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. Pomeroy-Mi.ddleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 19, 1983

~~!,!"~e ~,!~..~~~ ~~~~ I

)

HEAJ) OVER WHEEU! FUN - Nancy Snyder
wo·re ber roUer skates to a Marietta park with fuD

Intentions to enjoy herself standing up. But a look at

Mayors end

the other kids enjoying lhe sledding caused her to
Invent a new spori - roller ~edding. (AP
Laserpholo).
.
.

l~

court cases

Six defendants appeared before 10 days jail sentences on disorderly
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
manner charges and Paul E. Clark,
Tuesday night.
Middleport, was fined$~andcosts
Charles D. Jones, Middleport, and was given ttu'ee days In jail on a
was given a $10 and costs,
charge of driving while Intoxicated.
suspended, fine for driving left of
center; Lance T. Herman, MiddleThree defendants were fined and
port, was given a five day jail
nine others fOrfeited bonds In the
sentence for driving without a
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
license and a 20 day jail sentence for · Andrews Tuesday night.
driving while intoxicated; Joseph
Fined were Mike Hewitt, PomeM. Powell, Middleport, was fined roy, $100and costs, Intoxication, and
$15 and eosts, speeding; William T. $50andcosxts,disturbingthepeace;
Reeves, Pomeroy, and George Chartes Whittington, Pomeroy, $:nl
McDaniel, Middleport, were gtven and costs, destruction of prope~.
r-----~----------------.

Are·a death's··

Clara B. Shuster
Mrs. Clara B. Shuster, 87,
Pomeroy, died Wednesday at Veterans Memorial Hospital following a
llnger!ng Illness.
Mrs. Shuster was horn Feb. 17,
1895 at Wade, a daughter of the late
Henry and Loretta Yonalley Whetstone. She Is survived by a son a!ld
daughter-In-law, Gerald and
Mildred Shuster, Lincoln Heights,
Pomeroy, and a granddaughter.
Preceding her !n death besides her
parents were her husband, Nolan
Shuster, and two sisters, Myrtle
Miller and Emma Louderback.
The large lighted cross which
overlooks Pomeroy VIllage is located · on the former Shuster
property on Lincoln HUI and Mrs.
Shuster for many years untll 1979
lighted and extinguished the cross
for the church. Due to her
relationship with the program and
church, In lleu of flowers friends
may contribute In her memory to
the Trinity Church Cross Fund.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Frtday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Mark McClung
omclatlng. Burial wUl be In Beech
Grove Cemetery. Friends maycail
at the funeral home after 7 p.m.
Wednesday.

....

Investigate accidenl
The Gallla-Melgs post of the state
highway patrol Investigated a
two-car accident Tuesday afternoon
in Meigs County.
The patrol said Mark W. Grossnickle, 23, Rt. 1, Reedsville, was
eastbound on County Rd. 43, two
mlles west of Ohio 681. at 2:40p.m.
when he pulled off to the lefl side of
the road.
This was followed by a collision
with an eastbound vehicle driven by
Harold E. Smith, 39, Reedsville,
causing slight damage and no
citation to be issued.

Cited to mayor's court
Three cars were damaged and
one driver was cited to mayor's
court In an accident on E. Main St.,
at11:43a.m. Tuesday.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven
by Annie Chapman, Pomeroy, had
to make
left hand
turn. A
stopped
car following
and adriven
by Kenneth

=.:~:~~~c:~~~~~
from the rear by a third vehicle

joblessness hit both the South and
the Sun Belt besides the industrial
MidwestfromNovember1981tolast
· : November, according to new stateby-state unemploYment figures released by the government Tuesday.
In five states - Alabama,
Arlzona,IIllnots,MichlganandWest
VIrginia- the jobless rate jumped
by 4 or morepercentagepointsover
theyear. WestVIrginla'sunetnployment spurted by 7.4 percentage
points over the year, according to
theBureauofl..aborStatistlcs.
In November 1981, six states had
double-digit . unemployment, according to the figures which are not
ad!ilsted for such seasonal varia·
tlons as weather and school closings.
By last November, the ·report
shoWed, 19 states.and the DIStrict of
Columbia had unemployment rates

I

Rev. Robert McGee

at
or above 10 percent of their labor
forces.
The national, seasonally unadjusted unemployment rate was 10.4
percent In November. The adjusted
rate was 10.7percent.

and $:nJ and costs, giving beer or
Uq\10r to a intnor; Roy Buchanan,
Reedsville, $100 and cos Is,
Intoxication.
Forfeiting were Charles Lewis,
Veterans Memorial
Pomeroy, $43, posted on an assured
clear distance charge; Bobby
Admitted--Harold Ha.ger, RaHerdman, Middleport, $46, speedcine; Norman Grueser, Syracuse;
lng; Lori L. Guinther, Syracuse, $45, Perry Mitch, Middleport; Harold
speeding; Mathew Weaver, Middle- · Triplett, Pomeroy; Clara Shuster,
port, $43, left of center; Arthur
Pomeroy; JudyGUkey, Pomeroy.
Smith, Leon, W.Va., $45 speeding;
Discharged--Robert VanMeter,
Fred Burney, Pomeroy;
pos- Allee Plantz, Gregory Jonnson.
session of a eontrolled substance;
Blaine James, Mundry, W. Va.,$50,
~peedlng; Tim Crites, Pomeroy,

s.m.

allbutthe10IargeststateswUlnotbe experienced by ' FIInt, Mich., 23.4
available from the Labor Depart- percent, Yopngstown-Warren,
ment untU mid-February. For 40 Ohio, 22.5; ROck!ord, Ill., 214;
states and the District of Columbia, JohnstOWJ., .Pa., 2(1.7, and Duluththese figures are gatliered from
Superior, Mimi, .~.3. The lowest
state employment ..services and rate was 3.9 pecimt in Stamford
other sources and their disclosure Conn. .
lags that of the national rate by
The bureau said all but 10
about six weeks.
rnetropPlltan areas had higher
The seasonally adjusted national unemployment in November than
unemployment rate In December . atthesametbneayearearUer.
stood .at 10.8 percent of the 1l1
Among the 5Q states, Q!lly Ma~
mllllon-member tabor force, with had a better emp(oyment picture at
more than 12 mUlion people out of the end of the lyear. That state's
work.
.
.
. .
.jobli!s$ rate sUpped from 7.1percent
T!le state and metropoliU!Jl ~a in November 1981 to 7.0 percent las~
employment report released Tues- November.
·
daysho\¥edthatjoblessratesin91of·
The highest jobleSs rates Ill
some 220 areas surveyed equaled or November occurred tn Mlchlgali
exceeded the natlonall0.4 percent · andWestV!rglnla,16;4percent,and
unadjusted rate In November.
Alabama, 15.3.

l·

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Vol:3t,No.lB4

1 Sect ton , 12 Pages
15 C.ntt ·
A Muhlmedlo Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, thursday, January 20, 198.3

Copy•ighoed 1982

Shorter work
week, layoffs
under revieW

$59995

$64995

National
Product
Billions of Dollars
Based on
1972 Oolats

TWO ONLY

Hoffman to seek reelection
Middleport Mayor Fred Hof- government and services, and In
Initiated and completed by thts
capital improvements by both
fman today announced his candladministration Include:
aacy for re-election as mayor at the· public and private businesses and
-A new 200,000 ga 1. water
organl2atlons. There is still much to
June 7 primary election. Hoffman
storage tank was recen11v put Into
be done, both In new programs to be
has been rnayor of Middleport since
service which will vo·•&gt;Vide adeInitiated in the ~tear future and the
October, 1974, When he filled the
quate water storage •:•pacity for
continUing of some of the good
remaining portion of the late John
the village for many ~·ears In the
programs whiCh have been started
Zerkle's term. He was subsefuture. This, along wi\h substantial
during the past few years . ••
quently elected to successive four
.... water line improveMe nts on Vine,
In order that these programs can ···Grant, Beech, Powell c1.nd Page St ..
year terms beginning Jan. 1, 1976
· be continued at a level whleh I feel
and Jan. 1, 1!8!.
was made possible l'y the use of
has benefitted the majority of
In announcing the candidacy,
approximately $900,000 In HUD
Mlddleort residents, 1 have decided
Hoffman issued the following
funds which were made available
to seek re-eleetlon to anoth~r
statement:
to the village through the efforts of
four-year term."
"During the past utne years, I
this administration.
Some of the improvements In the
feel that many improvements have
-Sanitary sewer ;lnes were
village and beneficial programs for
been made in our community, both
installed on Powell, Page, Broad-·
ln.. the operations of the village . our residents which have been
(Continued on vagP 14)

,n

SEO grants total $600,@00

, CO~ORTV
25
CoDsoleTV

mlstattheConferenceBoardinNew, Wednesday that they .fear Interest
how, could be brought down,"
-The president r eared compteYork,
said
he
thinks
a
recovery
rates
could
be
pushed
higher
In
1983
lion
oi a 1984 · :!get plan as
Greenspan said.
way
and
that
the
already
is
under
unless
the
federal
budget
deficit
is
.
Treasury
Secre.
Donald Regan
Many economists are looking for a
will
grow
much
faster
lhls
.
economy
trimmed from the current projec- . promised deficits of under $200
After the steeep drop In economic turnaround from the 2.5 percent
tlons of
billion.
billion for each the next three years
activity last year, 1983 ougllt to be a drop In gross national product year than the Reagan administra"On lhls course, we could not
and another senior aide vowed a
year of steady, If modest, improve- durtng the 1982 fourth quarter. The tlon'sforecast of a 1.4 percent rtse.
Commerce Department reported
expect either sustained economic return to bla~k Ink by the end of the
ment for businesses and consumers,
Sommers estimates ~Wth for
growth or genuine prtce stability," decade. Other admlnistatlon off!Wednesday that the fourth-quarter
many eConomists believe.
thegroupsqldinaletter to President ciais said next year's deficit will be
retreat ended a year In which the . the year of2.4 percent. By historical
"The turn is at hand," Alan GNP dropped 1.8 percent .L the standards, both percentages would
Reagan and congressional leaders.
about $190 billion, a record budget Greenspan, chairman ·of the ecobe
extremely
small
for
the
first
year
In
other
economic
developments:
gap.
biggest decline since 1946, when lt
nomic consulting firm Townsend- fe!l14.7 percent.
of a recovery In business conditions.
-Martin S. Feldstein, the pres!-Japanese Prime Minister YasuGreenspan &amp; Co. Inc., told a forum
Somers also sees no significant , dent's top economist, said Wednes- hiro Nakasone ended talks with
"This ts a year of reeovery," said
In New York on Wednesday.
· Malcolm Baldrige, the Commerce decline In the unemployment rate.
dilY that ll)e ·administration Is President Reagflll at an Impasse
"There has not . been. any ~p­ Secretary. He add,ed that he expects TheConferenceBoardlsaresearch
consi~rlng a "major tax ,reform over U.S. requests that Japan Uft
seated, permanent damage In our the recovery to pick up speed as the group supported by business.
., lnillatlve." He said one approach frnport quotas .on key agricultural
economy which would preyent It year roUs on.
In Washington, a groUP,, of being discussed was to move from _ products. "We got no promtses ·on
·
frOI)1 really movingupverysharply ••
business and financial executives the existlng income tax to a tax on that," Said -Commerce Secretary
provided that interest rates, someAlbert T. Sommers, chief ecpnotold the · Reagan administration consum!Jt!On.
Baldrige. .

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MIDDLEPORT

Celeste receives bond·proposal for new housing

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Des- bill added by the DemocratL:';.;:4P:..----·__9.;;.,_ _ ..... · pite sonie ptilltlc'al flri:'WOrks, a bDI controlled Senate at Celeste's bidGNP DIOCUNE "" Chllrt olthe ---'-- creating a bond Issue, program to dl ~~s." "repr:ehensible and
u.s. OroM Na&amp;lonal ProciUct boost housing construction has been
u...,wu
llhows ·in die loud~~ quarter of
sent to Gov: Rlc:hard Celes!efOJ: his
Involv~ ·was language which
1li8Z, a cteeUne from lhe previous . · expected approval. .
.
. · apparently clears the way for
uarter to SUll triJion, 'lbe
'I'lle House completed legislative ·· Celeste to go ahead with his plan to
~ by rece11111on
action Wednesday when It accepted . restructure the state Department.of
q
~totlnlllh,decllnedl.8
Seitateamendments, 70-26, after a · Economic and Community
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TheCOOoencarwasrammedlntothe
back ' of the Chapman vehicle.
Damages were moderate. Lewis
was cited to mayor's court on an
assured clear distance charge.

Page6

.

19" B&amp;W

Pomeroy police chief
seeks public assistance
,Pomeroy Pollee Chief George
Stitt today asked pu bile help to solve
a wave of thefts in which cllr
batteries and car radios have been
stolen.
Chief Stitt said Simmons Motors,
Smith-Nelson Motors and residents
In the nearby areas have been
victims of the thefts.
It Is obvious that the items are
beb)g peddled to purchasers, Chief
Stitt said and he asks any person
contacted In regard to purehaslng a
car radio or a car battery to contact
his omce at once. AU Information
wlll be kept confidential, Chief Stitt
said.

Pag(• 9

Center chairman
unconcered about
group.,s decision

JANUARY \CLEARANCE

Court actions r.Jed
A j11dgment lri thearnountof$2,600
was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court along with three
dissolutions of marriage and a suit
for support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act.
J. Wllllam Lowe, Middleport,
filed suit in the amount of $2,600
against Stone WOOds Ltd., Marlet\3,
et al for damage to a water line that
deprived theptatntlffandhistenants
of water and use of sewer and for
rent for stored equipment and
materials.
Marsha Aline Batman (Payne)
flied for support against Thomas
Edward Payne.

Page 2

Livestoclc report

Consumption.tax studjed by Reagan

drtven._bY Charles Lewis, Pomeroy.

Flllng for dissolutloll of marriage
were Ralph E. Searles, Rutland and
Bernice R. Searles, Vinton; David
Lewis Chase, Middleport, and Allee
Jane Chase, Middleport; Bobby Lee
Kul!n, Rt. 2, Cheshire, and Dessie
Mae Kuhn, Rt. 2, Cheshlfe.
In other court actlon five marriages were dissolved and another
was granted.
•
Granted a divorce was Mary F.
FreemanfromJackB.Freemanon
charges of extreme cruelty. Mary
F. Freeman was restored to her
former name of Mary McAngus.
MarriageS dissolved were Barbara Kennedy and Perry Kennedy;
Cathy Ann Swartz and Jerry David
Swartz; VIvian Ellzabeth Jones and
Ayward Curtis Jones; Larry David
TucJcer and Janis Suzette Tucker,
and Robert Thomas Stewart and

RACINE

and
Mark
address
each onnoopen
flask
recorded,
. $88Roush,
charges.
'

Five calls were answered Tuesday by units, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
.
.At 10:27 a.m., Pomeroy took
Jos[)ua Davis to Veterans MemorIal; at 11: 53 a.m., Rutland, took
Clara Shuster to Veterans Memorial; 1:57 p.m., Tuppers Plains took
Eleanor Riel to St. Joseph Hospital
In Parkersburg; Racine at 2: :a! p.m.
took Dennis Hart to Veterans
Memorial and Middleport 111 5:49
p.m. took Shirley Herman to
Veterans Memorial.

