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                  <text>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

•

'

'

'

�'

Friday, January 22, 1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slrett
Pumrroy. Otuu
114-992-!151
.
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlllh~r

A conservative O'Connor....______J_am_es_J._K_il_pa_tr_ic_k

tlivisions to date.

A par·agraph probably should be
inserted
to acknowledge the
' (it!n~tral M&amp;UICer
irTilation felt by the justices
whenever they are thus labeled by
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
the press. The high court is not a
New11 Editor
ki nd of judicial bench show, the
collies here and the poodles there.
A MEMBER of Thto A~toiX'Iatt&gt;d Pre1111, laland Dlllly Prew Anoci&amp;lloo and the
Nevertheless, when the L"'Ourt
Amer:IC!UD NewHpaper PubiJMhen AIIIIOCiathlll.
divides narrowly, we generally find
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are ..-.·elcomed, They 11hould be leu thaD 300 wurdlllun~: . AU
the " liberal" Justices Brennan afrd
letttn .,e JUbjttl tu l'diUua: and m11111 bt ~lgned wllh n.~~me, 11ddrrx!i and t.tolt1Jhun~
number. Nt.tiUlllllkd ldtcrx will tw published. lkltt&gt;n • hoold ~In good ta1tt&gt;, addr~Ming
Mars hall one one side and the " conIIIIIUI!M, nut pt!f!IC)tliJHh.•ti.
.
scrvati~" Chief Justice Burger and
Justice Rchnquist on the other. ,
.Justice O'Connor seems · to have
suited up with the Burger-Rehnquist
learn .
Through Jan . 21, the court had ac'
ted on 21 cases, Justice O'Connor
had participated in 19 of these. Of
lht:! 19, only two were unanimous
decisions, and in these two Justiee
Today's subject is Poland, but we'll start elsewhere.
O'Connor herself spoke for the court.
In Munich, back in 19311, with the acquiescence of Britain and France in
In the other 17, the court fell apart
Hitler's dismembenncnl of C~cchoslovakia.
like the one-hoss shay . I haven't
We are still suffering the consequences of that failure of democratic will . It
checked the statistics, but I suspect
made World War II inevitable, and out of that conflict came the division of
that some sort of record was set at
Eruope into East and West.
· this point in a term of court, when
The entire experience has been taken as an object lesson as to the validity
four of five decisions on Jan. 12 were
of an obsevation by philosopher George Santayana. To the effect that those
reached by 5-4 divisions. this is not
who do not leatn from history are doomed to repeal it, a precept that has
the most congenial court that ever
shadowed and frequently shaped Western - that is to say, American came along .
responses to crises throughout the postwar era.
Ju.stice Brennan has succeeded
As now with Poland. Thus Washington's manic demands for Western counthe late Justice Douglas as the most
teraction, and tim agony in other alliance capitals over whether and how far
acerbic dissenter on the court. In
to go along .
one of the 5-4 decisions on Jan. 12,
But the Western allies are not the only students of history. The Russians
this one involved the gift of federal
are, if anything, even better learners. And there we have the real source of
property to tire Valley Forge
the crisis in Poland and the major obstacle to its resolution.
Christian College in Pennsylvania,
To Kremlin policy makers, nothing is more real and induri ng than the
Justice Brennan charged his
threat from tim West. History is their incontrovertible witness to its validity
colleagues with obfu.scating the
- from the Teutonic knights through Sweden,:s Charles XII, Napoleon and
issues, turning the Constitution on
two world wars ...:. and the terrible price it has exacted. Twenty million dead
its head, producing specious and tor·
in the last conflict alone .
·
luaus distinctions, and being blind to
The Jesson they have learned froin the experience is the necessity of a buffer between the Russian heartland and the predatory West.
This they fained in full from the devastation of World War II. When the
firing stopped, Soviet annles were in possession of half of Europe. That
posession has never been fully confirmed in international law - the muchmaligned Yalta conference of 1945 essentially postponed final decision on the
restructuring of Eastern Europe. In lhe absence of a peace conference and
NEW YORK (AP)- Two weeks
comprehensive treaty ratifying the consequences of the war, the closest '
ago when the National Bureau of
thing to confirmation has been the 1975 Helsinki conference on European
Economic Research proclaimed
security at which the Western powers in effect acknowledged the post·war
that "the U.S. economy Is currently
stat u.s quo.
undergoing a recession," most peoThe I!Oviets are delermiend to keep what they gained, as denionstrated in
ple already were looking for the
East Germany in 1953, in Hungary in 1956, in Clechoslovakia in 1968 and now
recovery.
in Poland. In doing so, despite Washington's contrary readings, they are not
Til autom11kers, hOmebuilders
acting aggressively but defensively, according to their reading of history .
and tbe unemployed, to name ju.st a
There are problems with historical lessons, however. They can be learned
few of the affected parties, the obtoo well, to the point that they distort response to crisis rather than guide it.
vious need not be underscored. In·
·Or they may be misapplied, circumstances and times having changed.
stead, In the fine Amertcan
The West's detennination not to repeat Munich has not always worked to
tradition, It was better to put the
its advantage. It had more than a little to do with the disastrous prolongation
bad behind.
of the Indochinese war.
"We're loaded for bear," said F .
Tile problem in Eastern Europe is that while the Soviets have the physical
James McDonald, GcneraJ'Motors
power to subdue their inunediate neighbors, they are unabl.e to dominate
president. According to hlm, the na·
them socially and culturally or to make them viable economically. As a
lion's biggest manutacturer was
result, the value of a captive East Europe as a geographical buffer is more
ready to take full advantage of a
than offset by the constant political threat to Soviet security it presents.
redound In carand truck sales.
The Soviets have in a sense backed themselves into a corner. The
Jack Carlson, executive vice
challenge is bringing them to realize it, and finding a way out that is acpresident
of the National Assocla·
ceptable to them, to the West and to the captive peoples.
tlon of Realtors, was almost as enIf history has any answers, they're not irruncdiately apparent.
thusiastic. He declared the worst
was over for housing. Interest rates
will fall through spring, he
declared .
There was less enthusiasm
PAT WHITEHEAD

Wake Forest upsets Tar Heels · ·

' Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, January 22, 1982

WASHINGTON
Nineteen
opinions do not a full tenn make, but
so far it Jouk• as if Justice Sandra
Day O'Co.nnor will be joining the
conservative bloc on the U.S.
Supreme Court. The court's first
woman justice has sided with the
libt' ra.Is on only one of the 5-4

BQB HOEFLICH

history.

Alter

that

he

deco1·um to the winds.

tossed

,.,. ,.,.

Justice O'Connor, s till feeling her
wav into such fratriddal biOOdlel-

tin~, has written only ;one disent of

her own . Her mai~n plunge into
these turbulent waters · came in a
case involvnrg the right of a single
employer to withdraw from a multiemployer bargaining group. She
spoke with asperity, but not with a
Brennahish acidity . .The lady may
have claws, in the feline fashion of
such meJnorable justices as Black
and Frankfurter, but she has yet to
unsheathe them.
Early on, in a case involving
federal authority over state tax
laws, a conservative majority
mobili~ed in lhe fonn of Rehnquist,
1
Burger, Whittl , Bladonun and
Powell. This one time, Justice

O'Connor sided in dissent with Mar·
shall, Brennan and Stevens. It was
her only .fall from grace .
Since then, we have found Jftstice
O'Connor on the side of the angels.
In a rash of 6-3 divisions on Jan. 13,
she stOOd staunchly with th Burger·
Rehnquist conservatives in support
of strict construction and judicial
restraint.
,
But over here on the conservative
side, Jet us keep fingers, crossed. The
history of the court abundantly
demonstrates that justices will not
slay lied. In his first few years on the
court, Ju.stice Blackrnun, a Nixon
appointee, stuck like wallpaper to
Chief Justice Burge r. they were
known at the time as the Minnesota
Twins. Now Justice Blackmon
·frequently winds up in al dissenting .
eorner with Brennan and Marshall.

By AliiiOClated Press

We ask ourselves, shaking our heds,
what is a nice fellow like Blackrnun
doing in a joint like this?
So Jet this be regarded as a ten·
tative or interini appraisal. By
every report from within the court,.
Justice O'Connor is pu!Ung a competent oar. Transcripts of a oral
argwnent indi.~ate that she often
asks penetrating questiOns of counsel. She is no shrinking violet in the
Friday discussion sessions. If she
gets up to answer a knock on the
closed chamber door, it is by reason ·
of seniority, not by reason of gender.
1
So far, so gOOd. In recent years the
court has been drifting - plenty of
sails, but no rudder. Roughly 130
decisions are yet to come before the
July adjournment, but at this point
in the . crui~e, Justice O'Connor is
contributing toward a steady conservative course.

.--: ,'. ' .

;,( ~· .

Lesson learning

The companies responsibility?
It's a shame that one pays such
high electric prices and still has to
· pay, what they feel, was the companies' responsibility.
For instance: a while back our furnace (electric) went out. U~on
calling an electrician to fix this, he
found something wrong with .our
breaker.
In turn we called the electric company to check this. They found that
1
the breaker had come loose.
Prior to this incident, we had,.
called the electric company
(Buckeye Rural) to chec~ our

breaker due to dirruning of our
lights.
They checked the meter, which
r·ead O.K., but did not check the
breaker at the top of the pole.
I personally feel that the breaker
was loose. If they had been accurate
at their job, when checking this, it
would not have later cost me an extra bill to the electrician, I didn't
need, a Jon~ with an outrageous electric bill.
Susan Burcham
Rt. I, Georges Creek Road
GallipoliS', Ohio

IN TROUBLE - North Carolina's Mall Doherty, left, J1JII8 In to
trouble as be Is pressured by Wake Forest's Denny Young, 20, during lint
haH action In Thunday night's Atlantic Coast Cooterence game being
played at Carmlchael Auditorium in Chapel Hill, N.C. Carollllll, the number one ranked team In the country, was upset by the Deacons 55-48. ( AP
Laserphoto) ,

Writers follow
Bengals' rookie

Today .in history
'

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Today Is Friday, Jan. 22, the 22nd day of1982. There are 343 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
,
On Jan. 22, 1900, Ru's slan workers revolted In St. Petersburg, drawing
fire from Imperial Army troops In what became known as "Bloody
Sunday."
On this date:
In 1655, Oliver Cromwell dissolved the Brttish Parllarnent.
In 1944, allled forces began landings at Anzlo, Italy, In World War II.
In 1979, a remote-controlled bomb In Beirut killed eight people Including
the terrorist said to have planned the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre.
· In 1980, the Soviet Union strtpped Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei
ilakharov of his state awards and sent him Into tnt.emal exlle after accusIng him of "subversive work."
· Ten years ago: Britain, Ireland, Denmark and Norway signed the
Treaty of Brussels, cleating the way for their entry to the European •
Common Market.
Five years agq: It was disclosed that the Carter admlnstratlon would
seek an $11 bllllon rebate for Americans on their 1!176 taxes.
One year ago: On his second day out of office, former President Jimmy
Carter met In West Germany with the Arnertcan hostages freed two days
earUer by Iranian militants.
.
.!
•
Today's birthdays: Actress Ann Sothem Is 71. Fonner Sen. Byrch Bayh ·
ot Indiana ).s 54.
Thought For Today: Take the world as It Is, not as It should be. - :
Anonymous.

al)long the unemploy&amp;l, but labor
and business econori')tsts were
widely quoted as looking for an Increase In employment, slow though
It might be, as the economy recovered In the second half.
Was It whistling In the dark?
Hard to say'- but there was a qual·
lty to the sound that reminded you
of the time when you were a kid and
you had to walk right throUgh the
toughest part of town In order to get
home.
GM, for example, might be
loaded for bear but If Is the Japanese that they and other domestic ·
manufacturers, have to deal with,
and everyone In Detroit knows it.
Chrysler has distributed a pam·
phlet that begins with the, stark admission that "the Japanese can
place a car In the United Slates for
about $l,fm less than a U.S.
manufacturer.''
Equally shocking Is another admission. "No action by Chrysler or
any other U.S. manufacturer can
offset the additional permanent tax

advantage which results from Japanese government policy," It
slates.
In other words, the U.S. manufacturers are not able to compete In
prtclng, and tbey won't be unless
government Intervenes. "No U.S.
manufacturer," says Chrysler,
"will be able to overcome Japan's
clear advantage as long as U.S. government policy allows It to

persist."
It concedes that SOOlls accounted
for by poorer productivity, and $550
because of wages, fringes and work
rules. But $650 of the dWerence,
Chrysler contends, comes from the
tax dWerenlal between the United
States and Japan. n claims that
taxes on the aver.,ge U.S. vehicle
are about $2,500, on a Japanese veh·
lcle about $1,850.

Mood changes
NEW YORK (AP) - The haves
and the havenots are always fight·
lng, and for a good old Amertcan
reason : The haves want to keep
what they've won, and the haveriots
just as eagerly want to win what
they haven't.
All In all, It has been a decent
battle so long as the economy was
expanding and making room for
more people.
Under such conditions, the two
didn't need to fight. The havenots,

that Is, could get thelrswithouthav·
lng to grab It from the haves. The
haves, secure In their properly'
c ould act magnanimously to
newcomers.
In a shrink economy, however,
the mood changes. 'The haves hold
dearly to what they have lest It be
taken from them, which may be the
very thing the havenots have In
mind. The haves are marked; they
are enemy.

Ronnie gets a C-..__p_lu_s______A_rt_
· B_uc_hwa_ld
The Los Angeles Times and Cable
News TV have just held a nationwide
poll and asked 1,500 people to give
Ronald Reagan a report card on his
first year as President. They gave
him a C-plus.
'
In a similar report card in April,
after his first 100 days, Reagan got a

B.
As one of Ronnie's proud parents,
I was very upset that he was falling
back in his grades, so I went to see
his teacher.
She told me that despite the C.
plus, Ronnie was still one of her
favorite pupils, and got along w ~ll
with all the students, and was well
liked by 70 percent of his class.
"Then why did he get a C..plus?" I
asked angrily.
,
" His mind seems to wander lately.
Frankly, I think he's in a recession."
" Is he doing all right in his
required subjects?" I asked.
" He conununicates very well, but
his big weakness is mathelll8tics
and that's bringing down his grade
average. He doesn't seem to know
the difference between 6 percent and

'

Noise? What notse? There may
_ have been some during lbe game,
but there certainly wasn't much afte!Wanl from the home crowd at
Carmichael Audltortum In Chapel
Hill, N.C.
" We don't let the noise affect us
like other clubs," Wake Forest
guard Mike He lms said of the usual
roar from the sea of North Carolina
blue. "We just want to play a good
game."
After falling behind 22-9 midway
through the first half Thursday
night, the Demon Deacons of Wake
Forest did just that. And when all
the shooting and the shouting was
over, they owned a 55-48 Atlantic
Coast Olnference victory over the
previously unbeaten, No.l-ranked
North ,Carolina Tar Heels.
For the Deacons, It was the second time In as many years that
they returned home from Carmi·
chael with a victory. Wake Forest
accomplished that teat by shooting
62.5 percent In the second half.
North Carolina center Sam Per·
klns was out with a virus and tbe

change In strategy effectively shut
down (OIWard James Worthy . He
scored 13 points tn the flrst,ll min·
utes but oiily managed seven more
the rest of the way.
Wake Forest's record now Is 12-J,
while North Carolina's 13-game
winning streak was sruippped.
The outcome left both clubs tied
with Vlrglnla for the ACC lead with
4-1 records .
'Three other members of The As·
soc!a'ted Press Top Twenty were 1n
action and two of them almost suifered Nqrlh Carolina's fate.
Fitth-ranked Minnesota. led by
guards Darryi1Mitchell and Trent
Tucker with 18 anll 13 po!nts, respectively, rolled to a 78-57 Btg Ten
victory over W~nsln. But No.6
Iowa needed Kenny Arnold's drlv·
Jng layup with nine seconds left to
nose out Northwestern 4847 In
another Big Ten contest and Mike
Anderson's layup with 15 seconds
remaining In overtime gave lOth·
ranked Tulsa a :17-74 Mlssourt Valley Conference triumph over
Southern Illinois.

. Top Ten
Mlnnesola,l2·2overall, lstiedfor
the Btg Ten lead at 4-1 with Iowa
and Purdue, which got four points
aplecelnovertlmefromKevtnStal·
lings, Dan Palomblzlo and Keith
E dmondson and defeated Ohio
State 66-60.
Iowa was fortunate to nip
Northwestern and Coach Lute 01·
son knew It.
'·'To say Je weJ:e lucky Is the understatement of the night," he said
after the Hawkeyes came from behind. They gained controloft.he ball
with 42 seconds remaining and
worked It around until Arnold's
winning basket.
" We weren't playing It· down for
one shot or any one player to take
the shot," said Olson. "We were
just walling for the got In a spot like
that, It's good to have a senior dolt.
Northwestern deserved to win.
This Is one we shouldn't have had, .
but we'll take tt."
The winning basket gave Iowa Its
only lead of the game. The Hawkeyes traDed throughout and were
once down by -10 points because of

the shooting of Northwestern's cen·
ter Bob Grady, who poured In 24
points.
· Although Tulsa ted from the start
against Southern lUtnots, the
Golden Hurricane blew a 65-50 lead
over the flnalll m!n~tes of regula·
tlon time. SIU tied tt at 68 on Ron
Camp's basket with 47 seconds left
to play.
J ohnny Fayne of Southern IIU·
nols led a ll scorers with 18 points,
whUe Bruce Vanley had 16 for
Tulsa a nd Paul Pre&amp;sey, whO fed
Anderson for· t o~c winning basket,
added 14.
Unranked Teams
Coach Gene Keady ca lled
Purdue's trtumph over Ohio State
the biggest road victory In hts two
years a t Purdue.
"This Is the biggest because of
the Importance of the timing tn the
league ," he said. "We played with
great potse. It's the happiest I've
seen our dressing room In i long
time.''
The Joss knocked OhloStat.e from
a share of the lead with a 3-2 record.

49ers'· Solomon suffers knee injury

Americans look for economic recovery

Letter to the editor

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

9 percent unemployment. "

" That's furmy," I said. "Last year
h~ seemed excellent in quoting
statistics, and what he intended to do
with them ."
"That may have been last year.
But now his figures never seem to
add up. We had a simple test last
week. We asked all the students to
put down what the government was
going to spend in 1983 and how much
it expected to collect in taxes to
balance that figure and Ronnie was
off by $50 billion."
,
"Addin~ and subtracting was
ne·:er Ronnie's stron~ suit," I said.
" That's why we sent hi'rn to the
Kemp-Roth Supply Side School of

Economics."
nThat may explain

il ,11

the

teacher said. "The·Kemp-Roth Supply Side School of Economics isn't
even an accredited institution . It's
made up of a bunch of radical
dreamers who believe the less
money people pay in taxes, the more
money they will have to spend,
which will create jobs, which will
eventually balance the budget. They

fllf$, I

/ P/1!6,

ignore such thin~s a::~ interest rates,
inflation and defense spending. But
the worst thing of all is they let the
pupils make up their own figures. No
matter wl)at nwnbers they come up
with no professor ever checks
them.".
'"Ronnie was very happy at the
Supply Side School," I said. " He
even won his Trojat~ Hose I.€Uer for
' football there. "
"But the school never prepared
l1im for t11e real world," the teacher
replied. " II was just one of those
California .Country Clubs where
everyor1e goes to have a ~ood time."
" How is Ronnie doing in other subjel'ls?"
"He's not doing very well in intc rn~tionalrelations . "

'' Why not' "
" His mind keeps wandering in
class. One day he's studying El
Salvador, the next day Nicaragua,
the next day Poland , and when you
ask him about China he ~ives you an
answer about the Middle Eal.
Frankly, I don't think he does
enough horm:w~rk . ''

HMA.IIAI'
HA,HA.

yUK. yUKI

" That's because we insist he ~o to
bed early. His mother and I wo~ld
rather have him rested than burn
!he oil to all hours of the night."
" Do you Jet him watch
television?''
" As much as he wants to. He loves
old movies."
" Perhaps if you cut down his
ldev ison he could do better than a C·
plus."
" I'd hate to do that. It's the only
fun he has. Don't you have any other
su!(~estions?''
/
''Well, l1e could take a course in
emedial aritlunctic. He wouldn't be
the first president who had to do it. "
· ''When d?you teach it?"
"On Wednesday afternoons."
" But that's when Ronnie takes
horsebacking riding ."

" It's your decision,'' the teacher
said. " If you're satisfied with a Cplus then I'd Jet things go along as
they are. But if he doesn't improve
his addition and.subtr·action I should
warn you the . next time his report
card comes out he could ~eta D."

TROY, Mich. (AP) - It's easy to
find Crls Collinsworth these days.
Just look for a throng of laughing
reporters and the Cincinnati Bengals' wide receiver usually wlll be
at the center.
Ollllnsworth, a rookie who made
the All· Pro team and the cover of
sports magazines, has become a
media celebrity In the week preced·
lng Super Bowl XVI.
Even Bengals Olach ·Forrest
Gregg ·was prompted to remark
about Collinsworth's popularity
with the nearly. 1,200 reporters on
hand.
"Idon'twantyouguysgo!ngover
and talking to Crls Ollilnsworlh, "
Gregg joked before Interviews
Thursday. "IIooked over there yes·
terday and there were more people
around him than there were around
me."
Collinsworth conducts Interviews
with a boyish frankness and self·
ef!aclng sense of ·humor. He'll
rarely duck a question, even If a
reporter Is prying Into his dating
life.
The former Florlda football star
loves to tell stories that begin,
''Y'all aren't going to believe this
one, but ... "
Durlngonegroup!ntervtew,areporter wondered tf Olllinsworth
liked Cincinnati.
' Ollllnsworth burted his face In
his hands In mock disbelief as he
recalled going to an autograph ses·

slon at a Cincinnati nightspot last
week.
"They had stx different eniran·
ces to this place , and they had
guards on these entrances. And
when I walked In this place -... I'm
telling you, you just gotta take me
for my word- It was like the Bea·
ties had come home," Ollllnsworth
said, In his Southern drawl.
To the great enjoyment of the ga ·
thered writers, Colllnswortli d ~s·
crt bed how guards had to fight h:l,-d
to keep the adoring women away.
"This went on for about a half·
hour. Finally I'm saying I've got to
get out of here. I 've got my date
back here and she's going nuts and she's thoroughly Impressed
now. I figure by now J'veconvinced
her that she should liang around for
a little while."
·
Ollllnsworth studied accounting
at Florida and has been accepted to
law school, although the Super
Bowl has delayed that.
He caught 67 passes for a teamleading l,OOl yards and etght touch·
downs as he made the Pro Bowlin
his rookie year. He !;aid he's not
worried about his encore, however.
"WhUe I may not make the Pro
Bowl every year and I may riot
make the Super Bowl every year,
there's been so much happening
thallthlnk the thing to dols sit back
and enjoy It and not say, 'Wow, now
l'vegottodoltagalnnextyear.'Or,
'If I don't do It again next year, It
will be a letdown.'

Red s dra ft 14 p Iayers

Brush Prairie, Wasb.; Thomas
D!Ceglio, 19, shortstop, Cedarhurst,
N.Y. ; Jay Munson, 19, OF, Seattle;
Steven Stout, 21, pitcher, Pampa,
Texes; Scott Obert, 19, catcher,
Olympia, Wash.; Kent Schwartz,
19, outfielder, Homes; Kan.; Louts
Burmester, 20, pitcher, WUllston
Park, N.Y.; Glen Kuiper, 18, short·
stop, Sturtevand, Wis.; Richard
Walker, 20, outfielder, Kansas City,
Mo. ; Richard Carter, 20, pitcher,
Hood River, Ore.; Ronald Johnson,
19, outfielder, Seattle; and Kenneth
Sinclair, 22, pitcher, Bronx, N.Y.

CINCINNATI (AP) - The Cincinnati Reds own negotiating rights
to J4 young players as a result of
baseball'!f rhld·wlnter draft last
week. Orsino Hill, 19, an outfielder
from Altadena, Calif., was the
team's top choice and already has
jlgned a 1!*12 minor league coniract
with the Reds .
The players chosen Include _six
pitchers, five outfielders, two In·
fielders and one catcher.
In addition to Hill. they are Glen
Spagnola, 18, pitcher, Orange,
Calif; Randall Myers.''19, pitcher,

PONTIAC, Mich . (AP)- Stoim
clouds have started forming on the
National Football League labor
front but that's nothing compared
to the fullscale storm that hit the
San Francisco 49ers three days before Super Bowl XVI.
Representatives of the NFL
Players Association and the
league's Management Council
rattled sabres at separate press
conferences Thursday while the
49ers were shaken by a sprained
left knee sutfered In practice by

treated In the locker room and
Coach Bill Walsh ·said his statu&lt;
would be reviewed today.
U Solomon, who caught 59 P"Sses
during the regular season, Is unable
to play, he will be replaced by Mike
WUson, a free agent rookie who
signed with the 49ers after being
released by Dallas. Wilson caught
nine passes during the regular
season.
The loss ot Solomon could serlously' alter the 49ers game plan
against the Bengals. Walsh was re-

wide receiver Freddie Solomon.
The Injury left Solomon officially
listed as questionable for Sunday's
title game against the Cincinnati
Bengals. In the NFL lexicon, questlonable status means a player has
a 50-50 chance of playing.
Solomon, San Francisco's second
!eadu&gt;g receiver , was Injured when
he collided with cornerback RoMie
Lott on a sldel!ne pass pattern dtirtng a workout Thursday. He was

fining his team's approach to Sun·
day's game as klckoff neared and
Indicated that he tho.u ght on defense San Francisco's major probIem might be containing the
running of Cincinnati's Pete
Johnson.
"My suspicion Is he'll be their
prtmary weapon," Walsh said of
the bulldozing fullback .
Forrest Gregg, Cincinnati's
coach, shrugged off Walsh 's

ri~~~a~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

D&amp;D
EQUIPMENT, INC.
PHONE 698·2164

ALBANY, OH.

SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER:
NOW IS THE TIME TO GET THOSE
REPAIRS MADE SO SPRING WORK WILL
GO SMOOTHER.
WE HAVE GENUINE M.F. PARTS AND FACTORY TRAINED PERSONNEL TO SERVE YOU. WE HAVE ALL THE SPECIAL TOOLS
NEEDED TO DO THE JOB.

CALL SOON FOR AN APPOINTMENT
"

PAT HILL FORD OFFERS

THE CLOSEST THING
TO COST-FREE DRIVING

HERE, YOU TAKE IT-CincllllUitl quarterback Ken Anderson bands·
the ball to fullback Pete Johnson In action earlier this season. An·

denon will be calling !he plays when his team meets the San Francisco
49en In Super Bowl XVI Sunday In the Sllverdome I~ Pontiac, Michigan.
(APLaserphoto).
'

TWO YEARS OF FORD CARE COVERAGE

1977 FORD GRANADA •

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'1995

4 Or ., A. T.. P .S .. P. B.

1976 FORD MUSTANG

' ,.

'1695

A.T.. P .S.

1974 FORD PINTO STATIONWAGON

'1095

4Cy i., A.T.

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

attributed t~·O'NeU which he Interpreted a s being a putdown of the
Bengals.
"I 'd like to apologize to coo lor
Cincinnati being here Instead of
Pittsburgh or San Diego or Butfalo," he said . "But we like 11 and
we're goMa stay."
O'Nell denied any Insult was In·
tended when he originally refused
to comment on the match ups, canslng the nap. He met for 15 minutes
wtth Gregg to work out the
misunderstanding.

suggestion.
"He may be encouraging me as
far as my game plan Is concerned,"
Gregg satd . "I won'tstand here and
say we won't give the ball to Pete.
But we got here by throwing the
bl,\ll. We scored a lot of points throwIng. Pete Is one of our weapons. We
don't put all our eggs In one
basket."
Gregg also was Involved In a
brief war of words with CBS televislon producer Terry O'NJII. The
coach was ~nnoyed over remarks

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�Pag&amp;-4-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Januaty 22, 1982

Purdue upsets OSU, 66-60

Nease presents forest Run program

By GEORGE STRODE
StaUings was one of Purdue's heCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
roes In the extra five minutes. He
Purdue Coach Gene Keady has re- ! scored four points as did Keith Edceived a vote of confidence - from , monson lind substitute Dan Palomhls players.
btoo.Stallbogs' basketandtwofree
Kevin Stallings burst Into an Ohio _throws gave the BoUermakers a 5SState Interview room after the Bot· 54 lead with two minutes left.
lerriiakers' 66-60 victory Thursday
Ohio State blew an opportunity to
nlght over the Buckeyes and sald:
"We're very proud of our coach. He win the game In the final seconds of
stuck by us thick and thin . We were regulation. Clark Kellogg missed a
3·7 at one time. He never gave up on free throw with nine secbnds left
before Larry Huggins sank a tech·
us.''
Keady called It the biggest road nlcal foul for a 52·52 regulation Ue.
triumph In his two seasons at Ron Stokes, a Buckeye freshnman,
Purdue. The Bollermakers re- was called for traveling with four
mained tied for the Big Ten lead seconds to play.
Edmonson, who scored a gamewith Iowa and Minnesota at 4-1,
knocking the Buckeyes (3-2) from a high 23 points, missed a 31}foot desperation shot Just before the buzzer
share of the top spot.
"This was the biggest because of ending the 40 minutes of regular
play.
111e lmporiance of the timing In the
Purdue, squaring Its overall reteague," Keady said. "We played
with great poise. It's the happiest cord at 7-7. outshot Ohio State 58 to
I've seen our dresslngroom In a - 44 percent and outrebcurtded them
long time. Now I can go to Bloo- 37-28. The BoUermakers Jed at'half·
time 2&amp;-22.
mington and relax."
Tony Camppell paced Ohio State,
Keady was refcrrtng to a trip Sat12-5
overall, with 17 points before he
urday to bitter rival Indiana. Meanfouled
out with more·than lour minwhUe, Ohio State tries to regroup
utes
left
In the second halt. Kellogg
Saturday against Invading Northwcontributed
16 points and 14 reestern In the Big Tel) Game of the
bcunds for the Buckeyes.
Week.
In other features on a busy Ohio
Eldon MlUer, Ohio State's coach,
downplayed the slgnlflcance of the ·co ll ege schedule Saturday,
home loss, teUing the media: "It's Baldwin-Wallace plays at Kenyon
abcut as lmporiant as you want to and Wittenberg, the preseason title
make lt. We played our best game favorite, at Musklngum In games
In the last four games, but It wasn't that match four of the seven Ohio
Conference leaders.
good enough.
Bowling Green risks a share of
"I still like this team, but you the Mid-American lead with Eastmake not like It so well right now." em Michigan, the Falcons playing

at Northern Dllnols and the Hurons
at Toledo.
Ohio University visits Mlaml and
Kent State entertainS Western
Mlchlgan In other Mid-American
encounters.
Clnclnnatl's Bearcats draw the
asslgrunent of playing visiting
Memphis State, a Metro Conference championship threat. Memphis State suffered lis tlrst league
loss at TUlane Thursday ntght.The
Bearcats, 11-4 for all games, have
not won In three Metro games. ·
Youngstown State entertains
Western Kentucky, one of the Ohio
Valley Conference title challe ngers. Ohio's other OVC
member, Akron, has Saturday off.
xavier bids to win Its first Midwestern Cities Conference game In
four tries against' Invading Oklahoma City.
Cleveland State (10-6) plays visitIng St.Francls, Pa. whUe Dayton
(11-3), another top Ohio Independent, Is Idle.
Defiance tries to knock off coleader and host Taylor In the
Hopsler·Buckeye Conference. Titfin risks Its Mid-Ohio lead against
Invading Malone.
Elsewhere Saturday, St.,Joseph,
Ind. plays at Ashland, Indiana·
Purdue-Fort Wayne at Wright
State, Central State at Chicago
State, John Carroll at Thiel, Hiram
at Washington &amp; Jefferson, Case
WeStern Reserve at Bethany, Findlay at Bluffton, Urbana at Mount
Vernon Nazarene, Walsh at Ohio
Dornlnlcan and Cedarv!lle at Rio
Grande;

A program on prayer and self·
denial was presented by Mrs. Mary
Nease at th~ recent meeting ot the
Forest Run Unitect Methodist
Women held at the home of Mrs.
Faye Hamilton.
l')!rs. Evelyn HoUon read the scripture whtch was laken from John 21
am! Acts 15. Readings by the members emphasized keeping our eyes,

members (Iron!, J.r, Tony Deem, Wade ConnoUy, Troy
Ward. Back- Kevin CUrfman, Paul Harris, Corey McPhaU, Dennis Teaford, Jason Hill, and Trevor Cardooe.

short par-4 and two-putted lor birdie and reached one par-5 In two.
Playing was no fun at aU for the
afternoon group.
They started playing In a cold
wind. Then the rain started, gently
at !trst and then Increasing In force
until the course was flooded and
unplayable.
The first man o!f the tee In the
afternoon, rookie Clyde Rego, was
making a run at the leaders when
play was held up. He was 5 under
par after eight holes. Tom Purtzer
was tour under after six holes.

Tigerettes post 33-30 victory
Despite playing most of the game
without the services of two injured
starters, Meigs battled the Ironton
Tigerettes down to the wire before
bowing, 33-30 Thursday evening.
Lynne Oliver had to leave the con- 1
test in the second period due to a leg
injury while Pam Crooks exited in 0
the third stanza with an injury.
Jennie Meadows led Meigs with II
points while Crooks had nine.
'
Teresa Sweeney and Susan
Jackson paced Ironton with 16 and 12
points respectively.
According to the charts, Meigs hit
13of 27 fi eld goal attempts for 47 percent while Ironton connected on 14 of
41 for 45 percent.
Ironton held a 1&amp;-13 rebounding ·
edge with Jackson getting four.
Meadows led Meigs with fiv e. The

Ohio
8_portlight
By George Strode

loss evened Meigs' overall record at
~- The Marauderettes are 4-S in the
SEOAJ.,.
In the reserve game, Ironton took
a :J6.2ii decision. Eldridge led the
winners with 10 points. B. J . Gordon
had eight for the losers. Meigs goes
to Eastern Monday.
Meigs (lOJ - Smith 1·02; OliverO·
0·0; Meadows 5· 1· 11 ; Crooks 4· 1·9;
And er son 2· 1·5;
Horton 1·0·2;
Swisher 1· 1·1. Totals U-4-JO.
Ironton ( 33) - Sweeney 7·2· 16;
Walk e r 0·3-3; Jackson 6·0 t 2; Me·
M ack in

1·0·2;

Whitehead

Totals t4· 5· JJ.
Meigs

10 16 24 30

Ironton

14 18 26 33

Tonight's games
Southern at Easter n
Kyger Cr eek at N or th Ga II ia
Southwes ter n at Hanna n Trace
Ga ll ipol is at W aver ly
Jack so,., a t Loqa n
Wellston at Athens
Ironton a t M eiqs
Portsmouth a t Green up
Hurri ca ne at Pt . Pleas;m t
Washington CHat Madison P lai ns
Chi llicothe at Frankl i n Furnit ce

(Saturday)

Portsmouth at Ci r c levi ll e
Wheelersbur g at Notre Dame
Waverly at Wa shing ton CH
Ath ens at Miami T ra ce
Mei~s a t Wahama

Kyger Creek at H annan

left with a nearly normal range o!

Medals and certificates have been
presented to the winners and other
participants in the history essay contest recently sponsored by Return
Jonathan Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution.
The first through fourth place winners in the contest, lisled respectively, were Larissa Long, Cheste r
Elementary; Elizabeth Smith,
Racine Elementary; Tracy Beegle,

Letart Eien:entury; and Amy die; Syracuse Elementary, Todd
Berkhimer, T~f.pers Plains Elemen- Lisle and Chris Stout; and Tuppers
tary.
Plains, Amanda Cozart, Lori Lea
Other pa'J11eipants were Brad- Burlie, James My~rs, Joy L. Swain,
bury, Kathy Thomas, Sean Gibbs, David Rice, llryan Durst, Amy
and Amy Luckeydoo; Chester Shrivers, Jeff Ca.ldwell, Lea Ann
Elementary, Jodie Schaekel, 'Trina Reed, Sara Berkhimer, Chris SpenDarlene Barker; Letart Elemen- cer, Tanuny Rutman, Amy Hager,
tary, Jason L. Hall, Dina Shuler, Chad Sinclair, Karen Sharp, Carol
Crystal Hill; Racine, Billy Jones, ' Lynn Fisher, Renee Kaylor, and
Melanie Van Meter and Shawn Did- Amy Connolly.

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

Meigs
Band·
Notes
By ROXANNE McDANIEL
This week's Meigs Band schedule
includes jazz band practice on Thursday, Jan. 21, 3::!M&gt; p.m. and
rehearsal in the banctroom for pep
band B on Friday, Jan. 22, at 6:30
p.m.

,

Attention, · seniors: Please bring '
your unifonns in with a dry
cleaners' receipt.
The exchange concert wi th
Jackson hall been set for March 4. At
the exchange conc-ert last year
MeiKs band students spent the af·
Iernoon with individual Jackson
band students, with a c'Onc-ert
following that evening. Unlike last
year. Jackson will only be coming
for the concert.
·'

Ill rCN" OIAU" NOW I

@nation @mpany
•
~~ed~

MILLING OtYIStON

· Bird Seeds · Oy ster Shell s and Grrt · fertlliu r s · Lime · Ce·

mcnt i'lnd Mortar · Stacie s.,lt · Water Softener · Rcm.edlcs · Salt ·
littus ·

V,l~Cine

· Roofinq · Paints · Red I\ rand Fcncinq · Baler
Binder Twine · ~prays · Gates · H.•v · Str.-.w

olrld

SUGAR RUN MILLS
1

Mulberry Ave.

992-2119

Pomeroy

High car insurance risks?

FRESHMAN CAGERS - Members of the 1981-82
Southern fre!!hman team are, back, David Ehersbach,
Steve Teaford, Darin Roush, Kevin Teaford, Scott

Schultz, Greg Nease, and Tom Greathouse. In front is
John Clark. The young Tornadoes are coached by
coach Carl Wolfe and Howie Caldwell.

College basketball scores '1
Thunday' • Colle1e Bu"'etball Scores

fn.dtana 54. llllnols 53
Iowa 49, Northwestern 48
Michigan St. 64., Michigan 62
Minnesota 78, Wisconsin 57
N .. Iowa 68, E .llllnols 63
Purdue 66, Ohio St. 60, OT
St. Xavier 84, NE Illinois 77
Tulsa 77, s. llllnQis 74 OT
Wayne St .. Mich. 81, Oakland 66
W.Kentucky 77, Akron 68
Youngstown S t. 67, Cleve land St. 55

BY The A..oclated Preu

EAST

Fairleigh Dickinson 67, Utica Coli. 65
Fa irmont St. 81, Alderson-Broaddus 68
Hamilton 68, Colgate !"18
Holy Cr oss 60, Maine 50
Marlst 97, Wagner 91
J{oches ter 61, Hobart 40
St.Joseph' s, Pa. 64, Lehigh 52
Siena 59, Robert Morris 43
SE M9t S$ach usetts 92, Nichols 84, OT
W. Maryla nd 78, Johns Hopkins 62

SOUTHWEST

Sam Houston St. Sl. Dallas Baptist 44
Wichita St . 73, W.Texas St. 72
FJ\R WEST
B'rlgh a m Young M, Air For ce 40
Fresno St. 40, Cal·Santll Barbara 38
Fullerton St. 61, San Jose St. 50
Nevada-Las Vegas 76, Uta h 67
Utah St. 90. Long Beach St. 82
W, Montana 75, Mont a na Tech 57
Wyom ing 77, San Diego St . G4

SOUTH

Citadel 69, Furman 66
Delta St. 60, Mississippi Col. 59
Murray St. 59, Middle Tennessee 58
New Orleans 82, Stetson 64
So.Mtss lss lppl 76, S.CaroU na 67
SW Louisiana 65, Loulttana Tec h 55
Tennessee T ech 66. Austin Peay S8
Tulane 58, Memphis St. M. OT
Wake Fore!lt 55, N .Caro lina 48

w.Carolina

By quarters:

North Ga llia at Vin ton County

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cesar
Cedeno says he's near perfect physIcal condltloilln his bid 10 return to
the outfield as a new memberotthe
Cincinnati Reds.
A severe ankle InJury forced the
31}year-old Cedeno to play first
base last summer for the Houston
Astros, who swapped him to tbe
Reds for third baseman Ray
Knight after the season.
An extensive rehabllltatlon program this winter has Cedeno confident he can play as many as 150
games In the Cincinnati outfield In
1982.
"I'm a !lmn believer that the best
years In my Ule are still ahead," 1
said Cedeno. ''I'm out to prove that.
I'm very close to 100 percent. By
the middle o! spring training, I
should'1le In top form. I should be
feeling great. "
The flve-tlme Golden Glove
winner said after dislocating Ills ankle In the 19al National League
Championship series, "I knew ·
there was something missing. I was ·
a couple of steps slower. I didn't ·
want to hurt the team so I went to
first base. "
But his batting average slipped
from .309 In 1*10 to .271 last
summer. His stolen base total
dropped tram 48 to 12.
When the season ended, Cedeno
spent a month In the SPQrts Injury
RehabWtatlon and Research Cl1nlc
In San Diego. He arrived with an
. ankle that was nearly Inflexible and .

0·0·0.

ved by Mrs. Hamilton and Mrs. NaJl..
thotie named and
Mrs. Betty Blackwood, Mrs, Leah
Nease, Mrs. Mary K. Roush, Mrs.
Carolyn Salser, Mrs. Kathleen Scott;
Mrs. EJith Sisson, Mrs. Naomi
Wyatt, Mrs .. Hilda Yeauger, and
guests, MarybeUe Warner and the
Merrifield Children.
cy Merrifield to

Helen Help Us

tour feet. He holed 25-30 foot putts
tor two more, drove the green on a

format called for a Sunday windup.
Larry Nelson led the early fln·
lshers with the best round of the
young season, an S-under-par 63.
His score. along with the 71 others
who completed play before the
rain, will stand: All of the afternoon
starters were stranded on the
course.' They marked their positions and were scheduled to resume
play from that point today.
Nelson, the current PGA champion, bogeyed his first hole after
snap-hooking his second shot,
three-putted another green but also
recorded iO birdies. Four of them ·
came after he hit Irons l)lstde of

reported. A dessert course was ser·

Announces history contest wtnners

Rain plagues Phoenix Open
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) - The
Phoelilx Open lost a halt-day and
got Its schedule k$ ked out of kll·
ter while veteran ro golfer Steve
Melnyk lost much more, a haltyear cerialnly; probably more;
possibly a career.
Melnyk, a former U.S. •nd BritIsh Amateur champlon)ust getting
started on hls 12th season as a tourIng pro, was the ftrst victim of the
rain-plagued Phoenix Open Thursday. His golf spikes slipped on a
wet, paved walkway as he was
leaving the pra:ctlce green. Melnyk
tell heavily and fractured hls right
elbcw.
"The doctor says I'm out for six
months to a year," he said after the
amn had been put In a cast. The
Injury, In a critical area for a pro
golfer, almost cerialnly ·will cost
hlm any chance he has of retaining
his playing rights on the all-exempt
tour next season and possibly wlU
force him to make another attempt
at the tour's qualifying schooL
A few hours after hls InJury, a
torrential rainstorm swept over the
6,726-yard Phoenix Country Club
course. flooded tees, greens and
bunkers on the flat layout. forcing
officials to postpone first round play
and Juggle the tournament's schedule, setting back the proJected finIsh by a full day.
The schedule now calls for the 72
,.players stranded on the course by
the storm to complete play Friday.
The second round wlU be played
Saturday, and the last two rounds
Sunday and Monday. The original

ears, and heart open to God at aU
limes. The self-denial offering was
taken .
Mrs. Mary Nease read the song,
"We Are the Church" and prayer
closed the program.
During the business meeting notes
were read from Stanley Nease, Mr.
and Mrs. 1.1. S. Nease, and Eima
Holter. Thirty-seren sick calls were

•

SOUTHERN'S RESERVES - The Southern Tornado reserve squad of Coach Howle Caldwell bas been
enjoying an outs landing Hl.season. Pictured are team

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Publishetl every afternoon, Monday lhrougtt
t'riday, J1J Coort Street, by UJe Ohlo Vall"lf
Publishing Company · Multimedia , Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio ~769, 992-2156. Second daS!
postage paid at Pomeror. Otuo.

'

Member: The Aa:tociated Pres11, Inland Dai,
ly PreK."' Aii.'Wl:ialion and ttu: American
Newspaper Publ!shers AssociaiiDn, National
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New3paper Sa les, 733 Third Avenue, New
York, New York t0017 .
POSTMASTER: Send address to The Daily
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy,Ohio 45769.
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Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier
may remit in advance dlrcd to The Daily
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month ballis. Credit
will be given. carrier each mon.th

204 Condor St.
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Phone: 992-2974

Transactions
Thunday'a Spons TrauacUon•
By The Aa11oclated Preas

No subscripllons by mail permitted in towns
where home carrier service Is available.

A.merlcan Leape
MINNESOTA TWINS- Signed Bobby
Castillo and Eddie Hodge, pttcners, and
Steve Doug las, outfielder.

ASTR0S Signed Tony
Scott, ouUi edle r, to a three·year contract.

DEARHELENANDSUE:
I'm very much In love with a 43year-old perlomler who travels a lot
with a band. I've read aU about him
and ·see his shows whenever I can.
I've written him 14 letters, but he
never answers. Maybe he doesn't
even get them. Should I keep on
writing and hoping?- CONFUSED
DEAR CON:
I'd guess you're Into faniasies
about an unknown performer
bee~-~ you haven't been successful
with close-by relationships.
Put away your pen and concentrate on making real friendships.
-HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE: And spend the
stamp money you save on a course
on " How to Conquer Shyness."
(GOT . PROBLEM? Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style?
Direct your questions to either Sue
or Helen Bottel - or both, If you
want a combination motherdaughter answer - in care of this
newspaper.)
·

•

Parent-teacher organtzatton meets
TiieaMual valentine's day party

Purchase of trophies for the ball
players and cheereleaders was approved at a recent meeting Jf the
Syracuse PTO held at the school.
The unit also voted to sponsor a
skating party lor those Involved In
the sports program of the school,
with the money to come from the
basketball fund .

talnS tor the gymnasium. More
participation In the PI'O was
discussed.
The resignation of Sharon Stewart as president due to IUness was
accepted. Barbara Lawrence's
School ot Dance presented a progra!J1. Room count was won bY
Patty Struble's Drst grade class.

was set lor Friday at 2 p.m . on Feb.
12. Thanks were extended to Mrs.
Beth Stearns and the other
teachers who assisted with the
i
C)Jrlstmas program. /
A discussion was held on making
the PTO's major project the purchase of new stage and window cur-

$39.l

~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;~;i;i;iiijiiijijjjjijjjjiiiijiiijiiijiiij,

Why can~t

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - ----!

Measured by percentages, his In~
Itial range of motion was 17 ·per-

•

otherfeed
•

cent. He left with a better than ~
percent mobillty.
Byron Wildermuth, the clinic dl·
rector, says cedeno had llrnlted
strength and power In his ankle
when he arrived. Tbe Injury, Wildermuth maintains, was a couple of
years oici.
"But he's a hard worker. You can
push him. He's Interested In getting
better. He's highly motivated,"
WUdermuth said.
Cedeno belieVes the cUnlc .trip
was worth' It, saying, "It came out
right for me. I got what I wanted. I
can play center field. This is what I
like 10 do. l wasn'tsatlslfled playing
first. My heart was In center.lt was
Just a matter of time before I got
back there."

~RieS

' '

duplicate
High Octane
performance?

~Purina...

~ing frllli-1..-.IOI..,IOW

With raean:h toda,l

Only Purina knows
how to formulate the
sp ecial balance of en '
ergy and amino acids
found in H igh Octane
Hog Chow". You won't
see this nutritional
difference on a High
Octane feed tag. But
you will see it where it
counts - in the way
your hogs perform .

MODERN SUPPLY
399W. MAin

Save our ~c. RC-100, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
and Dad's Root Beer bottle caps for charity.
'

992-2164

Pomeroy, Ohio

THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR
PETS, STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS
LAWNS AND GARDENS

'

.

Friday.

Social Calendar
~

Hayes, Charlel¢on, W.
speaking ; pu.!!lic invited.

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

21 Witts PM chlnHI, mtnlrnum rma Into I ohmi from

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By RunatJc

Sunday
GRACE EPISCOPAL Church
will have its Sunday momihg service at !0:30a.m.
SYRACUSE Church of the
Nazarene presents the Royalmen

ADULT Fellowship meeting of
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
will be Friday at 7 p.m. at the
fellowship haD.
MISSIONARY Service will be
held at the Unied Pentecostal
Church, Middleport, Friday, at
7,30 p.m. The John Norwackls
fatnlly, missionaries to France, · '
will be the speakers. me Rev ..
Clark Biker, P,.stor, invites the
. public to attend.

W. Va.,
In
Quartet, 6Charleston,
concert,
p.m. Sunday.
pastor,
the Rev. James B. Kittle, invites
· the pubUc.

Sanu-day
SPECIAL SERVICES, 7:30
p.m. Saturday and Sunday at
10:30 a.m.
Racine Church of
the Nazarene with Rev. John

at

MEIGS AREA Holiness
Association monthly rally Manday at H)'ltU Run Hollneaa Chur-

I

rr.ch;;a;t7;:3G=p=.m=·~:;::::::::~

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R47EDT Magnetic Cllrtrldge, Dual
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· ALL WOMEN'S
DRESS and CASUAL

flllilr-

Sends Love"

992·20:19 ar 992·5721

Reg. SeiNirale

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e

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-

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.·

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Monday

THE ~WORn! COUNCIL
46, Royal and Select Masters, will
meet Monday at 7: ~ p.m. at the !
Pomeroy Malonic Temple. The
royal master and select master
degrees wiD be conferred.

Va.,

~

20-20,000 Hz, with no mor. tt..n O,OIIt. _,... hllrmontc distortion

Mr. and Mrs. Donnie Barringer,
the former Kathy Whitlatch, ReedsviDe, are announcing the birth of
their first child, Jan. 15, at the
Hoher Medical Center. ·
The six pound, seven ounce infant
had been named Jessica Irene. She
was 19 inches long. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
Whitlatch of ReedsvlUe. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Barringer, alsO of Reedsville.
The maternal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Keith Aeiker,
Pomeroy, and the paternal greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Chevalier, Reedsville. Mrs. Leona
Kay Roach of Middleport ill a maternal great-great·gtandmother.

Ohio aad Weal VIrginia

emerit us.

