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u.s. arms sale talk alarms ·Israel

•

WINTHROP

Dick Cavalli-

M'l DAD -mt..D M~ THAT WHEN . H~
WA~.MY A~,

... AND HE: WENT t:ONN, ""R'J "'THE
- SEA5HORE At-JD '"T"'Hf&lt;t:W IT
IN i'He C:::CeAN •.•

HE WI&lt;OT"E:A NOTE

AND .P Ur IT IN A 80TTL.5 •..

.~.AND, MANY~ LA lEi&lt;~
WHeN HE WAe IN CHINA
!:"URINI::f 1l-tE: WAA. •••

I

\.--

.....

AND IT WN51'HE

6AME NOTE

He::

"Tl--RE:W IN \lvl4 EN
He W.A6 WTTLE/
•

I

NO...

o ...... r..:.
• . . LT 5AID, II i\\Q ~~~,.
iWO
0RDt:R0 6HRIMP.:.. FRieD RICE,
EASY·ON THE eoY 6A.UCE."

\

\

WILL QUESTION ARMS
SALE TO JORDAN - Israel's
new ambas11ador to Washington,
Mtl'she Arens, will seek
clarification of the Reagan ad·
ministration's plans to sell arms
to Jordan when he presents his
credentials Tuesday. The Israeli
government has prote~ted the
sale. lAP Laserphotol .

JERUSALEM (AP) -A possible U.S. arms sale to Jordan poses
new danger to the Middle East and
Israel "won't sit In silence over the
deal," Israeli Cabinet secretacy
Arl.e h Naor said Sunday.
Naor's comment to reporters fol·
lowing a weekly Cabinet session
came as Prtme Minister Menachem Begin was planning a policy
debate on the u.s..Jordan arms
Issue Monday ln the Kness.,t, Is·
rael's parliament. Begin did not at·
tend the Cabinet meeUng.
Reports that U.S. Secretary of
Defense Caspar Weinberger had
discussed sale of advanced F -16
fighter planes and mobile Hawk
anti-aircraft missiles to Jordan set
off alarms In the Jewish state.
"If such a deal goes through, It
would bring new and most dangerous elements Into the Middle East,"
· Naor said. "Israel can't and won't
sit In silence" while It sees a change
ln the Middle East balance of
power, be added.
N.aor said Israel wlU seek clartfl·
cation on the situation through Its
new ambassador to Washington,
Mos~Arens.

Arens Is to raise the proposed
arms sale with Secretary of State
Alexander M. Halg Jr. when he

presents his credenllals ln Washington on Tuesday.
Government sources were also
Irked by Weinberger's decision not
to visit Israel on his recent swing
through the Middle East. At one
point, In Amman, Jordan, he was
less than 30 mlles from Jerusalem.
Because of the proximity of Am·
man to Jerusalem, a U.S. ·.Jordan
armS deal would be as contentious
as last year's sale of AWACS radar
planes to Saudi Arabia.
Israeli military officials claim
the Hawk missiles would endanger
Israeli aircraft within Israel, and
they fear the F ·16 fighters In the
hands of .Jordanian pilots would be
more effective !han the more sophisticated F -15 planes sold to
Saudi Arabia last year becaUS!! .lor·
dan's pilots are considered more
skilled.
Washington Is Interested In bob·
tertng Jordan against the Syrian
armed forces and also wants to
keep King Hussein from turnlllg to
the Soviet Union for arms .
Officials with Weinberger In .lor·
dan said any sale of arms to .Jordan
would have to be coordl"''led with
President Reagan and the State
Department.
Interviewed Sunday on ABC's

•

ANt:&gt; rvE GOT SNOW6AUS.'

b Ed Sullivan
IF YOU MAKE A MOVE TO THRO#
THEM AT ME, I'LL HAVE 10 DO
, THE SAME iO 'TOU.' 1r~ CRAZY.' .

Arson bureau probes· major fire
HAMILTON, Ohio- The arson squad of the Hamilton Fire De·
partment was Investigating the cause of a tour·alarm fire that
chewed through more than a quarter of a downtown city block.
No damage estimate had been made of the Saturday evening fire,
according to a department spokesman.
The blaze sent billowing smoke over the city and forced traffic to
detour around the downtown site, officials said.
The blaze appeared 10 have done heavy damage to businesses
_ located Inside the Webster BuUdlng, a four·story structure that
• IIQ~ the shoe shop and an office supply business, the life depart·
ment said.

4,000 employees may strike
(OUNl"RRES ARM
rHEMSELVES •
TO ?HOW
STRENGTH ...

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Some 4,(0) workers at 65 Kroger stores In
central Ohio have voted to strike If they slon't have a contract settlement by M(rch 3.
The workers on Sunday rejected the company's offer of a three·
year pact Increasing the top wage scale !rom $9.12 an hour to $10.97
an hour over three years, union and company officials said. ·
· The proposed contract went down by a 1,J55.321 vote, whUe
members of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union approved caUing a slrlke by a 1,161·389 margin, said union President
Ralph J. Lorenzetti.

•"THEN GET CAUGHr IN
THE ST"ANDOFF OF AN
UNEASY PE,OOCE..' ·ISNT
THAT SIUPID?

Moslem leaders snub Pontiff

PRINTED IN CANADA

..-------..

.DUSTY CHAPS TM

by Art &amp;.Chip Sansom
~~QJ~

I'VB SEal ~TICI~b
00 ~~ AAECH~Ic.AL
SULL~

LAGOS; Nigeria - Moslem religious leaders snubbed Pope John
Paul II on his visit to northern Nigeria, rebuffing his drive to lm·
prove relations between Chrlstlanlty and Islam.
The pope had planned to deliver a speech Sunday to religious
leadt!rs at the State House In Kaduna stressing such common as·
peels of the two religious as opposition to abortion, respect lor hu·
man rights and belief In one God.
But after addressing at least 500,(0) swaying, band-clapping people at an open-air Mass, the pontiff's appearance at the State House
was canceled and he made his second speech Instead to two Mqslem
provincial governors In a crowded airport waiUng room.
'

American ·missionary murdered
GUATEMALA CITY - An American Catholic missionary who
left Nicaragua because he opposed the leftist government has been
murdered In Guatemala, the 15th church worker kidnapped or murdered ln this Central American nation.
No one claimed responslbUity for the kUling of Brother Ja~
Alfred Miller,'!'/, of Custer, Wis., on Saturday.
Church and human rights groups blame most at the political
violence In Guatemala on ultra-rightist supporters of the mllltary
government. But another missionary who worked with Miller In
Nicaragua said he asked for a transfer after the 1979 Sandlnlsta
revolution Installed a leftist government.

Warplanes cripple opium empire
CHIANG MAl, Thailand - 1'hal soldiers and warplanes have
crippled UW: opium empire of the world's most notorious drug'traf·
IIcker, but Western narcotics officials still expect tons of Southeast
Asian heroin to reach lhlj world's llllclt markets.
With or without opium warlord Khun Sa, opium poppies that.
peasants hilrvest In the hills of the famed "Golden Triangle" this
year will yield roughly 00 tons of heroin for Asian, European and
Amerlcan addicts, say U.S. Embassy officials In Bangkok.
'The lrlangle Is where the borders of Thailand, Laos and Burma
converge, and Is one of the world's lushestareaaforgrowtng poppies

Weather forecast

Rain likely to,/ght and Tuesday. Lows tonight In lheupper40san4

low 1!011. Highs Tuesday 50-55. Chance of rain '10 percent tonight and
neat 100 percent Tuesday. Winds soutbeasterly around 10 mph
tonight.

Edended 01* Forecut

we+....ay lbroqb Friday:

.
a.,_ of ralro or -1101111 IIDd rali.IIOUib W....,...•:r IIDd 1'11111
' P''""lle ovw lbe ....., . . . 'l1landa7 .... ~........ lbe
IIPPel' •llllltllto- • IIOUib Weli e
...t Iaiiie rid Ill -a
lo 1be low IIIIIOUib 'l'hnda:r IIDd Frlda:r. Loin Ia 1be ..,... . . to
lbe n+' . . WedJJ
IIDd ..,.,., 111111 Ill tbe • l'rlda:r·

••IQ'

.IQ'

(

~

Ellahu Ben· Ellssar, chairman of
the Knesset's Foreign Affairs and
Security Committee, told Israel Ra·
dio that the United States would be
turning against the Camp David

peace process by selling arms to
Jordan.
"Jordan had been Invited to par·
tlclpate In the peace process and
refused. Should the United States
now come and give a prize to those
who reject the peace?" he asked .

Demonstration protests Martial Law
By niOMAS W. NETI'ER
said most of the Poznan demonstra·
AMOCiated Press Writer
tors Saturday were students
WARSAW, Poland (AP)
"shouUng hostile slogans," but the
Hundreds of Poles ln Poznan, the crowd also Included "aJersons who
scene of the bloody "bread and free- are neither employed nor studying
dom" riots 26 years ago, staged a . anywhere."
weekend demonsIra lion on the !IE!. The pollee moved In and began
cond monthly anniversary of the making arrests when the crowd tg.
Imposition of martial law.
nored orders to disperse, the
PAP, the official news agency, agency said. It reported that the
said 194 demonstrators were ar· provincial defense committee
rested Saturday In the city in west banned gasoline sales and closed
central Poland, and 162 were "pun·
theaters tn the city because of the
lshed" by misdemeanor courts. No disturbance.
casualties were reported.·
It was the second major demdh·
The 1966 rlots In Poznan were the
stratlon against martial law re- first major outbreak of public oppoported In two weeks. At least 14 sition to Communist rule In Poland
people were Injured and 250 were and resulted in a change In the
arrested when pollee battled young party leadership, a pattern that has
r ioters In Gdansk on .Jan. 30.
been fepeated at · Intervals ever
PAP, the official news agency, since. The government admitted

•

that security forces ktlled53people.
There had been rumors of plans

tor hostile demonstrations Satur·
day In Gdansk, the blrtljplace of the
Independent labor federation Solldarlty, to mark the Imposition of
mar1lallaw Dec. 13. But Canadian
Press correspondent Doug Long reported that rlot pollee and tanks
surrounded the Lenin Shipyards,
soldiers with machine guns were
stationed at key Intersections, patrols searched cars and checked
the Identity cards of pedeslrlans, ·
a nd the Baltic port city was quiet.
PAP also reported that a homemade time bomb was found Satur·
day Inside a sack of potatoes behind
a gasoline station near a hospital In
the western city of Lublin.

enttne
1 Socii on, t 0 flag"
15 Conh
A Mullimodia Inc. Newspaper

Door open for budget changes

Priscilla's Pop
GOT" SNOWE5A.LLS

region."

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 15, 1982

I

'·

LOOK,

moderate Arab states In the

Halg said: "Our policy toward Js.
rae! has not (changed) and I do not
contemplate that It wt11 change In
the period ahead. It does not mean
we do oot seek good relations with

at

e
Voi.30,No.213
C::eyri!htod 1982

' 'This Week with David Brlnkely,"

I

,!} \ •

·'·

.v

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent Reagan Is calling on Republl·
car legtsla!Ors to demonstrate
"heroism and statemanship" by
sticking with his embattled budget
recommendations, but apparently
Is leaving the door ajar tor Con·
gress to lnillate some changes.
House Republican lead ers,
meanwhile, b,~ making overtures
to Democratic leaders - rathe r
than the group of conservative Democrats they worked with last year
- In the search for a budget that
Congress and the president can
agree on.
Reagan sent a letter to all Republican members or the House and
Senate over the weekend sayjng, "I
understand the ·nervousness· that
some m embers of Congress may
!eel In an election year."
' But he urged Republicans to
avoid the temptation "to go tor the
easy option, tile qutck fix" that
"solves nothing In the long run ."
· The president added, " It Will take
courage and endurance - heroism
and statesmanship - to see us
through."
Reagan said legislators should
listen to their constttuen Is during a
l!i&lt;lay Washington-Lincoln birth·
day recess and suggested they will
hear appeals for Congress to "hold
nrm to the course we have charted
for recovery."
"I urge you to listen to the real
voices of the American people, not
just the squeaky wheels," the presl·
dent said.
Reagan also repealed his stand
against reducing mllltary spending
or Increasing taxes to trtm deflcts.
"When It comes to holding down
taxes and Insuring a strengthened
national defense to protect the
peace, there must be no such thing

as retreat."
Included with the pep talk, how·
ever, was an apparent Invitation
for suggestions from Congress on
ways to whittle the record deficits
the administration Is !orecasUng

lor 1982 and 1!113:
"There wtll always be room for
Improvement In any budget and
an:,: economic policy," the presl·
dent said. "Where further savings
can lie found, or a be,rer way of
meeting agreed upon goals can be
worked out, I pledge my full cooper·
ation to you, and I want to hear
from you.''

The tone of the letter contrasted
with the strong rhetoric the presl·
dent and adrrdnlstratlon officials
used iast week when Reagan called
on his critics to "put up or shut up"
and described his budget as "a line
drawn ln the dirt."
Sen. 'Ernest Hollings, D·S.C., responded with an alternative budget
plan that even Senate Majority
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr., R·
Tenn., said had merit. But Treas·
ury Secretary Donald T. Regan
denounced the plan as "absolutely
rldlculous' 1 and "an affront to the
American people" and White
House spokesman David Gergen
said, "There Is no plan here to
compromise."
There has been virtually unanlm·
ous agreement that the president's
deficit forecast 01 $91 .5 billion In !Iscal 1983 wlU not be supported In
Congress.
House Republican leader Robert
H. Michel of IWnols summed up the
reaction amotlg conservatives by
saying they feel as If they've been
''pole-axed.''
Michel has made no secret ofthe
fact that he will meet this week with
Rep. .James R. .Tones, D·Okla.,
chairman of the House Budget
Committee, to discuss a possible bipartisan solution to the problem of
huge deficits.
"We've always had to have some
Democratic support to make any·
thing go and while It may not take
the same form that It did last year
... It might have some variations.
Michel would not rule out the pos·
slbUity of cooperation with the rna·
Jorlty Democratic leadership tn the

Dep•1ties book . House.
alleged fugitive
Robert Lee (Bobby) Kuhn, 24,
Pomeroy, was arrested Saturday
evening by Meigs County deputies
on an Indictment warrant from
Boone County W. Va., charge him
with two counts of grand larceny,
one count of receiving and disposIng of stolen property and one count
of entering without breaking.
According to the Indictments returned by the January, 1982termof
the Boone County Grand .Jury,
Kuhn In July, 1981 allegedly took
and disposed of $2,640 worth of guns
reportedly owned by Johnnie Batre
and In November, 1!Jl8, entered
without bre!lklng a building under
the control of the Boone County
Board and Education and stole a
human skeleton valued at $655.
Kuhn Is scheduled to appear In
the Meigs Coonty Court on Tuesday
to Indicate whether be wtll waive
extradition to tbeStateo! West VIr·
glnla to an6wer the charges.
In other department action,
David Wayne Grlndstaff, Racine,
reported Sunday morning the theft
~ a three month old German shepherd pup from his home.
'The sheriff's department also In·
vesUgated an acclde!lt Saturday
(COntinued on page 10)

WHITE HOUSE RETURN - . President and Mrs. Reagan walk
acrONo the White HtlltHe StJUih Lawn Sunday, on their return from a
weekend at Camp David, Md. The president spoke brielly with reporters,
but refused comment on a published report he approved a plan to assist
foreign govenunenb In diHrupllng alleged ,Cuban-Nicaraguan supply
lines to al~eSnlvadoran R~Jerrlllas . ( AP Laserphoto).

Lincoln said best, Nixon worst
ELYRIA, Ohio lAP) - An Informal poll of readers of an Ohio
newspaper shows they consider Abraham Lincoln the best U.S .
president and Richard Nixon, the worst. 1
The Elyria Chronicle-Telegram, with a circulation of aboutl'i,txll,
modeled Its poll after one recently conducted by the Chicago Tribune
Magazine.
Rounding out the top 10, In order, tor the Ohio newspaper were
George Washington , Franklin D. Roosevelt, Thomas .Jefferson,
Harry Truman, .John F. Kennedy, Teddy Roosevelt, Woodrow \VII·
· son, Dwight Eisenhower and Andrew Jackson.
The nine other "worst presidents" In the Chronicle-Telegram's
poll, ln order, are.Jimmy Carter, Warren Harding, Herbert Hodver,
Ulysses Grant, Andrew .Johnson, Lyndon .Johnson, Gerald Ford,
Ronald Reagan and Mar1ln Van Buren.

.....--.:...----------;_--~''

'-~

IJIIZ BASKETBALL 8WEE111EART8 - DuriN
bauuine ceremoaln •t die SoutJrerD.MIIIer reHn"e
game the IJIIZ Soatbera High Scbool bUI!e1ball•weelheart wa1 Cl owaed. Sbowll are quee01 Mel CluMIIff •ad
Alida Eva!M, wbo lied In baUotlag amOIJf( tile ilx ea.

,,

dklatn lbat ' were aomlnated. Each candidate wa•
e»eorted by a rmilor member of Stllttbern's Varsity
baskelbiiD IICiuad. Pictured are, 1-r, Kent WoUc, cHcort

fA Queen Mel CandUI; and Queen Alicia Evans, escor·
ted by Jay Reet.

�••

Monday, February 15, 1982

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

·commentary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 15, 1982

,.

Go home, Rodriq:Lu=e-=z=-____.::;_w_il_lw_:n_F_.n_uc_k_tey_Jr.

•

The Daily Sentinef
lll CoviSUeel
P -, OIIIo

,

IIHI!-IIJI

DEVOTm TO THE INTEREST OF t11E MEIGJ.MASON AREA

~lh

~m~ ~'-~' r""'f""WRd•~=~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Pllblilkr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

Allil&amp;u:l PubUI•r/Coatroll~r

Guerll Maa~aer

DALE RO'IliGEB, JR.
New• Editor
A MEMBER vi 'J1Ito A.M:bded Prrtl, ...... O.Uy Pftll AIMtiiU• ud tbt
...._N...,poperPIIlllJoiMn"-lalloL
.

o.n-

LE1TER8 OF OPINION •rr we~ . They •hould bt ieM
wonllloq. AU
ldlen •R! •bJed &amp;e flllldac aad mut be •lped wtdl ame, addl'ftll ud 1e1ep1M1Dt
.amber. Nt-Jped ~Uen wW be pabUIIIed. Letten1bllkl bt Ia &amp;ood Wk,addraalDC
IIIMI, ... pei'IMalltlet,

Wrong on rights
To absolutely no one's surprise, President Reagan has given the government in El Salvador a pa ssi n~ ~rade in hwnan rights.
He did so under terrn&lt; of the aid program approved by Congress last
December, which require• him to evaluate periodically the milit.lry. dominated junt.l's performance. Should he at any poi nt flunk the generals.
$25 million worth of military aid and $40 million in economic assist.lnce
would be cut off.
The Washington Post. which has not had many favorable words for this
presitlent's performance, is on his side for a ·change. It believes he diu the
"ri~ht and necessary thing" anu criti cizes Congress for forcing him to jump
a hurdle in doing so.
AHthe Post sees it in a curiously reasont•d editorial for that liberal thu1&gt;
derer, the United St.ltes under two presi denl&lt; has had no choife in El
Salvador but to adopt a "grit-your-teeth policy":
" For ll&lt;!Ople who can't t.lke the junla. the honest response is not to say the
junla is- surprise - beset and flawed , but rather to make the case that it's
at•ceplable to the Unite&lt;l States if El Salvauor goes the Cuban way."
The Post is wron~ . The ~easons are to be found on its own news pages in the
&lt;lispalches of its own correspondents on the '"'·
Fr0111 M&lt;rtote. near the Honuuran bord• .
. report the aftermath of a
Salvador•n anlJy oper~tion in December. ·- .•e largcts were guerrillas but
the vil'tims were several hundred civilians. According to survivors. troopH
arrived in helicopters, herded men, women and rh ilt.lren into tht! l'hurch
square and massacred the1n.
Enlerin~

MO'lOlc a Jnonth ~ la te r . Alma Guillcrmoprielo rl'ports, " the over-

whchninJ:t initial impression

we:~s

of lht• sil'kly sweL'l snwll of decomposing

IJ&lt;Idies."
From au horities in San Salvatlor. thl:!re has l'OHw a denial of 1nilii.Hry
respnnsibilily and an attempt to fin~er the guerrillas. Whatever weapons the
latter may be receiving fr011 1their Cuban friends. not even the U. S. Dcpartll •ent is yet saying helicopters arc included. ·
Sn much for human ri~hts. Salvadoran style.
Meanwhile, Christopher Dickey details ina front -pag&lt;· report the guerrilla
atlack on Ilopan~o air base that destroyed a g&lt;Jod part of the Salvadoran Air
Force. induded five of 14 American helicopters tm loan. II was a tnlally surpriso· assault that rc..:alls ~ucrrill• ladies during the Vietnam War.
· It's not the only sueh echo. In San ·Salvador. the junla and the America n
Fn1bassy continue to score paper atlvanl'e~ against the ~uerrillas and tn
daim that the country is cffcctivt•ly undt•r govcrlll ll&lt;!nt control.
Hut ouL~ide the capititl. on the first-hand te:&lt; limnny of Post and oth•·r
rt'I&gt;Ortcrs whn he:~ vc visited tl1c an•a s~- llw guerrilla~ Hl'l' in cumnumd of l ar~t·
rcdons (.I nti thei r lllilil.C::Iry t•apttbililics Hrl' obviously ~ rowin~ . to t11c point
t11at they CCI IlltiOUnt a successful atte:~ c k nn a key 111 i lita r~· installation on the

nu! Hk1rts of tlw ca1Jilal il'&lt;•lf.
M ~an whil e. the SalwiLiurrmlnilitary tlirecb its fire primanly at dvtha ns.
tlriv ing whrtl

ll1HY nri~inally h a \ 'l'

bt•t•n an CJ polilieal JK)pulation

i nt· reasin~ ly

into the 1·anks of the reb,. is.
The United Slates IS not bal'king a reformist junla, as assl'rte&lt;l by the Pust.
That ani11 1al died wh~n the nnlilary purgt•tl its l't•formislii 1CIH bcr:-; . Tilt· junta is now tht· n ca lurc 11( the r·igllt-wing gc ah·rttls. Rather than pressuring

thc11 1 In changt• tlwir wa ys.

L'lllllinuilt J! 1\n~t•riecm

Hid n ·assurcs

l1Wn 1 that

t11ey 11t·ed 11111.
W r-~sll in dun

IS bnck i n ~· yd Hllntht'l' wrong horst• in Latin 1\mt!rica - and
ra is ing llw sh:tkt•s as with t•adl stun,blt•. II is driving tlw Salvadnnul oppO:o·ut inn. initially a broad fn 111 \ ran j.!illg frn11 1 dissult·•nt Christian Dt'IIIOt 'l'als
tll rnugh S~Vt' ral shaUl'S or radit·a ls tu he:~ nl· linc M r:~nci ~ ts . incrcas inJ,! Iy iul u"

the enntrulof till' IusI.
It i.s nut

fWt· ventin~

El Salntdtlr fro111 guing duwn tht.&gt; Couu11Unist drain bul

making it inevitable that it will do so. Unless. the Cu ban way being tot.llly
unH&lt;W)llabk. pnlil'y makers ~ rit their Ieeth and make what eventually will
he tlwir ''nly rcw aG1illJ.!, dmit•c - L'OIIUTlitting U. S. force~ tu tile ba ttle .

Would t11at bt• at•ceptable to tht· Post? To tht· U1iil&lt;·tl Stal&lt;'s?

Berry's World

"Just a minute, Mr. O'ShllllnfiB8y. Which IRA

are !W' diiiCUIIBihg Wtl?"

