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                  <text>1t.- The

Sentinel

Reagan

ta~es

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan, declaring "no one put
anything over on me," Is taking full
responsibility for a declston to
grant tax-exempt status to schools
!bat dlscrlrillnate.
"The buck stops at my desk," the
president declared at a nationally
broadcast news conference Tuesday 1 the eve of his first anqlversary
In office.
"I'm the originator of the whole
t.hlng and J!m not going to deny that
It wasn't handled as well as It could

be."
But Reagan maintained he was
trying to change a procedure - not

a policy - when he reversed a 12·
year precedent Jan. 8 and told the
Internal Revenue Service not to
deny tax exemptions to schools that
exhibit .r acial bias.
An uproar quickly ensued, lead·
1ng Reagan to reverse himself and
ask Congress to prohibit the IRS
from doing what he authorized It to
do 12 days ago.
The president acknowledged that
the matter could have been better
handled, but Insisted that he had
only been trying to prevent the IRS
from making social policy. He said
decisions Uke that should be left to
Congress.
At his seventh news conference
since taking office, Reagan also
said: -His economic sanctions
against Poland and the Soviet UnIon have had an· unspecified lm-

responsibility for

pact, but "we're not going to walt
forever for Improvement" In the
lives of the Polish people under
martial law. " We have those steps

we can take."
Reagan said there was " no question the situation in Poland is still
deterioratinK . They have tried to
present it as mOderating; it isn't."
The president did not spell !&gt;Ut nor was he asked -just what posl·
tlve effects he believes were
produced by the U.S. sanctions ori
trade, aviation and fishing rights
agail)st the Polish and Soviet governments In the wake of the mil·
itary crackdown on the Solidarity
reform movement.
Reagan said Pope John Paul II,
himself a Pole, sent a lengthy communication. ''He approves what we
have done so far."

-His tax returns show a "small
percentage of deductions for worth·
whUe causes" because he gives "In
ways that are not tax deductible
with regard to Individuals that are
being helped." Deputy White
House press secretary Larry
Speakes said he would not release
the names of people Reagan has
helped nor the amount of money he
has donated privately . .
On their 1980 federal Income tax
return, the president and his wife,
Nancy, showed .charitable contri·
butlons of $3,00i on a total Income of
$227,968.
I'm afraid that to

:·And

.Landfill major
A discussion on the new county
landfill highlighted the meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioners
Tue$day.
Commissioners have taken option on 150 acres of land In Salisbury
Township, near Howell Hill Cemetery, for a new landfill site.
Meeting with the commissioners
were representatives of Buckeye
Hllls, Jlm Hartzler of John David
Jones and Associates and Frank

..

Ohio

avoid future questions of this kind,
maybe beglnnlng this year, I'm goIng to have to start publiCly doing
some things,'' Reagan said.
-He sympathizes with Ameri·
cans who are out of work, but
" there are a mUllan people more
working than there were 1111980."
That statement directly contradicted figures complied by the Bu·
, reau of Labor Statistics, which
reported total employment In December
97,188,&lt;XXJ, down more
than a half-mUilon from January
1981, the month Reagan iook office,
and 94,&lt;XXJ !ewer than December of
1980.
"He just mlsspoke himself on
that," deputy press secretary Peter
RouSsel said later. "In reality, It
(employment) has slipped ...by
about half a m!Uion during that
period."
Roussel said !he president was
brtefed on the employment situation shortly before the news conterenet! and apparently was "off a
little bit Qll the numbers."
-He does not believe American
business has rejected hls economic
Incentives. "I think we're just seeIng a little caution. They want to
make sure before they proceed."
· -He does not rule out the .u se of
Ue detectors as one method of end·
lng leaks of classified Information
to reporters. His crackdown .on
news leaks, Reagan said, was necessary to "protect ·national secur-

was

commiss~on

f~ror
Vol.30,No.196
C.,.•triiJhrod 1982

"We didn't anticipate that It was
going to be as mis1nterpreted as 1t
was," Reagan added. "I am opposed with every fiber of my being
to iliscrlmlnatlon.':
WhUe the president's legislative
proposal to correct the situation Is
pendlng, the IRS Is being told not to
enforce Reagan's earlier decision
except In the case of two schools.
The administration already had
promised the Supreme Court it
would grant tax exempi!ons to the
two Institutions that have cases
pendll)g. ,

•

·~

However, It the lflgtslatlon passes
as the administration wrote It, the
two schools .- Bob Jones Unlver·
slty and Goldsboro (N.C.) Christian
Schools - would have to give bacK'
any benefits they gain from their
exemptions.
The two schools acknowledge
they have discriminatory policies
but.malntaln they are based on rei!·
gious belief and are therefore ex·
empt from government scrutiny.

Regular meeting sel
· A regular meeting of the Bu~keye
Hills-Hocking Valley Regwnal
Developm~nt DiStrict Executive
Comrrtittec will be held at 7 p.m.
Jan. 26 in the . BH-HVRDD conference room, 216 Pub nan St. , 410 St.
Clair building, Marietta.
Meigs CoUI\ty Treasurer George
M. Collins, treasurer and chairman
of the audit-budget cprrunittee, has
scheduled a meeting o! his comrnittee in the office of the executive
director of the same location at 6
p.rri. 'j'ueliday. ,
'

ARC over the next five to eight years. Also testlfy!ng were Gov. Jay
Rockefeller of West VIrginia and
various health, housing and high·
way program administrators from
across Appalachia.
The Reagan admlnlstratlon has
said the ARC should be shut down
as soon.as possible and that the private sector should assume the role
of developing Appalachia. Brown
said Ume should be made for a transition period.
"! think even the administration
Is finally beginning to acknowledge
that the private sector won't pick
up the cost of highways, commun_.
lty factutles and the Uke," he said.
He said the 13 Appalachian governors had devised a plan to ·gradually Involve 'the prtvate sector 1m
economic development, Including
an "Appalachian foundation" to
raise funds !rom Individuals and
corporations, especially those who
have benefited from the coal
business.
Rockefeller also urged that the
ARC be given Ume and money to
wind up Its affairs. "We ask you to

walk the last mile with us," Rockefeller said. as he urged U.S. Rep.
James Oberstar, D-Mlnn., and the
other subcommltee members to
push for a $7 billion plan to pha!JE!
out the ARC over !he next elghi
years.
Oberstar, a member of the House
Public Works and Transportation
Committee, chaired the day-long
meeting and said he favored a
gradual phase-out. Hls economic
development subcommittee Is stud·
ylng !he phase-out proposal and
wlU report ba&lt;;k to the full
committee.

I

NEXT QUESTION - Pretrldent Ronald Reagan polnta lo a reporter during his news conference In the East Room at the White HOWle
Tuet~day; This Is Ills seventh news conference since taking offlee. fAP ·
Laserphoto).

Mayor's Court

Four defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined In the
court ·of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
·
Forfeiting were Daniel R. Tay' lor, Middleport, $40, speeding;
Larry L. Cleland, Langsville, $375,
driving while intoxicated, Patsy
Hurley, $225 1 petty theft, and Jeff
was made showed that a central
eollectlon system In all probabllty Lewis, Gallipolis, $55, speeding.
Would not be cost effective.
Fined were David L. Triplett,
An alternatives public meeting Is
Portland, $250 and costs and three
to be held sometime In early
days In jaU, driving whUe intoxl·
March.
cated; Steven R. Peckham, Mid·
dlepori, $25 and costs, assured
Attending were Henry Wells,
clear distance; Charles M. Thopresident, Richard Jones ·and
mas, Middleport, $50 and cos.ts, dls· .
David Koblentz, commissioners,
orderly manner, and Thomas E.
Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and MarHoffner, Middleport, $125 an11
·
tha Chambers.
costs, reckless operation.

I,

Hobart F. Riggs .
Funeral services for Hobart F .
Riggs, 62, who died Monday at ~Is
Rutland Route . l residence, have
been set for 2 p.m. Frtday at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home lri Middleport.
A retired coal miner, Mr. Riggs
was born In Middleport, Feb. 15,

Hospital
news·--

The West VIrginia governor said
he dld not think prtvate companies,
especially those with headquarters
Veterans Memorial
outside tqe region, would fund sewerage, water and highway proAdmltted··Roy Aimes, Mlnersgrams necessary for develOpment
vllle;
· Margaret Goett, Pomeroy;
of Appalachia.
"The ARC has been esSential for ·. Eli White, Minersville; Aaron
Middleport;
Carrie
providing funds for such develoP. · . Crump,
Crump,
Middleport.
ment/' he said. j•AJso, our people
Dlscharged··Gladys
Cuckler,
UkeARC'swayofdolngbuslness; It
Taylor,
Blanche
.Gibbs,
Pauline
lets them use federal dollars where
Leo
Story,
Henry
Cunningham.
they are most needed with the fewest number of bureaucratic strings
attached." · ·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DI.SCHARGES JAN. 19

I

Area deaths .·

1919, ·a son 'of the late Bert and
Belva Weaver Riggs. He was also
preceded In death by two brothers,
Roy and Bert, and two sisters, [)o.
rothy Fay and Mildred.
Survtvlng are a son and
daughter-In-law, Richard and Pa·
tricla Riggs, Camp HUI, Pa.; seven
brothers, Robert, Route 1, Lanr,s·
vUie; carL and Ray, Zanesville;
Herbert and Dean, Crooksville;
Earl, Danvllle, and Amok! of Roseville; a sister, Dalma Nelson,
McConnellsv!Ue; three grandchild·
ren, Lisa, Faith and Josh Riggs,
Trooper, Pa.
Offlcla~ at services wUl be tha
Rev. Amos Tillis. Burial Will be In
the Gravel HUI Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call at the fun·
eral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.

Three defendants were fined
and seven others forfeited bonds
In the court of Pomeroy Mayor·
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Robert Lee White,
Pomeroy, $;l(ll.and co~. petty larceny; Larry F: Gleason, H~er­
son, w. Va., $350 and costs and
three days In jaU, driving while In-·
toxlcated, and Walter L. Rolier1s,
$100 ·and
1)0815.
Pomeroy,
tntbxicatlon.
Forfeiting were Darren Day,
Route . 1, ' Bidwell, $32; James
Butcher, Parkersburg, $33; Janet:!a j'toach, Pomeroy, $33; Earl
Fields, Pomeroy, $31; JiUnes
sl!angler, Rutland, $33, a!J on
speeding charges, and DQnald
Weese, Syracuse, $.11, lmpf!?P~!r
backing.

i

,Emergency runs...
Five emergency calls were ans·
wered by local units on Tuesday,
the Meigs County Emergency Med· ·
teal Service reports. ·
Middleport at 2: 19 p.m. took
Henry Dav!s, Cheshite, to HiiiZel'
Medical Center and at 10:!i5;p,m. ,
took ,Margaret ~t,t:~~y.
from Powell's parking uli to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Racine at
5:49 a:m. took Misty Grueser from
Route 124 to Veterans Memoi1al
Hospital and at 9: iO a.m. took Roy
Armes, MlnersviJI!t, to Veterans
Memorial. Syracuse at" 2:25 p, m.,
took Elvira Barr from Route 124 to
Holzer Medl.c al Center.

Mrs. Charles Arnold and daugh·
ter, Stanley Baker Jr., Carol Bar· ~-----------­
nett, Mrs. Donnie Barringer and
daughter, Linda Boyles, Leah
Brown, S)IZI!tta Click, Dorothy
Coulson, Vallery Cox, Thelma Dal·
. ton, Ronald Davis, Bobby Fout, Ai·
leen Hardin, Mrs. Brian Harold and
son, Grover Hazelwood, Mrs. Oscar Jordan Jr. and son, Lawrence
Lemer, Melinda Moore, Clara Mar'
•COATS
gan, Lasco Niday, Hattie Norris,
.•SNOWSUITS ._. .
Jason Nott, Michael Phllllps, Ruth
Shobe, Gretta Strong, Dewey White
•PLAYWEAR
Jr., Ray Wofford.

JANUARY.·
CLEARANCE SALE
IN PROGRESS

,~

BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy Chaffee,
son, Reedsville; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Grueser, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Henry, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Parsons, daughter, Jackson.

'

'

KIDDIE SHO,P~
11.1 W. 2ncf

PomCIJ'OY, Oh.
'-" •

ELBERFELDS.. ·

January Clearance!
MEN'S

FLANNEL SHIRTS
Good selection in work flannels •
sport flannels - western flannels. In
sizes S (14-Wh), M (15-15 1/z), l
(16-Wh) and X~ (17-17\7).

SALE PRICES
.

ALSO

BOYS FLANNEL SHIRTS
Sizes 8 to 20. Western boys flannels included.
You'll like the select(on.
SALE PRICES ''
HOSPITAL SESSION- Josepb Selley,' a IIUI"VIvor
ulllre cmb ul aa Alr,Fitrida jeWDer Jut WedJwday
ID WublltgWa, •pellb wftll reporten Ia lire lobby ul
tbe Nalloul Hospital . for .Ortbopaedlcs and

·-

Relrab!Uialloa Ia Ar:llngtoa, Va. Tuetrday. S.llley 111id he
Will ''llm01t lrul net cerlalaly JIOIIldve" tbal Ted
Smolea, a crab vldlm, bad IUrlflced blmlelf to r~~~ve
other paS11eJII1!n. (AP Luerplloto) •.

'

1 Section, 12 P - 15 Conti
A 11\uiHmodla Inc. Nowopopor

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Thunday, January 21, 1982

Explosion kills
••
7 ·coal miners

Governor Brown supports phase out
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Kentucky Gov. John Y. Brown says
the Appalachian Regional Commission should ~ phased out In an
orderly, businesslike fashion so
time Is available to flnlsh existing
projects and to draw the private
sector lnto ·development of the
region.
Brown was the last of a parade of
witnesses who appeared Tl!esday
before a congresslonalsubcommlt·
tee studying a plan to phase '?ut the

at y

e

!ty · and our ablllty to conduct
foreign. pollcy ....What we're doing
Is simply abiding by the existing
law."
·
On the matter of tax exemptionS
ror1sehools !bat discriminate, Rea·
gall said there was no basis In law
!or the IRS ban, and that the IRS
"had actually formed a social law
and was enforcing that social law."

topic

Cost estlmates lwtll be prepared
Petrie, county deputy health
by Hartzler by Jab. 26, and an eng!commissioner.
neering agreement wlU be signed
Paul Jarsen of Buckeye HU!s ~
at that time.
gional Development saldlt would
Hartzler and Petrie also disbe necessary to have an engineer- ·
cussed 'the Tuppers Plains Wastelng firm employed by the county for
water project. Hartzler gave the
a Farmer's Home Admlnstratlon
appllcatlon for a development
board an update on the facllltles
plan !bat Is being done.
grant for the new landfill site.
The board agreed to employ the
Hartzler also described several
alternatives for alleviating the wasfirm of John David Jones and
tewater problem. The stucly that·
Associates.

•

.,
enttne

ELBERFELDS.IN.POM·EROY

CRAYNOR, Ky. (AP)- Teams
of workers today pulled the last bodies !rom a !amlly-&lt;lwned coal
mine where seven men, Including
four members of the family, were
killed In a blast that a state official
says may have been caused by
coal-mining explosives.
It waG the fourth mining disaster
In the Appalachian coalfields In
!;even weeks. Thirty-one men have
died.
The coal at the RFH Mining Co.'s
No. 1 Mine had been mined with ·
explosives, an old-fashioned but rei·
atlvely Inexpensive technique that
also had been used in a mine In
nearby TQiirnost, Ky .. where eight
people were killed In an explosion
last month. Officials have specu·
Ia, ted the Topmost blast may have
been caused by a coal-dust explosion as coal was being blasted from

Its seam.
One body was removed Wednes·
day and workers today pulled the
remaining six from the mine on a
foggy eastern /{entucky hillside.
State Mines and Minerals Com·
missioner WUiard Stanley speculated explosives caused the blast.
The explosion fired debri s
hundreds of feet and spewed ~o
much coal dust It blackened a hlll
facing the mine. "said Mike Fro.
man, who was on' his way to the
mine when yellow smoke began
pouring from the lt.
Stanley said the type of explosive
used was a ··water gel," and he said
he was bamed that "It would gener·
ate that .much heat." Some explosive detonators were not In proper
containers, Stanley said.
UMw President Sam ChurCh:
who arrived at the mine In a helle·

IN THEW

whkh trupp&lt;'li seven mt•n with Dlstrlc130 UMW.sufely
•·nurrllnutors James lluyrl, c&lt;'nkr and Lc&lt;lnurrl
Flemin~ , right. I AP La:'it'rphuln)

LD
.

:...

cause layoffs
'

Jury discounts insanity defense
CINCINNATI ~ A jury that convicted a self-avowed devll worshiper In the death .of an advertising executive discounted Insanity
and male prostitution In Its deliberations, a juror says.
Thomas Turner, 19, of Covington, Ky., was sentenced by Judge
Thomas Crush to llfe and seven to 25 years In prtson following the
guilty verdict.
· .
Turner. a confessed male prostitute, was accused of murdering
Procter &amp; Gamble Co. advertising executive Donald Cemlak In
August 19!Kl.
The jury found Turner guilty of murder whUe committing aggr~ ­
vated robbery.
Turner was convicted of beating and S\ilbblng Cemlak, 33, with a
• hammer and several knives In Cemlak's home In the Mount Adams
section ofClnclnllatl:
·

Presiflent toasts

CHURCH DISCUSSES - UMWA President Sam
Chunh, h-It dis•·usst•d Wcdowsduy mine a&lt;•t•idmt

Financial crisis may

ToDAY
m••

opter loaned by West VIrginia Gov.
Jay Rockefeller, called the ace!·
dent a ··carbon copy" of !he Dec. 7
blast 20 miles away at Topmost,
Ky. . where eight miners were
killed. Church had been In Charleston, W.Va .. discussing mine-safety
with IIDckefeUer.
Church ' said he talked with Ken·
tucky Gov. John Y. Brown Jr. by
telephone Wednesday night and
said the governor wanted ''to see If
there Is some way we might have
changes In our legislation" to ban
the use of explosives In underground mines."
The blast killed brothers 6umls,
Don and Jack Hamilton, along with
Wade Hamuton , Palmer Edwin
McKenny, Ronnie Hall and Thurman Reynolds, Wade Hamilton
was the son of mine co-owner Plir·
vis Hamilton ..

GOP names
new recorder

anniv~rsary

WASHINGTON - President Reagan gathered the hierarchy of
his administration on Wednesday to toast hls first anniversary In
office and remind one and all that "you're here to drain the swamp'"
of big government.
·
Later, at a formal, $10,fXXl.a·table dinner dance at the Washington
Hilton, the president was to tell blg contributors to Republlcan
coffers that "the days of sensational. quick victories are mostly
behlnd us."'
The message was similar to one Reagan delivered earlier Wednesday at a pep rally, complete with brass band, In .the Inter·
department auditorium In the Commerce Department for 1.500
presidential appointees.

U.S. blocks Israeli sanctions
UNITED NATIONS- Jordan and Syria are calling for anemer·
gency General Assembly session to debate Israel's annexation of !he
Golan Heights because the United States vetoed a Security Council
re501uflon calling for sanctions ~gains! the Jewish state.
Jordanian Ambassador Hazem Nuselbeh, who sponsored the
. sanctions resolutions, said after Wednesday's vote thathewouldask
the 15-natlon council to convene the assembly sesslon:'fhe-157-natlon
assembly's Third World majority probably would censure Israel,
but the assembly Is not empowered to take punitive action against a
member.

Policy forces sales to government_
WARSAW, Poland- The government announced a new policy
Wednesday that, lr)effect, forces farmers to sell grain to the state. It
appeared to be a step toward obllgatory farm sales to combat shor·
tages of bread. ftour and.meat.
The official news agency PAP reported ln .a brief dispatch that
grain only If they deliver grain to state
farmers would be sold
purchasing centers.
.
The action falls short of obllgatory sales to the state- a policy
Poland abandoned In the 1950s. Polish officials have promised they
wlU never return to obligatory sales.
Polish sources say bread rationing coupons are being prln~, and
other signs also suggest rationing of bread may begin soon.

seoo

Winning Ohio lottery number
I

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lotte:oy's dally game "The Number" was 714.
The lottery reported a loss of $395,054.50 from the wagering on Its
dally game. The loss came on sales of ~.631.50, whUe holders of
winning tickets are entitled to share $1,350,686, lottery officials saki.

Wectther foreCtJSt
Rain Ukely late tonight ancj Friday. Lows tonight 30-35, Highs
Frtday near 50. Chance of precipitation 70 percent tonight and Fri·
day. Winds easterly 10-15 mph tonight.
Ext-+cl Ohio Forecut
Saiurday tbroulh Moadq.
sa-en ch81111nlf to - llunterl Jllld tunrlng CGider SaAirday,
- ICIUerecl llunterl rnalllly In the rrodlleMI SuDday and
MCIIJda1. Hlp. In 1be till early Saiurday, bullernper1r&amp;uret lfetrerIIIJ tailrlc clurtD&amp; tile da.J, ..... Ill the, . Sunday Jllld Monday.
.:-. ~u 8uncla)' •
'
'

""""'IQ'-

NAMED RECORDER ·
Emrnogene Hol!rleln of Syracwre has been appointed Meigs
County recorder by the Republl·
can Central Committee. ·She
succeeds the late Eleanor
Roblroa.

.

Emmogene Holstein, College
Road, Syracuse, was appointed
Meigs County Recorder by !he Republican Central Committee Wednesday night.
Mrs. Holstein replaces the Ia te
Eleanor Robson. She wUl serve one
year, but must !Ue for nomination
and election this year to continue In
the post beyond 1982. ·
Mrs. ' Holstein Is presently em·
ployed at Elberfelds In Pomeroy.
She was a former employe of
Kingsbury Home Sales and served
as secretary for the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce. She Is a
member of the Syracuse Asbury
Methodist Church and a graduate
of Pomeroy High School. Her hus·
band, Bob died ·In 1975 and her only
son. BobbY, was kUied In a hunting
accident In 1976.
She has two daughters, Teresa
Holstein who Is presently attending
Hocking Technical School, and Dl·
ana Mills, Syracuse; two foster
daughters , Susie Knapp, Worthington a nd Jeannie Casto, Red House,
W.Va., and one step-daughter,
Gayle King, Buffalo, W. Va. She
also has two granddaughters and
two step-grandchildren.
Mrs. Holstein Is the daughter 'Of
the late Mr .• and Mrs. William C.
Edwards who were residents of
Syracuse.

•

at GDC

· COLUMBUS, Ohio I API -The problems make addltionalcutspos·
slate's current fiscal crisis could • slble. He said the department has
mean additional staff cuts In the been notified by the state Office of
Department of Mental Retardation Budget and Managemeni that It
and Developmental DisablllUes, can expect cuts of about$8.4 million
which has already announced plans because of the state's current fiscal
crisis. He said the department will
to abolish l.&lt;XXJ jobs.
Department Director i'l.udy Mag- try to ward off possible staff,-educ·
none said Wednesday that superin- !Ions by ol!Uilnlng OBM and state
tendents at the Orient. Columbus Controlling Board approvals to
and Gallipolis Developmental Censpend anticipated Medicaid
ters have been asked to recom·
revenues.
mend 1,000 positions for
He said the department also Is
abolishment wlthln the next five
considering redl!clng sabsldles to
months.
county mental retardation proMagnone said, however, !hat the
grams by 5 percent. virtually eliml·
abolishments are not the result of
natlng equipment purchases and
the state's most recent fiscal crisis.
reducing developmental center opHe said the cuts are being sought eraUng hinds.
The client reductions at developbecause the biennial budget b111 ordered client reductions.
mental centers· mean revenue
But Magnone said state budget . losses at Ortent.. Columbus and Gal-

llpolls. Those losses translate lntt
abolishment of 650 jobs at Orient,
180 jobs at· Columbus and 140 positions at Galllpolls, Magnone sa!d.
A department spokesman said
most of the positions are now fllled.
Magnone said the actual number
and type of positions to be ahoUshed
wUI be deterr'nlned by the regional
•COmmissioner and developmental
center S~!perintendent and wiU' be .
based on the center's needs and the
aval111,ble funds.
.
Magnone .saki the department
will try to inlnlrii!Ze the impact of
the cuts on clients by reducing the
department's admlnlst.ratlve staff.
The department currently employs
7,IXXI people to care for about 4,500
clients at state developmental
centers.

