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Pap•

14-The Dally Sentinel

: Publie ·input

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

teontln~frompa~•1&gt;

'I'IM;,boanl entered Into a "right
entry agreement with the Ohio
partment of Natural Resources.
Supt. Morris explained that two
yearsagothedepartmentbaddone
extensive work !Jeblnd. the Pomeroy Elementary School to drain wa·
ter from old mines In that area.
Meaaures taken were only tempor·
ary and the department Is now
. ready to return to the area and
make permanent Improvements,
Morris said. The right of entry
agreement gives the department
the right to move onto the property
to do the -..ary work.
NO OBUGATIONS FELT
The boanllndlcated that It feels
no obligation to make paytnent for
schOOl bond coupons belonging to
.Mts. Phyllis Spangler'. Supt. Morrts
said the bonds, faaued In 19.12 by the
Rutland Dllltrlct before consoUda·
lion, were found by Mrs. Spangler
In a home she had purchased. The
. county auditor's omce had stated
that there were no outstanding
.bonds at the time of coiiSOUdatlon
.;and the boanllndlcated last rilght
·that It feels no obUgatlon to pay ott
those bonds.
· The board added to the substitute
· teachers Ust Rose Ann Jenkins and
Charlsse Knight and employed
David Wargo as a Juntcr high
teacher for the remainder ot the
schOol year. Wargo will begin his
· dutlesFrldayreplaclngJamesCarpenter who was promoted from a
: teacher's post at the school to as: slstant superintendent. Granted
. professional leave were Bonny
Chapnian, Ron Logan to attend the
state girls basketball tournament;
John B!aettnar, a Deca cbalrper·
llOIIS meeting; Sharon Birch, Dana
. Kessinger and Joy Bentley to the
regiOnal conference on health edu·
cation. Mrs. Pamela Crow was
granted a leave of absence and resignations were accepted from
Erlc Diddle, substitute custodian,
and Debora Hensley as a substltllte
secretary and aide.
The resignation of Janice Burner
as a high school teacher was ac·
cepted and Jay Carpenter was ac:cepled as a tuition student In the
district.
The bOard approved a trip by
·French students and their teacher
·Mrs. VIrginia Poston, a trip to Qu:
ebec, Cailada, Aprll 12 through
·AprU 18. It was noted that this ts the
first such trip to be made by aca·
demlc students. Supt. Morris said
·that Mrs. Poston bad made all of
the necessary arrangements tor
the trip.
Supt. Morris was authortzed to
beglil the process of selectlon tor
recommendation to the board the
hiring ot up to two additional main·
t.enance people. The district now
has on!y one such person.
Jan. 11 and Jan. 13 were approved as calamity days and Supt.
Morrts was authorlzed to try to ar·
range for March 19, an In-service
day tor teachers, be changed Into a
acbool da:y with the In-service ses·
lilons to be held over two evening.
The district bas five days of school
to make up .at this time due to
weather and changing the In·
service meeting schedule would
make up one of them.
The board approved a repair cost
acbedule from Johnson Controls
which bas done a conslder¥ble

contract with Orkin Exterminating
wblch under the eontract will vtslt
each of the nine schools every
month. The board accepted the appralsal value on the Pomeroy Junlor ffigl) School property set by
Henry E . Cleland, Jr., tol!owtng an
allpralsal at $490,000. It was
stressed that the board need not be
In approval of the figure but the ac·
lion merely was to accept the work
done by Cleland.
Approval was given for a Wres!ling cllnlc to be held for fifth, slxtb,
seventh and eighth graders by
Larry Grimes, wrestling coach.
The novice activity wW last one
week and the tee for participation
will be $5 which wW be spent for
awards to be given winners of a
tournament to be held In conJunc·
lion with the activity.
The boanl agreed to ask for a 30
day rider on an Insurance pollcy
covering Meigs ffigh School and Its
contents. The poUcy Is Issued by the
Downing-Childs Agency and It was
reported that the premium paid Is
divided among other agents of the
county. The board Indicated that It
wants to make sure ~ Is a legal
Procedure before going ahead with
renewal of the poUcy.
Giving a report on the transition
of administrators, Supt. Morris
stated abouU286,000oftheonemll·
Uon dollar bond Issue bas been en·
cumbered or expended to date. He
pointed out that the Pomeroy Elementary School needs root repairs,
the junior high building needs Intertor Improvements, work must be
done at the Juntor high bulldlng to
make It possible to get aU of the
students Into one bulldlng and that
$100,000 has been earmarked for
equipment for the varlous schools.
•The schools wW be surveyed to deterrnlne those needs.
AlsO a division of job responslblll·
ties between him and Assistant
Supt. Carpenter bas been worked
out. He !)utber stated that both he
and Carpenter wiD serve on the neg.
otlatlng teams and suggested two
members of the board should also.
He spoke brletly on the reduction of
schOOl foundation payments adding
that more reductions are expected.
Supt. Morris also told of a programwhlchwasconductedtobrlng
In aopbomores of the Eastern and
Southern Districts recently to fa·
mUiarlze them with the vocational
programs of the high schoQI. Both
districtS pay Meigs LOcal tuition for
20 percen~ of ihetr study body to be
enrolled In vocational programs of
the Meigs District, Morris stated,
and It Is hoped that more students
from those two districts will be en·
roUed. Some programs have been
lost, but It Is hoped that new programs can be Introduced Into the
tllstrlct, Morris conduded.

NOT GUILTY -

A federal

toart juey Tuelday evelliD&amp; IC!IIlld

former Tyler Pollee Chief WUUe
Hardy not IIUilly of charge~ be
covend up wroucdolllll Ia tbe
clly's BeaadaJ.pJacued 1!171 IJfto
dercover drug lave~UpUoa. 1AP
Luerpbotol.

'

Seven defendants were tined and
16 others forfeited bol)ds In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Thesday Dlght.
Flned were Wallace Hattleld,
Pomeroy, $46, speeding; Marvin
Craig, Pomeroy, $1.25 and costs,
publlc lntoxlca lion; Tim Thomas,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, six
months probation, trespassing;
Mike Dorst, Pomeroy, and James
Thomas, Pomeroy, $213 and costs
each on vandalism charges; Tim
HyseU, Pomeroy, $88 -and costs,
open flask; Bob CUrry, Pomeroy,
$88 ind costs, open flask.
Forfeiting bonds were Mitchell
Chapman, Pomeroy, $50, speed·
lng; Mark Clark, Pomeroy, $44,
speeding; David Price, Pomeroy,
~7, s~g; Karen Ruth, Pomeroy, $48, speeding; Jolin Miller.
Pomeroy, $43, traveling the wrong
way on a one-way Street; Elolse
Brenner, Pomeroy, $45, speeding;

Three men ·get pri~on tenns
Three Meigs County men were
given prison sentences when they
appeared before Judge John C.
Bacon in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court Tuesday afternoon.
AU three were charged with
brekalng and entering in unrelated
offenses. They were charged in bills
of lntonnation prepared by the of.
fice of Meigs County Prosecutor
FredW. CrowUI.
Rodney Jordan, Albsny, was
charged with a breaking and en·
terlng incident earlier this month at
the Wilbur Dailey residence on counlyroad 10.
On Feb. 12, Jordan appesred
before Judge Bacon to enter a voluntary plea of guilty to the charge. He
was given a six months to five year
prison sentence Tuesday.
Timothy Matthew Herdman, 20,

I

Pomeroy,

was charged ·with
entering the Jaymar
Golf Club quarters IIi December,
1981 and entered his plea of guilty to
the charge Feb. 17. He also was
given a six rnonth to five year prison
sentence.

!Jresking and

Lance Tyrone Hennan, Middleport, was charged wltlt breaking
and entering the Flrestqne Store ln
Middleport on Jan. 31, this year. He
entered a plea of guilty on Feb. 8 and
was given a six month to five year
prison sentence Tuesday.
Athens County authorities have a
felony (bad check) warrant against
Jordan and may seek action against
him upon his release. AU three men
are IIi custody of liherlff James Prof.
fltt awaiting transportation to
Colllmbus to begin their sentences.

Area Deaths

Marie Boyd Cyrus

Admitted: Betty Taylor, Middleport; Jane Cundttt, Point Pleasant;
Koy Mullens, Pomeroy; Woodrow
Zwltllng, Syracuse.
Discharged: Christy Phalln, W·
llan Bumgardner, Katherine Min·
lcke, wnma Anderson, Audrew
Grindley, Della Roseberry, snd
Betty Taylor.

I

nephews.
Mrs. Cyrus was a member of the
Mt. Moriah Baptist Church In
Marte Boyd Cyrus, 63, of 1535 Nye
Middleport.
Ave., Pomeroy, died Tuesday at
Funeral services wW be held at 1
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• Sl)e was the daughter of the late p.m. at the Ewing Funeral Home
Joe and WUise Johnson Boyd. Also with the Rev. Calvin Mlnnts Offi·
preceding her In death were her . elating. Bwial will be In the Meigs
husband, Robert Cyrus, and three Memorial Ganlens. Friends may
brothers, Joe, Eddie and Arthur call at the funeralhomeafter1p.m.
Boyd.
Thurs(lay.
She Is survived by a son, Tommy
Garnes, Denver, Colo.; three broth· AppOintment made
ers, CbarUe Boyd,' Cleveland; Lawrence Boyd, Middleport, and Pat
John Anderson of Pomeroy bas
Boyd, Oak HW; three sisters, Fran- been appol1tted to a three year term
ces Qua!ts, Pomeroy, and Betty fto. on the Pomeroy-Middleport Metroblnson and Birdie Powell, both of poUlan Housing Authority, acconl·
Washington, D. C.; six grandchlld· lng to an entry tlled In the Meigs
ren, and several nieces and County Common Pleas Court.

Harold E . Thomas, Point Pleasant,

lined tn the court or Middleport
Mayor Fred Hottman TuesdaY

Also forfeiting bonds were Tl·
motby Rottker, Galllpo!ts, $44,

night.

w. Va., $45, $peedfng.

speeding; Wayne Robert Jewell,
Mason, $44, speeding;
Danny
Darst, Rutland, $43, Wrong way on
a one-way street; Gregory Taylor,
Route 4, Pomeroy, $63, squeellng
tires; ,foan King, Route 4, Pomeroy, $46, speeillng; Sharon Krahel,
Bidwell, ~7, speeding; Gary Nel·
son, Mlnersv111e, $45; speeding;
Carol Richmond, Route 1, Middle~ $45, speeding; Av1s Jackson,
Long Bottom, $62, speeding.
Meanwhile, tour people were

ELBERFEilDS

*
BRACHS

REAL CHOCOLATE
SPECIALS!

Ironton, and Rep. Claire (Buzz)
BaU Jr., R·Athens, to convince
OBES not to close the office at the
.end of March may have helped,
Had the office closed, Meigs resl·
dents would have been referred to
the Galltpolts office.
A-nother state ottlce scheduled
for closing - this one In Mason
County - will apparently be saved.
The West VIrginia Welfare DePart·
ment's lease with the county tor Its
present location In courthouse an·
nex In Point Pleasant expires Sunday, and unless rent.free

Emergency run$

Cherry St.

Syracuse, Oh.

PH. 992-3982
OPEN TUES. thru SAT.
Thurs. Evening By Appt.

-

DEBBIE POWELL-Owner /Operator
BEVERLY BISHOP-Operator
Clip

This

Ad

lor

Additional

Savinas

ALL PERMANENTS ON SALE
DURING THE MONTH OF MARCH.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

accommodations were located, the
department would have pulled out
of the Mason area.
An administrator tor the Cabell·
Mason region confirmed Tuesday
the posslbWty the department lll&lt;IY
move Its office onto the Lakin State
Hospital ~ once a formal
lease agreement Is drawn up. Point
Pleasant city government bas also
offered space In the youth center on
Camden Avenue, and the oMclal,
Sharon L. Winkler, said theweHare
department would probably take
up the offer.

Services set

115 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH.

An Ash Wednesday worship service wW be held thls evening at 8
p.m. at the Heath United Methodist
Church In !Wddleport.

PH. 992-2342

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT .
STORE
Phone 742-2100

l'rrcr~:; r llr!r:ttvr~ r luu :i&lt;tttnrl&lt;~y

1e11 2itl1
LB.

• • • • • •

I

• • • • • •

I

I

$1.99

Eckrich

PEPPER LOAF

$2.89

LB.
I

Homemade

HAM SALAD

$}.39

LB .

• • • • • • • • •

lib. Rome or Wine~ap

APPLES ..•.•••8 ~ 9• 97'

79'

12 oz. 16 Stice
Kraft Single Swiss$}
Pkg.
•

CHEESE .

1 lb. Cello Pack

CARROTS •••• ~ 9• 2169'

8

79

10 Lb. Ida no Baking

POTATOES ...• ~·? 12.19

• • • • • • • •Crtn.
• • 89c
31b. Avg. LB. J9C
•••••••• •
10 oz. Vienna

HOT DOG SAUCE
Gallon of R ich·n·Ready

ORANGE DRINK

Gal.

• • • • • • •

Can

• • •

CATSUP •

24 OZ·.

• • • • • • • • • • •

Vol.30,No.221

PORK-N-BEANS

• • • • • • • •

694

6 oz. Nescafe

INSTANT COFFEE

• • •

• • •

VIENNA SAUSAGE

-j

• • • •

• • •

10112 oz. Hllton

994

OYSTER STEW •••••'~ns 21s1.59
20 oz. Det Monte

·sLICED

I

I

I

I

I

down 0.1 percent after a 0.8 percent
previously.
The report said the unadjusted
rise In December.
Consumer Prtce Index rose to 282.5,
- Medical care costs advanced
mean tliat goods and services cost· 0.8 percent, Just about In Une with
the previously monthly Increases.
tng $10 In 1967 would have cost
Charges for hospital and other med·
$28.25 last month.
leal care serviees were up 1.8 perThe report also said:
• -Prtces tor transportation were cent, whUe physicians' fees rose 0.8
ott 0.2 percent after a 0.6 percent pen;ent.
rise In Decem~r. Gasotlne prices ·
- Apparel costs were down 0.1
percent
after a 0.1 percent Increase
tumbled 1.7 percent after rising 0.5
In
December.
Price dectlnes were
percent In the previous month and
reported
for
women's
and girls' clo0.8 percent In November. Used car
thing and for shoes, but prices rose
prlces were up a small 0.3 percent,
the smallest advance In 19 months. for men's and boys' apparel.
All the figures were adjusted for
New car prlces, refiectlng many
seasonal variations .
manufacturers ' rebates, were

•

enttne
FebNa:y 25,

2 Soctlont, 12 Pages
15 Contt
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

1982

Book pair
•
In
recent
theft case
. Anti-busing majority awaits victory
WASHlNGrrc&gt;N -Hour by hour, minute by minute, the Senate's
antl·buslng majority Is winding down the clock towanl Inevitable
victory over a band of tWbusterlng Uberals who argue that Congress'
should not be teUing courts how to rule.
·
For more than 15 h~urs on Wednesday and early today, senators
endured a stream of roll caU votes and procedural maneuvers, aU ·
part of Lowell Welcker's efforts to delay a final vote on the toughest
antl·buslng bW ever to clear the House or Senate.ln aU, 20 roU calls
· were taken.
,
Towards the end of Wednesday night, tempers frayed. And just
before midnight, Majority Leader Howard Baker of Tennessee
sought to reduce more than 100 minor amendments Welcker bas
Introduced as tools for keeping the flllbuster alive.

Plans. given bi-partisan

sup~rt

WASHlNGTON - President Reagan's development plan for the
Caribbean Basin appears to be receiving bipartisan congressional
support but some members expect voter resistance to such a large
sca.te aid program at a time of economic austerity at borne.
In addition to Increased aid tor the region, Reagan Is proPosing tax
preferences and Investment Incentives to help the hanl·pressed na·
tlons to the south achieve long-term, self-sustaining growth.
• • ~ Most of the congressiOnal attention was fqcused oi\ Reagan's prop-.
osal for a supplemental appropriation Of 1350 mllllon. 'This would
raise the total for the year to $824.9 million, almost double the 1981
figure.

Gunmen free ·95 hostages
BEffiUT, Lebanon- ShUte Moslem gurunen who held 100 people
hostage on a captured Kuwaiti airliner for more than nine hours
freed all but 10 of their captives early Thursday morning and disappeared Into Beirut, witnesses said.
One airport source said the gunmen may have gone to a nearby
Shiite shanty-town called Hayya 81'\oum, but authorities weren't
sure what happened to them or their hostages after they left the
plane and vanished Into the darkened area around the airport.
Airport security sources said the takeover began when the gunmen raced onto the tarmac In a white sedan and started shooting In
the air with automatic weapons as the passengers were disembarkIng about 4:30 p.m. local time - 9:30 a .m . EST.

Victim says suicide pact made
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A serlously·wounded 47-year-old man bas
told pollee he and an Ohio University coed bad made a suicide pact
before shooting themselves In his apartment, homicide detective
Robert Cupp said.
Catherine Wanner, 18, was found dead In the apartment on Mon·
day, shdt once In the head. Roy H. Sage, also found In the apartment,
had gunshot wounds In the head and chest, but llved. He Is In serious
condition at a ColumbUs hospital.
Cupp said he talked brletly with Sage, who said he and Miss
Wanner had made the pact. "He said they bad been talklni! about It
for a while and ... finally decided to do It," Cupp said. ·

CLEVELAND -The winning number drawn Wednesday Dlghtln
the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" was !1&lt;11.
The lotlery reported earnings pf $195,098 from the wagerlrwlonlts
• dally game. The eal'llinp came oo sales of $1,()35,381, whlle holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $840,283, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast

9 oz. Armour .

•

report said.
Food costs rose 0. 7 percent last
month, following small advances of
0.1 percent In each of the previous
two months.
PI :ces of fresh vegetables soared
16.8 percent. Prtces tor sugar, non·
alcoboUc beverages, and cereal '
and bakery products also fOlie, but
the costs tor meat, poultry, fish and
eggs feU 0.3 percent All the figureS
were adJusted for seasonal varta·
lions. With this report, the departrnent recalculated certain seasonal
adjustments to rettect Clbmges In
1981. 'This can account for some of
the monthly changeS reported

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Thunday,

c.pyrighlecl 1982

Winning Ohio lottery number

31 oz. 'Showboat

lions foresee Inflation this year
averaging 6 percent to 7 percent.
The government's new report
said the January slowdown was
helped by a sharp drop In gasoUne
prices, the smallest rise In used car
prices In almost two years and a
decUne In clothing costs.
Housing costs; led by a 0.4 per·
cent drop In prices for bomes, rose
a modest 0.3 percent, continuing a
trend began In the faiL Mortgage
Interest rates went up a small 0.2
percent.
·
Rent was up0.6 percent, tess than
In recent months, but fuel and other
utility biUs jumped 1.1 percent, the

at

DAYTON, Ohio - A woman supervisor smuggled a gun Inside a
mental tacWty and with a male patient apparently faked a hostage
sitUation as part of an escape plot, officials say.
Supervisor Karen Webb, 26, was Jalled Wednesday rilght after the
Highway Patrol filed charges of sexual battery and bringing a hand·
gun Into the Dayton Forensic Center, which Is part bf the Dayton
Mental Health Center.
Police surrounded the center In a 9*·hour standoff Wednesday,
beUevlng that Mrs. Webb was being held hostage by Doriald Bartley
n, 21, a patient awaiting trial In a l!8l slaying.
But after Bartley .surrendered to polke peacefully to end the
standoff, Mrs. Webb was questiOned O:Od the charges were tiled .

DelMonte

.

sUgbtly better than the 0.4 percent
Increase of December and the 0.5
percent of November.
For aU of 191!1, Inflation rose 8.9
percent, well below the 12.4 percent
of l!8l and the smallest Increase In
four years.
Economists are predicting an
even lt;l'l!rer rate tor au of 1982, bar·
ring an unforeseen disaster, such
as a crop faUure or a major Inter·
ruptlon In oll Imports. Most predlc·

Hostage situation was a hoax

• • • • • • • •

CRISCO SHORTENING

POME'ROY, OH.

3.5 percent.
The new monthly calculation was

Eckrich

3Lb.

PHONE .992-5432

cent of July l.!BJ. If the january
figure held steady for 12 straight
months, the annual figure wouldbe

(Contlnuedfrompage1)

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

BUY TWO ..• GET ONE FREE!
'

WASHINGTON (AP ) -Despite
surging tood pr1ces, Inflation In
January rose at Its slowest pace
since the summer of 1981 - an an·
nual rate ot 3.5 percent, the government said today.
Arlalysts, In advance of today's
teport, attributed the overall slowdown mostly to the continuing' re~n. but cautioned that the low
Januacy figure would likely pick up
somewhat tater ln the year.
The Labor Department said In Its ·
nel!' report that the Consumer
Prtce lndex rose a seasonally ad·
justed 0.3 percel)t last month, the
smallest Increase since the 0.1 per·

Holzer•••.

Window Boxes
Send in proof at pu: chase fr om any two Brach's Chocolates Window
boxes (Chelsea Ch1ps box qualif ies) and get a store coupon Qood
forONE FREE WINDOW BOX. ·
Th er e's no subsf i tute for the good taste of Brach 's Real Chocolates .

Recession keeps inflation rate down

.

QUARTERS . . .
PEANUTS • RAISINS • STARS • BRIDGE MIX
JOTS • ORANGE STICKS • PEANUT ~UlTER CHIPS

Mlc~l G. Trent, Route 21, Ra·
cine, wi'5 tined $250 and costs and
given tllree days In JaU on a charge
of dJ1vlng whlle Intoxicated, and
$100 and costs on a charge of dJ1v·
lng under suspension; t
.
Eddie Russell, Middleport, was
lined $50' and costs, on a charge of
dtsonlerly manner; John S. Cleland, Columbus, $250 and costs, and
three days In Jall, dJ1vlng while Intoxicated; and Donna J . Grueser,
Pomeroy, costs only, backing onto
a roadway.

Four calls were answered by un·
(Continued from page 1)
Its of the Meigs County Emergency
"
regular five day a week schedule.
Medical Service Thesday. The Mid·
Some of the employes of Dr.
dleport unit was called at 7:39a.m.
Conde wW transfer to work with the
for Betty Stoley, Batley Run Road,
Holzer Cllnlc. X·ray and lab servl·
and transported her to the Holzer
ces
will continue at the facWty . -,
Medical Cenler. At 9:38 p.m. the
Rutland squad transported Hazel
Grate from WWiamson Road to the
HOlzer Medical Center. The Racine "
unit transported WendeU Frecker
from West Main St. toHolzerat9: 21
a.m: and at 2:31 p.m. took Danny
J•
Spaun from the Ractne Elemen·
tary School to Holzer.

MARGARiNE
FOR THE BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON

.

Gallipolis plant

PICKLE LOAF

V

elerans Memorial

. Wedneiday. February 24, 1982

.

Mayors tenninate 27 eases

of\ lll!IOWit of furnace repairs In the
0.: ~trlct schools and entered Into .a

:

"

Clear tonight. Lows In the teens. Sunny Friday. Highs J:HO.
Chance of SDOW near zero per'Cent tonlgbt and Friday. Winds light

and varlable tonight.

.

E"*fttW

o.- Foreeut

SaalrdaJIIuoup Mn'ar.
FalrSaiurda,r......_ olrUior- """"'' IIMINonda;ar. lllP
In lhe •SIIia'dar IIIII lllllle low . . 110 lowtliillwM!aJIIMIMaadaf.
OvernflbiiDWII ~ Ill tile ...

