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                  <text>Appropriations
•
,gtven approval
By BOB ROEFUCB
Sen&amp;IDel Stall WrHer

sanitary sewer, SllU,2EO; sanitary tatlon of homes \Yere !llldeiWay
sewer escrow, $'19,000; water, when the program started and
' $146,670; water meter deposits, there are some 10 more now on flle.
Middleport Vlllage Councu meet- $3,000.
He wlU lllllke Inspections of romlniln~rsesStonMondaynlght'
Council unanimously named pleted homes next week and exapproVed approprlal!lms totaling
Carl Hor!cy, a veteran councilman, tended an Invitation to village
$2,391.~.39 for 1982. ·
to Serve
president. Horky was o(flchlls to accompany him. Before
named by Mayor Fred Hoffman to , . and after pictures are being made,
· According to the resolution, anserve on the planning commission he stated, and termed the changes
tlclpated receipts for 1!mare set at
$2,737,462.00.
as ctiuncll representative.
made In the homes where work has
Breal!down of the appropriations
James A. Schlvlnslcy, engineer been done as "dramatic":
Includes: general lund, $241,1Yl5;
with Mohican EnglneerlnJ and As·
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck restreet Ughts, $17,lXI; ~metery.
soclates, outlined progress In the ported that the new acco!llltlng sys·
$19,81rl; fire equipment, $18,9ro,
HUD funded home rehabuttallon tern as recommended by the State
swimming pool, $19,100; fire truck, · project which has been undeiWay. of Ohio Is now In operation.
$6,600; planning commission, $450;
He reported thataboutlllpercentof
Council named Bernard Fultz to
street maintenance, S88,11l0; street . the project Is completed and that continue as village solicitor for 1982
levy, ·resurfacing, $17,11)0; revenue
use. of local contractors has lli!en at.a salary.of$5,CXXJ a year. Mayor
sharing, $16,825:39; HUD,
quite successful.
HOtrman pointed out that Fultzdo$1,600,CXXJ; bond retirement, $6.'lll;
Some 20 applications for rehabUI·
(Continued on page 8)
, _ ...

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'

OAm~Midtlleport Mayor Fred Roffman, right,
administered the oath of olflce of ihree Middleport
CouncU memberS who are beginning newlour year
terms of office. They are from the lell Allen Lee King,

•

-.

at y

e

Jack SaUerlleld lllld Dewey Rorioli. A new COWICIIman, ·Robert Guinore, wu oilt of &amp;own 10 wail ..p,..senl lor Monday nllbl'a flnl meet1na oll88!.

•

enttne

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Voi.30,No.189

~

- ~lecl1982

· I s.ctlen, I

Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 12, i 982
I

ToDAY;
.

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••• IN JH.E·
Two

district~

back in :classroom

. . AY pROGRAM

A Y,. AW
t 1"\

co1 wee\1\y.
.
be 1eaturo:u
11
nieceS WI
·

·

servIng,.

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'

With ecich $5.00 purchase at our store, you may
purchase one I..JJ.Y·Away certificate for 99¢.

For example: $ 5.00 to $ 9.99 ... One CertHicate
SUUJO to $14.99 ... Two Certificates, Etc.
Paste these valuable certificates on your Stoneware
LJJ.y-Away saver card. as you collect them.
Each LJJ.y-Away card holds 16 certificates.

Tl,l!pl kMiy ......,.
Prlicllla, Vloiet, and
Caroline each offef an
arllstlc render.lng o1
nature-80ft bl0810111s.
Daslgl) your table eettlng ·

around any or all Of these
atrlklng craatlona.
And the P.tterns are as

dUrable as they ara
bellutlful.

ebilt1Waahar·Safe
e()verrPIWf
eS.fefor Mlcn);Wa•

•

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Redeem your .filled Lay-Away: card for _
a 16-piece starter
set of. this beautiful Colonial Stoneware.
·

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This Week's Feature:

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Temperatures had moderated to a degree In Meigs County 'l'IH:sda;y J1I0!1llng and high winds which had created a high wind chUI
factor over the weekend and Monday had d~ considerably. '
SchoOls resumed In the Eastern ana Meigs Local School Districts .
this morning while Southern Local Schools remaining cloaed.
The Meigs County Emergency Medical ServiCe reported that no
calls whatsoever were made by local emergency units on Monday.

Utility has three

.

alternativ~s

COL:tJMBUS, Ohio- Aspol\esman for Cleveland Electric Ulumlnatlng Co. says the ututty has oil least three alternatives to get
approval for an electric transmission line from the Perry Nuclear ·
Power Station.
The Ohio Power Siting Board on Monday pointed to eonslderatlons
for Amish communities In Geauga Co!lllty ln tUrning doWn both 'a
pitmary. and alternate route for the 51-mUe line.
The MS,OOO-volt line Is designed to take electricity from the Perry ·
station, now planned to start up In 1984, to an Ohio Edison substation
at Rootstown, near Akron.
Ohio Edison Is buUdlng the line jolnlly with CEI and Is responsible
for one-third of the mlleage and $10 mllllon or the $.'11 m!Uion cost

Settlers reject $2()2 million .offer
NEVIOT, Israell·Occupled Sinal- Israel's final withdrawal from
the Sinal next April had Its painful prelude over the weekend when
the Red Sea resbri of Nevlot said goodbye to Its last guests and shut
Its gates.
'
More than 3,CXXJ Israeli settlers are preparing to withdraw before
Israel turns over the last segment of the Sinal to Egypt on Apri125, as
required by the peace treaty between the two countries.
ln the 15 years their anny has occupied the Sinal, Israelis have
come to deeply love Its wild, mountainous hinterland and Its 145-mile
stretch of coral-rimmed coast
Settlers In the northern town or Yarnlt annD!Illced Monday they
were rejecting a government compensation offer qt $262 miUion and
planned to forcibly resist evacuation.

Authorities capture invaders
· PORT DE PAIX, Halt!- Authorities captured three of eight men
who landed on tiny Tortuga Island In an apparent attempt to topple
the government of President-for-life Jean-Claude Duvaller, a Haitian government spokesman said.
About 1i0 soldiers and mlllllamen hunted for the n:matnlng five
men on the Island, ;&gt;bout15 miles orr the north coast of lhts ImpoverIshed Cal1bbean nation.
The government said earlier that security forces and Inhabitants
of the Island chased olf a handful of armed Invaders over the weekend. But an exile In Miami said the "Invasion" was far from over.

Heart attack kills actor Lynde

BEVERLY IDLLS, Calif. - Comedian Paul Lynde, wh&lt;llle oneline wisecracks on the television game show·"Hollywood Squares" ·
belted his off-&lt;:amera shyness, has died qt a' massive heart attack at
age 55.
FI1ends who became concerned about the comedian when he
faDed to show up for a birthday party discovered the entertainer's
body Sunday lying In the bed of l\ls Beverly HUls home, said his
manager Alan David. He added Lynde might have been dead since
Saturday.
·
A coroner's autopsy Monday concluded the star died of a ma~ve
heart attack, said senior coroner's Investigator .John Decker.
Services are pending.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND-ThewtnnlngnumberdrawnMondaynlghtlnthe
. Ohio Lottery's daUy game ''The Number" was m .
The lottery reported a losa qt 11.900,7a5 frolh the wagering on Its
dally game. The I• came on sales qt S83'1,670, while holders Qt
winning tickets are entitled to share a record $2,740,375, lottery
omdals said.

·weather forecast

L

Saow likely deveioptna IOnlght and contlnutna Wednesday. Snow
polllbly heavy Wednesday. Lows 1011111t 13-18. Highs W!!dnelday
23-28. Chance r1 mow 70 pel cent lllftlllbt 8lld 90 percent Wednelday.
Wlllds euter!ylO.:D mph toallht.
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Ill Ollie 1\: c d
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11111w awalw 11re1r 'Dw I 1... I 'a .. .,. wll 1alll'ltlla7
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Frigid_weather threatens Citrus ·crop .

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SerVice for
4 ... Only

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/1. MuiHmodla Inc. No

7

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FJIIIQ ....

By AaiOdaled l'n:lll
Some of the bitterest winter
weather to hit the South In decades
·threatened Florida's citrus crop today as the death toO from sub-zero
temperatures across the nation
.
. shot up to 70.
Several elderly people froze to
death In their hOmes, lncllllllng a
92·year-okl woman In Mlsslsatppl
' and another the same age In
Alabama.

Buffalo, N.Y. was digging out
from a record 24·hour snowfall of 25
lnche~ and hundfe!ls of mlles of
roads were closed In lUinols, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania
and New York because of blowing
snow and drifts up to 6 feet deep.
Travelers forced off. the hlgl)ways
by blowing snow spent the n~ht In
highway service stations and
church pews, and state orrtce lruUd·
lngs In western New York were or·
'tiered to l'l!fll&amp;ln open as· refuaes.'
In New York City, the Heat eom.'·
plaint Bureau received more than
lO,oo:J reports of apartments with·
out heat.
Workers at Ashllind Oil Co. plant
In Callettsburg, Ky. were trying to
clear a frozen pipe Monday night
when explosions ripped through
gasoline tanks,lnjut1ng two people,
·a company orrtclal said. A resulting
fire was contained early today. .
A1l the Midwest warmed to zero
and abbve after record-cold
weather that saw the wlnd-&lt;:hlll factor dip to as low as 100 below In
Milwaukee, temperatures sank
Into the ~ today over thls year's
citrus crop, most of which Is stlU
unptcked.
'"The Lord's taken care of us before. I hope he's looking after us
again," said John Jackson, a state
Agriculture Department official for
Orange and Lake counties In the
northern part of F1or1da's citrus
belt. Citrus fruit can be destroyed
by slx hours of 28-degree cold.

It was 2 below In Birmingham,
Ala. Monday, and 8 above In Pensacola, Fla. The 1S at Houston was
the coldest there In 30 years.
Schools, factories and business
were shut throughout the Mld\\(est
and SoQth, and homes
lost electricity as power lines
cracked or generating facllltles be·
came overloaded.
There were some benefits, too.
Fewer cars were on the read§,_and

the Wisconsin Transportation Department reported Its first weekend In more than three years ·
without a traffic death. Pollee In
Chicago and Detroit reported a
drop In some categories of violent
crime.
·
. "The weather Is the per1ectcop,"
said Detroit Lt. Fred Williams.
Wisconsin's temperatures hit an
offlc!aUy recorded minus 29 Mon- ·
day morning, but unofficial reports

said the alr felt as cold as.mlnus100
degrees with the Wlnd-&lt;:hUI factor.
Icy alr that dipped to 5 below In
Atlanta, the coldest since 1899, and
1 above In Augusta, Ga., thecoldett
ever ·recorded there, frQie the radiators of cal's, saki Harry Murphy
of the state Department qt Transportation. Most schools that closed
Monday were expected to reopen
today.
(Continued on Jll!~e 8)

'

AIR COOLED - Doug Burton, left, and Charles
Gray, St. Albjtllll, W. Va., try to coax a balky car Into.
startlag In Monday's sub-zer11 temperatures, In a """""

&gt;

t'

repeated acr08s the COWIIIJ aa aa arctic cold
gripped the state. lAP Laserpho&amp;o).

Democratic field may get crowded
March 25. There's plenty of lime." as Secretary of State Anthony J .
said House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Celebtexre .Jr., should seek to re·
Jr., who Is testing the gubernatorial · taln the statewide o!flces·they cur·
waters but hasn't made the plunge. . rently hold. Celebrezze Is secretary
He and Marvin L. Wamer, rnllllo- of state, but has said he wlll run for
nalre Cincinnati businessman, ap- attorney general.
·Auditor Thomas E. Fergu59n appeared at a news conference and
saki one or them might run, but that parently wUI seek to keep hls office,
they. would not oppose each other while Treasurer Gertrude W. Don·
ahey, whose office has been caught
for the top nomination.
AI the same time, they hinted up In an embezzlement probe, has
strongly theY think Brown, as weD not said what she wUl do.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Maneuvering Is under way whldh
could lead to a political shootout tor
the Democratic nomlilatton forgov.
ernor and other spots on the party's
statewide ticket.
While Attorney General WOllam
J. Brown was out Monday making
his formal gubernatorial announcement, two other Democrats were In
Columbus Insisting pubUcly · the
field Is stw wide open. '
"The filing deadline Isn't until

Rltfe and Warner said they· hope
the Ohio Democratic Party will endorse a ticket before the flllnJ dead·
line, a move which Is under study•
Warner and Riffe saki they would
abide by any endorsements I!Y the
State Executive ·Committee; and
believe other Democrats should do
the same. If_the state COIIIIIIIttee
does not endorse, then tlley would
decide which one of them - U
either - should run for governor.

'

Attorney Knight seeks judgeship
Charles Knight, a member of th:• ·
MeiJlll County Bar Association.
today announced his candidacy fot
MeiJlll County Common Pleas Judge
· · in the Republican primary election
JuneS .
Knight, whose office is located at .
Knight Law Off!cea, 211 East Second
Street, in Pomeroy, Issued the
following statement: " I am. announcing my candidacy for the office of jildge of the Cootmon Pleltll
Court for Me!l!l County In the J!llle
primary election. In the put, I have
served Melga County u county
judge and aa &amp;aaiatant pi'OieCUting
allorney . and have addlllonally '
repraented oomeroua cUenll, both
as a civil and crin:liMI attorney in all
Melp County Coarla. I hope til bring
lo tile aftlce the tntere.t Del vigor of
I ~e who CUI undenland the
needa and clwlra Ill all dllr.ens of
the~. both young and old.
"While a Judce bas as Ida primary

v

duly the Interpretation and en- of his dass of 1966. He attende-d Ohio
forcement of our laws, I hope that I University, from 1967 to 1969, where
can carry out this duty while st!ll he received a hacheJor's degree in
c-onsidering the impa ct of those business administration. While serdecisions upon the individual• who ving in the Ohio National Guard
live and work to make Meigs county from 1970' to !976, Kni ght received
their home.
both a master's degree In busine!IS
"I shall endeavor to contact each administration and a juris doctorate
arid every family here in Meigs in law from the Ohio State Univer,
Counly during this campaign with sl\y.
the goal of determining more comKnight and his wife, Sharon,
pletely the general attitudes of our
re:Jide
at 106' Union Avenue In
county toward the courts and to
receive suggestions for im· Pomeroy. His parents, Howard and
provemepbl of our · system of Eleanor Knight, bQth former
teachers in Melgli County schools,
ju.stice."
reside at Chester on the. family
Knight began practice in Pomeroy fann.
In 1974 with Bernard V. Fultz when
Knight Is a member of the Meigs
he subsequently became a partner In County and Ohio Bar ·wociations,
the finn of Fultz and Knight. In 1978, as well as the Shade River L,odgc
Knight began his own finn.
Number t$3, Free and Accepted
Prlor to beginning prar;t!ce, Masons of Ohio, and he Is currently
Knight attended E8Jitem High treasurer of the Ea; teril High School
School where he was valedictori3Jl Alumni Association.

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AT'I'Y. CHARLES KNIGHT

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Commentary

· Pagr 2-The Dally S lllnel
,_,....., Mhllt;nut, Ohio
Tu II 141'(, Jc:"U . '/ 12, .1912

Weber

The · Daily Sentinel

revisitooL..---:---~'___J_ames_:,__J._K__;ilpa;__t_ri.c__k

WASHINGTON- At t11f presiden-

lll CIIIII'tRtM•t

r....,..,..u•w
llt-ff%..Uil

tial news conference on Dec. 17, a '

DEVO'TEOTOnlEINTI'JifmOt' THt: Mt:IC:S.IIA.'!ON •HEA

knowledge~~ble black reporter fired
a loaded question at Mr. Reagan:
Should the SUpreme Court's 'weber
decision be overturned? The
president was a sitting ducli. Of the
Weber deCision, as ·such, he
posae111ed no knowledge whatever.
"I have to confess to you,'' said
Mr. Reagan; "that I can't bring to
mind what It perlaliJS to and what it
calill lor." The reporter provided .a
sununary that waa accurate as far
liB It went. ''Well," the president
·latnely concluded, "if lhls ls
something that simply allows t~
training and the bringing up so !here
are more opportunities for
(minorities, in voluntary agreement
between lhe union and.management,
I can't 8el! •ny fault wllh that. I'm
for that."
On Jan ..4, the White House .issued
a belated statement correcting lhe
record. The president agrees with
the Justice Department that t~
Weber cue was wrongly decided.
The president "basically supports
affirmative action where it is on a
voluntary basis."
Very well. Lj!t us have plain
speech. The Supreme Court's
decision of June rT, 19'19, in the cue
of Brian F. Weber violated every a!'
plicable principle of jurisprudence.
.In order to achieve a result it regar·
ded .as socially desirable, lhe
. majority trampled underfoot not
only its own recent precedents but
also its well-established tules for
statutory construction. Five members of the court, led by JUBilee
Brennan, tossed away their judicial
robes and elecled themselves to the
United Slates Congress. They !hen
proceeded, by their own fiat, simply
to rewrlte TIUe VII of the CivU
Rights Act of. 1964. It war an indefensible act of. arrogance by life- .
tenured justices whooi! abuse of
power cannot easily be corrected:

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Plobllolio:r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOll HOEFUCH

A• .... l hbu.M/c-tr.lkr

GncnlMIMI~

DALE RO'lliGEB, JR.
NrwtEdll«

• MDIBEH "' Tloo: "-&lt;iokd p,_ llllollll Doll)' ..._ ..._..._ allll 11w
A...mcu Nnr...ptr hblilkn AUOtllt,_,

I..ETTERI OF OPINION 1rr wrk'GIIIH . Tlwy ....... W 5nl llu Ml . . . . '-c. AU
it1IHI art lft)Ht Itt Nitlq •••••• br •fpftl . . . . . . .. ..Wrn~ ud ~
• ..-... N• . .llfll'd ldk'rw will bto publillwcl. Lelttn
bt ll1eod IMlr, ~ill«
~~net, "' penea~Uttn .
_
.

