<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13662" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13662?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T18:31:01+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44636">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/af61a447521f4ea0de078fdb9e865be3.pdf</src>
      <authentication>17c045186b630d394fe251c73e093ec7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42763">
                  <text>'

WINTHROP

·b Dick Cavalli

·'

,

MY UNCLE .JAK~WON 50
THOLJSt\ND DOL..!.ARS IN 11-lj;
STATE L.Oi"TERY LA5r WE:E::K.

I

· Meigs encls streak;
Southern triumphs

.

'

.

~~~ND HE(~YEO:n-11:: 10Tf\L ...

~' HE~ ~h-415
3/RrHI DATE
1
'
'
..

'

· 1'V MY AWNT ELLA 5 ...
I
,

l'l/

AtJD.' $/2/34. :.

I

85:77. .. ~N TI-lS LOTTEI&lt;~ AND
WO&gt;J 50 ltl0LI6AND
DOLLAR6!
t•
' \
:'

.

,.

Page 3

I.

.,
.......,.enttne
"I .

,' •

,. {\ f

e

,•

'

Page 4

J

' '
'

Is snuff
dipping
dangerous?

No Bengals in
'83 Super Bowl

.
Voi.31 ,No . 176

•

at

I Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 10, 1983 ·

Copyo;ghtod 1982

UMW offers
.

l:.ILJ,.. . UNCLE

NOf6377...
WRONG-.:

""'" IJIMC&gt;E' A

I

HE

M15TAK~.
.'

,~

By KEVIN KeUy

OVPstaff
• I'!

'

•.'

'

\

\

•

rr .

. Priscilla's Pop

,•

..

.. .

,,A;

.

\JUST A LITTLE
I

•

WHILE~.ITS

SO 8E'AUTI FUL .'

~Y

'.
t.

Ed Sulli.v an

WElL·"ALL
RIGHT.' JUST
ONE NORE

'· WEEK .I

WILKESVILLE- United Mine
Workers of i\rnmica officials have
offered their assistance In narrow·
ing a cominunication gap between
Southern Ohio Coal Co. and Citizens
Organized . Against LongwalUng,
the group protesting property
damage caused by the ·mining
technique In Meigs and VInton
.counties.
The union also maintained that
longwalling is the best means Ohio's
coal Industry has now to stay
competitive.
Ed Bell, president of UMW
District 6, and Gene Oller, Local
1886 chief, assured COAL members
and other area residents Sunday the
unlon would help In getting fair
settlements made for those people
who either suffered damage or lost
their water supply•through mining
beneath their property. .
"I th!nl&lt; we can get together with
America n Electric Power and put
pressure on them to . settle with
you," Bell said.
Oller offered to arrange the
meeting with COAL and company
- ' ofl!c"fal s ·to straighten · out
d!!ferences.
•
t ''W..e~~ sUre aslt for lt, '~'· ht] sa~;· 1'·' P'·~·
they .!lon't want to mee! l"iuf,Yo"\1,
we'D let you· know what the reason

is.··
Oiler pointed out to the group the
company instituted the longwaU
procedure, which allows forupto90
percent recovery of coal mined, to
stay competitive against non-unlon
productandcoalnowbe!ngmlnedln

••
TAKE Af\:IOTHER .WHACk
AT THE..
--F-UMI?K!INS&lt;'
· ·,
. .

Ed Bell

Second
.
unit
working
..

help to COAL

BETlER TI=I,;..L ·'

NUMBS&lt;.5

1sCents

- A Muhimedia Inc . Newspa~r

the west.
"One block of coal pays for a.
longwall - It's a good product,"
Oiler said.
A possible way of mln!mizlng any
further damage done to property Is
to install arches under homes where
the longwall machine Is operating,
the local president explained.
Although production at Meigs
Mine No. 2, near Wilkesville, has
temporarily ceased t:ue to a coal
stockpile and layoffs, he said the
completion of a new, $55 miiUon
NOW OPERATIII!G - 'l1ds aerial vieW" shows 24,000-kw units are visible at lower center. The plant,
preparation plant at MelgsNo.l will
lhe Racine Hydro Plant, shortlY before It went Into
owned by Ohio Pclwer Co., Is the first of Its type to be
soon eliminate the stockpile.
·operation, and tbe U.S. Anny Corps of EDglneers
used on the Ohio River and among the first to he used
"If you'veseen that stockpile, It's
,Lock and Dam near Pomeroy. The Inlets for lite two
In lite United States. , I' '
·~, ~w,
imperative for them to get It out
now , becauseii's burning up," Oiler
noted .
COAL members were Informed
by their attorneys, Jon Sowash and
Jay Wamsley, that the best way the
group can force some changes and
prevent further damage is to make
their sentlrnenls known at a public
hearing slated for the first week of
other reason.
He urged his a~dienceto "shape a
March to discuss a permit appllcaCOLUMBUS, Ohio iAPl swearing
In
took
place
strategy
for our basic , Industry
Celeste's
t!on by Southern Ohio Coal to Richard Celeste was-publicly sworn
amid
the
backdrop
of
an
Ohio
lnnova~on ahd
which
emphasizes
cont!nuelongwaUingatMelgsNo,2.
In as Ohio's 64th governor today,
unemployment
rate
of
more
than
14
aims
at
global
fair
trade
."
"It's a good'pos!tlon to be In now andthe45-year-oldDemocratasked
percent,
the
~tate's
highest
since
the
Celeste
said
Ohioarui
should
not be
because the rompany is existing . Ohioans to join him to "ease today's
overcome by the realities of the
Great Dep~ion.
under a temporacy pennlt, whi~pls,~';&gt;-sli'a:~ P!l.in" qt joblessness.
In
his
Inaugural
address,
the
new
state
economy, but should work to
subject to change," Sowash · i'lf':, · Cel!ls~"llook the public oath on the
drew
on·
that
statistic.
"relndustrlallze
Ohio."
governor
plalned. "We also have proof • west steJ]il;of ~Statehouse shortly
In
his
' speech, Celeste-··
"Iwice
''We
know
the
pain
of
those'three
something is wrong, •wrtli-'lbe after [na~l ceremonieS began
quarters
of
a
million
of
our
brothers
referred
to
the
state
slogan, "With
process."
•
,,
at 11: :.1 a .m .,The swearing-!n was
and
sisters
who
have
no
work,"
God,
all
things
are
possible,''
saying
Sowash noted the Ohio ·Depart· ceremonial because Celeste pri·
Celeste
said.
"We
knoW
the
pain
of
he
planned
to
reaffirm
that
motto
as
ment of Natural Resourpes;· which
vately took the oath Saturday and
those
2,00!
people
who
walt
In
the
governor.
Is processing the corri(iany"s per· · assumed the governorship at 12: 01
cold for :nJ minimum wage jobs at
Celeste beat his Republican
mit, lias received more protests on
a .m. today.
,
the new store In the' maH. There are challenger, U.S. Rep. Clarence
granting the permit. scheduted to
· OutgoingRepublicanGov.James
many who seek a simple reason ...
Brown, by 600,(00 votes In the
last five years, than on any other
A. Rhodes sai\1 Sunday his aides
for
this
pain.
There
Is
none.
'
Novemb.!r general election. hamproject handled by tl1elr mining and
were told of the early swearing-ln. .
Nor,
Celeste
said,
Is
th.
e
re
a
quick
mering
on his theme of "jobs, jobs,
reclamation off!&lt;;e.
Rhodes. who left the governor's
solution.
jobs"
and
linking Brown to Pres!·
otnce alter serving longer than any
He and Wamsley ortglnally
reason
for
our
pain,
and
the
"The
dent
REagan's
econofl'1!c policies. ·
COI'$idered seeking an injpnctlon In
other Ohio chief executive, a total of
Is.
the
Throughout
his campaign, Cechallenge
for
our
future,
MelgsCountyCommonP!easCourt
16 years In office, said he was not
reality
that
the
world
has
changed
In
leste stressed the economic issue
angered by Celeste's decision to
against ·Southern Ohio Coal, but
profound ways, thatwenowUvelna
and vowed to Institute a "buy Ohio"
· have abandoned the Idea for now to
take the oath early. But he said he
global marketplace on this tiny blue
policy, which would give preferred
concentrate on complllng evidence
thought the early swearlng-lnwould
planet
and
we
will
never
return
to
status
to Ohio products, bids and
tor the public hearing.
detract from the Imparlance of
past
simpler
times,"
he
said.
contracts.
He refused to back down
today's Inauguration.
Sowash revealed that West V!rg!·
promiSe
despite warnings
from
the
Although he blamed federal
nla geologists have created a
Celeste said he took the oath of
that"
the
action
could result In
otnce In a "very small thing with the . policies "Which shun our region" for
formula by which subsidence, the
retalfation
by
other
states.
some. of the state's problems, he
fam!ly" a nd that the oath was
sink!ngofgroundduetom!nJng,can
Celeste takes the office held by ·
said Ohio's faltering economy
be predicted.
administered at the Columbus
Rhod~.
73, who was the nation's
stems
primarily
from
"the
conse"If we can predict how bad
Sheraton Hotel by Supreme Court
,
oldest
governor.
quence
of
historic
chan~e."
surface damage can bE.'. the
Justice Frank Celebre22e.
was
first
e
lected
to the
Rhodes
He
said
state
leaders
"must
prediction can put you In a better
"! took the oath of office early,
In
1962
and
state's
hlghest
office
repair Ohio ... for global competition
which Is a customary thing to do, "
position on how to fight this," he
served
two,
four-year
terms.
which Is unrelenting."
Celeste said. He said there was no
sa ld .

,

Ohio unemployment
situation
.
subject of Celeste inaugural

RACINE - The second of two
24,000-kllowatt units at Racine
Hydro Plant, located on the Ohio
River near Pomerey at the U.S.
1\imy Corps of Engineers Lock and
Dam. has begun generating
electricity.
Cons tructlon of the Ohio Power
Co. facUlty began In 1977, with the
first unit completed last September. Completion of a public
recreation area that will Include
comfort stations, parking, barbecue grUls and . picnic tables is
scheduled for later "this year. ·
A fishing area. consisting of a
JOO.foot co~rrete .walkway along
the liver bank, now Is open for
public use.Rac!ne Is Ohio Power's only
hydroelectric generatong station.lt
Is capable nf producing enough
electr!c!(y to meet the needs of
23,400 averge residential custo- •
mers. Elecl!tlty generated at
.Racine Is Jed Into the company's
power network which serves as a
pool of energy for customers of tiP
American Electric Power System.
For comparison, Ohio River
owns 8,342,00! kw of coal-fired
generating capacity to serve tiP
needs ri 6ll!,&lt;XXl customers.
Racine, which cost about $9o .
million to bulld, will be economical
to run. It utilizes water, a renewable resoult!e, to generate electricIty, and It requires only a small
maintenance crew to keep It
running.
I .

Checks forB&amp; E
The Meigs &lt;!ounty Sheriff's DeInvestigating ari at·
tempted breaking and entering that
occurred sometime Saturday Rlgnt
at Betty's Carry Out on SR 7. An
attempt was ·made to force open a
side door.
partm~nt is

Leads Chesler trustees
George Alfred Wolfe was elected
president of the Chester TownShip
Trustees at the organizational
meeting held 1-ecently.
Elected vice president w~s Ralph
Ours. The trustees will meet
Tuesday, Jan. ll, at 7: :.1 p.m. at the
Chester Town Hall.

I'I!INlfD IN CANADA

. -~

Art &amp; Chi

DUST
•

llOLD I-IlM ].IE -~

AAHl·CEADi..'/ ~~EST'LL

KEVE.~ 00 ,AWI'Jb WIT"

IT,,

"E 1S BeaJ ~t-Jtl WAT
· we·~ WA'Y

Review report ·cites 'inefficient' program ma11:agernent

Sansom

concentrates on a llegations of •or emotionally disturbed and are
.-;,.,Yintl of a S..ri&lt;•.,
"lnetnclent" program managenot being treated In other Center
In ·its 32-page final report, the .. ment at the mental health center.
programs for mental health proCommunity Ser.y!cesl Review
The following Is an edited
blems ... Unllsofspeechandhearing
Group called for the resignations of summary of the major "consensus
billed to Title XX (a (ederal grant
both Gallla·Jackson·Melgs 648 opinions" and observations of the
program) may bE.' violations of
Board executive directOr and G-J- review group roncemlng the men·
f.:egulatioris Inasmuch as speech
M Community Mental Health tld health center.
and hearing Is not normally
Center director Dr. Bernard
Review group opinion: Tlie
reimbursable unless It Is an Integral
Nielun.
execullve director has not wJe.
component" of another service, and,
The seven member review group quatel.vierfonnedhlsroleresponslas noted above, most clients are not
was fomied In OctoilE.'r by former blllllellu clqijc dlrector.lle has not
receiving any . other center
services."
·
·
state mental health director Myers exhibited ~ or adml-The Adult Activities Program
Kurtz, who established the panel to Ilistnldve lnltlallve Ill" leaderahiJI
" ... review allegations and make wllh1he .....wtllli!hnany Pf'DII'BIIMIs simply Title XX reimbursement
recorrunendat!ons to resolve the and some administrative to the MeigsCouncUonAgingforhot
lunches and recreation for senlor
conflict between the... (648 boar- 'manageinent pt'O( are dy&amp;d ... and · the ... (mental health _fwlctlonal, fragmenled,lnelfecllve
citizens. The Center did not preduce
a signed contract although It was
center) ... "
and lnelllclent.
The action was prompted by the
Review group.observatlons:
requested tWtce ... cllent eligibility
lnab!I!IY of the I:Jilard and the center
-The most positive remarks for Council on Aging services IS not
"to resolve long-starullng disputes ·from many program staff about the
contingent upon being mental
centertngon \heconu :and funding executive director were that he
health center clients; .that Is, these
ofpubllcmentalheal!hprogramslri leaves
al&lt;me '-'to do their own
clients would be entitled to the
the three county area."
. ihlng" lind that he doesn't get
service anway, without having the
The report- w}llch was fiQallzed Involved with "thlngsllkeprograniS center pay for them.
'
In late December and diStributed to that he knows liOthlng about."
-The Ja,ckson County Clinic
area couniY officials on Friday- · -Director's staff minutes state
Chief openly stated !bat the clinic's
states l'Viclence "clearly shows both that he wants "complaining from
relationship with other Jackson
managers"tobe"donebldlrector"s
executives (Plummer and Nlelun)
County agencies was "not as good .
were Intent on laylpg blame and staff .meetings only." HCJ\\'I!Yer,
as It might be" and that he was not
assigning resjlonsjbWty for 'r'' '.lS· there Is no Indication In minutes of
even wllling \O tJy to negotiate a
ter' and avoid being 'at fault' r. ~~er Jime lhrou8l) November 191p that better . relationship with some
than (maldng) 81\Y ronstructlvel these meetliJ&amp;s were stnletured to
agencies.
etrort toward compromise or con· . discuss or resolve Intra-agency
-A JUly 19111 NIMH Site VIsit
ruct resolution."
conflicts. .
·
~ was ' not familiar to key
.In asking for his resignation, the ·
-The $264,937 per year speech · . PI'OIIfari'l staff. The large majority
review group charges Nlelun "has · and hearing program Is not
of recommendations It made were
mt adequately pe1 funned his role primarily a mentall!"lth ~· . not 1mplemented by the executive
respQIIIlbllltles as clinic director."
The iaJ11e majority~ clleata served dll~tm ' aU It thl! dellclencles and
· Much of the panel's tina! report . bYthlsprqramaremtmentallylU
problems cited In .the report still
B~ 'The OVP Staff

W16S0 LON,

~ C.OUL.Dt-l'T ~Fuse. AF$J~E ~

1ELL·
1\-\E

lt;tt::Mr l'LL

0\IE~ .
'

~Tf

stat!

'

.00 I 1\-\A.T;
v;N'T
N~E~...

lEar ALL·

·w&amp;!

~

Jl«lE.,,"

~K.E~ .~
~,·t.~D

. ' "'"~ 1;) 1141: ! •.
.· ··~ ;~

~·roll

···~7t;o~ ··

..

I

-

I

exist and some other services and
programs have deteriorated since
that report.
-The Director of Opera lions
travels extensively to mental health
conferences. There is little docU&gt;
mentation that this travel benefits
the agency programmatically.
-The Chlldrens Residential
Treatment Center has been a less
effective program than It would be,
due in pari, to the continuous
squabbling between the executive
directors of both ai:encles. Further,
the program has suffered from
rapid turnover ln leadership and,
. thus. the degree of supel'v!s!on,
oversight and direction needed in
such a program has not been
provld~.
·
Group opinion: Allhough for the
most part the technical aspects of
the htunan resources area of the
cooununlty mental health center Is
aeceptable, fiome items need .
further concentration.
Group observations:
·-Agency "span of control:' Is, In
some Instances, entirely too broad.
-Some agency staff have spent
great deal of time gathering and
throW!ilg "dirt" on the 648 \J6afd ..
· Group opinion: Under the status
ul a "private non-proht corporaUon," the Center's purchasing
pradlces do not require competitive bidding...'lbe review grOup
notes wltlt Interest that on two
major purCii.es; lbat ol a~
ter syatem and a modular olllce
lluliOig, competitive bidding did

a·

not take place.. .ln the case of the
modular office building, th~ purchase was made from an In-law of
the center's operations director.
Group opinion: 'The' lnabillty of
the two parties to reach ap-eemenl
on a f!scal"year '83 contract was due
19 the existing animosity between
the two entitles and the &amp;18 board'~
ln&lt;!ens!tlvlty to the Center's concerns shout being taken over by the
648 board-As weD as by a lack of
Widerstandlng about each agencies
legitimate role _and control In the
funding and service areas of mental
health.
"'
Group observations:
-One could reasonably expect
the Increasing hostility and animos·
ity (between the two agencies) to
continue.
-The Center staff and board
members do not express any
fam!l!ar!ty with requirements
placed on boards relative to public
fun!ls which pass throughtheboanf
. The followl!ig Is the conchtd!ng
"General Opinion of the Review
Group":
Both directors ( 648 and Center)
have !riled to deiiiOIIIikate leadership In conflclt 01llnagement and
resolution. Both occupy pol;idon8 of
public trust and ~ he
expecled to utilize 'basic mental
h!lBith principles and concepts In
their work.
.
..
Nellhel' of the boards or directors
made lillY major elloii to schedule
such thlnp as joint meellnp, OOard
re1reata. or 111e of oullllde f~M;wta-

tors to directly attempt resolution of
the many issues which divided them
and the cornmunlty. It must he
reluctanUy ~'OIIcluded that they
cannot and do not practice what
they preach.
Most ofthe docwnentatlon, boanl
minutes, !n~rvtews. sl~ vi&lt;llt
repo~,

correspondence, etc .,

yields an oveiWhebnlng body of
data that · clearly shows both
executives were Intent on laying
blame and assigning responslbUity
for disasters and avoiding being nt
fault, rather than any constntt.11ve
efforts toward compromlo;e or
conflict resolu!lon .
It seems apparent that for Ill least
(Continued o';, page 10)

Wealher foreeast
Sixty percent chance of ra in
tonight. Low 38-43. Winds southerly
to southwesterly 10.20 mph. Cloudy
Tuesday with a !ill percent chance of
rain changing to snow flutT!es and
turning colder. Hlgh 40-45.
Extended Ohio Forecast
W~ay through Friday:
Chance of snow flwTies Mrtheast
W~y. Otherwise moslly fair
WedMwlay and again Friday but a
chance of rain or snow statewide
'lburaday. Highs mostly In the 3lfi
Wedlie!lday and mld-308 to mld-40&amp;
Thursday lind Friday. lDws 15-25
Wl'JilneJiday monilng and &amp;enerally
In lite~ 'Thursday and Friday.
')

)
___.____._

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

�.

•

'.
.

~omrnentary
The· Daily Sentinel
111 CmulSlrt'~'L
l~um t'ruy , Uhiu
5J4-HH156

n EVOTEO TOTHF.INTERFa~TOt" THE MEIGS.MMiON ARF:A

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nrws Edi tur
A MF:~·lBF.R 11f Tht' A ss~&gt;d:ut'tt' Prt·~s. Inland Du ih Pn·~~ r\~s•wiutinn artd lht·
Amt&gt;ri•·lm !\lt· ".~ P:.tpt"r l)ubli.~oht•rs Ass·~ · iwtiun .
·

' LETTERS OF OPINION lin- ~o~t&gt;knmrd . The)' shoold bt· lt"Ss than :JOe "'i•nls lun~ . All
lt'ltt•rs an• s ubj~· t tn t&gt;di li n ~ and must bt' signt'd with namf. atidrt's~ and M l'phnrll'.
numlk'r. N" unt~ i!(~ lt&gt;ttns will b.:- puhlisht'd. Lt&gt;Ut'n&gt; should bt• in It'"~ task'. addr~ s tn(
i!isUI"!ll. nut p.or~malltin .

.

'

Page.:.....,2~ The Daily ~ntinel "'

Monday, January 10, 1983

Pomeroy-Middiej;ort, Ohio
Monday, January 10, 1983.

Meigs·snaps 3~ game losing streak

Kind word for Helms. . .______;__J_am_·e_sJ_._K_ilp...._a_trlC_·k
WASHINGTON - Not since the
day of Joe _McCarthy and the
earlier day of Theodore Bilbo, so
far as I can recall, has a member of
the United States Senate suffered
the kind of vlllflcatlon an(l personal
attack that Jesse . Helms of North
Carolina has had to endure In the
past two weeks. The abuse is
utterly undeserved .
The klndesl thing that his critics
have said of l:lelms ls that he Is "an
obstructionist." Sen. Eqward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass .. charged Helms
with "gross abuse" of Senate rules.
Sen. Alan Simpson, R-Wyo., In .a
sorry breach of manners that did
the senator no credit, at one point
refused to shake Helms' hand.
Leading newspapers, notably The
Washington Post and The New
York Times, have assailed Helms.

The·Post termed him "an outcast"
alone delayed a vote on the gas tax
In the upper chamber. ,
bill Is equally false. Look at the
},.nd, pray tell, what exactly was 1'l74 record: Democrats no less than ·
Republlcans pushed amendments,
It that the senator did? He led a
engaged In discursive remarks and
f!llbuster against the gas tax blll
that prevented some of his colgenera_lly took their leisurely time.
leagues from getting home a few ' At' one point In these revolttpg
days earlier for Chrtstmas. That Is
proceedings, so few senators bothe sum and substance of lt.
thered to turn up that twice the
Several points ·deserve special
sergeant-at-arms had to be ordered
to round up absent members.
emphasis. Througliout this whole
regettable affair, Helms scrupuThird: From tllne to time Helms
lously observect the rules of the
spoke srarply In debate - so did a
Senate. Helms ls a parliamentary
dozen . others - but a careful
master In the old school of Richard
readlpg of the Congressional Record shows no lapse of courtesy oil
Russell and James Allen. He
the senator's .part. Helms ls quite
probably has forgotten ·more about
Senate rules than other members
simply lncapble of· the rudeness
that characterized other exchanges
have ever learned. Olarges that
during the lame duck session - tor
Helms "abused" the rules are
patent nonsense.
example, 'those that occurred be· Second: The noilon that Helms
tween Ted Stevens. R-Alaska, and

Fighting
•
conservation
In a series of administrative actions which defy rationality, the
Department of Energy Is waging a determined campaign to discourage
energy co115ervation in the nation's 83.5 million households.
Ignoring Its mandate to promote the efficient use of energy, DOE flnds
Itself Isolated from scores of state govel"ll!Ylents, consumer 'organlzatlons
and Industry groups which oppose the department's Indefensible position.
At Issue Is the proVision of the National Energy Conservation Polley
Act of 1!n8 which requires that DOE formulate mandatory nationwide
energy efficiency standards for more than a dozen household appliances.
The appliances Include furnaces and space heaters, central and room air
conditioners, clothes washers and dr)-ers, humidifiers and dehumidifiers,
ranges and ovens, refrigerators and freezers, water heaters, dishwashers
and televisions.
According to the General Accounting Office, four of those Items furnaces, water ht'aters, space heaters and central air conditioners- are
responsible for almost 15 percent of the country's total energy
consumption while the remaining appliancesaccountfor an additional flve
to seven percent.
OOE began the elaborate rulemaklng process r€\juired to Implement
the congressl&lt;lhal mandate In 1979, but the process was suspended In l981
after two House Republicans warned President Reagan that the proposed
standards "threaten to create multl-bUllon (dollar) havoc In tne appliance
Industry."
Most appliance manufacturers would lndeed--,prefer no standards
wha lever but they" already are confronted by energy efficiency standards
for some or all of the appliances IIi 41 states and would rather deal with
uniform national requirements that disparate state standards.
Moreover, at least one progressive firm -the Carrier Corp., one of
the country's leading producers of home heating andcoollngequlpmentbelieves that establishment of energy efficiency standards for central air
conditioners, furnaces and water heaters ls imperative.
'-'Anything less than Immediate promulgation of minimum standards
for this type of equipment Is simply not In the nation's hestlnterests," says
Edward A. Baily, Carrier's director of Industry relations.
Establishing readily attainable mlnlmum efficiency standards only
for central air conditioners, Carrier notes, would prodUce annual savings
for consumers equal to almost 44 million barrels of oil- valued at more
than $1.3 billion at current price levels - by the end of this century.
In addition, Improved efficiency would reduce the summertime peak
demand for electricity by more than 26 mllllon kilowatts, Carner says.
Since It costs utilities about $1,500 to provide each new kilowatt of
generating capacity. they 'could save an additional $39 bllllon In
construction costs.
But the Department of Energy, bllndly accepting the Reagan
administration's narrow•mlnded philosophy that no regulation ls good
regulation, cites "the Inherent diseconomies of governmental regulatory
lnterierence In the marketplace' ' at Its rationale for resisting Impositions
of any standards.
·
To justify that position, DOE relies upon,the provisions of the 1978 law
which waive the Imposition of standards If It ls found that they are not
technologically feasible or economically justified or that they would not
result In significant energy conservation.
But the General Accounting Office, In a scathing report, concludes
that OOE reached these conclusions through a "highly qilestlonable"
declslon-maklng process In which data was blatantly manipulated to
reach preconceived conclusions.
·
States wh)ch have Imposed their own efficiency standards wUI have
those Initiatives automatically negated by DOE's "no-standard standard"
and wUl be able to gain reinstatement only If the department acts
favorably on their petitions for special waivers.
The gepartment already has rejected any standards for clothes
dryers and gas ranges and ovens. Later this year, It probably wUI take the
same short-sighted action with regard to aU of the remaining appliances.

Pentagon's
WASHINGTON - For years I
have been crying out against the
prodigious waste In the Pentagon.
Uke others who believe the best
hope for peace Is a military
deterrent, I have warned repeatedly that giving the Pentagon brass
hats a virtual blank check for arms
•
expenditures
really produces less
bang for more bucks.
I had high hopes that Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger
would rein In the runaway spenders
In the Defense Department. Some