Today in history
Today Is Monday, Feb.l!S, the46thdayot19112. There are 319days left In
the year.
Today's hlghllght In history:
On Feb. l!S, 1922, the Pennanent Court or lntematlonal Justice held 111
tlrst II!SIIon at the Hague.
On this date:
---~ t:"f - &gt; .... 1 ' '
In 1789, the Roman Republic was piocwmed by the French after-ibe
capture of Rome.
.,
·
In 1944, U.S. troops completed theli' reconquest of the Solomon Islands In
the Pacific d~ Wl!l"ld Warn.
In 1963, several people, lnciudl!l8 three anny o111cera, were arrested ln
FraiV!e 011 Clla!'JI!I of plotting to ai\MuJnate Prelident Charles de Gaulle.
And In ~. China's fon!lgn minister, Chen Yl, said In Peldni that
peaceflt1 coexlltelloe with United States was out of the~·
Ten years ago, Attorney General John Mitchell reslped to take over as
director of President Richard Nixon's re-election campalp.
.
Five years qo, President Carter's mother, LWlan, recetved a wann
welcome In a town oorth of BorDbay, IDdla, wllere' lhe had lem!d·ln the
Peace Corps ten years earlier.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

On ·Jan. 15, the lrnmi~ration and
Naturalization folks sent back to
Cuba one Andrew Rodriguez Hernende-t, who had arrived in Miami as
a stowaway on a ccltrunercial vessel.
He is the first Cuban to land on
American soil sin&lt;!!! Castro took over
who asked for asylum and was
denied even an official hearing
before being returned . Atelegram of
protest dispatched to President
Reagan by leaders of hwnanitarian
or~a nizations recalls the cause of
Sifl]3s Kudirka, very much worth
recalling for several reasons.
It h;!ppened in 1970, off Martha's
Vineyard. A CoastGuard vessel was
stanuing by a RUS!Iian freighter
(just wliy , I do not recall) when suddenly a member of the Soviet crew
jumped on to the American vessel
and asked for asylwn. The captain
of the Russian freighter ·had a
heated conversation with tl)e Coast
Guard captain who, baffled as to
. what to do, wired headquarters in
Boston to advise him. One Admiral
Bender subsequently told the press
that the defector was returned to the
Russian freighter (his following stop
was Siberia) because the Soviet captain had confided lo the Coast Guard
captain that Kudirka was a common '
criminal, who had stolen $2,000.
Evidently for fear that he might be
thought naive presumptively to accept the charge of tbe Soviet captain
under the circwnstances, the admiral went on to say that the defector had leaped directly onto the
American boat rather than first
jumping into the water. Had
Kudirka done that, we were left to
assume, then the Coast Guard would
have picked him up not off a Russian
freighter , but from the Atlantic
Ocean. Understand? The planted
axiom in the story presupposes that
the Geneva Convention haa a clause
in it assigning to salt water some
sacramental property which transubstantiates an ordinary refugee

into a legitimate claimant for not Jewish, but nevertheless you ·him !hat any communication of thai
disapproved of life under Hitler' Ar- secret to the authorities would result
political asylum.
Now the inunigration people in ticle 33 of' the United Nation's Con- in your refusin~ ever again to speak
Miami began by telling us that the vention Relating to Refugees is to him. Thai is personal inCuban, Rodriguez, had as a baseil on the assumption that people timidation. Penalty? - three to
stowaway no status; but if he had . have a right to leave their country. eight years. Only the government of
defected properly, he'd have come On what grounds? In Castro's Cuba Cuba is authorized personally to inin under some other auspice than there is something missing, namely· timidate.
one that is clea rly illegal. Besides, freedom. To he deprived of freedom
In Switzerland during the -World
under the new 1980 Refugee Act, it is is, surely, persecution• Suppose thai
War
it was forbidden to enter from
specified that in order to achieve you were a Cuban and decided thai
Germany
or France, and the borasylum, it is required that the ap- life under a totalitarian dictator was
ders
were
patrolled. But if such
plicant prove a " well-founded fear of not worth living and resolved to
patrols
were
penetrated, as secretly
persecution.
escape, to which end you put away a
they
were,
the
Swiss didn't then
Now thai is a perplexing few pesos of your monthly salary in
return
the
refugees
- as we (our
requirement. If in Nazi Germany order to have something in your
capital
crime
of
this
century)
returyou were, say, Jewish, you could pocket the day you succeeded - six
ned
to
Russia
tne
refugees
pursuant
preswnabiy have proved, under the months to three years.
Now, suppose that you confide to the Yalta ·Agreement after the
new !avo:, a well-founded fear of persecution. But suppose thai you were your plans to your brother and warn Second World War.
11

As a parent of six children of
which four are still in their teens, I
have known both sorrow and happiness in trying to raise my children
In the fast pace that this world Is
moving. But one thing I have found,
love overcomes and outweighs all
the broken dreams and tears. If I
speak in the vernacular of my tee111
and understand the language of their
peers, but do not give them love, I
am just like so much noise falling on
thelrears.
If I could tell my children exactly
what their future holds; if I knew
everything ahead of them, and If I
believed that some day each one of
them would make it, but did "ol give
them love, I am noth\ng. If I give
them evecything they want, if I
sacrlfic.. all I have- even my life for them, and give no love, they gain

RACINE - The newly crowned
SVAC champion Southeril Tornadoes. behinu a fast-b1·eaking
double figure quartet. rolled to a 7156 triumph over the Miller Falcons
here ·Saturday evening., Tile win
boosts Southern to 18-1. while Milici"
drops to 1()-7,
The notorious "Wolfe Ga ng" led
by the sha rp-shooting Wolfe boys.
Kent and Richard, helped clip the
Falcons' wings with dual16 point efforts . Seniors . Robert Brown andI Jay
, Rees left the scene with 12 and 10
points respectivey in outslanding ef-

forts.
Miller's Jay Luning led all scorers
with 17 points followeu by John
Imler's 12 and Rodney Burgess witll
II. .

Coach Carl Wolfe's boys took a 1912 first period lead after Miller ~ ra b­
bed the openin~ tip anu score&lt;l on a
Tom Gaitten
Richard Wolfe

lot.·ked the srnre al two ~.·ach t &gt;ll a
patented jur nper £1·om tlw l'unwr

IJ&lt;·fore Miller can '&lt;' back ),&gt; rc~a111
tlw lead nn l.unin ~·s first ~oa l. A
Kent Wolfe drivt• an&lt;l 1'11111
:;o:se bc i'I'Y steal brnkc Opl' ll
Southern' s torr id atta ck and
Southcrnnt•ver lookt•d back.
Ocspit~ a clost' 1-!amc· in lht•
nl~ening slagcs. the bailie that many
expected never developed. By the
time the half rolled around SHS
glided to a 37-22 1ead.
Senior gui\rd Kent Wolfe aga in
uisiJiaycd a sparkling floor game.
ending tht• half witil 12 points.
Richard Wolfe and Bn1wn, in aduitiOn to dominatin~ tile boards.
poured in 'eight and six points at the
half. Lunin~ netlell all of his ei~ht
fi rst half points in !he opening round,
while Imler did the same in the
second can to.
After the half the hosts · aKain

t'&lt;Juc. ht f1rc .

Re~s

and Zane

Bt·~g lc_

l'acll hat! a t! Ot:N t halfto ~o along with

the

retnaimh •r

of

Llw

quartet.

Despll&lt;' Sout11ern"s hoi sll·eak.
Mill er continued t~ fi ght back as ilw
period t·ndet.i Cl2-33.
M tllnent.s into the last n1und.

Suuth&lt;·rn s ubstit~te&lt;l freely and
alm ost evcrv Tornado hit the
st·urin~ colun.lll. When t)lc dust had
Hcttlcd in the final frame. the scort!board lit up to the tune of a 71{&gt;6
Southern win.
In the second half, Rich Wolfe had
t•iJJ;ht. RePs .seven. and Brown six.
while Burgess and Lun in~ each canned nine for Mille~· .
Southc1·n enjoyed a warrn ni~ ht
from tlw floor. hi lti n~ 27 of 55 for 49
JJCrl'cnt ahu hit i7 of 25 from the line
f&lt;'l" 68 percent. Miller canned 23 of 51
attempts for 45 percent, and zippeu
10 of 19 at the line.
Southern dominated the boards 41·
25 Jed by Brown's 14. Lunin~ and

0

Imler had eight and seven lot· the
Falcons. SHS had 21 turnover.. 18
fouls. an&lt;l II assists. Miller had i9
turnovers, 21 fouls and ei~ht assists.
The hustlin~ Southern reserves of
Coach Howie Caldwell rolled to a 6140 win over the little Falcons. Tony
Deem had 17 points, and Kevin Curfman · 14 for the winners. Larry
RuHiling had 14 markers for Miller.
Southern wintls up its regular
season play Friday at home against
Ky ger Creek, the~ will gear "P for
sedional tourna1hent play wl1ere
Southern and Eastern clash at Meigs
High School.
sOuth ern (71) - R . Wolf e 7·2·16;
Frederick 0·2·2; Rees 4·2 · 10; Bost ic k
1·0·2; Brown 5·2· 12; Roseberry 1·0·2;
Beeqle 2·3·7; K . Wolfe 7·2·16 ; PapeO·
2 2; c umm ins0·2·2. Totals 27 · 11· 71.

Mi ller

(56) -

Iml er

6·0·12;

Morqan 3-0·6 : Gi ll 1·0·2; Harvey 1 2·
4; Luning 6· 5· 17; Burg ess 4-3· 11 ;
GE~i tt e n 7·0 ·A. Total s 23 · 10· 50 .
1\V quarters :
Southern
19 37 52 71

M;ller

12 22 33 56

College scores
By '1'111!

•...t•ed ~

""""

~rlcan U. 81, Towllon St. 73
Baltimort' 89. MWt 73
Baston Coil . 1111, Holy Crou 81

Boston U . 71. New Hampshlre 55

Canlaiul 52, Colgate "

Columbia 19. Brown ~
ComeU !10. Yak! .9
Dc!laware St. IW, Md .·E.Shore 73
Drexel

78. Hotstra 63

Fordham 58, Fairfield ~ . ar
Georpl:own, D,C. IM, Southern U. 48
HarYard 53, Prtnceton .9,

ar

Howard U. 77. W.1WAOia 76
LAfayene 67•. Boc~l 66
Manhattan "·Army~

Nlapra 100, Vermont 78

Nortbeasli'rn

~.

Falrltotgh Dlclr.lroon 64

~nn

65, Dartmouth M
Provldl'DCe '19, Seton Hall 70

Rhode bland '10. Masaac:h.....etts 00
~r

M, l.ehl&amp;h 116
Robert Mon1s 81 , WAIJ'IN 7(J
Ru..... 01,
Wuhinglon 4.1

c:eo.a.

St.Francts1 N.Y. 63. Loyda. Md. 56
St .Jotleptl's 83. ~Salle n
st.Peter'a 60, Iona !17
Siena 72. St.f'rands, Pa. n
Sy~ '78. Corlnfoctrut 71
VIllanova 73, St.JOhn's, NY til

W.Cbester St. S7, Delaware 54
W.VIrginl.a 49. StBoi\IV('fltul't' 43
OOU111
AppaladUan St . S.S, Otadel ~
Ba.pUst 68. E .fiH nols Sl. £il, &lt;Y1'
Centil"'\ary 58, HOUltOn Bapds. ~
Davldaon 52, South Carolina !11
East CaroUna fi8, N.C.·WUminaton 6ti
Furman l lll, VMI Ill
George Muon 74, Wll...CA!en Bay 6:.1:

Q.oorgla !17, Loulsla111 Sl. !11
Ge:qla Tech 55, Ga.Southl'fn 40
Grambling St. n. M.!Js.Valley m
.Jaclr.lon St. 66, Alcorn St 6fo
.Jamft Madl.ton 6&amp;, IUclunond ~
l&lt;mtuclr.y 12. Alabama 62

nothing. When I was a young
mother, I was a visionary. ,
I had all the answers and knew all
the formulas for successful childrearing, but when my children were
grown I put those inunature ideas
behind me.
Now, I have no answers, I know so
little and my understanding is
limited.
.
Only in •Heaven can I know the
rest. There my understanding shall
be complete, my joy wiU be full and
my tears will be wiped away.
Three things I have now - Faith
that my children will remember
their training, Hope that this will influence their future, and Love thai
continues no matter what.
Some tears go with this territory.
Love is a risk and love costs the
giver something. But love is. tbe
greatest gift a parent can give. Virginia Riffle, Syracuse.

Failing the
.

Desire needed too
In past weeks I've written several
letters to make my point. But facts
are facts.
. In today's world we all should
learn to do a day's work for a living
and not take our govern!ment for
granted. It doesn't owe you or me a
dime If we 110!1'~ pay them anything .
Still ~~~ lhink they should be
taken care of from the cradle to the
grave. Well, itdoesn'fwork that way
today.
I was once poor and I worked my
way to the job I have now and I am
proud to work at my job. It is the
best one I've had and I worked hard
to get it.

I didn't lay around and draw
welfare and food stamps! I worked
for any amount I could get paid. The
price a person gets paid haa nothing
to do with eating. It's hiB goals in
mind that's what it's aU about.

•

.,I .&lt;!OIJ't want to see anyone starve
to ' 'death ·which our governfment
won't lei happen. If people would
work they could'be working.
You don'l.have to make a mint to
have a job ~ Just tbe will to do it.
So, Americans, the next time you
look at the help wanted ads, don't
just look at the rate of pay, look and
see if you're really wanting to work!
~ Floyd H. Cleland.

teSl~~r----------D-on_c_ra_iff

If you happened to be reading this
Atest that it is publicly failing.
Failing by insisting that the 'junta
space the other day, there's a chanFailing in President Reagan's
Is in control of the situation wpen
ce you '~{ere mislnfoM'led.
assurance to Congress that the junta exactly the revene is all too obIt was stated in RD analysis uf the is making progress in respecting
vious. Government. forces are
situation In El Salv&amp;dor that · tt.e human rights. An assurance
rapidly losing control of the countryUnited States ia providing that coun- required by the terms of the
side. Guerrillas are in command of
try's military junta with $25 million program authorized by Congress extensive areas outside the towns,
in military and $40 million in last December if aid is to continue, which they are beginning to attack
economic ald.
bul directly contrary to what is directly. Even worse !Or the junta,
That understates the real stakes known to be the true state of affairs they are now strong enough to mount
by many millions. Current in El Salvador. The junta · Is assaults on military Installations.
authorized economic assistance ac- becoming not only steadily more
The truth is that the rebels contuaily comes to $112 million. Fur- repressive , but openly con- tinue to move from strength to
thennore, before the ink h;!d a chan- temptuous of objections to ils ex- strength as American aid to the junta escalates. Aid that is actually selfce to dry on that commentary the ad- cesses.
ministration was announcing its inFailing in attempting to finger the defeating. The propaganda benefits
tention of tossing an additional ~ Salvadoran rebels for massacres of the rebels are reaping frqm the
million·In emergency funds Into the civlllans when American correspon- clwnsy American attempts to crush
Salvadoran pot.
dents on the scene know and are them far outweigh the military
The wisdom of that move may be reporting the truth to the American value of their Cuban-supplied
questionable - and w.e'il get to that public. The slaughter is over- weapons, which the administration
later - bit it certainlY provides an whelmingly the work of government says it so fears.
appropriate label for the El forces, in recent instances
The rationale for aiding the junta
Salvador business. It's an emergen- American-trained and equipped haa been that we thereby gain
cy, all right, and not cinlf for the jW&gt; units.
leverage In persuading the colonels
Ia's coloneals. El Salvador is
Falling in asserting that a to mend their ways.
developing Into a crisis of American desperately needed land-reform
False. As currently administere,!,
policy and a _test _!!! !!!!! aLJ)UI!!m -. is. su~ing when -~· $. assistance only encourages
ministration's wiUJnl!ness to'TeVef SiJVicJorans responsible""'£or'1!'Yiifg•=!ltttn to-OIIIInllle· and-1ntenslfy the
with the Cpngress and the people of to make it work are writing it off as a repression.
·
·
the United States.
lost cause.
The only way to make an im-

pression upon the junta is to cut off
American aid. Imme'diately. Completely.
Support for that drastic step is
growing In Congress, at least within
the responsible majorities in both
houses that have not made r
ideological common cause with the
Latin American despotism .
Resolutions to end aid have been introduced. They don't have the votes
to pass - yet - but even more
hesitant members are vocally
critical of the administration's disinfonnation campaign.
Americans for some time have
had good cause to be skeptical of
what their leaders have been telling
them about El Salvador specifically
and Central American in gener)!l.
They are no long_er to be believed at
aU.
And we lllii.Y bore that is
especially true in the case n(
Secre~ry of State Al~nder Haig,
who assured Congress 'that the administration is prepared to do
"whatever is necessary" to prevent
the defeat of the Salvadoran junta.
Think about that for a while.

Miller's Rodney Burge~~~ (15)
pressure on Soulbern's
Wolfe (12). Despite II, Wolfe enjoyed
another good offelll!ive night wllh 16 points In Southern's 71-51 noneonfereoce win.
-

Tomadoettes clinch
tie for SVAC crown
CHESHIRE - Saturday afternoon
Southern's Tornadoettes clinched at
least a tie for the SVAC championship with an impressive 7fl-'n
win over Kyger Creek's Lady Bobcats.
Southern needs to win only one of
its remaining two games to repeat
as Southern Valley Athletic conference champions.
The whirling Tornadoeltes are
now 13-1 ovetall, including 12
straight victories; its only loss
coming to Class" AAA" Gallipolis.
Junior guard Mel Weese once
again led Southern scoring with 22
important points, but also got a lot of
help from Senior forward Elaine
Smith, who hit for 16 points including
a perfect eight of eight from the
charity stripe.
Sophomore forwanl Laren Wolfe
added II points and 12 rebounds,
while Cindy Evans had II rebounds
and six points.

Incidentally, Weese, 1981's Most
Valuable Player of the SVAC, is
averaging 17.6 points per game.
Loretta Gilmore led Kyger 's
scoring with nine points.
Southern jumped to an 18-8 first
period lead, then opened up a 2fl
point spread, 37-17, at the half. SHS
blistered the nets in the third frame,
outscoring the hosts 24,§ before
coasting in for the 75-27 Win.
Southern, undefeated at 11-0 in league
play, hit on 28 of !i4 field goals for 52
percent and hit 19 of 29 from the line
for 66 percent.
southern H) - Weese 10·2-22 ;

Sa lser 1·2·A; Wolfe 4·3· 11 ; John son 2·
IH; E. Smith 4-8 ~ 16 ; Evans 2·2·6; R.
Sm ith 3-1· 7; M ichael2·1·5. Totals 28·

19-75.
~ yger Creek 127) - Gilmore 3·3·9;

Carman 1·0·2; Mul lins 1·0-2; Roush

2·0·4; H. Baird

2 ·0· ~ ;

Ra iney 0·1·1;

Connelly 2· 1-5. Totals 11 · 5· 27.
By quarters :

Southern

Kyger Cree k

. ROCK SPRINGS - An evenly
balanced sct:··'nl( attack allowed the
Wahama White ~·alcons ~o overcome
a 22·19 halftime deficit here Saturday enroute to a narrow 45-41 victory
over the Meigs Marauders.
The winners were led in scoring by
Travis Grey with 10 points, followed
by Kendall Weaver and Donnie Van
Meier with eight each, Mark Roush
seven, and Estel Lavender, Jim
Powell each si~.
Meigs' Bob Ashley led all scorers
with 17 points, and Mike Riggs ad·
ded eight.
Wahama shot out of the gate in the
opening canto and spurted to an 11-8
lead at the conclusion of the quarter.
After renewing its life between ~uar­
ters, the White Falcons soared to a
17-81ead early in the second period.
The local Marauders made the
necessary adjustments. and went on
a rage of Its own, ripping the nets
and outscoring the visitors 14-2.
carrying the lead and momentum into the lockerroom at the half, the
score22-19.
Wahama gained momentum in the
third frame and warmed up the nets,
while Meigs hit a drought from the
floor. In the frame the White
Falcons outscore&lt;l its oponents 15-7
to regain the lead, 33-29 a( the buzzer.
In the last quarter, Waharna and

Memphb St. 62. f'lor1da St. 60
Mercer -m, San\lord 61, OT
Mlatalppt 58, f1011da n.

ar

Misallllppl Sl. 59, Auburn 45

Mol'l'hOad St. 8S. A111Un PMy a:!
MWTil)' St . 11, E.KentliCk)' 74

N.carouna AAT 73, nonda AAM n ,

"""

N.C.-Ot.ariotte 117 , ~· St. 17

17

22

Meigs batlled evenly, but Meigs
couldn't produce that extra punch it
neede&lt;l going down the stretch.
When it wsa all over the scoreboaru
lit up to the tune of a 4f&gt;.ll White
Falcon win.
Meigs was 17 of 45 from the floor
for 39 percent, while WHS hit 17 of
44. Although Meigs shot a good per·
cent.lge from the line, WHS scoreu
four more from the charity stripe to
produce the winning margin. Meigs
hit seven of 10 and WHS canHed II of
16.
Meigs had 14 fouls , 18 turnovers,
and 29 rebounds led by Ashley's 18.
Wahama had II fouls, 15 turnovers,
and 30 rebounds.
The Meigs reserves rolled to a
thrilling 48-43 win over the little
Falcons led by Chris Burdette with
14 points, and John Smith with II
points. For WHS Ron Bradley had 14 ·
and Scott Kimes 10. Mei gs overcame
a 27-23 halftime deficit for the win .
Meigs hosts Wellston in its final
regular season game this Friday .
MEIG S 14ll - Edwa rd s 30 6;
Ashley 6·5·17, Murrava 2·2-6; Riggs
4-0-8 and Chancey 2-0·4. Total s 17·7·
41.
Wa hama (45) W ea v er ..t -0·8 ;
Gr ey 5-0·10; Lavender 3·0·6; Van
Meter 1·6·8 : Rous n 2·3 ·7 and Powell
2·2·6. Totals 17·11 ·45 .
By qua rters:
ll 8 15 11- 45
Wahamna
8 14 7 12- ~1
M eiQs

27

KC sets. win record;
whips Hannan, 94-27
After losing a poorly played 47-44
decision to Eastern Friday night,
Ky~er Creek blitzed host Hannan ,
W. Va. Saturday evening, 94-27 in a
non-conference game.
The victory. Kyger's 12th this
scaosn. sets a school record for the
most viclories ever by a Bobcat
basketball team. The previous mark
was set in 196(H)7 by John Wickline's
team which posted an 11-9 record .
Saturday night, the Bobcats caine
out howling scoring 2l points in the
first period to lake a co1rummding
21-J lead.
KC never let up in the second slanza as the Bobcats canned 25 points
for a 46-lllead atthe hall. After a 14
point thiru period, the Gailians ripped the nets for 34 points during ·a
hot shooting fourth quarter .
Every player on the varsity scorc'tl
wllh smhc second liners enj oyi ng
fine .nights .
Keith Clark led the winners with 15

I

ALL
I F: AM
1/VI I('C IPrSb Urq
Pnrtsm oul h
AtllCnS
Gfl ll,po l is

GAME. ~

Pl . Pl c ~ snnt

w L

I'

.or

17 I 1323 996
IS 3 1310 1105
14 5 1276 1059
13 5 988 896
B 3 679 586
10 8 826 788
9 9 998 999
9 9 1004 951
9 9 1185 1234
8 ll 1108 171 5
6 10 831 894
5 1.-t 1071 1244
0 19 1005 1314

(h il lu: ott le
Iron ton
w .wc r t v
Jil e k son
w ellston
Wet sl11nctton CH
Loqrtn
MP I{JS
~ .l tu rdilV ' s non · ~ F 0 scor es :
f r •rn b le 77 Well ston 55
Whce lcrsbu rq 45 Waverl y 43
Wrt• ,a ma .45 M clqs .4 1
Por tsm out h 70 Miln nn F rankl in 6A
( 7 nt J

Wr'l"'h ,nq ton C H 59 Mild ISOn Pitt in &lt;.
~f. O "AL V liR~I TY

l1 ~M
Cillhpni,S

Allw ns,
Wavr rl y
tr on 1on
J ack sn n
Loq a n
Well st f'ln
M rc(JS

IOlAL S

w L I' Of'
17 1 745 627
10 3 891 734
7 5 679 617
7 6 738 715
5 I 798 773
5 8 732 ROO
5 R 809 875
0 13 698 949
Sl 51 6090 6090

resu lt :
A thens69 1rnnton 53

s~ turd ay 's

..

Area box scores
FEO f RAL HOO ING 167) Tab ler 0·2·2: Glass 9·5·23 ; Koker 1 5
9; Ru sse ll 3·0·6; K1•n nrdy 7 .4 18 ;
Benne tt 4·1·9. Totals H - 17·67.

NO RTH GALLIA 158) -

Black

burn 6 5· 17 ; Occ t 4·0·8; H oll e 1 0 "1 ;
Holl i nqshca d 1 'l .4 ; Kemp er 1 0 2:
Mays 1 4 18; N ea l 2 3 7. Total\ 22 · 14SB .
Score by quMters :
14 1.4 13 16-67
F ede ral Hock ing

North Ga ll ia

10 18 13 17-· 58

IRONTON 153) - Mark Fields 1·8·
10; Jimmy M orr is 5·0· 10 ; Denni s
Beacon 4·0·8; Rick F r ifl 4·0·8; J ay

Wolfe O · ll ; Mark Dic kens 1-0·2;
Bill Thomasi ·N . TOTALS 20·13·5l.

ATHENS 169) - Brent Henry 1...

6 ; Mall Stenson 0·2·2; Brad Baker 0·
2-2: J i m Schanzenb act'l 1-2·4; Kev i n
Schwarze! 3·2·8,· lom D owney 0·0·0 ;

M; ke Croc i 3·0·6; Woody May le 8 1·
17; Sieve Bruning 9·6·24. TOTALS
25·19-69.