.._ld

.More will come
In each lns.tance. the evolution of technology played as large a role as the
law.
_
.
IBM, which the Justice Department once thought should be broken up
.tor the good of competition, found ltseH surrounded by so many competl·
. tors and so much technology that, while It grew, Its market share fell.
In fact, thecornpanyrould show thatlts major developments sometimes
,crea_ted opportunities for new SIIPPliers and competitors In hardware .the machinery - and software - the .programs to ·make use of the
machinery.
So rapidly has the electronic computer field evolved that rather than
· being cloaed by monopoly It Is now deemed among the most open to
opportunity. Indeed, It Is a hotbed of entrepreneurtshlp.
: ATH, regulated Into llmltlng Itself to communications rather than
_computers, found the d~tlnctlon becoming Indefinable. as did the Federal
CornmUIIIcatlons Commission and the Justice Department. When does a
multipurpose telephone cease to be a phone and become a computer?
Evblutlon abo changed the meaning of communications, which not long
ago meant the Interchange 6f Information - through various types of
hardware - by voice, picture or writing. Then came data transmission.
· and computer languages. Should AT&amp;T be llmlted to voice communications whlle others used new technologies, some of which AT&amp;T ~lped
develop?
To what extent, for example, could AT&amp;T develop Its telephones In an
effort to make them more useful? Automatic call forwarding, In which a
telephone Is pi'OIII'IliJimed to ring In your dentist's office, If.that Is where
you'll be, was delayed over the telepho!MH)()mputer question.
But In t~ realm of basiC research, In which AT&amp;T'S Bell Laboratories
are aa Important as great universities, the distinctions became even hazIer. The world was changing; yesterday's conceptions were old today.
Who IS to say now what the preclae shape and content of electronic
communications will be? It Is unknoWn as most of the future, but of such
laJclnatlng and _enonnous possibilities that billions of dollars have been
spent fiiii.III!\IVerlng lor a place In lt. As It evolves so will conceptions. And
ATH and IBM will conceive large shares of lt.
,
AI a consequence, what are seen today as separate, distinct Industries
may not be tomorrow. Cable television, computers, TV screens, telephone
• servlcea and more may merge Into an Industrial unit. f.&lt;otions may merge
too. When, for Instance, does the lnlormatlon services business become the
news business? Is dial-the-weather lnlormatlon; or Is It news?
Some of the products leading to tomorrow are already In place, which Is·
~r reason why IBM Is not viewed today as the monopoly It was seen to
be a decade ago: Computers, two-way televisions, cable TV. earth sate!·
lltea are some of the major elements. More will come, and chalige, and
change perceptions, too.

~·Berry's

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The case originated in 19'74, not
long alter the KaiJer Alliminum &amp;
Chemical Co. negotiated· an
agreement with the United steelworkers. Under the agreement, af·
finnative action programs were to
be · inStltul\!d w!Ut the aim o1
bringing more blacks Into cta1t
positions. At the company's
G~cy. La., plant, where blacks
. were to be given at least half of the
openings in training programs until
they ~ld at leairt 38 percent ol all
such positions. Trainees were to be
accepted according to their seniority
within the plant.
PUrsuant to thio agreement, 13
trainees ·were chosen lor six dif.
ferent programs - seven blacks, six
whites. It is not contested that the
most senior bl!lck had less seniority
than several whites, among them

Weber, whose applications for four
. ptOgr81lll were rejected.

.fn a nutsheU: Weber was denied
lhiB opportunity for advancement
solely becaGII! of his race. He was a
victim of the very kind of racial
discrimination that is flatly forbidden by Title VD. 'l'he statute is
expUclt.lt contaliiB rwt tile sllghte$
ambiguity. Words could not be' set
more clearly one alter another. 1t is
" unlaldul" for employers and
uni0111 to dlscrimlnate against "any
tlfl!llloyee because of hiB race ''In admission to any program el!lablished
to proVide training."
Brennan's Incredible excuse for
upholding the Kaiser diBcrimination
WIIB !hat while the program violated
the letter of the law, it did not violate
·the spirit of the 11!w. I~ a libstering
dissent, Jusl!ce Rehnquist charged

that the majority hid pulled off a
"tour de force l'e!llinllcent not of
Jurists such as Hale, Holmea and
Hughes, but of escape artlsta such as
'Houdini." The majority had eluded .
both clear statutory language and
unlfonn precedent. It had discarded
a leglalatlve histQry of !he act that in .
earlier cases lhe court upanilnOW,Ily
had described as beyond cono
trsdlction. ,
This is the ·" Weber case." Undt:r
the Reagan administraiton, the
~ustice Department openly and
avowedly is searching for a set of
facts that would provide an opportunity for the court to revel'3e itself. · .
A ne~ test care could well go~
the other way, thus restoring vitality
to a federal statute that now give~
. tleliberate r11cial dillcrimination the
approval of judge-made law,
1

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Glenn could be Fritz's.opponent ·

World
•

Midwest In 1911l and manyMoodale
aides expect that to haunt him
again In 1984.

~.

the campaign for the title
never seems to end. When they aren't replayq the last campalgn or
pennant race they are trying to
elope out the next one.

On the other hand, GieJm, the
former war hero and astronaut
And l1ke the people who try to
with an All-American boy !Jna&amp;e, fiiUre out far In advance who the
could be a lonnldable l'andtdate. next World Series winner will be,
During 'I recent strategy aesalon, · Glenn, who waa re-elected east1y In
the men who p~aroundMon·
a major topic was whether IIOI'Ile1911l even ar Roliald Reagan waa dale a week ago were very milch
one other than Kennedy - Sen. . caJTYinl Ohio, Is I'UIII\Ini hard tor
aware !hat unpredictable developJohn Glenn ol. Ohio was the name
the Job.
llll!llts
can throw ott the best11101t o1.ten mentioned - could
Only Mondale and Kennedy have ~ apecul8tloli.
emerge aa Mondale's principal ri·
done more than Glenn to 11'11 IJI)IItl·
Nonetheless, It was a serious and
valiD 1984.
Oiled tor the next presidential essential e~~erciBe for these political
campaign.
pros.
Kennedy, It was,argued, Ill llllely
to run Into the same p-oblems wtlh
voters In the South and MMI'.!rest
Among the other names batted
More !han ' 100 people attended
that ~ did In 1911) when ~ chal- around during the Mondalecrowd's
the meeting, which was described
~ Jbnmy carter and was
liB a briefing session tor the 1982
three-ilay •trale!IY seulon ataChebeaten badly In the early primaries
sapeaiu! Bay resort: Sen. Gary
campaign. But the se 1"'1 was
In thole regions.
Hart ol. Colorado, former Gov.
equally Important In erasing any
'!be Massachuaetts~tor's per· Reuben A1tN!w ol. Florida and Gov.
!qerlng doubt about Mondale's
sonaliUe was seen as a major poUt!· Jay Rockfeller of West VIrginia.
determination to light for the 1984
cal llablllty In the South and
For politicians. like balebalJ • nomination.

AS they looked at the 1982 cam·
palgn, the Mmtale IP'OIIP saw the
economy ar the
with not even the cr111s in Poland
likely to dlwrt attention tD foreign

dec!cl- tactor

policy Issues.

. •

Only a few days alter the Moll-.
dale rneetlnio the Labor depart·
ment announced that the
unemployment rate had cllmbed to
U ~rcent In Decernbel', up frun
8.4 percent the previous moolh.

~ol the economists who met
with the former vice president suggested that the economy could tum
upward a lew months before Election Day. But wllh unemployment
apparently beading above 9 per·
cent In the coming mootha, Democratic poUtlclans are betting that an
econornJc upturn In late ~
probably would be too 18.te to ~lp
Republlcan candidates.
·

The sources in
Art Buchwald
the White House~--:-------___;__
.....
.......
.. . .
""&lt;.
..... .

.or. ... •
..
.......
..
~

I

," • •

"Hey, you think you've gof probltlmsl LBf me
tell you about BRACKET CREEP."

~)~Today
'

•
In

history

.

"
Today Ia TUesday, Jan. 1.2, the l21h day ofl!lll2. There are 353 days left 1n
... the year.
.
Today'a JlllbUght in history:
'
OnJanuaryl2th,l945, Gennan forces In Belgium retreated 1n the Battle
- '~ of tile Built! during World war rr.
·
.
~
Qn thll date:
.
In 19111, President Sukamo formed the National Front 1n Indonesls.
,,"
··
In 19'10, ,the ~lonlst Blafran regime surrendered, ending the Niger' lan ciYII war.
·
In m•, the NOI1h African nations of Ubya and TuniSia. ~
:0 aa•eement to merge ar a new republic.
r;_
And In l!rl&amp;, tile coalition cabinet In Thailand collapsed with the reslgna··
·- tlon of Prime Mlnl*r Kukrtt Pramoj.
~
Tell yean aao. the U.S. auto irldustry wooaovernment penn1illon for a
·• leCOIId round ol. pdce lncreaRs on 1972 models, the 1 percent averaae
:: IDCI'ellll to bli u.aed for safety and anU-JjollutiOn equipment.
::
F1ve yean aao. an InternatiOnal uproar aroee over the re1eare by the
;; Franch aovemment ol. ~ Palestinian l.elirortst leader Abu Daoud• .
.•
One year aao. .tenodat lllppOI'Ierl ol. Puerto ·RICan bidependenQe
~ claimed ~ b' a ltrlna o1. pn!-dawn bombings !hat destroyed
:: II!WI'81 warplaJa at a u.s. AJr Natlollal Guard baae 1n san Juan.
•· Taday'a lllrtbday: Bueball star Bill Madlock Is :n.
_
': 1bouibt For Today: A man must not awallow more beliefs than~ C8ll ·
::. dJp!at....: Havelock EUis, U.S. PI)'CIIolal1lt (lBS-1939).
·

r:

~

.

~

The media keep getting blamed
for all sortll of crimeS conunltted
agaiiiBt the goverrunent, bul very Ht·
tie Is mentioned about how many
times t~ press is used by t~ .
goverrunent to do its dirty work.
Take the recent firing of the
President's national security
stablehallf1 who, w~n it carne to Mr.
Reagan' a horseback riding, was considered one of hiB closest advisers.
The stablehand, Horatio Bridle,
had irked high members of the
White House staff with an Interview
he had goven to Sparta lllustrated
saying the President kept slipping
off his saddle. Sipce lhiB was
privileged infonnation, the White
House aides decided Bridle was not
a team .player and had t9 go. But no
one ha&lt;l 'the nerve to break the news
to the Pnisldent's stablehrnd.
So one of the aides aUed up his
good 'frlend Sam Dunteady of the
ANC Evening News and said, "ABk
me a · question about Horatio

·Tulsa tops Buffaloes
By "-iated PreM
Phil Spradling missed a couple of
games because of an appendix op' era,tlon. It lust wasn't lhe same
, Tulsa team wtlhout him.
That's why Coach Nolan Rl·
chardson was happy to see him
bacl\ Monday night, looking none
the worse for wear.
"Of course wllh Spradling back,
that made a difference 1n the bal·
!game," said Richardson after a 98IW victory over West Texas State.
Spradling, who missed two
games and played only eight min·
utes In Saturday night's loss to New
Mexico State, scored 14 points as
the 18th-ranked Golden Hun1cane
beat Its Missouri Valley Conference
opponent.
· '
"Sunday he looked real good 1n
practice," said Richardson. "He
said he was reaey to play. He said,
'I was ready (Saturday) at Las Cruces, but I was afraid ." '
Stadllng was an lm~rtant part of
a fast-breaking Tulsa attack that
thoroughly disorganized the Buffaloes. He played 22 minutes, hitting
seven of 11 field goal tries.
"At halftime, they had 131ayups
and made 1.2 of them,'.' said West
Texas State Coach Ken Edwards.
"We only had two. We didn 't shoot
with authority. We shot scared.
They , didn't do anything except
beat us down lhe court. They beat
us at our own game."
Tulsa jumped to a 55-39 halftime
lead. That lead ballooned to as
many as 25 points midway through
the second haU. Hun1cane freshman Steve Harrls scored 20 points
and 6-foot-10 sophomore Bruce

1M Daily Sentinel P!ls• 3

Bridle."
Sam said, " What's going on with
-the Presldent'sstablehand?"
''I can't tell you," the aide replied
andhungup.
.
That was enough for Sam. He went
on the air that night and said,
"White House sources hinted today
!hat there could be a big shakeup 1n
the President's litable. Mr. Reagan
is said to have expressed dlssau.facUoni wilh the constant bickering
going on between hiB national
security stablehand adviaer and the
grooms at Quantico, where hi.t horse
is kept."

The next morning, crews trom all
the major networks were staked out
at Bridle's house. When he left lor
work, cameras were shoved 1n hia
face, and ~ was asked if ~ was on
Ids ouaJ tNt?--- ........ •
"No one has spoken to me about
it," Bridle said. "The President has
told me J could have the stablehand
i.C/I!Aa~.t nnlell·ltll ~ . .

That afternoon, Lilly Stall, the
CBT White House correspondent
was having lWlCh wilh a Reagan inslder. He said, "Ask me if Charlton
Dancer is being considered as a
replAcement for Haratio Bridle as
the President's natiOnal security
stablehand."
Lilly said, "It Charlton Dancer
being considered to replace Bridle in
the White House?"
"There Is no trulh to the story

whatsoever."

Lilly rush back to . her place In
front of the White House and repor-ted to the TV audience, "Despite
denials from the President, It hu
not bean decided to replace Horatio
Bridle with Charlton Dancer, who
"!!ll stableband to Mr. Reagan w~n
the President was gove11101' of
• Clllfonaia."
By th1a time Bridle was becoming
frantic. He went to tile White HOUle
aides and uked to eee tile President,
110 !hat he CGU1d be aaured once and

lor all that his Job was not in jeopardy.
·
· The President agreed to see
Bridle, and afterwards said
"Horatio Is the best irtableband I'~
ever had."
·A White House aide standilll! next
to Jackie Woodley of NBZ whispered
to her, "ABk me if thia is the .last
time the President will ever see
Bridle again."
. ."Is thio the last time the President
will see Bridle?"
The White House man said "No
COiplllenl."
_ · '
Jackie went Qll t~ air that night
and said, "NBZ has learned today
that despite the meeting between
Presidelt Reagan and Horatio
Bridle the President will announce
the a):ipolntment of a· new natonal
sec11rity stablehand tomorrow.
White House aides Sllid the vicious
attacb and innuendoes by the
-media on Bridle now make It lmpoulble for h!m to do his job...

DOONES8URY

,

'I

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By Aasoc1ated Press
Missouri Coach Norm Stewart

:· found out early that respect doesn't
alwaysgowllh a No.2 ranking. As a
matter of fact, Mother Nature
really did a number on his Tigers.
"We had to practice In lhe dark
today," Stewart said In a telephone
Interview Monday night afterbelng
told Missouri bad taken over the
No.2 position ~hind North Carol·
Ina In the latest Associated Press
college basketball poll.
Record low temperatures were
recorded across Mlssourllast weekend and power outages that occurred throughout the state also hit
the campus.
"The weather has closed the
school and we had use auxlllary
lights to practice, but we couldn't
have played a game," Stewart
said.

Stewart, however, belleves
things will heat up for Missourllhls
week as the Tigers have games
wllh Big Eight rivals Oklahoma
State and Nebraska and a Sunday
showdown wllh No.17 Louisville.
"The conference games are
more Important to us !han Sunday's game with Louisville," said
Stewart; who added, "Louisville is

