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                  <text>~ WINTHROP

b

Vol.30,1'jo.203

-.. ... TOMORROW COME5 ALON&lt;S-, ·

AND IT MAKES THf: PREVIOW5
DAY AFTER TONORROW..•

... BE:COMe THe DAY BE:FORE
YE61 t::J&lt;'~Y. THeNALONri COMES
ANOTHE:Rc&gt;AY.AFTER TO~...

I WONDE:k IF 11-\15 SORT
.·~ df=."THING- ONL..Y .

HAPPE:N51"0
Me~
•

\

In the wlnter·weary Midwest, the
deepest snow was reported at
LOCKBOURNE, Ohio (AP) =
Greenville, In south-centraJ .llllnols,
Mary Weaver didn't pay much atwhere 221nches fell. Chuck Jones of
tention when she felt the kitchen
the Illinois Emergency · Services
floor shudder as the freight train
and Disaster agency said 2,&lt;m moraced along the tracks behind her
torists were stranded In temporary
mother's home.
.
shelters Sunday night. ·
Seconds later, she heard an exThe surprise storm developed
plosion as the 33-car train owned by
when warm, moist air from the
Norfolk &amp; Western Railway Co.
Gulf of Mexico suddenly moved up
tumbled olf a brtdge at the eastern
and collided with cold air from Can·
edge ot this tiny central Ohio vtllage
ada, which kept temperatures In
and forced the evacuation ol resl·
the northern Midwest as low as 36
dents from the area Sunday alter·
degrees below . zero In Detroit
noon. There were no InJuries.
Lakes, Minn. The storm moved toSeveral thousand residents in
ward tbe Northeast today, and new
southern Franklin County lost elec·
snow was beaded for the upper Mistrtca! power as a result or the derailsissippi Valley off the northern
ment. Reno Roblnet or South
Great Pla!ns.
Central Power Co. said al)out 500
An accident on Interstate 55 near
.
.
hwses were Without JX)wer late Into
snow.
St.
Louis
was
paralyzed
by
a
blinding
storm
SNOW JAM - TraHlc backs up on lnlentate-44
Pontiac In centralllllnoi~ Involved
the night.
which
dumped
18
Inches
of
snow,
blowing
Into
drills
behind a stuck snow plow and an auto enmlred In heavy
17 to 20 vehicles. Four people re·
"It burned down one phase of a
five feet high. tAl' Laserphotol.
celved minor lnjurtes.
69,000-volt power nne and all three
Ground transportation was at a
phase$ of a 7,®volt dlstrtbutlon
standstill In central Dllnols,wlth tbe
system,'' he said. The transmission
Chicago-to-New Orleans Interstate
lines were wired to 75- to Ill-foot
Dauberger said the homes might 55 and Phtladelphla-to-Denver Inhigh poles than bordered the raUget washed away and pollee aban· terstate ·70 both closed.
road tracks, Roblnet said. ·
Indiana was also hard hit with
doned their station when it was
"I heard It derail and all I coul.d
Interstate 65 nearly shut down beflooded with 1Y.! feet or water.
A one-vehicle .accident on where he was admltlj!d to the Qrtho- with a broken leg. A hospital spothink ol was that II hit my hoUBe,"
In Marlinton, a city o! 1,300 In a tween Indianapolis and Louisville Bulavllle-Porter Road took the life pedlc unit with a broken collar bone kesman said he was in lair condl·
Ms. Weaver said late Sunday aftervalley between ridges or !,he Allegh- and Interstate 69 closed between In- of a 29-year-old Rt. 1, Bidwell resi- and ear cut. He was reported In sa- tlon this morning.
noon, pointing to a two-slilry frame
eny mountains, an Ice jam on dlanaJXllls and Fort Wayne. That dent Saturday afternoon.
tisfactory condition this morning.
The patrol cited Taylor for DV1., house beside and just below a slopKnapp Creek gave say, sending 3\!, city had 29.71nches of snow lnJanu· · Dead Is Joseph G. Swaim. He
Swaim's body was later released
Troopers said Clara B. Denning,
Ing, gra!IS-covered rauroad grade.
teet of water through parts of the ary, breaklngthe1918recordof25.4 was pronounced dead at the scene to the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home 58, Ravenswood, W.Va., was
"It's 110 years old .' I just bouglit lt."
town. Pollee and fire officials said Inches. ·Kokomo received 20-lnches of a fractured skull, according to In VInton.
·
slightly InJured and not treated afMs. Weaver, who was at her
or snow Sunday.
In Other .matters over the wee- ter her vehicle lost control on a
four of tamllles were evacuated.
GaUia County Coroner Dr. Donald
mother's house, telephoned the nre
kend, the patrol said Robert R. Tay- curve on U.S. 35 and struck a guard
Warehime.
department and rpn down the
The Incident started at 4: 40 p.m. lor, 20, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was rail at 12:45 p.m. Sunday. Her vehi- s~t to see what happened.
when Swaim was drtvlng a 1975 hospitalized following a one-vehicle cle suffered· severe damage.
"The sky fiashed blue.! figured it
An Ohio Department of Natural
Chevrolet pickup truck north- accident on 554 early Sunday
hit power lines. Flames were shootResources vehicle was damaged In
boii"Cl, one mile south or Ohio 554. morning.
Ing everyWhere. The whole brtdge
According
to
the
report,
Taylor
an
accident late Frlllay night,
Travelling with him was Leonard
was In flames, " she said. '"l'l,ere
was eastboUnd at 12: 27 a.m. when troopers said.
W. Dobbins, 21, Rt. 1, Bidwell.
'was a· lot of smoke - gray and
The reJX)rt said Paul R. SteinThe Gallla-Melgs Post or the his vehicle went all the right side ol
black, silver,. blue and orange."
state highway patrol said the truck the road, causing him to lose con- metz, 21. Obetz, was being pursued
The tanker car that exploded con·
then lost control at a high r'te ol trol. The vehicle then went.Jeft, con- on Meigs County Rd. 1B at 11:20
talned lsobutylaldehyde, a clear llq·
speed and overturned, eJecting tinued on and struck a renee JXlSt p.m. by an ODNR vehicle when
uld used In the rubber Industry and
another state vehicle, .driven by
both Swa!rn and Dobbins !rom the before stopping.
lor making other chemicals, said
The accident caused severe dam- Keith o, Wood, 24, Chester, pulled
truck. The truck then rolled over
Al Frariks ol the Ohio Environmenage to Taylor's vehicle, and he was from a church parking lot to block
Swaim.
tal Protection Agency.
Dobbins was taken to Holzer taken to HMC by the EMS and ad- Steinmetz's vehicle. .
Hamilton, Township FJre Chief
(Continued on page 10)
NEWPORT, R.I. - The ornate iron gate has been covered wltJt
Medical Center by the GaUia EMS, mitted to the lntenalve care unit
Paul C. Stlmpfle said authorltles
pl)Wood to fend off curtous stares. Shades on the u\'per windows of
were linabte to immediately !den·
Clarendon Court are usually drawn.
llfy what the train was hauling and
Inside, prosecutors allege, financial consultant Claus C. von
decided to evacuate the more than
Bulow twice tried to murder his belress wUe, a beautiful, shy womai!
340 residents from the area as a
who has lain In a coma for more than a year.
precaution.
ton County.
County road.
By The AMOC!ated PreM
Monday, 16 people will be sworn In as von Bulow's jury and leave
"We thought It was lull of gases
BELLEFONTAINE
GRANVILLE
-Edward
Hodge,
Barbara
At least eight people were killed
the halls of Superior Court for a short bus ride to Clarendon Court.
or
something toxic . But It turned
28,
of
Columbus,
In
a
twoGraves,
63,
Jesup,
Ga.,
and
Lester
·
E
.
In traffic accidents on Ohio's streets
Prosecutor Stephen R. Famiglietti said the jurors will see the
out
that the cars were carrying catTurner,
66,
Stockport,
Ohio,
In
a
car
accident
on
U.S.
33
In
Logan
and highways durlng the weekend,
bedroom where Martha ''SUMy" von Bulow customarily slept with
sup,"
said Stlmpfle. "Those cars
two-car
accident
on
Interstate
70
In
County.
according to the Highway Patrol.
a window open, snuggled under a fur throw. They'll see the adjoining
just
folded
up llke anqccordlon."
FRIDAY
Licking
County.
The patrol counts traffic deaths ·
oval·shaped bathroom, where she was found Dec. 21, 191ll, unconsAfter
receiving
assurances from
ZANESVILLE
Unda
S.
Dover,
SATURDAY
between 6 p.m. Frtday and mid·
cious on the marble fioor.
the
EPA
and
railroad
that the air
GALLIPOLfSJoseph
G.
Swain,
3'7,
of
Chandlersvllle,
In
a
one-car
night Sunday. ·
sale,
residents
began
returnwas
on
Ohio
1&lt;Mi
In
Musklngum
accident
29,
of
Bidwell,
In
a
one-car
accident
The dead:
ing
to
their
homes.
on
a
county
road
In
GaUia
County.
County.
SUNDAY
A rainbow looped across the edge
MARION- MarkS. Lehman, 24,
ZANESVILLE - Randy A.
CINCINNATI - Stella Marie
or
town as citizens gathered to
ot
Marlon,
In
a
one-car
accident
on
Brenllsh,
20,
of
Zanesville,
In
a
oneWest, 24, of Cincinnati, In a one-car
NEW YORK - "Let Poland: Be Poland," the pro-Solidarity televiwatcl\
firefighters and construction
accident on Interstate 2751n Hamil· car accident on a Musklngum Ohio 309 In Marton County.
sion show produced by the U.S. government's o«&lt;clal propaganda
crews deal with the damage, but
agency and beamed around the world, received a less-than-cordia!
then disappeared as clouds moved
reception In several of the countries where It was shown.
ln.
The 9().mlnute program was broadcast Sunday to a JX)tenttal TV
Yellow smoke JXlUred out of a
and radio audience of 400 mllllon people.
damaged boxcar and drifted over
The show-business aspects o! the program, which featured sevthe village. Stlmpfie said the coloreral Hollywood stars, drew criticism In West Germany, the Nether·
Ing was caused by water doused on
lands, Denmark and England.
•
tile freight cars which carried catIn the United States, where Congress approved a special exempShirley Ann Evans and Paul suit, she contracted an lnlecUon, monetary settlement lnclu~ed In
sup.
Railway olllctals said the train
tion to allow domestic showing, few Publlc Broadcasting Service
Evans, Racine, have.llled a court suffered pain and menta! anguish the rue ouWnlng the court action.
(~uedon
10)
stations telecast the event as It was fed. Officials at others said they
action against Lewis D. Telle, Ma- and will suffer pain and mental anhad not decided whether to show the program.
rietta, and Veterans Memorial Hos- guish In the future . She alleges that
pital, resulting from an operation she has suffered permanent InJury
which Shirley Ann Evans under· and her earning capacity has been
impaired.
went at the Pomeroy hospital. .
The plaintiff charges that agents
CLEVELAND- The Greater Cleveland Chapter of the Amertcan
The plaintiffs charge that on Aug. acting In the course and scope of
Red Cross has started an appeal for money after depleting Its funds
12, 191ll, Dr. Telle undertook the
their ·employment at Veterans
whlle helping a rash of fire anil weather Victims In December and
medical and surgical care of Mrs. Memorial Hospital were negligent
January.
Evans for the purpose ol perform· and feU below the standard or care
Wllllam D. Lentz, director of Red croS.s disaster servicea In Clevelng a tonsllectomy at the Pomeroy applicable to hospitals undertaking
land, said the December budget was $18,&lt;m for disaster rellel, but
hOspital and that Dr. Telle con· to provide hospital care Including
the Red Cross spent $36,CMXJ. He said that lor January the budget was
tlnued to provide medical, surgical but not limited to recovery room
$22,CMXJ and disaster services amounted to S32.&lt;m.
and post operative care through
and post surgical care. Mrs. Evans
When all expenses for the two months are tallied, the shortfall will
again charges that' as a result or
Sept. 12.
be about $30,&lt;m, Lentz said.
this alleged negligence she contracted an Infection .
The plaintiffs charge that durtng
Paul Evans charges that as a dithole two months, Dr. Telle was
rect
and proxlrrulte result ol the deprofessionally negligent and faUed
fendants'
negligence, he has lost
to meet the standard of care appli·
NORTH ROYALToN, Ohio- a 47-year-old North ROyalton man
and
will
In
!hi! future lose the socable to reasonably careful and
died during the weekend In a fire In an apartment building, accordciety,
services,
companionship and
skilled physicians and surgeons In
Ing to the city's fire department.
consortium
of
his
wUe.
that he failed to provide proper sw:· .
Theodore T. Friel was viSiting In the apartment early Saturday
The plaintiffs ask that a jury of
glcal and post operative care" to
w~ a cigarette !gnitled a sofa, said North ROyalton Fire Chief
eight
persons be Impaneled to hear
Mts.
Evans.
L)oyd R. Leimbach.
.
their
case.
There Is no mention of
The
plaintiff
charges
that
as
a
reThe !Ire caused about SS.&lt;mdamage to the thlrd-Qoor apartment. .
part of the Sunset Cove Condominiums. Residents In the 24-unlt
complex were evacuated.
The resident of the apartment, Barbara J . Nemesh, was admitted
to Panna Communlcy Ho5pltal with bllmll. She was In satisfactory
A 15-year-old Route 1. I..anpv1lle Brian L. Burkhanuner, 16, Mlnencondition.
youth, has been cllarJI!d 1Ji Melp vllle, waa traveling west on State
County Juvenile Court with taldng Route 124 at Sycamore Grove when
a 1976 auto from the Coal Bucket he !oat control of his vehicle In cindearryout
partclng lot on saturday. ers at the lntenectlon of Route 124
'
I
.
Partly cloudy tonight. Low!J near 20. Becoming cloudy TUesday.
and county road :!1.
Jan. 23.
Olance of rain or snow by afternoon. Highs near 40. Chance cl
.
The vehicle ran olltherl&amp;ht ttrik·
precipitation 10 pereent l.olllght and II percent Tueaday. Winds eastThe velllcle, OWlled by Janetta 1ng a feria! on the Charles Theiss
erly ~10 mph tonl&amp;ht.
Darst and drtven by her hlllband, proper:tY, Racine then struck the
'
EXTENDED FOBB()AST
James, Plllnt Pleuant, W. Va., had bridge ralllnl belore ~ In a
Wedr rhy lhreqll FJtdar.
been left llllllllnll wult wu atotea creek.
Clluoli a l - Wedn 111Q ud -.iJ Tina dQ. Fair We 'lbllteThe' yooth admitted clrtvlnl the
Burkhammer received a amall
TAIU!:S IT IN- Soutbml'• Rebert Brown 1- up for a layup during
dqudFwtdaJ.IIIIIIIWrk 'y= h'f•to-.warmlnllotlle
car approximately·a mile and ooe- lacel"atlon abOve the rl&amp;ht eye and a
S.lludny'r
57·55 win over Soatlleulenl Ill ft-. County. The victory pve
. . _. • ..,_ 'q,IIBu Zalotllen"•..a.to_.•
half down Hampton Hollow .Road bump on the forehead. T1le !!at wu
llolltben
ali-t
-11111rll1ad avnpd Jut ye~~r'slouiG the Pantbers.
ICIIIIl oa Fw~taJ• . _ .. 111e .._ _...., • wwu 1•hr _.
betore the vehicle~~ Into a ditch. clemollllhed. There were oo chalps
Pltday ~~~n~ . 111111e . . . . . ...,
a
!Airy
aDd
more
plctum oa pa1e 3.
see
Sunday afternoon at 2: 30 p.m., rueci .
•
\~

By A88oclated Preaa
Six-foot snowdrifts stranded
thousands or motorists In the Midwest, while Ice Jam breaks sent six
feet ot water rolling through parts
of OU City, Pa.. and Inundated Marlinton, W.Va.
Sunday's snowstorm gave .stu·
dents and government workers a
holiday today, while residents waIted for snowplows and \he National
Guard to tackle the high drifts and
up to 221nches of new snow. Atleast
.five people died In the stonn.
Ten tamllles .near OU City were
'evacuated and downtown busl·
nesses were flooded when an Ice
jam broke on 011 Creek, a tributary
of the Allegheny River, said pollee
Lt. Greg Dauberger.
"The main Intersection In town Is
Qooded.... Water surrounds some
homes six feet deep," said Frank
Stacy of radio station WOYI. "The
water Is moving last. It's got a lot of
Icebergs In lt."

'

A&lt;~

Gallia records first fatq,lity

'·

Priscilla's Pop
I LAUGH AT
WINTER.',

----~------~~

I LAJJGH AT THE ·
6LU~TERY WIND.

11-4E 5WIRUNG $t-Pit/,
THE TREAC.HE.Ra.J5

Ed Sullivan
I LAUGH AT WINTER'
6EGAU5E I f-OLD IN

"' I CAN HEAR
GULL'S CRYING!
·I CAN l-EAR:

MY HANP THE M.AGIC

~CHILDREN
.()1.1 THE. 5EACH 'I

OF 7UMMER"·

•

0

von Bulow trwl begins today

.0

Eight die .o n Ohio highways

0

HEAR SAIL'S FL.APP!NGA~__'tHE.Y PICK UP THE WIND

.I

AND

CAA~

- .&gt;........

5AILORIS ClJT

TOO 86D YOU · Cl:)N'r ~ye
A SHELL iHA.T LETS YOU
. HEAR 90NP1.0WS, ;ruA.R'r. 1

TO 'SEA"'
Q

Reception cool on broadcast

Doctor Telle, Veterans Memorial
defendants in Meigs court action

.~ a
PRINTED IN CANADA !

Chapter appeals for ass!,stance

Man dies in weekend blaze

'

''CHILO GUIDANCE ISA GROWING RELD YOU MIGHT UKEI
. YOU'D BE AMAZED AT THE NUMBER OF CHILDREN
GlJI[!ING TH~ PARENTS THESE DAYS!"

.

"HElLO, HELEN? HOW MUCH IS APINCH
.

. OF SALT IN METRIC?"

Ch.-ge youth with car theft

Weather forecast

.

~

'!YEAH, HE WAS TALL, PARK AND HANDSOME..,BUTTHE
.'OARK' PART WAS JUST AHAIRPIECEI"

"sPeciAL

. \81 WITH EVERY PAIR OF CONTACTS
··WE THROW IN THIS FREE LENS FINDER!"
:. . . ·
... .. ...:.. .....:.

"MVPOaiON POI.LWONGOa •.,SHOT AN MROW
. 11jUM,_
.FAR'SJKNOW, IT'S snu: UP Tl:tEREI"'
... - ..
\

.'

1 Section, 10 """'
15 C4nh
A Multimedio IM. -.,..,...

33-car
•
tratn
derails

Heavy snow
halts travel

J

ME:ANWH ILE, ANO'THE:R DAY AFTeR

en tine

Pomei'O'r Middleport, ·Ohio, Monday, February 1, 1982

C:ei•lphled 1912

PA55A61:: OFT/ME I~ ~NDI&lt;QtJS
1V 5EHbLp. FoR INST.AN&lt;:;E ~
· THE DAY AF"I"ER TOVORROW Wl.l,.l...,
BECOME TOMORROW...

\

at y

e

••

'

••

.e. nw • ,_

~

�Commentary

Ohio

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel.
~-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 1, 1982 .

Auto pilot?

The Daily Sentinel
lllCuar&amp;Sittet

Tornadoes post 15th victOry
with 57 -5·5 win over Panthers·:

Willwm F. Buckley Jr. .
.

p.,..,.,,ow,

114-tH-UM
DEV(JJ'I!IITOTHE INTEREBTOF'THEMEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERTL. WINGETI

•

PubU•Iwr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A.u iltaathbllskrfCoatrulltr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ntw• F..diiOr
A MEMBER llf 'De Auocl.litd Prell, IDlllDd Dally Prt~~ An~K..l181 aDd the
Amerid.a NNipllptr Pllblilbeni "••ocbdJon.
' •,.
·

LE1TERS OF OPINION arY wrkomt'd. Tlwy 1buald br Wi1 U.• 3M wonk 1on1. AD
·Wtten •rr ••blrcl to l!dftlll8 aod ml!lll bt&gt; 11lpt'41 wUh 111m~, 8ddrw11 aDd klrpholte
llllllber. No u•llned Jrt~ra will br publlMbtd. Letkn 11buuW be l.a euod &amp;.IMk, addrn11lq
.._., .el pei'IOUIIUn.

A question
:o f weight .

