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                  <text>FHA withdraws funds for landfill
'

.

Some.$65,!XIJ which the Meigs County Commissioners had counted 9n for
the purchase iUld development of a new county Jandtlll wllJ not be

forthcoming.
Commissioners were advised Tuesday by the Farmers Home Administration that the county Is no longer being considered for funds to develop
· the new landfilL
MetgS County has been listed as a high priority for 601 funds and the
county commissioners say they have been ted to believe that the $65,!XIJ
would be available on the project. Howev'!r, commissioners must now find

other means or financing the prpject since all 601 funds are being
withdrawn.
Commenting on the loss of funds, Commission President Henry Wells
said:
•
' "Withdrawal of these grant funds Is a major blow to this board and to the
citizens of Meigs County..However, the problem still remains.
Meigs County must have a new landfill and we must now direct our
attention to ·other means oUlnanclng the project. We shall continue with all
engineering plans as we search for alternative means of ltnancbig this

•

Voi.30,No.210
C:pyriyhl:d 1982

project."
Commissioners, In other matters, voted to advertlse for bids on ~
new trucks, a pickup and two dump trucks, at the request of County
Engineer PhU Roberts who met with the board. Blds are to be opened on
March 2.
.
Bob Bailey, coordinator of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service, was authorized to enter Into a service agreement with Motorola, Inc.,
for a one year pertod at an annual rate of $3012.

•

at y

e

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enttne

I'

2 Sections. 14 .....
15 Cenll
A Myltt....dla Inc. NewspQpor

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Wednesday, February 10, 1982

Heavy volume won't keep OBES open

c::.r-1r

Despite the fact that it's doing a
receipt of the supplemental federal
"land office business" and supfunds.
plemental federal funds appear to be
in the offing, the Pomeroy Job Ser·
vice Office of the Ohio Bureau or
Employment Services will close its
doors on March 31.
Tuesday, the office located on
Union Ave., Pomeroy, was jam·
packed, not only with claimants but
wlth area residents completing applications to work for Coal Power
Inc., which last week aMounced
plans to open two underground
mines in Meigs County.
Coal Power, Inc., has been swamped with applications, several hundred, in fact, from across the area.
The finn has been accepting applications at its trailer office at the
Brown Trailer Lot in Minersville.
However, Ray Fassnacht, Coal
Power, Inc., official, announced
Tuesday afternoon that from now
on, all applications for employment
wlth the finn are being taken by' the
Pomeroy Job Services office.
This includes applications for office personnel as well as under·
ground mlne personnel and outside
mine workers.
Coal Power officials have indicated that Meigs Countians will be
given ,..mployment preference.
Edith Adkins, who has charge of the
Pomeroy ·Job Service Office, announced the March 31 closing in con. junction with instruction passed
down to her from George Curnutte,
chief of the Lands and Buildings
Department.
Several residents visiting the of.
fice on Tuesday expressed
dlspll!liBure at tiJe closing of the •
Pomeroy laciilty'since clairnilnts for
benefits wiU now have to go to
Gallipolis to have their claims
processed. lhey c~n go to Athens or
Marietta , but those offices are even
more distant than Gallipolis.
Last week, the local office
received, 906 claims concerning
benefits. This Included 54 new
claims, 12 extended claims and 724
continued claims. Adding to the
claim processing this week is the
processing of the ll]any job applications that apparently are forthcoming for Coal Power, Inc.
The United States Department of
Labor had instructed that 37 job services offices in Ohio be kept open.
However, Gary Stein, deputy ad·
mlnlstrator of the Ohio Bureau of
El)'lployment Services, has in. structed his staff to proceed with the
closings and layoffs pending the

Quality
Parts

The Ssvlng Place Slot

.Service

Tires. Battery
And Services
Are Available
Only In Stores
With Service Boys

Foster signs $8 million deal

Steel Belted Radials ·

39•.97~ur

NEW YORK- The New York Mets signed slugger George Foster
to a five-year contract today, paying the veteran outfielder more
than $1 mllllon a year.
The agreement Includes deferred payments which make the
value of the deal about $8 mJlllon.
Foster had one year remaining on a three·year $2.25-mJlllon con·
tract with Cbfclnnatl. But thl! Reds had decided they would not
sa tlsly Foster's contract demands beyond 1982 and laced losing him
Ill tree agency. Instead, they swallped him to New York In exchange
for three players, catcher Alex Trevino, and rtghthanded pitchers,
Jim !_{em and Greg Harris.
·

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House approves benefits bill
WASHINGTON - Repuhllcans and Democrats swapped charges
on the House floor Tuesday about who was to blame for the recession, then joined forces to approve President Reagan's plan for an
additional $2.3 billion for benefits and services'for the unemployed.
The House acted after voting 342-62 for a measure that Reagan
does not want - $123 million In Increased funds to help poor people
pay their heating bills In ·the coldest winter of the century.
The jobless benefl~ bill amounted to a change In Reagan's economic plan, as well. About $210 mJlllon or the $2.3 billion total would
restore cuts made last year In spending for job service workers.

Arrests made in 1980 killings

'

•

88 0ur

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SAN SALVAOOR, El Salvador - A government source says one
of two new suspects arrested In connection wlth the 1980-murder of
four American church women confessed to direct participation In
the kJIIlngS.
Pollee sources said It was the first confession by any of the eight
· men arrested In connection wlth the kUilngs.
. The government source, wbo declined to be Identified, ~ld the two
new suspects were arrested six weeks ago. He Indicated they would
be put on trial along with six National Guardsmen arrested last
· year.
The slain women were lay missionary Jean Donovan of Cleveland. Ursuline Sister ·Oor.othy Kaz.el of Cleveland, and Maryknoll
Sisters Ita Ford and Maura Clarke, both of New York.

Two women slain at motel bar
FREMONT, Ohio - Two women were slain by a gunman Tuesday evening at a motel bar, the sherlft's department said.
· Sandusky County Sherlft Joseph Kindred sald a man was taken
Into custody In connection wlth the Incident.
The sherlft' s department would not Identify the women pending
notification of their families.

Murder trial begins Thursday

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BATAVIA, Ohio- The murder and attempted murder trial or
junk do;!aler John Coyne, 37, will open Thursday now that Jucig!l John
L. Watson of Clermont County Coml)'lon Pleas Court has ruled that
defense attorney Andrew Dennison caMot withdraw from the case.
DeMison sought release because deputy prosecutor Jeffrey
Schwartz subpoened Dennison as a prosecution witness.
Coyne Is charged In the shootings of three youths caught steall~g
car parts from his Boot Hill Auto C:raveyatd on Aug. 215, 1921.
Phillip Osborne, 18, died, and Anthony Dotson, 16, and Leslie
Oberschlake, 16, were wounded. The survivors ha've been convicted
on theft charges.

WASHINGTON (AP ) - Pres!·
dent Reagan today reaffirmed his
determination to drive high lntlatlon out of the economy for good
despite the pain that recession and
hlgh unemployment are tnructlng
upon the nation.
In a written economic report the
president Is required to send to Con·
gress each win'ter, Reagan also
held to his prediction or a •'vigorous
economic recovery" this year des·
plte record budget deficits and per·
ststently high Interest rates.
"I am convinced that our policies, now that they are In place, are
the approprtate response to our current difficulties," Reagan said a
statement accompanying the re-

TOLEOO, Ohio - Depression caused by harsh winter weather
was a factor In six suicides reported In Toledo since heavy snowfalls
hit the area last week, according to Coroner Harry Mlgnerey.
"Sure, It's the bad weather. At least the weather ls a factor,"
Mlgnerey said the the suicides, which Included four teen-agers.
Three of the deaths occurred Tuesday.
"It's depressing. i don't know whether you see the results, but we
certainlY do. Three suicides In one day- that's pretty unusual," he
said.
Five of the deaths were caused by selt-tnructed gunshot wounds,
according to the coroner. The sixth victim took an overdose of drUgs.

Winning Ohio (ottery number
CLEVELAND (AP) -The winning number drawn Tuesday night .
111 the Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 601.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 3414:
The lottery reportold earnings of $615,147 on Its dally game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,000.~. whUe holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $435,412, lottery otftclals said.
I

Weather forecast
. Qouding over tonight with snow possible late tonight. Lows 15-~.
Mostly cloudy with a chance of anow Thlll'llday until becoming
partly cloudy In the afternoon. Highs around ~- Chance of snow 50
percent tonight and 40 perce~t Thursday. Winds westerly to ,south·
'
westerly around 10 mph tonl8ht.

Extended Oldo FCII'I!CU&amp;

friday throulb Sullda)':
o-raJJJ fair F'rlda7 liDd su.rdq. A ch8Me ol 1'1111 or -

Sllllda)'. Modenlhollread.~oup lbe period. JDP-Intlleapper. .
lo apper . . Pltday 111111 nOuaiiJ Ia lbe . . llalunlar 111111 Sanda)'·
._. 11 to .. Pltday, In lbe . . IWuriiiiJ ... Ia lbe . . s-laJ.

)

!.

sufficient to restore"all 37 of the of•
!ices bein~ closed.

; ; ; :: . . . . .[

. :. "h........

.Busy place
LINES - Lines vf clalmanll
were on !Iliad at the Pomeroy Job
Bervtee Olflee of the Obk Burtau
'o.f Employment · 8ervite1/
Tuesday afternoon walling their
tum to disciQII ~lalm• with pel'
1o1111el. The ortlee · wlU clwe on
March 31 causing local people to
travel to Gallipolis or some poinl
even more dlslantlo lake care of
tbelr bu•lnes with the bureau.
Meanwhile, (bottom left), ali appllcalfons for employment with
Coal Power, Inc., which wlll open
two underground ~oal mines In
Melga County In the near future,
wiD be proce.sed beghmlnj! lm'
mediately at the Pomeroy Job
Servlee Office of the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Servlcea In
Pomeroy. Among the numeroua
n!lldenlal making appllcalfons
Tuesday afternoon were John
Bunon and Danny Gardoer, New
Haven.

Reagan reaffirms inflation policies

Weather factor in suicides
5·pleeelttll"'=h••t
Metric or SAE box-end
.wrench set with handy
storage pouch. Save.
•

II has been indicated thal the supplemental funds probably will not be

port prepared by hls Council of Economic Ad'vtsers.
But his report also warned that
more suffering may lie ahead before the nation reaps the benefits or
permanently lower lntla tlon.
"The decision to end lntlatlon
over a period of several years will
be sustained by this admlnlstratlon, even though short-run costs
will be suffered before long-term
benefits begin to accrue," the report declared.
Acknowledging a "sbort-llved ·
trade-off between unemployment
and the rate of Inflation," the report
said, "This means that policies designed to reduce lntlatlon significantly wUI temporartly Increase

unemployment and reduce output
growth.

"Reverslilg the trends of the past
Is not an easy task. I never thought
or stated it would be," Reagan said.
"The damage that has been Inflicted on our economy was done by
Imprudent and lnapproprtate poll·
ctes over a periOd of many years;
we caMot realistically expect to
undo It all In a few short months."
The president's economic forecast predicts 1!112 wUI witness the
highest sustained rateol unemployment In the post-World Warn era,
but the forecast also shows a stead·
Uy declining rate of lntlatlon from
nearly 10 percent last year to less
than 5 percent by 1984.

.'

'

"We hope 1981 will be described
as the watershed year In which the
more than decade-old rising trend
of Inflation was finally arrested,"
the report said. It added that costs
of enduring the rising Inflation
rates the na lion expertenced dUring
the 1970s are greater than the costs
of moving toward a successful polIcy of non·lnfiatlonary growth.
Reagan Is counting on the Federal Rese!Ve Board, the nation's
central bank, to wage the main
fight against Inflation by severely
restrlctlng the growth of the nation's money supply. '!be result
thus far has been high Interest rates
that have trlggered a recession and
significant unemployment.

Storm property ·damage put at $343.9 million :
1

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) Property damage from five storms
which battered the Midwest In January will hit a record $3l'l.9 mJIIIon,
Insurance Industry analysts said
Tuesday.
The damage total, up 110 percent
from the previous January hlgh 6f
$163.5 mJlllon reached In 1!1'19, will
be even higher when flood damage
and buslnessea I~ are figured
In, according to W.D. Swltt, vice
president for Property Claim Sel'vl·
ces for the American Insurance

A.uoclatlon.
"The tnaurance flgurei don't Include bu&amp;tneea 10111e11 from down·
time, which II going to make the
economic fliurequltea bit larger,"
said Dave Strlnger, a Jpoketman

for the Industry . trade group.
"Some businesSes made money snowblower sales were up and any
firm that doesshovellng made money - bUt I've got a feeling that on
balance It's going to be very nega·

S5 million In Iowa and Oklahoma.
A second storm hit portions or 25
states east of the Mississippi River
between Jan. 15-~. causing Insured
losses of $60 mllllon, Swift said.

11\re figures."

Damage from winds, noodlng
and earth movement related to a
Jan. 3-5 storm cauaed $33.9 ffillllon
In los8es In Callfomla .while a Jan.
17 windstorm resulted lnCimJlllon
In losses In Colorado, according to '
the Industry analysis.
The first storm of the month. Jan.
2-4, caused UO million In 1osaes In
Mississippi and Ohio from haU, tor·
nadoes, snow and tlooding.
The January l0111e11 came alter
calaltrophe 10I8e8 .. sru million In
1981,. the
first time In three years
'

wont storm or the month
swept across 38 states between Jan.
8 and
14, causing $2'Jl mJlllon
In property damage, Swift said.
Damage clalma Included roof col.Iapees, flooded houses after water
pipes froze and tratflc accidents.
The

Jaq.

Loss estimates from .that storm
Include $18 million In Illinois; $16
million In Michigan, Mlssouii and
Ohio; $14 ·mJJJion In Minnesota and
Texas; $12 million In Kansas: and

·'

losses under $1 billion were
reported.
Nevertheless, the Industry too!t
"a fairly big underwriting loss" ani!
expects larger losses In the comlni
year, Stringer said, adding Indicalions are the violent weather will
continue through the spring.
"Any time you attempt to specu.
late beyood a week, you're on very
shaky ground," said Fred Ostby, a
meterologlst with the Severe Storm
Forecast Center. "The pattern now
ls very conducive to stormy
wea\her, but these things can
change rapidly.
"The temptation II to say the
pattern Indicates a very active furnado season.''

.

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�~ommen~y

...., ~""·

. I

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Sti'Mt
Pom~roy , Ohlu
.
ll~tn-IIH
DEVOTED TO TH E INTEREST OF mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

~mRJ

-r.

rT"\._J L.-

~v

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r-T"""'i'i!! d.~

.

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publbber

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Au h1tant Publbtht r / Cuntrolle r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrw t Edltor
A MEMBER uf Tht AlttiOdated PreKI, laland Ibllly Pn:d
Ameri can NtWiiS*Jit!f Publlahen AllniCiatkln.

A 1110dlltl011 llod

the

LEtTERS OF OPINION art welc omed. They 11hould bl: letli thlll :J00 wordllollg . All
let1en: are IIUbjt!ct to tdlllng and mulll be tlped with ume, lllktrnlll Mnd telephoDe
number. No •lllllglred _lettt&gt;n wlll!M! pllblll hed. l..A!U.en ~ttmuld ~ In good ta11k, 1ddreui.DK
111 11~. nutptrlil.lnMIIIk:».

Absence
of options
.

.
: The answer to deficits Is economic growth, said the president In presentIJ)g his budget. But the economy shrinks. The gap grows. And the options
· evaporate.
·
One posslbUity for reducing the gap would be tax Increases, but the
economy already Is In sorry shape. To raise taxes might be to risk pushing
the teetering economic vehicle off the clltf.
. Perhaps, then, even more can be cut from the budget. Perhaps, but only
at the risk of an uproar from aid recipients and elected officials. Cut
deiense then? The president himself would object.
Maybe the Federal Reserve could be Induced to ease credit, setting off a
revenue-buUdlng spending spree. But, the Fed objects, that would mean a
return to Inflation, one area where success has come.
· What then? Live with the budget gap, says President Reagan, foresaktng what was once the most basic of all his goals, and demonstrating at the
same' ume that he had little or np choice.
.
: Reagan has been forced by realities of life to make almost heretical
changes In his formula for success, not just ln terms of budget balancing,
which now Isn't a goal at all, but In other essentials.
Whereas a year ago he portrayed the options as clear and attainable, his
budget this year demonstrates how ephemeral and elusive they are.
It Is now conceded that there won't be a sharp recovery, even It the
budget writers suggest II. Their own numbers show lt. Real 1982 gross
liational product Isn't expected to total even 1 percent, and In 19831t might
teach 5.2 per cent, which ranks It as unremarkable.
• Interest rates are likely to stay ln double digits Into next .year. And over ·
~ ihe next several years, concedes the president, rates "wUI fall less rapidly
: than we had originally anticipated."
• · As was conceded earlier the unemployment rate Is likely to rise rather
: ihan fall. :o as much as 10 ~rcent of the workforce, before Improvement
· i:an lle looked for.
· Miscalculations• Yes. Neither the big deficits nor the recession were
ioreseen. The excuse sounds lame. " .. .It Is Impossible In a short period of
' time to correct the mistakes of decades," said Reagan.
. U the economy grew smartly It would resolve a lot of the confllcts. But It
· tsn't and that removes the keystone from the plan. The transfer of eco: nom'tc power to the private sector Isn't llkely to be swUt.
: : It Is In this area that Intense arguments are bound to develop. Some of
: !he president's strongest supporters ln private Industry argue that the
• !leflclts will prevent them from embarking on eiq)anslon.
. Jn essence, their argument Is that·the capital pool Is InSufficient lor the
admlnlstra tion to finance big deficits without denying Industry Its share or,
. ~t least, forcing Interest rates to prohibitive levels.
- -: The admlnlstratlon contends that not only wUI there be sufficient money,
: ~ut that buslnessandlndlvldualsavlngs resulting !rom taxcutswUiperrnlt
· il rapid buildup of capital !ormation !or expansion.
.
• • Prlva te sector economists and business people already have expressed
.: .doubts, ·and have even ridiculed such assumptions..

·'

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]3erry's World
.. ...
..
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IF '10U 1\ti"'K

1'thS

Wlt-lte:~ HAS

8E~N

COL.D 110U
St\OIJL.P 1'\AV~ ~N

Page 2-The Daily Senti~
PomeroY Middleport, OhiO Wednetday, febrvary 10, 1982

• • ;&gt;

Good .intentions, bad
The Illinois Constitution provides
cfuCAGO - Let it be assumed
that iii adopting their new gun con- that , " subj~ only .to the police
trol ordinance,.the trustees of Mor· power, the right of the Individual
ton GI'OI'e, Ill., ·were motivated by citizen to keep and bear anns shall
the very best intentions. Their pur· not be infringed." When it comes to
. pose was ·to prevent crime and to . the public safety, the cqur.t ruled, a
reduce the nwnber of tragic ac- municipalitY"s police/ power . emcidents and impulsive shootings that braces a power not merely to
regulate but also a power to prohibit.
· involve the use of handguns.
But good intentions can be more II is Immaterial that the ordinance
than offset by lamentable con- may not solve all the problems
·. sequences, and that is the case here. arising from the possession of hanThe ordinance is fatuous. II cannot dguns. If the trustees believed the
possibly be enforced. Its Inevitable ordinance "would serve to Inch the
effect will be to undermine the Morton Grove conununily one step
respect for law on which the rule of further to becoming peaceable and
safe," that is enough.
·
law depends.
As
for
the
U.
S.
Constitution,
said
Under the ordinance, which
became effective last week, ''no per·
son shall possess, in the Village of
Morton Grove, any handgun, unless
the SBJile has been rendered per·
manenlly inoperative." The law contains exceptions for peace officers,
licensed gun collectors, gun clubs,
and members of the anned services
while in the perfonnance of their of.
ficial duties. The law specifically
exempts antiQue fireanns and apparently exempts most rifles and
shotguns also. Persons who voJ.un.
tarUy deliver their working handguns to the Morton Grove polcie
are not to be compensated for the
weapons, but they will be imm""e
from ptosecution. Violation of the
ordinance becomes a misdemeanor
punishable by fines up to $500 or by
jail sentence up to six months.
lnunedlately upon ita enactment .
last year, the ocdlnilllce was
challenged by four handgun owners
who live in the village. They contended that the law vlolaleB both the
llllilols and the United States constitutions. On Dec. 29, U. S. District
Judge Bernard M. Decker dismls8ed
these arguments and upheld the or·
dinance.

law'(___~J=am:.:::e:::...:s1:.:..·~Ki2-lp......;at_ric_k

the court, the Second Amendment
restrains only aCts of Congress; the
Ninth Amendment Is inapplicable.
Whether the ordinance is wise or unwise Is not for the court to say. The
alw Is a valid exercise of legislative
authority.
Very well. II may not be a court's
function to conunenl on legislative
wiSdom, ·but others are not sO confined. The first thing to be said of
this remarll:ably Impotent ordinance
is that it will not be obeyed. And
second, if it were obeyed, the effect
would be to leave law-abiding .
citizens · defenseless against
criminals.
The first objection has the greater

meaning. ~e memories in COok .
County sO short that the history rl
Prohibition has been forgotten? The
attempt to ban possession of :
alcoholic beverages failed utterly. ,
Whatever the evils of alcohol may..
have been, the evils of Prohib!tlon
were · infinitely worse - crune, •
corruption, a pervasive contempt
forlaw.
.
A first rule of legislators at any
level ought to be never to pass an .
unenforceable law. Statutes lhllt!!\re .
aU form and no substance '\accomplish no useful purpose. '11111Y ·
foster widespread evasion and the,y ,
contribute to a state of ~~lind that
tends to view the law with disdain.. ·

·.

10, 1982

Foster joins
Mets today
NEW YORK (AP) - Slugging
outfielder George Foster Is ex·
pected to o!flclally become a
member of the New York Mets today, completing the transfer of last
season's Cincinnati Reds outfield to
New York City.
The Mets scheduled a news conterence for 2 p.m., EST, today after
General Manager Frank Cashen ·
met for more than eight hours
Tuesday with Foster's agent, Tom
Reich, to Iron out final details of a
Dve-year contract at a reported $1.5
mllllon a year.
"I'he 33-year-old outfielder, who
WOuld have become a free agent
.Mter the 1982 campaign, also was
expected to receive a $1 million
Interest-free loan.
Cashen and Reich began negotiating last week after the Mets and
Reds agreed to a trade contingent
on New York's being able to satisfy
Foster's salary demands. In return
for Foster, the Mets reportedly wm
send catcher Alex Trevino and
pitchers Jim Kern and yreg Harris
to Cincinnati.
Cincinnati's other 1981 outDelders, Ken Griffey and Dave Collins, are now with the New York
Yankees.

Mon.·Sit. 8 am·lO pm
Sunday

10 am·IO pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH FEB. 13, 1982

BUCKEl

Cube

Due to Tuesday's Icy, cold weather,
all basketbaD games were called
oU.
If po!J81ble, acll.on wm reswne at

$
·29
Ground Beef......
.
..
$ 59
Ground Chuck...l~, ..

scheduled Friday night.

~8~ ••

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
Southern
Kyger Creek
Eastern .
Hannan Trace
North Gallia
Southwestern

.

steadily. to 6.8· percent by the next
presidential election, and to 5.2 percen~byl987 .

A major GOP talking point In the
cornlng campaign will be projections of an Inflation rate of 6.6 percent for the current budget year
. and 5.1 percent next year. U his
forecasts prove out, Republicans
would go Into the presidential campaign with 4.7 percent Inflation.
That would be a major polltlcal
plus. But by Reagan's accounting,
It also carries a price tag, tn lbe
!orm of Increased deficits. Tax cuts
add to the deficits, but he Insists
they are a long-term cure. .
For all of that, the deficit projections are a serious problem for the
administration. According to the
forecasts In his own budget - and
Democrats contend they are unrea-

llstlcaUy optimistic - record delleIts wm persist through his term and
the next term.
•
u Reagan gets every budget re-:
duction he wants, the deficit for fiscal 1983 would be $91.5 bUllon. His
budget shows the deficits decllnlni ·
by $10bi!Uonayearafterthat, totli&amp;,
bUUon ln flscal1986. That would be'
sllghtly above the former alJ.tlinii
recond.
The forecasts span a period In·
eluding one congressional and one
presidential campaign. R.epubll·
cans find that unnerving. They will
have to explain lt. They criticized
Democratic de!lctts for years.
Reagan made a point of that
when the national debt hit one trll·
lion, saying It was the legacy of Democratic rule. Projected deficits I
would add half a trUllon dollars to !
the debt total In the next six years. ;

P

DP

1 1071
4 889
6 764
9 938
12 778
13 840

1038
829
752
955
948
1015

8 o 5&lt;16
6 2 450
4 3 359
3 5 467
I 6 ~33

397
435
355

16
11
9
7
2
2

SVAC ONLY

Southern
Kyger Creek
Eastern

Hannan Trace

ministration put mspending res- .
tralnts and tax cuts. The best
ottlclal guess now Is that when tbe
current fiscal year ends, the deficit
will be $98.6 bUilon.
'
Reagan once blamed many Uls
on deficits. He now says It must be
kept In perspective - and that It
wasn't his ~olng. He says one percentage point ln. joblessness can
add $25 bWion to a deficit.
Carter's last budget message
forecast joblessness at 7.4 percent
this year. The adrnlnlstratlon fig·
ures It at 8.4 percent. Tills Is a congressional election year, and a
Democratic campaign theme will
be admlnlstratlon policies they
blame for the high rate of
unemployment.
Reagan says those policies are
beginning to work. Reagan's projections show joblessness declinin~

STORE HOURS:

Snow cancels games

Budget could cause political problems .
WASHINGTON (AP) -In other
ctrcumstances, President Reagan
might have been more enthuSiastic
about !ortune-telllng In the federal
budget. But he had to project some
!orebodlng statistics that could
translate Into GOP political trouble
this year and again In 1984.
The law requires five-year projections of spending, deficits, lnfla·
tion, unemployment and other
statistics as part o! the anilual
budgel Fortunately, the ~w does
not require that they be accurate.
Jimmy Carter's budget forcast a
$16 bi!Uon deficit. That's a pittance
compared with the prospect now,
and with the outcome that budget
year. The de!!cit on Sept. 30, 1!m,
was $57.9 bWion.
Carter's 1982 budget, bequeathed
to Reagan, envisioned a deficit of
$27.5 bi!Uon. The Republican ad-

Ohio

473

Southwestern
502
North Galli a
6 ~85 474
This
week's
schedule :
Friday - North Galli a at Hannan
Trace; Kyger Creek at Eastern, and
Southern ~t Southwestern .
Saturday - Miller at Southern;
Kyger Creek 8t Hannan, W. Va ., and
Federal Hocking at North Galli a.

