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                  <text>14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

1982

Thunday, Janua'Y

Senator Collins opposes closing decision

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.,

"

.-~ · '

..,

END OF THE MONTH

CLEARANC~

ean•nc It yet another bardlhlp for Soulhem Ohio'a
l!llell)ployed, State Senator OU1ey Colllnl, R., Ironton,
Tbunda;y aftemoon voiced IU stru1g objection to the

BEGINS FRIDAY, JANUARY 2.th -~9:30A.M.

cloelng of the Pomeroy Office of the Bureau of Em-

plo;yments.mces.

.

CHILDREN'S

CORDUROYS

'

CHILDREN'S

VAN HEUSEN SlS.OOto$19.00

WINTER
TOPS
Flannel Shirts
Sweaters . ljl PRICE
Knit Tops,

-

···-

and

WINTER BLOUSES

1f2 PRICE

1

h PRICE

· WINTER

JUNIOR DRESSES:

-1h PRICE-

employment services sucbas lob referrals, counsellng,
testing and job placement.
•
Collins said that Meigs County Commissioner
- Richard Jones alerted him to tHe Pomeroy closing.
"We agree that this doesn't make much sense,"
said Collins. The 17th District Senator said that unemployment service has beriefltted downstate Ohio and
that the bureau has had a positive effect in reducing .
llllelllpioyment and In providing ~ imp&lt;hant servicei for people who have suffered job layoffs.
~ ·There la nothing lei be gained by cutting a
program that works," Collins !ald. He commented that

bureaiiCl'IIUc lnaenaltivity to the' ~ of Southern
Ohio. U people would e&lt;me down here and - for
tbemeelves bow crltical .the situation Is, I think the of·
flee -.Jd stay open," Collins said.
Ohio wtll lase :n of Its 130 unemployment offices
8Cl'OI8 the state within 90 days as a result of federal
budget reductions.
'
· "Unfort~tely, we have Utue control over the
declalooa made In Wuhingtoo on this matter. The
reduclim Ia a reality, but I think that our district is
hav!Jig to bear more than Its share of the butden,"

-

WOMEN'S

DRESS SHIRTS

eli~~ to SUin, the cuts .wtll fall beavi~ on

.

"It la an unfortunate dec;Won and one that llhowa

ALL SALES FINAL- NO EXCHANGES- REFUNDS- OR LAYAWAYS

.L

Collins commented;,

-WOMEN'S
WEAR

SWEATERS AND
SWEATER·VESTS
Cardigans and Slipovers ·

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR

-th PRICE

Girl seventh explosion victim
OKLAHOMA CITY - A 10-year-old, girl Thursday became the
sevel)th person to die from a water heater explosion that rained
eJass, COilC1'I!Ie bloCks and shrapnel down pn an .elementary school.
The death of Angela Martin, who had_been 1p "extremely critical"
condition," came nine days after the blast at Star Elementary
School In suburban Spencer.
Five other children and a teacher were kUled In the blast. Thirty·
!pur people we~ Injured and a ponceman suffered a heart attack
alter !living mouth-to-mouth resuallatlon to 10me of the Injured.

h PRICE

1

MEN'S

MEN'S $29.95 to $99.95
WINTER

VELOUR SHIRTS

.JACKETS AND
-COATS

Good Style and
Color Selection

PRICE

Blames inspectors' low morale

/2 PRICE

1

'5 &amp;

YS' WEAR

MEN'S
S, M, Land LX.

1h PRICE
COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR
Dotty

h PRICE

1

h PRICE

1

' The Hlehway Patrol sald the slngle-eoglne aircraft was found in a
lleld aboUt 10 miles north of London In Madison County and that It
had !lllle-dlved into the ground.
The patrol sald tile pUot was a.34-year-old UJ'bana man, Wayne
Enderle II, and said he was alone In the plane.
· Enderle had llled ilo fllgbt plan, the patrol said.

Driver honored for his effort

''

h
PRICE
\.~----------------------~ .

CHILDREN'S

.,&lt;'
••

WOMEN'S

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

KNIT ACCESSORIES ..'

KNIT HATS, SCARFS and GLOVES

Gowns, Robes, and Pajamas

•

1h PRICE

MEN'S $19.95 to $29.95

h PRICE

1f2 PRICE.
BOYS' WINTER JACKETS .
Sizes8to20. Reg. $18.95to$49.95.
Knits.

lf2 PRICE

PRICE

MEN'S WINTER HEADWEAR
TOBOGGANS AND CAPS

1

h PRICE

:CHILDREN'S WINTER COATS
SNOWSUITS, .COATS AND JACKfiS

} WINTER DRESSE~

·lh PRICE

LADIES'

WINTER SLEEPWEAR
I

ROBES, PAJAMAS &amp; GOWNS

h PRICE

1

Supplies stolen

Free cheese costs local agencies

Pomeroy PoUce report 110me
h300 In cleaning supplies and
equipment stolen from a storage
area for supplies at Powell's Super·
Valu 10metlme Thursday. A lock
was broken on the door of the room
tO ealn entrance. Pollee are contln·
u1J1i their lnvestliatlon.

COLUMBUS, OhiO - Presldeni Reagan's plan to give away surplus ~' won't coat COI1IIIITierl a cent but It could COlt local
agencies which store and handle the cheele. ·
Some locallljjl!lldel which have already ,vOlunteered their servl·
ces are having leCOIId thoughts since getting letten from the Ohio
Department or AeriCUlture about handling charaes.
Ohio 1.1 to get 1,4:fl,lnl pounds of cheele wrappecl in ftve.pound
packa&amp;RS. It will come on 43 trucks, each carrying 33,Ql pounds of
dleele. It would provide one pack to each of 286,lnl tarnlllell in the

''

111CJ1111Da.

.

.

.
Winning Ohio lottery ·number

Weather forecast
'

'CioudytanlPt with raiD • • taalllbta.l Satai'U,y. ~

-"Y lteady Ill the upper 401 ••••..,.•• llllb Saturday In the low • •
The cb•nce of raiD II -llXI pawut tnnlaN ml Satai'U,y.
OIJIDI! I '10

7

JL

&lt;

8 'rllll AT 'J-fllr,IIIIILI!IIIa.•s . , _ .
M
T
,.a-U IIIII;·
I

,

........

I

The Eastern High School buDd·
lng 1.1 structurally sound, but 'wiD
need watching.
.
This was the gist of an enemeering study presented when the dJ.s.
trlct'• board of education met
Wednesday nl&amp;bt but Superlntend·
ent Richard Roberts did not release
details untU today.
According to the report, the~ are
no dangers lnyolved lri the IIYlM&amp;·
slum, but the enjiDeerlng ftnn has
etven the board a puge to jnatall10

rneetlni

rooms be pointed up and
redecorated.
The board approved Dec. 17, 18,
and 22 and Jan. U and 14 as calam·
lty days. The district Jt.gv... t1W
days on the five peiaiJitted by the
State Department of Educallpn for
calamity day• without niakellp
time

required.

\

'

.

To make up one of the two days,

il!e board decided to hold clauea on

Feb. 5 when parent·teacherconfer·
ences were acheduled and reschethat a watchful eye can be kept on duled the parent·teacber activities
that area to aeelf there Is any lhlft. to Saturday, Feb. 6.
ing which might create a danger
The board received several bids
sltuatloq.
on a new school bus, but rejected all
. The report lllllie&amp;ts that the foun- of them when It was determined
dation of the otrk:e areas be studied
that the state department of eduCato determine what 1.1 causing tion has lipptoved 'thi! iiw'CI!Ue oi
rmved in thole areas. ItJurther in· · two more buaea and It waa decided
dlcated that there Ia no danger In· to advertise again for bid. on a total
volved In cla.iiJWms where walla of three buaea. The tire bill of Firehave separated from the floors stone In Parkersburg, W. Va., was
since the walll are not the support· accepted.
Approval was given for the 'boys
.ing type. It hal been suaeated that

varsity and reserve basketb8U
cosches and the glrla varsity and
Junior high basketball coaches to
atte!id their respective state
tournament.\.
Ralph Wigal was authorized · to
attend the stale baseball clinic.
The board authorized Dorsel Lar·
klns of the board and Supt. Richard
Roberts to af:!end a conference In
Columbus on Feb. 23 at which time
funding and reduction of staff wiU
. be dllcu&amp;!ed In view of poealble
school.lncome cuts.
A group of parents was on hand to
dlscuas with the-board the development of a baaketball program for
fourth through sixth ifaders and
the use of the buildings for these

proerams.
Meantime, offlctals at the high ·
'school are battling broken water
lines which have at Urnes cut the
entire water supply In the building
or redljced water semce In the
. bulldln&amp; to about one-halt.

New hope--is recession end near?
·111 APOOI•W , _

compared with 126,lnl reported budget office al.lo estimated that
unemployment would average a
last week.
Iotty
8.9 percent In 1982 after rising
-Preliminary Congressional
.
above
that level early In the year.
Budget ottlce figures •how the
-The
Commerce Department
economy decllnlng 0.1 percent In
the nation's foreign
reported
that
19112 - the third straight annual
trade
deficit
I'OIIe
about 9 percent '
drop- despite the recovery beein·
ntng In thll year's second quarter last year to $39.7 billion, the third·
hlglles! total on record. The 1!81
that both budget offtce and White
trade deficit was $36.4 billion .
House economists predict.· The

layoffs tempered economists'
enth111laam.
The Commerce Dllpartment said
Ita Index of LeadiJJe Indicator&amp; roae
0.6 percent in December, 1Janallng
that the economy lhoulr,t beein rec·
overing before Ione.The atreaeth of
that recovery, however, lefteconomllta divided.
.
. 1..esHncouraein Dews shoWed
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)reduction plant's manager, said
only that the company was review·
up 1n four other reporia:
The local preGdeftt of the Steel·
tne the propoeal.
-froductlvlty In private bull· Ml!'kers union at Kalller Aluminum
Staton sent his proposal to
nesa piUfllled at an annual rate of It Chemical Corp.'s plant says he'I
Kaiser, government and uUllty
7.2 percent in the fourth quarter o1 interested In RM. Mlck Sta:ton'a
1981 aa the rece~~lon clamped down plan to keep the company' a reduc· · company officials, and said Wednellday that even U It lln't foUowed
- the ~· drop since the p
lion plant open.
•
precllely, his plan would "help
venunent began keeplne such lie·
The w~ VIrginia ~bllcan •
ltlmulate· movement toward some
ures in llM7- and productivity was plan calla lor tax and pi'otlt lneen·
1011
of 110lut1on" to the unemploydowrl 0.1 perctmt tor 1t11 at 19SJ., the _ t!vetl, u weD continued labor nego.
ment
problem in this Jackson
Labtor Ilei;Jartlillin said.
.
tlatlonJ, to restore the Jobl of 750
RaiGNICD - IIIII.
County
eommuntty.
-The !IW'Dber of U.S. auto- wortren at the tlnanclally troubled
.IMJ.' 11M I . . 'M IJ 1Jr
workers on indeanlte layoff roae plallt.
·
I , llf ....... c...lf ...
Since last year, Kalserhasc105ed
However, Local 56611 Prealdent
.an.ay ...lire M. L Mn. . thllweekto:M3,500from229,27!ilalt
week, wblle car produ"'lon ear- Cbellowl!tb sald Thunday fouralumlnumpotllnesatltsreducllumped U.9· pmcent from 1a1t ·that the- P1U would bave Utile
tlon plant In · Ravenawopd, and
1111111111 M J6111llllt 11M h f'rd
week
to
...
Ml
can,
lndUitry
re·
cl!enoe
of
plnlne
the
company's
~ than 1,lnl workers have lost
........, . . I IS ... their jobs. Thj! company cited re: uw .... ...,..~ porta aid. At General Moton Inters~.
Corp., wblch !ICM' 11 neaottallrll a
"I woulcl say tt would ~ve two , duced clemar!ll for aluminum/ high
C
I I
I. 111'1. , _ . . .
ClOIIIrKt
with
lbe
United
Auto
chaMel~
Slim aiJd none, Chenooperating cost and labor producUv- '
1!1r I I ed, a!lf, wLt 11ri!
lty problems as re&amp;IQIII for the
aPneiiJ .......... naldl • ._., WOIWrl 1!111011, i38,lnl WOI'ken woeth said. '
were 011 lndeftlllte iayoft thll week
Emmit Boyle, the RaVI!IIIWOOd flrlnes.

give~

Plan

Her body was found Wednesday morning.
'

by ll!e M"lp C.Uty Republlcu Cealrill

Report says ·building sound

But other reports lll!awlna another
t!roP in productlvtty and more auto

'

CLEVELAND - The winnlni number drawn 1bunday nl&amp;bt in
the Ohio Lottery's dally pme ''Tile Number" ~ 00.
•
In the aemlweeldy "Plck ·~· pme, the ll'llulln8 number was 21m.
The lotterY reported eamlnp of $'7«1,31.4 on Itt dally pme. The
·earninP came on sa1et olll,lnl,512, willie bolders of wlmltng tlcketa
are entitled to share $ZI5,IM, lottery off!cla!o said.

IIPfi'l"leil

c.8rralttee.

The tint Increase since July lri
the government'a -key gauge of fu.
ture economic health lifted hoPes
that the receaalon 1.1 neartne an end.

CINCINNATI:... Women are annlng themlelves or stlcklngclole
to escorts and a two-allmty poUce taak force la tl'acklng numerous
leads aftel' the 10th woman abducted in the area waa found llaln In a
CJennont County barn.
Clermollt COunty Coroner Dr. Nick Capurro said Thursday that
the latest victim, Jerll)11 Stanlleld, :Jl, of Andenoo Township! a
Cincinnati suburb, waa raped and ltabbecl. Her hlllldl were bound.
Mn. StaDtleld disappeared from the Eutpte Shopp1na MaU the
afle{noOil r4 Jan. 13. Security euams there found bel' car the next

S.M. XL. Poly -CQtton Blends.

1

an

Women begin arming themselves

SPORT SHIRTS

'
Sizes 29 to 42 waist - Fuller cut
style included in this sale .

son County after an Investigation
was made by tht! sherltf's department, the Bureau of Criminal Investigation; the Ohio Highway
Patrol and Gallla Courtly Proaecu. tor Joseph Cain.

.tate.

·MEN'S $12.95to $18.00 .

CORDUROY JEANS
.

Robinson, who deputies ~
worked In a general rellet P!'OIII'ilm
In Middleport, was taken to Jack·

WASHINGTON - WUUam G. Yates, a 55-year-old Springfield,
Ohio, truck driver who Is credited with saving the life o&amp; an auto
'accident vlctlm, has been named driver of the year by the American
Trucking Auoclatlonl Inc.
Yates, who works for the Hobart Corp., has driven a truck protes.slonally since l!leG without having a preventable accident:
While driving near Jackaonvllle, Fla., In l9'11l, Yates passed tlie
,~eene of a tratllc accident and saw that a man and a woman were
trappeclln
automobile. He freed the couple and dl5covered that
. the woman was having dltllculty breathing.
'

file_.. a•-.
r.-

lbe late I'Jenr
CIM!dalel for lbe p!lllt wiD
l!an a.
yelir
tl!e two ~n ,mlcl! J'e!l!8la Clll
lire~ term, llllud 1184. Mn. Holallia wli

1!1 Holzer

Medical Center l!Y the Ga1Ua EMS,
and died in the llllenllve care l!ntt
at 2:41 a.m. Thiii'Sclay.
Dr. Edward Berlllch, asslltant
GaUta County coroner, reported
Spencer's death waa cauaed by a
single gunshot wound to the head,
but the matter was ltlll under invesilcatton. The .bodY was later removed to Franklin County for an
autopsy by the COf!)IM!r, and was
later releaaed to.the Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.

LONDON, Oblo - A prtvatep~ !hat crashed, apparently durIng the weekend, was found Thursday with the body of the pilot In It,
the Hlihway Patrol said.

1

BOYS' SHIRTS

·

~ .WIIJ -~

Regular, Slim and Husky SizesPlus Students 26 to 30 Waist.

M, L and LX. Good styles and
cOlors . .

,.&lt; iannels - Westerns · Sizes 8 to 20.

1f2 PRICE

CORDUROY JEANS

SPORT SHIRTS

$7.95 to $24.95

·

RobinsOn, Robinson apparently
. wanted to leaVe - the four bad
come to the scene in Robinson's car
- when an 8flll!llll!lll ensued and
RobiliiOD aileaediY shot Spencer
once with. a .38-callher revolver
around 9: e P·lll·
.,

"We have 25 percent fewer inspectors now than we bad lnl9'18and
there are nearly 450 more coal mines in operation," Cbiii'Ch sald
alter a meeting in W~'(ton D.C., this week with Vice President
George Bulb and Labor Secretary Raymond .~an.

BOYS $14,95 to $17.95

MEN'S FLANNEL

,

ace~nt.s.

1h PRICE
WOMEN'
. S
SWEATERS
1h PRICE

Ladies

s,

JUN lOR COATS

WORKSHIRTS

Values to $32.95

Trissi,

Deputies said Robinson and
Spencer, 8ccompanled by their
wiv..~. had 110111! to Stewart's resl·
de!!C4! that night to buy a television
set. When the set was purchased by

MEN'S $1Q.95to $20.95
HEAVYWEIGHT FLANNEL

KNIT SHIRTS

Devon, Bradley,
Mann and others.

Road.

WASHINGTON ·Untted Mine Workers President Sam Cbiii'Ch has
blamed the recent string of coal mine fatalities Oil low morale among
federal inspectors, who he said have been dwindling In numbers
whJ!e being forced to CIUTY an Increased workload. ·
Cbl!rcb sald budgetary and organizational problema In the federal
Mine S1tety and, Health Administration have led to the recent

LADIES' ·

WINTER·
COATS
· Misses and Half Sizes
1f2 PRICE

A MultlmecMa Me.

u Conn

Russell Robinson was arraigned
Thursday afternoon In Galllpolls • .
Municipal Court ·on a murder
charge In coiUlectlon with the shoot·
~death of PaulE. Spencer, 24, Rt.
1, Cheshire.
Judge James A. Bennett reduced
Robinson's bond from $15l,lnl to
$100,00) and set a prellmlllary bear·
lng in court tor 1: :Jl p.m. Tuesday.
Bennett appointed Ronald R. Cal·
houn as the defendant's atiomey,
and Robinson was returned to the
Jackson County 1a11.
The 24-year-old Robinson, also
Rt. 1, Cheshire, was arrested by the
Gallla County Sheriff's Department shortly after 10 p.m. Wednesday at a mobile home oWned by
Hubert Stewart on Bulavllle·
Addlson-· Road, near Possum Trot

WINTER

MISSES AND HALF SIZES

'w rer

, SoctloM, ,,,.,...

Bond set in ,
murder case

1h PRI~

WINTER DRESSES

enttne

Pom=y-Midcl!eport, Ohio, Friday, ~nua'Y ~. 1982

WINTER VESTS

WOMEN'S

file for unemployment C~J~J~pensatlon after the'
Pomeroy Office closes Its doors."
Collins ezpressed roncem about the Inconvenience
and additional cost to thoae out of work. "It's going to
mean longer lines, longer trips and more gasoline " he
said.
'
News of Bureau of Employment ·Servtce layOffs
and dflce shutdowlis comes aa Ohio records Ita highest
unemployment. The state's 11.8 percent unemployed In
December Ia second only to Michigan with 14.4 percent:
Collins said he will continue to Investigate the
possibility ol obtaining funds to keep the Office q~en but
cautioned that except for lobbying Ohio's
Congressional delegation, there Is little Ohio's General
Assembly a~n do.
"I Intend to pursue any allernatlve to keep Job services in Meigs County," Senator Collins concluded.

•

at y

Voi.30,Ne.20:1
Copr...hhicll912

BOYS' $19.95

1h PRICE

1/2

•

e

..
MEN'S

In alllalmess Ohio·has done better than many other
~tea In forestalling the cloaure of job service olflces.
!ne '¥1 offices will close up shop March Sl, 11112•
Some states dOlled their offices u early u October. Michigan, for eumple, has cl~ more than
half of Its I~ offices and has l4ld off 1,750 people,
Collins reports. He states that Tezas has ciOIJed 74 out
ofl35 offices and bas laid off 1,325 people. In CG!Itrut
Ohio has reduced-Its force by 325, the senator said.
QlnUnulng, he said:
"However, the state plans to lay off a total of 1,000
Bureau of E!Jlployment ~ce worllers. The criteria
for closing offices by the bureau Is baaed on claim load
and the recommendation of the local office q~eratlons
divislon.
"Meigs County's unemployed will be forced to
travel about 20 miles to the GaiUa Office In Gallipolis to

Collins has made _a caae for malnlalnlnc the
Pomeroy Office In Meigs County before ~ Stein,
. director of the bureau's unemployment ca~tlon

=· ...

......................
a:rr.

•

.
.

interest

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel ·
J11 Court S&amp;reee
Pft:Juoy, Ohio
,
IIWI!ot lil
DEVai'ED TO THE INTF..RF..sT OF 'l'llE MEIGS-MASON AREA
'

ROBERT L. WINGETf
P'U bllflber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A.ulltul h bUIIw:r/Coatrolkr

Ge~:tt i'IIIM a alltr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nnn Editor

LE1TER8 OF OPINION a rt welcumed. TIM:y 8hould ~ le.1 thaa 310 wonk luq. AU
ldten •re Hlbject 10 tMUUJq aDd ·mlliJI bt. wiped wltll name, l ddrt!llll a Dd telephune ·
umber . No 11111iped lcHien will be publla:Kd. Lttten t bould be Ia good Wl te, adclrn•lai
luael, •t pebOU.UUH.

:W aiti~g for
the other shoe
. It did not make many front pages, but the serious business of the 1984
:presidential electio~ began the other day.
The Democrats came up with a tentative set of new rules for that national
coovention. As proposed by a special study commission, blocks of seats will
· be reserved for members of Congress, governors, mayors and other elected
: an4 party officials and it will be easier for delegates to switch candidates.
Aliio, the changes in state-primary delegate allotment will favor popular·
vote leaders and the commission even made an attempt to impose some or: . der on the marathon primary process, although not a very vigorous one. THe
: ·first-In-the-nation Iowa party caucuses and New Hampshire preferential
primary have been rescheduled for later dates.
The stated purposes of the changes which still mu.St be approved by the
Democratic National Conunittee, are to make the nominating process more
fluid and the converltion, In the words of the commission chalnnan, Gov,
James Hunt of North Carolina, ' 'more representative of the mainstream of
the party."
What they really amount to, as o~rvers promptly noted, Is a reform of
the reforms of a decade ago, In effe&lt;:t returning to positiOns of influence, if
not oomplete control, the party professionals who were virtually frozen out
in the earlier drive to open bp the nominating process.
The Democr:stic initiative - or, If you will, retreat - is only the beginning.
The Republicans are similarly reviewing their nomination procedbres. Both
effors are a consequence of widespread criticism at the conclusion ot the
1980 campaign of e presidential elec~ion process, particularly its excessive
length.
That problem is really a complex of problems including many that the par·
ties have no or only partial control over. ·
Such as the plethora of primaries, TwMhirds of the states, plus the
'. District of Columbia and Puerto Rico, now have preference balloting under
widely varying rules and, worse, with no coordination in scheduling.
This ill, however, an exceedingly sensitive area involving state prestige as
well ail. party convenience. New Hampshire law mandates that the state
primary be the nation's first, an exercise of sovereignly thai may or may mt
have been invalidated by a Supreme Court decision dealing with Wisconsin
and suggested that primary responsibility for the primaries belongs to the
parties, not the states.
The Democrats for the present are attempting to settle the matter out of
.. court, delaying the New Hampshire vote from Febrary to early March
·· where it will still be the nation's first by a week. The Iowa caucuses, moved
back from January to late February, have received similar cautious treat·
ment.
The American election system is often and unlavorably compared with
those of other major democracies. Not always, however, fairly. Our
democratic friends are atmost wihtout excep,tion smaller in population and
territory, and much more homogeneous. And Americans lfllght find some of
their practices politically unsalisfying.
British elections are brief, n&lt;&gt;-nonsense affairs in which, however, voters
·do not have the opportunity to vote directly for the head of government. The
French, who have tried just about everything in their time, now go through a
.· multi-vote prll!'ess that sets the eventual results in concrete for longer than
·: ihe public may wish.
: · The fragmented, constantly changing American system, despite its many ·
flaws, works for a constantly changing, inunensely varied country. ihe ob,. jectiona is not that it produces the wrong results. Few would argue that
.• presidential nominees in recent decades would have been different under
.• even very different circumstances, and that includes George McGovern. But
its excesses would appear to be turning off the voting public, as evidenced in
the steady decline in the Election Day turnout. And that is a matter of very
great conc~rn. as one Ronald Reagan suggested shortly ·after his own victory: I'Wesimply wear (voters) oul. They get bored with the whole thing,"
The major parties cannot deal with t~e entire problem - or all the
·· problems - lhemselvs. But with some degree of cooperation In the
rationalizing of their internal processes, that can accomplish a great deal
toward that end.
Which is going to make what the Republicans eventually have to say on the
subject of exceptional interest.

Berry's World
'

"SMILE/"

.·

·.

Page

2- The Daily SentinJ

Four former football greats
chosen to NFL's Hall of Fame

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Friday, Janwry 29, 1982

The uncounted .enemyJ._____w,_·uw_·m_ F._B_uc_kl_ey_ .l_r.
For a long time during the Viet·
ilam War it was popular to say that if
only one left it to · the miliary, we
could get on with the business of winning the war. That argument (I too
used it) is conceptually appealing,
but i( suffered a great blow last
Sa!w)iay in a truly extraordinary
documentary pr'Oduced for CBS by
George Crile, featuring Mike
Wallace. The documentary absolutely establishes- that Gen.
William Westmoreland, for political
reasons, withheld lrol]l the
presJdent, probably from the joint
chiefs, from Congress and from the
American people, infonnatlon about
the enemy which was vital to any
sensible reordering of one's thoughts
toward the war, whether one were
dove-minded or otherwise.
In 1966, General Westmoreland
•became committed to the estimate
that he was fighting a quarter of a
million Viet Cong. Military
estimates were accbrdingly made on
that assumption. But then Intelligence estimales began to come
in, , including from one of those
capured enemy documents everyone
used • o lau~h at, which Indicated
tha~ the enemy's strength was twice
l'lat, arid that therefore at the rate at
which we were uprooting the enemy,
we were, roughly speaking, getting
nowhere.
· What then - if we had known the
truth in 1967 or 1968 - might we have
done?
We niight have abandoned the
war, on the grounds that the effort
required to defeat such an enemy on
the ground was more than the
tJnlted States could, or would, put
forward.
.
Or: 'We might have completely
altered our strategy, The president
might have approached Congress to
say: The war caMot be won by such
measures as we have been liSing, We ,
need to go to the heart of the
problem, and. the heart of the
problem is Hanoi.
Ill!ltead, President Johnson - and
William Westmoreland - kept
assuring us all that we were

•
:average North Vielllamese coming opposite about infiltration - inI ain prepared to concede that do\vn every month along the Ho Chi •cluding this statement which he
General Westmoreland must have Min Trail to 20,000 in the months made on "Meet the Press' in Novem.
ber of that year (Flashback to
strengths. But he has none at all in preceding Tet in January 1968.
front of a camera. 'It Ia always
Wallace (to the viewing audien- "Meet the Press," Lawrence Spivak
astonlshing to me how Mike Wallace ce): "In our interview, General is questioning Westmoreland) :
contrives to get pewle to conaent to . Westq10reland surprised us by con· "What about inliltration' A year ago
go before 'I camera to be questioned tradicting his official record and you said they were infiltrating at the
on subject8 concerning which they conlinning what Colonel Cooley had rate of about 7,000 a month, What
should prefer silence. I am sure that told us about a massive increase in are they doing today?"
Westmoreland: "I would esiimate
Wallace, using whatever magic It Is infiltration prior to Tet." · •
he disposes of, would have succeed: (Camera pan to Westmoreland, between 5,500 and6,000a month,"
Wallace: "And so we asked
ed In gettin Jack the Ripper to talk who is saing) "I would say it was in
to ·him on the subject of how Lon· ' the nagnitude of about 20,000 a mon- General Westmoreland to explain
·
don's streets 1\'ere crowded with th. That's actually when the temp that contradiction, "
Westmoreland: " It sounds to me
unnecessary young ladies, and it Is started - in the fall, and conUke a misstatement I - J. don't
a wol)der that he hasn't got Alger tinued."
Hiss on to discuss arcliJI!l means of
Wallace: "Twenty thousand a remember making it, but,certainly I
· could Mt retain all these deta.iled
conununicating with Moscow. It is month?"
merely to suggest the vulnerability
Westmoreland: " Yes. On that or· figures in my head."
Wallace (to viewers) : "But how
of General Westmoreland to quote derofmagnitude."
'one of a .dozen equally in·
Wallace (to viewers) : "We then could General Westmoreland have
criminating exchange!! from the reminded Gene.r al Westmoreland been wrong ·about the most critical
docwnentary, which """' bore on that back in 1967t he had told factor in the war?"
How indeed.
the huge increase - from the 7,OIJ!l Congre&amp;! and the president just the
willing ~..

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent Reagan has come up with
some new math to eJq&gt;laln the soar·
lng budget detlclts he-once prom·
!sed to end In a hurry, But there are
skeptl~ sln hts economics class who
prefer old-fashioned anthrnetlc.
Among them are some of the Democrats Reagan accuses of fashioning federal policies that ran
the debt total up to the trillion dollar
level. Republicans and coruoervatlve Democrats are worried, too, at
the prospect of deficits expected to
far exceed the record $66.4 bUllon of
Gerald R. Ford's l&lt;lst year In the
White House.
They wanted federal excise taxes
on tobacco, alcohol, gasoline and
telephone service Increased to trtm.
the deficit. So did some of the pres!·
dimt'sowneconomlcadvlsers. Rea·

IJou«AWu

SamHrdf

Defeulve end

Unebad:er

CANTON, Ohio (AP)- Now that
Sam Huff's fears of not tnaJdng the
Pro Football HaD of Fame have
been dispelled, he has a request of
the game's shrine.
"I don't !mow how they decide
where your plaque or your bust
- goes, but I'd love to be put along
side Jim Brown. I think Jim Brown
would like It, too,'~ said a laughing
Huff from his office In Washington.
Brown, as the Cleveland Browns'
fullback, andHuff,astheNewYork
Giants' middle linebacker, were
famed adversaries In · their Na·
.tiona! Fo&lt;itball League primes.
Brown preceded Huff Into the Hall
of Fame several years ago,
Huff wiD be one of four !ormer
football stars selected to be In·
ilucted Into the Hall on Saturday,
Aug, 7, In ceremonies prior to the
NFL's first exhibition of the season.
matching the Balt.tmore Colts with
the Minnesota Vlldngs.
He will be joined by two Chicago
Bears, lineman George Musso and
defensive end Doug Atkins, and

~-~
George MUBso
Guard-Tackle

Merllli Olseu
DefeDIIve taelde

Collusion charges
have no basis--Kuhn

gan said no.
"Raising taxes won't balance the
budget,'' Reagan told Congress .
TUesday night. That Is ~; of
course, If th~ government merely
ftnds more ways to spend what It
takes ln.
" It will encourage more government spendmg and less private Investment," Reagan said m· his
State of tbe Union message.

Sen. Bob Dole of Kansas and
former VIce President Walter F.
Mondale, who ran against each
other for vice president in 1976,
a~ that something has to he done
now to reduce the deficits.
·
They don't agree on what.
Reagan has flatly and repeatedly
ruled out any change In the 3-year
tax cut that Is the centerpiece of his
economic game plan.

