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Meigs plays Logan;
AU SVAC teams
in action Friday

Reedsville couple
has ye~r's first ·.
baby in Parkersburg

Page.~

Page 7

34

e

•

•

Voi.31 ,No .. 17~
Copy•;ghte&lt;i 1982

•

at

Livestock reports
Page 12

'

. . . . .,. ·e n tine

•.

2 Sections , 12 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 13, i 983

·•

No action taken
on final report

•

ByJEFFGRABMEJER

OVPs¥f
Although they began studying the
state review panel's final report, the
board of the Gallla-Jackson-Meigs·
Community Mental Health Center
took no action on the docilment
Wednesday night.
"We spent over two and a haif
hours going over the decisions and
recommendations of the review
group," Charles Howard, president
of the center board sqld after the
meeting. "We haven't finished yet,
so no decision was m ade. ·•
The m eeting was not open to the
public.
The 32-page final report of the
state-appOinted Community Services Review Group, delivered to local
officials F riday, called for significant changes at the center , including the resignation of executive
director Bernard Nlehm.
According to Niehrn, the board is

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HANGERS

Schwelker and the nomiJ!allon of Heckler to succeed
him u secretary of Health and Human Services. (AP
Laserphoto)

NEW POST - Former Rep. Margaret lledder
ol Mass., laces reporiers In the Eaat Room ollhe
While HOUBe Wednesday, where President Reagan,
rlpt, announced the resignation of Richard

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Wheat Snack Crackers 9 oz .

•

Heckler 1nomination receives
•
initial support In c.o ngress

5:'1
DJnck7iJ AUTO

WASHINGTON (AP) - Margaret Heckler , whose nomination as
1 secretary of health and human
services has received initial,support
In Congress, seems likely to become
the third woman In the Reagan
Cablnet.
Even grOUPs those who differ with
her position on abortion are reacting
favorably to her appointment.
" In the final analysis , she Is going
to be part of the Reagan administratiOn which has been quite hostile to
family planning and the reproduc·
tive rights of. women. But we are
hopeful," said Blll HamUton, legislative director for the Planned
Parenthood Federation of America.
"We know her to be a reasonable
person," he said.
President Reagan selected Mrs.
Heckler to succeed Richard S.
Schwelker as head of the $274 bllllon
government agency. Schwelkerwlll
leave government .early ln February to become president of the
American Council of Life
Insurance.
Mrs. Heckler will have to be
conf!nned by the Senate Flnance
Committee and the lull Senate
before she takes office. No date has
been set for a hearing because
· \':ongress Is in recess un_tll Jan. 25.
But Karn~ Small, a White House .

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LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
.

..

spokeswomen, said she expected
early confirmation of Mrs. Heckler,
a Republican who spent 16 years in
the House as a congresswoman
from Massachusetts.
Several senators Rralsed Mrs.
Heckler, including sen_ Edward
Kennedy, a Democrat from her
home state. "Although I have
disagreed with her on a number of
Issues; .. she Is a responsible and
talented public servant, who brings
real strengj;hs to the largest
domestic agency of the federal
govennent," he said.
Mrs. Heckler is a Roman Catholic
who strongly opposes publlc financing of abortions, but she has
supported the Equal Rights Amend·
ment and other women's rights
Issues, a• well as Issues affecting
veterans and the elderly.
While Mrs. Heckler was In
Congress, she argued against an
administration plan requiring parents to be told when minors receive
most contraceptives. The rule may
be one she would have to enforce at
the health agency.
Earller this week, Schwelker
gave final approval to the rule, but
Planned Parenthood has filed suit to
stop It from taking effect. The·
regulation must be approved by the
Office of Management and Budget.

reviewing the report point by point
and got through about half the
document Wednesday.
Both Nlehm and Howa rd said the
board gave no indication-whether
they will seek Nlehm' s resignation.
"Everyone is just Interested ·In
seeing \Vhat the ·repbrt says,"
Howard said.
When asked if any of the review
panel's a llegations appeared valid,
Howard said "some of them did and
some of them didn't. "
N!ehm said the board questioned
him and other staff members about
the report's allegations.
" I tried to show what I think are
fallacies In the report," he said.
Niehm said he disagrees with
~everal of the review panel' s
findings, but will not comment
further until the board has examined the entire document.
The center board wlll meet a
second time wlth staff members
Wednes~ to finish reviewing the

document , Howard said.
A third board meeting without the
staff will probably be scheduled to
determine If any action should be
taken, he said.
, ·In addition to Niehm's resignation, the review group's final report
calls for changes in some center
programs and the use of competitive bidding to hold down costs.
The review group also lnvestigated.operations and staffing at the
Gallia-Jackson-Melgs 648board and
called for the resignation of Its
execu tlve director, Max ine
Plummer.
Niehm and Plummer have been
" intent on laying blame and
assigning responsibility for disasters and avoiding being at fault
rather than (making) any constructive efforts toward compromise or
conflict resolution," the r eport says.
The 64B board Is expected td
discuss the panel report at Its
regular monthly meeting Monday.

Wreck leaves one in hospital
One man was admitted to
Veter ans Memorial Hospital and
two other persons ·were treated
there tor injuries received in a
one-car accident near Ohio 143
Wednesday night.
George Rels, 41, Rt. 4, Pomeroy ,
was reported to be in satisfactory
conilltion this morning, suffering
from cuts. A hospital spokesman
said he was being held for
observation.,
Rels was a passenger in a vehicle
driven by Homer L. Welsh, 33, Rt. 4,

Pomeroy, which was westbound on
Scipio Township Rd. 282 at 9:15p.m.
The car reportedly lost control, went
off the left side of the r oad and went
Into a ditch, causing moderate

highway patrol said We lsh was cited
for speed unsafe for conditions.
The patrol reported it cited
Charles R. Wolfe, 45, Rt. 2, Racine,
for DWI following a two-vehicle
dama~ .
accldentonCountyRd.'l61nChester
Welsh was injured, as was Township earlier In the day.
Wolfe was eastbound , one-tenth of
another passenger, Sandra Stanley;
33, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. All were taken to a mile east of0hlo7, at5p.m. when
Vet~rans by a passing motorist, · he reportedly went left of center and
where Welsh was treated for a cut to struck a westbound truck driven by
the ear and released, and Stanley Larry Longenette, 23, Reedsville.
Both vehicles were slightly damwas treated fo r a broken arm.
The Gallia-Meigs post of the state aged in the accident.

Some women said they thought
Mrs. Heckler 's nomination was
politically motivated.
Mrs. Heckler, a 51-year-old attoriiey from Wellesley, Mass., was
defeated by Rep. Barney Frank,
0-Mass., last November . The two
were thrown into a race because of
redistricting.
She Is the second woman the
president has named to a Cabinet
job In a week. The president chose
Elizabeth Hanford Dole to s ucceed
·Drew Lewis as transportation
secr etary last week. Jeane Kirkpatrick Is delegate to the United
Nations, a post with Cablnet rank.

COLUMBUS -The Office of the
Consumers' Counsel has announced it has received from
Columbia Gas letters of acceptance
for the gas rate orctinance of 28
communities that participated In
uniform rate negotiations.
The 28 co rrimunltes a re
members 9! two different unllorm
rate coalitions that negotiated their
new gas rates under the guidance of

Weather forecast

Boster on four stan·d ing committees

Mostly cloudy tonight. Low near

30. Winds southerly 1()-15 mph.
Friday, cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of s now, possibly mixed with
rain, High near 40.
Extended forecast
Satunlay through Monday:
Chance of snow Ounies northeast
Satunlay. Otherwise, fair through
the Jll!rlod. IDgh; near 30 Satunlay
and In the mid-~ to the mld-308
SwiCI&amp;y and Monday. Lows near 20
Satunlay and mostly In the teens
Sunday and Monday.

Columbia accepts negotiated rates

State Rep. Jolynn Boster, 0Gallipolis, was appointed Tuesday
to serve as vice-chairperson of the
Colleges and Universities subcommittee of the Ohio House Education
Committee.
Boster was assigned by House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New
Boston, to serve on four of the 24
standing committees In the
legislature.
.
Those committee appointments
are: J udiclary, Civil and Common
Law, Agriculture and Natural

the legal and technical staff of the
Consumers' CounseL The Consu- ·
mers' Counsel Is a state agency
that represents the Interest of
residential utility consumers,
headed by William A. Spratley.
Under Columbia ·Gas of Ohio's
unique rafe.setting policy , munlcl·
pallties negotiate their own gas
rates Instead of having It set by the

Resourses, and Education.
Boster said Wednesday she was
most gratified by the appointment
as vice-chair to the education
subcoinmlttee. Such a n assignmen't
for a freshman legislator is consi·
deredrare.
"With Rio Gr a nde and Ohio
University In my district," Boster
said , "I look forward to wor king
toward a greater understanding of
the problems of higher education In
the &lt;'!lmmunlty. " .
Whlle the education subcommlt·

PUCO. This type of negotiation has
found many municipalities at a
disadvantrage because they do not
have the resources to effectively
negotiate the complex contracts.
The coalitions, the North Central
Consortium II, (NCII) and the Gas
Rate Coalition, reached agreement
wlth Columbia for their new rates
In September and Ohober
'
respectively.

tee has no direct control over school
funding, Boster said the position as
vice-chairperson would allow her
input into thegrowlhanddlrectlonof
higher education.
Boster stressed the tritportanceof
re-allignlng eduational opportunities with industrial and · business
errtployment needs during her
successfui campaign for a seat In the
115th General Assembly .
Boster represents the 94th Ohio
District, which includes Gallia,
Meigs and Athens counties.

All Items Sold On

A First Come 'Basis

Energy saving money tips
.
.
.
·p resented -· to sentor ctttzens

·. Early Sell Out Possible

'

. ''

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH ,.
Turning your thermostat
down five degreeS can decrease
your gas bill ' by 15 percent,
according to John, Clark, marketing representative lor Columbus Gas o_l Ohio.
Clark was the guest speaker
Tuesday at the Senior Citizens
Center, the firSt In a series of
educational programs ~ared to
help low. Income. persons with
managing money. He was accompanied and assisted In the ·
program by John Koebel, Meigs
· Gallla Col¥tnb!a Gas office
manager.
Clark jD eaented a number ~I
low-roat, DO;CO&amp;t ways to cut

.

'

energy bills displaying a flow
make to the senior cltlzehs.
,
restrlcter for shower heads to
The gas company representacut down on tbefiowofhotwater
tive showed a film on haw to
and loam backed receptlcle save gas and money which listed
covers to prevent the cold air good maintenance of the furfrom coming in and the warm
nace, lowering the thermostat,
air from getting out . ,
and ·lnsta!Ung .il)sulatlon as .th~
He said every degree below 70 three best ways to get the
that a thermostat Is set saves greatest return in the farrilly
three percent on the energy bill. bud~t.
'
Heat deflectors on registers,
Clal'k suggested iowertng the ·
moist air through the ·use of thermostat by 10 degrees when
hUmidifiers, repairing ductwork
the house Is empty- or . the
·With leaks, cleaning and replac· occupants are sleeping If It can
Jng fllters, using kitchen and
remain at tbe lower level lor a
J)ath vents sparingly, lilsulat!ng ' period of at least eight hours. He
the -house and addlni another . suggested a clock thennostat as
layer of clothbig were the main ..a good Investment since the
suggestions which Clark had to
(Continued on page 8)

bt

CONStJMER COUNSELING SEI!I8iON - Joltn ' ttpe oa how to cut · hea&amp;lng bOis
a COI18Uinel'
'OO"=e""g ~on lor llelllor cllbeDB Tuellday .

aark, IIUII'kelllis reprea ••ttve, ud JGim Koebel,
Melp • GaiDa llllllllller, Columbus Ga of Ohio, gave

I•

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'

�•

Thu,rsday, January 13, 19.83

Commentary
. ·'

The Daily Sentinel

How miserable are· we?

Reagan: his own
writer, editor

William F. Buckley Jr.

Ronald Reagan gave us high'
defense expenditures. But tbe
responslbUity Is clearly hiis to lace
the country and to ask whether:we
do reaDy Intend to economize at~
expense of ·a mUitary judged to
have been dilapidated by the end of
Mr. darter's term of office.
Two things have laid w;1ste
economic projections of Mr. Reagan. Olll' his fault, tbe other Isn't.
Unemployment has risen by about
four points, and eVery percentage
point of unemployment represents
$25 billion ln 1 cost to the govenrtnent, a figure arrived at. 'by
adding lost tax revenue to Increased welfare expenditure.
Laying tbe blame lor thai
Increase on the shoulders of Ronald
Reagan Is pot easy to do. If the
cause of unemployment ws high
Interest rates, we need. only note
that when he was Inaugurated,
Interest was at 21 percent, now It Is
at13 percent. So we are to blame for

Is

what? Tax relief? But lax rellells
by almost every economic schoolo!
thought held to be lbe proper thing
In limes of recession.
For what Is Mr. Reagan Wmsel!
to blame? For permitting the
ccuntry to assume that the great
tax bill ol1981 solved, of came close
to solving, the great problem. That
problem Is runaway government
spending and prohibitive taxation.
Mr. Reagan's two grave mistakes
were first to encourage the notion
that the so-called safety net meant
tmmunlty lor all entitlement pro.
grams. It was obvious weD before
Mr. Stockman adopted The Atlantic .Monthly as his ccl)tessor that
Y.OU cannot reduce federal spending
from 23 percent of GNP to 19
percent oi .GNP by attacking food
stamps, and the half&lt;lozen other
little programs that account lor
only 30 percent of federal spending.
Mr. Reagan's second mistake
was In falling to get to the root of the
tax problem, which Is, V€JY simply,

high marginal rates of taxatiOn.
Kemp-Roth envisioned a reduction, .
over three ye;ll's, to 37.5 percent top
tax rate. Alter three , years, Mr.
Reagan~s top tax rate Will continue
at 50 percent. The reason these
ligures are important Is that the
· country contln~es to suffer fr9m
massive neglect
savings . and
investment. And the redirection of
sleeping capital is w~t Is needed to
bring on the · rejuvenation Mr.
. Reagan proclaimed. It Is by no
means possible to say that. had he ·
ccnfronted Congress with a suitable program, Congress would have
granted It to him.
So how do we make the final
adjudication? Why not use a
Democratic measurement of the
Misery Index? Remember? You
add the unemployment figure to the
lnfiat!on figure . Under Mr. Carter,
the Misery Index . stood at 19.8.
Under Mr.- Reagan, at this mo.
ment, when the stetch of failure
hangs over us, It Is 15.8.

or

BOB MAISON
6-1, Jr. F -·

CLIFF GRIFFITH
li-11, Jr. F

. TIM PROBERT
~.Jr.o

Meigs faces Logan Friday
By KEITH WISECUP
The Melgg- Marauders will at·
tempt to have their say In the
Southeastern OWo Athletic League
title race Friday at Hilltop Gym
against . the third place Logan
Chieftains.
The Marauders, fresh off their
season's lnlttal win (49-44 over
Vinton County). dropped a 4942
verdict to tbe Chiefs In the SEOAL
opener lastmonth.
Logan has since established itself
as a bona !Ide contender with a 4-3
league slate, good for a tie with
Waverly lor third. Coach Kirk
Hardman's crew Is 5-7 overall.
Meigs ts 1-9 overaD and~ 1n league
action.
Senior forwarcts Jim Gill and Jeff
Frasure combined for 41 points In

last week's Logan upset of Gallipolis, 62·55. A hot·shootlng guard Jeff
Morgan cculd make things tough
on the Marauders. Morgan did not
play In tbe two schools first
meeting.
Meigs wlli counter with two fine
guards In Nick Riggs IUid Rick
Edwards. Both -average In double
digits as the leading Marauder
scorers.
Rick Chancey. a senior getting
stronger each · week, and leading
rebounder G~ Taylor wUl start at
forwards with defense · minde!l BW
HolC&lt;lmb running the pivot.
In wrestling action, the strong
Meigs_ ma.t men pair up with
GautpoliS and South Point at Larry .
Morrison Gymnasium Saturday at

-5 p.m.
MEIGS CAGE SOORING
IVAIWI'Y)
PLAYER
G FG FT 1P AVO.
Nick RJggs
10 40 29 100 10.9
Rick Edwards
10 40 26 106 10.6
Rick Olancey
10 l'; 9 19 7.9
Greg Taylor
JO. 23 19 611 6.~
BUI.Holoomb
10 10 9 29 2.9
Jay Evans
10 12 4 211 2.8
Scott Plckens
10 11 I 23 2.3
Mike Kennedy
94191.0
George Hobson
8 0 4 4 0.5
Dan Thomas
20110.5
TQI'i\11!
10 171 103 45S tll.3
(RESERVE\!)
PLAYER
G FG FT 1P AVG.
MIJre Cllancey
10 61 15 137 13.7
Rick Wloe
10 46 22 114 11.4
Scott Gheen
9 21 44 16 5.1
Dan Thomas
10 -11 13 J5 3.5
Ja ck Welker
10 13 3 29 2.9
Dave Fisher
10 10 3 23 2.3
Nick Bush
1048161.6
Bob Foster
91020.2
Trey Cassell
70000.0
TOT.' Wl
10 117 ill 40! 4U

Aparicio (252). Hoyt Wilhelm (243).
of
election
with(242).
269. Then
came
Luis
and Gil
Hodges
Don
Drysdale
(237). It was Hodges' last year of

OU Bobcats edge Kent State
the pillar of U.S. strategic opera·
informed of the plan, and they have
tlons in the Persian Gull area.
been sworn to secrecy. The intent it
Here's what the Jordanian force
to keep the project hush-hush and to
would be used for: ·
finance It secretly.
- Malntalnlng Jordan's own
The reason for all the secrecy Is
··
stabutty:.
An elite military unit
not to suppress the congressional
against both Internal
would
guard
debate, which iS liegtnntng to
threats to Hussein's regime simmer below the surface. Rather.
It Is Intended to ·prevent a storm of · attempted coups or assassinations
- ' and external threats from such
protest In Jordan. WhUe King
hostile. neighhors as Syria.
Hussein reportedly favors the
- Emergencies In friendly Per·
project, it is doubtful that the
sian Gulf states: 'fh4; is the main
Palestinian majority In Jordan
purpose for creating the Jordanian
would welcome such close, active
RDF.
It could be dispatched
cooperation with the United States.
quickly lo put down Insurrections
· Nevertheless, Insiders told my
against regimes In Saudi Arabia,
associate Lucette Lagnado that the
Oman. Kuwait, Bahrain and the
Pentagon Is convinced Hussein can
United Arab Emirates.
be a key U.S. aDy in the middle
- Possible use In lnter·Arab
East. Some of those who are
wars: The Pentagon apparently
pushlng the plan even see Jordan as

sees the Jordanian RDF as a
potential surrogate force to promote U.S. interests In the area,
without need for Amertcan troops.
-The use of friendly Arab troops
would be Infinitely more palatable
to Saudi Arabia, which has expressed displeasure over the JlOSS!btllty o! calling In American forces,
even in a direct emergency.
Needless to say, the Pentagon's
secret plan has already ra~
concern, especially among senaIDrs who believe Israel, not Jordan,
is better equipped to protect
Amertcan interests In the Middle
East. They fear It will damage our
relations with our tn9St dependable
ally ; the Israelis would understan·
dably be ·concerned that a crack
Jordanian mllltaiy force could be
used against them .

A setting....,_s_t_a_r________________Low_._el_l_W_in_ge_tt
ment's s.crutlny from bootlegging
In the '20s to bedrooms of tbe '80s.
If the measure had successfully
passed during the 97th Congress, Its
results would have been far
reachlng and dangerous. The theory that life begins at conception
~auld have made abortion a capital
offense. It djd nothing more than
protect the fetus from the moment
of conception until birth. Then they
were on their pwn! It made no .
provision for the ntlll1ons of unwanted Infants that were thrusi on
an unwilling world. It would have
made it a crime to practice or teach
birth control or In any way to retard
tbe booming population explosion
whlch would have resulted. In
short, It was a gigantic hoax almost
forced on the American peeple for
the political or personal glorification of a few light wing extremists
and television preachers . ., o doubt
they will try again In the 98th
Congress.
.
While Jesse Helms' prestige may
· be fading with hiS peers and the
public, he stlD remains a· potent

power In' Republican politics. So
potent, In fact, that President
Reagan has not had tbe political
fortitude Io publicly crttlctze him
for almost putting the administration's "user lee" bill on the skids.
The reason Is simple. Helms Is a
111ember of .Ome of the Senate's
most Important committees and iS
chatnnan of the powerful Senate
Agriculture Committee. As chair·
man of this committee, Helms iS In
posltloil to keep a tight rein on
legislation affecting the natlon's
farmers and the farm voting bloc.
So, If President Reagan is Indeed
c0 nstder1ng ·running lor a second
term, Helms' help In tbe Senate Is
Important to him as he has already
lost the backing of the consirvative
New Right, the Moral Majortty and

kindred souls.
New Right activist apd direct·
mall specialist Richard Vlguerte
says, "You can read into thiis that
conservatives are now golrtg their
own way; they are not going to look
at tbe White House lor leadership."
Just where "their own way" will

take them '· Is anyone's guess but
mine would be that they will have ·
their own candidate for president in
1984. What readier candidate could
they have than Senator Helnis who
has already had more national
exposure to tbe news media than
any other they might consider? My
guess would be 111at Helms would
jump at the chance. When 19
candidates for House seats from
North Carolina , personaDy endorsed by Helms were defeated
Nov. 2, he knew Ws star was setting
in the Tar Heel state.
Helms' current term In the
Senate expires In 1984 and he laces
likely oppOsition by the efficient
and popular Governor James Hunt,
Jr. Even at the height of his power
in the Senate, It iS unlikely that
Helms C&lt;luld have defeated Gover·
nor Hunt. With his polltlcal fortunes
ebbing, lie may decide that It is
better to retire to prlva te life as a
defeated presidential candldaie
than as a defeated Senator.
Either way be goes, It couldn't
happen to a more deserving man! ,

.

