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                  <text>Page 16-The Daily Sentinel

I

George Robert McDaniel, 49, formerly or Meigs County, died Tuesday at hls home In CrystalLake,'IU.
He was a son of the late George
and Vlrglnla Bartrum McDaniel.
Also preceding him In death were
three brothers.
Surviving are hls wtle, Conine
Farley McDaniel; two sons, Robert
and Michael, both of Crystal Lake;
a daughter, Mrs. Arthur (Kathy)
Elswick, Harnden, Ind.; two brothers, Arthur of Columbus and Jerry
Allen of Greenfield; four sisters,
Wllina Weiman, Cheshire; Mary
Hawley, Columbus; Martha Fry,
GaWpolls; Wanda Tolle, Leesburg;
four grandsons and several aunts
and uncles.
SeiVices will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the RawUngs·Coats
Funeral Home with the Rev. O'Dell
Manley offlcta tlng. Burtal wW be In
Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.
Frtends may call at the funeral
home from 3 to 9 p.m. Friday.
Graveside mllltary rites wW be
conducted by Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion.

William Arthur Orr
Funeral services lor WUilam Arthur Orr, 79, well known Chester
resident who died In a highway accident Tuesday, have been setror 2
p.m. Thursday at the Ewing Funeral Home with the Rev. Richard
Thomas officiating.
A son of the late WIUiam I and

Minnie Orr, be was also preceded in
death by a sister, Lottie Hayman,
and a brother, Wayne Orr.
Mr.Orr was a director of the Racine Home-National Bank, a
former Chester Township Trustee
and attended the Chester United
Methodist Church.
Surviving are hls wtle, Ethel
Theiss Orr; three daughters, Mrs.
Ed (MarUyn) Neuman, GaUon;
Mrs. Bob (Martha) Lee, Racine,
and Mrs. Roger (Janet) Grueser,
Logan; 10 grandchildren, one
great-granddaughter; a sister,
Edith McElfresh, Ashley; a
brother, Paul Orr, Baslllln, and several nieces and nephews.
Burtal wiU be In the Sutton Cemetery . Friends may call at the fun.
eraI home at anytime.

Perry R. Orr
Perry R. Orr, 79, Columbus,
former Meigs resident, died Tuesday at the Northland Terrace Nurs·
ing Home.
Mr.Orr was a retlred.empioye of
the Central Garage of the State of
Ohio with 15 years service.
Surviving are five sons, Marton,
AUen, Starling, Marcus and Alba; a
brother, Olnton Orr; eight grand·
children, and 10 great grandchUdre~.

Friends may can at the Long
Funeral Home Northeast Chapel,
5528 Cleveland Ave., Columbus,
from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday and
from 2 to4and7to9p.m. Thursday.
Services will be held at the chapel
at 1 p.m. Friday. Burial wW be in
Forest Lawn Cemetery.

Meigs resident
dies in crash
A coWslon with a state road
grader on Ohio 124 between Racine
and Syracuse resulted In Meigs
County's first traffic fatality of the
year Tuesday morning.
Dead Is WUUam Arthur Orr, 78,
Rt. 1, LOng Bottom, who was pronounced dead at the scene.
Dr. Nonnan Ehlinger, a&lt;)tlng for
Meigs County Coroner Dr. Rankin
Pickens, said the exact cause of
death Is stW under Investigation,
but he believes Orr may have suf·
.fered a coronary prior to the
accident.

Underground

The GaUia ·Meigs Post of the
state highway patrol said Orr was
eastbound at 10: 15 a.m. when he
apparently was unable to stop and
drove into the rear of a stopped
grader operated by Warren Van
Meter, 56, Reedsville.
The grader was doing work on
the berm at the time of the crash.
Both the Racine emergency squad
and the volunteer rti-e department
responded to the scene, and Orr's
body was transported to Veterans
Memortal Hospital. It was later released to the Ewing Funeral Home
in Pomeroy.

!Continued from page 1)

parable to union wages plus fringe
benefits which would mean that
workers would be ahead financially
. if they did not join the union.
Upod questioning, Hunt also said
that hls cOmpany wUl sell coal to
private residences in Meigs County
at just a little over the cost figure
per ton. He also stated that while his
company d@es primarily underground mining, It might be interested in some strip mlning at a
later date.
He did ask residents knowing of
any lands in the county where there
lll'e coal reserves for underground
mining to let him know about those
locatiollB. The finn has an office at
Brown's Trailer r.nurt, the telephone
number being !m-2280.
Mine I of the company Is located in
what is known as Keeton Hollow and

Veterans Memorial
Admitted- Ida Dudding, Middle·
port; John McDaniel, Pomeroy;
Jenny WIUlamson, Rutland.
Discharged--Melissa Lambert,
Sidney Durst, Dorothy Schwab, Lll·
lie Gheen, Gladys Chaffee, Oneida
Ward.

Mine 2 is located on the Forest Run
Road. Introduced also and speaking
secretary-treasurer
Coal Power,
briefly was Randy ofReichenbach,
Inc.
In other business, Paul Simon announced that Smith Fun Land, out of
Florida, has been engaged as the
carnival for the annual Big Bend
Regatta. The resignation of Susan
Baer as secretary for the chamber
was announced and Jim Frecker,
president, reported that letters are
now going out to members concerning nominations to the board.
Mary Powell of Top of The Stairs
and Carmel Sisson of Dollar General
Store were Introduced. A get-well
card was prepared to send to Katie
Crow, confined to the Holzer
Medical Center.

Market report
Ohio Valli'!)' Uvnterk Co.
· Mullet Report
Sale every Saturday at 1 p.m. Prices taken
from the auction of Saturday, Jan. ~. 11182. Tre~t­
tb: Veal calvest5 to f1lower, feeder ca\Ue P-43
lower,~,.'Ows$142.00lower.

Total Head ttl.
Feeder Steen: Good and Choice 2:50 to300 lbs.
411oS4.50; !00 to 400 tbo. 41-M; 400 to 500 tbo. 46-

13.50; 500 to800 liB. 45. ~ ; 600to700 lbs. 4:J.&amp;I ;

Seeks divorce
Mary Smith, Route 1, Middleport, has flied suit for divorce from
Wilbur Smlth, Main St., Rutland, In
the Melgs ·County Common Pleas

Court.

I

Thursday meeting
A regular meeting of Evangeline
Chapter,' Order of Eastern Star,
wiU be held at 7:30p.m. Thursday.
Members are to take articles for an
auction. Proceeds wUI go to the
bear! foUndation.

Middleport, Ohio

Wednetday,

700 tniOO Jbs. H-49; 800 and over t6-61 .5Al.
Feeder Heifers: God and Chokt 2$0 to300 Ills.
:ruo-44; 300 to 400 tbl. 36-43; too to 500 lbs. 3943.$0; 500 to IJOO lbs. :r7-4UO; .600 to 700 lbl. 350 .50; 700 to 1100 lbs. 35-4.'1 ; ?00 to 100 lbs. :MI.OO.
U.7fl; IIJOandover38--tfi.OO.
Fe&lt;der Bulla; Good and Choie&lt; 2r&gt;O to 300 lbo.
47.50-52.50; lOO to 400 Ill! . .Wl; 400 to 500 lbs.
43.iiH;,500 tollOO tbo. 41.iiH1.50; 60010 700 lbo.
35-43.00; 700 to 800 lbs. 36.5G-41.75; 100 and over
33.iiH3.
Holateln steers and bulb 300 lo 100 lbi. 38-14.50.
Bllils 1,000 lbs. and up42-t8.SO.
SlauM,ht.er cows - uUIIUea :J3..37.50 ; canrteN
and culten33 down.
Veal cal't'tl7fl-94.

Some 17 patients of Veterans
Memorial Hospital had a rude awakening early Wednesday morning
wben they had to be evacuated

from the hospital after two bomb
threat telephone calls were
received.
Tbe ftrst call was received at
about 2: 30 a.m. with a male caller

Mayor's Court
Three defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Terry L. Fergu·

son, West Columbia, W. Va., $375,
driving whUe Intoxicated; Melanie
May, Ashland, Ky., $40, Speeding,
and Timothy R. Richardson,
Hometown, W. Va., $38, speeding.
Fined were Patrick L. Maha.ffey,
Middleport, $100 and costs, possession of marijuana, and $50 and
costs, dlsorderly manner; Roy
Neff, Middleport, $200 and costs, receiving stolen property; David
Watkins, Middleport, ~ and
costs, receiving stolen property,
and Vincent Stone, $200 and costs,
receiving stolen property and $200
and costs, giving false Information
to a po11ce officer.

advlslnll that a bomb had been set
to go off In the hospital at 8: 30 this
momlng.
Hospital employees notllled the
Pomeroy Police Department of the
calls and evacuation was started of
the some 17 patients. The move of
thepatientstothenearbyMelgsSerilor Citizens Center was not easy.
Some of the patients we~ recelving IV's's, others were or{ oi!:}gen
and two of them lllld undergone
surgery on Tuesday.
Nurses and emergency volunteers were everywhere handUng
the move. Nurseswerecalledback
on duty to help handle the problem.
Patients were placed on low cots

ll210loZ301biJ. 46.SG4.50.

801ns l-.30.
Sow!l4001bs. and up tl-46.2$,
PIJt.ll by the head 1$-2'1.511

situation.
The Pomeroy and Mlddl!port
Pollee Departments and Meigs
County sheriff's deputies searched
the buUdlng. Pomeroy's Fire Depa.rtment was pn the scene tor
hours.
No bolT!b was found and at 9:30
this morning, personnel began
moving the patients back to their
hospital rooms.
Nurses from the health department and the county tuberculosis
and health association as well as
those r~.· Jocal doCtors joined other

.

.

lOth .Jt
SALE STARTS THURS~. FEB. 4th AT 9 A.M.

.WOMEN'S SHOES

MEN'S SHOES

DRESS &amp; SPORT

DRESS &amp;SPORT
VALUES TO '40.00

.1 Group . . • ~AJ.R 56110
1 Group ..• P~'R 5 l0110

Twelve defendants forfeited
bonds-10 of them on speeding
charges--In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
Forfeiting on speeding charges
were Betty R. Carsey, Middleport,
$45; Harley Fetty, Jr., GaUipoUs,
$44; Sherman Green, Eskdale, w.
Va., $45; Gerald Rood, Letart,W.
Va., $44; Richard Kern, Cheshire,
$46; Charlotte Erlewlne, Dexter,
$46; Raymond Hudson, Albany,
$45; Howard Roush, Clltton, W.
Va., $46; Linda Powell, Pomeroy,
·$44; Jeroke Roush, Letart, W.Va.,
$45. Jack E. Landers, Pomeroy,
forfeited a $63 bond posted on a
charge of having no operator's license and a $313 bond posted on a
charge or fieeing a pollee officer.
John Tuttle, MlnersviUe, forfeited a .
$363 bond, posted on a cllllrge of
driving while into~cated .

$12~R
BARGAIN TABLE

CHILDREN'S SHOES
56110 A PAl ROR
2 FOR 510110

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS

s~v

Emergency runs

Two callS were answered by local
Ul\lts Tuesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
Middleport at 1:58 p.m. took CUI·
lord Demoskey, Middleport, to
Veterans M~mortal Hospital and
he was later moved to Holzer Medlcal Center. The Tuppers Plains
Uisnltlatl: IS6tap.tem.RoutookteM248eUssa FVran-

$200PAIR

,,

HOURS:

Mon.·Sat.
9:30 til 5:00
'.

KIDDIE
SHOPPE
111 W; 2nd Pomeroy, Oh. ·

Jury indicts five for attacks

r~c~~ro~m~~~~~~-to--ete--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CLEVELAND - Five men have been indicted by a Cuyahoga
County grand Jury In a wave of violent attacks that Included the
shooting of CouncUman Lonnie L. Burien.
David A. Ing_ram, 52; Willard Branch, 18; and Randolph Gilbert,
31, were indicted Wednesday on four counts each of felonious as·
sault. The charges stemmed from the Sept. 15 shooting of Burien and
attacks against three other men from Burien's ward.
Burten, 37, was shot three times In the leg on his front porch.
Ingram and Gilbert also were Indicted on an additional count of
felonious assault in a subsequent attack against Preston Terry,
Burien's administrative aide.

rans Memortal Hospital .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'

FEBRUARY FURNITURE SPECIALS
REG. $119.00

REG. 1319.00

,

PINE GOSSIP BENCH

'18800

*349

SPECIAL

COLUMBUS, Ohio- The Ohio Bureau of Employment Services did
a booming business last week In appUcations from claimants for
benefits under a program which extends unemployment compensa·
t1on for 13 weeks.
The bureau estimated that for the week ending Jan . 30, there were
9,ooi&gt; new claimantS for extended benefits and 41,476 claimants
newly out of work who rued for regular unemployment be~!lts.
It also reported there were27,900 claimants unemployed a week or
more tot extended benefits and 264,500 such claimants for regular
be~ts.
.
Tile state makes compensation avaUable tor up to 26 weeks on a
regular basis for persons put out of work through no cause of their

00

LANE

LIVING ROOM
CEDAR CHESTS
SUITES

CHAIRS
Large Size - Carioca Supported
Vinyl - Double Stitching - Double
Zippe:s. Red, blue, orange, white,
beige or brown.

$2400

Choose from 10 suiles re~u larly priced from
$1,020.00 to $1 ,175.00. Ourable nylon or Herculon covers. Traditional or Early American
styling. SAVE UP TO $400.00.

YOURCHOICE

MERSMAN

•

Bureau has booming business

-Oak or Maple Finish

KOEHLER 2 PIECE

BEAN BAG

SPECIAL

GUN CABINETS
-10 Gun ClpKily

Pine finish - 36" Width
SPECIAL

REG. $39.95

REG. '489.00

BUFFET AND HUTCH

$7700

SPECIAL

REG. $439.95

No I.IYIWIY
No Returns

Arrest suspect in bomb threat

OH.

'

SAVE $190.00

$77500

own.

Reg. '239.00 with padded tops.
Pine, maple or oak finishes.

FEBRUARY SPECIAL

Church leaders discuss Poland

$}5 goo

VATICAN CITY- Poland's top churchleaderswereduelnRome
today to discuss martial law with Pope John Paul II and what to do
about hls plans to vlslt his homeland next summer.
Archbishop Jozef Glemp, the Polish primate, was coming to the
Vatican with Cardinal Franclszek Macllllrskl, the pope's su~r
as archbishop of Krakow, and probably two other bishOps, Vatican
sources said Wednesday.
It Is the first visit by Glemp·and the cardinal to the pontlfl since
martial law was declared in Ills homeland Dec. 13 In an attempt to
check the reform movement led by the Independent Solidarity labor
union.

Chair Specials
One group 'of 12 chairs including wall-away
recliners, rocker recliners and swivel rocker "bed''
chairs.
All upholstered in long wearing nylon or Herculon
covers.
REG. $329.00 TO $369.00

$19900

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
HOURS: MON.·THUR. 9:30.5, FRI. 9:30-1:00. SAT. 9:30-5:00

2 Soctlons, 12 . . _
A Multimedia Inc.

1982

Gov. James A. Rhodes told Labor Secretary Raymond J . Donovan In a letter released Wednesday
that Ohio Is asking the Labor Department for another $85 m!Uion to
pay unemployment compensallon
benefits.
Instead of tile $307.7 m!Uion loan
approved for the first three months
of this year. th~ state wW need
$392.7 m!Uion, Rhodes said. the
$95.9 mtlllon loan requested for January was unchanged.
"We now find that the amounts
requested for February and March
must be increased, due to record·
high unemployment and claims
levels," he sal d.
Thelatestreq
. i. t,coupledwltha
$600 m!Uion debt at existed as or
Dec. 31, brings abnost $1 bUUon
the amount borrowed from the fed·
era! government to keep the system solvent.
None of the money has been
repaid:
An advisory council has submit·
ted a series of recommendations to
Rhodes and the General Assembly
for solving the unemployment trust
fund problems but no proposed tel!-·
islatlon has been introduced so far ..

15

c.n..

'

•
........

-·

'
1

1 ~

.. I

I

·Evacuate
hospital,
PATIENTS - Sixteen
patients of Veterans ·
Memorial Hjlspltal were In
various stages· of treatment early Wednesday
morning when they were
evacuated to the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center after two bomb threats were
received at the hospital. At
bottom, leU, hospital nur- '
ses return a patient to the
hospital following an "all
clear" by area lawmen.

Pancaking
presents
problems
A suspect has been arrested tn connection with twO'obomb threat
calls made to Veterans Memorial Hospital early Wednesday mornIng, leading to the evacuation of the hospital's 16 patients. The
suspect was arrested by Pomeroy Pollee Chief George Stitt with the
aid of the Middleport Pollee Department and the MeigS Sheriff's
Department. The suspect Is an adult male but Ills Identification Is not
being made public until further Investigation Is made, Chief Stitt
reports.

YOUR CHOICE

Come In And
Stock Up!

WASHINGTON (AP) -Ohio of- . nate also Is expected to act quickly
llclals say they are going ahead
on the adminlstrallon request.
with plans to close 37 job service
"'file deputy ·administration has
.offices, despite instructions to the
annpunced that we are going ahead
contrary .from the U.S. Labor wttltplans for the layoffs and shutDepartment.
downs,'' said OBES spokesman
The Labor Department hils told
Charles Westlake.
Ohio and other slates that addiAfter Congress has completed
tional funds are expected from a action on the supplemental appro. bW being rushed through Congress,
prta tlon and the Labor Department
and has Instructed the states to
lets the states know how much they
keep the job service offices open.
wiU receive, "it wW be up to our
However, Gary Stein, deputy ad· people to come up with a priority
minlstrator for the Ohio Bureau of IIston offices to bekeptopen,"Wes·
Employment Services, orrdered tlake said.
hls statt to go ahead with the closHe said the bureau does not exings and layoff of 1,00&gt; workers "as pect the supplemental funds to ·be
If we didn't know anything about sufficient to restore aU 37 of the offithe additional funding," an OBES ces being shut down .
spokesman said Wednesday.
"In allllkeUhood there still wlll be
A House Appropriations subcom- .Ome offices closed and some
mittee acted quickly Tuesday to ap- layoffs," he said.
.
prove a Reagan Administration
Westlake said the deelslon to go
request lor $2.3 bUUon In supple- ahead with the closings was
mental funds, including $210 mil- reached because of the uncertainty
lion for the state employment over how much money wW be In the
services.
bW by the thne It gets through ConThe fuU Appropriations Comrrl.- gress and how much Ohio wW get.
tee Is expected to approve the blll
"Ohio should rate pretty htgh,"
later this week. It Is scheduled tor he satd, because of the state's high
fioor action Tuesday In the House.
unemployment rate- second highThe Republican-controlled Se- est ln ·the nation.

MARGUERITE
SHOES
POME~OY'

'

State ·continues
clOsing · efforts

10% OFF
STOREWIDE

~

en tine

Yoi.30,No.206
1982

REGISTER FOR A '50. Gin CERTIFICATE /
TO BE GIVEN AWAY --•No Purchase Necesstrry

e-'d
~ee~''"' ·

at y

e

00

Today's "Best" Curio Value. Your choice of pme, oak or
cherry. Traditional or colonial styling in half hex or rectangular curios.

Every·Department

were placed In wheel chairs. Drlzzllng rain added to the misery of the

nurses and emergency workers In
returning the patients to their hospltal quarters.
Oneofthepatlentsinvolvedlnthe
evacuation said this morning that
whUe the Incident scared her, sbe
conunended everyone working In
the evacuation for their calm and
reassuring attitudes towards
patients.
At 9: 50 a.m. patients were back
In their rooms.
The Senior Citizens Center delayed opening uniU 10: 30 a .m. and
visitors !here were directed to
anotherpartofthebuUdinguntllaU
patients were returned to the
hospital.

COME TO MARGUERITE SHOES
AND HELP US CELEBRATE OUR

CURIO CABINETS

Bargains In

and earners for the move; some

•

1982

I~~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii

Bab!:ralves 40-80.

Top

february 3,

Major evacuation follows bomb threat

Area deaths

George R. McDaniel

•

Pomervy

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" was 060.
1
Tile lottery reported earnings of $1181,192 from the wagering on Its
daUy game. Tile earnings came on sales of $1,113,658, whUe holders
of winning tickets are entitled toshare$232,41i6, lotteryo!flclalssald.

. Weather forecast ·
1

Partly cloudy tonight. Lows 25-30. Increasing cloudiness Friday
with a chance of rain or snow by evening. Highs In upper 30s to low
408. Chance of precipitation 20 percent tonight and 30 percent Friday. Winds northeasterty 5-10 mph tonight,
Extended Ohio Forecas&amp;
s.&amp;urday ~h Monday:
•
1•
A chllllce ol. or 1'11111 aonb lllld rain IIOidll Saaunla:r, eadlq
dillS· Fair s-Ja:r. IWn or IIIOW )IOIIIIJie ap1n Maacla,r.

to -111 Sa&amp;urda:r. mid-a. ao mid • &amp;•ncta:r 1111c1 ID 111e
MOI'IIIDIIoWIIID upper t-. to low . . 8al&amp;urdaJ, 1..10

.ad U.ZI Monda)' IIIOI'IDJ.

COLU~i:'\lJS, Ohio (AP) - .Little
can be done ·about utUlty compan-Ies "pancaking" their rate increase
requests, says Richard Rosenberry
of the state Office of Consumers'
Counsel.
A bill aimed at preventing pancaking, or stacking one rate Increase request after another, has
been introduced in the Ohio House,
but rel!U!Ins In committee.
"Right now, the only thing that
can be done from a practical point
of view Is meet them head-&lt;Jn In
rate case after rate case,'' said Rosenberry, associate counsel for the
consumers' counsel.
"There's no prohibition against
their filing as many rate Increases
as they think they need."
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. Is
among Ohio utiUties taking advantage or pancaking. On Wednesday,
DP&amp;L was granted a $28.1 m!Uion
rate hike by the Publlc Utlllties
Commission or Ohio.•
Three months ago; It notified the
PUCO It would seek approval of an
additional Increase, which will be
considered soon.
Just last July, the PUCO approved an $81.7 million rate hike for
Dayton Power &amp; Light, which Included a $48 mlllion emergency Increase granted in November 1!8!.
The revenues collected from the
rate hike approved Wednesday wiU
be used to "recover the company's
share of the financing and construe·
tioncosts of the East Bend power
plant" in Rabbit Hash, Ky.

Woman given
prison terrn
Antta Wilson, 26, Reynoldsburg,
was given a sentence of four to 25
years in the Reformatory for
Women at MarysvUie for her role In
the robbery or the Swlsher-Lohse
Pharmacy In Pomeroy, Nov. 29,
1981, this morning by Meigs Com.mon Pleas Court Judge John C.
Bacon.
Wilson was charged with two
counts of aldlilg and abetting in the
theft of drugs and being the owner
and operator of a vehicle used in
committing the theft or drugs. She ·
entered pleas of guUty to both
charges.
BeSides the sentence, Wilson was
ordered to forfeit 10 the county for
law enforcement purposes the vehi·
cie used in the theft.
She and her husband, Michael
Amos Wilson, 28, Reynoldsburg
were apprehended.in Pomeroy on
Nov. 29 after a wild evening follow·
lng the robbery of Swllher-Lohse.
There was a polke chase, ex·
change of gunfire with Wilson being
injured, arid the taking of hostages
as pollee closed In on the Wilsons
following the robbery.
Wilson's attorney, following sen. tencing, noted that WUson is under
drug treatment and the court eet
for bearing on Feb. 25 his motion
for conditional probation for her
since sbe Is a drug dependent

person.

Army asks U.N. to verify massacre
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
El Salvador's army says It
Is asking the U.N. HUq)an Rights
Commission toverlfyltsclalmthat
leftist guerrUlas slaughtered more
than 150 peasants in an attack on a
northeastern viUage.
"The communist attackers dedicated themselves to k!Ulng, to
(AP) -

butchery, to exterminating the population, and they killed children,
women and men- even animals,''
an army spokesman said
Wednesday.
The spokesman, whc asked not to
be Identified, said the rebels' weekend raid on Nueva Trinidad, in
Morazan Province near the Hondu·

ran border, left be~een 150 and 200
dead - more than half the
population.
Reporters who visllted the vii·
!age Tuesday reported finding
about a dozen corpses lying 1n the
~tree! .

The leftists made no mention or
clvUian casualties.

Cause sought in .train derailment
HANGING ROCK, Ohio (AP) U. S. Coast Guard officials were
called in to Investigate a train deraUment Wednesday night after a
locomotive carrying 4,600gallonsof
diesel fuel tumbled into the Ohio
River.
Don Piedmont, a spokesman for
the Norfolk &amp; Western ran line, said
the submerged engine was not
leaking.
Coast Guard Port Safety Officer
H. Kelly Brown said two other derailed locomotives were seeping
fuel !rom their positions atop the
river bank.
But Piedmont said those leaks
had been contained and that no fuel
had leaked Into the river. Brown
said thOse two engines were carry·
lng a total of 7,IXXl gallons of fuel.
Piedmont said 25 cars derailed
Ia te Wednesday afternoon when the

train, bound for Roankoke, Va.,
from Bellevue, Ohio, crashed Into a
coal truck stuck on the tracks at a
private crossing,
Lawrence County sheriff's depu·
ties said the 99-c~r train was travelIng 58 miles per hour at the time of
the coWslon.
Deputies said the tractor-tr!lller
was driven by Samuel Lyon of Sa·
lyersvUle, Ky., who tried to signal ·
the' train to stop, but was
unsuccessful.
Among the car:s which left the
track were four locomotives, three
loaded cars and 18 empty cars. The
loaded cars were carrying automobUes and trailers, Piedmont said.
Two railroad employees, Carlton
Whitley, 54, or Falls Mills, Va., and
Clyde Barr, 00, of Bluefield, W.Va .,
were Injured In the derailment.
Piedmont said Whitley, an engi-

WATERY JIJNCTJON - Tbe ObJo River ..t the
dldatu Ke.alcky lllorelltle frame oftbe Norfolk
ud Wnten Raflw-:r e.n 111at denJJed _ , Jlotlllar
Roell, Olllo, lllte Wed daJ .ner- .tter a NW

1

neer, was admitted to Lawrence
County General Hospital with a fa·
clal fracture. Barr, a head brakeman, suffered bruises. A hospital
spokeswoman said both men were
In stable condition.
In addition to the locomotive,
Brown said two vans that were belog carried on Qneor the train 's cars
also had faUen Into the river.
Brown !'&amp;lei It probably would be
Thursday morning before officials
could determine the type of cleanup
necessary,
"In this kind of current, there's
not a whole lot you can do," Brown
said. "It'd probably be better to let
It go and dissipate."
Brown said It was too dark Wednesday to determine If any fuel had
leaked !rom the submerged locomotive. He said diesel fuel, llghter
than water, generally floats to the
surface before It dissipates.

mulfnt traiD collided with a lnlctor trailer rig at a
cr..tag oa U. S. iZ. Two loc:omoUv,ea aDd two can
alld lato lbe rlv.er, !Jut two trahuneu escaped without
aerloulajury. (AP Laserphoto)

�'
L

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

p-...,.ow.