I do not tire of recalling a conversation with Richard Nixon in 1967
in which he told oi the varidy of options available to a president of the
United States in forei~n policy. I
held what he '~'lid to be true, until
President Nixon was himself overtaken ; but that was a result of his
preoccupation with Watergate and
the general demoralization that
came upon us at the end of the Vietnam War.
What Nixon, having served Ike
for eight years as vice president,
said was. that no one can imagine,
who has not held the first or second
executive offices, what a president
can do if he faces a dashboard,
stu&lt;!les the data every day · by
reading reports 1of the National
Security COU1fcil and of the central
Intelligence Agency and recognized
that his hand, moving about the control panel, can direct the foreign
policY Of the ship of state. Oh, there
are limitations, of course: We all
kn{\W that even these limita'tions are
not easy to write into law. There
have been (at last count) 100
protracted military engagements by
U. S. forces with no accompanying
declaration of war. ·The last great
war we got into was declared by the
Congress of the United States, but its
inevitability was the handwork of
the president ·Of the United States:
We ask ourselves the question, then:
What is it that binds the !lands of
Ronald Reagan?
The complaint ill made that State
Department officials are running
United Slates foreign policy and that
they, for reasons organic to their
tempe~ament, are pacificists, but
that actually is not the perfect word
for it: temporizers is better. Let us
Cor the sake of thls analysis assume
this to be true. Well, there is a
secretary of state, who is sovereign
over the department, or is supposed
to be. There are of course differences in style: John Foster Dulles
liked to write foreign policy and,

By JEFF GREENFIELD
The American political landscape is littered with the carcasses and officeholders who underestimated the political skills and appeal of Ronald
Reagan.
·
From California Gov. Pat Brown, who celebrated Reagan's 1966 gubernatorial nomination, to President Jimmy Carter, whose aides openly hoped
tb nll1 against Reagan in 1980, opposing politicians were convinced that
Reagan was too "simple-minded," too casual with facts, to compete successfully in the political arena.
· Now the president's perfonnance at a recent press conference- his most
dl:~astrous since his inauguration- has triggered a new burst of criticism at
Reagan's persistent habit of misstating reality. But neither Reagan's friends nor foes have yet focused on two key questions: Why has Ronald Reagan
survived his habitual collision with the facts; and why is this habit more
dangerous to him and to his administration now than it has ever been?
The 1980 presidential campaign was filled with examples of Ronald
Reagan's umfarniliarity with the underlying truth of his assertions. He said
that General Motors had 25,000 employees who spent their lime filling out
government fonns. The correct number was one-fifth the size; and most of
them were collecting tax information. He :~aid Vietnam veterans were not
covered by the GI Bill; they were. He ascribed a figure to the overhead costs
of government social programs that was wildly Off-base. He suggested a
policy of aiding Afghanistan freedom fighters that directly violated a federal
law Mr. Reagan did not know existed.
These fumbles were given prominent play on network new programs, in·
major newspapers and in weekly news magazines. And they had no impact
whatever on Mr. Reagan's electoral success.
. Why' Several reasons seem clear. First, Mr. Reagan was asserting facts
to support general propositions with which most Americans agreed. If he
was wrong about the dollars and ma1ipower needed to comply with government regulations, most people clearly believed that government ~gulation
was too burdensome and too costly. Jimmy Carter !lad argued the same
· J)oilil during his 1976 campaign. If Mr. Reagan was wrong about .benefits
4vailable to Vietnam veterans, he was right about the scandalous mistreatI don't know you, Betty Theiss,
ment Of the Vietnam veteran once he came home. In other words, he may Racine, but l read your letter in the
liave had the composition of the road wrong, but he was at least going in the Daily Sentinel recently in praise of
t ight direction.
Dr. Rankin Pickens, and as I am one
Second, so thoroughly had Mr. Reagan captured the heart and soul of the who sllares in your· belief, I wish to
Republican Party that none of hi~ rivals - with the quixotic exception of thank you! I have been seeing Dr.
John Anderson - sought to challenge the substance of his argwnents. They Pickens since he first opened his ofwere ail hoping to inherit the Reagan constituency through tactical political fice except, of course, at various
success; and none of them had any interest in alienating that constituency times when he was away or needed
by suggesting that Mr. Reagan did not know what he was talking about.
at the hospital.
: Finally, Mr. Reagan was running against a president who had failed utI can really say I never had an
terly to establish himself as a figure of weight. The economic chaos, the per- unkind word from him.
sonal weakness, the escapades offamily and staff had combined to paint Mr.
He shook my hand upon entering
Garter as a presidential lightweight. And when a candidate with a reputation the Office and patted my shoulder
lor incompetence attacks the seriousness of his opposition, such a charge when leaving and said a kind word.
lacks punch.
I know of many who are bereaved,
Why, then, is Mr. Reagan's carelessness with facts - about the size of the ill, recuperating, hurting,
.work fo~ce, the success of volunteer ism, and history of the IRS policy on tax- discouraged, neglected, worried,
exemptiOn for segregated schools- so much more of a danger now? "
impoverished, lonely , deprived,
The answer is because he is no longer a candidate, or an after-dinner disappointed; may the Lord bring
speaker. He is the president, with literal life-antkteath power over tens of His love close to your side! God is
millions of people. His words count for more because they are issued with the
weight of a great power behind them.
It may be the attractive attribute of his character that Mr. Reagan does
not take himself all that seriously. But that is a lixury the office of the
president does not penni!. The world hangs on Mr. Reagan's words because
we will prosper or suffer, survive or fall , besed on his decisions. And if the
The beauty of the American
words he speaks do not fit the facts. the heavy weight of his office will inflict system of government is Congress
a major political cost on the lightweight nature of his world view.
makes the laws of the land, and then
the executive branch of government
carries them out. At least that is how
it used to work in the past.
But tmder "New Federalism/'
there just aren't enough troops to
carry out all the laws that Congress
passes. So the administration has to
be selective about those it believes
are necessary to the welfare of the
country, and the ones that just can't
be administered.
The Environmental Protection
Agency is a good example of this.
Chalmers, who is supposed to work
in toxic wastes, explained the
problem.
"EPA is very concerned about the
spllling of toxic wastes into the
nation's waters, but unfortunately
we had to lay off so many people that
we have to put the problem on hold."
"What good is the EPA if you can't
stop people from spilling toxic
wastes in the rivers and streams of

having done this, was said to have
left the department pretty well alone
to be guided by underlings. To the
extent .that such underlirigs undermined Mr. Dulles' own policies
there was, of course, difficulty. In
the case of Mr. Haig we have, really,
·.m unclear vision. On the one hand
he is associated with the Kissinger of
the Vietnam War. Mr. Haig backed
the invasion of Cambodia, the
!.solation of Haiphong, the so-called
Christmas bombing_And by the time
he found himself not at Kissinger's
side but at Nixon's, the whole
executive operation had been .ao
weakened that no one could do
anytning Jlllll)OSive . .'
When Mr. Kissinger approved sending a carrier from the Philippines
to the Gulf of Tonkin to discourage
what was to prove a decisive campaign of the North Vietnamese, he

was stopped by such as Javits and · ·Gromyko, but nothing would have
COoper and Church, who threatened · sounded harsher than Haig's refusal
to involve legislative authority even to go to Geneva. n is difficult,
against the use of U. S. arms. So it seven weeks after the imposition Of
went in Angola, when Mr. Kissinger martial law in Poland, to think of
sought to disestablish the myth of anything decisive done by Mr.
Cuban invincibility. Mr. Haig was Reagan. Perhaps that is why in a
impol!!nt in all matters except the news story filed as late as Jan_ 26,
most supremely important matter of The British press agency Reuters
the day, namely to ease Mr. Nixon, could refer to "Western Anger at
then fatally wounded, from the Moscow's Alleged Involvement in
White House. The post-Nixon period the Polish Crisis." · That's like
of executive recuperation was slow. referring to William Paley's alleged
Eight months later, Vietnam was involvement in the affairs of CBS.
gone.
The meetings in Washington last
But Mr. Reagan has confounded weekend of the old right and the new
his supp9rters by his failure not to right were in accord in believing ..
arrogate powers that belong to that Mr. Reagan has done enough ill
COngress, but to use powers that are the rniltter of .Poland.
Nixon's
indisputably his. Mr. Haig's mission control panel is there with all kinds
to meet with Andrei Grornyko in of lights flashing and data being
Geneva may have given him the op- recorded. But it is set on auto pilot.
portunity to say harsh things to

WATCH YOUR NOSE~ Southern's Zane Beegle 1211 g..,. in for a
layup against Stacy Dennewitz's mouth. Beegle scored eight points in
Southern's 57-S5 win.

Point Pleasant
stops Gallipolis

Budget deficit remains big excepiion
-

Letter to the editor
May GOO bless you
love.
Some have lost loved ones or are
nursing someone; again we can
breathe a prayer for you. Some are
facing changes; we wish the best for
you.
Your BIBLE is your sword for
conquest, your guiding light for
dreary, dark, empty, confused,
downer days. Your MIND .. . it is
you, reaching up to the very
thoughts of GOD. Nurturing it will
lengthen its reach and straighten its
grip.
I know I need YOU. l always
remember my acquaintances,
relatives, friends in. prayer faithfully. We must keep reaching out!
May our Lord bless · you, every
one! - Louise Siders, Middleport.

A clean agency

Berry's. World

"High food prices!"

Today in history-..
Today is Monday, Feb. 1, the 32nd day o! 1982. There are 333 days lett 1n

the year.

Today's Hlghllght In Hlstocy:
On Feb. 1, 1587, England's Queen Elizabeth I signed a warrant for the
execut!Qn of Mary, Queen of Scots.
On thls date:
In 1899, the U.S. flag was raised over the Pacific Island of Guam, which ·
!onnerly had been under Spanish eontrol.
~ 192f, Bdtatn recogntz.ed the COmmunist government of the Soviet
Union.
And In 1$79, Ayatollah Khomeinl returned to Iran after more ·than 14
years o! exile.

the nation?"
"You have to have an En.:

NEW YORK (AP) - President
Reagan said he wtll slick to his goal
or diminishing Washington's role in
a host of local and private sector
activities, but he made_one huge
and possibly dangerous.exception.
That exception was the budget
deflclt, the financing or which In·
trudes deep Into what the private
sector considers its territory, sop-ping up a llrnited supply of capital
thaI otheJWtse might help finance
industry.
Sipce Industrial expansion has
been a high priority of the Reagan
administration, a contradiction
seems to exist. Cart Industry ex·
pand, that is, if Washington won't
give It the room In financial
markets?
The argument has been well
aired even before the president indicated he had abandoned major
remedies tor quickly closing the
budget gap, which he now places at
nearly $100 billion In this !!seal
year.
Henry Kaufman has been especially outspoken about that gap. A

credit authority and partner In the
Salomon Brothers investment
firm, Kaufman early this ·month
said: "A confrontation between the ·
credit needs of the U.S. Treasury
and those of business is shaping up
for 1982." Interest rates wt11 rise
again, he said. 'The rebound wt11 be
"substantial."
Paul Volcker, the Federal Reserve Board chairman, never has
ceased to be concerned, seeming to
feel he has but two choices for handling the credit demands or the fed·
eral government: Keep a 'f tnn hold
on the money supply and watch Interest rates rtse; ,or let the printing
presses run, making credit avaUable for all, and watch Inflation resume its rise.
Either way, the economy gets
damaged, so again and again
Volcker has sought to get the
budget gap reduced. Just hours before the State o! the Union Message
he suggested that heavy Treasury
borrowing could work against the
very objectives of the Reagan
admlnlstra tlon.

Art Buchwald

~-------------------------------------

vironmental Protection Agency As a matter of fact, one of EPA's
because it was mandated by main functions under the Reagan
Congress, but we caQ 'I go around adlt'Jnistration is to clear them out
checking everyone who is dumping of the department, because they're
poison into the water. We have to not team players. When we find an
concentrate our energies on im- environmentalist working for us, we
portant things."
take a brown crayon and put a dct
••suchas?"
· next to his or her name, and then we
''Making sure the regulations con- find a reason to eliminate the job.
cerning toxic waste make sense. That's far more important than
We're hoping to save millions of worrying about some toxic waste
dollars by eliminating a IDt of silly dump that doesn't mean diddley-&lt;loo
rules that have tied up t.he agency except to the people who live in a
for years. By getting rid Of the . small area."
people in the field who kePp citing
"But if you keep firing people who
businesses for violating the EPA
are supposed to know something
rules, we'll have a lean, tough En- about the environment, how can you
vironmental Protection Agency that say the agency is dOing its job?"
everyone can be proud llf."
... All you have to do is look at the
"There are some people who think statistics. Before we came "in, 230
the Reagan administration is trying violations of pollution laws were
to do away with the EPA."
turned over to the Justice Depart"You're talking about the environ- ment for prosecution. Since EPA Admentalists. They're always bad- ministrator Ann~ Gorsuch took over,
mouthing us because theY never we've only cited 42 companies. That
think we're doing enough. But we're should prove we're on the ball." .
the first Environmental Protection
" Does that mean there have been
Agency which has ever stood up to less .violations since she took over, or
them and they don't like It one bit.. you're reluctant to cite more

violations?"
"It means we're doing our job with

a lot less p.eople. Instead of going to ·
the environmentalists, ask the
business community how we're
doing, and you'll discover they consider the new EPA one Of the bestrun agencies in Washington:
Business used to hate us. Now they
think of us as their friends."
"( didn't knOW business WBS SUJ&gt;'
posed to be your friend."
"Ounttitude is that you can get a
lot more done for the environment if
you treat business as a partner and ·
not an advemry. Before Ms. Gor;
such became. administrator, the
people polluting the environment
and dwnpiug toxic wastes weroi
frightened into doing somethillli
about it, because they were afraid of
being hauled into court. But om!
philosophy is that if we can appealt4
the companies as a matter of gOOd•
will, they'll be much more likely t&lt;i
do the right thing." ..,
"And if they don't?"
"We can't do anything about it. Af•
ter all, we're not policemen."

"They jammed us up inside. They
killed us on the offensive boaras ...
' That's how GalUpolis Coach Jim
Osborne described Saturday night's
57-54 non~onference Blue Devil setback to Coach Lennie Barnette's
host Pt. Pleasant Big Blacks.
'
Grab Quick Lead
The West Virginians, now :&gt;-3 on
the year, jumped off to a quick l().J
advantage, then held off a late
Gallipolis rally to defeat the Ohioans
for the first lime in seven years
as a capacity crowd looked on.
"This was a great shot in the ann
for our basketball program," said
· one Big Black observer after the
contest.
"Our boys did a fine job out there
tonight," remarked Coach Barnette.
"We ·bottled them up inside. They
weren't hitting their outside shots,"
he added.
Gallipolis, now 11-4 overall, shot 32
percent from the field, connecting on
only 19 of 59 attempts.
Meanwhile, the Big Blacks shot a
blistering 57 percent, hitting 23 of 40
field goal attempts. "At least six of
their goals were tip-ins off missed
shots," Osborne said.
Transfers Sblne
Three new players in the Pt.
Pleasant fold did most of the
damage.
Transfers Todd Gibson and Rob
Uttlefield, llUards, along with last
year's lone holdover, John David, all
scored in double figures .
Ed Legge, the ~ senior center
transfer, was limited to seven points, but he picked off 12 of Pt.
Pleasant's 29 rebounds, and was
credited with at least six blocked
shots.
Gibson, a ~ junior, led Pt.
Pleasant's attack with 14 points. Uttlefield, a 5-11 sophomore, chipped in
with 13. David hadJO points.
Phil King was the only Blue Devil
in'double figures . He tallied 19 points
for the Ohioans.
James Lane was limited to six
ooints before fouling out. Lane had

4·.4 ;

Jones

0·0-0;

Wellis

1-1-3.

TOTALS 23·11·57'.
By quarters :

Gallipolis
Pt. Pleos,nt

7 11 18 12- 54
16 15 8 18- 57

Trimble defeats
Bobcats, 7 6-69
'

JACKSONVILlE - Kyger Creek
played Its best game this season
here Saturday night but came away
with a 10811 as the host Trimble Tomeats took a 78-89 nOJioCOnference win.
Both teams enjoyed an exceptional fine shooting night con·
necting for 52 percent from the floor.
Kyger Creek hit 30 of 58 floor attempts while Trimble connected on
34of65.
The Bobcats alao sank nine of 13
·free throws while Trimble hit eight
of~.
.
The Bobcats held a 31-30 rebounding edge as J. D. Bradbury and
David Sands grabbed nine each
while Cliff Campbell paced Trimble
with nine.
· Steve Lanning provided the big
punch for Coach Tom Evans' Tomcats with 26 points, his best offensive
effort thls season.
Mark Echstenkempei' added 14
points and Bruce Fouts and Mike
Moore had 12 each for Trimble.
Kyger Creek also placed four
playel'll In double flgurel led by
guard Keith Clart's 17 points. Jeff

,.

,.

14 of Gallia's 32 rebounds. Tim
Madison had eight points before
fouling out. Russ Bergdoll scored
nine points forGAHS.
Gallipolis had 24 personals and 12
turnovers. Pt. Pleasant had 17 personals and 23 turnovers.
· Howl! Went
After falling behind by II points,
~9. GalliJ!Olls calmly fought back to
narrow the count to 31-24 just before
the haUiime intermission.
The Blue Devils controlled matters in the third stanza, outscoring
Pt. Pleasant, 18-8. That give the
visitors a 42-39 advantage going into
the final period.
Gallia's first lead of the night, 3!138, came on a long jwnper by King
with I :471eft in the third period.
The lead changed hands three
times early in the final period. John
David's tap-in (4:59) put PPHS On
top 47-.ffi. The Blacks were never
headed.
Key Play
Legge's tap-in (2 :06) made it 5350. Key play of the final period came
when Todd Gibson scooped up a
loose hail at mid~ourt and raced in
for an easy layup with I :06 left to
play.
King's driving layup (0:24) cut it
hack to three, 5f&gt;.52. Two free throws
by Kev Smith with 10 seconds left
clinched the PPHS victory.
)?!. Pleasant will host Barboursville r,uesday and play at
Wahama Friday. GAHS is on the
road twice this weekend - at Ironton Friday and at Portsmouth Saturday.
Box score:
GALLIPOLIS (54) - Bergdoll4·1·
9; Madison 2+8; Lane n ·6; Glenn
3·0·6; King 7·5·19; Skidmore 0·0·0;
Lanier O· H ; Sheets 1·0·2. TOTALS
19·16-54.
PT. PLEASANT (571 - Legge 3·1·
7; Littlefield 6+13; Simpkins 3·0·6;
Gibson 5+ i'; .David 5·0·10; Smith 0·

Moles, junior forward, had 14; Sands,J3 and Bradbury, 10.
Trimble led 16-10 at the end of the
first period and ~ at the half.
Kyger Creek cut that to M-52 going
into the final period.
The Bobcats slayed within one or
two points until the final two
minutes.
The victory pushed Trimble's
overall record to 1(){i while Kyger
Creek dropped to .a.
Trimble captured the reserve conteat in a nnp, 58-17. Morris led the
winners with 12 points.
Kyger Creek travels to Wahama
Tuellday, then holts Southwestern
Friday and Ne'llf Boston Saturday. ·
Box score:
. KYGER CREEK (6t) - ·Ciork 7·3·
17; Sands 6+13; Moles 7-0' 14; Love
2-1-5; Price 3·2·8; Barr 1-0-2; Brad·
bury H -10. Totals J0-9-69.
· TRIMBLE 1761 - Moore 6-G-U;
Holbert 1·0·2; Koon 2-0·4;
Echstonkemper 6-2-14; Lanning 13+
26; F.Uh 3-6-12 and Campbell 3-D-6.
Totals J4-1·76.
. By quorton:
Kyger Creek
12 23 17 17-69
Trimble
16 22 16 22-76

Skaggs steal and lay-up, a long jwnper for the hosts, cutting
By SCOTT WOlFE
Doles pulled the second shot from ·
Southeastern cut the score to 40-36, the lead to four, Southern went with the glass and Stacy Dennewitz :
RICHMOND DALE - The
but a Tom Roseberry drive and two its same play. After one missed shot swished a 20 footer, before another ·
Southern Purple Tornadoes, behind
quick buckets by red hot Richard a high jumping Richard Wolfe at 5- foul sent Roseberry to the line for his
a complete team effort, warranted
Wolfe put the Tornadoes up 48-38 at 10, out battled his towering op- one-and-one heroics for a 57-62
its fourth place state ranking here
the buzzer, its biggest lead ~f. ·the ponents for the rebound and save his score.
Saturday night with a thrilling 57-55
night.
triwnph over the sixth ranked
teama52-46 score.
Doles hit ·the next goal with 13
In the ·fourth quarter Southern
Ross-southeastern Panthers in
With 2:01 remaining Southeastern seconds, then Brown wa.s fouled
front of an overflow crowd at elected to freeze . the ball, putting
resor!ed to the foul, however, SHS where he missed two from the line. ·
the ball-handling specialties of kent
Southeastern High School.
did not reach the bonus until the I :51
Southeastern got off its last shot,
Although each Tornado came
Wolfe, Richard Wolfe, Roseberry,
mark when Rees went to the lirie but but a missed shot resulted in a
and Rees into effect .
. through in spectacular fashion,
couldn't connect. Moments later, physi~al scramble that sent Brown
Senior Scott Frederick cstne off
Richard Wolfe emerged as the hero
Rees again went to the line for the to the line for a one-and-one and Butafter netting seven points during the the bench and played his role well
bonus, but it wasd't meant to be and ch Doles to the line for a resulting
last five minutes with a detennined during the Tornado slow down. After
technical foul.
agsin SOutheastern had its chance.
a rough and tumble steal Doles cut
effort.
The Panthers couldn't hit paydirt
Brown's first shot bounded off the :
In the pressure-packed closing the SHS lead to 48-40 at the five
either from its end of the court and rim, while Doles canned his :
seconds, Southern's Tom Roseberry minute mark. Southern continued to
Richard Wolfe again came through technical foul attempts. With two
provided with 25 seconds left, slow things down until an errant
With a score at 54-46.
seconds remaining Ross got the ball
making the score 57-52. In the secon- pass resulted in a two shot foul for
On the inbounds play Ross com- at half court, but its attempt went
ds that followt'll Southern held on for M.Skaggs.
rilitted a turnover, but Mark Skaggs wide and was hauled down· by
Skaggs hit one for a 48-41 deficit at
its 15th straight victory without a
came back with a steal and drove it Richard Wolfe to secure a Tornado
the 3:22 mark while Southern had
defeat.
victory.
.
in for the score.
Unbeaten Southern, ranked fourth not yet scored in the stretch.
With I :09 left Kent Wolfe was
Leading Southern with 17 points
The Panthers cut the lead to 48-40
in the Associated Press Class "A"
quickly fouled and went to the line was Richard Wolfe, Kent Wolfe adpoll, flaunts a perfect I~ record after an SHS turnover at the 3:02
for two, but a glass plate over the ded 16, Jay Rees 10. Skaggs led all
overall and again reigns as dean of mark. Southern continued with its
basket repelled his efforts and Butch scorers with 23, while Doles tallied
the Southern Valley Athletic Ccon- deliberate game, but still worked for
Doles scored on his end with 54 17.
the good shot as Kent Wolfe found ,a
ference with a HI mark.
seconds left, the score now 54-00.
Southern hit 25 of 44 from the field
·
determined
Richard WoUe under the
Coac.h
Larry
Jordan's
On the ensuing play R. Wolfe was for a hot 57 percent, while SE hit 20
Southeastern panthers dropped to basket for a 50-44 Southern lead.
fouled and hit the first of a bonus to of 53 for 38 percent. Southern hit
After Skaggs quickly unlaunched
13-3 overall. The Panthers, perhaps
break Southern's foul shooting jinx.
seven of 17 from the line for 41 perlooking ahead to Saturday evening's
cent, had 20 fouls, nine turnovers,
game, dropped a 56-54 double overtwo steals and 15 assists led by Kent
time decision to Unioto Friday
Wolfe with six. Southern was
evening.
narrowly outrebounded 24-23.
Before a roaring crowd,
Brown, Beegle and K. Wolfe each
Southeastern grabbed the opening.
had six caroms, while Doles had
tip, but was repelled from the basket
seven and Skags six for the Panuntil the 7:09 mark when Stacy Den. !hers. The Panthers had 18 foulds,
newitz .~a feed to ti-8 center
seven turnovers, and hit 15 of 22
Butch Doles, who drove in for the
from the line for 88 percent.
gDHland a 2-0 Southeastern lead.
Southern dropped the reserve lilt
At the 6 :54 mark Robert Brown
43-35, but showed its class by comins
laced a pass to Jay Rees, putting
beck from a ~ point deficit at one
SHS on the board for a 2-2 st.'Ore.
point in the game. Dennis Teaford
, After Coach Carl Wolfe's Torled the locals with 12, while Bryan
nadoes turned away a second Ross
Alley had 11 for the winners.
attack; Kent Wolfe was fouled by
Southern hosts Hannan Trace
. Doles on a twisting lay·up. Wolfe
Friday then travels to Nelsonville, r.~lmly swished two from the line,
York on Saturday.
· giv;,,g Southern a lead that went
BoJC score:
southern (57) - R. Wolfe 7·3·17 ;
untouched with the exception of a
Frederick 0·0·0; . R c~..· s 5·4·1!,) : Brown
20-20 tie in the second canto. SharpH ·4; Roseberry 1·N ; Beegle 3·0·6,
shooting Jay Rees followed up with
and K. WolleJ.2·16. Totals25+57. ·
Southeastern 1551 - Dennewltz 2·
a corner jwnper, making the score
H ; R ichiP.r 0·3·3; M . Skaggs 10·3·23;
6-2, but Doles retaliated for a 6-4
Doles 6·7·11 ; J . Skaggs n ·6; Higley
verdict.
0·0-0. Totalsl0·15-55.
Tbe remainder of the quarter went
By quarters:
18 U 16 9- 57
Southern
' hipoand-tuck, with SOuthern gaining
Sootheostern
12 14 12 17- 55 ,
its biggest lead at the buzzer, l&amp;-12.
Doles provides the big gun for the
panthers with eight points the first
round, however, the physical pivot
man exited the game with three
fouls after the SOuthern defense
drew two successive charging fouls .
Five SOuthern sharp-shooters hit
the scoring column the first round
led by jwnpin' Jay Rees and Southpaw Kent Wolfe, each with six.
Despite Southern's diiltinct height
214 W. Main
advantage, the Whirlwinds were
THEY FLY mROUGH THE AIR- Southern's Jay Reea 141) and
Pomeroy
able to take early control of the
Southeastern's Jeff Higley (12) 1eem to be Dying throu11h the air with the
game. Its stingy defense, dazzling
greatest of ease during this action shot taken at Saturday'• game at Ricb992·2668
ball handling, and excellent shooting
moodale..Southetn continued Ita winning ways wilh a 57-55 triumph.
more than compensated for the
uneven match- ups under the r-----~~------------------.._
basket.