- ---

him a Ball State record 1, 749 for his

By Associated Press
It was a foul night In the
Mld·Amertcan Conference .
Consider:
Miami hacL 51. free throw attempts, making 36, as the Redsklfls
romped over host Western MlcWgan 84-60 Wednesday night, even .
though both teams had the same
number of field goals.
·
Eastern Michigan bombed Ball
State 89-75, again with both teams
· •getting equal numbers of field goals.
Kent State, whlch'has had trouble
getting to the free throw line In
several games - Including no
·attempts at Miami - outscored
OWo University by three field goals
but lost ss.s:l. The Golden Flashes
made good on9of14 free throw trtes
to~ of 33 for the Bobcats.
Elsewhere In the MAC, Bowling
Green knocked off Toledo 74-67 to
remain In a first-place tie with OWo
University at ~. and Northern
Ilinols beat Central Michigan n.&amp;'i.
John Marx went 14for15from the
foul line and scored 22 points lor
Miami. WestemMichigan'sCorde ll
Eley led all scorers with 30 points.
Eastern MlchigancoMectedon29
of 37free throw attempls as two Ball
State players fouled out, Including
high·scoring guard Ray McCallum,
as the Cardinals tried to light back
from a 4.z.22 halftime deficit. .
"That was the first time we've
beaten Ball State since I've been ,
here," said Eastern . Michigan
Coach Jim Boyce. "It was a real big
~ win because we were down and we
needed it. I think Marlow McClain
had as great game on Ray
McCallum.''
McCallum's six points stW gave

Transactions
HASUIA.LI.
AmerkiWII.A!..,.e

ry His ~ . dl&gt;slgnat!'d hlllr&gt;r. for tt..&gt; pur·
1»5e of ¢\'InK him his uncond!lk:Hlill re]{'BS(' as a pla,.ver. and namt'd him a SJPdal iMtructor ln thPir . developrnm! pn&gt;

gram.

F00111ALL
l.lftkeillbleN ~ Le~
ARrzONA WRANGLERS-Si!VIl'd C1ll·

vtn Murray, ruhning back,' to a mul!l-

;,t&gt;ar contract.
OIICAGO BLrrz-SifUlt'd .Joll'l Fto1reto.
kiCker.
OAKLAND INV ADER.·~--._o;;!gned &amp;bba
&amp;an. ruiVllnJo: bade
WI\SHINGTON
SlRJ!M
..Cral~ JamE'S. runnln~ bat'k, to a st'fil'S

or

OOI..J..,fXJE

EASTERN ILUNOIS-Named PJ Malde
!lead toocball roach . •
SUI'PERY RO(){-Naml'd Broce Boll·

Today In history

var usoclate alhk11c director.

CABLENTERTAINME~l

...

---

.~

~

seven misses with ~seconds left to
cap the Bearcats' comeback effort.
Dayton guard Kevin Conrad missed
as time ran out.
Bearcai Coach ·Ed Badger was
not ccmpletely satisfied with hiis
team's Intensity. b~t he did like the
play of walk.On Tony Wilson, a
guard attending Cincinnati on a
track scholarshlp as a hurdler.
Wilson came off tbe bench to score
six points and play a major part In
the defense.
"Tony WlisoQ
Is not a walk-on,
I
.
'be'sarun-on,"Badgersald. "I can't ·
say his play surprtsed me. I'm
pleased with him and I'm sure be'll
play aganst Memphis State
Saturday."
It was tbe ninth straight time
Dayton iost to Cincinnati, whlch
leads
in the rlvalry41-24.
In otber
games involving Ohio
colleges Wednesday night, Bowling
Green beat Toledo 74-67to remain in
aflrst-placetielntheMid-American
Conference with Ohio Unlv.ersity,
which knocked off Kent State.6!\.63.
~ bombed Western Michigan

In the OWo Confernce, BaldwinWallace got by Ohio Northern76-63,

SPECIAL OFFER!

55-53.

Witmlitgton tximbed Defiance
had26.
77-56 and Findlay whlpped Della nee
The key to Clnctnnatl's 5049 77~21n theHoosler·BuckeyeConfervictoryoverDaytonwaswhoscored ence. In tbe PreSident's Conference,
IUid who didn't.
'
It was Allegheny over John Carroll
Dayton's hlgh·scoring Roosevelt 63-54, and Washtngionand Jefferson
Chapman, averaging over~ points ' over Case Reserve 78-61.
per game, was held to 13.
In non-conference action, YoungThe wlnnln!&lt; polnts were scored stown State downed Oeveland State
bysenlorgoardKevln Gaffney, who 65-57, and Wright State defeated
hit his only.basketol the night after Indlana·Purdue-Indlanapolls 71&gt;65.

COPY PRI

The Meigs ·Marauder frestunan
cagers dropped their third straight
game to GaUlpolis, 43-37, at the
Larry Morrison Gymnasium ·
Wednesday.
Coach Tim Saunders' ninth grad·
ers, now 4-5, fell behind 164 aftertme
quarter but rallied to narrow the
margin to six by halftime.
Chris Shank led Meigs with 14
while Shawn Baker added 12. Other
marauder scorers were Lee Powell
with nine and Chris Kennedy with
two.
Sean Call PaCed GalUpolls with 12
while Todd Slone chipped In 10 for
Coach Gordon Baker's Blue Devils,
whlch are now IN.
· Meigs plays at home Wednesday
against Kyger Creek's ninth grade.
GallipoliS hosts Point Pleasant
Monday.
In a game played last Monday,
Meigs dropped a 5345 verdict to the
host Logan Chieftains.
Shank aga:Iri paced Meigs with 15
while Baker followed with 12. O!her
Meigs scorers were PaweD eight,
Parker Long four, and Rod Hafr1son; Scott PuUlns, and Brian
Houdashelt each had two.
Waid IJ8Ced Logan with 16. .

0

No
A lot of folks in town say it.
And many are enjoying the
benefits of

GALUPOLIS ( 43) - Stralt, 4-!.9; Slone,
Saunders, 2j.o4; Granl, 4~ Cal~.
4+12. ToOalo IN-43.
~10;

FULL SERVICE BANKING

MEIGS (3'1)-' Baker, W.l2; Powell. 9.(.9:
Shank, 7·9.14; Kennedy, 1.0.2. TotaJo nn.
Sco..byquarlenl:
Galllpo~IS
16 8 9 11)..43
Me~gs
4 14 9 10-17

rr:=========~~

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Marietta
66-58, 1
Musldngum
Denison edgedbeat
Oberlin
55-54, Otter1-~==::=======~-L!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
bein scraped by Wittenberg fi3.62,
Capital routed Kenyon 7349,Heldelberg whipped Mount Union 61-51,
and Ohio Wesleyan got by Wooster

MILWAUKEE BREWER.o;;..-WalvcG Lar·

four one-year contracts.

•

career. The5-foot-9senior needs one
more point to pass Northern llllnois'
Paul Dawkins for fourth place in
all-time MAC scoring and 100 more
to pass Northern IUtnois ' Allen
Ray horn and become tbe ccnference's all·tlme scoring leader. He's
averaging over~ a game.
. McLain led Eastern with 24
" points. Jon Mansliury h&lt;id 18forBall
State.
OWo U. Coach Danny Nee was
unhappy that his team didn't hit
more free throws, as tbe Bobcats
saw Kent State come back from a
14-point second·half deftctt to close
wlthln three. Ohio U. missed the
front half of three one-and-one free
tlq:ow tries In the last llh minutes . .
Guard Larry Robbins led the Kent
State ccmeback effort with 14 points
in a nln.,.minute stretch of tbe
second half.
Vic Alexander led a balanced Ohio
University scoring attack with 14 .
·points. Kent State was led by Greg
Cudworth with 16 points.
The Bowling Green • victory
marked the 50th time In 104
matchups that the Falcons had
l;leaten Toledo In their longstanding
rivalry.
David Jenkins scored 23 points to
lead Bowling Green, while Mitch
Adamek had 17forToledo.
Tim Dillon scored 25 points and
Ron Lindfors 22 for Northern
IUtnols. Central Michigan's Melvln
McLaugh!ln, the MAC's top scorer,

ellglbWtyintheBBWAAvote;After
a flv.,.year period, Hooges' name
will now go onto the Veterans
·Committee.
·
"I don't think any person on earth
now Is happier than 1 am ," said
Marlchal, who won 243 games and
posted a 2.89 earned run average in
16 major lera:gue seasons, most of
themwiththeSanFranc!scoGiants.
"When 1 was a kid tn school, I
dreamed of betng a baseball player,
but I never thought of the major
leagues. I loved to play haseball. I
wanted to play every day."
In 1958,at the age of19, he left his
native Domlnlcan Republic to pitch
1n the United States. Two years
later, he was in 'th.. majors with the
Giants, starting a career that would
produce six 2().victory seasons.
Robinsmi growing up In Little
Rock,Ark.,hadthesameblgleague
dream as Marichal. "II was the only
dream I ever had," he said .
Rnblnson set the standard for
defensive play at his position. He
holds major league records for third
basemen ln games played (2,870).
putouts (2,697). assists (6.~5)',
chances (8,002), double plays (618)

GAHS freshmen
defeat Marauders

51· free throws help Miami;

Pentagon secret .._p_l_a_n_____~_J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n

:· Mancuso's list
~ of brushoffs

NEW YORK (AP) - B_rooks
. Robinson has a ccnfesslon.
When the brllllant Baltimore
Orioles third haseman Is Inducted
alongg with Juan Marlchallnto the
Bas~ll Hall of Fame July 31, It
won t be the most . memorable
moment he ever has SJl€111 In
Cooperstown,.N.Y.
Robinson and Martchal were
named to the · HaD of F8.1lle
Wednesday by the Baseball Wrtters
Association of America, both easUy
passingtl¥?75percentvoterequlred
In the annual election.
Robinson. a peerless defensive
genius at third base for 23 seasons
with the Orioles, was named on 344
ofthe374ballotscast. He became the
14th.man In history to he elected in
his frrst year of ellgiblllty. ·
Marlchal, one of the premier
pitchers of hiS time, received .313
votes, well over the.281requlred. He
had fallen seven vo.t es short of
election last · .Year when sluggers
Hank Aaron and Frank Robinson
were named.
Slugger Harmon Killebrew,
whose573careerhomerunsareflfth
on the all· time list, feU 12 votes short

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

U y(lu will lift your head just a
111 Cuurt Strt"!.'l
little, you will sniff polltlcalcompulp,,mt•ru\', Ohiu
. slon. It Is deflnltely In the air to go
614-99:!-:!:1.)6
llE\'tlTEO TO TI-lE: INTEREST 01-' nn: MEIGS.MASO' AREA
after Ronald Reagan very hard.
Wben Walter Mondale declares his
raee •for president , which effron·
tery is now scheduled for mid·
February, he will hit Re~gan very
ROBERT L. WINGETT
hard. , In doing so,-.he iollows. of
course,
tbe popular fashion, which
Publisht·r
Is to assume that we live In a society
BOB HOEFLICH
I'AT WHITEHEAD
In which all that happens Is !be
r.t' IWI'BI Mll llll~ t·r
dolng of the president of the United
States. In the unlikely event that
DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
Mr. Mandate becomes the presiNr-..s Editor
dent, he might someday regret this
tendency.
A Mf.MBER nl Thto As.~t~ · i~tlt'lt Prt·s~. Inla nd Daih l'rr~ ~ ,\ ~s1wiu tiuo and lhl'
But for the tlme being, Blame
Amt'rii':IJl NI'-.. Sp.tpt&lt; r Publi.,.ho·r!i Anudstiull.
.
Reagan Is the signaL The lead
, LEITERS OF Ofl:IN ION llrt' ¥ol•lr11ml"d . Thry shoukl tw le!S.~ than 300 ""rds lmtM, . All
ed!tortal in the Sunday edition of
lt•ll rr~ an• subjl'rl tn rdilin~ and must bt- s ii(Dt'd with namr, addrrss and lrlt'phmtt'
The New York Times, imce labeled,
numllt' r . N it u.nsil(nt'd lrttr n; ...-ill bt- publislwd . l.t-ttt'n: ~huuld b.&gt; in W"od lasle. ~ddre~si~
issues. 11111 Jl('r:-t~.maiHi ~ . .
properly, the Big Bertha of Eastern
Seaboard Liberalism, gives us not
only the tune, but the full orchestration: "The stench of failure hangs
over Ronald Reagan's White ·
House." Missing only Is an excla·
mali on point. There follows a list of
most of the things that are wrong In
this world_Deaths from cancer are
the only thing Mr. Reagan Is not
held responsible for .
Now, most of the talk has to do ·
White House aides like to say that when it comes to speeches, President
with
the economy. And indeed It Is
' Reagan' is his own writer. He may be that -although he has a staff of
not
too
early to ask: Whose faulfls
speechwriters - but he is also his own editor.
.
It?
When Reagan made a hastily arranged trip to Louisiana to view flood
If we want to talk defense, then It
damage on his way borne to Washington from a California vacatlon after
Is half·correct to say \Us the fault of
the New Year's holiday, his staff prepared a brief radio s~h for him to
Ronald Reagan, because Indeed he
give to the local citizens. ·
came to power after four years that
Reagan set Ws hand to a typewritten text and smoothed out some of the
can be likened to the years of
more awkward language. Reagan's scratchy handwriting cculd be seen
Defense Secretary Louis Johnson
where he crossed out and rewrote parts of every paragraph of the speech.
in the sleepiest days of the
"I've come here today to tell the people of Louisiana that you've not been
Eisenhower
presidency. Reagan
struggling alone," was changed by the president to read: "I welcome this .
said
he
needed
to rearm .
. opportunity to tell you- the people of Louisiana, you are· not alone." ·
Now !be money voted for rear"Your homes and life's possessions may have been washed away, but
mament Is of ccurse voted by
your grit and mettle have not," became "I !mow many here have lost thell:
Congress, and Indeed money meahomes and life's possessions."
sures
must, specifically, ortglnate
A speechwriter prepared the text this way:
in
the
House of Representatives.
"The entire nation wants to come to your aid. And as in past national
Which
Is
run by Democrals. So that
(natural) disasters, the federal government will provide finn and
it
Is
a
little
bit glib to say that
. immediate support ... I have told Gov. Treen that I am ready to review hiS
request that portions of Louisiana be declared a .disaster area. I Intend to
speed the process.a long when I return toWashington, but I can assure you
now that the federal government will provide every bit Of assistance
possible, and without delay ."
After the president got through with it, it came out this way:
WASHINGTON - There has
"As in past nat. disasters, the entire nation wants to come to your aid ... I
been much agitated whispering on
. !mow Gov. Treen is framing a request that portions of Lousiana be
Capitol Hill about a secret Pen.: declared a disaster area. I !)ave told Gov. Treen that I approve that
tagon plan to establish a rapid
·:: request. The federal government will provide ·very bit of assistance
deployment force In Jordan. The
· possible, a nd without delay. "
.
.
secrecy of the project 'has pr.,.
',
And, when \t caTtle to shaving iuSt a few words to make a smoother text,
vented open discussion of an
Reagan !mew what he was doing:
extremely controversial Issue.
1
"I'm told that .. ." became 'I !mow."
Basically, the secret plan calls
·• ,, ; "The people of Louisiana should !mow that the rest of Amertca is
lor
perhaps two brigades of elite
\ · standing with them," became "Please know the rest ·Of America is
Jordanian troops, who would serve
: standing with you."
'
as modern minutemen ready to
respond Immediately to any crisiS
Iil the Persian Gulf area. This
"mint-Rapid Deployment Force,"
as It has already been nicknamed In
the Pentagon, would be trained and
equipped by the U.S. military.
The details are considered so
sensitive poUtlcaDy that only top
When you hear the words "I'm sorry, Mr. Jones is in a meeting right
congressional leaders have been
now:: you mi ght tend to accept it as an unimaginative brushoff and vow
.
someday to return the favor.
Joseph Mancuso, an entrepreneur whose latest bus iness is helping
. others get into business, has endured his share of insincertty, as has any
'"-. · other person who pleads for startup money and customers.
In the vernacular of us old pigeon
'
Operating from a combined apartment-office complex in lower
f&lt;U~ciers, Senator Jesse Helms has
Manhattan, Mimcuso runs the Center for En!repreneurial Management, .
fouled hiS own nest. Wben · the
an organization that provides tapes and books and runs seminars for
headstrong Republican from North
would·be entrepreneurs.
Carolina
kept the Senate In session
The center also offers the Entrepreneurtal Manager's Newsletter, a
until
two
days' before Chrtstmas
"source of useful information" but also an outlet for the philosophical
with
his
gas
tax filibuster, fellow
tendencies of Mancuso, a Harvard Business School product and author of
Senators were In the mood to shove
many business books.
him light out of the senatortal coop.
What If you manage to walt in Mr. Jones' office until his conference is
Helms, about wbom I have
over? That is , suppose you sit in the reception room and outwait him,
,
written
before, brags he was not
forcing him to submit to your visit? ?
elected
by the home folks to
Quite likely he will endure you, lfoniytogetridofyou. But thereisagood
In a popularity contest
participate
chance, says Mancuso, that as you leave he will smile, shake your hand
In
the
Senate.
He needn't worry.
and and inform you "so glad you dropped ln. "
he
had offended his
Even
before'
And many a business can go broke listening to another refrain, often
peers
by.
deprtving them .
Senatortal
conveyed In a tone of amazement by a customer surprtsed by your visit.; :1·
of their pre-Chrtstmas cheer be
just don't understand it, " the customer says, "the cbeck must have gotten
was not exactly the most popular
lost in tbe mail." Only one other thtngmatches it: " I never got your bill."
man In America. Wl!h the excepAmong business acquaintances who have more relaxed relationships,
tion of the New Right and the Moral
the words " we'll just have one more drink" qualify for Mancuso's liSt of the
he had little following
Majority,
world's biggest lies. He laments that "It's our pleasure to serve you" too
even
In
his
own state which turned
often iS-found only: in those places where-you're having just on~ more drink.
down
!feims
backed candidates In
He thinks that "your money cheerfully refunded" often lacks sincertty,
the
Nov.
·2
electon.
Because these
since he !mclws of few entrepreneurs or other business people who ever
groups had the professed approval
part with a nickel cbeertully. Many might do so for ethical reasons, of
of President Reagan, they exerted
course. but m ost knoW that money is ~11ade by taking rather than giving.
Influence on the 97th Congress far
What do you think of the person who says "no problem?" Or theonewho
beyond their' numbers In the rank
tells you the shipment will be in your office tomorrow. Or the seller who
and
file of Amertcan politics. they
day after day-says "we're expecting that shipment this afternoon?"
were riding Wgh, wide and handAll qualify for Mancuso's list. All are as believable, he contends, as the
some lor a while and sought
dentist's attempt to .&lt;;onsole you with "this won't hurt a bit." No more
passage of legislation that would
belieVable, he says, than lf the' words came from the Internal· Revenue
have forced their narrow views on
Service.
abortion, school prayer and school
busing on the rest of the nation.
Helms' star was falling even before
be tried to tie the Senate tn !mots
over the nickel a gallon gasoline
Today Is Thursday, J ail. 13, the 13th day o!Uil3. There are 352 days left In
lax.
I will admit to betrtg prejudiced
the year.
against Helms and his Ilk. It
Today's highlight In history:
probably steitls from my early
On Jan.13, 1733, James Oglethorpe and 130Engllsh colonists arrived at
years
.wben slmllar groups had
Charleston, S.C., en route to settling what Is now the state of Georgia.
successlully
foisted prohibition ori
. On this date:
the Amertcan people. For a decade
. In 1419, the British captured the French city of Rauen.
this country was treated to the most'
In 1813 tbe Brtllsh blockaded the Chesapeake and Delaware bays during
Indiscriminate law brealdng this
the War ~11812:
·
•
country had ever experienced untll
In 1915, an earthquake In central Italy klliect 30,00) people.
tbe present marijuana and cocaine
In 1943, President Franklin Roosevelt began a wartline conference with.
age. It' Is Impossible for this or any
British Pr1me Minister Winston Churchlllln Casablanca, Morocco.
other country to legislate morality.
Ten years agm Presidential envoy Heruy Kissinger lef:t Pari~ to report
But Heln1s and his coborts came
to President · Richard NIXon on six days ,of negotiationS with North
dangerously
close to trying OJtce
Vietnam's Le Due Tho.
,
again.
The
Rlght
to Life Btn would
Five yeai'S ago: Fonner VIce President Hubert Humphrey died In
have merely clianaed tbe governwaverly, Mlnne., at !be age of 66.

