriAmoldandBob lH

Unocromble -IOIJr JumbiM,
one llttlrlo each oquoro, lo form

EVENING

64 Misc. Merchandise

fl .. froozars 6ft &amp; 8ft .. other

sourses . in Ohio 1973 VICTORIAN trailer,
1 - 800 - 992 · 2351 , out of 11t up on rented lot in
Ripley . 2 Bedrooms, good
Ohio 1-513· 258· 01 12.

~ ~ ~. ~ ~

THURSDAY

89000 mllu. t341il .!)O
C.ll304·117&amp;-21&amp;1.

Meat caSe 8ft .. prOduce 14

Businais &amp; Second Mort·
gage loans . Equity Re -

~lf~N}
.
fj}
Ill 'ft ~THATilefWIBLEOWOADGAME

Television
Viewing

"tr.ck. with ca. reclining·
bucket •eats. Spt. Group
Inn . panel. mag wheels.

pool washer *90. All gua·
renteed 30 daya .

fur·

nlohed, 9 mile• from Pt.
Pleooilnt, 304-875-124B .

S portswear, lnfa nt-Prat.,n
or La d ie• App u el 'St o re .
Off er in g a ll n a t ion·ally

,.

77 MERCUR~ Cougo
XR· 7, PS , PB. olr, oloctrlc
locl&amp;t, AM· fM St-.o 8·

h1rveat gold Oenerel EIM:t·
ric Uke new e150, Kenmore
waaher •1 00 . avacado
Norge wooher t11 0. Whirl ·

ONE bid room, unfumlohed.
t176 . All utilltloolncludod
..copt electric. 304-876·
1371 or 675 -3812 .

o n busy Rt. 7 In Gallipoli1.
For in fo rma tio n write : J .

Auto• for Sele

KIT. 'N' CARLYLE ru

The Daily S~ntinei ...!.Page-11 "'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Whirlpool dryer cloon UO,

Unfurnished upa~irs apt for
Nnt, good location, 304-

Will lease Pennzoil Sta tion

Household Goods

Thursday, January 27; 1983

(I) MOVIE: 'love For Rent'
(f) Sneak Previews Jeffrey
Lyons and Neal Gabler take
a look at what's happening
at the mov ies.
llil (l)) It Takas Two
1 0 :00 0 (}) Cll Hill Street Blues
First of three parts. Renko is

disciplined for ' o ve re x po ~
sure· and Joyce goes to
Washington for a job interview. 160 min I
@ Top Rank Boxing from
las Vegas. NV
0 (I) Ill Knoto landing
(f) Mystery! 'Sergeant
Cribb: Murder Old Boy.' In·
specto r Jowett goes to his
school reunion and finds
something which he feels
deserves the help of Sergeant. Cribb . (60 min.)
!Closed Captioned]
(fi) Newswatch
• ®120/20
Iii INN News
1 0 :30 (}) History of Pro Football
CIJ ,20/20
® Alpine Ski School
Ill In Search of .. ..
1 0 :45 C1J TBS Evening News
11 :00 D (I) Newscentor
(f) 0 (f) 8) (j)) News
Cll News/Sports/Weather
(f) Dave Allan at large
·
IN) Eyewitness News
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1111 Benny Hill Show
11 :30 II CIJ Cll Tonight Show
Guest host Joan Rivers Is
'joined by Valerie Perrine and
Jamos Coco. !60 min.)
(}) MOVIE: 'This Sporting
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ill MOVIE: 'A SJftetl Town
lnTexao' .
·

e

~,.~,..,
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I " - Uke
ItHot"
S French

41 Classic
• Italian film
DOWN
1 Vamoose 1

author .