DALE HILL

FORD TRACTORS

____________

Rates of Taxation for 1981

Zane Beegle netted the first two
markers of the second round, giving
SHS a 20-12 lead, but several forced
Ia pun~te of Law, I, George M. Colllu, Treuurer of Mel«• rounl,·. Oldo, I" uaapll~1nce with rtY •
shots in the en..ulng moments
IMd Code No. 323.08 of Stale of Ohlo, do herebJ rh·e nollre of ·lho Rnt• nf Taxallon for the Tu
allowed Southeastern to knot the
YMr of 1981 . Rates expreued In dollan aDd
Mch 011e lho_,d dol ian tax •aluallon.
score at 20-all. Junior Skaggs came
off the bench and netted six points
during the Panther comeback,
locking the score at 20. Although -.TOWNSHIPS
Doles was on the bench the entire
second quarter lHI Mark Skaggs
SCHOOL DISTRICTS
fllled hta shoes quite well and eventually became the leading scorer.
After Southern's Beegle scored
AND CORPORATIONS
from underneath, the Tornadoes
maintained a two point lead aided by
Rees, Kent and Richard Wolfe's outBEDFORD
side shooting.
Mtil'l Local S. D. : ••• UO 1.70 24.00 .to .10 .20 1.00
2.00
83.70 .0881118 .088144
Eutera LoeaJ s. D•••• uo 1.70 21.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
80.70 .089688 .089877
2.00
Southe~:" then •witched from its
CHI1l8TER
zone at the 4:31 mark and went to its
lCaltern ~.oea~ s. n. ___4.8o 2.150 21.00 .to .10 .20 1.00
2.00
81.60 .0506.78 .041484
ma~to-man defense.
llttp Loeal 8. D. • . .• 4.80 2.60 24.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
2.00
84.50 .046180 .048865
COLUMBIA
Alexander s. D. ______ ua 8.70 27.70 .40 .10 .20 1.00 2.50
The switch made the difference
2.00
41.90 .245674 ,156782
and alao sparked point" guard Kent
LEBANON
Wolfe who tallied six points the
2.00
Euteru LocalS. D. --- 4.80 2.70 21.00 ,. 40 .10 .20 1.00
81.70 .066610 .067609
Southem Loeal S. D. __ 4.80 2.70 :u.oo .40 .10 .20 1.00
2.00
84.70 .086786 .052687
remainder of the frame, including
an 18 foot jumper with two !lfCOilds
LETART
Southera Loeal S. D.•• 4.80 8.20 24.00 .40 . .10 .20 1.00
2.00
remaining in the half to give SHS a
86.20 .049090 .062031
32-26lead.
OLIVE
2.00
EMtern Loc:&amp;l S. D. --- 4.80 8.70 21.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
32.70 .061810 .OS0266
ORANGE
Kent Wolfe paced Southern at the
E-.n Loeal S. D. -- -- UO 2.110 21.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
2.00
~ 1.511 .049309 .048966
half with 12 points, Reea had eight,
RUTLAND
and Beegle six. Leading the PanMlira ~I S. D. ---- 4.80 2.30 24.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
2.00
34.30 .042621 .041101
thei'll at the inlennluion were Doles
Rulland
VIUare ------ 4.80 1.00 24.0b .40 .10 .20 1.00
uo
2.00
38.50
. .0886114 .011697~
and Mark Skaggs with eight, and
SALEM
Junior Skaggs alx.
2.00
·
Mtlp Loeal S. D. --- - 4.80 I. 70 24.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
88.70 .0361118 .036144
Even with W ·Doles In the line-up, ·
SALISBURY
Southern dominated the third quar2.00
83.70 .0361118 .036144
Mlip LoeaJ ·S. D. ---- 4.30 1.70 2(.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
ter of play. Following
a Mark
.
8.20 2.00
83.40 .072884 .064978
MiddlepOrt Vill&amp;re -- -- 4.80 .20 24.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
6.80 2.00
as.oo .078612 .0712Bo
Pomeroy VIllar•·------ 4.80 .20 24.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
SCIPIO
Kelp Local S. D. ____ 4.80 2.40 :u.oo .40 .10 • .20 1.00
2.00
34.40 .046692 .044461

••to ..,

.

Young Marauders
post seventh win

The Meigs Junior !ligh School
seventh grade team 1lfOII Ita eighth
straight victory without I ICJii by
defeaUngJacka\Jn4W7.
'
.Huey Eason led the Meiga'ICOI'Ing
attack with 1$ polnta, while DcinDie
Beeker had 10, and Phil KJnc. and J.
Il Kitchen chipped In eight apiece.
'l1lelr next game wtll be qalnat
Athena "'eb. I at Athena.

Stri'TON
8oathem Local S. D. -- UO 2.10 :u.oo
, Racine Vlllap ------- t .80 .150 :u:oo
• a,_ Vtdare ------ 4.80 .60 :u.oo
Stri'TON
lltlp Loeal S. D. ----- 4.80 2.10 u.oo

.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00
10.10 2.00
6.80 2.00

34.10 .039371 .0376118
42.70 .126702 .086681
87.90 .074380 .080321

.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00

auo .0391171 .oaUK8

- - RaJ
-........
---~~----:-~"*"'== -~=-=~Eotat.o tu• whleh hove not been paid at the clo•a of each colle&lt;:tlon carry a penalty of ten
per ...,t. Ta- "'"'/'be paid at the offieo of the county tr~a• urer or by maiL Pleliae brlnr your
laat tax receipt an If you pay by mall be aure to locate your property by taxlnr diatrict and en-

~tamped Mit IICidreMed avalope.
Ahro" examine your tax rcetpt to- that lt .cover. all your property. Qfflce Houro 8:80A.M.
to 4:80 P.ll,lfonda:r thru Friday, Clotod on Safurday. '
.
.
GEPRGE M. COLLINS, Meiro C... Trea•.

doN

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4 The Daily Sentinel

Page

Monday, Febrvary 1, 1982

'

Fouts-Winslow combination
helps .AFC capture Pro Bowl
HONOLULU (AP)- Miami Dolphins Coach Don Shula may have
cringed the last tirile he saw Dah
Fouts and Kellen Winslow In action, but this time he was cheering
them.
When the Amerlca11 Football
Conference all-stars, coached by
Shula, needed a late score to take a
16-13 victory in Sunday's Pro Bowl,
the San Diego Chargers' Fouls-toWinslow combination helped get it.
Fouts took theAFC69yards, with
the big gainer a 23-yard pass to
Winslow, to set up the deCiding 23yard tleld goal by Kansas City's
Nick Lowery with three seconds
remaining.
"It was anything but a duU
game," said Shula, who recently
· had watched Fouts and Winslow
help the Chargers knock the Dolphins out of the NFL playo!fs.
"On the final drive, our o!fenslve
·llne dominated play," said Fouts,
who completed eight of 16 passes
for 1443 yards on the day. •'The pass
to Winslow down the middle (putling the ball at the NFC 5-yard llne)
broke their back."
Winslow, the NFL's top receiver
for the past two seasons, had six
catches for 86 yards and shared Pro
Bowl Most Valuable Player honors
with NFC defensive end LEe Roy
Selmon of Tampa Bay.

"It's a real honor to be named
co-MVP and an honor to be .on the
lleld with the finest players In the
game," said Winslow.
"There was more Intensity this
year," added the two-time Pro
Bowler. "Pride was a factor."
Selmon, In his third Pro Bowl, recorded four quanerback sacks for
losses totallng 35 yards, and was In
on eight tackles.
"I was just running around trying to do what we pracUced aU
week," he said. "They were picking
up Randy White (of Dallas) a lot
and· I walled lor him to clear out
and then I rushed."
Lowery, a second-year pro out of
Dartmouth who was turned down
by eight NFL teams before catch·
lng on with the Chiefs, said he
wasn't nervous before his gamewlnnlrig kick.
"I thought before the kick, 'I've
done It before and here It Is again, •"
he said.'
He had missed a PAT attempt on
the AFC's first touchdown when the
snap from center was off, and also
missed wide on a 52-yard field goal
attempt earlier In the contest.
"I figured It would be a lowscoring game," said NFC Co.Jch
John McKay of Tampa Bay.
"There was just too much defense.

It takes longer than a week to get an
offense coordinated."
The NFC, !falling 13-6 late In the
final quarter, tied the game on a
4-yard touchdown run by Dallas'
Tony Dorsett with 2: 43 left.
The American Conference.took a
6-0 halftime lead on a 4-yard scorIng pas$ from San FranCisco quarterback Joe Montana to Tampa
Bay tight end Jimmie Giles just belore the intermission. The score
came after Dallas rookie Everson
Walls madetheflrstofhis two Interceptions of Fouts, returning the ball
12 yards to the AFC 4-yard Une.
The PAT kick by Dallas' Rafael
SepUen was bloc~ by Kansas
City's Gary Green.
The AFC bounced back with two
third-period touchdowns, the first a
2-yard dash by San Diego's Chuck
Muncie afl(l the other a 1-yard spurt
by Houston's Earl Campbell. The
second score was set up when the
New York Jets' Mark Gastineau
plucked a Montana fumble out of
the air and returned It 21 yards to
the NFC 1-yard line.
Pittsburgh's Donnie Shell and
Jack Lambert, and Denver's
Randy Gradlshar turned In fine defensive performances t.or the AFC,
which allowed the NFC just 158 total yards.

East whips west in annual
·all star basketball game
'

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar sat
sulking In front of his locker, trying
to explain one of the worst performances of his brtlllant National
Basketball Association career.
"The game started at 10 a.m. Los
Angeles tln'le, and I wasn't aU
here, " Abdul-Jabbar said after
slnklng just one basket In 10 attempts during · the NBA All-Star
Game.
(AP) -

..

'.

.··
..
~

.

•-·
' --

onto the court before the game, had
"It was pretty hectic going 3,CXXJ
trouble with all phases of his game,
miles to get here. 1 took the 'red
eye' fllght and got here Friday CbommltUng three fouls and a tur·
nover In 22 minutes.
morning," Abdul-Jabbar said Sun" It doesn't count for more than
day after the East edged the West
an All-Star Game, so I can live with
120-118 at the Meadowlands Arena.
It," said Abdul-Jabbar, who Is the
"I didn't feel comfortable on my
second most proutlc scorer In NBA
shots and my rhythm wasn't
history behind Oscar Rober1$0n.
there."
"You don't want to disappoint your
The 7-foot-2 !.akers' center, wbo
fans, but I'd rather have a bad
received a roarlng ovation from the
crowd. of' 20,149 when he walked · game In the All-Star Game than
have II during the regular season."
Meanwhlle, In another dressing
room, East ~am star, LaiTy Bird
was basking In televlslop camera
lights and a crush of writers after
he was llilmed Most Valuable
~layer tor scoring 19 .points, IncludIng 12 In the final quaner. and pulling down 12 rebounds.
Bird characterized the All-Star
game as rapt, fun and physical.
"That was definitely the kind of
AU-Star Game you enjoy !!laying
because everyone wanted to pia~
together," said Bird, a 6-foot-9 forward for the Boston Celtics.
"It's llke the old basketball ad·
age," said Julius Erving, the Philadelphia 76ers' forward. "You give
the ball up and It comes back to you.
The player who Is unselfish and
who looks to pass has a successful
day ."
"II was a "good running game that
could have gone either way," Bird
said.

Wahama loses

.·'.• .

.·.
.·.·
...•..
.-·-·
,.
,.
,•

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ALlrSTAR FORM- Eastern Conference's Larry Bird aad Western
Conference's Kareem Abdul·Jabbar (33) eye a loooe ball duriDg !leCOod
period action io the NBA All.Star game at the Meadowlands Areaaa iD
New Jeney Sunday. Bird was oamed the ~arne's mosl ~aluable player, iD
a 120-118 East wlo. (AP Laserphoto),

Meigs splits recent match
The Meigs High School wrestling
team split a tri-match last Thursday, losing to Point Pleasant, then
defeating North Gallia In the finals .
Every wrestler for Meigs won a{
least one match except lor two individuals. Those wrestlers winning
both matches on the day were Troy
Bauer and Larry Romine.
·
Troy Bauer upped his record to 187-1 over the season and is improving
with every match. Troy wrestled in
the 138 pound weight class this week
to · fill in for Injured Mike Willford
and Larry Romine continued his
Romine

· MASON - Tim Evans scored 18
points and Dl:vid Fields added 17 to
lead the Kennil Blue Devils to their
fifth win In eight tries Civer Wahama,
7G-56, here Saturday night.
James Thornton.added 16 points to
the winning total and Emery Marcwn had 14. Fields also pulled down
11 rebounds, while Mark Ross handed oUI seven assists.
,
Wahama, H, was led In scoring
by Mark Roush and Keildall Weaver
with 13 each and Donnie VanMeter
with!O.
Kermit hit 26 of 59 field attempts,
44 percent, and was 12-for-23, 52 percent, at the foul line.
·

record to 22 wins and seven losses.
Last year, Romine was behind
Brian King at the 132 pound weight
class and very seldom saw varsity
action.
At the end of the seaosn, Romine
KERMIT (101 Marcum 1~ •
was voted the must improved Thornton 16, Evans 18, Ross 4,
Fields t7, Sturgill1 .
wrestler for the Meigs team.
WAHAMA (56) Weaver 13,
The Meigs team now stands all~2 Paugh
8, VanMeter 10. Embleton 6,
on dual meets and will have a hOme Roush 13, Gray .t, Lavender 2,
match at the Junior High Thursday, ·Machir2 .
By quarters :
Feb. 4, with another Feb. 18 at the • Kerm
it •
17 18 11 24-70
same location.
Wahama
16 t1 16 13--56
The SEOAL tournament will be
Feb. 20 at Athens.

Despite some funding cuts and
- 10811 ol staff, services "to Mei~ County senior cl~ns have not been cut,
aceoJ'ding to Mrs. Eleanor Thomas
director of the Meigs County Council
on Aging.
Mrs. Thomas advises that the
Council is now in the process of
prioritizing services in anticipation
ol additional cuts in funding.
The past year, according to the
director, haa seen a $2,500 cut in
Older Americans Act Fwxls and
r.duced staff in the nutrition and
chore services due to the elimination
of the public sector portion of the
CETA program. Mrs. Thomas
reports that the year has also seen a
decrease in Title XX funds which
are used for chore service and home
delivered meals.
She cited the possibility of another
decrease in the Older Americans Act
funds alonll with increased

-

lerence In Sunday's Pro Bowl game In Honolulu.
Selmon, who had seven tackles, was C&lt;&gt;-Most Valuable
Player In the game, along with San Diego olleoslve and .
Kellen Winslow. (AP Laserphoto).

A SELMON SACK - Tampa Bay defensive and
Lee Roy Selmon of the· National Football Conference
team, makes ooe of his four sacks on Sao Diego quarterback Dan Fouts of the Amcrlcao Football Con-

Texas · loses rough contest;
Wake Forest tames Arkansas
· back him when they ride him. He
By The Associated Press
The outcome left A&amp;M and Texas
The Texas Longhorns must have
got a good, quick walloping In tied for second place In the Southwfelt as though they were heading lor
there," Texas Coach Abe Lemons est Conference at 5-2, lust behind 6-2
said sarcastically of his star, who Arkansas. 'rhe 12th-ranked Razorthe last roundup... and In more
led all scorers with 24 points.
ways than one.
backs dropped a 49-48 nonconferBasketball became very much of
It was a lost weekend for Texas, ence squeaker Sunday to No.l8
and the early part of the ·week Wake Forest.
a contact sport Saturday as the
fifth -ranked Longhorns bowed to wasn't much better. On Tuesday,
Texas A&amp;M 71-69 011 Claude Riley's the Longhorns, o!f to their best start
With Texas falling by the wayjump shot with five seconds ·reIn 47 years with a 14-0 record,
side,
No.l-ranked Missouri was left
dropped a 69-59 decision to Baylor
maining In overtime.
as
the
nation's only Ul!beaten major
"First thing I do Monday Is go out and also lost No.2 scorer and recollege
tean'l... barely. The Tigers
and buy LaSalle (Thompson) a sad- bounder Mike Wacker for the sea- ·
edged
14th-ranked
Kansas State 59dle so people won't have to bare- son with a knee injury.
58 on the road for their 18th consecutive victory despite a subpar 6-point
performance from star Ricky
Frazier, who averages 15~.
Slx-foot-ll center Steve Stlpanovlch
IE!!i MisSQUri with 20 points,
By 'nae ..\MocWed Pre.
Lawnmceburg, IM. 56, Harrison 3.1
Sa&amp;urday'l Relul&amp;l
Lima 57, WapakOneta 50
and
guard
Jon Sundvold added 14.
Ada M, Cory· Rawson 52
LlmH Cath ..Y.I, Da)'. CaiTOII !It!
Stlpanovlch's
layup In the waning
Akron Buchtel tll , Warronsvtlle ~7
Ulratn C3th. 7'1, W. Salem Nol1h·
Akron EUet 63, Nordonia 44
wt"Stcrn tiO
seconds
gave
Mls$0uri
a 59-56 lead
Allla!ll'e M, Salem 47
Lorain Southview 64, Akron Hoban 6.1
before
a
K-State
basket
at the
An!lonia lfi, Day. Chrtstlan 60
l.nuiMJ\e :rr, Cll nron SOultl Jfi
A.)'eTSVille 45, Fayette 44
Luth£!ran li:. 61!1, Lutheran W. 48
buzzer.
Bay 70, Berea 47

Canton GJenOak 44, Mwlllon Perry 42
Cardington 51. LouOOnvlUe t6
Cln. AndertOn 60, C1n. Prtncf!tOn M
t'ln. Elder 58, Can . McKinley 46
Cln Hua:het ~. Day. Whit e 57

Cln. Summit R2, Nt&gt;w Miami 6..1
Claymont ED1 Ravenna 59
Cleve. Baptist !58, Lake Ridge 52
Cleve. Bnash 62. Cleve. Orana:l.' 45
Cle\le. Central Catt1. &amp;1, UlkeWood
t. Edward~
Cleve. UnlvenJit y 70, Gllmour :II
Coldwater 76. Ottoville 52
Col. DeSaiL'I 76, Worthlnton Chr. !;9
Con~u t 78, Jcffenon 6&amp;
Contlnei'lt.al 49, Hlcksvllk&gt; t1
DanvtUe 59, New Albany ~
Day. Cl\lm·JW ill, Marion Local 56

Dty. Fairview n , Col. Central 68

D!toy. Meadowdale .Ill. Day . Wayne 1l
Day. Rot h liD, Ctn. Woodward 00

Delphos St. John 74, Tot. St. Francis 53
Delta 00, Olaoep ~
Divine Word 1fi. Hope T~ple 63
Dubun 70, Licki ng Vat . ~
E. Paleltine 71), Columbiana 64, OT
Elida 54, Paukllng 37
Elyria 111!1, SanduSky 65
Elyria Calh. 65, Oberlin 61. 01'

Elyria Ou-. 63. CVCA. l'l
Fam!ll, Pa. 51, Aw;tlnlllwn·F11ch 4fi
redl'ra.l Hocking 69, L.ognn 66
Emanuel Baptist &amp;f., Calvary -&amp;6
Euclid 74, WlckDife 41
Evergt'l'en 67, Bllutleld, Mich.
Falr!lekl Unkln 68. Heath i l

~

F1tmertoWn '1'9, Muon 72
Fort fta:uvtory 51, Trt· Village 51

Gn!&gt;l!n!MeW 19, Fatrfteld 15
Grrenf\ekl 68, Adena 41
Greenan 82, Sprtnr. Northeastern 00
Hamilton Badin 78, Reading :fl

HWtop ~. Mon1pe1Jer :t6
Hu&lt;boll W. Rewrve 70, Kbld [Pa.l

or Phone: 1·919·2256
Between 6 and a p.m.

Walter and Mary Maxey who have
served for several years at the
Kagoshima ChriStian Mission in
Japan, will be at the Pomeroy Church of Christon Sunday, Feb. 7.