The Daily 'Senlinei-Page· 3

Robinson, Marichal selected
to baseballs Hall ·of Fame ·

Meet the Eastent

Page-2- The Daily Sentinel
· Po~eroy-Middle,,rt, Ohio ·
Thursday, January 13, 1983

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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PAT HILL FORD, .INC.
PH. 992-2196

�Page-4-The- Dai

S~ntinel

1983

Thursday, Jan

Eagles, Southwestern, Hannan Trace host tilts

Cavaliers drop ~
Wolfpack, 88-80

Your .
Station
For
High School
Basketball
And Ohio
University
Basketball.
The Sports Leader

·
'
Trace
Friday com1ng
Coach Brucestrong
WUtlnued entltuslasm as they travel
tn
FoiWard Roger
Wells has been
lng 54 per outing,·
,. Pirates·
011
The defending Southern Valley
Southwestern for a bout wlth Coach
sparking tlte SW attack,. last week
Charts show that the Eagl~ have ~~~
a lopsided
• .
33
Athletic Conference champion
Lloyd Myers' Highlanders.
hitting for 23 markers·. He Is
canned 175 of 524· field goal · trlum' h
Hallilan W 77Va
Southern Tornadoes and cross
Saturday Soutltern's purple and
complemented by consistent
attemptsfor33peroent. Theyhal(e ~=following'
count county counterpart Eastern
gold will return oome for a bout
double-flgtire scortng from center ·collected a total of
rebounds for
Eastern last Frida •
·
Eagles return tn conference play
with non-league Symmes Valley.
Paul McNeal and foiWard Randy ' a 28 rebound per game mark.
Matt Kemper ~ ·
this Friday evening as Southern
Southern Is currently 8-1 on the
Layton.
In tlte absence of Bissell, Jim · bask Is In botlt
~ts He had
season and 4.{) Inside loop play.
·Meanwhile, the determined
Newell led the Eagles Into battle :
lntse ·
t ~"wu~ats 8lld
travels to Southwestern, and Eastern defends Its home court against
Offensively, the Tornadoes field
Eastern Eaglesareserlouslyeylng
Tuesday night against Miller with
~~~ les Senl ~
24
Kyger Creek. North Gallla goes_to
another fast-breaking offensive
a victOI'J' for Friday night, seeking 17 points.
Ma also had ag · ht a t
8
~annan Trace In the third league
machtneaslnpastyears,currently
tomaketheBobcatsofCoachKeitlt
The Bobcats, enjoying one of - ~ c~~:
contest.
complllng 661 points for a 73.4 point
Carter their Initial prey of tlte
their best seasons ever, have been
added l t nine
lnts In tlte
Saturday evening, Southern reclip per game. Defensively, the · · 1982-83 season. EHS Is .currently . led by a balan,ced attackwltltevery Wildcat ;!me Also~ttlng double
0-11. Kyger Creek Is currently 10-2.
team member providing support.
figures
th West VIrginians
turns home for a non-league
Tornadoes have given up510 points
· matchup with Symmes Valley,
for a 57.7 average.
Eastern continually has been
Oftenslvel¥, senior guard Keith were ~~c Pent~k with
8lld
hoping to protect a home winning
Zane Beegle paces the Tornado
coming close to a win all season,
Clark who runs tlte KC offense 8lld
Antho Blackburn had 15
streak that spans a four:year
offense with 23 points per game. His
but its main opponent_this season usually provides tlte baskets on the
Coac~ Mike Jenkins' 11Wlldcats
period. Wahama a lso plays at · talented counterpart Rod Littlehas been that of injuries. Last fast-break, senior forward Jeff
ed Into Frida 's contest with a
North Gallta.
field has maintained a torrid pace
weekend. the Eagles lost tlte!r only Moles, and juniors, J.D. St;ad~
~overall ~ 8lld • slate
3
returning letterman and leading andBren(Lovehavebeentltemost
lnst
.
ts 1In.~
lr
A!ter a holtday loss to 'the
of his own, sinking 17.4 points per
1
·
·
·
rod
u
aga
ealfUI!
opponen
.
u•e
T!imble Tomcats, the So ut hern
outing.
.
scorer, Roger Bissell, to a serious P uc ve.
Ia t
tlng tlte Wildcats were
5
011
Tornadoes of Coach Carl Wolte
Southwestern, always a tough
back Injury. Bissell hail .been
Moles had 28 points against the
the
have been on a mid-season ramroad trip for the Tornadoes, has
shooting at a hot 15 point clip W~ma White .Falcons In Tues.
~~dly Sou~~~~
page that Includes a string of four
had Its problems tltis season, but
besides anchoring the EHS days 7049 win whUe Bradbury IE;&lt;'
Bru~ld Jed the Wildcats ~tlt
victories.
..
nearly came untracked for a win
defense.
the KC offense In last Saturdays
. while Mike "'~·iter had 15
12·
· Last week the Tornados claimed
last week at Kyger Creek. A!ter
According tn statistics Eastern 59-52 loss at New Bostnn with 20
poll\ts
·--Hannan Trace (90-46) and Mlller
le~dlng the Initial round 17-13, and
has been outscored by . a narrow points.
.
n~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiifjjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
(61-52) as their victims. The free trailing by just four after three
maiglnof5W-475sofarthtsseason.
Clark and Love provided the big
12 FOOT
wheeling Whirlwinds are looking to
rounds, the Highlanders faltered t9 . The hustlihg Eagles have averaged scoring witlt 18 and 16 points
this Friday's contest with eon·
a 74-58 loss.
47.7 points per game, whlle allow- . respectively In_ last Friday's win
over Southwestern.
North GaWa will seek its !oW'th
victory of tlte season at Hannan

By ~QIT WOLFE

.

posted

'78-53w!Ji

m

QV:C

0:

:t

atnst

By A8sociated Press
Nortlt Carolina State Coach Jim
Valvano admitted it. Ralph Sampson was "absolutely awesome."But
there was another matter to be
considered.
With a healthy Dereck Whittenburg, the Wolfpack had romped to a
· "16-polnt lead, ~34. over VIrginia in
the first halt. Witltout Whittenburg .
In the second half, 19th-ranked N.C.
Staie lost an 88-!ll decision to the
&amp; und-ranked Cavaliers Wednesa •ntght.
"Losing Whittenburg the way he
was performing Is akin to losing
Ralph," Valvano said. "What can r
say?"
Whittenburg scored all 27 of his
·points in the first halt - Including
seven 3-polnters from outside the
Atlantic Coast Conference's 19-foot
bonus circle. But early In the second
half, State's m0$t prolific scorer
broke. his right foot.
The Hoot-4 Sampson scored 19 of
his 33 points ln. the second halt and
grabbed 21 rebounds as' Virginia
averted disaster. VtrglnlaoutScored
N.C. State 14-4 to close out the half
trailing 5448. And, with Sa,mpson
controlling play, the Cavaliers
rallied twice in ' the second half to
win. .
'
"They had us back on our heels In
the first halt, attacking on ooth
offense and · defense," V!rg!nla
Coach Teriy Holland said.
Thurl Bailey added a career-high
25 polntsfortheWolfpack, 7-3and1·1
in the ACC, whUe Rick Carlisle had
14 lor VIrginia, 12-1 and 3-0 in
conference.
·I n the Top Twenty's only upset,
Michigan downed No. 17 Minnesota
63-58. In other games involving
ranked teams, No. 9 ·Louisville
defeatea· .Quke · 91-76, . 11th-ranked
North Carolina , edged Maryland
72-71,14th-rated Missouri clobbered
Northern Iowa 91-62, No. 15 Villan·
. ova defeated Pitt 66-48 and 16th·
ranked Houston beat Texas Chris·
tian 54-51.

goal attempts for 71.4 percent.
Henderson led Duke with 19 points.
SecondTen
:
Michigan recovered from a 43-34
deficit in the second half by
outscoring Minnesota 14-4- getting
slx points from Butch Wade - to
take a 48-47 lead with 7: 261eft In the
Big Ten showdown. Leslie Rockymore paced Michigan with 15 points,
while Randy Breuer . had 20 for
Minnesota , which lost fQr only the
second time. In 12 games.
Jim Braddock hit a three-point
field goat with 10 seconds left to boost
North Carolina over MaJY.Iand fu an
Atlantic Coast Conference game.
The Tar Heels,ll-3, won their eighth
game In a row. Michael Jordan
blocked an attempted layup by
Chuck Driesell, Coach Lefty Drlesell's son, to preserve the victory at
the buzzer. Jordan led Nortlt
Carolina with 17. points, and Ben
Coleman had 20 for Maryland.
Greg Cavener scored a careerhigh 22 points to pace Missouri to an
easy victory over Northern Illinois.
Missouri outscored the Panthers
10-2 In the first three minutes of the
second half to lead 53·28. Missouri,
11-2, also got 15 points from Jon
Sundvold.
·
John Pinone scored 19 points, and
9·2 Villanova led by as many as 20
points to beat P ittsburgh in a Big
East Cooference game. Villanova
outscored Pitt 12-2 totakea 16·61ead
early in the game, and t he rout was
on. Pitt's Clyde Va~ghan, the
leading scorer In the conference,
was held to only 12 points.
Michael Young scored 19 points,
and Akeem Ot~juwon and Reed
Gettys each hit'a palroffreethrows
in the final :n seconds to lift Houston
'over Texas Christian. The victory,
which gave Houston a 12-2 record,
was the first for the Cougars at Fort
Worth, Texas, in five years. Darrell
Browder lei) Ttu with 18 points. ·
Unr;mked Teams ·
John Paxson S!:Ored 16 of his 20
points tti the second half as Notre
Top
Dame buried Csnisius· 78-47. ForMilt Wagner scored.21 points, and
ward Bill Varner added 19 points for
the Cardinals of Lou isvllle thwarted , the II'is)J, 7-5, while Ray Hall had 1.3
a Duke rally to post their 12thvictory· points for the Golden Griffins. .
In 14 games. Duke cut the Louisville
Alfrederick Hughes scored 27
lead to nine points, 73-64, on three
points, and Loyola-Chlcago upbuckets by David Henderson. But
ended'DePaul 82·76. Hughes scored
two free throws and a .basket by 19 of his points in the second hail to
freshman Bllly Thompson put
hand DePaul its second straight
Louisvllle ahead by 13. 7(-64, with
loss. It was the first time in 179
4:44 to play.
games that DePaul had lost two In a
row. The Blue Demolls." now 8-5,
Lancaster Gordon added 16polnts were led by Kenny Patterson wtth22
lor Loulsvtlle, which hlt40of56field
points.

otl

Southeastern Ohio
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. 1982-83 RIO GRANDE COLLEGE REDWOMEN - Members of the 1982-83 Rio Grande College
women's basketball team Include (froDI row, from

left): Sue Camp ol Swanton, Ohio; Kaihy Dettllton ol
Beaver; Elaine Smith of Racine; Molly Feesier of
Columbus; Robin Hagen of South Welx4er; and Tina

Rio to host camp
- for area ru ners
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
.College and Community College
will host a cross-country camp for
runnel'S and coaches next summer.
According to Kevin Purcell, head
track coach, the camp will he held
Aug. 14-19 on the Rto Grande
' • College and · Community College ·
campus. He said the camp will
Include dally lectures on topics
such as training, racing, flexlblllty,
and nutrition. Video-tape analysts
of running technique will also be ··.
provided.
Cost for the camp Is $00. The fee
Includes cost for room and board,
physiolog ica l testing, a nd
handouts.
For additional information, con·
tact the Rio Grande athletic office
at (614) 245-5353, extension 293.

Clark of ciarksvlne, Ohio. Second row, ~ .coach
Jamie Ianni; e•tdshml COBCh Don Schul*e; Beth
Sammons of Lucasville; ,Jody Beba of Stewart; Kim
Curry ol Orient; Lori Bodnar of Blaine, Ohio; Kim
Conley of Jackson, and asslslaol coach Kim Adkins.

MAIL SUIISCBIPJ'IONS
Imide Ohio
13 Weeks ........................ ..........$14.01

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13, 1983

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County area

Thunday, January 13, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

organiza~ion

members .gather for meetings
,.

'

TOPS 1383

Meigs County United Methocl~t Ann Story, Mildred ·Thle, Nina
Pierce, Thelma Dill, ,and Betty
Lynn Slater wlll go to the P ortS·
Church Cooperative Palish held a! Roblnsc;&gt;n, Thelma Henderson, DoChevalier were .appointed to the
mouth dl,strlcl meeting In Aprtl,
Pomeroy Church.
rothy,Smlth, F1orence Henderson,
auditing committee.
. ·
Ne,q meeting will be held at the
The charter was draped in
Installed by Fay Sat~er were Edith Talbott, Vernon Nease,
Mrs. Sauer, wboheadslheParlsh
HeathchurchlriMiddleportonFeb.
0 I
memory of Ada Root, long-tlme
Kermit Wa lton, Chairma n; Thelma
Dorothy Calloway, Rev. Robinson,
committee, talked on her trip to the
14.
Kermit Walton had the
TOPS 1383 members enjoyed a
member who would have been 101
He nde r so n , v ice cha ir m a n;
a nd Meigs Col!llty seniorclttzens.
· North Central jurtsdlctlonal trainmeditation which opened the
holiday dinner party recently at the
Mildred Ihle, secretary; Dorothy
Winter evangelism convoca tion
lng event In Wisconsin where the
meeting.
home of Mrs. Clyde Henderson,
on J an. 15, whe n Evangeline
Smith, assistant secretary; and in Marton, Jan. :ll to Feb. 2, was
theme was "Governmental PoUcy
leader, Cheshire.· .
.
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Sla r, met Thursday nighI at
Florence Smith, treasurer.
a nnouJieed _by James Clark who and How It Affects Church Work:"
.1'
.
Diet dishes were brought by the
Middleport Ma_sonlc Temple.
Rev. Robert Robinson, social talked. on education emphasizing She will go to theN aUey Methodist
A surprise party honoring Nellie- members with Mamie Stephenson
Kathryn Mitc hell , worthy ma- conce 111s chairman, reported that that the Bible should betheprtmary
Church near Portsmouth on Feb. 4
Haggy, " Miss Christmas Time" of
giving the prayer precedtng the
he . had been to _Morgan County to . tool ot educational programs&gt;
to explain the work of the local · 1982 was held at the recent meeting
dinner. There was a gift exchange
tron, and J aflles Buc hanan, worthy
patron, presided a t the meeting with
give lnforma tion on starting a food
-Floyd DlUlnger reJl!l~ for the
Cooperative Parish.
of Rutland TOPS OH 1466 held at. . a nd tile contests .including the one
Emma Kay Clatworthy being
co-op such as opera tes here. He communications committee and
It was noted that ' the Rev.
Rutland.
.for " Miss Snowfla~" were won by
Installed . as treasurer by Naomi
noted that the Christmas order of the Rev Mr. Thomas announced
Florence 'Smith Is cOndUcting a
Mrs. Haggy lost a total of 87
Janet Thomas who was presented
King, past ma tron . Euvetta Bechtle
$3,100 was the la rgest ever 'tor the
plans for the "Seven Nfghts of
lecture on the book of &lt;liscipllne at
pounds. Members gave gifts to her
gifts. •
·
of the c heer committee reported
co-op. The minister a lso spoke on Wibjess" .to be held for a Uchurches · the Apple Grove Churcll every
In recognition of her wieght Joss.
Attending we re Catherine Little,
the need for establishing a clothing
in the county, April17 to23. He also
second TUesday of the month. A
Best loser of the week was Judy
Freda Davis, Edith Gardener,
that gilts have been mailed or
delivered and visits made with
bank .
noted that the annual pulpit ~ report on youth work was given by
Eblin, with Gloria Oller as the
J anet Thomas , Betty Lemley,
several of the shutin members.
·To recognize the workers In the exchange In the county will "lake . the Rev. f14ark Flynn who noted that
runner-up: Mrs. Eblin was given a
Theresa Prtce, Belva Schuler,
RePorted Ill were Dor is Karshner,
progr11 m, Rev. Richard Thomas
place onAprtl24.
, thenex!Biblequlzwllltakeplaceon
ribbon and a dollar and members
Mamie Stephenson, Shati . Black-.
Vernon Nease reported on actlvi- . Jan. 1l at ~_.PomeroY Unlt.Eid
sang In her honor. Rules of a new
well, Nancy Whltteknd, and BarGrant Ear ·and E ye Hospital, 323 · gave certificates to Velma Rue,
East Town St., Columbus; Beth
Pa uline Roush, Ruby Burke, Gay . ties of the Methodlt Men. VIvian' Methodist Church. Itwasnotedthat
contest were given.
· bara Colmer.
Cowan , at home, Roule 1, Mt. Alto, r---'----_;____:__--:_________.._____;________,;._____,____~,____________;___~--

Evangeline 0 ES

Thursday, January 13, 1983 ·

County~s

Meigs

Stacy Renee Burroughs and her
paJreniiS, Thomas and Karen Bur·

roushs, · Rt. 1, Reedsville, near
Tuppers Plains, are the winners of

The Dally Sentinel's First Baby of '
1983 Contest.

A program on missions with
emphasis on the work of United
Methodist Women, its goal and
objectives, was presented by NI\Jl
Moore at the Monday night meeting
of the organlza tlon a t Heath Church,
Middleport.
Mrs. Moore noted that the group
changed from Women's Society of
Chr.lstian Service to United Methodist Women at the time the
Methodists and United Brethem
Churehes merged.
• The work of the UMW was
discussed along with the places
where funds are used. Mrs. Moore
said that money for missions means
helping people, and · several readers, J en Chesher, Grace French,
Beulah McComas, Clara Crtswell,
and Twtla Childs, talked of work in
Zlare of Africa, the Carrlhean,
Operation Garden, the Okalahoma
CltyFOOCIBank, thelocalfoodbank,
school funds and the children on free
lunches.

Mrs.MoorealsohadchargeolthE '
prayer and self-znial service.
Funds go for the deaconesses work,
pension funds, world peace and
justice. After prayer, members
presented their offerings.
Mrs. Chlds had a plano preludl&gt;
with· Euvetta Bechtle welcoming
the members with a poem, .:'l Am
the New Year." Eltzaheth Mourning, devotional leader, gave scripture from John, had a reading,
"How to Find Happiness Through
the YearS" and "God Worked a
Miracle'' and concluded with a New
Year's Day pra ye r.
During the business meeting it
was noted that lnstallatls:m of the
new officers will be held at a
mornlngworshlpservlce. Reported
ill were Mrs. Mildred Ziegler, Mi-s.
Emma Wayland, Emerson Jones,
Sandy Luckeydoo, Florence Horton, Gladys Moore, and Mrs.
Cia!WOrthy.
Mrs. Bechtle, Mrs. Lettie Yolillg,
Mrs. Jessie Houchins, and Mrs.
Fran c e s Bre win g ton were

As winners of the annual event, . Crown from the Royal Crown

~~.:,;nd ~egifq~renrov!tswllldedrerelve a

P
by Big
r o
Bend merchants, sponsors of the
contest.
Stacy Renee was born at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital
In Parkersburg, •w. Va. , at 10:35
a.m . on Jan. 2. She weighed seven
pounds, five ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
Burroughs also tu.ve a son, Ja~n,
7, a second grader at the Tuppers
Plains Elemenlary SchooL.
,
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas BurrotWhs, Sr., Tuppers
Plains, and Mr. and Mrs. John
Frazier, Parkersburg . Greatgrandmother Is Mrs. Frances
Frazier, also of Parkersburg.
Gl!ls to he presented the new
arrival and her parents Include: a
case of Gerher llaby food from
Marks~J.. a pasckage of Pampers
m uu•er's tore, Inc.; a,&lt;;aseol
baby milk from Vaughan's Cardinal; a bottle of champagl\e from
the Pomery Wine Store; a baby
balloon and cut flower arrangemen! from Francis Flortst; a $10
gtft certificate from Powell's Super
Valu; . a baby cup _from Clark's
Jewelry . Store; a $10 savings
account from 'Central Trust; a
three-piece !lieder set from K&amp;C

h I'd

'T1QPS l466

Heath UMW

Elher!eld's; a free . meal to the
parents from Crow's Steak House;

,WINNER - Stacy Renee BUJ'l'OUghs Is the · Contest. Sbe Is pictured with her parents 1111d brother,
winner of The Dally Sentinel's Ftrot Baby ofthe Year Jason, at lhelr home near Tuppers Plains.

a baby bunting from -Pomeroy
Landmark; two Royal ciown

PomeroyChurch of Nazarene classes hold;::ti;;;·Rev. and Mrs. Clyde Henderson at

Calendar
THURSDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
Band Boosters will m eet Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. In tfie band
room:
POMEROY - Revelators of
McArthur will be featured at
Hysell Run Holiness Church,
7:30 p.m. Thursday . Theron
Durhsm, pastor, Invites tl)e
public.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange ,
Thursday, 7:30p.m. a t the haiL

veterans; hostesses, Mrs. Robert Ashley, Mrs. Marta Foster,
Mrs . Lillian Henderson , -Mrs.
Lawrence Smith, Mrs. Gene
Yost.
ORANGE TOWNSHIP-Special meeting Orance Township
Trustees, 7 p.m. Friday at home
of clerk, Nina Robinson; bids on
truck to be opened.
POMEROY - Mary Shrine,
31, Order of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, 8 p.m. Friday at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
"

RACINE - Southe rn Band
Boosters wiU meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. In the.band room .
. POMEROY - 'S hade River
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will meet In
regular session at 7: 1l p.m.
· Th_ursday.

FRIDAY
ANTIQUITY - John Jesseburg, missionary from France,
wlll speak at Antiquity Baptist
Church, Ro~te 338, Friday, 7: 30
p.m . Public Invited.
RACINE Fire Department's
Ladles Auxiliary, 7 p.m. at the
tire department, games parties
to begin.
.

.

SATIJRDAY
pQMEfl.OY - Star Grange
wlll meet Saturday for Its
January meeting. The ritualistic
team will practice at 7 p.m.
preceding the regular meeting.
All team members are urged to
attend the .practice session and
all members are asked to attend
the meeting. Vegetable and chill
will be served and those attendIng a re to take Ingredients.
POMEROY - Star Grange
meeting Saturday with tituallstlc team practice at 7 p.m.
preceding regular session; vegeta bie soup and chlll for
refresrunents.

RACINE - Return Jonathan ·
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
SUNDAY
Amertcan Revolution, meeting
POMEROY - Meigs GeneaFtiday, 1: 1l p.m. In social room
logical
Society will .meet at 2
of Racine First Baptist Church;
p.m.
Sunday
at Meigs Museum.
members to take caneeUed
A
work
session
will be held. ·
commemorative stamps lor

thelr home' recently for Sunday
school classes at Pomeroy Church
of the Nazarene.
The .adults aJid young adults
enjcyed a gift exchange . and
desserts and beverages were
served following prayer by Raymond Walburn .
·
Others attending were Mrs.
Raymond Walburn, daughter,
Pam, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colmer,
sons, BUiy and Timmy, R. E.
Henderson, Columbus; Nancy
Whltteklnd, Tammy Johnson,
Mamie Stephenson, Alberta Rlchards, Jlmmle Snider and Randy
Snider.

At the party for the kindergarten,
prtmary, junior and junior high
classes, where games were played
and Christmas songs sung were
Tammy Colmer, R. E. Henderson,
Brtan, Rusty and Donnie Nltz,
Shawn Whltteklnd, Daniel Whlttekind, Arica and Amber Blackwell,
Scottie Johnson, J . D. Johnson,
Tom . Van Cooney, Lonnie Van
Cooney, Barbara Colmer, Tammy
Johnson, Shart Blackwell and
Mamie Stephenson.
Each of the children received a
treat from tne Hendersons.

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

1

heritage
house

Observe 23rd year
~

A surprise anniversary party was
held Monday by Jerry 'Colmer for
his wife, Barba ra, at the couple's
--home. They were married 23 years
ago ..
Cake, ice cream, nuts, coffee and
iced tea were served to Pat and
Cindy Thomas, Mr, and Mrs.
Harold Whittekind and sonS, Shawn
and Daniel, Mr. and Mrs. David .
Johnson and sons, J . D. and Scottie,
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Blackwell and
daughters, Amber and Atlca ,

S
A
L
C
E

Q

0~ YOUR

)

DOORSTEP
SOON!
,.--

30o/o
QH
.

!