2 " Pal Joey"

10 Tete-a-tete cr eator
11 Represen- 3 Pentagon
tatives
habitues
13 Malayan
4 Greek letter
prince
5 Taking

Yesterday's Answer

14 Short poem im inte; est
15 Nigerian
6 Conflict
tribesman
in literature
16 Badge
7 Crew; hands
17 Generation 8 Causing
18 Border
an annoyance
20 "True-" 9 Barren
21 Percussion 12 Scheduled
instrument
22 Fwlction
23 Fastening
device
25 Cut intO

%S - politic
27 Jimmy
or T ommy
·30 Box wood tree
31 Turkish city .
33 Type si2e
36 Duct (bioi.) .
37 Palm l eaf ·

16 Liquid
measure
19 Prods
20 Feel around
23 Pure
24 Penny
Marshall
role

fillets
26American
jurist
27 Nitwit
26 Birds I Lat. I
29 Texas city
321ndian
weight
33 Snoop
34 But (Lat. I
35 Alamo hero
37 Vegetable

38 Twine

39 Celebrity
around

40 Endeavor

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's

how

to. work ll :

A X Y ·D L B A A X R

. lo

-

·LONGF .ELLOW

One letter simply standa for another. In this oample A 11 ~
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single l etters ,
lpotlrophes, the Jen(lh and forma lion Of t he WOrdl are ali '
hinto. Each day the code letters ore different.
..

CRYPTOQUOTES

W B D P ·L V P V
PG'BVB
JGSU

HEB
JB

HOW

V ST L!J. PSEV.

P G B

V G SJ

YBS Y T B
SF E

P S .

0 B V P'

VLWB. - VHUFBT
OFPTBE
.
Yestenllty'a Cryp&amp;oQuole: ECONOMY IS A POOR MAN'S ·
RE;VENUE; EXTRAVAGANCE
RUIN. -ANON
I

A

RICH
.

MA N 'S .
•

�I
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, Jan11ary 27, 1983

Tri-state council sets scouting ac!ivities
A Scout show at Huntington Mall ·Scout show Will be held on Satur·
and an Eagle Scout recognition day, Feb. 12, during mall floW'S,
dl~r will be some of the featlire&lt;i
The public will have an opportunity
events as the Tri-State Area Coun· to see Cub Scouts and Bov Scouts in
cU observes in February the 73rd action. A monkey bridge, pioneeranniversary of the Boy Scouts of ing tower, repelling, candle mak·
America.
ing, and maJdng white oak baskets
Feb. G-12 has been designated are some of the activities
Scouting Anniversary Week with scheduled.
an estlrnated 3,300 Cub Scouts, Boy
On Scouting Aimlversary Day,
Scouts and Explorers expected to Feb. 8, youth members of the moveparticipate in various activities in ment will be encouraged to ·wear
the' area. ·
their uniforms as a demonstration
A ~uncU spokesman said the of their membership in the largest
'
.

youth organlzatiQD ln ·the free
world. The day also will give them
an opportunity to rededicate them·
selves tO objectives outlined tit the
Olb Scout Promise, Boy Scout Oath
and Explorer Code.
Scouts will participate in rell·
gtous observance at their own pia·
ceS of worship on Feb. 6, Scout
Sunday, and on Feb. 12, Scout
Sabbath.
More than 45 percent of all packs,
troops and posts are chartered to

groups. Approximately :n
percent are chartered to educa•
tlonallnstltutlons and 32 percent to
other community·based
organiZations.
Council Executive Robert
McGinnis said Scouting.principles
strongly coincide with those ~
chartered organizations seeklng
structured youth pfQgrams.
The National theme for the 1~
Anniversary W~k is "C8tch the
Scoutlng Spirit."
rellgto~

Bank One merger plans given federal approv,al ·
The directors of Bank One of
Pomeroy, NA., and Bank One of
Southeastern Ohio, NA., have

Area deaths

I
THE VIDEO CRAZE - Vaughans have joined the national video
craze and opened an arcade in the building on Hartinger Parkway,