Priddy

f USPS 115-110)

Miller C1ty 6.1, Wayne Trace 50
MoBawk ~. Vani1X' 44
1\'apok!On 56, Archbold ofi
r-."clsonvtlle-York M, Mille~ 52, JOT

A Olvhdoa of MuiUD:Itdl8, IDe.
Publ!9hed every afternoon, Monday ltlroug~
Friday, 111 Court Street, by the Ohio Valley

KnoxvUie 62, Waynestteld :'J!I

Publ!ahlng Company • MultJ.medja, Int.,
P'orneroy, Ohio 45769, 992-2156. Second clasl
postage paid al Pomeroy; Ohio.
1
Member : The Associat~ Pres~~ , Inland 01~
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Newspa per Publishers 1\Moclation, Naliollll
Advertl.sl ntc Representatln, Branham

r-.'~merstown ~ . Malvern 39

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Orrvllk' 00, T\&amp;!Jcarawas Valley 49

Parkway IH , LlnrolnvUle 58
Parma HQiy Nome 63, Fi'atrvelw 00
Parma Nonnand.)' 113, Strongsv1lle 63
Philo 71, Morgan Gl

Pert Cl inton '18, Clyde 76
Porumouttl 8l Wheeleraburg 00
Poru. Eas t 76, Honttngton 64
Rac lnc Southern 57, Richmond Dale SE

""StROIIeCI'llrui
47, Hl'hroo Lakl'WOOd 46
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f&gt;l. F'o11 Loramie 48
PerkiM

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St . Joseph 52
Shaker Hl!l. 66, Wlllloughby S. 62

Sherwood Fal..WW 00, Defiance
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Minster

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Sprtng. Northwastem 47,
Shawnee 15
Strltch +t, Holland Sprtq. t2

Sprtng.

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Tallmadge f9, Akron E. 41
Tot, Whitmer 5!1, Tol. Central Cath, 52
To!.

Ragen~

66, On_ogoo Oay

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1\J.•Law ~. Northwest ~2
Urbana 50, Belk:ofootalnc 48
Vennlllon &amp;1, Mldvlcw 56
WarTen Kennedy 10, canneld 61
WIIShlftgton C. H. 66, W. Jeftei'IOn

Waterloo 70, West Branch !16
WeiUngton !14. Lorain BrookikJI'o t2

w. MUton 49, Areanwn 45

WlntersvWe !6, SICUbenvtlle !It
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Yellow Spring! Ill, W. Uberty tO
zanesvt~Je Chr. 59, Olllo Dear 4J

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Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
AGENTS:

talked on the Food Co-op sponsnred
by the Meigs Ministerial Association

and the problems of participation
and help with distribution. Four
members volunteered to assist with
the Co-op when needed. The) are
Janet Theiss, Norma Custer, Clarice
Krautter and Velma Rue.

The couple will show slides of their
work in Japan 'duiing the Sunday
School and Mr. Maxey will have the
message for the morning worship
service.

Service news notes

Th e Uail y Sentinel

Mento r 62, Barberton 6(1, JOT
Midpark 63, Rocky Rlvt't' .12

Henry
S a n d u 11 k y

A new bus is expected to be purchased this year as a replacement
for one of the Center's oldest
vehicles. Plans for expanded transportation, health services and
congregate housing remain in
question, according to Mrs. Thomas.
The director reports that during
the past year money making projects at the center brought in $10,869.73.
Membership fees totaled $1,670, and
donations • from
churches,
organizations and individuals
brought in $11,111.16.
She further advises that the Meigs
County Center was one of 13 included
in a nation-wide study. She said the
study report referred to the center
as a "coordinated service-delivery

one

It was noted that the next meeting
will be held on Feb. 11 at the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
Hostesses will be Roberta O'Brien
and June Freed with Lillian Moore
to have the program.
A report on Buckeye Girls' State
held at Ashland College was given

result of his demonstrated leadership, technical expertise and ,
dedication to duly. You can be
justifiably proud of Gary's accomplislunents in Fighter Squadron
Thirty One.
"The demands placed on our Navy
have never been greater and only
through the efforts of exceptional
personnel like your son can we ex·
pect to meet our cornmitmentlj.. .
Gary's advancement Indicates that
he is ready to face new challenges
and to accept greater respnsibilities
in our Navy.
"Fine young men like your son are
a part of what makes this country
great. I am proud to have him In my
~'Ommand and I look forward to his
continued success."

. Mr. and Mrs. Maxey and their two
children plan to return to Japan for
their third term of missionary service in August. They will continue
their ministry with the Yoshima
Church of Christ there and also at
the pri$0n in Kagoshirna . Now on
furlough they are using their time to
strengthen ties with supporting
~hurches and trying to stimulate fur·
ther interest in missions.

Co-op is small in comparison to the
total Food Co-op membership.
" The staff work .involved ilicludes
answering questions and taking orders, collecting money , bookkeeping, and placing purchase or·
ders, setting up, weighing, sacking,
BY HELEN AND SUE IICITTEL
son is worried enough to want
marking, distributing , and cleanDEAR
HELEN AND SUE :
· change, others become aware that
up.••
I Uve with my father and step- something Is wrong. Speak up! I'm
" The above work takes apmother.
I love her a lot, but she's left
pretty sure they'll listen.- SUE
proximately 40 hours of staff time
once
already.
If
she
didn't
come
per month. In view of the fact that
few fixed-income l!elliilrs benefit, it back the next lime, I'd want to live DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
About Ie(l.handed people: I've
was ~ staff reconunendation to the with her, but I couldn't. Besides, I'd
hate
to
leave
my
sisters
and
real
heard
they're more artistic, creative
Director that staff time could be betDad,
so
what
should
I
do•
and
aware.
Also, judging from the
ter used."
,
.
Another
question:
I'm
the
number
of
lefties
In prison with me,
" I hope this clarifies the decision
youngest
(13)
of
four
sisters,
and
we
they're
more
criminally
Inclined.
that wsa made regarding the Food
hardly
ever
talk,
except
to
be
rude.
Has
any
research
bt.'en
done
on this?
C&lt;&gt;-&lt;&gt;p. The Center can sUll be used
They
act
like·
they
hate
me
(they
DON
as a distribution point if others take
DEAROON :
over the responsibility so that staff don't even like each other very
much)
but
I
want
to
get
closer
to
I've heard that lefties are
is not involved to the extent they
them.
What
if
they
won
't
listen
and
sometimes
rebellious. more. apt to
have been in the past."
make fun of me when I ask that we mount causes or march to a diftry being polite? - " BRAINLESS"
ferent drumbeat, but crimlnally JnKID SISTER
clinced? If research has been done
DEAR KID SISTER:
here, I'm riot aware of it.- HELEN
Turn in your "What lfs" on a
NOTE FROM SUE: Since we
" Let's Do Something About This" asked correspondents to participate
button!
in a survey for an upcoming book on
Instead of worrying over whether left-handedness, we've received a
your step-mother will leave, show number of questions we can't anby Krillten Anderson, sponsored by
her instead how much she Is loved swer. Among them are :
the chapter. She told of being elected
·Is it true that there are seven left,
to the school board In Merritt City and ask your Dad and sisters to help.
Perhaps she doosn'l rcallz~ you handed · men to one left-handed
and of the various state officials including Gov. James Rhodes wbo care, because you've been so busy woman ?
Does being chan~ed Eroni left:'tb
came to Girls' State and were fighting among yourselves that you
haven~ I shown her.
right-handed make you stutter? (An ·
among the many speakers at the
Once you've won s11pport from old belief, but never proved.)
week-long program on government.
your sisters, it wtll b&lt;• easier to
Sad truth : Despite the fact that
discuss a truce . Now that you're a over I0 percent of \Jur population Is
teenager, no longer "the pesty kid," left-handed, amazingly little researI think you'U all soon be friends - If ch has been done on the subject.
you work alit! - HELEN
GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
SISTER:
for
discussion, tw&lt;&gt;-generaton style?
Born in CincinnaU In 194$, the
Could
be
your
step-mother
left
Direct
your questions to either S!le
minister was reared in Japan, the
because
she
couldn't
stand
the
or
Helen
Bottel - or both, If you
son of missionary parents. He
bickering
among
you
lour
females.
wanl
a
combination mother·
graduated from the Academy in
Why
not
ask
your
Dad
to
call
a
daughter
answ
er - in care uf this
Kobe, Japan In 1964, and returned to
lamlly
conference?
When
one
pernewspaper.
the United Stales to enter the Cincinnati Bible . College. After
graduating from there he entered
the Cincinnati Christian sMunary
where he earned his master's and
divinity degrees.
chips and drink .
Attending were her mother and
brother, Aric, Mr. and Mr•. Jim
Clark, Mt•gan and Jerry, Mrs. Debbie Mussel'. Kevin and Amanda, and
Pam Murphy, a junior at Eastern
Ms. Judy Musser and Cindy.
High School, and daughter of Ed and
Cecilia Murp~y , Tuppers Plains, has
been selected for Who's Who Among ,
High School Stude11ts for 1981-82.
Recognition Jn Wh&lt;)'s Who is a
national honor lor junior and senior
Class high school students who have
demonstrated achievement in either
academics, athletics, or •extracurricular activities. In 1981 Pam
received the United Stales
Cheerleading Achievement Award
and was also the recipient of the
most outstanding cheerleader school
Patterson
award.
She is a member of the National
Alyson Nicole Patterson, daughter
Honor Society, concert band, c&lt;&gt;- of Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Patterson,
editor of the yearbook, co-captain of Pomeroy, observed her first birththe varsity cheerleaders, attends .St. day on Jan. 25 with a party. A Holly
Paul's United Mellindbt Church and Hobby cake baked by her mother
is present of the youth fellowship.
was served with Ice cream, potato

Lick the 'what ifs' by

· pushing toward change

WIUI~M D. CHILDS

DON E. MUU£N
JOHN F. MUSSER
CIIARl£S 8. MUU£N
MICHAEL L CHILDS

Priddy
Gary Priddy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Dale L. Priddy, Route 4, Pomeroy,
has been promoted to Petty Officer
Third Class by the Department of
theNavy . .
A letter from M. N. Matton, commanding officer, Fighter Squadron
Thirty One, stales:
"II is with great personal pleasure
that I Inform you of your son's advancement to Petty Officer Third
Class. This notable achievement Is a

An Army husband and wife team,
Staff Sgt. James L. and Suzanne M.
Stewart, has· reenlisted in the U. S.
Army at Arlington Hall Station, Va.,
for an additional three years
military service.
•
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walley Manley of Route I, Reedsville.
She is daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James C. Smelker of 22910 Imperial
Valley Drive, Houston, is a senior
administration specialist with the U.
S. Army ,Intelligence and Threat
Wlysis Center.
She is a 1978 graduate of Spring
Senl~r High School, Texas.

Astrograp4
_
February 2, I98Z
This could be a very exciting year for you socially. You are likely
to enlarge your circle of friends or become Involved with a brand new
group.
AQUARIUS CJaD. •Feb.lt) Don'tletserious matters overwhelm
you today. By the same token, don't treat them frivolously. Going
overboard In either direction could cause failure.
PISCES CFeb. •Mircb Zll You're basically very kind and helpEul, and an associate who is aware of this may try to use you today to
advance his or her piii'])OIIes.
ARIES CMircb 21-Aprlllt) Be wary of the topics you choose in"
discussions with friends today. Polltics or reUgioo are among the sensitive issues which might lead to heated debate.
TAURUS (April %1-Miy Zl) Be sure you have the best counsel
available if you have to make Important legal or financial decisions
today. Wrong advice could prove cosUy.
GEMINI (May Z1.JUDe Zl) One-to-one relationships could be filled
with more stress than usual today. Keep this in mind so that you don't
get olf on the wrong foot, ~!her with your mat.! or coworkers .
CANCER (JaDe 2l.Jaly ZZ) Be helpful to others today, be careful
you're not caught in the, middle or put Jn a position where you have to
cboose a side.
LEO (Jaly ZS.Aq. ZZ) If two friends have a disagreement today,
be cardUl you're not caught in thP. middle or put In a position where
you have tocboosea~cle.
.
VIRGO ( Aac· !Nept. .ZZ) Normally, when you promise others
you'regolng to do10111ethingyour word can be relied upon; Today, you
might make commitments which you could fail to fulfill.
·
LIBRA (Sept. za.oct. Zll Your aales resistance could be rather low
today.111ere'a a potlllblllty you might be talked Into something which
won'llerve your best inlerella.
SCORPIO (Oet. MoNO\', ZZl Beware of a t.!ndency today to see
thlnga u you would like them to be rather than as they really are. This
ouUook could caUR you to make costly mlstaka.
8AGnTARJU8 CN.,, ~NNe. 2ljlmportant decialons should not
be baaed upoo hunches or Intuition today. Weigh every upecl before ·

renderlll&amp; a Jutllmenl.

C.o\PIUOOIIN (1*. IW-. Ill Uncharacteriltlcally, today you
may look to reap 1 1wve1t from .,_ In which you have not IIOWil.
Thla II not a. day for getting aomethlnc. .for nOChing. ·

Patterson celebrates birthday

Murphy named to Who's Who

Stewart

MassUJon 60, Canton Timken 57
Musi!Jon Jock!IOil 73. M&lt;trll~ijetoo 4fi

r••f'W

cil.

system," "a place with a feeling ol
warmth and enthusiasm," and
operating with "limited resources in
an economically depressed area."
In regard to the Meigs County
Food C&lt;&gt;-&lt;&gt;p, Mrs. Thomas released
the following statement which
reads, in part, as follows :
"There has been some criticism
that our staff will no longer be involved with the Food Cl&gt;{)p. When
the Food Co-Op was first started, we
felt it would be of great benotfit to
senior citizens living on filled inl'Omes, and our staff was willing to
take on the extra work and responsibility inyolved.
·'II has taken more and more staff
time, even though there are RSVP
volunteers and others who give a lot
of their time. However, the number
of senior citizens livinM on fixed incomes who purchase rood from the

Plans slide.show for Sunday services

Macon Eastem ~. New Richmond 43
Mans. Malabar 82, Woostf&gt;r 75
M ar"Kareua ~. Sanclu&amp;k.Y St. Mary 63

""""'

For small businesses and individuals, we ofbasic coverage, major medical, outpat,ent, group life, aod disability benefits and
retirement funds. For personal atte~tion,
write:

C/o M. Taylor, Rt. 1, Box 164
L,iHie Hocking, Ohio, 45742

A $25 donation to the International
Loan Fund was made by Preceptor
Beta Beta at a meeting held at the
Mei~ Inn Thursday. Mrs. Grace
Eich, sponsor of the chapter, bosted
the luncheon attended by 14 mem·
bers.
During the meeting Velma Rue

High school basketball
Belpre :1.\ Mal1ena Sot
Bethel 49, Covington :E
BILlf'fton &amp;4 , Riverdale +t
Boanlrruul 61, Young. Chi!.ney :u
Broolc.Deld 72. AShtabula 57
Bryan &amp;1, Patrick Henry 51
Buckf'ye Central ~ . Seneca E . 49
Buckt&gt;ye N. ~. .letl'l'!'!Dl Union 4fi, OT
Calvary Chr. n, Seven HWI ~

operational costs such as ga$0line,
postal rates, utilities, and supplies
as problems to be faced by the Courl-

Preceptor .Beta Beta makes donation

-.

f~r

HARVEST INSURANCE

Helen Help, Us

Services to sentors conttnue

•.

.
'•

•

•

'GROUP MEDICAL BENEFITS
.·
•

The Daily Sentinel-Pap-S

Pomeroy-Middlepo11, Ohio

Murphy

Social Calendar
Monday
EASTERN
ATHLETIC
Boosters. 7:30 p.m. Monday at
high li&lt;.h&lt;JO!
MEIGS COUNTY Shepherds 4H Club organlzallonal session, B
p.m. Monday at county extension
office.
POMEROY ~ Special meeting,
Bosworth Council 46, Royal and
Select Masters to confer Royal
Master and Select Master
De~ree.

LETART Township Trustees
meeting, 7:30 Monday evening at
Letart Community Building.
RACINE Chapter 134, Order of
Eastern Star, regular meeting
Monday night, 7:30 p.m. at tern- .
pie. Obligation night will be observed.

Tuesday

.

SU'M'ON Township Trustees
will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order
of the Eutem Siar, will meet
Tuesday at 7,45 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. A
layette shower to be held
loUowlng meeting for Kathy
Workman. AU olflcel'l .are to
wear chapter dresses.
CHES'J'ER Council 323,
Daughters ol Al!lerica, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at hall; charter to be
draped In memory ol Erna Jeae ·
with all membel'l to wear white.

THE R,EGULAR meeting ol the
Middleport Lod&amp;e 3113, F. and A.
M. will be held 'J:uelday at 1:30

p.m. All members are urged to
attend.

WEDNESDAY
A PANCAKE SUPPER will be
served in the ,social room of the
RacineUnlted Methodist Church
Wednesday from 4 to 7 p.m.

Sausage and coffee will be served
wlth the pancakes. The supper is
being sponsored by the men of the
church.
THE
MIDDLEPORT
Firemen's Auxiliary will meet at
7c30 p.m. Wednesday night at the
fire department. All members
are urged to attend.

Rutland urniture &amp; Bottle Gas Co.
IS
CLOSING OUT CERTAIN MODELS OF WARM
MORNING HEATERS THEY HAVE IN STOCK
•

2--#400 COAL AND WOOD HEATERS

$ 5999 5

. REGUlAR PRICE 5839.95 ...................... SALE PRia

2-WARM MORNING HEATERS AND BLOWERS
. WITH ATTRACTIVE PORCElAIN JACKETS......WILL SELL AT COST

5-LAUNDRY HEATERS

REGUlAR PRICE '99.95
SALE PRICE

5-ATLANTA WOOD HEATERS

$6495

REGUlAR PRICE '199;00

SALE PRia

$11 000

1-USED SEARS 50,'000 BTU GAS HEATER
ASKING t2M.OO, BUT IF PICKED UP

$13900

�-~--

\

~Page

{I ·

The Daily

Sentinel

.. . ... . ...

'
....... ~ ---·

Monday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FebNCII"f

Monday,

1, 1982

1 The first month of 1982 brought
sharp prlce hikes at the super·
1market, with grocery bills rising
, faster than they have since last
: June, according to an Associated
; Press marketbasket survey.
, Butter and eggs led the Ust of
• Items that coot more at the end of
I January than they did a month ear·
Uer, but there was a wide range of
1.01ber Increases as well. More than
_oue-thlrd ot au the Items checked
, by the AP went up In price last
month; fewer than one-fifth

i

j

l

i ¥l;llned.

' 'The AP survey Is based on a Ust
: Of 14 commonly purchased food and
' non·food products, selected at ran·
doin. 'The cost of the Items was
·; checked on March 1, 1973 at one
; supermarket In each of 13cltles and
: has been rechecked on or about the
• start Of each succeeding month.

The latest survey showed that the
marketbasket bill went up during
January at the checkllst store In
eight cities and went down tn five
cities, for an overalllnccreaseot1.2
percent.
The January boost compared
with a December Increase of only
two-tenths of 1 percent. It was the
steepest Increase since a 1.3 per·
cent lise In June 1981.
The Increases are due, In part, to
seasonal production declines In
things like qalry products. The bit·
ter cold weather across much of tbe
country during January also af·
fected production and prices.
The price of a pound of butter In·
creased last month at the checkllst
store In six cities, according to the
AP survey, whUe the prlce of eggs
Increased at the checklist store In
nine cities.
The price of frozen orange juice

'

concentrate atneady has lisen at
least 12 percent at the wholesale
level as a result Of the freeze In F1or·
Ida. But the Increase generally has
not shown up so far at the stores
surveyed by the AP. 'The prlce oi
frozen orange lulce concentrate
went up during January at the
checklist store In only three cities,
whlle It decUned In four cities.
Gove~t economists generally have predicted moderate In·
creases In food prices In the coming
year, although all of the forecasts
are subject to change because of
weather conditions.
No attempt was made to weight
the AP survey results according to
population density or actual famUy
spending. Standard brands and
sizes or comparable subsltutes
were used for the survey. Items
temporarily out of stock on one of
the survey dates being compared
were not Included In the over-all to-

NOTICE .OF
SALE

tals. The AP did not try to compare
actual prlces from city to city. 'The
only comparisons were made In
termll of percentages Of Increase or
decrease.
·
.
The Items on the AP checklist
were: chopped chuck; center cut
· pork chopS, frozen orange juice
concentrate, coffee, paper towels,
butter, Grade-A medium wblte
eggs, creamy peanut butter,
~undry detergent, fabrlc softener,
tomato sauce, ·milk, frankfurters
and granulated sugar. A 15th Item
on the AP Ust, chocolate chip coo- .
Ides, was dropped from the survey
when the manufacturer dlscon·
tlnued the package size that had
been used.
The cities checked were: AJbu.
querque, N.M., Atlanta, Boston,
Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los An·
geles, Miami, New York, PhUadel·
phla, Providence, R.I., ·Salt Lake
City and Seattle.

! -~ouse swapping cuts vacation expenses

n/a , not available

•

';f:

~

By Allocla&amp;ed Pl'el8
• A growing number of Americans
cutting vacation costs by swap~ng their houses with other faml·
for a home away from home.
-· 'A successful trade takes advance
planning, however. You should
; 'stjlrt making· arrangements now
· for a summer holiday.
·
i' · The typical house swap works
i J1ke this: Pick a city you'd like to
1 visit and find a farnUy wtlltng to
' trade houses. You move Into their
: tiouse; they move Into yours.
. , You eliminate hotel or !JlOtel
Youcuttood bills because you
r~can prepare some or all of your
f- ineals In your borrowed kitchen.
f' You get an lde11 of what It Is really
to live In a city Instead ol"
;1
1simply seeing the tourlst attrac·
r tlons. And you may have the use of
f extras like a car or a boat.
, You'll have to pass up some
~Jngs. however. You don't get the
~ge benefits of a hotel. You have

are

ltts

:Twns.

