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                  <text>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
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CREAM HORNS •••••••••••••••

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6189
YEAST DONUTS ••••••••••• , •••
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FRESH BAKED CHOCOLATE
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HARD ROLLS

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12 oz. Loaf

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CINNAMON BREAD ............ ..
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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

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CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES •••••••

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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

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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.

�Commentary

r

"Hey, don't worry! It's OK. I'm with the CIA. Our
authority has been expanded, you know."

The sound of it
From all the sounds of the oratory and the groans of the penny-p(nched,
thiS Is economic conservation time In America, a time when you hold on to
whllt you have, cut back and take no risks.
The president has made clear that economic conservation Is ln. He Is
cutting, cutting, cutting: The bureaucracy, aid to states, aid to Individuals
who had taken lor granted their dependency on government.
The sound of It echoes through the corporate world. The big automakers
seek take-backs from workers. Forget expansion, reduce risk. Win praise
lor saving pa~jer clips, rather than a raise lor winning new business.
Wall Street announces Its true-blue conservatism. Buy stocks lor dividends rather than for capital gains. Buy the safe ones; they might go
nowhere, but you won't risk your money.
Same line at home. Watch each dollar, keep the thermostat under 65.
make do with the old car for another year or two, eat pasta rather than
steak. and get an IRA to cut Income tax payments.
That's the sound of It anyway. But you wonde r how much Is sound and
how Is solid when you ,read that the Chamber of Commerce's "squeeze
Index" shows federal taxes grew faster than Income In December.
Is the country really conserving? Or Is It the economy wasting away?
Rather than conserving, plat Is, could you argue that the ec.o nomy Is
closing down? People are •spending less, Investors are Investing less,
business Is making fewer products, everyone Is making fewer plans.
In the past, challenges were met with answers, but the answers don't
appear automatically today. Perhaps, some suggest, the older Industries
have simply seen their day.
That argument can be carried a long way. While old Industries falter,
newer ones, mainly electronic a!ld technological, have appeared on the
scene, enough of them to prove that American Ingenuity Is still alive.
But so far. overall, business has shown little willingness or ability to
develop expansion plans, tax Incentives or not. It waits rather than conserves, and sales and tax revenue are lost each day.
So are the contributions ol16 mllllons workers who have lost their jobs or
had their hours reduced or who have su!tered the Ignominy of not even
being counted because they have given up looking for a job.
Blame the Federal Reserve and high Interest rates for discouraging
expansion, say Reagan's defenders. Blame big government deficits for the
high Interest rates, say critics of the president's program.
Blame Impatience; the president's program has been under way less
than a year, while problems have developed over decades. Blame business
for not taking the tax bait. Blame political opponents.
But blame Is lame, and mainly a contribution to oratory rather than to
the solution. It answers no questions, such. as whe ther the economy Is
conserving Its powers lor a big ~ush to come. or just wasting away.

Today in history
Today Is Thursday, Feb. 11, the 42nd day of 1982. There are 323 days left
In the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Feb. 11, 1929, the Lateran Treaty established an Independent Vatican
City.
On this date:
In 1531, King Henry VIII ·vas recogn!Zd as supreme head or the Church
In England.
In 1964, the Australian destroyer "Voyager" .sank oft New South Wales
after colliding with an Australian aircraft carrier, taking 89 lives.
In 1968, Communist troops In South Vietnam executed 300 civilians and
burled them In a mass grave during fighting for the city of Hue.
And In 1m. a treaty banning nuclear weapons from the ocean Door was
signed by 63 nations In ceremonies In Washington, London and Moscow.
Ten years ago. Lite magazine said It had found that Cllttord Irving's
book about billionaire Howard Hughes was a hoax and canceled plans to
publiSh excerpts. ·
Five years ago, President Jimmy Carter said he planned to send a
delegation to North Vietnam to discuss missing American mllltary personnel and other Issues.
One year ago, Las Vegas pollee arrested a 24-year-old busboy In connection with a fatal !Ire that swept through the Hilton Hotel the night before.
Today's birthdays: Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas, ls61 years old. Actress
Kim Stanley Is 57.
Thought For Today: Every noble -w ork Is at first Impossible.-- Thomas
Carlyle, Scottish wrlter-hlstorlan (1795-1881) .

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Cuurt Stre-et
Pomeroy,Oido
tll4-ttz...!l51

OEVOI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF TAE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~

~2-T!te Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 11 , 1982

Reds trade Moskau to Orioles
BALTIMORE (API- The Balti-

Dialogue on the budget.._·___W_ill_iam_F._B_uc_kley~Jr.

Berry's World

~~

The

,...,...__.._
,.., ,..,..,.c::I,F=o

~v

D. You voted for Reagan, if you'll
forgive my bad manners in remindi ng you?
R: Yawp.
D: He promised to eliminate the
budget deficit by 1984, but !he deficit
will be - by his reckoning - $83
billion in 1984. What is your comment•
R: That no one running for
president, whether it's FDR or Carter or Reagan, should "promise" to
eliminate the deficit, because no
president has the power to eliminate
the deficit.
D: Does that mean that if a
president has plenipotentiary power
he aclually could eliminate the
deficit?
R: Yawp.
D:How?
R: Easy. Lower the top tax rate to
25 percent, thereby increasing the
tax base .. Also, index the national
debt and reduce the carrying· costs
from about 13 percent to about three
percent.
D: Ho ho ho, you have a good sense
of hwnor.
R: Ho ho ho, you've run Congress
all but two years since Hoover and
you've had deficits ever since
Hoover.
D: Well granting a president isn't
in a position to exercise plenipoten·
tiary power, would you say that
Reagan has made a satisfactory
start?
R: Depends on what you mean by
satisfaclory. He has made a terrific
start if you compare him lo his
predecessor. His budget calls for a
4.5 percent increase in spending, and
a decrease to 6.6 percent in inflation.
That means that notwithstanding an
increase in military spending (18
percent); Reagan calls for a net
decrease in public spending. That's
good.
D: Oh, that's good, is it• A
decrease in public spending 1s
necessarily good?

R: It is if you conclude that exorbitant increases have caused
organic economic difficulties. If the
Soviet Union were to announce
tomoroow that it was going lo reduce
its public spending not by 4.5percent
but by 45 percent, wouldn't you consider that good?
D: I'm supposed to be asking the
questions around here. You consider
a deficit of $100 billlon tolerable?
R: Odd word, "tolerable. " That
means, Could we tolerate it? An·
swer: Sure, we could. Subquestion:
Is it good tb have a deficit? Suban·
swer: No, it is bad to have ~. deficit.
But if you ask the question : Would it
be better to have a 50 percent increase in the size of the deficit or a 50
percenl increase in the size of in·

flation, I'd say the former.
D: Why?
R : Because inflation affects all
spending. A deficil reflects only a
part ol public spending.
D : But doesn 't a deficit propel a
large inflation?
R: There is no exact coroUary. A
large deficit increases inflation, but
doesn't dictate the size of it. For instance, if you had a $100 billion
deficit
but ari inflation that
diminished from Carter's 12.6 percent to Reagan's projected 6.6 per·
cent, you're net better off.
D : Does that mean you suddenly
come out in favor of deficit spending?.
R : No. It means that if Congress is
determined to spend beyond our in·

more Orioles announced Wednes-

come, it's better to finance that •
spending by bOrrowing than _by : ·
taxing .
.
D: Aren't you alarmed by the ·
forecast of 7.9 percent unem- .
ployment next year?
R: Yes. when government spent
money without reference to its availability. If you have a family
earning $10,000 a year and a new car
costs $10,000, that family Isn't likely
to buy a new car, and the people who
make cars will be laid off. Inflated
prices are a cause of unemployment.
D: Huh ! I suppose you're trying to
tell me that the fight against inflation is a fight to diminish unemployment '
R: To the extent that I can hope to
tell you anything, the answer is yes.

In Des Moines, he conferred for
barely 10 minutes with Robert Ray,
a Republican and the nation's senior governor. In IndianapoliS, It
was much the same story with Gov.
Bob Orr.
Reagan did have a chance to talk
a bout new federalism with Sen.
David Durenberger, chairman of
the Senate subcommittee on Intergovernmental relations, who will
play an Important role In Senate
consideration of the president's
program.
The Minnesota Republican new
tD Bloomington with Reagan on
Monday evening and chatted with
hlm aboard Air Force One. The
topic? The Iowa-Minnesota football
games of the mld-1930s.
Asked abOut the amount of time,
or lack of time, given to the gover-

nors and the absence of any giveand-take dialogue with the state
legislators, White House spokesman Larry Speakes smiled and
said as Reagan new from Des
Moines to Indianapolis: "He met
with the governor and lieutenant
governor. He'll consult more."
The president's schedule w.a s
tight, and he dld spend some time _
talking with the governors, It not · ·
with Individual legislators. In add!- ·
lion, he has scheduled appointments with representatives or the
nation's counties and with '- ·
governors.
At each stop In the Midwest,
where Reagan spent barely enough
time In each city to notice the frigid
temperatures, the number of demonstrators voicing support or opposition to his plans .was small.

Examining doctor's donation'-4-s__R_ob_e_rt..;..;.~-=al=te!.2...rs
WASHINGTON (NEA) A
Federal Election Commission invesligation has produced evidence
suggesting that one of the country's
biggest political , fund-raising
organizations JIJIIY have repeatedly
misled both its members and the
public.
The organization is the American
Medical Political Action Committee,
established in 19tH bythe American
Medical Association to enhance the
political influence of the nation 's
physicians through a program of
collecling and disbursing campaign
contrlbulions to candidates for
public office.
In its letters, speeches and
publicalions, the Chicag~based AMPAC has claimed for years thai its
membf1rs •l the stat~ and local
levels are exdwively responsible
for determining which politicians
will receive the campaign fun&lt;m
donated by the doctors.
" This decision Is not made by a
' higher authority,' " says one AMPAC handbook. " It is made al the
district level and passed up" to state

tors to request a campaign conmedical society political-action
tribution to Sen. Claiborne Pell, Dcommittees and to AMP AC.
R.L, but were rebuffed when th~
" AMPAC doesn'l contribute to a
local ~hysicians said they •'could not
candidate in any state without a
conceive of ... doing anything for
request from the state PAC," says
Pell because they ' hate his guts.'"
another publi.cation. "Physicians
The AMA itself cannot make any
make the decisions ·about the
contributions to candidates for
disposition of all political funds ."
federal office because it is inBut the official minutes of the AM·
corporated; federal law specifically
PAC committee that makes the final
prohibits corporate donationS.
decision abOut contributions to canMoreover, AMPAC insists that its
didates, uncovered during a fourcampaign contributions are tolally
year-long FEC probe, tell a very dif·
unrelated to politicians' posilions on
ferenl story about AMPAC activities
pending bills in Congress.
during the 1970s.
"Legislation and Its fate Is a funcIn a Texas House race, a $5,000
AMPAC conlribulion was approved . tion of the AMA," says one AMPAC
publicalion. "AMPACcan hardly be
on the basis of ."an oral request"
accused of trying to influence penmade by a member of the AMPAC
ding legislation."
board of directors.
But among the thousands of
In one New York House race, "the
documents subpoenaed during the
committee considered a request for
FEC investigation are leltel'li from
$1,000 that had been stimulated by
the assistant dlreclor of the AMA's
the AMA Washington office." In lwo
Washington congressional retalions
other New Yo~k House contests, the
office seeking to genera~ AMPAC
AMPAC "staff was directed to
'
stimulate requests."
donations to members of Congress
In another instance, AMPAC of.
who endorsed the AMA's position on
flcials pressured Rhode Island
doc-_legislation.
r--..._
_ ____,

AMPAC describes itself in its
literature as "bipartisan" and
" neither a right-wing nor a left-wing
organization." It has made political
contributions to both Republicans
and Democrats,
but lhe FEC
docwnents reveal an unmistakable
affinity for Republicans and conservatives.
In one internal memo, an AMPAC
field representative recalls that
when he first met a Pennsylvania .•
doctor, "may initial impression of
him was thai he's very liberal," but · •
notes with relief that the physician
"is not really that liberal."
In another case, AMPAC officials
balked at a request from Florida
physicians to donate $2,500 _to a
Democratic candidate for a House
seat " because there is such a strong · •
chance for a Republican to win."
AMPAC claims to be a " model of "'
disclosure," but those previously
secret docwnents suggest that it has
been less than candid in revealing its
prlonties arfd aclivities to the doc- .!
ton who entrust it with their
political donations.

••

ROBERTL. WINGET£
Plblllber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

AtlllllliDt Publtlber/Controll~er

Geoer~~l Mau1er

·'
h
u

DALE ROTIIGJill, JR.
NnnEdltor

Ie-

A MEMBER o( Tile A-uol&lt;d l'rnl0 lolud CoDy Preu A110&lt;loU'"' ud the

Aaltrkal Newt..per Pllblllben A•oclad•.

-·

LE'ITERS OP' OPINION are wtleoaled. 'Dey u..Jd bf leu IIIIa M wonb loq. AU
1o1ten on •I&gt;Jed lo e4111a&amp; ud mut be olpeol wttlo ..,.., - . "'"'
-ber. No ...lpod lett.rw will be
Lelton .......... lo Coooltule,·oddmooola&amp;

-~""·

pu....,...._

t •

FOSTER SIGNS - . ExCioelooatl Reds outfielder
George Foster slgoed a five-year
$8 miDloa contract wllb lbe New
York Mets Wednesday. FO!!ter
bas beeo basebaU's most productive hitter for lbe last six yeam
(APLaserphoto).

. NEW YORK (AP) -

quently that he wanted to consult
with governor'&lt;; and state
legislators.
They are the people, he said, who
wtll have to shoulder an Increased
burden It he successtully transfers
to thestatesmorethan40programs
currently administered In
Washington.
Those "who sit In the state legislatures, the county boards and the
city councils of this country ... know
the needs of your·nelghbors and the
programs that will serve them
best," Reagan told a joint session of
the Indiana Legislature Tuesday.
But It he wants to hear the lawmakers' opinions, the recent trip
gave him little opportunity for
more than one-sided consultation.
He spoke. They listened.

..
.,"

25~NOFF

.••a
-

CHIPPEWA MINUS
40 and MINUS 50
INSULA TiD lOOTS
'7500
DAN'S BOOT
SHOP
MIDOI.[PORT, 01110

'TRUCK_LOAD
'NOW AN QRIOLE - Paul
M011kau, a rlgbthaoded pllcber,
who bas aol lJved up to expeclaUeos, has been traded by
tbe Cl.ocbmatl Reds to the
Baltimore Orioles lor a player to
be oamed ,later. The deal
followed Wednesday's 3-1 lrall8actloo l.ovolvlng slugger George
Footer.

II

BEARD WW. GO - CIDcbmaU's oewest J1&amp;hthaoded
reUef IMuler Jim Kero, obtaloed
l.o Wedaesday's deal .for Georce
Footer, sports a beavy growth l.o
this pboto whea be played for tile
TeliU Raogers. UDder hla employen, beank, loog hair and
musclacbes are ouL

Foster determined to eam .
salary, .help Mets improve

Federalism program reason for travel
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan's extensive travel
schedule In the coming weeks Is Intended to provide him with a
chance to hear what the country
has to say about his new federalism
program.
That's what his spokesmen said
before he set out Monday on the
first of the trips.
In Bloomington, Minn., his first
stop, the president put It this way: .
"You have to get about 50 miles,
at least, away from the Potomac
River and the District (of Columbia ) to get back to the real world."
As he began his campaign to sen
to Congress a budget that Includes
an unpopular $91.5 billion deficit
and a heavy reliance on the new
federaliSm plan, fu!agan said fre-

day they had acquired pitcher Paul
Moskau from the Cincinnati Reds
In exchange for a player to be
named later.
Moskau was 2-1 with two saves
and a 4.91 earned run average In 27
· games last season while recovering
from surgery performed the previous winter, but General Manager
Hank Peters of the Orioles said the

28 -y ear - old comes highly
recommended.
· Peters said Blll Werle, a Baltimore special assignments scout,
"rates Moskau al!oveaverage In aU
categories relative to his ablllty,
and Blllls equally Impressed with
his competitiveness under !Ire."
Moskau, Cincinnati's third-round
draft pick In June 1975, and posted a
36-9 minor league record before beIng called up to the Reds In June
1m.

"'

Armed
with the second-biggest contract In
baseball history, a $10 mllllon dear
that ~auld grow even larger,
slugger George Foster has joined
the New Yor~ Mets, determined to
help the perennial also-rans be¢ome contenders In the National
League.
"I'm used to winning and I'm
hoping lo make the Mets used to
winning, -too," Foster said.
The Mets acquired Foster, baseball's leading run producer for the
last six years, from Cincinnati for
catcher Alex Treyino and pitchers
Jim Kern and Greg Harps, and
then signed the veteran outfielder
to a five-year contract which guarantees the $10 mllllon.
The agreement Is second only to
the 10-year. $23 million deal Dave
Winfield received from the New
York Yankees.
"There Is a sizable signing bonus
and meaningful Incentives based
on most valuable player and substantial attendance bonuses," said
General Manager Frank Cashen,
who negotiated the contract with
Foster's agent, Tom Reich. "It ·
could go higher than $10 mllllon."

The contract also Includes a twoyear option beyond the live guaranteed seasons.
"At no point didn't I feel we.could
complete It as long as I came up
with the dollars," Cashen said.
"The numbers were a little
stronger than I expected but not
beyond what I was wtlllng to go."
Foster Introduced himself at a
packed news conference In Shea
Stadium, saying, "I'm not changIng what I do or )low I do II, just
whete It's going to be done."
Hls
runs batted In are tops In
the majors for the last six seasons
and he has pounded 198 homers
ovei' that period, second only to
Mike Schmidt's 221. Foster batted
.295 with 22 homers and 90 RBis In
l&lt;E games last season.
Despite that production, the Reds
felt they could not satisfy Foster's
projected demands after his 1982
contract expired and asked Reich
to supply a list of teams he would
accept In a trade.
"At first, we gave them two
teams aiKI the . Mets were one of
them," Reich said. "That Ust was
later expanded."
The Mets, who have never had a

sn

slugger of Foster's dimensions In
their lineup, pursued the trade vigorously. A year ago, they went after Winfield with the same kind of
determination and lost out to the
Yankees. This time, they brought
the prize home.
Did Foster think having baseball's two lllghest-prlced players
both playing lett field In New York
would create a rivalry with
Winfield?
"There was no rivalrY between
us when he was In the National
League," he said. "Why should
there be one ...-ah him In the Ameri-

can League?''
But he was excited about the
prospect of jolnlhg the.Mets. "I'm
looking forward to coming to New
York," he said. "The Mets have a
solid nucleus of talent and I'm hopIng to bring with me the winning
at'titude w~ developed In
Cincinnati."
.,.;
Then, Foster remembered the
planes from nes'rby LaGuardia
Airport that frequently fly over
Shea Stadium.
"I'd llke to warn the airports and
the planes that when I'm at bat they
better not fiy too low," he said.

Rose feels Foster's RBI's
will decline with NY Mets.
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Pete
ROse looks for slugger George Foster's run production to take a dip
with his new team, the New York
Mets.
·
Rose expects that the former Cincinnati Reds left fielder will lind It
tougher to drive In runs without
Dave Colllns, Ken Grlt!ey and
Dave Concepcion getting on base
ahead of him.
"I don't think George would be
worth the money he wanted to Cln·
clnnaU because they got rid of the
guys who hit In front of him," Rose
said, at a speaking engagement
this week.
·
" He's going to get his money, but
I don't think George realizes how
Important his teammmates were.
It's going to be ·harder ior him to
knock In 120 runs In New York.
"He's not going to have Grlt!ey,
Concepcion and Colllns on base. It's
going to be a lot different knocking
In Mookle Wilson, Lee Mazzllll and
Dave Kingman.
"I may be wrong, but I'll be very
surprised It George leads the
league In RBis next year."
Rose. a local hero lor his gritty
style of play with the Reds before
he signed with the ,Philadelphia
Phlllles, took a jab at Foster's defensive play. Foster has stated that
he doesn't want to hurl himself by
crashing Into an outfield wall or
Into base.

,udlng

"George Is In a class of his ownhe and (Phlllles third baseman)
Mike Schmidt- as far as hitting
. ho~ runs. But you have to do other
things," Rose said. "You have to
knock a wall down occasionally.
You have to get your unl!orrndlriy.
I used to use three unl!orms a day.
George uses three a month."
When one liStener brought up ·

Foster's name, Rose feigned surprise and responded, "You actually
pay to see George Foster play?"
The Mets' signing of Foster on
Wednesctay completed a revampIng of the Reds' starling lineup. Cln·
clnnatl has glveri up Its three
starling outfielders (Collins, Grlf!ey and Foster) and third baseman
Ray Knight.

Steeler great retires

PITTSBURGH (API - Mter 13 the baU. But he also set the stand·
years of waging war In the pits, dela.ro tor attitude. There will never be
enslve \IICkle Joe Greene of the
another Joe Greene. Joe will alPitl.'lburgh Steelers Is looking for·
ways be something special,'' Noll
ward to a peaceful life of
said.
retirement.
Greene's eyes glistened under
"My plans are to live, to enjoy the
the glare of television lights as he
easy lite. I'm a non-combatan't
made the announcement, but heremalned .inemotlonal and brushed
now," Greene said Wednesday at a
off eulogies just as be cast aside
luncheon called to say he was
·
blockers In his prime.
quitting.
"I came here as a boy. I leave
"Iwant.ed thlstobeahamoccahere as a man. I tend to think of this
slon," be said. And when asked how
time as a graduation," he added.
he would llke to be remembered,
Greene, 35, was the first draft
"Mean Joe" laughed .
choice that Coach Chuck NoU made
"What Is this? A wake? Just reIn bulldlrig a football dynasty that
member Joe as being a good fool·
ball player, and not really mean, as
produCed lour Super Bowl titles In
six years.
a man who loved the game, loved
Greene, the ptl1ar of the "Steel
the camaraderie, loved partlclpatCurtaln" !ront!our, has played In 10
lng as a team player. "
Pro Bowls since coming here In
Greene, who plans to pursue his
1969 out of North Texas State, and
Interests In a Dallas restaurant, has
NoU beUeves he was the best de!enbeen In the limelight off the field as
slve Uneman ever.
well. He has won a Clio award for
"He set the standard tor us. Physhis acting In a soft drink commereta!, and he played himself In a telelcally, be had quickness, speed,
vision movie broadcast last year.
aglllty, strength, the ablilty to lind
pitching machine pur· . r--:-:------....;..-------~--:_-1

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: .·: . Thursday, February II, 1982

~future

Barber shop appointments in
CINCINNATI (AP ) - With the
trade rumors finally come true, the
• · only thing pitchers Jim Kern and
' · Greg Harrls have left to do Is make
appointments with the barber.
"·
Kern, sporting a beard and curly

at a news conference to announce

" I've been told II gets warm
enough ln Aprtl that I won't need
this," Kern joked, rubbing his thlch
beard.
·

the trade ot George Foster to the
New York Mets.