Mlddleport. Currently there are seven machines in place, along with
two pool tables and a Juke box. According to Don Vaughan, the fa.mlly's
goal is to provide a supervised recreation center for the youth of the
community. They will be awarding door ·prizes, sponsoring tourna·
ments, and rewarding students for good grades. ({urrently, stodents
having .A's on their report cards are given a free game for each A.
There's no doubt about the popularity of video games at Vaughan's
place where these three, Margaret George, Jlnuny Reynolds and Chris
~~~h~u~
ddl
~
ed around one.

jointly announced !hat they have
elected to merge With Bank One of
Southeastern Ohio NA., being the

John Rhodes
Mrs. Martha Anderson, .Route 2,

Racine, received word of the death
of her brother, John Rhodes, 81,
Hooper, Neb.
Surviving are his wife, Inza; a
stepdaughter, Violet of Hooper; a
sister, Mrs. Anderson; three broth·
ers. Lester Rhodes, Baden, W.Va.;

Joe Rhodes and Bart Rhodes, Route
2. Racine. Hewasprecededlndeath
by his parents, Wilson ar\d Carrie
Rhodes, and three sisters.
Burial was in the .Lutheran
Cemetery at Hooper with the Warne
Funeral Home in charge. Offlclat·
ing at services was the Rev. James
Lindgren.

To end marriages

Deputies check
station break-in

Flllng for divorce were Bonnie
Sue Lascar, Rt. 1, Long Bottom,
against John L. Lascar, Rt.1, Long
Bottom, and Carol M. Scyoc,
A breaking and entering that
ReedsvfUe, . against Charles E.
occurred at Barr's Ashland Station,
Reedsville, Wednesday morning is Scyoc, Reedsville.
FlUng for dissOlution of marriage
being investigated by the Meigs
were Robert A. Venoy, Jr., MiddleCounty Sheriff's Department.
port, and Velvet L. Venoy,
Entry was made through a rear
door. Change was taken from the Middleport.
Donald Mills, Middleport, filed an
cash register along with other
action to establish a right of way
items.
against Laura Dellavalle,
Wednesday morning, Doug Lit·
Ue, Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy, Langsville.
informed the sheriff's department
he was travellng south on old U.s. 33 Faces DWI charg~
when his vehicle struck a deer.
Heavy damages were incurred to
The deer was knocked down, but
got up and ran. There was madera te a car and its driver. was charged
damage to the front of Little's WIth driving while intoxicated as the .
result of an accident on E. Main St.,
vehicle.
at 1:23 a.m. Thursday, Pomeroy
Pollee said an ~~stbound car driven
Judgment sought
by Donald E. l'{ost, Rutland. went
left to center and struck a utUity

NEW PIZZA PLI\CE -

Angle Hall is the owner - operator of
Angle's Plxza located on North second Ave. in Middleport. Her hours
are from 4 to ll: :JJ p.m. on Monday through Thursday, and from 4 to
mldnlght on Friday and Saturday. She's pictured here at the.oven with
Ry.an Hall,, her brother-In-law, who works bt the business with .Mrs.

$23,264.39
was filed
Meigs
County
A judgment
in lnthe
amount
of
Common Pleas Court by Moore's, a
dlvison of Evans products, Vienna,
W. Va., against Everett L. and
Helen Crow, Jr., Rt.1, Reedsville.
In other court action rwodivorces
were filed, one dissolution and an
action to establish right of way.

The Meig~ County Horseshoe
Club wlll meet Sunday, Jan. 30, at 1
p.m. at the Meigs County Fair·
grounds. AU members are urged to
attend.

Be a walking beauty every step of
the way in Hush Puppies ~ casuals.
Good looking, good feeling
shoes that don 't cost a fortune.

NOW $2499
SAVE $7.00

Pay Your Columbia Bills At ·

THE .SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

OUR JANUARY

WASHINGTON (AP) ·-ln a newslgn of recovery,
the govenunent 'sa.td today Its malo econornlc
forecasting gauge jwnped 1.5 pe1 cent ln December,
the eighth gain ln toe last nJ.ne mimtps and the biggest
Increase in mOre than ·two Years.
The Commerce Department reported the increase
in Its Index of Leading Economic Indicators, a
compilation of 10 separate statistics, Including
forward·poinllng lnfonnatlon concerning unemployment, production, prices and business conditions ln