"So I will not ask you to try to
balance tbe budget on the backs of
the American taxpayers," he said.
That sounds~. but one way. or
another, tbe whole problem Is on
their backs anyhow. They pay the
bills.
The argument has some old ad·
versarles speaking In hannony
now. For example, Republican

Reagan had said deficits were
the cause of Inflation. More re.cently, his advisers have been saylijg that It Isn't necessarily so, and
one ,of ~m suggested there Is no
connedfon at an. Reagan's explanation now includes the claim that
easing lnflatlov helps cause
deficits.
Elsewhere In the speec~.n~ no~

that taxes are to be Indexed for 1.;
nation so tbe government won't'
profit on rising prices. WhUe be
didn't mention It, that, too, will add
to tbe deficit figures.
Secretary of the Treasury : Do..
nald Regan says deficits will be
declining by ~bout $10 bUllon a
year. to levels In the range of $90
bUllon In flscal1983 and $90 billion In
1984. He said that would not necessarily drive up Interest rates. But
Chairman Paul A. Volcker of the
Federal Reserve Board said It
probably would .
And , as Reagan said, high Interest rates add to deficits, since the
government already owes about $1
trillion. He said Interest cost the government about $5 bllllon more
than was anticipated during 1981.

Cheaper .than y()u think...._··_ __ _A_rt_Buc_h_wa_ld
"Where'sSlocum?" '
No one knows whllt Is going to hap- ding, Oll,ly 13.95?"
"He went over to see Ronstetter on
"That's right. For $3.95 you can
pen when the AT&amp;T breaks up, according to the recent settlement they call anywhere In the city after 11 K Street about the merger deal."
"K Street, that's three blocks
o'clock, and all day Sunday."
made with the government.
away."
"Ma Bell" will be permitted to
' keep Its long-distance service, its
Slocum walks in and everyone
Shot of woman In supermarket.
laboratories, and go into all sorts of "When was the last time you spoke looks at him sternly.
Banker-type says, " Slocum,
new electronic communicatioll!l. But to your child when she was sleeping
it has agreed to sell off the local over at a friend's house?"
haven't you heard ct a local
telephone companies it owned,
"I never call her because it's too telephone call? For just $6.95 you:
which service communities.
expell!liW,"
could have spoken to Ronstetter on
According to the people who
"What would yCI! say if I tol&lt;l yo~ the phone."
"Gosh, sir, I never thought of it."
should know, this could increase the that If you dial direct :;ou co•r:d l&gt;lik
cost of local telephone calls tremen- to her for three minutes fOJ: f2. 75 af·
Banker smiles, "That's why
dO~j,§ly , ~ause AT&amp;T subsidized
tertl!idnlght?"
you're not going anywhere in the
this serivce, while It profited from
"J'd say you were pulling my leg." firm. A local telephone call is the
long-distance,
"I'm not pulling your leg, The B&amp;S only way to do business. Ins't that
This meall!l a whole new ad· Telephone Co. will now .ret you call right, gang?"
vertlslng campaign . for local anyone within a IO.mile radius after
Everyone at the table all together,
telephone companies, to encourage midnight for $2.75 for three minutes, •"RIGHT CHIEF."
people to use the phone.
and only $1.20 for every . added
'
The TV commercials might go · minute. Surely there Is someone In
Shot of grandmother type talking
something like this :
your town who would love to hear into the phone. Grandfatherly type
Camera o~~howing taxi driver. fromyou."
cornea into room . "Who are you
Voiceover,
talking to, mother?"
"Do you reaJ,ize that you -c811 now""- SIMit Oh!llllfeience JOOinln offke&gt; -~ Hikill, Relll insr lilhe seemed so
call your iocal deUcatessen ~r 11 Stocky banker-type man walks In Mppy to hear my volce.'i
o'clock at nlghtfor only $3.116?"
and say• to people sitting around the
Volceover, "You don't need a good.
Taxi driver, "You got to be kid- table:
~n to call someone locally any

more. Just pick up the phone and
surprise them. You'd be amazed rit
how little it costs compared to hiring
11 Candillac limousine. Malte
someone in your neighborhood happy today by saying, "Hello.' "
'Shot of attractive mother iP kitchen baking pies. Phone rings a~
mother answers. Operator's voice
.CIIIl , Ill\ ,btlard; ." We· Mve A· l!OllE!c!t
call from the Giant Food Market for
anyone from Connie Marks.''
•
Mother says, "I'll take it. Connie,
Is there anything wrong?"
"Mom, they're out of heavy sweet
cream. Do you want me to buy light
cream inst~ad?"
"I'll make do. But it was very
smart of you to call collect. By the
way, don't forget the cottage chese."
''Sure, mom. It's on my list."
Volceover, "When you have a
problem and you don't have the
money to make a local call, B&amp;S h8s
the answer. Call collect, or charge it
to your home or business number.
Local calls are cheaper tban )IOU
think."

r=r.------,

Today in ·history

DOONESBURY

'f

NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn says
despite Marvin Miller's charge that
club owners were acting In concert
to thwart the free agent system be .
found no Indication that the clubs
were doing business any differently
than they did last year, before the
strike.
Miller, executive director of t)1e
players association, has contended
that there is l!·notlceabledlfference
and he again described It as collu·
slon Thursday.
Kuhn said Miller's charge earlter
this month had caused him to
"check the numbers out."
"The numbers speak for them·
selves," said Kuhn, who reported
only a four percent difference In the
~ signing of 1981 re-entry draft free
agents compared with the signing
of those In the previous crop at the
same ptilnt.
He said 24 of the 41 players, or
58.5 percent, who declared for free
agency In 1981 had signed contracts, whlle at the same time last
year 30 of 48, or 62.5 percent, had
signed.
"Tile figures are so close, you're
talking about about Tweedledum
arid Tweedledee,'' said Kuhn.
Miller was not impressed. He
said If the conuntssloner meant to
Indicate that an Investigation had
disClosed no collusion, "That's hokum - that's really trying to pull
the wool over the press' eyes."
Miller saw evidence of poststrlke
collusion In two areas - whefll !hi!
free agent's former club had retained negotiating rights, offers
made by othl:r teams did not exceed the salary offered by the origl·

pleasing
the eye and,,best of all,
they
are to
fast.
There are· seven of the GTP
(Grand Touring Prototype) race
cars entered In this weekend'sDay·
tona 24-Hour Pepsi Challen&amp;i!. One
of tbein, a · Chevrolet-powered
March 82-G driven by Bobby Ra·
hal, sped to the pole position durlna ·
Thursday's round of qualifying at
Daytona International Speedway.
Rahal, who co-drove to victory
with Bob Garretson and Camel GT
champion BrtBn Redman In .1981,
this year will be teamed with Jim

Trueman and Bruce

Canepa. He

. grabb!!d the top spot In the huge
fleld by touring_ the 3.84-mlli! course
at 133.063 Jl,lph.
The International Motor Sports
ASIOCtatlon, which sanctions the
American GT ll)lOrtl car aeries,
brought 10me additional color to

The powerful Poi'ICile' Turbo
9ilfis, wlllch llave W'OII the lui four
· Daytona :~&amp;-hour eYI!IIII and have · ·
dominated the GTclnndt 1D r-.t .
years, IIIII took ef&amp;ht .of the top 10 ·
spoil- the only )IOiidclilllociJed fa
after ThUI'Iday'a quaUtytna - .
si0n1 amoag three dlvlllonl, GT,
GTO and GnJ,
. ..

.)

College 175-pound guard nam~
Ronald "Dutch" Reagan. In the
1935 College All-Star game, he was
pitted against Michigan's center,
Ger9Jd Ford.
At the time of his 1969 retirement,
the 6-8, 275-pound Atkins had
played longer than any NFL full.
ttme regular, 17 years and ~
games . The Tennessee All·
American started his career with
the Cleveland Browns, playtne two
seasons, performed for 12 seasons
with the BearS and finished with
three years with the New Orleans
Saints. .
Olsen , a Utah State All·
American, joins defensive end
David " Deacon" Jones as

nal team. And free agents were not
offered contracts for more ·than
three years.
"Is Bowie now clatmlng that all
26 teams woke up one morning and
said, 'I think three years Is the
tlmit. This Is all their Individual separate judgments, no matter who
the player was, what his posltjon,
no matter how young be might be,
no matter how Injury free he might
have been. They each Independently, with no COil!lullliUOII and no
decision on poltcy suddenly
changed from Cl\lbs who slgJM:d
players :for 10 years, 6 years, 5 years - all down to 3?'
"U you want to beUeve In AUce In
Wonderland and the tooth fatry,
you can beliwe the 26 clubs separ·
ately made that ktDd Of decision
without consultation,'' said Miller.
The figures cited by Kuhn on free
agent slgntngs were Included In a
news releaae distributed at a show·
lng of the. 1981 World Series fUm.
NEW YORK (AP) -Quarter·
WhUe there was no breakdown in backs earned an average salary of
the figures prepared by the Com- $160,037, topS In the National Foot·
missioner's office, of the, 24 free baU League In 1981, according to a
agents who have signed so far, 14 survey released by the league
have remained with ·their former Thursday.
.
club, and 10 moved to other teams.
The average aalary for all NFL
Kuhn said not only were free players last season was $90,102, an
ageots signing at about the same Increase of 14.5 percent over the
rate as last year, they also were $78,657 average for 1911l, the league
signing for higher salaries. Miller survey said. Those figures do not
said that was no Indication of Iaek Include preseason or postseason
of collusion. " Looking at a piece of pay and . performance bonuses.
paper and seeing higher numbers Those payments would push the avsays nothing," said Miller. "It erage past $100,1lXJ.
doesn't tell you, f9r Instance, If Ron
The league said It had paid $140.7
Guldty's actual market value was mllllon In salaries and $16.2 mllllon
beld down by coUucton on the part · lh preseason and postseason pay
of 1J! clubs Including the Yankees." and performance bonuses.
Behind quarterbacks as the top
eamers were running backs, who
averaged $94,9CS. Then came defen·
slve linemen at $92,996, followed by
receivers ($85,873), otfenslve lineHowever, the handful of dlstlnC· men ($85,543), linebackers
($85,~). defell!llve backs ($'79,581)
tive GTP cars made a fast and co-

The NFC holds a 7-4 advantage
over the AFC In the 11 years thegame has been played In Its present
format, and has won the last. four

tatlves from the Super Bowl Cham·
pion 49ers, headed by NFC starting
quarterback Joe Montana.
The AFC first-time list Includes
Cincinnati running back Pete John·
sop and Bengal offensive tackle An·
thony Munoz; ll·year NFL veteran
wide receiver Frank Lewis of Buf·
falo; tight end Ozzte Newsome of
Cleveland; and Denver wide receiver Steve Watson. ·
The veteran Pro Bowl players for
the AFC Include Pittsburgh linebacker Jack Lambert, appearing
for the seventh time, and linebackers Ted Hendricks of Oakland
and Robert Brazile, each making
tbe1r sixth appearance.
For the NFC, Los Angeles' centeF
Rich Saul has played In five prevlou.S Pro Bowls. Mlnnestoa linebacker Matt Blair, Atlanta center
Jeff Van Note, and Dallas defen·
slve tackle Randy White are aU
fifth-time selections for the game.
Bengats' quarterback Ken And·
erson, who has played In two previous Pro Bowls, will start for the
AFC, with Houston's Earl Campbell and the Chiefs' Delaney the
running backs.
For the NFC, whlch Is coached
by Tampa Bay's JOhn McKay, Dal·
las' Tony Dorsett and Detroit's
BWy Slms ..wlll open at the running
back spots.

filorfu;;~llm~p-le;i;s;sl;on;;ja;t;Da;;yto;;na;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jjj~

events this season.

Alexis.
1n ]861, Kansas was admitted to the union 8J! the 34th state.
.Tn, 19.16, Germans staged the first ZeppeHn raid on Parts In World War I. ·., ,

HONOLULU (AP) - A number
o! newcomers to the Pro Bowl will
see action In Sunday's N'atloAal
Football League all-star match, Including six rookies.
On the 40-man NFt sqiiad are
first-year cornerbacks Ronnie Loti
of San Francisco and Everson
Walls of Dallas, New Otteans' run·
nlng .back George Rogers, and New
York Gtants' Hnebacker Lawrence
Taylor.
RuMing bac.k ,Joe Delaney of
Kansas City and Cincinnati wide receiver Chris CoWnsworth are the
two rookies on the AFC squad.
"1bese players have been selected by a vote of their peers and
by the league's coaches, and that's
a v ~.· ~ critical eye." said American
eont~i-ence Coach Don ShuJa. "I
think the players who are here appreciate that.
''It used to be, before the coaches
and players did the voting, that you
could make It-on reputation. But
now a player makes It on the kind of
year he had. That's why we have a
number of rookies bere."
ln .addition to the rookies, there
will be 25 others players making
their Pro Bowl debuts In the nation·
ally televised· game at Aloha
Stadium.
Among the flrst·tlrile players In
the all-star game are five represen·

Rahal speeds to pole position
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- The prototypes are new, sleek,

members of the Rams' Fearsome
Foursome to make the shrine.
Jones did In 191Kl.
•
Olsen was selected for a record 1t
Pro Bowls In his i5-year career
with Los Angeles, missing only In
his final season In 1976. He was the
league's Rookie of the Year In 1962
and Its Player of the Year In 1974.

members to :.1, counting George
Halas; the franclllse owner and
former coach.
Musso, a $00-a-game tackle when
he started his pro career In 1933,
had the distinCtion of playing
against two future United States p
esldents. The Colltnsworth, m., native, wh!Je playing for Mllllken Col·
lege, performed against a Eureka

meetlnp.

NOW IS THE TIME
' .

'

SAVE HUNDREDS BY BUYING NOW, WITH INCENTIVES .
·FROM FORD, 5% BONUS ON 1982 ESCORTS, '2500"
ON 1981 ESCORTS, FORD CARE COVERAGE (24,000 ·
MILES or 2 YEARS FREE WARRANTY, INCLUDING
· MAINTENANCE) ALSO 12.5% . FINANCING AT LOCAL
·BANK.

1982 4-DR. ESCORT
47 M.P.G. EST: 'HWY.
_ LIST. $799_7.0_0
DISCOUNT 357.00
5% BONUS 285.00
(which can be used
as down payment. l

4 SP. OVERDRIVE
POWER STEERING
POWER BRAKES
RECLINING SEATS
PLUS LOTS MORE

S6,45500
12.6% FINANCING - $171.48 PER MONTH
1Payment without taxes, title, insurance tees 1

Quarterbacks earn top salary

their racing this seuon by allowing.
the specially-built, OJie&gt;{)l' few-of·&amp;·
kind race cars to take part In their ·

Today Is Friday, Jan. 29, the 29th day of 1982. There are336days left Li
the year.
Today's highJliht In history:
. On Jan. 29, 191ll, Canada's foreign minister announced that six U.S.
diplomats had been smuggled out of Iran after hldlng In Canada's em.
baSIIY In Tellran.
I
On this date:
In 1618, Theodore mbecomes Tsar of Russia on the death of his father,

MerHn Olsen, the former Los An·
geles Rams' defensive tackle and
now a national television sports
personaDty,
Olsen, star of NBC's "Father
Murphy" series an~ a pro football
analyst ior t.'te saua1 :IE~''Ork, was
the only player In 1982 to he eJected
In his first year of ellilbWty, flve
seasons after his retirement
Huff, a West VIrginia All·
American, says he never feared anything In a physical sense In his
llnebllc)dng days with the Giants
and the Washington Redsklns.
"But as a player I was afraid o!
faWng, not playin&amp; wen, not clolni
my job. And In recent years I
started being afraid of falllng to
make the Hall of Fame. That's how
much. It meant to me. But, alter
being afraid of falllni to make It , I
think that's whyflnallybe1ngvoted
In now makes It sweeter than 1f I'd
make It right away," said Huff. He ·
retired In 1969.
Musso and Atkins push tbe
Bears' Ust of Hall of Fame ·

Several newcomers will see action

HAU OF.FAME INDUCTEES - Tile Profeealoaal Footbell Hall of
Fame has IUIIIOWlCed Ita 111112 Clalll of Enshrinees. Tbey are former
Chicago Bean Doug AIIIIDI aDd George M11110, former Lot AD&amp;eles
Rams' delet11lve Unemen MerUn Ot.eu aDd Sua Huff, a Unehacket for ·
the Wasbinglon Redskilll aDd New York Glanll. (AP Luerphoto),

deficits
explains
Reagan's new math·
'
.

The Dally Sentinel Page 3

...,.,_, Midclleport' Ohio

FriCIOy, Janwry 29, l982

fND OF THI MONTH SALf
1976 DODGE VAN •·.. .. . .. . .. . ...... . .. . . . . $1795.00
Auto. Trans.
1974 CHEVY LUV PICKUP . . . . . ••• . •. . . ••. ••. •1395.00
4 Spd.
'
1972 FORD FIOO LONGBED . • . . . . . . • . . . . . • . . • • 595.00 •
Standard shih. 6 Cvt.
1976 FORD MUSTANG •... •. . •. •. , . •• •.• . ..•• 1595.00 .
V·6. Auto .. PO'N8r Steenng
1975 FORD GRANADA , , . , . , , • , . .. ••... ...•• •1495.00
4 Or.. Auto.. 6 c:yl .• ""·
'11977 FORD GRANADA . .•. ••. . , .. •. .• •..••••• 2195.00
4 Or .• auto .. air.
' •
1977 CHEVY CAIIARO Z28 .. . ... .. . . . . ..... . .. 2995.00
Maggs. 4 spd.

and punters-placekickers ($65,7"19).
The survey, conducted !or the
fifth year, shOWed that there were

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

1,562 players under contract at the
end or the regular season, an In·
crease of 30 over one year ag~.

See: Garland Parsons or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.

(WITH APPROVED CREDIT)

LOCAL BANK FINANCING ON ANY NEW CAR OR TRUCK AT SIMMON'S .

BELOW ARE SOME EXAMPLES OF THE TREMENDOUS SAVINGS
11201

1982 CHEVROLET IMPALA
4 Dr. Cruilt Control. Automltie T11n1111is·
slon, QUIItz Clo4, V1 Economy. AII·FM
Radio, Lt Blue .MIIIIIic with Blue Cloth
lllnch, F.nily Size with Y011 Budlll In

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DOWN PAYMENT

AMOUNT FINAIICED
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For 48 Mo.

Per Month (Approx.)

Mind.

'9617.81
1982 CUTLASS SUPREME COUPE DOWN PAYMENT 1100.00
2 Di., Air, fllllldWindowl.l.lllp lrld CGn•.....,
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Stoc:IIWMIII. IIICIIIIICh more. Ll Redwood
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308 E. MAIN ST.
•on.-Fri. 8 to·6

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PH. 992·2196

ANNUAL
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RATE -

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1395.00
1973 CHEVY •• • , .. • .. • .. • • . • • • . .. . • • •
1973 PLYMOUTH , •••••.. ••• •. •• . ••. •.••••••• 395.00
1974·PLYMOUfH DUSTER •• ••• •..• •••..•• •• .$495.00
1972 PONTIAC •••••• ••••.•.•......•••••••••• 295.00

s. 3rd A lie.

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PH. 992-6614

POMEROY, OHIO ·

Sat. 9 to s

�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

.' Friday, January 29, 1982

Friday, January 29, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reds' skipper feels '82 team
better than last year'S club
By DALE IWfHGEB, JR.
OVP News Edl&amp;or

BASI!JIAU. CHAT- Paul Houaellolder, lefl, oulfleld pr08peel for the
Clocbmad Reds, cllau with Jim VeDDari of Pomeroy, a Reds' seoul
during Tbunday's aDDUBI caravan stopover ID Huallagton. Householder
is expected to battle newly acquired CIIDI Hurdle for the starting righ~
field job Ibis spring.

Tulsa captures

68-61 home win

HUNTINGTON -Although
George Foster's future ln a Cln·
clruiatl Reds uniform remains
uncertain, John McNamara the
Reds' field general for the past
four seasons, feels his 1~ team
. Is a better club now than the '81
team which won n\ore regular
season games than any team in
all of baseball.
Even tough we last outfielders
Ken Grltfey and Dave Coll1ns and
third baseman Ray Knight, "We
have replaced them with adequate
. personnel In Cesar Cedeno and
Cllnt Hurdle. Johnny Bench cah do
a more than. adequate job at third
base where we can welcome his bat
In our dally llneup.
Clint Hurdle and Paul Householder are expected to battle It out
for the other starting berth providIng that George Foster Is not traded
before the season starts.
"I honestly don't know whether
he will be traded before the season
starts or not, but It he !sn't George
will be my cleanup hitter. If he Is
then we wlll have to evaluate the
situation particularly In regards to
the players we acquire for him,"
McNamara said.
Continuing the Reds' skipper
said, "We have acqulre:d a bonafide
centerflelder in Cedeno and will
have a better arm In right field no
matter if Householder or Cllnt Hurdle Is out there. You won't see

teams going !rani first to third or
Balr from St. Louis, are expected to
from second to home as easUy as
handle ll!lddle relief whlli! theretlathey have In the past,''.
ble Tom Hume and lefty Joe Price
In addition to Householder and
wiU provide late Inning reUef.
Hurdle, McNamara noted the Reds
Tbe team's major concern at the
stiU have veteran !)utflelders Larry
present time ~ the catching sltua·
BUttner, Sam Mejias and Mike VaU
tlon headed by Joe Nolau, a good
along with two other rookies who
hitting .receiver who doesn't fool
have a chance to ctack the team,
anyone with his throwing arm;
Duane Walker and Ed Mllner.
Mike O'Berry, a punch and judy
The Cincinnati manager feels
type rfghthanded hitter and rookie
Bench will do a good job at third
Dave Van Gorder.
base since he stiU possesses good
McNamara hinted a good throwhands and reflexes plus his desire
Ing consistent hitting catcher Is stiU
to' play anywhere he can. ''John
needed.
.
wants to play anywhere but catch, · It Is rumored that It Foster goes,
he even 'asked Fish (Reds' pitching It wiU be lor a catcher and Possibly
coach BID Fischer) if he could pitch
a lefthanded p!tcher.
last year, McNamara noted.
Cedeno said he was very excited
He said the Reds' Inner defense about playing 81 games at River'
composed ol shortstop David Confront Stadium and feels It will be
cepcion, second sacker Ron Oester advantagous to both him and the
and first baseman Dan Drlessen ts' Reds. "I've had several good series
stm one of the best In baseball.
at Riverfront and It's my favorite
Touching on the club's pltchtni ball park, be said. Cedeno who left
staff NcNamara and Fischer both
Houston's Astrodome In the trade
noted a solid staff led by ace rfgh·
for Ray Knight says he Is nearly 100
tuander Tom Seaver. Other star·
percent and Is looking forward to
ters are expected to be Marta Soto,
his first season with the Reds.
Frank Pastore, Bruce Berenyl, and
Cedeno earUer this week signed a
CharUe Lelbrandt. Paul Moskau,
new four year contract with
Mike LaCoss and Joe Edelen, acCincinnati.
quired late last season for Doug
Rookie outfielder Paul . House-

By Aalloclated Press .
really beUeve there Is a jinx."
It's
called
the
"Humcane
"
but
Wallace Bryant and Quintin Dal·
- .
'
that doesn't necessarily mean the ley combined for 43 points, leading
University of Tulsa's basketball San Francisco ID a convincing West
team blows the opposition away.
Coast Athletic Conference viCtory
"People expect us to beat people over San Diego.
to death," says Tulsa Coach Nolan
Bryant scored 23 points and Dal·
Richardson. "We don't have a team
ley added a! for the Dons, . who
like that. When you Juggle the U- raised their WCACrecord to4-1and
neup as much as we do, you can't
their overall mark to~~- Forward
expect us to get any kind of big lead.
Gerald Jones paced San D1ego with
~;,.,"":.-., ..._
We just want to win the gaine."
12· points and a game-high nine
EMT
Thursday night's performance
reOOunds.
B'Jtton Coli. fn, Nortneutem n
Connecticut 72, Manhattan 5'7
was tYPical of the 16th-ranked
Trent Tucker scored 18 points
.,..,.., Cot"mhl• " · M"'"M S&lt;. 11
Tulsa team. Richardson used a lot
and Mlnneso
. Ia took control in the
Duq......., "· SI.Franctt, Pa. 71
Nichols 93, Woruster St. 8t
of Sllbstltutlons, as he usually does,
second half to defeat Northwestern.
~ I•"""' '"· a..,.. w.......,.. "
Robert Morrll 75, MarUI 73
an4 his p~yers straggled and then The
was Ued three tlmes
st. Bonaventure 73, Musachuaetu 59
spurted to a 68-61 Missouri Valley. early score
In the second half before Gary
St.Jooeph'•· """"' "· Thoma• Cdt. "
Conference victory over West
Holmes
put
the
Gophers
ahead
to
80t!l'H
•
Alcorn St 106, N.Ttxu St. 82
Texas State.
stay at 37-35. .
Cam- 61, a......... Cdl. "'
The triumph was the 27th
"I know everyone thinks of
Dla,,.,.,.,_ s.c. '"· """"'' "
E.Tct\l'lel8ee St. 9'.!, VMI G8
straight at home for the Hurricane,
Randy Breuer when they think
Gl&lt;ovUJe St. m. w.vt'YI"'• s t. ,.
which hasn't lost there since RIabout us," said Minnesota Coach
· ::_~ ~. ~~m 61
chardson brought most of his play- Jim Dutcher. "But for us to play
NW ...........,. 83. s.""""' n
HAlL CESAR- Cesar Cedeno,
er8.·along with him Western Texas'
SE I...OOJ.Jiana 70, NIChOlls St. SO
well, Trent has to pIay weII.. He' s
the newest member of the Ctn5,....., 12 ; Wlt..C..., Bay 61
junior college champions two years
the key."
v•.u...., "'· N&lt;rfolk S&lt;. n
ciDDBtl Red1, was a big bll during
ago.
\\'.Kentucky 48. AutUn Petly 46
Added Dutcher: "The big dlflerThul'llday's annual press caravan
vw,..town
St. "' E
"
'"'"'"Y"'
"OUr margin of victory was satis- ence was we rebounded the detenM1DWE8r
In HuntiDgtoo. Cedeno says he
factory to us," said Richardson.
stve boards well ln the seCond half."
-O.}'tOn 79,
" ·Pn:!Yidence
..,., St. "'71, 501'
looks forward to playiDg a !uU
"We've got some senior .kids who
Rod Higgins scored 14 points to
lllJnolt 83. Punlue"'
se88on at Clncy's Riverfront
arepressing. They're just not play· . lead Fresno Slate over San Jose
~.'!i!,~~':; .
Stadium.
tng:- weU rtght now. But I really StatelnPaclflcCoastAthletlcAssoMlchlpnOl,CidoSt. m.OT
praised the kids afterward because
clatlon play. The vlciDry was
--~:.~.n.J.!\;;,-;:;:-:,n:"'
there's a lot of pressure on them
FresnoSiate'sllthlnarow,lts16th
v.......... ·.ut~aosr .
from me, from the fans and from
in
PCAA play and the 17th straight
Wlchlta St. "';.,~.,...: ~ . . .•.
the polls."
at home.
'
Howant Payne"· E.Texu "'· "'
·
·
Greg Stewart, one of the players
'~'hi!
leading
scorer
lor
San
Jose
...,_
.....
"'·
sw
T&gt;uo
St. ..
TI!XU·San
A:ntonlo
62,
Oklahoma
cny
Richarson brought from Western
was Chris McNealy, who bad 12
,., OT
Te~s who helped Tulsa win the Napoints with a game· high 11
"""'"'· w.TexusLGl
tional Invitation Tournament last
rebounds.
~:;"
Clutch foul shooting c~rried Meigs
year, combined with Bruce Vanley
111
U111'8111ted Telllllll
""'""' • Adamo ~- "
to a 311-35 victory over Waverly Thurfor 30 points to help the cause
James
Grltfin
scored
22
points
::!'~
~n':!~~
St. "'
sday
night in an SEOAL encounter
Thursday night. Trailing by as
and IUinols outscored Purdue 14-5
~ai-Saota &amp;""" 41
at Larry R. Morrison Gym.
marlY as nine points through most
In the closing minutes totakea63-48
"""'-·R&lt;no "· MooW\a" 47
With the score tied at 3:1-32 at the
of the game, the Hurricane took the
victory
over
the
Botlermakers.
~=~
~~';:_
~
end
of regulation, Meigs won the
lel\!l for good at 61-59 when fresh·
Dan
Pelekoudas
hit
a
20-foot
San 1J1eao st."· .....,.m v..,.."
contest
when Pam Crooks sank
man Steve Harris hit two free
jump shot as Ume expired to give
;::~.."P.~.~.:i::.:a"c!:t. 68
three
of four from the foul line_; Jenthrows with 2: 411eft.Michigan 1\ 62-60 overtime victory
w.New Me-"·Wettem S&lt;. st
nie Meadows added two of four and
Vanley, a 6-foot-10 sophomore,
over
Ohio
State.
KristinAndersonhitoneurthfree
.throw.
hit six of eight field goal attempts to
Marc Upshaw's four free throws
During the entire fo
quarter
flnfsh with 16 points, while Stewart
in the final 22 seconds gave Rhode
.,,......,....,.-and overtime, not one Meigs field
caine off 1the bench to add 14. West
Island
a
59-54 'victory over George
ay..,
,_,
..
.,.
,_
goal attempt went through the
Texas State got 12 points from Ed·
Washington.
OA8EIIAIL
hoops. Anderson led the
die- Harris and 10 apiece from Goll·
Arnel1cu ~.-pe
JamesCopeland's20-lootjumper
BHTIMORE
ORIOL Es Marauderettes with 13 points while
am Yegglns and Charles Bell.
with
4:40
to
go
put
Southern
IUinols
,::~..,..."""'
booeman. '"' Je!I
Th other action Involving the na·
a h ead to sta y an d h elped the SalU·
Schnl!tder, Jlltrhl!r, 10 thl! Calltomla An·
tlon's ranked teams, No. 6 Iowa
"" vi t
lndl
,rls tor Dan Ford, ou!ftclOer.
Ids to a 7•......,
c
ory
over
ana
CHICAGO WHITE sox _ Sl&amp;ned "'""'
eged Michigan State 57-56, No. 9
State.
"""'· ....,,.,, "" Rick Sellhelmeo·.
Chooses Ohio State
San Francisco crushed San Diego
red 18 lnts
....,.,.
Cllfl ' -vtn t
....., gs on SCO
po
TORONTO BLUE JAYS-"'""" Dam·
72·S3, No. 10 Minnesota beat
uo a ama. """"' ....man. 1o • ""'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- LineNorthwestern 61-53 and No. 19 and grabbed 12 rebounds to lead
· Wichita Slate to a 75o49.wln over
;:.;.,~~"l
~""a!,.":'
J~~
b8ckerJohnHutchlnsonofAtwater
1
fusno State defeated San Jose
Drake, Chuck Alekslnas scored 16
'"' Mm ~»mbaok. ,...,,.,.,_ •• ..,._,..,
Waterloo High School bas anState 63-45.
points
to
lead
Connecticut
to
a
72-57
rontnc:tt. N-.. ._.,.
nounced he wlll play his college
The TOp Twenty
Puhl,
ou~r.ASTROS
10 a tour-yeAr
contract,
Kenny Arnold and Steve Carlino . IviCtOrydover
Manhattan,
senior
HOUSTON
T"'J'
football
lit Ohio State
University.
Joe
D awsonand
bee
orwar
arne
andKlkoG&lt;n:la,
"""""'·- '"'""""'"'
The 6-foot-3)2,
20'1-pound
Hutscored 12 points each to lead Iowa .
Southern Mississippi's thln;I-Iead"'"'"''·
chlnson also. Is a kicker. He aver-over Michigan State. The trlumph,
lngcareerscorerwhenhecollected
,::::;:":::O~-.::~":":
aged 42.5 yards on his punts aDd
before a sellout crowd of 10,004 in
27 points in a 101-79 victory over
c.""""•
......,.,
MUbcy
also kicked a 45-yard field goal llist
Jefttson Fieldhouse, Improved the · Pan American.
arer
01 JamesiOWrl If! uw New Ycrt·~M
seaon.
Leq\M! and Bob Rt'«'e manaaer of Cal·
Bl(i Ten-leading Hawkeyes' record ·
Also,
steve
Bouchie
scored.
18
,..,
...... _......,._
He also was Waterloo's starting
to jl-11n conference play and 14-2for points and Ted Kitchel added 16,
NEW YORK METii- Annou.- 111"
quarterback In 1981.
EW. Va~Une , outnelder, had~ to
the season.
leading Indiana .to a 62-56 triumph
""""'"' • - - - "'""ac'
Hutchinson said he also was recIt was the first victory for the over
Wisconsin,
Tony
WUson
hit
a
HOFSTRA _~Bob Bon&gt;Wk:z
rulted
by Tennessee and Purdue.
Hawkeyes In Michigan State's ar- 15-footer with one second remain:·
"""' coach ..
ena after seven straight losses
tng to Uft Western Kentucky to a ,..!==========~----~------..,.-~
there.
48-46 win over Austin Peay and Do·iwe were trying to getoutol here nald Reese bad a game-high 25
with any kind of win that we could,''
points io lead Bradley to a 72·56 vicsaid a reUeved Lute Olson, the Iowa
tory over IUinots State.
coach. "The first thing ~e have ·to
Meanwhile, Vlrgln.la Mllllary reovercome when we come to Michl·
mained the last Division l team stiU .
gan State Is the Spartans..They nor- winless. Tbe Keydets slumped to
mally play quite well. The media 0-16 after a 92-68 loss to East TenAli!ANY, OH.
PHONE 691-2164
plays up this Jinx thing to a point
nessee State.
where the Michigan State players

1

Hele·n

H~lp · Us
'

A widow's whyohwhy--is she over sensitive?

holder also' beUeves he bas spent
·enough time In the rnlnors and Is
now ready for the big time.
"U belleve this Is a good opportunity and whoever does the best
job wiU be starting in right field. It
doesn't matter where I play as long
as I start," Householder said ID remarks prior to Thursday's luncheon In Huntlngton.Other speakers Included broad·
casters Joe Nuxball and Marty
Brennaman; publicity director
Jim Ferguson; Gordy Coleman,
head of .t he 'Reds' speakers' bu·
reau; pitcher Bruce Berenyl and
Woody Woodward, Assistant General Manager.
Woodward in .answer to a ques·
tlon concerning his role In player
negotiations said, "I would rather ·
stick to the development of personnel and other facets of the giiJDe
but, we negotiating contracts Is
part or my Job. With the new players' contract and agents, .It's a lot ·.
different now than It used to be.".
OthersJntrodueed were Jim Lett,
a West VIrginia native and manager al Cincinnati's Waterbury
farm club; Gene Bennett of Whee-'
lersburg, area scouting supervisor
and scout Jim Vennarl of Pomeroy.