For the moment, the trade meant

long hair, and Harrls, wearing a
mustache, trted on conservative
Cincinnati Reds caps Wednesday

chance to have new starters at five
coming face-fD.tace with the Reds'
positions this season.
policy against facial hair. Beyond
Trevino, 24, a good·tleldtng
that, the swap of Foster tor the two
young catcher .with an average bat, ·
Mets pitcher$ and catcher Alell
will compete with good·hittlng but
Trevino had other meanings.
weak-throwing Joe Nolan tor the
For Kern, It was a chance to start
starting Job. .
fresh after two seasons ot neck
Harrls 1 a 26-year-old right·
problems that robbed him of his
hander, had the best strikeout ratio
da2zltng 1!1'19 fo1'!ll.
on the Mets sta!t 'last season, his
For Harris, It was a challenge of
wlnnlng a tltth starter's spot.
· · first In the majors. He said Wednesday he's aiming for the tilth spot In
For Trevino, It marked a chance
the Reds' rotation.
to win a slartlng catching job.
But It was Kern, a 32-year-old reAnd the overall trade spelled the
lief artist, who stole the spotlight at
finish for one ot the Cincinnati
a news conference Wednesday with
Reds' most extensive overhaUls.
his quick humor.
The trade lett the Reds without
The rlght·hander )Vas the most .
their three starting outtlelders of
successful relief pitcher In the
1981 - Foster, Ken Griffey ·and
American League ln 1978, when he
Dave Colllns. They've also traded
finished :J3.5wlth 29savesanda1.57
third baseman Ray Knight, and the
earned run average. A neck prolr
acquisition of TreVIno gives them a

. Toledo defeats Bobcats
By Associated Pre"'
Ohio University Coach Danny
Nee was simply In the wrong place
at the wrong time Wednesday
nigh!.
Toledo Coach Bob Nic hols went
to the bench lor a boost and rolled to
his 300th career victory with a 74·64
• trtumph over tbe Bobcats In Mid·
· American Conference college
basketball.
· "I hate being Bobby Nichols'
• - .200th victim,'' Nee said.
· ' - In other conference games Wed·
'· nesday, Ball State climbed to first
· · · place In the league with a 76-65 vic·
·" · tory over MlamJ combined with Bowling Green's 67·64 defea t at the
· · · hands ot Kent State. Eastern Michl·
.- ' gan. beat Central Michigan 6%2,
e . and Northern Illinois hammered'
' ··· Western Michigan 82-61.
-· ' · Nichols started three freshman
and two sophomores, leaving Jun·
lor veterans Mitch Adamek and
Dan Boyle on the bench. and the
:. · ,-·Rockets sprinted to an ll·polnt lead
' over the Bobcats In the early going.
· ' " It was something I thought
· · · ·would be good for us,'' Nichols said.
·• ·. · ·"Those kids got us off to a good
start.''
· .. ·• ' The .Bobcats came back to hold a
· ' · 31-30 halftime lead, but Toledo shot
· ' · 65 percent from the field ' In the se,
"cond pertod to Ice the game. Fresh·
' - man guard Jay Gast had 18 points
·· · · · lor the Rockets.
·' ·
"As far as Jhe 300 are con·
• · cerned," Nichols said, "It repres·
en ts a lot of good players and a lot of
· · good times along the way; a lot of
· · · ·grea I wins a nd a few hearlaches ·

victory over Western Michigan.
1be Huskies snapped a 38-38 half·
time tie early In the second period,
moVIng to a 49-42 edge after five
minutes and holding 10.polnt leads
through much ot the second half.
Junior guard Marlow McClain
scored a game·hlgh 22 points to
lead Eastern Michigan over Cen·
tral Michigan.

of new Reds

"The biggest thing I thOught was
Marlow (McClain) played a big
game offensively,'' said Eastern
Coach Jim Boyce.
Eastern put the game out ot
reach when It reeled off eight unanswered points to go ahead 5&amp;44
with seven minutes left. MelVIn
McLaughlin ltad 18 points lor
Central.

LSU captures 73-68 victory over lOth ranked Alabama
1em llmlted him to Just 38 appearan·

Texas.
Kern said he's healed and ready
to tace National League batters tor
the first time ln his career.
"My style ot throwing Is straight,
unadulterated gas- 'Here It Is, see
I! you can hit It,' " Kern said. "I
rriade a liVIng ln the Amertcan
League for years by throwing nothing but fastballs. I've wondered If
I could overpower people over here
In the National League."
U Kern can regain his 1!1'19 form,
he'll make a formidable bullpen
team with ace relieVer Tom Hume.
"I most certainly don't expect to
come In here and be No. l ln the
bullpen, because I've been hurt the
last two years and Hume Is there,"
Kern said.

night.

.

"This may be the proudest I've
ever been In my 10 years at LSU ,"
Brown eJCI!lted after hls hobbled
Beng;$ used a second·halt delay
game to upset .the Crimson tide
and retain a share of the SEC lead
with Tennessee. "It may be the
mosb gallant performance of any
team I've coached."
With Leonard MltcheU scortng 18
points, LSU raced to a 40-20 lead
with 4: 151ett ln the flrilt hal!. But an

ankle InJury one minute later put

Mitchell !lilt of the gameatterhehlt
.on nine of 13 shots and grabbed
eight rebounds .
In the second halt, LSU went to a
detay offense, going without a field
goalln the flnal4: 09. But the Tigers
hit 10 ot 14 free throws, four by How·
ard Carter, who scored a gamehigh 20 points.
Alabama was the only member
of The Associated Press Top
Twenty to lose, but two others had
close calls. Top-rated VIrginia
needed two free throws by Ralph
Sampson with three seconds left to
ensure a 39-36 Atlantic Coast Con·
terence victory over North Carol·
Ina State, while thlrd·ranked
DePaul nipped Evansville 5!1-58.
In the Second Ten, 12th·ranked
Kentucky turned back Mississippi

•

56-49 and No.16 Wake Forest tlat·
tened Clemson 94-76, but Oklahoma
knocked otf No.15 Kansas State 68-

58.
Top Teia '..
LSU's · victory was Its 23rd
straight at home and knocked Ala·
bama out ot a t!Jree.way tie atop the
SEC. LSU and TeMessee are 10.3,
Alabama Is 9:4. EMis Whatley led
the losers , 17-4 overall, with 18
points.
Brown said LSU's triumph
ranked with the Tigers' 1978 victory
over eventual national champion
Kentucky, which , was accomp
llshed ln overtime with five reserves on the floor.
" We beat them (Alabama) ln the
spread and we are ln first place In
the SEC because of our defense,''
he said . "We beat the leading re-

said. "A play here or a play there
and It's our game."
VirKinla took the lead for good
37.Jii when Craig Robln9on was ere.
dlted with a basket on a ' goal·
tending call. The Cavaliers raiSed
their fecord to 23-1 and S-1 In the
ACC, whlle the Woltpack Is 17-6and

5·5.
Bernard Randolph sCored 18
points, Including the last basket of
the game with almost six minutes
remaining, to 11tt DePaul over
"pset·llllnded Evansv!lle, 17-4. The
Blue Demons, 21·1, took their first .
lead, 34-32, when Sldp Dillard hit a
splnnlng jumper at the halttlme

buzzer.
" I think there had to be an easier
way," sighed 67·year-old Coach
Ray Meyer. "I think the players
are deciding they want to age me. "

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NEW SPRING INTRODUCTIO~S
AND REMAINING FALL AND WINTER
INVENTORY

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-8390

...

.:
•I
I

Anderson,
Allen among
top honorees

19" REMOTE
COLOR
PORtABLE

•

•
•

PIDLADELPHIA (AP) - They
were a study In contrast, one happy
to forget pro football tor a while and
'(the other anticipating It Uke a
/.
youngster awaiting santa Claus.
Ken Anderson , quarterback of
the National Football League'sCin·
clnna U Bengals, and Marcus Allen,
~ - -- -· · ·
remarkable tailback of the South·
Lo c k -•n co ta 1 &amp; l•ne
. ern California Trojans, appeared
lun1ng
here Wednesday to be honored by
All ·e lec tro n,c c h a nn e l
the
Maxwell Football Club.
•wlec t• on
Anderson, whose Bengals lost to
In l.ne ma sk ptcture tub e
the San Francisco 49ers ln the Su·
per Bowl, was feted as the NFL
Player of the Year. Allen was given
. a trophy as the standout college
player ot 1981.
Anderson, who wUI be 33 on Man·.
~ 'ay, recounted how he let 10 dayl
1 )!lapse beto.r e he confronted the Su·
Bowl loss , traveling In .the
l.per
~
meantime to Hawaii tor the Pro
' Bowl.
: "The best thing that happened to
me was that I went straight to the
MICROWAVE OVEN
Pro Bowl and didn't read any pap
ers or watch the news out there.
There weren't as many reporters. I
didn't go back to Cincinnati and the
whole scene after the Super Bowl,"
Anderson said.
" Then when I cao:ne home a lot of
the hype already had died down,
and about Wednesday at 11 o'clock
at night I told my wUe, 'I'm not
• 30·Minute timer
going to get over this thing until! go
· &lt;~own and watch the tape of the
•
Separate defrost cycle
·game.' So I went down and watched
• Sealed· in ceramic shelf
·It until about 3 or 4 In the momlng.
. "I was Just as dlsallpolnted after·
. ward, but at least It was ·klnd ot put
behind me.''
The loss notwithstanding, Ander·
.. son said playing In the Super Bowl
bad a special meaning, because
· even though he once ~ the NFL In
. passing two straight years he bad
been through some hard times.
Fast flexible top burners
"Then, to come back on top was a
Big 25" all porcelain oven
very
satisfying thing. "
• Llft·off oven door
· He predicted that the BengaLs
• Roll·out broiler, adjusts ea~dhl
would continue as top competitors.
" Number one. eilcept for the
quarterback, we're a young team .
It all starts with the offensive line.
Those guys are very talented and
very young, and they're JOini to be
the nucleuS ot our team for a tong,
: long time.''
Anderson led the Bengals to a 12-4
\\hirlpnol LAUNDRY PAIR
·.
regular
season mark, comPletlnil
DR YER
WASHER
·
300
of
479
passes for 3, 754 yards and
• ""' '"'""""c.~""..
, 1 o., ,,t.~ ''''"~'" ' "'" ~
C, tl#\
t f''" ''Ht " '' " ""' "'" " "
. 29 touchdowns . Hehadonly10lnter·
• 1 "'~ '" ~nn S!S111 SPf'f&gt;tl\
r ~tll!
1
11
1
1
. ceptions, and flnl.!lhed with the high·
f
lii,j p .. r S"ogol •l +'ll A l j •Uo lnr t ' " ~' " '" "'" " '"
t l':nu~ l • • A• l,.n( •d S.ol•
"'"" ~ '"~
est completion percentage, 62.1,
'• l"1
• Stt • • • l wP" lup " ' ' '" '
, 0 ..,,,.,,,. ''"'"'" ' •~•o "
I"'' 1.11 ,.,
· and lowest lntercep,tlon average,
2.1. In the Super Bowl he rallied the
fOflofHl
Bengals trom a 2().() delicti before
P41 A
· losing, :!S-21. He was 25 for34for300
yanla ' ln the same. with two

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_ , : KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)- The
· wife of Lucius Allen, a former NBA
:'.· 's tar, wasfounddeadTuesdaylnthe
.
basement garage of the couple's
·.. · suburban Lee's Summit home, It
' · was aMounced.
Pollee said that Allen discovered
• ,. the body of his wife, Melanie Rose,
... ·' ~ '34, In the back seat of their Mer·
. · cedes. One Investigator theorized
' ..' · ·she died or carbon monoxide pol·
·. sonlng and said there were no signs
.' : ot violence. The medical examln· ·
~ ·: er's office was Investigating.
.• . . Allen played at UCLA In the late
.. ':, .1960s and with Milwaukee, Los Air·
. :. .~~t;les and Kansas City ln the NBA.
· · He retired at the end ot the 1978-79
season.

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bounding team with five guards ln'
the second hal!. I've never been
prouder. I could hug every one ot
them, which I did." .
· "You go ahead and make •'em ol\
you mtss 'em," Sampson said alter
his two clutch tree throws gave Vir·
ginla some breathing room and
also put hlm In double figures with
11 points. N.C. State ·surrounded
him with two and sometimes three
defenders throughout the contest.
"They put . quite a few people
around Ralph tonight and they
were big people," VIrginia Coach
Terry Holland said. "N.C. State Is
the biggest team we've faced . I just
hope we don't face anyone bigger."
Coach Jim Valvano ot the losers
refused to call it a moral victory.
• "You play No.1 and come that
close, It really means nothing," he

Single knob electronic
•
•

'

' ··
Ray McCallum 's 22 points led
·.: five starters In double figures as
· · · · Ball State hammered .Miami ex·
tended Its home wlnnlng strtng to 16
games and jumped Into the confer·
ence lead. The Cardinals raced
from a 44 tie toa37·24 halftime lead
and stretched the margin to 19
.. points midway through the final
.. pertod.
Dave Ziegler a nd Kenny HoweU
·: sank two free throws each ln the
tina! 28 seconds to help Kent State
.· ~nap their 10.game losing streak
. .. against Bowling Green.
"Maybe we have been over·
' .
achievers,'' said Bowling Green
Coach John Weinert. "We've won a
.. lot of close ones. Wedugourselvesa
hole ln the first half by being impa·
tient with our o[fense."
Bowling Green was led by David
J e nkins' 20 points. Marcus New~
ern added 16.
" We played with a lot of heart
and desire,'' said Kent State Coach
Ed Douma. · ~ we came back and
played good defense and made a
number of big shots, especially a t
the free throw line."
Freshman Keith G ray scored 23
· points as Northern Illinois scored a

.

By A!!OO!e'ed Pre.
Although LSU Is tied tor the Sou·
. theastern Conference lead, the T!g.
ers are not the basketball
powerllous!! !)ley,have been·tmre,
cent years. Maybe that's · why
Coach Dale Brown was so ecstatic
about the Tigers 73-68 victory over
10th·ranked Alabama Wednesday

ces ln 191ll and 23 last season with

. . •· "too."

_ . RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - The
, . . Clevela nd Force of the Major In·
door Soccer League has acquired
: three new players, shipped two
players a way In a trade and ac·
, .cepted the retirement of another.
The Force on Wednesday sent de. . fender Mike Barry and forward
George Dews nip to the New ,Jersey
, , Rockets for goalkeeper I.,ou Clo!tl.
.
In separate deals, the Force pur·
;
'chased forward Luis Alberto from
· . .the New York Arrows a nd defender
.'. David Strtde from the Fort Lauder·
... dale Strtkers. To make room on the
roster, the Force a nnounced thevo. . luntary retirement of forward .
Charlie Cooke.

Thul1day, Februa!Y 11 , 1982 ·

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ln1ercep~lons.

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Pomeroy

ThundOy, Februa,Y II., 1982

Thunday, February 11, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

READYTOSHOOT-Eastern's RogerBislell ~44) prepare~tolelfiy
wttb a Jiunp sbol over die bands of lwo Cadet defeades In Wednesday's 5351 overUme victory at Eastern. Providing defense are Terry Ayers 1531
111111 Donovan Tbleman ~ 33). Tlm Tucker photo.
•

1\'leigs wrestlers
top Big Blacks
For the first time in Meigs'
history, the t8Iented Marauder gra!}plers defeated Point Pleasant, 411-40,
in an exciting finish that relied on
Gary Nakamoto's heroics in the
heavyweight match.
In wbat boiled down to a close
match, despite Meigs giving up 12
points to forfeits, Nakamoto came
through in the clutch with a pin over
Mark Lanier.
· Meigs' only hope of winntng was a
pin. Aware of this dlffidllt task,
Nakamoto prepared for Limier, who
one week ago, defeated him in an
ea)'lier match .
Every victory Meigs had came
on pins again.
According to coach Grimes, ''This
h e lp s
a
team
a lways
psychologically, as other teams are
intimidated by this, and wrestle in
cautious ways."
.
"I'm trying to build the pinnin~
tradition for tbat reason," says
Grimes.
"W~ played Point Pleasant last
week. Now I know it was only
because of injuries . We . had
everyone healthy and we won seven
of the 13 weight classes. That doesn 'I

The Doil y

S~ntinel

(USPS 115--)
A Dtvllloa of MMJUmfdJa, lac .

Publlahed every afternoon, Monday through
Friday, Ill Court Stm!l, by the Ohio Valley
Pl,tbUshl.nK Company • MultimedJa, Inc.,
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Member: The AssOciated Press, Inllnd Dal,
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motur Route
One w«!k . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00
OneMonlll ........ ................

f4.40

sound like a lot, but considering that
we give up 12 points to forfeits in the
167 and 175 pound class before we

start.... "
Grimes continued, "As far as the
rest of the season goes, now is the
time you w~nt your wrestlers at
their best for league, sectionals,
districts and stale tournaments. I
feel our young freslunen and
sophomores are doing a great job
and I really couldn't expect much
more out of them. We don't have a
junior high program, so other
schools ha ve a lready got a 2 year
head start on us:"
Tbe r esults are as follows :
98 Meigs.

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10 20 2- 51
14 9 10 16 4-53

George Foster has signed an $10 million contract with the New York
Mets. Fonner teammates Ken Griffey and Dave Collins have been measured for Yankee pinstripes . And Cincinnati's RJverfront Stadium Is echoIng with an old and nostalgic retrain:
::Trading ~wedding) bells are breaking up that old gang of mine."
It was a unique team, a character and style a ll its own- I never expect
to see another !Ike II," said Sparky Anderson, the man who guided the
Cincinnati Reds In the decade of '70s, piling up 953 regular season vlcl9ries
six division crowns, four National League pennants and two world
championships.
. Tbey called It the Big Red Machine. It was both classy a nd murderous,
beatlng Boston In the World Series In 1975 apd- sweeping the Yankees In
Now only three of the ortgtnal major cogs remain -Johnny Bench, the
bull-shouldered, indestructlhle catcher, now 34; sUck shortstop Dave Concepcion, 33, a nd first baseman Dan Driessen. 30.
"In every one's life there Is a pinnacle to which nothing else can ever
compare," said Bench, now completing 1gg~ segments of his Emmywinning TV series, "The Baseball Bunch" In Arizona.
"To me, II was our greut team of the 1970s."
Analyzing the club, crt tics gave credit to Anderson for developing what
they called a petiect chemistry, using Bench, Pete Rose, Joe Morgan and
Tony Perez as bellwethers and models for the younger players. Bench was
leader of the whites on the team, these observers contended, Morgan
overseer of the blacks and Perez the Latins.
·
" Not so," argUes Anderson, now a reslden tofThousand Oaks, Calll., and
manager of the Detroit Tigers, who was fired by the Reds and replaced by
John McNamara In 1979.
"This was a team that d rew no ethnic lines. It was a unit. Tbere
no
thought of who was while, black or tan. They were people of different
colors, beliefs and religions. But, on the ballfield , they were a unit.
" Their greatest attribute was that they tolerated each other. There were
recognized leaders on tbe team - Bench, Rose, Perez, Morgan - but no
stars. The olde r guys a lways helped the younger guys. There was never
any m ention of salary, no jealousies. Nobody cared what another guy
made.
'" I told them that under the concre&lt;e we were one, with responslblllty to
o~lves and the club. We could forget the outside world. It was sick."
'1!'he first baseman, P erez, was the first to go, traded to Montreal in 1m
to-make room lor Driessen. A $3.2 million dollar contract lured Roseto the
P!1Jll1es In 19'19. Morgan was next. going to the Houston Astros, then
outfielder Cesar Geronimo to the Kansas City Royals last year , This was
followed by the exodus of Collins, Griffey a nd now Foster.
'

.

CHEVY CHASE

OOOGil~

EHS had i3 team fouls ands 16 turnovers, while FF had 16 turnovers
and 16 fouls .
Fort Frye won the reserve contest
25-22 after Eastern led by 7 points at
one point. Tom Dyer had 10 markers
and Robert Maison had 8 for
'Eastern.
FORT FRYE (51) - Don Sch·
wendeman 3-0·6, Pete Brooker 5·0·

~W:)o .

10, Donovan Theieman "4·2· 10, Dayrl

Griffin 1·0·2, Je rrv Ande rs on 4·3-Tl .

THE

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK
WILL NOT BE OPEN MONDAY
FEBRUARY 15
IN OBSERVANCE OF
PRESIDENT'S DAY

~ AModatton
. EASTERN CONFERENCE
.tilanlk Dlw.lun

National

•' I

Boston
Philadelphla

.'' """""""'

I

•&lt;

Mll waukee
IlelroU

"

lndl""

"
•

(PP) .
132 Wi lli ams (M) pinned
Gerlach &lt;PPI .
TJS Willford IMI pinned
Freeman ( PPI .
138 - McC ullough IMI pinned bV
Bl anke nship ( PPI .

'

'

'

P&lt;t.

13
II

Atlanta

Chk...

"""""""

1A

25
77

~

""'"""
"'"'"'
Utah

167 - Poi nt wins by forte it.
175 - Pointwinsby forfe it .
185 Wandling (PPJ pi nned
Davis (M) . ·
Hwy . Nakamoto (M) pinned
L anier ( P P) .

Phoenix

u

-

15
'll

17
22

23

II
II

Los Angeles

31

·--

.!121
.310

32
ll

.l'l.1

13

.1'lJ

Wabh ,Jesuit 69, llcvcre 67,

O'I

I

college scores

ON ANY NEW SUITE IN STOCK

1~

.5&amp;1

21
34

14

Otdo

Col.k•~P.

llukllthall

sr n.e A.Mo&lt;-~ ......_
"'edneaday'l lk:IMalta
Mi&lt;f.Amc rtclUI Confen..~
8:111 St . 76. Miami. Ohio M
Kent S1. li7, Bowling C roon 64

Cleveland at Dl.otmll
PorUand at MUwaukee
SHttlc at Houston

l'"reilldenl'a ConlereDCI'!
.John CArmll 'r.'l, Calif! RP.5erve !16

pitchers.

tcr to a five-year cont ract.

..SKE1.11ALL

0100 (:o..Jereoce
Capi!Bl Ill, Denison ~7

Kenyon 19, Oberlln 48
MW!klngum 71, Baldwtn· Wallact'! 66

Wtttenlx&gt;rg 57, Moun1 Untcm 47

llooMI'!r-Buelley~ Cotler..~

BIWffon 59, Tayklr

~7 .

OT

Wltmln~tt on

61, F1ndlay 00
NOII-Cod'en!I!Ce
Dayton ~. A..kton 1"!
DcflaJIC(' 97. Indiana Tt'Ch BB
Youngstown St, 7'2, Dclaware St . 47

t

6Month '' .... ''' .. ''. ' .... .. . . . .. m.w
1 Year ......... · ~ .... ... ..... .•• •.mJ(I

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW SET

WINTER CLEARANCE SALE ·

NOW OPEN

DlllssEIIS-BtfRK IEOS-tiiESlS

'

Oak 'Bedroom Group
· '12 P"rlce

FOR THE SEASON
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUAR¥ lOth
:r ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,s;;ici:A''L''''''''''''''''''·'·'·'·'·'·'·''''''·'·''·'·'·''~

SWIVEL ROCKERS
HEAVY DUlY COVERS

OF THE WEEK

fl

Ill

~.· i.

t
~!i!

~

,,

L__ _ j
ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
S70 W.MAINST.

PH. "2-2116

Remem/ier 16ur Udentine
,.

•

"

-· _,. __,J---------.....l
SIIJI',H f fl lOH',[
~ ' f1I

) I ' I

J

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

~••ac••=•"•••••

•

III

........., -:.... .,...,.. ,

··- -·

..,..,. ...... tlllt

Rq. '257

2-llecol. Maple

•99

t--4ali Drexel

-

GIRLS' WHITE
BEDROOM SUITES
FLiTURED IN
OUR WINDOW

LEES CARPET
ON SALE UNTIL

FEB.20

FINAL
REDUCTIONS

•

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

• . Mti.

DOORS

ON SALE!

~NDIItS

- -

GLASS

REDUCED
'144
SOFAS- CHAIRS ~TABLES

'Q wl

-'

BOOKCASES .

, , ... ·249

Remember your special Valentine Sunday, Februuy 14,
with a ei!t from RuaeU Stover Candies. Our beautiful
Satin, Foil or delicate Ginpam Horta are filled with "Only
the Finest" chocolate&amp; Our heana are a traditional fnorite
for all Remember friende and relatiftl with the fin•t in
chocolate. and butter bou. A heart ahaped box ol candy.
somethineany aweetheut would lote.
~

,_..,, 0 .