Ohio

Page 2-The Daily Senli.w '
Pomeroy Miclcll.port, Ohio
Thunday, r.bruary 4, 1912

Unf~ir advantag~:.._e_______R_o_be_rt_I._~_a_;,_gma_·_"'

lliCeoorllllre&lt;t

•
IIHn-1111
DEVarEII TO 11IE INTEREST OF 111E MEIGS-MASON AREA

.·

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Pa.bl.a.tr.rr

P.\TWlfiTEHE.\D

BOB HOEFLICH

Gt!ner• MM.DM11_er

.·
DALE ROTHGEB, JR •

••
',

.-

.;
~

:~

, Nnn Edllor
A MEMBER ol The Ao«llk-11 Prnl, r.tallll O.lly
Aateriala Ntwt,.per Publldrn; Auoct.U..

Prn~~

Auoctadoa and the
·

LE1TER8 Of' OPINION .re wele..aeci, Tiley thUid 1w- ...... wordii ...J, AU
lftten are Rbjec!t Co editlal ud auut be t lped with umt, addntt ud tektlluae
=~==u!:~Wn wW bt JNbliiW. Le~n abeuld
&amp;atk. ..tdralll..q •

bela,_.

..
;-

\t fightlipped ship
Every president has the right to attempt to nut a tight-lipped ship.
, Which Is another way of saying that the most notable aspect of
Washington's current flap over information leaks is Its familiarity. We've
been there before, with almost every president in recent memory.
". But that's not necessarily the bad news. U Ronald Reagan can rise
above his understandable pique of the moment, there are a number of how-to
and how-not-to pointers to be picked up from his predecessors.
:: To start with, leaks are not the exception but the rule in any adminiatraiton. Information is power in Washington- power to shape policy,
power to advance some programs and careers and to do others in.
:;' A super.zealous press corps Is usually credited with- or blamed for l]l8kaing public confidential information about public affairs. Some mem~rs of the press like to think of themselves in such il role, and can put a
sreat deal of effort into acting it out.
:. But when real masters of the game are in action, the press is usually
merely being used as the most convenient channel to get the desired word
stound•.

WASHINGTON (NEAl - Should
candidates for Congress be allowed
to spend unlimited amoWits of their
own money on their campaigns?
At least one member of Congress
thinks not. He is Sen. Alan Cranston,
[).Calif., who is sponsoring a bill that
would make most candidates think
twice before spending lavishly on
their own congressional race~~.
The federlll election laws passed
in the mid· 1970s permit Individuals
to contribute no more than $1,000 to
any single presidential or
congressional campaign. But the
Supreme Court has ruled that this
restriction does not apply to candidates' spending on their own
races.
The classic recent ca.Se of personal
campaign financing was the 1976
Pennsylvania Senate race won by
Republican John Heinz, · the Heinz
Foods scion. He "lent" his campaign
committee $5 million before the election and forgave the debt afterward.
Reports filed with ihe Federal
Election Commission indicate thai
this loophole is being used with in·
creasing frequency. No fewer than
25 candidates for the U. S. Senate
spent more than •100,000 of their own
money on their 1980 campaigns.
Opponents of the practice warn
that running for Congress will
become exclusively a rich man's
game unless something is done to
limit candi«&lt;ates' . personal contributions.
·
The biggest personal spender in
!98o was William. Schultz, an
t\rizona Democrat who spent $1.5
million of his own' money in an unsuccessful effort to unseat Barry
Goldwater. Next was pouglas
Cofrin, who spent $1.3 million in an
attempt to win the Republican
Senate nomination in Wisconsin.
Two other candidates spent

;. The calculated but unofficial disclosure of information is an effective
teChnique of practical politics employed at every decision-making level of
governlnent right up to the Oval Office. At less-elevated levels, . it is
sometimes the only way of getting a heari1Jg for dissenting views, par·
tlcularly in administrations characterized by powerful presidential personalities or dogmatic philosophies in which dissenters tend to be steam·
·
·
.pllered in internal counclls1
•: Dealing with this sitwltion is essentially a matter of administration
h~usekeeping, but you'd never know it from the way most president&amp; suddenly discovering leaks as a problem go about resolving it. Controlling the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - So
ijow of infonnation is elevated to a matter of national policy, ostensibly
jUstifying measures ranging from the ludicrous - lie detector tests ~ to the you want to run for political offiCe,
disturbing and sinister - restricting access to official information and of. huh? Governor, you say? And you
want to start off with a bang, right?
!lclals, punitive legislation, wiretapping and worse.
All you need to do is (ollow the
: : Such measures are Wlually undertaken in the name of national security,
bot very rarely with real justification. If threats are posed by leaks, they examples of the 10 people already
trying to be Ohio's next governor.
~ually are to reputations ~nd egos of those presently or formerly in office.
First, you don't simply announce
; • When you get down to the heart of the uproar, that was what possibly the
l!lggeslleak of all - the Pentagon Papers- was all about. And the would-be your Intentions. NO.way.
Announcing your candidacy caUs
rontrollers, it should be remembered, lost that one. In court.
;; The effort to control can lead to worse than leaks, as Richard Nixon · for hoopla, fanfare, excltment. You
4Jscovered. And it can take a particularly unpleasant turn when an angered need your family, a throng oof supporters, a pack of news reporters.
ptesident takes the situation personally.
.
·
The popular way of guaranteeing
.·• Lyndon Johnson of the immell!Hl ego and short fuse is the classic exam~ie, as we've had no end of reminders recenUy. Incensed when word got out that attention this year Is the "an!)irough sources other than his own as to personnel and policy decisions in nouncement •announcement." This
which he had taken a personal interest, he was known to call off ap- is a statement before you announce
Pointments to I!Uijor government posts and change or delay bnplementing that you will be announclng.lt'sthe
political equivalent of the two-for·
1)\e leaked policies.
··; Taken to that extreme, the effort to control the flow of information for one sale.
The next step is making the act!le sake of public policy ends up in making policy for the purpose of contual announcement- at the proper
trolling information. ·
'
place.
: : That is no way to plug a leak - Jet alone to nut a ship.
.
Among gubernatorial hopefuls so

almost $1 million each on their
Senate primary campaigns. They

were Bess Myerson, a New York
Democrat, and Thomas Stoner, an
Iowa Republican.
TIIere is widespread sentiment
within Congress that cilli:ens of a
free country should be able to spend
their money in any reasonable way
they see fit. That includes financing
their own campaigns for public of·
flee. This attitude would undoubtedly doom any measure simply limiting what a candidate could
spend on his own campaign.
So, Cranston's bill would instead
remove the $1,000 limit on contributions to candidates whose opponents were spending more than

$35,000 of their own money. The
rivala of ~ candidates
would be able to aolicit donations rl
any size from their supporters.
Cranston says that the esisting
loophole gives wealthy candidates
. "an enormous advantage" and that
his bill would give poorer candidates
a better opportunity to match their
rich opponents' perslinal spending.
Some oh&lt;iervers believe tllat the
Cranston bill has a real ·chance of
passage - not because Congress is
all that upset about tbe advantage
enjoyed by wealthy candidates, but
because the bill would mal!!llfy the
advantages of incumbency.
Fund-raising is allnost always
easier for incumbents than for

challengers, who may be forced 11!1
spend huge swns of their own money
because tbe incumbents haw cornered the market on contributl0111.
Thus, the only candidates !lble til
mount serious challenges maY bit
those with the means to spend
lavishly· on their own behalf. U the
Cranston bill passes, most incumbeilts will have litUe difficulty
raisi~g large sums to defeat bigspending opponents.
Cranston is also hard-pressed to
prove that large personal contribotions have affected elections all
that much.
There were only four Winners
among the 25 senatorial candidates
who spent more than $100,000 of their
own money in 1980.

"
"-·
•"
J

•

far, the most popular spot has been
the Statehouse rotunda. Three candidates have used it: Congressman
Clarence J . Brown, a Republican; .
Chief Justice Frank B. Celebreeze,
a Democrat, and Franklin County
Treasurer Dana Rinehart, a
Republican.
Another Republican, State Sen.
Thomas Vail Meter, chose the Gov- ·
emor's Mansion at Bexley for his
announcement, although the cur·
rent governor, James Rhndes,
hasn't llve there for years. .
Other locales are avaUable.
Republican · Seth Taft · chose
Cuyahoga County GOP headquarters; Republican James Betts
picked a Columbus hotel; Derner
crat WUJJam J . Brown selected his
blrthplace, Youngstown, and eo-·
Jumbus Republican RDbert Teater
stayed close to home - his front
porch.

But announcing you wW announce and picking a suitably gubernatorial spot to do It aren't
enough . You also rieed a
''fiyaround."
This technique, used by nearly

everybody Who's anybody, re·
qutres hopping from airport to air·
port all over the state, repealing
yow- final formal announcement.
Why bother? Just listen to an aide
to one Republican candidate:
"H you only announce in Colum·
bus, you only get coverage from the
Columbus (news) media; you·just
get on the Columbus evening news.
But if you fly to Cleveland and
Youngtown and Toledo and Dayton
and Cincinnati, then you get on lots
ol (TV) news shows - and Jots
more people' see you."
You think this is exaggeration?
It's not. Look at Jerry Springer, the
Cincinnati Democrat who most re-

cently entered the gubernatortal
fray.
On Wednesday, Jan. 'n, Spfln·
ger's campaign malled a statement
to reporters announcing be would
announce his candidacy.
On Saturday, Jan. 30, he announced it before a gatherlng otlOO
supporters .In Cincinnati's Union
Terminal. Then the following Mon·
day, he scheduled flights to Columbus , Canton, Cleveland,
Youngstown, Toledo and Vandalia
to announce some more.
But If all this is too complicated,
you could follow the example of
another Cincinnatian, John E.
Held.
Instead of announcing the announcement, announcing and then
flying around, Held revealed his
plans on Dec. 2.- He simply told Ohio
. GOP Chairman Earle Barnes - In
a letter .

."

....
•

...
.. ·

..

•'

.,

"I 'm not qualified to do ANYTHING, but I am
VERY lucky/"

-

;t'oday in history
;,' TOday ts Thursday, Feb. 4, the 35th day ot 1982. There are :m days left in
J.11e year.
• •· Today's highlight in history:
~: On Feb. 4, 1783, hostlllUes ~nded ill the Revolutionary War between the
Urilted States and Britain.
· : On thts date:
· ': In 1938, tn Nazi Germany Adolf Hitler assumed theottlceo!war minister
and named Joachim von Ribbentrop foreign mlnlsier.
; In 19&amp;1, China charged that the Soviet Union !leeks world domination
JIU'OUih a !policy of collaboratlota with the United States.
· In 1977, U.S. intelllgence ofttclala said the UnitEd States and the Soviet
Union were attempting to develop high-energy lleams that could destroy

i)Uclear missiles In flight.

.: And In 19'19, Iran's Prime Minister Shahpour Bakhttar sald he would
a)Tellt Ayatollah Khomelnl U the Moslem Provisional Government trled to
tllke over the country.
;:. 'J'en years ago, BritiSh troops sealed au approaches to NewJj' in North·
em Ireland and searched vtslton for Weapons prtor to a civil rights-march

If you interpreted the 1980 election
returns the same way I did, you
found the defeat · of the best and
brightest members of the U. s.
Senate to be just as frightening as
the election of Ronald Reagan.
Had the Democrats retained control of both houses of Con~. the
worst excesses of the conserVatives
who came to power with Reagan
could have been contained. But the
Democrats also lost political control
of the Senate and - as we
discovered later - ideological control of the House.
The sunken hopes and sunken
stomach - my symptoms from that
day - were deepened by the meanness of many of the new senators,
who seemed intent on erasing the
legacy of compassion handed down
by a string of presidents from
Franklin Roosevelt through Jimmy
Carter.
They were the New Centurians,
armed with the certainty that they
were absolutely Right. They
threatened to ~utlaw abortion, to end
the eight-hour workday, to eliminate
- not reduce - the real social safety
net. These were the men who ·
replaced George McGovern, John

Culver, Birch Bayh, Frank Church up one-third · of the Republican
and the rest.
majority in the Senate. They could
The self-styled New Right claimed easily control that majority if they
credit for the victqries of eight of the learn their lolls·
candidates: James Abdnor of South
They can't 'Possibly do as badly in
Dakota, Jeremiah Denton of 1982 as they did in 1981. If they do
Alabama, John East of North any better, many Americans will do
Carolina, Charles Grassley of Iowa, much worse.
Now the Republicans and the New
Robert Kasten of Wisconsin, Don
Nickles of Oklahoma, Steve Symms Right are focusing - like their
of Idaho and Dan Quayle of Indiana.
poster that showed McGovern inside
Now these men have spent a full the cross hairs of a rifle- on coming
year in the Senate. While they have, · closer to numerical control of the
helped Reagan make cru~l reduc- House and increasing their margin
tions in our institutionialized life- in the Senate.
support system, they have not lived
The GOP and its well-to-do
up to the primitive Vision their C8JIIo · associates plan to pour a h81f·million
paigns conjured it\ the public mind:
dollars each into 40 campaigns
A Washington Post analysis of this
against fl.oiuse Democrats this year.
neo-conservative cadre revealed The party will spend •18 million
them to have been impotent directly to aid congressional canlegislators during their first year in didates and milliom more on the
office. Although each holds at least sophisticated polling arid research
one subcommittee chalnnanship so vital to. today's electronic camand has used that platform to spout paigns. Independent political-action
New Right causes, none has conunittees will equal the $500,000
managed so far to inflict his ideas on gifts to the 40 House challengers.
the rest of the Senate· - and the
The Republicans intend to win in
country.
1982 or, at worst, to maintain their
But the eight New Right senators edge. Meanwhile, the Democrats
and their freshmen colleague~~ make
are concentrating - some would say

squandering - their political
energies on the fourth revision of
their nominating rules in the past 12
years. But their result was a process
that will remain susceptible in 1984
to the efforts of an early-bird clone
of the first Jimmy Carter campaign.
Some nuiinstream and liberal
Democrats have tried to compete
with the powerful PACs that made
the difference for the New Right
Eight in 1980. And two blackcontrolled PACs have registered
with the Federal Election Cornmission; their targets will be House
conservatives of both parties with
unaccep&amp;able recorda on civil rights.
The Republicans r,.tuse to predict
that they will gain control of hoth
houses of Congress in November.
But remember that they merely
have to hold their own in the Senate
and win a net total of 211 House seats
from the Democrats.
U they prevail, the Ne~ Right ·
Eight will be promoted to more
senior status and a nt:W corps ot
primitives will aim•their knives at
the nation's past and present corn-·
passions. And the fear we felt in 1980
will swell.

DOONESBURY

·.

.

.

Seaver chosen as .
banquet honoree
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Tom
Seaver of the Cincinnati RedS will
be honored for the athletic pelifor·
mance of the year bY the Columbus
Touchdown Club at its 'nth allsports awards banquet Friday
night.
The veteran right·hander posted
14 victories and only two defeats
and had a 2.55 earned run average
tn 1981, helping the Reds compile
the best overall record in major
league baseball at 66-42.
Clemson's Tigers and their
coach, Danny Ford, will receive
two awards as college football's
best team and coach last tall.
The Columbus to Club also selected Southern California tailback
Marcus Allen as Its College Back of
the Year, Brigham Young's Jim
McMahon as College Passer of the
Year and Kenneth StmsofTexasas
the most Hkely collegian to succeed
In the professional r'!JikS. . .
The club also tapped, the Ctncin·
nati Bengais
for two
awards.
For·.
rest
Gregg
was
named
Professional Football Coach of the
Year and his starqll8rterback, Ken
Anderson, Professional Player of
the Year.
Mike Sehmi(lt of the Philadelphia
PhUlles will receive baseball's
Player of the Year award from the
·organization.
Tony Gant, Fremont Ross' all·
state defensive back, .was named
the Ohio High School Football
Player of the Year.

Cole on

j;Ianned by Roman CathoHcs.

'; Five years ago, two elevated traU.. crashed In Chicago, killing eleven
people and injuring mOre than 150 others. .
. One year 1180. talks broke down between Poland's IOVI!rnmeRt and
leaders of a strike in the southern province of BlelsJm..Biala.
:: Today's birthdays: Feminist leader Betty Frledan ts 61. Actress Ida
lupjno ts 64.
•
:~ 'I'hQuiht For Today: : Histo'ry Is, Indeed, little more than the register of
Ole crtmes, follle!l and misfortunes of mankind. - Edward Gibbon, Englllh historian (1737-l'I!N).
.

CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
Redl; President Dick Wagner says
negotiations with the George Fos·
ter trade to the New York Mets
were p~sstng weU.
"We made a lot of progress yes·
terday, more progress today and
we plan to talk again in the morn·
tng," Wagner said Wednesday
evening.
"It's not completed but we are
close and hopefully It will be completed before spring training," ac·
cording to New York Mets vtce
preSident Lou Gorman. "We think
we are close to a deal, but untu you
have all the pieces of the p19'e. you
don't have a deal."
'
Wagner said that he made "considerable progress" in telephone
discussions Tuesday with Mets
General Manager Frank Cashen,
although the two clubs have not
settled on the players involved In a
. possible deal.
The Reds have been unable to
sign Foster, who could become a
free agent after the 1982 season.
The Reds prefer to trade the
slugger rather than Jose him as a
free agent.
The Mets and the Chicago Cubs
reportedly are interested In Foster,
who can veto any deal because of
his status as a !().year veteran with
five years on one ballclub. Foster
has given the Reds a list of teams he
would accept In a trade.
"It's a two-part thing," Wagner
said Wednesday. "First we would

agree on talent (Involved In the
trade). To complete a deal, they
would want to sign George to a. contract. So we would give the Mels
permission to talk to George for a
limited time. We have not agreed
on talent yet."
The Reds haven't hidden their desire to obtain a catcher and pitching
help, particularly a reliever. AI·
though Wagner declined to comment on which Mets players might
be involved, catcher Alex Trevino
and relief pitcher Nell Allen are re.
ported to be among players the
Reds would !Ike to obtain.
Allen led the Mets' stall with 1B
saves last season. }Ie posted a 7-li
record with a 2.96 earned run
average.
Allen signed a two-year contract
Wednesday with the Mets after tiling for salary arbitration. Allen in·
dlcated that he was fataHstlc about
a possible trade to the Reds.
"If It happens, it happens. I'm not
going to Jose any sleep over it,"
Allen said.
Mets Vice President Lou Gor·
man said Wednesday that Cashen
and Wagner were up late Tuesday
night discussing a trade.
"We feel very optimistic that
something can happen," Gorman
said. "HO!J!!fuUy, If we can make
the trade, It wiii not include Neil

Friday everung in the1r respective
leagues, Southern, Eastern, and
Meigs play important games with
conference opponents in high school
basketball action.
Unbeaten Southern defends its
home court against the persistent
Hannan Trac~ Wildca~~ in an im·
portant svAC tilt, while Eastern
travels to Vinton for a bout with the
NorthGaliiaPirates.
In the SEOAL Meigs travels to
Athens. Saturdsy evening the ram·
paging Southe.mTornadoes visit the
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes.
This week Southern's Purple Tornadoes again are rimked fourth in
the Associated Press Class "A" poll
for the state of Ohio. The unbeaten
Whirlwinds are coming off a big
weekend of victories, including a
narrow 57-SS triumph over powerful
Ross-Southeastern and a convincing
league win over the North Gallia
Pirates.
Both Eastern and Southern have
turned up the wicks during the past
week and have caught fire in the
midst of the season's final leg .
Last Friday, Eastern came from
behiod to defeat league for Southwestern, then scored a tremendous
victory over the Class "A" Alexander Spartans Tuesday evening.
Southern is now l!Hl on the season
and heads the SVAC with a perfect 1~
0 mark under Coach Carl Wolfe. The
powerful purple machine is
averaging 68.7 points per game,
while slowing just 48.7 markers
defensively.
On the year, Southern has ripped
the nets in Southeastern Ohio for
1,031 points, while allowing just 730
points against its stingy defensive
unit.
Kent Wolfe paces the Southern attack with 311 pomts and a 20.7
average . .Richard Wolfe adds to the
fatal sting with 151 points and a 10.1
average, while Robert Brown and
Jay Rees have 9.1 and 7.5 marks
respectively. The above quartet has
played outstanding in the clutch so
far this season, and hopes to toughen
up its ironclad nerves as the season
progresses.
Junior southpaw Zane Beegle has
come off the bench to spark the SHS
attack ,ith a7u.3 average, while
Tommy Roseberry has played super
defense. Roseberry also is a good
ball handler and hit two clutch free
throws in Saturday's victory over
Southeastern.
In the past two games, the red-hot
Eastern Eagles of Coach Dennis
Eichinger have played the roil of the
"Cardiac Kida" and pulled off two
dramatic victories much to the
delight of the Eastern fans.
'l'he Eagle strategy has made the
difference in igniting the Eagles,
along with a rebirth of deter·
mination and hustle on the Eastern
team. Tuesday Eastern showed. its
mark as a good team by showing its
class in a come-from-behind win
over the strong Alexander Spartans.

18.3 average.
Dill has collected 256 points in 14
starts this season. Mike Bisell has
maintained an 8.1 mark, while
reliable P _G. Riffe stays even with a
7.5 average. Greg Cole owns a 6.1
mark, Paul Sprague a 5.8 mark,
Charlie Ritchie a 3.5 . mark, and
Roger Bissell a three point average.
These men plus efforts fromt he
Eagle bench have put Eastern back
in the groove.
•
Eastern has scored 699 points per
fora49.9
while its

Offensively Big Tim Dill continues
to dominate the inside game with an

~--.~~ij~iiimi'l

Allen."

ponent has scored 711 points for a Murray weighs in with an 11.1 mark,
50.8 average. Eastern l!lls hit T/5 of Nick Riggs a 8..3 mark, Roger
785 field goals on the year for 35 per- Kovalchik a 7.7 average, and Riclt
cent average.
Edwards a 5.5 point average. ·
Winless Meigs has struggled
Meigs has canned. 313 of 643 field ·
through hard times, but still has goalsfora37percentaverage.Ittias :
hopes and capabilities of pulling off scored 783 points for a 5~.2 average. :
some upset victorie~~. Meigs has Jqst The biggest downfall lies in these :
seve.ral key · games ,,10' liOugh pp- figures; Meigs opponents have ·
ponents by less than,.,six ponts, scored 1,014 points in fourteen ·
however, it still lacks in the win gamesfora67.6averagepergame. ,
colWIUl.
.\11 varsity tilts begin at 8 p.m. •
Bob Ashley paces Meigs with a while the re~li'Ve contests begin at :
17.3
259
6:30.
'

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~L~()tti)••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••'11.9S
BAMBOO GARDEN ••••••••••••••• ,;, •••••••••• '14. 95
·BRANDY BIRCH••••••••••••••••••••••••••~••• '9.89 .
1
CARMEL ••••••• •••• •• •• ••••••• ..... •••••. •••• 14.95
CASCADE PECAN•• ••. •••• •••• ••••. •••••• ••• ~ '10.95
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HORIZON •• ••• •••••••• •• •••• •. •• •• •••. • •• • •.• '11 ~65
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PATINA GRAY.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• '12.45
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HIGHLAND HICKORY Y.';••••••••••••••••·••• "24.95
COVENTRY BIRCH Y•'!••••••••••••••••••••••• '17.95
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ALl sEArs JUST St50
ADMJSSION EVERY ruESDAr I 1.110

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MARIETTA - Marietta College

the 1881-C Marietta College juruor
·
team, coached by
The JVs opened
ooNov. 24.
plays forward, played
~b ~II??~ basketball at Eallem
:·
tn Reedlvllle. He Ia the
rl Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cole,

. ...........--. ·-- ···-

A.r"rr "f:L.dudlt OM... •!;•

531 JACKSON PIKE ·Rt .35 WEST
PhOne 448-4524

JV squad

t'reshman Gene Cole is.a member. of

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BATHROOM PANELS

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New right is not. sleeping"'____I_ulw_·n_B_on_d
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•

Progress made
•
• •
In negotiations

j: Berry's World
::

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'h.