. . ·.
..... -. . ...
·! . I I I I I
.·o
···.. ··.o
_... ....f ·,·
""

Couple announces .birth of first child

3 Month ...... .......... .......... 112.35
Six month ........................ $20~
!.Year .. ...bi~~·~id~Obl; ···· ·
aad Wr1t Vlrclnla
·
3Mooth ........................ .. $11.00
6Month .......................... 125.4!1
lYear . ... ...... . .. . . .. .... . ..... ~

GRAVELY

National Leaaue

HOUSTON

•

FRANK K. JONES, president,
Citizens Committee for Ethical Insurance, Berwyn, Pennsylvania,
I9312.

MAIL SUBSCR~ONS

· NEW WINTER HOURS :
Open Tues. thru Fri .
9 AM. till P .M .
Sat. 9 A.M. tit t P .M.

BASEBALL

MIAMINational
DOLPHINS-Announced
Football Lea1ue the
tl rement of Charles Ca llahan, publicity
rector. and named him publicity director

IUSPSJ45-9111'
A OM I IIII of Multlmeilia, Inc.

SINGLE COPY

99, VMI 69
MIDWEST
Dayton GG, St. Lou is 63
Drake 61, Bradley 49
Illin ois St. 68, Creta:hton 54

FOOTBALL

T he L&gt;uily Se nt inel

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTIEL
Thank you for catching me up,
DEAR HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
Professor. Following is a letter
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
you'll appreciate:
Re the young male who decried
having to pay more (or car in- DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
surance than would a woman his
Our organization secured official
age: Helen answered, quite fac- driving records of males and
tually, that "As a class, you men are females, by ages, from the federal
considered high-risk drivers, goverrunent and other l!gencies.
females less so, therefore males They show that 96 percent of young
must pay more ... it's good business drivers were not involved in any acsense."
cident, let alone being responsible
In times past, it was "gOOd for any.
business sense" to keep women from
We found untrue the accepted
being educated - they had a low in- slatement, "As a class, young males
cidence of . success lp pursuing are high-risk drivers." By insisting
professional careers, so why waste on higher rates for them, the inmoney ·on them? II was also " gOOd surance companies have arbitrarily
bus iness sense" to exc lude penalized careful drivers instead of
minorities (including women l from rewarding them . In repeated
any careers .. .
,
. testimonies at our state capital, we
Has it struck you, Helen, that have asked (like Sue) that new
almost every form of inequality has drivers get lower standard rates to
and can he rationalized in this encourage careful driving, these to
fashion? It is characteristic of social be raised if there are accidents. We
discrimination to evaluate an in- have also suggested that a sixdivi dual not on the basis of actual months' surcharge might be proper
personal performance, but on ex- at the Inception, to be eliminated if
pectations about his or her "class." there are no accidents during that
-PROF . DIRK H. van der EI..ST. period.
Anthr&lt;Jpology , California State
We are hard on the trail of the
irresponsible driver, regardless of
University, Fresno.
.
And it's time for change! Sue's an- age or sex, but let's be fair about it
swer, suggesting it, was much better and go by drivin~ facts, not inthan my bow to "business sense." surance company propaganda. -

A musical compan ion
that's also a waker- upperl
PM/Wake indicators,
snooze, s leep, .more .
#12-1521

Check Your Phone Book for the Iaiiie lllaekStore or Dealer Nearest You
lllfiiiCEI MAV VAAY AT IHOfYIOUAI. ITOAES ANO DEAlERS

A DIVISION OFT ANDY CORPORATION

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, January 22, 1982

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7
. . ......

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ballet will perform at Rio GrandeBallet Metropolitan will perfonn 36 perfonnances. This season, it is
at the Fine and Perfonning Ars Cen- expected that over 80,000 people will
ter on the campus of Rw Grnade attend aboul7!i perfonnances.
College and Community College
The perfonnance wtll commence
Feb. 14 at2 .30 p.rn
with the world premiere of
Ballet Metropolitan has enjoyed " Couples," choreographed by
three extremely succesSful seasons Soulant and ·accompanted by the
debuted as a professional company .mustc of Anton Dvorak, Serenade-in
Ill 1978.
E Major for Strings. Soulant also
The Colwnbus company includes des1gned the costwnes.
16 dancers representing 11 states
Death and romance colhde 111 the
and 14 countrtes.
climax of " Le Combat,"
Artisltc D1rector Wayne Soulanl choreographed by Wilham Dollar
danced and choreographed m this and accompa nied by music of Rafcountry and Europe before joining faello de Bonf1eld. The costumes are
the troupe 111 1978.
des1~ned by David Jordan.
During the ballet's ftrst season,
The ballad of " Le Combat" lakes
over 32,000 people enjoyed a touil of

place in the days of the crusades.
The scene open.s with the first encounter of Clorinda, a pagan girl ,
and Tancred, a Christian wamor .
Their final meeting shows them entwmed in a mortal combat in which
Tancred discovers his masked
assailanl 1s the girl he loves.
An aristocratic wedding feast is
dep1cled in " Pas de Dix,"
choreographed by E ugene Tanner
after Pelipa. Musit is by Alexander
Glazmov w1th costume destgn by
Dav1d Jordan.
T1 ckets for the event may be obo
tamed by contacting Rio Grande
College at 1614) 24!i-5353.

correspon~ence

COunty and area

Baumgardner and family. Madge
Dye, loca l, and Usa Dye, Oh1o Stale
Umversll) students , also attended
along with members of the Celia Dye
Erwm fam1ly of Marysvtlle and
members of the Mary Dye Kepnar
fam1 ly of Hartford.

Racine Social Events
WINNERS - Rutland Elementary students who
participated In the l&gt;ike-a·thon sponsored by St. Jude
Children's Research Center were presenllod their
prizes Thursday during an assembly. The youths pictured were all presenu.d with T·shirts and tho•e who
had the largest collections were also given jackets. To
receive a T·shirt a student had to collect alleast $25.
Those who colleclcd $'75 were given a T-shlrt and
Jacket. Winners pictured ure, first row, 1-r, Richard

Mrs. Clara M Powell spent three
weeks viSitmg her grandson, Mr.
and Mrs. Bryan Robtnson and son at
Mt. Vernon , N. Y. She was met on
her return to Ohio at the Columbus
Airport by her son-tn-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. S!frling Orr
of Gahanna, who returned her to
Racme after a several days' vistt
wtlhthem.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Robtnson and
daughter of Norfolk, Va. v1siled his
grandmother, Mrs. Clara Powell,
several days recently. Her New
Year's dinner guests were Mrs.
Dorothy Spencer and her grand:
chtldren, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Spencer and Mike, Mr. and Mrs. David
Spencer, Ike Spencer and son, John
Mrs. Grella Simpson, Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Stmpson and family,
Racine; Rebecca Jones, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Stemple and
daughter, Dayton, spent New Year's
Day with Mr. and Mts. Glen Sim·
pson, Waverly.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hysell and
children, Rtceville, Tenn. v1s1ted
relatives in Middleport, Syracuse,
and Racine. Mr. and Mrs Robert
Hysell, Syracuse, entertained with a
dinner at the1r home honorin~ the

Ellis, Kim Eblin, Shellu Hendricks, Tommy Mason
Pennington, Jr., Matthew Eblin, Ryan Lemley, and
Amber Eblin; second row, Michael Walls, Sandra Mar·
cum, Kelly Holman, Beth Ann Sweuringer, Wayne
Runyon ; third row, Amy Johnson, Stephanie Walker,
Rachel Rubinson and Steve Guillen. Receiving tickets
in addition lo the T·shlrts were Kim Eblin, Tommy
Pennington, Jr., Sandra Marcum, Wayne Runyon,
Amy Johnson and Stephanie Walker.

Ray Hysell family. Other relaltves
attending were Mr. and Mrs Ralph
Badgley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray
Hysell, Mrs. Oma Hysell.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland have
returned hoine ftom a four weeks •
visit wtth Mrs. Bessie Smes Smith at
Breckenridge, Texas. The Clelands
have also recetved word that their
son, Steve Cleland, is a surgical
patient m Houston, Texas.
Mrs. Mildred Swift of Columbus
was a recent visitor of her mother,
Mrs . Francis Morrts.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle spent
Chrtstmas with Mr. and Mrs. B11l
McKenzie and family , Gallipolis.
Bud SIIllpson, Seymour, lnd was
the overnight Wednesday and Thursday guest of hts mother, Mrs Gret·
taSimpson.
Mr. and Mrs Delbert Morris of
Athens, Mrs. Mane Chapman,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Ura Morris ,
Racine, visited Mr and Mrs. Chiford Moms recently.
Mr. and Mrs Edward Howell,
Flushing, spent several days recently with hts sister, Mrs Grella Simpson, and vtstted another sister,
Mrs. Mae Cleland at the Holzer
Medical Center

Carmel News,
By the Day
Kim Follrod was one of the
American htgh school students 111
Who's Who's, a great honor.
Florence Circle and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry C1rcle and sons visited wtth
Garrett Ctrcle and Mattie Circle at
Pleasant Valley Nursing Home on
Sand Hill Rd. in honor of Garrett's
82nd birthday on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ables of ,Bald
Knobs and Sue Hager of Racine
were recent callers at the Douglas
Ctrcle home.

J\strograph

Financial aid
applications
available

Personals

l..orrame,

and

has

a

Service
Locus'&amp; Beech Street

,

•

llu ·u It

C HM I O•oon

A..,_

P ocMesCOM~, · ~

461

Nationwide Ins. Co •
of Columbus, 0
804 W. Mam

.r'

l'

992 -2318 Pomeroy

Diamond Savinp &amp;

Loan

RACINE PLANING MIU.
" Mttt Work·
Syracuse

992-3978
TRINITY CHURCH , Rev W. H Pernn,
pastor. Oebb•e Buck , Sunday school
supt Church School 9 15om worsh1p
service , 10.30 a m Cho1r rehearsal
Tuesday 7 30 p m under direction of
Al1 ce Nease

THE

NAZARENE
Corner
Un ion
and
Mulberry Rev V1rg1l Byr er pastor
Glen McClung
osst
pastor
Clyde
Henderson , pastor eme r.tu s Sunday
School 9 30 am Glen McClung supt ,
morning worsh1p 10 30 a m evenmg
serv1c e
7 00 , m •d-week
se r viCe ,
Wednesday. 7 00 p m

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST

BIBLE

DE~TER

CHRISTIAN

UNITED

METHODI ST

Preaching 9 30 o m . ltrst and second
Sundays of each month , th1rd and fo urth
Sundays each month worsh1p serv1ce at
7 30 p m Wednesday evenings at 7.30
Praye-r and Bible Srudy
SE'iENTH -OAY ADVENTI ST Mulberrf
He1ghts Rood Pomeroy Pa stor Albert
O•ttes, Sobboth Scllool Superintendent
fi:1t0 White Sabbath School Saturday
ohernoon at 2 00 wtth Worship Ser\IICe
following at 3 15

~~~~~~~~======!~~~~~~~~~~~~~

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST C+i URCH-

S1st8r Harriett Wor ner Sup! Sunday
School , 9 30 a m , morntng worshtp
10 . ~5 o.m

POMEROY

Guaranteed

to please.
Ufetime .

Warranty

FIRST BAPTIST Dov•d

FIRST

SOUTHERN

BAPTIST

282

Mulberry Ave Pomeroy . Rev W1l llam
fl Newman, roster , Hershel McClure,
Sunday schoo ~upenntendent Sunday
school. 9 30 a .m : mornmg worsh1p
10 30. even1ng worsh1p , 7.30 p m
M1dweek prayer ser~o~tee , 7 30 p m

MIDWAY COMMUNtrY CHURCH Do x·

ter Rd. Rd . Long~ v •lle Rev A A
Hughes , Pastor Sunday School 10 o.m
Ser~o~lces on Tuesday . Thursday and Sunfi:un Rood Re~o~ Emmett Rowson pa s tor
Handley Dunn , supt. Sunday school 10
am . Sunday evening servtce 7 30 ; Bibl e
ttt0Ch1ng , 7 30 p.m. Thursday.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

E.cclesia Fellowsh.ip
PRESENTS

MICHAEL VANCE from Columbus, Oh.
Ministenng the Word of God and Special Gospel
Singing by "LIGHT" from Vienna, w. Va.

SATURDAY, JANUARY
23, 1982
.
0

,

7: 00P.M . attheMEIGS JR . HIGH AUDITORIUM
No Admissio n Charge - A F~eewill Offering w'ill be .
taken at the meeting

CHRISTIAN UNION ~ Lawrence Man ley
pottor ; Mrs Russell Young , Sunday
'"IChool Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
tttnlng worsh1p , 7 30 . Wednesday
P• · ter meetmg 7.30p m .

Valentine's Day is nght "..,.l_
around the corner, and for
all your gifts and cards see
The Middleport Book Store.
A large shipment of Valen·
tine gifts and .cards just ar·
rived. They have everything you need for your
Sweetheart.

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,

Elegant chain styles for men
l't women wi(h a layer of 14
Karat Gold on every visible
surface. Affordably priced.
6acked by Sweet's Lifet1me
Warranty.

~03"
'C/Jetrelers
Main, Pomeroy

Middleport Book Store
99 Mill Street
PH. 992·2641

211 E.

,.

Pastor Chutlc McPherson Welcomes
Everyone

Racine- Rev . James Sotterf1eld. pastor
Mornmg worsh1p 9', 45 a .m. Sunday
school . 10·A5 a m e~o~ening worshtp, 7
Tuet day 7 30 p m . ladies p ray er
meeting, Wednesdoy , 7·JOp m . YP£
MIDOlfPORT FIRST BAPTIST . Corner
Sixth and Pol mer . the Rev Mark Mc: Ciung Sunday Khool , 9.15 am .. Randy
Hay... Sunday School , supenntendent
Dan Riggs c.sst supt . Morning Worship
10 15 a.m . Youth meeting 7 30 p m
Wednesday , •ncludlng wH tots , .ager
beavers , junior astronauts, ond 1unior
ond 1tenlor high BYF. choir prachce B 30
p m. Wednesday prayer mHtlng ond BI ble study, w~nesdoy , 7:30p.m

CHURCH OF CHRIST Middleport , Sth

and Main , Bob Melfon . minister . Scott
Saltsman, ouoc late mtnister . 8ib!e
School , 9:30 a. m ; morning worship ,
10 30 a m evening service, 7.00 p.m .

Wodnotday B•blo Study ond youth group
rMetings, 7·00 p m

MIDDlEPORT

NAZARENE .

Re~o~ .

CHURCH

OF

Jim lroom.,

THE

pastor ;

8111 White, Sunday ochool oupt Sunday

'0

schOol, ' 30 o m : morning worship ,

Mtddleport, Ohto

K&amp;C=LERS
212 E . Mc11n Street

992-3785, Pomeroy

10 30 a m .. Sundov
evongelt st1c
meeting. 7 00 p m Prayer meet•ng ,
Wednesday, 1 p m

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF

Su ndll\

.\.f u nd u~

T u t• ~dov

Psnlrm
I IH

Ps ulm ~

P!io lm ~

Wednesday
Mollhfl w

7 I I 12

ill I lfi

10 ! 6-2J

lh ursrlo v
Mnllh1•1\

f'rldo\
lvl11rk

I ll l .J II

6 •P 52

Snlu rdo)
1/ohn
" 17-21

MEIGS COUNTY , Rev Wando Johnson ,
d~rector
Harold Jollnson dCJeclor of
education
HARRISONVIllE PRESBYTERIAN Wa r
sh1p Ser\I ICe, 9 om Churcll Schoo l ,
10 30o m
MIDDLEPORT Church Sc hoo l 9 00
om Morn.ng wor sh1 p 10 15

SY RA CUSE

FIR ST

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH Near

long Botto m Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
sc hoo l, 10 am . Church, 7 30 p m ,
prayer meetmg 7 30p m Thursd ay

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST Cor·

ner Ash and Plum Lesl1 e Haymon ,
pastor. Saturday even•ng service , 7 30
p m , Sunday School 10 om Sunday
Worsh1p Ser . . . lce , 11 am . Wednesday
7 30 p m , Bob
evemng serv ices ,
Gr~:~bb teo chin(l

, MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHOOIST CHURCH

Rev Robert M'Gee mte r~m director

POMEROY CLUSTER

Rev Rebert McGee
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 a m
Worthlp serv1ce 10.30 om
Cho1r
rehearsa l, Wednesday 7 p m Rev
Robert McGee pastor
ENTERPRISE Worsh1p 9 o m Church
School 10 am R1chord Rothem~eh
pastor
ROCK SPR INGS SundOy School 9 15
o m W ors htp serv1ce 10 o m
Richard Ro t h em~eh , pastor
FLATWOODS Church Sc hoo l iO o m
Worship I 1 o m , R1chord Rothem1ch
pastor

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

HEATH , Church Scf1ool 9 30 a m
Worsh1 p 10 30 am
UMYF 6 p m
Robert Robm son Pastor
RUTLAND Church School 9 30 a m
Wonh tp 10 30 am
Robert R1der .
pastor
SALEM CENTER
Worship 9 o m
Church School 9 -45 a m Robert Rider
pastor
PEARL CHAPEL Sunday Schoo l 9 30
am Worsh1p 7 30p m
SNOWVILLE
Sunday ~c hoo l
9 30
o m Worsh1p 11 00 o m

SY RACUSE CLUSTER

Rev Stanley Memf ted. Mln iS ler
FOREST fi:UN Worshp 9 am Churc h
SchooiiO om
MINER SVILLE Church Schoo l 9 o m
Worship lOam .
ASBURY Church School 9 50 a m
Worsh1p 11 am B1bl e Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW h si'Tuesdoy

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

~

Rev James Clark
fi:ev Mark Flynn
Rev . Florence Sm1th
Rev Carl Hicks

BETHANY

(Dorea')

Worsh•p 9 00

om Church School 10 00 am B1bl e
study , ht 2nd Jrd and 5th Tuesdays
7 IS p m youth f ellowship 2nd and 4th
Tuesdays , 6 00 p.m .
CARMEL and SUTTON (Worsh1p, Sun day School and mos t other event s hel d
101ntly. ) Sunday Schoo19 -45 and Wors hip
11 00 ot Sutton f1rs t and th~rd Sundays
and ot Carmel second and fourth Sun days Bible Study aecon d. fourth ond
ftfth Thursday1, 7· 15 p .m Family Night
Fellowship Dinner th1rd Thursday 6 30

pm
APPLE GROVE, Sundoy School

9 30
a m Worshtp 1 30 p m 1st and 3rd Sun days. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30
p m. Fellowshtp supper f1rst Solurdoy 6
' p m . UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p.m •
EAST LETART. Church School q om
Wors h1p service 10 a .m. Preyer meettng
1 30 p .m . Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 :30pm
RACINE WESlEYAN - SundOy sc hoo l
10 o .m . worship, 11 a.m Chotr procllce ,
Thursday , 8 p.m.
LET ART FALLSWorsh1p se rvice 9
am. Church Schooi iO a.m
MORNING STAR , Wo rs h1p 9·30 o m .
Church SchooiiO :)()a m

MORSE CHAPEL Church School 9 30
om Worsh1p 11 o.,.m .
PORTLAND Sunday School 6 30 p m
EYening Worship, 1 :lO p.m
Youth
Fellowt h ip, Wednesday, 7 30p m

NORTHEAST ClUSTER

Rev . RichordW Thoma s
Duane Sydenstricker, Sr .
Shel.:k&gt;n John!IOO
John W. Douglas
JOPPA, Worship 9·00 a m Church
SchoollO.OOom
""""
1
CHfSTER, Worship 9 a m
Church
School 10 o.m Choir fi:eheorsol 1 p m.
Thursdays. Bible Study, Thursdays

7;30p m
LONG BOTTOM, Sunday School at 9 30
a .m . Eveni"l Wonhip ot 7·30 p .m

Thuroday81bfoStudy, ?30p m
REEDS'!I,!;LE Sunday School 9 30 o m

One t tormy night our light •
wen I out Th11 blackneu was total
Lltlle M11 ry ~l;t flE~m e d and
srabbed me The boys . trvmR to be
brn e banged acr05s the ron m
I r.omfortod them lrylnlii lu hold
all aga inst the terro rs oft h ., d ~trk
Then the b11ck door bllllMfl£1 and
there was Bob st andi n ~t l rl the d oo r
holdlnR a IIRhted c an&lt;31 ~t
Dadd y ~.Pmdd y ' cri ed the du lri ren th t~lr IP.a rs l o r~ott r. n as lh !l
roo m resu med 11 ~ safe pro port 1on s
10 the hgh\ G al l~ the) helped 1n
IIRht the ca ndl e" 1:1 nd hu llfi ll rnnr111)1; hrH

Hn w l 1ke th at 1.1 1Htlll Is mv
chutt:h Th l! s p iritual r••sou r1 .,~ 11
nrftm IIMhl m y hf11 w1 th e sensllclf
pro por tio n ond co nluh•nc11 nr1

mat ter how rinrk thlnMK ~ee m
Your 1 hurch nm hn)lhltm your
hi~ 1f you 11.1118 1
1 a 1 hnm:e

UN ITED

PRESBYTERIAN Church Churcll Sc hool
10 IS am , Worsh1p , II lOam
RUTLAND CH URCH OF GOD Pasto r
Rev Jo f1n Evans Su nday school 10
a m , Su nday worsl·up , I I o m
Cht !dren s chu rch. II o m Sunday even
mg serv1ce 7 00 p m Wednes(J ay even
mg young lod1 es au xd 1ary , 6 p m
Wednesday family wors h 1p, 7 00 p m

Mann mm1ster William Snouffer Su nday school supt Sunday sc hool , 9 30
am , morn1ng wonh1p 10 30 am ·

day, 730pm
FAITH } ABERNI'CLE CHURCH , Bailey

'

A
.u

.

.

Pomeroy

MARK VSTORE
Middleport
Phone 992·3480

WAID CROSS
SONS SlORE

lHE DAILY
SENTINEL

2£\::FRANKLIN•

992-66SS

OF

126 E Matn

Pomeroy

l'

I

Carry Out
Phone 992·6304

John F . Fultz, Mgr .
Ph. 992-2101

BEN

fA».

Sillllng1 a Lo.a n
Pomeroy

CHURCH

~~~~~~K · ~

RALL'S

F&lt;~rm P.rtY Attltn~ co~ntv

GRAHAM

C........,

MEIGS TIRE
\ ~ CENTER, INC.

~)'(
• 'i

.-t" I

CHURCH , Rev .Rolph Sm11h. pa stor Sun
day school, q 30 o m M rs W orl ey
FranCis superintendent Preach1ng ser vices f.rst &amp; ·thtrd Sundavs followtng Su n
day School

RIQ"II Rae; ot!'O

,.,.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

POMEROY

s. Thtrd, M l ddfeport
992·2196

CHRIST 200 W Ma1n St 992 -5235 Vocal •
muSic Sunday worsh1p 10 am B1ble
study , I I a .m ; worsh1p , 6 p m Wednes day Bibl e dudy, 7 p m

~-~!!~~~-·

no.w 'IIIIII.ANIIIIMMI IJI

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.

pm
POMEROY WE STSIDE CHURCH OF

ROLWVER

Pomeroy

Phone (614) 742-2777

BURLINGTON

Tonight thru Thurs.

tB

SERVICE CEN~~~ znd

Rutland, Oh10 4S71S
J. Wm. " Btll" Brawn, Owner

CHAPEL Route 1 Shade B1ble sc hool
7 p m Thursday worsh1p serviCe 8

•

~~r~~! ·~.