To;ju
Of

~~~::

corner Second and Grape, Gallipolis 446·0332

'IJ
•

•

$100

$100

$20

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE TRADE IN ALLOWANCE TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD MAT- FOR YOUR OLD FOR YOUR OLD
TRESS AND BOX
RECLINER
SWEEPER
SPRINGS

LAST2 DAYS

'1

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD
DINING ROOM SUITE ON ANY NEW SUITE IN STOCK (Hutch, Trable, Chairs) .

Ohio Northern 110. Mar1etta ~
Otllo WPSI)'Jl 5R, WOOllier !14

Game~~

TofU

BaaltftbaD Am ~ .. UGII
SEATfl.£ SUPERSON ICS - Actlva!C'd
Armond HJU. MU&amp;rd.
'

$300

Toledo 71. Ohio U. 64

FrtdaJ'• Game&amp;
Golden State at New Jent»·
Seattle at DaJW
Utah at Kansas City
Atlanta at Ptnenlx
Sa n Antonio a t l.n!l Angeles
Boston at San Diego

HIGH OFF FLOOR - Greg
Cole, a senior member of tbe
. Eastern Eagles; goea up lor a lwo
banded jump shot In tbls Tlm
Tucker photo taken during Wednesday's ·noo-league game against Fort Frye, Eastem won illlOtb
game, 53-51 In an overtlme. Cadet
players are Don Scllweodeman
Ill) and Jerry Anderson (43) .

$300

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD

BEDROOM SUITE

Otlerbl!tn 81, Hetdeloorg 66

BAL'nMORE ORJOLES - Acq\llred
Paul M08kaU, pitcher, from t ~ Clnctnnatl
lb.odJ for a player to be named later.

FOR YOUR OLD LIVING
ROOM SUITE ON ANY
LIVING ROOM IN
STOCK.

Ohio

u~

New Jersey 115, Detrojt Ul!
Pb.lladelphla 102, Indiana 96

1

WMPO
·SATURDAYS
1 til Noon

Slellbenvtlk&gt; Cath . 7!1, Cad12 5oi

16

Wednelda)''• Gllml!l

JRD ST., RACINE, OH.
Member F.DIC

TRADE IN ALLOWANCE

19

S.n Diego

$1 3.~

Cal8y Kasem

Parma Holy Name :111, MllJII. St. Pt&gt;tcr

5~

15

Ponlanrl
Go&amp;den State

.,

N. Hoyalton 65, M«ttna Highland $2
Dale Glen. W. Va. 78, Beaver Local ~1

14

" ·"' """:.; ., ....
·"" ,,·~,
"
·"'
·"' "' ~

'HIUI"'Iday's

NEW YORK MF:l"S - Traded Alex 'f"rp.
vlno, catcher. and .Jim Kern and Greg
Han1.1. pl!Chen, lO 11\e QnctMall Reds
lor Goor(te Foster, oulflclder. Signed F'ot·

$300

H ud!IOrl 66. Stow 61

13h

14

Gokk'n State at New \'ork

outfteldel'J: and Lee Smtih and Paul

TRADE IN YOUR OLD FURNITURE AND WE
WILL GIVE UP TO s300 TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD FURNITURE REGARDLESS OF
CONDITION .........

Cleve. Adams !», Mentor 59
Edl Kin 68, Marga retia trl

t:l

w~. SpcJry

S.mall,

M

Bucke~

Transactions

!1011,

THE

llrocUvtlle &amp;3, Nordortia 60
S. 76, Wells\1lle 65 .

13

PurtJa!ld 1m. Cleveland 91
Ollcago 91, AtlAnta 73
Washlngtoo 119, Dallas 102
Kansu City ll\ Los Angell!$ 102
Utah 151. Denvt!r lt&amp;ll
PhOeniX U2, Boston llO

N.............

PAY YOUR

Akron E. 61, Greensburg Green 54
Bethel 94. Twin Va!JeY N. ~

10 ~

., "' ·"'
"'
.,
·""
·"' '
""

San AntooiG

Seattle

one-year rontracta .

SALE CONTINUES·

Ry The AMoc1aaed PreM
We4DMday'l Re.ulla

-

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldweti DlvWon

Sley ( PP).
155 - Greg Hicks (MI pinned by
Harde n IPPI .

SIJI:ned Dave Ford, pitcher; Benny Ayala,
outfielder, and Bob 8oTU1('r, lntlelder. to

ON ANYTHING WITH RED IN IT
OR
ANYTHING TRIMMED IN RED •

Ohio lU(h Scbool Do)'I Bukftball

08

.1'lJ

""""" DM...
:n 14
102
21
19 77
. u~
29
.«&lt;I
19
.:1111
II 36
.1.14

Ka11SBS City
DaUas

Romina (M) pinned wam ·

L

34

". " .roe.,....,
..,
"

Wash1ngton

NewY""'

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

SNOW CONTINUES

High school
scores

Pro standings
w

BASEBAlL

SATURDAY ONLY -10,-. OFF

.S coreboard••.

·····

o,ne~PNu

specified pre\1ously.

Our Valentine Gift
From Us to You

.

-· ~

Tnt....:uo...

$5.7 million. No damages were

lease

was

Thomas (M) .
132 ~ Ba uer (Ml pi nned Rai'ke

145 -

CINCINNATI (AP) -The Cln·
make specified improvements at
clnnatl Bengals a n!llo asking for · thestadlumandtheteam'sSpinney
more than $5.7 mllUon from tbe city
Field training complex.
of Cincinnati In a 3-year-old legal
A lawsuit Wed by the Bengals Is
battle over their stadium lease
scheduled to g0 to trial March 29
agreement.
before Hamnton County Common
The Bengals have fUed a petition
Pleas Judge Ralph Winkler.
asking for the city to pay the dam·
An amended petition flied In con·
ages and release the team from Its
nectlon with the case sets damages
lease for Riverfront Stadium or
sought from the 'city at more than

~tadium

1976.

National

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

· ~~ O.tiicit iihk."

Score by Quarters:
11 8

Fort Frye
Eastern

'
119 - King IMI pinned Tucker
IPP) .
126 - Atkinson IPPI pinned

CIIICAGO CUBS- Signed l...arry Buwa .
1hurtatop; Leon Durham And Scot Thomp.

1~ear

By wm Grlmlley
AP Corrnpondeot

Pr iddy (M J pi nned Jumper

11 2 -

' PlliCES
DeUy ............ .. .. ... ...... :

No Jlul»crlptlON by mall pennltted in towns
where home carrier service lB available.

TOTALS21 -9-Sl.
EASTERN (53) - Ritchie 2·0·4,
Co le 2·2·6; Riffe 4-2·10, M. B issei I l eO·
6, Sprague 2·3·7, Dill 5·0·10, R .
Bissell'.-2·10. TOTALS 22·9-53.

105 - Massile (PPI dec . Kinzel
IMI11 ·2.

CH ICAGO WHITE SOX - Signed Df.n.
nl! !.:.a mp, pitcher, to • one-yt"ar contract.

Subecrlbers not desiring to pay the carrier
ma1 remit In advance dJred to 'I'he Dally
StnUnel on a 3, fl or 12 month basis. Cm!lt
w\U be given carrier eacll month.

Sports World

Terry Ayers 3· 1111 ·10, Carl Sla-vin 1·0·2.

demeath for a perfect two point
back door play. F. F . called time
with two seconds left, but were
unable to get off a shot.
Eastern grabbed the tip of the extension period and hit the high jumping Riffe inside for the first score.
As time wound down to 1:07,
Thieman hit a basket to lock the
score at 51-51.
Eastern had its chance, but
missed a shot as a Cadet time out
followed at 39 seconds: Eastern
again forced a turnover with its
pressure defense, calling timeout
with 15 seconds left to set up a,play.
Fort Frye was successful at forcing the ball out front, but Mike
Bissell broke away from the corner
and down the baseline for the game
winning baSket.
Eastern hit 22 of 54 field goals for
41 percent, and hit 9 of 15 from the
line. Fort Frye canned 21 of 63 for 33
percent, and was equally successful
at the line, hitting 9 of 15 for 60 percent.
Eastern had 29 rebounds led by
Mike Bissell with 9. Tbe visitors also
had29led by Brookers'10.

Duncan pinned Snvder of

One v..r ......................... 152.11
SINGLE COPY
l~Cent.a

different occasions before holding on
By SCOTr WOLFE
to a33-29lead at the buzzer.
EAST MEIGS- While ending the
Fort Frye applied the pressure in
game in patented dramatic style,
the fourth round and grabbed the
Eastern's Eagles, on a 10 fool
baseline jumper by Mike Bissell opening tip. Brooker connected on
two jumpers to tie the score at 33-33
with four seconds left, edged visiting
before Roger Bissell put the Eagles
Fort Fyre's Cadets 5:!-51 in overtime
up by two at the 6:aJ mark.
here Wednesday night.
From that time on Eastern again
The hometown victory boosts the
Eagles to 1().6, while double " AA" . hit a drought from the field and
Fort Frye drops to 5-12.
made several costly turnovers,
while Fort Frye rattled off 10 unanAn overall b;llanced attack placed
swered .points for a 43-35 lead at the
three men in double figures for the
Eagles. Paying the way with 10 2:47mark. ·
After an Eagle time out the hosts
points each were P .G. Rifle, Tim
quickly adjusted and surged back inDill, and Roger Bissell.
to the action. During the next two
Ironically , three Cadets also tied
minutes
good passes and an outwith 10 points each, including Pete
standing
offensive effort by P .G.
Brooker, Donovan Thieman and
Riffe
put
the Eagles back in the
·Terry Ayers. Anderson led all
game.
During
the stretch the ramscorers with 11.
bling
Riffe
poured
iii eight points.
Coach Dennis Eichinger's hustling
Despite
his
individual
effort:, FF
. Eagles looked sharp in the opening
hit siX consecutive free th~ and
round, and after grabbing the
led 47-43 with one minute remaining.
opening tip drew first blood on a
Things certainly looked gloomy
basket by Greg Cole at the 7:45
for the hometown fans as tension
mark.
built and time started running out.
Seconds later, pivot man Dill
Eastern badly needed a steal and
swished a short jumper, then hit
forced one on the ensuing play, setover a minute later for a tHl score.
ting up a bucket by Tim Dill.
J erry Anderson finally broke the ice
A Fort Frye time out followed.
for F ort Frye at the 5:36 mark,
With 33 seconds left, Donovan
before Bissell put the locals on top
Thieman seemingly drove the last
0..2.
nail in Eastern's coffin with a short
Eastern drifted directly into a
two point play. Eastern quickly
mid-quarter cold front. during the
called tirrie and set up a play that
next three minutes, while the Cadets
allowed · Dill to break loose and
fought back to lock the score 8-8.
score, Eastern now trailing. 49-47
Finally Roger Bissell dumped in two
with 13 seconds left. EHS again
at the 2:16 mark, then shot a one shot
called time and on the following
technical as Eastern rolled to a 14-11
play, Todd Engle, fresh off the bench
first period lead.
was fouled going to the line for the
In the second canto Fort Frye
bonus.
grabbed the tip and took the lead on
Engle went to the line, his shot fell
two g6als by.P ete Brooker. In the enand Eastern raced down court
short,
suing moments the lead changed
last attempt. Ritchie hit
for
its
hanqs three times and was tied twice
Bissell
in
the comer.
before Cole and Bissell gave the
Bissell,
despite the pressure made
hosts a 23-19lead at the half.
a spectacular pass to Dill unEastern, all bu.t controlled the
third period, going up by eight in two

Bengals sue city over

Today's

Eastern takes 53-51 overtime victory

The Daily Sentinel-Poge-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

9:00-5 Dlily
(Ind. TIIU"-)

9:fiO.IIIen.

I Frilllr

$50

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW RECLINER

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW ONE

$50

$100

TRADE IN AllOWANCE TRADE IN ALLOWANCE TRADE IN ALLOWANCE
FOR YOUR OLD SWIVEL FOR YOUR OLD DINETTE
FOR EACH END OR
ROCKER OR STRAIGHT (Wood or Metal).
COFFEE TABLE
CHAIR
'
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
NEW END OR COFFEE TABL.E

WITH THE PURCHASE
OF ANEW CHAIR

WITH THE PURCHASE OF
ANEW DINETTE SET

I

�Thursday, February 11, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, February 11, 1982

Basket making ·to highlight craft workshop

Cancer Answerline

CHARLESTON, W. Va. - There
may be baskets growing in your
backyard. And Bryant Holsenbeck
can tell you how to find them.
Holsenbeck, whose traditional
wickerwork products have been
featured in national general intere•t
and arts magazines, will demonstrate how to collect and use indigenous vines in basket making at a
workshop Feb. 22-26 at the Cedar
Lakes Crafts Center near Ripley.
The CarrbOro, N.C. artist will take
her students into the field to gather
grape, honeysuckle and other
natural vines during the workshop,

A regular feature prepared by

should be investigated, it does not
in itself mean cancer. Any
help save your life from cancer.
prostate enlargement can lead to
Question : Does inhaling
a variety of urinary problems,
asbestos dust cause cancer?
such as difficulty in urinating or
ANSWER!ine: There is eviden- controlling urimition, the need to
ce that asbestos insulation urinate frequently, painful or
workers previously employed in
quming urination, or blood in the
shipyards and other industries
urine.
are developing asbestosis, a
Question : Doesn't everything
chronic lung disease, as well as cause cancer if the dose if high
increased rates of certain can- · enough?
ANSERiine: High doses of
cers. World Wr II shipyard
workes have been found to be an many chemicals re toxic, but
inceased risk for mesothelioma , they do not nece:.sarily cause
a cancer of the lining of the chest cancer. They may, however,
wall. Above-average rates of cause loss of hair or weight,
digestive system cancer have several other illnesses and conalso been found in asbestos ditions of even death - without
workers. It also has been shown relation to this disease.
ANSERiine: Dermatologists
that asbestos workers who smoke
are at risk for lung cancer eight warn that tanning for cosmetic
tlmes mroe than other smokers. purposes is neither safe nor inIt is 'not . known how or why nocuous. Since individuals vary
asbestos causes disease. The in their "lanability," your derfibers are very fine and can be matologist's advice, common
inhaled and . s wall owed, sense a nd moderation are the
remaining in the body many best criteria for tanning, indoors
years. AsbestO!;-related disease or out.
is not likely to appear until 15 to
Question: What can one do
35 or more years after exposure. abOut testicular cancer?
ANSERIIne: Early detection of
lnfonnation on health risks
associated with asbestos ex- this cancer is aided by a simple
posure can be obtained by writing three-minute self-examination.
"Asbestos," National Cancer In- Roll each testicle gently betwe.!'n
situte, Bethesda, Maryland, the thwnb and fingers of bOth
20014 .
hand. If you find any hard lumps
Question : What are the symp- or nodules see your doctor promtoms of prostate cancer?
ptly. He wlll give you a thorough
ANSWERiine: Cancer of the physical and man take certain Xprostate usua lly
involv es rays to make the most accurate
enlargement of the gland . diagnosis possible.
Howeve r, some enlargement
For more information call 992which is not cancer occurs in 7531, the Meigs County Cancer ofabout 50 percent of U.S. males !ice.
over 50. While this enlttrgcmi:!nt

the American Cancer Society, to

r&amp;dAi:Jr

sponsored by the West Virginia
Department of Education as part of
its crafts-promotion series.
Other workilhops at the Crafts
Center on those dates will be devoted
to !kat weaving , machine embroidery, tole and decorative painling. Workshops scheduled for March 1·5 will cover advance painting,
production woodworking, quilting,
stained glasS making and jewelry
crafts.
Workshop registration fees are $35
for West Virginians and $45 for outof-state guests. Reasonably priced
meals and lodging are available at

the Cedar lakes site, convenient to
1-77 in central West Virginia.

For infonnation, write to Crafts
Center Cedar lakes 25271, or
teleph~n• · 1~04 1 372~263.
•

The Community Builders Club
met recently at the home of Mr. and
Mrs . Ronald Osborne. Business
session was conducted by the
president, Ronald Osborne. Dues
were collected. Refreshments were
served to the following: Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Myers, Mr. and Mrs .

A Presentation by The Following ·Community Merchants

SAVE! 20% SAVE! 20% SAVE! 20%

ALL 14K
.$250
$5.QO &amp; ~VE $2.50

COMPLETE SELECTION
OF
HEART SHAPED

Celia Dye Irwin, Marysville, spent Davis, Mr . and Mrs. J ames Fetty
a day here with her father, Dale and daughter, Leslie, Parkersburg,
Oye.
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Nicolas
Rev. Arthur Crabtree held short Lozano and daughter, Kathy,
services at Temple United Charleston, W. Va.; Max Crabtree,
Methodist Church at noon on Mon- Armeda Mi chigan and Madge Dye
1
day for his uncle, Emzie Davis, and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtree,
Parkersburg, W. Va., wpo was local. Other guests who called were
buried in Temple Cemetery, Family ' Mr. and Mrs. William Battrell ,
members who gathered at the horne Albany. Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Batof Rev . and Mrs. Crabtree for a din- trell were college roonunates and
ner together following the burial of teachers in former years.
Mr. .Davis included Mrs. Emzie

NECKLACES
BRACELETS
EARRINGS
WHAT ALOVELY
WAY TO
SAY
I LOVE YOU!

•

Walter Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens, Mr. and Mrs. Harliss
Frank and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Haonwn. The next meeti1,1g will be at the
Pickens home.

FOR VALENTINE'S DAY, FEB. 14th

14K FLOATING
HEARTS

nd

Community Builders Club meets

Sweetheart Specials

OF POMEROY

Carpenter News Notes

Oj0

Diamond Savings &amp; Loan
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6655

Clark's Jewelry
Pomeroy, Ohio .

992-2054

OFF

Jim's Gulf
PRICES WILL

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6225

NEVER BE
' .,
Gold Prices are still at a 2 Year Low. So we have reduced the
prices on all 14K Chains, Bracelets, ~harms, 14K Gold Add A
.Beads and Chann Holders.

BETTER

STOP TODAY

EAR PIERCING DONE

WE DEAL IN ·
A FULL LINE
OF

FREE
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A$3.95
EARRING

•KRUGGERANDS
•MAPLE L£AFS

•FREE
•HURRY IN TODAY

•SAFE
•FAST

·.* SILVER·iJiffS
*SILVER ~ARS
*OLD GOLD

PERSONS UNDER 18 lUST BE ACCOMPANIED BY PARENT

j;/\~~· :~i~:.¥~2691

I~
U ~
GAWPOUS

•POCKEl WATCHES

m eourt St.

Pomeroy, Oh. 992-2054

POMEROY

heritage house/Locker 219

STOP IN TODAY

JEWELRY REPAIR - WATCH REPAIR

Pomeroy, Ohio.

8310

Ewing Funeral Home
Pomeroy, Ohio.

992-2121
·)

Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-2039

Pomeroy, Ohio

$589°0

SALE

992-2668

$388

00

&amp; Mullen
Insurance Agency

Middleport-Pomeroy

992-2342 or 992-3381

Ohio Valley
Plumbing &amp; Heating
Pomeroy, Ohio

FREE

•MODEL4636 25" COLOR CONSOLE
100% SOLID STATE
100 DEGREE PICTURE TUBE
•REG. $679.9512 STYLES)

SALE

The bij tlest ideas i1 the world
ere here today.

$598°

SALE

$64900

PLUs·fREE

SONY:

ODYSSEY
WITH PURCHASE
As199.00 VALUE

Projection TV System·

•25 " ELECTRONIC TUNED CONSOLE
•COMPUTER COLOR CHASSIS
•WIRELESS REMOTE CONTROL
•REG. $949.9512 STnESI

•MODEL 5020 50" SCREEN
•EXPRESS TUNING
•CABLE READY
•IHJAL SPEAKERS (IMPROVED AUDIO)
•DESIGNER STYLED CABINET
•REG. $2790.00

SALE

$79500

$2490

•PORTABLE SPLIT SYSTEM
•14 DAY PROGRAMMABLE TUNER
. •FULL FEATURE REMOTE CONTROL
•WEEKLY EVENT fEATURE
•TRANSITION EDITING
•FULL LOGIC TRANSPORT SYSTEM
•REG. $1450.00

VIDEO TAPE

THE ONE .AND ONLY

1

SALE

MODEL8377

•25" COLOR CONSOLE
•NEW COMPUTER COLOR CHASSIS
•25% BRIGHTER PICTURE
•REG. $749.9512 STYLES)

0

992-2036

Rail's Ben Franklin

PLUS
ODYSSEY1
WITH PURCHASE
As19900 VALUE

00

•

Francis Florist
·Pomeroy, Ohio

•IRISH ....... 3HR. BETA.......$ 9.95
•AMPEX . . . . . . 6 HR. VHS .......$13.50
•SONY . . . . . . 41/2 HR. BETA .......$13.95
•MAXWELL . . . . 3HR. BETL.... $14.90
•FUJI ... .. ... 6 HR. VHS....... $14.90
. eTOK . . . . • . . • 6 HR. VHS....... $15.90
•SONY . . . . • • . 5 HR. BETA....... $15.95
•MAXWELL ..·. . . 6 HR. VHS.......$18.90

Middleport, Ohio

992-3481

Central Trust Co.
•
Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

OF
AMERICA

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

FEB. 12TH &amp; 13TH

FEB. 12TH &amp; 13TH
THIRD AVE.-GALLIPOLIS

992-7034

R. C. Bottling Co.

Middleport, Ohio

We Salute the Scouts of
'
America.•..dedicated to a
b~tter way•... making a
better world through team
spirit and civic action. . •
.sharing interests and fun!

Racine

992-3542

Ho.-~

National Bank

Racine, Ohio

949-2210

The Daily Sentinel _
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2156

Pomeroy, Ohio

AMERICA
NE,EDS
SCOUTING ...
SCOUTING
NEEDS
AMERICA!

992-2556

New York Clothing House
Pomeroy, Ohio
"

992-2049

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funeral Home
Middleport, Ohio

992--5141

·Baum True Value
Chester, Ohio

985-3301

lngel's Furniture
Middleport, Ohio

992-2635

Meigs Inn
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6661

992-3629

Simmon's
Olds.-Cad.-Chev., Inc.

K&amp;C Jewelets

Pomeroy, Ohio

·992-3785

Pomeroy, Ohio

Sugar Run Mills Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2136

Ridenour Supply

Smith-Nelson Motors
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6614

The Farmer's Bank

992-2115

992-2174

Chester, Ohio

Star Supply

985-3308

Marguerite Shoes
Pomeroy, Ohio

. 949-2174·

Racine, Ohio

TWO DAYS ONLY

992-nu

Kingsbury Homes

'

TWO DAYS ONLY

992-2644

Meigs Auto Parts

992-2284

Downing-~hilds
•M~NAVOX 19" COLOR PORTABLE
•AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING
•100% SOLID STATE
•REG. $449.95

949-2626

Adolph's Dairy Valley

Pomeroy, Ohio

Magnavox
SALE

Racine, Ohio

The Fabric Shop

8315

•6 HOUR VHS VIDEO RECORDER
•FEATHER TOUCH CONTROLS
•REMOTE CONTROL PAUSE
•REG. $949.95

SpencerFasv Chek

992-5432

Pomeroy, Ohio

•6 HOUR VHS VIDEO RECORDER
•DIGITAL CLOCK TIMER
•24 HOUR PROGRAMMING
•REG. $849.95

•

Crow's Family Restaurant

Dale Hill Ford Tractor
The brig1test ideas nthe world
ere here today

WE'RE PROUD
TO SALUTE
THE
BOY SCOUTS

992-5627

Middleport, Ohio

GIGANTIC FEBRUARY VIDEO CLEARANCE

Magnavox

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Bank One of Pomeroy ·
Pomeroy-Rutland-Tuppers Plains

992-2133

'

Gravely Tractor
Sales &amp; Service

Brogan-Warner Ins.
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6687
I'

992-3639

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2975

�Page

10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.•••••.

Helen Help Us What S
1

Readers write on sex, love, e_tc.
By Helen and Sue Hottel
DEAR HELEN ADNSUE :
The letter from the young woman
who was so worried about her past
got to me. If she wants to change,
I'm herman!
I'm in my mid-20s. It seems that
every woman I've gone out with in
:he past seven years has wanted
only sex. What happened to loving
relationships, caring and responsibility?
·I haven't dated in a year because
I'm disgusted with this " your place
or mine" business on the first encounter.
Could you please forward my letter on to the n()o(onger-promiscuous
lady? -DISMAL
DEAR DIS:
Sorry, the lady gave no name and
address. However, if you (and
others) would like to correspond
with interesting, well-educated
women who aren't singles-bar .
"meet market" types, write for ·
ll)ore information to THE FINE
ARTS NETWORK, Box 4714,
Cleveland, Ohio. 44126.
Called The Intelligent Single's
Alternative, this high class "lonely
hearts club" brings together people
of all ages from all over the United
States and parts of Canada. Yotl
discover one another first by mail.
From there, it's up to you. And the
price is right: around $27 per year.
Good luck - HElEN AND SUE
HELEN AND SUE:
. You recently ran several letters
from (or about) people who were
married at a very young age and
wanted to find what they'd missed. I
say they weren't ready for marriage
yet, and should have waited.
We were wed when I as 14, and we
just passed our 25th anniversary

without my feeling as if I'd missed
anything. How could I, when I have
everything : a lover, boyfriend,
husband, and father of my children;
dancing, romance, flowers, dinnersout, and also kindness, responsibility, understanding and deep
love.
If I could go back and change my
life, I wouldn't! - MRS. RICHARD
SUMMERS
DEAR RAP :
Here's one who supports your
