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Page

10- T~ Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, January 25, 1982 ·

Uneinployment office
at Pomeroy to close

Icy spot may have ·c aused
plane to plunge into water
.
.

•

BOSTON (AP ) A World AirWays
1)(;- 10 that plunged Into shallow
water a¢ cracked In two might
have skidded on a sUck spot as It
landed In Icy rain, according to an
airline offlctal and some or the :liE
people aboard. But an airport spoltesman said the runway was

walked past us. and he was saying,
'I coUldn't stop the plane, I couldn't
stop the plane,': said Jeffrey Carr, a
college student from Attleboro,
Mass. "He was In a total state ot
shock.''

Passenger Debra Carr of Sand·
wlch reported the runway . was
"safe".
"sheer, smooth lee, justllkeaskat·
Federal offices, Investigating the lng rink" as she walked from the
wreck.
third jetliner accident In bad
weather In two weeks, say weather
"My lnlormatlon Is the plane hit
and runway conditions at Logan In· an Icy sllck and skidded. But that's
ternatlonal Aiqlort wUl be among what the National Transportation
the prtme focuses of the Inquiry Into Safety Board Is 1rylng ID find out,"
the crash Saturday night or Fllght World AirWays spokesman Ml·
30.
chael Henderson said.
No one was kUled or seriously In·
Patricia Goldman ot the safety
jured when the plane splashed Into board. who Is heading a lO.meljlber
Boston Harbor, althougli lour peer Investigative team, said, "Weather
· pie remained hospltallzed today, In· conditions and the airport's decicludlng - the pUot. The 196 sion to operate Is a key area we'~ be
passengers and 12 crew members looking at. WewUlbeconcentratlng
scratnbed down emergency chutes. on the runway environment and the
and waded through waist-deep weather."
water.
. Officials from the Massachusetts
"A pllot or co-pilot, stu~ned. ' Port Authority, which operates the

airport, said runways had been
plowed and sanded, and said : ther
jets landed _safely.
"The runway was open and operational. As tar as we're concerned,
It was safe," said Patrtck Moscarl·
toto, a port authority spokesman.
Pilot Peter Langley, :;4, who wa:;
thrown Into the water, was In good
condition alter being treated tor hypothermia, cuts and bruises.
Co-pllot Donald Hertzteldt, 38,
was released alter being treated for
exposure. "I'm all right, but! really
don't care to talk about It,'' he said'
Sunday by telephone from his hospital room.
The jet remained In the ley ocean
water today, Its tall on land and the
severed cockpit dangllng from the
body. The fuel was l!llloaded, but
otflclals had not decided when or
how to remove the aircraft.
The cockpit voice recorder and
the tllght data recorders were due
to arrive In Washington today tor
lab analysis, said NSTB spokesman Robert Buckhorn.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The Pomeroy Job Service Office of
the Ohio Bureau of EmplO)'Illent
Services is one of :n across the slate
scheduled to be closed within the
next 90 days.
Albert G. Giles, bureau ad·
minlstrator, announced the closings
Monday noting that cuts are needed
due to a redu.;tion in federal spending. He said. IIIey are necessary
despite the state's 12.5 unemployment !~vel ·because of
congresaional bul!get cuts whi~h
require the agency to trim 15 million
in ellpenses for the current year.
' Earlier the bureau had announeoo
layoffs of 325 employes over the
• state. Giles n«!ted It will take 30 to 00

•

days to settle lease arrangements
for the offices which will be closed.
He said layoffs will affect personnel
in all divisions and offices including
the Central Office in Colwnbus.
Contacted Monday afternoon,
Edith Adldns,.who has charge of the
Pomeroy office, said she had no official notification of the Impending
closing. She reported one person had
been laid off earlier and a second
person who worked on a half-time
basis was rio longer coming into the
Pomeroy Office.
Meigs County was without a fulltime employment office for many
years. Representatives fl'&lt;lll the
Gallipolis office came twice a week
to confer with claimants and job

e
Voi.30,No. 199

Separate area traffic accidents
resulted In two lnj uties over the
weekend, according to the GalllaMetp Post ol the state highway
patrol.
The patrol said Richard L. HUI,
26, McArthur, was northbound on
Ohio 346 In Meigs County at 6: 10
p.m. Saturday when the rear
wheels on his vehicle locked, causIng the vehicle to overturn.
The vehicle was severely dam·
aged, and HUl was .)alten to O'Bleness Memorial HoSPital, Athens,
where he was later treated and released for race, ·neck and arm cuts.
According to the report, Allcla A.
Feustel, 18, Eureka Star Route, lost
control ol her vehicle on an ley
stretch of Bob McCormack Road,
nine-tenths of a mile south of Ohio
160, at lla.m. Sunday and struck an
embankment.

....__.,. .,

Feustel was taken to Holzer Med·
teal Center by private vehicle,
-where she was treated and released
lor bruises. Hervehlclewasmoder·
ately damaged.
In other accidents over the weekend, the patrol said 'Arthur L.
Mlller; 55, Rutland, was north·
. bound' on Ohio 7 In Meigs County at

·7:17a.m. Saturday when his vehl·
cle sideswiped a southboun.d auto
driven by Sandra F. Peck, 29, Mid·
dleport, 'causing moderate damage
ID both vehicles. MOler was cited
lor lett of center.
Troopers sald a vehicle driven by
Brenda K. Unroe, 24, Eureka Star
Route, was pulllng from a parking
lot on Ohio 7, four-tentha of a mile
north ot Ga 011a County Rd. 15, at

7:16p.m. Saturday when she struck
a parked vehicle owned by BU!y
White Jr.. Rt. 1, Crown City.
Her vehicle then continued
across the road and struek another
parked auto owned by Harvey
Wells, Rt. 1, Cl'PWil City, causing
moderate damage ID her auto and
Wells' vehicle, and slight to the
White vehicle. Unroe was cited for
!allure to·use caution.

Youth ·faces charges
LODI, Ohio (AP) -A 14-year-old
Loci! youth saki·he kllled a 12-yearold with his father's .44-caUber
Magnum handgun alter an argument over a cigarette, pollee reported today.
Carl Sbultz, a sixth grader at
Loci! Elementary School, was pronounced dead at Lodl Community
Hospital about noon Saturday alter
emerg'ency efforts to revive him
talled.
Pollee said he had been shot
twice In the chest. He also was shot
In the shoulder, arm and stomach,
according to Medina County Cor-

. POMEROY - The annual
meetlng of the Fanners Bank and
Savings Co. was held recently at the
bank. Theodore T. Reed Jr. reported
the hank again enjoyed a profitable
year and deposits hsve -reached a
newhi~h.

Directors re-elected were :
Theodore T. Reed Jr., Thereon John·
aon, Paul G. Eich, Leslie F. Fultz,
Fred W. Crow Jr., Ben H. Ewing,
Dr. Fred R. Carsey Jr., Richard C.
Follrod and Fennan E. Moore.
The followin~ officers were also
re-elected: Reed, pre~ldent; Paul E.
·Kloes, vice president and secretary ;
·Roger W. Hysell, cashier; Jon P.
Karschnik, assistant cashier; Joanne J. Williams, assistant cashier;
Evelyn G. Lanning, assistant
cashier and·Addie W. Norris, loan of.
ficer.

Funds received

Meets tonight
The OH KAN Coin Club wtU meet
this evening In the River Boat
Room at Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.
All members are .requested to at·
tend. Plans for the annual coin
show ID be held on March 14, at the
Holiday Inn, Galllpoplls wUl be
made.
·
A JO.lot coin auction w1l) be held
following the meeting. Out ot IDwn
coin dealers wUl be present at 7
p.m. Reln)Shments wUl be setved.
Persons Interested In coins or
paper money are welcome to
attend. -

Veterans Memorial
Saturday
Admitted: Helen Sayre, Minersville; Benjamin Batey, Middleport.
Discharged: Everett Caldwell,
Charles Mace, Aaron CM.\mp,
James Mole.
Sunday

SATELLrl'E DISH- Kevin Hudaon (left) and Dan

Munn, technicians with 111e "-'~&amp;ted p...,.. rnalnt&amp;

118DCi! depariment Ill Columbua, adllllt 111e llllteiUte
dl8b at llle Oblo V aDey Publlahlng Co. plaut 1u Galll-

Teacher chosen
for presentation

Ivery

'tile Pomeroy'Mlddieport LJons ,
Club wtU meet Wednesday noon at •
the Meigs Inn.
All .Uons are
asked to attend.

,,

Fire .damages rolling
mlll
.
RAVENSWQ9D, W.Va~ -AIIrehasextenslyelydamagedaroUing
mUl at the Kaiser Aluminum plant, officials say.
John Celto, a Kaiser spokesman, said Monday's lire started In a
mUl· that was under construction, and damaged l)lro nearby mllls.
'I'IIllllre apparently started whlle some construction workers were
using a welding torch In the basement ot the fabrication atea o! the
· plant.
According ID a news release Issued Monday by Kaiser's Oakland,
Calif: office, production was stopped on two CO!J)-rolllng mUis and
.there was water damage to a five-stand and two-stand mUl.
Ripley Fire Department reported workers were evacuated from
the area when the lire Ignited. 'rhe tire department repoi'ted the
main fire was In the basement and three teet ol water had tllled that
· area as a result o! water sprayed to extlnqUlsh lt.
Aside from Ripley, Ravenswood, CottagevUle and Sllverton !Ire
departments responded to the biaze.
Kaiser offlctals did not have an Immediate estimate of the value ol
J!!t~ll!mlace causect by_the tire.

CHILDREN;$
.KNIT ACCESSORIES
GLOVES .
TOBOGGANS
KNIT HATS
SCARVES
MlnENS

Clearance Sale

lf2 PRICE.

Reprieve may not save

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

E~

WASHINGTON : Although the Equal Rlgh!S Amendment has
been granted a five-month reprieve by the Supreme Court, lawmak·
ers say that It has a shot at passage In only five states - and Its
chances are considered slender In every one.
The amendment' must be approved by -three more states by June
30 tt It Is to become part ol the U.S. Constitution, and battles ate likely
only In Vlrglnla, Florida, Missouri, North Caronna and illinois.
Even so, a key committee In the Vlrglnla House ol Delegates
opposes It; a survey shows most Florida senaiDrs would vote no;
backers In Misaourt concede there Is Utile chance ol success; the
North Carolina legislature has already defeated It live times; and
supporterS In the Ullnols Senate already have falled once this year ID
win a crucial rules change.

Admitted: Gerald Congo, Long
Bottom; Virginia Hayman, Ra·
cine; Sidney Durst, Portland; Thomas Hayman, Syracuse.
Discharged: Bernard Ralrden,
Margaret Goett, Darlene Hicks.

Emergency runs
Units of the Meigs County Emer;
gency Medical Service answered
three cans over the weekend, At
5: 5_7 p.m. on Saturday the RuUand
emergency squad went ID the home
ol Phyllis Well on the NobleSummit Road. She was treated but ;
not transpol'led.
At 8:41 p.m. the Middleport
squad responded to a call at the VII·
lage Manor Apartments for Sarah
Boyles who was treated but not
transported.
On Sunday at 9:04 a.m. Helen
Baer of Five Points was taken from
her home to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the Pomeroy unit.

Night

"

Agreement has prevented strikes
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Labor and management have marked five
years of str1ke-free construction In the Columbus area by rededicatIng themselves to a special project designed to promote cooperation
between labor and aontra~IDrs.
Mayor Tom Moody on Monday praised the cooperation ol trade
unions and contraciDrS that has united them on projects completed
or under construction totaling $'191 mUtlon.
During MOST's five years, construction projects completed without a work stoppage have !Dialed $.114.7 mUUon, Including the $70
mUtlon Ohio Center·Hyatt Regency Hotel complex In downtown
Columbus.

Crow'•
1 .·•

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.

.

.

.
. Sorry, No Substltutn except
Beveroges which hove on od·
djtlonol price.
·

Served with Whipped
Potatoes, Chicken Gravy,
Cole Slaw, Hot Roll, BuHer
and Coffee.

;

M PEW llUHlEFEHRED NliVIlUAl REl1lEMENT AC~As.

Krtty doesn t haVe moch money

d
n.. 'I L • had
'"""' ays.
""' o ' '"'
a tax·
deferred
Individual
Retiremem

·

IL- -

Acrouru (IRA ) :u The Farmers
Bank«~, she rould have
. he da
a lor of fi100e'y m r
ys to w mc.
de
.
.
. S9
By pos1ton8 JUfiJ
I .2)
roward an IM every week she
·
h
s
,,
0 ,.; .
ruuld •end up wot 2""""
on )0
ytaTh
"- '
h
. ,
ar
reeaung·· n
. sIwon
Sl
,.
de posot 0
9.2J a week could
lOta

I 1255,800

, ·

Of rourse, bcooUS&lt; the maxi·
mum allowable yearly mvestment

DINN£R ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Meet&amp; Tue&amp;day

VVedne~dayluncheon

wave slcnals.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Carla
Shul.er, . tnathmatlcs
teacher at Southern High School, .
oner Andrew J. Karson. "Grazing has been selected to give a presenwounds" on the boy's forearm and tation at the second annual compu·
hand Indicated he may have been ter lair to be held March 9 and 10 at
shot at more than live times, offle· the Hyatt Regency In Columbus.
ers said.
The computer fair Is sponsored
Loci! Pollee Chief Jim Bonnell by the Ohio Department ot Educasald the 14-year-old. a ninth grader . tion In cooperation with the Ohio
at Cloverleaf Junior High School, Educational
Data
Systems
called pollee and saki he had shot Association.
Shultz moments before.
Shuler's presentation, a microcomputer, wlU be a group session
designed tO be ot help In clrrlculum
The youth was being held at the ID directors and teachers at thesecounty jaU pending an appearance conclary level.
today before Medina County JuveShe wlU be teaching Basic Pronile Judge Dennis Dannley.
gramming to lOth graders. during
the fourth sixth week period. ·
Anyone wishing to sit !non or who
· would like to learn some program·
mtng or gain skills In other areas of
mathmatlcs may call her at Southem High School.

.

Chapter 17 wUl meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m. at the Melp Junior High.
An Oasis representative wlU be ·
present ID explain. opUcal and den- ·
181 Insurance. All 1!1e1Ylbers are
urged to attend.

jlolll. OVP baa swllched to sateritte ~paon of AP
wire .oopy as part of the ~ toward uae at micro-

Flood death toll may reach 500

· State Auditor Thomas E. Fergu·
son's office reported the 12th ad·
vance dlstrtbUtloil ot 1981 moiDr
vehicle registration lees totaling
$17,000,005.68 ID Ohio counties, citIes, townships and villages.
Of the amount, $1,499,992.68\irent'
to 73 counUes and or their muntclpallttes that Impose anaddltlonal$5
· levy on each set of Ucense plates .
sold In 1981.
The counties received 47 percent
ot the remainder or $7,285,029.61;
· whne the municipalities shared 34
perceat or $5,270,021.42 on the basis
ot vehicle count.
Meigs county received $17,449.22.

h bet .1ncreosed S
..
as 'L'-n
ro 2,1XX1, " 5
1""''""' ro earn even lllOI'O.
Making dcposirs by the week, by
thc month, or whatevt"r is rnosr
' runveniem.

__ __

'·

But whatever she mvcsts cOuld
c_
•
h'rgh-y•e
· ld rmeresr
·
sc.on ut'
earnrng

ro help ~ke her golden .renrs a
loc more gulden.
. . ,
R lind,
· beaouse uur ondovldual
·
emcmcnr Aanu&lt;"tt-. a ~ t:lY·
deferred, Kiroy wuld deduct e:och
f he
.
u r ytarly onvcstlll&lt;llts from h&lt;r
oaxab'~
·
So Srx:
L 'd pay nu
lit" 10CUIT'Ie.
fedcrnl oaxes on h&lt;r IRA until she
· L ..~
•
funds (m&amp;m· ·
staru w&amp;tnorawmg
, 9,
mum '8"' ' Vl ).
Thc:n when s~ rerirn, she'll
prububly be in a lower t:ox brodcet
· 1o
i"'Y'"'! wer &lt;axes.
If you'd lilcc tu ·set up an alford:ob'- 1n •
· lk
"' ""· come." m the pnlfel-

,.,

Ph. 992-5432

tF:'l

W

Silvings plan om help almost' anyone retire with a CJWrtet uf a million
dollors ·
Including Ki tty.

l

..•

"Th~ example asstJmes 12% interesl,
compounded annualy, based on the awage
quartef1y blla~ce. ~ ~ intended to be an

exam·

..

'

TO'BE CLOSED - The Pomeroy oltlce of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services wUl be closed within
the next 30 days. Other southeastern Ohio olll&lt;etl In-

•

eluded In the 37 scheduled for closing are Lopn, MeCoonelsv!Ue, New Lexington, Waverly, and McArtbtlr.

•

at y

LIMA, Peru - Several days or tDrrentlal rainS sent the Dooded
Chontayacu River throUgh a small jungle town In the heart ot the
Peruvtan coca country, and eslilpates ol the casualtles ranged from
200 to !500 people dead and m1sslng and' up ID 5,00J homeless.
Mayor Julian OUvera ol Uchlza telegraphed the mayor ol nearby
Tingo'Marta Monday that there were 500 dead or missing and 5,roJ
more homeless In Uchlza. He said he needed medicine, food, cJo.
thing and a helicopter to ''rescue people trapped on small Islands.In
the flood waters."
Civil Defense headquarters In Lltna said It confirmed at least 200
dead or miSSing and about 600 tamWes homeless.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Joblesa otitoans wlU have fewer people
to help them find work or obtain
unemployment benefits due ID the ·
layoff ol another l,roJ state Bureau
ot Employment Services workers .
Federal budget cuts mean that
Instead o! helping others with un·
employment problems, the burea11
employees soon must cope wtth unemptqyment themselves.
Cutbacks at the agency designed
to aid the Jobless come at a time
.when 601,000 Ohioan~ are out of
Work. Officials say unemployment
in the slate during December, the
mos'·recent month for which data is
available, was ' 11.8 percent, the
highest since 1940.
Gary E. Sleln, director of the
bureau's unemployment com- ·
pensation division, said cu·ts will fall
most heavily on services such as job

enttne
1 SocHon, 10 Patoo

15 Conti

A Mulolmodlo Inc. NtoWiflllpor

By BOB HOEFUCH
SentiDel S&amp;all Writer ·
Middleport Vlllage received
$1)5,027.8! In Interest payments
through Investing unused funda on
short term transactions during
1981.
· Such was the report ol Clerk·
Treasurer Jon Buck when Middleport VUJage eouncn met In regular
session Monday night.
The amount was over twice the
amount ($ill, 722.20) earned In Inter·
est llY village moneles In 198), Buck
stated.
Interest returns on amounts In·
vested In 1981 from the various
funds Included general fund,
$49,310.45; cemetery, $6,316.77, and
water tank fund, $!M00.58.
Robert GUmore began his duties
as a new councilman at last night's
meeting having been elected ID
se!VI! on the body last year.

~

-

Farmers
- Bank
•

Officers were reelected tor 1982
when the Meigs County Regional
Plarmlng Commlsslon met Monday
afternoon at the conference room of
The Farmers Bank BuUdlng for Its
annual organizational session.

«•rudlatlletoiO~Mdl

Mayor Fred Hoffman announced
that officials from HUD and the Departlnent of Economic Community
Development will meet with village
officials at 11 a.m . on Feb. 11 to
discuss HUD grants and progress
made oil projects. Hoffman said he
wUl have represenJatlves from var·
lous projects on hand tor the meetIng so that a good presentatrion can
be made on the progress ol the projects which have heen funded by
HUD.
The Department of Economic
Community Development wrn be
taking a role In the HUD programs
carried out by villages and cities In
the future and this Is the first meetIng on progress to be attended by
representatives ot that department. AU councU members were
Invited to attend the Feb. 11
meeting.
Council discussed a letter from

The officers are Thereon John·
son, president; Orten Roush, vice
president, who was In charge of yes·
terday's meeting; L. W. McComas,
secretacy, and George Colllns,
treasurer.

Roush will seek
• •
COID~ISSIOn post
Manning K. Roush, Rl. 1, Minersville, a Republican, has become the
first tp file a nominating petition for
county cominlsstoner.
Roush flied h1l petition Monday
with the Me!p County Board of

Becoming mostly sunny thla attemoon. Hlab In the low:&amp;. Clear
tontght. Low 15 to :1D. Partly cloudy Wednesday. High In the low 401.
The cbance ot preclpttatiol\ Is 20 ~t today, ~ar zero percent
tblllght and 10 percent Wednesday.
Frlmr'erl Ohio Fcnclllt
'ftlllldllr Ulroulh Sa&amp;urday - .A •t Ml ~~~- or ralll 'l'ltaniiiQ&gt;
........ ~. Mallly lair FIIUJ......... IIIe ........ to

nM . . TIM

Charles W. WesUake, bureau
pubUc Information officer, said he
does not yet know the procedure
that those people and others served
by offices that are to be closed wlU
follow In IWng their claims.
AAlthough they could face drives
to other facllltles In Newark, Lancaster, Zanesville or Athens, WesUake said the bureau has a mall·in
system !or use when claimants
would otherwise have to drive long
distances.
Stein said offlclals hope to process and pay claims on time despite
the reductions.
" (But) people are obviously goIng ID have .to walt In line ionger ...
(and) drive farther to tue a claim .~ ·

He said the layoffs and oltlceciOII·
lngs that hit Qhlo are not unique to
the state.
"It's nothing really limited to
Ohio. Every state Is suffering the
same thing," Stein said. "Every
state Is being ·hit pretty evenly on
this thing."
The latest cuts at the federally .
funded Ohio agency follow the Jan.
13 layoff of 325 employees because
of earlier budget cuts.
Westlake said the agency had
3,937 full-time employees and 1ll
offices statewide as of Dec. 31, 1981.

the Consumers Councll concerning
the Consumers Councll's move to
secure uniform rates with Columbia Gas of Ohio rather than each
community negotiating tor Its own
rate.
During the discussion , It was
brought out that Middleport tn the
past has come out o! negotiations
wUI rates that are comparable to
surrounding communities and that
a uniform rate could .run the rate In
Middleport village higher. Council
members wiD study the letter and
proposal of the Consumer's Council
furth er. Mayor Hoffman Indicated
that he believes the present. rate
contract with Columbia Gas of Ohio
expires this year.
Council approved making an application tor a grant from the Rural
Community Fire Protection Program for equipment as suggested
by the Middleport Fire Depart·
ment. The cost of the E&gt;julpment

would be $1622 with th&amp;grant to be
one-half ot that amount, If approved, and the village to pay the
other half.
The Middleport Department hu
never been approved lor such a
grant through the program although a number. ot appllcatlona
have been tiled, Mayor rloltman
said.
Councn went on record as havlilg
no objectlohs to the translero! aD·~
liquor Ucense from Betty Gilkey to
Yvonne Scally at the Good Times
Lounge.
Councll discuss Ice problems on
Middleport HUI and flU being used
on a lot acf9SS from the Middleport
swimming pool. .
Attending the meeting were
-Mayor Hoffman, Clerk Buck, and
councilmen Gllmore, WUllam Wal·
ters, Carl Horky, president, Jack·
son Satterlleld and Dewey Horton.