conservatives sharetl this hope . In
fact, less than two months after
President Reagan was Inaugurated, a rockrlbbed conservative
group called the Committee on
National Security compiled a report for me which pinpointed some
$32 billion that had been wasted on

i

·~

.. •

"

Today in history

various mllltary programs.
Now, after two years of SUP"
posedly tightfisted management by
Cap the Knife and his cost-cutters,
another eminently conservative
group has Issued a stinging report
on the Pentagon wastrels. The
report, produced by the Heritage
Fo_undajlon, ls now circulating at
the highest levels of the White
House. My associate Indy Badhwar
obtained a copy. '
The Heritage analysts' alarming
conclusion Is that the $1 .6 trtlllon
Reagan will spend on defense over
the next five years will give the
United Stales neither superior
hardware nor better fighting capability- nor even combat-readiness
- unless the Defense Department
Is overhauled from top to bottom.
Thls grlm warning represents a

slinlflcant break with the traditional conservative view that the
generals and adnnlrals know best.
Indeed, to question the brass hats'
wisdom was to rlsk accusations of
disloyalty .
Now, though, tl!e Herttage Foundation has concluded painfully that
the megabucks· thrown at the
Pentagon have often produaid a
mini-bang: Most surprising or all,
they have faulted their favorite
administration within memory
with allowing boondogglE.&gt;-as-usual
at the once-hallowed Pentagon. ·
The conservatives' somewhatembarrassed dlsiUuslonrnent with
the defense • establishment was
expressed by Heritage Foundation
spokesman Herb Berkowitz. thls
way:
"For years the liberals threw

Jack Anderson
money at social problems hoping
that they would go away. They
never did . So they asked for more
money- each year. The same
applies to defense. We keep saytn,g
we're falllng behind and kilep
throwing money at the Pentagon.
The public has already soured over
defense spending. If things continue this way, we wlll only destroy
the ~tiona! consensus behln~ a
strong deiense."
The foundation report says
bluntly: "Our defense establishment has stagnated."
. Footnote: When the Heritage
Foundation speaks, the Reagan
admlnlstra tlon listens. White
House Counselor Ed Meese Is
expected to advise PreSident Reagan to endorse the foundation's
recommendations publicly.

Worst TV commercia.._I_____A_rt_B_uc_hwa_L_d

If there were a prize for the worst
TV commercials, the Prudential
Life Insuranre Company has to be
a contender. In the past, Prudential
simply asked you to "buy a piece of
the Rock" - the rock being the
''Rock of Gibraltar," which has -been a symbol for as long as I can
remember of a very" solid
Institution.
But lately, either because the
Rock of Gibraltar Isn't as strong as
It used to be, or someone _sledded
just owning a "plere ct the Rock"
wasn't selling enough llfelnsuranre
policies, Prudential ls using hard
sell In Its commercials by scaring
the wits out of you .
They have two men dressed
completely In while picking up
. people off the streets and · taking
"them away on an escalator, '
preSumably to heaven.
I probably wouldn't object If they
•
tbok away people whose time had
come, but the advertising people at
Prudential have their two "agents"
snatching people In the prime of
~
their lives .
~
The other night I was watching
~
· one of the bowl games and during a
!
time out, the two white-suited men
picked a meter maid who was
" Oh, dear! 1 suppose you 'II be another vote tor
writing
out a traffic ticket: She
the Democrats in '84!" .
couldn't have been more than
thirty, and seemed In the best of
health.
bne of the mea, It JrecaJ1, had a
cllpboll)'ll and apparently the meter maid's name was on lt. They
Today Is Monday, Jan. 10, the t~nth day ofl!fl.l There are 355 days left I!}
gently escorted her away from the
the year.
car, and 1h the next scene she was
TOctay's highlight In hfstory:
riding on the -escalator above
On Jan. 10, 1946. the Unlt_ed Nations General Assembly convened In
London.
.
studio-made clouds; happy as a
lark that her time had come.
On this date:
The Idea. had obvilualy been
In 1776, American revolutionary Thomas Paine published his Influential
stolen
!rom the movie "H~yen
pamplllet ."Common Sense."
,
Can
Walt."
I believe what I
1n ISIJJ, the League of Nations was established as the Treaty of Versailles
went lilto effect.
·
·
objected to rmst of all was that the
1n 1928, the Soviet government ordered the exile of BOlshevik ploneer- . meter maid clld not protest wllell
these two stranaen came akill
Leell Trotsky.

Berry's World

va~t. waste

Howaro Metzenbaum, D-Ohlo. He ~
spoke trom beginning !0' end In
paruainentary speEch. .
·.
Fourth, the most Important.
Helms was exactly right In . his
crttlclsm of the Indefensible pi'()O(lo
dures thai led to the fillbuster in the
first pla&lt;:e. Helms' attackers should
read the senator's speech of DE.&gt;ic.
10, beglnnlngonPageS-14353otthe
Congressional Record. As helms
properly noted, the Iallie duck
session had been called for one
major purpose - to pass appropr!. atlons bills. An Important bankruptcy bill also was to he considered. There were a few other
serious matters. A gas tax bill was
never mentioned.
"Yet here we are," said Helms,
"about to consider · a · gas tax.:
Increase and highway authorization all rolled up Into one little piece
of legisIa tlon, which I daresay not
over five senators understand or
can begin to descrtbe the contents
of. Thls Is a bad way to operate, If
you wlll pardon t!le expression, a
railroad." '
Hellos argued forcefully that the
gas tax blll Is not likely to proVide
many new jobs; Indeed, as such
authorities as Martin Feldstein and
Alice Rlvlln have suggested, the bill
may provide no new · jobs, net, at
all. Feldstein Is chairman of the
Council of Economic Advisers;
Rlvlln heads the Congressional
Budget. Office. They deserve to be
listened to.
'
Helms argued ihe complexities
of the blll. Anyone who supposes
this Is a simple I'll old Increase or
five cents In the tax on gasoline has
no\ done his homework. The act has
far-reaching implications for the
economy, for the principles of
federalism and for Its Impact upon
low-Income work~rs.
Why the haste? Helms raised the
queStion repeatedly, but senators
would not stay for an answer.
Christmas wsa at hand. Members
of lxith hOUS&lt;."S
out of sorts.

ticket."
and dragged her away. She seemed
quite content riding on the
"We're sorry, you have to come
with
us."
escalator.
•
1
"In· a pig's eye I'm coming with
It was not only In bad taste, but
you . I have 12 morecarstotlcketon
smacked of false advertising. I
this block. "
have known many meter maids In
my time, andl'veyet to run Into one
"Your name Is on We llst and you
have to go now."
of them whO would be. taken In by
"What list ls that? "
two wacky guys In white I'Uits wbo
told them to stop wrltlng parking
"The Prudential Insuranre llst. It
tickets and come with them. Meter wa!&gt; made ,up by our advertising
maids have heard every story In agency."
.
" You have to be joking. My ·
the book.
The first thing the meter maid policy Is with Metropolitan Life.
would say to the two guys Is, "Is this Now beat It bef9re I give you botli
. tickets for loitering around an
your car?"
The men would deny It and then expired parking meter."
"You have to come lnimedllltely. ·
she would say, "Well, then, don't
bother me when I'm writing out a Our TV cornrnerclal goes on In a

minute."
"I've heard some nutty stories In
my time, but thls takes the cake.'
Now~ off before I dump sand on
your pretty white suits."
"But you're dead ."
"The person who didn't put two
quarters In thls meter Is dead. And
If lie dOesn't come back In 15
·minutes I'm going to call the tow
truck.' :
"You'll never get to heaven lfyru
don't come with us now."
"Where are you weirdos

parked? ''
"Our escalator Is over there.''
"I might have known it. You're:
right In front of a fire hydrant. That·
will"cost you each $2i.''

The Daily Sentinel -Page-~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

By KEI111 WL'IECUP

words of a jubDant Dnirrimer.
McARTHUR -After 32 straight
Although Dru~J~mer S8,1d allofhls
· , games gloomed -~th darkened Marauders . played well, he was
storm clouds, the Meigs Marauder extremely pleased with 64 senior
1
cagers cleared the sky Saturday center BUI Holcomb's play.
night enroute to a 49-44 win over
Holcomb led the Marauders with
host vinton County.
10 rebounds, Including five In the
The Marauders' win was the first · fourth quarter, played tenacious
slnoe they defeated Wahama on defense, and dived after several
February 14, 1981, It also marked loose balls wheil possessk&gt;n was
the first varsity win for first-year crtticallate In the game. I:ioloomb
head coach Greg Drummer.
added four poln ts tn his finest game
"We played very well defen- thus far.
sively and played a $mart floor
Junk&gt;r Nick Riggs, playing huri
game. We stayed In ·our man-to- with a hlp bruise the entire second
man the entire game. I told our half, led Meigs with 18 points and
men earlier that whenever we play along )VIth guard running mate
good defense and shoot 70 percent senior Rlck Edwards, had a fine
from the free .throwline, we'll be In floor game.' Edwards chipped In
most- of our games," were the nine markers.

six point" spread at the !mit.
The Marauders made but two of
17 shots In the first eight minutes.
·Tied heading for the last period,
Meigs made nine of 12 fourth '
quarter free throws for 71 perrent
vinton County, coached by exEastern' Eagle Bob Caldwell, con- ·
nected on 18 of 53 two-point tries for
34 percent and eight of 13 from the
.fo\11 line for 62 percent.
The Marauders outrebounded
VInton 30-26. Meigs committed but
11 turnovers compared to the
VIkings 21.
The Drummer-men upped their
season mark to 1-9 overall while
reai'nlnlng 0-6 In SEOAL play.
.VInton County, who lost to Federal-

Senior Rlck Cha ncey nailed the
VIkings' coffin shut with four
consecutive free throws to up a
4140 Meigs lead ID five at th~ two
minute mark . Chancey ended with
12 tallies . Senior f01ward Greg
Tayl:lr• grabbed nine rebounds In
turning In another steady
periormance.
Steve Hayes, VInton County'·s
fine 6-2 center, was the game's
leadlng srorer with 24 · while
1
teammate Roger Mace added 13.
1 The "remainder of the VIking squad
managed but seven points.
Just as In the first meeting
between the two schools which
VInton won 61-46, the VIkings
jumped out to a 6-0 lead and held a

Hoc]&lt;lng on Friday night, dropped
to 3-7 overall.
·
All was not roses, however, as the
little Marauders manage9 but one
point In the final quarter to drop a
35-30 decision to the VInton C_ounty
reserves. .
Meigs, which at haUtlme led by
eight points, was topped In scoring
· by Mike Chancey with 17 while
Rick Wise ·added seven. Bolendar
and Botthe led the little Vlkes with
nine apiece.
Coach Mlck Childs' reserves
dropped to 2-7 on the year.
'
Meigs hits the. road for the finale
of a _
long ffve game road skein when
they invade the warpath at HUltop
Stadium against the Logan Chief-

talns this Frtday. Logan won the
earller match-up, 4942.
Box score:
MEIGS (191 - Ri ggs 74-18; E:dwards2·5-9;
Holcomb 2-04: c;ha ncey 4-4-12; Tayler 1-3-5:
Evans 0-1-1; PICkenS o-o-0. TOTW 16-I'J-41.
VINTON (X)UI'/1'\' (4t) - Hayes 12-0-2&gt;(;
Ma ce H -13; Radc!On 0-2-2; Rem&gt;' 1-0-2;
Doclri.UI-0-2: Bolcn cr r 0-l-t: Ham m:m0-0-0.
TOTALS IIHH~
Soo re by quarters:

Me igs
Vinton -Co.

6 16 12 1'&gt;-49
10 18 6 10--44 fiest1' Ve6

M~GS (:ti l - Wise 2-3-7; Qumcey 8-1-11;

Gheen 11-0-0-, Fisher 0.0-0; Welker J-0-2; Bush
0-(J-{}; Thomas 2-04; Cassell 0-0-0. TOI'ALS
13-4-:11.

VINTON CO. (35) - Bci~ nd er 4- l-9: BOOthe
4-1-9; Allman 3-0-6; Arganlrlght 1+6:
Hammon 2·1·5. TOl'AUi 14-7·3 ~ ·
By quarters

l7 4 8 1- 30
9 4 17 5-35

Meigs
Vinton Co.

.

Southern .defeats Miller crew
.

.

By SCOTI' WOLFE
The tlrtng Tornadoes started to sl\lmp In the second round, wli!le the
HEMLOCK -The hlgh-fiylng Southern Tornadoes repelled a serious
fresh Falcons started a scoring spree of theti- own. The hosts worked the
foulth quarter challenge by the powerfUl Miller Faloons, then continued to
ball successfully Into big Luning, who scored 10 points In the frame, pull~
roll to a 61-52 triumph over the hosts here Satw'day evening before the
the Falcons to within two points, ~28. after hls successful shot at the
largest crowd tJ ever Witness a high school basketball contest at MUler - buzzer.
'
High School.
Uttlefleld and Kevin Curiman gave Southern six point tead by scoring
After overcoming a marginal· deficit early In the game, Coach Bruce
the first two buckets of the second half.
Starner's Falcons slowly battled t~ a 42-40 advantage with 5:20 lEft In the
Southern shifted Into a zone defense as did the Falcons.
game.
Southern held a six point lead through most of the frame, but with the
Not to be ouldone, Southern created Its own "comE.&gt;-back" heroics at the . score 38-32 Luning grabbed a steal and powered,in for a slam- dunk that
ilul Une, hitting 12 of 14 attepts the lastthree minutes to regain the lead and
rocket the Miller gym with excitement. This shift In momentum pulled
secure the coveted non-league win.
Miller close at the buzzer 4240.
Southern. 8-1 record overall, ls ranked 12th In the state AP poll, and
Early In the last round two Luning buckets greeted the shocked
remains the undisputed SVAC league leader with a perfect 4-0 mark.
Tornadoes and Miller took Its first lead at 44-42. The Southerners than
Miller, flaunting a fine season of Its own, Is now 7-3 overall.
awoke on a crucial Curfman steal and feed to Beegle that resulted In a
A victory by Miller &lt;Ner sixth ranked Trimble on Tuesday evening and
three point play for the event1,1al winners and a 45-44 lead.
1
RICK CHANCEY
revenge for an earlier 10 point losS tJ Southern ear ller In the year IJ'&lt;Ned to
With 4:041eft Littlefield grabbed-a steal and drove It In for a 49461ead . .
be quite a "crowd-drawer" as the contest rere!ved to!l"bllllllg among
Following a missed Falcon shot, Southern started to hold the ball and run a
games played In Soutll!'astern Ohio.
·
conservative offerlse. running the clock to 2:43 when
, Miller switched back
When the sparks frOOl the opposing forces Involved In the clash faded
tJ a man-to-man defense.
away, the standing room only crowd departed, satisfied with the
Mlller clxise to go · for the foul against Southern's slow-down game.
hard-foug)lt exhibition they had witnessed .
Several, Intentional two-shot fouls 1:€5Ulted, along with a string of 12 of 14
In a ~-hot first perild alone, sill Tornadoes broke Into the scoring
crucial free throw attempts.ln that stint Beegle sank five, Olriman four,
column, ' but when all the chips had been counted, Zane Beegle and Rod
and Dennis Teaford two. MUler sank a goal at the buzzer to account for the
Littlefield headed the attack With 18 and 15 points respectively.
61-52 finale.
Big Steve Brunli:tg, shaking the
In another all-star '.~ormance. Falcon ace Jay Luillng produced a
SHS hit 22of67 for 35 percent and 17 of 2~ at the lln«:for77percent. Miller effects of a linge~ing Ulness,
game- high 30 points, complemented by senk&gt;r guard Rodney Burgess, who . canned 23 of 61 attempts for 38 percent from tlje floor and sank six of nine
conducted a clinic at Waverly
netted 12."
· free throws for 67 percent.
.
.
·
Saturday night In leading . his
In an exploslvefirstquarterthatCoachCarlWolfedub'lesas, "one r1the
Southern won the battle ofthe' boards 41-381ed by Littlefield's 12. Luning Athens,Bulldogs toanSJ-61 triumph
best overall performances any of ll)Y Southern teams has produced at a
had 12 for Miller.
.
over the Tigers.
given tline," SHS gained toul:l - domination both defensively and
The winners had nine steals, 14 fools , and 10 turnovers, while Miller had
' The 6-5 senior, wbo Is headed to
ofi!nslvely.
10, 17 and llln the respective categories. ·
Ohio University . next season,
A rapid running game and Intense pressing game by the hustling
Another excel~nt outing by Coach Howle Caldwell's reserves gave the scored 25 points, Including a pair of
Tornadoes boosted the visitors to a 16-6 advantage midway through the
fightlpg funnel clouds a 51-28J,rlumph, after spotting the Falcons 21-71n the slam dunks, grabbed 11 rebounds,
round. Mlller grabbed the openbtg tip, but_ Callie up empty llanded,
first round. Scott Schuitz led Southern with 19, whlle Todd Pierce had 11 for blocked two shots. anci stole the ball
allowing Beegle to notch first scoring homrs. Giant Luning knotted the
Miller.
twice .
score -at 2-2, but at this point the Tornadoes started to smoke.
Southern ls on the road at Southwestern on Friday , then trl~ to defend
As a result, the Bulldogs enjoyed
• Consistent sharp-shoot!!!' Zane Beegle sank another bucket, along with
Its home-winning streak Saturday against Symmes Valley. Miller plays at . a 50 percent sbootlng night (30of60)
Eastern Tuesday evening.
·
Nick Bostick's first scOre to give SHS a 6-2 edge. Rod Burgess pulled the
and took over second place In the
hosts close at 64, but Bostick canned two stniight buckets to send the ,
....,-....,=~-~~ SEOAL standlpgs with a 5-2 record ;
Whirlwinds on a scorlpg tear.
• Box score:
Miller &lt;••t- Galtten 0-00 Harvey 1-Q-2:
The hos t Tigers built a 10-7 lead
When the buzzer had sounded SHS enjoyed a convincing 24-121ead, but
S...hem C81l _ Uttlelle ld Hl~; Beegl e ~~~ ~- ~~~'Luning JJ-4-II:
with 3: 15 left In the first periql
the efiects of Its rllpld pace began to take a negative effect on the SHS
~18; Tealord Ho: De"em 0·2·2; Curfma n
Smre hy quarters:
before AHS tallied 12 straight
24 6 11 ~61
2·5-9 ; Bostick 3-%1: Bostick 2-1- 5; Brtnager
SoM. " 1erhern
qu intet, who had played In Friday night's hard-earned win over Hannan
111
12 16 12 1-52
~- Tolalo 211-17-61.
points for a 19-10 lead.
Trace.
By halftime the Athens lead was

NICK RIGGS

Athens rolls over
Waverly five, 81-60

-------------=-....

Logan take~ Gallipolis Invitati~nal meet

Logan caplured the fourth annual Gallipolis In\ritatlonal S8tu rday before a good sized, "noisy
crowd. Making a strong bid with 10

wrestlers making It to the finals,
the Chieftains accumulated 171
total pobtts. Meigs finished ~ond
with 126 points, Gall!pollsthlrdwlth

122~ points while Pulnt Pleasant
had 117 points:
Fa lrland led the second foursome
with 79 points, Coal Grove had 73';:2

points, Chesapeake, 30 points and
,
North Gallla, ~.
Taking first place In various
weight classes for Meigs were
Priddy, 119 pound class; King, 126
pound class and WUlford, 145 pound
event.
Snyder of Meigs took second In
the 98 pound class.

·Gill, Frasure pace
Logan to
.
62-5~ win over Gallipolis
.

SenlorfOiwardsJ~GUlandJeff

Frasure eomblned for 41 points and
16 rebounds to pac~ best Logan to a
62-55 Southeastern Ohio League
basketball victory overGalllpolls In
Hllltop Gym Saturday night
GUI tossed In Tl pobtts and
snagged five rebounds while Frasure tallied 14 markers and
grabbed 11 caroms for Kirk
Hardman's Olleftalns.
Gallla's Lynn Sheets held the
loop's top scorer, Jell Morgan, to
six points, but costly GAHS tumovers, plus a three-for 18 shooting
periormance from the field In the
second perbd kDied the Blue
,.. Deylls' chanoes for a road victory.
Gallipolis never led In the
contest. The score was tied at 2, 4, 6
and 8·before Gill's long jumper at
the 2: 31 mark put LHS ahead to
stay.
'
I
GAHS traDed 16-12 after one
period and ~21 during the hal!tlrile
Intermission.
Logan held a 44-35 advantage
golpg Into the final stanza.
Galllpolls pulled within five
polnts twice In the last period, 48-43
on a tllree-polnt play by . James
Lane wtth 5:41 left, and 5045 on
Lynn Sheets' layup with 4:28 to gp.

-

BPrh~Cookman

ftJ. Md.-E. Sllor'r 00

Cm!PI'IBI':I' " · Nf: Loubrlllna 85

CP,nt. F'b1da (1), ~ 88
Clladrl &amp;1. Campbe-0 !ill
Da\1IIQI !'18. F\annan ~
OPkttwart&gt; Sl. 1'8, S. CliroUna St. T1
E.•r CanXIJII 43. Jarrw MadiiOn t1

F'lol1dt 92, A.-.,. 7!i
F1ortdl AIM T•. ~ St m·
F\U'man 'iO. Wolford ~
.IIK'IIIOI'IYWt a. li. N. Allblmli 1D
Loulllonl St. II. Georoto "'
~Tail !II, Pan Amt&gt;rtcan JJ
LouJovltp II.

""""' ... "'

MMI'Iftaii!8.VMIII

I)

crden:
98 1b6. - Cassday CLI ; Sn)der (Mt; Wen tz

Back-to-back short jumpers by ·(41 percen)) and seven c:l. 14 at tllfi
Frasure and Morgan at 4: 15 and foul line (50 percent). GAHS had a
3:35 aU but sealed the victory for season-high 24 personal fouls, 33
. Logan.
rebounds and 13 turnovers.
The Chiefs' biggest margin was. • Logan wUI host Meigs Friday.
6049, with 1: 17 remaining.
.
Gallipolis will play two hOme
The defeat dropped GAllS three games thls weekend. Athens, an
tun games off league-leading Iron- easy 80-61 winner over Waverly at
ton, a 4847 winner over Jackson Waverly Saturday, comes to town
Satw'day night Five con!ietence Friday night. Northwest visits
games remain on the 1982-83 GAHS Saturday night In a nonsc~Ie&lt;~ule.
league contest.
The Blue Devlls are 5-i overall
Box score :
and 34 Inside the conference.
GAWI'()LIS (55)
Madison 311-l;;
Meanwhile, Logan, playing Its ,£Uc~r 5-1-U ; La ne 11·3-25; !$heets 448;
().0.(1; Skidmore 0-0-0; WoUe Q...O.O;
best game of the year, kept Its title Carter
Clark 1-0-2; Edetmann0-3-3. TOT..U.S2+7·5l
hopes alive by upping ltll conferUIGAN (62) - GUI9-9-27; Frasure 1-6-14 ;
ence marl&lt; to 4-3. LHS Is 5-7 on the VanVorhls 1-24; Morgan J-0.6; PatterSJn
4-1-9; MUIB"• 1~2; Dickens 0-M. TOTALS
year.
1:'1-!HZ.
GDI was ,nine of 14 from the field
llY-n:
Ga1Updis
12 9 14
and nlneof12at'thefou1Unetopace · Logan
16. 14 II
all scorers.
The Chiefs were 22 &lt;147 irom the
.field (47 percent), mostly from
Inside, and 18 iJf 29 at the foul line
(62 percent). Logan had 15 personals, 34 rebo!lnd$ and 15 turnovers.
Lane paced the · lceers with 25
, points and a season-high 18 rl'bounds. Chris Ellcessor added 11
points for the Galllans.
GAHS was 24 of 58 from the field

&lt;Ffci; Ill;, _:_ .MB!!IIe (PPI: Fields cCG I:
Young {F ).
McComas (F) ; Ba!To.v ILl;

112 lbo, -

Blankenship &lt;CG ).
119 lbo . - Priddy (M) ; Vllnblli&gt;B" (L );
AUen iC GI.
I:ai ltB. - KJng: (M); McComas (Ch. );
Blytlle (L) .
13211B. -Gelgfl' (L); Ralkell'\') ; S)VIsher

'·

(GAHS).
I.'E lbs. - Smith (GAHS) : McBride (L );
. Atkinson IPP).
145 lbo . - Wntford CM); Holm"' (CG ):
Freeman ( PP) .

I 55 liB. - Lahman (GAHS); Mc1n!Cl!h (L);
RallOOII*! (Ch .) ,
.
167 lbo . -llennett CGAHS); Ross (CG);
Kullman (PP ).
-

175lbs. - Keller IL) ; Maddox (Ch. ); Lang
(Ch .) .
185 lbs . - Korab . iGAHS) ; Whalon CL):

Ba.,-

(M).

HWf . -

Galloway (F);

(PP) .

FebeS

&lt;L ); Doss

'

(bampions- Logan, 171 pc:ints. RuMEr-up
- Melg1;, ~ pdp!&gt;.
.
.

Ga1Ua Academy, 122\i point~ Pt. Pleasant, 117 pdnts; Fairland, 79 pants; Coal
Grove, 73~ pcjnts; Ou:sapeake, :TI points;
Nonh Gallla,

zr points.

'ANNOUNCING!

WINTER
·HOURS:
'

MON., TUES., WEDS. &amp;

College scores

, Alubama 7-1, KmhK'k:\' hi
Ala. ·Rirmlnaham r.t. S. Alabama 67
.\lrom Sf. 711. J«luon Sl . 6'
A~ttn Pray 72, E. KcrlfUl'll)" &amp;7

Final Besula
{FLrst, secorxl and third , listed ln that

38-24, enough to stave off a hot
shooting Waverly in the third
quarter, which ended with Athens
atop a 5545 score.
Bruning had recorded a routine
one handed slam dunk In the third
period, but In the final quarter his
magnanimous score brought everybody, including the Tiger fans, to
their feet.
Bruning stole an errant Tiger
pas s, flipped It to a teamniate, who
i'd him perfectly as he glided·
toward the unguarded Waverly
basket.
His dunk triggered the crowd into
cheers, and the score became 70-56.
In addition to Bruning's 25po!nts,
Woody Mpyle chipped In 19. .
· Robbie Lewis canned 14 and big
Ed Sharienaker 13 to pace the
Tigers, now 4-3 in league play. ·

New Sealy. Quilted

Top, Innerspring

FRI.: 9:JG.5:00

Ml'm"t' Rl , Stelson!:!
Mllllaan fl. Appalatlllln Sl. n. 2 OT
Mlal.appt ~ Ten!Hil'P M..Cif
Mltalalppl St. 64 , VanderUit II
Murny Sl. !IJ, Akron 79

North Caro&amp;IM tf'l', SyraC'Uit' 64
N. ~rollftl M:T TJ, Howard U. liO
Otd llclnlnQI •. RltrJdp bland 81
Somlm!OI.llanltn-llrnmMo"
s. .,.,_ 7). J - 0 1 .
SE Loulaia1111 19, C'ammlll fll
,
SW........,. 1111, E.,_ Bapao( ·10
'hi . ~ ,._ E. , . , _ 10. 7J
- - ...... Ill. ~

v.., .,
s. Mm··· •

va.-eo ••,..,..Nilh ~

Rk~umn~;t

..

MATTRESSES

SAT,: 9:30-2:00

TWIN
ag.

Authorized Catalog Merchants

Gregg &amp; Patty Gibbs

. 108 W. MAIN ST.• POMEROY, OH. ·

!II

Vbpdl 'n!dl 7&amp;.
WakP Fblftt _,, Gc.&gt;&lt;ll'f:ta 'hdl U
Wll1lom • MarY " · """"" Maul_..
YOUIWifOWn St. 73. MlddW Tt'lllt. 86

FIRM

THURS.: ,9:30-12:00

PHONE:

(Ohio) 992·21 78
(W. Va.) 773-8671

HOURS:

Mon.-T-.-Wad.·frl.- 9•30 1o &amp;

Thurs. 9:30 1o 12

.

$5995
e..Pc.

The Tigers finished with a 31
percent shooting average on 25 of
80, made 11 of 15 at the line, and
claimed 39 rebou nds, 12 by
Sharienaker.
Waverly ·Na~ called for 27
personal fouls resulting In the loss
of Sharfenaker and Jerry Miller
with Rusty Conley and· Tom
Thompson each collecting . four
personals.
The lxix score:
ATUENS (80) - BUI Fln~art y 2-2-6; L eo n
Allen 5-0-10; Brad Baker 0-2-2; Marc Whaley
0-2-2; Mike Williams 1.0.2; Sean Harter 1-0·2; ·
Kevin Conz 1-Q-2; Carl Matheny4-2-10; Woody
May\e!)-9-19; Steve Bruning 11-3-25. TOTALS
oo-~ -111.

W1\VERLY Ifill -Jerry MUler 5-2-12;
Tom Thompson 1-0.2; Robbi e Lewis 4-6-14;
Jlm TOOmas 2-0-4; Ed Shartmaker 6-I-lJ;
Jlm Trimble 1-0-2: Tim BMetenbach 4..0-8:

Rusty Conley 1-2-4; And re Pu rsell 1-0--2.
TOTALS ~11-61.
Score by qtlal1ers:

Athens
19 19 17 25--111
Waverly
12 l2 21 16--61
Reserve score : AIhens 46. Wa ver~ 33.
SatUrdu,\-'!IC

fitllt· ~o ·

Ry Till'

na...ltelhull S.~on •.s

,\.,.,~ M ·iakd l"n ~..

tA"iT

B11smn Coli. !Vi. S11on lt:J II 7:l
C"anl~tu~

;'1!'1,

N~·~~o· Or lf'a n.~

r:~' lii" '•H' P ~..~ .

4!1

N&lt;tl!\' f(l

Dukl' til. J.u S&lt;JU~,'liO
rttll"lf'IJ;:h Dk·kin.'il'ln 1-&gt;-1. MtuN .7!i
1/;uv:ml 7:1. Oitrlmllultl flf1
Holy C ros.~ 7i, Ma~~-.;w hust•H.~ Tl
lona 11 ~. Ptu'' i.l
l i&gt;hl ~ h fll , LoMolil , MeL .ar;
Northt-a ~PrTl ~1. Malll£' ~,7
l'r'fln !fl . Hro.,.m Iii
Pmn Sl. 71. St. [lona\'t•nlun' iii
PI1T ~hUJ ~h

' 'f. Ulfli,VPIH' l i:l

l'rlnC'f'lon ~~"•. Y;llo• :~
Pr'O\fldc-nrf' ~~ ~- Dit,VI un li:l
IWbt·rT MrJI'rls 7.1. rJA.•d.:~ ntl ~t . R1