response to "Sane Reader." I too
see no hidden evil in the Dungeons
and Dragons game, and am surprised that so tnany " reformers"
tenn it ''Satan's work ."
D&amp;D is a simple role-playing,
designed to help the player forget his
tedious, boring, annoying everyday
world. I'm an avid fan, and I've
never performed a violent or antisocial act, nor does D&amp;D inspire
me toward one.
''S.R." speaks of President
Reagan's near-assassin as an example of what can happen to "one
who constantly fantasizes." Hinckley was unbalanced, and such persons can be touched off by anything.
Why ,try to wrap the entire
population in cotton wool because a
very few are mentally ill' Rather,
we should find ways to detect the unbalanced and help them before they
do harm. A- LAW ABIDING FANTASIZER IN N.J.
DEAR LAFINJ :
Thanks, we needed that! HELEN ADN SUE
(GOT A PROBLEM' Or a subject
for discussion, two-generation style'
·Direct your question to either Sue or
Helen Bolte!- or both, if you want a
combination mother-daughter answer- in care of this newspaper.)

Meeting 11otes
Hero Club
The Meigs High School Hero Club
ts :ceiebratlng National FHA-Hero
Week and National Vocational Educatlon Week, Feb. 8-13, with several activities.
The tour letters In Hero stand lor
Horne Economics Related Occupalions and all members In the club
are students with multi-area job
training classes at Meigs High
SChool. These classes are open to
students !rom Eastern and Southem High schools as are au voca·
tiona! programs at Meigs High
School.
All of the Hero members attended classes at Meigs High
SChool In the morning and then
sP,I!nd their afternoons, evening
and weekends working In area bustnesses to get on-the-job training
and experience.
All of the jobs focus on home economlcs related occupations and
bdys as well as girls participate.
'Area businesses which are trainIng these students Include the
Pomeroy Health Care Center,
CETA, Meigs Local Schools,
McClure's Three In One, Adolph's
Dairy Valley, Burger Chef, Riverview IGA, Lazy Day Cafe, Royal
C(Own Bottling Co., anq Vaughan's
Cardinal.
The employers at these businesses work cooperatively with the
school Instructor and coordinator,
Suzy Carpenter, in preparing the
students lor various job skills
now do to
as perform
well as the
Improving
the
needed
tasks they
student's job posslbtlitles for the
future.
Students are graded on how well
they peftorm on the job as well as In
the classroom. They also learn
atiout personal financing and wise
C&lt;J11surnerism, ~ so that they can
make the most their paychecks.
scime are already ma!Tied and
have family responsibltltles In addition to school and work.
Activities of the Hero Club this

BARGAINS
In Every Department
Come In and
STOCK UP!
NO LAYAWAYS
NO REFUNDS
STORE HOURS:

Mon ••Sat.
9:31 till 5:00

week are centered on the valentine
theme of hearts and flowers.
Members arv taking orders for
sweetheart roses. The stlk flowers
are trimmed with a white lace
heart and satin ribbon and sell for
$2. Hero is also taking orders for
personalized valentine cards. The
nine by 1;! Inch cards feature twin
white lace hearts complete with the
name of the sweetheart couple and
sell for $1 each. The roses and cards
can be ordered from Meigs High
School Hero members.
Saturday night, Hero will span·
sor a sweetheart dance at the high
school following the Meigs ·
Wahama basketball game In the
cafeteria untll midnight and will
feature Uve music, the rock band,
"Tranzlt." Dress Is casual. Refreshments wlil be tree. All area
teens &amp;re Invited to take their swee!hearts to the dance or to attend
single.

Thursday, February 11, 1982

•

Cooking?
By DALE M. STOlL
Meigs County ExteDBioo
Home Economist

Are you looking for more ideas to
brighten up mid-winter meals?
Last week we covered several different ideas for using haml1llrger.
This week I'm going to concentrate
on breakfast ideas.
Each Valentine's Day my family
waits expectantly for the special
dishes that I prepare for this holiday. Last year I made pink pancakes. (I'll probably never live that
one down!) If you have trouble getting your family to pay attention to
what hou make, then try something
a little different! In case you want to
try pink pancakes, just add a little
red food coloring to the pancake batter. Kids love 'em!
This year, I prepared whole wheat
pancakes. To make them a little different, I dropped the batter onto the
griddle in a heart shape. It did take a
little practice but before long, I was
turning out terrific heart-shaped
pancakes.
The whole wheat pancake recipe
that I've selected is very good.
Whole wheat pancakes have a sort of
nutty flavor and higher in fiber
than regular pancakes. Fiber is an
important part of our diets. Eating
more foods high in fiber tends to
reduce the symptoms of chronic coostipation and other problems with
the lower digestive tract. In addition, once you begin to eat fooda
with whole wheat flour added, other
fooda seem sort of bland and
bodiless.
Wbule Wheat Pancakes
I egg
_
2 tablespoons cooking oil
I cup buttermilk or I cup sour milk
% cup whole wheat flour
I tablespoon brown sugar
'h teaspoon soda
'h teaspoon salt
I teaspoon baking powder
Beal'the egg. Add buttermilk and
oil. Mix in other ingredients. Beat
until the batter is smooth. Bake on a
hot, greased griddle until brown on
both sides. Makes 10, 4-inch pancakes.
To sour milk, place I tablespoon
vinegar in a measuring cup. Add
enough milk to make I cup. Let
stand for a few minutes.
If you've checked the prices of

pancake syrup lately, you probably
are looking for a way to cut down on
the cost of syrup. Many syrups have
a long list of artificial ingredients,
too. If you want to make your own
syrup then try this recipe. I double
the recipe and store the syrup in the
refrigerator. Before I use the syrup,
I place the container in warm water.
Pancake Syrup
1 cup light com syrup
'h cup brown sugar
'h cup water
Msple flavoring
Combine corn syrup, sugar and
water in a saucepan. On medium
heat, cook until the sugar is
dissolved, stirring constantly.
Remove from heat and add a small
amount of maple flavoring, if
desired. natural maple flavoring is
availale in some stores. Using pure
maple syrup as a flavoring is
posible, but the cost is higher.
A good breakfast menu using
whole wheat pancakes might include
a grapefruit hall, whole wheat pancakes and syrup, and milk. Breakfast is such an important meal yet so
many kids as well as adults have this
notion that eating anything at all
constitutes a good llreakfast.
The problem with eating surgary
cereals or donuts for breakfast is
that those fooda provide energy but
few of the nutrients that our bodies
need. Sugary foods also suppress appetites, causing people to eat less of
the foods that are good for them. Too
many fooda high in sugar may cause
tooth decay as well as unwanted
pounds.
Last week my six-year-old ' n
told me he wanted a banana sp •..
for breakfast! He hastened to add
that instead of ice cream, the
hanana split was to ·have scoops of
cottage cheese. Why not? A
banana, cottage cheese, a topping
of . oat and nut granola and
strawberries really is a good
breakfast! In the same light, why
not let kids have pizza, subs, or
ham and cheese sandwiches for
breakfast!
For your free copy of a guideline
for good eating, contact the Meigs
County Extension Office at 992-6696.

A special serviCe was held during
the regular worship hour of the
First United Presbyterian Church
of Syracus.;: on ,,Eeb. 7 to dedicate
the new plano given by Mrs . Msrgaret Winebrenner In memory of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. nomas
Clark. and her husband, WllllamF.
(Dick) Winebrenner.
Rev. Wanda Johnson conducted
the services with participation
from the congregation. The mlnlster's sermon, " God's Gift or
Music", was preceded by the song,
"One D3y at a Time" by Esther
Harden. Michael McKelvey and
Andrea Theiss were joined by the
congregation for the ConfessiOn or
faith by singing "They WID Know
We are Christians by Our Love."
Thomas Clark was mayor of Syr-

acuse, an elder tn the church, su-:
perintendent of the Sunday School
and a member of the area councU. :
Mrs. Cla rl&lt; wa s a postmaster at ·
Syracuse and In the chu rch taught ,
pre-teen Sunday School classes. ·
Several members of the Winebrenner family were present tor .
the dedication.
;
.\'our " EitraT~h"

·

rill Sl.att lt57
;
I

L

,

FLORIST
PH. 992·2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

· ENTIRE STOCK
WOMEN'S WINTER
DRESS SHOES
AND BOOTS

All GIRLS FASHION BOOTS
ALL PURSES

50% Off
MEN'S SUEDE &amp; LEATHER

HIKER BOOTS
BOYS SUEDE BOOTS AND BOYS
LEATHER WORK BOOTS

40% Off
. - - - - - A T LOCKER 219~-----.

ALL NCAA ANDJOX
·ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR

. 30% Off ·

·

, L--------------~
\. ,~

heritage house of shoes
N., 2ndAve.

SATURDAY
VALENTINE Sweetheart Dance will be held Saturday from 9.
p.m. to I a.m. at teh Royal Oak

VALENTINE
WEEKEND
SPECIAL

10% OFF
STOREWIDE

VALENTINE BAKE sale,
beginning 9 a.m. Saturday at
Gaul's Market, Chester, by
Chester United Methodist Church
to raise funds for an outdoor
bulletin board.

·MARGUERITE SHOES
POMUOY, ott.

DEPEND .ON US
WE'RE 'PARTS PLUS'

AUTO PARTS

NAME BRANDS- COMPETITIVE PRICES
FACTORY TRAINED PERSONNEL

"iJVING OUR AREA FOR
llllllll""'!! ~;:;-;a..,
50 YEARS"

10W30
LIMIT I

10W30

QT.
• Proved in seVen years

10W40

cl ruQQed race c:ompetition
by ttii!l'enske Team

Announcements

Middleport, Oh.

A potluck supper planned for Friday night at the Rock Springs Uni·
ted Methodist Church has been
cancelled.

Revival services w1ll begin at the
Syracuse Nazarene Church tonight'
and continue through Feb. 14. Services each evening wtll begin at 7
p.m. with singers to include Ralph
and Joan Dunmire Evans and BW
Groves. Rev . James B. Kittle In·
vites the public.

TOOL
BOXES

STOP

YOUR
CHOICE

WI BED #C0101
NARROW BED #C0103
IMPORT #C0102

SHOPPING

RACINE - The Southern High School hoooroll for th4! third six weelcJ grading period has

been announced. Thoe:se making a grade of 8 or
above In all their subja-l.s to be named to the roll

are:
Grade eight -:- Jodi Harris, MeliSSB Ihle, Pam

MASTER CYLINDERS

Johnson, Alana Lyoru, l...i.SH Parsons, Kelly

Rizer. Kenda Rizer, Robin Savago, Becky Van·
Meier, Paula WinebreMer, LOri Adams. Todd
Adarns. Dixie Dugan,

Grace Episcopal Church service
will be at 12:30 p.m. Sunday. A
congregational meeting and potluck
dinner will follow the service.

ONE

Honor roll

Thtrea~

$2699

Bini(, Kelley

Grut!IW!r,Se1.nGrueser. Heath HID, Ryan Oliver.

Grade ~even - Kim AdaiTlH, Car(ll Bumern,

Rachel Reiber, Kris SeUen, Diana Simpaon,
Tammy TheW. Matt Harris, UgiiUi Hart, Usa
PaPe. Tammy Wolfe, Wendy Wolfe, Joe ROUSh,

$2195

FOR MOST
CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCKS

EXCHANGE
REMANUFACTURED

Terri Rouah, Karla Smith.

STARTERS or

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

1
1

$}3 88AN~

ELITE CHAIN
XL 14

.

~

BANKONE.M
Pomeroy-Rutland-Tuppers Plains

S3Q25

EXCH.

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

· I....

-With
lotorola

OIL . $199.
FILTER ~os~en r ..

LET US TESf YOUR UNIT
FREE. BEFORE YOU BUYI

lAWN MOWER
&amp;
GARDEN TRACTOR

GET THE RIGHT MUFFLER
EXO STAI'I BY ARVIN

REPAIR
NOW IS tHE TIME TO GET

READY FOR SPRING
LOCAL PICKUP &amp; DEUYERY

Remember . Feb. 14th

bl CUHIII" Of llmii.O dl"ncllnQ on tnt bank' I

25260

S36

EXCHANGE
SINGLE RESERVOIR'

YOUR "ONE STOP" AUTO PARTS STORE

VALENTINE'S DAY
VALENTINE CANDY
and CARDS

Serving the needs of people who dll•rv• our help.

Masolt, W. Va.

$1988

99 EXCHANGE

WITH TRADE-IN

Residential real estate loans to Individuals
Home lmp~ovement loans
Commercial loans to small and large businesses
Consumer loans
Farm loans
Education loans

• ~rom Um.t IO llmt U'lt IYliiADUIIy Ol tnt lbo'tlloant mty htvtiO
IUPPIY Ol llndiDII Iundt . .

DUAl RESERVOIR ONLY

ALT~RNATORS

To help, we make the following types of loans:*

IIIR BI.OCit

•

.
'

'

•
•
•
•

HOURS: ·
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9 to 6
Sat.9tos

.

in the day, ask yourself if it's because you're repealing unproductive
procedures. Don't duplicate old mistakes.
PISCES (Feb. ~Msrch 20) Someone of whom you're quite fond
could do something today which may hurt your feelings. Rather than
dwell on it, be the one whoforgiveseven though it wasn't your fault.
ARIES (Mareh 21·Apr1119) Your initial tendency today may be to
dodge difficult decisions, but when you meet situations head-in , you'll
find adequate solutions.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) Coworkers may be a trifle difficult to
get along with today, but if you keep in mind your collective goals the
rough sP6ts can be smoothed over.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your loved one may not live up to your
expectations today. Rather than making an issue of ·what occurs,
strive to be understanding and forgiving.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) You and your mate may not see eye-toeye on several important issues today. Should a rift occur, try to patch
things up later with a little peace offering.
lEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Even though you will be.able to see others'
frailties today , try to overlook their shortcomings. Praise them in terJilS designed to awaken their better qualities.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Try to be very discerning today regarding how you spend your money. If possible, eliminate all nonessentials. Buy only what is necessary.
LmRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) In involvements with outsiders today.
you'll do all the right things to win thdr approval. When dealing with
family members, you may not exude the same wannth.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) Early in the day you could restrict
your progress because you may have predetermined that what you've
planned won't work out. Later, your attitude will brighten.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) There's a possibility you'll per·
mit your hopes to be overshadowed by pessimism today in areas
relating to your security. Don't. You can withstand advertisity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Important goals are achievable
today, but they may not come about as you first plan. You 'll find ways
to accomplish your purpose despite setbacks.
'

For generations we've been lending money (all kinds of loans
for all kinds of reasons) to businesses and people in our
community. They have deserved QI.Jr help and we intend to
continue serving them through our responsible and openminded lending policies. After all, the bank that doesn't take
the opportunity to be a part of a community's social and
economic progress is passing up a great Investment.

Our careiJJIIY trained tax preparers are up-tq-date on all the tax
credits and deductions that apply to the farmer. At H&amp;R Block,
we'll take all the time necessary to do the job right because we
want you to pay the lowest legitimate tax.

HOURS:
Mon.: Fri. 9 to 6
Sat. 9 to 5

RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution; I :30 p.m.
at the Meigs Inn. Members are to
lake quilt tickets.

.

, Fl NAL REDUCTIONS

REMANUFACTURED

returns•••we could
save· you money.

PH; 773·9128

THE AFTERNOON Circle of
Heath United Methodist Church
will meet at 2 p.m. Thursday at
the church.

A ceremonial will be 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.

c,

February 12, !982

We know the meaning of the word. .

.
prepare your Income tax

PH. 992-3795

A MEETING of Alcoholics
Anonymous will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Community Mental Health Building .

A ROUND and square dance
will be held at the Senior Citizens
Center in the multi-purpose
· building on Friday, 8 to II p.m.
The public is invited.

Jlnniversarrw ~ale

Archery building. Music. will be
MARY SHRINE :rl, White ·
presented by Gary Stewart Band
Shrine
of
Jerusalem,
.of Point Pleasant, W.Va. Tickets,
ceremonial ; 8 p.m. Friday at the
$12 couple, are available at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Swisher and Lohse Drug store,
· Pomeroy ; Newell's Sunoco 41nd
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
Gaul's Market, Chester. The danUnited Methodist Church, Thursce is being sponsored by Eastern
day, 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Band Boosters.
Mrs. Emma Clatworthy. Twila
Childs will be the co-hostess.
ANNUAL Father-son banquet
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
ROCK 'N . ROLL-athon at
Saturday; 6:30 p.m. at Pomeroy
Pomeroy health Care Center 2 to
Masonic Teinple. Dinner music
4 p.m. Friday. Residents will
and entertainment by Bob Sager
rock for Meigs County Heart
following dinner. Tickets can be
Fund Drive. Entertairunent by
reserved at door or purchased
Francis Andrews orchestra and
from any Mason or by contacting
refreshments served. Public inFrarik Sisson ot Mike Walker.
vited.

You are li kely to be more adventurous and daring th is coming
y ear than vou have ev er b ee n in the pas f Excitin g times are ah ead in
wh ich you'll feel impell ed to e xplore new hori zons.
AQUARIUS I Jan. ~Feb. 19) If things don't start off too well early

Wolf
Pen
Mr. and Mrs. George Gum Jr.

'

45769

PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Chapter will meet at 7:45p.m. Thursday at the Riverboat Room of the
·Diamond Savings and Loan Co.

The Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club wlil
meet at 7: ll Monday night at the
Middleport Ubrary.
The civic participation comrrdttee wlil present the program with
Ruth Powers to show a fUm on
heart attacks. The club will observe
Heart Sunday on Feb. 21 with a
door-to-door canvas ior funds. Mrs.
Grace Pratt Is general chairman.

Partners •••
Let H&amp;R Block
.

Pomeroy, Oh.

ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE,
7:30p.m. Th~yatthehall .

Club. The Ladies Auxiliary is
hosting the dinner.

CONTINUING
OUR
.
-

Astrograph

Hill

2nd &amp;Brown Sts.

THURSDAY

A DINNER will be held Friday
evening at 7 p.m. at the Eagles·

, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Hill are announcing the birth of their first
child, a son, Ryan Morgan, at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital on Jan . 6.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Grindley, Minersville, and
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hill, Racine.
Great-grandparents are Mrs .
Ronald Grindley, Minersville, and
Mrs. Charles Fiering, Davenport,
Iowa, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hill,
Racine.

r-;=======================il

618 E. Main St.

Social Calendar

Friday

Hills announce birth

were Wednesday evening visitors of
Mrs. Faye Gum and Glenda.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp were
recent afternoon visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith, Charles and
Kevin Knapp.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Syracuse church dedicates piano

Jun 1·0· r Chapter
The Junior Chapter of the
N.W.M.S. of Syracuse Nazarene
Church held its regular monthly
meeting on Feb. 2after school.
Members met in the church
fellowship hall with 10 in attendance.
Their theme for the year is "Hats
Off to Our FJ:i.endly Neighbors."
This month tftey studied Canada.
Games were played and refreshments served.
The leader is Mrs. Ora Bass. Rev.
James B. Kittle is pastor.

Thu~y~ February 11, 1982

--e

PWS OTHER GIFTS

VILLAGE PHARMACY ·
.

Memt. FDIC

.

I

l'll.lt2-M&amp;t

$1 995

UMITED UFETIME GUARANTEE
·
Wt Stoct ACOIIIplett lilt or Muflltls IIIII Pipes.

· G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
2~ 3rd AVE.
GAUIPOUS. OH.

446-1813

1704 E.ASTERN AVE.
GAUIPOUS, OHIO
446-4204

144·1 . 2nd Sl
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2138

I

ROUTE 33

IIASOII, WV

na:.sm

~·
.
4"
Parts Plus au..,_... ... n.n·s-- yaul
.

' I

•'

�•

11

Thunday, FebruarY II , · 1982

1982

The

13

-~

Riffe's decision due
•
after family reunion

CONGRATULATIONS President Reagan
congratulates Vivian Vahlberg during a ceremony
Wednesday evening In Washington. where she became

Judge ends
13 cases

the flnt woman president of the National Press Club.
Vahlberg reports lor the Dally Oklahoman rl
Oklahoma City. IAPLaserphoto)

Area deaths

Twelve defendants were fined
, and a 13th defendant forfeited a
bond In the Meigs County Court of
Judge Patrick O'Brien Wednesday.
Fined were William A. Bates, Columbus, $21 and costs; Perla Averton, Pomeroy, $24 and costs;
Rickey Chapman, Milton, W. Va.,
$20 and costs; Edwin Nabring, Catlettsburg, Ky., $22 and costs; Joseph Masters, Reedsville, $21 and
costs; Robert T. Thompson, Columbus, $20 and costs, aU on speedIng charges; Herbert D. Noel,
Route 4, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, no
muffler; Paul D. Lewis, Racine,
$15 and costs, no eye protection; $30
and costs, !allure to display license
. plates, and $75 and costs, no valid
· operator's license; Gregory Davis,
: Pomeroy, $200 and costs, :60 days
confinement, suspended, ·and slx
months probation, petty theft;
Deanna Smith, Tuppers Plains. $40
and costs, failure to yield half of the
roadway; Charles McGrath ;
Langsville, $125 and costs, 30 days
· In · )all, 26 suspended, Indecent
exposure.
Thomas Crisp, Langsville, forfeIted a $50.50 bond posted on speedIng charges.

Probe minor wreck

William C. Frazier
W!JIIam C. Frazier, 80, Storys
Run Road ln the Cheshire area,
died Wednesday at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Frazier was born Nov. 26,
1901 In Gallia County, a son of the
late James and Ma1·garet Rupe
Frazier. He was also preceded In
death by two sisters, Eleazady
Clark and Nellie Little, and a halfbrother, Wilbur Wines.
Surviving are his wife, Helen
Rupe Frazier; a son, William FrazIer, Jr ., and a daughter, Patricia
Frazier, both at home; a sister,
Bertha Manley, Middleport, and
several Jlleces a nd nephews.
Mr. Frazier was a retired laborer
with the New York Central Railroad and had also been a coal miner
during his career. He attended the
Silver Run Baptist Church.
Funeral Services will be held at 1
p.m . Friday at the .Rawllngs-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with the
Rev. Eddie Boyer o!flclat!ng. Bur. !al wiU be In Gravel HUI Cemetery
at Cheshire. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to4and 7 to
9 p.m. today.

Veterans Memorial

Pomeroy Pollee report medium
damages to two vehicles ln an accident on Powell's parking lot Wed·
nesday. A car driven by Margaret
·F. Hamilton, Pomeroy, struck a
parked vehicle owned by Melody
Hoschar, Pomeroy. There were no
Injuries and no citations.

Glenford gets help

Adm!t~ed -- Charles Johnson,
Long Bottom; Martin Nesselroad,
Long Bottom; Hazel Ferrell, ·
Gallipolis.