•

Johnson. heads planning COffiffilSSIOD

Weather forecast

.... ..... ...._.. .._.._

weekly .

Stein said.
!tis not known how long the fund· .
lng problems will remain.
"AU we can do Is hope that Con·
gress wlU put some more money
lniD the budget for the rest of the
year," Stein said.

•

CLEVELAND-ThewtnnlngnumberdrawnMondaynlghtlnthe
Ohio Lottery's clally game "The Number" was 6150.
The lottery reported earnlng8 o! $252,173.50 from the wagering on
Its dallY game. The earnings came on sales of $1,m1,9'18, whlle
holders ot winning tlckets are entitled ID share $756~.50. lottery
otflctals said.

rr:'a substantial sunt is not a auarantee
of interest rates or !!nd financial resub.

Slashing the number ot employees and closing offices means
that Ohioans IWng claims face
longer waiting lines and, In some
cases, trips ot 30 miles or more to
seek ~slstance.
One.of the centers to be closed Is
In New Lexington, a branch of.the

district office In Zanesville. The
Perry County laclllty has recenUy
been serving about 800 people

receives $65,027 in interest

'

pie of how regular deposits into an IRA can

referrals, counseling, testing and
job·lacement.
"'1:11e cuts are much greater on
the employment service side than
the unemployment service skle of
our operation,'' he said. "'Those are
the services that are going to be
ellmlnnted entirely or drastically
cut back."
Besides the layoffs, 37 job service
offices throughout the state wUI be
closed ·over the pext three months
due ID spending cuts totaling $15
mUllan In the current llscal year.

•

Winning Ohio lottery number

"

The Community Owned Bank
•

'

'They'll show yuu huw 01 rcbJUiar

'

!

Pomeroy, OH:,

sionals ot The F;:~ rmers Bank.

WI'YI GOI THI

Crow's _Family Restaurant .
221 W; Main

...

Cutbacks force more layoffs

Meigs County happenings
Farmers S&amp;L
elects officel'8

. ........
_..,___

Pomen:y~Midd!:port, Ohio, Tuesday, January 26, 1982

Copyrighttcl 1912

Traffic accidents leave two hurt

seekers.
A full-time office was returned to
Meigs County ln July, 1977 at a
Sycamore Street locatiop, and then
in 19'19, the .office was moved to
Union Ave.
Besides ~ - Adkins, there is an
employment service representative,
a claims examiner, two claims
assistants, and a WIN conlact
specialist, along with a part-time
project c&lt;iunselor. Whether any of
the local workers will be transferred
to other offices Is uncertain.
As for the people who are served
through the Pomeroy office, Mrs.
Adkins said they will probably be
handled through the Gallipolis office
(Continued on paRe 12)

lnJIQ'.I-.m• lb

Ia tile ...

Manning Roush

Elections.
Roush, 45, was born and reared in
the Forest Run area and graduated
from J&gt;omeroy High School.
He owns and operates Gravely
Tractor Sales, 204 Condor st.,
Pomeroy.
'
Prior to that, he was associated
with the Union Barge Line Corp.,
and served 16 years as a part time
· deputy sheriff under Bob Hartenbach.
Roush is married to the fanner
Ramona Brinker and IIIey hsve two
daughters, Kimberly and Krista . He
is the son of Mary K. Roush and the
late H. Kerns Roush.
"I know M~lga County, like Meigs
Counlf and the people 1\'ho live In
Melga County. If I win the primary
and general election, I believe I'
p011seas the knowledge and .ability to
help make Meiga County a better
place In which to live." Heney Wells,
who Is presently a meinber of the
board of commlasioners and serves
ulll prelident, says he will support
Roullt In his bid for ~ty comnUaloner. Wells hai ch&lt;ilen not to
run for re-election.

Attendance at the meeting was
The study recommended relow due ID weather conditions but placement qt the Lucas Run bridge
the group did hear a reP.,rt ot on Route 124 north ot Portland; lm·
J ames Jennings Assoclates on provement of Route 124 between
housing and highway studies;
Portland and Long Bottom; lm·
Jennings, consultant for the com· proving the Intersection of Routes
mission , reported that the study on 124 and 33 In Pomeroy; completing
highways disclosed that US 33 Route 33 from Pomeroy to Athens;
should be extended to Five Points ' a tour lane highway to GaiUpoUs;
and then to Ravenswood .
(Continued on page 121

'

...

FUN TIME - Tile •new came Monday, •chool was dismlsaed, and
llletl&amp;two were amoq tile many who tooli to sledding. Brlaa Kom and
Sieve 1'ney loud tltlalarge lnneriUbe jwd right for twoi as they trneled
'dOWIIa Mulberry Ave. hill.

�'·

Commentary

pgg.--2-The Daily Sentinel ~
Porperoy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, January 26, 1982

IUC.rt8Dftl
P-"f,OIIIO
. llt-tiUUI
DEVOTEDTOTifE .INTEKESTOFTHEMEIGS-MASON AREA

Mr. Reagan is not iikely to crack
up under the fire of the conservatives who have met in
Washington to express their general
displeasure. He recognizes that it is
the duty of the right to press harder
than a president is likely to move. So
is it With the left, &gt;thich periodically
meets, when Democrats are in
power, to bemoan the dLfference
beween their president's actions and
how things would go if they themselves were president.
John Kenneth Galbraith was once
asked the question, "Who do you
favor for president?" and answered,
"The lefftwardmost viable candidate." An honest answer, to which
the obvious complement on the right
is, "The rightwardmost viable can- .
dictate." The operative word, in
dealing wiht either "left" or

~~ ~ ......-.-.~=~·~
-

PubU1brr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Allilt.IDI P\lblbber/Cootrolkr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nnh FAIJt.Jr
A MEMBER ol

~ A11~~t.datl"d

Prtt111, lniMDd Dally Prt!U A1111odatl011 aod the

America I Nn'IPiptr Pubu.ben AAoclltl011.

LETTERS OF'OPINJON aft' welcomed. Thty 11Muld bt len thalo 380 wonllllO•I· All

• lelkl:l

Ire Abjttl to todlllitg •nd mu1t bl:! •lgnnl with IIIDM!, .Wren ud WI~
• • •mtier. N• P~lped le lk!n will bt! pubU1bed. Letwn ftbould be illlt.Mld tl1k. •ddreulzlfc
IIIaH, Dell penouiJtlet.

11

llegistration
and realism
Much has been made of Prll8ident Reagan's reneging en candidate
Reagan's opposition to draft registration.
•
Too much . .This is certainly not the first time that opm10ns andd pi'OI1lllles
uttered in the crOS8fire of a campaign have been re¥~ or reversed
following the election. The responsibilities of power, beinll'blore demanding
than its pursuit, have a way of changing presidential llj!rceptions of the
nation's needa.
That's called growing in the Oval office, and can be a v~ry good thing. We
could uae more of it in most administrations.
What should be of more concern is the timing and political circumstances
of the decision to continue registering 1&amp;-year-olds.
·
But first, some background.
In principle, military service in time of national need is an inh~rent duty of
citizenship. As the Selective Service Act of 1948 put it, "in a free society, the
obligations and privileges of serving in the armed forces ... should be shared
generally, in accordance with a system of selection which is fair and just."
That principle, however, was one of the casualties of Viethnam.
Americans did not share the "obligations and pritileges" fairly in th:at !'rdeal. The system of selection raised an ariny that was unrepresentative of
the nation racially and economically.
.
Further, opposition to the war itself led multitudes of potential draftees to
opt out of their duties as citizens. The legal aspects of that disturbing
manifestation of mass dissent where eventually more or less rll8oived with
ail amnesty .that did nothing, however, to rehabilitate the principle. To the
contrary, according to amnesty opponents, it had been further weakened by
semi-legitimizing refusal to serve.
Once the conflict ended, it was politically and militarily advantageous to
drop the draft. The curtailed services were unable to absorb all the manpower it generated and the question of who must serve and who was to be excused was difficult to impossible to answer fairly, as Vietnam had shown,
The·case was also made that conscript armies were obsolete in the nuclear
era. A major war would likely be over in hours and smaller professional forces were more effective in brush·fire operations.
The draft was a back-burner issue until. Jimmy. Carter reinstituted
registration in 1980, presenting It as a precautionary measure to lessen delay
in mobilization in the event of a national emegency, a rationale that was
rejected at the time by among other,s one Ronald Reagan.
What should be noted is that Carter resumed registration as part of his
response to Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. Reagan now seconds his
predecesor during the furor over Poland, clearly to avoid appearing to take
a step back in American preparedness in the midst of a building confrontatgion with the Soviets.
That position can be justified. But even so, it means that Reagan, like Carter, Is using the·draft essentially as a political tool, not dealing with this high
kensjtive and potentially explosive issue on its own merits. The problems
thatfai51l8 could more than offset those registration is intended to answer.
The w&lt;•unds of Vietnamm'IY have largely healed, but scars remain. The
prmc;l&gt;ie ,•' ciLizen service is ~tl11 OIJ the casualty list. A million or more
eliGibl• 11!-vear-clos, a is estnna&lt;ed, have not registered in the last two
years.
.
Selective Service is now offering them a grace period of up to60 da)l&amp;,•ll!ld.
authorities say they will prosecute those who fail to respond. Shoula they
proceed to do so, the complications could be Immense. Identifying and
locating the non·signers would be the first problem, and court action of the
scope that would follow would be costly, time-consuming and certain to raise
a domestic political storm, reopening the divisions of Vietnam. · ·
Those are the realities, not the politics, of the draft Issue as they should be
perceived by the occupant of the Oval Office.

i

i
"'

'

0

. "OK/ ENOUGH WITH THE WINTER WONDERLAND ALREADY!'"

Today ·in history
Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 26, the 26th day of1982. There are 339 days leftln
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Jan. 26, 1942, the first U.S. Expeditionary Force arrived In Europe
during World War II, putting ashOre In Northern Ireland. · ,
,
On this date:
·
In lll27, the South American country of Peru seceded trom Colombia.
In 1837, Michigan Joined the union as the 26th state.
·
In 180, Brttlsh sovereignty was proclaimed over Hong Kong.
In 19'11, the Soviet Union announced that !lD unmanned spacecratt had
made a soft landing on the planet Venus.
·
.
Ten years ago, North VIetnam denounced as unacceptable the peace
proposal offered by President Nixon the night before.
Five years ago, the United States charged that the arrest c:A human
rights activists In Czecho91ovalcla viOlated the 1975 Helsinki ~ent
between Communist and Western nations.
·
'
One year 8j0, former Rep. Richard Kelly of Florida was convicted of
brfbery and conspiracy cbatges stemming trom the FBI's Ablcam probe.
Today'sblrthdays: SIJ!ierEartha Kltilli!C. BlactactlvfltADaelaDavls
Ia 38,

·

,,

Reagan and the rigc:=:h:=.t____w_a_lw_m_F._.B_u_ck_ley_J_r. -,-,

The Daily Sentinel

~v
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT

.....-thiMa

'l'hougllt For Today: A sound mind In a IOUIId body 11-·~N..... to
prayed tor.- Juvenal, Roman lawyer-satirist (abouJ S)-1«1 A.D.).

right,"

is

11

Viable."

And

field. His stands, so long and
.W.!Uw!Y•• ;~rticulated, are unambiguous as to concept, flexible in the
matter of execution. But In the field
of foreign policy there is genuine
COnfusion. It is not surprising that
his critics trot out so voluptuOusly
statements of his made during the
past which would appear to apply to
the !Qnd of thing he .is now charged
with doing, most specifically in the ·
failure adequately to meet the
challege of the suppression of
Poland.
Consider the matter of credits.
Specifically, consider the matter of
International Harvester and the
matter of grain.
Arguments have been made, with
special force from stockholders of
International Harvester and from

producers of American grain, that
the economic factors should
probably prevail here. EveryoQe
knows that our budget deficit is vast,
that there is a great deal of surplus
grain which needs to be sold to
somebody, at the risk of impoverishing a number of farmers,
All this is true.
But it is also true that the
American people are putting up $150
billion a year in order to maintain
the military. one hundred and fifty_
billion dollars is many times the sum
of money tt would cost us to protect
farmers whose grain was re-routed
from American seaports to
American granaries. The incredible
notion that the United States should
supply credit to ttie Soviet Union and
to Its satellites, which credit makes

p055ible the importation of U.S.
grain and U.S. commercial products, in many cases at prices above
those an American conswner would
be as)&lt;ed to pay.
. .
Mr. Reagan must not appear mflexible , nor be inflexible. But he
must appear to be a stalwart presence the locus of antl-conununlst
th~ught and action. What appears, in
the matter of Poland, to be an Indecisiveness when confronted with
bureaucratic arguments, cornmercia! pre5sures, agricultural lobbyists, reduces the in_tegrity of the
stance and augments the reliance on
firepower. To this Mr. Reagan needa
to give thought. , Meanwhile,
provided they guard carefully their
rhetoric, the conservatives are
correct in drawing attention tn the
shortfall.

"
:~

~

"
"

:
' ··.
' .'
' ~.

question to ask about Mr. Reagan,
therefore, is whether he · might
••viably'' act more uconservatively"
than he has done.
In domestic policy he has n~t. in he
opinion of some of us, gone as far as
he might have. Here we mean that
he has not gone as far as he might
have rhetorically. Probably he got
the Congress everything he could
conceivably have got from it. Indeed
at one point, before the critical vote
in the House on the tax bill, Mr.
Reagan and his advisers calculated
that they would lose by two v.otes. He
stands especially to suffer from the
Stockman Syndrome, here defined
as "Privately I know that it isrt't
going to work." If Mr. Reagan had
asked, let us say, for a reduction in
the marginal tax rate to a maximum
of 2S percent, he could ascribe any
shorlfall in future economic deficits
to the difference between what 'he
asked for and what he got.
It is in the field of foreign policy
that he gives a perplexing image.
primarily, Reagan is a mag~etic

Weather causes schedule . problems ·
Weather permitting, two con·
tests Involving Southern Valley At·
h1eUc Conference schools are
scheduled this evening. During the
month of January, several games
have been postponed forcing
schools to play make-up games
during the.week and on Saturdays.
A make-up contest that had
Kyger Creek traveUng to Elk Valley was postponed again. Saturday
night, ·the Bobcats were scheduled
to play at Hannan In another rna·
keup, but, that game was poSt·
poned . because of leaky rook
problems In the Hannan bUDding,
Tonight, Wahama plays at
Southwestern and North Gallla
lrl vels to Adena to play an earller
postponed_contest. Action begins at
6p.m.
Friday night, North Gallla vlslts
league leading Southern; Hannan
Trace now In third. place In the
SVAC plays second place Kyger
Creek and Eastern plays at
Southwestern.

Saturday's only contest finds
Kyger Creek at Trimble.

LastFrtdaynlght,Southernover·
come
a slow start and a determined
effort by arch rtval Eastern to win a
37..n· affair. The unbeaten Torna·
does won the cmtest at the foul circles. Again, southpaw senior Kent
Wolfe was the leading Tornado
point producer while Tim Dill, Si
senior center, paced Eastern.
Kyger Creek defeated North Gal·
!Ia for the thli'd time this season,
62-61.
The Bobcats were ·forced to
come-from-behind throughout the
contest.
North Gallla whlch has come a
long way since the Bobcats' nine
point victory In the opening game of
the season December .4 was paced
by Junior .forward Mike Mays' 22
points. Jeff Moles led Kyger Creek
with 22 points.
Saturday night, North Gallla
dropped a 12·55 affair to VInton
County',
·
Eric Holle and Mays led the PI·
· rates with 12 and 11 points
respectively.
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
Trace Wildcats posted their sixth
victory of the season last Friday,
SVAC STANDINGS
6048
over Southwestern.
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W P
P OP
Greg Webb, senior guard, main·
Soutt-.ern
13 0 899
talnedhlsscoringaveragewitha22
Kyger Creek
8 2 588 778
7 6

Eastern

6 6 597 613
2 B 614 747
1 10 609 771

Soutt-.western

759

added 13 and Kelly Petrie 11 points
each.
·

Paul McNeal again led the Hlghlander offense with 20 points.

r-=~==================~--~

Valentines for kidS
are filled with fun
Wack{ riddles, cartoon characters and
supemeroes ... you'U find them all on Halhna!k
Valentines made just for kids. Let them choose
their favorites from our Wide selection for
Sunday, February 14.

REASON #5: If the IRS audits your return,
H&amp;R Block goes with you at no extra c:ost.
An IRS audit can be an anxious time for any taxpayer.
But, if you're audited, Block will go with you. at no extra
cost. Not as a legal representative, but to explain how your
return was prepared. We're always ready to stand behind
you, year-round .

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

17 reasons. One smart'decision.
PeaniJI$ CI\MfK1trs &lt;C 1950. 1958, 1005, 1~ United Fe11tull! Syndintr . Inc
TtK~

&amp;.

Othf;l d~rQN

1~ Halma~

© 1001 Hallm11rtl C..uds. II'IC
Carcb, Inc

DUTTON'S DRUG CO.
12 N. 2nd Ave.

992·3106

Middleport, OH. ·

618 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.

2nd &amp; Brown Sts.
Mason, w. Va.

"2-3795

773-9121

Hours:
Mon .-Fri. 9 to 6
Sat. 9 to s

Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9 to 6

Hours:
Sat. 9 to S

~~ r~po:In:~teff::o:_rt~w:hil~e~~:o:by:_~sh:rets::~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-_1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Hannan Trace

NortriGallia

SVAC ONLY

Soutt.ern
Kyger Creek
Hannan Trac e
Eastern

6
4
3
2

Southwestern
North Galli a
Tliis week 's ga mes :

Tuesday -

'0
2
3
3

395
330
349
241

275
332
343
263
1 4 330 381
I 4 289 336

war.ama at Soutt.·

western and Nortr, Galli a at Adena .
Friday - Hannan Trace at Kyger

Creek; Eastern at Soutr.western and
Nortt, Galli a at Southern..
'
Saturday - Kyger Creek at Trim·
ble.

Donahey decisiQn . preplexing problem I
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (APj -State by which the statewide candidates
Treasurer Gertrude W. Donahey, a
must file nominating petitions for
the June primary.
·
formidable vote-getter In the past.
Is 1n the most perplexing dilemma
She had Indicated earller she
of her political career.
would make the decision while va·
She can decide not to seek her catlonlng with her family durtng
fourth, four-year term as treasurer
the Christmas holldays 1n Florida.
and risk helng accused of running Bllt when she returned, she said she
away from an embezzlement scan- was stlli pondertng her decision.
dal still under Investigation In her
Mrs. Donahey met last week with
State ·Democratic Chairman Paul
oH!ce.
Or she can run for re-election . Tipps but Insisted that their discusagain and try to clear her name sions did not Include her possible
with the voters, not knowtng what candidacy.
the various Investigations wW tum
Representatives of Prtce Waterup and how much of it mlght be house, who report periodically on
used by her opponents.
their probe to the State Controlling
Prtce Waterhouse &amp; Co., the ac- Board, say theY have received ex·
counting fiim trying to solve the cellent . cooperation from the
mystery of $1.3 mtlllon 1n treasurer.
unaccounted·for funds, Indicates its
Mrs. Donahey, who has not been
report will be ready about August accused of any wrongdoing, Is
or September, Just the time the fall standing firm on her decision not to
campaign wW start heating up.
dtscuss the Investigation, made
Mrs. Donahey, 73, says she has when the probe first got under way
not made up her mind on whether last fall.
to run.
Tipps and other leading Demo''I'll let you know by March 20," 'crats also are taking a walt-and·see
she said, referrtng to the deadllne attitude.

But all have said privately they
are concerned about· what the ef·
feels of the scandal- Prtce Water·
house already has said that some of
the $1.3 million was embezzled have on the Democrats' statewide
ticket.
Mrs. Donahey, Widow of a
former Ueutenant governor and

daughter-ln·law of a former gover·
nor, came IntO office In 1970 on the
heels of a Republican scandal in the ' '
treasurer's office.
She won her office Initially by " '
320,000 votes among 2. 7 mllilon ··
cast, and was re-elected II) 1974 lly · ·
373,000 among 2.8 million cast. She
was elected to her third term In 1978
by 697,465 among 2.6 mtlllon votes.

..

•: I

Legislation status
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Here
Is the status of maJor legislation
pending In the 114th Ohio General
Assembly:
PRISONS - A $484 rnlllion program for construction and renova·
tion of prisons throughout the state.
Dltferent versions passed by House
and Senate; pending In a Joint con·
terence committee that meets
Wednesday.
REDISTRlCI'ING- Draws new
boundary Unes for Ohio's congres·
slonal districts, reduced from 23 to
21 this year due to population shifts.

,,,

House vote expected this week.
ORGANIZED CRIME - Pack·
age of bllls reinstating an
organlzed-&lt;Jrtme statute struck
down by the Ohlo Supreme Court,
expanding powers of the attorney
genera to conduct investigations
and . authorizing court-ordered
wiretapping. Heartng Wednesday
In senate Judiciary Committee.
ABORTION - Requires certain
Information to be given to pregnant
women before they col)Sent to abor·
tlons. Passed the Senate; pending
In the House.

Newspaper sources
The White House is cl~mping
down hard on any ~overnment employee who speaks to a member of
the press. Originally they wre con,
cemed with "National Security"
leaks from the State Department,
Defense, CIA and National Security
Agency. But the rules are now being
adopted by other departm~nts, most
of which have no state secrets.
On the surface, the Reagan Ad.ministration cannot be faulted for
wanting everyone in the government
to speak with one voice (it seems to
work very well In the Soviet Union).
But 1 believe there are inherent
dangers in making it very difficult,
if not impossible, to keep government officials from . discussing
anything of importance with the
media.
What most people don't realize is
that when a government official has
lunch or a discreet meeting with a
reporter, many tjmes the official is
trying to get more infonnaUon out of
the newspaperman, than the
newspapermar is trying to get out of
the official.
.