MIXED

Fryer Parts ...... ~; ..
SUP~IOR FRANKIE
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·

Ohio College

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ONo c.lep .....bel!

llJ 'lbl

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Mkl-QIIIGCa .. ElM
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fUo Grande 81, citllD Dornlnlcan 60

, TUnn 41, ML Vernon Naz. 78
Walah 1!6. Malone 71

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Po ' ' ' ' Canferenoe
Hlram n, Allegheny 58

Non-Ctnlerence
Central State 94, Wrlghl Stale T.l

09

Tougher handgun lawso..._____R_et--=-e

...:.:.:sh::::::iel:..:::.ds :

thus encouraging legislators
lake reasonable precautions . whenever he carries a handgun. The :
throughout our fifty states to move
relating to those who drive responsible, law-abiding citizen is ·
forward with handgun control
automobiles. Such efforts seek to not.
·
·
A(l.()()~D PtJR\~a
In 1979, the last year of available legislation.
'
reduce deaths and injuries from
Sloganeering avoids serious ·
statistics, handguns killed 48 people
Here in Ohio, Representative Lee
automobiles.
debate on the real issue sun:ounding .
In Japan, eight In Great Britain, 34 1. Fisher (]).16th District) has in·
In the case of handguns, doesn't it unregulated handguns. The real
In Switzerland, 52 in Canada, 58 in troduced legislation, H.B. 651,
make sense to wait a few days to issue is saving lives. Too many of ·
Israel, 21 1n Sweden, and 42 in West modeled after the Kennedy-Rodino
allow the police to check on the iden- our children, relatives, friends, and ·
Gennany. By way of comparison, bill now before the U. S. Congress.
tity of a would-be purchaser to be neighbors have already faUen vicmore Americans were kiUed in Ohio Slply put, the Fisher handgun bill
sure he isn't a feloo before tim to America's growing handgun
last year by handgun fire than com· would require the licensing of handelivering that handgun? Under plague. Right now there Is one chanbiDed annual death toU .of all seven dgun owners and the registration of
current Federal Law, one can ce in five that you or someone yoo
of these countrl~. These foreign
their handguns. Of course the gun
merely walk into a handgun store love will suffer handgun violence in
II
II
countries have tough national han- lobby is already mobllil!ing its forces
and buy handguns with no waiting your lifetime. And as every day goes
dgun. laws. The United StaleB doea to kill this life-saving measure. they
period and no backg~und .check.
by, those odds worsen.
not, AndOhiohasoneoftheweakest will once again appeal to.the base
Handgun owner llcensll)g wol!kl...,,,r,P~ge of ~ t.f.lsher bill w~uld
state laws In our country.
fears o( law-abiding gun owners to
provide for such a cheCk. Why . send a f1rm and'Cl"'r ll)e888ge to the·
As a result of the tragic handgun
marshall opposition to the Fisher
should the law-abiding citizen resist citizens. of Ohio. A message
murder of John Lennon, the han- bUI.
such an awroach? Polls have. con- assures law-abiding citizens that.
dgun wounding of President
But maybe this time, common sen·
sistently shown that the majonty of their state legisll!tors are serious
Reagan, and the rising level of han- se w,lll prevail. The Fisher bill
handgun owners don't. Even Smith about stopping the criminal misuse:
, : Today Is Wednesday, Feb. 10, tl:~ 41st day of1982. 'flll!rl) at(&gt;3'.ul tl.avs left dgun violence nationwide, more and merelyseekstoestablishreasonable
&amp; Wesson, the nation's largest han- of handguns. It will be a clear-wan.:
·lit the year.
· ·
•
more citizens are demanding precautions to guard against turnlng
dg"" manufadun:r • supports llcen- nlng to the street criminal that han- ;
: · Today's highlight In history:
.
tougher handgun laws - on the . over a potential murder machine to
sing, declanng II a responsible dgun violence wm no longer be :
: On February 10, 1763, France ceded Canada to England as the Treaty of local, state, and national level. Mor- criminals.
measure. It seems ~t only a tolerated in Ohio. That the pollee ,
;paris was signed, ending the French and Indian War.
ton Grove.-Ill., has become a symbol
The Fisher licensing and
narrow group of gun zealots oppose have new tools for putting the gun- :
to the majority of Americans who registration bill can be best unsuchprecautions.Butunfortunately, tolingcriminalbehlndhars.
1
•; On this date:
:: In 1828, South American revolutionary Simon Bolivar became ruler of want handgun control;·&amp;symbol of a
derstpod by comparing it to driver
it is usually from that group that
But passage of this law as with ',
local vlllag~ slrivlng to deal with licensing and automobile
legislators hear..
.
most laws, depends on ~ch and .
c;:olombla.
America's national' problem of han- registration. You would not let a
The responsible, law-ab1dlng every citizen of Ohio, Unleas '
dgun violence because our national
thirteen year old drive on Ohio~
citizen will register his handgun and legislators hear from the average
and state legislators haven't; a symstreets. You would not let a bllne
secure a license. The street thug will citizen, the handgun carnage will go
bol of a local vlllase do~Rt· battle.-m&amp;ll..dtille w ,Ob!o's h!j)lwaf.s .• Th.J,. no_!, beca_use h~ can't. As a result, on and on and on. And !I could claim
with the all-powerful National Rifle driver licensing system was set up to ""tliii "§ff'eet criminal Is at risk you.
Association - and winning - and
I was reading the Sentinel last lime the company paid him while on
..-----~--,
week when I noticed the fellow out vacation and we know those men at
Rutland way was still wanting the the power stations gel a lot of
vacation money.
poor people to starve to death.
Wei~ the PUCO lets them raise
-: First I found he was working at
our
rates per kilowatt Then the
of 'these power plants, making
same
people tl)at this man wants to
&amp;,ood money. The only people that
star:ve
to death and us old people on
hate to see a poor person ealls a per·
Social
Security
have to pay higher
son that has a good job,' or some
light
bUls.
So
you
see the people he
wealthy person.
wants
to
starve
and
we on SoCial
· Now, let's gel down to the facts
Security
are
helping
pay
thl.s man
about this man. The power company
every year goes before the PUCO wages. That'~ absolutely agalnat the
.
and lays their expense sheet down poor people.
I '
Remember, son, there are alwa,ys
for ·OJlllrating thai year. This man's
two sides to a story.- Ben Batey.
~ry Is In the expense sheet not
jdsl the time he worked but also the
(N. T. "Pete Sblelds 1B lbe cbalro
mao of Handgun Control, lac.

1"+\e.

6~15-~T 'e~ AGf-.

.,

f!CIIlCIIlCI~ ............ ~~

: :(i

Today in history

-

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:

HAWTHORNE MELODY

2 0

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09

BRENDA

Letters to the editor

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•
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49

•
•
•
•

�-·

...
Wednesday, February 10, 1982

Sentinel

~

"

"

...
.

~

Ohio

·O hio
Sportlight

--

By George Strode
.,
....~ ----------------------------------------------'

: : · COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Just one day alter his lather died. Frank
:: Glo!fre posted 32 points, 10 rebounds, 7 steals, 8 assists and 2 shot blocks In
:: Jl single basketball game for Huron High School.
:::; · The 6-loot senior guard did not decide until just before game time Friday
:: night to play against Fremont St.Joseph. His dad, Ralph, a long-time
- · Huron booster, had died Thursday morning.
"Frank decided his dad would have wanted him to play," said Huron
: : Coach Bob Bowers. "It was just an Incredible emotional performance. He
went out and did lt lor hls dad."
.
:: Around Ohio: Leaking gymnasium roofs at Glenville and East Tech and
f~ In John Marshall's arena have forced Cleveland city officials to play
::- basketball doubleheaders at other sites.
• , A federal judge has upheld the Ohio High School Athletic Association's
- . eight-semester ellgtblllty rule, throwing out a suit by EucUd Center Dean
':: Lanier, who repeated one sophomore semester when he transferred from
~ ,a Mississippi school. Lanier Is now Ineligible for the rest of the school year.
:::;: Steve Bruning, a 6-5 junior, has broken Athens' ~year-old career scar·
;:· -lng record of 992 points held by Ralph Nuzum. Bruning now has 1,027 points
: .alter scoring 38 points against Pomeroy Meigs and Lancaster during the

=

=

:':; a

: weekend.
•
:.
:-·
:.:;
::
:;:

, The passage of a levy last week assures Lorain city schools' athletic
programs will continue. If the levy had failed, officials said all lnterscho·Iastlc sporis would have been dropped.
. Louisville Aquinas refused to play Its basketball game against Lisbon
Beaver, a protest from football last fall. Aquinas charged Beaver had 12
players on the field when It scored a winning touchdown.
Springlleld Northeasu!m halted Its 20-game losing spell In the Central
- :Buckeye Conference, stunning Bellefontaine 4941. Pepper Begoof Spring·
- ;tleld South hit 12 of 17 shots In the last 10 minutes, Including six In 30
::;- ·seconds, during a 26-polnt performance against Beavercreek.
:;: : Dick Hempy of Marion River Valley has missed only 12 of his last44 field
::. ~$cal attempts. He's shooting 64 percent for the season. Ada guns for Its
- seventh straight sole Northwest Conference title against co-leading Spen·
~~ ~ervllle Friday night.
:;- · Damon Goodwin, a 6-5 St. Marys guard committed to the University of
·:. :Dayton, has gone over the l,IXXJ.polnt career mark. Even without long·
::;. ;tlme Coach Charlie Huggins, Indian Valley South continues to roll along.
•• ·'J'he Rebels, under former Huggins player and assistant Mark Huston, Is
:7" '15-3. Huggins still teaches at the school.
:: : Xenia Wllson, part of the Ohio Veterans Children's Home, Is staging a
flasketball renaissance. The school's boys have a 10·5 record and the girls a
!:" '15-1 mark.
,. , · Mike Glomi ranks as Newark's all-time scoring leader with 1,194 points,
;topping the old record o11,062 set by Randy Foster tit the early 1970s.
::;- •: Girls basketball - Francine Lewis, a 6-2 all-state senior, has helped
- .Mansfield Malabar to a 16-1 record, Including a 65-54 defeat of Columbus
::; ·Northland. She had 32 points and 20 rebounds In that game. She now has
::' :2,006 points In four seasons. Ohio State, Kentucky, Indiana, North Carolina
:; :state, Old Dominion, Louisiana Tech and Long Beach Staff&gt; are recruiting

:=. ·:

,

=

:
;
l
I

Top Class AA
lineman will
attend OSU ·
By Associated Press
His coach says touted Young·
stown Mooney center Bob Maggs
will attend Ohio State because It lui·
fllls a childhood football dream.
"He's always been an Ohio State
fan, a fan of Woody Hayes," Coach
Don Bucci says of the &amp;-foot-5, 255pound Maggs, The Assocla ted
Press' Class AA State Lineman of
the Year.
"And he feels he can play early
there. He has theabUityto play anywhere on the offensive line. He
played center this year. He played
tackle last year. And he can play
guard, too, because of his running
abtllty," Bucci said.
Bucci, Mooney's coach since
1961, ranks Maggs with 1981 Michl·
gan AU-American tackle Ed Mu·
ransky, .Jerry DIOrio and John
Lucente as the greatest linemen
he's had. DIOrio currently plays for
the Wolverines and Lucente for the
Buckeyes.
Ohio State, however, lost another
blue chip player Tuesday night
when Cincinnati Princeton tight

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - For·
ward David Jenkins, whose perfor·
mances helped Bowling Green Into
the sole lead, has been named the
Mid-American Conference Player
of the Week In men's basketball.
Jenkins, a &amp;-loot-5, 195-pound sophomore from Warren, Ohio,
scored the winning basket with two
seconds left and 18 points In a 63-61
decision over Western Michigan
Wednesday. He had 25 points In an
80·79 overtime victory over Central

r:seven osu recruits
-·
·-·~ in north-south tilt

- ·· CANTON, Ohio (AP) -Seven of
=:
::; :Ohio State's recruits, Including
:;: ;Players ' of the Year Keith Byars
- '8.nd Bob Maggs, have been selected
play In the annual Ohio North·
·:: :~uth AU-Star football ~arne next

:::: :to

= ·summer.
:- ;; Secretary-Treasurer Lou Ven·
: :dlttl of the sponsoring Ohio High
:~ :School Football Coaches Assocla·
:: ;tlon announced the 33-man all-star
:aquads Tuesday for the contest Fri·
::.: 'day night, July 23, In nearby
The game matches the outstand..
lng Ohio seniors from the previous
football season.
The Buckeyes' recruits are de!·
enslve tackle Daryl Lee of Columbus Marion Franklin, defensive
end Byron Lee of Columbus Eastmoor, linebacker Mark Pfister of ·
Upper Arlington, running back :
::: Barry Walker of Lancaster and By- .
:: ars, The Associated Press' State .
;:: ,Class AA Back of the Year from

DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

443-C Locust St., Middleport

end Arnold Franklin anno\IIICed he
had chosen North Carolina over the
Buckeyes, UCLA, LSU, Purdue
and Notre Dame.
Princeton Coach Pat Mancuso
said of Franklin, the ·AP's Class ' ·
AAA SUite Lineman of the Year:
"He llked the situation and the
coaches at North Carolina. He says
he feels comfortable there. And he
wanted to go to a school which
needed tight ends."
Franklin, with 4.&amp;-second speed
In the 41J.yard dash, "played running
back In junior high school before
becoming a tight end and line- ·
hacker for Princeton.
"He has all the tools to be a great .
one," Princeton Coach Pat Mancuso said of the &amp;-3, 228-pound
Franklin. "He's big and has excel·
lent control of his body because of
basketball. But the biggest thing Is
his abtllty to run with the football
alter he catches it."
Maggs' commitment raised tci 22
the number of recruits the Buck·
eyes ha~e· landed. They want to
sign about 25 players this winter.

VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES
CHILDREN'S VISION
Mon. }
Thurs.
Fri.

-~

9to12
and
1to5

•

Examinations by
Appointment, Other
Examination Hours
Available by Request

1 to 5
and
6 to 9

Tues. }
Weds.

PH. 992-6545

1-----;_--------------'--""""":"

lUTHI

-·
----*•

~

•

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--·

Michigan Saturday.
The two triumphs pushed the Fal·
co~· record to 7·3 for a one-half
game lead on second-place Ball
SUite In the Mid-American race.
Meanwhile, Eastern Michigan's
Laurie Byrd was selected the
league's Player of the Week for the
women's sport. The senior guard
from Flint, Mich., had 24 points In
an 81·56 beating of Kent State and
added 32 points In an 83-74deleatby
Central Michigan.

Pickens Hardware

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A DlviJioaoiMu.ltfmedil, Ia~ .

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

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The Daily Sentinel

Member; The Associated Preas, Inland Dait
ly Preu AuuciaUQn and Qle America,.
Newapaper Publishers Association, National
Advut!Jins Reyresentatlve, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Th!.rd Avenue, New
York, New York 10017.

FASHIOit'

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BAKEWARE

I

Publl.!lhed every afternoon, Honday thrOU(!:~
Friday, 111 Court Street, by the Ohio VaUe~
PubllJhlng COmpany • Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992-2156. Second clau
postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

DElli

SEPCIIL ISS ...TIEIT

By Carrier or Molol' R01k
Out!: week .... . ... . .... . ............ tl.OO

Dayton Roth, lor the South and run·
nlng back John Wooldridge ol Ak·
ron Central-Hower and Maggs,
Youngstown Mooney's Ohio Class
AA Line man of the Year, tor the
North.
Byars, a 6-foot-2, 225-pound all·
sports star, gained 1,662 yards for
Dayton Roth last fall . He also plays
for the school's basketball team
and Is a prtrne baseball prospect as
a hard·hlttlng outfielder.

~·

UDIES' .

CORN
lEAL

Ctn.

--.-.

45!

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PIIOU 1001
tillS, FEB l1
TIU SIT
·FEI .13, WIIIU
QIIITinES UST

POSTMASTER; Send addrtSB to The Daily
Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,Ohlo45769.

~ "
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. The Daily Sentinel' Page-s

FAMILY
.PACK
CHICKEIS.

Jenkins chosen as player of week

IUSPS I ...IIO)

:(II'

James L Schmoll, 0.0.

WIITE .

:=: :her.

:':. : · Sarah Evans, Gallipolis: 16-2 all-state senior center, posted a school·
::- record 40 points, breaking ner own mark of 38 points for a single game.
:: Mary Weisgerber has beCome Newark's second girl ever to surpass l.(XXl
- career points.
:::: · Bellefontaine lias won 19 straight girls games, led by 5·10 junior centf&gt;r
:. :Lisa George's 25.1-polnt average. Kristy Brown has berome Ridgeway
all-time scoring c hampion with 1,330 points.
.,::-:. . :Ridgemont's
.

Pomervy-Middleport, Ohio

1982

TOMATO JUICE

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The Daily Sentinel

Tigers defeat Kansas
.

'

•

By The .Bend

'

B)' Tbe Aaoooclated PreM

··For more than eight minutes In
Kans,as, Missouri couldn't do anytlllna with the basketb;ill. But for
I)'IOI'ethan 17 minutes In New York,
Cain was able to do anything he
YIJIIIted with lt. Manhattan's .Tim
·Cain, the "confidence man," that

t8. '

; ~ Missouri , countering Kansas'
~ defense with a slowdown
~. didn't score a point In the
·ftnaJ 8\2 minutes Tuesday night.
But the fourth-ranked Tigers' de-.ffnse allowed just three 'points In
-that stretch, swiping the ball in the
:Closing seconds to ptesezve a 42-41
"V!ctory over the Jayhawks. It was
the only game Involving a ranked
team.
Cain, a 6-foot-7 freshman forward, scored Manhattan College's
: .first 19 points In the second half as
;tile Jaspers, tra!Ung 23-20 at the In·
. ;terrntsston, ran away from Prln·
'ffton ~-39.

• Missouri's Ricky Frazier, recov• 11rtng trom the fiu on his 24th birth·
: day, scored a game-high 20 points

.

- Including 10 of the Tigers' 12 In
the second half.
1be game's biggest play belonged to Missouri's Steve Stipancr
vlch.· AB the Jayhawks looked for
the potenUal winning shot In the
waning moments, the ball was
slapped away and, after a scramble, Stlpanovich came up with It
just seconds before the final buzzer
sounded. MisSouri Is ~1 overall
and 9-lln the Big Eight Conference.
Kansas Is 12-9 and 3-6.
Marquette, 16-7, survived St.Bonaventure's slowdown tactics, .
beating the Bonnles ~. Freshman Terry Reason's layup with
4:28 to play put the Warrtors ahead
to stay at 34-33, then GleM Rivers
hit lwo baskets tq seal the victory.
Rlch Fetter had a hot second half,
scoring 17 of his 19 points as Penn
State wiped out Duquesne's 16polnt lead and defe!l~ the Dukes
74-69. Bruee Atkins scored 23 points
!or the losers.
Curtis Green scored 20 points and
Southern Mississippi withstood a
late North Texas State threat to de-

feat the Mean Green 75-68. Southem MisSissippi saw It's 15-polnt
lead shrink to five In the t1nal
minute.
Yale JOOk the lead In the IvY
League race with a 74-65 victory
over Brown, spurred by Junior
guard Steve Leondls' 20 points. 1be
teams had been tied atop the league
with 4-1 records before the game.
Brown's Ira James scored 14ofhts
team's first 16 points - but was
held to just slx points In the second
half.
Charlie Smith and Nigel Uoyd
combined for 50 points as U.S. Internailonal rallied to beat Boston
University ~Uoyd scored 16 of his 24 points In
the second halt. Smith also scored
16 of his game-high 261n the second.

Social Calendar
WEDNESDAY

THE AFTERNOON Circle of
Heath United Methodi&gt;t Church
TilE RUTLAND Silver Circle will meet at 2 p.m. Thursday at
Club will hold a fr~e' blood pressure the church.
clinic Wednesday, 12 noon to 1 p.m.
at the Center on Hill Street. The
Friday
clinic is open to the public and will
be conduted by Barbara Van Meter,
A DINNER will he held Friday
R.N.
evening at 7 p.m. at the Eagles
REGULAR meeting of the Club. The Ladies Auxiliary is
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club will hosting the dinner.
he held Wednesday at noon at the
Meigs Inn.
A ROUND and square dance
will he held at the Senior Citizens
REGULAR MEETING,
Center in the multi-purpose
Pomeroy Chapter 80 and Bosworbuilding on Friday, 8 to ll p.m.
th Council 46 , Wednesday
The
public is invited.
.evening; full opening practice in
Royal Arch and Past Masters
Degrees loj inspection.

half.
Davjd .Lardner came oft the

bench to score 18 points- breaking
Temple's zone defense by hitting
nine of 12 jump shots - as Penn
turned back the Owls 59-56. It was
the Quakers' fifth consecutive vic.
tory following their school-reci&gt;rd
nine-game losing streak.

·Bossy MVP tn all star tilt ·
played.

'

But In view of all the furor over
recent dirty trtckson lce,lt was per·
haps fortuitous for the NHL that
nice guy Mike BossY was the Most
Valuable Player as the Wales Conterence defeated the Campbell Conterence 4-2 Tuesday night.
Bossy, the New York Islander
·who'd rather score than fight,
.pumped In the winning and lrumJ'IUICI! tallies to give the Wales Con• .terence Its sixth triumph In the
. lje\'en years of the current All-Star
•rformat.
Losing coach Glen Sonmor,
.whose Minnesota team Is pushed
around frequently durtng the regu·
,lar season, took special no~ of the
way the game was played,
, · "At this tempo," Sonmor said,
· "we showed hockey to Its best ad·
. vantage. It was an excellent exam·Pie of so many of the best pa~ of
our garne,lnstead of the nonseDBe."

Wayne Gretzky, the high-scoring
whiz from Edmonton Who had one
of the Campbell goals, added something along the same nne.
"You come to a game like this to
have fun and you keep In the back of
your mind, sportsmanship,"
Gretzky said. "A game like this
helps hold all thatotherstuftback."
Only five minor penalties were
called, one leading to a power play
goal by Raymond Bourque of Boston, pulling the Wales Into a 1-1 tie
at 12: 03 of the first period.
That matched a goal by Rick
Valve of Toronto, on 'the first shot
by the Campbells, and Wales went
ahead 2-1 at lJ: 'rl on agoalbyMa'rc
Tardif of Quebec.
Gretzky ' s breakaway goal
forged a 2-2 tie alter 26 seconds of
the second period, and then Bossy
took charge.
·
His tiebreaker, at 17: 10 of thesecond pertod, carne on a backhanded shot which was defiected
past goalle Gilles Meloche ott the
skate of Craig Hai'tsburg, a Camp-

REVIVAL, Syracuse Church of
the Nazarene, continuing through
Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening.
Singers, Ralph and Joann Dun·
mire Evans and Bill Groves. The
Rev. James B. Kittle, pastor, in·
vites the public.

bell defenseman.
Then, at 1:19 of the third period, a
perfect pass from the corner to
mid-lee by Montreal detenseman
Larry RobJnson got Bossy In the
clear for a breakaway goal.
"I think I played a good hockey
game besides the two goals I
scored," Bossy said. "I like to be
recognized as a complete hockey
player, and I did some things out
there that I hope prove that"

Wr being awarded a $16,&lt;rocar
as the MVP, Bossy accepted congratulatl.ons from Roblrtson and
cracked to his teammate: "Twodefensemen helped me, you and
Craig (Hartsburg).''
In addition to scoring on their
first shot on goal, the Campbeils
outshot the Wales 17-8 In the !lrst
pertod but traDed 2-1.
"We looked very much In charge
early,'' said Sonmor, "but It was
just a shot of youth. Then their poise

took over.••

1HURSDAY
SCREAMING REBOUND - KaDBas forward
David Magley (35) lets out a yell and reels back as
Mlsoouri forward Marvin McCrary puD• In a rebouod

beneath his own basket. Tbe play eame In the first baU
of Tuesday night's game In Lawrence, Kan. (AP Laserphoto).