l

Meet the ·Meigs Marauders

Vanley added 16. Shawn Smith The Green Wave was it!d by John
WllUams' 22 points.
scored J.ll points for the losers.
" I was ten1bly disappointed wllh
In other action Involving lhe na·
our
play In the closing minutes,"
lion's ranked teams, No.' 4 DePaul
said
Vlrglnla Tech Coach Charlie
defeated Creighton 76-6'/; No. 15
Molr.
"We had a nine-point lead
Oregon State routed Stanford 81-38
and
tried
to throw It away."
and No. 20 Vlrglnla Tech edged Tu"
I
feel
we lost the game 1!1 the
lane 65-64.
first
half
when
we got behind and
The Top Twenty
gave
VIrginia
Tech toO many
Terry Cummings scored 29
gilts,"
said
Tulane
Coach Ned
points and Bernard Randolph
Fowler.
"We
certalnly
had a
added 20 as DePaul beat Creighton.
chance
at
lheend
.
We
had
the
shots
Tralllng 36-35 at the half, the mue
all
night
!hat
just
wouldn't
drop
for
Demons outscored Creighton 1~
us."
In the first slx minutes 10 take a
50-41lead with 13: 23 rerruilnlng and
U111'811ked Teams
never lost lhelr advantage.
In other games, J~nalh NlchOiafl
DePaul Coach Ray Me};er called
the victory "a stinker,' ' ~g It hit two free lhrows wllh 26 seconds
remaining to cllnch Alabama'
the second game 1n a 1'0\1! !hat he
wasn't satisfied wllhhis te~
' 1sper- Bbmlngham' s 85-81 victory over
NlckRiggs '
North Carolina-Charlotte, TonyHa·
formance. He was vlslb . upset
5-10, Sophomore Guard
wllh Saturday night's 71-69 umph ney scored 19 poinis to lead South
Alabama to a 65-55 victory over Akover Dayton In his l,IXXlth game.
"We've lost our momentum," he ron, Dwayne McClain hit all eight
said . "We're just not having tun out of his shots from the floor as Vlllan·
ova avenged a five-year losing
there a,nymore. It showed tonight."
Paced by guard Lester Conner's streak to St. John's by !!dglng the
Weather permitting, a lull slate
Redmen 64-62 ~nd Matt Clark al action Is scheduled tonight In17 points and seven steals, Oregon
scored U points to lead four Okla·
State breezed past Stanford. The
volvlng Southern Valley Athletic
homa State players 1n double flg·
Beavers outscored Stanford 31-8 at
Conference squads.
the start of lhe second half In build- · ures as the Cowboys defeated
Non-leegue games lind Wahama
Texas-Arlington 63-55.
Ing up a 35-polnt lead and coasted
visiting Kyger Creek; Eastern tra·
Also, Mitchell Anderson sank two
the rest of the way.
vellng to Miller: !)outhwestern gofree throws with tWo seconds left to
VIrginia Tech built a nlne-polnt
lng to Symmes Valley, and Ironton
11ft Bradley to a 63-61 victory over St. Joe at Hannan Trace.
lead with 2: 58 left behind Gordy
Southern Illinois, Florida State
Bryant's 17 points, !hen cut short a
Friday night, Southern Is at
Tulane rally to nlplheGreen Wave. guard Mitchell Wiggins scored 37 . Kyger Creek; Southwestern !lasts
points and pulled down nine re- North Gallla and Hannan Trace
The Hokles led 39-21 at the half
bounds to lead the Ser1unoles past visits Eastern.
and lhe closest Tulane got was the
archrival Florida 82-67 and Greg
final margin, even though the
League leading Southern will
Dennis scored 24 polntsforWestern play Alexander Saturday whlle ·
Green Wave had a27-17rehoundlng
Carollna as the Catamounts beat
edge and hit six of 1.2 free throws to
Miller plays North Gallla.
Central Wesleyan 95-77.
just two of lhree for Vll'Jdnla Tech.
Going IntO tonight's actl&lt;m, SoulhI
em continues tq dominate Its opponents with a 11Hl record and W
slate in the SVAC.
Kyger Creek, which finished last
ayearagoln the loop standings and
\
won six ~ames against West Vlrgl.nla OlliJC?III!Ills, continues as the big
to No.6 wtt}l 1'01 pOints.
Insignificant U! us from a coaching
surprise of the league wllh a 5-l restandpoint."
'
San Francisco moved up a posi- cord and 3-1 mark against SVAC
North Carollna, which sur.kved a
tion to N....7 with 755 points. George- foeli.
· challenge from VIrginia last week - !Qwn, D.C., which Ill currenUy
The Bobcats never posted a
1n a battleofthenatlon'stopranked
riding a 1.2-game winning streak, league victory last season.
teams, was again a nearly u'13nim·
jumped from No.13 to No.8 with 690
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
ous choice 1n the ' poU. The Tar
points, while Arkansas, with 666 Trace Wildcats, a strong second
Heels, who edged then-No.2 Caval!• points, and Houston, entering the half team a year ago seems to be
ers ~last Saturday, received 58-- Top 10 for lhe first time lhls season, golne the same way this campaign.
rounded out the Top 10 with ~ The Wildcats are 5-5 overall and 2·2
of-59 first-place votes and 1,179
points - one shy of .petfecUon points.
from the nationwide panel of sport
Minnesota made one of the biggest downward moves, dropping
wrlters and broadcasters. ·
North Carolina's victory at home
from No.6 to No.11 following a 49-47
over VIrginia marked the second
loss to Ohio State last week. North
Tunda1 Trlpllc•k'
Dft. Zl, • •
time lh!s season It bad won a battle
Carollna State was l21h and was
St.l..tlqa
of No.1 vs. No.2. On Dec. 26,1heTar followed by Alabama, Idaho, Team
Plll.
6
Heels, 12~. downed then-No.2 Ken·
Oregon State, Wichita State, Louis- Star Supply Co.
6
tucky 82-69 to reljln lhe nation's
ville, Tulsa, Texas and VIrginia C
II S'aPennzoll
4
J hn
Gulf ~
Melg1Inn
4
bragging rights.
Tech.
Fore11lRunBlock
2
Missouri, 11~. jumped two
- Last week, the Second 10 was Ar· No. 5
2
H!Wl int.l . Karnt! - Pat Carson 186, 1&amp;3 ; Carolyn
kansas, Louisville, Georgetown,
notches and edged Vlrglnla by a
Bachner 175.
Houston, North Carollna State, Ala·
mere eight points in grabbing the
HIWl ~erica - Pat Caf'ljon !138; Carolyn
489; Betty Whitlatch 400.
No.2 position. The Tigers received
bama, Oregon State, Idaho, UCLA Bachner
Team hil(h Kame- C &amp;IS Pe nnzoil4~ .
the first-place vote that did nor go to
and St.John's of New York.
Team hil(h St! riL'M - C &amp; S Pcnruoil1385.
Texas and Virglnla Tech, which
North Carollna and 1,070 points.
DePaul Inched Into the No.4 posl- upset Louisville last Saturday,
don with j!51 points, whlle Iowa
were the newcomers to the Top 20,
T&lt;am
P...
moved up two slots and was next
replacing UCLA, raitked second in Meil(l lnn
12
No. 5
10
lhe preseason poll, and St.John's,
·wllh 883 points. Kentucky, ranked
Forc!lt Run Blocli
10
lhird last week when they were sur- which was crushed by Georgetown Star Supply Co.
Jhn '1 GuJf
prtsed by 'tennessee 70-66; sll~ped
last week.
C II SPeiUU:()IJ

Mike Edwards

Bob Ashley
, 11-1, Senior center

5-11, Senior Forward

Four non-league games set tonight ·

~:Tigers in No.2 pJsition

.

WASHINGTON (AP) -Political
advl.aen to former Vtce Pll!llde!lt
Walter F. Mondale are disputing
llllllfllPIIonl that the race for the
191M Democratic jHesldeutlal 1101111natlon will be betvieen their 00.
and Sen. Edward M. Kemledy.

,.

,_
. . Mlddl:::..&amp;,
Oh.io
.
~

Tuudalf, January 12, 1982

1

Southwest ern
North Gal l ia

1 7

444

OP
434
311

400
591
SSB

1 6 427 546
SVACONLY
Soulhe rn
~ 0 289
191
Ky ge r Creek
J 1 21 5 202
E astern

1 'l

Hanna n T rac e
Southwes lorn
Nor lh Gallia

'2 2 235 229

1.4.4

1 2 205
0 3 157

Waha ma

112

250
207

at

Kv ge r Cr eek ; East ern at M iller ;

/

Southwes tern a l Symm('s Valley and

Ironton St. J oe at Hannan Trace.

Hl~h

Ind . l(ame - Kim Baley 196; June LamOOrt Jill: Carulvn Bachner 1116.
HiMh Ht!rl~" · :- Cwrolyn BHt:hnt!r 531 ; June
l..ambl!rt495; Knn Batey 472.
Team hiMh l(lllnl! - M"ell(s Inn 492 .
Te~un h l ~h Kc ric!' - Mci"•lrml4rl&amp;.

Friday : Southern at l&lt;yge r Creek :
Nor rh Gall iA at .Southwest ern ana

Hannan Trac e at Eastern .
Saturday : Ale xander at Southern
and M i ller at North Ga lli a.

f'jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiijiiiijiiiijii

''
•

The Uaily Scoilinel

·cusPStu-•1

I

NfL season. He was a first-round
Publlahed enry aflerfi()OI'I, Monday through
friday, 111 Couot Sll'e&lt;t, by the Ohlo ,VaUey
198l draft choice of the Bengals.
Publllhlnv Cornl&gt;anY - Multimedia, Inc.,
White, a 6-4. 250-pound AllPomeroy, Ohio 4.11ell, tn-21101. Second dUI
poltage r-td at Pomeroy, Ohio.
American at the University of Maryland, wlll be making his fifth
Member : The Auoclal«&lt; Preu, lnllrl'l:l O.ily Prell AUoclltion and the Amenean
straight Pro Bowl appearance. He,
Nenp~per Pllbliahen A.saOciiUoo, NaUonal
too, was a No.1 drattcholce,ln 1975.
Adve11t.lntt Repreaent.at lve, BranMm
Ntwaptlper S.lea, 733 Third Avenue, Ntlt
Munoz' blOCking had much to do
York , Ne• York 10017.
wllh Cincinnati quarterback Ken
POSTMASTER: Send addnu w Tho llolly
Anderson being lhe lo!'ranked
Sentinel, 111 COUrt St., Pomeroy, Ohio~7111 .
passer and the NFL's Most Valua· 81JBICRIFI'ION RATES
ble Player this season. He was
By C.rrkr or ac.ttr Roate
equally adept at blOCking for the
One ....k.. . -. . . . . . . ........ . ..... 11.110
One Month . . ... , .. , .. , . ......... . .. Sf.tO
Bengals' rushers .
One Year . . . . . . . . ...... ... , , ... . 162.10
SINGLE COPY
"He's the best young otrenslve
PRICES
lineman I have ever played
Dally ..... .. ..... ........... _.. 15 Cenu
against,'' all-pro defensive end LeS.bacrlbero n04 desiring to P"f the carrier
roy Selmon of lhe Tampa Bay Bucmay remit ln advance direct \0 Ttle O.ily
SenU~I oo a 3, 8 or 12 month bull. Credit
caneers said of Munoz.
wiU bf given carrier uch moo01.
St.John (12-1) held onto the Class·
Cincinnati Coach Forrest Gregg,
A lead wllh 224 points. Sidney Lehhimself a Hall of Fame otlens!ve
No sublcrlpUons by mall permittee! In towns
where home carrier aervice Ia avallllble.
man (1.2~) kept second place wltl!
lineman from his Green Bay
190 points while Columbus
Packer days, said of Munoz: "He's
MAlL liUI!IICRIFI'IONll
Oldullllll'"l Vlqlaia
Academy '110-1) was third again
a rare specimen. He moves better
l Monlh . - ...... -................. 112.3$
with 153.
·
than any big man I have ever
Sill moolh ... - .. ... -....... ... ... !m.M
I Year . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sli.OO
seen."
In Class AAA, Newark used the
Rl&amp;el Oallkle 0.611
upset of McKinley to vault from
Tom Landry, Dalla~.· coach who
aiiiiii.,IVIrJiola
I Moolh .... -........ - .... .. ..... . 111.110
nlnlh last week to fourth lhls time
bands out praise sparingly, says
I Mooth .... . ............ .. ...... - 123.40
behind Toledo Scott. Warren How- White never has a bad game for the
1Year .......... . ...... . . . ... . , .. Sti:JO
fifth,
Dayton
Meadowdale
·•·
Cowboys.
land
was
sixth, Warren Western Reserve .---;..,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-1

ALL SNOW TiRES NOW I·NSTOCK .
STARTING AT

Retreads •
New 4 Plys
All Season
I

• • •

I

I

I

I

I

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•

I

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ALL.NEW TIRES-Mounted &amp;Bal. Free

A Dtvilioll ol MIIJibnedla, lac.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Offen- . award for sponsoring International
Trucks. Munoz and White will be
sive tackle Anlhony Munoz of the
Super Bowl-hound C!nciimatl Ben- Introduced at halftlme of the Pro
Bowl Jan. 31 In Honolulu wllh$5,001
gals _and defensive tackle Randy
being awarded In their names to the
White of the Dallas Cowboys are
charity of their choice.
the 1981 Linemen of the Year In the
Mimoz, a 6-toot-6, 278-pound UniNational Football League.
Their ~lectlons were announced versity of Soulhern CaiUomla AllAmerican, will appear in his first
today by the Pro Football Hall or
Fame, which coordinates the Pro Bowl this year In his second

5VAC -S-TANDINGS
ALL &lt;;AMES
TEAM
W L P
Soulhe rn
10 0 665
Kyger Cree k
5 I 329
Eastern
5 J 409
Hannan Tr ace
• S 5 590

Tonight' s games:

Locai howling

·Munoz, White top linemen

forward finished wllh 14 points, senior guard David Sands and junior
guard, Kellh Clark dumped In 12
points apiece.
Mike BlsseU, senlorfmward, was
the game's top point maker with 26
points on 10 ·baskets and six free
throWs. Twenty of those points
came In the Eagles' second half
comeback errort. Tim Dill, 6-4 senior center, bad 15 points. ·
At VInton, Greg Webb canned 21
points to lead the WUdcats to ,lhelr
74-61 win over North Gallla. Toby
Sheets had 18 points whlle Jet!
Barnes and Mike RoSsiter added 10
points each.
North Gallla placed three players In double figures with David Roberts getting 15 points; Bob
Blackburn and Matt Kemper, 13
each.

In Ieegue play.
, •
· Eastern, alter a quick start, bas
lost the last two times out. In addltlon, !IOml! players have quit the
squad.
The Eagles are~ overall and 1·2
against SVAC teams.
Southwestern and North Gallla
both have had 'trouble getting untracked this winter. The Hlghland· ·
ers own a 1·7 qverall record whlle
North Gallla Ill 1-6.
. LastFiiday,Southemlambasted
Southwestern, 94-49; Kyger Creek
deteeted Eartern, 6'(~ and Hannan Trace dumped North Gallla,
7U1.
At Southern, the Tornadoes used
a man-to-man press etrectlvely to
build a 22·11 lead tQ, Its lopsided .
victory.
Southpaw Kent Wolfe led the ,attack wllh 29 points.
Paul McNeal led the Highlanders
with 13 points.
At Cheshire, Kyger Creek after
falling behind by elgll\ points In the
opening minutes, roared by to take 1
a 30-:U halftime lead which It never
rellnqulshed.
The .Bobcats placed lour players
In •double figures with Junior for·
ward Jeff Motes leading t~ way
wllh 16 points. Tim Price. 6-3senlor

I •

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E . Main

Ph. 992· 2094
Front Eng Alignment-Most Cars
Brake Service

Pomeroy

Southern fifth
in AP ratings
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Columbus Northland will rlsk Its new
Class AAA state poll lead twice this
week against a pair of league
rivals.
The Vlklngs (9-0) wlll have Uttle
time to savor lhe!r first No. 1 rankIng ever In the boys basketrall poll
conducted weekly by The Associated Press. They play at Columbus Walnut Ridge tonight and
Columbus East Frlday night.
The Vlklngs moved Into the top
spot by beating Columbus Marton·
Fran,klln 58-44 whlle lhe No. 1 team
, .last week, Canton McKinley, was
sutrerlng losses to Newark and .
Cleveland Heights.
As a result, a statewide panel or
sportll writers and broadcasters accorded Northland 20ol poll)ts for the
lead, just six points ahead of No. 2
Keit.ering Alter (9-1) ,
,
Meanwhlle, Wlllnrd In Class AA
and rlelphos StJohn In Class A retained the other leads.
Wlllard, stretching Its unbeaten
season to 11 pmes, bad a 224-18&gt; t.ead over runnerup Warsaw River
VIew (9-0) in Class AA. The Crirn·
son Flashes, the AP's state poll
lcl(lg last winter, were 95 points
ahead of third-place Columbus Bex·
ley (12-1).

sevenlh and Alllance nlnlh. AI·
!lance joined the big school Top Ten
for the first time.
.
Hamllton RoSs moved up lhree
spots to fourth whlle Urbana was uP
four positions to fifth In Class AA.
Dayton Roth was sixth In the middle classification with Napoieolaf
seventh, Rossford elghlh, ~
lersburg ninth and Minerva lOth.
Wheelersburg and Mlne!'Va were
the only new schools In the Class
AA's Top Ten.
In Class A, Old Washlngton Buc eye TraD advanced .three f)lOts .
fourth with Racine Southefn filth, ,
Anna an~ Fayette Gorham- .
Fayette tied for sixth, iUclunond
Dale Southeastern elghlh, Kalida
ninth and newcecner New Washlng1011 Buckey~Centralln lOth.

"We'd Like to

Relief!

nsurance

A Speedy
Financial Recovery!

'

m.Pomoroy,OH.
214W. Moln

OPEN-SAT.
· ·-·- TILL NOON
rormerly RNtor·l,...nl.llll Dale c. Wamor

.

The so-called Short Form is now lwo pages. It caUsJor
up to 63 entries. You may even find yourself referring to the
instructions 16 times.
H&amp;R Block tax preparers are trained lo ask the right
questions, make the right entries. use the right forms. All
you have to do is sign your name.

.......

Our Major Medical Policy
will help . you to
recuperate : from those
many medical bills!

i

REASON #8: H&amp;R Block uncompllcates
the new 1040A Short Form•

H&amp;RBLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

17 reasons. One smart decision.
. I· . 618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
992·3795
Hours:
9·6 Mon. -Fri
~ Sat. 9·5

2nd &amp; Brown Sts .
Mason,W. Va .
773-9128

Hours :
9·6 Tues. &amp; Thur.
sat. 9· 5

�.'

Pap• . 4

,_,•l'll'f

The Daily s.ntinel

Middleport, Ohio

Plans March of Dimes drive
Mrs. Susie PuiUns and Mrs. Susie
Karr have been named cochalnnan for !lie &amp;Mual March of.
• Dimes fund drive In Meigs County.
Several activities • are being
planned Including !lie Mother's
March and a radlothon; Mrs. Pullins reports.
'qle Motlier's March wW be beld
tile week of Jan. 31 VJ!th XI Gamma
Mu and Ohio Eta Phi Olapters oi
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority .going
house-io,ho!,ise In Pomeroy, Middleport, Bradbury and Syracuse.
Oilier volunteers wW work In the
county.

Mrs. Pullins reports that a large
portiOn of !lie money collected In
Meigs County remains here for
medlcaJ service and community
programs, while part goes for research and public health educailon
nationally. Locally a nursing scholarship Is also awarded. '
As pointed out by Mrs. Pullins.
each year thousands of American
Infants are born too soon, too small
or critically W. Many do not survive
and many of those who do survive
have a struggle. She noted that
very otten they have problems with

breathln&amp;, heart acilon, and control
of temperature and blood Sli11ar.
):n order to survive they need prolonged hospital care from specialty
trained medical teams using sophlstJCated equipment. 'I'!lls. according to Mrs. Pullins, Is where
much of !lie March of Dimes I'J10o
ney goes. The wluntary health
agency alms to protect !lie unborn
and !lie newtlom.
"By giving to !lie March of
Dimes, you are giving to !lie child-

ren of tomorrow", Mrs. Pullins
'COIICiuded.

Students named to Dean's List
!I

J

Seventeen Meigs Countialis have
been named to the dean's list for the
fall quarter at Ohio University.
To he named to the list, a student
mWit have earned a ·g111de point
average of 3.3 or better on a scale of
4 and have earned 16 hours, 12 of
,.:hich were{dlken for a letter grade.

Named to the list w
ere Lawrence
Pooler, Route 3, Pomeroy 1 Kellie
Ann Smiddie, Suzy Samuel ~.
Pomeroy; Mary Beth Obilz, Racine ;
Jana Kaye Burson, Camille Susette
Swindell, Nona Leigh Wilson ,
Shade; Margaret Marie Amberger,
Syracuse; Lester Albert Green, Jr.,

Route 2, Coolville; Susan Rene Lipscomb, Route 2, Coolville; Tamela
Jayne Murphy, Route 1, Coolville;
Susan Elaine Hannwn, Long Bottom; Sheila Edna Horky, Mid·
dleport; Vicky Koste Hysell, Minersville; l.inda Rae Eason, Larry
Grover Fisher, Lance Kevin Oliver,
Pomeroy .

are the instructors and all enrollees
pertinent information are confidential: ·
The ABE program is free of
charge and those enrolling can emphasize special skills or direction

1 and

toward the GED t'erlificate. Any
adult over 16 is eligible to attend.
Individuals may report at any
time on either or both days and
remain for as long as they want.
Each program is individualized.