PREPARE TO FIGHT ~ Members of tbe Meilll! BolliDg Club
traveled to Cambridge last weekend to prepare for tbe 11ec0ad anoual
bome boxing sbow at 7:30p.m. Saturday In lbe Meigs Hlidl School. Foor
local. boxen, Roger Cottrill, Charlie Wbltlklnd, Brian Nllz and Brion
WUlls returned home as winners. Clinton Herdman of Mel&amp;sloot In a split
decision to Scott 1..11~ of Glouster. Proceeds from Satarday's event will
go towards th~ purchase of a regulation riug so that (&gt;olden Glove
events can be staged locally,

Candidates use all sorts of gimmicks

..
.'•'

eigs' teams prepare for Fri~ay ·games ?

·

Limill With Coupon.
Yllid Feb. 4t•ru 18, 1912

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�Page

4-The Daily

Senti~l

Disputed call results
By A.ssoclated l're88
The way the Kentucky Wildcats
were playing, the Auburn Tigers
didn't need any breaks.
·
But they got one- and It eventu·
ally resulted In an 83-81 overtime
victOJy tor Auburn over the na·
lion's ninth-ranked college basket··
ball team Wednesday ntght.
"There's no way to take a basket
away from us," satd Kentucky
Coach Joe B. Hall after a fteld goal
by Derrick Hard In overtime was
disallowed because the clock had
failed to start when Kentucky
threw the ball Into play. Officials
ruled that all play between the In·
•bounds pass and the time when the
horn blew was negated .
Hall was, or course, dissatisfied
with the explanation.
"The clock was't running, but
there was no justtr.~.c~ tlon for taking
&lt;~way the bucket," skid Hall . "I've
seen games go for two minutes
without the clock running and they
didn't go back and take away
paints."
Meanwhile. Auburn stole every·
thing from the listless Wildcats but
their sneakers. Auburn "ran a heck
of a trap and we just turned the ball
over too much ," said . Hall. "Thts
really damages our Southeastern
Conference title chances."

Thurflay, Februa,y 4, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Kentucky had 19 turnovers In the
game. 12 after halftime, and Au·
burn also came up with nine steals.
"Just say we played good," said
Auburn Coach Sonny Smith. "The
most Important thing for us was the
change to the halt-court trap. We
made the steals. Another key was
our lree·throw shooting." Auburn
made 31 of 38 shots from 'the foul
line.
Charles Barkley, Odell Mosteller
and Byron Henson scored four
points each In overtime to lead Au·
burn's upset. Trailing 5443 with
8: 54 left In regulation, the Tigers
used a trapping zone defense to
force Kentucky Into errors that
enabled Auburn to get back Into
contention.
Barkley had 22 points, Mosteller
20 and Darrell Lockhart 16 for Au·
bum, while Jim Master, who
scored two uncontested layups for
Kentucky at the end, led all scorers
with 29 points while Hard had 25.
Before Wednesday night's victory,
Auburn had lost 13 straight games
to Kentucky.
Maryland shocked No. 13 Wake
Forest 61-56 and Mississippi
whipped No. 16 Tennessee. 55-53 In
overtime In other upsets Wednes·
day night. Elsewhere, No. 1 Mls·
sour! stopped Colorado 8().54, No. 3

TOUGH TO TOP - North Carolina University's Sam Perkins (41)
tries to get a shot over Virginia's Ralph Sampson (50) during first half action of the University of Virginia-North CaroUna ACC college basketball
game in Charlottesville, Virginia, Wednesday. ( AP Laserphoto )

•
JD

83-81 loss

VIrginia beat No. 2 North Carollna
74-58, No. 4 DePaul edged St. Joseph's (Pa.) 4&amp;44ln overtime, No.8
Alabama took a 66-63 decision over
Mtsstsslppl State, No. 12 Texas beat
Southern Methodist 69-56, and No.
19 Kansas State trtmmed Nebraska
75-64. Memphis State, tied for No.
19, was forced to postpone Its game
with St. Louis University because
of snow.
Top Ten
Steve Stipanovlch, Jon Sundvold
and Ricky Frazier comblped for n
points, leading Missouri over Colorado. Stipanovich scored 14 points,
Sundvold added 12 and Frazier had
11 as Missouri gained Its 19th
straight victory this season and Us
29th consecutive at home. Both
streaks are Missouri records.
Othell Wilson and Ralph Samp.
son led VIrginia to a 17·patnt lead
early In the second half and the Ca·
vallers held off two North Carolina
rallies to beat the Tar Heels.
Wilson scored 20 points a nd
Sampson added 18 as the Cavallers
took over the Atlantic Coast Confer·
ence lead and avenged their only
defeat In 22 games overall. It was
only the seeond loss In 18 starts for
North carolina, which had beaten
Virginia 65.£0 less than a month ago
at Chapel Hlll.
" We knew ourselves we could
beat them and we just wanted to
prove It to everyone else,' • said Wll·
son. "We had them beaten down
there (at North Carollna) and came
unglued. We knew If we did things
right, we could beat them. "
Terry Cummings scored a game·
high 17 paints, Including a tlp.ln at
the end of the overtime period, to
help DePaul beat St. Joseph's. With
the scare tied at 44 and only seconds
remaining tn the overtime, Kenny
Patterson put up a 20-footer. The
ball kicked off the rim to teammate
Jerry McMlllan, whose 15-footer .
from the left side missed the iron,
but eurnmlngs came up with the
air ball and banked In the layup at
the buzzer.
Alabama, playing without Du·
stricken senior forward Eddie Phil·
Ups, survived a scare from
Mlsstss)ppl State and used a four·
corner offense to beat the Bulldogs.
The Crimson Tide got balanced
scoring from Its starters, led by
Phillip Lockett with 17.

Second Ten
Sophomore g uard Denard
Holmes moved Into Injured ror·
ward Mike Wacker's spot and
scared 22 paints as Texas defeated
SMU. The victory Improved Texas'
record to 15-3 and halted a threegame losing streak that began

when Wacker, a s.root-9 sophomore
and the team's second-leading
scorer and rebounder, went out for
the season with a knee Injury.
Freshrnru! Adrian Branch scored
seven or Maryland's final nine
points In the last 45 seconds as the
Terps upset Wake Forest. Branch
made one of two foul shOts with 45
seconds remaining io give the
Terps a 53-50 lead and then
rammed home a dunk sllot ori a
pass from Herman Veal with 31 seconds left to make It 55-50. He added
two more free throws In a one-andone situation before Danny Young
hit a field goal for the Demon Deacons. Fouled again, Branch made
two free throws with 13 seconds left
and flnlshed with 20 points.
Mlsstsslppl's Carlos Clark hit two
baskets In overtime, Including one
at the final buzCoach Don DeVoe .
said his players got themselves Into
a jam bY lagging behind the Rebels
early In overtime.
"You can't win a game against a
good defensive team when you spot
them a basket at the first of the
overtime llke we did tonight," [)e.
Voe said.
Randy Reed scored 25 points to
lead Kansas State over Nebraska.

played , It was Northern llltnols
over Kent State 79-73 In overtime
and Ohio University over Central
Michigan 72-67.
·
Eastern Michigan shot a torrid
67.9 percent tn the second half to
overcome Miami, 7·12 and 4·5. The
Hurons are 13-6 overall.
George Sweigert, Miami's 6-foot·
9 senior center, led all scorers with
24 points.
Coaches often llke to be In the
bonus foul-shooting situation In the
final seconds of a tense game, but
not Bowllng Green's John Weinert
- not Wednesday.
"We weren't In the llonus during
the final two minutes, so Western
Michigan could not get the ball
away from us by !oullng," Weinert
said.
As a result, the Falcons were able
to hold onto the ball lor the final two

MAC standings
Mld·Mnforican ConfemtU
Cool . .4.11 GlllniS
WL I'd W
6 3 .007 lJ
E. Michigan
6 3 .667 u
nowllnK Green
:i 3 ,6%; 9
Ball St.

01\10

u.

:14

N. fillnoiJ

w. Michiga n
Kent Sl .

54
45
45

I. Pct.

6 .Qit
7 .6.12

8 -~'!1
.:'iJS 10 8 .~
.5.'16 910 .474
.444
.444

11} 9 - ~
g ll .4:21

Miami, Ohio

4 5

.444

7 U

-~

Tolroo
C. Michigan

35
~ 7

.m u 7
.222 8 1l

.~11
-~

We4.11Ndaf'• Qarne.

Ball St. at Toledo. ppd.. snow
Bowllng Greer1 63, W. Michigan tJ
Ea.ttem Mletuaan 14, Miami, Ohlo 68
N. Ullnoll19, Kent St. 1l

Ohio U. 'r.l, Cent. Mk'higan 67
'111ui4ay'• Game

Ball St. at Toledo

aunae.

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

tlon

ot

Gene U ttlel. siulatant coach.
IIOCIU!:V
N.-.... ll.c!llef Leape

NHL.-Sus~nded

IJoo · Perry,

head
coach, Lot Angtk-1 Klnp, lor ~ days roc
orderlna Paul Mulvey to )eave tbl! bench
durtng an a!II!rt:ation In a porn~! Jan.U

against vancouver.
DE'IROIT RED WING8-Sent DoD Mw-doc h, right wUlg, to Mlronda(k of the
American Hockey l..eque. Recalled Joe
Paterson, lt!h wing, from Adlronlack.

OSU inks tailback
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Mike
Lanese, an All-Ohio taUback from
Mayfield H~h School, announced
Wednesday he will play hls college
football at Ohio State University.
The &amp;-foot, 11*).pound Lanese, the
first tailback recruited by Buck·
eyes' Coach Earle Bruce this win·
ter, gained 1,417 yards and scored
12 touchdowns In his senior season.
Lanese Is the lOth player that
Bruce has recruited so far. The
Ohio State coach e~ts to sign
allout 25 players thls winter.

Eastern Michigan tops Miami, 7 4-68
By Associated Press
The three-way tie for first place
tn the Mld·Amertcan Conference
has temporarily become a two-way
deadlock, and the coach of one or
the top teams would like to thin
things out even more.
"We hope to pull away soon,"
said Eastern Michigan Coach Jim
Boyce after his team beat Miami
. 74-68 Wednesday night to move to
S.31n the MAC. "We don'tlikebelng
In clumps."
A few other teams, or course,
may have something to say about
that. Among them Is Bowling
Green, which stayed tied for the
lead by defea ting Western Michl·
gan 63-61. And Ball State Is only
one·half game off the pace at 5-3.
Ball State's game at Toledo was
postponed because of bad weather.
In other MAC games that were

REAL KICKER - DePaul's Walter Downing, left, and St. Joseph's
Bob Lojewski tangle up as ball gels away during basketball action at
Rosemoht Horizon Wednesday night. DePaul won during the last seconds
of overtime, 46-44. (AP Laser'photo)
~----------------

College
basketball

son, 2·7ln the league.
The frustration was evident In
the comments by Central Coach
" The game was there to be won
rnckParfitt.
- time after time after time after
time," he said. " While we played
hard, we did not play with lntelll·
gence for the first time this

IUSPSI ...... I

La!ayettE' 113, Lell!gh 75
Lasalle lW, canislus 76
ruck'r 66, Delaware 6?
St.John'&amp;, NY 71. 8oslvn CoU. 70

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•nirr ur Mlltor" Route
On~ week .. . ........ ........... .... U.OO
One Month .......... ........ ....... $·UO
One Year .... .... ............. .... S52.80

W.Vlrxtnia St. 79, Falnna11 St. 72
SOUTH
AlabAma 66. MIMlUippl St. 63
Auburn 113, Kentucky 81

Ce11U011 66, N.Carolina Sl. M

SINGLEcaPY

O.vld!on 56, ApPalactuan St. M
Duke 47, Georgia Tt!ch r&amp;6
Georgia Jn, nm1da 13
James Madison 5!11, Ca mpbell47

Daily .

Loyola. Md. 68. Biltlmore 52
M.llryland 61, Wake Forffi M
MWll!llppl ~. ~neuee 5.1. err
Morehouse 70, Clartr: til

NC-Wilm1ngton 63, N.CaroUna A&amp;:T 61

No subscrlptlona by mall permitted in towns
where home carrier service 1:1 available.

lb.lblana Tech :11

MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS

Old Dmninkln Ml, Rk:lumnd 57
SE LouJslana 70, Southern '9
VIrginia 74, N.Carolina !18
VIrginia St. 84, LoRI'NCJ(Id 'IB
MIDWI!'.8T

Allegheny 8l. Jotul Carroll n

Betll.....omman., .....,. ,.

PRICES
. ......... ....... 15Cents

Subscribers not desiring t() pay the carrier
may remit in advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel on a 3, 6 or IZ month basis. Credit
will be given carrier e&amp;ch month.

Louisiana Sl 7!1, Vanderbilt 70
Loulsvlllt 61, Tulane !16

m.

CLEVELAND (AP) -Tie Cln·
clnnati Bengals say lhey do not un·
derstand their Inclusion In a $39
mlllion lawsuit tiled by a former
Cleveland Browns offlclal.
Robert Nussbaumer. 57, sued the
Bengals and the publishers or
Sports Illustrated magazine over a
magazine article that he says por·
trayed him as a spy for Browns
~wner Art Modell.
Nussbaumer Is a financial con·
sultan! and former player person·
nel dlrecior of the Browns.
He fUed the sult Tuesday In Cuya·
hoga County Common Pleas Court
In Cleveland.
·
He Is seeking $39 mllllon In dam·

POSTMASTER: Send address to 1hc Daily
Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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A Dlvlsloa ofMuiUmedJa, lnc.

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BuckneU 72, W.Chetter SL 61
, IRJaware Valley 41, Scranton 40

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~ ~onth th ' ····· ·· ' ·· ·· ·· ·· ·· ······ ~ -35
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IX mon , • ..... , . , . , , ... , , , . , , , , _. .
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Northern Illinois made 12 of 14
Kent State.
Alien Rayborn led the Huskies
with a 20-polnL, 20-rebound perfor·
mance as Northern boosted Its sea·
son record to 9-10 overall and 5-4.tn
the MAC.

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MEIGS BOXING
CLUB, INC.

DATE: SATURDAY, FEB. 6th
TIME: 7:30 P.M.

·,

·.

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

LARRY MORRISON GYM

.

'

240 3rd AVE.
1704 EASTERN AVE. 144 W. 2nd ST. ROUTE 33
GALUPOLIS, OH. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO MASON, WV

446-1813

446-4204

AlSO VAIWL.E AT
3RD ST., RACINE, OH .

•..

'
I'

DEPEND ON US WE'RE 'PARTS PLUS'

89¢

THE .INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Downing-Childs Insurance:
and
Mullen Insurance

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

10W40

H&amp;R BLOCit
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.

· INSULATED LEATHER
BOOTS, PULL.ON AND
LACE UP. UP TO 25%
OFF. CHOOSE FROM
BRAND NAMES LIKE
IPPEWA, REDWING
AND SHEBOYGAN.

~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~i

Own a small busin~?
You'll_apprecla~e the
careful attention
H&amp;R Block can give
your.tax returns.

WE 1RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

PEBBLE BEACH, CaUl. (AP) Sa'n Diego and In the $1 MUUon Sun
also collected U.S. Amateur and
mel Bay.
.
Jack Nicklaus comes Into one of his
City Challenge the first week of the
U.S.Opencrownson the same spec·
He'll be playing with former
favorite tournaments with renewed
year In southern Africa. he finished
tacular layout that winds along
President Gerald Ford as his amaenthusiasm and, according to Nick- one shot back of Johnny Miller.
cllfis and crags overlooking Car·
teur partner.
laus, with hls game In better shape
Last week's effort Included a brll·
than In years.
llant final round of 64 that fell Just .----------~--~--------­
"I'm In better shape for the
one shot short.
Crosby than I havebeenforyears,"
'I've played twice and played
Nicklaus said before teeing off towell and each time I've been one
day In the first round of the 41st
back of Johnny," he said. " I'd llke
Bing Crosby National Pro-Am, an
to have won one.
event he has won three times.
"I'd love to get one or two wins
"That relates to the shape of my under my belt before Augusta."
golf game," conllnued Nicklaus,
And this. obviously. Is one ~r· his
now 42 and holder or a record 17
prime targets. The format calls for
major professional championships.
the 168 pros, each with an amateur
"I had to get my golf game In
partner, to play one round on each
shape for South A1rica. That was of three Monterey Peninsula
early In the year. And I played very
courses, Pebble Beach, Cypress
well there. I played well last week.
Point and Spyglass Hlll. After 54
•
"Now, I'm coming here, Instead
holes, the field will be cut for the
of ·coming off a mid-winter break,
rtnal round at Pebble Beach, long·
I'm coming tn with a couple or
ranked by Nicklaus as one of his
weeks of golf behind me. I'm anx·
favorlte courses In th~ world.
lous to play."
And It's one of.his more produc·
And he's anxious to win.
tive layouts. In addition to the three
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
In those two starts, last week ln. Crosby titles he's won here, he's

. . . LEASING

JUST ARRIVED A SHIPMENT
OF NIKE TRACK SHOES, ALSO
A FULL LINE OF BASEBALL
CLEATS FROM NIKE AND CON·
VERSE.

tree throws In overtime to defeat

ages from the defendants - Time
Inc., publisher of Sports Jllus·
!rated; Paul Zimmerman, who
wrote the story; the Beligals, and
Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg.
The Jan. 25 article, which focused on the Bengals, touched upon
Gregg's career as head coach of the
Browns from 1975 to 1977. Gregg
was fired with one game left In the
season. The story said Nussbau·
mer, then a Browns vice president,
eavesdropped on team meetings
and reported to Modell.
"We haven•t seen any summons
or complaint," Louis 4Jvlnsky, dl·
rector of public affairs lor Time
Inc. In New York.'sald WeJnesday.

--BANK ONE ,._

·s Month .. . .. .................... 123.40
1 Year ......................... I4Ul

r~::::::::::::::::::::~~~~~::::::::;;;;;

season.''

sUp
to 8-11
andwhich
4·5 Insaw
league
play.
Kent
State,
Its record
was led In scoring by Dave

The Oail y Sc nlinel

EAST

W.Georgta 90. Armstrong St. 86

minutes, setting up a 22-footer by
forward David Jenkins with three
seconds left . For the game, Jenkins
had 18 points - the same as team·
mate Marcus Newbern.
Western Michigan was led by
Walker D. Russell with 20 points
and Jasper McElroy with 19.
Western Michigan blistered the
nets In the first half, hitting on 16 or
20 Door attempts, but returned to
earth tn the !;E!Cond period. Bowling
Green moved to 12·7 overall. West·
ern Michigan Is 1().9, 4·5.
Jeff Thomas and Kirk Lehman
scored 18 paints each for Ohio Unl·
verslty as the Bobcats ha nded the
Chippewas their fourth consecutive
loss .
Ohio boosted Its record to 1().8
overall and 54 In MAC play. The
Chippewas fell to 8·11 for the sea·

come off the Futures Circuit so hungry they're ready to gnaw a
piece t1 your ar,m,"·sald Barbara Potter, a ·statuesque New Englander
who deserted the ski slopes for tennis.
"All of them are tough, they won't give you a point," added Bettina
an lnternatlonattst who converses In four languages and makes a
tennis racket sing the way Plnchas Zuckerman does a violln.
"They don't know the word 'awe.' They're not afraid or anybody."
Such ts the way a couple or globe-elrcllng young ladles describe the
jungle terrors.of the $10.2 mllllon women's tennis eli-cult, one of the most
competitive and thriving enterprises i.1 sports.
Barbara and Bettina are two of the newest thniats to the game's ruling
lrtiJlllVerate or Chris Evert-Lloyd, Martina Navratllova and Tracy Austin
but at 20 and 18 years of age, respectively, are regarded as "middle-aged"
In thls ldd·lnfested game.
"Soli!" people call them 'clones,' because their games are so closely
patterned after Chris"' said Potter. speaking or the teen-age deluge. ·
"They're reaDy coming out of the woodwork."
The two young ladles were In New York Wednesday to help promote the
$300,00) Avon Championships at Madison Square Garden March 24-30, one
of the major events on the circuit. Both came out of the Avon Futures. as
have scores of others, to make their score In the big leagues.
"Avon' has . been responsible for the fantastic growth of the women's
circuit," said Potter, a Hoot-9 left·hander from Woodbury, Conn .• who ·
skis, dives, paints and reads heavy books such as "The Lost Plantagenet."
"Avon ts the reason so many kids are rushing Into the tournament circuit."
The Avon tour alone offers·$2.2 million tn prize money. InternationaUy,
there are 70 tournaments overall which boosts the total prize money
another $8 mllllon.
Potter won $172,867last year and gained the world ranking of No.lO. She
Is threatening to Improve her standing In 1982, having already won the
Cincinnati tournament and gained the semifinals at Washington, D.C. and
Seattle for a $50,008 prize total.
The blonde and bouncy Bunge, Peru-born daughter of a German bust·
nessman now living In Coral Gables, Fla., holds a German citizenship yet .
travels on a U.S. visa. She speaks fluent German, Engllsh and Spanish and
Is conquering French whUe picking up conquests on the court.
_
She had a No.l2 ranking In 1981 on earnings of $154,318, almost trtple that.
of the pnivlous year. · So far. in this young season she has. won $24,700,
gaining the finals at Cincinnati and losing to Navratuova In Washington ·
and Seattle.
.
Both Potter and Bunge acknowledge that the Lloyd·Navratilova-Austtn
trto currently dominates the game but see the steady wave of newcomers
methodically chipping away at the once Impenetrable steel bloc.

BA8EB.\U.

BA8U'l'IWL
Nden&amp;l Buketba1 AllocWkll
ln'AH JAZZ-Anoounced the m~gna.

Sports World

•
'

Transactions
TORONTO JiLUE JA '{5-SignE'(I AI·
tredo GrUiln, Shorutop; H01ken Powell,
outfielder, and Jim Cott, pltcl\er, tel oneyear contracts.
N.-J._..
CINCINNATI REDS-NamecJ Cam BonJ.
ray SCOUting superv15or for the carolinas
and C«rgla.
NEW YORK METS-Slgned Neu Allen,
pitcher, to 11. two-year rontract.

Nicklaus ready for 4.1st Crosby event

Today,,

I

The Daily S.nti~I-Page---5.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Member FDIC

POINT PLEASANT AUTO PARTS ,
AVE.
515 lAIII ST. 6JS.1520

992-2138

773-551 1

"THIIII II 01111
· llfAII YOtl"

~AUTO

.II

PARTS

..

�Page

6;=The Daily Sentinel

Poti-oy

Mldcllepcirt, Ohio

Rio receives grant froll':l ~sears .
said. Ohio colleges and universities
are among ove 1,000 private accredited two-and four-year institutions across the country which
are sharing $1.5 million in Sears
Foundation funds for the 1981-112
academic year. Funds may be used
as the colleges and universities
deem necessary.

In addition to its unrestricted
grant program, the Sears-Roebuck
Foundation each year conducl.l a
variety of special-purpose programs
in elementary, secondary, higher
and continuing education,
Altogether, the founilation had ex. penditures of more than $2 million in
1981 for its education activities.

Youth group raises cainp funds
. I

The Ambassadors for Christ youth
group will sell candy for the next few
months working toward their goal of
raising funds for youth camp duri~g
theswnmer.
At Christmas time the group
presented the nativity 111 the
Langsville Christian Church. In the

Ambassadors for Youth group are
RandaU and Brian Smith, Lisa anq
Jerry Brevik, Angie Russell, Paul
Council, Kevin Musser and Allita ·
Umbarger. For the program the
nursery class sang "Away in a
Mange'r." Singing were Bridgette ·
and Jeremy Council, Kiniberly

Janey and Amanda Musser, under
the direction of Sally Kennedy.
E»ther Kennedy was at the piano.
Joanna Council, leader of the
group, read the Christmas story
from the Bible. Assistant leaders,
Faye Stinions and Deborah Musser,
helped with costumes and
refreshments for the church.
-

Couple will speak to fellowship
· Bruce and Jackie Zirkle,
Pomeroy, will be speakers at the
Feb. 11 meeting of the Pomeroy
Clulpter of the Women's Aglow
Fellowship to be held at the Meigs
Inn.
Mr. and Mrs. Zirkle have two
daughters, Susan, 19, and Rhonda,
13. The family attends the Pentecostal Assembly in Racine where
Bruce is a Sunday School superintendent. Both Bruce and Jackie have
taught the young adult class and
other levels of Sunday School.
Mrs. Zirkle has served the Aglow
as hostess, publicationl; chairman
and president.
The doors at the Meigs Inn will
open at 6 p.m., dinner will be served
at 7 p.m. and Mr. and Mrs. Zirkle

will speak at 8 p.m.
Reservations are to be made on or
before Feb. 9 with Sarah Winters,

446-7444; Gloria Johnson, 742-2442;
Joyce Hoback, 94&amp;-2325 or Billie J.
Dawson, 773-9123.

Area stUdents members of
Marietta College team
Marietta College freshman Dale
Teaford is a member of the 1981-32
Pioneer.varsity basketball team.
Teaford, who plays forward for
Marietta, is a former student at
Southern High School in Racine. He
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Teaford, Box 127, Racine.
Freshman Gene Cole is a member

of the college's junior varsity
basketball learn, coached by Chuck
Robinson.
Cole plays forward and played
high · school basketball at Eastern·
High School in Reedsville. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Cole,
Box 211, Tuppers Plains.

· Astrograph

Social
Calendar

LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Trustees meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday at township garage with
representative of Department of
Natural Resources to be present.