Scoreboard.•.
Basketball scores
Tueeda)''• CoUep BukeUNIIJ Score~
By 'ftle A.Moclatecl ~
Amerlcatl

NMional Hockey Leape
Walea CoaleftiiCI!
PatriCk DIVII&amp;OII

NY lslandm
Phlladelph.l&amp;

EAST

u. Sf., Harvard 66

Cbeyney St. 00, N.Y. Tcch44
Fordham 60, Army 43
rona 19, Utica 57
Manhattan ~ Princeton :D
Pt&gt;M 59, Tempk!: S6
Pl&gt;M st 74. DIM)uesJE m
Sr:.Micbael's 92, NorwiCh 56
St.Pe1er's S8, Fah11cld 48
Towson Sl. 67, Loyola. Md. 66, OT
U_.S. lntemational 811, Bos1on U. 83 .
Ya)e 74, Brown~

NY
"'""""
Plttsburrh
Wash1J11ton

8 20) 21:2 :18

21 26

8 2111 336

15 31

9 200 23Z :II

!!()

m

1 224 1M

9 2ll tTl 67

--

&amp;rtronl

"""""" """""""'

22 17 16 ~ 199 al
2S 26 4 2lk 1J37 54
:1) 23 11 2fll 2311 51

MI........
St. loub
Wlnn~

a;

OUcago
Toronto
Detroit

'
MlDW!SI'
Marquette 40. St.Bonawnture ~
Mluourl .cl, Kansaa 41
iiOLTIIWI!liT
S.Miulllllppl 75. N.Tex.as St. 68
.... WI!IIT

21il'l:fli&amp;1

21 20 9 2!tl 228 63
16 24 13 182 22.1 ~

Quebec

Charleston, S.C. 88. Voorhees 83
Shaw 110, Norfolk St. '"'· 20T
West GeorJia !n', AUJ(Uita ~

~

29XI
2:i 21

31 11
29 11

lblton
But!alo

Ala.-Huntsville !l!t, Talladep Tl

WLTGFGAPtl
34 13 G 2U 172 74

Adanw DIVIilloo ·
J1 ll ll 256 158 74

Mootreal

soum

2e 156 50

26 10

16 'l7 13 '119 z:l

~

1629101"~-12

Sm,ytlle IM\'116on ,
35 13 10 :Ill :125 Ill
Edmonton
~ :H 13 :l25 246 5.3
CaJtiary
VancouVI'r
18 26 lJ ISO 200 tT
1!i2911217:.U
Leo .......
11 36 9 llli 257 ll
Colorado

E.New Mexico '18, Panhandle St T1

n.e.da.J'• o.me

S.Cdorado 00. Colo.Mines 53, err

........ o ....

At l.ADMY_., tfd.

WaiH Conference 4, Campbell Confer~•

Pro standings

................
WL

"""'"
Wu"""""'

Phlladelphla

Pd.

33

14

.'IW

11

2&lt;~

.479
.449

12

3.1

14

.702

-

21
19

21
26

.01
.422

121h
13

...............
~

22

.638
.m

HOOJston

25

22

.532

5

Ut.ah

15

31

.326

H'n

KArwu City
Dallas

Ci

31

32

.Jl9
..JH

~

H

Wales Coaference goaUe , Tue~day nlgbtln the 34111 ADDual NHL AIJ.Siar game
Mlcbel Dlou olthe Ptllllburgb Peagullls gelti set to stop In Landover, Md. Wales Conference Barry Beck of the
shot by CampbeU Coaference's Dave Taylor (dark jeJ'o New York Raqen helps oul on the play. (AP Laseroey) of the Loo Angel"" Kings during flnl pertod acllon photo).
Nor THIS TIME -

-

5

~If.!

.123

1\1

.7le

l'l&gt;rtlaod
Gokiea State

2'i

19

.578

'1

2&amp;

M

.M.5

san
""""""'

~

21
J.t

.m

1¥..
9

.292

:IJ'n

'llllnlaT• Game.

Colden Stall! at NY
Oevelind It Pl;!trolt

Pontand at MUwaula!e
Seattle at HoultOn

'n

" Akron

N. 88. Young. .East 81

Avon Lake 57, A\100 &amp;.1, CTr

68. Newton Falll ~

BarbertOn 73, Cleve. Kennedy

I

Young lady Lancers ;
roll over Eagleettes '
Federal Hocking's Junior t-llgh
girls' basketball team rolled to a~
victory over Eastern alter a clpse
first half. Eastern drops to3-7.
Eastern played good defense the
first half of the game, trailing 4-2 af·
ter the first period, then trailing 13-6
at the half. In the second half
Eastern couldn't get its offense
rolling and couldn't stop the f4slmoving Lancers, the score 2&amp;-8. ;
Miller led F. H. with eight points,
Burdette had seven, Frashler six,
SiMett two, Flowers two, and WOOd
one. Tonya Savoy and Beverly Wlj!al
each had four lor the Eaglettes. •
Joy · BraMon had 11 rebowids.
Eastern shot two out of nine from ihe
foul line.

~

Transactions

Buckeye Vat 40, Col Academy .18
CimpbeU·McrnorW 15, Strutbtrs 48

uo

Carey !18. Mohawk M, 01'
Arllehon 58. Milford 4:1
O n. LASalle· 56. Cln . Walnut HWs

an.

.,. fte A•dded Pre.

......... ._....
.........u.

CHICAGO WHITE SOX-signed Wayne
Nordhqen, outf\elder, to a one-year coo~

011. St. Bernard 73, Lockland 63
On. PurceU. 48. Falrfteld 4f.
Columbiana Creotv1eW 60, Stanton

,.

Moi'J&amp;ft and Bob

I!I.J:Klllr'l.
Local

Clranl ,., Broolt1leld Ol
Grand VaL 10, Br1atol II. 301'

. plleto) •

,.

~

El\lk recloN.I ICOUtirw

P001'IIAIL
NMMNI Foehll Leape

1
I

'

BALTIMORE COI..'J'S-Named Bud Car·
son defftl!iw coontlnatoi"; Hal Hunter d.·
fenslve line ccach; Gunther CUnntncfWn

nnstme Ill

O.y. Jetfer1011 88. Day. Carroll 61
Ea!iUake N. 84., Ma&amp;lon M
Eaton 5l Arcanum 4!i
Ed~ !il, PMtlJv1lle tT
Fairbanks 6'1, W. U~·Saltm 62,
FalrYicw Park 87, Columtia 6C
Flrelandl 6&amp;, S. ~ !I
Fn!derlcktDWD :16, Ml GUNd :J6

~

1

TORON'J'O BLUE JAYs-Named W,1yne

Cont.lnental 61, Co.lwnb.ll Grovt 51
Cqjey M , Akron

met.

defenstve UlY coach; Rick Venturt Une-bockl&gt;r coach. and Rlcban:l Mann recetv·

ar

m

ooaclt

1
HOCilEl'
Nalll»ftaa Hockel' Lape
I
HARTFORD WHALERS- I

.....,81'00

ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE,
7:30p.m. Thursday at the hall.
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapter will meet at 7:45p.m. Thurs·
day at the Riverboat Room of the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co .
A MEETING of Alcoholics
Anonymous will be held Thurs·
day at 7:30 p.m. at the Community Mental Health Building.

A ceremonial will he held by
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, Friday, 8 p.m.
Dues are payable, and potluck
refreshments will be served.
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 1:30 p.m.
at the Meigs Inn. Members are to
· take quilt tickets.
MARY SHRINE 37, • White
Shrine
of
Jerusalem,
ceremonial; 8 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Emma Clatworthy. Twila
Childs will be the c~hostess.

Announcements
.
'

Revtvtal sevtces are betng held at
the POMEROY Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Harrisonville Road,
through Sunday. Rev. Marshall
Smart of Greenfield, Ind. Is the
speaker. Rev. Earl Fields, pastor,
Invites the pubUc to attend.
American Legion Post 39" will

the group or at Harold Newell's Ser·
vice Station in Chester or SwisherLohse Phannacy in Pomeroy.

Pomeroy .Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, wiU
hold its annual father-son banquet
Saturday at 6:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy ~asoni~ Temple ..
There w1ll be dinner mus1c and enhost Buckeye Boys State represen- · tertainment following he dinner will
tatives and some supertntendents be
·dtid b Bob Sa

~~ ~~ools t~o~":u!"~~~:eUng ~o~~ster ~asons !~~ their sons

pos pe will be
yed 1 7
A c hlll
sup
r
serv
with Co
nde Ge ldaE
ko~t urging me~be~ato at:
tend. On March 7 the spring conference wUl be held at Junctlon City,
I d the
and on March 16 , theposan
auxiliary will celebrate the legion's
birthday with a supper at the post
home.

rn:::

or fathers are mv1ted as well as sonl'k
1 e or father- like f'1gur~s. T'1ckeIs
fo~ adults are $3.75 and $2.50 for
ch1ldren under 12. They can be
reserved to be picked up at the door ,
purchased from any Mason or from
F nkS'
Mlk Wlk
A
-ra . •sson . or
e a er.
steak dinner Will be served.

The Pomeroy Health Care Center
will
have an open house and roCk 'n
A Valentine bake sale will be held
Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. at roll jamboree on Feb. 1_2 from 2 to 4
Gaul's market in Chester by the p.m. Entertainment will he by the
Chester United Methodist Church. Francis Andrew Band. RefreshProceeds will go towards a new out- ments will be' served and the public
is invited.
door bullelln board.
Anyone having any items to conEAST MEIGS - . The Eastern tribute to Mrs. Lucille Murray
District Band Boosters will stage a whose home was extensively
Valentine dance from 9 p.m. to 1 damaged by fire last week is asked
a.m. Saturday at Royal Oak Park to call992-7460. Needed are women's
with music by the Gary Stewart ; trousers, size 18 and size 40 shirts,
Band of Point Pleasant. Tickets may and boy's clothing, 31-33 trousers
be purchased from ·any member of and mediwn shirts.

4strograph

l'UMdiQ'I 8portl TraziMdiolw

an. Mcl'ilebolu ro, an. Moeller 67

(rtght) oullllde Fl. Lauderdale'• Yaalee sladlam
Tuelolay 8fter 1be trio ftP01 led eu1f. te IJIIWI'lralJiiDC
per Georse ~~ lllvllatlell. lAP Laler-

')

Mar.::ltl'll~r

Akron Spring. 5'1, Akron EUet :II
Alexandtor n, WI!UJIDn 60
Austlnlown-Fitch 40, Wamn Harding :li
Badger

Top seeded New Lexington, 14-3,
· drew a first round bye in the Class
AA Sectional girls' tournament
scheduled to begin Monday, Feb. 15
at Athens High School. Belpre, 11'15, ·
will meet Sheridan, 5-11, in the 5
p.m. game that night while Alexan·
der, 4-9, meets Meigs 1()..7, at 6:45
p.m.
j
In the 8:30 contact, Warren Local,
14-3, plays Nelsonville-York, 1~.
The winner of the Belpre-Sheri!lan
game meets New Lexington on FFb.
22 while the other winners tang!&amp; at
7:30p.m. that night.
!
Championship game for the tollrnament is scheduled Feb. V. The
winner ad.vances to the Pistrict at
Athens High School 'beginning March3.

Cimbrkll!l! fll, Sl. Clatnvllle 56
C.n!Jeild !17, Salem !16

See.tue 11\1, New York lUJ
Houswn 129, San Dteao 121
WednlldQ'I G.mes
Detrott at New Jeney
Indiana at iJtllladelphla
Port1&amp;nd at Oevel&amp;nd
Atlanl.a at Chlcaio
Wash!JiitOn at oauu
Lea Angw!let at Kansas City
Utah at Drrmver
Boston at Phorntx

Tllledrre.

Akron CowntJy 5:l, Akron

13

'hee&amp;IQ'• Q~ome~

-·-

man SeMG~ Bop lla*edd

By'n.t •

ll

~

.

-

34

U. Anilf!'lel L11, Atlanta U7
Mllwaun 1-. lndlana 101
DetrUt 128, CI\Dao m, OT
w~ 112. StQ An10No
Utah 123. Gokterl Stall! lOT

'

High school
scores
Ol\kl

11

1f,

New York lllaOOen at Chicago
Washlngtoo at Calgary
Q.lcbet at Los Angeles

15'n
2l'n

:1&gt;

LcoAoaeteo
""'""'

P1tl!buJ1h 111 Montreal
Boston at MiMHOt.a

l3'n

Pac:UicDI~

'

..

13 ~

[)@tnj,l
Atlanta
Indiana
Chlcqo

Diego

GETI'ING RfflBED- New York Yankees' reUef
plteber Ron Davia (c:ealer) lake~ IODie Ileal for bla
. "AllSiar" T-tblrt from leaDUUte oecoocklrln&amp; o:a~
: . · cber8afi1Ji'~(left) udballpeaCGIIebJelfTOI'berl

1~

u~

Milwaukee

San Antonio
Denver

•

Buffalo at Ph.lladelphla

.e

:11 28
.m
18 :1)
.3'15
OeYeland
11 ~
.239
WESTERN CONFERFJIICE

•

New York Ranprs at St.Loolll
'lburiiiQ'I Game~
Vancouvet" at Detroit

OD

:m -

Marauderettes
face Alexander

I

VancouVf!T 111 ThrmiD

.111~

11 25
Zl 71
Cftltnl DlvWon

New .lf!f"M!)'
New York

W~IGUMI

Hartford at Pltt&amp;burah
Wllmlpeg at Bulfalo

Nadonal BMIIfibal ~
FAift'ERN CONFERENCE

I

Wednesday, February 10, 1982

·Page-7

•

LANDOVER, Md. (AP) -It was
a National Hockey League All-Star
game, so It figured to be cleanly

The Daily Sentinel

Mkhel Galameu, center, to Blnat\amton .
cllhe Aml!'r1can Hockey Leape.

February 11, 1981
Your ablUty to make and win new friends will be greatly enhanced
this coming year. There's a possibility you'll move with an entirely
new social group. However, this does not mean you'll desert old pals.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. lll) You could get some encouraging
news today pertaining to an interest that you have with another who
resides ala considerable distance.
PISCES (Feb. %0-Mareb Zll) Your instincts and h:mches on ways to
get ahead competitively should prove to be the pluaes which will pU:t
you in the victor's circle today.
,
ARIES (Mareb Zl·Aprll 19) Not only are you able to grasp the
essence of ideas quickly tod8y, you should also be able to show others
how to improve upon that which they conceive.
TAURUS (April 2&amp;-Mary ZIJ) You're nol likely to be content with
the status quo today. If you find conditions not to your liking, you'll
know how to make constructive changes.
GEMINI (May 2l.J1111e Zll) Take advantage of any opportunities
today to go where you can meet some new people. You may establish
relationships important to your future.
CANcER (JUDe Zl.July ZZ J Difficult tasks can be greaUy sinJ.
pllfied today If you'll take Ume to think them through before starting.
Examine your chores ~evJ!I'); JJ18Ie., .
LEO (July 23-Aug. ZZ) Even though it may not appea~ so at the
Ume, an unusual development today will later prove to be a lucky
break. Don't make hasty judgments.
VIRGO (Aug. za.&amp;pl. ZZ) Gains could come to you today through
two unrelated channeiB. One has been profitable previously, the other
wiD he a brand-new source.
LIBRA (Sept. ZS-Oc!l. Z3J Keep your schedule as flexible as
possible today. Something fWl with your friends may pop up In which
you'll want lobe able to participate.
· SCORPIO (Oct. Z+Nov. ZZ) Som~ may give you infonnation
today to put you on the track ot a bargain regarding a speclaJ item
you've felt was priced too high. •
SAGn"rARIUS (Nov. ZS.De.!. Zl) U you're Involved socially with
friends today, come up with Ideas for doing something dlffeent. They'll
appreciate suggestions tor change~ in the routine.
.
.
CAPRICORN (IJec, ZZ.Ja Ill Should an oppot tnnlty present I~
self today, be prepared to move swiftly. It could be of a fleeting nature.
[)on'tdaUy.

FHA plans membership party
The Southern FHA Hero Cl&lt;~tptt•r
is participating in the observance of
Nalional FHA/HERO Week as a
part of National Vocational
Education Week.
Across the country FHA/Hero
Chapter of Future Homemakers of
America are planning activities
focusing on the theme " Future
Homemakers of America, Join Us
and Grow With Us."
The FHA is one of nine vocational
education youth organizations. A
part of home economics curiculums
through grade 12, it provides
meaning and motivation for youth
working toward educational goals
related to consumer home
economics and vocational home
economics education. It reaches
beyond classroom instruction into
the home and community.
During this week the local chapter
will he having several special activities including a membership par·
ty. Members of the chapter are
Charlotte Eakins, Elsie Roach, Judy
Kiser, Mary Evans, Patricia
Pauley , Brenda Heck , and Lois

Frank. Pam Holcomb is the adviser.
Future Homemakers of America
has 12,500 chapters and a national
membership of ·395,&lt;ro. Members
belogn to two types of chapters. FHA
chapters place major emphasis on .
conswner education, homemaking
and family life eduqtion combined
with exploration of jolls and careers.
Hero (Home Economics Related Occupations) Chapters place major
emphasis on preparation for jobs
and careers with recognition that
workers also fill multiple roles as
homemakers· and community
leaders. Both kinds of chapters emphasize growth of the individual
leadership development, citizenship
and the dual roles of career and
homemaking for men and women.
Founded in 1945 and -located in
Washington, D. C., Future
Homemakers of America is currently undertaking a $2 million lund
raising campaign lo build its own
national headquarters and leader·
ship center. A move to Reston, Va. ,
19 miles outside the nation's capital
is planned lor next summer.

SOU111ERN FHA/HERO CHAPTER - These Southern Chapter
memhen ol the FUA/HERO Join this week In the ohaervance of National
FHA/HERO Week as a part of Nallonal Vocallonal Education Week.
Memben, front, lell to rtghl, are Mary Evans, Pam Holcomb, adviser,
and Palrlcla Pauley, and back row, Charlotte Eakins, !';Isle Roach, and
Judy Kiser; Brenda Heck aod Lois Frank, both memben of the Chapter,
are not pictured. Thi• week a membenihlp drive and party will be among
the acllvllles.

Valentine projects meeting topic
'

A prayer and self-denial service
was conducted by Mrs. Nan Moore
at the Monday night meeting of the
United Methodist Women of the
Heath Church, Middleport.
Mrs. Moore noted that 25,&lt;ro societies take part In the special ser·
vice and explained where the
montes collected go. She concluded
the service with a prayer by Clara

noled that the Afternoon Circle will
meet TIIURSDAY AFfERNOON.
The annual valentine project of remembering shutlns and elderly
people of the community wUl be
held on Saturday .at 1: 30 p.m.
Members are asked to take COOkies
or candles to the church for that.
Mrs. Joan Roblrtson thanked the
class for Christmas gifts. A mother·
daughter banquet was discussed
and 70 sick calls were reported. A
plano prelude by Mrs. Roblrtson
opened the meeting. Mrs. Bechtle
welcomed the 22 members and the

H. Scott.

· Mri ;:avella Bechtle presided at

the business meeting announcing

the World Day of Prayer service to
be held on March 5. Reports were
given by the circles and It was

group sang "Amertca", gave the
pledge, and then heard a patrtotlc
poem by Mrs . Bechtle. Mrs. Vicki
Houchins gave devotions taking
scripture from Psalms and Kings .
She read a poem, "Things lp be
Thankful For." Seventy sick visits
were reported. ·
Mrs. Donna Byer gave an Inter·
esUng program about women In
htstory.She started out with the
Statue of Liberty, mentioning
Queens Isabella and Elizabeth, also
talking about Pocohonas and the
puritans. She talked about the
women and their role In hlstqry and

discussed education of women and
the changes which have taken
place, and then assisted by tier
daughter, Mary, displayed dollS
dressed to depict the vartous educational pursuits. She concluded with
a fashion show of dolls from the
time of the first president's wife to
fashions of the present time.
Prayer by Mrs. Bechtle concluded the meeting. Hostesses.
were Clara Criswell, Pauline Horton, Mae Ketchka, and Genevee
Cheshire with Mae Lambert contri·
buting. A Valentine motif was carried out.

Good health habits may reduce' cancer risk
By S. MICHAEL,
PubUc Information
Chairman
"Oral cancer slrikes approximately 'r/,000 new 'cases in the
United States each year and causes
9,150 deaths," says S. Michael,
Public Infonnation Chairman of the
American cancer Society in Meigs
County. Cancer can affect any part
of the oral cavity, from lip to tongue
to mouth and throat.
It's no secret that good health
habits are ' important where selfprotection against cancer is concerned, and a key word in helping
protect yourself against oral cancer
is moderation. That's because some
of the things we put in our mouths
are irritating. Heavy Uquor Intake
can affect mouth tissues adversely.
Over-i!xposure to the · sun or wind
may he hard to avoid if outdoor ac- ,

tivities form a major psrt of the
day's work or leisure Interests.
However, you can protect lips with
cream or special sunblock
preparations. Moderation is not
enough if smoking is your habit. You
really should stop lor many health
reasons. And cigarette smoking is
strongly suspected of being a cause
of oral cancer because it subjects
mouth tissues to repeated contact
with Irrttants, not only in the smoke
but heat from the burning cigarette
paper, as revealed by the American
Cancer Society.
Three times as many men Y!ho
smoke die of oral cancer each year
as men who don't smoke. In fact, the
combination of heavy smoking and
alcohol raises the risk of oral cancer.
It's up to you to be alert, and keep
an eye on your mouth! II you have a

•
sore that bleeds easily and doesn't
heal; a lwnp or thickening; a red·
dish or whitish patch that persists;
difficulty in cl!ewlng, swallowi~g or
moving tongue or jaws see your dentist or physician promptly. Be sure
and have a regular, complete
checkup by your dentist because at
this time the dentist has an op-

portunity to see if there is any air
nonnal tissue changes and can
detect cancer at an early and
curable stage, says Michael.
For more information on oral cancer call 992-7531, or stop in at the
cancer office, Mulberry Heights,
Tuesday and Thursday, 1 to 4:30
p.m.

Christmas Seal appeal continues
MASON, W. Va. - Recent ligures
from the American Lung
Association of West Virginia
(ALAWV J indicate that donors in
Mason County have contributed
$2,878 during the 1981-82 fiscal year,
which ends March 31. Figures
reflect income from all direct mail
campaigns, which include the
Christmas Seal campaign still in

progress, according to Sandra French, Program Director, Kanawha
Valley RegionoltheALAWV.
The current total In Masori County
represents 76 percent of the $3,782
contributed by March 31, 1981, French sai&lt;!. She noted that it's still not
too late to answer the 1981 Christmas
Seal appeal. Any contributions will
he used by the ALAWV to fund its
"life and breath" programs.

Health center residents focus of projects
Projects for residents of the
Health Care Center will be
carried out by the Asbury United

Methodist Women of the Syracuse
Church.
Plans for the projects were made

Pom~roy

when the women met recently at the
home of Mrs. Opal Kloes. Among the
projects planned will be remembering the patients on their birthdays. Members will also start collecting gifts to prepare sunshine boxes
for them later in the year.
Members were also asked to save
Campbell sour labels to be taken to
the.dlstrlct meeting.
Devotions on "Hands" were given
by Mrs. Nancy Merrifield. Eighty·
one sick and shut-In calls were
reported . Blessing boxes were taken

to the meeting.
The call to prayer and self-&lt;lenial
program entitled "Open Our Ears;•
Our Eyes, and Our Heart" was
presented by Mrs. Kloes assisted by
Mrs. Margaret Eichinger, . Mrs.
Irene Parker, Mrs. Mary Lisle, Mrs.
Marcia Karr, Mrs. Helen Teaford,
and Mrs. Beulah Ward. Others at·
tending were Mary Cundiff, April
Hannon, Nora Houdashelt and a
guest, Buffy MerrUield.
Mrs. Kloes served a dessert course.

·NOTICE
.
•. ...;.

'f\:4,.,

WXIT TV 5

'

'"

.jll"~'llf'"".:$...(,t ~ .::·i' ''1'r.l:•.;.;i~l'1it;·

SCTV PAID TV
Now meptinl appliutions lor deposit - Station will open this fall. Depos1t
Decoder Ita is $20 - $1 per month Includes HBO, Showtime, WIBS
Atlanta, WXIS Cllanftti 19 It Cincinnati, 2-24-Hour lrlll'lie Channels Out of New
Yon &amp; Chicaco, PTL Club, plus local pro1ra11!mina.

011

We will be operating early this fall.

$8.00 Per Month
Plus $20 Deposit for Decoder Box
FACE OF A WINNER - C11ampfea lit. AllllreJ J)nl_.. ol
Eltdoa ~*" w1111
....._lifter~ Belt Ill ShoW ta 111e wenDitDiter Keael Club lbow at New YOrt;•a Madk011 Square Gardea

'*

Tuelolay nlgbl. ( AP l.eaer]MtoI.