I

'

•

•'

Two arrests were made by the
Pomeroy Pollee Deparlment and
the Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
ment as a result of the theft of two
tires and wheels from a pickup
truck at the Slmmons·Olds·
Cadlllac Agency In Pomeroy.
According to pollee, the theft of
the ures and wheels occurred early
Tuesday morning.
'
I
The rear of the truck bad been
Jackup up and placed on blocks.
Sheriff deputies a~tro Paul
Wllson, 20, Racine, charging htm
with the theft of the two tires and
wheels. Wllson remains In the
county Jall under $5,000 bond.
Meanwhile, the sheriff reports that
James Morris, 27, of near Pomeroy, has heen released on his own
recognlzanc.; on a chB.rge of recelv·
lng stolen property, the two wheels
and tires.
In oth11r action, a breaking and
entering at the Harr'lsonvllleSchool
Saturday was cleared up Wednes·
day with the arrest of Steve Han·
lng, 18, New Lima 'Road. Charges
are also to be flled In the Meigs
County Juvenile Court against four
Harrisonville area youngsters for
CLOSED- This auxlllary, one-way road, I'UIIlllng Who u1e the roadway to e1cape an especially loog traf·
their part In'the breaking and enter·
UDder
lbe Pomeroy·Ma•oa brtdge !las beeli completely De Uoe al lbe IDterwecUoo of W. MiiiD SL ud lbe
lng. Some of the stolen Items have
closed
by Pomeroy Vlllage. Tbe road over the yearw brldge. The road wiD be cloeed uotn lbe weather
been recovered. Haning Is In the
bas
been
frequenUy used etlpeclaUy by local motorists brealul so lbat satlsfaclory repairs inay be made by the
county jaU pending a hearing this
vOiage.
'
week.
The county sheriff's department
also completed an accident report
Wednesday.
According to the report the accl·
dent took place at 4 p.m. Wednes·
day on County Road 18. Mrs. Mabel
Pickens, Route 1, Shade, was tra·
veUng east on the road shen she got
too close to the right edge and went
ott the roadway strtklng a parked
as an alternative to the original
nation's economic performance.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest·
car owned by Charles Aelker, near
budget Reagan sent to Capitol Hill.
dent
Reagan
Is
moving
to
"sound
Republicans
and
Democrats
Pomeroy. The Aelker car received
Speakes added that the president
·out"
Congress
on
how
It
would
realike
have
decried
Reagan's
sUght damages and Mrs. Pickens'
would
"sound out" Senate Majority
budget for the unprecedented vocar was moderately ' damaged. duce the huge deficits In his tan·
Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr., R·
lume of red Ink It contains, lnclud·
There were ·no InJuries and no gulshlng 1983 budget plan, yet there
Tenn.,
and House Republican
Is no Indication the administration
lng forecasts of a $98.6 bllUon
citations.
Leader
Robert
H. Michel of Illinois
Is ready to give ground.
shortfall In the current fiscal year
at
a
White
House
meeting today.
and an $82 billiOn deficit In 1984.
On Tuesday, Republican Sen. The reaction of other lntluentlal
His $757.6 billion budget was ex·
members of Congress also was bePete V. Domenlcl ot New Mexico,
peeled to receive another Jolt today
Cold spell to continue
.
lng sought, he ' said.
chairman of the Senate Budget
when AUce M. Rlvlln, director of
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Committee, proposed a plan to trim
the Congressional Budget Office,
By The A.wooolated PreM
Regan - appearing before the Sethe deficits by scatlng down the proAn arctic airmass moving over reveats her agency's re-evaluation
nate Budget Committee Wednes·
posed Pentagon buildup, boosting
Ohio by this evening wiU hold mer· of the spending plan In testimony
day - said he found · Domenlcl's
some taxes and possibly postpon·
cury readings In the ~ over most before the Senate Appropriations
alternative
"reasonable
tng the last year of the basic, 3-year
of the state today.
Committee.
proposal."
cut
In
personal
Income
tax
rates.
Sources
said
the
congressional
Torilght wW be clear and cold
"I find It very Interesting. I don't
Congress adopted the tax cut last
with lows from 5 to 10 above In the analysis of Reagan's budget for the
rejeclltout
of hand," Regan said to
year.
north to the teens In the extreme fiscal year that begins Oct. 1 Uk.ely
Domenlcl.
"Potltlcally, I won't
At
the
White
House.
deputy
press
would show the administration 's
southeast.
comment
on
lt."
secretary
Larry
Speakes
said
Wed·
A moderating trend wW begin proJected 1983 deficit ot $91.5 bUUon
Budget
director
David Stock·
nesday
that
Domenlct's
proposal
Friday after the arctic high pres· Is about $10 billion too low.
man,
asked
about
Domenlcl's
propwas
being
studied:
According to the sources, who
sure moves east and the air flow
osal
at
a
separate
hearing
But
he
cautioned
"It's
too
early
to
asked not to be Identified, the
begins coming out of the south.
Wednesday, said: "It's a good-faith
teU" whether the plan could behigher deficit forecast was due to
Highs by the weekend wW be back
effort
to generate a comprehensive
come
another
bipartisan
com·
higher estimates of defense costs
lnlo the 30s or even low 40s. No preproposal.
But there are problem
promise
such
as
that
drafted
with
cipitation ts expected In Ohio · and farm loan supports, and less
areas
that
n~ to be looked at."
administration
asslslance
last
year
optimistic assumptions about the
through Satunlay.

..

ROft l

CLOSED

Reagan awaits co~gressional
•
vtews
on deficit reductions

a

'

Senate approves bill

revampi~g

cause Republicans were
"They will be able to charge the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
embarrassed by the Democratic
consumer
as
much
as
they
want
to
Senate approved a bW to revamp
amendments which "would have
under this bill," asserted Minority
til.: Publlc Utilities Commission
put some real rate reform Into the
late Wednesday after paf11san de- · Leader Harry Meshel, D ·
bW."
Youngstown, who left thefloorwlth
bate that ended when Democratic
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Con·
several colleagues when Senate
leaders stalked from the floor and
cord,
the bW's chief sponsor, conPresident Paul E. GWmor, R·Port
refused to vote.
ceded
the proposal holds no
CUnton, ordered a roll call on It to
The roll ,call proceeded anyway
promise
of lower bills for
begin.
and the vote was 22-3, enough to
consumers.
Mesbel was attempting to get GU·
send the bill to an uncertain fate In
But he said lt.would give the pubJmor's attention to speak on the
the Democrat-controUed House.
lic more participation In the rateMajority RepubUcan sponsors of
me~. as were two other Demomaking 8ystem, protect against
crats, Asatstant_Minority Leader
the proposal claim It would lm·
construction of unnecessary taclll·
Neal F. Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton,
prove the eftlclency of the PUCO,
ties, require the utilities to make
and Sen. J. Timothy McCormack,
provide It with a more broadly
more accurate short and long·term
D-Euclld. They also left the floor.
based rr.akeup and stop utilities
eenergy forecasts · and require
Glllmor said be was looklni down
from bulldfn&amp; unneeded tactlltles.
PUCO review of management
on !he rostrum at the time and dld
The moatly Oeitoociatlc oppoaudits.
aee
the
Democrats.
At
that
not
nents claimed the bill gives utllltles
The bW sets up a nominating
evl!1' more opporlwdty than they point, the debate bad been solng on
council
that would submit Usts of
now have to hllie the rates of C\llto- tor about t1ve hours, most ot It over
·
prospective
utility commissioners
mers, becallll! of. a provision lbat
::as:IIIOitly
unsuccessful
to
the
governor.
He would be rets De111ocrats offered.
appiQ'eDtly wfll let them InclUde
quired
to
uite
that
Ust to liU vacan·
charged that GD·
more types of expenditures In their
rate bue. .
'
cles.
Currently,
the
govemor may
tmor cut alf debate deliberately be'

'

,.

'

Puco·

name anyone he chooses to the
PUGO.
. Speck's btll also Increases the
number of commissioners from
three to five and provides that It
must hold some of Its public hearIngs In the evening and In cities out·
side Columbus.
The minority leader referred to
the GOP provision that says PUCO
may authorize "any expenditure In·
curred In the provision of public
utilities services unless such expen.
dltures. are found by the oommfs..
slon to have resulted from
Imprudent management."
Meshel said under present taw,
the uWitles have the burden of
showing the PUCO they acta!
prUdently.
One of the DemoCratic amend·
mellls would have stripped this
from the bDl. It was rejected,
mosUy along party Unes, as were
most others.

•

�Thursday, February 25, 1982

:Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111Court8trftt
p~::l·
OlaJo
II
till
DEVOTED TO THE IN'TEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. ~INGE'IT
·

Publh~r

P~rWJI.J~EAD

BOBHOEFLICH

AlilllllaDt Pul)itsher/COIItrotler

Geoeral Maoa&amp;er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New1Edltor
A MEMBER 011 Thr Anoclated Prna, Inland Dally Prlw Anuclatloo and tilt
Amcrkaa NrwtJIIper PubU.h~n Aollflltloa.
LETTERS OF OPINION are wtltoml!it. Tbey 1lloold be In~ lhaa 300 wonk lq. All
ldkn are nbjed tu edJUq ud muBt bt 111~ with Dlmt, llddrat and klepboot
~mber. No umlgaed ldtcn wlllb.o pubi!Mtted. Ldten tlwuld be In good btlle, addrfttlng
~IAtl , DOt pei"J!ODIUtlft.

Letter to the editor
.'

Wants answers
I would like a straight answer on
El Salvadore to.
1 have eight sons, two Anny, one
Marine, one Air Force. I have had
two in Vietnam. I for one, don't want
another Vietnam. I went through
Hell while my sons were \here. Mr.
Reagan is taking us that way again
and Congress Is acting like a bunch
of zombi&lt;!li. Whatever he wants they do - regardless if it's right or
wrong .
Doesn't the American people know
by n0w'what Mr. Reagan is? So he
can. slip our sons right into El
Salvadore, you aren't going to know
it until your son tells you where he's
going. I'Ye'been this route before.
Mrs. H. R. Leamond
Racine, Ohio

He doesn't care
In connection with a letter written
by Floyd Cleland about Welfare, I
think he Is stupid in his ways. If he
lost his job the Welfare should turn
him down, because of his complaining about other people on
welfare. There are a lot of families
• with husbands that would work if
· there were jobs for them, The way
he puts it lie doesn't care about the
: little kids who really need it and
: · sometimes the families can't getit.
The money isn't corning out of his
: pocket.
Thank you,
Mrs, Patricia J. Cleland

·Make wishes known
Once again, Congress is out to
change the Clean Air Act. This lime
they want to eUrninale what the
people in the Northeast call "acid
rain." The way they want to do it is
to stop us here in the Ohio Valley and
·. West Virginia from burning our
coal. The problem is nobody can say
: that burning our coal here is causing

the ''acid rain" problem.
What about allto exhaust in the
Northeast, or the factories and
power plants there? What about the
big smelters in Canada? If all these
things are spewing out sulfur dioxide
: fumes, why don't they do something
in their own backyards before they
• : 'start blaming us?
. Maybe it's because that would cost
them money and they would rather
throw a lot of miners out of work instead of spending some money to fix
their own problems. Ohio and the
panhandle of West Virginia have
already lost 3,000 to 4,000 mining
jobs due to the environmentalists.

We can'tafford to lose anymore.
, U.S. Senate Bill 5-1706, sponsored
.by Senator Mitchell of Maine, would
force the utilities in all states east of
the Mississippi River to reduce
sulfur dioxide emissions by 10
million tons during the next 10 years.
Each state would have to reduce its
share, and for Ohio that is 1.6 million
per year.
That doesn't bother the Senator
because his state of Maine wouldn't
have to do anything. Bill 5-1706 could
throw over 80,000 miners out of work
but this doesn't bother Senator Mitchell. He doesn't have any miners in
Maine.
Reduclligrsulfur dioxide emissions
by 10 million tons per year would
cost utilities about 'l:i million dollars
to start with and 7 billion each year
from now until who knows when.
Who would be socked with the bill?
Not the people in the Northeast, but
aU of us right here in the Ohio Valley
and West Virginia who have to pay
our electric bills. Some utilities
estimate they would have to increase·rates by 70 percent to pay for
Senator Mitchell's bill!
We, as coal miners, can't afford
that and we don't think anyone else
can, Nolie of us can afford to lose our
jobs beca!lse the utilities can't bum
our coal. If we are put out of work
and also have to pay higher electric
.bills, we can't survive.
The sad part of the whole thing il;
that no one can say that reducing
sulfur dioxide emissions from the
Ohio Valley and West Virginia will
solve the problem. Senator Mitchell
even admits that the 10 million tons
annual reduction in sulfur dioxide
emissions is just a figure he pulled
out of the air. Nobody knows what
they are talking about arrived at
that figure.
We can have clean air Without Mitchell's bill. That bill will not improve
our health and even Congress knows
that enough facts are not In to decide
if Mitchell's bill would do anything
for "acid rain." A law was passed
last year ordering a study of what
causes "acid rain." Let's not go off
half-cocked and spend billions of
dollars 'and put a lot of miners out of
work before we know what we are
doing.
i
Write your U.S. Senators today
and let them know tliat the people in
the Ohio Valley and West Virginia
are not going to stand still and let the
Northeast put us out of work. Ask
them to vote against 5-1706, the Mitchell bill.
Don Nunley
Don Holcomb
Gene Oller
Terry Moles

Berry's World

--

Ohio
Sportlight

Pag• 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 25, 1982

- !

Constitutional stewso_......______Ja_m_es_J_.K_i___,..lp_at_ric_k
WASIDNGTQN - ConstiMional
pots are bubbling again on Capitol
Hill. The balance-the-budget amendment will be served up in the Senate
toward the end of March. Amendments dealing · with abortion and
school prayer are waiting in committee pantries. Talk is heard of a
highly improbable constitutional
convention.
All this is stimulating stuff - ··
stimulating, that is, if one loves to
drink at the fountains of constitutions! debate. My own hope is
that most of the turrent argument
will go the way of bubbles of champagne.
S.J.R. 58, proposing an amendment to the Constitution "altering
federal budget procedures," came
out of tlie Senate Judiciary Committee last sununer with only a
single dissenting vote. Max Baucus
of Montana thought the Constitution
should not · be amended simply to
resolve problems that really require
"only a modicum of discipline by the
Congress." Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania went along with the
crowd, but he made murmuring
noises. He had "very seriOIJS reser·
vations about the approach and substance of this proposal."
Baucus and Specter are better
cooks than than collegial chefs who
compounded this indig !stible stew.
The pending reijOlutior has an admirable purpose. Afu.r all, who
could oppose the goal of a balanced
federal. budget? The principle of
"pay as we go" has been a leading
political principle for nearly 200 '
years. Nearly everyone gives at
least lip service to it.
But ends are one thing and means
quite another. This amendment is in
trouble from its very first sentence:
" Prior to each fiscal year, the
Congress shall adopt a statement of
receipts and outlays for that year in
which total outlays are no greater
than total receipts." The sentence is

disarmingly simple.
Note what we are talking about.
We are talking about a "statement."
Statements of prospective receipts
and outlays may be endlessly amended; indeed, up to the moment of
adoption, such statements ought to
be constantly amended, the better to
adjust budetary predictions to
economic realities. The budget that
Mr. Reagan sent to the Hill three
weeks ago attempts to fix revenues
and expenditures through Sept. 30,
1983. This is guesswork; it is guesswork in the mold of the butter with
which the March Hare oiled the Mad
. Halter's watch - the best butter and
the best guesswork, but some crumbs get in.
The amendment attempts to

remove some of the elements of
guesswork. Receipts in this magical
statement "sllall not increase by a
rate greater than the rate of increase in nations! income in the last
calendar year ending before such
fiscal year." What is this talisman of
"nations! income?" It is a figment
of statistical imagination, a popover
index, crisp on the. outside, hollow

within.

Semantics to one side, the
proposed amendment has even more
serious flaws. The precious
"statement" may be waived by a
three-fifths vote of both houses. H
the amendment were operative
\_oday, the Congress would be compelled to adopt such a waiver. There
is no way Wider moon or sun that a

for 1983 without ruinous taxation .of
intolerable reductions in outlays for
defense and for social programs.
The pending amendment has impressive support. Nearly half the
senators have lined up behind it.
Such respected figures in the private
sector as economist Milton Friedman have endorsed it. The Nations!
Tax-Limitation Committee has just
launched a high-powered lobbying
campaign in the amendment's
behalf . These voices notwithstanding, Senator Baucus' quiet
objection still makes greater sense.
A cumbersome amendment, easily
evaded, will not get us out of the pits
of deficit spending. Only selfdiscipline will.

Loans circumvent election laws
A persistent and potentially scandalous issue relating to the financing of
political campaigns once again has surfaced .briefly and then disappeared
from public view without being properly resolved.
The status and treatment of loans - often involving hundreds of
thousands of dollars - to candidates for public office and their campaign
committees has become a perennial yet seemingly insoluble problem for
both the politicians and the officials respoa1sible for monitoring campaign
financing.
The most recent case invol\'es $130,000 worth of bank loans obtainro by
Sen. Alfonse M. D'Amato, R-N .Y., to help finance his successlul1980 campaign,
Prior to being elected to the Senate, D' Amato served as the chief fiscal
officer and later as the highest elected official of a Long Island township
that, like many other municipalities, placed millions of dollars' worth of noninterest-bearing deposits with various local banks.
When he returned to one of those banks for four campaign loans,
D' Amato received the funds on extraordinarily favorable terms. The hank
required no collateral for security and handled the transactions as personal
rather than business loans, thus making D' Amato eligible for a low Interest
rate.
One of the loans, for $30,000, carried an interest rate of only 10.5 percent
at a lime when the prime rate, supposedly the lowest rate offered to the
bank's best commercial customers, was 18.5 percent.
The hank vice president who arranged for the loans was also the bank of.
ficer .who earlier solicited D' Amato for a share of the township's interestfree deposits.
Although the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Justice Depart·
ment conducted a lengthy investigation of the dubious circumstances, they
terminated the probe earlier this year after concluding that there was no
evidence available to warrant prosecution.

By George Strode

balanced budget could be adopted

The Federal Election Commission five years ago conducted an
elaborate survey of the loan activity of all candidates for House and Senate
seats in the 1976 elections and .identified approximately 230 "apparent
violators" of federal law.
' "Certain questionable patterns and relationships of individuals and in·
stitutions'' were found in the cases•of 81 candidates and committees that
handled more than $10 million worth of loans. ln·nine cases, the FEC staff
recommended enforcement action because "possible substantive violations
have been committed."
Some examples of the suspicious transactions that surfaced in contests
for House seats:
-A Pennsylvania Republican secured a $27,000 loan from a bank where
his campaign treasurer was employed.
- Mter a Georgia Democrat received a $10,000 bank loan, his campaign
treasurer acknowledged the transaction in a letter written on bant;
stationery.
- More than $105,000 worth of bank loans secured by a South Carolli18
Republican were identified as notes maturing in 90 days, but there was no
record of repayment more than one year later.
- AHawaii Democrat made more than $500,000 worth of personal loans
to his campaign corm'nittee, but provided no information about the source of
the money or condition of the loans.
Although approximately a dozen FEC staff members spent a total of
thousands of hours identifying potential violators and urged that the issue be
given "close scrutiny," the FEC took no action against any of the politicians
involved.
The commission decided instead that the problem could be resolved by
merely issuing new forms calling for public reporting of additional informatio.1 about campaign loans.

A black 'Repuhlican.._______A_r_tB_uc_hwa_l_d

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Dayton Roth, a state bays basketball tournachampion twice In the last six years, may close its doors later this
year.
Roth Is one of lour Dayton public high schools expeCted to be converted
into an lntermedtate school In the 1982-83 school year. The other high
schools are WUbur Wrtght, Fairview and Colonel White.
I?· Bernard Hatch, the new Dayton city school superintendent, has
proposed the closing ol the four high schools because of decllnlng enrollment. The Dayton Board of Education will conduct a sertes ol hearings In
the affected districts in March.
The new alignment would call tor five high schools, Dunbar, Meadowdale, Belmont, Patterson and Kiser. Ali would be Class AAA schools with
enrollments of around 1,200 to 1,300 In tlie upper three grades.
"I think It's good for a number of reasons," Bill Parrish, athletic director
of the Dayton schools, said. "The outlying school districts Is wbere the
. power has been. We're going to be able to compete with them now."
Parrish says the vast majortty ol telephone calls to the city education
office have favored Hatch's proposal. ·
Of course, the mergers would put Mike Haley, Roth's basketball coach,
out of a job. Haley played with Portsmouth's 1961 state champions a~d
directed Roth to the Class AA tournament title In 1976 and the Class AM
crown last sprtng.
AroWld Ohio: How's this tor a coaching combination? Fran VoU, Del·
phos St.John's girls coach, Is 1~12 In seven seasons, and Bob Arnzen, the
school's boys coach, is 4ffi.216tn 32 years. Voll has won three state titleS tn
five years, too.
Wooster led Dover 3.0 before their game started. .Paver's starters aU
wore dlf!erent jersey numbers than In the scorebook, an autpmatlc technical foul lor each regular. Wooster won 63-34. Dave Sluss has cracked
Houston single game (45) and ~a!'O!er (1,?il6) scoring marks. I:lis career
mark broke a 20-year'{)l:l record h~ld bY Amo~ ,Jnhns.
Watkins Memortal has won lis first basKetl!all league In its 27-year
history. Watkins, champion of,the LlckLag c.runty League, is CQached by
Richard Harrop, brother of Warsaw River VIew Coach Walter Harrop.
Urhana captured Its first league crown, the CentralBuckeye Conference,
ln 15 years.
·
According to hlmselt, fiery Jack Greynolds, Barberton's coach, was
ejected from a game for the first time In 26 years after his third technical
foul against Alliance.
Xenia's players celebrated their Western Ohio League title by receiving
the trophy, slam-dunking lor l!ve minutes and eating a large cake from the
cheerleaders. It must have been too much. The Bucs lost the next night to
Tecumseh 6&amp;-64.
Woodsfield had West VIrginia's third-ranked Class A team, Sistersville,
down three points with 13 seconds lett and sitU lost 81-8:!. Mike Salmonds
scored haskets with three seconds to play and at the buzzer In a 40-point
effort.
River View had 10 of its 13 performers score In a 93-T7 romp over West
Musklngum. Seven of lhe winners' players reached double figures, too.
Ctncinna II Moeller sophomore Byron Larkins' first start resulted ln 29
polnts. Cincinnati Elder went lour oliertlmes to nip Cincinnati McNicholas
93,92,
City playoff champions- Cleveland, Eastover John Adams SS.67ror the
school's first title since 1968, coached by former Wittenberg and Harlem
Globe Trotter star Tony WUcox; Akron Central-Hower over Kenmore
69.00, sixth crown In last seven for Coach Joe Sieglerth; and Columbus,
Northland over West 72-65.
Toledo clty.schools posted the best non,league performance ever with a
·54·28 record, led by 6-1 marks by Rogers and Bowsher.
Girls - Dayton Patterson, the Winner of 70 striht regular season
games, upset in Its first tournament game, 44-39 b . ettertng Fairmont
West; Hebron Lakewood's Rhoda Stevens, 14 stra htl!eld goals lor 28
polnts vs. Licking Heights.
Football- Jim VanDeGrift, a 109-36-Scoach at Lebanon lor 15 years, Is
giving no reason for his resignation. He will remain as a Lebanon teacher.
Bill Trent, a Kentucky state championship coach at Greenup, named to
rebuild Chillicothe's program, not over .500 lor the last 12 years.
m~mt

Scoreboard•••
Boys scores
ONo Jllab khool Bop ~
IIJ 'n.e Alledlled Pl'8l

~. Kennedy 63, Nordonll .li
Cleve. Marlhall 46, ~a 40

,._.,

~- st. IgnatJ\11 56, Parma Valley

Cleve. st. JO!Il"ph 17, Palnesvllle Rhlm ldi! 57
Lorain 56, N. Rktgeytlle 43
New pttladt'Jpftla 66, E. Uverpool 64
N. Olmsted ¥.1, Rocky P•··&lt;&gt;r oUi
Sleubmvtne 72, Dow- .) ~
Wadswath 67, ..Urn F'1rt5lo ne 51
Wtuoughby S. 49, Wlc~o. ffn 47
Your~~ .

The hardest thing for the Reagan
ft read, "Thomas Jefferson Ill,
administration to find is a Chalnnan, Black Citizens for the B-1
;,qualified" black person to appoint Bomber."
to an important position in the
"That's a heavy title," I said.
government. By "qualified," we "What do you do? "
"Anything they ask me to."
mean somebody who is against
busing, job-training programs,
"Who do you mean by they?"
welfare, food stamps, government·
"The Republican Party."
"I thought you were a Democrat."
subsidized housing, as well as equalopportWlity litigation.
" I .used to be tmtill decided there
But when the administration finds was no fortune in it. There are too
a black who's willing to buy the many blacks in the Democratic Parwhole conservative package, he's ty, and there's no opportunity there.
welcome into the government with But if you're a black Republican you
open arms.
can write your own ticket. There are
I don't want to brag, but I know · so few of us that when they find me,
one, and if all goes .well he could they can't do enough for yoli."
become a rising star in the
''Such as?''
Republican Party.
"Well, I'm particularly in demand
His name is Thomas Jefferson m, for Republican flUid raisers. Not
and I ran Into him in Hrooks only don't I have to pay $1,000 for
Brothers where be was being fitted dinner, but they always sit me on the
f9r a suit.
·
dais. When I was a Democrat, I was
"How goes the civil rights bat· lucky to gel a seat near the kitchen
tle?" I asked.
door. Yau know when they introduce
"I'm not into civil rights any the head iable and the Master of
more," Thomas told me. ' " Here's Ceremonies asks everyone to hold
• my new business." He handed me a their applause? Well, when they incard.

traduce me the audience can't conlain themSelves, and they start clap' ping right awa;r. I get standing
ovations for just taking a bow."
"That must be a great ego trip."
"You can't imagin!J how many
people want to take me to IWlch at
the Metropolitan and University
Clubs. I tum down nine invitations
for ,every one I accept. All my host
haS to say is 'This is Thomas Jefferson Ill - he's black,' and you'd
think I was Robert Redford. I even
. get to play golf at the best country
clubs. When I was a Democrat! had
to, wait hours to tee off at a public

stifling business. The only difference
is when a black person says it they
like it twice as much.
"When I was a Democrat, nobody
asked me to speak. They were
looking for a Jesse Jackson, or an
Andy Young, or a Julian Bond or a
Benjamin Hooks , arid the
Democrats always expected them to
speak for nothing. But Republicans
know if they want a black speaker
they have to pay for him.' "'
"You're on to something, Tom," I
said in admiration. "You found out,
as a black, where the money is." .
" I'm j~~&gt;1 killing time Wllil 1 get
course,".
the right government appointment.
"I can see you in demand as a They're going to have to come to me
guest," I said. " But how do you soon because ,they've used up every
make a living?"
black conservative they've got."
"Speaking at business meetings.
"I wonde.r why more blacks don't
You can't imagine how mariy cor- try to gel on the Republican gravy
porations are desperate for a black train?"
speaker to fill out their program."
"I hope tlley don't....lf too many
"What do you tell them?"
blacks join the party, t!&gt;e novelty
· "The same old thing the white will wear off and the Republicans
speakers do. I attack big govern- won't treat us any better than .the
ment , welfare · cheats, social · Democra't.H."
programs, and regulations that are

.......

_

South 66. W. Branc:n

;)J

Aleron St. V-St. M 8&amp;, CantOl'l Ca th. M
Alexander 73, New Lexington 64

Bellefontaine 41, Graham .1!

Scora

EMr
Oniw 18. FDU-MadiDI T7

Geo.Wuhlftatoo 63,.Ruteen 62
Georptown. D.C. M. PrcwtdPnce 42
lona 71, W~anet 119
LaSalle '57, ~xet M
Lelllgtl 61. Delaware M
Mar1st ~. Vermont 00
RldP.r ~ Bucluel :W
St.JOhn'1, NY ID, seton Hall 65

Vlllanova 67, Coonectk:ut 63. OT
W.Oiftter Sl n, Lala~ m
W. Vtrgtnte 82. Pltllburrb 77

80l11'11

All.b&amp;ma 74, Autwn n

Sbl!na!Kb.h 51, Fort Frye oj()
Tri· Valley 42, aaymont J9

....._
...............