_l

VIRGIL B. TEAFO~D SR.
2 ,~~~~:f

SUNOCO

Brown's Fire &amp;
a nd
Equipment Sales
service

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 21 2

r

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
992 ~ 295S

W Mom St Ne1l Proudfoot, pa stor 81
ble school, 9 30 a m morning wor·
ship, 10 30 a m Vouth meetmgs 6 30
p m even1ng worship 7 30 Wedn es
day ntgf1t prayer meetmg and Btble
study 7 30p m
'
THE SALVATION ARMY' , 115 Butter nut A ve
Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs
Roy Wlnmg off•cers m charge Sunday
holineu meeting 10 a m , Sunday
10 30 a m. Sunday sch ool
School
leoder, YPSM , Elotse Adam s 7 30 p m
solvo tion meeting venous speakers
and mus1 c specials Thursday - tOo m
to 2 p m Lad1es Home League all
women mvited, 7 30 p m
prayer
meeting and Btbl e study Rev Noel
Herman. teacher

"

t

-

992-9f21 Mtddleport

OLD

' COLO\' ·

~

complete

Automotiv e

Main St Pomeroy Sunday s er v~ees ot
10 30 om Holv Commumon on the
first Sunday o f,..eoch month and co m
bmed w1th mormng prayer on the th1rd
Sunday M arnmg prover and se rm on on
all o ther Sundays of the month Church
School and nursery care p rovided Cof
tee hour 1n the Pomh Hall 1mmed1at ely
followmg the serv1ce

broth er,

M1chael Gene.
Mrs. Gene Jeffers has returned
home after spendmg three weeks m
San Franctsco, California, w1lh her
parents, Mr . an d Mrs. Marco
Escobar and other relallves there.
Mr and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
viSited wtth Mr . and Mrs. Earl Bratton near Vales Mill
Mrs. Dawn Dye Walker and
daughter, Carrie, Thurman, took
her father, Dale Dye and Murl
Galaway, loca l, to Coshocton, Oh10
where they attended a Dye family
gathering w1th Mr and Mrs. Chester

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E

and Mrs. Gene J effers have rece1ved
word of the ,b1rth of a daughter to
their son and daughter, Mr and
Mrs. M1chael Lawson, Racine. The
httle one was named Brooke

••

This MesSiq!e and Church Directory Spo~ored By The Interested Businesses Listed On. This Page:

Cabme1 Makmg

Carpenter Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Dwa me Jordan and
Sarah Faye have returned from a
vacatiOn lrlp over the holidays to
vtsit relatives in Georgia and
Flor~d~. They were overmght guests
PRESENTED TROPHIES- Joey Snyder, cenler,
Brown, Jell, accepted a trophy on behalf ollhe Rutland
of her brother-tn-law and sister, Mr.
received the top award In lhe bike-a·lhon sponsored by
Freewill Baplisl Church for the largest group par·
and Mrs Alfred Rice m Perry,
St. Jude Children's Research Center, a trophy, for
tlcipatlon. On the right is Douglas Behnke, principal.
Georgia and attended a family
having ridden lbe farthest, a total of 68 miles. Jodi
gathering w1th Mr. and Mrs. Rtck
R1ce and sons a nd Steve R1ce, Gad·
sden, Alabama attending. They
were guests later at the home of
Mrs. Jordan's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilham Culwell, Satsuma, Flonda
January 23, 1982
for
several days, VISiting other frt enSeveral lessons you've learned from painful past expenences wtll
ds
and
relatives mcludmg Mr. and
be put to ~:ood use lh1s commg year . Rather than repeat old 1mstakes,
Mrs.
T.
J . Spurlock, Melrose; Mr
you'll turn losmg conditions into wmning ones.
and
Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey and the1r
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Normally you're qutte good at hanJumor and semor class h1gh sc hool
guests,
Mr
.
and Mrs. Harold Gillogly
dling adverse situijiiOns, but today you may feel impell ed to run for
students interested in applying for
at
Webster
and
Mr. Jordan's nephew
cover at the first sign of problems. Stand your ground
$1,000 collel(e scholarships should
and
fam1ly,
Mr
and Mrs Dale JorPISCES (Feb. 20-Murch 20) You have more going for you today
rcoquest apphcatwns by March 15
dan,
Katie
and
Kara, Pala Alta
than you may realize, so don't let ncgat1ve condtllons intilmdate you.
fr om th e Ed ucati Onal ComSpnngs,
Fl o r~da
Draw upon your hidden strengths for success.
mumcaiiOlls. Scl10larsh1p FounMr. and Mrs. Arthur Cra btree and
ARIES !March 21-Aprlll!) Your 1deas and concepts are likely to
dation, 3105 MacArthur Blvd., NorMadge
Dye were in Parkersburg, W.
be better than those of your assoctales today, but unless they are
lhbrok, Ill 60062.
Va
.
a
recent
Sunday to vtSitlhetr unpresented sktllfuly 11 w11l be difficult to gain support for them.
To receive an apphcatJOn, studencle
and
aunt,
Mr. and Mrs. Emz1e
TAURUS (A prot20-M•v 20) Coworkers could lack your optnmsm
ts should snd a self·addressPd, slam·
Davts.
Mr
DaviS
IS 111 very poor
and drtve today and cause frustratmg delays . Try to be self·rchant
ped envelope with a note stallllll
l1eallh.
and not too dependent on others.
the1r na m e, address, c 1ty, state, z1p
I
Mr . ~ nd Mrs. Harold Gillogly,
GEMINI I May 21-June 20) Today you must ftrsl show companiOns
code and approxunate IJI'atle pomt
V1ckte
and Bruce , hosted a fa mily
:r:our willingness to be cooperat1ve 1f you expect them to act hkewise.
e~vcrC~gc F 1fty award wmners will .
gathering
recently. Those attendtnK
You set the mood. They'll behave accordmgly.
be selected on the baSis of aeade~mc
mcluded
Karen
Gtlkey and Scott
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You're hkely to be enthuSiastic m
perfonnance, mvolvement in exAllen,
Athens;
Lincoln
Russell, Wolf
beguming projects today, but you may will s)'ould anyone question or
tracUI'I'I Cular acllvllles and need for
Pen;
Mr
and
Mrs.
Frankhn
Russell,
crtl1c1ze your efforts.
£man c1 a l cud
7'
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ) Deahngs w1th mflucnllal contacts should go
Russell,
Washington
Court
Middleport;
Rev. and
Mrs.House
Ray,
off smooth ly today, but there's a chance small-minded persons could
Mrs.
Clinton
Gilkey
and
Mr.
and
cause you unnecessary headaches.
Mrs.
Tad
G1lkey
and
Crystal,
Mr and Mrs Arthur Johnson
VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Don'tlel your enthuSiasm lor nnprovmg
Albany; and Mr. and Mrs. Wallet
called at the holl'e of Mr. and Mrs.
your surroundings cause you to spend more than you s hould for 1tems
Jordan,
Joshua and Jeremy, local.
or malenals, just because you wanllhemnow.
Douglas Johnson of Racme Sunday
Callers
were
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
evemng.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Innately , you'reqUite creat1ve today but
Gtllogly and Mr. and Mrs Arthur
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Orr of
you may fail to use your bn~ht 1deas because it 1mght mtcrfere ;.,th
Crabtree, local.
the ways others arc accustomed to domg tlungs.
Chester called at the home of Mr
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gillogly are
and Mrs. Robert Lee and Becky on
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Something matenally promtsmg could
now
spending some lime m Webster,
Monday.
unexpectedly develop today. For some reas011 you m1ght not feel
Florida
with their brother-in-law
you're enl1tled to it, and fall to do &amp;nythmg about tl.
Sheryl and Patrick Johnson and
and
s1
ster,
Mr. and Mrs Clinton
Betty Van Meter and Eunie Brinker
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dec. 21) !I left to your own devices today
Gilkey.
called a !the William Carelton home
you should be adro1l at workmg out ln cky f1nanc1al situatwns When
Mn Kathertne Lemaster and Mr
others utlerfere, they' ll dull your edge.
m Racme on Monday evening.
CAPRICORN (De~. 22-Jun. 19) Be hopeful today, but keep your
expectations within reasons. Your possibility for gains at lhts tune
have their limitations.

OR·

GroccrtesGeneral Merchandtse
Ractne 949· 2550

MtddleportPomerov. o.
m eetmg. 7

p.m Wednesday

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHR IST

Vmcent C Walers Ill min• ster, Harmon
Block supen ntendent Sunday School
9 30 o m
evening service 7 p m ,
Wednesday B1bl e Study 7 p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZAREN E
Rev Herbert Grote , pa stor Fronk Riffl e
~ upt Sunday School , 9 30 o m Wors h ip
servtce 11 a m and 7 30 p m. Prayer
m eeting, Wedne ~ doy , 1 30 p m

LAUREl CLIFF FREE

METHODIST

CHURCH Rev Rober t Miller pas tor
Lloyd Wnght Director of Christian
Educotton Sunday School , 9 30 a . m ;
. Mornmg Worsh1p, 10 30 o m , Ch oir
Practice Sunday 6 30 p m . Evening
Worsh ip, 7 30 p m Wednesdov Prayer
and Bible Study, 7·l0 p m

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST. Chorle•

Ru ssel l Sr mm1ster R1 ck Macomb er
supt Sunday schoof, 9 30om : worship
serviCe 10 30o,m B1ble Study Tuesday
730 pm

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF
Morn•"q Wor5h1p I 0 30 a m Even1ng
Wors~p 7 30 p m
Btbl e Study
- wednesdays ot 1 30 p m
ALFRED , Sunday School at ~ 45 om
Mornmg Worsh 1p a t II o m Voul h b 30
p m Sundays W ednesday N1ght Praye r
Meet1 ng 7·30 p m
ST PAU L. (luppen Plams) Sunday
S&lt;.hool 9 00 o m Mornmg Worsh tp a t
10 00 o m Bibl e Study 7 30 p m lues

doy

SOU TH BETHEL (Stiver Rtdge ) Sunday
School 9·00 o m Morn~ng Wosh 1p 10·00
o m Wednesday Sible Study, 7· 30 p m
KE NO CHURCH OF CHRIST O l1"¥ er
Swo•n Supenntendent Sunday school
Q 30 every w eek
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Sunday
School 9 30 a m , even1ng service. 7 30
p m Wedne sdov prayer meet1ng, 7 30

pm
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

CHRI ST Duane Worden , mln1 ster B1ble
doss , ~ 30 am , mormng worsh1p , 10 30
a m
8'1/enmg worsllip
6 30 p m
Wednesday Bib le s..t udy 6.30 p.m

NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY

Church. Sunday School serv1ce 9 o4S
a m
Worsh1p
service
10 3 0
E"¥angehsflc Service , 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer meetmg 7 30

ZION CH URCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy

Homsonv dl e Rd Robert Purtel l pa stor
B1ll McElroy Sunday sc hool SURf Sunday
school q 30 q m wo rship service 10 30
a m Sunday worsh ip service 7 JO p m
Monday and Tu es day evenmg serv1ces
7 30 eo cll evemng

ST JOHN lUTHERAN CHURCH P;ne

Grove The Rev W1lhom M1ddleswa rth ,
Pastor Church services 9 30 o m Sunday School 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST Jerry
Pmgley, pastor Sundov sc hool . 9 30
o m , mornmg worsh1p, 10 30 o m
Wednesday even.ng serv1ce 7 30
1
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST fi:ev Earl Shuler ,
pastor Sunday school9 30 o m Chu rch
se rv1ce. 7 p m .. youth meet1ng 6
p m Tuesday 81ble Study 7 p m

RACINECHURCH OF THE NAZARENE

Rev Thomas H Cather pastor Martha
Wo lfe . Cho~rmon of the Boord of Chns
lion L1f e. Sunday School. 9 30 o m , mor mng worship 10 30 Su nday even1ng
worsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer meet1ng
Wednesday , 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L Wolker
Pa stor Robert Smtih Su ndov school
supt Sunday sch oo l , 9 30 o m . morning
wors h1p 10 40 a m Sunday even1ng
worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday evening 81ble
st udv 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN . Rev R 0

Brown poslor Sunday Sch oo l 9 30
om morn1ng wors h 1p 10-45 youth ser
\l iCe 6 45 p m evening wonh1p 7 30
p m pray er and pra1 se Wedn esday
730p m
SIL \fER RUN FREE BAPTIST Rev Mor
v1 n Morkm pastor Ste\le L1tt le Sunday'
school supt Sunday school, I 0 o m ,
morn ing worsh ip, 11 o m
Sunday
8'1/&amp;ning w o r s hl ~ 7 30 Prayer m eet1ng
and Btble st udy Thursday . 7 30 p m .
youth servtce 6 p m Sunday

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 383

N
2nd A ve
Middleport Sunday
School, 10 00 o m Sun ' Wed . Even
1ng Serv•ces 7 30 p m p m
LIBERTY Chrrstlan Church 4 l1bertv
A"¥e , Pom eroy Sunday School 10o m ,
Worsh •p 7 30 Wednesday Serv1ce 7 30 "

pm
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD, Rev R E

Rob1nson, pastor Sunday school . 9 30
a m worship ser . . . lce I I am even1ng
serv1ce 7 00 youth servi ce . Wednes
day 7 OOp.m.

LANGSVIllf

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH

Robert E Musser pastor Sunday sc hool
9 30 a m , Paul Musser supt , morning
worship 10 30, Sundov even1ng serv1 ce ,
7 00 mtd - week service Wedne sd ay ~

pm
SYRACUS E CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Rev James B K1ttle pastor
Norman Pre sley
Sunday
School
Supenntenden t
Sunday schoof 9 30
am
morn ing worsh1p 10 AS om
evangeli stic serv1ce 1 p m. Prover and
Pro1se Wednesday , 7 p m . yo uth
meeting, 7 p m

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST

Elden R Bloke, pasto r Sunday Schooi i O
om Robert Reed. supt .. Morning se r mon 11 o m Su nday mght serv 1ces
Christian Endeavor . 7·30 p m Song ser
vice. 8 p m . Preochmg 8 30 p m
M1dweek Pra yer meeting Wedn &amp;A;d oy 7
p m Al vin Reed loy leodt. r
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRI ST located at
Rutfond on New L•ma Rood , ne•t to
Fore1t Acr e Pork Rev Ray Rouse
pa stor Robe rt Mu ner Sunday School
sup! Sunday sch ool , 10·30 o m , worsh1p
7 30 p m Bible Study Wednesday 7 30
p m . Saturday n1ght prayer serv•ce. 7 30

pm
HEMLOCMGROVE CHRISTIAN R&lt;&gt;ije•

Watson pastor Crenson Pratt ~undoy
school supt . Mornmg worship , 9.30 o m ,
Sundoy schoo l , 10 30 am e"¥emng ser
vice 1 30
MT
UNI ON BAPTIST
Rev
Tom
Dooley , Joe Sayre
Sunday Schoo l
Sup&amp;n ntenent
Sunday sc hool
9 -45
am eveninQ worsh1p , 7 30 p m Pray er

Sermonette
.
Ther e IS a n gti't ytay t o do every th •ng an d u su ally dozen s of wro{'lg
ones If you have been muddling a lonq , d o1ng a iob '"any o l d way ,
wh a t a rc l •ef '' ts to b e sh own by the e xp ert h ow fh C' thtng really s ho,uld
b e d one N ot on ly do w e sa ~o~ e our se lvPo; much w ear arid tear. but we
f ee l muc h m or e sat.sft ed w hen w e have learn ed t he nqht way , ev en
thou gh 1t may hurt our pnd e a b 1t to u n learn the m ethod we w er e us• no
bef ore
Chr lst 1an s b el1 e v e that the r e 1S a r 1qht way o f do1ng t he mos t im
p ort ant tDb of all ~ I1V1n q - and there are p lenty of wrong on es . T h ey
beli e ve that Jesu s Chr.st, who c la •m ed t o be God llvmg on thts earth as
M an. gAve u s th e c lu e for th e nght way of l ivin g - YJttat we might ca ll
t he " rectpe fo r happ1ness " It com es '" what IS of t e n ca l led th e Sermon
o n the Mount , '" M a tthew 's Gosp e t, ch apter 5, verses 3·9, and 1t •s prm
t ed here jus t as •t ism t he B1ble Note the differ ences In what J esus
s a1d , and w hat m an s~ys 1n h1S (llC tlons tow ard h1s f e llowmen
•
Men say Blessed are t he pu shers f o r they get on 1n the world
Jesu s sa1 d : Bl essed a r e th e poor in sptrit, for t heirs 1s the ktngdom of
heaven
Men s ay Blesse d are the hard bo ded. for they never tet l 1f e hurt
them
Jesus sa1d Bl essed are they tha t mourn , f or thev shall b e c om
forted
Men say . Bl e ssed are t hey who compl ain ; for t hey g et thetr own way
1n the end
..
Je sus said · Bl essed a r e th e m e ek, f or they shall tnher1t the earth
Men say · Blessed are the blase; for they n ever worry over thc tr
SinS
Jesus said : Blessed are t he v wh1 cf fJo hunger an d t h 1r st a fte r
righteou sn ess; f or th ey shal l be filled .
·
Men say ; Blessed are the s lave drtvers; for they get results.
Jesus said : Blessed are th e m e r ciful, for th ey shall obtatn mercy.
M en sa y ' Blessed are the knoWiedgel!lble men of the world , for they
know the 1r way around .
Jesus said · Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God
M en say Blessed are the troubl e makers ; for th ey rilake people t ake
n ot ice of them.
Jesus sa1d : Blessed are the peacemakers; for thev shall be ca ll ed
the children of God.
M easure th e result! of both attitudes Now, wh ich best r eflec t your
attttudes and values.

&gt;US

CHRIST OF LATTER DAV SA Tt
Portland Rocme Road Willi am Ro u ~
pastor Lmda Evans, church sc hool
director Church school , 9 30 om
morning worship 10 30 o m Wednesday evening prover services , 7,JO p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTt ST , Rev
Earl
Slluler pastor Worship service 9 30
am Sunday school . 10.30 o m Bibl e
Study and p rayer serviiJle Thursday
7 30p m
CARLETON CHURCH, Kmgsbury Rood
J1mm 1e Evans, pastor. Sunday scf1oof,
9 30 o m Ra lph Car l superi ntendent
evening wo rt hip 7 30 p m Pray er
meeting. Wednesday , 7 30 p m

LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN

Tom

Riche son pastor Wallace Damewood
Sunday School Superin tendent Wors hip
ser~o~ lce at 9 am B1bl e School 10 a m

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH Rev

Theron Durham past or Sunday School
at 9 30 a m , Mormng worship al tO 30
o m Thursday serv1ces at 7 30 p m

FREEDOM GOSPEl MISSION ol Bald

Knob , located on County Rood 31 Rev
Lowrance Gluesencamp pas tor Rev
Roger W111looss1stont pastor Preaching
services Sunday 7·30 p m , prayer
meeting WJdnesdoy 7 30 p m Gory
Gr~ft l th
leodeYouth group1 . Sunday
evemg 6 30 p m w1 th Roger and
V1olet Wdllord ali lea ders Commun10n
servtces fir st Sunday each month
WHITES CHAPEL Coo l ~o~1 ll e RO Rev
Roy Deeter pastor Sunday school 9 30
am worshtp sef'\ltee 10 30 am 81ble
study and prayer serv •ce Wednesday,
7l0 pm
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHfi:lSf Eugene
Underwood postm Herb Ell10tl Sunday
school supt Sunda v school 9 30 a m ,
mormng worship and comun1 on 10 30

om
RUTIANO BIBl EMETHODIST CHURCH

Amos f1 lhs .pastor Donny Tdh s Sundov
School Supt Sunday Sc hool 9·30 a m
followed by mornmg worshi p Sundov
evenmg serv1ce
7 00 p m
Prover
meellng, Wednesday 7 00 p m

RUTlAND

CHURCH

Of

THE

NAZARENE Rev Lloyd- 0 Grimm Jr
pa stor Sunday schoo l ~ JO o m . worsh•p serv1ce 10 30 a m young peopl es
• ser v1ce 6 p m Evang eli stiC service 6 30
p m Wednesday se rvice 7 00 p m
Flfi:ST SOUTHERN BAPTI ST Corner of
S&amp;cond and APo stor Fronk Lowther Su n
day school. 9 45 o m , w orsh •p serv 1ce .
11 om and 7 30 p m Week ly B1ble
Study Wednesday I 30 p m

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Moiler

Sl Maso n W Vo Eugen e L Conger
m•n• ster Sunday B1ble Stud-; 10 o m
Wonh 1p 11 o m and ., p m W edne sday
81ble Studv vocal mus•c 7 p m
LIFE SCIENCE CH URCH 11 North
T h~r d St
Ches lme Indep enden t lun·
domental serv1ces Sunday evemng I 30
p m PoSior R e~.o Or Robert Persons

MASON ASSEMBLY Of GOD Dudd;ng
Lone , Mason W Vo Rev Ronn1e B
Rose Pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m
Morning Wors hi p 11 o m Eve nmg Ser
vice 7·30 p m Wednesday Women s
MtMII trlet 9 a.m (meet 1ng and proyer
Prayer and B1ble Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , The Rev. William

Campbell, pastor Sunday School , 9 30
a.m Jotnes HuQhes, supt , even1ng ser ·
vice 7 30 p.m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting, 7 30 p m . Youth prayer
service each Tuesday

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. letart, W

Va ., Rt. I , Mork Irwin , pastor Wo rsllip
se rvices 9 30 a m : •Sundov school 11
o.m .. even ing worship 7 .30 p m. Tu.-,
dov cottage prayer meeting and Blbft
study, 9 30 am
Worsllip ser"¥ice
Wednetday , 7.30 p.m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH now locat ed
on Pom•roy Pike County Rood 25 , near
Flatwoods Rev Blackwood. pastor. Ser ·
vices on Sunday at 10 30 O.rfl and 7·30
p m with Sunday school , ~ 30om Btble
study. Wednes day 7 30 p m

INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH

INC

-

Pearl St.

Middleport Rev ,
Sundov school ,
9:30a-.m.· Morn ing worship 10.30 a .m ,
e~o~ening worship, 7:30 p .m Tuesday.
12·30 p m Women's prayer meeting,
Prayer ond praise service, Wednesday;

0 '0.11 Manley pastor

7:30p.m
RUTlAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST, Elder Jomoo Mitior. Bible
It~~ , Witdnesdoy, 7 30 p.m , Sunday
School , 10 a.m . Sunday n lgf1t servl(e

7:30p.m. ·
I
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS -

- Taken from Is God ot Home by J. B. PhilliPS. Submitted by Pastor
Robert E Rob;nson. Heath UnUed Method;st Church, M;dd[eport,

Harrlton"¥ille Rood. Earl Fleldt . pastor:

Oh1 0

Sunday Sc.hool9 30 a. m , Morning Wor-

'

.

Henry Eblin, Jr , Sunday School Supt.

,,

ship II tJ m : Sunday 8\lenlng serv1ce
7·30 m Prayer Meeting , Thursday . 7 30

pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD -

Not Pentecos tal , Re"' George Oiler
JX!Sior Wonh1p senr1ce Sunday 9 45
a m , Sunday school 11 a m . worship
se r~o~lce
7 30 p.m. Tllursday prayer
mee ting, 1 30 p m
M T HERMON Un1ted Brethren In
Christ Church . Re\1. Robert Sanden
pastor Don Will loy leader Located In
Tex at Community off CR 82 Sunday
achool. 9 30 o .m . Morning worship ••r·
vice 10 45 a m , evening preaching ser
vice second and fourth Sunday• 7 30
p.m .. Christian Endeavor, ftrsl and third
Sundovs. 7 30 p m Wednesday praye r
meeting and Bible study 7 lOp m

JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 37319 Stale
Route 124 {One nl!le eost of RutiC.nd)
Sun day. Blbl• lecture 9 30 a m , Wat·
chtower t tudy 10 20 o. m Tuesday, BI bl e study , 7 30 p m · Thursday
Theocrat ic School 7 30 p m . Str~o~lce
Mee ting, B 20p .m

RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTISr Church -

Solem St , Rutland Donald Karr, Sr.
pastor Bud Stewart superintendent.
Sunday School 10 a.m : even ing wor·
ship , 7.30 p m Wednesday evening •er vice 7l0p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prorhecy, located
on the 0 J White Rood of highway 160
Sunday School tO a m Superintendent
John Loveday . First Wednesday night of
month CPMA services, second Wedn ...
doy WMB meeting, third through fifth
youth service George Croyle. pastor

HOPE BAPrtST CHAPEL - 570 Gronl

St , M iddleport: Sunday School, 10 o m .
morning wo rs hip 11 a m eventng war ·
ship , 7 p. m Wednesday evening Bibl e
study and p rayer meeting , 7 p. m. Af filiated with Sou thern Baptist Con~o~en ­
tlon

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST-·

Ricky Gilbert postor Steve Pickens
superintendent. Sunday School 9 30 a
m , Church Servt(e l , 10 30 a.m .

JUBILEE

CHRISTIAN

CENTER

George to Creek Rood. Rev C J Lemley,
pastor , John Fe llure, l uperlntendent
Church tc hool 9·30 om , morning war
ship, 10 30 eventng ser&gt;11ce 7 p m Bible
Study Thu rs , 7 p m Clones for oil ages
Nursery pro~o~ ided for worship service•

ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH, Corner

of Sycamore and Second Sh .. Pomeroy.
The Rev . 1Wilhom Middlesworth, Pottor
Sunday Schoo l ot 9 45 u m and Church
Serv ices 11 am .
SACRED HEART, Rev Father Paul 0
Welton. pottor Phone 992·2825 Saturday e\lening Matt , 7 30 Sunday Mass, B
and 10 am , Confession. Saturday

7·7·30p m
VICTORY BAPTIST - 52S N 2nd St

Middfeport James £ Keesee poslor'
Sunday morn1ng worship , 10om., even•ng servic e 7, Wedn&amp;,.doy evening wor ship 7 p m Visitation. Thursday 6 30

pm

U INITY Christian A sse mbly. Cool ville
-- Gtlbert Sp encer pastor Sundov
school , 9 30 a .m , morn 1ng worship 11
a •n Sunday evening se r ~o~lce 7 30 p.m .,
mtdweek prayer urvlce Wednesday,
7 30p .m
MOUNT Olive Community Church.
lawrence Bush paslor Max Folmer, Sr
Supenntendent Sunday School and mor·
n lng worsh1p 9·30 a m. Sunday evening
§erv1c• 7 p m Vouth meeting and Bible
study Wednesday . 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypo .. Rev. Robert Smith , Sr .
pastor Rev James Cund iff onl1 tont
pastor Sunday School. 9.30 om . mornIng worshi p, 10 30 a m .; evening....,.. r..·
1hip
7 30
Women 's Fetlo-..1hlp
Tuesdays, 10 a m .: Wednesday nlghi
prayer ser~o~lce , 7 lG p m
FAITH BAPTt Sl Church Moson, meet
at Un1ted Steel Workers Un1on Holl
Ro1lrood Street, Mo1on. Morning wor ship 9 30 a m Sunday School10 30 a m
Evening S•rvice1 1 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesday , 1 30 p m Mid Week Bibl e
Study, Thursday 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTI ST - Rev Nyle
Borden
pastor
Cornelius Bunch
lliupenntendent Sun day schoo l. 9 30
a m ' second and fourth Sundays war
th1p te r ~o~ l ce at 2 30 p.m
MT MORIAH,..8A.PTJST - Fourth and
Main St . Mlddreport Rev Calvm M lnnts, pastor. Mrs Elvin Bumgardner
supt Sunday sc hool 9 ..10 a.m worsh 1
service 10 .. sa m

p

BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH, Route I , Shade Pat tor Don
Block A.ffll.ated w1th Southern 8aptl 1 t
Convenrlon . Sunday schoo l, 1 30 p m .
Sunday worship 2 30 p m Thuh doy
even ing Bible study , 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEfoiBl y , Racine
Route 124 , William Hoback, po 1 tor Sun
day school 10 a.m ; Sunday evening s•r·
vice 6 30 p m Wednelday eening ser ·
vice , 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST. ltev Free land
Norris pa stor Don Cheadle, Supt Sun
doy School 9 30 o m Morn •ng Worsh 1p
10 30 a .m Pray ftr Service. olt•rnot~
Sundays

MIDDlEPORT PENTECOSTAl

Third

Ave., the fi:ev Clark Boker , pa stor . Carl
Nottingf1om, Sunday School Supt . Sun do)' School 10 a m. - do•••• for all
ages; E\lenlng tervlces 6·00 Wednesday Study 7 30 p m Youth ser\llces
730p m Fr+dny
·

ECCIESIA fEllOWSHIP 128 M;fl St
Middleport. Pastor it Brother Chuck
McPherson Sunday School at 10 o . m .
Services Sundoy evening at 7 p m ond
Wednet doy ot 7 p m

�Friday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

B~red

BORED WITH BUREAUCRACY, REAGAN AIDE QUITS - Lyn
Nofziger, President Reagan's assistant fur JM11ltlcal affain;, Is leaving the
White House after a year. "I don't like government.ll's just that simple,"
he said. (AP Laserphutol.