Ohio

Area cage
standings

the

...
".
··
,
.:
.~

"
.,

Art Buchwald ·'

'' Is this straight?"
For example, let us assume a
Defense Department big shot is · "I got it from the guy at The
having lunch with a reporter from Washington Post who knows
the "Daily Planet."
someone in the weapons testing
The Defense Department man department."
opens up the conversation.
"This is good stuff," the Defense
"What have you heard?"
Department official said. "I'll get on
"The Navy is going to a¥ ,for two it right away. You heard an~h!ng
more nuclear carriers.'' ·
should know about the MX m1ssLle?
"Damn, wheredidyouhearit?"
"The Wall Street Journal man
"A reliable source in naval says if you harden the present
plans."
missile sites with more cement, the
"We haven't had anything on that · silos might not be able to handle the
on our floor. How are they going to weight."
try and get them?"
"How reliable is The Wall Street
"By going over your head direct to Journal on this?"
Congress. They figure if they ask for
"The reporter's been working on
two, they'll get one." .
. the story lor three months. ! think he
"I better let the secretary know knows what he's talking about."
about' it so he doesn't appear to be
"How much time do we have
surprised. What else is going on In beforethestorybreaks?"
the Pentagon?"
"Maybe two or three weeks."
','The ~rmy is having more trouble
"Our contractors haven 't told us
with the' M-1 \ank than they're ad- 1his."
milling. But they're covering up
"Why should they? They're hoping
because they're afraid you'll order to sell you a lot of cement."
them to stop building the tanks until
"Do you think I should tell the
the bugs are worked out."
Defense secretary about it?"

,!

'.

"Yeh, but don't tell him where you
got it. I don't want The Wall Street
Journal to give me a lie detector test
to find out the·source of the leak."
"Do you have anything on.what AI
Haig is up to these days?"
"Off the record? He's trying to get
the autonomy talks between Israel
and Egypt on the tracks. In order to
do it, he may have to put the Golan
Heights on the back burner.
"He hasn't mentioned his plan to
Weinberger."
. "He's going straight to the
President with it, so Defense doesn't

...

foul him up ."

•t•

" You're really cooking today. Can
I uae it?"
"The New York Times man, gave
it to a White House aide, so I don't
imagine it's classified."
"I appreciate this briefing and so
does the8ecretary."
''Don't mention it. I believe that in
a free society the people who work in
government have a right to know
what is going on in their own depart-

"

ments.

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'·
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~)

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DOONESBURV ··
"'

Cedeno·
happy,
healthy

'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cesar
Cedeno, with his ankle feeling good
again and a four-year contract 1n
his pocket, said Monday that be Is
looking f01ward to new opportunl·
ties In a CinCinnati Reds uniform.
"lt's 'the greatest thing to happen
to me In some years. I say thanks to
·the Reds for giving me the opportunity," said Cedeno, an ll·year
veteran who came from the Hous. ton Astros In a trade for third baseman Ray Knight.
"It makes me feel young again ..I
like Riverfront Stadium, and as all
· of you !mow, a healthy Cesar can
help anybody. And I am healthy,"
he said.
Cedeno, who suffered an ankle In·
jury last season, hlt .m 1n 82 games
with the Astros after batting .300 In
191ll. He was mov~ to first place
last season after spending most of
his career In center field, where he
won five Golden Glove awards for
fleldlng.
"lfeell am a center fielder and it
Is important for me to return there.
1 feel that with my ankle close to
'being perfect, I can win aoother
Gold Glove," he said.
"I agreed with BW (Vlrdon, Astros manager) to play first base because that is where they needed
help. I Just wasn't able to play every day beCause of the ankle.
Cedeno said that he came to Cincinnati to sign a contract with Reds
President Dick Wagner and lind UvIng quarters.
"I signed a new contract for four
years with the Reds. I had one that
could have lasted six years with the
Astros, but Tom Reich (his agent)
and 1 are happy with that," said
Cedeno.
Cedeno said he had not talked at
length yet with Reds Manager John
McNamara, but added that he has
set personal goals for this year.
"I'm looking to hit over .:m and
hit :11-plus home runs and steal.
many bases. My main goal Ls to
play In over 150 games. After the
mediocre year I had In 1!&amp;, ~ rebuilt the ankle at the Sports Medic
Clinic 1n San Diego. I !eel as if I'm
starting over with the ball club that
everyone has to beat. Both the
Dodgers and the· A.stros know
that," said CedenO.
'"The Reds pitching ts the best.
No club wW be abki to run away
with lt. Tom (Silaver) Ia at his very
best.''

•

Now

can earn 16.250M

the next year and a half.

Before you invest your money for
retirement, car~fully consider the options.
Some programs advertise high initial
rates to get your business, but there is no
rate guarantee after the first 90 d~ys.
When you invest your money 1n
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not just the next quarter.

Stop by or .call any BANK ONE office
for details.

Thefe ii • IIUbslantial inlet"e51 penalty for early WithdrawaL

I..ocal bowling

"Thill ;s lht lfNteSt tlltiiiCIIIfeciiW IMI.lll '(Wtld

EARLYSUNDAY~ED

..
'
'

.,

'.

be

•

IIOWUNG IZAGUE
. J .... rytT, !IIZ
Team
Po6•11
Poweii'.SuperV•lu
GI:J AII&amp;O Part.
"
ROIICh'aGunSHap ,
~
Jaynw C!OI1 Co.
I
l
FrJeadfyTovem
.
· I
Ro,.ol Crown
10
High S.rieo - IMenl Lorry Dugon SU, Roy
Roach lf7 Terry Seiden~bl!l511 ; {Women! Debbio lloniiOy 134, BellY Whltllolch HI, Morlone
Wl-117.
Hl(hGime - (Men I Lorry llqon 2ll, Rlndy

!!

-

•
J

26, 1982

f

I

Wls•••• You think
o1 u•ll•115011qour name
CDIBII up ftnt._

•• Toenr_ s.t-1 "' ' tWomenJ
a, .,._ ""*Y ••. a.ur

Morteoe wboon
Whllillch ltl .

I,

Me~berFDIC

·--

®

"

'·

"

�1982

Ohio

--

Local bowling

Fratcmul Onkr of F:a~l.-s
14
Bill'dJody Sllup
14
H&amp;:RFire:done
G
t ..,am HiKh &amp;ms - Bill ':~ ROlly ShOp 21167.

John Tyrl'e580. ChHrlic V11nMett!r !i60.
H i~ll Individual Gil me - Mosc Norman and
D~tl c Del vis 223, Must! Norm1:111 210, Chou%.' Yun·
Meter 208.

we couldn't cont1itue to shoot82per-

cent from the fioor."

the victory was only Notre

Dame's fifth against 10 losses. Bill
Varner added 11 points tor the lr·
Ish, .Including a tree throw that
gave Notre Dame Its 50th point.
Brlan Kellennan, who scored Ida·
ho's only two points In pverUme.
topped the Vandals wtth 18.
In other games Involving ranked
teams, No. 7 Kentucky defeated
Louisiana State 7~. and Georgetown clobbered 20th-ranked Vlllan·
ova 72-56.

The Top Ten
Melvin Turpin had 20 points, In·
eluding eight of Kentucky's first 10,
and the Wildcats opened an early
10-:llead en route to an easy VIctory
over Louisiana State In the Sou·
theastern Cooterence.
Dirk Mlnnlefield added 17 points,
and Derrick Hord had 16 tor Ken·
lucky, 1.3-3 aild S-2 In the SEC.
Freshman Derrick Taylor had 'l:1
points for the Tigers, 8-7 and 5-3 In
the SEC.
The~dTen

Georgetown rebounded from
three consecutive losses. behind
Eric "Sleepy" Floyd, who went
over the :i,OOJ.polnt mark, and the
Hoyas defeated VIllanova In a Big
East Conteyence game. Floyd
scored IB points, and teammate
Eric Smith had 17.
Georgetown, 15-5 and 4-3 In the
cont~. outscored VIllanova IS.
6 In a streak that gave the Hoyas a

58-43 lead wtth 5even minutes left,
VIllanova, J.3.4 and S-2 In the Big
East, was led by Stewart Granger
and freshman Ed Pinckney wtth 12
points apiece.
Ulll'llllked Teams
Dale Solomon hit a three-point
play wtth 57 seconds lett that put
Vlrglnla Tech up by seven, and the
Hokles sCored an !!3-7l&gt;vlctory over
St. Louts In the Metro Conference.
Solomon had 16 points.
Blll Garnett scored 25 points and
Hoot center chris Engler added 25
as Wyoming defeated Hawall87-61.
and took over first place In the
Western Athletic Conference.
Ricky Plei.'Cf/ Scored 19 of his '1:1
points In the tlrst halt, and Rice held
on to heat Southern Methodist 42-40
In the Southwest Conference. Ken·
neth Perkins' 24 points and nbie reboUnds led Lamar to a 91-77 victory
over TelUI.$·Arllngton In the South·
land Conference.
Greg Jones liad 22 points to lead
West Virginia to its 14th straight
victory, n:60, over Mlissachusetts
In the Eastern Eight. Forward
David Magley scored 26 points to
lead Kansas to a 72-liO victory over
Alcorn State In a nonconference
game.

U the 49ers'do make It back, they

will have some ammunition that
was never used by their potent oftense Sunday.
"A lot was left over on the play
board," Walsh said Monday before
leaving tor home. "We couldn't
take advantage of some of the
things we had Planned."
Poor field position through much
of the second half restricted the
49ers' attack.
"Backed up as we were, we had
to he careful," said Waish. "We
couldn't do some of the things we
wanted to. They had field position
and all we could do was stall them,
make them use the clock."

But the 4llers did plenty In the
first half, coniltructlng a 2().0 lead,
the largest Intermission margin In
Super Bowl history, and then held
on grimly to ttght off a Bengal
comeback tor a 26-21 victory.
"We demonstrated great character," Walsh sa.ld. "It was typical of
previous games In which the of·
tense and defense -took turns bJ1ng.
lng us back."
In the first halt, It was the 49er
offense spearheaded by quarter·
back Joe Montana, voted the Most
Valuable Player, who direCted the
team on two TD marches - one a
92-yard drive which was the longest
In Super Bowl history.
In the secqnd half, it was the49er

.Southern still fourth . in Class A
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) - Sid·
ney Lehman's veteran Cavaliers,
perhaps drawing on their experlen·
ces of last winter, are Ohio's No. 1
, .· ClaSs A schoolboy basketball team
today.
Lehman, which starts all seniors,
has breezed by 14 straight opponents this season after bowing In
the
regional tournament finals last
·'',.· spring tor an 18-7 record.
.'
Ironically, the team that beat the
Cavaliers In the regional champion·
•'
ship, Columbus Academy, ranks
second In Class A this week with 225
points to 259 tor Lehman. Delphos
St.John, last week's small school
leader, tumbled to third place after
suffering
Its second defeat In 12
•'
games.
·'
St.John lost Its lead when the
Blue Jays dropped a 73-58 decision
to Class AA Ottawa-Glandori Fri·
. day night. The Delphos school's
only other setback came against
'
Lima Central Catholic, another AA
power.
•'

...

..

.

Meanwhile, Columbus Northisnd
In Class AAA and Wlllard In Class
AA easily retained their leads 1n the
weekly voting by a statewide panel
of sports wrlters and broadcasters.
In Class AA, Wheelersburg
moved one poslton to fourth, swapping places with Napoleon. Dayton
Roth held onto sixth, Warsaw River
VIew was seventh, Coldwater
eighth, Hamilton Ross ninth and
Minerva lOth.
In Class A, Racine Southern was
fourth again, Fayette Gorham·
Fayette llfth, Richmond Dale Sou·
theastern sixth, New Washington
Buckeye Central seventh, Anna
eighth, l&lt;aUda ninth and Old Wa·
shtngton Buckeye Trail No. 10.

'

..

s, Loratn

7,

Kln~o ll·l, 146.
Alii~. J.3.1, 133.

8. LOcll C1overleaf, 13-{1, lW.
9, o\krOil CemraJ..tlower, 10.2 1 ie.
10, Wlni«JvtUf:, IJ.O. 41
OUitr .elleoll reeeMng 10 or more
po&amp;ntl: 11, Manlfteld Malabar lt. 12, Toledo R.otEen 26. 13. ClnclnNitl Alldertc»&gt;
'Afl. 14 (til!) , Cleveland St. JI:*!Ptt lind
Wamr~ Howland l7. 18, Kent RooleveU .
12. 17, Parma Padu 11. 18

(~~JWnla

·

and ClndMI.tt Oak HOlllO'.
CIAIII.U

1. WWan:l, U0. 297.
:il, Urbana, ).2.(1, 217.
3, Col11mbul Belliey, lH 186.
4, Wlleek!rlbur&amp;, ll-0, 1&amp;
5. Napllful, to.t, 132.
Dlytoo Roth. 1().3, 111 .
7, War.w R1wr View, U·l. 100.

s.

p:J!Jltll: 11, Campbell Memoril.l 34. 12.

19. Doylestown Chippewa .12. XI !tiel,
Ham1110rt Badin, H11Jtboro and Wai'I"'I!Uvllle Heiahll 10.

Wide panel of sporu wr11cn and broad· •
cull!~ ral~

Ohio high S('t\ool basketball
t ~am s tl\la week for The A.uod1ted Press
(10 polntll klr Clnt to I point for IOliU:

Yort,NewYtd: 1~17.

' ·

POS'I'MMTER' Send acidr&lt;siiD The DollY.
Senllnel, Itt Collrl Sl., Pomeroy •Ohio 457ell.
SUII'JCIUFI'ION RATES

B)' CUriel' 1M' M•ter a-te

()Reweelr. ......•••. ,, , ••. , • ••• •• ,,. fl.OO
One Month ................. · .. · .... t4.411,

1

One Year ..........••.. ··•·· · · · · •• Pt.lll1

SINGLE COPY

,

I

PRICES

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Subecrlben not dtalring ID pay tho! carrier '
may remit In advance direct to 11le o.!lY ;
Sentinel on a 3, I or 12 month buill. Credit.
wi1l be given carrter each mooth.
·

No aubscrlpUOIII by mail pennitted in tDwna; 1:
where home carrier service is avallable.
~

. .·

...n.stJIISCIIIFI'IONS
ObteudWftiVJrPabi
"
3Montb , ........... .... ..... . .. . . SlUi .

st. month .. .... -...... .. .. .. .. ...

$JO,i ,

t Year

139.

... . ~~'=~=

~

J, WarTel'l Western Reserve, IH, lifT.

~ti'~

~.t
~IJb

·Tuesday

8, Anna, 12-1, 89.
9, Kal&amp;cla, 11·1, Kl.
41.

Other achoOlJ l'tftlvlnl I() or mo~
potrua: 11. Lorain Catholic 1J6. 11, ZaiiHvtlle R.oe!!craN 28. JJ, Canal Wb:heater
.ZS. u. Lelplle 11. 15, Peeblet 20. 16 (tie),
Str&amp;Jburi: and McDonald 19. 18. Wlrdlam

CINCINNATI \AP) - Office "Weknowwedldn'taccompllshevworkers, high school students play· erythlng we Intended to accompllsh
lng hooky, shoppers and chlldren
when we went to Pontiac... . Next
18. 19, Mll\lfleld St. Pet«'t 17. 1), Klnl·
man ~r a . 21, Sftllirta: U. %l (~1.
year, we ·want to Invite aU you peoturned out 3,500 strong Monday In
RIPley, Foetorla St. Wendi!Hn, GreenWidl
the snow-covered downtown to
ple to Pasadena."
Swlh &lt;irltral, Vletlna Matlll!W• anti C.atea
M1111 10.
cheer tcir the Clnclnnatl Bengals.
Area ri!Sldents are used to celeEven though the American Foot·
bratlng World Series victories by
baU Conference champions lost
the Cincinnati Reds, but this was
Sunday to the San Francisco 49ers
the Bengals' first tasteottheSuper
'' .:~":-~
2().21 In Super Bowl XVI, fans
Bowl, and they wanted more.
sought to boost the team's spirits at
"Next year we're going to get a
BOSTON ~~..... ,.,,
a civic rally.
mouthful of It," running tiack Ar·
Ma" Clesr .,. e&gt;oc&gt; Rainey, ~"""'·
"I wouldn't have come to the pep
chle G_rltfln told the chanting
::!,~""' Alle"""'· '"k""'· """" 10
raUy If they'd won," said Jane Beh·
throng.
CHICAGO WHITE sox-......, s....
Un, 26. ''If they'd won, they wouldn't . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - " " " ' - ' _
' "'_...
_lde_'·_"'_'_'""'_""_'_""_""'_L__-l
have needed us. "
. ...
"They brought the whole city to. gether tor a couple of weeks. It may
be utter, total escapism, but everybody needs to get away !rom
problems and we.dld It through the
Bengals. We owe them tor It," said
Susan Cranley, a college student.
"I can't picture the 49ers getting
any better of a reception than this, ••
Bengals guard Daire Lapham told
the
orange-a nd -black-decked
crowd on Fountain Square: ' 'I think
everyone was worried about that
(what kind of reception they would
·
get) .
"After a loss In a game like that. I
you people really brought us back t
up. I want to thank you."
Fans at the early-afternoon rally .
chanted, " Next year," and "Pasad- ~
ena," referring to the site of next I
year's Super Bowl. Clusters of wa v·
WIWAIID. CHILDS
lng tans dotted Interstate 75, the
DOll E. 11Ull£N
route from Greater Cincinnati In·
.101111 F. MUSSER
ternatlonal AirPort to downtown,
CIIARW l11Ull£N
"Th!J has really wanned my
MICIIML L CHILDS
heart, to see aU you people here,"
Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg said ..

..

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
.

.Wednesday

MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce, 7 p.m. Tuesday at
Ingels Furniture. Merchants
urged to attend.

.

POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn. All Lions urged to
attend.

.

Alpha Omicron
Peg Thomas of Rio Grande Col·
lege was guest speaker on the topic ,

omo vALLEY Cornmandery
24, regular meeting at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.

RUTLAND PTO, Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. Refreshments will he
served.

A valentine's queen contest Is un·
derway by the Meigs Chapter of the
Future Homemakers of America.
Jars tor contributions w111 he
placed In area businesses from
Jan . 25 to Feb. Btorpennleswith the
student receiving the most to bbe
named the "Penny Queen." Announcment of the winner w1ll be

Visi•~

Thursday
POMEROY
Ladies
Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the hospital.

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
PH. 992·2094

Pomer111

The Middleport Garden- Club
meeting scheduled for Feb. I, has
been cancelled.

"Assertiveness" at the Saturday
meeting of the Alpha Orpicron
Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma.
Held Saturday at the library In
Jackson, members enjoyed a
carry-In illllCheo!t served from a Ia·
ble decorated wtth sprlng colors
featuring wreaths of daffodlls a.nd
yellow tapers. Gertrude Trace h&amp;d
the Invocation and other mcmbern ·
of the hostess committee were ,
Nancy Kibler, Mary Ellen Smith,
Marguerite Gahm, Dr. . Ann
McCarroll and Eleanor Essman.
Jackie Fain. music chairman, provided the dinner music. ·

r?

The 33rd anniversary and ladies
night will be observed by the
Pomeroy-Middleport Liol\1 Club
Friday at 6:30 at the Meigs Inn. All
Lions and their ladles are invited to
attend . There will be entertairunent.

531 JACII:SON PIKE •Rq5 WEST

Ms. Thomas passed out a bill of
rights taken trom the book, "New
Assertive Women." She discussed
several of the rights from the Ust
expressing the tact that everyone
needs respect tor mothers: and also
that If you treat yourself wtth respect, others will follow the exam·
pie. She was Introduced by Susan
wm. chairman of the personal
growth committee.

Barbara Uttler, president, read
biographical lnfonna~on tor the
purpose ot selecting a member tor
Alpha Delta State, Anna Turner,
chairman of mem\lershlp, and two
members of the cOmmittee. Carol
Eberts and Nancy KtbblerweDUA.
ch~ of the preferential voting .
Next meeting will be held on Feb.

20. at 12: ll p.m. at the Robbins Res·
taurant, Jackson. Donna Stanley
will speak on teachers' retirement.

eARQAJN MATINEES .ON SAT I $tJH
ALL SEATS JUST 11.50

ADMISSION EVEifY TUf"SIMY 11,60

Celebrates birthday
A birthday party was held for
Shaw• Bradley Imboden, two, at his
Midd)eport home on Jan. 13 . The
party was given by his mother,
Cheryl Imboden, and Terry Harmon.
A .. cooki~ monster" cake was ser~
ved along with ice cream, chips, and
punch. There were decorations of
blue and white streamers matching
the blue and white table setting
along with cohirful balloons.
Attending the party were Mrs. Ted
Woods and Jared, Mrs. Kenny
Nejgler and sons, Scott and Jason,
Tony Hannon, Keith and Dolly
Woods, grandparents.
Sending gifts were Mt . and Mrs .
Rudy Stewart and Brett and Shannon , Mr . and Mrs. Larry Hoffman,
Mr . and Mrs . Tom Woods and
Melissa, Ms. Jane Horton and Kristy
of Spring Lake, N.C.
'

Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will nieet at noon Thurs·
day at the Meigs Inn for a luncheon meeting.

made at a party on Feb. 11. Plans
were also discussed tot naming
"member of the month" with a pic·
ture and resume to be published.
Feb. 7-131s FHA·Hero Week and
several public reiatlons programs
are planned tor that · tlffie. The
group recently had a party at the
Pizza Shack. ·

....._.

CAN YOU AFFORD ·
TttE OAMAGE?

1

No
one is ever
prepared· for a tragic
fire, but you can be
financially safeguarded. Talk to Usl

Df. Heyman Hl!rl, Huntington
Carolyn Jeffers, Golda Radcliff,
Syracuse;JamesCornell,Pomeroy;
Mary Louse Shuler and Teresa,
Racine; Barbara Van Meter,
Rutland: and Bill Cornell, Dorcas.

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2% MILK ......... ~ ...•... ~~.~h9.':"~ $1.79
VALLEY BELL BUrtERMILK .............. ~!!~.~~.~~;_,,~
ROYAL CREST 2% MILK •••••....... ~ •.•.q~hH?~.$1.79
ILK. 1f2GAL. / .. ~
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Capital Savings &amp; Loan. a Beneficial Finance System affiliated
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Phone or visit your local Beneficial office today for further
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or fecler•llr·ch•rtered uvlnga •nd lo•n.

dlange.