Discharged--Helene Sayre, Ruth
Mulford, Allee Adams, .John McDaniel, Regina Rice, Thomas Justice,
Charles .Johnson, 11mothy Jenkins.

Wiley Dale Ours, Jr.
Wiley Dale Ours, Jr., Levittown,
Pa., former Meigs County resident,
died Tuesday following an extended Illness.
Born March 31, 1936, he was the
eldest son of Wiley and Audrey
Ours, longtime residents ot Racine.
He was preceded In death by a
brother. Robert Larry.
Surviving, In addition to bls parents, are his wife, Kathryn Buckley
Ours; two sons, Michael and Robert; a daughter, Lisa; five sisters
and brothers Including VIolet Preston, Pasadena, Calif.; Harry Ours,
Columbus; Karen Willson, Opa
Locka, Fla.; WOllam Ours, Belmont, MISs., and Nancy Yoacham,
Racine. Several nieces and nephews ahd several aunts and uncles
also survive. ·
Services will be held Friday at
the Beck, O'Neal and Strouse Funeral Home, 7400 New Falls Road,
Levittown. Burial will be In the
Newtown Cemetery at Newtown,
Pa.
Area friends and relatives may
send contributions to the Meigs
County Chapter of the American
Cancer Society In his memory.

Dance set Friday
The Rutland PrO will sponsor a
valentine dance for students and
parents from 7 to 9 p.m . Friday at
the Rutland Elementary School
gymnasium. There will be a dance
contest, cake walks, door prizes,
games, food, a bake shop and the
crowning of the 1982 Mr. and Miss
Sweetheart at 8 p.m.

Emergency run

. COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) -The
village of Glenford will receive
$29,211! from the state to help pay
for construcllon of a new township
hall, Gov ..James Rhodes' office
says.

The Middle port Emergency
Squad at 2:33p.m. Wednesday took
Lillian Burt from her home on
Route 124 to the Holzer Medical
Cente r .

Meets Friday
The Meigs County Coon Hunters
Club will meet at 7 p.m. Friday at
Its quarters on Snowball Hill. Refreshments will be served .

COLUMBUS, Oblo (AP) -Ohio
House Speaker Vernal G . Rttte Jr.
Is having a family reunion this weekend to help him decide whether to
seek the Democratlc nomination
for governor.
But Marvin L. Warner, a close
friend and Cincinnati businessman
also considering the race, may figure more ln Rille's decision - at
least from a polltlcal viewpoint.
Rille, a 56-year-old New Boston
Insurance man now finishing' his
fo\lrth term as speaker, said Wednesday, "some days I think I have
made up my mind; otber days I
think I haven't."
He said he, his wife and their scattered, grown children "will slt
down and talk about !t. I'm going to
make a decision one way or the
other and announce It Feb. 20, my
wife's birthday/'
Rlffe, ~ean ot the House with
23 years of uninterrupted service,
would have to quit his powerful post
to run. He sald he figures he would
have to spend $2 million to· wtn the
primary.
The speaker said he and Warner,

a rnliUonalre who never has held
publlc office, still have an understanding that they will not oppose
each other In the primary.
U Warner would decide to run,
"my decision would be made just
like that," he said, snapping his fin·
gers. "I would not run·, and I would
give him my total support. But If
Marvin decided not to go, then I'd
have to make the big decision."

The Daily Sentinel

Or Write Di!ily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio45769

save the taxpayers of Ohio some
money," Campanella said .
Campanella said he talked wtth
the govemorr, who has npt ruledout the posslblllty of running for
auditor. Campanella said he got no
commitment on the governor's
plans. Rhodes, a Republlcan,ls prevented by the state constitution
from seeking a tlii!JI cOnsecutive
term.

Public Notice
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
ORDINANCE
An ORDINANCE to
make appropriations for

current

ber31,1912.
Sect ion 1. BE IT
RESOLVED by the Council
of tile Village of Mid·
dleport, State of Ohio, t~at,
to provide for the current
expe:nses and other ex·
pendllures of the said
Village of M iddleport
during the f iscal year en·

ding December 31,1982, the
following sums be and they

ar:e hereby set aside and

appropriated as follows:
VIZ :

Section 2. That . there be

a~propriated

make endorsements In races for
the Ohio Supreme Court to avoid
"costly and counter-productive
primaries." ·
He did not propose endorsements
In other statewide contests, but said
he would meet In early March with
candidates In the crowded race for
governor to see If the field could be
trimmed.
"It won't Involve any armtwisting," Colley said. "I believe
we will have a -contested primary
for governor."
He also pledged to strengthen
party fund-raising efforts a1;d proposed a post-primary gala, featurIng entertainers and party leaders,
to bolster finances of the party's
candidates In · the . November
election.

Colley said he had urged the governor to run for auditor this year.
Rhodes, who cannot seek reelection as governor, has taken
himself out of a possible bid for the
U.S. Senate but has not ruled out
entering the auditor's race.

of Dr.
Murray Ferderber,
'19, head
ot
physical
medicine
at

1976.
Henderson was charged earlier
with the Jan. 21 gunshot slaylngs of
his wife's parents and thelrll-yearold son In Cherry Fork, Ohio. When
arrested Saturday, Henderson was
carrying a .22callber pistol stolen
from his In-laws' home, deputies
said.
!n weekend pollee Interviews,
Henderson described shooting his
In-laws, a woman In South CarolIna, a woman In Mississippi, a man
In Louisiana and five people In FlorIda, Including Ferderber and a
store clerk, pollee claimed.
Henderson was paroled after a
robbery conviction In Wyoming, authorities said. The man who put
Henderson In the Wyoming State

Wages
Employee
· Benefits

$67,600 .00
18,200.00

Travel Transporta-

tion
Contractual
Services

.and Mainte nance
12,050.00
Transfers
10,000.00
Total Police Law En forcement
113,600.00
Total Security of
Persons and
Property
113,600.00
'
PUBLIC HEALTH
AND WELFARE
Payment to County
Health District· 4.300.00
Total Public H,alth
and Welfare
4.300.00
GENERAL
GOVERNMENT
Mayor and Administrative

Offices
Salaries/

8,500.00

Wages

Employee
Benefits

2,150.00

Travel Transport a·

tion

900.00

Services

700.00

Contractual
Other Operation and

Maint.
Total Mayor and

1,700.00

Administrative

Offices

LeglsL&amp;tive

1,200.00

Contrectual
Services
7 ,4()0.00
Other Operation and
53 ,300.00
Maintenance

car,ita l Outl~y

'

To al Street
Maintenance and

-f:iiiiiiiiiiiiiii..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii

Repair

·

Federal Grant

4,000.00

88,800.00

Other
1.600,000.00
Total Federal Grant
Fund
1,600,000.00
Federal Revenue Sharing

Other

16.825.39

Total Federal Revenue

Sharing Fund
Program

..

3

16,825.39

Announcements

THE JOURNEYMEN
GOSPEL SINGERS
Will Be At
Cheshire eaptist
Church
Sundav Evening

Feb . 14 at 7:30P.M.
Everyone Welcome

dum
1,852.o2S.39
SECTION 4. SPECIAL
REVENUE FUNDS A~
DEN DUM :
Street Levy Fund
Employee
Benefits
250.00

23646,

45169 was appointed Ad·
ministratr ix of the estate of

Terry

Qualls,

Sr . ,

Street.
.15769.·

Pomeroy,

Ohio

deceased, late of 101 New
Robert E . Buck

Contractual

Services

Interest and

Principal
Total Fire Truck

Fund

6.600.00

Bond Retirement Fund
Contractual
100.00
Services
Interest and

Principal

Salaries!

Benefits

2,000.00

Services

1.300.00

nals, andthe Records
are
custody
Files, Jour·
required by the Laws of the
State of Ohio to be kept, do

Contractual
Total Office

Concessions

Other Operation and
Maintenance

Total

_..,000.00

Concessions
.(11 ,000.00
Total Swimming Pool
Fund Appropriation
Leisure Time
Activities
19,100.00

and Training
meeting
on

will · com·

AGENTS:

mence at 10:30 a.m . and is
open to the general public.

•'

A record of the proceedings
Is maintained by the Office
of Manpower Develop·

JOHN. F. IIUSSU
CIIUUS 8. IIUlUII
MICHAEL L OIILDS

ment, 1160 Dublin Road,
Columbu~. Ohio 43215.

U.S. Rl. SO En!

Call Ken ot,tng
For Fast Service
985·3561

Guvsvitle, Ohio

AuthOrized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

.,. PARTS AND Ufi'VtCf;
ALL MAIC:!:S

•w.ntlfn
eOrvtn

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

• Ro~~nv••

e Oltpolollll
eDilhWtlhtrt

• Hor warer T Anil 1

'2.00 Each

Sat., Feb. 27
Reg.UONOW$17.50
Reg. US Now $22.50
Reg. UO Now $27.50
US Wave Length

3-11 tfc

For Longer Hair

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Mlcldloport
Clll 992-2726
2-1-1 mo.

John Wise

David Price

1614) 992-3556
1·13·1 mo. pd .

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

ATOZ

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

HOME MAINTENANCE
A~D REPAIRS

8·20·tfc

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

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

20 Years E•perlence
Plumbing, Carpentry,
Roofing,
Electrical,
Cisterns, Cement, Stone
walls, Chimney Repair.
All Home Repairs
Trailer Roots and
Underpinning

•

N. o degrees 00' 00" E.
along the grantor's west

\._

---------tflli!Y

Mod~~~ei~ctrical
Equipmenl

CAD.-CHEV., INC.
Ph . 992-6614
308 E. Main Pomeroy,

corner of sa id Lot Number
12 at 69.00 feet a total
distance of 118.99 feet to a

• Lo·Boy
eTrencher
• Water • Sew('r
• Gas Lines
• s ~ p tIc
sy s tems

E along the grantor's nor·

Large or Small Jobs

th. property line, 100 feet to
PH . 992· 2478
a point in the grantor's
1 21 1 mo pd
property corner ; thence N.
·
·
·
18 degrees 51' 00" E . along I==========~
the·grantor's west prope~ty ~
line, S5.21 feet to fhe po1nt
of
beg0.557
inn ingacres
and
conClaSSI.fl' ed
taining
of wh•cn
0.157 acres is in said Lot
Number 11 and0.157 acres
is in sai d Lot Numbe r 11
~au
The said oroprrty •s &lt;10
pra isf'ld ,:n $31,800.00 &lt;t nd
Co:'l nnot be sold for less thnn
1 , tl,e o;"l ppra.sed pr 1ce .
T.--.rm s C r~ s h in hil nc1 drl 'f

Ads

(?)

ll , 18. 25

I

M c iqs County

CAll:

POMEROY
lANDMARK
614-992-2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT

CALL TODAY!

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION
SATURDAY, FEB. 13-7:00 P.M.
EVERY SATURMY THERWTER
IN PAGEVILLE, OHIO
Several truckloads of good merchandise
coming ln.
.
.
Door Prizes to be g1ven away.
Not responsible for accidents .
.
Terms of Sale: Cash or Check wrth
positive I.D.
AUCTIONEER: DON ROSSER

a r v I c e a n d
Installation.
Raaidentlll
&amp; Commercial

Call742-3 196
2·1- lmo.

bring
extra cash
for
shoppln&amp; sprees
Re•l Estate Gener•l

HOBSTETTER REALTY
GeorgeS . Hobstener Jr.·
Broker

OFFICF. 742-2003

RACINE Lovely 4
bedroom , 2 story home.
Wel l
insulated,
r easonable utilities. Kit·
chen has hand -crafted
cabinets .
Asking

$32,500 .00 .

Own e r

an x ious to sell, wi I I con·
slder reasonable offer .

RIVER

FRONT

Large
two story
colonial. 4 bedrooms,
dining room. bath. laundry . Excellent view of
the r iver in Middleport.
pwner
financing
avai Iable . GOOd terms,

Sells for $26,500.00.
COUNTRY - 2 acres
with ·5 yr. old ranch . 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. kitchen -dining combo, full
basement, carport and

utility building . Extra
good qua;;ty built home.
Selling for S-45,000.00.
PRICE REDUCED - 3
bedroom . tolal electric,
1'1• baths. Situated on 1
acre on New Lima Rd.

Reduced _to $30,000.00.
SUPER BUY!!
Choryl Lemley, Anoc.
Phone742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Anoc.

Phone 742-3092

machine repair, parts. and

Call

BEVERlY WICKLINE
NOW AI

4_46_·_02_9_4._. - - -- - - -

Old. Call675-6145.

Complete tine of Muzzle

s

Loading Guns and Supplies .
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Velley
Plaza. 446-8025.

ROSENBERG RECYCLI ·
NG
Opening
soon
spec i a II zing
in
ALUMINUM

CANS,

aluminum
sheet
&amp;
cast alum .•siding,
copper
wire,
teries &amp; IBM cards. Wath

this pdaper for !ocRationband

gran openmg . osen erg
Recvcling, 140 Columbus

Will provide answering service or weke up call. 304-

IN R"~INE
""

675·3734.

Weds., Thu11. &amp; Sat.
HAIR STYLING
Both Mtt1 &amp; Woft!tn

French City Meats are
booking Custom Cattle.

CALLg49-2320

Call 446-3472.

~========:
_
For bulk del ivery of

;========::=tJ
RHI Eltate O•n.r•l

gasoline~ heating Oil and

diesel fuel, call Landmark,

m -2181 , Pomeroy, Oh .
Gun

1

VIRGILB . SR. ~ "

11011

216 E. 2nd St.

Phone
1-(614)·992-3315

Shoot

Racine Gun

Club. Every Sun . starting
at 1 p.m. Factorv choke
guns only .
Rac ine Fire Dept. sponsors

a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6:30p.m .. Bashan. Factory

JUST LISTED - Love·

choke 12 gauge shotgun .

iy Country home on
large level tot. Has 3
nice size bedrooms,
modern bath, modern
kitchen with range and
refrigerator. Lots of
closets and nice car·
peting. Garage for 2
csrs, one with storage.

only. Gene's Deep Steam
Carpet Cleening . Scotch
Guard · Free Estimates .
'192 ·6309 .

3112

thru Sat . Announcing Jane
Morris joining our staff .

more

or

less,

good garden, lots of

trees, 3 bedrooms,
house be!ng overhauled.

Bath, good woodburner

chimnev, garage and
other buildings. Only

$19,500.
BUILDING LOT -

Ex·

Special Feb., March 8o Apr.

------

Betty' s Beauty Boutique.
2nd St., Mason . Open Tues.
Appt. 773-5272. Perm spec .
S211 .-Sl7.50, S25.-22 .50. Also
Valerie is vack on Fri. &amp;

Sat.
JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier. 30A-675-7397.
Camp Conley .

ceptional view from on

top of Pomeroy . Hos all
utilities,
garage .

and

2

I'M SWEET ON YOU
Send your love

heart

shaped

a giant

chocolate

chip cookie, custom
decorating . ·Order now for
Valentine' s Day or anv

special dayl $9 .00 delivery
included. Call Mojo's 4463675.

car

POMEROY - One acre
lot with a 2 bedroom

reasonable home. Bath,
all utilities, front porch,
and full basement with

garage. Only $16,500.
l2 ACRES - Southern
School
District. 3
· bedrooms, bath, all
utilities, storage and on
hard road .

, OR RENT - Furnished 1 bedroom apartment out of town. $125.00
m·o nth .
Deposit
required.

Hnus;IUf
Heat llfll·lf fer .'&gt;

LOST 2 walker dogs, 70

lbs .. male, black, while 8o
tan. 55 lbs. black &amp; white,

spotted. Reward offered .
388·8194 .
Lost : green over night case

on Laurel Cliff Rd . In
hospltolarea . 992·5S94.
Lost : red Doberman in Apple Grove and Tanners Run
area . Contact Dean Hill

247 ·3725.

1·· 2.4· 1 mo.

acres,

Happy Ads

"---=~-~-~~--

b·

Rd ., Athens, Oh 45701. Call
1-614·593·7477 .

$49,900.
JUST LISTED -

Need good home, 5 lovable
mate puppies, mostly
black, med. size, 1 weeks

brass, radiators, auto at- 6._ __,L,o~
SI'-'a~n~d'-'F..!o~u~n~d__

ANNOUNCING

8-A BEAUTY

point in the grantor's nor·
thwest property corner ;
thence s. 15 degrees 45' 00"

Li1tle, male, black &amp; brown
3
Announcemenls
dog, part pOOdle. Call 675SWEEPER and sewing 2948.

Georges Creek Rd .

neada: fui'TIIICIIa rupeir

Sl.50
52.50
2·3-1 mo.

Announcements

l

supplies.
Pi.ck up and
delivery, Davis Vocuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

For all your wiring

8

PULLINS
EX'CAVAJING

,

-.

Ph. ,14·843·2591

~~=====~-~~-t~fc~t~~~~~~~;;~~

• Dozers
• Backhoes
• Dump Trucks

JAM ES J . PROFFITT
SHERIFF

_,,,, ,

1

SIMMON' S 0 L D S . -

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

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

MembershiP
Weekly CloSs

Ph. 367·7UO
1·71tfc

P&amp;S BUilDINGS

Part~! _ _

property line and the west
li ne of said L01 Number 12
and passing the northwest

o f Sfli C.

to a point In the grantor's
nodh property corn~r C!nd
the real point of beg1nnu·~g
for
the
land
t)ere1n
dev-rihf"t1 : thpnrP ~ . f..1
·degrees 20' 00" E . cont 1nu·
inci alonq sa id line and tt1e
9.r antor's north prope:r~v
line, 88.60 feet to a po1nt 1n
the granto~·s northeast
property corner ; thence S.

-

Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Insulated Dog Houses

ALIGNMENT

~===~

corner and ttii weSt line of
said Lot Number 12; thence

County Certified

wood buildings 24•36.

FRONT-END

~

Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks

Sizes from 4 to o and all

See Mr . Goodwrench Fo r A

Ph. 949· 2160 or 949-2482

feet to· a point in the gran·

Gas Line-Dllches

r~~=:::::;::::::;:::::~~=~~~~~6~-1~5~-t~fc~

TOM HOSKINS

REESEH:TRENCHING
SERVICE·

Utility Buildings

PH . 992·3872
2-3-1 mo. pd.

SLINDERELLA
DIET/EXERCISE
CLASSES

Water·Sewer·E teet ric

Sites start from JOx24 "

· With Genuine GM

tor's southNest prppe&lt;ty

Middleport, Ohio
9·21 -tfc

9·30-lf.c

(614) 742·2131

bathrooms, remodeling,

south orooertv line . 198.00

992-G259
276 sycamore 51.

Pomeroy, Ohio

A !so Wood Splitter
For R'ent

plumbing, electric, and
heating .

southeast
property corner:
th.ence N . 90
00' 00"
w. along degrees
the grantor's

SALE PHONE NO.

(Free Estimates&gt;
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 S or 992-7314

Delivery Available
or You Pick Uo

169 N. 2nd

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom

toapointinthe grantor's

Sale.

tltcfricll work

Now S29.SO

Kay's Beeuty Salon

Public Notice
east corner of said Lot
Number 11 at 50.30 feet a
total distance of tt9.30 leet

Used Color TV Sets for

- PI~Jmblng•nd

.
Mixed Hardwoods

thru

No Sunday Calls

- Con,nte work

FIREWOOD

Mon., Feb. 1

949·2860.

7·5-tfc

OPEN

- •oounv ana gunor work

VALENTINE
PERM SALE

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949-28()1 or

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing ot all types
eSiding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e20 Yrs. experience

MOW

- Addonl •nd rtmoelelini

ANY PERSON WhO has
anything to give away and

FOUND : Female block 8o
tan dog . . Looks mostly
Dachshund . Black body
with borwn head . Found at
Meigs High School. 992-

6198.
LOST New Haven area .

Brown puppy, hos on blue
Collar and white flea collar .
Coli 304-882-3S71.
Yard Sale

7

Moving Sale. King wood &amp;
coal heater, Sears kerosene

htr ., N27 box WOOd stove,
GE portable dishwasher.
assorted tires, dishes, ca-n-ny jars. clothing &amp; much
more. 644 Lake Drive, Rio

Grande . 10 :AM to 4PM,
Fir. 8o Sat.
--~-----------

Huge Garage Sale. Sat .,
Sun . &amp; Mon . Furniture,
clothes. glanware. Lots of

other .misc .

Items . 5th

house above Coast Guard
Stlltion llbove Henderson .

Public Sale

1

&amp; Auction

----

Auct ion Sa 1975 Case 450
dozer, 6 way blade, new
engine, new tracks. MF
255. MF 135, MF 40, 860

offer any other thing for
sale mav place an ad In this

Ford, two 20-10 John Deere
tractors. 6561 H diesel, 250
IH diesel. Long -165 diesel,
Long JlO diesel. MMU

column . There wfll be no
charge to the advertl~r .

Good

does not offer or attempt to

Small puppies, 8 wks. old .
Call 446·9535 or 682·7672 .
Stove to give a-away . For
parts. Call446·1583.

16001H dump truck -4X.4 .
sect ion of corner

planter&amp;.

plows,

disc,

Spreaderr., and hay equip·

ment . Saturday Feb. 13th,
11 :00. Selletal hundred
more Items expected .
Siders Equipment Co., US .
highway 35, 1 mite South of
Pt. Pleasant. 30H75-7421.

2 rabbit dOllS 1 yr . old, both
male. Call 379-2114.

9- =-~_!nted lo ~~Y:: ::::::­

Hampsters. Call 304-1953486.

. Camping PUll !railer. 15 to
20 ft long: Gas and electric
refrlgator. 614-985·4394.

121 11. lie

•

9 5 He

HARRISO,.
1V SERVICE

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Located on Rocksprings Rd.
POMEROY, OHIO
West of Fairgrounds
PH. (614)992-6564
2·5·1 m .

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Funds
Meter

Wlli.JAII D. OIILDS
DOflliiUlUN

APPUANCE
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

"We Also Sell Used Auto Parh"

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

· Pomerov . Ohio. on Satur·
day . the 1Jth day at
March . 1992. AI 10 00
o' clock. A.M ., The fOllowin g
described real estate, to·
wit :
· Situate in Fraction One.
Town 61 Range 14, Rutland Townsnip,
Village of
Rutland, Meigs Countv ,
Ohio, and being part of Lot
Numbers 11 and 12 of the

e. along

BATTERIES

Future Reference

Also Buyers of Radiators and Copper

that the

records of the Meigs County Recorder's Office and
Deposit
3,000.00 being more fully descr ibed
"'5 fotlows :
GRAND TOTAL TRUST
Com'nii:mcing at a point in
AND AGENCY FUN OS
the northeast corner of Lot
APPROPRIATION
3,000.00 Number 7 and the
TOTAL ALL APPROPRIA- southeast corner at Lot
TIONS
2,391,966.39 Number .6 of Turner's Sub·
SECTION II. And the divi~ion Number Oo.p ~"
Village Clerk is hereby recorded in plat Book
authorized to draw warran· Number 4, Page Number 4
ts on the Village Treasurer in the records of the Meigs
for payments from ~nv of county Recorder ' s Off ice
and the ex isting southerly
r ight-of-way tine of Bryant
Announcements
3
Street; thence S. 67 de~rees
20' 00" E . along the ex1sti.ng
southerly right-of·way 11ne

·MOTORS............~~~-~~~-~~~: .. .

!-II -i mo.

Cemetery
19,880.00
GRAND TOTAL
ENTERPRISE
plat of the Town of Rutland
FUNDS APPROPRIA as recorded in Plat Book 3.
TION
~9,5,910 . 00
Other Trust and Agency .Pages 13 and 1.4 in the

'Downing·Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance

February 23, 1982, to be
held at the Administration
Building In Piketon. Ohio.

.

certify

1

nouncing a Reglona I Em-

I

herebY

$15()

UNCLEAN

Opon 9 RM. Io 5:111 ~ . M .

I, Jon Buck, Clerk of the
Viila11-e of Middleport in

said _ounty, and in whose

I

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

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

CERTIFICATE
Section 5705.39, R.C. -

9,100 .00

$ .
JUNK CARS ......... ~~~.~~?.~.~~: .. 25
BUYERSOF
$}()()
BUYERSOF

l'omtoiJ, 011.

3 mi. westn

Keep This Ad For

BOGGS

Pomeroy Scrap Iron Metals

AUTO &amp; TRANS.
REPAIR

Contr actua I
certificate that the total ap·
Services
100.00 propriations
from each
Other Operation and
taken togetner with
Malnt.
285.00 fund,
all other outstanding ap:
Transfers
65.00 propriatlons,
do not exceed
Total Planning
such official estimate or
Commiss fon
amended official estimate.
Fund
450.00 When the appropriation
Sanitary Sewer Escrow does not exceed such of.- •r)d
ficial estimate, the countv
CL tractual
shall give such cer·
Services
29,000.00 auditor
tificate forthwith upon
50,000.00 recelvin9 from the ap·
car,ital Outlay
To a! Sanitary
propriatmg author ltv a cer·
Sewer Escrow
tified copy of the ap·
Fund ·
79,000.00 pro~riatlon measure ..."
SECTION 7'. That there
be appropriated from the
The State of Ohio, Meigs
fOllOWing ENTERPR ISE County, ss.

FUNDS :
Water Fund

$CASH$

l141oward RuiiJnd

the grantor's east property
line and passing the north· .

The Ohio Balance of
State Prime Sponsor is an-

Naval Air Stillion . Ia VIrginia Beacll, Wednesday.

Sl Rt.l14

Clerk of Council
Car l J. Horky
Presiaent of
Council

0 degrees 00' 00"

LEGAL NOTICE

Kleemama, CommencJer Ill tile fiiiJter II'OUP hued 011
tile Nlml... Ia oae Ill tile two pllto. tllat 1bol down two
Ubyauflglrten onAaPIIIB. lAP Laerpliot)

Roger Hysell's
GARAGE

6,200.00 "No
appropriation