Urbana 11. Mlaml E. 41

Wayneda.le 81, Woodl1dge 46

Youna. Rayen ~. Southern I...OC'al 29
Richmond Dele SE M, Huntington II

BeachWOOd 12, Newbury :rr
River Val . ~ N. UrOOn t9
Tot. Scott 51, Tot Rogers n

Duke 13, OfomiOI'I 12, lOT
Georgia &amp;f, 1'l!nnelal!e 6J
Kentuclly

n . ....._ 5&lt;, "

Ml.ullalppl 74, Loulliana St. 61

n.

Georlla Tech !W
N.Caroilna St. !l, Maryland 38
N.Kentllelcy 75, Kentucky St. 68
N.CaroUna

RkhmlDd •• E.Carollrui &amp;1
Otadtl 57

s.caroUAa 6'l.

Tent'leSII«' St. 70, Bethunt-Cookman 68
Vandertlllt !l, Fbl1da 61
Vlfllria S., Wake Fcrett 66
W.CaroliN 61, Campbeil53

Girls scores
011M J1111a 8dtoGI Glrtll !ntOal
w~aa...

""'"'""nmken

613, A)aOn St:wtn~:. 21
CoploPy 4.1, MauWon 35
N. Roylli!AJCI • Bert-a 34
Canton

Parma Holy Name 57, Rrlere 41
a...u.r~

GalllpollJ 61 . Rock Hill 47
Loralrl cat11 . a, Flrel.andl :tl

Lutheran W. 51, WeWnltOn 39
Ml'dlnll

HJtNand 71, Cleovt . Qranp 32

Oak Hutor U. ElmwoOd J6 '
Stl!tr.1Ue C.th. ~ Bucke)'tl N. 21
Warri!IIMlie 27, Mdna Buckeye 2.1

weU.ivtue u. T«011to Tl

a.o•-

Ciew. Hawkm 35, Cleve. Glen Oak :D.

ar

E . Kno1t :t7, CenlertJur'JI: f6

illl.tM'EirT'
a.u St. n. Bowline Gretn 58
OUcqo eB, l..alle Forett 61

DePaul15. F'larman 7f
Jowa St. n , Oklahoma St. 6t
Kansu Sr.. 57, Miuourl 56

Maf1lU!'HI!' 'II. Detroit S.l

Miami, o . 13. C. Mir:tdpn 7ti
Nf!brukll 79, ColoraiSo $7

N.DJ1no11172.. E.Michlpn' 62
St.JOie9h't, ~. lOt, IWnob Tech 91
Tolfdo Ill. Kerlt St. 75
Valpullo ~ Bul.ltr 70
w .Mkhlpn m. Ohlo 53
W\1,-Mii.,..Wtae 87, Grand vau.,r St. ~

Today Is Thursday, Feb. 25, the56thdayofl982. Thereare~daysletlin
the yi!Br.
Today's highlight In history:
On Feb. 25, 1!NII, Communists ~ lzed power In Czechoslovakia In ji:COilp.
On this date:
In 1570, England's Queen EUzabelh was excommunicated by Pope Pius

v.

Ii11601, arttatn's Earl of Esaex was executed tor treason.'

In 1954, Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser usurped power as Premier of

Egypt.

By Alllioclale&lt;l p...,..
When It comes to poise, you can' t
beat Jack Hartman's boys.
"Our team did a good job of keepIng Its poise," Hartman said alter
his unranked Kansas State team
upset No.5 Mtssourt 57·56 1ncollege
basketbali Wednesday night. "We
got tired at the end, but we still
played great."
Perhaps the most poised of all the
Kansas State players was Ed
Nealy, who calmly hit two free
throws In the last ttve seconds for
the winning points In the midst ol
waving hands and thunderous noise
at Missouri's Hearnes Auditorium
In Columbia·.
Nealy had been shootlng only 46
percent from the foul line In confer·
ence games, but he was five of six
from the line Wednesday night as
the Wildcats avenged a 59-58 toss to
Missourt earlier this season at Man·
hattan , Kan., while handing the
Tigers their second straight loss.
Nealy, who scored 17 points, went
for an offensive rebound and put up
a wild s)1ot that missed, but he was
fouled by Missouri's Ricky Frazier
to se~ the stage lor his gamewinning foul shots.
Missouri, which lost a 63-51 decl·
slon last Saturday at Georgetown,
called lime alter Kansas State went
ahead, but Marvin McCrary
missed a wild 40-tooter with one second left.
In other games involving the na·

tion's ranked teams, No. 1 Virginia
crushed No. 18 Wake Forest 84-66,
No. 2 North Carolina trimmed
Georgia Tech 77-54, No. 3 DePaul
edged Furman 75-74, No. 6 West
VIrginia tripped Pittsburgh 82-T7,
No.7 Kentucky stopped Mississippi
State 71-54, No. 12 Georgetown
trounced Providence 6042, No. 15
Arkansas nipped Southern Methodist 54·53, No. 17 Alabama escaped
with a 74·72 vl~tory over Auburn
and Georgia shocked No. 19 Ten·
nessee 64·63.
Top Ten
Ralph Sampson scored 22 points
and grabbed 20 rebounds and Craig
Robinson added 20 points and nine
rebounds as VIrginia overpowered
Wake Forest.
The Cavaliers' 12th victory in 13
league starts assured them of at
least a tle for the regular·season
Atlantic Coast Conference cham·
plonshlp. VIrginia holds a onegame lead olier North Carolina,
and can claim Its second consecu·
live outright championship by winning at Maryland Saturday.
James Worthy scored 20 points to
lead North Carolina to an easy vic·
tory over Georgia Tech. The Tar
Heels had little trouble disposing of
the Yellow Jackets while posting
their 23rd victory in 25 games.
Anthony Hyrd led Georgia Tech
with 18 points.
North Carolina also outre·
bounded Georgia Tech 50·32,

num,bers that were music to Coach
Dean Smith's ears.
Worthy scored his 20 points In 26
minutes and Georgia Tech Coach
Bobby Cremtns expressed gratltude that Smith held Worthy's playing tlme down.
Terry Cummings scored 19
points and Bernard Randolph had
17 to help DePaul beat Furman.
Cummings and Randolph comblned to lead the Blue Demons back
from an elght·polnt deficit at the
halt.
Greg Jones scored 22 points and
Russel Todd hit a pair of pressure
free throws as West V(rginla deleated upset·mlnded Pittsburgh to ,
keep the Mountaineers' winning
streak alive at 23 games. Todd's
free throws with 49 seconds to play
gave the Mountaineers, 24-1. a 78·73
lead. Seconds later, Jones stole the
ball and led Tony Washam lor a
dunk shot.
Derrick Hard scored six points
during a 16-4 run that helped Ken,
lucky thrash Mississippi State. The
WUdcats reeled off 10 straight
points durtng the streak, including
a steal a nd layup by Hord and con·
secutlve baskets by Dicky Beal, to
take a 30·14 lead and
Mississippi State nev er
recovered.
Second Ten
Btu Martin led a balanced Geor·
getown attack with 13 points as the
Hoyas took advantage cit cold shoot-

ing by Providence to trounce the
Frtars. Georgetown's 7-foot fresh·
man center Pat Ewing added 11
points and led Georgetown on detense with six blocked shots. ·
Ricky Norton's free throw with 10
seconds remaining·lUted Arkansas
over SMU. The Razorbacks almost
lost the game as the result of a lourcorner delay offense that Arkansas
Coach Eddie Sutton ordered with
13: 38 left In the game and his team
holding a flve-polnt lead.
Alabama freshman Ennis Wha·
tley sank two tree throws In the tl·
na) tlve seconds tD hold off a
persistent Auburn team and l)elp
the Crimson Tide squeeze by the
Tigers.
Georgia's Dominique Wilkins
tipped In a shot with eight seconds
lett to give the Bulldogs a tight w1n
over Tennessee.

r------------

lfAROAIN ltfATINEfS ON SAT 4 SUN
~LL .SEATS JVST I UO
ADMISSION EVERY TUESOAY lf.IJO

I

"We're golng to pick 26th In the Kemp (eighth · round ), both
draft, so what we'U be looking for starters .
"In addition, David Verser (first
will be the best player available, no
matter what his posltlon happens tD round ), John Simmons (third
be," Gregg said ,
round), Guy Frazier (fourth round)
Gregg pointed out several areas and Jeff Schuh (seventh round) all
made slgniticant contributions."
In which the defending Amertcan
"Sure, it's always disappointing
Conference champions could use
some support.
to lose," he said. "But I'm sitU very
"We feel we're In good shape at proud of our club. No one expected
quarterback, Wide receiver and us to get that lar ... well, almost no
tight end," Gregg said. "Hut we ca n one, because I always thought we
always use help on the defensive could do it, and I guess a lew play·
and offensive Unes, in the defensive ·ers did, too."
backfield, at linebacker and at run·
ning back.
"Last year's draft was an out·
standing one lor us, with wide receiver Cris Colllpsworth (second
round pick) and free safety Bobby

Will play tonight

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Due to a power laliure,

Wedne~­

day's Cla8s A SecUonaJ Tournament action between Kyger Creek
and North GaJDa at Melp lOgb
SchoOl wu poeiponed until 7: 00
p.m. lhl8 evening. 'l1le champloP.
llhlp pme featuring Southern and
the wlruJ!!rolthe KC.Ptrate game Is
oet lor the same time Friday night. .

Our carefully trained tax preparers are up-to-date on all the tax
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Today in history·

Kansas State upsets Missouri Tigers

CINCINNATI (AP) - Coach
Forrest Gregg looks for the Cincinnati Bengals to get even better, like
an aging wine.
"It'll be tough ," Gregg said, ref·
erring to his club's chances ol repeating as Super Bowl
participants. "Hut we're a young
team that's golng to get ~letter.
"When you get there like we did,
everyone Is shooting at you. But I'll
tell you one thing. Nobody's laughIng at those striped helmets now."
The Bengals lost to the San Fran·
cisco 49ers 26-21 in Super Bowl XVI
last month. The success after three
consecutive losing seasons has meant changes In Gregg's off,season
routine.
The telephone lings frequently at
his office. He's In demand to con·
duct clinics, address groups and
make endorsements.
"February was a busy month,"
he said.
There's also plannlng for the col·
lege draft, set for Apri127·28. Unlike
previous years, when the ' Bengals
got high draft cboices because ol
their losing records, theyt!'ld them·
selves drafting near the end of the
list this time around .

College scores
w~· Collep IIMIIeCbd

wards, and Roger Kovalchik. Back row, Coacb Gordon Fillher, Nick
Riggs, Rick Chancey, Bob Asbley, John Smith and Mike Edwards. Not
shown; Brian Whaley.

Gregg expects Bengals to improve

F\Wr Cath . 63, Llckina Ht1 21
K1n1anc:l 67, Fairport Hudlng 28
Newark Cath. 69, Mlllenpc)n ~
NOI'lhrnx' fO, W01hl.ngton Chr-. 56

WeclnelciQ'• ._..
0 . . -'AA. Tow :W:iotuD
AkrOn CenHioWer 7'l. Norton 4:l
Ebardman II), YIJWII. Chaney :ill
Cleve. Hay 62, CrHtwoott u

SEASON OVER - Meigs' vanity baskelball squad clGied 0111 lbe
narrenl t1eU0D l01ing, 75-55, to Sberldan Tuesday In lbe Ci811 AA SeetiODal al Albeu. The Marauden finished with a 11-21 ruord. Team memben were, fi'OIIt row, left to rlgbt, Mark Friend, Randy Murray, Rick Ed-

_..AND Till
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Sat. 9 to 5

�.

•

rc('

Thursday, February 25, 1982

Pomeroy Midd!efort, Ohio

Gretzky sets all time NHL scoring mark
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) -When
Wayne Gretzky was six years old
and tearing apart midget hockey,
he was told he wouldn't last.
Now he is 21 and holds all the
major lndlvldual National Hockey
League scoring records. And the
marks he set might last forever.
Gretzky was at his dramatic best
Wednesday nlght as the Edmonton
Oilers defeated the Buffalo Sabres
6-3. He needed one goal to snap a
deadlock with Phil Esposito for the
most goals scored in one NHL season -Esposito established therecord in 1970-71 and Gretzky tied It
last Sunday in Detroit.
'
The marvellous Oller center dld
not produce that historic goal unW
6:36 remained In the game. He had
four excellent chances but was
st)lmled each time by Sabre goalie
Don Edwards.
But then, when Buffalo right
wing Steve Patrick coughed up the
puck, Ciretzky pounced on It and

before the setlout crowd of 16,433
seemed to teallze It, he had
slammed a iO-foot wrist shot past .
Edwards for No. 77.
Gretzky was on l&lt;:e for nearly half
the game and wound up with three
goals In that final 6:36, giving him
79 this season and a 20-game point·
scoring streak. At his current pace,
Gre!zky would challenge the 100.
goal barrier and would easlly surpass 200 pol!lts - he already holds
the points record withl76 this campaign, 12 more than last season.
Not bad for a kid who was supposed to be washed up during his
adolescence.
He was not particularly worried
abOut breaking Esposito's mark,
which he did In his 64th game. It
took Esposito 78 contests.
" Every game Is a challenge; every shift Is a challeilge," saki
Gretzky, whose hat trtck was his
nlnth game with at least three
goals, including a flve.goal

Middleport, Ohio

COU.EOE
PI TTSBURG

The Ouil y Se ntin el
IUSPSIU-1101
A Dlvlllon of Ml!lt:lmedla, Inc.

STATE - Named

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Published every afternoon, Monday lhrOUMh
Friday, 111 Court Street, by the Ohio VMUey
Publl.oihlng Company - Multimedia, Inc .,
Poml!rO)', Ohio n769, 992-21[16. Second clas:t
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10W40

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Cincinnati
Reds Manager John McNamara
was fiu.sh with optimism Wednesday as pitchers and catchers began
workouts at the National League
baseball club'.s spring training
camp.
"This is going ·to be one of the
most interesting springs I've ever
had as a manager," McNamara
saki. "There are going to be a lot of
new faces In Tampa, and I llke that
because the moves that have been
made have been designed to streng-

FREE

CEDENO AND KERN JOIN REDS IN FIRST
WORKOUT - Clnclnnnti Redrr' new players, Ceoar
Cedeno, left, acquired iu trade with Houston and Jim
Kern who played with Texas last season, join In

DIP STRIPP'R

WITH COUPON
Addltion1l

TAMPA. Fla. (AP) - Cesar
Cedeno Isn't wasting any time In
getting ready to play center field
for the Clnclnna tl Reds.
Cedeno worked out with the
Reds' pitchers and catchers Wednesday, a week before he and the
rest of the squad were due to report.
"He to~d me that he'd be In a few
days early, but I didn't expect him
In today," said Reds Manager John
McNamara. "It was a pleasant
surprise. "
Cedeno, who turns 31 years old
today-, was acquired In an offseason traQe that sent third baseman Ray Knight to the Houston
Astros. He's been given the starting
center field job In place of Ken Griffey, who was traded to the New
York Yankees.
"I always come down with the
pitchers a nd catchers, " Cedeno
said. "! do It because of the fac tthat
I used to play winter bail-! played
year round- and I don't play winter bail any more. If I waited until
the rest of the team came down , I
wouldn't be ready to go right

away."
He wasted no tlme getting ready
Wednesday. Cedeno was the last
player to leave the Reds' practice
field and weight room. streaming
sweat.
After watching part of Cedeno's
workout, McNamara pulled him
aside and cautioned him abOut
overexertion.
"He's had proble ms with groin

Two rookies sign

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CINONNATI (AP) - Right·
handed pitchers Jose Brito a nd Jeff
Lahti have signed one-year contracts for the 1982 season with the
Cincinnati Reds, the National
Leagu e baseball club said
Wednesday.
Terms of the contracts were not
revealed.
Brtto, 22, had a 6-11 record a nd
4.!B earned run average last season
with the Reds' lop farm club, Oass
AAA IndlanapoUs.
Lahti, 25, was 6-6 with a 2.97
ear n ed run average at
.Indianapolis.

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physical drills as ClnclnDati bolda Ill lint 1prlng
trlanlng workout In Tampa Wednesday. In
background, from left, pitCher Tom Hume, Johnny
Bench and Tom Beaver. (AP laserpboto).

•

&amp;

and hamstring pulls," McNamara
said. "I talked to him a Uttle bit
abOut not pushing himself. He's
new and he may want to show people what he can do. He doesn't have
to do that. We know what he can
do."

Cedeno said he considers the
hard work a part of his job.
"I work as hard as I can until I
can hardly stand up every day,"
Cedeno said. "I've always been
known as a hard worker. I'm a person who doesn't like to have anybody push me. I push myself. I could
have stayed out there and run all
day long."
The outfielder wants to get a running start when the Reds open their
pre-season exhibition schedule
March 10.
''It's a lot of hard work, but it wtll
pay off,'' he said . "I work .on my
legs a couple of days, stretch them
out good a nd then I'll take a few fly
balls. When the e xhibition ga mes
start, I want to be ready to go."
Catcher Alex Trevino was missIng Tuesday
the pitc
hers and
catchers
heldwhen
their first
workout
because of visa troubles. 'rrevlno, acquired from the New York Mets In
a trade for George Foster, was ex·
pected to work out today.
Non-roster pitchers Blll Bonharn
and Geoff CQmbe also missed the
first workout Bonham plans to
work out In California through the
end of the week. Combe Is pursuing
a grievance against the ballclub to
try to become a free agent.

Girls Class A
finals tonight
Finals in · the upper and lower
brackets of the 19112 Class A girls
sectional basketball tournament will
be held at Gallipolis in the GAHS
gym this evening.
First game pits Southern against
Syrrunes Valley at 6:30 p.m. The
winner advances to the Waverly
district. Second game at 8:30 finds
Eastern battling
Southwestern. This winner -will also
advance to the Waverly district. .

CONGRATULATIONS

To Our Local
FFA MEMBERS••••
'
You'll be leaders
for Tomorrow's
Agriculture.

WAGNER"'
.

\r---

HEAVY DUTY

DISC
PADS

BRAKE RlliD

REBUILT

.

.

Anxious Cedeno
•
•
not wasting time

Transactions
NCAA- Nwned F'red Jacoby to Its 10.
member ex.ecuUve oommlltee.

Reds' manager flush with
·optimism as club opens
camp
.
..

SALE ON

· Lee Corduroy Jeans
Insulated Boots
Carhart Work Clothes
DAN'S
BOOT SHOP

The Daily Sentinei-Pag-5

Middleport, Ohio

slty and Wayne's desire outweighs
anybody else. That's what makes
him so great."
The Great Gretzky received
cabled messages from President
Reagan and NHL President John
Ziegler. Reagan bad met Gretzky
at a White House Luncheon held
earlier this month for the Ail·Stars.

and three four-goal nights this
sea!50n.
That second wind produced the
historic goal, tben a pair of slapshots that darted past Edwards In
the tlnaJ two minutes, lifting Edmonton to a victory that extended
Its unbeaten string to eight games.
Gretzky's fabulous night, his
fourth straight five-point perfor·
mance, offset a gaJJant effort by
Edwards and Gll Perreault. Perreault, a 12-year NHL veteran and
the only original Sabre, scored once
in each period, his last goal at 2:27
of the final period llftlng Buffalo
Into a 3-3 tie.
But then Gretzky took over. ADd,
after snapping the tie - and his
personal deadlock with EspositoGretzky was presented the puck by
Espo, who thanked him "for letting
me be a part of this.
"In my oplnllon, he has the greatest amount of talent In the league, "
said
"He has totallnten-

DEPEND ON USWE'RE 'PARTS PLUS'

ESPOSITO GIVF.'l GRETZKY Tim PUCK- PbU Esposito, who held
·Ute record for the most goals scored In one season, gives Wayne Gretzky
the puck wbtcb be put Into the Sabre's net for his 77th goal to heal
Esposito's record. (AP Laserphoto)

~roy

Thursday, Februa,Y 25, 1982

BRAJCE CALIPERS

Johnny Bench will move to third to
succeed Ray Knight, who was
traded to the Houston Astros; and
fo.r mer New York Met Alex Trevino w1l1 be_gtven the chance to win
the regular catching job.
"I belleVe that we're a better
team right now, going Into spring
training, than we were at the end of
the (1981) season - and we won
more games than anybody else last
year," McNamara saki.
He said the pitchers will start
slowly, throwing 10 minutes a day

.

each, running and working wit:h
weights. Catchers and other plaY:
ers who voluntarily reported early
will have a chance to get extra ba'ttlng practice. The rest of the squad
Js due to report to Redsland next
Monday.

"Some people have doubts abOut
our power, and I'll agree !hat we
won't have any one player who will
hit as many home runs as George
Foster has been giving us,"
McNamara said.

rlii;;;i;;-.;;;;;;;;;!~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;
then ·the club."
The Reds will have a n all-new
outfield and new third baseman,
and possibly a new catcher. Outfielders George Foster and ~en .
Griffey have been traded away and
Dave Collins became a free agent; .
How is possible for Rice's to sell high qqallty suites for
such unbelieveable low prices??? Here are 6 reasons:

Hush

4. Volume buying.
s. Volume selling.
fl. Small mark-up.

1. Low overhead.
2. Family operation
3. Direct factory buying.

. Any location - whether you 're off to
th e .office or out on the town - you 'll
appreciate the co mfort and quality that
hav e made H ush Puppiese casua ls
famous. Ju st the right to uch of class
combined with a smart se nse of style.
And you don 't have to be a m ovie star
to af1ord them

New 2 pc:. Living '·

With

Extra Heavy
·Oak Frame ·

Room Suite
Reg. $239

Regular

'138

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Save '10'1.

New 2 pc. ~·""E!&lt;

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Suite

Reg. $299.95

CARLA
NOW ONLY
Pay Your Columbia Gas Bills At:

$19995
SAVE 1100

THE SHOEBOX
MlbDLEPORT, OHIO

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•CARTERS MENSWEAR ..... PT. PLEASANT
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PRESENTS FOR THE 1st TIME A

4 STORE
STOCK REDUCTION SALE
Final Reductions -on Fall Clothing at 50% Savings!
Don't miss our SPECIAL GROUPS of fine quality
clothing for Men and Women. (Ladies' Wear at
Thomas Clothiers O~ly.) .
.

•

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•MEN'S SPORTCOATS
•'VlEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
•MEN'S SWEATERS
•MEN'S OUTERWEAR JACKETS
•MEN'S VELOUR SHIRTS
•MEN'S CORDUROY PANTS
•MEN'S SHOES (T.C. &amp; NYCH-ONLY)
•MEN'S FASHION LEVI'S JEANS
•MEN'S DOWN FILLED VESTS
•MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
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PRICE

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
~04

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POMEROY, 01110
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Pam Plus auto.tot•• ... n.n·a-- yeul
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Member FDIC

.

THOMAS

CARTERS
CLOTHIERS MENSWEAR
354 2nd AVE . .
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO -

420' MAIN ST.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

THE

HUB
322 2nd AVE. .
. GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

NEW YORK
CLOTHING

HOUSE
126 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO

�Thundery,

The· Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Thunday, February 25, 1982

Page--6

Parents ask (Why dicl it happen?'
daughter!- BONNIE
DEAR MRS.,W. :
Our deepest SYmpathies are with
you.
Although it's hard for those left
behind not to wonder, "Could we
have somehow prevented thl$? " I'm
sure you understand it wasn't you,
but lifo: itseif that focused Bonnie's
decision. She was deeply sensitive, .
she feared the future, she wanted
rest. Ali your love couldn't change
that, and I know how greatly you
tried.
May memories of your daughter
not be clouded by guilt. - H.

know!- PSYCIUATRIST

DEAR HELEN:
What a sad waste of a beautiful,
talented person: I'm sorry the boy
who wrote the poem Is no longer
here. If only someone had listened ...
to the words he couldn't speak, but
only wrote.
Having considered suicide at one
point in tny life, I know the terrible
feelings of sell-hatred and
uselessness that one experiences.
I think God that two things were
still present in my emotions: a remnant of self-respect, and cowardice.
The latter kept me from taking my
DEAR HELEN :
life until I sufficiently nurtured the
The blank verse written by the · former.
young student who later killed himI now realize I am one heU of a perseif shows so very clearly that he son and I deserve to enjoy aU the
confonned, he pretended everything pleasures life has to offer, not the
was fine, but his deep sensitivity and black nothingness of death. I mature
the feeling that no one understood and grow more each day.
(because he couldn't articulate)
My cure for depression : Just find
pushed him over the brink.
one good thing about yourself, no
Depressed people are·often afraid matter how small. Then work on it,
to show their emotions. So they let it grow, and it will give birth to
pretend, all the while feeling other good feelings about your worlonelier. That's why the overly quiet, th. The proce.S should continue the
good, obedient, no-trouble child is rest of your life, as it has in mine.
sometimes the one to go.
And remember: Suicide is not only
a great personal injustice but an inParents should be ever alert for justice to ail those who !Pve you. hidden depreSBion, and if they can't DAVID, A CONCER.NEI) TEEN
break through it, they should find
Got a problem? An adult subject
someone with whom the child will for diSC USB iOn? You can talk it over
corrununicate. This won't be easy; in her column if you write to Helen
at times it can be impoSBible. I Bolte!, in care of this newspaper.

physician, Dr. Wilma Mansfield,
initially and on a monthly basis up to
32 weeks of pregnancy.
After 32 weeks of pregnancy, the
patients will be referred to participating obstetricians in the
surrounding area. All blood and lab
work results will be transferred to
the obstretician of choice.
1The charges during the program
will be based on a sliding fee scale,

and will not cover any expenses after referral to a participating obstetrician.
If a resident has been diagnosed
pregnant, and L1 intereE!t:~ in cny of
the services, sile t. asked to contact
the Meigs County Health Department at 992-6626.
In announcing .the program, Nita
Wisnlski, R.N., project director,
streSBed the importance of early
ore-natal care.