Memorial service
held for flyers
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)- More
than 3,&lt;XXl frtends and relatlves of
tour Air Force Thunderblrds pUots
kllled In a training maneuver ga·
thered In a cold, wind-swept han~:ar
at Nellis Air Force Base for
memorial services.
As ·the services moved outside to
a runway apron Thursday, an honor guard fired a three-shot volley
and "Tap~" was played.
Then, four F -4 Phantom jets att·
ached to the Nellis Fighter Weapons School streaked over Sunrise
Mountain on the southeast side of
the base. They pulled up toward the
cloud-laden sky and one jet peeled
away, leaving the dramatic "missIng man'' formation symbolizing a
lost pilot.
Inol.uded In the audience were government and civic leaders from
throughout Nevada, many of the
140 former Thunderblrrls and
members of the Snowbirds, the
Canadian Air Force precision fiy.
log team.
The tour men were killed Mon·
day when their T-38 Talon jets
slammed Into the desert at more

than 400 mph as they completed a
loop maneuver. A six-member Air
Force board Is Investigating the
crash and Is expected to Issue areport on Its ca use early next month.
~ ' "'orce officers have speculr - ~ a t the .Thunderblrds, who
ar. cralned to fiy off their
commander-leader's plane, may
have followed him lnto the ground.
Alr Force officials have announced funeral service plans tor
each of the men.
Services loa the team leader,
Maj. Norman L. LowrY III, , were
scheduled today at Riverside National Cemetery, Riverside, Call1.
Capt. Mark E. Melancon wil be
buried Saturday afternoon at Restland Memorial Park in Richard·
son, Texas. He will be burled next
to his father, an Air Force officer
who was killed In a pla~e crash In
1957.
Services tor Capt. Joseph "Pete"
Peterson, the team veteran, will be
Monday at Culpepper National
Cemetery, Culpepper, Va,
Capt. Wlllle Mays will be burted
Tut&gt;sday at Maplewood Cemetery
In Ripley, Tenn.

Property transfers
Mary And1·ews to Blauser Well
Scrv .. Inc .. Ri~hl of way, Olive.
Francis H. Andrews to Blal.l."icr

Well Serv., lnc., Right of way, Olive.
Kenneth Sciles, Jr. to Barbara
Jean Sciles. 3.78 ac1·d . Chesler.

Monte 'R. 8a1-ringe1' to Bernard

Hoover

Bobo, Parcel, Orange.
Arnold F.. Riggs, Elaine M. Ri~gs
way. Olive.
,
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Ri~h l or
Robert E. Miller, Judy Miller to
way, Sale111.
Ken Frak, Right of Way, Rutland.
Char les R. Eads . Jo Ann Eads to
Leonard L. Lentz, Alice Lentz to
Herald Oil and Gas Co .. Hi~ht or
B&amp;F Christmas Trees, Inc., Sale1n.
way, Rutland.
Richard D_ailey, Pamela J. Dailey
Richard B. Hayman to Vir~inia
to Ken Frak, Right of Way,l!utland.
Lou Hayman. Parcel, Lcbanm;.
Nellie Hysell to Ken Frak, Right Of
Margaret Ellen Wine brenner to
Way, Hutland.
Eleanor K. McKelvey. Marvin W.
Marie A. Grueser, Nancy S
McKelvey, .47 acre, Syracuse.
Grueser to K•n Frak, Right of Way ,
Meigs County Farm Bureau Bedford.
Coopera tive Assn., Inc. to Land· .
Raymond J. Fowler, Patsy R.
mark, Inc., Parcels, Pomeroy.
Fowler to Ken Frak, Right of Way ,
Ricky E. Hoover. Jacqueline H.
Rutland.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Lyn
Nofziger, Ronald Reagan's bareknuckled polJtlcal strategist, Is quit·
t1ng the White House after a rear,
bored wtth the bureaucracy and
worrte(j that his boss Is being hurt
bY slatf lnflghtlng.
"I don't like government, It's just
that simple," said Notzlger, who Is
said bY colleagues to be too Irreverent and outspoken to fit tn.
So the man who teamed up with
Reagan ' In 1~ - before anyone
else ln the White House -Is leaving
today. Agaln. Just like he's done
several times before.
Nofziger chafed under White
House rules. He would not wear the
lapel pln that Identified sl.afl
members to the Secret Service and
refUSed to fill out forms lor an FBI
background check giving his past
addresses.
" U they're so damn smart," Nof·
ziger barked, "Let them figure It
out." Nofziger's wife Bonnie and an
assistant fll1ed out the forms.
In a n admlnlstratloli tallored In
three-p~ suits, Nofziger sported
a Mlckry Mouse tie and a rumpled
sports coat, with shlrttall hanging
out and cigar clamped ln teeth. He
made no secret of his fondness for ·
gin.
With Impeccable conservative
• credentials, Nofziger served as
Reagan's llghlnlng rod tor complaints from theparty'srlght Wing.
He also made a crusade of tracking

,;,ould"say about this," then call him
up and get his opinion.
Nofziger Is not the ttrst highranking White House aide to leave.
National Securlty adviser Ricbard
V. Allen resigned under pressllre
after being cleared In White House
and Justtce Department tnvesttga·
lions, and Max Frledersdorf, tbe
admlnlslratlon's highly regarded
congressional lobbyist, quit to be- ·
come the top U.S. diplomat In Bermuda, saying It was ttme to do
something different.
Deaver plans to leave at the end
of this year, saying he can't get by
on a salary of $60,662.
"Most people who come Into a
Nofziger refuses to point a finger
place like this either like governpublicly at any suspects but says,
ment or they begin to get out," Not·
"I would hope that the people In the
zlger says. "You Will see ln the next
White House who appear to be feedyear people leaving as they figure
Ing negal!ve things· to the press
they've had It or they've done all
about other members of the White
they could do, or they've go\ better
House sl.afl would come to the conthlngstodo.Andthenyou'U!Ieepeo- .
clusion sometime ·that the man
pie f!ihtlng to stay In here. But I
they're hurting Is tbe president." ·
was flghtlng to get out."
Despite his pld ties with Reagan
Nofziger lasted 21 months with
apd his prominent role In the 199) 1
Reagan
ln the governor's office In
campaign as chief spokesman; NofCalifornia
lrtore quitting. He was
ziger never became part of the
with
Reagan
again tor the 1976 preWhite . House high command. He
sidential
race
and then set up the
says he does not regretlttUJ;oed out
that
Reagan uSed as a
organization
that way, and that he talked'to Reaspringboard
tor
his
next, ultimately
gan "whenever I've needed to aJl!l
successful,
attempt.
In 1979, Nofwanted to."
ziger
was
squeezed
out
of the Rea·
Deaver says there were many ocgao
campaign
by
other
aides. He
casions In the past year when Rea·
rejoined
In
the
summer
of
198J and
gan paused durtng a policy meeting
quit
agaln
after
Reagan's
election
and said, "I wonder what Lyn
down Democrats hidden In jobs In
the bure;lucracy. and replacing
them with Reagan loyalists.
He complalned he wasn't able to
throw enough of them out.
Nofziger's departure comes as
signs of trouble crop up In the White
House Inner circle o! chief of staff
James A. Baker III, couriseior Ed·
wln Meese and deputy chief of staff
Michael K. Deaver. A recent spate
of stories based on anonymOus
sources blamed Meese tor a foul-up
embarrassing to the admlnlslra·
lion, and one account said Meese
might be gone wtthln a yefr.
'

Fees
100.60
Cig arette Li ce nse
Fees and Fines
(Grossi
85.72
'0 ther
3,852 .82
Total Recei pts
12,796.69
Total Beginn ing
Balance Plus
Receipts
21,520 _95
Expenditures
Total Expe nd itures Adm .
12,on 91
Town Halls, Memori al
Buildings and
Grounds
150.00
Cemeteries
489 .60
Lighting
851.26
Grand Total ~ x p .General Fund 13.564 .77
Ba Ionce, Dec. 31,
1981
7,956 .16

- only to be persuaded to return.
Perhaps his best-known moments came durtng the hectic
hours after after the assassination
attempt on Reagan last March 30,
when Nofziger brlefed·the press on
the president's conditiOn outside
George Washlngton University
Hospital.
i rBul, as he says now, "This Is just
not mY ballgame.
"I don't like all tile In-house maneuvertng," Nofziger said. "I don't
really like the Idea of not being your
own person, you know, and you're
really not If you're In an
administration.
"And besides, I've got better
thin~s to do -which is almost a!IY
thing I niay want to do," Nofziger
said.
'
He plans to work as a political
consultant and do some wrtttng,
public speaking and radio and teleVision commentary. Although Nofziger Insists that money Isn't a
"factor In his decision, no one doubts
that · companies wt11 be wllllng to
pay handsomely for his !!frvices.
As he leaves, Nofziger gives tbe
admlnstratlon overall high marks
tor Its tlrst year ln office and views
Reagan as "savior" -with a small
"s" who is "savlngthlscountry a lot
of ways from going down the drain,
economically and maybe just
generally."
He Is belng succeeded by his deputy, Edward Rolllns.

Wade Hamilton, 23 - died of Inter·
nal lnjurles apparently caused by
the explosion.
He said Donald Ray Hamilton,
39, Palmer Edmund McKinoe) , 2~.
Thurman Reynolds, 25 and Ronnie
Hall, 25, evidently died of carbon
monoxide poiSQnlng.
Many of those who choose coal
mining don't work lnanythlngelaborate, They work In small mines
like the RFH, one of five truck
mines In the same rugged hollow.
The Initial Investment on the RFH
was $500,&lt;XXl.
"It's a challenge to them," said
Eva Salisbury whose husband lost
a first cousin In the explosion. " It's
a tradition, you know."
"It's also a necessity, In part,"
sald Harlan McKinney, who at 15,
expects to start coal mining In three

years. "I guess I'll have to. That's
all there Is around here."
But with the current boom ln
coal, It's enough to keep tamllles
and small towns together. The
Craynor community Is close-knit,
consisting of about 75 wood and
brlck )lomes and 10 trailers spread
out by the wlndlng road.
Four generations living next to
each other ls not unnsual, and some
who leave, like Eva Salisbury,
come hack because they "can't get
as close to anyone as we are here."
This part of eastern Kentucky Is
dotted wlth small mines like RFH.
Most still "shoot from the solid" drllllng a sertes of holes ln the coal
seam and !llllng them with an explosive powder or gel, as was used
at RFH.
· The explosives a~ set off with

B~~~ce, Jan. 1,

1.241.11
Receipts
Moror Vehi cle '
Licen se Tax
10,852.82
Total Rece ipt s
10,852.82
Totctl Beginn ing
Balance
Plu s
12 093 93
Rec e 1. Pfs
• ·
Expenditures
Total ExpendituresMisc .
6.660 .38
Grand Total Exp.Motor Vehicle

Gas~~~~~ Tax
Balan ce, ·ran . 1,
198 1
3.460 .91
Receipts 1 oo 00
,
T
Gaso Ime a x
4, 4 .
Olh er
1·065 ·32
·
t
Tot a I Rece 1p s
16, 200 .47
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
19.661.38
Expenditures
Total ExpendituresMisc.
7,551.12

Ma inlTotal
.
Exp.- 6,831.00
Grand
Gasoline Tax ·
Fund
14.382.12
Balance, Dec. 31.
1981
5.279.26
Tota l Exp. Plu s Ba l. ,
Dec. 31, 1981
19,661.38
Road and Bridge
Fund
Bala nce Jan 1
· ·
1981 ·
959 _99
Receipts
Genera I Proper t y
Tax - Real Estate
and Trail er
' Grassl
3 245 31
'
Tangib
le Personal · ·
Property Tax
(Grass l
38.26

detonatlng caps, and It anythlng
goes wrong, there can be a fiash of
flame. The name, ln turn, can Ignite a methane gas or the highly
volatile coal dust which, under
safety laws, Is to be covered by a
layer of rock dust.
United Mlne Workers President
Sam Church visited Craynor Wed·
nesday. He said he thought the
practice of shooting from the solid
should be quickly phased out, as It
was In most U.S , mines when the
Industry was mechanized back In
the 1940s and 1950s.

Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were Ralph Stewart, Pomeroy, and
Thomas. Deeter, Hilliard, $22 and
costs each, speed·; William Jones,
Racine, and Gregory Bailey,
Chester, $21 and costs each, speed;
Hershel George, Baltimore, Ohio,
$155 and costs, overweight; Thomas
Gaspers, Reedsville, $5 and costs, no
muffler; David White, Colwnbus,
$,25 and costs, hunting deer after the
. temporary tag has been detached
frdm the special animal deer permit; Lanita Wentzel, Parkersburg,
$25 and C&lt;¥lts, speed; Clarence Mcintyre, Minersville, $15 and costs,
speed; Alice Gardner, Pomeroy, $26
and costs, speed; Jerry G. Holley ;
Minersville, $30 and L'Osts, failure to
yield; Thomas C. Porter, Rt. 1,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, no muffler;
Donna Taylor, Cheshire, 3:0 days

Willard Stanley, commissioner
of the state Department of Mines
and Minerals, said he could not
argue that mine Inspection procedures were adequate, slnce 15 miners had died In the past six weeks.

Hardwoods
Delivery Available
or You Pick Uo

Sires start fro-m 3h24"

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·

Also Wood Splitter
For Rent

Si1es from 4 , 0 0 and all
wood buildings 24x36 .
Insulated Dog Houses

John Wise
(6141742·2131

P&amp;S. BUILDINGS

tensive remodel·
ing .
• E lectricat work
• Roofing work
14 Years ~xperience

Mixed

U'I" B
ti ity uilding5

Rl
. 3· BoxOh.
54
Racine,
Ph. 614 .843 . 2591

David Price
(6141992-3556
1·. 13·1mo. pd.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

...,...._,P'-"'
ubtic Notice

i~~~: ~!~f~~i~g

3.283.57
Balance Pl us
l;leceipts
4,243 .56
Efpenditures
Total Expe nd ituresMisc.
2.856 .86
Gra nd Tola l Exp.Road and Br idge
Fund
2, 856 .86
Balance, Dec. 31 ,
1981
1.386.70
Total Ex p. Plu s Ba l. ,
Dec. Jl. 1981
4, 243 _5(1

And Home Maintenance
• Roo ling of all types
•Siding
• Remodeling
eFreeeslimales
e20 Yrs. experience