PhoM 441·4524

Iml:xx:len

area residents for holidays

Holiday guests of Anna Cornell
and Mercedes Condon included
Darrell
Shahan,
Galllpoli s:
Kathleen Morris, Long Bottom :
Carol Morris, student at Ohio
University; Heather Shuler, Long

THE PRECEPTOR Beta Beta

606 E. Main

Announcements

FHA holds queen's contest

REGULAR MEETING of Ohio
Valley Comm~ndery 24 Knights
Templarat 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
Sir Knights reque;'led to bring
sworda and hells for full fonn
Practice.

HARRISONVILLE - Golden
Age Club will meet at the town
hall Tuesday at 7 p.m. pending
road conditions. There will he in·
stallation of officers and dues
collected. Each family is to bring
cookies. Beverages will be
provided by the club.

STUDDING AVAilABLE
BAlANCING EXTRA

•• nda'Y 211
Tnrcugn '" 0

0, 101.

10, Old WuhlngtOn Buckeye Trail, 12·1,

Social Calendar

.

5. Fayettl! Gorham·FaYttte, lJ.O, l:H.
6, ltictunond DUe Sootheutem, U.1,
llll.
7, NrN Wuhlngton Buckeye Central, 12·

3_,500 attend rally
to welcoi.ne Bengals

The Hwnanitarian Award was
presented to J eff Hillery · at the
regular meeti•.•g of the Meigs County
Hwnane Society.
Mrs . Dorothea Fisher, president,
in regard to Hillery stated in a letter,
"You have personally given your
time and efforts ih animal rescue
operations and shown a great sympathy for animal welfare. Your
recently published story in our local
neWspaper eertainly reflect. a sensitive and deeply caring person." ·
Mrs. Fisher further commented
"in view of your interest in and compassion fo•· the unwanted or un·
fortunate members of our animal
world we would like to present you
with our Humanitarian Award."
The year end report of activities of
the Meigs County Hwnane Society
was ·given by · Donna Smith ,
telephone eoordinator.
The-report showed the society had
31 cat. and dogs adopted; received
54 calls pertajning to missing pets ;
hwnane agent made95 runs: had326
animal related phone calls; two
cases of dogs caught in traps; three
dog bites; four calls in regard to
dogs being shot; received 21 com·
plaints (some handled by rescue
agent and others settled by phone) ;
17 calls assisted by police departments in Pomeroy, Middleport,
Rutland and Syracuse.

&amp;Month .. .•..•••....•••..••••.•.• f23.td (
IYear . ......... . . ... .... .. ... : .•.-....

J, DtlphOI st. John. 10.2, n .
4, Racine Southern, l.Ml, tal.

1. Kettering Aller, 13-1. 243 .

A program on herbs, medicinal, good for nervous afflictiiHl, headaromatic and culinary uses · was aches, restlessness , dandruff, and in
.
.
'
p~nted at the reeent meeting of
cooking. Sage, she said, is good for
the Fernwood Garden Club held at most aibnent. as well as in c-ooking.
the home of Mrs. Thelma Giles.
Mrs. Giles told of harvesting roSe
Mrs. Giles not¢ VJat during the hips, the richest source of Vitamin
Elizabethan Age, herbs were highly C, and gave each member a seed
used as mtljliqnes, She spoke of the ·catalog.
!'!!pealed comments about herbs in
During the refreslunent hour, she
the Bible and noted that the Greeks served both hibiscus and red dragon
passed on the.ir knowledge to the' tea.
Romans wh.o carried their
knOWledge throughout the world.
The meeting opened with the club
Mrs. Giles told specifically of c'&lt;l0ect and devotions by Mrs. ijelen
three herbs, garlic, rosemary and Johnson on "Deep Winter Freeze,"
sage. The garfic with its distinct "Not Like Mother Used to Make."
aroma can he used either dry or and ' 'Old Fashioned Warp." For roll
fresh, she said, and can also he use&lt;! eaU members exchanged herbs
to repel Insects in the garden. She grown by the members.
·
also noted that it is good for colds,
Mrs. Giles '•displayed the publicity
blood pressure, headaches, angina hook which is preparing of the club
pain, and other aijment..
members and other events. AtAs for rosemarY'/ ,Mrs. Giles spke tending the meeting besides tfiose
of it as being an evergreen with a named were Mrs. Ida Murphy, Mrs .
pine scent used in ancient times for Susie Warner, Mrs. Kathryn Johnweddin~s and funerals. She said it is
son, and Mrs . Marjorie Purtell.

3 Month ........ ............. ..... flS,od

2, Columb.ul Academy, 13-l. t'l:S.

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

'

Advertiaing Representative, Branham
Newspe,per Sales, 133 Third Avenue, New

1, Sidney Lehri\U.n, 1«1, :m!l.

CIAS'l i\M
1, CoillmM Nonhland, IJ..(), 290 polntl.

A GENTS:

tnland Dol;'

ClAS8.

.,.._IL

.·

1

Iy p,.,; AUociaUoo 111111 tho! AmoriCOJI
Newaplpet'PIIbtlshen--Na.-t ·

-mjll~" ot """''~"•

w.

Transactions

..

p~~~~~gepaldatl'm&gt;otO)', OhiO,

' Member· The _._lated Prao,

Humane Society

-

4:/._._
.
.:.:~~
1

10. Mlnma, 10.1. ~

COLUMBUS. Ohlo ( A.P) - How a state-

'

Publill&gt;od OYe!"/llfte,.,.._ Monay tJwoo&amp;&lt;l
Frldoy, Itt eo.ut SU&lt;et, by tho! Ohio Valle)'
Publlshini Coo&gt;polly • Mulll!DOdla, Inc.,
_Pomeroy, Ohio 45768, tn-21M. Second daM

Fernwood Garden dub

. rates on
Check th~::'e DePOsitS···

Other IChOoll recetvtng lO or more

High school ratings ·

A DI.W. tiHIII.-, Joe.

~ ti-t~ qt.,.~ ·.

defense which staged a brllltaht
goal-line stand, denying the Ben·
gats after Cincinnati had· a first·
and-goal from the 3-yard line.
"Thts was a great victory over a
tine team, a great team, the best In
the AFC and the second best In the
NFL.'' said Walsh.
.
~' Thts was one of those unique years In Super Bowl history when
both teams had beaten everybody.
Anybody you might think was as
good had a shot and couldn't heat
them. Clearly. you had the two best
teams In 19811n the Super Bowl."
' Walsh said he wasn't surprised at
CinCinnati's second halt comeback
after San Frarictsco had buUt Its big
lead.
"You just don't go out and play
tor the · world championship and
have a cakewalk," he said.
Montana accepted the Sport
Magazine MVP award humbly.
"I take thts award In honor of the
whole team.'' he said. "It was such
a team ettort."

8. Coldwater. ~.0. 74.
9, Hamlltc11 Rou, 12·1, 59.

Glftl'd'lt'ld McClain 31. 13, YClUn&amp;JIOWn
Rayen 28. 14, 7#nnviUe MayM!Je 21. II,
Glllpoi&amp;IM. 16, Ot1awa·Giand0rl' Zl. 17,
Clbertln Flreluda ~ - 18, Wl'Ulniton 16.

...
•'

4, Newark, lJ.:il, 181.
5. Dayton MMdr.M&lt;diJp, 14-1, J.!Je.

The Doily Sentinel" ·
.
itJSPSt.W.) . .

RETREAD SNOW TIRES
~
~
~...~

Will Bengals, 49ers return to Super Bowl?
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Super
Bowl XVI was so good, many left
here hoping tor a re-run.
What are the chances of the
Champion San Francisco 49ers and
Cincinnati Bengals having a re, match next year? .
' ·
"They're a team that wlU be
hack," 49ers Coach Bill Walsh said
of the Bengals. "They're too good. I
don't see the AFC with a team to
beat them."
And San Francisco?
"We think we can Improve ln.the
draft and make a run again," said
the coach. "But It wlll be tough to
repeat In the NFC. We have a lot of
good teams In our conference."

't·

The Daily Sentinei-Pag&amp;-S

Pomerov-:Midcllef!O'!, Ohio

Meigs County organizations .hold meetings

Notre Dame wins 50-48 overtime game
By AMoclated l'reM
Notre Dame has put together
consecutive victories tor the first
time this season, art!l Coach Digger
Phelps has never seen anythlng
like It.
"! have never seen a group llke
this wtth just pure heart," Phelps
said Monday night after the Il1sh
eked out a 50-48 overtime victory
over 11th-ranked Idaho.
Notre Dame went Into a stall that
held the Vandals to 10 points In the
second halt, and the two teams
were tied 46-46 at the end of
regulation.
The Irtsh held the ball tor the tlrst
three minutes of the five-minute
overtime period and took !heir first
'c,
lead, 4846, on a pair of tree throws
\
by freshman guard Ron Rowan,
'
·)
who led Notre.Dame wtth 17 points.
'J
Phelps saki he told his players to
keep cool after Idaho hit 14 of Its
first 15 shots to take an IS-point lead
DIRK DRIVES - Kentucky's Dirk Mlnnlefleld I 10, right) drives
In the first halt. " ! told them they
around Louisiana State's Derrick Taylor during Kentucky's 76-65
couldn't keep It going," Phelps
Southeastern Conferenee wln. 1AP Laserphoto).
Said. "! think Idaho got too hot too
c;,
. quick."
The loss was the second straight
\ tor the \'andals, who won their t1rst
TRI..COUNTY ROWUNC L EAG UE
Fndcrna l order of E&lt;i,llles 2638, Tulcrs (ll SUI'HIK:t!
16 games of the season.
~IIPUif')lll , l&amp;ll
Co. 2:153.
Tc~:~ u 1 Hl~h Go~~me _ Fr&lt;~tcrnal Order of
"Needless to say we got a little
TEAM
POINTS
Roach'liGUnSh()p
28
E~Mil!!i 932, BIII'H Body Shop9J7, Bill's Body Shop
tentative fn the second half/' said
Tulers Jn•turanL~ Co.
18
Idaho Coach Don Monson. "I knew
Top of the S1Birt1
16 ""·
Hi~h l!ltl ivJ tlual S!!tJL'il - MD:Ie NorJIIHil 5113 .

Tueada;, January 26, 1982

•
•

...-

PA~ER roWEI.S49¢ ro;LET PAPrR 79¢
•

.

.

',

~

-r

,

'

TEAICBAGS · ~~99¢' BREADGS:~LOAF 49¢

. . . . . . . ._llllli.-....._ _

.

·BANANAS
3LBS. $} 00

�Jte:ge 6

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Helen Help Us

·Small

inv~stment, large ·return. Want
Public: Notice

WANT AD INFORMATION

Is it love or burnout
That's the burning questton
By HELEN AND SUE BOTTEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
In recent months I have been
f;11Strated at work, am iosing my
temper :more, and making more
errors. This, I think stems from
being Ignored by a male supervisor
because be Is preoccupied with other
. tll!np.
I get very jealous when he gives
assignments to someone else rather
than me,
My girl friel)d says the reason for
my feellng.s is that I'm secretly in
lov_e with him, U this Is true, why am
I rude to him sometimes, miserable
111011t of the time?
thfuk he's a terrific person to
work for 10 why is everything going
wrong, and how can I get back on the
right track with him? - NEEDS
HELPAT23

rsun

DEAR tffiEDS:
Is it love or bum-out - or perhaps
a Utile of both?
One thing for sure: your present
attitude will help neither your
career nor your chance with this
man. So, unless yQU can become
mcire cooperative, we'd suggest a

transfer to another department.
HELEN
NEEDS HELP:
An added benefit here: once
you're out of this man's department,
he may notice you as a person, not a
work-related problem. Sometimes
love biOSBoms more reHdilf In the
company lunch room than it does on
the job, - SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My best friend Joan and I are
working on a routine for next
season's cheer leader positions. (We
have two head cheer leaders at our
school.) She's petty good and we've
practiced a lot, but we may still get
beaten by two other girls who will be
in the try-outs.
Last month Diedre transferred to
our school. She was head cheer
leader at her high school and she's
terrific. She has asked me to be her
partner and I know we could win.
But iii accept, Joan will. be out.
Should I stay with Joan and Jose,
or hurt Joan's feelings and win? GEE!
DEARGERI :

"All they ever asked for was
prayers. They knew we had very .
little to offer them medically, If
Mary was to be cured, It had to be a
miracle," said Helen Tobias, the
head nutse at the hospital and a
close friend . ·"When they realtzed
God wasn't going to cure her they
accepted II. I'm sure It strengthened their faith," she said. ·
"John was just fantastic. He had
to learn how to take care of Mary,
and he did a super job. Jokingly, we
gave hlm a nurse's cap the first
time they went home from the hospital," she said.

U'n i o n
Av e nu e,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for

A,~OUNCEI'.\ENTS

•

•-card of Tflan-.:s
:.-In Mtmor lam
4-GIYtiWIY
,_HIPJIY Ads

.

U - Fu r llli Sh.cl RoomS
lor Rltnt

..,__l.ost and Fownd

4._ _5~(t

7~ Y•rd S.le
..... Public hit
&amp; Auction

47-Wente to Rent
41-Equlpment for Rent
U - ForlNIIt

•MERCHANDISE

&amp;EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

51 - H0usehold Gooch
n - ca, TV, R•dlo Equl~:~ment

11-HtlpWanted

l2-Siiuatlon w.. nhld
IJ-Insur,"tce
14- B~sineu Tr•inlnv

H - M isc. Merchandise

ts-Scltools 1nstructlon

II- Fruits I veveto~bl"
Sf- For S.learTr•de

(1 )

So~le

..-Holy I Gr•in
IS- Set4&amp; Fertili1er

l1 - H0 me1 for S._le

7h- Autol for Sate
72- TrLM:kS tor Solie

U - F.umllor Safe

7374157•-

37- Aialton

&lt;'

News Notes

TRAILER

lt ~ H 0 me improvemenll
12- Piumblng&amp; He.tlinll
U - Excav;lling
14- EieclricJI &amp;

ls-Gener.tl H.tuling
16-M.H. Repair
17- Upholsterv

Rates and Other Information
Up to IS words ... onedo~y inHrtion

, . , , . , , , , Sl.OO
upti)Uwords ... thrteCiaytnsertion ........ , ............... H .OO
Up to 15 woards ... siJ days insertion ,.
. . . , .. , , .. ... , , , 11.00
CAnro~ge 4 words per linet
Mobile Home sates and Yard !.ties ue .t cnpll!d only with co~sfl
with ordEr . u eent cn•rt• tor o1d1 urrylng BoJ Number in Co~re of

Greg Roush
Ph, 992-7583
or 992 -2282

Curb Inflation .!
3 ACRES .Pay Cash for
!,·
Classlflads and . 1I1
I
Sav.alll
I'
1

1

•

Write your vwn tta and order by mall with this j

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

BEV~RLY WICKLINE
NOW AT

lWanled
l For Sale

)AnnounCement

) For Renl '

1.
2.
3.

jI

17. - - - - - - I
18 .
I
19, _ _ _ _ __
I
j
20.
21.
22 .

4.

s. _ _ __ __
6. _ _ __ __
7, _ _ _ __ _

23.
24.
25.
26.

j

I
I
I
I
I
I
II

BUILDINGS

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)

Now picking up
auto bodies . Top prices
paid for ·auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals.
1
mile
west
of
Fairgrou'nds on Old Rt.
JJ .
Mon. ·Frl.8: 30 to 4:00

Ph. 992-6l6'

1·7· I , 10 .

S&amp;W •TV
and
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382
All makes and models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
se,.vice available.

1·3·1 mo.

8, _ __ __

21.

9. - - - - -11 . --~---

28.
29.
30.

12. - -- - - 13. - -- - - 14.
IS.
16.

32.
33. - - - - - - j
34.
I
I
35.

· 10. - -

- -- -

31.

Mail This Collpon with Remittance
The Daily Sentinel
111Court5t.

•I
I
I
I
I

I
l,
I
I

I

l..----"!'::r:eroy, 01'1. ~~'-------JI

CALL:
614 -992-2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heati!l!i Oil.

PRICED RIGHT
CALL TODAY!

Make
AND
Total

electric , 3 bedroom
r1ome with U x 16 sitting
room . dining room Wtth
bay window and built· In
china . Modern kitc:hen .
Full basement w / wood·
burner. Heated garage
with automatic door
opener . Priced very
reasonable
tor tt1e
quality ot the home at

LAFF ·A· DAY

SOVLFVL DVO - Smokey Robillloo and
~· MliiB abare a lauab IUid a llug for
.P....,..pllen IIIIer IIIey were named favorlle male

-

'

'

•

.

f

'

aDd female vocallaiiiD !be IOUI category at lbe Dlnlb
auua1 American Millie Awards Ill Lae Aageles Moaday. (APLIIaerpllolo).

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

"You've 1101 .to win this one for

me , Tiger."

Board of County Cotrunissioner,
Meig~ County to Ohio Power CornPBJlY. Ea:jernent, Sulton.
·
Thomas J . Marcinko to Patricia F.
Marcinko, Parcels, Olive-&lt;&gt;range.
James B. O'Brien, Roberta M.
O'Brien to James B. O'Brien, Roberla M. O'Brien, WRS, Parcels,
Pomeroy.

Glenn I . Cundiff, Jr., Carol A. CundiffloGienn J . Condiff, Jr., carol A.
Cundiff, Parcel, Syracuse.
James W. Brannon, Virginia L.
Brannon to Blauser Energy Cotp.,
Right otway, Olive.

- - -Ta-· ·
x
Serv ice . .,

Incom e

Federal and Stale. Prompt,

Announcements
'----"=
" --= "-'-'-SWEEPER and sewing

JIMS Waler Service. Call: .
Jim Lanier, 304-675·7397.
camp conley.

3

Pick up and . 4Glveawa
ANY PERSON who has
Georges Creek Rd . Call anything to give away and '
does not offer or l'lttempt to
offer · any other thing for

Loading Guns and Sup·
plies .
Spring
Valley

Trading Co., Spt ..1g Valley
Plaza, 446-8025.

sale may Place an ad in lhls
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser . . ~
' I

J female 1/ 2 grown k ittens '

to gtve away . Call 446·1256.
ShOoting Malch every sunday 1PM Gall Ia Co. Coon 3 k Iliens, '9 weeks old.
club . K r iner ·Sandholl ow Housebroken, 446·2258
Rd .

----··

Feml!l'le Calico kitten . Call ·~

Dealer

For

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3·1f C

bulk

delivery

of

gasoline, heating oil and

diesel fuel, call Landmark,

99).2181 , Pomeroy, Oh .
Gun

Shoot

Racine

Gun

MIUER ELECTRIC · aReGun
cine Fire Dept. sponsors
Shool. Sat. nights
6:30p.m.• Bashan. Factory
SERVICE
choke 12 gauge sholgvn.
For all your
wiring needs.

Let George Miller
check your present
electrical system.
Residentia 1
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
H ·lfc

245-9347 , ask tor Penny.

- - - - -- -·..

Two adorable cuddly pup·
pies . Mother Is a CockapOQ, .,
8 weeks old pups, bolh '·
females. 992·1208 after 5:30 ''•
·~ .

p .m .

FIVE monlh old pupple, . .
part Beagle &amp; hound, has '
had alls!lots, housebroken,

1

304-675-3972.

-- --· - - - - - --......! ..·

2 PUPPIES, half Alrdale, "·
phone 30076·2979. Call
before 2:30 on weekdays.

' •,

Fl e a Market .
New
Opening. 7 days e week .

~ mo. old yellow .P ersian•· '
The Hearl of Mlddleporl. 20 cat.
304-675-2634.
_.. ,
N. 2nd 51. formerly Marlin
General Store. 992-6370.

Lost and Found

6

LOST

Lad les

· ••."'

Armllron•&gt;

Quartz watch . Color-Silver "'·
tone. Lost·Seturday around ,

Foodland, Frulhs

Phar· '·

macy , Barrs or Johnsons··'
Grocery. If found please

call446-1486.

LOST : Black &amp; while Fox

WELDING SHOP

REPAIR WORK
• Gas &amp; E Jectric
• Cutting
• Brazing
e20 Yrs. Exp .
Reasonable Rates

.PH. 992·5663

Terrier . License No. 88.
Five Points area . Name

REESE •
.
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Grasshopper. S50. reward.
992-3479,
wanled lo Buy
WANT TO BUY Old fur ·

9
Real Estate- General

water· Sewer· E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
' Water Line Hook -ups
Sep1ic Tanks
County Certified
Roush lane
Cheshire, Oh .

nlture and Antiques of all

kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256-1967 In lhe evenings.

CASH PAID for Clean, lale
model used cars . Smith
Bui ck· Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call446·2282. ·

Ph. l67·7S60
1·n lfc

BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything

CUSTOM
WELDING
JO Years EJCperience
Small Pipelines A

Specialty
North of Racine
On c armel Road
at Sawmill

J. R. PARSONS

NEW LISTING - A Iii·

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"
- liddon•

tie more than a half an
aCre of level yard with
a garden area and a

12' M60' Skyline mobile

home in the country but
close to town . Total
electri c, publi c w ater
and ready for you .

.,..t;l rti"'IOIIe llnt

- R&amp;OIIng and ogulter work ·
- Con(r•l• work
- Plumbino And
electr ic• I wor•

$12,000.00.
IMMEDIATE POSSES·
SION

Estimates.)

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

9·30·tfc

1·8·1mo . pd.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Meigs property transfers
to Timothy Smith, 'Lot, Middleport.
Frank Puckett to Doyle J.
Donald Wooten, Phyllis Wooten to
Galbraith, Shirley A. Galbraith, .
Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Parcels, Salem.
Doyle J. Galbraith, Shirley A. · Way, Columbus.
Rodney E . Walker, Dianne Welker
Galbraith to H. Robert Beaver,
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Mary Allee Beaver, Parcels, Salem.
Way, Rutland.
Arnold Grate, Mildred Grate to
. Eugene Smith, Marjorie Smith to
Herald Oil and Ga~ Comp~ny, Right
Eugene
Smlth, Marjorie Smith, Parof Way, Rutland.
·
t&gt;el,
Bedford.
James Neal, Jerrie l'feal to Herald
Michael Blake, Vicki Blake to
Oil and Gaa Company, Right of Way,
Buckeye
Rural Electric Coop. Inc.,
Scipio.
·
·
Right
of
Way,
Scipio.
James Neal, Jerrie Neal to Herald
CUnt
E.
Douglas, Alpha L.
Oil and Gas Company, Right of Way,
Douglas
to
Buckeye
Rural Electric
Scipio.
Coop.
Inc.,
Right
of
Way,
Scipio.
Lincoln E. Smith, Shrley A. Smith

Racine, Oh .