Church's Syracuse Circuit
minister to speak at Bethany
Rev. Stanley Merrifield of the
Syracuse Circuit of United
Methodist Churches will preach at
tiMi regular Sunday evening service
of the Southern Cluster No. 2 of
United Methodist Churches Sunday
night at Bethany United Methodist
Church in Dorcas.

The evening services will begin at
7:30. Participating churches are
Bethany, Carmel, Morning Star,
Portland, and Sutton United
Methodist Churches.
The March 7 service, to be held at
Morning Star, will feature a movie
from the American Bible Society.

Rev. Robert Robinson of Heath
United Methodist Church in Middleport will be the speaker for the
March 14 service at Sutton.
The March 21 service, at Portland,
will feature the Rev. Richard
Thomas of the Northeast Cluster of
United Methodist Churches.

coffee cake, eggs and coffee. The
table grace was given in unison.
There was quiet music by Mrs. Mary
Stewart, and duet by Mrs. Lois Burt
and Mrs. Roy Holter. A Lenten
meditation, "The Light," was given
by Mrs. Gay Perrin. FoildWing the

'

The Meigs Hi~h School honor roll for the third
s ix weeks

~ratlln~

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs Junior High

period has been announced.

School honor roll for the third .six weeks .:rading
periOd has been announet:d. Those makin.: a
l(rade ol 8 or above in all their Mubjeets to De
named to the ruil are :

ThOse makmg u ,.:radc of 8 or above in all thd r
subjt!.;~ to be namt.-d to the roll an~ :
GratJc •'•i11e, Lisa Ashley, Charlotte Lyon~.

.

Dt..'bclrah Portt!r, Sherry Sa.yn: . EuiHSick, Ali::s m•

Tromm.

Grade seven, Erin Anderson , J.Cim Annstrong,
Jeff AnlOid, SuaanArnold, Stanle)' Broome, Tim
Casacll , Marty Cline, Jennifer Couch, Heather
Cullw ns, To.Jtl Cullurns, Paul Du.ill~)' , Tim Durst,
Huey Eason, Darla Hawley, Kristi Haynes,
Shannon Hindy, Je98e Howard. D11rcie Hysell,
Su.sa.n 'Jones, Darla King, Phil King, Susan King,
Eddie Kitchen, Mike I&lt;loes, Judy Mees , Steve
MllS.Scr, Michelle PetersOn. SL'Ott Powell. Sally
Radfort.l, Cindy ~ i frle , Ct"lt!ryl Roush, Tracy
Scho!derer, Kris Sexton, Brenda Sinclair, David
Smilh, Mark SmiUl, Ra chel Steele, Mickie
Stewart, Jenny Sw11rtz, Brian Tannehill. Deru1y
Welsh, Chip Werry, Michelle Zirkle.

Grade len, Sherry Arnold , C111'is .Burdette,
M1mte ChupmUn, Bal'boro ChaJll&gt;clcar. Thnotl1y
Fri~t.:ier. Pt~ul

Janey, Rh011da Jcfrcrs, Ml'ls.~ Me·
Millian. Jenny Me1uJows, Kiln Pauley, J on
PCI'rin , Nick Hi ~~s, Sh;t ron Rus.scll, Amy S i~~Son .
Vau~lliln S 1~n o.:cr. Paula Swinddl, Tcr·ri Thoma.
Eliwl:dh We lsh.
Grade eleven. Jilnlie Acree, Carrie Atlk ins.
I.!S&lt;J All en. Tina 1\llcn. Rowena A\•eriun. Anita
Basl•aJrt. Jeflrl!y Bau~Jun41n , Jhu Blankenship,
Cra1g rJolq1 , Hobin Buffm~ll&lt;Jtl l , Brett Carl. Jeff
Car::~on . Ci ndy Crook11 . Todd Cundi ff. Ba rl&gt;tlra
Cwter. K11rla l:&gt;t'mos11. Faith Dicken::~, Tim Fife.
Brett l"lnlaw, Kim Fraley, Bl"iil n Hanni11~ .
Tcrt~!l&lt;l Harden. Ketrl Hardt:r, Sc:otl Ha rriscm .
William Holcomb. Stcpl~nie Hc)lwhh11!, l .isa JurGrade t:i'~ ht. David Averion, J on Bell. Deni::~c
vJ.s, Valaric Jcffei'Jt, Brill Kin~. Su:;anl.i~ htrool. f Bentz, Beckr. Birt•h(ield, April Brick II$, Pollie
Cmtly Parlu:r. J ea nna Pauley, J.on Piekett , BcrChadwell , Mike Chancey, Gary Coleman, Kenda
mnd Romine : Ki111 nnush . Brenda Smi th, Lintla
Dcnohue, Gina Follrod, Karen Grover, Jodi
0. _Smith, Kr1s Snn"':tlcn, Tunya Stobart , Pttula
HHrrison, Rotld Harrison, Darren Hayes, Pelihy
Swisher, Wently _T1Ihs . Deanna VanMeter, Man
Hysell, K~is K~nnedy, . ROdney Klein, Shelly
Van Vnmketl, Bna11 Wtll .
Lemley, Cmdy Lttl!e. Kns ML'(1h ee, Ryan Mahr,
Grade tw~lw . Tanye~ 1\leshi i'C, Kri slitl Atl·
Kelly Milburn, JuJy Mowt&gt;ry . Tirn Mullins, Lee
licrson, Juh f}:. Arnold. Roll A~hlcy , Teresa
Powell Chri.&lt;; Shank , Tim Sloon, Anita Smi th ,
Ba~ha m . Kiw Bi rdlricld, He~ lila Blunhl11,
Carol Smith, Julie SiSMOrl. James Smi th , Laura
Janwt; Ca rsey, M&lt;1rk t:li Jll', Dcnist! Cobb, J ohrt
Smith.
Crcmcan:~,
P&lt;tllld&lt;l
Crooks.
Susau
Damll'r.
rr:~==:::::=======;1
, .lconl'ltc Darlin~ . Pl1yll 1s Davis, Vicky Ot!Wrtl,
Kimberl y DcnJOs!-i , Jo y IJewh LJI'l&gt;l. Tcn·sa Dur~ l.
Hiek Ebcr:~IJal'll. Brc11da Fry, Charlt•s (~cary,
Your ''Extra Touch"
.Jimmy G i llb.~ . Ga ry Gintht•r, Michat•l Gra y.
,.
-·
Florist Since J957
Hl'I-(JIIa Hawkins. Ma ry Beth Hawley, llilvid l·loffman , Sherry Hulll. Stcvt• Hni!'.l. Rnbt•rt
Hnutiashcll. Bn•mlo Janey, Tony Jt!Wcll, Dh.'k
Kin ~. Robul Kild1cn. Keith Lmkous. E1·w l.i11S·
t..:nnb, f'nmklin Martin. lJa Ma rtin , Ma rk
ML-r.uire , Vickie Nottingham, 1.rm1e Oliver.
Kathy Parker, Kjlll Pullcrson, O)la Pugh, Dclindu Roullh, Hclt·n Sh1ck. Alrr~ Smith. Omnic
PH. 992-2644
Smith, l.11 ura Smilh , Rllbt!rta S111 ith, Lorri
Snowl.lc•1. Susa.n Swann, V1cki Soluters, Gret Ur)' 1
.-JS'l E. Main, Pomeroy
ThomHs, Melinda Thomas. Ot•nni~ Thi)l~lon . Ti111 t
Your FTD F.lorist

fl

:'

~

New Spring
Shoes Arriving

Dally
heritage house
of shoes
N. 2nd Av~.

Middleport, Ohio

IN STOCK FOR
·SPRING SPORTS
·BASEBALL AND
TRACK.SHOES
IN THE
ANNEX

FLORIST

il~============-~=====::::~=====

Tillis.
Relk'l'CI:I
Tillis,
T!n1
Tomlin,
ncr, Terry
Wuyland
, Tr1
1y Willis,
FredDeniSl'
Younlo(Tur.
___!

hymn, "0 Love that Will Not Let Me
Go," Mrs. Mae Mora had the
benediction.
Members of the Happy Harvesters
Class, the Friendly Circle and the
Busy Bee Circle served as hostesses
for the breakfast.

.

and South America. As they tasted
each food, the scouts gave one cent
to the Juliet Lowe World Friendship
Fund.
Reports were given by the scouts
attending the Thinking Day
program at Royal Oak Park Sunday.

I

•SWIMWEAR
•BLOUSES
•DRESSES

Awards were presented to the
yearly best losers at the recent
meeting of TOPS OH 1456, Rutland.
Cindy Hartenbsch won the first
place awards in the fourth division;
Janet Bolin, the second place in the
fourth division; Nancy Vance, first
place in the third division. Each
received a certificate, a ribbotl and a
cash prize. The weekly best loser
was Kathy Stewart with Beulah
Wright as runner-up. Last week's ·
best loser was Ollie Hill with Sharon
' Black and Cindy Hartenbach as runners-up.
Clara Phillips was the winner of he
heart contest and received a wind
chime 88 her prize.
The weigh-In Ume is now at 6 p.m.
and the meetings start at 6:30 p.m.
Il)formatlon .Qn the clUb mlly be lJb.
·talned by billing 742-2171. . .
.

I

•SPORTSWEAR
•SKIRTS
•SLACKS

MANY WINTER SPECIALS
IN MEN'S AND LADIES'
DEPARTMENT ARE STILL
AVAILABLE

BAHR CLOTHIERS
·ALL SALIS FINAf~rxflwWf-110 RETURNS

eveni ng.

Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gilkey visited
Sw1uay with Mrs. Della Stah.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Korn "·ho has
spent the winter with their daughter
a nd son-in-law Mr amd Mrs Ed
· several days
·
Baul'r, Huron , · sptml
ht'l't'. Mr. Karr ca lled on Charles
Mash and Norman Schaefer.
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Feb. 21 was 88. Choir members present were 16. A duet was
sung by Mrs. Pullins and Mrs.
Fomer.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs, Faye
Cow1tryman, Greenville.
Jack Hoffner, Pomeroy, William
Bailey, Bradbury, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Eskew, Pomeroy, and Edward Archer, Rosfville, called on
Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan Schaefer
rec'ently.

THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW Garden
Club will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Denver
Weber with Mrs. Sandy Roberts
and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead as cohostesses. European slides will
be shown by Mrs. Weber.

THE MEIGS COUNTY Church
of Christ Women's Fellowship
will meet at the Pomeroy Church,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Oale Stoll,
Meigs County Extension Agent,
home economics, will be the
speaker.

Astrograph
February za,.IJ82
Persons who can be truly helpful in bettering your lot will confide in
you more this coming year than they ever had in the past. Their confidential tips will prove advantageous.
PISCES (Feb. ZO.Marcb 20) Rather than eannarking incoming funds
for new products or goods, it may be wise at this time to use some of your
monies to play off old obligations first
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) It'll be easy to get along well with most
people t(_lday, but one with whom you've had erOS!! words in the past could
still have a chip on his shoulder.
TAURUS (April OO.May 20) You can achieve your aims today by
using common sense and tact. Ho.wever, if you be.gi~ to get too pliShy you
might undo everything. Be assertive, not antagorust1c.
GEMINI (May ZI-June 20) In conversations with friends today, be
careful not to force your views. You may win the debate but you could
alienate a pal.
CANCER (June ZI..July 22) From your vantage point you should be
able to see ways to make changes today whieh could benefit your family.
However, you won't get their support if you don't clearly explain your
methods.
.
LEO (July 23-Aug. %%) Partners or aSBociates may have better Ideas
than you today, but convincing you might not be so easy. Don't let pnde of
authorship affect your judgment.·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your suggesti~ns regarding ways another
should manage his or her affairs will be on'target today. However, you
may not be as wise In your own dealings.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0&lt;1. 23) Beware of a tendency today to get a trine
heavy msituations which should be treated lightly. Don't take yourseif or
events too seriously.
.
·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)' Tasks requiring concentration should
be attended to early in the day. Possibilities for frustratoon and
mistakes increase as your energy wanes.
.
. . .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. !1) You'll enJOY soc1ahzong today,
provided the events are not of long duration. When things drag on your
social graces may desert you. .
.
CAPRICORN (!lee. 2Z..Jan. 19) You should be able to find some
good buys today that fit neatly into your .b~dget. Subdue Impulses t~
purchase something you know you shouldn t JUS! because another owns

'350

00

DIVIDEND ON All
'i2' V.W: RABBIT CARS
&amp; TRUCKS.
"Black ne" Edition
. Not Included

'81' AMC

"RABBITS"

SPIRIT D/L
4 cyl., auto., p.s., a/m-f/m
stereo, lo.w miles

'5395.

$ave

·"CHEAPIES"

i78' PONTJAC

'75' NEWPOitT 1095.
'68' C.20 1795.
.'73' DODGE WG. 'lt5.
'73' JEEP 11195.

SUN BIRD

1

$AVE

1·80 Model Gas
1-79 Model Diesel
1-78 Model Gas
· All 1 Owner

Station Wagon, 6 cyl., auto.,
p.s., wood grain, roof rack.

'3295.

'79' CHEV•
•

MONTE CARLO
v~. auto.,

p.s., air, tilt,
cruise, stereo, low miles.

'5995.

. ASK US ABOUT OUR EXC~USIVE 12 MONTH OR
12,000 MILE
"
NATIONWIDE USID CAR WARRANTY!

..

\

Baptist Church in Middleport has
concluded with 46 conversions and 30
baptlsmals. Evangelist was Clovis
Vanover of Columbus. Pastor of the
church is Leslie Hayman.

I '

Sam Persons, Marietta, spent the
weekend with Mr.- and Mrs. Elson
Dailey and family.
Mr. and Mrs. IUchard Smith shup-

Meigs Countlans who are
widowed divorced or single and
wish to niake new friends are invited
to a dance and organizational
meeting of a club to be fonned at 6
p.m. Sunday at Krodel Park club
house, Point Pleasant. Ideas on
helping to form a wortbwhlle and interesting singles social .club are
being sought and should be presented at the Sunday session.

Joshua Wilson, Hanunondsville.
Ohio visited recently with his grandparents, Rev . and Mrs. l..awrence
Gluesencamp.
Mr. and Mrs. Kerry Dobbins
called on Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Brewer on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lehew and

Mary Ann Hoffman underwent
Monday at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Janet Mora of Pomeroy is
recuperating from an appendectOmy performed Monday at
·the Nolzer Medical Center.

=--·--

For
Elegant

LADIES &amp; MEN'S
HIGH FASHION
WESTERN BOOTS

Ears
Oiamonds and
14 Karat Gold

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
!

I 4 PTS.

I.

$4800 '

----- - -,'I,
1
'

",;;b.

~~

il

FRIDAY
WEEKEND REVIVAL at
United Faith Church, Route 7
bypass near Pomeroy, Friday,
Saturday and Sunday, 7:30 each
_ evening .. . ith Rev . ' David
Wiserrtan as evangelist and
special singing by Hannony.
Hymn sing 2 p.m. Sunday ; public
invited .
RACINE
FIREMEN'S
AUXIUARY, soup dinner and
supper, serving to begin at II
a.m. Friday at the firehouse.
A MEETING of the Meigs
County Fox Chasers will be held
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the cabin
on Eagle Ridge Road . All members and interested persons are
invited to attend as plans for the
spring bench show and hunt will
be made.

FILL YOUR
PRESCRIPTION
WITH
US!
'

SWISHER
&amp;'LOHSE
,

\12 E. Main ·
Pomeroy
992-2955

NEW SPRING SHO.ES
ARRIVING DAI LV!

l

I,

~--I~ ,

lie___ __ ____J I
10 PTS.

$69 95

ALL GIRLS AND LADIES
WINTER MERCHANDISE

Y2 Pr_ice

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp;
JEWELRY
Middleport, Ohio

THE
FINANCIAL
CENTER
OFFERS A
'NEW MONEY
MARKET
ACCOUNT
WITH
MATURITIES
OF ONE TO
89. DAYS.
Presenting Central Trust's improve d Money Morl&lt;e t Account . Now you con
·
invest as little as $2,500 tor as little· os one day and earn high money mark et
rates. You con toke your money out (part ot it or all or n) whenever you'd
like with no penalty. All with the c omfort of knowng your money is 100% .
secured by on obligation of the U.S. Government or ots Age ncies. So 1t you re
looking foro short-term investment !hot's lOng on returns. look to our Money
Market Account. You don't need to open ony othe r kind of account to toke
advantage of this high rote . For complete details, stop by any Central TMI
office today.lt's the kind of i
n&lt;JW service you've come to expect
.
from the bonk that's wor\&lt;rng to be
your tota l financial center.

CMPAIY

Ernest! Van lawagen was admitted Tuesday to the Holzer
Medical Center.
surg~,.Y

-.=.=

ped in Parkersburg re~cr,tly.

ON AIL WIN f[ H MLHCHANDISf

MARGUERITE SHOES
"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block"
POMEROY, OHIO
I

.

Stivers ville
News Notes

FINAL CLEARANCE

A revival at the Ash St. Freewill

son ca:loo on Mrs. Nell Middteswart
recently.

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

Announcements
.

.w.

By Mrs. Herbert Rousb
David Roush of Bedford, Ky. spent
a weekend with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Roush.
Mr. and Mrn. RUSBell Roush
visited Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
recently at Portland.
Wilda Lawson spent a few days
with Mrs. Dorothy Rnssell at
Pomeroy·
Miehelle Morris of Pomeroy
" ted he r grandparen ts ' Mr. a nd
Vtsl
· · Mrs. Charles Law~on. recentiy. t
Mr. and Mrs. Sod Manuel spen a
Sunday w1th Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel and Tim.
Mrs. Dana Lewis of Clifton and
Cindy Roush visited' Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush Tuesday evening.
Dana and Roberta also visited the
Roushes a recent Sunday.

Social Calendar

one.
ood 'd
t
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. 19) If you feel you have g
1 eas oday, believe in them and follow them through. Don't be intimidated by
a know-it-all who may try to prck them apart.

Japan was the country the troop
represented.
The county-wide scout skating
party was announced for March 7, 2 ·
to 4 p.m. at the Skate-a-way Rink.
Only registered girl scouts are
eligible to participate.

TOPS members rp;;;;;;~~~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;ii
earn awards
NEW LADIES SPRING FASHIONS

will be with Ms. Bertha

Parker.
Thirty persons from the local
church held their Valentine dinner
at the Meigs Inn on a Saturday

THE

Girl Scouts celebrate Thinking D'!y
National Thinking Day was observed when the Salisbury Girl
Scout Troop noo met Tuesday
.. evening at the' Meigs High School.
··• The scouts brought foods from
several countries including Mexico,
Spain, England, Poland, France, the
Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany

nieetin~

A large crowd attended the film,
·•The Reflections of His Love" Sunday evening at the local church.
Mr. and Mrs. William Jacobs,
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Colwnbus,
visited over the weekend
Church Feb. 14 was 88. Choir mem -.
with
Mrs.
Jacobs'
mother, Mrs. Tina
bers prese11t were 15. A duet was
sung by Sharon Fomer and Kathy ·Jacobs.
Charles Mash and Norman
Pullins.
Schaefer
are much improved after
Word has been received from Mrs.
recent
illnesses. ·
their
Floyd Shook that she is Kelting along

Area honot rolls

Holds 20th Lenten breakfast
Approltimately 140 women and
ministers from area churches attended the 20th anniversary Lenten
breakfast Wednesday morning at
Trinity Church.
Hosted by women of the church,
the menu consisted of orange juice,

Hem~an

MOVING AWNG TOGETHER - It's not what it is trying lokeep upthe_paeeona recent afternoon. (AP
looks like In realty, nine-year-old Michelle BUlman of Laserpho,to)
New Philadelphia Is roller skaUng and her dog, Bully,

Health Department sponsors
pre-natal program for resi4ents
A new program for pregnant
women of Meigs County has been announced by the Meigs County Health
Department.
The program consists of providing
pre-natal education in individual
and claSB sessions, obtaining prenatal blood and lab work, providing
pre-natal vitamins, providing prenatal dietary counseling, providing
clinic examinations by the program

Cotu:J.ty correspondence'-----------~--_:_~--------~·""''--­
Melissa, Pomeroy, spent a recent
Delbert Ours visited his daughter
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom.
very well aflt!r her operation.
Sunday
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Nonnan
and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs.
Kasper. Dayton, calll'1l Fairview
LongBottom on Mrs. Bertha
Fitch
at Long Bottom on Sunday.
Lehew
and
Elaine.
Audrey Brewer and David.
Parker recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Middleswart,
Mrs. Lloyd Wright was hD:&gt;tess
News Notes
Mike and Justin Middfeswart, Mrs.
recently to six members of the News Notes.
Grace Allen and Mrs. Shirley JohnLaurel CliffHealth Club. The March

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

.;......

The Daily Sentinei-Pap--7

Pomeroy Middleport,.Ohio

1982

By MEWDY ROUSH
Get well wishes go to Long Bottom
mail carrier Phil Radford and
Henry Hensley who were injured
when their vehicles collided on a hill
in Long Bottom (Hensley Road) ,
recently.
Miss Kelly Ridenour recently underwent surgery. She is home now
and will be ready to go back to
school before long. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Keith
Ridenour. Kelly has two brothers,
Matt and Floyd.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Millard Ball
have been Dougie Ball, Montgomery, W. Va.
Donations of money and clothing
or household goods for the Earl Hunt
Family may be left at the Long Bottom Community Building or Mrs.
Ernestine Hayman. The Hunts'
home in Bashan burned reeently and
everything was lost. Please help.
Reminder - This is the month
that the local · chapter of the
American Heart Association will be
conducting iis fund drive.

Helen Help Us
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTJ'EL
DEAR HELEN:
I read the beautiful and poignant
letter from the boy who later committed suicide, and it came to me
again: We parents sometimes don't
know WIW it's too late.
My daughter, a lovely sensitive 21year-old, took her . life November
8,1981. She was always more concerned with others than with heraeif.
She ·conunitted suicide the same
night her fiance was killed in an
automobile accident.
In going through her personal
belongings, to try to understand
why, when we all loved h~r so much,
I came acroSB a notebook filled with
her thoughts. May I share one of her
poems with your readers? - MRS.
J.W.
CRY OF ADAUGHTER
To be born; to grow up, to grow
old, to die :
To be there when needed and
never know why.
To always be strong and never to
falter,
To love and be loved when she finds a manAnd know she mUst pay him for
the things he has bought her;
With marriage and children.
And not to wear life, as a horse
wears a halter,
But to keep on going, until it has
caught her.
Oh, mother of mine:
Listen, listen, to the cry of a

FebruCrry 25,

liM CCCOJ'V 1101 ill~ m I OC

MLMB(Il f'OiC

�Page

25, 1982

8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Midd'-port, Ohio

Thursday,

February 25, 1982

Prosecutors calll2 rebuttal·
•
•
Witnesses ID
Williams trial
ATLANTA (~) - Wayne B.
WU!lams once beat and c hoked 1lls
elderly father for refusing to write
him a check and sll!pped his
mother when she tried to Intervene,
a teen-ager testllled at WWlams'
murder trial.
Sheldon Kemp, 17, was one of a
dozen rebuttal witnesses called by
prosecutors Wednesday after tes.
tlmony by the 23-year-old defend·
ant ended with a series of angry
conlrontattons with Assistant Dis·
trlct Attorney Jack Mallard.
WWtams was the 65th and final
defense witness In his trtal on
murder charges In the deaths of
Nathaniel Cater, 'n, and Jimmy
Ray Payne, 21, two of 28 young
blacks whose deaths during a 22·
month peliod were Investigated by
a spectal pollee task force.
No arrests have been made ln the
26 other slaylngs, but prosecutors
contend the deaths of Cater and
Payne were part of a pattern of kll·
lings and introduced evidence llnk·

ing WWtarns to the slaylngs of 10
other young blacks.
Williams: comba ti ve a t titude
durlhg ~xamlnatlon Wednes·
day contrasted with his calm demeanor durtng his previous two
days on the stand. He called Mallard "a fool" and insisted !he prosecutor was being unfair In his
questioning.
But despite his confrontations
with Mallard, WWtams never faltered In maintaining his innocence
ln the killings of Cater, Payne and
the 10 6ther young blacks.
Kemp, who said he once was a.
singer ln a group promoted by WWI·
ams, testlfled he was at the WWIams' home ln the summer of 1!119
when· the fight broke out between
WU!lams and his 6S-year-old father,
Homer, over the check.
"Wayne started cussing and stuff
and trying to beat him and push
him, " Kemp said. "His mom was
trying to keep him away from his
daddy and he pushed her and

Area Deaths
She is survived by her husband,
Wllllam C. Brown and her father,
Clarence R. Wise, both of DuMellton; two stepchildren, Brenda
SUva and Daniel Brown, both of
Florida; a brothe r , Roscoe Wise,
Middleport; a sister, Mrs. Mildred

Clara Smilh
. Clara Smith, Second Ave. , Middleport, died 'Thursday morning at
the Hol2er Medical Center. Arran~ gements are being made at the Wll·
caxen Funeral Home in Point
Pleasant.

tl"

Betty Wise Brown
Betty Wise Brown, 61, formerly
. of Middleport, died Wednesday at
·her home ln DuMellton, Fla.
Mrs. Brown was born May ·29,
1920 In Middleport, a daughter of
Clarence R. Wise and the late Jennie D. 'Thompson Wise. She was a
graduate of Middleport High
School and was a member of the
·. t&gt;unnellon Methodist Church.

Districts given
state funds
: .: The February State School Foun. dation 9Ubsidy payment _ of
.f100,791,560.09 to 613 Ohio city,
·exempted village and local 9chool
·· districts and 87 county boards of
education was reported by State
Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson.
• Meigs County's three local school
districts received $380,450.93 with
Eastern Local receiving $98,993.89 ;
Meigs Local , $186,661.80, and
· Southern Local, $96,795.24.
The9c were the amounts following
deduction for retirement of teachers
. and non-certified employes. In ad·
· ilition, the Meigs County Board of
·Education received a direct allot.. ment of $18,324 .11.

.

.
.
· 'Will meet Tuesday
.