TOM HOSKINS
Ph .,49·2160 or 949·'2482

WANTED TO BUY

~~~ Tr~~:~ Eslale

SCRAP

(Grossi
2, 548.2.:1
Total Rece ipts
2, 548 .2-4
Total Beginn inQ
Ba L.la nce Plus
Re&lt;eipts
2,593.57
Expenditures
Contra cls
2,ISO.OO
Other Expenses
361 .35
ToraiE xp.
2,511.35
Balance, Dec . 31,
1981
82 _22
Tolal Exp. Plus Bal.,

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
Now picking up iunk
au to bodies . Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron .:~nd metals .
1 mile wesl of
Fairgrounds on Old Rl.
33
'
Mon.· Fri.8,30 lo4 ,00
Ph. 992-6564

Sharin~Fund

B~~~ ce, Jan

BOGGS

'
2 751 31
' ·
lleceipts
Grants Federal
3.471.00
Total Receipts
3,47100
Total Beqinning
Balance Plus
Rece ipls
6,168.31
Expenditures
Maint. and
.
Supp I1es Operorion 4,031.39
To1a l Exp .
4,031.39
Balance, Dec. 31 ,
1981
2,136.93
Total
. Plus Bal. , , _
Doc.Exp
,
31 1981
6 168 31
11122.llc

•

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u.s . Rr. so East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Hollan d, .Bus h Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
I·Hfc

Located at the Golden Wings CD Club 112
Mile North ol Chauncey, Ohio on Route
13 . All kinds ol merchandise .
Not ~esponsible for accidents.
Terms of Sale: cash or Check with ·
Positive I D .
AUCTIONEER-BILL BROWN

~of

Meigs

Curb Inflation I
Pay Cash .f or
Classifieds and

County Commissioners,
Meigs County, Ohio, pur-·
suant to the requirements
('If U . S.A . PUbliC Law 92·

500, as amended' by Publ ic
Law 95 -217. Sec t ioh 201, will

hold a Public Meeting at
7:00P .M . on Monday, Mar-

Ch 8, 1982 at the RYm·
nf'slum

of

the

Tuppers

Plains Elementary School

on S.R. 6~1 just east or S.R.
7 in Tl.-'ppers Plains . The

purpose of this meert ng will

be to discuss th e progress
on the Wast ewater
Fac ilities plan tor the unin·

corporated area of Tuppers
pla ins. Ohio with residents
of the ~rea and other in·
terested individuals and

organizations, and to
receive comments and
questions from the public.
.Spec i fic

alternat i ve

methOds tor wastewater
disposal applicable to the
Tuppers Plains area will be

discussed .
The Tuppers

Plains

Facilities Planning Area
consists

of

the

unin•

corporated Village of Tup·
pers Plains , ~nd lm·
mediately adlacent.;~reas.
The Tuppers plains
Facilities Pian will include
the following information

about the planning area :
water quality problems
and
goats:
vironmental

and en·
inventOry ,

land use , population, and

•

Public Notice

FINANCIA.L
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Fiscal Year
Ending December
'
• 31, 1981
Orange Township
Meigs county
Rl. 2, Box 171 .
Coolville, Ohio
, January 18, lf81
I corllf.y the following
report to be correct.
Nina Robinson
Tel. No. 614915-3869
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
· RECEIPTS AND
ElCPENDfTURES
Gener111 Fund
General Fund
'U ,724.26
Motor Vehicle

Fund
Fi r e Protection

Fund

· s~vei_J_I
Wrire your own ad .and order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
resu lts . Money nol refundable.

PH . 992·5663

SERVICE
' PARTSANOSfRVICE
ALL MAkE S
""'"'"'

992-6259

• orvers

""'""'
e Dispos.i ls

276 Sycamore St .
Middleport, Ohio

• DiShwast~ers

C• R' MASH
CONSTRUCTION

==':':"':

~;======·1~-3~-1~m~o=.~

BISSEll
SIDING CO

PULLINS . .
EXCAVATING
eDozers
• Backhoes
• Dump T rue ks
• L··Bo
vY
eTrf!ntZh er
•Woter•S ewer
eGas lines
•Sept ic
System s
large or Small Jobs
PH. 992 "2478

•

"B eau Ill u,1 c ustom
B ' It G
•
01
arages '
Call lor free siding
estimates , 949·2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunday.Calls
_ 1-lfc
31

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

Mlu.£R ELECTRIC
SERVICE

1 21 1

For all

MOBILE
HOME
PARTS

your

wiring needs,

L t G
M . ll
e
eorge
I er
Check your present
electrical system.
Residen·t ial
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
2-B ·tfc

You' II

tract it down
much fast'er
wI t h a

Anything for your
Mobile Home.

WANT AD

KINGSBURY
PARTS &amp; ACCESS.

eANNOUNCEMENTS

2.511 .35

,. 7.

8.

I
I

.

. I

17. ----- - -

18._ _ _ _ _ __

Wanted

,
I
I

I
I
I

I'

I

I;

L----~.:~:~~:..~~~~·------J

B - Ruildint Suppliu

· 5'- ·Pets tot Salt
51- Mullcallnslrument
SI- Fr.,llt &amp; Vt-Jelablu
st- For Sale or Trade

n - wanted to Buy

12- MOfli!Y to I.Oin

S•lf
••- Ha y &amp; Gr.tln
U- Stfd &amp; Ftrlllirar

Want· Ad Advertising
Deldlin~s
Monday 2:00 on Saturday
TueHay ttlru Frlelty 2; ctt t-'. M .
tM d1y Mfon pw,liution
Sundily 2:M P.M. F'rlelay

U- Liv•stoclt

54

Misc . Mercbondlce

JANUARY CLEARANCE!

• TRANSPORTATION

.1111111111 FtiJtlblt c.peiSIJep

11 - Autollor Salt
12- TrucllstorS.Ia
13- 'tflnl &amp; 4 W. D.

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

•..., .... a,,..,.""",.,._..,.

74- MotorcYCIIS

11-lloatl &amp; Motors

11 llllt carHt '" 1Mctl te lick ,...,.,.
....'-' Uckllll, _.,_. lfttl1tttt1 frM

1._1uto Pa rts &amp;
•ccassorl~t

llolll ......... ...

77- •ute At,alr
11-C•mplnt Et~ulpment

SERVICES
,• - Homt•m,.-ovemtflts
12- Pium•intl Heatlnt
IJ-EIICIIIIfllll
·M-Eitcfrlctl&amp;
aetrillrlfiCift
u- Gtt~tral Htullng
16-M.H . Repair
11- U-I&amp;Itty

lftJOGit

IIUt-tn.M

•12"
Sci. ye.

Rates and Other Information

Rultller au
cash ' n' Carry
Brown, ltut
STAITING AT

'4"

Up to ~sword1 .. . on~ day lnQrtion . , .. , ... . , .. ... . , . . . .. . . , l:t.M

· up11to 1Sworas ... tf'lr•d•v insertion . . .. . . . .... . .. . . . .. . . ...

J4.00

u,to 15WI)lilrll&amp; ... s'11 Clays '""rtlon .. . . . .. .... . ... . .... .. .. S7 .oo
l Avtr,.. 4 words Hr lint I
Mottllt Hom• Nltl iiM Yard tttn art acC::tp_. only witfl cntl
wi"' ord« . U Cftlt dau,. lor ads urrylnt Ao• Nu,.,e.r lA Cart et

Dr'v'' 1\ (,ttJ,.

So~v•·

1\ I "1

Rllll /\Nfl r IJnNifiJfO

TIMS.riHI.
Tftt ~i.tMr rewrvH tile r ltltl t~ ,N it.,. rtltet any Hs '""*I
ol)jectleut. Tk 'ultii&amp;Mr will not IN ntponslb.. fer more tMn Mt
incorrect lnwrtlen . ·

Ml\IN ' .1

'·

675-1333

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

6

/1

Lost and Found- -

Announcements
·swEEPER and sewi ng

LOST : Gold chain 141&lt; .
gold . Across from Stifflers
in Pomeroy in Park ing Lol .
99n442 .

supplies.
up and
machine repaPick
ir , parts,
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
446·0294 ..

Lost : black and wh ite fox
terrier. Li cense no. 88. Five
Points area . Name
Grasshopper . $50 reward .
Ca II 992· 3479.

Complete line of Muzz.le
Loading Guns and Supplies . Spring
Valley
Trading Co ., Spring Valleu,
Pt•za
H&lt; 8025
u
• "'""''
•

LOST · Brown &amp; while
bel!lgle, male, vicinity of
West Po int RO . Ca ll304·882·
2790.

Shooting Match ever"; Sun·
day lPM Ga ll ia Co . Coon
c lub . Kriner ·Sandhollow
Rd.

9 - - wantedtOBU- -

3

-----

For

bulk

deliV ery

ol

g•sotlne.
oil and
diesel
fuel,heating
call Landmark,
992·2181 , Pomerov . Oh .
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Everv Sun. starting
af I p.m. Factory choke
guns only .
Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot. Sat . nights
6:30p.m .• Bashan. Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun .

In come tax
servi ce.
Federal and state income
tax forms, quarterly repor ·
Is, and W·2 lorms wil l be
done by appointment . See
wanda Eblin, 41000 Laure l
Cliff Rd., Pomerov . 992·
2272.
In come Ta)( Servi ce .
Federf)l and State. Prompt,
accurate. Ma rtha . Fry ,
Pomeroy. Phone 992·341-4.
All dresses a nd blouses half
price. Special on per ·
manents . S20 for S18 . SlB for
$16. All short C\Jr ly per·
manents $12 .50 . Aline
Weaver's
Dres-s
and
Beauty Shop. 5th and Vine
St., Rac ine. 614-949·2666.

·------

JIMS Water Servi ce. Call
Jim Lanier, 304-675·7397 .
Camp Conley .

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

wANT TO BUY Old fur ·
nl ture . and AntiQues of all
kinds , call Kenneth Swa in,
256·1967 in the evenings .
CASH PAl D for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bu lck· Pontlac, GAll ipolis,
Oh io. Catl446·2282.
BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
pftying cash ,f_or anything
stamped 10K , 14K, 18K and
dental gold . .Cictss rings,
wedding rings, sliver coins
or a nyth ing st•mp ed
sterling . Clarks Jewelry
Slore. Ga llipoli s 446·2691 or
992 ·2054 in F'omeroy1
---·-----~

Buyin g Gold, Silver,
Platinum. old coi ns, scrap
rings &amp; si lverware. Dally
quot es available . Also
coins &amp; coi n supplies for
sal e . Spring Valley
Trading, Spring Valley
. Ptaz•. 446·8025 or 446·8026.
We pav cash for late model ..
clean used cars.
Frenchtown car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069.
~-----

----

Wanted to buy tie logs.
Paying up • lo $140 per
thousand. Call 256-6363 or ·
634-3131.
.
Underpinn ing for house
house trail er. Ca ll 25b·l393 ..

-----

BEDS· IRDN , BRASS, old
lurnifur e, gold, sliver
dollars, wood ice bo)(es,
stone Iars, antique• e tc.,
Comple te
households .
Wrile : M.D. Miller, Rl . 4,
Pom eroy, Oh . Or992·7760 . .

---~---

4
Giveawa
-------ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other th ing for
sa le may place an ad In this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertisPr .
Free. Half Beagle puppies .
Ca ll446·4530 atrer 4PM
1 year old &amp; 2 morath old
male German Shept1erd &amp;
Norwegian Elk HOund . 949·
2506.

---·--

Seven puppi es. Phone 985·
4212.
BLACK and wh ite femal e
Colli e, 304-576·2173 .
PUPPIES. 4 male, part
German Shepherd, part
Colli e, 9 weeks old, phone
304·882·2004.

----

·-

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

PRICED RIGHT
CAU. TODAY!

• FARM SUPP.LIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

21 - Bustnes•
OoQOrlun lty

n-•••nors

1

In Mason County

·---'-·-

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
99H191
Dottie Turner 992·5692 .
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Office
992-2259

614·992· 2181
For
Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating 011. -

U - AnlifiUU

,, _ Farm EquiPm ent

u - lolS I Acrtacre
)6- Real Estate- Wanti!O

POMEROY
LANDMARK

.tf- For Ltallt
• MERCHANDISE

• FINANCIAL

14-Buslneu Buikllngs

RIGGSCREST
5
bedroom colonial home
with lar~e rec . room ,
util ity, 211-. baths, total
electric . Doubl e ge~rage .
off ic e, deck In rear on
large lot . $63.000.00.

CALL:

4' - Wanltd to Rltnl
U- Equlpment for Rent

54-Misc. Mtrc:hudise

lt - Hoi'n'' lor Sllf
n - Mobile Homes
for Sale
:tJ-Farm' lor Salt

I'
26.
I
27.
I
I
28 .
I
2'1 .
I
30. - - - - -I
------ ~ 31. - - - - - - I

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

MIDDLEPORT
2
bedroom home in con
veni cpt locnt ion . part
ba sement . Lctrqe lot.
$19.750 .00 .
POMEROY - Slolely
older home with up lo
four bedroom s, ori ginal
woodwork . 111-. baths.
FIreplace, for ced a ir
qasfurna cc . Larqefront
sitt ing por ch. Many
featur es . $29 ,900 .00.

u - space tor Rtnf

11 - Heip Wanted

•REAL ESTATE

25.

34. - - - -- - 35. - - - - -"--

POMEROY - A neat 3
bedroom home with new
roof, full basement.
garge , din•nq roo m,
livinp room . front and
rear porch es . coal
stoker furna ce. Nice
larq e lot. Good plctce for
c h i ldr e n t o p lay
$26.700 .00 .

for R1tnl

51- H0uttholll Goods
n- ee , TV, Aiello Equipmenl

Str'lfices

23.
24.

33 . - - - -- -

.

e RENTALS

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

n - Prottnlonal

• 22.

32. -~----

NEW LISTING
Syracuse - 3·5 bcdr oon)
hom e on 200'x100' lot .
Jlh storv frame with
F.A. N.G- . heat . Car ·
pe t i nq .
Gar a qc .
$20.500 00 .

J.7· 1

44- AINrlmtnfl tor REnt
4t-Furnllhld ll'opms

11-IIUIIftfiS Tr• tnlniJ
l~Sctlools lnstrucUon
U-Radio , TV.
&amp; ce Repa ir
11-Wantecl To Do

19,
20.
21.

9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15. ~----16. - -- - -

work

Water·Sewer· E lect ric
Gas \..ine· Ditches
Water line Hook ·ups
Septic Tanks
Count~ Certified
RO\ISh Lane
Cheshire. Oh .
Ph. 367-7560

1- Announc:em eniS
4- Giuaw•y
s--Happy Ads

1J- tnsur•nce

5.
6.

- Piumbifl!lllnd

T~ENCHING

l-1'n Mempr••m

ll- Sif~o~•lion

4.

- Concrete work
(Free Estimates)
V . C. YOUNG Ill
992-621S or 992-lJ 14
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·tfc

41 - Hovtel for Rent
•2- Mobllt Homes

1- c;ard of Th_anll$

.,..._Lostancl Founcl

2.
3.

- Addon' and re moOellnt
- RooliniJ and gyftu work

CLASSIFIED AD INDE"

Phon•-----------------

l.

601

E. Moln
PDMERDY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Mid·
deleport - Exr. e!lr.nt
n e iqhborho od ,
3
bedroom home with
chain link fence in rear .
Lots of closet space,
F . A.
q as
h e at.
Re modeled th rouqhout.
Assum e loan . $29,900 .00 .

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Nam•----~------------Addre••·---------------

)Wanted
l For Sale
) Announcement
1For Renf

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

REESE •

992-2156

Flea Mark.e l . New
Opening. 7 days a week .
The Heart of Mlddleporr . 2()
N. 2nd St. formerlv Martin
General Store. 99HJ70.

Rl. 124
Minersville, Oh .
Ph. 992-5587
12·31 ·1 mo.

eleclric~l

In Meigs County

County

446-2342

All makes and models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
service available .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
·
bathrooms. rem oct ehng,
plumbing , electric, an d
heating .

In Gallia

APPLIANCE SERVICE
Ch
ester, Ohio
PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382

Call Ken Young
For Fast Serv ice
~ 985-35 61

Used Color Tv Sets for
Sate.
SALE PHONE NO.

\ .

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

S&amp;W JV
and

PHONE 992-2156 .

2,856 .86

,I

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN.

WANT AD INFORMATION

14,382 .12

J=edera l Revenue
Shar il'l QFund
4,031 39
rota I
44,006 .87
Balance
Dec. 31. 1981
Genera l Fund
. 7,956 .18
Motor Vehi cle
Li ce nse Tax
Fund
5.433.55
Gasol inc Ta x
Fund
5.279.26
Road and Bridge
Fund
1.386.70
Fire Protection
Fund
82.72
Federal Revenue
Sharinq Fund
2.136.92
'Tota l
22.274.83
CASH BALANCE,
RECEIPTS AND
EXPENDITURES
BY FUND
General F~nd
Balance, Jan . 1.
1981
8.724.26
Receipts
General ProPerty
Tax- Real Est ale
and Trdiler
(Grossi
4,636.14
Tangible Pe5sona1
Propertv 1 ax
(Grossi
54.65
Estate Tax
(Gross) ·
274.01
Local Government
and Sta te Income
Tax
3,792.75
Liauor Permit
(Continued on page 9)

Mason Co., w. va .
Area Code 304
675- Pt. Pleas~nt
458- Leon
576-Apple (;rov e
· 773- Mason
882- New Haven
895- Letart
937- Buffoto

l-8·1mo. pd .

SERVICE ·

t - wanteclto Buv

RoacJ and Bridge

J. R. PARSONS

Address:
Pinnell St. Ripley, w. Va.
Office Hours:
Mon •• fri. 9 a.m. to 5p.m.
By Appointment Only
Phone (3041372·8550

r----------------------1

Public Notice
Fund

Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583 .
or 992 · 2282
3

Al\nounces the opening of his office for
the practice of internal medicine .

7-Y•rd S•le
I - Public hie
&amp; Auction

License Tax
1,241.11
Fund
Gasoline Tax
Fund
3.460.91
Road and Bridge
. Fund ·
95'1.99
Fire Protection
Fund '
45.23
Federal Revenue
Shoring Fund
2.751 .31
Tot•l
17,182.91
Total Receipts
General Fund
12.796.69
Motor Vehicle
License TaX
Fund
10,852.82
Gasolin e Tax
Fund
t6,200.47
Road and Bridge
Fund
3,283.57
Fire Protection
Fund
2,548.24 '
. Federal Rev~nue
Sharing Funa
3,417.00
Total
49,098.79
Total Receipts
and aarances
21.520.85
General Fund
Molor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
12,093 .93
"', asoline Tax
Fund
19,661.38
·oad and Bridge
Fund
4,243 .56
1 ire Protection
Fund
2.593.57
I cderal Revenue
Sharing Fund
6,168.31
"i &gt;tal
66.2~1.70
Expenditures
13!564.7'!
L'lneral Fund
'\l'.otor Vehicle
:..Icense Tax
Fund
6.660.38
1soline Tax

Small Pipelines A
Specialty
North of Racine
On Carmel Road
at Sawmill

STEVER. KESSEL, M.D.

1:00 P.M. UNTIL ·???

Small investment, large
return. Sentinel Want Ads
--,--'P-'u"b'"tic Notice
wastewater flow proj ec·
tions; eva lu ation of the
current wastewater treat·
ment and disp o sa l
methods; evaluation of
a Ilerna live solutions to .the
area's wastewater needs;
and a recommended plan
based on costs and en·
vironm e n1a l
( On ·
siderations.
. Anticipated completion
of the Tuppers Plains
Fac ilities Plan is July.
1982.
.
The public is encouraged
to actively participate in
this important matter .
Jan. 22

.WELDING SHOP

. REPAIR WORK
• Gas &amp; electric
• Cutting
• Brazing
4120 Yrs. Exp ,
Reasonable Rates
866"South Third
Middleport, Ohio

~~=====~l-~7~-l~m~o~-~~~~~~;g·8~-2~D~·I~fc;rr~~~~~~~~~-r====::·=·:.:m:o:.:P:d:.~

DecFederal
. 31,1981Revenue
2.593.57

I

Public Notice

30 Years Experience

Meigs co. Area Code
614
992- Middloporl
Pomerov
985- Chester
343- Portland
247- Letarl Faits
949- Racine
742- Rulland
667- Coolville

G•llj• Co. Area Code
614
446-GIIIIpotls
367-Cheshlre
318- VInton
24S-Rio Grande
•256-Guyan Dlst.
641-Arabia Oist.

n&amp;D

CUSTOM
WELDING

~~======7=·5=·t:f:cj~::;:;:::~~9;·2~1=·tt~c~rr:":"':':w:":":•:'":':'

Saturday, January 23, 1982

Inspectors go ln Monday, otllclats mine and scattered coal dust
said.
across the opposite hillside.
Medical examiners said ThursWillard Stanley, state Mlnes and
Minerals Commissioner, specuday evening, based on autopsies,
that four of the Victims apparently lated that explosives used to loosen
were killed by carbon monoxide coal may have been at fault.
David Jones, administrator of
polsonlng and three others died
state medical examiner's office
the
from
massive
lnternallnjurles.
confinement, 25 suspended, costs
Among
the
victims
in
the
Wedsaid
blood tests would be made to
only, restitution, one year probation,
nesday
accident
at
the
RFH
Mining
that carbon monoxide
confirm
falsification.
Co.'s No. 1 mlne at Craynor were · caused tour of the deaths, "but
thrt¥! brothers,. who shared owner- that's what lt looks like at this
Forfeiting bonds were Dexter L. · ·
Ship of the mine, their nephew and Ume."
Porterfield, Columbus, $45.50,
He said other Injuries the tour
three distant cousins.
failure to display license plates: .
Services were scheduled .today men received wouldn't have been
Robert 8 1 Terry, Belpre, $45.50,
for six of the me111n nearby Martin. enough to klll them.
failure to display valid registration ;
"In essen&lt;;e ... they just Inhaled
A funeral tor the seventh man was
Walter A. Wright, Wellston, $45.50,
belng lheld ln VIrgie, a lew mUes to tire," said Jones. "It's the same
failure to display highway used tax
the sduth.
kind ot death that you would get Ina
sticker.
The blast shot debris out of the house fire ."

NOTICE is hereby given

•

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

AUCTION

where seven miners were killed In
an explosion to ensure nothing Is
disturbed before state and federal

that the Board

Pilat oa the Bluford nuclear reterV~~Uon IUenrWedIK!IIday durfD&amp; a tuur by the Nortbwetl ftlloul power
eouaell. II ud P1aDt 5 at Satlop on tbe Olympic Pen!Jt.
1111iaare tbelwo tl)realeaed planll. (AP Laaerpboto).

FIREWOOD

8

Tertninate 13 cases
Thirteen defendants were fined
and three others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Wednesday.

Business Services

Fund Ta)(
6,660 .38
Fund
License
Fire Protection
Balan ce, Dec. 31 ,
Balance, Jan. 1,
198 1
5.433.55
1981
45.33
To,tal Exp. Plu s Ba l..
Receipts
Dec. 31. 1981
12,093.93 Genera l Prope rty

State. troopers -•. guard ·m ine site
PIKEVILLE, Ky. (AP)- State
troopers are guarding a coal mine

CIHssified /Uf1(f!ll filver the ·
ft~llllwinl( telephllnl' exrhHn1(f!ll, ..

_ 95+~:=:::::::=;:===~~~~~~~~6~-1~5-~lf~c~~~=;~~;;;l;· ~·;lm~o=.~~=;;;;~;;~~=~~=====~~~~

Dec Exp
. 31 , .19~1
Total
Plus Ba l2·..1,520 .
Motor Vehicle
Lic~n;~dTax ·

Small mines offer only ··available work
CRAYNOR, Ky. (AP) - The
mlners of eastern Kentucky under·
stand the risks, but often have little
choice but 19 work In small mines
such as the RF1f Mining Co. No. 1
mine, where seven men died
Wednesday.
"You just never thlnk about It until It happens," said Shannon
McKinney, whose brother was one
of the seven victims. "It's just
terrible.
'' I'm not sure now whether I'll go
back or not," said McKinney, wtlo
was workingin a nearby mine Wed·
nesday. "But it'-s about the only
work around here that pays
anythlng."
David Jones of the state medical
examiner's office said Thursday
that three brothers - Jack Hamil·
ton, 36, Bernis Ha1J11lton, 31, and

The

Ohio

Public Notice

•

LEGAL NOTICE

GOING, GOING, G..• - The board of dfredon of
.Wasblugtoa Public P-er Supply System meelllloday
lor a flul decision to termlute tOIIIInleUoa on lwo ol
Ita nuclear energy pillnts. Thill iii an enertor 111ot of

22, 1982

22, 1982

political strategist resigns

tn James E.. Bartley,

Rcat1·ice L. Bmtley. 12/100 acre .
Syracuse.
Chesle r E. Wells. Dorothy M.
Wells to Blauser Well Servtcc l11 c...
Righlofway, Oliw .
.
Harold Brewe1·, Ruby Bre)Yc1· to
Blauser Well Scrv .. Inc., Ri~hl of

January

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325
NEAR POMEROY Level lot , wood burner, 3
bedrooms, carpeting, 2
porches ,
basement,
5torm doors and win·
dows . Price was $38,500 .
ThiS Week On)y $30,000.
MtD 'OLEPORT
Automatic hot water
he•t (gas tired), large
carpeted
living. 3
bedrooms, insulated ~
full basement, garage
-and full basement on
large corner lot.
!REASONABLE - In·
.sulated 3 bedrooms,
nice kitchen, mOdern
bath, lots of good ·Cbr·
peting, porches and
patio. Out ol all floods .
Only S32,500. ·
BARGAIN - 5 room
frame home with bath,
all city ut ilities. large
ba seme nt for the
children and 3 lots. Just
111.000.

. I!

•

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end . S12 .50 per ton . Buridled
s lab . $10 .50 per ton.
Dellverd ro Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock Springs Rd . , .,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.

-------silv er, ster ling ,

~ old ,

1cwe lry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport . 992·
3476.
- - - --··- ---BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HI DES. Gene Hines
Rl. I, Amesvi lle. Oh 448·
6747 . Buying raw lu r after
Dec. 17. Dally 6 PM Ia 9
PM, closed Sundays. Also
c losed Dec . 2-4 &amp; 25.
RAW FUR buyer. Beef &amp;
deer hidc ·ginshang . Trap·'
p ing s upplie s . George
Buckley, Rt . 2, Arhens, Oh .
Open
614 · 664 4761.
even ings.
OLD FURNITURE, beds,
•ron, brass, or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or squ~re
Wood ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
CQmptele household . Gold
silver, old money, pockei
watches, cha ins, rings, and
elc. Indian Artifacts ot all
typos. AlSo buying boseball
Cllrds. Osby Martin 992 ·
6370 .

---------

~

--

Would like 10 buy up to 3
acres. of land around
Rurrand area . Out of high
walor . Preler black top
road. Conta ct Larry Barr
742-3149 .

---- ---- -·-

Row lurs, hloes, sera~
me,els,
batteries,
r adlators, ginseng, yellow
roo1. and merchandise
brokering. Harper·Hatste·
ad Salvage Company , JOO
Etevenlh Street. 675-5868.
Also Flea M•rket open
dally . Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm .

-------

11
HOI Wapted
Eo'lrn 20 ' per cent
.. tlremenl on $2,000.00
wholesale lnstemd of 3 per
cent re11rement
on
17.~PV. 614-875·9749 or
614·477-1414.
\

.

�•

\

Sentinel
11 =~

-: Eetp-~a~~r[ ::- =:-

They'll Do It Every Time

SALES PERSONELL
Do to new Audto Vtsual
program
rapidly
ex
pandtng f.rm has several
openmgs .n tfs outstde sales
dept If you are ambtous

IT W~S PAIIITEI7 2 'I'EJO"'S
A60 ~y 2 FI"'EMI'N WHO

TRWAG 106€f
AN I!!STIMATE ••

WMSP OPEC FOI&lt; NOOI~
IN TH~ PtiJHT···
/--...

and well groomed. we may

shartng,

He- PitT

fte•:lb l e'f
hours Car &amp; htgh sc
educatton requtred

1&gt;9rtumtles of $1,000

011 OHLY

B.ASE
PAINT

mo and up For tnte rvtew
ca ll between 10 AM &amp; 2PM
on ly, 614 446 7649

Pmecrest Care Center has
part

ttme opentngs for

~ N's

For f urther tnfo con

S.! _~sehold

Furntshed
room
ses,
utthtles pd. stngle ma le.
r
•9 share bath
, ..,,. .• .,, tier 7PM

2 Bdr
Aparlmenl, ~58
Second Ave Large livtng
room, kttchen , bath, newly
decoraled
Complete ly
furn Adults, dep &amp; ref
req $225 mo 446 2581 or
~46 2236

O~&amp;ca&lt;T
WAT~"'·

per

------ Goods

••

2nd floor furntshed ef
f•ency apl 729 2nd Ave ,
GallopoiiS Call i46 0957
Adults only , no pets

have a tOb for yo~ We offer
patd vacattons, prof tt

, hospttahzatton,

Furntshed apartment for
rent Ca ll 446 3937

tact Judy t 'olley,
RN
Otrector of NurstflQ, 446

7112 E 0 E

Deluxe furntshed apar t
ment, excellent locat1on, 1
or 2 a dults, only 1275, ref &amp;
dep requtred
Cal l 446
0338

WHY WOULD 2 Di amonds,
8 Emeralds over 40 Pear ls
over: 500 Otrec t s Sw ttc h
For tnformafton ca ll (
523 4012 or wnle P 0
2 brd apf H UD e"epled,
2125, Hg t n , Wva 25621
1-----------r----------~kot c hen turn Call 675 5104
we can pay now or pay
later The delinquent ch tl d
of tod ay 1S tom orr ows
pnson In m ate We can wa tt
l tll tom or row and pay for
pnsons and cnme and taw
en forcemen t or we can '
take care of the problem
today Make an Investment
tn the future become a
foster paren t Call Juvent le
Courl &lt;146 3842

Homes for Sale

31

250 Ne ighborhood Rd ,
Ga llipolis
Owner wdl
f tnanc e, 3 bdr ranc h, 1
bath, country k 1tchen, 1 car
de ta c hed garage w1th
workshop, also attached
c arpor t
Unftntshed
basement,
tncludes ap
pltances Washer &amp; dryer,
range &amp; retng Gas heat,
city water. septt c tank 1
acre lot m c ludes 2 trader
Why set tle for less sell t he pads With e lectnc &amp; water
besl AVON Call 446 3358 $40,000 ftrm Ftnancing 3
or 742 235 4
_,
yr land contract, 10 per
cent down, 12 per cent tn
GE T VALUABLE tratOIO Q terest only Call collec t
as a young bustness person Wayne Clark 614 262·3929
and ea rn good money plu s Please no r ealtors
some great g tfts as a sen
ttnel rou te earn er Phone 3 brm
h om e new ly
us nght away and get on decora te d. near c1ty 2 out
the eltg tbil 1fy ltst a t 992
bUtldtngs &amp; carport Vtnyl
2156 or 992 2157
s1d1ng and carpet Call 446
3897
BABYSITT ER need ed, 304
675 7142
Large home. 4 bedroom s,
famtly , ltvtng &amp; dtnlng
TR I CHEM Lo qu ld Em
room, full k1tchen , full
brotd e ry
•ns tru cto rs basement 2 acres L arge
needed now Excellent ear
sw tmmtng poo l 985 4290
ntng potenttal Call for tn
fo rmatton Elsa Cox, 304
Or r ent 3 bedroom fur
675 5187
ntshed home on Bud Chat
ttn Road on bt g level lot
12
Situattons Wanted
576 2711

_____

Need someone to share nde

0 u ca mpus any weekday
Ca II &lt;146 3862

Wanted PE-rson to sh ar e 2
bdr a pt Call245 5835
Have va canc y for elderly
person Room . board and
care Reasonable 99 2 602 2
---~===
13
Insurance

SA NDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
servtc es for ftre m surahce
cov erage tn Gallta County
for almost a century
Fa rm , home and persona l
propertv cover ages are
available to meet '"
divtdual needs
Contact
Le wts Hu g h es , agent
P hon e 446 33 18

•

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been
ca n
ce ll e d?
Lo s t
your
operat or 's LICense? P hone
992 2143
18

Wanled to Do

Babystttt ng tn my hom e
Ca ll44~0390

W il l babv stt day or ntght '"
my hom e Ca ll 446 4337 un
fol 7PM
Wd l do house c leantng of
any nature
reasonab le
rates Phone 367 0490 or
446 1402
P ta no Tun tnQ, 25 years ex
pertence Ca ll Rev El m er
GeiSer, 388 9809

CAR PEN TE R &amp; hom e
ma•nta1nance, 304 675 3190

flnanEial
22

Money to Loan

Colu mbus First Mortgage
Company FHA VA Ft nan
Cookie
c tng L oan Rep
Krautter 1304)675 3473

REFINANCE or purc hase
your hom e 30 year ft xed
rate WVa &amp; OhtO Leader
Mortgage, 77 E Sta te Sf ,
Athens, Oh 592 3051
23

Profess1onal
Serveces

Pt ano Tuning Be ktnd to
your ea rs Call B•ll Ward
for appotnfm ent, 4&lt;46 .4372

c

&amp; L Bookkeeptng Com
plete bookk eeptna ar:'ld ta x
ser vt ce for business and'"
d1vlduals
ca rol Nea l 446 3862

Rubbe r Sla m p &amp; Business
Cards u susally one or two
days servtce Dt sm uke's
405 2nd Ave, Gall opo li s,
446 0474
YOUR Federal, Stale, City
Ta'Kes prepared 17 years
e)(peflence with tax hrm
Kenneth Adkins, 50 Oltve
Sl , Gallipolis , 446·7475
Plano &amp; Organ lessons,
Mary Lucas Call 446·9787

31

41 _

!fouses f~r Reni--

2 bedroom family rm , S300
per mo plus uttltttes, $300
dep requ •red Ca II 446
~554

Furntshed cottage near
HMC 4 rooms, one c hild
$200 w a ter pa1d Ca ll 446
&lt;1416 a lter 7PM

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newl y
decorated
un
furntshed, J rm house
Su ttab le for stngle person
or rettred coup le Garden
space, depostt &amp; references
requ1red Call 446 0~50 or
446 t291

9 room house tn R 10 Gran
de Ca II 446 3485
5 bdr house tn Galltpol ts
near park, $400 Ca ll .wo
7265 or 446 0644
Two bedroom house on
Roush Lane In Cheshire
near Power Plants Un
furmshed, dep &amp; ref No
pels, yard &amp; garden $225
mo Call4461527

5 rooms. 3 bedrooms, balh,
uttllty room, ntce and
c le an 446 1519 or992 2430

Comfortable 3 bedroom
home, 8 1/2 p e r ce nt
assumable loan, and ts Country home tn Pomeroy,
nea r PPHS, la rge fenced •n Flatwoods area For sa le
yard, kttc hen appliances or rent - 2 story, 3 bedroom,
and
m ore
We
ar e 17 acres, large pond 614
re tocatmg and can share 446·2359 after 6 p m
realtor's f ees by selling
now Call alter 6 pm 675 5 room house, bath, large
lot,
g arden
space
1625
Avatlable Jan 25 Ra ci ne
area 992 5858
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TR I STATE
MOBILE
HOMES Ga llopolos Year
end sale, pn ce reduced,
used mobtle homes CAL L
446 7572

HOUSES on state Rl 87,
rural
water ,
Wendell
Fauver. 30~ 895 3879
House for ren t , $200 a m on
th plus de posot, 30~ 675
6750

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, ~ Mt
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 PHONE4463868

UNFURNISHED house ,
whtte frame, 3 bedroom ,
elec tnc heat, ktfchen not
fu r nt shed wth stove &amp;
refr.gerator Utlltty room
w1th washer &amp; dryer
hookup 3 acre garden &amp;
Mathng address
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy yard
mobile home Set up wtth 2 Galhpolts Ferry, lease &amp;
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural depos1 required Owner
water, c lose to town, tman sh tp management Phone
cmg ava1 l able Phone -446 Huntmglon. 304 522 1991
1294

1912 12x60 mobil e home,
new ca rpet , centr al atr
con d Call 245 9510 after
6PM

~~. ~:~~~~:::: ;~~;~~~~~~

and depos1t r'e qutred,
Camp Con le y, 304 675 3219
42

1970 12x60 Buddy ce ntral
hea t and a tr Set up and un
derptnned Phone 4.46 7402
after 5 30 PM
$9,000
1968 Cherokee
tra1l er on lot , parftally fur
ntshed, has new fuel otl fur
nanc:e wtth 300 gal tank,
has new 10x20 ft porch
Wtth awntng &amp; soltd oak
deck, new underpmnmg,
very well tn sulated, has 2
bdr , full bath, kitchen,
llv1ng room , rur al water
Ca ii 38B 9059 anyt om e

Mob1le Hames
lor Rent

2 bedroom unfurntshed
m obtle home Located 2
mtles out 588 Adults onlv ,
$175 00 mo Ca ll446 2300

REPOSS ESS ION 1981 all
electnc m obtle home, se t
on lot ready to move mto
Payments $159 .47 month
Afl State Modular Homes
576 2711
USED MOBILE
576 2711

HOME

Farms for Sale

2 bdr and 3 bdr mob1 le
homes Call446 0175
Looktng for mature person
to share mob1le home on
George's C•ee k Rd Ca ll
446 ~789 afler 5PM
2 bdr tra11er Adults pref
Ph 367 7329

6002
2 bdr. trailer turntshed,
adults only , Brown Trailer
Park , 992 3324

2 bedroom mob1le home '"

MOBILE home for renl
1 acre on lhe Middleport wllh option lo buy, 304576
s1de of the flood road, 2711
be•utlful localion, $5,000
Cal1992 5236
TWO bedroom lurnlshed,
$150
per month plus
24'h acresforsale Call614 uttlltles, New Haven , 30-4
667·3609
882 2466
44

Houses for Renl

3 or 4 bdr house In PI
Pleasant near hospital.
S300 mo rent $200 deposit.
Call .u6-8234.

•

APARTMENTS 1 AND 2
BEDROOMS
R E NT
STARTSAT, 1BEDROOM
$152, 2 BEDROOMS $188,
DEPOSIT $200 Call 446
27.S
1 bdr par t1a lly furntshed
apt , newly remodeled, $135
month plus uttltttes No
c hildren Call 992 5880 after

6
Furntshed e fft c t ~ ncy $145,
u1tlttleS pd One pt! r so n
Call446 &lt;1416 afler 7PM

2 bdr unfurntshed apt tn
Crown C1ty Call256 6520
Sem• furntshed apt
1n
Coats But ldmg over Dutton
Drugs Suttable for one per
son Call at Apl 18m Coats
Butldtng for tnformatton
Partly furnt shed apart
ment Close to shoppm g tn
Pomeroy No pe ts Adulls
$125 per month 614 992
3201
2 bedroom upstatrs apt
Front St , Middleport $130
month
S6S
secu r i ty
depos it Hobste tle r Really
742 2003

Apartments 675 5548
APARTMENTS , mobil e
homes,
houses,
Pt
Pleasant and Galltpol ts
614 446 8221 or614 2&lt;5 9484
EffiCiency rooms by the
wee k on Matn Stree t ,
Mason, WV 773 5651

FURN ISHED 4 room a par
tment, adults, no pets, 304
675 1453
TWO b edroom apartment,
1 older chtld, all utihtt es
pa1d, 304 675 5679 after 5
pm

FURNISHED 1 bedroom
apartment 1n Pt Pleasant
e)(tra n•ce, adu lts only , no
pets Phone 304 675 1386
45

SLEEPING ROOMS and
ltght house k eeptng apt ,
Park Central Hotel
Week ly rates availabl e S60
and up tn Ctrcles Motel
Call446 2501
Have va canc v for elderly
man or woman 1n my
home Reasonab le r a te s,
good expenence Tupper s
Plams 667 6329 or 667 3402
Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roule 33, North of
Pomeroy Large 1ots Ca ll
992 7479

2 t ra iler spa ces '" Syracuse
Tratler Park I all elec trt c
614 992·3625
47

Aparlmemt
for Rent

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, cnatr, rocker, ot
loman, 3 !abies, S500 Sofa,
chatr and loveseat. 1275
Sofas and chairs pr•ced
from $285 to $795 T abies,
138 and up to 1109 H1de a
beds,S3AO , queen stze, S380
Reclmers, $175 lo $295,
Lamps from ~18 lo $65 5
pc difelles fro m $79, to
$385 7 pc , $189 a nd up
Wood table with 4 cha trs,
1219 up to $495 Desk 1110
Hutches, 1300 and $375 ,
maple or pme f1n1sh
Bedroom suttes
Bassett
Oak , $675, Bassell Cherry,
1795
Bunk bed complete
Wtth ma ttresses, $250 and
up to S350 Captatn's beds,
1275 complete Baby beds,
$99 Mattresses or box
spnngs, full or tw tn, $58 ,
ftr m, $68 and $78 Queen
sels, 1195 5 dr chesls, S49
4 dr
chests, $42. Bed
frames, 120 a nd S25 , 10 gun
Gun cabtnets, $350, dtnet
te cha tr s S20 and $25 Gas
or elec tr ic ranges, $295 Or
thopedtc super '• rm, $95,
ba by matresses, S25 &amp; SJS,
bed frames $20 $25, &amp; SJO
Elec tr ic ftreplac e, gun
ca btnet, Ltvtng room sutte,
wood tabl e &amp; 4 chairs
Used,
Ranges,
refngerators, and TV ' s,
3 mtles out Bulav llle Rd
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon
thru Fn , 9am to Spm, Sat
446 0322 "
Kenmore waSher $125 , GE
d ryers S85, Whor lpool
washer &amp; dryer patr $225
Call256 1207

sl -

- - Anf1(JU'e s___ _

Anttque d1nnett se t. $400
Call 388 9676
-::.-: __-:::::
54 ~_!.Sc _Mer_ch
_ andice
Lurnp Coal $32 per ton
Ztnn Coa l Co, Inc Call446
1408 between 9 a nd 5

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal ,
Alumnium, Brass, Copper,
Batt e rt es
Sktdmore
Foster, 123 112 P.ne 51
Galltpohs Block Co, 123112
Pme St , 446 2783
3 8 ft showcases wtth
l tghts, 1 large bedroom
su1te, double dresser and
chest, 2 ant1que clocks, 1
meat sl •cer and mtsc
groc ery store equtpment
Call 256 6413, 12 p m to 9
pm

wanted lo Renl

3 bdr mobile hom e or
house In Vinton Schoo l
DISI Call 388 8832
Wan ted to rent or buy
Tra tler space 1n M1d
dleport Pomeroy area 992
6510

Household Goods
---

For Sa le Kttchen table and
2 c h ao rs, S2S See af 769
Brownell Ave, Middleport
New woOd c; tove, half prtce,
neve,. useo, $350 Can con
vert to furnance Call 256
111 6, Galltpolts
Re s taurant
equtpment
,-econdtttoned by RADCO
Call 304 523 1378
Hgln ,
WV A

A carr y out bust ness closed
GOOD
USED
AP
down and has a II bever r\ge
PLIANCES
washers,
coolers for sale Call 1 614
dryers,
r e fngerators , 286 5740
rang es
Skaggs
Ap
phances, Upper ~lver Rd ,
besi de Stone Crest Motel Gas h ea ttng stove 60,000
BTU Call446 2637
446 ·739~

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Friday, Januory 22, 1982

The Daily S.nlinel-l'age-11

DICK TRACY

Vans &amp; 4 W. O .

Would like to trade 73 lnt
Scout .4x4. for late model 4
wtleel drtve &amp; pay cash dtf
terence Call446 9265

IT MU:!IT KAV~
SOMeTHIN&lt;7 TO
00 Wt'TH THAT"