H intemted in this .SIIViu call before 5:00 p.m.
&amp;i 4- 25t;.l510

Box 95, Rt. 1, Crown City, Ohio 45623.
.,

�;r

Page

8

The Daily Sentinel

Not all vets are walking time bombs
BY HELEN BOTI'EL

Be glad to:
DEAR HELEN:
May we hear from Vietnam j.:OrnSo much has been written about bat veterans who have survived the
Vietnam combat veterans as peace - and also from those who
"walking time bombs" or spaced-in fear they may not. We need your
failures that I'd like to speak for the stories. - H.
other side.
By no means do all of us fit that DEAR HELEN:
description. We came through with
My 50th high school reunion is
scars, physical and mental, but coming up and I'd like to make the
we're whole, sane, and not to be wat- trip.
ched and feared if we'd go berserk at
But I don't want people· in my
any moment.
present location knowing that I'm 68
I don't like what I saw or what I years old ! It isn't entirely vanity : If
had to do in those reeking jungles, you're still working, as I am, age is a
but I'm not letting it ruin my life. stigma. I'm consldered 50ish"
Yes, there were nightmares at first therefore clients come to me, where
- and a Jot of resentment toward they'd avoid a fema le senior citizen.
civilians who put me down because I Also, my friends are all younger and
did what my government asked. I they think of me as' 'their age.'' I see
was lucky in that I had someone wise no need to tell them differently .
to talk.to. I've never hidden my VietHere's tt.e problem. I understand
nam experience : I put it on job ap- my high school sends out press
plications and discussed it briefly releases when a :;()th anniversary is
with employers to show them I held. Names of those attending
wouldn't go suddenly mad (as some (especially if they're prominent) are
• suspected).
often published in•their local news- • ·Many other vets are like me but papers. It would be just my luck to
:we find it increasingly hard t~ be get a mention.
· - normal when people read all those
How do I avoid this' - SELF·
: : articles and books about 'Nam's
EMPLOYED AT AN ADVANCED
: · heritage of crazies.
AGE
You'd do a service, Helen, if you'd DEARSEAAAA :
. '
: ask other sane Vietnam veterans to
Two ways: Tell your high school's
: : tell how they came all the way back. current principal that you prefer no
• - DEFUSED TIME BOMB
·home-town publicity about thi s 50th
.."_ DEARDTB:
11

.

reunion . And just in case the press
release goes out anyway, ask your
local newspaper not to print it. If the
" Items'' editor is a woman, I'm sure'
she'll understand.- H.
P.S. Let's hope she isn't a gossip!
DEAR HELEN :
I just learned that my husband has
ooen having an affair for the past 10
yea rs. He travels a lot, and his
"other wife"

l~es

on his route. She's

very much in Jove with him, and
claims he's taken so much of her life
that she can't let go.
I've been married to this cheating
liar for 30 years. Now he wants me
just to forget and forgive, probably
while he continues with his home
away from home. (He says he's been
foolish, but can I believe that' )
Is there any hope for a relationship like this' - CONSIDERING
DIVORCE
DEARC.D. :
Your on ly hope is forgiveness
laced with trust. Nei ther seems
likely in your present state, but
professional counseling for both you
and your husband might change
things. Call the Family Service
Agency in your city.- H.
rGot a problem' An adult subject
for discussion' You can talk it over
Ill her column 1f you wr1tc Helen Bottel, in care of this 1iewspa per. )

Mindy Diane, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Aeiker., was recently
honored on her third birthday at her
home in Middleport. Cake and ice
cream were served to, her grandmother, Mrs. Violet Lee, TaJl11lly,

'
allergy without actually ingesting or
allergic to the material · scratched
injecting some penicillin. However,
onto or injected into the skin.
now
approved for investigational
However, care must be taken with
use
is
a penicillln antigen for direct
this test since the reaction seen on
skin
testing.
It is hoped this same
the skin may not necessarily mean
method
.
can
be expanded to
the sensitizing agent is producing
diagnosins
and
managing patients .
the running nose, asthma, or skin
with other medication allergies.
disease. There are newer tests to
check for agents causing allergies, r-;;;;;;;;;;;!~~;;~;;;;jj
but they are more costly and more
technically comple•. These tests invalve drawing some of the patient's
blood and analyzing it for specific
immune proteins, or antibodies to
FOR'AU. OCCASIONS
the particular offending allergen.
A fairly common allergic reaction
which frightens both the patient and
the physician is to penicillin. Until
recently it was difficult to detennine
Ph. 992·6342

Honor

JemyVamey.
.
'
Grode llfte - Jarrod Circle, Juon Circle.

Shonncia Counto, Jenny Domron, Jolm DIU
Hoback, SheUy Wioebronnor, Mayla v ..cham,
Nonnan MatJon, Joyce Pictltnl, JeMI.fer Smith,
Jan WillLMns. .

Grode four - lllr&lt;ild Bird, Amy lboniloo
Kathy lale: Angie Manuel, Aimee WoUe, Trict8
Wolfe, Bl'f!nda 7Jrkle.
·

.

'*" .

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

--

for lilt in
'"'"'run•
l'dld 1'1 lhilld. tt ..,..

_....

'

-iood-.. . .

311-.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
EYetylhlng .yOu buy 11 Krogtt il OU"'"'-' tor VOU'

OHice Hours by A~polntment Only

CALL (614)-992-2104
or (304)-675-1244

•

.

to'-'

1912 • l&lt;1lOGif1 CO. I1'IMS AND l'ltCII
GOOD SUNDA,, I'IIIIIAI' 7, 1'1tttOUGH 'SAf\la&gt;A, ,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~

=-.. . . . ':t.~t.gg~
·

I'UIIIAIY 13, 1112."'

POMEROYANDGALLIPOLISSTORES '

;:::11 . •:.t

......

COSfQJTTll

WlnsaYITHIIIGHf ro LIMil' QUAHmlD. HONIIOLO
roDIAllll.

(liter .

Clke Mix . ''~··

·115 SHilTS Pll lOll

·(-..&amp;1--

IJTIWW . .....

,.....

.r..

five - Shelly Connolly, Todd L.is.\e,

ner.

.

Gl'lde .!lix - Je:rutlfer Arnold, Shllwn Arnott ,
Chris Bael', Ronnie Burkhammer, Wendy F't'y,

Talbott, Kim Slobarl ,

AngieGrueser, ScoUMcPba!l, Wendy Triplett.

Celt c.tter
lllfllll Cl '~·

Mix ....... '~·

Chcollt•

I'Ll

=··

sse

Cnt

c.tt•r2 ,~

Sp•I••HI .. .;, .

69 C

cosr OJTTII

Hot COCM
Mix .... -

.. ...

2

WIOI 01 IXTIA WIDE

Cut Cutter
--~1
N """'

1J....

-'

r.:. . . . ~;: 19

COlT cun11 IH~

s:~~IICU1

cost cun••

rOIIIOII ... Con

.... 11'1 ... .... :

$2

"""" •011 ..

..

COn

Kwikee Brand !
WAFER SLICED
•
Sandwich Steaks.,

AVG.

Whole Fresh
Pork Loin

AVO. WHOLE

18

U.S.D.A. GIADI A FIIOZEN (22-0Z. SIZE)

HOLLY FARMS. U.S.D.A. tNSI'ICTED

'
...

FROZEN MEAT

LIIIT 2 IOXEI WITH COIPON
liMIT DNI COUPON Pll FAMILY

U.S. GOVT INSPECTED
FRESH GROUND

-

..... Ill. ' IIIlA!. Ill. ll, 11112

IIIIICT. TIIIPUCAIIIIlln IIICII TUII

PH . 992.2556
570 W. MAIN ST.

Store Hours:
Monday-Tlwrs., Sat. g.s
Frida, 9-8

!,.

HARTLEY SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO
992-5272

IN THI PIICI

Kroger Meat Bolog• lb.

Doa.

79c

MilS.

It's not a one·time offer. Not a special deal. It's a price cut on all Hefty,
Trash Bags and Tall Kitchen Garbage Bags starting now!
And Hefty did it without cutting strength or quality. Hefty Trash Bags
have a triple-thick inner layer -they're tough enough to ove rstuff ~-so
you can use fewer bags and save money. And Hefty. Tall Kitchen Garbage
Bags have a tough inner security limng that holds even the wettest
kitchen mess without leaking.
So remember next time you go to the store-now Hefty's a greater
buy than ever before'

QUAIIIIS II.UIIONNET

Margarl ne .......... 16-oa.
Plc1.

Country Club
Ice Crea11 .

18

1S C

liiD 01 GOLDIN

3
s
129
~&amp;iliijKic Lv•~ ' 1"
..o•.

..:..

Deotloralt .. .. .. .. . c.n,:
aoaooth
.., pale
f
u-.S119
'T
........ , .... .
Y•lenf..s...

·

·

,..,.77° ,,99°

=
-y . ....:. l;t:,' '4''.
, ..........
'MIII\'AIL ...21) L'1001

•

IXtiA FAitCY. t•IID WASHINGTON ITATE

sse

·

Delclous Apples .... eoch
WIIITI
·s199
Seedless Grapes ..... 111 •
.

$399

Yellow Onions ;... ...... lb.23c

All MftTI MIAT, SUQD TO OIIDER IAEFOID

Turkel·Breast ... ..... lb.$299:
(h;~';eiYI
$299

t;,i;

1110011

INQUDIItii.OZ. CHIU &amp;
CRACICIIIS, WITH IIANS

Brown 'N'
Sene Rolls

i ,lJiGi.' ''' .lb.

fiiiH

•

\

I
)

'•

...

$

:

~
12
Fiesta
Chili ............ Each
•
lAUD
'
Cherry PI8 . . . . . . . . . 22-oa.
$199
Pie

'

10' Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph. 992-2039 or 992·5721
.lit ICCiilt all 011jor cltdit canis .end wirtl

·

Lettuce

$1 09

Pecan Halves .. ....... lb.

ASSOIIIID aao

$299

Iceberg Head

1H'f1Rl

W'rlti

Top Sirloin Steak .. ... lb.

Gold 'N' Pure
Orange Juice 't.-Gol.
Ctn.

88

19

U.S . GOVT. OIIADED CHOICE IONILISS

CALIFORNIA

IN THl ,IIOOUCI DIPT..
TIIOPICANA

;;.,.. Pot Pies hoe;!·. 79c
&lt;M•x.Cif"'rtH-...••
~zan-o..
c
. o on 01nners ... Plc1.
FIIOZIN
SMITH'S
26-oa . $219
Ch erry PIe -.. ... -.. Pie
011 FISH)

· Tail-Less
T-Bone Steak

99 C

Springdale
2% Milk

' '
,

Boneless Boston $229.
Roll Roast ......... lb.
·

U.S. GOYT GIADID CHOICE

Any Size Pk,.
$129
Ground Bee ..... lb.
THORN AI'PLI VALLIY
s·149
•
cl
Ba
1·1b.
Sl1ce con..... .. Plc1.

Diet Pepsi
or .Pepsi Cola

ADOlPH'S DAIRY VAllEY

1
I

I
I
I
I

············•••iilt'-••
DF

-

U.S. GOVT. GIADED CHOICE, liEF
CHUCKAIM

RETUINAILI llt&gt;1rtill .
MOUNTAIN DEW,

II

~a~'HE •: !

itl M6bil 011 Corporation 1982

.'

...... 4s· C

FIIOZEN 100%

"The Way America sends Love"

•
•

......

Cost Cutter

Ma
· ,. .
... 111lw
t
,_

;~:;ri:.;bRICA~
99
Loin Chops .... :... lb.
• ··1-ll.
C
Smoked Picnics ........ lb. 79
$149
Comish Game Hens Eoch
59c
Mixed Fryer Parts .. .lb.

.. ..

~rc~. ~u~lr! Sl~ 9

COif C\mll CUT

" •·
-co .... ... 'Can

SPECIAL
OF THE WEEK

DeTerGenT

o

=. . ·~·29

$

_,.. . .... ..... 1
1
'35
. . .....s9
COlT Cunll UAI.

o

UOUID

S't'f'UP

5299

fnllt.

Frank Vaughan, Americanism
chairman of Drew Websier Post 39
American Legion, was among th~
I ,200 Oh10 Legtonnaires ailending
the annual mid-winter conference of
the . Ohio Department, American
Leg10n, held on Jan. 31 in Columbus.

o

EE" ~!·s399

39 c

COST Cuntl

4

~

Gnu~

Krls\en Pape, Saran PhUaon, Becky Winebren-

11....,.,

19C

COST CUnEI

coPYitoln

you cBn send it ~~.~~w~,~·:U:ou ;
like. Because
no
way to send a love tt:lat lasts th is
Valentine's Day.
·

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

Cost
,___(liter, ........
. D.....r .. .... "'•·

C05JCUTnl

Lovebird Bouquet. Just ca ll or

.' .

MACAIONI &amp; CHilli

11tilftdlon r~ of manufaclur., . " you 1ft not Ntis·
r.d. Krou- will1~ 'f()Ur itiiTI with lhe 11me t,.nd or a
1b6t brlnd 01' ret~,~nd w r purchne priCII .

visit Pomeroy F lower

•

ponette

Stewart.

011
tier ond priced oa low or lower then "no
no- Ieoda". At IC"'Ior you know o•octiy whot
you're ....... wh ... youltur It, not ....... youIt. AiM! - h ond overy "Coat CuHo•" Item Ia ltcockecl
ltr
Sottoloctlon Ouorontoe.

t,_..,,

""

to

when ...,.w., r811eciing U. ...,.. ~bing~ Of I rlinchlck
which will entiat ypu 10 purcl\lillthe ldwrtilld i1.m 11 tt.

Without cutting quality, prices
immediately reduced up to 20%.

.

Grade liz -

four - Shelly Arnold, Chrbti Drum- ·

·""'Y

Look lor the ltrllht yellow IDitol fhrouthout the
atore. low prlcoa on ~uoilty euor011..... preddoy•ln ond doy-out. o...r 100 ..
- a.
Produm with o nomo you con IIUal •"" • ......lty
erodo yeu con coUftt on . PIOducto yeu con ••••""

rMdily 1VaiUb61
NCh Kroger Stor•. 11cepl •
~
do
OUt Of "' .,.,.._,
llem. we -Mil offtf you yOur choice of 1 COI"nPP'Ibit item,

6;de
A
· Medium Eggs ..

This Va lentine's Day, se nd a' giit
of flowers in a gift of love.
The Lovebird Bouquet .
It'S a beautiful f loral arrange·
ment that .comes In an erqulsite
glass bo)( trimmed in brass.
T h is el egant keep· sake is .
decorated with our custom·
·designed lovebirds.
So send a Valentine that will
always be cherished . Th e

BeckyEvana.

Gr~de

field, Chastty JacklJ, Tricla Michael, Chl'll!

Dolly Hill, Jooepb Cooley.
• -:- 111e Syracuae Elementary

EVERYDAY LOW ,RICES ON ITEMS YOU NEED AND USE EVERY DAY

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Announcing a

Send The
Lovebird Bouquet.
v.Ientine's 0.
Feb.14.

Grode"fc:- Rae Lynn Dolley, Nancy Hunt,
Grec Weddle, Suale Sprouae, J . J . Lawrence,
Zelia La'!.*"'_, Tonya Meadows, Juon Quillen,
.......,Sherrl Roulh .
Grade five - Da.m Johnlon, Ryan Evana,

Powell, Lori
Ste"art, Kevin Teaford, JoM Willbuger.'

Green,

Grade lhret - Janws Arldt!rson, Cheryl Papc,

Joetta Piu.lno, Michael RUll.:!t\1. Hobyn Stool.

.

mx

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

l'lUlDIIOSIT

•
•
••

ARK!•. Gleon. . PeW

.

' FRUT ,,..,
.•

:~, ., ., :,;: ,: , .",:' :; :, :.; ., .,;. ;. ;. ;. ;. ;. ;. ;.: .; ., :,.; :; .;: ":' ;. :;. ;.:&lt; .;: .;: ;: .; .;: , ., , J

Love That Lasts.

B~n ~anaWl•

.

f~if~a~pa;t;ie;n~t~h;a;d~a~tru~e;pe;·;n;ic;il~li;n!~~~~;;;;;;;;~~!~

NOW OPEN

Aeiker

.r._
AleyW

ShiM Kincaid David
~. Kim Sp....;, Lori

Junlon - Koilly llaller, ZaDe BeecJe, Nlc:l:

Hlvman. Xlmbtrly Jenkins. Anaela Mills "'""""
Powell.
Grade two - Amber t'wru11int1M. Chris Ebersbldl. Stacy Fry, Scott Usle, Kerri Muneu 1
Ri nee R~J~JSell .
'

Gntde two - JOih111 Codner, Michael Hill ,
G1enda Holler, ROMie Wagner.
Grode tl&gt;fte - llelo!nie Aclaml, JWIIe Beegle,
O&gt;dner, Clitia Hannon. Mlke Kincaid.

- f t, LoU lhle,

Badick, Brian Burl&lt;hamn&gt;er, Cindy Evans.

Grade one - Mark Allen, John Bent!I)•.

Valerie CoMolly, J.eMiter Cro:w, 1iunara

Krllty Jlller,Rod&gt;o!Rooo, llar!lieROUih,SIIjlwn
Wolfe.
•
· ., •

Fllber, Karen Hemsloy Debbie Holler, Jolle

Wolfe.

g.-.de ~ B or •!Jove ln •ll their aubJects to Jle
named to the~ are :
,

CAROUSEL
CONfECTIONERY

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10th

Twilla and Samantha, Teresa
Wisecup and Jeremy, Mrs. Wilda
Hudson, Glenn, Jr., and Danny, Mrs.
Carol Young and Wendi , Mrs. Francis Young, Patricia and Roger, Jr.
Games. were played and gifts were
presented to Mindy.

Grade two - Michelle BrowD, Kellie E~
Mt!tla GoodY, Andy Hill, Jimey Holter, Veleoia
Hunnel, David l.ole, Trava" Petre~ lleJdi Snider

Sthool honor roll tor the Ulird abc wttk.s gtwtil'lll
period hu lJetn aiVlOUI'lcf:d. 1'tlose rna~ing a

Grode ,... - Ana&lt; Oeoli, llklloel Evll\l,
Cln)' Hiolfletd, Vlralnlo Pick..,, Kenny Rizer,

Sophomores - Janie Amberaer, Sam ~
buraey, Jamea Bush, Trevor Cardone, Eric euoare:
. nlncllom. Kevin Cllrhnao, U.. Deem Tony
Deem, Lee otn, Rlllly Ftau, 1'11111 111ni.. nna
- Toay -.ty, -.,. Baei)e,
~--~ J..._, Corey McPholl, Jone
Broon. Mel caadlll, Deolae Deem, Julie . ......t,
Lloda PoU!ttl, Alke IUIIIo, Milly
,Fiau. Kim Follrod, Joo Bob Homoley, Pblllip Stover. DonJtlly
Warner, lllarUe Wolfe, IAren
~d, Jenay Manuel, Ollvor, Kelly Wolfe, Tony Wolfe.
' ~eno . Jay Reel, l'lol 1\00111, Mellnda
Freolvnen - Cl1ris Arnold, Jon Oaito Alon
SalmoN, Rita Slolet', Elalne Smltll, Reoee
Smlill, Rand)o Tucker, Mary Winebrenner, Kent Crilp, Tina Davia, David Elbonbldl, 'Ralph
roll
for the third Tllooe
Iii ·mMinlla
- ........
period
beeniMoonced.
l[nlde
&lt;i B....
or
above In oll thftr llllb~ to be nomed to the roll

If-

I
I

·-·

Tammy Holter,
Shuler.
RACINE - Tbo Soulhom Jli&amp;b School ......

Wolle.

rolls

Klni

H...,_

hu been~. Tllooe moking llrado .. 8
or above in all lhl!tr aubjec.U to ~ named to the
roll are:
Grode- - Heather Hill, Julie Hlll, Nikki
Iale, Eddie Sawyers. Keri Whi1aker, Mepn

SdiOOI-

Tbol'Utland Elemenlory
roll ror
the thlnlllix ......rodin&amp; period .... been ...
I\OYI'K'ed. 1'hOie mallflla 1rade of 8 -or above in
oll their llllbjecll to be ........ to the roll.,.:

James ltuDD. tiruce JOf'VWJn, Kobtrl K.incakl
Bock)~ Lee; bmml Mea &lt;Iowa, Oalr Morrto,
M"'"'l", Unda 0 Brien. 'ln&lt;oy .!!l!!le. Dovid
- · Ton)a Saber, K!We Sellen Lon
Sorouoe. Lon Wanlerl, lllnet1e w-t, Mel

Gnuie five - Sbawn Oiddle, Billy Jones..
Eliza belli Smlill, Melanie VanM-.
Grade Ill - Bridle Jlinol, · l'ltr&lt;ce Circle,

CAKES

FOR THE SEASON

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Dye (Linda Kay Durst) of Lancaster are announcing the birth of a daughter on
Feb. 5 at the Lancaster Fairfield
County Hospital.
The seven pound three oimce infant has been named Billie Joelle.
Maternal grandparents are Mrs.
Mary Durst, Middleport, and Roland
· Durst, Pomeroy . Paternal grandparents are Mrs. Melissa Bynum of
Rockbridge, and William Dye, Sr.,
Parsons, W. Va. Mrs. Bess Durst Of
Pomeroy is a great-grandmother.
The infant has a half-brother,
David Shuler, Middleport, and a
half-sister. Brenda Daye Miller,
Ironton.

"-'oy Middleport, Ohio
RAClNE - 1'bl! Racine ~mentary School

Attends conference

present a positive productive lifestyle that empha sizes the total
development of the Individual.
In addition to · the children 's TV
Show, Faith For Today has a health
magazine and Bible study projects
for boys and girls,

Dye birth

Aeiker birthday

allergic
reactions.
medications
can These
cause reactions
various
can vary from a mild skin rash to
serious respiratory problems. The
methods of treatment also vary
depending on the reaction and the
sensitizing substance. This substance must be identified before
treatment can begin.
Unfortunately, determining the offending substance is not a simple
task for the physician or the patient.
Usually the doctor will take a
careful history to determine the
C&lt;act circumstances associated
with the allergy symptoms. If the
patient has a runny nose and watery
eyes only in August and September
then an allergy to pollens such as
ragweed might be suspected.
In many cases, identification of
the allergen or sensitizing substance
can be substantiated by the skin
testing technique. This technique involves scratching
allergens
onto the the
skin.offending
Within
minutes a raised, reddened area
should appear if the patient is

·Donations to start TV program
program hosted by Pastor and Mrs.
William Fagal of New York City. In
1971 Faith For Today began
producing " Westbrook Hospital," a
weekly series that presently airs
nationwide on more than 160 broadcast and ca ble outlets.
The children's program is an ~x­
citing new venture for the production company. Executive producer
James Hannum says the new
program will be fun and entertaining and at the same time

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor of
Family Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathlc
Medicine
QUEST I 0 N :
Can allergies be
treated
suecesslully?
ANSWER: Before discussing
allergy treatment, it is imSCHRECK
portant to understand what an
allergy is. As mentioned in a
previous column, an individual's
sensitivity to specific substances in
the environment such as fOOd or

Wednesday, February 10, 1982

-roll r... the third Ill ....u tlf&amp;dintr period

Family Medicine

Helen Help Us

Seventh-day Adventists of the
Pomeroy Church are helping a new ,
children's television program with
their offerings on Feb. 13. The yet-tobe-named program is slated for
national release later this year.
Tbe program, which will focus on
positive lifestyles for people, is
being produced by Faith For Today
Television Productions of Thousand
Oaks, Calif.
'
Faith For Today was established
in 1950 with a weekly drama

Wednesday, February 10, 1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

�•
Page

10--The

Daily Sentinel ·

P~-Midclleport,

The

Ohio

.Welfare · ripoff costly
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Welwas taking place or whether admifare cheaters In Ohio pocket rnllnistra tive errors or du plications
: uons of dollars each year, but It 's
were Involved.'
: Impossible to estimate the extent of
State Tax Com missioner Edga r
: their rlp-otf because of the' complex
Lindley agrees.
: tangle or red tape and jurlsdlctlonal
" Tha t person on welfare could
• responslbltlty.
have made $10 somewhere and had
: • Welfare recipients In Ohio can
tax withheld a nd still be entirely
draw !rom several programs:
and perfectly under the law and be
' -AldtoDependentChlldren,fedentitled to wh a tever welfare
. e ra lly and state funded .
they're getting," he said. "By the
-Medicaid , federally a nd state
time you work those things out, you
; tunded.
end up with a very small number of
• -Food Stamps, 100 percent fedpeople ."
: erally funded .
P eople who a pply for ADC benef• - E mergency Assista nce for
Its must complete an application
famllles , fed er ally a nd s tate
showing employment a nd Income,
; funded .
substantiated by payroll stubs. If
• -Adult Emergency Assistance, officials want to verify the Informa' administered and funded by the
tion, they must have permission of
: state and counties.
the recipient.
.
• -Supplementa l Security ln-Welfare agencies are prohibited
: come, entirely funded and admlnisfrom going to the Internal Revenue
~· tered by Social Security.
service because of the 1976 privacy
, -Varlousstate prOilfamslnvolv- l-a w making IRS r e c o rd s
; lng 20 social services, such as proconfidential.
. tectlve services for children, day
State Auditor Thomas F erguson
: care, foster care, transportation
wa nts to use state Income tax re: and housing.
turns In fighting welfare fraud and
• The Ohio Department of Public
has been critica l of Lindley for res• Welfare does not directly adminisIsting the Idea .
ter any program, said Director
"The state tax people match
Kenneth Creasy. Ohio has what he
state returns against IRS returns,"
calls a "county-administered,
Ferguson said. "Then you get Into
state-supervised" system.
technical and legal compUcatlons.
lt's up to county welfare depart- The question Is, 'Does state tax In. ments to determine eliglbUity of reformation become federal tax In·. clplents and Investigate fraud, said
formation•' We don't think It does."
.Jerry Collimore, a department
Lindley says that he has never
" spokesman.
objected to using any Information
The largest amount of money dis"
to fight fraud as long as It's autho· 'irtbuted Is funneled through the
rized by the Leglsalture.
ADC program. During fiscal yea r
"Mr. Ferguson has been critical
1981, a total of $001 mUllan In ADC of me for reasons that are uri,, benefits was distributed among an
founded to begin with," he said.
" average of 573,012 recipients a
"What I have said Is simply we
)'nonth. Pinpointing cheaters Is ala- should adhere to the law. We should
borious task.
not ourselves violate the law In
Some follow-up Investigation Is order to find viola tors because If we
done by the department by matchdo then we're no better than the
.. lng Social Security numbers of
violators."
ADC recipients with Social SecurLindley said the Legislature has
. lty numbers of employers In Ohio,
authorized some provisions that
Creasy says.
perrnlt the use of tax Information to
· "U the number turns up both plaaS!llSt the student loan comrnlsslon
ces, It means that a person was reIn seeking borrowers who failed to
repay their loans.
ceiving welfare and somebody was
Ferguson estimates his depart: (laying him wages," he explained.
Creasy, however, said the raw Inment coold save the state between
formation must be " cleaned up" to
$50 rnllllon and $liO million a year
just In ADC funds If It were permit· Cleterrnlne whether actual cheating

The Daily Sentinel

ted to make a computerized check
of all welfare recipients against
state tax return's, Workmen's Compe nsation and unemploy me nt
benefits .
Creasy said he would be happy to
have any Information If It would
help a ccurately determine possible
fraud .
" I think the Income tax thing Is a
heavy legal and philosophic argument about using Income tax records," Creasy said . ... If we had It
available, we would use it."
Lindley maintains that when the
state begins using the tax structure
for s6clal purposes, It begins to dli·
ute voluntary compliance as well
as administrative efforts.
Ferguson Insists the state can be
more cost-effective In battling
fraud under his plan.
"By doing computerized checks
you can do It relatively Inexpensively," he said.
Ferguson estimates that ADC
fraud costs taxpayers $52.2 mUUon
a year, but Lindley Is skeptical of .
the figure .

