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Vol.29, No. 214
Copyrighted 1981 .

MANGer
PLJ5HED OFF 11-IE

THESE DA.Y5.

Six workers were · Injured-one
critically-this morning when an ex·
plosion ripped through the side of a
barge dry-docked for repairs at M
and G Transport, 267 Upper River
Rd.

AND THOSE Wt=RE'
c.JUSTTHE
CO!Vv\-\ERCIALS.

YESTE~DAY I 5A.W
A WCJI.AAN ~PED

WHEN HER Krro-teN
EXPl-ODED.

·'

f '

-o ,_.,..,, 100.. Nllog' U.I .IIiU 'NOll.

HE" WA? RACING UPSTAJ
TO THE BATHROOM ANP
HE FELL/

HOW HE
TWISTED HI$
ANKLE.

THEN
CRACKED
HIS ELOOW ON
THE BATHROOM .

DOOR"'

WHEN HE GRABBED
AT THE SHOWER CURrAIN,

THE ROD CAME VOWN
AND SMACKED HI$ HEAI7.

U.ted in critical condition at
Holzer Medical Center with third
degree burns to the face, eyes and
lungs is Delbert Williams, 25,
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. A
spokesman for HMC said late this
morning Williams was expected to
be transferred to University
Hospital in Columbus later todaf.
· Also injured were Charles Bord·
man, 52, Pl. Pleasant; Robert L.
Saunders, 28, Gallipolis; Fred J.
Neece, 39, Dexter; David Adkins, 32,
Crown City; and, Larry D. Church,
40, Crown City.
Bordman was treated and
released at HMC for first and second
degree burns to the ·face. Church
was treated and released for first
degree bums to the face. Saunders
was treated for minor first degree
burns, and released.
Although they reportedly suffered
only minor injuries, no information
wall available at press time con·
ceming the condition of Neece and
Adkins.
Gallipollil City Fire Chief James
Northup said that, although the In·

--·JUST BEFORE
HE ?LIPPED 0\1 TI-lE
RUG AND FELL INTO
THE TUB.

in explosion

formation was sketchy, it appeared
the explosion occurred while
welding operations were being conducted on the barge.
Gallipolis City Police and the city ·
fire department were called to the
scene at8:59 .a.m.
The explosion ripped through a 5().
foot section of the barge. The onehalf inch metal was peeled away
below and over the top of the drydocked vessel.
"It was a gasoline barge," the
chief said, "we have reports that it
had been inspected and approved for
repair." Northup added that the
barge had reportedly been under
repair for approximately two weeks.
There was no immediate official
explanation as to the cause of the ex·
plosion.

\

\

Ray Bush, of the city fire depart·
ment, said a flash fire accompanied
the explosion, which shook the contents of homes across the river and
as much as a mile away from the
site on the Ohio side.
Merchants at the Silver Bridge
Shopping Plaza reported numerous
windows were broken by the force of
the eltplosion.
Firemen said a full investigation
of the accident was expected to be
conducted by the U.S. Coast Guard.

in
grand theft case
~

The Meigs County Sheriff's De par·
trnent Is investigating a grand theft
case and and a breaking and en·
tering.
According to the report Lester
Thomas, operator of the Salem Cen·
ter Store, notified the state highway
Patrol that a person had taken cash
from the register.
.• -'!lie sheriff'I deputies learned that
two young men had pulled into the
station for gasoline. While gas was
being put in the car, one of them
went into the store. Shortly after
Thomas entered. the store, he
noticed the re~il!ter drawer open and

AND HE WAS GETTING ME

PCOR POP.' WHAT
WAS HE IN SUCH A
HURRY FOR~

•

Pai~ .s~ught

by·Ed Sullivan

·P riscilla's Po

•

""""'IX InJure

STA~VIN~ ~5.

ROOFCF=A
SKY5cAAPI:R.

1 Section, 1o pages 1.5 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 16, 1981

•

AN011-IER ONE W.A5
ATT.Aa&lt;eD
BYA 6-AN~OF

IJU5T~WA

en tine

at

e

b Dick Cavalli
THEREe TO:J MUQ-i
VIOLENCE
ON TELEV1510'-l

•

currency totaling $235 was missing.
The pair then headed west on SR
124 towards Wilkesville. The car was
described. as an old Nova or Camero,
dark blue in color. Responding to the
call, in addition to the sheriff's
department was Vinton County
Sheriff's Department. Wilkesville
Police and highway patrol.
Herb Coler. Coolville. reported
that sometime between Thursday
and Saturday a cabin owned by him
located on Indian Run was entered.
Taken was a radio, two lanterns and
an 1.800 watt AC generator.

Patrol cites man for DWI

.AN AI/HE51VE. BANDAGE .'

A Bidwell man was injured In a
\ one-car accident in Gallia County
Saturday afternoon, according to the

Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio-Highway Patrol.
(Continued on page 10)

Weather
Extended forooast - Wednesday through Friday. Mild weather
with showers Wednesday and Thursday. Fair Friday. Highs. in the 50s
and lows from the mid·50s to low 40s.
Mostly cloudy and mild with a chance of showers today, tonight
and Tuesday. Highs today in upper 40s. Low tonight in mid 30s.

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--Jg,,;.~·.,....~, .....;. .
BARGE EXPLOSION - Sill workers were Injured this morning
when an explosion ripped through tbe side of a barge dry-docked lor
repairs at Mand G Transport. The explosion ripped through a 59-loot sec-

·~- ,._.

...(( , ...

lion of the barge, peeling the one-baH tach metal siding below and over
the top of the vessel. There was no Immediate olflclal explanation as to
the cause of the explosion.

Despite surplus, no break
forthcoming ·in gas prices
.

great that "the induslry may have to
drink it.''
But his Lu,ndberg Letter, a weekly
oil industry periodical, stressed that
" regardless of surpluses, certain in·
creased costs must get through to
the pwnp, so a decline in prices is
not a reasonable prospect at this
time."
The letter said consumer con·
servation of gasoline and continued
production of fuel oil for winter
heating were combining to create
stocks of 2'11 million barrels of gas at
refineries, in pipelines and at large
tenninals throughout the country.
Another oil industry publication
official said Sunday that the nation

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
United Stales' rapidly growing
reserves of gasoline are so great
that refineries may be forced to slow
down or shut down and gas prices
eventually may drop, an oil industry
analyst says.
Dan Lundberg said oil-production
runs at refineries are at
~~ uneconomic rates" and gasoline
stockpiles, fast approaching a
record-breaking inventory, arc so

I

has begun to control its conswnption
of petroleum products and could be
on the way to .easing the energy
problem "without fully realizing it."
German Chacin, editor of the
Energy Detente newsletter, said the
U.S. economy has improved its
energy efficiency 12 percent since
the Arab oil embargo of 1973. He said
that translates into a savings of 4.9
million barrels of oil a day.
"Since the pefrolewn price in·
creases of 1973-74, con·
servation ... has entered the scene
with a vigor that many wouldn't
have thought possible back in the
1960s and early '70s," Chacin said.
Energy Detente is a bilingual,

twice-monthly publication that
studies the energy situation in the
Western Hemisphere. It is affiliated
with the Lundberg Letter.
The Lundberg Letter, published
Friday, said refinery production
runs dropped to 72.7 percent of
capacity in January from an already
low 76.6 percent in December.
Refiners, who generally like to run
at about 90 percent capacity, are
faced with "even greater
slowdowns, perhaps shutdowns,"
the letter said.
Industry experts say production
runs of less than 75 percent aren't
profitable for most refineries.

Rutland hit heavy by fires
The small community of Rutland
was hit heavy by fires over the
weekend with losses totaling over
$75,000 as the result of two fires at
residence.s.
The Rutland Fire Department was
kept on the move Saturday night and
Sunday with the fires and were
assisted by the Pomeroy and Mid·
dleport Departments.
The first blaze occurred at aboul9
p.m. Saturday night at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Patterson on
College Ave.
Mr.and Mrs. Patterson were at
home , when the fire started. Pat·
lerson noted the lights in the home
flicker and investigating the large
garage neJtt to the house found the
structure on fire. The blaze apparently started from a wood burner
in the large garage and spread
quickly from .the garage to the upstairs of the tw()ostory frame home
and then moved to the downstairs.
The family saved very little from
its home. Patterson carried articles
from one bedroom, but was overcome by smoke and had to receive
first aid treatment.
An automobile and truck in the
garage were lost In the fire. The Pat·
tersons were able to free their large
dog from the blazing ·garage,
however.
· Firemen said that the home was a
total loss and damages were
estimated at a minimum of $50,000.
Rooms that were not gutted received
beavy water and smoke damage.

@ ,., 11'/ ..A, ..... TU llof. U.l . Pot. &amp; T1111 011. •

"OH, HE'll GET APASSING GRADE... IF HE DION'T
I'D HAVE HIM AGAIN NeXT SEMESTER!"

"NOW, EVERYBODY Rliliii[&lt;V'FTER ME:
''

'TAKE ME TO YOUFI'~TER!"

"IT'S PROIABLYTHE MPG. THAT'S THE THING
HAROLD 18 ALWAYS WORRYING ABOUT!"

FIRE DESTROYS HOME- Loll was ettlmated blamed. No one waa home at the time of the blaze. Six·
at tll,OUO Ia a lire wblelt leveled tbe frame home of , teen men and three lnlckl from the Racine Volunteer
Eatla R•ch Saturday evening on Old Portland R•d In Fire De.-rtment reaponded but the blaze was out of
Portland. An overheated woodbumlng Blove was control upon their arrival.

"BUT HEL!N, WE ALREADY HAVE IIQHT 'LATEAS'
THAT HAVE BECOME 'NOWS'I"

'

•

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1\o'

There is insurance coverage.
Firemen were on the scene until
after 2 a.m. Middleport sent an air
truck and Pomeroy a tanker to the
scene.
AI noon Sunday firemen were
called to Main St., where a one story
home owned by Charles Vance was
on fire . That home was also completely gutted and losses were set at
about $25,000 at a minimtun.

No one was at home when the fire
took place. The house was rented by
Debbie Hannon. Firemen said
cause of the fire was probably electrical'. Nothing was saved from the
blaze. Fii·emen were on the scene
until about 3 p.m. The Middleport
Department sent an air truck to the
scene . There. wa s insurance
coverage also on the Vance house.

COMPLETE LOSS-Rutland Fit·cmcn reported this large two story
home was a complete loss as the result of a fire Saturday night. Damages
to the property of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Patterson were set at a minimum of
$50,000. Hardly anything was saved from the home and the Patteraons
lost two motor vellicles parked in a large garage area where the fire !!tarted. A wood burner was · believed to have caused the fire .
~

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. February 16, 1981

Commentary

Meigs edges Wahama,51-50

Page-2-The DailY Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio '
Monday, February 16, 1981

What would an internal.security
SeCUrity COmmittee do ?..___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _Wi_rll_iam_F._B_uc_kl_ey_ll_r.
You have read abOut the new
Soviet submarine? It is called
Alpha, it is capable traveling below
sea level at 3,000 feet, i.e., 2,000 feet
deper than our own submarines. And
it can speed along at - 50 miles per
hour, which means a race beiween it
and our torpedoes would be roughly
open.
You have read that Senator Strom
Thurmond has proposed reconstituting the Senate Internal
Security Subcommittee? This
proposal has brought howls from aU
those congressmen and critics who
recalled how McCarthyism ruined
this country, even if they are a little
shaky in recalling jus thow. What on
earth would an internal security
committee do? one critic asks, After
all, the United States is at peace,
isn't it?
You may not have read (unless
you subscribe to Science magazine)
abOut the DeVimy Test Lab Ltd.; or
abOut Peter Virag; or abOut Jacob
Kelmer. Permit me ...
Peter Virag is a Canadian attorney who left Hungary in 1957,
which was a good time to leave
Hungary. He is Jewish, and a friend

__

.,, _

___;

of Israel. In 1972 he incorporated -at

an address near Montreal a firm
caUedDtlVimyTest Lab, Ltd., which
would devote itself to the manufal'ture and test of integrated circuits.
· In order to start up his enterprise,
Virag ordered . a whole mess of
sophisticated computer equipment
from various firms in California.
Equipment so sophisticated and so
useful potentially to anyone engaged
in the development of military
technology that its export to the
communist nations is barred under
the Jaw, a aw supervised by the
Commerce Department with, · of
course, the aid of the Jaw enlorc,ement agencies.
In the interval between 1972 and
1978, it gradually transpired that
DeVimy Test Lab, Ltd. was the
smallest test lab in the whole world,
existing only in its incorporation
papers. The California hottechnology material would arrive in
Montreal and be delivered to a
customs broker. The customs broker
had instructions to ship it to a firm in
Amsterdam. From Amsterdam the
goods sometimes were flown direl'-

__________

-,

The Daily Sentinel
ll1 Court Slrtel
Pollltroy, Olllo
114-lft-!IM
DEVOTED TO mE INTEREST OF mE MEIGS-MASON AREA

pubiJiher

Waiter Spawr are two patriots who
own Spawr Optical Research, Inc.,
in Corona, Calif., and they have been
convicted of exporting copper watercooled mirrors to Switzerland and
West Gennany for reshipment to the
Soviet Union .
Investigation
disclosed that the principal
initiating purchaser was the physics
institute of Moscow University,

which wanted the mirrors for particle beam and laser research to be
used - for Soviet anti-satellite
weaspons, presumably.
Is it really a waste of time for a
congressional committee to inqlrlre
into this mess, propose remedial ' •
legislation, and devote itself to this ;~
one concrete lesion in the national ;..
'
security?

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Newi Editor

A MEMBER of Tlw Auocla1ed Press, llllaDd Daily PreN A..odaUoa aud liM
Amrricaa Nt:W!Ipaper Pllblishen Aa•oclltiog,

LETTERS OF OPINION an welcomed. Tbey ellouhl be leu thu - werdt loac. AD
letttn arr 111bjttt iAJ td.JUng aDd mltll be 1lped wl\b umc. addral ADd kiepbolw
oumber. No II.DIIiped letters will be publllbcd. l.dWn shouhl be lD 1ood CU&amp;e, addrallq
ilisun. DOt penoaallttes.

It is inevitable
II President Reagan manages to cut the size of government, as
promised, it won't happen without cries from critics that he is insensitive
to the needs of people. It is inevitable.
·
Amid the howling, therefore, how long are "the people" likely to stand
behind their President'
Two years, at least, says Richard Lesher, President of the Chamber of
Commerce and an outspoken exponent of the "let's rebuild America"
theme, a theme he chose, as the title of his recent book.
Two years is Lesher's minimum estimate, based on the unlikely chance
Reagan will make almost no progress toward his goals of cutting taxes,
spending and regulations. But if he succeeds as Lesher expects him to,
t)len the support, Lesher says, " will be indefinite."
Unlike analysts who claim the recent election shouldn't be interpreted
as a mandate for Reagan's fiscal conservatism, Lesher insists it is just
that. And, he says, when the tax and other cuts are in place the President
probably may generate even greater support.
It is inconceivable that Reagan won't show early progress, he says, and
he claims that some of that progress even now is beginning to show ill the
decline of interest rates, a direction he expects to continue.
"And there absolutely will be a tax cut," he said." A deep personal cut
and a cut in business taxes," as well as reductions in the marriage
penalty, capital gains and taxes on interest, dividends and royalties.
Soon, Lesher believes, there wiU be evidence of huge spending cuts. He
predicts that "bOth the energy and education departments will be
dismantled," and that many regulations will be tamed or eliminated.
"Our candidate is OSHA,' j-he said, referring to the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration, considered by some businessmen to be an
agency of harassment rather than one dedicated to remedying abuses.
Lesher is convinced voters will support such a program as it evolves,
and he believes they will remain with the President as he reviews and
stripa government from energy issues, develops foreign trade and builds
the country's military strength.
Some critics of Reagan's military program contend it is at odds with
the thrust of other goals, which largely involve cuts in spending and the
reduction of government's role in the economy. Military spending is, after all, government spending. "Big government" spending.
It doesn't disturb Lesher: It is, he says, what the people want. And, yes,
he added, it is consistent with the Chamber's vision of returning to basic
American principles: Defense, he said, is 511ch a principle.

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" What do YOU say - do people kill people, or
do guns kill people?"

Tothy in history.

·• •

Today is Monday, Feb.l6, the 47th day of 1981-. Thereare318 days left in
ihe year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Feb. 16, 1959, Fidel Castro became the premier of Cuba.
On this date:
"
In 1804, a force of U.S. Marines slipped into Tripoli harbor and burned
ihe U.S. Navy frigate Philadelphia, which had been captured by pirates.

•

remaining.

He sank the first of a one-plus
tying the game.

Following a Wahama time out,
Miller coMected again to put Meigs
ahead. Wahama failed to get off a
shot before the buzzer soWlded.
Meigs hit 47 percent from the field
and 45 percent from the foul line.
Wahama hit 36 percent from the
floor and 58 percent at the foul circles.
Meigs (51) - Ashley 9·0· 18; Miller
5·3·13; Judge A·0·8; Ohlinger 1-2-4;
Dodson 2·0·4; Smith 2·0-A and
Wayland 0-0-0. TotaiS23+SI.
Wahamo !SOl - Gibbs 10·10·30;
Ingels 4· 1·9; Barnltz 2-0·A; Roush l ·l·
3; Gray 1·0·2; Fowler 0-l-l; Gilland
0·1·1. and Kitchen 0-l-1. Totals 11·14·

BOYS' SECI'IONAL
ClaN Ali
AT AmENS HIGHSCHOOL
lbundoy, Fdl. II
f

·7:31p.m.- Sheridan va. Warren.
Frldoy, Fdl. n
7 p.m.- Melp vs. Nn Leld.ngton

9 p.m. - Meiga-New l..eWlgton wiMer va.
Sheridan-Warren winner.
Soblnlay, Man:b 7
7:30p.m. - ChampioRihi.p ga~. winner advances to d!Atrict tournament at Ollio University
to play Portsmooth wiMer .ort Fridllly, March 13.
AT PORTSMOUTH HIGH SCHOOL

'•'

. . . . ...
•

Wahama a 50-49 lead. Meigs then
elected to go for the victory on a last
second shot.
However, a traveling violation
with four se-conds left gave Wahama
the ball.
Miller stole the Inbounds-pas8 and
was fouled with two seconds

•

,

Friday, Feb. 27

6:30p.m.- Northwest va. Irontvn.

e p.m. - Jackson VB. Pw1amoulh Weal.
7:30

Wectae.day, Maid 4
Wheelenburg va. Northwest-

p.m. -

Ironton winner.
'111ur"'Uy, Man=• 5
7:30 p.m.- JacUon..Portarnoulh Weal winner
vs. Minford.