February 5, 1982
It's important this coming year that you set larger goals for yourself where your work or career is concerned. Aim high. Even if you fail
short, you'll still be a winner.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. 19) Under most conditions we all
welcome assistance, but you are apt to perform better today unaided
by t'Oworkers. They could be more of a hindrance than a help.
PISCES (Feb. · 2&amp;-March 20) If you are anticipating doing
something today which you know will be fun, don't let one who always
changes everybody's plans around disrupt your schedule.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) You will be rather adept today at
managing complex situations for others, provided there's no one
looking over your shoulder, dictating what you should do.
TAURUS (Aprli2&amp;-May ZO) Try to treat everyone equally today,
not just those you deem to be your peers. Behaving in a superior manner will cause problems.
·
"
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your possibilities for profitable returns
are promising today in areas. where you offer service or goods.
Speculative ventures, however, could incur losses.
CANCER (Jane 21·July %2) Situations you personally initiate
should turn out rather lucky for you today, unless you get too pushy or
assertive. Tone down your directives.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Subdue tendencies today to make things
harder for yourself than they should be. All will run quite smoothly if
you don't rock the boat.
VIRGO (Aug: ~epl. 22) Enjoy your friends for what they are
today, not for what they have to offer. They, in turn, will find much to
admire in you. Don't mix business with pleasure.
LIRRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Your possibilities for personal gain are
strong today, but you must be very careful not to be selfish in attempting to fulfill your desires.
SCORPIO (0&lt;1. 24-Nov. 22) The secretfor success today is to treat
whatever occurs philosophically. If you let youl'l!elf gel too uptight, it
will distort your judgment.
·
SAG ITTARJUS (Nov. 23-Dee. 21) Someone to whom you once were
kind will want to reciprocate today, but the situation could get complicated when one who shouldn't butts in.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 191 There's a chance you might be
part of a successful team effort today, yet you might end up feeling
disgruntled because your t'O-participanl wants all the bows.

SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Masonic Lodge, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday with work in Master
Mason degree.

Lifestyle

THURSDAY
EV ANGEIJNE Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, will
meet at 7:30p.m. Thursdayatthe
Middleport Masonic T'iroPle.
Members are reminded to take
articles for ari auction. Proceeds
will go to the Heart Foundation.

THE MEIGS Association for
Retarded Citizens will meet at
7:30p.m. Thursday at the Meigs
Community School.

EASTERN DJSTIDCJ' Band
Boosters 7:30p.m. Thursday at
band room of high school; projec-' .
ts will be discussed.
MEIGS ASSOCIATION for
Retarded Citizens, 7:30 p.m. at
the Meigs Coinmunity School.

THE REGULAR monthly
business meeting of the Bend 0'
the River Artist Council will be
held at the Barn Studio, 7:30p.m.
Thursday.

know the secret.
Cheese S.are
2 tablespoona butter or margarine
2 tablespoona fiour
1 cup milk
· y.4 teaspoon salt

12-1 cup grated cheese
.Melt butter .or ll\8rgarine 'in a
meillwri l!uace pan, Mix in nour.
Remove from the heat. Gradually
the
add
· milk, mixing thoroughly·
Return to heat and stir contlnuowdy
until the sauce has thickened. Add
the cheese and stir until it has
melted. Serve at once.
As I've mentioned In other colurn-

Tomato sauce p~~ oregano leaves

The Pomeroy PI'A will meet at
the Pomeroy Elementary School
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. Founder's
Day will be obsei'Ved and past presIdents will be honored. The otficeJ'!l
will serve refreshments and a
nursery will be provided.
Memorial services for the late
Robert D. Roberts, retired Pomeroy
tescher, wiD be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church with Rev . Robert
McGee officiating.
A new organization to be called
"Meigs CI tlzens For Better
Athletics" will hold its initial
meeting at 7:30p.m. Monday at the
gymnasium in Rutland. Residents
having questions about the new
group are to contact Joe Loftis 742-

Loss of taste, smell not unusual

Browned ham
. burger

•

Pepperoni
Green peppen
onions (sauteed or raw)
ollves
Mozzarella cheeae, . shredded or
sliced .
\
Plaza pizza sauce or tomato sauce
on the dough. If ..:.&lt;nn tomato sauce,
....,....
sprinkle the sauce with oregano (A
spice iv.Dable in the grocery stores
. - lhll Is aile \){ the spices that gives
pizza It's characteristic Davor). Top
with browned, crumbled ham-

By HELEN B01TEL
DEAR HELEN:
I know you aren't running a dootor's column, but I thought perhaps
sOme of your readers might help my
fnend since doctors and druggists
haven't.
She has lost her sense of taste and
smell.
Once friendly and outgoing, she
now avoids social life because it
usually centers on food which she
can no longer enjoy. She seems to be
getting a complex.
If anyone has had this trouble and
found a remedy, we'd like to hear
what it is. Thanks for any help offered. - CONCERNED.FRIEND
DEARFIDEND :
I predict your friend will receive
much response, for loss of taste andor smell are not unusual disorders.
But since each case is different,
"help" may be limited.
Has she visited a neurologist? Sudden taste-loss !night indicate nerve
damage. - H,

burger, pepperoni, green peppel'll,
onions, olivl!ll, etc. Top with shredded cheese.
Place the pizza 00 tbe lowest rack

ns, the secret to prepare hnn!Mree
sauces is removing the pan from the
heat and stirring the milk into the in the oven. Bake in a 375 deg . .oven
d
until the cheese is lightly browned,
fat-fiour mixture gra ually:
about 21&gt;-30 minuts. Cut in squares or
4. When you're staring at that old chunks. This is a lloife and fork
pound of ground beef, Imagine
s&lt;_»nething different. 'fry a deep dish m;::~ week I'll have more ideas
piZZB, forexample.
·
d reel
t 'd
· ddin
Have you ever seen the com- - an
pes o a~ you 10 a
g
merclals on TV that feature this in- some ~p to your wmter mea~. If you
credibly delicious-looking dish? It's are mteres~ 10 a rec1pe for
thick and gooey and absolutely creamed chicken to serve your
delicious 1
roasted waffles or biscuits, contact
· Deep Dlab Pizza
the Meigs County Extension office at
(Dough)
,_=99U8::::::::::98::...
· --'-----112-2cups all purpose fiour
I cup whole wheat fiour
112 teaspoons sugar
' 2 teaspoons salt
I package active dry yeast
I cup very bot tap water
2 tablespoons cooking oil
In a large bowl, mix I cup all purpose fiour, spgar, salt and dry yeast.
Add very hot tap water and oil to the
dry ingredients, mixing thoroughly.
Beat vigorously for I minute. Add
whole wheat fiour and enough all
purpose fiour to make a soft dough.
Turn out on a ficured board and
knead for aboul2 minutes. Divide in
haH and let rest about 5 minutes.
Cover dough with plastic wrap
during this time.
Without letting the dough rise, roll
dough about 12"-thlck and place in a
greased pizza pan or greased cookie
sheet.
·
WMPO
Toppings
Pizza sauce (buy in the tomato
SATURDAYS
sauce or pizza section of the grocery
store)
I til Noon ,

~---~~~
RECEIVED A

Announcemencs

2570.

the usual butjered vegetable dish.

Making a cheeae sauce is easy if you

SHIPMENT OF LEVI STRAIGHT
LEG AND.BOOT CUT JEANS
AT '18.50

GIFT- Middleport's lalenled Gene Grate created
tbla attractive walaut grandfather dock as a gift for
Mr. ud Mn. MardD Essex and surprised them wilb II
over lbe weekend. Essex Is a former superintendent of

Mlddleport Schools. Grate has deslgoed and roaslnlcted a total of Dine such clocks for relalivl!ll and
friends.

DEAR SINISTRAL :
Did I ever! Letters poUred In by
the hundreds. In fact, I haven't had
so much response to a single request
since the tinie .I queried views on
their extramarllal affairs and my
mailman's ba~ swelled like Santa's. ·
(Could this mean left-banders are
as numerous as unfaithful wives or are lefties simply more willing to
be counted? )
I especially like the following comment from a fellow sinistral :

DEARHELEN:
One last word about left-banders:
Of course they' re more liberal (as
someone said) : They naturally lean
to the left.
Incidentally, did you get much
response to your request for participants in a left-banders' survey
(for an upcoming book)? -

DEAR HELEN: .
The true test of left-handed endurance c~e when I joined the
Peace Corps and was sent to the
strictly right-haniled country of
Zaire, where no one gives or takes
anything with the left hand. (Note
from H.; the left hand Is considered
" unclean" by some nationalities.)
During training, one Zairois asked
if it hurt to use my left hand. When I
arrived at my teaching post and
wrote my name on the blackboard, I
was greeted with, "Elle est
gauchee!"
SeH~onscious of every moment
my favorite side did, I tried to
change. But there was one advantage : When I caught a student
cheating, I would take his test away
with the old left hand, and he knew
he was in trouble!
II took a long time to break a