~~~~~~~~~~11iiiiiiiif1

t

54

Misc . Merchand1ce

f IPM Sppplles
&amp; llvestoEII

F~rewood $35 pte kup load,

slacked Ph 38ll 8770 or 388
97 3 7
Pyrodex now tn stock 16 oz
ca n SB 95 Also Red Dol,
Blue Dot, Green Dot, and
Dupont Power tn stock
Spring Valley Tradmg Co ,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446
8025
28ft 76 Impala ca mper f or
sa le tor $5,000 Call 367
7238
For sale woodburn1ng
stove Ask tng $50 Call 379
2755

Br.tiSh 303 r.fl e 11 shol,
bolt actton, S75 Cra ftsman
2 stage burntng outftt etc ,
$75 Call446 1735

Sears con sole stero AM F M
r a doo Call388 9809
ExcelSIOr Otl Co , 636 E
Ma tn St, Pomeroy , Ohto
9922205
.4x9 T anden uttilty tratl er ,
new lights. rebut It Call992
2075
All types of tarm and tn
du stnal trail ers, Mon
tgomery Tratl er Sales.
Langsville, Oh io 45741 669
4245 eyenmgs

,_

--~

Used ttr es
Han shaw' s
Ttres on Lucas Lane 675

7360
BI G a tr compressor , $700
68 72 Nova body par t s

Rebuilt 390 Ford motor,
$250 39 Chevy Coupe body
$500 Large lighted ad
vert1s1ng stgn on stand
$375
Couch $600
New
dtnette set , 6 c hatrs, $115
304 576 2602

-

61

-- --------

Farm Equtpment

case tra ctor 3 pomt hitch
i!md snow blade Ca ll 4.46
0885 after 5PM

1980 220 MF do esel tractor,
used 221 hrs
also rear
mower wtth tractor All •n
exc cond , $6,700 Call 446
1700
Levestock

63

Reg tstere d Quarter Horse
ftlty,
Regtstered
Ap
paloosa , 4 yrs old and gOOd
b lood lone Call 256 6413, 12
pm to9pm
Good work p ony &amp; harness,
100 bales of ha y, r abb1ts
Call 379 2761
6 calves 2 1/2 to 3 112 week s
old Half Hereford half
Holsteon Call245 5064

64

Hay &amp;

Gra~n

HORSE Feed Spec ial, 100U
$8 95,
January
18 23
Yauger F arm Supply, Rt
35 So uthSide, wv

THIS

Pets for Sate

POODLE GROOMING
Call Judy Taylor at 367
7220
ORAGONWYND
CAT
TERY
KENNEL AKC
Chow
pupptes,
CFA
Hlmala)'an, Perstan and
Stamese ktttens Call 446
38.44 after .4 p m
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boardtng all breeds. clean
mdoor outdoor factl tttes
Also AKC Reg
Dober
mans Call446 7795

---j--------BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boardi ng and groonung
A K C Gordon
sellers,
English Cocker Spaniels
Ca II 388 9190
ACK Reg
b lack male
Labador I 1/ 2 yr old Very
good w 1lh children Call
367 7481
AKC Reg Enghsh Spnnger
Spaniels L1ver &amp; while $85
Ca II 446 8234

AKC Reg . Poodle wormed
&amp; all shots, good wolh
children Call446 7411.
FISh Tank and Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave, Pt.
Pleasanl 675 2063 Mon ,
Thurs., / Fr. 11 to 6 Tues ,
Wed, I Sat 11 lo 4. Check
our Fish Special.

57

Muslc•l
1nstruments

APARTMENT for rent,
$150. per month, 304-675·
1972.

BUNDY Trunpet, e•cellenl
condlllon, $125 00, 304·675·

TWO tM!droom aparlmenl,
hospllal area, excellont
condition, 304-675·1962

ANTIQUE plftyer plano,
electrified, 100 rolls, S400.
phone :J0.4 675·1652

2665

BECAIJGE IT OOES/fT L()(JI(
60011 ON Tie 5CHOOl
ADMIHISTIU\TI ON '5
ltECOIW TO HA\1: TOO
IWlY FAIUHG

1978 INT ERNATIONAL
Scou t , 31,000 mtles, $4,000
phone 304 895 3477
74

ELTOH-COOLD
YOU STEP IH
1£1tE FOR A
~EN'T?

~TUDEMTS!~

Motorcycles

Would like to trade 73 H an
da 750 for lat e model Go ld
1wmg &amp; pay cash dtf
tere nce Cal l 446 9265

7!_ ____ ~'-!!o Repatr _
Oualtty Autobod y &amp; Pa tnt
work
Insura nce work
welcome
Sunroofs tn
sl a lled from 1200$230 Auto
Trom Center, 446 1968
78

Camptng
E u1pment

32 ft , 5 ph wheel trav el
trat ler Dale Ra y Ptn House
model. ltke new, a1r co n
d ttt oned Loaded wtth ex
tras Call 446 1102 after 4 &amp;
weekends or
446 3547
anyttm e

78 Mustang II , 4 cyl mde r.
PB , PS, atr con dtttoner,
new ttres, exce llent co n
dttton Call 4-46 7838 or 446
7447

CAPTA IN STEEMER Car
pe t Clean 1ng featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carq et s Free est tm ates
Ca ll446 2101

78 AMX
6 cyc lt nder
autom atiC AM F M , 40
channel CB
good gas
mil eage Ca ll 446 8122

PAINTING
mte n or and
ex1e r1 or,
;&gt;lumbtn g
root.ng , som e r em odeli ng
20 yrs cx p Call 386 9652

1980 Cutlass Supre m e 1979
Chrysler Cordoba
Both
loaded, exc cond, pn ced to
sell Ca ll446 2109

Call 446 2801 for te rmote,
roach, btrd, rodent , sp tder ,
Free
and fleas cont r ol
esttmates,sB III Thomas

19 Honda C1v 1c 4 spd , AM
FM exc cond , regu la r
gas Ca ll446 0877

RON'S Te lcv tston Servtce
Spec 1altZ 1ng '" Zen tth and
and
M otorola, Qu aza r
hou se ca lls Phone 576 2398
or 446 2454

Auto

for Sale

----

1976 BUtCk LeSabre Wt ll Sell
cheap Ca ll388 9809
1972 votkswagon Super
Beetl e, auto, blue $850
Ca !l446 161 5 or 446 1243

1980 El Cam ono
2784

56

cy l call afler 3 p m 304
1979 FOUR Wheel dnve,
Chevy, lJ.e ton, 4 speed 1979
Volkswagen Rabbit , 2 door ,
4 speed, 304 615 1578 After
3 30 675 1320
•

1977 M ec ury Mar qu e low
mtles, Mt c: helt n t~r es All
opttons Phone 614 446 4406

71

SS

-------

675 3898

1mprovem ents

1969 Dodge Dart, 440 B x ~ .
Automatt c. new en g tr'l e,
m a ny extras $ 1000 614 949
2455

Bu11d1ng Supplies

ISCOMI&gt;JG-

79 DODGE power wagon, 4
wheel dnve, 29,000 m tles 8

ST UC CO PLASTERING
textured ce lltngs com
mc r c1al a nd restdent1al
f r ee es t1m ates Ca ll 256
118 2

ASHLEY
woodburn e r ,
used 2 months, new $250
S185 Wtfh fan &amp; automattc
damper 304 675 2458

Building mfttenals bloc k ,
brtck, sewer pi pes, wtn
dows, lintel s, etc ClaUde
Wtnfers, Rto Grande, 1 0
Call245 5121

MO~NI '-' 6•

-------Home

1969 Plymouth wagon 318
au to 985 4346

_,_

Hl9 COLLAR AND
WHEN "5ATAN" '!ioPEAK!I}
'TH! t&gt;Oe WIL.L. SO TO
WH;;Re THE VOl CE

81

EXCERCISE b1k e, baby
bed, both ltke new , 30.4 67 5
6110

_

50 WE PLANT IT

I~

EQUtPMe;..rr THAT
WA7 PE-LIVIIt&amp;P

1979 K5 Blazer Tra•l en ng
spec ta l, auto trans , a c ,
cru1se con trol, C B , $6,200
book value Wtll sell for
$4,600 992 6537

In t1me for Val entt ne's Day
1/ 4 Carat dtamond s
engagement nng Wtll sell
for S250 00 less !han value.
have wntten appra tsal
Call367 0672

ON E Maytag d,-yer, good
condo loon, SIOO
304 675
48 26

I

1971 VW Van, good famoly
or work van. S900 Call 446
97 48 after 5 or weekends

2 4,000 BTU space heaters
$65 ea , 2 30' gas ranges
avacado &amp; go ld $75 ea , 12
refrtge rator s and 2 dee p
freezer s, 2 G E washers
avacado &amp; gold Skaggs
Appliances, Upper R1ver
Rd , Galltpo lt s, 446 7398

KENMORE dry e r, good
cond1l1on, 195 304 675 2927

Truck's for Sale

1977 Jeep Wagoneer 4
Wheel dr.ve, new mud &amp;
snow t 1res. 56 000 m1les
Phone 388 9334

Forewood S25 load Spill &amp;
stacked Call 388 9700 or
388 9313

G E
refnger a tor, co lor
conso le TV, sofa , lovesea t ,
&amp; c ha tr, coffee and end
tables, G E self c lea ntng
ove n, bedroom su tt, 71
Dodge van 304 675 6750

12

73

Sofa &amp; chatr htgh qual •tv
wtth addtttonal sltp covers
$525 Call446 a263

New Ke nmore washer &amp;
dryer, $485 00 Call 367
0602

22, I

1973 GMC o;, lon, 4 speed
transm1sston . bed rusty,
runs good, S275
ftrm.
phone 304 67 5 2539

For sale one Homeltte
Super XL chatnsaw less
bar &amp; chatn for parts, $60
Call 446 A537

For sa le one dark brown
couch, S75 Ca ll446 4537

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARL YL.E '"

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE II,
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive 51 ,
Galltpolts 3 ptece l tvtng
room suttes $199, maple
rockers $49, se veral chest
of dr awers, new &amp; use d
wood burners, new table
lamps $18.. wood coo k
ranges, new 5 ptece dtnnet
sets $150, k1fchen cab1nets,
severa l dtnnet sets, Sti ver
ston e a ll s•zes, bunk bed s
S100. n e w tools of all k1nds.
wnn ger Maytag washer,
L1nol eum rugs 9xl2 $10,
and lots more

Furn1shed Rooms

responsible person
Pay
utlll ttes Ph 446 7044 bet
ween 9 &amp; 5 Aller 5, 256·

Syracuse
Washer and
Farm. located on Rl 218,40 dryer Deposit required
acres, 1200 lb
tobacco 614 992 3625
base Ca II alter 6. 2A5·9222
One bedroom furni s hed ex
tra nice Ideal for coup le
35
Lots &amp; Acreage
1150 plus ul•lllles and dep
2. 1 acre house lois, on 554, 992·7479
low downpaymenl, land
contract, rural water, Construction
workers
Columbus end Southern !railer for lhree Phone 304·
Electroc Call 256 6•13, 12 773 5651, Mason
p. mto9pm

~1

Ca ll

2 bcl rt trailer, nverfront ,

Homes for Sale

REMODELED 5 roo m
home w1th bath, 2 porches
small
b UIIdm g,
good
heating system and .4 acres
leYel land Should qualify
for Farmers Home loan
with no down paymenl
Only $32,.500.00 Call 30H75
3030 or 675 3.01

Apartment for rent
446 0390

46

1976 Wtnsor l4x70 centra l
a•r and heat, underptnntng , Furntshed, adults only
concrete stepps, storm win· Call 446 ~110
dews W i ll sell unfurnished
or part turn Call 992 2006
For rent furn tshed mobtle
or 992 3401
home four miles out, no tn
s1de pets, pnvate lot, big
TRAILER , Mason C1ly ya rd Call446 3918
Sale or re nt, 304 675·3770

33

-

Ohio

614 742

1975 M erc ury Monarch 6
cy l
3 speed, good gas
m1 1eage, new p atnt , good
t~res Was Sl 250 Now $995
992 5388
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West V~rgmta Over
20 less ex oenstv e ca r s tn
stock
30~

RI NGLES'SSERVICE ex
pcr 1enced mason, roof er
electr 1c tan,
ca rpen•er
qeneral
repatrs
and
remode tmg Phone 304 675
2088 or 67 5 4560
Water we lt s Commercta l
and Oomestt c Tes t holes
Pumps Sales and Serv1 ce
304 895 3801
LOCK SMITH
Serv tce
Res td en t•ftl
automof tve
E m erqency serv tce Call
882 2079
W A NDLI NG
Electnca l
serv 1ce, old wo r k and new
work. small app1 1ances, 24
hour se rvt ce Phone 3C4
675 6663

675 6445

74 CHRYS LER Newpo rt
Custom, wtth 400 motor, no
batfery, body bad $175
.,4 895 3578

1979
CHEVY
MalibU
Classtc, l andau top, 36,000
1noles, $4800,304 675 2508

1968 CHEVELLE, 396
automttlc, good condttton,
$2850 ca ll304 372 9544
72

T,-uck's for Sale

1974 FOR 0 F 250 new stake
bed and dual whee ls Call
256 6&lt;13 , 12 p m fo9 p m

WMtE-""'

FIISNIONS?'HMM ..
AN INlN.IS/'1/ttS

l 0\N E~PECT ON MY INVESTMENT
THIS WEEKEND.•• a+' IffY YACHT;/

~M!X&lt;W

IIEK Ctl+f~Y,

117EA I

III'NNI£trtl'J'!!'S

Eveni~~kvisionUsti~. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EVENINO

'

i!JIMMJ,tr'

' ltj· THOMAS 'JOSEPH

'
ACROSS
441' CagQey film
!Hurt '
DOWN
5 Spellbinder
1 Permit
11 Tv's Norman 2 Hold off

IZ Irinate
3 Monkey with
13 Volcanic spew 4 Memorable
14 Set
tJme
Intervals
5 At reduced
15 F;WJ 'ol
prices
8 Engrossed
1 (SUfllx)
II Sliltiiiner
7 Strain
17 Swnalian
- knat
' &lt; '
~pe
8 Grease
18
'!tie IU.nd
oai'nlvore
9 S:, the
:ze seafood •
'

at

L

sm.u

.

I

Vesterday•s Auwer

ZO Wrongly
~Chinese
23 City In
civet
Florldll
3G Twi&gt;l
Zl Optimistic
3Z MemZS "The Prince
brane
and th e - "
35 Exclama ·
!8 Famous
lion
American
,38 E ntreat

Excav_aJtng

Galltpolts Dtvers t ft~d Con
sf Co Cust om dd'zer &amp;
brtckhoe work
Spectf\1
farm rat es Ca ll us for free
est •matcs 446 4440
84

78 _Monza , V 8, $2200
automatoc, 304 576 2971

Pl umb.ng
&amp; Hea tmg __

CAR T ERS PLUMBING
AND HEA TING
Cor F ourth and P tne
Phone 446 3888 or 446 4477
83

1970 FORD Fa1rlane .500,
$600 304 675 2508

AA IAITEKESTIN6 IDEA ! WE'LL
DISCUSS WHAT KIND QF AH/ZIIIW

F &amp; I&lt; Tree T,-tmm.ng
stump re m ova l 615 1331

82

73 NOVA,

AN INVES TMENT
IN WINNIE WINKLE

Electncat
&amp; Relnger a h on

SEWI NG Mach me repa1rs.
serv tc e Autho r tzed S tn ~er
Sales &amp; Scrv1ce 1 Sharpen
Sctssors
F abnc
Sho p
Pom eroy 992 2274

JACKS REFR IGERATIO
N atr cond•t•on sen.1ce,
commercia l
tndustnal
P hone 882 2079
Gcncr!_l Jia~~ng_

WANTED TO BUY a Late
Model 2 lon truck llafbed
or cab and chassis Ph 446
4782

BS

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE Call 367 7471 or
367 059 1

DAILY 1CaYPTOQUOTE

78 Dodge D 150 P ICk Up, ~
wheel drtve, 32,000 miles
W1th camper top, In ex
cellenl cond Call ~46 · 750~.

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; l1mest0(1e for dnveways
~a ll for es,tma tes 367 71 01

One lelter simply standi for anoth er In this aample A ll
uied•f0r"' the l lhreef1L's, X ,for the two Ot, etc Single letters.
lpostrP.Phes: th i •lenath 01 nd fof m'atlon of t he ~o rds are 111
hUttl' Eath day' (he code. letters are dirrerent

1978 Ford F ·250, 4 wheel
drive wllh lock out hubbs,
sliding back glass, new
14x35x15 tires on mag
wheels wilh 4 In loll kit
Call367-0478.,. 367 7534 .