.

Leuer to editor

GOP plots rearportionment__no_b_Wc__::ag_ma_n
will gain three, cililoruia will gain
two, and Washington, Oregon, New
Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Utah,
Colorado and Tennesee will each
gain one,
Moreover, population shifts will
also require most of the remaining
states to redraw district lines to
maintain the constitutional
requirement that aU House districts
be as equal as possible in population.
All of this redistricting must be completed by 1982.
The Republicans see this process
as a golden opportunity to follow up
on their 1960 victories. The party and
conservative organitatons are
hoping to provide state legislatures
with technical help In drawing boundaries in such a way that many of
the new or redesigned districts will

elect Republicans to Congress in
1982.
These redistricting plans will be
based on the concept of "compact
districts", which involves the tight
grouping of citizens of like interests
into a single district. In practice,
this means attempting to place all
members of a racial or ethnic community in a single district.
Let's say that a town with a
relatively large black population Is
entitled to two representatives in
Congress. If most of the blacks are
concentrated in one congressional
district, it is likely that they would
elect a liberal Democrat - probably
a black - to represent that district
but would have little Impact on the
outcome In the other district. If the
blacks were divided equally between

the districts, however, they might
exert enough Influence to elect
liberals to both congressional seats.
So, concentrating blacks and other
liberal Influences into the smallest
possible number of districts In·
creases the chances that more conservative candldatei - in otyher
words, Republicans - will be elel'ted In the other districts. According
to one estimate, such redistricting
could affect six of the 18 members of
the Congressional Black Caucus.
So, you can expect to hear many
redistricting arguments based on
the "theory" that good government
rquires compact districts.
In many of the sta~s that are
losing districts, two Dtlmocratlc incwnbents · wlil be forced to run
against each other In party
primaries unless one steps aside.

so.

By Quarters:
Meigs
Wahama

ll 12 l7 14-51
l1 12 13 11- .10

Tournament pairings

'

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one.
Florida will gain four seats, Texas

Wahama gained a 21-17 advantage
midway through the second canto,.
saw Meigs score six straight points
to take a 23-21lead before Gibbs tied
the game just before intermission,
23-23.
Wahama opened its biggest lead of
the night, 32-27 early in the third
period only to see the Marauders answer with three straight buckeis for
a 3$-3lllead.
In the final seconds of the quarter,
Mike Miller scored on successive
baskets glvlng Meigs a 46-36 lead
going Into the final period.
The Marauders scored the first
three points to take a 43-36 lead
before Wahama bounced back tying
the game at 45-45 with four minutes
remaining .
Another bucket by Gibbs made it
47-45 but Chris Judge tied it again,
47-47.
Gibbs and Steve .Ohlinger traded
baskets to knot the score at 49-49
with less than a minute to go.
At that point, Deron Gilland,
sophomore guard for the White
Falcons, made one of two free
throws with 49 seconds left giving

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Two weeks ago I suggested a sales predecessor, Reuben Eskew, · all the statistics and computers they heating bill.
When they part with sales tax
tax on car 3J1d truck fuel as a way to Florida has a hive full of honey, a need to come up with a fair sales tax
recover soine of Ohio's dwindling , half .biUion dollar surplus in its rate. Then they will -no longer need money, they know they will get
highway revenue. When t wrote the treasury . Raising taxes is anathema to worry abOut high prices wrecking something in return . In spite of whai·.
article, which the editor kindly used to any legislator and especially so their highway plans. The higher the the oil executives and politicians
prices, the more tax revenue . I think, the public may be gullible but
as an editorial, I had no idea Florida when there is no dire need.
would
guess th8t a gas sales tax rate they are not stupid.
Like
a
bunch
of
overgrown
Governor Bob Graham was looking
of·
abOut
ten percent would do the
Think what will happen if Govergrasshoppers,
they
want
to
spend
over my shoulder.
nor
Reagan and his merry henthe
surplus
before
they
take
any
al'trick.
Apparently_ he was because
rr
you
think
that
rate
is
chmen
in the legislature opt to stick
tion.
They
need
only
look
at
destitute
yesterday he called on the Florida
with
the
status quo. Everything I
Ohio
to
see
the
bee
has
a
.
lot
more
unreasonable,
think
again.
When
legislature to restructure the salei
President Reagan removed all price read or hear points to $2 gasoline
tax law to include gasoline, deisel sense than the grasshopper. It will
be interesting to see how Governor controls from oil, the press reported before the year is out.
fuel and gasohol.
.
the oil company executives were
The governor is only doing what Graham makes out.
In his rush to make a grand
If I had known the governor was
" jubilant.''
Ohio officials should have . done
gesture by decontrolling oil,
So they were, I suppose, for they President Reagan let IOO!ie the
years ago - looking ahead. Florida watching, I would have made my
has eight cents per gallon state gas proposal more specific. ! was en- celebrated by raising gasoline, revenging oil wolves among us
tax for highway purposes. The state visioning an enlightened Ohio deisel fuel and heating oil prices to , defenseless sheep. As the price of oil
legislature scrapping all their out- the highest level ever. The public, products rises, the gallons sold will
retail sales tax is four ~rcent.
The Department of Tran- dated gallonage taxing system for a 'beat down by inflation, accepted this drop and highway revenues with
newest jolt phlegmatically, although them. II you think you have
sportation (DOT) estimates that sales tax on all car and truck fuel.
DOT will have a $2 billion deficit by All this revenue would be used for they don't get a nickel back in im- ctiuckholes in your roads now, jusi
1985. The . department is already highway purposes only. Then, I proved roads or anything else. I wait.
feeling the pinch caused by reduced thought, the state could afford a have yet to see a jubilant motorist
You ain't seen nothing yet! gallonage due to high prices, con- decent access road to the new $17 driving away from a gas station or a Lowell Wingett.
home owner jubilantly payin~ his
servation and smaller cars. Graham million bridge at Ravenswood .
If
I
have
dwelt
overlong
on
estimates the suggested additional
tax for highway use will bring in $292 Florida, it is only to prove that other
states have revenue problems too,
million yearly.
Naturally, the governor's proposal either present or pending. I predict
instantly drew opJF.ition. In the that many more states will be tursame news story, the Republican ning to the gas sales tax unless they
leadership in the legislature em- would rather sink into genteel poverMust help ourselves
phasized they wanted no part in ty and let their roads go to hell. My
All we need is to help ourselves as to sewer costs. We are starting
messing with the tax structure. only criticism of Governor
not
wait for President Reagan .
' out, in debt and paying, two or more
Graham's
proposal
is
it
doesn't
go
Perhaps it's only their way of flexing
on
TV
News,
people
in
a
I
saw
years before the system Is
the new muscle they think they have far enough.
Now that the governor and I have West VIrginia community trying to operational. What will our costs be
since President Reagan carried the
proposed the way, the whiz kids that do something about their runaway once it is In operation? Can we pay It
state.
Thanks to the careful fiscal make up the Ohio legislature can cost,_up to $50 per month, for sewage - don't ask the president - ask
policies of Graham and his carry the ball from here. They have semce.
yourself, or the people that are
I would like for people in Syracuse operating the system now. - Brooks
and Racine to realize their situation Sayre, Syracuse, Ohio..

WASHINGTON (NEA)- A chief
order of business fo most state.
legislatures this year will be the
reapportiorunent of congressional
districts based n the 1980 cenaus.
The Snowbelt-to-Sunbelt
population shift documented jby the
census will require the Northeast to
give up nine of its 113 current seats
and the Midwest to relinquish eight
of its 121 seats. The South will add
eight seats to its current 125, while
the West wiU add nine to its 76.
Ten states will close at least one
seat. New York will lose_live, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Illinois will each
lose two, and indiana, Michigan,
Missouri, New Jersey, South Dakota
and Massachusetts will each lose

:. • , •wo of those wins came at the
• ~ ,, ..eoftheWhiteFalcons.
Saturday night's first hall action
was a scoring contest between
Wahama's Larry Gibbs and Meigs'
Bob Alihley. Gibbs netted 19 in the
half while Ashley had 14.
Wahama, after falling behind 3-0,
reeled off six straight unanswered
points before Meigs knotted the
game at 11-ll at the end of the first
quarter.

.••
••-·
;i

BOBHOEFUCH

Astfslaot Publlshu/Cootro,ler

•

strategic laser equipment, sent to a
man in Vienna who claimed to be 'a
professor directing a re;earch institute affiliated with a university;
however, the institute's address turned out to be the apartment of the
"professor,' and the material, for all
we know, went into the manufacture
of that submarine. Nor is it all innocent at the U. S. end. Frances and

Florida has surplus in highway 'f unds:

ROBERT L. WINGETr
PATWHITEfiElD

tly to East Germany, sometimes to
Prague; sometimes they just disappeared.
Virag a commie? No. he did what
he did at the instigation of Jacob
Kelmer, an Israeli i)usinessman
operating out of Haifa, who appealed
to Virag's pri)-Israel sentiments Virag believed the hot goods were
going to the defense of Israel.
Payments for the goods were made
through money shipments to Swiss
banks - where the upstream trail
ended for American investigators,
because Swiss hanks don't talk. An
Albany, N.Y., grand jury indicted
Kelmer, but an Alhany, N.Y. , grand
jury doesn't have effective jurisdil'tion over Haifa businessmen, and it
is not known (to the writer, or to
Science magazine's) just what the
Israelis have done with, or to,
Kelmer.
An isolated case • Commerce
Department investigators have
discovered at least 50 such cases of
contrived diversions for the Soviet
Union of high-technology material
manufactured in the United States
though specifically prOhibited from
export to the corrununists. And they
estimate that there have been
several times 50 infractions of the
law. In other words, that it is abOut
as easy to smuggle high technology
out of the United States as it is to ·
smuggle drugs into the United
States.
There is a large Jist of the hot stuff
we know of that has leaked through
to the Soviet Uruon. It includes

Mike Miller sank two free throws
with two seconds remaining Satur·
day night giving the Meigs
Mara•!ders a thrilling, 51-00 win over
Wahama.
Miller's iast second heroics over·
shadowed a great performance by
Wahama's Larry Gibbs. Gibbs
finished the game with 30 points and
21 rebounds.
The victory, Meigs' second in a
row, increased its season's record to

Sa1Urday, Mart!• 7
7:30 p.m. - Championship pme ; winner a~
vaooes to district tournament at Ohio University

to play Athens sectloo winner Friday, March 13.

OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE- Larry Gibbs, (%3) of Wahama
gets an easy layup' agabult Meigs High Scbool on this action photo from
Saturday's one point victory by Meigs. Gibbs enjoyed a floe ouUng with 3(1
polots and 21 rebOunds. Sbowo with Gibbs &amp;I'B Marauders Mike Miller (5),
Bob'Ashley, (41) and Jeff Wayland (lS).

Southern girls
remain unbeaten
BY SCO'IT WOLFE
ALBANY - Saturday afternoon at
.\lexander High School, Southern's
Tornadoettes placed four girls in
double figures to defeat the Alexander Spartans, 61-46, to remain undefeated in regular season play:
Southern now owns a perfect 15-0
record, while Alexander drops to~ Southern's perfect mark, coupled
with two losses by all other SV AC
schools has earned Southern the
SV AC championship for 1981.
Southern's remaining regular
season game is a league contest at
Kyger Creek Wedne~y.
Mel Weese ~ced Coach Con nee
Easlen's Whirlwinds with 19 points,
Elaine Smith had 16, Della Johnson
added 11, and Tammy Smith sank
10.
Candy Theiss led the Spartans
with a game high. 2Al points,
Uewellyn add 11 Hawk sank six,
Corsey five, and Lowry four . A good
game from the floor kept the talen·
ted Spartans in the game as they

Racine UMC
•
moves mto
first place·

connected on 17 of 40 attempts for 43
percent to best the Southerners in
that category.
.
Southern took a narrow ll-10 lead
in the first period and built up 29-20
lead at the half. Going down the
stretch in the third period, Alexander had its best quarter, outscoring
Southern 18-12 and cutting the lead
to41-38.
In the first 1ninute of the final
round the Southern Belles held a
narrow advantage, then stormed
throughout the rest of the period in
an awesome manner. Alexander
was forced to play Southern's game
the last round as Southern's defense
applied the pressure and held the
hosts to just eight points.
On the other side of the coin, the
winners erupted for 20 points,
whirling in for the triumph, 61.-46.
In that last round Southern had
two starters foul out, and had four
others playing with four fouls each.
On the night the winners ere
whistled for 27 fouls, while the hoSts
got caught for 18.
Southern hit 25 of 68 from the field
lor 37 percent, and registered II of 19
from the line for a 53 percent.
Alexander hit 12 of 29 from the
charity stripes for 41 percent.
Southern claimed the battle of the
boards 34-29 led by Della Johnson's .
10 and Cindy Evans with eight.
Theiss had 12 for the hosts. SHS had
15 turnovers, 16 steals, and two
assists.
BoK score :

Southern (61) - Weese 8-3·19 ;
Salser 2·0-A; Evans 0·0-0; Johnson 43 1l ; Smith 5·0·10 ; E. Smith 6·A·16 ;
Wolfe 0· 1-1; Michael 0·0-0. Totals lS·
11-61.
Aleunder (46) - Llewellyn 5-l11 ; Corsey 2·1·5; Theiss 6·8·10;
Lowry 2 0·4; Llghlfritz 0·00 ; Hawk
2-2·6; Bobo 0·0·0; Harper 0·0·0;
Wallace0-0-0. Totals 17-12-46.
Scofe by quarters :

Southern
Alexander

ll lB 12 2()-61
10 10 18 8- 46

ClouA
AT MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
Moadly, Feb. Z3
7p.m. - Southwestern vs. NorthGallla.
S:JO p.m. - Kyaer Creek vs. Southern,
Wedaetdaiy, Feb. !S
7:30p.m.- Southwe:stem-NorthGalll.a winner
vs. Meltts Easttm.
Frklly, Feb. t7
. 7::JG p.m. - Championship game. Southwestern-North Gallla-Eastem winner vs. Kyger
Creek..SOOthem winner ; winner advances to

diStrict tournament at Chtlli~!!\~ School to
play l.ucasvillt Valley winner
y, March
10,

BOYS' SI:CIIONAL
. CluiAAA.
Ai COit\loeaHoD Cea\tr
AtMu
Wed-y, Fdl. 25
6p.m. - OaWpollan. ~r .
7 p.m.- Miami Tr.cevs. M.ariet.W .
9 p.m. - Athens va. I.JJtlan.
·
Mardi I
7 p.m. - OalllpoliJ.-LIIncaster •iniH!r vs.

Chillk'Ulhe '
9 p.m. - Miami Tract--Marietta winner vs .
Atht.'OS-I.ogan WIMer.
Winners advance to the Marietta District.
BOYS' SKCTIONAL
ClouA
At II'OIItol
Moedlyt Manti) JS

6:30p.m.- Synunea Valley vs. Hannan Trace.
8:30p.m.- Green va. lronton St. Joe.
W~y,Marcht5

· Hannan Trace-Symmea Valley wlnner va. Oak
Hill.

Mart•l
WiMerolHT.SV..OH l(amtS va. Gnen.
Winner advan«:s to Chillicothe Oiatrict.
GtRLS' SECI'IONAL
lhu.UA
AT ALEXANDER HIGit SCHOOL
Satarda~ Feb. 11

1 ::!CJ p.m.- Logan V!l . Chmtcothe.
3:30p.m.- Miami Traeevs. Mari~W .
SlturUy, Feb. !I
3 p.m. - Mlam.l Trace-Marietta winner vs.
Athellll. LOwer bracket fllllls ; winner advanCI!!!I
tu district tournament at Sheridan High School to
play Eastern Dlstrlct lower bracket wlnn~r
'l'tlurtday, March ~attl : 30 p.m.
5 p.m. - LOgan-Chillicothe winner vs. Lancaurter Upper bracket rtna\s; winner advance! to
district tournament at Sheridan High School to
play Eaatern Dl!ltrict lower :bracKet winn~r
Tluamtay, March 5 at 8:30p.m.
CLASSAA
.

AT ATHENS HIGH SCHOOL
M.....y,Fdl.lt

Sp.rn . - Sheridan va. Warro.
7p.rn.- Nelsooville-Yort. vs. Belpre.
9p.rn.- Meigs vs. Aleunder.
Satllrday, Feb. !I

1 p.m. - Sheridan-Warren wiMer vs. New
l..exington .
3 p.m. - Nelsonville York·Belpre winner VI.
Meigs-Alexander winntt.
Soblnlay Fdl. Zl
2 p.rn._- Champl~p game; winner advances to district tournament at Atheru High
School to play Portamuuth sectional winner
Sw.turday, March~ AT PORTSMOUTH HIGH SCHOOL
.........y,Fob.17
6:30p.m.- Jacluonva, Northwest.
8 p.m.- Portsmouth West va. We\L!Iton. ,
Tlntrtday, Feb. II
6:30 p.m. - Wheelenburg va. JaclulonNtlrthwest winner.
ap.m. - Portsmouth West-WeUaton winner VI,

Ironton.

,.._,Feb. II

7 p.m. - O.mpi;;J,ip game; winner advances to district. tournament at Athens Hillh
Schuol to plly Athena sectional winner Saturdiy,
Man:h 7.

AT IRONTON HIGil SCHOOL
Tllortday Fob. II
6 p.m. - Cheupeake-~oulh winner va.
South Point.
7:30 p,m. - Rock Hlli·Falrland winner va.
GallipOI(s.