IANOTJIER "SINIST~~t' S

~~~;bit of switching from'

left to riKht hand before g1vmg
anyone anythilig.
I'm now.the mother of a 2-year-ol&lt;l
lefty, and will raise her to know that
left-handedness builds character.
Ask my Mom - she thinks I'm a real
character. -DIANE
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk It over
in her column if you write to Helen
Batte!, care of this newspaper.

r - - - - - - - - - -.,--

Levrs
..
·

original huvywaight
un-wallhed Levi Jeans.

The

FLARES .
STRAIGHT LEG

MEN'S

sJ850

Rag. $21.96
NOW

LADIES'
Rag. $29.00NOW

s2ps

Al10 Student Si-·

NEW YORK
CLOTHING
HOUSE

Middleport resident .. builds a
homemade gra~dfather' s clock

~

GIRLS, INFANTS SIZE 4 to TEENS SIZE 4

'%PRICE -

1

Middleport's talented Gene Grate
has completed his ninth "frtm scratch", handcrafted granlltather's
clock.
Recipienta of the ninth attractive
clock created by Grate for relatives
and frienda are Dr. and Mrs. Martin
Essex, .Coliunbus. Grate was
secretary at Middleport High School
in the 1930's when Dr. Martin was
superintendent of Middleport
sc)!Pols. Dr. Essex, former Ohio
Superintendent of Instruction,
currently is executive director of the

Ohio Advisory Council for
Vocational Education. Grate made a ·
visit to surprise the couple with the
clock over the weekend.
The latest clock, made of walnut
and accented with contrasting
molding, took Grate about two months to make. One can make a clock in
that amount of time only by putting
most other things aside and living
with the work involved for that time
period, Grate points out. Incidentally, there were 1.186 separate
pieces of wood used to make the

decorative molding on the time
piece.

...

As in other Grate clocks, the 87inch tall beauty delivered to Mr. and
Mrs. Essex has aU three sets of

famous chimes, Whittington, St.
Michael, and W~slminister . Jnside
the front door of the clock is an

FOR THE ENTIRE

vour "Exb'li Toac:h"

~•1Sia,.lt57

ATABLE OF DRESS, CASUAL and SPORT SHOES

$5 to $15

.

FLORIST

LADIES' KNEE &amp; PANTY HOSE 1/z PRICE

PH. 992 · 2644

SIMON'S PICK:A·PAIR

mE . Main, Pomeroy

"Hand-I-~;;~~Y~ou~r~F~T~D~F~Io~rl~•l~;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

crafted byplaque
Gene Grate
- 1982." A
engraved
reading,
large monogram, "E:" was designed·
in the front o( the clock lor Mr. and
Mrs. Essex.

FINAl CLEARANCE
.
.

SALE CONTINUES ON
WINTER WEARING APPAREL
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
WITH SAVINGS UP TO 50%.

BAHR CLOTHIERS.
Mid~leport,

Ohio

0

Professor speaks at DAR

MORE REDUCTIONS

Dr. Marcella Barton, assistant tie Kno.W, Facts in the Lives of
This is her second year at Rio
professor of history at Rio Grande ·February Presidents."
Grande. She is a member of the
College and Community College, as
A native of Bedford, Oh., Barton . American Historical Association,
the goest speaker at the annual lun- now resides in Gallipolis. She earned the Amerioan Society of Church
cheon for the Daughters . of the a bachelor's degree from the History, and the Ohio Academy of
American Revolution Monday, Feb. University of California, an M.S. History. R~ntly, her article on
1 at the home of Charles Holzer in from the University of Akron and a Teresa Of Avila, a sixteenth century
Gallipolis.
Ph.D. from the University of mystic, was accepted for publication
The title of Barton's talk was "Lit- Chicago.
in the "Catholic Historical Review."

Alilt of Qlllllty ....,., _ . tlllt you connot IIford to mla. Comt in llltywlilt our
Hloctlorl Is 11 Its blst. Ustod hilt •• just a law oltht flnllslk savinp onllinc ""'·

ENTIRE STOCK
'
•HART SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX
.•JOHNNY CARSON
•PALM BEACH
•HAGGAR

•

FURNITURE SHOWCASE

. HART-SCHAFFNER &amp; MARX

FINAL REDUCTIONS
I ONLY

END TABLE
Burl and Brass
Reg. SISS

THE BASIC camera handling
technique workshop and critique
by Leo Hill will be held Friday at
7;30 p.m. at the Barn Studjo.

S44

WALNUT
WALL UNIT
30"

X

72"

Reg . $299

$122

SAVE UP

I ONLY

MElGS COUNTY Foxhunters
Club meeting 8 p.m. Friday at
• cabin on Eagle Ridge Road.

PECAN
Req. 5189

SAMSONITE

FOLDING TABLES
AND CHAIRS

73

STEARNS&amp; FOSTER

•HIDE-A-BEDS
•LAtZ-BOY RECLINERS
•BEAUTY REST MATTRESSES

Lifestyle,----~...:......,
FURNITURE

THIRDATOLIIIE
GALLIPOLIS

HOURS : 9·5 Dally

Inc. ThursdAy
9-8 Mon. &amp; Friday

(2) In Stock
Both Loaded

'699500
Choice · .
Your

SIMMONS
AND.

HUGE SAVINGS

I

305 V-8, auto. p.s., p.b.,
V-Top, Stereo

5

Discontinued Covers

•DINETTES
•SOFAS·
•ROCKERS

GRAND PRIX ·

END TABLE

lf2 OFF

200/o

ALL SPORT COATS REDUCED

WINTER CLEARANCE SALE

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEES, regular meeting
Friday, 7 p.m. at the home of the
clerk, Wanda Eblin, Laurel Cliff
Road.

MEIGS Boling Club will hold
second boxing program of season
at 7: 30 p.m. Saturday at Meigs
High School gymnasium with
representatives tram Glouster,
Coshocton, Parkersburg and
· Ripley clubs as well as Meigs to
be competing. Trollies will be
awarded winner of each bout and
a irophy to the. best boxer in two
age groups. Public lhvited.

Helen Help Us

What's Cookin'?
By DALE M. STOHL
Melp Extellllea 8ft-vice,
Home Ee0114Bles
Are you tired of serving the same
old stuff for dinner each night? Well,
move over meaUoaf and watchout
hamburgers because some new
foods may be moving in! If your dinners rate a round of"bo hums" from
your family, then put some zing in
your menus.
Here are some ideas to pep up the
mid-winter food blahs:
I. Try BOI'll!lthing new for your
evening meal. Don't try to changeh
the wbole meal around. Just sneak
in one new or unusually prepared
· food. For example, make surprise
muffins to accompany the Wednesday nigh! baked steak. Here's
how: Prepare a basic muffin recipe.
Into greased muffin cups, spoon
about 2 tablespoons of batter. Add I
teaspoon of jelly in the center of the
batter. Top with additional batter.
Bake as directed. Children think this
is a superidea!
Here's another idea for an easy
potato dish: Bake potatoes as usual.
About 20 minutes before serving
time, cut the potatoes in half lengthwise. Scoop out ~ potato, leaving
the shell in tact. Mash the potato, adding a small amowrt of butter or
margarine, milk and salt and pepper. Pile the mashed potatoes into
the shells and top with a little grated
cheese, if desired. Pop the potatoes
back into the oven and bake until
hot.
2. Meatloaf, meatloaf, meatloaf!
Everybody fixes it and it's usually a
favorite with most families. If
you're getting bored with the same
old loaf, then try hiding something
special inside the loaf. Place about
haH of the meaUoef mixture into a
loaf pan and make a depression running the length of the pan. Place hardcooked eggs in a row in the center
or chunks of cheese.
Try preparing individual meat
loaves next lillie. Not only do they
bake more quickly, but the smaller
sip! js a nice change from the usual
sllee, too. Bake .in muffin cups or
just form small loaves and place in a
large baking pan.
3. Try a cheese sauce on cooked
veggies for a delicious chan~e from

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-7

LAST 2 DAYS

FRIDAY

STAR GRANGE ritualistic
team practice at hall, 7 p.m.
Saturday preceding regular
meeting starting at 7:30 p.m.;
state baking contest will be held.

Pomeroy Middleport, Oh.io

1982

CORNER OF THIRD AND OLIVE, GALLI POLIS

MISSIONARY MEETING, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Hysell Run
Holiness Church with the Rev.
James Broome speaking; public
invited.

SATIIRDAY

February 4,

,_

'

RIO GRANDE- An unrestricted
grant totaling $900 was given to Rio
Grande College r~ntly by the
Sears-Roebuck Foundation, a
sjlokesman saidl
· Unrestricted grants totaling more
than $62,000 will be distributed to 45
privately supported · college and
universities in Ohio, the spokesman

Thunc!ay,

Remember Your lldentine
Remember your IJMICUd Valentine Sunday, Februuy 14,
with a lift from Ru•U StOYer Candies. Our beautiful
Satin, Foil or delicate Ginlham Hearta are filled with "Only
the Fineat" chocolates. Our belrtl are a tnditional fnorite
fouiL Remember frienda ilnd relati- with the fineet in
chocolat. and butter bona. A heart lbaped box Ol candyIOmethinll any aweetheart would ~~~
;::;;.,~ "'·,. u II S

lllllllll.....

1977 DODGE
'CHARGER S/E
black with red bucl\!lt
5eats, ale, V-Top, Console

ctm.ASS SUPREME.

4 dr., 1-owner, shows ·
excellent care, a/c, V-Top

Was

radials

··~~~· '2395 00
- ASK US AIOUT"'UIIXO.USIVI12 MONTHS OR 12,000
MILE NATIONWIDE USED CAR WARRANTY!

25%

Dress S
................................... WERES13-'20......... NOW '11.05-'16.99
Topcoats .All Weather Coats ................... '90-'150 .............. :...... '72-1120
Dress Slacks ........................................ ~20-'60 ................. sl5.99- 144.99
Outerwear (Leather Coats included) ...... S57.50-'225 ................. ;... }46-1182
'Sweaters ............... ~ ................. ............. '19-'50 .................. '15.20J39.99
ladies' levi's Straight Legs.................... ~ ...... -'29 ................... ._...... 122.75
ladles' levi's Bendovers ................................ S26 ..........................'20.80
Ladies' levi's Corduroy &amp; Fashion Jeans ......... .S29 ..........................S23.20
GROUP MEN'S

SUITS ·
Reduced · lf3
WI NT II

-JACKETS

&amp;COATS
1/3

OFF

ENTIRE STOCK

·SHOES

15% OFF

........
GROUP DRESS
l
SHOES ......•.••·-··· IJOFF
GROUP MEN'S

SPORT COATS
1
/3

Off

All LADlE
WINTER MERCHANDISE
1

REDUCED

V3

·

. 1I

To

12

PEIIOL£TOII

SHIRTS&amp;
TOPEnES

30% Off

�1982

Meigs County happenings
Meets Monday

·OSP cites driver

To altend senices
.
.

Tile Ohio s~te patrol cited a
: driver In a two-car collision In
: Meigs CoUnty Wednesday night.
According to the report, a vehicle
: driven by Van J. WWford, 21, Rt. 1,
Middleport, faUed to stop at the stop
sign at the junction of County Rd. 18
and.Ohio 143 at 10:35 p,m . and col-·
1lded with a northbound vehicle
: driven byClec!usJ. Klng,3l,Pome. roy, ,Ca45lng moderate damage.
WillfoJ'&lt;! was cited for failure to
:yield.

In observance of Four Chaplains
Sunday, members of Drew Webster Post 39, Amertcan Legion, w111
attend services at 11 a.m. Sunday
at St. Paul Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy rather than Grace Episcopal Church. Speaking at the service will be the Rev. WUI!am
Mlddleswarth, pastor of the St.
Paul Church.

Public meeting sel

-Veterans Memorial
: _Admitted--Ronald Richards, Big
Springs, W. Va.; LUI!an Gardner,
:Pomeroy; David Wolfe ,

;Middleport,
: Dtscharged-Mattle Teaford, Ro-nald Richards, Raymond Gheen.

Public

A public meEjtlng for all Racine
residents Interested In 9: proposed
new natural gas o~nance will be
held at 7 p .m . Monday at Racine
VUlage Hall. Bob Gibson of Racine
Gas servtce .w ill be on hand to
answer questions.

Ql!lster Township Trustees will
meet In regular session at 8 p.m.
Monday at Chester Town Hall.

Emergency runs
Local units answered four emergency calls Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 11: 48 a.m., the Middleport
Unit took Lucy Gardner, Laurel St.,
Pomeroy, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 3: (8 p.m. took Lucy
Barringer fl'om the Meigs County
Courthouse where sbe haa fallen
down stairs to Veterans Memorial
and later to Holzer Medical Center.
The Tuppers Plains Unit at 10: 33
a.m. took Addle Baker from Success Road to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg and at 2:01 p.m. took
April Foreman from Reiber Road
to Camden -Clark Hospital,
Parkersburg.

' .• ' l

TWO KINDS OF DEPOSITS- A woman leans·
through ber automobne window to depo1lt mall as a

In !(lUI' days, further tulng overworked road ~
and fo~log die cloolng of nearly everytblng. (AP

drivlllg snow slorm barreled Into southeastern
Michigan Wednelday, It was lbe second major storm

Laserpboto l

J

Congress studies tax measures Court terminates 19 cases
'

.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Two
·proposals on withholding taxes that
;would affect mUilons of Americans
:are pending In Congress, but an ln:fluentlal Republican on. the House
, Ways and Means Committee says
,one Is "not
an)'where" and
the other one shouldn't.
Rep, Barber Conable said Wednesday that President ~agan's
: plan to have savings Institutions
: and corporations withhold taxes on
: Interest and dividends_will not be
. approved by Congress.
· Reagan ts proposing that 5 perCent of an Individual's Interest and
dividend Income be withheld as a
way of deterrlng tax cheaters.
The chairman and vice chalr·:·:inan of thecoiliresslonalJolnt Eco·nO)l'lc Committee - Rep. Henry P .
.lteuss. D-Wis., and Sen. Roger
"::;JejJsen, R-Iowa-;"' Introduced legts·latlon Wednesday to have the
change reftected Immediately In
the withholding rates.
On another economic ~tter,
Sen. Nancy Landon Kassebaum
tOld the Joint Economic Committee
that the faltering American econ-omy Is taking Its heaviest toll on
·women.
'
. In other congressional business
Wednesday:
.
-Ten senatorS Introduced legislation to retaliate against a Canadian tax ,law that discourages
Canadian businesses lroni adver:tWng on U.S. television stations.

gomg

The escalation of the "border
broadcast war" would add a provision to the U.S. tax code to "mirror" the 1976 Canadian law denying
tax deductions for ads placed on
U.S. stations.
-The Joint Economic Committee said that contrary to the admin·
tstration's deregulation philosophy,
the Interstate Commerce Commission has reversed a congressionally
mandated trend of easing government control of the trucking
Industry.
-Sen. Jerenilah Denton, R -AJa.,
said the Reagan administration
will recommend spending $11 mil·
lion In flscal1982 for a new program
designed to help pregnant adolescents and encourage chastity
amo· -· teen-agers.
. Romano L. Mazzoll, DK&gt; &lt;nairman of the House Intelligence legislation subcommittee,
.said be was "very perturbed" by
some aspects of closed-door testimony focusing on Task Force 157, a
now-disbanded su~rsecret mil·
ltary Intelligence unit. However, he
gave no detaiiB.
-The General Accounting Office
said Congress . should Impose
academic-progress standards on
colleges to force them to dismiss
falling stullents who receive federal
ald. The GAO's Gregory J. Ahart
told a House education subcommittee a recent survey of 20 lnstltutloris
showed some 20 percent of the sub-

~n defendants

sldlzed students with !)On-passing
grades.
-U.S. sanctions againSt the Soviet Union and talk of future actions
constitutes a "de facto" grain embargo that Is costing fanners more
than the actua11!8l sales ban, Robert Paarlberg, a political economist from Wellesley College, told a
senate Agriculture subcommittee.
-Three RePl!bllcans - Reps.
Robert K. Domano!Callfornla, AI·
bert Lee Smith of Alabama and
John LeBouteiller of New York and Howard Plillllps, director of
the Conservative Caucus, .said they
wnuld push for a ban on U.S, bank
loans to the Polish military regime.

Market report
AtMDI Uvetltd Relet

Albuy, Olllo
, ..... Ill!

CATI'LE PRICES:
Feeder StA!ert: (Good aOO Chol.ce) 300-600 lbl!.
43-61.'/li; 100-70010.. 41.5044.2li.
Feeder Hdon !Good and Choice ) lbo.
1$-47.50; 100-70010.. 3'/.IIIH&amp;.'/li.
Feeder Bulla (Good ond Owice) lbo.
42.~,100-701 1 bo. 43-43.'1!1.
Sll...,ler~lllll: IOvor 1,1100 10..)41....2!1.
SIIUI!hler COWl : UWIUeo :w-7.10; Canners

and Callen 23.111h17.00.

Sprlnjjor COWit (By lho Head) 2'1W60.
CowondCa~Poln : {BytloeUnlti-Veoll: !Cholc..ncl Prime) 57-W.
lllb)'CaiYell (By lho Head) 29-'/li.
lllbyCalvea {By lhe Powldi 50-12.

HOGPRICE8-

--

HogJ: (No. I, lllrrowo and GUll) 200-230 lbo.

Bulcher Sowo 31.50-41.

Butcher Bolra 34.111).31 ,

Feeder Pip: (Bylholle""'l IU4~,'10 .

SHEEP PRICF.'l:

Feeder Lambe: ~1 .

were

fined
and four others forfeited bonds In
the Meigs County Court of Patrlck
O'Brien Wednesday,

SteVen Beveridge, Huntington, W.
Va., $10 and costs, no valid
reglstr,ltlon.
Fotfeltlng bonds were Patrlck
Llnkons, Shade, $ll3, reckless oper-

atlon; Dave PaiSley, ByersvlUe,
$50.50, speeding; Teny L. Life,
Reedsville, $70.5(). ~peedlng. and
Carolyn D. Walker, Rutland, p!.5(),
failure to yield the o;ight of way.

Fined were John Higgins, Parkersburg, $24 and costs, speeding;
John Davitt, HagerstowD, Md., .$23
and costs, speeding; Brenda Elll·
ott, Guysville, $10 and costs, lm·
proper pa_sslng; WUI!am Knittel,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, failure to
yield the right of way; Lanlta WentZel, Bidwell, costs only, failure to
display valid registration; Donald
Folmer, Jr., Pomeroy, SZ7 and
costs, speeding; Charles D. Douthit, New Haven, W. Va., $20 and
costs, speeding; Roger Watkins,
Route 1, Shade, $150 and cost ·
three days in jail and iJO day license
suspension, driving while lntoxl·
cated; Thomas Farley, Jr.. Athens,
$30 and C!JSis, expired operator's 11·
cense; Doris F, Grueser, Minersville, $25 and costs, Improper
starting; Marvin Little, Middleport, $250 and costs, three days In
jail, JJ day license suspension, drivIng wl;llle Intoxicated; Marjorie
Rood, Reedsville, $150 and costs,
three days In jail, 30 day license
suspension, driving_ while Intoxicated; Paul Steinmetz, Jr., Obetz,
$40 and costs, !allure to display
valid license plates; $50 and costs
and 10 days In jail, driving While
·under suspension; Charles Lantz,
Coolville, $25 and costs. attaching
bicycles and sleds to . vehicles;

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write D;~ily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Po111eory, Ohio 45_7 69

·1 ~'

l ·Cord of Thanks
2· 1n Memoriam
3·Announcements
-4·Giveaway
5·Happy Ads
6· Lost and Found
7-Yard Sa le
8· Public Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanted to Buv

Classified pages cover the
CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
Real Estat£'

'f

Employnwnt
11 -Help wanted
12·Situation Wanted
13· 1nsurance
14 · 8usin~s5 Training
15·Schools Instruction
16-Radio, TV ,
&amp; CB Repair
17·Miscellaneous
18-Wanted To do

n

31 -Homesfor Sale
32·Mobile Homes
for Sale
33-Farmsfor Sale
34-Business Buildings
35-Lots &amp; Acreage
36-Real EstateWanled

41 ·Houses for Rent
42·Moblle l-lomes
for Rent
43·Farmsfor Rent
44-Apartmentlor Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
46· Space for rent
47·Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
&lt;49· For J.gase

2l ·Buslness Opportunity
22-Money to Loan
13·Profe5slonal
Services

Public Notice
FINANCiA-L
REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
Scipio Township
Meigs County
35410 VInCe Rd.,
PomtroyLOhlo
January 21, t912
• I certify the following
·report to be correct.
Betty J . BllhO~
Tel. No, 61 742-24P
SUMMARY OF
CASH BALANCES,
RECEf PTS AND
'EXPENDITURES
I• lance
. .
Jan, 1, 1911
General Fund
$4,187.13
MOtor Vehicle
• LicenHTaX
• Fund
1. ISO!
Gasoline Tox .

Public Notice
-- --Fund
2,730 . 1~
Rood and Bridge
1,238.35
Fund
.
Fire Protection
1.~74 . 10
'FUnd
Federal Revenue
Shoring Fund
551.20
Tota l
11,336.83
Tot• I Receipts
Generai'Fund
12,009.09
Motor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
Gasoline Tax
19,200.41
Fund
Road and Bridge
Fund
2.821.8i
Fire Protection
1,666.89
Fund
Feclefal Revenue
Sharing Fund
2,623.00
11'1119.00
Totol
"Tran\fers In"

Public Notice
Gasoline Tax
Fund
3,000.00
Total
3,000.00
Tot•l Receipts
and Bolances
General Fund
16,196.82
Motor Vehicle
LicemeTax
11,952.45
Fund
Gasoline Tax
21,930.61
Fund
Road and Bridge
Fund
4,060.16
Fire Protection
Fund
J, 141,59
Federal Revenue
Shoring Fund
3,111.20
Total
;!O,.W.83
Expondflur"
General Fund
10,928,75
Motor Vehicle
LicenHTox
Fund
1l,.W.4C
Gasoline Tax

'

.

I·

TransporLotoon
Misr:.

~

-

51 -Household Goods
52-CB , TV , &amp;
Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54-Misc . Merchandise
55-Building Supplies
56-Pets for Sale
57 ·Muscial Instruments
56 -Fruiis &amp; Vegetables
59 -For Sale c&gt;r Trade

F;mn Suppiii!S

OI ·Farm Equipment
62·Wanted to buv
63·Livestock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed&amp; Fertilizer

Public Notice

~

following telephone exchanges.
Gallia County
Are"' Code614

71 -Autos for Sa1'e
72- Trucks for Sale
73 -Vans &amp; 4 WD
74 -Motorcyc les
75·Boats&amp; Motors
76-Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
77 -Auto Repair
78 ·Camping Equipment

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446-Galllpolls
l61-Cheshlre
311-Vinton

245-R io Grande
256-Guyan Dlst.
64J-Arabia Dist .
319- Walnut
Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

992-Middleport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
343-Portiancf
247- Letart Falls
949-Racint
742- Rutiand
667-Coolville

615-Pt. Pleasant
458- LeOrl
!76-Apple Grove
713--Mason
882-New Haven
895-Lelart
tli-Buffafo

~
8l ·Home Improvement~
82· P lumbing &amp; Heating
83· Excavating
84··E lectrlcal &amp;
Refr igeration
85-General Hauling
86-M.H. Repair
81· Upholslery

Public Notice

1 16,708.94 Total
Fund
12,061 .51
Road and Bridge
CASH BA"-ANC ES,
3,063 . ~9
Fund
RECEIPTS AND
Fire Protection
.E-XPENDITURES
Fund
1,7Ml.37
BY FUND
Federal Revenue
General Fund
Sharing Fund
2,491.27 Balance,.Jan. 1,
Total ·
48 394.26
1982
4,187.73
"Transfers Oui'•
Receipts
General Fund
3,000.00 General Property Tax·
B•lanco
Reo I Estate
Dec. Jl, 1911
and Troller
General Fund
5,268.07
(Gross)
4,005.45
Motor Vehicle
Tangible Personof
License Tax
Property Tax'11'17.01 . {Gross)
Fund
25.13
Gasoline Tax
Estate Tax
Fund
3,221.61
(Gross)
172.11
Road ahd llrldge
Local Government
Fund
99&lt;1.67
and State Income
FIre Protection
Tax
7,552.31
Fund
l,ol()1.22 Liquor Permit
Federal Revenue
Fees
150.80
Sharing Fund
616.93 Cigarette License

TION
Street Maintenance

Up to 15 words .. .Three day insertoon ........ .... .. SJ.Oo
Up to 15 Words ... Oneday

insertion ......... ... ... $4.00

Up to 15 Words ... Six dav
insertion ............... $7.00
(Average 4 words per line)
Yard Sale. In Memorv.
Card of Thanks are ac·
cepted only Cash in Ad·
vance.

Public Notice
Fees and Fines
{Gross)
80.17
Other
21.86
Total Receipts
12,009.09
Total' Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipl!
16,196.82
l!xponclitures ·
Total Expondf\"i'esAdmln,
9.018.02
Town Halls,
Memoriol Buildings and
Grounds
438.08
Cemeteries
1,255.00
Lighting,
211.65
Grand Total Exp.General Fund 10,928.15
Balance, Dec, 31,
·
1981
. 5,268.07
Total Exp. Plus Bar,,
Dec. 31,1981
16,196._82

Motllr Vtlokfe
Lie-• Tu Fund
Bolonce, Jan. 1.

The Publis her reserves
the right to edit or reject
any ads deemed objectional. The Publisher
will not be responsible for
more than one Incorrect in·
sertion .
Public Notice

Public Notice
1981

1,154.71
Receipts
Motot'llehicle
License Tox
10,791.7~
Total Receipts
10,791.74
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
_ Rece]pts
11.952.45
Expenditures
Totol ExpendituresMisc .
3.118.72
Malnt.
2,718.76
Improvement
4,857.96
Grand Total Exp.Motor Vehicle
License Tax
Fund
11,455 .44
Balance, Dec. 31,
1981
~91,01
TOtal Exp. Plus Bol.,
11,952.45
Dec . 31, 1981
GasollneTu
·
Fund
Balance, Jon. I,

1981

2,730.14
Receipts
•
14,.j(){),OI)
Gasoline Tax
3.3c Per Gallon
and Transfer
~.800.41'
Total Receipt•
19,200.41'
Total Beginning
· Balance Plus
Receipts
21,930.61
Receipts
Total Exp. Misc.
10,257.4t
Malnt.
8,451.411
Grand Total Exp. Gasoline Tax
Fund ·
181708.94
. ,
Balance, Dec. 31,
1981
3,221.67
Total Exp. Plus Bal.i
Dec. 31, 1981
2 ,930.61
(Continued on Page 8_)

Employee
Wages
Benef it s
Contractua 1

20,000.00
4,100.00

r----------,----------r-~-------~--------~.,.---------""T----------

Services
1.400 .00
Other Operation and

S&amp;W .1V
and

Maintenance
53,300 oo
Capital Outlay
4,ooo:oo
Total Street
Main.enance and
Repair
88,800.00
Federal Grant
Other
1,600,000.00

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Chester, Ohio

Total Federal Grant

Fund

1,600,000.00

PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382

Federal Revenue Sharin_g

Other

16,825.39

Sharing Fund
Program
Other

16,825.39

Total Federal Revenue

All makes and models
Antenna Installation
House· calls and shop
service available.
1-3-1 mo .

11,300.00

Grand Total Special
Revenue Funds
Appropriation
Includes Adden- ·

Wages
Employee

Tr~~nef~~sansporta.
I.10n
Contractual
Servl·ces

1.600.00

1•000 -00
Maint.Outlay
Capital
3,000.00
ther
Operation
and
Transfers
2,950.00
Total Fire Equipment
Fund
18,950.00
Fire Truck Fund
Contractual
Services
300.00
onterestand
Principal
6,300.00
Truck
.600.00
6
Bond Retirement Fund
Contractual
services
100.00
1nterest and
Principal
6,200.00
Total Bond Retirement
Fund
6,300.00
Planning
commission
Fund
contractual

To~~~n~ire

A
SATURDAY, FEB. 6-7:00 P . M.
Every Saturday Thereafter
In Pagevllle, Ohio
several truckloads of merchandise plus truckload
of lood producls. New dealer coming In, so don't
mi"ss this sale. Several Door Pr,zes to be given .
away.
Not responsible for accidenl!.
Terms of Sale: Cuh or Check with Positive I D
E~tl Available.

---- 1'~l!!_i£_'!O_I!~_

~ropriations

-·

for
conngencies can only be ex-

~i~~~d v"Jl~n .;:Pg~~~n~\ 1"'{g;

·,tems of e•pense con·
"
stituting
a lena
I obligation
aga ' nst the
v lage
and fo
'
•
r
11
purposes other han those
covered by other specific
appropriat ions
herein

made .
SECT 10 N
12 . Th i s
resolution shall take effect

100.00 at the earl iest period
allowed by law.
600.00
Passed January 11. 1982
9, 700 _00 Attest:

Other
Operation and 100.00
Services
Maint.
285.00
Public Notice
Transfers
65 .00
Total P lanninq
CommissiOn
ANNUAL
Fund
450.00
APPROPRIATION
sanitary
Sewer Escrow
ORDINANCE
Fund
An OR Dl NANCE to
make appropriatiQns for Contractual
Services
29,000 .00
Current Expenses and Capital Outlay
50,000 .00
other EKpenditures of the Tota l sanitary
Village of Middleport,
sewer Escrow
State ot Ohio, during the
Fund
79.000 .00
fiscal year ending Decem·
SECTION 7. That there
ber ll; 1982.
be appropriated from the
Section 1. BE IT followong ENTERPRISE
. RESOLVEDbytheCouncil ' FUNDS:
of the Village of Mid- Water Fund
dleport, State of Ohio, that, Salaries/
to provide for the current
Wages
8,100.00
expenses and other ex· Employee
penditures of the said
Benefits
2,000 .00
Village of Middleporl Contractual
during the fiscal year en·
,
.00
Serv!Ces
· ·ce
ding December 31, 1982, the Total Olfl
11,14300
oo.oo
following sums be and they
Other Equipment
are hereby set aside and
appropriated as follows : OtherOperalionand
Maintenance
5,000 .00
VIZ:
Section 2. That there be Capital Outlay
10,000.00
aRpropriated from the Tota l Other
Equipment
15,000.00
GENERAL FUND :
Other ·
120,270.00
SECURITY OF
Tota l Water FunQ
PERSONS AND
Appropriation 146,670 .00
PROPERTY
BASIC UTILITY
Pol ice Law Enforcement
SERVICES
Salaries/
$67,600.00
Wages
Sanitarv Sewer
Fund
Employee
Benefits
18,200.00 Office
Tra11el Transporta ·
Sa laries/
10,000 .00
wages
lion
500.00
Employee
Contractual
2,350 .00
Benefits
5,250.00
Services
Contractual
Other O_peration
Services
1,200.00
and Mainte· ·
nance
12,050.00 Other Operation and
· Maintenance
500.00
Transfers
10,000.00
Total Office
1~ . 050 . 00
Total Police Law En·
96,210 .00
lorcement
113,600.00 Other
Total Sewer Fund
Total Security of
Appropriat ion
Persons and
Basic Utility
Property
113,600.00
Services
110,260 .00
PUBLIC HEALTH
LEISURE TIME
AND WELFARE
ACTIVITIES
Payment to County
Health District 4,300.00 Swimming Pool
Salaries/
Total Public Health
Wages
7.000 .00
and Welfare
4,300.00
Employee
GENERAL
150.00
Benefits
GOVERNMENT
Mayor and Administrative Contractual
Services
2,250 .00
Offices
Other Operation and
Salaries/
Maintenance
2,5.50 .00
8,500.00
Wages
Capital Outlay
3,000.00
Employee
150.00
Benefits
2,150.00 Transfers
Total Swimming
Travel Transporta·
Pool
15, 100.00
tion
900.00
Concessions
Contractual
Services
700.00 Other Operation and
Maintenance
4,000 .00
Other Operation and
Main!.
1.700.00 Toto I
Concessions
4,000 .00
Total Mayor and
Total Swimming Pool
Administrative
Fund Appropriation
13,950.00
Offices
Leisure Time
Activities
Legislative
19,100.00
Activities
(Council)
Cemetery
19,880.00
Salaries/
1,200.00 GRAND TOTAL
Wages
ENTERPRISE
Total Legislative
FUNDS APPROPRIA·
Activities
1,200.00
295,910.00
TION
Clerk, Treasurer
Other Trust and Agency
Salaries/
Wages
5,200.00 Funds
Meter
Travel Transporta·
Deposit
3,000.00
lion
300.00
GRAND TOTAL TRUST
Contractual
Services
550.00 1 AND AGENCY FUNDS
APPROPRIA·
Other Operation and
3,000.00
Main! .
450.00 . TION
TOTAL ALL APPROPR lA·
Total Clerk,
2,391,966.39
TIONS
Treasurer
6,500.00
SECTION II . And the
Lands and Buildings
Village Clerk is hereby
Contractual
Services
91800.00 authorized to draw warran·
ts on the Village Treasurer
Other Operations ana
Malnt.
2,200.00 for payments from any of
foregoing
ap ·
'Tronsters
100.00 the
propriations
upon
Toto I Lands and
Buildings
12,100.00 receiving proper cer·
tificates and vouchers
Coonty Aud itor's
therefor, approved by the
and Treasurer's
or
officers
Fees
6,500.00 board
Other
82,575.00 authoriied by law to ap·
prove the same, or an or·
Total
I Govern123, 125.00 dinance or resolution of
council to make the ex·
pendilures; provided that
no warrants shall be drawn
or paid for salarie_s or
wages e)(cept to persons
employed by authority of
and in accordance with law
or ordinance. Provided fur·
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~h~e~r~~~~h~a~t--t~h~e:__a~p:.j
8
Public Sale
&amp; Auction .

\

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

PUUINS
EXCAVATING

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
piUI'Ilbing , electric, and
heating.

• Dozers
es._ckhoes·
• Dump Trucks
elo· Boy
• Trencher
• Wnte,- • Sew('r
• Gns lines
eS e ptic
Syst e ms
large or small Jobs
PH . 991·2478
1·21·1 mo. pd .

FREE
ESTI'MATES
PH. 992-'6011
8·20-tf c

-

SCRAP
(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron &amp; Met all
Now picking up iunk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies.
scrap iron and metals.
1 mile
west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt .
JJ.

Mon.· Fri.B: 30 to 4: oo
Ph. 992-6$64
1·7· 1 mo.

HARRISON

D&amp;D

WANTED TO BUY

TV SERVICE

WELDING SHOP

NOW

REPAIR WOR_K
• Gas &amp; Electric
ecutting
• Brazing
e20 Yrs . Exp.
Reasqnable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport, Ohio

OPEN
Used Color TV sets for
Sale.
SALE PHONE NO,

992-6259
' 216 Sycamore St .
Middleport, Ohio
9·21 -tfc

PH. 992·5663
1-1-1 mo.

~==:==:=-::-:-::=-:-t=========j;::========:jr:::;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;=~rr=;:;:;;;;:;;:;;;::;;::=::;t=====;::::==::::;
--------- - - - Keep This Ad For
SLINDERELLA

dum
025.39 I
SECTION
4. , ,852
SPikiAL
~§~5~~7 FUNDS AD·
Street Levv Fund
Employee
Benefits
250.00
Contractual
Services
~~ 00
- C,:tpital Outlay
17,150.00
Total Street
Levy
Fire Equipment
'·""'"'-"-''- '
Salari-es/

Auctioneer: Don R

•

Business Services

and Repair

SalarieS/

0

Sentinei-Page-9

NO'tiCe__ _

(2) 4, ltc

The Daily Sentinel

Announcements

(Continued from Page 8)
Road and Bridge
Fund
Balance, Jan . 1,
1981
. .
1,238 .35
Receipts
General Property TaxRe•l Estate
and Trailer
2•803 -80
(G~SS)
Tll~ible Personal
Property Tax
18.01
(Gross)
Total Receipts
2.821 .81
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
4,060.16
Expenditures
Total Exp. Misc .
3.063.49
Grand Total Exp.R:oad and Bridge
Fund
3,063 .49
Balance, Dec . 31,
'
1981
996.67
Total Exp . P'us Bal. ,
Dec. 31 , 1981
4,060.16
Fire Protection
Fund
Balance, Jan. 1,
1981
.
1,4700
Rece1pts
General Property TaxReal Estate
and 'T railer
(Gross)
1,648.88
Tangible Personal
Property Tax
(Gross)
16.01
Total Receipts
1.666.89
Total Beginn ing
Balance Plus
Receipts
.
3,141.59
Expenditures
Contracts
1.700.00
Other Expenses
40 37
Total Exp.
1,140:37
Balance, Dec. 31 ,
1981
1,401.22
Total Exp. Plus Bal ..
Dec . 31, 1981
J, 141.59
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Balance, Jan .l,
1981
551.20
Receipts
Grants Federal
2,623.00
Total Receipts
2,623.00
Total Beginning
Balance Plus
Receipts
3,114.20
Expenditures
Ma intenance and
Operation
Salaries Employees
2,491 .27
Total Exp .
2,497 .27
Balance, Dec . 31,
1981
676.93
Total Exp. Plus Bal.,
Dec . 31,1981
3,174 .20

The

Ohio

Clerk of Co unco' I
Jon Buck
Carl J . Horky
President of
Cou.ncit
CERTIFICATE
Section 5705.39, R.C. "No
appropriation
measure shall become ef·

~~~f~oer f~f!:~t wW~ t~~u~~

propriatlng authority ... a
certificate that the total ap·
propriations from each
fund, taken together with
all other outstanding ap·
propria lions, do not exceed
such official estimate or
ame~ded official estimate.
When the a~propriation
does not exceed such of·

BOGGS

SALES

fiREWOOD

Future Reference

APPLIANCE

,

&amp; SERVICE

Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Available
y
p· k u
or ou IC
0

us
· · Rl · 50 E as1
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holla"d, Bush Hog

Also Wood Splitter
For Rent

Farm Equipment
Dealer

ewuhtn

{614) 142-2131
David Price
(614) 99N556
l -13· lmo. Pd.

1·3·tfc

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985-3561
PAns AND sERI.IICE
AL.L MA~ ES

John Wise

Farm Equl' pment
Parts &amp; Servl' ce

SERVICE

oomn

•lilllntn

.a,,po,
.. l,
oolohwnhm
•HotwatnTIInlu

'ISifc

OfET/EXERC15E
CLASSES
Mpndq1:30 r,-m.
Chester:AA.. on c Hall
TuesdaY 10:30a .m.
Mason!Methodlst
Church
T
d 1 30
Po'l::!rU-t.\et~.;.Ti;,
Church

ANNOUNtiNG

-

BEVERLY WICKLINE
NOW AT

B-A BEAUTY

Thursday 10:30 a.m .
Pomeroy-Five Point
Call: JoAnn Newsome

IN RACINE
Wtds., Tllun. &amp; Sot.

Lecturer
992·3382
M b
hi
$3 _50
em ers P
Weekly Class
$2.50
2. 3. Jmo.

CALL949-232Q

HAl RSTYLI"G
lolh Mon &amp; Womon
1-- 24·1mo.

~~=:~:=~==j~========j~========~t=====~~~~f~====~~~~
ROUSH _

It--'--:===

REESE

MSALE

Mon., Feb. 1
thru
s 1 F b 27
a ., e ·
::::
Reg. SlO Now 527.50
S35 wave Length
For Longer Hair
Now s 2t.SO
""" aSalon
~1 s --~
1119 N. 2nd
llolid&lt;,JI &gt;1'1
C.U 99 2-272&amp;

·

CUSTOM
WELDING

··-. ·
·
·
·

TRENCHING
.

:~~ =~= :~~:;~

SERVICE~

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum.
SIDING

CONSTRUCTIQN

- _:-ex-

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes
3

~":r,e:1 rg~T;!.~:!:~e
Specialty J
North of Racine
On Carmel Road
at Sawmill

water· Sewer· Electric
Gas line· Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
county certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

J• R• PARSONS·

Ph . 361-1560

18 1

:~;.si ve remodel~
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years E lCperience

, Beautiful, Custom .
Buill Garages"
Call tor free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls , ·

Greg Roush
Ph. 992 · 7583
or 992·2282

3 11 f

auditor shall give such cer·
ficialedima~,thecounty~~~~~2~-~1~l~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~- l~·~lt~fc~~~~~~~- ~·~m=o~-~p~d~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~·=t=c~
tificate forthwith upon

OHIO VALLEY
ROOfiNG

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

recelvin9 from ·t he ap·
propriatong authority a certified copy of the ap·
propriation meas.ure ... "
The Slate of Ohio, Meigs
Co1Jnty, ss.
I, Jon Buck, Clerk of the
And Home Maintenance
Vi!dlag_e of Midddl~port in
• Roofing of all types
sat County, an '"whose
eSiding
For ell your wiring
custody the Files, Jour·
nals, and Records are
• Remodeling
needs; fu~ repair
required by the Laws of the
• Free estimates
s e r v i c e end
State of Ohio to be keft, do
elO Yrs. eKperience
ln111111e1ion,
hereby certify lha the
fOregoing Annual Ap ·.
Reaidenliel
propriation Ordinance is
&amp;
Commerclel
taken and copied from the
original Ordinance now on
Ph.949-2160 or 949 -2482
Call 742-3195
file with said Village, that
1·5·tfc
the foregoing Ordinance
has been compared by me
.original and !;::========~-;::=:::::::::=;:::::;=~
with
the same
said 1s
that the
a true and
correct copy thereof.
_
" youNG's
S.e Mr . GOOdw r•nch For A
Witness my signature,
FRONT-END
this 12th day ot January,
CARPENTER
ALIGNMENT
1982 .
Jon Buck
5 E R V1C E"
With Genuine GM
Clerk of the
PariSI
Village of
(,.;
- Addon• •ncl r•modellni
Middleport
Me igs County, Ohio
- Rool lnt •nd QUtter wor•
,-~....
~

Cl asS 'f'
d Ad s
I le
bring you
extra cash
for
shopping sprees
AHI Eetate Oenerel

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

_,,,,,

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

TOM HOSKINS

Card of Thanks
THE family of Albert M.
Gilley would like to thank
the
many
friends ,
relatives, neighbors and
his many loyol friends he
talked with on channel 12
during his long Illness. We
thank each one for their
provers and lovely cards
and generous donations of
fOOd and gilts brought to
our homes, the beautiful
flowers and acts of kind·
ness shown af the loss of a
loving husband, father and
grandfather.