Six defe~dants lorfelted bonds In
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clar•ence Andrews Tuesday night.
' · They are Terry Stobart, Pomeroy, $43, wrong way on a one way
streets; Luther Bell, Jr., Crab Orchard, .w. Va .. 543, Illegal turn;
,. Rusty Roush, Hartford, W. Va., $63,
.disorderly manner; Roger Hysell,
' Pomeroy, $45, and Donald Miller,
Pataskala, $46, both on speeding
charges, and Bernard Ralrden,
Hartford, $63, disorderly manner.
' ·

Robert L. Miller, Pomeroy, was
fined $350 and costs and was given a
three day jaU sentence on a charge
of driving while Intoxicated, and
Brian Johnson, Middleport, was
fined $36 and costs, on speeding
charges, and $25, no costs, for fallure to appear earlier In court.
Three men were fined and a
fourth was given a jail sentence
In the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night. ·

Police cite man
following accident
· A car was heavily damaged and
Its driver was fined on charges or
driving while Intoxicated as theresult of an accident on Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, Tuesday.
Pomeroy Pollee said Terry Barringer, ReedsvUle, went off the
right of the road and turned over.
Barringer escaped Injury. He was
fined $350 and costs and was given a
three day jaU sentence In the court
of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.

.F irefighter treated
' Damages were kept minor In two
'fires handled by the Middleport
Fire Department TUesday.
.. The department went to the
Betsy Ross Bakery at 10 a .m.
where a donut fryer caught fire.
Sparks from a cutting torch being
· used on the equipment caught
grease on fire.
. At 11:46 a .m ., the department
went to the Candlellght Inn on
Route 7 below Middleport. Fuel oil
coming from a stove Ignited . There
was only smoke damage.
· Middleport firemen , Elmer
Young, Jr., was treated for smoke
Inhalation on the scene.

Rock-a-thon set
A rock and roU-a-thon wUl be held
. for the public from 2 to 4 p.m . Friday at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center to raise funds for the Meigs
County Heart F1111d Drive.
- Residents of the center will be
I'OCktng In chairs during the period
under sponsorship of the public and
'businesses which will make contributions to the heart fu~d on beha lf
of the participants.
· · The Francis Andrew band will be
on hand to provide music and l'eireshmentswlll be served. The public Is Invited. ·

Rl&gt;ltrnlre, Sue Murphy, Timothy
.Jenkins.

Admitted--Regina Rice, Middleport; Philip Donovan, Syracuse;
Timothy Jenkins, Pomemy; Dottle
J . Sizemore, Middleport; Sarah
Jane Congo, Racine; Ernest Terry
Black, Racine; Alban Salser, Racine ; Seth Wehrung, Pomeroy;
Clarence McDaniel, Rutland.
Discharged-Opal Kauff, Floyd

Schools still out

I

All Meigs County schools were
closed again Wednesday, for thesecond consecutive day, due to an additional snowlall of approximately
one Inch which tell overnight causIng hazardous road conditions to
continue.

Area deaths

Lucretia H. Werry
Mrs. Lucretia H. Werry, 83, 109
Plea sant Ridge, Pomeroy, died
TUesday at Mlarnl Valley Hospital
In Dayton.
She was a daughter or the Ia te
John T. and AdeUne Moore Woodrum. She was a lso preceded In
death by her husband, Charles ,J.
Werry; a son, Albert L. Werry; a
daughter, Emma Kathryn Werry,
two brothers and two sisters.
A member of Trinity Church,
Pomeroy, Mrs. Werry Is survived
by four sons, Harold W. Werry, Gallipolis; Walter Werry, Mason, W.
Va.; John E. Werry, Hemlock
Grove, and Paul C. Werry, Dayton;
a daughter, Margaret W. Phelps,
Dayton.
Also surviving are 16 grandchildren, nine greqat-grandchUdren and
several nieces and nephews.
Services w!U be held at 1 p.m .
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Robert McGee o!ficlatlng. Burial will be In Beech
GroveCemetery. Frlendsmaycall
at the funeral home anytime after
11 a .m. Thursday.

Howard A. Dailey
Howard A. Dalley, ~7. well known
Middleport resident, died at his
home at 15 Dew St., Middleport,

-the 15th day ot February ,
82
196.- Troy House Tr ai le r
19 at1 1o :oo a.m .
0

·

Busmess
•
semces
•

FEBHUARY CLEARANCE
Kiitland Furniture Carpet Shop

~~========~-;:=;;==;:=;;;:;;;:;=:;rr=;;;;,;:=;;;iil~~;:::;r;:=TtTI;~ijiT;~=:;
C R MASH

Sef~a,
~5°0~~~e~ c~~~~·
Item s m ay be sold

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

in
un its or parce ls. Sell er
rese r ves the r ight to bi d
a
annd
d ath11ebr,.digs.h t to r e iect any

BISSEll
SIDING CO

(2l 8, 9, 10, 3tc
Public Notice

•

•

co
· NSTRUCTION
custom kitchens and
appliances,
cu&amp;tom
bathroom&amp;, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

" BeautifuJ, Custom
Buill
1 Garages"
1
·d · ng
Call
or
ree Sl 1
estimates , t49· 28Dl or
949-2860.
No Sunday Calls

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURTOF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RUTH SCHARTIGER, AO·
MINISTRATRIX OF THE
ESTATE OF HOWARD L.

11

Keep This Ad For

,

Futur~efererite

APPLIANCE
.
SERVICE

Buy N1111 &amp; Save $2 • $&amp; ,_ Ylld
2S Rolls C.wpet in stock to plcl """'-::• bKUCI. CQtt IMtltlod fllo llittl

· Good

985·3561

PARTS ANO SE: A'VI CE

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH 99 6011
•
28·20·ffc

3· 1l ·tfc

ALL

MAKE S

ew&amp;,nen

•a•von

lecturer
Hl-3382
Membership
Weekly Class

•"""'

oOI•oo•m

eDi&amp;hW&amp;&amp;Mrs
eHotW&amp; tnhn lu

9 S t1 c

13.50
$2.50
J· l mo.

Sq . yd. installed

Layoffs and the shutdown of the
more profit or look good In the eyes
reduction plant at Kaiser Alumiof their stockholders." lhP lPitPr
num Corporation's Ravenswood
said.
plant were, In the opinion of the
The letter was published locally
some of the employees, an excuse on the same day It was announced
by Kaiser management to weaken
Kaiser had rejected a plan by U.S.
the United Steelworkers of AmerRep. Mick Staton, R-W.Va., deIca union local.
signed to keep the plant open. A
In a recently published Jetter to
spokesman said Staton's proposals
the editor In the Point Pleasant
- which Included delays In utUlty
Register, a Local5668 member vobut payments and tax breaks Iced some of his and other emdidn't answer the production probployees' frustrations .
lems at the plant.
The letter disputes the answers
Kaiser closed Its final potune In
Kaiser has given to the media about
the reduction section on .Jan. 10 afproblems at the plant and claims
ter the local rejected reopening conthe interoffice memo recently cirtract negotla lions.
culated among the employees outThe letter slams management
lines a calculated effort by
for blaming production problems
management to take advantage of
at Ravenswood on the employees,
the present economic distress to exand takes Issue with several points
tract concessions from the union.
In the memo outlining a plan to get
The letter, submitted by .Jack
the Ul_llon to cooperate with the proHesson of New Haven, a Kaiser
posed production slowdown. Conemployee and USWA m ember, aptents of the memo were released In
-peared more than a week ago In the
a story which appeared in the .Jan.
Ravenswood News and In Mon11 editions of the Reg is te r,
day's edition of the Register.
Pomeroy-Middleport Dally Sen"After witnessing actions by this
tinel and the Gallipolis Dally
corporation over the past 23 years It
Tribune.
Is hard lor me to be surprised at
The memo, written by W.H. Cunanything they (Kaiser managediff, Ravenswood Industrial relament) will do to their union emtions manager, contained only the
ployees to make themselves a little -opinions of the author and are not
Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
FOUR SCHOOl
BUSES FOR
M E IGS LOCAL
BOAROOF
.
E DUCATION
Scal ed "proposals w i 11 be
,.ec{'ived by the Boa r d of
Educat ion of the M e iqs
L oc .11 Sc hool Di stri c t of
M•dd teport, Otl iO a t the
Trea surer ' s Off ice unt i l
12 : 00 noon on February 19,
1982 and at thnt t i m e
opened by th e Tr easu re ,- of
sa id Boil rd , tabulated, an d
a r eport tt1er eo f made to
sa id Board at i_
t s n e~ t

company policy, according to .a
Kaiser spokesman.
However, the letter Indicates lt1s
the feeling of USWA members that
management used the depressed
steel market as an excuse to al!!O
combine jobs, create departmentAl
seniority and replace employees
with machines.
The author quotes from the
memo which claims Kaiser employees couldn't decide lor thems elves on what's good for
themselve~ and the company.
"Myself, and almost all workers
at the plant, resent the company
feeUng that we 'don't know what
decision Is best for us.' We also resent the Implication that our lnternatlon~l union officials cannot handle
'tough' decisions on their part In negotiations with the company," the
letter said .
Massive layoffs at the laclllty began last spring, and In an effort to
stave off further job losses, management felt renegotiation or the
contract on seniority and benefit
sections would help. When put to a
vote, the Idea was overwhelming~)'
rejected 'by local membership, and
plans too close the reduction plant
were put Into effect.

sc hed ul ed m eet 1nq as
provided by l nw for four I J)
65 passenqPr sch ool buses ,
ilccord i nq to speci ficaTi ons
of sa id hnMd of f'd ucati on .
Sepilrrtt£'
rt nd
in·
dependent b H'lS w \H be
recei v ed w ith rpspr"r t tn t hf'
c h ~ ss is and bod y ty pr' ~ln d
Will State t hat f h(\ I) US Wllt•n
n~se mbl cd itnd pr ior
l r•
delivf'r y comply Wl t ll n il
SC hOO l
d1str •c t
spr ci f icrt t ion s. ni l s~f f" t y
re qul a tions et nd · curre nt
Ohio Mi n imum St andar ds
l or
Sch oo l Bu s Con ·
st,-uc ti ori of the DepArt·
ment of Education Adop ted
by nnd with the conSent of

--

- - - -·- ·Public Notice
- --··----

Public Notice
------ ----

~

Drr c-ctnr ot Hiq hway
Sil fr t y pur sunn t 1o Sec ti on
4511 76 of th e Oh io Revi sed
( o ( l f' nnd nil ot hc,- per ·
trnent pr ovr s10n of l nw .
Sprcif icnt 1ons nnd i n·
stru ct lons to bi dder s m ay
bf' obl ili ned at tile off ic f' of
the T rcr~su r P r . M idd leport ,
Ohio.
A CNI1I iC'd check Pit Yi'l bi P.
to thf" Trensu r cr of ttlr
flhovP boilr d of cduCf'l ti on
or a sati sfactory bid b ond
r xl"'cutcd by I he bi dder rm d
tile su r ety co mpil ny, In ;~ n
amount cq unl t o t i\le ncr·
cr nt (5 per ce nt) of the b id
snail be subm itted w rth
ri'lc h bid.
f i iC

S.1 1d b OM&lt;I of cdu cn tion
rr. srr vr s t llr. r i qllt to Wfl lv e
ln l or mr~ l i l i cs, l o nccep t or
r f'i f'Cf ilny and all or PM ts
nf c1ny ;m d c"' ll bids.
. No bid s can be w i t h
dr r~ w n for at lc asl thir t y
(30)
d n y s rtfl er
th e
schf' ri'"-' lcd cl osinq t im e tor
n 'cr ipt of bi ds .
M ci qs County Bo!l rd
of EdU Ci'l lion
Jrme Wa gner,
Tr easur er
621 South Tt1i rd
AVf' nue
M idd lepor t . Oh io
45760
61' 992 56'so
(1 1 20. 17 12) 3, i O. 41 c

f-..----------!----------'---------__;..L..________

ed~-~~:crM~' r~~~~de~89~ '

p~~I\~~XLE

In pursuance of the Or ·
der of Probate Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, Ruth
Schartiger, Ad ministratrix
of the Estate of Howard L.
Searls, Deceased, will offer
for Si'ie at public auct !on on
the 17th day of February.
1982. at 10: 00 a .m . at the of licesofFredW. Crow, Ill,
196 West Second · street,
Pomeroy ,
Otli o ,
the
following descr ibed real

angles): thence south 67
deg,
Route13' 20"
No. east2S4
143 at.0Sfeel;
right
the true poi nt of beginning
for the following tr~ct :
Beginning South 38 deg.
05' 40" West 100 feet · then·
ceSouth67deg . 13'26" east
"'5 feet ; thence south 57
~eg , 20' 20" east 175 feet ;
thence north 38 deg . 05' 40"
east 100 feet.· thence north
57 deg. :10' 20" west 175
feet; thence north 67 deg.
"
1 5 1 t t th
.13' 20 eas 2 ee . o e
point
of
beginn
taining 0.46 acre·i ng,
niorecon·
or

Situate in th e Township
estate
of Rutland,
:
County of
Meigs and State of Oh oo, towit :
Beg i nn ing62rodswestof
tr1e northeast corner of Seclion 8, Town 6; Ran ge 1.4,
Ohio Company ' s Pllrchase,
Htencewest20rods; then ce
south 30 1/ • rods i thence
NorH• 71=¥" degrees east 31
to county road ; thence
1 :s4•12 oegrees wesT .)
then ce north 17
"ei~~~~~~ west about 16 rods
~~
01 beg inning, con·
4 acres, more or

1

e'Beed Reference : Volume
253_,_ Page 449, M eigs Countv Parcel
ueed Records
No, 2 .
Situated in ·Sec tion no. 7,

ex cepting ltoe.
ibed
in Sec.r eal
8,
nge 1_4, ~utlaf"!d

b etng
·
road
at
Scipio Township,
eigs
beglnnmg
,n
County,
0 h .10, an d M
norner
of H1e
lot
more
p arti t ularly '"ow'Ln"e'"'d,.b,Siy M . C. and C. F .
as folat
l ows:
described
Beginn i ng
the in· Ran,burn ; ttoence Norn,
f 34
terseclion of the easlline of deg rees west 82 '12 eel ;
a 1.45 acre lot recorded in H1ence nortb 17 deg rees
Deed Book No. 222. Page west 99teet ; ttoence souno
No. 189, Deed R ~ ords of 73 degrees west 80 feet ;
M eigs County, 0hoo and a then ce so\jth 17 deg rees
oint 12 fee1 at right angles east 99feet ; tr1ence south 34
rom the centerlioe of State deg rees east 82'1:! feet ;
··Route No. Ul; thence south ttlenc e norttl 72l~ degrees
83 deg. 40' east east 200 to a east to the place of begin·
, p~lnt; thence so.u th 78 deg .
ning, conta1nin g one· third
UQ' east 208.2 feet to a point acre , more or less .
.;n the center of the south
RE 'FERENCE
DEED :
concrete bridge r a iling (12 Vol. 259, Page 55, Meigs
feet off the centerline ot 5. County Deed Records.
The prem ises are ap·
R. 1.43 at ri~ht ~ngles) i!nd
• the true potnt of beginning praised at SJ,SOO.OO an~
tor the following described must be sold · for not less
... tra ct :
than two·thirds of the ap·
Thence south 67 deg. 13' praised value, and tt1e ter ·
~0" east 254.05 teet ,· thence
ms of the sale are cash in
south 38 de 9. 05' AO" we ~t t.and on date of sale .
100 feet ; thence south 67
RUTH SCHARTIGER ,
'deg. 13' 20" east 25 feet ;
Admin i stratri~e.
thence south 57 deg . 20' 20' '
of the Estate of
east 175 feet ; thence south
Howard L . Sear ls,
'38 deg. OS' 40" wesl
Deceased
(passjng an i,-on pin at 89 .46 (I) 27 (2) 3, 10, Jtc
teet) for a total di~tanc e. of
225 68 feet to an 1ron p1n ;
Card of Thanks
thence north 73 deg . 56' -40"
west 246 .01 teet to an iron
' llin; thence north 21 deg .
16' 10" east 222.88 feet to an
CARD Of THANKS
iron pin i thence north 44
tteg. 40' west 90 .00 feet to an
The Famly of Arthur
, iron pin ; thence north 07
Orr would like to ex ·
dOll . 15' east 120.0 feet to
press our deep ap
the point of beginning, con·
preciation to our many .
ta inmg 2.192 acres .
fricmds , relatives and
· Deed Reference : Volume
neighbors for their acts
'252, Page 811 , Meigs Deed
of kindnes s shown ar the
•Records.
loss of our loving
1
together w i th a 1910
husband,
father and
,Richardson Mobile Home,
grandfa1her.
. Serl~l
Number 40713.
A sincere thank s to
located thereon.
the
Rev .
Richard
Said real estate and
Thomas for conducting
"mobile home appraised for
; Two Thousand Three Hun·
the service; to Rev .
dred
Thirtv · four
and
Hicks and Rev. Mark
'00 / lOOths
Dollars
Flynn for . their con·
1$2,3J.I.OO) and cannot. be
soling words ; to the
•sold for tess than two· th1rds
Pallbearers ; to the
of that amount.
.
Directors of the Racine
TERMS OF SALE : Five
Home National Bank
Hundred Dollars ($500 .00 )
cash or c ertified check on
who served a s Honorary
'he day of sale ; balance
Pallbearers ; and to
with ten (10) days of date of
e.lch one who remem·
sale .
bered us in any way. A
James J . Proffitt
special thanks for the
Sheriff
dinner served by the
Meigs County, Ohio
Chester
Volunteer
· (2) 10, 17, 24, Jtc
Fireman' s Auxliary .
May God bless each of
you .
Public Notice
Mrs. Ethel Orr, Mr. &amp;
PUBLIC NOTICE
Mrs. Edward Newman
The following described
&amp; Family, Mr. &amp; Mrs.
i1em(s] will be offered for
Robert Lee &amp; Family,
public sale to the highest
Dr. &amp; Mrs . . Roger
b idder on the prem1ses of
Bank One of Pomeroy NA,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, on

r.

I

EXCAVATING

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Truck s
eLo· Boy
e Trencher
•Water • sewer
• G•s Lines
•Septic
Systems
5
LargPeHor m " 11 Jobs
· 992 · 2478

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

And Home Main1enance
• Roofing at all types
• Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
•
v rs. experience
20

TOM HOSKINS
Ph.

.

or 9 9. 12
4 24
949 2160

7

SALES -&amp; SE~VICE

ALIGNMENT
-~
lthG
· GM
·· ~ W
enu,m,e
~ .

Par s_ _

-t..·--_i-Hiie...._

~
,_
. _ - -.. . .. .
Modern Electrica 1
Equipmen1

'S OLDS
SIMMON
·•
CAO.·CHEV., INC .

u.s. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Ph. 992-6614
308 E . Main
Pomeroy ,

~~~====~-~8~-t~tc~fr;;~~~~~~~;n
"YOUNG'S
CARpENTER
SERVICE"

ATO Z
HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS
20 Years experience
Plumbing, carpentry,
Roofing,
Electrical.

Cisterns, Cement, Stone
walls, Chimney Repair.
All Home Repairs
Trao·ler RoOts.and
Underpinning
PH. 992-3872
. . mo. pd .
23 1

VALENTINE
PERM SALE
Mon .. Feb . 1
thru
Sat., F~b. 27
Reg. J20 Now $17.50
Reg. $25 Now $22.50
Reg. SJO Now $27. 50
535 wave Length
For·Longer Hair
Now$29.50

Kay's lleluty Salon
169 N. 2nd
Mlcldlopon

Clll 992-2725
2- 1-1 mo.

-

Addoni anel remiXitliiHI
Roof ing .tnd vutter work
concrete work
Plumbing i l'ld
l! ll'c1rical work

(Free Estimates}

V . C. YOUNG Ill
992 -621S or 992· 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·3D·tlc

REESE.,.:·
TRENCHING
SERVICE·
Wa1er·Sewer· Electric
Gas line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560
1-7 1 tt c

MILLER

FIREWOOD

E~ECTRIC

Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Available
or You Pick Uo

Also wood Splitter
For R"ent
John Wise
(614) 742-2131
David Price
f 614) 992-3556
1·13-1 mo. pd .

ANNOUNCING

BEVERLY WICKLINE
NOW AT

SERVICE
For aP your wiring
~;

f u , _ repair
service and
in11allatlon.
Ralidentilll
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3196
-i m o.

ALL STEEL
BUilDINGS
Sizes s1ar 1 from l0x24"

B-A BEAUTY
Woofs., lllun. I 511.
HAIR mUNG
lllllh Men I -

CAll 949-2320
1-- 2• -1 m o.

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to &amp; and all
wood buildings 24x36 .
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, BoK 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843 -2591
·
6·15·tf c

$}25

BUYERSOF

DON E.MUUEN
JOHII f. MUSS[ I I .
CIIIRW I. MUU£11
IICIIA£L L CHILDS

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·?1 · tfc

JUNK CARS ......... ~.~~-~~.~.~~: ..
BUYERS OF ·

$}00

APPLIANCES ....... ~-~~ · -~~ .~~~: • • •
1

$}50

UNCLEAN

MOTORS ............ ~~~. !~~-~-~~:...
BAnERIES

General

bring you
extra cash
for
shoppina sprees

I

'2.00 Each

A'ko Buyers of Radiators and Copper
"We Also Sell Used Auto Parts"

Located on Rocksprings Rd.
POMEROY, OHIO
West ofFal
PH. (614

RUTLAND FURNITURE
MAIN ST.

742 -2211

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

_,,,,, .,
2

Happy Ads

5

-.

In Memoriam

MattMws
In Loving m emory of
Stan l ey , Em erson Mal thews who passed away 20
yrs. a go, February 10, 1962 .
Lov i ng memory neve r dies ,
as years roll on and days
pas. by,
1n our hea,srts a memory is
kept,
of on e we loved and will
neve r forgeT.
Loved and m issed by wife ,
children,
brothers
&amp;
sisters.

I'M SWEET ON YOU
Send your love a giant
heart shaped chocolate
chip cookie , custom
decorating . Order now for
Val ent ine's Day or any
special day I $9.00 delivery
included. Call Mojo's --446·
3675 .

6

Lost and Found

LOST 2 walker dogs. 70
ibs., male, black , white &amp;
tan . 55 lbS. black &amp; white,
spoiled . Reward ofler~d 388·8194.
Lost : green over n ight cllse
on Laure l Cli ff Rd. In
hospital orea. 992 -5594 .

Real Estate General

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3 ·ttc

Pomeroy Scrap Iron Metals

WilliAM D. CHILW'

992.,"-259.

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

A.

•

Drive A little -- Save A Lot·

POMEROY
lANDMARK

used Color TV Sets tor
Sale .
SALE PHONE NO.

s~~Mr. GD!Xtwrencn For A

$

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen·lnsurance

NOW
OPEN
.

PRICED RIGHT
l!~==~i1~-1~1~-l~m~o-~p~d~.M~;;~~;;~;;·S~-t~fc~~~~:~~~~~=l~=~~~~~~~~
ClaSSI-fi-ed ds
R.. . , Ellhlt11
BOGGS
FRONT END·

IN RACINE

AGENTS:

2

PLAII'IfTIFF,
SEARLS,
DECEASED

Meigs County Deed Recor·
ds, and a point 12 feet, at
the right ang les from th e
center l i ne of State Route
No.· 143 ; thence South 83
cte9. 40' east 200 teet to a
p61nt: thence South 81 deg.
50' easll7S feet to a poinl;
thence south 78 deg. 00'
East:108.21eettoapoinl in
the center of the South con·
crete bridge railing (12 feet
off the center line of State

· of roll ends
and UP

Call Ken Young
F F t5
1
or as erv ce

54 MiSc . Merchandice
~~~=====~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pr~~~~~~~=~~:::;::::;:;~;:;:::~::'::~:="
r~r~:a~rviod~s~~i~~o~; ~i}~RL\.Ee\ A~" L L I A !\1
PULLINS
OHIO VALLEY
HARR150N
Beginning at the inDEFENDANTS.
TV SERVICE·
CALL:
tersection of the east line of
NO. 23,2 70
ROOFING

I

Tuesday morning.
Mr. Oatley had been In faUlng
health for sometime. He was an
electrician before becoming Ill. He
was an active member of the Middleport Fire Department and belonged to Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
American Legion.
Preceding Mr. Dalley In death
were his father, .John Everett OaJ,
ley. and a brother, Bill.
Surviving are hls wife, Roberta
Howell Oatley; his mother, Marte
Langlotz Dalley; a son and
daughter-In-law, Kevin and Sharon
Dalley, Lancaster; a son-In-law
and daughter, Lee and Bronwyn
Williams, Middleport; two
brothers-In- law and sisters, Mr.
and Mrs. Gene (Pe&amp;lQ') _Houdashelt, Pomeroy, and Mr. aod Mrs.
Jack (Louise) Kelly, COlumbus; a
bro!ller and sister-In-law, Don and
Margaret Ann Oatley of Chllllcothe. Also surviving are Dve
grandchldren and several nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Father Paul
Welton o!flclatlng. Burial will be In
Sacred Heart Cemetery, Pomeroy.
Friends may donate In his memory
to the Middleport Fire Department
or the Meigs Chapter of the American Heart Association. Frlendl
may call at the funeral home from 2
to 4 and 'l to 9 p.m . today.