Meigs' birth announcements
Blevins
Menifee and Tina Blevins are announcing the birth of a daughter,
Melanie Louise. She weighed seven
pounds, two ounces and was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Carl
and Martha Stewart of Middleport ,
and Mrs. Mirl Ratliff, Cheshire, is a
maternal great-grandmother.
Paternal grandparents are Ver.non and Mildred Blevins of
Pomeroy, and Dewey Ramsey and
Ernestine Friend of Ripley, W. Va.
are great-grandparents.

Keirns

JCmuary 12, 1912

Tuudry, January 12, 1,12
...

Holiday ·dinner held
The annual holiday dinner of !lie
Long Bottom Community Assocta·
lion for members and thelrfamWI!!I
was held on Dec. alattheccAnn\WI~
lty building. Mrs. Leona Hensley
gave the blessing.
Planning the affair were Ernestine Ha)llllan, Ruby Brewer, Phyllis Larkins and Melody Roberts.
Mrs. Ha)llllan baked the ham for
the dinner.
Mrs. Hensley presided at !lie
meeting. Sbe read the Christmas
story from !lie second chapter of Sl
Luke. The Lord's Prayer aJ\d
pledge of allegiance were given In
unison. Mae McPeek read the secretary's report. Harold Brewer re-

ported that the posts for the
assoclatloa1 algn were donated by
BW DalleY;· A note of thanks wll) be
sent to bini. II was also noted that a
gas stove has been donated by
Harry Coleinan. .
It was reported by Mrs. Hayman
that !lie club now has anotlier $.'iXl
certificate. Taxes on the bulldlng
wW be paid this month. Jenny Newlun and Melody Roberts were com·
pllmented ·on the building
decorations for !lie affair.
Pearl Powell, Ruby L. Brewer
and Miss Roberts wW be hostesses
for !lie next meeting.
A gift eJIChange was held and hoi·
!day calu!s provided by Miss Ro-

Gilmore

Mr. and Mrs . Larry Keirns, the
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore, Walformer Sonia Carr, Guysville, are worth, Wl.sc. are announcing !lie
announcing the birth of , their fir•1 birth of their third daughter on Satchild, a son, born on Dec. 19 at the urday, Jan. 9, at the Janesville,
Ohio State University Hospital in Wise. hospital.
Columbus.
The eight pounds, one ounce In·
The infant weighed three pounds, fant has been named Robin Louise.
14 ounces and was 17 inches long. He She was 21 Inches long. Mr. and
has been named Bradley Augustus.
Mrs. Gilmore's other children are
Maternal grandparents are Mr. Shannon Lynn, seven, and Kasey
and Mrs. Charles Carr, Coolville; Jo,lhree.
a.\d !he paternal grandparents are
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keirns, Athens. .Gardner Wehrung, and Mr. and
Maternal great-grandparents are Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Pomeroy. Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Carr andMr, and,Mrs. R. Georgia Wehrung, Middleport, and
E. Douglas. Paternal great- Mrs. Nora Gilmore, Pomeroy, are
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. W. great-grandmothers.
A. LaFollette, Millfield.

liens were won tiy Bobby Fitch and

. Mrs. Hensley.

STEVE R. KESSEL, M.D.

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsel Larkins, Mr. and Mrs. Emle
NewUn and Tracl. Mr. and Mrs. Ha·
. rold Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Fitch, Mr. and Mrs. Tor:n Ha)llllan

and daughtel'!l. Mrs. Leona Hens. ley, Mrs. Mae McPeek, Mrs- Alta
DIU, Mrs. Freda I..ark1ru! lind Roberta, Sammy
Mr. aJ\d
Mrs. Malitln Nesselroad, Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Neutzllng and Jay, Pearl
Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bl•seJI, ·
Mrs. LUa Ridenour, Kelly and
Matt, Mary Andrews, Mr. and Mrs.
Harlan Ballard, and Melody
Roberts.

•
Announces the opening of his office for
the practice of internal medicine.

...

Address:

Announcements

BAnERrSALE
-

CUSTOM
, WELDING
Made

Small Pipelines A
Specialty
North of R&lt;tcine
On L atmel Road
.1t Sawmill

County correspondence

1

Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warner and
children, Nicole and Tara, of Tell
City, Ind., spent Christmas with his
mother, Mrs. Jane Ann Warner and
son, Jay,
Mr. and Mrs . Chester Knight spent
Christmas in Caledonia with their

SCRAP

(Pomeroy Sera p
Iron &amp; Metal)
Now picking

up

junk

auto bodies . Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals .

1

Calendar
Tuesday
HARRISONVIUE EASTERN
STAR Tuesday al 7:30p.m. The
station of all past Adahs will be
honored.
SPECIAL MEETING, Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM tonight,
7 p.m.; work in entered ai)prentice degree ; refrestunenl$.

Wednesday
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
l.ions Club noon Wednesday at
Meigs Inn.

I

RUTLAND- A free blooil pressure clinic wiU be held at the Hill
St.. Rutland Chapter of Rutland
Sliver Qrcle, Wednesday from
noon to 1 p.m. Barbara Van Meter, R.N., wWhavecQa.rgeofthe
cllnlc, Which the open to the
pubUc.

EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7
p.m. Wednesday in band room of
high school.
REGULAR MEETING,
Pomeroy Chapter 110 and Boswor·
th Council 46, Wednesday night;
full form opening practice in
Royal Arch Degree.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Uons Club will meet for Its first
session of the new year at noon
Wednesday at Meigs Inn.

mile

west

of

33.
Mon.- Fri.8 :30 to4 : 0(]

Ph. 99HS64

1 7·1 mo .

PhoN 448··524
IIAROAIN MATINEES ON SAT .t SUN
ALL SEATS .JUST .S 1.50
AOIIISSION EVEIn' TUfSlMY t 1.50

$39

Thursday
. THE ELEANOR CIRCLE of
United Methodist Church
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
the church. A while elephant
lillie will be held.
'

95

EXCH.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

FAIRPLAIN TRACTOR
·. SALES, INC.

Iii

Massey Ferguson In·
dustrial Equipment.
we sell the best and
service the rest. ·

On Rl. 33 W.
Ripley, w. va .
Ph. (304) 372-987S
or (304) 372·5479
12·18·1 mo.

And Home Maintenance
• Rooting of all types
eSiding
• Remodeling

• Free estimates
I·
e '20 'Y rs. experience

'rOM HOSKINS
Ph.949-2160 or 949·2482
7·5-tfc

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

992~259

and
custom

Custam

kitchens

appliances,
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing. electric, and

heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH . 992-6011

NOW

866 South Third
Middleport, Ohio

Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches

Water line Hook -ups

FREE
iNSTALLATION

Septic Tanks

countv Certified
Cheshire, Oh .

Ph . 367-7560
1·7-llfc

This permanently sealed battery is virtually
trouble-free during Its normal service life.
Large capacity plates deliver maximum power,
sure starts. Put a PowerGard battery in your car and forget about adding water- ever!

MIUER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your
wiring needs.

'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
242 W.llain

992-2101I

ATTENTION DOG OWNERS

Ali STEEL
BUILDINGS
Sizes start from l0x24"

1982 Dog licenses Are N~w On Sale

Utility Buildings

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1982 DOG LICENSE IS JANl,fARY 20th. TWO
DOLLAR ($2.00) PENALTY LICENSE IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER
THAT DATE . FOR -YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICTION
BLAN~ AND MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE .
NOW. FEES ARE TWO DOLLARS ($2.00) FOR EACH DOG, MALE OR
FEMALE .
To obtain license by mail, send this form to : Howard F. ~rank, County .Auditor,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope and price of
license.
Male Dog $2.00

Felmale Dog $2 .00

Kennel License $10.00

OWNER OF DOG

- -· -·- ----

ADDRESS _______________________________

c

i!

·If
Known

Fees
Paid

StieS from 4 to 6 a·n d all
wood buildings 24xl6.
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box S4
Ra·c ine, Oh.

Ph. 61°4 ·10·2S91
6·15 lfc

TOP OF THE STAIRS
F"dness &amp; Beauty
Salon
·:Z02'1J E. Main St.

PH. 992-6720
Mary Powell

Owner/Operator

- --· --··

Breed

Let George Miller
check your present
electrical system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
2-B·tfc

Date
Purchased

Outside

Tog No.
Assigned

Ohl~

Trudy Roush -Stvlist
Call for ~ppointment

Perm Special
30% OFF

OPEN

8·20·1fc

SKATE-AWAY
Open Wed., Fri . &amp; Sat.
7:30 TIIIO :OO
sundav 2:00 to 4:30

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

.

"Beautiful, Custom

License ~ust be Obtained no l~ter tha·n Jan. 20, 191f to avoid penalty_. Allor thiS date penally Will be
12.00 for s•ngle tag and SS.OO for kOflntlllconse.

SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
COOUNG

Built GArages"
Call for free slaing
ostlmotos, 949-2101 ar
f49•2NO. ·
No sunday Calls
3·11-lfc

Private Parties
Available

PH. 985-3929
or 985-9996
12·16·1 mo .

I

Tappan Recuperative
Furnace. Coleman Air
Conditioning , Arkla
Servel Gas A ir Condi·
tioning , Sheet Metal

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SE!iVICE"

Work .

&gt;UNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rt. 2. Albany. Ohio
614·698-6791
11 ·16-lfn
Reupholstery
SPECIAL

Bar Stoots

-

525.00

Estimates)
V. C . YOUNG Ill
992-&amp;21 S or 992·7314
(free

Truck Seats

5100.00
labor &amp; Material

Eflective Dk 15th
Thru Jan. urn

Trim Shop

APPUANCE
SERVICE

Racine, Oh.

PH . 949·2202
12·15·1 mo.

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985-3561

BOGGS
U.S. Rt. SO East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland. Bush Hog

AND U:R1.11a
ALLMAkU

P~A'TS

This home has an equip
pcd Kenmore kitChen,
11•1 baths. full basement
i'! nd nice sun deck ,
overlooking your own
pond . Th is 711 acres of
SeC IUStOn iS priced just

furnished older home on
9.0 0d
street .
2· 3
bedrooms ,
kit c hen,
bath, on large level lot
with ga rden space and

garage . $16 ,000 .
home features a wood

b.:tsement and vinyl
siding . Nice fenced back

building, here it is!!
Business on Main Street
with 2 apartments o\ler
to fix up and rent. This
may be the beginning of
something great fOr
you : Call for details.

TUPPERS PLAINS
Nice ranch type home
with 3 bedrooms, car ·
pet.
patio,
storage
bu il ding ,
in
good

location, on a level 3/,.
acre lot. Pr iced to sell.

').~";.~ ~ -

bedrooms,

m&lt;lnY

trrosL

You c.1n't beat our
owner linilnced proper·
ties for good va lut' on
tod"y ' s market . we
h",wc more. so why not
Colli for a showing on
these tod!lV!!!

CheryllC"lley, Assoc .

Phone 742· 1171
Vt! lmi~ Nicinsky , Assoc .

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or 992-2282
1·3· 1 mo.

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF PEARL
REVNOLOS, ako 1/ELMA
PEARL REYNOLDS,
DECEASED
Case No , 23634
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

YO(!!? NEED&gt;

on December 21, 1981, in
the Melgs CountY Probate ·
Court, Case No. 236J4, Rose

I

Cigarettes
C•rtons
S$.95.uc
&amp; pack
l5.85
Open 7 Days A Week
Open Mon. · ThurS.
u .m. to 10 p.m.
Op8n Fri". at ft a.m.
thru Sunday at t p.m .
OPEN 24 HOURS
. Fri.·SUN.
We Sell Pep•i, R.C. &amp;
coca·Cola PrOducts by
tho 6 &amp; I Pack ana also
in liter bottles.
Authorlted Sunflower
Deoler. Sell or Rent
These Sign•.
12·16-lfc

For

bulk

delivery

of

gasoline, heating all l!lnd
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .

Gun Sho!lt Racine Gun
Club . EverY sun . starting

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash
for
.
Classlfleds and
Savell
--I

!

Robert E. Buck
Clerk

(12)

29 (1)

5,

12. Jtc

Flea Market . New
Opening. 7 days a week .
The Heart of Mlddleporl. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992-6370.

Will dell,er . Caii3BB·9001.

General

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E . 2nd St.

These cash rates
include discount

wt.tonQtt

Phone
1,{614)·992-3325

)Wanled
)For Sale

17 . - - - - - - -- - -

18 .
19, - - - - - - 20. _ __ _ _
- - - - - -- - -----------------_ ___:__;______

26.

~------

27. - - - - - - - - - -

28.

10. - - - - - -·

29.

30.
31 .

12. - - - - - - - - 13. ~-------14. - - - - - 15. - - - - - 16.

.

---=------

21 .
22.
23.
24.
25.

11.

32.
33. _ _ _ _ __

_;

34. - - - ------;:\_
3~ .

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, 011. 45769

...

/

&amp;

Trap·
ping supplies . George
Buckley, Rl . 2. Alhens, Oh.
61~ · 664 · 4761.
Open

----------

OLO FURNITURE, beds,
Iron, brass. or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of ell .fYpes.
Tables, round or square.
Wood Ice bolles. Old desks
and Pookcases. Will buy
complete household. Golll,
Watches, chains, rings, and
elc. Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buy ing beseboll
cords. Osbv Marlin 992 ·
6370.
Cuh for

old and used
no paperbacks,
school! books, or book club

books;

edition. Also buy old oil

paint ings. ·Box 11-4, Athens.

Oh. 45701 . 593-8915.

Raw furs , hides. scrap
metals,
batterie s,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise

broker lng . Harper·Halste·

ad Sal1.1age Company , JOO

Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also Flea Market open
de lly. Open Monday·
Friday 1·5 pm .

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

~----·--·-·-- ·----·-,--~=-·------·-··.11

l.!_ ___H!!JI Wanted_
Why settle for less, sell the
best. AI/ON . Call 446·3358
or 742·2354.

Free 4 puppies Collie &amp; ·
COUNTY
German Shepherd. Call VINTON
HEALTH DEPARTMEN T
«6·8138.
Is a dual agency Involved in
health nur·
Female doo with one male BOTHandpublic
home health nur·
pup. Female &amp; mole cot. sing
sing services . We hl'IVe a
Call 245·5089.
position available for a
wearing a leather collar.
Porter area . Rt . SS4 . Call·

388·8738.

reg i stered professional
nurse 1o assist in th ese
progrllms. If vou des ire NO
' on ca ll ' hours, and can
work 32 1/2 hours per week,

.c 112 mo. old mixed Terrior

plicatlons

A While

TEAFORD(B

9. - - - - - -

---------RAW FUR buyer. Beef

silver. old money, pocket

1

&amp;

black PUPPV

please call 596·5233. Ap·

NEW LISTING -· On
top of the world et
Pomeroy , This building
lot will give vou fresh
air lind view of the
beautiful Ohio plus the
surrounding hills.
2 FAMILY HOME Large and roomy, view
of !he Ohio, ell clly

uti lilies and large yard.
Excellent location for

bu&amp;lness. No zoning. use

River.

1

CHEAPIE - ~ acres
ravered with young
trees for firewood . 4
room frame house. Only
16,000ca,sh.

Hort·." "I
I II·, 11 It fli&lt;lr lt•J-.

until

January 22,1982. WE ARE
AN
EQUAL
0~ PORTUNITY
EM ·
PLOVER .

THREE halt · Beagle pup·
pies, 30H9S·3641 .

GET

VA~UABLE

training

as a young business person
and earn good money plus

.- - Lo.tond Found
some great gifts as a Sen ·
FOUND Gollla Acadmey tlnel route c;arrler. Phone
High School Class ring. us r ight away and get on
Graduation year Is 1939 . 11 the eligibility list af 992·
is a wom8!1 class ring . To 2156 or 992·2157: ·
'dentify letter inside oi ring .

col1446·2343.

Servi ce Manager Needed

~OST :

Exper lt: nc e
requir e d .
Replies kept confident ia l.
Send r esume to Box 719· H

-------·-Large amount of

money lm Pomeroy. Down ·

1own area . Reward . FInder
please call 992·5270.

LOST: 2 male coon hOunds.
Mostly while with black
spo!S. In vl'clnlly of Wolfe
Pen and Harrisonville. 742·
2234.

------

LOST -Small block purse.
vicinity of Main and
Pleasant Val ley Apfs.
Reward. 675 · 7~26 .

for wht?t you want.

t ACf!E - 2 .bedroom,
full basement home.
coal furnace, 2 car
garage and all city
utilities. Only S16,SOO.
; owner financing .
12 ACRES - On Stale
Rt ., city water, natural
gas', 3 bedroom hOme
, overloot&lt;lng the o'hlo

accepted

puppies. Black &amp; brown
female all shOIS except one.
Call «6·0747 after 5.

--------

B. - - - - --

BUYING OEER AND
BEEF HIDES . Gene Hines
Rt. 1. Amesville, Oh 448·
6747. Buying raw fur. -after
Dec. 12. Dally 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Syndays. Also
closed Dec.l4'&amp;25.

---·---

1'
I

Phon•-----------------

5. - - - - - - - - - 6. - - - - - 7.

currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Mlddleporl. 992·
3476.
.

evenings .

Probate Judge/

Address---------

4. - - - - - - - - -

silver, ·sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;

R.ac 1ne Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sol. nights
6:30p.m., Ba,hen. Factory
choke12 guage shotgun.

06820, was appointed Ex· 8510.
ecu tr ix of the Estate of
- - - -- - - Allan'- H . Keller, deceased.
To
a good home 2·7 month
late of Tuppers Plains,
old kittens, good mouser .
Ohio.

Nam•----~--------------1I

1. - - - - - - 2., _ _ _ _ __

Gold,

23635. Barbara Elberfeld TWO CALICO CATS, both
Keller Dolan. 15 Deertield female. One mostly black ,
Ro~d . Darien. Connecticut one mostly white. Call 388·

~

) For Rent

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 per lon. Bundled
slab. $10.50 per 1on.
Dellverd to Oh io ~aile! Co ..
Rock Springs Rd . ,
Pomeroy. 992·2689.

in fhe Meigs County Pro· charge to the adVertiser.
bate .Court, Case N,o . -

Wrlle your own ad and ordor bV mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

) Announcement

Complete
households .
Write : M.D. Miller , Rl . 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992-7760.

deer hlde·ginshang .

PRICED RIGHT
CAll TODAY!

II
II

dollars, wood Ice bo&gt;&lt;es,
stone Iars, antiques, etc. ,

at 1 p.m. Factory choke
guns only .