ASHLEY roMPER · llelp' lab Allller INI'ellll7 lo eock . . rtpt

*

u'*

annforaeloteWMtenlptaplnetWIIIIama'aX.. HWeaver(ll)
darlac IW1Dday'1 45-61 IGa Tra¥11 01'11)' (ZZ) IDOCher Wblte Falcon
p1ayer • prtltdarlbe ltaeterrllorJ UDder the ='lkdbdJ 11m Tucker
photo.

',

p&lt;lints ; Jeff Moles anu Ron Martin
dumPed in 12 points apiece, Brent
Love had 13 and J. D. Bradbury
finished with 10. Noodles Tolliver led.
Hannan with 12 points.
Ky~er Creek shot a bliste~·ing 52·
pt'fCt!nl frmn the rloor commctin~ un , ,
32 of 52 attempts anu 30 of 4:! at the ·
foul lines.
".:·
The Bobcal' play at Elk Valley
this evening at 6 p.m. in another' ··

game postponed earlier uue to bad
weather. Friuay. KC closes its '
rc~ule:~r season play at Southern.
'
Box score :
·•,.
k YGER CREEt&lt; (94) - Clark 6· 3·
15. S11nds 2 3 7; M a rt in 3 6 17; Moles '
6 0· 12: love 6 1 13 : Pn ce 3·3·9
Strnud 2·3 7:, Barr 1·7·9 ; an d Brnd·,
hu ry , J .4· 10 . T ota Is 31·30·94,
HANNAN , W . Vol . (27) - Ta ll iv('r
6 0 17; SpurlO Ck I I 3; Y ou nq I j 5:"
Pow er s 3 0 6; Smi t h 0-1·1. To fil ls 11 ·

1·27'

fl y quart€!rS :
Kyq er Crf'f'k
Hannan , W , Va .

21 25
3

8

14
7

34- 94
9- 27

Area cage standings

II&gt;

, FULL STEAM AHEAD - lUck Cltuiley (14) bu an awkward expa•
sloD 011
r.ce u be all
a lhort Jmnp lllot over'*.., he
n-. Waltama'a Alta Madllr (.). Waltama ezta+d Melp' . . . .
lllreak wllh a 45-0 vld«y. 11m Tucker photo.

·'

N£ l..oullla.na 11. Han:tln·Stmmona 66

NW Loublana 96, Ark. · Llt ~ Rock 86
Old Ocmlnklo 8.1, Navy 5$
Sooth Alabama 7R. Nicholls St. !II ·

18 37. 61 75
8

'.

FLYING CENTER- Robert Brown (441, Southern'N senior center,
leav.,. lbe Door for a jump shot over the stretching booy of Jay Luning
i33l of Miller Saturday night. Brown had 12 points In helping the Tornadoes capture their 18th victory.

Marthall lCfl, CampbeU 66
McNf'Cit Sl. 51, Lamar •9

Wahama trips Meigs

Letters to .the editor_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
'Love abounds

Southern rolls over Falc.o ns

I

score by quarters:

Ironton
10 17 13 13-53
Athens
19 10 14 26-69
Reserve score : Athens 43, Iron ton
35.

\

•.EOAL R F. H . RVES

If AM

AlllC nS
Jock son
c~ n lllp ol ' !;o

•rnnt on
WilvNIY
Wt •ll s t on
L fH 1•1 n

Mt •1q5
"I QTJ\l ~

w

ll

I.
l

p

609
9 3 545
9 4 537
9 4 628
6 6 468
4 9 553
7 ll 444
I 12 445
51 Sl 4229
2

0 1'

489
429
470
517

489
613

589 .

633 ' ' •

4229, ·

~. iltur dolV ' 5

r es ult :
1\fhC'nS 43 Iron ton 35
Tuc s.d,ly ' s qnm('s :
W;~ s ht n u t on C H i'll Ei'l St Cl 1nl on
'•
P t . P tcas.1nt " ' M 1llon
O c l ~twar c nt Chd li r o111r
ThUr'Sd.:'ly'S g,lm C:
Ol Pl . Plf'fJ SEI Ot , •
St'&gt;sonv i l lc
lrnak cu p , 1: 151
Frid ay ' s gilm cs :
'•
Gilll lpolis At LO' tfln
We ll ston M M PiQs
1rnnton ilt J ""cko;,on
Athens a t w aver ly
'
Ch il1i co t11c a t W hi tcJ,al l
Gr cf"nup at Port5m oul ll
•
W11CCier sburq ilf No rt nwcst
Wdm i nq ton at Wo%hi nqt rm C H
~. a turd clV'S Q il M C!I :
Ches apeake i'l t Wh cclcr sb ur q
Port sm outh rtf Iront on
Pt PICr'ISrtnf M G a11cpm1s
JMkson n1 Wrw r rl y (m nkcu p l

.

- '•

"1 .

�~·

Pomerot Midcllepo!f, ·.Ohio

Page-4L The' Daily Sentinel

February 15, 1982

Allison overcomes obstacles
to capture 24th Daytona 500
By DICK BRINSTER
AP Sporia Wrtler
DAYToNA BEACH, Fla. (AP)
- The rear bumper was gone, the
fuel pressure read zero and the en·
gtne sputtered, but for Bobby All!·
son, vindication came In the form of
a Dayto!l8 500 victory.
The 44-year-old driver from
Hueytown, Ala., overcame all obstacles Sunday and won the 24th
running-of stock car racing's most
coveted prize and a $120,(15() share
ol a $927,625 purse.
"I had faith In the crew," Allison
said when asked about 1981, when
he ran out of gas With 26 laps remaining and lost a race be bad
dominated. "He (crew chief Gary
Nelson) got on the radio and sald
we were going to try ID go the distance. And I said, 'okay."'
So Allison built an Insurmountable.lead after pitting wlth 100 miles
remalnlng and had barely enough
fuel to finish. R'!Jllllng for a different team last year, a slmllar decision Cost him a chance to join
Richard Petty and Cale Yarborough as the only drivers ever ID ·
wln the race mo.r e t)lan once.
aearly, Alllson was more fortunate than he was when he saw

·.

...
..
...

By The Bend

Victory important to me--Levi
By BOB GREEN
AP Golf Writer
HONOLULU !APl· Wayne Levi's victory In the Hawaiian Open
put him In a different, much more
pleasant category on the pro golf

tour.

TASTE OF VICTORY - Robby Allison, from

lime here Sunday alter winnln~ the Daytona 500 aulu

Hu~ytuwn, -"'Ia., gds ~ Laste uf t'hampa~ne in vit•tnry

nll'c and taking home 1120,030 in prize modey. 'AP

"It was a very, very Important
victory for me," Levi said alter
he'd outlasted a host of would-be
challengers with a 2-under-par 70
Sunday, good enough fc.,· a 1-stro)&lt;e
triumph.
There are at least three major
benefits.
First, he's no longer subject to
the rigors of the Monday morning
qualifying rounds, the Ill-hole shootout non-exempt players must survive just ID gain a spot In the
taurnamenl field.
Second, "there's another berth In
the Masters," Levi sald.
And third, there's a spot awaiting
him In the Tournament of Champions at La Costa, Calif., "an absolutely great tournament for the
pros," Levi said.
Levi, 28, captured his thlrd'lndl-

I .lJso·rpholoJ

Scoreboard...

,.

Pro standings

High school

TUlane 81, St.Looll ~7
Vllll:inta ~. Clem110n 54
Wa kfo Forst 86, Duke n

National Hockl!y Leque
w~

scores

Conference

,.. ....
",., " ' "' '" ""'
"" ""
"' "
"'" " " "'"" "'
" " """" "" "
... "'
"'
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"' " '""' "''" ""
"
,."" " ·~ ·~ "'
m

Pllf.rlclt DlvWon

w

OF GA

T

L

9 211 119
Ill 216
9 . 2'41

21

21 '!I
16 3J

Wall h l~ton

A.dui'Wi DlvUllon

3J 11
18

Montrrul

8 :Jll
9 ?II
Bu!l11kl
tl
10
IIH rt!urd
26 14
l: ..mphl'll COnfer'l!ftee
Non1~ J)lvhllon
21 111 16
M lnm '!ilJla
17
211
St . Louis
21
10 2$1
Chlct~J.!O
II
W lnniJ l'~
16 29 ll
Toronto
,1 ) II l!ll
IJrotrolt
Sm,Ythe OlvWon
:16
II .\ :.11
Edmonton
Rostun

..,....

Zl

(.;r, l~lll)'

Vancouver
Loa

A n ~&lt;.&gt;lt'!i

12 &gt;II

" "'

13
!I

36

""" "

Archbold

4G

1&lt;1

2&lt;\ &lt;I

HI R1

&lt;1

'"' "' "'

!:\RhmlitY'II (htRI4"1

NY IJIU!klt'l'll ~. Phlladi'IJlhla 'l
NY Jtan~J"li :1, Hartford 'l
O IIJ&lt;itl)' 6. flosto n :l
Mont real 7, WlnniJll'~ J
l.os Angel4'!1 :1. Plt L~bu!'J&lt;h 3, Ill'
O t iC&lt;~IlO 6. Toronto 4
Mln~Ul 6. 1)(&gt;1rolt I

ClPVe
Wood &lt;[I

Cleve. St. ht:natlus
01!'Vf'. Unl\-' {lf'!jjl)•
COl .

U m~~

t:.\.'!i• n: HN I;UNJo' t:Ht:Nl'E
Al~ntlt · lMvWoo
w 1.
rr.t. GO

Mllwnuk('('

.
.

lX'trol t
ll'ldlana
Atlunto
Chkul!ll)

'

lloostoo
Dl'llVer

Ulllh
l&gt;a\l ru

Kar1.o;a5 City

.

sea ttle
lm An11:clcs

.
.·.
~
·~

_.,'

.491!

19

.4.11
.41&gt;1

" ·""

39
.220
11
wm\TEUN CONt,.::RENCE
Mldwt llt DtvWon
17
San Antonio
CI!'Vl!IU nd

...
.
~~

·"" ,,

'"" ""'2'J" ""·"" ""..
·"'
"12" "'2'J" .4."'11
19 "

Por11n l1ll
GoiOOn StatC'
.l'hoenlx
Su n Dlt'J;O

t

17

.

.,

Oanw

Plllllldelphla 117, NNI' York Uli

'•

Golden !\tat(' 100, Kili\SIII City 93
&amp;lion liB, Lui Anl(eles 103
San A(UOOIO 114, Sea!tle fN
Dalla!l W , New ,Jersey lot
Indiana 1117, Portland 91
Mttwa ukee m. Ck!vt!land 97

'
•,
~

~

..

Mllftday's Game
Dl!nvt:!l' al Utah

'

i

~IQ''IGIUll!lll

'·.,'
.........,.

...•.....J.
.... .
··""·.
..,J ..
·~

11 '
2'1

16
16¥,
~

7

~nday'•

'

" II

.~7 1

Phlluclclphlll llt NNI' York 107
Ml.lwaukcc ~ Clli&lt;'Ago 00
Hoo5!on 111, Waah!ng'!on t(H
Utah I:Jl PhOOI\JX U!i
Denver 146, &amp;In Diego m

Da!1M at New 'iork
ll ou~lon 8.1 Dl!troil
Pl\c)(!nllt at Chicago
Kan~~~~ s C!ty at Denver
Sea11ie at Loa Ange les
waahlngton at Portland
Allanta at San otego

Lona

Beach St. ~7. San .10M' St. ~ err
Montaftl 82, Montana St. i7
N4!Y,·W Vt'(IU liM, Pan American e6
Ncv.· Reno 81, N.Arlmna 79
New Mmco 64, Cokltaoo st. 62
Oreaot't SI.·H, &lt;mron ~1
fTppenllne 79, Poniand 64
San Otego St 19, Hawau tiO
San F'ra.ncbco ~. San Dlcao 00, 20T
Santa Cla111 tm. St.Mat'y'J, caut. 50
Swlhml Cll til, Art2IOnA 59, O'r
TellaS-E! Pa·'l 13, WyomJnc :rr
UCU!. 'l'l. Alll.UIIJ Sit . 80
WashlnitOft !1J, Stanford ~
Washlnaton Sl. 49, C.Womla '8

:1)

.....

.......,EAST

Webn St. 77, Bciae SL 66

I

New Miami 84, ~ Sllawnoo n
N. Canton 79, LoUisville Aqulr1a11 7.1
N. CoDC!IW HIII IWi. fl@thf'I·Tatf! 1"1
NorwaYJI(' 73. Buckeyr !16

~

N.Carollna 66, Geortlla 57
S.Florlda TI, VII'Jinla Conunoowta!th !B

MIDWI!&gt;JT

St .Xukr :wt. SJU.F..ttwan:Uvtlk&gt;

~

Pe tel'!lbt.Jf'R Spr1ng. 6.1, Mc Donald 62, OT

Plttsburxh Shadyside Ill, Hud&amp;Qfl WRA

"

PolAnd M, Wam!n 1&lt;c!nn00y 6..1
Portsmouth 70. CoL M11rlon·Franldln IH
IDr
.

Transactions

Rac ll'lf' SOOtr.am n, Mllk&gt;r 56
saUnevUIC SoutDem W, Ml1110 &amp;.'!
Shadyside 70. Buckl')'l! W. 54
Sht•1by 1\l, NOTWalk ~
S. Rangt 46, Min&lt;'ral Ridge 44
Sprtna. Calhollc 67.•Mtarru E. 44
Spr1ng. Nonhwestem 64, TecurTIICh so
Sprtng, Soulh 65, Spring Shawll('e :13
SummU Coontry Day If), E . Cllnton 66
Tr1mblc n. Wt'llttCil ~
'l'llllaw 6f., UIUa'ltown Lake 59
Upper SandllSky fn Gallon 32
Urbatu1 &amp;1, Grallam 47
·van Buren f7, OttovUJe .4Ci
Wahama . W. Va. 45. M1!1p 41
W11rw.n W. Relerw 81, Young. Ursuline

Wftkend s,..111'ranlat.OU...

.

WA1111nilon C. H. M, Madbon Plaint 56
Wetnon. W. Va., N, SteubenvWe 63
Wellington 611, Keyatone 52
WheotlersiNfl' e. Waverly tJ
WIUard 86, BeUewe 65
Wynrord ~.

Le1dft&amp;ton !15,

OT

Colle&amp;e--

SE LooiJia':ll '12, Te!UM!Uee St. lit
Tent'll!lllee 119, Vardl!rbl.lt S6
Tn ..at.ananooea fl. w .earoU.,. 11
Tl!lliBiol!e Tech 91 , N.C.·Aallevllle 66

......... ._..
.....MIL

CHICAGO• wtnTE

.seK~

...:ra.,.-

frmaz.ard , Pl!te Mack8.n111 and Steve Dll·
lard, !Aftelden: and Dave Rkhlitll,
calc net'.

l

CLEVELAND JNOJANs-sap.ed .John

Denny, pllcll«, 10 a thrft-year corttract.

DE.'TROrr TIGERS-&amp;aned Jerry T\lm·
er. ood\e1der.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Siined Tom·

Coach Torn Smith's Portsmouth
. n ( I'·'~
r top-seeded tn
·
Tr 0 Ja
s .....,, wee
the Class I).A Southern Sectional
High School Tournament, to be held
at Ironton Feb. 21&gt;-March 5.
Rock u·u (16-4)
ded
I
l
was see
second.
.___
,--- Coach Jim-&amp;.rborne's Gallipolis
Blue [}evils (13-5) were not seeded,
thus the Southeastern Oho League
champions must play and win three
games to get into the 1982 Qass AM
District at Athens.
Gallipolis will battle South Point
( 7·11) in the first sectional contest on
Thursday, Feb. 25, beglnl)ing at7:30
p.m. in the Ironton Sports Center.
Tickets are $2, ~nd may be purchasedatthedoor.

my ,Jot&amp;n, pitcher, lo a multJyear ron·
tract.

N - .......
CHICAGO ClJm-S4cned Dick Thlrow,
pltchrr, toil ltln!t!-year cmtncl ,
NEW YORK ME'I'S-SI(ned Huble

Brooks. third

bl~ttnan; Mot*ir Wllaoo.
CIJ~; and ~~ Gall, piiCIIer; 10

N--.. . . . .

ona-ye.r (-'OI!Intll .

HOaUCY

PtTTSBURGH

more poinL~ as the hosts

POMEROY-Poppy royalty was
selected at the recent meeting of
the Junior AuxUiary, DreW Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, held at the
home of Mrs. HaiTy Davis, advisor.
·· Royalty named were -Erica
McClintock, Junior Miss Poppy,
Pam Haggy, Little Miss PoJIPy;
Palma Wlles, Poppy Princess.
They will preside thrOugh Memor·
Jal Day.
It was noled that valentines were
sent ID Bill Rovnak, Arcadia NursIng' Home, the juniors "adopted"
graJ)diather; Mrs. Jed Webster Sr.,
Mrs. Ellen Couch, Miss Dorothy
Leifheit, and Jennifer Mankins,
"adopted" family of the junior ilux·
iliary. A get-well ca_rd was sent to
Tina Riffle, a patient at the Holzer
Medical Center.
numk you notes were received
and read from the Arcadia Nursing
Home, the Pomeroy Health Care
Center, the Athens Mental Health
Center, and the Meigs County lnflr-'.
mary for Christmas

.

BAND - The Francis Andrews band was on hand
at the Pomeroy Health Care Center Friday to provide

.

entertainment for a rock and roll session lor the county
heart lund drive.

Health center residents rock 'n'
roll to support heart association
The Pomeroy Health Care Center
was U1e first nursing home in the

area to conduct a rock-and-roll and
"h~art . "

Residents rocked in rocking chairs
and some rolled in wheel chairs
Friday to do their part in support of
the American Heart Association.

The Francis Andrews hand was
present and refrestunents were served to the public which was invited.
The Meigs County Chapter of the
Heart Association has several
special events scheduled for the
month and the rock and roll was an
excellent start for the county's heart .

fund drive.
The activities director, Annette
Lambert, was lnstrwnental in
m·ganizing the event which will
bring in O"~r $300 for the county
heart associa1.1on. Thanks was ex·
tended to all participanls, donors,
residents and visitors for their support in Friday's activities.

head 'women's roach at Buckeye
Trails Hi~h School, has a seven.year
coaching mark of 135-15.
Rio Grande will wrap up its
regular season with a pair of road
games this week. The Redmen wiD
travel to Cedarville on Tuesday and
Dyke on Sunday.
Malone (60) -

~:..ardl., plkt, on waht!n from

the St.Louis Blues.

'

The game also marked "CoshOt'·
ton-Guernsey Ni~ht" with special
musical entertainment provided by

Jutzc 3·2·8; Morrison 0·2·2; Currv 4·
1·9 ; Mowc ry6 ·7· 19 . Totals '29· 16· 74 .
Halftime score - Malone 32 , Ri o
Grande 30 .

FORT l.EWIS-A.nrlwncftl the retlpa·
tiOn C!l .Jay McNitt, hNd footbd ooecll.

..

A Dlvlaklll of MWUDitdl.l, lite .

Published every afternoon, Monday lhrough
Friday, 111 Ctlurt Street, by the Ohio Valley
Publishing
Company • Mllltimedia, Inc.,
Pom.~.Oilloi$709, 11J2.2151. S'!&lt;Oild clasa

pottagepaldatPomeroy,OIIIo.
Membe" The Alisoclated Preu Inland Da&gt;
ly Preu Aaao&lt;ia«on and u..t American
Newa~rPubllsher8AMoclaUoo, Nalional

AdvertlsiJlg Representative, Branhlm
Newspaper ~les, 713 Th!1d Avenue. New

Von. New York 10011.

POITMASTER ·. Send a••-·
-·- to-~
.. ~ Daily
S&lt;nllnel,lll Court st .. Pome.oy, Olllol$71!9.
SUIISCRwnON RAT&gt;l!

ByCarri&lt;rorM""" Route
ou..eek ... .. · .. .. .. · .. · .. · · 11 ·oo
One Mooth · · · ............ ....... ... 14.40

r-;===========:;~

One Yea. "

1

!fn'/:i 1 ~n"c~~';".:!,~N• •· C.-edit

FORD TRACTO.RS

; ,

(

I

.

Dally ...... :, .... .'...... ... .... roCenlo
Subocriben not d"~lng to poy the canier
may r.mll In adYance direct to The Dolly

DALE HILL

Semifinals will be played at6 and 8

" siNrii.ii OOPY . " ." . 1$2.111
PRICES

I

(11-11).

'

The Uoily ~cntind
iUSPSI-1

Jl.ln. on Tuesday, March 2.
Th e c hamp10ns
· h'1p game is
Friday.March5,at7:30p.m.
Winner of the Ironton Sectjonal
will battle the Unioto Sectional title
winnel' at ou on Friday, March 12.
at 9 p m
· ·
Winner of that district title will ad·
vance to the Oh'10 Umversity
Regionals, slated Wednesday, Mar·
h
t
c 17'a 7 p.m.
The state tournament will be held
ti1e following weekend.

214 W. Main
Pomeroy
992·2668

Coffman 6-J-13 ;

Crawford 2·0·4; Nutt 0· 1·1; Perdue J·
.4·10; Saracina 5·2·12 ; Spinnel l 4·2· 10 ,·
Wertz 0· 1·1; Zeiqlc r 4· 1·9. Totals 24·
12-60.
Rio Graridv (74) - McDonald 12·4·
28 ; Penrod 1·0·2; Wollenburg 3·0·6 ;

No sut.cripllOfll by lllll\1 pennitted Jn town.~
when home caJTier ,.,.,.. II aYaliable.
MAIL!IVIIIICIIIPTIONI

,

sMontli ..~~~.~~.~-~~ .... 112.3:1
SlllmonUt .. • .. .. .

.. ............ 110-~

.... ib~oii.;,ideo.;;;."· .. · i:lr.~
's = · ............v1,.wa
..... .. ..... 113.00
8
.. •.•... ... . .. .. . •.. .•.. 1. 123.411
1 I Year - .... ....... .. ....... .. ...

·\' v...,

_..lll

In 1ts first pcrfonnance of the win·
ter season, the Ohio University Symphonic Wind Ensemble. conducted
by Ron Socciarelli, will pcrfonn
Sunday, Feb. 21. at 8 p.m. in
Memorial Auditorium.
The Wind Ensemble is comprisc'll
ol approximatey sixth advanced
wind and percussion students at the
School of Music. Under the direction
of Ron Socciarelli. associate
professor of music, they will perform a varied program of twentieth
ct•ntury works by Stravinsky,
Varcsc. Hindemith, Benson,
Suri&gt;ll!chi. and Jenkins .
Highli~hting . the program is

Personals
MIDDLEPORT--Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Province entertained
with a post-holiday dinner party at
their home.

Diana and Todd Dav(dson, Mid·
dleport; Denver and Margaret
Biggs, Pomeroy; Carol and Terry
Miller, Indiana; Mary Miller, Waterford; Ray, IUa, Tracy , Buddy,
Regina, Trlsha Ruble, Waterford;
Raymond H. Ruble, Homer; Lee,
Joann and Franlt:_Kirby, Gallipolis;
Ed and Goldie ProVInce, Gallipolis; Clharles, Chuck, and Mike Province, Cantan; Susan Mercer and
Tammy Keenan, Canton; Allen
and Lois Davidson, Middleport.

during the past seven years. Linn,

tJliWed

sel~cts

remembrances.
It was noted that a large box of
cancelled stamps bad been donated
to the Senior Citizens Center for
help on one of their prograJ!lS. A
box of ribbons has been prepared
and will be sent to the Dayton Veterans Hospital where they will be
woven Into ruga.
Mrs. Davis reviewed the rules for
the junior confel'!!llce 10 be held In
AprD. The members will enter
most of the conlests. Several prolects are undetway to earn money
for the Eluwa School for the Deal
and the Blind located In North
Nambllia near the Angollan
border. Suppoit of the school Is the
foreign relations project ot the
group.
Kim Patterson presided at the
meeting with Robin Campbell givIng the prayer. The pledge and
preamble were repeated In unison.
Two new Qleinbers were
welcomed.
The history of Pomeroy was re-

Warren Bt!nsOn•s "SYmPhony for
Drums an'd Wind Orchestra." Dale
Grail(. music critic lor the lthica.
New York Journal writes of a recenl
perfonlUince of the work: "This was
lhe most compelling and brilliant
n•cent oomposition heard in all the
concerts of the year'."
The work is S.:ored in thn•e
movements: lnvotation, opening
tensely and moving to explosive outbursts and long held Iones. Contemplation. a simple melody. and
finally. Declaration, beginning sof·
tly. then building to .a frantic cli!nax
and only gradually dyin~ away .
The Ohio University Wind Ensemble was formed in 1971 and l1as a
history of fine performances which
includt• the Kennedy Center in

MONDAY
CHESTER PTO, Chesler
Elementary School gymnaslwn,
7:30 Monday night.
POMEROY - Special meeting
. of Ohio Valley Commandery 24
' 7-!'311-p.m."Monclay fpr -~~J!I~Il ,
the Order of the Tenipl~': aU·
Knights Templar invited.