BY HELEN IIOTTEL
. you imply• .:._ lL
I usecfto think I wu doing a merDEAIUIELEN:
chant a favor when I bought at biB
As a widow of several years, I've Dear Qelen :
store. Now, It JleBIIIIII'm his enemy
adjusted to "Uve. Alone and Uke . After my last few shoPPing tripe, I until he pro:ves (by minutely
It." Other people's attitudes are my just, may do aU my buying by mall
chectlng my credit card and C(lllo
problem. For lnstalice:
henCeforth. I'm tired of being slant watching) thatl'm not.
What makes every man think you treated like a criminal!
Yes, I know thia is necessary what
are after him just because you offer
First person you see when you witb thefts and rip-offa ever on the
a friendly hello, even though he Is walk Into a store Is the security rise but the good Cultomer C8ll have
only a slight acquaintance or a for'- guard. Then you're funneled past a lbe 1aat WOrd: I did aU the shopping
mer friend of your husband?
stand where clerks relieve you of by mall-onter houae when I was a
. Why does almost every woman packages, ~o be picked up wben you young farm wife. I can do so again!
think you are trytng'-to steal her leave. I'm surprised they don't take .:.. GUILTY UNTIL PROVEN IN·
husband, even though you wouldn't your purse, letting you carry only a NOCENT
gtve~tplugged .nickelltirhim?
wallet: After aU, a_large llandbag Is DEARGUPI:
Finally, if you llave a good, frien- great for shoplifting.
.
• Happy mall-ordering. But after a
dly relationship with another
There are reflecting mirrors on few months of long walli, poor fits
woman,lsn'titsadthatsomanysick ceiling and waU.. .and -1 suspect and counUeiiB "This Item Is tel&amp;
minds think "gay?"- ADJUSTED . those holes above YOII have eyes porarilyoutofstoct"notices,Ithlnk
WIDOW
behind them. You can't enter a you'U settle for mild surveUiance ...
Dear Widow:
dressing room without being just u your friends acCept a peepYousay"every,""almostevery," checked - and if you're ·over the hole .checkbeforeyouopenthedoor
"so many" ... Either you're three-Item Umit, it's no. go. Lately to tlleir ring. This, unfortunately, iS
overreacting or you come on so I'v'lt encountered wearing apparel the modern way of life. - H.
strong that you invite criticism.
wltli anchored-00 clips that can only
Got a problem? An adult subjecf
Unless You're a real femme fatale be removed by machine after you for. discussion? You can talk it over
(and if so, enjoy!) I'd say you're too make the purchase. And, of course, in her column if you write to Helen

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wood, Route
4, Pomeroy • wiU celebrate thelr 40th
wedding anniversary Sunday at the
Middleport Elementary School, 2 to
4 p.m.
· ·
The affair Is being hosted by the
coupl~'s four chUdren, Ernestine
stephnas, Naples, Fla.; Earie,
Minersville; Edith, Middleport, and
Earl, at home.
Wood and the former Maudle
Ethel Ughtfoot were married in
Pomeroy oo Feb. 1, 1942. They have
two grandchildren:
Friends and relatives of the couple
are Invited to call during the open
reception hours.

=:.o::..s:;.!:;

TransactJ'ons

!It-

'CENTER OF AnENTION Clncbmad Reds' fll!lilager John
McNamara .was lbe center of at.
teatloa daring 1bunday's annual
prep caravan al Huatlngtoa.
Mac feels biB present club will he
better thaD last seaBon's Reds.

NEW FACE ON TOUR
Woody Woodward, • Aulalaat
Geaeral Maaater ol tile CtnciDDBtl Reds, made Jill ffnl appearance oa lbe IIIUIU8l eanvaa
Tbul'llday Ia Hnntlngton. Woodward baa cbarce of player
development aad beadles
oegotlatl0111 for some playen.

e

ADI~~~.....
Publl.ohod every altem&lt;&gt;t111, Mondoy

throug"

Fri&lt;lly, 111 Court Slree~ by lhe Ohio vau.~
Publlahlilg
In&lt;'·•
- - r n v OhJ
- - • Multimedia
u t'~-~

c.m~ny

·

edge~

Waverly took the reserve game,
25-12. Goble and Smith led the winners with 10 polnli apiece while B. J. .
Gordon IOppedMeigsWI'ths'~
I.A. an~
The 10118 left Waverly with
record. Meigs travels to Belpre Monday.

Waverly (35)- Null 3-2-8; Sowers
J-J-9; Mapte 2-2-6; Pendleton 2-0-~ ;
Reed 4-0-8; Patrick 0-0-0; Tripp 0-0-0
ond AU II 0-0-0. TOll IS 14-7·3S.
Meigs em- smith2-l-5: Oliver 30·6; Meadows l·J-5; Crooks 3-3-9;
A~;~':.':.nJ~~-~:3. Tot•ls14·20.31.
waverly
8 17 25 32 3-35 .

1

.

r;"= ~~~ '=n~~
Newopoper Pulfuhon -""""· National

~=~~gSal~:~;~·~:~v~..:~:·~=
1

York, New York 111011.

·

'

, PQSTMASTER: Send adtlreu lo The Dolly
Settllnel, 111 CoortSt., Pomeroy, Oh!o~lllll.
SUIIIJCRIPI10NRATEs
OneweekByCarrier.-_.._

One Montli::::::::::::::::::::::::: ~::
One Year .. .. siNiii.iiooiov .... .. ~1 ~
PRI·&lt;;EB

Dolly .......... . ............... 15Cen18
Su-ra not dooJttng 10 PlY lhe .. tTl.,
may remit 1n atlvan" "'""' 1o n.. Doll
Senttnel
3, e cr 12 month baals. Cred~
wWbeslvoo..•camereachmontb.
No otlllocrlplitllll by .service
mail permltltd
In towna.
wherehorriecarrier
llavaUabll!.

~."!:t~~~s
!M th

-.-. •• " .. . .. ... " ..... ... · · · 112 35
~:,"'~ _:: : :::::::::::: ::::: : ::: : ::;

011

RatetO.IaldeOhlo

·

!Month ... -~-~~~ -v~ .. . : .. ti3IIO
'I M - · ·· · ·· . .. ................. t23.4tl

r~Me~lg;s;;;;8~17;·29;3;2;6-;38;;l;Year~;-·;··;...;..;..;·.;..;"~";·';";· ·;·-;$lUI;·;;

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w

EQUIPMENT, INC.

J•ckson at Gallipolis

Meigs at Waverly

L~anotWelistoo

Athens at Ironton

Wheelersburg at Portsmouth West
Hilliard at Chillicothe .
Teays Valley at Washington CH
Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
eastern at Southwestern
Nprth Galli• at Southern
,
!Saturday)
: l(yger Creek at Trimble
~

.

WE HAVE GENUINE M.F. PARTS AND FACTORY ·TRAINED PER·
SONNEL TO SERVE YOU. WE HAVE AU THE SPECIAL TOOLS
NEEDED TO DO THE ~OB.

wpeelersburg at Portsmouth

1Jackson

at Rock Hill
'Gillllpolis ol Pl. Pleasant
ILQ!Ian oi Federal Hocking
: we~t Jefferson at wa_
shlngton CH

CALL SOOrt' :FOR AN APPOINTMENT

Mr. and Mrs. Woods

21
p;,;;;g~pa.d,;~~Ohi:.:~~~claaa

Crooks netted nine.
Sowers paced Waverly with nine
points while Nutt added eight.
Meigs hit 14 of 36 field goal attempts for 39 percent and 10 of aJ
free throws. Waverly connected on
14 of 43·from the floor and 10 of 17 at
the charity stripes. The Marauderettes, ~. held a 31·20 reliOundlng

SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER:
NOW IS THE TIME TO GO THOSE
REPAIRS .MADE SO SPRING WORK WILL '
GO .SMOOTHER.

·.

•dy Sontinel

D&amp;D

T~)Dight's games

By ELLEN BELL
This Is probably the last column
with my by-line. ·As you are probably
a'lf&amp;re, I wu given an offer that was
too•JIPOCI to refuse, So I will become
the director of the Washington Cc!Un, ty PubUc Ubrary, baaed In Marietta.
For the months ol Febnlary and
March, I will be In Washington County three days a week and in Meigs
O!unty the re8t of the 1feek. (For the
1110111 pert, expect to see me at the
Pomeroy Pubtlc Ubrary on ThW"Bday, Friday, and Saturday each
week.) Beginning In April, I will be
working In Marietta full-time. ·
Ruth Powers, \tho baa been supervising the Middleport Public

Th V ·

.

-·'man·

~

Pnll, Jell, and
wei-o'er, p.:;pere ii;
!4111 YEAR - IB8Z marb lbe Mill year for the materiail for the BPW worten and other voluateen ,
Mldd1eport BUIIDeu and Profealoaal Women to coobutl
. dnct the Heart-SUnday fund drive In the vfUage. Here · wbo wW go bou..,;.loob0111e soUcltlng conlri . . - oa

February 1s Heart . Month and
again this year the Middleport
Business and Professional Women's
Club wiU be conducting a house-tohouse fund drive In Middleport for
. the American Heart Association.
Mrs. Grace Pratt imd Mrs.
Alwllda Werner,long-tlme members
of the Middleport BPW Club, are C()chalnnen for the fund drive In Middleport which wiU be conducted on
Feb. 21.
Members of the club wUI he
assisted by other volunteers to go
,

house-to-houseonFeb. 21,fttmlto6
p.m. with the money to be turned in
that afternoon to Mrs. Pratt and
Mrs. Werner at the headquarters In
Middleport village hall.

Grueser, from the Meigs CountY
Heart Branch of the Central Ohio
Chapter, Inc.

r:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;=:;
.A

This Is the 34th year that the club
has handled the fund drive in Mid·
dlepori. They have been awarded
nwnerous certificates and plaques
In recognltion of outstanding ser-vlct, and In 1977 were given a Spej!lal
plaque by the county fund drive
chairman that year, Walter

SPECIAL
VALINTINf
GIFT IDEA

Your Libraries

Foul shooti•ng e.-.
uives
Mel·gs, 3 8-3 5 VI.ctory

.:=.,..

•

;~7'b!~:-;~:~th :;;n;;ear IArea heart fund &amp;ive underWay I.

College
basketball

eat-1,.,....""

·-.;,.

Astrograph

Making music

January 30, 1911%
Someone you may meet by chance or through unusual clr·
cwnstances in the coming year mighllurn out to be a very valuable
and helpful contact. Be friendly to all you encoW!ter, even those who
are merely casual acquai,nlances.
'
.
.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. 19) Be extremely attentive and make
' notes today if you are trying to learn something that you may need to
use in the fut~re. Your knowledge will be tested later.
PISCES (Feb. 2t-Marcb ·20) It's important at this time to try to
keep current with your bills and obligations. A failure to do so may
cause creditors to breathe down your neck.
AlUES (March Zl·Aprillt) Be very caaeful how you cond~ct yourself with companions or associates today. There's a ,possibility you
Could unintentionally say or do something they'll find offensive.
TAURUS (April ZO.May 110) This is one of those days when yop're
. not likely to perform too well under pressure. Don't leave things until
the last minute.
·.
GEMINI (May Zl·Juae 20) Friends you_feel are a bi~e too a~r­
tive or bossy should be avoided today if possible. You won t appreciate
them telling you what to do or how to do it.
•.
.
· CANCER (June !1-July !f) Ambitions ~r.~ dnve 11re admt:'Bble
qualities, provided OfiH,.purpoll&amp; aren't acluellfd ~Ube oxpense of
others. Don't tread on any toes today.
,
. 1..£0 (July ZS.Ang. Ul Just as you ·won t want ,others to bnpose ,
their Ideas or views on you today, be careful that you re not accused of
the same falling. Let all have their say.
VIRGO (Aug. !S-Sept. Ul Be careful al this time that you don't
overextend yourself financially. Analyze your btidget and Income
realiBtlcally before taking on long-term obligallona.
.
LIBRA (Sept. Z3-0ct. !31 Normally you're very· cooppative and
fair but today you could get so wrapped up in your self-iriteresta that
you'may not think of others.
,
.
SCORPIO (Oct. !4-Nov. Ul People With whom you re assocaated
may try to dump some dlstasfeful chorea in your lap today, If they
think they can get away with lt.
·
.
SAG.mARIUS (Nov. ZS.Dec. n) Peer pr 11111'1! today m~ght
make it liard to do things as you would Ute to do thmL BIICkllng under •
could prove It! he a rnlstake If you act agaillst your better judgment.
CAPRICORN ~Dec. ZZ.Ju. II) lf the outside world doeln't treat
you too kindly today, don't use thia 88 an excuse for coming down hard
. .
011 the family. Leave your problems on the doorstep.

I

MlfCMIIIALifl fiOWt

@nation @npany
MILLING DlYIIlON
~ooels · Bird Stoels - Oyster Shells Inti Grit'· Fertilizers · Lime - Cement and MOrtAr · Stod: SRit · Wlttr Softener · Remedies . ·SAlt _
Litters · V,tcclne · Aootinq· ·P1ints • Red Rrand Fcncinq · B•ler and

'

Rinder Twiile- Spr-yo -G-le1- Hay · Str•w

·

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

"2-2119

Pomeroy

Social'
.
,Calendar•
. Moriday
. TilE MEIGS cOunty Shepherda
4-11 aub wiD meet for IIi
orpn~zattonal seulon at a·p.m. ,
MCIIIdaY at the county eUenalon
office, Mulberry Helght.l.

204 Condor St.
POIJ'ftroy, Oh.
Phone:'tn-2974
NEWWINTEII HOURS:
0 - Tues. lllrU Fri.

tAM. Ill S P.M.
9 A.M. till P.M.

HAW!'HORNE, Calif. (AP) Engineers routinely decide
wh'ether a metal or a plastic Is best
for a parttcular product - frequently on the basts of cost or ease
of proces,\tng.
A product engineer at a roy com·
pany here selected one plast1c for
an unusual reasoo: Its musical
quaUtles.
•
He heard the meta!Uc·ring made
by a piece of p!astlc falling on his
desk. That set 'in motion his decl·
slon to re-design the musiC-making
part of the
Jack·ln·theMattel.

Library for the past three yean, was
the unanimous choice of the Ubrary
Board of Trustees for the post of
director of the Meigs County Public

Ubrary. Ruth has been a tlbrary
assistant at Pomei'O)' and Middleport since May, 19'18. She began
her tlbrary career under the Community Action Agency CETA
program and later was named to
replace ·Christine Grueser, who
retlrl!d from the Ubrary In August,
19'18. Ruth became deputy clerk·
treasurer In 1981 and assistant dtrector,t:lerk • treasurer In Januacy
1982. She will serve as director and
clerk-treasurer beginning In April.
Madhu Malhotra, a Ubrary assistant
since November 1977, will take over
at Middleport.
~ have also been serving as coordinator of Meigs County's Aduli
Basic i!lducation (ABE) classes,

from your libraries.

.-----.....,------1

~rrq_ce
..

tht persoriQI Promiu ring

·JOHN MANSVILLE
OWENS CORNING

.REINSUL

'25•'I'

..'

.

For a special person ex·
· pressing special feelil)gs ..
with a special personal
touch .

-,

1

Set with a sparkling dia·
mond. Available
in
VALADIUM
or
J.OK.
yellow gold .

··

-~~

sQ. FT.

98S llO 1
CHESTEH OHIO

:~Jettelers.
m

1 . Main, Pomeroy

..

Pomeroy -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

and
whichMlddJeport
are locatedPubUc
In the Libraries.
Kathy Manlcke, who has been a
professional ABE Instructor at both
centers, will take over those responsibilities. She will continue to teach
at the Pomeroy Public Library learning center.
·
I offer hearty congratulations to
Ruth, whti has been training for her
new job for some time. I am leaving
my adopted home with many
regrets, but I know that Ruth wiD
continue, to offer the high
of

TAX lAW CHANGES WIU. CHANGE
FlUNG FORMS, TOO
When you go to file this tax season, yoli'U find that your tax
forms have changed. Many of the revisions reflect changes brought
about by the 1981 Economic Recovery Tax Act passed this year.
Among !hi! most sfgnlftcant differences Is the government's
clear encouraeement to UBe the short form 1060A by making more
taxpayers eligible.
'
Last year, taxpayers were unable to use the short form if they
had Income over S:l),(O) (or S4(),lXXJ w,here the taxpayer was married
and flli!d a Jo!nireturn). Tbe same appUed where the taxpayer had
more than $400 in interest or dividends, unless the taxpayer was
ftllng only to get a refund t1 the earned Income credit.
1bla year's returns however co!I$OIIdate last year's flUng status
tax tablellnto one table, coveHng up to ~.(0) of Income, making
the short form U18ble by more taxpayers.
Karl Kebler, manager of the H&amp;R Block In Pomeroy, ~~osays
thai taxpayen however should take a "cloee, hard look before
deciding ' to uie the simpler abort form for ariy type of IncOme
bracket: "TradltlonaUy, as tax procesalng Is simplified, the taxpayer
· tend~ to lose out on important opportunities for taking advantage of
tax breaJIB, regardless of 1nc01pe level," ~ld Kebler. "You may save
time but at the coat of wasting tti doUan.
c~ taxpayen may expect are reporting procedureS for inierelt and dividend IDcome, Kebler adds. For 1lll2. interest and dividend tnccme IOW'Cel are listing on the back of the 1060A,
·whiCh Is a c:JJanae. 1bll me8lll that the IRS has eUmlnated the
-requb etnellt that taxpayeri with CJVf!f $tOO In Interest or dividends

Arnone

mlllt UBe lbe long form.
·
Another J10I5&gt;0rthy chaJI&amp;Ie of Interest to consumers Is on Schedule A. Separate linea for·the cleductJoo of the coat of tr~naportatlon
JJt!( el'ary for medical care, '8lld the COlt of having one s tax return
prepared have been provided. 8oth Items llave been frequently
overJo!*,ed by taxpa)'lm. Ill addftlm, ueparafe line has been added
for jJEDI!lBlules IIIli paid 011 motor vehiCles.
·
"Both the .~ tupay• and thole who have been familiar

witll!RS tu l'ltlll:ll fonllll w1111lllduubtedl)lllave questiOnl thll year
u a result of u-llld Giber cl1aJI&amp;I!s,'' concludes Kebler. For more
lnformatlm, caat.ct J16R BLock, 618 East Mala Street, PomEIOy,
Ohio, or call 19J.3i15 for an appointment.
Advertisement
,/

'

servlee you have come to expect

)

COLLECTIBLE
MINIATURES
For Valentine'• D•y giving ...
Chooae from seven miniature shapes Including a
4'/a" Jewel box, bud vase, boot slipper, blown
vase 5'1t" basket and toothpick holder/votive.
Available In two patterns ..•. Blue Roses ari'd
Pink Blosaoma ••• on Fenton satin finished
custard glue beautifully hand decorated and
Individually algned by the artist.

MIDDLEPORT ·aooK STORE
99 Mill

'

992· 2641

'

�Pa'u •

~The Daily Sentinel

P-.y Mhh'hport, Ohio

I

Friday, Janucuy 29, 1982

Cons1irner Reports

from

Friday, Janucuy 29, 1982

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Pon...-ay Middlep·tt, Ohio .

~

7 fXrERIENCE lltE JOY Of RELIGION

New car bumpers are safer
BylbeEdllon
ole_...., Reporta
Since 19711 automakers have been .
required to equip cars with bumpers _
that will allow the vehicle to g!!l
through a $-mph accident un- ·
damaged. But the National Highway ·
Traffic Safety Administration
p!'Opllllea to ellmlnate aU crash standards for rear bwnpers and either
ellminale the front-bumper stan- .
dard or reduce it from 5 mph to 2.5

=

a barrier at 5 mph, not one car
sustained damage. Ten years ago in
the same test on
models, the

repairs, ammge for other tr8118portation whlle nlJIIIlrs were made
and get reimbursed by the il!auranoe
company. · That aggravation and
time (two , hours, in NHTSA's
estimate) wOuld be worth about S25.

damage averaged
per car. That
would be more than t-tOO per car at
today's repalt prices.
The new bumpera l'l!llulttng from
'
the $-mph standllrd also . poee
Experts have disputed ihls and
smaller hazards to pedelltrlans, sjn- other NHTSA figures that the asence they have a greater capacity to cy uses t&amp; show that cost-benefit of
absorb the force of impact in an ac- the bumper regulation li only break·
cident.
even. NHTSA wants to ellmlnate the
mph,
und.ir the ·law, NHTSA can ron stall(jard.
In leatlng cars, Consumer Reports back the bwnp.lr standard If It can
If you'd rather save a few hundred
has rammed bumpers with a " bum- show that the cost of the standard on your next low-speed rear-end
per basher" - a heavy atee1 bat- outweighs Its benefits.
colllsiQn and avoid the haasle of
tering ram that craahea into the
NHTSA receQtlY did ·a new costwrite: s.unper Standard;
bumper at 5 mph. Before 1979, It waa benefit analysis that the agency Docket No. 73-19, Docket Section,
not unusual to have to replace the ctslms ahows the 5-IJIIII1 bumper Rm. 5108, National Highway Traffic
bwnper follOwing this teat and nl8ke standard isn't worth it.
Safety Admlnlstratlon, 400 7th St.
other repairs on what waa often ex- • NHTSA recently did a new cost- S.W., Washington, D.C.l!ll500.
tenaive damage. But on many new benefit analysis that the agency
(For a special teprlnt of Concars, CR au~ engineers"ha.ve claims ahows the 5-mph bumper .surners Union's evaluation of which
found no viaible damage after an en- · standard isn't worth lt.
cars do beat in craahea, send $1 for
counter with the basher.
In essnslng the cost of the each copy to CONSUMERS, P.O.
The Insurance Institute for High- regulation, one of the factors figured Box 481, Radio City Station, New
way Safety got slmllar results in In by NHTSA was the cost of the lime York, NY 10019. Be sure to -* for
crash tests conducted last year. Out It would take a conaumer to the reprint on car-craah results,) o
of 12 19111 cars that were crashed Into negotiate repalra. deUver a car for
(c) 1982, Consumers Union

Where
Pomeroy, Olliio

FLAG PBBIIIlNTATION .._. JeUette ........ of
Rdua J-lllu Help ""I kt of 1M 0....... 1 of
1M -'-rba Revlldae, ,.....,.. alarp A•erleaa
flq le MlddJeplrt llmrllle 'l'nclp 12M, '111iu . .)' afo
Ia I-. AetQI'II f•lbe 1r..p WM hilly Ellu, left,
. . lfoip IeMer. Trwp IMIIIben pkllnd 11ft fnai
row, Lllld. CIIIIJIIIIU. 8llerl')' JoBaoa, ltarft Bani,

Bible Class
elects officers

, Br , ... C.B, ud Aalby ~; aeetal mr, Peuy
Lew11, W-'7 Clark, Bealber Fruekonk, Lee
!Aelte,doo, ltyla 8ellen; tldrd row, Tin Gertaeb, '
Headier O.veaport, Tabldla Pldlll)ll, Mary llelb Stpa,
o ClaWy Weaver, Dadle Qelul, Erica Ellu, Headier
MJtcbell, Pam lfaay, MJcloell Frub, Krll Cllldwell,
Tracy Ellll, Valerie Baker, 8lld Jeri Hawley.

Cotinty announcements

2U E . Main

H2·51l0
. Pomeroy
.

HEllER'S

New officer&amp; were elected at the
evening meeting of the
Adult Bible Class held at St. Paul's
United Methodist Church In
Tuppers Plalna.
Elected were Evelyn Spencer,
president; Betty Chevaller, vice
·president; Darts Koenig, secretary; Mlldred Brooks, treasurer;
Lorean Gorrell and Linda Dame-

day ·at 7: 45 p.m. AU offtcers are to

·wear chapter . dresses. A layette.
sbower wtll be held tor Kathy Work-

man follolvlna' tJM: ~tlng.

Members of "the Royal Oak BaU
Room Dance Club and their friends
have bl!en Invited to the Slp1nera
Moeque In Columbus on Feb. 20 for
a dance featuring Ann Young and
the Cbuck Selby Orchestra. The
dance will be beld !rom 9 p.m. to 1
a.m.
,
Members of the local club and the
Athena club wUl be il\'1!11 )1!1!fen!lltlal aeatlng ~ the baud, accordIng to Gerald Powell who was
contacted about the lnvltstton IIY·
the dltector. Thole who plan to atlenll are aaked to contact Powell at
992·21122 before Feb. 13.

~- proeram committee.

Williamson birth
·,

Grandparen~ are

Mr. and Mrs.

Fred WUUamson of Rutland and
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth WUcox, Middleport. Great-grandparentaare
Mrs. Edith WtUiamson, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCool, Ketlerlttg; Mr. and Mrs. F.W. Wilcox.
Langsville, and JOhn }loUiday;
Dexter.

Powers birthday
...
~ --

The birthday anniversary of Mrs.
Rilth PoWera -was oblerved Sunclay
with a family gathering at.her h~ •.
A cake was served roUowing the
dinner hostec! by Mrs. Powers'
mother, Mrs. Grac;e Pratt, and glfta
were presented to the honoree.
.
, Othera attending were her
husband, Franli: Powers, Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie · Marahall, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs, Mike Jones and
Mica, Pomeroy; Mr, and Mrs. Bob
· Powers, and Mrs. Alma Cartwright,
' Middleport.

Mr. and .Mrs. Richard WWiam·
1011 ~ Columbus are llnnounctng
the blrih of a seven pound son, Mlc~l Lee, born on Dec. 6 at the
Riverside Methodist Hospital In
Columbus.
CONCERT- J. D. Hilda Bad will perf- SaDday at I p.m. 1D lbe Flue 8lld Periiii'IIIIDI Ani Cellter of
Rio Gl'811de Collete ... Col!umullty Collele. Tile bud
will perform ortglaai malertal aad Clll'reDI coaatry,

pup 8lld rock...,., Tlebtlare ta aad will be •lillie at
lbe FIDe aad PerfOI"mllll Artl Ceater 8lld Sammen
MulicSiltdlo, 111 Wf:81llroadWIIy, WeU.toa.

Remembering FDR at Hyde Park
'
HYDE PARK, N.Y. (AP) Door and atttc of the home. Water
Samuel Eliot Morison once said.
"The president of the United States !rom fire hoaea .cascaded through
The president's eclectic, han~
Is very disturbed," Henry Morgen- the lower stories. Dozena of reson
approach to collecUng stamps
thau Jr. told the trembling archi- cuers ruahed Into the burning home
was
l'llll'rored in his New Deal eftect of the RhliJebeck, N,Y. post and salvaaecl nearly all the Irreforts
to Uft America out of the
Office on Apt11 25, 1938.
placeable fUmtshlngs.
Depression.
Hitler had Invaded Austrts a
National Park Service staff have
Lalssez-faire economists were
inonth before and 10.mllllonAmerJ- vowed to reatore the national
.cana were out of work. At the mo- historic site. Roosevelt, an' early horrified with Roosevelt's "pump
priming" social-spending ap. ment, though, Franklin Delano backer of hlBtOric preservation
proach
to reviving the nayonal
· Roo!M!velt had something else on surely would haveaj,proved.
'
his mind.'
Before Saturday's fire, Spring- economy.Likewlse, true stamp col·
Roosevelt had learned that arehl- ·wood remained almost exactly as It lectors were shocked that Rooselect R. Stanley-Brown Intended to was the day Roosevelt lett, down to velt hand!ed his collectton wtth his
disobey his lnstructlona and use
the Issues of Time magazine on the lingers rather than tongs.
Roosevelt loved Springwood and
. freshly quarried stone for the
coffee tables and the World War 0 - .
planted
more than haU a mUllon
Rhlnebec~ post ofllce, spoiling its
era blackout curtalna on the
trees
on
the l ,®acre estate. The
Hudson Valley Dutch design.
windows.
.
greenery
plan gennlnated In his
"His instructions are that they
VIsitors - there were more than
mind
and
the Clvtltan Conservashould use old stone wall," Treas250,000 last year - have been
ury Secretary Morgenthau wanied struck by the sight of wheelchairs. tion Colll8 he proposed as president
Stanley-Brown. "For God's sake They appear smau and crude. One put unemployed men to work plantdo, please."
Ing trees across the country.
Is made !rom a kltcben chair wtth
Hyde Park has the natlon'soldest
He did.
Its legs chopped off.
oral history project: In 1947, NaP~ple surrounding FrankUn
The sense of quiet tra~ .ts
_RoQsevelt learned quickly that the heightened by the sight ~ Eleanoc tional Park Service hlstortans beman, one of the dominant world ng.
Roosevelt's bedroom, the one ad- r---------------;----~-----1
ures of the :.lth century, could be joining
the presldeflt's that she ocjust ~ absorbed by post office de- cupied alter he was stricken by
sign - or stamp coUectlng -as he pollo In 1921. It Is as sparsely fllrwaa by world war and economic ntShed as a guest I'OQm, In a senae
collapse.
It was - mother Sara Roooeveti
"That's the part of FDR that peo- owned Springwood unw her death
ple don't write about," saki Susan In 1941 and Eleanor waa the woman
Brown, a museum i:urator here. of the house for less than four years.
"What's so amaZing Ia the way he
The main stalrcaae Ill usually
would shut It au off. He could f1ntsh
crowded with naval paintinga a meeting with Winston ChurehtU, Roosevelt's COUectton of5,000palntgo to his room and work happUy on tngs and prints on seafal1ng 1.1 :
"hiS stamps."
•
considered the \wrld's!ariest.
On Saturday, America cele"FDR Wilu1d have gone down ln.
brates the centennial of a man who history as a great coUector evea 11:
shaped his home and county with
he had done nothing else," historian
the same intensity that he would
laterahapeJllewYorkstate,thena· ·
tton and the world.
Franklin Roosevelt was bol'!l .
· Jan. :.1, JB82 in the gracious, 35room lfamUy home bere, 70 m11ea
liOI'th of New York Oty on the eaat
• bank of the Hudaon River. Spring- ·
IIIWMID.CMILDs
wood ·was the 1lleioni reaklence of ·
11011 t ••, f l
the only president elected to four '
'' Tft' way America
tenns.
JCIIIII f. ·
Sends Love"
CIIAILES
I. IW.LEII
Exactly a week before his centen-.
·992·2039 or 992-5721
IICIIMI. LC111U1S
. nlal, .Ore ripped through the third .