POMEROY
.LANDMARK

3. - -- - - -

tpmF~m GAS
Our Specialties

having furniture

CAll:

Llcensea &amp; li.onded

ewater • sewer
• Gas Lines
• septk Systems

An~one

ncome tax service .
54 MISc. Mtrch•ndlco
Federal and state iricome
POMEROY
3
Reynolds, 266 Mill Street. tax torms, quarterlv repor ·
be droom , privat e
Mlddleporl , Ohio 45760, IS, and W·2 forms will be
location . Excellent con·
was tPPOinled Execulrl• of done by appointment . See
difion . Fireplace, full
the
estate
of
Pearl Wando Eblin. 41000 Laurel
basement. ga ra ge .
Reynofds, aka Velma Pearl Cliff Rd., Pomeroy. 992·
534,500.
Reynolds, deceased. late ot
309 Hooker Street. Mid · ·nn.
REALTORS
•
· dleport, Ohio 45760.
Robert E. Buck TRI ·CHEM Liquid Em·
.
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
614-992·2181
Probate Judge/ broidery . E"'cellent ear·
GRI 992·6191
For Farm and
·
Clerk ning opportunities. Hold
Jean Trussell
949·2660
c12) 29. n l 5. 12. Jlc
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Home Delivery of
classes-receive free gifts or
992·5692
paints. EIsa Cox, 304·675·
Gas
Diesel
--=
P
""
ub
;
:-;
1
.,.lc:--.
N
:o:
o
:-;c
tice--Office
992·22S9
5187.
·
·
Heating Oil.
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
4- - - -Giveawoy
·
COUNTY, OHIO
-------ESTATE OF ALLAN H. AI'IY PERSON who ~as
~ELLER, DECEASEO
anylhing to give o)Vay and
Case No. 23635 ·
does not offer or attempt to
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
offer any other I hi ng for
OF FIOUCIARY
sale may place on odIn this
,----------------~-----~
· On December 21st, 1981 , column. There will be no

• Dump Truck

• Trencher

Complete line of Munle
Load ing Guns and Sup·
plies. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spr ing Valley
Plaza. «6·8025. ·

BEDS·IRON , BRASS, old
furniture. gold, silver

Veterans

------::--=-===: :-·

SYRACUSE - A neat
double wide home with

• Septic Systems
• water, sewer &amp;
Gas Lines

Ph. 992-7201

446·0069.

AnnOuncements
SWC.C:PER and sewing
machine repa'lr, parts, and
Pick up end
supplies.
delivery , Oa\lis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hellf mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
4-46·0294 ..

Hospllal,

",511c

5·21 -lfc

E»~perience

Center,

Pomeroy
Emergencv
Squad, Dr. Mansfield, Dr .
Lentz, Ewings Funeral
Home, the pall -bearers,
Rev . Walker, Rev. Black·
wood, and thdse who sent
food. '"flowers, and svm·
pathv cards ,
The Kiser Family

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

• Dump Trucks
• Lo soy

14 Years

C.1re

Memorial

Re•t Estate

.

• Rooting work

',' .

•"""'"
•Dispouh
a Oiii'IWIIften
•HMWAttrTAnkl

e Dozers
. • Backhoes

timsive remodeling.
e Electrical work

~ po ssi biliti es .

Thflre is off street
p(lrking xnd the owner
will financ e with down
pmt at onlv 10% in

S'IITIS'~Y

We poy cash for li!lte model
clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson ,

for repair at the residence
!he Illness and after the of the late Harold Russell
death of our beloved sister make arrangements to
and aunt Doris Jean Kiser . pickup by January 31 , 1982
Special thanks is extended all unclaimed will be sold.
to the Pomeroy Health Call 446·1881 after 5PM.

f'honc·742· 1092

equipped kitchen plus
di .s hwasher, e l ec tric
heat, storage building,
wood burner , n ice lot.

and
Helene

We would like to express
our sincere thanks and ap·
preclatlon to those whose
prayers ·and words of com·
fort were so· helpful during

story home on Union
Avenue . .This home hcts

• Backhoe

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

recuperation .
Sayre.

tull

Trading, Spring Volley
Plaza, 416·8025 or «6·8026.

675-1333
..
.... .... . . .....
...........
. ........ . . 3

hospit'alizatlon

available. Also

coinS &amp; coin supplies tor
sate . Spring Valley

Masor1 cauntv

Card of Th•nks
1 WISH To expres$ mv
thanks and appreciation to
everyone who helped me in
any way . ~urlng my

yard .
PRICE
REDUCED
!O
538.500.00.
OWN "- R FINANCING
- Why not look at thi s 2

• E.-cavating

ROUSH

~

E-x •

mosphere bedrooms tor
the ki ds. Basement., nice
kitchen for mom, deck
area and sitting porch
for dad with a beautiful
1.1iew of the river all tor
only $45,000 .

stamped

rings &amp; sllverwi!lre. Daily

quotes

992·2156
In

c:~nd

cc-llent locat ion , close to
sc hool il nd shopping.
Th is
home
ha s 3

POMEROY - If you
want your owa business
and only need the

446-2342

$26-4·.31 per month for 10'
yrs.
RACIP-tf - 4 bedroom
home. well in!lulated .
K ftc hen
ha s
ew
cabinets . You must see
thi s home to appreciate
its beauty . Make your
Appt , tOdRy!! ONLY

burning fireplace , large
living room , beautiful
forma l dining room,
study and doll house a1 ·

anvthlng

Buying Gold, Silver.
Platinum, old coins, scrap

..
1n Meigs County

In Gallia County

rate ,

$31 ,500.00.
MIDDLF.PORT -

or

sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992·20S-41nPonieroy1

TO PLAC!' AN AO CALL

and
owner will finance at
down

BUYING OOLD &amp; SILVER
poyilig cosh tor onylnlng
stomped IOK . 14K, IBK and
dental gold . ·Class i"ings,
wedding rinos, sliver coins

773-Mason

$25.000 00

i nt erest

343-Porlf•nd
247-Lolart Foils
949- Raclnt
742-Rulfond
"7-Coolvllle

882- Now Hoven
895--Letart
937-Buffalo

rctte. Fi nanced for 12
yrs . at approx . $268 .00
per mo. Selling price is
$76.500 .00 . Gr ea t star ter
home.

10qo

CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bulck· Pontloc, GAllipolis.
Ohio. Coll446·2282.

Mason Co.. W. va .
Area COde 304
675-Pt. Pleuanl
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove

ri9hl at S45,ooo.oo.
OWN ER FINANCING
- Lovely 2 story home
with ri\ler vi ew in Mid·
dlepor t. 10~ interest

SS ,OOO .OO

MtitS Co. Artl COde
614
Ht-Middleporl
Pomeroy
915-C hester

eOryen

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Lorge or Small Jobs
PH . 992-2471
12-7 ·llno. pd .

446-GO!IIpofls
367-Choshlre
311-Vinton
245-RioGrande
256-Guyan Olst.
643-Arabla Dis!.

, •W.uhen

Farm Equipment
Dealer

PUlliNS
EXCAVATING
.

614

'
ACRAGE
- with a
lovely 3 bedr:oom home.

ONLY

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
MIODLEPORT - This

9-Jo-tfc

t&lt;eep This Ad For
Future Reference

Gallla Co. Area COde

OFFIC.E 742-2003

Large
5
bedroom home . Lovely
woodwork throughout .

E. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY &amp;

SALES &amp; SE~VICE

Addons •ncl remodel lnl
"ool lnv•nd oun er work
Concrete worll
PiumbintMd
e l ectr~ul work

REALTY
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr .
Broker

F.XCEL LENT BUY -

601

Wonted to 8uL__
WANT TO BUY Old furniture and Anflques nf oil
kinds, coli Kenneth Swain,
256·19671n the evenings.

9

( :/lfllllififMIJNI/(f!/1 NIVt!r thf!
fullowinl( tf!lf!tlhrlnt' t'XrhHn#(f!ll ...

Racine

S32.000.

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21 -tfc

-~===~~~2~-1~1~·1~m~~o-~~==~g~g~~~~
· :;··
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Estate - General

MIOOLEPORT - ThiS

Used Color TV Sets for
Sole.
SALE PHONE NO.

REESE t~t
TRENQIING
SERVICE·

For Group Sizes

22 f, 24, 24f
36 Moqth

Astrograph

.ie pleased to have Diann Jewell Returning
to her etalf.
,
"'SPECIAL FOR THE MONTH"
. '5 00 orr on any perm
" .
For A-ppointment Phone 173•5404
Operators: Connie, Marilee, Diann, Janet
3rd Street
Mu11on, WV

12·31 · 1 mo.

!31 .W::KSON PIKE ·Rt .35 WEST

Power Gard
. ' Ballery

..

Ph. 992-5587

from Cedar,
Walnut &amp;

' REPAIR WORK
• Gas &amp; Electric
• Culling
• Brazing
e20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates

Roush Lane

Janet's Hair Go Round

lilt. 124
Minersville, Oh.

Fairground s on Old Rt.

PH. 992 · 5~63

son and. daughter-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. 'terry Knight and son Stevie.
they were joined there by Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Knight and Stephanie of
Antioch, Ill. The Dick Knight family
later visited in Pomeroy with his
parents.

,
January 13, 1982
If you have prepared yoursell properly, your (lO!lsibllitles for advan&lt;ement In your chosen field are very good lhls coming year. Strive
to make youl'llelf lndlspen•able.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You're apt to be extremely
imaginative and resourceful ~oday in situations where !here is a profit
motive. You can succl.ed without taking advantage of others.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Someone coljld come to you at this
lime with an interesting business or invesbnent proposal. Explore it in
depth. It could prove worthwhile.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Greater benefits are likely to come
today from partnership arrangements or joint ventures than from
what you do on your own. Give team efforts priority.
ARIES (Marth 21-April 19) Make It a point today not to say
anything about others unless it is constructive and uplifting. Wellchosen comments tould tum an acquaintance into an ally.
TAURUS (Aprii:IO-May 20) If you approach your tasks as a game
rather than as a chore, you can be extremely productive today and
also encourage those who labor,at your side to behave likewise.
GEMINI (June Zl-July 22) Today, you may not do as well competitively as you'd like in the beginning, bul alter you warm up a bit
the odds will tum in your favor.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) This is a good day to entertain persons
at your house to whom you fe~l strongly obligated. It doesn't have to be
anything elaborate. Companionship is the imP!lrlant factor.
LEO (JiflY 23-Aug. 22) This could be a profitable day, provided you
do not sit on ideas or plans which could make or save you money. Put
them to the test.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 It may be necessary for you to be a trifle
bolder than Wlual in business or financial matters today, Be assertive
without being selfish.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Unless situations warrant it, you are
likely to be a bit laid back and desirous of taking things easy today.
However, when challenges arise so does your initiative.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Fortunate are the friends who have
you in their corner today. You'll help them without being asked: More
lmportarilly, you won't require a pal on the back for doing so.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your greatest success today is
likely to come from a project or venture which has just captured your
fancy. In your case, "new" means 11 lucky."

KINGSBURY
PARTS &amp; ACtESS.

12 ·3·1 mo . pd.

D&amp;D
:WELDING SHOP

o

Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Haley, Sr.,
Middleport, will obaerve their 35th
wedding anniversary on Thursday,
Jan. 14, not Jan. 4 as was
erroneoWily reported. A family
celebration is being planned.

Blevins

Social

MOBILE . '
HOME
PARTS

From S34.95
To 579.95
PH . 992-3269

WANTED TO BUY

Real

suvice available.

cvpress,
Cherry .

J. R. PARSONS

Ph. 992·7S37

Antenna 1nstallation
calls and shop

14 Available

30 Years E• pc n enc('

My Husband and 1 wish
to thank our friends
and my customers for
their
sympathy,
prayers, cards and
understanding dur'ing
the recent i llness and
death of my father . 1
Will continue to balc:e
and decorate cakes for
all occasions .
Bunny kuhl

HOuse

CLOCKS

1·7· 1mo.

'

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
PH. 985--4269 or
. 985--4382

Phone(304)372-8550

DR. JAME$ P. CONDE,. INC:

'

S&amp;WTV
and

Anything for your
Mobile Home.

Five iiflh grade students from the , shop and gained ideas for developing
prose, plays, calligraphy and
·n~g~sk:i:,:lls::.:_in:_:t:::h:e.:a:.:reo::".:of:_:poe:=:lr::._Y:_
· _a_n_ima
__
tio_n_.- - - - - - - Rutland Elementary School at-- _::w:.:_r:_:iti~
tended the fall Young Writers Con- ,..
ference held at New Lexington.
Making up the group, accompanied by their teacher, Donna
Jenkins, were Shawn Fetty, Sabtina
Wilson, Rhoda Gomez, Chad Carson
Osteopathi·c Physician &amp; Surgeon I
.
and Scott Edmonda.
\ ISO Mill St.
Middleport, Oh . 45760
The Young Writers Conference is
designed to rmitivale children with
PH. (614) 992-7271
high ability to develop theit writing
skills. Each participant received a
I
certificate at the close of the work·
OFFICE HOURS :
· Mon .-Tues.· Thurs. &amp; Fri .
9:00 a.m.-12:00 N_oon
The Pomeroy United Methodist
200 p.m.-4:00p.m.
Women's meeting scheduled for
tonigl-t (Tuesday) has been can·
WEDNESDAY
celled due to the weather.
9:00 a.m. ·2:00 p . m .
Sara Marie olcidie wW be hoSATURDAY '1By•Appointment Only)
nored with a layette ~bower on Sun9:00 a.m.-12&lt;00 Noon
day at !lie hOme of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Pooler. Open
hOuse hours Will be Observed from 2
to 4 .p.m. and relatives and friends
of Ms. Diddle are Invited to call.
U •

Card of Thanks

All malc:es and models

Pinnell St Ripley, W. Va.
Office Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
By Appointment Only

Ralrden;

Fifth graders attend-- conference

Correction

Cord of TMnks

Business Services

-

Local education center open
The Adult Basic Etlucation learning center at the Middleport Public
Ubrary is open on Wednesdays and
Thursdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.ril .
Gail Eichinger and Susan Pullins

TP;IIdliY,

•

I

Plltillc Sole
&amp; Auction

the
Hartford Community
Building. Sale time 7 p.m.
Consignment Of new and
used merchandise always
welcome .
Richard
Revnolds aucfloneer. 1·304·
275·3069.
Auction every Wed. at

FARMERS-turn !hoi un·
needed mach inery Into
hard cash. Siders Equip·
mont Co. Is now laking con·
Slgnments tor the
February 131h. Auction .
30-4-675·7421 .

for automobile dealership .
c ·o

Dally

Sen lln e l.

Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 .

RELIAB LE

..

PER SON lo

clean downtown Pomeroy
offices once a week in
evening . Write Box 7.29-B.
Dailv sentinel , Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769 .

'

,

R.N . immediate opening .
Pharmacy based I. V . team
work for profe,sio n al
ho spi tal
Pharmacy
managment co. Part·tlme
davs .
No
ex perience
necessary . Call V. M . Phi"'r·

macy . 992-6297. E.O.E.

.. -----'-

Sales trainee opportunity

availeble. Excellent ear·
nlng potentia l. Salary ·plus
commission . Company
paid beo\ef lls . O ld
established ·territory, No
experlerice
necessary .
Complete

train ing

Menaoement
promot ions readily
available. For additional
Information call Richard
Flsher 992·2480.
program .

---~--

�Put•-,Pagl 6 The Daily Sentinel
II

32

Help Wonted

Automobile
Salesman
'Needed. Ambitious person
: willing to meet !he publ ic
:selling new and used

•automobiles .

Some

ex ·

j

•perlence 'required . Repli es
'Jtept confidential. Sen r·
resume to Box 72'1-C, c ·
Dally Sentinel, Pomero·,
Ohio &lt;15769..
- -....... ..

..
r-OiiiWOJ'
Mobile Homes
lor S•lo .

TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL
«6·7572.
CLEAN USED MQ.BILE
HOMES
KES~L ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, 'RT
35. PHONE «6-3868.

Babysil!er needed in my
hQme, day shill, need own .. ~--------­
transportation. References
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
required. Phone 67S-S628
mobile home. Set up with :z
'aflf!r • pm :
or ~ lots. gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan·
cing available. Phone ~; NO
EXPERIENCE
12'14.
•REQUIRED lor this high
Income opportunity w ith
national oil company In Pl.
For Sale 1976 Rembrant
Pleasant area . Regardless house trailer 12x60, 2
of experience, write M . K . bedroom, WOOdburner &amp;
Reaa, 80)( 696, Dllyton, air conditioner. Call 256·
Ohlo&lt;S~1 1669 after 5.

~ Aloe

Vera Distributors
' needed. For more in·
formation . Call · 31l&lt;-675S18S.

12

Sllu111on• wanted

Wanted : Person to shllre 2
bdr. apt . Caii2&lt;S-5835.

cllre for elderiV
woman or · man In my

Will

hOme.

Good e)(perlence.

Reasonable rates. 667·J.W2

or 667-6329.
Will do babysil!ing In my
nome. Reliable. 992 -7667.
(

, 13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coveroge in Gallla County
for almost a century .

Farm, home and personal
property covereges are
.availeble .to meet individual needs. Contact
• Lewis Hughes, agent.
• Phone «6-3319.

1976 Castle, Ux70, $3.&lt;95.
1973 Fleetwood Ux65,
SS,99S. 1972 New Moon
12x6}. w/exp., S5,99S. 196&lt;
Champion 20x-44, $7,995.
196S Caslle 10x5S, $3,&lt;95.
Kanauga Mobile Homes,
Rl. 1, Kanauga, Oh. Call
«6-9662.
For sale two 12x60 !railers
1969 Liberty , 1968 Winston,
$9,000 for both . Call «6-474S
or «6' 1630.

AUTOMOBILE
IN SURANCE been
can- .
celled?
Lost
your 12 x 60, 1972 .model, 2
operator's License? Phone . bedroom, gas heat, window
992-2143
ac, furnished. Located 66
Burdette Addition . Phone
675-220&lt;.
· 15 Schools lns!ruc!lon
: :· REGISTER
NOW l.or
various Arts and Crafts
classes to begin soon. For
more Information call 30~, 675-336.5. The GAZEBO, Arts and crafls supplies, Pl.
Pleasant. .
·
11
l

Wanted to Do -

Will do sewi~ for woman
S. chi ldren. Call 2&lt;15-9213 or
2&lt;5-5601.