!
l

-

.

l

!-!
!
!
l
!
!

.:

~

TIMEX WATCHES
$5.00 OFF
Umit 1 Per Coupon
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Coupon Expire$1-17-83

VALUABLE COUPON

FREE JEWELRY
BUY 1 PIECE, GET 2nd PIECE ·OF
EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FREE
No Umit Wrth Coupon
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Coupon Expires 1-17-83

VALUABLE COUPON

Reg. s15;99

60o/o

' Off
heritage house
·of shoes

~Ca~l!~~-~800-~62~4-~90~80~~=M=ID=D=I.EPO:;:::::R=T=~

New officers were Installed, food
c&lt;Hlp workers recognized, and
reports on planned activities given
at the Monday night meellng of

Pillow
Arm
Special

Correspondence

VALUABLE COUPON

1 GALLON ·..

I
N
U

--

Rexall Cool Spray .
HUMIDIFIER

Meigs Co-op Parish

a

mnk

T

CABLENTERTAI NM ENT

.·.

NAVY OXFORDS

N

Jimrnle Snider, Alberta Richards,
and Billy Colme r.

SPECIAL OFFER!

&amp;

1
!

hostesses.

·chrtstmas·Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Russell were Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Summet1leld, Candi,
Wendy and Crystal of Medina, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Russell, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Haggy, Stephanie and
Brad .• Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mauda and Michael, Bertha
· Russell, Earl Russell imd· Carl
Russell.
: Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
were dinner gttests of Mrs. Iva
. JohnSOn recent Thursday (preCilrts~S dinner).
Mr. and Mrs.· Charley Smith
· were Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kall,
•KeVtn and Charles. •
· Mr. and Mrs . . Gary Jones and
· sons, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Oldaker
and Gabtiel were Christmas Day
. guests of Mr. and Mrs. Maury
' Miller.
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Worley,
Stacy artd Daniel of Daniels, W.
. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Kall, Kevin and L.'harles, and Iva
Johnson were reeent · · Sunday
' dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith. Also v!sltlng were
Ann and Charlotte Lambert.

Cross Sons Grocery· a $5 gift
Bottling Co.; a baby planter from certtf1cate from Herl~ge House of
the Pomery Flower Shop; a $i gift
certificate from Village Pharmacy; a $10 savings account from
MEN'S BOYS'
Bank One of Pomeroy· three boxes ·
of Ne wborn Pa,rri,pers from
Swtsher-Lohse Pharmacy· a case
Reg. 129.95 to 136.95
of KrOger · canned
from
Kroger's; a pair of Pall Parrot
OUR PRICE
baby shoes, from Hartley Shoes; a
$3 gift certl!lca!e ttoin the Fabric
Shljl; a free meal to the .p arents
$1295 - $1695
from the Meigs Inn; a $10,savlngs
account from the Racine Home
BAILEY'S SHOES
National Bank; three caseS of
Beech Nut baby food from Wald
MIDDLEPOH1 OH
;-----___,;:.__ _ _ _ ____1,
·- --

fro

Holiday parties were hosted by

!
!

$8.99

Umit 1 Per ,Coupon
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Coupon Expires 1-17-83

VALUABLE COUPO,.

~

Russell Stover Candy

cfu

1 .POUND

lg
!
!
!

$1.10 OFF
, . Umit 2 Per Coupon
Sw1sher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Coup()n EXpires 1-17-83

VALUABLE COUPON

Saye~

Aspir_ins
100's

Reg.

$3.06 $1.69

Umit 2 Per Coupon
Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy
Coupon EXpires 1-17-83

Rag. '550

39995

New 2 pr::. pillq:• arm livinl ,room
saitl! with 100% nJioo tORr and

111JP1t trim. This it a bartain il there

evtr was one.

Fl NEWEARING
APPAREL FOR
MEN &amp;WOMEN
ON SALE .NOW
'

.

Get
Coffee Table

WOOD DINmE

.

'

'

7

first baby born in Parkersburg; W. · Va. hospital

ay party

W. Va., a nd Evelyn Lewis, Pomeroy Health Care Center, who
observes hef93rd birthday Thursday (today).
It was decided to proceed with the
complete rem6dellng of the ~egis­
tratlon, lounge, and dressing rooms,
and !iJa t officers will wear c hapter
dresses or business suits at all
meetings liDless other pla ns are
made.
The m eeting closed with Bill King
giving prayer before the members
retired to the dining room for a
soc ial hour with salad and crackers
being served by Naomi and Bessie
King.

The Daily Sentinei- P.age

Pomeroy Middleport;- Ohio

REG.
1269.95

$19995 .

SAVE

s7o

'

AT BAHR'S.
BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT

'
"'

'

• 'l

�-

'

..__,__..

.

----~-----

Thursday, January 13, ·1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday; January 13, 1983

Policeman,_ seven others die
in ·3 0-hour h~stage ordeal
MEMPIDS, Tenn. (AP ) - Police
flrlngautomatlcweaponsstonneda
houS!l earlY today In a shootout with
members of a religious sect who
held' a patrolman hostage for 30
hours, authorities said .. All eight
people Inside were . found dead,
inCluding·the ~tostage;
·
Several rounds of gas canisters
were thrown Into the home as the
predawn assault began, and auto-

. tnatlcw~aponsftrecouldbeheardln
.the backJlround.
"The tactical unit, upon entering
the house, wasflreduponbyseveral
'I!Jdivlduals. They · returned fire,"
' said Boo Graham, administrative
assistant to Pollee Director John D.
Holt.
"All the subjects (captors) were
male black adults," Graham said. .
Among the dead were Patrohnan '
R.S. Hester, a 10-yeai veteran oHhe
force. He w;15 taken hoSfage
Tuesday night by Undberg Sanders, 49, described as a religlo\!s
zealot with a history of mental
tllness whO thought police were
''ailti·Christ. ''.

In good condition · at a hospital,
Gra.hiun said. Police said Hester
had .been dead fl'r. se¥eral hours
· before the assault began.
An hour before the assault began
at 3:07 a .m., · negotiators used
bullhorns In ' an unsuccessful at·
tempt, to talk to Sanders. PoJJce who
were eavesdropping with electronic
listening devices !;aid · they were
concerned because Hester's voice
had not been heard since 6: :II a .m .
\Vednesday .
Pollcehadkeptvigllformorethan ·

30 hours at Shannon Elementary

·SChool across the .s~t from the
small frame house where Hester
was seized In an incident thal atso
Injured two other officers.
As the · gunfire began today,
relatives of several people fn!;idetbe
house began screl\)lllng and tri€&lt;1 to
Jeaveasehoolclassroomwherethe)i
and repOrters were being kept by
pollee.
. When officers blocked the door,
some relatives tried to jump out the
flrst·story windows. Pollee outside,
stopped them.
Graham said Hester WljS capOne. of the ~!fleers making the
turedwhen he and his partner. R.O.
assault suffered a cut )land and was
. SChwill, were s\lmmoned Tue$day

· BAD,NEWS- Pollee Director Jolm Holt (right)
talks with Ids aide, Patroilnan Bob Graham (left) '
and. an unldentiUed member of the negotiating team.
early Thursday after learning lhat Patrobpan Bob
Hesler had been kllled w.hlle being held hostage by a

BRATILEBORO, Vt. (AP)- A
Mrs. Hilley disappeared from a
charming, middle-aged woman
hotel near Birmingham, Ala., on
;vho vanished from Alabama In 1979
Noy. 18, 1979, after she was charged
after being accused of killing her
with the attempted ·murder by
husband and paralyzing her daugh·
polson of her daughter, Carol,
ter with arsenic has been caught by
first-degree murder In the 1975
" a fluke," the FBI says.
polscinlng death of her husband,
Audrey Matie Hilley's true iden·
Frank, and two bad check charges
tity was only learned Wednesday
totaling more tban $6,00J.
because she was being questioned In
Mrs. Hilley was released on bond
another FBI Investigation, the
after she was charged and was
agency said.
reportedly staying at the hotel to
Mrs. Hill.ey had been living in
avoid relatives who hadthreatene(l
Mat low, N.H. and had
job in
to klJI her.
Brattleboro, near the Vermont·J\Iew .
AuL"'orltles said they never had
Hampshire slate line, Investigators
any clear motive for the poisonings .
sat.d •
The 49.year-oldwoman, formerly
Her daughter, Carol Hilley, 22.
of Anniston, Ala.,.was charged.with
was paralyzed by acute arsenic
uniawfulflighttgavoidprosecutlon
poisoning In 1979, but later recoand was ordered held without bolld
vered. · Before th~ year was out,
at Rutland, Vt., pending arraign'
lnvestigaiors discovered that Mrs,
Hilley's husband, Fr.ank, had "l.edof
menttoday.
"

'

Authorities said they were order·
ing Miss Gruber out of the country
because she allegedly collected
"secret information" about military facilities. The 33-year-old
reporter denied the charge.
Miss Gruber, the only American

.Village funds lotal $472,663
All Middleport VIllage moneys as
of Dec. 31, 1982, totaled $472,663.42,
according to the monthly 'r eport of
· Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck.
Receipts, expendill!nis for the
month of each fund; respectively,
· and the end of the month balance of
each follow: · general, 30,060.04,
$27,152.12; $32,664.72; street main·
tenance , $13 ,692.23, $ll,330.18,
$1,088.69; HUD, no receipts,
$2G,937 .~. $4,153.28; fe:&lt;)eral revenue sharing, no receipts, $640.88,
$5,4m .81; s~t llght, $3,081.94,
$1,367.19, $10,633.52; street levy,
$3,081.95, "$75.35,, $13,747,32; fire
equipment, $2,175, ~52.24, $112.02;

fire truck, $2,054.63, $3,200.23,
$36.836.93; general bo$nd retlrement , $1,027 .32 , · 5,362 . 62,
$14,589.40; planning commission,
no receipts, $5.04, $68.66; sardtary
sewer escrow, no receipts,: $2,030,
$136,717.39; water tank, $1,767.88,

reporter- for the agency in Warsaw.
was released from 23 hours'
detention Wednesday evening. .
Her Polish secretary, Anna
Olszewska, also Was detained
Tuesday; but remained in pollee
custody Wednesday night, according to Polish television.
The official · news agency PAP
annou nced the e~pluslon order in a
report Wednesday and Miss Gruber
said it was theflrsto!flcialword·she
had of the decision. It was not known
whenshewouldberequiredtoleave
Poland.

a

.

night by an anonymous caller who
tOld a pollee dispatcher that a /nan ·
Wanted In a purse-:,matchlng was
there.
The patrohnen. were attacked as
. soon as theY arrived, Graham said.
A radio catl for help brought several
otherpcillce units to the scene, and a
hall of bullets scattered the b;ickup
officers:
.
" ·
SchwUJ, a 9-year pollee veteran,
was shot In the face and hand. and .
was reported In serious but stable ·
condition at Methodist Hospital
here. Pat;rohnan Tommy Turner
was struck In the head with a pistol
but was not hospltallzed.
-Graham said the ~all that bl'ought
pollee appeared to have been l!\l)de
by someone In the house, but could ·
not explain why Sanders might have
wanted to capture a pollee officer.
• Holt said Sanders' group cons!·
(lered pollee to be :'anti-Chrlst,
anti:religlon or the devJI."
Sanders' wife, Dorothy, said her
husband had been under treatment
for a mental disorder and that he
expected the world io end on
Monday. She alsO said her husballd
and others In the house with hlrn
believed they could not dte.

.... Since 1979, authorities have received reports that people have
spotted -Mrs. Hilley In Alabama,
Atlanta·, Florida, Louisiana, Arkan·
sas and Montana. '
·
Carol Hilley said last month that
her mother probably moved
frequently.
Mfs. Hilley was an executive ·
secretary ,. for several prominent
Anniston businessmen.

·JANUARY TV
CLEARANCE SALE

••

P.

•

r

'

"'·

•

Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

BiJShan

H.
-

thewlnds.

ily Sentinel .

The

PHONE
992-2156
Write Dailly St!ltinel
Dept.
CIISSified
.111 Co~:~rt St.. Pomeroy, O~o 45769

St. Rl . 124 Pomeroy, oH
AUTO &amp; TRUCK

'Rernod~irw

' Stonn Windows ·$ Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Years Experl!nce
TOM HOSKINS ·
Ph. 7...2834
Or 949:2160 10ti5idc

; .

21 ·8u-ooo,.....,.,_.,

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AlSO Transmoss10n
PH. 992·5682
o·r 992·7121 .
3·24-llc

M•IIO C&lt;&gt;u"''

ArtaC:Oitttl'l

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26-lllwt [ ooo•W•&lt;&gt;&lt;o d

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COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
from the Smallest Heater
Core to the Larpst Radiator,
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

THE DABBLE. SHOP
OPEN 9·5
CLOSED THURSDAY
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC ·BISQUE
- Checlc Our Specials For
The Month of January
DABBLE SHOP
251 Y, W. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH. "
12-2~1 mo.

"'• r• CCI&lt;I e l O"'

71 •C'!f"-IIE__..r

5tf o rS... &lt;&gt;&lt; ltodo

41 - HouMoloo 11 .. 1
42 -Mobilo H....,n let 111..,,

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74- M&lt;~t"'cyc:!.o

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fioo u, onurt10 n

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$ 7 00

SMITH N.ELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992·2174

.

'

Curb Inflation
Pay .Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell . I
,_

mall ~

wrtte your own ad and order by

George S. HobsteHer, Jr., Broker

VELMA NICINSKY
Associate
Home

results. Money no1 refundable .

I1 Nam•---------- ,
I Address----------1 Phone-----~---------1 Print one word In each

-

I l For Rent

MAGNAVOX 25"
·COLOR CONSOLE

5. --.--- --

13. - - -- 14. ~ -----15. --~-'--

Real Estata • General

' 608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

243 Third ~1/t : Gllli~liS . Ohio .45631",

NEW LISTING ..., MiDDLEPORT- Good starter home- cute 2
bedroom, one fklor p~n home wnh hookup for wood burner, gas
heater, dining room, util,ity hookups. Chain link fence around Jot

t

·

,

0175 .
Old stoneware jars, jugs,
crocks &amp; milk pitchers. alao

614·367·0138.
Old wicher baskets. Call

·m·

I
I
.t.-~---------.---~--------~·.,.,;,

R(AlTOil ·

'·

Call

furniture. gold. silver dol ~
l~1r1, wood ice boxes. stone
jars. antiques , etc. , Com .
plete households . Write:

shoot. · Racine Gun

M.D. Miller. Rt. 4. Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992·7760.

Georges Creek Rd.
446-0294 ..
Oun

Club . Every Sunday starting
1 p.m. Factory choked guns
only.
·

PH. 992-3194 or
992-3305

Doc. 11 . 614·742·2753 .

Wanted To Buy:Se'weral co'·

Federal end State income
taxes. Quarterly reports, W·
2 forms , Done by .ap,point-

pieo of Edgar Ervin's 1949 ,

History ~f Meigs . County.
· Please quote price and con dition .of book . Box 146,

Pomeroy. Ohio . 45769 .

. ment. 614·992·2272oroee
Wanda EbNn at 41000 Lau·
rei Cliff Rd .• Pomeroy.

Bradbury, Oh.
7228 ; I

1·5-1 mo.

'

WiD beibyslj

i"

614·992·
my ~ome .

Song feot Jon.22.. 7:30p.m,
Sliver Run Free ~ill Baptist
Church. Singers~ The UnFoe
_ Family, The Gabriel builrtet.

VinYl &amp; Aluminum
:
I
I

Gold. s~ver. sterling, je.
welry, rings. ·alii coins &amp;
cunency. ,Ed Bt.kett Barber

income ·t •x service. ·Federal
&amp; State. Wallace Au~~:ell,

No Sunday Calls
·

BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old

Shop, Middleport . 992·
3476 .

INCOME TAX SERVICE.

Weekly irash pickups in
Middleport ,. Bradbury,
and Leading Creek Area.
· "You Cal~ We'll. Haul."

Athens .. Oh .

anyone who

knows who
shOt 2 goats on the Jim
Lucas farm Saturday

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

·

Buy raw fur and beef hides.

_trapping ·supplies . At . ·2 ,

1 - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 3 0 4·773-6640.

..

The Dally Sentinel .
111 court st.
Pomeroy, Oh. 4576,

''

Will pay cash for used
mobile hom~s. Damages,
repossed or insurance
claims considered. Call446.·

SWeEPER and se.,;ing rna ·
chine repair~ parts. and
supplies.
Pick _up and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one hatf mile Up

1 - - - - - - - - - - 1 REW!!RD OF 100.00 to

$24,500.00.

Mall This Coupon wl.th R,emlttance ·

18", •I ••&amp;·7086

Wanted to buy Square Dancin_g outfits. All sizes. men's
and women's. Call 446 -

w~ekends 12 noon to 9PM.
deer hidea and ginseng ahd

10·6·11c

PH.992·2259

Dottie Turner ...:.......................................... ...992·5692
Office :........................... ..... :.........:.:: ............ 992·2259

'

Bill Gone Johnson
446 -ooe9

George Buckley, 614·664·
4761 . Weekdays 5 to 9,

3 Announcements

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
At 3, Box 54
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591

"-"'Y

'

11·26-tlc'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes lrom 6'x6' Up •
to 24'xl6'. . ·
Insulated Dog Houses

· REALTORS
E. Cleland, Jr.. GRl ......,.... ......... :............ 992-619i
· Jteio Trusutt :................... :..... ........;............... 949-2660

16. _ _ _ _ __

Pomeroy, Ohio ,

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes start from ·I2'Xl6'

air, patio, carJX)rt, summer kitchen, rec. room, nice mildem ~tchen
With dishwasher. Also heatalamr fireplace. Outstanding at
$49,5Ql.OO.
'

li. --~---....,-

:,

~:a~"Js~~·:.:~.r late modal

Ill

I2·31-l rrni.

RACINE ...: 12% fixed tatE inlerest, VA or F.HAon this beautifui3
bedroom spin level home with Ill baths; fully insulated, gas forced

10. _ _ __ _ __
11. _ _ _ _ __

Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza~ 446-8026 ot

4537 .

V.

ALL STEEL &amp;

. $30,000. Call for showong.

9. _ _ __ __

.

service avaUable
1·5· 1 mo.· pd ...

large bath~ fireplace, carport metal slnrage JUrtdinF. Buy all and
rent the cottage. Buy cottage and lot for $15,000- DoubM! wide,.
· carport and lot for $32,000. MOve double w\(le, ca11~rt from I~ for

,6. - ' - - - - - - ' 7. _ _ _ _ __
B. _ __ __ _

'

1·12-lmo d

C, YOUNG
992·6215 or 992·7314

PH. 992-2772

LETART - Owner wil sell this pfoperty several way~ II acre lot
with one bedroom cotmge - well mai.ntainort beautiful 3 yr. old
double llide - unusual featUres, 3 be:irc \, dining roOm, 2

4. ---,.-- --

NOW

Buying Go!d. Silver, Plati· .
num, old cfJina, scrap ringa
S. silv&amp;rware. · Daily quotes
available. Alao coins &amp; coin
supplies for aa!e. Spring

electrical work
{Free Estima,.J

J~~E::~~~~~E

.

Hoooa calls end shop

gas,furnace. Hardwood floor.:. 50'xl32' lot. Just $18.900.00,

3. - -.,--- --

'679.90

the evenings .

•Now Roofing

AI makes and models
Antenna. lnstalation

MIDDlEPOIII- 3 bedroom, home, qu~ street. new !arced air

L -'----;---~--­
. 2. - - r - - -- ' - - -

call Kenneth Swein,

~Water

- Cone~ work
-~lumbirig end

•Storm Windows ·
•Replac«h~nt Windows

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT- Beautiful new carpet in this 3
bedroom home, with garage and workshop ·in basement. Cerltral ·
air - well mainlllined exterior. Good, location . Just $25,900.00. .

( )Announcement

Wanted To Buy

-Sewer .
-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992·2478

r---------1-=========t~;;;~~~~~~~
· • ...........
•• •• •• •••w
••• ''. .....
''".
_,
. ....o.•·.....

th!Jnks

Wilt, Alice Welch
&amp; Family.

)Wanted;
IForSale

Auctioneer. 276-3069.

kin~•·

'

Some'insu~tion.
&lt;
&lt;

welco,e.
Richard Reyti'olda
used merchandise
always

446·3159 or 256· 1967 in

- Roofi1g and gutter work

•Storm ·ooora

THANKS

ms

These cash rates
include discount

merchandise every
Consigments
of newweek.
and

_..

to relatives,
friends and ·neiahbors lor
flowers, food, i:anls and their
consoli~W
of kindness
duri,.the time of our sorrow.
Special thinks to Rev. Cecil
Cox, Tilt BiiOIIY·Jonla~ fun·
nl Chlpel, and the Rutland .
Eonerpncy SqUid. lily God
lllo$s IICil and""' Qne who
hilped in any lilY·

'.:.::L.J~~~~E~j

Auction every Fri. night at
Hartford Commun~y
Center. Truckloads of new

the

Frenchtown Car Co. ;

etnsulatlon

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985~269 or 985~382
Dewayne Wiliams
&amp; Scottie Smith

Phone 742·3171

Card of Thanks

sincere

Tol!

SERVICE

Associate

Ph. 742-3092

CARD

~~u==P~~~~=~
·
To2S

773·6786 or 3 04· 7739185.

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni·
ture and Antiques of 111

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addons an~ remodeling

. VINYl &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

APPLIANCE

CHERYL LEMLEY

Tha Family of Dana Welch;
wishes to express their

space below. Each In·
I, titial or group. o1 figures
I counts as a word. Count
1 name and address or
1 phone number if used.
I You' ll get better results -~+-'---11-'-t---t--i
if vou describe fully,
I give price. The Sentine~ To IS

1I classify,
reserves edit
the or
right
to
reject
1 any ad. Your ad will be
I put In the proper
classification if you'll
I check the proper box
below.

AND

I

•

with this

antiques. farm, househOlds: .
. licenaed Ohio · WVa. 304·

9

-Dozers
-Batkboes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher

YOUNG'S

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULA·TION

S&amp;WTV

HOBSTETTER REALTY
RESIDENTIAL and COMMERCIAL
OFFICE and HOME - 992-5739 ·
Pqmeroy, Ohio 45760
215 Mulbony Avenue

.

WVa State Champion Auctioneer Rick Pearson. Estates

::================:L=================:·~::::::::====~t=::::::::::::::::~r:==:;~:;~;:~~ -4_4_6·_8_0_26_.~---------

coupon . Cancel .your.. ad by phone when you get

.I

PU LUNS
EXCAVATING

Real Estate • General

SIDI~.G

BISSELL

LONG 1 DAY S·ALE JANU·
ARY 22. D &amp; D EQUIP·
MENT. ALBANY ·OHIO. ·

UCensed Admiriistrator for

100 bod

skilled nursing

home in Southeast Ohio

Salary c;omen.utated with
experience. Send resume to ,

SHMC, F'.O.Bo• 1088. Gal .
'lipolis, Oh 45631.

Rock Drummer wanted.
Must' have OWn kit: Coli'
''
014· 245: 9303 . ask for Tim
.
REviVAL w~l start Monday · or Keilin .,;
"Beautiful, cus.tom
. Built Garages;' · · ·1 Jonuory 17th. ot the Church I::--:~-----:-...:.,­
Call for tree sidln~ 1 of Chriat in Chrl8tlan Union, . Truck ·d river wanttid or s811'
estimates, 949-2801 or \ Hertford. at7:30 p.m. Evan~ nlco truck. Call448·1279or ·
g~llot lo .Rev. Denver 446-4060 .
.
.
949· 2UG.
..
McCarty of Wllktyillo, OH . ~~---:---'---:._­
No Sunday cails
Spe~leleing~r• are
Mea- Need lady to lift in .whti
3-t'Hic · eongero, Wlllo C~opol, Well • elderly lady. Call 614·2511oton. OH . .
1590; slllary.negotloblo. · ·

J

SIDING
CO.
.

t.._

. 1.

•.

REPAIR

""'
11------..,-__.---'
r-~~~~~--~~ifii~';j~~~;--j;;i~i~~r---~--~----~
,,........
..... '"'"··
~~========~fr========~Fr~~~~~~==~

·19" PORTABLE SUPER COLOR

REG.

H II

oger yse
GARAGE

ROOFIN
,G
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
'Roofin• of all ......
Residential&amp;'""
Commen:ial

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u.s. Rl, 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3-lfc

-~'-Dr

---------~I
I
I
I
I

I

'

R

"

&gt;

Newapa,pers to give away to

.

2-26-tlc

NOW

puppies . .Call 614 · 246·
9277,

~==========t========:::j~=========~

11 M

0
$279°

Part German S~p~erd 3

FIRE DEPT.