general.
Meanwhile, the report said an accompanying
Index of Coincident Indicators - designed to
measure current conditions - dipped 0.1 percent in
DeCember, indicating that the long recession may
well have been contlnlllng, though at a slow pace.
· In the past, gains In the leading lniticators have
foreshadowed recovery for the economy as a whole,
though recovery usually arrived sociner than nine
months after the indicators turned up. Index ~
prior to past recoveries also were bigger than most
recent increases. indicating to many analysts that the

economy's 19&amp;1 rebound will be only moderate.
The December gain was the biggest since the 2.8
percent ln september 198) as the economy was
pu.11Jng out of that year's steey but stiort recession.
Such gains of 2percent or more have been common at
the start ol previous recoveries.
In CORira.st, the btdex rose just 0.2 percent in
November of last year- revised downward from the
orlglnal estimate of 0.8 percent - and 0.3 percent ln
October, talay's report said.
Since the performance of several Index ·components·was announced earlier thts month, It had been
widely asswned the leading Indicators would be up
for December. President Reagan reinforced that
asswnptlon when he told reporters Thursday night
they could expect "some good news" when the report
was released today.
In December, the report said, slxofthe10avatlable
leading Indicators showed Improvement, led by a
gain in new orders for plants and equipment and a
drop ln lnltlal cl!llms for unemployment benefits-

SALE

Common Stock
a. No. shares authorized
5,too (par value)
b. No: shares outstanding 5,too (par value) ........................................... 125,000.00
Surplus ........................................................... ,. .................... ....... ......... 125,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies and
other capital reserves ...................................................... ... .... ............. 1,342,000.00..
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ............................................... ................... 1,592,000.00
-~~ TOTAl J..,IABILI'l1ES AND EQUITY CAPITAL .................................... 17,610,000.00 - - •

IS COMING TO THE END!
Sorry. All good things must end and the big discounts we have offered all month will be withdrawn Jan. 31st. If you have not taken advantage
of this sale we urge you to come in.

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, MONDAY
. JANUARY 28, 29 ·and 31

heritage house
OF SHOES
MIDDLBioln, OHIO
'•

/

an indication that layoffs were slowing.
Also showing Improvement in December were the
nation's money supply, building permits for future
house construction, stock prices arid orders for new
consumer goods and materials.
Three indicators gave negative economic signals in
December: total business Hquld assets, prices of
sensitive raw materials and speed of deliveries.
There was no change in the average workweek.
More and more ln recent days, private economists
and administration offlclals have been saying that at
least modest recovery ls probably already under
way. But the new increase in the leading indicators
was still a welcome sign that condltlons are likely uf
continue to trnprove in the next few months.
The strength and length of that recovery are in
much greater question.
Testifying before Congress on Thursday, Federa)
Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said, "The stage
appears set for sustainable recovery in business
activity, bringing with lt the higher levels of
employment and real income that we aU desire."

However, he added, looming federal budget
deficits of S200, bllllon or more could threaten that
recovery.
.: .
Also on Thursday, private economist Henry
Kaubnan said in New York that Reagan's State of the
Union address did not convince him that the deficits
· would be coming down rapidly.
One day earller, Treasury Secretary Donald T .