Fire leaves .Meigs family homeless
Mr. and Mrs. David Priddy and

three children were left homeless
and all of lhelr possession were des·
troyed when !Ire struck their mobile home on Beech Grove Road at

Officers
working
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . (API Pollee are 011 the streets In full
strongth as scores of officers have
returned to work after a five-day
slckout to protest the clty"s refusal
to discuss a pay raise.
Pollee Capt. N.E. Noble said that
nearly all the 87 officers who stayed
off the job were back to work Wed·
nesday. The 112-man Ioree had to
run emergency shifts staffed by su·
pervlsory personnel after rank·
and-!lle began caiUng In sick last
Thursday.
" Most all of them are back. A
few, very few, are out that are
sick,·· said Noble, adding that some
officers were In the hospitaL
Many officers who stayed of!
work were anxious to know what
action the city might take against
them, Noble said.

about 2:10p.m. Wednesday.
Melissa Priddy, ll·month-old
daughter of the couple, was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital, for
observation as a result of smoke
Inhalation and minor bums. She
was kept overnight but was released this morning.
The Rutland Fire Department
answered a call to the home which
was leveled by fire.
· Mrs. Priddy reported she was goIng to a neighbor's to use a telephone and noticed smoke and fire
at the Priddy mobile home. A
neighbor, Wayne Adams, ran to the
home and took Melissa from the
trailer. She was taken to the hasp!-

tal . by the Rul.land Emergency·
Squad.
Cause of the tire was believed to
have been an electrical problem.
No monetary loss has been set. The
other two Prtddy children are tour ·
and seven.
Pomeroy firemen answered a
call to the Kevin Hudson home on
Welshtown Hill at 7:·48 p.m. Wed·
nesday where a tire had broken out.
Fire officials saki that blaze was
kept confined to the kitchen where
It started. Cause has not been determined nor has monetary loss been
sa. There wa~ Insurance coverage
on the h!&gt;Use owned by Vernon Hudson, officials said.

Officials delay
education cuts.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -State
leaders are skeptical about the
officials have delayed cuts In edudeficit.
cation funding and released mil·
"Yes, I think that's a !alr statelions of dollars for schools wh!le
ment ... I asked (budget dlreqtor)
lawmakers, some skeptical,
Howard Collier If he would go over
ponder a projected $1 billion state
the figures agaln," Riffe said.
·
government deficit.
Rhodes and the legislative leadEducation and administration of·
ers agreed to delay the school cuts.
flclals 5ay proposed cuts would
The legislator-dominated Con·
bring disaster to schools.
trolling Board then approved reHouse Speaker Vernal G. Rlffe
lease of the full $166.7 million In
Jr. said Wednesday no one has been
state subsidies for January due
able to satisfactorily explain th~ de'
'
schools. ·
·
ficit to him.
"We should walt uniU the execu"1llat's exactly what's bothering
tive and the other leaders decide
me," Riffe, D-New Boston, saki. "I
how to handle the problem and not
knew we hail a problem, but not one
try
to do It In a flt of hysteria,"
of that magnitude unlll we were
George
Lord, board president,
told last Thursday."
saki.
The
action means cuts cannot
Rltfe was among leglstatlve leadbe
Imposed
until February.
ers who met privately with Gov. ,
The
Education
Department was
James A. Rhodes for a· briefing
braced
for
spending
cuts · thiS
from budget experts Wednesday.
month.
Rltfe was asked later if some

MEET ON BUDGET CRISIS - Ohio Senate President
,
rtgllt twnlllo talk with r"JJ&lt;Irten briefly before entering a meeting In the
Guve'nror'• office W~dnesday In Columbus. With Glllmor l• Stirurte finance committee chairman Stanley Aronoff. Legislative ltlldei'H from both
~ and •tate budget dlrc&lt;tor Howard Collier met wlth GnverntO" .
James Rlrocle1r for more than 90 minutes In •n •ttcmpt In Iron uut the
Klate'a fhrca1 problems. (AP l..aserphuto)

�21

Commentary

League leading Southern travels .to Eastern Friday

Page--2-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thurtday, January 21, 1982

By SCOTT WOLFE
Friday evening, when Southern 's
Tornadoes travel cross-county to
play .Eastern's Eagles, one of the
greatest and _most notoriou:&gt; high
school basketball rivalries of all
tjme will be renewed.
, So far, Southern has been
awesome, compiling a perfect 11-ll
record, while Eastern stands at 6-4.
The Eagles got off to a great start,
then stumbled through hard times,
·but ~rc now back on the righttrack.
Southern, lacking in heieht, but
overflowing with quickness, has
be en
rem paging through
Southeastern OhiiJ thi' season
totally obliterating.its P!Jponenls and
anything left.in its pa!h.
The Tornadoes of Coach Carl
Wolfe, have torn away pages of the
past and used them successfully
throughout the campaign, su1··
prising both fans and opponents
along the way.

Big Stakees____~_____________w_ill_w_m_F_.B_~_k_ley_.__
h.

Berry's Wo.rld

The acceleralin~ impatience with
such as Helmut Schmidt, who
celebrated the irnposili"'l of martial
law in Poland by visiting East Ger·
1nany and cooing with the folks on
the other side of the great wall, is
especially vexing becau:&gt;e on the oi~e
hand we are entitled to be indignant ;
but, on the other hand, our in·
dignation perfectly suits the
strategic designs of the Soviet
Union .

-~
i

;
.11:

..

I
II

·Reagan is resolute in his intentions,
why is jt necessary to negotiate in
· tlie matted The next question that
arises is: Asswning that the Soviet
Union were to withdraw its ~
missiles, w~ere would they then be
located? With a range of 4,500 miles,
they could retreat to an area east fi
Moscow and still serve their deadly
plll'pOse as instruments of intimidation against European cities.
To judge by i&gt;ast experience with
Soviet negotiators, it is unlikely that
Mr. Rea~an is ju:&gt;tifiably under
they will withdraw their missiles,
fire for not acting lnore decisively in
never mind ll)at doing so would be of
the rnaller of Poland. Henry
unqu,estionable significance. More
Kissinger correctly indict&lt; our -· likely the Soviet negotiators )\'ill, in
failure to cloo;e off financial credit
the coming year, accelerate the
for the Soviet Union and our inexpropaganda aimed ~ I di~ipating the
plicable determination to continue to
negotiate with the leaders of the
Soviet Union precisely at a moment
~PND~~-·
when it has been proved that
negotiations with the Soviet Union
t'fl'f'l"~
don't accomplish anything. We are
.
.~~.-'
at fault for indecisive leadership.
But we cannot signify to Europe that
we have arrived at tenninal im·
patience. Not without giving to the
Soviets that which they most desire,
namely the dissolution of the NATO
alliance.

European world. When the day
comes to go forward with the
deployment of the NATO missiles,
the Soviet Union counts on a Europe
prostra(j! with fear , indecision and .
flatulence . That Europe the Soviet
Union will rllb in our face as an area
fliintly weak, unwilling to resist
what will he recognized as a Soviet
juggernaut.
Our task is to recognize thai for all
that there is demoralization in
Europe, particularly among the intellectuals, the prospect of life under
the dominion of the Soviet Union '"ill
ultimately bring right reason to the
councils of an area of the world
where freedom and civilization have
most conSpicuously flouri shed.

Now Mr . Reagan's special
problem these days is, without
rodomontade, -to exe" genuine
leadership. He has not done so tn the
matter of Poland, but It is pot;Sible
that he has his reasorfs.
But if Mr. Reagan is•wrong, then
his miscalculation will bring a grief,
and a resignation, that is appropriate to the occasion. Poland
has given us a kind of corporate
valor a~nost unheard of in this ceotury.
If Poland goes down, then
the Soviet Union's pressure will rise.
And NATO will face the final test li
1983, but will do so without the
strategic sense of confidence in
American leadership. The stakes
are that big.

.. ..

. . ,ill

Meigs plays

•,

.. ....!1

. .•·

Hjs

~iggest

gaffe

President Reagan celebrated his first anniversary In office this week
with his biggest gaffe and there was no trouble finding someone to accept
Ah , but they say, it is for all intents
the l)Jame.
The question Involved the policy Qf. denyJng tax-exempt status to schools and purposes already a shambles.
that dlscrlmlna te on racial grounds. The poilcy had been In effect since the That is only half true. _The day to
days or Richard M. Nixon's presidency, but Reagan threw It out because watch for is the day in 1983 whep the
he said such decisions should be made by Congress, not such agencies as alliance is scheduled to begin the
deployment of our theater nuclear
the Internal Revenue Service.
Reagan's decision, which hewed to the Republican Party platform, weapons. We are, for reasons that
prompted an outcry and led his aides to worry that he was being perceived elude some of us, at present
negotiating whether to go forward
as a racist.
It was followed by an announcement that he would submit legislation to with a corrunitmen! to rlenloy. Mr.
remedy the situation - to deny the tax-exempt status by law, rather than Reagan said in No·J•!rnher thet this
. was a zero option negotiation. By
• by administrative tlat. Then came the legislation Itself.
Reagan, asked at his news conference TUesday whether It was his start that he meant that either the Soviet
who was to blame, said: "No one put anything over on me. The buck stops Union would withdraw its ss-20
at my desk. I'm the originator or the whole thing, and I'm notgolngtodeny missiles - in which case we would
hold back on our Pershing and
that It wasn't handled as well as It could be."
News stories appeared last weekend bearing the Imprint of leaks !rom Tomahawk missiles - or l!!se we
the White House aimed at placing Edwl!TME!ese Ill, Reagan's counselor, would proceed to deploy .
The question arises : If Mr.
at the center of the controversy.
•
Administration Insiders were said to have reporled that It was Meese's
handling of the entire matter, with little help !rom the other top members
·at the White House staff, that brought the problem on. It was Meese's
behavior, these reports said, that brought a flash or anger !rom Michael K.
Deaver, the deputy chief of staff.
David Gergen, the cautious, quiet White House spokesman, tried on
Tuesday morning to put the matter In perspective. No, he said, there was
WASIDNGTON (AP) -All the
representatives.
1
no IU-wUI between Meese and Deaver. He said the matter could have been admlnlstration had to do was noThe _episode stems from the de-; .
handled better.."! think Ed !eels that way," he said.
,
thing and the Issue of tax exemP:
regulation drive of an admlnlslra·
Pointing a finger at the White House staff- and not at Reagan, Gergen !Ions for racially segregated
lion pledged and determined to cut
' said: "I think the staff work could have been better. Ifthere'sblame,aUof private schools would have_ reaway at the rule-making power
us share responslblllty for It, Including myself."
mained a matter lor the Supreme
wielded by federal agencies. That
To a White House staff filled with lawyers, "It sounded like a fairly Court, with the politicians safely on
was a Reagan .c ampaign promise
narrow Issue, a legal issue," he said. "I was not aware at the time that (t the sidelines.
and the administration boasts of
was a 12-year pollcy."
progress toward fulttulng u. But In
Instead, that Issue has , been
Gergen, the director of commuplcatlons, said he did not understand the added to the list of troubhisome sothe case of the school tax exemplull Implications or the Initial decision and blamed himself for not taking · cial questions to be confronted by
tions, that political goal obscured
the greater polltical peril ol reversCongress In an election year.
the time to understand lt.
An eleCtion-time debate on the
Ing an 11-year-old federal policy.
But a remedy may be In sight.
The Reagan White House, one year old, Is thinking of forming a Cabinet clvll rights sensitivities of a RepubThe Republican campaign plat·
CouncU on Legal Artalrs. Thus, Reagan could get Cabinet-level advice lican administration Is not going to
form Included a pledge to end "the
when he Is contemplating a step that may again take him Into such legal help the GOP. It's no problem for
unconstitutional i'egulatory ven·
members ol Congress In frozen podella"
against ·tndependent
hot water.
schools, blaming It aU on the Carter
sitions - Southern conservatives
who had been pressing lot the tax
administration. But the Internal
Revenue SerVIce policy that denied
exemptions or for liberals who
tax exemptions to private schools
a.rgue that to grant them .Is to suband colleges that dlscrlrnlnate •on
sidize segregation.
The more difficult spot Is that of the basis ol race was Instituted durI ju:&gt;l read a letter from a man at he doesn't mean to drink and be
the
centrlst
senatorS
and
Ing the presidency of Republican
Long Bottom who says there are no merry.
children gain~ hungry in · Meigs
Some people look out lor just
County.
themselves. If I was having a good
We have children all over ,this meal, I would want my neighbor to
county going hungry.
have a good meal. Have you ever
Sir. you are talking about Social called in a poor neighbor to eat with
Security. When it was first started, it you.
was for a working man. Now the rich
It would be better than seeing a
" It's speech that keeps the Oower
Women, striving to 15et ahead in
man has taken it over. Please check man sitting in a bar throwing his
the career -world are willing to
girl~ lbe gutter."
into the movie industry and see how money away.
examine anything that might hold
Professor Henry Hlggl"" In "My
many actors are gelling it. Check
I still think there is enough money
them back - including what comes
Fair Lady."
and see how many millionair~.s are spent on bOO'le and cigarettes to
out
of their mouths.
~etting it.
keep the poor people of 1\'jeigs coun·
A lot of women put you off with
As a fonner speech teacher, I was
I also want to mention the ty , I was one man who worked every
·
pleased to see an article in the
their voices.
bankruptcy law. It use to be callc the day a nd sometimes had to go to bed
I had a friend whose voice was so December "Cosmopolitan" titled :
poor's man law , bul no more hungry. TI1al was under the Hoover
shrill, I cringed every time we !w1- " And Out of Her Mouth Came
becall.'ie the rich man has taken it, administration, the Republican, par·
ched. It was like being in an E . F . Toads." Author John Clement wrote
too. Who made the rich man hi s ty.
Hutton ad : Everybody In the that "Women, more than men, are in
money more than likely .the poor or
Don't think for one minute we
. danger of having their personalities
working man or woman 7 Now, il you won't have it in the Reagan ad· restaurant turned to listen to her but it wasn't because she · had defined on the basis of voice. In a job
are an honest person I wonder if you· ministration. Look at the money he
something imporlant to say.
interview, a good voi~e may be more
pay the " Lord" his share for giving has stopped here in 1• Ohio for
For
a
time,
I
worked
under
a
irnpor1ant thana good resume:"
you your health and the air that you l'llucation, look at the money he· has
woman
executive
who
only
spoke
in
Clement writes about a woman
breathe. Now I think the Lord deser· taken away for road construction.
a
whisper:
It
was
killing
to
watch
with
a nasal twang being typed as
ves 10 percent of your earnings. Do
That is just he beginning. Please
six-footers
come
to
her
desk
and
whiny
, complaining and un·
7
you think that is right That is the don't gel jealous because poor
bend
like
pretzels
·
trying
to
hear
.
cooperative.
A breathy, whispery
law of the Bible. That kind of sluff people get food stamps and old
what
she
had
to
say.
voke
is
interpreted
as a sign of in·
doesn't come out of Washington.
' people Social Security.
'There
was
another
woman
at
the
decisiveness
and
the
woman will
The Lord means for the poor
Ben Batey
olfice
who
wore
expensive
designer
likely
be
passed
over
for
someone
people to have some as the rich. But
clothes, had a great figure and with a more positive-sounding voice.
looked as good as a rnagazine cover. A high-pitched, chirpy voice is con·
Until she opened her mouth, that is. sidered "non-executive."
Ill Court Slreel
Out carne a whiny, complaining
The ideal, of course, is a finn ,
P001eroy , Olllo
cabn,
pleasantly pitched voice.
voice,
totally
destroying
the
illusion.
fJI-Ih-!IM
OEVarE010111E INTERF.ST OFntE MEIGS-MASON AREA
.Vntil receJ)11y._i1,.J.Yas ~ed..Jljlrothy)i!lmoff, prominent New
that the voice was a fixed part of the York voice and speech consultant, ' person.
,
helps women achieve that with

·-

•

Tax exemption issue added to congress' list

Letter to ihe editor

-Don't be jealou.,___ _ _ _ _ _ __

Richard M. Nixon.
In September, the Justice Department had described the IRS position as legally soun&lt;1. Two
Southern schools with admittedly
discriminatory policies challenged
the IRS rule, and the, Supreme
Court agreed to hear their appeals.
A ruling was expected by next
summer.
But the administration stepped In ·Jan. 8, telling the court It was revokIng the IRS regulation that was
under appeal.
Four days later, Reagan said he
would propose and push legislation
to deny tax-exempt status to dis·
criminatory - schools.
That
amounted to a. request that Congress undo what the adinln!stratlon
had just done.
In keeping with the policy of dei'egulatlon, that makes some
sense; the administration has held

all along that rules should be made
by law and not by appointed
officials.
The president apparently was not
Involved In the deliberations, or .even the decision, on the IRS rule. .
He was told of It the day before It ·
was announced.

The whole exercise raised an .
Issue netiher ·the administration
nor Congress needs, and left an lm·
pression of disarray and mlscalcu- ·
latlon at the White House.
, It wUI take time to pass the bill. There are likely to be attempts to ·
minimize Its Impact on one hand, ··
and to broaden It on the other.
There Is always the threatofflllbuster. And there wUI always be Democrats
to
note
that
the
admlnlstratlon could have avoided ·
the whole business just by leaving It
alone.

Saying it with styiiL._l_e_______R_us_ty-Br_ow_n

· The Daily Sentinel

L

I~

~-

.

techniques to overcome high pitch, tense, speaking too fast, too low, too .
loudly and without adequate breath.
nasality, stridency and breathiness.
supnort.
Other women, according to the ar·
"I had to learn to relax, first of
tide, are working to conquer
all,"
says Betty, " to be a Raggedy
atrocious grarrunar, maddening
Ann
with neck muscles limp as
habits, including the repeated "ya
cooked
spa~l1etli. I do exercises that
know?" M-idwestern twangs and
11
t:nake
me
stick out my :;tcmo~~ct1 ·
Brooklyn dese, demand do~e . "
when
I
breathe,
:' ~met!oi:~~ women
It just so happens that a friend of
are
trained
not
to
~o. It's known as
mine, Betty, a veteran elementary
-breathing
from
the
diaphragm."
'
school teacher in Waukegan, Ill.. is
She teamed that she hadabused
very much into speech therapy these
her vocal 'hords by speaking too
days. She's been "working out"
low . Her correct pitch is B ~low:
twice a week for seven months With
middle C. "So I play a pitch pipe to·
a speech therapist at the Speech and
hear ihe right tone before I start
Language Clinic of Northwestern
speaking,"
she says. With great ef·
University . ·
Betty 's involv emen t · was fort, she's also learned to slow down
and speak more softly. ,
precipitated by a crisis, not an
Her · next lest: to remember all
awakening; however.
this
in the classroom, the grocery:
" I spent the final two weeks of
store
and at crowded cocktail par~
school last May with a sign around
ties.
my neck reading 'Voiceless.' Over
" When all ibis is over, I expect to
the years, she had ignored warning .
be
a much better teacher and a lo(
signals of occasional hoarseness and
more
effective with my third!
laryngitis. When she lost her voice
grailers,"
says Betty.
'
completely, she was worried enough
She
and
many other women ar~
to go to the speech clinic for testing,
discovering
it's not only what you
ptng anaprOfessil!hal help. Her
say
that
counts
- but how it comes
problems were diagnosed as: too
out.

OOONESBURV"

1111XJ5HT lilT Fat. 71/E
ff 11/115 fNI- 1EIII.J.Y !JIG
IJM/.5. ff.ft!.

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
PubiiJber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Mlii1Pl P'Ubllllttr/COIU'olkr

Ge...-oiJMo ......

Besides ;is impressive overall averaging 52.1 points per game, produces Eastern's power plays in·
return for this lmporlant game.
record, southern ranks high jn the while allowing 50.9 per game. side,butalsocanopenuptheoutside
Sprague i~ a great rebounder and
state's AP poll and again has proven Eas_tern has oulsl'Ored its opposition gar.ne with his shooting ability.
owned a 5.5 scoring average.
to be the premier team in the SVAC, 5:H'oo9.
.
Mike Bi!l8ell, another good outside
When it is time to hit the court
its record~The unbeaten Southerners are led rna'n, owns a 9.3 average, Greg Cole
Friday evening at 8 p.m. one can bet
~';astern, despite suffering a frigid by Kent Wolfe. Wolfe is p!ayinl( his has a 6.1 average and handles the · Coach Dennis Eich.inger will have
cold streak, seems to have regained third season as the Southern point
ball handling duties, and P. G. Riffe
his Eagles well-prepared for the en·
its fonn going into Friday's irn· guard and his experie•ice and ability
has reached the 7.6rnark.
counter. making for another great
porlant contest. Eastern's killer in· has made him one of Southeastern
Charlie Ritchie and Roger Bisell
game .
stinct is still present--The Eagles are Ohio's great Ooor leaders. Wolfe has own 3.7 and 3.5 averages respecIn the preliminary contest Coach
still in t'Onlenlion for the SVAC title, tallied 256 points this season for a lively. Big Paul Sprague, who has
Howie Caldwell's Tornado reserves
whileowr\inga2-2loopret'Ord.
23.2average.
missed four games with tom
will meet the little Eagles of-Coach
Southern's offensive attack has ' Southern's rebounding ace Robert ligaments in his ankle, hopes to
Arch Rose, beginning at 6:30 p,rn .
been as potent as u:&gt;ual. The Brown has a 10.7 average; Richard r-.--------~~~!!i!~iiii!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif1
deyastating sharpshooters have can· Wolfe, an outside shooter has a 10
•
ned 315 of 689 attempts for a potent point average; and ,sharp-shooti ng
OHIO LOTTERY ' S
45.7 shooljng percentage.
Jay Rees claims a 7.4 mark. Junior
Eastern, who improved over its guard Zane Beegle has raised his
Due to popular demand_,
Ohio Lottery has extended
latest outings, has hit 203 of 536 at· average to 6.3, while Torn Roseberry
"P ick 4'.' drawings to twice a week - Tuesday &amp; Thur·
temptsfor37.8pereent.
hasa4.8mark. ·
sday. As a result, all belling will close 10 minutes earlier
The Tornadoes are averaging 12.2
Eastern's agile center and leading
- lo
. r the "Pick 4" game only (7 : 10p.m. (ather than 7:20
points per game, while its oppt)nent scorer, Tim Dill , tl:.s raised his
p
. m.). Bets made Thursday after 7: 11f"ji. m. through
has been allowed jus! 49.3 points. average to a llealthy 18 points per
Tuesday
7:10 p . m . are for Tuesday's drawing , Bets
Southern has outscored its foe 79fr game. On the season, Dill l1as 180
made
Tuesday
after 7: 10 through Thursday 7:10 are lor
534 in 11 ga1(les. The Eagles are points in 10 games. Dill not only
, Thur_s day's drawing. On Jan. 1, the Ohio Lottery Com·
mJssron pard out nearly 52 million on the Number 111 for
the past 6 weeks. Shammy's payoff has exceeded it's
bets. Why not try your luck! P'lay the regular J Digit or
the ever-increasing popular "Pick 4" ·
Roger Kovalchik ~verages 7.6, Nick
Saturday evening in a 6 p.m. conSHAMMY'S THEN 1 CARRY ·OlfT
605 W. Main St .
Riggs 7.5, and ric~ Edwards 5.1 after test Meigs travels to Waharna, 3-5, to
BEER ·WINE
Pnmcrov. Oh . 45769
12 games. Ashley, Meigs' all-time face the White Falcons. The varsity
leading rebounder is averaging nine j1lt follows the reserve tilt.
rebounds per game.
Wahama travels to powerful
The Meigs reserves are now 1·7 Southern on Tuesday.
within league play and 4-7 overall.
Friday's game time is 6:30 for
The young Marauders are coached reserves and 8 p.m. for the varsity
by Mick Childs.
lilt.

IQI

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New1 Edllor

r

. ..