Ph. 614-143·2591
6·1Hic

r~

grea1 ·.

children
and
gr.indchildren .

Th i s tw o
bedroom home has new
carpet in the liv ing
room, new alum inum
sidina.
Insulat io n .
garag(. and a two story
cellar buld ing w ith 1 1/ 8
acres which part is fen ·

ced. $24,900.00
MOBILE HOME WITH
EliPANDO - A huge

Mulberry Avenue in
Pomeroy .
Give us a call and ask
about our owner Finan•
ced propertiel with only
a 10% Interest ratell
Cheryl Lemle 11_, AlsK.

Phone 742-3092

Rl. 3, BOK 54

tllff Rd ., Pomeroy. 992·

2272 .

accurate . Martha Fry,
Pomeroy . Phone 992·3414, · '

Farm EQuipmenl

CFree

S6S.ooo.oo. Localed on

Velma Nicinsky, Anoc.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

POMEROY
LANDMARK

M .This older 3
bedroom home needs
repair but the location is
excellent and is situated
on approx. 2112 acres
across from the Rutland
Grade School. Asking

Phone 742-3171

Dog Houses

~~~~U~C_t~~, ~ ~ :~· •,.:

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Authorized John Deer,
NeW Holland, BUSh Hag

.! •

In com e
fa)(
service. ,
Federal and ' state Income
tax forms. quarterly repOr'- '
ts. and W-2 forms will be ,,
done by l'lppolntment. See
Wanda Eblin, -41000 Laurel

machine repair, parts. and

·BOGGS

Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x36.

3

suppl ies.

Ph. 992-5587

u .s . Rl. strEasl
Guysville, Ohio

866 South Third
Middleport, Ohio

Ask ing only $30,000.00.
super lerrific buy Ill
HANDYMAN'S DREA·

SPACIOUS
BEAUTIFUL -

Rt. 124
Minersville, Oh .

Utility Buildings

healing.

HOME

offer.

&amp; ACCESS•

SadlY missed by wife
Lona, daughlers Evelyn
and Caryl, sons Lowell ,
Zenilh and Garrel , grand·

Club. Every Sun. starting
ivnk ~-----------!----------_, al 1 p.m. Factory choke
gunsonly .
·

-:Ordinary? No way! I Or·
dinarily this home could
not be offered for such a
fantastic price. but the
owner wants to move
out of state. L ovely 3
bedrooms, total elec'·
tri c, 1111 baths, carporel.
Situated on I acre.

re asont~ble

KINGSBURY

Sizes start from 30:11:24"

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

On good

S18 ,000 .00 .

Middleport. Ohio
9·21 -tfc

Ali STEEL

asking $9,500.00. 1
PRICE REDUCED !

I
I
I
I

276 Sycamore St.

lnsul~ted

14''d 2', excellent condi · ·
lion , total electric, 2
bedrooms, equipped kit·
chen. Must see this,

include discount

OPEN

IN RACINE

1· ·24· 1 mo .

OFFICE 742-2003

These cash rales

Anything for your
Mobi'Je Home.

Weds., """' &amp;Sal.

CALL 949·2320

GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr.
Broker

MOBILE

forever in our hearts .

complete line of Muzzle

HAIR STYLING
lloltl Mt1 &amp;Women

REALTY

Phon•---------------

memories. He will remain

HOME
P ARTS

~--------=1----------i 4_46_0_29~

B-A BEAUTY

county road i n Rutland
Township . Ex cellent for
thr ee houses.
VERY NICE - Corner
lot with gar a He arid 2 ap·
ts. Also thi s lovely 3
b e droo m
insu l Ated
home. Hot wa er heat.
ce ntral
a t r , lUll
b ase ment,
formal
dining and nice k i t.

Address---------------

January 26, 1980.
r.==========t==:;:;::;;;;=;==~
MOBILE
a bit of ~dm !s foynd in our

992-&amp;259

ANNOUNCING

Hous.i1g
Headquarters

Nam•------------------

In Memoriam

ward Chevalier who Pl'IS!ted

Sale.
SALE PHONE NO.

woodburni ng f ir eplace,
larqe fa"m i ly room ,
modern kit .• g ar age and
3 acres.

675-1333

t __ _ _ _..:...:._:_::_:_.:...:__ _ _ ___J .,

In Loving Memory of Ed·

TV SERVICE

''

992-2156
In Mason County ·

2

Used Color TV Sets for

LOTS -

446-2342

Phonej3041372~550

NOW

1·3· 1 mo.

$32, 500.
.
LARGE 10 ROOMS FREE GA S, 2 ful l bath'· '

,-----------~----------~

~

14 Years E~perienc c

·-

In Meigs County

'n Gallia County

away ·two years ago on
He is gone but every day

• Elec:trical worl&lt;

LAND CONTRACT --

Tht Publilfler reurve~tne rlfihlloedit or niectany ads deemt&lt;l
objectional. The Publisher will not be respon5ible for more t~n one
incorrect lnserticm .

·4

remodel -

e Roofing work

One lev el acre, outbuilding 43x36 used as .a
garage and
storago.
Nice 2 bedroom home
with
furna c e.
full
basement. on State road
ne ar
stor e s . Only

The Sentinel.

'

tensive
ing.

Lev e l 3 l ot s with
Leading Cr . water and
electric . Only $5 ,000 .00
or on time.
NICE
3 or 4
b e droom s,
b a th .
modern kit .• basement,
nat. gas furnac e, and
central a ir .' Carpetinq, 4
porches, and .66 of an
acr e. City water.

Aelriver•llon

s ft c

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New· Homes - ex -

ol d 4 bed r oom er . 2 full
bath s, l ar ge fa m ily
room .
ba se m ent,
garage and pati o. La rg e
lot ahove atl fl oods in
Middleport .

SERVICES
Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

T iiii'IU

JUST LISTED - 20 yr.

V•n• I 4 W.O.
Motorcyctel
BNh &amp; Moton ·
Auto P•rts I
Acceuories
11- Auto Repo~ l r
71- C.tmpint E cauipment

34-Buinen Buildings
Js-Lots I ~cnaqe
l6- Reo11 E ~t •t~ Wanred

9

25, 26 , 27, 28, 29, Sic

try hom e of 3 bedr oom s.
ca rpeting , bath, modern
kit .. tu ll basem ent, fur·
naceand lar ge lot .

•TRANSPORTATION

» - Mobile Homes
for Sele

Fairview
News Notes

•Hot Wafer

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325
· JUST LISTED - Coun·

n - wentt4 to Buv
n - Li\lestock

• REAL ESTATE

Laurel Cliff

•OitpaU IS

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

"-F•rm EquiPment

937- Buffalo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

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

•Dhhwa 1hen

•

•

•

576- Appl e Grove
773- Mason
882- New Hav en
89S-: Letart

ALL MA K ES

•Ro~~neu

..

67l- PI. Pleasanl
458- Leon

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

e Orv er.

.

Mason Co., w. Va.
A rea Code 304

STEVE R. KESSEL, M.D•.

• Wo11hers

Real Estate- General

U- Antlq~o~es

• FARM SUPPLIES .
&amp; LIVESTOCK

S1tniU1

reared in this community.
Charles Mash has been returned
,,
home from Veterans Hospital and is
getting along very good,
Mrs. Robert Bowen, Chester, has
been a patient at University
By Ml'll. Herbert Roosb
Attendance at the morning ser- Hospital, Columbus. The Bowens
lived
in
this
community
for
several
Mrs.
Betty McGuire· and Lynn of
vices at the Free MethOdist Church
years.
Pomeroy
visited a day with Mrs. ',
on Jan. 10 and 17 was 50 and 45. AtEdith
Manuel.
Nonnan
Schaefer
was
a
patient
at
tendance was low due to the cold
Veterans Memorial Hospital several
Mrs. Flossie Bush and Don
weather.
days. He is now ai home and doing Manuel visited Wednesday with
Word has been received here of very good.
Mrs. Arnold Hupp at Portland.
the illness of Mrs. Floyd Shook of
Mr. and Mrs. William · Perry,
Miss ' Wilda Lawson spent a few
Canton. Rev. Shook was pastor of Athens, visited a Sunday with Mr. days with Mrs. Dorothy Rusaell at
the local church for seven years.
Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Nonnan Schaefer.
Mr . and Mrs. Lloyd Wright, Mrs.
Clarence Ray of Racine visited
Sidney Leifheit , Columbus, ~ho Enna Fox, and Mrs. Iva Pearl Mrs. Elha Warner Tuesday evening.
died recently and . was buried at Powell visited recently with Mrs.
David Russell of Bedford, Ky.
Shade, was the son of Mr. and Mrs. ' Nellie Tracy, Kimes Rest Home, spent a week with his parents, Mr.
Thomas Leif!leit, and was born and Athens.
and Mrs. Russell Roush and family.

PARTS AND SE: RIJIC E

SJ- t,o\uliCallnlfrumenl

lt-Businltn
Qppartunlty
Z2-Money to Lo•n
lJ-Protenlonal

County and area correspondence

Call K·en· Young
For Fast Serv &lt;ce
985-3561

SS - Bulldint SIIPPIIU
I._Pets tor Sale

• FINANCIAL

display a woolen ouUII, a black short jacket with a
square neckline worn over a white shirt wltll knife
pleats. (AP Luserpholo) ,

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

No.

and to w i t~tdraw the above
vetlicle . pr ior to sale. Fur ·
ther , The Farmers Bank
and Sav ings Company
reserves the right to rej ec t
any or all b ids subm i tted:
Furn1er, ve t1icles are
sold In ttte co·n dition 1t1ey
are in wiH1 no expressed or
implied warrant ies given.

for Rent
44- ANrtmenll for II Ent

I.-Radio. TV.
, &amp; C:B Rep~ir
11-Wanted To Do

HAUTE COUTURE BY PER SPOOK - In preview
of his Spring-Summer for 1982 Haute Couture Collection from Norwegian couturier Per Spook, two models

Mrs. Tobias' concern was not un·
usual at the hospital, said hospital
spokeswoman Carol Mattar.
"The emphasis Is on quality of
lite, not death," she said. "These
nurses do everything for the pa·
tients anct; their families. You can 'I
descrtbe the dedication; you have
to feel it. They take their clothes
home to wash, they visit them when
they go home, they take care of
their children. There Is almost no
turnover."

e RENTALS

. 614
992- Mtddleporl
Pomeroy
9U- Chester
343- Porlland
247- Lelart Falls
949- Ractne
742- Rulland
667- Coolvllle

Future Reference

fo il ow
" in g

Ford , Ser ia l

Me igs Co. Area Code

Gallia Co. Area COde
614
446- Golllpolls
367- Cheshlre
liB- VInton
245- RioGrande
256-Guyan Olsl.
643- Anbla Dis I.

r.=:::;;:::::;;;:::;:;:;;::=~rr=========~==========~
l&lt;eepThisAdFor

~~~G UHOI608 - F 250 lhe Farmers Bank and
Sav i ng s
Company ,
Pomero{, Ohio, reserves
the rigt, to bid at tt1i' sate,

•• - House•tor Rent

t-WanrM to Buy

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
This poem expresses my feelings
exactly :
Lord, please consign to superhot
places,
Those who_park cars by stradling
two spaces. - DRIVER

Mrs. Tobias said Mary thrived
while spending time away !rom the
hospital.
"She gained weight and dld all
the things Mary wanted to do," she
said.
Hempfling said funeral arrangements were private.
"I guess I'll go back to school
now. I'd better or Helen Tobias will
clobber me," he said.

1980

U- Mobile Home•

J-AnncMJnnments

GERl :
Here's an idea : Ask Deidre to join
you in a cheerleading threesome.
But first get an okay from the
athletic department. I doubt that
you'll have trouble here, when you
explain the circumstances to the
director. - SUE

(Got A 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.

ccola lateral
sh I he
:

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Is winning more important to you
than loyalty? That's a question Only
you can answer, but remember, a
cheerieaaing job lasts one season
while a well-tended best-friendship
could last forever. - HELEN

Marriage lasted six months
The couple was able to leave the
hospital !rom time to time and
lle111pfllng, who had dropped out of
schOol and was not working, took
care of her.
"We had a nice Christmas with
the lamUy," he said Monday In a
telephone Interview !rom Dayton.

105

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

Mond a y 'J :OOon Satun:ta y
TIHIIUY ftlru Frld8y 1: 00 ... M ,
the dav be lore publiutlon
Sundo~v:J : OO P .M. Fridoi't'

CINCINNATI ' (API
John
Hempfilng dedicated his Ute to
Mary Malchow when they married
last July. They both knew cancer
would take her 'Ute.
••we had a fUll six months. We
ha4 six months they didn't think
we'd have," said HempfUng after
Mary aUppi!d away Monday.
The couple met when both were
students 1,\t a technical school In
Centervtlle.
Mary, who was 26whenshedled,
had ovarian cancer and was hospitalized In the Oncology Unit at Miami Valley Hospital.
· They were married In the hospital July 31, 1981, and spent their.honeymoon In her hospital room.
Nurses decorated the hospital
hall tot the wedding and made
Mary's wedding clothes. Rev. Jack
Schwarz of Greenmont Oak Park
Community Church pertonned the
ceremony.

public198~.
sale atwill10:00
be held
30th,
a.m . al
a

Ads

l:IH1111ified f'NIIfl!ll rover the
fr~llr~winll fel&lt;&gt;r,hom• exrhllnlfl!ll ...

Business Services

PUBLIC NOTICE'

Not ice is hereby gi ven
th at o_n Saturday, Jan u,ar "

PHONE 992-2156
•

The

Ohio

1982

Tuesday, January 26, 1982

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
"Beautilul, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free slcfing
estimates, 949 ·2801 or

949-2160.

No Sunday Calls

3·1Hfc

PULliNS
EXCAVATING

Mixed Hard.JJ'ods
Delivery Available
or YOU Pick UD

land. $9,000.00.
CLOSE IN - Over sl•

acres of nice la yin g
cl eared land with a
drilled well . Elec tric
crosses land, but would
have to be put in . A sk ing

Also Wood Splitter
For Rent
John Wlu

$11 ,000.00.

(614) 742-2131
David Price

(614) 992-3556
1·13·1 mo. pd .

eTrencher
• Wate-r • Sewer

Syslems

Large·or Small Jobs

PH , 992-2471
1·21 ·1 mo. f)d .

RUTLAND - 11h story
fra me home with 7
room s, .J bedrooms,
d i n i n g room
with
firepla ce, and a large
nice lot. House needs
some repair . Asking

$13,000.00.
LARGE KITCHEN - 3

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING.

bedroom s, could have
full basement. House
approx . 6 years old, has
a front porch , and ls a

•Roollni of alllypes

• Dump Trucks
eL .. Boy
•Septic

FIREWOOD

And Home Main1enance

eOo1ers
• Backhoe's

eGas lines

l i ving
room ,
2·3
bedroom, l iJ, baths ~ all
underpinning, 2 por ·
ches, w indow A. C. . and
equipped k itchen. No

•Siding
• RemoJCiellng

• Free estimates
' e20 Yrs. eMperiel)ce

TOM HOSKINS
Ph.949-216G or 949-2412
7-5-lfc

good buy aiSI9 , ~, oo .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .•
GRI
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Ootie Turner 992-5692
Office
992·2259

slamped IOK, 14K, 18K and
denial gold. Class rings,

wedding rings, silver coins
or
any thing
stamped

slerllng, Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
99N0541n Pomeroy I

Buying
GOld,
Sliver,
Plat inum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Oailv
quotes available. Alsc ., ·
coins &amp; coin supplies tor ~·

sal e . Spring Vo lley"
Trad ing , Spring Vollev::
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446·8026.•.

we pay cl)sh for late modllff
cl ean used cars .
• •

F~i~~~~~:';o~~~o~~·

: ::

446·0069.

.~ ....

wanfed to buy lie log$:
Pay ing

up

to

Sl-40

per .

lhousand . Call 256·6363 or
634-3 13 I.

------ -- -

TOP PRIC E Scrap Melat,
auto bodies. and cars. ·eat ··
ter ies, alumlum, brass &amp;
copper . G..,lllpoll s Block::

Co.. 123 112 Pine 51 .. 446-,
2783 .
..

•.
-Top rabbit
- - -----;
Beagle. 13 lo 1:1''

112 inchu tall . 3 to 3 112 "
years old, not gun 5hy, o~ :
t'.unter &amp; tra cker . Must nor·..
run deer or fox . No f&amp;Sf,'"

.

dog, two week trial. Co~ -:
lacl Bi II Carler al -446·3413. ==

---

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, otcC'
furniture. gold, sllv~ ·
dollars, wood Ice boxei.

stone jars. antiques, etc., .
Comp l ete
houset'.otds .

Wrile: M.D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomerov , Oh . Or992·77M.

.

CHIP WOOD . Poles max,
diameter 10"

on larg81t

end. S12.50 per lon . Bundleq'
$lab . S10 .50_ per ton .
Deliverd 10 (lhio Pallel Co,,
Rock Spr tnos Rd . •
Pomeroy. 992·2689.

.'

,,

�Sentinel

Ohio

They' ll Do It Every Time

Wa nted to Buy

9

Gold,

si lver,

sterling,

~

jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burk ett Bar ·
ber Shop, M iddleport. '192·

42

. f ~rJl!~ ..! - - -

....

2' bdr . and 3 bdr. mob ile
homes. Call ..-46·0175.

/lVI'S .EVE~
:M::&gt;W 7'0
&amp;EaW.EA

3~76 .

2 bdr . trailer . Adults pref.
P h . 367-7329.

MIJ..i.IO'/AIRE'

....

,...., ..

~

BUYING DEE R AN D
BEEF H IDES . Ge ne Hines
Rt . 1, Amesv ille, Oh 4486747 . Buyi ng raw fl! r after
De&lt; . 12. Da il y 6 PM to 9
PM , closed Sundays. Also
c losed Det . 2A &amp; 25.

- - ----Mobile home at 322 Third

-.

A ve. Adul ts onl y, no pe tS.
Call 4-16·3748 or 256·1903.

......,.......,,• .&lt;..

_I.HW'I .......

-~

....

Centenar y, 2 bdr ., pri'Jate
ref . &amp; de p ., S160. m o .,
, ......... Ca ii1 ·61 H43·26&lt;14.

RA W FUR buyer . Beef &amp;
deer hlde·gl nshang. T ra p·
pi ng suppfi es . George

- - - - --

in country w i tr. garden
space avai lable f ree, .$115
mo. plus deposi t and r ef.
Ca ll614·286·2394 a fte r 5.

eveni ngs.

OL O FURNITU RE . bed s.
iron, brass, or wood . Ki1·
Chen cubba rds of all1ypes.
T abies. r ound or sQuare.
WOOd ice boxes. Old desks
a n~ bookcases. W ill buy
complete household . Gold,
silver, old money, pocket

2 bdr . tra iler furni shed,
adults on ly, Brown Trailer
P a r k, 99 2 · 3 32 ~ .

~==:=====~=~~=::::::~~~~~

watches,
chains,
rings,
etc.
Indian
Art ifacts
ofand
all
lypes. Al so buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.

32

w ould like to buy up to 3
ac r es of land around
Rutland area . Out of high
water . Pr efer black top
road . Corrtact L arry Barr
742· 3149 .

2,2'----'-'
M"o"nc,e.~.
y..:to
=-=
L::c
oa,n:.__

Baby car seat. 30073-5013
afte r 5 :30 p .m .

REFINAN CE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rr!!lte . WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
MOrtgage , 77 E . State St.,
Athens, Oh. 592-3051.

-·
Col·u mbus Fir st Mortgage
company FHA,VA Finan·
clng Loan Rep. Cookie
Krauller (304)67q~7J.

Raw furs, hides, sc rap
me1al s,
batteries ,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchand ise
broker ing . Harper-Halstead Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 615·58611 .
Al so Flea Market Open
da lly . Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm .

23

C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com plete bookk eeping and tax
service for bus iness and in·
dividua ls ..
Carol Neai4-16·3B62

USED piano, S50 to S75.
Call after 5 p.m .304-675·
6363.

Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. Ususally one or two
days servi ce. Dismuke's
405 2nd . Ave., Gallipolis,
446·0474.

E xcersi ze bike . 675·5909.

Help Wanted

Earn
20 p e r
c e nt
retirement on $2,000.00
whol esale instead of 3 per
c ent retire,m ent on
S7,500PV . 614-875-9749 or
614-477·1414.

WHY WOULD 2 Diamond,,
8 Emeralds over 40 Pearls

over 500 Dir ects Switch .
For information call 13041
523·4012 or write P .O. Box
2125, Hgln ., Wv a 25621.
We can pay now or pay
later . The delinquent chiid
of todtty is tomorrows
prison Inmate. We can wait
till tomorrow and pay for
prisons and crime and law
enforcement or · we can
taRe care of the problem
today . Make an investment
in the future become a
foster parent . Call Juvenile
Courl4-16·3842.

GET VALUABLE train ing
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tine I route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
t1"1e eligibil ity list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
A s'soci at e n ee d ed to
manage local office. Should
have goOd sales
or
business background. In ·
come comm ensurte to
ability. Write Economic
Associates, P.O. Box 1084,
Newark , Olii o 43055.

ADD $60. to $70 . weekly to
y o ur
in c om e ,
se ll
cosmetics part time. Call
Pt. Pleasant Employment
Service, 304-675·2770.
Situations Wanted

Wanted : Person to share 2
bdr . apt . Caii2~5 · 58J5 .
""ould like house w ork by
day or week . 992-7129.
I

6)~· 667-J.402.

1)

:;v--

Insurance

-

'SANDY AND BEAVER In·
suranc:e Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
cover&amp;ge In Gallla county
tor almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
propertv coverages are
available to meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact
Lewis Hughes , agen1.
Phone 4~· 3 ,318 .
.AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been can ·
Lost
your .
t elt e d?
ope:rator;' s License? Phone
992·2143
11

Wanted to Do

Babysllllng in my home ..
Call 446·0390.
Will do house cleaning of
any nature. r-easonable
rates. Phone 367·0490 or
4-16·1.402.
Wlil do Plumbin g &amp; sm a ll
car pentry jobs . Ca ll 675·
5760 ..
CARPENTRY, · siding &amp;
remOdeling, phone Jp.l·576·
2989.