~ R::=e=l=ia=b:;le= w=o=m=a"'n"'t:=o=.:=ba::;b;:y=s:;l'l
,in yQur home. Weeknights
• or weekends. Cal12&lt;5-92!3.
sandblasting -old
cars.
trallr&amp;rs and smaller items.
Call «6-8274 after 5. Ask
for Rick.
Will do babysllllng in my
home. Oay shill only . Call
«6-4158.
e)(perienced and
dependable ladies will
wall-paper or paint in your
home or business. Phone
30H58-1,3S or &lt;58-1536.
TWO

21

Business
Opportunity

Facemyer Cab Co. &amp; also
includes Yellow Cab .
Equipment II. everything
goes. Call 379 · 2~4 .
. 22

Money to Loan

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA-VA Financing Loan ReP. Cookie
Kraulter (304 )675-3473 .

r- - - - - - -

r.-

, . REFINANCE or purchase
your ·home. 30 year fixed
:... rate. wva. &amp; Ohio. Leader
- Mortgage, 77 E . Slate 51.,
Athens, Oh. S92-30S1.
[

1

- 23

Professional
Services

o-·- Plano Tuning-Be kind to

~

your ears . Call Bill Ward
r- for appointment, 446-.tln.

I

r
'

•

·c s. L Bookkeeping. Com·
•plele bookkeeping and lax
service for business and in·
divlduals.
,
Carol Neal «6-3862
j

r .Gallipolis
Only Rubber
Stamp Shop. ususally one

1-

or two days service.
Dismuke's AOS 2nd . Ave.,
· - - «6-0&lt;74.

t

~==========
• 31

Homes tor Sale

3 bdrm . home, carpet,
beautiful cabinets, vinl~
siding, outbuildings, car·
pet. nat. gas. c ity water &amp;
' .s chools. 446-3891 .

---

. Large tiome. ~ bedrooms,
family, living s. dining
room, full kitchen, full
besement. 2 acres. Lerge
swimming pool . 985:&lt;290.
Or rent·3 bedroom furnished home on Bud Chah
tin Road on b ig level lot.
516-2711 .
THREE bedroom hous,
101, Leon . 30H68--40&lt;1.
Greatly
reduced .
4·
bedrooms, lri· level· all electric, new. kitchen, full ;
basemen!, .large family '
room, dining room, living
room, two and a half baths,
geraoe~ extra Iaroe lot,
cdlitred palio, priced on
fliowlng only. Phone 675·

• 263.1.

41=-"~!isesi'o_rRent--

4-4
- - - -o!o.,.rtmemt
forRont

story farm house, .c mi .
from town. K.C. dis!., \lard
&amp; garden. Call «6-06&lt;11 at·
fer 5.

Samll Firs! Floor Apart·
men!. Ulllilies furnished .
Callal6314th Ave.

:z

ATTENTION
M.
U.
STUDENTS. &lt; bedroom
ho~se . 2 blocks from Marshall, 2 baths, .l oin! kitchen,
furnished refrigerator,
washer , dryer ,
beds,
dressers. S8S pper student
1 per month plus util ities.
Please caii67S-5056.
ALL electric home yvith
gllrage &amp; .full
size
basement, 5250. a month,
phone 30H7S·3217.
Mobile home, 2 bedroom,
furnished, . (clean), city
utilities, 2 miles out, Sl75.
Call «6-0939.
2 bdr , and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call «6-017S.
2 bdr. mobile home com ·
pielely turn . Call-446-9669.
2 bedroom mobile home
partially furn., extra nice,
in Gallipolis. S2SO per mo.
plus gas, $150 dep., adults
preferred . Call «6-3791 af ·
ler 5.

For Rent Mobile Home.
Phone &lt;46·0756.

1972 Skyline 12 X&lt;4 i ¥~-------­
bedroom furnished, good .Nice 3 bdr, trailer. Water
condition . Also small furnished. on private lot,
trailer for rent. 992 -7479.
good cond, one child, no
pets. 446-0514 .
197A Hillcrest trailer. 12x54.
16,000 .
Day
992-2693, Mobile home, 2 bedroom ,
evenings 992-3911 .
furnished, (clean), city
utilities, 2 miles out, $175.
TWO bedroom 12x60, partiallv furnished , gas heat, 3 2 trailers
12x60 un·
m i le s out from Pt. furnished, $115 mo.; SlOO
Pleasant,
R!.
62 , depos it . Call446-4745 or «6Charleston Rd . call i!lfter .C, 1630.
JOH75-3741.

6.4 TWO bedroom , trailer,
11200. 31JH15-S&lt;81.

19112 Nashua 14 X 70 with 7
x 20 Expando, factory
fireplace, 2 baths, 13,000.
and.assume. Phone 31U-5762706.
33

Forms lor Sale

Farm, located on R!. 218, 40
acres, 1200 lb . tobacco
base. Call after 6, 2&lt;5-9222.
115.7 ACRES sec luded
farm, 10 mile SE of. Pl .
Pleasant.. priced on in·
specllon, Todd Bush, 31)4675-5076.
35

Midd
.

Hoose trailer on 322 3rd .
Ave .. Gallipolis. Adulls
only, no pels. Call «6-37&lt;8
or 256-1903.
2 bedr. all electric., Rae·
coon Rd. no pels. deposit,
$165 per mo .. Call «6·0822.
2 bedroom 12x60 Mobile
home. Must have referen·
ces and deposit. S!15 mon·
thly . HoMe 992-6206 after S,
business992-6173.
House !railer for rent In
Middleport. Call 992-3S90 .
Coppertone electric range.
Construction
workers
trailer for three. Phone 30~ ·
773-56SJ, Ma.son . ·
TWO bedroom mobile
home in New HBven .
Adults only, no pets, 304·
675-1452.

Lots &amp; Acreate

Registered Quarter Horit.
filly.
Registered
Ap- .
paloosa, 4 yrs. old and good
blood line. Call 256'6413, 12
p.m. !o 9 p.m .

79 OODGE 1power wagon, 4Wheel-drlve, 29,000 mi; ... 8
cyl, call after 3 p.m . JO.l675-3891.

Buckskin mare 1!. 2 colts.
100 bales of good horse hay
and rabbits. Call 379-2761.

74

Auto lor Salt

72 Pontiac, exc. conct .• very
little rust, new vinyl top,
can be see~ 107-Chillicothe
Rd.
1978 Mustang 11, • cyl ., PS,
PB, air, new tires, ex.
cond. Call «6-7838 or «6·
7-447 alters.
16 Ford Torino. 2 dr .• S900 .
Cali 379-2156 .

3 bedroom apt. in Middleport . $150. month. m 5692.
/1J.,.

A

1 bedroom apt. new. car·

pe!ing. Very ni ce . m -5880
after6p.m .

c11 •

.,..... ...