Sutton Township Trustees will
· ·meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Souders, Pensacola, Fla.; an aunt,
Mildred Beeson, Pomeroy; two nephews, three nieces and a great·
niece.
Services will be announced later
by the Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral Home ln Middleport.

r

funea·al

Funeral services for Marte Boyd
Cyrus, Pomeroy, who died Tues·
day , wW be l)eld at 1 p .m . Friday at
the Ewing Funeral Home where
friends may call at anytime.

Deliberations continue
BATAVIA, Ohio (AP) -A Cler-'
mont Couilty Corrimon Pleas Court
jury was to re~me deliberations
today ln the John Coyne murder
trta l.
The 12-member Jury deliberated
for 11 hours Wednesday before
breaking for the night without a
verdict. It deliberated for just
under three hours when lt received
the case Tuesday .
Coyne, 38, ls charged with
murde r and two counts of attempted murder ln the shooting death of
Phillip Osborne , 18, and the woundIng of two 16-year-old companions
at Coyne's Junkyard on Aug. 28.
Coyne maintains he was acting ln
self-defense In guarding his Boot
Hill Auto G rave yard agains t
thieve s .

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY,
POMEROY, OHIO
Cue No. 17191
PARK FINANCIAL INC .
Columbu s OH
Plainllf 1
· VS·

HARVEY RUSSELL and
JEAN RUSSELL

Wolfe Uninjured
Scott Wolle, sportswriter for the
Pomeroy-Middleport Dally Sen·
tlnel and the Sunday TimesSentinel and teacher ln the Eastern
School Dlstrtct, escaped InJury In a
one-car accident near Ohio 124
Tuesday motnlng.
Wolle, 22, Racine, was eastbound
on Meigs County Rd. 28 at 6 a .m .
when he fell asleep at the wheel. His
vehicle then went off the left slde of
the road, drove through a fence and
stopped In field.
'The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
state highway patrol said sllght
damage was reported to Wolfe's
vehicle.
'The patrol said a piece of coal fell
from a passing coal truck ·on Ohlo
160 at 3 p .m . Monday and struck the
Wtndshleld of a northbound vehicle
driven by Deborah L. Hall, 22, Vln·
ton, causing slight damage.

Files court action
Bell trice Eaton, Parkersburg, W.
Va., has filed action ln the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for
the sale of real estate against Helen
G. WWia,ms, Syracuse, Edwin S.
Cozart and George Collins as treas·
urer of Meigs Co~nty to gain money
awarded ln another court.
'The plaintiff charges that she
was granted judgment of $2,0U.93
ln the Munclpal Court in Athens
from the defendant and that she has
a valid lien against real estate
owned by the defendant. 'The plaintiff asks that the WWiams property
be sold and the debt paid.
A divorce action by Shelba J.
Wickline ag:alnst James D. Wickline has been dismissed In the
court.
Also filed ln the court was an action for partition of oU, gas and min·
erals by Robert E . Miller ,
Middleport, against the Me thodist
Church of Rutland, et al.

· Coyne could be convicted of
lesser charges.

Marriage licenses

Jurors asked Judge John Watson
to explain Ohio law on self-defense
during deliberations Wednesday.
They also had Watson repeat his
Instructions.

Carl Leslle Hubbard, 70, Syracuse, and MOdred Mae Hubbard,
60, Mason, W. Va.
Dennie Edison Hlll , 42, Racine,
and Janet Faye Rainey, 29, Mason,
W.Va .

Public Notice
Rutiand, OH
Defendants
Pursuant to an OR DER
OF SALE issued by the
Court of Common Pleas.
Meigs County in the above
named case, I w ill expose
for s ale at·r.ubtlc CI!Uction on
the front s eps of the Meigs
Coun t y Courthou s e ,
Pomerov. Oh io, on Satur·

SATURDAY, FEB.

27-7:00 P.M.

EVERYSATURDAYTHEREAFTE~

WANT

AD

............... ,
'

"

'

0

,

I

O oO

0 o

1-Card of Thanks (paid in advance )

2-Card of Thank s (pa id in advance)
] ·Announcements

21 -Business Opporluriily
22-Money to Loan
23· Professional Serv ices

.!~ · Giveaway

.

5-Happy Ads
6-Lost and Found
7-Yard Sale (paid in advance )
8-Public Sale
&amp; Auct jon
9-Wanted to Buy

11 · Help W~nled
12 ·Situatio'" Wanted
13-lnsurance
14· Business Training
lS·Schools Instruction
.16-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repa ir
· '17-Miscellaneous·
18·Wanted To do

31 -Homes tor Sale
32·Mobile Homes for Sa le
33-Farms for Sal e
34-Business Buildings
35· Lots &amp; Acreage
36-Rea l Estate Wanted

~n - Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homes tor Rent
43 -Farms lor Rent
44 -Apartmer\tlor Rent
45· Furnlshed Rooms
~ - Space for rent
47-Wanted to Rent
4B·Equ ipmenttor Rent
49-For Lease

I

' .t . l

\- 0

1

II~.

~~·

AFl'ER HIS DAY IN COURT-' Wayne Wllllams,
right, Is escorted loa car Wednesday after completion

of his testimony In bill defenae at Atlanta. He Is
cbarged with the murders of two y01111g blacb. ( AP
taserpbota)

eANNOUNCEMENTS
I- Card ot Than~•

4:1-Mobl le Homt 1
for Rent
"-APirtmentslor REnt
45--Furnlstlftl RDOms

'

'•

SR . ,

APPOII\ITMENT ·
OF FIDUCIARY
On February 2, 1982, In

One hundred and ten pints of
blood wl're contributed to the Meigs
County blood program by 116 donors Wednesday when an Amelican Red Cross Bloodmoblle vis! 1
the county senior cltl2ens center.
Seventy-four persons were replacing blood used by relatives and
friends and .10 were first time donors, At the visit Unda Haley became a gallon donor; Sheila Taylor
and Max Davis, three gallon donors
and Arletta Vanover became a four
gallon donor.
Nurses were Ferndora Story, Lenora Leifheit and Jackie Frost and
attending physicians were Dr.
Wilma Mansfield and Dr. James
Witherell. The canteen was served
by Amertcan Legion Post 39, and
clerical workers were Mary Nease,
J ean Nease, Juanita Sayre, Macel
Barton, Emma K Clatworthy, Vlrgtnta · Buchanan, Erma Roush,
Joyce Hoback, Maida Mora, ClarIce Krautter, Lula Hampton and
Vernon Nease along wlth R.S.V.P.
workers Thelma Dill, Florence Rl·
chards, Clarence Struble, Myrtle
Sisson, Bernadine Meter, Hannah
Queen and Jessie Curtis.
Donors by community Included:
Pomeroy .. Helen Blackston,
Greg D . !Dnes, Janealel R. Johnson, Sadie Carl, Carolyn Je!fers,
Mary Mora, Unda Wyatt, Patty
Hoffman, Brenda K. Chappelear ,
Donna L. Evans, Joseph C. Hall,
Russell W. M00re, Roger Young,
Hugh Leifheit, Mary Starcher, VIrgil R. Byrer, 'Thomas McClung, Dl·
ana L . White, Esther Keeton,
Sheila J . Taylor, Vlrgli E. Taylor,
Barbara J. Kennedy, Debra Mora,
Jane V. Abbott, Horner Baxter, Susan Pullins, AM Mash, Carl R.
Hall : William Smith, Bennie
Wrtght, Tamara Mash, Ronald
Ha nning, Leo Vaughan, Rowena
Vaughan, Oscar Smith, Howard P .

Ucet~stH ~ded.

' .

- PiumbinJ ond
lfoclolcof wori

IF'" Estlmotosl

V. C. YOUNG Ill

All

BOGGS

.SALES. &amp; SE~VICE

BUILDINGS
Sizes start from l0x24" .

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

Utility BuildingS

6-Losto~nd

Found

7- Y~rd So~le

t-Pubtle Salt
&amp;

Auetion

t-Wo~ntl:d

to 8uv

Rt . 3, BOK S4
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843·2591
6-]s.tfc

Logan, Brian Hamuton, Gerrl HamUton, Mary K. Spencer, Billy J.
Spencer, Laurence Leonard,
Paultte Harrison, Geoffrey A. Wll·
son, VIrgil K. Windon, Marvin E .
Taylor, WU!lam W. Radford, Gerald Rought, Oren L. Wright, Opal
Grueser, John Koehler, Joyce
Grover, Gloria Riggs, David R.
Riggs, Margaret L. Kennedy, Dennis J . &lt;;:Umore, Mark Riggs, Do!UI8
Hatfield, Rollle Hemsley.
Syracuse .. Arletta Vanover.
David Smith, Eller 0 . Pickens,
Chris Jacks, David Hubbard, Shlr·
ley Sayre, Aaron Sayre, Donna
Aleshire.
Chester--Mark W. Hall, Clarence
C. Wolfe, Jr.
Middleport- George L. Harris,
Jr., Kenneth W. Madden, Linda Haley, Joyce V. Bartrum, Roger Stewart, Julla Qualls, Max Davts,
WU!Iam Allen Blackwood ..Timothy
King, Leafy M. Chasteen, Faye L .
Wallace, Harold J. Johnson, Sarah
Fowler, Edward Durst, Robert V.

11-HelpWtnt.ct

Police probe vandalism

Two calls were answered by local
emergency units Wednesday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service-reports.
'The Rutland Unit at 9: 19 a .m.
took Myrtle Murphy from Danville
to Hol2er Medical Center; Rutland
at 2 p .m . took James Gibson from
Harrisonville to Ho12er Medical
Center.

wm end marriage

Velenins Memorial

An action for divorce has been
filed In the Meigs County Common
Pleas by Jane Wagner of Racine
against Charles F . Wagner, Ra·
cine. She charges the defendant
with gross neglect of duty and ex·
treme cruelty and asks for custody
of two minor children .

51-Frulll &amp; Vlftllblll
59-For Stleor Tnde

16-RoldiCI, T'v',
&amp; ca Ae.,.ir
lt-W.uted To Do

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

n - Protus ion•l
Services

n - wanttd to auy
6)--livnloc:k
Slit
6-t- HIY &amp; Grain
u - Seed &amp; Ftrliliztr

eREAL ESTATE

e TRANSPORTATION

Opportun ity
n-Monev to l.ou

l2 ....:. Moblllt Hemes
lor Salt
JJ- Ftrms lor Sale
34-Busintu Bulld ints
U- Loh I Acrucae
36- Rtll l E s toJte w an tea
37- RI!altors

1J- ~trtsi4W . D .

14- Motorevetu
75-- Boatt&amp; Motorl
76-Auto Po~rts &amp;
ACCIItOrles
71- Auhl Rept ir
71- Co~mplng Equipment

SERVICES
Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines
f'Aonday 2 :Oil on Saturday

lhru rrido~, 1 :00 .- .M.
tttt d•~ be tort pubiiUtlon
Sun&lt;I.IY 2: 00P. M. Fr idiY

Tuhdl~

.

11- H 0melmProvements
l'l- Piumb lng &amp; Hutlng

13- EIICI¥illint
14- E leetrltill &amp;
Relrigerilt lon

15-Gener•l

Ho~ulinv

U - M , H , Rtpelr

Rates and Other Information
_ Up 10 15 wonts ... one do~y Inser tion . . . . .......... . , , , .. . ... U .OO
Up to !Swords ... three day insertion . , . .. . .... .. . . ....... , . M.OO
Up to IS woards ... t ill dtyl insertion .
....... .. .
. ... 57.00
rAverage 4 words per line)
Mobile Home wles tnd Ytrd sales .Ire .ltcepted only wlltl cash
w11tl crdtr . JS eent charge tor ecu urrylng 1011 Number in Ctre of
The Sentinel.
Ttlt Publisher reserve~ the right to tdii!H' r e jtet tny o1d1 dttmed
objectional. The Publisher w ill not be rttpotuibte lor more thiln one
Incorrect Ins ertion .

~

Write your own ad and order bY mall wflh this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
results . Money not refundable.

Nam•'-------------------Address:---------

C )Wanted
( ) For Sale
c ) Announcement
c ) For Rent

,

71 -Autosfor Sate
72-Trucks tor Sale
n vans &amp;4WD
74·Motorcycles
75· Boa ts &amp; Mo1ors
76-Auto Parts&amp; Accessories
77-Auto Repa ir
78-Camping Equipment

the

folloUJing telephone exchanges. • .
Gallia County
AreaCncle614
..._Gallipolis

AreaCodefl4
tn-MICidleporl
Pomeroy

~VInton

643-Arabia Dist.

379- Wafnut

M.SOR Co., WV

Meigs County

· 24s-RioGrancle
2-Guyan Oist.
81 -Home Improvements
82-Plumbing &amp; Heating
83· Exca vat ing
84-Elcc rical &amp; ij:efrigerati on
85·Gc nera l Hauling
86-M.H. Repair
8r Uphol slery

COI1el"

915-Chnler
34!- Porttand
247- Letart Falls
Mf-Rilclne
74:1-Rulland
667--Coolville

Area Code 304

45169.

Robert E. Buck

1. ~----2.
_ _ __ _ _

20 . - - - -- - ' 21 . _ _ _ _ __

3. _ _ __ _ _
4 . _ _ _ _ __

22 . - -- --,--23 . _ _ _ _ __

7, _

_ _ _ __

8.
-_
'-_
- _9. _ _
_

10. _ _ __ __
11. - - - -- 12. _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ __
14 - --~--1~ ·------

16. - --

(Average 4 W&lt;&gt;rds per fine)

Street, Pom eroy, Oh io Te rry
Qualls , Sr . ,
45769 was o1ppolnled Ad · deceased, lafe of 101 New
mlnistratrix of the estateot Str·eet. Pomeroy, Ohio

PubliC Notice
Probate Judge/
Clerk
12.:• 11, 18, 25. 31c

17. - - -- - 18. _ _ _ _ __
19, _ _ _ _ __

'·6. --_ __ _ _ _-

675-PI. Pleasant
4-L_,
,7.... Apple Grove
77:1--MaSOII
•2-New Haven
195-Letart
r.I7- Buffalo

Up to 15 Words... Three day insenoon .. .. ........... SJ.CU
Up to 15 Words ... Oneday
inserlion ..... ..........s.uo
Up to 15 WorciS... Six day
iMerlion ........ ....... S7 .00

---. I

1

----------··""--------------~

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

'I

-

-

-

24. - - - - - - 25. - - - -- -26. _ _ _ _ __

-~PUbii ( No.ii Ce

- -

- -----'-~-- ----

17- Upholsterv

..... ..........
. . .. ..
- ~ · ····
~,

in
I
.
Property address is Main
St .. Rutland.
The sai d property is appra ised a f $31 ,800.00 and i
cannot be sold lor less t ha n
11::.~ th e a ppraised price.
1
Terms · Cash In ha nd day
of sa le.
· · · J AMES J . PROFF ITT
SHERI FF
Meigs Cou nt y
(2 111 . 18 , 25
iS

1t- Allt&lt;llfOr Solie
JJ- Truc~s lor hit

l l- Homes lo r So~le

Admitted--Edith Fultz, Pomeroy; Lora Cleland, Langsville; Bill
Kennedy, Pomeroy; Vermana
Thomas, Pomeroy; Thomas
O'Brien, Mason. '
Discharged-Jane Cundiff, Lorena Laudermllt, Delbert Brush,
Marte Domlgan.
·

Turkey Hunters we have
mouth calls, slate box
calls, camo gea r &amp; decoys
in stock . Spr ing Valley
Trading co., spring Valley
Plaza , 446·8025.

,, _ ,trm EquiPment

11 - Business

I
I

I,

I
I
I

tl

LEGAL NOTICE
Offers will be received at
the offi ces of Fred W.
Crrm, Ill of Crow, Crow &amp;
Porter, ~orner Second &amp;
Mechanic
Streets,
Pomeroy . Ohio. at 10:00
a .m . on Thursday, M~rch
11, 1982 tor the undivided
one-half of the real estate
of the fate Cl ifford Hall ,
s ituate in the Township of
Letart
Meigs CoUnty ,
Ohio . Terms of sale, cash.
Pro~rty c8nnot be sold for
less than appraised valu e
of $2.500.00.
Fred W. Craw, Ill ,
Adm inistrator of
the Estate of
Clifford Hall , Dec.
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter
Attorneys
for Administrator
(2) 18, 25 (31 4, 3tc

2.___.!!
1n~M=em!!:o~r!!ia~m..___

'I
l1

I
I
I
I
I

Roy Sears Who
Away 6 Years Ago on
Feb. 25. 1976. ·
God look around His
garden .
Ar,d he saw an empty
space
· He then looked down
from Heaven
And saw your po.or tired
face .
He put His arms around
you
And whispered come to
rest
His 9.arden must be
beaut,ful
He only takes the best.
You meant so much to
all of us
There is nothing we can
say
The grief is still within
our hearts
And we think of you
each day ,
We did not have the last
farewell
Nor the thoughts of
saying goodbye
For you were gone
before we knew
And only God knows
why.
we look back with tendernen
Along the path you trOd.
Bless the vears we had
with you
And leave the rest to
God .
Tired ~nd we~ry he
made no fuss
But tried so hard to stay
with us .
And when I am sad and
lonely
And everything goes
wrong
I seem to hear you
whisper Mom
Cheer up and carry on.
Deeply loved and Sadly
Missed by Mom, Dad,
Sisters and Brother.

27 . - - - ,..,, --28. - - - - - 29. _ _ _ __
30. -

--'-- - - -

31 . _ __

_ __

32. - - - - -33.
-·
-_
-_34. ___
_
35. _ _ __ __

Mall This Coupon with RemiHence
The DillY Sentinel
111 CourtSt.
Pomeroy, Oli. 45769

fr-~-----~-'le: ~ ---~-~~~-~~-~-

H.

L WRITESEL

ROOFING
All types of roof wor~ ,
new or repair gutter and
downspouts ,
gutter
cleaning and painting .
All work guaranteed .
Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices
Call Howard
949·1263
949-2160
2-24-lfc

7
Yard Sale
TWO •a mily garaQe S8le,
rain or shine. 9-5, 10"
Locust L. a n e~ Mason, WV,
Fr iday &amp; Saturday .
Wanted to Bu
WAN T TO BUY Old fur·
nifure and Antiques of all
kinds, ca ll Kenn eth Swain ,
446·31 59 and 256·1967 In the
evenings .

9

CASH PAlO for clean, l~le
model used Clii!'S. Srf1ittl
Bui ck-Pontiac. Gallipolis,
Ohio. Call446·2282 .

5.-Petslor Stle
J1-Muslullnstn.~menl

Js-Sehoolllnttruclion

Two acts of vandallsm were reported Tuesday to Pomeroy Pollee.
Simmons Motors, Pomeroy, reported that two tires and wheels
were removed from a truck. Carl
Hendricks, 150akSt.. Pomeroy, reported that his car was scratched
on the right side from the back· to
the front.

Announcements
SWEEJ&gt;ER and sew ing
mac hine repair, parts, and
suppli es.
Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile -up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
446·0294 ..

B - Bulldlnv Supplltl

ll-lnsur'tnct

Emergency mns

.,

3

eMERCHANDISE

12-51tU.IIiOn W.lnt&amp;d

King, Sandra K. Taylor, Debra
Carder, Judith K. Hunter, Clara J .
France.
Tuppers Plains--Maxine Wiener.
MlnersvWe---Stacy Arnold, Mary
L. Voss, Clarence D. Mcintyre.
Racine --William H. Hobac k,
Mark J. Malson, Aaron Wolfe.
Long Bottom--Henry Bahr, Howard Parker.
ReedsvUie.. Deborah L. Sanders,
Mace! Bartton.
Rutland--Karolyn Black, Charlotte Hysell, Fred George, DoMa
Davidson, James C . Birchfield.
Hemlock Grove--Jack R. Welker.
Point Pleasant--Kenton Shellne,
Roscoe Sprouse, Jack Oliver, Jr.
Raclne---Jeivell L. Matthews, Do
rothy M. Sayre , Michael
Winebrenner.
Portland.. Laurence R. Groggel.
West Columbia--'Thomas w. Hoschar, Carolyn Stewart.
New Haven--Keruleth Vickers,
Hershall Furguson .

....
'" ... ............ .
...................

SI- HoUithold Goods
52-(8, TV , Rtdlo Equipment
5l--AnfiQUtl
SI--Miac . Mtrchandiu

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

992-6259

SERVICE·
Water·Sewer· E lectric
Gas Line-Ditche s
Water Line Huok-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush L.ane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph . 367·7560
1-7-l lfc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

NOW

274 Sycamore s t'.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21-ltc

TRENCHING

Sizei from 4 to 6 and all
wood build ings 24x:J6.
Insulated Dog Houses

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
l·Hic

992·6215 or992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-lfc

REESE~:­

STEEL

SERVICE

OPEN
Used Color TV Sets tor
Sale.
SALE PHONE NO .

Ph.949·2160 or 949·2482
7·S·Ifc

2-11-1....

2·25-1 ITl(l pd.

TV

TOM HOSKINS

PH. 992·7201

Rent
41- Wanlfd to Rent
41--Equlpmtnt lor Rent
,,_Forluse

PHONE 992-2156

---·_...... -.........
... ... . .. .

the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 23646
Mary E. Qualls, 101 New

..

U- Sp,~ctlor

J4-8Ut iness Tro~ining

- - ~PUbTiCNotiCI --~
QUALLS ,
DECEASED
Case No. 23646 .
NOTICE OF

PHONE
992·2490
FOR AN
APPOINTMENT

HARRISON

And Hom e Maintenance
• Roof ing of all types
• Siding
'
• Remodeling
• F ree estimates
• 20 Y rs. experience

_

l- In Mtmoritm
t--CiYNWty
J-H~ppy Ads

•

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF TERRY

ROOFING

eRENTALS

41 - Houst'.for Rent

l-AnnCK~ncaments

Meigs Countians donate 110
•
pints of blood Wednesday

367- Cheshire

61 -Farm Equipment
62·Wan1ed to buy
63-Livestock
6.4-Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer·

,CONTRACTING

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Chuaified pagea
51 · Household Goods
52-CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
S3·Antioues 54·Misc . Merchandise
55· Building Supplies
56· Pets for Sale
57-Musciallnstruments
58· Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59· For Sale or Trade

OHIO VALLEY

* septic systems
•water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
"dump truck
*limestone

SERVICE

UNGtS

-u....
·pttw
- ·wori
·
- - ·..
...
...(ooouoto-.1

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, ·oh. 45769

J&amp;F
*•excavating
b;lckhoe

TAX

CARPENTER
SERVICE

INFORMATION

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio45769

0

¥

PHONE 992-2156

·.

0

INCOME

20 Yeillrs Experience
Plumbing, c~rpentry ,
Roofing, Electrical,
Cisterns, Cement, Stone
Walls~ Chimney Repair.
All Home Repairs
Trailer Roofs and
Underpin!'ling
PH . 992-!872
2·3·1 mo. pd.

3 Miles West of Albany, at the corner of
Routes 143 and 50. "Bring Your Own
Chair".
Lots of Merchandise coming in.
Not responsible for accidents.
terms of Sale: Cash.
Plenty of
ing space.
Don Rosser

The Daily Sentinel

•

Gerald Reuter

noz

AU

Phon•----------------

- ' " I o •o • O I 0"&gt;.., o 0 o -.o o r

Business Senices
HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS

slapped her."
Kemp said the two men eventually ended up in a bedroom with
Homer Wllllams lying on a bed a nd
his son sitting on his stomach ''with
his .h ands on his throat"
When WWlarns let his father up,
Kemp said the elder WWlams got a
shotgun and pointed It at his son,
" saying he was going to shoot his
head off."
Both WWlams and his father ,
who testlfled ln his son's behalf, denied any sucb Incident took place
when they were asked about It by
prosecutors earlier ln the trial.
Defense lawyer Alvin Binder
suggested that Kemp was getting
revenge on WWlams because he
was kicked out of the slnglng_group
and because WWiams' parents refused to buy him a rnlnl·blke. 'The
youth denied both allegations.
WWiams' mother, Faye . WWIams, had testlfled that the 197lloan
was for an alr conditioning system
purchased for their home.

The

Ohio

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614·992·2182
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel

rRicE'oRIGHT
CALL TODAY!

•Roofing &amp; Gutter
•Vinvl Siding
•Carport&amp; / Patio
Covers
•Concrete Work
•Room Additions

BISSELl

St. Rt 121

Pomeory, llfl.

· 3 mi. west on
1211oward Rulland

SIDING CO.

AUTO &amp;TRANS.
REP AIR
PH. 992 _5682
or 992·7121

1nsurance Work
· Wind, water, or Fire

Opon9RM.to~: lOP .M.
2-ll -1 mo.

CALL: 992·6323
2.l9·1 mo. pd.-

Easte r Cl'tndy Prices, $1.60
lb . $1.50 lb. tor full case.
Di's Crall Supply, Spring
Vall ey Plaza . Call446·2134.

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
e5tlmates, 949·2801 or
949·2860 .
No Sunday Calls

For bulk de live ry of
gasoline, heati ng oil and

3· 11 ·ttc

~~===~~~~~1~==~~;~==~Pr=;~=~~~=~
C. R. MASH

'1'12·2161.
Pomeroy,
Oh. ·
di ese l fu el,
call Landmark,

Re•l Est•t• - Generel

HOBSTETTER REALTY
Geort e S. Hobsll!tter J r .
Brok er
OF F ICE 74H OOl

OWNER FINANCED Solid br ick, 2 story, 3
bedrooms, large d ining
room and liv ing room,
111-2 baths. Loc ated in
Pomeroy . E xce ll ent
c ond ition .
PRICE
REDUCED T0$22 ,500 .
RANCH HOME
To tal
ele tri c ,
3
bed room s, 2 bath s,
kitchen-dining combo.
Situated on 2 a cres.
Had lots of fender lov·
ino c ar e. Se lls tor

tensive
inq.
.
• Electrical work
•Custom Pole Bldg$,
• Roofing work
14 Years Experience
Greg Rou"sh
Ph. 992· 7583
or 992·2282

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling ,
plumbing, electric, and
heating :

Rac ine F ire Dept. sponsors
a Gun snoot, Sat . nights
6:30p.m .. Bashan. Factory
choke 12 gau ge shotgun .