.

TlntndayFdi. ZI
7 p.m. - CMmptOMhip game; winner advances to cliltrict tournament at Athens High
School to play Unloto o&lt;d!ONI wln,.r Salurday
Mar&lt;h 1-

'

ATGAt.Grl~ADEMY

.

HIGHSCHOOL
1\ttndoy,Feb. JJ
·
7:30p.m.- Symrne~ Valley v1. Southwestern.
FrWoy, Fdl. Z1
6p.m.- MelpEoatern ... NorthGaiU..
a p.m.- Hannan Trtct VI. Federal Hocking.
l!o ......y, Fdl. ll
1p.m. - Southern VI, Oal11i11...
.
3 p.m. - Ky~~:er Creek va. Symmefl ValleySouthwestern winner.
Frtdoy, Fdl. n
6 p.m. - Meigs Eutem-North Gallla winner
vs. Ha(lllln Trice-Federal Hocking winner. Upper bracket champiONhip game; wlnntr advances to diatrict tournament at Chillicothe tugh
School to race Ohio Unlo.Jenlty Chillicothe upper
bracket wiMer Tue.Say , Mardl3, at I p.m.

TRIPPING OR NOT?- Wahama's Jerry Roush (20) appears to be
tripplog Meigs' Britt Dodson (%5) during Saturday's 51-50 thriller at
Wahama .

Marauder gals
post 61-46 win

BY SCOTr WOLFE
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
Marauder girls claimed a 61-46
come-from-behind win over the
Wellston Golden Rockets here recently behind another good team efforl
I p.m. -Southern-Oak Hill winner vs. Kyger
Cttek..Symmes VaUey..SOUthwe!lh!m wiMer, Meigs is 9-10 overall and 5-41 inside
Lower bn.cket championship aame: winner ad·
theSEOAL.
.
vance~ to district tournament at Olill1cothe High
School to face Ohio Universlty Chillicothe lower
21
points
led
Coach
Andrea
Riggs'
· bracket winner Thursday, March 5, at 6:30p.m.
Ron Logan's Marauders to the win,
while Pam Crooks had 11, Laura
Smith added ·10, and Kristen Anderson 10 for the victorious
Marauders.
'
Vickers led the Wellston club with
20 markers,_ Roberts sank 10, and
· McFadden netted nine lor the
Rockets.
The first quarter was completely
Fresh from a league victory F,ri- dominated by the visiting Wellston
day over Nortll Gallia, the
team aa It blasted off to II 1!&gt;-4 first
Southwestern puah was dealt a setperiod lead. Early in the second
round Wellston reeled Off four more
back Saturday when the Eastern
Pike Eagles rolled to an SUI vll'to take a 19-4 lead. Early in the
tory.
second round Wellston reeled off
four more to take a 19-4 lead. After a
It was a tight game throughout the
first hall, according to Coach Loyd
Meigs time out the hosts started to
Myers, who noted the Highlanders
take form and drained the first stage
jumped ahead one or two points on
explosives from the Rocket attack.
several occasions. They were one
The foul line proved to he very
point behind, 37-38, at the halftime
useful to the hosts as they canned 12
buzzer.
of 14 from the line in a comeback attack. Andrea Riggs hit five of six
from
the line, Laura Smith sank four
"That's when our ooys lost
of
five
crucial free throws, and Pam
everything,'' Myers said abOut the
Crooks
oot11 ends of a two shot foul .
third quarter, as the Eagles
When
the second period fireworks
outscored the struggling
Meigs
trailed by just one, 26ended,
Highlanders, 30-ll . Two defensive
•rebounds and 19 turnovers kept the 25.
Great teamwork and individual efSouthwestern men wen · behind
fort
propelled the Meigs gals to a 42throughout the remaining half.
37
lead
at the end of the third round.
Top scoring by the Eagles helped,
as Neal Leist contributed 27 points to The Marauders rode into victory
the Eastern effort. He was assisted lane following a hot final round and
with 17 by Steve Witt and 10 by G. claimed the hilrd fought ~1-46 win.
Tunnell.

Pike Eastern

whips SWHS

·Meigs hit 20 of 58 from the floor for
35 percent after hitting just si:!; of 29
the first half. Meigs hit 21 of 41
overall from the line for 51 percent,
while Wellston hit 16 of 32 for 50 per·
ce.nt.
Meigs had 29 rebOunds, led by
Riggs' seven, Smith's six, and
Oliver's six. Meigs had 13 turnovers
and 26 team fouls.
Coach Ronnie Chapman's Meigs
reserves pulled off a 22-15 win over
the little rockets in the preliminary
contest. Paula Horton Jed the winners with nine points, Cindy Crooks
had five, Susan Ughtfoot four, Paula
Swisher one, and Robin Buffington
three. K. McFadden led Wellston
with six, Howe and Potts had three
each, Fannin 'had two, and Martin
•
one.
Me!gs t•ll - Anderson 3-4·10;
King 0-2-2; Drehiil l-0-2; Crooks 4-J11 ; Riggs B-5·21; Smith 2-6-10;
Dillard 1·1·3; Oliver 1·0·2; DeBord 00-0. Totals 20-21-61 .
Wellston !46) - Mullen 0-l-l; c .
McFadden 4·1-9; Roberts 2-4-10;
Spencer o-3·3; Potts 1-0-2; MartinO·
1-l ; Hatten 1-0-2. Totals 15-16-46.
Score by quarters: 4 21 11 19-61
' x::r.;on
15 ll 1l ll - 46
.-------------

Local bowling

Southwestern's Wa'yne Sizemore
scored 15 points. Scott Russell contributed 12 and Todd Baker 13.
The Highlanders shot 54 percent of
its field goals (22 out of 41 attempts)
and 85 percent of the free throws (17
for2Al) .
In the reserve game, Eastern also
won,82-50.
Southwestern Is 11-10 overall and
5-4 In the league. They lace Wahama
Tuesday night and hannan Trace
Friday.
EASTERN PIKE (84) - Leist,
10-7-27 ; Witt, 6-5-17; Doll, j.i-5;
Tunnell, 3·4·10; Sloan, 3·1·7; Me·
Callister 3-2-8; Phillips, 3·0·6; Cantrell, 1·0·2; johnson, 1·0-2. Totals

32·30·14.
SOUTHWESTERN

-61)

Sizemore, 6·3·15; Burleson, 3·2·8;

Russell, 4-4-12; Newberry , 0-3-3;
Baker, 6·1·13; Sterrett, 3·2·8; Miller,
0·2-2. Total122-17-61 ,
Score by quarters;
19 II 30 17-14
Eastern Pike
Southwestern
16 20 11 14-61

Pomeroy Bewllog Lanes
MODday Early Mlied

League

Jan. II, 1911
Team

W.L

Roach's Gun Shop

31 12

Bill'oBodySnop
21 15
Team No. S
22 18
Ad-Taker No. 2
20 2()
McClure':s3 &amp; 1
l4 26
Ad-Taker No. t
12 %8
Men 'a hiMh aeries - Ray Roach $47; Ruaa Car·
""'135; Clyde Sayre 522WI)men'a high se ries - Betty Whitlatch &amp;.'H;
Debl Hensley 611; Pat Carson 502.
Men's high game - Bill" Smith 213; Clyde
Sayre 212; Roy Rooch 2113.
Women's hit~h t~ame - Betty 'Whitlatch 268.
202; Pat Carson 191.
Teamseriea- Roich'11Gun Shop2121.
Team game - Roa ch's Gun Shop 730.
Moaday Early Mixed
Leque
Feb. 2,1981

Team
Roach's Gun Shop
Bill'sBodyShop
McCiurt's3&amp; lll

W.L
42 14
30 26

! + !+

Ad-Taker No.2
26 ;,)
Team No. 5
22 34
Ad-Taker No. 1
20 36
~en' s hiteh series - Ray Rllach 5811: Danny
WLIJ :lei; Bob Hensley 004.
Women'!! high serle! - Milrlenc Wilson !~:it·
PatC.r!onOO&amp;: Deb1Henslev004.
'

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...,:_ ____ ..,---. ·- -- _J

�Monda , February 16, _1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A's, Tigers· open
• •
trrun1ng camps
spring training was canceled when owners.
the players called a work stoppage
"The players want nothing," he
to
protest
the
lack
of
progress
in
consaid.
"We have no demands on the
crisis peeking over the horizon,
The
labor
talks
table
and
we have no right to make
tract
negotiations.
major league bueball's spring
dragged
on
until
the
last
week
in
any
demands.
The gun Is in their
training camps open for business
May when management and the hands. It should surprise no one,
this week.
The Oakland A's, surprise second- . players' union, facing a strike however, that if they fire It at the
deadline, finally 'hammered out an players, the players will Shoot
place finishel"&gt;! in the American
agreement with the belp of federal back."
League West last season, are the firmediators in a marathon negotiation
For his part, Ray Grehey, the
st team in camp, with Manager Billy
session
that
lasted
some
19
hours.
owners'
chief negotiator, ~
Martin sending his pitchers and catUnresolved at that time was the glum.
chers lhrough.their opening workout
An eternal optimist through the
issue of compensation - what a club
Sunday in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Today, Detroit. Manager Sparky losing a quality free agent player 19M labor talks, Grebey said. "I
Andersoo welcomes the Tigers' bat- should receive in return. ·The two never shut the door on tomorrow,
terymen to their camp at Lakeland, sides established a committee to but I seen no prtllrelll. We were
study the question, but there has given the right to do something (IJn.
Fla.
plement the compensation
After tluit; a couple of teams will beenlittlemovementontheissue.
Under
terms
of
the
May
23
proposal). We are entering a period
drift into Florida and Arizona
1980
in which some hard decisions must
agreement,
which
averted
a
training camps almost daily. Cin,
cinnati will be the last team to report strike, management has the option be made ."
While the two sides wrestle over
on March 4. When the Reds go to of unilaterally putting into place jts
work at their Tampa, Fla. base, compensation proposal, a plan the last remaining contract luue,
there will be 18 teams in Florida, which the players previously rejec- teams will start getting in shl1pe for
the !981 season. Some 385 eshibiUon
and seven in Arizona, with the ted.
That
action
coUJd
come
any
time
games are scheduled before opening
California Angels training at Palm
this
week.
day,
when the Phillies play the Reds
Springs, Calif.
II it does, the players have until at Cincinnati.
The American League champions,
Only one team has switched
the Kansas City Royals, are due in March 1 to do one of three things.
Fort Myers, Fla ., Feb. 21, and tbe They can either accept the plan · training headquarters, the Montreal
world champions, the Philadelphia (unlikely); reject it and set a strike Expos moving from Daytona Beach
Phillies, arrive at Clearwater, Fla. to start prior to June 1 (more to West Palm Beach, where they join
likely) ; or ask management to ap- the Atlanta Braces.
Feb. 25.
Three clubs, KaiiB&amp;S City, Texaa
That's the same date ti)e Major prove a waiver of their 1981 strike
League Players Association is rights, reserving the right to strike and San Diego, will leave the conscheduled to meet at Tampa, Fla. in 1981 (also unlikely). That decislon tlnental United States thla spring.
The Royals and Rangers wlll be in
and decide on a next step in the con- will be made at the Tampa meeting.
Marvin Miller, executive director San Juan, Puerto Rico March :IS-H
tinuing debate over compensation
for clubs losing free agent players in of the players association, wants It for games to benefit the ROberto
clear that any action the players Clemente Sports City. The Padres
the re-entry draft.
A year ago, the final week of take will be in response to the play in Mexico City March J().lt-12.

By Associated t'relis
With the spectre of another labor

RICHARD TAKES HIS SEVENTH- Richard Petty, driving a STP Buick ( 43) gets the checkered flag as

he wins for the seventh Ume, Ihe Daytona 500. (AP
Laserphoto).

:P etty surprises ~llison for
seventh Daytona win
By Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Richard Petty, the "King" of stock
car racing, got a break Sunday when
favored Bobby Allison ran out of gas
late in the . race, then took a
calculated risk and went on to wrap
up his sevenf11 Daytona 500 victory.
a seven-time NASCAR
1 Petty,
):hampion and the all-time Grant
National leader with 193 victories,
never led before the !75th of 200 laps
on Daytona International Speedway's 2.5-mile, high-banked track.
Allison, who fought off Neil Bonnett In the early going and Buddy
Baker after the halfway mark, appeared in command heading for his
last pit stop on lap 174.
Baker followed Allison in, but the
leader suddenly slowed to a crawl
because of an empty gas tank and
barely limped to his pit.
Ricky Rudd inherited the lead for
one iap, but fell back when he had to
pit. That left Petty ahead on lap 175
and the 43-year-old veteran finessed
his final pit stop into a seven-second
lead and eventual victory.
Petty, who chose not to change his
worn tires and only take on enough

~McEnroe
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) -John
McEnroe shook the challenge from
Guillermo Vilas to win the $300,000
Pepsi Grand Slam of Tennis yesterday 5-7,6-4, !Hl.
It took three hours and 15 minutes
for McEnroe to win the grueling
match, a. repeat of the 1979 consolation event here in which McEnroe
beat Vilas in straight sets. McEnroe
won $150,000 and Vilas earned
$75,000.
In the consolation match, Brian
;Teacher beat Tim Guillikson 6-2,6-7,
.f-0.

• McEnroe,,who became the second~

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gasl to finish the race, said, "New
tires are stickier for about eight to 10
laps, then they're just like the old
ones.
"After that, the old tires are just
like the new ones. We figures if we
could get far enough ahead, they
couldn't catch us. I wasn't concerned about the car because it was
handiing pretty good and I knew I
could run well by myself," Petty added. The wily veteran ran the last 65
laps of the race on the same set of
Goodyear tires.
Allison, driving a controversial
Pontiac LeMans, couldn't catch Petty's Buick Regal. The winner
crossed the finish tine a four second
ahead of Allison's second-place car.
Rudd's Oldsmobile Cutlass was
third, followed by Baker and defending NASCAR champion Dale Earnhardt's Pontiac Grand Prix. Petty,
who won only a pair of short track
races last season, gained his first
superspeedway victory over 1979.
He averaged 169,651 mph, picking
up $90,575 from the record purse of
$71ll,OOO.
Allison's car, a limited edition
with a sloping rear window, ap-

Irwin wins Hawaiian Open

peared by far the fastest car on the
track Sunday. He dominated until
the pivotal pit stop.
Bonnett's Ford Thunderbird suocombed to a cut tire and a loose
spoiler, retiring on lap 125, while
defending Daytona champion
Baker's Cutlass challenged but
couldn't stay with the top three at
the end.
There were 49 lead changes
among nine drivers in the exc.iting
race. It was the first victory for
Buick in a Grand National race since

tournament scoring record, 23
strokes under par.
HONOLULU - The record was
"I'm very pleased, not only with
nice- 11 8 bonus", said Hale Irwin.
the win, but with myself. I made a
But the important thing was winning
comeback to the point where I feel I
again after a Ill-month victory
· should be playing," he said.
drought.
Irwin, twice an American national
" It's been a long time,'' Irwin said
champion but a non-wiMer since
Sunday after capping his victory in
the Hawailan Open with a birdie- taking his second U. S. Open in June
of 1979, captured the 12th victory of
eagle finish that brought him the

By Associated Press

1955.

his PGA Tour career with a frontrunning 69 over the last round. He
won $58,500 from the total purse of
$235,000.
He took the event by six shots with
a 265 total on the 6,881-yard Waialae
Country Club course, which was one
better than the record set by Andy
Bean a year ago.

Redmen face MOC champ
Cedarville Tuesday night •

There were fears the new cars in
use this season would be forced to
run farther apart than the old cars
because of their generally boxy, less
aerodynamic body st,ylings. But
those fears proved groundless as the
leaders ran in nose-tt&gt;-bumper
"freight trains" .that included as
many as 13 cars,
Those same aerodynamics
problem, lent credence b/ a pair of
spectacular accidents in which cars
left the ground during Thursday's
qualifying races, raised further
fears the 500 would turn into a
demolition derby.

Malone eliminated visiting Rio
Grande College {rom the regular
season tiUe picture with a 101-85
Mid-Ohio Conference victory Saturday night in Canton.
Cedarville captured the 1~1
MOC crown with a 93-89 triumph
over Tiffin.