Regan told Congress that "the recovery may well
already he under way at this moment."
But he said interest rates must decline at least a bit
further for the recovery to last.
Regan also said that even with modest recovery
from the recession, the nation's unemploymentrat.e
- now at a 42-year high of 10.8 percent - would
average about that same rate for ail of 19&amp;3.
,
The leading indicators Index dropped for 11
straight months through last Ma!'(''l as the recession
neared, arrived and then deepened. Since spring, it
has risen in every month except for August.

Eastern schools
reap levy benfits

National Bank Region Number 4

.

CLEARANCE

1 Section, 12 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc, New,poper

Big recovery sign---index increases

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

Demand deposits of Individuals, partnerships,
and corporations ............................... ......... .. ... ..... ......... . , .............. 2,3QJ,OOO.OO
Time and savings deposits of individuals, partnerships,
·
and corporations ......................................................................... 12,909,000.00
Deposits of Uril!ed States Government ........... ... :.... :............... ................... 32,000.00
Depo81ts of States and polltlcal subdivisions ln the
United States .................. ............ ................ ... ................ .......... ....... ~.000.00 .
Certlfied and omcers' checks ............................................................... :... 79,000.00
Total DePosits ................... ........ ·.................... ..... ................... ... ...... ... 16,044,000.00
Total demand deposits ...................... .. ......................... 2,828,tXXl.OO
·
Total t1me and savings deposits .................................. 13,Z16,tXXl.OO
--~~ · AU other llabllltles .......... ... ... ... .. ............. .... .... .. .......... ...... ....... .... .... ...... . 34,000.00 _ __
1
TCYrAL LIABILITIES (excluding subordinated
ootes and debentures ...... . 16,078,000.00
.

Midtown casual slip on
with silkee suede uppers

enttne

,Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 28, 19Sa

Copyrithletl 1983

REPORT Of CONDITION

Thousands
of Dollars
Cash and due from oeposltory Institutions .................... .. .. .... ' ................ 1,00,000.00
U. S. Treasury securities ............... :.................................... ......... ......... 1,850,000.00
Obllgatlons of States and polltlcal subdivisions
in the United States ............................................................ .. ......... 1,336,000.00
AU other securities ............... :... .' .. : .............................................. ..... .. ..... 168,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreement to resell ................. ........ ...... ...... .... ............... ............... 1,850,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding. unearned Income) ................... ll,:ll&gt;,cm.oo .
Less: Allowance for possible loan losses ... ........ .. .............. 2D!I,tXXl.OO
Loans, Net ........ .... .................. , ..................................................... 11,101,(Xl).00
Bank premlses, furniture and Oxtures, and other assets
represe'ntlng bank premlses ........................... ....... ...... ....................... 233,000.00
---1- AU other assets .........................................................,. ............................ 89,000.00 _ __
. TCYrAL ASSETS .......................... ... ...... ....... ... .......................... : ...... 17,670,000.00

Reg. SJ1.99

at y

•

By SCMT WOLFE

Statement of Resources and Llabllltles

l-·

Anytloing goes with

•

QUALITY WINTER CLOTHING
FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY

Charter number 9815

HushP
. . ®'1 '
.
up.,..es

Veterans Memorial
· Adffiitted ..James Van Cooney,
MiddlepOrt; · Michael Norris, Al· ·
bany; James Wllliam Lowe, Mid·