E . M•II•W•
POMEROY, 0 .
992·2259
YOU CAN BUY A
HOME AT BELOW
CURRENT INTEREST
RATES WITH THESE
ASSUMABLE
OR
- Concreht work
(2) 4, 11 , 2tc
SELLER FINANCED
Modern Electrical
- Plumbing .1nd
PROPERTIES .
EQuipment
electriul work
Publit Notice
Assume this loan wlf.h
'
!Free Estimates!
SIMMON'S OLDS.$2,500 down, 17% In·
teres!, approx . 29 years
J
Announcements
NOTICE OF .
V. C. YOUNG Ill
CAD .·CHEV,, INC.
to
pay,
$302
per
month
SALE
992·621 5 or 992-7314
Ph . 992-6614
SWEEPER ond sewing
Includes taxes and In·
By virtue of an Order of
Pomeroy, Ohio
308 E . Main Pomeroy,
machine repair , parts, and
surance , total S29,.;oo Sate issued out of the Com ·
•upplies.
Pick up ond
mon P l e~s Court of Meigs
1..-----...L:·nl·tfc
Home on State Route
delivery, Davis Vacuum
124, two bedrooms, l'h
County,
Ohio,
in
the
case
of
1-----------!---~------;
Cleaner, one half mile up
1st F1nancial Savinjr-i &amp;
~cres ,
several
Loan Association , pla.mtiff ,
Georges creek Rd . Call
buildingS,
garden
space,
vs . Dennis Tillis, et. al. ,
«6 ·029~ ..
large rear enclosed por·
defendants ,
upon
a
ch, many features .
iudgment thereon ren·
A TO
Complete line Of Muzzle
Owner will help finance
dered.. being Case No .
11,944 in sa;d court. 1 will
HOME MAINTENANCE
this newly constructed
Loading Guns and Sup·
plies.
Spring
Valley
offer !or sale, at the front
AND REPAIRS
English tudor, split en·
Sizu
start
from
l0x24"
door of the Court House in
Trodlng Co ., Spring Valley
try home, close to Mid·
Pomeroy , Meigs County,
20 Years Experience
Plaza , 446·8025.
dleport. Featuring 3
Ohio. on the 27th day of
Plumbing, Carpentry ,..
bedrooms,
21J:J
baths,
February, 1982, at ten
t 1 1
family room, Iaroe
o' c lock a .m ., the fo llowing
Roofing~
Etec r ca •
Sizes from 4 ro 6 and all
ROSENBERG RECYCLI living
room
with
lands and tenements, to
Cisterns, Cement, Stone
wood buildings 24X36.
NG
Opening
soon
w it :
Walls, Chimney Repair.
separote dining room,
Insulated Cog Houses
specializing
In
SITUATED in the TownAll Home Repairs
garage , workshop .
ALUMINUM
CANS,
ship of Rutland, County of
.
$49,900.
oluminum siding, sheet &amp;
Meig~, State of Oh io, and
Trailer Roofs an~
Assume this loan at
cast alum., copper wire,
b01..111ded and described as
Underpinning
Rt. 3, Box S4
1l'h% with $3,400 down,
follows. to w it : Being in
PH . 992-3872
Racine, Oh.
brass, radiators, auto bot·
appro)( . 28 years fo pay,
Section 6. in the Village of
_2. 3_0 mo. pd .
Pi&gt;. 614·843·2591
terles &amp; IBM cords. Wath
S302 per month , includes
Rutl.and. Beginning 786.7
6·15-tfc
lhls paper lor location ond
taxes and insurance grand opening . Rose.nberg
feet
east
and
503
feet
north
1
'==========~==::;::::=~==~
from fhe southwest corner ttotol 529 ,900
J
Recycling, 1M! Columbus
of Section 8, at the nor·
- -·· ·- ·bedroom home on ex·
Rd ., Athens, Oh 45101 . Call
thwest corner of the Churcellent street In MidANI Eltltt Gener1l
1·614-7477 .
ch lot; lhence South 75
dleport . NIce lot with
degrees east 181.5; thence
chain
link lence,
north 15 degrees East 90
For bulk delivery of
remodeled throughout .
feet ; thence N or'th 75
gasoline, heotlng oil and
13% Pate Available on
degrees West 181.5 feel to
the street; thence south 15
diesel fueL call Landmark,
this F .H.A. assumable
degrees West 90 feet along
992-2181 , Pomeroy, Oh.
loan on a 3 bedroom
the street to the place of
home near Pomeroy . In
VIRGIL B. SR.
beginning, containing .35
excellent condition with
216 E . 2nd St .
Gun Shoot Rac ine Gun
acre, more or less.
full basement, wood
Club . Every sun. starting
Deed Reference : Volume
burning fireplace, nice
142, Page 829, Meigs Coun·
Phone
at 1 p .m. Factory choke
rooms . Large lot - gar·
ty Deed Records.
guns only .
H
614
1·992·3325
The real estate was apden space. $5,000 down Georges . Hobstetter Jr .
pra ised at $17,000.00
approx . 29 years to pay.
JUST
LISTED
Roclne Fire Depl. sponsors
Terms of Sale: $1.000
Broker
Principal and Interest
Remodeled
6
bedroom
cash at time of sale with
OFFICE 142·2003
o Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
$330.20
per
month
·
Totol
home, modern bath,
the balance in cash within
6:30p.m ., Ba!hon . Factory
price $3~.500 .
N'EW LISTING - 48
thirty (301 days after date
d ining,
2 porches,
.c hokel2gougeshotgun.
Owner
will
tln1nc:e
this
of sale. Deposit to be
tl!lcres
M I L wi,th
basement and a wood·
bui lding 1?1. Approx 1
waived if sold to plaintiff·
minerals, and 5 vr. old
working shop 2~x~2 .
first mortgage holder:.
Flea
Market.
New
acre cleared land with
split
level
home
Land
contract
$32,500.
James J . Proffitt
Opening.
7
days
a
week
.
city
water
and
electric
featuring
~ bedrooms, 2
JUST LISTED - 7 room
Sheriff of
The Heart Of Middleport . 20
available. $500 down,
baths. familY room
frame, out of high
Meigs County
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
term 3 years at 10% w/ stone
firepl!!ce ,
water, bath, natural
(11 21.28 (2 1 A, Jtc
payment
of
$48
.41
mon,
Generol
Store . 992-6310.
Wx20' living room, kitgas, and city water.
thly, principle and in·
chenJ.-.. has bullt·ln cor·
Only $9,800.
Public Notice
teresf total price
nlng
range, sell Income
tax
!ervlce .
RT. 7 FARM - 18 acres,
$2,000.
I
clean
ing
oven
,
dish·
Federal and state Income
some
fencP.
,
old
farm
PUBLIC NOTICE
Blended rate available
tax forms. quarterly repor·
hou~ .
a 2 bedroom
Formation to mine washer and Nu· tone
at 1~%. on a 2 bedroom
food center, dining room
Is, and W·2 forms will be
within 100 feet of public
trailer , and other out·
home,
on
approx
.
1
118
road CRJO also known as
with sliding doors to
done by appointment. See
buildings. T .P. water.
acre lot.
Lots of
Forest Run Rd., Sutton
Wanda Eblin, 41000 Laurel
patio. Central vacuum
$32,000.
Township, Meigs County . and intercom. Laroe J
remodeling, forced air
Cliff Rd.. Pomeroy. 992RT. 143 - 5 yr. old 6
An opportunity for in ·
heot,
aluminum
sid
ing
.
story barn and 3 tractor
rooms, 2 lull oaths, car2272.
terested parties to present
30 · Years term, 10%
equipment
shed .
peting, range, Dbl .
testimony will be provided
down, $265.53 per month
$611,000.00.
oven,
2
door
on Monday, Feb. 8, 1982 at
JIMS Water Service. Call
principal and interest CONVENIENT LOCAT·
the Meigs County Court
refrigerator. Level 1.88
Jim Lanier, 304-675·7397 .
toto! price $24,900.
room at 1:30 p .m .
ION - Eight room two
acres. $37,900.
Camp Conley.
Soller
Financing
Thl•
Meigs County
story h&lt;&gt;me situated oo
2 HOUSES - or will sell
Commissioners
newly
constructed
corner lot In Middleport.
separate. 3 bedrooms
(2)4,5, 21c
energy
efficient 3
McDaniel's Custom But·
Possible owner finaneach, city water &amp; gas. 2
bedroom home near
chering . Open from 7:30
cing to qualified buyer .
garages, level lots ad·
Pomeroy with full
pm II! 6 pm . 304-882-3224.
$35,000.00.
joining. $28,500.
S4 Misc. Merchandlce
bosement on approx .
GOOD LOCATION Mf.DDLEPORT 8
1.15 acre lot. $5,000 down
SPACIOUS, and In mint
room house, out Of all
Glvuwoy
4
- 12% Interest - 20
condition.
Three
flOOds, 3 or 4 bedroom!,
year
term
negotlablol
bedrooms, 1'h baths,
bath, basement,. new
Total prlceS-42,000, mon·
kitchen and family
gos furnoce. 2 lots. Only
thly payment of Sol()1.ol()
,121,000.
room
w/llrepl~ce .
principle and Interest.
RedUCed to $22,5Q9.00 .
NOW 15 THE TIME TO
REALTORS
OWner will help with
LIST YOUR PROPER·
Henry E. Clel•nd, Jr.,
financing.
TY WtTH' US FOR
614·992-2181
GRI
H'l·6191 ·
COUNTRY SECLUSIP·
SPRING SALE . CALL
For
Farm
and
Jun
TRussell
949·2660
N- Privacy yet close to
"2--:1876.
Dotfle&amp;
town. 7'h acres with
Home Delivery of
SUE
MURPHY,
To give oway wood pollets,
ROller Turner 992-5692
four bedroom, 2 bath
HELEN AND GOR·
pickup ot t~e side of 11&lt; •
G~s
Diesel
Office
ttN259
home, full basement, 1
DON TEAFORD, AL~
Mart. Limited supplv.
Heating Oil.
car garage. S-45,000.00.
REALTORS.
Velma Nicinsky, Auoc.
Brmony Spaniel 2 yr. old,
Pllone 742--:1092
HOII\dl_(/
1-"'"''"· full stock . Call 256Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
675/.0 after6.
PI!Oftt142-l111
Ht•, ulrlll·lf It:'.,

,....

---·. . =-'--

ALL STEEL

z

BUILDINGS

UtililJ Buildings

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

TEAFO.R

REALTY

CALL:

Glveaw~v

4

Old Hotpolnt wosher. Coli
«6-1010.
'
7 mixed breed puppies,. oil
male, 6 weeks old . 1 female
wire haired ferrlor, 5 '12
months old . 615· 61~5 or ~16·
2~90 .
.
-:ca::-:p::-:p::-:yccA::-:d:-:s- - 5: - ---:H
--'Eat Your Heart out' S~np
your love a olant hear:t
shaped chocolate chip
cookie, custom decorating.
Order now for Valentine'•
Doy or .ony speclol doyl
$9.00 delivery lncluder.l;
Call Malo's «6·3615.
,.
6'

Lost and Found

,

LOST: Brownish- orang~
medium size, short hail'
Beegle. Has little while o~
it. Lost In Long Bottom
oreo. Reword . 985 - ~215 . ·c
·'

1.----;;Y:::a-=rd:;-S~•::-;1:::,---:
Rummage So le Groct
Methodist, Cedar St. Enlo
Fri. Feb. 5·9 to ~PM. vecy
gOOd Items, house hola
gOOds.
Heated Gorage Sale Route
35. 3rd. house behind Caid·
well's Truck Stop. Lots ·01
baby clothes, walker,
books, car bed, misc.
Thuro., Fri., &amp; Soil. Feb
4,5,6 . 9AM to 5PM.
Gorage Sale Thursdoy and
Friday . Heated goroge.
Everything must go.
Garage Is going to be used
for body shop. New oak
porch swings, exten!lot&gt;
ladder, hand tools, dishes,
oal&lt; desk ond choir, o ld
crank telephone, old bran
railroad lock and key,
Phone «6·1080, 2 miles
from Gall ipolis on Rt. w . .•
le_ __
8.- - - ;P" u'"b:-:-11:-::c-;5:-::•"'
&amp; Auction
Feb. 11, 1982 at 10 a.m. tne
Racine Home National
Bank Will Offer for sole at
Public
Auction
the
following : 1916 Chevorlet
Mollbu Closslc, 197~ Buick
2 door h~ rdtop, 1979 Honda
XLSOOS motorcycle. The
Racine Home Not1on41
Bank reser~es the right to
reject any or oil bidS ond
may remove anv or all
items from the sale lit anv
lime.
9

Wooled to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
nlture and Antiques of ali
k inds , call Kenneth Swain,
256· 1967 In the evening• .
CASH PAID for clean, lote
model uS&lt;!d cars . Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAIIIpoll•.
Ohio . Coll446·2282 .
&lt;

POMEROY
lANDMARK

A - lB

PRICED RIGHT

,,

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal,
auto bodies, and cars. Bat·
terles, 1lum luml, br•n &amp;
copper . Gallipolis Block
co., 123 1/ 2 Pine St ., 446·
2783.

,,

�Page- i 0-The
9

4, 1982
Sentinel

Wanted to Buy

41
Houses for Rent
House near
park in
Gallipolis. Call 446· 1265 or
44·60644.

They'll Do It Every Time

We pay cash for late model

clean vsCd cars.
Frenchtown Car Ca .
Bill Gene Johnson,
«6·0069.
A nice building lot. Will pay
cash . Call379· 2617.

Last day I will buy fur for
this season is Saturday,
Feb. 13, George Buckley,
664-4761 .

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDES . Gene Hines
Rl. 1, Amesville, Oh 448·
6747. Buying raw fur after
Dec. 12 . Daily 6 ~M lo 9
PM, closed Sundays.
OLD FURNITURE, beds,

iron, brass, or wood . Kit·

chen cubbards of al l types.

Tables, round or square.
Wood ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
complete household. Gold,

silver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and

etc . Indian Artifacts of all
types . Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.
.
.
JUNKED cars, scrap
metals, aluminum cans, .
transmissions, motors, batteries, radiators, oil well
drilling bits, tungsten carbide, high speed steel,
waste paper, cardboard,
raw furs, hides, ginslng
and yellow root_ HarperHalstead Salvage Co. 300
Eleventh St., Pt. Pleasant,
304·675· 5868. Also flea
market open Monday
through Friday, 1·5 p.m.

WANT to buy Farmall Cub,
100, 130, 140, C, Super A, or
200
tractors
with
cultivators. Or will buy
cultivators or tractors
separately . John L. Cald·
well, Route 1, Box -4, Dna,
wv 25545 .

Have vacancy for elderly
woman or man in my
private home. Good experience .
Reasonable
rates. Cali 614·667·6329 or
614-667·3402 .
Bookkeeping, income fa)(
service, individual and
business . Call Richard
Bailey at 992·3861 after 6
p .m .
Have room and board and
laundry for elderly persons. 992·6022 .
Will care for elderly in our
home. Women and men .
Trained and experienced.
992·7314.

13

lnsur~nce

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
8vai Iable to meet in·
dlviduat needs. Contact
Lewis Hughes, agent .
Phone 446·3318.
wanted to Do
my home.

THREE bedroom house.
Haven Heigh1s, fireplace
with heatolator, hardwood
floors. family room with
sliding glass door, forced
olr fuel oil heal. 8_ %
assumable loan. Fm· HA.
Catl304·895·3610 or 304·675·
4380 ask tor Beverly ,
HOUSE in New Haven.
small down payment ,
assumable loan, 304-882·
2754.
Sandhill and Oshel · Road ·
This is· a 47 acre plot.
Bea.utiful rolling and level
land. Has a 2 story house
with garage. Small woods.
All mineral rights . Just a
few minutes drive from
town. Somerville Rea-lty
675·3030 or 675·4232. Jean
Caslo675·3431.
By owner, close to schools,
hospital and pharmacies.
675·5468.

For sale or renl. 2 bdr.
mobile home. Call675·4154.
4 room house, ba!h, 2502
Lincoln St. Pt. Pleasant.
Call 304·675·5034 or 675·
4389.
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Earn
20
per
cent
retirement on $2,000.00
wholesale instead of 3 per
cent
retirement
on
S7,500PV. 614·875·9749 or
614-477-1414.

Will babysit in my home
weekdays, day hours only.
located in town, have experience . Coll446·8320.

Someone to care for goats.
M i lk • and
feed .
Ex perienced . 256·6642.

Babysitting in mv home on
Bob
McCormick
Rd .
Daytime hours S25 wk. for
one child, $35 wk . for two.
Call446·3188.

Why would 2 Diamonds, 6
Emeralds, over 40 pearls
and 500 Directs switch? 20
per cent ret irement on
$2,00.00 wholesale. Call 614·
446·4273 or 614·446·9332 or
• write s G Associates, 336
2nd. Ave, Gallipolis, Oh io
45631
Registered Nurse wanted
by a residenta~ and day
treatment program serving retarded adults with
behavior d isorders. Salary
range $16,000 to $18,000
year, comensurate with ex-1
perlen ce
plus other
benefits . Responsibilities
include
some
case
management duties as well
as health care related
tasks. Applicants musl be
energeti c,
c reative,
flexible and in need of a
professional challange. If
Interested send resume to
Michael
BlYth ,
Ohio
Residential Services, Inc .,
Rt. 1 Box 5, Mill Creek Rd .•
Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
RN position available for
R N Supervisor for 1H
shift . Exc. startjng salary
plus a comptele benefit
pcickage. For a personal intervi ew call Mrs. Judy
Holley, Director of Nursing, Pinecrest Care Center, 446·7112 . E,O,E.

Will babysit in my home
Mon .-Fri. Anv hours. MusT
be potty trained. Coli 367·
0136 .

CARPENTRY. siding &amp;
remodeling, phone 304·576·
2989.

Flnantlal
21

Business
Opportunity

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 have your store open
In as lltlle as 15 days . Call
any lime 1·800·255·9049 Ext.

7.

:n

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rale. wva . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . S!ale Sl .•
Athens, Oh . 592·3051.
2:J

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning-Be kind to
your ears. Call 8111 .ward
for appointment, 4.46-4372 .

C &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com ·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and In ·
dividuals .
carol Neal «6·3862
Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. ususally one or two
days service. Dismuke's
405 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis.
446·0474 .

31

Homes for Sale

Bookkee per . Only ex· 1972 Concord Mobile Home.
perienced need apply, send 12X65. Call «6·7015 after
resum e to Box 507 In care · 5 :30p.m .
Gallipoli s DallY . Tribune,
- - - - - - -- -825 Jrd . Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh 2.12 acres ·of land wl!h 6
45631 .
rooms and bath on Mid·
dleporl Hill . For further in·
'
GET VALUABLE
training formation contact the
as a young business person owner al650 South 2nd Ave,
and earn good money plus Middleport or 992·6755 .
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone Comfortable 3 bedroom
us right away and get on home, 8 lh percen1
the e ligibility li SI a t 992
assumable loan, and is
2156 or 992·2157.
near PPHS. large fenced in
yard, kitchen appliances
nd
more.
We
are
Delivery person tor lighl
~nvelope
delivery wllh I ~::~~~~::.~~g and can share
fees by selling
small cor. Apply ot Jaycee lo
afler 6 pm 675·
Hallin Pomeroy 10:30 a.m.
thru 5 :00p. m . 992·7540.

Mobile home. 2 bdr .. adulls
only, no pets, 322 3rd . Ave,
Gallipolis. Call 446· 3748 or
256·1903 ,
3 bdr. dovble wide located
in Johnson's Mobile Home
Park. No pels, deposit
require~ll vtilitles pd.
except eleciric. newly
decorated, SJOO month . Call
«6·3547.

2 bclr. mobile

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PJ-IONE 446·3868 . ·

Parf·time Licensed Prac·
tical Nurse to dispense
medication to residents of
an intermediate care
facil ity for the mentalty
retarded . Hours vary~
depending ' On
when
medication needs to be
dispensed . $5.75/hr . Contact John Lehew, P.O. Box
'906 , Gallipolis, Ohio .
Buckeye Community Services is an equal op·
portunity employer .

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

2 bdr. mobite home . Call
446·3101.

TRI-STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Price
reduced, used mobi te
homes. CALL «6·7572 .

Part time general office
work. Send resume to Box
506 in care of Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Jrd.
Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .

Furnished eff ltency. $135
mo.. 1 person, utilities
pa id. Call «6·4416 afler
7PM.

2 Bedroom Tra iler par·
tiallv furnished . On river,
responsible adults. 256:/IJO:l
after6.

Jackie's Cake Decorating
First house past
Scoll's Bail &amp; ear. juS!
South of Eureka . Taking
orders for ~akes &amp; candles
(fancy and plain) . Call 256·
1367 or 256-6571.

HelpWanted

tHREE bedroom home for
rent. nice location, must
give good references, 304·
675·1090 .

2 bdr. and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Call «6·0175 .

~Candies .

11

For rent 3 bedr. ·home, ~
miles from town on Rl. 218.
Cali «6·1158.

42

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 per !on. Bundled
slab . $10 .50 per !on.
Del iverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Sprinds
Rd . ,
Pomeroy . 992·26119 .

12x/IJ 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Se't vp with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan cing available. Phone 4461294.
1970 2 bdr., extra nice, new
carpel &amp; hot water tank,
natural gas. set up ready to
move into. City limits. a
bargain, SJ.650. Call 446·
8252, after 5 call446·2491

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

home at
Evergreen . Call 446·7932 .
2 bdr. trailer furnished,
adults only, Brown Trailer
Park, 992· 3324.

Nice 1 bedroom furnished
.mobile home. 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rl. 33. Phone
for appoinlmenl992·7479.
3 bedroom
furnished
Mobile Home with washer
&amp; dryer on private lot.
Deposit required, no pets.
949·2253 .

1982 Nashua 14 • 70, 7 • 21
expando. factory fireplace.
2 balhs, $3000 down and
assume balance. Phone
576·2706.
1977 SKYLINE. all eleclrlc,
central air, two bedroom,
$14.000, 304-675·6986.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Nice level homesite in
Clearv iew River Estates·
Sewer· Water ·Eiec . $500.00
down. Phone 256·1216.
36

Real EState
Wanted

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

Very
nice apt., un ·
furnished, ground lloor.
convlent In town, quite
neighborhood, 4 rooms plus
balh, all C',llrpe!ed, has
range and refrigerator,
large kitchen. covered
patio and yard, two car
reserved parking, $210. mo.
Call Earl Tope «6·0690
business hours and 446-0161
evenings &amp; sundays.

3 rooms &amp; bath, ground
floor, private entrance, kil·
chen
furnished,
also
h
was er. d rver, &amp; dl s h.
washer . 1 or 2 persons
ideal. $150 month, $100
deposit. Call «6·0830 Fri . &amp;
Sat. 614·533·3884 sunday .
Efficiency
apartment.
Roush Lane, Cheshire. 304·
773-5882.
2 bedroom furnished apar·
tment. 992·5434 or 992·5914
or 304·882·2566.

3 bedroom unfurnished
apartment. 992· 5434 or 9925914 or 304·882·2566.
3 rooms and balh furnished
upstairs apartment in
Pomeroy . 992·5621 after 6
p.m .
Apartments. 675·5548.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
6T4·«6·8221 or 614·245·9484,
Efficiency rooms by !he
week on Main Street,
Mason, wv. 773·5651.
3 bdr. apt. also 2 bdr.
!railer. Call675·4045.

'72 Ford 'h Ton Pickup, V·
8, auto., TS , PB, good con·
dition . «6·0648 alter 5.

House 2 bedroom, 733 3rd.
Ave., Gallipolis . Deposit
required. Call 446·3870 or
446·1340.
9 room house In Rio Grande, Oh. Call446·3485,

WHITE frame. 7 room. 3
bedroom, eleclrlc heat, kit·
chen not furnl!hed with
stove &amp; refrigerator, utilitY
room With wuher &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 Acre yard &amp; garden area, Mailbox address.
Galllpoll! Ferry. Deposit &amp;
lease required. ownership
management, 304·522· 1990.

MeANWH ILE:, EASY ANP UNCLE JACK
TltACIN6 T~l! ~leNAl. ,.,

A~E

· We'Rt: HeAPING

I!IACt&lt; TO THf:
MOTf:Ll

SWAIN
AUCTION FURN
. ITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive S!.,
Gallipolis. 3 piece living
room suites $199, maple
rockers $A9, several cne$t
of drawers. new &amp; used
wood burners, new table
Ia mps $1 e. wood · cook
ranges. new 5 piece dinnet
sets $150, kilchen cabinets,
several dinnet sets, silver
stone-all sizes, bunk beds
SlOO, new tools of allltinds,
wringer Maytag washer,
Linoleum rugs 9x12 $10,
and lois more. Hours lOam
lo5pm, 446·3159.
GOOD
USED
AP·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges .
Skaggs Ap ·
pliances. Upper River Rd.,
beside Slone Crest Motet.
446·7398.
3 cushion sofa with mat·
chino chair and an oval coflee !able wllh matching
end table, exc. cond . Call
«6·1569.

ONE couch, 1 chair, like
new. $250. phone 304·675·
7141 .
52

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg, Dober·
mans. Call «6·7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.
Reg. cocker Spaniel pups,
color blonde. Call «6·1262.·

FOR sate or trade· running
&amp; treeing Walker Coon
Hound . 304·675·2745.