The Yellow Jackets will invade
LyneCenterTUesdaynightfora7:30
p.m. contest. The Ohio Valley Bank
Night batUe will wind up regular
season play for both teams. Cedarville edged Rio, 93-92, in overtime
mitlment to play yesterday and left , earlier this year.
for New York.
Saturday, Rio Grande, playing
Gerulaitis, however, did get the
without two · reg11lars (Kev
$30,000 designated for the fourth- Castleman
and Watson McDonald,
place finisher. Arvida Corp., spon- due to an eligibility ruling) gave the
sor of the event, said the company host Pioneers all they wanted before
agreed to award the winner of the going down to loss number 11. Rio
consolation match ·$5,000. Gullikson, has won 16 outings this winter.
inserted into the four-player lineup
The defeat left Rio Grande with a
for Gerulaitis, did not receive any 1().3 MOC record heading into
prize money.
Tuesday's finale. Malone is 12-10
The Teacher-Gullikson match was overall and 8-5 in league play.
marred by controversy. At the end
Ron Wilczak's 32 points paced the
of the second set, tournament spon- Pioneers' scoring attack. Ed Yarsors announced that the players borough added :IIi. The Pioneers led
would play a 12-point tie-b~eaker 47-41 during ' the halftime in·
and the winner would be ' awarded termisslon.
the match.
Four Redmen finished in double
Fans booed the announcement and figures, led by Tom Dorsey's 16 poinofficials later changed it to a four- ts. Rick Acord had 15, Tom Jutze 15
game third set.
and Vince Wollenberg 12.
Rio was 36 of 82 from the field for
43 percent. The Redmen were 13 of

wins Pepsi event

ranked tennis player in the world
largely on the strength of a serveand-volley attack, stayed on the
baseline yesterday and punished
Vilas with accurae ground strokes.
McEnroe's game plan was in contrast to Vilas' style of play . Vilas,
the NO. 4 ranked player, rushed the
net throughout the match and held a
4-2 lead in the first set before
McEnroe settled down.
McEnroe emerged as a slight
favorite in this four-player tournament when top-ranked Bjorn Borg
pulled out on Friday after he came
down with the flu.
Vilas is a clay cort specialist and
McEnroe had said he favored faster
surgaces. Vilas appeared in control
of the tempo of the match in the first
set as mcEnroe was visibly upset by
the catcalls from some in the crowd
of 1!,500 at Boca West, a resort community here where the match was
played.
·
Twice during the first set,
OAKLAND, Calif. ( AP)
McEnroe .asked umpire Florence Teenager Andrea Jaeger, giving
Blanchard to request that the crowd aw~y 20 years experience to her opcalm down.
por\ent, wore down . Virginia Wade
McEnroe got back into the match and won 6-3, 6-1 Sunday in the finals
In th~ fifth game of the second set of the $125,000 Avon Championships
when he broke Vilas' serve. of California.
McEnroe had seven service breaks,
The · 15-year-old, seeded second,
while Vilas had four.
won her second tournament title of
McEnroe, the 1980 U. s. Open the year despite playing on sore feet,
champion and third-place finisher which bothered her throughout the
here for the last two years, won a week.
•
crucial battle in the ninth game of . - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ .
the second set when Vilas floated a
backhand long over the baseline to
put McEnroe ahead 5-4. McEnroe
then breezed through the next seven
games to close out the match.
The consolatin match actually
ilmounted to an exhibition, since
Teacher had been assured of the
$45,000 third-place pri•e money
when Vilas Gerulaitls pulled out of
the tournmanet after a semi-final
251 W. Main
loss Saturday. Gerulaitis, a lastP.omeroy, Ott.
minute replacement for Bjorn Borg,
. "2·2661
bad not given the tou~nament a com-

Teenager posts
lournrunenl win

J

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pecializin&amp; In Pediatrics
And lntern1l Medicine
NOW ACCEPTING
NEW PATIENTS
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Profenlon.il

---

21from the foul line for61 percent.
The Redmen had 36 rebounds, 11
by Dorsey. Tbe losers had 20 assists,
12 by Vince Phelps . Rio had 11 turnovers.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE 1851- Phelps H ·
8; J ulze 7· 1-15 : Wollenberg 6·0-12 ;
Acord 5·5-15 : Dorsey 6·4·16; Maisch
J·H : Burson O·O·O: Quisenberry O·O·
O; Banks 0·1·1: Penrod 5·0·10.
TOTALS 36-13-85.
MALONE 1101) - Davidson 0·0·0;
Keucher 2·0-4; Wilczak 15·2·321
cossman9·J·21 ; YarbOrough 11·2-26:
Splnneil 3·0·6; Huffman . 1·0·2;
Crawford 1·0·2; Halhaway 2·0·4:
Young 0·2·2. TOTALS 45·9· 101.
H•'Iflime score: Malone 47, Rio 41 .

16, 1981

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, February 16. 1911 ;.:.~

16, 1981

DICK TRACY

Imuortant news for ultra low tar smokers.

Television

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

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•
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.........

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CAROL aJM&amp;n _ ,
FNINOI

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(I) AIC . .WS
(I) 3-1-1 COIITACT
IDl OYIIII!AIY Ouoet:,..,"'wned
photographer Vounf t&lt;arett.
Hoati:HughDowneandFr•'*lll•lf.
I:IO . CI~~S.A.)

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CAPTAIN EASY
MTEE~E':f
lltOTH~It I~ SOMe I&lt;INDA

I.O,OK I IF MARY

'

THIN!&lt; IT-. !tAI'I! T'loHOW
UP AT TMEIIt CA&amp;IN 'f

.

'

· 60ME"TIMES
CAL.L.ED.

ITHROXEI

l

PIIIIACIAZIIII!
NOMIAMYIMCENT PULl

.o-·1-IT:-LOUIB

Thle ••ctualwe. rare ftlnl footage

;reatell world heavyweight

..,.ii=~=~
OII'YHI!

IJJ/6 Cct{(fiOO, '(OIJI.l({)
LADI~S ~ f(NJ

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(AniWOISIOmOrrow)

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MACIII!tt...._"

T:IO

WOIIDI••YI!
OP HOI'!

BRIDGE

OIIDAMIIOII

.IOKI!II'I WILD

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

L!l&gt;ertlr lloptiot vo MaroNI

'

em I!ICIC CAViTT IMOW

(II). PACI 'I'MI!IIUIIC

~= lEA'=.:OII,.
"IAIIIII Plougod b' gonlp ond

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conf..lon,-tngallt-to
toko motto&lt;olnto hlo own hondo
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toplonntngoniiiOVItl!lhettoontototo. (CO&lt;ICiuolon: 10 mlno.)
(Cioood-Coptlolled: U.S.A.)
(JJ AIIIIIICAII CATHOL!C
(!) IIOVII! -fMUIICAL) 0000

ANNIE
.!(), f DOH'T

"

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_.

111111 BetH' DR. LIYIR

t1 C1!. L~IR'S CJtARQE, HAS ALOT

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l"fllll'hl"'.• a!T l!Xli'T
THIHit HE'S CRAZY
AIWJT TilE IQEA •·

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... . _.. 1111
(I) IIIOYII o(DIIAIIA) "" .._

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OH HIS
Ml~(), AHNIE ~

( I ) • • n~ArliiCM.,..A
lt!rilllftg oHompt to pllol o opoodbootthrouglloftoetlftgllrot-,o
ghoolly
double mordor
oolvod-000,
_ _thot
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Skill earns just rewards

... .

NORTH

whoa• quick acthln uve1 1 I'Hft

....-...

"""' burning to -~~~ In on aport·
p.!_~IObloH . (10-.)

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work and no play makea Ken

.

Reavaa a very mad coach when

8ola111lond VM!IIIIIo got o nlgllljob
r~a ...eing caraandthek'touof
• ..., otorto hurtlftg ""' toom. (10
mlno.)
(fi) MAll AUVI: lllllltiG . .IIO
Raoul Wallenberg helped uva
thoooondo ol Jowloh Hvoo dortog
tho Bocond World Wot. Loot ooJoouory 17, 1-lnlheauolody
oltllo Ruooloo "'""""' IIIIo opoolol
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todoy I n . - prleM ....... (80

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HII!IIE, PRONlO, G000 lliDOI'.'
W1i fiOT Ui A. UlTLE OL'

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DISCUSS WllH YUH/

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1:10 liiW-.IIAPPLIIMOW
1:11
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-AYIIIiltn'AT'I'MI!

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2·16-81

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WEST

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SOUTH

... .
+5

+QJ10763

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
w... Norlb Eo!l South
I.

z•Pau

Pass
Pass

Kreyns and Bob SlaVen borg of
the N~therlands in the 1966
Olympiad."
Oswald: "It was very close .
A mere eight match points
after 280 boards. There was a
Jot of luck involved. Both
pairs had their full share, but
Jim gives this hand to show
how a brilliant bidding decision by Slavenborg gave the
Dutch pair 33 out of a possible
34 match points on a key hand
in the finals."

tAK761l

"'"
tonilyltlg • - ' ttvoogll """"'"
all, IndO horoicoighl·-·olll~

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,loi.M.Noo c ~.J. OlM.IftcUII.,....
Milke ChiOU pey
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'

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Satu!Vay'o l Jumt&gt;leo: SWOOP MUSIC BECOME EMBARK
: Tranquilize yourself In order to write
mualc-''COMPOSE"

IIOlL tiiiOOD IQUAIII!I

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III!I'OIIT

TO 6LU6H! _ _.,

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Now orrange the clrc:lod loiters to
form the aurprioe a..-, aa oug·
gootod by ttlll abOve cartoon.

Prlnt-werhere:

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~UIIOA~IItWI

lok.. olookollhe-lllfeond
profee1l011al career of OM of the

t,I.IH,\i II.)~ ~
DID 'C.J SA.'&lt; 1:&gt; ~(;:M ~

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'T~VEL.!f{S A~E

WILD WILD WOIIUl OP
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(I) (JI) ctl8 NI!WS

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IIOe MI!WIWIT IMOW

WE'LL TAI&lt;I! TUitNlJ
!!TANDING WATCII .. ANP
IMI&lt;I! 5UIU! THI oo.Aitl CII\CLI!O ALL
AltOUND Llifl

•lllf#IT NUr. . 1\NP HI!'S A~
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Unoct- theM lour Ju-.
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lour ordlnlty wordo.

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P~ss

Opening lead:+4

Alan: "That was skilL The
luck came when the Dutch
held the North-South cards so
they could use their skill."
Oswald: "West opened a
trump against the three-club
contract. East took his ace
and led a trump back to
dummy's king. Kreyns dis·
carded a diamond on the ace
of hearts, ruffed back to his
hand, drew West's last trump
and played spades. He still
had to lose four spade tricks
for down one since he ran out
of trumps before getting to
clear the suit."

By Oswald Jacoby
... Alu Soll\1&amp;

Alan: "What a brilhant
1 can see other North·
South pairs landing in game_
or maybe slam and going
down for telephone numbers ."

pallS.

Alan: "I see that your son
Jim, playing with Or. John
Fisher of Dallas, finished a
very dose second to Hans

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You all
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ti.J.hooonuoonootndoy-

Rufus?

lollfnii'OlOI&lt;o,ondctwiH-op
IO&lt; o conlrontotloft with lllo who 'oMllocl' him to 1&lt;-.
IY\.YIA · - KAYI!'I flU.
IICAL COIIIDY TOMOIIT n A
atar·atudded caat, dancer~. chor~

please!

em

111 al\d orcheatra

Join crHtor 111d

hootSylvlo Fino Koya to r..-to
memorabla momenta from foyr
Qf'llt AIMftean mumae., 'IIIUn'a
Rolnbow,' 'SouthPoolflC,' 'Lady In
tho O.rk' ond
CMriiJ', (80

mlna_,)
1:10 •

oo a

·s-

HOUU CALLI Dr. Ml·

chl ..l and AM And«aoft ll'ftYIIIII

omen wonlod by thopollcelntolllo
hoopllol to vloM ltlo gro¥011' M
!other.

HIS PAST
MAY COME

•

e&gt;ACK TO
HAUNT US...
TIME AND
nMEAOAIN.

HOWCAN WE
liVE WITH
THIS ClOUD
OVER OUR
HEADS?

LOOK , I DON'T
THINK WE 'RE
GOING TO
SOLVE ANY·
THING TO·
NIGHT. I'M
G0N0 HOME 1

Cll

AND I 'M 001NG TO
CHECK ON CONSUElO.

WE'VE 13EEN NEGLECTING
THAT POOR LITTLE
SOMETHINO

TH I N~

AWFUL ! r~~J

t-.-

OIILY'I'MI!IIALLWAI-

Bolo&lt;o JockloA---• bo·
-H'ocolorborriorln
tolontodblocllplo,_.-.daniM
atardom Ht th'e bag IIIDHI. Hoet
PauiWintloldMol-tolhe-·

cenHa or the playere end vlewa

vlnloge photogropho ond """ togo o l - ol tllo grool ....,.,.
lhet modo 1111 111o Nogro ~~­
LHO-·
~- (!) IIOVII o(ADVRIITUIII) ••
11 . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Only
4 mgtar

MERIT
r-Ultra Lights ..

I

,

.

-~

'
'

....'

'

'

IT MA
ME SICI&lt;
TH' WAV LOWEEZV DOES
EVERV HAND'S TURN FOR
THAT LAZV WHELP!!

''
'•
.,_'· .,,''
''
'
'

'

-'
MENTHOL
ULTRA LOW TAR

10:11
10:10

~~=

I

PRETT'r' SOON TJ.1E SACK OOOR

4 mg "tar;' 0.4 mg nicotine av. per cigarene by FTC Method

OF Tlo!E HO\!SE WILL OPEN,
AND TilE ~OUND-HEADED
KID WILL COME WAl.KIN6
OUT WITfl MV SUPPER ...

Warning: The' Surgeon General Has Oeterminerl
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

L-----------------------....J

,0:,1

A WATC~ED BACK.
DOOR NEVER OPENS!

......,

I

TIII!VINIIDIIIWS
C1N UIIOATIIII!WI
IIIII! AMI .IIIALID
Ill! WI

....

rna'~' ill)•

I

PIITIVALM~
~AIID­

OIIftll UIIITI
11:11 -lltiTGALLIIIT
11:11
ATI
1 t:IO
'I'MI!..=riHOW
'Tho Boot ol Coroon' Hall: - Y
Careon. Oueata: Sammy DIN Jr.,
Sy..n 81r1ndon. (Repe.t ; eo

"''"'''
oo AeccAI'TIOIIIoilln
(I) IIOIIIADLIY 1H0W

(JI) lliov• o(DIIAMA) ••• .....,.

C l'hlll11 Morris Inc. i9HI

defective
14'5pelk
wildly

portrayer

... , ......"111D

llli. AICIIIWS~-

of Cordelia

:M Guided

-

IS Apiece

.lncludlnl!
!'I Move to2t Eurclalng

a:::::
S3Welgh

31 Fl'lllch river
rr Joel or Zane
31Lidt
DOWN

~

'

4 Tendency

5 Aneurin I Baby (Fr.) I Exude
t Give It up
7 English
II Macho males phlloaopher
lllllbemla
I Region with·
'
II Show clearly In a region
'•
It War game 11 English
II "Apocalypae prelate and
Yesterday'• Alllwer
Now" star
hymn
28 Hair
Z5 Insig·
17 Holbrook
writer
arrangement
nlficant
II Challce veil 13 Fbhennan
Zl Actor,
!'I Hot·
It "To - and 15 Gannent
to Hold"
Industry
Robert tempered
• One kind
spy (sl .)
!Z Phillips AcaZl Bad turn
ol vene
It Henry
demy site ·
31 Apportion I
Z3
Father
Jl Math raUo 1
23More ·
lflalna

room atKI forMI Lou to take,.......

(I) WOIILD 0# liT AIIIRICA
Award· wlnnlng actreu Paule••
Myoro brlngato tllo 111oro tllao 21
different characleraln a wlrbiHO
drlmatllltlon ot two c~dl of
block Amortcon ltlotory old hotl·
tage. The apeclal, faaturtftg vtvkt
IOCatlonooq....oo,h~othe
pootr, ol LongolonHultiH, Pout
lawrence Dunbar and RIYrftOf'ld
PaHor-. (IOmlno.)

:'

ACROIIS
I NIPI palm

anchor
31 UUie

ogotnonl'o oldo ogolnot htaotall.

·-EVEN
HIS 5LEEP WALKIN'

.., THOMAS JOSEPH

min~

• (JJ dl LOU OIIAIIT A bitter
etrlkt over automation, led 'Y •"
oggrooolvo report or, opltto lllooiiY

BARNEY

' '

Regular&amp;
l\1enthol

1..,

(I) ~~tW •OUt. •LAY Otorlo lo
tramect tor • criMa·of-paaeJon
mordo&lt;.ondwllonTuokor...,_
wrongllllly impHoolod In lllo OOH,
boll! wind up •• pro, lorlllo , _
1 0 - 10 "'" r o e l m -. (80

dl'*u'"J

Antoinette

6-+-+-

I TeMII point

lllellplte
SSo-lang,
MlliJrita I

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

,

Ia

A X Y D. L I A A X I .
LONGPELCOW

.

One let\er limply atanda for another. In thia aomple A Ia
used lor the thre~ L's, X lor the two O's, etc. Sinele lettero,
apottrophea, the lenelh ond formation of the word• are all
hlnta. Each day the code lettero """ dilferont.

cavnOQuOTBS
T JV C
JV

-

F

LFIVR

FGFW

NVFGCVX
F

LFC

NVFGCVX

V GG R '

VGGKG .

YGKPVGW

Ynlerdlly'a Cryplequole: .. .I NEVER RF.!ALLY LOST 'mE TI- •
TLE. IT WAS JUST OUT ON LOAN FOR SIX MONTHS.- JOSE '
NAPOLES

'

�Pag"-~-The

Monday, February 16, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily sentinel

Honor roll announced.;__________________ _
Prindpi.l James A. Di~bJ hu aM~ the
honor roll for thl! third Iii weeki lfWllnl f!rtod

aboveinall&amp;helriUbjecUandtobenamedtothe

ronan:
Gl"ldl 9 - Sherry Arnold, Dave Birr, Chris
Burdett&lt;, Gtorae H....., Keilh K!JIIel, Mlcllaol
Kennedy, IUe llabmolo, JOII Penin, Lon
Sayre,
PoW. Swindell.
Grade 10 - Jami~ Acree, Rowena Averlon.

_. _J
repOru:;u.

at Meill;a Hif(h School. Stodentlmlklng •' B'' or

'.J.T1Q·
0('
' r oJ news

a

Lynda Adkins ~th wehonlghtredlOIII of
over four poun,., wa.s
o
as
weekly queen at the Wednesday
.
"' TOPS OH 1'.. of
meetiJ18

Rutland.

-wu

Ul

She was presented Wl'th a ValenUne ribbon and a dollar and members sang in her. honor. Shorty
· ht pn!Sl'ded at the mee~.,.
WrJg
which opened with the TOPS pledle
and roll call . Suggestions were glven
on ways to lose weight. Infonnation
on the club may be obtained by
"'IYWll
calling 742"""".

:'~

Megan Evans

Matthew Evans

'Three local children celebrate birthdays
ilt:eaghan Nicole Smith, daughter
ofi David and Nancy Smith, Cald~ll, observed her first birthday on
Jan. 23 with a family party, Her
grandpareots are Mr. and Mrs.
Do!lmar Baum, Chester, Mrs. Violet
S$th, Reedsville, and the late
David A. Smith. Mr. and Mrs.
J.-,eph Bissell, Long Bottom, are
hq great-grandparents.