dleport; Gw!nnie White, Middleport; Robert King, Middleport.
Dlscharged-Sharon Pierce, Wil·
Uam Watson, Terry Whitlatch.

CLEARANCE
SALE

Voi.31,No.t90

of Racine in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31, ~published in
responSe to call made by Comptrpller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code,
section 161.

Hush Puppl~ treats for feet

G-J-M Center

Meets Sunday

e

RAONE HOME NATIONAL BANK

.Beginning Feb. I, the single copy
price of lbe Daily Sentinel will go up
from 15 to ~ cents. This wiU not
affect home delivery prices, it will
remain $1 per week.

(Continued from page 1)
straightening out mental health
service delivery in this region ... "
Niehm said thl§ morning that he
was not surprised by by the board's
decision not to fire him.
"I was convinced that if they
looked at all the information they
would see what was wrong With the
review group's recom menda·
lions," Nlehm said.
Many of the panel's findings
lacked validity, Niehm said, because review group members did
not consider all the evidence.
Even if the charges were true,
most "were not of major signifi·
cance." he said.

END-OF-THE-MONTH

Livestock reports
Page 10

Pages 34

•

•
grant larger Iendlrig . authority. '
There will be no changes in poltcy;
procedures and personnel.
Bank One of Southeastern Ohio;
NA., wtU operate with eight offices
which inctlide Pomeroy, Tllll
Plains, Somerset, Tuppers Plains,
Rutland and three In Athens. Bank
One Corporation operates over 1m
banking offices thrOughout Ohio.

Pasta recipes
Page 6

r~po~le~.;Y;os~t;w~a;s~n~ot~ln~j~ured~·~·;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~

Hall.

Price going up

lead bank.
The merger became effective
after Federal Regulatory approval.
In making the announcement, B.
T. Grover, Jr., president of Bank
One of Southeastern Ohio NA., and
Paul A. Barnett, president of Bank
One of Pomeroy, NA., saki the
merger wfU bring about more
efficient customer serVIces and

Marauderettes,
Tornadoettes post
basketball victories

Arriounts outstanding as of report date:
Time certificates of deposit in denomlnatons of
·
$100,00J or more. ;............................................................ ,. ..........,. .. 1.10l,IKXJ.OO
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month) ending With report date:
Total deposits ........ ................... .................... .......................... .. ..... 15,753,1KXJ.OO
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
Uabllltles. We declare that It has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge
and belief ls true and correct.
John T. Wolfe
Albert Hill, Jr.-Directors
Earl Cro$s
I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier of the above-named~ do hereby declare that this Report of
Condition IS true and correct to the jlest of mY knowledge and belle!. · ·
.
·
·
Gary P. Norris
January 24, 1!&amp;

TYPEWRITERSPUHCHASED-NIDe-IBMSeleiRietJ)Iew·

rtten were - t l y purchued by file Eestem J..oc.t 8ciMiol Dflb1d
wllb. rev- levied by a live-mill emaaaacy IIIII levy ,..ed Jut
Nowmber. 'lbe new machlnee replaced aevenl • ,_.. eld me1 I
models 'In 11118 bMic .,...... . _ are Man
Sllrtven, Jell Slll'lven, and Slllldra ~~ l!lo &amp;,9. O..ene:elar tile
cle wart&lt; In CUnt "Julleos, Bwifr ?"F Ecluelliloll teecher at lbe 111111

Dern4laltraitn&amp; lbe new
IIChool.

EASTMEIGS-TheEastemLocal District Is finally starting to
reap the benefits ol a Jive mm
emergency operating levy, passes
last November tor school opera·
dons, Improvements, and needed
maintenance.
Among those improvements to
· the academic program has been
the purchasing of new textbooks
and typewriters, acquired during
the last two weeks. These acquisitions are the first of many Improvements that were previously
detailed in an outline prior to . the
election to account for all expenditures of additional tax revenues
within the dlslrlct. The first quarterly tax dlstrtbutlon provided
funds for the most recent
purchases.
.
S!xty·ffve new Social Studies