7:05

19611 FORD p ick up, runs
good, needs clulch, 675·

7:30

S7

Musical
tnstrumen1s

Used piano below SlOO. Cail
388·9015.

a
61

tl

estaeM

Farm Equipment

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
«6·1675
Special Sale on NEW
TRACTOR I
Model
HP
Price
260-'24
$4924.110
26(}24
5295.00
26(}24
4924.00
26(}24
5295.00

1978
Chevy
Blazer
(Cheyenne) V-8, 4-WO, new
!ires, regular gas. extras.
Call «6· 1882 afler 6PM.

BOitN LosER
I'M,&amp;.~, taW/5,
f3UT ~OF M"/ ~

For sate .o r trade 73 In·
ternational Scout, standard
transmission and lock- out
hubs. Call 256·6574 afler 6
PM.

~~~6HT~
H~\1~1 TI ~~(t •.

E~ C1:JNE- ~-

7:35
7:58

dlaena

that will curtail her dancing
career in a few ahort yeare. (00
mlna .)

Motorcycles
ex c.

ANNIE

.-J !;Pitli'Kl CLIP BUILT

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

IHTO

t'.Y PUR.SE $0 I

WAS I'BLE TO GET
oor QIJICNLY.

Four 8' by 15', while, steel
spoke rims. 6 lug for Jeep
or Chevy truck. $100. Call
446·9465.

4,_,6: __=.S"pa,_c,e'-'f"'o"-r_,R,_,e,_n,_!_ _

54

Large !railer lot. Call «6·
4265 or 446·4736.

Lump Coal $32 per !on.
Zinn Coal Co., Inc . Coli «6·
1408 be!ween 9 and 4.

31[)28
31[)28
31o-4x4-28

5594.00
5983.00
7072 .00

For Sale Kitchen !able and
2 chairs, $25. See a! 769
Brownell Ave .• Middleport.

35
35

6555.00
6945.00

81

Home
Improvements

claealc VlctorHuoo novel. Alao
starring Derek Jacobi,

460-41 .1&gt;460-41.1&gt;460-41.1&gt;460--4X4-41.1&gt;-

7353.00
7995.00
61157.00
9619.00

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com ·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates . Call 2561182.

_Gielgud aod Robert PowelL (2
hrl .)

51[)48.5-5io-4x4-48.5-51[)48 .5--

7778.00
9886.00
8450.00

3 bdr. trailer unfurnished,
on private lot with garden
space, $150 a month, $tOO
deposit. 10 miles south of
Pt. Pleasant on 51. Rl. 2.
Call ~76· 9084 .

•

""" ·

s1
For rent trailer, exc. cond.,
references, Camp ConleY .
Call675·2133.

TWO bedroom, furnished.
mobile home,large lot,
references and deposit
required. Camp Cantey,
304-675·3219 .
TWO bedroom, furnished,
New Haven, 304:882·2466 .
Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished
room
$85,
utilities pd ., single male,
range, refrlg . share balh.
446·4416 after 7PM .
Furnished apartment for
renl. Call «6·3937 .
Deluxe furnished apartment, excellent location, 1
or 2 adulls, only $275, ref. &amp;
dep. required. Call «6·

0338.
2 brd. apl. HUD excepted,
kitchen furn , utilities par·
!Iaiiy pd..
excellent
location. Call 675 ·5104 or
675-7284.
Furnished apt. 3 rooms
with pr,ivate balh. Referen ces preferred, 845 2nd.
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 446·
2215.

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

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, at·
taman. 3 tables, $500 . Sofa,
chair and loveseal, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·•·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from $18. lo $65. 5
pc . difettes from $79 .• lo
·S385. 7 pc .. $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs.
S219 UP to $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300 . and S375.,
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675 .. Bassett Cherry,
S795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275 . complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or !win. S58 ..
firm, $68. ·and $78. Queen
sets. S195. 5 dr . chests, $49.
4 dr. chests. $42. Bed
frames, $20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, SJ.SO. , d inette chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
!hopedlc super firm, S95,
baby malresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; $30.
Electric fireplace , gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood !able &amp; 4 chairs .
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.'
Open ?am to 7pm. Mon .
thru Fri., 9am lo Spm, Sat.
446·0322

New wood stove, half price.
never used, $350. Can convert to fvrnance . Call 2561216, Gallipolis .

Firewood $30 . a PU load.
W ithin 10 mile radius
cheaper. Ph. J .J. Justice,
388·8246.
3 graves for sale at Ohio
Valtey Memorial Gardens
al$400. Call245· 5682 .

May!ag automatic washer
rebuiH,
guarenteed,
$120.110. Easy dryer rebuilt,
guarenteed, $90.0"
Call
446·8181.
.

-

l:fnderwood, long-standard
carriage, office Slyle, elec·
!r lc ly pewr iter. E II fe p r inl,
$100. Call446·9465.

1 King wood and COlli bur·
ner. 1 slero JVC lurnlable
with 1120 Lvxman reclever
and 2 Bose speakers. Call
388·8556.
'
Utlllly trailer 8'x5', 1 year
old. Asking $575 .00. Call
446·9627 ,
Excelsior Oi I Co., 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·2205.
Craig AM· FM cassetle
with Croig 50 watt power
booster . 742·3154 or 992·
7467.

61[)64
9314.00
61[)-4x4- 64 - 11.304.00
Plus Freight
Sale Date March 13, 1982
CALL NOW!
64

Hay &amp; Grain

For sale ear corn. Call 614·
384·4514.

1pa nspartatlan
7;-;1: - - -A"'·u"'t"o"t"'
o"'
r -;-5a"'l"e-' 81 Dodge- Colt, 41 MPG,
front wheel drive, 5,000
miles. must sell. Call 6752343 or 675·1540.
1979 Chevy Monza V-6,
auto, PS, new radial tires,
37,000 miles. ex . cond. call
«6·1569.
1976 Red Marquise vinyl
top, PW , PB . Call245·5879.
1980 Chevette 4 spd., AM
radio, 8,600 m iles, s.t.OOO .
Phone «6·4818.
1975 Super Beelte sunroof.
50,000 miles. good cond .
Call388·8769.

WOOD-304·458·1833.
THIS IS IT· OUR ANNUAL
SALE. Get up to $125.00
savings on World-Book En·
cyclopedia.
Monthly
payments available. Call
Margaret Pierce, local
school service represen·
tallve . 304·675· 3775.

1
I":::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;.J..:::::::======~ 2750,
---------

For Sole 1976 Ford LTO.
PS, pe, A/C, cruise con trol, 351 engine, $2,500. U
ft. aluminum ion boa! with
1 112 horse Mercury motor,
$1 ,000. Capehart cabinet
slero with AM· FM radio; 8·
track., $125. Prices firm .
Cali 675·3209,
USED gas cook stove, 304·
675-1090.
55

1972 VW runs good, $950 .
Call388·8769.
1978 Z-28 350, 4 borrell , 4'
spd., with !-top, till wheel,
PS, PB, AC, AM· FM 8·
!rack, $4,700. 367·0262.
1980 Buick Skylark. 22,000
mile~ .
PS,
PB,
AC,
1wtomat1c . Like new .
$5,450. 614·949·2273 .
1970 Olds. Cullass . Needs
transmission. $125. 949·
2179. "
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less eXpensive cars in
stock.
1976 NOVA ·ss. 305, J speed
on floor, $1,/IJO, 304-675·
2745.
197t Camero. $4995 or tr.ade
for pickup of equal value.
675· 1104 8·4 pm or after 4,
895·3579.

Bulldlnt Supplies

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win-dows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, o.
Caii2&lt;1S·5121.

1978 Chevette, automatic,
A1,000 miles, will accept
older car as trade ln. See ol
2316 lh Mt. Vernon Avenue,
PI, Pl.

ME FOR A WHILE!

Pets for Sale

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
,JS.U after 4 p .m.

1970 Volk'!lwagon sunroof,
good . tires,
good
mechanical shape', needs
some body work. Call 675·
4321.$900.
1971 PINTO 2000 CC,
automobile, 304-.iSS-1679.

By Olwald.Jaeolly

uti AWl Sollltl

Do~n.

NORTH

+u2

Back Ill 1888 the coal sup-

ly ahlp Merrimac wu sunk
n Havana Harbor In an
attempt to botUe up the
Spanloh fleet. It · didn't
succeed, but It bothered the
Spanish fleet aod helped our
Jl!avy dellroy It when It got
out.
In today'a hand East wins
the heart lead with the ace
and counts points. He does so
and decldea that South wlll
hold both the klnl and queen
of bearta 10 that a heart
ret~ Is hopelea. He had
heard of the Merrimac coup
and decldel biB only chance
to beat three no-tnunp Is to
kill dtammy's diamond suit
10 he leads his klnl of club!!.
The play II·totally UIIIUC•
ceuful.
South
takes
dummy's ace of club!! and
plays the kin&amp; of diamonds.
East duckl the llrlt diamond
but decldea to win the second one on the theory that
West and South each had
been dealt two diamonds.
Now declarer made five. notrump. Tile Spitnlsh fleet had
10tten out and won the
battle!
If East had held off twice
In diamonds that Merrimac
coup would have &amp;lven South

John

'

treeaurea of the peal year,
including : 'The Onion Field,'

1·4-11

•u

e

Gene Slakel and Roger Ebert
single out acme ol th'a buried

HQJ 1011

+AI

EAST

WEST

+K 10 8 7
•Aaz

+QU
• J 10 87 8

to

tA7s

+UB73

+K82
SOUTH

+AH

.KQI

uu

"+QJIO&amp;
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wnt

Norib

Eaol

Soutli

Paos

It

Pau

I NT' ,·

Pass

3 NT

Pan

Pass

Pau

I+

Open Ins lead: • J

one opade, two hearts, two
diamonds and four clubs for
nine tricks.
Then, to cap the climax If
Eut had jual shlited to a
IJIItde at trick two the
defense would have collected three spades, two aces
and a tidy lfttle profit. ·

starring Jamea Woode ;

'Fingara,' wllh Harvey Kittel;
and ' Galea of Hea11en ,' a
documentary
cemeterlea.

GASOUNE ALLEY
8:30

Shades drawn in
broad
daijliqh!.!

Call 446·2801 for termite ,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates.sBill Thomas.

abl)ut

il2)1 BARNEY MILLER
ClJ ClJ OIMME A BREAK
(llJ THIS OLD HOUSE Hoot Bob

under renpvalion. (Cioaed ·
Captioned: U.S.A.)
il2)1 TAXI
10:00 ClJ ClJHILLSTREETBLU!S
Captiinfurlllodoeaa alowburn
a a public defender Joyce
1
Oavanportoutmeneuvera him In
court by claiming that her client
il a wlctlmotpoiiOeentrapment ;
a uanu warthriatena to go from
almrner to boll ; and Sgt .
Eetarheua Ia In another world

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

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpente r , electrician,
general repairs
and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675 ·4560 .

whCKJ he leamane may aoon be
a tat her. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
iJ) MOVIE ·(MUSICAL
COMEDY» •••
"Popere 11
11180
'(I) &lt;Dle 20.20 Hugh Dow no
hoete thle weeklro aerlea
profll.ina noteworthy event a in
new1, aclenca and entartaln-

WINNIE
I AM A PROUP
WINNIE ... BUT l
Ac:I\'\IT KNOWING
N071f/N6 ABOUT

Water wells. commercial
and Domestic. Test holes .
Pvmps Sales and Service .
304·895·3802 .

YOU AME~ICAN
WOMFN!

MONEY. ., I CATCH
ON ~ICK! EIIUT

.•. PEII1HAPS 1 AM

AFFAIR6 OF THE

FOR LEAVING AU.
MY WIVES IN MY

HFART...

r

l!lfiNG PCINISHEP. ..

menl . (80 mlna.)

Cll PRI-I!R
(j)) NI!WS

I. HOMELANP/

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential , automotive .
Emergency service. Call
8_82·2079.

'I .

Plumbing ,
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANp HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446· 4477

BARNEY

&amp;_! _ _Excavating

HOW DO 'tOO LIKE
HAVIN' TWINS,
RUTHV·JUNE?

Gallipolis Diversified Con s~ . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us for tree
estimates. 446·4440.

•

10:05 Cll TBS EVI!NlNG NEWS
10:28 ()) CBNUPDATENEWS •
10:30 ®
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PRUINTS
10:5B ()) !:BN UPDATE NEWS
tt :00 CIJ• Cll &lt;IlG'CiliJD) IJ2) II
HE WI
: ()) NASHVILLE RFD"
(I) DICK CAVETT SHOW
11:05 Cll ALLIN THE FAMILY
11:30 ClJ • (!) THE TONIGHT
SHOW
()) ANOTHER LIFE
Cll BENNY HILL SHOW
• Cll CBS LATE MOVIE
Quine~. M.E.: 'Accomplice To
Murdar"Qulncyvialtaahomafor
batterad wlvaain an attempt to
provethatawoman'adeathw••
cauaed by her huaband'a

THEV WORK
IN SHIFTS

repeated beatin,JI. (Repeat)
The Salrit: 'The Maater Plan'
The Saint voiunteara to help a
girl nnd her mla ..ng brother and
Ia plunged lnlo the world of
international drug amuuuNn;.
(Ropoot)
(I) ABC CAPTIONED N!WI
!lllMOVIE ·(THRILLER) *111
"r....uuveAc,tlofl" 11173
il2). ABCNEWSNtOHTiJNE
Anchored by Ted Koppel.
11:35 Cll MOVIE ·(DRAMA) •••

'
Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SE~t NG Mllchlne repairs ,
serv1ce . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servicel Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop
Pomeroy . 992·2274 .
'

"lulnmerPiece" 1ell

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

. General Hauli; ; g -

JONES BOYS WATER 1
SERVICE . Call 367· 7471 or
367-0591 .
Upholstery

~1---~
_liJ M:A.-t -'+· a-J.-k c.o-«a -!!!

bathfno ault model a 'tWho are
being terrorized by a gang of
killer• th1t plan to uae the

I

gorgeoua womel'), llctudlna
Don'ooldgitllriend,lno-.

12:30

~- (R-1: 70 llllno,)

(J).Cll LATI NIGHT WITH
DAVID LETTERMAN

ltr tHOMAS JOSIPH

ACROSS

43 Ballpitrk

1 Indonesian ·

•

vendor's cry

Island

DOWN
5 Greek Island 1 Fundamental
10 Athlnt
ZSpanlah
II Right now I
province
13 Hindu deity
It Furniture
wood
15 O'NeiU play
II Concealed

s

· Invigorate
tlke's mother
5 Ethereal

Yesterday's "-r

being

I Plo1'ed land

17 "Bolch-" 7 .Witty remark Z3 Sacred
(1962 -g) I One of the
Egyptian
18 Bach
·
Great Lakes
symbol
specialty
• Strqth
U Uterary
21 Border ·
I! Of a single
work
21 Beverage
Individual
. Z5 Rendition
ft Pineapple 11 Healthy
by Cicero
Z3 Barracks
II Vetch
Z8 Sutter's
IOUlld
ft Malay bOat
Mill find
21 Reaction

n

to a

Z8 Extolled
30 "- Foolish
Thlnp"
31 Awaken
32 Seeing red
:13 Fervency

118 Kook
S1l Apply
make-up

pun

Nucleu,~

Z8C.rdpme
zt Bunna's
ancient

IllUDe

3t Mercury's

shoea
34 On jlenalon
(abbr.)

35 Newman film t.:=-+--t--+-31 Ex-hockey

star
37 Set straight
3tTwo
4t Skirt's

''

complement

41 Regardlllg .

•z -up

{fed
. the kitty)

DAILY CRYPTOQUoTE- Here's bow to work

.

1'1:58 ~ CIIIIUPDATENI!WS
12:00
~ANDALLEN
SIX II A THRI!I! LI!.'ITI!II
WOIID Michael Carrero.
Profellor Lorna Faffetaftd Of'.
Phillip Farrellanawar the
qulatlone molt a eked abOut
MXIIKI HXdltty.
Cll ABC NI!WI NIGHT LINE
Anchored by Ted Koppol.
Cll PBS LATI!NIGHT
(12) • VI!O~" Dan Tanno 11
hireq to protect 46 luecloua

.
TRISTATE
)
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . A\le,, Gallipolis
446· 7833 or 44&amp;·1833,
·

~

animal

Vila diiCUIIII plana for
inatatllng a wood burning at ave
in thaaingle ·famlly tract home

RON'S TelevisiOn Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calts. Phone 576·2398
or «6·2454.

MOWREYS
1
1 Box 124, Pl . .-oeasa,nl,·30•1-i
675·4154.

Jumbles: lANKY AWFUL SURETY INTACT
Answer: Why blondes are Preferred on some juriesTHEY ARE ALWAYS "FAIR"

The Merrimac coup

® SNEAK PREVIEWS Crltlca

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

IS

(Answers lomorrowJ

BRIDGE

Notre Dame Cathedral, In thia
dramatic adaPialiOn of the ·

AND SO DO I'

Laalay·Anna

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car ·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffell Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free esti mates .
Calt 446·2107 .

84

I

I I)( I I I) .

)ouroF(

lOOk No. :zo. containing 110 puaiH, Ia aVafllbltlor 11.05 poatplikl

Ju

Hunchback Of Notr, Dame·
Anthony Hop kina tiara In the
I Itie role of Quaalmodo, the
dalormed ball ringer or Perla'

WeLL, LETS JUST SI'.Y
SHE WANTS
I'VE DECIDED THEY CAN TO 60 BACK
GET ALONG -,A,oTHOUr
TO MOO. DOC .. .

ser it lees

87

U

Auto Repair

Oual ily Autobody &amp; Paint
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Aulo Trim Center, «6 · 1968.

82

II

Now arrange the drt*t let1ars to
form the surprise answer, 11 aug - ·
gelled by lho above cartoon.

from Jumblt, clo thla ntWtpaper, BoA 34. NOfWood. N.J. 0'1548.1ncludll 'your
name, add,..., t code and mtke checkl
ab• to Ne.,
a.

. il2) Gl MORK AND MINDY
8:05 Cll MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "111
1
' Fun In Acapulco" tH3
8 :30 [))MOYIE ·liiYSTERYI'"'
''Hound Of The 811kervllla8''
11138
(llJ OMNI: NEW FRONTIER
il2) .. BOSOM BUDDIES
8:68 Cll CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 :00 ClJ G Cll
DtFF'RENT
STROKES .
()] 700CLUB
UIOUIJD)HALLMARKHALLOF
FAME PRESENTATION 'Tho

2 bedroom lrai ler close to
~chool, stores, and park .
Deposll required. Mid·
dleporl. 992·5914.
MOBILE home for renl
with option to buy. 304·576·
2711 .

veslerday·s

' Fingara,' wltl'l Harvey Kietel ;
and · Gates of Heaven ,' a
documentary about animal
cemeteries.

IT

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping ap!.,
Park Central Hotel.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Roule 33. North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992-7479.

1

MsMr.(

SPECIAL
(])MOVIE-[MUSICAL)** "Tho
ldolmakar'' 1880
Cll COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Michigan State ve Ohio State
fllliJIJD) MAGNUII,P.I.
[)) SNEAK PREVIEWS Critic a
Gena Siakat and Roger Ebert
aingla out aome of the burled
treaaurea of the peat year,
including : 'The Onion Fieid,'
a turing Jamea Wood a:

Large RCA Victor 25' color
screen console TV with
twin
speakers .
Price
$150.00. Caii388·886S.

Misc. Merchandice

r J
INAGUM1
.f) K
J

Cll NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

New Aulo Parts $20.000
slock, Ill most. 25·50 per
cent cost . Porter, Oh. Cali
367·.0236 or 367· 7101.

n

tDRIHNE±

•rn FAME Bruno falltln

she has an Incurable

YfELL~I'VE HAD A

76

1 rx IJ

love lor thellrat time, but hla
girlfriend , a dancer, teatnalhlt

1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, 3.41 ton, 4 speed,
$4,500. 304-675 ·1578. Aller
3:30675·1320.

1975 XL350 Honda,
cond. Call367 ·0397 .

il2). MUPPET SHOW
Cll CAROL BURNETT ANO
FRIENDS Guoat: Aton Aldo.
CIJe YOUABKEOFORIT
()] ANOTHER LIFE
ClleCil FAMILY FEUD
ClJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
[))
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
£lll
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(llJ ALLCREATUliESGREAT
AND SMALL
il2) •
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(I) SANFORD 'AND SON
Cll !:Bij_UPDATE NEWS

8:00 ())

77 Chevy Van fer sell or
trade for small car or
truck . Call245·5034.

74

I I, -

!lllt~EWS

· '"~~ 7617.
r~~:::;:::::;::;;~~~~~~~;;;~:;::o;·:·~":""'~
-=-==:=::=::::::;e7=:=====
Household Goods
Pels lor Sale
7._3c.__..;
,
V:,:a, n,_,s..:&amp;o.4,_,W"-.=
D.:..-_ _
56
POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
1220.

ENSI'tb

(]) DECOYS: POUCE UND!II
COVER A Now York City
undercover crime unit walk athe
atreela diagulaed aa helplaaa
vlctlmauing thlaintrigulng
method of criminal juatlcl\
Cll
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
Cll HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
8(1) TiCTACDOUGH
[)) (llJ
MACNEIL·LEHR!R
REPORT

1CAPTAIN EASY

1975 Ford TSIIO t5 in steel
dump, gas 5 X 4 34M Rears.
2 airlifl Ayles. 1 Eaton 2 sp
Rayte. 1 350 GM engine
, complete . Phone 992·3861
afler6 p. m .

51

by~Amolcland Bob Leo

Unscromblo thooe four Jumbleto,
one 1ot1er to oacll square, to 1orm
four ordin.lry -a..

CIJ • PM MAGAZINE
Cll WEEKEND GARDENER

7:00

70 3/4 ton Chevrolet
Pickup, new bed, new muf ·
tiers. Call 388 ·9353 .

,J4mj

ftj'}9~ jj}'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

EV.NING

1979 Dodge 112 ton, 6 cyl., 3
spd ., exc, cond. Call 388 ·
8769.

~~

11

~ ~ ~~·

THURSDAY
FEB. 4, 11182

4::;S==;Fo:u=r=n=::i"'
sh:=e::d;cR;;:o
=o=m
==
s=

- - - -- -

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
decorated
un ·
furnished, J rm . house.
Suitable for single person
or retired coupte. Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
required. Call 446·0450 or
.446·1291.

Television
•
•
.v tewmg

HOUSTON'S f.IONOR~D TO HAVe
AMERICA'S MOST FAMOUS
L.AWMAN PAY 1-fER A VISIT. .

Truck's for Sale

1974 Chevy C-10 power
steering &amp; brakes, AM· FM
stero, good cond. Call 446·
7654,

2 bdr . completely turn .. all Good used auto washers &amp;
electric, carpeted, adults, dryers, serviced, checked,
no pets, 458 2nd. Ave., guaranteed. Number 10
Gallipolis, $225 per mo. · choose from. $80 &amp; up. Call
plus deposll. Call «6·2236. 256·1207 .
'
or 446·2581.
Pair of velvet club cha :rs,
Aparlmenls· 1 and 2 blue and green stnpe, Lowrey organ. like new.
Coppi!rlone
bedrooms. Rent starts at; 1 newly unholstered, ex - $800 .
41
Houses for Rent
bedroom $152, 2 bedroom cellent condlllon . $350 pair. refrigerator $125. 675·5304 .
2 bedroom family rm ., $300 $188, deposit $200 . Call «6· 675·6692 days, 675·2128 after
per mo. plus utilities. $300 2745.
·
5PM.
Horse saddle, like new. 882·
446·

72

1979 Chevy 1 ton, flat bed
truck. $4,200. Call «6·4782.

Furnished apt ., 3 rooms,
eteclricily &amp; water paid,
S200 mo. Call 446·4416 afler
7PM .

Large tract of land located
In Pomeroy, Ohio. Can be
financed at 12 percent. 992·
5786 .

dep. required. Call
4554.

. by Larry Wright

2 b~droom hous~ ff'ailer in
Racine. $175 per month, S75
deposit. You pay utlll!ies.
Unfurnished bul kilchen.
614·367-7811 .

44
1977 DBwn mobile home,
excellent condition, 12 x 60,
completely furnished, all
electric. $7500 . Call 304·5762014, if not home, call after
5 prp.

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished apartment, up·
stairs. 4 rooms and bath.
One or two adults, referen·
ces and security deposit
required. Call 446·041.4 af·
fer 5PM .

HOUSE, unfurnished, 5
rooms, bctth, b;isement,
2714 ' Lincoln, $250 ., small
deposlt. lnquire next door.

BEDS· IRON, BRASS. old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars. antiques, etc .•
complete
households.
Write : M .D. M~ l .ler , Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . O'r992-7711J.

44

The

Ohio

4, 1982

Ohio

II

It:

AltYDLBAAltR
LONG.BLLOW

One latter almply ltlnda for another. In this 11m pie . A It ·
l1llld for the three L'o, X for the two O't, etc. Sln&amp;le letten,
. IPOitrophn, th1 lenllh · ~nd fonn1tlon of the words ore all
hints. EKh
d•J ltr, .code letten •re dltfllirent.
·
,
.
'

CaYPI'OQUO'I'&amp;II

HK

KXXJ

KARV

PXT

IJFE.-PROVEIUIS

..'

GFRR

-==:

R F M ·A .

Ytli&amp;erdaYI
mAN ANY

PXT

HK

DSTKD

BJXG

P}(:TS-

ZXG

DX

IXADZA

GUARD YOUR HEART MORE ,
, FOR IT JS mE SOURCE OF ALL ·

.

�12-The

.

. Sentinel

' 4, 1

Ohio

Rio council seeks joint negotiations
An ordinance notitylng Columbia
Gas and the Public Ut1llties Commission of Ohio oi Its intention to
seek a joint negotiation status with
other mwi!clpallttes In the area !or

a "uniform gas rate" was unanimously enacted by the Rio Grande
village council last night.
'That action came Immediately
!ollowmg a meeting with Columbia
Gas representative John M. (Jake)
Koebel &lt;)urtng which the village
was notified the gas company had
opted to temporarily withdraw Its
request !or a rate hike tor consumption tn the Gailla County vtllagc.
Koebel told the legl$1ative body a
previously requested Increase had
been based on erroneous data that
did not accurately reflect new ac·
counts recently added to the Colum·
bla system within the munlclpallty.
In presenting that Jntormat!on,
Koebel asserted the request wtth-

drawal was not based · as charged
in a statement released Friday by
· State Rep . Ron James ( D·
Proctorvtlle) · on the intervention
of the Office of the Consumers'
Counsel in the hegotlatlon process.
Koebel said last night an error In
the ortg!nal December rate hike request . which he said represented
an Increase of 12.9 percent · had
been discovered and resubmitted
to his company's rate department
in January . prior to any lnterven·
tton on the part at the Consumers'
Counsel.
Asked If the error would have
been found t! the village council had
proceed€.! to pass the rate InCrease
as ortg!nally · submitted In IJe.
cember, Koebel responded he was
confident the company would have
returned to the village with an ad·
justed rate.
''This was an honest error, not an

attempt ID slip one past Rio
Grande," he said.
Following Koebel's appearance
before the council, the body moved
ID seek to establish, with the aid of
the Consumers' Counsel, a unltorm
gas rate with other mwi!c!pal cor·
porations in Gallla, Lawrence,
Jackson, Meigs and V!ntoh
Counties.
Such an approach to negotiating
with Columbia Gas was urged last
week by both the Consumers' Coun·
sel and Rep. James, who, as chair·
man of the Oli!o House PUblic
UIU!ties Committee, Is now com·
pleting a tour month Investigation
of the rate setting policies used by
the company.
Under House Bill 156, which was
passed by the General Assembly in
1979, two or more municipalities
may negotiate one rate wtth a util·
tty company. The purpose of the

Gambling ruling
affects elderly
CLEARWATER, F1a. (AP) Thousands of elderly people who
had little -recreat!pn save for their
card games wW be a!tected by the
gambling convictions of eight ret!·
rees arrested at a "nickel-and·
dime" poker game, says Peter
Leek, one or the "Largo 8."
As tor Leek, he's through with
poker.
" I don't want a record at this late
date," said the retired steelworker
tram Buffalo, N. Y, At 63, he was the