. •illire

There are steps to take to make
to trust your home and possessions
swapping easter. Among then\:
to ·a stranger, and you you may feel
-Be specltlc In descrlblng of
uncomfortable Jiving with someone
your house and demand stnnllar deelse's personal belongings. And
taUs about any swap you are consld·
there Is no guarantee that the ac·
ering. Get a photograph 'it possible.
commodatlons will live up to the
-What Is part of the swap? Is a
description.
car
Included? Are there plants to be
Why do people SWOIIJ?
watered.
or pets to be fed? Do you
"Money Is a prlme reason In the
want
a
non-smoker?
beginning," said Mary DeBaldo of
-Agree, In advance, wh9 pays
the Vacation Exchange Club, Inc.,
for
what. Discuss things Uke teleof New York City, one of several
phone,
cleaning, utility and news·
exchange services which will, for a
paper
delivery
bills.
fee, put would-be traders In touch
-check
your
Insurance to see It
Wtth each other. Once people get .
additional
coverage
is needed.
Involved In swapping, she said,
Exchange services publlsh dlrec·
"they make so many friends ... It
torles of potential swappers In the
becomes a cultural experlence."
The friends are more Important United States and overseas. You
can Ust your house In the directothan the savings.
Barbara WUson, managerofTra· ries or you can simply subscribe to
them .
velers Home Exchange Club, Inc.,
The Vacation Exchange Club of
of Denver, agreed. "The savings
are considerable," she said, but the New York publlshes two directoreal benefit Is that you " meet Inter· ries - one In February and one In
AprU. The deadline for a listing In
esttng people."

the April edition Is Feb. 15, but you
can get a subscription alone at any
time. 'The price Of a subSCription Is
$14; It you want a Ustlng as well, It
will cost you $21. For Information,
Write the clu~ at 350 Broadway,
New York, N.Y., 10013.
Travelers Home Exchange of
Denver also publlshes ·directories
In February and AprU. The dead·
line for listing In the AprU directory
Is March 31.

Ap

Photocopy causes ·problems ·
LOS ANGELES (AP) - President Reagan's attorney says that
the discovery Of an "altered" photocopy Of papers be signed two
weeks ago In the sale of the Reagan home In Pacific Palisades
caused the deal with a Nevada corporation to be called off.
The home was sold Friday to another buyer - attorney Steven J .
Halpern and two Halpern famUy trustees- for an undisclosed price.
"There was an Irregularity about (the first deal), there Is no
question about It," Roy D. Miller said Saturday when asked about
the transaction with Zoller Industries that collapsed Jan. 18.
A man who ·answered the phone at Zoller on Saturday night declined to give his name and said i'Ompany executives would be
unavallable for comment until todliy.
Miller said th~t he had signed an escrow agreement on the Reagans' behalf Ustlng the sale priC"' at $Ul3 mllllon. But on Jan.15, Ted
C!andenlng - an executive at Valley First Federal Savings and
Loan ot Palm Desert, whlc(l was conslderlng financing the sale -'told Miller he bad papers ln which the price was Usted as $1.93
mllllon.
.
"He (the bank oHictal) bad a photocopy which contained my
signature and figures different than what I signed," Miller said,
calling It an "alteration" of the orlgtnal document. He said he could
not say who bad made the changes.
Reagan was "upset" about the problem, Miller said.

Gently, please
PARIS (AP) - The 248-mlle
route from Paris south to Lyon can
be traversed by a train that oper·
ales at a cruising speed of 156 mUes
per hour.
The high-speed raU line was designed with gentle curves so that
the train would "avoid plasterlng
passengers against the walls," as
one engtneerlng journal described
It recently after the Inauguration.

The Daily Sentit:~el

~

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio45769

'

•
Announcements ' I~

a

1·Card of Thanks
2-lnMemorla m

Real Estate

3-Announcement s
A· Giveaway

S·Happy Ads
6· Lost and Found
7-Yard Sale
9·'Wanted to Buy

f!

Employment

-

Rental s

14· Business Training
15-Schools Instruction

&amp; CB Repair
18-Wanted To do

·'

...

~)

fnlinu:ial

21 ·Buslnen Opportunity

,. .

NOTICE Dt'
· . ·sCHOOL BUS BID
· In accordance with Sec
tlon 307.86 of the Ohio
Revised COde sealed bids
will · be received In the of·
joke of the Mel.g s County
E:ommlssloners,

~urthouse.

County

Pomeroy,
Ia, 45769, until twelve
tn (12:00 ~ . m . ) on
Fe ruary 16, 1 82 to be
read aloud at 2:00P.M. for
qoe ( 1&gt; new 19 passenger

Yl

Hei~Wanted

SALES AGENT
WANTED

&amp;nd Instructions to bidders
are on file and may be ob·

tal ned at Said office.
Said bus must comply
wllh all safety regulations

and meet or exceed the
Ohio Minimum Standards

~

65·Seed &amp; Fertilizer

54

bown calendn
anci ipiCillly ad•lllliolol -'""' olin 10
fof ., 1 - I·
! f1lll or port Umt ooolo.
Wt IIIICI I IIIII Otitfttld 1111n or
" , _ .., llci!Jiiw

J,:

·::::'?.

' - . bu.- pffl ..., ll·

--·--lilt~
- · · spocillfJ - ·

CO!IIIIIIlfr. 11M l1too. D. MutpiiJ

' J:o., Is 1 !II- lo lllt oohootlslnt
I

__

flllol - ... IIU.

Com-

.. Jill' ~- IIIII It
"'*'
" ........ ,.., ...

. . . . . . . 1:"7""'"''
_,
, .D. . .