Members
of NE
'
cluster UM
Churches meet
Ten persons from the Northeast
CljJster United Methodist Churches
were presented at a Local Church
Lftadership Workshop February 10
at: the Gilman Avenue United
M~thodist Church in Marietta.
Present were Mrs. Betty
Chevalier, Mrs. Chester Gorrell, Mr.
a,nd Mrs. Guy Spencer, Mrs. Doris
F;oenig, James Stout, Mrs. Mae
Vineyard, and Miss Mary Frances
V.ineyard, all of St. Paul's, Tuppers
.Blains; Mrs. Clarence Henderosn, of
Alfred; and the Rev. Richard
Thomas, pastor of the Northeast
Cluster.
:A total of IU7 persons attended
vBrious smaller groups under the
f(lllowing headings: Nurture and
Care, Outreach. Family and Age
Conce rns.

Gevel

Pastor·Paris h

The fifth birthday of Megan Beth
Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Evans, Route 4, Pomeroy,
was observed with a party at her
home Wednesday.
Cake, ice cream, Kool·Aid and coffee were served. Attending were
Mrs. Frankie Hunoel and Artie,
Mrs. Jenny Warth, Dave, Darrin
and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Evans,
Cindy, Ryan, Matthew and Robert
Brown, Mrs. Marc French, Heath
and Amy Adrian, Megan's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Russell, her great-grandmother,
Mrs. Grace French, and her sister,
Jessica. Sending gifts were Megan 's
grandmother, Mrs. Bernice Evans,
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Stivers.

Community Corner
By Charlene Hoeflich
Lifestyle writer
If you were around in the fifties
and sixties, then
are sure ·to
remember "The
Jays."
Kenny
Hysell and Leon
Jordan spun discs
for dances all
over the tricounty.
Leon has moved
on, but Kenny is
Charlene
still here and
come March 14 will host a dance par·
ty sponsored by the Middleport PTA
tn the Middleport Elementary
School gym from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Admission is $3 and tickets wiU be
sold at the door or can be purchased
in advance at the Kiddie Shop in
Pomeroy or from any PTA officer.
The money, of course, will go into
school improvements.

Relations, Local Church Trustees,
'l:eachers' Training, and United
Methodist Women . Participants
were informed concermng their
duties and responsibilities as church
&lt;flicials, with ideas and techniques
for enhancing their service in the
local church. Rev. Thomas was in
GeorgeShiveler, Jr. was delighted
charge of a workshop on Family and
to
hear from so many old frien&lt;b
41:e Level Ministries, assisted by the
foll
owing his angioplasty at Christ
Rev. Sharon Rhonemus of the TunHospital
in Cinctnnati. The
nell Charge.
angwplasty, a new type of surgery
for a blocked artery which does not
:There will be two more 01&gt;' involve ope ning the chest, was successful and George has already
p&lt;irtunities for Meigs Countians to
returned to work .
l"'rticipate in workshops of a similar
The other good news at the
~lure. Grace U. M. Church in
Shiveler household is about their
{lallipolis will host one on Feb. 17. daughter, Jayne Ann. She recently
fhe Plains U. M. Church will host graduated cum laude· from the
the final workshop for the Athens University of Cincinnati receiving
pistrict on February 24.
her bachelor of science degree in
speech pathology. She is continuing
work there on her master's degree.
Certainly everyone is interested in

.

j

ASTRO
GRAPH
February 11,1981

1urEMINI
~ pllmentll

~May

Zl-Juae Zl) G1ve

com-

to friends today In 11ituations
meritint~ acknowledgment. Be sincere,
' however, bec.Ruse they'll resent being dam·
: ned by faint praise.
IJunt 2l·July tl Your
1 CANCER
• poosibilitie:,: for per::~onal gain look prorni.dng
· today, but there l.s also an indicatioo you
· may not be wil11ng to share ~hat which others
: helped you ucqu1rc.
1 LEO IJuJr !! :~t:g . tt l 1£ you are po5iUve
1 your way Ill right tudr~y, hmction as ln. dependently as possible. Associates who
· want to be helpful may actually tum l)u\ to
' be a hindrance.
,

VIRGO (Aug. ~t. U) Your ideas on
: ways to achieve thln~s today will be qWle
, good, but you might unplemcnt them count t.erproductlvely. Act, but also think.
• LIBRA (Sept %3-0el t1) You're popular
• with friends today aAd )'ou'U make a
· tleeii'IDie addition to any gatherillij:, but you
rnlllt be ~reful not to overstay y\:lur
..k:ome.
1

SCORPIO (~t. :24--Nov. t:tl When it comes
to '-rotecting your self·Jntercsts today,
you re more lhan capable of handling any
Sllualion But you rni~ht not pt•rforrn as well
lookillf'l uul fnl' 11thers

. SAG nTAK IUS I NO\ 2.H h·r . 2JI Yoo'll

't\andlc thin ~::s Ill ways !oda} wturh will win

you ildmiratioh.

al1ouL your ac-, complishments, however, wtU ll:lke the
Boast111~

• bloom uffUterusc.

- CAPRICORN COet. z:t.J•o. lt) In
t:omphc•ted altutiolll!l fur at hen
JOU're very adroit todly, btat take care not to
bt drawn Into IClfl1ethl.nl lUcky which could
cost you money out rJf your own pocket.·

~ IDIII)alif14!1

saving dollars and one way Is to
learn the repair of small appliances,
switches, plugs, and outlets, so that
a repairman won't have to be called
for every minor job.
A workshop - no charge, no preregistration - will be held at the
Senior Cifuens Center, multiplll'pose room, Tuesday from 10 a.m. until noon. Dave Boothe, Jackson Area
Extension supervisor, will provide
the expertise by demonstrsttng
minor repairs.

Inflation has had an effect on
everyone's life and hits hard on the
cost of foods, so tips on how to fight
inflation in the kitchen will always
be appreciated. Have ideas on "extenders" without having to go into
the ·packaged products from the
supennarket shelf1
Last week we resumed our "Fun
with Foods" and are anxious for
some of your favorite recipes. Every
homemaker has some speciality.
Share it with others.
While this colwnnist wiU not test
the recipes, the name of the person
submitting each one will be printed.

To support the Scouting program
in the Tri-State Area Council, Boy
. Scouts of America, sustaining members will be enrolled during this
month.
The enrollment is held among
members, parents, and frien&lt;b of
Scouting in order to provide
operating fun&lt;b for the council, according to Charles F. Bagley, III,
Sustaining Membership Chainnan.
"Even -though the United Way
provides us with funds for the
operation of the Tri-State Area
Council, approximately 40 percent of
our operating budget is received
through sustaining membership
enrollment,'' Bagley said.
Tri-state Area Council supports
community organization using the
ScouUng program through Cub
Scout packs, Boy Scout troops, ahd ·
Explorer posta by providing

Cook, Porn Croolut, Mike Cwullnl!ltam, SUian
Donner, Ptt111l! Dovis, Kim Deritoatt, Melonle
Dillard, Tema Dorst, Tammy Eicltlnoer. Marl&lt;
Friend , Brenda Fry, Jim Glbbo, Robin Hawk,
Mary Hawley Dave Hoffman Steve HOOd,
Tracy Hyoell, 'orenda W. Janey, Tony Jewell,
Dick King, Kall Knapp, Eric u,..,..,b, Franklin
MarUn. Mart McGuirt, Kim Patterson, Opal

Public Nollco
. PUBLIC NOTICE ·
Bids will be received by
the Village of Middleport at

W:ce
~t~~r:~ntYI~~~ P.~ ·
March
1981 for the
4,
following vehicle :

1970 Ford
Pickup.

Styteslde

The vllla$Je rMerves the
right to re1ect anv or all
bids and to waive any in·
formalities in bidding .

(21 16, 23, 2tc

Public Notice
Ohio, however, all ott, gas,
coat and other minerals .
The prayer of said
Petition is as follows ;
'' Wherefore Petitioners
demand an order of the
court authorizing them to
sell, ,::onvey and transfer
the real estate described In

this peti!ion to Oon R. Hill
and Mary E. Hill, or the

survivor of them, whose
address is .49.585 State
Route 338, Racine, Oh1o

Pomeroy. Ohio, reser\'H

the righ to bid at this sale,
and to withdraw anv of the
above mentioned venicles

prior to the sate. Further,
the Farmers Bank and
Savings Company reserves

the right to rejecf any or all
,bids submitted .
(2) 16, 28, 20, 3tc
Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby given
that Pearl Norris, Marshall

Adams. Herschel Norris,

Clarence T . Norris and
Florence Adams as the
du ly appointed, qualified
and acting lrustees of the
u. B. Church, have flied
their Petition in the Com·
men Pleas Court of Meigs

Coun!Y, Ohio, being Case

No. lr731, praving for
authority to sell. conveyo
and transfer 1o Don R. Hill
and Mary E . Hill , for the
consideration of $900.00 the

following described real

eM ate:
The following described
real estate situate In the
Township of Letart in tne

County of Meigs and State
of Ohio, bounded and

described as follows : Beinq
in Section 16, Town f,

Range 12, beglnrilng at the

7760.

dition,

OLD COINS, pocket wat·
ches, class rings, wedding

bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
Treasure Chest Coin Shop
Athens. OH . 594-4221.
'
Wanted to Buy : class rings

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

fective date of each final
action and the issuance
date of each propased ac tion Is stated. Final actions
are appeoal.!ible In writing ,
within 30 days of the ef·
fect lve date, to the En·
vironmental Board of

our sincere appre-cl.!itlon to

all our relatives, friends,

and neighbors for all your
prayers and your many ac·
ts of thoughtfulness during

!he iII ness and death of our

Grandmother, Elsie Ward .
Review. Suite 123, 240 Par- Special
thanks to Reverend
4.1215. Notice of such appeal and Mrs. Arthur Duht , Dr .

shall be f 1led with the dfrec·
tor within 3 days thereof. A
proposed
action
will
become final unless: (l) A
written
adjudication
hearing request is sub· ·
mitted with in 30 days of the
issuance date, or ( 2) the
director rev1ses or with·
·draws the proPOsed action.
As concerns actions other
than final actions, within 30

and Mrs. Bruce Paxton,
and Hughes Funeral Hom e.
Larry and Linda Mon
tgomeroy .

comments and/ or request
a meeting. If significant
publ ic interest ex 1sts, a

3

concerns any action, anyo
person may : (1) Request
notice concerning further
actions, and/ or ( 2) Obtain
additiona I i nformation .
Unless
otherwise
specifically P'rOvided
herein or in the particular
notices ,
all
co m ·
munications shalt be ad·

1--C•rct el Tn•nlls

41-Hc.usn klr Jhrn

n - Mobile Home•
tor •e"'

Racine Volunteer Fire
Department SPOnsors a
shot gun &amp; rifle match
Factoryo choke 12 guage

•~

a.tvicn

....,.

) For Ren!

Wtnt-AG AIYtrtlslng
O.tdllnts
1:10 P.M. DtiiV
1:1 Noen ht11rdft'

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

tl - HomeiMIWIVtmtnft
12- ,.um-.... I IICUifiltl

4._·_ _ _ _ __

s. _ _ _ _ __

ll-. ,cav•""'

6. _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ __

14-ltectric•l
1 Welrtttretlon
U-Otfttrll HtwUN

8. _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

M-M. H . Re,.lr

rorMtMitv

u -u,..~awy

10. _ __ _ __

~

11 . _ _ _ _ _ __

R1tel 1nd Other lnformltjon
1f Weri• er unw

,..,,

c...

'·"
....
....

I d1,

l .H

......
ldlyl

assistant

to

magician .

Write Dr. Bloch, the
Magician, 920 East 6!n
Street, . New

York,

NY

10009.

NEW HAVEN United
Methodist Church is

5eeklng part· time Director

of Music. con!act or.
James Locknar! 130•1 882·

GUN

SH OO T,
Club. cvc,·y

Ra ci ne Gun
Fr1day n1gh t st ~rllng at
7 :30 p.m . Factory choke
guns only .

3136 or

Reverend

John

Campbell a! (3041 882·262•.
Lad't' or girl to live in .

TO O

'1'12·2686.

expert
tuning &amp; and repa 1r . Lane

Oaniels, 742·2951 or 992·
2082

12 . _ _ _ _ _ __
13. _ _ _ _ _ __
CMr11
I.JS
I.M

,..,,,.u,

Molt! .. Hem. sa los aM Y.1nt ••In are•cuptM ont~ wlthcatll wltA
...... JJ Ctftt t,..rtt ,_, ldt. CI"Yiftl IOl NumDt• lit Clrt M Tltt
lflltiHl.

I

three bediooms, new carpet. 1971 Cameron, 10 x 6~.
two bedrooms, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, new carpet 1976
Cameron, 12 x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Skyoline, 12sx 6), two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1f:J, new

home, has 3 bedrooms,

1'h bath, l iving room ac ·
tented by
antique
chandelier, large k it·
chen and family room
comb. wlth fireplace.

'

carpel .

Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Assoc.

54

1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 6S,

Beautiful 2 story brick

1970

PMC,

12 x 60, two bedrooms, new

ca rpet. B

X

S Sales. Inc.,

2nd x Viand Street, Point

Pleasant, WV Phone 675·
4424.

Gener11

Misc. Merchanise

Firewood for sale, Mi)(ed

types of wood. $35.00 per
PICk -up load. Delivered,
will

stack

for

Senior

Citizens. 843-4951 or 843·
2815.
SPECIAL

DISCOUNT

!lAVE

VACANCY

or

for

.eldertyo persons who need
'board, room and laundrv.
'Eat ·ln dining room, men
iand women have separate
)laths, pr ivate rooms and
.aemi ·prlvate, availabl~ .
·Prices to fit income . 992·

•

.Furnece repa1rs, electrical
:work. plumbing, mobi le
•home or res idence. 992·

!5858.

i~~

; 3"t--.,
H~o~m~e~s~f~
or~S~a~l7e -­

,_______

IBeautlful three bedroom
~ ranch

brick home In Baum

23 .- --_ -_ --- 25. _ _...._._ _ _
26._ _ __
27 . _ _ __
28._ _ __ __ ..;,
29._ _ _ __ _
30._ _ _ _ __
31 ._ _ _ _ _---"'
32._ _ _ _ __
33._ _ _ _ __ ,

34 _ _ _ _____
35 _ _ __ _

Mail This Coupon with Remltta nc,·
The Daily Sentinel
Box 729
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

'1'12·2571 or 1-687·6o429
;F-O
_R_ S_A_L_E_:__s_e-ve_n__r_oo__m
ldouble Insulated ranch
0

fstyole home, total electric,

!reasonably priced on !hree
{level acres one mile from

•Rac ine Phone949·2706.
: 3__B_E_D
_R
_O
_ O_M_,_ 2_ b_a_t-h,
modern kltcnen, living
'

~

'I

I
,I
.I
,I
.I
.I
•I

., I
~----------------- ----- -J

1- - - - - - -

1FOR SALE : Seven room
t double
Insulated ranch
i style home, total electric,

wood burner In iamlly
I room, gas available. 3
I bedrooms, 11h baths,
1reasonablY priced on !hee
I level acr's one mile from
1 Racine . Phone 949·2106.

!• two
ATTRACTIVE home on
and one·half acres.

I Private setting on St. Rt. 7
l by Memory Gardens. Ter·
ms. 992·7741 .

42

and

"'
9,..._

only .

Brown's

Park. '1'12-3324.

$16,000,00.
APPROX. S ACRES OF
VACANT LANO! Util·

util ity. Large ca rport!

TWO BEOROOM mobile

mediately .

pets

No

or

home for rent, uti llties
paid . John Sheets, JIJ.,

available .

miles south of Middleport

$10,000.00.
REALTOR

onRt. 7.

at

992·5692

.Am.
1· ( 614) -992-3325

NEW - 2 bedrooms,
ba!h, loft, knotty pine
klfchen, elec. baseboard

heat and level tot on the
river.
LARGE - 1620 sq. ft . Of
floor space. 8 rooms, 4

bedrooms, 2 full baths,

gas furnace with wood
burner , birch kitchen,
full
basement ,
carpeting, 2 porches and

dbl. garage.
FIREPLACE
AND
OEN - very nice 2

at 992-7787.

well ,

septic

acres of nearly

level

land. Only $6,500.
GARAGE APT. - Nice·
ly carpeted 2 bedrooms,
bath, gas furance, dbl.
garage, all In good
shape. Close to sfores,
school and pool. Only
$16,000.
1.62 ACRES - Near

town on Rt. 7. Four
room frame home With
cistern
water,
2

bedrooms, half bath and
fronl parch lor ius!
$12,000.
NEW LISTING - 14
acres near Forked Run

Lake. Minerals
112,000.

wll~ilte .

and

Housinq
Headctu.lrter~

CUNNrftGHAM
-'&amp; .ASSOC.

type

992· 7~79 .

...................
••

•

.I • •

...._ • •

"

... .

53
Antiques
ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check

S4

'

World Book Encyclopedias
- Limited number, 1960
edilton sets. Save S100.00.
$15.00 per montn. Ellt•beth
Coffman, 949·2592.
ONE HORSE frailer and
two hon.es . one paint mare

a11d one regls!ered Appaloosa . '1'12·5449 . .
SEASONED FIREWOOD
for sale. $30.00. Phone 992·
5240 .