RutJ!I'I'S 70, St . .IO~'Ph ·s n'i
St. John's 71i. Gl'(]l',ll:r&gt;town hi1'
St. PPit•r's &lt;t'o, !\tunh:nmn ;m
ToM' ~ Ill

Sl. ."o"o. fltK·k nl"'ll f'oJ

Vo•rmont 67. St Fm ncL-.. NS lf1
VlrJ:iniu K'l. M;u;,·lund &amp;I
Virginia 7:1. Tt•mpiP 71

W~ l

�•

· Page- 4-· The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, ·Ohio

Monday, January 10, J983

Bengals, .Steelers, Falcons
· lose in ·Super Bowl Tourrtey
, By AssociaiOO Press

"I was blessed," McNeil said of
his performance. " I was In the right
time place at the right time."
· New YOrk, now 7-3, also got a
playoff-reCord interception return
from Darrol Ray. He spar ked a
three-touc hdown outburst In the last
period by pic king off a Ken
Ahderson pass and streak!1lg 98
yams for the touchdown. The Jets
also got ttrree field goals from Pat
Leahy . .
The Jets' Richa rd Todd com ple ted 20 of 28 passes for 269 yards,
which included eight receptions hy
Wesley Wa lker for a career -hJghl45
yai1!s.
Anderson , who had two first·
qua rter touc hdown passes to slake
the Bengals to a 14-3 lead, finished
with 26 completions in 35 attempts
for 354 yards.
Chargers 31, Steelers 28
Dan Fouts' third touchdown toss
didn't com e a minute too late in
leading San Diego over Pittsburgh.
He hit Kellen Winslow on a 12-yard
flare passwithone minutetopiay to ·
rally the Chargers.
Fouts, who completed 'Zl of 42
passes for 333 yards, also !)it reserve
tight end Ertc Sievers on a 10-yard
strike and Winslow with a nS-ya rder
to overshadow Bradshaw's 28 of 39
for 325 yards .
·
Chuck Muricle rushed for 126
yards as San Diego improVed its
record to 7-3. The Steelers finished

The New York Jets fired their
qannon, Ute San Diego Chargers
attacked by air, the Dallas Cowboys
struck from all fronts a11d the
Minnesota Vikings refused to fold in
the first weekend of play of the
National Football League playoffs .
• The NFL's revls€&lt;:1 and expanded
16- team playbff format , necessi·
tated by the 57-day players' strike
that wiped ou t seven weeks of the
season, also ·produced a ·few
surprises and guaranteed new
finalists for Super Bowl XVII on
Jan . 30.
. The Jets, behind Freeman
McNeil's record-breaking 211 rush·
· ing yards, crushed Cinclnnati 44-17
Sunda,y afternoon, elimina ting the
defending American Conference
c hampion .Sengals from a return
nip to thechampionsl)lpgam e. Last
year's Super Bowl \\1nners, the San
.Francisco 49ers, didn 't reach the
pla yoffs.
In Sunday's other playoff ga m es,
San Diego edged Pittsburgh 31-28 in
the AFC and Dallas trimmed
Ta mpa Bay 30-17 and Minnesota
eliminated Atlanta 30-24 in the
National Conference.
In Saturday's first-round ma t·
'· chups, · the Los Angeles Raiders
ousted Clevela nd 27-10 a nd Miami
eliminated New EJ'lgla nd 28-13inthe
AFC and Washington blasted Detroit 30-7 and Green Bay whipped St.
6-4.
Louts 41-16 in the NFC.
Cowboys 30, Buccaneers 17
Next weeke nd's games will have
Danny White overcame physical
New York a t Los Angeles a nd
Minnesota at Washington on Satur- ailments - an infected tooth and
day a nd San Diego at Miami and , swollgn thumb- to lead Dalla~ over
Ta mpa Bay. He completed 'Zl of 45
Green Bay a t Dallas on Sunday.
passes for 312 yards and two
J ets 44, Bengals 17
" When you've got a cannon, touchdowns.
Rookie reserve safety Monty
you're supposed to shoot it, " New
York Coach Wa lt Michaels said . Hunter returned .an Interception 19
"Today, he · (McNeil) was our yards to give the CowbOys the
go-ahead touchdown In the fourth
cannon."
McNeil, w ho a lso rushed a nd quarter.
•· passed for two touchdowns, gave · Tampa Bay quarte rbac k Doug
the J ets the ir first playoff victory Williams completed only eight of 28
since ·Joe Na m a th led New York to passes for 113 yaf!ls as the Bucs
victory in Su per Bowl III.
finished 5·5.

Rio humbles Panthers
71-54 in loop opener
io

\W':'r

a

...

.,

'•

Pt. Pleasant
Portsneuth

Irontoo

L P
1 7:!;
1 315
2 751

Ncw1bwe!lt
Athens
Galllpdls

7 5 691 6l5

6 ~ 681 657
5 4 510 462
5 5 f«;. 611
5 7 1m ,6.'18109

Waverly

Logan

Jack!Dl
Aiex&amp;nder

Washington CH

4 7 642
3 5 j94 !113
2 8 563 6l0

.
1 9 456 610
NOit-OOidermce reNt&amp;:
Gr {£Jivtew 64 Washington CH 54
Parkersburg SOutll85 Pt. PleASant Gl
\Yheelenburg 81 Falnand 55 ·
lllelgs 49 Vlnlon Counly 44

MeigS

IIJOOAL VARSITY
TEAM

W L P ·ap

lrontt&gt;t
Athens

6 1 375 319
5 2 451 ll2
. 4 3 417 «16

Logan

•

Solunii&amp;"•-

4
3
2
0

3 446 453
4 :m ·:r;s
5 376 Jli6
6 256 tl9

zt il :llllno

Logan li'l Gallipolis 55
lrmton 48 Jackson if7
Athens~ .Wavt!rly 61

to 29-10 with 4': 19 to go In the haH on
six straight points by Mowery.
Rio opened a big 51-21 . lead
midway through the tina! session
unW Lawhorn cleared the bench.
Mowery and Richards had 14
each to pace a balanced Rio attack.
Kent Wolfe added eight, Rick
Penrod seven and Dan Curry, Rick
Ftltz a nd Bob Shaw six apiece.
Brian Doughty paced Ohio Dominran with 12 points while Chuck
McKnight and Tim Slekel added 11
each.
'·
Rio held a 26-W margin In lleld
goals and went 19 of 22from the line
to OD's 14 of 21.
,.
Special prizes were gt n away
at halftime as part a O'Dell
Lumber Night. The Wa ·
Memorial High School Band der the
directiOn of Jim Morgan rovlded
entertainment.
_,
OWO DOMINICAN (II) - Page 0-2-2;
Doughty 5-2-12; Crawley 2-2-6: McKnight
4-3-U ; WIUeke 1-24 ; Hlrree 2-0-4; Sutton
W4: Siekel 4-3-11. Tolalo S.1444.
RIO GRANDE (711 - Mowecy 5-4-14;
Rldlards 4-6-14 ; Maisch 2-0-4; Curry 1-4-6;
Shaw 2-2-6; Wolfe 4.0.8; P enrod 3-1-7; · F ritz
2-2-6; Walters 1.0..2: Aroold 1.0.2; Fumier
1~2. Tolala 5-111-71 .
H~ e - RJoGrande 33,0hioDomtnlcan
12.

Athellti

Logan
Waverly
Ironte~~

W L P OP
5 2 284 278
4 3 2119 252

43322Dl
4 3 247 :113
4 3 2fi6 :!64

Jl\C!k!IOO
342fi62tl2
0 '6 2lj 29()
Melli&gt;
TOTAU!
1JII8 111111
Saloon! I&amp;"• f'I!IIUk
GalllpoH s tl Logan 47 12 ,.,)
Jackson :1) lrmton 32
Athens«) Wave rly :n

u•

"--aY•
P"'""
Waverly at Portsmouth

Fri.,. _

Alexander at Vinton County
\Wmlngtcll at Washington CH

l\lelp al Logan
Athens at Gallipolis
Waverly at Jack!JOI'I. ,

Alexander al Federat HOCitl~
CircleYille at Washlnglon CH
Wheelersburg at Northwes t
~boursvD.le at Pt.· Pleasant

a

:n

. MCJ180H

Washington
Detroit

Jact..,
-

..

,.

PAT HILL FORD IlK.

INSTALLMENT LOANS
992-30D7

Aost lowl. Pasadena
J.111uarv 30 t ~ ~ 1

Washington

Minnesota

Dallas
Tampa Say

Dallas

•

461 5. w

.... MIDOI£1'011, 0 .

--...-

•HARDWARE
CJHomt

· Green Bay ·

985-3301

c:JV•Sitors

· playoff~ u the teams work lhelr
Super BowL ( AP Luerphoto).

hit double figures wlh 14 points.
Two Bobcats, Keith Oark and
Jeff Moles fouled out early In the
'
fourth quarter',
Kyger &lt;,'reek hit 23 ct 00 field goal
attem ps and just six of 16 at the
foul eire les.
The loss left KC with a 9·2 overall
record: it was NeW . Boston's
seventh straight win. Coach Keith ·
C;&gt;rter' sBobcats travel to Waharna
Tuesday and Eastern Friday.
The Little Bobcats f1 Coach
Mark Hartman captured the reserve contest, J6.3l.
Box score:

Visiting Kyger Creek trailing
36-20 at the end of the first hillf
came on stro11g the !ieCOnd half but
still fell srort at the end losing to a
tough New Boston squad, 59-52
SatUrdiiY night.
The Bobcats finished the game
with a strong 21 point fourth period
but It turned out to be just a little
late.
•
New Boston, now 10-2 for the
&amp;eason, was led by the double digit
scortng of Brian Bowling \11th 19
points; Dave Tolbert added ·16
while Dale Holsinger canned 13.
Pacing the BObcat attack was
. junior center J . D. Bradb\lry who
had 20 points and nine rebounds.
Brent Love, &amp;-2 junior forward , also

~unbly',;

~ft.

KVGERCIU!EK(tii )-Ci ark ~ Moles
2·2-6; Bradblo l)l 9-2·:1!; Love 6-2-14: ·slrolld
1.0:2; R Mariln 1~2. , . _ IH&amp;
NEW liOS1'0'i (.) - llc1NIN! 7~19 ;

'

lt.Mlll!o

l.o..li!(ViJk&gt;

w.,-

Kygor ens

16 :IJ 12

("m.f\'IN' 7l Rlark RlWL !W

A Dl116du. .t M•lt&amp;lnedll,llt,

vs.
SOUTHWESTERN.;_
AWAY.:....JAN.14
SYMMES VALLEYHOME-JAN. 15
'WAHAMAAWAY-JAN. 18

Mt!mtkor: 1'hl! ~i¥lW Prtsti. Jnl~Hid I&gt;Mi-;
ly Press Aoucllllioo and tht! An~ril'an
Nt·•~pMpt:r Publ b.h.!n ~111.· t.lioo Nwtklnl l
AllverU11i n~ Reprek'nt•ll vt, Br•nhaun
Ne'!INPMI)6. Silt!s, 733 Third AYel'lle, New
York. New Ymt 10017 ,
.._
'

Tiw

PaiTMASTER : ~nd addrt.&gt;U lu
O..il.)'
Ill Cour1 St. Pon-.croy, Ohiut$781.'

.'

8Uli8CIIIPTION RATa

B)'Carrlt-ror...._llulw

'

A.·~\'t'r F1; lls. Pu .. R'l. Youn/.! . 1-~sl H7
~ . Hud.'Oil W. n~r.-..

BEGINNING
KARATE ClASSES

!l(&gt;r•k,t.;h\n• ..1. rlractl~'lnl ~i
l'k&gt;thr&gt;l IW. Ou~-. No!1hrt.h.'f' :r.

lll•x)r:.· tR 13~ Walnut 41
Blur!lon T.l, Mc·Comb ~
Roar dmun tiii. Sak'm 5i

~A,TIONAI. INE Plumb.ng &amp; Ht atmt Supplies

I

"II You Wonl o Plum~r IIIII
You Wont Him Good''

I

BtK'kl'\'f' Val. '\1, M at'\.'li\ 'tlk• .'r;'

C'adil i.l nurkf').·r W. :'J!I
( 'unton etnh, il . [}J\1'1' till
Ct~ n tnn fik•nOak 711, N. Cant):'" ;~~o~
Cunl&lt;m Swih ~. Ma~~lllon .Jac•k....an !111
C;mltm 'nmkNI ti1, Lnuts,·llll• .~
I ' t~ n lon Trinllr 1111. l.utlw'l11 n F:. ~
CHlna 1\'i, Sldl'lf'.' ' IJ9
Ol;mtm ;• ;, (iirdlnal ,-.;
Cin. Ck, E.~ l r• 1&gt;1.. Gm.•nh lll" 49
f"in . l'o k Nk·holas,.lf•. Amf'lill :."!

,_y

Sui.ISI'riht•r!i not dt'!'l iri n~.t l11
U\4.• t·~rrit•r
llloiiY remil in attl \'!tflt'l' din d tu Tht' Daily
St·nlu'h·l t iD 111 :l. 6 ur IZ munl.h lwl$:;;. Cn-dit

···-

wiii iJt• &amp;.: 1\'CIIt'Mrrit·•· l'l:lt'h munth .

1:\ Wt.. ·k.~
jJi Wt'I'IL"'

....

'
• "t

. . SH.fl.l

()UIJ!Idt• Otlltt

J:l WtTittoi . . . . . . . . . . .
. .... .. . ·' Sl!&gt;.21
iJi Wt't'k.'i . . . . . . . . . . ... . •...... . .. 129.li4
52 Wt "·k.~ .. . . . . . . , . . . .. ... , , , . . . 1$.21

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS

'

'

TOWNSHiPS
I

I

'

u

i

•'
1i

Eatarn
CHESTER
Eatarn
,MoiVO
COLUMBIA

•,'I •
••

l

•u

1. I

!

DOWNING-CHilDS

li!

ANQ

.

311.20
31.20

4.30
4.30

1.70
1.70

24.00
26.00

.40 .10 ~ 20 : 1.00
.40 .10 .20 l.ilO

2.00 t.50 t.oo .035158
2.00 1.50 1.00 .033114

.ottsts
.014185

4.30
4.30

3.00 ' 26.00
3.00 24.00

.40 .10 • .20 . 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00 t.50 1.00 .042259
2.00 1.50 1.00 .044513

.034182 39.50
.035913 . 37.50

4.30

3.70

.40 . tO .20 1.00

2.00 1.50 t.OO .271570

. t84549

'.

27.70

2.30

j

44.20

ORANGE
Ellttfn

4.30
4.30

2.70
2.1o·

28.00

24.il0 .40 .to .20 · 1.00

2.00 1.50 1.00 .047637
2.00 UO I()() . 05~tll

.027011 39.20
.028543 ' 37.20

4.30

3.20

24.00

.40 .to .20 1.00

z.oo uo r 110-;om

.021803

37.70

4.30

3.20

26.00

.40 . tO .20

2.00 t5o 1.00 . .04&amp;144

.o2sts'2

illl.7o

Rulllnd Vil\oge
SALEM
· Mli11
SALISBURY

26.111 ' .40 .10 .20 1.00

·4.30
4.30

2.30
1.00

4.30

1.70

' . 4.30.

Soothom
Roci .. Vililtl

Syroe.. Villoge

1.00

2.50

4.30

Moiio
SUTTON

&gt;

'

MiddiiPDn Villoge 4.30
Po-ov Villoge 4.30

SCIPIO

.tO .20 1.00

4:3Q

RUTLAND

Mtill

.40

4.30
. 4.30
4.30
4.30

2.00 1.50' 1.00 .041776

.020029

39.00

24.00 .40 .10 .20 . 1.00
24.00 · .40 . tO .20 1.00

2.00 1.50 1.00 .04t6911
5.50 ·2.00 1.50 1.00 .013221

.017823
.033998

36.10
4t .oo

24.00 . .40 . tO .20 1.00

2:00 1.50 1.00 .035158

,012619

38.20

I

1.,70
.20

24.00· .40 . tO ,o 1.00
24.00 .40 .tO .20 ,1.00
24.00 .40 . tO .20 . 1.00

2.40

2f,OO

.zo

2.10.

.80
.80

2.10

24.00
24.00
24.00
24.00

.40 .tO

.zO

I

I

I

.

.o201ts

..
2.00 1.50 t.OO .038181 .014211
tO.tO 2.00 1.50 t.OO . 1Zl1~1 ' .064t00
5.30 2.00 1.50 1.00 .07t7J4 .087t43
'\

.. .· 2.00 1.50 1.110 .031715

.40 .to .20 1.110

'

.OlCZit

i
l

- .: JockDI :Ill, 11'1111111 II.

.,

..

il1 ( 2n rl

Pomt' f6y, 0 .

MILLER--HOME-JAN. 11 .
KYGER CREEK-HOME-JAN. 14
WATERFORD-HOME-JAN. 18

J : .

.:

,I

I
I
I

I

3UO .
" ·20
40.40
•,

I

'

OPPONENT
AI Lopn
.llckson.

.

At Ironton
Fedentl Hocki!W
Waverly

At Nelsonville-York
Ftb. 11
Athens
F.tl. 12
At Wahama
Feb. 18
Gallipolis
All resetve pmes start at 6:30 p.m.

EASTERN EAGlES
Dennis Eiching-Coach

I

W.hlma

-

_.

JIM'S GU~F

I
•

SOUTHERN TORNADOES
Carl Wolfe-cOach

.

I
;

1

DATE
Jan. 14
Jan. 15
Jan. 18
Jan. 21
Jan. 28
Jan. 29
Fe_b. 4.
Feb. 5
Feb; 11
Feb.l2
Feb. 18

OPPONENT
At Southwestern
Symmes Valley
At Wahama (6:15 p.m.)
Kyger Creek
Eastern

• FIIDAV 9:00 . 1!00

I

SATURDAY lji:OQ . 6:00

1LO!ED StHIAY

1

At Lopn
At North Gallia
Ceredo-Kenova
At Hannan Trace
at Huntington St. Joe
SoUthwestern (6:15 p.~.)

DATE
Jan. 11
Jan. 14
Jan. 18
Jan. 21
Jan. 28
Feb. 1
Feb. 4
Feb. 11
Feb. 18

. ·'

HOWIE CALDWELL-ASST. COACH

OPPONENT
Miller
Kypr Creek
Waterford
At 1tan111n Trace
At Southern
At Ale•nder

SENIOI CmZIN
DISCOUNT
wt: ru .-u I'IIIK IIImllfft
tMI AGtt
wtu....- . wnUMAOM

. ........ "" •

......,u_
....
"'"'""""
• MEDIM£T • Pea
110.1\ltit [ CJIUMYJM

Southwestern

North Gallia
At Kyger Creek
' .

DON EICHINGER-ASST. COACH

EWING

.I

..

38.90

envelop1.
. ·
1
1.... •·.
·
AlwopoumhiO your lax ....np&amp; lo . . lhet itCOYmall yollfproperty. Office Houn 8 :80 A.M. tp 4:'0
1
•
P.M., MODday t1uu Priday, Clo.d on •tulday. .
·'
·.
· '
OIOROII M. COLLINS. Moip Co. 'l'nu.
,

DATE
Jan. 14
Jan. 21
Jan. 22
Jan. 28
Jan. 29
Feb. 4
Feb. 5

.
"HOME BANK
SEE US FOR
ALL ·YOUR GULF
FOR
.
PRODUCTS
HOME PEOPLE"
'
AND YOUR
f!llember FDIC
QUICK STOP .
.GROCERY
NEEDS .

...

31.10

MBGS MARAUDERS
Greg Drummer CDCich

.

11oe1 lolal.o 1ax01 which
paid at the cloao d~ each collecliOn carry 1 penally of ~en per
Clht. TUn may bo paid at tho office of lhe county· ~,.. ot by mall. PI•- brt"l your laot lU ncelp~
· 111d If' you pay by mill bo oureto locote your pr&lt;lpally by \Uin1 !IJoaict and onclooe olamped ..lf·adm-d

I, .

....

MICK CHILDs-ASST. COACH

I

.012611 ' J6,2Q
.IMOm 42.90
.043413 441.50

z.oo i.so 1,.oo· .1144584

1.00 .

.40 .to .211 t.oo
.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .tO .20 1.110 ·

.
havo not been

2.00 1.50 1.00 .035751
1.20 2.00 1.511 1.00 .071523
5.10 2.00 1.50 1.00 .087321

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992·3381 OR
992·2342.

•'
I

'

MULLEN INSURANCE

''

·o

Eootwn

Mtit/

'

I

LEBANON
E•ttm
Southern
LETART
SOUIItorn
. OLIV.E

SUTTON

..,

.

.'•

•ui
hi

•

l

BEDFORD

Moip

J
il

i

i
•
I

Pro"' p l Cou rff'OU1 Sr rv . ..

"

In pursuoiiCI ol law, I, Georga M. Collins, Tr-m of Moip CouniY. Ohio, in compl)lncf witlt Codo No. 323.01
at Stitt o.f Ohio, do htr1by giw notice of the Ratn pt Tlltttion lor the Tax Vw of 1112. Rtttstxp...t in dollars tnd
cannon uch one thousand dotlan tu valuation.

.~
• .•

A Phon~ Call B•...g ,

vs.

.. . ............ ' . . . . . . .. S27 .:.
62 W•~-IL"' . .. .. .. ... .. .. .. .. . .. .. 151.3 ~
•

992-20361-

EASTERN

.

Rates of Taxation for 1982

SC~OOL DISTRICTS

IAL~

992-345l

MAll. SUIISCR1PTIONS

•• '*Ohln
. .. . . . . . . . ..

ELECIRIC Ill IEWER CtfAN!R

• TOWING . IEPAIIS . SERVICE
CALL

N•• s ub.oi. ·riptiun."' by nWtil pt'flnitlt'tl in tu'wns ,
wl-. ·n·.hunw n &amp;rriN S!'r\' il't' is.11v• iLllbll'

Beginning Jan. 11
At 7:00P.M.
At Carleton School
In Syracuse.
For Information Call
992-5421 or 992-5896

'

RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL
INDUSTRIAL

l'llilly ..... . ... .............. ... Ja Ct· nUi

,;. J'JN!fmd l'ht• nl'l

AND CORPORATIONS ~
'

985·3385 .·

SOUTHERN

PRICF.S

,\i hc&gt;n.~ HI I, Wa\'t•r~· til
Hav ~:!. l-:l\'t1:• .f!!

TUPPERS PlAINS 9RA.NCH

Saturday
7:30 a.ni. to 4:00 p.m.

1U8Ps1. . . . 1

On.;• Wt'l'k .. • .. , .. , , . .. , ... ........ 51!10
Ont! Month , . , , , , . , .... , , .. , .... , . •t:40
Ont• Yt•ar ..• . , . .. . , .•.. , . , ... , , .. , 1$%.10
SINGLE COP~

rtn. flo0,· Haron M. nn. Sl. xawr -IR

742-2888

..

t

·

RUlLANO..BRANCM

..,

Daily Sentinel

The

.992-2133 ·

LOGAN-AWAY-JAN. 14
JACKSON--HOME-JAN. 21
WAHAMA--HOME-JAN. 22

Mon, thru Fri
7:30a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

.'

11-~9

CORNER OF E COU RT~ 2nd ST.
POMEROY

vs.

HOURS:

n 9 n 21-:12

New lboltlll

MEIGS

FIBERGLASS '&amp; FOAM
INSULATION
•

Tolbort 6+16; HolsJn&amp;t!&lt; 1-5-13: Jo~ 3-2-11
""::Y~· TotalS :n-27'5~

WALK-UP l OfttVE tN
WINDOW SERVICE

I

WHEEL HORSE
lBwn &amp; Garden
TRACTORS..

lowiU'd lbe

SenU~l.

Cln . T'h~-"' - 'f:rl. ~ :d . !1\. Hllkmst .lfl

Aqulr~;.~ s ~11

Amhr-1"11 SIN'II" ."12. Yr nnlllon 51
r\.~hlitnd

CHESTER, OH.
•

New Boston upends Bobcats

1\lliarw;-t•

'

OF P9MEROY NA

"lour B•itdinc llottrlllllorket Pt.co"

Team

--

992-2196

BAUM

January t6

..
1)13211--41
12 rr 10 ~·

, . . . (Ill

9,92-6661

Minnesota
Atlanta

•

'

•

.....""'

.

.

'

.-

IISI!D CA1S

Janua-y 15

Dlvllll-~21: FrankEdiiiWIOit~: JonCJay
1~:1; Joey Wyant~ Tim llolllllni'().J.J.

-

·. .

•.

·97 N. 2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT

San

San

(fl} - AI COWDI 7·1-15; Todd

TOTAUI . .H1.
letNbrC . tea

' lot ·

CENTER"
January 16

Frank McClellan 2-1-5; Tony Kellll ~lD;
1\yan AIIIIWOrth 0.1-1: Jim 'l1lcmlu 1-2-t:
Kevin Weol l0-2; l'lelft Tllmo 1-2-10.

TOTAUIItH&amp;

.

.

'

Miami
New

Eagle gals ·
beaten 32-25
FORT FRYE - Donna ScUeppl
dumped in 14 points and Cdnnle
Teamsters, eight points as host Fort
Frye defeated the Eastern girls'
r~rve basketbaU . team, 32-25.
After a 44 first period deadlock,
Fort Frye took a 12-9 halftime lead.
A second and third periOd press
for~d several Eastern turnovers ·
and proved to be the Eagles'
greatest downfall . In that third
frame FF outscored EHS 14·8.
Eastern had trouble
the offensive boards and as a result only got
one shot at the basket each trip
&lt;10wn court. ·
·Eastern put forth a hustling,
determined effi:lrt In the last game
to outscore the winners 8-6, but
their late game scoring bid fell
short at the '11uzzer.
Gloria Brooker addfd six for Fort
Frye, Debbie Polk two, Melissa
Dairs two, and Anita Slatter two.
For. Eastern Ann Diddle had a
. great game with 14 points, Margaret Horner had eight, Jodi
Barringer two and Tammy Cape.
hart 1.
Homer hauled down 16rebounds,
while Diddle and Barrin~;~er each
had live. ·
Eastern, now 3,4, plays Tu,esday
at Meigs ilt 5:00 p,m., then travels
to Watelf\)nl' Jan. 13 to play
Waterfonl .

..

* ·MEIGS· MARAUDERS
.
~ *EASTERN. EAGLES
*SOUTHERN TORNADOES

~YOUR FINANCIAL

New York

High school cage results ••..

oo

when Davis meshed a jumper. It
was 4745.
With just 17 seconds left, COllins
again scored out of the corner to
'know the C!)unt at 47c45:
This set the stage for Tlsmo, who .
converted the first of a one-and-one
for the victory.
Davis led all scorers with 21
points for the Ironmen with Collins
adding 15.
Mark FieldS with 16 and brace
r1. 10 point effi:lrts tram Tony Kelth
and Tlsmo paced the Ironton
· vic tory, their sixth straight
triumph.
Ironton made W of 55 from the
field for 36 iJI!I'Cmt, eight of 141rom
t he line, and netted rehounds , 16
by Fields. '
·
·. Jacksonsbotf4st35percentonW
d 58, made seven of 14 foul shots,
an&lt;) clairried 34 caroms, 12 by Joey
Wyatt.
'!'he box score:
, JROIIII'ON (411) - ~k Fl- 7-2·16:

Cincinnati
New York

SEOAL RESEliVE$
TEAM
Galllpolls

'.

January t 5&lt;...

THE ROAD TO THE SUPER BOWL - 'Ibis

OP
565
:!67
612

&gt;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

..

THE
CENTRAL ·
TRUST .
COMPANY

•

Los

Cleveland

chart shows lhe results of the llrM round games, 111111
lhe matchups lor the - d round, In the NFL

7 5 644 630

JackSCI'I.
Meigs
TOTAU!

. Ironton wins tilf ·
in final 4 seconds
' ~ Pierre Tisrm's free throw with
: • just four seconds remaining llfte&lt;j
the Ironton Tigers to a thrilling
4847 SEOAL v~ tory over the
J ackson Ironme n Saturday night.
The contes t mar ked the second
time In two . nig hts the league
leading Tig ers had to claw from
behind. HIS rem ains a top the
league with a 6&gt;1 r ecord·.
Sa)Urday the ba st Ironmen led
12-10 after one quarte r and carried
a 29-~3 lead Into the Intermission.
The Tigers erupted for 21 points
In the third period to gain a 44-39
edge heading into the final eight
minutes.
In the fourth quarter, Todd Davis
goalljd fa r J iickson to redu~ the
mafiln to 44-41. but Jim Thomas
cann,ed a pair of free throWs a t the
6: 29 r ark to III! Ironton Into a 46-41
lead.
.
·
.:
W{th 5: 13 showlilg Ryan Alrisrna~ free throwfi:lra 47-41
• lead.'
:
NQbody scilred durtng the next
~ mlnu~ as .I ronton rebounded a s~ 8lld then stalled the
ball. l
• · J~Jfkson replnl!d possessiOn and
• AI q,wn. quickly drUied a cotner
1J10t with 1:48 left lb narrow tile
• lead~ 47-43.
.
clodl ' I1,IQWed !56 seconds
.
.
.

Cage
Standings
W
9
3
9

-

XVII

Los

StLouis

TEAM
WheelorobW'g

.

SUPER BOWL

Trallinl1 24-2'3 with 6: 45 to go,
Minnesota drove 72 yards with Ted
Brown followiJ'lg a Rickey You11g
block to go·in from the5wlth l : 44left
for the winning points.
"Rickey made a dyliamlc block,"
said Brown , who rushed for 82:Yards
despite being knocked out of the
game In the first fialfwitha shoulder
injury. The Vikings' defense yielded
only 115 yards passing and did not
allow the Atlanta offense a touchdown . Cornerback John Turner
intercepted ' two of Steve · Bartkowski passes.
Minnesota improved to 6-4 while
Atlanta finished 5-5.
Raiders 27, Browm 10
Jim Plunke tt had one of his finest
games, completing 24 of 37 passes
for 386 yards In leading Los Angeles
to Its ninth victory In 10 games. The
Browns·finished 4-6.
Rookie Marcus Alle n, who rushed
for 72 yards on 17 carries and caught
six passes for 75 yards, had
touchdown runs of 2 and 3 ya rds and
· Frank Hawkins seated on a 1-yard
run for the Raiders.

Waverly
Galllpolls

-

RIO GRANDE - Coach John
Lawhorn said before his Rio
Grande College Redmen took on
the Ohio Dominican College Panth·
e rs Saturday night that his squad
needed establish the te mpo of the
game early and play saUd defense
If they ere goi11g to wlp these
Mid-Ohio Conferen~ opener.
Lawhorn's Re'd men did·just that ,
outscorin g t he P a nthers 17·2 In the
first 10 minuteS e nroute to a '71·54
victory before an O'Dell Lumber
C 0mpany night crowd of 2,600atthe
P a ul R. Ly ne Center .
" We wer e especia lly pleased
with the perfo rman~ of our
freshmen," Lawhorn said. "They
came in w hen .t hey had to and
showed that they can play college
ball. We're pleased to have opened
the conferen ce In such a positive
fashion."
The win m oved the Redmen to
· 12-6 overafl and 1-0 in the MOC.
They' ll hos t Malone College Tues·
day a t Ly ne Center.
The Redm e n opened !he 17-2 lead
behind four points ea ch from J erry
:. . Mowery, Tim Richards and Ra·
· · cine's Ke nt Wolfe. they stretshed It

vnw,gs.30, Falcons 2t

The Road to

I

. : :Monday, Januory 10, 1983

15.7 NYE AVE.
992-6225

'

IL.

608 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2259
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr:

"Your Athletic
Shoe Headquarters"

GRI ............. :........ :·.:.992-6191
Dottle tumer .., ............ 992-5692

J11n Trussell ............... 949-2660
Oftice ........ .................. 992-2259

SYRACUSE OFRCE

992-6333

II

.'

HOME.

UDIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
' ESTABLISHED 1913
Ben H. Ewing-Director

PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AVE.

RACINE OFFICE

POMEROY, OH.

949-2210

t
. ',/
,t..

;

FUNERAL
.

.,

"COME GROW

. WITH

US.'~

Fo
....
a t ;;..

FARMERS

BANK .·

.&amp; SAVIl4GS CO•. ,
POMEROY, Ott

..

'PH. 2136. - ~ '

FIM.......................

'

•'

�-·-

~---_..._

.~·

Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

r·

10, 1983

none

would be·an all·around agreement
that relatives concentrate on biological progeny, and buy ODJy
ineitp.,Wve gifts for the "steps."
Thus each child would receive one
or two nice ~ts from "real"
grands, and ." remembrances"
!rom the others.
Another suggestion: Draw
names.
Above .all, don't 5p\lnd more than
yo\\ can afford." Your sincere
In erest and continuing love will be
remembered' by the grandehUdren
long after they've outgrown your
gifts.- H.
P .S. Ideas, any of J.UU stepgrandparents out there?

DEAR HElEN:
My husband's mother worrted
about his 1!1/ery snllne. She bundled
him off to the doctDr, relativeS tell
me, wben most kids would settle for
a few nose-wipes. So he grew . up
afraid of germs and ·very ·alert for

NO
YOU'l1l - Andrew Hamada, age 2 of
Columbus, appears to be woddng with the wrong fountain H be Intends
. 01 quench his thirst. The bOy was at the GreyhotDld Bus Station where
his moOter had brought him to watch t~ buses 111' In and out. ( AP
. Laserphoto).

•

O'Bleness recetves
cost-saving award

A regular feature prepared by

w&lt;l'ds, he's a
dariled llypocroodrlac!
I have ,a djusted to this, but now
be's raising our chlldren the same
way his mother raised him, ~ sees
a sore lbf&lt;N!,t as "!rllbably'!lh;eP·" a
little headache as, maybe a tumor,
and heaven help tiiHtld If he !J!\s ari ·
ache · in his ' joints - juv"mUe .
arthritis without a doobt! I'm not
one to rnal!e fuSSeS, but ...
How can I keep thi!m sane about
Illness ~ he's a nut on the ' . ·
subject? -QUIETLY WORRIED
DEARQ.W.:
Speak oot! You should·ha"!!l'!lone
It long ago. Accepting your , llusband's hypocrondrla may ·Only '
Intensify lt. Dlscussihg It' with him
could yet lead to therapy which ,
might beter all your Jlva. - I{ .

vs

Whotl tdtf•- Ia ur*nown;

-tagatw,
urtl&lt;nclwn
.tmlnillntors.
holrt. - exec-·
·
. . - ond/or llllgno of Roy
BUih tf diet IIIII.
I

EDV!IARD •BUSH. if living, I

·"the
""'*
11U1. . e. ur*ncw"':
·uriknOwn~ heira. diM....~
le&gt;,aa.... ldminilbltota. exec-

. . - ond/or lllifln• of .Ed·
~nl Bush, If doe
d.

EDRA BUSH,

whose addaDR is unknown;
.the unknown heios. - s .
!ega..,., adminilll'ltoos. exec·
U10n, and/or lllligno of Edra
Buoh:lf-""
MAY BREWER, whooelut
k.-.n

Got a problem! An aault subject
tor discussion? You CWI talk It rJVer
In her column If you write to Helen '
Bottel, care c1 thlll newspaper.

J·---·
.............. .
,_.,
··-

Calendar

...,...........
.... ..
..............
...... ........
..... .
&amp; 4- Moi!C , .._~..,
n- •..u~.,.

s-.,-~,.

ERI'fEST BREWER. whole
known
30020
Valley Bei.R&lt;*I. Rocine. Ohio
46771, if living; 1he unknown

heirs, devisees. legatees·
administrators, executots
and/ ·assigns of Ernest
Brewor.ifctet-Md
BlANCHE WINTERS. If
living, whooe oddress is un·
known; the unknown heiro.
tors...ecuton and/"' IIS!Iigns
devi-.

of Blonche Winters.
tkK

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

,,.....,.__

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

.