liNt.

~~~.

JU. ltd -

illrl

"

!he following:
1! Purchase

2 Lellse Cone and three
year&gt;
3) h~ease with oplion to
buyb~c k

for School Bus con ·
The Meigs County Com
slrucllon as odapted by the ' missioners reserve th e
Ohio Department of r ight to reject any or al I
Education and all other bids or P.arls thereof
pertinent provisions of law.
Price, qualol~. avallabllll y
The front of the enveloge of service and deliver y
enclosinp, the bid must e dale will be con•ldered In
marked 'Sealed Bid School awarding contract.
•Bus." Bidder to furnish
own bid form .
(2) 1, 15, 2tc
Each bid should Include
Public Notice
Misc. Merchandice

Rollo11111

I 'lftiiWfJd:llrtl

Public Notice

Up to 15 W9rds ... One day

insertion ..

Up to 15 Words ... Six dav

insertion

CALL:

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614-992·2181
For
Farm
and
Home Deliv~ry of
Gas '
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT
CAlL TOIMY!
-- ·- -

.

NOTICE OF
FORFEITURE
OF LEASE
Empire Development Cor
poration, Inc .
c/o Guv1Boggess
Box 41

Tuppers P.lalns, OH 4S71l

Sugar .Camp ~un and In·
dian Run, bouncted on the

Emmott I. Peterson and

Marcinko; on the East by

Public Nollco

LOrrllne F. Peterson
address unknown

TO WHOM IT MAY CON·
CERN:
Pursuant
to
the

Darlene

J.

add res s

and

Olive

M.

Osburn,

husband and wife~ lo WB a.
BB Oil and G•s &lt;..Ompany,
dated Apr il 4th, 1964, and
recorded

in

Volu~

Sl,

Page 59S, of the Meigs

County Lease itecords,
which lease was assigned

from Empire Development

Corporatton

to

John

D.

f::r~tion,

Inc. ·

521 Miramar Road, No. 11
Son Diego, CA 92126
John D. Oliver and Blcklli
l. l(ver

the lease has expired since
the lease calls for a term of
ten years and so long
thereafter as oil or gas, or
either of them, Is prOduced

from the said lands by the

Lessee, Its socceuors or

assigns,

among

other

provisions, which spec•fic
provision has been violated

Oliver and Biddle L.
Oliver. OI&gt;E June 28, 1965,

and not fulfi lied, and II Is

ded in Vblume 5-4, Page 59.
of the Meigs County LeMj!
Records. and which lease

for record an Affidavit of

which a\signment is' recor·

the intention Of the un·
denigned Lessor$ to file
Forfeiture with the County

Recorder of Meigs County,

Ohio, if lessee, Its sue·
cesso~~ or assigns, does not

...... .. S7 .00

The Pub I isher reserves
Yarct Sale, In Memory, · the right to edit or reject
any ads deemed obCard of Thanks are aciecllonal . The Publisher
cepted only Cash in Ad·
will not be responsible for
vance .
more then one incorrect insertion.

successors-in·
interest to the
Lessors

m 1, lie
Public Notice

Public Notice
Pages 13 and 14 in the

records of the Meigs Coun·

1~

Recorder's Office and

being more tully described
·~follows:

Commencing at a point In
the northeast corner of Lot

i Number 7 and .t he
LEGAL NOTICE
sour~easr corner of Lot
COURT OF COMMON . Number .6 of Turner' s Sub·
P~EAS_. MEIGS' COUNTy,
division Number ..Or1P. ~~~~
POMEt&lt;OY, OHIO
recorded in Plat · Book
ease No. 17.91 Number 4. Page Number 4
PARK FINANCIAL INC.
in the r~ords of the Meigs
Columbus OH
County Recorder's Office
Pfal~tlf 1
·YS·

HARVEY RUSSELL and
JEAN RUSSE~L
Rutlalld,OH
Delonclanls
Pursuant to an ORDER
· OF SALE ISSUed by the
Court of Common Pleas,
Meigs County in the above

nam.e&lt;l case. 1 will expose

for sale at publlc auction on
the front stePS 01 tne Meigs
County
Courthouse,
Pomeroy, Ohio, on Satur-

and the existing southerly

right·of·way line of Bryant
Streeli thence s. 67 de9rees
20' 00' E . along the ex•sting
southerly rlghl·of·way line
of Bryant Street. 12S.97 feet
to a point in the grantor's

north property corner and

the real point of beoint'ling
for
the
land llereln
desc:rlhPn : thPnrP S f..7
degrees 20' 00" E . continuing alonq said line and ttte

grantor's nortn propertv
11010~ 88.60 feet to a poont in
the grantor's northeast

day, the . 27th day ot
February, .1982, at 10:00
roperty corner; thence S.
have ..,;d lease released of o'clock A.M., the following
degrees 00' 00" E. along
record within ~hirty (30) described real estate, to·
grantor's east property
the
da~• from the dale of thiS · wit ;
line and passing the north·
which assignment Is rKor·. notice.
Situate In Fracllon One,
corner of $Old Lot
ded In Volume 54, Page 71,
Delmar J. Osburn, Town 61 Range 14, Rutland east
Number 11 at 50.30 feel a
of the Meigs County Lease
Lessor Townsnlp, Village of total
distance of 119.30 feel
Records; which lease
Delmar G. OSburn Rutland, Meigs county, to a point
In the grantor's
and Re_glna K. Ohio, and bl!ing part of Lot southeast property
covers 44 acre1, more or
corner;
OSburn, Numbers 11 ~nd I 2 of the
less, in Olive TownshiJ11
N. 90 degrees 00' 00"
Meigs County, Slalf! or
Larry ~ - Osburn and plat of the Town of Rutland · thence
w. along tne grantor's
Mary Jane Osburn, as recorded In Pial Book 3. sputh
Ohio, on the waters of
oroperty line. 198.'00

Empire Development Corparallon to Emmett 1.
Peterson end Lorr&amp;ine F .
Sindelln , • Peterson, on June 28, 1965,

President
Empire Delielopmenl Cor

and whl.c h you are either
Lessee or the successor· In ·

provisions of
Section Interest by virtue of the
5301 .332 of the Ohio Revised above assignments of
·
COde, you are hereby lease, is forte fled .
not;fled that the Lea51!
The basis of the for ·
from Delmar J . Osburn . feiture is tnat the term of

TO : WB &amp; BB Oil and Ga s · was further assigned from

Company,
unknown

lands of Dona ld Buchanon;
on the South by lands of C.
0 . Cowdery; and on the
West by Johnnie Klb~le;

..... $4.00

(Average-4wordsper line )

Public Notice

Norlh by lands of Winifred

11
I,
I•

Phone-----------------

82· Piumblng &amp; Heating

Public Notice
2181111nols Drive
Rantoui.IL61866

1·i

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

Up to 15 Words ... Three day insertiOn ... .. ..... ..... 53 .00

Refrigeration
8S·General Hauling
86·M.H. Repair
87·Upholstery

!:I

Name·--~---------------

91 -Home Improvements
93-Excavating
84-Eiectricai &amp;

I'I
II•

I

1195-Lelarl
937-Buffafo

61 ·Farm Equipment
62 ·Wanted to buy
63·Livestock
64·Hay &amp; Grain

pure ase (specify

Write your own ;d and order by. mall with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when ~ou get
results. Money not refundable.

882-New Haven

f;nm Supph P.s

separate bids tor each o

amount)

742-Rutland
667-COOIVille

773-Mason

22 -Money to Loan

Public Notice
school bus. Specifications

Falls

675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon

23· Profession•!
Services

Public Notice

2~11-Letart

949-Racine

Mason Co .• WV
Area Code 304

I

-41 -Housesfor Rent
42-Mobile Homes
for Rent
43-Farmsfor Rent
44 -Apartment for Rent
4S· Furnished Rooms
46 · Space for rent
47 -Wanted to Ren t
48 -Equipment for Rent
49 · For Lease

17-MiscellenP.ous

343-Porlfand

576-Apple Grove

:....

16· RadiO, TV ,
·,

Pomeroy
985-Chester

let-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
25,-Guvan Dist.
643-Arabia Dist.
379- Walnut

76-Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
77 -Auto Repair
78 -Camping Equipment

Curb Inflation
.

Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savelll

9t2-Middleport

U7-Cheshire

7S· Boals &amp; Motors

12·S ituation Wanted

13·1nsur ance

..

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446-Gallipolis

74 -Motorcycles

53 -Antiques
54 -Misc . Merchandise
55 -Building Supplies
56· Pets for Sale
57 -Musciallnstruments
58 -Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59· For Sale or Trade

ll ·Help Wanted

Gallia County
Area Code 614

nvans&amp;4WD

57·CB. TV , &amp;
Radio Equipmenl

33· Farms for Sale
34· Business Buildings
35· Lots &amp; Acreag e
36-Real Esfate Wanted

following telephone exchanges.

71 -Autos for Sale
77.· Trucks for Sale

51-Household Goods

31 -Mobile Homes
for Sa le

&amp;Auction

~

'•

9

Mi sc.

31 -Homes for Sale

&amp;·Public Sale

..
..

Tr;ms porta tion

g

These cash rates
include discount

_ _...:.Publlc ·Notlce
fe~t to' a point in the gran·
tor's southwest crogertv
corner and the west line o~
saiCILot Number U ; th~nce

)Wanted
&gt;For Sale

) Announcement
) For Rent

N. 0 degrees 00' 00'' E

along the grantor's west
property line end the west
line of said Lot Number 12
and passing the northwest
corner ot Sllid Lot Number

12 at 69.00 feet a total

distance of 119.99 feet ·to a
point In the grantor 's nor·thwest property corner ;

thence s. 75 degrees •s· OO"
E . along the grantor's north property line, 100 feet to

a point in the grantor's
property corner ; thenGe N.
18 degrees 51' 00" E. along
the grantor's west property
line, 55.21 feet to the point
of . ,beginning and contatn•ng 0,557 acres of whi ch
0.157 atres is in said Lot
Number ll and 0.157 acres
is in said ~ot Number 12.
T~e sa1d ·property is ap-

praosed at

s:n.eoo.oo

and

cannot be sold for less th'ltn

2/3rds the apprais!'d price.·

Terms: Cash m h!nd
dav of sale.
'

JAMES J . PROFFITT
.:
SHERIFF

Meigs County 1

·~:vnno»r
Shops the
WANT AD WAY

Public Notice

also e&gt;e.cept the followinq
tract. to-wit : Situ~te in 100
Acre Lots Numbered 288
and 289 aforesa id and boun ·
ded thus : Beginn ing at the
Northwest corner of saio

r----------------------,

Classified pages cover the

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

~-

Pt:rchase 1n SuTt on Town
s!1ip, Mc iqs County, Ol1io .
Also. exceptinq The right ot
the Marl in Ebersbach
Comu~nv .
its. succes5.ors
rmd ass1nns in perpetuity
Lot No. 289; !hence East 18 10 mtnr. and r emove the
chains 8.4 links to the North
Si'lid coal from · said r eal
line of said L ot No. 188;
&lt;'State and to do nit thi nqs
thence South 10 cha ins 50
necessary in connectiOn
links; thence North 80
therewith,
and
further ·
degrees wes_t 22 chains 15
more the right in per·
links ; thence North 7
petuity to use so much of
chains SO links to t he place
the surface ·described
of beg inning , cofltaininq 17
afQresa id as may be
acres sold to C. Roush bv
nece~sary to open, operate
deed dated Dec. 18. 1861.
and equ ip a complete coa t
February, 1987, at 10:00 Also. except 60 acres of sur · mining property with
o'clock A.M .• the following face deeded July 22 , 1873, ~a
buiJ,;:tings and railroad swit ·
lands and tenements, to- Wi lliam J . Ba ll by LewiS
ci"es·"'·necessary to mine,
wit :
Curtis and Catherme Cur · . load and carry away coa l
The fol lowing real estate tis, his wile, .be the same
from $a id premises, and
sttuated in the County of
more or less.
c'tlso for drf'tin aqc nnd
Meigs. and State of Ohio
4-, lso ,
excepting 'deposit at re luse and tur ·
and known as Hundred
therefrom the following thermore, the right :n per ·
Acre Lots numbered 288
part of Lot No. 289 begi n- pe tuity to haul through and
and 289 in Section No. 30, in
ning at a point in the East IJVN said premises coat
Town No. 2 and Range No.
line of said Lot No. 289 and and other materia ls from
12 in the Ohio Company's
on the North line of the such ofher properti es as
Purchase estimated k con·
county road leading from they or any of them may
tain Two ,Hundred Acres.
Pome.roy to Rac i ne; thence destre. Said Mart in Eber s
mor_
e or less .
Nort h 5 degrees East on bach Com pan y. its su:·
EXCEPT the follow ing said
East line of said Lot cessors and assigns, are to
described tracts of land ou t
No. 288 Two Hundred and be r elieved from any sur of the above Hundred Acre
Eight and E igh t · Tenths fa ce damage by reason . of
Lots, to-wi t:
feet; thence North 85 mining coal under said
Two and one-half acres
degres West 100 feet ; t hen- premises. Any surface land
taken from the SouthWest
ce South 5 degrees West 146 required or used as above
corner of said One Hundred
feet ; th ence north 78 by said Martin Ebersbach
Acre Lot No. 289, com degrees 40' West 600 feet to company, its successors or
mencing at sa id Southwest
the said North line of sa id assigns, is to be pa id for at
corner and running up th e ,co.
u ntv road ; th ence in an the rate of $200.00 per acre,
river six rods, and fa r
eas tertv direction along and said Martin Ebersbach
enough back to contain two
said North line of said Company, its successors
and one-half acres; and
county road 707 feet to th e and asSigns, is atso qranted
also t he follow ing exof beginning, con- th e r ight in perpe tu ity to
cepted, to-wit: Beginn ing 6 place
731100 of an acr e. transport and haul coal and
rods East of the Southwest · taining
Also, excepting from said other materials a long and
c orner of 100 Acre Lot No.
tra ct first described the through any passage ways
289 aforesaid; thence up
following tract of land or entries in or under said
the r iver North 82 d~grees
being a part of Lot No. 288, prem ises and a long and
East s chains 10 links to a
Town 2, Range 12 of ·t he through any mint•ral seam
stake; thence North 10 Ohio
Company's Purchase or vein from an·y conchains 25 li nks to a post;
and further bounded and ti guous coa ' properties ·of
thence North 91f2 degr ees described
as follows : the sa1d Marttn Ebersbach
Ea~t 2 c hains 75 links to a
Beginning at the point of in· Co.. it s successors and
post ; thence North 63
tersection of the East line assigns
degrees West 7 chains 73 of
said Lot No . 788 with the
E&gt;ecepting ana reserving
links to a poplar tree'; then· South
line of the right of
to Grace Wi ll iams. 0 . w.
ce South 2 chains 50 links;
of the Oh io River Elec- CapP.hilrf, Annil Mari e
thence East l chain so way
tric Ra ilroad Co.; th ence Hewitt ,
and
Charles
links ; thence South h
SoutH SO degrees West on Copehart, their hei rs and
chains to th e place of begin - said
East line of Lot No
assigns , all oil and gas
n ing. containing 9 acres. 288, 60.9
feet; then ce N 75
Also, except tt'le following, aegrees west 89 teer; men- ly ino under nnd with1n th e
pre ffiis~s her eby conveyed,
to-wit : Beginning at a
North 56 degrees 3' West with the n9ht to enter on
st.ake on the line between ce
123 .2 feet to a point on the
what was formerly the said said South line of the ri9ht· said prem tses , prospf'ct ,
e~plor~
and drill for ,
Lewis Curtis and one Han · of·way of the Ohio R-1ver
devel op, produ c~. store and
nati RouSih on t he North Electric Railroad Co.;
remove the same. with all
side of the road from thence South 76 degrees
ma ch int• ry , strut:tures.
Racine to Pomeroy in Lot and 20' East along said
No. 299 aforesaidi thence South line of said rignt·of - derricks, tanks, Ph.&gt;e lines.
fixtures,
North on said line 105 fee t ; way 996.1 feet to the place equipment.
thence East 80 feet ; thence of beginning, conta ining 1.9 machinery and other appliances
and
th i ngs
South 95 feet to said road; , acres .
necessary or convenient
thence West down said
Also.
except ing
th e therefor, and th e right to
road 80 fee t to the said
place of beginn ing ; Also, followin g described r eal use so much of the surface
situated in the Coun- as may be necessary for
except the follow ing tract. estate
to·wtt ; Beginning at the ty of Me igs. in the State of th e purposes aforesaid;
and 100 Acre Lots 288 said oil and 9as excep tion
Northwest corner of What Ohio
was
form e rly
Wash and 289 in Town 2, Range 12 and reservatton is subject
Township, and to th e r i ght and privileqe to
Nease's lot in the East line in Suttonand
descr•bed os use suff ic ient gas lo f u rni ~ h
of what was formerly said bounded
Hannah Roush's Lot in said follows : A str ip or par cel of one dwelling on sa id
land 25 teet in w idth and ex · premises, without any
100 Acre Lot No. 289 at a tending
from the We st line charges for the Qas, from
post 6 chains 95 links North of
Capehart's land to the any gas produ cing w ell on
from t he river bank; thenEasT 1 ine of the same a said premises .
ce East 80 feet to a oost;
of 114.7 feet, more
A l so. exceptifl"
th e
then ce South 95 teet to a pistance
post at road; then ce North or less. the North side of follow ing d escri bed rea l
said
strip
being
bounded
by
estate situated in 100 Acre
841J2 degrees East 3 chains
the South line of th e C•&gt;unty Lr.t No. 289, Sutton Town·
SO links to a post on side or road
and
the
South
stde
of
ship, M eigs County, Ohio,
said road; thence North 2
strip being bounded by and described as follows :
degrees East 3 chains 26 said
~ ti np rlr;twn ,nilri.l UP.I .tf\ .t.Df'
Beginning in t he center of
l inks to a pos t; thence West
4 chains 71 links to a posT in said South tine of the coun · State Route No. 124 where
tv road and disband in a th e Easl li ne of Charles
what was formerlY said southerly direction 25 feet
Roush's line; thence South measured at right angl es Blake Lot intersects th e
2 de~rees West 2 chains and from the sa id southerly line center of Sa id Road ; thence
North 2 degrees East 270
15 links to the place of of c ounty. road containing
along Charles Blake'' s
beginning . Also, except the 2867 .5 square feet, more or. feet
East li ne to his Northeast
following, to-wit : Begin- less.
.
corner; thenc e South 85
ning at a post on the bank of
Also, save and except all
the Ohio River on the the coal in and under the deg rees 40' W es t 80 feet
~IOn!=f Charles Blake's Nor·
soutt1east corner of whatM following described real
formerly Hannan Roush' s estate, to·wit : Being 100
lot in said 100 Acre L ot No. Acre Lots No. 289 and 289 in
Real Est•t• Gener1l
289; thence North 2 degrees Section 30, Town 2, Range
East on what was formerly 12 of th e Ohio Company's
said Roush 's line 6 chains
to a post on the road; thence North 84112 deQrees East
5 chains and 14 links along
said roa'U to a post; thence
South 6 chains 62 li nks t o a
VIRGIL B. SR.
post on the r iver bank ;
216 E. 2nd St.
SATISI'Y
YOVR
NEEOS
thenc e down said r iver to·

By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Com mon Pleas Court of Mei~s
County. Ohio, in the case of
Harold M . Smith, Route 1.
Racine, Ohio. Plaintiff,
agai nsf Esther Smith ,
Route 1, Racine . Ohfo.
Def endant. upon
a
judgment therein ren . dered, being Case No. 17921
in said Court. I .Will offer
· for sate, at the front door of
the
Courthouse
in
Pomeroy, Meigs County.
Ohio, on the 20th day of

!.

17. - - ' - - - - 18.
19,
20.
21.
I

30. - - - - - -

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

31.-- - - - 32. - - -- - 33. - - -- -34. - -·- - - 35. - - - - -

I

1
1
1

23.
24.
2S.
26.
27.
28.
79. - - - - -- -

I
Mall This Coupon with Remittance
I
I
The Dally Sentinel
I
111 court St.
I
Pomeroy, 01\. 45769
I
. .
.
.
~---------------------

t

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Truclcs
• Lo· Bov
• Trencher
• Water • Sewer
eGas ·lines
• Septic
Systems
Large or Small Jobs

PH . 992-2478
1·71· 1 mo. pd.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Custom kitchens and
appliances ,
custom
bathr.,oms, remodeling,
plumbing , electric, and
heating.

FR~E

ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

Real E1tat1 Ge"eral

S@eMr. Goodwrl!nci'IFar

FRONT·END
ALIGNMENT
..--· ... With Genuine GM
Parts!

----·--·.
-I-\.---------=-

(,.;

Assume this loan with
dpwn. 12% in ·
.terest, approx:. 29 years
to pay, $302 per month
includes taxes and in·
surance, total $29.500 Home on State Route
124, two bedrooms, 1117
acres ,
several
buildings, garden space,
large rear enclosed por·
ch,ffiany features .
Owner will help finance
this newly constructed
English tudor , split en·
try home , close to Mid
dleporT . Featuring J
bedrooms, 21fJ baths,
family room , large
, llvlng
ro o m
with
separate dining room ,
gai'age ,
work shop .

basement on approx.

room house. out of all
f loods. 3 or 4 bedrooms,
bath, basement. new
gas furnace . 2 lots. Only

1.75acre lot. S5,000down
12% interest - 20
year term negotiable!
Total price $42.000. man·

$21,000.
NOW IS THE TIME TO
LIST YOUR PROPER ·
TY
WITH US FOR
SPRING SALE. CALL
992-3176 .
SUE
MURPHY •
HELEN AND GOR ·
OON TEAFORD, ALl,
REALTORS.

thly payment of S40UO
princ iple and interest .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
GRI
992-6191
Jean TRussell 949·2660
Dottie&amp;
RogerTurner 992· 5692
Office
992·22S9

H ousin g
Headquarters

Buy Now l SM 52 • f&amp; P. Y•d
·, 2S .,.b c:.p.t II llodl to pidl 11om.

' ....
. lildlld. carpet l!llllllod he """

fOld,

':.J~~~~~~=
IIIII· ~
Jlitiiuo,._

IIJI

'12"
Sq. vd . installed

Rt. 3, Bo&gt;e 54
Racine. Oh.

Ph. 614·843 ·2S91
6·15·1fc

Goocl ~erection •
Kttchen
ubber Ba1ckedl
Cash •n• Carry
Brown. Blue

STARTING AT
.....

REESE-:
TRENCHING
SERVICE·
Water-Sewer· E lec'tric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook· ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

Ph . 367·1560

Yd.

IN RACINE
""'-· !hun. I Sal.
HAIR STYLING
Both Mtn I Women

• YYnnl!n

J. R. PARSONS
1·8·1 mo. pd .

MOBILE
HOME

• Drv•n
e Ro\n9n
• DiiPGt.oillll

CAll 949·2320

• Dill'lw.nn•rs
eHotW•I•rTilnkl

f.Sll c

1.. 74·1 mo ,

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Anything tor your
Mobile Home.

KINGSBURY
&amp; ACCESS.
Rt. 124

WELDING SHOif

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

PARTS

REPAIR WORK
eGas &amp; Electric
eCutting
• Brazing
e20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates _

~ ·seautHul,

Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949 ·2801 or

866 South Third
Middleport , Ohio

949-7860.
No Sunday Calls

Minersville, Oh .

Ph. 992· 5587

PH. 992·5663

J·11 ·1fc

FIREWOOD
Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Available
or YOu Pick Uo

John Wise

David Price

(6141992·35S6
1·13 ·1 mo. Pd.

S&amp;WJV
and

.APPLIANCE

l'ram
_lrr

Chester, Ohio
PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382
All makes and models
Antenno~~ lns1allation
House calls and shop
service available.
1·3-1 mo .

CIIINHifil'd JIH~I!H r·over the

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER

followin~ teii'Jihonl• l'.uhnn~e11 •..

SERVI~E"

Meigs Co. Area Code

Garlia co. Area Code

614
992- Middleport

614

- jl,ddonl 1nd nmodel1n1
- RCX!flnt 1nd euttt'r work

446-Gallipolis

Pomerov

367- Cheshlre
388-Vintqn

- Concrele work
- PtumDing•nO

985- Chester
343-Porlland

145-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
643-Arabia Dist.

eleoctr iu l work

(Free Estimates)

247 - Lerart Falls
9419- Racine

742- Rutland

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•·

667-Coolville

99HliS or 992-7314
Pomeroy . Ohio

Mason Co .•

9·30·Ifc

H ·

w. Vit .

Area Code 304

MS- Pt, Pleasant
4S8-Leon

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
u.s. Rt. 50 East

Guysville, Ohio
Authoriud John Deer.

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; service
1·3-lfc

576- Apple Grove

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·
tensive
in g.

773- Mason
882- New Haven

895- Lelart
937- Buffalo

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

remodel ·

In Meigs County ;

In Gallia County

• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years E&gt;eperience

446-2342

992·2156
In Mason County

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

675·1333
'

Flea
Market.
New
Open ing . 7 days .1!1 week 1

.HARRISON
TV SERVICE

NOW

.OPEN
used Color TV Sets for
Sale.

SALE PHONE NO.

992-6259
276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

·

9·21-lfc

OHIO VALlEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
e Roofing of all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs . experience

The Heart of Middleport . 20
SWEEPER

and

sewing

machine repair , parts, and
supplies.
Pi ck up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mil e up
Georges Creek Rd . Call

446 ·0294..

Ph .949·2160 or 949-2482
1· 5· ti c

-----.

I

In com e
tax
service~
Federal and state Income
tt'lx forms, quarterly repot"lts. and W-'l forms will b4o

done by appointment. Set

.

Plaza . 446·807S .

TOM HOSKINS

N. 2nd St . formerly Martin
Generl!l Store. 992-6370.
1

Complete line of Muzzle Wanda Eblin, 41000 ~aure1
Loading Guns and Sup· Cliff Rd , Pomeroy. 992j
plies .
Spring
Valley 2772.
_I
Trading Co., Spring Valley

Bauer's Barber Shopmwlli
be open all dlly Thursdat

Bleu,
Poorest people crowd

December 31 . Happy Ne&gt;k

Year .

jails. Study. Library. Law.

1-----------1------------l Economics
ScIence.
.

A W

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

NUGGET
11e.H - n2.H

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

den space . SS,OOO down ·

8

II

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

bedroom home on excellent street in Mid·
dleport. Nice tot with
c hain
link
f e nce ,
remodeled throughout.
13% Rate Available on
this F .H .A . aSsumable
loan on a 3 bedroom
home near Pomeroy. In
excellent condition with
full basement, wood
burning firepla ce, ni ce
rooms . Large lot - oar·

MIDDLEPORT

J.

BUILDINGS
Sizes start from J0x'24 "

3

approK . 29yearstopay .
Pr inci pal and inter est
$330 .20 per month · Total
price$34,500 .