Total Bond Retirement
measure shall become ef·
Fund
6,300.00 fective
until the county
Planning
Commission auditor files with . the apFund
propriating authority ... a

New 3 pc. bedroom
suite which includes
double dresser, mirror, chest, bookcase
bed. ,

Reg. S319 .00

HOMECOMING KISS - Cmdr. Beary xieeawm
~ bJs wlle, Clrvl, after aiTiviDg at tile Oceua

officers

authorized by law to ap-

300.00 Passed January 11 , 1982
Attest :
6,300.00 Jon Buck

Probate Judge/
Clerk
121 tl , 19, 25. 3tc

meeting

or

therelor. approved by the

prove the same, or an ordinance or resolution of
counc il to make the e&gt;c penditures; provided that
no warrants snail be drawn
Contractual
or paid for ·sa laries or
Services
400.00 wages except to persons
Capital Outlay
17,150.00 em:rloved by authoritv of
Total Street
an in accordance w :th law
Levy
17,800.00 or ordinance. Provided fur·
Fire Equipment Fund
!her that lhe ap S!!lariesl
propriations for
con Wages
1,600.00 tingencies can only be e&gt;c Employee
pended upon appea.l of two·
Benefits
100.00 thirds vote of Council for
Travel Transporta items of e&gt;cpense con·
600.00 stituting a legal obligation
tion
Contractual
against the village, and for
Services
9,700.00 purposes other then thoSe
Other Operation and
covered by other specific
Malnt.
1,000.00 appropriations
here i n
Capital Outlay
3,000.00 made.
Transfers
2,950.00
SECTION 12 . This
Total Fire Equipment
resolution shall take effect
Fund
18,950.00 at the earliest period
Fire Truck Fund
allowed bV law .

WE'RE TOGnHER
.
- TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

Mary E. Quails, 101 New
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

The

board

of Bryant Streel. 125.97 feet

On February 2, 1982, in
the Meigs County Probate

J)Ioyment
Council

tificates

p r oper cer ·
and vouchers

rec ~ 1v1ng

Services
9 800.00 salaries/
wages
10,000.'00
Middleport
Other Operations and'
Meigs County, Ohio
Malnt.
2.200.00 . Employee
Benefits
2.350.00
Transfers
100.00 Contractua
121 4, 11, 2tc
l.
Total Lands and
Services
Buildings
12.100.00 Other Operation and1,200.00
Public Notice
county Auditor's
Maintenance
500.00
. and Treasurer's
LEGAL NOTICE
Total Office
14,050.00
Fees
6,500.00 Other
COURT OF COMMON
96,210.00
Other
82,575.00 Total Sewer Fund
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
Total General Govern·
POMEROY, OHIO
Appropriation
men!
123.125.00
Case No . 11898
Basic
Utility
GRAND TOTAL
Services
110,260.00 PARK FINANCIAL INC.
GENERAL FUND
Columbu$, OH
LEISURE TIME
APPROPRIAPlaintiff
ACTIVITIES
TION
241.025.00 Swimming Pool
· V5SECTION 4. That there
HARVEY RUSSELL and
be appropriated from the Salaries/
JEAN RUSSELL
.
7,000.00
Wages
fOllOWing
SPECIAL Employee
Rutland, OH
REVENUE FUNDS.
150.00 · Defendants
Benefits
TRANSPORT A·
Pursuant to an ORDER
Contractual
TION
Serv ices
2.250.00 OF SALE issued by th e.
Street Maintenance
court of common Pleas,
Other Operation and
and Repair
Maintenance
2,550.00 Meigs County in the above
Salaries/
Capital Out lay
3.000.00 named case, I w ill ·expose
20,000.00 Transfers
Wages
150.00 tOr sale at public auction on
the front steps of the Me igs
Employee
Total Swimming
4,100.00
Benefits
Pool
t 5,100.00 countv courthouse ,

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
No.

Revenue Funds
Appropriation
Includes Adden-

ll.-400.00 foregoing Annual Ap Other Equipment
propriation Ordinance is
Activities
1.2QO.OO Other Operation and
, taken and copied from the
Clerk. Treasurer
Maintenance
5,000.00 original Ordinance now on
Salaries/
Outlay
10,000.00 file with said Village, that
Wages
5.200.00 Capital
the foregoing Ordinance
Total Other
Travel Transporta·
Equipment
15,000.00 has been compared bv me
tion
300.00 Other
120,270.00 with the said orig ina l and
Contractual
that the same is a true and
Water Fund
services
550.00 Total
Appropriation 146,670.00 correct copy thereof .
Other Operation and
Witness my signature,
BASIC UTILITY
Maint.
450.00 .
this 12th day of January,
SERVICES
Total Clerk.
1982.
Sanitary Sewer
Treasurer
6,500.00
Jon Buck
Fund
Lands and Buildings
Clerk of the
Office
Contractual
Village of
Total Legislative

Case No. 23646

Case

Business Senices

~--~~· ----~---.-

· Wages
· 13,950.00 , Employee

Activities

(Council)
Salaries/
Wages

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF TERRY
QUALLS,
SR.,
DECEASED

Court,

500.00
5,250.00

Other Operation

Prison said he was "just baffled"
about the alleged confessions.
Albany County Justlce of the
Peace Craig Kirkwood, a former
deputy county prosecutor, said
Henderson was accused of tying up
a glrlflrend In a West Laramie,
Wyo. house and steaUng a carton of
milk, a box of cookies and $1.12
from a piggy bank belonging to the
woman's child . .
Henderson agreed to plead guilty
to robbery, was sentenced In 19'77to
3-5 years and was paroled, Kirkwood sald.
"I was just baffled when I
heard," Kirkwood said. "I never
thought he could have done something like that, never In my wildest

Presbyterian-University Hospital
In Pittsburgh for 34 years and who
was noted lor designing rehabilltaUve programs at several state
hospitals.
Ferderber was found dead Jan.
25 of a gunshot wound In the head.
His wife found the body In their mobile home n~ar Satsuma, Fla . The
couple had retired to Florida In

the

Pol ice Law Enforcement
Salaries/

"I would hope that the governor
would continue to play an active
role .In Ohio as he has In the past
lrregardless of whether he's a candidate," Colley said. ·
Colley's election bid fell one vote
short of the 24 needed In the first
two ballots cast by the committee.
He was backed by Rhodes, whose
efforts drew !Ire from some committee members.
· ~bert J. Huffman of Ludlow
Falls was critical of Rhodes'
lobbying.
"I resent thelnordlnatelengths to
which the gove·r nor went to contaCt
members of the committee," Huffman said. He said he was convinced some votes for Johnson and
Brennan were antl-Rhodes votes.
Johnson was President Reagan's
campaign coordinator ln Ohio durIng last year's etecuon.
Huffmah said the governor's endorsement of Colley was a "distinct
liability,'' but the new GOP cblef
disagreed. .
.
"I do not think it was a Uabillty.
The governor's support was welcome, " CoUey said.

dreams."

from

GENERAL FUND:
SECURITY OF
PERSONS AND
PROPERTY

Drifter points out three more bodies
BROOKSVILLE, Fla. (AP) -A
drUter charged with killing a promInent Pennsylvania doctor and
three others has led deputies to the
bodies of three unidentified people,
the authorities said.
Robert Dale Henderson, 36, of
Eckmansvllle, Ohio, who has confessed lo as many as 11 slaylngs In
five states - Including three In
Ohio - led deputies to the bodies
Wednesday In a wOods 65 miles
north of St. Petersburg, Hernando
County Sheriff Melvin Kelly said at
headquarters here.
Deputles said they have no
rillsslng-persons reports that would
help Identify the three.
Henderson was charged with
murder Wednesday In the slaying

and

Village of Middleport,
State of Ohio, during the

GOP chairman wants to trim field
COLUMBUS, . Ohio (AP) ...,
Newly elected Ohio Republican
Party Chairman Michael F. Colley
says he wants to trim the field In the
GOP gubernatorial primary and
that he has urged outgoing Gov.
James A. Rhodes to run for state
auditor.
He was elected to the post Wednesday by the state central and executive commi!tefl to succeed Earl
T. Barnes of Cine inn...~· as party
chief.
Colley, 45, won 24-21 over Rep.
David W. Johnson of North Canton
In three rounds of balloting.
His victory came after a third
candidate, Lucas County party
Chairman James H. Brennan,
withdrew.
Colley Is Franklin County GOP
chairman, a post he said he wants
to keep while hQidlng the state
party job.
,Reducing the field of gubernatorIal entries and pumping more money Into GOP war chests are
among Items on the agenda he
outlined.
Colley said the party . should

Expenses

.other ExpenditUres of the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -An aide
to Rep. ClarenceJ. Brown, R-Ohlo,
would neither confirm nor deny reports that Brown has chosen James
E . Betts to joln his ticket In the race
for the GOP gubernatorial
nomination.
Betts, of Rocky River, was the
first Republican to announce he
was running for governor. He also
refused to comment on reports that
he might take the lieutenant governor's spot behind Brown.
James R. Wray, the Urbana congressman's pollt!cal director, said
Brown wiU announce his running
mate by week's end.

--Public Notice
Public Notice -Other ·
17,300.00 the
tor e go i ng
ap Grand Total Special
pro~r .iations
upon
~c-c-:-~--:c

fis :at year ending Decem·

CLEVELAND (AP) - Cuyahoga
County Commissioner VIncent C.
Campanella says he wants the Republican nomination for state auditor, even though Gov. James
Rhodes Is rumored to be considerIng the race.
Campanella, 39, Wednesday became the first announced opponent
tor the Job held by Thomas E . Ferguson, a two-term Democrat.
Campanella Is a former Cuyahoga County auditor and former
Cleveland budget director and law
director. He was elected a county
commissioner In 1980.
"I'm the kind of auditor who can

PHONE 992-2156

'·

�Page
,

14-The Daily Sentinel
Wanted to Buy

41

Houses for Rent
2 bedroom house. un·
furnished on Lower Rt. 7.
Oepos it required. Call 256·

They'll Do It Every Time

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, c~ll Kenneth Swain,
256· 19671n the e"enlngs.

1413.
Small 2 bdr. suitable for 2
people. 10~ Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis .
Oeposlt
required. 4-46·2957.

CASH PAID for c lean, late
. mOdel used cars . Smith
8uick· Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call «6·2282 .

3 bdr. house, 2 fireplaces.
central air, garage, fence&amp;
swimming pool . Call 675·
5104.

Buying
Gold ,
Sil"er ,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes a"allable. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies tor
sale .
Spr i ng
Valley
Trading, Spring Va lley
Plaza , «6·8025 or 446·8026.

44

Apartmemt .
for Rent

clean uSed cars.

Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
«6·0069.

House for rent . 3 bedrooms,
k i tchen,
living roorri,
dining room, find bath .
Nice and clean . some car pet. No inside pets: Deposit
required . 992·3090.

Furnished apar-tment, up·
stairs, 4 rooms and bath .
One or two adults, referen·
ces and security deposit
required. Call «6·0444 af·
ter 5PM.

BEOS· IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold , si lver
dol lars, wood ice boxes ,

stone iars. antiQues. etc .,
Complete
households .
Write : M. O. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 9'12 · 77~.

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma•.

diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.SC per ton. Bundled
slab . $10.50 per ton .
Oell"erd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Sprin g s
Rd . ,
Pomeroy . 992·2689 .
Go ld,

silver ,

ster l ing ,

lewelry, rings, old coins &amp;

currency . Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Midd lepdrt. 9923476.
OLD FURNITURE, beds,

iron, brass, or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or squ~re .
Wood ice bo•E'!l. Old desks
clnd bookcases. Will buy
complete household. Gold,
silver, old money, pocket

watches, chains. rinos. and
etc. Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also. bu.ying baseba ll

cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.

JUNKED

metals,

cars,

aluminum

scrap
cans,

3-~omesi'Ci"rSale

11

Help Wanted
New Income Limits. If you
Resident manager couple earn between $9,000 to
Small
senior $15,000. a year, you may be
needed .
c itizen~ apartment com able to buy ~ 3 bedroom
plex in Middleport area . No house (not a mobile hcimel
experience required . Will for as little as $135. mo. No
tra in. Apartment and all down payment. Call 9'12·
utilities pa id plus salary .
7034.
We are look ing for mature
couple. This is an excellent
opportunity for the retired House in New Haven,
or semi-retired looking for smell . down payment,
additional inc ome. Send assumable loan, 304·882 '
brief reply to P . Osborne, 2754.
9121 Twigg Hupp Rd .. Sun·
bury, Ohio43074 .
House meadowbrook Ad dition J bedroom, family
GET VALUABLE tratning room with fir eplace, cen as a young business person tral air , basement, 304-675 ·
and earn good money plus 1542.
some great gifts as a Sen·
tinel route carrier. Phone Home sate or rent Rt. 62 N .
us right away and get on 7 rooms. 2 bath, basement.
the eligibility list at 9'12· carport, dep . &amp; ref . req .
2156 or 1192·2157 .
Ca ll 1 · 614 · 928 - ~339 alter
5 :30PM.
12
Situations Wanted
Wanted : Person to share 2 For rent trailer in Ball' s
Trailer Park, App le Grove.
bdr. apt. Cali245·5220.
Call304-675·3618 .
Will care for ·etderly in our
home. Women and men.
Trained and .experienced .
9'12-7314.
-~---~-

Income tax service. Pror'n·
pt accurate . Martha Fry ,
Pomeroy . 992·3414 .
Will care for elderly in mv
home. Private room or
semi -private. 992 -6748 .

'

transmissions, motors, bat-

teries, radiators, oil well
drilling bits, tungsten car·
bide, high speed steel ,

waste paper, cardboard,
raw furs, hides, ginslng
and yellow root . Harper·
Halstead Salvage Co. 300
Eleventh St., Pt . l"leasant,
304 ·675· 5868 . Also Ilea
market open Mondav
through Friday, 1-5 p.m.

13

Help Wanted

Earn
20
per
cent
retirement on $2,000.00
wholesale instea~ of 3 per

cent

retirem e nt

on

S7,SOOPV. 614-875 · 97~9 or
614-477· 1414.
TEXAS OIL COMPANY
need! mature person for
short trips surround ing
(lallipoils, Oh . Contac t

customers. we train. Write
D.O. dickerson, Pres.,
Southwestern Petrol~um,
Box 789, Ft. Worlh , h .
76101 .
Why would 2 Diamonds, 6
Emeralds, over 40 pearls
and 500 Directs switch? :20

per cent retirement on

$2,00.00 wholesale . Cai1614·
446- ~273 or 614·446·9332 or
write S G Associates, 336
2nd . Ave, Gallipolis, Oh io
45631
· Bookkeeper . Only ex perienced need apply . Send
resume to Bo&gt;C. 507 in care
Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
825 3rd . Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh
45631.

With the Army National
Guard, you ' ll have a part
time job with full time
benefits. You will attend
training one weekend each
month and rwo weeks each
year . B_
e nefits include 1ow
cost life insurance, e)(cellent pay and a free p_
en sloo'( plan .. P lus the Army
Guard's valuable technical
schooling may help you
prepare for a well paying
civilian occupation. Call
675·3950.
LPN or RN needed part or
fu l l· time .
Excellent
benet Its,
comp.!Hllble
salary. Arcadia Nursing
center, Coolville, Ohio. 6673156.
TEXAS 01 L COMPANY
urgentlY needs mature person for Pt. Pleasant area
business sales rep. Sales
e&gt;C.perlence not necessary .
we train. Write D. P .
DicKerson,
Southwestern
Petroleum , Box 789, Ft.
worth, TX . 76101.
E•perienced Auto Body
man . 10 years exper ience,
mus~ have own tools. Call
675·3373.
Growing Company has
position available for a
Women in the Gall ipolis
area to provide our service
(no products are sold) .
Free Training, Set. your
, own hours. Starling In·
come SlO hour I Send
resume: vera's 'Colorized'
Image Professionals, Rt. 2
Box 137B, Mlllerburg, Oh

«654.

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
serviceS f or f ire insurance
CO\Ierage in Gallia County
for almost a ceritury .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are ·
available to meet in·
d ividual needs. Contact
Lewis Hugh es, agent.
Phone 446· 3318.
15

1t

- -

Schools Instruction

Dl's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza. 446·2134. X·
stitch headquarters, ALL
colors DMC . Free lessons.
Guitar lessons, individual
classes, personal attent ion .
MOdest prices. Call 304675·
3734 .

4 bedroom house with large
l iving room , dining room,
and garden. S115 month.

Security deposit. Call 9'12·
5692 .
WHITE frame, 7 room, 3
bedroom , electric heat, kit·
chen not furnished · with
stove &amp; refrigerator, utility
room with washer &amp; drver
hookup . 3 Acre yard &amp; garden area . Mailbox address,
Gallipolis Ferry . Deposit &amp;
lease required . Ownership
management. 304·522· 1990.

House, Apple Groye. 25 per
cef)t down, finance ba l an·
ce . Cail304·675 ·36t8 .
32

Mobile Homes
for Sate

TRJ · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Price
reduced,
used mobile
homes. CALL 446·7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOB I LE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLI POL IS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
12•60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobi le home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan cing available . Phone 4461294.
.For. sale 10x35, 1 bdr. house
trailer. Call388 ·9684 .

77 windsor
l&lt;tx70,
3
bedroom, 1/ 2 bath, all electric, central air cond. Call
446·9681 after 5.

-------~--

18

Wanted toDO

--

Will do babysi tting in my
home. Call446 ·7268. ·
Wi ll baby sit in my home.
895·3911 .

F lnan£ial
22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home . 30 year fixed
rate. WVa . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . Stale St..
Athens, Oh . 592·3051 .
Professional
Services

23

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

1971 KIRKWOOD, 12X65, 2
bedroom, fnmlly room , underpinned , 10)(20 awning, ac, W·d . Good condition. 304675 · 5739,
evenings
8.
weekends .
MOBilE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Call
304-576·2711.
1972 12x65 Schultz, 3bdr .,
gas heat, partially fur·
nished . Call675·2907.
1974 Schultz 14)(70, exc.
cond .• AC , washer &amp; dryer,
2bdr., dining room , all electri c. Phone 675-3-466.

P ia no
Tun i ng
&amp;
Repair.Call Bill Ward for
appointment,
Ward ' s,
Keyboard , 446·4372.
35

C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com ·
plet e bookkeeping and ta•
service for business and in·
dividuats.
Carol Neal446·3862
Adverti sing specialities .
Book matches, calenders,
pen &amp; penc ils, dicount
coupon books. Dismuke' s
~OS 2nd . Ave ., Gallipolis,

HOME .

Nice level homesite in
Clearvlew River Estates·
Sewer·Water· Eiec. $500.00
down. PhOne 256·1216.
70 acrea of va cant land.
$210 per a cre, mineral
rights included, located on
German Ridge Rd ., approx . I 112 m i. oil State Rl.
141. Call 379·2676.

446· 047~ .

Piano' s tuned and ser Vi ced . Call Bob Grubb, ·446·
4525 .

Real Estate
31

Large tract of land located
in Pomeroy , Ohio. Can be
financed at 12 percent. 9'12·
5786.
•
Trailer sites. 10 percent
down . 992·2571 or 9'12·3830 .

1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446·7015 after
5:30p .m .

Friendly Ridg e . Double
wide, 11.5 acres, 3 ·bdr., 2
baths, family room, shed.
$29,500. Caii256·1668.
By owner, 2 bdr . house in
citv, excellent neigh borhood. Only S18,SCO. Call
446·2942 .
House for sale in Rutland
Suburb. Needs remodeling .
Ask ing $15,000. 949·2428 . .

Comfortable 3 bedroom
home, 8 lf1 percent
assumable loan, al')d is
near PPHS, large fenced in
yard, kitchen appliances
and m .o re .
We are
1relocating and can share
realtor's fees by selling
now. Call after 6 pm 675·

~

OUR BOARDING HOUSE .
41

~ft
lfllatf

6 over
front
end ,
f~~~·=·:":'"~·~·~;~;~===r~=~~~~~===:1197s
dragextras,
pipes,
King Honda
/ Queen750,
seat,

One bedroom, unfurnished
apratment . Two &amp; three
bedroom mobile homes,
furnished or unfurnished.
Phone675·1371 or675·3812.

51

Housel)old Goods

Automatic washers s.
dryers,
reworked
&amp;
guaranteed. priced trom
S80to$125 . Call256· 1207.

Furnished Rooms

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

1_:::--:::-==:-:-:-:-=:::::...L=========:..J

Homes for Sale
Houses for Rent

2 bedroom family rm., $300
mo. utilities and dep.
required. Call4~6 - ~554.
RIGHT OOWN TOWN
Newly
decorated
unfurn ished, 3 rm. house.
Suitable for single person
or retired couple. Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
required, Call 446·0450 or
446·1291.

.......--

House 2 &lt;fi.?clr"o om. 733 3rd. , .. ,.. ·"
Ave., Gallipolis. Oepdsit
required. Call 446·3870 dr
~46- 1340 . .

.

tl:l•••

.Whirlpool electric range
30' , like new, $125. Call388·
9794 .

used
coveraus, afternoons.
open Saturday · Sunday
warehouse 7 miles East,
Ravenswood Rt. 21. new insulated coveralls $25,
buck le-gum boots $15,
jackets $16 up, Union made
imprinted
advertising
specialities, call675·3334.

Used tires . Hanshaws Tires
on Lucas L·a ne. Call 67S·

7360.

56

$1000. Call Calvin anytime
446· 6638.

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 367-

7S

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels .
Cai1388·9790.
Priced to sell. Female
A. K.C. registered Golden
Retriever puppies. 9 weeks
old. After s p.m. 742 ·2957.
AKC Shetland Sheepdog
(Shellysl 6 weeks old,
Sable &amp; white, $200 each .
Caii675· 4515.

1971 KIRKWOOD 12x65
Mobile Home -will trade for
good late model4•4 pickup .
304-675·5739 evenings &amp;
weekends.

77

AFTERNOON AT

ouruJI(V.
Cll•liJ FAIIILY FEUD
(!) LAVERNE AND BHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
Cl)
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
&lt;1m
RICHARD SIIIIIONS
lil!tOW
(llJ AU CREATURES GREAT
AND IIIIIALL
&lt;Ill •
ENTERTAINMENT

;:oo.

7:35
7:58
8:00

,,

~

.'

mr::oRD

BORN LOSER

AND SON
giN UPDATE NEWS
•CIJ 'FAilE To holp ou1a1
home. Bruno tekea an aHarachooljob, which atralna hla
relatlonehlpwith hie varY proud
lather. (80 mine.)
C1J NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
IPECIAL
(])
MOVIE
·(SCIEKCE·FICTION •••
IIORK AND MINDY
IIAGNUII, P.l.
SNEAK PREVIEWS Crlllco
Gene Slal(eland Roger Ebert
review the neweet mov111 In
town , Including : 'Venom'. a
auepanaethrlllar; 'VIce Squad',

Farm Equipment

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446·1675
Special Sa le on NEW
LONG TRACTOR!
Model
HP
Price
26&lt;r-2~
$492~.00
31o28 5594.00
31o-4x4--28 7072.00
36035 6555.00
460-41 .97353.00
460--4•4--~1.~
9619.00
51o48.57778.00
51o-4.4--48.5- 9886.00
Slo48.5- 8450.00
61o64
931~.00
61o-4x4--64 - 11,304.00
Plus Freight
Sale Oate March 13, 1982
CALL NOW!

64

IIOVI~ "(W!ST!RN) ••••

SUtcllero" 11168
I . 108011 BUDDIES

8:30

OVIE -(MYSTERY) •••

ANNIE

''Adventuree Of Sherlock

•• I TOLD TOiW LOOKG LIKE io\RS.
TO GO ON IN
CAR.60H HAS
AND YIAiT FOR
COMPflliY ••

YlELL ... 1 JUST CAN'T
AU. TH05E GONG HELP THiHH.IN' GONG
OUGHT T' BE KEPT
DIDN'T UPSET
'(()U TOO MUCHt YlHERE THEY BELOHf;
-ON TELEV/51011AN HIE'"

-1 HOPE

Holmol" 111311
OIINI: NEW FROIITI!R
8 :58
U~A Tl! NEWS
11:00
CIJ
DtFF'RENT
TROKES

~ Cl

I

ME .-

,l.,oy,f~~NEY IIIUER

ifi (I KNOTS LANDING

SNEAK PREVIEWS Crltlco

Oane Slake! and Roger Ebel1
review the naweat mo'lllaaln
town, ll'lcludtng : 'Venom', a
euapenae thriller; 'VIceSquad',
a drama about a former
proatltute who a great to
cooperate with the pollee; and
' Zoo I Suit'. a musical drama

....

..

•fl

,,.,' '

1:30