Letters to e~itor

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Four-day work weeks and layoffs of state
employees are among optlons under review to cope with state government
money problems, officials say.
Both steps are among many options being considered as the Celeste
administration grapples with a budget deficit proJected to exceed $500
mllllon by the June 30 end of the fiscal year.
.Gov. Richard Celeste's top fiscal o!!'lcer, Chris Sale, said Wednesday that
a four-day work week was .one item that might be illcluded on a long llst of
!li~YOR HOFFMAN
options she is to submit to the governor.
Legislative sources said, the layoff of state government emplqyees,
perhaps 5 percent to 7 percent, was being reviewed.
Paul Costello, press secretary to the governor, said Celeste would have
no Immediate comment. ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
investment while taxing personal Wednesday night the admlnistrn· anything etse that t: not kept for it.•
"Those are options the governor has not responded to yet because they
Reagan administration is studying
spending on consumer goads and
·
have not been presented to h1m as a package," Costello said.
tion " is considering a major tax lasting value.
Ms. Sale said she expected !he list of ·Options. to be submitted to the a revamped income tax system that services.
reform Initiative," and a SCH!alled
The Idea behind a &lt;''JD'Umpri•m
·would exempt savings, stock and
President Reagan's chief econo- consumption tax is "one of the
governor this week.
tax, Feldstein said. '' !hao mdividu
mist, Maitlit S. Feldstein, said approaches we have been ais would pay feder ,olra:-.l's onl\' i•li
Arthur Evans. executive director of the Ohio Civil Service Employees bond purchases and other fonns of
Association, 'which ·represents · many state workers, was asked about
. ttllscusslng." 1
that portion of InC{'• • Thp;· S!Jffid •m
"The consumption tax approach pen,onal consumpti•J•:
shortened work weeks and layoffs.
is appealing ln a number of ways,"
· "We're faclng a $500 mllllon bUdget deficit. We all recognize that when
C'ash savings, · v.m·hases ,f
you ()ave that kind of deficit ... there are going to have to be some
Feldstein said in a speech prepared stocks or other ,,,,..ts. and rc•pay·
.for delivery to a tax conference.
reductions somewhere," Evans said Wednesday. "(But) one lhlng we will
ments of loans",., uuld be subtracted
be doing is protecting the interests of our members."
from
that par. ·•f a person's income
Feldstein emphasized that ad·Records · in the Department of Admintstratlve Services placed the
ministration discussions on a con- subject to laxi•tlon, he said.
. . number d. state employees as of last month at 57,265, down from 58,254 in
The present tax code ,e ncourages
sumption tax are preliminary and
December 1981. Excluded from those figures are state university and
"no specific or final decisions have people to bcri'O\v by allowing them
county Welfare pepartment employees.
to deduct Intel ffit costs from their
been made."
~rt Brlndza, president of Ohio CouncilS of the American Federation ··
But he said a consumption tax ·taxable Income, and discourages
released Jan 7, according to ' 111&lt;.
of State, County and Municipal Employees, said he would not comment on
ByJEFFGRABMEIER
"removes the distortion In the them from. saving by taxing
panel.
OVPstaff
shortened work weeks or' layoffs ·" until we get something substantive."
present iaw that favors current Interest, dividends and capital
The deadline falls on this Friday,
The chairman of the Gal!laImposition of a four-day work week was considered and rejected ·last
consumption and discourages sav- gains, he said.
but
Howard
said
he
Is
not
wonied.
Jackson-Me!gs Community Mental
Critics of a conslimptton tax
yeill' by fot;mer Gov. James A. Rhodes.
ing." Without an increase In savings
''That two week business doesn't
'Ibestlite faces a sea of red Ink because of recesslon-spawna:l declines In Health Center board said he \s riot
and investments, the economy approach have a.rgue9 that It favors
mean anything to me," he said.
tax revenues and Increased expenses.
.
. concerned that his board has taken
wealthy people, who a1le:llla better
cannot expand, he said.
"With as much Information as we
Through December, the Legislative Budget Office said, general revenue
no action ·yet on a state report
Feldstein, chairman of the presi- position to save a.
have to go over, you .can 'I do thts
·
fund 11tc0me was $66.3_zyllllon below estimates, while expenses were $76.3 critical of the agency.
dent's Councll of Economic Advis- large proportion of thllli- money
Charles Howard said the center type of thing (qulck)y )."
mllllon over estimates. ~ .
·
ers, did not describe ln detail the
or Invest it In stcx;~··alld ~In the past two meetings, the
board , is studying the 32-page
Spending for general relief as of Do;&gt;c: 31 was $41.2 million more than had
consumption tax he had in mtna, but Lower-income peop~ critics say,
been forecast. Expenditures under the Ald To Depen(jent Children document wrttten by the Commun- hoard has gone over the repOrt's
economists usually apply the term often have little to savE\Wter paying
findings Concerning the center
Ity Services Review Group "at a
program exceeded projections by $11.9 million.
consumption to food, entertain- for housing, energy, fold and other
pace where everyone has time to polnt-by-polnt, Howard said.
Extending a package of temporary taxes due to expire March 31 is
ment, tobacco, clothing, rent and necessities.
. Members wlll•meet again next
considered unavoidable, but such a step would still leave a gap of more
understand it."
·~
.~
The center board met for nearly Wednesday to "assimliate" the
Information, he said.
three hours Wednesday night to
However, he is unsure if any
continue reviewing the report,
Howard said. The review group's action will be taken then.
"I will not predict when a decision --report was also the topic of a board
WASHINGTON- Grants totalllng more than sf&gt;.~ have
Increasing cloudiness tonight. Low near 20. Mosll)r cloudy tonight.
will
be made," Howard said.
meeting a week ago.
been awarded to four Southeastern Ohio agencies for the
Hlgh35-40.
The 648 boaid has met once to
"We don't want tomakeanyhasty
contlnuatlon of programs assisting the elderly, according to Rep.
ExtEnded Ohio Forecast
discuss the report, but has alSo
decisions," he said.
Clarence Mlller.
Samrday through Monday:
.
. .
In Its final report, the seven- · made no decisions concerning it. A
The funds, approved by ACTION, were approved rcu- ·the
Chance of rain or !lllOW Samrday and Sunday. Cloudy and tumlng
person review panel recommended second meeting far them ts schefollowing:
colder Monday with a chance of snow IJurrles northeast. Highs mlbe
significant changes -at the center, duled Monday.
-$507,300 to the Corporation for Ohio Appalachian Development"
m~ to rnlfl-:lfi'l. Lows In upper ~ to mid-80s.
The county commissioners from
Including the ·resignatiOn of execu(GOAD) of Marietta, Ohio, for the continuation of a multl~tillty
Gallia, Jackson and Melgs ,countles
.tlve director Bernard Niehrn.
Foster Grandparent prngram.
plan to meet in Gallipolis Friday to
-$32,900 to the Meigs County Council on Aging for the continuation
The report also calls for the determine what course of action
of the Meigs County Retlred Senior Volunteer Program.
CLEVELAND (AP) --7 The winning number drawn Wednesday
resignation of Maxine Plummer,
they should take.
-$41,600 to the I. 'hens Senior Citizens program for Its RSVP
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 711.
executive director of the GalliaThe review group said state and
program.
The lottery reported a loss of $821,166.50 from the wagering on Its
Jackson-Melgs 648 board.
comm\lnlty offlclais should meet
-$37,000 to the Washington County Commissioners for the ·
dally game. The loss resulted from sales of$S83,573.50, while holders
The 648 and center boards should
two or three weeks after the report's
contlntJation
of the Washington county RSVP outreach program.
nf
'WPrP
I tn •hArP $1.704.
nffl~l·is said.
act on the recommendations within
release to discuss how to proceed in
two weeks after the report was
the situation.

Emergency runs

The Rev .. Robert McGee, 51, 211
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, pastor of
the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church tor the past five years, died
Wednesd~y morning at O'Bieness
Memorta!Hospltalln Athens followIng a brief illness.
The Rev. Mr. McGee was born at
The Plains, a,sonofOscarMcGeeof
The Plains and the late Mary
McCialnMcGee. Hewasagruadate
of The Plains High School, Ohio
. University and the Methodist Theological School In Ohio. He was a
navy veteran of the Korean Conflict
and formerly was employed at the
· atomic plant in Waverly, Battelle
Institute In Columbus and a I Ohio
University with the computer sclene
program. He was a former pastor of
the McDougel and The Poston
UnJteil Methodist Churches and the
Jacksonville Charge. He was a
member of Amesville Lodge 278,
F&amp;AM. and the Pomeroy Middleport Lions Club.
Besides his father, he is survivect
by his wife, Janice B. McGee; two
daughters, Mary (Jan) Fowler,
Beckley, W.Va .. and Christina Gay
Fultz, Hllllard; a stepson, Allison
Rorick, and a stepdaughter,
Nanette Rorick, both of The Plains;
his stepmother, Beualah McGee,
The Plains; four grandchtldren;
two sisters, Mrs. Russell (Shirley)
Tinkham, The Plains, and Betty
Harrison, Columbus; two brothers,
William D. McGee, Kissimmee,
Fla., and Thomas G. McGee,
Sarasota Springs, N. Y.
Besides his mother, he was
preceded in death by astster,Donna
Jean McGee.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. Benjamin Edwards and the
Rev. Wesley Clarke omciat!ng.
Burtal will be In the New Marshfield .
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Hughes Funeral Horne, 168 Morris
Ave,, Athens, from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Friday, and at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church from 10
a.m. Saturday untu time of services.

Mothers March
of Dimes drive :
scheduled ]an. 29-30

'

r;:=====================::;-:OPEN FRID W, JAN. 28th

...

I

PH. 992-2635

Alfred Dietzel to head Ohio's of Dietzel's pay, reported to be
the questloQ then.before the House.
Finally, he slammed his gavel and
development program~ chairman . S!ll.O!J0.$100,000 a year. The maximum allowed by law for the
of an advisory coii1'Cll. is illegal.
shouted down the veteran Allen
director's post is $63,500. - . ~ .
County laMnaker.
He said an arrangement fot
. The · bill originally passed the . chambers of commerce around the' . That idea collapsed when some
. Senate Democrats raised questions
· House Jan. 12 by a lopsided vote of
state to pay the six-figure salary of ·abOut' coofllcts·of Interest, and the
· 88-9. Some Republicans said they
Dietzel, head of the Columbus senate adopted What Celeste called
swltthed their votes to protest the
chamber, runsafoulofOhlo'sethJcs ·. a good compromise. ·
treatment given their as$1stant
taws, claims by Democrats to the
Rose said Dietzel .In the council
· lead.er. ·
contrary notwithstanding. ,
post wlll be considered a public
R.osesaidCel~te'shandllngofthe
Celeste lnltlaiiY proposed naming offlclalsubject to the ethics laws and
developo~ent department matter,
Dietzel developnient director and that he could be "criminally liable"
. speclfic~lly the recruitment of
having the chambers pay all or part If the chambers pay his salary.

' .

�•

Thursday, January 20, 1983

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

eover). uenns .the descrtption of employer thatwascontrlbuting6.7
one ·refonn, as given by The New
percent, why then she really Isn't
Y(nt: Times: "Make the seli·
paying aU that much more, and
employment Social Security tax
noW she Is getting a deduction,
rate comparable to the combined
which she didn't get before. Are you
employer-empioyee rate, effective
confused? That's the Idea. The
1/1184. Allow . one-half of the
!Jottom line Is that self-employment
combined rate to be deducted as a
Is· discouraged to the tune of $18
MotherDay . ~twasWTOngwlth
business
expense."
bUllon.
.
Social Securtty, we are encouraged
~I
this
means
Is
that
Mrs.
The
major
victory lor Mr:
to . forget, Is that too much r;noney
Jones,
who
has
a
one-woman
Reagan
Is
held
to be the shllt
was going out. In such situations,
stenographic
service,
will
now
forward
by
six
months of the
the Democrat quick fix Is: Well, get
Increase
her
Social
Securtty
payaJLA,
which
Is
the
cost.of-living
more money coming In - tax
mentto
twice
what
she
Would
pay
If
adjustment.
The
value
of that
more. The Republican solution Is
concession ls held to be $40 bU1lon.
supposed to be: Reduce the amount Mrs. Jones were working for Kelly
Glrislnc.
Havtngdonethal,shewlll
·
The wonderful tiuny here Is that'
of money going out. The 1963
lake
6.
7
percent
of
the
Income
and
any rise In the cost' of living
breakthrough Is very nearly a total
subtract
It
from
her
taxable
annual
p~upposes a oonttnuation of
victory for the Democrats.
gross
eamlngs
.
.•
But
since
Mrs.
lnflatlon.So thatwearesupposedto
Consider,; for a moment , the .
Jones
Is
now
assessed
over
nine
anticipate
continuing lnflatlon. It's
means by which ttie breakthrough
percent
on
the
grounds
that,
after
not
hard
to~eewhy.
Another'wayof
proposes to raise $18 billion (during
all,
she
will
be
getting
the
same
putting
this
Is
that
Mr. Reagan's
the 1983·1989 period the break·
antl·increased-spending provision ·
through Is specifically designed to benefits as If she worked for an

The Great Social Security Break·
through ol 1~ may be a political
triumph, which is the name we give
to measures satisfactory to Ronald
·Reagan and Tip O'Neill, and should
be limited to declarations ol war
. and resolutions c)ecreelng We Love

111 COllri Slrrt'l
P.,mrror\1, Ohi01

11'-99i·U51

iJF:\'OTF.OTO THE JNTERF..STOFTHt-: MEIGS-MASON ARF.A

.,....I"'T""E!!! c::::t IF=I

r"T"'L...... ......_

.

.

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Pub li ~ ht'r

P.AT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

,\ ,.,i~ Wnll'uhlisht&gt;r/{.'unlrn l l• · r

r... n~nd MmiiiJ!:I'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR,
Nr ,~osE d i1ur

A MEMRf~ R nf Thr Assul'iulrct Prt'SS. lnhmd Da il ~ Prt"ss AsSHt'iiUiun und lhl'
A mt&gt;ri• ·;m Nt·ll· ~ pll~r l'ub lis ht•n.: AssudMtiun.
l. f:lTERS Of' OPINION art' "'dt·nmed. Thry 10 hoold bt· Jes..; th'a n 300 .,.,-urd~ Inn)( . All
h·llr rs art· s ubj ~c· t lu rdilinl( a nd musl bt- ~i~~:nnl with namlt!. addrt'S!i a nd lt'lt'phmu.•
numh.-r. Nn unsi):nt'd ldtt'rS 'will b4- publisht&gt;d. Lt·U~no shnuld bl- in~t;uud Ui,o; lr . u ddrr!lsl~
issut·s, nul ~r~llil:l lili t!S.

Letter to the editor
Finding fault...
To the gentleman that Is always
finding fault about t!te appoint·
ments Gov. ·Celeste Is making. Now
he has started trying to tell the
governor how to run the state of
Ohio. I win say one thing If he wants
to know how Ronald James got that
job, he was appointed to It If he
woiJld write to Mr. James he would
be glad to tell him. I have written to
Mr. James and also Oakley Collins
aRd they both answered my maiL
Tile time has rome we a U better
qJlit finding fault and pray to the
· Lord to save our country.
:11
Russia takes our country they
'
.

Wants

would see he would quit spouting
off. Some times people act like they . ..
have a real education and other
times It looks like they are pretty
dumb.
1 wish the man at Portland would ·
pick up the Bible and turn to St.
Mark. It tells the life of Christ, and
see If he can find fault with It I wish
everyone had a feetlng like Bob
Hoeflich, we would have· a real,..
cQuntry to live ln.
I say, Bob, you will get yo11r
reward some day. " God bless you." ·
Ben Batey

992-6368

expan~ion

•

•

ln past weeks we have seen a big expansion of Veterans
!1'1jiny ston es about our local Hospital.
The county will only help ltseli by
hospital and the great care they
doing
It It means more jobs
gi;,~. Well, the time Is here for our
building
It, jobs filling the personnel
loCal hospital to expand . We, the
spots when It's done and In around
~le of Meigs County, should
· have a hospital which delivers · about way, our county has helped
WASHINGTON - Things were
· b:ibles and will do more operations Its people out very much. So come
pretty grim over at the Pentagon
on Meigs let's push lor the
around Christmas. The lame.&lt;Juck
aOd all of thiS' takes room.
1'he county has all the land expansion of our local hospital to · Congress was kllllng funds lor the
better serve our people.
bf~d the hOspital and our county
MX dense-pack. And there were
Floyd H. Cleland
his seen fit to buUd many buildings
signs Utat the new Congress might
IQ}': the elderly, so now let's push for
even dO the unthinkable: Cut the
defense budget.
Under these trying circum•
stanes, It's understandable that the
brass sought reUef with some
:i have a complaint against Meigs schools. But do aU ol our kids use holiday partying.
&amp;boo! Spirit. I feel the parents of dope? Surely there Is some way to
So many office part! as were
M-1f.S. should pull together and help the ones that are clean. ·
scheduled that even the most
· I hope you parents help your
~tlfy It
dedicated wassaUer couldn't possl·
·the bathtooms have no·doors on children .. Contact the school and
bly keep track ol th@m all. Dallying
uie Individual stalls. What kind ol ask about this . I also hope you have too long at the auditors' punchbowl,
better luck than I did.
pnvacy do our kids have?
say, might mean missing the
Dan Mortis wouldn't talk to me.
;the girls have per.&lt;onal needs to
catered bullet at procurement or
taKe care of. Besides that, would we The first time I talked to him was
systems analysts . What was a poor
as : parenfs llke to he In that last year. He said he wasn't aware
colonel to do?
ol the situation. That was last year.
stluation?
.The Alr Force solved this little
Last week, his secreary told me
;:Ct has to be degrading for our
problem with typical flair. It
kids. Do the teachers have doors on he said to cali the principal at
M.H.S.
tlietr bathrooms?
I called and tqey were out ol their
l feel our kids need prlvacy just
offices. I left my number. I haven't
a~ i he adults do , after all , they are
h•tnan beings, too. It's not right to heard anything jet.
The big question In defense this
So parents, I urge you to help our
p~l)lsh the kids because of a few.
week
Is not whether the country can
kids.
They also have to leave the main
afford
guns and butter - but
Karen Brown
dq&lt;ir of the bathroom open. They
It can afford guns and
whether
Langsville
have mirrors so they can see in.
military
salaries.
J;m aware of the dope In the
• Nobody was more surprised that
'
the military brass when Secretary
of Defense Caspar Weinberger
annoul\ced that he intended to cut
:ram an exchange student lorm ways to Uve in peace and .hannony.
the Pentagon budget by rescinding
When someone visits Egypt's
Egypt I'm living right now In
wage hikes for the armed forces.
capital, Cairo, he · finds a large
P~meroy.
Unofficial Washington, which Is
•I'm enclosing an article about Industrialized city with a populaalways
suspicious when It comes to
Ei:'YPt which I wish you can print In tion of 8 million, living on the banks
defense
spending, has two theories
of the great Nile River, which flows
t1ie Daily SentineL
on the Weinberger announcement.
'Here I'm enclosing my address 1,000 miles ·South to the country
One Is that by announcing a
~ my telephone number too, In Sudan providing life gtvlngwa ter to
freeze
on mUitary pay, the Defense '
ca$e you might have any questions both couqtrles.
Secretary
Js sure he'll be oveiTllled
Next to Cairo Is Giza, which Is
oi need more Information.
by
Congress,
and they will restore
:i really do appreciate your known lor Its three pyramids and the cuts, leaving
him wjth the .
the sphinx standing there from
effOrts.
he
originally
asked lor:
budget
thousands of years ago. Farther
'
In Love with Egypt
The
other
theory
Is that If the
:6n the other side of the world South Is Luxor and A$wan, the land mWtary feels the defense
cuts are
tll&amp;re Is a country whlch eldsted of the Heroglyphlc's monuments.
going to come out of their salaries
thOusands of years ago; there Is There Is the world's greatest tomb;
they may take another hard look at
Egypt. .
. .
King Tut's Tqrnb found In 1940's.
their requests, and find ways of
In the very south, there Is .the
:Egypt; with Its great past, Is In
saving
money on hardware that
Ill&amp; Middle East on the Medlterra· main resource of hydroelectrtc they swore
they couldn't do
power which is Aswan High Dam,
neim Sea. It has 43 million people;
•
wlthout
1
· whenever someone looks he sees 436 feet high and 2 mlles long.
It
wouldn
'I
surprise
me
If
at
this
In this country I was born; I
tJielr laces IDled with Love and
very moment a group of Army,
Pliace, he understands that when learned·hcnw to love, share and care
Navy and Air Force generals were.
tMir last president; Anwar El for all the people.
And as we always say in Arable; . meeting to go over lh\!lr hew
~dat, made the treaty ol peace·
weapons budgets right now.
~ih Isra.el In 1978, he made It I say "Salam".
"Admiral, the Air Force Is
Assem 0 . Kabech
~aue the Egyptians prefer al·
willing to give up Its antisubmarine
all·weather laser-directed Snail
Darter Helicopter If your people
will cancel your nuclear Satelllte
Missile Program."
!!We're willing to deal providing
~ roaay Is Thursday, Jan . 20, the 20thday ofl!ll3, There.areil45days left In ~
we know what the Army Is willing
tilt year.
·•
to cut out of Its budget."
·
..
;toclay's highlight In history:
"Gentlemen, "I've talked to my R
·On Jan. 20, 1981, 52 Amertca ns held hostage at the U.S. embassy In
&amp; D experts and we've decided we
Tetu-an were set tree after more than 14 months ·tn captivity.
'
can do without the M, 112
:0., this date!
.
.
'
·Bom:nwracker."
•In ll!li5, England's Parliament met lor the first time:
"What the hell Is that?" .
:Jn lB)l, John Marshall was !!Ppolnted chief justice of the U.S. Supreme
"We're
not sure yet bec!luse It's
Court.
,ln 1887, tile Senate approved the leaslngofPearlHarborlnHawaUasa · stili on the drawiDII board, but It
was ruppolled to' make a helluva
naVaJiiase.