1976 9 passanger Chevy
station wagon . Call «6-11181
after 5PM .
1979

Cutlass

Supreme,

~~~~~~~~~~1r::::::::;:::::::11oaded. Cai1256-1667.

2
apts.
unfurnished .
Episcopal Rectory, Main 54
Misc. Merchandico
St.. Pomeroy . If interested
call992-3589.
TOP PRICE Scrap Metal,
Alumnium, l;'rass, Cqpper,
.
Skidmore
2 large, 3 bedroom apart- Batteries
Fosler, 123 11 Pine ·st.
ments. 1 upper &amp; 1 lower. Gallipolis BID&lt;:k2co., 123
112
Large yll)rd w ith each a'pt. PineS!., «6-2 .
783
De!)0$11 required . 2nd 51.,
Middleport. 992-71&lt;3 after S
p.m .
For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs, $25. See at 769
Brownell Ave., Middleport.
Apartments. 67S-55&lt;8.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614-«6-8221 or 614-2&lt;15-9&lt;8&lt;.

New wood stove, ~If price,
never used, $3.50.tCan con·
vert to furnance . Call 2561216, Gallipolis.

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Ma .. n, WV . 773-5651.

Used fireplace Insert .
'Free heal Maclline'. Dual
blower system, ex c. cond.,
$175 . Call «6--4118S.

THREE bedroom and I
bedroom apartments in Pt.
Pleasant, newly remOdled,
clean,
conveniently
located, 30~ · 67S- 6020 .

Ice fishing supplies now in
stock . Spring
Valley
Trading Co .. Spring Valley
Plaza, «6-902S.

4..5'---"
F_,ur,_,n,l"-sh,_,od.,_R=oo,.m=•SLEEP! NG ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt ..
Park Central Hotel.
Weekly rates available $60
and up in Circles Motel .
Call «6-2501.
46

Space for Rent

Trailer lot for rent. Call
426S.

«·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7419 .

Call388-8655.
G.E .
double
door
refrigerator, almond. I
year old $125. Caii89S-3618.
USED apartment size
refrigerator, good con·
·dillon, $7S.OO, JOH75·2226.
GOOD
used Maylag
automat ic . washer, excellent condition, S17S .
Used dryer, 165. Village
Furniture. 31)4-675-1773.
54

fe'lsc. Merch1ndice

Lump Coal ·132 per ton.
Zinn Coal Co., Inc . Call-4461"!18 bf!tween 9 and 5 .
3.- 8 11. showca..,s with
lights, 1 large bedroom
sul!e. double dresser and
chest, 2 anliqu~ clocks, 1
meat slicer and Misc.
grocery store equipment.
Call 256·6&lt;13, 12 p .m . to 9
p.m .

- -- - - - -- -,

•
•
VIewmg
TUIIDAY
. .tAll. t'2, 1112

Motorcycles

81 suzuki 850 L lull dress,
shall drive, like new.
Phone 256-1 W ofler 6PM.

7:00

~1980 Pontiac Bonn . diesel,
55
BUilding Supplies
excellent
cond .,
low
Building materials block,
mlle~ge . Call «6-8310.
brick, •sewer pipes, -.. windows, lintels, etc . Claude 1973 Pontiac ex. cond.,
Winters. Rio Grande, D. complete new exhaust
Caii2.S-S121 .
system, USO. Call «6·8398.

54

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judv Tavior at 367·
7220.
DRAGDNWYNO
C'AT ·
TERY - KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies , CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese ~lttens . Call 4-C6·
38-44 alter 4 p.m.

Daschund
dog and
minature German Shepard
dog. Call «6-2203.

Remington Thunderbolts
22 LR , $12.7S per Shundred .
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, «6- ·
9025.

•

HOOF HOLLOW Horses S.
pon i es .
Everything
imaginable in horse eQuipment. Also bells, boots.
Riding lessons and trail
rides .
698 -3290 .
R ulh
Reeves .

SS.W 38 special amo. $11 .99
per SO. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, «6-902S.

Weights, bar-bell, and ben·
ch, S3S . Call «6-0562.

73 Crysler Station Wagon,
good work car $200. Call
256-11&lt;1 after 6PM.

1976 Malibu 4 dr., power
steering, power brakes,
air, new tires and paint,
62,000 miles for $1.950. Call
«6-21188.
1975 Cutlass Supreme
bucket
seats,
floor
automatic, AM·FM stero.
Call256-6519.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding ali breeds. clean
indoor-outdoOr facilities.
AI'" AKC Reg. Dober· 1966 Chevy Impala, 283
mans. Ca 11 «6-779S.
automatic, power steering,
runs good. 98S·4346.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming. 1980 Camaro. Call «6 ·9327 .
AKC Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels. 1969 Plymouth wagon. 319
Call388·9790.
auto. 98S-Q46.

All case knives 10 per cent
off . Spring Valley Trading
co., Spring Valley Plaza,
«6-8025.

Crossman B· B's $1 .09 per
1,SOO .
Spring
Valley
Trading Co .• Spring Valley
Plaza, &lt;46-9025.

Pets lor Sale

Fish Tank and Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pl.
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon.,
Thurs., 1 Fri. 11 to 6. Tue$.,
Wed., I Sal. 11 li&gt; 4. Check
our Fish Special.

AKC

A carrv out bus.iness closed
ctown and has all beverage
coolers for sale. Call 1 · 61~ ·
286-S7«J.

Pekingeese
882-2683.

registered
puppies. 304·

DACHSUHUND
mixed
plolt II. Beagle, 1 red male,
1 black female. 6 months.
Trade for dome~tic rabbits.
Phone 304-6'75-1076.

Homelite Chain Saw, like
new . Caii24S-9212.
Long wood burning stove,
Free Standing
and
f ireplace inserts. Call .446·
167S.

Doberman
pups,
registered. 675-7763.

Butchering hogs ready to - - - -- - - - - - S7
Musical
butcher. Fuel otl heater.
Instruments
Cheap . Gall361-7533.
~----~~--·Piano in storage, Respon1120 Lux man reciever, sible party may take on low
Bose speakers, JVC turn - monthly payments. Call
credit manager col lect,
table. Call398-9.556.
614-6&lt;2-S180 .

•

1973 Pinto s . w .~ Good on gas
and gOOd condition . Air
conditioner 25,000 btu. 61~ ·
667-6636.
1970 Plymouth GTX . ~
magnum, 1!11 stock, nice,
rare, price reduced for
quick sale. 7&lt;2·21&lt;3.
197S Mercury Monarc, 6
cyl .. 3 speed, good gas
mileage. New paint, good
tires. $1 ,250.992-5388.

1977 RENAULT LeCar, 40
mpg, good condition, new
tires. $1400. 576-2127.

soo.

6&lt; FORD Fairlane
2
door with 69 302, &lt; speed
engine, has low mllage.
Call after 6, 304-895-3603 :
1991 TRANS-Am, loaded
with T-top, $8700. 304-67S·
3137 anytime.
·

1979 Chevy Malibu Classic,
landau top, 35,000 miles.
$.1800 . 67S-2508 .

1977 Dodge Monaco wagon.
4 door,
power,
air,
automatic, $800. 197c Vega
wagon $SOil. 675-3962.
1965 Oldsmobile, 304-67S·
2811 .

68 THUNDERBIRD, 69000
actual miles, 5600. 30-4-675·
4201 .
Government surplus cars
and trucks now available
through local salas, under
uoo.oo. can 1-71-l-569-0241
for your directory on hCPN
to purchase. open 2.t hours.

61

I

NI!WI
.
.IIUPPITIIIOW
.
7:01
C)AIIOL I U - n AND
FRIINDI
· 7:30 ille YOU AIK!D POll IT
ill ANOTI:IIII UF!

!IDJ

~'T g~

A.T WORK

lOOt&gt;..'I. "-11-letJ 1 SA'i to, ! MEAA IOMORRDW I
~IAM~IniJ0

I

.
I

()) NATIOIIALCII!OGRAPIIIC

l

~A HAI'PlD,.YIFonzlt

.
i

ANNIE
1-11$5 RE~EL lOOK IT OfF
TH' HIMISE6 T' PLANE 5~E
~000

OFF TH'

WHERE

IT

For sale 1977 Ram
Charger, excellent con·
dition, low mileage, Call
2&lt;15-9213.

Farm Equipment

STICI(.IN'.,

RINGLES'S s 'i :f!VICE ixperienced mason, · roofer,
carpenter, 1 electrician.
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone JO.l·67S2088 or 67S--4560.

())70Q.CL..

(1)~-THIII!'ICOMPANY
Mr . Furley fella for 1 wealthy

lady who thinka he owna the
apartment build ina and Ia
playk'lguptohlmlnanattemptto
!l!!)' 11. (CioMd·C.oplionedJ
'

GASOLINE ALLEY

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT See The Hay
EQuipment of the future,
New from Vermeer also 1979 Dodge pickup, low
large round bale movers &amp; mllea~e . Call «6-4185.
feederplus a full line o1
FIREWOOD-split oak, S40 equipment, from Long,
1979 31&lt; GMC truck, 4-WO,
a rick, $70. a cord, call 304· Vermeer, Kuhn, Kelley,
and man~ others. And see 3,600 mi . Great lor winter
67S-3137 anytime.
firm. can 446-3675 o;
us to get your parts 1!. com4&lt;6-382&lt;
before noon.
plete
service .
USED
SEASONED oak firewood, EQUIP ; Tractors; 1 !H
call JO.l-675-2751 offer 4 ' Hydro 70, 1 «&lt;S Long, 2 MF 1976 Chevrolet 112 ton
p. m .
·
, 135, 2 Bush-hogs, 1 Tobacco pickup, good cond., 56,000
~
setter, Cultivators, 2 rakes, miles, $2,000. Call388·8769.
Used fires. Hanshaw's haybind, large bale mover,
Tires on Lucas Lane. 67S- bale unroller, 76 Jeep 1980 Chevy ~ ton 4 wheel
7360.
pickup,
NH
ma~ure
drive. Auto trans with over·
spreader. CHECK _OUR drive. insulated topper
PRICES
S.
COMPAREI
REMINGTON
30 · 06
trailer hltlch, many extras:
automatic model 7&lt;2 wilh «6.- 1615.
Cai1992-312'1 after 5 .- JO-p.m . ,'
sling &amp; swive1s. Excellent
condition. SJOO.OO call 31)&lt;- For Sille · AC 160 Diesel
1962 FORD Falcon Ran675-428.
tractor
also
Massey chero pickup with shell,
Ferguson baler No. 12. Call runs good, ne""' paint,
1 GREENHOUSE, &lt;II.X811., 1367-7.55-4.
1700. or offer :JCW-576-2921.
1-40.00,31l&lt;-89S-3879.
.
---~_:._---~--~---'' Almost new 2~5 Ferguson
7J
Vons &amp; 4 W.D.
sony casselle deck, . tractor, &lt;SO round hay
d lacousll c
speokers baler, 7 II. hay bind, Used-2 -1,71 Volkswagen Von,~
realistic amp: SJOO. Phone corn pickers, hay baler, 2 lllmily or work van .' HOO.
hay rakes, 2 row corn plan- 446-97•· call after 5 on
675-1S13.
weekdays.
- - - - - - -- .- tor, small farm. 675·1851.
Colonial style cast Iron 1
1979 Jeep Cherokee, 4
Franklin
Stove
wilh 62
Wonted 10 luy
grale,screen and other ac- Baby furniture and spring wheel drive, 1 owner.
Phone «6-1173 between 8
cessor1es 1175.00. Phone maternity clo!lles;size 7or and5.
31U-675-2&lt;7&lt;
after
5
P.M
.
:9.
Phon~
31)&lt;·675-6819.
_ _ _ __ __ __ ,
7
'

u.«JJ

I

I.

• Clllll

You wouldn't
believe the
qas it uses!

CARPENTRY
S.
remodeling, electrical anet
plumbing . 30&lt;-576-2989 or
576-2587.
.
LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential. automotive.
Emergency service. Call
1182·2079.
EXPERIENCED car penter available for hom:e
or business remodeling or
new structures.
Free
estimates. References.
Will beat any signed writ·
!en estimate. JO.l - 67S · 2~ .
Wandling electrica l . service, Old work and new
work, 2.C hour ser ·
vice. phone 30&lt;-675-6663.

YEs ••• IT
Ef5 . ME
TOPAY/

Plumbing

JABAR .

CA~TER'S

SEWING Machine reJMiri,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service1 Sharpe'n
Scissors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy . m -227&lt;.

ON Hl5 YACHT,

I ASSUME?'

CMARABOU~

&amp; Heating

. •. TO JOIN HIM

MELISSY GOT RID
OF THAT TWO·TIMIN'
BOYFRIEND OF HERS

the Harta, worth let•
to 1
women who wll kMI lo got lt. (eo

relatively worthlttt etan,p lo

••otPt

mini.)
(CioNd·Ciptionod;
U.B.A.)
(l)p-LINI!'W!IoendWhot
Are the Enti'JIWO in Central
AMerica?' Oueata : Lawrence
Blmt, dlrtCtor ollltoCounciloro
Htmlaphtrlc Affaire ; Ma•

10:~'-·£.~~==

~.:.":.-­
:t:!llA~~-

11:10 ===-__.___,__

&gt;
•· PEANUTS

11:11

WAAT AAE FRIEHt'S
~ IF VOU CAN'T
FOR6El TllEM

Call for estimates 367-1101.

Won

dummy, draw trumP. alld
wind up wltlt bla alx trum!l'l ·.
one beart ruff, four dla·
moada alld tbe ace of clube.
We do not know Ute bid·
tlln1 at tbe OIHr table, but
the Jl!lle ala apade conll'act .
wu reacbed ind Ute ..me
jack of etube opened.
Tbe play lor tbe flnt two
trlcltl wu Ute AmeL but at
trick · tbree Ute aeclarer
!llayed I aecoacl trum~ud
llleit tried to cub bll
of
dllmonda at trick lour. est
ruffed and cubed bla ace of

Dbl.

,.

,.

,..

Nri . ltJn

Redbl. , . .
.. ·.. CNT Pw
.... . ..
p. .

,.
..

....

Pllil

Opealac lead: +J

diMCL• "J r(

· lty THOMAS JOSIPH

tt-out

ACR088
1 V88abond
5 Rental •lin
II - Harbor,
Guam

(jult got by)

DOWN
1 Odau.que•a

quarten
! ~ buffa
I Cowhancl'l
lmplemenbi

Hltchcoclt:'l
wlnclow

: =·(l.at.) Ytltei'IIIIJ'a Aalwer
• Mlnlnl find d - HIJ1IIfe • Piece of

UDevile
IC Marine flyer
II CJiallce veil
II Leglonnaln
17 Virgin Mary

7 Make an
lmpreiiiCin
I stepped In

It Prior to
• Wobbly
• UDI• _,.
11 Drulltk
21 South African
leiJI1IIIl&amp;

(now and

. lancl

alnya)
•llhula
11 Cruy
II AIMrlctl
ft MMIIIII•nl
pailller
or Manit • Evaluated

a Pyrtnn• u Vllor

II Colllle

rtpUblle

f1 Olctlltor
Amln
Zl Piece of
Sl

!wnlture
And not

u Swill river

u Lambkin •• cry
M Equatorial

1-.-+-4--

MDray

S'ILeo
'
Durodler'l
middle name
II Heraldic
wreatlt
UScratdly

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'a how to work It:
AltYDLIAAltl
II LONGPILLOW
ODe ....... limply 1taadl for IIIOiber. Ia IIIIa -pie A II
ued lor tU three L'1, X for the two O"t, etc. Slalle lett. . .
_.,.,.... · the lenllb aDd formttloa .o l the •Oftla are aU
Illata. laeb day the code lei len are dllreront .

TRISTATE
.UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
«6·7833 or «6·1133.

_

... _

o..lt:L-.......... Colhr

"r

QLAALEXRT

QUFLGU

EXWW

*&lt;~=~=AI~:
'ANIII!tTOII_....... Ye&lt;e,

QHN

~

•

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 12&lt;. Pl . Pleasant, 31)&lt;675-&lt;15-4.

BPU

........,_(10-.)

MCmllll Ln ..

depretttcl on her blrthcl•r.

------- -

caYPTOQUcmr&amp;

KL

PMQXB

SUUI

BPMB

·BEL

ILWWMAK

TIIIYOIIIIITIHOW

I!_ _ _ Upholstery

_ _ _ _ _ - - - 4_ _

'JoiiJI WU IW'e to be
able to rull · a heart In

Vulawable:.Nortb-lloutb .

tO:II

I!. limestone for driveways.

-

a.G OUT AIII!IIICA
MJIIIID HITCIICOCI(

tO:

-------NOW HAULING house coal

-

Dealer; Nortb

DOW.

Singer, dep•ty director ot tht

HudiOftlntttiUie. - t: W~llem

-~

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367-7&lt;71 or
367-0S91 .

••

led dummy'• mlletoa heart
to bll kine alld llfut'a ace. It
didD't matter wbat Eut did

~&amp;W~t~~M~~~
· ~In~I~._~

phll•lella1amuggltl 1

'

tx

IIW1d
MEaehan&amp;•,
uwordl
U Ancel (Fr.)
NOkWime
peruke

BAkNEY

' General HIIUii!!J_

IS

•xun

eplaode ot a new aerl••

~mln1.)

REFRIGERATOR, washer, dryer, range repair service. City Furniture, 31JA675-26011 or evenings 614«6·829S.

+QittUI

boUJ opponeabi lo.:owlnc.
TIMID be 1~ to tevlew
all tbe bl
aad filially

II Gualemllu

Cll 110'1/II·(THIIILLIII) ••
"~'~~.tot 01 Tile J......... t810
(I) 1111e HART TO HAIIT On
the night ol hi I dUih, 1

- ·----...,•

80UTB

ft PhiUpplne.

de lee! him; 1rd whllt Field 11
purewtng an aff•lr wtth • pretty
r•porter, Conatanct 11tl her
1lghtt on y..,g JuliO Sanchez.

JACKS REFRIGERATIO N. air condltiori service.
commercial , lnr:lvstrial.
PhOne 882-2079.
,

-- - - -

of clube, cubed the ace of

ttlllll
.ICQU

II Unperturbed
I%Uke

· re -election and Elmo decldaa
thitle.tha lima to ••poae the
lawm•n ' a corrupl paet and

SHE'S SWEET
ON ZEB .
HAWKINS

IWT
•1•u

UIT
IU
AQIOU
. . ...
Jl0t71

Cll TUUDAY
NIGHT MOYII! 'Qrooud
Lightning' 1g77 Stl(l' Rlchlrd ·
er_vor. PamOrter.
ttl AIII!IIICAN PLAYHOUII!
'The Shady Hill Kldnepping' II
an oriatn•l John Cheettar
telepfav a tarring George
Grizzard, Polly Holliday, Paul
OooleyandCtlttteHolm. IIIII
contemporerycornedyoferrora
about a •uburban family who
auflera comic uproar when the
youngeat family member Ia
beHaved to have been trlldIJ!PPed. (eo m1n1.) ·
IHl LIP I! ON UIITH 'TI111ollnltt
Variah'' Ia the p,.mlare

detailing , wlth eJC.traordlnarv
wlldll!e photogrophi/, !he 11ory
of evolution on thla planet .
Hoated by aotor·'adventurer
D1vld Allenborough. (eo
mint.)
1::10 ()) 1111• TOO CLOII POll
COMI'OIIT Deopltt !IIi Rulh't
objectlona, April decldee to
move in wtth hit' boyfriend who
lo lll!!j;o 11er oge.
tD:OO ille liJ PLAMINGO ROAD
Sheri If Sample II •P for

All INWTATION

I !5RJNG
NE5SAGE FROjl
MY MASTER, I

tAQJIIU

apadee aad wu bappl. to -

S4uiggy Ia conaumed with

1-INI

••+us

Hunprlau. Jollll won tbe
fint trld with dummy'a ace

WCMRM"1811

jo1iou1y. ICioltd·Ciplionld;
U.S.A.)
1:111 C1J CIN UPOATI NI!WI
t:OO ille (!) IRn MAYI!IIICK
Maverick u111 Marylou' a
newapaper to print eanaatlonal
publk:ity about a tarat E11tern
cornpai'ly'a no·holda barred
attempt to gain control over
Sweetwater and othlf'townaln
!he territory. (eo mlno.)

NORTH
+AX I

Jolul Colllap of Great
Brlllla baa lOIII bela larowD
u one of tbe pealelt dum·
my· playen of aii~Ume. In
tod.y't llaDd ... blm Ia
111 apadet •1•la~t tbe

(J) ~. L~YI!IINI! AND
!IIIIRL.eY Lonny meot1 t girl 11
the La Braa Tar Pitt and

F a. K &lt;ltJte Trimming, .
-stump rertfc&gt;v'aJ: 675' 1:1:11 .

a4
Electrical
_ __ &amp;RefrigerAtion

(MowOro~)

Jumblts; FORTY MUSIC ENCAMP
ADVICE
•
Anower: Soundt like lha Judfit made tha Hnlonce
ahorttf on hi1 w1y fo W«lc-"COMMUTEO"

By OlwaW JacebJ

rock auperatar Rick Brawelar
arrlveeln San Diego tor concert
. d1t11. (110 mlno.)
,
(I) UPI! ONIAIITH 'Tho lnllltltt
Variety' 11 the premiere
apiaode of a new 11rlea
detailing, wllh a~etraordlnarv
wlldlll1 photogr1phy, the IIOIY
of evolution on thll planet .
Hoatad b.y actor· adventurer
D1vld
Anonborough. (eo
mlna.)
1:08 (J) IIOYI! -(ADVI!NTUIIIJ •• '
..~....,.., 1111
1:30 (I) MOYII•(COMIDY)"
''!ftc redllllelhrin kl ftl

I'IA6

'

197&lt; Ford F·250 new stake
bed and dual wheels. Call
256-6&lt;13, 12 p.m. to9 p .m .

I )( I I I )

... Alii Seatq

eountertelt Uckll acam when

'

13
EJCcavatint
~
~--==~~'-~,
Gallipolis ·Diversified Con·
st . co. Custom dozer s.
backhoe work . Special
fi!rm ri!tes. Call us for free
estimates. «6 - ~.

rI

Stellar. British play

_telo.J.414:.Copllonld; u .s .,.,J
eCiliiiJ - A N D A . J . and Alck Innocently
becom'e entaAsllad In 1

II!" termite,

- --- - - - - . - -

A

BRIDGE

and AI vlalt a amall Southarn
lunch counter whan the newa
prompt a AI to partlclp•teln a
clvJI right a damonatartlon .

roach. bird, r~,. spider,
ancl fleas ~ll!llr.DI. . Free
est imales,sBIII •Th.pmas.

12

Vtsterday'a

U.S .A.)

French City Palnll~g
Residential, commerci•l,
interior, exterior, paper
hanging ,' and texur~d
ceilings. Ph. 367-7·7 U'Orll47·
7160.
'
' I

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes .
Pumps Sales and Service.

· .' I

lffOr1 10 make him reveal the

location .o f hi a traaaura . (80
mini.)
(Ciolld-ptptloned;

PAINTING - interior and
e•terior, plumbing,
roofing. some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Ca ii388·96S2.

'

RICHARD IIMMONI

()I)
MOYII
·ICOIIIDY•MUIICAL) •• \1
'"Y.......d Lover" IIH
ilJJ
INTIRTAINIIINT
TONIGHT
.
7:3a (I) IANI'OIID AND . 7:111 (I) CIIN UPDATINI!WI
1:00 ille (!) PA TH!IIIIUIIPIIY
YoungWUIAdtrna· di1coveryo1
a gold nugget brlngl him to
aarloua trouble when hi afather,
a dnankard whO abai'Mioned hlll'l
yaara Ago, locke him In 1
rat-lnfeatad root cellar In an

&lt;

' .

Printanawerhere:

e

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by
Halle!! Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
C~li «6-2107.

~;..

[j

I I I

lltOW

l

---Call «6·2f(l1

IIIJ8IIii!B8

RI!POIIT

1\-11.; ~m~&lt;DA'/.

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com·
mercia! end residential ,
free estimates. Call 2561182.

AWA'I WA6.

I DEECIV .,

liJ LAVIIINI! AND IHIIILIY

Aute Ropolr

Improvements

WAiiHE F16H
"THAT 6CT

I!K;l!I!T. .III

Ouallty Aulobody .s. Paint
work. Insurance work
welcome . Sunroofs installed from S200-S231l. Auto
Trim Center, ~- 1968 .

Home

I (J

WeCil PAIIILYFIUD

AND COMPANY
(J)
NIGIITI.Y

•

RISMEY

()) MIADowullll I.e_' I

Now Open MILLERS
USED AUTO PARTS .
Adamsv l lle-Harrisburgh
Rd. Open 9-S Weekdays, 9noon Sats. Ph . 2&lt;15-9102.

81

()

1-11

RI!POIIT

Windshield broken? Call
· Southern ·Auto glass. Insurance claims · welcome,
Free
mobile
service
available. Call -446-1011.

PLUMBING
AND HEATING
cor. Fourth and Pine ·
Phone «6-38118 or «6·«77

1979 31&lt; GMC truck, &lt;·WD,
3,600 mi. G·reat for winter.
$&lt;,400 firm . Cali «6-367S or
446· 382~ before noon .

Sound design am-fm stereo
receiver wfth 8 track recor·
der and 2 speakers $75. Red
sculptured shag carpel
10xl2. Like- new. 190. 99253118.

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
bal!eries. «6-7717.

304 ~895, 3802 .

1970 FORo Torino, 2 door ,
5600. 304-675-2508.

Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main S!., Pomeroy, Ohio. Martin 12 string acoustic
guitar . Good cond . Best of ·