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Group II,
Middleport . First United
Presbyterian Church, 7: 30
Tuelda)' nlghi at the church.
·Mrs. William Morris and Mrs.
LouiB Sauer to ~ hostesses. Mts.
Myron Miller to give devotions.
The aetond chapter of the study .
book will be reviewed by Mrs.
Wanda Johnson.

Salisbury PTO meets at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at the school. Game
Protector Andy Lyles will
present the program.
ROCKING- Edith Burton, a rO!ddent of Pomeroy Health Care Center, was joined by younger Je881e
Wright to rock for the &lt;01111\y heart fund drive.

SALISBURY PTO meeting,
7:30p.m. Tuesday Ht school with
lathe111' night to be observed and
pro~ ram by Andy Ly Jes, county
~arne protector.

8rganizations hold meetings
Adult Fellowship
Adult Fellowship members of
Syracwre Church of the Nazarene
met Jan. 22 at the church's
fellowship hall.
The meeting was opened with the
Lord's Prayer and Rev. James Kittle led devotions from Psabns 71 : I·
24, "Ten Conunandments for a New
Year."
President Thelma Miller presided
over the meeting .and hostesses were
Mary Janice Lavender, Rachel CUndlH and Fannie Aleshire. Games
were presented by Ora Bass.
The next meeting will be in March
with the hostesses Marie Rizer,
'Mary Pickens and Liz Rice.
Attending the meeting were
Rachel Cundiff, Fannie Aleshire,
Oma Hysell, Marie Rizer, Liz Rice,
Mary Pickens, Eber Pickens, Jim
Miller, Thebna Miller, Artie Grindley, Ora Bass, Mary Janice Laven. der and Rev. and Mrs. James B. Kit·
tie.

Slinderella
, Carlotta Reed and Karen Baker
tied for the most weight .lost at last
week's meeting of the Cllester Slinderella Qass. At the Mason class,
two new members were welcomed
and Carolyn Van Meter lost the most
weight and Grace Welch was run·
ner·up .

Wigal lost the most
weight at the Pomeroy class with
Carla McFarland and Kelly
Hawkins lying for runner-up. Betty
Dill and Norma Custer tic'll lor t11e
most weight lost at the Thursday
morning exercise dass with Cora
Folmer as the runner-up. Information on the Slinderella
program may be obl&lt;Jined by calling
JoAnn Newsome.

Enterprise Youch
Enterprise United Methodist
Youth mel at the church Saturday,
Feb. 13, for a Valentine party.
Charades, contests, games and
ann wrestling, under Ute leadership
of Valerie Simpson and Darrin War·
th, president and vice president,
were enjoyed by the 11 members and
three guests present.
Winning prizes were Art Hunnel,
Donia Crane and Danny Hall.
Refreslunenls were'furnished and
prepared by the members completed the evening.
On Sunday, the-youth gathered on
Rose Hill for sleighriding and a
wiener roast. Attending were members Art Hunnel, Valerie Simpson,
Amy Warth, Joan Simpson, Jo Ellen
Crane; Chris Davis, Darrin Warth,
Danny Hall, Donia Crane: guests

Billy Crane, Amy Beth Brothers,
Mike Borders, Cindy Denny. Randy
Robie, Peggy Crane, and leaders
Bill Crane and Joyce Davis.

Students named
to Who's Who

Sl9995
Maloy

SAVE $60

Evangelist Maloy

EAST MEIGS - The 19112 edition
of Who's Who in music will carry the
names of seven students from
Eastern High School who have been
Rev. A. B. Maloy, pastor and
selected based on tlK!ir academic
achievement, service to the com- evangelist from Hamden, will be
munity , leadership in extra evangelist for a Meigs Area Hollnel!ll
curricular activities and future Association revival to be held at
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
potential.
FebZZ.28.
Maloy has served as evangelist in
There are a part of students selec- many Southeastern Ohio comted from more than 1,300 institutions munities and he Is currently ,pastor
of higher learning in all 50 states, the of Church of Christ In Christian
District of Colwnbia and several Union al Wellston where he has
foreign nations. Outstanding studen- pa:llored for the past :1» years.
ts have been honored in the annual : The song evangell!itlr for the ser·
directory since it was first published vices will be the Minsker Family of
Nelsonville. Rev. Johil Mirulker Is
In 1934.
pastor of Wesleyan Church in
Nelaonvllle and was fanner district
Studenls named this year are superintendent of the Ohio District
Carolyn Bowen, Scott DiUon, Sarah of Wesleyan Church. The public Is
Goebel, Brian Collins, Lisa Collins, .invited to the serviCI!S to be held at
Julie Elberfeld and Jeff Shnvers .
1:30 each evening.

Washington, D. C. in 1973. This wa~
the first l'tllWt•rt by a University
Band or Wind Ensemble at the Performin~ Arts Center.
Tlw Wind Ensemble has also pcrlnrrned . lor the Ohio Music
Educators' Association Conference.
the National Meeting, ol College
Band Direchws. and' the National
Tt•aclwrs' M,celing of College Band
Di rc~tors. and the National
Tt•achers' Assodation Confcrenc'e.
Tlw Enst•mble will be tourin~ liw
Slllt•· of Ohio during the first wt•ek of
May . Zanesville, Dayton. Cin·
cilmali. W'"&gt;ster. and Massillon are
amon~ the l'ities on lour . Many of
llw host directors ar·e School of
Music Alumni.

T11e program of February 21 Is

Social Calendar ·

POMEROY - Father's Night

Marjori~

.
viewed and It was noted that the
first settlement was In 1792 with the
first child being born In August
1797. The first cabin was buUt 1n
:um where the Baptist Church now
stands, It was reported. In 1812
c61U1 was held In a home In Middleport, and In 1822the first courthouse
located In Chester and still standing
was constructed. The Pomeroy
courthouse was bullt In 1841. The
stairway and wings of the structure
wereaddedlater. Itwasnotedthat
the nrst coal mine was opened In
uo; and the salt works In 1852. In
1841, Pomeroy was lncolllOrated
and named tor Samuel W.
Pomeroy.
Adults attending were Mrs. Loretta Tiemeyer, unit president,
Mrs. .Janice Hankla, Mrs. Janet
Haggy and Anna WUes. Refresh·
ments were served. The juniors
will meet wlth the seniors on Feb.
23, 7: 30 p.m. at the hall for their
Americanism program. ·

free and t)prn to ev,·ryonc.

will be observed when the

1

royalty

OU Symphony
plans performance
.

Attending were OUn and Pearl
Knapp, Kevin Knapp, Randy, PhylUs, Jennifer and Bridgett Cross,
Syracuse; Duane and Donna
Knapp, Rutland; Marvin, Mary
and Michelle Roush, Pomeroy;
Nancy, Usa, Roger and June
·Snyder, Middleport; Catla sne·
Snyder, West Columbia W. Va.

the Coshocton High School Pep Band
ami .lazz Ensemble under the direction of Jon Mattison.
Rio G1·ande alumni David Linn,
tile 1979 Associated Press Women's
Basketl)all Coach of the Year, was
honored at halftime for his contributions to athletic'S in the state

ahead by 57-!i4 at the 3:36mark.
Dan Curry followed with a drive to
boost the margin to 59-54.
The Redrnen put the game out of
reach in the final 25 seconds wlwn
Vince Wollenburg hit a short jumper. Jerry Mowery netted four free
throws, and Paul Morrison converted a pair ol charity stripes lor
the finall4-point margm.

Action will reswne at 6 p.m. on
Friday, Feb. 26, when Fairland (811) takes on Ohio Valley Conference
champion Rock Hlll (IIH).
In the 'nightcap on Feb. 26, Coal
Grove !li-6) will battle Chesapeake

PENGUINS -

COILI'lllll:

b&lt;lck in front by one, McDonald connected on II drive then sprinted to the
other end ol the court where he
blocked a shot attempt by Frank
Sara dna.
Ten seconds later. McDonald
cashed in a layup olf a feed from
Rick Penrod for a three-point lead
with 7:08 to go. McDonald scored six

Portsmouth top-seeded
in Ironton Sectional ·

Penn.ylvanla 7'9 , Harvard fi2
Pllt.b.irJh fil, Ouq\M!Ine 61

Pr1ncel0n 59, O.rtmouth
80tJ1R

Oak Hill 81, VInton Co\lnty 6:'1
Old t'on 89, Danbury Lakelldf' 66
OrrvUlf' , 7, Aki'Ofl Hoban 44
P anna Padua 57, Oevt&gt;. l.lrK'Oin·Wl'!Ot
51\, 0T

.~'7

.:loll
16
. t•RCtftc DlvW.n

F'r'l&gt;sno Sl. 71, C..I·II'VIne M
Fullerton St. ti6, Utah Sl. liJ
Gomaga 19, l..o)lola, catu. til
Ida~ 71, Idaho St. 50

Moh.l!.wk ~. Bettsville ol6

14 1f.!

.!ill

Pur1land 1211, Dct rott 1:!1

.,

-

By SCOTI' MILLER
RIO GRANDE- Forward Watson
McDonald , playing his final
collegiate game before a horne
crowd, went on a scoring tear midway through the second ball here
Saturday night to lead Rio Grande's
Redmen to a 7HO victory over the
Malone Pioneers.
The victory moved the Redrnen to
24-7 on the season, the most victories
in the state by a college team. The
Pioneers dropped to~ 17 overall.
McDonald, playing with a heavily
taped leg due to a severe hamstring ·
pull, took control at the 10:49 mark
of the second half and the Redmen
trailing 46-45. The 6-6 senior from
Warren, Ohio, scored Rio's next 12
points to turn the deficit into a 57-!i4
lead.
He opened the spree with a drive
at the 10:33 mark for a 47-16lead. Af·
ter Malone's Dave Crawford notched a jwnper to put the Pioneers

Ca1·5anta Bal1iltra 79, Paclt\c 66

Ca th. 44, Shawnt.'f '-1

Junior auxiliary

McDonald paces Rio ·Grande
•
•
In 74-60 win over Pioneers

FARWE8T
~m V01.1ng 49, Alr Fort'f 41

Malwrn 52, E. Canton e
Mlln5llt•kl Sr 76'. MII ~ Ulon 14
Marton Local M, St. Marys 48
Mau Uion Qubllan 73. Zllnl'!i\111£&gt; Chrts.
tlan 56
Mau Uion Perry 57, Oovrr oUI
Mau lllon 1\ulaw &amp;4, Unlontuwn I.Jike 59
M£'-'dlnu TR, CuyahOga FaUJ 7 I
Miller City ~. Pandora·G Uboa 51
Minster 67, Houston~

14 ',1

. ~I

14
Saturday'• Gamet~
Indiana 110, C!l"\'&lt;'lllnd 100

..

~

,."" :n23 ·""' '
"" " .m "'
"'
"".:n "" "", '~
2G "
":16 .m.M2'" ·~
33

KI!Jd Prep, Pa . 511
Tempi£' Ri. Herlllli(&gt;

U ma Sr. 64, Middletown :\l
Ulraln Cl('!lrv\CW Ill, Avon 46
Loutt VUic ~7. West Branch !W

N 111~ Rtutlil'tball l\lwll&gt;lli.Cioll

23
r~tral Dl\'bllon

Elyria AA

Chrb tJi.tn 46
Cunoilon Valley :'16• .fi:'Wet\·Sclo M
Convoy CK'Rfvlcw &amp;6, Wayne Tm~ G4
Day. Roth 'Jo4 , Yf'Uow Spdngs 76
Day. S tl vtn· Pan ~n b•, Wa pakOfl('la

HnrHord at f.allt'lll)'

•'
•'

Her1tage

~.
!'il,

Hola;mte m, Contlnenlill 42
IndiAn Vallt&gt;y S. '19, Indian V9.lley N. 42
Kf'nton n, Indian Lake !W
Kin~ Mill s ~. Mil!On t 2
Kyger Cl'l'l.'k 94, Hai\JU!n, w. Va. 'l'l
Lai4('Wood !IH, Lakewood St. Edwud 51
Landmark Ch.rbtiBn 87. O n. Count ry
Otiy 47

PltUbuiJ(h at NY lftlanck&gt;r.~
flu ffnlo at St Louis

Nt'W York

Marshall 44. A&amp;ht.abu la Edge·

H11 m llton 74, Col. Wa tnut Rldg(&gt; M
Ha milton Badin tltl, Hamilton !lolls 63

t:olorado at Montrea l

W :t.~ h l ngt on

Ctn. Withrow n, Dayton Dunbar 69
Cln. Woodwilrt:l ~. ru. South ~

F'alrfklld 12. Cln. Nor1hwcst 48
Fayrttd £fl. HlcklviJto M
F'ID•rni · H~klng 67. North Ga Uia !18
F't!nwlck 00, Covtngton 45
f1 N'landl! 75, Collirw W. ftetierv(' 6'J

'l'ut•Miuy'!l 011m~
Wtnni(X'g a t QulU&gt;e

..•'.

Ca nton McKinley· 9.1. Cot E ast (/j
C«iar.1lle re. Sprillfj:. Soutnea111 11!m ~
Cln. Oak HIUs 10, Ctn. St. Xavier :15
Cln. Prl ~on Rl , O n. Sycamore !15
Cln. Per1ormlng Artll ~l. M Lam1 Va lk&gt;y

K Pall'ltl11f' 117, YOUI'IQ. Wilson till

".!, Ed monton 2. llf'
Monday'11 GI.Rlal
Mlnfl(IS()ta at Toronto
V!IIICOUVCr at ChicnRO

n

tu ..(.'hl.Orcle fn. VllllparalJO 66
lrv:llna 7l, Iowa !!8
KarLSaJ fiG, Nf!bralka 6.1
K.lnau St. 58. Iowa St . 49
Louisville 61, C1nclnnau :iJ
Marquette ~. VII'Jinia Tech ~1
Mlarnl' Ohlo 6'J. l&lt;t.•·r~t St. 60
Mk'hlgan 4S, Northwestern 44
Mlnnetota M, Purdoo ~
N.MeJdco St. 6'1 , S.IUlnoiA 6.1, 0T
N_. Orleant ~ Dayton 411
N .Carollna St. 62, Notre Oaln(' 42
N.I!Unota 70, 0100 U. 118
N.lowa IW. U.S. lntemauonal 64
Ohkl St . ~1. Mlc~an St . oK
Oklahoma 10:1. CokJmdo 87
Oklahoma Oty 56, BuUer ~
Tulsa 70, Creflhton 63 '
W.Texaa St. &amp;'1, l.,.:llana St. 81. ar
Wichita St . 62, Drake tJ ,
80Vl'IIW&gt;l!T
r\rkansas St. 51. U...l51an.a Tf.leh t6
Baylor 64, Tf!:US T«h 61
Houston !i6, Arkansas Sl
MIIIOUI181, Oklahoma St . 82
Texas 81, N.Teus st. 7tl
Texas MM IU, Rke 71
Texa.11·Arllrvton 1M. SW t.oui.Uana 74
Texa.11 Chrt•tlan fft, Southern Meth. 60

E. CI('Ve. Shaw :WI. WurremiVIUt' 4:t

Bo~ton

"'...

, oont ~

"

Nt'\l' York tbn ~('I'J ~. Qtli'IX'C 2

lb;ton
Phllndt'lphla
NI'W .lel"ll('y

Deti"'&amp;i 112. Xavier, Ohio 7H, OT
EvarJJVllle n. Onl Roberti 47
IUinola 611, WbconJ!n 60

Barlx&gt;rton 78, Ca nton Gle n0al4 .Y.I
Orooke Coun ty. W.Va .. li9. Sll!ubfinvtlk'

Sunday'11 OautNLw York Jslarwk&gt;rs 9. ll artford 1
Colorado ~. Wa .~h l ngton J
Philadelphia 6, l.os An.i(t' lf'~ 4

.

Cent .Michlgan 93, Tok&gt;do 87

C:ath. 61

.

56, W.MJchlaan .53

Brlldj,py 48. fillnob St. 47

Athl&gt;ns tll. Ironton S.1

VEtnrouvcr J, St.Lnuls 2

•'

~.

~·

Bowllilg Gll!t'n !5, E . Michl~ran 66

Ada 72, Htudln Norlht.'l'n 5111
Akron Central·Howe r 58, Canton nrn.

181

&gt;~

."' "

&gt;I

"

Cukwado

111
Tl

267

:1!1

MIDWEIIT

otiAo ...,.. 8d10018Dp fiMketh.u
Salunlay'a fk..alt.

:11 21

Tern~

Allrori 78, YounptoWn St . 61

BaU

117

6

NY l!!lanrkn
f'&gt;hllinlt!l i'hla
NY H.a nJ(['f"~
Plnsl:rurgh

WIWam &amp; Mary 68,

came down to the last few holes.
The other fellows fell back and I
was able to hang In there."
North, Crenshaw, Clampett and
Beck all made their challenges. All
fell back. Crenshaw came back
from that triple bogey to get close
again, then bogeyed' two In a row.
From a share of the lead, North
bogeyed three holes In a row, 3puttlng the first two. aampett hit
one out of bounds on the 17th. Beck
feil out of contention with a bogey
on the 16th.
And Levi, playing the bright
orange ball that has come Into
vogue on the pro tour this year, held
steady In the growing pressure.
He took the lead for good with a
soft little approach that set up a
very short birdie putt on the 15th,
then preserved It \)y two-putting for
par from about 100 feet on the 17th.
The vl~tory was worth $58,500
.from the total purse of $325,000 and
boosted Levi's 1982 earnings to
$69,658. That's more than he won all
of last season and assured him of an
exempllon through the 1983 season.

vidual title In a slx-yearcareer wlth
a m !Dtal, 11 strokes under par on
the Walalae Country Qub course
that winds Its way ·some 6,881 y~s
through Palm Groves and along
Pacific beaches.
Scott Simpson finished second,
one stroke back at 278 after a closIng 69, with Chip BeCk at 68-279.
Ben Crenshaw, 21-year-old
Bobby Clampett and former U.S.
Open champ Andy North were next
at m. Crenshaw had a 70 despite a
lost ball and a triple bogey. Clampen shot 71 and the disappointed
North, who was tied for the lead on
three separate occasions O"&gt;:er the
final round, finished with a 73.
Masters champ Tom Watson
never got started. He was only two
off the lead going Into the final
round but took himself out of It with
a fat 76 and a 285 total. He was tied
at that figure with Arnold Palmer,
the national seniors champ wM
had a closing 72.
"It was a very close tournament," Levi said, "with four or five
guys within a shot or two. It aU

Monday, February 15, 1982
5

The race came down to a ques.
tlon of Alllson being able ID go the
distance. He barely succeeded after bulldlng a huge lead over
second-place finisher Yarborough
and Joe Hultman.
As one ol 10 drivers who exchanged the lead 31 Urnes, Allison
was 1n front for the flnal38l;lps. His
average speed was held to 15it991
mph because five cautions slowed
the field lor 34 laps and he was not
pressed In the final stages of the
race.
Yarborough, Hultman, Terry Labonte, Waltrip and Bonnett were
the only drivers capable of running
near Allison alter the pattern of the
race was set.
Earlier, Dale Earnhardt ran
near the lront, but his car blew a
head gasket when It ran out of gas
on the 44th lap. Labonte, who finIshed a lap behind the leaders In
fourth position, lost any chance he
had when he was forced to pit for
fuel wlth two laps remalnlng.
Bill Elliott finished fifth with Ron ,
Bouchard, HaiTy Gant and Buddy
Baker nailing down the next three
places. Bouchard, Gant and Baker
all sustained some damage In the
Wawak Incident.

seven-time winDer Petty drive ott a
year ago with a victory that should
have been hls.
On the fourth lap or 200 run over
the 2.5-mlle Dayto!l8 International
Speedway, Allison said he "might
have got up ln!D Cale" and started a
chain-reaction crash that took
three cars from the race Sunday. It
also took the rear bumper from Allison's Buick Regal and very nearly
ended his dliy against the wall atop
the high-banked fourth turn.
Allison also managed to escape
unscathed when Bobby Wawak,
who had been black flagged, blew
his engine entering the first turn on
lap 1ll4- Petty, polesltter Benny
Parsons and hard"Charglng Nell
Bonnett were not so fortunate .
They crashed, and a crowd of
110,001 saw a starting field of 42 reduced to 24.
Allison's chief rival Darrell Waltrip, the prerace favorite, had
taken the leaq seven laps earlier.
Allison e!!(!aped potential disaster
again despite running closely behind Waltrip when the engine let go.
But the vlctary, Alllson's first In
the race sl,nce 1978, was by no
· me!!ns tainted. He led the pack for
147 laps.

The Daily Sentinel

at Laurel Cliff revival

lfz PRICE
LAMP SALE
Buy one lamj!' at the
regular price and get the
matching Ia mp for
· Vz PRICE •.

· •19.95 to '79.95

'

MEIGS ATIILETIC Boosters.
7:30 p.rn. Tuesday at hi~h school;
aium1li blisketball game to be
disl'USSt!d .

WEDNESDAY
'' .

\

ANNUAL INSPECTION ol
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM,.Wel,jnesday by John H. Bryan, J~ ..
Ironton. ~istrict deputy ~rand
high priest of the 12th capitular
district. Dinner served ·al 6:30
p.m. by Pomeroy Eastern Star
Chapter: degree work in past
masters d~gree.
JOHN H. BRYAN•Jr., Ironton.
District Deputy Grand High
Priest of the 12th Capitular
District, will be the inspecting of.
ficer when the annual inspection
of Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Ar·
ch Masons, is held Wednesday.
Dinner will be served •t6 :30 p.m.
by the Pomeroy Chapter. Order
uf EasternSt.lr. PeKree work will
be in the Past Master Degree. All
Royal Arch Masons are invited.
THE MIDDLEPORT Lilt!rar·y
Club will meet Wc'llncsday at the
horne of Mrs. Ben Philson. Mrs. '
Hobert Fisher will giYe the book
review.

.

�Page

6

The Daily Sentinel

,

•

Monday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

February 15, 1982

Us

' .

Business Services
Roger Hysell's
GARAGE

· VS.

ARNO.LD J . OCTE;AU
and
BARBARA J. OCTEAU
Defendants.
COso No. 1101s
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Arnold J . Octeau and
Barbara J. Octeau, whose
last known address was R.
D.. Racine, Ohio, and
olhetwlse whose plact of
residence Is unknown and
·cannot · with reasonable
diligence be ascertained;

Wants more male sex symools
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTIEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
lt's really depressing to watch a
IJ\'OVie where women are beautiful,
!li!'Xy, gorgeously dressed, and their
hasbands look old and dull. What we
need are more male actors that
could be sex symbols. Instead, the
really handsome ones are cast as
villains - and look at all the nonhtroes like Dustin Hollman. Dudley
Moore, etc. They would never sweep
a · woman off her feet like Burt
Reynolds used to do before he aged .
(All the A·l male sex symbols ye
n~aring or past 50 and we 201sh
people can 'I get enthused. I
:Also,! wish men would dress more
fashionably. Their clothes get so
boring. Outside ollapel-widths, their
suits never change.
:Another thing, I'd like to see more
nlllles show off their physiques.

Telev ision displays women in skim·
py swim suits and low-cut ~own s.
How about near-bare men too' I'll
bet they'd sell more products ' .
TIME FOR A CHANGE
DEARTFAC:
Burt Reynolds losing it' Please 1
You'le '1J)Caking of the man all
womt·n Jove.
But seriously : Must wC have sex
!'lyrn hols: ~illll' t ~cnde r·? J pr·~... rer
~ uod

actors

pnrtrayin~

real petJple

In beautiful..people displaying more

body than tale nt. Of course I'm not
20is h ... - HELEN
TFAC :
F:vcn we 20i sh Jleople aren't
kt•en on

!'lt'X

symb01m:

sP

~my 1110rt!.

Equal ri ~ hls is libc ratin~ males as
wt·ll e~s ft·mal~s . rellll'lllber? - SUE
IHeAR HELEN AND SUE :
You iiskt ·d for pet p•·eH:s 01 1

County correspondence
Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert RoWih
Christmas guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Montgomery were Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Montgomery and two
children, · ~ackie , Steve and
S~~hanle McHenry, all of New
Matamoras, Steve and Rose Montgomery of Marietta, Debbie, Ed
and Dwight Ball of Parkersburg.
,Mr. and Mrs. David Nance and son
o( Oak Grove, Ky. spent several
da)'l! with their parents, Mr. and
Mn. Wayne Wilson and Mr. and
MrS. David Nance, Sr. at Syracuse.
Robert Montgomery, employed on
the Ohio River, was met in Hun·
tii!gton by Mrs. Robert Montgomery
all&lt;! came home for a few days
vacation from the boat, Daniel Web-

ster.
Mr. and Mrs. Everette Parsons of
Polpt Pleasant visited Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Anderso~.
·
-Mr. and Mrs. Bob Casper, gran·
dlop Billy Dye ol Columbus spent
the weekend with Mrs. Dolly Wolfe
and family. Billy spent Saturday
rught with Joey Rouilh and they all
attended the Racine and Eastern
ball game at Eastern on Friday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. David Sayre spent
Monday and Tuesday with Mrs.
Peggy Gregory at Columbus. Mrs.
Sayre consulted her doctors at
University Hospital on Tuesday.
'Rev. Mark Flynn filled the pulpit
at . the Methodist Church Sunday
night with 60 people in attendance.
The young peoples choir from Flynn
CJlurch sang several songs. Refreshments or cookies and coffee were
serVed preceding the church ser·

v:lees.
Keith Hayman returned home
Thlll'6day from his employment on
the Ohio River to visit his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell spent a
recent weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Hart and son at Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Huber ol
Co)nmbus spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and
Keith and also visited Mr. qnd Mrs.
Joe Bissell Saturday at u .ng Bottom.
Mrs . Gerald Hayman entertained
at dinner Thursday In honor ol her
h'lslland, Gerald, who was
celebrating his birthday. Attending
were Gene and Linda Jewell of
J.4itart, W. Va., Robert and Lillie
Hart of Racine. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
oUrs visited the Haymans recently.
:Mr. and ,Mrs. Bruce Hart and son,
Jonathan of Columbus were
..:eekend guests of her parents, Mr.