Goo~-times

.

'.:-

Meet Southern's Tornadoes

blamed for ~incy's collapse

Upset parent

CINCINNATI (AP) _:_By' most
accounts, the Cincinnati Reds' lack
of run production .led to their 1982
collapse.· But pitching coach BU1
Fischer says the hitters aren't the
only players to lllame.

. only

yields dollars and cents
pro~ed we have Inflation. The
more inflation, the rnore we save.
Get It?
·
But Tip O'Neill got what he
wanted by - raising taxes. Social
Security will be In 1984 rise to 14
percent, seven percent · each · for
employer and employee. Andltwlll . .
rise progressively to 199o, whe n Ills
scheduled to reach 15.3 percent.
Meanwhile, the raise In the taxes Is
·scheduled to bring In $40 ml1llon
during the period under discussion.
Now If oriewere prepared to raise
taxes as required to continue the
present schedule of Social Security
services, then thequestlonofbowto
proceedWoul,dendrtghtthere. Just
keep raising the payroll taxes.
There Is, however, a problem In
doing this. It 1s a problem of what
th!l economists can the "wedge,"
whlcti 1s the difference between '
'
what JohnJoneSkeepslnhlspockel
. and what you have to pay out to get
John Jones to work for you. The
bigger the wedge, the more
expensive t1 Is to hire. The more
expensive to hire, the larger the
unemployment Wh8.t we have
done under the rubrtc of the
breakthrough ls simply to add to
the wedge, during a period when we
shall be subtracting from It
So: No matter what, Tip O'Neill
gets what he wanted. And Reagan
gets bali ol what he wanted , only 11
there Is tnnaUon In the future.
Oh yes. If you are on Social
Security and you have outside
Income ol $20,000 or more, one-hali
ol your Soclal Security bene!lts will
be taxed - which, up to a point, Is
fair enough. What point? Well,
suppose you died before you had
earned back what you actually paid
into Social Securtty? Wouldn't you
then have been taxed twice by the
government?
Yes. But consider yourself lucky.
Under the Great .Breakthrough',
you might have been taxed thtee
limes.
' ·
·

Fischer, who .belleves pitching Is
the most Important part of baseball.
said Wednesday .that the Reds'
mound corps was largely responsl·
ble for the lOllosses last year. a
team record.

sufficiency ol cuisine and Jlbatlons
Asked lor official comment on
will be evaluated." Translated
the go.go goings-on, Capt. John
from Pentagonese, this meant that
Whittaker, and Air Fo!'C€ o;pokes·
no cash contributions would be man, said:
necessary unless the load and
"We have inquired Into the
booze ran out.
matter and detennlned that there
As any sertous holiday reveler was a professional dancer at that
knows , some parties arc more . Christmas party. It Is somewhat
worthwhile than others. There's no contrary to A1r Force policies·
point wasting time at a mulled· regardlng"eeltertatnment 'for· parwine affair If good Scotch and hot ties. The pollozy requires that
hors d 'oeuvres are available a · entertainment be in good taste, not
corridor away.
,
be offensive to the people pretent
The prize Alr Force party was and not be an embarrassment to
held in .a basement room In the the Air Force, so . It was not
Pentagon. The guests were colon- · cbmpleu!ly In keeptltg . with that
els and senior civilian bureaucrats. policy ." ,
The entertlanment was a topless
Excessfve partying often brings
dancer (female).
, acute
of regret the morn"Some of the colonels were lng ~r. At' a time r'!'ihen budget
standing two abreast on chairs to deficits are soaring oil of control,
get a good view, of the gyrations," yet the rriWtary ins!~~ need
one ainusedgu,est confided.
every penny they'v~iked . for.

By SCIYIT WOLFE

Welcoming back the familiar
confines ol the Larry Morrison
Gymnasium this weekend, the
Meigs Marauders play host to
Jackson Friday and Wahama
Saturday, the first home games lor
Coach Greg Drummer's crew In
over a month.
During the past month, the
Maraudel'll picked up thlr first win
of the season In five outings. And
with a good bounce or two, they
stand a good chance ol adding to
their 1-10 record.
The first a! the two weekend
games sees the Jackson lronmen
come Into town. Jackson defeated
. Meigs '1240 earUer In Jackson,
probably the poorest perlonnance
·- by the .Marauders this year.
"We're looking forwaict to play·

m"llngs

\

'\)

made a mistake."
"You did in your budget."
"We've almost rqade1 enough
"Don't believe everyihtng you
raises
read .in the budget. We can do the . c4ts to have our
restored."
,
.
job with 52ti. ''
"Good, Now I don't want It ·to · "I'll offer to cancel 5!j cruise •
missiles lor the carrier fleet."
leave this room, but the A1r Force
"Put me down for two B-1
doesn't need bali the AWAC:s It's
bomhers we don't need tomorrow." .
asking lor. We 'were just being
"You can have the money we set
redundant In case Congress balked
aside
lor the ovevrun on the
at the price."
·
polson·tlpped
Comanche rocket."
"The Army Is willing to sacrifice
"That should do it. Let's go see
Its investment In Its Densepack
Weinberger and tell him we
Anti-Rocket Personnel Carrier."
overestimated our defense hard"I thought you told us an
ware needs·, and we'll take the
Armored Division couldn't move
money for pay raises Instead."
without it."
"Suppose he gets mad?"
"The damn thing failed every
" Why should he get mad? Irs
test, but we, went into production,
coming
out o! the services' pocket
because we couldn't admit we
·
- not his."

sa1a7

I·

I

HuLME
!iliA

'.

r

ROCK SPRINGS - Both the
seventh and eighth grade Meigs
Marauder cagers suffered a disappointing one-point loss to the Logan
Baby Chlels here Wednesday.
SUFFER FIRST LOSS
Coach Rusty Boolanan's little
Marauder eighth graders lost lor
ihe first time In ten outings, 36-.'!5, to
Logan.
.
Metgs· missed two lay-ups and
twQ fnlllt ends on one-and-ones In
· the tlnal minute of play with Logan

College
cage results.

....

foday in ·hisJory

Kenyon fi:'l. Baldwri-Waii3C'l' 5R
MlllldriJZUm fl. Mount Untln «J
{)hk)

NOI"'hfrn 111. OIX&gt;rlln

n

Ot1l"""ln '18. Martena rr7

Wl"enbt'ra 54, Ohio' W~il 51
WOOl!« 751 lll'llllon 72
('.eld,
n

:
I
I'
I

t ,i
"Hey,· this th)ng really works- It's already lost track of my New Year, ' I

.1

·

•

·

• ·

1

,

'

~)

sooner:

..-----,.----+-...--;'

HIKER

.BOOTS

S}79s_sgggs

BAILEY'S SHOES

"If you go through our drUls,
you're going to Improve,': Fischer

ing them again. If we get fired up
and play like we're capable, I think
we can wtn," said Drummer.
Jackson w1U take a ~ overaU
record into the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League &lt;;onteSt with a 3-5
league slate. Meigs Is sWI looking
for their first league $ In seven
outings.
The Ironmen have a good
1111-around athlete in AI CoWns and ·
an outside net-Hamer In Jon etay.
Ab&lt;lut Jackson, Drummer com·
ments, "'They're talented, good·
Shooting, and give good man-toman pressure .. They're not overly
big, though. I think we're better
than the ·first time we played
tllem."
Jackson comes otl a 59-56 loss to
Minford last Saturday and will play
at Vinton County this Saturday.
Agalnsl the cross-rtver rtval

White Falcons, the Marauders will
lace a hungry Wahama live !halls
winless In eight games.
Coach Lewis Hall's Falcons are
. coming oil their best game of the
year as Iiley. gave the powerlul
Southern Tornadoes a good go.at-lt,
49.:15, last Tuesday.
"They're not to be tak!m ljghtly.
They have a deCent team and the
team that makes the fewest
mistakes wlllprobably win, " stated
Drummer on the Falcons.
Ron Bradley and Ertc Embleton
have been the Falcon main sparks
this year.
· Starting for the Marauders will
be double-digit scorers 5-9 senior
Rick Edwards and S.ll junior Nick
Riggs at guards, 6-0 senior Greg
Taylor and 5,10 senior Rick Chan·
cey at forwards, and 64 senior Bill
Holcomb at center.

holding a one point lead.
.r auders went down to their third
.o\ccordlng to Bookman, Meigs one-point loss in the season, 40-39, to ·
played well enough to win but just Logan. Meigs Is now J.6on the year,
couldn't buy a basket. They lour of their losses by a total ol ten
points.
managed only 15, of 41! field goal
attempts for 29 per cent and made
Michael Bartrurn paced Meigs
with 17 points, his season-high, and
live ol15 free throws lo~ 33 per cent.
Scortng for the little Marauders 11 rebounds. Billy Brothers had.10
were J. R. Iqtchen with 13, Huey points and seven rebounds while&gt;
Eason and Jesse Howard with nine • Paul Melton added five points and
apiece, and Phil King and Steve seven rebounds. Melton was
Musser had two each. Kuhn led awarded the "defensive player of
Logan with 10.
the week" wlthhlssparkllnl{hustle.
Coach Bookman has awarded
Other Meigs scorers were Scott
the entire team the ''defensive WUllams with five and Bllly Snyder
player ol the week" award· with had two. J. Meedlng led Logan with
their win over Gallipolis and looss ll and J. Gabrlal had 10.
to Logan.
The Mejp Junior High teams
7l'll GRADE
• play at home against 'Jackson next
Coach ROn Drexler's little Ma· Wednesday at s·p.m.

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RACINE -';!be Southern Torna7, Charle~ Holland 4 and PeaY .
doette reserves recently staked
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claim onanexcltlng31-29overtlme
Southern's young gals trailed s.6
victory over the Alexander Sparafter the first stanza, !lien feU to a
tans here during girls' high school . 19-12 deficit at 11»! half. Dur!Jiithlfd
basketball'actloo.
t
qu~ actiOn Sout!tern edied
.
l
Jenny Ben~ led the' winners, cloler at23-:ln, then "caught Dre"ln
with· aa excellent noor pme and a
lhe.' lalt round to knot the
at
game'blgh ll points. Lort Adams
29-29.
.
added 6 points, Alana Lyons 5,
In the overtime extenslonSHShlt
· Tonya CurninJDs 2, ,Iodl Harris 4.
paydlrt for the only score and lhli
·
·JuB Houdashelt2 and~ Hill 1. 31·29 trtumph. ·
. Clu1sti. Beatty· U41 Donaa Payne
SOutheni hit 12 of 40 field goals .
shared top llo!IOn for Alexllnder . and 7 of :In at the lt!te for 31l'and 35
with 8 points each, Jodi Burson had' percent n!lpi!Ctlvely. SHS had 27
rebunda led by Mandy Hill with 10. .

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excellent team e!!ort
On the other hand, the Tornadoes of Coach Carl
Wolie depend upon speed, quickness, consistent
shooting, and an intense defensive game by the entire
SHS contingent lor Its·winning combination.
No matter what the outcome, this week's bout Is
certainly the ~er among aU contests in the
area. On paper the outcome Is lOP close to call, and
perhaps . a more hungry Bobcat pack will redeem
Itself ol an earlier lB point loss to the Southerners.
Meanwhile, In the lar end of Gallla County the
Eastern Eegles will meet Hannan Trace's WUdcats,
who downed the visitors by 12 In first round action ol
league play. Eastern played an intense first hali
Tuesday and a credible second hall, but never-theless dropped Its l3 straight contest' ol the season
without a win, 5249, to the Waterlord Wildcats.
Jay Carpenter and Jim Newell have picked up the
. offeilslve slack, while Troy Guthrie, Tim PI obei t,
Mike Colllns and Rob Malson have product!d
consistent outings.
Tuesday ~nlng Hannan Trace tripped the
Symmes Valley Vlklngs to push Its overall record to
7-6 and 3-2 inside the svAC.
Coach Uoyd Myers' Southwestern Highlanders
will be out to snap a seven game losing streak against
the lmprovtn,g North Gallla Pirates of Coach Bruce
Wilson. North Gallla defeated Wahama, 59·56 in Its
last outing. Meanwhile, Southwestern suffered a 75-51
loss to Oak Hill Tuesday night. RlJ!ier Wells continues
to pace the Highlanders offense.
At Vinton, the Pirates' two bjg players, Matt
Kemper, 6-5 junior center, and Mike Mays, 6-3 senior
forward, continue to lead the Pirate attack.

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However, Cincinnati pitchers
"walked 570 batters -100 more than r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
opposing pitchers - and uncorl«'d
50 wfld pitches last year. Opposing
runners stole 149 bases 1n 201
attempts - a 75 percent success
rate.
Pitchers and catchers are to
report to spring training Feb. 19.
earlier than usual. And Fischer
. ; promised more attention to such
bastes as holding runners on base ·
. and throws to first.

(llli ('t irv a...Juehall
lly .... ~........ ...._ .

I

resolutions."

The Reds compUed a 3.66 earned
run ave~:age last year - ·an
Improvement over the 3.73 staff
ERA ol 1981, when the neO.s
complled the best overall record in
the major leagues .

·

Marauder junior high cage round-up

6l'IJII®II8'3 fOiP;f- S1.

.

~.Sr. F

'

Wednesday· that In light of last;
year's dlvlslonllnlsh, the Reds could•
change back Into a contender
than expected.
t
"Atlanta won ltlasfyearwlth the!
fewest number of victories sinci;!
1900," Wagner said. "So we don' .:;
haveasblgahlllto cllmb.'' ·
l

.

By KElTII WllQ«:lJP

I

..Whoever saki we did? "

CIIRIS 110811CK

said. "We'regotngtoworkonmoves
to first ~. along with the
catchers."
The strategy Is to try to cut down
on runs allowed to win more of the
·closer games this year.
"Last year, we lost 29 games by
onerun.WealsoloSt29games bytwo
runs," Fischer said. ."If we could
eliminate half of' those one-run
losses, and one-third of the two-run
losses;lhat's25morevtctorles. That
would put ~s·rtght in the battle."
Twenty-live more victories would
give the Reds !l6 this year, three
fewer than the Atlanta Braves
notclled In winning the National
League West last season.
The Braves' 89-73 mark ' gave
them the fewest victories by a
.Western Division champion since
division playstartedln1900. The1979
Reds and 1m San Francisco Giants
took the division with 90 victories,
but every other champion needed at
least 93 victories to claim the IItle.
Reds President Dick Wagner said

Meigs returns. home for two games .

Salaries vs; gurL._'_n--'._s_',~-~·-·_~.. .:. _._:~_:___..
:_ .,_;··.L,." ~'·_·__•.,,_, _' . . :·.~-~·~-~~-;~-'~_Ju_.,~:~~-r.~.·---ld .I
-

Loves Egypt

.

Friday evening, the Southern Tornadoes aDc!
Eastern Eagles return to the local hardwood after
mid-week bouts wtih non-league opposition on
Tuesday evening.
In what could be the dectstve game going down
the stretch lor this year's SVAC .championship,
; Southern hosts powerlul Kyger Creek, while Eastern
· travels down the pike to Hannan Trace for a rematch
with Ute WUdcats.
·
In a race lor the best class "A" record In
Southeastern Ohio and a quest lor the Southern
Valley Athletic Championship, the Bobcats of Coach
Keith Carter lrivade Southern's home turl Friday 1n
an attempt to unseat the long-reigning Tornadoes.
Kyger Creek, 11-2 overall and 4-1 In the SVAC,
dropped lis opening league Wt to Southern atter'
leading early in the g&amp;ll)€. Since that point the
scrappy Botrats have blasted opponents along the
way, winning Its remaining league contests to remain
In the hunt lor this year's championship. ·
While reigning I!S league champion the past six
years, Southern continues Its · winning basketball
tradition this year with an ll-1 record overall, a
perlect !HI loop slate, plus a n'lnth place ranklrig in the
. Ohio AP roll. The state-runner up Tornadoes alsci will
be eyeing this week 's Wt with extra Intensity as It
hopes to keep alive Its home winning streak of more
than four years.
1 SIZe; stamina, and a potent, but a controlled
ottenslve game has been the niatn ingredient to
· Bobcat success this season. A well-balanced attack
that often places five men in double figures also plays
.an trnwrtant factor as well as . complement an

"We didn't pltch ·aggres&amp;lvely,"
Fischer told sportswriters as part of
· a seven-city media caravan. " In·
steadoltaklnglt to them, lheytooklt
to us. We served up bases on balls
llke they were jelly beans.''

..

·s ·o uthem hosts . Kyger Creek
•m SVAC showdown Friday

I

bang for a buck."
"Okay, If we give up these~ .
program, how short are we lor
military pay hikes?"
"I figure we need 40 bUlton
dollars more in cuts before I can
afford to send my kid to college.''
"You think you have problems.
I've got a $100,000 mortgage
hanging over my head and I'm
going to lose my house If I don't get
a pay raise."
"How would you llke to be a
two-star general and have the bank
threaten to take your car away?"
"There's still a lot oflat here we
cim cut out. Admiral, does your
s.ecvlce really need 600 lighting
ships?"