LEGAL NOTICE

Scipio
Township,
Meigs
in Section
7,
Situated

Union members voice opinion on layoffs

Veterans Memorial

Public Notice

~~rold

Kissinger to undergo heart surgery

·: Meigs County happenings ••

Public Notice

Plaintiff, ,
First Bank of Mariettil,
N. Hudnell, et al .,
D e f e n d a n t s ·
Pursuant to an Order of
Sale Issued to me from the
Court County,
of Common
Meigs
Ohio,· Pleas.
in the
above---entitled case, being
number 17748, I Will offer
lor .sale atr.ublic auction on
the fronts eps of the Courthou'se,
MeiQS Coun t&amp;
~-~•erg~· t~hlf3thatdaly0 · of
March, 1982. the fallowing
lands and tenements, to·
wit :
Situated in the Township
of Scipio. County of Meigs
and Sta·te of Oh io, to·wit :
Parcel No. 1
_

With ley roads and snow falling,
TO UNDERGO SURGERY .:... Former Secretary of Tuesday when be aooouoced he would
Meigs County's emergency squads
State
Henry Kl•sluger aod bls wife Nancy walk down a bypa•• heart surgery at the facility W•.tw,.&lt;b•y
were kept on the move Tuesday
co,-rtdor
at Massachusetts General Hoopltal, Booton Laserphoto).
answering 10 caUs according to the
emergency medical services.
The Middleport Unit at 2:17a.m.
took Barbara Smith from Park St.,
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
9:04a.m . went to Dew St., for HowBOSTON (AP)- Although there
Friday alter a general checkup, but
ence Tuesday he hoped to·leave the
ard Dalley, who was dead upon arare
some
risks,
former
Secretary
returned Sunday night.
In
about
two
weeks
and
hospital
rival and the Pomeroy Unit ·
State
Henry
Kissinger
says
his
of
Austen, the hospital's chief of
planned
to
limit
his
schedule
for
the
assisted on this call; at 10: 26 a.m.
doctor
told
him
open-heart
surgery
·
next
six
weeks.
general
surgical services, has been
took Lionel Boggs from Dr. James
shouldn't
slow
him
down
a
bit.
Kissinger's
personal physician for
Kissinger; who had no previous
Conde's office to Holzer Medical
"He
told
me
I
would
be
stronger
almost 10 years. He said the fourhea1t problems, first entered the
Center. Rutland at 5: 34 p.m. took
than ever afterward - which Is the
hour operation "probably" would
hospital one week ago complaining
Clarence McDaniel, Jr., from Main
most terrifying news my associates
at shoulder pains. He was released
be a triple bypass and he predicted
St., Rutland, to Veterans Memorhave ever received," Kissinger, 58,
a fuU recovery.
Ial. Racine at 7: 28 a.m. took Betty
joked
TUesday:
_
Seeks divorce
Spaun from Apple Grove to Holzer
Thul'8day deadline
Kissinger, scheduled to undergo
Medical Center and at 12: 01 took
Thursday Is the final day for placsurgery this morning at MassachuSarah Congo from Cross St. , to
Charging abandonmen t , exIng
orders with the Meigs County
setts
General
Hospital,
was
retreme cruelty and gross neglect of
Veterans Memorial; at 1: 57 p.m.
Co-op for pickup on Feb. 18.
Food
ported
In
good
condition
and
resting
duty, Rose MarleSrnlth, Pomeroy,
took Alban Salser from Carmel
Residents
may place their orders
comfortably
early
today.
Road to Veterans Memorial. Syrahas filed suit for divorce against
atr
the
Meigs
Senior Citizens CenThe
1973
N
o~l
P
eace
Prize
cuse at 3:59a.m. took Oris Hubbard
Ricky Allen Smith, Lake Buller,
ter,
Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy,
winner
and
secretary
of
state
from
Fla. The plaintiff asks custody of
from Third St., to the Holzer Medior
at
the
Meigs
Methodist Minis1973
to
1m
said
at
a
news
confertwo minor children.
cal Center alJd at 12: 53 p.m. took
tries
office
In
Middleport.
Ernest Black to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.

Fined were Timothy Herdman,
Middleport, $200 and costs, resist·
lng arrest, and $100 and costs, disorderly charges; Richard Hermann,
Middleport, $250 and costs and
three days In jail, driving while Intoxlcated, and Berlin Mullins, Coco
Beach, Fla., $250 and costs, three
days In jail, driving while lntoxicated, arid $100 and costs, driving
under suspension.
Roy Neff, Middleport, was given
a 10 day jail sentence on a charge of
possessing stolen property.

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

Squads kept busy

·Mayor's terminate 11 cases

11

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

Phone
1-(614)-992·3325
JUST LISTED - Love·
ly Country home on
la rg e level lot . Has 3
nice size bedrooms,
modern bath, modern
kitchen with range ant;l
refrigerator, Lots . ol
closets and nice t ar ·
peting . Garage for 2
cars, one with storage .
$49,900.
JUST LISTED 3'1&gt;
acres, more or less,
good garden, lots of
tr ees, 3 bedroom s,
house being overhauled.
Bath, good woodburner
chimney, garage and
other buildings. Only
$19,500 .
BUILDING LOT - E x ·
ceptional 11iew from on
top of Pomeroy . Has all
utiliti es , liJni:l 2 car
garage .
POMEROY - One acre
lot with a 2 bedroom
reasonable home . Bath .
all utilities, front porch ,
liJnd full basem ent with
garage. Only $16.500.
ll ACRES - Southern
District .
J
School
bedrooms . bath. all
util ities, storage and on
hard road.
FOR RENT Furnished 1 bedroom apar1·
m ent out of t own. $125.00
month .
Deposit
required.

NEW liSTING - 18" '
Acres of nic e laying
wooded ground , with an
older home. All ut ilities,
septic etc . Near ¥e lgs
High School. $22.200.00.
NEW LISTING - Dairy
Farm , 110
acres ,
several barns, j;! tc ., milk
house, 80 head ot catt le,
all equipmen1 . Call for
more info.
MOBILE HOME AND
LOT - A nice 3 Bdrm .
m obil e home with over
l'l2 acre lot, pc;~rches,
storage bldg .. mQSt furnitu,-e. Nel!lr M i ne 1.
$17,900.00.
.
POMEROY - One slory
ranch
w i th
lull
basement, WBFP, cen·
tral· ai r,
garage .
Reduced l o $17.500 .00 .
STATELY
OLDER
home in Middleport , this
9 room home and up to 5
bdrms ., formal d ining,
family"'room , fir'epla ces,
three room garage
ap- rtm ent . $35,000 .00
FIVE
POINTS
Almost new ran ch style
hom e
with
full
basement, A .C. unit.
n ic e kitchen, 1 acre of
yard. $44,900 .00.
REDUCED - Beautiful
newer split entry home ,
garage, nic e lot near
Estern Hi g h School .
M ust be seen, now only
$54,000.00 . Finan cin g
available, call today .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Jr.,
GRI
992 -5692
Dottle Turner
949-2660
Jean Trussell
992-2259
Office

Hous,iJg
Heaclquarters

J - · Ari~OUOcemeniS - ·

---'-- ----· ---·

LOVELY 3 BR brick home, has wood burning
firepla ce in living room . 11h ba_th, vyell constructed
&amp; i nsulated . One floor plan . Askong $35,000.
OWNER SAYS SELL - We htwe r educed thi s home
from $17.000 10 $12,900 and will work terms. 2 or 3
BR home w ith equipped kitchen includ ing breakfast
bar , stove, &amp; r efr igerator. L ar ge living room has
firepla ce. al so cellar and laundry room.
UNUSUAL HOME - Ca l l &amp; gel deta i ls on lhis .
lovely 3 B R 2111 baths, A·frame, on 4 plus acres.
Large work garage. root cellar. located c lose to
Forked Run State Perk . Asking $73,000 .
NEW LISTING - 2 BR tra i ler on very n!ce lot on
quiet stree t . Kitchen has st o v ~ , refrigeretor ~ dinette
set, corner dish d isplay cab1net &amp; easy ';'•ew. i~to
spacious L .R. This place could be very niCe llv•ng
for you or ju st- as investmen1 propertv . Now rents .
lorS175 . AsklngSt2,000.
JUST LISTED - New doll type 3 BR home, cozy is
the key word here . K it chen comes complete w lfh .1
year old self cleaning o11en, refr igerator &amp; 6 cha.r
wooden dinette set. This home is about 1.5 _miles out
of miles out of M iddleport on 2 plus acres, •t ha ~ out ·
buildings for store. Rental income from a tra1ler ·
S175. All this for only $35,000.
' ...
VERY NICE - This home has 3 nice s ize BR ' s,
closets, eat-in ~itchen , OR or FR, &amp; an extr11 LR .
.Lot Is 3 plus acres, garage , sev~ral other nice
build ings fruit trees, several vanetles of _berry
bushe5, c~rta l ns, woodbufner, dishwi:lsher, all stay .
Give us your offer i n the SSO's.
LAND FOR SALE - Closelo Rt. 7. 20 acres . Ask ing
$13,000. Owner w i ll lend contract - tO% down &amp; work
toqether cry balance.
RENTALS AVAILABLE
Nice brick home in
Letart. OH . S250 • a month plus Sl50 deposll &amp;
referenc011.
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspen -'- As10eloto
PH . 10·2075

-

SWE E PER and sewing
machine repair, parts , and
--'---------suppiies.
Pick up and Set of 3 keys on red tog .
delivery, Davis Vacuvm , Vlc i nlly of Post Qffi ce . Cell
Cleaner, one half mile up 675·4399.
Georges Cr eek Rd . Call
446-0294 ..
LOST New Hallen area .
.... ·--· --~ - Brown puppy , has on blue
Compl ete line of Muzzle · collar and white flea collar .
Load ing Guns and Sup· Cai 1304·882·3S71 .
plies.
Sprin g
Valley
----------- ;_o._ - - : - -~=
T,-ad ing Co., Spr ing Va lley
7..c__ _
Ya o:.c!1_~e,____ _
Plaza . 446-8025.
..
.- .._
-··
Huge Garage Sale. Sat .,
ROSENBERG RECYCLI · Sun. &amp; Mon . Furniture,
NG
Openin g
so o n clothes, glassware . Lots ot
sp ec ia li zin g
i n otHer misc . items . 5th
house above Coast GuBrd
ALUMINUM
tANS ,
Station above Henderson.
aluminum siding , sheet &amp;
ca st alum ., copper w ir e,
brass, rad iator s, auto bat· 8
Public Sale
teries &amp; IBM cards. Wath
&amp; Auction
this paper for location and
Au ction Sal e. 1975 Case 450
grand opening. Rosenberg
Re cycling, 140 Columbus dozer , 6 w ay blade, new
eng !ne, new trl'l cks. MF
Rd .. Ath ens, Oh 45701 . Call
255, MF 135, N\f' 40. 860
1-614-7477.
Fo,-d, two 20· 10 John Deere
Will proV'ide answ erin g ser · tra ctor s. 6561H diesel , 250
IH diesel. Long 465 diesel,
vi ce or wak e up call . 304·
Long 310 diesel, MMU
615 -3734.
16001 H dump truck 4•4 .
Good secTion of corn er
French City M eats are planters , plows, dls.c,
book·ing Custom Cattle. spreaders, and hay equip ·
'all 446-3471.
menl. Saturday Feb. 13th,
11 : 00 . Several hundred
more items exp ected .
Siders Equipment Co., US .
F or bulk de liv e ry of
highway 35 , 1 mile South 'ot
gasoline, heating oil and
PI . Pleasant. 304-675-7421 .
diesel f uel , call Landmar k,
992·2181 , Pomeroy, Oh .
Large Farm ~ Industrial
Gun Shoot Racine Gun Auct ion . Feb. 20th, 1982 at
Club. E very Sun . starting Rav enwood, wv. Sale vard
at 1 p .m . Factory choRe loacted four miles east of I·
77 at Ra11enswood exit 146,
guns only .
lake Rt . 56 to the In·
--·~-- -~ -. -·
tersection of Rt. 21 . Taking
Raci ne Fire Dept. sponsor s consignments starting Feb.
a Gun Shoot , Sat . nl ghls 15. Farm trac tors, truck s,
6: 30p.m ., Bashan. Fac tory trail er , dozers, backhoe,
choke 12 gauge shotg un .
et c. M cCauley Tractor
........
Sales. 304-273 ·2611 or 273·
Specia l Feb., March &amp; Apr. 3700.
only , Gene 's Deep Steam
Carpet Cleaning . Scotch
Guard· Fr ee Es t i mates.
992-6309.
Bu y i ng
Gold ,
Silver,
Betty' s Beauty Bou ti que. Pla t inum, old coins, scrap
2nd Sl .• Mason . Open Tues. rin gs &amp; si l\lerware. Daily
thru Sat . Announcing Jane quotes a vailable. Also
Morr is join ing ou r staff . coins &amp; col n supplies for
Spr i ng
Vall ey
APPI. 773-5272. Perm spec . s al e .
Valley
$20. -$17 .50, $25. -22.50. A lso T r ad ing, Spring
Valer ie "is v ack on Fri. &amp; Plaz a, 446·8025 or 446-8026.
Sat.
.
We pay cash for late mOdel
JIMS Water Servi c e. Ce l l clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car Co .
J i m La nier, 304-675-7397 .
Bi ll GE:ne Johnson ;
Camp Conl ey .

- -· -

-

~-

--

__

-·

-

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

------- - - -

-----.--

CENTRAL REALTY·

..

Lost : red Doberma11 In Appl e Grove and Tann-ers Run
area. Conta ct Oean Hill
247-3725.

---

- -------·-·'46·0069 ,

4--~-

Giveaway- · -

ANY P E RSON who ha s
anyth !ng to give away and
does not off er or attempt lo
offer any other th ing for
sale may pl a~e an ad In th is
column . There will be no
charge to the adv e ~t l ser .
Part Beagle pupp ies. 8
w eeks old. Call 446 -1:10&lt; al terS p.m .
Smoll puppies, 8 wks. old.
Call446·9535 or 682 ·7672 .
Stove to o ive e·away . For
part.s. Call 446· 1583.
Little, mal e, bla ck &amp; brown
dog, part poodle . Call 67 5·
2948 .
Hompster s. Call

304-895-

TOP PRIC E Sc ra p Mel al,
auto bodies, and car s. Bat·
teri es, alum l um, brass &amp;
copper . Gallipolis B io(k
Co., 123 112 Pine St.. 4462783.
L ast day 1 w il l buv fur fo r
th is season is Saturday,
Feb. 13. George Buckley,
664· 4761.
BEDS·IRON , BRASS, OJd
furnitur e, gold , silver
dollars, wood lee bQ)ces,
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
Compl e t e
hou se hold s.
Wrile' : M .D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy , Oh . Or 992· 7760.
CHIP WOOD . Poles max.
di am eter 10" on l argest
end. Sl2 ..$(1 per l on. Bundled
s l ab . $10 .50 pe r , lon .
Del iver d to Oh io Pall et Co.,
R oc k
Spr i ng s
Rd . ,
Pome roy . 992-2689 ,
Go ld, si lv e r , s te,-l i ng,
jewelry, rings, old coin s &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Barber Shop, Middleport . 99':1·

3476 .

- ------ -- -

'

••

�12· The
9

Sentinel

Wanted to Buy

41

They'll Do It Every Time

WANT TO BUY Old fur ·
n iture and Antiqu es of all
k inds, call Kenneth Swa i n~
256· 1967 in the evenings.

Houses for Rent

RIGH T DOWN TOWN
Newlv
decorated .un furnished, 3 rm . house.
,Suitable tor single person
or ret ired couple . Garden
space, dep~sit &amp; references
required. Call 446 · 0~50 or
446· 1291 .

CASH PAl D tor clean, late
model used car s. Sm ith
Bulck-Pont illc, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call «6·2282.

9 room house in Rio Gran de, Oh. Call

OLD FURNITURE , beds,
iron, brass, or wood. Ki tchen cubbards of all types.
Wood Ice bo•e•. 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

2

bedroom house, un f urnished on Lower Rf . 7.
Depos it requ ired. Call 2561413.

cerds. Osby Martin 992·

- - - --- -

6370.

Camping pull tr aile r . 15 to

.._,.

20 tllong. Gas and electric
refrlgalor . 614-985·4394.
JUNKED

cars.

scrap

alum inum cans,

tran$missions. motorS. batteries, radiators, oil well

drilling bits, tungsten carbide, high speed steel.

waste

p~per,

cardboard,

raw furs, hides, ginsing
and yellow root. Harper·
Halstead Salvage Co. 300
Eleventh St., Pt. Pleasant,
304·675· 5868 . Also flea
market open Monday
through Friday,l ·5p.m .

- ........ ·-· .
.....................
11

Help Wanted

Earn
20
per
cent
retirement on $2,000.00
wholesa le Instead of 3 per
cent
retirement
on
S7,500PV. 614-875·9749 or
614·477·1414.
TEXAS OIL COMPANY
needs mature person for
short triPS surrounding
Gallipolis, Oh . Contact
C).lstomers. We train. Write
D.O. dickerson, Pres .,
Southwestern PetroleUm,
Bo• 189, Ft . Worth, T•.
76101.
Wh.y would 2 Diamonds, 6
Emera lds, over 40 pear l s
i!lnd SOO Directs switch? 20
per cent retirement on
$2,00.00 whol..ale. Call614·
446··1273 or 614·446·9332 or
write s G Associates, 336
2nd. Ave, Gallipol is, Ohio
45631

SAL CA&gt;ASO•E.

l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~s~-~"~ ~ "~-·~J
CMCORAL,
FLA .

II

Help Wanted

HOUSE, unfurnished. 5
roOms, bath, basement,
2714 L incoln, $250., small
deposit . Inquire next door .

1625.

12

Situations Wanted

Insurance

13

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage In Gallia County
for almost a centurv.
Farm, home and persona l
property CO\Ierages are
avai labl e to meet individua l needs. Contact
Lewis Hughes, agent.
Phone 446·3318 .
1S

Schools Instruction

Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza, 4~ · 2134 . X·
stitch headquarters. ALL
colors OMC . Free lessons.

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
"s right away and gel on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

F!aaaelal

TEXAS
REFINERY
CORP. offers plenty ot
money plus cash bonuses,
fringe benefits to mature
person In Pt. Pleasant
area. Regardless of e•·
perlence, write H .H . Sears,
Pres,, Bo• 711, Fl. Worth,
TX. 76101 .

Older 3 bedroom all elec tric house in Pomeroy . Carpeting, porch, patio, yard,
and garden space. Dep.
and ref . required. $250 per
month. Write Be• 729·5,
Pomeroy, Oh 45769 .

House for rent . 3 bedrooms,
POSITION AVAILABLE .
kitchen , liv i ng room,
Youth
Counselor .
M inimum Qualif ications :
dining room, and bath .
Completion of covrsework
Nice and clean . Some carfor undergraduate major
owner, 2 bdr . house in · pet. No inside pets. Deposit
field of study (i.e . social
ex cell e nt neigh requi rec;j . 992-3090.
work, psychology, correc·
. Only $18,500. Call
tions, juvenlte ' justice, etc .) 144&lt;1·2942
3 room house in Mason.
as required by college or ,
WVA . Semi furnished . 614·
university or six months
992·7352
equ 'l valent work ex perience in direct care of
4 bedroom house with large
youths or equ ivalent (i.e.
liv ing room, dining room ;
teacher, youth leader,
and garden . $175 month .
etc . ) .
App l ications NewlncomeLim ifs . ltyou
Security deposit. Call 992available at Meigs county
between $9,000 to
5692.
Juvenile Court on or befor-e 1" ' ~~ a y8ar, you may be
February 19, 1982.
buy a 3 bedroom
( not a mobile home)
WHITE frame , 7 room, 3
lillie as $135. mo. No
bedroom, electric heat, kitpayment. Call 992 chen not furnished with
stove &amp; refrigerator, utility
room with washer &amp; dryer
hookup . 3 Acre yard &amp; garden area . Mailbox address,
Gall ipolis Ferry . DepoSit &amp;
lease required. ownership
management . 304·522-1990.

Registered Nurse wanted
by a residenta l and day
treatment program serving retarded adults with
behav ior disorders. Salary
ra nge S16,000 to Sl8.000
year, comensurate with experience
p·lus
other
benefits. Responsibilities
include
some
case
management duties as wet 1
as health care re lated
tasks. Applicants must be
energetic, creative, interested send resume to
Michael
!11Yih,
Ohio
Resldental Services. Inc ..
Rl . I Bo• 5, Mill Creek Rd .
Ga Ill polls. Oh 45631 .

·Resident manager couple
needed . Small senior
citizens apartment com·
plex In Midd leport area . No
experience required. Will
train. Apartment and all
utllllies paid plus salary .
We are lOOking for mature
couple. This is an e.cellenl
opportunity for the retired
or semi· retired looking for
additional Income. Send
brief reply to P. Osborne,
9121 Twigg Hupp Rd ., Sun·
bury, Ohlo4307~.

Small i bdr . suitable for 2
people. 104 Fourth Ave .•
Gallipolis .
Deposit
required. 446·2957.

1972 concord Mob ile Home,
12x65. Call 446 ·7015 alter
5:30p.m .

HOUSE in New Haven,
small down payment,
assumable loan, 304-882 2754.

Wanted : Person to share 2
House meadowbrook Ad·
bdr . apt. Call245·5220.
dition 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen RN position aiJailable for wr1·i·e~re tor efdei--1~ in·oUr tral air, basement, 304·675RN Supervisor for 11-7 · home. Women and men.
shift. Exc. starting salary 1 Trained lind experienced. 15~2 .
plus a complete benefit 992·7314.
package . For a personailn32
Mobile Homes
tervlew call Mrs. Judy
for Sale
Income fax service. PromHolley, Director of Nur·
TRI
·
STATE
MOBILE
pt
accurate.
Martha
Ffy,
Sing, Pinecrest Care Cen·
Pomeroy . 992·3414.
HOMES. Gallipolis. Price
fer, 446·1112. E .O.E.
reduced, used mobile
homes. CALL 446·1572.
Need
babysitter
in
Bookkeeper . Only ex ·
Harrisonville
area
.
4
hours
perienced need apply . Send
CLEAN USED MOBILE
resume to Box 507 in care every evening. 992·5264.
HOMES
KESSEL'S
Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
MOB I LE
825 Jrd. Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh Will care for elderly in my QUALITY
home . Pri vate room or HOME SALES, 4 MI. ,
45631.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
semi ·pri\late. 992·6748 .
35. PHONE ~46 · 3868 .
With the Army Nationa l
Guard, you'll have a part
lime job with full lime
benetlts. You will attend
training one weekend each
month and two weeks each
year. Benetlls Inc lude low
cost life insurance, ex·
cellent pay and a t~ee pen·
sion plan. Plus the Army
Guard's valuable technical
schooling may help you
prepare for a well paying
civi lian occupation. Call
675-3950.

«&lt;~ ··3485 .

Small 1 bedroom house
located on Sanders Dr .
Deposit &amp; references. Call
evenings 446·025.4.

Tables, round or square.

metals,

Guitar lessons, individual
classes, personal attention.
Modest prices . Call 304·675·
373~ .

18

Wanted to Do

Will do babysitting in my
home. Call446·7268.
Will babysit in my home.
895·3911 .

22

Money to Loan

REF I NANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
r;tl'e . WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State st ..
Athens, Oh . 592·3051.
23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning-Be kind to
your ears. Call Bil l Ward
for appointment, 446·4372.
C &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service tor business and In-dividuals.
carol Neal446·3862
Advertising specialities.
Book matthes, ca lenders;
pen &amp; pencils, dicount
coupon books. Dismuke's
4Q5 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis,
446·0474 .
Plano's tuned and serCall Bob Grubb, 446·
(

'

CLAN Ml LLS has several
Immediate openings for
telephone appointment
clerks. No e•perience
necessary. We train. May
work 9AM to lPM or 5·
9PM. Apply to Jackie Car·
l'f!Y· Scottish tNN, Room
163 between 12·1PM or 4·
5PM on Tu..day &amp; Wed·
nesday. Equal Opportunity
Employer.

HARPER Adult Care Cen·
ter·provldlng the personal
care your elderly ne~ in a
home like atmosphere.
vacanCies now avallible.
ca II 30H75· 1293.

Experienced Auto Body
man. 10 years experience,
must have own tools. Call
,75-3373.

Friendly Ridge. Double
wide\ 11 .5 acres, J bdr ., 2
baths, fomlly room, shed.
$29,500. Call256·1668.

-"

.......... ''

. . . ... . . . -yo . . . .

31

10, 1982

Ohio

12•60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with ·2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, fimmcing available . Phone 4461294.
1970 2 bdr ., e)(tra nice, new
carpet &amp; hot Water tank ,
natura I gas. set up ready to
move into. City limits, a
bargain, $3,650 . Call «&lt;~ ·
8252, after 5 call446·2491
For sale 10x35, I bdr . nouse
trailer . Caii3B8·9684.

77

w indsor
14•70.
3
bedroom, 1/ 2 bath, all elec ·
tric, central air cond . Call
446·9681 atler 5.
USED MOBILE
576·2711 '

HOME .

1971 KIRKWOOD. 12x65, 2
bedroom, family room, underpinned, 10x20 awning, ac. w -d . Good condition . 304675 ·5739 ,
even i ngs
&amp;
weekends.
1977 SKYLINE . all electric,
central air , two bedroom ,
$14.000, 304·675·69ll6 .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; -insured . Call
304·576·2711 .

1912 12•65 Schultz,

3bdr.,
gas heat, partially fur ·
nished . Call675·2907 .