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

Spec ial Feb., Ma rc h &amp; Apr.
only . Gene's Deep Steam
Carpet Clean ing. Scotch
Guard · Free Es t im ates.
992·6309.

8·20-lfc

1-nc_o_m_e_Fry,
T~)( 8preparation.
f.~~====~~~~~f=~~::;::;;;;;;::~~ Martha
Coale Sf.,
su Mr . Goodwre nc hForA

.

r~~~~1.~~~

$45,000 .

RACINE - La rge 2
story, 4 bedroom home.
Nice moderni zed kitchen. Good si ze ya rd
with garden s pace. You
mu st see the insi de of
t hi s hom e ! Ter ms
As k in g
a vailab le .
$32 .500 .
MOBILE HOME - EK·
cellent, mint cond ition .
2 bedrooms, Libert-;
home . 1-4'x52' . Buy this
and rent !he tot. $9,500.
MIDDLEPORT 3
bedroom home with gas
forced 8ir furnace . On
corner lot. Ctose in to
stores and shopping.
Owner willing to consider ,a reasonabl e of·
fer . c a ll tod ay. S35,000 .

CONSTRUCTION

Gun - -Sh-oo-; Rac ine Gun
Clu b. Every Sun . starti ng
;~n~ .,':,,~ · Factory choke

--- With Genuine GM

Part~

; &lt;.,.; ·

~ -..--.~--

•

•

#

---·

- - - . . . .·

·

-

·

~

__...

Modern Electrical
Equipment
SIMMON'S OLDS. ·
CAD .·CHEV., INC.
Ph . 992·6614
308 E. Main Pomeroy ,
I· -tfc

J&amp;L BLOWN-

Pomeroy , 992 ·3414.

4

INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
eStorm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• New Rooting
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph . 992· 2772
.
2-15-l mo.

Giveaway.____

ANY PER SON who has
anything to give away and
does not o(fe r or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in th is
cotvmn . Th ere will be no
c harge to the a dvertiser.
White, fe mal e cat 6 mos.
old. Call446·4659.
BoK of men &amp; womens
shoes, sizes 7 1/2 and 9 112.

It~~~;;~~~~~~t=====~~~~i Cal
l «6·9525.
Pu ps to give a
304-882·3380.

way. Call

FOUR , part Colli e puppies,
304-675·1577 or 675·271 4.

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

6
Lost and Found
LOST Siberian Huske y
(ma le ) mostly dark gray
with white mark ings, on
brown eye &amp; one blue eye,
answers to ' KeeGee', safe
to approach. REWARD.
Call «6·49'18 or 446·3172.

For al your wiring
nelda; fumK81 rapeir
aervice
VIRGIL.&amp;. SR.
216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-(614)· 992-3325
NEAR TOW~l On
·three state r.oute.$. City
water , woodburn e-r ,
range, refr igerat or .
basement, bat h and 3
bedroom s. Level lot.
Will take 8round 530,000.
BUILDING LOTS country location for a
nice home or trail er .
POMEROY
3
bedroom
carpeted
home . Nice kitchen,
storm drs., w indows.
lnsul~ted , patio,
1tully
porch and garden space.
MOdern bath. Asking
S32,500.
LOTS OF SPACE - Hr
5 bedrooms In tne coun·
try home of 10 rooms, 2
modern bi1ths, large
family room , basement,
garage, 2 porches I con·
crete J and over 300
acres, or will s ell with
less for less.
2G YRS. OLD ~
bedrooms, 2 bJths,
washroom. large family
room. large back patio,
garage and nice lot .
Would like to have
'

Lecturer
.
992-3382
Membership
Sl.SO
weeklY Cfa.~s ,
12.s0
_ . 2·3·1 mo.

m·••

HUI/'odUJ

Hl.',/lltfll.lfft r·,

Rlllidential

&amp; Comn181clel
Cell 742-3196

LOST R Ed &amp; wh ite calf,
weight 200 lbs ., vlncinity of
Rt. 218 &amp; Cr iner SandhO IIOW Rd . Ca ll 446·
2422.

1----- -----.l...---------1
Insurance

WE'RE TOGETHER -TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
AGENTS:

WILLIAM D. CHILDS
DON E. MULL£N

.IOHit F. MUSSER
CltMI.E$ I. MULLEN
MICHAEL L CHILDS

We pay cash for late model
clean used car s.
Frenct,town Car CO.
Bi II Gene Johnson,
. 446·0069.
TOP !&gt;RICE Scrap Meiel.
auto bodies, and cars. Ba1·
terles, alumium, brli!SS &amp;
copper . Gallipolis Block
Co .. 123 112 Pine St ., 446·
2783.
.,
w anted to buy junk cars or
wrecked cars . Phone ~ 388·
9303.
BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old
furnitur e, gold , Silver
doll ars, wood ice boXes,
stone jars, antiques,, etc .•
households .
Comple te
Write : M.D. Miller, Rt : 4,
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 9'/J./760.
CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
dia meter 14" on laroest
end. S12.50 per ton. Bundled
s lab . $10 .50 per , ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pa llet Co.,
Rock Springs Rtl . ,
Pomer oy. 992 ·2689.
·
Gold, s liver, sterling,
jewe lry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber Shop, Middl eport, 992 ·
3476.
OLD FURNITUR E, beds,
iron, bra ss , or wood . .Kitchen cubbards of all types.
Tables, r ound or squnre.
Wood Ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
compl ete household . Gold ,
silver. Old money, pocket
watches, chains, r ings. and
etc . lndia·n Artifacts of all
types. Al so buying baseball
ca rds. Osby Martin 992·
6370.
.

_____

__.

__ _

JUNK E D cars, glass ,
base ba ll ca rds, sc ra p
metals, aluminum cl!tls,
transmi ss ions, motors, fiat·
te r ies, rad iators, oil well
dr illing bits. tungsten Cl!r·
bi de, hi gh speed stiel,
was te pa ~er, cardboard,
r&amp;w fur s, hi des, glnslng
and yellow r oot . Harg;er·
Hal stead Salvage Co. .300
Eleventh Sl .. Pl. Pleasant,
304·675 ·5868 . Al so fl ea
ma rk e t ope n Mondllly
th rough Fr:ld ay, 1-S p.m ....

.
-------EXE RCISE bik e,
-

5162.
Half Doberman and St.
Ber na rd dog . Found at
Smiths Penzoil in Rac ine.
614-949·91 30.
1

LOST-Large brown female
dog wit h white feet , an swers to the name of
Brown, West Columbia Clifton a.re a . Reward.
phone , 304-773·57 40 or 77J.
5831.
FOUND· zipper Bible. Rl. 2
area at Silver Bridge, 304·
675·1680.

$47 ,000.

REALTORS:
HELEN, BRUCE,
VIRGIL AND
SUE MURPHY

and

illltlllll1ion.

Buying Gold, Silve r.
Plat inum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; si lverware. Da lly
quotes a vailable . Also
coins &amp; coin suppl ies for
s al e . Spring Valley
Trad ing , Spring Valley
Pla za . 446·8025 or 446· 80~6 .

7
Yard Sale
GARAGE SALE Feb. 27 &amp;
28 . 9AM 11 11 5PM. Lawn
tractors, tillers, glassware.
bOOks, records, doll s, anloads
of
t i ques ,
miscell aneous. P aul Denney, Bidwell. Oh .
GIGANTIC 6 tam Hy
garage and bac k yard sale .
128 5. Park Dr . Pt .
Plea5ant. Furniture, liP·
plfances, baby -childre n
clo1hlng, nlc·nacks, stereo
'stand . Thursday, Friday.
9:00. Saturda\1 unlill 8 at
night.

304- ~75·

•

.

With tne Army National
Gu ard . you'll have a pcrrt
time iob with full time
benefits . You will attend
trai ning one weekend each
month a nd twQ weeks ecK.h
year . Benefits ' Include IGW
cost life insurance, excell ent pay and a tree p&lt;!n·
s lon plan. Plus the Army
Guard's valuable technical
s ~;~ool i ng may help ypu
prepare tor a well paying
civilian occupation. Cell
675·3950.
-----.-

~

w~ have a Foster ca,re
Prog ram in Gall ia Coonty,
but it won' t work without
you. There are childr,en
who are wa it ing but there
is no home to place them- in ,
Foster parents are baitly
needed for adjudicated
you th . It won' t work
wi tnou t you. Ca ll 446·3842.

WANTED-rel ia ble ba by
$itfer in my home, w~k ·
days and some Saturdays.
References requ ired, 304·
675·5628.

----·- --

�lG-The Daily Sentinel

Page
11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

42

They'll Do It E11ery Time

Mobile Homes

51

for Rent

The Gallipolis Recreation
Department is tak ing applications for parHime
grounds
'ma i ntenanc e

2 bdr. and 3 bdr . mobile
homes. Call 446·0175.

worker. Must be able to
drive truck, tractor, use

44

daYs per week when
needed. apply at City
Building, 518
Second

utilities pd ., sin_gle male,
range, refr lg. share bath.

Avenue immed i ately.

«6·4416 after I PM.

"-

Part
t i me
Cosmetolog i st

room

S125.

2 bdr. apt. HUD excepted,

l ice ns e d
positi on

KIT 'N' CARLVLE TM

Recl iners, $175. to S295.,
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
pc. ditettes from $79., to
S385. 7 pc .. $189. and up.
WOod table with 4 chairs.
$219 up to $495 . Desk $110.
Hutches, $300. and S375.,

adapted to
fit
you r
schedu le.
Contact
P inecrest Care Center . Call

446·7112 .

446·0390.

up to $350. Captain's beds.
$275. complete. Baby beds.

New 1 bdr. unfurnished
apt _, with new stove &amp;
refrig . No pets, S169 mo.

S99 .

GET VALUABLE tra ining
as a young business person
and e.!lrn good money plus

MatJresses

or

us right away and get on
the el igibility list at ·992·

2156or992'2157 .

th~pedic super firm, $95,

baby matresses, S25 &amp; S35.
bed
framesfireplace.
$20$25, &amp; $30.
Electric
gun
2nd. floor effiency apt.
Adults only, no pets . Brad·
bury Apartments, 446·0957 .

3 bedroom remodeled, new

cellent advancement op·
portunifies. Call Oavana,

carpet, furnace, water
heater, basement . $15,5000.
Approximate ly lfJ down .
S200 or less per month .
Take auto traHer, etc . as
down payment. Middleport

at 1-614·4&lt;6·7071 , room 10,

area . 304-882·2466.

e&gt;eperience necessary. Ex -

on Friday after: 8 p.m. &amp;
Saturday untill 5 p .m , for
interv iew.
12

Situations Wanted

wanled : Person to share 2
bdr. apt. Call245·5220.
Have vacancy for elderly
person. Room , board, and

4 year old, 3 bedroom, 27
acres, all electric, heat
pump, central air, car·
peled throughout. 1 year
old 12 x 36 meta l storage
building , pond, all new fen ·
ces, located close to new
Meigs mines opening up .

Eagle Ridge Rd. $39,500 .
614-949·2793 .

--------

laundry . 992-6748 .
In su"r a, n:::c=.:ec____

13

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

379·3318.
15

77).5860.

ONE bedroom home in
Hartford, phone 304-773-

TRI · STATE

kicking bags, and prolec ·
tive
equipment . 143
. Burlington Rd.. Jackson,

Oh . Call286·3074 .
wanted to Do
&amp;

on

driveways. Call379·2642.
Wanted to do babysitting in
my
home.
Preschool

children . Call 367· 7207.
But·

FlnaiiEial
21
Business.
---~rtunity
Cigarette
Vendin g

Business. Caii304·77J.5651 .
Mane to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St .,

Athens. Oh. 592·3051 .
Professiona I
Services

&amp;
Repatr.Call Bill Ward for
Tuning

Ward' s

Keyboard, 446·4372.
C &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
ser\llce for business and in·
dlviduals.

Carol Neal4&lt;6·3862
tuned

ser·
vfced. Call Bob Grubb, 4&lt;6·

tratter $3,500. Located in

tobacco base, Clay Twp.,

city school dlst. Call 4&lt;6·
9434.

Call446·0338.

Trailer sites. 10 percent

3 room unfurnished apart·
ment, adults only, no pets,
util ities paid . Call446·3437.

Lots &amp; Acreage

3

and

1 acre w ith mobile home,
wafer, cellar house, wash
house, utility building . Will
sell with or without mobile
home or visa versa. Call

1971 Hillcre st mobile home.

Asking $4,000. 99n724 or
out Rl. 143. four miles. set·

ll)atches. pencils, stickers,
sam
somerville,
Pt .
Pleasant. 304·675-3334.

11.9 acre. Rt. 2 near Pt.

Pleasant city limits. Call
675·2615 .

2

11 .9 acre. Rt. 2 near Pt.
Pleasant clty limits . Call

675·2615 .

1972 Concord Mobile Home,

12x65. Call 446· 7015 after
5:30p.m.

-----

l bedroom brick home, full
basement, garage, I acre,

St. Rl. 35. Call 446·0755.
House for sale in Vinton.
Call388·8823 alter 5. .
New Income Limits. If you
earn between $9,000 to

$15,000. a year. you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom

1980

U x 70

3

bedroom

7034 .

1979 14 x 70 Festival 2
bedroom, 2 baths, gas heat,
good water well, set up on
3.1 acres between Racine
and Portland In country.
Also front and back por·
ches. Call 614·843,49-tS after .
6p.m .

apt .

crane behind cab. 12 ft . flat
bed, e)(cellen t rubber, low
mileage on engi ne. $3000

DOWN

TOWN

ranges .

Skaggs

TWIN Rivers Tower Apart·
ments for the elderly, 200

RAY'S
USED · FUR ·
NITURE Desk $35, hospital
bed complete $100, small
breakfast set $30, utility

Apartment

in

Gallipolis.
COUCH &amp; chair, green,
recently re·uphotstered,

45

S200 .. at 130 Ple asant St. Pt .

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING

ROOMS and

light housekeeping
Park Central Hotel.
46

u

Space for Rent

Household Goods

3962.

G. E . r efrigerator 15 .9
cu .ff .. freezer on top, i ce
maker, avacoda. $350.00.

HOME . 3431.

Catl675· 1652 or 675·3962 .

===:::::=:::===::.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured. Call

30076·2711.

Mobile Homes

For Sale G.E. electric
stove, double sink . antique
l;&gt;edroom suite, 73 Chrysler,
good cond . low mil eage .

for Rent
Trailer for rent . Call 446·

0156 or 4-16·4225 .

Catt30076·2574.

74 Schultz tra iler 12x65 al l

Centenary, 2bdr .• private

electric. Call 304·458· 1775.

BRAND new hide·a·bed
couch, $400. 304·615·2517.

lot, ref. &amp; dep., $160 mo.,

Moon

12x55

2

bedroom , furnished , un·
derpinning, set up. Nort·h

Pt. Pleasant, ss.soo.oo . Call
675·2195.
For sale 2 &amp; l bedroom
trailers, furnished , with

LOT CLEARANCE SALE
$1.000 to $3,000 ott on all
homes. New 1211. wide, all

adults. Call614 ·643·2644.
3 bedroom mobile home on
I acre, near city . Adults,
deposit, no pels. Call 4&lt;6·
7326 evenings.

ONE couch, 1 chair, like

new. $200 . phone 30H75·
7141.
BEMCO mattress with
matching box springs, full
size, almost new, S75 .00

2 bedroom partially fur ·
nished $100 plus utilities.

$100 dep. Call 446-4002 after
5PM .

3lot,
bedrOOm
trailer, private
water turnished.
ref. &amp; •
dep. required. 1 small

12&gt;55 2bdr., $4,995 . Also in·

child . no pets . Call446·0514.

buill. 14&gt;70, 3 bdr .. 1 112

bath, with 2x6 sidewalls,

tully insulated, R·factor 23,
ceiling, 20 in wall 21 in
floor. Check anywher no
other home Is Insulated this
good . 1O%down and low

2 bdr . trailer furnished ,
adults only, Brown Trailer

Park. 99n324 .
Nice 1 bedroom furnished
mobile home. 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt . 33 . Phone

bank financing . All State

tor appointment 992 ·7479.

Modular Homes . Half way
between Huntington and
Pt . Pleasant on 51. Rf. 2.

2 bedroom house trailer in
Racine. $175 per month. $75

30H76·2711.
l3

Farms for Sale

Fa rm . 76 acres, good
house, barn, workshop,
small chicken house. 1 mile
,west ·of Langsville on

SR124. 614-74n860 atter 4
'p.m.
FARM·122 acres, Tribble
Road, Mason County,
Phone 304-937·2375.

deposit . You pay utilities.
Unfurnish'ed but kitchen.
61067-7811.
2 bedroom trailer close to
school, stores, and park.
Deposit required . Mid·

dteport . 992-5914.
2 bedroom mobile home
completely

furnished.

Utilities paid. Deposit and
references

required .

Adults only. S250. 992·3647.

sizes in stock, haul In your
pickup truck. Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

40 channel CB base still in
carton, 100 fl. co·axel cable
with it

and new astra plane

61

Farm Equipment

1980 Massey Ferguson 255
Diesel tractor. 1962 Ford

601 Diesel tractor, w/front
end loader. 675·3203 after
5:30PM.,
62

Wanted to buy used kitchen

125 P .S.I. with tour cyl'ln·
der gas engine. One portable generator, 5 KW with
four cylinder engine moun·
1teO on two wheel trailer,

Wanted to buy Horses &amp;

1979 27ft. ·coachman 5th

7 hereford heifers.949·2268 .

wheel. E)(c ellent condition.
Ca II 245·5578.

Also would like to buy a
1975 or 1976 V.W. Rabbit
engine. 99B961.
Set of tv tables with holder.
Sl . Black and white tv with
stand. S50. 992·3680.
on Lucas Lane. Call 675·
7360.

Chester after 6 p.m.

Oak firewood . Call 675·2757
alter 4: PM.
NEW buildings at factory.
All parts accounted for . All
structural steel carries full

tactory
guarantee.
Bui Idings 10,000 square teet
to the smallest 1,200 square
feet. Must sell im ·
mediately , Will sell cheap.
Call toll free 1-800·248·0065
or 1·800·248·0321. Ext. 777 .
CHROME breakfast set
with 6 chairs ( aquat . Ken·

more dishwasher with
sanitizer (brown}. Both in

excellent condition. 304-675·
3680.
Building Supplies

.Building m·a terials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, ' Rio Grande, 0 .

Pets for Sale

EXCELLENT conditioned
Alfatta·S4.00 bate. 30H82·
2767 .

.............. ,...... .
~n ,,

1974 Datsun 7· 10 wagon.
auto, good cond. ,

~I so

good

gas mileage. Call 446·4222
9· 5, after 5 ca 11446·2174 .
1968
~ngine

Ford

Custom

302

58,352 actual miles,

$175.00 . Two new radial
snow tires. Phone 446· 0972
after 5PM.
•

offE~.r .

grooming.

A K C Gordon setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Caii38H790.
Good clean horses for sale,

and horse trailer. Call 388·
8623.

57

Musical
Instruments

wurlltz:er organ, 3 sets of

key boards. Call2.t5·5578.

any and all bids.

61

Form Equipment

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·

8 :30 (I) MOVIE :
'Sherlock
Holmeo and. the Pearl of
Death'
(fi) Omnl: The New .
Frontier

Ca ll446·2107 .

- - -- - -- --

- ·tB·

Tel'lvi sion Servi ce .

68 Impala, 327, auto., new

- --- - - - - -

tires, good running cond .

Call446·3400.

--+-.....,~ II

(I)
(!)
Strokeo
(J) 700 Club

1978 Toyota Corolla sports
coupe. 4 cyt, automatic,

(I)
® MOVIE:
'Muggeble Mary: Street
Cop'
(fi) Sneak Preview• Each
week co-hosts Roger Ebert
and Gene Siskol give view·
ers their lissessm8nts of
what's flving and what 's
flopping at local movie
theatres .

GASOUNE ALLEY

a

remodeling. Phone 30H75·
2088 or 675·4560 .

Completely

restored . A.tt stock . very

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. T es t holes.
F"umps Sales and Serv ice .

30H95·3802 .

mediately . 742c2143.

-------.--LOCKSMITH
Serv ice

1980

Resident i al , automotive
Emergency service. CaH

Must

sell

Plymouth

im ·

Champ,

614-985·3509.
HARTS Used Cars. New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in

stock .

II

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

WINNIE, I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

W~H )OU HAI7
NEVE~ GOTTEN

Cor . Fourth and Pine

D &amp; K Plumbirig. Licensed

through local sales, under

call anytime, 675·3378.

tor

your directory on how
to purchase. Open 24 hours.

automatic, $450. Call 304·
675· 7577 after 3:00PM.
For sale 74 Mustang. 4 cyt. ,

84

1975 Ford Granada, 2 door,
cyL,

123,000

automatic ,

new

miles,

tires,

shocks&amp; battery, S800. Call
JOH/5-7455.
"
1967 FORD LTO, gOod run ·

nlng condition, 304-675· 1090.
72

Truck's for Sale

1978 Jeep pick· up truck. 4·
WD. with short bed , good
cond. Call 446·9-163 after
6PM.

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446-1675
Special Sole on NEW 1968 1 ton, Chevy truck .
LONG TRACTOR I
Cott36H194.
Model
HP
PrIce
26024
$4924.00
1975 Ford F150 pickup
31G28 5594.00
31G-4x4-28 ~ 7072.00 . truck $1 ,250. 949·.2544.
~
35 6555.00
-160--'
41 .9- 7353.00
1979 F,350 1 ton Ford cab
460-4X4-41.9- 9619.00 · and chassis. «)() engine, ~
51G48.5- 1778.00
speed, PS, PB, AM· FM, 6
51G-4X4-48.5- 9886.00
new tires. Call 614·1143' 4945
51G48.5- IWSO.OO
afler6p.m .
61G64
9314.00
61G-4x~ -11,304.00
1975 Ford T880 15ft. dump.
Plus Freight Gas
S and 4 3• rears. 1912
Ford T9000 Tri·Axle 20 It
Sale Dale March 13, 1982
318 Detroit, 5 and 4
CALLNOWI dump.
Air Shift. 38 rears. Phone
992·3861.
1980 Masuy Ferguson
haybine,
New
Idea 1979 Ford F·350 4X4 «ll •
hayrake, &amp; grader blade. speed. Many edras . . E&gt;"
&amp;75-3203 after 5: JOPM.
.cell en! condition. 992·7414.

lH~JA~ .

YOU'RE TAKING
HIS MONEY. ..
MalEY THAT CAME
FROM WHO-KNOWS-'_......_

:oo • m

WHERE.'

CHARACTEil!

Stiller

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Mac hin e repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Serv ice S'}arpen
Sc issors . Fabric Shop ,

Pomeroy . 9n2274 .
JACKS REFRI GER ATIO ·
N Air conditi on ser vice,
commerc ia l,
indu st ri a l.

MV SISTER ZONEY
SAVS I SHOULD
ALWAYS

READTH'
LABELS

87

Upholstery

"------"'-=~~-L-

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis .
446·7833or446· 1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt .
1 Box 124. Pl. Pleasant , 304·
675'4154.

WHAT IN

THUNDI;R IS
pllllf!~1JIII ?

a

aocielite din while under
the care of a controversial
physician. (R) 160 mln .j

(I) C8ptloned ABC Newo
&lt;lll MOVIE: 'Th&lt;i Brldge
on the River Kwai'
12:00 (J)
NCAA
Women' a
BHketblll: South C.rollne lit Oid Dominion
(I)
(J2)
Dan must
noll on international gang

v-s

Answer: What he had to do every

~ime she had an

oCCident In the kitchenEAT IT FOR DINNER

BRIDGE
Americana take over
By Oswald Jacoby
aad Ala~ Soatag
NORTH

Starting with boards 18to-61 of the 96-board match
the
Americans
took
command . The hands were
quieter and it became a mat·
ter of card play with the
Americans picking up on
many difficult bands.
Both South players
arrived at a very optimistic
. four hearts. We nave shown
bidding with a club opening,
a heart overcall, one of those
modern expert doubles for
takeout, a sporting heart
raise by North and a game
closing four hearts by SOuth .
John Solodar for America
took dummy's ace of spades
and led a club. A duck by
East would almost surely
have led to John's defeat./
but East took his ace o
clubs and led e second
spade .
John ruffed, cashed his
ace of diamonds, ruffed a
diamond in dummy, ruffed a
second spade, ruffed another
diamond as East's kin~
dropped ruffed dummy s
last spade and led his king of
trumps .
East was in with the ace
and led back a trump to
John's queen . John led hiS
good oucen of diamonds.

+AiSS

.HI
t2

+to 1 s u
WEST

EAST

•u

• 874 2

+IIQJ6

.AJ3
t K 73

• J 10114

+u

+AQ7

SOUTH
+10

'KQ IOU
t A Ql5
+KJ8

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Wnt
Nartb East
llbl.

Pau

2.

f+

!+

Pasa

1.