•

I'

'I

•.
_,

PHONE 992-7802
or992-7443
2·13·1 mo .

~~~-!enON

Body Repair · Insurance
work - Collision Repair .
Expert pamting, body
work, pinstriping &amp;
vinyl tops.
Free Estimates

.PWMBING,
AND :
HEAnNG

Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
estorm Doors

• Storm Windows

·~~~~~':~en!

.,

'

12 Park St.
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
2·1-1 mo.

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
1-28-1 mo.

Autos for Sille

11

NOVA Ha!Chback .
Good cond . 742·2421.
1975

trans ., radio, RUise wipers,
good tires. Plellse call 614·

'1'12-3381 during daytime

hours, or 614·992 ·1405 after
6.

BUICK

Ph. 992 -7583
1· 22· 1 mo.

1-7-!fc

A.M.-S:3D P.M.

Limited.

10-7-tlc

Palttm Oepl

·1 · ! 1

The Daily Sentinel
243 West 17 Sl, New York, NY

10011. Print NAME, AOOIIESS,
st ~eaml 1 ned

1977

PL YMOUIH

Road

Runner, 318, air con ·
dltloning, power steering,

In excellent condi!ion. Also
1964 Oodge Polara, 318 .
Phone 949-2171.

133-fllfiiiiiiWM QuiltiJII .$1.75

UO.Siruttts-Sim 31-56.$1.75
129-Quickllay Tt~nsfill . $1.75

February lnventDiy Sale
Cash'n'Carry

CARPET

With Paddin~

Buil~ings

618 E. Main

Pomeory, Oh.

SHAG.

$799

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
St.

992-3795

2·1·2mo.

"From 30x30"

SMALL

I

Utility Buildings

ARD
AVATORS

from 4x6 to 1lx40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. J, Box S4
Racine, Oh.

i
I

50"-10-JO 'H. P.
HA 60" -25-60 H.P.
60"-45·80 H.P,

Ph. 614·843-2591
6·15-lfc

All Models
Available

LEO MORRIS
R!. 1 Side Hill Rd.
Rutland, on.

J&amp;F
ENTERPRISES

2-9·tfc

Backhoe, snow plowing,
eJtCcavation, water-gassewer lines, ct?rtified
septic systems, dump
truck, stone·coal, etc. ;
General home repair &amp;
carpenter work . Springs
developed &amp; ponds
cleared.
Rt . 2 Pomeroy

DAVID BRICKLE$

CONSTRUCTION
•Siding •Insulation •Roofing •Storm W·ndows • Concrete Work • Septic Systems
•Backhoe •Dump Truck ~ •Remodeling
•New construction •Guttering &amp;
Downspouts

Ph. 992-7201

2 Rolls
Rubber Back

Reg. 515.95
Reg. 1899
~::
Sq.
Yd.
&amp; Up
&amp; Up
Installed
Casn-n-carr
Buy Now&amp; Save 52-56 Per Yard.
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from .
Regular backed carpet installed free,
with pad.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

$995

H&amp;R BLOCK OFFICE LOCATION

the sew1n1 to

money' Send now for NEW 1981
SPRING-SUMMERPATTERN CAl·
ALOG. I00 styles. hee pattem
coupon. ($2 Value). Catalog, $1.
U4-14 Quick Quilts . . .$1.75

A·l condition. '1'12·3288.

Payrolls, profit and loss statements, all
federal and state forms.

ZIP, SIZ£, and STYLE lUMBER.

We

SERVICE

Sites

Size~

Anne Adams

1

ALL STEEL

Finn

• Dozers
•-Backhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992-2478
11·20·3 mo. pd .

BOOK~EEPING
•BUSINESSES
•FARMS
•PARTNERSHIPS
eOORPORATIONS

992·5682

Elastic ef(ortle!Siy nips the
w01sl of live PREITY·EASY
DRESSES- you 'll want evety one
oi them fo1 day and evening. And
th• vest that tops them so neatly.
P1inted Patt•tn 4626· Miss.s
Sizes 8. 10. 12 . 14. 16 . 18. 10.
S1ze 12 (bust 34) takes 3 1!8
yards 4S·tnch fabric
$2.00 fir OHh paltlrn. A.d SOC
for OHil paltlrn fol fint-ciiSI
ainuil and handiin1. Send to:

•

TRI-COUNTY

Hrs.: Mon .· Fri.

save you time so you can save

$499

• New Homes - extensive remodeling
• Electrical work
• Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-Transmission
Repair
9

PUWNS
EXCAVATING

CONSTRUCT\ON

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE
..

loaded, new ti r es, no rust In

KITCHEN
CARPET

ROUSH

. . . 'T"

tor $3,'1'12.00 - 40'x72'x 14'
for 56,339.00 - 48'x96'xU'
for $48,881 .00 - 60'x 100' x16'
for $13,'1'13.00. Call collect
today at 6·614·294-2675 til 8
p.m.

large . Also,

Misc. Merchtndlse

Bedford Township
and
Flatwoods Area
$5-00 Per Month
weekly Pickup

Bo w llla Sollt -NeworUsed

99HS44

Ph. 367-7560

build ing sale!! 30'x48'x12'

!lbles or entire estates.

guns, pocket w•fches and
coin collections. Call 6U·
767-3167 or 557-3411 .

PrD~Hrlllt

(4 Bags Limit Per Week)

HIUORY SIWTED CWBS

Water·Sewer·E lectric
Gas Line·Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

ALL STEEL clear·span

for antiques and collec·
Nothing too

Clttnp, Wtljlll Cltanp

FAST SERVICE

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

Farm Equipment

61

1975

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Sou!hern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
'1'12-39S4.

Nto Grill' IH.h

215-lmo.

-...... ... .

...... . .

Cooking facilities, table.
S40.00 per week Phone 1· 1979 CHEVROLET Chevet·
304-773·5651 .
te, 2 dr . hdtp . Standard

Pomeroy . Large tots. Call

GOLF WJBS: .Ntw &amp; Use4l .i.
LUIONS
RIPAIRI CloloinL lolnirltinL

992·7544

Call992·3421

Amer ican Foxhound,
Chesapeake Bay Re·
tri ever. Collie type,
Benji type and Terrier

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

46
Space tor Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North ot

KLUB

Kingsbury Rd., 2 mi.
west Co. Rd . 18 .
Pomerov,Oh. 4S769
Domestic, Japanese &amp;
European
Cars &amp;
Trucks .

Three

a double. 2 62
Wanted to Buy
fur·
nlshed . Available 1st of CHIP WOOD. Poles 'In ax .
month . '1'12·2749.
diameter 10" on largest
end. S12 p-er ton. Bundled
Four room apartment for slab. S10 per ton . Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co., R!. 2,
ren!. '1'12-5908.
Pomeroy '1'12·2689.
2 BEDROOM aparlm~nt n
,. "
Middleport. No children. I·
30&lt;-882·2566.
Sleeping rooms for rent on
Main Street In Mason .

"" ll t nlll

HART'S
TRASH HAULING

KOUNTRY

VA loans no monev down
Federal Housing3% on S2S,OOO
S% on balance.
conventional LoansS%
down
Call for Information

completely

Furnished Rooms

f---__.::.===='-------1
"'
' !II@C!II N.lf.51=or"
. . cDmuunar•••
.- Apt HouuOwnen
..- Moboll He""' P.ar~l

THE

Mortgage Bankers

HALF of

bedroom

bedroom home with
perm.a ·stone
siding .
Furnace, bath , new kit·
chen, detllched garage

Drilled

SIZES 8-20

I b I i!'£5fBEII

Unfurnished one bedroom
apartment for rent. Ren·
ters assistance available
for senior citizen~. Contact
Village Manor Apartments

45

Phone

4626

type, Labrador type,

Ap•rtment
for Rent

3 AND 4 RM furnished apts . Phone 992·5434.

OFFICE 992-2259

116 E. Second Street

Printed Pattern

Alaskian Spitz, Dober·
man type, St . Beranrd

-

44

(

ltU

~~t==~~~t===='
Five Plus Vest!
J&amp;L BLOWN
KAUFPS

POMEROY

992·6260.

.._..'

992-6191
ASSOCIATES

.t~R~~~-~:.t J3

Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.

future . Call the Meigs
County Humane Society

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

Housing ·
Heaclquarters

BOWERS

REPAIR Sweepers,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances. Lawn mower.

AKC REGISTERED
Mobile homes for rent, fur · Cocker Spaniel puppies .
n lshed, very nice. Call 992· Born 1· 5-81 , $100.00 include
7479.
worming and first shots .
992·7543 .
3 BEDROOM Home. Storys
Run Rd . S200. plus depoSI!.
PUT A cold nose in your
367-7811.

children. Deposit. 992·2749.

~

Pets for Sale

56

acre lot with.(

IUp~~rlng Si nn

On Entire Stock

Trailer

bedroom house . Bath,

Real Estate- Gener•l

The

Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
Scissors.

'1'12·2181 .
2 bedroom trailer. Adults I.L~·M~•!!!ln~St!:_._..!,~~~J

2 BEDROOM mobile home
furnished . Available im·

!ties

992·2284 ,

all

,~;;;;;;;LANDMARK

Mobile Homes
for Rent

yard. Several trees. 4
bedrooms in this 7 room
house on Rt. 12&lt;4. 2 car

tank , electr ic and 1.66

!2561.

References

deposit required. '1'12-3457.

$33,000.00
YOUR OWN FRUIT
ORCHARD In the back

with central air,
1unatta ched g~mage , 2

I bridge, Portland, Oh. 843·

pets

windows, large foyer,
and
bullt · ln
c hina
ca binet are some of the
outstanding features of
this 3 4 bedroom home
In town. want to see?

! system

~ 4 BE OROOM house. 5

FOUR BEDROOM brick
home In MiddlePOrt. No

$9,000.00
FRENCH DOORS, bay

If:~

Horse Power Ridtng
Mawer
1--Good Tr11ler Approvfll Wood
Burner :Sto11t wUh tllower
1--GOOd Gal R•nge
1- Good Halpo•nt Washer
1--H " QE TV
1-- 14 cu. fl. Hotpgmt
Rtl rlgtratar
All of tne a bo Ye he ms In u ·
cellent condition . Ail 1r1 priced
Ia sell lmmelll.aleiV See us ro-

Houses tor Rent
6 room house on NYe Ave .
$200. mon!h plus depaslt .
367 7811 .

dl e port ,
with
all
ut1lifies . Has small
older home to fl)( up or
remove from
site .

• room, dining room , office,
1full ba•ement, new heat

'miles from Ravenswood

0 I

41

$19,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap· .
prox. SO'x100' lot In Mid-

and 31ots.
TRAILER LOT - On
R!. 124 near coal mine.

i3&gt;14.1.

~

MACHINE
servrce,

ELWOOD

..... .
I

Electrica 1
t•
e ngera mn

&amp; R 1·

Repairs ,

1-- 11

carpeting . 11/:1 acre lot
with large garage .

!

• blocks from scnool. '1'12·

•,- I

and

Jean Trusseii949·2UO

:,;:,==:;w:;:a=:n;:ted
=.;t=:o:;O~o==

2• . __;..._

inside

Dottle &amp; Aoger Turner

lm-2143.

-I

Pa lnl

1::==:::::::::=:====
;t:.::3c____:..:
ln:.:S:::U:.;ra::.:n:.:Co;,e__~
IN ·

.,.,

Newly constructed one
bedroom house. Needs

'6022

ca n·
your
b,lerator's license? Phone

I

992-2259

•DI, hwll ht "
•HotWII11'Tinllt

;===::;:=====- ~===~~~~==j======l-~25~-~~~m~o~.::::t=======' =·":':':::,·.··

makesl

POMEROY,O.

..·'

•D il pt~h

tOryHI
eJhnvon

10% to 20% Discount

2211

Firewood, $35.00 a truck

ACRES borders
Pomeroy City Limits.
$2,500. 949-2652 .

AU. MAKIS
• W~Ihtn

Ph. 667·6485

chquard. 992-6309 or 742-

SEWING

Now At
Pomeroy
Landmark
Repossessed
Items

915-3561
PARTS AND IIAVICI

Reedsville, OH.

Gene 's Carpet Cleaning ,
deep stream extr·action.
Free
estimated,
reasonable rates , scot ·

W.Va. 1·304-675-4154.
load, $60.00 a cord. All har ·

For Fu t hr~ •n

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Home
Improvements

84

dwOOd, split, &amp; del iVered .

NEW LISTING
CLOSE IN- off bypass.

If

prices on
furniture .
Reupholsferl ng. Jan. &amp;
Feb .,
1981.
Mowrey ' s
Upholstery, Pt. Pleasant,

8.65

Almost

f.UTOMOBILE
jS URANCE been
'telled?
LOSI

These cash rdl es
include discount

Adf rwnn int Otl'ltr tl'l•n con•ecwtl'f't ••v• will 1M Cl'llrfHII tl'lt 1 illv
rite.
11'1 ... ,..,, , Cltl tf , tlatllll' 11\d OlitWity 6 Ctflfl ,., wtr11, U .a

Mobile Homes
for Sale

BUY

WILL 00 babysitting
housecleaning. 992· 36•7.

· house located on Route 7.
'992·2571 .

15.- __
-- 16 . ____
_

UJ

32

nice trailer lot, approx .

742·3171

Let George Miller check
't'OUr present electrical
system .
Residential
. &amp; Commercial

Set•Jiees

:14 acre with Water tap,

Velma Nicinsk

For all of your wiring needs.

.,.

BUILDING SITE - Or

$26,500.00.

MILLER ELECTRIC H&amp;R BODY
SERVICE

76

(l

ment, large lot .

garage. $20,500.00.
REDUCED! SOUTH · .
ERN DISTRICT

' Trailer lot for sale, SS,OOO .
· Modular home lot on Route
!7, three bedroom farm ·

·~ · -------

Mf

1978 BLAZER , 22,000 miles,
no rus!. 992·2178

chen, 2 ba!hs, full base·

----------12 Situations Wanted

;estimates. Fred Miller at
:9'12-6338 .

•pel! word o••r 1111 mlnll'flum If wordt 11 4 ce"rt "'word,., diV

mlttltftVm . Cltlt I"

WANTED tor television.

PAY highest pt 1ce s
possi ble for gold an(1 o;;• lve r
coi ns, rings, iewclr y, ('tc.
Con ta ct Ed Bur kr'll Htl(her
Shop, MiddlepOt l

22 .

eSERVICIS

l'-•••ttan

WANTED : People to se ll
Avon . 742·2354 or 742·2755.

I

21 .

IACCtiMtiH
77- Au.. R,..Ir

:a--lu&amp;II\ISIIUitd!fttl
li-Uitl ' ACrtlte
K-tteallll•tt W1ntH

the eligibility list at 9922156or992·2157.

17 . _ _ _ __ __
18._ _ _ __ _,••
19. _ _ _ __ _ _.1
20._ _ _ _ _ _ 1

74-Moternclet
1s- _.uto Peril

ll-Ptrms fflr Sale

NOW DOIN G halllfn g,
moving jobs, rM t~~t in g
houses Inside or out .
Basement, attic cle;anln g,
also carpet clea ning. yar d
work, etc. Phone 99j!·J649.
Ask for Velma and leav e
name and num ber ·and we
wi ll return t he call Free
estimates In Me lg'i Count y
area .

•Gas heat , central air . Call

) Announcement

71-Autos tor llle
rt- V•rlll 4 W. D.

1--Htmll tor 111e1
12--Meltl
.. .tiomtt

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash fo r
'
Cla.sslffeds and
Savel· II

I Wanted
1 For Sale

IHII&amp; Perlllher

eTRANSPORTATION

eRI!AL ESTATE

11
Help Wanted
GET VALUABLE train ing
as a young business person

Motorcycles

74

Lots &amp; Acreage
TRAILER LOT for sale,
$4,000 00. 992·2571 .

!Addition, Pomeroy, Ohio.

12- lrut:ltlt tor l•t•
6:1--L.ivettock
64--Hn I Qraln

tion . $1800. Call949 2537.

--------- ..... -

8.43·4831 or 843·4734.

nounces the c to s1ng of her
own Salon a hd has
re located at tn e Fashion
Beauty Shop, 1131'1 E .
Sec ond St.. Pome or y,
owned by Mrs Elimbc t h
Vaughan. For appt. cAll

CHEVROLET

Pick up truck with top·
per In excellent cond i·

u

classify, edif or re'lect

_,-.,m laulemen1

-

1975

located on Gravel Hill ,
features living room
with · fireplace, •family
room, 4 bedrooms, kit·

MYRTIS Parker of Myr!ls ·
Kay's Be~u ty ~alan an-

give price. The Sen ti nel
r eserves the r i gh t to

IJ-W•"'" to luy

wheel drive, 11275.00. '1'12·
6323.

utlll!y room, single car
garage. $36,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Large 2 story nome

$2,800.00.
BARGAIN

Business Services

1977 DODGE four wheel

drive, 8 foot bed in good
condition . $2600 00. Also
1974 scout, 6 cylinder, two

nice 3 bedroom . ranch
home, living room ,
large eat-in kitchen,

Re111 Est1te

Humane socle!y at 992·

any ad. Your ad wil be
put in the pro per
clasification if you ' ll
check the proper box
below

Si der !rade. $3500.00. 985·
.095.

In·

6260.

If YOU deSCr ibe , tully,

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

21 - Pre~ltlllon•l

Oh . 992-6370.

ltial or groop of figures

1~Sdloolllnltructlon

underpinning

General Store , Middleport,

counts as a word . Count
name and address or W rds
phone number if used . 0
You'll get better r esu lts --+-=d=.•Y+=&lt;.:+--'-C--1--.:..:..:

SJ-IUi'fcUnt s~.~,uet

61

plete estates. Osby Martin

Pvt a cold nose in your life.
Call the Meigs County

Pr l.n t one wor;d In each
space below. Each In ·

,._,.."tor S.lt

21-- .. liMII
o,.rwnny
U-Meney 111 LNn

2360 or 992· 2639 Histones •
for
sate
P omer o y ·'
Middleport L ibra ri es.

/floor tile, plumbing. Free

eMERCHANDISE

eFINANCIAL

appointment January ·Mar ·

ch. '1'12-2264, 992 2802, on-

•---------:will do paneling, ceiling,

11-H... ItMkl GOOfs
n - CI, TV , R•dlolqulpmtnt
U-Anllt)UIS
U - Mitc. M..-ctt•ncfiu

ttediO, TV
&amp;Citt..,.lr
1._WIIttH To Do

. --~-

Addreu _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _

&amp;Awc~tct

,._

&amp; Silver, class rings , pocket
watches, chains, diamonds
&amp; so on Copper brass and
batteries, ant ique items,
also do appraisals, com ·
plete auctioneer service.
Oyer 30 years experience In
business . Will buy com ·

MEIGS MUSEUM open by

N a m e - - - - - - --'-- -

...-s ..ce'for lttr~t
t7-W•n1ed Ia !tent
tt--•qwipmet~tlor lllent

12-Sitwetfod w•ruec~
11--lnaurii\CI
1~ - lushMst Trt lnlnt

USEO FURNITURE . Gold

Write vour own ad and order by mail wUh this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone w t1 cn vou qct
results. Money not refund able

U - FIIIoomt

11--Httow•"'"

Ohio

r-----------------------,

U - Apartment tor R tnl

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Announe~ments

shot guns only. Open slgh!s
mee!ing may be held. As 22 rifle

:1-lnMemor•am

Store, Pomeroy, Ohio -45769

"blin, 41000 Laurel Cli ff

days of the dale Indicated! every Sat. night 6:30 p.m. YOUR PIAN O.
any person mav submi
at their building In Bashan. valuable to neglect,

eRENTALS

9--WaniedtoBur _

Ta)( service, federal , state,
&amp; quarterly ta xes done by "
appointment. See Wanda

RACINE

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

l-Ann04,1ncemenrt
._OivHw•v
1-Ha,,., Adl
t-Lott 1M Po1.1nf
7- V'Irll , •••
1--Publlt S•'•

~.

sons Ave., Columbus, Oh io

eANNOUNCEMENTS

stamped, 10K, UK, or 18K
gold. Silver coins, pocke!
watches. Call Joe Clark at
992·2054 at Clark's Jewelry

'1'12-2702.

COUNTY: MEIGS
_, ....................... ..
PUBLIC NOTICE
Last week the following
documents were. received
or prepared bv·'The Ohio
Card of Thllnks
Environmental Protection
Agency &lt;OEPAI. The ef- WE WOULD like !oexpress

1969 PMC 3 bedroom
trailer. 12X60. '1'12-3954.

a

Announcem ents

Roed, Pomerrov,
/,5•7111 . 992·2272.

1971 FORD dump truck In

good condition . W ill con·

WANTED T0 Buy :
Real Estate General
GOLO,
SILVER li~~~~~~~~;
PLATINUM, STERLING:
COINS, RINGS,JEWELRREALTY
Y, MISC . ITEMS. AB·
S 0 LUTE