Laurel Cliff .
News Notes
By BERTHA PARKER
Attendance at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church Jan. 31 was
89.
Choir members present were 13.
Mr . and Mrs. Bob Barton sang a
duet, How Great Thou Art.
Mrs. Mildred Perry, Athens, spent
two days with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs . Norman Schaefer. Mr.
Schaefer is improving each day
from his recent illness.
Mrs. Nellie Cox has been returned
home from Holzer Medical Center,
much improved.
Mr. and Mri. Roy Howell went to
Greenfield to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Faye Countryman. Mr. Howell
became sick so they had to come
home Saturday evening.
Mrs. Bertha Parker received a let·
ter from her grandson, Mark Talley,
stating that h~ was on the honor roll
at the East Texas State University.
The film, Reflections of His Love,
will be shown at the local church
Feb. 21 at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is
welcome.

Carmel News
Mrs. Marilyn Newman and son
David from Galion, Oh., and Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester called on
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee and family
oq Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle spent
a couple of days with Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Johnson or Belpre recenUy.
Rocky Pitzer of Pomeroy called at
the home of Douglas Circle on MoDday evening.

'

Betty Van Meter, Sheryl-IJohnson
and Eunie Brinker spent Sunday
evening with William Carleton and
family or Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Circle and
family were dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Circle and Verna on

Sunday.

En~li s h

misuse. Here'¥ mine :
One docs not feel badly. ~ladl y or
sadly. One behaves badly, but feels
bad. Example : He behaved badly
wh,•ii lw insulted his wik and she
felt bad about it. - S.R.S. BELEN AND SUE:
Dnn. my fianl'e. is sweet and I love
him a Int. Wt•'ve bee11 togetlwr three
vea1·s.
· His sister's boyfriend stopped by
our huu~c une night while 1ny man
was workln~. and s omehow we ended up in bed.
Don canw home. early anrJ
tlist'OI'ei'ed us . It was very upsetting
to everybody .
w,.·,·e slilllil'inl( tol(ether. but it's
nut the same. Do you think love will
1 riwnph•- WORRIER
I &gt;EAR WOHRIER :
... And you1· fiance is a forgivlll ~
1)t'rsnn . 1 I,t•1 's hnpe his sister is too. 1
- SU E

sum eone

wi1U

deprives

you

You are required to an·
swer the Complaint within

28 days after the last
publication of this notice
which will be published on·

~~ ~0-'.b .w~g~ for .six SI.IC ·

of

,

cesslve weeks. The last
publication will be made an
March 15, 1982, ond the 28
days will commence on
that dale.

In case of your failure to
answer
or
otherwise
respond as required by
Oh1a Rules of Civil

. Proceduref judgment by
default Will be rendered
against you far the relief
demanded In the Cam·
plaint.

FE)ED!NG THE BIRDS- Tbe!le C.hester Elementary School children have learned the Importance of
feeding the bird~ In a therapy program sponsored by
the Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts. Friday af·
tem01m they hung a large bird fe&lt;'lier In a tree on the
Orr lot near the school. The feeder wao made by Carol

Dated : February 5, 1982
Larry E. Spencer
Clerk of Cqurts
Meigs coonty
Common Pleas Court
(2) 8, 15, 22, (3) 1, 8, 15, 61c

Erwin, a member of the garden club. A large bag .of
Iced hBs been provided by the club. Friday afternoon
Alice Thompson and Sheila Taylor worked with the
children In 11111king pine rune feeders of peanut butter
and bird feed. Bettie Bow and Steve Jewell are
teachers of the two classes in the therapy program.

amount)
The Meigs County Comm lssloners reserve the
right to · reject anv or all

Consumer Reports
Limits of life insurance

backstop.
It was noted thBI the skate-a-way
will be rented ~lor the basketball
players and cheerleaders. Named to
the nominating committee were
Shirley Sayre, Judy Paper, Sandra
Baer, Ruth Stearns, Janice Lisle.
and Marsha Russell . The second
grade won the room count. The four·
th ~rade presented the program
playing several songs on flutophones
under the direction ol the instrumental instructor.

Sauters birth
of the lax question is crucial to the
11•erits of this type'of policy.
The expectations that universal·
life will yield high intel't'st rates whether or not tax-deductible may not be justified. The 1110ney
paid into universal-life policies is
now put mainly into relatively shortterm investments paying l1igh rates.
If those rates fall . people won 't
flock to buy these policies; in fad.
they'll avoid them~ And since people
t'31l take theil"lllOilCy out oF a UlliV~I'·
sal-life pnlky at will. the insurance
emnpanies would t!ncounler some
risk by invl'stin~ in lon~t&gt;r-term il1·
vcsbncnlo.; .

Until tht• tax status of universallife is resolved . lh~ main advantag e
0

nf tl1is lypt• of policy is its clear
disdosure of fees . ~~·oss interest
nib's antl othtJr Information .
Another advanta~c is its nexibility
with rcgor~ to annual premiums and
fat't&gt; amount.

'

F'or most buyers. thou~h . univ cr·
sal-life may not be better · than
buying :si1nple term insurant.-e anti
investing separately. The fees
associated with universal life
diminish its attracti\1Cilti!SS COII lpared With alternative investments.
IF'or a special reprint of Cnn·
s ume rs Union 's evaluation nf
ht&gt;ll lt•nwn ers' in.suranl."C~ send $1 fnl'
each l'Opy to CONSUMERS, P.O.
Rox 461. Radio City Station. New
York . NY 10019. Rc sure ltJ ask for
the reprint 1111 homeowner's in·
surance. 1
I c J 1982. Consumers Union

Bidders must apply, on
the proper forms, for
qualification at least ten
days crior to the date set
fOr o·penlm:J bids in ac·

thereof .

Plans l!!nd specifications
are on file in the Depart·
mentof Transpqrtation and
the office of the District
o~uty Director .
The Director reserves
the riaht to reject any all
bids.

DAVIOL. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev. 8·17·73
(2 ) 8,15, 21c

tensive
in !I.

Rool Ellta1o Gonerol

985·3561
ewn"en

3

bedroom, energy effi·
cient, home in Pomeroy ..
Fully
insulated.
beautiful interior with
new carpeting, WBFP;

A 4

Excellent

location

Middleport
bedrooms, gas

in

3

F .A.

ment. $29,000.
MARBLE FIREPLACE
and beautiful wood·
k in this 4·5 bedroom
me. Family room.
e fover . Approx . 112
acre lot . tn Racine.

$.45,000 .

IN POMEROY -

1'1&gt;

story home with 3
bedrooms,
full
basement, pantry area,
bath, family room . Just

$22.900.
,
REALTOR

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,

GRI

992-6191

Jean Trussell

949· 21660

Roger &amp; Dottie

Turner

992·Sj92

Office

992·2259

twenty·eight (281 days af·

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

pori. $40,000.
GOOD BUY - S rooms,
( )Wanted
( )for Sate
l )Announcement
l )For Rent

'I
I

1.
2.

19,
20.
21 .

3.

22,

4.

5.

weeks. The last publication
will be made on March 15,
1982, 1982. and the twenty·

I
I 8.
I
:1 9.
:t 10.
'I 11.
'I 12.
I 13.
I 14.
'II 15.
I 16.

I
. 'I
jl
I

eight (28) days for answer
• will commence on that
date.
.
' In case of your failure to

I
I
I
17. - - - - - - 1
18.
I
,,

23.
24.

Authorized John Deer,
_ New Holland, Bush Hog
'
Farm equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1-J· tf c

only $11,000.
HANDYMAN SPECIAL
- Here you go with a 4
room house and ..3/4
acres of woods at only

$6,000 cash.

REALTORS
Gorden Teaford
Helen Teaford
and Sue Murphy
"2-3176

26.
27.

29. _

_ _ __

CALL:

3C. _ _ _ __

POMEROY
lANDMARK

31. - - - - - 32. - - - - - -

33. - -- -- -

614·992·2181 .

34. - - - - - -

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

~·------

Mall This Cou!!On with Aeminence
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

PRICED RIGHT

~

,.

..

' c.,.; ;

Part~ _
--;.-::..-.~-. ·-- _._,
;

Modern Electrical
Equipment

• Jl()

1 - - - - - " ' --

CONSTRUCTION

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Custom kitchens and

Sizes start from lOX24"

C. R. MASH
appliances,
custom
bathrooms. remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and

delivery

heating.

Utility Buildings
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. l, BOJC 54
Racine, Oh .

Ph. 614·843·2591 ,
6· 15 tic

Ph. 367·7560
l ·J.l

HOZ

Gun

(6J4) 742·2131

onty . Gene's Deep Steam

McDaniel

Estimates .
c ustom

chery . 304·882·3224.

but·

J IMS Water Service. Call

Jim Lanier, 304·675-7397.
Camp Con lev.
Giveaway

4

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
c!Oes not offer or attempt lo
offer any other thing for

sale may place an ad In this

column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

tic

Registered

VALENTINE
PERM SALE

Mon., Feb. I
ttlru

Sat.. Feb. 27
Reg. no Now $17.50
Reg. $25 Now $22.50 ·
Reg, $30 Now S27.SO .
S35 Wave Length
For Longer Hair

Now 129.50
Kly's S.uty Salon

Thursday 10·: a . m.
Pomerov· FI\Ie Point
Call : JoAnn Newsome
Lecturer

992-3382

Membership

WeeklY Class

Sl.50

n.50
2·3-1 mo.

~

$CASH$
Pomeroy Scrap Iron Metals
BUYERSOF
$ 25

Prosobee, baby cereaL Call

304-675·1057.

You are the light of my

$}50

'

Used Calor TV Sets far
Sale.
SALE PHONE NO.

'2.00 Each

LOST Crown

TODAY!

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
estimates,

949·2101

or

3·1Hfc

ShOped

blr·

......

Buying Gold, Sliver,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
fJr, "r~

~-

A l1IIIP

rings &amp; silverware. Dally

S;wr! A lot

JTLAND FURNITURE

--------------..
MAIN ST

and yellow root. HarPer~'

Halstead Salvage Co. ;,oo
Eleventh St., Pl. PleasanJ,
304·675·5868. Also flea
market open Mond,Y
throogh Friday, 1·5 p:m.•

Position Available for Sub: .

stltute Teacher tor Guiding ·
Hand
School '

from the Department
Education ,
Respon '·
sibilltles· during teacher'• •

for groups r,l •

students. Salory·$35.00 per
day. Avollobllity·lmrl)edla·
tely . Applications can be

Ratliff , P.O. Box 1.,.
Cheshire, Oh 45620, 614·347 -~
0102.
:•

several~

OLAN MILLS has
Immediate openings . for,.
telephone appolntment,o
clerks. No experience,.
necessary . We train , Mev:

Night baker 32 to 40 ht~, l
per week, 10PM·6Am . No

W•ntod Ia Buy
necessary, ApWANT TO BUY Old fur · experience
ply
at
Mr.
Donut, Point
nlture and Antiques of all Pleasant In person
.
.
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256·1967 In the evenings.
Help wanted·babysltter ·lw
two
sma.ll children Include~
CASH PAID tor clean, late housework,
8·5, live days a
model used cars. Smith
.
Reference.•
Buick· Pontiac, GAllipolis, week
reQuired
.
Call
675·5914 af·
Ohio. Call «6·2282.
terSPM .
9

"Beautiful, Custom

Built Garages"
Call for tree siding

paper, cardboar,d,

---------··

s,locllon
KIrchen
1 11, .
Ubber lla·Ck&lt;!CI.I 1 Ct'llic Bod
Cash 'n' Corry
1 Oo1don
Brawn. Blue
STARTING AT

Sq.

weste

raw furs, hides, glnstrig

work 9AM to 1PM or 5PM•
to 9PM. Apply Jackie Car-:•
Reword . Caii61H42 ~ 2823 .
'
sey, scottish Inn. Room 163•:
12·1PM or HPM:I.
FOUND small doo, black 4letween
&amp; Wednesday ..
blanket bock, yellow head. Tuesday
Equal
Opportunity
Em ·~
feet, legs. breast and
~
stomach. Call 304-675-5164. player.

G~

'12"

leries, radiators, oil w•JI
drilling bits, tungsten cor·•
bide, high spoed siMI.'

ths1one pin, 6 birthstones .

. Good

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

JUNKED cars, sere,;
metals, 81umlnum cenf~·
transmissions, motors, ba1·

obtained from : Mr. Dav id

Found : Black and tan Ger·
man Shephard In Cherry
Ridge. Will owner ~lease
coil 992-6504. Young dog,
approximately 10 months
Old.

Used Auto Parts"

.., ... &amp;SM 12 · 16 I'IIYn
2S llolll c.pot In """' to pkt fralw.
. ::.- llodlod. Cllpo!IMIIIIod frot 11it11

992-6259

Camping pull trailer. 15 to
20 fl long . Gas and ~leclrlc,
refrlgator. 614-985·4394. ·
'•

praort~mmlng

Lost iln Found

Call667·3323.

Rutland Furniture carpet Shop

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21-lfc

Wood Ice boKes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will bW ,
complete household . Gold,
silver, old money, pocket •
w8tches, chains, rings, anll,.
etc. Indian Artifacts of ·an ,
lypes. Also buying baset;a(l
cards. Osby Martin 992· '
6370.
.
;

absence, b.elng responsible
for providing educational

LOST: Black &amp; While male
cat. Lost In Tuppers Plains.

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE

OPEN

Tables, round or squar• ..

Of :

life . Today and Always

Located o'L Rocksprings Rd.
POM~:ROY, OHIO
west of
PH .

NOW

Kn,

type~. :

val id teaching certificate

Ads

Also Buyers of Radiators and Copper

HARRISON
1V SERVICE

949·2160.
No Su~day Calls

Ha

Charlie,

APPLIANCES ....... ~.~~-~.~~.~~~·- .. .

5 ~ 11

iron, brass, or wood.

chen cubbards of all

Qualifications-must have I •

s

$}00

BUYERSOF

"We Also

st~rllng~ ;

5720.

JUNK CARS......... ~:~.~~?.~.~!: .. }

BAnERIES

2 - 1- 1 mo.

silver,

jewelry, rings, old coins&amp; .
currency . Ed Burke.tt B•r': ·
ber Shop, Middleport. 992· •
3476.
.. ''•

2 half Chow 8. hall St. Ber·
nard 8. Collie puppies, 8
wks. old, 1 black 8. 1cream . 1''1- - ;:H.-;e::;tp:U:W;:a::nt'-l!d::;--,...., ·
Cali367-0663.
·" ---....:..:=-==""--- ··
Why would 2 Diamonds,, 6'
Puppies 16 weeks old Ger· Emeralds, over 40 pearl'
man
Shepherd · Collle and 500 Directs swltcll? 20· ;
per cent retirement on• ~
mixed . Call675·2254.
$2,00.00 wholesale. Call614· ,
«6·4273 ()r 614·«6·9332 or
Beautiful black German write S G A,.oclates, 336 ·
shepherd, 4 years old . 2nd. Ave. Gallipolis, Oh(a .:
unable to keep, Call 675· 45631

MOTORS ..........•.~~~. !~~-~~~: ...

MkUIIIPC1't
Call 992-2725

d iameter 1.4" on largest

black cat. Call675·2948.

UNCLEAN

189 N. 2nd

- - - - - - -- -,.

CHIP WOOD . Poles rna¥ .

Moved can' t keep female

Underpinning
PH. 992·3872
2·3·1 mo. pd.

1614)992-3556
1·13·1 mo. pd ..

Cockerspaniel

puppy, 6 mo . old, female.
Call379 .. 2721.
II

Plumbing, Carpentry,
Rooting,
Electrical ,
Cisterns, Cement, Stone
walls, Chimney Repair ,
All Home Repairs
Trailer Roofs and

David Price

complete
househoi&lt;IS!'
Write: M.D. Miller, Rl. 4i ·•
Pomeroy, Oh. or 992·7760 ... ·,

OLD FURN ITURE, bells,
Spec ial Feb .. March &amp; Apr .

20 Years Experience

John Wise

furniture, gold, Silver ,
dOllars, WOOd Ice bOXII,. i
1
stone I ars. antiques, etc., ~

Gal~.

Racine

6:30p.m ., Bashan. FL~~ctory
choke 12 gauge shotgun.

SLINDERELLA
DIET/EXERCISE

HOME MAINTENANCE
· AND REP.IRS

,.I

guns only .

Shoot

a Gun Shoot, Sat . nights

Water-Sewer-Electric ·
Gas Line-Ditches
Water line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
Co~nty Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

Insulated Dog Houses

.

Club. Every Sun. starling

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors

v rs. ex pe f ience

REESE*'{ .
TRENCHING
SERVICE·

woOd buildings 24x36.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

of

Carpet Cleaning. Scotch

Sir:es from 4 to 6 and all

446·0069.

at 1 p.m. Factory choke

Ph.949·2160 or 949·2482
7-S·tfc

l-28·11C

Bill Gene Johnson,

end. S12.SO per ton . Bundll!d ·
slab. $10.50 per ton ,,,
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co, , :
Rock Springs Rd.,'
Pomeroy. 992-2689.
· ,,,.

Gun

TOM HOSKINS

Pomeroy,

bulk

gasoline, heating ali and
diesel fuel , call Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.

• Free estimates

SIMMON'S OLOS.·
CAD. ·CH EV ., INC.
Ph. 992·6614
308 E . Main

1

And Home Maintenance
e Roofing of all types
•Siding
• Remodeling

---

__

French City Meats ore
booking Custom Cattle.
Coil «6·3472.
For

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOFING

.-··-- With Genuine GM

,

Frenchtown Car Co.

PRICE Scrap Metal~
Georges Creek Rd . Call TOP
auto bodies, and cars. Bat: .
446·0294 ..
teries, alumlum, brass ; &amp;1
copper. Gallipolis Block
Complete line of Mu:zzte co .. 123 1/2 Pine St.. «6·
Loading Guns and Sup· 2783.
plies.
Spring · Valley
Trading Co., Spring Volley BEDS· IRON. BRASS, al({~
Plaza, 4-46,8025.

28. _ _ _ _ __

Pomer.,Y,
o.;. 45769
:I. .. ___ ..;.,._....,..
_____
,______,___ •••• N.....:;;

1

mo

clean used cars.

Pick up and

+----------+----------+----------; 992·6309.
Guard -Free

bath, full basement, citv
u'tilftles and 3 lots for

Hous.i'!l
Headqu;1rtt •rs

25.

Wanted Ia Buy
We pay cosh for late modei~

delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

aervice and
lnllallation.
Rlllldential
&amp; CommMciel
Call 742-3196

FRONT·ENP
ALIGNMENT

~

mllchine repa ir , parts, and

supplies.

For all your wiring.

2- 14~ 1

,:...

u.s. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio

3
Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing

'*Cia; fu~ repair

See Mr . Goodwre ndl For A

Mixed Hardwoods
Deliverv Available
or You P.ick Uo

Mora

Larry F. Spencer
M e1gs County
Common Pleas CO\irt
OAT E : February 3, 1982
12l e. 15. 221311 . 8, IS, 6tc

Mason County

675·1333

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

• excavating
• septic systems

FIREWOOD

corner lot near stores. 3
large bedrooms , bath,
automatic gas hot water
heat. Formal dining,
storm drs. and windows,
full basement, large
porch, garage and car·

.

tn

L----------+---------+----------1
I female pup part Beegle.
r
Ca1347·0576.

on 180x120 lot. Only
$69,000.
Ml DDLE PORT - Level

ter the last publicatiOn of
this nqtice which will be
r.ublistied once e8ctt w~ek
or six (6) success1ve

992-2156

1·· 24· 1 mo.

• backhoe

'S If (

heat, porches, full base·

ceramic baths, famitv
room, 3 car garage, birch
kitchen
with
refrigerator,
range.
dishwasher and 2 patios

terests be set off or ordered

446-2342

CALL 949-2320

•limestone
Licensed &amp; Bqnded.
PH. 992-7201

Iaroe 8 room brick ran·

sold if It cannot be par·
titioned; for an allOwance
of attorney fees herein and
costs. 1
·
You are required to an·
swer the Compla int within

IN RACINE

·'

1n Meigs County

In Gallia County

Wtlls., TI1VIL &amp; S.l.
HAil STYliNG
Bclth Men &amp; Wt!men

• water, sewer
&amp; gas tines
•dump truck

PARTS AND S£ AVIC E
ALL MAkES

Ch. 2632 SQ. fl . 2 fUll

an sw e r
or 1 o therwise
respond itS required by the
Oh•o
Rules of
Civil
Procedure, [udgmel")t by
dcfi!u lt will be rendered
L~~ga•n s t you for the rel ief
de~anded in the Com·
plamt .

TOPLACEANAOCALL

8-A BEAUTY

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

JUST LISTED - Lovely

I

·-~···

Pamerov, Ohio
9-JO.llc

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service

1-(614)·992·3325

partitionea ; tnat me 1n·

675-Pt. Ptoasa11t
458-Loon.
576-Apple Grove
773- Mason
882-New Haven
195-Letart
937- Butlala

NOW AT

992-6215 or 992·7314

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Phone

Public Notice

M110n Co., W. \Ia ,
Area Codo J0.4

BEVERLY WICKLINE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992· 2282

Future Reference

VIRGIL 8 . SR .
· 216 E. 2nd St.

Public Notice

2·1 5·1 mo.

...lddons
••d JU1111 ,.....
-RooliiiJind
-&lt;:ootrtlt worl
-P'Iumblntlnd
tltctricllwOJI
(fr11 Estim1t~

• f:lectric~l work
•Custom Pole Bldgs.
• Roofing work
t4 Years Experience

A Iso wood Splitter
For Rent

.

446-Gilllpolls
367-Cht&amp;hlro
311-VInton
245-Rio Grande
2S6-Guyan Dlst.
643-Arabla Dlst.

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772

Keep Thl~ Ad For

$28.500.
PRICE REDUCED -

AGENTS:

o Storm Windows

• Replacement
Windows
e New Roofing

PH . 992·2478
1·2J. 1 mo. pd.

remodel :

• Jhnlll!l
•Di1po1o1h

WILLIAM D. CHILDS
DON E. MULLEN
JOHN f. MUSS£R
CHARLES B. MULL£N
MICHAEL L CHILDS

614

9

NEW TOWN -

Jason Mora,. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Mora , celebrated his first
birthday recently .
His paternal ~randparents, Mr.
and Mrs . Woodro·.v Mora, hosted a . ·
dinner in Jason's honor. Attending ·
were his sister, Jennifer, his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Max ·
Eichinger. Becky and Max , Jr .. and .
Janet Mora .
Later in the afternoon, · a
decorated birtllday cake, ice cream
and Kool-Aid were served by his ·
mother. He opene~ gifts and cards
given to him by all those attending
and his maternal grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Allen Eichinger, Jackie,
Mike and Debbie Frost, Paula and
Heather Mora,
Eblin, and Mr.

e Storm Doors

• Septic
Sy s tems
Large or Small Jobs

Molgs Co. ~·,...Code
614
"2-Miclclteporl
Pomeroy.
915-Chftter
343-Portlancl
247-Lotart Falls
949-Raclno
742-Ruttand
11417-Coolvlllo

Gallla Ca. Area Code

•Insulation

• Gas lines

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ·ex- ·

•Dryen

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance

• Oor:ers

(211 , 15. 2tc

bedroom home, bath,
dinirig room, on ap·
prox . 3J• acre lot. par·
tially
remadeted .