Sootb

••

Pass

OpeninR lead:

•K

East ruffed and had to lead
a club. John finessed the
jack and was home.
The Pakistani South didn't
find John's play and went
down one .

tt~IW'-'tr

by THOMAS.JOSEPH
A':ROSS
II City of
1 Singe
5 One of
the Magi
11 Whetstone
12 Arthurlan

maiden
13 Eager
14 Bemoan
the fact
15 Ferrer
It Costly wear

17 Friend,
In Dljon
18 Current
2G O'aggy hill
21 Conclude

%%Queue
23 Heavenly
sight
2t French
secondary
school

MIUUisseh
12 Babies do
43 Narrative

DOWN
I Title-holder

z Be Imminent
3 Old·

womanlah

Yeslerday'l Awlwer

•

31 Stadium
4 Incarnadine 2% Stringed
·
Instrument
32 Famous
5 Verbal noun 23 Recital
prl.""'
I VIgilant
2-4 Extend acrosa 33 Cubic
7 Droop
Brlgandish
25
Intercede
measure
8
1 Windflower 21 Respite

10 Pensloner
11 Cleft
19 Observed

38 Egyptian

21 Nurture
30 West Indies

king
39 "The Cat in

sorcery

the -"

27 Pizzeria
fixture

2t Powld dog
21 Actor Beatty
31 French city
34 Demler
35 French
lonna! dance

b+---+.-

31 Nonsense!
37ln high
spirits
3t Greek

goddela
ueeremony

DAILY CRYPT.OQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Ia

AIYDLIAAXI
LONGPILLOW
'•.

w'-1. (60 min.l
(I) PBS Late Nitiht
12:30 II (I) (!) Late Night with

Call for estimates 367· 7101 .

Camp Conley.

(Anoworotomorrowl
NEGATE TANGLE

JumiMtlcM* No. 20. contalillno 110 plal:lee, Is n•ll•bte fOf S1 .1S po.~ld
lram Jumble, do lhia newap.per, Box M, Norwood. N.J. 07Ma. lnc:lude your
n~~me, ackftu, ~I code •nd mskl chec~l
1ble to N""
1.

who uns chorus girla to
rig the casino's roulette

NOW HAULING house coat
&amp; l imestone tor dri veways .

30H75·7397 .

SUGAR,
VEGETABLE FAT,
DAIRV WHEY--

a

a

JONES BOYS WATER
SERV ICE . Call 361·7471 or
36],0591.

Jim Lanier,

Ann&amp; Meara

(I) Dick Cavett
11 :30 II (I)(!) Tonight Show
(J) Another Ufe
CD MOVIE: 'Competition'
(I) MOVIE: 'Houea on
Gr..,.pPte Aoed'
(I)
(J2) Nlghtline
(I) Quincy A wealthy

BARNEY

General Hauling._..__

J I MS Wafer Service. Ca 11

and

a

movies, spona and ape·
cials.
(I) All In the Family

Phone 8Bn079.
85

rn a

take a look at upcoming

83 - _-_-__,E::c.-•,c;,_a- v- ating

·Gallipolis Diversified Con·
st . Co . Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe wor k . Spec ial
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446· 4440.

6

!NYOt. VEP WITH

Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now available
$300 .00. Call J./14·569·0241

(B Taxi [Closed ·
Captioned]
1 0:00 G (I) (!) Hill Street
Blues
(I) • (J2) Barbara Walterw
Special 20/20
(I) Omega Factor
(jj) Newawlltch
10:30 (J) Sing out America
(I) TBS Evening New•
(jj) Hitchcock
11
CIJ
CIJ ®
G2l News
(J) Noohvllle AFD
CD ' Sneek Previewa Jerry

675·2440.

17 Thunderbird Town Lan ·

Caii30H58·1775.

c ar ·

penter available tor home
or business remodeling or
new structures . Fr ee
estimates, referenc es, 304·

82

dau and 74 Camara Z28 .

ance features ·21 songs :
'60 's classics plus some of
their recent solo hits .
(fi) Thlo Old Houoe Bob
Vila and carpenter Norm
Abram tear down the old
wood paneling in the basement recreation room .

882 ·2079.
EXPERIENCED

tB

Berney ·Miller
[Cioeed-Captioned]
9:30 8 (I) (!) Glmme A Break
CD SRO: Simon and
Garfunkel Concert In the
Pari&lt; This concert perlorm·

AM· FM. Caii24H182 .
Magnum.

Dlff'rent

PLAID

a

RING LES' S SERVICE ex ·
perienced meaon, roofer,
carpenter , electrician ,
general repa i r s and

movie

Youngsters
who
have
achieved something very
unique are the subject of
this special program . (60
min.)

pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelf Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free est imates.

F &amp; K Tree Trimming ,
stump remov~l. 6.75-1331.

local

II tB Th~'a Incredible!

or 446·2454.
make

at

theatres .

1973 Chevy step side PS,

automatic, front wheel
drive, sun roof, AM· FM
stereo, low mileage, 35
mile per gallon. $4500 firm.

and

I

flopping

buill up root . Cai i 3B8·9857.

Call446·9595 after 2PM .

(!) Feme Doris'
coach challenges

week co-hosts Roger Ebert
and Gene Siskel give view~
ers their assessmen1s of
what 5 flying and what 's

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting. 30 years ex ·
perience, specializing in

RO~'S

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

20 yrs . exp. Ca II 38a.9652.

74 Dodge Dart $250. 65 Pon· Specializing, in Zen ith and
tiac $150. Call "388·9081 or · Motorola, Quazar, and
38a.B230.
house calls. Phone 576·2398
gOOd cond.,

(I)

a

Auto for Sate

nice .

Persian and

PAINT ING · inTeri or and
exter i or , plumbing ,
roofing, some remodel ing .

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

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220,

Himalayan,

te)(tured ceilings com ·
merc i a! and residentia l,
free estimates. Call 256 ·

1182.

hay, mixed hay·$2.50 bale.

71

D

tally unlike herself. (60
min.)
(J) Natlonel Geographic
Special
CD MOVIE: 'Man Who
Saw Tomorrow'
(I) MOVIE: 'The Stepford
Wives'
(I)
NCAA
Baoketball:
lndiene at Ohio State
(I) (lt Magnum, P.l.
(I) Sneak Preylewa Eoch

STUCCO PLASTERIN G

Used tires. Hanshaws Tires

Toni~

her to study a character to·

ANNIE

Home
_.___!.!nprovements

I

Meara

(I) Sanford ""d Son
(I) Medical VIeWpoint
CD t..veme end Shirley
llJ (I) Family Feud
(I) Buolneu Report
(jJ Richard Simmon•
(fi) All Crntureo Groat
11nd Smell
lB Entertainment

8:00
81

Yesterday 's

Jumbles: EMBER

movtes, sports ar'td spe~
cials.

drama

Hay $3.00 per bate . Call446·
2724.

Anne

a .

Hay &amp; Grain

64

and

Now emtnge the circled teners to
form the S\frprlH answer. as sug ·
gelled by tho-~~~ cortoon.

I I I I I I I IJ

Printanswerhere:(

take a look at upcqming

GRAIN ted butcher lambs,
phone 30H75· 1927 .

Can de.lfver. 614-985·4259 or
contaf' /IIbert Parker at

Minature Schnauzer 6 wks.
puppy ,
ACK
Third Ave.. Gallipolis, ' otd
Ohio, between BAM and Registered. Salt &amp; pepper,
4:30 PM. weekdays. Sealed $125. Ca11446·7489.

Friday, March 12, 1982, at

BORNWSER

THI6 6HOUL.DONL.Y
15E DONE WITH
cS&gt;OOC' TASTE.

) I I J

(I) liD MIICNeil-lehrer
Report
&lt;II News
8 G2l Muppet Show
7 :30 8 (I) You Allked For It
(J)AnotllerUfe
CD Sneak Previews Jerry

Camping
Equipment

ponies. Call379·2761.

rD · I

ell Ent-lnment Tonight
Cil Heppy Oey8
8 (I) Tic TIIC Dough

StiUer

78

ISAURES I

Friends

Auto R: epair

63 ____~L~Iv~e~s~to~c~k_____

Both Items to be sold as Is

the Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative
off i ce.
Buckeye Rural Elctric
reserves the right to reject

.

Quality AUtObody &amp; Paint

675·2948.

19QO passport C·IO, 1200

and may be viewed at 143

bids for one or both items
will be accepted until 4PM,

back seat. $200. each, 304·

675· 2~22 .

work . Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles .
Auto Trim Center , 446·1968.

cabinet metal or wOOd. Carl

Hav . Large round bales.

Boarding

portable air compressor,

ANVTHIN6 TO 170 WIT"H

&amp;Accessories
VAN seats, 2 snaP in mid·
d ie seats, one permanent

77

Wanted to Buy

antenna and 23 channel
mobile unit. All for S200
firm . 614-985·3509.

Like new 3 custom green &amp;
KENNEL ·,
blue Brocade double bed ' HILLCREST
Boarding
all
breeds,
clean
spreads. New $100 ea., will
indoor·outdoor facilities .
sell $50 ea . Call 446·0481 .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans . Caii446B95 .
15 cu . fl . chest type freezer,
$125. 1968 Dodge Dart, $300.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Call256· 1558.

FOR SALE One Yeager

·pJtfEit l'

New Royce CB number 621,

- .'.. "-··
..........
. . ... . .. .
'-----------.&amp;..----------1

electric , 2 bdr .• $7,995. New
14ft. wide, 2 bdr., $9,995.
traducing the highest
energy efficient home ever

Call 304-675·6427 after 6
p.m .

repairs. Call446·0978.

1~.

9 :00p.m .• 304·.t58· 1666.
....j - - - - - - - - - - - - _- - - ---:--:-c-;;cc-c:::-- 76
Auto Parts

1970 Plymouth G TX 440

Quilt ing frames, velvet
throw Pillows, book cases.
picnic tables, lawn fur ·
niture, and I will do

UFO "U6o1N!16o5

Call between 5 :30 p.m. &amp;

.Plastic Septic Tanks. Slate
and county approved. 1,000
gal. tank, price S3.40. Other

56

'-'---"======"-

ton, 4·wheel drive, '4 speed,

TWO YI:AR? A60, THI~ TOW II
PUT ELECTRICITY IN POit THE
Fllt'T TIME-, A LOT OF FOLK,
MOVEP... THeY DtON•'r WAN;

1----...:.______,_____.._....___

54

Mise, Merchandice

1980 &lt;;hew Scottsdale 3/ 4

WHAT DO YOU
FIGURE! THII&gt;

33000 m ites, pr ice $4400.

Cl ,•~~r~&amp;~..~ne

Pomeroy . Large lots. Call

51

2 bedroom house. Call 675·

ll.l:lMt

Caii24B121 .

COUCH , rocking chair and

42

Antique horse wagon shQw
· condition, harness &amp; bridle,

Zinn Coat Co., Inc. Call446·
1408 between 9 and 4.

paint . 992 ·3090 or 992·5039.

181

$600. Call256 ·6309.

Electric stove 30' , double
oven, all timers, avacoda,
$200.00. Call 6]5. 1652 or 675·

USED MOBILE
516·2711 '

Antiqf.!es

Lump Coal $32 per ton .

Unfurnished house for rent .
2 bedroom . Carpet in living
room and bath. All new

CAPTAIN EASY

IJ
..

rx

1

(I) ABC Ntwa
(1)3·2-1 . Contact
(fi) Over Ealy
8 :30 G (I) Cl) NBC News
(J) $&amp;0.000 Pyremid
' (I) Gamer Pyle •
(I) Muppet Show
8 Cll Clt CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
(fi) un... Yoga Mid You
8G2lABCN7:00 G (I) P.M, M-Ine
(J) WMkend Gerdener
(I) ~ Bumett and

1978 GOLDEN Eagle jeep
CJS, new top , new tires,

z.. a.'f

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 , North of
9n7479 .

Recently

MOOERN CON'IENIENCE6o.

55
SJ

News

Cll Andy Griffith

tm i tes, good shape. 773·5150.

Pleasant .

apt .,

9926309

-·-~--

hide ·a · bed

304·675· 1458 alter 7Pm .

614-985·4395.

--

new

couch , $400. 675·2517.

baby bed. 304·895·3319.

----

cabinet SB.OO, iron &amp; brass
bed $85, 5 piece bedroom
suite $65, chest of drawers

Brand

CJ5 .

·=-~ -

8:00 • (I) Cil • (I) &lt;» • G2l

AM· FM. regular gas. 30.000

References

and depos it . 304·615·1962.

and dep . required . 992·3054.

5858.

Kenmore auto. washer,
guaranteed, $80 . Nice

S35, wood, coat &amp; gas
e)(cellent condition; $250. heaters. Call367-06.37 .

1676
Lincoln
Hts . ,
Pomeroy . 4 room house,
bath, basement, atti c tor
storage. Newly painted and
new floor coverings. Adults
preferred . No pets . Ref .

$2.500. 985·3385. after 5 949·
2754 .

Call256·1207.

TWO bedroom apartment,

'

5 room house with bath .
Large lot near Racine . 992 -

G. E . dryer $80, Kenmore
washer $90, guaranteed.

dryer $80. Ca II 446·8181 .

Equal Opportunity Housing

For rent or sale 3 bedroom
fu lly carpeted home 5 miles
from town . No pets. Call

1964 Troy Mobil e Home.
10x50 furni shed . Pr iced at

pliances, Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel .

Small furnished apt. No
pets. 304-675· 1365.

304·67H679 .

Jeep

1· I

EVENING

Vans&amp;4W. D.

U .SOO. 99H406.

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

mobile

THURSDAY
2/25/82

redone ,
no
rust.
Customized. New t ires.

Ap ·

4&lt;6·7398 .

houses ,
Pt .
and Gallipolis.

plus utilities .

77

miles, excellent condition.

refrigerators,

&amp;econd St. Pt . Pleasant, An

5104.

4U· I158 .

padded maple rockers
$34.00, new &amp; used wood
burners from ' $60.00 to
S27S.OO, several ~hest and
dressers. var iety of silver
stone cook ware, 4 utility
kitchen cab inets, TV's,
dinet sets, beds, ,desks, and
Jots more . Open lOam to

drvers,

614 ·446·8221 or 614·24H484 .

mo. uti II ties and dep.
required. Call 446·.4554.

73

SWAIN
· AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St., Firewood, split and
Gallipolis. :l nice bedroom delivered In 8 foot bed
suites, gas &amp; electric pickup, $35 .00 a toad. Call
ranges ,
5
used 38a.9823.
refrigerators, 2 new frost
free refrig. at $275.00, 3 Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E.
pice liv ing room suites Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
$199.00, 2 piece living ··~m 992·2205.
su iles 5140.00, love seats
$70,00. wood dinet set with 4 8 H .P. Gravely Riding
captain
chairs (new) Mawer. Exc. cond. $45().
275.00, linoleum rugs 9x12 949·2544.
$10, large owl lamps $25.00,

1 bedroom furnished apt.
992·5434. 9n5914 or 304-882·
Apartments . 675·5548 .

Houses tor Rent

RIGHT

0 322

thru Fri .. ~~;n t ° 5pm. Sal.
- ·

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PL IANCIOS
washers,

homes,
Pleasant
41

used ranges ,
refr igerators, and TV's. 3
miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am 10 7Pm. Mon.

in

2566.

Gallipolis

Television
•
•
VIewmg·

1968 Ford F100. Sta ndard .
30H73·5013.

wood table &amp; 4 chairs. ~54,__,;M~fS~C,_-~M~e!!r!:c~h~ond=l~ce!._

Pomeroy. Oh io. 99U621.

3 bedroom home. Large
back yard close to school.

house (not a mobile home)

tor as tittle as $135. mo. No
down payme nt. Call 992·

bedroom

-

firm . 614-985·3509.

cabinet, Living room suite,

Spm, 446·3159.

mobile home in Chester
area . lO X 12 room built on
with wood burner . Sitting
on 2 at r es which can be
r ented r easonable . $12,000.

air . Caii30H7J.5651.

Homes for Sale

unfurnished

ling alond road .

New
POL IT ICAL · businesses .
Union made Imprinted ad·
vertislng specialties, book

bedroom

apartment. 992·5434 or 992·
5914 or 30H82·2566 .

Racine, Oh . Call 247 ·3925 or

4525.

31

Small furni s hed apart·
ment, central air &amp; heat,
parkinQ, 1 or 2 adults only.

(variety frulfJ. farm pond.

Newly
decorated
un ·
furnished , 3 rm . house.
Suitable for single person
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy or retired ·couple. Garden
mobile home. Set up with 2 ' space, deposit &amp; references
or A lots, gas heat, rural required . Call 446-0450 or
water, close to town, finan · 4&lt;6· 1291 '
cing available. Phone 446·
1294.
3 bdr. house, 2 fireplace s.
central air, garage, fence &amp;
1979 23 ft . Layton travel swimming pool . Call 675·

367-0218 .

Piano's

2215.

89.8 acre farm, 8 room
house, basernent, metal
barn, 2 car garage, orchard

2 bedroom family rm ., $300
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WE ST , GALLI POLIS , RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.

24].3774.

chering. Call304·88).]224 ,

appointment.

446·3105 .

MOBILE

homes . CALL 446·7572 .

Piano

Furnished apt. 3 rooms
with private bath . References preferred, 845 2nd.
Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 446·

APARTMENTS;

Karate the ulti mate in self
defence all private lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children .
I nstructiion thru black
belt. Also available Karate
uniforms puctJing and

ll

concrete cellar, spring
rights, county rur!!!l water,
with 2 outbuildings. Call

LOT for sate,

HOMES . Gallipolis. Price
reduced , used mobile

22

trailer, 18x30 garage, 10x10

3.5 .

colors DMC. Free lessons.

Custom

3.12 acres of land. 14x70

Ferry, 144'xl05', $7500. 304·
67H429 .

Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza, 446·2134. X·
stitch headquarters. ALL

McDaniels

tor 111 price. Call446·0481 .

tra t air. basement. 30H75·
1542 .
FIVE room house, 81f:~%
financing, full basement, 2
baths, nice lpt, Clifton, 304·

bath, adults only. Ret. &amp;
sec. dep . req . Call446·0444.

2 grave sites in Mounds
section of Mound Hill . Sell

down . 992 ·2571 or 992·3830 .

5215.

Hauling
limestone
gravel. Wi II spread

Lots &amp; Acreage

House Meadowbrobk Ad·
dition J bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen·

Schools Instruction

11

35

Furn ished apartment 4 r . &amp;

7., - --- rruCk·s tor sa1e-

The

Ohio

box

springs, full or twin, $58 .•
firm , $68. and $78. Queen
plus $50 dep., water fur· sets. $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
14 dr. chests, S42 . Bed
nished . Call446·3617.
frames, S20.and $25 .• 10 gun
· Gun cab inets, SJSO., dinet- r
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·

some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone

25, 1982

1967 Chevy tru ck C60 with

I

beds,$340., queen site, $380.

Februo

1976 Ford van , automat ic
transmission, 8 cylinder, 34
ton, 12 passenger. $800 .
Harrisonville . 614· 742·3044 .

kitchen furn, utilities part i ally · Pd , , excellent ' maple or pjhe f i nish .
location . Call 675·5104 or Bedroom suites · Bassett
675·7284.
Oak, $675 ., Bassett Cherry,
$795 . Bunk bed complete
Apartment tor ren1. Call with mattresses, $250. and

available, Hours may be

HELP wanted teaching
Tri-Chem craft classes. No

by Larry Wright

'~lf'ltlo~
'/WRIMiiP MoOSe.

from S285 . to $795. Tables,
S38 and up to $109. Hide·a·

for Rent
Furnished

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chalr. rocker, ot·
toman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa.
~hair and toveseat, · $275.
Sofas and chairs priced

Apartmemt

hand tools. Wi II work 2-3

Thuisdciy,

PEANUTS

Devld letten1w1 David is
·
joined by comedian Richard
Lewis and author Studo
Terket. (60 min.l
II (I) MOVIE: ~McMillan
&amp; Wife: Til Deeth Do Uo
Pert'
1:00 8&lt;JtN1 :30 CD MOVIE:
'Modem
Romence'
(!) Newe/Sign Off
2:00 (I) 8echaliM Fllthar

(I)
MOVIE:
'lt'l
Woncltrful World'

(Jitllellfte
2:30 (I) Ufe cl Ailey
3:00 (J) tlumo • Allen

,n

CIYnoQUOTES

XRI
WK

FRJ

YQCR

EYRTG

e

CD MOVIE: 'Men Who

s.w TOITIOII_.•

o-.

lettlir olmply otonda for another. In lhlo oomple . A Ia
uiOd for the three L's, X for the two O' s, et&lt;. Sinal• Jetton,
apottrophes, the lenllh ond formation of the wordo ore
hints. Each doy the code !etten •~ dlft'erent.

LRGCOJEL

WR R J

U IJ

F U

QSFTGRS

SUFRLETZ
J

EQT VJ R
"

Yeslmla;,'1 Cryptoqaole: WHOEVER SERVES HIS COUN"
TRY WEU. HAS NO NEED OF ANCESTO~:'-VOLTAIRE

-

�Page

12-The Daily Sentine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Geologists drilling
in ·tri-county ar~a
COLUMBUS - A core-drilling rig
will sample mineral resources in
several southeastern Ohio counties
during a study conducted by the
Division or Geological Survey of the
Ohio Department of Natural Resour·
ces (ODNR). .
•
Survey geologists plan to drill six
to eight cores over the ned four
months in Athens, Gallia , Jackson,
Meigs and Vinton counties.
The targets of exploration are the
Clarion (No. 4A) and Sharon (No. I )
coals. These be&lt;Jrock fonnations lie
as deep as 500 feet beneath the sur·
face of the study area .
Although coal resources are the
primary concern of this study, Survey geologists expect to obtain
valuable information on other
mineral resources , such as
limestone, shale and clay.

The study is only one of several
new prj!'Cis made possible by the
division's recent purchase or the
core-drilling rig. The rig enables
geologists to explore subsurface
rpek formations in areas where little
other information is available.
During core drilling a special drill
bit cuts down through the rock
layers, forming ciyinder-shaped
core 511mples each roughly two inches in diameter and 10 feet long. A
steel line brings the cores to the surface, where they a re catalogues and
described by geologists.
The core samples are sent to the
Division of Geological Survey
laboratories in Columbus for testing
and are then stored in a library of
core samples maintained by the
division for consultation by members of science and industry.

Terminate I6 ·cases
Ten defendants were fined and six
others forfeited bonds in the court of
Meigs County Judge Patrick
O'Brien Wednesday.
Fined were Lawrence Binegar,
Macksburg, $10 and costs, changing
direction of travel without due
caution; Robert Sampson, Glendale,
W. Va., $27 and costs, speeding;
Doulgas Reeves, Johnstown, $150
and costs, shooting or attempting to
take a deer, and $250 and costs, hunting with a gun during closed
season; Salvadore Lovens,
J,.akewood, $21 and costs, speeding;
William Imboden, Middleport, $21
and costs, speedinili- Mark Combs,
Racine, $30 and costs, failure to
yield the right of way, $100and costs,
no motorcycle operator's license, 10
days in jail, eight suspended and six
months probation; Dale Riffle, address unrecorded, $75 and costs, 30
days in jail suspended, one year
probation, assault; Keith Pickens,
Racine, $75 and costs, 10 day jail
sentence suspended and six months

probation, no operator's license;
Carol Hubbard, Pomeroy, $35 and
costs, 30 days in jail suspended, one
year probation and restitution, insufficient funds; Erniue Griffin,
Tuppers Plains, $50 and costs with
fine suspended if defendant repairs
damages, criminal mischief.
Forfeiting bonds were Jeffrey
Boyce, Dunbar, W. Va., $40.50; Den·
nis L. Richards, Racine, $50.50;
Gary Wright, Heath, $40.50; Keith
Lynch, Middleport, $43.50, all posted
on speeding charges; Nancy
Wollard, Middleport, $30.50 failure
to yield right of way from private
drive and Dale Carnes, Concor,
N.C., $50.50, speeding ·assured clear
distance.
In addition, Lonnie Mayes,
Pomeroy, was assessed costs and
was given a 10 day jail sentence on
charges of resisting arrest and
Dorothy McCloud, Middleport, was
given a 60 day jail -~entence, 55
suspended and placed on one year
probation on falsification charges.

Packet deadline here
This Is the last week to order tree
packets and ground cover plants
from the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.
The selection of plants or
seedlings does not include any
plants, which are likely to spread
or become a nuisance. Each should
e11courage wildlife, control erosion
or beautiful your area.
A wide variety of seedlings are
available such as white pine, red
pine, Austrian pine, Norway spruce,
Canadian Hemlock , redosier
dogwood, white spruce, Colorado
blue spruce, nanking cherry, white
birch, Douglas fir, white mulberry,
hackberry, black locust, white ash,
sugar maple, tulip poplar,

sycamore, red oak, silver maple and
catalpa.
These seedlings are available in
individual variety packets or in the
wildlife and song bird packets.
In growtd cover plants there are
crown vetch, myrtle, English ivy,
and pachysandra available in 50
crown lot packets.
For information on prices and
types of trees in the various packets
just stop by the office at 221 Wesi
Second Street in Pomeroy, second
floor of the Farmer's Bank building
or phone 992-8647 between 7: 15 a.m.
and5p.m.
All orders must be in by March 4
and must be prepaid.

Property transfers
Garnet Johnston, Lawrence Johnston, Carl Dean Johnston to Harold
Proffitt, Eula Proffitt, 5.1 acres,
Lebanon.
Mamie Hendricks aka Maymie
Hendricks, Mariano Hendricks,
Cert. of Trans., Middleport.
Charles Simms, Emogene Simms
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Way, Rutland· Salem.
kathleen Lehew, Larry Max
Lehew to Larry Max Lehew,
KaWeen Lehew, Parcels, Pomeroy.
George S. Carper, Lavonne Car·
per, Helen Carper to Michael Halar,
Wendy Halar, 2.75 acres, Bedford.
Helen Smith to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Garnet Evans, Dixie Smith to
James E. Diddle, Right! of "1\'ay,
Lebanon.
John T. Wolfe, Joan Wolfe to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.

State of Ohio to Laura J . McGraw
nka Laura J . Bond et al, Charles
Bond, Farmers Bank and Savings
Company, Treasurer of Meigs County, Ohio, Auditor of Meigs County,
Ohio, Judgment Entry on Verdict,
Pomeroy.
Russell E. Quillen, Velma F:
Quillen to Reba Greene, 100 A. Lot,
Letart.
Clifford Scott Thomas, Patricia
Ellen Thomas to Michael Della
Valle, Pi. Lot 128, Middleport.
Jack C. Ginther, Florine Ginther
to James L. Hubbard, Sharon L.
Hubbard Lots 21 and 22, Chester.
James L. Hubbard, Sharon L.
Hubbard to William Krackomberger, Golda Krackomberger, Lois
21 and 22, Chester.
Mormng Star United Baptist Chur·
ch, to Thelma Dalton, 1.003 acres,
Scipio.