1974 Schultz

l4x)O, exc .
cond ·., AC, washer &amp; dryer,
2bdr., dining room , al l elec ·
!ric. Phone 675·3466.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Nl ce Ieve I h omesite in
Ciearview River EstatesSewer· WI
a er· El ec . $500 .00
down . Phone256·1216.
70 acrea of vacant land.
$210 per acre, minen!l
rights Included, located on
German Ridge Rd .• ap·
prox. 1112 mi. off Stale Rl.
141 . Call379·2676 .
Large troct of land located
In Pomeroy, Ohio. Can be
financed at 12 percent. 992·

Mobil~

Homes
for Rent

2 bdr . and 3 bdr . mobile
homes . Calt 446-0175.

2 brd . apt. HUD e.cepted,
l(itchen furn , · utilities par·
t ia liY pd ., ucelient
location. Call 675·5104 or
675-7284.

Mobile home, 2 bdr ., adults
only, no pets, 322 Jrd. Ave,
Ga ll ipolis . Call 446·3748 or
256· 1903.

74

Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.

~S230. ~~~~~~:~~:=~~==~~~~o;-;.,.~-~-~

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes ,
houses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614· 245·9~84 .
Efficiency rooms by the
week 0n Main Street,
Mason, wv . 773·5651 .
1

One bedroom, unfurnished
apratmenl. Two &amp; three
bedroom mobile homes,
furnished or unflJrnished .
Phone 675· 1371 or 675·3812 .
45

Furnished Rooms

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

Space for Rent

Trailer space at Mer·
cervllle . County water,
large lot. Call 446·)157 or
367·7218 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lofs. Cal l
992 · 7~79 .

1 acre country trailer lot.
Flatwoods . S70.00 month
plus $70.00 deposit . Phone :

51

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, choir. rocker
ot·
loman, 31ables, SSOO.
chair and ioveseat,
Sofas and chairs orlcedl
from S285. to $795.
SJ8 and up to s109 .
beds.S340., queen size. S380.
Recliners, $175. to S29S .,
Lamps from S18 . to 565 •
pc . difelles from S79.,
$385. 7 'pc., $189. and up,
Wood table with 4 chairs.
S219 up to $.495. Desk $110.
Hutches, S300. and $375 .•
mllple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites • Bassett
Oak, S615 .. Basset! Cherry,
S795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
up to S350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete . Baby beds.
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm , S68. and S78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frames, S20.and$25., 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, $350., dinette chairs S20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, S295. Or·
lhopedic s"per firm, S95,
baby matresses, S25 &amp; S35,
bed frames S20 S25, &amp; SJO.
E lectric fireplace, gun
cabinet, LiiJing room suite,
wood table &amp; 41 chairs.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV' s,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri., 9am to Spm , sat.
446·0322

SWAIN
Mise, Merchandice
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp; 54
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive 51 .. Lump Coal $32 per ton.
3 bdr. double w ide located Gallipolis. 3 piece living Zinn Coal Co .,. Inc . Call 446ih Johnson's Mobile Home room suites $199, maple 1408 between 9 and 4.
Park . No pets, deposll rockers $49, several chest
required, all utilities pd . of drawers, Maple rockers
. except electric, newly $.49, several late model For Sate 1&lt; itch en tab le and
decorated. S300 month . Call bedroom suites, variety of 2 chairs, $25. See at 169
desks, · Cedar wardrobe, Brownell Ave ., Middleport .
446·3547.
9x12 linoleum SlO and $12.
2 bdr. mobi le home c lose to seiJeral refrlg., gas &amp; elec - New wood stove, half price,
tric · ranges, coa l &amp; wood never used, $350. Can con·
HMC . Call446·7032.
cook stoves, severa l chest vert fo furnance. Call 256of drawers, variety of 1216, Gallipo lis.
Mobile home for renf. chest,
lamps ,
and
Adults only, no pets. Call mechanic tools of all kinds,
Snow tires, new recaps,
367 · 7~38 .
new &amp; used wood burners G78· 14, $30.00. Call675·6898.
some with fans, new table
2 bdr. trailer furnished, lamps $18, wood cook
adults only, Brown Trailer ranges, new 5 piece dinnet Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Park, 992·3324.
sets $150, kitchen cabinets. Main 51., Pomeroy, Ohio.
several dinnet sets, silver 992-2205.
Nice 1 bedroom furnished stone-all sizes, new too ls of
mobi le home . 9 mile from al l kinds, wringer Mayfag Jenson AM-FM cassette
Pomeroy on Rt . 33 . Phone washer, Linoleum rugs stereo with built in booster.
9x12 $10, and lots more. We S225. 614-742·3154.
for appoinlmenl992·7479.
have everything to set up
housekeeping . Hours lOam 3 used Maytag Automatic
2 bedroom house trai ler in lo 5pm, «6·3159.
S.SO. &amp; up. Frigidaire Dryer
Racine. $175-per month . $75
S85. Dishwasher $40. 742·
deposit. You pay util ities.
USED
AP· 2352 .
Unfurnished but kitchen . GOOD
PLIANCES · washers,
614·367·7811 .
dryers,
refrigerators, RecOrd player with am -fm
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap 2 bedroom trailer close to pliances, Upper River Rd., radio. 985·4267.
school, stores, and · park . beside Stone Crest Motel.
THIS IS IT · OUR ANNUAL
Deposit required . Mid- 446·7398 .
d leport . 992·5914.
SALE . Gel up to $125.00
savings on World -Book EnSears
E'lecfroic -Sensor cyclopedia.
Monthly
MOB ILE home for rent dryer. $60 . Call446·4048 .
payments ava liable. Call
with option to buy. 304-516·
Margaret Pierce, local
2711 '
.
G E autO. washer, nice, school service represen·
$110.00. Norge, dryer exc. !alive. 304-675·3775 .
TWO bedroom, furnished , shape. $90.00. Call446·8181.
mobile home, large lof,
20 fl. telephone poles for
references and depos i t
required. Camp Conley , Automatic washers &amp; sale. 304-675-6918.
dryers,
reworked &amp;
304-615·3219 .
guaranteed . priced from Will babysit In my home.
sao to S125. Call 256· 1207 .
1980 Harl ey Davidson SL T.
TWO bedroom, furnished ,
1977 Ford . Divil'lO outfit,
New Haven , 304·882·2466.
Whirlpool electric range 304·675·5870,
30', l ike new. Sl25. Call388·
9794.
44
Apartmemt
Air compressor $765; large
for Rent
advertising •lgn S350; Nova
Furnished
room
$85 , Refrigerator, meta l bed, parts .68· 72 model. , High
bed, other performance model 350 4
utilities pd., single male, roll ·a·way
volt main shaft lock' $275;
range, refrig . .share bt~th. items. Call304·458·1869.
·39 cnevy body SSOO; 390
446·4416 atier 7PM.
Bedroom suite, kitchen Ford motor S125; 300 6 cvl.
motor $200; new couch
Furnished apartment for fab le &amp; chairs, pre-hung $500; 39 Chevy sedon
cabinet
front
with
door,
reni ..Call4~·3937 .
doors. dresser. Call 675 - Sl,OOO. 304·576·2602.
1431.
Deluxe furnished apartSomerville's Camouflaged
ment, e)(cellent location, 1
Army Surplus cloth 1'ng,
Refrigerator
&amp;
electric
Or 2 a dult s, on I Y $ 275 • r ef - &amp;
used coveraus, open SaturOd33ep8.. ,required. Call 446- range, good condition, SSOO day -'Sunday afternoons.
forlhepair . Call675·3962.
warehouse 7 miles East,
l,:::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_l,:=========~ Ravenswood Rt. 21, new In·
~
sulated coveralls 525,
buckle ·gum boots SIS,
jackets S16 up, Union made
imprinted
advertising
speclillllles, call615·3334.
Used tires. H&amp;nshaws Tires
on Lucas L•ne. Call 675·

7360.

Trailer sites. 10 percent
down. 992·2571 or992·3830.

Firewood, $25.00 plck"P
load at farm. Call895·3395.
55

Houses for Rant

2 bedroom family rm ., $300
mo. utilities and dep.
require~ . Call446·4554:
House 2 bedroom, 733 3r.d.
Ave., Gallipolis. Deposit
req"lred. Call 446·3870 or
446· 1340.

HI LLCREST KENNEL
Boarding· all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Call «6· 7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
Eng I ish Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.
Priced to sell . Female
A.K .C. registered Golden
Retrieve; puppies. 9 weeks
old. After 5 p.m. 7~2 · 2957.
AKC Shetland Sheepdog
iSheltysl 6 weeks old,
Sable &amp; white, $200 each .
Ca ll 675·4515.
·
5..9_ _,_F,or'-"-Sa,;l,_,e'-'or"-'T'-'r_,a_,d,_e_
want to trade washer and
dryer for o .portable set.
Caii 614-949·2S06.
1~71

KIRKWOOD 12•65
Mobile Home·wilt trade for
good late model4x4 pickup.
304-675·5739 evenings &amp;
weekends.

. ............ .. .
---·................

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
;Call Judy Taylor at 367·

7220.

Farm Equipment

JIVIDEN ' S
FARM
EQUIPMEN,T
«6· 1675
Special Sale on NEW
LONG TRACTOR!
Model
HP
Price .
26024
$4924.00
31Q28 5594.00
31Q-4•o4-28 7072.00

360--

35 -

460-

~1.9-

6555 .00
7353 .00

460-~•o4-41 . 9-

9619.00
48.57778 .00
48.5- 9886.00
48.5- 8450 .00
64
931~ . 00
6 1 Q-~x4-64 - 11,304.00
Plus Freight

51Q51Q-4x451Q61Q-

Sale Dale March 13, 1982
CALL NOW!
63

livestock

Weened whole Ho lstein bull
calf . Call256·6315.
64

Hay &amp; Grain

For sale ear corn . Call614384·4514.

WEDNESDAY
FEB. 10, t082
EVENING
7:00 Cl). PM IIAQAZINE
II) THE NEW BIBLE BAFFLE

~~rw

ENTERTAIIMENT
NIGHT
HAPPY DA Y8 AGAIN
; Cll TIC TAC DOUOH
iDl MAC!IEIL-l!HRER
PORT
!!!!W!!
• MUPPET SHOW
7:05
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS
Clueot: William
nd.
7:30
• YOU ASKED FOR IT
ANOTHER LIFE
.
WOMEN'S GYMNASTICS
John Traetta and Greg Lewil
hoallt&gt;la fire! lntomollonoltoam
champlonahlp meet tepad at
Madleon SquareOarden In New
Yorf&lt; C!!x,
CI).W FAMILY FEUD
&lt;IJ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
II)
NIQHnY BUSINESS
REPORT
®I RICHARD SIMMONS

71

llHINK, IN LI{;HT OF HOW .
l'VE BEEN TII:EATEO HER!:,
' t'lt\ OWEP THE COURTE~Y OF
~I'CLIISIVI! ON THIS
.
STORY, MR. JACK.
...I

I

,.. AND I WOULDN'T HAVE:
HAP TO Lt=EC.H OFF UNCLE"
.JAC!&lt; FOII:cVt;R., AND THE:
NUNS COULD U5E" A 6 1EiGSR
CONVENT ANYWAY, AND .--~-....
THE MONEY THEY
WOULD' VE MADS~

.: :liN

r

...
custom
1977 Harley
. Must
Davidson
see to ~1200
appreclale. Call «6·7015.

Auto for Sole

1975 Honda 750. drag pipes,
6
over
front
end,
King/Queen seat, extras,
$1000. Call Calvin anytime
446·6638.
75

76

HARTS Used Cars, New
Ha\len West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars In
stock .
GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now available
through local sales, under
$300.00. Call 1-714·569·0241
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 2~ hours.

1915 Mustang II 4 cyl.,
asking 52,000. Call 304·675·
512~ after 5:00.
1981 Ford Escort, super
sharp, PS, PB, AM·FM
stero, extra low mileage,
$6,000. Call 675·2571 or 675·
(318.
Truck's for Sale

1981 Datsun pickup 5 spd.
transmission, lono bed .
Call «&lt;1·8380 after 5.

iUJ •

I

Power steering for 1973 &amp;
newer
Chevy 1trucks.
Power brakes set up for
same. Custom ·sunroof. new
rings, main bearing, rod
bearings, .tim ing chain,
gasket set. for 350 Chevy
engine. 3/4 ton Chevy truck
rearend. Call388·9684 . .

77

~'ri!~

' ANNlE

THREE WOJLD
CAT LAUGH!

INDEED ! PFIIH.'

Auto Repair

Qual ity Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center. 446·1968.

Ser lEt$
81

STUCCO PLASTERING
te&gt;&lt;tured cei I ings com mercial and residential.
free estimates. Call 2561182 .

8:35
8:58
1:00

CAPTAIN STEEMER Qlr·
pef Clean ing featured :by
Haffelt Brothers custom
CarQets. Free estirTu!ltes.
Call&lt;46·2107.
PAINTING - interior and
e&gt;&lt;terior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. "'P· Call 388-9652 .

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

1:30
10:00

... but I can certainl4 testif4
that he's a deadbeat! He
hasn't
his bill for eiqht
months!

heard Mrs. Wallet
Senator Bobble
a dead·
beat and
a phon4?

tO: 15

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter, · el ectrician,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560.

LOCKSMITH
Service .
Residential , aufomotiiJe .
Emergency service. Call
882 ·2079.

10:20
t0:28
10:30
10:50

~~:
WINNIE

A5 TilE PRINCESS

... THAT WE SHOULI7

WINT~

5Qt/AU ...
YES,! FEEL
NOW .. . THANKS
TO YOU AND
SAID.

6663.

/!NEMY/

NO?

Mf/CH /fETTER

Wandling Electrical serIJice. Old work and n&amp;w
work, small appliances 24
nr . service . Ph. 304-675·

FRANKLY,

POSTPONE OUR TALK 0\IAR, TINIE
UNTIL YOU REGAIN
IS MY
YOUR STOMACH,
s~sr

.JU HEAPS HOME TO SKIRT A

83

Excavating

Gallipolis Diversif ied Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . SpeCial
far!'" rates. Call us for tree
esttmates. 446-4440 .

=-=== ~
Electrical

84

&amp; R efrigera tiori

SEWING Machine repairs,
servtce . Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service! Sharpeil
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2274.
•

73

367·0591 .

JONES BOYS ' WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or

1961 Jeep Wagoneer 4 x 4.
327 engine. Automatic, 1-:.:7_ _ -!!.U.!!ph'!o!!!l!'st~e!CrYL___
automatic front h"bs, new
TRISTATE
,
brakes, good body, 614-985· . UPHOLSTERY SHOP' '
4209 ·
11 63 Sec. Ave .. Gallipoll~
446· 7833or«c~· 1833,
·
··
1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, 'Ill ton, ~ speed,
54,500. 304-675·1578. After
3:30 675·1320.

!

l

I

i'tlY~W¥~ ..

~

I

ABC CAPTIONI!D NEWS
MOVIE •(COMEDV) ••

....,.." . . .uty·• 1t44

!B). ~C N!WINIGHTUNE

~chorod by Tid Koppel.
11:45 (!)MOYIE ·(THRILLER) n
'.1'rldoy, The t 3111" tMO
ll:eo CIJ MOYIE ·(COMEDY) ••
"Stop, You•re Killing Mt"
'1952
t 2:00 ())
BURNS AND AU!N

t:ITY/
BARNEY

~~C NEWS NIGHTLIN!

1EEHEEHEE

l

· PAW WON'T

NEVER FIND
MV BUTTER
AN' EGG
MONEY

UP HERE

chOfed by Ted Koppel.
I'NLATINIOHT
•
LOVE I OAT louc
yeameforthtwor1dofehowblz
end recrulti ttleatrvlcee of
three dynamic woman to help
him meet a famoua maneger;
Julie h11 a bltteraweet reunion
with her college awtttheart;
ond,•m•nwholoolfoldofwolor
takta the crulet with a friend .
~oat: 70 mino.)
12:30
JACK lENNY
LOVE BOAT looac yeorno
tor the world of thow biz and
recrultl the aervlcea of three
dynamic women to he_, him
meet a famoua manager; Julie
haaa biHeraweet reurUon with
htr coHeg• awllthtart; and, a
menwholeatroldofwottnokoo
the crultt with a hi end .
m.-•1: 70 mino.)
CD LATI NIGHT WITH DAVID
LeTTI!RMANOUIII:fllmvldeo
artlot Bill Wagman and hll dog,
ntroy. (80 mlno.)

~

N. air condition service
commercial, industrial ~
Phone 882·2079.
General Haullhg

QUINCY Following 1
mentalout·patlent 'a plea of 'not
gultyby rea eon ot lnaanlty' ln the
slaying of hi a father and
brother, Quincy and the D.A.
plead for a change in the law to
require that "!•ntel l y Ill
crimina Ia eerve out their
aentancaa afterbalng dec Ia red
aone. ceo mlno.)
Cl)(!l). DYNASTY
II) Na-ICTION TELEYI·
SION 'I Remember Harlem ' Thla
condenaed .vera ion of the
four-part aerie a 'I Remember
Harlem' takea a took at Harlem
from Ill early yearathrough the
to1170'o .
NEWS
MOYIE -{COMEDY) •• "All
ht Long" 1081
TIS EVENING NEW&amp;
CIN UPOAT! NEWS
SINO OUT AMERICA
ALFR!D HITCHCOCK
ESI!NTB
TIS EVENING NEWS

n~ CIISLATI~OYIE

---------------"
JACKS R\=FRIGERATIQ,
15

ff1ll17riB
~rn~:.~~~~:

~

1 BELIEVE rLL
LONG AS I KNOW
WE'RE HEA!71NG
BACK TO t:t:HTRAL

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

~•m

M':SHVIUI RFD
it) DICK CAVETT SHOW
eat : Blance, actraa1.
11:28
CJIN UPDATE NEWS
t 1:30
• ' COLU!G! BASKET·
BALL Kentucky 111 Mlaelaalppl
ANOTH!R LIF!
BENNY HIU 8110W
THE TONIGHT I HOW
Gueata: Eddie Murphy, Wayne
Rogoro, Albert ·Hogue. (eo

MAKE IT • ., A$
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

THE GREATEST
AMERICAN H!RO
• (I) ®I SHE'S A GOOD
SKAT!, CHARLIE BROWN
Peppermint Pattytrleato prove
ehe'l a good ekllta, and
Woodatock tuma out to be the
unllappabla hero who put a her
performing artlatry aafely on
~~Ropoot)
W
LIVE FROM LINCOLN
C TIR 'An Evening wllh
ltz11ak Perlman' Violin let ltzl1ak
Perlman and conductor David
Zlnmen perform Brahma'
'Concerto for VIolin in 0 Ma)or'
and Mendalaaohn'a'Concarto
for Violin al'td Orcheatraln E
Minor' with the New York
llhormonlc. (2 hro.)
AUINTHEFAMILY
MOYIE··(DRAMA) 00 111
:l_riil.O.!J!&gt;uollaotordo" tll78
WW\liJCBBSPI!CIALMOYIE
PRESENTATION 'Hooper'
1978 Stare: Burt Reyl"!olda,
Jl.n·Michool Vinconl.
CIJ NBAIASKETBALLA!Ianla
wko vo Chicago Bullo
C.li.H. UPDATl NEWB
THI!FACTSOFLIFE
A rllt between roommatea Jo
and Blair Ia magnified when,
Ieeming they are no longer on
probation, they decide to apllt
upandTootleandNatallefollow

~

8:05
8:30

Home
Improvements

Call 446·2801 tor termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates,sBil l Thomas.
•.
RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

ENTERTAINMENT

NIOHT
SANFORD AND SON
CIIN..UPDATENEWB
• CD REAL PEOPLE
Profiles of a California couple
who teach horaeback riding to
cerebral palay vlctlme; Q7 year
old twin elatera who were
~loglold girl a: e booutypogeonl
for pigeons; 'oil wreetllno' in .
Southern California; and a
Vlrglnlo man wno tried to
propoee to hie girlfriend by
'!ling • billboard . {eo mlno.)
llJ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

7:35
7:58
8:00

New Auto Paris $20,000
stock, fit most. 25·50 per
cent cost. Porter, Oh . Call
367·0236 or 367 ·7101 .

1980 Toyota, SR5 Pickup,
am· fm,
5-speed,
low
mileage. E.cellent. S5,500.
7~2 · 2877 alter 5.
Vans&amp;4W.D.

~c:.~FILES IN ART

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuorles

----- - - - - - -

1981 Reliant K Car, 4·D, PS,
PB, air, auto, 12,000 mi. ,
new cond . Call 446·2300.

BORN LOSER

1978 Hydra Sport 18ft. Bass
boat, 150 HP Mercury with
trim &amp; till, 12· 2~ volt
Evenrude trolling motor, 3
batteries, Pro-trail trailer.
Call304-773·5593 .
·

1979 Thunderbird, power
steering, power brakes,
am-fm radio, air cond .;
good cond . Rear defroster.
Call after 5:00, «6 · 2~18.

.

Boatsand
Motors for Sale

Water welts. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
P,umps Sales and Servic,e.
304-895·3802 .
.

72

CAPTAIN EASY

sao.

17 Gremlin, auto .• 6 cyl.,
21 ,000 miles, nice, $1400,
good gas mileage. 256·6459.

Building Supplies

Building materials block,
brick. sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Ca112&amp;5121 . '
56

61

1979 Harley Davidson Spor·
tster. Excellent condition .
$2700 tl~m . 4 Good Year all
terrain steel belted radials.
30 by 13.5 by 15. Like new.
$400. 4 Chevy 15 ln. whi l e
spoke wheels.
949· 222~
atter6p.m ,

- 13

olii &amp;.Aft• 't"

• •
VIewmg

Pets tor Sale

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies.
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
3844after 4p.m .

For Sale couch &amp; chair, like
new. Call 675·7141.

Sears dune cart, ~ood .con ·
dillon. Call304·576·2164.

41

56

Motorcycles

1

Television

1972 Ford F·.250 ~- Whl!el
Drive. 985·4339.

446 · 368~ .

Furn ished apartment, ypstairs, 4 rooms and bath.
one or two adults, references and security deposit
r equired. Call 446·0444 af·
!er 5PM,

Apartments . 615·5.548.

vans&amp;4W.D. •

1978
Chevy
van ,
customized. Call446·1015 or

2745.

- - ..

Ohio

1979 Jeep Wagoner quadra
track, AC, PS, PB. rear
defrost. cruise. till Wh'l."l •
aluminum wheels, luggage
rack. AM· FM stero, 24,000
miles, will toke older ~­
wheel drive automatic · on
trade. Call304·675·4327 .

Ap artments - 1 and 2
bedrooms. Rent starts at; 1
bedroom S152. 2. bedroom
$188, deposit $200. Call «&lt;~ ·

utilities
Furnished
pd ., 1 apt.
bdr., adults,
near HMC . Call 446·4416 af·
ler 7PM .

73

1982

78 Jeep CJ ·5, 6 cyl .• 3 spd .•
$4,000. 30~ ·773· 5684.
'

2 bdr. completely furn ., all
electric, carpeted, adults,
no pets. 458 2nd . Ave.•
Gallipolis, $225 per mo.
plus deposit. Call «6·2236
or 446· 2581 .

40~· 860 · 8405 .

Centenary. 2 bdr .• private
lot, ref . &amp; dep., $160 mo ..
odulls. Call614· 6~3 ~ 26~4 .

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYl£"'

5786.

.

Homes for Sale

42

Apartmemt
lot Rent

44

.

•

PEANUTS

I DON'T THINK MY
SWEET 6AB800 WOUl.ll
GIVE ME A VALENTINE
ANVWAV,..

I'M

NOT YOUR ''sWEET

SABBOO' AND I-lOW DO VOIJ
KNOW I' WOULDN'T GIVE
VOU A VALENTINE IF I
WERE ~''SweET BAS&amp;OO"
WHICfl I'M NOT?!
'

SEE THE

PROSLEM, MA'AM?

t2:N
t:OO
1:10
t:IIO

l••w•

CIN IPOI1T8 fii!POIIT

··~

WHAI COI.O~ COULD
IHE eH.ouee
P05e;I~L.Y SE~

IOSOYUJ I ()
rJ
1

Prlnl answer here :

Now arrahge !he circled ieners to
form lhe surprise answer. as :wg gesled by the Ab&lt;we cartoon.

"[TI( I

I I J"

(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday 's

I

Jumbles: NOISY EJECT RANCID AROUND
Answer: What the loafer who was born with a sliver
spoon In his mouth hasn 't done sinceSTIRRED
_

Jumb.. Book No. U, contltlnlnQ 110 puzzltl , 11 lltllllble lm $1.95 pottplld
from Jumbll, Clo lhll newap1per, Bolt 34, Norwood, N.J. 01~ . Include your
namt,
zip code and mtkt t:h.Ckl ptyebll to Nlwlpaperbookl .

add""·

BRIDQ~
A real card fight

~·-

.....-------,

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Soalag

NORTH

West has a tough hand to
lead from against South's
three notrump.
North has used Stayman
to find out if South has a
four-card major suit and
South has sho)Vn four hearts.
Then North jumped to three
notrump so that it is certain
that North does not have
four hearts, but almost cer·
lain that he holds four
spades.
In spite of that West
decide~~ that a spade lead is
the least unattractive one at
his disposal. He leads the
seven of spades.
It should be a cinch for
East to see that he must hold
back his king of opades and
not play It on whatever card
Is plaJied from dummy. It
should be a cinch. But play·
era who blindly play third
hand high, In accordance
wllh the old rule that Is cor·
reel on most occaaio1111 will
rise with the king ana just
waste It this time.
II East does rlay the king,
South will ge four spade
tricks, three hearts and the
minor suit aces to have no
trouble making his contract.
II Eaot holds back the
king, South will be held to
three spade tricks and will

2-11).11

• Q J 10 9

.J!4

• Q7 2
+A63
WEST

EAST
+K 6 32

+74

•n

.K 8 62

tJ6 43

+K 10 2

t K98
+H54
SOUTH
+ABI
• A Q 10 9
t A 10 5
+Q8 7

Vulnerable: North'llouth
Dealer: South

Wett

Nortb

Ea•t

PaM
Pass
Pa9S

~

3 NT

Pau
Pass

Opening lead:

Soutb
I NT
f'
Pus

•7

probabfy fall one trick short.
He may stm make it. There
are all sorts of posalbUitles
in diamonds and dubs. But
the play wm be a flght, not a
romp.