992 ·220S .
fer. 949-2741 .

Gl BSON Les Paul Guitar.
will sell to be$t offer, call
304-67S·5027 after&lt;.

I 'LL IJ&amp;T THOliE VO"r;!J AND
THAT C0~16L0M!~ATI llAYe
~OM!TIII'!6 IN COIM\Or.l.

"l·

1947 Ford, good motor,
so lid
bodv ,
Serious
inquiries only . 675·2207 .

SEARS chord organ. full
rhythm section, like new,
originally $1100 .00·now
SS50.00, 31l&lt;·882-2350 aller
&lt;:00.

Auto Parts
&amp; Acces.,.les

77

I -t I

(J)
INTIRTA!IIIRNT
TONIGHT
liJ HAPPY DAYIAGAIN '
eW TIC TACDOUGII
(J) ®
MACN!L.UHIII!II

RON'S Teloylslon Service.
HART S Used Cars, New Speclail'zlnQ in Zen.llh a~d
Quazar Md
Haven West Vir'ginia. over Mo!oro
20 less expensive ca~ in · house cal s. Phone !'76-2398
or 446· 2~~~;
~
·
stock .

Brand new upright freezer
still In carton. Save monev . NEW Conqueror 5·string
banjo with case. $250. 992·
Phone for app!. «6-2906,
65&lt;6.

Kodak M22 instamalic
movie camera, movie
light, Sears Super 8 profec·
tor, $100. Sound Design
AM- FM 8-!rack stereo
rece iver and 2 speakers,
S7S. 12 x 10 red sculptured
shag carpel, 190. 81!. !ruck
topper, SIS. 1969 Chevelle
V-8 Automatic, new paint,
fair condition, $450. 1975
Mercury Monarch 6·cyl, 3
s/&gt;eed, new ·pain!, and new
tires, S139S . Caii992-S388.

76

ille PM IIAOAZINI
ill
;JOHN AIIKIMIIIQ
IHOW

1976 GL 1000 Honda Golden·
Wing, good condilion,
SJIOO. 304· 895-3815-leave
phone number. ·

CAPTAIN EASY

AND 2 BEDROOMS
RENT STARTS AT; 1
BEDROOM
$152 ,
2
BE 0 R DO M S
S 189 ,
DEPOSIT $200. Call «627&lt;15.

FURNISHED&lt; room apar!men!, adults, no pels, 304- .
67S-1&lt;153.
--------Apartments in Henderson.
$150. per month. Phone 30&lt;67S-1972.

Television

'llf!!1&amp;4W.D.

I

~========:.:::..L-.-;:-;:-;:-~::-~~~:i;;;~~~ 446-7398.
,
or= s"'a71e= g=a=s= ra"'n"'g"'e"',"'s;:;;
JO.
=
F ==

GOSSIP .. ..

12, 1912 .
7!

Llv"IDcli

71

Furnished apartment for
rent. Call «6-3937.

---------

1./NI~ANT ­

by Larry Wright

2 Bdr. ApartMent, &lt;58
Second Avf!.: Large living
room , kllcheri, b&amp;lh, newly
decorated . . Completely
turn. Adults, dep. II. ref.
req . 1225 mo. -1'46-2581 or
«6-2236.

.. ... . .........
·····... ... .

71ELJ.S l't&gt;U

T

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

TWO bedroom furnished
trailer , 1150 . 00 plus
2. 1 acre house lots, on 554,
utilities, New Haven, 304·
low downpayment, land . 892-2466.
contract, rural water ,
OFFICE space for · rent,
Columbus and Southern
304·67S·WS.
Electric. Cali 256-6&lt;13, 12
FURNISHED 1 bedroom
p.m. lo9p.m .
mobile home, all utilities
paid. outskirts of Hen·
,,,
derson, 304-675·6730.
2 or 3 grave lots for sale at
Gallipolis Ohio Memory
Household Goods
Gardens. Will sell cheap . Two bedroom trailer, 51
Camp Conley, bolt led gas
Cai12&lt;5-S682 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
·and air conditioning. Phone Sofa, chair. rocker. ot·
304-67S·2938 or 675-1146.
loman. 3 tables. ssoo. Sola,
chair and loveseal, $275 .
Mobile home, completely Sofas and chairs Priced
furnished, washer and from $285 . to $795. Tables.
dryer, air conditioner, in S38 and up to $109. Hide-a ·
41
Houses far Rent
Mason . Phone 31U-773-9520 beds,$340. , queen size. $380.
2 bedroom well Insulated or 773·57S1.
_.. Recliners, S!IS. to S29S ..
house near Rio Grande
- - - -- ---.&lt;• ~ j Lamps from $.18. !o $65. 5
pc . dllettes from S79., to College, $200 per month
Apartmemt
$311.1. 1 pc ., $189 . and up.
plus utilities and $100 44
for Rent
Wood table wllh 4 choirs,
refundable
deposit.
$219 up to S&lt;9S. Desk $110.
References required . Call Furnished- - room
S85,
Hutches, $300. and $31S ..
2&lt;S-932S or 2&lt;S-SJ64.
utilities pd ., sing le male, maple or pine finish .
range, refrlg, share bath . Bedroom suites · Bassett
2 bedroom cottage, fur· 446-«16 after I PM .
Oak, 567S., Basset! Cherry,
nished, $200, water paid .
$795. Bunk bed complete
Call «6-«16 aller I PM.
J rooms with private bath, wl!h mallresses. $250 . and
845 Second Ave. Phone 446· up to 1350. Captain's beds,
S27S. complete. Baby beds,
3 bdr. house carpeted, 221S.
la rge yard on Rt . 218. Ref.
$99 . Mal!resses or box
&amp; dep. required, S:ZOO mo. 2nd. floor furnished ef· springs, full or twin, $58.,
Ph. «6-6697 after 4PM .
liency apt . 729 2nd . Ave, firm, $68. and 179. Queen
Ga llipolis. Call «6-0957 . sets, S19S. 5 dr. chests, 149.
-4 dr. chests, s.c:z. Bed
· House for sale in Vinton . Adults only, no pets.
frames, S20 .and S2S .• 10 gun
Call after 5. 3118 -8823.
· Gun cabinets, 1350 .. dinet 2·l room furn ., apts . te 'chairs $20. and S2S. Gas
9 room house in Rio Gran- uwm~s paid, dep. &amp; ref. or electric ranges, S295. Or·
required. S22S-$250 per mo. thopedlc super firm, S95,
de . Cal! -446·3&lt;85 .
Call «6·09S2 .
baby malresses, $25 II. $3S,
be.d frames 120125. S. 531) .
2 bedroom house. Spring
Ave .• PomeroY . Carpeted. 7- r()om hOuse JacksollPike Electric fireplace, gun
remodeled. Call after 6. beh ind Pinecrest Nursing cabinet, Living room suite,
S195. month not lncludihg home $200 plus deposit II. wood table II. • chairs.
ref . and 2 bedroom apt $175 used,
Ranges·,
utilities. 992·2288 .
mo . down town plus refrigerators, and TV's,
Nice 3 bedroom house for deposit. 446-3919 or 446- 3 miles out Buleville Rd"
Open 9am lo 7pm, Mdri.
0021 .
rent. If• mile from Meigs
thru Fri ., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
Mine!. 614-7&lt;2-2126.
«6·0322
Furni.shed efficiency, Sl45.
Utilltie$
pd
.,
one
person
.
TWO bedroom furnished
GOOD
USED
AP house, $150.00 plus !Jtllltles, Call «6-«16, alter 7PM.
PLIANCES - washers,
New Haven, 90H92-2466.
Furnished apartment, 2 dryers,
refrigerators,
rooms 8. bath , downstairs, ranges.
Skaggs Ap ·
3 bedroom house, referen- 1adult, clean, no pets. Call pllances, Upper R iver Rd.,
ces, no pels. 67S-1365.
,..46·1519.
beside Stone Crest Motel.

li_..,lk&gt;DY'

, Ohio .

Mid lap lilt, Ohio

L

QLAALE
M

C 1. F V U B Q L L V . -

LRU
BL

KLHAF U

Q K F H AU

rneyii--!MI-

IIHII-AIIoelndPiollxher
up oo 1 bilnd dele. (llePitl)

Yutu*l'a Cltrll&amp;'te; mERE JB NO DUTY WE UNDERRATE 80 MU
All THE DUTY OF . BEING
HAPPY.-ROBERT L. STEVENSON
'I

'

PMK .

�.

. '

. Ponwof · Midd.,_., Ohio

UJAUERLY
POMEROY
UJEST UNION
GEORGOOWN
NEW LENINGTON

Predict more· auto layoffs
WASHINGTON (AP) -Another
baH·mllllon Jobs could be lost In
auto-related Industries by 19@5 unJesa Coagress enacts'so-called "local eonteot" legislation, a United
Auto Workers oftlclal says.
"Without a loCal content law that
mandali!tfslgnl1lcarit U.S. automotive Investment by U.S. and
forelp·based companies, we envf·
lkm an Industrial catastrophe of un·
ptecedented proportions,'' Lee
Price, ot t11e OAW research start,
tOld .11 hearing of the Senate subCommtttee on employment and
productivity Monday.
The hearings resumed today.
Price sald employment by automakers and their suppliers
dropped from 2.8 mlUion In 1978 to
2.2 mWlon In llRl. "We face further
rapid erosion of employment unlesS ·the government takes action,"
he said.
The UAW predlctro that wlthcut
local content restrictions, auto lm·
porta - which amounted to 25 per·
cent of t11e u.S. market In 1981 would rile to 35 percent or more by
1985, and the domestlcllly produced content of U.S.-rnade cars

'would drop from about~ percent In
1981 to 85 percent In the same
period.
•
Such an Invasion or the domestic
auto market from abroad would result In lOsses of more than 200,000
"core auto jobs" and ~.000 associated manufacturing jobs, Prtce
said.
·Other UAW proposals called for
the govemrnellt to Improve, rather
than scrap, the present worker adjustment assistance ptogram and
offer a "scrappage bounty" to en·
courage Americans to junk o,lder ·
cars.
1n addition, "something must be
done about monetary policy," the
UAW statement said. "The health
of the auto Industry depends on the
avallabWty of an adequate supply
of credit at reasonable· rates of
Interest."
Some other wltne~ . .Including
John M. Mutz, lieutenant governor
of Indiana, urged exparidlng ·
worker retraining programs.
Mutz sal() Congress "shoul&lt;l get
the block grant ptogram for voca·
tiona! education and training
moving."

Super Bowl party
:won't erase pain
PONTIAC, Mich. lAP ) - Pro
fqotball's "big party" Is coming to
town with Its limousines and fur
coats, but some people here l)old
Uttle hope that much Super Bowl
money will trickle down to Pontiac,
where one-quarter of the workers
are unemployed.
The northern Detroit suburb of
PonUac, where Super Bowl XVI between the Ctnctnnau Bengals and
• San Franclsco 49ers will be played
Jan. 24, had a 23.9 percent unem·
ployment rate In October, accordIng to the Michigan Employment

Security Commission's latest
figures.
That means 10,900 people were
unemployed, out of a workforce of
more than 45,000 In the city. The
area Is heavily dependent on the
slumping auto Industry.
The Super Bowl "Is going to be a
blg party, but nothing can take your
mtnd off unemployment," said
Marlene Smlt)l, an assembly line
worker at General Motors Corp.'s
Pontiac division engine plant who
will be laid of! Frtday for the second
tlme In nine years.

Meigs Countyhappenings
Minor accident
Pomeroy VUlage pollee reported
one accident Monday due to road
conditions. A truck drtven by
Claude Humphrey, Route 2, Pomeroy, coming down Lincoln Hlll, slid
an a curve and struck a car drtven
by Joll!ph Reiser, Pomeroy, travel·
lng uphW. There were medium
damages.

Appropriations
.(Continued from page 1)
nates all of the pay hack to the
village.
· Fire contract renewals were approved with Cheshire Township for
tf,MO for 1982 and with Salisbury
Township for 11,100. Both figures
are the same as the 111111 contracts.
Mayor Hortman appointed David
Baker, Incumbent, to a five year
tenn on ·tbe Mlddlep&lt;&gt;rt Recreation
Commission and Steve Story was
named to a five year tenn on the
Meigs Housing Authortty.
Mayor Hottman announced he
has received notice of a hearing on
a propoaed rate hike by General
Telephone Co. of Ohio to be held on
Feb. ill In Cleveland.
Council approved the December
report of Mayor Hottman showing
·recelpta of 14,037 for the month of
December in fines and fees. Mayor
Hoffman announced council committees for tlle year.
Preceding the meeting, Mayor
· Hortman gave the oath ot office to
three Incumbent council members
who are starting new four year
terms. They are Allen Lee King,
Jack Satterfield and Dewey Horton. New council member, Robert
Gilmore, who replaces Marvin
Kelly on council, was out of town
aile! unable to attend the first meetIng of the year:

Furnace explodes
Pomeroy firemen answered a
call to the Steve Eblin residence at
Laurel Cliff Monday evening where
a furnace had exploded. It was believed a (Ire might developed. Firemen checked out the situation and
returned to their staUon.

Veterans Memorial
Aqmltted--Darlene Johnson, Mason, W.Va.; VIvian Jones, Racine;
Todd Reltmlre, Pomeroy; Betty
Sayre, West Columbia, W. Va.
Discharged--Faye Harper, R\lth
Lairson.

. Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were Issued to
Dale Franklin Rlffle, 19, Pomeroy,
and Lona Kay Hart,l6, Rt. 2, Pomeroy; Jimmy Lee Derenberger, 24,
Rt. 2, Albany, and Charlene Cremeans, 20, Rt. 2, Albany.

"Many of ~ 37,1Dl people who
have lost JObs In the Indiana auto .
pla.nts over the past tlneyl!llfS wW
never . return to their previous
work,'' Mutz said. '"'bey need to be
retrained to become employable
again.'
.
Many Idled auto wo!'kers who
started retraining programs are
finding their benefits are running
out, he sa~ In urging extension of ,
the Trade Adjuslr!lent Act to provide benefits for "as lo!ig.as an unemployed breadwlnne~ Is In
school.''.
Under questioning by Sen. Dan
Quayle, R·Ind., Mutzsald he would
favo.r taking the vocational education program out of the Depart·
ment of Education and comblnlng
It with the Labor Department's retraining pl'Ofll'arns In a lJCW agency.
Mutz said he would like to see the
federal government ".redirect
some of Its clefense spending" Into
high unemployment areas.
Quayle, who conducted the hear·
lng, said Michigan, Ohio and Indiana have been hit particularly hard
bY the auto Industry slump, with
more. than 150,000 auto Industry
jobs lost and 17 plants closed.

Area
deaths

; I'

OUR ·5fhh
SMOLDERING SLIDE - A youngster slides past
lhe bul'lleCHiut rellllll1111 of one of three adjaeeut -

bulldbJia Mooday 1hat were leveled by an extra•alarm,
Sunday mlll'lllng lire IJD !he Near North side of

Y~AR
.
'

Chicago. Strong winds and record eold temperatures
hampered ftreflghtel'll In their efforts to COIIIrol the
blaze. lAP Laserphoto).

Weaiher threatens Citrus ·c~op
1COntinued from page 1)

tered wllh an average of two aban- · one would ·come," said Mrs. Modoned can! per mue.
wltz, later In satisfactory copdltlon.
Buffalo had 25 Inches o! snow beIrene.Ohman thought she heard a · Detroit Receiving and Children's
tween 1 p.m. Sunday and 1 p.m .. kitten crying outside her Madison,
hospitals treated at least a dozen .
Monday. ' .
Wis. home Sunday night, but It was cases of frostblle. "We .rionnaily .
Sidney R. Leifheit
"It was like something out, of a 69-year-old Allee Mowltz, who had
see only a couple of cases a year,"
fairy tale," said Cat))y Green, 21, or
!allen
beside
her
stalled
car
and
said
spokes~J~oman Barbara
Sidney R. Leifheit, 63, of 6(87
lhe Albany, N.Y. area, who was broken her hlp In minus 3-degree Ahlberg.
Northgap Dr., Columbus, died Sun- fofClld of! the New York State Thru·
weather, which felt like 36 below
Janie L. Shephard, 92, froze to
day at Doctors Hospital North afway southwest of Buffalo. "You with the wlnd-chW factor.
death
In her llome at Selma, Ala.,
ter an extended Ulness.
couldn't see anything but white. It
"It seemed like no one would where the ~adlngwas 1 above, offiwas like we were fioatlng through hear me.. and I thought maybe no cials said.
Mr. Leifheit was a former resl·
white clouds."
dent of Meigs County th~ son of !he
Ernie Neff, a spokesman for
late Tom and Helen Lelfhlet. He
Florida Citrus Mutual In Lakeland,
was a graduate of Pomeroy .High
saki there was a "strong possibility
School.
there wW be damage" to the citrus
crop,
and National weather Ser·
Twosultsfordlvorce:onefordls· Agreement Act against Wayne .
He was a member of Free Methoforecaster
Bob
Case
In
Miami
solution
and ·another for support Lamar Wrtght.
vice
dist Church, Westerville, ·supertn··saldMondaynlghtwasthe"crltlcal
have
been
filed In Meigs County
Granted divorces were Helen
tendenf for Altman Coady
night."
.
Common
Pleas
Court.
Marie
Rood from Hamson Rood,
Construction Co., member of Car·
.
Only
about
12
percent
of
FlortFlllng
for
divorce
were
Laura
Jr.;
Michael
Meldau·!rom Loretta
penters Union Local 200. He was a
da's
projected
orange
crop
and
Sue
Kirk,
Rt.
2,
Albany,
against
Joy
Meldau;
Ella Blanche Stewart
10
veteran of World War Jl havtng
percent
of
the
grapefruit
crop
bas
Terry
J.
Kirk,
Rt.
2,
Albany,
and
from
Fred
W11llam
Stewart; Gina
servEd with the U. S. Navy.
been.plcked.
Sharon
L.
Hubbard,
Chester,
M.
Johnson
from
Ronnie
D. John.
He Is survived by his wife, Helen
Weather-related
,ddeaths
_
Inagainst
James
L.
Hubbard,
son
.
and
Eltza.
b
eth.
Lane
from
Leifheit; one son, Tom R. Lelfhlet,
eluding
traffic
fatalities,
heart
at·
Pomeroy.
Tommy
Lane.
Columbus; daughters and sons-In·
tacks and exposure _ have been
FlUng for dissolution of marriage
Marriages dissolved were Oanlel
law, JVIrs. Fred (Polly) Schmidt
reported
In
22
states
since
the
harsh
were
Jesse
Moms,
Pomeroy
and
Ross
McCloud and Donria Jean
Jr., Illinois and Mrs. Mark (Sidmoved
In
Saturday.
Dorothy
J
,
Moms,
Middleport.
McCloud;
VIrginia L. Hayman and
weather
ney) Fouty, Columbus; daughter,
Therewereelghtdeathsreported
Mary
Ruth
McKellZie
Wright
fUed
Richard
B.
Hayman and Emma
Joyce Leifheit, Columbus; seven
In Dllnols, seven In Iowa al\d_!'en- .--f-or_su_p_po_rt_._un_de_r_the_Rec_
. _tp_roc_al-:--Je_a_n_Cha
__
· ney
__
an_d_Be_n_·Ch_a_ney_._
grandchildren; three sisters, Cecl·
nsylvanla, six In Michigan and
lla Hart, Pomeroy; _ Betty
North Cilro\lna, and five each In
McKeever ·and Dons McDonald,
New York and lndlana. Three peoWaynesville; uncle, Hugh Leifheit,
ple died In West VIrginia and Ohio,
Pomeroy;' mother-In-law, Edltll
Grtm and several nieces and two each In Texas,]{entucky, Wls·
consln, Minnesota, Maryland, Ala·,
nephews.
hama and South Carolina, and one •
each In Nebraska, Connecticut,
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the Free . Mlssourt, Flortda, VIrginia and
Methodist Church, 4142 Westerville
Mississippi. Two others were missIng and presumed dead In Vlrglnla.
Rd with the Rev. Donald Scott offl·
U.S. 31ln Mlchlga'n was clogged
elating. Burtal
be at Shade.
1nc1reasse Your Productivity With
Frtends may call at the.Schoedln- Monday with a ·6-foot-deep snow
Our Desktop Business Computer
ger North Chapel, 5554 Karl Road
drift three-quarters of a mile toqg,
today 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
and one stretch of the road was lit-

Couples end marriages

STARTS
THURSDAY, JANUARY .14th
DOORS OPEN ~:30 ·AM
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Middleport.youth. unhurt in wreck
A drtver:was Injured In a one- curve, sUd lett of center and struck
vehicle accident at the junction of a southbound car drtven by Brenda
Ohio 141 and 775 Monday afternoon, M. Smith, 21, Racine.
according to the GaWa-Melgs Post
There was riloderate damage to
of the state highway patrol.
Harless' vehicle and slight to the
Ronald E. Massie, 20, Rt. 1, Nor- Smith auto.
thup, was westbound on 141 at 3
In Meigs County, Andy J. Ianna·
p.m. when he lost control of his veh· reiU, 16, Middleport, escaped Injury
lcle while attempting a turn onto when his vehicle lost control on
775.
snow-and-Ice-covered road on Sa·
The vehicle .then slid lett and llsbury Twp. Rd. 303 (Dark HoUow
struck' an Ohio Bell Telepllone Co. Road) , two-tenths of a iiille south of
pole and drove lrito a ditch. There Ohio 7, at 6:15p.m.
was moderate damage to the vehl·
The car went off the right side of
cle, and Massie was Injured, but not the road and Into a ditch, causing
treated. The patrol cited him for moderate damage.
unsafe vehicle.
Joseph R. Foreman, 47, Por·
The patrol Investigated three tland, was eastbound on Ohio 124 at
other minor accidents on Morx!ay. 7: 20 p.m. when a deer was struck
The report said a vehicle driven and killed when It ran Into the path
by Timmy H. Harless, 30, VInton, of his vehicle. The vehicle surtered
was northbound on Ohio 325 at 3: 25 slight damage.
p.m, when he lost conliVI .on a
No InJuries were recorded In four

SUPPtflriiNr TO: WllKl. Y AfVI[W, DAI&amp;. V: SfNriNfL

accidents which occured Sunday,
according to the GaWa-Melgs Post
of the State Highway Patrol.
Jerry Holley, Ill, Minersville,
was.ctted for fallure to yield In an
accident which took place at 2: 15
p.m. Sunday on State Route seven
nine-tenths of a mile south of mile
post nine !n Pomeroy, Meigs
County. Holley's car was south·
bound and made a left tum Into the
path ot a car . drtven by Clifford
Manley, 25", Minersville.
AI 3::JJ p.m. ~y , cars
driven In opposite directions by
Chartes R. Stewart, 18, Langaville, .
and JennUer Bums, 18, Worthington, coWded seven-tenths ot a mile
south of State Route 100 on Town·
ship Road One, Wllkesvtlle Town·
ship, Vlnillll County. There were 110
other occupants and 110 citations

were given.

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Body ·L?nguage

Served with Mashed Potatoes, Choice-of Salad,
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