1131 JlliCIISOIII'I&lt;E ' lit' 35 WilT

Ser-Vice notes

.. ·-=='='"=""==·.....if:••iii..iiliiiil

Bowling
Marine Lance Cpl. Brtsn K.

BowUng, son of Charles and Pearl
Shatto ol P. 0 . Box 211, Racine, has
been promoted to his present rank
while serving with the -Ftrst Tank
Battalion, Camp Pendleton, Calif.

Stewart

G!l0

\

r--:---------___.

TRINITY CHURCH . Rev. W. H. Perrin, "'"ting, 7 :00 p .m.. Prayer meeting,
paotor: Debbie luck, S..'llloy ochool · Wodneiday , 7 p.m.
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
oupt. Church School, 9:15a.m. : worohlp
Mrvlce, 10:30 a.m. Chair rehearsal , MEIGS COUNTY, Rtrv. Wanda Johnson ,
TUHdoy, 7:30 p.m, under dlr«tlon of dir«tor ; Harold Johnson ; director of
,AIIce.NeaH .
eduCaUon.
POMEROY CHURCH
OF THE
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN. WarNAZARENE : Corner
Union
and ship S.Vke, 9 a .m .; ·Church School, ·
Mulberry, · Rev . VIrgil Byrer, poator. 10:30o. m .
,
Glen McCiu"'l, 0111. paoto• . Clyde
MIDDLEPORT. Chuteh School. 9:00
Handerlon, poator emerltu1 . Sunday a .m .. Mo~n l ng wonhip, 10:15 .
School . 9:30a.m .. Glen McClung, oupl.;
SYRACUSE
FIRST
UNITED
momlnt worahip. 10:30 a .m. ; even ing PRESIYTERIAN Church. Church Scl1ool,
oorvlce, 7 :00;· mld ·wook .. rvlco , 10:1~ o . m .; Worohlp, II : 30~ . m .
•
Wednetdav, 7:00p .m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor .
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E. Rev. John Evant. Sunc:ta,. achool , 10
Main St. , Pomeroy. Sunday Mrvlcea ot a .m.: Sunday worship , 11 a .m.:
10:30 a .m . Holy Communion on the Children'o chuoch, 11 a.m .: Sundayevonflnt Sunday of eoc:h month. and com~
lngservice, 7:00p.m. ; Wedne&amp;davev•n·
blned with mornlnt prover on the third
lng YOU"i ladle• auxiliary, 6 p.m .
Sunday. Morning prayer and Mi'mon on Wedneadayfomltywonhlp , 7 :00p.m.
o i l - S..ndoyo of the month . Church
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH . Noor
School and nuno&lt;y core provldod. Col·
LongBottom, EdooiHoot, pallor. Sundoy
IH hour in tile Porloh Holt immodlotoly oc11ool, 10 a.m. : Church, 7 :30 p.m.:
followintthe Mf'VIce.
· prayer mNfl"liJ , 7:30p.m. Thurtday.
POMEROY CI;IURCH Of CHRIST, 2!2
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, CorW. Moln St. Nell Proudfoot, po 1tor, Bi·
ner Ath and Plum: Letlie Hayman,
ble ocl-'. 9:30 a.m.: mo&lt;nlng wo•·
paotor. SotUidoy wenlng Mrvlce, 7:30
ohlfi, 10:30 o.m. ; Y,o vth ,..tlngo , 6:30 p .m. ; .Sunday SchOol, 10 a .m . Sundoy
Worship S.rvlc~ , 11 a .m. ; Wednetdov
p.m .; evef'ling wor.hlp, 7:30. Wednet·
doy night prayer meeting and llble evening
7:30 p.m ., BoL
G1ubb, tocichlng. .
study, 7:30p.m .
THE: SALVATtON ARMY , 115 Butterf~EtGS
nut Ave. . Pomeroy . Envqy and MrJ.
COOPERATIVE PARISt:t
Roy Wining, offk..-.ln chorge. SundayMETHODIST CHURCH
hallne~~ meeting, 10 a.m .; Sunday
R..- . Robert McGee, int.... m dlr~lor
School. 10:30 o .m . S..ndoy school
POMEROY CLUSTER
loodo&lt; , YPSM , EloiM Adamo. 7:30p.m.,
Rev . RobeotMcCoo
10lvotion mHting, various ,~.,.
POMEROY , Sunday Sch~l 9 :15a.m.
and muiiC apecloll. Thundoy- 10 a .m . Worthlp tervlce 10:30 O.fQ, Choir
to 2 p .m. Ladl• Hom• Lea.gue , all
r•h.orJOI. Wed,... doy, 7 p.m . Rev .
women Invited; 7:30 p.m. prayer RObert McGee , pastor .
meeting . ond llble atudy . Rev . Noel
ENTERPRISE. Wonhlp 9 a .m. Church
HomtoniUIII.ING,
loocTONher. SOUTH•RN ••p'TIST
paScl1oorl. 10 a .m . Richard Rothomk
, h,
II;"
_.,
110
CHAPEL, Route 1, Shade. llble school,
ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday School 9:15
7 p.m . Thursday; wonhlp 1ervice,\ 8 o . m . Worthlp Mrvlce , 10 o. m.,
p.m .
.
Richard Rothemlch . pastor .
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH .OF
FLATWOODS. Church School 10 o .m.
CHRIST. 200 w. Main St .. 992-5235. Vocal
Wor~hlp 11 a .m., Richard Rothemich,
music . Sunday wonhlp , 10 a .m.; Bible
pattor.
. otuclv, llo.m.: worohlp, 6p.m . WodnM·
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
doyilblootuclv , 7 .m .
HEATH , Church School 9 :30 a .m.
Worohlp 10:30 o.m. UMYF 6 p .m.
OLD DEXtER . BilLE CHRISTIAN
1
Robert Rob lnton , Pottor.
, CHURCH, IIY.Ralph Smith. paltor . Sundoy Khool, 9:30 o .m . , Mn. Worley
RUTLAND, Church School 9:30 a .m.
--•-- . Preoc:h ing ••r·
Wor1 hi p 10;30 a .m . R-"vv.rt Rid.,.,·
Froncll, superlnt...--.t
vlcooflrot&amp;thirdSuncloyofollowingSunpaotor.
.
day School .
SALEM CENTER, Worthip 9 a .m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
Church ~hool 9:45 a .m . ROO.ot Rider,
~ Preaching 9:30a.m .. fir1t and tecond
pottor.
Suncloyt of eoch monrh ; third and fourtH
PEARL CHAPEL, Sunday School 9:30
S..ndoyo - h month, wonhlp oentko ot
o .m . Wonhlp 7:30p.m.
7:30p.m. Wednetcloy evening~ at 7:30.
SNOWVILLE. Sunday School , 9:30
Proyo&lt;ondllbloStudy . 1
o .m . Worohlp ll :OOa.m .
SEVENTH-DAY ADV:ENTIST , Mulberry
SYR"'USE CLUSTER
Helghtt Road , Pomeroy. flottor , Albei1
tt.v. StonleyMerrlfled, Mlni1ter
Dttteo; $obbeth ~I S..porlntondont,
FOREST RUN : Wonhp 9 a .m . Church
Scl\ooiiOo.m.
Rita · White. Soblioth SchOof, Saturday
oft__, ot 2:1!l, with Worohl" S..ko
MINERSVILLE , Church School 9 o .m.
followlngelt3:15.
worship 10a .m ,
ASIIURY: Church School •9 :50 o .m.
RUTlAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSill... Harriott Womer, Supt. Sundoy · worohlp II o .m , Blblo Study 7 :30 p .m .
~1. 9 :30 a .m .: mo&lt;nlng worohlp,
Thurodoy . UMWflotTUOidoy.
!0:45a.m .
SOUTHERN CLUStER
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, David
Rev . Jo- Clorl&lt;
Mann, mlnllter: Wllliom Snouffer, Sun·
,_...,, Mark flynn
day tchool aupt. Sunday school, 9:30
Rev. Florence Smith
a.m.; morning worohlp 10:30 o .m.
Rov . Co•l Hkko
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST ; 282
BETHANY , (Dorcoo), Worohlp 9:00
Mulber,.., A.,. ,, Pomeroy, Rev . Wllliom
a .m . Church School 10:00 o .m. Biblo
R. Newman, pa~tor; ~ McClure,
1tucty, 111, 2nd, 3rt1 and 5th Tuttdays
7 :15p.m .: xouth foliowohlp, 2nd and 4th
· Sunday, ochool ouporlntondonl. Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m .; morning worstnp, } UIHdop. :DO p .m.
10:30; - l " ' l wonh!p, 7:30 p .m.
CARMEL and SUTTON (Worohlp, Sun·
Midwookl"''l"!t'IMYico, 7:30p.m .
cloy School and moot othor evonlo held
MlrYWAV cbMMuNITY CHURCH, O.x· . jointly.) Sunday School 1:45 and Worohlp
tor lid., Rd .. Longlvillo, Rev. A. A.
11 :00 ot Sutton flrot and thi•d Sundoyo
~..._ p ~• ~·~--• 10
ond ot C...mol oocond and fourtll S..n
....,._ , "''~ ,
..,......
o .m .
•
ServkM on Tueodoy,
roc1oy ond Sun·
cloys. llblo Study oocond. fourth ond
dov, 7:30p.m.
fifth Thurodoyo. 7 :15p.m . Family Night
TABERNACLE CHUKH, Ioiiey . Foll""'rhlp Dinner third Thurodoy . 6:30
p m
.un ~~ R~ •--~ R - - -tor
~.
~' APPLE GROVE. Sunday SchoOl , ,30
1
~nn , lllptl • Sundoylc 7ochool
·b
Wonhlp7·30pm htond3rd•· n
30 11 10
~;~chi".;~
_ .m.~ : :
Prayer.;..,~ ·wodn..d..,
.
MIDDI.EPOIT CHURCH Of CHRIST IN ' p .m . Folkiwohlp:::J: flrot Solurdoy 6
7:30 p.m.
UNION, ~ Manley, p .m . UMW2ndT
poolor: Mro. 1111,11111 Young, Sunday .
EAST LET /\ItT, Church School 9 o .m.
$cMof Supt. SurMioy School 9:30 o .m .
Wonhip oorvico ~o a.m.' !'ray"'~
EYMI- Wonhlp, 7:30, Wodnoodco,•
7~
· 30 .m. Wodnoodco
_ r· UMW
...
7:
7 30
Of' GOD,
T lAC
Sunday
"'-'
Racine-~. ctor. . tOo.m.; wonhlp. llo.m. Cholrproctico,
Morning --'ttp, 9':45 a .m .:
nc1oy
Thurodor, tp.m .
ocl-', 10:45 o .m.: ....,1- worship , 7 .
LETI\ItT FAU5- Worohlp oorvlco 9
...
a.u~·~--'10
· ·
Tueodoy, 7:30 p.m., lodloo Jl"'''"'
a .m.
~"""""' o .m .
-ling: Wodno..-.. 7:30p.m. YPE. .
MOIININIP STI\It, Wonhlp 9:30 o.m .:
MIOillEPOIT· FlriT BAI'TIST, CornOf Church Schoof I 0:30a.m.
Sixth and P'olmer, tile a . .. Me·
MOIISE CHAPEl. Chu•ch School 9 :30
•• _.__ - ~--• 9 15
Roool.·
~Noll II om
Clurtll· .
..,_,,
:
o.m.
;
-...,
a.
· ·
· · School 6:30 p.m ..
Hoyeo , Suftdor ~. _..,tondont,
• Sunday

complete
Automotive

+

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.......,_.. u--·· °'

:k;:

7:':!0

CIIIIISTIAN

7,

Down•rig-Cbilds.lnsurance
and
Mullen Insurance

-=::t.
''g~
flev.-

'wlsi.7vAN _

Dan • •· -•· oupt. Morning Wonhip,
10:15 o .m. Youth
7:30 p.m .
1y1, lncfu&lt;llne.;.;: - · ......,., Junior ooh'"-· and junior
a n d - high lVI': choir procttco, 1:30
w.clt
,
- - l l o • o n d l i· .
W... r·•-·
'?:30:,m•
.
"I wUJO!I,
~
T, no
Of
~
and - ·
mlnlotwr, Scott

mMt'-.

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Boll*'-·

AGENTS:

•
Save 6ur RC, RC·IOO, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite

and Dad's Root Beer boffle caps tor charity.

. . . . , _, - - mlniolor.. liblo
Schoof, 9:30 o. m.: _...,. -.hlp,
10:30 o. m.: .. . ,.... - · 7 : 0 0 p.m .-

n::.::i;:,.tli.

w.tM ... lllltltt StUdy """ youthMII!Ol•

"'""·

CHURCH . OF

TMI

NAZA~B•.
Jim.,_,., pooiOr:
111 Whh, IUndor ocl-' ..... llundor
oc1ooo1 ""' a.m.: moi'Jtlt• wotoh!P,
0.111.': Sunday . ._llotlc

. 10:30'

"

'

~i"'

Wonhlp, 7:30 p.m . y...,th
FeRowlhlp,~, 1 :30p.m.·

IIO«THHASTCWIITBI

Rev . RlchordW. 1'hom&lt;lo

Duono Sydonotridoor, Sr.
SheldonJoho,_,

o:t':

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·•
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a.m. ~
....
~ 10:00o.m.
CltESTBI, Wonhlp 9 a .m .. Church .
~ 10 a.M. Ooolr -11117 p.m ..
n.urMoro. lillie~. Tl!urodoyo.
/

7:30, ...

.

CoP,rownt
1982 K1111er -'ll•efl•I•!'IQ Semct
P 0 &amp;l• 801• CNiriQtltl"l'- . Y•9n1 lno&amp;

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Service
Locu ~t&amp; aeechStree. . . . . . . . .

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Sunde,
' Plllms
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EU.IS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Geol- hlo- Son; to bo. our

' plungc ·~ on? Sonwono
flhy

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992-JJ2S

_...., crlhlo 1111 ill lbaolcwo. an impoflanl pon
.. Chrlltt..
Mkn 1houth we ~nnot
'llll*c to be lib Him - W8 cu Mam to mnt
• •• c:twk:.- . . critn wtth th« Nml!

llhcine 949-::USO

Lo•n

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

llo!ibr , .. Md aloo IO be -IU!Igllo. Tht

General Merchandi se

992-9121 Middleport

..
~ •.~~
Monday

Tuotdo,
l'lllml
Paalma
82:HI
121 :1-8
Wednesd•y ' Thurtday
FrtdiY
Salufdly
Prove~
rJatthew '1 Matthew Romllns
13:12· 15
7:7· 1·
10:37-42
13:7·14

Dh.