Owner will financ-e tnis
building tl)f. Aoprox 1
acre cleared 1a11d with
city water and electric
available . $500 down.
term 3 year s at 10% payment of $48 .41 m an·
thly, prin ciple and interest total price
$2,000.
Blended rate available
at 14%, on a 2 bedroom
home, on appro&gt;e . I 1/ 8
acre
lot . Lots
of
remodeling , for ced a ir
heat. aluminum siding.
30 Years term. IOo/o
down, $265 .53 per month
principal and interest total price $2-4,900.
Seller Financing - This
new 1v
cons tr u c ted
energy
eff tcient
l
bedroom home near
Po meroy
w it h
full

1
1

AU. STEEL

Assume this loan at
11'h % with $3,400 down,
approK . 29 vears to pay,
$302 per month , includes
tttxes and insurance -

JUST
LISTED
-Remodeled 6 bedroom
home, modern bath,
d ining ,
2 porches.
basement and a wood working shop 24x42.
Land contract $32,500 .
JUST LISTED - 7 room
frame, out of high
water, bath, natural
gas. and c ity water.
Only $9,800.
RT . 7 FARM - 18 acres.
some fence , old farm
house. a 2 bedroom
tra iler, and other out ·
buildings . T .P. water .
$32,000 .
RT . 14l - 5 yr. old 8
room s, 2 full baths, car·
peting , range, Obi.
ove n,
2
door
refrigerator. Level 1.8!f.
acres. $37.900.
2 HOUSES - or will sell
separate. 3 bedrooms
each, city water &amp; gas . 2
garages, level tots adjoining . $28.500. ·

I
I'

Ph. 992·6614 ,
308 E. Main
Pomeroy,

. $49.900.

Phone
1-( 614) · 992-3325

-

.

B·A BEAUTY

ALlMA~ES .

(6141742-2 131

~-

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985·3541
PARTSA NO HRVICE

SIMMON'S OLDS .·
CAD.·CHEV., INC.

$2,.500

total · $29.900

Small Pipelines A
Specialty
North of Racine
·On Ca rmel Road
at Sawmill

Also wood Splitter
For Rent

.

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
YOU 'CAN BUY A
HOME AT BELOW
RRENT INTEREST
TES WITH THESE
ASSUMABLE
OR
SELLER FINANCED
PROPERTIES .

lO Years Experience

Modern Electrical
Equipment

E. Mainlo.oi.MJ

''I::==::;:::J!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
I!
FEBRUARY CLEARANCE

'I 1.
I.
I 2.
I 3.
I •·
I s. - - -- - 1 6.
I 1.
I 8.
II 9.
I 10.
I 11.

1
1

The Paily

, Ohio

-Public----Notice
----------- - -·
the place of beginning . And
....

.~rocery prices rise dpring January
By LOUISE COOK
· "-''ated PreM Writer

1' 1982

"

MILLER
ELECTRIC
-sERVICE

For an your wiring
neecll; fu~ rapelr
aervlca
intUtlle1ion.

and

Re1hlenlilll
&amp; Commercllll
Cal 742-318&amp;

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP
(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal!
Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals . _
1
mile
west
ot
Fairgrounds on Old Rt .

33.
Mon. ·Fri .8:30 104 :00
Ph . 992-6564
1-1·1 mo.

He a It h .
M i litary ,

weapons. vocations.
Rohelio

sules &amp; E·Vap " water
pill s" . Fruth Pharmecy ,

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG
Opening
soon

JIMS Water Service . Cell

specializing

In

ALUMINUM
CANS,
aluminum siding. sheet &amp;
cast alum., copper wire,
brass, radiators, auto bat-

teries &amp; IBM cards. Walh
this paper for location and
grand opening. Rosenberg

Recycling, 140 Columbus
Rd., Athen&amp;, Oh 4S701 , Call
1-61N.,7.

1 hunger and lose
~------------J~-..!..:.--------i
Weight
with and
New Hydrex
Shape
~
Diet Plan
Water Pills . Fruth Phar·
mac~ .

VALENTINE
PERM SAL£

--- ~--:

REDUCE safe &amp; fast with
GoB esc Table IS or Call·

Jim L•nler. 304-675·7397.
Camp Conley.
RETIRED widow gen·
tlcman would lll&lt;d to write
or meet widow lady , SOber.:
non-smoker . For co:m;

panion5hip . Call for

furl~~

information , 304· 773 ·5477 .

Mc Dani el's Custom But·
cher ing, Open from 7:30

am 1116 pm . JOH82 ·32,.. ·

4

---- --=---Giveaway

.1

ANY PERSON who hasl
anything to give away and!
does not offer or attempt to

For

Mon., Feb. 1

thru
Sol., Feb. 27
Rtll. $20 Now 517.50
R... S2S Now $22.50
R... $lO Now U7.50
US Wove Length
For Loneer Hair" '
Now S2t.50

~·111a.utJ
sa
N. 2nd

bUlk

delivery

of

gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, Cll ll Landmark,

9t2·2181. Pomeroy. Oh .
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun . star ting

•Colflll2·2721
2· 1· 1 mo.

,,

____

column. Tt1ere w ill be no
char ge to th e advertiser. , :
~

___:_~- ·

2 puppies, small gOOd "'11ri
children. Call•46·7152 " i

at 1 p.m. Fa ctory chOk e
guns only.

1

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot. Sal. nlghls
6:3Cl p.m.• Bashan. Factory
choke12 geuoe shotgun.

R''R 'tat

offer any other thing IP(,
sale may place an ad In 1~1'

To gOOd home 5 puppies:
Half Shepherd and ~fll

______ ____,

Collie. Caii38B·9306.

· , :

Puppies to goocr home. 67!?
9787.
.
;
~

�Pag-8- The Daily Sentinel

Po
12 - -STtUitiOiiSWanted -

~6

• Lost •nd Found
11
Help Wanled
Cute 6 wk . old puppies. part
20 per
cenl
Dachshund, 2 males. 2 Earn
fe males, free to good hori1~. retirement on $2.000.00
106 Peoples Terrace, wholesale Instead of 3 per

Pomeroy .
Lost : 1
round
shaped
locket. Ytllow gold w ith

ce~nt

ret irement

$7,500PV.

614-875-9749

6u - ~11- r~r• .

Bookkeeping, Income tax
service, individ u~l and
busi ness . Call Richard
Bailey at 992 ·3861 after 6
p.m .

on

or

13

several chipped diamonds

on front . Lot of sentimenta l
NEI;DED
va lue as it was a gift to me. RN's · LPN ' s
If found please call Linda NOW to fulfill requirem en·
ts of ICF Certification.
Mayer 992·5950.
Salary commensurate with
training and ~perien~e ­
Lost : Brown dog, part Ger · Extensive berteflts 1n·
man Shephard . Goes by eluding
paid
Sparky , Black.collar . L in- hospital ization, retirement
coln Hill area. 992·6556 .
program , no penalty sick
leave, 3 week va cation to
~eward .
Lost 2 beagle start . More. Contact Per ·
dogs, 1 male, 1 female . ~nel Director. (J0-4) 675write Lakin
Black, brown and whi te . 3230 or
Vic inity of TNT area . Call Hosp ital, Lakin , WVa
8U2 · 2631
or
8811075 25250 .
eovenings.
WANTED : Full·t ime livein Housemanager and partYard Sale
7
time Reli~ Housemanager
Rummag e Sa le Grace (weekends) to work with
Methodist, Cedar St. Ent . persons handicapped with
F r i. Feb . 5·9 to 4PM. very mental retardation at
good items, house hold groUp home in Gallipolis.
goods.
Job requires that you
supervise staff and that
you train and supervise
8
Public Sale
clients in personal hygiene
_ ___.:&amp;
= Auction
and home livi ng skills.
Feb . 11 . 1982 at 10 a .m . the Week ends off . Room .
Racine Home Na tional board,
and . benefits
Bank will offer for sa le a1 provided. Send resume to
F&gt;ublic
Alfction
the John Lehew, P .O. Box 90.1,
foll ow ing : 1976 Chevotlet Gallipol is, Dh 45631. E',qual
Mal ibu Classic, 1974 Buick opportunity employer .
2 door hardtop, 1979 Honda
XLSOOS motorcy c le . The
Ra cine Home Nat ional Full charge bookkeeper 1
Bank reserves the right to to 2 years recent ex· :
reiect any or all bids and perience In general
may rem ove any or all bookkeeping, preparation
items from the Sl!le at any of pay r oll, taxes and sales
taxes .
Send
sal.ary
time .
requirement and resume to
Box 505 in car..e Gallipolis
wanted to Buy
Daily Tr ibune, 825 3rd .
Ave, Gallipolis, 45631.
WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
niture and Antiques of al l
kinds, Cllll Kenneth Swain, Free Lance Cinematogar·
pher/ reporter·found , Si len256· 19671n the evenings.
t; and video tape for TV
station . Write News. D~par ·
CASH PAID for clean, late tment, P .O. Box 13, Hunmodel used cars. Smith tington, wva . 25701. E .Q.E .
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call «6·2282.
Taking · Applications for
Grill Cook. Now taking
Buying
Gold,
Sitover,
taking applications at Bob
F&gt;latinum, old coins, scrap Eovans· Steak House.
'1 rings &amp; silverware. DailY
quotes available . Al so
someone to care for goats.
coins &amp; coin supplies. for
Milk
and
feed .
Ex·
sale .
Spring
Valley
~rienced . 256·6642.
Trading, Spring Valley
Plaza. «6·0025 or 446·8026.
GET VALUABLE training
We pav cash tor late model as a young business person
·clean used cars.
and earn good money plus
·
Frenchtown Car Co.
. some great gifts as a Sen· '
Bill Gene Johnson ,
tinel route carrier. Phone
«6·0069.
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
wanted to buy tie logs. 2156 or 992·2157.
Paying up to SIAO per
thousand . Call 256·6363 or Part time. RN for 7 to 3
Shift. 2 to 3 days a week.
634·3131.
Call Mrs. VanMeter at
TOP PRICE Scrap Me tal , Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
auto bod ies , and ca rs. Bat- ter. 992 ·6606.
ter ies. alumium , brass &amp;
copper. Gall lpons Block R .N .' s· L.P .N .'s needed
Co., 123 112 Pin&lt; Sl ., 446· now to fullfil I requirements
of I. C. F . Certification .
2783 .
Salary commensurate with
Top rabbll Beag le . IIIIo 13 training and eM;perience·
112 inches tall , 3 t&amp;" 3 1/2 Extensive benefits in·
paid
years old, not gun shy, gOOd elud i ng
hunter &amp; tracker. MUst not hospitalization, retirement
run deer or fox . No fast program, no penalty Sick
dog, two week trial. Con · leave, 3 week vacation to
start. More. Contact Per·
tact Bil l Carter al «6·3413.
sonnel Director 30H75·3230
or write Lak in Hospital.
A nice building lot. Will pay
Lakin, WV 2 ~250 .
cash . Call379-2617 .
La!lt day I will buy fur lor
this season is Saturday,
Feb . 13, George Buckley,
664·4761 .

BEDS· I RON , BRASS, old
furniture , gold , sil'ller
dollars. wood ice boxes,
stone tars, antiques, etc.,
complete
households .
Write : M .D. Miller. Rt. -4 ,
Pomeroy , Oh. Or 992·7760.
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
d ia m eter 10" on laroesf
e nd . $12.50 per ton . Bundled
sl ab . $10 .50 p er ton .
Deliverd fa Ohio Pallet Co.,
Ro c k
Spring s
Rd .,
Pome roy . 992·2689.
Gold, silv er, sterling,
jewelry , ri ngs, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burken Bar·
ber Shop, M idd le port. 992·
3476.

BUYING DEER AND
BI;,E F HIDES . Gene Hines
Rt . 1, Amesville, Oh «8·
6747 . Buying raw fur otter
Dec . 12 . Dal ly 6 PM to 9
PM, c losed Sundays.

AUT.OMDBILE
IN ·
SURANCE been can ·
ce lled?
L ost
your
operator's License? Phone
992-21-43

18

Wan Jed to Do

Babysitting in my home.
Call «6·0390.
Will care for an elderly
man or woman i n our
h9me. $600 per . mo. Call
«6-8163.
Jackie's Cake Decorating
&amp; Candies. First house past
Scott's Bait &amp; Bar, just
South of Eureka . Taking
orders for cakes &amp; candies
(fancy and plain) . Call 256·
1367 or 256·6571.

4-2- -Mobile Homes
far Rent ·

2 bedroom brick~ house,
large patio, sliding door ,
full basement, garage, 1
acre lot on state Rt. 35. Low
SO's . Call «6·0755 .

Mobile Homes
for Sale

32

TRI -STATE
MOBILE
HOME S. Gallipolis. Price
r educed, used mobile
homes. CALL«6·7572.

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town , finan·
cing available. Phone 446·
1294.
1972 12x60 mobil e home fur·
nished w ith e&gt;&lt; tra s. Finan·
clng available. Call 367·

7115 .
1973 New Moon mobile
home, 2 bedroom 12x65, un·
furnished. Caii446·6S45.

1973 Champion mobile
home. Set-up &amp; ready to
live in . Call 446·8286, after
5 ;00PM ca ll446·8127 .
USED MOBILE
576-2711 .

Will babysit in my home
weekdays, ddV hours only ,
located in town , have ex ·
perience. Call.u6·8320 .

1977 Dawn mobile home.
excellent condition, 12 &gt;&lt; 60,
completely furnished, all
electric, $7500. Call 304·576·
2014, if not home, ca ll after
5pm.

HOME .

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

3 rows for sale at Oh io
Valley Memoria,! Gardens
at $400. Call 245·5682.

21

Business
Opporlunity

HAVE a highly profitable
and beautiful Jean ShOp of
your own. Featuring the
latest in Jeans, Denims,
Sportswear and Western
Wear. $12,500.00 Includes
beginning Inventory. fix ·
tures and training . You
may haove your store open
in as little as 15 days. Call
any time 1·800·255·9049 Exl.
7.
22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . Slate St.,
Athens, Dh . 592·3051.
23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning-Be kind to
your ears. Call" Bill Ward
for appointment, 446·4372 .

C &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in ·
dlviduals.
Carol Neal «6-3862
Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
cards . Ususally one or two
days service. Dismuke's
A05 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis,
«6·0474.

TRI · CHEM liquid em ·
broidery
ins tru c tors
needed now . Exce llent ear·
ning poten ia l. Elsa Cox 304 675·5187.

3.-'1'-_!!
H::::
o:.:.
m::e~s..::lo,_,rc..;So:ao:l::::
e_ _

R.N.'s . L. p . N.'s NEE OED
NOW to fulfill requiremen ·
ts of I, C. F . Certification .
Salary commensurate with
training and experience Extensive benefifs In·

1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446·7015 after
5 :30p.m.
3 or 4 bedroom house with
bath in country on 2.3
acres . Storm windows,
rural water, garage. tots of
storage space , close to al l J
mines. F&gt;rice reduced for
quick sale. $15,500 . 742·
2502 .

el uding
paid
hospitalization, retirement
p r ogram, no pc1lalty sick
lea ve, 3 week vacation to

start . More. Contact Per sonnel Director ~ 04-675· 3230
or write Lakin Hospital,
La kin , WV 25250.

Comforteble 3 bedroom
home, 8 112 perce nt
assumable loan. and Is
near PPHS, ·targe fenced in
yard. kitchen appliances
and more .
We
are
relocating and can share
realtor's fees bv selling
now . Call alter ' om 6751625.

,.-:2,---S
" 'i""
tu-a"'t'"'
lo-n-s"'w"'a- n--:-ted
Wanted : Person to share 2
bdr. apt. Call245·5835.
Haove va cancy for elderly
woman or man in my
private home. Good ex·
peri ence .
Reasonabl e
rates. Call 61A·667·6329 or
614·667-3402 .

HOUSE In .. New Haven.
sma 11 down payment ,
assumable loan, 304·882·
275A.

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mObile
homes. Call «6-0175.
F urn ished,
i deal
for
couple, no inside pets,
private lot, b ig yard. A
miles out . Call «6·3918.

- , acre lot Kemper Hollow
Rd . Close to HMC . Ca ll 1·
614·592-5639.

Large tr act of land located
in Pomeroy, Ohio. Can be
financed at 12 percent. 991·

5786.

.

Rentals

2 brd . apt. HUD excepted,
kitchen furn . Call675 · 510~.

2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in
Crown City . Call256·6520 .
Furnished apt. J rooms
wllh pr ivate bath . Releren ·
ces preferred, ,845 · 2nd .
Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 446·
2215.

2 room furnished
adults . Call «6·0168.

apt .,

Apartments . 675-5548.
APARTMENTS , mob ile
hom es,
h ous es .
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614-406·8221 or614·245·9484.
Elficiency roomS by the
week on Main Street,
Mason, WV . 773·5651 .

Houses for Rent

41

Delu xe furnished apart·
m ent, exce llent location, 1
or 2 adults, only S275, ref . &amp;
rtep. required . Call -446JJJS.

Efficiency
apar"tment .
Roush Lane, Chestlire. 30.4·.
773-5882 .

Real Estate
Wanted

36

Furnished apa r tm ent for
rent. Call «6·3937 .

2 bedroom family rm .1 $300
per mo . plus uti li ties, $300
dep. required . Call 446·
4554 .

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
decorat ed unfurnished, 3 rm . house.
Suitable for single person
or retired couple . Garden
space, deposit &amp; r eferences
required. Ca ll 4.46·0450 or
«6: 12'11 .
2 bdr. house on lower Rt. 7.
Dep. required . &lt;taiL , 256·
1413,
I
House 2 bedroom, 733 3rd.
Ave.. Gall ipolis. Qeposit
required. Call 446-3870 or
446-1340 . .

2 bdr. complete ly furn ., all
electric, carpeted, adults,
no pets, .458 2nd . Ave .•
Gallipolis, $225 per mo.
plus deposit. Cal l 446-2236
or «6·2581.
5 room house, bath, large
lot , garden space .
Available Jan . 25. Racine
area . 992·5858 .
Furnished home . 992·7706.

2 bedroom house '.m Li ncoln
Hts . New floor cooverings,
gas heat. Adults preferred.
No pets. Ref. t~nd dep.
requ ired. 992 ·3054
2.12 acres of land with 6
rooms and bath on Middleport Hill. For furth er in·
formation contact the
owner at 650 South 2nd Ave,
Middleport or 992 ·6755.

UNFURNISHED house.
white. frame, 3 bedroom,
electric heat, k itchen not
furnished w lh stove &amp;
refrigerator. Ut ility room
with washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 acre garden &amp;
yard . Mai l ing address
Gallipolis Ferry, lease &amp;
deposl required . Owner·
ship management. Phone
Huntington , 304-522·1990 .

APARTMENT for rent,
S150. per month, 304-675·
1972.

FURNISHED 1 bedroom,
all e lectric aPartment.
adults only, no pet s, ca 11
304-675-3708 .
DUPLEX ,
furnished.
adulls, 304·675·1902.
45

FUrnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel.
46

Space for Rent

Large trailer lot . Ca11 446·
4265 or 446·4736 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roule 33, North of
Pomeroy. Laroe lots . Cali
992 -7479.

Sl

WHITE frame , 7 room, 3
bedroom, electric heat, kit·
chen not furnished with
stove&amp; refrigerator, utiHty
room with washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 Acre yard &amp; gar·
den area . Mailbox address,
Gallipolis Ferry . Deposit
lease required . Ownership
management. "JOA-522·1990 ,

a.

....

Mobile Homes
for Rent

MOBILE home for rent
wllh opllon to buy, 30A·576;2711 .

11

FURNISHED 2 or 3
bedroom mobile home. unfurniShed I bedroom apartment 30-4-675·1371 or 675·
3812

Help Wanted

Why settle for less, sell lhe 1
best. AVON . . Call 446·3358 ,
or 742-2354.
i

(

Television
•

,.

Chevy c-10 power steering
&amp; brakes, AM· FM stero,
good cond. Cai1«6-765A.

,IM'l1JJ.t
~

Good 16 cu .ft . refrigerator
for sale. Call «6· 1146.

S4 Misc. Merchandice
Lump coal $32 per ton .

Rex rabbits, beautiful fur,
Sire grand champion.
Meigs Fair 1981 . C·asotrs.
Lynx. SB·$10. 614-985·AI34.

dump, gas 5x 4 34M Rears .
2 airlift Ayles. 1 Eaton 2 sp
Rayle . 1 350 GM engi,n e
complete. Phone 992-3861
after6p .m .

7_3 _ _ vans&amp;4W. D.

-·····--···

1 apartment size Sears
Kenmore washer, real
nice, $90.00. 1 GE dryer,
sso.oo . Call256·1207 .
1 Whirlpool 1mperial 90
auto . washer, 3 speed, S
cy cle, like new, $125. Call
256·1207.
Furniture for sale. Leaving
area must sell. Regular
Buck stove excellent condillon (free standing) $600.
8 II . pool lable, $300. Com·
plete Groyle Hill lioving
su ite w/ tables, $1,000 . Cal l
446·7497 or «6-A942.
Exercise bike, just
new. Call446·1570.

like

J

..........

51o48.551 o-4x4- 40 .551o48. 561o64
61o-4 ,4-64

9314,00
- 11 ,304.00
Plus Freight

Sale Date March 13, 1982
CALL ~OW!

MASSEY FERGUSON 96
bushel
grinder -mixer,
same as new condition , 30.-372-9773.
1965 MF 35 gasoline trac·
tor , one 6 foot scraper
blade, price 27.95 . Phone
576-2297 after 5 pm.
- - - - -·--- - ~ -

F irewood $30 . a PU load.
Within 10 mile rad ius
cheaper . Ph. J.J . Justice,
388·8246.

Household Goods

Gibson 15.fl . freezer . 1 year
old . $350. 614·949 ·2732 .
20 ft Gibson chest freezer .
Had only a few months .
$375. 742·3154 or 9'12 ·7067.

6.4
Hay &amp; Grah~- --­
Hay for sale . Call 367-0157.

.

Nice Spelt straw. Coolville
614·667·3838 .

•
H~y-

$1 .75 per bale,
m 1n1mum SO bale, ground
ear corn S82 ton.61.4·985·
3581.

100 or more Timothv hay ,
742·2416.

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

Maple dinette ' set. 4 bar
stools, sofa . 992-7639.
Firewood for sale. S35
pickup truck load. 614·905·
3887.
Craig AM-FM cassette
with Craig 50 watt power
booster. 742·3HA or 992·
7067 .

_Quills $35 . 614·669-6041 .

THIS IS IT · OUR ANNUAL
SALE . Gel up to $125.00
savings on World-Book Enc y c I oped i a .
Month I y
payments available. Call
Margaret Pierce. local
school servi ce represen tative . 304-675-3775.
· Lowrey organ, like new,
$800 .
Copperlone
refrigerator S125. 675·5304.

~C~~~ii}~~~=

55
Bultdlng Supplies
Building materials block ,

brick , sewer pipes, wlndows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Call245·5121.

S6

Pets lor Sale

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TeRY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies, CF A
Himalayan, Persian and
Sl•mese kittens. Call «6·
3841 afler~ p.m .
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. ·Dober·
mans. Call «6·7795.

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators, BRIARPATCH KENNELS
ranges .
Skaggs Ap- :Boarding and grooming.
Gordon setters,
pliances, Upper River Rd., A 1&lt; C
beside Stone Crest Motel . English Cocker Spaniels .
Call 388·9790.
«6·7398.

._ .

71

_.

Auto for 5ale

For sale 1978 Chrysler Cor·
doba automatic, AT, PS,
PB, air, cruise, leather in·
ter lqr. ifO~ mileage . Must
se1 r. call245·5841 .

81

Home
Improvements

- TOWARD TH05&amp;
;_: • ACM&amp; RAT;,

. .BORNLOSER
i,~JII=~ lllAT

'lbU ~L-ETW

I DIGTATeQ,

11-1~ Pk!&lt;A'5E.,
11
I LCN8-'P.J
~

MISS~tJ.

MlJGI-1 . d

49 Che.v y S.W. runs, new
brakes, wood In good
shape, $1,200 or best offer.
Caii379· 236A.

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone,«6-3888 or -IA6·4477

81 Dodge Colt, AI MPG,
front wheel drive, 5,000
miles. must sell : Call 675·
23-43 or 675·15.0. ,

83

THERE'S ONLY ONE THING
... AND THAT'S HOW R.J .
I DON'T GET ABOUT THIS
MANAGeD T\;ET SL"-0&lt;
CI&lt;A'ZY DEAL ."..
--&lt;"~
BART TGO ALONG
WITH HIS SCHEMe!

when a Soviet cruiaar rema an
will budge;
tenelon moun
II
Amer
ican daatroyer:
and
bomberafrom both countrlea
oro lounchod. (2 hro.) (CiooodCoplloned; U.S.A.)

is evadinq mel

She's alwa14s

1 can't =-

liked
you/

imaqine
Wh14!

WHEN~~ !NT81l77"'AI.. f'OI? twTKIMS' IVIIVN!t
J~t?.M~/711/.S YACIIT &amp;&lt;'a:u!CCU-~ .. 1

NOT 50 QUICKLY, ·

MY

LITTLE FASHION

17E516NER ...

Excavating

Gallipolis Diversified Coil·
st . Co. Custom doter &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. -4-46· 4440.
84

PAW!! OUR

Electrical

_ _&amp; Refrlgention

SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service! Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy . 992·2274.

1969 Plymouth wagon. 318
auro . 985--4346.

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N . air condition service,
commercial, Industrial.
Phone 882·2079.

~BARN'S ON FIRE!~

1972 Ford Torino 351 -C,
fastback sport, new tires,
A-1 condition . $995. Must
see. 61A·667-3085.
·
1980 Buick Skylark. 22.000
miles .
PS,
PB, AC,
automatic . Like new.
$5,A.50. 614-9A9·2273 .

-HIITI

&lt;Ill•

HARTS Used Cars, New.
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive can In
stock . ·l
1976 NOVA SS, 30$, 3 speed
on floor, $1,600, 304-675·
2745.

Genorol Hauii!!L_

M

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367·0591.
NOW HAULING hOuse coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367·7101 .
Upholstery

Do--.--.11 '.

JUST ~EN '(OU
THINK YOu'VE :
SEEN EVERYTIIIH6...

•.YOU REALIZE ·
YOU HAVEN'T

TRISTATE
1 UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave., Gallipolis ,
446·7833 or «6·1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 12A, Pl. Pleasant, 304675-41s.l.

.

l

THEATRE OF
THE MONTH 'Pray TV' Drama
aboUio young proacher ' o
IUugglotOChOOIIbiiWIInlhO
convanllonet church end I hi
miniOiry Oltho olrwovoo. Store; .
JohnR itlor, Nod Bully ,
Modolyn Smllh. (2 hro.)
D Cll ®I M.A.S.H. A wlndtoll
ohlpmonl of trooh oggo hoo
.,oryonoll tho 40771h
overjoyed except tor on a
moroooplrol~whooppooroono
'!!llhiln lho meoolonl.
(l1J I!IINITEIN-IIE!THOVEN
Maximilian Scholl diiCUIIII
Vionno ond Boolhoven'o oorly
yooroond Loon ora Bornotoln
lolodo lho Vlonno Phllhormonlc
Orohealrein the ' Corlolan
Ovorouro , Opuo82'ond
'Symphony No. 21n D Major ,
Qpuo 311'. CliO mlno.)
8 :30 ill MOVIE -(DRAMA) '"111.
"IIUIII!lt _ .. tere
eWIJal HOUH CALLI Dr.
Norman Solomon fa Oil I
melpractlce eult when he
pl•c•• tha overweight
Ktnalnglon cl'lef, t.torrll
Bobcock,onodlottokoophlm
hoollhy.
10:00 • Cllllal LOU GRANT Lou
knowa he'll gat unofficial
crlllclorn from outopol&lt;en Tho•
Toll, rotlrod city editor. bulhlto
· the root when an unorticial
complalni aoalnll the Trib
comet from a watchdog
commlttaeonthapraail'leaded
by tn unfriendly chairwc;.man.
(f!O mlno.)
0DGREATP!RFDRMANCE8
'Brldoohood Rovllllod: Tho
Bltlk Ll.ghl ot Day' IIndo
Charita and Stbattlan In tht
J•·zz ·cruy world ot London
nlghlllfoln lhooorly 11120'o. (110
mlno.)
(jJ) II!WI
10:2S (]) CBNUPDAT!NEWI
10:30 (jJ) AIJIIIID HITCHCOCK
tO:IO ~ TBII~GNEWI
t0:118
CBN UI'DATIII!Wil_
11;011
• Cll&lt;IJe Cllllm
II!WI .
Cl) HAIIIVILU IIPD
'
Cll HIINITI-ETHOVIN
Maximilian Schell dl101111••
Vienna and Beethoven'• urty
yeera and Leonard larneteln
loodolho VloMo Philharmonic
Orchaetreln tha 'Coriolan
Ovtrhrt, Op&amp;u 12' and
'Symphony No. 21n D Mol or,
. CIOmlno.)
t1:H
UPDATIII!WI
11:30
THITOMOHTINOW
'Tloa hot Of Coroon' Guaoto;
Warlauli Hartley, RodRey

278~ .

15

.The coup's on
By O.wlld Jacoby
udAJaS.tac
Oswald: "There are all
10rta of pla:v- desrrlbed
under the general name of
coup. Tbe Vleana cour Is a
specialized form o the
place at the end of the play
- others are made early."
.Alan: " In today's hand
South ruffs the third heart
and pla:v- two rounda of
trump11 only to fet the bed
QeWI. He .hu los two tricks
and bu a trump looer aird a
dub loser still to come.
'!'here Ia · some obscure