NEW BOOKS ARRIVE - Feet m High School teachers Steve
texts, "The Western Hemisphere,"
Weber, lett, lllld Ralt* Wl(al display lbe latel&amp; ediUoas or lbe new
by Allyn and Bacon; 85 biology
teribN*• lila&amp; enotved e&amp; lbe achool Ibis week a e result of funds · texts, "Modem Biology" by Holt,
producM by lbe live miD IIIII levy pPMed Jut November. EirbiY·flve
Rinehart, and Winston; and nine
BIGiel)' boob 111111 • SoctaJ I!Jiudlee hooks were purchlllllid for ll8e this
new IBM seteclrlc typewriters
llftlle!ltel'.
'
· have been the first new additions at
the high school.
According to Business Education
teacher, Clint Mullens, "New ty·
pewrlters gtve the students a much
better ma~;h!ne to learn on. The old
typewriters were ln very poor con·
dillon, likewise making It difficult
the current fiscal year which ends just disastrous,'' Brandt said.
for
the beginning student to type on.
He said the association belleves
JWJelJ would amounttoanaverage
"I'm
extremely pleased to get
cuts of that size would force
cut of 20 percent in dlslrlcts'
the
new
equipment. It's the most
hundreds of dlstrtcts to borrow from
monthly checks.
the state's emergency loan fund to
"Of course taking that much
remain
open.
money out of the last four or five
Inalegtslatlvereporttomembers
monthsofthestate's fiscal year ... ls
this week, the Buckeye Association
Mostly cloudy tonight. Low25-30. Winds light and southerly. Cloudy ·
of School Adm!ntstra tors said
and wanner Saturday. High 4448.
Celeste's budget chief, Cristina
Extended O!Jio Forecast
Prices going up
Sale,indlcated that elementary and
Sunday through Tuesday:
secondary education would be
Chance of showers SlUiday and Tuesday: Fair on Monday. Highs
Effective Monday, January 31,
expected to make up about $200
40-50.
Wws 25-35.
•
lbe slncJe copy pl'lce ., lbe Dally
mUllon of the deficit.
8enlblel will p .. from u to 28
"Education has taken its share of
tftiiL '1'1118 will not ailed home
budget cuts. Theneedtoexplainand
*ther)' prleel, wlllch wiD renuUn express this to your representative
Sl per week.
and senator ls critical," the organ!·
· zation told Its members. ·

Ohio schools
face sharp cuts
.
'

-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Otilo said. "So I don't think there's going
education groups are warning to be any way to avoid a sullstaritlal
schools about possible cuts of up to . · cut there but we're sitU·worldng on
$200 million in state aid, but Gov. what that might aniount to."
Richard Celeste says the amount of
The Ohio Scllool Boards Assocla·
cuts has not~ determined.'
don, QDe member of the coalltlon, ·
A coalltiQn of organizations says said Celeste appears to belleve that
theCelesteadmlnlstratlonisconsld- primary and secondary education
erlng reductions in that range to received preterentlal treatment
help otrset a prolected deficit of $528 wl)en the budget was drafted.
mUllan ln the state budget.
Basic aid to the state's 615 local
Celeste said Thursday that no districts was cut 4 percent while
decision has been reached. He Is to ca tegorlcal programs were
deUwr his budget to a joint session trlnuned 7.8 percent. Spending by
ol the Uglsiature Tuesday.
other aaencJes was slashed 10
"We'w ..""'
t
~ a $528 miUion pfOb.
peroen.
lem.Educatlonclearlyrepresentsa
John B~. director~ leglslavery sullstantlal portion of the tlve. se~ for the school boards
general revenue fund," Celeste association, sakla$Dlmlllloncutin
·•
'

equipment we have ever received
in this area." Many of the typewrfters, some of which are still In use,
are over 25 years old.
Social Studies teacher, Ralph WIgal, who had previously had books
with a 1963 copyright says, "It will
be a great trnprovement to have the
books updated in the classroom."
The new editions have a 1982 copy.
right date, the latest on the market. .
~ StevE! Weber, Eastern High
School Chemistry and Biology
teacher, believes the new books In
his class Will add a new dtrnenslon
to the classroom, besides updating