ROCK SPBINGS - The Meigs
Marauders, currently winless at ().
12, will return horne this Friday
evening to host the Fighting Ironton
Tigers at Larry R Morrison gymnasinm, then· again hit the road at
,Waharna on Saturday.
Ironton's Tigers are now 5-5
overall a.nd 3-3 within U1e SEOAL
league, while Meigs is winless at 1)..8
in loop play.
In the first lime around this season
Ironton claimed a 5!1-32 win over
Meigs but the Marauders led the fir·
st quarter, then stayed close until
the final minutes of play.
In that game Meigs hit only 14 of 49
fi eld g081s for 28.6 percent, a per·
l'Cntage that is rarely good enough
for vietory .
_" The always tough Tigers have
barely outscored its opponen1546-541
in overall standings. The Tigers own
: a 54.6 offensive output and a 54.1
• defensive average.
'• · Offens ively both clubs are
~'statistically close as Meigs averages
! 51 points per outing after 12 games.
On the year, Meigs has scored 612
points.
Defensively,
howeve r , th e
Marauders are giv ing up too many
points. Its opponents have averaged
68.4 points per game, outscoring
Meigs 82Hl12.
Despite the past and the current
Meigs' record, basketball fans know
that anything can happen.
The Marauders are coached by
Coach Gordon Fisher in his second
year as head mentor. Fisher, before
corning to Meigs, had suecess in the
bilsketball minded Indian Valley
South program where he served as
an assistant.
Of late, Meigs has been consistently impro-ving in field goal per·
centage. hitting 118 of 294 in its last
five games for a 4ll percent. A big
boost in percentage carne when MHS
shot 52 percent at Wellston. Overall
the locals have canned 248 of 682 for
36.3 percent.
Meigs is lacking in deptl1 as
statistics show. In most games only
five players or less are able to break
into the scoring colwnn.
Two times seven players produced
· scores and two times six managed
some olfense. _
Individually, Bob Ashley leads
Meigs with 189 points for a IS. 75
average. Randy Murray is next in
line with 128 points fqr 10.6 points,

Iro~ton ·Friday

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Monge signs
with Indians
CLEVELAND iAPl - The
agent for left-handed pitchers Rick
Waits and Sid Monge says the
Cleveland Indians "are on their
way to ha vlng the first 20-rnan
pitching staff In baseball history."
Monge was a free agent untll the
American League team re-signed
him Wednesday for three years,
making hJm the 18th pitcher on the
Indians' rpster. Terms of the contract were not disclosed.
He and Walls, who signed a
three-year pact with the club last
week, are both represented by
Houston-based
agent
Alan
Hendricks.
"At the end or the 1981 season, I
would have saki Cleveland had a
less than 10 percent chance of retaining Monge and Watts," Hendricks said. "But (team president)
Gabe Paul and (general manager)
PhD Seghl have worked hard and
made the best pfters."
Monge, 30, a native of Agua
Prieta, Mexico, was 3-5 With a 4.3!1
earned run average In 1981. In tile
past two years, the rellever has al·
lowed 21 home runs In 147 Innings.
"Sid's problem has been confl·
dence," Paul said. "His arm Is fine:
Other teams were Interested In
him. We belleve he wUI regain his
old fonn. If not, we wciuld not have
s!gDed him. He just has to go back
to thinking he can get hitters out."
MOnge's best year In Cleveland
was .1979. _when he was selected to
the aU-star team. He finished the .
)'e8J' With a 12-10 record, 15 18Ves
and a 2.40 ERA.

lfliTIIK fllei'Y

MOOUN P!OBLEMS
.,d SlOUCTION

.

=
-·

-

.
"

•.• t

�•
Page

4-The Daily- Sentinel

post
81-36 victory
second hall attack In the fourth
sta nza behind the shooting Strq~d
and senior Dave Sands.
Hitting double figures for Kyger
Creek were Moles with 16, Price
had 12, whUe Cla rk and Stroud
added 11 each.
Tolliver was the ani ~ Wildcat In
double figures with 12 points.
According to the charts, Kyger
Creek sank 29 of 51 floor attempts
and 23 of 38 free throws. Hannan.
eonnected on 12 of 48 from the field
and 12 of 22 at the charity stripes.
The Bobcats collected 49 rebounds with sophomore J .D. Brad'
bury gettlng 10.
Kyger Creek also won the reserve contest, 47·32. John Ranegar
had 15 points In pacing the wiMers
while teammate Chuck Vogel
canned 11. Chrls Johnson led Ha n·
na n with 10 points:
Kyger Creek travels to North
Gallla Frlday, Hanna n on Saturday
and goes to Elk Valley, Monday.

took

CHICAGO iAPl -Destiny, Mlke
Dltka said, brought him back to
Chicago. But how long he stays on
as the Bea rs' new head coach likely
wiU depend on how well he suc·
ceeds In transplanting the Dallas
Cowboys' offense to the colder
climes of the North.
" I' rn not going to do everything
(Dallas) Coach (Tom) Landry
dtd, " Dltka said at a Wednesday
news conference announcing that
he had had bee hired as Neill Am·
rstrong's successor. "I can't be all
things to all people."
But Dl!ka acknowledged that his
State, fi8.67 In overllme; Central
Michigan nipped Nort hem Illinois nine years as an assistant coach on
64-62; and Western Michigan Landry's start taught him "what an
organlza lion has to sacrtftce" to be
whipped MlamiBS-75.
Melvin McLaughlin scored 18 successful. And he added that he
points, Including a 17-foot jumper would begin famtuarlzlng the
with two seconds remaining, to Bears' personnel with the system
lead Central Michigan. But next month and expect the ppyers
McLaughlin admitted his S.ior-18 to report to training camp '.'\v!th a
pretty good understanding of what
pertorinance wasn't his best.
"When I was on the floor and saw we expect fl\lm them:
"I'm a believer In the multiple
the ball go in , I was very, very
happy," he said. "The coacht&gt;S offense. It keeps the defense oft bal·
have confidence in me to get a good ance," said Dltka. "U the defense
shot oH. I dld not have a good nJght knows what we're going to do.
offensively because I missed prac- they'll beat me."
Owner George Halas, who •1\as
tice yesterday with a sore throat
expanded his own involvement In
and Was not In my rhythm."
With the victory, the Chippewas the National Football League club
moved to S.7 overall, while North· since the Bears' d!sappolnllng 6-10
ern DUnois dropped to 6-9. Both ·finish' last season, said with the apteams are 2·3 In the MAC.
; pointment o! Dltka, "the game plan
I had been working on Is now
Forward Je[f Zatko[f scored 21
complete."
points and grabbed 11 rebounds in
Dltka, ~2 , viewed his return to
Eastern Michigan's v1ctory over
Kent State. The Hurons, 114 over· · Chicago as " a situation that was
meani for me. Everybody has their
all, hit 10 straight baskets In the se.
cond hall to grab the lead fQr good. destiny and mine Is In Chicago."
After being drafted in tfte first
The Golden Flashes fell to 6-9
r ound In 1961 out of Pitt, where he
overall and 2-3 In the. conference.
Walker D. Russell scored 11 of his earned All-America honors his senior year, Dlika achieved Instant
game·high 26 points In the final six
success with the Bears.
minutes to Uft Western Michigan,
He went on to win Rookie-of-the8-7 and 2·3, In Its come-from-behind
Year honors and was selected All·
85-75 victory over Miami.
Pro three times during his six years
Western Michigan trailed 4240 at
In Chicago, playing a pivotal role on
the hall before unleashing a burst in
the Bears' last championship team
the final minutes. Miami dropped
to 5-10 a nd 2·3.
In 1963. The next year, he set an
NFL record for a tight end by
Nate Cole scored two,free throws
In the overtlme period !a lead Ohio catching 75 passes, a mark that
stood until Kellen Winslow of San
University over Ball State. Ball
Diego broke it last year.
Sta te led 41-31 with 17:06 remaining
Dltka moved on to the Phlladel·
In the game, but c:Ouldn' t hold the
phla Eagles lor the 1967 and 1968
lead. Ohio Is 7·6 overall, while Ball
seasons, closing out his playing
State Is 7-7. Both teanis are 3-2 In
the MAC.
days with the Cowboys.

another timeout .

Molespacedthe Bobcats'30polnt
third quarter with eight points,
Roger Stroud a ndB ren tLovecame
o[f the bench to add five points
apiece.

Kyger Creek continued Its hot·

HANNAN 136 )
1 oll,ycr. 2 B 11 :
'&gt; r udock.? 0 4, P ow• '"· 3 o 6; Allr:n,
') 1 5; OPX II ' r . ? 76 . Wd son, 1 o 7 ,,ncl
J n11ns on. 0 1 I T ot.1 1 ~ 12 · 11 · 36 .
• vGr R CRF rk I BII - Clerk, 3
; 11: s,,,d,. 3 1 A: Molr·s. 4 B lo :
P r1cf' , 51 11 : " t r oud . 5 I 11: B ri'! d
nwy. 3 0 6 : L nve . 2 J 7 tlnd M n rt l n ,
1 1 5 Tot oIs 19· 23-81.
1'\v OuiHtC'r s :
10 II 6 Q. 36
H iln n ,ln
11 16 10 n 81
K Cr&lt;'!'k

I'A('ES VICTORY - ,Jeff
1\•Jult•s, 6-2 junior. forward , pared
Kyg••r Crct!k lu iLo.; seventh \o'irtnry in nine altt•mpts Wednesday
ni~ht . Mttles had 16 points In the
T ats' 81·36 win uver Hannan, W.
Va.

Ditka new
Bears coach

Falcons top Rockets,
OU decks Ball State
By A_,lated Press
The more than 5,200 fans who
tuled Anderson Arena for Wed·
nesday night's game between
Mid -American Conference rivals
Toledo and Bowling Green proba·
bly expected a close contest. They
were hall right.
For 20 minutes the Falcons and
,. the Rockets, both 9·5 entering the
game, played It close. A bucket
only two seconds before the half·
time buzzer gave Bowling Green a
tenuous 4().38 advantage.
But the Falcons left Toledo In the
dust In the second half. Bowling
Green scored 11 of the first 13 points
to start the final perlod en route to
an 8().64 v1ctory. ·
Although the teams are now only
a game apart In terms of overall
records, they a re a world apart In
the MAC. Bowling Green contlnues
to share the lead with Eastern
Michigan at 4·1. Toledo Is alone In
the conference basement at 1-4.
Despite Toledo's problems,
Coach Bobby Nichols Isn't giving
up.
"We'll come back," Nichols said.
"We lost to a learn that was simply
better than us. We played a strong
first hall, but our play In the second
half let us down."
Bowling Green Coach John Wei·
nert wanted to talk about the Fal·
cons' Dav1d Greer, who scorro 14
points and dished out 12 assists.
"The secret about David Greer Is
that he takes what the defense
gives him," Reinert said. "We had
a lot of great passing against Tole,
do' s zone, and Greer had ma rly of
those passes."
Eastern kept pace with Bowling
Green with Its 84-69 victory over
Kent State. Elsewhere In the MAC,
Ohio University dpfeated Ba ll

By A-w-••ted Preo8
Yo11 wouldn't expect a cotlege
basketball team to go 10 minutes
at the end of a game without
hlt(lng a field goal and stay In
contentlon.
But the CoMectlcut Huskies did
Wednesday night, thanks to their
free- throw shooting.
As a result, the Huskies pulled off
a 63-52 upset' dver 13th-ranked
Georgetown.
"It was a g(l(ld win for us because
Georgetown has been getting all
the respect," said Connecticut
Coach Dom Pemo. "When people
talk about teams In the Big East
(Conference ) they always talk
about other teams."
The Husklt&gt;S, now 3-2 In confer·
enC&lt;! play Uke Georgetown and 11-3
overall, ignored the screaming par· 1
!!san crowd In ihe Hoyas' tiny
McDonough Arena. They fashioned
their upset by sinking 16 of 19 foul
shots, lncludblg eight In a row by
. Norman Bailey, down the stretch.
The Hoyas. 144,lost thetr second
straight game after a 13-game win·
nlng streak.
"They didn't do anything we
didn't expect them to do," s;1.kl
Georgetown Coach John Thompson. "They just made their free
throws and their shots and we
didn't."
The Huskies were · repeatedly
able to frustrate the eHorts ofGeorgetown to work the ball Inside to
prtze fres.h man Pat Ewing. Mean·
whlle, Corny Thompson led the
Huskies with 16 poltlts while Batley
had 14.
•
Duke tripped No. 14 Norlh Carol·
(na State 4948 In another upset
Wednesday night. In other games
Involving the nation's ranked
teams, No. 2 MISsouri turned back
Kansas 41·35, No. 3 VIrginia defeated George Washlngton 8().54,
No. 9 Kentucky whipped F1orlda 91·
76, No. 16 Alabama stopped Gear·
gla 81-66, 18th-ranked Kansas State
downed Oklahoma 47:42 and 20th·

16-7-1. anti is

i m prov in ~

th, Greg Thomas fourth, Troy Bauer

Tour·nament Saturda y . beg inning C::l t
11 and then they will return home ror
a triangula r IHHtc h Thursday ,
Ja!lUary 28 at 1. In the latter match

~~;~~~~ently: its poorest showing of ' lh~~i~2d"~:k~r:~~to;~ :~~r~~ rren

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TROY, Mlch. (AP) - The Cincinnati Bengals are preparing for Su·
per · . Bowl XVI by having
third-string quarterback Turk
Schonert do a footballimpersona·
lion of San Francisco's Joe
Montana.
During the a.;ongals' dosed-door
workouts, they have Schonert run
an offense patterned after the
49ers' to gfve the defense some fa.
mlllarlty with the San Francisco
attack.
Schonert, the hero of the Bengals'
S(!ason-openlng victory over Seat·
. tie' trles ~ run plays the' way the
San Francisco quarterback would.
"It's not so much that they say,
'You're Joe Montana, act like him.'
We just run their offense," Schonert said Wednesday. "We run a
· unte sprint-out because he does
move ~lind a Utile bit. They'll tell
me when I drop back to move out of
the pocket Uke Joe can do."
lt wasn't too long ago that Schaner! dreamed. of taking over for
Bengals' quarterback Ken Anderson Instead of Montana.
Schonert, who Was tutored by
49ers Coach Bill Walsh for two )(8ars at Stanford, stepped In when .
Anderson had a disastrous first
quarter against sea tile and rallled ·
the Bengals from a 21;polnt deficit
to a 27·21 victory.
Acquired on waivers from Chi·

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I ron ton 45 W averly 38

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Oho U. 6~ Boll Sl. 67, 01
W. Michipn 85, Miami 75
Oftlo Coni.
lbldwin ·W•II•ce 87, Denison 62
Kenyon 79, Htidelbtra721 OT
Muskin1um 39. Mount Un1on 32. OT
Ohio Northern 71, Wooster .W
Oh io Wesleyln lUll, OOir11r. 72
Wittenblra 6-4. M1riettJ 54

FLARES
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SHOES FOR
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LeVI'S

Profnalonel pow1r tapa with

Loqan
JMksnn
Tcm i ght' s q;lm c &lt;&gt;:
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any habits that were slmilar to
'what we taught, yet slightly dilleren!. So we could start from scratch
with a great athlete who had a real
great mind from the standpoint of
lnquisltlveni!'JS and Intellect. So we
hfld everthl.~g going with Kenny."

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Mci q s 36 J a c k son 25
GA ll iPOliS 57 W C'II ston 16

tougher to defend against the
r eceivers.
Walsh speaks !rom experience,
having been lnstrumentallnelevat·
lng the air game to an art form .
He spent nine years of o!tls NFL
coaching career (1967·75 as an as·
ststant In ClnciMatl) molding And·
erson Into one of the best passers of
this genera tlon and has spent the
last three years turning Joe Man·
lana into perhaps the next great
one.
Anderson. a third-round draft
choice by the Bengais out of tiny

i-GAL
WET/DRY VACUUM

St OAl ONl V
( V,U Sity )

W

it. "
" Passing - tluit's the way the
game has gone ," said Walsh, point·
lng out that the rules changes In
rece nt yearS have made It easter to
protect the quarterback and

even though he's returned to the
cago In his rookie season of 1~.
bench.
Schonert made Ills professional de·"I'm not for gotten," Schonert
but In that game.
said. "I'll go arol'nd town and peo"That was the first tlme that I
ple are always bringing up the Sea t·
ever played In a regular-season
Ue game and still congratula ting
game," Schonert said. "We were
down 2HI. I think I was siunned · me for that game.
" It's not publicized openly like It
when I went In, that they actually
.
was
earlier. But I do walk around
bel!Ched Ken Anderson. I couldn't
and people recognize me around
,
believe it.''
1
the town. It' s a lot different now."
Although Coach Forrest Gregg
Indicated after the victory that lte
would start Schonert the next week
against the New York Jets, he
changed his mind and decided to go
with Anderson.
"It was a disappointment," Schonert said. "I heard thatl was going
to start the next week (against New
·York). I was keyed for It, reaUy
exctled about tt.
·
"Then Tuesday came along and I
was told that KeMy was going to
start, but It he didn't perform well
he was go(ng to put ine right back
ln . But the Idea of actually starting
my first NFL game ... It was a
Your loullnd-"dontly ownod TNt Voluo Hordwort
disappointment." .
8toro hll nadonol choln·buylnli powor.
While Anderson went on to have
his most proUflc season for passing,
Schonert completed just one more
pass the rest of the year - during ll
game In which Anderson was hurt.
Hoovy·duly voc hopdlto dtbrlo ordinary
Schonert, who led. college quar·
Vacuum• ca~·t : wood chlp1, nell• and
oven woterl Wl!h hooo, wondo, dolly,
terbacks In passing efficiency dur·
nozzle and lqUI8QH ahoe.
MMeoo.e
lng his senior year at Stanford, said
I
he's not slid back into obscurity

All GAM E S

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
992-379,5
Hours,':
9·6 Mon .· Fri
s·a t. 9-5

Supcl Bowl will hi• playt•d un Jan. 24 . II will hi• the first
time that the tilt will hi· played In" Ntirtht•rn site. I AP
(..aserphotu I

Schonert practices · like Montana

At hens
w.w r! rly

:_~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

'UJl W

·SITE OF SUPER HOWt XVI - This is an aerial
view of the Sllverdome in Pun liar, Mich.. where th•·

H AM

H&amp;R BLOCit.

--ro;~·l

•

Girls standings

O ur tax preparers have been carefully trained to understand income taxes related to the small business situation. At H&amp;R Block,
we want to make sure you pay the lowest legitimate tax .

I

...
.:.

Sroodlap

tld c~. tc. J ,, · i t:l ~ou t :-H• ~· h ·nl! h l•· . "

M t!igs had only three iJ\•Y!' whn
wrestled to their potcnti 31 an d only
one of these three ca me C:IW i:I Y with
the championship.
'
Frcslunan Doug Priddy, \nestling
in the 112 pound class, pinned his
way all through the lourney to eal'll
first place honors.
The other lwo boys fa iril1g well
were sophomores Keith Kinzel and
Larry Romine. They were defeal cd
in the finals by very good wrestl ers
to take second p W honors. Tl-.,
nnly other Mt!i
' • QU!ell,Ch
the finals Was Gary Nakamoto who
was pinned in the second round for
second place.
According to Coach Grimes, two
other wrestlers have tumed their
season around. They are Mike Mow·ning and Tf'l)y Bauer. Troy had a

--LEAS

Augustana College In IIUnols In
1m. was an NFL passing cham·
pion twice under Walsh's tutelage,
and again during the 1981 season.
Montana, the 49ers' third-round
draft choice out of mighty Notre
Dame In 1979, Walsh's first year as
their coach-general manager, was
the National Football Conferenc.?'s
passing champion In 1981:
" Kenny might have even gone
lower In the dr~ than the third
round because he was b'Pm such a
small school.'' said Walsh. "But af.
ter we worked forabout three years, well then everybody said they
were about to draft him.
"A lot of people say he was a rollout passer but he wasn't really.
The offense A ugustana had at the
time was sort uf 'drift off to the side
and fire It,"' said Walsh. And because Anderson wasn't a pro-style
pas~r . teal:hlng him NFL tech·
nlques was actually easier.
''Everything we taught him was
basically new to him, so I could al·
most be a purist In what I taughtvery fundamental. He didn't have .

By BRUCE LOWft'T
AP sPorts Wrlier
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP ) - When
you've got two .or the very best
pas~rs In the National League
barking out the signals In the SUper
Bowl, you naturally :lon't expect
them to spend a whole lot of time
handing the ball of!.
Neither do BUI Walsh and For·
rest Gregg.
The coach!$ of the San Francisco
49ers and Cincinnati Bengals predict that In this new aerlal era, the
·ball just may be hi the air more
than In any of the previous 15 Super
Bowl games.
"Probably the No. 1 reason we're
here Is ol' No. 14," said Gregg, ref·
errlng to his quarterback, Ken And·
erson, an 11-year veteran. " And
when passing's what gets you here,
you'd be a fool not to keep on doln'

Ja-ryll,tta

match. As a r esult some wcl'c b~ate n

by

. .BANK ONE .. _

~AND THE PROFESSIONS

-------- -------------------l

Gallipolis
witrys
h l:iO
. South
144.5, St. Ma
136,
MeigsCharleston
105.5 and
North Gallia 34.
The M ei ~s dub had p1•cviously
dl'fcalt."ll three or the lce&amp;lllS cnmpt~ litlg in the tournament, while the
other opposition had been beaten by
the teams Meigs had bested. ·
Coarh Grimes said, "Tile boys
wen• too confident going into the
m atches and that is a cardinal sin in
any sport. All were looking ahead to
!he finals before playing there firs]

'5

~TO BUSINESS, INDUSTRY.

Marauder wrestlers finish fifth
POINT PLEASANT - The Mt.• igs
wrestling team , ha ving mily one

·Record aerial display·is .
expected.· in Super Bowll6

r l nked Tennessee turned back Mls· nlng of the second."
slsslppl State 5444.
Jim Master's 22 points pacec1
TbeTopTen
Kentucky to an easy victory over
Ricky Frazier sank six free vlctory·slaiVed F1orlda. The Wild·
throws In the final minute as Mls· cats used the foul line tor the vic·
sour! survived an upset bid by arch· tory, hitting on 35 of 43 attempts to
rival Kansas. The Jayhawks had a overcome a young Florida team
20-19 halttlme lead and quickly that lost a school record lOth
jumped ahead by tlve points after straight game and feU to4-lllorthe
Intermission as the Tigers had trou· season.
ble with Kansas' alternating :wne
·anct man-to-man defenses. •
The 1~ Tigers went Into a :stall . - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . : - with 7: 15 remaining after a rleld
goal by Steve Stlpanovlch gave .
The IJuil y Sentinel
them a 34-33 lead. Frazier, who led
!USPS 115-. .1
AD!vb!GoofMul-la&lt;.
the Tigers with 15 points, hit two
rree throws with i: 281eft for a 36-33 Published t!very a~. MoOOay thrwgti
Friday, 1ll Cqurt Street, by the 0No VaUey
Mlssourllead and Ka11S2s IIPVer got
Publlahl~;~g Company • Mu.J.Umedil, Inc.,
Closer than three points again.
Pomeroy, Ohio ~7&amp;9, 992-2156. Second claa
postage paid at Pomtroy, Ohio.
"Our second halt we made no
mistakes and that'S a first for us, "
Member : The Associated Preu, lnlan!:l O.ii
ly Press ASIJOCiation and. the AmtriC211
said MlsSou,rl Coach Norm SteNewspaper Publishers Asaoctation, National
wart. "We held KU to 15 points In
Advertising Repre•ent.at!ve. Branharil
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue, New
the second hall, and we're happy
Yorll. New York 10017.
with that. In the first halt, there was
POO'I'MASTER: Send addreu IO The Dilly
a lot ol pushing and shoving, and we
Sentinel, IJl Court st., Pomeroy, Ohiot578.
' didn't shoot well."
•
SVB8CRIP'l'ION RATES
Othell Wilson and Ralph SampBy Carrin'ot MCJ&amp;« ROIII&amp;e
son both SCQred 18 points to pace
One week .. • . . . , .••. . . .. .. . . . . ... .. $l.DO
Ont! Month ....... . .. . . ... .. .... .. .. S4.t0
VIrginia's romp over George Wa·
One Year ....... . . . .. . .. . ......•. .. ~. 10
shlngto_n. Wilson scored 12 ot his 18
SINGLE COP\'
PRICE.!i
points In the first hall as the Cavall·
Daily .....• ' ......•...... ' ..... eenta'
ers, 17-1, took a 39-21 lead at
Sub6ctibers not desiring 10 PlY lhe carrier
Intermission.
may remit in advance direct to The Daily
The Cavaliers broke open the
-Sentinel Dfl a 3, 6 or 12 month basiJ. Credit
will be given carrier each month.
game early In 1\le second half, goIng repeatedly to the Hoot-4 SampNo subscriptiona by mail penniUed in towns
wlwre home t11rrier ~~i ce is available.
son
for
uncontested
shots
undemeal\l the basket.
MAILSUBSCRIP'l'IONS
ObJo aDd West Ylrgtall
"Our defense was the diller·
3Month ...••... .. .•• . . . . •. • . . .. .. 112.35
ence," said VIrginia Coach Terry
Sb: month .... . ................... $21).1Q
1Year ....... , .. , . . ........... . .. $3t.OO
Holland. "We Just got such a very
Ralel Outddr Obkt
good effort from a lot of people. We
.ad Wn1 VIr ~(.~aU~
3 Month .. . .. ..
.. .... .. . 113.00
played excellent defense In the last
!Month .......
. ..... . .. 123.!0
part of the ftrst hall and the begin·
. ......... MUO
I Year .......

NEW BEARS COACH - Mike
Dltka ponders a question in
Chirago Wednesday aft.r an- .
nounclng he had signed as new
head coach of the Chicago Bears.
Dltka comes from the Dallas
Cowboys, where he served as
assistant nfft•nslvc t•oat•h fur
nine st•usuns. 1AP l.ascrphotu 1

The Daily Sentinei-Pag~ 5

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Free throw shooting .helps
Huskies pull off big upset

After a sluggish beginning,
Kyger Creek exploded for 52 second
hall pointS Wednesday night to post
a lopsided, 81·36 non-ronterencP
victory over "151tlng HaMa n.
W.Va.
The win pushed the Bobcats'
overaU record to 7-2 while Hannan
qropped Its third game without a
win.
Both teams pl!!Y.~ on near even
terms In the first perlod which ,
ended with the Bobcats holding a ·
13-10 advantage.
Coach Keith Carter 's team took a
29-21 lead Into the lockerroom be·
hind the shooting of senior Tim
Prlce aMd juniors, Je[f Moles,
Kelth Clark and Ron Martln.
Charles (Noodles ) Tolliver kept .
Hannan In the contest with fast
breaking baskets and his foul
shooting.
Kyger Creek ca me out with a
wne press which ratUed Hann!m.'
Within a two minute span, the
Bobcats had Increased their lt&gt;ad to
35-21 and led 41·22 as the Wildcats

Host Point Pleasant was tlw victor
with 163 points, foll owed by

Thursday, January 21, 1982

Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt, Ohio

~obcats

•

SS5 PARK ST., MIDbLIPORT, OHIO.