PHONE 992-2156

Pubilc Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
The obJect of the Com· !arid as described contains Sumner to Keno on the east thence south 105 rods and
plaint is a partition action 120 acres and 21.03 rOds, line of said Fraction 36; 8'/2 links: thence west 47
concerning the oil. gas and more or less. The tract of thence soUth on said frac· ·i-ods and 13 links; thence
all other minerals """ land to be conveyed by this tion line -46 rods anct l'h north 105 rods and 8'h
derlylng the following deed Is 10 acres off the nor· feet ; thence west 1 rod; links to the place of begin·
thwest corner of the above thence north to center of
. .
described real estate : 1
Situated in the Township described land : Beginning said road; thence following ning, con Ia1n1ng 31 acres
center
of
said
r.
o
ad
to
place
and
28
rods,
more or less .
et
the
northwest
corner
of
of Orange, County of Meigs
the above-described land; of 'beginning, containing
and Slate of Ohio:
Said three parcels of real
FIRST TRACT: In Frac· thence south 61-7/13 rOds; ~- 1/5 square rods. more estate are subject to all
lion 6~ Town 4, Range 12. thence east 26 rOds; thence or"less.
easements and highways of
Ohio l..Ompany's Purchase. north 61-7/13 rOds; thence
record.
THIRD
TRACT:
Situated
Beginning at the southwest to the place of beginning,
Deed Reference : Volume
in
Fraction
6.
Town
4,
corner of said Fraction 6; containlng 10 acres.
234, Page 57; Volume 277,
Range
12.
Ohio
Company's
SECOND TRACT:
Page ss and Volume 281,
111ence north 113 rOds and
10 links; thence east 1691h Slluatl!d In Fraction 34. Purchase. Beginning 33 Page 68'/, Meigs County
rOds
and
16'h
links
south
of
rOds; thence south 113 rOds Town 4, Range 12, Ohio
Deed Records.
Purchase. · thO! northwest corner of ·
and 10 links; thence west Company's
said
Fraction
6;
the"ce
169'h rOds to the Place of Commencing In the center
and the prayer is that the
bealnnlng. Said tract of of the road leading from east 47 rOds and 13 links;! abOve descnbed
estate
.
.. .be

P,arts

cordance w1th Chapter 5525
Ohio Revised Code.

Yoacham ·birth
RACINE--Mark and Nancy Yoacham of Racine are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Lena Ruth,
born on Jan. 31 at O'Bieness Memortal Hospital, Athens. The Infant
weighed six pounds lour ounces and
was 18~ Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Joacham have two
other children, Mayla and Camilla.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Wlley Ours, Racine, and
the paternal grandparents are
Joan Miller, Mesa, Arizona, and
Reed Kirkham, Reston, Va. Pater·
nal great-grandparents are Ruth
Muter, Roy, Utah, and Mr. and
Mrs. Orla Kirkham, Chillicothe.

or

Price, quality, availability
of service and delivery
date will be considered in
awarding contract.

$.45,000 .

Mora birthday

RACINE - Mr: and Mrs. Timothy
Sauters, Racine, are announcing the
birth ol twin daughters on Feb. 7 at
the University Hospital, Columbus.
The twins have been named An·
drea Melissa and Amanda Hazel.
One weighed two poUnds, 13 ounces,
and the other, three pounds, four
ounces.
.Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
George Yonker, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. Leroy Sauters, Route 3,
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Yonker. Route 3, Pomeroy, Mrs.
· Aman~a
'Eastman, Route 3,
Pomeroy, and Vaughan Sauters,
Route I, Shade, arc the great·
· grandparents.
Mrs. Sauters. the fonner Melissa
Yonker, came home from the
hospital Thursday. The twins will
remain there lor seve1·at weeks.

payable to the Director.

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BETTER

'

A book fair to be held at the school
March 9, 10 and 11 was announced at
the recent meeting of the Syracuse
PTO held at the school
Marsha Russell, president, ex·
tended thanks to the teachers for the
newsletter. The ways and means
chainnan reminded parents to continue saving . soup labels. Reports
were made on tile progress toward
'the purt·hBse of stage and window
eurtains and materials for a

bids

'

Syracuse . PTO plans book fair

from

event more
thousand dollars, or a
for ten per cent of his · i

'NEW LISTING -

6.
7.

dents In a legal action en·
tilled Jon M. Grueser, et.
al ., plaintiffs, ·vs· e; . R.
Hoffman aka Elza R. Hoff·
man. et. al ., defendants.
This action has been
asslgnl!d Case Number
18,084 and Is pending In
the Court of Common
Pleas of Meigs county,
Pomeroy. Ohiool.5769.

the following:
11 Purchase
2) Lease (one and three
year I
3) Lease with option to
purchase [specify buyback

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

• Bact&lt; hoes
• Dump Truck s
elo-sov
• Trencher
• Water • Sewer

ROUSH

• Hot Wolltr T o1nk1

.,1

have been named defen·

include
separate .bids· tor each of

l:iHIIIIi/lfid plff(ft ~f'OWr tM
ft~llm#Jilll( tele11latJne uclutni(M ...

MNOUNCING

• DlltiWUIII!ri

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

Public Notice
ministrators. successors,
assigns and spouses of E .
R. Hoffman aKa Ella R.
Hoffman. Rosa Hoffman
and R. 0 . Harper, ad·
dresses unknown; you are
herebv notified that YO\J.

PH. 992-5612
or 992·7111
o,.o 9 AM. to 5:30 P.M.
2·11·1 mo.

foreteiture of a land in·

stallment contract between
the Plaintiffs and the
Defendants and for other
relief.

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notice
IN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
Jon M. Grueser, et, al.,
·· Plaintiffs,
·VI·
E. R. Hoffman aka Ella R.
Hoffman. eta I.•
Defendants.
Case No. 18,084
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To E. R. Hollman aka
Ella R. Hollman, Rosa
· Hoffman and R. D. Harper,
·tr llvfno. and the unknown
Mefrs, n•xt of kin, devisees,
legatees, executors, ad·

AUTO &amp; TRANS.
REPAIR

Defendants and to order

sulitudc witho.ut provitlin)! you with
eompany ." How dn you cope with
same' - LISTENER AGAINST HIS
Wll.l.
DEAR LISTENER :
Dt:prive hi Ill I nr herl of your COIIIpany . - HELEN AND SUE
I Got a proble111 ' Or a subject fnr
discuss ion, tw~generation style?
f)il·et'l your questions to either Sue
nr Heh·n Bottel - or both if you want
t t 1'01Jibination Jnother-daughter answer - in care of l11is newspapel'. l

By the Editors
of Conoumer ReportH
It's new. It's improved. It's been
described as "an almost idea l
policy" by Money magazine, but the
editors of Consumer Reports think
that universal life insurance has
serions drawbacks.
Simply defined, universal-life is a
new type of policy thBt packages
tenn insurance with 'an investment
fund . Part of the money you put into
a universal-life policy buys plain
tcnn insurance protection. Part
goes toward company expenses and
profits. The remainder, referred In
as the policy's cash value, earns in·
teres! at a variable rate.
The policies offer somewhat
gn •ater conveniencl:' than 'tradi tiona I
life insu1·ance policies. You can ad·
just the face amount. You can pay
whatever annual pre111ium you wish
fwithinlimitsl, rather than the fixed
annual premium of a standard
whol&lt;~life policy, payin~ more when
you can afford it,. skipping a
premium when money is tight. That
increas&lt;'l flexibility is an advantage.
For universal-life to compare
favorably with other investments.
its interc.st must be substantially
lax-deferred. The "ross yield on
universal-life is not competitive.
And despite whBt sales people wiU
probably tell you, lax deferral is not
dcfinilt• - Not yet. anyway. The Jn.
lcl'llal Revenue Service still has to
confirm favorable lax treatment. So
far . the IRS will say only that the
malt~r is under study. The outcome

I'Dmeorr, Olt
l mi. west on
124 1ow11d Rvtl,.d

and Elizabeth Becker,
Plaintiffs, vs. Arnold J . Oc·
tei u and Barbara J . Oc·
teau Defendants. This ac·
tion·has been assigned case
no. 11015 and is pending in
the Coort of Common Pleas
of Meigs County, Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Ohio 45769,
The . object Q{ the Com·
plaint Is to Quidl' the title of
the Plaintiffs against the

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

St. Rt. l24

You are hereby notifiec'
that yo~:~ have been -·"~me.&lt;
Defendants rn a legal ac·
tion entitled John Becker

HAP :
Hac' s a quote for you: " A bore is

and Mrs. Don Bell.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush and
daughters, Kimberly and Jennifer,
spent Friday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush
visited Rev. and Mrs. 0. G. McKinney at Maplewood Lake recently and
accompanied them to Pari&lt;ersbur~
In the evening to revival services at
the Church of the Nazarene where
Rev. McKinney is the evangelist.

r.

The Daily Sentinel Pag•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

/1/ t:Jll

•,

QUOtes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
aale . Spring Volley
Trading, Spring • Valley
Plaza, ~· 8025 or 446·8026.

·•

----'---~ '

EVERYBODY
Shops the
WANT AD

;~

wlJ
" .

�Page 8-The Daily Sentinel
Hel Wantld

11

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, ~io

· They'll Do It Every Time

Bookkeeper . Onlv e•·
perienced need applv . Send

2 bdr . and 3 bdr . mobi le
hom es . Ca ll-4-46·0175.

resume to Box 507 in care

Gall ipolis Oallv Trl~une ,
· 8253rd . Ave .. Gallipolis, Oh
45631.

Centenary , 2 bdr ., p ri v ate
lot. r ef . &amp; dep., $160 mo.,
adulls. Caii61H43·764• .

. Wit h the Army Nationa l
Guar d, you ' II have a par t
tim e job w ith f ull tim e
benef its. You will attend
train ing one weekend each

44

Furni shed apartment for
rent . Ca 11 446·3937 .

civilian occupation.' Call
675·3950.

delivered m eals program
congregate
andthe horne·
for
persons over
age of
60 In Adams. Brown,
Gallia, Highland, Jackson,
Lawrence, Pike, Ross,
Scioto and Vinton Counties .
Experience
managing
Older Americans Act and
Title
XX
funds
are
preferred. Must have the
ability to compile, organize
and analyze budget and
service information . B .A.
in social
services,
nutrition, home economics
or related ffeld preferred .
Travel required . Beginning
salarv
S17,000·$14,000 .
resumes must be received
bV Fridav. Febru.a rv 19,
1982, in the office of the
Area Agen cy on Ag ing
DIStrict 7, Inc., P.O. Box
976, Rio Grande College,
Rio Grande, Ohio 4567 4. An
Affirmative ·Action/Equal
Opportunity Emloyer.
GET VALUABLE training

as ·a young business Person

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier . Phone
us ' right awlJy and get on
the ellgibilllv list at 992·
2156 or 997 ·2157.
LPN or R N needed part or
fu(l
time . Excellent

benefits,

comparable

salary . Arcadia Nursing
Cehter, Coolvi ll e, Ohio. 667 ·
3156.