~~~

lU~....-.l...-

HIIU-Iot~ll.,.l

..... ..._

....lf..

fego-. admillistJatota. O&gt;IOC·

umn,ond/or~of ·&amp;~

EVERETT MOSIER. if living, whoM addreu is un·
known. the unknown heirs.
devi-. . - . - ·
ton. executon end
·"' aa of

Hospitalized

...

were
j

.

'

y

....

'• '

:!

·

!
:
II
I

I

bP. rnolhf: no rth Oljrl ol NW rin0

Hte ['J rnyr t IS lhrll !he ~ Jh Ov1~
: df "il.llht' lf od &lt;~nd qns 11qhts b1~
1 f')&lt;H!IJIOI1N1 and 1111e th ~•P. t ll 11~)
! Qi HP.tn l r1S i'lfld lllSI Oil dP-InnrJ
: ani!;, 111:11 ' !hi' 111lf!rP.S1 h• '
l d~t l•tiiH11f'rl
&lt;)1\d ~0!
Or
: O rdc&gt;tf.d solrl 1! 11 can tl OI IJC
1 ptHIItHu tm l for ,111 i ltl ow rtn c~· nt
1 ::Htn tnP)• Ines hf: 1 1~1n ancl cos ts
'"- You are reqUi red to answer
the r omplrtrn t Wltl11ll twt•nty·
: P-tnht d.IVS ilfl f' l Ihi" I&lt;ISI pi r!JIIC:il ·
l fi(Jil of 1h1s no 11r.r whtr:h \viii he
: pt •bl1shr , I r Hlt:(• f' dt:h w~k lot
, S IX .c.;onsf!r r ttt vll wrP.ks ThP 1,151

~rtnd

on

Will b fl n li:ldf' fJn
~ Ff'htu:'lry 14 . 1983 nml lh• •
t tv\. 'llltO ISJhl
(toy:; l!;t iHl SWPr
1

JlUI ) IIC. II IUil

'

•

th .1t dntP.
J~/ il,"lS t~ n l yOI I) lillhHe !(').
1 •.m krl':f I or O t hi~• W I 5P. rr-s nnnd
I, ~lS t " .t~rt_~tPd
'l
''
hy l hf"0111r1 R tr!P.SO!

: wt111oJhrnPI lCfl nn

~

I (I

: b~~

i~ijf()cPdi

ff l ', fllri{lrllPI)!

Wtll

r~M8•Bci ,:l(JOrn:;t y 01 1 lor lh ?.

nel1e l l

d ~nHl llrl NI

; comt,~,lrnl
•'

L:IIIV

r

111

tlw

Snf:rwm

Cl.•rk of C01•rl 'l
MPI!l ~ Cnunty
ContmOrl Pl na:=; C 0 11!!
I

I

11 110. 17 24. 31i2 ) 7. 14.!itc
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE

.

So co1y, pretty. it's an afghan
granny would lowe to crochet.
Colorlul '13-in ch octagons a1e
joined wtth small squares to
create a fascinating pattern
Crochet alghan of synthetic
worsted 1n 3 colors. Pattern
715J dilect1ons. co101 schemes.
$2.25 lor each · paHem. Add
504 each pattern 101 postage
and ' handling . Send to:
Alice Braob
J ·l, ::;•
NHdlecraft lltpt

day ol January . 1983 at 4 00
p .m fort he purpose bf elect tn g
dtrecwrs a nd the transact1on of
-su ch other bus1'ness as may
properly come before sa1d
1

meefin~

•
Pau l E Kl oes,

Secretaryt

(12127 . 11)10, 1.6.'18. 4tc

.. REPAIR

I

1

i

--.-----..:.....---1I

1

All CRAFT 11001(5..$2.00 eacll

AI llools ond Catliot--odd 5~
tiCh lor postlp 111d handline.
135-Dalb &amp; Clothes On Por1do ·
134-14 Quick Mocltlne Quilb
·133-flshlon Humo QuiHinJ
l32·Qult Ori 'nils

·

I
I

I Wanted
I For Sale

1
1

!Announcement'
I For Rent

I

I

include discount

~~·--

17

I
I
I
I
I

'

I
I
1

I~

19,
20.

1
I
I
:

21 .

n.
23.

~.

6.
7'

I

·

Also Transmission I,
PH ; 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

I . 9.
1 1o.
1 n.
I 12.
1· 13.

I

PlASTICS
t -SUPPLY
. oQ RANGE

GAS PIPE
•BLACK GAS PIPE
•REGULA TORS ·

YOUNG'S

~----~---

- Concrete work

-Plumbing ..,d
electricaf work
(free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 992~2772
1110.

Rec. us-'6.95

NOW 2/1 5.00
leather Hats, T·Shirts, A&lt;cts·
sories &amp; mUch mGre.
Hrs.: 9·5

Closed Sun &amp;Mon.
8oec hcrove Rd. .
Rutland, Ohio

12 8-l mo

L,._ _ _ _:.._,_,31;.·7~·lllf:&gt;,C.J

ALL STEEL&amp; .
POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes start from 12'd6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from .6'&gt;6' Up
to 24'&gt;36'.
Insulated Doc Houses
Rt. 3. Box 54
Racine , Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591

FtlnchtownCarCo.
8111 Gene Johnaon
448 0089
'

·

Wanted to buy Square Dane-·
ing outfits. All aizee, .men's

and womon'o. Call 448·
4637.
.
. Will · pay cash for used· •
mobile homes. Oamagea,

reponed

or Insurance

claims con•ldered. Call44&amp;,

0175
Old

stoneware jars. juga,

crodu &amp; milk pitchera. alto·
old wicher baskett. Call ·

814-387-013B.

.

Fann tractor Good cond
'with equiplfl8nt a.' good·

used pool table e. guns. Diet
814·379-2802.

Tobbecco poun'dege. 30 .
cents a lb. Call 446-0373.
~It

tara,

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
r.n "li llllli l, rl l•l rJir '• r••, lr ·.) ,l)'.r•o l
11• · "'"nv :Jr·Jn• : 1.. .J,It'v ttl• • SJ, ·I oil ·.
fJrq•. Hin,Pn t r•:•:• 1•d I''; 1lu· r;,,!JII nl
Colllill 'll ll l'l• •d'· J', j)I III.•HIPd
SI'I IIO II 2 q :f~ tll , ,, lll P
I
H• ·vr•:•!I C•K li •. I•NIII o·)(p•···• 1!11 · I
, II jll ,j )l ll. . II II II • Il l I II 1 Tl lfl I I roll I II

wo~d

ice boxeo, atone
anbquos, etc., Com·
plato households. Write:
M.D.OrMillar,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy ' ·
Oh.
992· 7780.

Gold, ·~ver, sterling. It· .
welry, nngs, old coin• &amp;.
currency. Ed Burkatt Berber '
Middleport.

Shop,

3478.

99,2·

•

·

1•! ll o•• Mo 11• "· (oll lll iV C ••lll tiii JI!S f ~
!'' •111•T•IV 0[111 1 . oi ' I ' !Otil lir.kAM

1111 S;! llil d. •v 11, ?/ 11rl r1 .1y o l
J I)HI.Jl Y l 'JH'l lh• · in llo •WIIIIf
7 ) r1 11•,1•jll ,._,.,,' I ( 1 II • IP I I W-' v Ho iO
1 ,1 1•·' · M1ulr ·l fll 10 1'• Sl'liil N1 o
!,ilf;:l 10
1l l••H010 IIIII H "'"" h• . , ••nloy
I I ~ II I , I I 1 I 11 q
I )II '
D· ·l l, UIIIII '' tt

Jt,fv1f • 1 1· 1~nr f tn
SI H HJff
MII C~ ~ UllJNll'

111 1• •

11

Help Wanted

---'------;·
Ucef'!led Administrator for

100 bed

aklllod nuraing

· home in Southearr Ohio ..

Salary comenaurated wtth
experience. S8nd reaume to- .

SHMC, P.O.Box 1088 Gal- •
lipolia, Oh 45631 .
'
•

'
Machinist Lathe. braze me- :
talizing, experi~nce n~e 1 .. .
aery, etc. · Send . resume to :

! 11

ID·6·11c

Bo:c 8000 in care of the ~ ·

PULLIN
EXCAVATING

"CUT OUT
FO~ FUTURE USf'

KEN'S

I

29.
JO.

I
I

985-3561

31.
32.

:

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer

SERVICE
· All Makes

•Washers •oish· ,
washers •Ranges
• Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS .and SE AVICE
4-5-ttc

Galllpolla Dolley Tri&gt;Une ,
B25 3rd. Ave .. Gallipolis Oh •
46831.
'
•

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

.... u

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

3 Announcements
SWEEPER ~nd sewing ina -

-Gas LJnes
-Septic Systems
lARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992·2478
12· 0·1 mo d.