HOURS:

MON.-FRI. 7:00A.M. TO 5:00 P.M.
SAT. 7:00A.M. TO 3:00 P.M.

s•
COPPER
FINISH·SQUARE

48
10
1D-IN.
PIPE WRENCH

For eccurlte cuta and mu·

Roploceoblo

IUrementa. StMI with rl.ilt·

floating t'look for eaay re·
11111, For111d.
MM10

prool-r flnloh.ceDOMM

jowl.

lull·

..
t'

.•
.·
'

''

�_Pag•

6

,.,. Daily SBntl~

Extension agent to
teach sewing class

Information from the
American ~eancer Society ·.
Breast cancer is the number one breast self-examination by women
disease concern of American women of all ages. In addition, the Society
but today there are effectjve steps .recorrunends a malfunogram every
that both women and their year for asymptomatic women over
physicians can take to help c-ontrol the age of 50 and a baseline mamthe disease said S. Michael, public mogram for those ~omen between
information chairman of the the ages of 35 and 40. A lnamAmerican Cancer Society in Meigs mogram is a low dose x-ray used in
County.
the detection of SJnall breast can' Nationwide more than 110,000 new L'ers. ''Of course a woman is advised
cases of breast cancer are diagnosed to t-onsull her physician when ap· annually and over 37,000 deaths ot• plyin~ these recommendations to
cur. In Ohio alone, the ,figures are herself," Michael added. Those who
5,700new ca'ses and 1,900 deaths.
have a higher risk for breast cancer
"E!Irly detection and prompt are those w~o · have -personal or
treatment have been found to be the family history of breast cancer,
most important tools in guarding never had children, or had fil'lil child
against breast cancer," · Mi~hael after 30.
said. " If you. are a wo1,nan, spending
According to the American Can~er
live minutes each month could save Society, breast cancer will strike
your life. The simple procedure one out of every 13 American women
known as breast self-examination is with the greatest nwnber of cases
.· one of the most effective ways of fin- OL"Curring among women ov~r the
.. ding a 'breast cancer early, when Itis age of 50. Every wo1nan needs to
most curable." Ways to examine learn and then practice breast self·
your breasts are while in the shower, examination. Experience has shown
before a mirror, and lying down.
thai women themselves detect some
During the examination if a lump, 95 pert'ent of all breast twnors,
• · dimple, any kind of discharge is Michael added.
discovered see your doctor as soon
as possible. Don't be fri~ht~ned .
" Thousands of women are alive
Most breast lwnps or changes are and well today after discovering
not cancer, but only your doctor can breast cancer, Michael said. 'Canmake the diagnosis.
cer can be beaten and the Jivin~
When breysl cancer is detected proof is all around us."
early in a localized state, five-year
If you would like to have classes on
survival is about 85 percent ac· breast self-examination (BSE) for
cording to the American Cancer your group, organization, or club or
Society. ·
would like to know more about BSE
The American Cancer Society's call 992·7531 between 1-4:30 p.m. or
recent health ~heckup guidelines slop at the office on Mulberry
recommend the monthly practice of ijeights in Pomeroy. ·
f

Group II holds meeting

'·

The Meigs MiniSterial's food pan- Papau, New Guina paper written by
. try project and the church's par- Ana Tava Tutor.·
Mrs. Miller conunented on or~
ticipation were discussed at the
Tuesday night meeting of Group II dering some houseware Items for
of the Middleport First United the ~roup to sell. Devotional leader
Presbyterian Church held at the was. Mrs. Donald Lowery who used
home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace with · " Faith" as her topic. Her meditation
was taken from "The Apples of
· Mrs. Robert Woodard as c~&gt;-hostess.
God,"
and she concluded with a
Mrs. Paul Haplonatall, president,
prayer.
noted that the first Sunday in each ·
Mrs. Wallace conducted the Bible
month has been designated for
Study
from the book, "Praise God."
bringing canned foods to the church
A
thank
you was read from Mrs.
for the pantry.
Thomas
Rue
for flowers sent to her
Areport was given on the finances
father's
funeral.
for the past year. Mrs. Myron Miller
Salad, crackers, coffee and candy
conducted the least coin devotional
were served.
usi~ an article taken from the

~ Workshop

held recently

Basic camera tuindling techniques
were taught by Leo Hill at recent
photography workshops conducted
at McClure's Barn.
Hill, a professor at Rio Grande,
discussed shutter speed, depth of
field, reflectors,
. . light conditions and

21 , 1982

Thu!'lday, January 21, 1982

had four slide presentations at the
two workshops. On Feb. 5, the 28
enrolled will meet at McClure's for a
critique. Herschel McClure
prepared the food for the all-&lt;iay
Saturday sessions.

Helen Help Us
By HEl.EN IIOO'rEL
DEAR HELEN :
The Cancer Society's Greal
American Smoke.out in November·
was a huge success. So why not "
Great American Drink-out • Fur a
specified time, people would be
asked not to conswne any alcoholic
beverage. Then, maybe they 'd con.
linue cutting down. Aller all .
cigarette use has lost considerable
ground since those big campaigns
wer~ launched against.
I can't understand why tobacco is
a prime target, while bee•· and wine
ads are still allowed on TV and
l.lere's no such thing as a label. '
"Drinking Can Be Injurious to Your
Health."
Boole maims and kills more
people than cigarettes ever did .
Think of •the drunk dri ving accidents, the ruined lives, pickled
minds, alc-ohlic deaths.
How about it, everyone : A Great
American Drink-out - but make it a

Plans are also being Dl!lde for a
A sewing clllss kick..off meeting
has been announced for Feb. 8 at 7 tw~&gt;-part microwave cooking class to
p.m.' at the Senior Citizens Center by beJleld on March 4 and 11 from 7 to
. Mrs. Dale Stoll, Miegs County Ex· 9:30 p.m. at the Exte~ion office.
Experienced home economists will
tension Agent.
demonstrate microwave cooking
To participate in the classes, techniques. Pre.registration Is to be
which will be held daytime and/or made" by February 26. The cost will
evenings on Mondays, Feb. 15; 22, be $2 per session.
March I, 8, 15 and 22, residentsmust ,..:...-------.;.__ __
attend the kick-off meeting.
At the meeting, there will be a
cliscussion on supplies, patterns,
fabric, color and styles; measures
will be taken to .detennine proper
pattern size; a fiim on sewing will be
shown, and the classes will be
scheduled. There is a $5 fee for the
series of six classes to cover the
educational supplies.

SINGERS - RuliS and the Gelpel TODell wt11 be featured siDgers at
IJ!e Meip Area HoliDess Association 1o be held at'
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the HyseU Run Hollaess Church. The Rev. Virgil
Byrer wtll be speaker. Alloclallon President, the Rev. James Broome, Iaviies the public to attead. Makiag up the GOspel Tones, a local group, are
front, I tor, Joanaa Lanham, Jan Lavender, Peggy Bu.sh, Juanlta Spencer; back, I tor, Run Spencer, Dnld StraWJbaugh, Leland'Dualap.

On Tuesday, March 30 at 7:30 p.in.
at St. Paul's Lutheran Church there
will be a fashion show sponsored by
the Fabric Sllop and the Meigs Coun·
ly Cooperative Extension Service.

Bell resigns position
Ellen Bell, director and clerk·
teasurer of the Meigs County Public
libraries since July I, 1978, has
resigned. Her resignation is ef·
fective on April!.
Mrs. Bell has accepted the
position of director of the
Washington County public Library.
She and her husband, Robert, along
with their two chldren, Jonathan and
Benjamin, who reside on a fann at
Langsville, will move to Washington
County later this year.
Since coming to Meigs· county,
Mrs. Bell has not only ~orked
toward imerovem~pt and developinenrcif11ie' Ubraries, but has be~n
active in numerous civic and school
affairs.
She organized the Friends of the
library, secured funding for painting the interiors of ~lath library
buildings, and ~ecured thr!!i! special
program grants. One of the grants
brought a riverboat to Meigs County
during Regatta in 1979 for historical
trips up the Ohio River. In 1980, a
grant was secured· to puchase
•naterials for the Adult Basic
Education program, and In 1981,
Mrs. Bell secured a grant for a
series of children's programs
highlighted by a visit from the
renowned children's author, Brinton
Turkle.

,... -·

.

..

.

·

Casey Kcuem

FLORIST

Route 1, Box 196, Walworth, WI. are
announcing the birth o! a daughter,
Robin Louise, born on Jan. 9 at
Mercy Hospital, Janesville, W.l,
The Infant weighed eight pounds,
. one ounce. Mr. and Mrs. GUmore
have two other daughters, Shannon
Lyn, seven, and Kasey Jo, three.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Gardner Wehrung, and Mr. and
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Pomeroy.
Great-grandparents are Mrs.
Elmer WehrU.ng, Middleport; Mrs.
Nora Gilmore, Pomeroy; Mrs.
Mrs. Faye Daugherty, Magnolia;
. and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Bennett,
: Point Pleasant, W. Va.

WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

I.

POMEROY - Marine Private Ml·
chael Smith has returned to
Twenty-Nine Palmi, Calif. after
spending the holidays here .with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith.

MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League will meet at
t 30·Thursday night at !he home
of Mrs. Thelma Osborne. Carl

.
' BELL
Mrs. Bell worked with the late
Lucy Amsbary in starling Serenity
House, a ,refuge for battered·wives.

GRACE EPISCOPAL Church
will have its Sunday m9rning service at 10:30 a.m.

,

.

......___.,

MEIGS COUNTY Democrat
Central and Executive Com·
mlttees meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday, Carpenters' Hall, E.
Main st., Pomeroy.

~~~4®

Fri~y ,
REVIVAL SERVlCES will be
held at the Pomeroy Church of
the Nazarene, Friday, Saturday
and Sunday nights at 7 p.m. Joe
Gween will be the speaker.

, " ... when only the finest will do."

Valentines l?aY

. AimLT Fellowship meeting of
· Syracuse Chur~ of the Nazarene
will be Friday at 7 p.m. at the
· fellowshlp.hall.
•MISSIONARY Service will be
held at the Unied Pentecostal
Church, Middleport, Friday, at
7:30 p.m. The John Norwackls
family, m18810111ries to Fran~,. ·il
will be the speakers. THe '"'" •11·1
Clark Baker, pastor, invites

Cards &amp;Gifts··

..

SHOES ........ IS% OFF

Reduced Y3

5

97 Pairs

Florsheim .. ~ ....25%

OFF

CONTRARY· TO RUMORS

$TART QUICK

WE ARE NOT GOING OUT .OF BUSINESS. I
WE HAVE BEEN IN BUSINESS FOR 47
YEARS AND OUR GOAL IS AT LEAST 47
MORE•..

•3981 TR~IJ~
.

'

Groop

Mr. and Mn;. Gary Johnson and son.

Ecclesla FeUowshlp, 128 MID St.,
Middleport, will 'have,a revival thJs
weekend .
Thursday and Friday evening at
7 p.m. the Sunrise Gospel Singers .
will be singing with JeJTY Skaggs of
Gallipolis as the speaker. On Satur·
day night at the Meigs Junlor High
auditorium, Light from Vienna, W.
Va. Ww be singing and Michael
Vance wW be doing the preaching,
· • Vance will be ministering at Eccie,,
sla Fellowship on Sunday,

.

OFF

*LA·Z·BOY RECLINERS
.*SOFAS
*WAU HUGGER RECLINERS
*HIDE-A-BEDS
. *CHAIRS~ROCKERS,LOUNGE
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a fARANCE PRICES ON

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· *SAMSONITE FOLDING TABLES and CHAIRS .

T

FREE DELIVERY
.·FREE PARKING

,,
446 3045

1

OPEN ALL DAY THURS.
MON •• FRI. nL 1:00 ·

at a meeting Monday at the Pomeroy Maso.tlc Temple. All Royal
Arch Masons are invited.
Jack Carsey, manager of Landmark, Pomeroy, recently underwent
open 'heart surgery.
His address is St. Marys Hospital.
2900 First Ave., Huntington, W. Va.
25701 . His room nwnnber is 535. Car·
ds may 'be sent to him in care or the
hospital.

oo

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The Meigs Area Holiness
Association will hold their monthly
rally Monday, Jan. 25 at Hysell Run
Holiness Church at 7:30 p.!n.

January 22, 1982
Rewards thus far denied you for an endeavor on which you have
worked very hard ni'ay suddenly break in your favor this coming year ...
You'll be glad you sweated it out.
AQUARWS (Jan. ~Feb.l9) Your possibilities for success are ex~
ceptionally gOOd today . Not necessarily from your own efforts, but ,
from compassionate supporters in the background.
· PISCES (Feb. ~March 20) Be hopeful today, even if what you're
wishing for may appear unattainable to others. Luck could intervene
and slant the odds in your favor.
ARIES (March 21·April 19) Others inay find challenging
situations a trifle distastefullodl!Y, but not you. You'll sense that, the
harder you try the more Lady Luck will help you.
TAURUS {April 2&amp;-'May :!0) Try to select companions today who
are optimistic and who do not think pettily. The rlght type of ,
associations will inspire you to lise yollr fullest potential.
GEMINI {May Zl-June 201 Go ·out of your way to be of ~rvic'll
today, even If it interleres with your immediate plans. In the long run
you'll gain more by being helpful. .
.
CANCER (June Zl·July t%1 Others will enjoy associating with you
today. You have a knack for making ali whom you encounter feellm·
portanl. Lifting their spirits enhances your popularity.
LEO (July !3-Aug. Z2) If you have a deep-down feeling you're
lucky today, don't disregard it. Your aspeclll indicate Dame Fortune
designated you a winner. Prove her right.
VIRGO {Aug. %~-Sept. Z2) You're in need of fun divel'liiOna today,
although you may at !inrt think you have too many serious matters to
attend to. Relaxing activities refurbish your spirits.
LIBRA {Sept. %3-0ct. %31 Don't let your pride stand In the way if
others want to shower you with favors today. Be a gracious taker.
Your turn to give will come.
SCORPIO {Oct. M-Nov. Z21 An optimistic attitude will put you
with the winners today, so don't be discouraged if'things seem to get
off the wrong foot. You Cilll right matters.
·
.
SAGmARRJS {Nov. !3-~. Zlllnitlally, today, it may look like ·
you're the !liver Instead of the getter. This condition could suddenly
reverse itaelf and put you on the receiving end.
cAPRICORN (Dee. ZWu. JJ) Involvements today with friends of
long standln8 should pan out happily for all. You're lucky for old pall
and they're lucky for rou:
.
.

BLOWER MOTORS

IN

Under Norm11 Drl"lng Condition•

I

Astrqgrapht~

u;;tyALle Furnl•ture Showcase.

SAVE TO

3 911

36 MONTH GUARANTEE

Announcements

. Pomeroy Chapter ill will confer
:.• the most
. exceUent master degree

1/2

;~~i~ 0~~-4, $149

WITH A ....... Plus
Malnt•n•nc• FrH
CiAOU'S 22F, 24 , 1Cf lo 72

•

CORNER THIRD •nd OUvE STREETS . '
OAWPOUS, OHIO

STARTING

BA TTERY....--~~-M·-...

''

Our Janue~ry Clearance
Sale Continues,
With·New Spring Merchandise
Arriv~ng Each Day

·
FURNITURE
tyl
Lifes e -·. ·~SHOWCASE

'iLIQUID FIRE"

FLUID

CLEARANCE
SALE

School PTA will meet at 7
Thursday night at the school.

LADIES' WEAR
ENTIRE DEPT.
ON SALE
AT NICE SAVINGS

calch ._, wHh yow car

COANER.THIRD end OUVE STREETS ·

THE POMEROY ELementary

SUITS .

Doft't let wll cler

Middleport, Ohio

~~

25%

EN'S

.

will~==========~~~:~~~~~~~~~~f~~~;~~~~~~~~~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

the home of Dorothy Long Thursday,Jan. 21, at 7:30p.m,

HART-SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX

Sweaters ............................. ... ;............ '19-•so .. :............... 115.20·139.99
Ladies' Levi's Straight Legs.................... ~ .......s29 ........ ................ .. s22.75
Ladies' Levi's Bendov.ers .......... ........ ....... ...... '26 .......................... '20.80
Ladies' Levi's Corduroy &amp; Fashion Jeans..........s29 .......................... '23.20

Margu·erl"te Shoes

speak
"Laws
of Our
Hysell, on
Juvenile
officer,
Children." There will be a while

:~~~

200/o

............................... wERE'13·'20 ........ NOWstl.OS-'16.99
Topcoats All Weather Coats .................... '90-'150 ..................... '72·'120
Dre~s Slacks ........ .'............................·... '20-'60 .................'15.99-'44.99
Outerwear (Leather Coats inc1uded) ......s57 .50-'225 .......... :............'46-' 182

OHIO
the~~·t~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~;~~~~~~

Rutland Youth Association and has
She
also
in organizing
served
as helped
an officer
on the Road 'of
the Meigs Medical and Dental
Clinic, the Human Resource Coun·
ell, and the Ohio Valley Librarians
Advisory Conunittee.
Prior to coming to Meigs County,
Mrs. Bell was the library assistant
at Maple Valley Branch In Akron. ·
She is a graduate of Case-Western
Reserv_e University where she
received a degr~ in library science.

FINE .WEARING APPAREL
FOR MEN &amp;WOMEN

f

st•cret m~ctin ~s; and the rewards
tno are the ame as, for a ' 'straight''

.ALL' SPORT COATS REDUCED

.

BAHR QOTHIERS

Sunday

THE

$101 SUITS .......................... ....... ... $86,40
$155 SUIT$ .......................... ; ........ $124.00
$175 SUITS .................................... $139.99
$195 SUITS .. ... ............................... $156.00
$210 SUITS ....................... , ........... $161.00
$330 SUITS ...... ...................... ....... $247.75

, Babies don't always wait until the
, ·mother arrives at a hospital to be
'
.

. Social Calendar
Thursday

pe1:son.''

Johnson

Now In.. Progress .

Pvt. Smith is enrolled in electronics
school. He was accompanied to the
airport by his parents and Mrs.
Karl R~sell of Scotts Depot, W.
Va.

~ vxes in nnl'

ENTIRE STOCK
•HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX
•JOJtNNY CARSON
•PALM lEACH
•HAGGAR

affair.
I now realize Lhal bisexuality is
middle ground . It could happen to
anyone if the circwnslances were
right. - ANONYMOUS
DEAR ANONYMOUS:
I can't a ~ ree. Bise~ual i ly is too
rare to be " middle ~round . "
I also think you're risking a good
marriage for - what? - H. ·

Mr. and Mrs. Marvin J . GUmore,

.

Visits for holidays

(Mothers A~ainst Drunk DI"ivers )

'*

A af Clfllilly ..,., ........ thll 10" ctniiOt lfbd to miss. Comt In tlfty wNio our
nloclioo is II ill bosl, Usted !lilt n just a ""' ol tht -~ savinpllllllitinl yoo.

hammer away at ow,.boozing? One
Please set the reeot'd st•·aight. answer is that the Am.irican Cancer FOR TRUTH IN ADVERTIS ING
Society spends some $8 million an- DEAR FOR :
nually on l'ducali on, research and
You didll't read far enou~h : My
other programs related to the health Webste•·'s dves . . as a second
hazards of smoki ng. By comparison. ll oeani n ~ : " Bisexual :. sex uall y
aleohol-abuse people haw very nreined Inward bt1th sexes: person
smallbudgets.
who part ici pa tes in both
Another answe r: Many people " heterosexua l and homosexua l
would nut back a movement which relationshi ps." - H
ntil!hl ' be ,·n ns t r u et c d cts
ProilibitiOJust. Could thei r "Great DEAR HEI,EN :
I' m hapPi ly marril'd and have no
' A111etiean Drink-nut" r eacti on ~.
ul1t'ntion of di vnrdng my husba nd .
''I'll drink to that! " ? - H.
A gay woman and I l1ave fallen in
- -;lttv: and I'm hav ing my first
DEAR HELEN :
Those people who contributed to IJisexual affair. SHe also loves her
your colwnn on bisexuality have no · " wife" and doesn't plan to leave her.
Our e'ltramari l.il l relationship has
tile usua l I&gt;itfalis : jealousy, guilt,

Gilmore

Yoar 11 EatntToae.. ,.·

·~
· .
_ . Fioriat8lllrellf7

w..,k, rather than a day ! - UQUOR l'&lt;lllcept of what the word really
ABUSER WHOWANTS,TOSTOP
mean•. Quotin~ from my Webster's
DEAR L.A.W.W.T.S.:
flictionary. " bisexual" means " o{
All in fav or si ~ nify by saying " L" both . sexes. hennaphrod lte. "
"Opposed•...
Taber's Medical Dictionary terms
Why do cigaft'l tes gt'l all the heal " bisexual" as " hcnnaphroditic.
while only A.A. and M.A.D.D. having imperft&gt;cl gcnil.illia of both

Birth announcements

the moatbly raUy of

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE

··~~~. ~~

.

OT.
Limit 1a

... t dl

I 'PAP.

1211. "TANGLE-PROOF• "

tgse EMERGENCY

ICE Scraper
1:1 7 INCH • 69'
L:l 10 INCH · '99•

IC·1255

WINDSHIELD

89$

WASHER SOLVENT

DON'T~~~O~ED
'ROTECTS TO
250 BELOW 00

• PI'6VftltHUII &amp;

corrosion
&amp; lilllt•gll

• Stops squ,.ts

LIMIT l

SPRAY
LOCK
DE-ICER ·

Valvoline

' fllllltiC/ty td/11

GAL .

NO. !01

TOW ROPE

6500 Ibs. 12'/t Ft. length with
slip hooks and protector grips.

ANTI FREEZE

• lubrle~tn loeb

&amp; ilinlfl
• Drifs out wrt wiring

99$

$}89

.

No. 4001

UNFREEZE FROZEN

WINDSHIELD DE·ICER

HANDLE SNOW BRUSH
.......:::::: 9

•I

-

*19.9

WORKS FAST
REMOVES
Rrlltlt ·lt:s

EACH

• Passenger Cars

· i.vallalile •t the fallowing Auto P•rts Storn:
'

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
........u

' .....204

PLUS FREE TESTER

*189

• Pickup Trucks

GALLIPOLIS
1704 Eastern Ave.
240 Jrd Ave.

LIMJT6

POMEROY MASON
144
2nd
Route 3373-5511
9t2·21Jf

w.

Complete Maclllne.lllop Service

With 2 Gillon Purchase
Umlt I Tester Pe1 tullomer

POINT PLEASANT AUTO PARTS
SISM•In St.
675-1520
2611 J8Ck1011 A VI •
675-2731

· ~----------------~----~

..

\

�•

l

/

!~~a!ge~~a~·~T~he~Do~il!y~~~n~t~ine~I~--------------------------------_!P~~~~~~y~M~i~dd~l~eePM~rt~.~Oh~io~----------------------------------~T~h~u~~~d~ay~,~~~nua~·~~!·~2!1;~19:8~2.r

•

l:l111111ifil.'d Jllllfl!ll roVf.'r thf!
followinl( tf!ll!phont•Pxrhanlfl'll .••

N.D.

A suit in the amount of $50,!XXJ
was !lied in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Robert and Iva Sis·
son, Rutland, against Carroll Nor·
rts; dba Carroll Norris Dodge,
GaWpolls, Chrysler, Corp.. Detroit,
and Tom Rue Motors Inc.,
Middleport.
The plalnllf1s charge that the 1~
Plymouth Horizon they purchased
trom Rue Motors Is a defective
vehiCle.
A suit In the amount of $1.715.50
filed by Sears Roebuck and
Co., Columbus, against DDennls
TUIIs and Diana TIUis, Rutland.
f1i foreclosure suit was ttled by the
Famlers Bank and Savings Co.,
Pomeroy, against John Cline Dal·
ley, Pomeroy, Jacklyn J. Dalley,
Pomeroy and George Cotl!ns, treas·
· urer of Meigs County.

currert quarter before recovery
begins In the Apr11-June period.
Although many private analysts
said the tleht-cn!du po11cy of the
Federal Reserve Board was a main
cause of· the recession, Regan and
other administration officials con·
telld the tight credit was necessary
to fight the Inflation Inherited trom
the Carter admlnlstra lion.
Deputy Commerce Secretary Joseph Wrlghl Jr. asserted that "this
receSsion stemmed from policymakers' earlier faUure to come to
grtps with deeply embedded
Inflation."
!'lot everyon!! In Washington

was

To end man:iage
Paul Pullins, Middleport, and
Nancy Puillns, Chester, ftled tor
dissolution of marrtage.

E~ergency

Democratic Rep. Henry Reuss,
chatnnan ot the. Joint Economic.
Comn:llttee, saki, "The sony state
ol the economy Is the cllrect !'(!Suit
of President Reagan's program ot
huge tax cuts tor the affluent, sharp
Increases ·In defenile spending lead·
lng to gaping deficits, and the Ught
monetary policies of the Federal
Reserve, carried out at the admln·
lstration's behest.

NEW- David L. narrt., ••• of
Mr. and Ml'll. Kenneth E. Harrlo,
36100 Rock Spring• Road,
Pomeroy, ha• been Jlllmed an advertising repre~~entatlve of The
Dally Senllnel, Tim Halstead,
IUC111 ad•erti•iag director, an·
nouocL'd lodlly. A 1978 graduate
of Melg• High School, Harrl• Is a
graduall' oil the American School
of Broadca•tlngln Columbus and
previously wa• employed at Rio
Station WMPO.

Market report

Meeting postponed
A regular meeting of the Eastern
Local School Djstrlct Board of )Cdu·
cation scheduled tor this eventng at
the hlgh school has been postponed
until 7 p.m. next Wednesday, Jan .'

27.

Olth; \lallt'y Uvr~&amp;lut • k Cu.
Ma~rkrt Rttporl
Sale \'VC I')' Sulur1luy at I p.m. Prit·~:; blk,·n
. frnm thl! auction ol Stth.irdtly. Jrtll. 16. 1!182. Tren-

I

SIIWS 400 lbK, lUid UJI ;J7--42.
Pks hy tlwheatl1 7.:i0-35.

to $-4 1111-(hcr. Total ~clld 202.

F'cctlt'r Steers : GoCid Hllll Choice zr,o In :\OO IIm.
Jt.r.J: JOO lC1 400 IIJJ.I. 4~ : 400 10{100 lbH . 47.00-:ta ;
600 tu 700 lbs. 46-5.1: 700 lu 800 1 ~ . 4&amp;-51: 800 o~wtJ
11Vt:f48-54.

F'ccdcl' Hci hm; : t loi'lo.l Ulll.l Chm ~·~-: 2li0 to 300 lbs.
41.~ :

300 to 400 llxi. :16-4[1: 400 to 500 Ills. 41·
46Jfl; 500 to 600 Ills. 1~4 .00: 600 tu 700 lb!l. 374:-.i .OO: 700 to 800 ll&gt;s. 38.50-43 .75: 800 Hlld uvc r 40J() _

fo' t•t•tlt•!' Bulbi : GO('(J Hlltl ChOkl.! 250 lu J00 lbs.

47.60-6.1.(;0: 300 lu #10 IU:J. 47-53: 400 to 500 lbs.

r.oo 111 ROO Ills . 43.00-49.00: BOO 1t1 700 IIJ~ .

41-47.00 : 700 tu &amp;X) lbll , 38-15: 800 tmll uyc r JJ.tiOtl .(;O,
flul stcin slt•t•rs atrd UullslOO t11800 IUs. 404.00.
Bull.~ J.llOIIIIJs. anti Ul t42-46.~ .

SlttUl!hil'r CIIWS - util itics 36--40:

· · ultct ·.~J:i

tlllw n
Vt•ul calvus 7r.-!17.
Bt~lly l'a ivc~ 35-00.
Tnp Hn~s2 10 \112jlfll\n;. 44-47 ,
RHIWI27-Jf.

eHIIlW r~

alll.l

A I ~:
'

NEB.

COLO

6.8

C0!'4111 .1';~

4.3

5.3

Ill J
M

ARIZ

6.4

N MEX .

6.9

7. ·;

o· 7....;

KAN .

9.'::·r

DEL
D C.8 . ..:
'"

4.4

"'

OKLA .

3.8

'

'"I

'"

TEX .

cP

5.5

0~0

HAWAII

5.3

"'

0

"

..

.' 'I

1

~'·' '

~ !I)

c"

1-- , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·""1,,,
STATE-BY-STATE UNEMPWVMENT RATEThis chart shows the nation's unemployment rate un a
slate-by-state basis for tlie month of November, IBSI,
based on figure• from the Bureau uf Labor Statistics..

E~pect

ds: Vea l L'&lt;II Vt!Y sh•&lt;Hiy, fL~~ r c&lt;~tt l l! stt!lltly .

~~ . r.fi-.51 1

UTAH

A car-deer accident caused ml·
nor Injury to a driver on U.S. 35
Wednesday night, according to the
Gallla-Melgs Post of the stale hlgh·
way patrol.
Clarence W. Sheward, 39, Jack·
son, was eastbound, two miles west
ot Ohio 325, at 7: 40.p.m. .when a deer
ran onto the road and collided with
Shew;ml's vehicle.
,,
The Impact caused Sheward's
car to go ott the right side ot the
road and strtke a guardrail, causIng severe damage. Sheward was
Injured, but not trea~.
A two-vehicle accident In Meigs
County resulted In a citation for a
Ravenswood, W.Va. man on
Wednesday.
The report sald Steve R. •Peery,

Stolen safe found

H

4.3

...

4.8

These flgur"" are not adjusted to take Into account ,'~~
seasonal variatlons) 'llleen states had unemployment ·· .
rates higher than November's seasonally_ adjtlliled 1", :,
national average of 8.4 perce~tl. (AP Laserphotol
' ..

Alltenll Llvntock Salt'M

Albany,Ohlo
Ju. Jl, 1982
CA'ITIE PRICES o
F'fi'dcr St~n : !Good antl Choit'e l 300-000 Ill:! .
-1&amp;42.2!i: *-700 lbll. 46.f.I0.51 .00.
Ft!t!dl!r ~tft&gt;111 : (Qoot.larld Choke t 300-500 1~ .
37-44: fll»-700 lb!l. 17-42.00.
Feeder Bulls; !Good illlll C hol~..~ I 300-{100 IIJ..i .
45-51.00 ; ~700 lbl. 44-lil .75.
.
Sli!Uio(htcr Bull»: rOvc l' 1.00llb:l . l 43-f6.2!1.
SllluJI(hlt!r Cow!4 : Utlllti~ ~ . 7r.-4 1 .25 : Cl! nncrs
Mild Cuttt!l'!l27 .fi0.39 ,
Vcal:t : 1Choh.:ca1lll Prhncl68.oo-89 .
Baby CalveM : fRy t~ HeatH 31-61 : By lhc
Po!md5HOO.
HOGPRICF~ ,

Hfll(s: (Nu. l. Barrows wild Giltlii200-2JO lbl .
4!1. 7~ . 00.

Buh:her Sowll33.:i0-4t .
Bulcht!r Boar." 34-37.25.

FcellerPit~:s :

I By the Ht'adl 14-29.

~;:e~~?~:~7.1~.
\

.

•

ID

deer-car wreck ·

22, was westbound on Ohio 121 at
5: 15 p.m. when he met an east·
bound vehicle driven by Marjorie
V. Miller, 52, Rt.1, Middleport, and
the mirrors on .both vehicles struck.
There was slight damage to both
vehicles and Peery was cited tor
left of center.
Troopers said Dorts J . Hartley.
22, Wellston, escaped Injury when
her car caught flre on U.S. 35 near
the junction with Ohio 160 al'lO: 58
a.m. Wednesday. Hartley pulled off
to the side of the road and put out
the fire wtth an extinguisher. There
was moderate damage to her·
vehicle.
The patrolsaldaneastbound veh·
lcle driven by Walter D. Ward, 55,
McArthur, met a westbound auto

ruling on. fiber

ATLANTA (AP) .-WayneWIUI·
ams' lawyers have asked a judge to
limit testimony on some of the tlbers the prosecution says Unk Willi·
. ams to the slaylngs of two young
men and· an FBI expert said fibers
are not positive evidence.
Desplte.a contention by prosecu·
tors thll t fibers on the bodies of the
two victims are not unSlmllar to fibers found In Williams' car and
home,· fiber expert Harold Dead·
man said Wednesday that no tests
were made to see It the fibers ex·
lsted In the victims' homes.
The judge, Clarence Cooper,
promised an early ruling today on
the defense effort to Umlt testimony
about the fibers. ·
Defense attorney Alvin Binder
told Cooper on Wednesday that
prosecution witnesses sbould not be
allowed to testify about any tests
conducted on the fiber evidence af.
ter Dec. 14, when the defense was
given Its last reports on lab tests on
the fibers. .
1
Williams, a 23-year-old aspiring
talent scout, Is charged with the
murders of Na~nlel Cater. 27,
and Jimmy Ray Payne, 21, two of
28 young blacks who disappeared
during a 22-month period and later

were found slain. A special pollee
task force created to investigate the
ldtl!ngs ha~ made no arrests in the
26 other deaths.
Prosecutors have made no effort
during two days of testimony about
fibers to link Williams with either of
the two victims. But pretrtal testim·
ony indicated that tiny fibers and
dog hairs found on the bodies of
Cater and Payne were not micros·
coplcally dWerent from fibers and
dog halrs taken trom Williams'
home and car.
Binder argued the defense would
be harmed It prosecution experts
were allowed to testify abol.it
"scientific evidence that they dla·
boUcally didn't put in wrttlng to
keep It from our experts."
Binder flied the .motion as Dead·
man prepared to take the stand tor
the first tim!! in the trial, which Is In
Its fourth week. Cooper allowed
Deadman to testify before he ruled
on the motion, but Deadman didn't
discuss any ot his findings from
tests on the tiber evidence.
Instead, Deadman to)d the j11ry
In detall how fibers are analyzed Itt
the laboratory and how comparl·
sons of fibers can be used to show
that two people, or a person and an

n .l

'"'
.·"

---.·
, ,.

driven by Chrtstopher L. Groby, 20,
Hundred, W.'Va.,onacurveonOhto
124 at 1:50 p.m. Wednesday and· ' '
collided.
There was moderate damage to
Groby:s vehicle and slight to t~
Ward a.uto, and no citation was
Issued.
__j
In other accidents Investigated; ,
by the patrol Wednesday, Jerry c.• •
Hackler, 29, Jackson, coUided with 1
a deer on Ohio 588 at 6:35a.m. and I
his vehicle underwent slight . J
damage.
.
Jeffrey W. Spencer, 26, VIenna,
W.Va., was soulhbound on Ohio 218 1
at 9: 20 a.m. when his vehicle went 1
Off the right ~Ide Of the road and :
struck an embankment-, causing severe damage.

I

Sale /issued out of the Common' Pleas Court of M eig$
County, Ohio, in the Cc'ISP of
1st F inancial Savin9s &amp;
Loan Assoc iation. plamti ff .
\IS. Dennis Till is, et. al. ,
defendants ,
up on a
judgment there1 n ren·
dered. being Ca se No.
'17,944 in said Court( 1 will
offer tor sale, at the tront
door of the Court House 'in
Pomeroy, Mei gs County,
Ohio, on- the 27th day of
February, -1982 , ~~ ten
.l c lock a.m .• th e following
lands and tenem ents, to
w it :
_
S TUATED in the Town·
ship of Rutland, County of
Meigs, State of Ohio. and
bounded and described as
tallows. to wit: Beinq in
Section 8. in th e Vil lage ot
Rutland. Beginning 786 .7

.I
object, could have come In contact. , :
Under questioning by Binder,
Deadman acknowledged
that.
matching fibers cannot be used to
"tell with absolute certainty" that a"
!Iller came from a particular,
source. He said tiber evidence can ,
be used only as circumstantial evl··
dence and cannot be used to prov~
"positive ldenttllcatlon." Compart·
sons are significant only It the tiber;
type involved Is unusual, he said.

•-

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1

I

I
I

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,
:
:

Marriage licenses $3
Marriage Ucenses were Issued ta:j
John Franklin Aelker, 40, Rt. 1, ·
Middleport, and Vaptyolla Louise~
Taylor, 21, Pomeroy; David Craig
Kennedy, 19, Pomeroy, and Deena
Louise Neet')!, 18, Pomeroy; Kel~
AUen Hendrtcks, 20, ,Pomeroy, and
Barbara Ann Wells, 20, Pomeroy; 1
Carl Eugene Smith, Jr. 21, Langs- I
.ville, and Rebecca Lynn Handley, 1
17, Rt. 1, Langsvlll~; Dor Clark Co- :

I