director. Church 1chool. 9:30 a .m.;
mornlng . worohlp, 10:30 a .m. ; Wodnll·
we..net Yl at 7 :30p.ho'o
i"g Servic" 7:30p.m . p.m.
day evening prayer aervices , 7 :30p.m.
ALFRED , Sunday Sc
I at 9 :45 a.m .
LIBERTY Christian Church , • Liberty
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST , Rev . Eod
Mornlnv Wonhlp at 11 a .m . Youth , 6:30
A11e .. Pomeroy. Sunday School tO a .m 1 :
Shuler, pottor. Worthip service, 9·30
p.m . Sundays. Wedn•sdoy Night Pray•r
Worship 7 :30. Wednesday Service, 7 :30
a .m. Sunday school. 10:30 a .m . · 1•
Meeting, 7 :30p.m .
p .m .
Study and prayer se rvice Thu h
ST. · PAUL, (Tu-ro Plolno): Sunday
CHESTER CHURCH Of GOO, Rov. R. E.
7:30p .m .
School 9 :00a.m . Morning Worship at
Robln•on , pastor. Sunday school; 9 :30
CARlETON CHURCH, Klngtbury Rood.
10:00 a .m. Bible Study , 7 :30p.m . Tu .. a .m.; wont,ip service , 11 a .m.; ev., inliii
Jimmie E11an1 . ·po•tor. Sunday tchool .
day.
... Hrvlce . 7 :00; youth ••r11lce , Wedn•• ·
9:30a.m .. Rolph Carl. tuper lntendent:
SOUTH Blit!EL (Silvor Ridge): Sunday
cloy . 7:00p.m.
'
evonlng woroh lp. 7:30 p .m . P•o•••
School 9:00a.m . Mo•nlng Wolhlp 10:00
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
meeting, Wodnoodoy, 7 :30p.m .
o .m. Wodneiday llbloSI\Idy , 7:30p.m.
Robert E. Mu1101 , pallor. Sundoy oc11ool, ·
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Tom
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Oliver
9 :30a .m .; Paul Mu 11er, supt.; mornln'D Rlcha100, pOt lor; Wallace Damewood,
Swain, S..porlntondont. Sundoy ochool
worship , 10:30: Sundoy evonlngoorvlco,
Sundoy Sctlool Suporlntondonl . Worohlp
9:30everyWeek .
7 :00; mid- wH~ Hrvlce . Wednetdoy , 7
servlceat~CI . m . BlbleSc:hoaiiOa .m .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Sunday
p .m .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Rov.
School, 9 :30 o .m. ; ovonlngoorvlco , 7 :30
· SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THl
Tho•on Du•ham, pooto,. Sundoy School
p.m . Wednesday prayer m"tlng, 7 :30
NAZARENE , Rev. Jome18. Ki!tle. pattor;
at 9 :~ a .m.: Morning wonhlp ot 10 :30
p.m. RW
Norman Pretley , · Sunday School
a . m. ThundoyMrvlcesat7 :30p . m.
BEA . 1\UOW . RIDGE, CHURCH OF·
Suporlntondont. Sunday school 9 :30 · FREEDOM COSPlL MISSION ol Bold
CHRIST, .Duane Worden , mini•!• . Bible
a .m .: morning wors~ip , 10:-'5 a .m . I . Knob, located on County Rood 31. ~ev .
doll, 9: 30, a . m ~ : n'l9tr)lngh ~ ~p . 10:30
evangeliltlc serv ice, 7 p.m. Prayer a~
lawrence Glu"•ncamp, po1tor: Rev .
a.m .; eY•n ~ WOrt IP· ' :30 p.m .
PrQi~ Wednetday , 7 p.m.: .,.oUth 'Roger Wlllfoo11itfonf po1tor . Preaching
Wedn~ IU • 1tudy, 6:306.m.
m"llng , 7 p.m.
servlcu . Sunday 7 :30 · p.m. . prayer
hNEW
TIVERSVI~ C MMUNITY
!DEN UNilED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
mHtlng , Wodnoodoy , 7:30 p.m .. Gory
C uoch, Sundohy Sc
I oorvlco , 9 :45
Eldon R. lloko: paotor. Sunday School tO
Griffith , loodoYouth grO&lt;tpo , Sundoy
a .m .;
Wotl ip
service.
10:30 :
o.m .; Robert RHd, supt.; Morning ,.,.. ev•lng, 6:30 p.m. with Roger or)d
Evangelistic Service, 7:30p.m . Wednel ·
mon, 11 a .m .; Sunday niQht servlc..
Violet Willford 01 l.adert . Communion
day, Prayer m"tlng. 7:30.
Chriltlon Endeavor, 7 :30p.m .; Song,.,.
••rvices flnt Sunday ecch month .
"ZION CHURCdH OF C!'fltlST , Pomeroy·
vice , 8 P·trl ·: Preaching 8 :30 p.m . .
WHITE'S CHAPEL . Coolville RD . Rev .
1 R .: Robert Purtell , pot tor;
Harrltonvlle
MidwHk Prayer mHting, Wednesday , 7
Roy Deeter, poator. Sunday school 9:30
BI~~ Eiroy. Sundoy ochooloupt. Sunday p.m .; 1\lvl~ Rood , loy loodo&lt;.,
o.m.: worohlp oervlco, t0:30 o.m. Bible
Knvu . 9:30a.m. ; waf'1/'tlp service 1,0 :30
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, Located ot
•tud.,. an~ prayer ser11ice. Wedne•doy,
a .m. ; Sun:r worlhlp service,-7:30 p .m.
Aullond dn New limo Rood , next to
7 :30p .m .
Mot!day 0
T":'etdoy, evening t ervlc••.
For .. t Acre Pork: Rev . Roy Rou 1e
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST , Eugene
7 :30 each evening.
paator: Robert Muller. Sunday Scho0i
Underwood, pastor ; Herb Elliott , Sunday
ST . . JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pino
oupt . Sundoy ochool, 10:30o.m.: worohlp
ochool oupt. Sundoy ochool , 9 :30a.m.;
. Grove. 'The Rev . William MiddlesWorth,
7:30 p.m.lible Study, WednHday , 7 :30 .. morning wor1hip and comunion. 10:30
Pastor. Church tervicn 9:301 a.m . Sun·
p.m.; Saturday night proyer ••rvice , 7 :30
o .m .
. do"'Scl1ool10 :30o .m .
.
p.m.
:,
,RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST CHURCH .
ADBURY CHURC::2; CHRIST, Jolly
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rogo&lt;
Amoo Tilllo , paoto•: Donny Tllllo , Sundoy
Pingley, paotor: Su
ochool, 9 :30
Wotoon, paotor; Crenoon Prall, Sundo y'
School Supt. Sunday School, 9 :30a .m .:
a .m.; morntno worship , 10 :30 a .m ..
schoahupt. Morning wotthlp , 9 :30a.m.;
followed by ~J~orning worthlp . Sunday
Wednfldoy evening ~ervlce , 7 :30.
Sunday ~ehool , 10:30 a .m.; evening serltVenlng •ervic:e. 7:00 p .m. Prayer
ANTIQUITY 11\PTIST, Rev. Earl Shuler,
11 1ce, 7:30 .
mee tl ng. w-•
.unead oy , 7: 00 p .m ..
paoto,, Sunday ochool9:30o.m .; Chu1ch
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Rov . Tom
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
••rvke, 7 p.m .; youth m"tlng. 6
Dooley; Jo. Soyre, Sunda~ School
NAZARENE , Rev . Liard 0 . Grimm, Jr ..
p.m.Tueodoy Biblo Study , 7 p.m .
Supo1intonont. Sundoy ochool, 9:45
pallor . Sunday ochool, 9 :30 a .m.;. wor·
RACINE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE,
a .m. ; e11enlng wonhip , 7:30p.m. Prayer- thlp ••r11lc•. 10 :30 a .m. lroodca1t live
Rev . Thomas H. Collier , pat tor. Martha
m"ting, 7~30 p .m. Wedn••doy.
over WMPO: y~ung people'• service, 7
Wollo, Chalnnon ol tho Boord of Chris.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST,
p.m . Evongeliotlc oorvlco , 7:30 p.m .
~~~~ ll=~r~h~~~~~$~~ ·~.~ VIncent C. Waten. Ill, mlnlater: Hlirman W.clnetdaJ service, 7:30 ~ . m,
h
Block , ouporlntondent. Sundoy Schopl
FIRST S UTHERN 11\P 1ST , Co•nor ol
wort lp, 7:30 p .m . Prayer mMtlng ,
9:30 a .m.; evening service, 7 p .m .;
Second and AP01tor Fronk Lowther . Sun ·
WednHday, 7 :30p.m.
WednetdoyBibleStudy, 7p.m.
day tchool , 9:.-5 o .m .; worship 1ervlce .
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L Wolkor ,
CHESTER CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE ,
11 a .m. ond 7:30 p.m. Wookly Blblo
Pootor. Robert h~lth , Sunday school , Rov . Holben Grote . paolor . F1onk Riffle .
Study , Wodnoodoy,7:30 p .m .
oupl. : Sundoy IC ool. 9 :30a.m.: morning
oupt . Sundoy School , .9:30a.m. Worship
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Millo•
worship, 10:40 a .m.; Sundoy evening • ••rvlce, 11 a .m . and 7:30p.m . Prayer
St ., Maaon , W. \/a . Eugen e l . Conge r ,
worohlp , 7 :30: Wodnoodoy ovonlng8iblo
mooting , Wodnoodoy. 7:30p.m.
mlnloto&lt;. Sunday Biblo Study 10 a .m .:
ol\ldy , 7:30.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Wo.-.hlp II a .m . and 7 p .m . Wodnoodoy
DANVILLE WESlEndoY/\N , R~~-- R. D.
CHURCH , Rw . Robe•t Miller, paoto':
Blblo Study, vocal muolc , 7 p.m .
Brown , paolor . Su
Y Sc-I. 9:30
Lloyd W•ight, Dl1o&lt;:to• of Chrlotlon
LIFE SCIENCE CHURCH - 12 North
o .m .: morning woroltlp 10:45: youth oorldu&lt;otlon. S..nday School, 9 :30 a . m .;
Thl•d St., Choohl••· tnd..,.ndont , fun vice. 6:45 p .m .; evening worahlp , 1:30
Morning Worsh'l p, 10:30 a . m .; Choir
domentoltervicet. Sundcty even ing 7 :30
p.m.; prayer and pral••· Wednesday ,
Prcx:tlce , Sunday. 6:30 p.m.: Evening
p.m . Poator.llev . Or. Robert Per10n1.
7:30p.m.
Worlhlp. 7 :30 p .m . Wodnoodoy Proyo•
MASON 1\SSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST .'Rov . MorondlibloStudy, 7:30p.m.
Lono , Mooon , W. Vo. Rov . Ronnlo B.
vln Marilin. paotor: Stovo Llttlo Sunday
DE~TER CHURCH Of CHRIST, Chorloo
Rooo . Pootor. Sunday School 1:45 a .m .:
achool supt ; Sunday IChool, 10 a .m ,:
Ay 11•ll. Sr. . miniater; !tick Macomber ,
Morning Worship 11 a .m . Evening S.r ·
morning worohlp, II o.m. ' Sunday
oupt. Sunday school, ~:30 o .m.: -•hlp
vice 7:30 ,.m. Wodnoodoy Womon'o
evondonl "8 wor~~ · T7hu
: 30~!:_aye • m . .tlng
••rvice. 10:30a .m . B..,leStudy. Tue•dO.,. .
Mlnistrlet a .m. (mHtlng ond prayer .
1
1liblo
••-,.
r-,. :
p .m .;
7:30p.m .
·
P•oyerond Bible Study 7 p .m .
youthMtvico , 6p.m. Sunday.
REOIIC/\NIZfD CHURCH OF JESUS
HARTFOIID CHURCH Of CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH , 383
CHRIST OF lATTER DAY 51\INTS ,
CHRISTIAN UNION , Tho Rev . William
NSc." -!lnd Ave ., MSi ddl~paWrodt.Su!'doy
Portlond Roclno Rood. William Roush ,
Campbell, paotor. 6undoy School, 9 :30
~ . I 000
:
o. m . un .
· &lt;Y~ ·
paotor. Lindo Evans, chu1&lt;h ochool
a .m .: JOmoo HughM , oupt., evonlngoitf ·
r---- -----7,;;;-;;;a-;:;-;;;-:;:;;;;:-;;_.----------, vlco , 7-:30 p.m. Wodn-"-·
. - , ovonlng
/ A CLEAN
TEJa
proyor mHiing, 7 :30p.m . Youth prayer
Anew year beginS. We have a clean stale on which to write a history
'""'lco ooch Tuesday.
of 1-- . Our actions
_ , y~·and
rnlne,
will
be
-'!ten
upon
this
clean
FAIRVIEW IIIIILE CHURCH , Lotort . W .
-·
""
Vo .. Rl . 1' Marl&lt; Irwin, paotor . Worohlp
new alate. WhatWIIlhistoryrecord~MelgsCountythlnewyear?
oooviCM , 9t30 o .m .; Sundov ' ochool , II
Looking to the past few years we find little In which to delight. Tbe
a .m .; evening worohlp , 7 :il p. mnd. Tu•• ·
conununltleswe Uve in can be better.a nd c1eaner. Na turaUy that IS
· OUT
cloy
coltof10 proyor f1'"tlng o
l (blo
otuclv . 9 ,30 o.m .. Worohlp ,.,vice.
responslbll'ty N of
ref
to be I to
still that I
•lldft
what
~ . -jectedus p era
c Olle a...,.-,
'
8
W
eiday. 7 :30p.m .
loc od
we ve pro
in years put. SeWer hands have spread dirt
CAL VARY Bt~E ~UIICH,
at
just as lleWel' mouths have spread filth Uln"-avo yards sidewa'"on Pome•oy PI o , ounty R 25, noor
·
·
''"&amp;''" '"'
'
""'
Flotwoodo. Rev. llockwood, paotor . So•·
l=t that the :ldenta ol Melga County and aU Ita
•Ieos on Sunday ot 10:30 a .m. and
· owns a
es
care. WI .Its sewer banda, MelgaCounllana
p.m . with Sundayocl1ool. 9:30a . m . -~ e
have spread llflth and trash along the streets and yard and roadways
·~~~;;::t;v· ~~~ss cHuacH ,
... t-andcountry
iddl
"' vw•o
•
INC. - roo.rl St .. M toporl. Rov .
With
lha
theae
filth
ndov
I
•
sewer mou
same
ytypepeople, spewflllth Into the
O'Dell Manley , pattor: -~
y •cl)oo .
atr of our towns and streets and stores. Crude, filthy, vulgar and dirty
9:30a .m .; Morning wor ... lp 10:30 o .m .:
wordsareutteredandshoutediiOthedecentpeoplecan .... ·uweUas
wfnl"'l worohlp, 7:30 p .m . TuOodoy,
•JAU12:30 p .m. Women '• proyer m"ting:
children.,:.,_
PraYtell me what Is.U grou U· 8
th
with
mOll
aewer
Pr~or and prol10 oorvlco, Wodnoodoy,
. hands... ~~ spread filth for
to aee and bear and·then ~
· 7 ' R:hi.~ APC)sTot.tc CHURCH OF
, ,. do

1

6

1

7 30

;,:v

~U show~whoevvlllage~

71,~

others
andJaunO.

aewer

rights from the law
"'
- ··
. God will give them righta. He will also aeelhey lauglt no monl but
weep and cry forever. He wiD aeelhey dwell forever away from decent
' people who care about God,"-- lllld family ""'- ahaU be
1d fallin&amp;"~"'
·. and ' 11'-~...
-•.O.Iwn of •~O. then lllld 88 ~·• "- JleWe&amp; ""
to '-'_,
•UD
·lateea, "don't", end "pntty ~-"He howled, "I don't know where
. you read lt.I1We81'- other fellow uld ill" No, too late when God
·

'"""'' ,

.

''"''"'•

callaustotaat ·

·

. •

ButH'

_,.:.

• a .,..,.,_

--we

1 _ ~;...

. . · """"

-"'ftn

ere talklnl about now. Let Ill ,make

LoHolorrOM, Sundoir ~at 9 :30
II 1 full of clean, goad, ldnd llllerlea alate . No Mwel' words or sewer
a .m. &amp;.!nil 'Wouhlp ' at 7:30 p.m .
• deedl
anyofourdtylltteefli country~ Tbenlhatcieall . .
Thulldor...,.~7:30p.m.
.
~ 1
or , _ _
new .
. IIIIDI'Yiul:
kli,ol9:30 a .m.
' llalewl .P eue
.,.....atlllman. · Rev. WIIUamMiddlawarth
-ttlt• Woooh!P I ,., a .m. · ivonl"'l ·
·--:------~Udbenn!!!~~Q~IUI~el~IOI~of~M~el~p~Count~~'Y
. Won~ 7:30 p . m , libfe Study . .

both"'"""

l..:__ _:_·

M i ddl ~ p or t

992·219.

Nationwide in s. Co.

Alhen1 Cov nt't'

S •~tiAI I &amp;

2" S. Second

af .... Clwiollon ......... lo the

,. 1111 -

Groceries-

w. V•.

y.,.""" .....

~lhol

.

461 S. Third,

,,

of Columbu s, 0 .
804 w. Main
992·2311 Pomeroy

,•

. .. '

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

-to
___. . .......-··.,........,. ......... . .

••

F ~, m erl'l

Pat Hill Ford, Inc.
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

992-665S

How doop lo "'" _ , How ....... lo .... . cl
,.._ 11oo - h k?
~~o.r ,
... und-. . . .....,.._to lollow. J&amp;.lo •
the-

-

SONS SlORE

·S.kers ol

'"'TH

WE'RE TOGnHER TO
$.RYE YOU·BmER

''

Before -

WAID CROSS

Goooi'BrNd

~
Z16 E . Main

moNte cou,_. and commltnMnt.

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, wUl meet Tiles-

~ondjly

,.

V

'-~ ~

llamond Savinp &amp;
Loan Co.

T.rudgcd~

Reula'-Bropn Insurance
Services

Huntingt!JII,

Phone 992 -3480

Someone ·.·

lEW YORK ~: .4
a.ontiiG
~ :1·:.:.
KERM_IT'S KO"NER
. •• 7

repatrs;

Rev. Richard Thomas· gave the
lesSOn from Exodus 34. There was·.
.group singing of "The Rbck that Is
;Htgher Than i'', ,.Love Lifted Me'',
and ,.Blessed Assurance."
otflcers' reports were given.
ReadlDp Included "Thrice His" by
Lorean Gorrell; "If We Could See
Beyond Today" by Floyd Stout; "I'
Needed the Quiet" by Edna Har·
'mDn; ''The Prayer of An Unknown
'Soldier" by Edith Harper;·"Be" by ·
Vercla Stout; "The Uttle Things"
by Dorlli Koenig; "Just Suppose"
by Rev. Mr. Thomas.
Read by Mrs. ChevaUer at the :
meeting was a recent letter from a ,
former pastor, Jij!v. W!llter Frost. .
'Rl!treshments were served by Mrs.
Chevaller and Mrs. Koenig. Grace
was offered by Rev. Mr. Thomas.
Next meeting wUl be F.eb. 23 at the
church. Attending besides those
named were Chester Gorrell, Unda
Gorrell, and Mrs, Richard Thomas.

MARK VSTORE ~
Middleport r.~ ,}1

.

· JESUS CHRIST , Elder J0m01 Mitior. Bible
otudy, Wodnoo~ 7:30 p .m .: Sunday
~. 10 a .m.
nday ~iglot oervlco,

· ~p.m
.
POMOOY
7

WESlEYAN HOliNESS Horrloonvlllo Rood: E
. orl Flolclo, pa1t01·
,
!
Henry El&gt;lin, Jr .. Suftdor Scl)oo1 S..pt.
~ School 9 :30 m .; Morni"'l Wor·
ohip
o . m.:
eveni"'l NrYice ,
7 :30 .m. : rroyor- "'I· Thuiodoy , 7 :30

s..:::r,°·

p .m.

•

. S'I'RACUII FIIST CHulcH Of COO Not - t a l, Rev. Gear~ Ollor ,

paotor. Wonhlp oorvlco Sunday , 9 :45
a .m.; Sunday ochool, 11 o .m .; worohlp
oorvke. 7 :30 p.m . Thuiodoy proyor
-lng. 7,~.m .

1

1

Service
Rutland , Ohio 45775

J . Wm. " Bill" Brown, Owner
Phone (6141742 ·217 7

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
Middl e p ort ·
Pom e roy , 0 ,

MT. HERMON United Brethren In
Christ Church . Rev . Robert Sanders ,
pastor : Don Will , loy leader. locat'XIIn
Texas Community oft CA 82. Sunday
tc:~ool . 9 :30a .m .: Morning worship ••r·
vke ., 10:45 a .m.: e11ening preaching ••r·
vice second · and fourth Sunday•. 7 :30
p.m .; Chritllan Endeavor, first ond lhlrd
Sunday• . 7:30 p .m. Wednetday prayer
m"tlng ond Bible 1tudy , 7:30p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES , 37319 Stoto
Route 12• (One mile easl of Rutland ).
Sunday , Bible lecture 9 :30 a . m .: Wal c:htower study, 10:20 a , m.: Tuesday , 81·
ble 1tudy , 7 :30 p .m .; lhurtdoy ,
ThiiOCrotk School, 7:30 p .m.: S.r11lce
Me eting, 8 :20p .m .
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church Salem St. , Rl.!tlond . Donald Karr , Sr .
po1tor; Bud Stewart , s uperintendent .
Sunday School, 10 a .m.: evening wo r·
1hip, 7:30p.m. Wednetdoy evening .. , .
vice, 7 :30p .m.
CHURCH OF COD ol Profhocy , located
on tho 0 . J . Whllo Rood ol highway 160.
Sunday School 10 a .m. Superintendent
John Loveday. Fint We4nesdoy nigh! ol
month CPMA s ervice•, -aecond Wedn••·
cloy WMB mooting , third ihrough llfth
youth tervlce. George Croyle , pastor . .
HOPE 8/\PTIST CHAPEL - 570 G'ont
51., Mlcldlopo11 : Sunday School, IOo . m .;
morning worship , 11 a . m . evening war·
1~ip , 7 p. m. Wedneaday .... ening Bibl e
1tudy and prayer meeting, 7 p. m. Af·
filiated with Southern Baptltl Conllen·
tlon.
8RADFORD CHURCH Of CHRISTRicky Gilbert, · pastor ; Steve Pickens.
•u,.rlntendent . Sunday School 9 :30 a .
m.: Ch1.1rch Servlce1, 10:30a.m .
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER George 's Creek Rood . Rev . C. J. lemley .
pottor; John Fellure , superlnteodent .
Church tchool , 9:30 a .m .; morning wor ·
1hip, 10:30; e vening service, 7 p.m. Bible ·
Study Thurs., 7 p .m . Cla11e1 for oil age s .
Nursery provided for wanhlp se rvice• .
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH , Corner
of Sycamore and S~ond Stt ., Pomeroy ,
The Re v . William Middlesworth , Postor .
su,day School al 9:45 a .m . or1d Church'
Service• W a .m.
SACRED HEART, Rev . Fot~er Paul D.
Welton , po1tor. Phone 992· 2825. Saturday evening Man , 7:30; Sunday Mall , 8
and 10 a .m.: Confe11 lon. Saturday:
7-7:30p.m .
VICTORY BAPTIST - 52S N. 2nd 51 ..
Middleport. Jam•• E. KeetH , pastor.
Sunday morning wonhlp , 10 a .m .; even ·
lng service. 7: WednHday evening wor.
t hlp , 7 p .m.; Visitation . Ttlunday , 6:30
p .m.
TRINITY Christian A11embly , Coolville
- Gilbert Spenc:er , pot tor . Sunday
tehool. 9 :30a.m.: morhlnQ warth lp , 11
a .m . Sunday evening aervlce. 7 :30p.m.;
midw. . k praye r tervlce Wednetdo~ .
7:30p.m .
MOUNT Oll ~e Co mmunity C~urch ,
Lawrence 8u1~ . pallor; Mo. Folmer , Sr .
SUperintendent. Sunday School and mor·
nlng worship , 9 :30a .m . Sunday even ing
aerv lce . 7 p.m .; Youth meeting and Bible
1tudy, Wedneaday , 7p .m .
UNITED FAITH -CHURCH - Route 7 on
Pomeroy bypo11 . Rev . Robert Smith , Sr.,
po1tar ; R.... . Jam•• Cundiff . ou latant
pa1tor·. Sunday School. 9 :30a .m .; morn ·
lng wort hlp , 10:30 a . m.; evening wor ·
thip, 7:30. Women '• Fellows hip
Tundoys. 10 o. m.: Wednesday nlgh f
prayer serv ice, 7:30p .m .
FAITH BAPTIST Chu rc h , Mason, m eet
at United . Steel Workers Union Hall ,
·Railroad Stree t , Moton. Morning wo rsh ip 9 :30a.m ., SundoySchool10:30a .m .
Evening Service, 1 p .m . Prayer meeting
Wodnoodoy , 7:30 p .m . Mld-Wook Blblo
Study , Thurodoy, 7p.m.

' ~UN IAPTIST - Rov : Nylo
FOitEST
Iorden, pastor. Corneli u s lunch .
1uperlntenderit . Sunday 1chool , 9130
a .m .; second and fourth Sundoy 1 wor ship ••rvice at 2:30p.m .
MT . MOitiAH BAPTIST - Fou•th and
Main St ., Middleport . Rev. Colvin Min ·
nls . pastor. Mn . Elvin Bumgardner ,
· supt. _Sunday IChool , 9:30a.m .; wort hip
Jervlce , 10:-'5 o;m .
BURLINGHI\M SOUTHERN BAPTIST
- CHURCH , Route 1. Shode. Pastor Don
. Black . Affiliated with Southern 8Ciptla t
Convention . Sunday school, 1:30 p .m .:
· Sunday wonhlp , 2:30 p .m . Thuraday
e vening Bible study. 1 p.m .
PENTECOSTAL .ASSEMBLY . Roclno ,
Routel24 , William Hoback , pal lor . Sun ·
doy Khool , 10o.m.; SuQday ev en ing l tr ·
vice . 6:30 p.m . Wednnday Mning ser :
· vice , 7 .
CARPENTER BAPTIST , Rev . Froolond
Norris , pastor. Don Cheadle , Supt. Sun·
cloy School, 9:30 o .m. Morning Worship ,
. 10:30 O. 'J' . Prayer Service , olternatt
Sundoyo.
· MIDDLEPORT PENTE COSTAL. Thltd'
Aw .. the Raw . Clark Bak•r. pastor . Carl
~tlnohom . Sunday Schoof Supt . Sun·
day k"hool 10 a . m. - do"" for oil
Of" ; Even ing service • . 6:00. Wed·
nesdoy Study , 7 :30p .m . Youth ' 'rvice 1,
7:30p.m. Friday .
i ECCLES!/\ FELLOWSHIP . 128 Mill Sl ..
; Mlddlepof1; PastOr II Brother Chuck
McPherson . Sunday School ot 10 a . m .~
· Setvk" Sunday e vening at 7 p.m. ancC.
1W.dnesdoy at 7 p.m .

�•

•

•
J:a!•

8

Friday,

Pomeroy-Micldlepcirt, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

January

AMOCIIIted PreM Writer
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -

A

man who' coolly assembled a shot·
gun and opened fire In his wt!e's
InSurance office, killing two people
and wounding nine others before he
was slain by pollee, was "always
• jeJilous," says a co-worker of his
wife.
Ricardo Contawe was carrying a
fiower gift box when he strolled Into
the 18th-floor otf!ce In a hlgh-t1se
above downtown San Francisco on
Thursday afternoon.
He chatted casually with some of
his wife's co-workers. Then, while
they watched, he assembled a 12·
gauge pump shotgun concealed In
the l9ng box, Sgt. Mike Pera said.
He fired first at his wt!e, hitting
her In the leg.
As others rushed to her aid, he
fired " randomly," Pera said, ct1ti' cally wounding a company vice
president and an unidentified
\voman who had to have her right
arm amputated below the elbow.
Contawe's wt!e, Orllnda, was In

stable condlUon. The two dead had
not been unidentified.
"My first Instinct was to jump
1lllder the table, and that's what I
did," said David Luke, a senior tosurance underwriter, who said he
was six feet from the gunman when
the shooting started. ·
"I heard a woman yell, 'Please
don't shoot me.' I heard a shot and
that's when I got up and wheeled
around and just headed the other
way."
The 42-story buUdlng overlooking
San Francisco Bay was plwiged
Into chaos as workers stampeded
down stairs and dove for cover.
Minutes later the offices of the Mission Insurance Co. were spattered
wtth blood and the shooting had
topped. Contawe, 36, was dead.

Tiu-ee patrol cars cruising the
area had arrived at Spear Tower
about 15 inlnutes after the shooting
spree began, and three officers
killed the gunman In a brief gun
battle-after he fired at them from 30
feet away, Pera said.

29, 1982

· - Small inv~tment, large returns. Want Ads
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS
IS ACINCH
t;:::==D&amp;~D
If YOU USE THt INCH! -a~~~Gw~~

Officer John Sheveland was
nicked by a t1cocbetlngJr8gment,
but was not hospitalized. omcers
Jim Selm and Bill. Taylor were
uninjured.
Cossette Hul was at her desk
when Contawe came In with the
box.
"We heard a shot. I wassosc~
I COJlldn'tmove,'' shesatd. ''Hewas
shooting all over the place."

Thet'e rlghtl When you UH a column Inch
·
d rtl I
..__ I
Or more In miWipllper a ve I ng uw t
dleplay or cla11lfled you reach thoiiHnds
of potential buyer~ that ere eiiger
to receive your money-Hving
m
'
IIHQ&amp;In...

The couple had been having mar- .
Ita! dltflcultles for "a long time,"

WA,Nt

:~~!';'::!~:~~res

elOYrs.e•perience

y'oM HOSKINS

.PH. 992·5.63
1·7·1 mo.

AD INFORMATION

Ph.949-2160 or 949-2482
· 7·5-tlc

AIDING VICTIM - Paramedics work over a vlen
tim of a slloetlng 1pree Thanday afternoon in a down-

eRENTALS

•ANNOUNCEMENTS"

41 -Houstl for Rent
42-Mablle Homos

l-c1 ,cl of Tn.nts

Teen arrested in killing
of Turkish
Consul General
.

Fraser said negotiations broke
down over a vat1ety of ISsues, especially job security and equaUty of
sacrifice between UAW members
and other GM employees.

B;y LINDA DEUTSCH
AMoclated l'reM Writer

"Unless all these pieces come to-.
gether In negotiations, nothing
comes together," Fraser said.
"The economics Just didn't come
together."
Meanwhile, It was reported
Thursday that laid-off workers
could be decisive In a ratification
vole on any new contract containing concessions by the UAW.
The Detroit Free Press quoled
sources close to the bargaining as
saying concessions would be a lot
more acceptable to furloughed
workers than to hlgh-senlot1ty employees with steady work. Workers
on Indefinite layoff but In good
standing with the union are eligible
to vote on contract proposals.

LOS ~GELES (AP) - Pollee
raided a home In a middle-claS.
suburb and arrested a teen-ager on.
a murder charge after Turkey's
consul general was assasslnai£J In
a burst D1 gunfire only a week after
he had turned. down an otter of official protection.
·
Armenian terrorists claimed responslbtUty for the killing Thursday
of Consul General Kemal Artkan,
the third Turkish consular official
In L!ls Angeles ldlled In nine years.
Deputy Pollee Chief James Hardin
said officers were "looking for at
least one other suspect." .
· Hanpig "Harry" Sassounlan, 19,
of Pasadena, was booked late
Thursday for Investigation of
murder In Artkan's kUling, said pollee Sgt. Dudley Varney. Artkan
was shot as he waited at a stoplight
on a busy city street while he was
driving to work.
Three juveniles were held for
questioning for several hours but
were released, Varney said.
Los Angeles Pollee Chief Daryf
Gates said the ambush kUling came
a week after th~ 54-year-old diplomat was warned that his ll!e was In
danger but turned down an otter of
pollee protection.
"We have no idea why he chose to
do what he 'aeclded to do, but he did
refuse our otters," Gates said.
Minutes after Artkan was shot,
anonymous calli! claiming responsibllty were received by various
news organizations, including the
Washington bureau of The Associated Press.
"We have just shot a Turkish diplomat In Los Angeles;" the caller
In Washington said. The male voice
Identified hlrmel! as a member of
·t he Justice Commandos of the Armentan ·Genoclde.
· Armenian . nationalists accuse
the Turks· of slaughtet1ng 1.5 mllllon of their countrymen-In Turkey
In 1915 and driving hundreds of
thousands more Into exUe. The Turkish government never has ac·
knowledged the accusations of
genocide.
A ft1end of Arlkan, Aldf Keskin,
said the consul general seemed to
have a premonlllon of his assassl·
nation, . but stopped using body·
guards because he felt they could
not save him.
"He told me, 'If someone wants
to kUI me, he WtU whether I am
guarded or not. Why should I get a

Senate hearing expected the follow- provements in the Salvadoran goIng Monday.
vernment's human rights record.
In a six-page report to Congress
The president's certification also
explaining Reagan's decision, the
seemed certain to be contesled In
administration said the Salvadoran court. Michael Luhan of the Council
government was making reasonaon Hemispheric Affairs said the llbble progress toward halting human eral Washington-based research
rights abuses consldet1ng the curgroup will seek an injunction
. rent clvU war.
against continuation of aid
''EI Salvador Is now In a state of Immediately. ·
active clvU strife Involving the goFormer Rep. Robert Dt1nan, Dvernment and armed groups of the
Mass., who has said he will handle
left and right," the report said. "As
the court challenge, declared earIn similar circumstances In history, lier this week that "the law doesn't
such clvU strife has produced violajust say that such a cet11flcatlon
tions of human t1ghts by elements
must be made, but that It must be
of each side."
true."
· While not addressing recent re· The American ClvU LiberUes Un·
porlil In The Washlngton Post and
ion and the Amet1cas Watch ComThe New York Times about alleged
mittee, a human rights group, said
government massacres of civtUtheir recent study of the Salvadoans, It noled that the mllltary high
ran.mllitary's actions "in our judgcommand has prohibited its troops
ment make It unlawful for the
from violating human rights.
president to reach the findings neAnd the report, delivered to the • cessary to Issue the certification."
Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said statistics compiled by the
U.S. EmbassY In El Salvador
showed a decrease In alleged
Renaissance prints
abuses by security fo~s.
However, a State Department ofNEW YORK (AP) - "Renaisficial who was Involved In the El
sance Ornament Prints and DrawIngs," an exhibition of some 200
Salvador decision raised questions
works on paper from the collections
about that assessment. Theotflclal,
of the Metro!)OIItan Museum of Art,
who asked not to be Identified, said
he was "not aware of any" lm:
continues through Feb. 14.

6-LDII and Found

CouRT - Cbarmue XeD- .ia lbe W.,ae WIDia111111llU'der trt.i. A will e• ferlbe
111nJaP • riDe ol proHCUiiall, lllle lllnm AIIIUIIL (AP i nrpboh).

.,_ 11'111 lo mate ller way

_pht111111pllen Tllandlylll Allanlll .tter llle Callfled
'

41-WantN to Rent

1-YaniSale

4f-For leue

t-W•ntiR!Io Buy

•MERCHANDISE

• EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

S1-H 0u.. ftold Oood1

CONSTRUCTION
custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
1&gt;athr011.ms, remodeling,
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Mason Co .. w. va .
Area Code 304

675- Pt. Pleasant

Anything lor your
Mobile Home.
KINGSBURY

458- Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
812~ New Haven

895- Letart
937- Buffalo

&amp; ACCESS.-

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH", 992·6011

TO PLACE AN AO CALL

Rt.124
Minersville, Oh.
Ph. 992·5587

In M eigs County

In Gallla County

992-2156

446--2342

lt-Buslntn Tr1lnlng
IJ-Sctlools Instruction

.J7-Muslullnstrumtnt
51-Fruits &amp; Vqttables
n-For Ultor Traclt

16-lhdio, TV,
I CB Rtpllr
11-Wtnttd To DG

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL
11 - Buslntn
Opportunity
U- Mont¥ to Lo1n
U - Proftnlonll
Services

, 1_Ftrm ECI!uiPment
n-wanttel tG 8uy
U-LIVt&amp;tOC:Iil
S.lt
64-Ha¥&amp; Grain
U - Sttd &amp; Ftrtlliltr

e REAL ESTATE

e TRANSPORTATION

16- lil~l

75-INIS I MeiOF$

7.._Aillt Ptrh I
Acceasorlts
77- Autt Rep.oir
71-Camplng Equipment

Estale Wantf!d

SERVICES

e•-H 0melmprovtmtnts

wan l-Ad Advertising
Deidllnes
Monday l :00 on Saturday
Tuelday ttlru Friday 2:00 t" ,M.
ttlt d•V bllore pubtkatlon
Sunday 2:00P.M. Friday

11-Piumblntl Httllnt
IJ-EI!etlllallng

'

14-Eiectric:oll
Rtfrlgtrallon

Gasoline Tax

Fund
921.52
Road and Bridge
Fund
·
:1,652.35
Fund
456.81
Total
. 15,41$.28
Total Receipts
General Fund
27,457.74

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

deaths of :18 young blacks during a
22-month period have been Invest!•
gated by a poUce task force.
Mrs. TranimeUsald thecarWUllams was driving cut In front of her
car and turned around slowly
enough for her to trY to talk to
1
Rogers.
"When I looked over, I looked at
this man's face, and Larry Rogers
was In the seat and he was like
thiS," she said, shutting her eyes
and leaning against the side of the
witneSs stand.
Mrs. Trammel said on crossexamination that she was not concerned about seeing Rogers under
those conditions because, "I
thought he as trying to hide, he
didn't want anyone to see him because he was with a newsman."

Write your own
order oy- ;;,ail wllh this
coupon . Concef your ad · by phone when you got
results. Money not refundoble.

Nam•------------------Addren----------

Phon•------------------

Cemetery

MoTor Vehicle

license Tax
Fund

Gesollne Tax

9,772.35

thouse,

Pomeroy ,

Clerk

f
.I

SIMMON'S OLOS.·
D.·CHEV., INC.
Ph. 992-6614
308 E. Main Pomeroy,

~~~:~~es

) For Rent

1. - - - - - 2.

3.

••
5.
6.

9.

10. - - - - -11 . - - - - -12. - - - - - 13. - - - - - 14. - - - - - -

15. -- - - -16.

17. - - - - - 18. - -- - -19, - - - - - 20. _..:.__ _ __
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.

•

:~::':.',:.~ewer

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

S&amp;W .TV

and

.•.

grandchildren.

WELDING

. This Js in memory of John
Proff1tt. He takes the best
and leaves the. rest. When

Jesus comes he will teke
whose who are divine.

be unified . At that lime the

charge to the advertiser .

to

Specialty
North ol Racine
on carmel Road

27.
21. - - - -- 29. - '_
-_
-30.
_-_
_31.
32.
33.
3-4.

Zion .

His

oo

wife ,

children, grandch i ldren,
brothers, end faml tles.

at Sawmlil
3

Announcements
SWEhEIPER ,ondarstsewalnngd
mac ne repa r, P
,
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Dovis Vacuum

J• R• PARSONS
1·8-1 mo. pd

APPLIANCE SER\IICEI
Chester, Ohio
PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382

MNOUNCING

..

SIDING CO.

lfOW AT
8-ABEAUTY

"Beautiful. Custom

IN IIACINE

Built Garages"
Call tor free siding
e51imates. 949·2101 or
949-2860.

'nd

All makes
mode_
ls
Antenna lns1allatlon
House calls and shop
service available.

Comple1e line of Muule

LOad ing Guns and Sup·
piles . .Spring Valley
Trading Co .. Spring Valley
Plazo, 4-16·8025.

I ~~~~~~~§~~

Bleu,Poorest people crowd

lolls. Study. Library . Low .
Science .
Health.

..... 111011. ' $11.

Economics .
Military .
Weapons. Vocations.

IMIRSTIUK

ilotiiMMl-

No Sunday Calls

·

CAU 949-2320
1.. 24·1 rno.

3·11 ·1fc

1-3-1

wantAd

BEVERLY WICKLIN~

NG
Opening
speci.atlzlng

POMEROY,O.

BOGGS

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - extensive remodel·
ing.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rl. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Autnoriled John Deer,
New Holllnd, Bush.Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

• Electril:;:al work
• Roofing work
14 Years Experience

Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
or 992-2282

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
I·Hic

Future Reference

NEW LISTING - A Iii·
fie more than a fla lf an
acre of level yard with
a garden arell and a
12'"it60' Skyline mobile

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Calli&lt; en oung
For Fast Service

985·3561
P,toiiTSANDHRVICE
ALL.M.A~ ES

• ....,a ....,.
.o,..,.,.

home in the -c;ountry bul

SION

tlttlllntti
.OIIpoUII
• Dlstl·oull'ltrs

•Hoi W•ltr T•nh

PO~SES ·

9 S lfc

REESE~{

Public Notice
PUBliC NOTICE·

Notice Is hereby given
that on Saturday, January

105 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for
cash ·•the· following
collateral :
1980 Ford, Serial No.
F26GUH01608 - F 250 ~X~he Farmers Bank apd

savings

SERVICE·

..

drilled

Countv Certllied

company,

Cheshire, Oh.

the right to bid at this sale.
and lo wlltodraw the above

Ph. 367-7560
1·7·1

vehicle. prior to sale . Fur" I~;::====~~~~
lher.
The Formers Bonk I'

and Savings Company
reserves the right to reject
any or all bids submi tted .
Further. vehicles are
sold In the condition they
are in with no elC.pressed or
imp tied warranties given.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

.

-

Addon' •nd rtmodollng
ftooflnt 11K11utter wortc
Concrtft work
PlUinDtftllrld
tltctrlcal wertc

(Free Esllm•lesl
V. C. 1YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·1fc

I

a Gun Shoot, Sal. nights
6:30p.m., Boshon. Factory
choke 12 gauge shotgun.

well.

Flea
Market.
New
Opening . 7 days a week .

The Heart of Middleport. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store. 992-6370.

Electric

Phone

H 614) ·992-3325
JUST LISTED -

Coun·

try home of J bedrooms,
carpeting, bath, modern
kit., full basement, fur ·
nace and large lot .

JUST LISTED -

20 yr .

$13,000.00.
LARGE KITCHEN - 3

Misc. Merchandice

bedfooms, could have
futl basement . Hoose
approx. 6 years otd, has
a frunt porch, and is a

CALL:

good buy at $19,500.00. ·
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
GRf .
992-6191

TRAILER LOTS Level 3 lot• with
Leading Cr. water and
electric. Only $5,000.00
or on time.
NICE
3 or 4

Je1n Trussell

949·2660

Dolle Turner
Office

992-5692
992-2259

AUCTION

----~-----_ _;___ __
_ _ _ __

35. - - - - - -

Mill This coupon with RemiHence
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, 01\. 457"

centrat .a ir. carpeting,,.
porches, and .60 of an
acre . City wa1er.

POMEROY
lANDMARK

614·99-2·2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

CAll TODAY!

MIIC. Morch•ndice

LAND CONTRACT One level acre, out·
buliCiing 43x36 used as a
garage and · storage.
Nice 2 bedroom home
furnace. , · full
wi1h
stores .

SATURDAY, JAN. 30 AT 6:30P.M • .

AT

modern kif .. garage ond

RUTLAND GYMNASIUM

S&amp;KAUCTION
SHERMAN TILLIS: OWNER
LONNIE NEAL: AUCTIONEER
TERMS OF SALE: CASH OR CHECK
WITH
POSITIVE I.D.

3 ACRES -

On gOOd

coun1,Y road in Rutland

Township. Excellent lor

1hree houses.

VERY NICE - Corner
lot with go rage and 2 ap·
ts. Also this lovely 3
bedroom l_nsulated
home. Hot waer heat,
cen1rat
air,
full
basemen1,
formal

dining and nice kll.
Hr!IJ\dHJ

Ht•, ulrJll.lt ft'f\

Rummage

Sale

Grace

Methodist, Cedar St. Ent .
Fr i. Feb . 5·9 to 4PM . Very
good

Items,

8

house

hold

Publldaie
&amp; Auction

Feb. 11 , 1982 0110 a.m . lhe
Racine

Home

National

may remove any or ·alt
Items from the sate at onv
tirne .

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

nlture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256·1967 In the evenings.

---·-·-----

CASH PAID for Clean, late
model used cars, Smith
Buick ·Ponliac. GAllipolis
Ohio. Caii446 ·22B2 .
'
BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anythlng
stamped 10K. UK , 18K and
dental gold. Class rirrgs,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything
stamped

sterling . Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992·2054 In Pomeroyl ·
Platinum, old coins, scrap

IU\' N..-1 tavti2·N Ptf'Yirt

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

21 ftlllt Carr,: ,,. ltKk t. llkk '""'·
l~tt~lar lie lid, ur,.t insf11..,. rrN

wttfl,.. ,

:

, . . . _ .. 1111_

woodburnlng fireplace,
large family room .
3 acres,

Yard Salo

7

------Sliver,

Only

$32.500.
iLARGE 10 ROOMS - '
FREE GAS, 2 full baths,

LOST ·black 1!. tan Germon
Shepard, L.onghollow Rd .
area, 304·895·3473, 30H7S·
1915.

Buying · Gold,

basement. on State road
near

LOST·'JNT orea. black &amp;
while English Sette,r. red
collar with bell , 304-675·
4380 between 8:30•4:30.

9
Wanfe~ to Bu
WANT TO BUY Old fur ·

PRICED RIGHT
Sol

FOUND Ladles wris1 wat·

will offer for sele at
Income
t&amp;x
service . Public
Au c tion
the
Federal and store Income following: 1976 Chevoriel
tax forms, qvarterly repor· Malibu Classic, 1974 Buick
Is, and W-2 forms will be 2 door hordlop, 1979 Honda
done by oppolntment . See XLSOOS motorcycle . The
wondo Eblin, 41000 Lourel Racine Home National
Cliff Rd ., Pomeroy . 992· Bank reserves the right to
2272 .
reject ~ny or all b!ds and

1'h story
frame home with 7
rooms, 3 bedrooms.
d i n l ng room
with
1
fireplace, and a targe
niCe tot . House needs
some repair . Asking

otd oil bedroomer. 2 futl
baths, large famllv
room.
basement,
garage and patio . Large
lot above all floods In
Middleport.

ond
red
304·
ond

Red Irts"h Setter with flea
collar, vincl nity of bidwell,
Call388·9710 .