~~~AA~;~~:4:

;;;::

In

CIJI)I'ti'TAXI Jim bolrlondo ' 'lo
eight ~ear Old runaway who
haUl hit cab al'ld aa he geta to

ALLEYOOP

lo 1hlnk ol adopting him .
(Qiooed·Coplionod; U.S .A.)
Wl THIS OLD HOUSEHoiiBob

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
CarQets. Free estimates.
Cai1446·2107 .

Vila demonatretaa how to
waterproof a baaement .
(&amp;loa.t._d·CIPtlonad; U.S.A.)

10:00 (IJ •
CIJ HILL STREET
SLUE!
ill MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••••
"Ro..R!n.a.Bull" 11180
Cll (121• 2CHO Hugh Down a

PAINTING · interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp . Cai1388·9652.

Lar9e round bales
each . Call458· 1656.

Call 446·2801 for term ite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control . Free
estimates,sBIII Thomas.
Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex·
perience, specializing in
buill up roof. Cal l 388 9857.

Auto for Sale

1981 Reliant K Car, 4· 0, PS,
PB, oir, auto, 12,000 mi.,
new cond . Call446·2300.

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
per ienced mason, roofer ,
carpenter,
electrician ,
genera I repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304·6752088 or 675·456() ,

LOCKSMITH
Serv ice .
Residential , automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882·2079.

1977 Trans Am, auto, PS,
PB, air. low mi les. 1979 VW
4-spd ., air cond. Call 446·
259'1.

Wandling Electrical Service. Old work and r.: w
work , small appliances, 24
hr. service. Ph . 304-675 6663.
.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in

82---'" ·-Pi.;',;t,;;;g-=-=- ==
__ _ ! Heatlr~L_ __

stock .

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now availabl~
through local sales. under
$300.00 . Call 1-714·569·0241
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.
1981 Ford Escort, super
sharp, PS, PB. AM· FM
stero, e&gt;C.fra low mileage,
$6,000. Call 675·2511 or 675·
4318.
1975 Volkeswagon Super
Beetle, new paint, sunroof,
low f'('liles. other e)(tras,
52,600. 304-675·2415 after
SPM.
72

GASOUNB

t.Aary'aataff Ia under eueplcion
when druge are regularly lound
milling from the medical room

ALLEY

Then

you'll
tesiify1

well, no, but I'm

awfully qlad 40u
carne b~.

10:28
1D:30

Mr. Pert!

10:35
10;58
11:00

i

Mory 'o floor. (60 mlno.)
OMEGA FACTOR
NEWS
CBN UPDATE NEWS
SING OUT AMERICA
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
ESENT8
TIS EVENING NEWS
gi!!._UPDATE NEWS
• (l) CIJ. Cll&lt;Im (11)81

I
m

~~~IIHVILLE AFD

(I)

Truck 1 S for Sale

Building Suppllos
Vons&amp;4W.D.

197.9 FOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, '14 ton, 4 speed,
$4,500. 304-675·1578 . After
675·1320.

I 1:Oii
11:30

DICK CAVETT SHOW

I

'

WINNIE

TO BE 6RLITALLY
HONEST WITH YOU,

OMAR., L NEEP
C'ASH! 'fN/5
WEEK! OR

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

Cl •~ ......... ~··· ...... "' " ' " ' ""

HOWMVCH

... 131.1T 1 KNOW 1 COULl/ REPAY

YOU .• • EVENTUALLY/Tl1E

MONEY ARE

INTEGRITY

OF JWNNIE IWNKLE MS'Hto.NS
STAN175 FIRMLY 8EHINO MY

WE TALKING
ASOUT?'

WORr?/

.

MY, CREDITORS

WILL SE SACK
AT MY OOC!i?!

ANOTHER UFE
I_ENNY HILL SHOW
CIJ CBS LATE MOVIE
ASC CAP;riONED NEWS
MOVIE ·(IIUBICALI ••~;
''ll&gt;JI Ahoy" 11142
&lt;Ill .. ABC NEWBNIGHTLINE
Mchorod by Tod Koppel.
11:35 (II
MOVIE
·(SCIENCE-FICTION) ••~;
luotroted lion" tile~
t 1:58
CBN UPDATE NEWS .
12:00
IIUANSANDALLEN
ABC NEWS NIGHTLINE
Anchored by Tod Koppol.
C1J ~SI.ATI!NIGHT
(J)) • V!OAI Dan Tanna and
Lt . Noloon' 1 SWAT oquad

~

el'lgagein a dtaperateelfort to
••"~~• a choreographer and four
chorue girl a from a trio Of'lllcloue
••·cona holed up in 1 hotel

IIJ.nthouoe. (Repoot; 70 mlno.)
12:10 WIIOVIE o(HORAOR) • "Fun
!!P~" 1081
12:30 W•CIJ LATE NIGHT WITH
DAVIDL!TT!RIIANGuiiiO:

comedy team Bob and Ray. (80

BARNEY
83 --~E•cavatlng

-

.. ·
-------

Gallipo lis Diversified Can st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe worl&lt; . Special
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates. 446·44~0.

'HOW ABOUT
A BODACIOUS
HEALTH DRINK •.
PAW?

NOW
YOU'RE
TAll&lt; IN'!!

1:10
1:30
1:45

JACKS REFRIGERATION. air condition service
commerciaL i ndustrial'
Phone 882·2079.
·

Upholstery

TRISTATE '
. UPHOLSTERY S.HOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gaiiipdlis.
446·7833 or «6· 1833.

PEANUTS

OUR TEACHER SAYS WE
HAVE TO HAVE A
VALENTINE 80X 50
I-IERE IT 15.•.

~~~OURSW£ETBA8800

WANTS TO GIVE YOU A
80)( OF CANDY, HE'LL
HAVE TO 61VE IT TO
YOU

NOT '!'OUR'' SWEET

IMBBDD''AIW V01J COULDN'T
I AHUNDREr?
ELSEWHERE!

l

Answer.

A(

rrI I I

I)( XXI)
(Answers tomorrow}

Jumbles · QUOTA LEECH EMBALM JOYOUS
Answer: What color could the blouse possibly
be?-"50 BLUf;"

Yesterday 's ]

Jumble Book NO-. 20, contelnlng 110 puuln, lanlllablt for S1 .15 potlpald
from Jumble, clo thll newapaper, Box ~. Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
n.mt~ 1ddreu
code end m1ke check•
1ble to Newa
.

.

'

BRIDGE
The 'Bracket' play
of play by East a "Bracke't"
play . He has bracketed
dummy's honor and caused
It to become valueleu. The
bracket play Is sometimes
made by a defender on lead
' as we will show In tomorrow's article.
(NliW!iPAPER ll:l'lTIIIIPRIS! A!ISN.)

Alaa Sootllog

Ninety-nine percent of
East players would put up
the king of spades at trick
one. It would look as If the
play of the elght could not be
correct.
Indeed It would be a loser
If West had led from A·Q-10·
3 or A·Q-9·3 olnce II would
let South IICOre a surprise
trick with the 10 or nlne,
dependtnc on which one he
held. II would lllso break
even If West bad led from A·

NORnl

1-11·11

+H

'KQ 101
• Q 10 8
• J 10 8 2

Q·H
It Ia very unlikely that
West would open Into South's
bid spade suit with four to
the ace-queen. Now look at
the actual hand.
West has found the only
wlnntnc lead! If East ls
expert enou&amp;h to play his
etcht of spades at trick one,
he wlllcet In with the ace of
dlamondl and lay down his
kina of opades. He will aet to
pick up dummy's jack this
way. South will bave used up
the queen or I 0 to best the
eight at trick one. Now,
when Eaot leads the olx
West'• ace and nine will be
wlnnero. The king of clubs
will then be the settinc trick.
We bave called this type

WEST
+H73
.763
tl42
+K96

EAST

+K8S

•Jn2
tAU

+713
SOUTH
• Q 10 4 2

'AS

tKJ76
+AQI

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer: South
West

Nortb

Eaat

South

Pau

2+
3 NT

Pou

1 NT
2+

Pau

Pa11

P11s

Pasa

Opening lead :

+3
'

~~laf.
""·Jt(
ltr THOMAS JOSEPH
40 Scorecard

ACROSS

1 "Memories
Are Made
of - "

ohowo that highlight tho pooplo

u.d tvlfltl ot the p11t year.

liJ MOVIE ·(COMEDY) u~;
oo liMy Crooko" 108U
3:118 . CBN IPORTI RePORT
4:00
I MARRIED JOAN
4:30
11Y LITTLE MARGIE
4:4&amp;
MOVIE
·(ICIINCI·"CTIOK •••

m

" 11110

LOAFATHIR
THEA LW!
ATROL

entry
UHold a

session
DOWN
10 Nevada city I Set of three

5 Trespass

II Plant feature 2 Hair coloring
13 Facts;
data (sl.)
14 Call it quits
IS Babylonian
deity
18 Ending for
fib or lib
17 - brio
18 City in
Georgia
ZO - row
21 Old English
court
22 Unaspirated
consonant
23 Newsman
Morley
25 Ship
Zl Very (Fr. )
27 Browning's

3 Dressed to kill
4 - Canals
s Part of PTA

Yesterday's Answer

6 Singular thing
7 Lawyer
(abbr. )
8 "The sky is
falling"
utterer
9 Distaff role
12 Execute

16 Dutch colonist
19 Small anvil
ZO More cunning
23 Sound system
Z4 Newspaper
story
25 Italian coin
27 Commando

30 Curtain
fabric
31 Wading bird
33 Presidential
prerogative :
31 Paddle
37 Rick's piano
player

..Herve - "
28 Coup d' Z!I Make It
32 Slower ( mus. I t::;;-+-t~-t--33 Rome's
- Veneto
34 Dress (up)
35 Resounded
37 Agitate
38 Oleic
acid salt
3! Winged (her . )
2 -11

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLIIAAX&amp;

to

work It:

LONGFELLOW

lo

IIOVIEo(IIISTORICAL)••~;

Hllarloua •poof or award•

11:30

----·--·...._..,-

nlhouoo. (Ror.ot; 70 mlno.)
C8N 8POA S REPORT
UIARREDJOAN
• NEWS
IIY UTTLI! MARGIE
NEWS

'1:111• D8Wn" 1080
())
MOVIE
o(DRAMA.fiOIIANCE)•.. "lly
. putltlon" 1Me
IACHELOAFATHEA
2~
IIIUEVE
LWECWRIL!Y
2:30
_,..AIIDAUEN
3:00
JACKII!NNY
3:30
011C1! AIID FDA AU...THE
3:411
I.AIT
AWAIIDI
SHOW

I~

MOWRE;YS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675-4154.

VEGAI Don Tonno ond Lt.

Nllton'e SWAT aquad engage
In 1 deaperate effort to aeve a
choreographer and four ohorue
girl a from a trio of vlcloua
u-cona holed up In a hotel
1~

-~

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367·0591.

(I)

12:118

SEW:ING Machine repairs ,
serv1ce. Authorized Singer
Sa!es &amp; Servtce1 Sharpen
SCISSors. Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 992·2274.

'iF Gin;,., Hautin~==-=

J!li,"~lCK B!NNY

HERE'S
TO "/OUR
BODACIOUS
HEALTH!!

84 - - -Electrical:::--.:___ &amp; Retrlgeratio~ -­

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

IN THE FAIIIL Y
THE TONIGHTSHOW

Guest : Burt Reynolda. (80
mine.)

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

~-

73

nl . (80 mlno .)
Cll&lt;Im NURSE Everyone on

;

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

Water wells. Commercia l
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304·895· 3802 .
71

Now arrange the circled letters 10
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abOve cartoon .

profiling noteworthy events in
I'IIWI, ICIIRCI and ent1rtain·

"'·
- •.
'

eet · Jamea Coco. actor.

$15.00

IIJ

anchora thla weakly magazine

Hay &amp; Grain

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

WHA'T A 61f':L..

60ME'TIME5 WEAR'S
A'T 'THE !!lEACH.

IDd

8:05 W

(l ttwlotltfA. t.. . t WI\o&lt;j VI ... l l W(lft

Livestock

Weened whole Ho lstein bull
calf . Call256·6315.

Nll.JEG

By O.wald Jocoby

cooperate with the pollee; and
'Zoot Suit', a mualcal drama
aurroundlng a 1Q40 murder In
L.o.aAngelea.

doctor!'
63

r~tj

a drema about a former

know the child batlerhab~lna

61

1

proatltute who agreea to

seroiEes
Home
Improvements

· ...

~ii

Ouality Autobody 8. Paint
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles. Auto Trim Center, -4-46-1968 .

11

'::'~-:.=""' -

ro"1080

Auto Repair ·

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com mercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182 .

Firewood, '$2S .OO pickup
load at farm . Call895·3395.

Small 1 bedroom house
located on Sanders On
Oepdsll &amp; references. Call IJ?:il..,,;·~
evenlngs4-46·0254.

MO~~OW

li&lt;IC.KED IN l

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

For Sal~ or Trade

59 ·

74 Chevy pickup, PS, PB .
Call «6· 7654.

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows; lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Call245·5121.

OKAY, &amp;ISNE-R, YOU WIN. I'LL T8LI&lt;,
&amp;UT NO E1.CLU~IVE6. YOU GET YOUR
CHUM~ F~OM THE PilE-~; HE:RI! T'O·

THC~E D00~5o

1978 Hydra Sport 18ft. Bass
DRAGONWYND
CAT· boat, 150 I:1P Mercury with
TERY · KENNE.L. AKC trim &amp; lnt, 12·24 volt
Chow puppies,
CFA . Evenrude trQIIing motor, 3'
, Himalayan, Persian and batteries, Pr&amp;trail trailer.
Siamese kittens. Call «6·
Cali304-773· 5f3.
3844 after 4 p. m .
76
Auto Parts
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
&amp; Acc~ssories
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities . New Auto Parts $20,000
Also AKC Reo. Oober- stock, fit most. 25-50 per
cent cost. Porter, Oh. Call
mans. Call446· 7795.
367·0236 or 367-7101.

1981 Datsun pickup 's spd.
tre.n smlsslon, long bed .
Call -4-46-8380 after 5.

55

C'MON• ['LI..
HELP YOU Fl~

Boats and
Motors for Sate

7~20.

Sears dune cart, good condition. Caii3C4·576·2164.

9 room house in Rio Gran·
de, Oh. Call 4-46·3485.

e)lploree
and other
queatlona concerning the
plantta, . the etara and

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

--~------

Lots &amp; Acreage

. THURSDAY
FEB, 11, 1082
EVENING
• YOU ASKED FOR IT
ANOTHERUFE
WHAT ONEARTH? Why aro
d lnoaaura extinct; doe a man
have the mental power to
control light? Oraon Beln t1oat1
th ialnqula ltive apeclal that

.·-

1978 Subaru 4 W. O. stationVtagon . Needs engine work .
30·35 m .p.g. $1,400. or
might take gun. rota-tiller
or Gr avely as partial
tradein . 9'12·7247 ..

RAY'S
USED
FUR ·
46
Space for Rent
N I TU R E Wood burner
Trailer space at Mer- SlOO, wood &amp; coal stove $85,
cerville. County water," gas heater $100, chest $35,
large lot . Call 446·1157 or dresser $25, rocker $25,
bedroom suite $65, dinner
367· 7218.
bell $45, 2 end tables $24 .
Antiques and much more
Mobile Homes
COUNTRY MOBILE Home furniture . 367·0637 .
42
Park,
Route
33,
North
of
for Rent
Pomeroy. Large lots . Call
2 bdr. and 3 bdr . mobile 9'12· 7479.
Refrjgerator, meta l bed,
homes. Call446·0175 .
roll -a -way
bed, other
Items. Call304·458 ·1869.
Trailer lots for rent. Sewer
Centenary, 2 bdr., private &amp; water furnished . Caii67Slot. ref . &amp; dep., $160 mo., 1076.
Bedroom suite, kitchen
adults. Call614· 643·2644 .
table &amp; chairs. pre-hung
door, cabinet front with
Household Goods
doors, dresser . Call 6753 bdr . double wide located 51
1431.
jn JohRson's Mobile Home
LAYNE'S FURN ITURE
Park. No pets, deposit Sofa, chair, rocl&lt;er, ot·
required. all utilities pd . loman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa, RefriQerator &amp; electric
except electric, new I y chair and loveseat, .S275. range, good condition, $.500
decorated, $300 month. Ca ll Sofas and chairs priced for the pair. Call675·3962 .
446·3547 .
from $285 . to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide-a - For Sale couch &amp; chair, like
2 bdr. mobile home close to beds,$340., queen size,
new. Call675· 7141.
Recliners, $175. to
HMC. Call446·7032.
Lamps from $18. to
.
pc
.
difettes
from
$79
.,
to 19 cu .ft . ref irgerator.
Mobi l e home for rent .
La rge freezer. avocado G.
$385
.
7
pc.,
$189
.
and
up.
Adults only, no pets. Call
c. 5200. Huffy 10 spd.
Wood
table
with
4
chairs,
367·7438.
$219 up to $495. Desk S110. bicycle, new, $135 . Cali675·
Hutches, $300. and $375 .. 2635.
2 bedroom all electric, Rac - maple or pine fin ish.
coon Creek Rd . $165.00 per Bedroom suites - Bassett Captain Mate maple bed
mo. plus deposit, no pets . Oak, $675 ., Bassett Cherry. and matching chest, exCa ll 446·0822 .
$795 . Bunk bed complete ce llent condition . Call 675with mattresses, $2SC. and 6162.
2 bdr . trailer furnished, up to $350 . Captain's beds,
---'---~ --~adu lts only, Brown Trailer $275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or bo•
Park. 992·3324.
springs, full or twin, $58., 54
Misc. Merch~ndice
Nice 1 bedroom furn ished firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, $195. S dr. chests, $49 . Lump Coal $32 per ton .
mobile home . 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt . 33. Phone 4 dr. chests, $42. Bed Zinn Coal Co., Inc. Cal l.446frames, S20.and $25 .. 10 gun 1408 between 9 and 4.
for appointment 9'12·7479.
- Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
te chair$ $20. and $25. Gas
2 bedroom house trailer in or electric ranges, $295 . Or· For Sa le Kitch en table and
Racine . S175 per month. $75 thopedic super firm, $95, 2 chairs, $25 . See at 769
deposit. You pay uti lities. baby matresses, $25 8. $35, Brownel l Ave ., Middlepdrt .
Unfurnished but kitchen . bed frames $20$25.8. $30.
614·367·7811.
E lectrlc fireplace , gun New wood stove, half price,.
cabinet, Living room suite, never used, $350. Can con vert to furnance. Call 2562 bedroom trailer
wood table &amp; -4 chairs.
school,' stores, ~n.Ci'1~~·i+.....-.;,;.~t.;.;...~ ...:..;.f!.,rn g e s , 1216cGaii ipolis .
Deposit required . Mid- refrigerators, and TV's,
dleport. 992·5914.
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Snow tires, new recaps,
Open 9am lo 7pm, Mon. G78·14, $30.00. Call 675·6898.
thru Fri., 9am to5pm , Sat .
MOBILE home for rent
446·0322
Will build industrial, farm,
with option to buy, 304·576and utility trailers to suit
2711 .
SWAIN
customer . Also mobile
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp; home lot for rent in Ra.tciot,
2 bdr . mobile home un· PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .,
furnished, couples onl y . Gallipo lis. 3 piece~ living Oh . Call 379·2322.
Cali675·1076.
room suites $199, maple
rockers $49, several chest E•celsior Oil Co., 636 E .
of
drawers, Maple rockers Main St .• Pomeroy, Ohio.
44
Apartmemf
$49,
several late model 9'12·2205.
tor Rent
bedroom suites, variety of
Furnished
room
$85, desks, Cedar wardrobe, Jenson AM- FM cassette
utilities pd., sing le male, 9•12 linoleum SlO and S12, stereo with built in booster .
range, refrig . share bath . severa l refrig ., gas &amp; elec - $225. 614· 742·3154.
446·4416 after /PM.
tric ranges. coat &amp; wood
cook s1oves, several che~t 3 used Maytag Automatic
Furnished apartment tor of drawers. variety of SSO. &amp; up. Fr igidaire Dryer
chest.
lamps,
and S85. Dishwasher $40 . 742rent. Caii446·3937 .
mech~nic tools of al l kinds,
2352.
new &amp; used wood burners
Deluxe furnished apart- some with fans, new table
ment, excellent location, 1 lamps $18, wOOd cook Record player with am-fm
or 2 adults, only $275, ref . 8. ranges, new 5 piece dinnet radio. 985·'267 .
dep. required. Call 446· sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
0338.
several dinnet sets, silver THIS IS IT · OUR ANNUAL
stone-all sizes. new tools of SALE . Get up to $125.00
2 brd. apt. HUD e•cepted, all kinds, wringer Maytag savings on world -Book En kitchen furn, utilities par· washer, Linoleum rugs cyclopedia .
Monthly
tlaliy
pd. , e•cellent 9•12 $10, and lots more. We payments a"ailable. Call
location . Call 675-510-4 or have everything to set up Margaret Pierce, local
housekeeping . Hours tOam school servi ce represen 675· 7284.
to 5pm, 446 ·3159 .
tative . 304-675·3775.
2 bdr. completely furn ., a ll
electric, carpeted, adults,
Go 0 D
usE D
A P · 20 fl. telephone poles for
no pets, 458 2nd. Ave .,
PLIANCES
washers, sale. 304·675·6918.
Gaiiipdlis, $22~ per mo. dryers,
refrigerators,
plus deposit. Call 446·2236 renges . Skaggs
Ap - Air compressor $675; large
or 446·2581 .
·
pliances, Upper River Rd., advertising sign $350; Nova
beside Stone Crest Motel. parts 68· 72 model. High
Apartmenfs - 1 and 2 «6· 7398.
performance model 350 ~
bedrooms. Rent starts at; 1
volt main short block $275;
bedroom 5152, 2 bedroom Sears Electroic -Sensor 39 Chevy body SSOO; new
$188, deposit S200. Call 446· dryer , S60. Call446·4048.
couch $500; 39 Chevy sedan
2745.
$1,000. 304· 576 · 2~2 .
GE auto. washer, nice,
Apartment for rent . Call $110.00. Norge, dryer exc. Somerville's ·camouflaged
shape, $90 .00. Ca ii 446·8181 . Army surplus clothing,
446·0390 .

House -4 rooms &amp; bath, Hen·
derson, SlO,SCO. Call 675·
4203 .

1972 Ford F·2SC 4-Wheel
Drl"e. 985·4339 .

1979 Harley Davidson Spdr·
tster . Excellent condition .
$2700 firm . 4 Good Year all
terrain steel belted radials.
30 bY 13.5 by 15. Like new .
$400 . 4 Chevy ·15 ln. white
Spdke wheejs. $80 . 949·2224
afler6p .m .

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes.
houses.
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614·245·9484.

45

Television
•
•
VIewmg·

vons·&amp; ~W.O.

74- - - MOtOrCv-CI! 'j~-

2 bedroom furnished apart·
menf. 9'12· 543~ or 992-5914
or 304-882·2566.

Efficiency rooms by the

73

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 1S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1978
£hevy
van,
c u stomized. Call 446·7015 or
446·3684

Furhished
apt . $230 .
utilities pd ., 1 bd ,, , adults,
near HMC. Call446·4416 af·
ter 7PM.