.JASON HILL.
IH, Jr. G

TREVOR CARDONE
~1, Jr. C

Penta'""'g'--o__,..n_____-:-1_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n

computerized the whole operation. .
There really was no alternative.
True to Its tradition of "eat, drtnk
and be merry, for tomorrow we
dle," the Air Force had scheduled
42 parties within a nine-day pertod
at 42 different locations In the
Pentagon. There were even cham·
pagne brunc~es during duty·hours.
To help the partygoers stay the
course, officials fed time and
location data Into a computer,
which collated the lnlonnatlon and
produced pr~~ttouts for. distribution
to selected personnel. My associate
Indy Badhwar obtained a copy ol
the computer printout.
The list ls -utled unabashedly:
"Chrl~tmas Party Ust." It Is
signed, in computer print, "Santa
Claus," and It is jolly Indeed.
''Offsets need not be tendered, "
the schedule said. "ijowever,

T·he Daily Sentinei-Page-4

j.Lack of prod~ction, pitching;

Great breakthroug"'-'r!;_h_·_ __;___::--·:--:w:-::--u_lia~m-:-:F~.B-:-=uc_k__,tey,_J-r.:-

'

~v

.

'

Page- 2 -The Daily Sentinel
. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohlq
. Thursday, January 20, 1983