chance for a ~e~ueeze in case
\Vetil holda five clubs In
addition to his live hearta.
But there II a 'coup en
puaant' at hll beck a!ld call
provided that ~ wlll have
to follow IQ three diamonds
and two clubs."
· O.wsld: "South cuht!ll his
lut 10011 trump, the three
top diamonds and the ace
arid kln1 of dub&amp;. Now he
leadJ dummy's last heart."
Alan; "Poor East has been
couP!KI. U be ruffa. South
luit dllcards his last club. lf
he dllcardl, South ruffa with
hllllllall trump."

-

London lmHh. IR-t:
mlfto.)
~ ANOTHER 1.11'1

itO

ll"r.:"t-ATE MOYII
Qulocy, M.E.: 'Ponlnt~' Quincy
racaeegalftattha*tdll•ofu
impending •nion eltcUon to
confirm thlf th• oklll otao
IPPifeftlhomlaldl¥1ol""ltthlt
of a rnlealnt labor 111cler.
(Aop•ol) Bonocek: 'A Million
Tho Hatd War' A Leo ~~I.~
OHM'
:ta~a•...,.
iloallllMd
_ _ _ __

.,.. - · -· "'-tl

1-1-11

NORTH

+114

91o u 2
tAKI
+AK8
WEST
EAST
+JtOU
.AKQH
•ea
• J 10 8
t6432
+Q 10 32
+Je7
SOUTII
.AKQ12
.7 8
tQ87
+854

•s

IQ!Ieell!. Some coups take

Vulnerable; BoUt
Dealer: North
Weot

29

Nortlt

t+

Pou

E11t

Soat

Pus

1+
2+

Pass

I+

Paa
Pa11

Pw

Peas

P1u

4+

Opening lead; "X

Oswald: "The defense had
two winners. South had
made then\ use both wlimera
on the same trick."

r~~i~~~~;~~~--ii~~~i~ii~~
~ ~ ~ _· _____ -~

.,

~

lty THOMAS JOIIPH

~ ~OO.iL:c

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

1978 buick Regal si lver, ex·
cellent cond.. 57,000 m i.
Book price $5,300. Sell for
$5,000 firm . Call992·7866 af·
terAPM .

1980 El Camino. 61A·'7~2 ·

Ul52
8:30 GCilllmPIIIVATEBENJAMIN
Thatroopaat Fort Bradley obey
ordar1 I a atonawall 1 raporttr
checking out rumoura of
polluted w111r un.IU Benjamin
IPIIII the btanl about thl tOll
a!tdtn,
8:11 W CIN UPDATE NEWS
11:00 CIJ.CD MONDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIII 'World War Ill'
(Conclutlon) 1182 Stare; Rock
Hudaon, David Soul, Cathy laa
Crotby . AI American lraopa
rapulae Savitt lnv,l dtraln
Al..ka, the two h.. da of atata
mHt In lcoland, but neither aide

' lblt IO NIWiptptl't&gt;ooltl .

BRIDGE

"Gr•ateat Show · , 1.-th"

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason, rooter.
carpenter , electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304-6752088 or 675-A560.

82

1910 Toyota Corolla Tercel,
AM· FM, air cond., auto,
low miles. $3,895. Call «6·
. 1724.

501o1Ell11N', ll!EY 60
LIKE f;OLD ,TIIflNEY!-

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331.

1972 Pontiac. In ·perfect
cond .• has new vinyl top.
Can be seen at 107
Chlllocothe .Rd., 245-5879 .

RIIM, Hdrtt1, :r:lp c~ and ~lkl chtckt

'ModemRomance" 1t8t
Cll tlll •
. T.HAT'S
INCREDIBLe
• Cl) tll) MR. MERLIN Zoe
atanda up two glrlain one night,
ao Merlin magically change a
Ale~; Into a cute redhead lnd
aenda him Into tha high achool
to teach Zac alaaaon.
GlJ GREAT PERFORMANCES
' Brldeahead Revllttld : The
Btaak light of Day' find a
Chari.. and Sebullan in tha
jau-cruy world of London
nightlife In thaeari.Y1820'1. (8,0
mlna.)
8:05 CJl MOYIE · (DRAMA)"''

ATEACHER 60EG EVEN
A LITTLE WHII.E W111100T
TEIICHIN' G&lt;»&gt;E!lOOY

II)

hm .lumbltt Clo thta newtpaPtf, Boa 34, NorwOOd, N.J. 07MI. tnciUdt.rour

1

- IF

]THE(

.......... aoc. No. 11, contalftlng 110 I)UZVta, Ia tvalliblt for 11.85 pc~~~lp~;ld

~~! ,(COM!DYI"\11

RON'S Television Service .
SpecialiZing in Zenllll and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or «6· 2454.

, Now arrange the circled Jenera 10
form the surprise answer, 11 suggested by lho above cartoon.

(Anawets lomorrow)
Sallotday'o 'j Jumblea: lOONY ITCHY JUSTLY RADIAL
Answer: How they benl their knees -" JO INT-LY"

theywaraorphan•d.trieatoaue
to gain cuatod)' ot tha children.
(60 mlno .) (Cioood·Copllonod;
1/,_S.A.)
C1J NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

PAINTING · interior and
ex ter i or , plumbing,
roofing, some remOdeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automot i ve.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079 .

()
Answerhere: r I I XI

) I I

dra, who reJected them when

Call «6·2801 for termite.
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates,sBill Thomas.

WHAT 5R'AP~I"T
IS MO~e THAN.

m

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car ·
pet Cleaning leature&lt;l by
Hoffelt Brothers custom
Carqets . . Free estlr:nates.
Call «6·2107 .

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

(I)

()

FnNOI

,.

lilS L~~1P M~

I

ITHACED

7:30 ~. YOU AIKED FOR IT
All!l.'IMII Lll'l
el)) FAIIILYFEUD
LAVERN! AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
(1), COUEGEIIASKETBALL
t.Aarahall Unlveralty va The
Cltldel j
1)1)
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHoW
(fiJ CREATIVITY WITH I ILL
MOYI!AI 'Theln11entore' The
tlaeh of ln1igt"!t tha t turn•
inwantora on, and the long path
tl'lay follow to mark at new
lnovintlon• end convtnoe their
lnveatora, 11 explored In thll
look at tha apaclal world of
invantore.
·
1BJ .. !NTEIITAINMENT
TONIGHT
7:11
IIANFORDAND7:118
~!I..UPDATI NEWS
1:00
• CD LITTLE HOUH ON
THE PRAIRIE An oldtrly
relative of JanWa and Ca111n·

ALLEYOOP

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential,
free t.'Sti mates. Call 2561182.

I KJ

~-=-TIIIOW
7:05 (I} CAIIOL IUIIN!TT AND

FA,\II I.IE5 ,.. F0Ft Tile SAkE- .
OF TH05e YOU l-OVE ,;, FOR
THe SAKE OF·THE: Pl.AIJE-T
l!iAP,TH, PON'T MAKEMEANc;RY-

·'·' TFtACER.'i!il &gt;IE-AD1'-115 u; STRAIGHT

.

7778 .00
900600
8450 .00

ENFEC

RIPORT

FOR THS 5-AKJ; 0~ 'iOUil

1

1979 Ford F -250 A wheel
drive . Good work truck.
1 Zinn Coal Co., Inc . Call-4461
FOR -sale or trade-running ' Phone 985·A339 alter 4 p .m .
1408 between 9 and 4.
&amp; treeing Walker Coon
Hound. 304·675-27 45.
1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
For Sale Kitchen Jable and
Chevy, 'f.o ton, 4 speed,
2 chairs, $25 . See at 769
SA,SOO. 304-675·1.578 . After
Brownell Ave _, Middleport.
3;30675-1320.
. ... . . .
New wood stove, half price ,
I bi
1980 CHEVY Scottsdale, 'f.o
never used, S3SO . Can con ·
ton, -4 whe,el drive, 4 speed,
vert to furnance. Call 256·
AM· FM. regular gas, 29,000
12lo. Gallipolis.
m i lOS; good Shape, 304-773·
••
Farm Equipment
5150.
Restaurant
equipment
JIVIDEN'S
FARM
rtconditioned by RADCO .
EQUIPMENT
Call 304·523· 1378. Hgtn ..
«6-1675
76
Auto Parts
WVA.
Special Sa le on . NEW
&amp; Accessories
TRACTOR!
CAMPER
topper
for
HP
Pri ce
F irewood $35 .00 pickup Model
pi c kup, $150., 304·675·6113.
2~
24
$4924.00
toad, four ·toads $100,
2~
24
52'15.00
delivered . Cali388·9823 .
2~
24
4924.00
1 pair chrome running
2~
24
~295 . 00
boards for Ford truck or
Win. M -12, 30' full choke.
Bronco SBO . 2 grey captain
Win. M -12 , 28' mod. Rem . 31o28
5594.00
chairs
$75. 675 ' ~C8 .
M-31, 30' full choke. Phone 31o28
5983.00
«6·3413.
31o-4xd- 28
7071.00
72_~ulo Repair
RAY'S
USED
FUR ·
35
6555.00
Duality Autobody &amp; Paint
N ITU R E Bunk beds $65,
35
6945.00
work. Professional custom
coa l stove $85, living room
paint work on motorc;yctes.
41.9suite $35. couch $15, 4607353 .00
Auto Trim Center, 446-1968.
41.9bedroom suite $65, dinette 4607995 .00
A1.9- 6857 .00
set $35, refrigerator $45 . 460460-4x4-41 .9Call367·0637.
9619 .00
--·

I I)

Cll T1C TAC DOUGH ·
(ft)
MACNI!L.UHRI!R

t-:-::=~~;:;;;~;;~~=-r.~:;::;;;;;;;:;;,;;;;~~1
Hou"Sehold GoOds
56
Pets for Sale
1975 Ford T880 15 in steel
51
Reg. cocker spaniel pups,
color blonde, Call «6· 126)!.

"YEASS

HA,!v=~~;INT

ll 'a vary nulrlllous

I ()

lour ordinary_._

CllR
.

'72 Ford 'h Ton Pickup, V·
8, auto., TS, PB, good con·
dillon. «6-06-18 after 5.

c•~rrtCA. .....

u..a..-

"-loilr ~.
Onl lot* 10- .......,., to form

•

7:00 (]) . P11 MAGAziNE
(I)
A GM!AT DAY .TO
RIMI-R

i'il. 7TEAOY A; 9&gt;!&amp;'
"~ ' 60E7
.
;.
EASY. THe

.

.

' MONDAY
PEL 1, tee2

CAPTAIN EASY
Caii-IA6· 172~.

,.f}l}~fi)ft ~ THATICAAMILED~ORDGAME .
~ ~ ~~
·
byHenrtArnoldandBobLeo
.

VIewmg

• Truck's for S1le

1979 . Ford F -150, A-wheel.
drive lock ats, AM-FM,
auto, PS, PB , AC, S.,795 .

..........
. . ..." ... .
.......
.., .........

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gollipolis. 3 piece living
room suites $199, maple
rockers $49, several chest
of drawers, new &amp; used
wood burners, new table
lamps $18, wood cool&lt;
ranges, new 5 piece dlnnet
sets SlSO, kitchen cabinets,
several· dlnnet sets. sliver
stone·all sizes, bunk beds
$100, new tools of all klnds,
wringer Maytag washer,
Linoleum rugs 9x12 $10,
and lots more. Hours lOam
to 5pm . «6·3159.

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

DICK TRACY

1979 Chevy 1 ton, flat bed
truck, SA,200. Call «6 - ~782 .

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

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, at·
taman, 3 tables, S.SOO. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S275 .
Sofas and cha irs priced
from $285 . t o $795. Tables,
$38 and up lo $109 . Hide-a ·
beds,$340., queen size. S380.
Rec liners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from SIB . to $65 . 5
pc. difettes from S79 ., to
S385. 7 pc .. $189 . and up .
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$119 up to $495. Desk $110 .
Hulc hes, $300. and $375.,
maple or p ine f inish .
Bedroom su ites · Bassett
Oak. $675 .. Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complele
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
spr ings, full or twin, $58.,
firm . $68. and $78 . Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49 .
~ dr. chests,
$42 . Bed
frames, S20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cebinets, $350., dinet·
te chairs S20 . end 125 . Gas
or electri c ranges, S295 . Or·
thopedic super firm , $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; $30 .
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,

PomtfO'·
.
Middleport, Ohio

JEEPS. CARS, TRUCKS
Many sell for under $200.00
at loca l government sales.
For
purchas ing
Information ca;ll our Surplus
Sales Center 602 ·998·0575
Ext. 7965.

72

Nice 1 bedroom furni shed
mobile home. 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt. 33. Phone
for appointment 992 -7479.

Fur n is he d
room
$85,
utilities pd ., si ngle male,
range, re.f r ig. sher e bath .
«6·4416 after 7PM .

,

'" '

,..Monday, February 1' 1982

AUIO lor Salt

1977 THUNDERBIRD, ex·
cellent condition~ will con·
sider a trade, 304·675·.u96.

2 Bedroom Trailer par·
tially furnished . On river,
responsi ble adults. 256·6002
after 6.

2 bdr . furnished trailer.
ca ll «6·3522.
- - -- -- - - -44
Apartmemt
_ _ __,!:.:
or Ront

71

78 Monza , V-8, 52200.
automatic, JQ-4·576-2971.

2 bedroom mobile home at
Evergreen . J m iles from
HMC. Ca ll «6·0157.

wood
tabte &amp; -4 chairs.
Used.
Range s,
refrigerators, and TV' s,
3 miles out Bulav ille Rd.
Open 9arl1 to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri .. 9am lo5pm, Sal.
«6·0322

JUNKED cars, scrap
metals, aluminum cans,
transn'llss i ons , motors,
batteries, r adiators, oil
well drilling blls, tungsten
carbide, high speed steel,
waste paper , cardbollrd,
raw furs, hides, glnslng
and yellow root.. Harper·
Halstead Salvage Co., 300 ·
Eleventh St., Pt . Pleas~nt,
30A · 675·5868 . Also flea
market Open Monday
throogh Friday, 1-Sp.m .

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

CLEAN USE D MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SA LE S. . 4 MI. 2 bdr . trailer furnished,
WE ST, GALLIPOLI S, RT . adults only, Brown Trailer
Pa rk , 992 ·3314.
35. PHONE «6-3868.

Babysitting in eovenings In
Cheshire areit. Child 1 year
and older. Call367· 7718.

CARPENTRY, sid ing &amp;
remOdeling , phone 304·5762'189 .

Haove va cancy for elderly
person. Room, board, care,
and laundry. 992·6022.

•

:il - -H"""O""me$ for Sale

Insurance

SA NDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coyerage in Gallia County
for
almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverag es are
avllilable to m eet indiv idual needs. Contact
Lew is Hug hes, agent .
Phone 446 · 3~18 .

Nkmday, ~~ 1, 1982

- Midc!Jeport, Ohio

ACROSS

l Idol
3 Drooping
C Manifold
5 Salad plant

1 Albanian
dialect ·
S Raimondi

and Slepl, e .g . • Mountain
10Lokl's

crest

danahtar
-·~
11 Hunter

7

Tallie

8 Austral
9 Knew

COIIIIellatlon
12 ~

City
by perception
(Pittsburgh) lC Terminated
3F
11 F _,_,.
. euww..
leader

1 sme
lS Imitator
17 Large
container

II Phone
COfllpany

11Mellow

1t Ducked

II Make
an addrela
oo F
h

Yt!llterday'l Auwer
zc Biblical
3% Dutch
Queen's
cheese
country
33 Went on ·
Zllmpure
lndUBtrlal

diamond

employee
Zl ConsiBn

!'IF, Lee -

Z! Too

21 Rio de Ia

a-

marltee

board
34 Prayer

endlrig
35 Mford
37 French
dance

... rene por1
It EXpended
II Used a dttu
Malntained

M

27 ned
M Before
a Averllge
•

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31 Verbatim
31 Moorllh
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feature
II Eared
41 Yemen's
capital
C1 Type rl race

42 Patch
DOWN
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TEMPI'IilD D' AIL POI!8JBU!! OBJECTIONS MUSf BE
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�SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEL

.

Sale Starts Today
Good thru February 7, 1912

,

•• •

... ,. . ,·$

While quantltl•••••· Quantity rlghtueMrvecl. We are not re1pon•l·
ltla·for typog~phlcal arron. lorry, no daalen.

JUOOES-Thet~e three

membel"'l of the Bend 0'
'lbe River Arte CouncU judged entries In a "Heart
Art" JIC)Mer conlea&amp; oold In conJUDCtlon with Heart
Moath, February. AU of the postei'R created In the
cont'llllt, open to an stud!!ntll of. an ~eta In the
county, wiD he displayed In bu8lne88 holl!lell during
this month. 'lbe juqes holding the best of show entries are from the left Janet Koblenlz. holding the best
of llhow by Joe Young, JUvervlew Elementary

-

School; Rhojean McClure, holding the best of &amp;bow In
junior hJch competition by Jim Smith, Melp Junior
HIJ!It School, and Becky Circle, holding the best of
show. among high !Klhool partlclpanls by Velvcl Elkins, Eastern High School. The best of show wlnnei'R
were awarded prizes given by the CoDege BookStore,
Athens. AU contestant~~ were InVIted pelltll at the
judging party held Sunday at Vclerans Memorial
Hospital.

Meigs County happe'Rings
Meet

ThuQ~day

Lebanon Township Trustees will
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
township garage. A representative
of the Department of Natural Resources will be present.

Will reorganize
Boy Scout Troop 242, Syracuse,
will reorganize at a meeting to be
held at 7 p.m. WEdnesday at the
Syracuse Elementary School. Paul
CUrtis will serve as scoutmaster.

Marriage license
Kenneth Eugene Kiser, 20, Route
2, Racine, and Loraine McCoy, 20,
Route 1, Ewlngton have applied for
a marrtage license In Meigs County
Probate Court.

presented by Larry Hunt when the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
meets at noon Tuesday at the Meigs
Inn.

Local units answered four emer·
gency cans· over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
At 2: 22 a.m. this morning the
Middleport Unit took John Cougan
!rom Middleport to Veterans Mem·
orlal Hospital and the Pom~y
Unit just past midnight took Lee
Roush, Union Ave., to Holzer Medl·
cal Center.
On Sunday, the Tuppers Plains
Unit took Foster Nldla, Reedsville,
to Camden-Qark Hospital In Par·
kersburg and on Saturday at11: 11
p.m. , !lie Pomeroy Unit took Della
Roseberry from W. Main St., to
Veterans Memodal.

Joseph Gregory Swaim, 29, Rt.l,
Bidwell, died Saturday afternoon
following an auto accident on
BulaviiJe.Porter Road In Gailla
County.
Born Oct. 16, 1952, In WWiamson,
W.Va., son o! Joseph Swaim, Rt.l,
Langsville, and Lucy Preece Puck·
ett, Fort Myers, Fla., who both sur·
vlve, he was employEd at Southern
In a recent Interview with The
Coal Co. Mine No. 2.
AssociatEd Press, Romero Barcelo
Also suiV!vlng are hls wife,
Johnna Rhodes Swaim; a son, Tra· saldtheReaganlnlllatlveasheunderstands It could undermine
vis Harley, at home; a son and Puerto Rico's precadous 1!\'0nomy,
daughter from a previous mar· and Its planners should make more
dage, Joseph Michael and Jeimtter
Swaim, both Rt. 1, Bidwell; and a use of economic and technical reavallable here.
sister, Mrs. James (Brenda) Scott sources
In a letter to the president made
of Fort Collins, Colo.
public last week, the governor said:
Funeral services.will be held at 1
"I am confident
you ofwilltheconsider
p.m. TueSday In the McCoy-Moore carefully
the effect
CartbFuneral ~orne, Vinton, with the bean Basin Initiative on Puerto
Rev. Elmer Geiser officiating. . Rico as you prepare ·to !annulate
Fdends may call at the funeral your final policy on the region. The
home from 6-9 p.m. today.
Initial recommendations which are
now being reviewEd, If adoptEd,
would sertously Impair the con·
tinued social and economic devel·

Members of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of Amedca, are to wear
white when they meet at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday to drape the charter In memory of the late Ema Jesse.

Middleport Pollee today were In·
vestigatlng several Incidents In
which tires were slashed on cars.
Two tires were slashed on four dlf·
ferent cars overnight, pollee said.

Work session set

Meeting tonight

Speaker chosen

'l'he Rev. James Broome, Mid·
dleport, will be speaker at a mls·
slonary meeting to be 'held at 7: 30
p.m. Thursday at the Hysell Run
Hotlness Church. The public Is
InvitEd.

Coal chamber topic

ByL.RUBENSANCHEZ
In the Interview. "Other Cadbbean
Puerto Rican officials worry that
Associated !'reM Writer
countdes may oppose that. Maybe this will cause lndustrtes to move
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP)they think we have a colonial sta· from thetr Island and will attract
Gov. Carlos Romero Barcelo and
Ius. But we have a better economy Investment money' that might oth·
- other Puerto Rican leaders are
and lnd~trlal Infrastructure than erwlse come to Puerto Rlc&lt;i at a
campaigning publicly for more Jn.
Cadbbean countdes have."
time when the Island's economy Is
nuence In the shaping of President
In
"deep trouble - trouble offlctals
Recent speeches by Secretary of
Reagan's Caribbean Basin
blame
In part on Reagan's budget.
State Alexander M. Haig Jr. and
Initiative.
·
cutting.
special trade representative WilThey have expressed concern liam Brock and statements by U.S.
that the plan now being put to- diplomats In the Caribbean region
gether In Washlngton may Ignore
make clear that the administration
Unlike Puerto Rico, Romero
' Puerto Rico's Interests and the ad·
plans to center the plan on trade Barcelo explainEd, other Islands
vice they are oftertng. They fear · concessions and Incentives for In·
are not subject to fEderal pollution
that trade and Investment concesvestment in the area's Independent laws or the federal mtnlmum wage
sions being considered for other Ca· countdes.
level.
rtbbean Islands could hurt their
Island, a U.S. Commonwealth thatlr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;

Joseph G. Swaim

Probe vandalism

ROMEROY··The Meigs County
Fair Board will meet at8 p.m. Mon·
day a I the county extension seiV!ce
office.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--VIctor Im·
baden, Syracuse; Sandra Luckeydoo, Middleport.
Saturday Discharge--Benjamin
Batey.
Sunday Admlsslons- Deila Roseberry, Pomeroy; Melissa Lambert, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharge--Lena Baxter.

~1g;~~orhopeswlllbecomethe .

33-car

(Continuedfrompagel)
also carded cannEd goods and
grain.
N&amp;W officials at the scene were
unable to explain what caused the
derailment. "I have no Idea/' said
Tom Moo re , an N&amp;W
superintendent.
Earl McFarland, an N&amp;W gen·
eral foreman, said officials from
the railroad's Roanoke, Va., head·
quarters would lnvestlga te the
accident.
The train 'was traveling from Bel·
levue In northern Ohio to Ports·
mouth In the southern part of the
state, rail clerk Wanda Webb said.

BRACH'S
CANDY CONVIRSATION .

Puerto .Ricans oppose U.S. plan

Emergency runs

Must wear white

A special meeting of Shade River
Masonic Lodge will be held at 7:30
p.m. Thursday with work In the
master mason degree.

Area
deaths

F1NALIS'l'!t-'lbe8e flnallsta In the "Heart Art" JI08' are SUIIIUI ·Jett, Judy Kiser, Southi!rll H1J!1t School;
ter conteM staged by the Melp County Heart "-'1· . Klmberlee Mcintyre, Angle Chapman, Clater Eleat1on were on haDd for a party held !or conte..taats at
mentary, aod Chris ChadweD, Mlddleport ElemenVeterans Memorial H08Pital Sunday•. From the left tary. Refre8lunent8 were provided by the P.orneroy
Pastry Shop.

op~~~~u~~~:~~~centerof

I

ELa·E • fELDS
.

Larveor

1111011 ""'"
110a.

49~

YOUR CHOICI

EA.

VALENTINi. CARDS
.
AND PO.PS
U CUrl CAIIDI AND CANDY POPS

.

WINTER CLOTH IN. Gs·ALE.
·

1~

2 PRIcE

.
CONTINUES

HEARTS

99-~

.
_ __

Men's and boys'. shirts, corduroy jeans, jackets,
sweaters. flannel work shirts - Children's jackets
coats, snow suits, tops, jeans - Women's and Junio;
Coats, sportswear, sweaters, tops and more.
·

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

r~th~e~Ba;;sln;;p~la~n;,':';th;e~g;ov~e;rn;o~r~sa~l:d1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"SCIN.TED
ARTIFICIAL ROSES.
ONI DO'ZIN
, IO.ICID

Aspects of a coal mining opera·
tlon by Coal Power, Jnc., will be

Gallia..•
·(Continued from page 1)
Steinmetz 'apparently trted to
ddve around Wood, but collided
with Wood's auto. The accident
caused moderate damage to Stein·
metz's vehicle and slight to Wood's
state auto, and Steinmetz was cited
for !allure to display valid license
plates and driving under
suspension.
Roger E. Watkins, 39, Shade, was
cited for OWl following a one-car ·
crash on Ohio 71n Meigs County at
5:30a.m. Saturday.
The patrol said Watkins was
northbound when his vehicle swung
right and struck an embankrilent,
causing moderate damage. .
Rosanna R. Trussell, 18, Long
Bottom, escaped Injury In a onevehicle accident on Meigs County
Rd. 30, four rnlles east of 7, at 1: 15
a.m. Saturday when she dropped
off the dght side of the road, lost
control, swung around and struck a
ditch, causing slight damage to the
vehicle.
The patrol said a deer was killEd
after colliding with an auto ddven
by James D. Glaze, 29, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, on Meigs County Rd. alat1:00
a.m. Sunday. Glaze's vehicle was
slightly damaged.
The patrol said a vehicle driven
by Dorta F. Grueser, 67, Minersville, attemptEd tocrossasectlonof
Ohio 124 at 11: 00 a.m. Sunday and ·
collided with an eastbound auto
driven .by Jane A. CUndiff, 28,
Syracuse.
Moderate damage was reportEd
to Cundltf's car and Grueser WBII .
citEd for Improper starting.

AT
CROW'S
FAMILY

~RESTAURANT

VA LENTINE CARDS

Every Tuesday Night
21 Ct.

ALL ~ THE KENTUCKY FRIED

CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING
ROOM ONLY
SeiVId with Whipped PotJtoes,
Chicbn Gmy, Cole Slaw, Hot

FOR JUST

$325

Roll, Butter and Coffee.
Sony. No stibstitutes ei!CIIlf ._
IIIIlS which have Ill lddftiOIIIII
price.

Every Wednesday Night

.BAKED STEAK DINNER .
DINING ROOM ONLY
Served with Meslled Potltoes,
Choice of Salld, Roll, and Drink.

$335

Farmers
Bank

Crow's Family Restaurant.
228

w. Meln

Kitty doesn't have =~'mlHJEFERREDfovDuALRETIIEMENTAC~As.
ncy
But whatever
· 1s ar The f armers Bank .
rhesc days. But 1.f she h;~d a tax·
. she
. mvcsts
. . ooukl
s10na
deferred Jndividual Retirement
~~be earntng hagh-yaeld Interest
They'll show you how t1 regular
ACOJum (IRA) ar The Farmers
~ P mak~ her golden years a
sJvings plan can help almos r :any·
Ba~e. she rould have
_
oc A~we~ en.
. . .
one retire with :1 qwrrcr of a m i ll ~m
a lor of n"&gt;oney in the dolus to mme. .
• nuse our mdtvklual
dollars
1
Retirement t\ca ,u.,r~. are, .. , .
By def'U'iting jusr S19.2;
deferred, Kitty could dedUc:t each
Including Kitty.
toward an IRA every week. she
f
could erxl up with Sl)),800 in 30
o her yearly invesrmenrs from her *This example assiJmes 12% interest,
'""'" ·"
taxable iOO!me. So she'd pay no
rompounded annually, based on 100 average
.-- federal """' on her IRA unril she
quarterly
balance. It is intended to be an
Thac's worth reea.ting: A
exam·
def'U'it of $19.23 a week could
stat'J$ withdrawing furxls (mini·
tom! $2)),800.
mum ag&lt;: )9V&gt; ).
pie of how regular depoSits into an IRA can
grow
.
·
Then
when
she
reti
res,
she'll
Of rourse, because rhe maxi-1..-bl
into a substantial sum. It is not a guarantee
pn...
y be in a lower tax brncker
mum allowable yearly in,..rmenr
paying k&gt;wer ltlxes.
of interest rates or end financial r~ ·
has ~n increased 10 S2,CXXJ, it's
possible ro earn ev.en more.
If yuu'd like ru set up an afford·
Making deposits by the wtek, by
able IRA, mme tail&lt; m the profesthe month, or whatever is mosr
runveniem.

OH.,

11le Community Owned Bank

ASSORTED STYLES
11 a.

Ma.

41 a.

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