Mason,WV.
week
on /73·5651.
Main street,
Last day I will buy fur for
this season is Saturday,
Feb. 13: George Bu ckley,
664·4761 .

by Larry WriGht

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

Older 3 bedroom all elec·
tric house in Pomeroy . Carpeting, porc h, patio, yard, 3 bedroom unfurnished
and garden space. Oep. , apartment. 992·5434 or 992·
and ref. required. S250 per 5914 or 304-882·2566.
month. Write Bo• 729-S,
Pomeroy. Oh 45769.
Apartments. 675·5548 .

We pay cash for late model

Thursdeiy, February 11, 1982

Thurtday, February 11, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ODe letter olmpl)' alond.o for another. In lhla aomple A 11
uoed for the three L'a, X for the two O'o, etc. Slnlle !etten,
opo1trophea, the lenl\11 and formotlon of the worda ore aU
hlnta. Each day the code letters ore different.

caYPTOQUOTit8
LS

NTYYSGL,

uw

LJW

XSIIQPC

WEWGO

UQNWC

QPC

SP

RTNLKXW .

PWXWNNQGO
IWQNTGW

XSIISP

ITNL
GKBJL.

GTLJWGZSGC

u.

JQOWN
Yeti nta.r'a Crypt.lqllole: REPAY EVIL WITH
YOU DEPJUVE 'I1IE EVILDOER OF ALL mE

OF fUS WICKEDNESS.-LEOTOI.Sl'OY
~

1112

lOng

FeeturM Svn&lt;licllt, Inc.

GOOD AND
PLEASUFE

.

I

�said Cedric Waggoner, of Harry
Lcndon Candles Inc. of North
Ca nton.
Even In ha rd-hit Youngstown,
flowers a ppear to be seiUng this
Fe brua ry. Novak said the Alexander's shop the re Is doing a · b risk
business.
"Surprisingly with a ll the layoffs.
tbey had a n increase of sales at
Christmas a nd we're expecting an
Increase for Vale ntine's Day,"
Novak said .
" I guess people appreciate now·
ers a nd beauty. Florists have told
me that during the Depression,
s ometimes people didn't have food
on their tables but they had flowers," he saud.
Zanetos, whose fa ther founded
the Anthony-Thomas Candy Co. In
1917, said the same seems to hold
true for confectione rs.
''I'm amazed, but It doesn't
surprise me," Zanetos said .
"My dad raised five children during tbe Great Depression. Back In
those days when candy was a luxury, people were stiU buying it."
Zanetos said the company's sales
have Increased by about 10 percent
In tbe last six months. He said
candy prices have remained fairly
stable during that time.
Novak said his 10 flower shops
expect to seU out of roses- at $40 a
dozen. They're also offertng floral
arrangeme nts and assorime nts In
the $15 to $20 price range.
"We wtu sell every rose we have,
which Is good for us," Novak said."People want roses for Valentine's
Day, and they're w!Uing to pay for
them. They're our best seller."

planners are blue. But Va lentine's
Day stays sweet for Ohio me rcha nts who say candy a nd fl ower
sales are running true.
Although the annual rush for
roses and laced candy boxes has
several days to run, Ohio me rchants say the economic recession
apparently hasn't discouraged
lovers.
"The economy never affects us
much," said Larry Novak, general
manager of 10 Alexande r's flower
and plant shops In Cleveland and
Youngstown. " We're sell1ng as
much as we did last yea r and the
year before."
"Our business appears to be
recession-proof, " added Tom Zanelos, president of the AnthonyThomas Candy Co., with 14 stores
in Franklin County .
" We have not noticed any drop In
volume. We've probably had an Increase In the number of pounds (of
candy) sold In the last six-month
period," he added.
That trend comes even though It
hasn't gotten any cheaper to send
flowers or candy . A dozen longstemmed roses fetc h around $40 In
tbe Cleveland area . Homemade
chocolates start at around $5 a
pound In stores around the state.
While less-expensive candles a nd
floral arrangements seem to be
more popular Ibis Valentine's Day,
merchants expect an otherwise
normal season.
"Generally, people are not buyIng bigger things, like cars and refrigerators . But tbey have money
to spend and they're spending It,"
'

Village

fund~

WASiflNGTON (AP) - The biggest one-month food price Increa se
since tbe summer of 1980 pushed overall Inflation at tbe wholesale leve l
higher at an annual rate ol 5.3 percent last month, tbe government reported today.
Analysts said sharp reductions in hog-breeding herds had cut tbe supply
of pork, contrtbuting to a big Inc rease in meat prices and to a 1.1 percent
rise in consumer food prices.
In addition, prices twned up sharply for eggs and accelerated somewha t
for refll)ed sugar, dal.ry products, fish, roasted coffee and a variety of otber
,
foods, the new report said.
It said tbe Labor Department's Producer Price Index for finished goods
rose 0.4 percent in January alone, up slightly from December's 0.3 percent,
but generally In Une wltb figures for the past y ear which have been much
Improved over 1980.
Inflation for all of 1981 totaled 7 percent at the wholesale level, compared
witb"ll.B percent the previous year.
January's 5.3 percent annual rate means that If prices rose at the same
0.4 percent pace for 12 consecutive months, the overall increase would total
5.3 percent.
Wholesale prices climbed just 6.3 percent in the past 12 months, the
lowest total since the 6.2 ~rcent for the 12 months ended In Apr1119TI.

JEWELRY
SALE
Remember
Your

Valentine
With
Jewelry

Chains-Earrings-Pins
Necklaces - Bracelets
20% OFF

receipts,
no
disbursements,
$33,444.27; general bond retirement,
no receipts, no disbursements,
$14,107.05; planning commission, no
receipts, $5.04, $149.67; sanitary
sewer escrow, no receipts, no
disbursements, $142,885.59; water
tank, $1,000, no disbursements,
$153,369.82; water, . $8,94p5,
$8,885,50, $42,056.93 ; samtary sewer,
$6,854;44, $7,316.43, $5,557.35; swimming pool, no receipts, $21.53,
$731.09; cemetery, $605.47, $1,052.23,
$360.45 deficit; water meter trusts,
$215, $231, $8,405.57.
Receipts for the month totaled
$68,429.33 compared to expenditures
of$76,639.15. .

Middleport Village funds
totaled $444,488.87 as of Jan. 31, according to the monthly report of
Middleport Clerk-Treasurer Jon
·
Buck.
Receipts and expenditures for the
month and tbe balance of each fund
as of Jan. 31, respectively, fo\low:
General, $15,278.77, $14,449.40,
· $2~.892. 78; street maintenance,
$3,0110.40, $6,549.42, $3,446.87 deficit;
HUD, $28,000, $27,980.35, $3,633.13;
federal revenue sharing, $3,348,
$2,982.05, $8,34~ .81; street light, no
receipts, $1,059.82, $10,829.40 ; street
levy, no receipts, $2,631.34, $175.59;
fire equipment, $1,100, $3,473,
$2,287.87 deficit; fire truck fund, no

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
CANVAS OR
LEATHER
PONYS

MEN'S ENGINEER BOOTS
~-

$3995

mLEATHER

AMERICAN MADE

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
IN THE HEART lif POMEROY

'78.DATSUN

FIREBIRD

280Z

V·B, AT , P .S .• A.C.•
stereo, w ir e wh ee l

l·owner, new v .w .
trade· in.

'5995

'2495
'77 OlDS
CUTLASS SUP.
V·B, A.T., P .S ., A.C. ,
V·top, wheel s.

'3695

FOR YOUR VALENTINE

Voi.30,No.212
C:eyrightod 198'2

Buy her a new look for Spring! Dresses, blouses, jeans
and
in Junior Misses and Half
.

'

c .

/

1\

\
.

;'

I

Dress slacks, Van Heusen dress and sport shirts, Wembley lies,
Rolf's Billfolds, Hickok dress and western bells, handkerchiefs,
dress socks, lightweight jackets and many more. We'll gladly
help you find the gift you'd like to give him.

WAS l499S
NOW

"CHEAPIES"
'71 DEMON
'1295
'75 NEWPORT
'1595
UP TO $800.00
"CASH"

FOR YOUR USED
CAR TRADED
ON ANEW

CHARGED WITH MURDER- Robert Dale Hendern, In lumdculfa,
IB escorted from a court hearing Thursday ID Palatka, Fla. Helldenoa
was charged wltb first degree murder, and IB accused of the death Ill Dr.
Murray B. Ferberber on Jan Zi. Henderson has confessed 10 kUling 10 to

HALLMARK

11 persons and has led pollee to three bodies, pollee said. (AP Laser-

photo I.

'4695

Valen-ti-ne-Cards
Select your Valentine Cards from our ex·
cellent selection on the 1st floor. Plus party favors
gift wrap
novelties by
Hallmark.

Valentine sale prices on our entire stock of pre-recorded cassette
and S-track tapes and stereo albums.

'79 CHEV.
MONTE CARLO
V-6, A.T.. P .S .• A.C. ,
tilf, cruiser. s·t e reo,

low miles.

'5995
'79 FORD
FAIRMONT WG.
Squire Pkg ., 6 cvl. ,
A.T., P .S., A.C. , roof

rack. rear wiper .

'4995

ASK US ABOUT OUR EXCLUSIVE 12
MONTH OR 12,000 MILE NATIONWIDE USEDCARWA'RRANTY.

VALENTINE
CHAIR SALE

•

REG. •3.79 •••••••••• SALE '2.95
REG. '6.79 • • • • • • • • • • SALE '5.45
REG. '9.79 • • • • • • • • • • SALE '7.85
REG. '12.79 •••••••• SALE '10.25

Give your Valentine something special ... a
quality Berkline or Kroehler chair.
ALL CHAIRS ON STOCK ARE

ON SALE!
OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8- SATURDAY UNTIL 5

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

ll fi l •'
,.

I

''1 AN I LOW

•'H ou'•J L +JIIt · A I:'J• r,

played tbe major part In pushing up J anuary food costs- a nd , therefore,
overall wholesale prices.
"Sharp reductions In tbe breeding herds of hogs a nd some disruptions In
slaughter caused by tbe weather have led to dramatic Increases In meat
prices at all stages of processing in January," reported Donald R.alajczak,
directOr of the Georgia State Unive rsity Economic F orecasting Project.
Jason Benderly of tbe Washington Analysis Corp. said big Increases in
poultry and hog prices, coupled wltb a lesser rtse In cattle prices, would
account for most of tbe Increase In food costs .
"Fortunately, prices for consumer goods otbe r than food continue to be
restrained by recesslonary pressures," Ratajczak said.
Botb men said food prices would continue to surge lor the next month or
more. They laid part ol tbe blame on heavy california rain and freezing
Florida temperatures tbat damaged some vegetable crops.
The government's Index for wholesale prices Includes many consumer
Items one step before sale to the public, and thus ts a good indica tor of how
store prices will move soon.
However, tbe Index does not Include costs of various services or of
housing, a category that has heavy influence on the consumer price Index
that w!U be publlshed later this month. .
The CPT also dectlned last year, to 8.9 percent from the 12 .4 percent of
1980.

en tine

at

2 Sections, 12 Pages
15 Conh
A Multimodla In&lt;. Nowspopor

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 12, 1982

Meigs County shertff' s deputies
Jlmmer Soulsby, Pall! &amp;~we, Don
Snyder; Investigator Gary Wolfe,
and prosecuting attorney Investigator Paul Gerard attended a BC!
computerized criminal history
class at tbe Ohio Peace Officers
Training Academy In London.
The officers, following the trainIng session, were given tbe pass
word enabling them to use tbe shertff's department LEADS computer to check tbe computerized
criminal history fUes at the BCi.
The session Included Information
on tbe history, purposes and legal
restrictions on the use oftbe compu·
terlzed criminal histories.
·
The sher'Jf's department also
transported Jerry Ray Moore, 18,

'

SALE

saver! l ·Owner .

The food price Increase In January was tbe biggest since tbe·2.6 percent
of August 1911l, when tbe nation was suffering from a severe drought,
Labor Department otflclals said.
However, the food rtse was partly offset by a 0.9 percent decUne In
energy costs. That decllne followed Increases of .more tban 1 percent In
botb November and December.
Ga soUne and natural gas prices decreased somewhat in January, but
prices for home heating oU showed a small increase for tbe third straight
month, the report said.
Prices for flnlshed consumer goods other than food and energy rose 0.5
percent In .January after snowing no change In December.
Price Increases were recorded for a wide variety of Items, Including
newspapers and magazines, te:~~tile house fwnlshlngs, tires and tubes,
prescription drugs, alcoholic beverages and cosmetics.
Car prices decUned after rising In December.
All of the figures were adjusted to discount for normal seasonal variations In prices.
Before adjustment, the PPI stood a t 2TI.4 In January, meaning that
goods which cost $10 in the base year of 1967 would have cost $27.74 last
montb .
Analysts commenting In advance of today 's report said meat prices

Highway Administration and will
utU!ze the existing alignment and
grade. The proposed bridge wtll be
a three span concrete sial!, 28 feet
wide qnd approximately 98 feet
long. This alternate was chosen as
tbe best because of the small envlr·
onmentallmpact and low cost.
According to the Ohio Department of Transportation District 10
Deputy Director Walter G. Smith,
environmental data and otber plan·
nlng development Information are
avaUable for publlc viewing or dis·
cussion at the district otflce In Ma·
rletta. The office Is located on
Musklngum Drive phone 373-0012.
Smltb says any questions or Imput
from the public are welcome.

Deputies 'attend
training session

ALBUM
AND
TAPE
4 c yl. , 4 spd ., gas

ease in· lation rate

'

. LINGERIE FOR YOUR VALENTINE

Men's and Boys'
Dept.-1st Floor

~ncr

MARIETTA--Planning has been
completed lor construction of a replacement bridge over Lauck's
Run, located on State Route 124 in
Meigs County, approximately .5 of
a n\Ue northwest of Lebanon Township Road 146.
The project will replace an existing narrow and structurally dell·
cient b11dge.
The next phase w!U be to complete tbe detail design of tbe project
and purchase necessary rights of
way. Traffic over Lauck's Run wiU
be maintained during construction
by use of a lemporary bridge and
road.
The project has been developed
in conjurPtlOn wltb the Federal

Tedd1es, cam•soles, pajamas, long and shOrt gowns, robes and baby
dolls .
All new for

VALENTINE GIFT
SUGGESTIONS

•

Complete planning
on SR.l24 bridge

;It__:r!; j ~~

I

'79 PONTIAC

Triple whft e, A.C. ,
radial s.

SPRING FASHIONS

1,

KEDS ..................... ;.FROM $2495 ANDUP

'75 MERCURY
MONTEGO

e

NEW

.· ~

LADIES' LEATHER

covers .

Food prices

total $444,488

AU

! .. •

1982

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Valentine's Day is
sweet for merchants
By Assoclaled Press
Economists see red , fina ncial

11

Thursday,

Ohio

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Mu-rder suspect ·
to undergo tests

Middleport, to tbe Columbus Cor·
rectlonal FacUlty to begin serving
his concurrent sentences of one to
five years, two counts, on breaking
and entering charges Imposed ear·
Iter Ibis week in the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
A deer was killed Thursday on
Route 248 Thursday when It ran Into
the patb of a pickup truck driven by
Kenneth R. White, Route 1, Lcng
Bottom.
Damage to the truck was moderate and White was not Injured.
Wednesday night a deer, was
struck when It ran lnto the patb of a
car driven by Tommy Simmons,
Route 1, Middleport, on Route 7.
Damage was moderate to tbe vehl·
cle and the deer was able to leave
the scene.

Third reading taken
on $5 service charge

A tblrd reading of an ordinance
PALATKA. Fla. (AP I - The ·
pennlsslon to the Racine
granting
Henderson was arraigned here
drtfter charged with four murders,
Gas
and
Service Co. to add a $5
Tursday before Putnam County
who earlier surprised deputies by
monthly
service
charge to custo.Judge W!Ulam E. Warren.
forcing tbem to detour so he could
mers'
bUI
was
approved
recently
Warren Informed him of his
show tbem tbree other bodies, Is
by
the
Racine
Vtllage
Council.
rights, read a warrant for firstbeing held without ball today in a
Herb Gibson, owner of the comdegree murder and told him no
pany,
fielded questions from a
North Florida jaU.
bond would be set.
Robert Dale Henderson will unHoward B. Pearl, a public de- number of residents attending the
dergo psychiatric tests, hts lawyer
fender appointed to represent meeting prior to tbe voting on the
saki following Henderson's Initial
Henderson, said after tbe hearing ·tbird reading by council members.
court appearance Thursday.
that his client, tiso charged ~tb . It was pointed out that the rates
Wednesday, tbe balding 36-year- ktillng tbree In-laws In Cherry for gas consumed wiU remain tbe
old part-time tobacco field worker
Fork, Ohio, had been told not to same wltb tbe only difference being
told deputies escorting him to tbe
tbe $5 monthly service charge. The
make any more statements.
Putnam County jail tO drive to a
Henderson has been charged ordinance wiU be posted In five lowooded site about 65 mUes north of wltb the shooting deaths of his cations for 15 days.
St. Petersburg, so he could show parents-In-law, Ivan and Marie
In otber council action, an applithem tbe bodies of tbree hitchhlk· Barnett, and their 11-year-old son, cation for obtaining pennlsslon to
ers - a woman and two men purchase surplus Items from the
on Jan. 211n their !ann home.
State
Agency for Property Utillza·
Henderson claims he killed.
When arrested Saturday, pollee
Late Thursday, Hernando au- said the gun Henderson was cai:rY· tlon was approved.
Various
thorities had ldentl!led two of the ing,was tbe same .22:Caltber pistol Items that can be used by tbe ttre
victims as Frances Bell Dickey, 23, stolen from tbe home of Henderol Batesvtlle, Miss., and Vernon D. son's In-laws.
Odom, 27, of Clarksdale, Miss. All
Miller said tbe bullet which was
An arson 1nvestlgator from the
tbree had been dead about a week.
fatal to Ferderber would be comWest VIrginia state fire marshal's
At tbe time he led deputies to the pared in a test wltb bullets fired
otflce Is joining the state pollee and
bodies, Henderson was already from that weapon.
Michael Whalen, director of secon·
charged with killing three In-laws
dary education for Mason County
In Ohio and a retired doctor In Put·
schools, In an ongoing investigation
nam County.
of a recent series of fires at Hannan
In all, the Wyoming prison paro- Minor damage
High School.
lee allegedly told Charlotte County
According to waiter Smittle of
The
Gallla-Melgs
,Post
State
pollee In Punta Gorda last weekend
tbe
flre marshal's office, the InvesHighway
patrol
Thursday
invesltthat he had kl1led 10 or 11 people In
tigation
Is prel1mlnary. His office
aged
a
minor
traffic
accident
ln·
several sta te_s.
was
notified
recently ol several
Henderson Is charged here with volvlng a Meigs Countlan .
smallllres
reportedly
set off at the
tbe Jan. 25 murder of Dr. Murray Troopers said a car driven by
school.
B. Ferderber, a retired physician Mlldred K. Farmer', 42, Pomeroy,
One state trooper has been as·
from Pittsburgh found dead by his sustained slight damage when It
signed to tbe Investigation, said
wife Inside their mobile home near ran over a muff!ei: lying In the road
Cpl. K.R. Beckett of tli!! Point Pleatbe small community of satsuma. on Ohio 7 at 2: 30 p,m., causing the
sant state pollee detachment, and
Ferderber had been shot In the mutller to pop up and strlke a door
on the car.
he added tbe fires were malnly set
back of the head.

and street departments are avaUable through tbe program from time
to time .
Also meeting with council were
members of the Racine Board of
Public Affairs and representatives
from the Southeastern Equipment
Company concerning repairs to the
village backhoe. Action was tabled
until the next regular meeting.
Mayor Charles Pyles presided
over tbe meeting attended by board
of publlc affairs members, Bobby
Roy and Charles Shain; Clerk·
Treasurer Kay Warden, and councU members, Robert Beegle, Ben
Petrel, Jeanette Lawrence, Cressa
Shain, Carroll Teaford and Scott
Wolfe.
The publlc Is Invited ID the next
regular meeting, 7 p.m ., March 1,
at v!Uage hall.

School fires under study
In trash cans.
Since last week, Hannan students
have been Individually questioned,
reported Whalen. A complete report of the Investigation will be sent
ID the Mason County prosecutor's
office and then forwarded ID the
county board of education for
review.
I

The Investigation began when a
group of concerned parents rrom
tbe Hannan area approached the
school board on Feb. 2 wltb aUegatlona of dlsclptlne problems, fires,
unsanitary condltlom and students
carrying hunting Imlves Into the
school, which the board agreed to
have checlred.

'

Simulated launch successful
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - A simulated launch of tbe space
shuttle Columbia was successfully completed Thursday night after
being aborted earlier In the day by problems wltb a faulty computer
system.
Rocky Raab, a spokesman for Kennedy Space Center, said the 6
p.m. mock mission was error-free. It had been rescheduled because
of a problem In the "shared peripheral area" of the launch processIng system.
The system Is used only for simulations and would not have affected the third launch, set for March 22, offl~lal s said. The special
computer programs on board Columbia and at the launch control
center are designed to mimic actual flight conditions.

Gallia officials seek pl'ant taxes
GALLIPOLIS - GaUia County officials are ganging up on the
state tax commissioner to fight a tax allotment rule they say costs
tbe county $1.2 miUion a year.
The Galtla County board ol education says the commissioner has
ruled that taxes from a power plant must be divided among 66
counties and that It costs county schools over $1 mUUon a year.
Educators are joining other county officials In appealing the rule
to the State Board of Tax Appeals. Other officials say the rule costs
the county general fund up to $250,00) a year.
The school board had sought to keep Tax Commissioner Edgar L.
Lindley from distributing 30 poercent of the tangible personal property taxes collected from the Ohio Power Co., Gavin plant to 66 other
counties . Lindley said va luation from power lines should go to counties where the lines are located .

Schools will feel effects soon
COLUMBUS, Ohio- The state's615local school dlstrtcts soon wUI
begin feeling the effects of spending cuts Imposed as a result of the
state government's budget crisis.
•
The Ohio Department of Education said Thursday that state subs!·
dies for the five months remaining In the current fiscal year will be
trimmed by at least $46.9 mUllan.
That figure represents prtmary and secondary education 's share
of $100 mUllan In cuts ordered by Gov .•James Rhodes on .Jan. 30.
But the administration's budget experts warned that more severe
cuts will be needed unless tbe Legislature approves a temporary
Increase In tbe sales tax to help offset a projected deficit of Sl billion
by .rune 30, 1983.

10-day rebellion spreads
AMMAN, Jordan - U.S. officials report indications that the 10·
day-old Hama rebelllon against Syrian Preside nt Hafez Assad Is
spreading ID other cities.
The Amer)cans said diplomatic and Intelligence reports Indicated
trouble has broken out In Latakia, the coastal port that Is Assad's
power base, and otber centers. But they did not say whatothercltles
have been affected by the uprtslngtbat Western diplomats reported
erupted Feb. 2 In Hama, Syria's tblrd largest city and a center of
Sunnl Moslem opposition to Assad's Alawlte sect.
The Syrian government admitted that the army had sealed off
Hama , In northwest Syria 120 miles north of Damascus , and was
rounding up "criminals" and weapons.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Thursday night In
tbe Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 465.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4 ~' game, the winning number was 9100.
The lottery reported earnings of $622,00 on Its dally game. The
earnings came on sales of $1 ,096,419, whlle holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $474,338, lottery officials said .

Weather forecast
Snow tonight and Saturday morning. Mostly cloudy Saturday afternoon. Lows tonight near 25. Highs Saturday near 40. Chance of
precipitation 90 percent tonight and 60 percent Saturday. Winds
variable 10 mph or less tonight.
Extended Ohio Forecallt
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair Sunday and Monday. A chance of rain Tuesday. Wannlng
through the pertod. Hlr;hs In the upper SO.. and the 40s Sunday ,
wanntag 10 the mld-408 to mld·t!OI! Monday and Tuesday. Overnight
Iowa In the leertAIO low 20!1 early Sunday and In the mld·ZOs to mld·30s
early Monday and Tue8day.

••

•

/

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