DIRECTOR fO&lt; Sheltered
Workshop, Gallia Co. Board

of M~-00. Mutt meet certi~
fiC8tlon requirem.,tll of the

OhiO Dapanment of Mental
Retardation and Develop~

mental dlaabitities. BA de-

chine repair, parts, and gree a mutt, '"Perienca and
•uppliaa.
Pick up and ' b.ck~round.. in butineas. in·
delivery, Davis Vacuum dustnal production and 18 •
Cl•ner, one hltf mile up lesmsnahip ia enential. Ap· .,
Geo111e1 Crook Rd. Call plication• may be obtained

by wr~lng P.O. BO&gt;C 14
Cheshire, Oh ·45620 or coli ·
814·367-01 02 .

4.,6.0294 ..

~a!lle4,grlll operator. Apply
- 1 ~ person Bob Evans Steak

House,

THE DABBLE SHOP
OPEN 9,5
CLOSED THURSDAY
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
Check Our Specials For
Tl1e Month of January ·
DABBLE SHOP . .
251 ~ W. Main St. ·
Pom111oy, OH.
12·24-1 1110,

•
J'

Now laking applications far ·:
new deal~ra for Fri.,dly
Ho""\' Parties. Also booking
partiea for June to gat extra

ROOFiN(l
Jt L WRIT~SEL
."Gutters -

free glfta. Call 614-992 •
3661.
.

•Downspouts
tiNew or Repair
•Painting

Sales penon needed at bcal
business. Send reauma to

P.O. Box 729 D.H. C·o The
D11ily

FREE .ESTIMATES

Sentinel.

Oh. 45789 .

Ph.
992-2791
·r
_ . 6l
O 949 22

Income tax oorvloa. Federal
· • State. Wallace Ruooell,
• · , Brodbury, Oh. 614-992 714
~-;:.._ __:_ _ _..:.·
.·.:::.:
·':::.'~ 7228. '

Pomeroy ·

' ;

HAVE FUN paying your
Holoday billa. Soli Avon and
earn good •••· m•t nice: ..

people. Call - 814-B43 · .
2982, 614-3B8-9045 814 ' .
992-3890.
•
. ''

Giveaway
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT

Now Aceeptlt1&amp; 'New
Clients

,

·

JIFS,

LAFF-A·DAY

'

Wo pay cooh for late model

clean .\fled care.

old
mtture, gold,BRASS.
silver dol-·
j ~========:J fuBEDS·IRON,

·Res identia I .
&amp; Commercial
Ca II 742·3195

POIMro'f, Ohio

28 .

--------~

HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
CHROME PRIMARYS
·Rae, '107.SO
II OW '87 .SO
Complete Kicker Assembly
.
Rec. '189.95
NOW 1147.50
leather
Vests
Rec. 1 149.95
NOW '79.95-'89.95
Harley Je"\'lry-Harley Pins

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

992-6216,or 992-7314

I
1

I
I
1I
1
I
I
I
I
II

TRUCK
&amp; AUTO
NEw &amp;.USED

. VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
olnaulation
&lt;Storm 00011
•Storm WindoWI
•ROP,ia!:oment Windows
•New Roofing
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE

Wanted To Buy

Buying Gold, Sliver, PlatJ.:
num. old coins. scrap ring•
8i allver~are. Daily quote•
ovallable. Also cojns • coin
ouppllea lor oafe. $pring.
Valley Trading Co .. Spring· ,
Valey Pl1za, 448-8026 or
446-8026.

FRYE'S

-________:_-+-----'--....,---+

26 .

.

extensive

ll · tl ·rtc

For all _your wiring
needs;
furnaces '
repair service and
insta'llatt'on.

12·10-1 mo. pd

APPLIANCE

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
T~e paily Sentinel
Ill Court Sf.
Pomeroy, Oh.' 457 69

'· 986-4193 or 992-3087
12-20-Hc

MILLER ·
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

G&amp;W

I

·- ·- ·
· •
14.
~.
15.
~ ------ --34. - - - - ·- - - - , - ,
16
.
35. ---~- - - -

New Homes -

remOdeling
ofloctric work
.Custom Pole B~gs.
&amp; Garaaes oRoolina Work
...lumi111111 &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Y•rs Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7583
or 992·2282

long Bottom, OH. 46743

12·31·1

?5

v

a.

Sidewalks -

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

I Ql\le pnce . The Sent i ne~ To 15
I reserves the right to _,_'-+--+--+--+--i
CARPENTER
I classify, ed it or reiectT'!o~2:st--~~~~~-j
1any ad . Your ad will be 1
I put in the proper To 35
i · - Addona
. SERVICE
classification if you'll
and remodeling
I check the proper bQx
These cash
- Roofing and guttM wolk
r·-

Community

WANTED TO BUY Old furniture and Antique• of all
klndo, calf Kenneth Swain.
446-3169 or 268·1987 in
the evening•.
~

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Route 1

DELIVERY
PH. 985-3892 .
or 985-3837

one' w.Q!P in each

II below .

every Fri. night at

Hartford

Center. Truckloodo of now
merchandiao every w8elc.
Conolgmento of n- and ·
merchandiM alwayt
welcome. RIChard Reynofdo

12

'CHARLES SAYRE
· AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

St.

space below. Each in ·
I titial or group of figures
I counts as a word, Count
I name and address or
1 phone number .if used . w ••••.~
I You' II get better resu 1ts ---+--+_:~_:~_,;_:
'', you . describe fully,

The Daily Sentinel · I
Box 163, Old .Chelsea Sla., New I
YoR, NY 10113. Plinl N1me, I t
Address, Zip, P1Hem Number. I 2
Ves! I want to see more crafts, send 1 3.
me your new 1983 NEEDLECRAFT
CATALOG. 150 designs, 3 free 1 •·
I s.
patterns. Only $1 ,50