~~~~:g

1i·W••ol1aDo

REG . 5399.95

~ything
to giw•
aw~y and
does
not offer·
or attemPt
to
offer an.y other thing for e.ete
may place an -a:d in thi1
cOlumn. Thera will be no
Charge to the advertl•r.

RACINE

985-3561.

ANY PERSON who hoo

ROOFING

:R.

•

we can repair and
racora radiatora and
heater cores. We can.
also aCid !Jjlil and rod
out radiators. Wa alsl)
ropair Gas Tanks.
PAT HiLL FORD

.

GUN SHOOT

Giveaway

I,c:=======~~=========f========~

·-

Deputies checking
stolen car report

Ener,gy.. ·

SERVICE

&gt;

' !._boll._111• Cl f i -

Meigs County happenings...

ProP,erty transfers .

{~~USE"
KEN'S
APPLIA.NCE
SERVICE

FOR

4

M1LLER
ELE.CTRIC
S'ERVICE

)

Emergency.squads
make 20 I runs ·

·

The Daily Senli,n!'I- Page-9

RADIATOR

Attend youth g.range
,

Ohio

Business Services
1'----------,----------r"---------'1

noodles, green .beans, Jello salad,
hot rolls and butter, milk.
THURSDAY ...: Ch111 with
crackers, one-half butter and onC'
half . peanut butt.e r . sandwich,
cheese sllce, cookie, milk.
·
FRIDAY - Cook's choice.

.

cnt,

,
any organization or individ·
Several Meigs County grangers
All Makes
ual _who would . like ,Jtlem.
LOts and · Iota. CBif' lfa&amp;.
recenfntly ·atte~ed aedgrabyngeUyoioitll
•WuheroR•Piati· .
January U, 1983
4327 .
co erence s.,.,nsor . . . n ver·
92-2,96
washers
•
ongeo
FactorY
Choke
12
9
Don't tie afrald to involve yourself ln projects or ventures this .
slty ~range In Franklin County.
Middleort, · Ohio .
.;~F':.'!,.
Gauge Shotguns Only.
ONE cute little puppy. 304·
coming year which are large In scope. You are more likely to s.u eced
Attending were Opal aild BID Dyer
).) 3.uc
PARTS.and SERVICE
675·2108.
·
where. your anibltk&gt;ns are grand in scale.
and Carla and Becky Rife.
4-5-k
H I mo.
-~-~-.,---CAPRIOORN (Dec. 2Wan. 19) Cornpllcatbns may develop In
There were sessions · ronducted
AKC West Highland wMo
areas which nonnally run smoothly, while you could be extremely
Terrier.
tema·le.
on membership, 'ritualism, code · f-:==::;;;~;:==ii:::========t;.;;:::;;;;::;:::::;;::;:::;1
,
304-675·41
14. :spayed.
1
lucky .in matterS where Dame l"ortune somethnes Ignores you. ·
reading, literary . programs and
'· Kitchen Cabinets - RoofFREE black &amp; white cats.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Cllirlfy your objectives today so that
publicity.
ing - Siding ~ Concrete
304,675-5160
.
you don't waste time gOing after something which might not be what
The 1982 State Grange Prince
*BLOWN
Patios ~ Sidewalks . you want after you get lt.
FOUR kittins, 3 cats, 304·
and Princess .Kevin Evan5 and
·
INSULATION
New Construction - Re675·5419
alter 5.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Early developments might oot be
Kelly McClelland were present at .
*SIDING
modeling-'- Custom Pole .
totally to your liking today, but don't let this upset you. Beloretheday' s
'the ~ession anvell as the National
*ROOFING
Barns.
over you should get hoped·for results. .
Prince Dondi Fitch, whO Is from
For all your wirin!J \
*NEW
'CHARLES "AYRE
.ARIES {Mluch 2l'AprB 19) It's possible today thatyou niay'not see
6 Lost and Found
Ohio
needs;
furnaces
"
eye-to-eye with friends on specific 'Issues. Rather than risk any
. A ~uare dance ende\1 the day's . , repair service arid
CONSTRUCTION
AND SON
LOST Manilla envelope with
unpleasantness, change the subject If things heat up.
activities.
installation .
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
personal papers. Reward
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Important goals are reachable today, ·
Master of University Grange is
· ~esidential ,
PH. 949-2182
. Route 1
Call 446·1279 or 446'
. but they may oot be attained ioo e11sily. However,lfyou are persistent
PattY Dyer, a Meigs County
. &amp; Commercial
Or 949-3055
Long Bot1Dm, OH. 45743 4060.
you should enjOY substantial rewards.
resident 11ttending Ohio University
Call742·31.9r 7 -lfc ,
12-13-1 mo.
985-4193 or 99~2~g:~
Loat·Biock and brown fe GEMINI (May ZJ.June 20) Do not make major judgments In haste
tlday. There' s a poSstbUJty you could overlook some key points In your
and
agronomy.
3866.beagle . Call 614·992majortng
in agriculture education
male
Initial evaluation.
r-------------~--~-F~O-U_N_D_:~i-tMn
___a_t _P_I_ea-s-an- i
CANCER (June 21.July 22) A situation presently oot to your best
VaHey Hospital. Owner ideo ·
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
ROUSH
•
advantage can be adjusted today so that It will come out in a manner to
tify and pay lor ad. 304·
Dust lo dust
yield you benEfits.
··
L WRITESEL
m.555o.
Now
New
CONSTRUCTION'!
· LEO (,July 23Aug. 22) Be tactful and diplomatic when dealing with
New Homes · extensive
•(;utters
MIAMI (AP) - How many
Low Rates
,.modeling
·
·
!-'(rworkets today. With a little extra consideration, you can turn those
visitors to Florida ex~! I! taste of
15 Y~rs Exjlerien~
•Electric !M&gt;rk
•Downspouts
who now oppose you Into aJJies.
7·
Yard Sale
the Sahara Desert when they ge t
All Work Guaranteed
.Cu!IO!Il Pole Bldgs.
•New or Repair
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In areas where you are concerned about
&amp; Gara~s
· oPaintinn
)
there?
To Be Done Right and
afloofing w:i
'"'
Garage Sale (Warm 108
. only your own needs, results might be slim today. However, you should ·
be quite lucky when you try to help others.
Recently, a giant dust cloud
On Time
-.lluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
fREE ESTIMATES ' ~i;~h$~r~~~:.olk~t~:~~~
swirled up from the Sahara In North
CALt 992-6273
15 Y•" Experience
Ph. . _2791
tu oe. floor lamps, · pole
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Social acttvlties ot fun dlversklns will be
992
• 5' patglio door, new
Africa,
traveletlacrosstheAtlantie.
or
992-6206
~~E~~~Ys~
lamdps
what you need today to re!urbtsh your psyche. J:)on't be trapped by dull
1
Ocean
and
rained
down
on
parts
of
or
992·2282
or
949-2263
an
°
d too 1•· auware, gao
routines.
213011
Florida. The dust doubled Miami's
I
mo.
llll ·tl c
J.I4·ttc
\~g::.,~~i!:'n~~~~ 0~~;:~~~
~RPIO (Ocl. ~Nov, 22) Your possibilities for personal gain
look very good tooay, but potential returns might not arrive until the
visibility by two-thirds.
-------last minute.
pollution index alld cui airport
19.
SAGrrrARIDS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Thlpgs should go quite smoothly
Scientists esthnated that more - ·------...,.....-;
OHIO ·
-;;--~;-;:--=-:--than a million tons of Saharan grit
-,
8
Public Sale
for you today, provided you don't let self-doubts cloud your thinking.
were carried across the ocean by
BOG~S
VALLEY
&amp; Auction
You're a W!"ne~. so act like cine.
· ,

Coolville
resident pleads guilty;
.
awaits pre-sentencmg reports

•

¥0NDAY- No .Schooi (Martin
Luther King Day),
·
TUESDAY ..:. .Chicken pattie on
b\lri, baked beans, fruit, bro'Wnle,
mill&lt;.
·
wEDNESDAY - Chicken ·and

Astrogtaph

arsenic poiscinlng.
The investigators alsci found that
both Mrs. RUley's mother, Lucille
Frazier, and her motller·in-law,
Carrie Hilley, had slgniftcant, but
not fatal traces or arsenic ln their
systems when they died.
Alabama authorities speculated
recently that Mrs. Hilley had taken
another name and was llvlngquletly
In a small town.

r---------------..;,.
_______
.,.-.....,--:-------------------Area deaths
\

no disbursements,
$175,327.93;
wa·
\
ter,
$10,194.74, $11,896.64,
$23,156.12;
sanitary sewer, $7,378.43, $6,451.08,
$7 ,058.01; swimming pool, $1,400, ·
.Salvation Army in ,P omeroy over
$26.32, $1,306.80; cemetery, $2.362,
Winona M. Overturf
the past 10 years.
$1,457.47, $1,007.00; water meter
Services will he held Friday in
lru$ts, $105, $322, $8,751'.65.
Winona M. Overtuii, 79, RD,
Prosperity,
W. Va.
Receipts for the month totaled
Middleport, died Tuesday at Yete$1'8,381.16 while expenditures
rans Memor·iitl Hospital. , ,
John F. Swisher
amounted to $96,212.86.
Mrs. Overll!rf was born July 19,
1903 at Fort Arthur, Texas. She was
John F . Swisher, 78, Middleport,
preceded in death by her parents formerly of Point Pleasant, died
arid one brothe~ . Boyd Griggs.
Wednesday at V~terans Memorial
.
.
She was a member of the United HospitaL
Pentecostal Church, Middleport
Mr. Swisher was born Aug. 26,
1904 in Mason County, a son of the
and worked as a waitress.
Russell M. Cremeans, 19, Cool- , According to Paul Gerard, inves·
She is survived by her husband,
lateJQhn F . and RoseDellaHarmon
ville, plead guilty. to a charge of tlgator for the · prosecutor, the
Gerald J . Overturf; one brother, Swisher. He was a ret_lred mate for
breaking and entering when he charge resulted from an Incident
James Griggs and one sister,
the Ohio River Co. His wife, Laura
appearect before Meigs County that occurred just hours before at a
Marynell Reams, both of Herrin, Simpkins SwiShe r , preceded .hlrn In
Common Pleas Judge Charles H.
houseonCallawayRidge.Thehouse
TIL, and several nieces and nephews. · death on Match 23, 1975.
· Knight Wednesday.
was not occupied at the thne of
Surviving are four daughters,
Funeral services wtil be held
· Judge:Knight ordered the matter e ntry.
Friday at 2 p.m. at the Rawlings· Miss Elizabeth Swisher, Mrs.
of sentencing continued upon com·
Cremeans .was arrested by Sgt,
Coats-Blower Funeral Home with Yvorula Dennis and Mrs. Karen
pletiQnofprE'-sentenceinvestigation Randy Forbes of the sheriff' s
the Rev, Clark Baker officiating. Fahner, all of Middleport, and Mrs.
and report. Cremeans was released department. All property stole n was
Burial will be in Riverview Ceme- Viola Watson, Henderson, W. Va.;
on a $2,500 bond and final sentencing recovered by Sgt. Forbes.
tery. Friends may call at the funeral four sons, George, Middleport;
was set for Feb. 14.
...
Breaking a nd entering is a felony
Carl, . Point Pleasant; Michael,
home today from 2 to4 and 7 to 9.
Thechargewas containedinabill of the fo\lrth degree carrying a
Columbus, and Shellia of Jackson·
maximum possible penalty of five
of information . prepared by the
ville, Fla. ; two brothers, Freelln
Loretta Hayes
·.office of Meigs County Prosecuting years in prison and a fine of up to
Swisher, Point Pleasant, and Do$2,500.
Attorney Fred W. Cf9W lll.
Mrs. Lor.e tta Hayes, formerly of nald Swisher, New York City. ; 18
Ash st., Middleport, died Monday at
grandclilldren and seven great·
a hospital in Avon, Oh., where she grandchildren. Services will he held
had been a patieni for six days.
at 2 p.n\. Frldday at the Crow·
Mrs. Hayes was preceded In death Russell Funeral Home in Point
Marriage license
by her husband, George. She is
Pleasant with the Rev. George
survived by several daughters. She Hoschar officiating. Burial will be In .
A marriage license was issued in was a member or the Ash St., Kirkland Memory .Gardens.
Meigs County Probate Court to Freewill Baptist Church In Middle- Friends may call at the funeral
Gregory Allan Winebrenner, 25, Rt.
The Meigs County Sheriff's De·
port and was a freqent viSitor to the home any,time after 2 p.m. ~ay.
1,
Reedsville, and Ingrid Paige
: partment Is investigatingthe theft of
Hayman, 20, Long Bottom.
a 19.7i7 Cadillac that was stolen from
. a parking lot in lowe r Middleport
between 1 a.m . and 4 p.m . .
· Wednesday.
Penn Central Transportation Co.
Harry D . Holter, George . C.
&gt;' The vehicle was owned by John
to Consolidated Rail Corporation,
Holter to Larry It Wright, Inc.,
Hlgglnbothan , Lincoln . Heights,
Corrective Stipulation, Meigs.
Meigs County emergency 'medl·
Right of Water and Meter Site
PomerQY. It was reported th11t the
Duckworth, deceased,
Harold
.cal service squads made a total of
Agree., Sutton.·
keys had been locked in the car. The
201 runs in DeCember.
Blanche Easterday, deceased, to J1l,ola Duckworth, Cert of trans.;
car bears the ltcense number
,
William Reed Easterday, John Syrac;use.
The breakdown Is as lollows:
AEH·743.
&lt;
Lola Duckwprth to Max E.
Pomeroy, 43 runs, 690 miles, William Easterday, Rose DeBrUhl,
Duckworth, Lot 6, Syracuse.
average 16 miles per run; Middle·
Affidavit, Sutton.
Alt)leers Oil, Inc., Right of Way,
port, 36 runs,' 593.9 miles, average 16
' Nina Theiss; deceased, Blythe
miles; Rutland, 2.3 rups, 511.8 miles,
Tbels, affidavit, Sutton.
Rutland.
Veterans MemoJial
· Paul R. Johnspl), Carolyn E.
average 25 miles; Racine, 25 runs,
Johnson to Lotile L. Lawson,
981.6 ,n\lles, average 39 mUes; •
.
Admitted .. Helen · Engel, Pome ·
0
Parcels, Oltve.
..
Syracuse, 11 ru11s. 247.3 mUes;
roy; Mary Jane F rancis, Portland;
average
22
miles;
Tuppers
Plains,
(Conilnued
from
page
1)
Jlo!eutzling,
deoeased
to
Clarence
Wilbur Ha nning, Middleport; Ro·
Ada
M.
Neu
tzllng,
Wilma
Mees,
bert H. Hysell, Pomeroy.
14 rims, 515.5 miles; average 37
temperature ' Is . autorpatically
Cert .. of trans., Chester,
ralseli and • lowered with a
Dlscharged··Manley E . ChrL•ty. · miles. ,
Clyde.Scragg, Blanche Scragg to
family's sclledule.
TrahSfer squads made 49 runs,
John A. Meeks.
Joseph William Scragg, Trustee,
totaling 1,888.1 miles, an average of
Insulation was diSC\!SSed and
Par.cels, Rutlalld.
39 miles pet run. · ,
.
Clark said the attic ts the best
Clyde Scragg, Blanche Scragg to
EMS Administrator Bob Byet
place to start. For Meigs County
oseph
wnlia. m Scragg, :rru~ee.
several
hours
of
training
has
he
sald
the
R
value
(the
hlgber
said
Two emergency runs
Parcels, Rutland.
·
been ·scheduled for EM't's and
the more effective) should be 30
'
paramedics.
,. for the roof, and 19.for the walls .
Tho calls were answered by local
. A 27·hour refresher Is slated to
and floors. Caulking 'around the
unitS on Wednesday, the Meigs
start tn· Syracuse .Jan. 25, while ~
windoWs and doors, weather
·CountY Emergency Medical !)erstripping, · adding storm win· . .Meet$ l.onight ..
vtce reports. At 5: 14 a .m., ·the · · 90-hour basic EMT training class is
being
hell;!
at
Veterans
Memorial
dows or Clear plliSt!c sheets as
Middleport Unit twk John Swisher
Hosplial.
.
·
.
.
·
.
.
·
.
well as closing, the drapes when ·
A spectal lnl)eting of ~. Meigs
of · near Middlepoi:( to Veterans
An
additional
therapy
obeseiva,
.
the
s11n
~down
were
among
·
Local
Band BoosterswDI be lleJd at6
Memor1al Hospital and at 1: 12 p.m.,
tion
Is
.
.
now
being
conducted
at
thi!Iow-costwaysllstedasbelng
this
eVening
('l1nmlday) In ' tbe
the . Middleport Unit . went . to 850
Veterans·
for
EMT,
EMTP
and
.
ef~tive
'In
.
reducing
energy
:.Meigs
Junior'
High
Schi:lolcafeterta
MapleSt.forBe~nlceBiakewhowas
In
Midd,Jeport.
.
.
AD
.
V·EMT
persrinnoJ.
bil'given treatment.
~

.

· The central office or Meigs Local
School District, in accordance with
Its policy of a uniforin lunch
program · throughout the distr1ct,
announces tbe menu ior the week of
Jan. 17.
·

Arsenic po4oning .$Uspect arrested

Poland expels American reporter
WARSAW, Poland (AP)- Ruth
Gruber, United Press Internatlon, al's Wars aw corre spondent,
charged that the government order
expelling her from Poland is " part of
a campaign against the Western
press" by the military government. ·

Meigs Local School District.lunch.menu

.

group of reHglous zealots. Seven .m embers of the
group died when ponce rushed the house where they
were holding Hesler In a rescile attempt. ( AP
Laserphoto)

Pomeroy-Middle

,.

tJJ

�•

L

Page- l 0 11

The Do i ly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Help W a nt ed

41

peraprofes ·

siena! cf aa .. oom trai"ing
pr()(Jn!m. Unemj:l~yed per·
son should contact the toetl

Bureeu of Emp~ym&lt;en.f Se r·
vices for fltrthiJI' detah and

Eureka 2 bdr.. furniahed,
riverfront lot, ref. &amp;dop. CoN
814·843-2844.·

10 arrMge f OJ an int tM'Vie¥W

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EM PLOYER .
p 0 N&lt;1 25040

12x60 furnished • convenient locllti~. Upper River
Rd . Sac .. dfip. raq . Coil
446-8668 .

DI RECTOR lor Sheltered .
Worllshop. G allta ,co. Board
of MR -00 . M ust meet certific• t ion requirem4!11"1 ts ot tht .

Ohio Dep art m ent of Mental
Retaf- duion end Develop·
mental diaab l!ities. BA de·
gree a must, iKperie nce and
beckgrou nd in b usinMs, indt~ strill l pro duction and 11klsmanship is euentia l. Ap·
plication s mity be obt8ined
b\1 w ritJlg P.O. Box 14.
614
-36 7-0102
.
Chaahirt.
Oh 46620
or c al l
HAVE FUN paying you r
Holidoy bills. Sol i Avon ond
earn good $:$$ , meet nict
peopl e. Ca l l 614 - 843 2982, 614 -388-9045 . 614·
992 -3690 .