J

~~~
~m~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Melon
Pickens Hdwe. ·
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1111 Viand St.
17&amp;.2702

'

�•

Thursday, January 20, 1983 .

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

20, 1983

Urbana·.gives :Rio scare before losi~g·
7IJ- 70 Mid-Ohio C~nf~rence cage battle:
Guard Jerry Mowery connected
on a pair of.free throws with 38
seconds remaining Wednesday
night to give Rio Grande College a
71·70 basketball victory overvlsiting
Urbana College in Mid.Qhlo Confer·
enceplay.
Urbana bad cut tile Rio lead to
one, 6%8, witll1:.J) left in tile game
on Jump shot by Mark Vaughn ..
Rio worked the clock down to tile
38 second mark when Mowery was
fouled, setting up a bonus free throw
situation. Mowery canned both
shots(glving him 11 straight for tile
night.
Dean Curtis tossed in a despera·
tlon shot at tile buzzer for the Blue
Knights.

a

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Rlo wfil nowface'I'ttfln University ;
at Lyne Center on Saturday. Tipotf :
~for that MOC encounter Is 7: :II ·
.
'
.•
p .m .

BoX score:
l.lRBANll. &lt;lil -Curtis, lW; l)avls.~; :
Jut&gt;e, 0-:1-2; McC!uslley, 4-IH!; Jo~. ~1-11; :

V,auglm IIH-24; West, !-11-2; Knecht, 3-5-11.
TOTAU . .U.'ll.
RIO GRANDE (n l - Mowery, t-11-19;
Penrod, 1-11-2; Shaw, ~2-12; Cu1Ty,.&amp;4-16;

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:~:

C0Lffi.1BUS, Ohio (AP)- A movement, spurred by horsemen, Is
w reduce exotic betting at Ohio's racetracks.
' "Wbat we're doing Is breaking the pullUc," Chairman George
Smith of the Ohio Thoroughbred Race Fund Advisory Committee
'15ald.
.
: Smith Is leadlng a group to reduce the ni.lmber of dally doubles,
qulnellas and trtfecfas - where a bettor must pick multiple winners
- at state tracks.
' The Centerville horseman, speaJUng before tile Ohio Racing
. ~mmlsslon Wedriesday, cited Beulah's curren.t practice of
. conducting straight betting In only one of nfue races. "The maximum ·.
;or exotic races should be four on one program, " he said.
· Lou 'Madonna of Grove City, president of the Ohio Chapter of the
Horsemen's Benevolent and Prot~ive AssOciation, says the 21\)
percent takeout from exotic betting is too much. In straight
wagering, only 18 percent comes off the top.
. George Jones, general ~ger of Thistledown, says his track
favors fewer exotic betting races. "What we're ftodlng Is the public Is
tapping out (gnlng broke) much earlier In the day. The more exotics
you have, the quicker they leave," he told the commission.
Smith also says stable entries should be permitted to race In Ohio
qulnella races, permitted in other states such as New York and
llllnols. "If we have horses owned by different people with the same
trainer, we can't enter both In the same (exotic) race. One must be
. scratcb!!d. That works a. hardship Ol\ horseT!len," he said.
:, Commission chairman Henty Gurvls says he plans tD call together
: representatives from the tracks and horseT!len in.the spring to solve
,, the exotic betting Issue.
:: "I've been against It," he said. "We were reluctant to grant even
!· that first trlfecta. The horsemen wanted exotic betting. The tracks
, wanted exotic betting. Now they're coming together and saying this
after a ll."

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18th-rantted Oklahoma State 84-63,
By Alo;oclated Preis
added 21 points for UNLV, which
three inches taller than any of the.
No. 13 Villanova romped over Seton
That's why he felt the Razorbacks'
increased Its PCAA record to 5-0 and
Delta State player s, also had 13;
game against Texas ·Chttstian Hall 75-59 and 19th-ranked GeorgeIs now·15-0overall.
rebounds for tile 13-1 Tigers.
Virginia opened a 10-point lead
Wednesday_night was so Important. town beat Pittsburgh 62-54.
Second Ten
Texas Christian trailed by five,
midway through ·the first half and
"This game was bigger than tile
Seven -footer Steve Stipanovlch
had little trouble beating Virginia
one at Houston Saturday," Sutton 58-53, with less than four minutes
scored a career -high 32 points to
but
a
steal
by
Walker
led
to
a
Tech.
The Cavaliers, 14-2, were led
left,
said after Arkansas wore down a
boost Missouri over Oklahomna
by Jim Miller, w.ho scored12ofhls 18
top-flight TCU squad, 69-55. "We layup by Alvin Roberts, and Walker
State in Big Eight Conference
points in tile second half.
needed a victory to keep the Jollowed with a dunk to get Arkansas
action. Leading by only six points,
out of trouble.
With Tech ahead 20-}8, Virginia . Missouri scored 131n a row, elghtof
pressure on Houston. If we lose,
HornedFrogsCoachJimKilltngs•
ran off 12 straight points. Ralph
Houston has11 free game."
them by Stipanovlch,.to take a 42-23
Sampson added 12 points for
· The fourth- ranked Razorbacks, · worth said he felt poor officiating
lead with 2: JS.Ieft in tile first half.
Virginia, and Del Curry paced Tech; Missouri, 13-2 and 1-0 ·in the Big
one of two major undefeated teams, helped ruin his team's effort. TCU
went
to
thi!
line
just
five
times,
14·2,
with 17 In tile non-conference
got 15 polnts and some big plays Ia te
Eight, also got 12 points from Jon
compared
to
20
for
Arkansas.
game.
In the game from guard Darrell
Sunavold , while Raymond Cren"It's hard to . play with one
Matt Ilpherty paced North CaroF shaw had 19 for Oklahoma State,
Walker to beat the Homed Frog:;.
referee," Killingsworth said.
ina over N.C. State with 21 points,
The victory, at Arkansas' Barn12·2 and 0-L
"Denny Bishop was good, but the
and be and Warren Martin helped
hill Arena, gave the Razorbacks a
Ed Pinckney scored 15 points and
the Tar Heels abort a Wolfpackrally John Pinone had 13 to lead Villanova
record of 14-0, 4-0 iri tile Southwest other two should be selling insuIn tile second half of their Atlantic over Seton Hall. Vlllanova led Seton
Conference. Houston, r;anked 15th rance. I'd love to be able to play
karate defense and have my
Coast Conference m i!ichup . N.C. Hall24-8 In the early going and 48-32
nationally, Is 5-0 in the SWC, while
opponents
shoot
12
free
throws
to
our
State
pulled within 55-46 before at the half.
TCU dropped to3-21n the league and
two
in
the
first
half."
12-4 overall. Fifth-ranked NevadaNorth Carolina went on an 8-2 burst
- getting four points each by
.
TopTen
Las Vegas Is the nation's other
Jeff Collins and Sidney Green
Doherty and Martin - to lead 63-48
unbeaten major college team with a
spearheaded a strong second-half
with 15 minutes to play.
15-0 record after beating Long
FEELING BLUE?
effort to lead Nevada-Las Vegas ·
Jim Braddock added 18 points for
Beach Sl&lt;!te 95-83.
COUNSELING CAN HELP!!
over Long Beach State in a Pacific · the Tar Heels, 13-3 and winners oUO
In other games involving ranked
CALL
Coast Athletic Association game.
in a row, while Terry Gannon had 18
teams, No. 7 VIrginia defeated
0
Pacing the Rebels, who led only· for State. The Tar Heels are 3-0 in
17th-raled Virginia Tech 7~. No.3
42-41 at the half, was Collins, who
conference.
North Carolina clobbered North
COMMUNITY
Keith 1.,ee poured in 29 points as
scored 'J:l points and added"¥ven
Carolina State 99-81, sixth-ranked
MENTAL HEALTH CENTER
Memphis State beat up on Division
rebounds, while Green had 23 points
Memphis State whipped Delta State
II Delta State. The 6-foot-10- Lee,
and 12 rebounds, Larry '1\nderson
100-62, NO. 12 Missouri defeated

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·

orsemen start actton Razorbac~s post 69-55 victory over TCU ·
aga~nst exotic betting

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Size 42 Reg.
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2"x60 Yards

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;

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SPORT COAT

DUCT TAPE

.

:

said Cey had agreed to terms in and a player who has playoff and
The Doily Sentinel
prlnclpleforfiveyears, butdetaUsof World Series experience. It gives us
(!lsr8IIHIII) •
the agreement were not announced. . a very good Infield."
A Dl¥111iin ol M.-edla, lee.
Cey was In the ftoal year of his
Cey has played more games for
PubUshed every · afternoon, ' Monday
contract with the Dodgers and
the Dodgers at third base than any
through Friday. 111 Court Street, by tho
Ohio V&amp;lley Publlshlng Company .
reportedly wanted to renegotiate for
player in club- history and he holds
Multlmedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 4511l9,
four years at an average of about the fielding record with a .977
im2156. Second dass p&amp;lllge paid at .'
$700,000 a year. ·
. percentage
• Pomeroy, Ohio.
••·
.• . ,
The Dodgers refused to 1:0 a long r~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;IJ Member: Thfo A.ssoctated Press, lnland
with the proposal and Cey agreed to
Dally Press A$Soclatlon and tho Amert·
can Newspilper Publishers Assoelattm, ·
waive (he no-trade clause so a deal
Natkmal Advertising Representative,
could be made.
.Branham Newspa~r Sak.&gt;s, '133 Th1rd
Cey Is the Los Angeles Dodgers'
Avenue, New York. New York 10011.
all-time home run hitter with 228.
POSTMASrER: Serxl address to The
The 10-year veteran hit .254 In 150
Dally Sentlnel, 111 Co&gt;!rl St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 4571l9.
.
games last year wltb24 homers and
79RBis.
SIJBSCRIP110N RA'IE!
"First of all, It (the trade) gives us
By earner or Molor RoWe
One week ...... ... ......................... $1.00 ~
an outstandlng third baseman,"
One Mooth ................................. IUO ~
Colletti said. "Second , It gives us
One Year ... .............•....... .. ........ $52.110 ~
another right-handed power hitter.
Third, It gives usa great competitor
Dally ...
15 Cenb

THE DAILY SENTINEL - 992-2156

*
SILVER CLOTH

traded to··Chicago Cubs·

B.EAT UNEMPLOYMENT! EXCELL_ENT WALK
ROUTE NOW OPEN IN SYRACUSE AREA.
. EXCELLENT POTENTIAL TO BUILD.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY~ WE TRAIN.
DON'T PASS THIS UP ... CALL NOW.

It was upset Friday in · a State Fairgrounds Coliseum tripleheader.
Colu!flbUs Brookhaven stunned Columbus Northland, No.4 in Class AAA
at tile t ime, after Columl)us Linden had surprised Columbus Beechcroft .
·
The lasers were previously unbeaten.
Zanesville won twice in the final seconds last week. The Blue Devils beat'
Lancaster 49-48 after wiping out a three-point deficit with 30 seconds left.
They overcame a t hree-point Linden lead with 35 seconds remaining,
wining 65-64.
·
Larry Allen, son-in-law of long-tlme Hamilton Coach Marv McCollum, .
has Miami Trace on a winning tear in his first season. The Panthers have
won four of their last five games under Allen after their losing streak hit 24
games earlier this season.
Marc Streeter scored 40'ofhis team's 51 points and took all but 17 of its 59
floor shots in a 51-45 overtime triumph over Fremont St.Joseph. Randy
Slocum's 45-foot shot at the buzzer gave East Clinton a 71-69 victory over
Blanchester, which led by 22 pbints after three quarters.
Football - Stanford flew Xenia quarterback Scott Phillippi to the West
Coast school, looking at him as possible replacement for Joho Elway.
Phillippi holds all Xenia's passing records.
Wrest ling · - Lakewood St.Edward whipped Michigan powers
Temperence Bedford, Rochester Adams and Montrose In a quadrangular ·
meet at Temperence last week. The Eagles arechasingtlleirslxth straighl
Class AAA state tournam ent title. Lorain Southview has reached 100
victories in only its 14th season. The Saints, coached by Dan Ternes, are
10043-l.
Girls basketball- Edith Spivey has coached 100 winners in five seasons
at East Cleveland Shaw. A 73-42 victory over Parma Normandy gave her a
100-8 career recoin. Lisa Bradley of Lima Bath. a 5-9 senior guard, had
1,684 career points through 13 games tills winter.

a

peramt. The Redmen were 21 of :II
·
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Rio held a 39-32 advantage on the
boaJ'ds, The Redmen had 29
turnovers while Urbana lost the ball
26tlmes.
· The game marked Hotz.ei Cllnlc

ror 70 percent.

Maisch, 0-4-12: WoUe, _ , Richards. 2&lt;H;

CHICAGO (AP) -The acquisition of Los Angeles [lodgers third
baseman Ron Cey In a trade for two
minor league players will give the
Chicago Cubs · a much improves)
infield as far executives of tile
National League baseball team are
concerned.
The Cubs, recently thwarted in ·
efforts to sign free-agent Steve
Garvey, announcedlateWednesday
that the 34-year-old Ceywould waive
his contract's no-trade clause and
join the Cubs ..
And General Manager Dallas
Green said that obtaining Cey
"more than made up" fortllelossof
Garvey.
"It means I don't have to m 0ve
Bill Buckner off first base, " he
added.
Team spokesman Ned ·collettl

WOLFE DRIVES - Rio Grande Guard Kent WoUe (with baD)
drives down court in Wedriesday's Mid-Ohio Conlerence basl&lt;etbaD
game against visiting Urbana. The Blue Knights lost a 71· 70 decision to
the host Redmen.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Fran Vall , the girls basketball coach ·;It
three-time state champion Delphos St.John 's, is philosophical about his
school's first league defeat.
"Every ~treak has to e nd some time, " Voll said over the telephone.
"We'll just have to start a new one."
Maria Stein Marion needed an ove rtime to pin a 46-45 Midwest Athletic
Conference loss on St.John's last week, ending a 57-game league winning
streak stretching over eight seasons.
St.John's girls won 5!1in a row In seven seasons In the Western Buckeye
league before switching conferences.
Vall has coached the Blue J ays to s tate titles in 1977,1979 and 19~land a
168-14 career record going into this week.
Arou~d Ohio: Wellsville's boys teams, from the seventh.grad·e through
the varsity . have a combined 52·1 record this year. The reserves lost to
Steubenville last weekend.
·
Peebles boys own a 57-game regular season winning streak. Warren
Western Reserve's winning spell ha.S reached 29 regular season games.
I!leeler!ia' s ~laHJi.a 10440 thrashing of Bergholz Spriitgfield set a school

The victory left Rio Grande with a the second half. Repeated turnovers
16-6 season mark. Inside 'the MOC. . and. missed shots prevented Rio
ato lmprovedltsflrstplacerecord to from blowing the visitors out. :
4-0.
Mowery led all scorers with 19
Urbana.· dropped to 3-13 overall polnts.DanCurryadd!!!l16andJohn
and 0-41nslde the conference. ·
Maisch and Bob Shaw each had 12.
Rio Grande built up a six point
MalsiCh picked off 12 ·rebounds
l~ad In the first six minutes.of play while Curry and Shaw _e ach had
behind John Maisch. The Redrnen nine.
were up by nine, 27-18, witll6: 07 left
Vall!lhn· earned game-high scarin the first half following a goal by ing honors with 24 points while ~
Kent Wolfe.
Rodney Jones and Tim Knecht each
. Vall!lhn connected ori lhree added 11. .
straight goals In the closing minutes
Former Rio ace Tom Jutze paced
of the half to knot the count at34-all the Knights in rebounding with 13.
just before the h alftime
Thevlsltors~29ol74fromthe
intermission.field for 39 percent. Rio was :5 of77 .
The Redmen were on top by four for33percentfrom !!!!!_field. Urbana
polntsonthreeseparateoccasionsln was 12 of 19 at the fDI!lllne ror 63

Sentinel-Page-S

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The

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Thursday, January 20, 1983

Cancer answerline

Meigs Mothers March of
Dimes begins next week

;
A regul8r feature prepared by
: · the American Caucer Society, to
: • help save your Ufe from cancer.
• ·
QUESTION: Is It true that
: ·. tlum'elceut light has been found to
· cauae skin cancer?
•
• ' · ANSWERIJne: A recent Austral~
ian stildy of women oltlce workers
: , • did show some assoclaUon betweel
: · : malignant melanoma and expo-

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Gratitude in need of ·reward: But who is the helper?

I would shower gratitude and a
liberal reward on anyone who
returns my purse which disappeared while my grown children
were treating me to a birthday
dJnner at an Atlantic City casino.
They'd gone together and collected
enough money for a lovely trip for
!lie. which, when you're a band!·
capped person with very little
Income, would have been the
occasion of a lifetime. It was In my
purse.

ATHENS - Southeasmrn
POMEROY _ Magnolia Club
Ohio Residence Association will
at 7:~ p.m. Thursday at the
meet In the basement of United
home 0 I Mrs Kar G
Cnmpus Ministry, Athens, Frl·
·
I rueser.
day at 6:~ p.m. Purpose of the
- ~- meeting ts to discuss prol\lems
arising from oil and gas driU!ng.
POMEROY Willing
Wo~1\ers .Class of Enterpflse
United Methodist Church wiD
.SATURDAY
meet at 7::.1 p.m. at the home of
. Dorothy LOng.
.
MIDDLEPORT Delta
Kappa Gamma wll! have a
carry·ln dinner Saturday at
POMEROY ~ Evangeline
Middleport Church of Christ at
Chapter. Order of the Eastern
12:31
p.m. Hostesses remind
Star, wiD hold officers' practice
members
should take their own ·
at 7 p.m. Thursday to Include
table
service.
work practice.

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Your "Ewtra Touch"
l'lorlst Slnce1Q7

wlll at least return the pictures of
my grandchildren and my Medl·
care card. But I think I should sign
myself - HOPELESS.
DEAR HELEN AND' SUE:
I owe an awful lot to Jerome, my
older brother. He raised the family
when our parents died, and his
money put me through high school.
He gave up an awiul Jot for me. ·
He's never married, and he
doesn't want me to ever get
involved with a man . You see, he
remembj!rs many bad things about
our mother and lather and their life
together and wants to "save me
from that." (There were lots of
fights, beatings, etc. They died In a
1\rurik driving accident.)
Jerome says he'll finance my
college educ.atlon 11 I promise to
remain single, preferably be a
virgin, all my life. He has dreams of

1HURSDAY

•

Helen help us
I stili keep hoping the "frnder"

my coming back to the old home
Bottel - or both, 11 you want ,a
place anC~ sharing it with him.
combination mother-daughter
I owe him so much, but Isn't this
answer .....: In care of this
asking more than I can give? .newspaper.)
Especially since I've met a guy and
am -FALLING IN LOVE
DEARFlL:
Yes, It's asking far too much!
Don't let gratitude push you toward
!'JI agreement you can'tkeepwltha '
MASON, W. VA.
man who has an abnormal fb&lt;ation .
-SUE

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POMER,OY Episcopal
Church Women will boli:l a
luncheon at 12:~p.m. Thursday
In the Meigs Inn' Hostesses will
be Crace Elch, Margaret Dutton, Helen Hayes and Nellie
Brown.

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PH. 992~2644

,_

JANET'S

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Child Conservation League
will meet at 7:31p.m . Thursday
at the home of Peggy Harris,
wbo 1s have devotions. Janet
Duffy and Peggy Houdashelt
will be hostesses.

PERM SPECIAL-ssoo 'Off

DEAR FIL:
And very possibly more than one
fixation. Your brother should spend
his money on psychiatric help whlle you work your way through
college. - HELEN
(GOT A
subject
for PROBLEM?
discussion, Or
two·a
generation style? Dln&gt;ct your
questions to either Sue or Helen

ANY PERM. THIS MONTH.

· PH. 773-5404

...•

Marilee, Connie, Diann or Janet

FRIDAY .
DORCAS - There wlll be a
soup supper at Bethany United
Methodist Church, Dorcas, Friday at ~p.m . Soup, sandwiches,
·and dessert wlll be served.
Members are to take their own
containers for carry-out orders.

I

I1~~~~~~~§~~~~§~=~~~~iiii~

Meigs organization members hold meetings
Friendly Circle
Areviewoftbepastyearandearly
spring aetivitles were discussed
when Friendly Circle of Trinity
Church met Tuesday.
Marie Hauck, president, repcrted
on Christmas projects and thank
you notes were read. Program
books for 1983 made by Norma
Louise Jewell were dJstributed. The
annual Lenten breakfast and quiet
hour to be observed on Wednesday,
Feb. 16, was noted with Maye Mora
to be program chairman. Erma
Smith is chairman of the breakfast.
Each member contributed to the
program witlt inspirat ional
thoughts for the New Year. An
original poem on the alms of
Friendly Circle by Evelyn GUmore
was of special interest to the group.
A story, "Wnen it Hails, Make Ice
Cream" and prayer by Mary
Virginia Reibel concluded the
program.
.
Preceding the meeting a covered
dJsh dinner was enjoyed by 12
members with table grace being
given by Mrs. Mora .

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.Lydia Council
Officers were elected and projects
· · of assisting the needy were adopted
at the first meeting of the Lydia
Council of the Bradford Church of
Christ.
Meeting at the church parsonage
with Cheri Seevers as hostess, the

grolip elected Mrs. Seevers, pres!·
planned during a meeting of the
dent; Jackie Reed, vice president; · Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
TUlle Rowley, secretary, Nancy Beta Sigma Phi Sorority at the
Morris, treasurer, and·VIcki Smith,
Diamond SavingS and Loan Co.
news reporter. ·
recently.
A "pack the pantry" project will
Donna Jones presided at the
be started With members to take
meeting which was preceded by a
canned food to the church each spaghetti dinner hosted by Mrs.
month. This month canned vegeta· Jones and Vera Crow assisted by the
bles are to be brought In while next
social committee.
month, members are asked to take
Judy Wells presented a dem on·
canned fruit.
stration on Aloe Bera Products from
Another project will be to collect Cher Bell Creations dlsplayirig s kin ,
money .e ach month to buy white
health and food products.
sheets and hand towels for Dr.
David Grubb who is leaving in two
years for the mission fields of Africa. ·
Wanda Stafford received her 20
The third projectwlll be to select a
pound
weight loss ribbon and
needy family of the area to assist.
certificate
at the Monday night
Members set Feb. 24 and March
meeting
of
the
Five Points Sllnder·
29as workdaysatthechurch. Plans
were made to begin a monthly study ella Class.
Mrs. Stafford and Mrs. Mary
of women of the Bible with Nancy
Wayland
tied for the mosf weight
Morris to have devotions at the next
lost.
A
tthe
Mason Class, Dixie Short
meeting. Meetings were set for the
lost
the
most
weight, and Sheila
third Monday of each month.