•

J

BegiMing April I, 1982 the Social
Security Representative from
Athens wiD visit Pomeroy on the fir·
st, third and fifth Wednesday of
every month from 10 a .m. to noon at
the Senior Citizens Center on
Mulberry Heights.
According to Social Security Branch Manager Edwin Peterson, the
chang• in visits and time schedules
Is nf!CCssary because of budget ·nd
staffing adjusbnents.
Peterson also explainf,'d that toll·
free telephone service Is available to
Meigs County residents. The tollfree number, 99U622, is a direct call
to the Social Security Olfic in
Athens. "Our representative to
Pomeroy must leave the Senior

.

Citizens Center by noon in order to
make other scheduled contacts in
r ·Meigs Cowtty," he said. "Therefore,
it's important for people to realize
that most business with Social
Security can be handled faster by
telephone. In addition a toll-free
call to the Athens Socia{ Security 01·
lice will connect you with a
specialist."
Unless the busineSs is urgent, the
best time to call Social Security at
!19U622 Is after the middle of the
month or In the afternoon.
The Athens Social Security office
Is located at 221 ~ Col unibus Road
and is open to the pubticfrom 8:45 to
4:30 p.m. weekdays except on
national holidays.

FOR birthday celebration set
Meigs County Democrats will
celebrate the IOOth birthday of the
late Franklin Delano Roosevelt
·· Saturday 11t the Meigs County Senior
Citizen.• Center.
1
There will be Bluegraas music and
beans, cornbread, hot dogs and
beverages will be served by the
senior citizens. Hours of the
celebration will be from 3 to 7 p.m.

The Hart Brothers · will play
Bluegrass music from 5 to 7 p.m.,
Chairman Bud Wilson reports.
There will be speakers from state
and county offices on hand and party
history will be presented along with
music ofthe30'sand40's.
The event Is open to the pubi.ic and
tickets are $2.50 at the door.

,.

END OF 'THE MONTH SALE

Voi.30,No.222

Pomet!y

Cep,:ulg11Nd 1912

FINAL- NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS

. -·
s:~~~Ts~~~~

~;~;~;.;-----~-----roo-vs-----·

WINTER sL~EPWEAR
1

Reg. '4.50 to '9.00 .... Sale 2.00
Reg. '10.00 to '15.00 ... Sale 14.00

-----r~;~~;.s:7"

______

4:~~:.!R. T~P!. '!.so

1 ..,..

Reg. 7.95 to 10.95 . . . . Sale '3.00
Reg. '11.95 to 114.95 ... Sale '5.00

1

1

l

Reg. 6.00 to 8.00 . . . . Sale 2.50
Reg. '9.00 to 111.00 ... . Sale 14.00
1

1

1

~~~~~ '22~~~::~~~- ~~~~:~:~:~~:..~~~~-t-~~~~ '17.~ -~ ~:~~-~
BOYS

FLANNEL SHIRTS

II

REG. '8.95 AND '9.95

"Dr;;;'&amp; Sportswear j
Reg . $9 .50 to Sll.OO
Reg. S12.00 to 515.00
Reg. $16.00to$21.00
Reg. 522.00 to $26.00
Reg. $28.00 to 536.00

. ..... Sale $2.50
. . ... . Sele $5.00
.. •. •. Sale$7.00
. .. .. . Sale $9.00
.. : .. Sale S12.00

MEN;LANNEL SHIRTS

II

Reg. 17.95 to 113.95 . . . . Sale 13.00
1
Reg. 114.95 to 119.95 . . . Sale 16.00
REG. 110.95 AND 112.95
I Reg. '20.95 to 127.95 . . . Sale 18.00
SALE '4 •00 .
. ..___,._,._.4II-____ ._.._:_._._.._.._.._.._.__.._.
.
..._._..__________ _.. ____
_._._...__._..._ _____
.

SALE '3.00

I

I PRETEEN
I
R~~~5!~~ 0~~~~~~~~~0 ~ Reg~.i0~~~[13~~~~~~:~~.oo I

WOMEN'S

Reg. 111.00 to 114.50
Reg. '15.00 to 120.00
Reg. 122.00 to 130.00
Reg. '33.00 to 141.00

... Sale '5.00 i Reg, 115.00 to 120.00
... Sale '7.00
Reg. 121.00 to '26.00
•. Sale 111.00
Reg. 127.00 to '36.00
.. Sale '13.00
Reg. '37.00 to '57.00

MEN'S

·KNIT SHIRTS

. . . Sale '7.00
. . . Sale '9.00
. . Sale 112.00
. . Sale 115.00 i

Reg. .'7.95 to '16.00 . . . . Sale '3.00
Reg. '17.95 to '22.95 . . . Sale '6.00
Reg. '26.95 to '29.95 . . . Sale '8.00
Reg. '32.95 and '39.95 . Sale 110.00

-------- -----·------""":"-~-~----:___~ ·~

~-----~

!

MATERNITY .

,.,

. -' ·-----~
JUNioR SLACKS AND

I

MEN'S ·.

,...;

.

.

.

'

RECEIVES OA'I11- Oblo Sectelary of Slate Anthony J. Celebrene,
Jr. admiDlltered the oath ol office IG Lealie F. FDIIZ and Russell Inillg
WUson, new members of the Meigs County·Board of Electioilll. From left
IG right are Lealie F. Fultz, RU81eU lrvlug WUson, aud Secretary of Slate.
Anthony J. Celebrene, Jr. Tire ceremooles were beld Tbu~Jday, Feb ..18
at the Pike County Courthouse.

RO£

Reg. '18.95 to '22.95 ... Sale ,7,00 i
Reg. '24.95 to '32.9. 5 . . Sale '10.00

Reg. 15.00 to 20.00 .. . Sale '6.00
Reg. '21.00 to '29.00 ... Sale '8.00
~ruN.07

I

~I MENs

Reg. s11.oo to s21.oo ..... sate S7.oo
Reg . $22.00 to S2s .oo . . . .. sale S9.00
Reg. $26.00 to $28 .00. . . . Sale $11.00
Reg, SJO.OO .to $34.00. .. . Sale 513.00

___ ._..___ ..___.._ ---;--------- _..;..._.._.._.._.._.. r--_..--.~---~-.-..-.---..-

SWEATERS' AND

DRESS AND
S·PORT SHIRTS

I

l

Reg.$5.00toS~~~~

... SaleS2.00
Reg. $14.00 to 519.00 .. . .. Sale S5.00
Reg. S21t.oo to S25.00 . .... Sale 59.00
Reg.S26.00toS31.00 •• •... Sale$12.00
Reg. S34.00 toS44.bo .. ... Sale 515.00

JUNIOR

..

.

WINTER DRESSES

I :::: :~i~:;~:!~7~~·:::·~::::::::

I Reg. 111.95 and 112..95 .. Sale 14.00
1 Reg '1 4 95 to '16 95
Sale ,6 00 1
Reg. 117.95 to 119.95 ... Sale 17.00 I

1 · · · ··· ·

Reg. $28,00 to $35.00
Reg . 536.00 to 542.00
Reg . $44.00toS48 .00
Reg . ss1.oo to $64 .00

..
..
..
..

Sale $12.00
Sale S15.oo
Sale$17.00
Sale s2o.oo

11---------------.
----·------------~---------------MEN'S
I JUNIOR SPORTS A
CHILDREN'S
.
WINTER VESTS

I

·
'
REG. '14.95 TO '29.95

WE R I

I1 Reg.
6.00 to 13.00 . . . . Sale '2.50
Reg. '14.00 to '18.00 . . . Sale 5.00
1

1

1

SALE •s.oo

Reg. '19.00 to '22.00
1 Reg. '23.00 to '26.00
1
REG. '32.95 AND 49.95
I Reg. 12MO to '32.00
.
SALE *10.00 1 Reg. '39.00 to '48.00
II-·~·-"~'--·-·-----...

-----L..-.--1
r

1

!

... Sale.'7.oo 1
. . . Sale 19.00
.. Sale 112.00
.. Sale 115.00

.

WINTER COATS AND
SNOW SUITS

!

'--·

Reg. 516.00 to $21.00 ... .. Sale ss.oo
Reg. $22.00 to $28.00 . . . . . Sale $7.00
Reg. 530.00 to $37.00 ..... Sale $9.00
Reg.SJ8 .00to$46.00 .. . . Sale$11.00
Reg . $47.00 to $59.00. . . . Sale $13.00

~-- - - · - - ........__..,_..__.. ,..-·------·---, ·---..-..--

JR. COATS

I MISSES AND HALF SIZES

MEN'S

lI

WINTER JACKETS

Reg. '44.95 to '59.95 . . Sale 120.00
Reg. '64.95 to '79.95 . . Sale 125.00 1
Reg. '89.95 &amp; '99.95 . . Sale 130.00

.
--------BOYS WINTER JACKETS

~-------

REG. '19.95 AND 29.95

.

s

BLOUSES

SALE 7.00 1 Reg. 14.00 to 19.00 . . . Sale '6.00

,_......

MENS AND BOYS

Sale 120.00
Sale 125.00
Sale 130.oo·
Sale 140.00
Sale 150.00
Sale 160.00

MISSES AND EXTRA SIZE

SWEATERS
·

·1

1

~~
Reg. '20.00 to '26.00

. . .. Sale '9.00
Reg. '27.00 to '34.00 . . Sale '12.00

SALE '15.00

W

1

1

MISSES AND EXTRA SIZES

1

REG. '42.95 AND '44.95
...,...._.._.. _ _ _ _

Reg. S41 .00 to sso.oo........ saie s2o.oo
Reg. $60.00 to $78.00........ Sale $25.00
Reg . $80.00 to $99.00.. . .... Sale $30.00
·Reg . 5108.00 toS119.oo ..... Sale 540.00
Reg. ·$125.00 to S144.00. .....Sale 550.00
Reg. $150.00 to S200.00. ..... Sale $60 .00

Reg. '44.00 to 150.00 . .
Reg. '65.00 to 178.00 . .
I Reg. '81.00 to 1101.00
I Reg. 1109.00 to 1121.00
Reg. 1135.00 to 1148.00
Reg. '152.00 to 1164.00

r----·------------~---o--------~--..-----

!

AND VESTS

WOMEN'S COATS

-----~---

...:....._.__,_

.

TOBOGGANS &amp; CAPS •I

·1

MEN'S AND BO ;
'
YS
GLOVES

l

I

-

U

Reg. '1.19 to '2.49 •..... Sale 50' f
1
1
Reg. '2.95 &amp; '3.50 ..... Sale 11.00 I Reg. 1.95 &amp; 2.95 · · · · · Sale '1.00 ·

.--------

- -

I CHILDREN'S

"""

WINTER PANTS AND JEANS
Reg. '6.00 to '8:so . . . .
Reg. '9.00 to 112.50 . . . .
Reg. '13.00 to '15.50 ...
Reg. 116.00 to-'19.00

Sale 12.00
Sale 14.00
Sale '5.00
Sale '6 00

Reg.~:4~~~=~ ~· . ~ Sa~~:~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~-~. ~~_:.1~~~o.'26.oo ~ .~: ~~~:oo
MISSES &amp; EXTRA SI~E

,

MISSES AND HALF SIZE

$PO~,. TSWEAR

1-~----

·-

DRESSES

REG. '6.00 10 '8.50 . . . .
REG. '9.00 10 '13.00 . • •
REG. '14.00 10 '11.00 . .
REG. 119.0010 124.00 ..
REG. '25.00 10 131.00 . .

SALE '2.00
REG. 132.00 10 '38.00 . SALE '11.00
REG. '9.00 TO 116.00 . . .
SALE 'l.OO
REG. '40.00 TO 148.00 . SALE I Jl.OO
REG. '19.00 TO '28.00 . .
SALE '5.00
REG, '50.00 10 '57.00 . SALE '15.00
REG. '29.00 TO '34.00 . .
SALE 17.00
REG. '60.00 TO '65.00 . SALE '20.00
REG. '35.00 TO '40.00 . .
SALE '9.00
~- ... _.._..__.._,._.,_, -~ I,.... _ _ _ _ ...___

-

SALE '4.00
SALE 15.00
SALE '7 .00
SALE '9.00

·--

--

·~~-·---·-....!'~-

''"" ''""

OPEN FRIDAY UNTIL 8 AND SATURDAY UNTIL 5:00

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

MIDDLESEX, N.J.- After a day of sl1tlng through rubble, Investigators were uncertain whether a pipe bomb had caused a mam·
moth blast that destroyed a house, k!Uing the couple Inside and
Injuring their three sons.
'
_@d~ Richard Puskas and hts wl1e, P.a tricla, were kll1ed ln \he
"'bursday motntng pi&amp;St, said Middlesex County Prosecutor Rl·
.chard Rebeck.
.,
Their three sons, Andrew Jr., 9; Scott, 7, and Brian, , were
leaving the bouse on their way to school when the explosion occured,
Rebeck said.

U.S. steps up oil import boycott
WASHINGTON - The Reagan administration Is stepping up Its
campaign against Col. Moammar Khada(y, the Libyan leader, by
Imposing a boycott of oil Imports from the mtlttant Arab country and
halting sales of American oil and gas equipment to the Libyans,
Informed sources say.
The decision was taken b:t the National Security Council Thursday
and Is expected to take effect in two weeks, after consultation with
the West European allies, Congress and oil company executives.
While the United States has long accused Khadaly of promoting
terrorism, there was no apparent specl1ic provocation for the move,
which was under consideration lor several months.

Marijuana poses major concern
WASHINGTON - There Is no conclusive evidence marijuana
causes permanent, long-term health effects In humans, but a variety
of shorter term reactions to the drug " justifies serious national
concern," concludes a major study released today.
The National Academy of Sciences study, one of the most compre·
henslve ever attempted on the health effects of marijuana, said the
Jack of Information about the most widely used Ullclt drug In Amer·
tea Is astonishing. ·
The studying committee said the country must gtve a higher
priority to research on marijuana and related drugs, Including a
greater Investment of research dollars.

WARSAW, Poland - Poland's Parliament convenect a two-day
session today that Is expected to ratl!y hard-line pol:cles on marital
law adopted by the Communist Party's Central Commtttee.
The Sejm, Poland's Parliament, Will also consider economic reforms and state tribunals to try former party and government lead·
ers accused of causing the cUJTent economic and social crisis.
At.the Central Committee meeting, which ended ThUrsday, Com munist leaders named Interior Minister Gen. Czeslaw Klszcak as an
alternate member to the ruling Politburo. He Is the fourth general
named to the 19-member Politburo, whlcll has 14 voting members
and five non·votlng alternates.

Winning Ohio lottery number
.

'

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thlifs:day rught ln
the Ohb Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 988.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 9939.
The lottery reported a loss of $193,883 on Its dally game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,062,825, while holders of winning tickets
are entitled to share $1,256,711!, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast

REG. '41.00 TO '47.00 . SALE '12.00
REG. '48.00 TO '58.00 . SALE '15.00
REG. '60.00 TO '78.00 . SALE '20.00

--------·_...-

Clues sought in fatal explosion

Hardline policies to follow session

Reg. '8.00 to '14.00 . . . . Sale '3.00
Reg. 115.00 to 120.00 . . . Sale '7.00
Reg. 122.00 to 130.00 . . • Sale 19.00
Reg. '32.00 to 137.00 ·. . Sale 112.00

_,_,__...__..+----·w

Middleport, Ohio, Friday,

February 26, 1982

2 Soctiont, 12 .....

.

15 c.nts

A Multitnulha Inc. New 1 t

IF

The Congressional Budget Office markets and poses the threat of ecoWASHINGTON (AP) - Pres'sure Is buDding on President Rea· · predicted that even 11 Congress nomic and financial conditions not
e- Jets all the budget sayings pro- seen since the 1930s," the financial
gao to abandon his budget as
posed by the president, deficits Will and housing leaders wrote In their
congressional economists conclyde
rise from $111 bUllon this year to letter to Reagan.
It will produce annual deficits of
"Prolonged high interest rates
$100 bUilon for the foreseeable fu- $121 bUllon ned year, $129 bfillon ln
are creating an economic and !iture and business leaders plead for 1984, anrt $1!10 bUllon in 1985.
nanclal crisis In this country. In
a change of course to avoid economic disaster.
That runs counter to the adminls· order to bring interest rates down,
Leaders of the troubled financial tratlon prediction that Reagan's Immediate action must be taken to
and housing Industries told Reagan ' budget · will produce a . steady reduce massive federal budget deIn a Jetter Thursday that he has " no downward trend of deficits - $98.6 flclts," they said.
alternative" but to seek higher btlllon this year; $91.5 bUllon In . The letter was signed by the
taxes, .reduced miUtary spending 1983; $83 bUllon tn 1984; and $72 btl- ·heads bf American Bankers Associ·
ation. Mortgage 'Bankers Assocla·
and cuts in government benefit pro- lion In 1985.
grams such as Social Security In
The differences are due to less tton, National Association of Home
order to trim deficits.
optimistic assumptions of the econ- Builders, Mutual Savings Banks,
omy and higher Interest costs as National Association of Realtors
House Republican leader Robert well as higher estimated spending and U.S. League of Savings
H. Michel of llllnols .told reporters for the programs In Reagan's Associations .
Thursday that a bUI the administra- budget, principally the Pentagon
Members of those groups have
tion will need passed by May to and farm price supports.
been especially hard hit by persist·
· raise the nallonal debt ceiling w!U
Most analysts say It Is the pros- ently high i11terest rates and some
fall unless It Is linked to "a budget pect of high deficits that has kept have said their buslness problems
resolution . that Indicates we are Interest rates high because of fears are hurting much more than they
narrowing the deficit."
by lenders that huge government do during a typical recession .
Michel said he thinks the way to borrowings In later years either
Allee M. Rivlln, director or the
do that Is tone down planned de- will fuel a new surge in infiatlon or Congressional Budget Office, told
fense spending Increases, reduce create a credit shortage.
the Senate Appropriations Commit·
cost-of-living Increases In various
"More than ·anything else, It Is tee on Thursday that "large and rtsgovernment benefit programs and the spectre of an oveJWhelmtng vo- lng budget deficits could seriously
defer an Income tax cut scheduled lume of deficit Unanclng which Impair the overall performance of
tor 1983.
haunts housing and financial the economy over the longer run ."

Consumer Price Index
285 .

Base Period
1967 . 100

280 •
275.

270 •
265•
260 "'MAMJ JA
1981
Source: Dept. of labor

CONSUMER PRICE INDEXThe unadjusted Collllumer Price
Index rose to 282.51o January, according IG the Departmeul ol

Labor. Goods and services
e011tlng $10 Ia IINI7 would have
e0111 $28.25 last mouth. (AP
Laserphoto).

·-Pomeroy offiee among 16.. not closing

Re~ ~.oo w~~.R .. Sale~~ Il '13.9~~~~:E~SSa~ ·~oo I ,., ..,~~~~ RO~~... ""
1

enttne

Leaders urge Reagan
to abandon '82 budget

BEGINS·FRIOAY, FEB. 26 AT 9:30AM.
FINAL CLEAN-UP ON WINTER
. CLOTHES

~ALL SALES

•

at y

e

ELBE.RFELDS IN POMEROY

1

About your Social Security

•

Thursday, Febrvary 25, 1982

that given the agency last year.
GUes said the offices that are to
~matn open are In Bryan, Bucyrus, Cadiz, Caldwell, Eaion, McAr·
thur, McCoMeilsvlUe, Millersburg,
Mt. Gilead, Nelsonvtile, New Lex·
ington, Ottawa, Pomeroy, Urbana,
West Union and Woodfield.
The 22 offices still to be clOsed are
at Barnesville, Cincinnati, CtrcJe.
vlUe, Cleveland, East LlverpcJOI,
Hlllsboro, Kenton, Logan, Loudon,

·S ubstitute teacher pay
to a regular teachers' salary schedule. Formerly the period Involved
before the transfer to tile regular
schedule was 60 days.
The board named John Batley
and John Coffman to the substitute
teachers Ust and agreed that Paul
Baer shall return to a regular bus
driving route In the district.
The board entered Into a contract
with Ohio University providing that

The pay status of substitute
teachers In the Eastern Local
School District was Improved
Thursday ·night when the district's
board of education met In regular
session.
The board adopted a resolu tlon
which provides that in the future,
substitute teachers working .lor 30
consecutive days In the district will
be transferred after that time over

stat~s.

Middletown, Piqua, Port Clinton,
Toledo, Van Wert, Wauseon, Waverly, Willard , Wllm1ngton, Fostoria, Columbus and Carrollton.
In addition, Work Incentive Program offices at Youngstown,
Springfield, Lancaster, Ironton and
Painesville also will be closed. The
functions of th&lt;~~e off1ces Will be
shifted to Job Service offices in
tiKl8e cities.

improved ·

field students of the u.nlverstty can
wtlrk In the district. A service
agreement with the Meigs ~unty
Board of Mental Retardation was
accepted.
Library aides were authorized to
attend a workshop In Marietta on
March 18 and 19 and a trip by FFA
students to the French City meat
packing establishment In GaUia
County was approved. It was

agreed to advertise for an assistant
baBeball coach and to hire substitute teachers to work tor head
teachers whq wUI be Involved In a
slate Inspection of schools on
March 9, 10 and 1.1.
The board approved $150 tor .
playground equipment tor the
Chester Elementary School 81\d·
purchased two new sewing rna."
chlnes tor the home economics department. Some equipment was
also purchased for the Industrial

Judge denies conditional probation .a~e::.~~~ssedworkwhich
She was charged with two counts
of aiding and abetting In the theft of
drugs and of being the owner and
burg, because she Is a drug
operator of a motor vehicle used in
dependent person was dented by
committing the theft ot drugs. Wll·
Judge John C. Bacon in the Meigs
son had entered guilty pleas to both
County Common Pleas Court Frl·
charges but her attorney had
day morning and WUson was orsought conditional probation for
dered to begin serving a four to 25
her slnce she Is a drug dependent
year sentence Imposed earlier .
The four to 25 year sentence In the · person.
Wilson and her husband , Michael
Women's Reformatory at Marys·
ville was banded down by Judge
Bacon originally on Feb. 4 when
• Wilson appeared to face charges
for her role ln the armed robbery of
the Swlsher·Lohse Pharmacy in
Pomeroy o,n Nov. 29.
A motion for conditional proba·
tion for Anita Wilson , 26, Reynolds·

Amos WUson , 28, also of Reynolds·
burg, were apprehended ln Pomeroy on Nov. 29 after a wild evenlug
following the robbery of the Pomeroy drug store. There was a pollee
chase, an exchange of gunfire with
Michael Wilson being Injured and
there was the taking of hostages by
WUson as pollee closed In on the
couple following the robbery and at·
tempts to escape apprehension.

must be done as recommended by
an engineering finn on tbe high
schoOl because of structural dlffl·
cultles and discussed placing a tax
levy before voters In June to provide funds for that work. No action
was taken, however.
Attending the meeting were Supt.
Richard Rogers, Treasurer Eloise
Boston and board members, Dorset
Larkins, WUllam Buckley, Roger
Gaul, James Caldwell and Bemard
Shrlvers.

vafidals
pound
vehicle
Larry Groggel, Route 1, Portland, reported that the windshield
on the driver's side of his car was
smashed and the emergency brake
lever was pulled back"BI\d jammed.
The car was parked on the South·
em High SChool parking lot Thursday night, according to the report
Wed with the Meigs County sheriff's department.
In other activities, deputies today
were transporting three Individuals
to the ColumbusS:::Orrectional FacUlty begin serving sentences imposed this week In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Transported were Lance Tyrone
Herman, Rodney D. Jordan and TImothy M. Herdman, all given slx
month to five year sentences on un·
lated breaking and entering
incidents.
Meanwhile, Pomeroy poUce In·
vestlgated an accident at 10: 15a.m.
(Continued oo page 12)

w

Increasing cloudiness tonight with a chance ohnow by morning . .
Lows tn the mid to upper 20s. Cloudy with a chance of snow or rain
Saturday. Highs 3540. Chance of precipitation 30 percent tonight and
40 percent Saturday. winds easterly to northeasterly around 10 mph
tonight.
£ytended Oblo Forecut

The original closlrigs were scheduled after cuts In the federal
budget. But Giles said the 16 offices
can be kept open because Ohio has
received some additional money
from the federal government.
"Naturally, we are gra terul for
the additional money to help main·
taln our statewide operations at a
respectful level," Giles said.
However, he said, federal funds
for OBES are 18 percent less than

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services has changed s~. saying 16
of 38 offices earlier scheduled for
cloSing wU; i'"'llaln open.
However, OBES Administrator
Albert G. GUes said Wednesday the
agency still .will close 22 office s ln
the next 30 to 120 days. Some em·
ployees will be laid Qff, but substan·
tlally fewer thai! the I,OOl planned
earlier.

1

Stnul•y ~~!roUP Tueaday:
C1oanCe of rain or- Moada¥· Fait Stmda:y lllld 'rueldaJ. JUcha
1D tile Ill aDd low 40a S• hy IIIII 1D tile mlci-IOI to lbe IJIId.llll
MendaJ aDd TafJ!day, U.. 1D lbe
Stmda:y IIDd MondaJ llld Ill
lbe mid-ZOe to the ~ 'l'ue8da)'.

:eu.

1

GETS READY - Rebert D. 8mlll1, u lJt.
•tnuoc•tal profeuor at Oblo Qsdvenlty, worted wltb
lbe Melp HJgb Sebool Sympbosdt Baud n.msday af.

\

11:- u llle bud prepared lor Ill 1prlug coucert,
"All EvniDC c1 Mule" IG be presented at 7:31 ,p.m.
sat Tlnsnday 1D lbe Larry R. Morrison G}'DIDBIIDID of
llle Jd&amp;ls Kbool.

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