MARKET GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr .
PRICE GUARANTED EO
Broker
BURKETT
BAR E R
Olfice742·2003
SHOP, Ml DOLE PORT
OHI0'1'12·3476.
' NEW LISTING - Extra

WoodyanJ, Jane Wyatt.

3

for S•le

el uded. $~500 . 00. 247-3942.

Charles Stt!wart , Sheri stewart, Tt~num Rtoburt,

Public Notice

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769

MONDAY
MEIGS BAND Boaters, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at high school hand room.
'ruESDAY
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Daughters of America Tuesday 7: 30 ·
p.m. Initiation and silent auction
will be held.
SALISBURY PTO, Tuesday, 7:30
p.1n. at the school. Fathers Night
will be observed. Andy Lyle, game
protector, will be the guest speaker.
Refrestunents will be served.
MIDDLEPORT LODGE 363
F&amp;AM 7 p.m. Work In master mason
degree. AU masons are invited to attend.

silver

~~=-=~~~~~~~~~lr::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~T~h~e~D~agi~ly~~~~;;~~;~
72
Trucks for Sale

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

Mobile Homes

Write M. D. Miller, Rt. ~. 1975 VIKING Mobile Home,
Pomeroy, OH1 or call '1'12· 12M5 In excellent con-

Clunille Swindell, Barbara ThOJ.nus, C~ndy
Weaver Da rla Wil co•, David W l lkt"&lt;~, l,mda
Will iams. Darla Willlarn:o~on, LJt boruh

Date 01/26/81
This final action not
4.5771"J,!)r the consideration
of SYUU.OO "and for such preceded by proposed ac·
other relief as may be tion and Is appealable to
EBR. Collection System &amp;
proper."

materials, s ummer

Social·Calendar

iewelry,

32

tee boxes,jars antiQues,
etc. Complete households.

u;n

Public Notice
Said .Petition will come Treatment Plant for the
PUBLIC NOTICE
on for hearing at 9 00 A.M . Villagc:s of Syracuse and
Notice is hereby gl ven On tne 27th day of Racln~.
that on Saturday&lt;february
, 1981, or as soon
21 , 1981, at 10:w A.M. a February
(21 16, ltc
be.
public sale will be held at thereafter as may
Pearl Norris
105 Union Avenue ,
Marshall Adams
Pomeroy, Ohlol to sell for
Herschel Norris
cash the
allowing
Clarence T. Norris
collateral, to·wlt:
'
'
I -4,
Florence Adams
1976 Pontiac Grand Prix
Trustees ot the SATISI'Y &gt;'.'J,/R NEEOS
SJ 2KS726P194674
B. CHurch
The Farmers Bank and (1) 26, (2) , 2, 9,U.
16, 4tc
Savings
Company,

training, program assistance, ad·

by Jan Jenkins and Rita Stout
following the m""ting.

rings,

~ollars, sterling, etc., wOOd

:fe

requirement! .
Approval of plans and
specffications
Syracuse· Racine Region·
al Sewer District
Racine, OH, Effective

PHONE 992-2156

camp operations, and direct service
to Scout units. In addition, the council helps ·to organlu new units and
provide techniques for recruiUng
Cubmasters, Scoutmaster, and Explorer AdvisOI'll.
Tri-State Area Council Is administered by a volunteer executive
·board. Officers are Dr. George J.
Hill, president; David J. Glockner,
vice president-program; Robert D.
Carpenter, vice president·
administration; Harold E. Kelley,
vice president-finance; Morris L.
Griffiths, vice presidentdevelopment; Dr. Richard D. Comfort, council commissioner; David
Elmore, 81l8istant council commissioner; Saul L. Kaplan,
treasurer; and Charles F. Badgley,
m. assistant trea.surer.

Grade 11 _' Tamm,y Adk.lm, Rtgan Arnold, ...
Conn! Bailey . Brian Bauer, Ktmla Hraun.
Brvcke Brickle! Kl!liY Brown, Richard Brown,
Billy Browning: Ben Chopplck. Ben .uavldson ,
Robert Oavt.!! Britt I)o(lsOO, Oebbtl! l)ot&gt;f e~.
Shari Drehel. Patti Dt.lgan, u~ Enson , ·r:resa
J
~' ields. Kevin Gtbbs Kun (,!w,
ke~N.
Ke~thHanlng, Rh0ntta !lining,
R~n Harder, Robln Herald, SaJldra Ht' rduum,
Floyd Holliday, Sheila Horky, J oy lhit~Ort,
Sberrl H sell Joyce Janey, Chet)•l Mm~on,
Chris JuYge Ange la KennedY, Rand~ Krl lllt&gt;Of.
Unda Kove\Chtk Mita Lee, Ed 1.-t'.~te r, HetklC
Long Terry M8yes, Patricia Mill'hdl, Cnrol
Morris, JotUl Morris, Juli Moormn~ . Detna
Neece, Steve Ohlinger, Randall O!l~fiH' · Arl~e~
Payne E lllabeth Perrin Rocky Pii ZCI', M rea
Riggs' Melsrue Root,
Rupe, 1'rat'l ~~~re,
Tooy , Scott, Marcy Seuon, Tt!rl! ~ Smith,

Public Notice
dressed to: Hearing Clerk,
OEAP, P. 0 . Box 1049,
Columbus. Ohio 43216,
phone : (6U) 466·6037 . Con·
suit RC Chapter 3745 and
OAC Chapter 374.5·47 and
3746 -5 for
app li Cable

WANT AD INFORMAnON

vancement

9
Wented!oBuy
IRON AND BRASS BEDS,
old furniture, desks, gold

wedding bands, anythinG

1
Lori Kloes, freshman at Judson
College tn Elgin, Dl., is just back off
Nor!h 4.5 feet fa the place of
a tour with the Judson Choir. The beginning.
group had a five day tour in Illinois
Reserving to the State of
and surrounding states returning to
Elgin in the heavy snow after having 1.-------------''------ - - ---,
to, ancel their last appearance.
Incidentally, Lori, daughter of
June and Manning Kloes, will be
coming home In March and plans to
resume her education in Ohio.

Mrs. Burton honoree of shower
A surprise. layette shower. was
held for Jenrufer Burton followmg a
recent meting of the Willing
Workers Missionary Society of the
First Church of God, Syracuse, held
at the church.
Mrs. Nonna Wilson led in prayer,
and Jan Jenkins was acting
president. Scripture wa.s taken from
I John 5, verses 1-6. Officers' reports
were read by Mrs. Virginia Oiler.
Work sessions for the Easter
bazaar were discussed with the lirst
one being held today (Monday) at
6:30 p.m. at the church. Each member is to take ideas and items which
they have been working on at home.
It was decided that each member
will take a joke gift to sell at the next
meeting. The Rev. George Oiler
cloSed the buailll!llll meeting with
prayer.
lee cream and cake were served

Dole Brickl.,, Mari&lt;Cillle,BWC&lt;IImer,Jeanet~o

P\&amp;&amp;h. Belinda Rolllh, Jeff siunet, 11\LHilil..'l Si~
Roberta Smith. Becky nma, nm Ttlll!l,
~Tumtr BrianWbaley,FredYoong.

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want· Ads

Northeast corner of Cass ie
Sayre lot, running East 3()
feet ; thence South 45 feet i
thence West 30 feet ; thence

Boy scouts to enroll members

This corning ~ear you art' likely to fonn
several important partnerships. Two Will be
fi)T' social pW"]))Ses. The third could be for
bwlinesa.
AQUARIUS fJaD. ZO.Feb. UJ Pllrtners
may be a bit mOrt! competent than you are
today in handling your collective interests.
. lnstead of bucking the1r effurts. emphasize
.cooperalioo. Romance, travel, luck, resour, ces, possible ptUalls and career for the
•coming months are all discwsed in your
1 Astr...,.Oraph which begirn with your bir·
' thday Mail $1 fur each to Astro-Graph, Bolt
: 419, Radiu C1ty Stat1 on, N Y 10019. Be sure
1lospecify b1rthdale.
' PISCES fFt&gt;b. Zll-M.ar ch 201 The duties for
• which you're resrJOnslble y~&gt;u' ll deal w1th
1 full y today. Tht! bmd could cume by l.olkinJo:
1 on the chores of the less--efricient.
1
ARIES (March Zl·AprU 19) In your
: deali~ with friends things will be going
1 your way tOday, yet there's a possibility you
1could do something unwi:Je and create ill• will.
• TAURUS (April JO..May %8) Be supportive
' of family members today, especially in
: situatiON where others boast or acrompliWnents of lhelr brood. llon'l be ane-

l

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Evans, Portland, entertained recently with a
party in celebratiO!l of the third birthday of their son, Matthew Shane,
at their home.
Cake, ice cream, KQOl-Aid, coffee
and chips were served. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Philip Ohlinger
and Laura, Darrin Warth, Mrs. Barbara Talbott and Donette, Denise
Manuel, Robert Brown, Matthew's
grandmother, Mrs. Ada Van Meter,
his brother and sisters, Ryan, Alicia
and Cindy. Sending gifts were his
grandmother, Mrs. Bernice Evans,
Andy and Sharon Owen, Leota Blr-.
ch, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fitch, Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Evans, Megan and
Jessica, Mr. and Mrs. Don Hunoel
and Artie.

=·=r~,=.

Scott Plctena, Kris Snowden, Tonya Stobart,
Paula Swisher, Grell Taylor, Renee W1Ws,
·s...
nna Wise
Grade 11 -· tanya Aleshire, Tereu. 8uham.
Klm Btrdlllokl, Resina Blantoo, Vickie Boyl.,,

"M

Meaghan Smith

=l=.,

B!'&lt;nt Flnt.... Becky Handley PoW. Horton,
St.pllanle!louchU.., Ani!•"' H•bb.;nl, Usa Jarvu, Valerie Jeflon, Swan Lislrtloot, Mary c..,

.'

Monday, February 16, 19ill

PH. 992-7119

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

All ty p&lt;&gt;s of roo I work ,
new or r epair gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and pa inting .
All work gutHMitced.

Free Estimates
Re.Jsonable Pnces
Call Howard

949·1862
949·2160

2-4·1fc

40625 St. Rt. 681
85

General Hauling

J&amp;C Sanitat ion Servi ce.
Trash pi ckup available in

Village of Middleporf.
Phone 992·5016 or 992·7597

anytime.

2·13·1 mo. pd .
15

General Htullng

NOW DOl NG hauling,
mov ing jobs , painting
houses i nside
basement·attic

or out ,
cleaning,

also carpet cleaning, yard
work, etc. 992·3849. Ask fOr

Velma and leave name! and
no. Will return call . Free 1
estimates in Meigs Co. ·
area .

�Pagt&gt;-~:1--The

Area deaths
Edward Wayne Wolfe
Edward Wayne Wolfe, 72, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, ·died Sunday at his
residence.
; Mr. Wolfe was preceded in death
by his parents, Wil)iam and Lucinda
POoler Wolfe, one daughter, Mona
June and one sister Nina Robinson. ·
Mr. Willie was a member of the
Mt. Hermon United Brethren Church.
·
, . He is survived by his wile, Gladys
Wolfe; son and daughter-in-law,
Hubert and Judy Wolfe, Pomeroy;
daughter, Sandy Keney, Pomeroy;
two brothers, Glenroy Wolfe,
Cleveland, and Alfred Wolfe,
Pomeroy; two·sisters, Ella Spencer
and Edna Stalder both of Pomeroy;
three g~andchildren, William Keith
Wolfe and Lee and Alesha Keney,
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held Wed·
nesday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Robert
Sanders and Rev. James Leach officiating. Burial will be in MI. Her·
mon Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home this evening from 7
to 9 and Tuesday from 7 to 9. The
family request in lieu of flowers
donations be made to the cancer
fund.

Anna Davis Grim
Aruia Davis Grim, 94, Middleport,
died Sunday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital following an ex·
tended il!Iiess.
Mrs. Grim was born July 4, 1886 to ·
the late Edmond and Sarah Smith
Davis. She was also prceded in death
by her husband, Victor Grim in !967.
Mrs. Davis was the last member of a
large family. She was a member of
the Middleport First Baptist Church.
She is survived by two daughters
and sons-in-law, Alice and Russell
(Bros) Mills, Middleport and Jane
and Robert Sever, North Canton;
one son and daughter-in-law, Paul
and Esta Grim, New Boston; nine
'grandchildren, 17 great grandchildren and two great great gbrandchildren.
. Funeral services will be held Wed·
nesday at 11 a.m. at the Rawlings·Coats-Blower Funeral Home with
the Rev. Mark McClung officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
Cemetery. Friend!; may call at the
· funeral home from Tuesday from 2
to4and7to9.

Robert F. Gordon
Robet F. Gordon, 67, of Rt. 1,
Cheshire, died at 5 p.m. Seturday in
Holzer Medical Center. He had been
in failing health for the past four
years.
Born May 17, 1913, in Cheshire
Twp., Gallia County, son of the late
Baker and Mabel Hawley Gordon,

Monday, February 16, 1981

Pomeroy Mlddleport,,Ohio

DailY Sentinel

Blood appeal .for Kingsbury man

·1.
.J

An appeal was issued today for
he was a retired fanner and pipefit·
blood
for Stephen Eugene Smith, 24,
ter.
Kingsbury,
who has used 42 pints of
He belonged to the following
blood
to
date
during his recent con·
organizations: United Association of
Pipefitters Union, No. 521, Hun·
tington, W. Va.; The Aladdin Temple of the Shrine; the Gallipolis
Shrine Club; the OHio Valley Commandery, the Bosworth Council, and
the Royal Archmasons, all of
Pomeroy; Siloam Lodge No. 456 of POMEROY-six runs were made by
Cheshire; and was secretary of the local emergency uits Friday and
Gallia County Fol\hunters Saturday morning ~ Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service repor·
Association.
.
.
He married Esther Baker, who ted.
· survives, on July 17, 1937, in
At. 12:39 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Brown's Trailer Court for
Pomeroy.
Also surviving are a son, James, Sylvia Deicher who was taken to
of Rt. I, Cheshire; a grandson and Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
granddaughter; a brother, Emory of 11:46 a.m. the Pomeroy squad tran·
Rt. I, Cheshire; four sisters, Mrs. sported Mona Farra and Ward
Vesta Ham of Gallipolis, Janet Gor- Sayre, injured in an auto accident, to
don of Cheshire, Mrs. Belva Miller of Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
Dayton, and Mrs. Delores Moore of 11:54 .a.m. Daisy and Henry Sayre,
also injured in an auto accident,
London.
A sister preceded him in death.
were taken to Veterans Memorial
Funeral services will be held at 2 Hospital; Mona Farra and Daisy
p.m. Tuesday in the Waugh·Halley· Seyre were taken in the transfer
Wood Funeral Home, with the Rev. vehicle to Holzer Medical Center; at
'Daphne Resch officiating. Burial 8:45 a.m. Tuppers Plains unit Iran·
will be in Gravel Hill Cemetery.
sported Maude Seals to St. Joseph
Friends may call at Jhe funeral Hospital; at 10:18 a.m. the Syracuse
home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. today . unit took Opal Cummings to
Masonic services will be held in the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Saturday at 6:50a.m. the Tuppers
funeral home at8 p.m. today.
Plains unit took Sam Bias, SR 181,
Reedsville, to St. Joseph Hospital.
Maude Mae Seals

the intensive care unit. He is
married to the former Becky
Houdashelt of Pomeroy and is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Smith and
the son.in.law of Mr.'and Mrs. Gene
Houdashelt.
Residents are asked to give in his

finement to Holzer Medical Center.
Smith is seriously ill at the
Gallipolis hospital and is confined to

:1\leigs County happenings ••
Emergency runs

name when the next American Red
Cross Bloodmobile visits the Meil!ll
Senior Citizens Center from 1:30 to 6
p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 25. Those
doing so are to inform the clerical
help of the unit that they were giving
in Smith's 011me.

Budget, inflation biggest items
•
In Reagan's .congressional speech
WASlllNGTON (AP) - President
Reagan, disdaining any "cutesy
acronym" to symbolize his assault
on the !Uition's economic woes, will
use "straight talk"· in his televised
address to Congress to call for immediate action on cutting taxes, the
budget and goverrunent regulation,
. his chief spokesman says.
"We have no choice," press
secretary James Brady said Monday as Reagan and his aides com·
pleted a " page by page,llne by line"
review of the speech ln the White
House library. "We have to deal
with inflation. He is saying the

TUESDAY SESSION
Group 2 of the First United
Presbyterian Church will meet at
7:30p.m., Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky, Middleport, with
Mrs. Thomas Rue as c~hostess. The
'program for the evening will be a
religious play with Mrs. Harley
Brown in charge of devotions.
TO MEET TUESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Council323,
Daughters of America will meet
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. There will be
initiation and a silent auction by the
Good of the Order committee.

Patrol cites

-A tw~part tax document consystem will work if we let it work."
taining
specifics of his proposed cuts
The speech, to be delivered at 9
in
individual
income taxes and acp.m. EST Wednesday; will be the
,
cejerated
depreciation
schedules in·
centerpiece of a six-part package
tended
to
reduce
business
taxes. The
detailing Reagan's economic
New
York
Times
report~
today the
program of tax reductions and ap.
administration
will
propose
that
proximately $50 billion in budget
high-income
Americans
ln.
cuts.
divlduals
earning
at
least
$42,500
·
The president's package alsp will
·
and
couples
earning
at
least
$60,000
contain:
·
- His actual budget message - receive less than the full 30 per·
revising the Carter administration's cent tax cut .being considered for
fiscal 1982 spending proposal of most taxpayers over three years.
-A 12-to lf&gt;.page fact sheet.
$739.3 billion.
-Proposals to revise government
- A written message to Congress
regulations.
expanding on points in the speech.

•

Saunders, 79, was westbound on
Springfield Twp. Rd. 22 at 4:30p.m.
when he reportedly failed to make a