Norma Russell will have the Feb.
20th meetl!ig at her home.
Members were reminded that
every Tuesday at 2 p.m. Mrs.
Seevers is conducting a study of the
Bible for Interested women . She
noted thatthereisstllitlmetostgnup
for the ' 1read the Bible through In a
year" program.
Refreshments
were served by the hostess.

Slinderella

..

Profitt, He le n Grirrun. and Linda
Clark tied for runner· up.
At the Wednesday morning Five
Points exercise class, Joan
Vaughan showed the most weight
l6st, with Cathy Workman as
runner·up. Information on classes
may be obtained by ~;alllng JoAnn
Newsome, lecturer, 992-03382.

Xi Gamma Mu ·

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CARDS

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REG . '840.96

$649

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loud::a:lrd.

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Here are the shoes women
in white love for style. conlfort,
and durat/ility. Our great
White Sale only comes once
a year .. . And now it's here!
So take advantage and
...........get.Y.QUF.I.paira NOW! ....... , .. .. , ,, .. .., . ............... .

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*ladies' S~ters ·
.
*ladies' Dress ·Slacks and Casual

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·•Lee Cord Jeans,
•Carhart ·Vests · .

e
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heritage house
Jliddllport. ·Ohio

MIDDLEPORT

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ss &amp;'6 Off

DAN'S BOOT SHOP.

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OF SHOES

Gilmore

A famlly 1arty using a Strawbery
Shortcake theme was held for
Robin .. Both girls recelyed gilts
from their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wehrung and Mr. and Mrs.
GUmqre, their uncle and aunt, Mr.
.and Mrs . Frarik lhle, a great.aunt,
Louise Gilmore, great . gr3nd·
mother, Nora Gilmore, and cou·
sins, Seth, Jodie and Joshua, ·
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Georgia Weh·
rung, a great-grandmother,
Middleport.

Garey

The first blrttlday of Patricia
Ellen Garey was observed recently
at the home of ner grandparents. A
clown cake wa.s served with . lee
cream·, chips and pop.
Atti!ndlng , were her grandpar·
ents, EarlandPatrlctaBossman; a
great·grandmother, Anna Mohler,
her parents, James and Sandra
Garey, and sister Jennlter, Amy
Might, Randy Might and Juanita
QUESTION: Why is early detec- ·Barber.
tion so lmpcrtnnt?
Her grandfather, Clair Might,
ANSWERllne: Because many ' and Wand a and Carl Findling sent
cancers are curable when caught
gilts.
before they have melastaslred or
spread to other parts of the body.
For further lnforma tion call the
A party honoring Bobby Ray
Meigs County cancer unlt of the
Mitchell Jr. on his seventh birthday
ASC at 992·7531,

Mitchell

Robin Louise Gilmore
Kasey Jo Glmore, lour, and
Robin Louse Gilmore, one, daughmrs of Joe and Linda Gilmore,
·walworth, Wisconsin, and grand·
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Gardner
Wehrung and Mr. and Mrs. Elza
Gilmore, Pomeroy, celebrated
their recent birthdays with parties.

A Pink Panther theme was
· carried out for Kasey Jo's party
with her guests Including Jeff and

Kasey Jo Gilmore .

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Nutritionist will lecture at Top of the Stairs salon
Linda Aikman, nutritionist, will
speak at 7 p.m . Monday illgbt at the
Top of the Stairs, Main Street,
Pomeroy.

CABLENTERTAI NM ENT

Aikman developed a course in
nutrition and taught classes at Ohio
University lor two years. She 1s
currently involved In nutritional
counseling with monthly lectures at
the University Inn.
sheholdstiireemaster'sdegrees
one of which 1s lnooimsellng, and has .
1

Theprogramonnutritionandhow
it affects weight Joss and keeping
weight off 1s open to the public.
There 1s no charge.

County and area correspondence

·;o!~!

Racine Social Eve. nts
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Here for the funeral services of
Mrs. Llna Curtis were Harry
Micky, Mr. and Mrs. Richard

Marietta; Mrs. Cindy Meyers of
Fort Walton Beach, Fla.; Mr. and
Mrs. Jeff Bowers, twin girls and
son of Columbus; Mrs. Voyonna ·
Thlidore, Columbus; Mrs. Erma
Vurge and . Mr. and Mrs. Ira
Hudson, Millwood, W.Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Myers and Mrs. Sherry

r-

SPECIAL OFFER!
ON YOUR
DOORSTEP SOON!.

:g:~= ~:_j~~ca~U~l~'-8~00-6~~2~4-~90~.~80~

Parkersburg, W.V~ .; Mrs. Gladys . _:::ci:ated:_:w:lth:::ba::dn:u:trt:tlo:n·:.__
Hutchinson and Mr. and Mrs. Nell
Beaver of New Matamilras, Ohio;

~

~ri:,!r~:~~·a~:;:::a~: ::':ct~~:;~!~~ • l~~~~~MJ

Curtis and Sherr! Lee, Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Curtis and Tina Ann, Mr. and
Mrs. SamCuitl.sandSueAnneand
their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Fee.
Mrs. Garnet Ervine and Dixie
Smith spent Sunday w!th. Mrs.

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m~:.CL:e;::~t~1=~ he~~eE~~~r==%n~!~

spent Sunday and overnight with
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mrs. Meadle Long returned
home after spending a month with
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Long at
Minerva, Ohio.
Relativ~ from a distance com·
lng for the funeral of Floyd Farra at
Racine Baptist Church Included
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E . F;arra of
San Antpnlo, Texas; Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Bodily of 'Fort Walton
Beach, Fla.; Joe Farra of Rome,
N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs· ·Floyd Farra
Jr. of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. C.E .
Hendershot of Hartwell, Ga.; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Atkinson of

the home of Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
The meeting opened with the group

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WE ALSO HAVE A FULL UNE OF.. •, .
VALENTINE PARTY FAVORS

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M'ddleport, Book Store

cha~.

CONGRA TULA liONS

To

Dailey s Country Restaurd'nt

Slmpsmi.

Jrd St., Racine
(F~rmerly Steamboat Inn)

,·· ·

GRAND OPENING
SUNDAy I JANUARY 30th
OPEN FOR BUSINESS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 28
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HOURS: MONDAY-THURSDAY-tl:30 a.m.-8 p.m.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY-5:30 a.m.-11 p.m.
SUNDAY-I -.m.-4 p.m •

Your prescriptions are as Important to
us as you are. we make sure they're
filled exactly to your doctor's speclflca·
· tlons at all times. You can depend on ItI
stop In, see us for an your drug needs.

Limil I Coupon Per Person

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SUJISHER LOHSE
l'har rnoc y

KeftMitlli McCu........... P'tt.
Clllrltl aiHII, l.l'ft.
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.._Y 11:•ttn:••"''"'·"'·
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Good For
HOT DOG, FRENCH FRIES
and SMALL COKE
-Offer Good Jan. 2s, 29, 30

Depend onus

I.Milft

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singing "Uv!ng lor Jesus" with .
Gretta, vice chairman, In
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She gave devotions with a topic '
U'ddl'
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"Some Guides for the New Year"
82 Mill S~.
•••1 eport,
with Scripture, Isalan 6:8, Romails •
992-2691
8:28, John 13:35, . Romans· 13:8, ·
Luke 18:1 and prayer. "Have Thine tr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;:
OwnWay,Lord"'wassungfollowed I'
by a busmess .session. Mrs. MarJe
Roy presented a program. A love
gilt offering was ·taken. ''Give or
Your BeSt to the MaSter'' was sung
and prayer closed the meeting.
1
Eleven members enjoyed delicious
refreshments served by Mrs·:·

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.. -oN T,HEIR

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WE HAVE All SORTS OF VALENTINE •
GIFT GIVING IDEAS AND
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VALENTINE CARDS .
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!;:;:.:~b;;: ~!~~ ~~~a;
o~ ~~::;.s;"~: '•
birthday.
Shumway of Ripley, W.Va.

300/o Off

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POMEROY - Country and
Western dance class Sunday, 2
to 4 p.m. at Royal Oak Park
recreation bulldlng. Gerald Powell, Instructor.

Interpreted cautiously unW further
relevant. data accumulate."
QUESTION: Is the consumption
of alocbol related to cancer?
ANSWERllne: Excessive drinkIng is related to cancers of the
mouth, thrOat, and esophagus. The
combination .of ale&lt;!4ol COllSI!llli&gt;'
tion and cigarette smoking Is
associated with especlally high
rates of esophagi!a\ am throat
cancer.
QUESTION: Why does a person
who has given up cigarette smokIng go bck to the habit?
ANSWERJ!ne: A major reason Is
. doubtless the habit factor. In
addition, a psychological need has
been established, based on the oral
and manual gratification of handling a cigarette, lighting it, putting
it .between the lips, etc.
QUESTION: What are the chances of being cured of lung cancer?
ANSWERI!ne: About one In 10.
. Most cases are lncuralole at the
moment of discovery.
QUESTION: Do chest x-rays
cause lung cancer?
ANSWERJ!ne: No. Diagnostic
x·rays, as utilized by physicians
today, do not cause lung cancer.

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ONE WEEK ONLY

POMEROY - Baptist Men's
Day will be observed at the First
Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy Sunday, The men of
the church will have full charge
of the services with Roger
Turner to speak at the 10: 30 a.m.
service, and Herschel McClure
to speak at the7: 31 p.m. service.
The public is Invited to attend.

!hat "the findings should be

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2Ml OFF
UJO

SUNDAY

was given af the hOme of Elaine
Janet Beran, Bryan and Rachel
Mitchell recently.. Attending were
Milligan, Scott llej:l, Dereck
Paul and Peggy McBane Jr., his · Bosma, Jennlter Baxter, and Shan·
graridpatents, Roy and Unda
oon and Robin Gilmore, stsmrs.
Brunty and Brenda White.
Yellow and pink rosebuds ,decorated the angel food cake which
was served with other
relrestunents.

Garey

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Rt.m.AND - Dance Satur·
day, 8 to 11 p.m. at Rutland Civic
Center; singles $2, coullles $3;
music by Itomlc Sounds.

JanWU)' 21, 1883
Be alert lor oppOrtunities thlscomingyearwhlchcould takeyouoll
Into new tlelds of endeavor. These openlngs may come through
. lrtepdshlps you already have estabUshed.
AQUARIUS (Jaa. •Feb. 18) Look out lor your own lnteresttoday,
but try to do so In ways others will not think are too self·servlng. Be fa!r
mall~rde~.
.
PISCES (Feb. :!DoMarch 110) Be crelul today, but also be careful not
to let others palm oft onto you responslbllitles they slx&gt;uld be tending to
themselves.
ARIES (March 21-April 18) Be doubly careful yow you handle your
financial affairs today. Carelessness could lead to costly, hard·to.
correct mistakes.
·
·.TAURUS (Apdl 5-May 20) It's lmportnnt today to be realistic
regarding goals and objectives you set for yourself. It you strive for ihe
unobtainable you 'U be disappcinted.
G~ (May 21.June 20) It you discover obstacles In your path
today, there s a strong poiSlbllity they may be of YOUI'OWD making, due
to faulty planning.
.
.
,
. CANCER (.JUDe 21-July 2!) Try to avoid situations today where you
· could !eel forced to takeaposltionoppos,lngthemajortty. You won't like
being out on the Umb by yourself.
·
LEO (.lulyii-Aq. !2) You are llkelytohemoresuccesstul today in
Independent ventures than you will be In those reqlilrlng a team effort.
Associates could hold you back.
VIRGO (AIJI. zs.&amp;pt. 22) Dltflcult tasks will be made even harder
today 11 your attitude Is negative. Try to find pleasure In what you hope
to accomptlsh.
·
.
UBRA (Sept. ill-Oct. 28) Try to maintain control of your
Involvements today. In situations where too much is left up to others,
things could go awry.
SCORPIO (Od. U-Nov. 22) You might notbeln the mood todoso,
l;lut It would he advisable to pamper your mama bit today, rather than
to tal«' an opposing position.
SAGrrrARIUS (Nov. 2S-Dec. 21) This is one ·or those days when
everythlitg could pOe up and squeeze you Into a corper 11 you !all to keep
pace with your responsibilities.
CAPRIOORN (Dee. !Waa. 11) Your normally cautious Approach
could desert you today. You might be mmpted to take chances where
you shouldn't. Don't .step out of character.
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JANUARY 21 THRU JANUARY 28
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PH. 992-6669

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Middleport, OH.

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Vlu.AGE PHARMACY

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MID.DLEPORT

Professional Footwear

From... ·

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theemerg~cy ~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;~;;;;~~;;~~

mirror

VALENTINE

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Dr.
Rantz
talked
room
service
andonthe urgent care
center.
Carol McCullough announced
plans lor a skating party to be held
Sunday from 5 to 7:31p.m . at the
(continued on pageS)

•Triple ~~ " -· huloh

From Our Complete
Selection Of

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BAHR QOTHIERS

Dr. Liz Rantz of Veter&amp;ns
Me!llorial Hospital ·was guest .
speaker at the Jan. 18 meeting of XI
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority at the hospital.
Introduced by c;arolyn Grueser,

nonball

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A l!Jncheon at the Meigs Inn on
Jan. T/ and a Valentine social were

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SAVE $190

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· CONTINUES ON J)fE
WEARING APPARiil(FOR
MEN &amp; WOMtN: .
DISCOUNTS FROM 2~ TO 500/o

POMEROY - Songlest at
Silver Run Freewill Bapilst
Church at 7: 30 p.m. The Unroe
Famlly arid the Gabrtel quartet
will be featured.

Astrograph

...

Preceptor Bera Beta

SEND ASPECIAL
VALENTINE GREETING ....

The ~dy

Compared T/4 women with melanoma against 549 women without
disease. The Incidence of mela·
noma among those who said they
worked under tluorescent light was
double that of the women who did
not The study was reported In the
British medical journal Lancet.
The · Investigators silld bowever

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c ·alendar·

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saving my life. If, by any chance,
he reads this now, he'll know I'm
still - GRATEFUL .
HELEN AND SUE:
· I guess it takes all kindS. Your
correspondent reports he risked his
life to retrieve a duffie bag from a
busy freeway, then mailed it to the
owner with a letter of explanation
- but got not one word of thanks,

BIU'I! to tluorescent light.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Meigs residents record birthdays

Lighting and alcohol related ·to cancer

;

The Mothers March of Dimes to collect money to
educational Interviews on the hour from 1 to 5 p.m . of
fight birth defects will be he ld In Meigs County on
10 to 15 minutes each. Pamela Lagodlch, Regional
Jan. 29 and 31, Marian Michael, chairman of the
CordlnatorofChapterServtces,willpartlclpatealong
Meigs County Chapter of the March of Dimes
with local chapter members In discussing slx topics
·
announced today.
during the day.
Plans are being made for a hOuse..to·house
They ~ "General Prenatal Care", "Women,
campaign 1n communities of the county on those two
Infants and Children Food Supplemental Program of
days by volunt~rs. TJ!ose not visited by a volunteer
the Meigs Colinty Health Department", "Meigs
are being asked to send their contributions to the
County March of, DlmP&lt; Birth Defects Foundation",
"Adolescent Pregnancy", "Effects of Cigarette
March o( Dimes to Janlce Fetty, 18 VIllage .Green
Smoking and Aloohol Consumption on the Newborn",
Apartments , Pomeroy, treasurer.
Posters to promote the March of Dimes and
and " Dad, It's Your Baby, Too."
cann!Sters for donations have beeh plaCed In the··•· ..
, AlSo planned In conjunction with the radio
programming Is an auction of Items donated to the
villages of the.county, and dime coin cards have been
chapter. Quarterly projects are being planned to
dJstrlbuted to the elementary schools.
Mrs. Michael points out that nearly halt of the
raise money for the group.
money collected In Meigs County 1s used for .health
MOI'IIERS MARCH OF DIMEi -The posters
care schola rships for local students and for educating
are going up and the cannl•ers In busloes8 places of
people in ways of preventing birth defects .
the cOUDty are going out as the officers prepare lor
The balance of the funds collected 1s sent to the
the 811Dual fund chive which beglas on Jan. :rl with a ·
national chapter where it is used to finance medical
radlothon and on Jan. 29 and 30 with the Mothers
research.
MBI'()h lor the Meigs County Chapter of the MBI'()h of
In addition to the Mothers March, the local
chapter has planned a March of Dimes Birth Defects
Dhnes. Marian Mlchae~ seated, Is chalnnall, with
·
Janice Fetty, left, treasurer, and Nancy Ackennan,
Foundation Radio Day for Jan. 27.
This activity will begin with an Interview on
secretacy.
Kaleidoscope at 10: 34 and then continue with

By HELEN AND SUE BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I can't believe the ingratitude of
the person whose duffie bag (with
$308 and other valuables in It) was
returned by mail at considerable
expense to the f.lnder. Not even a
word of thanks! May he not be so
lucky next time. .
Here's a reverse situation: Sev·
era! years ago our Rochester, N.Y. ,
apartment house literally ex·
ploded, because of a gas leak. !was
thrown out the window, landed
dazed and burnJng on the lawn.
An anonymous someone beat out
the fire on my clothes, and
comforted me until the ambulance
came.
Next day , while I siill couldn't
receive visitors, he stopped by the
hospital to see how I was and lett a
box of candy. But no name!
If only I could tharik him for

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.SYRACUSE·

MEMBER FDIC

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 8 - The Da il y Sentinel

Thursday, January 20, -1983

Thursday; January 20, 1983

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What's cookin'?

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Stretching small food budget to feed family tricky
By DALE M. STOLL
Melp Counly Exten.lon
Home Econornls&amp;.

Alter the Christmas holidays,
many tamllles experience a real
strain on thelr budgets. ·The
amount of money allocated for food
often gets rerouted to other areas:
Stretching a small food budget to
feed a family for a whole month Is a
trtcky business. Here are some
Ideas for choosing and using food to
make the most of your food dollars.
When choosing. foods , pick the
ones that will offer nutrition at a low
cost. Pop, chips and other snacks
are not good choices as they flU you
up with the wrong things for a high
price. Be ruthless' Offer popcorn
for snackttme and save money for
foods that you can use to make
wholesome meals.
Ha mburger Is a great standby
for mealtime. Use ham burger io
create this ve~lon of chopped
steak.
Cheap Chopped Steak
1 pound ground beef
113 cup (lour
Salt and pepper
Make hamburger Into patles, roll
tn flour , place tn greased skillet and
fl)• until done. Make a flour and
milk gravy, or use 1 can cream of
mushroom soup diluted with \1, cup
milk and pour over hamburger.
Simmer over low heat for 15
minutes.

A green vegetable or salad and
fruit would be good with this meal.
Try. substituting cabbage for
lettuce In your meal plans. Cabbage slaw is nutritious and goes
well wit~ variety of foods. This
recipe Is called Calico Slaw because of the flecks of colorful
vegetables.
Calico Slaw
~ small heag cabbage
2 medium size carrots
Green pepper
Radishes
:y. cup mayonnaise
2'T. sugar
2 T. vinegar
Salt and pepper
Clean and wash vegetables. Cut
vegetables tn small pieces and
place In a bowl. Combine mayon·
nalse, vinegar and sugar. Pour
over vegetables, mixing well. Add
salt and pepper to taste. A small
amount of gratect onion may be
added, If desired. Chill in relrlgera·
tor. Note: You can vary the colorful
vegetables In this recipe to suit your
family's tastes.
· Try eggs lor Inexpensive good
food. Hard-cooked eggs can be
chopped and mixed with mayon·
nalse and pickle for quick egg
salad. Serve egg salad sandwiches
or toasted whole-wheat bread along
with vegetable or tomato soup. Try
french toast or scrambled eggs for
a quick supper. Use small amounts ·

a

of leftover bam or cooked.hotdogs ·
mtlk. Coolt 5 murutes, stirring
tn the scrambled eggs for extra

flavor. Prepare whole grain muf·
fins with scrambled eggs and serve
fresh fruit for a good supper.
When shopping look lor meats
that have been reduced. Many
limes, grocery stores . will mark
down their meats in ordel' to get rid
of them . on thelr pull-date. If
purchased by the date stamped on
the label, they will be fine to eat.
When I I:JUy meat this way, talways
prepare It that njght or freeze tt for
future use.

Pork chops can be combined with
potatoes for a sttck-to-your-rtbs
meal that can be low cost. Buy pork·
chops on sale or when the meat Is
reduced.
Pork Chop and
Potato Scallop

4 pork chops (1 pound)
1 can.cream of mushroom soup
1 cup white sauce
·
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
4 cups thlnly sliced potatoes
Salt and pepper
In skillet brown chops. Blend
soup and white sauce with parsley.
In 2-quart casserole, alternate
layer of potateos, splnkled with salt
and pepper, and sauce. Top with
chops. Cover; bake at 375 .degree
for 1Y. hours.
Thin White Sauce - Blend 1
tablespoon flour with 1 tablespoon
fat. Add 1 cup reconstituted dry

and deUclous iwlpe that uses ham
2Bake
cupsIncooked
~rc:=~~~··;;"·
tn an WJSusual way. Try this one as
buttered,
It Is popular with kids, too.
role for &lt;10 mln11l!il
NoocllyBam
Add more milk U
&gt;n pound ground left-over bam'
4 fuU cups of c1r1e11
&gt;n pound sharp cheddar cheese 2 cups of
(ground or grated)