2772.

I

- Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXII
II , LONGF£J, LOW

s?::_~ __ :upho ~-le r_y ­
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec Ave , Galltpolts
446 7833 or •46 1833
- - - - -!....---~~~-~

1972 Dump !ruck, F600
Ford, exc cond. 53,000 992

I
I

MOWREYS Uphol stery Rl
I Bo• 124, Pt Pleasa nt, 304
675·41 54

CIIYPTOQVOT£8
EBQZ

·M

M WDQF

KMZ
OQM FJ

• BQ
'
U Q F W Q G"D' P 'A Z,

DBMD

J: -

I'KMVPZQ.J .
AW

BMJ

8 p J

QNQZ

JDF'PNPZ V ,

MDDMPZQ!.

LQG l f!Z Q

• H,Q \V· P 'z
D B Q A J, A F Q
.K M F D P Z
• Ya~'l 'ernce.uote: ALL , GENEJRAUZATIONS ARE
1, • D~~ROU~i EVEl'nliiS ONE - 0,\)MAS•THE YOlJliiGER

�•
Pag&amp;- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middlepo:t, Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) · - A
cern Is about people giving ()ut Ingang described by pollee as very
formation," Dalley said . "'The
well organized Is controlUng a do(four) people who were killed were
zen bars, lnvQlved with drugs and
not outsiders. "
'
prostitution and suspected In four
Dalley saki the gang controls 12
kllllngs, an official says.
taverns a nd Is lnvolved.ln prostltU·
Columbus pollee have been In·
tlon. fe ncing stolen mercrufndlse,
vestlgatlng the gang for about a
selling narcotics, motor vehicle
year, d uring which· time It has ex·
thefts and pornography sales.
panded Its a ctivities, said Lt. Dave
He told The Columbus Dispatch
Dalley, commander of the depart·
the ga ng Is "the largest a nd most
ment's organized crime u nit.
da ngerous organized-crim e groJIP
"We're talking about a highly soIn the area."
phisticated organization that'll do
. The Investigation came to light
anything to make a buck," Dalley
earller this week. whe n Da lley test!·
said 'Thursday. He said the Investifled before a state legisla tive comgation Is continuing.
mittee that Is conside ring tougher
Pollee estimate a bout 350 people • clim e legislation.
•
may be Involved with the gang. It
He said the gang Is run by a peroperates In Columbus, Franklin
son whom he referred to only as the
County and possibly more of cen''boss. ' '
tral Ohio, Dalley said. ·
Dalley said the ga ng Is rna&lt;¥! up
No a rrests have been made beof "everything from the boss to the
cause o! a lack of evidence. Dalley
guys who sweep the floor." 'That
said some potentlal ln!ormants a nd
includes go-go dancers, bartendwitnesses have been Intimidated
e rs. thieves. drug pushers a nd e nInto keeptog quiet.
forcers, he a dded.
" 'Their (the gang's) ml!ln con·
Dalley said the ga ng has ga ined

Charle~

Area deaths
A. Jeffers

Charles A. Jeffers. 85, Mason,
died yeslerday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Nov. 20, 1896 In Hende rson.
he was the son or tho&gt; la te Charles
and Anne Clonch Jeffers. He Is preceded In death by his wile, J essie A.
Jeffers who died In 1970.
He was a truck dnve r a nd a
member of the VFW Post 9926 of
Mason and Srnlth-Capehart Post
140 In New Haven. He was a veteran of World War I.
Surviving· hbn are two daugh·
ters, Clara Lewis and Wilda Van·
Meter , Mason; two spns, Homer
Jeffers, CU!ton and David Jeffers,
Mason; a half-sister, E r ma Clonch,
At!Mins. Ohio; 10 grandchildren; 13
great-gra ndchlldren and one great·
great.grandchUd.
Fune ra l services wlll be held Saturday at 1 p.m: at Foglesong Fun.era I Home. . Revs. J a mes Lewis
and Lester Va nMeter will officiate.
Bunal will be held at Concord
Cemetery .. Military gravesldei1Ies
will be conducted by VFW P ost 9926
and Smlth-Capehart Post 140.
Fnends may ca ll the funeral
home today between 5-9 p.m .

Marie Young
Mrs. Ma n e Young, 66, 532 West
Main St., Pomeroy, died Fnday
morning at Ve terans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs.Youngwas a da ughlerofthe
late Charles and Lydia Roush Mor·
al1ty. She was also preceded In
death by a brother, Arthur, a nd a
half-sister, Allee Trail .
Surviving are her husband, Cllf·
ford E. Young, Sr. ; a son, Clifford
E. Young, Jr .. Athens; a grandson.
Michael E. Young , Athens; a sls·
ter. Mrs. Josephine Bolinger,
Pomeroy; a brothe r, Lawrence
(Pete) Morarlty, Pome roy, a nd
several nieces a nd nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Monda y at the Ewing Funeral
Horne with burial to be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends may ca ll
at the funeral home a nytime after
10 a .m . Saturday .

Marlene Welch
Ma rlene Welch, 39, Coolv 'lc. died
Thursda y a t Doctors Hospital,
Colwnbus, following a n extended
illness.
ville
Mrs.the
Wedaughter
lch was born
of at
MaReedsrgaret
J3rawley Weslfa U; Reedsville, a nd
the la te VIrgil Westfall. In addltlon
to her father she was preceded In
death by one daughter. Sabnna.
Besides her mother, survivors In·
e lude her husband, Larry Welch; .
three sons, Mike and Steven at
home and James who Is stationed
tn North Carolina with the U.S. Ma·
rtnes; one daughter. Tainrny a t
horne; three sisters, Sylvia ~ausey
and Judy Horner both of Reedsville ..
and Linda Smeeks, Coolville; three
brothers . J ack Westfall, Reedsvllle; Eugene Westfall, Long Bot. tom and Roger Westfall, Belpre.
FUneral' services will be held Sun- i
day al l p.m . at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville, with the Rev.
Robert Markley officiating. Bunal
will be In Chl1stlan Church Cern.,.
tery, Tuppers Plains. Fne nds may .
call at the fune ral hOme after l p.m.
Saturday.

Robert Roberts
Robert (Bob) Roberts, 71, well·
knoWn Pomeroy retired school
teacher, died Friday morning at ,
the Holzer Medical Center In GaJU- .
polts following a brief Illness.
Mr. Roberts was proba bly one of
the most popular teachers In the
history of Pomeroy schools. He was
held Ln the highest regard by students over the years as well as parentS and school patrons. He was a
sports enthusiast and wits named·.
" manoftheyear" a couple of years

a go by the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.
He wass born Oct. .20, 1910, a son
o! the la te Cora Ha nnum and William G. Roberts.
He was a lllelong resident of
Meigs, County a nd a graduate o!
Ohio University. ·He had been a
teacher tor 36 years before his
retirement.
Surviving a re his wife, Nonga
F leming Robens; two sons, Robert
F . Roberts, Uniontown, a nd MIchael G. Robens, Ne wa rk; four
granddaughters, a grandson; a
brother, Grant Robens, Point Pleasant, and two great nieces In this
area, Maureen Hennessy, Ga llipolis, and Bernadette Ande rson,
Pomeroy.
.
·
'
Mr. Robens was a member of
the Masonic Lodge and the Gre.:n
a nd White Club of Ohio University.
In lieu of flowe rs, fne nds m ay
contribute to the Meigs County
Heart Association. Graveside IileS
wiD be conductro by the E wing
Fune ral Home.
Cremation will follow .

.

Sunday concert
The Sy~cuse Church of the Nazarene wlll present the Royabnen
Qua rtet In concert a t 6 p.m . Sunday
a t the church. The Rev. James Kit·
tie, pastor, invites the public.

The ·

control of the 12 bars pl1mal1ly
through Intimidation. Businessmen
who refused to sell have been threatened a nd bea ten, he said. Some
bars were set on fire, a nd the gang
Is suspected In several arson cases,
he added.
Oatley said detectives estimate
the gang leader a nd hls top associates a re raking in $750,!XXI a year.
While emphaslzlng he COuld not
provide some details because the
lnvestlga tlon Is proceeding, Da lley
told The Associated P ress that the
gang's operations have been
growing.
"We first becam e aware of them
In the past couple years," he said.
" We didn't reallze how fast they
were expanding.' '
Descrlblng the gang as " a typical
kind of organlzed-cnrne group not the Matta," Dalley said the Investiga tion Is proving difficult
because actual ownership of the
tave rns Is carefully hidden.
"The people at the top don' t have
their n.,_m es on anythin ~. " he said.

By LARRY EWING
nmea s·nttneJ Staff
G AU.IPQLIS : News from the
Associated Press was received by
llli!IDber papers of the O)]lo Vafiey
Publlahlng Co. - Including the Galli·
polla Dally Tribune, Point Pleasant
Register, 'The Dally Sentinel and
The Sunday Times-Sentinel - this
In GalUpoUS via a new transmlsslon path throiJgh space.
I&lt;elth Fuller, president of AP,
congratulated OVP tor belnjl an
early user of space age communications technology. "In live years
we aU may look back on this event

weeli

BENGAL RALLY - Severdl hundred Cincinnati
Bengal fans held a noon hour rally In Fountain Square
Thun;day to show their support for the Bengals who
play the San Francisco t9ers Sunday in Super Buwl

Fees collecled in Meigs Ccunty
Court in 1981 totaled $102,216.44 ac·
cording t o Betty Hobstetter, clerk .
Fees were distributed as follows:
fines to state, $34,360,33 ; R&amp;R Fund ·
(restituti oin to criminal assault ,
etc.), $!;,870.
Fines and co:-·•.s to county: sheriff
fees, $2,324.89; general fund ,
$26,124.37 ; law library fund,
$15,292 .55 ; auto license and gas fund ,
$10,763.86. Small claims collected
totaled $7,8441.44.
There were 1,559 crimina l cases
filed , 152 civil cases, and 101 sma ll
d aim civil cases .
'

Vol. 15 No. so

,Today's T-S

COAT and JACKET SALE

. ·•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8

ELB ERFE LOS IN POMEROY

!~~~:::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Lebanon
1
Tuppers
andbe the
Township Plains
area will
presented
by I·
James J ennings Associates, Colum·
bus. Election of officers will he held. ·

Veterans Memorial

Super Bowl

preview, page C-1

AoP.Ro .

INTEREST

BAUM'S TRUE
VALUE

we'll put
you in·Dr.J's.

Shoest

Converse All Star® P.ros:
Worn by more players
than any other shoe.
In leather, canvas,
or mesh.

This could very well be the best time to purchase that
. car or truck of your choice at a tremendous savings of
several hundred $$$, on any new car or truck of your
choice.

1982 Chevrolet Chevette Scooter·4 Dr.
S5590.64 LIST PRICE
600.00 DOWN .PAYMENT
S4990o64 ~r~::g: 'f8 mu.1

WITH APPROVED CREDIT
AND DOWN PAYMENT

•

bortion nn•tes:ts:l
pro-, anti-,_D-1

PER
MONTH

•

We're pulrmg out the stops to bring our customers .;,hat.
they need, to make purchasing a car or truciJ affordable
again. Don't walt till spring, don't miss out on 12.5%
A.PoR. Interest •

Only at Simmons, depena on ... YOUR.DEALER ON THE . .
R.IVER .... for high quality, excellent service, and flexi-:
b1llty to meet
your needs.
•

SIMMON'S OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
.
.
. -CHEVROLET, INC.
0

308 E. MAIN ST.
Mbn.·Fri. 8

to 6

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992-6614
(Anytime By

ot communication

COIIJ. '
'"Jbe 8iOlY of thla tecllnoloiY,"
UYI AP Director ot Commllnlca·
!Ioiii David Bowell, "Ia that •llnllt
tranlrnllllcD from the utelllte cu
all5,10Q AP DeWipapers &amp;lid
broadcuten. Dlatance and loca·

cover

tlon becorne lrrelev~L "
I (CODtlnued dn A-4)

ID SoctiDftl, 1D Pogn U Ctlltl
AMUitlmtclll Inc. Nows.,....,.

Sunday, Jan . 24, 1982

Area meat packi'lg house reOpens
purc~sed

the plant early this
scene late last year. 'The A &amp; P store ors have been c~ulatlna OII ,Jbe
taat week 110 cb&amp;JJ8e of o·Wllllll'llllf.
month for an ........losed amount.
on Second Avenue closed Its doors - ·1blllly of another atore _..._ has been flied with. tha codt
GALJ:.IPOLIS ...: Call it a case of The firm has
plartts, he
In nlld·December, and while rumuie buJidlna, city
lilroemeat otflce.
· ·
bounc!ng'back from the recession:
added.
a major Galllpolla a~ business
When they get underway, the
reopens Monday.
manager said the firm wW seU Its
French City Meats, under new
llama, 118~ 8ftd weiner products
ownerslilp, has l!l!&amp;ln taken up resilocally, and he ~xpects the plant to
dence Ln Its Telias Road plant and
do more buying and slaughtering of ·
accOrding to the firm's officials,
cattle.
will shoot tor tu11 production.
Pyles ·sald there Is a Umlt on the
"We Intend io service as many
amount of meat which can be
local retailers as possible,'' saki
bought at the plant. NearlY all or Its .
plant manager Larry Pyles, who
business Is done through delivery.
wttli almost au of hla previous work
The plant's buying otrlce wlll be
Ioree began work last week getting
open Monday through Friday and
the facWty ready.
untll noon saturday. At this stage,
'The plant was closed in early DePyles said all of the ex-Landmark
cember after Its owners, Landemployees at the plant have been '
m&amp;.rk, decided to consolldale Its
rel.;.-ed, and they are taking appll· food operations lor ~uthem Ohio
cattons tor people Wtth elq)l!i'lence
out of Its Marietta base. 'The stateIn lieet boning and slaughtering of
wide farm cooperative had OWlled
animals.
the plant sinCe 1972 and hoped at the
The firm Ia also looking at buying
closing would streamline Its
hogs, but )he posslbUlty Ia In the
service.
talking stage now, Pyll1s advlaed.
Pyles, who managed the plant for
Founded as the Evans -Packing
Landmark, sa,ld at the Ume there • Co. In 1937 and for many yean one
were no Immediate planS to do anyot Gallla County's major lndu- .
. thing with the plant. .T he closing put
trieS, all equipment ln·t lle plan\ wu
approximately 50 people OU:t of
Intact when employees returned to
work last Monday. Pylell, Who has
• work and forced local supermarkets and restaurants to look for
been with the firm tor17years, said
anothi!r meat wholesaler.
there are no planS to add 'any new
However, Pyles saki last week
equipment to the facility, as reBA&lt;JK TO WORK- Laveme ._.,., JU.I, 011» · . _ pa c I a.. Ill* weell. AbouiM peoplewfllll _;
bttera to buy the plant came In after
ported
hy
WSAZ-TV
last
pou.
(left) .... Marprel ..... Ia. .. c - CIIJ,
blldllo ........ _ . .... the pleat wDI Napa~ fw '
Wednesday.
the closing, aDd KM Meats, Co_vlngFreach
Qty Mota _...,_ Idled .... llle pleat
t
I 'Ma.IIQ.
'
ton, Ky., a meat producer serving
The closing of the }llant was one
ciO.ed Ia December, are- '-d&lt; oa the Job Clllbe
the trt-state rreglon since the 1880s,
of two blows to the local. bu.stness

;,~thet

otfJM;,;~

r.;t;;'"

Continuation of Meigs Food
Co-op se..Vices threatened

DON'T WAIT

#191

atablllzatloll

tmts

Cites apathy as problef!l

With' Approved Credit For A LIMITED TIME ONLY

~Y'....,..

rooma,lt lmllledlateJy~re- .
liability &amp;lid quallty ot receptlorlal
well u COIItrlbute to a ..,.lflrlllt

I

(LOCAL BANK FINANCING)

. i-..t-~

aae technolciY$rectlytothe-

•

•

Middleport·Pomerov- Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

By KEVIN II.EUY

Select Any Coat or Jacket for Men and Boys
Children
Girls' Sizes, Junior Sizes and
Women's and Save One Half - Good Selecti'on
Available
·

omces

teleiJMten.
.
Tfle i)'stem DOt llnly brlllp ..,_

•

Tline• SRMI11t'l Staff

Y2 PRICE

A final reportproject
on the housing
im·
plementation
in Racine,

m.

phone landUIIes llll!d up uila time
for DeWI dlltrlbutloll.
~
Under tile plan, dabl SIINII ortctnated at AP headq~ In New
York City 80 llrst to an "upilnk"
ea!1h sbltlon owned byWestenl Un·
Jon In Glenwood, N.J . Tiley are
tnuwnltted up to tile Ntelllt.e,
wlrlch relaya !bern back to eertllln
a broad cone of l!llelliY wblcb CO\'•
ers the enUre Untied States.
Here In G.llllpolls tile Blpala are
captured In the anleunit mounted at
the OVP
at 825 'I1IIrd A'fie.,
and converted into the electnmlc
pulses wlllcb drive computers drd

(

'

The annual meeting of the Meigs
County Regional Pla nning Commission will be held a t 3: 10 p.m.
Monday in .the conference room of
the Fanne rs Bank Building .

and reallze the AP sateWte Olstl1butl.on Syslem marked the start of a
dramatlc new era In communica1
tions," Flitter said.
'
The event referred to was the
first otllclal reception of DataSpeed
signals relayed to OVP from
Westar
a communlcatl0118 sateWte In gtlOStatlonary, 11)111Chronous orbit 22.:m miles above the
equator.
AP and Its member newspapers
· are constructtni! 90Q earth stations,
each consisting ot a dish antellllll ot
10-loot diameter • and associated
electronics - to replace the tele- .

0 .

Copyrighted 1912

Jobs ...

.

ttttba

XVI. Some of the Bengal players recorded messages
played a t the raliy. The messages promised their fans
a Super Bowl victory. (AP Laserphoto ).

ELBERFELD$

Annual meeting set

rr1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-i~[

news

Space age· technol~gy e~ters the newsroom

Court collections
total $1 02,216o44

Actmltted ..Gerald Congo, Long
.. Bottom; Oneida Ward, Pomeroy;
Eva Lawson, Racine.
(Continued from page I)
Dlsc harged.. Me llssa Priddy,
pie may no longer be state ernMandy HW, Roy Armes, Mane
Dudding .
piQ)iees, but' wiD be still be working
tn the field·of mental retardation.
Any GDC employees willing to . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
relocute can apply for jobs at the
two new centers, the official said.
A final decision on staff cuts Is to
be made by Zbnrnerman and the
department's regional commls·
JOHNSON'S
stoner.
Normand
Tremblay.
ENERGY
Tremblay previously worked In ad·
ministration at GDC.
D¥r1ng a visit to the Guiding
Hand School In Cheshire last Qc.
Iober , Magnone Indicated the leglsla ture had cut the proposed level of
funding In the 1982·83 budget and
his staff was lobbying to get the
funding restored.
, .
bun~ing addlltlon to
Ohio's continuing money probyour existing furnace, att·
lems coupled with reduced client
ached to your duct wolk.
load a t GDC resulted In 14 job abollshments last May. In an effort to
985-3301
prevent layoffs, shifts were frozen
CHESTER. OHIO
a t the center In December 1!9&gt;.

.:
...

Friday, January 22, 1982

•

Police disclose gang probe

I

·-

J

Sat.

Winter storms hit

U.S., page D-1
Area deatlll ......... A-8
S.illf'll .......... ·.. D-2
~ed ·

......... ~7
FAIIWial . • • . • . • • . . A·W
Farlll • . • . • . . . • . . . . . 1).3 '
Ufestyle ...... ~ ... B-1-1
~ ••••••••••. •• A.W
StJte-NatioDal • • • • • • • Dol

st:Jiiill ·········'··· C..H

T~

... . .... IMJit

By CHARLENE HOEn.JCH
Tlm&amp;Sentluelataff
POMEROY Continu e d
operation of the Melga County Food
C(H)Jl is threatened because of
apathy of residents as well as
possible eviction from the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center, the
.distribution point since Its lnC!lptlon
tliree years ago.
'A decline in participation In the
primary concern, according to the
Rev. Robert Robinson, social concerns chainnan of the Cooperative
Pariah of Methodist Churches In
Meigs County, who has charge of the
Food eo.q, operation .
The minllter cited a time· when
about 100 orders were received on an
every-other·weeJ&lt;. basis to now when
less than 50 co-op members order.
, At ·the same time when par·
tlclpants are decjining, Allee W8Jll8ley, the co-ot1 financial director, has
resigned effective in March, and advised the Meigs County Food Co-Op
by letter the " Melp County Senior
Citizens Center will not be available
for the 'Food Co-op deliveries ef·
fectlve at the end of March, 19112. "
Head of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program at the Senior Citizens
Center, Mrs. W&amp;llllley reports the
responsibility for taking and
processing the orders and handling
the dlatrlbutlOIII of the JBCk and bulk
orden " takes too much of her. time
· as well u
staff ll)embers, and
as long as the center iB. used, the
llaH Will get the work...
I
Sbe noted she's spent between '10
and 15 hours each month In food co-

of ,the county's senior citizens
program, and she advised that ihe
center can continue to be used as
distribution point "If ;rwork Ia done
by other than staff people.
"The facility may be used; the
staff cannot," was the chalnnan's
response to a question about the
earlier letter which said the "Melp
COI.inty Senior Citizens ~nter wlU
not be available for the Food C&amp;-Op
delivenes · effective at the end of

a

then was moved to the new county·
owned building when It opened.

It's stated purpose Is to provide
nutrltiOWJ, low-cost food to the
people of Meigs County regardl'l&amp;'l Of
age, race, sex, martial status,
religion or income.
The co-op is operated by a committee composed of Vemon Nease,
executive director; MUdred lhle,
memberslp illrector; Mrs . \famsley, financial director; Paullne
Marcl!,1~."
Roush, publicity director; and her·
The co-op wu established In late bert (rete) Shields, transportation .
19'18 when the Senior Citizens Center director, who work directly with
was still In the fonner Pomeroy . Robinson.
.
(Continued on D-2)
Junior High Scboo1 bulldtng, lnd

News briefs...

··

M't~$t
kev to relief
.·
BL
N, Oblo- A former Wblte HOU.te aide says thenatlon'a :

blacltl ahould imderstand that their economiC future Ilea In aettlni '
back tO the Inner cities.
·
"I believe we have to look at IIIII u a matter of 1Urvlval not only
tor cities, but tor blacltl," aald Nathaniel Fleldl, a jlOIIcy analylt In
,
President Carter's admlnlatratloll.
Fields, a 1971 BJumoD CoiJete lflduat.e, made the C911UT11mta ·:
during the school'• annual Black Empbula Week thla wee~~.
"We (blackl) ~ not relpOIIIIble tor belne down, but we are
respollllble tor aett1n1r up,'' the econGmllt said.
';
'
•
rn00ey

S~~~ObloEP~:!~flcholaottheOhloEnYir·.
ProtectloD

onrnental
Aaency uYI theltat.eWIIlaetabollt~.cmtn · •
tederal fund&amp; to Cl!ftllllete.clean up of ooe of four hazarduua wut.e ·
lai'OQIII near ~t.
·
,
' ·
He aald Frlday' dle U.S. EPA earlier reported Incorrectly that
Ohio would aet S3110,00l for the work.
Nicholl said the fllnda wiD be llll!d to cap La&amp;oon No. 4. It ia the ·
laf8l!l( of lour, emptied ot Wiler &amp;lid COIItaminated on.

odee: Ohio needs muodens

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov. June~ A. Jfi'.Jde..YIIIate and local
.,..ctalllllould provide 111111 tor Obloeu to plant prdena on diii'IDal

cummt dlfrlcult economic &lt;times.

the put, thele have been caJiecl 'victory prdenJ,• but here In

"""'-'··- are IOina to clwJ&amp;e that IIUile to 'national debt' Cardms .
~~ule· that will better symboll2le Jbe rneu the federalpernment
hal placed thla country In," Rboclel aald Friday.
·
He laid be bu liked hla cabinet to IW'Vt!y llate land aulblble tor ·
p1ant1nc and that be planl to ull:: mayon &amp;lid other munlclpal om- ·
claJ. to take similar IIepa. •
'

lfher

OJlwork·

I

So, u · Robinson 111ld tn · an

necutive meeting which fo1Jowin8
the Tbunday dlatrlbutlon of orders,
the " Melili eo.q, not only facea the
problem of decllnlntl putlctpaUOn,
but locating a new dlatrlbatlori

point"
lloftver, when cont.cted Friday
momlnl, the Rev. Robert MeGee,
ciUma 01 the Melp County Council Gil A81DI. aid ..
been In COD'

w

tact with m.Jior ~director

I

Col~

,.....,... ,. ~~;d

...lie

bJ Mefp c ll••ll Gl'dodl£.
t 1 a 1111 JII'IPII!I'• .......
aliap.,
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awll.-.lllllnii*IIII ...... C ltadllllfallles-lelllle
'C!Hf'IGI MIN
Ill 1 M •1 5\ llllleClHpll.,_to_.
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to tile Oral Llllel-, ...... tile Na'lk........ to . . . . . . ta :

acatelaCII Ill ... Net I lllllel•lciUt ..... ll....y.tlll..: ;
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l'lldlle Nw•w at .. ••• M1 . . far wtlw11 Fllrldl. CAP LM~i- :

........

.

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