De luxe furnished apartment, exce llent location, 1
or 2 adu lts, only S275, ref. &amp;
dep. requ ir ed. Call 4460338 .

~~~~~~~~~=====r~~~ii~~~~~~
Rentals
23

p ofess·onal
1 ..
r
Services

Piano
Tuning
&amp;..
Repair .Call Bill Ward for
appo i ntmen t,
W a !_d ' s
Keyboard, 446·4372.
C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in·
dividuals.
Carol Nea l 446·3862
Piano's tuned and ser·
vic ed . Cal l Bob Grubb, 446·
4575 .

Real Estate

Situations Wanted

income tex service. Prom·
pt accurate . Martha Fry,
Pomeroy . 992·3414 .

Will care for elderly in my
home. Private room or
semi -private. 992·6748 .
Part·tlme babysllter for 7
girls 2 days week . My home
or will consider yours if
close
to
Elementary
school.
1.!_~ ;_·....!!
ln, s,u-"
ra"'n.:.:c,_,e'--- -

SANDY ANO BEAVER In·
surance Co, hils offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in·
dividual needs. Contact
Lewis Hughes , agent .
Phone 446·3318.
IS

Schools Instruction

Dl's Crafl Supplv, Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·2134. X·
stllch headquarters, ALL
colors DMC . Free lessons.
Karate the ultimate In self
defence a ll private lessons,
Men. women, &amp; children .
lnstructiion thru black
belt. Also available Karate
uniforms puching and
kicking bags, end protec ·
live equipment .
143
Burlington Rd., kason, Oh .
Call286·3074.
Wanted to Do

18

Will babysit In
895·3911 .

mv

home.

McDaniels Custom But·
chering . Caii304:B82·3774.

BuSiness
Opportunltv

21

own

your own paint and
decorating store. AAA·l
paint manufacturer needs
distributor for this area .
Modest investment. Call
collect (304) 743·5071 Mon·
dav ·Frlday or write P.O.
Box 308, Milton WVa 75541 .
12

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
vour home. 30 vear fl•ed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St .,
Alhens, Oh . 592·3051.

------·-

Houses for Rent
2 bedroom family rm ., $300
mo. ut ilitieS and dep.
requ ired. Call 446·4554 .

41

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
decorated
un ·
furnished, 3 rm . house.
Suitable for single person
or retired couple. GarQen
space, deposit &amp; references
requ ired. Call 446·0450 or
446·1291 .
House 2 bedroom. 733 3rd .
Ave .• Gall ipolis . Deposit
required. Call 446·3870 or
446·1340.

3I __..:H
= om
= es,_I:.:O::.r_,S:.::a:.::le,___
1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446·7015 after
5:30p .m .
By owner, 2 bdr . house in
city , excellent ne i gh ·
borhood. Onlv $18,500. Call
446·2942 .
House for sa le in Rutland
Suburb . Needs remodeling.
Asking $15,000. 949·2478.
House for sate in Rufland
Suburb. Needs remodeling.
ASking $15,000. 949·2428.

New Income Limits. If you
Ladies needed for good earn between $9,000 to
paying temporary office S15,000 . a year, you may be
like work . No experience able to buv a 3 bedroom
necessery . Also need ladies · house (not a mobile home)
with ,c;:ar for light delivery ' for as l ittle as $135 . mo. No
work . Gas allowance. Ap· down payment. Call 992·
ply in person to Mrs. Car· 7034.
ter, Room 105, Meigs Inn·
Hole!, Weds . 9 to9 :30 a.m ., Comforlable 3 bedroom
Feb. 17.
home, 8 •1:2 percent
assumable loan, and is
Experienced Auto Body near PPHS, large fenced in
man . 10 years experience, yard, kitchen appliances
more .
We
are
must have own tools . Cali and
675·3373 .
relocat ing an·d can share
realtor's fees by selling
now. Call after 6 pm 675·
1625.
12

Apartmem1
for Rent

Furnish.e d
r oom
S85 ,
utilities pd ,, single mal e,
i':ange, refr ig. sh are bath .
446·4416 afler 7PM .

mont!l and two weeks each
year . Benefits include low
cost life in surance, ex ·
cellent pay and a free pen·
sian plan . Plus the Army
Guard's valuable techn ical
schooling may help you
prepare for a we iLpaying

The Area Ag ency on Ag ing
District 7, Inc. is now ac·
ceptlng appli cati ons for the
position of Nutrition Coor·
dlnator . Will be responsi~le
for management of the

4-2 ~~ Mobile Homes - for Rent

House meadowbrook Ad·
dition 3 bedroom , family
room with fireplace, cen·
tral air, basement, 304·675·
1542.

Smal l 2 bdr . suitable for 2
people. 104 Fourth Ave.,
Gallipolis .
Deposit
required. 446·2957 .

2 brd . apt. HUO excepted,
kitchen turn , utilities partial l y pd ., excell e nt
l ocat ion . Call 675·5104 or
675-7284 .

2 bdr. completely furn., all
electr ic , carpeted, adults,
no pets, 458 2nd. Ave .•
Gall ipolis, $225 per , mo.
plus deposit. Call 4-46·2236
oni46·2S81.
Apartments· 1 and 2
bedrooms. Rent starts at ; 1
bedroom $152, 2 bedroom
$188, deposil·$700. Call 446 ·
2745.
.
Furnished apartment, upstairs, 4 rooms and bath .
One or two adults, referen·
ces and security deposit
required. Call 446·0444 af·
ter 5PM.
Apartment for rent . Call
446·0390 .
Upsta irs, 2 bedroom, fur ·
nished apartment. Private
entrance . Ca l! «6-2374 or
446·0284.

3 bdr . house, 2 firepla ces,
central air, garage, fence&amp;
swimming pool. Call 675·
5104.
Large house, · downtown
Gallipolis . Call 446·7265 or
446·0644.
Homes tor Rent, Lease, or
Land Contract In twon, or
country.
Call
Strout
Realty, 446·0008.
4 bedroom house with large
living room, dining room,
c:ind garden. $175 month.
Security deposit. Call 992·
569'2 ..
2 bedroom house. Call 675·
3431 .
42

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

3 bdr. double wide located
in Johnson's Mobile Home
Park . No pets. deposit
required, all utilities pd .
except electric , newly
decorated, $300 month. Call
446·3547 .

-------2 bdr . mobile home close to
HMC . Ca l l446·7032 .

bedroom unfurnished
apartment. 992-5434 or 9n
5914 or.304·882·2566 .
3

Apartments. 67·5·55-48 .
APARTMEN TS. mobile
homes,
hou ses,
Pt.
Pleasant and Gall i pol is.
~14 · 446 · 8221 or614.,24H484 .
Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason, wv. 773·5651 .
Garge apartment. two
mobile homes on Rt . 2, 5
minutes from town. Call
675·3000 afler 5 caii67H277

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Price
reduced, used mobile
homes. CALL 446·7512.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446 ·3868.
12•60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up V(ith 2
or 4 lots, gas hea1, t-ural
water, dose to town, flnan·
cing avai lable . Phone 446·
1294.
windsor
14x70, 3
bedroom, 112 bath, all elec·
trlc, centrdl air cand . Call·
446·9681 afler 5 .

77

5 .75 acre with or without
1972 14l&lt;70 mobile home,
12x14 room , 2 bdr. Call756·
9357 .

USEO MOBILE
576·2711 .

HOME .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Call
304·576·2711.

Mobi le home tor rent.
Adults only, no pets. Call
367-7438.
Mobile home for rent. Call
446·0390.
3 bedroom mob ile home on
private lot, 3 miles South of
Gallipolis. Adults, deposit ,
no pets. Call 446 .. 7376
evenings.
2 bdr trail er in Kanauga ,
partially furnished . Pay
own utilties. Call 446·7044
between 9·5.
Trailer for rent. Call 446·
0756 or 446·4225.
3 bdr. mobile home Quail
Creek . Call 745-9519 alter
5PM .
2 bdr . trailer furnished ,
adults only, Brown Tra iler
Park , 992-3324.
Nice 1 bedroom furnished
mobile home. 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt. 33. Phone
for appointment 992 · 7~79 .
2 bedroom house trai ler in
Racine . S175 per month . $75
depos it . You pay utilities.
Unfurnished but kitchen .
614·367-7811.
2 bedroom trailer close to
school , stores, and park .
Deposit required. Mid ·
dleport . 992·5914.

1972 17x65 Schullz, Jbdr.,
gas heat, partially fur · 3 bedroom
furnished
nlshed. Call675·2907.
I Mobile Home with washer
on private lot.
1974 Schultz 14x70, exc. ~~~~~·~~ reQuired, no pets.
cond ., AC, washer &amp; dryer,
2bdr .. dining room, all elec·
tric . Phone675·3466.
35

70 acrea of vacant land.
5210 per acre, mineral
rights Included, located on
German Ridge Rd., ap·
pro•. 1 117 mi. off State Rl.
Ul. Coll379·2676.
Large tract Of land located
In Pomerov, Ohio. can be
financed at 12 percent. 992·
5786.

= Is-=
c-. M
.-;::
e::
rc:;h:-:a::n::d;;-ic;::e; 5.c4:---;M
1969 Ford 2 ton cabin
chassis, new 300 motor, 5
spd trans., 2 spd . rearend,
new tires, new paint job,
outstanding conditon. 3 yr .
old Dalmatian, male. Call
367·7533.
Ker osun heater, solid oak
couch &amp; ace. table, glass
f ire screen, 50 gal. drum
wilh pump. Call 446·4211 .
Moving must sell Kenmore
heavy duty washer &amp;
dryer, like new, "$550 for
pair . Call245·5624 . .

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt..
Park Central Hotel.
Space lor Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy, Large lots . Call
992·7479.
Tra iler lots for r ent . Sewer
&amp; water furnished. Cal1675·
1076.

Merebandlse
51 .---"H'-"o"'u~
se:!h,o,ldc:G
=
oo,d,s'---

Baby bed for sal e good con·
dit ion. $.40,00. Phone 446·
3735 till 7:00P, 446·7610 al ·
fer 5:00P .
19 cu .ft. ref i rgerator .
Large freezer. avocado G.
c . 5200. Hullv 10 spd .
bicycle, new, $135. Call675·
2635.
SWA I N
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 OHve St.,
Gallipolis. 3 nice bedroom
suiteS, gas &amp; electric
ranges ,
5
used
refrigerators, 2 new frost
free refrig. al $275 .00, 3
pice living room suites
$199.00, 2 piece living room
suites Sl40 .00, love seats
$70 .00, wood dinet set w ith 4
captain chairs (new)
275.00, 9x10 linoleum rugs
9x12 · $10, large owl lamps
$75 .00, padded maple
rocke-rs $3-4.00, new &amp; used
wood burners from $60.00
to $275.00, several chest
and dressers. variety of
silver stone cook ware. 4
utility kitchen cab inets,
TV's, dinet sets, beds,
desks. and lots more . Open
lOam to5pm, 446·3159.

2 bdr. mobile home un·
furnished , couples only .
Call675· 1076
2 bedroom mobile home for
renl. Call675 .. 3885.

t stero JVC turntable with
1120 LU)(man reciever and
2 Bose speakers, w ill con·
Sider selling separate. Ca ll
388·8556.
Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·2205.
Jenson AM· FM cassette
stereo with built in booster.
$225 . 614·742 ·3154.
20 ft . telephone poles for
sale . 304-675·6918.
A ir compressor $675; large
advertising sign $350; Nova
parts 68·72 model. High
performance model 350 4
volt main short block $275;
39 Chevv bodv $500; new
cou ch $500 ; 39 Chevv sedan
$1,000 . 304·576·2602 .
Used tires. Hanshaw$ Tires
_
on Lucas Lane . Call 675 ·
7360.
Sears dune cart, goOd con·
dilion . Call304·576·2164 .
For sale -7 ft . Brunswick
pool table $250. drum set 6
pc . Ludwig $300 . Ca ll 675 ·
4287 .
Muzzle loading- rifle .
Lineman Great Plaines, so
caliber. Caii304-B82·2823 .
1 treadmill jogger, $50, Call
675·4616.
For sale firewoOd S10.00
pickup, you get. Call 304·
576·2010.
Stack 3 antenna Ham 11
rotor 70' cable &amp; coax, 45'
tower . Call675·5066,
Used electric furnance .
Caii30H7S·3099.

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

.
54

Misc. Merchandlce
Lump Coal $32 per ton .
Zinn Co~ I Co., Inc. Call 446·
1408 between 9 and 4.

71

For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs, $75. See at 769
Brownell Ave., Middleport,

1977 Trans Am, auto, PS,
PB, air, low miles. 1979 VW
4·spd., air cond. Call ~7599.

- '

Auto for Sale

New wood stove, half price,
Coupe,
never used, $350. Can con - f 42,1l'OC
4 cvl.,
vert to furnance. Call 25(1·
1216, Gallipolis.
76 Grand Torino, 69,000
Snow tires, new recaps, miles, auto, PS, PB, AMG78·14, $30.00 . Caii67H898 . FM &amp;·track, Air cond.;verY
good cond. $1,700. Call 388·
8769.

56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judv Taylor at 367·
7220 .
ORAGONWYNO
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies,
CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
384.4 afler 4 p .m.
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all
indoor-outdoor
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans . Call446·7795.

79 Mustang 4 cyl .. 4 spd .,
37,000 miles, exc . cond .,
$4,250. Call afler 5PM, 446·
4297.

79 Mustang 4 cyl., 4 spd .,
37,000 miles, exc. cond .,
$4,250. Call alter 5PM, 446·
4292.
1970 Chevv Nova good tires
and good cond. Call 256·
65&lt;12.
1975 Buick Regal crome
wheels .t new tires, craig
AM ·FM radl'o, built in CB,
&amp;·track p layer, crusie con·
trol. Call446·3346 .
1979 Chevv Chevette . Four
door, hat cnback, factory
luggage
rack,
under
coating, new radials, one
owner, very lo.w mileage.
Priced under book . Will ac·
cept trade in . 667·3085 .

BRIARPATCH KENN
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters, HARTS Used Cars, New
English Cocker Spaniels. Haven West Virginia. Over
.20 less expensive cars in
Call388·9790 .
stock .
2 Reg . apricot male POOdle
puppies $125 ea . Ca II 446·
8367 or 756·6461.

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
ANO
TRUCKS · now available
through local saleS, under
Small part Chihuhu dog. $300.00. Call 1-714·569·0.241
Call379-2168 .
for your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.
Oobermans show
large type,
1981 Ford Escort, super
perment, beautiful
sharp, PS, PB, AM·FM
crop, red female, 4 months stero, extra low mileage,
old. Call992-7888 .
$6,000. Call 675·2571 or 675·
4318.
Rabbits for sale. Ca ll 304·
• 675-7478.
"'
1975 Volkeswagon Super
Beetle, new paint, sunroof.
low miles, other extras,
-...
-' .- • . • • "''Y'
_ .....
$7,600 . 304-675·7415 afler
5PM.
&amp; bi"QSIBER

..... ......

1968 Chevelle Malibu 5600,
'I Farm Equipment
1973 Chevy Luv truck S350.
Both needs some work . Call
JIVIDEN'S
FARM 675·2845 anvlime .
EQUIPMENT
446·1675
Special Sa le on NEW 1975 · Mustand, good con·
dition. ask ing $1,000. Call
LONG TRACTOR!
304·882·2257 or 882·2873.
Model
HP
Price
26024
54924.00
31Q28 5594.p!l
1975 Pl ymouth station·
31Q-4x4--28 7072.00
wagon very good cond .,
36035 6555 .00
cruise control. AM-FM
46041 .97353.00
radio, luggage rack, $1,200.
460-4•4--41.9- 9619.00
Call937·7276.
51o48.5-7778.00
51Q-4x4--48.5-- 9886.00
70 Challenger
RT ·440
51o48.5-8450.00
maginum . Call675·1606.
61Q64
9314.00
61Q-4x4--64 - 11 ,304.00
Plus Freight 1973 Plymouth Valient 6
cvl ., verv good cond . Call
675·2579 .
Sale Oate March 13, 1982
CALL NOW I
72
Truck's for Sale
SHOW ING OFF
1981 Datsun pickup 5 spd.
VERMEER
transmission, long bed.
SUPER
Call446·8380 after 5.
BALERS
And Associated
Equipment
1975 Ford T880 15 ft. steel
dump, gas, 5 &amp; 4 lrans., 34
Plus
The New Line Of
rear rears. 1972 Ford T9000
Vermeer···
20 11. alum . dump, ttrlaxle,
Zweegers
318 Oetriot, 5 &amp; 4 lrans., 38
Mowers &amp; Rakes
rears. Phone614·992·3861 .
Dale : Febuarv 22, 1987
Time: 8:00PM
Place : Gall ia Academy
High School, 340 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis, vo.Ag . room .
1980 MF 755 diesel tractor
'like new', 1980 MF 450
round Hay baler 'like new•.
1980 MF 775 havbine 'like
new'. 1962 Ford 601 Work ·
master diesel tractor
w/front end loader . New
Idea hay rake, grader
blade. Phone 675·3203 after
5:30PM.
Livestock

70 International pickup,
gOOd cond,, 5450. Call 256·
6309 afler 6PM.
1979 Ford E•plorer, 74,000
miles, topper, many ex tras, excellent condition .
Call 446·8038 alter 3:30.
1980 Tovota, SR5 Pickup,
am -·f m,
5·speed,
low
mileage. Excellenl. $5,500 .
742·2877 after 5.
1977 3/4 Chevv pickup, exc.
shape with · self contained
camper $3,200. 65 Olds 98,
new paint, good cond., S850.
Call887·3180.

flllv. Call379·2168.

64

Hoy &amp; Groin

For sale ear corn. Caii61438H514.
wet, wire tie $1.20 per bale.
Call 614·474-6889. Clr·
clevllle, Oh.

2 bedroom mobile home
Trailer sites. 10 percent partlallv furn ished . Call
Adverti si ng speci a lities. ! down. 997·7571 or 992·3830. · 675·415&lt;1.
Book matches, calenders, 1
pen
pencils, dlcount
5 acres SR681, near Tup- Furnished 2·bedroom
coupon books. Dlsmu~e·s '1 pers Plains. Good building mobile home. Deposit and
405 2nd . Ave., Gallipolis, site. 614-1155· 1116 after S:30 some utilities paid. Call
446·0474.
p.m.
676·6517.

Grovnd ear corn S82. t&lt;in .
985·3581.

a.

worge round boles $15.00
each. Call 458·1656.
1

'

WITH ALL. TH

EASY, PAINl-ESS WAYS
OUT AT A

DISPOSAL..'?

1978 Luv truck low mileage
ant, topper, S3,450. Coll 675·
1229.
71 Ford pickup tr~ck, S350.
Caii30H75-3123 .

:SLIPPING THII:OUGH THE
REPORTERS' FINGER'S A6AIN,
EASY HAS RENTED A .J!!f,P...

Vans&amp;4W.O.

1977 Ford Bronco, 64,000
miles, good cond. $3,200.
Coli 446·4185 or 446'7013.

DAYS AGAIN.
TIC TAC DOUGH
(fi) MACNI!;IL-li!HR!R

I 'P &amp;ETTJ;P: FIND A PLACE
TO SLEI'P BEFO~E IT Glm;.

WHY ARt; THE

NI6HT~

SO LONe
THIS TIME- 0~

TOO

THE YEAP:I

::

1981 Honda GL·.I100 In·
terstate, like new. 1,900
miles. Call 675·6850 or 615·
3203 afler 5:30PM.
Boats and
Moton tor Sale

I

1978 Hvdra Sport 1811. Bass ·
150 HP Mercury with
trim &amp; tilt, 12·24 YOII
Evenrude trolling motor, 3
batteries, Pro·trail trailer.
Call304-773-5593.

~·~~~A::::,:ND

AW F#J.IL'/ tWJ.£, I MA SW:.\Wb
tJJHml I CAN srm A.T

ENTERTAINMENT
IGHT
7:35
SANFORDANDSON
7:61
ClltUPDATE NEWS ·
8:00
e&lt;IJL.IT1U HOUSE 011
THE PRAIRIE L1ur1lng1111
Wilder' I Joy over ihelmmlnant
birth of hlr llr1t child 11
ahattered when herhuaband Ia

5

!

r--__,=-, ToP 1

.,
I

Auto Parts

felled by a atroke while tryklg to
aave hi a cropa during' a hall

I

;

&amp; Accessories

atorm.(Part one or a two·part
eplaode; 00 mine.) (Cioaed. 9.@plloned; U.S.A.)
lJJ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

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

~VjECIAL

MOVIE
·(SCI!NCE·FICTION .,.

8' Ford truck bed . Call 773·
5528 or 773-59~0.
·

(Jj""'J'I"Jrl

ANNIE

THAT'S

i

C,DIBI.E
llDJ MR. MERLIN
GREAT PEAFOR·
MAHCEI 'Brldelhll~ R"'loll·
ed : A Blow Upon 1 Brulae'

Auto R:epair

a.

oualily Autobody
Pain!
work. Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
AUto Jrim Center, .446· 1968.

Charlee arrlvee at Brld..head
from Pari• to epand the New

Year of 1025, and learn a that
Saba allan, who myattriouiiY
dlllppeored II C~rlll"!~l, hll
b"n
found.
(Cioeed·
CJpllonld; U.S.A.) (60mlno.)
8:05 (I) II 'lYlE -(COMEDY! •u~&lt;o

camping
Equipment

1979 73 fl . Lavton travel
trailer $3,500. Located in
Racine, Oh. Call247·3975 or
247·3774.

. ~fll!t..Medneu"

8:30 •

E.,, ·1Ees

8:1111
8:00

Home
1mprovenients

WI:LL, (PUFF) I SURE
AM GLAD (HUFF) YOU

FELJ.AS (PUFF) ARE
PUSHING!

{I)

I (D).

llDJ

1PRIVATE

NJAMIN
CBN UPDATE NEWS
llJO~UI

MONOAY NIGHT
MOYIE 'The Jerk' 1979 Storo:
Stave Marlin, Bernadette
f !!,I.
W llDJ M.A.S.H.
(j))
BERNSTEINIE!THOVEN Maxlmlllon
Schell lntroducae the 'leonore
OVerturt No. 31n C MaJor. Opu1
72,'whlchloployodbvLoonord

I

ALLEYOOP

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com - ''1
mercia! and residential.
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

...THIS Tl-IING IMliJLD m;: (PI,IFF) AWFUL
T'PUU.. (GROAN) WITHOUT YOUR HELP I

Barnetaln and the Vienna

CAPTAIN STEEMER C;lr·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
Call 446-2107 .

Philharmonic . Barnetaln aleo
conduct• 'Symphon~ No. 41n
B·lllt MIJor, Opuo 60'. (60

~

mtne..J

8:30 (])eCll JOHNNY GOES

,

HOMI Johnny C1r10n returna

tothetownotNorfolk,Nebraakl
where hi grew up, and tak11

PAINTING · interior and. •
exterior , plumbing, ·~':
roofing, some remodeling. _
20 vrs. e•p . Call388·9657 ,

viewer• to Ute houee where he
IIY~,goeafotarldalnthe tD3D
Chry1l1r he drove ••• young

GASOUNE ALLEY
10:011

Mrs. Wallet, becau'se LjOU
are an old friend of

to
affair at. am&lt;~bodLJ
er.. a fract1on oHhe sum
involved!

the Bobbles ...

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing iri Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls . Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454 .

10:10
10:28
10:30

:~:

";.

l ~UPPOSE WE
COUI.P FIND SOME
WOii'K IN THE OFFICE
F'Oii' ZAFER, IF IT'S

"

··': ~

..
_,. .•
• ••.

·' ·

T11A71MPORTANT
TO YOU, OMN&lt;...

LOCKSMITH
Service .•. ~:
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882-7079.

... rT l'oOIJLP JE AM

OPPORWNITY

FOR ZAFEI': TO SHARPEN HIS
~6$ SK/LLS ANP IM·
PROVE HIS ~ISH AT THE

IT'S COMING THI!&gt; WAY
... IT MUST ~ iHE
~.ssz.'

SAME TIMEl

TIBEVENINO NEWS
CINUPDATENEWS
SINO OUT AMERICA
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
rJ1EBENTB

ltlrCIJ"Ma.rw;az.

m
(D).

'~Kkkl"

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

..'·

11:35

12:00

Excavating

BARNEY

Gallipolis Diversif ied Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Special
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446·4440 ,

•.'·

SILAS!! THESE
DADBURN TOMATER5

:I CAN
PUT'EMON

ARE GREEN

RIPE·AWAV

"

12:30

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine repairs,
service . Authorized Singer ., ~
Sales &amp; Servicel Sharpen
•
Scissors. Fabric Shop,,7~
Pomeroy . 992·227-4,
• ,

12:118

...-

1:00
1:30

. •·'

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
(
N. air condition service, - ; .
commercial, industrial.
.Phone 882·2079.
•IS

l

r:~~s

VILI.ERFD
11:01
INTHEFAMILY,
11:28
UPDATENEWS
1 1:30
TH!TONIOHTSHOW
'TheBtatOfCareon'Gueeta:AII
· McGrew, Pat Boone, Phil
·Donahue. (Rape1t; 80 min a.)
()) ANOTHER UFE
(Jl .MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••••
8 Bull" 11180
NNYHILI.
CIS LATE MOVIE
VI! -(WESTERN) •••

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

.

WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP
BOXING SuaarRav Leonerd va
Br!IJC! f'inch.
ewllDJ LOUORANTTho Trlb
dlacovera the pl i ght of
rrlohtened and exploited
refuQIII efllr It hlfll I
Vietnam••• photographer

ruloo. (60 mlno.)
()) COLI.EOE BASKETBALL
Appalechlan
Stete
va

RINGLES'S SERVICE· e•·
perienced mason , roofer,
carpenter, electrician,
general repairs and
remodel ing. Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675· 4560.
'

84

llllr~ {jl) HOUSE CALLS

(I)

'whoaetalent almost mak11 up
for 1'111 breaking the city room

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

83

Genenl H;oullno

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

TRISTATE
• UPHO~STERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Golllpof is.
446·7833 or 446·1833.

1978
Chovv
van, MOWREYS Upholslerv Rt.
customized. Call 446·7015 or · 1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
446-3684.
675-415&lt;1.
I'

CAME SACK
TO VISIT.

IGURCOHI
I K) KJ
HIS r I I] r I I I
Now arrange

•

the Circted letters to

rom; the eurprise answer, as suggeoted by lhe oboYO cartoon.

Answer here:
Saturday':

I

.

II)

(Anowera tomorrow)
Jumbleo: RAVEN VITAL EMERGE BICEPS
Ana-: A lrulllul aouiCI of lnlormatlon THE GRAPEYI!'IE

Jumble Book NO. 18, contllnlng 110 pualel, I IYIIllble lor S1.15 ~1pald
from Jumb... alo this newsp~~par, loJI 34, ,.CMWood, N.J. 07641. lncl~a your
MAll, ICfdNn,
codt lncl lftlkl cbtc:ltl
lbll to NIWiptperbookl.

'A time for thinking'
lly Oowald Jacoby
ud Alu Soata1
Oswald: "Faber has published another line booli: by
H.W. Kelsey. Like all Kelsey
boou the material Ia lor
advaac:ed playeri, but It Ia
well p..-tecl and makes
lor 1ooc1 reat11n1. 1111 first
chat:! Ia entitled 'A time
for
k1D1.' "
Alu: "Totlay'a hand Ia
constructed from one of hla.
. Declarer playa dummy's
seven of heartS at trick one.
East producea the queen.
South takes hla ace and
decides to set up dlamorula
to aet a quick club discard.
He leads hla el1ht of the
suit."

Oswald: "West ducu and
wins the secood diamond . He
leads another heart. South is
In dummy. This high dla·
mond lllri hll own hand with
no way to get to It right
away. He leads a trump.
East wioa and leads the jacl&lt;
of cluba. Now South must
loae a club and bla nice

1ame."

I'IORTH

1-IS-12

+ltl?lll
\'KJ7

.

+Qt

+.u

WEST

EAST
+AK
•Qu

---.

•eu2

tAIOU
teas
+KBBU
+J 10 t 7
SOUTH
+QH 52
\'A 104
tKJ 8
+Q2

Vulnerable: Eaat-West
Dealer; South
Weol

North

Elol

Sooth

Pou
Pou

t+

Pau

Pau

I+

Opening lead: \'2

·

Alan: "Do you aee how a
llttle thought at trick one
would have . brought the
. aame home? Soutli should
have played dummy's tack
of hearta at trick one. Eaal
would aWl play the queen,
but now South'a 10 of fiearta
would have been a sure
entry to hll hand and he

would have been able to get
that all important club
discard."
Oswald: "South was
unlucky to lind East with
both high trumps and the
queen of hearts, but
forethought would bave taken care ol those bad breaks."

hll 1843hlgh ochoolcluo. (110

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years eX-·
perience, specializing in
buill up roof . Call 388·9857 .

82

WHAT THE 6H06T

man. and atMnda a reunion of

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

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895·3807 .

) I I )

l&amp;ogl".

WITH~ ~.f'OUCATIOO

I

II

SHOW

Affli_Tlti!R UFE
·
• C1J FA..LY FEUD
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND CoMPANY
CIJ
NIOHTL Y 'BUSINESS
MPORT
{ll)
RICIWID 8111-B
SIIOW
(j)) CREATIVITY WITH BILL
MOYERS 'Thll'l No Tomot·
o ... That ' a a Work ol Art'
Surprising lnnoutlonaln
tomato ralalng to create more
protltableand ·aoclally valuabte
tomatOM 11 the theme or thia

BORN I.J.)SER

boat~

87
73

C1J
;~~y
li:~PPET

1977 Honda 360 Street, $400.
Call 304-887·2757 or 887·
2873:

78

byHennAmoldondBobLee

Unocromble thele lour Jumbles,
one loiter to ....n oquaro. to form
lour ordina.y WOldt.

MOIIDAY
P!l.15,1882

1975 Honda 750, drag pipes,
6
over front
end,
King/ Queen seat, e)(tras, ""
$1000. Call Calvin anvtime
446·6638.

77

ftj'}I}N} fi}'i} 'jjl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~.

7:00 (])e PM IIAGAZIN!
[))
A GREAT DAY TO
I!IMEMBER
C1J
!N'nRTAINM!NT

\977 Harlev Davidson 1200
custom. Must see to ap·
predate . Call446·'7015.

76

.

EVI!NINQ

CAPTAIN EASY

75

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

I

P~YSICIAN'S

.

1978 Subaru 4 W.O. stati on· '
wagon. Needs engine work.
30·35 m .p.g. $1,400 . or ·'
might take gun, roto-rlller •
or GravelY as partial
tradein. 992-7247 ..

5,000 bales of straw, never

Services

Television
•
•
vtewmg

A GUN lt:-1 A
DAI'!K AI.I.EY

7=4====~NI~o=.to~.r=-c~v~cl=.e~s==== ~~:

l·~~~~~~~~i~T~~~~~~~~;~i

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DICK TRACY

- - - ---:--- ·

5 vr. old more and 9 mo. old

For rent mobile home, Pt.
Pleasant. Call 446·8271.

IS, 1982

For sale 1978 CJS Jeep! \
Renagade, good cond ........
$4,000. Call675·65&lt;15.
: ·

63

2 &amp; 3 bedroom mobile
homes furnished or un·
furnished, one bedroom un·
furnished apartment. Call
1675·1117' or675·3812.

~bruary

76 Dodoe van -400 engine.
air cond .• PS,_ PB, hea-..:v
duty suspens1on , crus1e
control , ralley wheels, low
mileage, $2,200 . Call 1-304· .
458·1513.
•

55
Building Supplies
Automatic washers &amp;
dryers,
reworked &amp;. Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
guaranteed. priced fror'n
. dews, lintels, etc. Claude
$60 to $125. ca 11 756·1207.
Winters, Rio Grande, 0.
Call245-5121.

Qui lting frames, velvet
throw pillows, book cases.
picnic tables, fawn fur ·
niture, and · I will · do
repairs . Ca ll-446·0978.

Professional

73

GE auto. washer, nice,
$110.00. Norge, dryer el&lt;c.
shape. $90.00. Call446·818l.

New 1 bedroom apartment,
downtown, furni shed or un·
furnished. private parking,
304-675-9760.

Lots &amp; Acreage

Nice level homesite in
Clearvlew River Estates·
sewer·W.ater· Eiec. $500.00
down. Phone 256· 1216.

GOOO
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
drye.-s,
refrigerators,
rahges .
Skaggs
Appliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Sto.ne Crest Motel.
446·7398.

T ir e chains for pickup
tru ck 15' wheel never used ..
Call367 .. 7790.

46
Home sale or rent Rt. 62 N.
7 rooms, 2 bath, basement,
carport, dep. &amp; ref. req .
Call 1-614-928·4339 afler
5: 30PM .

baby malresses, $25 &amp; $35,
thopedic
super
firm,
$95,
bed frames
S70S25,
&amp; S30.
Electric fireplace, gun
c·abinet. Living room suite.
wood table &amp; 4 chairs .
Us e d ,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri. , 9am to 5pm, Sat.
446·0322

Monday,

by Larry Wnght

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa , cha ir , r ocker, ot·
l oma n, 3 tables, $500. SQfa,
.ch air and loveseat, $275.
Sofa s and chairs priced
from $285. lo $795. Tablelijo.
$38 and up lo $109. Hide·a·
t:,eds,$340., queen size. $380,
Rec liner s, $175. to $295.,
La m ps from $18 . to $65. 5
pc. difetles from $79 .. to
$385. 7 pc., $189. and up.
Wood table with .t chairs.
$719 up t o $495. Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. an'd $375.,
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds.
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresse~ or box
spr ings, full or twin, $58.,
firm, $68 . and $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr . chests, $42. Bed
frames. $70.~nd $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350. , dinet·
te chairs S20.. and $25. Gas
or electric r.-nges, $295. Or-

Effiency apt,.r private
home, with private en·
!ranee . Call675·3220.

45

Monday. February 15, 1982

1:40

PEANUTS

'' I=IAT JUSTITIA
RUAT COELUM!"

TH~ ' COULD RUIN

MV WHOLE CASE

2:00

2:1a
2:30
2:40
3:00

3:10
3:40
1:118
4:00

4:30
4:18

11172

ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
Mchored by Tid Koppel.
CIJ
IIOVIE
·(ICIENCE·FICTION) ••
nderWoter CitY" ttMI2
BURHSANOAWN
ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
Anchorod by Ted Koppel.
()) ~~ LATENtOHT
&lt;Dl• ABC MOVIE OF THI!
wt:!K 'Valentine' 1878 Star~:
Jack Albert1on, M1ry Martin,
l#tl!l.§.wK.
CZJe&lt;Il LATE NIGHT WITH
DAVID LeTTERMAN Cluut :
comedian Franklin Ajaye. (80
mine.)
(]) JACK BENNY
()) lOUD GOLD Hcet: Dionne