If you wou llkecoples
1, ~spoon harseradlsh
recipes for
1 can condensed cream of dinner,
mushroom soup thlnned with % Meigs
' Box32,
cup mtlk
1 i:reen pepper, diced
992.fliii96.

constantly to make the sauce
smooth. SeaSon to taste with salt
and pepper.
Note: 2 cups of white sauce can
be substituted for the soup and the
white sauce called tor tn the recipe.
Try buttered carrots and brcJc.
coli, a fruity gelatin salad and a
bran muffin with thls dish.
One of my very favortte "end of
the month" casseroles Is an easy

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES JAN. 19
A(lalyn Babcock, ,Mrs. ~hll Baird
.and daughter, LtlCY Bonecutter,
Jason Clltton, Ola 'Cohen; Mabel
Costoq,DonaldFarley,CecUFerguson, Jessie Fortner, M. tin Gibbs,
William Hatten, VIcky · Jialdr!!n,
BObby Holt, Gary Kazee, Sari)
Kerns, .Jessie Landrum, Judy
Lanham, John Lioya, Usa Long,
, Robert Love, MarY Martin, Nancy
Mayes, Hallie Robinson, Charlene
Skaggs, Tony Taylor, Evelyn'
Treadway, Helen Waugh, Mary
Willis.

Meigs organization
•••.___...:.;:(CO="t=lnu=ed:.::.from=page=6)~~
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borne of Mrs. lcta Mll@y.
· .
Six months were represented and •
materials used Included dried
flowers, dried weeds and plants, silk
flowers and crocheted ones.
Mrs. Kalhryn.)ohnsonpresldedat
themeettngandled theclub.coUect.
Devotions on "Opporlunltles" were
given by Mrs. Marjorie PurleU. It
~was pointed out that as the New
Yearbringsopportunitleswesbould
use them not as an advancementfor
ourselves but to help others along
life's way.
The tree sale was discussed and
the club decided · to purchase
dogwood and redbud trees for ·the
rnembers.
A discussion was held on two
spring tours, one to the Arboretum
lnNewarkandtheothertotheGiass
HouseatStewart.

Skate-a-way Rink. The party Is for
members, thelr larntlles and
friends.
The group voted to stage a holiday
gift shop again this year. Lynn
Shuler and Maurtsha Nelson, ser··
vice. co-chalrmen, announced the
Mother~ March of Dimes to be lleld
on Sunday, Jan. ll. Members will
canvas Middleport from 1 to 5 p.m.
CoUectlon folders are to be returned
to the home of Mrs. Nelson.
Coffee and cookies were served by
the hospital following the meeting.

Fernwood
Garden Club
Arrangements uslngtheflowerof
thelr blrth month were displayed by
members .a t the recent meeting of
Fernwood Garden Club held at the

' Gardening tips by Mrs. @.1•.
Murphy InclUded developing on ·
paperaplanforsprtnggardenlilg.a
study of plants which thrlv~~
- .!bel
soU available, and also cons
'
new plants. She said !hatttus: :· of
year, houseplants need lotsci'Hght.;
She also said this Is a good ttltie
force bulbs to bloom and to \l1ing In
shrubs wblch can be brought to:,
bloomearly. Mrs.M;urphyalsosaid
that the cold frame needs to be ..,
wa tclied for prOper ventilation, that -,
poinsettias should be cut back and
allowed to rest, and that potting ,\
supplies should be gotten out and· \
prepared for spring planting.
-·
Refreshments were served to those named and Mrs. Suzanne •.
Warner, Mrs. Helen :Johnson, Mrs. ' ',
Evelyn Thoma, and Mrs. Thelma"'
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OPERA~ON

- Jullan
Thurlow, center, S.years-old, sits with his mother,
Jane, and Dr. Fred Epstein at New York University
Medical Center, Wednesday. Jullan was brought to

New York for an operation on a spinal tumor that will
eventually cripple him U It cannot be success!uDy
removed. ( AP Laserphoto)

By SCOTf KRAFT
An Associated Press spot check
Associated Press Writer
Wednesday indicated that blood
Blood banks nationwide say they · banks were not going along with the
won't heed theadvtceoftheNattonal foundation r:equest. Perkins called It
Hemophilia Foundation, which re"an effort for us to take action lor
corrunended asking male donors If emotional rather than scientific
they are homosexual to detect reasons."
possible carriers of a mysterous
Some regular donors "may take
disease found most often In gay
offense"
at being asked whether
men.
they
are
homosexuals, said Mike
"We are not about to try to bar aU
Tregellas,
director of laboratorles
gays from donating blood," said Dr.
Herbert Perkins, research director at the Arizona Blood Services in
for the Irwin Memorial Bloodbank Phoenix.
The foundation has ''a real
tn ,San Francisco, where an estl·
mated 15percentoftheresldentsare problem but they're asking a bit
much ... It's just not realistic,"
homosexual.
Tregellas
said.
The hemophilia foundation recommended Monday that blood
The country's three major blood
banks ask male donors If they are
homosexual and then ban all blood collectors - the American Red
donations from gay men, It alsosatd Cross, the American Association of
blood collection should be halted tn Blood Banks and the Council of
areas heavily populated by gay Community Blood Centers- said In
men.
a joint statement that they would
·Homosexualmenhaveahighrate suggest blood banks avoid recruit·
of acqulred lnunune deficiency tngspeclflcgroupswlthahlghrlskof
syndrome, or AIDS, an apparently AIDS.
lrreverslble breakdown of the
But excluding donors because of
body's abillty to fight disease. AIDS lhelr sexual preference alone would
alsodrug
has been
diagnosed
in lntraven·
ous
users,
Haitian lnunigrants
and hemophiliacs.

CINCINNATI (AP) - Seven
black pollee officers cut from the
pollee force because of budget
problems had their jobs back today
while a judge decides whether the
layoffs were disq;lrntnatory.
U.S. District Judge Carl Rubin on
Wednesday issued a 10-day order
reinstating the officers for two
weeks while he decides whether the
layoffs violated a court-ordered
minority hlring plan.

The seven, four of them women,
were among 23 police officers and
non· uniformed personnel laid off on
a last·hired, flrst-jired basis thls
week. The layoffs are among 59 in
various city departments to balance
the $155 million, 1983 budget.
The NAACP argued that cutting
officers by seniority results in a
disproportionate number of blacks
losing thelr jobs.
No white officers were teinstated.

"If It (the court order) becomes

permanent, ~e·u have to flrewhite
officers" or other city employees,
City Manager Sylvester Murray
said.
The NAACP said the black
officers were hlred under a consent
agreement with the fede,ral court
that forces the city to Increase the
percentage of black officers.
: 'Defe~dants have never met
their goals under the decree," the

Students want locked door policy' resci~ded
CONCORD. N.H. (APJ- Merri· ask to use It again.
walt three hours to use the
mack valley High School pupils say
Another time, she was forced to bathroom, sho;! said.
they must wait up .to three hours to
use bathrooms, and have asked the
school to reconsider a locked-door
policy aimed at preventing
vandalism,·
In two weeks, .320 pup(\s- about
one-thlrdof the student body- have
signed a petition asking lor another
look at the 4·year·old rule.
The doors were locked as adminls·
trators tried to stop vandals from
wrecking the bathrooms by break·
tng sinks and clogging toilets. Now,
STUFFED FLOUNDER
6 OZ. PRIME RIB
there are closely monitored "ba·
.POTATO
throorn breaks" for lolir minutes
POTATO
between clas~ and lln1ited ba·
. VEGETABLE
VEGETABLE
throom openings before and alter
ROLLS
ROLLS
.
schooL
SAlAD BAR
Frustrated pupils say the breaks
SAlAD BAR
are too short, and that often people In
DESSERT
DESSERT .
' line to use the faclltttes are shooed
NON-ALCHOLHOLIC
. " back to class by teachers.
NON-ALCHOLIC
"I think they should at least let us
BEVERAGE
BEVERAGE
llnlshgotngtothe lialhroom," said a
seventh-grader.
Principal Jonathan Russell said If
9
the student counctl approves the ·
TAX
TAX
·petition, he will conslder.reopentng
the bathrooms lor a two-week triaL
DINNER SERED 5-9 EAOI EVENING
our!rig clasSes, pupils must get a .
keyfrom 'thetrteachersorthescbool
office to use the bathroom.
Eleventh-grader Chris thurston,
whO drew up the petitiOn, said she ·
waited 25 minutes to use the office ,
key, but had toretum to class before
her turn and was tooemj)arrassed to

S7 P~US

$7'L~S

NAACP said tn arguing for the
officers' rehtrtng. "Defendants are ,
prohibited by the decree from acts
that have a dlscrlmlnatory effect on
blacks and women. The challenged
layoffs and demotions ,., clearly
have a dlscrtmlnatory effect on
blacks and women."
The Fraternal Order of Pollee
matntainsthecitydldnothavetocut
any city workers. In addition, the
FOP says the city must comJ,!Iywlth
Civil Service law in all personnel
reductions - aJ!ll make cuts based
on seniority.
FOP President Elmer Dunaway ·
demanded that all the layoffs be
cancelled.
·

w,

I

.

.,
'I

1

..
'·
''

1 , l!. !hll!l- ln -...Col

"

151&lt;-

. , I H C111oo A..,l
4 7 w.. tood ' " " -

s• .,.,.., Mioo c,..NI•o•

1• ' Moooo-e,c1 ..

!&gt;!oil~• ......

7!1 . - l o l l Md lll"

~JA"'"'""'

I ..........

L

!11 "' "lOCal lnin u unenn

11 AII IO AUtfl

!&gt; 8 ,, ...~ ....~ ...... .

~~

...

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

THE DABBLE SHOP
.
OPEN 9-5
CLOSED THURSDAY
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
Chocl&lt; Our Specials For
The Month of January
DABBLE SHOP
251 y, Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Song foot Jon .22, 7:30p.m.
Silver Run fr• Will Baptiat :

Church . Singen-The Unroe
Femity, The Gabriel Quartet.

LONG 1' DAY SALE JANU·
ARY 22, D a. 0 EQUIP·
MENT, ALBANY OHIO.
.
ln~ome Tax service. Fod~ral
a. State. Wallace Ruuall.
Bradb ury, Oh. 614·992·

w.

12·24-1 mo.

"

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
VINYL &amp;
. ALUMINUM SIDING
•

RACINE
FIRE DEPT•
Bashan Building

.

EVERY
• '

6 30 ,; M
:

r''

VALLEY
ROOFING
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
' Roofing ot all types
Res"
went'• 1 &amp;

•Stonn WindoWs

column . .Thera will be no
charge to the advertiser.

"Remodeling
'Storm WindOWS &amp; Doors
fREE ESTIM TES
20 y
Ex A.

· •New Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
12·31·1 mo,

12

ANY PERSON who hlia
awa~ end
does not loffor or attempt to
offe1 ·any othe&lt; thing for sale
may ploco on ad In this
anything to give

Commercial

•Replacemant ·Windovn

'

.,

--'f-""'----

etnaullltion
•Stonn Doors

SAT, NIGHT
Factory Choke

House cat gray with long
hair, 1 yr. old, h1d all shots,

sn.yad, and declawad. Celt
4'46-0768.
P".
742-2834
"
App rox. 20 chlckano &amp; 3
Or 949:2160 \012S/~C geese. Call614·388-8710.
1 Chow Chow. puppy to
good home. Call 614·256·
1531 .
25" Zenith Consolo TV in
wood cabinet. N""ds pic·
lure tuba. 61 4·992·3076 .
.
- - - - - - - -·lcSt. Rt. !24 Pomeroy, OH
Dog, malo, port collie. To
614 ' 99 2 '
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
good
3988 . home.
REPAIR
2 pupptes . 8 Weeks old. 1
female, 1 mota. 814·992AlsoTransmissior.
pH. 992- 56B2
3047.
or 992-7 121
6 month old black Garman
}·2Hfc · Shepherd, excellent h,.lth,
good with kldo. 304·675·

TOMr~OSKlNSce

PIC ups tn
Middleport, Bradbury,
and Leading Creek Area .
"You Call, We'll Haul."

..,
.,..
Qewayne Wiliarra

PH 992 3194

&amp;Scottie Smith ·
mak• and moofolo
AntennaiMia.lltlon
House ellis and shop
sa'VIr:o avalabla
I ·~ · I mo. ))d.

. AI

SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughtel' Lambs 50.52

•

-

992·3305

0r

No Sunday Calls
151 mi&gt; .

Co mo"'ll f OUIIImonl

... o•..,..

111

Vino~n

246

...

"""'"'""'""'"..,.nn

60 -·O•••

6!1 S.ecl 8 ft&lt;UhtM

,..,_

C-

..._... ,_

16MHAtp••

Up 1&lt;1 I II Wou lo

17 Uplo&lt;llol...,

•t l_..,..., ..,. "'""'
... , ... lot..

Public Notice

Public Notice

catrons and Con tract docu·
ments maybe obtarned or
examrned at the offtce of Floyd
Browne Assoc rates. Llm• ted
Co n sult 1n g
Planners.

So• •v , _, _

South

reJurn o f same wrthm thrrty !301
days after the bid bpen1ng The
successtul brdder may retarn

hrs Drawtngs lor further us£!.
and hrs deposrt refunded
Chec:ks shall be ma_de payable to the V1llage of Middleport.
Oh1o
Each 'b•dder must 1nsure that
alt employees and apphcants
for employment are not d•S·
cnm1nated aga1nst because of
ra ce. color: relig•on. sex. or
national ongrn.

'

,7

1 . 14.~,

extensive

Yard Sale

Of

991·2282

Champion Aucti·
Rick Pearson . Estates,
antiques. farm. houeeholds .
Licensed Ohio·WVa . 304.

773·5785 or 304-7739185.
.

All Makes

•Washers •Dish·
washers •Ranges

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

•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers

·PARTS .and SERVICE

11·11 rtc

4·5·~C

·. ---------------,·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Mavor

20. 27

George S. Hobstetter, Jr., Broker
RESIDENTIAL and COMMERCIAL
OFFICE and HOME - 992-5739

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free · siding 1
estimates. 947-2801 or ,'
•
' 949· 2860.
'
No Sunday Calls

.

;9=;w;a=n~ted
=;:;T=o~B;:u=v=

SMITH NELSON
'
MOTORS, INC.

num. old coin a, scrap. ringa
&amp; silverware. Daily quotao

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni·

ture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,

446~ 3159

or 256·1967 in

the evenings.

Buyin{J Gold. Silver. Pletl·

available . Also. coins 8t coin
supplies for sale. Spring

1-----------ir----------1 -::-:------:-We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Associate
Phone.742·3171 .

Home Ph. 742-3092

new
week.

Valley Trading Co., Spring
2·2G·tlc i Valley Plaza, 446 · 80~5 or
' - - - - - - - - - - - ' 446-8028.

' --....,..-~--"

CHERYL LEMLEY .

Associate

Auction every Fri. night it
the · Hartford Community
Cente.- . Truckl oada of
merchandise every
Consig111ents of new and
u•d merchandise alwaya
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276·3069.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From tne Smallest Healer_
Core to tne largest Radiator.
Radiator-Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. EKperience

Pomeroy. Oh.
Pn. 992·2174

3·1Hfc

P-eroy. Ohio 45760

VELMA NICINSKY

,
;

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa

985-3561

&amp;Garaaos

-Roofing Work
&lt;Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
IS Yo1rs Experience
GREG ROUSH .
PH. 992-7583 '

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

HOBSTETTER REALTY
.

-

oneerState

1----------J----------+----------1

Real Estate General

Moving Sate Past Centenary

8

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.Custom Pole Bld&amp;s:

Fred Ho ffm an

21 S Mulbotry Avenue

''CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S

e£1edric wort&lt;

THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

A twenty·f•ve dollar !$25 00)

ments ta~en from tjle above
oH•c;:es, thP. full amount of
whrch wrll be refunded upon

New Homes -

!!modeling

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1-3· tic

The Owner reserves the nght
to re1ect anv or all bids and to
wa•ve any •nlormal•t1es 1n

Street. Manon. Ohoo 43302

l

or 949-2263

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Ohio

State of Oh10 .

M am

depos •t Will , be req urred for
each set of Dr aw.ngs. Spec1 f1ca trons and Cont ra ct docu-

Ph. 992-2791

..

Engtn eers - 1-------:--:--:---::---7,..-----

181

! '

McCormick Rd. Cal! 4482161 or 614·387·0684.

white trailer. 19th
to blue&amp;.
3rd . •
left.

GUysville,
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
·
Farm Equipment
Dealer

of employment as ascerta•ned
and determ1ned by the Depart·
ment of ln dustn al Aelat•ons and
prov•ded fbr rn th e laws o'l the

Jan

FREE ESTIMATES

~

SALES SERVICE
u:s. Rt. so East

,

Btd ders . to the Spec• at Req uire ments lor wage rates. the hour s

brddmg

.

tM l .. ...
U1 lutlolft

Public Notice

'

S53,000 00.
Coo•es of Orawmgs. Speclfl-

Phon•------------------

.l

712
~ 17

......

o&lt;

1 - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - ---j
14 fiiC ifOC: I Ill fl .. ._.,..,n_
U111GI5-do 0....,.,..,.. ,;..,
I !I Oen.,.. Houlmy
u.,,.,H;_,. ,.,... ....,_....,
llll!'o UIIOI"'9

Addreu·--------~--------

:1.,

l?ol
713 Mo.....

~

2•7 ' - - ' .."
tU Roeo,.

I'l l I'I~MI&gt;o"98 IIIIO)Iflll

t J •· -•oxo

Write your
ad and order by mall' with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you got
I results. Money not refundable . ·

..

'" ... ,..._,
...,...G.. _
., .. ..... .

, . . CM11•

2&amp;1
6U A&gt;-o.,;o.Oio,
111 Wei"'"

-Water

on

.

LOST White &amp;. liver colored
English Pointer. Lost
Bob ·

.... -_ ~~====~1~1-~2~8~.-tfc~- · fr::====~·~·l2~·'~""~'-"'~'~·j~==~;;~~~~ Town House on
BOGGS
,.....
..
&amp;
. ._..... , ..
..... c..... Jo•

"-•Of

o..... ,. ,
o.., ... o...

Jta

6 Lost and Found
-::-::-::---: - - : - - -

• utters
•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painling

-sewer
-Gas Lines
...:.septic Systems
LA.RGE or SMALL JOBS
PH . 992-2478

!F... Eatlmateot
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
PomBI'oy, Ohio

Mo1onCo , WV

...... c-•u
'
''a ,.;~...,

.,, .. coGetu

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo·Boy
-Trencher

-Concn!la Work
-Plumbing .,d
atactricol wort&lt;

,.,., ••r tlu•

..,.._.eoum.,

lioii .. CIIWIU'II

Jtl Cr..tM•

l l ............. ....

SavaiJ I
own

1 .•
1

.,.,

PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
.Now Accepting New
Clients
Low Rates
15 Years Experience
All Woltt Guaranteed
To Be Done Right and
On Time
CALL 992-6273
or 992-6206
12/30/ l oro.

Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson

446-0069

Wanted

to buy SquareOanc.
ing outfits. All sins, men 's
and , women's. Call 446 ·

4537.
Arint one word in ~tach;- ·
For all your wiring ·
space
below. Each In·
Will pay cash for used ~
needs; furnaces '
t1tiol or group of flgurn
Anenuon ot tt.o Bo dder ''
Raul Estate General
mobile homes. Damages,
, , counts as a word. Count
repair service and
r~possed
or insurance
. I; ""me and address or
' dt
rected
the spectncl
•al uded
con- !.==================~ • installation.
stru
ct• on to
regulauons
·
6
claims considered . Cal1446' l'ptlone number If used.
1 ~··•~•u• d
ld••• herer n.. rCiat1 ve to spec1at re0175.
.
Residential
I You'll gwt better results
1 -~· t•-•• , •ys ~_--·- Qurremen ts for procure ment of .
608
E.
MAIN
if you describe futly,
.'
&amp; Commercial
labor. the sp ecral rnformatr on
Old , stoneware jars, jugs,
I give price. The Sent1ne~ Tot 1
u ., ' 7.04
Call742·3195
gtven •n th e ln!ormatron to
crocks &amp; milk pitchers. also
I rese.Ves the r lght to
·
POMEROY, OHIO
3·7·tlc
~
wicher baskets. Call
I classify, edit or reject To 2S
...
~
11.00
··
•
1
2 In Memo;iam
1 any ad. Your ad wttl be
1----'------+---------1
614·367·01
38.
P,H.992·2259
· lTY
,put In the proper To 3S
1.. ""iu .. " uo""
Buy raw fur end beef hides.
classification If you'll
.
' fixed ·rare available. Th~ 2 bedroom nome
George Buckley, 614 ·684·
NEW LISTING- IOOU
check the proper box
These cosh rates
AUTOMATIC
4761 , Weekdays 5 to 9,
IN10VING MEMORY
in Pomeroy can be yours with $2,400 down. Payments of $92.66
btl! OW.
,
include discount
weekends 12 noon to 9PM .
T~NSMISSION CO.
monthly for 20 ~rs. Good condition! Total price $12,0QIJ.OO.
OF DALTON GROvER
deer hides and ginseng and
I
. ( )Wanted
He his been Jllll
trapping supplies.
2,
I sixteen
NEW LISTING - IIDDL£Pt11T- Third Ave. - Neat home in
•. ( )For Sate
Athens., Oh .
lana
Y'ltlrs
.
. I
· ( )Announcement
goo:! lotatiln. 3 bedrooms, bath, range-ref., fireplace, Asking
sad day we·n..t7. -----,-~--- I
I )For Rent
$37,500.00.
. BEDS-IRON, BRASS. old
18. ~---' --- 1
· fum iture, golj:S, silver dol·
.cannoi express
t9,
I
Iars, wood ice boxes, stone
NEW LISTING - 30 acres .of vacant land w~h 'an minerals.
OPEN 9 to 5 MON. l!vu $AT.
,1, --".· -:-~---c.7"",
20.
. ·•
I how/much, ·
ExceHent .hunting, Some timber. $7,000.00.
.
Al_lTypes of Auto Repair. . I ~wmgqnwttiiDIE;; ·jars, antiques, etc.; ComWe still low llld miss
Brlkls, Tune-Ups, eto.·, •' • · I = = ; ; : ; = : = = plet.e hou·seholds. Write ·
·2.
21 .
I
M.D. Miller, At. 4 , Pomeroy·:
him yet,
NEW
LISTING
RUTlAND
Pttldular
with acreage. Plenty of
sPECIAl·
·
1 Card of Thanks
Oh. Or 992 -7760.
3. - - - - - -- 22.
I.
'
TRANSMISSION
ALTER
113rden space ~uS a 3 bedroom, 24'x58' modular, 2 baths, fully
Wife llyrt!e; Children
II
4. _ _. . : _ _._ _
23 ,
AND FLUID CHANGE
eqlipp!ll kilt:tien, fireplace, central air, F.A Electric neat Rear
and Grandchildren: ~
Gold, silver. sterling, je Only '31 .95 ,
Wa would
to express welry. rings, old coins &amp;
; 5.
24.
1
enc(osed
porch.
Approximately
5-6
acres.
$38,225.00.
Si511rs lnd Brother

...,'

·Y

6.

H

7.
' J.
• 9.

26.

Winter Clearance Still In Progre11

·n .

:13.
~··

'1s.'

.

v.

I 54 Misc. Merchandise

29.

I'

I

I1

30.
3f: _

~l2 . _

7

1.

28.

'10..

·
_

··

·

B2. - -, ' '
' 33. _ _
34 . .. ___ '

..::_

. .' )6.
.,
35. _
-.·c
1 •.
I ~:
•. .
I
I'~ Man·Thls Coupon with R.emlttance

I

,The111Dally
sentinel
Court St.

~;
••
1 ). •

r

I

Pomeroy, 011. 45769

~·-~-----

..

•

1
1
I
I
I
I·

·

I

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

NEW USTIIIG - !IUTIAND - A. nice ranch llama with 3
bedtoorns, basemen~ forced air lumace, insulated. Deck.
$38,900.00.

ON
E
HEATERS
S

lllt,Rl&amp;ltt llotnl For You! - POMEROY - 3 lt!!drooms with
cal]lBtins. ·Separate . dining room, nice kitchen with range,
insuiltlld, mrms. tree stall!lin~ fireplace. Secluded, qliet! J~¢
. $22,500.00.
'
.
..
. .

30,000 BTU
90,000 BTU
150,QOO. BTU

RWTORS
.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr...GRI ,. .... ::.... ,. ................... 992-6191
Je1n TIVIIIII ............................................ ...... 949-2660
Dotttt Tumer ................................................. 992·~92
Ollie• .................... ............. ;......._. .. ,. ............. 992·2259

SALE
.PAC.

Prices Start At •

Sl99.95·

1
I
I

·

CIIB:K

Rt.

Ike ation
appreCi

our elncere
for
the many cerde. flo'Nirl and

1-14-ttc

I

-

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614'·992·2181

IT.J
.
LJ3

A .

I £lA

.

'JUOI

' i

currency. Ed Burkett Barber

Middleport . 992·
prov-ro received while Bill Shop,
3.476 .
Wll o patlontlil St. Joseph's
Hoop Hal.
Wanted - ~od used electric
Bill t!o Corrlo K•n!'odv
typewriter. Call 949·2590

1-----..,..,~-,--l

anytime .

RADIATOR

We

3 Announcements

, SEAVI~

$WEEPER and sawi1g m•-

and