B~tnk

$11,000.00.
RUTLA NO -

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

old yellow Persian

6
Lost and Found
LOST TNT area black
white English Seller.
collar with bell. Coli
67S·.008 between 8:30
4:30.

goods.

crosses land , but would
havetobeput in . Asking

RoushLane

Pomeroy, ·Ohio, re!erves

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors

acres · of nice laying
cleared land with a

Septic Tanks

of

at 1 p.m . Factorv choke
guns only .

land . $9,000.00.
c"LOSE IN - Over sl•

Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
water Line Hook·ups

de li very

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun . starling

living
room,
2· 3
bedroom . l'lz baths, llil
underpinning, 2 por.ches, window A.C., and
equipped k itchen . No

TRENCHING

30th, 1982, at 10:00 a.m . a
public sale will be held a1

bulk

992-2181, Pomeroy, Oh .

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

mo.

4

cat. 304-675·2635.

LOST In the lo•m of Mason,
small brown Chihuahua
dog, chlldrens pel.
Rewar.d, 304·773-5019 .

gosollne, healing oil and

acres which part is fen·

To gOOd home 5 puppies.
Half Shepherd and half
Collie. Call388·9306.

terles &amp; IBM cards. Wath

diesel fuel, call Landmark,

cellar buidlng with 1 1/8

2 puppies, small good with
children . Coil4-46·7152 . .

ch. Call 245-9492 and lden·
lily .

For

This two
bedrQOm home nas new
carpe't in the living
room, new aluminum
siding,
Insulation,
garage and a two story

Two tul t blooded German

Shepherds 379-2168.

aluminum siding, sheet &amp;
cast alum ., copper w!re,
brass, radiators, auto bllt·

Rd., Athens, Oh 45701. Call
1·614-7477 .

-

Coll-«6·3318.

In

CANS.

this paper for location and
grand opening . Rosenberg
Recycling, UO Columbus

close to town. Total
electric, public water
and ready for you .

$12,000.00.
IMMEDIATE

soon

ALUMINUM

992·2259

3 half grown kittens. 0ne
black and white, long h~~J i r ·
rwo bob tailed, real nice.

Rohello

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·

E. Malo1l..lllli

Keep This Ad For

l!inYfhlng to olve Bway and

does not offer or attempt to

Satan will be lied . Then the
ones that are di-vine will

small Pipelines A

4
Giveawa y
ANY PERSON who hos
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in th is
column . There will be no

rest will have 1000 years to

lO Years Experience

Rt.I.Bo•54
Racine, Oh.
Ph 614 143 2591
·
• • 6. 15 .11 c

BISsEll

COOKWARE
MISCELLANEOUS

"-----.------------------

'I

16141992-3556
1·13·1 mo. pd .

Sizes star1 from l0x24"
· Si~es from 4 to • and all
wood buildings 24x36.
lnsul~ted Dog Houses

TOOLS- FURNITURE

26.

7.
8.

David Price

Middleport, Ohio
9 21 "c

bedrooms
bath,
rl;========~~~=======::;~l "modern
kit.,; basement,
nat. gas furnace, and

)Wonted
l For Sole

Ohio

Stobart, Sr, who departed :RETIRED widow g 0 n·
this life Jan 29,1980. A lear . tleman would likd to write
drop falls as I recall, the .or meelwidow lady . Sober.
hoppy doys we knew. Sodly non·smoker: F'or • cOm \
missed by Wife, children, panlonsh lp. Coli lor further
grandchildren, and great lnformollon, 304-773·5477.

1614 ) 742-2131

276 Syc1more St.

Announce!Tients
JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier. 30H75·7397 .
Camp Conley .

J

In memory of George D.

John Wise

992-6259.

• Dump Trucks
• Lo-Boy
• Trencher

These cash ra1es

} Announcement

Also wood SpliHer
For Rent

Utility Buildings

eSeplic
Systems
Large or small Jobs
PH . 992-201
1·21-1 mo . pd.

SI/TIS~Y YOUR NEED&gt;

11,-461.84 45769, )mill 12 :30 p.m. on
Cemetery Fund
556.81 February 16, 1982. The bids
Fire Protection
will be opened al2 :30 p.m .
Fund
14.955.06 .on
February 16, 1982 and
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
6",74-4.00 read aloud for the following
Total
85,637 .« vehicles. Each bid to meet
Bal~nce
the conditions and
oec. 31, 1981
.specifications as follows :
General Fund
6,085 .36
Specifications may be ob-,
Motor Vehicle
tained from the Meigs

'

Modern Electric;a 1
Equipment

11125. 26, 27. 28. 29, Sic

.

Fund

:

~---~---

.

.-- · Public Notice
- - -Public
- - -Notice
···--Fund
11.353.57 fice located at the Cour-

Road and Bridge

... ,With Genuine GM
; (,j 1
Parisi

I

Include discount

Public Notice

.· -

----------------------~
.
I

Williams to victims

In Memoriam

OPEN
Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
SALE PHONE NO.

BUILDINGS
EXCAVATING

16--M.H. Rt!Nir
. 11-Uprtolstery

objtctlortll. Till! Publlstl~r wilt net bl rl!lponstblt lor mere tMn ont
incorrec.tlnstrtion .

.
More witnesses link

or You Pick Ua

PULLINS

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

Rates and Other Information

.

NOW

U - Gtntrtl Hauling

Up to !Swords ... ontdlvlnstrllon , , ...... . . .... ....... , .. n .M
up to !Sword• ... '"'"day ll'lltrtlon . : . . . .. .. . ..... .. ...... J.t .tt
Up to IS WHrds ... sl• days inurtlon , ........... , . . . . ...... 11 .H
( Anrage4 words pe:r lint)
Mobile Home s•les al\d 'Yard sates are accepttcl only with castl
with order. n unt (htrlt! lor adl ctrrytne Bo• Nuri'IIMr In C•n of
Ttlt Stnllnet.
The Publiiher ruervn the rltht to tdU or rtlecf '"" Ids deemed

.

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

-=~====="i=""'1
_,..,,
-

Mixed HardwoOds
Delivery Available

Georges creek Rd . Coli
-441·0294
Cleaner... one nail mile up

~J-Yanii4W . D .

"J7- Reauon

SERVICE

~~=======~::t~========~fr~~~~~~~~~f.===~====~~
'G£T'ji)(JR--WlTI!A
- - - --

74-Moton:vc:le•

U- FarmsforSIIt
14- Busintn Buildings
U- LOII I ACUIU

TV

FIREWOOD

·CUSTOM

71-Au~s tor Slit
7:1- Truclils lor Salt

JJ - Hom•• fOr Salt
n-Mobllt Htmn
tor Stlt

(Pomeroy scrap
1ron &amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk
aulo bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals.
1 mile west of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.
33 ·
Mon .· Fri .8:30 to 4:00
Ph. 992-6564
1 71

675-1333

I'

HARRISON

~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~
~=============2~-~8-=lf~c::~~========~-~-~m~o~.~~~~~~~~STEEL

·

52-CB, TV, lilldiO EqulpmtrU
n-Antlqu•• ·
St-MIIC . Mtrctlandllt
SS - 8u i ldlnt SUpplies
w-Pets lor Sa lt

II- Help wanted
12-snuatlon Wa11te&lt;1
11- lnsuranc:t

your

Let George Miller
t
h k
c ec your presen
electrical system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

41-Eq~o~lpment for Ronf

._Public S•te
&amp; Auction

'

Fund
16.200.47
Road and Bridge
license T a)(
Emerge-ncy
13,1.0.21
Fund
Tel. No. 614
Fund
1,963.17 County
Medical Service Office,
300.00 Gasotine ·Tax
691-62D-4 Cemetery Fund
Fire Protection ,
CASH BALAN(:E
at
Mulberry
Fund
5,768.42 located
Fund
.0,137.33 Road and Bridge
SHEET
Heights. Pomeroy, Ohio
Federal Revenue
DECEMBER 31, 1911
, Fund
4,333.72 45769 .
1
Sharing Fund
6,744.00 Cem~tery Fund
ASSETS:
200.00
Vehicles
to
be
three
13\·
Totol
116,755.10 '!Fire Protection
Cash on Hond
Depository
To.tal Receipts
28,182.27 New Type f I Class I
Fund
1rtd Bal1nces
Balonces IActive
Total
46,532.94 Emergency Ar,nbulance.
38,3-1.5 ..()
Price Will be with no trad~
and Inactive S58,801.00 General Fund
Motor Vehicle
,
Less: Checks Outin vehicle .
. starldlng
-41.532.94
(1) 29, lie
License Tax
The front of the envelope
LIABILITIES :
10,269.26
Fund enclosing
the bid must be
Gosollne Tax
Fund
- --=-.;.,.,,_..,.,...-,- - - mar ked "sea led Bid ,
FUnd
17,121 .99
Balances
_ _..!P~u~b'!'li~c-~N~o'!'li~ce..___ Emergency Ambu 1a nee
Road ond Bridge
Toto!
Vehicle." Bidder to use the
Fund
, 15.795 ..56 I
Llobllllles . 41,532.94
NOTICE TO
county bid form .
Cemetery Fund
456.81
SUMMARY OF
Fire Protection
EMERGENCY
The · Board of County
C.ASH BALANCES,
FuQd
6,774.00
ECEIPTS ANI:J
.
AMBULANCE DEALERS Commissioners may ac132,170.38
EXPENDITURES
. Total
In accordance with Sec· cept the lowest bid or the
ExAelldituros
Bli•nco
307.114 of the Ohio best bid for the intended
Genera 1Fund
32,260.07 lion
.
J•n. 1, 1911
Revised Code, sealed bids purpose, and reserve the
Generol Fund
10,887.69 MOtor Vehicle
will be received by tile right to relect any or ali
L.lcense Tox
Motor Vehicle
Fund
8.306.09 Meigs County Boord of bids, and any part thereof.
L.lcense Tox
Commissioners, In their of· m 29. m s2rc
Fund
496.91 Gasoline Tax
To.wnshlp

44-A,.rtmonh tor liiEnt
n-Furnlsl'ltd RO.mt
,.._Space for Rent

r-Hippy Ads

young bodyguard kU!ed too?"' KesCainaro. All the bulletS In the gu.'IS
kln said.
had been discharged.
Artkan was alone when he pulled
Witnesses noted the Ucense
his while Ford out of the garage of number of the car, and pollC!'
the hlgh-t1se apartment he shared
traced It to a home In a middlewith his wt!e, Nuran.
class area of Pasadena, where~!(
It was 9:56a.m. and rain was bewas confiscated and the four young
ginning to fall as Arlkan turned the
men were taken Into custody, said
corner and headed up Cornstook
Pasadena Pollee spokesmlfn
Avenue to busy Wilshire Boulevard
Rocky McAllster.
and his office at the Turkish consu"Our revolutionary struggle ~
late two mlles away In Beverly
gan In 1975," the caller lo the A:f
Hills.
said after Arlkan was ldlled. "oaiHe stopped at a ~ llght. Eyewitsole targets are Turkish diplomats
nesses and pollee said two darkand Institutions."
'
haired young men rushed up to the
In a written statement, Presldebt
car and opened !Ire through the
Reagan called the attack "a tragic
door and window of the driver's
event," and ordered the FBI to join
side. A hall of bullets, eight Qr 10 In
the Investigation by the Los Anall, smashed through metal and
geles Pollee Department.
glass.
Reagan said Artkan "was assasThe gunmen fied to a walling car,
sinated in an apparent act of terrorthe witnesses said, and sped away
Ism. I condemn this vicious act."
whUe At1kan, hit In the head and
On Jan. 't1. 1973, Turkish Consul
chest, slumped over dead.
General Mehmet Baydar and VIce
His car rolled, hit two autos arid
Consul Bahadlr Demir were shot to
crashed into a tree.
. death at a hotel in Santa Barbara.
"The car was rolling, like by It- Gourgen Yanlldan, Tl, of Santa
self, \Ike there was no driver," said
Barbara was lmpt1scned for the
construction engineer .Rick
attack.
Collette, who looked up from his
0~ Oct. 6, 191!0, two gasO\ine
work nearby and saw two young
bombs were tossed 111 the Bel-Air
men, about 18 to 21 years old, run:
home then occupied by Artkan. One
nlng away.
week tater, a local Turkish travel
Pollee found a 9mm piStol and a agency was bombed by Individuals
.45-callber pistol In Ivy where wit- claiming to be from the same
nesses saw the assassins pause be- group. There were no arrests In
fore jumping 1n a white Chevrolet either case. '

ATLANTA (AP) -A witness testified Thursday that she saw one of
the city's young black sla;ytng victims slumped over with his eyes
shut In a car drtven by Wayne B.
WUllatns, and t~~at the youth faUed
to respond when she called his
name.
Nellie Trammell told jurors at
Wllllams' murder trial that she saw
20-year-old Larry Rogers. a neighbor, with the defendant In a green
station wagon on March 30, 1981,
the day Rogers disappeared. He
was found delld 10 days later.
"I said, 'Larry?' He didn't say
anything," she said. Mrs. Trammell and Charmaine Kendt1ck,
who testified later Thursday, were
the seventh and eighth prosecution '
witnesses to place Williams with
one of nve young bl~cks. The

tor Rent

l-Announcemtllll
4-GivOIWI'f

all

Wiring O~edS.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

town office building In Sa.n Frauclaco. Tbree were '
killed and nine were inJured aulbot1des said. (AP
Laserphoto).

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

SERVICE .

For

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

Meigs County
Rt. 3, AI buy, Ohio
J•nuary 20, 1t12
· 1 certify the following
report to be correct.
Glori• Hullon

t

And Hom~ Mainlenance
• R01&gt;fii1g of all types
• Siding

ELECTRIC

PHONE 992-2156

Columbia Township

' j, ·,\'

:;r;::::;::c.::;::R~:;M:;::;ASH~rr=::;M~oa~IL;:E:::;1
:~:~

P.omeroy

985-Chester
143- Porlilnd
247-Letart Falls

1n Mason County

Public Notice
FINANCIAL
'REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
" For Fiscal Year
Ending December
31, 1911

WITNESS LEAVEll

ROOFING

Gas&amp; Electr 1·c
8 Cutting
e Brazing
e 20 Yrs. E xp.
Reasonable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport,Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Ms. Hut said, adding that Mrs. Coniawne had told her "that guy Is always jealous."
When pollee amved, the gunman
h8d his shotgun trained on a
woman who was cowering behind a
desk and pleading for her life. The
woman was Injured by gun!lre,
Pera said.
1 Market Plaza Is an office com·
. plexor-two towers and a six-story,
glass-enclosed gallery. Streets
around the..flnancial district were
jammed with emergency vehicles
and homeward-bound commuters.

Critics will fight certification
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Critics
of the U.S.-backed Salvadoran gO:
· vernment are vowing to fight PresidenfReagan 's certfflcation that the
mllltary-clvtUan junta has made a
"concerted and slgnl!lcant effort"
to prolect human t1ghts.
The president's ]udgment Thursday came on the heels of pubjlshed
reports alleging that El Salvador's
· troops had massacred hundreds of
unarmed men, women and children In recent offensives against lef•
Ustguerrlllas.
. The certification was required by
Congress In last year's foreign aid
bill before the administration could
continue $65 miuton In aid to the
Central Amet1can government.
Rep. Gerry E. Stlidds, D-Mass., a
member of the House Foreign AIfairs Commtttee, said he will Introduce a resolution to overturn
Reagan's certification, w~lch he
charged Ignored widespread hu. man rights abuses by the Salvadoran mUltary.
"There's no way the president's
going to legttlmately meet the concerns of the Congress In this (foreign aid) law," Studdssald. "I don't
know anybody outside this adffilnls·
tratlon who belleves what the administration Is saying."
A House heartng on the certification Is set for next Tuesday, with a

Meigs Co. Area COde
614
992-Middleport

Gallia Co. Art• COde
614
446-G•IIIpolls
367-Chtshlre
311-Vinton
245-R lo Grande
256-Guv•n Dlsl.
643-Arabl• Dist.

==:r;:::::o=HI=ov:::AUE=:=Y

Emergency talks fall apart
sions from the union In hopes of cutting labor costs that would enable II
to become more competitive with
foreign carmakers.
In exchange, the union sought job
security guarantees and an end to
the purc)Jase by GM ,of parts and
components from overseas
manufacturers . .
EarUer Thursday, Owen Bieber,
a UAW vice president and head of
the union's GM department, had
said union officials were becoming
"Increasingly concerned as the
Fraser said... It's over."
mk' it deadllne approaches."
The breakdown, announced 30
end of negotiations ktUs
minutes before a union-Imposed
Gt .• s promise, made Jan. 12, that
deadline for negotiations, means
all union concessions resulting
contract talks between the union
from a new agreement would be
and the nation's No. 1 automaker
passed on to consumers in the form
will not resume untU July' the traditional time for auto negotiations. · of car-prtce reductions.
"We are deeply disappointed,"
current contracts expire Sept. 14.
Alfred s. WarrenJr.,GMvlcepresNegotiations began Jan. 11 at
ldent for Industrial relations, said.
GM's request. The automaker
asked for wage and benefit conces- "The idea was a very exci!lng one."

l:l111111ified fHII/t'll rover lhf!
followinl(leleJJh.lmf! e.rch.HnKeH ...

Business
Services
.

2--ln Memorltl'ri

DETROIT (AP) - Emergency
contract talks between the United
Auto Workers union and General
· Motors Corp. feU apart Thufsday
night over job security and other
Issues, UAW President Douglas
Fraser said.
Fraser announced the breakdown of negotiations about 11: 30
p.m. after a 114410ur bargaining session that wrapped up nearly three
weeks of contract talks.
"II just didn't go together,"

The

Ohio

I

Three dead,. nine wounded'
after highrise shoothout ·.
B;y JACK SCHREIBMAN

Friday,

29, 1982 .

3

IIUOGIT
..........
,.

Cutl •n• C1rrv
lrown, llut

'12•

sunrNG AT

Sit. yl. 1n111111t1

O•IV&gt;·

1 l1iol

Rublllr

/\

'4"
I 11111·

&lt;;.lVI'

....

·~
·1~. YO.

l "'

ldJIIJ\N[l fl.JHNIHJRf
Ml\lN ~.r

D~ l ly

quotes avaHable . Also
coins &amp; coi n supplies for

sale . Spring Val ley
Trading, Spring Volley
Plaza, 441·8025 or 441·8026.

--------

ICMIIIII

/\

rings &amp; silverware .

111n11

We pay cash for late rnodei
clean used cars.
Fre~chtown Car Co,
Bill Ge·ne Johnson,

4-46·0069.

-----. Wonted lo buy tie iogs.
Paying up lo $140 · per
thousand ." Call 256·636) or
634·3131 .
TOP PRi i::E Scrap Metal,
auto bodies, and cars. Bat·

1

· oluiJIIum . brass a.
Goillpofls Block
1/2 Pine St., .w,.

\

�Ohio
9

Wonted to Buy

•1

Top rabbit Beagle. 13 to 13
1/2 Inches toll, 3 to 3 112
years old, not oun shy, good
hunter &amp; tracker. Must not
run deer ol lox. No fast
dog, two week trial . Con·
tact Bill Carter at «6·3413.

3 bdr. house Plantz Sub
DIY.; $185 n;lO. , 1100 dep.
Ph . .IA6·3617.
House 2 bedroom, 733 Jrd.
Ave.. Gallipolis. Deposit
required. Call .IA6·3870 or
.IA6· 13AO.
.

A nlce~ulld l ng lot . Will pay
cosh. Calll79·2617 .

5 room house, both, large

lot,

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold , silver
. dollars, wood Ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc ..
Complete
households.
Write : M . D. 6Ailler, Rl . 4, ,
Pomero.)'; ofi. Or 992-7760.

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HI DES, Gene Hines
Rt. 1, Amesville, Oh 4411·
6747. Buying raw fur after

Dec . 12. Dally 6 PM to 9
PM, closed sundays. Also
closed Dec . 24 &amp; 25.
RAW FUR buyer. Beef &amp;
deer hlde·g lnshong. Trap·
ping supplies . George
Buckley , Rt . 2, Athens, Oh.
614 · 464 · 4761 .
Open
evenings.

OLD FURNITURE , beds,

Iron, brass. or wOOd. Kit-

chen cubbards of all types.
Tables. round or square.

Wood Ice boxes. Old desks
and booKcases. Will buy
complete household. Gold,
silver, Old money, pocket

watches, chains, rings, and'
etc . Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin .992·
6370.
would like to buy up to 3
acres of land around
Ru~land area . Out of high
water. Prefer black top

road. Contact Larry Barr
742·3149.
Baby car seat. 304-773·5013
after 5:30p .m .

Raw

furs. -.hides,

metals,

scrap

batteries,

radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, . and merct'landise
brokering. Harper·Halste·
ad Sal"age Company , 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also . Flea Market open
dally. Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1-5 pm .
Raw

furs,

hides~

batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow

root, and
brokerlng.

merchandise
H~rper · HaiSte ·

ad Salvege Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675 ~ 5868 .
Also Flea Market open
dally . Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm.
USED piano, $50 to $75.
Call after S p. m .JOH75·
6363.
USED piano, $50 to $75.
Call after S p.m .30A·67.i·
6363.
USED black &amp; Wh ite TV'S'.
Must work. Will pay cash
or non-cash receipt for in·
come tax deduc t ions .
Needed
for
student
microcomputers.
Call
Richard Austin, 304·576·
2026.

11

Help Wanted

Earn
20
per
cent
retirement on $2.000.00
wholesale Instead of 3 per
cent . retirement
on
$7,500PV . 61A-81H7A9 or
61N77-1A14.

Why settle lor less, sell the
best. AVON .· Call A46·3358
or·742·2354.

Associate needed to
manage local office. Should .
have good sales or business
background . Income com·
menSurate to ability . Send
resume to P.O. Box 1084,
Newark. Oh 43055.

space .

Available Jan. 25. Racine

3 bedroom home. 992·630'1.
Furnished home. 992·7706.
UNFURNISHED house,
white frame, 3 bedroom,
electric heat, kitchen not

furn ished wlh stove &amp;
refrigerator. Utility room

1-I~::::::!~~=::~::::::=====~~
11
Help wanted
WANTED : Full·time live·
In Housemanager and part·
time Relief Housemanager
&lt;weekends) to work with
persons handicapped with
mental retardation at
group home In Gallipolis.
Job requires that vou
supervise staff and that
you train and supervise
clients In personal hygiene
and home living skills ..
Weekends off.
Room ,
board, and benefits
provided . Send resume to
John Lehew. P.O. Box 906.
Gallipolis, Oh 45631. Equal
opportunity em plover.

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.
Part time .RN for, 7 to 3
shift. 2 to 3 days a week.
Call Mrs. VanMeter at
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
fer . 992 ·6606.

ADD $60. to $70 . weekly to
your
income,
sell
cosmetics part time. Call
Pt . Pleasant Employment
Service, 304-675·2770.
. TRI ·CHEM liquid em
broidery
Instructors
needed nQW . Excellent ear·
nlng potenial. Elsa Cox 30~ 675-5187.
12

Professional
ServJces

Tax .
Individual
and small
business. For appointment
call367-026!1.

Have vac.ancv for elderly
woman or man in my
private home. Good ex·
perience.
Reasonable

rates . Coli 614·667·6329 or
61A ~667 ~3402 .

Excellent typist desires
part time employment. Ex·
perienced legal, Insurance.
Write Bo)( 729· A c/o Daily
sentinel. Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.
Have vacancy for elderly
person . Room, board, care,
and laundry . 992-6022.
wanted to buy, rent or
business In MidI db, port or Pomeroy, Also
'
to buy C·1 and C·2
Liquor license. Would like
to rent empty building In
Middleport. Phone 992·9981
or P.O. Box 405, Pomeroy .
Serious inquiries only,

Bookkeeping, Income tax
service, Individual and
business . Call Richard
Bailey at 992·3861 after 6
p.m .

13

31

Homes for Sale

2 bedroom brlcj&lt; house,
large patio, sliding . dpor,
lull bosem~nt, garage, 1
acre lot on state Rt. 35. Low
50's. Call416·0755.
3 or A bedroom house with
bath In country on 2.3
acres. Storm windows,
rural water, garage, lots of
storage space, close to all 3
mines. Price reduced for
quick sale. $15,500. 7A2·
2502.
or rent·l bedroom fur·
nlshed home on Bud Chat·
lin Road on big level lot.
576·2711 .
Comfortable 3 bedroom
home , 8 112 percent
assumable loan, and Is
near PPHS, large fenced In
yard, kitchen appliances
and
more.
We
are
relocating lind can share
realtor's lees by selling
now. Call after 6 pm 675·
1625.

Situations wanted

Wanted: Person to share 2
bdr. apt . Call245·5835.

Insurance

SANOY AND BEAVER In·
surance co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallla County
tor almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
Free Lance Cinematogar· available to meet in·
pher/ reporter·found, sllen· diVIdual needs. Contact
t, and video . tape tor TV . Lewis Hughes, agent.
statiOn . Write News Depar· Phone.IA6·3318.
tment, P.O. Box 13, Hun·
tington, wva. 25701. E .O.E .
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
COMPREHENSIVE PLA· celled?
Lost
your
NNiiR / ENERGY SPECl· operator's License? Phone
Ail 5-T . OV R DC, an 11· 992·2143
County southern Ohio
multi -purpose regional
planning agency, Is taking
II
Wanted to Do
resumes for the position of
Comprehensive
Pl~n ­
Babysitting In my home.
ner!Energy Specialist. A
Coll4i6·0390.
Bachelor's Degree In one of
the following Is required:
Will care for an elderly
city and regional planning,
man or woman In our
public administration, ar·
home. $600 per. mo. Coli
chltecture or civil
446-1163.
engineering . or related
field. A Master's Degree is
CARPENTRY, siding &amp;
preferred (t~ree years of
remodeling, phone 30H76·
relevent local agency ex·
2989.
perlence may substitute).
The position will be respon·
slble tor conducting OVR ·
IN home sitting lor the
DC'S energy convervation . elderly . Experienced nur·
related activities . Ex·
ses ald. S days a week. Will
perlence In conducting
discuss wages. Call after s
workshops, conducting
p.m. 30H7H297.
research and writing
reports, and In preparing
grants Is a plus. Salary
range :
$12,000·$16,000.
Please submit resumes by
February 8th to: Executive 22
Money to Loan
Director, Ohio Valley
REF
I
NANCE
or purchaM
Regional
Development
commlslon, 740 Second St., your ·home. 30 veer fixed
Portsmouth, Ohio . 45662. rote. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
'An Equal Opp3rtunlly Mortgage, 11 E. State St.,
Athens, Oh . .592·3051 .
Emplpyer'.

with washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 acre garden &amp;
yard . Mailing address
Gallipolis Ferry, lease &amp;
deposl required .· Owner·
ship management. Phone
Huntington, 304·522· 1990.

THREE bedroom, 2 baths,
. lamily· recreallon, laun ·
dry, workshop, 2 car
Plano tunlng·Be kind to gar~ge fenced yard, $425.
your ears. Coli Bill Ward plus deposit, 508 McNeil
for appointment, 416·4372Ave . Pt. Pleasant, phone
30H7Hr53.
C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax THREE bedroom, 2 baths,
setvlce for business and in· h•mily·recreatlon, laun·
dlvlduols.
dry, workshop, 2 car
Carol Neal .IA6·3862 garage fenced yard, S.25 .
plus ~eposlt, 508 McNeil
Rubber Stamp &amp; BUsiness Ave. Pt. Pleasant, phone
cards. Ususally one or two 304·675·5453.
days service. Dismuke's
-405 2n~. Ave .. Gallipolis, 42
Mobile Homes
«6·0A74.
lor Rent
23

AccOunting -Income

Full ch\l~ge bookkeeper 1
to 2 years recent experience In general
bookkeeping, preparation
of payroll, taxes and sales
taxes ,
Send
salary
requirement l!lnd resume to
Box 505 ln. care Gallipolis
Dally Tribune, 825 Jrd.
Ave, Gallipolis, 45631 .

scrap

metals .

garden

area . 992·5858.

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end . Sl2.50 per ton . Bundled
slab . $10 .50 per ton .
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co ..
Rot:k
Springs
Ad . ,
Por.•eroy. 992·2689.
Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middl eport. 992·
3416.

HouMSiorRent

THREE bedroom house,
Haven Heights, fireplace
with heatolator, hardwOOd
floors, family room with
sliding glass door, forced
air fuel oil heat. 8_%
assumable loan. Fm·HA .
Call 304·895·3610 or 304-675·
4380 ask for Beverly,
Mobile Homes
lor Sale

·TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Price
reduced. used mobile
homes. CALL A46·7S72.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESS 'E L'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 416·3868.
12&gt;&lt;60 2 . bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan·
clng available. Phone 416·
1294.

2 bdr. and ·3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call .IA6·0175.
Furnished ,
ideal
for
couple, no inside pets,
pr ivate lot, big yard, 4
miles out. Call «6·3918.
2 bdr . trailer furnished,
adults only, BroWn Trailer
Park, 992·3324.

2 bedroom house trailer In
Racine. Available Feb.l.
$200 month .. $75 deposit.
You pay utililles. 614·367·
7811.
Construction
workers
trailer for three . Phone 304·
773·5651, Mason.

MOBILE home lor rent
with option to buy, 304·576·
2711.
FURNISHED 2 or 3
bedroom mobile home . Un·
furnished 1 bedroom apart·
ment 304-675· 1371 or 675·
3812
2 bdr. furnished trailer .
Call416·3522 .

44

Apartmemt
tor Rent

Furnished
room
$85,
utilities pd., single male,
range, refrlg. share bath.
«6·4416 alter 7PM.
Furnished apartment for
rent. Call .IA6·3937.

Deluxe furnished apart·
ment, excellent location, I
or 2 adults, only $275, ref . &amp;
dep. required. Call 4A6·
0038.
2 brd. apt. HUD excepted,
kitchen lurn. Caii67B104.
2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in
Crown City. Coll256·6520.
APARTMENTS
FOR
RENT. APARTMENTS· I
AND 2
BEDROOMS.
RENT STARTS AT: 1
BEDROOM $152,
2
BEDROOMS
$188 .
DEPOSIT $200. CALL A46·
2745.
Furnished apt. 3 rooms
with private bath . Referen·
ces preferred, 84.5 2nd .
Ave .. Gallipolis . Call 416·
2215.

197212&gt;&lt;60 mobile home fur·
nlshed with extras. Finan·
clng available. Call • 367-.
7175.
2 room furnished apt .,
adults . Call446·0168 .
1973 New Moon mobile
home. 2 bedroom 12x65, un· N ow a c c e p! I n g a p ·
furnished. Call «6·6545.
plications for 1 bedroom
handicapped apartment.
l2)C65 underpinned, car,pet Only handicapped or age 62
all new, nu·sosh windows, or over need apply . Rent
rural water, excellent con· amount based on income.
Housing
Op ·
dltion with patio &amp; awning. Equal
portunlfy . Call 992-7772 tor
Call416·2395 alter 5:00.
further information.
1973 Champion mobile
home. Set·up &amp; ready to
live ln . Coli 416·8286, alter
5:00PM call «6·8127.
REPOSSESSION . 1981 all
electric mobile home, set
On lot ready to move Into.
Payments $159.47 month.
All Stale Modular Homes.
576·2711 .
USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME.

Efficiency
apartment .
Roush Lane, Cheshire . 30..·
773·5882.

Apartments. 675·55~ .
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis .
614·«6·8221 0! 614·245·9484.

«

Friday, January :19.- 1982

Apartmemt
for Rent

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

by Larry Wrighl

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

72

~&lt;;fAAT~

TWO apirtments, single
persons only, nea:r down
town area, Dr. Slack, 304·
675·5261.