. IJO.SwnterriShion•Siml&amp;-56
N011ce · is hereby g1ven th at
~~~:::. Patdlwori&lt; Quilb
the annual meet1ng of the
ll
Doili•
, s 1 oc~ho!d e rs at The Fa rmer s
· Ba nk and Sav1ngs Company o!
211 West Second Street.
I Pomeroy, Qh1o. w1ll be held at
the offic e of sa•d . Bank In
Pomeroy. O hio. accord tng 10 1ts
bylaws on \he th1rd Wednes·

I

I

11,p rm
. t

ay I S

Barns.

Roger Hysell·
GARAGE

Phone.----------------

ilCftl5

w lr!S:'i

.the

,~-::::::::::::::::r~::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::=:::;l.

614-992-2181

Address----------,.-

.Auction

PH. 949-2182""
or 949-3055

modeling - Custom Pole

SAT. NIGHT .
' 6:30P.M.
FactorY Choke 12

Wri1e your own ad and 'order by mall ' .;.,ith this I
coupon. Cancel your ad .by phone when you get 1

1 Name

Un

Patios -

EVERY

LANDMARK

I-

CONSTRUCTION

New Construction - Re- .

1·3 I mo.

results . Money not refundable.

•NEW

in&amp; - Sldin&amp; ~ Conc~e

RACINE
FIRE -DEPT.

Pay Cash for
:
•
.
I
Classifieds and :
Savel II
:I

I

•ROOFING

K~chen Cabinels- Roof-

. GUN SHOOT

Gauge ShOtgUns Only.

T r·

*~~~~~~liON

N S d C II
0

wva State c;pion Auctlon . Eltatet
antiques. farm ; houteholda:
Ucenaed Ohfo-WVa. 304,773·6786 or 304-'7739186.
on•r Rick Pe

9

30,000 BTU
90,000 BTU
lSO,OOO BTU

..;;;

·;

Public: Sele
&amp; Auction

~:;::::::::::::::::::::4'=========mo=·~~:::::::::::::·1:3-:l:m:o:.~ Auctionaer. 27&amp;-3089. '

---___-:;::::~ !;'-----------:========= Au~o &amp;oriiuct\
. Curb Inflation I·

~--

\

Stltli tlfll1 1n Lct tilnon T1 lWf1 ·

rnor c

Parts &amp;Service
1·'3·tfc

.

PH. 992-3194 or
992 •3305

Far'm .Equipment

SALE ON
SPACE HEATERS

JAN. 15. 10 A.M.

sh tr MP.11 JS Coun ty. Ohro. In
Srw tHm 36 Town 2 Rnn qe 11

.- . .... """""""'
..,_ ....... "

.

~ME~Y

f'S iil lt'

....

R.Oilert

OF .
PT. PLEASANT

roy OhiO 4 5 7 !)9
.
r
· Thr. ohtPcl o lt hr, compk11nt IS
aiPar tr\ron a nr1 Qlrll'lHU !o ncttOh.
c o ncern1n(l 011 nnr1()a s l•ndr.rtylr lll th o ICJIInw: llJ rte:H :r 1t':il1d 1r.'qt

I

First birth

$}99.95

Cowl ()I M nt ~ S C n t~nty . P o m +;

ol ·

~

THE PEOPLES BANK

pe1 1d tno u\ thB Cornrnon P IPo~ S

___ _
-·
--· - ·

Chester News Notes

Prices Start At

W est Vit{l tnt a Ptrlo a nd Paper ,
Cornpnny ~''I al di'IE' n&lt;iH il\S
Th1 s a ~ 11 0 n hn s huen ass1 nr1r.ct
Ca~e No 83 CV 3- &lt;~nd 1s

)

--.d·"
.....
-of,_ -. ·M

Octagons-Squares

INTERNATIONAL 1600
DUMP, TRUCK
10 TON LOWBOY TRAILER

You arP- h e rr.by nolt f ~t: d that
you hfiVI beP.II DamP.d d etend;mts In .1 l8f1ill' ilr l10n P.ntrlterl
Janl f!S W Su tllf ~. pl(11ntttr vS

---

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

J.D. 450 BULL DOZER
INTERNATIONAL 3400A
BACKHOE

fego..-.

D-ealer

Bashan Building

Housing
Headquarters

LOST·At Duffaln GoiMpofia.
1982 Wah.na White FofCORI cta . . ing. Belonga to
Vlkkl L. Hayeo. Cell n35993. Reword.

*f!LOWN

Middleport, Bradbury,
and Leading Creek Area.
"'You Call • We'II Hau 1...

·New·
Holland,
Bush Hog
Farm
Equipnfent
·

REAl.TOR

AUCTION

whosO addtess is unknown;
the uulcnown heirs, dtN · eas.
_ , o n i , e•ec·
uton and/ or a.igno of Jennie
Berdine, if de!
d. 1

~~ ,::!-:i,!~ ~~~:

Authori~ed John "eere,

m

REASONABL£ PRIC~S.

Lost and Found

----'--;----

Weekly trash pickups In

5

Dean russell ................................................ .. 949-2660
ott;e Turner .................. ......................... :..... 992-5692
OffICe ........ ·· .. " "" ............ ·.............. ............... 992-2259

WE SELL GOOD HOMES AT

6

Willa me
l!o Scottie Smith
·All mekes and models
Antenno lnotallation
Houae callo and shop
o.-vtce evliloble
Oowayno

·. MANLEY'S
TRASH s·ERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

·REALTORS

RACINE Modern old
bedroom home. Gas furnace,
balh, lot 62xll9. Only
$14,500.

Chest111, Ohio

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

' Pit 742-2834

.BOGGS

~enryl Cleland, Jr., GRI ................................. 992-lil91

home and 2 acres near Me1gs
High. Rural water, bam and
pasture. $14,000.

Klnano . .Female 4 momho .
All gold. 814-742·2328.

SERVICE

;=.::::::::~!::::;:~~==~O~r~~~2~lro~~~if~~======~t~·5:~I~mo~~~~ 8

RACINE - 12%lixed rate interest. VA or F.H.A. on this beautlfu l3
bedroom spirt level home with 1'h baths, fully insulated. gas forciid
a1r, patio, carport summer krtchen, ret. room, nice mooern kitchen
with d•hwasher. Also heatalator fireplace. Outstanding at
$49,500.00,
.

OPPORIUNilY- Od country

or

949-2101

949-2860 . .
No Sunday Calls
'
3. 1J·tlc

L£TART - Owner will sell th~ property several ways! lh acre lot .
With one bedroom cottage - well maintained beautiful 3 yr. old
double wide - unusual features. 3 bedrooms, dining room, 2
large baths, fireplace, carport, metal storage buildmg. Buy all and
rent the cottage. Buy cottage and lot for $15,000 -Double wide,
carport and lot for $32,000 Move double wide, carport from let for
$30,000 Call for show1ng
•

LARGE FAMILY - 3 or 4
bedrooms, gas furnace, carpeting, lots ol closets, swimming
pod, new 2 car garage and 2
lot near Middeport school.
$51,500. .
.

JENNIE BERDINE. if living

estimates ~

' MlliDLEPORT - 3 bedroom home, qUiet street, rrew · f~rced air
gas furnace . ~rdwooo floors. 50'xl32' Lbt. Just $18,900.00.

FARMERS - · 80 acres near
Racine. Lays well for crops.
goo;l 3 bedroom home. A
cheali'P~ce to live.

ROOFING
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
'RoofinJ of oil typos
llsidontial &amp; I ·- •
Cornmtn:iil
'Raw~
'Stonn Wiodows &amp; Doors
, FREE ESTIMATES
20 Yws E.,..ionct
- -- TOM HOSKINS

"Beautiful, custom
Built Garage-s"
Call for free siding

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT -:- Beautiful new carpet in this 3
bedroom home. l'!llh garage and worf&lt;shop in basement. Central
a1r - well il!atnti11ned exterior. Good location: Just $25,900.00.

NOW $13,000.00 - Near
Pomeroy ·slnres. Small lot 3
bedrooms, city utilities, bath,
furnace, and basemen!

leptees. admini&amp;baiUrS. e•ec·
utoB ond Mligns of W . H. ·
Berdine, if deca r•t.

,,...

-of

equipped kitChen, large m, and
al m111erao. $79,500.110.
NEW LISTING - 9 bedrtJOm,
all elec. 1974 Schultz and I
100dl9. Carpel range, refrig_eralnr, disposal and lurniture.
Excellent Cond. Only $11,900.

whosO edd,.. is unknown.
the unknown hen, ,-de'Vi&amp;!BI,

J

Extend period

NEW liSTING - 97 Acres -

7 boautlut pupo. Llrto ·
breed. Mother io Reglot-d
Doberman. 81 4·992-&amp;482.

VALLEY

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

• NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - GOOd starter oome- cute 2
~droom . ooe floor plan home w~h hookup for wood burner; gas
heater. d1mng room , ut11ity hOokups. Chain link lence around lot
Some Insulation. $24,500.00. ·
.
.

E-M.-.. if -lllld.
W. H. BERDINE. if living.

Ql •i"ltlfl . c,u nt;;unlnp 78

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

·I-( 614 )-9'92-3325

VVinteri. if d6tnud.

,,

____

d.

the...._.,heirl, -

I

""'·'·-·.......,_...,_.__
__

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

if

EARL WINTERS, if living.
whole ldd1'811 is unknown:

PHO.NE 992-2156

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

30020

-· -is
·-·-11·

.

. . . . . ..

is

-rninistrotota,
· devi-.exoc:utDr8
lega-. ad·
an·
d/"' llligns of Moy Brewer. If

help save your llfe from cancer.
QUESTION: Is cllewing tobacco
or "dipping" snuff safeornon-hablt
forming?
ANSWERIIne: Smokeless tothat
we've
achieved
results."
. O'Bleness Memorial Hospital
bacco
doesn't carry the health
The
SWAT
(Save
Waste
and
has ' been awarded a certificate of
hazard
warning that cigarettes do,
special recognition for outstanding Thousands) ·program alone re·
but
It'~
tobacco
just the same and Is
sulted In $70,000 In anticipated
cost-saving achievements In 19132.
habit-forming.
The nicotine In It
Presented by the'Ol'llo Voluntary sav!ngs In 1982, accordlhg to
lifts
you
up
first,
then lets you down.
hospital officials. Employees reEffort on .Health Care ·Costs, a
That high-low effect..,..,..,.on your
coalffion of health providers, busl· . ceived &lt;!Wards for cost-sav!ug
nervous system sets you up lor
suggestions
with
the
grand
prize
ness, consumers and others, the
continued
need. Thus habitual use canCer."
going
to
Albany
resident
John
.
award recognized hospital cost
The sOciety's 's tatement was
ol chewtDg ·tobacco and snuff
McClain.
·
containment me115ures that are
tssued
after the results were In
causes Other health hazards.
McClain's suggestion of a mopexpected to slow !be growth of
from
tbe
five year Breast Cancer
Among these are leukoplakia, the
ping schedule for the-housekeeping
irlpatient expenses by 21 percent
Detection Demonstration Prolect
leathery white patches inside the
department saved 64 hours time
over tbe last fiscal year.
mouth caused by direct contact in which more than 280,«XXl women
per pay period for an annual $6,200
The hospital saved $102,000 In
with and continued Irritation liy were screened. It was jointly
savings. He received a check for
actual dollars as a result of a
funded llY the Society and the
tobacco jUice; less sense of taste
five percent of that amount.
number of prudent management
National Cancer Institute.·
resulting In the urge for more sail
Savings achievEd by the product
programs during the 1982 calendar
QUESTION: Is there a blood test
or sugar; receding gums and tooth
year, said Executive Director .. standardization committee infor cancer?
~
decay. Approximately five percent
·c)uded $47,000 in nursing services
Rlchafd Castrop.
ANSWERllne: To date no ~lood
of
diagnOsed
'
leukoplakl&lt;l
cases
~one in 19132, primarily as a result
· O'Bleness was one of 24 Ohio
develop lpto oral cancer. Besides · tests have been developed that can
hospitals to receive the special , of ,opting for lower· priced supplies
determine whether oite has cancer.
these health hazardS It ll\!'ans more
of. comparable quality. ,
award. An additional 13 hospitals
There have been several tests
bad breath and dtscolored teeth.
The committee encouraged betwere· recognized by the Ohio
which were thought tD be specific
QUESTION: Does the use of
ter bidding procedures for hospital
Voluntary Effort fqr a lesser
for certain sites of capcer but theSe
talcum powder result in cancer?
services and ' products, . renegodegree of savings. ,
proved to be unreliable.
ANSWERI!ne: A study in1Boston,
tiated contracts with vendors and
·O'Bleness ' savings were
For iurther ,Information call the
Mass. at Brigham and Women's
went to primary vendorS.. in some
achieved In part through the efforts
'Meigs County Cancer Unit of the
Hospltlit showed some association
areas, b,ringlng costS down over a
of the hospital's Product StandardiASC at 992-7531.
between talc and ovarian cancer in
wide variety of products, Moffitt
zation Committee, Central Charge
said.
· women who regularly dusted their
• Committee and i!S'SWAT program,
genitals or sanitary napkins. The
The
hospital's
central
chafge
an. employee cost-saving suggeshygiene habits of 215 women with
committee focused· on setting aption contest conducted In March
ovarian
cancer were compared to
prpprtate charges for them or
1982.
215
women
who did not have the
.
'
services that were purchased by
According to Judy Moffitt, chair·
It
was
found
that
32
won'len
disease.
O'Bieness at considerable expense.
person of the product standardizaOf .. ~. DoiiJ Sotttitool Closs~·· Dopl.
111 Coort St .. ,...,.,, Oloio 457"
who did have cancer had used
Moffitt said the product Standartion commit t ee, the cost·
talcum,
and
that
Only
13
of
the
dization committee has been recontainment efforts increased
women Ln the control group_Used It
named the cost containment com. awareness of the high ~st of
that way: It was suggested that the
mittee
and
is
continuing
.
i
ts
study
of
liosp!tal care and of potential waste
presence
of asQe&amp;tos in the powder
·.- it=. ·
hospital
costs.
A
second
SWAT
throughout O'Bleness. "Everybody
;view
of
the
might
be
involved,
'in
program will probably be conf .'l tu•i/il'l/ /NIItl&gt;• IJI 'I'F I,.,.
has lumped on the bandwagon,"
111 ---...o-..
,nA--••
.,
,...,_,
1-•n..._.,l
•z-c• tvafll..... t:.......similarity of the ovarian cancer to
juUn11 i rllf I,.,,.,,,""' o· n ,.,. air.&amp;:'' ' • . '!'
ducted In the fall, she said.
. ,,.,..... wo
~;iid
Moffitt. "We're a!), very
.,
•:a••,. ._
.....
•o.........,.
l'l)esothelloma or cancer of the
,
enthusiastic. It's exciting to see
..
...
,...._
li·L•t..,4F_,.
31 -tl .....
chest lining which has been deft.
lY•4..._l,.....,. _ _ eool
76-·-~·----·
U·MoWt.,;.;;;;,_,,.
n•-....UF __ ... . .
,................., _..
&amp;n. 11'1 .... _ .
nltely linked to asbestos.
,
.-.;...
·~
4111 lHII
...
.
H7 o..lw•.
lli Lett .. . . ...,.
QUESTION: Has mammoliN ..... G''"!"t
ll.
V•ll-fiiHihloWWo•IIOd
1n ........, 0e~.
2 . ll.. o.....
IU ,.._..__
graphy proved tD be beneficial or
2.. 0...,..0...
. . . L....
1411 ........ .,..
•1
U7 Wlo.l. '
harmless In the )ong run when used
11f-E_.o
,,.
42M.W. .....MI• .....'
,,..,,
ou.w ....... .....
43-F.,-1,.. ....1
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
in
the
!ietection
&lt;111d
diagnosis
of
11-Liwt- .
..... ,.._lfori\MII
MONDAY
64-Kayli O••n
, .........i,......
...-11-·
Sorority will meet Tuesday at
·breast cW!cer?
~··"'_ .. o.w-.llk"-h
411-.,._fDI .....I
.,
,
,,..,.._rvacl"RACINE -Bible study will be
7:30 p.m. at Meigs Inn. Patty
u,. •• , .............
,
ANSWER!Ine: Accordln~ to the
41·( ...... _
......"'
'7 Mlo=-a•o"l
,. ....... ho.
held from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday at
41-forLPickens and Darla Kelly will
American · Cancer Society " ...
the home of Mrs. Joan Wolfe.
have the prugram, and Patty
mammugraphy In trained hands Is
Doris Snowden will be the
Public Notice · -l
Circle and Lynn Crow the
Public: Notice
a most valuable tool in the detect1on ·
Public: Notice
Public Notice
.
I
teacher.
refreshments.
~i~~~d diagnosis of breast ca:ncer.
Town
·3
.
Range
11.
Oh10-j
Ba~er
8
.
A
LawrE:Ilce
AndreVv
-...SO\IIhe:JS1 q~m r iP- 1 ol Sr~· h0 11 266
Breast cancer Is the number one
IN THE
Company's Pur'chase. bounded 1
J. Pullins. Lucinda Pu llfns.Jbhn
P.~cr.n t 15 a cr o•s .1s dr.sr uhf:!rl rr)
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
cancer·kiiJer of American women.
. SYRACUSE PTO Monday at 7
COMMON PLEAS
'
Pull1ns. GilmOre Q , Lawrence. as follow s:
Vol
ume.
R&amp;
pm[l l 3 7 2 M"''\1 ~ Cr1r1111y
COURT,
VQ!!al Music Boosters will meet
.
Beg•nn1ng
tn
the
West
line
~
o
f
I
Delilah
V.
Lark1
ns.
Bert
Lawp.m. Speaker will be .Cathy
1n the United States, one of every ll
[)eP.d Rncord !&gt;
r
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
•
rence, Roscoe Lawrence. ad~ southwest S.W . German' s lot1n t
at 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday at the high
.Blaettnar, district Title I Coord!·
women will get breast cW!cer JAMES
W. SUTTI.I:
'•
dresses 1.11k.nown 1f living. and if the center of Ldng Run: thence 1
3f"ll1
th\)
'prayPI
IS
lhU1
tlw
.-ohovf:
school.
durtng her lifetime; every 15
nator. Students of Mrs. Shirley
PLAINTIFF
•
deceased. · the1r u nknown west along sa1d S. W. German's
d flSC IIhe0 O il itl ll f 'J&lt;)S lll!Bf f!S\ 'i h f!
'
Sayre will present )he program.
minutes, '!hree women ctevelop vs
spouses. he1rs, devisees, lega- west line 37 rod s and ten l1nks
partr!ronfKI 1hat l h~ .111\t'lft'!SI!'o IIf'
\)
H. HEROINE. ET AL
.tees, executors. administrators . to a stake at the so utheast
RACINE ...., Work wUI be in
d P:t 8rmin ed. tha t lhr&gt;-lnl~ri'SI &lt;; hf! St ·l
breast cancer, and one woman dies W.
'
OEFENOANTS
corner of Mrs Jones· lot:
and
assigns
,
whose
addresses
oi ordl&gt;fecl sold rl '' ca11nnt hP.
the entered apprentice . degree
of the disease. The appropriate use
NO. 83 CV2 ott
thence sou:th along side line of
are unknown.
·
.,''
f)&lt;l rll\roned. for an allowano e o l
when
Racine
Lodge
461,
F&amp;AM
NOTICE BY ·'
Mrs.
Jon
es'
land
86
rods
to
a·
of mammography In conlunction
POMEROY - Pomeroy PTA
.:morm~ I P.~C·s a11d cns ts he1e1n nnrl
'•
You are hereby notlfiOO that a post ~ thence east th1 rty seven
PUBUCAT10N
meets at 7: 30 p.m . Tuesday.
'I
with clinical examination ·and
will meet M&lt;,mday at 7: 30 p.m. at
tO Qlllel lllif!IO •;ard 11 •fll (]~\[li t• ilOrl
Complatnt \0 Quiet Title has
T\): W. H. BEROINE. W jiving, mtnflfals
rods and ten 11n1&lt;s to a post :
'•
been ftled tn the Common Pleas then ce north 86 rods to th e
Pomeroy Elementary School.
,WEDNESDAY
Ynu arn rPqu1rP.d 10 ltnSVVP.r thP.
Court
of
Me1gs
County.
Ohio,
·
ur*nown heirw. dllo ' I I - - . .
place of beginning con.t&lt;l!n lng
Guest speaker will be Cindy
Cornpl,lln\ W1th1n IWP. t'lly ·mflhl dayr.
Case No 17.865 demanding twenty acres.
POMEROY
Regular
meet8dmiliababNI.
8MCUIOrl
aN:I/or
Schneider of Meigs Juvenile
altl'!r tho last pl)bl • ~:nt•on' ol th1 s
Buckeye Hi\IS Career Center has
the follcwing
REFER ENCE DEED: VoL ,
W. H . -· M nOtiCe '•'-fHCh Wtll b • puhf,.-,hl)d OI ICf: qu1et . title
ings
of
Pomeroy
Chapter
8l,
rea estate, to-wit
Department. Plans will be
.
. eat:h week tor S•A cnnsec: u!IVfl described
extended the registration pertod for
129. page 516. Me1gs County
RAM, and Bosworth Council46,
· You are hereby lio'tiftOO that a -D~ed Records.
JENME
BERDINE,
H
IM/.g,
completed for the movie to be
·
the following courses: medical
weflks The last pubhc11tron w ill he Complamt to Quiet T1tle has
R&amp;SM, will be held at 7:30p.m.
The demand of the Com- ,
.shOwn on Jan. 16.
madl'
on
Fubrr
1
ary
2
4
1983
,
a
nd
clerk, medical term!ooiogy, bas~IC
been ftled in tt.e Common Pleas · pla1nt 1s that the t1t1e t o the
Wednesday at the temple. Comthe twer ~ ty er~ht day.;, to• onswo::r w1 ll
Court of Meigs County. Ohio, . above descr1bed real estate be
,
environmental
sys~ms. lntroducMltninilbators, IUCU10f'l lnd/or
mandery full-form practice will
commence Ofl thil t d ale
TIJESDAY
Case No. t 7. 86 5 demanding QU 18ted , the names of the
t1on to electrlcity;-computer ·proIn casn olv our fa,lrJrf! to an!-oytP.I or
qu1et title of the following , · Pl~mtiffs . Patnck E McDole and
be held after the meetings. ·
·
·;· POMEROY - Ohio Eta, Phi
..
'
ct.
.
Othmw1se rP.Spond flS rP.&lt;tllrred hy
gramming, aerobic dance, welddescy~bed real estate. to-wit:
n McDole.
Fl£M LONG, ·Mliving, the Oh10 Rules.ol Crv1l ProcP.dL,re.
The following described real Emerro
Ing ·, welding-arc and
You are required to 'Bns.wer
tudgment bv !l eli"iult ~~~~ bf! rP.~ ­
situated 1n Lebanon the Compla1nt wrthm t-NentV·
oxy-acetylene, and small engine -.dov· ........ · dflrrxl agan·l'&gt; l you lor the retrei estate
Township, In the Cou~ty of' .,ght
lntofl. P41G'! 10111- .nd/or 8lllgnl
1281 days a«er the ·last
c:IF!IT 'anrled .n the Cnmplarnt
repair. ,
Me•gs and State of Ohio. ro -.-;t pubhcaton of th1s noticewt'lich
of film Lang. If c'l
Jd.
. Being in Range I t 1), Town ~II be . published once each
Any lhterested persons have until
NONA t.ONQ, W tilling, " ' - Dared Janu,"'ry 6. 1983
131.
Section 1271 of the O,hio ...wek. for s1x (6) conoocutNe
Rtdimour
and
john
and
Mr.
and
Jan. 20 to regjster. For further
Mr. and Mrs. CI&lt;IY!on Allen were
' Larry E Spo-111~er
Company's Purchase and des- WJeks. The last publication will 1 ~
Mrs. Lowell Ridenour, all local. _
ClArk o l Courts
Information caJI 245-5334 between 2 tnriOI'I. IXtCII &amp;cct· 8ftd/or lllignt
C)lrLStmas guests of Dr. and Mrs.
crlbed 'as follows : Beginning at
Me1qs C11untv the SoUth East corner of 'lands be made on February 7. i 983
Mr.
and
Mrs.
VirgU
Roush
spent
p.m. and 1~ p.m. Monday through
Billy R. Alllm and Katie, Westerand the , ...... ntv·ei ght 128) days
Corhmon ,Pieos Court
formerly owned byE . H. Slater's for answ.er w111· commence· on
You are h~r A by noiif1ad that .,.ou
ThursdaY or 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. lin
ville. Other guests were Mr. amf ;everal weeks in F1orlda with Mr.
(ll 10. 17.24 31 ·(2 17 14. 6tc
land, thence West INith South that date, '
havtt b11en named defelidants 1n a
al!d Mrs. Larry Ro\lsh at Winter . Frtday.
Mrs. P. E . SimmS, Allentown, Pa.
line of said land len rods,
legal ac tion entitled James w.
In case of your · fa11ure tci
Haven and Mr. and Mrs. Don .
thence North to the line of answer or otherwise respond '\
Christmas dinner guests of Mr.
Publ.lc: Noti~
Sullie. plmnllff vs , W. H Berd1ne. e1
Dav1d Jones bt. thiJlce East tan as r«~Utred by the Ohio Rules of ~
at. delendapts Thi Sact10 n has been
abd ·Mrs. Robert Wood were Mr. . Matlack, Lake Worth.
rods to the·comer of said E. H. Ci"l Procedure. iu~gm&lt;&gt;it by .
_ ass1gned - Ca~ NO 83 CV 2 and 1S
·•
IN THE
and Mrs; VIrgil Wood, Sprtngfleld; .
, Slater and David Jones' land default Will be r"'dered against
PP. nd1ng m the Common ~eas
CQMMON PLEAii
~
· ten rods. thence South with the
MISS Sandy Wood, Belpre; Mr. and
,'
ypu. for the relief dem~ded 1n '11
Mr. and Mrs.
First an¥ Court of Me1qs Counl'(, Oh10
CDURTOf
08VId
Jones,lin8
to
the
pl~e of
i.
TM
ob,ect
61
the
complamt
1s
a
the Complatnt.
·
MBGI COUNTY, OHIO
Mrs. BW Beegle and sons, Gallipoannouncing the birth of a son,
beginn:tng to contain T\W (2) , .
par11110n ac tron concern mg ott and
1.,1\RRY'E. Sf'EN(:ER •'
lis;: Bob, Charlie .and Amy Wood,
Matthew Robert, born mt'Jan. 4 at gas underlytng the IOJiowm!) ,des· PATRICK I. MoDQLf. IT AL acres of land. bethesamemore
' . Clerk of c~n . - ·',.
Plllnlllla.
or 18S$. .
.
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy ·
the O'Bienell ~tal In Atherui. crtbed real estate~
·
Meigs County, Ofi&gt;q '•'
REFERENCE DEED: Vol. .11 ..3. tO. 1~. 24,31 (2)7 . 6tC '•
cllllrtes Vroman, Belpre, son of
S1tuated • 1n Leban011 tOwnship,
and Letha Woocj, local.
·
CHARI.&amp; T. TAYLDR, El AL 122,
'lbi! infant wt!labed lleml pouucia,
.,,,
Pege 476,' Meigs County
M8igs
CountY.
Ohio
descr1bed
as
' o.lind' :
John Vroman, Middleport, and . nine OUIICt!L Matemal IP'81111pu'Guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. K.
Deed
RecOrds.
.
·
' fQitows:·one ·fourth ot,thtt oil •nd.
No.17,881
:
The following described r eat
Ridenour on Christmas
Mr. son-in-law ol Mrs. Roma Hawkins;
enl:l 8l'f Mr. 8114 Mrs, Jllick Pmy,' QfiS under 86 .ares s~U8114 .,
•,
'- NOTICE IV
estate 11tut11ed in the Cour1ty of
and Mrs. John Wickham, Mrl and Middleport, underwent heart . Wlnterllllllel 81111 tbe patemll Seo11oo 26. Town 3. Range 13 ·
PUaiCA110Nknown at the Henry Qn , TO: Charles T Tavtor, George Mtiga, township of Leb.,on
l\lrll. John Ridenour, Jaaon and . sllrgery ThursdaY at the ClevelaDd · eraDdparenl:l are Mr. .and Mn. fdrrnerly
farm. all of the lOUth hall of tl'li .Cottle. Cora Cottle. C~llries A. •nd Stt11e 01 O~lo, to-wit:
Lowell Flnt, Serille. .
.
.. Jared. Mr. and Mrs. J~mes Cllnlc.
BliinR a pan of Section27.
::t

The Daily Sentinel

-

VallavBatt R&lt;*l, AlCina. Ohio
46711, if living; the unknown

January 11, IJ83
..
Several secret ambitious which you have .been·harhortng have an
excellent chan~ of beJnk fuJOUed this coming year. Now Is the time tp
bring them out Into the open.
.
.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2:!-.Jan. 19) Regardless of outward appearan·
ces, think and ae~ positively today in .matters which affect your
reputation or finances. You'U do the right things.
. ,
AQUJ\BIUS (Jan; 20-Feb. 19) You have good leadership qualities
today and this will be evident to those with whOm you associate. They'U
find ways to ease you Into a commanding i'ole.
PISCES (Feb. •Mareh 20) Continue to operate at full throttle
regarding your Important obJectives and goals. Lady Luck \s sun In
your corner, rooting for your success.
ARIES..(March U-AprO 19) Thts 15 a day that shOuld be to your ,
liking because everything will be moving at a 'swift pace and you're not
.
likely to have any moments of boredom.
l'AURUS (AprB •May' !ill) A matter which has been concerning
you could suddenly take a turn for the better today and enable you to '
reallt.e your hopes. Be ready to act.
GEMINI (MaY ZI..,June 20) YOIU'greatestasset today lsyourablllty '
to arbitrate touchy sltuat1ons so that all concerned feel they got the ,,
better deal.
·
·
CANCER (JUDe 2J.July. 22) Whatever you do today, stiive to &lt;1o
your very best.' Your accomplishments cOUld have flr-reacblng effi!C~
which you may not be aware of now.
·
·:
LEO (,July :IS-Aac. 22) Your optimism is easily aroused today
and this will have a dellghtful effect upon your companions, It will be
hard tO be dispirited In your presence.
VIRGO (Aq.s.sep&amp;. 22) Wayscouiddeveloptoclayforyou'madd to
your resources through other than your usual channels: these will be
Oeet!ng opportunities, so act qulcldy.
I.JBAA (Sept. 23-0d. 13) You can broaden your schedule a hit
today, because you will be capable of handling several situationS
simultaneously - and do a 'good job on each o~.
·
SCORPIO (Oci. zt-Nuv. 22) You're likely to be more fortunate In
financial matters today than you will be tomorrow. Whlle the breaks
are going your way, do not whatever needs dotrig.
SAGmARIUS (Nov; ZS.Dec. 21) Get out and circulate today If
things have been a bit dull tor you romantically. Your poss!bllitles lor
meeting someone to whom you'll be attracted are ~·
·

breast self-examination definitely
offers to women over the age of 50,
and perhaps to women aged 40 to
49, the promise of significantly
iricreasing the cure rate of breast
cancer. In most cases breast
cancer can be ·diagnosed by
mammography at an extrmely
early and highly curable stage. The
Society Is concerned that unwar·
ranted fears about the danger of
radiation associated with 1118JI11Jl0graphy may ultimately lead to an
Increase in deaths from breast

living.

~

I

·MOre oi lesS. Free ga~ good 3
bedroom home, 1 ~ balhs, mooern

Mole Dog. friendly with

·r-=========:;r.:=======---::r.=======~==:::~kldo.
e. chain.
&amp;14-949-2482
,
Good
WitCh dog . Bo•

608 E. MAIN '
POMEROY~ OHIO
PH.992-2259

VIRGIL B ... SR.
2nd St.
Phone

4

Business SerVices

Real Estate - General

216 E.

WEST VIRGINIA PULP
. PAPER COMPANY ET
DEFENDANTs'
NO. B3 CV3 1
NOTICE BY
· PIJBUCATION
. To: ilov· BUSH, If living,

Astrograph

Dipping ·snuff
dangerous?
the American Cancer Society, to

sYnlptpms. 1n other

The-Daily

Pomeroy-Mid.dleport, Ohio

Real

IN i'HE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT, .
MEIGS COUNlY OHIO
JAMES W. SUTTlE'
'PlAINTIFf

c~mplicat:ions

Cancer .Answerline
FOUNTAIN• FOR

10, 1983

Monday, January
Notice

spent over ~ o~ each child at
By HELEN BOT'l'EL
, Christmas, around . $50 each for
DEAR HF;IEN: '
I overheard one of my ~epgrand· their birthdays. We can't afford this
sons bragging tD his stepbrother for 17, plus lilfts tor grown-uP&amp; too!
(my l*lloglcal grandson) that And. cheap; dinky pi'E!Ients are ··
.at all.
having two and one-hall sets of scarcely better than
Outside of going broke · liy
parents meant over a doZen grWld:
and greatgrand!laiJ!DtS- he's lost "stepS," I'm concerned with one
track of the exact number- and more angle: Some of the other
"Boy, that rakes In the lo&lt;X on grands give only to their "own."
Thus "ours" feel , short.Changed.
Christmas and birthdays! "
·
Great for him, but how about us You can see hnw the "step" who
stepgrimdparents who feel we has over a · dozen grands and
shouldn't give tD one part of the gre!ltgrands might lord It over the ·
family -(our own grandklds) with· others. This cruld almost insptre
young pmple to think dlv&lt;l'ces are
out giving to an?
Four of our six offspdng have lucrative to children. ' 1\ts, hers and ours;' chiklren, a GRANDMA GOING CRAZY
P .S. We'd appreciate suggestions
to_tal of 17 youndsters, only siX of
from
you Wid others In the same
· whom .are related to· us. Our
boat.
'
children are either raising their
DEAR
GGC:
.
-···
stepchildren or have them at
This thoroughly modern problem
hollday t1me.
We're on ret! remen tlncome, not hits mom families each year. 11
large. Before the reman1ages, . grandparents 'lire evenly divided,
when the family was still small, we the best solution. 1\ seems to me,

'

t

Helen Help Us'

Grandparents vs. gift

•

" ~

Monday, January

-; '.

Pomeroy--Middlepor,, Ohio

____ --

..

low Rate$

15 Yea11 Eiplri1111ce
All Work Gunnteed
To Be Done lli&amp;ht and.

Onnme ·

CAU 99H273

or 992-6206

,Vll/1

COMPLETE
RADIATOR .
SERVICE
Fmm the Sn11IIK! Heellf
Core to the·!Jtpst Rl~iator.
Rldialo! Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS • .
l5YJS.
. . Experience .

to the Mlvertlaar.

olnd
wlth'ofdor
Cilfl 1114-

SMITH ·NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
P-JOW. Ott.

1110).

ANY ..PERSON who hao
arwlhtllg to give oway and
do• not otter·or attemPt to
c&gt;th• thing tor·oale
lit ld In thlo
wil be no

. . Ph. 992•2174

2·26-tfc

' Do you heve room in
homo for in I wk. old

puppy. Coli 44&amp;-81 98.

\

•

florida rooident dooll'es ma- · ",
ture female to care tor 10

yoar old girt Room end · ,
-rd pluo other fringe be .. :
Mlto. Send -ume ond ·
IYIIilblllty to P.O. , Box .
874&amp;, South Ch•leoton
WV .25303 .
.
. .

�•
Page 11

S-

Th e Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-

They'll Do It Every Time

H e lp W anted

44

Middleport, Ohio

Ajla.-.ment
for Rent

Monday, January

61 Household Goods

~----------------------~

The Wen Virgin.i a Department of Health is seeking a

trator fo r its Fairmont Emer-

Houaaa and 1 &amp; 2 bdr.
apef.tmanta for rent. HUD

genc y Hoapital, locatect in
FairmOnt, Wes t Vi ... ginia . Require m ents: Baccalaurea te
degree plus two ve•n of

Reol Eot otlo. Carol Yeager.
Rultor, Call 304-6766104 or 876-63B6 .

fu ll-time

H o~ital

Adminis·

program available. A-One

8Jilperience in hospita l or
health services. or business

Furnis hed apt .• 82 .2 6 , utlities pd., 243 Jackaoo ptke.
Gailipolla , Adulto , 446 ·
4416 alter 7 p.m .

ad m in istration . T h iS 4 4-bed
fac ility prwldes long-t erm
skilled nur sing service• and
outpatient clin ic se rvices.
App lica nts sho uld s ~b mit
resumes and appltcatione t o:

2 bdr. unfurnished apt . in
Crown City , Call 614 -2666620 ,

L Clark Hansbargar, M .D .. .
Di rect or of Health. 1 BOO

Washington

JACKSON E STATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has 1
bedroom "'' P!Irtmenr:s. rent
starting a t $1. 67 p,r month.
Call 446-2746 or loove

Street. East,

Ch arle ston, W ast

Virginia

26 305 , by December 16 .
Salary negoti able . Eq ual Oppo rtu n ity Emplo yer · AA
Pla~- M -F -H

mt~~aaga .

--,r-.t;fi
~~AI'r. •

teo/ \'tliOI&lt;' N.V.

SWAIN
AUCTION Itt FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St,. Golllpolio , King cool • wood
hoetero with fin t469. let
spring Itt mettr-ce,1oo.
fi iTn t120, ooto-loveo.. t •
chair .199, IOYOSIOtl t70,
new coal &amp; woOd heetera ••
low 1 1 8399 with ~owert,
used coal &amp; wood helltert,

12

Situations
Wanted

GI NGER BREAD STUDIO.
Art lessons. · Jon i Carring to n. 698-3290 .

Haul - Li mestone .
Gravel , or Dirt . Phone 614992- 3410 or B43-2924,
Will

6 bedroom. 2 1,;2 baths, elec-

13 , ,

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
sitrvi:es for fire ins .. ance
coverage in Galli a County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
coverages are availabJe to
meet individual needs. Contact . Eugene Holley. agent .
Phone.388-.8690 .
15

tric ity. restored victorian.
wall to wall carpet, ec gat
heat. 304-675 -6804.

32 Mobiie Homes ,
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES , USED- CARS.
TRUCKS , GALLIPOLIS .
C11_ECK OUR PRICES ,
CALL 446-7672 ,

Schools
Instruction

2 bdr. house unfurnished on
lower Rt. 7. Dep . req . Call
614-256-1413,
House. 6" rm• ,' &amp; both
located 681 4th Ave ., Galli·
polis, $160 mo , $66 dop,
Call 446-3870 or 446 134o,

4 bdr . 1'\ouae. fireplece . full
b81ement, 3 miles' out of
town. city ochoot can 446 1616 or446 -1244,
6 rm hou• et 10 Edgemont
Dr ., 2 bdr. &amp; bat h, !reohly
painted, LR &amp; DR now wall
to wallcorpet, urge kitchen
with plenty of a~blnets , Call
Richard Carter . 446-1370
altar 6 ,

22 Money

to

Sale

Loan

HOME LOANS 12% fi • od
rate. Leadei Mortgage, 1·
II 14- 692-3061 ,
.

Businesa &amp;. Second Mort·
gage loan1 . Equity Reaour••· in Ohio 1 -800992-23&amp;1 . out " of Ohio
1 -5T3-26i!-ot 12.
,23

for

OPPORTUNITY KNOCKING whh this' 149 ocre
Rutland farm . Anxious sell
has priced ' accordingly. In·
elude• rural home. b•rn.
garage. minerals, and.. Much
more. If you have Interest in
a good country ferm or
miner1l1, don' t pau up VDUr
opportunltyiL Call R,C,S.
Reoltora. 1 -614-693-6671
or 114-892 -1131 2,

1 bd.room fu rnished apt.
614- 992 -6434 or 304 882 -2666 .

1---------:--:--

Trailer in Syracuse and Apt .
in Middleport, 614 -9927611 '
Apt. for rent. Half double-2
bd.room Apt. Adults pre·
forrod , No pots, 614-9922749 .

1- - - - -- : - - - -

In Middloport 2 bdr, furnished apt ., 304-882-26 66
or 992; 7206 ,

Apt . fully carpeted bed .room , living
room, kitchen. bath . Garage. $18fij . month . 61 4 ·
992-2362 lifter 4 p,m,
Furnishe~

Pomerov· 2 ·lxt.oom unfurnlahed houoe, 8196, mo,
Security deposit. 8100. plus
utilitiea. After 8 -call 814992-2288,

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 roOm house. Preferably
4 ML WEST, GALLIPOLIS. eduha, no pet"a. 614·992Karate t he ultimate in self. RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274,
39B1,
defence 'all private lessons.
Men . women , &amp;. children . For sale or rent 12x60'
Instruction t hru black belt. mobile home, gas heat. rural
Also available Kara1e uni· water, close to town. availaforms puchinQ and kicking ble Jan, 1st Call446-1 24~
bags, and protective equip·
ment. Jerry Lo vvery 8t Asso- Mobile home &amp; IOta for sale Houae in Racine. 2 bd.room.
ciates karate Studio, 1 43 1067 Budcly mobile home fully furnished . 8200 .
Burlington Rd ., Jackson, 1 2x60, 2 bdr .. gas heat, month . Oepoait required.
Oh , Call 614-286-3074 or rural water, set up with 2 or 61 4-949-2801 .
614- 384-6160 .
. 4 loto . Col 448-1240,
3 bedroom downatlira apt.
Mobile home 1981 2 bod- Relerencu 8126, month
1 B W anted to Do
room 14x60, with 21ft. ro,l plu s deposit . No pets. Syra·
out, extras incl .. $14,000 or cuao, 614-992-5611,
$3,000 d'own &amp; take over
. I
Gen eral Hau ing a nd Tras h paymento. Call 446-2062 ,
removal Se rvice . Reliable
and- dependable. Call 446- 78 Nashua mobile home
3159 after 6PM 266-1967. 1 4x70 ew.cellent con d. Call
61 4-367."1469 oftor 6PM .
Spacial Window Tinting .
Auto, residential, commercial &amp; R.V.. windows. Free
estimates. 446 -3100 or
- 448 - 7122, Kotali c
8x20 Mobile Home. Ramo·
Landscaping .
deled , $800 , 614-949Will do s ewi11 9 o1 any kind in 2645 .
my homo. Call 446-4861,
USED MOBILE HOME , 42 Mobila Homes
578-271.1.
for Rent
1961 Elcono 10x66 furn ished slre~y set up. good
21
Busin.e ss
condition $2800,00. 304- Eureka · 2 bdr ., furnithld,
676-3468 ,
Opportunity '
riverfront Jot, ref. 8t dap . Cal
514-643-2644.
1 4x66 TWO bedroom, Holly
Earn $700- $1 ,600 mo. op- Park, with 1 00 ft, • 200 ft, 2 bdr. mobile home comlot included. Washer &amp;
erating your own pan time. dryer, ·2 air conditfoners. pletely turn. at Kei-r. Call
446-9689 ,
in-home business. Qualify
large kitchen with all built In
fo r company car, trevel, appliMcea.
with bultt In 2 bdr. tumiahed adults only,
ret irement program . Repeat
·,profits on conaumable pro- dis hwasher. new carpet &amp; Now Haven, Call 304-882aperia1. excellent con· 241111·,
duct• . DoHn '1 interfere dr
dtiion.
4th Street. Mason,
wi1h p .. Mnt employment. WY. 304-773-6713
after 6 Large trailer lot on B•deviHt·
Weekly training ciaaa . will p. m .
Addloon Rd, Coli 446-4 736
awrt in J anuary. can ·446or 448-4266 ,
198B,
33 Farms

1- - -- - :--:-:--:--:-

2 bedroom 1 Ox 50. Aduho
only. Brown··· Trailer Park,
Mlnoravlllo, Oh, 814-9923324 ,

Nice 3 bedroom mobile
home near Herrisonvlle. Untumiahed. 2 children, no
Inside pe1a. Heat furnished .
814-742-3033,

Apa rtmen ts . 304· 67 5 6648 , '
APARTMENTS , mo bil e
homea, houses. Pt. Ple asant
and Gallipolis . 61 4-4468221 .

FURNISHED 4 room cot·
tage, edulta, no pet s, 304676, 1463,

1872 GMC bUdc 310 auto.
PS, PB, good tlreo, . .00.
Coll448-7357.
,

448~

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
· waaha r1, dr:yera, nrfrigeratoro, rangea. $kaggo Ap pliances, Upper· River Rd .,
beside Sto ne Creat Motel .
446-739B .

448 -~72 .

PERIIIIANENT HAIR
REM,OVALProfoaalonol
Electrolyolo Cent•. · Inc,. .
A , M ,A . Approvod, Dr, Ref,
orrolo. Gilt Certlllcas, new
houro, ey oppointmont,
304-11711·11234,

dinotte chairo Uo. and 126,
Gas or electric ranges, 8326
up to $376 . Baby mo -trsoooa. $26 • 136. bed
frames $20, 125, &amp; 130,
kin g frame 160. Good aoloction o1 bodroa,m ouhn.
cedar cheats, rockers, metal
cabinets. swivel rockers.
Und Furniture -- bookcaoe.
ranges, chairs, end table•.
was he,s. dryers. refrlgeratoro and lV'o, 3 miloa out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9a'm to
6pm, Mon, thru Fri,, 9om to
6pm, Sat,
446-0322

For oolo lump cool • '\ire·
wood , ZInn CooI Co,. Inc,
Coli 446-1408 ,
Slaba cut-up e18 lulll.,gth
810 PU lood. round wood,
k load c~l e1•
~rgo INO
· "'
~2411-6804.

•-

-

... .·- ....
.. "
31 Homes fo r Sale

HouM for · •I• an len,d
oont-. Clleohlrw. 0~- 7
..,o........,.,t, prage,

_,....,, ,. u lum.,oo,
., ......2 I .
I

Two ocre lota-1&amp;o It, road
lrontoga. city wot~. behind
B4 Lumber. Col 304 -11711IIB73 or 11711· 3111 B,

I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

304-623· 137B,
19B3 Nocchi •-ing machine, Dlai-A-Motic with

J!~~~~~~~~~

~':,~""gro':'=~ =~~::!;

on buttono • moko buttDn
holeo. Rog , prlao e438.811
year In deoronce oole 8121,
Collll14-38&amp;-8818. Out ol
town cd collect, lr• dalivery. ThiN mechi.... · are
brend new, ule in orgiNII
freight box .

Hou• coel •24 ton. Hlvher

ford tract..-, 81,30o,
111 4-318-&amp;1118,

:;;:=:;:;===.===

1
I·

83

Uveltock

1---------10 co- • o bull lor aale,
Hoovy Sprirvoro mlxod, Col
~11-0871 ,

Clow1r hoy. 1200 w lrw tied ,
t2 ,ll0 b!llo, Joclcaon. Oh .
Coll1114-281-11340,

81 Toyoio i5 opa..S. · exc,
cond, Call 448-1748 oftor
II.

71 Pinto ·Wigc)n. good Con-

dition. e1 .0110. 4-G 78 tlroo,
2 ..ow tlroa liko now. • BO,
Coli 441-24118.

Building motorlols block, ,
brick. _ . , plpoa, win dowo. llntalo. etc. Cloudo
Wlntora. Rio Grilndo. 0 , Coli
814-2411-6121 ,

a•ra..

Build your own
or
bem, 24x24. e111 , Lu!ftb•
furnished, Con dellvor.
Other olzoa, Cell 1-114BB6-7311 ,

1178 Dodge Colt hlltchbeclc, e1.aoo. Col 44114811o.

78 Dodge Maglum PB. Pl.
BUILDING MATERIAL. Flot llir, AM-FM · rodlo, - d
metal eheet1 . porcelan~ · cond,. U ,OOO, Call 4411enamol cootad, 4ft. by Bft. 0528 or 111 et 410 Smith
thru 4ft. by 12ft. 17.00 to Dr .• K8naug1 .1
oi ,IIO, odd aizn n .oo to
011 .00, 114-187-3081.
1871 MCJ Mltlet 42.000 '
mloa, Muat eoit Call 44117414,
.
66 Pets for Sale
18711 Co-orlh V. .o II
opd .. oil orglnol·. 441· 8378,

43 Farm• for Rent

pur·

Roglater8d eobermen
Coll114-171-281"' . •

noo,

17

Mtllloal
lnetrutnentl

'
CARl UOOI - . '7111
Avolloble ot loCII go-nmont Hloo.Colllrwlun-111
1-1111-111-0241 :

C=

1171 Ml.--y, X117, 304418·1121.
.

NINE pi- rwtl llrum ....
'"miNto lnoludH, 1114·

17

CHIYROLET
Cloolllo, 4 door.

·:..=: ...... .... ... :~a-a:=
.......
......,...:m=:·;..-:.:
•.
•.
171-1887.

a

.

•

=-=.. . . . . . . .
N AD A· llu o

I ook

firM. Cell

,
•

o-

-'

I

I,

-·.' .

79 Motors Home•
&amp; Camper•

8 :00

-• 1 OOWT 5EE

1973 Bononzo 3o It,
comp• traitor fark modol.
Can be ..., Wodnoorloy
.Jon, 12, 1183 ot Southern
Volley Mobile Homo Pori&lt;
Cheohlro. U.OOO,

50METHIN'5 BEEN

:·

1114:

I]) ESPN SportaCent•
I]) Amarlcan ProfeHIGnals
I]) 0 I]) FamHy f1&gt;4d
C1J Buoineaa Report
ill) Inside Bulineu
01 ()21 Entertainment
Tonight
0 CD (1) Uttle Houae on
the Prairie Sarah' s r:eceotly
widowed father comes to

lveffb
I KR~E

:r '

IfATS~ 1

F'ROM "DAOOY',.

Toni'ght's program features
.some men who make

who made 88 straight free
throws blindfolded and a
'wom.an who caused a big
drop in gang violence by bec,eming the gang' s mother.
(60 min .)

Home
Improvements

,\ 1.1 .1-:,Y OOP

0
YOU M EOI'&gt;N ,WE
FlNI'&gt;LLY GET TO
EAT?

'

agem is finally revealed. (R}

(2 hrs.IICiosad Captioned!
fi) Gunomoke

Morcum Roofing • SpoutIng , 30 yo. . oxperlonca.
opclolizing In bult up rool,
Caiii14-31B-81117 ,

f;ASOLI NE ALLEY

.. ,but it's your~r ,: f 40i.l drops
that nasty ol' warrant fo' m
arres'!

You inherited It qush
an oil mine both oil
in Mexico?
an'

CARPENTRY, · WALL PANELING, CEILING TILE INITALLED, Reduced rotao
for montha C'lf Jenu•ry,
Fobruory, Mon:h , 1114-98227118 ,

F • K Treo Trlmmhtlll......
rwmovol, Cal 11711-1 331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE 'expartoncad roollng. Including
hot tor oppMcotlon, corpon·
•r. eloctriclon, maaan , Call
304 -1711-ZOBB or 8711 46110,

Get your corpot in ahlp
ohepa, W.t• -··FREE
El'tiMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPT IAN
STEAMER 114-441-2107.
82

YOUR FOLKS DIDN'T

,,

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PWMIING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Plno
Phone 4411-3811 or 448-

4477

84

e l ectricel

•

'

BUTTER FINGERS!!
.
,

'

&amp; Refrigeration

·-

IEWINCJ Mochlne ropolra,
'a..vioi. Authoriz..S Binger
a.11o • •-co eu.,.n
8claaora . Fobrlc l~op ,
Pomeroy. 882-2284.
85

.-

.''
'

Generel Hilullng

·-

1

JONES BOY&amp; WATER 8ER YICE . Col 114-317-7471
or 114-3117-0111 ,
JIMI WATER IERVICE,
Coli Jim L•ler( ~-171 - .
7317.
87

"

~·'

PF:ANUTii

.

•I
,,'
'

•

'Upholetery

"
'
•
''
' '\"

.

TRIITATE ·
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
1113
Avo.. Oolllpollo.
441· 7111 or 4411-1833.

a.o.

fc:!'Ef2\ ~1;t"'.'::

104-1711-4114•

'.:.

0 I])® Private Benjamin

9 :00

Benjamin's cousin transfers
to Ft. Bradley .
0 CD (1) MOVIE: 'I

Married Wyatt Earp'
(I) 700 Club
ill MOVIE: 'I Lova You ...
.Goodbye'
(I) 0 (DJ MOVIE: 'JUst
You and Ma'
1J (I) ®I M• A• S•H Hawkeye and B.J. search for 8
cure to Winchester's s n() ring.
fJI I'ICAA BasketbaR:
Kentucky at Miaslsolppi
St,
9:30 0 I]) ®I Newhart George
Utley learns the truth about
'relighting an old flame .·
1 0 :00 CD MOVIE: 'Rollover'
CD MOVIE: ' Fighting
Sullivans'
·
I]) Gymnastic•: USGF
. Single Elimination Championohip
0 I]) ®I Cagney &amp; lAcey
I]) Groat Performencea
'Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy .
' The ident ity of lha double
agent is finally revealed. (AI
(2 hrs.)(Ciosed CaptionodJ
(jj) News-tch
10 :30 (I) St. Time
I]) TBS Eveninv, Newa
ill) Enterprise 'Tailspin.'
Tonight's program· looks at
the bankruptcy of Broniff
Airlines .
l!llln Search oL ..
1 1 :00 0 CD Newacenter
I]) ESPN SportsCanter
(I) 0 (I) Q ()21 Newa
(1) Newa/Sporta/Weatller
® Eyewitneao News
ill) Sign Ofl
fll Benny Hill Show
1 1 :30 II CD (1) Tonight Show
(l) Another Ule
Ill · Portrait of AmeriClll :
VIrginia
(I) Benny Hift Show
0 I]) Trapper John M.O,
Gonzo is concerned when
rrapper's old friend' freezes
ddring an emergency, (R)
(60 01in .)
® All In the Family
D llJ NightUne
fJI Madame' o Pl_.,a
12 :00 CD
MOVIE:
~ Buddy,
Buddy'
.
CD MOVIE; 'Magic'
m ·aumo &amp; Allen
I]) NCAA
llooloriNIH:
G-gatown at SI"BC""" .
I]) Nifhtllne .
CIJ Sign Ofl
llD MOVIE: 'X !rom Outer

NO ONE CAN EXPECT A
TEACHER'S TEN·VEAROLD CAR TO START ON
, A DAY LIKE THIS

DGunomc&gt;ke
12:30 D ()) (1) 'Leta Nlgin-

Dovldletterman
())Jack Benny Show .:..
I]) MOVIE: 'The Adven'tureo ol Don Juon'
(JJ Lut Word
·
D ()) MDVII: 'Oollitok
R........ fora Filing at.•
1 :00

"4-f II
'

'

'I '

-.•"

.,

'
.

, r

8:30

Splice'
.
II &lt;B1 Lut Word

THEY SHOULD CLOSE
THE SCHOOLS WHEN IT
GETS TH IS COLD,,

· 1:30

()) I Morrled ~

I

L~

. ())

MOVIE:

(J)

OuentWcl

I'III!C

·

-

'

AeJOVT THE
GF!:At.JP CANYON.
Now arrange the cirded letters to ·
form the surprise answer, • • auggesled by lhe above ca~oon,

-.:{X I IJ"CI Ill I]"·:·:
liolurdoy·'· l

(Answon1 lomorrow)
J -: ASSAY PORGY DIVERT MAFITIN
: Whot lhe two bedbuga who lell In lo•e
decided lo do-MARRY IN THE SPFIING

r:r-·

11, oonlllnlng 110 purzltt, .. avallablti lor 11 .85 PQ11PIId
frolft .-....wltQ M
8oJt 3C, Harwood, N.J . 07841. /ncfudeyour
NlfM,
cadi a maka checkl IHIYIIble to NIWipaperboota..

Ne-

'They

·

All

.

"

·.
' '

GE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
\

A.~erlcans sweep p~ire
Here are a couple of their

hands."

Vulnerable: North-lloulll
Dealer: Solltb
·
Wetl

Nor!~

Ealll

Soalll

••

Dbl

2.

It
2+

l&gt;asa
Pass

4+

Pass . Pa"

Oswald: "Champion players like to bid, North's double of one heart was for .
takeout. Stansby bid two
hearts to crowd his opponents, but South bid two
spades wlth his rock bottom
minimum opening, Needless
to 111y, Nortlt took him right
to go~~me,"
Jim: "Had Mat-tel opened
the kilts of hearts, four
' Spades · would have been
dOwn one alm08t automatically, but he led his singleton
club, Even the greatest don't
al"wavs flnd the best opening
lead''
·
Oswald: "litansby took the
ace and king of. clubs and
nonnally would have f.lven
his partntr a club ruf , but
Chip discarded his 1o of

'

'

.

hearts."

Opellilll! lead: +5

0s11'ald: "American pairs
really swept tbe World Pairs
championships , in France
this fall."
Jim: "Lew Stansby and
Chip Martel of California,
, wl!o are CUIT1!Dtlr playing
like the · best pall' ill !he
world, won !he open pairs,

Jim: "Lew looked at that
ratlier astonishing diseard
and figured out that Chip
didn't want a club ruff alter
alt He led a heart. The
defense got their normal
loor tricks and a &amp;ood score
since many North-South
pairs had stoppe&lt;J at spade
part scores."
Oswald: "Had. 'the third
club been led, Chip would
ruff, but declarer would
probably have picked up the
trump king and . scored a
top,"

~.

-

...,lf, il

titUtr. 'f)tr(
b~ THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I One of
the Curies
&amp; Wltite poplar
II Bedeck
12 Cicero's
tongue
13 Terminate
15 Dutch

commune
16 Chemical
suffix
17 Peleg's
son
18 German
style cake
20 Snarl
21 Bantu
hinguage
22 TurbuleRce
Z3 Mane~ver
25 Valley
!6 Inlet
27 Sty
Zi'Sonof
Jacob
Zl Stars,
to Pompey

DOWN
I Medieval
war club
· 2 Take for
one's oivn
3 Lover boy
4 Provoke
5 Give a right
6 Wings !Lat I
Yeslefllay's Answer
7 Interdiction
8 Unending 20 Cary of cinema 30 Gen nan poet
9 Ancestry %3 German wine 31 Revamp
10 Withstand %4 Extend
33 Birds
U Grecian 25 Forsa kes
as a class
_
theaters 21 Lilaceous
35 Muslim prince' ,
19 "Cry Me a plant
37 Singular
"
27 Pallid
38 Farceur

.

32 Debussy's
.•" l.a -"

33 Beverage
34 Deer
311 Finished
311 Let (ignore )
CO Ringwonn
· 41 Strews
42 Harsh

. DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

I

f io

Here's how to w ork It :

A X y D L B· A A X R
LONGFELLOW

'

Oite ~tier ii"''&gt;IY otando for another. In lhis sample A is
used for the three L 's, X f?F the tw,o O's, etc. Sing_le letlers,
·aposlrephes, the length anij fo r malwn of lhe words 'are all
hlnt1. Each day the code letlers are different

-' -

CltYPTOQUOTES

G Z-G E J U C G

HS

UC

NLG

J L UG S

UIA E HP G IGVN

S K J li T N U G C . -

Lfolllhed'

.

WHAT THEY 6AIP

Cll ® Squore P11911

I])
MOVIE:
'Nioholaa
Niclcleby'
ill) Groat Perfonwm~cea
'Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy.
· The identity of the double

.
'

Patty is chosen ro represent
Weem:awee High, on 8i TV
quiz show.

IT'S I'&gt;LL '&gt;'OURS , FEUAS! i3Q ON,
OV.ER I'&gt;N' &gt;IELP YOURSE LVES I

'

GENE'&amp; CARPET CLEAN · INO, Deep ••om cleoning.
Sootchgourd, Frn eeti motu, L - ,.. ., 11 4-892.11308.

t)

Walnut Grove . 160 min .)

MOVIE: 'Convay'
MOVIE: 'The Uhimete
Warrior'
(l) I Spy
I])
NCAA
B a - 1:
Georgetown at Syrocuoe
Cil Portrait el Americo:
Virginia
(lJ Gl &lt;HI That' a lnc,..dible

.

.

! .

beardS out of bees. a man

ITUCCO PLASTER I NO ,
telttured ~illnp commercial and r - ..11a1. lreo
eotlrnotu Coli 114-2511182,

• • ,,.·I

CD
CD

llHYTiftf!G OUT
l'&gt;Ut.ZIN' AROUND IN
THERE,., WELL, 1 MY HEAO- MAYBE I
WASN'T ASLEEP 5/fOtiLON'T HAVE BEEN
AHYWAY
H0/.0/N' Bf!CK

MEANANY HARM.

HARTl Uaod Cora, Now
,H•- Weot Vlrglnle.
20 two aoponiiVII o&lt;ira In

Unfurnished up1t1if1 ept for
rent. good looetlon, 304w.. led: Form ot ·1 ooto150 171-1302.
Acreo. rollng lond, Reply to
loa 1000. In a-o Gallpollo
· Dalt~buno,82Uo!Avo ..
Gol
a 45131 .