~~~~ ~~s~~:~~~e:~;c::: i

Franklin Rltt)e, 22, Racine, ana I
Lena Kay Sampson, 17. Rt.
Reedsville; Timothy AUen Ba· 1
sham, 19, Rt. 1, ReedsvUle, and I
'1'11'~ Marte Brooks, 17, Rt. 1, :
Reedsvtlle.

1,1

Business Services

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK .

BOGGS

614·992·2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt. SO East
Guysville. Ohio
Authorized John De.er.
New Holland , Bush Hot
Farm Equipment
Dealer

PRICED RIGHT
CAll

•
•
•
•

Backhoe
'Excavating
Sep1ic Systems
Water. Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
• Dump Truck

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
I 3

~--

tfr

from the southwest corner
of Section 8, at the nor ·
thwest corn_
e r of the Chur,
ch ·lot; thenc e South 75
d egrees east 181 .5; thence
north 15 degrees East 90
feet ; therice North 75
degrees West 181.5 feet to
the street; thence south 15
degrees West ·90 feet alonq
the street to the place of
beginning, contain ing .35
acre, more or less . .
Deed Reference : Volume
142, Page 829, Meigs Coun ty Deed Records .
The real estate was ap p"ra ised at$17,000 .00.

Sale:

$1.000

ct'lsh at time of sale with
the balance in cash with in

lhirty 1301 days afler dAte

of sale. Deposit to be
wa i ved if sold to plaintifffirst mortgage holder . 1
James J. Prpffitt
Sheriff of
Meigs County

Il l 21. 2812) 4, 3tc

AU STEEL
BUILDINGS

E.Mai1•WMI

Sizes

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

start from J(hc24"

Utility Buildings
Sites from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24xl6.
Insulated Dog. Houses

N E W LISTING - Middeleport E )(Cellc nt

nPiQh bor hoo d ,
_3
bf'droom hom e with
chai n l ink tcn c:e in rear .
L ots ol c loset space.
F : A.
&lt;Hl S
lleat .
R&lt;'modC' I&lt;'d throuq hout.
Assume loan . $29,900 .00.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
R1. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.

Ph. 614 ·84J·2591
6·15-ttc

NEW
liSTING
Syr.1cuse - 3· 5 bedroom
hom~ on 200'xl00' l ot .
11'7 story fram P with
F .A . N .G- . hea1. Car -·
p e t i nq
Gar.;~qc .

I

$10.500.00

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

NOW

POMEROY - - A neat 3

VIRGIL 8 . SR. ktA-110.,

216 E . 2nd Sf.

Used Color T·v Sets for

Sale.
SALE PHONE NO .

992-6259
276 Sycamore St.

$76.700.00

Phone
H614)-992-332S
N.EAR

OPEN

b edroom home with n ew
roof. full ba semen t ,
qarqe, d ininq r oom,
livinq room . front c1nd
r ear
por c h es, ,coal
stoker furnac e. N ice
larqe lot . Good plilce,tor
ch i ldr e n
to
play

Ph. 992-7201

--

,"DRIVE IT TODAY,
SPRING.IS WHEN YOU PA Yl"

••

POMEROY

MIDDLE PORT
-

Level lot, woodburner. 3

bedrooms, carpet ing, 2
porches.
basement.
st orm doors and w indows. Price was $38,500.
This Wee k Only $30.000
Automatic hof water
neat ~g as fi red), lc:!"r qe
car peted
l ivi n Q.
3
bedroom s.
i nsulated ,
lull rlasement, qaraqe
rtnd full basem ent on
large cor ner lot .

REASONABLE -

In-

sula ted 3 bedrooms,
nice kitchen, modern
bath. lots of qood carpetinq , porches and
patio . Out of al l floods.

On ly $32 .500 .
~ARG AIN -

5 room
trame h om e with bath,
n il city uti lities, larqe
brtsC'ment
t or
111e
children and J lots. Just
$11,000 . .

Middleport, Ohio
9·1Htc

2

5·1t·tfc

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

,,

"'ll

WINTER WORRIES Roa Wells of suburblut
·Col111111iu, Olljo, rOUDd hlmleH with more IliaD gullae ,._ to '"'"'f llbotd after hll car wu rr-n In
plaee after a wee hill' water main break In trout ot

'.

w•·

Ne JMHne; ~ap.
lrleod, ~ l'lltae7. ""lwe&lt;l
away lit the tr._ car TtH!Iday, baUom, bat dldn'l
niUe mucll helldway. Wel8 11V8 aD17 W1im1
weather-wiD cie!r up the pnblem. (API= I pboto)

576- Apple Grove

773- Mason
882- New Haven

895- Letart
9:J7- 8uffato

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
tn Meigs County

1n Gil lila County

446-2342
In Maso" County

• Roofing Of all types
eSiding
e Remodel i ng
e Free estimates
e20 Vrs. experience

•

TOM HOSKINS
Ph.949· 2160 or 949·2482
I ·S·tfc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and
appliances,
cu·s tom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Now picking up junk
.:.utO bodi es. Top prices
p~id
s cr~p

1
mile
west
of
Fi\irgrounds on Old Rt .

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

33 .
Mon.· Fri.8 :30 to4 J00
Ph . 992-6564

eANNOUNCEMENTS ·
1- car4ol Thults
2- ln Memoriam
l-AMownuments
._GIVtiWIY
5-HtPflrAdl
t-Lost ana l=ound

1· 7· 1 mo.

&amp; Auction
t-Wt nlldto Buy

POMEROY

-

"YOUNG'S "
CARPENTER
SERVICE"
- Addons and remodeling
..._ Roofing and gutter work

toaturcs. $19.900.00 .

-concrete work
- Plumbing o11nd

RIGGSCREST

5
bedroom colonial hor'ne
with Iaroe rcc . room,
uti li ty, 21;, baths, total
electr ic. Double garage,
off 1ce. deck in rear on
l.;rqc lot. S63,000.00 .

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .

992-6191
Dottie Turner

elt(lrlul work'

(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or t92-7314
Pomeroy , Ohio

Jean Trussell

949·2460

992·2259

TRENCHING
SERVICE·
water· Sewer-E lectr ic
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush lane
Cheshire. Oh.

11- Wtnted lo Do

1

tensive

eFINANCIAL

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
C~ll
tor free siding
estima tes, 949 ·2801 or

1 3 I mo.

No Sunday
"You've given me so many iron
tablets, Doc , they wouldn 't lei

Saturday, January 23, 1982
1:00 P.M. UNTIL???

,

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

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

12·31 1 mo .

me through Ute gate at the ~---------+---------1

Located at the Golden Wings CB !=lub '
Mile North of Chauncey, Ohio on Route
13. All kinds of merchandise .
Not responsible for accidents.
.
Terms . of Sale : Cash or Check w1th
Positive I D.
AUCTIONEER - BILL BROWN

Keep This Ad For
Future Reference

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

30 Yeus f. MPtmc-nce
~ m.1 11 Pipelines fl

call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985·3561

!-lpccialty
Nor:th of R.1cin c
on t flrrnel Road

I 8 1 mo. pd .

1111ar101

AND Sl: Ill VICE

ALLM.AI&lt;U
.w.n.tlttn
e Oryert

J. R. PARSONS

GET

P .UIT~

.lll .. rtgf\
• OolpoU Is

•

Cliil Rd .,
7271 .

. TIMr Publisher reservet1he rtvn• totd lt or retc!t:lany adt Gtemed
obi tcllon•t. The Publlshtr will n1t1Hl rnpontiblt fer more than ont
incorrect ln11rlion.

Ph. 992 -5S87

CUSTOM
WELDING

In come
t ax
sen·lce .
Federa l and state inco me
tax forms, quarter ly r epor ·
ts, e~nd W 2 form s w ill be
done by appoi ntm enr. s~
wanda Eblin . 41000 Laurel

16-M.H. Repair
17- UphOIUtry

Uptol5words ... onedaylniefllf1~ ......... . ............. U .OG
U words ... three dar inlllrlion . . . . . . . . .
. . u .oo
u wearGs ... si• Gin inurtion , , . . . . . .
. ..... , .... $1 .00
(AVerage 4 worGs per lint l
Meblle Home sales and Y.ud ules are actept&amp;G !Jnly w11h cash
-..iHt or'der. 25 cent t:tlarve lor ads urryint Be• Number In Care of

airport!"
1

Relrlger.• tton
IS- Gtntrll Hauling

Up to
Up to

~·· 124 Oh . '
Minersville,

3·11 · ti c

M - -tectrlcat&amp;

Rates and Other Information

KINGSBURY
PARTS &amp; ACCESS.

C~lls

Th e Heart of Middl eport . 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
Genera l Slore . 992-6370 .

ll- E•cavatlnt

Tilt Stnti~tl .

Anything for your
Mobile Home .

949·2060.

Flea
M a rkel.
New
Qpeninq. 7 days A week .

a1 - H0me1mPfo'lernentt
n - Ptumblnv I. Mutlnv

Deadlines
Monltfty 7' 00 on Sa turd11~
lhru Friday 2; 110 t' .M.
the d,.y blltof"t pullliutlon
hnday.1:00 P .M . Frld1y

MOBILE
HOME
PARTS

Rl!~ir

71- Cimplnt Equlpmtllt

Tuete~ay

----------+--.....-------+----------!
BISSEll
SIDING CO.

Acctuorlu
71- Auto

Want-Ad Adver11slng

.

p-

Racine Fire Dept . sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sa t. ni ghts
6: 30p .m ., Bashan . Factory
choke 12 gau9e shotgun .

n - lloalll Moton
76- AUIO PlriS &amp;

SERVICES

Greg Roush
Ph .- 992-7583
or 992-2282

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

e TRANSPORTATION

J' - Rtialfon

• E lectrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years F."x pvrience

Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at I p.m . Factory choke
guns only _

Gun

71- AufOI for 'ale
72- lrucks tor Salt
n - vans&amp;• w.o.
74- Motorcyclts

Re"l Ellale WAnte d

~-

Write, your own ad and order by moll with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
results. Mon&amp;y not refundable.

I
I
I
I
I

I
I·
I
I
I
I
I

I·

I
I

Nam•·----------r·

home ,

TOOLS - FURNITURE
COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS
ALL NEW ITEMS

These cash rates

Ni C&lt;'
t ot,l l

HfRB OAWIIIIIS-AUCTIOIIEER
Rodltty 11ow11y - Apprentice

SATURDAY, JAN 23 AT 6:30P.M.
RUTlAND GYMNASIUM

S&amp;K AUCTION
IDIIIIIE IlEAl: AUCTIOIIEEI
Ter111 Gil .Sale: Clllt Of Clttdlwilll Pllitiiii.D.

homt~

tot

17·1mo.

STEVE R. KESSEL, M.D.

nice priv~ t e
Th is qual 1ty built
on

4,

2~ .

6.
1.

15.
26.
27.

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

· Address:

o. ______
9, _ _ _ _ __

2,;,

10. - - - - - -

11.

29.
30.

12.
13.

31. - - - - - 32 . _ ,_ _ _ __
33 .
34 .

Pinnell St. Ripley, W. Va.

.)~ .

bedroom home . LarQc
liv i na · room , dining
roam·, full basemen t,
carport. storage bldq .
Oh io Power all electric .

Office Hours:
Mon.·Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

. .o.

Velma Nlcinsky, Assoc.

Phono 742·34192
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
. Phone 74.N171

I .

By Appointment Only
Phone (304) 372·8550

15. - - - - - -

Go ld

cha in

14K .

Lost : bl acK and white fox

t7. - - - - - 10.

5.

P.CIIEAGE - 2 acres
w ith ranch style 3

s~s.ooo .

.Lost and. FOund
.

991 2•42.

19. - - - - - - 20.
21. - - - - 22.
13.

1.

2.
3.

ro om

home fea tures equipped
with
bir ch
k i tc hen
cabinets, "living room
with firep lace, d 1nl n&lt;1
room , fam i ly room, 5
bndrooms. 21h hi'lths,
utility room. 575 ,000.00.

) Announcement
)For Rent

Pti. 992-5663

HILL
ten

2506 .

qold . A cross fr0 1"'1 St ifflcrs
in Pomeroy in Park l n~l Lot .

)Wanted
JFor Sole

POMERO~

Br..=. ut iful

1 year old &amp; 2 month old
male German Shepherd &amp;
Norweg ian· Elk. HOund . 9-49·

LOST

Include discount

DLEPORT L ovply
two story homf', one
hlock from r 1vcr. J
hcct rooms . 11vinq r oom.
dininq
room , fa mily
r oom, l.=trge kttc hcn ,
r! MaCJc on n 1CC' co rner

liNCOLN

alter 4PM .