~
llr lHOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
39 Beetle
1 Indonesian
Bailey's
island
nemesis
5 Baccaloni
40 Raison d' wasone
DOWN
10 In the center I Fundamental
11 Matt Helm
~Type of acid
portrayer
3 Avant.garde
12 Hindu deity
drama group
13 Secret.;
4 Thessalian
mysteries
mountain
14 Order of
5 Noble
animals
8 Rainbow
(suff . )
shape
15 Nigerian
7 Top of
16 Young sheep the line
17 Business
8 Meeting·
19 Dutch
ending
commune
phrase
20 Bloody
9 Donkeys
21 Donnouse
II Take the vows
22 lnslgnlf·
icant
24 Bank
properties
25 Pale
26 Night '(Fr.)
2'1 Colorado
Indian
Z8 Fonner chess
champion
31 Blue grass
:J2 Dos Passos
trilogy
33Compass
reading
(abbr. )
34 Uncut
31 Facta
37 Wagner opera
3111nfuriated

Yeoterday'a Aoawt!i
15 Ethereal
Z8 Bean·
18 French
family
statesman
shrub
21 Secular
29 Chemical
22 hidlgent ones
salt
23 Iron Curtain . 30 English
land
author
24 Capital
l5 Participial
of Elam
ending
Z8 Japanese·
311 German
~orlean
article

2· t0

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

AXYDLIIAA'IIl
LONGJ'BLL01J

One letter aimply otonda lor onother. In lhla aample A Ia
uoed for the three L'l, X lor the two O's, ete. Sin&amp;le !etten,
apottrophet, the lenJ(h and formation of the wonll an all
hlnto. Eaeh day the eode lelten ore dillerenL

CaYnOQUOTBB

HXMFN
NVO

JWBG

XYWS

TXMHWYX

BG X

UVVT

FAT

XYWSTVXH

I_IIAIIfii!D JOAN

ITANDING IIOOM ONLY
'An Evening AI Tho Moulin
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thll naughty, bowdy Oov 90'• ·
bart! lhow.
t:IO ; IIY LITTLE IIAIIOII!

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JWKIXTAXZZ. - SXV
BVSz, BVrj
Yedenlay'a Cryptoquole: HAlF A DOZEN UNES OF KIND. ·
NESS MAY BRING SUNSHINE INTO ntE WHOlE DAY OF
SOME SiCK PERSON.-G,H,WILKINSON

�Page- 14

Wednesday, February 10, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

e

High prices force children from pro
DENVER (AP) - Three mUlla n
children throughout the countrymost of them from lower-Income
famll!es - have stopped buying
school lunches because federal food
subsidies have ~n cut, according
to a study by a school-food Industry
group.
Schools ha ve Increased their prices and tightened the eligibility requi re m e nt s f or fr ee and
reduced-price lunches because of
Reagan administration budget cuts
that went Into effect in September .
The study by Dan Wlsotzkey,
chairman of the America n School
Food Services Association, showed
that 1.100 schools - with a total enrollment of 38'/,IXXJ- have stopped
offering lunches because of reduced fed eral food subsidies.
The Denver-based association is

an Industry lobbying group of administ ra tors of food serv ice
programs.
Of the 3 million children who
have stopped buy ing lunches,
nearly 63U,IXXJ are from families
with Incomes between $10,1XXJ and
$15,1XXJ a year, the study said. Students' parents report their earnings
on their a ppUcations for the school
lunch program .
Researchers don't know why
each of the remaining children
dropped out of the lunch programs.
But Wtsotzkey said In a n Interview
Tuesday that most were unable to
alford the average price of $5 a
week for school lunches.
Studies by the U.s. Department
of Agriculture confirmed the find·
tngs, said USDA spokesman
George Braley In Washln~on .

Disorderly arrests top list
Among 30 arreLts made by the
Middleport Police Department
during January, eight were made on
disorderly manner charges, according to the monthly report of
Police Chief J. J ' Cremeans.
One sixth of the total arrests were
on cha rges of driving while intoxicated ami th ere were th ere on
charges of speeding and two on
reckless operation charges. There

the month of January, Fire Chief
Jeff Darst reports. All vehicles were
driven a total of 1,033.1 miles during
the month .

was one arrest each for hampering

Sl-60 ; :wo to 400100. 48-00 : too toooo lbs. 47-00: ooo

Market report
Ohio Volley u'"'""kCo.
M"ketRe,.rt
Sale every Saturday at l p.m. Prices tak~n
from the audiun or S~tturd.ay , F~b. R. Trends :
Veal l'a lves $10 lower, reetkr cattle h to $5
hi,l(hcr , cows S2.50toSJ.50 higher. Toted Head 'JlJ.
Fct.'dcr Steers : Good and Choice 2!iO to 300100.

totiOO lbs. 45-{i3; 600to700lb:i. 4:1-51 ; 700to800 Jb:i.
Poll·ce business, no license plates, 4419
; 800 and over 46-51 .!Al.
destruction of property, no driver's
f'I.'L'(ler Heifers : Good and Cl10ice zao to300 lbs.
42 ; 300 to 400 Jbs_ W-48.50; 400 to ~ lbs. 41-49 ;
ll·cense, exiting on traffic side of :iOO·:i0to600
lbs. 3f!..-.46 ; 600 to 700 lbs. 37-4).25 ; 700 to
vehicle fleeing police Officer, petty BOO ll&gt;!. 36.50-43.75; BOO ando•e. ~.
' ..
d ·I,
d' ·t n
Fct:dcr Bull:i : Good ttnd Choke 250 to 300 100.
t he ft , assure
c car
IS a ce, · 47 .fiG.-57.50; 300 to 400100. 4~55.!i0 ; ~00 to :;oo lbs.
discharging lirearm in public, and &lt;Jw.;u.oo to 800 lb•. 41 .50-'17 "" ' 800 to 700 too.
failure to yield the ri ght of way.
~~~~-: 700 tu 800 lbs. 36.50-41.75 ; tm and over
The department investigated 11
Holstein steers ami bulls300 to 800 lbs. 33-4UO.
accidents and 282 parking meter
:,~~~~~~ ~':~:"~ ue,1~~~50Ju..w.fl0; canners
tickets were written . Parking meter ilntl cutlcr~ 35 tlown .
Veal calves - t:hoice and prime 71).62.
11 l 'on . totaled t:54J)
~&amp;
I
S
•
.
·-~-Meanwhile, the Middleport Fire
Topho~s 210to230 l bs. &lt;a-r.o.
BOlli'S 33-35
Department answered 31 calls - 12
So w, &lt;otJib;.andup&lt;J-47.50 .
fire and 39 emergencies - during:
Pi~&lt;:s by the head 15-30.

-

The drop In participation was the
first recorded since the federal
school lunch program was founded
In 1946, Wlsotzkey said. His assocla·
tlon annually records the number
of participating students .
"Some children are not eatingthey're spending their lunch period
on the school playground Instead of
the cafeteria," Wlsotzkey sald.
"Some students are standing
around begging for food from their
teachers or friends."
According to Wlsotzkey's study,
states with the largest dropout

rates were Texas, Dllnols, New Jersey, Arlzona, Pennsylvania and
Washington. More than 20,rol students In each of thOse states do not
eat federally financed lunches because their schools have dropped
out of the program, he said.
Former President Carter proposed spelldlng $3.9 bllllon for the
federal food program, but the Reagan administration wanted the figure cut to $2.34 bllllon. Instead,
Congress voted to set the school
lunc h program budget at $2.6
billion.

Poor children who once qualified
for free or redUced-price meals
have been hit hardest by the cutbacks, Wlsotzkey said.
The cutoff In family Income lor
tree lunches Is $10,990 for a family
oHour, downfrom$11,520underthe
1911l guidelines. For the reducedprice lunches, the cutoff !Xllnt Is
$15,630 for a family o! four, almost
$2,rol a year less than the 191'0 regulations allowed.
Reduced-price meals now sell !or
40 cents, up from 20 cents during
the 1~81 school year.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Republi·
can congressional leaders are try·
lng to make sure President Reagan
"understands the realities" of the
growing Capitol HID resentment of
his deficit- ridden 1983 budget
proposal.
But Reagan made It clear he was
In no
· to compromise prior to

a White House meeting today with
Senate Majority Leader Howard H.
Baker Jr., House Republican
leader Robert H. Michel and Sen.
Paul Laxalt, the president's closest
friend In the Senate.
The object of their concern: Reagan's $757.6 billion 1983 spending
Its
S91.5 bllllon

Bedspreads · Sheets - Towels - Couch Throws - Area Rugs
Mattress pads· Table Covers.

*50% OH All Winter Clothing
Jackets - Coats - Shirts for Men - Women's and Children's
Coats- Tops- Shirts· Sweaters· Knitwear.

*FEB. FURNITURE SPECIALS

Have a Heart
we have hearts for your
favori te Valentme . In 14Kt.
gold overlay by Krementz .

Many items of quality furniture reduced during this special
sale. Visit the Jrd floor.

* VALENTINES DAY NEXT SUNDAY
Buy the gifts you need - Select Hallmark Valentine Card
and Gift Wrap. Be ready for sweethearts day next Sunday·.
INCOME IDISTRffiUTION - David, Stockman, Dlredor of the Office

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

of Management and Budget, testllles over his briefing books before a
Joint Economics Committee bearing, Wednesday on Capitol Hill. Stock·
man testified on the Impact of the Reagan Administration's economic
policies on the distribution of Income. ( AP Laserphoto)

II.

16.UOf0
E
I
•

WEDNESDAY SPECIALS
59~ .

3/89e
6/69e
CAKE DONUTS •••••••••••••••
S 1.49
HOT DONUTS •••••••••••••••••
3/89e
CREAM PUFFS ••••••••••••••••
O E h

FRESH BAKED

· HOllEY APPLE SLICED
FRESH BAKED

Dozen

FRESH BAKED

THURSDAY SPECIALS
l

FRESH BAKED

DONUT HOLES •••• , •••••

~~~ED

WALNUT COOKIES

99e

f
~?e~ .or••••

$1D
••••••••••••••
~n

3/B9e

FRESH BAKED

CREAM HORNS •••••••••••••••

e
6189
YEAST DONUTS ••••••••••• , •••
4/ $1 00
FRENCH CRUELLERS •••••••••••

FRESH BAKED CHOCOLATE
FRESH BAKED

FRIDAY SPECIALS
FRESH BAKED ASST.

HARD ROLLS

. ................ 6/9~e

FRESH BAKED CINNAMON

SWEET ROLLS •••••••••••••••••

6199

12 oz. Loaf

FRESH BAKED ICED

CINNAMON BREAD ............ ..
SOUR CREAM

CAKE DONUTS

$129

BAGELS . .................. .

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_.._.._.....,._.. ....

RETilEMIMT

Wilh Your Special
Message t rom

FRESH BAKED CINNAMON

PERSIAN BUNS ••••• ; • • • • • • • • •
.

GEORGE WASHINGTON SPECIAL

$3,042,435
~e• •

11 1 12'• f1terest rate
•

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_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _,....~

Stopbyany
.
BANK ONE otflce
for details.

399 .

9" Size $229

CHERRY PIE •••••• - ~ . ••••••••••••

New claims due to lack of orders
COLUMBUS, Ohio- More than 6,rol of the 40,003 Initial claims
lor unemployment benefits filed during the week ending Feb. 6 were
due to lack-of-order hyolfs In the auto and auto parts Industries, the
Ohio Bureau of Employmenl Services says.
Bureau administrator Albert Giles said Wednesday the number of
clalnns was down 5.2 percent from the previous week's total of42,30L
Continuing claims lor benefits by those out of work a week or more
numbered 325,451, a 6.6 percent Increase over the previous week's
total, Giles said.
He said 3,:m jobless workers In Ohio e xhausted their benefits
under all programs during the week ending Jan. 30.

Plant expansion escapes cuts
PIKETON, Ohio- Expansion of the uranium enrichment plant at
Piketon has escaped cuts In the Reagan administration budget, an
official says.
Chuck Greener, spokesman for Rep. Bob McEwen, ROhlo. said
the expansion will remain on schedule If Congress agrees with the
president's proposals.
The Installation produces fuel for nuclear plants In several countries. Five years ago, It began a government-finanCed expansion.
The plant, 20 miles north of Portsmouth, employs about 2,DJ people.

CLEVElAND (AP) - The winning number drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 459.
The lotlery reported earnings of $600,969.50 from the wagering on
Its dally game, The earnings came on sales of $1,054,645, while
hOlders of winning tickets are entitled to share $453,675, lottery offi·
clals saki.

Weather forecast
Mostly clear tonight. Lows 10-15. Becoming cloudy Friday. Highs

J0-35, Chance of snow near zero percent tonight and 20 perceht

99~

6/8 9e

CONESVILLE, Ohio - Two men who climbed a utility smokestack to protest acid rain Monday have accomplished their mission
and planned to end their protest today, a spokesman for the Greenpeace environmental group says.
Peter Dykstra said from 'V shtngton Wednesday night he had
been In contact with Greenp~? " officials In Conesville, who were In
radio contact with the two.
Greenpeace Identified the two as James Creager, 25, of Ann Ar·
bar, Mich. , and Bob Jackzy, 26, of Toledo.
The protesters, who climbed an &amp;15-foot smokestack at a Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. plant, face criminal trespass
charges, said Coshocton County Sheriff Davfd Corbett.

Winning Ohio lottery number

5/ S100..
Each

DUNKIN' STICKS ............. .

20

Tr~e•e

~...-

,

CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES •••••••

DELICIOUS

$ 966,926

·• T'l•s anumes lhat you ma ke a 52 000 contnbutron at me blrg tnnmg ot eac11

-

HE-ART CAKES •••••••••••••••••••

HEART SHAPED JUMBO

ACCOUNT

30

" " d that you leave fund5 H, your tA-'11'1'&lt;lYQI'I your 65th ,aas

SATURDAY SPECIALS
H BAKED

Act quickly to get
the best tax advantage.

I

6/89~

Plain or Onion

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During February the
18-month rate is 16.25%.*) Or you can
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in effect for February is 15.75%.*)

Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
for your retirement. To maximize the taxdeferred interest you earn, you should make
your contributions as soon as possible after
You can choose one of two ways
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
to earn your Interest at BANK ONE.
statements on the status of the Account and
You can choose an
your funds are
interest rate which
AMOUNT insured by an
AGE
When-Open
You Wltl Accumulate
is set for 18 months.
agency of the
Your IRA
AtAtltl''
Any new funds
federal
deposited'will earn .
50
$ 83,506 government.
~------,_------~
40
$ 298,667
INDIVIDUAL

6/69e
•••••••••••••••

FRESH BAKED

FRES

~

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2·,000, which
can be subtracted from your income beforfi.
your taxes are figured each year. If you
have a non-working spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
and your spouse both work, you can each
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
money market interest rates for an
inflation-proof rate of return.
The chart below illustrates how quickly
your financial future can grow.

HUNTINGTON, Utah - Union coal miners returned to work for
the graveyard shift at Emery Mining Corp.'s five eastern Utah
~- mi!J_es·.early today after. settlement of_a three-day wlldcat strike.
The agreement reached Wednesday night between union and
company officials ended the strike by about 1,400 union coal miners
who walkEd off the job to protest a Feb. 3 Incident In which a foreman
allegedly threatened a worker In one of mines, union officials said.
Union officials decided to end the strike after the company agreed
to establish a new policy lor disciplining employees, said Don Colegie, United Mine Workers Local 2176 president.

Pair will end protest today

4
FRIED PIES ••••••••••••
z~ .a~ ••••

Frtday, Winds variable Jess than 10 mph tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecast .

Whcn.ar you think
of Mllnt money, our name

comes up first.

Member FDIC

=.

BANKONETMBANK ONE OF POMEROV
POU£AO'f·~~

deficit.
Baker and the Senate's No. 2 Republican, Sen. Ted Stevens of
Alaska, both said Wednesday that
they found merit In a Democratic
senator's alternative plan that calls
for a virtual freeze on Pentagon
spending while trtmmlng by hal!
the administration's three-year tax
cut.
But Treasury Secretary Donald
T. Regan dismissed the Democratic plan as " absqlutely ridiculous" and the president himsel!
declared he will stick by his plans
for big Increases In mllltary spendIng and deep cuts In outlays for social programs.
Mike Johnson, an aide to llllnols'
Rep. Michel, said that although the
White House arranged today's
meeting Michel IntendEd "once
more to make sure the president
understands the realitles down
here (In Congress. )"
Baker, of Tennessee, and Laxalt,
of Nevada, were expected to deliver a slrnllar message.
Meanwhile, Senate Democratic
leader Robert C. Byrd ol West Virginia sent Reagan a letter asking
him to withdraw the administration·s proposed budget.
"! am looking for a document we
In Congress can work with; one
based on 1'!1allstlc assumptions;
one which shows a much clearer
trend toward a balanced budget,"
Byrd wrote.
Byrd urged the president to take
a "courageous step" ltke the one
President Carter took In 1911l when

he withdrew his original budget
and submitted a new one.
House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill .Jr., D-Mass., also kept up
his harsh crlticJsm of the president
Wednesday, saying It was Reagan
who should " put up or Shut up."
"The product of the Reagan economic sales pitch has been a dlsas~r and all the roadshows In the
world are not going to change that
!act," O'Neill said.
O'Neill referred to a two-day trtp
to the Midwest earlier this week In
which the president challenged his
budget crl'tlcs to ':put up or shut
up."
Reagan stood his ground Wed.nesday, teillng a group of women
appointed to administration jobs:
"We come to government at a time
o! economic crisis, and we've only
begun to sort out the mess that had
been building for 40 years . But the
difficulties that we face today only
prove the !allure of the programs
that came before."
Baker, In his first major detour
from Reagan's strategy, has said
that a proposal by Sen. Ernest F .
Hollings of South Carolina Is "Interesting and worthwhile." Stevens
agreed that "It merits a lot of
consideration.''
Hollings, ranking Democrat on
the Senate Budget Committee, said
his alternative could cut Reagan's
projected deficit of $91.5 billion for
1983 to $42 billion and produce a surplus In 1985- the year Reagan forecasts a deficit of $82 bllllon.

BANKING TALK- Paul Volcker, ~halrman of the Federal Reserve
Board, Is pictured In an appearance before the House Banking Committee Wednesday on Capitol Hill. Volcker said the Federal Reserve
Board will continue to slow the growth of the U.S. money supply, despite
arguments thalli could stifle eunomlc recovery. ( AP Laserpholo)

High court ·
could get
•
rate Issue

•

Union miners return to work

16 Dz loaf

2 S.Ct.om 16 Page• · 15 Canh
A Multimedia Inc . Nowspapet

Pomeroy-Mic!dleport, Ohio, 'ThuBCiay, Februc11y 11, 1982

*FEB. WHITE SALE- 20% OFF

VAUGHAN'$·

IT ALlAN BREAD ••••••••• , , ~ •••••

enttne

Capitol Hill resentment gets stronger

I d;l! IiI1IH iJ ~ i Ui HI

FRESH BAKED .

at

•

Voi.30,No.211
Copyrighted i 982

ELBERFELD$

Phone 992-5546

•

&amp;Unnmy~hMo~y.

Chance o f - Ounte&amp; Saturday. Fair and wanner Suaday and
MondaY .IDgblln the mld-30ol to mld-4811 Salurday, In the .Sunday
and mlcHOs to mld-MB Monday. Ovemliht loWB In the teens early
Saturday and In the :101 early Sunday and Monday.

-

I

COLUMBUS, . Ohio (AP)- The
Ohio Supreme Court may be the
next stop lor the city of Columbus
as It attempts toobtajn a rollback of
a natural gas rate lhcrease lnnplemented last year tJ1-Cobimbla Gas
o! Ohio Inc.
The Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio on Wednesday dented the
city a requestforare-hearlngofthe
4.3 percent rate Increase that Columbia lnnplemented In December.
The city had objected to the way
Increased demand costs were computed for residential customers.
In August, the commission
enacted a uniform demand charge
which, In effect, lowered ~atural
gas rates for residential customers
but Increased them lor Industrial
users.
The Industries objected to the actlon, arguing they were "static" users of fuel and did not require as
great a capacity for storage as residential customers.
In December, the PUCO retracted Its August order and ruled
that the historic treatment of allocating demand costs be used.
Thomas Donavan, deputy director of the city's energy department ,
said the Issue could be taken before
the Ohio Supreme Court.
" We could go to the Supreme
Court," City Attorney Greg Lashutka agreed. "Our policy has
been not to tue frivolous appeals to
the Supreme Court. We'D have to
look at the case, !?Valuate Its merits
and put that case Into context with
similar Columbia Gas cases."
The average monthly bUJ for Columbia's 178,625 customers runs
$66.02. according to company spokeswoman Carol McBurney.
Columbia has pending before the
PUCO a $10.58 million rate
Increase.

EAGLE - ~~ Tbon1811, left, a teolor .al Meigs
High Scbool, completed his final requirement for
becoming an Eagle Scout- the highest award givenby mating this altar table for the Meigs County Infirmary. Shown with the new table are, left to right,
Thomas, Randy Murray, a member of Boy Seoul Troop
249 who aulsted; the Rev. W. H. Perrin who drew

plans for the table, aDd ·~· Jlllldred Jacobs, who Is
serving as superintendent hlthe lnflnnary until her
replacement Is named following her recent
resignation. Greg wUI receive the Eagle rank In early
spring. He Is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Oon Thomas of
Pomeroy.

Gallia-Meigs CAA places
orders for surplus cheese
Meigs and Gallia Co\llltY needy
families are expected to receive
some of the three miltion pounds of
government surplus cheese coming
into Ohio.
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency is heading an effort !o
get some A&gt;f the surplus cheese for
needy famlies here.
Joe Barsotti, CM Executive
Director, said Wednesday that while
the cheese has not been ordered, he
expects to order 10,000 pounds for
the needy of the two counties the first time.
According to Barsotti , tentative
arrangements have been made to
use walk-in coolers at the Gallipolis
Developmental Center, although
local distribution centers in the two
counties have not as yet been

established .
Several agencies have been contacted and locations and volunteers
to help with the distribution seem
available.
The cheese will he picked up at
Ja ckson. There will be a charge of 15
cents for every five pounds with the
amount for the initial 10,000 pounds
probably to he taken from grant funds, Barsotti said.
The onlY way to avoid that charge,
according to the Ohio Department of
Agriculture, is to receive, store and
distribute an entire truckload of
cheese.
In that case, the federal government will deliver a truckload of 1,120
cases or 33,600 pounds right to the
;-torage distribution point at no cost.
John M. Stackhouse, director of
the Ohio Department of Agriculture,

announced today Ohio's original 1.4
million pounds of cheese has been
committed for local distribution at
this time, and that he has ordered an
additional I \2 million pounds for
Ohio's needy families.
The first loads of cheese have
already been shipped to the Cincl(lnati and Barberton areas.
There is no application nor income
specifications for recipients of the
surplus cheese, although th'&gt;Se
receiving it will be required to sign a
sheet saying thai they are eligible.
The limit Is one five-pound
package per family . Educational
handouts on storing, general handling and basic use for cheese have
been prepared by Dale Stoll, Meigs
County Extension Service, home
economics agent, and will be
distributed with the cheese.

Escapee needs hospitalization
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. lAP) A man charged wl th several felonies was warned by doctors that he
was In no condition to leave' the hospital where hewasrecovertng!rom
a bullet wound, but he apparently
disagreep, and today authorities
say they are searching In two states
for him.
·
.
· Dispatcher Claudia Royal of the
Lawrence County, Ohio, shertff's
department, salil ' early today that
authorities from Ohio and West VIrginia were searching for Robert
Travis, 43, who pollee say walked
out of St. Mary's Hospital in Huntington on Wednesday afternoon.
The South Point, Ohio, man Is
wanted In Ohio on charges of felonIous assault, resisting arrest, escape from custody and cai-rylng a
concealed wea!Xln, said Lawrence
County sheriff's deputy James
Heald. He saki the charges stern
from a shooting lnctdent last week
In which Travis' probation officer

shot him In the neck;
A hospital administrator said
Travis left the hospital, where he
was staying In an unguarded room,
shortly after 1 p.m. Wednesday.
"He leftwlthout permisSion and
checked out against all medical ad·
vice," said St. Mary's Executive
Olrector Steve Soltis.
On Feb. 3, Travis was to appear ..
In Lawrence County Municipal
Court In Chesapeake for a probation violation hearing, Heald said.
Travis and his probation officer
argued before the hearing, Heald
said. According to Heald, the probation officer shot Travis when he
attempted to drtve away .
Travis was trans!Xlrted across
the Ohio River to St. Mary's Hospital, where no guard was posted.
Heald said he was told the Cabell
Coun\y sherttt's department lacked
the necessary manpower to post a
guard and would not take responsl·
blltty for Travis.

REPEAT-Tidlaeeae waa repeated lhouaands of limes thla week as
Melp Colutly was IPill bll by heavy· iaow. Joe Moore, Rutland, might
have been c-oled a bit aa he cleaued off his .c ar by realizing the rea Ideofa of northern Ohio have been battling·two feel of snow.

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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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