191'1 Chevy ·1 ton, flal bed
truck, S.,200. Call «6-4782 .

Afe l!oRf.l.

• A Moose A
t&gt;IW KeePS

~~ C4eANi~

1974 CHEVY 112 ton CTO, PS,
PB, AM· FM stereo, 8·
track, 304·675·3985.

L.AfJ/ PIIJA'f. "

CAPT,.rN EASY
t DON' T kNOW A&amp;Our
THil' VOICE Blit&gt;INI!~ .
IN EFtiW5- HEAD.

73
Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
I ight housekeeping apt,,
Park Central Hotel.

.•. ,., 111,....

wheel
truck .
Phone 985·4339 after 4 p .m .

Misc. Merchandlce

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

51
Household Goods
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair', rocker, ot·
toman, 3 tables, $.500. Sofa,
chair i!lnd ·loveseat, 1275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from S285. to $795 . Tables,
.$38 and up to $109. Hlde·a ·
beds,$340., queen size, $380 ..
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65 . S
pc. · dilettes from $79., to
$385. 7 pc. , $189. and up ..
Wood table with A chairs,
$219 up to $A9S. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and $375.,
maple or pine finish.
'Bedroom suites · BasseH
Oak, $675., BasseM Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. alid
up to S3SO . Captain's beds.
$275. complete . Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm , $68. and $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr . c~ests, SA9.
4 dr . chests, $42. Bed
lrames.-S20.and $25., TO gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or ·
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby matresses, S25 &amp; S3S,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; SJO.
Electric . fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 cha!rs.
Used,
Ranges.
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bul&amp;vllle Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri. , 9am to5pm, Sal.
«6·0322
SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. 3 piece living
room suites $199, maple
rockers $.19, several chest
of drawers, new &amp; used
woOd burners, new .table
lamps $18, wood cook
ranges, new 5 piece dlnnet
sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
several dlnnet sets, silver
stone·all siZes, bunk beds
$100, new toots of all kinds,
wringer Maytag washer,
Linoleum rugs 9x12 $10,
and lots more. Hours 10am
io Spm, A46·3159.
GOOD

USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside 'Stone Crest Motel.
oiA(\·7398.
GOOd 16 cu .ft. refrigerator

for sale. Call «6·1146.
BEIGE sofa, excellent con·

dillon ,
304 · 675 · 7172
evenings or 675-3230 ext.
305 days.

54;:=;M;I~sc;.~M~er~c~h~a~n;dl~c~e=
- - - ~--

20 II Gibson chest freezer .
Had only a few months.
$375 . 742·3154 or 992'1467 .
Maple dinette set. A bar
stools, sofa . 992-7639.

Firewood lor sale. $35
pic~up truck load . 614-985·
3887.
Craig AM· FM cassette
with Craig 50 watt power
booster. 742·31S. or 992·
7461 .

Farm Equip.,.ent

Firewood $35.00 pickup
load, lour loads $100,
delivered. Call388·9823.

HAY elevator, STOll. 304·
882·3501 after 5:00.

Regular size buck Stove,
wood or coal, Insert or free
standing, 3 weeks old, S800.
Coli .IA6·3063.
Win. M·12, 30' full choke.
Win. M·12, 28' moo. Rem.
M·31, 30' lull choke. Phone
416·3413.
Quilling frames, book
shelves, picnic tables, or
lawn furniture . Call 416·
0978.

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
«6·1675
Special Sole on NEW
TRACTOR!
Model
HP
Price
260-24
S.924.00
260-24
5295.00
260-24
m4.oo
260-24
5295.00
31Q28
31Q28
31Q-4x.t-28

5594.00
.5'183 .00
7072.00

35
35

6555.00
6945 .00

RAY'S
USED FUR ·
NITURE Bunk beds $65, 460-41.9coal stove S85, living room 460-41.9suite $35, couch $15, 460-41 .9bedroom suite $65, dinette ol60-4x.t-41.9set $35, refrigerator $45.
Call367·0637.
51oAIH51Q-4x.t-~.551Q~.5-

Furniture for sale. le~vtng
area must sell . Regular
Buck stove excellent con·
dillon (free standing) $600.
8 fl. pool table, $300. Com·
plete Groyle Hill living
suite w/ tables, Sl.OOO. Call
.IA6·7497 or 416·4942.

7778.00
9886.00
8450.00

.

Work pony, hoy. . Call 379·
2761.
Hay &amp; Grain
Nice Spelt straw. Coolville
614·667·3838.
64

Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·2205.

Quilts S35. 614·669·6041 .
NEW buildings at factory.
All parts accounted for. All
structural steel ·carrles full
factory
guarantee.
Buildings 10,000 square feet
the smallest 1,200 square
eel. Must sell lm ·
medlotiey . Will sell cheap.
Call toll free 1 · 800 · 2~·0065
or 1·800·248·0021. Ext. 777.
UNION labeled Imprinted
political
advertising
specialties, New army field
jackets, {liners) clothing,
combat leather boots, &lt;sur·
plus rental clothing), new
heavy winter clothing, Sam
Somerville, Pt. Pleasant
JOH75·333A, &lt;wareh"'(se 7
miles east of Ravenswood
Old Rt. 21.) Open Saturday
and ·Sunday afternoon.

S"'S_...;B::;U::;I:::Id::;l:::n:zP..::S:.::Ur:.PP~:cl:::l•::•:...._

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, o.
Call245·5121.
l'els for Sill~

56

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·

7220. .

.•

D~AGONWYNO

CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
lndoor·outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. . Dober·
mons. Call «6-7795.
BRIARP;O.TCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AK C Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Coil :1118·9790 .
Reg. cocker spaniel pups,
color blonde. Call .IA6·1262.

4 Bedroom house In PI,
Pleasant on M-m•o:t Clr·
cle. $300
plus S200
1146-l23ol.

Livestock

63

.. . ·-· ... ..
.

71

.... .

t-4

'" '

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

Auto lor Sale

vw 1969, $500. Last. year of
this style, 1,000 miles on
overhaul, rebored, needs
repair . Call Forst· MIIchell,
416· 1136.
For sale 1978 Chysler Cor·
doba automatic, AT, PS,
PB, arr, cruise, leather in·
terlor, loW mileage. Must
sell. Caii24H841.
1972 Pontiac. In perfect
cond., has new vinyl top.
Con be seen at 107
Chlllocothe Rd. , 245·5879.
49 Chevy S.W. runs. new
brakes, wood in gOOd
shape, $1,200 or best offer.
Cali379·2364.
1969 Plymouth wagon . 318
auto. 985-4346.
1980 El Camino. 6U·H2·
2784.
1976 Hondo Civic. Good
cOndition. 614-985·3816.
1972 Ford Torino 351 ·C,
fastback sport, new tires,
A· 1 eo,ndlllon. $995. Must
see. 614·667·3085.
HARTS Used Cars, New
Hoven West Virginia. Over
20 tess expensive cars in
stock .
GOVERNMEN.T
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now available
through local sales, under
$300.00. Coli 1-714·569·0241
tor your directory on now
to purchase. open 24 hours.
78 Monu. V·8, $2200.
automatic, 304·576·2971. .
68 THUNDERBIRD, 69,000
actual miles, UOO. 304·675'
4201 .
1971 DODGE Challenger
3&lt;111. Phone 304·675· 1936.
1977 THUNDERBIRD, ex·
cellent condition, will con·
Sider a trade, 304·675·.w96.
1976 NOVA SS, 305, 3 speed
on floor, $UOO, 30H75·
2745.

2 bdr. house on lower Rt. 7.
Oep. required. Call 256·
W3.
'

"''- or tr-.runnlng

coon

PURCHASE or euume
payments, 1976 Mlvrlck,
~~!Mid condition, ~75-

1636.

79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
wheel·driVe, 29,000 miles, 8
cyl. call alter 3 p.m . lOA·
675·3898.

YEAH, Y!OAH, QI(AY-

1979 fOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, :ll.. ton, .t( speed,
$4,500. 304-675 ·1578. Alter '
3:30675·1320.

SHE 1$06 WITH.
I!EH AKER5?•.

1 6ET TH' ME55AGE!

ER- M155 Rfi'IEL
EVER 5lfl' l't!EitE

CLOTHEG SURE ~LL)~~;'j

1980 CHEVY Scottsdale, '10
ton, 4 wheel drive. ~ speed,
AM· FM, regular gas, 29,000
miles, good shape, 304·773·
5150.

1'

Auto Parts

&amp;

Accessories

ONE 350 Chevy engine,.one
327 Chevy engine. Both $80 .
One 76 Chevy truck IIO&lt;'d
$20. Chevrolet truck bed,
one 650 duel line Holley
Carp. $50. One 76 truck rear
end $75: 0ne 350 turbo tran·
smission SSO. Phone 304·
675·6750.

CAMPER
topper
lor
pickup, $150., 304-675-6113.
Auto Repair

77

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work. ProfeSsional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, .IA6· 1968.

81

•

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commerc-ial and residential.
free estimates. Call 256·
11&amp;2.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
Call «6·2107.

WINNIE
WINNIE, I

/¥LAX? MAYBE
WE CoULD #tJ11f
I!IENEFIT THI5
AFTE~NOON/

YOU, YOUR ASIIWS ... OR

.IIEING

PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling. ·
,20 yrs . exp. Call388·9652 .

al(#l,:f~/
JU5T WHAT I&lt;INI7
OF ~'«:!MAN fllO
YOU TAKE M!!
FOR'!"

WHY PON'T 'lOU

THINK )t)U NEED TO

(bET 'YOU~ J"H!t:MI'~ IN
OIWER! llf~XM' MEANs MORE 10
A~!'

AMERICANS
... ALWAYS Plfe·
TENPING TO liE

SOHWnNJUS/
P.'E~APS A !liT
MORE M~Y
WOIJLP PUT

AHASI!/

---·- -- Call «6·2801 lor termite,

roach, ·bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
esllmates,sBill Thomas. ·

RON'S Television Service .
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
nouse calls~ Phone 576·2398
or «6·24S. .
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331.

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perlenced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician.
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304· 675~
2088 or 615·4560.

Evening tele.v ision listings _____________________
FRIDAY
JAN. 21, t88Z

&lt;Ile PM MAGAZINe

()) GOOD NEWS
ffi IN&amp;IDETHE Nf~
(I)
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(I) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
8(f) TIC TAC DOUGH
CIJ i1D MACNEIL-I.EHAER

Water wells; Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-895·3802.

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential. automotive .
Er;nergency service. Call
882·2079.
Plumbing
- - '&amp;=-H
:.:c,eatin"'g' - - - CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 416·3888 or «6· 4477

a3

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial/ industrial .
Phone882·2079.
Generol Hauling

.JONES BOYS WATEf!
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367-oS'IJ .
NOW HAULING house cool
&amp; limestone lor driveways.
Call lor estimates 367·7101.
17

Upllolst&lt;try

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.

1~6-71133or ~· 1833.

MOWREYS Ullholste,:;Rt
1 Box 12•. Pt. Ploasant, 304:
675·•1S..

11 :01
11:30

WITH LOUl811UK!YIIA

MCCLAIN'S LAW

Detective Get . . poaea •• a
memb:lr Of tM Aryan Brother·
hoodaothat heltabletogeth.,
evidence that two membera of
the ltfOIIP ate reaponalbte for a ·
aerlll of unrelated alaylnot .

(§o.!!J.Inl.l
.
.(JJ(JI OALLASJ.R. ahowa

..aG ()) . , . _ STOIIY

I

SOLID, GOLD Hoat :
Dionne Warwick . Gold record
wlnnert pertOfm their hit

7:30

8 •00

THITONIOHTIHOW

12:30 W.cDTNUIITOPICTV

.-- y -'JWPIIII
"LIIIIfllll" 1M1

::=

f'IIIDAYI

12:61

1.00
1:10

2:00,
.I

1:11
2;:10
3.00
3::10

=:.,~tePOR;r

=-(-·1--AU..D
-·lilY
L__

=~'An.ft

MOYII ·CDRAMA) ••

Ul'l OP IIIUY

1 .

HI DOUG
COLLIQI IAIKI!TBALL
Furman ve Marthall

I

(;LAHIC COUNTRY •
KING'IC-Ng
NA
AUYel

e
~~RYALI.I!Y
lctl~.A- IIIAN-

DIIILL AND TIIIIIANDIII!LL

ltiTI!Raouaau : Donny
Otmoi'MS. Al'l' Stevent. Ceo
mini .)

Cil WOftLD CHAMPIONSHIP
IOXINQ Wlllred Benitez VI
Rob~o Dtwan.

~

,

ROCK

CHURCH

PRQCl.AiMI

n .oo &lt;Il e CIJ CD e CIJ tBl ®e

News
()) SOUNDSTAGE ' Ch ick

Corea and Frienda ' br l no
aulhenllc Jazz: bounce l o
Soundstage •• they perform
aome olthalr all time tavOfitll .
mlaa.)
11:01
ORLD AT WAR
11:30
SATU .. DAY NIGHT

ffiICIJ
UYI

CIJ

12:00

KI!NN!:OY C!NTEA TON·
IQHT ' Qre81 V l bee t L i onel
Hampton and Frlenda' A tribute
to Lionel Hampton tdclll olfthe
new aeaaon olthe Kenl'ledy
Center Tonight url ee , with
performance a at the White
Houaeandthacantar. Stephan·
1e Milia , Zoot S ima , Lou Ia
Bellton tnd many other Jau
great a nluta Hampton at thle
autpiclout eafebrttlon. (80
mina.)
1210&amp; (1) MOVIE ·(DRAMA f .. \1,
" Walk on the Wild Side"

11H12
1:00 (f).MOYIE·(MYST!RYJ•••

,....

" Bunn.- Lake 11 Mlttlnl"

CIZle MOYIE ·(HORROR) •••

"frlnkenetaln " 1132 ·
1: 15 (I) ONCE'AND FOR ALL ... THE
LAIT
AWAADI
BHOW
Hllutoua apoor d r award a
at\owtlhlt hlghllghlthe peopfe
and tventt or the put year .

CIJ

AMEAICANTAAIL

.

(]) N!W LIFET!AM(TIME

CJ)COlL!OI!:HOCki!YBoaton
College Yl Oertmoutl\

1;30

MOVIE
·{SCIENCE· FICTIOH •••
"kennera" 1eao
Cl) MOYIE -4THAILLEAI•' V.
.. ,.,
• .,.. 1871
eeif:.oVI! ·(DRAMA)•••
"IQfd DrlYer" 1173

TENTATIVE)
2:00 (]J
WARREN
PA!HNTa

CJJ

.

ROB!RTI

2: 16 (])MOYIRo(HISTORICALJ••\11

"Zulli Dawn" 1880

2:30
2;30

(J)Ie A8CNeWS
ffi

·

MOVI! · CDRAMAI''

" Yeltow C1n1ry" 1843

IBJMOYI!·(OAAM.t.l•••% ' 'In

2•••

(J)I. N!WS

~fJ~Ntfi;)'il ~THATICAAMBLEOWOAOQAME

QU l.J::I}

'

J:ttr•

ANNUAL

'SMrke'

I

CIJ

AI#MD HITCHCOCK
-IINTI
(Jf) . . . AI( PMYIIWI CrtiiCI .

Gene s.alcel and Roger Ebert
review the n•walt movletln
tchwft, including aoenea from :
· On Qoldan Pond' ltlrrlf\1
Katharine Hepburn and Henry
Fonde; ' WftOII Llllll It
Anywa.,.f' wllh Alch,rd
, ... 11§9'1.

10:00 ()) •

. .1

four Jumb6ea,

GEALE

I I I

· .::L;:...~·-

.. ..

~-==ABYIILAie
IOIJDGOLII-t•DioNo

5CUiied,
as a snake
llln the
thick ol
12 Actreu Dohi
13 Without
{Lilt.)

14 Bully tree

15 Medieval
shield
II Coolldge
17 Sheep Uck
It Student's
study

It Uncover
21 Bruillan
tree
22 Conlllct In
literature
23Gennan

URind
DOWN
I Swlu city
%Pfleat'a

veotment
3 "Peanutln
ch.lraciA!r
4 Chemical
lulfls
5 Beach ho1110
1 Viva voce
7 Badly
a Faucet
problem
t Initiate
II Klngaley
play
11 Sl•llllllle with

Yetterday'o Allllwer
%G Freight boat 3t Noted
!3 MinnoW film
Inventor
U SuperlaUve 3% Speechify
In grammar U Queenly
U Football
35 City of
player
Mana ...h
2t Pastry
:n \Vords from
offering
a witness
2t Walk
:It Knock

·,r:n;:...,r;;.,..-;

city

21 Tendency

271nter%8 Droop .
%8 Company
30 Quake
:It Had a bite

35 Skill
:18 Gold ISp.)
3'1ltallan

42 Pavarottl :
' 'Prbno - ··

tJ

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'o how to W'ork It:
II

•·"'
WHA1 YOU Mt6HT
&lt;!&gt;!!1 F~OM A

I?E !M"TER',

IUNGATHI
( J ·I (J

Now arranga h

drct.d '-"'" to

tonn lhl tutpi'IH antwer. 11 aug-

~"' tho ....,. """"""·

Prlnten•werhere: "(

I I I I I I )"
(~tomorrow)

I

ACR088
llndonetlan
Island

31 Salver
4t .Dodged
41 Movie
dot!

ISMIOOH I

Y"ltrday't

diN:MJw•-'
.., THOMAS JOIIPH

llellport

I tJ

I VERAS

.

MOQIIII'FW.IQ

by.HenfiArnoldandBobLee

one letter to eem IQuere. to torm
to.. ordinary worde. .

llfo)'tuoo; .,.,.,.., , _ , . •
abo.t OOftNno Of . . . In

*••

~~·

THE LOYI! IIOAT

QOLDIIII ~ AWAIIOI
ilDPHOTDe:Oe (I) UNDIIRII:A WORLD OP
JACCIUIII
COUITL\U

Q;30

CJl

Unacrambte thell

CIJtlDJ WALTD-Y

0:00

10;30

()) MOVI! •(DRAMA) ••• ~
"Prlwete Affetrl Of hi Ami"

AFRICA

1:01
1;30

Are Smiling''

11144
10:05 (J) Til W!I!K!ND Nl!~l

tt.rm'1 W•r" 1885

@.MOYIE ·I ADVENTURE)
··~ ' 'L•nd Thel Tim•
Forgot" 1875

Gill liANNA'UIIK
()).CD ONI! OP THe BOYS
1. . .

Anchored bV Tad Koppet
11 :35 ())MOvti~)••• 1 'Shk:a
0111'0011"1. .
12 ;00 ()) -ANDAUZN •.

(ll~~r:;:-

INIIOII!LOOK

C1l CRIIII IN TN! HORN OF

C81L.t.TI:MOYIR

Cl) A8C NIWI NIQHTLINI
Anchored b.,- Ted Koppel .

m·

&amp;OI'IJ!.

m

00 MOYII·(DRAMA1"

ClliiiiiOII '12
(fil NOVA '.A Field Guide to

CaptlonedJU .S.A.)(IOmlM .)

Purdue

CIJ CD e ())tlJl ®e

()) JACK .NIIY

hit old apirlt at Ewing Oil and
uaea MllrU•• Stone In tn effort
to raotln hla ttandlng with the
otd cartel . (eo mint.)

(CioMd·

(}I).

®e A8CIIEWINIOHTLINE

Force" 1116
1130 ()) ® WALL ITR!fT. Wfii!K

FRONTPAOIIATUADAY

NIGHT
{fi) COLUO! HOCKEY OU va

1888 Rhodet Raaaon , Ml•
HI I'M. 2) 'Handa Of A Sttanger·
1&amp;62 Paullukather , Joan
Hlrvay. (2 hr• .• 30 "'tna.)

RI!YIIW

opon.

()) IUTT!RFU!I

Cfl MOYII 'KingKongEtcapat'

8:06 (() IIOYI! ·(COMEDY) ••
"McHIIII Nevr Jolnalhe Air

Roger Tory Peteraon' NOVA
talcea •n Intimate look el the
man whoa a blet-aatung
g&amp;Hd•booka on ornlthoiOOY
havl played 1 p'wltal role In
turnklo blrd·watchlng Ia to a

,.,c rJ'MOYII·(IUIPI!N8!)••
"RaurrecUon" 1110
()). C[) HIE HAW Gue111 :
Bobby Bare, Stoneman F•mlly ,
Glater Brothart , Kip pi
Brannon. (80 mlna.)
{!) LAWRINCI WILK SHOW

(f) ABC CAP110NI!D NeWS

(f)llDWAIHINGTONWEIKIN

()).CD

Clle

&lt;JDl

l!r••

" trlllh

!:VINING
7;00
DANCH!VER
C1J
BLACKWOOD
BROTNIIII

(}} AJIOTHIRL.,E
CIJ I!!NNY HIU.INOW

HAZZAIID

I1D MOVI! ·(MUSICAL!"\;

SATURDAY
JAN . .:ao, 1182

Gueat t;to•t : David Br•nnar.
Gueett: Hat en G~r,ey Brown .
(!Omina.) .
.

e

O;OO

5:36 (])RAT PATROL

TOfl., THE MOUN
IN THI tr Allfl.Y

.(I)

C1J

IACH!LOR FATHI!R
RATPATfiOL
AOISIIAGL!Y SHOW
M-ON IIIPOIIIBU

6:30 ([) ANOTHI!R LIFI!

NI!W8
ClJ MOYII #CCOMRDY)
••
"lnlpro....- Ch8ftnefa11 t . . 1 '

FDR ABC Nowo

sPec ial that mark• the 100th
annlvlfllf)' of Fr•nklln Dtlano
Rooaavalt'e birth ; David
Brinkley will anchor, with ABC
Nlwa eorreepondanta Pe.ter
Jennlnga, Robart Trot.n and
Jamet Wooten contributing .
Alao, noted Rooaavelt ecttolar,
Arthur M. Schlee lng•r. Jr. will
act aa principal contulttnt . (3
hra.)
ffi tlJ) TH£ DUKES OF

SEWING Machine repairs,
ser-vice . Authorized Sinoer
Sales &amp; Servicel Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2274.

IS

11 •00 ()) e

"Frldar Thll13lh" 1110

Eiedrical

4:31
0:00
O:DO

'Flame TrHe of Thlka : Frlanda
in High Placet• The aon ol the
Grant ' a haad man , Sammy ,
linda hit wa)' Into the dynlmlll
atoraga hut , whlleNjombo Ilea
d)'ing Under 1 witch doctor· a
apall . (Cioaed · Captionad ;
U.S .A.) (SO mlna.)
10:58 (I) ~BNUPOARN!:WI

LouialanaTachvaOidDomlnlon
Unlvaraity
(]) IIOYI! ·fTHAILL'ERI ••

&amp; Refrigeration

4: 30

@ MASTeRPIICR THEATRE

()) WOM!N'I IAIK!TBALL

CIJ (J)I iii

••••
CIJ CIN
IPOIITI M!PORT
4:00
MY LITTLE MAROII

10:011 (I) T8S I!!YI!NING NEWS
t0:28 CIJ CBN UPDATI! NEWS
10:30 (I) MIU.lR'SCOURT

Prolilet of nolawor1h)' aventtln
MWa, aclence •nd entertain·
ment . teomlna.)

backhoe work. · Sp·ecial
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·«40.

••• ''Coel . .ner'a D•u•hler"

i1D NEWS

m

Gallipolis Diversified Con·

-

BUBIN!SB

A!POflt
Gill
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
I1D IUUES; OHIO
l]l) •
II!NTI!RTAINMI!NT
TOHIGHT
, 1:3a
aAIII'OfiD ANo aoN
7:58 (I) CJftliPDATE NEWI
8;00 ()). CIJ N8C MAGAZINE

st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;

Angle Dickinson alan •• a
recently divorced women who
muatadjuat toalnglelila.andtha
world or the working woman .
Alao atarrlng John Ireland and
Dorl Branner. (Premiere; eo
mina.))

(I) CRII!ATIYITY WITH BILL
MOYERS 'The Inventor a· The
!leah ollnaight that turn a
inventor• on, and the long path
theyloltow to market new
invention• end convince their
invest ora, Ia e•plored 11'1 I hi a
IOOII II the II)ICill world 01
invlrrtbrt.
'

(]) ANOTHIA LIFE
OOeCJJ FAMILY FEUD
Cl) LAYI!RNI! AND IHIRLE't
.t.NDCOiiiPANY

E xca va:.:.lln::;g.___

3:46 (]) MOYII! ·(BIOOR.t.PttiCAL)

GCIJt!DJ FALCONCAIIV

1;00 ffi WINNERS
1:30 ()). YOU ASKED FOR IT

Warwick. Gold record wlnnera
e!_rform their hit aongt.
llJ AUSTIN CITY LIMITS
' Johnny lee and Chuly
~ c Cialn ' The new urban
cowboy appeal or Johnny Lee .
and the bright contemporary
tound of Cherlv MCClain blend
on Aut lin Clly lim IIIII he
performt hit h l tt l n Glau l c
honky·tonk etyle end aha tlnga
her current emaah , ' Slael)in '
with the Radio On .' (eDtnlnt.)

I·-

CAlliE AND CO.

' An Evening At The Moulin
Rouge' GeOf'ge Hamilton hoata
th la naught)', bewdy Gay so· a
cabarilt ahow .

(J)I .. MUPPeT SHOW

NIOHTLY

()) .CD

CIJ 100CLUB
@ 8TANDINO ROOII ONLY

REPORT
tlJ) NIWS

())

12

10;00

I!YI!NINQ

1:00

.....

'

NO - All' IT ISM'T lilY PLACE
T' 1151(, I!IJT GEE - ~
SHE COlliES eACit HER

7353.00
7995.00
6851 .00
9619.00

1 apartment size Sears
Kenmore washer, real
64
9314.00
nice, $90.00. 1 GE dryer, 61Q61Q-4x.t-64 -11,304 .00
$80.00. Call256·1207.
Plus Freight
1 Whirlpool Imperial 90
auto. washer, J speed, 5 Sale Date March 13, 1982
CALLNOWl
cycle, like new, $125. Call
256·1207.

Chow
pu pples,
FA
Himalayan,
Persian c and
Siamese kittens. Call o~At~·
with Major Hoople JW after 4 p.m.

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
decorated un·
furnished, 3 rm. house.
Suitable lor single person
or retired couple. Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
required. Call o~At~·IWSO or
.IA6· 1291.

61

MASSEY FERGUSON 96
bushel
grinder -mixer,
same as . new coridition, 304·
372-9773 .

II"~======::::::J.:::::::::==:::;::.~

4554.

For Sale or Trade
1974·CHEVY '12 ton CTO, PS,
PB, AM· FM stereo, 8·
track, 304·675·3911.5.

~'

Restaurant
equipment
recondilloned by RADCO.
Call 304·523· 1378. Hgtn.,
WVA.

Gibson 15 II. freezer. 1 year WOOD·304. 458 . 1833 _
old. $350. 614-949·2732.

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

,....

It-~=========:;;==========~~1979
Ford F ·250 4
drive. Good work

Lump Cool $32 per ton.
Zinn Cool Co., Inc. Coli o~At~·
4"''- - "Sp&lt;:a:.:c:.:e:..:
'
f.:;O:._
r.o:Rc.:e.o:n:._l_ _
1-4011 between 9 and 4.
Large trailer lot, Call 446- ·
A26S or «6· A736.
For Sale K lichen table and
chairs, $25. See at 769
COUNTRY MOBILE Home 2Brownell
Ave., Middleport.
Park, Route JJ, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
New wOOd stove, half price,
992·7479.
never used, S350. Con con·
vert to furnance . Call 256·
.
1216, Gallipolis .
., ......

4:.:1~--'""'o,u,_,u~se:lor~R~e!!n!!t__

CONVeNT.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

78 Cherokee 4·w~eel drive,
miles, aluminum
wheels, all tinted glass,
radio, bucket seats, ex·
celle~t cond .. $6,000. Call
675-1932.

.._# _ ~ -

$4

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

IN THe

RffR&amp;AT'
ROOM
AT TH&amp;

!A~Y. ITCOUL.C ALL 81:

DUPLEX,
furnished,
adu Its, 304·675·1902.

home. Reasonable rates,
good experience .. Typpers
Plains 667·6329 or 667·3402.

Page- 11

1975 For~ T880 15 In steel
dump, gas5x• UM Rears.
2 airlift Ayles. 1 Eatlin 2 sp
Rayle. 1 l50 GM engine
complete. Phone 992·3861
alter6p.m .

HOW~@~

FURNISHED 1 bedroom,
t~ll . electric
apartment,
adults only , no pets, coli
304·675·3788.

Have vacancy for elderly
man or woman in my

The Daily Sentinel-

1981 Ford l50 Cargo truck,
14,000 actual miles. EK·
cellent connltlon . Contact
Jon Karschnlk at Farmers
Bank x Savings Co,mpany.

APARTMENT for rent,
$150. per month, 304 ~ 6751972.

45

P_roy..:...Middlepoot, Ohio

Truck's lor Sale

Jumotes: PEACE

MANllf

LIBIDO

SYMBOL

Answtr: He couldn 'l rtmtf'1ber- whet thlt word
meant-"AMNEBIA"

AXVDLBAAXa
LONGJ'.LLOW

One letter aimptJ atanda for another. In thia ump1e A II
uoed for the three L'o, X lor the two 0'1, ete. Sln1le lettors.
apoetroph ... the len&amp;th 1nd formation of the wordt an aU
hlntl. EaC!h d1y th~ c:ode leUen ar'e dltrertnt.
cavnOQUOTES

UJIPZUQ

NZHH

TliFCOIFS

ZB

JMft.FAlZJUV

J

FLFE

OJVVZMHF

THH

CKVI

L F E A J C F . Y.etterday's Cryploqaote :

V.
OUR

MF

8 Z E V 1·

R J P U .V J U
JOY MAKES THE

CLOUDIEST DAY GLAD, AND OUR GRIEF FINDS NIGIIT IN ·
THESUNNIEB1'SKY.-J08EPH PARKER

'•

MF

..

�Pag•

12-The Daily s.ntinel

29, 1982

Friday,

Tapes docu111:e~t Air.Florid~ crash

·President Reagan proposes
hike ·in nuclear spending.
.