Sl\000 REWARD tor return
of Man's Go ld Ring .
Mi ssing from Dr . Vernon
B . Wt10d .11t patient of Holzer
M edi ca l Center. Contact
Mrs. Wood room 515 ;, t
Holz er s ftt -446·.5668.

$31 ,000 .00.
NEW LISTING - MID·

•ot. S35 ,000 .

'

Free . Hlllf Beegle puppies .
Ca l l•-16 · ~530

'

clrc tri c on 1 ~ c rt • on
N f'W
L i ma
Rd .

AUCTION

PERSON who has

any th ing to give ~way and , ·
does not offer or attempt to '
offer any other thing for .
sa le may pla ce an ad i n this
column . Ther e will be n!\
charqe to 1he advert iser.

BLACK and while fem ale

r~nc h

11 '7 b"tll,

P.NY

-..--·- -----.. Giv_~~W~'t _ _

Coll ie, 304·576·2173 .

OFFIC F. 742-2003
NEW LISTING thrf'e bedroom

Be•uty Shop. 51h and \line •.
St., Ra cine . 614 ·949·2666 .

'!i IIC

S. Hobstettcr Jr .
B rok£&gt;r

•

mane nts. $20 tor $10 . $18 tor

SM. All short curly per --~
mt'lnents $12 . 50 . Aline
w eaver 's
Dress
and ·

D ls tlwo~uherl

•HoiW,ftrTIInlol

with
G~ orgc

All dresses and blouses half
price . Specia.l on per-

I

Addr••••---------1I
Phone
l

Pomeroy . 992 ·

lnc:ome
r·ax Servic e .
Federal and State. Prompt,
accurate . M arlh&lt;t Fry,
Pomer oy . Phone 992· 3414.

II 4

Lots of Good Merchandise(
Terms of Sale: cash or Chec.l
Positive I D
,
Not responsible for accidents
Eats Available
Auctioneer - Don Rosser

-

991·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .

U- S.Id I Ftrtlliltr

n - Farmster Sat•
J-4 - Buslntn lvllcl tne•
U - LOII &amp; Acretltll

.

For bulk del i very o·f "
gasoline, heating all and
diesel fuel , ca ll Landmark , ·

0 - LIYtslock
h ie
64- HIY &amp; Gri lli

eREAL ESTATE

i~g .

1-7 ·1 tfc

Housing
Headquarters

AUCTION

O,portunlt&gt;t
U - Montv to Loan

l&lt;.rlner · Sandhollow

.

,, _ ,arm EquiPment
n - wanttd to 8uy

ll - ttoml!tlor Salt
n - Moltlle Homes
lor Sele

remodel·

Rd .

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LI\IESTOCIC

11 - lu•in .. •

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - e•· .

club .

st- For S.lt or Trade

I Cllhpa lr

ROUSH

Ph. J67 · 7560

9·30 ·tCC

99'2· 5692

Olfice

REESE~ :

Shoot ing Match every Sun-

day !PM Galllo Co. Coon

H - Mutiul lflllrurnont
SI- Frultl &amp; Vtttllltltl

SlrYICtl

Sla tc ly

Plaza. 446·8025.

Merctt.nllln
U - BuiUIInt SuppHII
u-Pth for Sale
~ - MI"sc .

1J-Scllool 5 Instruction
11-RiciiO. lV,

·

Coi l

Complete line of Muzzle
Loading Guns and Supplies .
Spring
Vall'ey
Trading Ca .• Spring Vt'llley

s 1- H 0viehold OMs

12-SitutHon Wanted
ll- trltUrance
14-llllintu Trailfil'll

Let George Miller
check your present
electrical system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195

Georges Creek Rd .
·46 ·0294 ..

tttnf

S1-C8, TV, RadiO Equipment
Sl- Antlques

11- HtlpWinttcl

.,

machine repair, parts , and
suppl ies.
Pick up and
deliverv , Dav is Vacuum ·
Cleaner , one half mile !JP

eMERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SEIIIIICES

For all your
wiring needs.

e RENTALS

41- wanttd to Re~t
41- Eq ulpmtnt for Rent
49- For lNII

t-Pubtlc Salt

- -- --· -

-

3 ___ ~n~~nc.!~e.!!!! _~SWEEPE R and sewlnq

" 1- Housas tor Atnt
42- Mobllt Homes
tor Rent
44-Apartmtnts torREnt
45- ,:!urnithlcf Room•
41- Sp,~utor

1-Yari!SIIe

MIUER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

2-B ·tlc

The family of Allee Grant
would like to thank all their
friends t'lnd relfttlves for
thler prayers . flowers. all
donations and fOOd and el sa
Re¥ . Alan B lac kwood .
From lhe family .

or Write Dally Sen.tlnel Classltltid Dept.
111 ~ourt St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

for auto bodies.
iron c1nd metals.

8·20· tfc

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

~'""

(Pomeroy Sera p
Iron &amp; Metal)

And Home Ma intf'nanc e

w. va .

458- Leon

U - ~roleSIIOnll

older M m e with up to
four bedrooms, orlqinal
woodwork. Jl.'1 baths.
Fireplace, torc ed air
qr~s furnttc c. Large front
si tt i nq por c h
Manv

Athens Uvestock Yards on Rt. 50
I

co .•

Area Code 304
675- Pt. Pleasant

PH . 992·2478
1·11- 1 m o . pd.

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

s 19.750.00 .

FRIDAY,·JAN. 22 AT 7:00 P.M.
THAT'S RIGHT! THIS LOW, LOW RATE AND
DEFERRED PAYMENT OFFIER AVAILABLE TO
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS ON 36 MONTH TER~
MS. OFFER EXPIRES FEB. 28th. SO DO NOT
DELAY!

Oavid Price

1614) 992 ·3556
1· 13· 1 m o . pd.

b edroom home in con venient location . po1rt
bt'lSE'mcnL Larqc l ot .

Saturday, January 23-6:00 P.M.
Pageville Auction House

NO PAYMENT FOR
~ DAYS!

C614l 742·2131

Pomeroy
115-Chtsler
343-Porllond
247-Lellrl Fill S
Ut-R•cine
742- Rutland
667- Coolvllle

675-1333

AUCTION

-14.9%

John Wis e

992-MI~dleporl

M~son

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Truc ks
elo· Boy
• Tr~ncher
• water • Sewer
• Gas L incs
eS c ptic
.Systems
LArge or Small Jobs

Also Wood Splitter
For Rent

.lt s .. wmill

NEW CAR
FINANCING

PUUINS
EXCAVATING

Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Available
or You Pick Ua ·

L1censed &amp; Bonded

- --·- -- - -Real ~ta~e --~!~~e~~
-

FIREWOOD

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Meigs Co. lAna Code
614

Gallia Co. Are~ Code
614 '
4&lt;6-Galllpolls
367- Choshlre
3U-IIInton
245- R io Grandt
256- Guyan Dist .
643- Arabla Dist.

feel easl and 503 feel north

MIDDLEPOR ·l

testimo~y

Misc. Mtrchandice

S4

NOTICE OF
• SALE
Byr v irtue of an Order of

Terms of

Admitted--James Williams, Par·
kersburg; Ruth Ebersbach, Por·
tiand; Dana Aldrtdge, Minersville;
Melissa Priddy, Rutland.
Dlscharged··Kathy Robinson,
Charles Grueser.

c11 w~ 12

WYO.

agreed.

Veterans Memorial

runs

Two calls were answerf;'d by local
units on Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice reports.
The Pomeroy Unit at 7: 48 a. m.
took Jim Williams from the Kroger
Stpre to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal and the Racine Unit at ·10: (U
a.m. took Ruth Ebersbach, New
Portland Road to Veterans
Memorial.

S.D.

Man ;hurt

A roller type fiOQr sate stolen
tro(ll and F . and A. Sunshine Cen·
ter. ·W. Main St., .Pomeroy, in IJe.
cember has been recovered
Pomeroy Pollee Chief George Stitt
reports.
The sate was recovered by Chlet
Stitt and Patrolman Steve Hartenbach along County Road 3. The sate
had been chiseled open and about
$523 taken. However, Chief Stitt In·
dlcated that recovery of. the safe
wtll aid In the Investigation of the
thett.

- -;;;P:::
u;;cbl"-ic Nolice

4.4·

Jfeigs County happenings
Couple files suit

Ohio

-:

Advisers pms buck
in econoniic cold war
WASHINGTON (AP) ,..- Presl· . flatlon and interest rates and "did
deilt Reagan's economic advisers/
not help us In our recovery
cotlcedlng the recession Is worse
program."
than they had expected, are trying
The treasury secretary's com·
to licatter the blame from the Fed·
ments call)e as ·t h.e Commerce Deer4J Reserve Board to a Carter ad·
partment was giving Its final
ministration that has been out of
conflrma tlon of recession.
·otllce a year.
Commerce repOrted that "real"
:)'reasury Secretary Donald T.
or' lnflatlon-adjusle!l gross national
~an said Wednesday that new
product ,... thevalueolallgoodsand
~emment rtga~showed the naservices produced in the nation Il~ has fallen Into 'a deep reces·
sank at the'end of 1981 faster than It
stqn, deeper than most forecasters
had since a record 9.9 percent rate
had predicted."
of decline in the sprtng of 198l.
And v.arlo11s officials. silld things
The fourth-quarter drop - at an
will worsen before they get better, annual rate of 5.2 percent - fol·
with national OUlPIIt sUpping even
lowed a second-quarter decline at 1
IO'f'er In the current quarter and
rate of 1.6 percent and a thlrd· ·
u®mployrnent rising above Dequarter gain atarateotl.4peicent.
cember's 8.9 percent.
Real GNP rose 1.9percentforthe
But. they were not accepting
year - compared with a 1~ d~ .
blame.
cUne of 0.2 percent. ·The gain was
"We lnhertted this mess," Regan
mostly due to a robust ~.6 percent
said. "Those who blame Reaganon·
rate of growth In the first quarter as
lcs for the c11rrent slump must be·
Jimmy Carter left .office and the
Ueve In retroactive causation.".'
new administration took over naAnd he added that erratic steer·
tional economic policy.
lng of the nation's money supply by
Regan said the recession proba·
the Federal Reserve since Reagan
bly will go a bit deeper, with real
took office left flllanclal markets
GNP dropping as much as 2 per·
uncertain about future levels of In·
cent further at an annual ratelnthe

21 1982

35 . · _ _ _ _ _ _

Mail Th!~ ,coupon wlfh Remittance
;t'he Dally Sentinel
i 111 CourtSt.
Pomeroy, 011. 45769

terri('r . lice nse no. 88. F ivP.
Po i nt s
area .
NAm e
Gri'ISShOPPN . SSO r ewArd .
Ca ll 991 3479 .

LO ST Br own &amp;
wh i te
bea gle, mal o. vicinity ol
Wos t Poi nt Rd . C~ II J0--4 · 88 1

2790 .
9

Wanlecl to Buy

u

WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture and Antiques or all
kind s, c all Kenneth Swa in,
256 ·1967 i n the evenings.

.

·l

'I
I

I
1

I

CASH PAID lor ' lean, la ic

model u sed cars. Smith
Buic k-Pontiac . GAllipol is,
OhiO . Call ~46 · 1102 .
BUYING GOLD 8. SILVER
paying cash for anyth ing

slamped tOK , 14K , 18K a nd
dental gold . Class r ings.
weddinq rings, si l ve-r coi ns

or

anvlhlng

sterling .

Clarks

slamped
Jewelry _

I Store . Gallipolis ~ol6·1691 or
.1 ' 992 ·205~ in .Pomeroy1

L-----------------~..J'II...--.-·---~------~--------J

�•
10-The
9

Sentinel

--~w~a~nt~e~d'-!r.'!
o~B~uCL__

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

41

by Larry Wright

Buy ing
Gold,
Silver,
Platinum . old coins. scrap
rings &amp; silverwa re. Daily
quote s available. Also
co ins &amp; coin suppl ies for
sale .
Spr i ng
Valley
Trading , Spring
valley
Plaza , 446·8025 or 446·8026 .

- -·'- -··---.. - - --- ---- --

42
Mobile Homes
___ for _!!enr__ __ _

2 bedrodrn unfurnished
mObile home . Located 2
miles out S88. Adults only,
$175 .00 mo. Cal l446·2300 .

We pay cash for late m odel
clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson ,
446·0069.

------

up

to Sl40

per

034·3131.

Underpinn ing for house
housetrailer . Call256 '19J.

Furnished, adults
Call446·4t10.

dollars. wood ice boxes.
stone Iars, antiques, et c ..

3 ~76 .

BUYING DEER A ND
BEEF HIDES . Gene Hines
Rt. 1, Amesville, Oh 4--48·
6747 . Buying raw fur atfer
b ee. 12. Daily 6 PM to 9
PM , c losed Sunda ys. Also
closed Dec . 24 &amp; 25.
RAW FUR buyer . Bee f &amp;
deer hide·ginshang . Trap·
ping suppli es. George
Buck ley, Rt . 2. Athens, Oh .
614 · 66~ · 4761 .
Open
even ings.
OLD ,FURNITURE , beds,
iron, brass , or wood . Kit·
chen cubbards of all types.
TablfJs. r ound or square.
Wood ice bo xes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
comple te household . Gold,
si lver , old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
etc. India n Artifacts of all
type s. Also buyin g baseball
cards. Osby Marti n 992 ·
6370.
Small copy ma chine to
reproduce ta x forms . G. E.
Reuter , 614-992·2490.
Would like to buy up to 3
acres of land around
Rufland area . Out of high
water . Prefer bl ac k top
road . Contac t Larry Barr
742·3149 .
Raw fur s. hi des, scrap
metals,
batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root , and merchandise
brokering . Harper -Ha lstead Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
AlsO P'lea Market open
dai ly . Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm.
Em~

Sen11tes
11 __ •

~elp !'a.'!'!.C!...

__

Ear n
20
per
ce nt
r etir ement on 52.000 .00
w holesa le instead of 3 per
ce nt
retirement
on
$7.500PV . 614-875·9749 or
614·477 1414.
SA LES PE RSO N E L L
Do to new Audio-Vi sual
pro gram
r ap idly
e)( ·
panding firm has sever al
openin~s in its outside sales
dept . If you are ambious
lind w ell groomed, we may
have a job for lou. We offer
pa i d vacation s, profit
s har i ng ,
pay
hospitalization, fl ex ibl e
hours. Car &amp; high sc hool
education r equ ir ed . Opportunities of $1 ,000 p r
mo. and up. For interview
call between 10 AM &amp; 2PM
only . 614 ·446·7649 .
Pinec r est Care Center has
pa rt tim e openings for
RN 's. For further inf o. con ·
ta cl Judy Hol ley, RN
Oirector of Nursing, "46·
7112. E.O.E.
WHY WOULD 2 Diamonds,
8 Emeralds over -40 Pearls
over 500 Directs Switch .
For inform ation call (304)
.523·401 2 or write P.O. Box
2125. Hg tn ., Wva 25621.

- -· -- --

-~-

-

-·

We can pay ·now or pay
later. The delinquent child
ot to da y is tomorrows
Pr ison inmate . We can waif
Jill tomorrow and pay for
prisons and cr ime an·d law
enfor cement or we can
t ake care of the problem
today. Make an investment
in th e future become a
foster parent . Call Juvenile
Court 446·3842.
GET VALUABLE !raining
as a young business person
.Jnd ea r n good money plus
~o m e great gifts as a Sen·
ti ne I route carr ier . Phone
' us ri ght away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156or 992·2157 .
-

-- _ _ c _ _ _ - -

BABYSI TTER needed, 30•·
675· 7142 .

-

12 -

Have va cancv for elderly
person . Room, bOard and
ca re. Reasonable. 992·6022 .

13

Insurance

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been
can·
celled?
Lost
your
operator'\License? Phone
992·2143
I

72

46

Ir~~:;~~~~;:;;;r::;:;~;;;;;;:;:;:;~
2
bedroom. mobile
homeand
in
_____ -----Syracuse
Wash er
13
Insurance
-· - - - - - - - -SANOY AND BEAVER In·
sura nee Co. has offered
se rvi ces forf ireinsurance
co verage in Ga ll ia County
for almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in ·
di vidual needs. Contact
L ew is Hughes. agent .
Phone 446 3318.
ia

- w anled"iOOO- -

Baby sitting in my hOme.
Ca II 446·0390

---- ----·- -

Will babysit day or night in
my home. Ca ll 446·4337 un·
tii7PM.
TWO ex p erienced and
dependable ladies will
wal l-paper or paint in your
home or business. Phone
304·458·1835 or 458·1536.
CARPENTER &amp; home
maintainance, 304·675·3190.

-

--·----- •.. --FIA3AEial

22 - =~M~~ iY!_o _Loan __ _
Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA·VA Finan·
cing Loan Rep. Cook ie
Krautter (3041675 · ~73 .
REFINANCE or purchase
your home.. 30 year fixed
rate. wva. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St .,
Athens . Oh. 592-3051 .
23

P'rofesslonal
ServiceS

32 - -MObile HomeS - -

dryer. Deposit
614·992·3625.

for Sale

1972 12x60 mobile home,
new carpet . central air
cond. Call 245·9520 after
6PM .

Construction
workers
trailer for three. Phone 304·
773-5651 , Mason.

1970 12x60 · Buddy central MOBILE home for rPnt
hea t and air . Set up and un·, with opti on to buy, 304·576·
2711 ..
derpinne~ . Phqne 446·7402
after 5:30PM .
-,-----,-4-4
Apartmemt
$9 , 000. 1968 Cherokee ___ ~_E,_,e~
ntc...__
trailer on lot. partia ll y fur·
r oom
$85 ,
nished, has new fuel Oi l fur· Furnished
nance with 300 gal. tank, utiliti~s pd. , single male,
has new 10x20 ft . porch range, refrig. share bath .
with awning &amp; solid oak 446·4416 after 7PM .
deck, neYJ underpinning,
very well insulated, has 2 2nd . floor furnished efbdr .• full bath, kitchen , ~ fi ency apt . 729 2nd . Ave.,
living room, rural water . Gallipolis. Call 446·0957 .
Ca II 388·9059 anytime.
Adults only, no pets.

---

2 bedroom mobi le home. 2 Bdr. Apartment , 458
Sel up on Depol Sl ., Second Ave.. Large living
Rutland . Lot available. 614· room , kitclien, bath, newly
992·2490.
Completely
·decorated .
turn . Adults. dep . &amp; ref.
1976 Winsor 14x70 central req . $225 mo . 446·2581 or
air and heet, underpinning, 446·2236.
concrete stepps, storm w indows. Wil l sell unfurnished Furnished apartment for
or part turn . Call 992·2006 rent. Call-446·3937 .
or 992·3-401 .
Deluxe furnis hed apart·
ment, excellent location, 1
or 2 adults, only 527.5, ref . &amp;
dep . required . Call 446·
0338 .

TRAILER , Mason Ci ty .
Sa le or rent. 304·675·3770.
REPOSSESSION . 1981 all
electric mobile home. set
on lot ready to move into.
Payments 5159.47 mo nth .
All State Modular Homes.
576 2711 .
USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

2 brd . apt. HUD excepted,
kit chen furn . Call 675·5104 .
Apartment for r ent. Call
446·0390 .

HOME .

APARTMENTS· 1 AND 2
BEDROOMS .
RENT
STARTSAT;l BEDROOM
Sl52, 2 BEDROOM S Slllll.
DEPOSIT S200 . Call 446·
2745 .

---------Piano Tuning -Be kind to
your ears. Cal l Bill Ward
for appointment, 446·4372 .
C• &amp; L Bookkeep! ng . Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in·
dividuals.
Carol Nea l 446·3862
~

-

---------

Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. Ususally one or two
days service . Dismuke's
405 2nd. Ave .• Gallipolis,
446 ·0474 .
YOUR Federal. Stale. City
Taxes prepared . 17 years
e)(perience with tax firm .
Kenneth Adk ins, 50 Olive
St., Gallipolis, 446·7475 .

31

- -HonleS fOr Sale ---

-- ·-------

-~

Neighborhood Rd .,
Gallipolis . Owner will
finan ce, 3 bdr. ranch, 1
bath, country kitchen, 1 car
detac hed garage with
workshop, also attached
carport .
Unfinish e d
basement , includes ap·
pl iances: Washer &amp; dryer,
range &amp; refrig . Gas heat,
city water. septic tank . 1
acre lot inc ludes 2 trailer
pads with electric &amp; water .
$40,000 f irm . Financing 3
yr . la nd con tract, 10 per
cent down, 12 per cent in·
t ~ r es t on l y. Call collect
Wayne Clar&lt; . 614·262·3929.
Please no realtor s.
250

required .

ll ~ -- !=irms for s""ii!_~-=­
Farm , tocafed on Rt :-21 8, "o
acres, 1200 lb . toba cc o
base. Call atier 6, 2~5-9222

l bdr . partially furn ished
- - - - - - - - - - - - apr .• newly remodeled, S135
35 _ ---"
L,_,
ots &amp; Acreage
month p lus utilities. No
2, 1 acre house lots, on 554, children . Calt 992·5880 after
low downpayment, land 6.
contract, rural water, 1
Columbus and Southern Furnished efficiency . $145,
Electric. Cal l 256·6413. 12 utilities pd . One person.
p .m . to9 p.rn .
Ca l. 1446 · •~16 after 7PM .
1 acre on the M idd leport 2 bdr . unfurnished apt . i.n
side of the flood road, Crown City . Ca ll 256·6520.
beautiful location, SS,OOO.
Cal l 992· 5236.
Semi furnished apt. in
Coats Building over Dutton
Drugs. Suitable for one perRentals
son . Ca ll at Apt . 18 in Coats
Bui lding for information.
. ·c..~
41
Houses far Rent
2 bedroom well iirrsull~tE•d " l
house near Ri o Grande
College, · S200 per mon!h
plus uti lities and $100
refundable
deposit .
References r equ ired. Call'
245-9325 or 2•5-5364.

------

Partly furnished apart·
ment . Close to shopping in
Pomeroy . No pets . Adults.
$125 per month . 614·9923201 .
Apartments . 675·5548.

APARTMENT S. mob ile
3 or 4 bdr . house in Pt. homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant near hospital. Pleasant and Gallipolis.
$300 mo. r ent $200 deposit. 614·446·8221 or 614·245 ·9484.
Call446 · 823~ .

2 bedroom family rm ., $300
per mo. plus utilities, $300
dep. required . Call 4~ ·
~554 .

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason. WV . 773·5651.
FURNISHED~

room apar·
tn1ent , adults, no pets, 304·
Furnished · cottage near 675· 1453.
HMC . 4 rooms, or.c r::hild.
3 brm . .nome newly $200 water paid . Call -446· TWO bedroom apartment,
decorated , near city . 2 out «16 after 7PM.
1 older chi l d, all utilities
bui ldings &amp; carport . Vinyl
.... __ --- paid, 304·675·5679 after, 5
siding and carpet . Call 4-46· RIGHT DOWN TOWN
p.m .
3897 .
Newly
decorated un ·
furnished, 3 rm . house. FURNISHED 1 bedroom
Large home, 4 bedrooms, Suitable for single person apartment in Pt. Pleasant,
family , living &amp; dining or retired couple. Garden extra nice, adults only , no
room. fu ll kitchen, full space, depos it &amp; references pets. Phone 304·675·1386.
basement. 2 acres. Large required . Call 446·0450 or
446·1291 .
swimming pool. 985·4290.
45- - FlJrnished iOor:nsOr rent -3 bedroom fur·· 9 room house in Rio Gran·
SLEEP I NG ROOMS and
nished home on Bud Chat· de. Call446·3485 .
light housekeeping apt.,
tin Road on big level lot.
Park Central Hotel.
576 ·1711 .
5 bdr . house in Gallipolis
near park, $400. Call 446·
Weekly rates avai lable S60
Comfortable 3 bedroom 7265 or 446·0644.
and up in Circles Motel.
home , 8 1: 1 percent
assumable loan. and is Two bedroom house on Call 446·2501 ..
near PPHS, large fenced in
Roush Lane in Chesh ire
vard, kitchen appliances near Power Plants. Un· I'
a nd
more .
We
are furnished. dep . &amp; ref . No
relocat ing and can share pets, yard &amp; garden . S225
realtor' s fees by selling
mo. Call-446· 1527.
now. Call after 6 pm 675·
1625.
rooms, 3 bedrooms. bath,
__ _j_ "'"'"~---------· 5utility
room, nice and
c lean. 446· 1519 or 992·2,j)().
J2
Mobile Homes
for Sale
Country home In Pomeroy,
TRI · STATE MOBILE
Flatwoods area . For sale
HOMES . Gallipolis. Year
end sale, price reduced, or rent. 2 story, j bedroom ,
17 acres, large pond . 614·
used mobile homes . CALL
"6·2359 after 6 p.m.
~46 · 7572 .