~~~ 9 :, =
11

Tal..,lalon lorvice,
In Z.nlth .,d
Ouez•r . and
571-2388

1171 AMC lplrh LHtbocli:
Good botlv. In runnlnfl oondltlon. 31,000 mllaa .
02,1100 firm , 11 4·112·
11412,

Reel Estate
Wanted

:.,

8
\;"kit
_
,
882 2234

ball Run'
(l) Tic Tee Dough
[1) Carol Burnett
CIJ 0 (I) II ()21 News
Cil News/Sports/Weather
CIJ ill) Powerhouse ·
(l§l Eyewltneoo ~
Ill Wo.nder Woman
I]) . NCAA .Instruct iona1
Series
II CD (1) NBC News
(l) MOVIE: 'Scotland Yotd
lnopector'
I]) Pony 's People 1R
Sporto
ril Bob Newhart Show
I]) News
0 I]) ®I CBS News
I]) Dr, Who
ill) Over Easy
GilD ABC News
II CD P,M, Magazine
I]) ESPN'o Horae R.ctng
Wkly ,
I]) Gomer Pyli
CIJ Entartoinment Tonight
,(1) 8 Charlie's Angels ·
. 0 I]) Tic Tac Deugll
()) (jj) MacNeil-.......r
Report
®I Eyewitneso Nawa
Q 1D P-Ie's Court
II CD® You Aaked For It ,
CD Fraggle Rock Visit the
world of Fraggle Rock underneath the basement of an
eccentric inventor.

.,~
1 F rd for aolortor
197&amp;
-•· FORD
110 Van
o Vlln PO a.

lornel 1177 Mercury
dr .. AC. , PS.
82000 , Coli
2320 .

66 · Building Supplla•

Apartment
far Rent

7:30

•

PAINTINCJ - interior ond
a!rl orlor. plum bin.g; roollng,
aomo re-ing , 20 .,._.
-ta p, Collll1 4 -388-11112.

Firewood dallvonod tiO. o
cord , Cool dolivor8d t45.
ton. Cell Tom Hoakino 114- 1882 Buick Rogel 25,000
949 -21-110 or 1114-742- mloa. A- 1 concltlon. PI,
PS, crulao. tilt ••ring,
2834,
AM-FM atoro • couofto
G,E, No frost refrigerator, 2 player. Coll44&amp;-1211 , '
cha'l•· kitchon toblo •
choirs, ond tobloa, 61 4·882 - 79 Suburban Sllveredo,
•allertng pkg, es.aoo. Col
6881 or 1114-182-5017.
4411 -3400.

~~~h~4t1Btlih lOCI Ill

40 ecru. 2 · bedrooma. Ill
oloctric, HUD
304-372-8481 .

1978 '10-n GMCbUdc, 4x4
,.mpor apocjol 2 II, Auto,,
loclrGutiiUba.op'*owheola.
low ml•ge. good shlpe.
114-885-41-.1 ,

81

firewood, U6. truck Iced,
t66 , a cO&lt;d, Split ond ~~~=~==::;==;~=
daltve; ad, I 1 4-8~3- 31103,
71
A 11101 for Sale

8 eu, ft. chest
cond,. t17&amp;,
rongo,good
111110.

Whirlpool w a sher &amp; dryer
$90 81!1 ., Kamore waSher
81 00, GE dryer like new
$110, Whirlpool super capacity washer like ·new · 19 " BLACK &amp; white cabinet
S130 . All guaranteed 30 nodet TV. e~~tcellent condl ·
lion. 876, 2 N - 16 "
. dayo. Coli 614-266-1207 ,
studded ·1s now tires,
Sofa &amp; Chair, dinette seat, mounted. fit Chevy pickup,
color TV, 2 bedroom suite, $30 , each. 304-678 -2762,
waahar Itt dryer , Soiling
cheap "leaving sta1e. Call 6 c u . ft . ch81t ty'pa d•p
freez e, Sears . 304-876 ·
446 -B1 16.
7832.
White 22 cu. ft . aide by side
refrig ., $225 like new. Call
448 -8181 .

1171 K-•v Bl-r. 4-WD.
uc, con d., PS, PB. AM-FM
roclo. •4.700 or beet olhr.
Cllll 882-8831.

2V. yeor old pony atollion,
Coll304-87&amp;-n72.

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

Plenty homegrown potatoes,
Delmar Gaines, Laten ,
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, RoutB 33, . Nor t h of w.v . ~4-896 - 3400 .
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
Firewood, split .-,nd deli·
992 -7479 ,
voted 826 ,00 a l oad. 304675 -3647,

McDANIEL CUSTOM BUT'CHERING, cutting &amp; wrap ping, 6 days 41 week . phone
304-BB2-3224,

7 :00

.
-lcH dollv8Nd. WllloccoptOhlo Raglot ... d Ouorter Ho_ _
HEAP Youchora, Call &amp;1 4- Ruth ·Roovu Alao groda.
2116-8818 .
Soddllio , brldloa, wlnt•
horN blenkets. Weet.-n
Firewood apllt, cut to boolo . 1114-881-3280,
Motor honte. - ·
length. you· pick up. Wal - - - - - - - - - ,,1871
_ mlleogo, 1111 contalnod.
dollvor , We occept HEAP RIDING horHa • aoddlw,
outornatlc, B track. 304cardo, CoM 1114· 258-1245. 304-1711-2213. 6711-21110,
882-2730,
Buck otove llroplaco lneort 8711 ' 2821 ·

Heavy duty washer and
dryer - $186 . Heavy du.t y
wash&amp;r- $85 . 30 ln. 911
ranga-$66 . 30 in. electric
rengo. $86. Call 614-742236 2,

Fr&amp;erer beef, all sires. 304882- 2637 or 304- 8822213 .

6 :30

304· 1176·1507,

1178 Morcury Couger XR7.
Block • red lntorll&gt;f. p ,o.,
'p,b,. air. oi8No. many optloM, oxc. cond, 31,000
mloo. . 3o2 ong, t4,2811,
AC!Itpt trade, 114-81730111,

44
36

SPINET-Conoolo plono bargoln , Wantod: Raoponalblo
party to toke over low
monthly poymanto onaplnet
•·no c
~
~-~~
P~ . on- aeon ~ Wr!W Credit MMoger: P. •
Box 33. Frledono. PA
161141 ,

· Antiques

.,_

6:1 II

12 potMn:le&lt;
von
11111 mo~ • I uto ,. or,
1
••ro-ladlo, '2.0811 • . Col ,
441-411&amp;4,

Muaicel
\.
Instrument•

For tile Reateunnt·
Carrvout equlpmont, ueod, I :
lowoat prjceo . RADGO.

Color TV llko new 8196,
RCA table model color TV
8126, 2tablocolor1V's8811
ea.. TV- radio combination
S75, nice bedroom suite or free olonding. Coli 61 4$1 96, ' roofrig, $75, 2 bdr 379-2115 ,
frostfree refrig. coppartone
S160, Franklin woq(l burn- Mouborg BOO with · ·- • •
ing stove $96 , 30 In electric strop, 243, llka .,_, U2&amp;.
range $160. 30 in electic Call 448-2469,
coppertone range $96, Mev·
tag wesher dryer set $160. 1 V. cord hord wood. dell'
Skaggs Appliance, Upper vered 18o, Clll 1114-381River Rd ., Gallipolis, 448- . 9930.
7398.
% HP bond\ grinder with
·· ~and, two wheel whh lemp
e76, Coli 448-2079.

MAHOGANY SETTEE SET;
sett ee. a rm chair . and
ro cker . Oak cabinet letter
file .
VIctorian fa inting
couc h, Call 446· 1 171 or
446 -2573,

Trucks for Sale

~~~~~~~~~;:::r~=~;:~~~~~i~7~3~;V~e~n~s~lo~4~W;.o~.
,

&amp; Acreage

3&amp; Aero at Rodney on W. T.
W1t1on Rd. Ownei' Finane.
lng ovollable. 448-8221 ,

II CD Newscenter
_ iiJ MOVIE: .'The Cannon-

117B [lODGE· Exprna. excel_,! condition. , _ tlrwa.
n1oo, 304-175-14711,

h
di
64 Mise, Mere en H

'

8 :00

1176 Ford Rongor XL-2, '10
ton PU. e7oo. Call sa2111 - 11111 or 1114-2&amp;11 ·
, 117,

CBoL Bookkeeping
• Bookkeeping 8. tax lervice
for all typn of ~ualnn•s .
Carol Nell 446 -3882

36 Lots

' EVENI NG

1180 Flet X1 I . Col 304171-3088 oft• 4 :00.

Profeuional
Services

PIANO TUNING Itt REPAIR
call Bin Word for appointment. Ward 'J Keyboard ,

'

roof. llm-fm · -· -· 3()4.
1711-7811,
.

3169.

dressers. TV'1 . Call

Unfurn . 2 bec4room garage 54 Misc. Merchandise
apt. Adults Only. No Pels.
304-676-1066.
Warm Morning LP gas stove.
6500 BTU, 3 yoara old, like
now , 614-742-2B69 after II
p .m .

61 Household Goods

Viewi;ng
1no;s3

72

53
UNFURNISHED apo~ m ont
for rent , 1 bedroom,
8180 .00 Call Automotive
Supply, 8 -6 , 304 -6'75 221 B. 675-6763,

Television

1171 Muatong. 4cyt. twbo.
4 ...-. olr c""dltiDn. oun

beds complete $179. bunklea mattreasas *40. chaste,

a

For s ale - Repouessed
house. 3 bd .rooma, all refinished, new carpet i ng
t hrough out. Sits' on 3 acres.
Located on Beahan Rd.
ExceUen1' terms to . right
party . Price reduced to
$30,000. 30 veer financing
available. Contact Bank One
of Pomeroy, 614-992 2133 ,

Middleport, Ohio

new dtnet sets •11 a.. up,
refrigeraton, rang... bu'*

875 , to
6 ~from
S99
436dinomoo
7pc 818.9
and -~p , Wood 'table ~ith ,.;
choirs 8426, to 1746, Doak
8110 up to 1226, Hutchn.
• 660 , an d up, mapI oor PIn8
finioh , Bunk bed complete
with mottre11ea, 126o, and
ur to 1396, Baby bado,
$) 1 Q. Mattreuea or box
aprings. lull or twin. 868,.
868
d 87B
f.
sets.
8196
.
1rm., 5 dr,' chosto.
an 4 dr.$114,
· cheats.
uaen
$42
Bod
frames. 820 ,ond $25,, 10
gun - Gun cobinoto, eJ60.,

necea ae ry . For in fo nnation
call 919-227-6140 o• 919 227-6169 . 9 a.m. to 9 p.m,
Mo ndtw t hrough Friday .
Adams Enter pr ises Inc .