WarwJck. Gold record wlnnere
orm their hit oongo.
CIN IIPOATIREPORT
IMAIIIIIIOJOAN
MY l.IT1U MARGIE
NEWI
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LAIT
AWAIIDI
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lor THOMAS JOSIPH
ACROSS
f5 Antitoxins
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origin
I Level
s Ness
2 Fanatical
9 Tennis
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luminary
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11 French city
5 "Sleuth" star
13 Lessen
&amp; Noun suffix
14 That is (Lat.) 1 "The Music
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Man" star
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18 Knightly title
challenging
19 Argue
10 Sell
21 Oolong
12 Layers
2% River (Sp.)
17 SiOWI
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unusual
23 Servant
day ... "
24 Have a think
2t Pinkish color
session
27 Devilfish
28 Kiln
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:10 Catnip
31 Footwear
:14 Monk's title
:15 GJ's bed
:18 Fonnal
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dance
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tO Hire
42 Speak
at length
43 Gennan city
44 Coup d'-

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25 Delayed
26 Put a new

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beam

27 Ex-Yankee

slugger
29 Philippine
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39 African

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letter

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
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· RJBEANDFAU., BUT AN IDEA IJVESON.-JOHN F. KE~

NEDY

�Monday, Felfuary IS, 1982

Nine die on Ohio's

highw~ys

BELLJ:VUE 'T"' Joseph Meyer,
Two pedestrtans kWed by hitFRIDAY •
and-run drivers were among the
ZANESVILLE- Debora Tisher, 16, of Bellevue, irl a train· snowrnonine victims of traffic accidents· 25, Zanesville, In a one-car accident bUe accident on 4 township road In
around Ohio over the weekend, the
Seneca County.
on Ohio 60 In Musklngum County .
Highway Patrol said. Two of the
fatal accidents Involved trains.
The patrol counts tramc fatall·
ties from 6 p.m . Frtday to mldillght
"We cannot IIV!! with what Is hapSunday.
WASinNGTON (AP) - Con·
pening," Sam Church Jr.. pres!·
The dead:
gresstonaJ heartngs on mine safety
dent .of the United Mine Workers
SUNDAY
&amp;re scheduled this Thursday and
union, said last month In calling for
TOLEDO - Troy G. Bartlett of
Friday amid charges that the
ihe congressional Investigations.
Toledo, a pedestrian struck by a hit·
mounting fataltty toll ts dlrectly
UMW o!ftctals have charged
linked to recent government per·
and-run driver on a Toledo city
there Is a dtteet connection bestreet.
sonnel poUctes.
tween the recen\latalltles and the
Over the past two months there
SATURDAY
personnel poHctjes pf the Mine
EUCLID- Graham Hastings, 60,
have been 35 deaths In the nat!on's
Safety !IJid Heal~ Administration,
mines. The 1981 toll of 153 miners
Euclid, a pedestrtan, In a hit-sklp
the federal watchdog of the under·
Incident on a city street.
kUied In job-related accidents was
ground roaJ lnd11Stry.
ELYRIA - Clara Dalton, 75,
the highest since 1975. Mine ace!·
The 11gency's Inspection staff has
Litchfield, In a on~ar accident on
dents have claimed 16 lives so
1
been decllnlng since the last year of
Ohio 18 at Ohio 301 In Lorl\ln
this year.
..
the Carter administration, dropCoun\}'.
The Reagan administration,
ping from 1,400 to about 1,:100. In
STOW - RDnnle L. Stowers, 33,
meal\whlle, Is responding to thereconjunction with that decHne, there
o! Cuyahoga Falls, In a on~ar ac·
cent outcry over the deaths by rewere 5,!XXIfeWerunclerground mine
cldenton a city street In Stow, In
versing Itself and seeking more
Inspections last year lhan•ln 1900.
SI!!Tlllllt county.
money to help protect the nation's
ATHENS- Charles A. Decker,
miners.
44, Murray City, In a two-car acel· . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - dent on U.S. 33 In Hocking County.
RAVENNA - Mittie M. Kirkendall, 55, Akron, In a two-car ace!·
dent on a county road In Portage
YES.' We are still doing senior pooraitJ and you have timf
County.
AKRON - Harold E . Santee, 00,
to meet the yearbook deadline.
of Sharon Center, In a car-train acYour full color portraits are done before traditional oil
cident on Ohio 162 In Summit
backdrops as weU as scenic settings to·give you a wide variety
County.

Heanngs on mine safety

far

HIGH"SGIOOL SENIORS

who were nmners-up are pictured and Include Troy
WU118, John Lyons and Rodney Manley, front, I to r,
and back, I to r, Charles Landers and the Instructor,
Richard Fetty.

DISTRICT COMPETITION-Jimmy Gibbs and
VIc Painter were first and second place winners In ttie
dl!trlct welding competition held at Meigs mgh
School Thursday night. Other Meigs mgh students

Meigs County happenings ..
Squads kept busy
Eight calls were a nswered by local emergency units over the weekend, the Meigs Emergency
Medical Service reports.
On Sunday, the Rutland Unit at
2: 56 took Gerald Grate from his resIdence at LangsvUie to Holzer MedIcal Center and at 9:20 a.m. took
.John Manning from Meigs Mine 2
to Holzer Medical Center. ' Racine
at 2: 20 p.m. took Violet Brewer
!rom StlversvUie to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
On Saturday at 10: 15 a.m ., the
Middleport Unil" wook Th~lma
Snyder !rom the LaSalle Hotel to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
2: 16 p.m . Middleport took Clara
Smith. ·South Second Ave., to
Holzer Medical Center and at 9:56
p.m. took Penny Smith from River·
side Apartments to Veterans Memorial. Pomeroy at 9:13 a.m. took
RDbert and Vicky Coe from Bur·
llngham, the scene of an auto accide nt, to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 11: 45 p.m. took Pa11·
tetta Edwards from the Eagles
Club 'to Veterans Memorial.

Blame accidents
on icy conditions
Two accld~nts resulting from Icy
roads were Investigated over the
weekend by the Pomeroy Pollee
Department.
At 12:20 p.m . Saturday, a car
driven by Riel,&lt; L. McKnight, Middleport, traveling south on Lincoln
Heights, sUd Into the parked vehicle
of E. D. Barnltz. There were damages to the left front of the Bamitz
car and th~ right fender of the
McKnight car. There were no lnjurles and no citations.
At 12: 51 p.m . Friday a car driven

POMEROY - The Greg R. Davis
fined on petty theft charges In court
the past week is not Gregory Carl ·
Davis associated with Kingsbury
Homes.
'

Area
deaths ·

by George Thomas, Rutland, slide
Into the car of Bep Phllscn parked
at the Sugar Run MJU on Mulberry
Ave. There were llght ilamages
and no Injuries.

Charles L Faulkner
Need extra help

'

Charles L. Faulkner, 60, Jackson·
viUe, Fla., former Pomeroy resident, died Sunday at a .JacksonvUie
hospital.
Mr. Faulkner Is survived by his
wl1e, the former Ernestine Rea of
Pomeroy. Don Rea of MtnersvUie
and Mrs. Aileen Wehrung, Pome-·
roy, are a brother and sister of Mrs .
Faulkner.
Other survivors are a daughter
and son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. David
Sage and daughter, Rebecca,
Cleveland; his father, Clt!ford
Faulkner, and a brother, Fred
Faulkner, both of Daytona Beach,
Fla.
Services wtll be held In
JacksonviUe.

A meeting wtU be held at the Rutland Civic Center, the former Ru·
ti!IDd Gymnasium which has been
~&amp;ken over by Rutland Village, at 7
p.m.,. Tuesday. Plans for an open
house will be held and tbere wtU be
a cleaning work session. Officials
urge all residents to attend since a
great amount of he lp wtu be needed
for the success of the new center.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions-- Ronald
Lutz, Pomeroy; Rev. WUHam Newman, Pomeroy.
Saturday Dtscharges -- Aiban
Salser, Preston Parsons.
Sunday Admissions-- Dorothy
Brewer, Portland .
Sunday Dis c harges- -Rona ld
Lutz, Ernest Black, Elizabeth
Salser, Dottle Sizemore.

Boosters to m~et
POMEROY ..TIJe Meigs Athletic
Boosters wilt meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the high school An
alumni basketball game will be
discussed.

Voi.30,No.214
Copyrightod 1982

ST . •JOHN'S, Newfoun(lland (AP ) - E ighty-four
olfshore oU workers, 15 of them Americans, were
missing and believed dead today after the sinking ol
the world's biggest on rig In a North Atlantic storm.
The 4,262-ton Soviet freighter Mekhanlk Tarasov
with 37 people aboard was listing 45 degrees In tbe
same storm, but the weather Improved slightly, and
the crew chose to stay aboard untU a Soviet fishing
boat arrived. Meanwhile, a Danish fishing boat was
standing by to take o!f the crew If the ship began to
sink.
The search an&amp;:iescue center ln Halifax said the
freighter was about 240 miles east of Newfoundland
and about 65 tnlles east of the drllllng site ln the
Hibernia ileld where the storm's huge waves capsized the $l.al mUHon oU rig Ocean Ranger Monday
·
morning.
Mobil OU Canada Ltd ., which leased the .Tapa"¥
buUt rtg from a Louisiana company, said the crew
Included 15 Amedcans, 52 Newfoundlanders, 16 men

-

.. - ~

·~
·... -==-.
·

Some .Kaiser employes affected now

THE PHOTO PLACE

A news story from the Associated Press concerning supplemental
benefits for workers of kaiser Alumtnwn's Ravenswood plant was
clarified Monday afternoon.
The story was to the effect that supplemental benefits wiU end in
March . However, a spokesman Monday said that the employes with
under 10 years of seniority are affected at this time.
This group of employes can receive up to 52 weeks of supplemental
benefits.
· However, those with from 10 to 20 years are to receive benefits for
one and one half years and those with 20 years or more are to receive
benefits for a period of two years.
Benefits for those over 10 years of service are guaranteed, the
spokesman said.

109 High St., P&lt;fmeroy
Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich

·ELBERFELDS
SA LEI

Kroger stores will remain open

WEMBLEY TIES

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A Kroger official says the supermarket
chain will remain open 11 4,!XXI union members carry out a threa ·
tened strtke March 3.
Talks between the company and the United Food and Commercial
Workers Union Locallre!l - which represents clerks, cashiers. and
grocery baggers In 65central Ohio Kroger stores- have brokeno!f.
Union members Sunday gave their leaders the authority to caU a

Special group of ties selected from our regular stock.
Regular prices $8.50 to $11.00. Hurry in for best
selection.
I

'l/.2
7~ PRICE

MARYSVILLE, Ohio (AP) - More than three weeks have passed
since Union County Shertlf Harry Wolfe was gunned down while
Investigating a burglary alram at a rural house, and authorttles
remain frustrated tn their attempts to find his kJUer.
Altho11gh authorities have been Investigating the shooting, Union
County Prosecutor Larry Schneider says no break In the case is
expected soon . Schneider repeatedly has said an arrest does not
appear Imminent.
A citizens' group has announced a $5,00! reward leading to the
conviction of the kUier.

With·Whipped Potatoes,

Chicken Gmy, Cole Slaw, Hot
Roll, Butter and Coffee.

FOR JUST

$325

Sony. No substitutes except' beverages wllich llav.e an additional
price.

-

Every ":'ednesday Night

BAKE(}·STEAK DINNER
DINING ROOII ONLY
.

'

Setved wHh Mashed Potatoes,
Choice.of Sllad, Roll, llld Orink.

Crow's
228

w. Meln

$J35_

Family Restaurant
'

PH. 882-&amp;432

POMEROY, GH.:

'

n£ I£W 'DUklEFU UED NliiiiiUAL RET,RMENT' ACCOII'fl'S-IIAa.
Contrary to popular beliel. you
don·! need b1g bucks 10 bu1ld a
rettremenl nest egg At leas! not
any .more
Because the new tax-delerred
Individual Retrrement Accounts at
farmers San~ lets
YOU butld a SIZable retirement fUnd
frQffi ffiodeSI annual InvestmentS
/&gt;os an example. deposit $t .000
at the start ot each year lor 30 years
nd your grand total. with earned
inter:est. could be a whopping
5270.292. (Based on 12% 1nterest.
compounded annually).
Thet s worth repeating : $1 .000
a year for 30 years. plus interest.
cotiiO eQual over a quarter ol a.)

Or. ''you prefer depoSlllhe
maxtmum amount tor an tndt·
VIdual. $2.000 a year. WhiCh could
make you a halt of a mllilonarre 1n
30 years
And because our IRA plans are
lax-deterred . you deduct !he
annU811MeStment from yOUr yearly
f8X8bl8 inCOme. So you 'll pay nO
federal taxes on your IRA until
you.start Withdrawing funds
(minimum age 59~)
. Then. when you retrre. yo~ · II
probably be in a IOW&amp;r tax bracket.
paying less taxes.

To get"" the details about
ollordoble IRAs, see the pro
lessionols ot Formers Bonk
They II show you how o little
chlcl&lt;en feed con help you
hotch o, golden egg lor 0
golden retirement .

A Pomeroy tnan was slightly In·
jured In a on~ar crash on U.S. 33'
Monday morning.
.John W. Moore, '1:1, was treated
and released from Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
state highway patio! said Moore
was drtvlng northbound at 8: 53
a.m. when he reportedly feU asleep
at the wheel. His vehicle then went
oil the left side of the road, struck a
guardrau and overturned.
Moore's auto was severely dam·
aged and he was taken to Veterans
by the Meigs EMS,
The patrol Investigated two deer

~ouse

acclden~

In the area on Monday.
Acrordtng'to the report, .John F .
Harrison, 48, Middleport, was west·
bound on Ohlol24at9: 10a.m . when
a deer jumped from the raUroad
tracks adjoining the highway and
collided with Harrison's car.
The deer left the scene and slight
damage was done to the vehicle.
Brenda G. Henson, 28, Rt. 3, Gal·
llpolls, was southbound on Ohio 160,
two miles north of U.S. 35, at 7: 40
p.m. when a deer ran Into the path
of her auto and collided, ca11Sing
sUght damage. The deer also left
the scene.

collapse

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - Eleven teen-agers were killed when a
house, used as a reglous school, collapsed because of heavy rains,
poHce said today.
Relief workers pulled the 11 dead from the rubble In Batkhela. 100
mtles northwest ol here. Five other students who were seriously
Injured were taken to a hospital.

NOlo The"""" ca&gt;cu,.loons are oOIOn&lt;ted &gt;O
TM

;~n~~.~.':~,"i" 01 '"'''"'"'""'end

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night tn the
Ohio l.Alttery's dally game "The Nwnber" was 40'1.
The lottery reported earnings of SE53.al2 from the wagertng on Its
dally game. The earnings came on sales of $1,064,178, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $o111,096, lottery olflcljl.ls said.

WI'YI 001 THI
• ~ ... ,_!(... ......,.._.,._

million dollars

and llferafts," said pUot Mike Clark. " We searched
for about two hours a nd (saw) various debris of the
Ranger, I assumc, ... but there was no sign ol the
Ranger at au." ·
Cpl. Randy Brown was lowered by cable Into the
water, but "It was j11St too ro11gh to get anyone," he
said.
A spokesman for the rig's owner. Ocean Drtlllng
and Exploration Co. of New Orleans, satd the Ranger
was the biggest drilling platform afloat. Ltoyd'sShtpplng Register said the loss was the largest In oU-rtg
history.
The self-propelled Ocean Ranger was built In .Ia·
pan six years ago and had a rectangular platform 398
feet lopg lind 262 feet wide. It was 337 fee\ frQ{n the top
of the derrick to the pontoons 50-00 feet below the
suriace which kept It ~noat.
•
' At Spindler, the spokesman for the owner,' said the
rig was designed to withsland the North AUanUc win·
ter and "underwent much worse just this wthter."

I

'

"Subat•ntlal Pen•ttv lor Early Wlllldrawal"

Weather forecast ·

Farmers

Occasional rain tonight lhr011gh Wednesday. Lows tonight In the
mtd-406. Highs Wednesday In the low 50s. Wlndseasterlytonortheas·
•
terly around 10 mph tonight.
Ez*ended Oltlo FOftClU&amp;

Bank

01'-

'l1lundl,y tllrcJull1 Sa&amp;arda,y:
.
•
a.- ol nln
aoribaadralll P""'He IIOUdl 'lbanday and
fi'rtda7, Fair ~. JliPI ll'lllllld to DOlCh aad ID die mid 101 to
low Ill IOII&amp;IIIba a 1f1 ·
. l.mN IDibe upper~ to mid • ·

·The .COmmunity QwMd Bank
I

)

hopes , wiU be amended prior to
voting.
"There's no way we can alford
that version (of the plan)," he said.
"We'ev got a lot of people who are
would-be congressmen and would·
be governors that don't want to give

this district a fair shake. "
Colllns~td he would be announcIng his reelection bid In a few days.
"I don't know who's announcing
against me, but they'll rome up
with someone," he added.

or

DETROIT- General Motors. Corp. says It will cut back opera·
!Ions at three plants and resume second-shift operations at three
others, putting about 2,500 more workers on lndeflntte layoff.
Production cutbacks at the Pontiac, Mich., plant and at GM plants
tn Fremont, Call!., and South Gate, Call!., will Idle about 6,100
workers, but nearly 3,700 employees will be called back at plants In
Ohio and Wisconsin, the No. 1 carmaker said Monday tn• a
statement.
Monday's production schedule changes were In response to
market conditions and forecasts of demand for new cars and trucks.

II teenagers die in

De 1n l18mpltof now rtQu rar diPQSJIS rnto

an IRA cao g•ow onto ajubsllnloll sum

Pledging to be a working reprecorporate franchise taxes."
sentative, the man who hope9 toreAsked about the present fiscal
present the new legtslat!ve dlstrlct
c risis faced by the state, Ball said
,bf Athens, Gallla and Meigs coun·
plans to Implement cutbacks and
ties next year announced his bid for
layoffs are the only solutions which
reelection Monday.
can be reached at this stage.
State Rep. Claire (BU2Z) Ball .Jr.,
"There has to be cutbacks," 11e
R·Athens, also urged the election of
commented. "There's not going to
local GOP'candldates durtng press
be a tax Increase. I'm not one who
conferences In Pomeroy and
kicks welfare around, but the
Gallipolis.
budget dlrector (Harold Collier)
Ball was given a boost In his Galli·
wants to cut welfare and education.
polls visit with the appearance
Now If you're going to be cutting,
State Sen. · Oakley · C. Colltns, R·
across-the-board cuts In aU depart!JY .non, who Is also seeking reelecments l.s the fairest way. We need to
tion this year, and Myron (Bud )
come up with some long-range soluMcGhee, who Is running as a Retions to our funding problems, parpublican candidate tn the primary
ticularly education. That wiU
for a Gallta County commissioner's
remain my priority Item. "
post
Ball admitted he wasn't com' Ball told hi~ audience that aside
pletely familiar with the current
from trying tot... !nconta~t with the
controversy over rates set by Copeople - "you're Important to me,
lumbia Gas of Ohio, but added he Is
and I'm certainty going to (!l!t back
working wtth Rlo Grande Mayor
with you" - his major concerns
Marlln Wedemeyer tn' establishing
wtth the proposed 94th legislative
some kind of standard rate for
district are with Improving access
VIllages.
to and frorli the area and with find·
U reelected In November, BaU ·
tng a more practical method of
wUI represent the new district
!undlng public schools.
which has been reapportioned by
He's been Involved with starting
the state. While he formerly repres·
the proposed u.s, 35 bypass beented · AthenS, Hocking, .Jackson '
cause the ability of peoPJe to move · and VInton counties, he wUI now be
freely In and out of this section of
trading off .Jackson and Vinton to
the state Is Important to Its ceoState Rep. Ron ,James, D mimic development, he explained.
Proctorv!Ue, for Gailla and Meigs.
The plan Is In the process of being
"I was surprised the Democratcompleted by Ohio Department of
controlled reapportionment board
Transportation engineers.
gave .James those counties, beThe five-term legislator said a
cause they've been Republican, "
permanent or more long-term way
Collins noted, agreeing with Ball
of financing education In Ohio must
the Athens-GaUia-Metgs comblna·
be found.
tlon Is a much better district.
"We wanted to earmark the In·
Collins also Indicated he 's
come tax lor education In 1978," he
against a congressional and sena·
said. " But we'll settle In 1~ with
torial redistricting plan which Is
the lottery, real estate taxes and
now facing the Senate, which he

Meigs resident hurt in wreck

COVINGTON, Ky. -The final Be9erty Hills Supper Club fire trial
ts scheduled to begin March 2, although more than half of the remaining defendants h~tve reached out-of-court settlements.
Four other companies .:... Guilford Mllis and Its division, Loekette
Corp.; Firestone Tire and Rubber Co., and House of Foam Inc. have been dismissed as defendants.
The firms had manufactured or supplled foam rubber products
allegedly used to make chairs that were In the club's Cabaret Room,
where bodies of many of the fire victims were found . Attorneys for
the platntlfts contend that fumes from the burning products contrlbuted to the deaths.

Every Tuesday Night

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN ·you CAN EAT

sea disaster

Mason, president of Mobil Canada, told a news ron·
terence: "The Ocean Ranger Is lost. I cannot hold out
much hope for survivors."
The Boston Herald American reported two former
crew members, Robert St. Aublns and Terry Frame
of St. .Johns, told It safety drtlls were not taken seriously aboard the rig and the boats were never
•
lowered .
"We had drtlls most Sundays, but we just put on our
life jackets, went to the boats and stood around for 10
minutes," said St. Au bins. He said he quit the rtg last
Thursday.
Mobil said the crew radioed about 2 a.m. local time
the rig was listing and the crew was preparing to
abandon tt. But It was not known whether all the men
got o!f.
Olflclals reported the rtg was last sighted afloat
moi'e than eight hours later. The pUot of the next
plane over saw only parts of the anchor gear.
"There were a few bodies around ... and lifeboats

GM will cut back operations

Final Beverly Hills trial set

AT
CROWS
FAMILY
'RESTAURANT

Selvtd

,

Killing frustrates authorities

TUES. &amp; WED. NIGHT SPECIALS

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

st.l;llw.

Bere said that under the life of the proposed contract, the top wage
would IncreaSe from $9.12 an hour to $10.97 per hour.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

-

1 s.tt..,, 10 Poges 15 Conll
A Multlmodia Inc. Newspaper

Rep.Ball announces candidacy

GIVE US A CALL
EVENINGS &amp; WEEKENDS
·-·.-

en tine

• •
•
IDISSIDg ID

from other parts of Canada and one Briton. The company said the names would not be announced until the
farntltes were notified.
It was the second ~ighest toll ln the history ol orr-•
shore drtUing, exceeded only by the loss of 123 men In
the capsizing of the rig Alexander KleUand In the
•
North Sea on March 'l:/, 1980.
Only one body from the Ocean Rang~r crew was
recovered. Searching ships and aircraft reported
sighting three ol the rtg's four lifeboats, with two
bodles tn one of them, two of the 12 ll!erafts, and
bodies In red-and-orange survival suits and debris In
the water. But the 50-foot waves prevented recovery
of the other bodies, and snow a nd low vlstblll!y llam-,
pered the search.
·
The survival suits could have kept the wearers
altve for about an hour In the frigid water that otherwise would kill In minutes, o!tlclals said.
The search planes ret~~rned to St. .John's for the
night and were to resume the hunt at dawn. But W. 0 .

of preview selection.
We give you individualized attention.

.

a -1 y

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 16,1982

84 workers

HONORED - MnJ. Mildred
Jacobs, superintendent of the
Meigs County Infirmary for the
past 24 yeanJ, will be guest of
honor at a public open recepllon
Irom 2 to 4 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 21,
at the lnllrmary. The reception Is
being · staged by employes and
former employes of the lnllrmary
during Mrs Jacobs' tenure. Mrs.
Jacobs and her husband, CWford,
reside on Laurel Cliff. Botb Mr.
and Mrs. Jacobs are now retired.
She, however, Is ftlllng In at tbe
Infirmary unW her replacement
lsoamed.

. Deputies.. ·
(Continued from page I)
morning on Route 124 near Racine.
According to the report, Mrs. Toni
Andrew, Racine, was traveling
west when she lost control of her
vehicle which ran off the right of the
road striking a fence on the property of Otis McClintick, Raclne
1
There were light damages to the
vehicle and fence. Mrs. Andrew
was not Injured .
Lonnie Mayes, 21, Long Hollow
Road, Pomeroy, Is being held In the
county ja il following his arrest Frt·
day evening on a bench warrant
from the Meigs County Court for
fa lling to pay over $500 In old floes.
He Is also being held onanescall'!
charge.
.
According to the sheriff's department, Mayes, while belng booked
Friday evening, ran from the sheriff's office when the booking deputy was answertng the telephone.
I
Mayes was located apprpxtmatelyl
15 minutes later on a hill behind the
Pomeroy Library by Pomeroy pollee olftcers who were caUed to assist. State law provides a penalty of
from six months to five years on
oharges of breaking detention.
The shertlf's department is Investigating a hltsklp accident which oc·
cured at Hawk's PennzoU Station
between 9:30 p.m . Saturday and
11: 45 a.m. S\lnday. ·
According to the report, a vehicle
pulled onto the station lot and dam·
aged two of the gas pumps.

Name clarified

e

•

W-

APPOINTED- Bad
Mi111 c-&amp;y De-nte a.lnbu,
11M beea 1ppolated te' I !oar year term • 1M Melp Ctuty Beud II
Eledl- by 1M Melp Couty Dememlde ee.tral Cemmlttee. He
replae!ell E." A. WtnceU, D., Ill &amp;be baird. Wllloa will lie 11m! ldlt •Ill ol
alfiee 11111 weet.
•)

'

BAU. ANNOUNCES CANDIDACY- state Rep. Claire (Bulz) BaD
Jr. (right) IUIIIOIIOOeCI hill bid lor reelection to lheH01111eln ~conlt!l'
ence111 held In Pomeroy and Gallipolis on Monday. Bllll, an A&amp;llena
Republlcal1, wiD be repreae~~ling the new legllllalhle dlltrlct of Athens,
GaDia 8nd Melp COUIIIIes Uelected In November. During hill Gallipolis
viol&amp;, &amp;II received eome IU(Ipori from Sen. Oakley C. Colllnl, 11-lrontoll
(left) and D. Dean Evans, chairman ol GaDIB County's GOP executive
committee.

.Pomeroy council
tables rate hike
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
A request for a rate hike by Cable
Entertainment, Inc., was tabled,
pending public Input, at Monday's
regular meeting ol Pomeroy Vll·
tage Council.
Dick Newell, company represen·
tatlve, discussed aspects of the
company's operations In the community and presented the ordl·
nance requesting the rate Increase.
Newell said that Columbus sta·
tlons are network stations and can·
nOt be put on satelllte to provide a
better picture. Improvements
planned by the company have been
delayed because parts are slow In
arriving. He did report, however,
that a standby power system has
been Installed. He also said two en·
glneertng firms are studying how
the operations of the company can
be IJI'Iproved. One company has
completed Its report and the second
one Is forthcoming, Newell satd.
He outlined a plan through which
residents lodge complaints about
service. They are to ftrst call the
company office In Point Pleasant.
It they receive no response, they
are to contact Newell by phone. If
this brings no results, they are to
stop by vUiage hall and complete a
complaint lorm which will be
turned over to council and then
couneU wUI contact Newell.
Newell presented the rate In·
crease ordinance whiCh asks that
rates be Increased from $7 a month
to$8.50a monthforprlvate reslden·
ces. Senior citiZenS and dlsabUity
rates would go to 75 percent of the
new $8.50 rate. · Each additional set
In a home would cost $2 eaeh.
· Couilcii tabled ttie ordinanCe
without a 11rtrt readllig and ask that

residents give. imput on theti feelIng about the rate Increase request.
In closing Newell said the company Is lnstalltng a new all-sports
channel (ESPN) . This will not be
professional sports, however, he
said . The channel would operate 24
hours a day leaturtng only sports.
WILL COMPLETE ROAD
Council agreed to clQIIe completely the road under the bridge
between Pomeroy and Middleport
until weather permits the necessary patching and repair to that
road .
A communication was read from
Colwnbta Gas of Ohio stating that
cost recovery charges as of the
March 12 billing wtll be 36.64 cents
per 1,001 cubic feet of gas used.
Chtel ol Pollee George Stitt was
authorized to purchase a !Ire exUngulsher for one of the pollee cars.
Council voted to enter Into a con.
tract with the Ohio Drtlllng Co. for
phase one of a water project and a
contract Is being sent to the company. Iljlring phase one, the company would Investigate the
hardness, minerals, chlorides and
other makeup ol the present water
and would suggest possible sites for
test drilling. Phase two will Include
test drilling and testing and tbe
third phase would Include drlUtng .
new wells for the community's water service. ·
Roger Stewart of the Meigs BoxIng Club appeartng before counctl,
spoke pn the goal of the club to purchase a regula !Jon rtng whtchcould
be used for such events as Golden
Gloves bouts. Council voted a $300
contrlbutl.on from the recreation
I'..
.
fund .
An Informal 84$ston for counct!
members and Kim Shields, viUage
(Continued on page 10)

..

'

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