-------

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

7J

Wanted to Rent

Household Goods

Kenmore washer $125., GE
dryers $B5 ., Whirlpool
wash er &amp; -dryer pair $225 .
Call 256· 1207.
SWAIN
AUCT ION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .,
Gallipolis. 3 piece living
room suites $199, maple
rockers $49, several chest
of drawers, new &amp; used
wood burners, new table
lamps $18, wood cook
ranges, new 5 piece dinnet
sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
several dinnet sets, silver
stone·all sizes, bunk 11eds
$100. new tools of all kinds,
wring er Maytag washer,
Linoleum rugs 9x12 $10,
and lots more .
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washer s,
dry e rs.
refrigerators ,
ran g es . Skaggs
Ap pliances, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446·7398 .
Sofa &amp; chair high quality
with a"d ditional slip covers
$525 . Call446·8263 .
2-4,000 BTU space heaters
$65 ea., 2·30' gas ranges
avacado &amp; gold $75 ea ., 12·
refrigerators and 2 deep
free zers, 2·GE washers
avacado· &amp; gold. Skaggs
Applianc es, Upper River
Rd .• GallipoHs. 446·7398 .
For sale one dark brown
couch, $75. Call446-4537.
G.E'. refrigerator, color
console TV , sofa, loveseat,
&amp;· chair, coff ee antt end
tabl es, G. E . setf cleaning
oven, bedroom suit, 71
Dodge van 304·675 ·6750.

Misc. Merchilndh::e

Lump coal S32 per ron.
Zinn Coal Co., Inc . Call «6·
1408 between9 and 5.
TOP PRICE Scrap Metal,
Alumnium, Brass, Copper,
Batteries .
Skidmore
Foster, 123 112 Pirte Sl .
Gallipolis Block co., 123112
Pine St .• 446·2783.
·
For Sale K itchen table and
2 chairs. S25. See at 769
Brownell Ave., Middleport.

5J

Antiques

Ant ique dinnett set, $.400 .
Call 388-9676 .

S4 · Misc. Merchandice
3- · 8 ft . showcases with
lights, 1 large bedroom
su i te, double dresser and
chest, 2 antique clocks, 1
meat slicer and misc.
groc er y store equipment .
Call 256·6413, 12 p.m. to 9
p.m .

12x&lt;IO 2 bedroom Buddy
mobi le home. Set up with 2
or 4 tots, gas heat, rural
water, close to ·town, finan ·
cing available. Phone 446·

1294.

5 room house, bath, l:flrge
lot,
garden space .
Available Jan. 25 . Racine
area . 992·.58S8.
.1\11 eleC'tric home wtth
garage and fult size
basement . S250 month .
Phone 675·3217 .
HOUSES on slate Rt. 87.
rura l water,
Wendell
Fauver. 304·895·3879.

Pets tor Sale

Fish Tank and Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave.. Pl .
Pleasant. 675·2063. Mon.,
Thurs.,/ Fri . 11 to 6. Tues.,
Wed .• 1 Sal. 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.

~UNi!A L OW~

N060 DY EL;E 17

Sf/WING

THERE~

::

JU~T ONE ,EH 1

-

·----

·--~---===-

BUNDY Trunpet, excellent
condition, $125 .00, 304·675·
2665.

---· .............. ....
··· · -~·-·

Gas heating stove 60,000
BTU . Call446·2637.

'

Firewood SJS pickup load,
stacked. Ph . 388·8770 or 388·
9737.
Pyrodex now in stock 16 oz.
can 58.95. Also Red Dot,
Blue Dot, Green Dol, and
Dupont Power in stock .'
Spring Valley Trading Co.•
Spring Valley Plaza, «6·
8025.
28ft . 76 Impala camper for
sale tor $5.000. Call 367·
7238 .
For sale woodburning
stove. :&lt;ls~ing 550. Call 379·
2755.
British .303. rifle 11 shot,
boll action, •S7~. Craftsman
2 stage burning outfit etc .,
S75. Call446 · 1~35 .
For sa le one Homelite
Super XL chainsaw less
bar &amp; cha1n for parts. S60.
Call 446·4537.
F;rewood S25 load. Spl i t &amp;
stacked . Call 388·9700 or
388·9313.
Excelsior Oil Co .• 636 E .
Main St .• Pomeroy, Oh io.
m -2205.

61

'

Far"! Equipment

Case fr¥:tor J point hitch
and snow blade. Call 446·
0885 after 5PM .
1980 220 MF diesel tractor,
used 221 hrs., .rtlso rear
mower with tractor. All in
exc. cond ., $6,700. Call 446·
1700.

.-3----uvestock-Registered Quarter Horse
filly,
Registered
Ap ·
paloosa, 4 yrs. old and good
blood l ine,~ll 256·6413 . 12
p.m. lo9 p.m .

~

77

78
Camping
__ __,.E~q~u~menl _ _
32 ft .• 5 ph wheel travel
trailer Dale Ray Pin House
model·, like new, air con·
ditioned . Loaded with ex·
rras. Call 446· 1102 after • &amp;
weekends or
446 ·3547
anytime.

ANNIE
~ TOIW

ilA5 601N5 TO

FiX n1E OOOit UMTIL
YOU 5HOIIIEO HIJ.l
THE fN6TRUCr10N

5227 .

4x9 Tanden utility trailer .
new lights, rebuilt . Calf 992·
2075.
All types -of farm and in·
dustrial trailers, Men ·
tgomery T ra iter Sales,
Langsvi lle, Ohio 45HI. 669·
4245 evenings.
n

----- ~--

Used tires. Hanshaw's
Tires on Lucas Lane. 675·
7360.
BIG air compressor, $700.
68· 72 Nova body parts.
Rebuilt 390 Ford · motor,
S250. 39 Chevv Coupe body
S500'. Large lighted ad·
vertising sign on stand
S375 . Couch S600 . New
dinette set, 6 chairs, $115.
30076·2&lt;102 .
--~-

EXCERCISE bike, baby
bed, bolh like new, 304·675·

6110.
SS

Building Supplies

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call U5·5121 .

.56

Pels lor Sate

POODLE GROOM I NG .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.

Hay &amp; Grain

Ground ear corn. $82 ton.
Caii61H85·3581.

SCHOOL!

800/t, ANNIE?

81

AKC Reg. English Springer
Spanlels.-Liver &amp; white $85.
Call 446· 82~4 .
AKC Reg. Poodle wormed
&amp; all shots, good . with
children. Calt 446·7411 .

~EFOGED

TO 1'1\GS THE
PEPPBl SIWEHTS·~

NON TALK! WHO
PUT 'YOU TWO
BUMS UP TO
THIS?

Rover, q~t awa~
from the
qastank!

Mom ·had a fiqht
with Jessica and
called Wilmer
n~mes?

l

t,CLAUDIU8
NI!WS
t0:15
STANDING ROOM ONLY
'An EveninG AI The Moulin
Rouge' George He milton hoete
thla neughty. bawdy Oay 90't
baret ahow.
10:28
CIH UPDATE NEWS
lLFIIED HITCHCOCK
10:30

~

rJ~EII!NT8

WINNIE
SUDPENL.Y WE'VE

HIT A 5.t.lcK

SJI'I::IT 011 THE R0'\0
'TO SUCCESG!

:~:: !tlll/1\'~ar~;b.
H16HER OPER ·
ATING COSTti,
NA&lt;SGING
F:EI"AIRs ..

••• FRANKLY, I

IXIN'T KNOWHOW
WE'RE GOING TO

MAKE. IT NEXT

MONTH!

TO IJE PERFECTLY HONEST,.
OMI&gt;R ..• I. WAS TH1Nk!N6
PERHAPS YOU COULl?
MAKE MY COMPANY A

MOP£5T JpAN/

ffi

_____

73 NOVA, 30•·67H•.S.

i~

1970 FORD Fairlane 500,
30-4-675·2508 .
1979 CHEVY Malizu assic,
landau top, :U.,OOQ iles,

:- .::..::. :::Ei~tri-;~(~ :..·

.• __&amp;_f!_efr!J!erat~o~. _

Truck's ior Sole
72
'!.._2.!~!!...!!..!!!!:.!!.!!~­

JONEs BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call ~7-7'71 or
367 ·0591.

78 Dodge D · l50 pickup, • ·
wheel drive, 32,000 miles
with camper lop, in ex·
celtentcond. Calf «6-7504.
1978 Ford F ·250, &lt;·wheel
drive with lock oul hUbbs,
sliding beck glass, new
Ux3Sx15 tires on mag
WheelS With 4 in. lift kit.
Coii367-CI471 pr 367-7534.

__________

___,_

__ -

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call tor estimates 367·7101.
aT

-·=

:::_::::]I..P.holsierv
TRISTATE
UP~OLSTERY SHOP
)163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
446· 7833.or 446·1833.

-----,.-

----.-·-·

MOWREYS Upholstery Rl .
1 Box 12•. Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675·415.1.

------:-------

''

I WAS SAVIN' UP MV BUTTERAN'- EGG MONEY SO'S I COULD
TAKE ME A

--BUT MV BUTTER-AN~EGG MONEY
TOOK A VACATION FUST

l

. ''J)omoaoattM" 111M

•

Y11WP01NT At Pre·
aldent Reagan rilarlct hi I firlt
year In office. thlt edition will
tocua on controverelee about
newt coverage of th• Pr•·
aldency ei'ld tht degree to
which It hi I been fair and
accurate. ABC New1 Carr•·
epondent T•d Kopptlanchort
from the Weahlngton bureau of
~ Nowo. (50 mlno.)
11:311 CIJIIOVII-(CDIIEDYI .. ,.
"
Happy" 1HO
11 :SS
CIH UPDATl! NI!WS
12:00
IUIIHS AND ALLI!N
!WPOflll' Ao Prooldont
AIIQIIR IJirkl hit flrlt ye•r In
otflco, thlo edition wllf focuo on
controvereleeaboul new•
CIOYOriQIOflhoprooldoncyand
tho dogrM to which it hoo boon
fair and tccuratt. ABC Newa
Correapondent Ted Koppel
anchorl from the Waahlngton
buroou of ABC Nowo. (eo ·
(JZ •

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition servi ce,
commercial. industrial .
,Phone 882·2079 .

--· -----··
.---s --~~~·•Hiliiiri,=
=­

WANTED TO BUY a Late
Model 2 ton truck·flalbed
or cab and chassis. Ph. «6·
4782.

BARNEY .

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Author: ized Singer
Sales &amp; Service1 Sharpen
Sc issors . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . m -22H.

S-4800., 30-4-6~5 · 2508 .

SIHVILU IIFD
.
TOR IN THI! HOUSE
11:06
NTH! FAMILY
I 1:30
'I'll! TONIGHT SHOW
'The Beat Of Carton ' Oueata:
Luclllo Boll, Koll~ Monteith ,
Oleic Enberg. (Repeat; 60
no.)
ANOTH!R LIFE
'
IIOVI! ·(DIIAIIA) ••
"Blood Banter" 1180
(1) 'U:NNY HILL SHOW
• ()) CIS LATE IIOVI!
Quine~. M.E.: 'C rib Job' A
juvenlltlaacculldofelaylngan
elderly mtn and a juvenile·
eenlor citizen'• project It
jeopardlz:td by repercuaalont
ofthecue. (Repeat) The Saint:
'Portreit of Brenda' The Saint' a
lnveettaatlon of a murd•red
tr1111 put a him on the trail of a
popelngerendhermanlpulatlvt
ru. (R-11)
AIC CAPTIONED lft:WI
MOVIE -(DIIAIIA) •••

PEANUTS

C%.AY, TROOPS, LET '5
60! MOVE ACROSS!
LET'S 60! LET'S 60!

'I'OU SEEM TO BE
DOING A GOOD JOB A5

MY .5\J6STITIJTE, SilL

12:30

I""I·~TE:~:,RRO w
COA8T·TO-COA8TGuooto :
Former Senator Georg a
McOowern , Slater Bledoe. _
HIYIOY Milll, Wllllo Slorgoll.
111-1; flO mlno.)
mJACKIENNY

•.

J

WOR:I75 yOU MI6Hi

&amp;EI FROM
VOL.IAIRE .

.

I

Now arrange the circled leners 10
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the abOve cartoon.

{Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: BATON GLAND CRAYON HALVED
Answer; What no upright person would do- LEAN

10011. No. 20, c~tllnlng 110 puulll, lt tva!leblt for 11.815 potlpild
from Jumbte. clo thlt newt paper. Bo• 34. NOtWoocl, N.J. 07641. lncludt your

Jumble

na_me, eddrett, Jl codt nd meke "c twch a able to Newe a

rbo9ka.

BRIDGE
East on the rocks
By Onrald jacoby
ud Alaa Soatag
The defense started with
three rounds of hearts. South
ruffed the third lead high
and drew trumps.
When they broke 2·2 South
saw that if East held the
king of diamond! he had a
cinCh end play against him .
Of course; the end play
and the whole hand would
collapse If West held that
red klng, but South had a lot
of faltli In the soundness of
East's blcklln&amp;.
As South nplalned after
the hand was over, "If West
held his nibs, I would have
come out with egg all over
my face."
South cas~ed dummy's
ace of clubs led a club to his
king and ruifed his last club.
Then came the end play.
He Jed dummy's last
heart. East covered and now
South diBcarded his three of
diamond!.
Poor East was right
between one of those rocks
and hard places. If he led his
last heart, South would
chuck his seven of diamonds
and ruff In dummy. If he led
a diamond, South would let

i

m•CiJI§&amp; ~~Alit:

- -- -__
------------

Gallipolis Diversif ied Con·
st.• Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·4-440.

())MOVIE ·(MUSICAL) ••••
wfng nmo" 11138
QMNI: NEW FRONTIERS
• I!IT OF TH! WEST
8:58
CIN ljf'DATE NEWS
9:00
(!) DtFF'RENT
STROKES Wllllo po~o tho
conaaquancaa tor not paying
enough attention to hie
llrlond. (Cioood·Copllonod)
1..0CU:LUI
(J)IlJ) KNOTS LANDINO
SNI!AK PREVIEWS 'I Woo o
Teenage Movie : Hollywood
1981' Crttlca Gene Slakel and
Roge.r Ebert 'ocua on the
rtaeone why the teen •o•
audience it now determining
l~od'o blgglot hMo .
·
J,\IINEY MILLER
U:30
(!) O f - A IR!AK
THIS OLD HOUII! Hoot Bob
Vila poun •the footlnge for the
greenhouGe ud 1 high -tech
energy audl,t It conducted .
'l.l.•d·C.ptlonod; U.S.A.)
WTAXf
8:50
DI.I!Vt:NtNG N!WI
10:00
.(!)HtLLITAI!!TILUEB
Toprotoothlmoolllnogrondiury
lnveatlgatlon of pollee
corruption , Capt. Furlllo
reluctantly htree an expenalvt
lawyer to help him ; Hill and
Renko are delighted to be
aatlgned to bt waltera II 1
,popular reataurant 11 part of a
planto•poaevenalpollcemen
md.£!f~flclolo . (80 mlno.l
llJ
~20 Hugh Down•
anchort thlt weeklymegazlne
profiling noteworthy eventlln
nawa, aclence and entenaln·

Clll•

-~-----·--

HARTS Used Cars. New
Hav.en West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock.

Yesterday's

WALT DISNEY
WORLD'S 1Dth ANNIVER·
SARY Spociolmorklng tho loth
anniYtrllry ot Florlda'a Wall
Ol'aney World . Gueatalnclqda
Dean Jon ea. Eileen Brennan ,
Larry Gillin, Michele Lee, Dana
Plato and Ricky Schroder. (60
mtna.)
(1) 8HUKPREVIEW8 "IWuo
Teenage Movie : Hollywood
t98t' Crltlca Gene Slokolond
Roger Ebert focue on the
reaeona why the teenage
audience Ia now determining
HoJ~od'o blgglot hlfl .
&lt;Ill• IIOAK AND MINDY
8:30 (])MOVIE ~DRAMA) •• "IIY

l

GASOUNE ALLEY

1

1·11

[]
Prlnr answer here:" D rI I I J ( I I 1''

l

PAINTING · Interior and
exterio f.
ptumbino·,
rooting, some remOdeling .
20 vrs . e.p . Call388·9652 .

........
. . . . ···•·
.. . . . . .....
... ...

rJ

l

Home
Improvements

.

IGROFTEt

bdra . .a' 1NO

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured cei l ingS com ·
mercia I lind resident ial.
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

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

'
----------·-

ACK Reg . black male
Labedor 1 112 yr. old . Verv
good witn· children. Calf
367·7481 .

PROOF 11'
THE5E ~Y5..
I WA6 RRED BEC005E I

Set\) lEes

HORSE Feed Special, lOON · Call 446·28Cl for termite,
$8 .95,
January
18·23 . roach , bird, rodent, spider,
Yauger Farm Supply, Rt . and fleas control. Free
estimates,sBill
Thoi'nas .
35 southside. wv .
.
...
Carpentry and remOdeling .
' ...
,
Plumbing and some elec·
trical work . 614-949·2006 or
614·992·3851 .
1_!_ __ f'ut~or ~~e__ _
1958 Jeep, metal lop, runs RON ' S Television Servtce. ,
Specializing in Zeni th and
good, $750.00. Call256·6769 .
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls . Phone 576·2398
1977 Mecury Marque low or 446·2454.
mi les, Michel in fires. All
options. Phone 614·446-.uo6. F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675· 1331 . ·
.
78 Mustang 11 , 4 cylinder,
PB, PS, air conditioner, RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
new tires, excellent con· perienced mason, roofer,
dltion . Call 446·7838 or 446· carpenter,
electrician ,
7447.
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone. 304·675------.1- -----··78 AMX
6
cycl inder 2088 or 675·4560.
automatic AM· FM, · 40
channel ce. good gas Water wells. Commercial
mileage . Call «6·8122.
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
1980 Cutlass Supreme. 1979 304·895·3802 .
Chrysler Cordoba. Both
loaded, e)( c. cpnd, p'riced to LOCKSMITH
Serv ic e.
sell . Call «6· 2109 . '
Residential , automotive.
Emergency serv ice. Call
1969 Plymoulh wagon. 318 882·2079.
auto. 985·4346.
82
Plumbtng
1969 Dodge Dar!, "0 Bx M ,
a.Heoling -·-Automatic, new engine,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
many extras. $1000. 614·9..9AND HEATING
2~55 .
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446 · ~477
_._
.
1980 El Camino. 610&lt;2
278• .
83 - ----E,.caYatirlg- · -

-- _r ____ --·-- -

BRIAR PATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC Gordon setters,
EngHsh Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.

LITE~ACY

-'- - -- - -- - -

74 CHRYSLER Newport
Custom, with .COO motor, no
battery, bodv bad, $175.
30H95· 3578 .

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg . D&lt;&gt;l&gt;&lt;!r·
mans. Call446·7795.

THAT'6 NO

C.RAOOATED
RWMHIGH

~

New Firestone 721 radia l
tire. 13 in on wheel. 614·992-

..BIJT TOfW

J

I [)

f.!l!.rd~

Auto Repair

Quality Aulobody &amp; Paint
work . Insurance work
we lcome . Sunroofs in·
stalled from $200· ~230 . Auto
Trirn Center, .446·1968.

---

.liJ &lt;1DJ

GOOd work pony &amp; harness,
100 bales ol hay, rabbits. CAPTAIN STEEMER. Car·
•pel Cleaning fealured by
Call379·2761 .
·
Haffett Brothers CuStom
Carqets. Free estimates.
1/ 2 blood Beefoto cows . 614·
Call-446·2107 .
742·2630after 5 :30p.m .
64 ·

!NTERTAINII!HT

TONIOHT
7:35 ()) HBA 8ASKET8ALLAtlonto
wh va New York Knlcka
7:58 ·
~N..UPDATE NEWS
8:00
• (!) FAll! Loro~ dlo·
covers a gun that hia brother, a
releaaedprleoner, haaleft In hie
apanment, andtrlea togetrld or
It, but Ilia actlona coma to the
attention Or the Boerd ol
Education. (80 mlna.)
()) NlnONALGEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL
()) COLLEOE BASKETBALL
Ohio State Unlveralty ve

Motorcy~tes

Would I ike to trade 73 Hon·
Maestro ele,c trlc plano, da 750 for late model Gold·
with amp., $200., excellent w ing &amp; pay cash dif·
terence. Call446·9265.
cond;tion. Call2-15·9258.

A carry out business closed
down and has all beverage
coolers for sa le. Call 1·614·
286·5740.