Clotl'ling Store Manager, to
superviu , manage in·van ·
tory end sell . MARCH OPENING . Sand resume with
salary requ irements to ·
:GINZA , 2066 Braew ick
Dr .• Akron, Ohio . 44313.
The West Virginia Depart·
ment of Heetth is1eeking a

ful -tine Hospital Adminii·
trator for its Fairmont Emer·
gency Hospital, located in
Fairmont, Wes1 Virginia. Re·
quii"Bments : Baccalaureate
degree ptu s t.wo y~rs of
ex.periBnce in t1ospital or
health services, or business
administration . This 44-bed
f.::ility provtdes long-term
skilled nurfl&gt;ing services and
outpatiem clink: servlcas.
Applicants shOuld submit
resumes and applications to:
L. Clark Hansberger, M . D.,
Director of Health. 1 800
Washington Street, East,

2 bodroom 1 Ox 50. Adults
only. Brown's Trailer Park.
MinersVille, Oh, 814-9923324: . '
"

Ir~~~~;~~;~~~~~;;~~~~~~
18

Wanted to Do

Will keep pre-•!'hool children in my home, Spring
Valley area. Call after 6,
446 -8326 .
WANT to do houaa cleaning,

304-773-5226 .

21

Business

0 ppo rtu nity
OWN your own Jean Spo&lt;tswoar, lnflnt-Preteen
or ladles Apparel Store.
Offering all natio·nally
known brands such aa Jordaehe, Chic. lee, levi. Van·

derbilt, Calvin Kle.i n,
Wranglor over 200 othor
brondo. 67,900 to $16.600
includes be.g inning invantory, airfare for one to
Fas'lion Center, training,
fixturai. grand opening promotion1. Call Mr. Keenan
306-67B-3639.

32

1•h70 excellent cond. Call
614-367-7489 after &amp;PM.

8x20 Mobiht Home. Remodeled. $800. 81 4-949 ·
2646 ,
Good used 2 bedroom mobile homn . Furnished . ·
Brbwn's Trller Park, Rt.
124, Min-.ville. Oh. 8141 9_9_2_·_3_3_2_4_.- - - - •·
1979 Shultz mobile homo.
Lindsey lyons. Tuppers
Plains, Oh . 667·3303 .

1---------USED MOBILE HOME .
676-2711.

1----------

1977. mobile home 12x:80,
3 bedrooms, central air.
304-676 -3866. Golllpolio
Farry. WV.

33

Farms for Sale

1-

Professional

Services
1---- - -- - --

40 acres, 2 bedrooms, all
electric, Hl)D Approved.
304-372 -9499.

1979 unfumlohed Wlndoor
Troller with lot. •16.600.
614-992-6366 Middleport.

1----------

23

TWO mobile homes for rent
on Rt. 2 about &amp; minurtes

10.3 ecreo 12x60 mobile
home with new carpet.
partially furnished, tobacco
base. Haooan Tree Rd..
$18,000 oil or 812,000 for
land only. Col 814-2688704 or 614-268-1139.

2 bdr. unfurniahad apt. in
Crown City. (:all 614-2686620.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has .1
bedroom apartments, rent
1tarting at 8167 per month.
Call 448-2746 or l•va
message.
Bradb\Jry efficiency opt.,
2nd. · floor, adqtt1 only, 729
2nd. AVo., Gallipolis. Call
446-0967.
.
Furniohod opt. 1 bdr . • 920
. 4th Ave. Gallipolis. Adults,
water 8t electric pd. 1200
mo. Call 446-4416 after
7PM .

1st. floor ~ pert. furnished
apt, Utilflies paid, refemce
required. Inquire at 631 4th
AVe., Gollpolis.

1----------

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
ewance Co . has offered
aervi:•• for fire inatWai1ce
coverage in Gallia County
tor almoat a cehtury . Farm,
home end personal property

QQv•.g•• are available to
m.et individual needs. Conmet Eugene Holley, agent.
Phono 388-8690.
16

Schools
Instruction ·
.

GREAT BUY
2112 acres. 6 rrnt. recently
remodeled, wall 10 wall
carpet. forcod lir, I 13.000.
Crown City, Oh . Call 304·
738-8439.

.

Housaa for Rent

2 "h: bltha. alec·
tricity, re•tored victQrian,
wall tQ wal car.. t, ac gas
hoot. 304-876-8804.
32 Mobile Homes
for ,Sale

Good locotlon $126 mo,
A-0 ne Reol Elltotes. Carol
Yaoger Ro111or. 676· 6104
or 676-6386.
---------4 bdr . house. fireplace, full
basement, 3 miles out of
!Own, city school, Coli 448·
18111 Or 446-1244,

Pomeroy•2 bel. .uom unfurnlohod hou•. $196. mo.
Security dopoolt. 1100. pluo
utiUtleo. Alter 6-coll 614·
992-22B8.
4 room
odult
.. nohouoe.
peto. Preferably
814 -9923981.
.

·•

eo.

••pe-

1------'-----UII'~'JRNISHED apartment
for rent, 1 bedroom,
$180.00 Call Automotive
Supply, 8-6, 304-6762218, 676-6753.

FURNISHED 4 room cottage, adutta. no pets, 304~
876-1463.
Unfurniohod uplltairo opt for
rent. good locatton, 304676-1302.
MASON WV, 2 bedroom
apartment, unfurnished,
carpet, olr, •1 60, pl_uo utili·
Ilea. 304-882-3366.

••tr••

i"

.... .

.:

Large trailer lot on Bulavlll•
Addi..,.. Rd. Coll441·4738
or 448.· 4286.

.. -'l'; ..

, 'I

' '

73

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Polic. Route 33. NO!'Ih of
Pomeroy. large 1011. Coil
992-7479.

48

ft
.• Iorge
bod yourHII.
pick up hMIIo·
bit,
operllll
190.
per day. 304-B96-3841.

Otttnyl!l+rc~

~~~~~;;~~::::;r;~~;~i==~;;~

Undorpinnint for- 12x80
mobile home, 13&amp;. Coli
814·3BB-9S09.
.

51 Housahol~ Goods

GOOD USED APPUANCES
- wlilhars, dryers. refrigerators, ranges. Shgga Ap·
pliancM, Upper River Rd .•
bolide Stone Crtllt Mo101.
446-7398.

· Q.-n oizo wotorbod Mke
new with pod. 1heeto &amp;
plllo-, t400. Coli 1114387-74&amp;2.

69

For Sale or Trade

i97&amp; Iuick Eloct1'o 2 bdr.,
PS, PI, AC, AM·FM storo
t1,8&amp;0 or trade for cattle,
form oqulp.....,t, or mobHe
home of equal velue. Call
44&amp;-4637.

-

.. .. ·
. ...

.,

,.,,_

a

•

""

8:00

I
\

18 ft. Low boy 2 ulo trollor
ond o n - 1·3 HP Myero
pump • titnk 1111 - · Clll 83
446-71104.
-------8 ft. doll co• ond gondo· 1 0 COWl • 0 bull for All,
H011vy Sprlngere mixod. Coli
loH. Contoct 387-03~S.
4411·0S71.
Motchlngoofo ond choir like
=! Heraford bullo. Lawrence
now. Coll448·2318,
Burdoll. Coli 614-245·
GRAIN FED BEEF. Coli 11181.
81 4-2611-8&amp;, s.
llllfl~llt- Quorter Horoe,
S fl. oluminum toppor for Ruth RM..i . Aloo greda.
Ford pickup, fuM length tool Saddlas. bridlea. winter
bo•. loll side. Coll61 4-4411- horee blankets. Weatern
booll. 814-898;3290.
1420.

-------lc-

truck

Firewood, 13&amp;.
lood .
1611. • cord. Split ond
doliverod, 814·843-3803.

RIDING hor- &amp; ooddleo,
304·&amp;78·2283, 678-2110.
676-2821.

),nJ:

PART. WE' RE HOME FREE.

SHORTWT...

/

I
• BORN· L.OSER

week 's games.

79

C!l ESPN Sponscenter
liJ Andy Griffith
.
1

i'

t
II
I

Motors Homes
S. Campers

YEP! 1 THINH I
FINALLY GOT TH'
HINK5 OUT OF 'Ef1,
l'iARBUCK5!

I

1979 "Motor home, c••n.
low mileage, ..tf contained,
automatic, 8 track. 304882-2730 . .

/

DU~NEO

RIGHT IT OOE5! COME
OVER TO TH' VIDEO SCREEN
AN' WE'LL PUT TH' BABY
THROUGH 'Ell PACEG!

a

..
~0

...

'A

••

O»

00

I

THEENK I
GO BACK

••. BECI\USE I

TD I'!VCAVE

"YOU GET AWAY THAT EASILY!

DON'T THINK

THESE GALS ARE GONIIIA LEr

EEN THE .

JOIIIGLIO I

n..

I

a

Houso cool 124ton. Hlaher POODLE GROOMING. Coli
HARTl UIOCI Cora. Now
if dollvorod. Wllloccept Ohio Judy Toylor ot 814-317·
Electrical
Ho- Woot Vlrglnll., Over B4
HEAP Vouch. .. Col 814· 7220.
20
leu
o•ponolvo
coro
In
S.
Refrigeretion
268'8818.
otuok.
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
Firowood opllt. cut to ·• KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
SEWING Mochina repeiro,
length, you pick up. We ploo, CFA Hlmoloyon, Por- .
CARS t1 001 trucko *7&amp;1 oorvico. Authorl•ocl Singer
dollvsr. Wo occopt HEAP 1ion ond Sl..,_ kilt..,..
Avllloblo lt. local govem- Solll &amp; Sorvlco Sharpen
cordi. Coli 814-258-824&amp; . Call 448·3844 oltlr 4PM.
ment uloo.Colllrofundlblo) Scluora . Fobrlc Shop,
1-81g·&amp;ll9·0241.
Pom-.,oy. 992·2284.
..
fomole, II wb. old, I 00.
77 CHEVROLET Coprlce
with Major Hoople Call 448-0708.
General Hauling
Cl11,1c. 4 door, cloon, 86
NADA Blul Book
Dobermon fuU blooded,:::·
U,300.00 firm. Call 304oro, block, e40. Coli
8·
875-34411.
1824.
JONES BOYS WATER SER·
1179 Muotong, 4 cyl. turbo, VICE. Call 814·3117-7471
SiomoM ldaOrll. purobtocl.
4 opoocl, o!r condition, oun or 814-387-0691.
Call 446·811011.
roof. om-fm S-treck. 304Neod oomothlng hauled
178·7888.
AKC roglotaNd lrl"" Iotter
•-Y or oomothlng moved?
pupploo no. 304· 773,.810 Rot X19. Coil 304- Wo'lldo lt. Coll448-31 &amp;Bor
11831.
114·2118-1887 oftor 8.
17&amp;-3089 oftor 4:00.

liP

. Mualcel
Instruments

8 piece Ludwig drum lnoludtl oR oymbelo .,d
otando. t 11100 firm. Phone .
304-8711-112811.

1117&amp; CHRYSLER
304-875-3874.

t17&amp;,

11110 CHEVmE, 4 dOor,
- - tnnomlllion, air
oondltlonlnl. many oxtroo.
Call :00. 304-176-

office?

the charqes?

WI NNIE
WINNIE, YOU

NO SUCH

LOOK LIKE

LU.CK/1 HAD
TO MAKf

SOMETHING
CAT

&gt;'";";, , ••

fr

BARNEY

NOT

ALL TH' MAGIC HAS
GONE PLUMB OUT .
OF MY MARRIAGE,
LOWEEZY

..1

MINE!!

~

£
~

MY MAN ·
SNUFFY DOES A
DISAPPEAR IN'
ACT EVE;R'
NIGHT AFTER
SUPPER

t Ei:r.~~~~
~

.---C.-!.~4 j
!

~~~~-_L_=..:::2.J

=:::=::======
_e_7___

Cllop

UP~o_st_;e_rv~~h 1

, CHop
CHop .

.,
,,
'·

,.'
,,•'
,.

-~·

~""'-\

REPO~TS,"ICV SIDEWALKS"

. ~" '\

.

'

_/.J
1- I J

..

THE TRAFFIC IIELICOPTER

Cf./op'JY
· .;·
.
(...

~(

!

,' .

' PEANUTS

JIMS WATER . SERVICE.
Coli Jim lonlor, 3'04-6767397.
'

2718 . .

4ouqoinq
to answer the
phone, Slim?

l

===============

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
. 1880 DATSUN ZOO 8X
GillON ' 1'1'-· holdllloak, loodod, low mi· 1 1 83 Sec. Aw., Gollipollo.
..... Annlwnlry modtll. ...... nnllont -.dltlon. 448·7B33 or 441-1133.
I'IIGod hunclrwdo undtt -k
CMrry • ...._ •
twin 12 ......, omp. .hot ......... otp,optMIIMk MOV,n!EYI Upholotory Rt.
offer. hit offer. 104-171· 1o1 or coli Joi-1175-8427 1 loJI l24. Pt. Plouont,
304-8711-4114.
lfter8 p.(ll :
3421.

)1;11

Could she be
sweeHalkinq him
into droppinq

Rover's mother
is in Pert's

l

1---------

-------------lc-

I (J

I I XI XJ

BRIDGE

Auto Parts
Acce11ories

AM-FM Dotoun PU rodio.
lite modal Chevy Dotoun PU
bed, 8ft. llteol flottoed, VW
115' snow tires • wheele &amp;
other 16 • tires, &amp; hole meg
wheel• for PU'o. Minor'o
U eed Auto Pert e.
Adomovglo·Hirrioburg Rd .
Coll1114· 241ii-9102 .

I WEHIN

rI I I

Motorcycles

81 Hondo C M4DO, laol thon
2,000 mllos, luggap rock
end back rest. Ilk• new.
1860. 304-773-6009,

[J

.......

jMOHG~
()

IF TH17 15- THE HAI':Pc7T

HALFWAY
ALOIICii THe . ·

8 CD Newoconter
Cll MOVIE: 'Dot and the

·m..=-~ --

Kang.sroo'
Cl) MOVIE:' love For Rent'
Cll Tic Toe Dough
([) Carol Burnett
(J) II (J) II llJ Newo
Fi(ANKEN·
CD NOYYII/Sporto/Weather
MONSTE~
D~AC·
STE
IN'
S
(J) Gil Poworhouoe
U~A ANP A WE~EWOL.F
CD Eyewltneu News
(!II Wonder Woman
ALL AT THE ~Air'\E TIME,
6:30 8 Cil CD NBC· News
6ETTSR HOP:!: IT'S TH 1$.
Cll MOVIE: 'Plunderers of
Painted Flots'
Now a"an~ the elrded leners to
(J) Bob Newhart Show
form the surprise answer, as sug([) G (jJ ABC News
QIIIad by the above cartoon .
II Cll ® "CBS News
(J) Dr, Who
liD Over Easy
Print answer here:
7:00 U (l) P.M. Magazine
(!) ESPN's Sportsforum
(Answoos lomorrow) ·
(J) Gomer Pyla
Yeslorday·sl
Jumbleo:
SINGE
DICED
WINNOW
BOLERO
.
(J) Entertainment Tonight
.
Answer:
When
his
glrl
lnslsled
lha_
l
he
find
a
job
,
thi
s
CD g) (:horiio'o Angels
Ia what he decided 10 look for- A NEW GIR L ·
0 Cll Tic Tac Dough
(J) ffi) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
® Eyewitness News
Ill l12l People's Court
7:30 1D Cil CD You Asked For It
Cll Inside 1he NFL len
Dawson and Nick Buoniconti
analyze this week· s NFL action and look ahead to next

PAA6EJWJJ5&gt;

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
2Yi
old
ltal!ion.
Sofa, chair. roeker, ott· · Firewood dtU..red 180. •
2.
man, 3 tablet, l••tra he•'l cord. Coli dlliverod 141ii. Coli 304-11711·
by Frontier), $6S6. Solo, ton. C.ll Tom Hooklno 114·
chair and loveMat, e2715. 949·2180 or 814-74264 Hey 8t Grain
Sofa a and chai111 priced from 2834.
t286. to 1896. Toblll, 146
and up to 8126. Hide·•' Firewood for Hie, Split &amp; Alfolfo hoy 13.00 bolo.
beda,8440 . end up to doliverod t3&amp;. pickup lood. 304-87&amp;-80114. . .
t626 ., Reclinera, $176. to Call 814-247-2192 or 8148360., lompa from 128. to 949·2029.
Hoy-- frol, 76 conto, STUCCO PLASTERING
876. 6 pc. dinettes from
• 1 .7&amp; per bale, Glonrldgo ••tured ceilings commer·
$99 .. to 843&amp;. 7 pc,. 11SS. McDANIEL CUSTOM BUT· Form. Rodmond Rldgo. Gil· cial and residential, free
and up, Wood table with aix CHERING. cunlng
wrop- llpollo Ferry. 304·&amp;76 - ottlmoteo. Coli 814-2511choirs 8426. to 1746. Dook ping, 6 doyo o 1182. &lt;
.
· phone 1970.
8110 up to 8226 . Hutchn. 304-8S2-3224.
1660. and up, maploorplno
PAINTING · interior lnd
'
. . .. '
finioh. Bunk bod complete '14 horoepo-r Myero Suboxterlor. plumbing. roofing.
with mettr••••· e210. iind mergHble pump and outfit.
lOme remodeling. 20 yrs.
up to 8396. Baby beds. 2 v•r• okl, excellent condl~
••P· Coli 81 4·388-98&amp;2.
Autoa for Sale
1110, Mattreaaes or box don. 304·876·2207 eft• e 71
springt, full or twin, I 58., p.m.
- - - - - - - - Morcum Roofing • Spout·
finn, 168. ond 878. Ou•n
ing. 30 yeart experience.
oet1, 8196 . 4 dr. chooto, Whirlpool woohor ond dryor. 1982 Buick Rogol 28.000 -ciolizli&gt;g In bult up roof.
I yeor old. olmond. 1400. min, A· 1 .,..,..ltlon, PB, Coli 814-388-98&amp;7.
*42. 5 dr. cheot1, •M. !romeo, . uo .•
12&amp;,. 10 304-87&amp;-7880.
PS. cNIM, tHt lltMring,
gun • Gun coblnoto. 1360.,
AM· FM otero • CIIIOIIO GENE'S CARPET CLEAN·
dinotio choirol20. ond U6. 3 drowor buffet for 111e. Con ployor. Cal 448-1211.
lNG. Deep ateom cloonlng,
Ges or electric rangee, 1326 bo ooan It 281&amp; Jockoon
Scotchgaurd. Free eatlup .to 1376. Boby ma· Avo. or coll304-17&amp;·2823. 1977 Mercuiy Monon:h 4· miiM, Low rotn. 814-982·
treuoa, 826 &amp; $36, bod 12&amp; .
·dr., AC, PS, Pl. Aoking 83011,
fromos UO, $26. • 130,
UOOO. Coli 814-379king fromo 860. Good ooloc- ·N - olx-pieco living room 2320.
CARPEr,ITRY, WALL PA·
tion of bedroom .suites. :oulto. 304-87&amp; -&amp;1 82 ofter
NELING. CEILING TILE INceder chelta. rockera. metal · &amp;:30 p.m.
11178 MG Mlgot 42,000 STAUED. Roducod rotoo
cabineta, awivel rockers.
mlloo. Muot •II. Coli 448- for months of Jonuory.
Uaed Furniture -- bookcaH, ASHLEY wood burner . 7414.
Fobruory, Morch. 814-992range1, chairs. end tlblea, *160.00 304-876-3184.
27&amp;9.
· wash.,., drYers, refrlgere19711 Co.Worth Vogo 6
tora and TV'1. 3 mile1 out THREE ploco ooctlonol opd,. on orginal, 448-937B. RON'S Tolovlolon Service.
BuloVillo Rd. Open 9om to couch. 8 montho old, Phone
SHc•lizlng in Zenith and
6pm, Mon. thru Fri.. Bam to 304-876-&amp;0!ill.
1974 Novo good cond., Motorola, Ouazar. and
6pm, Sot .
84,000 mi .• now tlroo (80'1 houM coHo. Coli 678 -239S
446-0322
TOBACCO quoto for Ale,
70'o) ohocko, storo ..,,. or 4411·24&amp;4,
304-87&amp;-,, 26.
tom. upholotory ond oxhou11
Solo &amp; Choir, dinette 1111.
IYIItlm, Price 11.&amp;00, Clll F • K TrH Trimming, _,ump
color TV. 2 bedroom Illite,
4411-0827.
owrno¥111 . Coli 87&amp;-1331.
waeher &amp; dryer. Selling 66 Building Suppllee
cheap leaving ttate. Call
1970 VW good cond., boot RINGLE"S SERVICE oipe446-81,5 .
offor. Call 814-245-9322.
rioncod roofing. Including
Building motorlolo block.
hot tar •plication. carpenbrick. - r pipeo, win·
12 cu.ft. Hotpolilt refrigera- dowo, llntol1, etc. Cloudt 1 Z pol80nogor Ford von ter. olec:trlolon, maoon . Clll
tor, gold guorantHd. 1110. Wlntero, llio Orondo, 0 , Coli 1976 modll, IUIO., air, 304·676-2088 or 67&amp; ·
W hlrlpool. automatic 814-245-&amp;121 .
otoro-rodlo, t2.091i. Coli 4&amp;60.
.
washer, like new. Gueran·
446-4564.
t..d. Coli 446 ·8 1 81 .
Woter Wallo. Commorclol
BulkS your own QINOI or
Corwtto
tll.200
finn.
117&amp;
ond Domntlc. Tilt holoo.
born, 24x24, " " · Lumber
Neorly now GE horvett gold furnished.
Pumps SIIIM and Service.
Can · deliver. Coli 17&amp;-7&amp;47 oltlr 7.
wooh• with mini wuh •
304-896-3S02.
Othor olzeo. C.ll 1·814·
ooftnor dloponoar. 1 B lb. BB8-7311.
1911 Hondo Civic outo., olr
capacity. Guarenteed 30
cond.; AM·FM otoro. Coli Got your corpet In ohlp
day1, I 1 60. Coli 614-268- BUILDING MATERIAL. Flot 1114-245-1287 lftor &amp;PM.
ohope. W.tor removol. FREE
1207.
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
metal sheeta porcelan·
onomol cootocl. 4ft. by 8ft. 11181 GTO. t210 . Coli 114- CLEANING, CAPTIAN
STEAMER 114·446-2107.
thru 4 ft. by 1211. 17.00 10 381-1707.
54 Misc. Merchandiee 19.80, odd oiZM 13,00 to
11171 Chevrolet L.oguono
111.00. 1114-887-308&amp;.
Plumbing
good runnlnt cond. i300. "82
!Inn. C.H 814·245-9278
8t Heeting
For aele, lump coal 6 "firelflor 8PM.
wood. linn Coal Co .• Inc. 66 Peta for S81e
I
C.ll 448-1408,
111711 Bulok EljOctro 2 llclr .•
itiLLCREliT KENNEL
CARTER'S PLUMBING
PS,
PB, AC. AM·FM tt•o
Slobl cut-up t16 IUIIIongth Boordlng oil broodl, AKC
,.NO HEATING
11,9&amp;0
or
trodt
for
cottlo,
•10 PU load, round wood, Rog. Dobermilno pupo ond .
Cor. Fourth and Pin•
form
equipment.
or
mobllo
largo truck lood, Col 614- Dobermon Stud llnlll:e.
homo of oquol voluo. Coli Phon• 448-388S or 4411·
246-&amp;804.
Call 448· 77911.
4477
446·4&amp;37.

ye)ar

WHATEV5R
IT WAS
PAT WAS
PL-ANNING
TO SPIL-l.-...