'N' CARLYLE ,.

by Larry' Wr,igh t

Have vacancy for elder ly

man

or woma n in

home. Reasona ble ra tes,.
gOOd e)(perience. Tupper s
P lains667·6329 or 667·3402.
46

COI) NTR Y MOBILE Home
Par k, Rou te 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7479.

C/f4'f.
1
1Mso

2 trai ler spaces in Syr acuse
electr ic.

~ -~

--- -

·-Mobile Homes
~ _ f_
o r_S ~I ~ -~ _ _

REPOSS E SS ION. 19Bl al'l
elec tri c mobile l"rome. se t
on lot r eady to move into.
Payments $159.47 month .
All State Modu lar Homes.
576·2111.
l977 DAWN mobile home.
excellent cond it ion, 12x60,
completely fu r nist-.ed, all
el ectr i c, $7500, call 30.4·576·
2014 .
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2. 1 ac r e house lots, on 554.
low . downpayment, land
contract , rural Wate r ,
Columbus and Soutl".ern
Elec tric . Call 256-6413, 12
p.m. to 9p.m .
24 1h acres for sale. Call614-

667·3609.

2Syr
bed
roosem. mobil
e er
r.om and
e in
acu
Wa sti
dryer . Deposit r equi red.
614·992·3625.

HU&gt;-~UflV

-----~-

One bedroom furnist-.ed·ex·
tra nice. Idea l for couple.
Sl50 plus utilities and dep.
992-7479,
Constru c ti on
w ork ers
trai ler tor three . Phone 304773·5651 , Mason .
MOBILE home tor rent
witr. opt ion to buy , 304·576·
2711 .
T WO bedroom furn ist"'red,
$150 . per mont h plus
ut ilities, New Haven, 304882 · 2 ~ .

.. - - {!

44

Apartmemt
tor Rent

Fu~nished

Real Estate
Wanted

Used 2 bedroom mob ile
home wanted for Young
Professional man in Rio
Grande· Gallipoll s area .
Land contract preferred.
Ca ll446·7065 after 4PM.

room
S85,
ut ilities pd ., single male,
range, refrig . share bath ,
4-16·4416 alter 7PM.
2nd . floor
flency apt.
Gall ipolis.
Adults onlv,

furni s hed ef·
729 2nd. Ave .•
Call 4-16·0957.
no pets.

0

Household O'!Qd•

~=~=======~;:~;~~;;;~::1
54

Ml sc. Mere h andl ce

1972 12x60 mobile home fur·
nlshed with extras. Finan·
c lnQ available. Call 367·
7175.
1973 New Moon mobile
home, 2 bedroom 12X65. un·
furnished . Call4-16·6545.
USED

MOBILE

516·2711 .

HOME .

--··· ..........
,
.
-

Regular s ize buck Stove.
wood or coa I, fn~rt or free
standing, 3 week s old, S800.
Caii4-16·J063 .
Win. M·12. 30' full c hoke.
Win. M· n. ·28' mod . Rem .
M·Jl, 30' lull choke. Phone
4-16·3414.
Excelsior Oi l co .. 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy , OtriO.
'192·2205.
All types .of farm and in·
dustrla,l Ira llers, Man·
tgomery Trailer Sales,
Langsville, Ohio 45741 . 669·
4245 evenings .

...
In by 30 In metal beslos

6
pipe for wood burner, 6
pieces with vent cap. 992·
7110 alter 2 p.m.
Living room sofa and love
seat. 2 ginger jar lamps.
.992·2054 days or 992·5301 al·
ler 5 p.m.

1970 12x60 Buddy centra l
heat and air. Set up and un·
derplnned . Phone 4~· 7402
alter 5 :30PM.

61

-.--.-~

THREE bedroom, 2 baths,
family -recreation, laundry , workshop, 2 car
garage fenced yard, $.425.
plu• deposit, 508 McNeil
Ave . Pt. Pleasant, phone
304-675·5453.
TWO l!edroom, furnished
home, large lot, referehces
and deposit required,
Camp Conley, J0.4·615·3219.

four ordlna&lt;y -

SHOW

l cAN'T 61!T AWAY FROM Will""":':;;(
THAT CONY!lNT WITHOUT
~eTTIIJ6 A P~AIJT. . ,-"l~j:;-r!:l

73 .

vans&amp;4W. O.
vw
van, gOOd family
1971
'"
or work van, $900 . Ca II .....,-

Form Equipment

1980 220 MF diesel tractor,
used 221 hrs. , also rear
mower w i th tractor. All in
exc. cond ., $6,700. Call 4-16·
1700.
1979 Massey Ferguson end
loader, piQW, disc, grader
blade, tines, chains, bush
t.og. S12,000. 4-16·2971.

6,J_ ___:L
,_i,_,v,e-"
st,.,oc
"-k
, __ _
Registered Q\Jarter Horse
filly,
Registered
Ap·
paloosa, 4 yrs. old and good
blOOd line. Call 256·6413, 12
p.m . to9 p .m .

1979 Ford F ·250 4 wheel
dr ive. Good work truck.
Phone 985·4339 a lte r 4 p.m .

79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
wheel-dr ive, 29,000 m iles, 8
c yl. call alter 3 p.m . 304··
675·3898.
1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, 'I• ton, 4 s pee d . 1979
Volkswagen Rabbit, 2 door ,
4 speed, 304-675·1578. Afte r
3 :30675·1320.
1978 INTERNATIONAL
Scout, 31 ,000 miles, U,OOO.
pr.one 304-895,3477 .
74

mixed hay, never
been wei. Coli 614·286·2394
after 5.

Qual ity Autobody &amp; Paint
work . I nsorance work
welcome. sunroofs i n·
stalled from S200·S230. Auto
Trim Center, 446·1968.

Nice Spelt straw . Coolville
614·667 ·3838.

--·.........
...... .............
...........
71

Auto for Sale

1980 Cutlass supreme . 1979
c r. rysler Cordoba. Both
loaded, e)(c . cond, priced to
sell . Call446·2109.
1972 Volkswagen Super
Beelle , auto., blue, S850.
Call4~ · 161,5 or 446·1243.

1975 Mustang II as is $900.
Call 367,7419 .
VW 1969, S500. Last year of,
this style, 8,000 miles on
overhaul, rebored, needs
repair. Call Forst·Mitchell,
446·1136.
1969 Opal wagon,
Phone 367 · 0~1.

SJ25.

- -- - 1972
Datsun
p ic kup
wreck ed st ill runs, good
recaps, SJ5. Call4-16·2971.
For sale 1978 Chysler Cor ·
doba automatic, AT , PS,
PB, air, cruise, leather in·
terior, lOw mileage . Must
sell. Caii2~B841.

1969 Plymouth wagon. 31B
auto. 985·4346.
1980 El Camino.
2784.

614-7~2 ·

- - - ---·----.

1978 Plymouth Arrow. 5
speed, AC, AM· FM, real
sporty , exC:ellen1 condition,
and gas mileage . 30.8000
miles. $4100. Call after 5 :30 :
m. 614·667 ·3958.
1970 Plymouth GTX·440
Magnum . Comp l etely
restored, ver y nice, pr ice
reduced for quick sale. 614·
742·2143.

-----

1973 Ca maro, new paint,
runs good, some work
needed, new air shocks,
good tires, perfect interior .
S700. 614·742·3063.

FOR Sale by Sealed Bids .
1979 Chevrolet four door
Impala, automatic, P .S.•
P.B .,
w i tt.
air ,
mechanically good shape,
needs body work. Can be
Rutland Ohio. Con·
Vern&lt;&gt;n Weber or Jerry
on outside of
I erweiOflle cruiser bid and
hand to Vernon
Weber, clerk Rufland
VIllage, Rutland. Bids wil l
be opened Feb. 2, 1982 at 7
p.m . In Rutland. Council
reserves th~ right to accept
re1ect all bids.

1973 Ford Plnto&lt;cycllnder,
automatic, 42,000 actual
miles, in good condition.
Caii~IJ23 .

1974 CHEVY 'h ton ClO, PS,
PB, AM· FM stereo, 8·
tra~k. J0.4·,75·3985.

STUCCO PLAST ERIN G
te xtured ceil ings com·
mercia! and residen1ial,
free estimates . Call 256·
IIB2.

Trade·lt78 Camero 305,
loaded, sliver, r'ed Interior,
tor a 4·- 1 drive pickup
of equal value. Call675-11114
IAMio4PM.

~ AND

N()Yj l'VE

THEM . l i'H\NT '100
TO PUT Tl1Eii 8ACit

IN THE PROPER
SEQUENCE, '!ORO.

Tl1E STRIP APfJRT ••

C' fiiON~ AAE

'100 IJ,I{)()(If?!

VEKY LIKELY- BUT I VERY
MU Ql OOU6T IF YOU

CANDO IT.

• A IHFIIIIT
COULD DO IT !

ALLEYOOP

l.A$1' I SAW, HE WAS
OVER THERIO FILMING
A COMMERCIAL!

Call 446·2801 for te•mite,
roa ch, bird. rodent, spider,
fleas control. Free
estima1es.sBill Thomas.
RON ' S Televi sion Service .
Speci alizing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and .·
house calls . P hone 576·239B
or 446·2454.

1WOI.IIdn't
do thi' to

- --·-- -

8:30
·
10:00

an old pal!
Ifs Pert!

F &amp; K Tr ee. Tr imm ing,
stump removal . 675·1331.

R INGLE S' S SERVIC E ex ·
pe"rienced mason, roofer,
c arpenter , el'ectr l cian ,
general repa i rs an d
r emodeling . Phone 304·6752088 or 675·4560.
Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Te st holes.
Pumps Sales and Servic e.
304-895·3802.

LOCKSMITH
Servi ce .
Re sidential , automotive.
Emergency ser vice. Call
8B2·2079.

WINNIE

AY AY. lfiATlfl WELl, ~l'rii'I()RRIEP
yOOii: TA!m •

WANDLING El e clrico l
service, old work and new
work, sma ll appliances, 2-C
r.our servic e. Phone 304·
675·6663.
82

YOU'RE IN

NE!15 HAl' U5

~Kit'to/

iiOOP NANP5, ·

77JO, .. A~UT
GOING OUT FOR A
CRUISE. WITH

WINNIE !

THOSE OMiNOUs

C/.OUP:S UP

THERE!

- PlUmbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine ·
Phone 4.46-3888 or 4.46-4-477
~

83

10:05
10:28
10:30

--

-~

10:58

tt :oo

NEWS

(J) CD 8 (J) ®lllJI•

(1) NASHVI~~E RFO
Excavating

Gnll ipol is Diver sified Con·
st. c o. Custom dozer &amp;
backt.oe work . Speci al
farm rates . Ca ll us for free
estimates. 446-4440.

- - - ---.
1M - - - - ei.!CtriCal - --~·

BARNEY

..
STOP PLAYIN'
WITH VOUR FOOD !!

SHUX·· ALL WE'RE
GITTIN'15 Nltjlt1Lt:';!!

-~--~Re_!!if!_ratio~ -­
SE:WING MaChine r epairs,
servi ce. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servicel Sharpen
Sc issors. Fabr ic St'.op ,
P om e roy . 992 · 22 7 ~ .

Generi i HauJ!!!i__

1970 FORD Falrlane 500,
$600, 304-675·25111.

81

-Upllolslery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipoli s.
4-16·7833 or 4-16·1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rl.
I Box 124, Pl. Pleasant, 304·

Now arrange lhe cirCled ltfttro to
form the aurprise answer, as sug·
goaled by tho abOve oanoon.

)

r I XI

I I I X) :
{AI)swers tomorrow)''':

Yesterday'$

!

Jumbles: POUND FELON BALLET HOOKUP
Answer: Tha skeleton waa burni ng l he mid night oil
becaus e he wanle d to d o th is- BONE UP

BRIDGE
.

._

'

An abominable hand

..

By Oowald J•"""Y
and Alan SoDtas
North's four club was
Gerber and South's four
hearis showed · one a c e
whereupon North contracted
lor seven notrump.
This hand actually came
up in the Life Masters Pairs
some 30·odd yean ago aiJd
practically every declarer
found hims elf in s even
notrump.
There are 12 top tric ks
and a posalble 13th in e ac h
one of the four suits.
Every declarer played the
hand ca refully and eve n
those who normally lake lit·
tie time spent a lot on this
abomination.
E;very declarer also found
hillUiell down one at \he
finish. This was before the
da ys of c omputer hands.
Today some de clarers would
be looking for th e computer
with a sledge hammer.
Nonnally when you have
threat cards In all four suits
you s hould be able to find a
squee~ . but this time there
was no soap. Unfortunately
for declarer he had to dis·
·card a fourth card before a
defender since East had the
heart with club protection
· and West the spade plus dla·

NORTH
.Q 9
• A K74
t A83
.AK76

1·11·11

EAST

WEST

•an

+J IOH

• J 10 ~

•o s

z

•no
·~~ 9 3

• J 10 9 7

•so

SOUTH
+AKU
.Q88

t KQ &amp;2
.Q!
Vulne rable: iloth
Deale r : South
Weal

North . E11t

South
I NT

Pass

4+

Pal!

4•

Pass

7 NT

Pass

Pass

Pass
Opening lead; •J

mond protec tion.
A couple of pairs got to six ,
notrump only . The declarers
•lUI agonl!ed over the play,
but woun4 up all smllea
when the y saw that the
grand slam could not be
made .

1------------..,...----··
t1£,,,.~,,r
loy IHOMAS JOSI'H
ACR088

1 Pollsh cake

• Employing
31 Skin problem

5 Brltlab

40 Mulm

composer
JD CUch!!llln's
wife
11 Peanut
13 FOR's
Scottie
It Phonograph

track

41 Bum
DOWN

1Suit
ZFamous

baritone
3 Not perfect
4 Macaw

5-

on

Veslerdaj'a Altlwer

18 Hellinkl

. (Inciting 1

15 Japaneae

f Actor

flllteaman
11 Hell a
sawbt!ck

Greene
1 sticky

17 VitaUty

substanCtl

aBlameless

11 Tugboat's

t Theatrical

cable, e .g .

!0 Woman's name

oodertaklng

native

GoQdrnan 'a

lt Feral abode
mtllic
· '·
%% Whirring
30 Minnesota.. ·
IOOild
city
23 SrnaU-town 31 Restrain
college
31 - Fall
24 Sllll!llialmt!llll 37 Between
25 Bazaar

tic and

%1Modlf)'

toe

u wa.·bled

1% Send

%%Kind of

ll""'"T!r-n--,r-

back

%9 Beilny

mullin
%3

Demonstrate
In a way

%5 "Norma

Rae~'

star

!t Old lrlab robe
%1 Filb
:!II Skin growth
%9 Way to
serve eg1111
USufflx
for cow

I 1:05 (J) AU IN THI! FAMILY
11:28 (]) CIJ! UPDATE NEWS
I 1:30 (])8CIJTHETONIGHTSHOW
33 One klnd
Gueat Ho at : Joan Rivera .
ofcon:eBGueata ; Mike Connor a, Rip
pOndent
Taylor. [80mlna.)
()) ANOTHER LIFE
UPoem
(J) BENNY l!fi.L SHOW
J51oa11
8(1) CIIIUT!MOVIE
DzbuguhvW
(J) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
(lDi MOVIE ·[DRAMA)'!'.
:n
Aultrallan
"Return To Mecon Coiinty"
manuplal
11175
(J)). ABC NEW I NIOIITLINE
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work . lt :
Anchored by Ted Koppel.
11 :38 (J) MOVIE · (COMEDY) "'l'o
AXYDLBAAll;l
" RomenotrandJu.. t"1Mt
II
LONGPE.
LLOW
11 :55 (]) ONCIANDFORALL.. . TH!
UIIT
AWARDS
IHOW
'
One lelt,r aimply 1tands lor another. In t hio oample A· ii
Hllarlout apOol of awar d a
tiled lor the three L'o, X for the two O'a, etc. Sln1le le ttera.
ahowathathlghUghtthepeople
opj)ltrophea, the lenfl(h and fonnollon of the worda are all
and evente of the peel year:
hlilta. Euh dey the code !etten are dlft'erent.
12:00 (J) BURNBAND AU!N
· (J) AIC NEWS NIGHTLINI
~chorod by Ted Koppel.
[]) PBI UTENIGHT
caYPTOQUOTU
llJle ,ANTAIY IILAND An
amneail YIOtltn, Cl~e to Inherit
l20 million. come• to Mr .
OD
JJNHPN
YNJUPN
YNJQXOQJF
,
Roarke to have her deelree
lUll~. m..et: 70 mlroo.)
12:10 (}) • Cil TOMORAO .W
WC
XIP
OWFPD
WA
UWSN
OI IWPD
C!)AIT·TG-COAIT Guooto;
former Iranian Prealdent
UW S N
WA
RCPPD
XIP
, • Boni· Sodr, Pierro Sollnaor.
XI J C
Xaviera Hollander, Omar
W ' ZJ FFP U
Sharll. (R-ot; DOmino.)
XNWSDPND . - - JSDX OC
'
(]) J~CK I!NNY
(J) PANTAIY ISLAND An
amne1i1 vlcttm, dae to Wlherlt ·
Yeaterday'• Cryptoqaote : ANTS ARE GOOD
$20 million , co .. •• to Mr .
CITIZENS
- THEY PLACE GROUP · JNTE:RE;STS
Roarke to have her deelrea
JI'IR8T.-CLARENCE DAY
f~. (R-ot: 70 inlllo.)

.

JACKS REFRI G ERATIO·
N . ai r cOndition service,
c; ornmerci al, industrial.
Phone 8B2·2079.

675-41~ .

(}) e

,·

Prlntanswarhere:

t~omlno.)

.GASOUNEAILEY .

()

)

liD Lll'! ON !ARTH 'Tho Firat
Foruta' Oavld Atte_nborough
look a at how plant a paved the
way "tor inaecla , and how the'
ll r at planta and early land
creaturelloiVedtheproblemof ·
r!_producuon. (60 mtna.)
Cll llJI. TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT
(l)eCDNBCNEWSREPORT:
DEMOCRATIIAI!SPONS! ,
ANALYSISNBCNewaprovldea
a platform for th e Oemocrata
reaponae to Pre a ldtnt
Reagan 'a State ot the Union
addre a a, and a political
analvale of tnt adCireee and tbe
remarkt following . (60 mine.)
(]) MOVIE -(COMEDY I ••• "8
To 5" 11,80
(J) (J)). HART TO H~RT
Jennifer Ia bralnw81hed by her
beauty ulan operator into
ateallng vafuablea from ner
wealthy aoclety frland 1. (60
mlna.)
(Cioaed·Captloned;
U.S.A.)
(j]) NEWS
(J) TIS EVENING NEWS
(]) CiiNUPDATE NEWS·
•
(J) Gal
PAOGR~M
UNANNOUNCED
(J) FIRING LINE 'Roao lvod: ·
Th l a Houae App r oves the
Economk:lnttlatlveofPraaldent
Reagan, Part II' Guaat: John
Kenneth Galbraith . Hoal :
William F. BucKley, Jr.. (80
mine.)
(j])
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PRESENTS
&lt;lJ CBN UPDATE NEWS

ME:IA\.. DENIC.E5
i"'A"T HELP KEEP
LOGK5 IN PL.AC E .

~NAPMENt

dolo~d ~(80mlno . )

·SegUin' Written and directed
byJeauaSalvadorTrevlno, thle
drama ia baaed on the life of one
of Texae' early unsung heroea,
Juan ~epomuceno SeQuin, who
ra is ed an army t o fight the
Mexican torcea at the Alamo.

()

IGARCHEI

D Cll ·GDI STATE OF THE
UNION ADDIII!I8
(J) AMI!RIC~N PLAYHOUSE

PAINT I NG
interior and
exterior. plumbin g,
roofing, some remOdeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 3BB·9652.

NOW HAULIN G house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways .
Call for e stimates 367-7101.

71 Monze, V·8, 12200.
automatic, J0.4·576·2971 .

ME'AN '? ! l'Jo\ CUTIING A
COJo\IC STRIP OUT
l HAVE TOO BEEN
Kfj)j)(N' THEM BOOKS.' Cf TCX:¥\YIS fi\PEit
.. THEN I'LL CUT
~ ER - l'lt'f\T'5 lHAT
THE THREE BOXES Cf
YEll oOtN'?-

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free est imates.
Call4-16·2107.

14 CHRYSLER Newport
Custom, with AOO motor, no
battery, body bad, $175 .
JO.I-895-3518.

1979
CHEVY
Malibu
Classic / landau lop, 36,000
miles, $.4800., JO.I:615·2508.

~ l'tlflDOAYA

Home
Improvements

11

JONE S BOYS WATER
SERVIC E. Call 367·7471 or
367-0591 .

For Sale or Trode

ANNIE

&amp;er,lees

as

59

Motorcvcles

.1980 Honda CX ·SOO. Blac k.
600 lb mare pony work har- Exc . cond. $2,000 . 614·992·
ness to sale or trade tor 3312.
equal value. '192·6035.

Good

BORN LOSER

I KJ

.

ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
Cil HAPPY DAYS~GAIM
8 (1) TICTACDOUGH
(J) (j]) MACN!tL·L!HR!A
REPORT
Gal NEWS
llJl e MUPPET SHOW
7:05 (J) CAROL BURNETT AND
FRII!NDS
· ·10 (1) . YOU ASKED FOR IT
(]) ANOTHER LIFE
CJl e(J) F~MI~YFEUD
CD ~AVEliNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
(J)
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
Gal
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(j]) SPROCKETS 'Tho Betty
Boop F••tival'
llJl 1111 ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
.
7:31 (J) lANFORD AND SON
7;58 &lt;lJ CIIIN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (1) 8 CD FATHER MURPHY
The financial future of the Gold
HIIISchoolandorphanageareln
thetlnyhandaotamentallyalow
orph i n who conv lnce a the
adults ahale the only one who
can ride their loul ·tempered
hot~ a InJackaon'a annualrace.
tB_apeat; 60 mine.)
ill NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL
(])MOVIE-{HIBTORICALl'' l'o
' ~J~Iu Dawn" 1t80
(]) llJl 1111 HAPPY DAYS
8 (J) SIMON AND SIMON
(J) LIFE ON EARTH 'Tho Flrol
Foree! a' Oa...,ld Attenborough
looks at how plant a paved the
way tor Insecta, and how the
II rat plants and early l and
creatureuoiYedtheproblemof
~rod~tctl o n . (60 mlna.)
(1Q) DISCOVI!R : THE WORLD
OF8CIINC!
8 :06 (J) MOVIE ·(WESTERN)"
·- "Wor W.!llo•" 11187
8 :30 (J) llJI• LAVERN! AND
8HU1LEY Carmine audltlona for
a part lA a mualcalabout the Ute
of Rocky . Grezlano. (Closed·
Caplionod; U.S.A.)
8 :58 (]) f;_IN UPDATe NEWS '
11:00 (1) . CD S.TA TE OF THE
UNION ADDRESS Pre s ld 0 nl
Reag•n will deliver the Stele ot
th e Union addreu to a Jo int
union of Congren at th e
Capitol. (80 mlna.)
(]) 700_!&lt;LUB
(J)llJI . . STATE OF THE
UNION AODR!88 AB C Nowo
provideacoverageofPr.. ldent
Reagan ' s Sate o·t the Union
'Addrell ; network prOgram·
mtng for th la even ing will be

TH!lRE'S NOT IOOIN~ TO SJ!
AIN ROOM IN HER!! TO !!oeT
UP THe RECE,IVEP: .

r1 [ tJ

SUMIN

~onto.