'Palm 90, Palm 90... you on the frequency'
By H. JOSEF HEBERT

George,

WltJdJI the depu-tment'1 central to $1.87 blllJon next ye&amp;f..
Research Into both active aDd
. rl.llce, the prcip01a1 ellll!lnates mopasllve
solar beatlnJ lor bulldlnp
ney b' the Ra1b ~ the intstant
would
be
eUmlnated, as would resecretaries and ~ the approsearch
Into
hydroeJectrlc power
ptlaUon lor Energy Secretary
aDd
use
r1.
the
potential energy or
James Edwards' rl.llce start-from
the
oceans.
·
$2.1 miWon In 1982 to S649,001 for ·
E!lel'IIY
conservatloll
grants
to
lll83. There are COIIeip wllng cuts
The proposed budget fllures, obtained Thursday from IIOIII'Cetl who
In ~- lnterguvernmelltal, state and lOcal aovemments would
JeclslaUve a¢ public aiWrs statts. be cut-to $2.5 million from $231.9
asked not to be ldenutled, would
m1111o11 this year and $402.2 million
OYeraJ1, the lll83 budget propoloadd more than $101 mUIIoD to wea·
lalt
year.
als
requests
$7.74
bjlllon
lor
EneriY
pons productions and other nuclear
'I)eparlment
functions,
a
cut
of
$1.7
programs aver 1982 levels.
The bud&amp;et also would cutrtnanc·
lilllloD from the 1982 appropriatiOn.
lng for the natloll's Strategic PetroAt the same time, the presldellt
The budaet submlsllon calls lor
wUI ask iAJlll'e&amp;S to cut energy con·
the ElleriY Department's nuclear leum Relerve ftom $3.8 bWion. this
year to $2.47 bUIIon.
servatloll grants by llln1l»t 90 per·
Jll'Oip'amS to lncrealefrom$'-69 btl·
The petroleum reserve, which ul·
cent aDd eliminate many solar lloo 1D 1982 to S5.5 biDion In flacal
Umately
Is Intended 10 hold 750 mil·
1983,
wblch
beillns
Oct.
1.
Jn
flacal
eDel'liY reaearch Jli'OIII'8ffil·
Tlie propoll1 also JIIO\rell towilrd year.J981, the laltbud&amp;etrl. the Car· t1on barrels of oil as lniurance
ap1nst another oU e!llbariO, now
Reagan's pledge to eliminate the ter admlnlstratloll, nuclear. pro. Energy Department, gro~~plng Its
holds more than DJ mDllon barrels
81'&amp;1111 received $3.69 bllJJon.
and
Is expected to reach ZIG mllllon
· various p1'0II'8IliS under the other
E!lel'iY supply research and debarrels - · a 44-day supply - In
Cabinet agencies that would run veioprnlmt would be slashed from
them If Congress goes along.
AprU.
$'U7 billion during the cunbt year
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prell:
dent Reagan will 1*-opoee further
lnereues tor nuclear 'iJI'OIII'IIllliiD
bls 1983 energy budget but wiU pu!!b
lor deep cuts In solar and etlei'1IY
ccaaervaUon, congressional liN!'·
ces say.

tenni~ates

Judge

.

Twenty-one defendant&amp; were fined
UNION HALL DESTROYED -l"'re 'l1aanda7 nllhi . Ave.lllld ftb 8a'ee&amp; ID Polat JMennnt. Noalllnulte of
damnp hM ' - mUe loOCOI ...., to Point p!eennt
dr t•oyed~'U... HaDior•tedatJackiMl
lire depnrirnell&amp; &amp;'tile!•

·Fire levels .
Union Hall .

I

Area deaths
Clarence E. McDaniel

Darnell and Vera Thomas, both of
Cheshire, and a nephew, George W.
Thomas of Welcome, N.C. He was
also preceded ln.death by two broth·
ers and a slslel'.
Graveside services wUI be held at
2 p.m. Saturday In Gravel Hill
Cemetery, near Cheshire; with the
Rev. WWiam Price ot!lctaUng. Ar·

*•·

Only the metal girders protrud·
lng p-am a roofless Carpenters Un·
lon Local 1.159 Hall at Jackson
Avenue Qnd 27th Street In Point
PleUant remained following a
huge fire which started at apjlroxl-

Clarence Edward (Doc) McDa·
nlel, ~. Route 1, Middleport, died
Thursday at Holzer Medical
Center.
He was a son of the late George
mately 7:30 p.m. Thunday.
and VIrginia Bartrum McDaniel.
The catlle of the fire has not yet
He was also preceded In death by
been
determined and It ma-y take
rangements are by Miller's Home
two brothers and a grandson.
days
before oftlcla!a can fiDd an
lor Funerals.
Mr. McDaniel was a retired em·
answer, according to Point Pleapiqyee of Foote Mineral Corpora·
sant Fire Chlet Jim Wood. No dam·
tlon and he was a member of the Clarence L. Walburn
age estimates were releaaed by the
Hobson Church of Christ In Chrisfire department and LoCal 1159 of!l.
tian Union.
Clarence Le!ter (Bus) Walburn,
clals could not be reached today for
Surviving are his wife, Hilda 74, Route 4, Pomeroy, (Union
,
comment.
Wise McDaniel; three daughters, Avenue) died Thursday night at his
Describing the upper porUon of
Diana Frederick, Chester; Sbaron residence.
the two-level building as enaulfed
Jean Nlcko!B, Demming, Wash.,
He was a son of the late Charles
by flames, Wood Bald extlnliutsh1ni
and Debra Dodrlll, Middleport; and Stella Artist Walburn. He was
the blpe was dlt!lcult at first and
two grandchildren; three brothers,
also preceded ID death by his wife,
firemen worked lor nearly an hour·
Geoi'J'I!; IIIIJlols; Arthur, Colum- Katie; a daughter, Mary Kathleen
and-a-half before brlnalng It under
bus, and Jerry Allen McDaniel, EbUn; a brother, Charles Walburn;
control. Spot !Ires caused when the
Greenfield; four sisters, Wilma a sister, Evelyn RlggJ, and two In·
root fell In ellllled, but once firemen
Wejman, Cheshire; Mary Hawley, rant sisters.
were In control, the fire was put out
Columbus; Martha Frye, GalllpoMr. Walburn was retired having
In nearly an hour.
llii, and Wanda. ToDe, LeesburR.
served asmanageroftheHI-loSerAs many flies as possible were
Several aunts, wteles, nieces and vice Station at Mason, W. Va. He
removed ,from the upstairs last
nei&gt;hews also survive.
was a member of the Knights of
night by firemen and th1a morning,
Services wUI be held at 2 p.mal. Pythlas Loclaeseveral were carted away along
Sunday at the Ewing Funer
Surviving are a daughter, Geral·
with metal folding chatrs, most or
Home with the Rev. 0. H. Cart and dine Luarle Lightfoot, Pomeroy; · which were covered by soot, lab
the Rev. Joseph Guinn ot!lclaUng. grandchildren, Butch Lightfoot,
and.the charred caved-In i'oof.
Burial wUI be In Meigs Memory MlnersviDe; Cathy Eblin Weaver
Wood said a Point Pleasant pa·
Gardens. Friends may call at the · and Jeff Lightfoot, both of Florida;
trOiman first spotted the fire and 29
funeral home anyUme after 7 p.m. Cherie Lightfoot WIUJamson, Ru·
volunteer ftremer\ and seven fire
this evening. Graveside mllltaey tland; Suzie Lightfoot, Pomeroy;
trucks responded. Most firemen
rites will be conducted by Feeney- four ·great-grandchildren; three
left at midnight, but some stayed
Bennett Post 128, American brothers, Eldoo, Middleport; Ra,y·
over as a precautionary measure.
Legion.
mond, Middleport, and Harry, CoNo Injuries were reported, al·
though the Point Pleasant EMS
lumbus; three sisters, Ola
was on the scene.
Flnstead, Jacksonville, Fla.; Lul880n M. Thomas
State Fire Marshall Walter Smlt·
cUie Cox, JacksonvUle, Fla., and
Jason M. Thomas, 93,1ormerly of Doris Lewis, Mason, Ohio, and sevtie was also at the fire scene last
night.
Cbesldre, died recently In the eral nieces and nephews.
Greenfield Manor Nursing Home,
Services wUI be held at 1 p.m.
Greenfield, Ohio.
Monday at the Ewing Funeral
Born April 20, lllll!, In RuUand, Home with the Rev. Don Walker
son of the late Zeth and Ashtabula otrlctatlng. Burial wUI be In Miles · Katie in hospital
Lyle Thomas, he was a World War I Cemetery. Friends may can at the
'Mrs. Kathryn (KaUe) Crow, Sy·
funeral home anyUme after 7 p.m.
veteran.
raucse, Dally SenUnel editorial
Surviving are two nieces, Mary 81\turday.
stair member, Is a medical paUent
at /the Holzer Medical Center. Her
room number Is 4111.

Property transfers

'

and five others forfeited bonds In the
Meigs CoUnt)' Court of Judge
Patrick O'Brien W~y.
Forfeltinc were Cbrtatopher L.
Gorby, Hundles, W. Va., $45.50, left
of cen~r; Patrick Pemberton, P!OO.torvllle, and Larry L. Grubb, Hun. tlngton, W. Va., puo each on
speeding ~es; Carl F. Hlc:U,
Route 1, Racine, $10.10, faUure to
wear required gla
and Harold
Eppa, Reno, $liii.IO, speeding.
Fined were Rlc!lard Haggerty,
Middleport, $10 and COlla, failure to
yield right of way; Danny Hood,
Pomeroy' $10 and COlla, assured
clear distance; 11lonw KeMedy,
Pomeroy, $10 and COlla, faUure to
.yield right of way; Glerm Do!!glas,
Reedsville, $3D and COlla, speeding;
Timothy Davidson, Pomeroy, six
monlhil In jail, five inonths being

To drap charter

Ru.uell Priddy, ~lchael Priddy, Meigs.
Nellie T. Frank, deceased, to
AUce Priddy to Herald Oil and G,as
Chester CouncU 323, Daughters
Johnm
L. Frank, Melanie Isakson,
'Co., 59 acres, Right of Way, Rutland ..
rl. America, wUI meet at 7:30p.m.
RuSsell Priddy, .Michael Priddy, Victoria Anderson, Cert of Trans., . Tuelclay, weather . permitting, at
Alice Priddy to Herald Oil and Gas Meigs.
the hall. The charter will be draped
Tommy Mason Pennington Sr.,
Co., 29 acres, Right of Way, RuUsnd.
In memory of Erna Jesse.
Julius McGhee, Gladys McGhee to Pamela K. Pemlngton to Amos
Members are to wear white.
Herald Oil and Gaa Company, Right TilliB, Lot, RuUsnd.
of way, Rutland.
Marriage lieenr;e
•
Shirley M. Long to Nancy Jaspers,
heres, Lebanon.
R•lilr meeting set
David' Scott Ridgway, 23, and
Jack E. Seelig to Richard W.
A regular meeUng of the Letart Peggy Sue Trussell, 23, both r:r
Vaughan, Ruby Vaughan, Parcels, Township Trusteell will be held Mon- Pomeroy have apPlied lor a marPomeroy.
day evening at the Letart Com- rtage license 1n Meigs Probate,
Roy W. Mayer, dec., to Charlotte ..-munl--ty-B_ull_dlng
__· .:.·_ _ _· -:.___
Court
_ _. _ _....._ _ _ _ _ _ _-1
Pauline Mayer, Cert. of Trans.,
_ ~ ~ ..._.. .........:o _
~_
~ ~ ~~ -~:,;;...
Pomeroy.
_. ... _.
... _. ... _._._...._._.__,_
Carolyn Shields to David J . Craig, ~
Salem.
1

Clyde E. McCutcheon, BoMie Meeutclleon to Blause{ Well Service, ~
' Inc., Olive.
4
Lawrence Ebner Darst: Sharon I~
Darst, David Lyn Darst, by his at- I '
toriley In fact, Cindy Darst, by her 1 ~
attorneylnfast,RexAllen·Derst,by 1 ~
1U attorney 1n fact, Patricta Lou . ~
Smith, Pearl Smith, Enuna Ellen 1
McClure Robert McClure to Carl L.
~
Wolle,
S. Wolle, 1.10 A.,
I

I

BrendA

R~~E. Frank, deceued, to Firat ·

National

Bank

in

Brookings .

YES! We are still doing stmiorpo#rllits tmd you have time ~
eo meet the yearlJook tieMJiimJ,
~
Your full . color po#l'llils are done before trttditionai oil. 4
hll&amp;kdrops III well as scenic set#ngs to give you a wide variety ~
of pref!iew seleaion.
•
We give you indiWIIkJized IIUention.
~
·

GIVE US A CALL
~
EVENINGS &amp; WEEKENDS

itf§ic.l
•
THE PfiOTO PLACE
l·
109 High St., Pomeroy

It
·
14 '
j

j

~

Money actions rded

&lt;'

. -

Cers end Truck

,
r

~·
(' I
~.

,. '

_ _.. .-......
._...-

~l~~, Air Florida Jtt

.,

Washington 1·
; National
; Allport
· Approx 1 2 Mile

187, Order of
Eastern $tar, Mason, W. Va.,lsextendlng an lnvltaUon to an Eastern
Siar members to attend a grand
visitation by Tillie Marcum,
worthy llf8lld matron, and Pau)
Cbrlaipber, worthy lf8IICI patron,
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday In the Point
Pleasant Masonic Lodge Hall,
Point Pleaant. A dinner will precede the meeUng at 6 p.m. at the
ScotUsh Inn on Route 62; north of
Point Pleasant.
A reception will follow the meet·
1ng honoring NeWe Casto, grand
Martha, or the grand chapter of
West. Vlrglnla.

To end marriages
B. Lawson was granted
a divorce from Wilda T. Lawson on
grounds of gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty and the
malden name al Com WIU!i'estored.
A petition lor the dissolution rl. the
IJIIU'I'Ia&amp;e of Jennie Lee Asbley•.
Cheshli-e, and Robert GrayliODAsbley, Middleport, was ftled.
Lllllan F. Stalnaker, Route 3,
Pomeroy, fDed action for divorce
against Harley L. Stalnaker, Route
3, Pomeroy.
Kenneth

Veterans Memorial

.

Admitted--Oris Hubbard, Syracuse; LUlie Gheen, Racine; Wilma
Anderson, RaciDe,
Dlscharged--VIrglnla Hayman,
Dustin Huffman, EU White and
Eva Lawson.

,. '

Preaching senices
The Rev. Mark Flynn will be

preacbillg at the Apple Grove Unl·
ted Methodist Church at 7:30p.m.
Sunday. Refreshments of cookles
and coffee will be served at 7 p.m.

Today's T-S
\

Roosevelt
remembered, D-1

'

Rio Grande
Cheshire
McArthur
Pomeroy
WellSton
Oak Hill
Middleport
New Boston
South Point
South Webster
Ironton
·

10 minute oulage set
An extensive 10 minute Columbus

and Southeni Ohio Electric Co.
power outage wiD . take place in
MeigJ County at 11:30 a.m. on
Tuesday, Feb. 9, Jolm D. Born, C!lfllpany repre!M!ntative said today.
Trarlsmiasion work will be done
during the period at the Bashan,
Meigs and Coolville substations. In
the event of rain at the Ume, the
outage will take place at the same
hour oii the following day . ·

Emergency nm
The Racine Emergency Squad at
10; 03 p.m. Thursday took Sue Davis
from Apple Grove to Holzer Medl·
cal Center.

NBA All Stars
page C-1

A car driven by 'Keith Ashley,
Pomeroy, sUde on cinders and
struck a car driven by Mark
Friend, Pomeroy.'· ~ · were
llght and there were no Injuries.

N .Y.S.E lssu" ~
Consolidated Tr adonq
FndHy . Jan

Volume Shares

All 1t1C1torlsts travellllg State
Route 124 between Racine and Syracuse are urged to use extreme '
cautloll at the construction site at
BowmaD's Run. Barrels holding
temporary llll&amp;rdrall at the location
akJng the lUI have II8ITOIW!d the
tramc portion of pavement.

'

82,124,200
Issues Traded

Up
1,143 .
Unctt.nged
315
Down
431
•N .V.S E. Index

69.39 +0.81

•S .&amp;P. Comp.

120.40 + 1.48

-Dow Jones Ind.

.

AP

Area deaths • ·.. ; .....

.

M

Dullness • . . • • • • . • • • • E-1

ClauUled ......... D-3-7
Editorial .. .. • • .. .. A·%--3
Farm ...... , • . . . • • E-Z-3

OPIN fRIDAY NIGHT TIL I

'

871.10 -t 6.85

Business
page E-1

.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY . ·

72.05
68.88
68.U
67.84
67.76
67.04

68.86
65.71
65.39
65.28

by municipal ordinance. In addltion,olthe municipal·
Illes who negotiated directly with Columbia Gas, we
saw a variance of as much as $23.57 lor 13 MCF o!
gas.''

Under House Bill 156, which was passed by the
113th General Assembly In 1979, two or more munlcl·
paUtles may negotiate one rate with a utlUty com·
pany. The purpose of the bill, according to James,
was to allow villages and cities to combine their ef·
forts in seeking the lowest possible rates.
"By combining their monetary and technical resources, munlclpaUtes are better enabled to negotiate the lowest possible rate from Columbia Gas,"
1,3.i?p. James added. "All tooQften, small commuriltles
do not receive a lair gas rate because they lack the
technical expertise or the money to hire someone who
does."
..
"It Is my hope that the community leaders In this
flve-cqunty area will seriously consider this 'strength

In numbers' approach to seeking the lowest possible
gas rate lor their residents," Rep. James statement
continued.
Gallla-Melgs Office Manager•tor Columbia Gas
John M. (Jake) Koebel said Friday that although his
company had no obj~Uon to consolidated bargain·
lng; Columbia
maintain a ~sltlon of favoring
uhotne rule,"

d&lt;ie'

I

Koebel explained that variations In rate structure
for Individual municipalities Is based on Investment
and actual cost of operation of the gas system within
the commlll)lty.
.
"Equalization of those rates for a large, consoll·
dated area wUI mean that some communities wUI
gain whUe others lose," he added.
"The bottom line for the company would remain
essentially unchanged ," Koebel concludl!d.
Mldc)leport Mayor Fred Hollman said Friday he
(Continued on A-4 &gt;

Lifestyle .......... IH-8
IMal .........
A-4-1
81ate-Nati011111 ••••• D-l·Z
I •

a.,....

• •

c-1-1
TUe-O!ie . . . • • . • • IDiert

.

'

By DALE RO'DIGEB JR.
OvP News F.dltor
GALLIPOLIS -Gallla County
Treasurer Frank MIUs and his staff
Monday will begin mailing the long
awaited 1!!81 real estate tax statements to county property owners.
This year's statements reflects
the new appraised values established by the largest mass apprasial company, the
Cole-Layer-Trumble Company of
Dayton, hired upon receipt of an
order from the Ohio Department of
Tax Equalization directing a reappratsal of all real property In the
county by County A.udllor Dorothy
Candee.
Object of the appraisal linn was

to establish market value as a tax
lien date of Jan.1, 1!1!1. DatecoDec·
tors first visited properties to secure descriptions o! the buUdln115,
terrain features of the land and
other pertinent facts and character·
lstics to permit the appraiser to
later value the property.
Once market value has been es·
tabllshed lor each parcel and approved by the Ohio Commissioner
of Tax Equalization, the appraised
values were used to calculate the.
taxable value lor the 1981 tax bills.
Tax rates ·are based upon levies
passed by the voters, bond retirement needs and budgetary requirements of the various tax districts.
The taxable value multiplied by the

tax rate generates the doUar
charge on each parcel of real
estate.
For the 1!1!1 tax year the audl·
tor's ot!lce has Issue a certificate
calling lor Treasurer Mills to col·
lect S10,6il6,~.66. Included In that
figure Is $169,877.00 In delinquent
tax collections from last year and
special assessments totaUng $814.
Under the total coDection, Gallla
County's general fund wUI receive
an estimated $1,319,000; Gallipolis
City, $86,000; the Gallipolis City
Schools, $2,275,000; GaUia County
Schools, $5,00&gt;1000 and the Gallla·
Jackson-VInton JVS, $1,&lt;00.000.
According to Mills, the Depart·
(ConUnued on A-4)

Ohio's $1 billion deficit battle:
lawmakers explore fiscal options

1,889

MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR - CHILDREN'S WEAR - JUNIORS
AND WOMEN'S C1.01111NG -

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o o o o I o I I I I I 0

11 sections, n P•v" 35 Cenll
A 1\i\UitlmOJIIo Inc. Ntwspoper

Sunday,Jan.Jl, 1982

NATURAL GAS BII..LS are eMpected to averqe 11198 this winter
nationwide, an Increase of 1116 over Iaiii year. Currentlaw provides for a
' gradual rise In natural 111111 piices with romplele decontrol taklnp; effect
Jan. 1985. However, oeveral pi'OJIO'Ial8 lor ~ratlnJ deoontrol are
under consideration In Coilp;re~~~~ and the White HOlMe.

Real estate .tax statement mailings
begin Monday in Gallia County

CouncU 46, Royal and Select Mastelll, will be held at 7:30p.m. Mon·
day to confer the royal maslel' and
the select master degree.

1f2 PRICE

130CCF
$76.55

·lnlormation supplied by Columbia Gas of Ohio.

Special meetill@ '
A special meeUng or Bosworth

.

By LARRY EWING
'l'lme&amp;Sentlnel Stalt
GALLIPOLIS.- The mayors and councU membel)l
of communities In Gallla, Meigs, .Jackson, VInton and
Lawrence CounUes are being urged by the Office of
the Consumers' Counsel and State Representative
Ron James (D·Proctorvllle) to seek a five-county
wide rate from Columbia Gas of Ohio.
Rep. James Is Chairman of the Ohio HoUSE' .Public
Utilities Committee whiCh Is now completing a lour
nionth Investigation of the rate setting policies used
· ·. by Columbia Gas.
"During the progress of our hearings, we have seen
an· alarming difference of rates throughout the
state," James said In a statement Issued Friday.
"MunlclpaUUes who chose to have the Public UtiUtles
Commission set. their rates, consistently'"&gt;. ~1 lower
charges than those communities that set their rates

TOWN

ALL WINTER CLOTHING
. ,
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control asked pilot Larry Wbea·
ton to depart quickly as another
aircraft was waiting to land on
the same runway .
uoK," Wheaton, 34, acknowledged. That was the last word
heanl from Flight 90.
"You talking to that Palm?
You talldng to that Palm?" the
controller asked his ooUeague at
the alrporj's west radar!acWty,
referring to the Air Florida jet.
"See It you give Palm \II) a call."
But there was no l'll!I)Onse
from the Boeing 7rt.

State ~ep., consumer group
• •
•
•
urge JOtnt gas negottattons '

Comparative rate figures

ELBERFELD$
END-OF-THE-MONTH. CLEARANCE
'

After Flight 90 taxied Into ta·
keoff position, the FAA's ground

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Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant

Copyrighted 1982

Deputies check two·· mishaps
Melp County shel1tf's deputies
lnVI!SUgated a hlt·sklp accident that
occurred about8p.m. Thursday evening on the parking lot of the Ra·
ciDe Gun Club.
According to the report, a 1917
car wu dlpnaged when a pickup
truck backed Into the grUI. The
pickup truck left wlthout'4_t.opplng.
Bernard Diddle, Racine, aims the
car.
Thursday evening, the department lnveltlpted an accident on
the Melp Hlih School,parking lot.

WASHINGTON (AP) "Give me a check at the end of
the runway," an exasperated
controUer at National Airport
asked a USAlr pUot. ''I'm look·
lng ·ror a 701."
· By then, It had been nearly six
minutes since Air Florida Flight
90 was cleared lor takeoff, began
Its roll and disappeared from the
radar screen. Repeated calls to
the Boeing 737 went
unanswered.
The frantic search lor Flight
00, moments after the aircraft

.'
cause
or the weather.
And weather clearly was of
concern. During the 2 hours 11nd
16 minutes covered by the tape,
10 pUots Informed the tower that
they were returning to de-Ice
,their planes. They were concerned that too much I~ had
formed during the takeoff
del11ys.
.
The pUot of Flight 90 made no
such request, according to the
tape. Investigators believe be ·
bad the plane de-Iced at some
point before leaving the pas· .
senger bOarding f rea - about 43
minutes before takeoff.

tmts

speeding;

Mason Chapter

Writer

•

26 cases

suspension; ADen Young, Pomeroy,
~\~~~)ended, five years ~tlon,
llllllpel18ion of driver's llcense for 30 60 days In jail, 45 suapended, Wle
days, and court COlla, driving while year probation, attempting to conIntoxicated; Donald SteinJnetz, . vey marijuana to a priaoner at the
Rut1anl( redrl- operation, $100 county jaU; Thomas Zumbro, Mcand COlla; Jobn Coffman, Porlland, ConnelsVIlle, tliOO and costs. 90 da)'s
$100 and COlla, left of center; Gary jail sentence, 110 suspended, two
Hyaell, Middleport, $20 and costs, years probation, drlvint! while inspeedipc; Bruce Hahn, Marietta, $22
toxicated; Ronalll Grady, Racln"and CGitl,
Owen J. Smith, ,$150 and Cllllta, three days in jaU,
Route •• Pomeroy, $30 and costs,
license ~ 30 days, driving
.
'
failure to yield right of way; Darrell
K. Smith, New Marshburg, ~ and while lntoKlcated, and $15 and costs,
10 days In jaU, !eVen suspended and
COlla, reckless operation; Bobby L.
Porter, Rou~ 1, RUtland, $30 and one year probation, npired
coals, speeding; Richard D. Darst, operator's lice~; John McGuffin,
Route 2, Cheshire, $20 and costs, Huntington, W. VB., $30 and colits,
speeding; Steve R. Peery, Raven&amp;- speeding; steven Saunde111, VIenna,
wood, W. Va., $25 and Cllllta, left of W. Va., $21 and costs, speeding;
center, and $30 and COlts, fllilure to Gerald Dill, Minersville, $100. and
display valid license plates; Brian Cllllta, 15 days In jaU, 11 suspended,
Bass, Syracuae, $$0 and Cllllta, six 30 days suspension of driver's licenmonU. probation, driving under se, driving whlleintoK!cated,

Hits Bridge

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~

Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich .
-~

Plant Hits

Vol. 1S No. Sl

Extends invitation

A suit for $18,103.71 has been IUed
In the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Bank Olle of Poineroy
against Chai'les R. Hatfield, Route
1, Rutland, et al.
Ronnie Yoder and the Dundee ·
Emmco Excel Insurance Co., Ak·
ron, llled an acUon for ~.tm.f9
against Charles D. Cox, McArthur,
and Gary Hensley, Ewlngt.on, resulting from a motor ~nt.
In another caae, a rorecloauie action toiallng $18,251.83 was filed
agalnat Nancy L. Pope, Middleport, et al, by the Fanners Home
Administration.

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(Trultee of Trust Created Under
_ ~ __ -~ _
_
Item IV~ Will of John E. Fnnkl, . • ..., .. _ --. - -

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4

Washington
Memorial
Flarkway

Meigs County happenings•.

HIGH
. SCHOOL SENIORS

E=.l~ A.~gt~:.Y.~~:.r .~

A"'CietM ·Preis

crashed Into the Potoinac River
In a snowstorm Jan.13, was doc·
umented Friday In transcripts
of airport control tower tapes . ~
The tapes, released by the
Federal Aviation Admlnlstra·
lion, shed Uttle light on what
might have caused the Air FlorIda plaoe to crash, kllllng78 people, Including four motorists on a
. busy commuter bridge.
But they made clear that the
airport was highly congested on
that snowy afternoon, with as
many as 15 aircraft awalUng takeoff at one point. The airport
had been closed lor a while be-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Top
Ohio leaders are reviewing a smor·
gasbord of fiscal options In trying to
avoid a projected $1 billion deficit In
the state's budget.
Senate -Minority Leader Harry
Meshel said temporary Increases
In the sales and personal Income
taxes were among a long list of
Items mentioned during meetings
.Gov. James Rhodes has held with
legislative leaders.
"All sorts of cuts ... temporary
tax Increases ... just a whole host of
things -were quickly touched on,"
Mesbel said.
But be and Senate Republican
leaders aliree that no one Is yet ad·
VocaUng the use of a tax Increase to
help solve the state's fiscal woes.
"I think there'• a I'I!COIIIlltiOn that
It would be very dlt!lcult to get a tax
Increase through at this moment,"
. Mesbel said.
Senate RepubliCans have ~ailed
lor an Immediately etrectlve cut of
3 percent In IIJll!ndlni to solve the
state'I ilnowll deficit to date of 191
mDllon.

"No tax has reached the stage of
acceptlblllty yet," A.ronof!, R·
Clnclmati, said.
"The feeUng In the Republican
caucus Is that untn the budget Is put
Into balance In so tar as Its current
deficit Is concerned with executive
cuts, It would be virtually lmpossl·
ble to pick up enough leglstatlve
supporllor other measures, lnclud·
lng taxes," he said.

. Senate Presldeilt Paul E . Gil·
lmor said the sales and Income
taxes had been mentioned as a matter of discussion.
"We're arguing against th.:it. It
was just brought up as a posslbU'
lty," Glllmor, R-Port Clinton, said.
"I can't say the governor Is advocating anything In there. That and a
number of other areas has been discuaied," he said.

According to Oblo Budget Director Howard Collier,.~
the state-faces a proJected de.ftclt of Sl biDion by June
30, 1983 - the end of the Currell&amp; budget. Slwnplng tax
revenues and hlgb welfare CIUieiOai1IJ, both generated
by the natloaal recesd011, have been IJiamed for the
problem.lncreublg the ~tate's 5 percent sales tax by
1 percent would produce vaeylug amouuta depending
011 the lenPh of time It II In effect. Coller said Friday
It mllht yield MIO ......, over a full year. Other
propose's Involve reduced employee work w~ks,
defen-al of a ICbeduled ~&amp;Me euaployee pay relle next
year and a waiver of certa1a 11tate mandate. bnpoeed
on local scboollll*lda.
·

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News briefs•••
· · Celeste makes
'

candida~y

official

LAKEWOOD, Ohio (AP) -Surrounded by tlie family of an unemployed neighbor, Democrat Richard F. Celeste has of{ldally entered
for his
IIUbernatorlal bid. ·
At a news conference Friday at the home of P.J.
McCrone, Celeste said jobs wUI be the main Issue of
his candidacy.
But Celeste, Peace Corps director under President
Carter from 1g!S to 1981, said be does not have a
aulck-I'IX plan lor Oblo'sl2.5 percent unemployment
rate.
EXJ~res~lnil concern over President Reagan's plans to shift federal
programs to the states and establish a typeoltrustfund, Celeste said be
would prefer receiving a bulk amount from the federal InCOme tax.
But he said the state could run the programs with few administrative
cos~ .
.
"I've heard ligures ol10 percent and 15 percent for administration
costs," Celeste said. "That Is way out of line. The state must lmpo~e ·a
discipline on ltseU."

Packard to build Rabbit harnesses
WARREN, Ohio (AP) - The Packard Electric Dlvlsl,on of General
Motors, which manufactures electrical harnesses lor OM cars, wiD
begin building them !or domesticaUy built Volkliwagen Rabbits, Packard said In a report to Its workers Friday.
Company officials said that Packard, which has been hit hard by
layoffs caused by a slump In car sales, aoon will begin producing au of
the left-hand engine electrical harnetses lor 1983 Rabbits which are
buUt at the vw plant In Westmoreland County, Pa. ·
The new orders mean that Packard will manufacture 40 percent of
VW's 1983 wiring requirements, company ofllcjals said.
Packard bas 2.400 hourly workers on Indefinite layoff. Next week, !N;j
hourly worker'S are to be laid off temporarily.
.Two-hundred salaried jobs also are being cut at the plant.
The VW order Is seen as a "door-opener" to more component part
business lor the Packard plant, al!lclala said.

Reclamation funding may increase
COLUMBUS, OhiO (AP) - Efforts to reclaim Ohio's strip-mined
land may get ~ shot In the arm of Q&gt; million this year and S8 mUiion to·
$10 million anr i1ally pending federal approVal ~ the state's proposed
feiU)atory progam.
The Oblo beparlment of Nat)lral Resourcessubmltted Its permanent
coal m1nln&amp; and reclamation retiulatorY PfOII'IIIII Jan. 221or approval
by the U.S. Ilepaf\ment of Interior'a Office rl. Surface Mlntng, U appr'O\'ed, llrlp mlnlnir acUvltles and reclaqlatioJIIn Ohio wOUld be solely ·
J'elll)ated byODNR'I DlvlslonaiReclarr.atlon. CurrenUy, the acUvltles
are a joint effort al ODNR and OSM.
Tbe$30 miWon, to berelealed upon OSM approval, has been collected
since 19'1'1 b-orn a severance tax on coal mined In Ohio.

~~~~~~~~~~----~:

VI .

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