C'A PTAN EASY

I

304-&amp;711-1607.

8t

I I

EVENING .

Vana&amp; 4W.D.

76

•

(t) 11113 LWied FHturl S'f'"dleale. 1111l .

IIii I

I II

(J)
NCAA Basketball:
Purdue at Ohio St.
0 Cll Family Feud
(J) Buajreos Report
(jj) lasf'Chance Garage '
Gl l12l Entertainment
Tonighl
B:OO · 1D Cil CD Fame Leroy befriends a tough but talented
youngster and Coco challenges a visiting celebrity.
(60 min.)
Cll MOVIE: 'The Great
Caruso·
(l) I Spy
(!) NFL Story: Line By Line
liJ NCAA Basketball:
Wichita St. at Tulsa
0 (J) (jJ Magnum , P.l.
The arrival by sea of a large
crate leads Magnum into a
situation with a Japanese
business. (A)(60 min .!
(J) . .MOVIE:
'Nicholas
Nickleby'
® Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey lyons look at what's ·
happening at the movies .
01 l12l NCAA Basketball :
West Virginia at Penn St.
1!11 MOVIE: 'They Died
With Thair Boots On'
8:30 Cll
MOVIE:
'Sleeping
Dogs'
ffi Top Rank Boxing
(jj) Enterprise ·The Selling
of Terri Gibbs.' Tonight's
program follows the career
of singer Terri Gibbs.
9:00 U (l) CD Gimme a Break
The Chief catches Julie
smoking.
(l) 700 Club
0 Cll ® Simon &amp; Simon
(jj)
Myateryl
'Sergeant
' Cribb." A group of people
oppose the sale of a celebrated elephant in the London Zoo. 160 min.) !Ciosad
Captioned!
9:30 0 Cil CD Cheers The de·
mise of her cat puts Diane in
a funk.
1 0:00 U (l) CD Hill Street Blues
Capt. Furillo offers to turn In
his badge during the trial investigating the police depanment . (AI (60 min.)
(f) MOVIE: 'Two Weeks In
Another Town'
lil TBS Evening News
(J) . . (jJ 20/20
0 Cll ® Knots Landing
Mack proposes to Karen
and Kenny can·t accept his
firing by Gary and Abby . (60
min .}
(jj) Newswttch
.INN Newo
10:30 Cil Year That Wao: 1982
This show recaps the peo·
pie and events that made
the news.
(l) Star Time
(jj) Alpine Ski School
g) In Search of., .
11 :00 0 Cil Newscenter
(!) ESPN SportsCenter
([) Woman Wetch
(J) 1!1 (J) 8 l12i News
CD Newa/Sports/Weathor
(f) Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey lyons look at what's
happening at 'the movies .
CD Eyewitnlla Nawa
(jj) Sign Off
• Benny Hill Show
1; :30 U (l) CD Tonight Show
(l) MOVIE: 'Pennies from
Heaven'
·
(I) Another Ufa
(!)
NCAA
Bosketball: ·
Colorodo a1 Kanaao State
Ci'J" MOVIE: 'Roughly
Speaking'
(J) Benny Hill Show
0 (J) Quincy Quincy tries
to trace a mysterious toxin
that is causing some mysterious deaths. (R) (60 min.)
C1J ·sign 011.
®Allin tho Family .
Ill l121. Nightllne
·
Ill Modlmo: a.~lace
.11:46 (l)
MOVIE:
'Gimme
Shelter'
1 2:00 (I) IUII)I &amp; Alien
Cll Nlghtlina
® MOVIE: 'My Name lo
Nobody'
•.
Gl (jJ Loot Word
·
g) Gunomoke
1 2:30 D (J) i1)lote Night with
:
David Lo~rmon
(J) Jack Bonny Show
(f) Lut Word
.
.
D Cll MOVI,E: 'McCloud:
Showdown ot tho End of
!he World' ·
. J..,n
· 1 :00 Clll Morriod
ID (jJ Ne• SIJ.'1 .D ff . _
1; 15. (f)
MOVIE:
' Budcly.
Buddy'
· 1 :30 •
(J)
NBC
NelJVII
. Overnight
, Cll MOVIE! 'The Ultimoto .
Worrior'

0

l.d J

b

dJ

b

J

, --=sw=a:.=...::.:a::C:.:o:::LY..:a:;;n:=...:::.:a:::m.::e:.:s;.;:;:a:.:c:.:o:::Ly_

_

Foes help out
two no-trump. Like most
experts she added a point lor
her one 10-spot, or maybe
because it w as a good day
lor her biometrics. Jn. any
NORTH
1-13·83
event, she found herself in a
K94
very normal three no-trump.
93
She · could counl nine easy
+QJ42
tricks alter the diamond
+Q98
lead, but knew that she
WEST
EAST
would need I 0 lor a good
+ASH
• 10 3 2
score and that 11 tricks
•As
.QI07542
would be close to a top. She
+98653
got her 11 tricks with a little
+4 3
J 10 7 2
1 help from her opponents . .
SOU Til
·•. · ·Dummy's queen of dia+QJB
1 moods held the first trick
•Ks
and East dropped the heart
+A K 10 7
live-spot. Obvwusly, it was
+AK65
the start of som e sort of
strength signa"!.
Vulnerable: East-West
Betty Ann l ed a diamond
Dealer: East
to her ace and East completWest North East
South
ed the signal'by playing the
Pass
2NT
heart deuce. Now she lea her
Pass 3NT Pass
Pass
queen of spades. West
Pass
grabbed her ace and contin·
ued with the ace and six of
hearts.
Opening lead: tg
Betty Ann' s king had
become a winner and she
was up to I 0 tricks, trying
By Oswald Jacoby
for 11 .
and James Jacoby
She got them with no trouble. She simply took the r est
It takes sklll to will a by cashing 11er spades and
World Pairs championship, diamonds . On the last
but the .winner needs some diamond; poor East had to
luck also. Here we see Ken- chuck a club in order to keep
nedy and Sanders picking up the queen of hearts over
extra tricks for another top dummy's jack and ail four .

.J
+

.+•....

score.

.

'

clubs were now w"iimers ~

.