CAPTAIN F;ASY

·

.IL....T!-Nl:.::r,LE~R,:..-.+1--,...:,

EvENING
PM
M~G-AZINE '
7:00
()) . JOHN ANKI!AB!IIG

9748 alte r 5 or weekends .

·~

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

TH~EE bedroom, 2 baths,
family -recreation , laundry, workshop, 2 car
garage fenced yard, $.425.
plus deposit, 508 McNeil
Ave. Pt. Pleasant, phone
30H75·5r53 .

Ul..,••oblo10 t-ech lqUirt,IO
lour Jumbln,
form '

1

(]) THE YE~R TH~T WAS :
1181 Pat rick O' Neal ho• t •
vldelo ecrapbook ol the veer' a

byHwlriArnoldondBobLoe

one -

(1) .

1981 Ford 350 Ca rgo truc k.
1141,000 actual m iles. Ex·
cellent condition. Contact
Jon Karschnik at Far mers
Bank x Savings Compan y .

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive Sl.,
Gallipolis. '.J piece Hving 4 used Firestone 13 in
radials . SIS each . 61042·
YOUR Federal, State, City
room suites $199, maple 3154or992-7~7
. ·
Taxe s prepared. 17 years
rockers
$49,
several
cr~
est
Furnist'.ed apartment for
experience with ta x firm .
of
drawers
,
new
&amp;
used
rent. Call446·3937.
Kenneth Adkins, 50 Olive
wood burners, new table , Single bed, bookcase head·
Renlals
St ., Gallipoll•, 4~ · 7~75 .
lamps SIB. wood cook board and dresser. 992·
Deluxe furni shed apa~t ­ ranges, newS piece d fnnet 7565.
ment, excellent location, 1 sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
Piano &amp; Organ lessons.
41
Houses for Rent
or 2 adults, only $275, ref . &amp; several dinnet sets, silver Used tires . Hanshaw's
Mary Lucas. Caii446·97B7.
dep. required . Call 446· stone ·all sizes, bunk beds Tires on Lucas Lane. 675·
2 bedroom family rm .. SJOO 0338.
SlOO, new -tools of al.l kinds, 7360.
Accoul')ting · lncome Ta x. per mo . plus uti II ties, $300
wringer Maytag washer ,
dep·
.
required.
Call
«6Ind iVi dual
and small
2 brd . a pt . HUD excepted, Li nole um rugs 9x12 SIO,
business. For appointment 4554.
Building Supplies
and lots more. Hours lOam ss
kitcr.en furn. Ceii67B104.
call367·0268.
loSpm , 4~ · 3159 .
Building
materials block,
Furnisl".ed cottage near
brick,
sewer
pipes, winApartm
ent
f
or
rent.
C.:ill
HMC . A rooms, one child .
GOOD
US E D
AP · dows, lintels, etc . Claude
S200 wate r paid . Call 446· 446·0390.
PLIANies ·
wast'.ers; Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
4416 a fter 7PM .
dry ers,
r efrig e rators. Caii24B121 .
Furnished effi ciency . $145, rang es .
Skaggs
Ap utilities pd . One perSon.
RIGHT DOWN TOWN
pliances, Upper River Rd., 56
Pets for S~le
Call4-16·4416
after
7PM
.
Newly
decorated
un 31
Homes for Sale
beside Stone Crest Motel.
furni sl"led, 3 rm . house.
POODLE GROOMING.
4~ · 7398 .
3 brm. home newly Suitable tor single person 2 bdr . unfurnished apt. in
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
decorated . near city . 2 out or r etired couple. Garden Crown City . Call256·6520.
Whirlpool self cleaning 7220.
buildings &amp; car port. Vinyl space, deposit &amp; r eferences
..
stove and microwave coms iding and carpet. Call 4-16· required. Call 446·04.50 or
. APARTMENTS
FOR b ination , 5750 . Call · 4~· DRAGONWYND
CAT '
3B97 .
446·1291.
TERV · KENNEL. AKC
RENT . APARTMENTS· 1 9818.
Chow puppies,
CFA
AND
2
BEDROOMS .
3 or 4 bedroom house w ith 9 r oom house in Rio Gran· RENT STARTS AT : I
Himalayan, Persian and
bath in country on 23 acres. de. Caii4~ · 34B5 .
BEDROOM
$152 ,
2 Frigidaire · dryer $60.00, Siamese kittens. Call 4.46·
Storm windows , rural
BEDROOM S
S188 . Kenmore wa stier perfect 3B44 after 4 p.m .
s hape SliO.OO. Cai 14 ~ · B181.
water, garage, lots of
DEPOSIT S200. CALL 4~
storage space, close to all 3 5 bdr. house in Gallipolis 2745.
mines. Price reduced for near park, $400 . Ca ll 4~ ·
G.E . refrigerator. color HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
quick sale. S15,500. 742 · 7265 or 4-16·0644.
console
TV , sofa , loveseat,
Apartment. good location
2502.
&amp;" cha ir , coffee and end i ndoor ·outdoor fa c ilities .
Two bedroom house on carpeted . Utilities paid, tables, G.E . self cleaning Also AKC Re g. Dober ·
$185 mo. pll.:.; depoSit. Ref .
mans. Call446·7795.
Or r ent·3 bedroom fur · Roush Lane in Ct"'reshir e requ ir ed . Ca ll446·7482 mar · oven, bedroom . suit, 71
near
Power
Plants.
Un
Dodge
van
304·f5
·6750.
nlshed home on BUd Chatrilngs.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
tin Road on big level lot. furnlsl"led, dep. &amp; ref . No
pets,
yard
&amp;
garde
n
.
S225
Boarding and grooming .
576·2711 .
mo. Call 4~ · 1527 .
Antiques
furni shed apart · 53
AKC Gordon
setters,
-· - - - - - -- ment. Close to shopping in
English Cocker Spaniels.
Antique
dinnett
set,
$400
.
Comfortable 3 bedroom
Pomeroy . No pets. Adul ts .
Call JB8·9790.
hom e , 8 'h
percent OR LEASE
S125 per. m onth . 614·992 · Ca ll 388·9676.
assumable loan, and Is Home for Rent. Lease, or 3201.
Puppies mother ACK Reg .
near PPHS, large fenced in Land Contract in town or
54 Misc. Marchandice
black Chow·father Collie
yard, k itcl".en appliances country . S1rout Rea lty, 446·
Apartments. 675·5548.
Lump coa l SJ2 per ton . and St . Bernard . Excellent
and
m or e . We are 0008.
Zinn Coal Co., 1 nc . Call 4-16· Chow features, 2 females . 1
relocating and can share
blac k and 1 tan . Call 367 ·
realtor ' s fees by selling 4··. Bedroom house in Pt. APARTMENT S, mobile 140B be tween 9 a nd 5.
0663.
now . Cal l after 6 pm 675· Pleasant on Moseman Cir· h omes .
h ous e s ,
PT .
cle. $300 per mo. plus S200 · Pleasant and Gallipolis . 3· 8 ft . sriowcases with
1625.
dama ge depos it. 4~ · B234 .
614-4~ · 8221 or 614-245-9484 .
ACK Re g . black female
li ghts, 1 large bedroom
su ite, double dresser and Chow 1 112 yr. old, gOOd
THREE bedr oom house
with central air, gas heat, 2 bdr. hou se on lower Rt. 7. Effi cienc y room s by the chest, 2 antiQue cloo'ks, 1 temperment, gOOd breeder.
·
excellent location in Pt. De p . required . Ca ll 256· week on Main Stree t, meat slicer and misc. Call 367 ·0663.
gr ocery store equipment.
Pleasant, excellent finan · 1413 .
Mason, wv . 773·5651. ·
- - - - - - - - "•
Call 256·6413, 12 p. m . to ' 9 AKC English Springer
cl ng arrangments possible,
will
consider
.any Country home in Pomeroy , TWO bedroom apartment, p .m .
Spaniel. Male, liver and
reasonable offer, 304895· FlatwoOds area . For sale 1 older cf".ild, all utilities
while. Bweeks old . S85 .
3(~•Jalter 5.
or rent. 2 story, 3 bedroom , paid, 304-675 ·5679 after 5 For Sale Kitchen tabl e and
2 chai r s, $25. See at 769
r
17 acres, large pc.H1 614· p.m .
German Shepherd pups,
Br ownell Av e., Middleport.
32
Mobile Homes
4-16·2359 afte r 6 p.m .
SIO. Caii4-16·32BI.
lor Sale
APARTMENT for re nt,
Parakeet &amp; cage $25., 10
TR I.. STATE MOBILE 5 room house, bath, large $150 . per month, 304-675· New wOOd stove, half price,
never used, $350. Can con - gallon \aquarium with sun·
s pac e . 1972 .
HOMES . Gallipolis. Price lot , garden
vert
to
furnance
.
Call
256fish SIS ., 3 while Turtle
redu ce d, used mobile Available Jan. 25 . Ra cine
1216, Gallipol is .
are a . 992 ·5B58 .
Doves, 1 pair &amp; single, 2
homes. CALL4~ · 7572 .
TWO bedroo m apartm e nt,
wire cages. SJO. 992·2969 or
llospital area . excell ent
see at Belly's Carryout, 3
A carry out business closed
condition, 304-675·1962.
CLEAN USED MOBILE J bedroom home . 992·6309 .
miles south of Middleport.
down and I". as a II beverage
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
coolers
tor
sa
le
.
Ca
ll
H14·
QUALITY
MOBILE HOU SES on s ta te Rt. B7, TWO apir1ments, single
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
HOME SALES, 4 MI . r ural water , Wendell per sons on Iy , nea r down 286·5740.
2413 Jackson Ave ., Pl.
WEST , GALLI POLIS, RT Fa uver, 304-895·3879 .
town are a , Dr . Slac k, 304·
Pleasant. 675·2063 . Mon.,
35. PHONE 4~· 3B68 .
F irewood '35.00 p ickup
675-5267 .
T~urs . , I Fri. 11 to 6 . Tues.,
loa
d
,
four
loa
ds
SIOO,
House for r ent, S200. a monWed., I Sat. 11 to 4 . Chec~
del
ivered.
Call
388·9823.
12x 60 2 bedroom Buddy th plus deposit, 304·675· 45
Furnished Room-. our F ish Spec ial .
mobile home. Set up with 2 6750 .
SLEEPING
ROOMS
and
or A lots, gas heat, rural
F irewOOd $25 load. Split &amp;
RABBITS J114·458· l!6 1.
llgr.t hou sekeeping ·apt ., stac ked . Call 388·9700 or
water. Close to town, finan Park Centra l Hotel .
ci ng available . Fthone 446·
3BB-9313 .
1294.

S9 ,000. 196B Cherokee
tra iler on lot, partially fur·
nished, has new fuel oil fur·
nance with 300 ga l. tank,
has new 10x20 ft . porch
with awn ing &amp; sol id oak
deck , new under pinning,
very well Insulated, has 2
bdr., full bath, k itchen,
living room , rural water.
Call388·9059 anytim e.

'74 Fo( d 112 Ton Pickup,
33,000 ac tua l miles, new
ti r es. Like new condition.
4-16·3537 .

()

LAYN E' S FURNITURE ·
Sofa, chair, 'rocl(er, ot·
t a man, J ta bles, $500. Sofa,
ch a ir a nd Joveseat, S275 .
Sofas a nd cha irs priced
from $2BS. lo $795. Tables,
SJ8 and up to S109 . Hide·• ·
beds ,SJ40., queen size, $380 .
Lamps
fromSl75.
SIB. to
to $65
. 5,
Recliners,
S295.
pc . difelles from S79., to
SJ85.
pc ., with
$189. and
up.
WOOd 7table
4 chairs,
S219 up to $495. Desk SllO.
Hutches, SJOO. and $375 ..
maple or r,lne finish.
Bedroom sui es · Bassett
Oak, $675 .. Bassen Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250: and
up to S350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
s._ 1ngs, full or twi('l, $58.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
se ts, S195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. · chests,• $42. Bed
frames, S20.and $25. , 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinette c hairs S20. and S25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
thoped lc super m·m . S95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frame s S20S25, &amp; SJO.
Electric fireplace, gun
cabiriet, Living room suite,
wood fable &amp; 4 chairsT"'"
U s ed ,
Ran g es ,
refrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon.
thru Fri.. 9am to 5pm, Sat.
4-16·0322

Truck' s.for Sale

WANT E D TO BUY .a Late
Model 2 ton t ruck·ft albed
or cab and chassis. Ph. " ''
4782.

I ATe. iT.
51

I

TUEID~Y

1974 FORD F ·250 new sl a ke
l!ed and du a l wheels . Cal l
256·6-113. 12 p ..m . lo 9 p.m .

I

1 all

'\lf}~f.\.41 fi}i} ~THATSCRAMILEDWORDG~Me

~ ~ ~~ ·

JAN. 211, 11182
72

•

The

Television
•
•
VIewmg

Aut o for Sale

68 T HUND ER BIRD, 69,000
actua l mi les. $600. 304·675·
4201 .

5pacetor Rent

Tr ailer P_
a rk .
61092 .3625.

71

196B C HE V ELLE. 396
autom itic, gOOd condition,
$2850. call 304·372·9544.

my

,

Why •ellle lor less, sell the
be st. AVON . Call 4-16·3358
or 742 ·2354 .

'

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning -Be kind to
your ears . Call Bill Ward
for appointment, 4~ · ~372.

USED plano, S50 to S/5.
Cal l after 5 p.m .304-675·
6363.

Have vacancy for elderly
woman or man in my
private home. Good ex·
perience .
Reasonable
rates. Call 614·667-6329 or

KIT

A.~etEbaedlse

2 bdr . mob ile liQme for r ent

1-2

Furnished Rooms

---------~-

no pe ts . Ca ll 446·11 58 .

Op e n

11

4S

2 bdr . mobile ·t-.ome adu lts,

Buck ley , Rt. 2. Athens, Oh.
6 1~ · 66~ · 41 6 1.

Mobile Homes

26, 1982

Ohio

Tuetday, Janucuy 26, 1982

PEANUTS

I'VE NEVER HEA~D
OF ANI(ONE FISHING
IN THE SNOW...

I CAN'T IMA61NE

WHAT VOU EXPECT
TO CATCH

SNOWFISH!

we

·

~

'
.,

'

�Pag1

10-The Daily Sentinel

, Pomeroy-Middi.,ort, Ohio

Tax hike out --states must
assume federal programs
'

;Voi.30,No.200
IYO£
tC.,.,o!tlhtod
J.