turn at the intersection with CR 10.
Seunders' car then slid across the
road and collided with a fence,
causing slight !lamage to the auto.
He was injured, but not treated, and
the patrol cited Saunders for DWI
and no operator's license.
The patrol also investigated two
car-deer accidents in the area over
the weekend.
Troopers said Jeffrey D. Jones,16,
Reedsville, waseastboundonSR681
in Meigs County at 1:30 a.m. Saturday when his car struck and killed a ,
deer, causing slight damage to his
car and no injury.
Ruby Vaughan, 43, Middleport,
was eastbound on U.S. 35 in Jackson
County at 9:30p.m. Saturday when
her ca r collided with a deer . The
deer was not found afterward,
troopers said. Slight damage was
reported to Vaughan's car and there

See Our New Selection
Voi.29,No. 21S
Copyrighted 1981

MEN'S
KNIT
SHIRTS

Maude Mae Seals, 87, Tuppers
Eight emergency calls were anPlains, died Saturday at St. Joseph swered by local units over the
Hospital, Parkersburg.
weekend, the Meigs Emergency
Mrs. Seals was hom Nov. 17, 1893 Medical Services reports.
the daughter of the late Peter and
On Saturday at 9:02 p.m., the
Edna Osborne Dorst. She was also Pomeroy Unit took Eula Welker,
New styles arriving
dailY .
Famous
preceded in death by her husband, Laurel St., to Veterans Memorial
m akes
!ike Van
Davis Seals, one ·son, two brothers, Hospital; the Rutland Unit at 4:12
Heusen · Wrangler · \
three sisters and one great gran- p.m. took Iva Stewart, Main St. to
Campus . In sizes S
dson.
Holzer Medical Center; the Tuppers
(306), M ( 38·40) , L
Mrs. Seals was a member of the Plains Unit at 6:.50 a.m. took Sam
(42 · 44 )
and
XL
SimpSon Methodist Church, Belville, Bias from Route 681 to St. Joseph
(46·48). Short sleeve
solids
patterns .
W. Va. , She lived in Belville for 54 Hospital in Parkersburg and at 10:22
Make you r selections
years prior to moving to Tuppers a.m., the Middleport Unit took
ear ly .
Plains 13 years ago.
Raymond Napper, Bailey Run Road
She is survived by three to Veterans Memorial.
daughters, Mrs. Perry (Sylvia) Cur·
On Sunday at 3:17 p.m., the
tis, Reedsville; Mrs. William (Vera)
Unit treated Sendy Evans
Thompson, Elizabeth, W. Va., and Syracuse
at ber home on Third St.; the
Mrs. James (Helen) Beck, Kent;
UnitCollege
at 9:25p.m.,
Sam ..~w~a~s~no~·:
·n~ju~ry~.-----·~-J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rutland
two sons, Glenn of Kent and Eugene Beller
from
Ave. to took
Veterans
of Akron; one brother, Frank Dorst, Memorial; the Tuppers Plains Unit
Long Bottom and one sister, Cora at 11 :56 a.m. took Paul Andrews
Emrick, Lancaster.
from his home to Veterans
Funeral services will he held Memorial, and the Middleport Unit
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the White at 10:56 p.m., took Frances Hawkins
Funeral Home, Coolville, with the from 10 Libery Ave., to Holzer
Rev. Roy Deeter officiating. Burial Medical Center.
will be in Sand Hill Cemetery, Long
Bottom. Friends may call at the
CAR STRIKES POLE
funeral home at anytime.
LB.
Pomeroy Police report that a car
driven by Gregory Davis, Syracuse,
MEETSAT6P.M.
struck a utility pole on W. Main St.,
The Southern Local Board of at 2:40 a.m. Police said Davis went
Education will meet this evening at 6 right to avoid a collision with a car
19 per roll
p.m. rather than 7 p.m. as was which had stopped in front of his
reported.
vehicle.

ELBERFELDS. IN POMEROY

GROUND BEEF

'139

ECKRICH SAUSAGE

J
;

l
.•

MATE

INSTANT

18

oz.

DELTA

QUAKER OATS
REG~~R &amp;

4 ROLLS
CARNATION

PINK
SALMON

Rich Chocolate

'1

2% MILK

8

COCOA ,

'

79~

BATH TISSUE

15 '12 OZ. WHITNEY

MIX

GAL

j

~

139

BISCUITS

6/'1

2 LB. SHEDD'S
-·---r-

99~
CELERY

BANANAS

WJUTE PLAINS, N.Y. -Jean Harris, former headmistress of an
exclusive school for girls, a woman of silk and pearls, loved Dr. Herman Tarnower for It years. Today a jury was beginning deliberQtions
on whether his death at her banda was murder or an accident born of
her suicidal depression.
·
A string of witnesse~ - society matrons, educators, school
colleagues and students - testified about her character and the
emotional tunnoll she was in.
The three-month trial, marked both by high-societY drama and by
complicated medical testimony, reached its climax Monday with five
hours of impassioned closing arguments.

Suspect faces court arraignment

8 OZ. BALLARD

VALLEY BELL

.It's so convenient
__to_bank by _maiL

79c

~~

Deliberations begin in Harris case

COFFEE-

49c BUNCH

!..AS VEGAS, Nev.- A Las Vegas Hilton busboy was going to court
today for arraignment on charges of murder and arson stenuning
from a fire at the hOtel that left eight -people dead imd 192 others in.
jured last week.
Police alleged Philip Bruce Cline acknowledged starting the !Ire,
contending it was an ·accident that occurred when a marijuana
cigarette he lleld touched against curtains in an eighth-floor elevator
lobby.
The Feb. 10 blaze quickly spread up 21 stories to the top of the 3()..
story hotel, the largeat in the United States.

Services held for fire victims
DUBUN, Ireland - Oturches throughout the Irish Republic held
services today on a n~tional day of mournjng for the 44 victims of last
Saturday's Dublin disco fire.
The services coinCided with the first funerals of the young people
who died In the Valentine's Day tragedy at the Stardust cabaret, the
worst fire ln Dublln's history. Thirteen of the dead have still not been
Identified. The Injured were 130.

Ohio lottery winning nuinher
CLEVELAND- The wiMing selected Monday night in the Ohio Lot·
tery's daily game "The Number" was: lm. The lottery reported earnings of f546,3!8 .50 from the money wagered. Lottery officials said
sales were 18tS,540.50. Holders of winning tickets are entitled to share
$299,222.

Weather

Farmers
Bank·
Your Community Owned Bank

Mernber fDIC

CHERRY
PIES

TV

DINNERS

79~

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Patrol cites
two drivers

!

. ~
. ~·"

oz.

1 Section, 12 Pages

Next to the restroom area would . EDA winterization grant totaling ,
be two furnaces which would be in $75,200. It bas been estimated that
two zones, one to heat the an additional $75,000 to $100,000 will
auditorium and the other to heat the be needed to complete rehabilitation
office rooms. The furnace to the of the bUilding. Application for a
auditorium would only be turned on loan for the additional funds has
when in use.
been made by Kim Shields, grant
Aramp on the hack of the building consultant, through FHA. .
- o··
would, be constructed for the han·
Also included in the rehabilitation
dicapped. Basset also explained that is insUlation, new insulated roof, and
an elevator shaft could also be dry wall.
placed on the first floor. Basset said
Basset said two contracts will be
if an elevator is required, It would necessary when the job goes for
cost approximately $-15,000. Basset bids, one for EDA work and one for
is to find out first if the elevator Is alterations.
required before completing the
Councll will be able to borrow the
plans.
necessary funds through FHA at 5
The second floor will house the of. percent interest.
flee of the mayor, the clerk's office
The most important Issue . at the
and office of the secretary.
moment is completing the plans by
Bas&amp;et explained that most of the the . !liSt day of Feb., Baslet ex·
windows will have to replaced . plalned.
Those not replaced Ifill need to be
SUGGESTS WAGE INCREASE
repaired and painted. Another fur·
Larry Wehrung, councilman,
nace will also be on the second floor. suggested council grant a wage in·
Council has approval an 80 percent
(Continued on page 12)

By KATIE CROW
Athens Architect David Basset
Monday night outlined plans for the
conversion of the former Pomeroy
Senior High School to a city hall
building at a meeting of Pomeroy
Council.
Basset presented blueprints of the
building and explained that the
auditorium on tbe first floor would
remain an auditorim. He added that
the walls in the auditoriwn portion
were in good condition and the only
work necessary would be electric
work and painting.
One of the former classrooms on
the lower floor will be converted into
a council chamber.
One of the two large restrooms
would be converted into a room for
the water department and the boys'
restroom Into two restrooms.
The· two remaining rooms on the
first floor would be used as room
for the police department and the
other an office for the chief of police.

oz.

16

Mter the speech, Reagan will
withdraw from tb€ fray as Cabinet
officials and David A. Stockman,
director of the Office of
Management and Budget, begin
trying to sell the president's
proposals to the public ancl
Congress.
;Vter speaking to the news
executives Thursday morning, and
possibly meeting with congressional
leaders that same morning for the'
second time in two days, Reagan
will leave for a four-day visit at his
ranch near Santa Barbara, Calif.

Architect outlines
b~ding conversion

SUPERIOR FRANKIE$
22 oz.

serious times. It is a serious mission.
·The descriptive title of this will be as
straight as the straight talk" of the
speech, the press secretary said.
He said Reagan, attempting to
correct "some misapprehension,"
wi)l promise "equal treatment ·for
business subsidies as well as other
government programs. "
·
This would appear to be aimed at
alleviating fears that the president
will seek to stem government spen·
. ding increases by cutting social
programs without reducing government aid for business.

entine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February '17, 1981

, •1

12

at

e

ELBERFELD$

(Continued from page I)
The pa·"trol said Heber Marshall

•

"This will be the information base
from which we begin the offensive,"
Brady said, He outllned a multi·
front approach that will have )op administration officials appearing on
television news programs and 125
ellecutives of major newspapers
from acros!i the country visiting the
White House to be briefed 'by. the
president.
Brady said the speech will focus ·
on the budget and tax cuts, the need
for a stabilized monetary policy and
the regulatory revisions.
Reagan "has rejected the thought
of a cutesy acronym. These are

Considerable cloudlneas and Mftliance of showers tonight and Wednesday. Lows tonight near 50. Highs Wednesday near 60. Chance of
rain 30 percent tonight and Wedneaday. Southwesterly winds less than
10 mph tonight.
Exleuded Ohio Foreea1t- Thuraday through Seturday: Achance of
showers Thursday and again Saturday. Fair Friday, Highs in the 50s
Thursday and Seturday and In the upper 50a to upper 601 Friday, Lows
from the upper 30s to low tOs Thursday morning and mostlY In the toe
Friday and Saturday.

Two persons were cited in
separate traffic accidents in·
vestigated by the Gallia·Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol Monday.
· Tiie patrol said a car driven by
Robert E. Rober1.'! Jr., 59, Gallipolis,
was northbound on SR 7 in Gallia
County a~ 11:20 a.m. when his car
collided with another vehicle driven
by Henry P. Cook, 41, Gallipolis.
Moderate damage was reported to
PRESIDENT'S DAY- American flago drooped In to be doing a better than normal day on Monday, of·
both car~ and Cook was cited for
the drtallng rain Monday as the commullity observed flees of the county courthouse were clooed, there wao
failure to yield.
President'• Day. Although buslneos houses 11ppeared. no mall delivery, and hanks and other office• were
closed for the oboervance.
Troopers said autos driven by
James R. Mlller, 28, Rio Grande,
and Presion M. Jordan, 18, Thurman, were both eastbound on U.S. 35
in Gallia County at 9:25 a.m. when
Miller's car stopped for a left turn.
According to the report, Jordan
was unable to stop and collided with
the rear of the Miller auto, causing
slight damage to the Mlller. vehicle
and severe to Jordan's car.
Several area residents are named, collection suits we intend to impress anything about it."
Jordan was cited for assured clear
According to information supplied
among 501 defendants, in suits upon these defaulters that the
distance, troopers said.
through
the Department of Justice,
federal
government
is
indeed
The patrol investigated a two-car brought today against 'former
112
former
Rio Grande College
serious
about
repayment.
All
others
crash in Gallia County Monday mor- college and university students
students
are
curl'e!ltly
In default (for
must
realize
that
they
will
either
charged with defaulting on federal
ning.
a
total
of
$107,265)
on
their NDSL
repay
their
loans
or
suffer
the
conVehicles driven by Edward J . student loans, according to a
payments.
The
default
rate at Rio
sequences,''
Cissell
said
today.
Schott, 44, Waterford, and Chris A. statement released by the United
i3rande,
according
to
the
U.S. At·
In
announcing
the
suits,
the
U.S.
Capehart, 17, Middleport, were both States Attorney for the Southern
torney,
is
19.88
.
Attorney
.
expressed
alarm
at
the
southbound on SR 7 at 11:35 a.m. District ofOhio.
A total of 1,112 former Ohio
"These cases total $663,868.46 and number of defaulted loans and the
when both cars attempted to pass
University
students (for a total of
are based on defaulted student high default rate of the National
another vehicle.
$953,453)
are
currently in default.
Direct
Student
Loan
Program,
.(NDCapehart's auto then went off the loans, Insured by .the U.S. Depart·
The
O.U.
default
rate is 17.44.
left side of the road, colliding with a ment of Education under the SL) which is administered by
"
The
NDSL
Program ad·
fence, the report said, causing Federal Insured Student Loan colleges ... "particularly ln the ministered by the colleges in the
Program, and Veterans Ad· Southern District of Ohio.''
moderate damage.
Cissell was harshly critical of the Southern District of Ohio has a
ministration
assistance allowance.
Troopers said a car driven by
institutions administering the default rate of 20.04 percent," Cissell
Harold R. Bush, 44, Gallipolis, was The defendants ln these cases have
concluded, "The amount in default
backing Into the Gallipolis cl(f resisted and ignored collection ef· programs.
"In response to the request of this in this district for this one program
building parking lot at 11:30 a.m. forts by the lenders and have
office in 1979 th!lt the colleges and is $23.6 million and actually exceeds
received
at
least
one
demand
letter
and collided with a parked vehicle
universities begin more aggressive by 76 percent the amount taken in all
owned by Charles E. Moody, 2t, from this office. Judgments now are
collection procedures, one college bank robberies in the United States
being
sought
against
them
as
a
last
Rodney.
administrator responded, 'it wasnl last year."
resort,"
U.S.
Attorney
James
C.
Moderate damage was reported to
part of the image of a college to be
Moody's car and slight to the Bush Cissell charges.
hounding students. It's kind of like a
Area
residents
(along
with
auto.
father dunning his son."' he said.
monetary
judgment
sought)
named
The patrol Investigated a palr of
Cissell added, "In my opinion this
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
two-car crashes in Meigs County in the suits Include: Ronald E. Huff.
attitude has been a major con· reminds the public that bids will be
man,
Gallipolis,
($1,0t0.02);
Robert
Monday.
tributing factor to the outrageous taken for sale of the village lot at
Wayne S. King, 19, Nashport, was M. Payne, Jackson, ($890.15); Bendefaults of student loans. College ad· Garfield and South Third Ave. WlW 4
nie
J.
Wright,
Pomeroy,
($910.90);
eaatbound on U.S. 33 at 7:30 a.m.
ministrators and many others p.m. Monday, Feb, 23.
'
when a westbound auto apparently Gilbert K. Smith, Pomeroy, ($631);
responsible
lor
coliecting
these
All
bids
received
will
be
con- .
went left of center and collided, Bennett D. Roush. Belpre ($655.20);
loans
are
concerned
about
their
sidered
at
the
regular
meeting
Moncausing slight damage to King's Edgar B. Richardson, Coalton 'images' rather than their responday, Feb. 23, at 7:30p.m.
auto. The westbound car continued ($1,552); William Mannering, sibilities, and as a result former
Bids on the property may be left at
Jackson, ($1,323); and, Albert D.
on, the report said.
the
Mayor's office any lilne prior to
Neal,
Wellston,
($1,433.60).
students
believe
that
if
they
ignore
The patrol !lBid Ralph E. Parker,
the bid deadline.
"By
filing
a
large
nwnber
of
repayment
demands
no
one
will
do
(Continued on page 12)

Government cracks down ·
on student default cases

Public reminder

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