Note Betty Ann's 20-pof~t

~~~-~
by t:HOMAS JOShoH
2 Misplace

ACROSS

I Stonned

3 Wagnerian

5 Love seal
9 Task · • .

4 Tobacco

heroine

5 Conductor

10 Hold it!
(naut. )
12 To be (Lat.)
13 Cook a
certain way
14 Salt lake

Caldwell

6 Eggs
7 Henry Fonda
film

s Besieged

H3

Yesterday's Answer

near Jordan 11 Unstable
21 Treason
16 New Guinea 13 Thrash
22 Pay dirt
jlort
15 Brisk
23 EquivQCate
17 N .Z. fort
19 Star in Leo 25 Dickens
18 Perch
20 Part of a
lass
19 Vacation
cardinal's 27 Campus
title.
figure
spot
23 Salubrious
,.......,....,,....,.....
24 Conmdum
25 Postpone
28 French
author
27 Topicfor
Neil Simon
28 Slng:le ( ~~refil&lt;)

29 Cubic meter '
32 Soho so-long
33 Inflexible
34 Chinese
dynasty
35 Brink
37 Egyptian king

~Spanish

composer

30 Give the O.K.
31 English ritual

b-+-1----11-

36 Conjoined
38 Barren
39 Search

tO Chinese
society

t1 Being (Sp. )
42 Angel (Fr.)

DOWN
I Engendered

DAILY CRYP'J'OQUOTE-Here's
,

•

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N G ·F E L L 0 W

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A· is
used- for the three L's, X for the two O's, et c. Single l eiters: .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are au ·
hln!A. Each.day the code letters are diflerent.
•

..

CR1(PTOQIJ01,ES

CE Y
K M

'

DAYJC

UPKTD

ZQYJMVA Y

·.S E J C

ZYPZQY

QKO

Y

M .J X. '

· ' ~-

XPV . RJ.TTPC UP .. c:- SJQCYA
IJDYEPC ·
'Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ENCOURA:GEMENT AFTER CEN• SUREISASTHESUN AFI'ERASHOWER.-GOETHE
'

•

11

Tel~vision

1113/83

1871! FORD Von for Ale or
trade. also Ford v1n pana.

74

Page -

THURSDAY .

77 Joep·nHdo pointed ·
11,8&amp;0. Aloo 71 JMP·hord .
top-81.300, Coli 614-9492732. Wil trodt.

64 Miac. Merchandlee

The Daily Senlinei -

Vi~wil.lg

1978 K-6 Blozor, 4-WD.
oKc. cond., PS, PB, AM·FM
rtlclio. 14,700 or beat oHer.
Coli 992'6938.

Equipment
for Rent

Beckh01 encloader di;a 8

Pomeroy.:__Middleport, Ohio

DIC'K TRAC'Y

18B1 PLYMOUTH Arraw
pickup, like new. phone ,
304·678·2873 .

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

!

Trocki for Sale

13, 1,983

1973 Ford llon.cher-o
pickup, run1 good ,. body
rough, Coli 814-286· 84&amp;8,

I~

R nt

f

I~=========:.l=========J~AiK~C~Lho~~~A~p;.oo;-~pu~m;;;·
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

TRI - STATE MOBILE 8 .Ooms and both. unfurHOMES. USED· CARS, . rilohod·. d.tpoolt required.
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS . Naw paint and carpeting.
CHECK · OUR PRICES . 814-992-3090.
CALL 448·7672 .
Houooln Roclno. 2 bd.room,
CLEAN USED MOBILE fully furnlohed, uoo ;
HPMEB KESSEL'S QUAL· month. · Depoolt required.
18 Wanted to Do
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. 814-949-2801'
4 MI. WESl:. GAU.IPOLIS,
In Pomeroy·2 bd.room
RT 36 . ·PHONE 448-7274.
houM. Equipped . kltch.._,
GtnM'III Haulng and Tr111h
r.novel Sorvlco. Rollable For Nle or · rent 12x80 Cllrpeted. forced air fur,.ce.
.,d. dlpendoblo. Col 448· mobllo home. 011 heat. rurol Coli 814-882·291S . .
3159 all• 8PM 2118· 1967. water. Cktaa to town, available Jon . lot. Col448·1240. &amp; bedroom. reotorad Vlcto·
ri.,, AC, low hoot. booutlful
SpeQill Window Tinting .
Auto, i'Hident!al , .c o mmer- Mobile home &amp; Iota for sale corpet, 1660 mo.. 304cial • Ft .V. wmdow s . r. ree 1 QS,7 Buddy mobile home 875-8S04.
ettlmate s. 4·45 . ~1 00 or 12&gt;60, 2 bdr., gas hoot,
446-7122, Kot • l i c rural water, .set up with ~ or HOUSE Moodowbrook odcl·
thin. 3 bodroomo, ,......,..
4 lots, CoN 448·1240. ·
LondiCAping .
required. phone 304-6711I'IIMI...,II llefvloo n - work, Mobile home 1981 2 bod· 11142,
1 - olfVice ' rooni 14•80. with 21ft. roll
r8lel. fWef 15 ,,.,
out,
Ind•• t14,000 or 4 nno.· • biJh unfutnlohod.
rlonCI, llollobM Plumbing n.ooo do·w n • toke oVer locetod 11 28 Colitlll Aw,,
GolllpoHo. C.U 441·1473.
c111 814-379-27oo.
peym.,to. Coli 448-2082.

"' ......... v.,

1•- .-,-oo-m-.a-ff-lc-lon-'cv-op-. - ,.
2
1

304-882-2666 or 1 -614992-7206.

3 bedroom houN for ule ..
New carpeting throughout.
Located on Beahan Rd. end
sits' On 3 acres of land.
Excellent tennlo to right
party. MAKE AN OFFER. 30
year ' flnanciR{' lveilable. 2 bdr. house unfurnlatad on
Contact Bank One of Po·m a- lower Rt. 7. Dop. req. Coli
roy: 614-992-21 33.
814-266-1413.

·6 bedroom.

Karate the ultimate in Hlf
defence all private leaaons.
M.,, women, &amp; children .
lnati\Jction thN blaek belt.
Al10 available Karate uniform• puching and kicking
b8Q1, arid protective equipmint . Jerry Lowery 8t AISociatet Karate S'udio, 143
Surtington Rd.. Jackson.
Oh . Call 614-288-3074 or
814-384-61 ~0 .

41

46 S

i'

/I

_ __P_ac_e_o_r_,_e_ _
1

Thursday, January

197S Dodp 4 WhMI drive
truck. Call 448-7&amp;04.

I
'

72

13, 1983

1171 Dodge PU 318 Stond·
ord lhlfl. 122&amp;. Coli 814318-9387,

!-4ow Cdtl i ~
'X&gt; COI.O iN ~ ~

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
44
Apartment
STORE 62 Olive St .• Go ill·
for Rent
polls, King cool • wood
hao10ro with lin 14&amp;8, set
box opring. mottreil 1100• .
Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr. finn 1120. oofo-loveoeat •
apartments for rilnt. HUO chair 8199, love Mltl 170.
program available. A-One new coal • wood hutera 11
Reel Eltatet. Carol Yeager.. low u 8399 with blowon.
Realtor. Coil 304-B76-. uMd coal &amp; wood heeters,
now dinot 1111 $76 &amp; up.
6104 or 876·6386 .
refrigerators, rangea. bunk ·
. Furnistwd apt., $226, utli· beds complete 1179, bunties pd,. 243 Jocl&lt;ion Pike, kiea mattreaes 140, chesta.
Gallipolis. Adults . 448- dre01ors, TV'a. Coli 4411·
3169.
4416 alter 7 p.m.

C&amp;L Bookkeeping'
Bookkeeping &amp; tax earvice
Furni1hod opt. $146 no
for all types of busin1111••·
utilities pd, 3 room•. 701
Fk»rida resident desires me- I-C_or_o_I_N_••_I_4_4_8_·_3B_&amp;_2_ _
OPPORTUNITY KNOCK · 4th Avo .. Gallipolio. Coli
ture 1ema.\e to c•r• ior 10 ·
G with thla 148 · oore 4411·44 1 6 oft or 7PM,
'
yoar old girl. Room and PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR IN
Rutland firm. Al1l&lt;i_
ous oell
board plus otl'ler fringe be- Call Bill Ward for appointhas priced accordil"lgly. In- Garage Apartment. 3 bdr. 8a
netts. Send reaume and ment. Ward's Keyboard. cludae rural home, barn. t:N!~th, furnished including
ovoilabllity to P.O. Box 446-4372 .
garage. minerals, and Much washer&amp;: d~er, adUlts only,
8746. South Charleston, 1- -------.,..--;_
If you have imer.. t in no pets. Call 446-1619 .
WV 26303. .
Bookkeeping Servi'cei· 1more.
good country farm or
.. . Begin 1983 with neet
minerals. don't pan up your 1 bedroom Apartment for
FU l1 time babysitter needed accurate records. Expeopportunityll. ~all R.C.S . rant. Coli 446-0390.
to coma to my home during ria1ced in wide errary of · Realtors.
1-614-593-6571 .
the day. 1 child. li~t systems including fund acPDMERDY-2 bedroom un·
houNkeeping. reference re- counting and double entry.
IUmiohed opt.. $160. 2
quired. Phone before 6, All phases of payroll and 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
bodroom hou1e $186. Dep304-675-3797 . After 6, rel111ted taxes. St;ictty confi·
oolt 8100. Coli 614-992_3 04·676-6803 .
dential. Excel•nt references
2288.
'
available upon rtqueat. Call
36AcrooatRodnoyonW. T. l---~2.----~
AN OHIO OIL CO . offon Undo Viddish at 614-379·
Watsoo Rd. Owrwr Finane- Apt. for rent. Halfdouble-2
high income, plus ca•h ,2_7_0_1_._ _ _~--ing ovoiloblo. 446-B221 .
bd.room Apt. Adults prebonusn. be,nefits to mature •forrod. No pots. 614-992peroon in Pt. PlaiSant area. PERMANENT tl A I A
Two acre lota-160 ft. road 2749.
Regardless of experience, REMOVAL- ProfeSiional
frontage~ city wet•. behind 1 - - - - - - - - -write M . T . Read, American Electroly1is Cent•. Inc .•
84 Lumbor. Col 304-875- In Middleport 2 bdr. furLubrlcanto Co ., Box 696, A ..M.A. Approved, Dr. Raf·
niohed 11p1 .• 304-8B2-2668
Dayton, Ohio 45401 .
errol,; Gilt CartHicotes. new 6B73 or 876- 381 a,
or 992-7206 .
hours. By appointment.
304-876-6234.
36
Roal Estate
1 bedroom garage apt, in
12 Situations
quiet neighborhood in Mid·
Wanted
Wanted
dloport. Sto.. &amp; refrigora 1or. Adult1. 8150 month
plua utilities . 614-384GINGER BREAD STUDIO. .
6309.
Art le11ons. Jonl earring - ---~-----­
ton. 898-3290.
Aportmonto. 304-8766&amp;4B,
Will core IO&lt; elderly lady in
rrrv ~me. Reatcinable rates.
APARTMENTS. mobile
EJIIperience and references.
homes, housea. Pt. Pleasant
- Coll304-773-9186.
and Gallipolis. 614-446B221 .

13

Fumlahed RoomaK
ri_T_'N_'_C_AR_L_Y_LE_'_"_:._ _ _ _ _._b.,;.y_LM_:ry_w_rtg__,ht

43 Farms for Rent

78 Nashu&amp; mobile home

I==========

'-==========

Nice 3 bedroom mobile
home near Herrlaonylle. UnIUmiohed. 2 children. no
inaidl!t pets. Heat furniahad.
614-742 -3033 .

from town, Call after 6 .
304-676 -6277.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

14Jt66 TWO bedroom, Holly
Park. with 100ft. • 200ft.
lot included . Weahar &amp;
dryer. 2 air condjtioners,
Iorge kitchen with all built in
appliance•, with built in
dishwasher, n8'N carpet a.
draperies. excellent condtiion. 4th Stntet. Mason,
WV. 304-773-6713 olter 6
p.m.

Charlllston,
West Virginia
26306, by December
16. !Salary negotiable. Equal Op- 22 Monoy to Loan
portunity Employer - AA
Plan· M-F-H
HOME LOANS 12% fixed
LOOKING FOR A PART rate . Leader Mortgage, 1.
· TIME JOB that has good 614-692-3061 .
pay, life insurance, .retire·
ment plan. that will teach Business a. Second Mort·
you a 11aluable job !kill, plus gage loans . Equity Re·help with a college or sounaa. in· Ohio 1-800Vo-Tech education? There's 992-2351, out of Ohio
only on a around I High 1 -&amp;1 3-268-01 12.
SchoolyouSeniors
or qualify
gradu8tas.
may even
for s cash bonus. Contact
the wast Virginia Army
National Guard. For more
information call Sergeant
Sergeant LuttOn at 304.
876· 3960 or call toll free
1-800-642-3619,

46

W..,..ly · - · one poroon
THREE · bedroom hot.iae for 180, 2 -pie t70. Circle'•
rent, niCe location. 304- Motol. Call 448-2501 ,
87&amp;· 1090.
SIMping room 1121. utili· .
liM pd. lingle mole. ohore
both . 979 2nd Avo .• Bolli po42 Mobile Homes
lio. Coli 448-4418 eftor
for Rent
7PM.
.
.

The Rio Grande CoHttgl!ll
C .E T A office is curre ntly
seeking twenty -five 12:6 )
perwona: to parttcipate in •

food service

Houeea tOr Rarit

Thursday, Jan_uary

,,

.

�·T.hursday, Jan~ary 13, 1·9a:f

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

Page-12-The Dail Sentinel

z

--

Market reports
•

Ohio Valley U.-estock Co.
Man.; Report
Trends : Veal calves

J5

tbs. 43-62; S00.700 tbs. 4().57.

lbs . 53-63; m ro400 tbs. 54.so.Q;; 4lO"' 000 lbs.
52-64: n to soo 100. s1-m: oco to 100 1bs. so.GI :

m

to 400 tbs. 48.~; 400 to :;oo tbs.

42.50-49; 700 to 800 lbs. 46-48; 800 and over

A !)eries of public gam es parH$
will be held at the Racine Fire
Station beginning at 7 p.m . tomor·
row night (Friday! under the
sponsorship of the fire dep~rtmerit 's
ladies a uxiliary.

Cows utlUtles 36-41; canners and

cutters 32-35.50.

Vea l Calves choice a nd prime '79-~ ­
Baby Calves 35-a:l.
Cows and Calves Combination 320-425.
Top Hogs 210 to 230 lbs. 53.50-56.
Boars 40-42 .~ .

Sows 400 lbs. am up 40-50.25.

Pigs by the Head 35-511

lbs. 44-64; -500-700 Jbs . 4U-:&gt;M.

Feeder HeUers: (Good aoo DloJce ' D).~

lbs. 37-57.50; 500-700 tbs. :JS.SJ.

FURTHER
REDUCTIONS
1/3 to 1/2
OFF ·-,
SORRY- All
SALES ANAL
NO LAYAWAYS

GIRLS' .

OVERALL JACKETS

LITTLE BOYS' AND GIRlS'

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

SWEATER SALE

PANTS

BOYS SHIRTS

Junior and Misses sizes. Cardigans, crew
necks, vests, cowl necks: V-necks .

Corduroy jeans, denim jeans and sweat
pants.

All of our boys shirts, including westerns -II annels · knits and sweat shirt
looks. Sizes 8 to 20.

LADIES'

REG.
REG.
REG.
. REG.

111.00
114.00
119.00
122.00

.................... SALE 17.70
.... :............... SALE '9.80
.................. SALE 113.30
.................. SALE '15.40

REG. 17.00 .............. :.. sALE '4.89
REG. 19.00 ......... , .......SALE 16.29
REG. 113.00 ...............SALE 19.09
JEG. 116.00 ............. SALE 111.19

Model

KV 1924

SPORTSWEAR SALE

EXPRESS TUNING CONTROL

Boys' Winter Jackets

.Hats, Gloves
and Toboggans

$698

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE!

MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
Sizes S, M, L and XL Westerns ·.d ress flannels · s uede looks.
Solid colors and patterns.

MEN'S 115.95 SLACKS
MEN'S 119.95 SLACKS
MEN'S '29.95 SLACKS
MEN'S 132.95 SLACKS

............................. '10.35
...... :...................... 112.95
............................. '19.45
......................, ...... '21.45

1 13.95

Sweaters and Sweater Vests
Velour Shirts
Knit Shirts
Work Flannel Shirts
Quilt. Lined Flannel
Shirts
-,
. -

sizes

''

LADIES
SPORTSWEAR

.JUNIOR
COAT CLEARANCE

All Wrangler coordinates, Devon , .Trissi,
Bradley, Levi and Douglas Marc .

Clearance prices on our remaining stock
of Jr. winter coats and jackets.

REG. '18.00 TO 197.00

REG 159.00to 1164.00

SAlE PRICED

$1260 TO $6790

'•

--~

SALE PRICED

MEN'S WRANGLER '32.95

19. Solid colors and patterns.
SHIRTS ...................................... 19.00
SHIRTS .................................... 110.35
SHIRTS ......... .': .......................... 111.65
SHIRTS .................................... 114.60

DRESS
DRESS
DRESS
DRESS

to

WASHINGTON (AP ) -Wholesale prices climbed 3.5 percent last
year, the smallest rise in 11 years
and less thanhalfthegainof1981, the
government reported today.
In December alone, the Labor
Department said, p1ioes rose a
minuscule 0.1 percent - markedly
off from November's 0.6 percent
and the smallest one-month change
since prices fell 0.1 percent in
September.
For all of. last year, the depart·
ment said, themocleration in energy
and food prices actually restrained
the overall wholesale price gain for
conswner goods, which, if those two
areas were omitted, would have'
risen 5 percent.
The department gave this break·
down of specific changes In the

price gain lowest .in 11.years

Producer Prl~ Index for finished cent for the year, compared~w!th a
goods, as ,_the wholesale price sharp 12 percent gain in December.
calculation Is fonnally known:
Beef and veal prices fell ·2.9 percent
-Energy coSts: Gasoline prices last year, including a 0.7 percent
fell8.6percent last year, helped by a drop in December.· Pork prices,
0.3 percent drop in December. however, skyrocketed 19.7 percent
Natural gas prices, which had in 1982, although rising 1.1 percent in
soared followJn&amp; congressional December. Poultry prices · rose a
price aecontrol in 1978, surg€d ~. 7 modest 2.2 percent fortheyear, even
percent in 1982, althoughdlppingO.S though tumbling 2.7 percent last
percent last month. Home heating month.
oil costs ' were unchanged for the
-Automobile prices rose a modyear despite a 0.4 percent drop in erate 1.9 percent last year, comDecember.
pared with a 1 percent Increase In
December. Light truck prices were
-Food prices: The moderate 2.1
up 1.8 percent for 1982 and 0.~
percent yearly gain was helped by a
tiny 0.1 percent jump in December. · percent in December.
-Capital equipment costs rose 4
Prices for fresh fruits tumbled 11.9
percent
for the year and 0.6 percent
percent last year and were down 4
last
month.
Those costs are for
percent for the month of December.
machin~ry and transportation ·
Vegetable prices turnbl~ 12 per-

LINEO DENIM JACKETS
Sizes 38 to 46. Waist length stYle with corduroy collar
and warm scherpa lining.

Only.

$1995

119.95 Quilt Lined Work Jackets ..................... 111.95

January Clearance!

January Clearance!

MEN'S WINTER
COATS AND VESTS

BIG BEN 139.95

Good style and color selection in winter jackets · vests · dress
·
coats and all weather coats. Sizes 34 to 46.

by the June 30 end of the current flscill year .
"We're in serious straits. The economy just has not .helped usatall," said
Meshel, D-Youngstown . "Frankly I can foresee some reductiOns in' state
spending ... in order to balance the books."
ContinUation of a package of temporary taxes, Including a surcharge on
the state income tax, past its March 31 expiration date already Is considered
unavoidable.
Meshel said extending it would generate less than $:.ro mUlion of the
income needed to deal with what is projected to be a shortfall of almost $.'m
million.
Meshel said increasing taxes beyond the level of the temporary package
"has not been seriously thought about ," raising theprospectof.majorcutsin
the last half of the fiscal year to eliminate the red ink.
Meshel said he expects Gov. Richard Celeste to outline his proposal for
dealing with the problem next month.
"I think during the month of February there'll be a proposal made by the
governor to deal witfi'the shortfall," Meshel said.
He and House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. met with Celeste We&lt;jnesday,
but the Senate President said specifics were not discussed.
It was thefirstofwhat is expected to beaseriesofmeetings. "I think we'll
be meeting very regularly," Meshel said.

S4130 TO $11480

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN
14\12

~olesale

...... ._.,.. .............................. 19.00
........................................ 110.35
........................:................ 112.95
.....................................·... 114.90

January Clearance Sale

MEN'S INSULATED COVERALLS
Zips from top and bottom. Brown, navy and olivewood. S, .
M, Land *!.. Not all sies in all colors. limited quantity.· .

.\ .$

Save 300AJ
1'"

SHIRT.S
115.~$ SHIRTS
119.95 SHIRTS
'22.95 SHIRTS

January Clenrance Sale

Han&amp; Te.n, Wran&amp;ler, Stuffed Shirt
and other quality name brand~ . .
Blazers, sktrts. slack~. coordlnatlna
. tops and blouses.

(614 ) 1146-7686

$419

JANUARY CLEARANCE!

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR
2113 Tnlrd A11e \ Gallloolis . Otllo ~ 563 1 .

REG. 16.00 ......................SALE 14.19
REG. 18.00 ...................... SALE 15.59
REG. 112.00 .................... SALE '8.39
REG. '15.00 ........ ,.... .... . SALE 110.49
REG. 119.00 .................. SALE 113.29

29 to 34. EKcellent selection of solid

114.00
116.00
118.00
122.50

NOW

TO

According to assistant plant manager John Moore, the Gavin plant has
enough coal stockpiled to operate 95days at full capacity.
However, he said only one of the plant' s two genera ling unit s is operating
because of the low demand for electricity.
HUes said there is also a stockpile of coal at the mines.

piece outfits, suits and bib overalls .
Sizes New Born to size 7.

REG. 11.89 TO 16.00

$} 29

OUTFITS

Waist sizes 30 to 50 - lengths
colors and patterns.

Neck

REG. '899.95

..................................... SALE 111.20
... ::............................... SALE 114.70
........ ,........................... SALE 118.20
.................................... SALE '21.70

2

.

workers on Dec. 29.
AEP. also cited the poor economy as the major factor in calling for the first
two layoffs.
.
'
The layoffs were part of a major cost reduction program at the
Colwnbus·based AEP.
The Meigs Mlnes are a major supplier of coa l to the James M. Gavin
electrical generating plant in Cheshire.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -Revenue to run state government is far below
• estimates, raising the prospect of massive spending cuts, officials say.
Income
major taxes used to fund state government decllnect in
December, led by a $19.7million drop in the non-auto sales tax.
.
A Legislative Budget Office report shows that category yielded $144.6
million for December, compared with $164.3 million it had been expected to
,produce.
Since .sales tax reporis lag about one month behind, the figures do not
reflect the Christmas shopping season. Retail sales nationally during the
period showed little improvement.
Slight gains in some other tax categories helped to offset theOtilosales tax
performance.
The auto sales tax produced $3.3 million more than expected, while
revenue from the public utUlty tax was $8.4 million higher than forecast.
Total general revenue income I9r the month was $19.3 million below
estimates, compared to a shortfall of $27.5 million for November.
For the fiscal year-tO&lt;:Iate, state government income was $66.3 million
below expectatioils at the end ofDecembercompare!] to$45.2milllonat the
end of November.
Senate President Harry Meshel said Thursday that state government
''may very well'' face spending cuts of up to$.JXlmillion to balance its budget

LITTLE BOYS'

CHILDREN'S

DRESS SHIRTS

MAGNI(VOX 25" COLOR
FULL REMOTE CONTROL

16;00
121.00
126.00
'31.00

1

JANUARY CLEARANCE!

•Men's
•Men's
•Men's
•Men's
•Men's

Reg. 1674.95

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

The mines will be kept in "standby'· cqndition and ready to reopen when
needed, he said.
.
Company officials have not made a predictlon as to when employees will
be called baCk t&lt;i work, Hiles said.
However, he added it is "unlikely" e mployees will be called back anytime.
in the near future.
The "continuing economjcdecllne" and Jhe resulting drop in demand for
electricity and coal is to blame for the layoffs, Hiles said.
The demand for AEP electricity dropped 12.6 percent from 1981 to 1982, he
~d .
.
Monday's layoff will be the first at the RaccoonMlne No.3. The first two
layoffs had affected Meigs No.1 and No.2 Mines .
The cOal .company furloughed 920 workers Nov. 2. and an additionallOO

Cuts 01ay follow revenue. loss

Winter blazers, slacks, vests. sweaters, blou~ and skirts.

'5.00 ........................................ SALE 13.49 .
'8.00 ............. ~ .......... ;............... SALE '5.59 ·
'11.00 .................................:,, ... SALE 17.69
'17.00 .................................... SALE 1 11.89

MEN'S AND BOYS'
DEPARTMENT

Southern Ohio Coal Co. is affiliated with AEP.
Hiles said 458 employees wiU. continue to work at- the No. 1 mine
. preperation plant and in performing safety and maintenance tasks at the
mines.

from

WINTER TOPS

SALE PRICED

WILKESVILLE -The layqff of 4~ workers at tbe Raccoon Mine No.3
beginning Monday will shut down the last of Southern Ohio Coal Co. 's three
mines in the county.
Since November, the coal company has furloughed 1,326workers in three
separatelayo!fs. ·
The most recent job action will affect 350 union and 70 salaried personnel,
according to Steve Hiles, a spokesman for American Electric Power's Fuel
Supply Division in Lancaster.

Sale Prices
PRE-TEEN

CLEARANCE SALE PRICES NOW · .

-

19" Model

.

'

UTILE Gl RLS' AND BOYS'

Sale Prices

..

REG. 18.00 ..............................................SALE 15.59
REG. 112.00 ..................... ... .................... SALE '8.39 .
REG." 118.00 ..................................... :.... SALE 1l2.59
REG. 124.00 ....................... ;.................. SALE 116.79
REG. 132.00 .......................................... SALE 122.39

'22.95 JACKETS &amp; COATS ............. ........... '17.00
'24.99 JACKETS &amp; COATS ............... :........ '18.70
'25.49 JACKETS &amp; COATS ........................ '19.00

Sizes 8 to 20 - some with zip-out
sleeves. Many hooded styles. Boys'
vests included.

.I

and Sportswear .

Fancy dresses, jumpers, blazers, skirts, slacks, vests and coordt·
nating blouses.

Carhartt and Big Ben hyWrangler makes. Not all sizes in button
~
front coat style or zipper front waist length style.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

JANUARY TV CLEARANCE SALE!

•

Dre~ses

·

c

Sweaters, flannel shirts, knit shirts, sweat shirts; blouses, capes and
velours.

S\lVER BR\OGE PLAZA

1 Settion , 10 Pages
15 Cenr.
A Multimedia Int. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 14, 1983
I

MEN'S BLUE DENIM

The courthouse will be closed
Monday in obserVance of Mart in
Luther King Day Judge Charles
Knight announced today.

•

Voi.31 ,No. 180

Closed Monday

Feeder Steers: tGood aOO Choice) Jn-!J))

• Page 3

at .y enttne
e
•
•
420miners receive layoff notices

Coi&gt;y•lght~ t 982

Athelll!l Uve:stock Sales

January S. 1983
CA'ITLE PRICES:

Purdue tops OSU

•

UAliTY WINTER CLOTHING

Game parties slated

Bulls UXXllbs. a nd up '42-49.i5.

. OU basketball.
program improves
_See Sportlight .

Ul

BUIChPr Sows 4246.
ButchPr Boars 42-45.
·f'eroer Pigs: rBy' the Hea d) 28--45.

~. 50.

SONY:

Letters to editor
Page2

tbs. 52·54.50,

FEEDER BULLS: Good and c hoice 250 to
llllbs , 48--57: D) to 400 roo. 49-62;'" 400 to5fD lbs.
,..58.50; 500 to GOO )J;)s. 47-54.7j; 1m to 700 lbs.
42-52: 700 to BOO lbs. 45.50-48; liXHbs. a nd over
40.5().48.
'
Hol.stl'ln SteerS a nd Bull&lt;; DJ to &amp;ll liE .
Sla ught~r

(j

1~:::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;::=~;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~===;;;;;;;;;;·

Cow and Calf Pairs: (By the Unit) 3104~ .
Veals: (Choice and Prime) 61-75.50. ·
Baby Calves: (By the Head ) 25-67.fl0.
~by Calves: (By the Pourx.l) 51-64.
HOG PRICES:
H ~ : (N&lt;i. 1. Barrows and Gilts) 200-230

4&amp;-!l.l50; 500 to 600 lbs. 45-52; 600 to 700 lbs.
42 · ~ .

jr;

Cuners 25-36.
·
Springer Cows: (ijy Ibe Head ) 250-285.

700 to 8)0 lbs. 51·55; 800 and over 48-54.50.
F'eedf&gt;r Ht"lfers: Good and Chok't&gt; 250 to :nl

lbs. 46-50;

Cholc~)

Slaughter
Buns:
!Overaqd
UOO lbs.J 4547.75.
Feede-r Bulls:
· (Good
.m5oo
Slaughter Cows: Utlllties 35-41; Canne~ -

higher; feeder

ca nle steady ; cows $J.l.50 lower:
Feeder Steers: Q'xx:l and Choice 250 to XlJ

ft/'(//11/l/111/t;'

LADIES WINTER

' who
ltll(el llld ll1e paraphemaUa uaed .by ......
lhltr llludy 00 drug, alcohol and tObacCo abulle tile ' uae llllll'ljwuJa. 'lbey also loun!d the court'-. AI
lllxtb fll'8de elMs of Darleae Anlolt, •pomeroy the oftlce of tile probate court the. operation o1 the
l!lemi!lllary, Tbu!Wiay toured tile Melp Ooalay
olllce "ffl explained by luqe Buell and otis Knopp,
Shaill'o ~I and tile. COUIIIy COIUihouse. tn.nt olllcer. lbaeU made arragements lor a
Sp kq !o the ciMe dadng the week were Carl brea&amp;haltzer Ill be demolust111ted at the 8dloolloday
JlyleiJ, Juyeale otllcer, Clnd.v Schneider,
I I nt to by • 8t.ate Jllabway Patrolman. The liP""-its and
. , . . , probate Judge Robert Bud! and Sue Zlrlde,
Mn. Amott extead lhelrthanlra to U.. who •sw"'J
R.N., medlcallechnldan who -..es lhe Pumenl) In the prop am. Pldured are 111e 8tudentl, Mn.
Emerpncy !!qua4. llediJ Mobler, l1berllf deputy, Amott and 1\JrS. Zirkle ulhey apprOaehed lhe steps
Tbunday let the children view marljualla In Vlll'lou8 to the sherlll's department '11mnday morning.
TOVR SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT-As put ol

HANDBAGS
Leather, corduroy, vinyls, canvas
and sweat bags all reduced 35%.

Reg. 15.00 to 142.00
SALE PRICED

-

S325 TO S2730

~--_,....

......:...' --.---. ·--.- ...,,
I

••

equipment used by bu.s iness and
industry.
All the increases are adjusted for
seasonal variatiOns.
In all, the unadjusted Producer
Price Index for finished goods stood .
at 285:1 in DeCember, meaning that
goods costlng$10at wholesale in1967
would havecost$28.5~last month.
If prices rose for 12 straight
months at December's rate, tlle
yearly rise would be 0.8 percent. In
reporting its infl'ltior ·: "Ures, the
department bases its compounded
annual rate on a more pre&lt;;lse
calCulation of monthly changes than
the figure It makes public for the
one-month change.

FACES MANY PROBLEMS- Ohio Governor Richard Celeste
who IA!ok oiDce Monday faces many problems including a budget crisis.
AccordiDg to officials the revenue to nm state govenunent Is lar below
esllmalllS, raising the prospect ol massive spending cuts. (AP
Laserphoto).

Reagan may consider
increased payroll tax

Protests fail;
auction today

WASHINGTON (AP) - As a
agreement."Hesaidinanintervlew
commission struggles against a
that he expected the commission
deadline to draft a rescue plan for
finally would issue "a list of options
Social Security, a top White House and a statement of the areas of
aide says President Reagan might agreement."
LONDON, Ohio (AP) -Douglas
consider speeding up the system's
There would be little benefit in the
A. Dalley's 191 acres of farmland
schectuled increases in payroll commission submitting a repon
)"ere going on the auction block
taxes.
which lacked brOiJd backing be·
today to setile a debt after his court
But White House Chief of Staff cause that would "simply crea te a
action and protests by. fellow
James A. Baker III said Thursday target· for political sharpshooters,"
farmers against the forced sale
any acceleration in payroll tax hikes he said.
failed.
On another front, Sen. William L.
would only .~ considered "If tied to
Dalley, :rl, went tocoun Thursday
reforms on 'tlie spending side."
Anns!rong. R-Colo., led a group of
in an llth·hour 't!ffort to block the
The Social Security reform com- conservative commission members
sheriff's sale of the land, which last
mission is scheduled to submit its in sharply criticizing a plan under
was planted in corn: Madison ··
report and go out of business discussion to accelerate paymll tax
County Common Pleas Judge
Satunlay, llut there are few indica· Increases schedu led for 1985 and
Robert S. Nichols ruled that
tlons the panel has been able to 1~ and to give workers an income
appraisal of the land was conducted
reach a consensus on a comprehen· . tax credit to offset the extra amount
p~ly.
· sive plan.
they would pay.
Dalley's brother Richard, a
The plan would switch govern·
The panel may' have to settle for
member of the Family Farm
little more than a "list of options," ment revenue from the income tax
Movement who helped organize
said Rep. Barber Conable Jr., account · to the Social Security
efforts to block the auction, wouldn',t , RN.Y., a commission m,e mber.
account, with no net cha nge in the
say what protesters planned today.
Baker, one of the top White House current tax structure.
officials working with commission
"The tax credit idea is a bout th~
members
in
last-ditch
attempts
to
poorest
part of this proposal, and 11 is
Weather forecast
forge a compromise. said Thursday also,ih my judgment the least likely
that Reagan "might consider" to be ·adopted," Atmstrong told
Cloudy tonight with 60 percent
chance ofsnow,.Low In themld·20s.
acceptingthespeed·upin the payroll reporters Thursday outside the
Wit)ds becoming northeasterly!().~ · taxes H accompanied by changes In commission's headquarters a fter
mphfSaturday, near 100 percent
benefits.
he met with four other conservative
chance of snow. Temperatures
"But he is firmly opposed to members of the panel.
, adding Social Security.taxes on top
In general, liberal Democrats
nearly steady in'the mid-20s.
Extended Ohio Forecast
of those that are already sche· · have supported speeding up· th€'
Sunda.v through 'l'ueoday: ,
duled," Baker said in a San payroll taxes while· Republicans
Chance ol !luntes SUnday Francisco speech to the Common· · have fa vored reductions in future
and In 111e nor&amp;heast Monw.
wealthClubofCalHomia.
bene!itincreases.
·He added: "Even H the. commis· · Sources close to the pane.1. who
OtberWiae lair ~· Chance of
.raiD or IIIOW tla'ouflbout the etate
sion is unable to reach agreement, asked not to be idenmied, said the
"'-"··· u• .... tnlhemJd.!Oatolhe We have stronger hopes now that a payroll .tax increase-tax credit was
bipartisall coalition can be forged in · also the sticking point with White ·
mJd.30a Sanclay, In lhe 3011 Monday
and In the mld-301 to the ll1kWOs
theCongressonSocialSecuri)Y."
· House· negotiators who came to a
Tue8day. Lows 11-lO Sunti!Q, In the
ME:anwhile, Conable, the top deadlock Wednesday in lalks with.
teens MOIII!af and 111 the ' Sis f!ewblican on the House Ways and key members of the panel. A final
..-......o.u,
Codlffimmlittee, saidt it willfinbel . negotiating session is . set for .
_&amp;_.........,._;.._________ .· . Means
"very
cut to ge a
a , Saturdaymorning.
~
··

&amp;...........,.........

·

·

r

'

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