budget dellberlltlQDS were projec·

gone on the federal level," saki the
White House source, who asked
Ing cuts or new taxes, the federal
tllat he not be Identified.
deftclt would balloon .to more .than
Several administration and con$100 bUUon In llscal1983, which beggressional sources saki the presilns~Oct.1 .
dent would:
"We're balancing a sizable de~Eschew the advice of key
tlclt on one side vs. tax Increases on White House aides and call for no
the other," said one White House ·Increase In excise or any other
official.
taxes.
One plan to Increase federal ex·~unveU a progr!UJl, to take efelse taxes on whiskey, wine, gaso- fect In stages, In which exlsttng exline and tobacco products was said
else ~ are shared with the
·
to have been calculated to ralae states.
Unlon speech.
enough money to hold the detlclt to
~Propose closing cerlaln "loopThe address, to a Joint session of
holes" In federal tax law, making
11M! House and Senate, and a ll!lllon- ~ bllllon. .
Although sevei"al well-plaCed· sure large corporallons pay a minw!de televl.slon and radio audience,
sources said the tax plan was re- • Imum Income tax.
Is to begin at 9 p.m. EST.
jected, the ~ bUUon deficit llgure
-OuUlne a plan to transfer ap"Wbeil you tum on the TV, you'll
aet a heavy dose of budget eco119m· "Is stlll there," the White Houseof- proximately 40 federal programs
~ such things as welfare, food
tlclal said1cs and the president's hopes toleHe did nottndlcatewhatsteps are stamps, and education and transgislatively
Implement
his
contemplated to reduce the llgure portation projects - to the stales.
program; federalism Initiatives,
LEADERSHIP MEETING - Preildeat Rellpa O'Neil Jr. of Maaaebuaetta alongside. Iieagaa will
from SlOO bllllon to ~ bllllon.
The stales would run them, under
and a brief overvieW of foreign )l(ll·
speab duriDg a dbmer Moaday at the White liGUle lor deliver the State of the Uoloa mea•ce to a jolal sessloa
Woven throughout the speech ledei"al standards, In exchange for
ley with some stern words toward
of the House aDd Seute. (AP Laserpbolo).
coogret~~~lonalleaders, with HOWle Speaker 1bomu P.
will he an emphaSis on what the
the excise tax revenue. The federal
Intervention In the Western Hemispresident calls "New Federallam," · government wouid take over Medl· .
phere and stem words about Pohll proposals to hand over to the cald, the l)ealth care program for
land," said one White House
states
some of the programs he the poor now financed by a CQmbl·
official.
thinks
should be admlnlstered
nation of federal and_state funds.
Deputy White House press secrecloser
to
home.
In addition, one congressional
tary Larry s~ saki the presl·
Tuppers flalns Unit at 12: 24 p.m. '
"The
federalism
Is
the
bedrock
source
said revenue from the ~jxlsl· Family learn re-enlists
dent Is · weighing a crttlclsm "In
tOok Henry Hensley, Beverly HensReaganlsm,
the
return
to
the
states
lng
tax
lmpos.ed
on
oU
companles·
l
n
straight-forward terms" of Soviet
ley and Melissa Hensley to Parol
programs
he
thinks
rightfully
beAn
Army
husband
and
wife
conjunction with prlce decontrol
arms shipments to Cuba.
·
Pomeroy
Pollee
reported
two
ackersburg hospitals with . Injuries
long
there,
that
never
shOuld
have
would
he
turned
over
to
the
stales.
.
team,
Staff
Sgt.
.James
L.
and
SuAt the heart of the president's
cidents
due
to
the
snowfall
and
received tn an auto accident near
Thesourcesalsosaldacapwould zaMe M. Stewart, has re-enlisted In
weather
conditions
Monday.
the Intersection of Roules 681 and
the
U.
S.
Army
at
Arlington
Hall
be soughf for Increases In S&lt;realled
· A car driven by James Counts,
124.
"entlllen)l!nt programs," except Station, Va., for an additional three
Racine, backed Into a car belongSyracuse at 8:09 p.m. took .AI·,
.Social Si!curlty. A congressional , years' military .service.
Ing
to
Wllllam
Lucas,
WUkesvllle,
berta
Hubbard to Veterans Memor.. .
James Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
source said this would save $60 bU·
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
inlal
and
Middleport at 10: 06 p~m. :
Walley Manley of Route 1, Reeds·
lion over five years.
·
curring
medium
damages
to
both
treated
Mrs.
Ed Smith atherbome •
Congressional sources said Rea· ville; ,and hls wife Is thedaughterof
vehlcl'ls.
,
on
Park
St.
Pomeroy
at 9:46p.m. ·
gan would caU for creation of up to Mr. and Mrs. J~jmes C. Smelker of
At
4:31
p.m.
Monday,
a
truck
took
Charles
Valsteldon
of Me- five "enterprise :zones"·lo promote 22910 Imperial Drlve, Houston. She
driven
by
Myron
Mlller,
Pomeroy,
chanic
St.,
to
Veterans.
~marla!.
· business development In depressed Is a senior admtnls~ation specllillst
sUd Into a parked car owned by
Tuppers Plains at 10:52 p.m. took ·
COLUMBUS, Olllo (AP) - Officials seeking solutjons to a projected $1 urban areas over the next three ye- with the tJ. S. Anny Intelligence .
Ralph
Werry,
Pomeroy,
on
Si!cond
Elizabeth Lyons to St. Joseph Hos-·
and Threat Analysis Center. She Is
bUllon state government detlclt say clostag schools ahead of sclledule and · ars. They said the administration
St.,
Incurring
heavy
damages
to
the
pita!, Parkersburg.
•
cutting the state work week are possible options.
wants to Waive the minimum wage a 1978 graduate of Spring Senior
side
of
the
Werry
car
and
medium
One legislator says a combination o1 spending cuts and tax hikes could requirement for youths hired In High School, Texas.
to tlie MUier vehicle.
Veterans Memorial
eventually he enacted and predicts Gov. James A. Rllodes may anilounce those businesses.
Corretltion
spending cuts this week or early next week.
Although Reagan will outline hls
Admitted--Michael Hubbard,:
' Ideas for dealing with the budget crisis were discussed Monday at a · program for the coming year, the
Due to an error, the headline In
Syracuse;
PhllUp Radford, Pome-:
, meeting ol Rhodes, leg!slatlve leaders and state tlscal omcers.
speech "Is not a long laundry list of
Monday's
Sentinel
erroneously
roy;
Ray
Wolford, Middleport; ·
' No &lt;!eclslons were made. Some wanted to walt for January Income programs. It Is more uplifting In
Local emergency units In severe
ldenllfled
Fanners
Bank &amp; Savings
Marty
Morarlty,
Racine; 0us11n:
figures before recommending cuts which could be almost a! percent to nature and It wtU emphasize the neweather conditions answered eight
Co.
of
Pomeroy
as
Farmers
s&amp;L.
Huffman,
Pomeroy.
start.
cesslty of staying on course," said
calls on Monday, the Meigs County
The Sentinel apologizes for the
Discharged--None.
However, another meeting was set Thursday and legislative leaders one adnjlnlstratlon source.
Emergency
Medical Service
error.
.said Rhodes could order spending cuts at tllat time. The state Constitution
reporia.
Postpone meeting
Free clothi~ day
,,. requires the governor to balance the budget at the end o1 each tlscal year
Syracuse at 2:22 p.m. took Ml·
A meeting of the Meigs Local:
on June 30.
chael Hubbard, Syracuse, to Ve~
.
Chapter
of the Ohio Association ol.
Free
clothing
day
w1ll
be
held
at
Senate Finance Chairman Stanley J . Aronoff, R-Ctnctnnatl, said he had
rans Memorlal Hospital and
Public
School
Employes scheduled
The
Salvation
ArmY,
ill
Butternut
"just a gut feeling" that Rhodes' orders wUI come Friday or Monday.
Middleport at -5: 23 p.m. took Kim
for
thll
evening
has been postponed
Ave.,
Pomeroy,
on
Thursday,
Jan.
Arono!f said there was somedlscusslonaboutendlng the school year two
Smith to Veterans· Memorial. · At 5
until
7:30
p.m.
on Feb. 2 at the
28, from 10 a.m. untO noon. All area
• weeks early at the end of the 1!!82-1983 school year,
Pearl 'L Roush
p.m. Middleport took Ray Wolf9rd
Meigs
Junior
High School In
residents
In
need
ol
clofhlng
are
Senate President Paul E. CiUimor, R-Port Clinton, said a four-day state
to Veterans Memorial and the
Middleport.,
PearJ··L.
Roush,
73,
Mason,
died
welcome.
·work week also was brought up, but he wail not sure whether It would save
Monday at Pleasant VaUey
.a algni11cant amount of money.
Hospllal.
, HOWle Speaker Vernal G. RltfeJr., D-New Boston, lllidhelsanxlousto
Born May 17, 190lln Nitro, she
•see January revenue figures. He said thatllfhey areas disastrous as those
was
the cjaughter ol the late Roberl
of ~ber, they might help him betler understand the $1 billion deficit
L.
and
M)nnle F. Plunkett Dudding.
· projection that carne only two months after the Leilslature raised the
She Is preceded In de~th by a
:. 18les and other taxes.
Steve Jenkins, 27, Racine, ar·, "I'm not questlO{I!ng the Integrity ol Howard CoWer or anyone else. I just daughter, Agnes E. Roush and one
rested
by the Meigs County Shegrandson.
· don't see how. those ligures could have been so far off," Rlfte 'sald.
riff's Department on a warrant
The speaker and Glllmor were stuMed Jan. 14 when CoWer, whore- · She was a cook lor 18 years at from Athens County who was
.turned Jan.'l to the post he held with Rllodes In earUer administrations, Muon Elementary and atlended
turned over to Athens County authe Mason United Methodist
· ·announced the deficit
thorities Sunday night escaped·
· . He said spending cuts, If relied on solely to balance the budaet by June 30 Church and Its sunshine Class. She Monday.
was alSO a member ol the Mason
fhls year and again on June 30, 19113, would have to be 19.4 percent In the
According to Gary Wolfe, InvestiCounty Democratic W.omen's Club
remainder of the current fiscal year and 16.3 percent the next.
gator
for the Meigs County Sherlff's
"We were told on Dec. 29 that the budget was In balance. Now, less a for 40 years and participated on the
Department,
Jenkll!S, after eluding
month later, we are told tbere Is a deficit ol tllat magnitude,'' Rlfte said. Democratic Execullve Committee
officers,
took a taxi from /t.thens to
.
AronoH said the group looked at various kinds ol cuts and how slashes at for the y,iaggner District She was a
Racine .
member ol the Rllododendron
. ·vartous levels would affect state agencies.
Wolfe went In search of Jenkins
· He said they also lalked about graduated cuts, starting at less than 19.4 Homema~Cers Club and the Mason
and located hlm at the home of bls
percent but geared to double or even tr1ple In future months If state Firemen Auxll1ary.
(Jimklns) mother. Wolfe qotltled
Survivlhg are her husband, Eber
.. revenues continue In a tailspin as CoWer predicts.
the mother to return to her horne In
Aronolf said another tax hike was not mentioned at the closed door Roush, Mason; three daughters,
order
to let Wolfe enter the resi.' .meeting but tllat he stlll Insists one may be needed. "But the cuts are Ruth Ryan, Jean Grueser and Mtn·
dence.
Wolle then called Jenkins
nie Rlze~,, Mason; one sister, Mary
· ' Inevitable,'' the senator said.
and
told
hlm give up, which he did.
F. Dudc!lng, Mason; one brother,
Jenkins
Is presenlly lodged In
Robert P. Dudding, Mason; .slx
Meigs County Jan. Meigs County
grandchildren,
11
great·
authorities have a bench warrant
grandchUdren
and
several
nieces
(Continued from page 1)
on Jenkins for !allure to comply
and nepliews.
(Continued
from
page
1)
Funer&lt;il services wlll be held at 1 with a court order.
through personal contact or using
Improvement o1 Route 124. rrom ,p.m. Thu,rsday at the Foglesong
the mall claim service.
Route 7 to WilkesVille; raising the Funeral Home with Revs. Bennie
Mrs Adkins reported 51 new
level of Route 248 In one location Stevens and James KltUe will orftAU schools of Meigs County were
claims for unemployment benefits,
38 claims reopened, 588 continued above the 100 year flood stage; re- cate and 'bul1al w1ll he held at tbe closed Tuesday as the result of a
four lnch·'snow which fell Monday
claims, and 125 new extended claims habWtatlon of two bridges on Route Kirkland Mernorlal Gardens.
Friends may call the funeral
and the accompanylpg ley roads.
provided through the ,13 week ex- 681, general Improvements to
home on Wednesd;l.y between 1·9
All schools are over the live calamtension on unemployment benefits county roads.
Jennlngs spoke on the study p.m.
lty days to which they are entitled
(or the week ending Jan. 23.
In lieu of fiowers, the famlly reby the State Department of EducaOther area officers scheduled for made of housing, water and sewage
lion without makeup time being
closing include ClrclevUie, Logan, tn Racine, Portland and Tuppers quests dOnations be contr1buted to
required.
McConnelsvllle, New Lexington, Plains. He )l(llnted out fhat local the Mason Emergency Stiuad.
committees we~;e formed to maker---------~---;,...--------~
Waverly, McArthur and Caldwell.
In addlllon to thoee job service recommendations and plans for the
faclliUes, tlie bureau said Work In· communities. The. group outlined
. centive Program offices would be sites lor housing aa wen as needs:
fTSFORTREL.
closed In Youngstown, ·Springfield, Copies of the Study will he distribT'hlfs • you need to knOW'.
Uted to officials who might be help. 'Lani:aster, Ironton·and Painesville.
ful In development of additional '
In the· meantime, Dr. Robert facllllles.
· . Zlrrimerinan, G4Uipolls DevelopA discussion brought out that the
menial Center superintendent, re- state Is plann!nr a feaaiblllty study
)l(lrted . nothing ~ out of ·his of a road to the new Ravenswood
meettng last Friday with Ohio De-. bridge and Is planning to resurface
Served with Mashed Potatoes, Choice of Salad,
"partrnentofMenlaiRetardallonof- Route 124 from Route 338 to Racine
~oil and Drink
f!clals
over
proposed
job although that probably w1U not take
a!Jollsllmellts at GDC.
place this year.
Zbnmemlan said he lwd at leut
Fleshly cut fOf the season - .Joan Curtis does a
two more meetings slated with
sheer floral border dress in Celanese FortreJ®
ODMR staft and he doesn't anllcl· !\ Mail carrier hurt
· p()lyester knit. This drop shoulder dress has a self
DINING
ROOM ONLY ·
pate any further developments this
.
.'
bound .jewel neckline with center back slash and
week.
: Long Bottom Post 0tt1ce patrons
button clostJres. Block only. Sizes 8-16. Machine
· ODMR announced last Thuraday lare advised that their rural catrler,
washable.
.1
It popolled Job abolllhments to the PhliUp RadfOrd, waa InJured In an
superintendents · at the GaiUpolls, auto accident Moaday. He was •FORTREL Is a trademark of Fiber Industries, Inc .•
Orient and ColumbUs developmen- taken to Veteran&amp; Meinol1al Hospia subei~iary of Celanese Corporation. ·
'
'
.
tal centers due to decreasing client tal wherehewaaadmlltedfortreatpopulatlon. Officials said the abol· ment of Injuries. /1. subetltute Is
~ts were rnandaated by tile lleiDI Uled io lll!i'YI! the 101111! fOO
' State'I He!tnlal budget and not by . Pllnm DOmlaiJy II!I'VIced by
228 W. Main
. Pomergy; .Ohio
Ph. 992-5432
the preen! state detlclt
· Radford.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent Reagan w1ll tell Congress ~ .
the American people tonight tllat '
he will not seek higher taxes, bUt ·
that the stateswtll have to takeover
apProximately 40 federal progJ;amS, well-placed sources say. ·
Reagan summoned Republlcan
CO!lile&amp;Sionai leaders to a WhlU!
House meeting this morning to
begin I'OU!Idlni up the help tllat wUI
be crUcial to passing the program
he wUI ouWne In bls State ol the

at y enttne
Economy still .problem

e

.,

uons that wiiiiOut additional spend-

Meigs County h_appenings
Check accidents

Shorter work week,
early school closings,
options in fiscal crisis

•·

•

•

. WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
\lent Reagan's pitch lor a "bold
stroke" transfer o1 $47 bllllon In fed-

deficits and the troubled economy.
· era! programs to the sta~ Is doing
Democrats and Republicans
lltUe to aUay the concerns of lawmakers preoccupied ~th soaring · alike were quick to say the proposal
Reagan outllned Tuesday night In
hls first State of the Unton speech
should not be allowed to divert national attenllon from coping with
pressing economic problems ..
The federal government, while
shifting the burden of the programs
to the stales, also should turn over
the revenue to pay for them, Reagan said. That would come from
e)(Clse taxes on gasoline, tobacCo,
alcohol and telephones, plus the socalled wlndfaU profits tax on oU.
Food stamps and welfare were
among the programs Reagan proposed turning over to stall! and local governments. The switch would
begin In October 1983, and he COJ11·
pleted In eight years, Reagan said.
During tllat period the programs
would cost approximately $400 bUUon, according to administration
esllmales.
In exchange. the federal government would take over full responslbllty for the·Medicaid program ol
· health care for the needy.
Rellgan conceded the nation was
"In a Ume of recesslon,''&lt;but said
the tax and budget-cutting ' pi'ogra_ms.Congressenacled athisbeh· ·
FIRST STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS- President Reagaa adest last year need more time to take
. dresses a J"lnt Se881oa of Congre111 Tuesday night In the HOWle cbamber
hold. He cautioned against expectoa Capitol Hill to give bls first State of tbe Union Ypeeeh yiace taklag ofIng a "quick flx."
flee juMt..- one ye~~r ago. ( AP Laserphoto).
·
That
lo provide llttle ~

for the many leg!slators most o! them facing re-election In
10 months - eager for something
more than an admonlllon to hang
tough.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker, R-Tenn., caUed ·Reagan's
plan to transfer more than 40 programs to the stales "a brave courageelis ·statement" that coUld_ be
approved by Congress this year.
But .Sen. Mark Hattleld, .R-Ore.,
chairman of fhe Appropriations
Committee, cautioned: "His success In achieving this remarkable
program ... wlll ultimately hiN!e on
an economic rebirth In the coming
year. The looli1lng specter or Increasing federal deficits and high
Interest rales simply cannot he
Ignored."
And Senate Finance Chairman
Bob Dole, the Kansas RepubUcan
whose appeal for an Increase In exelse taxes to trtm the deficit went
unheeded by Reagan, warned the
transfer Jllan Could "produce some
pitfalls.'• Federal deficits of Just
under $100 bUUon, the figure cited
by Reagan In his address, "are not
economically acceptable," Dole
added.
Democrallc crltlclsm was predictably harsher.
Senate Minority Leader Robert
C. Byrd, 0-W.Va., said, "I don't belleve Democrats or Republicans
(Continued onpage20)

Escapee back
in custody

Elberfelds In·Pomeroy

seemed

Candidate on 300 mile walk
DAYTON, Ohio- Walter Beckjord, who Is seeking the RepubU· ·
can nomination to a U.S. Senate seat from Ohio, reached Dayton on
Tuesday on his 39G-mlle campaign walk from Cincinnati to
Cleveland.
·
+ w ' :f!eckjord, a Cincinnati attorney and former Clactnnatl QouncUman, said tllat hls Jegtslallve goals Include "a revival of the economy
on a lasting basis, through removal of unreasonable rules, through
lncenllves for additional savings and lnveslment. and through the
revival of the Incentive system ... so those able to work will not pass
up Jobs to receive government benefits."
·

·columbm Gas joi'ns drilling effort
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -Columbia Gas Transmlsslon Corp. has
joined with a Louisiana company to buy oU and gas drilling rights tp
about 250,lm acres In Vermo'!,t. omclals said Tuesday.
Columbia aMounced that It has joined with Louisiana Land and
Explorallon Co. to buy the oU and gas leases from Ohio OU and Gas
Co.
Columbia spokeswoman Ellen Schweppe described the partnership as "50-50,'' but said the purchase prlce would not be disclosed
because "It's a prlvaU! business deaL"
She described the acqulslllon as "very speculative" and said Columbia wUI have to test before determining Whether drilling Is
jusllfled.

Police chief faces charge
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, Ohio - Pollee Chief Rodman
Scott and awdllary policeman Harold Balles. are to appear In
F;~yette County Municipal Court Friday at 1: 30 p.m. In coMection
With the alleged t~lt of cable television service.
Each man faces a third-degree misdemeanor charge of receiving
unauthorized cable U!levlslon service.
Both have pleaded Innocent to the charge.

Johnson••

Democrats ~ respond

Schools closed

Winning Ohio. lottery number

f

CLEVELAND - The wtnntng number di-awn Tuesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 134.
In too' 5emlweekly "Pick 4" game, the w1iln1ng number was 5676.
The lottery reported earnlngs .of $97,431.50 Its dally game. The
earnlllgs came on sliles of $930,557.50, wbUe holders ol w1nnlnll
tickets are entitled to share $833,126, lotterY olflclals said.

Weather forecast

'315

'Crow's Family Restaurant
'(

to address

WASHING'fON- The Democrats used President Reagan's most
effective forum - television - to respond to his State of the Union
message with a nationally broadcast portrait of the Reagan admlnls· •
traUon as rewarding the wealthy and Ignoring the hungry and jobless or America.
The 30-mtnuU! producllon, whose $65,lm cost was financed by the
Democratic National Committee and tbe party's House and Senate
campaign committees, was aired Tuesday night atler Reagan deUvered hls first State of the Union message before a televised Joint
session ol Congress.
Interspersed with fumed vignettes of citizens complaining about
tlfe In the Reagan era were results ol a Democrallc-commlssloned
poU unfavorable to the Reagan administration and crltlcal comments from Democratic politicians.

Ivery Wednesday Night Af

CROW'S.FAMILY RESTAURANT
BAKED STEAK DINNER

MAKF.'I POINT- Prelldent Ro1111ld Reagan lllllkes a point wblle addressing a Joint Session· of Coagreas Tuelday night on Capitol .Hill.
Reagan YBid that be would hold the line on tax lnCI'ellses but wanted more
help from stale and local governmeats on federal programs. (AP Laserphoto).

Lack of money
halts projects

·sPRING

Unemployment

Mostly cloudy tonight Low 1n the upper 30S to near 40. Bnsk winds
tonight Cloudy with a chance or shOwers Thursday. High near 45
with temperatures faUtng during the afternoon. The clwjce ol pre. clpltatlon Is a! percent ionlgbt and 30 percent Thursday.
I
Ohio ExteDded o.tlook
FridaJ lllralqb 8uDda1 - A 1'onoe of ,._,.•trt.lee
.. Ill lbe aorlbelllit
Fttday. Otaoe• wloe f81r.llflbiiD lbe m1Ht1 to-• Friday, Ill llle

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

low .... low . . lllliut'dar IIDd lbe mid .....IDd . . . . . ., • . _ .
llllbe . _ FridaJ IIDd .. lbe upper ..... low . . a....nta, IIDd
Swde)'. ....
~'

,DESCRJIIIIB BYPASS PL-\Ns- state Rep. Claire (Buzz) Ball Jr.,
&amp;-Aihenll (left), polnta .to a eect1on ol u.s. 3$ throulfl Gallla Cciunly
. slated for bnprovement through the creallon of a four-lane bypaa.
Hokllllg the other end of lbe map Is Walter G. Smith, deputy dlredor of
Diatrtct 10 ol the Ohio ~..-tment ol Transportation. BOth are pUIIhlng
lor lbe completion of destin plans and rtghHf-way purchaie for the
project, althoulh federal and lllate funding remains a lhomy question.

I

.

Commi-ssioners
•
votce
concer11
about closing

It's a message heard all too
often: Improvement of U.S. 35
through Gallla County can be accomplished by the construction of a
four-lane bypass, but money Is the
only thing standing between It and
Its creation.
However, an Ohio Department ol
Tr11nsportatlon oHiclal and a state
legislator told the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday
design plans and right-of-way purchases must be completed to aUow
lor funding .
'\It's one of the most needed prOjects, and probably one of the biggest,'' said Walter G. Smith, deputy
director of OOOf's Dlstr1ct 10 ofnee In Manetta.
Smith said an Improvement plan
was being drawn up prior to AprU
1911) when money problems forced
the department to terminate Its
contract with the designer.
However. the designer had substantially completed work on most
of a three-section plan for 35. Smith
and State Rep., Claire (Buzz) Ball
told the chamber two sections of the
plan must be completed at the
same time for the pr,oposed bypass
to work.
The two plans call for the fourlane to begin just north --ol Rlo
Grande to a point near BidwellRodney Road. The road would then
continue from there to the present
35 Intersection with Ohio 160.
Since the bypass would go cro!IScountry, neither plan Is workable
unless buUt at the same time. Complellon of just one would lead nowhere, Smith explained.
A third plan, to create a four-lane
on the present road between Rlo
Grande and CentervUie, Is Important, "but not vital," he added, be-

cause traffic now drops oH between
the two vUiages.
Smith said more design work Is
expected to he done on the two
plans In June . The plans and purchase or land must be complete to
allow the project torankhlghon the
priority list.
Ball, an Athens Republican, said
funding on the project would be '75
percentlederal and25percentstate
.- provided the money's there.
"We all have to be optimists," he
said.
Estimated costs on all three seclions come to $22 million on the seclion from Bidwell-Rodney Road to
Holzer Medical Cenu.r, S26 mUUon
on the part from Rlo Grande to
Bidwell-Rodney and SS% mUUon OR·
the four-lane tci Centerville.
"We're getting close to $60 million, which Is no small project,''
Smith noted.
Even with everythlnK done and
the money obtained, however, actual construction on the bypaso
couldn't begin until the mld-1980s,
the oHiclals said.
The money problem faced by the
state Is also affecting other ·a rea
road projects, prlmarlly the Appalachian Highway, Ball and Smith
revealed.
While the Brown and Adams
counties project Is expected to go
through, stretches of U.S. 50 betWeen Athens and Albany and
Athens and Coolville have been put
on the shelf because the funding
Isn't available.
BaU said the 3 percent gasoUne
tax was Introduced last year to
raise revenue for such projectB,
and he thinks there may be a gas
tax Increase In the future as a
means of raising JI!Ore money.

Meigs County CommiSSioners gineertng design for the county enTuesday voiced their concern atier gineer's approval to move the
small streat 30 feet along Forest
learning or the state's decision to
close the Meigs oHice of the Ohio
Run-Road.
Roberts verbally approved the
Bureau of Employment Service.
plans tor re-locating the stream. A
The board lssu~d the following: "We are shocked to hear vla
public hearing w1ll be held In order
· (Continued on page 20)
• the news media ofthe state's Intent
to close the Ohio Bureau of Employment Service office In Meigs
County.
"In addition we are highly disappointed that the State of Ohip has
seen fit to make an announcement
without first even discussing the
matler with the Meigs County
CommiSSioners.
"Much time and eHort went ·Into
establlsblng this office In our
county In 19'T7 and the convenlence
Candidates for lour county-level posts will be nominated In the June primary elections, the Meigs
and economic advantages have
County
Board of Elections rewrts.
·
worked out wen lor the citizens of
· Candidates ffn- any of the four posts have until 4 p.m. on March 25 to file their petitions with the
this county.
'
board.
"Havfng not been advised by
Positions opening this year for nominations by the Democrals a~d Republicans include one seat
state •autliorltles of the closing ol
on the board of county commissioners, a four year term, now held by Henry Wells, Republican ; the
this oHlce, we fall to see the ratiocounty audltO!''s post, now held by Republican Howard Frank who announced that he will not seek
nale of the state when more and
nomination and reelection as has Wells; common pleas court judgeship held by John C. Bacon, and
/more people are becoming
an unexpired term for county recorder.
·
unemployed.
Manning Roush, a Republican, has flied his petition for nomination to run for county com"It Is our Intent to Immediately
missioner and Bill Wickline, chief deputy In the office of County Auditor Frank says he wil! Meek
contact Representative Claire Ball, .~
nomination and election to the auditor's post.
Jr., and Senator Oilkley Collins to
Charles Knight, Pomeroy Attorney, has filed his petition to run for the common pleas court
see If ~ythlng can be done to sav"'
judgeship.
· this agency for Meigs County."
. Emmogene Holstein, R., of Syracuse was recently appointed to serve as county recorder for 1982
County engineer PhU Roberts ,
replacing the late Eleanor Robson .
and county highway superintend·
· In ihe May primary, candidates will be nominated to run for the two years remaining on the
ent, Ted Warner, along with repre, unexpired term of the late Miss Robson.
sentatives of Coal Power, lnc.,
MelgsCountians will also elect a county court judge in the fall, but candidates for that post do not
Gene McGrath and Ray Fassnacht
file until August since It is a non-parllsan post.
.
1
dl:lcussed the development ol a coal
The board of elections expects a•blg election this year, not only from the local level standpoint,
mining operation on the Ed Baer
but from the standpOint of slate level officials who will be nominated in the June primary.
p1ope.:ty In Sutton Township.
McGrath presented the basic en,

Four county-level posts
highlight June 8 primary

. ,

·-

1S C..,to

"==:per

Ia~

Squads kept busy

Area deaths

2 Sodlon, 20 Pagot
A Multin:odb Inc.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, .Januart 27, 1982

\

I

' ·~

\.

f

,

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