youngest of the men found guUty of
violating Florida's gambling law.
"I'll probably play gin rummy ,
but just for tun."
Two Pinellas County undercover
detectives had gone to a recreation
hall In Largo, the Ranchero Village
' Moblle Home Park, on a complaint
Nov. 4. While playing pool, she
watched the retirees' card game
over their shoulders tor an hour.
Assistant State Attorney Ron
Crider had the evidence: a deck of
cards, poker chips and $24 cash seIzed tram the card table that day.
After a two-day trtal, during
which two of the defendants were
hospitalized, a jury of four women
and two men deliberated less than
an hour to reach a verdict.

One of the hospitalized defend·
ants was In intensive care with a
heart problem and the other had
cataract surgery. ·
Pinellas County Judge WBllam
Blackwood withheld adjudication
at gu!lt, which means t! the defend·
ants meet the court's conditions
they can petition to have their records wiped clean. He gave the defendants 30 days probation and
ordered each ID pay $75 court costs.
"I'm trying to be philosophical,
but It hurts," defense lawyer David
Kurland said. "The defendants
were siDle. They paid their court
costs and lett."
In court, Kurland had argued the
misdemeanor gambling law
doesn't
even forms
mention
poker by
name. Other
of gambling,
such as the dog track, the horse

~::·::.~...-;
:.-;,::,:~~:;"""""'
pl!:~~~·~:~k~=~~~~~:~.;~~

e

.WINDBREAKERS

bill, according to Jaml!f !s _toallow
villages and cities ID combine their
efforts in seeking the lowest possible rates.
As defined by the ordinance auth·
orlzed; "unt!6rm rate" would apply
as a single gas rate for every mu·
nic!pa! corporation In the bargain·
lng group.
Mayor Wedemeyer said last
night he had received word through
the Consumers' Counsel that off!·
cla!s in both WellsiDn and Pomeroy
had expressed tentative Interest In
joining with Rio Grande In consoll·
dated bargaining.
Under the proposal, the gas com·
pany would negotiate with a "Wi!·
form gas rate committee"
compr\sed nt representatives of the
Conslupers' Counsel and officials Of
the municipal corporations In·
eluded in the .consol!dated group.

Vcii.30,No.208

'12.99

HushPupaltf'

take the

prusure

off

ROXIE Ill

WASHINGTON (AP) - The unemployment rate
unexpectedly dipped sllghtly las~ month, pOssibly a
reflectlon of fewer post·hollday layoffs in an economy
already hit t~ recessloit, the Labor Deparlrnent said
today.
.
The national jobless rate declined at an annual rate
tlu'ee-tenlhs of a percentage paint - from 8.8 per·
cent to 8.5 percent - as the number of people out of
.
work fell by 270,00&gt;.
Overall, 9.2 million Americans were out of work In
January as the labor force shrank by 300,00&gt;.
An analyst with the department's 8\!feaU Labor
Statistics !ndlcated the reversal of recent sharp rises
In unemployment may have resul,ted from thedeclln·
ing business actlvity.
"Many of the Industries that typically lay people oft
were so depressed they had no extra people ID lay
oft," said Deborah Klein.
Sbe noted that traditional rls!ng joblessness follow·
ing the Christmas holiday shOpping season Was rev·
ersed this year because many retall siDres had not
brought extra people onto the payroll. 1

or

or

SAVE Y20N
CHILDREN'S WINTER TO.PS
CHILDREN'S COATS
CHILDREN'S JEANS &amp; CORDUROYS
CHILDREN'S SLEEPWEAR
WOMEN'S WINTER SLEEPWEAR
WOMEN'S SWEATERS
WOMEN'S DRESSES
WOMEN'S COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
WOMEI)I'S BLOUSES
WOMEN'S COATS
JUNIOR COATS
JUNIOR SWEATERS
JUNiOR SPORTSWEAR
JUNIOR SLACKS
MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS
MEN'S SWEATERS
MEN'S VELOUR SHIRTS
MEN'S FLANNEL SPORT SHIRTS
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
MEN'S CORDUROY JEANS
BOYS' SHIRTS
VAN HEUSEN DRESS SHIRTS
MEN'S FLANNEL PAJAMAS
MEN'S COATS AND JACKETS
BOYS .WINTER JAtKETS
MEN'S AND BOYS' VESTS
MEN'S FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS
BOYS' CORDUROY JEANS

THE

·

IIIDOUPOIT, 01!.

~;~~;~;;;~;:~-~======···

Imitate frees correctional employe
CHILLICOTHE - A ~-year-old employee of the Chillicothe Cor·
recttonal InstitUte was -freed unharmed alter being held hostage for
more than an hour.
Ohio Department of Corrections DlreciDr George F. Den!Dn said
psychOlogical assistant Joan C. He!dtmann had beell bound by the
feet and held with a r1120r Thursday afternoon ·by !rlmate Roger A.

ChrtStman.
'

Staff ·members of the fac!llty were able ID rush the second·fioor
oUICil in the institution'~ treatment area around 4:30 p.m. alter
attemPts faDed ID talk Christman iniD surrendering, 'Denton said.

'

Arms proposal reduces weapons
WASHINGTON- The Reagan adminlstratlon, striving to coun·
Soviet charges that It Is "footdragglng" on arms control, has
submitted a formal draft treaty to Moscow on reducing medium·
range nuclear weapons targeted on Europe.
President Reagan announced the proposal Thursday and called It
"a major contribution to security, stabillty and peace."
'The Soviet Union had no !minedlate response to the draft treaty,
which was submitted Tuesday In Geneva ID Soviet arms control
negotlalor5.
~r

Flight pioneer goes out of business
LONDON ~Sir Freddie Laker, knighted tor his pioneering low·
cost flights across the Atlantic, said loday his Laker Airways was out
of business because of insurmounlable debts of more than $350
miillon. •
Fllgh'- were turned back and passengers were stranded. Tears
flowed from Laker start, proudly wearing the airline's crimSon and
black unltorms, at Gatwlck Airport south London.
Passengers due to fiy Laker tram New York, Los Angeles, MJami
and Tampa, F1a. wW have to find their own way.

LDS IN POMEROY

or

r&amp;aJJ~
•
Sweetheart Specials

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 891.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 0149.
The lottery reported earnings or $723,826 pn Its. daily game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,123,581, while holders of winning tickets
are entitled ID share $399,755, lottery oft!cla!s said.

FOR VALENTINE'S DAY, FEB. 14th

was no more than a simple means

;:~~n~re~~~~o;t~=

SAVEl 20% SAVEl 20% SAVEI20%

Yo

ALL 14K
14K FLOATING
HEARTS
j250
Rea. $5.00 &amp; SAVE $2.50

COMPLETE SELECTION

OF

HEART SHAPED

NECKLACES
BRACELETS
EARRINGS.
.PICKENS HARDWARE ·
MASON; W.VA.
PH, 773-5583

Weather forecast
or

Cloudy with a chance
snow or flurries tonight. Lows 20-25.
Partly cloudy and colder Saturday. Highs :5-:ll. Chance of prec!plta·
don tO percent IDnight and 20 percent Saturday. Winds westerly to
northwesterly 5-15 mph IDn!ght. .

OFF

Gold Prices are still at a 2 Year Low. So we have reduced the1

prices on all 141 Chains, Bracelets, Charms, 14K Gold Add A
Beads and Charm Holders..

PIERCING DONE

FREE
. WITH TfiE PURCHASE OF A$3.95 .
·EARRING
•SAFE
•FAST

eFREE
•HURRY IN TODAY

Exl&lt;!oded Ohio Fore&lt;l&amp;llt
Slladay

PRICES WILL
NEVER BE
BETTER

FalrSundqandMGMa)'. Rain poMibleTue8day. Wann~J~cll'end
JlftlocL RIP. In mid-~ to mld-308 Sunday, rWDr to the
low ... to low 11811 by Tuelday. LowB 5 below to 5 above 8uDday
mo&lt;...,.,rlliDJtoiO.l!IIIMondaymonln(andto~TIIeldaymom-

I

1111· '

STOP TODAY

AFULl LINE
OF

•KRUGGERAND.S
•MAPLE LEAFS .
*SILVER COINS

I lOVE YOU!

STOP IN TODAY

StohO"D"f Oufvcf•d

--- ===

WEATIIER PORBCA8T -;- Tile Nau..J Wea~ Set wlte predldll

,_peril"

frlllay .. llle - · · ..... "llle . . . at ...
New ....,... , .... llle Gna1 l.Uell'tlltllllllllllto pull " llle Plaia

-

stata a.la II ap I lied Iaiiie
JaJIWida, (,\Ph II phto).

•
I

Damages were estimated at
$15,00&gt; as the result of a !Ire which
struck the borne of Mrs. Lillian
Murray, 118 Laurel St., Pomeroy,
'Thursday night.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said Pomeroy fll'l!men were
first called ID the home at 8:57p.m:
wben a !tre broke out In the basement of the two siDry frame home.
The ftre was extinguiShed with only
$50 in damages. Firemen returned
to their station at 10 p.m. Cause of
the !Ire Is believed to have been
electrical
Just alter 11 p.m., firemen were
agafu ~3lled to the home. upon ar·
rival, ttret!ghters found the kitchen
and another room on the first floor
engut!ed in names. lt was deter·
· mined that the second fire had
started In the kitchen. It Is believed

Meanwhile, both Democrats and Republicans are
moving swtrtly toward congressional approval of an
additional $2.3 billion tor benefits and services for the
jobless. A supplemental appropriation was approved
by thaoHousr Appropriations Committee Thw'Sllay.
and the bill Ts expected to win the support of tilE' !ull
House next week.
The money InCludes $1.9 billion that the federal
government wW advance to state governments,
whose own unemployment reserves are low. Therema!n!ng $343 million ts tor personneliD process unem·
playment claims and provide job referral services by
state employment service offices,

that It might have been rekindled
from the first tire since the second
!Ire started a few feet above the
firSt one In the basement.
Pomeroy firemen were on the
scene until 4 a .m. Friday an!) In
fighting the blaze three firemen
•were Injured. Two or them were
overcome with smoke and a third,
John Manley received a severly
sprained ankle which required
treatment at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Chlef Legar said there was exten·
s!ve smoke and water damage as a
result of the second fire. Frank Els·
naugle of the Stati!'F!re Marshal's
was called to the scene to assist In
determining the cause of the !Ire.
. There Is some Insurance cover·
age, Chief Legar reported.

J':!~g~+~gives ~~~ .,
14-50 year term
resulting from his shoot-out with pollee foUowtng the robbery at the
Sw!sher-Lohse Pharmacy on Nov .
29, and one count of kidnapping a
Pomeroy resident in his attempt ID
escape pollee officers on Nov. 29.
Permitting drtlg abuse was the
misdemeanor.

MJchael A. Wilson, 28, Reynolds·
burg, charged on six counts related
.ID robberies at tour local drug
stores In November, 1981. was sentenced to from 14 to 50 years In a
state prison Thursday.
Wilson. appeared before Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon entering voluntary guilty pleas to six felony .
charges and one misdemeanor in
connection with the robberies .
He was charged with Iour counts
of theft at drugs involving a fire.
arm; one count of felonious assault

Wilson's w!te, Anita, 26, Rey·
noldsburg, was given a tour to 25
year sentence In the Women's Reformatory at Marysville earlier
Thursday for her role In the
robberies.

Columbia Gas rates increase
to Columbia .
The new gas costs will be reflected
in bills sent to customers early in
March, Koebel said .
•
Over a 12-month period, a
customer's average monthly consumption Is 13,000 cubic feet, so the
Increase will average about $4.75 a
month on an annual basts.
Koebel urged customers who have
difficulty paying their bills to contact the nearest Columbia office to
try to work out arrangements for
easing the burden of payments, or to
obtain information on where to apply for governmental assistance.

Columbia Gas of Ohio filed its
quarterly gas cost recovery today
with the Public Utilities Commlss!on
of Ohio, amounting to an additional
charge to customers of 37 cents per
thousand cubic feet of gas con·
sumed.
Jake M. Koebel, Gallipolis area
manager for the gas company, said
the eight percent increase represents higher costs that Columbia of Ohio
pays its supplier for gas purchased
for Columbia customers. Under Ohio
and federal regulations, these costs
are recovered from customers on a
penny-for-penny basis, with no profit

l

-llleutent-

of llle ~.except

PROCESS- Belly Lou Moote, Chelle!', aDd DGrothy Smith, Monih11 J

Star, were bwlrftandly llltei'lloOB~, 110111' fo 11elp proeets
food orders- a major Increase- placed Ill rough tbe Meigs·County Food
CCH&gt;p.

Business increases
at Meigs Food Co-op
Business boomed for the Meigs County Food Co-op ThurSIIay.
Two weeks ago, it was reported the future of the CCH&gt;p, designed to
provide nutritious, low cost food to the people ~ Meigs County ( regar·
dless of age, race, sex, marital status or Income), was threatened due
to apathy of residents towards the program.
Thursday, food arrived to f!ll 95 orders placed following the announcement.
Allee Wamsley, financial director of the food CCH&gt;p, said the nurnber of orders this week was nearly twice those placed for any Ume
during the past year,
There were a lot of new faces - residents who have volunteered to
help with distribution- along the assembly line Thursday as weighing
and measuring food for the 95 orders was completed at the Me!p
Senior Cll!zeD.!I Center.
Mrs. Wamsley reports approximately 30 new people ordered food
this time and there were a number of co-op members placing orders
who had not done so for a long time.
The next delivery of food ordered will be Feb. 18. Orders wUI be
accepted any time at the Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy. &lt;»op members willing to assist In processing orders after
they arrive may register at the center when they place orders.
.
New ro-op members are welcome and !nfonnatlon on the program
may be secured from the Meigs Methodist Ministries which sponsors
the program.
The goal ts at least 100 orders for each delivery.
With that many orders, the food Is delivered to Meip County
rather than a vehicle having to be dispatched to Wellston to pick !I up.

or

Reagan seeks additional Medicare cuts
WASIUNGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan will try to squeeze
more than $5.1 billion from Med!·
care and Medicaid next year by
making the elderly pay more
their hospital bills, allowing Uens on
the homes of Med!ea!d patients In
nursing homes and Imposing a host
of other economy measures,
budget documents show.
"When people find the health programs cut, they're going to find big
boles in the 'safety net,'" said Sen.
Max Baucus, 0-Mont., whO disclosed cuts In Medicaid and the
Publlc Health Service.
At the same ttme, Houa.e Demo. crats charged Thursday that Rea·
· gan 's budget also could leave the
Environmental ProiAlCtlon Agency
without enough funds to police ha·
zardous chemicals and clean up
dangerous sp!lls, spell the demise
of Amtrak everywhere except the
Northeast corridor and tnt the na·
tton's enera::Y poUcy toward nuclear

that Reagan could m8J&lt;e some
changes before he sends the budget
to Congress on Monday, but said
they would be slight.
In addition to$2.96 billion inMed!·
care savings and $2.16 billion in Medicaid, they said Reagan wW try ID
cut $562 million ·tram the Public
Health Service's $8.3 bUllon budget.
Rep. John D!ngeU, 0-Mlch., said
Reagan's proposals would force
states to deny thousands of mothers
or chBdren health care or food due
ID a 25 percent cutback In the $348
miillon Maternal and Child Health
Block Grant and the Agriculture
Department's $934 D)llllon special
nutritional program tor Wotne!!, In·
!ants and Children, which would be
lumped together.
Medicaid cuts will force
hundreds of lhousanda of aged,
blind and disabled poor people ID
"lose some or all of their health
care coverage for IUCb optional ser·
vices as preterlplloll dnlp, eye, glaases, hearing aids and dental
power.
The Democrats said admln!atra·
care" he said.
Budget documents from the
tlon ~ had leaked copies of
Health Care Financing Admlnlstrathe budget. They acknowledged

or

WE DEAL IN

WHAT A LOVELY
WAY TO

SAY

lbroulfl 'l'uelday:

~~trouP the

•SILVER BARS ·.
.OLD GOLD .
•POCKET WATCHES

PERSONS UNDER

CIUCAGO ·A large mass of fr!g!d Arctic air gripped much of the
central United States on Thursday, while snow fell on the southwest·
ern and central Plains and the southern Rockies.
It was mostly sunny but cold In North Dakota and northern Michl·
gan, as low-temperature records were set across the northern part
the nation.
.
Rain or snow was forecast tor Friday In Washington, the central
Rockies and across the south-central Plains and the mld-Mtsslss!pp!
and northern Ohio valleys, into the north-central Atlantic states.

or

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

SHOE BOX.

He said WhariDn Econometrics Is expecting unem·
ployment to average 9.3 percent In the first three
months of this year.
"Clearly, more rapid growth in the economy would
help. And the .(July 1) tax cut wm help," he said. "We
tend to be a Bttie less optimistic than the adminlstrati·
on ... because we continue to see the Federal Reserve
Board maintaining a fairly tight interest policy."

Treasury Secretary Donald Regan says the Reagan administration Is "terribly upset" by soaring un·
employment. But M agrees with Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige's assessment that the
national jobless rate could, 11,!t 10 percent before the
economy begins recovering fimn the recession.
David Arnst, an analyst with Evans Economics
forecasting firm here, says that unless there ts some
unexpected relief from high Interest rates, "It could
go to 10 percent."
"The good news Is that the worst of the decline In
the economy' Is over," he said. "The bad news Is that
we don't have much Impetus torrecovery."
Arnst said prospects tor an easing of unemp!oy·
ment might remain dlm until the nation's business
executives "see the wh!te!Hlf·th~yes" of an economic turnaround.
Asked -whether unemployment might reach
-double-d!gtt levels before the economy railles, Nari·
man Behravesh, a forecaster with Wharton Econometrics, said, "Our view Is that It could happen, but
the llkeUhood Is fairly low."

"Because firms didn't hire as many people as they
usually do in December, they didn't lay ott as many,"
Ms. Klein said. ·
.
The department's figures tor Januai-y were ad·
justed to take Into account, tor the !Irs~ time, population statistics tram the 1980 census and the regular
year-end readjustment or unemployment figures !or
seasonal factots.
The department revised figures for all of 1981 ID
reflect new ·seasonal patterns, dropping the previously reported Ul)employment rate tor December
from 8.9 percent to 8.8 percent.
The decllne In unemployment in January was due
mainly to a falloff in joblessness among adult males,
the traditional family breadwinners. Joblessness
among this class at workers tell tram 7.9 percent In
December ID 7,5 percent in January.
The post-World War II high tor unemployment Is 9
perc;ent, set in May 197li.
.
Many government and private economists have
said they expeCt jobllessness ID rise above 10 pereent
before peaking.

Frigid Arctic air hits central U.S.

SAVE ·Y2

PAY YOUR COI.UMBIA
GAS .. us~''

15 Conh

A MuiHmodla Inc. Newtpapoo

Home fire .loss
p~t at $15,000

Oo '10UI toot need reliet? Soak them 1n
Hush f\lpptes• Shoo&amp; - they II love
l'OU lor it Construc ted Wt th e)ltra steel
atlank supPOrt these shoes will g1ve
vou the all-dBY l llillance you need
Ptlced to roliBYB your budget . too

2 Sectlono, 12 .......

Nation's unemployment rate down

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES

QUANTITIES LIMITED-ALL SALES FINAL

l

en tine

at

~

CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES

Atlanta on April 22, the day Payne
disappeared.
Dean was the first witness In the
6-week-old trial to place Wlll!ams
with Payne, whose body also was
found in the Chattahoochee River.
Earlier, Margaret Carter testWed
she saw WUllams and Cater together in a park a week before he
d!sapp\!ared . .
The testimony by Henry and
Dean came as prosecutors began
wrapping up their case of circum·
stantla! evidence . against the 23year·o ld black free-lance
photographer and aspiring talent
scout.
Prior to Ms. Marlin's testimony,
the only hint or motive provided by
the state has been the testlmony of
two black teen-agers who claimed
Williams ottered them money ID
perform homosexual acts.
Williams has denied he Is a homosexual, and also says he did not
know any of the 28 victims.

•

Pomeroy-Middlepcirt; Ohio, Friday, February ~. 1982

c.p,.lgh'-1 1982

ELBERFELD$

Hatred for race given as
motive in Atlanta slayings
race," Mallard said. "This goes to
ATLANTA (AP) -Atterproduc·
motive, to his bent of mind."
ing Witnesses to place Wayne B.
Cooper adjourned the hearing to
Williams with two slain young '
his
chambers without giv ing
blacks on the days they disapBinder
a chance to argue In open
peared, a prosecuiDr says he'll
court
against
admitting the testlm·
show WUllams' hatred for "certain
any
about
motive.
The judge later
elements" of his race was a motive
promised
he
would
rule on the Issue
!or the slay!ngs.
Defense lawyer Alvin Binder ob- 'today.
W!lllams Is charged with the
jected Wednesday when prosecu·
murders
of Nathaniel Cater, 27,
!Drs in the murder trial asked
11nd Jimmy Ray P;tyne, 21, two of
witness Denise MarUn If she ever
28 young blacks whose deaths durheard Wtlllams make deroga!Dry
ing a 22-month period have been
remarks about blacks.
under Investigation by a special poAfter Judge Clarence Cooper ex·
llee
task force. There have been no
oused the jury, Ms. Marlin testt!led
arrests in the 26 other s!aylllfS.
that Williams used a derogatory
Robert I. Henry, a surprise wit·
term to refer to "his own race."
ness
discovered by prosecutors
"He used to call his own race
Monday,
testt!!ed Wednesday · he
nlggers," Ms. Marlln testt!ted alter
saw
Williams
and Cater holding
the jury left the courtroom.
an
Atlanta
sireet the night
hands
on
Assistant District Attorney Jack
at
May
21.
That
was
just hours beMallard told Cooper during a hear·
tore
Williams
was
stopped
near a
tng out at the jury's presence lhat
River
bridge
where
Chattahoochee
the state has several witnesses who
prosecuiDrs
contend
Cater's
body
will testl1y about racially 1eroga·
was
dumped.
The
body
was
pulled
tory remarks by Williams.
from the river May 24.
" We expect ID show by several
And A.B. Dean, an elderly Dou·
other witnesses that this was his
glas
County resident, testil!ed Wedbent of mlnd ... toward his own race,
he saw WU!Iams and Payne
nesday
tDward certain elements at his own
standing next ID a taxi In west

FLANNEL LINED

,

don, which runs MediCare and Medicaid, Indicate Reagan wW seek a
2 percent across-the-board reduc·
lion in MediCare reimbursement of
hospitals to save $650 mllllon In f!s.
cal1983, which starts Oct. 1.
Most Medicare and Medicaid
cuts would be in the form of lower
payments to hospitals, !nstltudona,
physicians, state agencies and
other providers.
•
Medicare and Medicaid , which
now cost $70 billion a year, provide
health Insurance for 52 million el·
derly, disabled and poor Ameri·
cans. By next year, 53 m!lllon are
expected to be covered.
Medicare, which provides health
care for elderly people regardless
of their inCOme, would be cut by
requiring patients to pay part of the
coat- poeslbly 10 percent- for the
first 60 days r4holpltallz&amp;tton up/D
$2~. After that, new catutropb!c
coverage would provide llllllm1ted
tree hotlp!taltzadcn. '!'be prngram
now pays for days 2 through ~While thla catutropbtc c:iOverage
would save theelderly81111 mllllon in

, ~al1984, budget documents !nd!'cate the cost-sharing provision
would coat them $1.!14 bllUon.
Reagan also wW ask Congress ID
approve Medicare vouchers, which
would allow the elderly ID enroll in
private health plans.
Another Reagan proposal would
allow states to place liens .against
the hor'nes or other real property or
Medicaid recipients In nursing
homes. States could sell the property to recover Medicaid costs after
the patient died and when the property was "no longer needed by the
recipient, spouse or minor child·
ren," accot:d!ng ID the HCFA
document.
This provision, plus an tn!tiattve
to allow states to make adult chUd·
ren of Medicaid nursing home pa·
ttents contribute
their parents'
•c,.re, would save $212 million .
Dlngell was joined at a news con·
terence by Deniocratlc Reps. Rl·
·chard Ottinger of New York, Henry
Waxman of California, James Fl.orlo of New Jersey and Timothy
Wirth of Colorado.

w

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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>02. February</text>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43790">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43789">
              <text>February 4, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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</item>