Pomeroy-

niCK THi\CY

Autot for Sele

11

10, 1983

o.v..,

box

Sofia and chairs pric,pdfrom
choir
lovaoeu,
8275
$286 . and
to 8896,
Toblea.
846,
and Up to • 126. Hlde-obods , $440 , and· up to
8626 ,. Rocllnero, 8176, to
$360 ,. umps lrom e28 , to

TRUCKING. no experience

Monday, Janua r y

1181 Codlllac, 4 door Melon
Juot ll&lt;e new, 304:
1711-4384, .
.

Small fu rniihed effiency, 1
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
professional type male onty, . Soli, chair, rocker. ottocentral air and h_,at. 446· man, 3 tables. (extra heavy
0338 ,
by Frontier), 8686 , Soli,

FAYlll!iMANN,

1

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N.' CARLYLE"'

•

10, 1983

L_B Y L .

U V

C HB E J G - .
' HB E
WT KUE

(

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page. 10-The Daily Sentinel

I

Monday, January 1-0, 1983

Meigs·
County.
budget
figures
released
I

Area delths

Federal funds, $4,125.66; CETA
'fa iling health for some tlme, was
Meigs County Commissioners County BoardofEducation, 169MR
Sanitary revenue tunds, emer·
·
IID,$4.182.50;
CETA&amp;A,$1,271.41;
born Jan. 22, 1915, the daughter of · have approved a budget for 1983 Board, $310,676.25; food sezylce, gency crisis program, $11); M. R.
CET
A
PM,
$8,2!16.41.
These funds
totaling $5,501,430.1i!.
$3,191.81; public assistance, . gift fuild, $9U.89; waste disposal
Funeral services for Guy V. the hlte Irving R. and Mae EchOI,s
are carry-over balance of fl!n&lt;ls
Recapitula tion d tunds Is as $1,398,235.; Community Mental funds, landfiJJ, $40,149.
Sargent, 9o. Route 2, Pomeroy, who Karr, Sr. She was also pteceded in
not active ]ll'OIJJ'allli.
Juvenile
probation,
$1.9;
comdeath
by'IWO
brothers,
Thomas
and
follows:
Health
'il'ld
Retardation
fund,
648
died Friday night at the Holzer
EMS
transfer( n!,'1ti5.90; Fed•
General
executive,
board
of
munity
corrections
grant,
board,
$2.!,3'(6.17;
reill
estate
•8$Karr.
Horace
Medical Center, will be helq at 1 ,
eral
Revenue
Sharing Fund,
was
a
graduate
of
.
county
r;Ommissioners,
~,8)U2;
.
$11,530.61;
battered
sp()uses.
Mrs.
Crow
sessment
fund,
$35,069;
rrotor
p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
$117,617.46.
Grand
1Dtal ofailtunds,
county
auditor,
$'19,464.61;
county
$2,410;
FMHA
plannblg
grant,
Pomeroy
Htgh
School
and
Qhio
vehicle and gasoline tax fund,
Hom e.
$5,501,W.68.
treasurer.
$67,580.60;
prosecuting
$935;
juvenile
court
program,
University. She was a school
$1,33l,:ul.76; SoU and Water ConMr. SargentwasaFetiredfarmer,
$104,815.90;
bureau
d
attorney,
.
seryatlon special fund , $13,172.93.
$56,'094 ,40; relief and welfare,
teacher
havingtaught
in
Cinclnnati,
blacksmith a nd carpenter . He was
inspection,
$15,00o;
county
.
plan$00,213.69.
.
'
·
and
at
the
Syracuse
Elementary
Bond
retirement
funds,
general,
born in Meigs County Nov.12, 1892, a
ning
commission,
$3,ffi0;
judiciaL
sen;k:es
number
50,
Children
R.
·
Bond
retirement,
$23,474.75;
M.
School.
.. cSOn of the late George a nd Kate
common pleas court, $64,250; do- special assessment , . Veterans $:.!1,979.19; T. B ., $57,(BJ,59; health
She was a inember of the Grace
· Cummings Sargent.
mestic relations and juvenile cour~ Memorial, $8,843.35; revenue, M. department, $119,556.67; traller
Episcopal
Church
and
&lt;!11
active
Surviving are a son, Doyle W.
$35,644
. 14 ; pr o bate court.
member
of
Dloslan
affairs
of
the
parks, $19,50.69; EMS, $258,770.48.
R. facilltles , $49,818.07.
Sargent , Da rwin; a half-brother,
church having seJVed with the
$22;557 .08; clerk o I courts , r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Ralph Ashworth. Columbus; a
$71J,639.77; coroner, $1.3,950; county
Vestry
and
National
Board
of
half-sister. Golda Archer , Colum·
and municipal courts, $45,392.48;
Episcopal Church Women, . a
bus; a step-da ughter, Mrs. Alton
board of elections, $81,471!.47; buDdmember
of
Mortar
Board
and
(Virginia) Douglas, Shade; a stepand grounds, $74,692; sheriff,
Ing
Chimes
Women's
Hon
rary
at
Ohio
0
son, Cecil Welch. Shade; four
$216,7!18.16;
recorder, $41,Bro.84.
University
and
PI
Beta
Sorority.
grandchildren and three greatAgriculture,
$55,103; bealth and
In
addition
to
her
husband.
she
is
grandchildren.·
welfare
,
registration
ct vital statisby
one
daughter,
Unda
survived
Prec€ding hlmaJI death were his
ti:s.• $100; charities and correction,
Crow Beegle, Worthington; two
first wife. Maude Hawk Sargent;
county
-home, $74,450; chUdren
sons,
Fred
Crow,
rp.
Syracuse,
and
his . !;e(:ond wife, Bertha Welch
"board and children's
services
I.
Carson
Crow,
Rt:
3,
Pomeroy;
Sargent, two sons, five sisters, a
hOme,
$:!&gt;,450;
soldiers' relle~
three
grandsons,
Toby.
Nathaniel
brother and a step-daughter .
$27
,850
;
veterans
services,
Carson
Beegle,
Worthington,
a
and
ot!iciatlng a t sen'ices will be the
$22,961.90;
·
public
assistance,
granddaughter
,
Anne
Lowry
Rev. RogerWatson.Burlalwillbein
$2.!,394 ; highways , plat 'map,
Adams, Syracuse, and a brother.
Burtlngham Cemetery. Friends
$33,439; Insurance, pensions and
IrvlngR. Karr, Mason.
may call at the funeral home from2
. taxes, $140,620; contingencies,
At the request of the Mrs. Crow,
to4 and 7 to9p.m . Monday.
$4,586.34; total · general fund,
private graveside services will be
$1,466,4!ll.73.
held
Tuesday
at
2:
~p.m
.
at
Beech
Eleanor Crow
Dog and kennel fund , $7,881.31;
Grove Cemetery with the Rev. AI
Mrs. Elea nor Crow, 67, Syracuse,
McKenzie officiating. In lieu of
well-known Me igs County •resident
Dowers, friends may give con~bu·
a nd wife of Pomeroy Attorney Fred
Meets Tuesday
!Ions to thelr favorite charltie!l in
w. Crow, J r., died early this Mrs. Craw's memory. Memorial
morning at Holzer Medical Center.
The Harrisonville Chapter 255,
services will be held at the Grace
Mrs. Crow. w ho ha(! been In
Order o! the Eastern Star. will meet
:~·
EpiscOpal Church In Pomeroy
at 7: :.l p.m. Tuesday at the Masonic
Thursday at 1: 30 p.m.
Temple. Members are asked to take
The Ewing Funeral Home is In
Items for,a white elephant sale.
charge of arrangements.
(Continued from page 1)
the past year that lime, mooey,
effort and energy have been freely
expended III the effort to flpt each
other. In this process both executives seem io have lost sight ofwhay
it is they are for!
(On Tu&lt;'''/ay: Th&lt;• .
RPI ·i(' H' Group.o; u ~mmm(&gt;rn/nlion .. )

Guy V. Sargent

and

Venneil resign8
coaching position
Page J

Vol.31 ,No.177
1982

. I.

pool, $22,9ll;

cemetery, $23,(8); m eter deposit ,

On hand for the third consecutive council meeting
Monday night were residents of Hudson St., who have
requested that their street be , improved and that
more stringent measures be iaken by the police
department concerning speeding and other alleged .
violations.
Cow!cllm;m Jack Satterfield reported-on a r ecent
on site meeting· of several council m embers with
residents of the street. Satterfield recommended that
brush be ciea~ away in.one section to see what can
be done about widening the · street and that a
tum-around area be made by the village in one
section on land owned by the village. Action would
widen' the street some four to five feet, but residents
clail)'led that this much widening will not help much.
However, they agieed to go along' with council's plan
to make some improvements to the street and to post

'

By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP news staff

.

I ,

It not dnly tastes fresher while you smoke.
It even leaves you with a clean, fresh taste.

The Gallla. Jackson and Meigs county commissioners agree the support
of . their 648 board members may be critical to Implement
recommendations made hy the state 'panel which investigated mental
health seJVIces In the three-county area.
1lle commisslonel's from the three counties met lri Galllpolis Monday to
discuss the final report of the ·Community SeJVices Review Group.
1lle review group, which released Its report to the commissioners
Friday, recorrunendtid "sweeping changes" at the Gailla-Jackson-Meigs
-.MS~xllird and the Community Mental Health Center.
.
·'
The panel called for th.l-Testgnatlons of Maxine Plummer, executive
director of the 648 board, and Bernard Nlehm , executive director of the
mental health center.
Meigs County commissioner Richard Jones said the 648 board members
·must ·he involved in decisions regarding the report because the
commissioners have " no statutory authortty" to implement the panel's
recommendations.
" I'm not prepared to make any finn decision until we can discuss the
report with our board memberS.'' he sai&lt;l.
By Ohio law, the commissioners in each county appoint some members
to the 648 board. The remaining positions on the board are state
appointments.
Ja,ckson County commissioner Joseph Conger said the commissioners
have some control because they can remove thelr appointees to the &amp;18
board who c;to not support the panel's recommendations.
Severa l commissioners noted that the state panel called for 648 and ·
center board members who do not agree with the panel's
recommendations to resign their positions.
.
While the counties may have some control over 648 board members, tile
commissioners Said they have no authority over center board members .
because the merital health renter Is a private, non-profit corporation.
Gallla County commissioner Verlin Swain said county officials must
take some action to correct problems at the 648 board .
'
" We can't condone this type of thing," Swain said. "We should go
fotward and decide what should be done." .
1be cornmlssioners from each county agreed to discuss tbe report with
thelr county's appointees !o the the 648 board beforil January 19.
On January 21, the nilie commissioners will meet again to discuss what
'
action to take regarding the report .

.-----------------------.. .\';-"·1-,
We,qther forecast
Partly cloudy and colder tonight with 40 percent chance of snow ·
flurries. Low a round 20. Winds westerly to nothwesterly 1().15 mph.
Wednesday, partly cloudy and continued cold. High 25-:.l.
. Extended Ohio Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair and cold 'lbw.;day, Moderating with a chance of rain or snow
Frida)' and Saturday. Highs from the mid-~ to mld-3081bursday
and mostly In the 30s Friday and Satunlay. Lows 1D the teens
Thursday .momlng and b1 the 20s Friday B!ld Satunlny'

Meets tonight
Racine Village Council will meet
at 7 this evening at village hail to
take actiop on 1983 appropriations
introduce legislation on Racine
water rates. Residents are Invited
to attend .

am

.

CEREMONIAL OAm - Ohio Govemor Richard Celeste takes
the ceremonial oath of office 1\fonday from Supreme Court Justice
Anthony Celebre'IZe on the steps of the StatehoUIIe in Columbus. Celeste
became the 64th govemor ol Ohio. (AP La8erphoto )-

.

COLUMBUS, · Ohio (AP) Legislation taking effect today
reshapes the Public Utllities Com·
mission of Ohio, one day a fter Gov.
Richard Celeste named a new
chalnnan and two board members
quit.
Two Republican members of the
board resigned Monday, clearing
(he way for Celeste, a Democrat, to
name a new five-member board as
he had promised in his campaign .
Michael De!Bane, the only Democrat on the panel, resigned as
commissioner but was immediately appointed the newchainnan

Nancy J . Hayes, Pomeroy and
WIIUam !{: Hayes, Dexter, filed for
dJIIIOiutlon of marriage and the ·
f'anners Bank
Savings Co.,.
llled a- foreclosure suit agalnst
L. Harfonl, Charleston, eta!

of the board .
Celeste said he named DeiBane
chaim1an because "I believe that
continuiiy is essential. I believe that
Mr. DelBane 's letter speaks for
itse¥· as does hisrecordofctlssent on
rate case after rate case." ·
In a· letter to Celeste. the former
legisla tor irom Hubbard pledged to
help ttie new admtnJstration bring
utility prices under public control. ·
"I am grateful for· their coopern·
tion," Celest!' said of the resignations of Dennis Pines and former
chainnan Jon Kelly.
During his campaign for gover ·

nor, Celeste promised to demand
the resignations of the three PUCO
.c omrnJssioners.
De!Bane said he would follow the
governor's "action agenda." prtncl' low-cost
pies, which include buying
Ohio ,fuel; ordertng an audit of
Columbia Gas of Ohio; promoting
the use of "clean" Ohio coal; setting
rates to reward conservation by
residential and small-business customers ; and protecting public
participation in the regulatory
process.
" I fully support this mandate and

648 PERSONNEL
strong leadership In Influencing and controlling the
The
648
board
should request the immediate
activities of the e~tive director and the sta!f."
resignation
of
executive
director Ma:oiine Plummer,
In addition to the resignations of both executiveThe review panel also qeveloped a plan· to ensure
directors, theCommunttyServicesRevlewGrouphas
the
report
says.
'
that its recommendations are followed.
She should be replaced with a person "who is not and
called for other significant changes in the operation . · The director of mental health should app()int a
has
not been lnvolved .with the Gallia -Jackson-Metgs
and slatting of the Gallla·Jackso!l·Meigs 648 board
person to "generally oversee" the implem entation of
and the Community Mental Health Center. .
mental health system."
recommendations: the panel wrote.
'
The·reports says the 648 bOard has "too many staff
The review group was formed In October by. former:
This person should work up to forty hours month ·
mental health director Myers Kurtz to Investigate the
for the duties for which it is responsible.
until the recommendations are carried out , but not
It calls for the staff to be reduced from nine to three
648 board and the mental health center. It released Its
overayear.
.
flnalleyort Friday.
.
personsan executlvedirector. planner-fiscal officer ·
The review group said the appointee.should be paid
arid
an
adminl!;trative
assistant-secretary.
ln. order for its i'eco1Tlll'\€ndatlon.i; to be carried out,
by the department of mental health , but also
the review group'hascaliedforlhecompletesupportof ·
"All
staff
positions
should
Ill: abolished and... posisanctioned to .w ork by the . three sets of county
tion
descriptions
rewritten
to
consolidate tasks and
. the 648 and mental health renter boards . .
·. commissioners and th~ 6411 and center boards.
·
functions,"
according
to
the
report.
·
Board members o! the two agencies should
A second Corrununlty Services Review Group ·
The
panel
wrote
that
these
staff
members
should
"indicate In writing lhelr willingness to Implement the
should be appointed by th¢ state director of mental
perform the functions assigned and Ctit down on the .
feC9rnmendatlons In this report or resign their
health "for the express purpose of determining
positions as members tf the,b oard,'' lhe report states,
use of consultants.
.
progress" In following through on the recommenda. "It is the opinion of the review group that this
· Board members sMJid make their decision within
tiOns, the report states. ·
·
.
staffing level should petmlt the 648 boaf!l. to rrieet the
two weeks of the release of tlie report, the panel wr'Ote.
· This group should complete Its work within a year .
requirements of (Ohio law) ."
_In the future, the review group saki the Galila,
, Following are some of the important recommenda·. Jackson aoo Meigs county commissioners and the
tlons the panel made regarding staffing . and • . • Staff members at the &amp;II! board are "too highly paid
and have received salary ·increases too freq~ntly
Ohio Department of Mental Heelth should appoint &amp;18
operations at the 648 board:
without a major corresponding Increase in duties,"
board !lle!Tlbers "willing and capable of exerting

I
I.

ure

7 mi. "tar". 0.5 mi. nicoune
a-. penigarette bv FTC method.

'
•

Later Monday evening, more
than 8,&lt;XXl people attended Celeste's
Inaugural ball, milled around In the
crowd and consumed plies of food :
"I amespeciailywanttothankall
of you who had the (alth last spring"
and supported hln\, Celeste said.
The crowd, most In lonna! dress,
was entertained with ja12, big band
and disco music.
A free public reu&gt;ption Monday.
at the fanner Halle's department
store just south of !he Statehouse,
drew thousaros o! PeoPle, who
crowded Into the building just after
Celeste's Inaugural speech.
The new Democratic governor
arrived about 2 p.m. and stopped on
three floors of the building to make
brief
"I was delayed getting over here
because I anhounced that I had
received the resignations of three
members of the Public Utilities
Commission," Celeste said. triggerIng a roar of approval from the
crowd.
·
The crowd was a mlic of
supporters, with some weartng furs
and others in T-shlrts. Even
toddlers were evident.
"I think we've had 4,00l people in
and out of here easily," said MartY
SWederlich, coordinator of public
,eception.

speeches.

New legislation reshapes Ohio's PUCO

By OVP staffers

Suits for dissolution of marriage

COLtJMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Gov.
Richard Celeste for the most part
celebrated on his first day in office
tnd was joined in the f~stivlties by
lhousands of people.
He told a gatherlngofDemocrl!ts,
· however, that the public expects·
them .to solve some of the state's
problems and will hold the party
accountable if they do not.
"We understand that we must
work together if we are to work at .
all," Celeste told apartisan crowd at
a $!50-a-ticket dtnner at the down. town Sheraton Hotel Monday
evening.
·
Celeste joined fellow elected
Democrats on a swakers' platform
in· the hotel ballroom before more
than 1,:m ticketholders. Besides Lt.
Gov. Myrl Shoemaker, Celeste was
· flanked by Senate President Harry
Meshel and House Speaker Vernal
Riffe Jr.
Meshel was among several
speakers to point out that the 1!R!
general election resulted !9 Democratic majorities In both houses of
the Legislature as well as Democrats in every elected state o!flce.
Shoemaker said the Democrats'
sweePing victories filled hlm with
pride, but pointed out that pride
· wouldn't solve economic woes that
have resulted in a 14.5 percent
unemployment rate.

gratefully accept your request that!
serve as chalnnan as this change is
begun, " De!Bane told the governor.
,,
Legislation goes into effect today
which requires the goyernor to
choose his nominees from .. a Ust
drawn by a nominatlngcouncU. Tne
new legislation also Increases the '
· sizeoftheeommisslonfrom'three.to
five members.
•
Celeste said DelBane's appoint·
ment would not be subject to review
since he already was serving the
agency.

Significant changes sought by revtew group.

Two fire calls .

Actions filed .

Kloes to another five year term on the planning
commission was approvect by council.
Council approved two fire contracts for 1983.
One is with Cheshire Township for $4650 a year plus
$'75 a call and the oth~r is with Cheshire VU!age for
$2800 a year plus $75 a call. Mayor Hoffman
announced councu· committees for 1983.
~ayor Hoffman w;ls authorlzetl to advertise for
bids m\ relocating · the storm sewer and filling
pro~rtY owned by the village on General Hartinger
ParRway, across from theGeneral Hartinger.Park.
A study on the project will be completed in about 10
days. CouncU discussed use of the plot of land with
Councllrnan Robert Gilmore Indicating that he felt
the land should be reserved for recreation to tie in
with the present park. Howliver, no actions were
taken, it being stressed that no plan for the land has
been locked in yet. ' (Continued on page 12)

•

•

TWo calls were answered by the
Pomeroy_Fire Depart)nent 'Satur·
day. At 1::Jl p.m ., the unit went to
the William Morrls residence on
CollltiSJW&lt;Id due to a small !lash fire
on a cook stove and at 5:26p.m. the
department went to the Meigs
Senior CitizellS Center when the fire
alarm system maifu,nctioned.

cominlsslo~ for i 983 and the appolniment of Manning

'Thousands _celebrate
·-·c eleste's festivities

1

Afresh new ~aste experience
that outshtnes menthol.

1 Section, 12 Pages
15 Cents
A_Multim.dia Inc . N•wtpaper

a 10 mile ;m hqur speed limit on the street . Council
agreed that the first primary action to be taken Is the
cleanJng-up of the brush In areas along the street so
that it can he studied more realistically as to what can
be done to Improve the situation. Mayor Fred
Hoffman will secure workers to get the cleanup
processes underway .
Council approved the December report of Mayor
Hoffman showing receipts of $4445 in fines and fees, ·
for the month . Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reported
the Jaw has been changed so that village checking
moneys can be placed In an Interest drawing account.
He said !Je signed the necessary paper for that step to
be taken and the checking account should draw for
the village a mlnimum of $3400 in Interest during 1983.
Council reelected upon the recommendation of
Mayor Hoffman, Carl Horky to seJVe as council
president during 1983. Horky was reappointed to
serve as-the village representative on the planning

Final ·d ecision
up to boards

~

Saturday Admls.s lons -- Jo'e
Moore. Rutland; Joseph ZwUllng,
Pomeroy; Roger Bissell, II. Long
Bottom ; Christine Pullins,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--Hazel
Thompson. Betty Archer, Pamela
Stone, Clarence McDaniel, Jr .•
Sally Canter, Sara Willis.- Donna
Philabaum.
Sunday Admissions --Dora
Roush, Pomeroy; Jack Stivers,
Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges--Anna Col·
bum, Thelma Grueser, Chrlstine
Pullins and Walter Jones.

Warning, The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health_

am

neMn

ily BOB HOEFLICH

Middleport Village CouncU Monday night adopted
its 1983 approprtations resolution providing lor
expenditures totaling $2,224,866.26 this year, certainly
one of the largest a ppropriations in the history of the
town. ·
Making' up a considerab_le portion of the
appropriations is the federal HUD !uJld which will
have a total of $1,300,00) for town projects in it this
year.
Appropriated from theothersfun~for .the yearare
gen...al, $144,300; safety. $134,:.W; street maintenance, $99,00l; revenue sharing, $12,006.26; street
light, $18,400; street levy, ~.600; fire equipment,
ro,450; fire truck fund, $6,!nl; fire house Improvement; $114,9ll; bond retirement, $6,300; planning
conunisslon, $300; sanitary sewer escrow, Ul,OOl;
water fund, $146,270; sewage, $ll7,260; swimming

$1 29

Veterans Memorial

Court.

enttne

Pomeroy,- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 11, 1983

$3,300.

Here~om~s

Local unJts answered 10 calls on
the weekend, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
Sunday calls Included Pomeroy
at 12: 32·a.m., to 628~ E . Main St.,
Donna Thomas to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 3: 12 a.m., to
sheriff's office for Bill Morris, taken
to veterans Memortal ijospltal;
11: 50 a .m., Pomeroy to 313 Condor
St., Jack Stivers to Veterans
Memorial; MiddleportFireDepart·
meni to 432 S. Third St .. at4: 54 p.m.
for a chimney fire; Rutland Squad,
10: 45 p.m. to Meigs Mlne 1 for
William Jones, taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
Calls on Saturday Included:
Pomeroy Unit at 12:52 a.m. , State
.. St., for Joseph Zwilling, taken to
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
2: :.l a .m ., to Pearl St. for Bertha
Brickles, to Veterans Memorial;
~iddleport, 3: 22 a.m., Lisa Oiler
from 674 Plum St., to Veterans
~emortal ; 12: 33 p.m., Tuppers
Plailns, Eastern High School for
Roger Bissf!il ll, to Veterans.
Memorial, and Syracuse. 9: 19p.m.,
to Frog Blvd., for Eleanor Crow.
taken to Holzer Medical ~nter.

and a foreclosure were !lied In
Meigs .CountY, Common · Pleas

•

$2,224,866 appropriation measure approved

'-/ B:-: 5

kept busy

Page 5

at

Copyri~tlted

SALE PRICED

Squad~

Page 4

•

e

CHILDREN'S WINTER
HATS, GLOVES and MITTENS

Review••.

Green Thumb
program .participant

"'

. JA!WARY CLEARANCE SALE!!

From Only .

No.I Memphis
loses-first contest

..
'•.

•,

.

-

•

\\o

a

according to·the panel.
.
1bey recommend the board establish a "definltJve ·
policy on all salary levels. relative to position duties,
frequency of pay increa.seS, and performance
evaluations."
,
In addition, personnel' policies and procedures
should be updated
present policies and ..
procedures should be followed .

am

.

"TRAVEL

·

"The 648 board. should establish a written policy
' outlining guidelines lor appropriate travel relmbusement for both staff and board members. Such·
guldlelnes should ~consistent with reimbursements
afforded other employees at the county, state and
·
·
·
federallevel.
"Tile &amp;IS board may wish \oeQnsiderthe purchase of
vehicles, cleary rriark the vehicles· as "public"
vehicles and establish appropriate depreciation and
maintenance schedules and not permit employees to
use personal cars except under unusual

. circumstances.
"The 648 boanl should 'e stablislt a written. policy
·
·
requtrtng car poo~.
· Continued on P.9

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="108">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2674">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="42765">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42764">
              <text>January 10, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="867">
      <name>crow</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="558">
      <name>karr</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="497">
      <name>sargent</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