~DIIIALL

(Ill •

74

t) ()~

~~~~~::::: 1~ND ITUCLEDI
l

BEAUTIF -U L
AKC 1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
reg i stered
German Chevy, 'I• ton, 4 speed. 1979
Shepard puppies. All shots Volkswagen Rabbit, 2 door,
and wormed, call 304·675- 4 speed, 304·675· 1578. Aller
3:3067.5· 1320.
4217.
Musical
Instruments

lllCift:IL-li!HRER

ANOTHER LIFE
fi!IIETHENFL .
r(J) FAMILY FEUD
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
())
NfGHTLY BUSINESS
._PORT
&lt;1m
RICHARD $flllfiiON8
attOW
.
(D) ALL CREATURE8 OREAT

1980 Chevy Scotsdale '4
ton, 4 wheel drive, 4 speed,
em ·fm , regular gas, 29,000
miles. good shape. 773·5154).

l

"-··-~- ­

lr.:-TSHOW

1

---

57

·I

T1C TAC DOUOII

79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
wheel -drive, 29,000 miles. B
cyl. call after 3 p.m. 304·
675·3898 .

New wood stove, half price,
never used, $350. Can con·
vert Ia furnance. Call 256·
1216, GalliP,olis.

1_-;;,.;;-:;-:;-:;-.:::::::-:;:-;:-:.:-::..J..:·:.·-:.;;~;.-:·.:;-::;::;-:,-::.;-:.;:-;:-;:--::.,~

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QI:JALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS---A-T
35 . PHONE ·46·J868:"·
~

56

PO.RAI

GHTrDAYSAOAIN

90 I"LL HAVEM'I CMOIC!i OF

byHenriAmoldondBobLoe

four ordina'Y -de.

7:00 ~. PM IIAOAZIN!
WEEKEND OARDE._R
EHTI!RTAINIIENT

~

1.£1 ~~ .,

Unlctlmblo these leur Jumbles,
one letter to eech aquare, 10 form

Eft NINO

~=~=======~==~~:..:~~~~ $4,600. 992·6537 .

·--~-·

KENMORE dryer, good
condition, $95 . 304·675·2927.

Vans &amp; 4 W . D ~

1979 KS Blazer. Trailering
special, auto. trans., a.c.,
cruise control, C. B .• $6,200.
book value . 'Wi.ll sell for

S4

fti}I}N"} fii}tt ~THATBCRAIIBLEDWORDGAIIE

~

THURSDAr
JAN. 21 , 11182

Would like lo trade 73 Int.
Scout 4x•. for late model • ·
wheet drive &amp; Pay ca$h dif·
terence. Call «6·9265.

Wanted to r ent or buy .
Trailer space in Middleport -Pomeroy area. 992·
6510.

L AYNE 'S FURNITURE
.Sofa, chair, rocker, ottOman, 13 t_ables, $500 . Sofa,
chair and lovesea.t, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from S285. to $795. Tables,
S38 and up lo S109 . Hide·• ·
bed s.S3~0 .. queen size. S380.
Recl iners, S175. Ia S295 .,
Lamps from $18 . to S65. 5
p- difettes from S79. , to
S3b5. 7 pc ., St89. and up.
Wood table with 4 c~airs,
S219 up to S-495 . Desk $110.
Hutches, S300. and $375 .,
maple or p ine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak , S675., Bassett Cherry,
$79&lt;
Bun&lt; bed complele
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or bo)(
springs, folt or twin, $58.,
firm. S68. and $78. Queen
sels, Sl95. 5 dr. chesls, S49.
~
dr . chests, $42 . Bed ,
frames, S20 .and S25 .• 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
fe chairs $20. and .$25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295 . Or·
thopedic super firm. $95,
baby malresses, S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25. &amp; $30.
Electric f ireplace, gun
cabinet, L iving room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
Used ,
Ranges ,
refrigerators. and TV' s,
J m iles out Bu laville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
fhru Fri., 9am to5pm, Sat .
446-0322

•
•
VIewmg

1971 VW Van, good family ·
or work van, $900. Call 446·
97 48 after 5 or weekends.

3 bdr. mob ile home or
house in Vinton School
Dist . Call388·8832.

51

'

1977 Jeep Wagoneer • ·
Wheel drive, new mud &amp;
snow tires, .56,000 miles.
Phone 388·9334.

2 trailer spaces in Syracuse
TraHer Park . 1 all electri c.
614·992·3625.

1

Television

Truck's tor Sale

•

Space tor Rent

··-------- -

11

1972 Dump truck, F600
Ford, exc . cond. S3,000. 992·
2772.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.

47

.

Ohio

1974 FORD F·250 new stake
bed and dual wheels. Call
256·6413, 12 p .m . to 9 p.m .

Have vacancy for elderi,Y"
nian or woman In rnv
home . Reasonable rates,
good experience . luppers
Pla;ns 661·6329 or 667·3402.

adults only, Brown Tr ai ler
Park, 992·3324.

-Situations Wanted

---·

only.

----- ·---- --- 2 bdr . trailer furni shed,

Complete
households .
Write : M. D. Miller, Rt . A,

Go ld , silver, st erling ,
ieWelry , rin gs, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, M iddleport . 992·

___ _

2 bdr . tra iler. Adults pr ef .
Ph . 367·7-29 .

BE DS I RON. BRAS S. old
fur n i tur e, gold , sil...,e r

&lt;.. HIP WOOD. Poles rna)( .
(11CHTieter 10" on largest
end . $12.50 per ton. Bu ndled
slab . $10 .50 per !o n.
Oeliverd to Ohio Pall et co.,
Ro c k
Spring s
Rd . ,
Pomeroy . 992·2689 .

_____ .......

Looking for ma ture person
to share mobile home on
George's Creek Rd . Call
446·4789 after 5PM .

thou sand . Cal l 256·6363 or

PomProy, Oh . Or 992·776CJ.

-

2 bdr . and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call446·0175.

Wanted to ' buy t ie logs.

Pa yin g

Houns for Rent

House for rent , S100. a mon·
th plus dePQ5il , 30H75·
6750.

21 , 1982

21 1982

Ohio

NORTH
.AQU8

1-ll·82

•s8u
• Q86

+AP
WEST

EAST

.75

.12

.97

.AKQ102

ti09SI

tKJ2
+J63

+Q10H2

SOUTH
.KJI063

.JI

t A 73

+K84
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: East
Wett

Norllt

Pass

••

Pass

I. 1.
East

Soutll

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

•9

It ride around to dummy'•
queen.
Either way, South had glv·
en away a heart trick to get .
r id of two diamond losers.

tiG', .• _,.If'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I George of the
late show
5 Glazier's
product
10 Competent
II One In

DOWN
I Ran rampant ,
. Residence
3 "Lord of the
- "
4 Downing
Street

z

a hurry

acklress

13 Leaving ship

5 Granular

15 Dutch

• Robust

commWle
18 Slower (mus.)
17 StaMum
18 Fate
20 - zook.s!
21 One carter
22 Attractive
Z3 Grove of
trees

7 Oleaceous
tree
8 One kind of
wedding

t Set In

19 - force
22 Possum Z3 GanneniJI
24 Sketch
25 Enlgma

30 Tower
31 Clan
32 Soprano

Emma
33 Food-lntake

28 Springing

a series
12 Execute

14

Yet~lenlay's Anrrwer

sound
Zllln opposltlon (poet.)

guldes
38 Man '•
nickname
39 Thrash

28 'Howler"
1

f7 Ue In
walt
Zll Sticky
subatance

2tSiowt
31 Sanctified
34 Priest's
vestment
35 Cotter,
e.g.
38 Italian
Radio-TV
network
37 Twlddllng

one's
thumbs
Ill Scoffs

u Encourage
t%Ant
U Stack TV role

1-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
.
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply otands lor another. (n lhla sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single l ctl ers .
apoetrophes, the length and formation of the wordt are all
hlntt. Each day the code letlert ore dlft'ercnt.

cavnOQVOTES

GXX

ZVTVCGXAIGJAKTW

RGTZVCKNW ,
· RNBGW

VDVT

J LV

JLAW

GCV

KTV .

P KNT Z VC

Yetlenlay's Ceyptoqaote: l LIKE TREES BECAUSE THEY
SEEM TO BE MORE ~!GNED TO THE WAY 11lEY HAVE
TO l.:fVE THAN 0'111ER THINGS 00.-WilU• CA11lER

�1982

Ohio

'

UAW negotiators break off ,d iscussion ..~
DETROIT (AP) - United Auto
Workers negotiators broke off
emergency contract talks with
General Motors Corp. and Ford
. Co.
' Wednesday, amid preMotor
d!ctlom the breakdowrt might furthur depress new-car sales.
UAW President Douglas Fraser
announced t)le collapse of the GM
talks shortly alter noon, saying the
two sides were deadlocked on economic and job security Issues. He
refused to elaborate.
Following the lead of the union's
Gly1 committee, the Ford negotiators decided to recess their talks
pending a meeting of the entire
council Saturday In Washington,
said Don Ephlin, VAW vice president and head of the union's F ord
Department.
Ephlin said he did not belleve the
breakdown meant an end to the
negotiations.
The two bargaining councils will
have to decide whether to continue
bargaining now or walt until the

Architecture

DISAPQINTED - United Auto Worken President Douglas A. Fraser
talks to reporters Wcdncsay, after announcing that bargainers fur the

union and General Motors Corp. were un.ablt! tu rcafh agreement on contract cunccsions. ( AP Lascrph11l11 l

Good time for
union work

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Construction unions have been part.!cuJarly hard-hit by the recession and
hOusing Industry slump, but an offl·
clal of the Columbus Building and
Construction Trades Council says
this Is a good time to be organizing.
"U you'll remembe.r your labor
history, unions first organiZed in

Improvement
•
proJect
underway
LETART FALLS - A prujecl t o
help meet reque~t~ lor new and improved grades of se rvice hi:ls been

sU.rted here, General Telephone Co.
of Ohio announced toda y. More than
$26,000 is budgeted to insU.II call~witching equipment that will
provide 100 new customer !itlcs, said
Hcuold Miller of Jackson, customer

Service supervisor.
The po·oject al~o will increase the
calling path~ lo · Ath ens and
Pomeroy.
The Letart Falls cxt:ha nge serves

mcwc than 200 customers ln' a IGsquart:.'-1 nill' art•a of Mei gs County.

the darkest times b! all - the Depression," said Ralph Scribner.
"I'd like to tum around the climate,
the attitude In this town."
Scribner .began a $200,1XXJ campaign In July to convince non -union
construction workers to join up.
A Toledo native, Scribner was
reerulted by the CQuncll from the
Ohio State Association of Plumbers
and Plpefltters to direct the organ·
lz!ng campalg!o. hhe drive was
launched with a $100,1XXJ contribution from the 17 unions In the local
council and $100,1XXJ from the national council.
T)te local council has 15,1XXJ
members. That number hasn't
changed much over the past few
years, officials said.
Robert Farrington, the council's
executive secretary, said there are
about 8,000 non-union construction
workers In the Columbus council's
area, which Includes Franklin, Drl·
aware, Union. Madison, Pickaway
a nd Fairfield counties.
Sco;ibner said he and his fivemember staff recently were com·
mended by the national council for
their efforts.
"We're not out to put employers
out of business. We' re trying to get
our share of the pie," he said.

. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Two
exhibitions of architectural drawIngs continue on display at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
through Feb. 7.
They. are "Peter Bonnet Wight
a nd the Gullded Art," and "The
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts : Masterpiece of ·American
Architecture."

1981 inflation

&gt;
traditional mid-summer opening of
opened negotiations last week on
job securttY tor the union's 300.~
contract talks, Fraser said.
possible contract concessions to the
plus GM employees. He did n~
However, because of the econation's two largest automakers.
elaborate.
.
,
nomic uncertainty of the auto In-· The opening of talks came six
Fraser saki he had no Idea hoW
dustry, he said: '"The odds are with
months before traditlonai midthe breakdown of talks at Gl4
going now. We've got to make a
summer negottations were to
would affect layoffs In the auto In·
begin. Current contracts expire
dustrY. which has morej than
decision."
Fraser and GM's top bargainer
Sept. 14.
227,1XXJ workers on !ndetlnlte layott
each warned that the development
Fraser said .. that negotiations
But the union president saki ~
could plunge the already-depressed
were mired In disagreement over
thought the collapse of the talks'
auto Industry Into deeper trouble.
economic Issues and the question of. probably would hurt new-car saleS,
•
"We're disappointed," F r a s e r . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - said at a news conference. uwe
wanted to work this agreement out.
It's disappointing and regrettable."
1
Contract concessions are n~ed
•
because "we need to respond to
(slumping sales) very, very
quickly," Atlred S. Warren Jr .,
GM's vice president for Industrial
relations , told repo~rs after talks
broke down.
He said he had "some fears" that
car sales would be damaged by the
decision to break off the talks.
The talks began Jan. 11 and the
union had set a bargaining deadline
of Saturday, but Fraser said the lnabUlty to reach a settlement
"wasn't a question of time. Perhaps it was the absence ot a pressure point that we usu~lly have,
namely a strike deadllne.
"We had enough time. I
think ihe planning was wrong or the
WIUIAM D. CHILDS
timing was wrong. We were hung
DON E. MULLEN
up on these Issues a couple of days
JOHN F. MUSSER
ago and just couldn't move them."
CHARLES B. MULLEN
Locked In the worst auto Industry
MICHAEL L. CHILDS
slump In half a century, the UAW

WASlUNGTON (.1\P) - Intlatlon rose 8.9 percent
In 1981, the smallest Increase In tour years, the government said today. Analysts said the rece5s!on was
largely responsible tor the tumble from 1911l's 12.4
percent.
.
Intlatlon ended 1981 wtth a 0.4 percent Increase In
December, about the same as In the previous two
months, the Labor Department said .
Mortgage Interest rates declined In December for
the first time since September 19!ll, but housing pri·
ces picked up slightly after tailing In November.
The overall improvement In !nflat!on also was reOected In the Labor Department's report last week
that lnfiatlon, as measured .at the wholesale level.
rose 7 percent last year, also the slowest rise since
1917.

WE'RE TOGETHER T0
SERVE YOU BET.TER

The departme nt didn' t disclose
what type of contraband was being
distribute&lt;!.
A news release from the de partment said that so far, 35 people are
established In the two areas. and
the amount may rise to 70.

AGENTS:

An Investigation has begun and
outside law enforceme nt agencies,
Including Gallipolis City Pollee, are
assisting, according to a depart·
ment spokesman.
The department requested that

Y2 PRICE SALE
.

WINTER COATS AND JACKETS
COATS AND JACKETS FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY -GOOD SELECTIONSMAY . ELIMINATE 140 JOB$ -

ALL-SALES FINAL -NO EXCHANGES - NO REFUNDS- NO LAY A WAYS

Mental Kelardatlon 1o abolish UO Jobs at GDC.

The Gothic-

::~=q::::n!a:o..!r:::; ~=::~'::=t~a:m=!~:!~ea~!
over a. recommendadon by the Ohio Department of

nectlon with the .huge staie deficit.

Haven
physician
files sui.t

------------------~New

Inmate dies from skull fracture
MANSFIELD, Ohio - A 21-year-&lt;~ld Inmate at the Ohio State
Reformatory at Mansfield was killed Thursday alf'i'r his skull was
crushed as the door of his cell was automatically closed, autborities
said.
Richland County Coroner Michael Oakes ldentitled the victim as
Joel Smith but was .unable to confirm his hometown. Further details
of the accident were not Immediately made available.
Oakes said the accident occurred as the Inmates were being re·
leased from their cells at lunchtime. He said Smith's cell door was
closed automatically by a hydraulic mechanism.

I

Robbers preying on elderly
'

CONTINUES
AT THE

COLUMBUS, Ohio- Robbers posing asctty water-meter readers
are preying on elderly residents In a northeast Columbus
neighborhood.
Columbus pollee said that the men robbeQ four people, all of whom
are more than 60 years old, between Jan. 15 and Tuesday.
Three of the people were robbed by a man armed with a knife who
entered their homes by claiming to be a meter reader, pollee said.
They say that the fourth victim was robbed by two men In her
backyard. Wallets and purses were stolen In each case.

HERITAGE
HOUSE '
OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT

. Soviet arms sales hit record
wASlUNGTON - Soviet arms sales to developing countries
climbed to a record $6.2 billion last year and played a key role In
helping Moscow pay tor food Imports from the Third World , accord·
!ng to an economic consulting firm.
An analysts being released today by Wharton Econometric Forecasting Associates concludes that the lrnportance·ot amos exports In
the Soviet Union's overall hard-currency balance of trade and payments has "risen dramatically."
WithOut arms sales, the combined Soviet balance of trade with the
Industrialized West and developing nations "would have registered
a deficit of around $9.6 bllllon lristead of the anticipated deficit ot$3.4
bllllon," the report_said.

•

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 786.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 3887.
The lottery reported earnings ot $635,729 on its dally game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,061,701.50, while holder!i of winning
tickets are entitled to share $425,972.50, lottery ofttc!als said.
.

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

Weather forecast

SPECIAL SALE PRICES ALSO ON ALL WINTER APPAREl.
FOR BOYS AND GIRLS-MEN-CHILDREN-JUNIORS
AND WOMEN'S. GOOD SELECTIONS AVAILABLE.

OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8-SATURDAY. UNTIL 5

1 Soctlon, 12 ' - 15 Conti
A MuiHmedla Inc. N - 1 *

22, 1982

scheduled to discuss the situation
with ODMR officials today In Coat GalllpoUs Developmental Cent~r
lum~us. He has been Instructed by ,
would hAve taken place even If the
ODMR director Rudy Magnone to
state wasn't In a financial bind.
carefully look at the staffing sltuaA spokesman tor the Ohio Delion at GDC.
partment of Menial Retardation
The action came after an ansaid the main reason the job abolnouncement Thursday by Magishments are being recommended
none 1,1XXJ staff jobs at the three
to officials at Gallipolis, Columbus
centers, the largest of their kind In
and Ortept developmental centen
Ohio, would be eliminated within the
Is decreased client population.
next live months.
"One thing we want to emphasize
Client depopulation of the three
Is that this has nothing do with the
means decreased revenue , Magbudget crisis," said Nick Damopou·
none explain'ed, and would translate Into the loss ot 650 jobs at
los of ODMR's communications
staff. " It's unfortunate · these
Orient, 00 at Columbus and"140 at
abol!shmenl.s are happening at the
Galllpolls. .
same lime ."
Damopoulos saki Galllpolls has
In the meantime, GDC Superin- the lowest amount of abollshments
tendent Robert Zimmerman was . because Its staff-Is the smallest - ,
By KEVIN KELLY
Proposed ellm!nation of 140 jobs

ELBER-FELDS IN POMEROY·

•

Jat:~uary

Jobs would have gone
despit~ fiscal woes

any unusual activity seen In the
area be reported to 675-:~no.

INFLATION
KNOCK OUT
SALE

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Friday,

Coeyriphted t982

0.2 percent In each of the two previous months. Groc·
ery costs were up 0.5 percent, up from the unchallied
figure for November.
-Overall housing costs were up 0.4 percent, the
same as In November. Mortgage lnf'i'rest ratesfeliO.l
percent, offsetting a simUar rise In hOuse sale prices,
which had fallen 0.8 percent In November.
-Transportation costs gained 0.4 percent, below
the 0.8 percent advance In November. New car prtces
were up 0.7 .percent after a smaller Increase In November and a decllne In October.
-Medical care rose 0.8 percent. the smallest rise
since lhe 0.6 percent of December 19!ll.
The unadjusted consumer price Index rose to 281.5
In December. Goods and services costing $10 In 1967
would have cost $28.15 last month.
·

•

at

and
Mullen Insurance

.

!ng year; housing prices rose 10.2 percent, down from
the 13.7 percent rise of 19!ll.
But medical care costs climbed 12.5 percent, up
from the 10 percent jufl\P of the prevluus year. Entertainment costs were up 7.2 percent.
The overall Improvement tor 1981 was helped by
the seasonally adjusted 0.4 advance In December, '
which would be 5.2 percent if the rate persisted for 12
straight months, department officials said.
The department calculates Its annual extrapolation ot the monthly rate from a more precise monthly
calculation than the number It releases.
For December, the department reported these consumer price !rends:
-Food prices, Including the costs ot dining out and
supermarket buying, were up0.5 percent after rts!nl!:

•

• Vol.30,No.197

Cosa Nostra .active in tri county area
The Mason County Sheriff' s Department said the organized crime
organization known as the Cosa
Nostra l.s using the Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant ~rea to distribute
contraband and as a staging area
for hltm an contractors.

'•

The Consumer Price Index released today checks
costs for a broader range of Item' than does the
wholesale survey .
The 8.9 percent climb In the CPI for 1~1 was also
well below the 13.3 percer:t of 1m. The Index rose 9
percent In 1978 and 6.8 percent In 1917.
" All major categortes of consumer spending except medical care registered smaller Increases In
1~1 thal1 In 19130," the report sal&lt;\,
A sharp fall In food price Increases and moderating
transportatlon and housing price Increases "were largely responsible for the slowdown In the overall CPI, ''
the department saki.
For the year, food prices rose 4.3 percent, off from
the 10.1 percent jump of 1980; transportation prices
rose 11 percent, down from 14.7 percent In thepreced·

e

Downing~Childs Insurance

8.9 percent

Rain tonight. Temperatures rising Into the low 50s overnight. Rain
ending Saturday. Temperatures falling Into the low ills ,by evening.
Chance of precipitation near 100 percent tonight and 70 percent
Saturday. Winds southeasterly 15-25 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecaa&amp;
Sunday throlqh Tueaday:
Sc~Uttred 8110W llurrles mainly north and eaM Sunday and Monday. Chaoce of rain or Tunday. Modendlng tread lbrouptlle
period. IIJibs In leelll11!01111 and upper teeM to mid-. . lOUth Sanday, . . -allllld . . 81111111 Moaday aDd mid ... t o - - 48 mril
to • IIOutll 'lWMay. Uwa D-18 S,mdiiJ .... MoOd., aDd 111-fll

....

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.......,.
.•

.,
I

A sultfor slander In the amount of
$1,800,000 has been filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Dr. Mateo ' Dayo, New Haven,
against Dr. Rankin R. Pickens,
Pomeroy.
The plaintiff, Dr. Dayo, charges
•:on or about January 21, 1981, defendant, Dr. Rankin R. Pickens, by
personal communication made
statements to various members ot
the board ot trustees ot Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The plaintiff further charges "defendant , Dr. Pickens, told the board
other Individuals that the Bureau of
Narcotic Drugs along with a duputy
Investigated the plaintiff, Dr. Mateo Dayo, tour months ago.
Plaintiff
further
charged
Pickens, stated that Dr. Mateo
Dayo was prescribing drugs to !ndl·
vlduals who were coming to Meigs
County tor drugs and se!Ung these
drugs on the street. According to
the petition, the defendant al·
Jegedly stated that 'I talked to some
nurses who slated tbe he (Dr. Ma·
teo Dayo, the plaintiff) was at times
!ncapacltated.. ihey had to shOw
him what to do.'
P!alntitf, Dr. Dayo, says, "statements of the defendant were false
and detammatory to hlms!nce he Is
a medical doctor practicing medl·
cine at the Veterans Memortal Hos·
pllal and as a general practitioner
In Meigs County."
Dayo contend5 such statements
Impute a dishOnesty to the plaintiff
in both hiS business and profession,
a business which Is built and thrtves
upon trust of his clients and his honesty as well as his reputation In the
community.
Dr .Dayo claims as a direct result, he and his business, credit,
reputation, clientele, and profes·
slon have suffered great pain and
mental anguish In the sum of
$1,500.000."
The second claim slates " plain·
tiff, Dr. Mateo Dayo, as a result of
the false malicious and slanderous
statements ot the defendant has
suffeJ:ed economic loss due to loss
of business In his office In the sum of
$300,000.
.[
The pla!nttlf, Dr. Mateo Dayo, demands judgment In the sum of
$300,000 compensatory damages
and $1,500,1XXJ punlstlve damages,
plus attotney fees and costs.

Extend tag deadline
Due to the bad weath!lr this month, Meigs County Auditor Howard
Frank announces that Ume hall been
extended for o·esidenl!l to purchase
dog tag.s withOut penalty. The
original deadline of Jan. 00 hall been
extended to Feb. lll.

roughly more than 800 personnel.
U the staff remained with the
present level of client population at
GDC, the center would be running
on a deficit by year's end, Damnpoulus explained. doMR plans to
transfer
approximately
1,100
cUents out of the three centers In the
near future, so It would be "good
administrative sense" to make cuts
where Personnel weren't needed.
Those who may lose their jobs
have an opportunity to take job!i at
a new center which will open soon
In Cincinnati and at another which
Is now opening In Dayton. Additionally, the department Is keeping
open Its contacts In the community
td locate jobs.
.
With this, Damopoulos said pro(Continued on page 121

U n emp I0 yment co·sts up agat·n
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
cost ol unemployment went up
again In Ohio this week with the
resumption of a pfOIII'IIm of ex·
tended benetlts.
The program could cost the slate
an extra $Ill million In the next 13
weeks It all the estimated 48,1XXJ
qualified unemployed workers applied for benetlts, officials said.
But WIUiam Pap!er, director ot
research and statistics lor the Ohio

Bureau of Employment Services,
doesn't expect that to happen. He
noted, hOwever, the state already
owes the federal 111\employment
trust fund $600 mtlllorllt boJTOwed
last year and had previously applied tor as:nlmilllon loanforunemployment payrolls this year.
The news came at a time when
weekly unemployment figures declined for the first time In months. ·
The drop was 40.4 percent, but

employment offices Indicated It
was brought on largely by erratic
automobile production, where
..layoffs could send tbe figure ba:ck
up at any time.
The bureau reported Thtll'llday
that the number of claimants for
compensation constdeted newly unemployed dropped In the week end·
lng Jan . 16 to 34,844 from 58,501 the
previous week.

Union County sheriff ·gunned down
MARYSVaLE, Ohio (AP) Law enforcement officers today
continued searching for the killer ot
Union County Sheriff Harry L.
Wolfe, who was gunned down while
answering a burglar alarm at a rural home near Plain City .
A statewide alert. was Issued for a
car that Wolfe had reported seeing
In the driveway 85 he approached
the house Thursday afternoon. ,
The car belonged to a Columbus
woman whOse' father said It had
been missing, although It was not
reported stolen. ''Someone took the
keys," the woman's father said.
County
Prosecutor
Larry
Schneider said ttoe 59-year-&lt;&gt;ld sheriff had been on patrol when ht• of·

Patrol cites
Meigs driver

flee notified him of the burglar
alarm. He said Wolfe raclloed the
license number of a gray Cad!Uac
that was parked In the driveway,
asked tor a reglstra tlon check, then
apparently got out of his squad c14r
to approach the house.
Schneider'said dispatchers heard
three gunshots over a telephone
llne, which was left open when the
burglar alarm was touched off.
Other otftcers rushed. to the scene
and found the dead sheriff.
Wolfe's gun was missing. Off!·
clals said they searched the area
with metal detectors but found no
trace of It
Schneider said It was "not a remote possibility" that the sheriff
had been shot with his own gun.
Marysville, the Union County
seat, Is !ocated about 35 . mlles

northwest of Columbus. The shootIng took place outside a home on
Robinson Road, eight miles south·
est of Marysville and about three
miles northwest of Plain City,
Wolfe spent 21 years with the
Ohio Highway Patrol, retiring tn
1974. He was In his eighth year u
sherltt and was the first Ohio sheriff
killed In the line of duty since Aug.
31. 1970, when Vinton County Sheriff Harold Steele was slain In a
shootout.
He Is survived by his wife, Paula,
and fou.r children.
Wolfe was responding to an
alarm at the home of Terry Edtlngton, officials said.
"When we got there, the sheriff
was dead," said Deputy Michael
O'Day. He saki the body was beside
the right front wheel ot the car.

The Gallla·Melgs Post cited a
Langsville woman In a two-vehicle "..,..,.._..--- - - - : : ;
accident In Meigs County Thursday
afternoon.
The patrol said Caroline D .
Walker, 30, was southbound on
County Rd. 16. four-tenths ot a mile
north of Ohio 124, at 2:30p.m. when
she reportedly tailed to yield halt
the roadw.a y to an oncoming vehl·
cte driven by Racquel K. Hutton,
38, Rt. 1, Rutland.
Moderate damage was reported
to both vehicles and Walker was
cited for failure to yield .
The patrol said a northbound vehlcle .driven by Mark J . Dixon, 27,
Sylvania, attempted to pass
another northbound auto driven by
Paul E. Ayers, 27, Rt. 1, GaUipolls,
on Ohio 7 In Gallla County at 8:50
. a.m. Thursd'!Y·
Ayers then turned left and struck
Dixon's vehicle In the side, causing
slight damage to both vehicles. Ay- ,
ers was cited tor Improper turn .
Troopers said a tractor trailer
driven by Leroy E . Ward, 35, OberUn, was northbound on Ohio 7 In
Meigs County..at 2; 20 p.m. Thursday, pulled onto a soft berm and
lOBI control. The truck then struck
an embankment and overturned.
SHERIFF SLAIN - Ullloa Couty Sllertff Hllrry L Welte wu shot
There was. moderate damage to
and kiW 'l'llllnday wbDe re~~poadfDC to aa alarm lndltatlq a bu'lllar)'
tbe truck and Ward escaped
near Maryavllle. (AP l.aRrphotol.
uninjured.
I

•

'

'

'

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