rna!erial not Included in his past
1973 edition.
Weber commented, "The newest
edition we received wUl ald in our
visual Instruction as well as help In
our laboratory activftles, through
the use of detailed diagrams and
more advanced lab procedures.
''Some of the material in our new
book had not yet b'een dlscovered
when the old ones were published.
Many new scient!ffc discoveries
are included ln the latest edition.
We as teachers would llke to thank
those who supported the levy, so
that we can better meet the needs of
the students."
For the students, and the future
of Eastern High School, this hopes
to be just the beginning of many
Improvements within the classroom and the district's physical facfllties as well.

Weather forecast

GDC union has no-comment on layoffs
.
'
may appeal the aboliahments, a
Plqces5 comprising "a tot ()f
paperwork."

'

how many local members will lose

By KEVIN KELLY
their jobs.
OVP818Jf
At his Thursday meeting with
The only recognized llnlon at
Danny
Brown, the local president,
Gallipolis Developmental · Center · "Ourblggestconcerntstoexplaln
end
Hany
Ray, chiel steward,
has no comment on 104 planned whatthemembershlp'srlgbtsere,"
.
Harrington
said
a committee had
layoffs next month, but ls working be said. "We can't comment at this
been
formed
to
contact
members.
toward protecting the rights of Its tlmebecausewedon'tknowtheins
Announcementoflaycl.fs,.-oneof
1T11!111bership there.
and outs Yet. llllll.Yfoundoutaboutlt
the largest since client reduction
"The ones thatareourmembers, yesterday (Wednesday)."
we'll take care of them," noted
GDC admlnl.stratloo recoplf.ed began forcing furloughs two years
ago- came .Wednesday from the
Steve Harrington, a staff represe_n·
AFSCME as the only labor bargalnOhio
. Department of Mental
tatlve for the American Federation log unit at the center tor mentally
Rl!tardatlon.
of State, Coonty and Municipal
retarded clleRII on Jan. 1 alter
In a memo to staff, GDC
~ (AFSCME) Council 8 Loca1 .1TI5 1bowa1 proof It had
Supertmendent
Robert Zlinmeromce ln Athens.
obtained memberBhlp at or in
man ~ he has been' ln·
Jf.arrlngtDn met with ~ 17'15 excetll ~ 20 percent cl. the presc!Slt
stnlrted by ODMR to PJW11re a
leadl!n 'lbunday at the local's .· employeepopulatlon.
· TIMifm or lht ceater's J~ 191!2
oftlce e11 the one grounds. His ·
t.eltle cl. orpe""b schedule,
HlllTIJigloil
l8kt
!lllrt
a
ot
1111!1
• pr1m111y purJlOII! was to de!ennlne
which had led to 481ayoffs a month
week,
more
than
tal
people
had
wiUcli liJcai members are caught ln
later.
joined
the
1ocel.
Further
lnfolmathe la)'IJ(fs, set for Feb. 9, and to
'Ibis new schedule Is io retlect the
advlle thodte members of their . tlon on what AFSCME wUI do may
deYeiDp
either
next
Thur!clay
or
·
.._
~ uot11er 51 jobl at GDC by
rights.
March, leaving 5.11 people emhe mums to fllld out
HaiTington indicated AFSCME Friday

wilel?

played at GDC. The schedule ls
currently under review by ODMR's
central otflce, and ls to be made
available to staff by Feb. 1. .
An attached memo from Dr.
Rudy Magnone, ODMR director,
shows the declslon had apparently
been finalized by Jan. 18.
.
"Subsequent to the job atiollsh·
ments noted above, there will be no
subsequent job abollshments at
GDC for fiscal year 19&amp;1," Mag·
.none's memo states.
The largest number ·of abollshml!llts will be hospital aide supervi·
sors; with 3f Jobs axed. The next
largest to eo are 20 hospital aides.
There will be 12 food service jobs
ellmlnted, whlle three maintenance
and painting employees will be let
go.
Other abollshments cover posi·
dons ranging from a mental health
administrator to a groundske!!per.

CHECIUNG IJST- In the altennath of the armouncement oll04
at G•Dipolls Developmental Center, Local 17l5 AFSCME
members galbered 'nuinday to d~ what part of their
membenldp Ia effected. Checldng their list are, from left, steward Kyle
Donnelly, Iocai pn i'llent Danny BIW'It and chief steward Harrj

Iayolfa

Ray.

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