~~~~~ie~~p~lrPi~:a~~
=~~ !I~:::;;=:;:=:
~
~I!,"!'U~I'v!tt~ll~l~li~~
one
le&amp;IYif:
Ooorgoo Creek Rei.

'-18r cores. We can

also acid boll and rod
out radiators. W. also
n!plllr Gas Tenlcs.
. . PAT HILL FORD
'
992-2191
Mlddleort. Ohio
1·13·tlc

Buying old and new comio

books after 6 p.m. 304·675· ·'·
8239 ,·
'
...

can repair . an~

IIICOra radiators

L__...:.~~----~ ~--------~----~----------~ t~------------~

'

old ·

T~" ·.

J¥
~s

',''....

ment. 614-992·2272 or see
Wando Eblin ot.4.1000 lou·
rei Cliff Rd., Pomeroy.

..,---'-,.,-----,.
7228.
..: 4
,.,~lveaway
,

GUN SHOOT

.

J.,fl..,,.;,.,z t. ·l• •1•luun- , ., d~rrrt~' ' ...

"' ,. ....... 5:.1•

Nam•-------------------

·-..

Federal and State incOme.

· r~;~~;·~~~~~~~~~2;o:·20~;·H~c~t==::=====~~~~~;;~~=~
·OHIO ,

54.ffi.
Butcher Sows 41-46.
Butcherlloars41 .3543.50.
Fe«ter Pip: (By the Head) ]3.:J!.

n v...•••wo

115 .ti.111 Mf'tJU. ACUII&lt;Iflll

I.I Curb "lnflatlon
I Pay Cash for . ·
!: Clas,lfJa·d s and

'.'•

INCOME TAX SERVICE.·

~·

~~~~~~~==~·fr==~===~~~r.=======~~~
MANLEY'S
Roger Hyse II
--------TRASH SERVICE
GARAGE
Weekly trash · k
·

l.lrr .uifi • • tll"'l(''-~

71..r.wtotlo• hlo
72 ,, ......... , •••

..

...,.
..••·'••

.

,

Fe&lt;der

V1llage Hall. M1ddleport. OhtO,
lMPRDVEMfcN1 S ·
un ul 2.30 P.f\11 . Februar.y 8..
CONTRACT NO. 8
Sealed proposals w1ll be
1983 . ·and then publicly
The proposed work under
recetved by the Vtlla g~ of
opened and read aloud for the th rs Con tract cons•sts of the
M rd dleport. Me1gs Cou nty.
co nsuuc!lon of
Construot10rl of approx1mately
Oh1o. rn the off1ce o1the Mayor.
STORM DRAINAGE
825 lrneal feet of 30 .. p1pe.
manh o les
an d a ll
appunenances
The est rmated constr uction
_,.-..-....:--------~---·------""" cos t for thr s pro1ect rs

Prices In·Effect fhur.•, Fri. &amp; Sat. Only

New Haven

'CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
. R··- 1
~Long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067 ·I

Gaul!
. . Shotguns Only.
and Choice) :J10.500
lbs. 49.(.6.00; !ro1!ll tbs. 4~59.
,
L.------1·_3·_1_mo...,.
.
lbs. :1).50; Heifers:
5fD.700 tbs.
37-5100.
(Good
and Cookoel
Ololce) mooo
:m.rooo
Feeder Bulls: (Goal
and
,.
tbs. 47-63: sm.700tbs. 42-!17.75.
S&amp;W TV
Slaughtel' Bul~ : !Over l.tlXllbs.) :1!.00-46.
•
Siaughtei'Cows: UtDIUesiM-39.25; Canners
AND"·
and Cutters 2;&gt;34.!10.
·
Sirlnl!'r Cows !By the Head) :00.320.
APPLIANCE
Veals: ICholceand Prlmei5&amp;76.50.
Baby Calves: I By the Head)2251l67.00.
SERVICE
Baby Calves rBy the Pound! 37.50-m.
HOG PRICES:
Chester, Ohio
Hogs: (No. I, Barrows-Gilts) 21»2.11 lbs,
Ph.'.985 '269 or 98&lt; '382

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

._

.~ ·

ALL STEEL &amp;
·
POLE BUILDINGS
Sim start from 12'116'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizeslrom 6'•6' Up
to 24'•36'
.
.
Insulated Dog Houses ·
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt 3. Bol 54
.Pn.Racine.
On.
614_843 . 2591
10·6·tlc

CATI'LE PRICEs:
Fe«ter s.....,: !Good

,,

JEANS
R~ i2p : '3]00
'1800

' 182-1312

"""
.... .-•c-...

.,.f.................

I O&lt; -

Public Notice

·LEE &amp; UVI

THE fASHtON SHOPPE

&amp; 2 M-ot;-

.l ,...............

II w-•&lt;'lf•O.

POMEROY, OH.

30·% - 50 %'0ff

ihc - Sidine - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeli~- Custom Pole
Rams.

SERVICE
- Addona and r&amp;modallng
-Roofing ond gutter wort&lt;

U Cli ._fV a A...... Eq '"l'"'•"'

~,

~·

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

11 5....., . . . . . . . .
IJ ....... _t

:~- ~~~··-,

.

Save

,.,.s ...

J!I IOU 8 a c• '""9&lt;1
l lllultlllloloWo lllod

•• ..._.. ,,_1&gt;11

We're Overstockedll
.

·

-

.., •

l tloo~ool..,.. •,.

-

,,
'•
'·
. '.

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reporta,
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. Done f,y
appointKitchen Cabinets- Roof·

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Boots &amp; Shoes for Men, Women and Children

&amp; MISSY

,...,~, a.t.
LMIJ~df"'"'"

I

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SALE
PRICED

-..1

• ·a..""'""''

NOW IN PROGRESS ..'•.'

F~ 992-3639

a l , , _ . . ...... .........

'

WINTER

"The Middle Shoe Store in the Middle Block"

c ~·d

2.............. ,, ...... ~""" • ""' • 1
JAn.-•O'IC,_,.,

"We're trying to assure privacy
and assure that people are not
dlscrlmtnated against," said Dr. '
Johanna Pindyck, vice president of
the center. "But just like In a blood
shortage, It's the public's problem .
as well as ours."
;;

------------------·
MARGUERITE
SHOES

...

.

'•

The New York Blood Center, the
largest center tn the world, was
drawing up a policy Wednesday to
screen donors. Among the options:
devtstng blood tests for hlgh·rlsk
groups and asking people who
constde'r themselves high rtsks not
to contribute.

3 Announcements

Business ·services·

Sows tOOibs. and up 46-~),25.
Ptgs By The Head Z).48.

daughter, Ravenswood; Mr. B.lld
Oblo v.u.,. U v - Co.
J'4rs. Thomas Campbell, daughter,
~~~..,
VInton; Mr.andMrs. Wallace Smith
Feeders....,: 'Good and Cholce,1!51 to :m
ill, daughter, Point Pleasant,
lbs.52-ti0: :mto400 .tbs,~.roo: 400to500tbs.
·· 50-59.50; 500 to tiOO ibS. 52.6(),50; IIXl to 1!lllbs.
Va.
!IIJ.:l8.50; 100 to IIXllbs. 48.!11J.56,60; l!!lOand over
47.!11J.55.
.
FEEDER HEIFERS: Good and Cb:llce,
Fox hunters organiZe
250 to :m lbs. 4fo.53; JXl to 400 Ills. 46.!11J.52; 400
to 500 Ills. 45.~.50; 500 to 11Xllbs, 45-~2 ; IIXl
A new fox hunting club, "The to
1!lllbs. 47,5Q.5Ul; J\!l to IIXIIbs. 4.H8.75;
·Great Bend Hunt Club" was IIXI and over 42:511.49.50.
FEEDER BULLS: Good and OIOice, ZiO to
orgasnlzed recently tn Racine.
JXllbo.!G«l;
:ulto4001bo. 51~1; 400to:!Wlbs.
O!flcers of the new group are 48-56; 500 to IIXllbs.
49-56.50; «XX to 1!lllbs.
Corbett Cleek, presl~t; Elson 47-53; 100 to 80l lbs. 45-51; 800 and over
Dailey, vice president; Chester 42.5(l.t)i
Holsteln Steers and Bulls, :m to IIXl lb8.
Rose, secretary; Harry Richards,
~roo .
.
Bulls l,IXXIlbs. and up 41.5046,50,
treasurer, and Mrs . Nancy
Cows, uUUtles 37·39.50; canners
Jaspers, Mrs. Genevieve Richards andSlaughter
cutters 32-36.
Veal Calves, choice and prime 76-84 .
and Mrs. Ann Dalley, trus~ .
Baby Calves, :IJ.Ii'i.
Anyon«! wishing Information may
Cows aixl Calves combinatiOn JZ).4(f,.
contact any of the office~.
Top Hop 210 to 2lllbs. 53.!10·M.75.
Boars 4()42.25,

..

No one knows what causes AIDS,
but some researchers say It may be
transmitted through sexual contact
or blood products. A l~member
task force at the federal Center'S f9.J'
Disease Control is studying AIDS.

r

Market .reports

.21

be "an Invasion of privacy that can :•
be justtlled only If (the foundation) :•
demonstrates clear-cut benefit," · ;;
the statement said. The three blood ''
collectors receive 95 ~t of the
nation's voluntarUy donated blood. -

MANY 1/2 PRICE

ments, compliments
of Refresh·
Jlrnmy
cond\ICted
the meeting.
Allen, · southeastern , Equipment
representatlve,wereservedfollow·
lng the meeting.

The Daily Senlinei - Page-9.

.---------~-----------------------~------------------------------,·~::::::::::::::;r,::::::::::::::~;:=:::::::::::~-1-67_9_.___________
The Daily Sentinel
PHONE
PULLINS
r---RO_O_F_IN-G----1 ~J~~~~F~~;;~~~~~~ :~
992 _2156 I. -- YOUNG'S
OrWriteDaillyS.•tinoiCioss~io&lt;IOtpt.
·
CARPENTER
-DEXozeCrsAVATING
H. L WRITESEL
111 Court St., Pontoy, Ottio 45169
G

'•.,
'•

-

the Utter control program and what
they hope to acc;ompllsh If the grant
goes through. They also talked
a'bOut the duties ct the trustees
wben the litter control program ls
Put Into effect.
Retiring Auditor Frank talked
aboutthechangestnrecelptswhlch
the townships can expect In the
·next year. He com11ltmented the
tn~rees and clerks lor having
!lntshed the year with bal,ancect
budgets .and extended his thanks
for cooperation over the ye~s.
Mrs. Johnson, retlrjngpresldent,

w:

We Need To Sell Jeans

JUNIOR

Other 'officers elected were Leo
Morris, vice president; and Shirley
Johnson, secretary • treasu,rer.
PreSldlng over the election was
Rep. Jolynn Boster, who spoke
briefly at the meeting on ber
concern about the 'problems of her
constltljents and her wUUngness to
serve the people of the district.
Attending the meeting besides
the trustees and clerks, their
husbands and wives, were ,Mrs.
Boster, honorary members, Larry
Spencer, clerk' of courts; David
· Koblentz •.. co.unty · commissioner;
Phil Roberts, engineer; Howard
Frank, auditor; and Carl Hysell
· and Roy Miller at th~ litter control
program.
Hysell and Miller both spoke on

BIR'DIS
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Boyce,

r•-----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i''. :;

Judge's order puts officers back on job

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

leads Meigs County trustees

Robert Pickett was elected pres!·
dent of the Meigs County Assocla·
lion of To.wnshlp Trustees and
Clerks at the annual m~ttng held
Monday night at the Salisbury
Elemeniary School.

Blood banks won't questjon
men about sexual preference

IN TOWN FOR

P~ckett

I

~'

delivery , Di ' a Vacuum
· Cleaner,
~•tf mil• ' up

446-0294,.

Colt

'

Gun ohoot, Recine Gun
Club. Ewty Sundar •••ling
1 p.m. FRtory choked guno
only.

,.

11

Help Wanted

Sell Avon where you live or
where you 'INOik : Call 446 ·

3358.

I

I.

�10
11

Sentinel ,

The

Thursda
Help Wanted

They~ll

Ucanaod Administrator for

100

Do It Every Time

42 Mobile Homes

44

for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

by Larry Wright

••

KIT 'N' CARLYLE••

Eureka 2 'bdr., furnished,
riverfront lot. rfllf. dap. Cal

exp•lence . Send r_esum~;~ to
SHMC. P . O . Bo~ 1088 . Gal·
llpolii, Oh 45631 .

814-843-~844 .

(26)

p1:U10na to participate in a
food aervioe paraprofes-

2 bdr. troller In country. Col
814-268-6B13.

sional clas•oom training
program . Unemployed per·

Warm mobil home for rant.
Call 448-1052 alter 6 .

ton should contact the local
Bur•u of Employment Ser·
vicea for further details aod
to arrange for an interview.

AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER.
P.O. No. 26040 .
The Galli&amp; County Junvenile
Court is in nied of fQrt~r
homes · for unruly youth.
Thue youth need love.
strong guidanc~. and a place
where they can sort outtheir
lives. Become a foster parant and. help
Gallia County's
future
For more
informstl on, coli the Juvenile Court
at 446· 3842.
HAVE FUN . paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn
good$$$,
me.et- 843
nice·
eople
. Call 614P

29a2. 614-388-9046.614992·3690 .
The Weat Virginia Depart·

mont of H.. lth is seeking o
ful~time Hospital Administrator for its Fairmont Emergency Hospital. located in
Fairmont. Welt
Virgin fa . Ra qulrementa:
Baccalaureate
degree plus two years of
exp•ionco . In hospital or
~alth services, or business
admlnilllration . This 44-bad
facility provides long-term
1kiUed nursing services and
outpadent clinic servicea.
Applicants ahould submit
rooumoaandopplicotionato:
l . Clark Hons~argor, M. D.,
Director of Health, 1800
Waohington Stroot, East.
Charleston, Welt Virginia
26306. by December 16.
Salary negotiable. Equal Qpportunity Employer-AA
Plon-M-F -H
LOOKING FOR A PART
TIME JOB that has good
pay, life insurance. retirement plan, that will teach
you e valuable job •iH. plua
help with a college or
Vo-Toch education? Thore'o
only one aroundl High
School Seniors or graduates, you may even qualify
for a cash bonus . Contact
the West Virginia Army
National Guard. For more
Information call Sergeant
Sergeant" Lutton et 304875-3960 ~r call toll !roo
· 1-800-842-3619 .
AVON. Representatives
needed . Help pay your
Chriotmas bills. 304-6761429.
SALES AGENT WANTED .
NatioMIIy known c'alandar
manufacturer and specialty
adv.-tlaing company offara
an opportunity for an industrious lelf-uarter for full or
pert time work. We Reed 8 ·
aalea orien tad person to
preaent our excluaive calltndara, buaineu gifts and
extenaive advertising spacialty assortment to firms
.Mthln the buliness com- :
munity . The Thos . D . ·
Murphy Co. is a pioneer in
the advertt.ing field tWice
1888, so you know we 're
hafe to stay. If you can
organize your own time and
determine your own succooa. wr"o: Pat Murphy. P.
0 . Box 382. Red Oak. Iowa
61688 .

,.20

.
8 usmess

Mobo"le Homes

Opportunity

for Sale

mobile home.
Will ·lease Pennzoil Station 1974
2 bd r.Schultz·
ox.c . con d.• 12x66
on busy Rt. 7 in Gallipolio. ~With 4x10 o•pando. 9x24
For information write: J. awning, central air, dieSin&amp;r, P.O. Box 194-6, Par- hwaaher, range, rafrlg ., in~
kersburg, WVa . 26101 .
cludaa new carpet, drapes,
$8,700 . Call 614-367Own you r own Jean - 0691 .
Sportswear, Infant-Preteen
at Lldiea Apparel Store. Good uaad 2 bed~m mo1l
01fering
all such
nationally
n' • hod
e h omTrailer
ea. F ur
known
brands
as Jord- b'
Brown"s
Park,
Rt.·
ache, Chic, Lee, Levi, Van- 124 . Minersvlle. Oh. 814dorbilt , Calvin Klein . 992 _3324 .
Wrangler over 200 other
bran do. $7.900 to 118.900 Toke over payments lor a 78
includas beginning inven- 2 bd.room mobile home.
·tory, airfare for one to Academy . Call 614-949Fashion Center, training, 2300 or 814-949-2091.
fixtures, grand opening promotlono. Call Mr. Kolllocky USED MOBILE HOME .
{601) 327-8031 .
676-2711 .
OWN your · own Jean Sponswear. Infant-Preteen
or Ladies apparel store.
Offering nationally known
brands such as Jordacha,
Chic, lee. levi. Vandorbilt.
Wrangler over 200 other
bran do. 87,900 to 118,900
includes beginning inven·
tory, airfare for one to
Fashion Center, training,
fixtures, grand opening promotions. Call Mr. Dickson
{601) 8B2-6164 o~601)
288-1361 .

33 Farms for S .a le
10.3 ac,...s. 12x80 mobile
home. tobacco baae, t ..ilar

partially furnished . Hannan
Troco Rd. 81 B,OOO or
812,000 lend only. Call
814 -266-8704 or 814·
268-1139.
207 acre farm. langsvlle.
Mlnerol rlghtl Included. No
houoo. 812,000 down. Will
carry rest. 6.1 4-388-9348.

22 Money to Loan
35 Lots 8o. Acreage
HOME LOANS 12% fixed
rata. Leader Mortgag·e. 1814-592-3061.
Business &amp; Second Mort~
gage loans . Equity Aesour•• · in Ohio 1-800992· 236t, out of Ohio
1-613-268-0112.

23

Professional
Services

Cl!oL Bookkeeping
Tax Returno l!o bookkeoping
for lndhtiduala &amp;. businesaea:
Carol Neal

35AcresetRodneyonW. T.
Watson Rd., OwMr Financing available. 448-8221 .

36 · Real Estate
Wanted

45

Mobile homo 6 mi. from
town. no peu. Call 448·
116B.
3 bedroo~ . furnished or
unfurniahad at New 'Haven,

46

Wanwd: Farm ol1 00 to 160
Acree, rolling land, Reply to
Box 8000, In c-o Gallipoll&amp;
Daily Tribuna, B26 3od Ava ..
Gallipolis 46831 .

446-3862

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appointment, Ward's Keyboard,
44.6-4372.
PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL- Professional
Electrolysis Cent•. Inc ..
A.M.A. Approved. Dr. Referrals. Gift Certificates. new
houra. By appointment,
304-676-8234.

0

74

I!:~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~-:__:-

MIIC . Merchendlae
Backhoe andloador digo B
ft .. large bed pick uP hauloble, operata yourooll. I 90. For uwe lump coal •
per day. 304-B96-3841 .
firaw-. Zlnn Coal Co ..
Inc. Coli 448- t 408 .

41

Houses for Rent

Good ' location $125 mo.
A-One Real Estatn. Carol
Yooger Reahor, 676·6t04
or 676-6386 or 676-77B8.
d4 bdr. hll!JIO, firoploco, lull
baaement, 3 miles out of
town, city ochool. Ca~ 4461816 or 448-1244.

Very nice 2 bdr. duple•
horne, furniah&amp;d, ~ain St.,
Ch8ohire, Oil . Call 614·
246-6B1 B.
3 bdr. farm ~ouao, Pt.
Pleaaant area. call for addltiorial information 446 4802.

3 bdr. home in town. basement, large lot. many trMI, Small unlumllhed houao In
woodburnor, quhrt neigh- . town. 2 BR'o, pay own
borhood. $32 ,600. Call utilities. No pets . Dap.
~6-4999 .
Req.ol180.00 m.o . 4487B88. alter 6 448-4046 .
3 bedroom houea for nle.
New carpeting throughoU1. 2 bdr. houH unfurnished on
· 13
Insurance
located· on Beahan Rd. and lower At. 7. Dap. requ . Call
oits on 3 acrH of land. 814-268-1413 .
Excallant terms to right
SANDY AND BEAVER ln- party. MAKE AN OFFER. 30 6 rmo. 'h doubla,,all utll"lo•
IIA'ance Co. haa offered year financing available. fumlihed. 1360 1 month,
.. rvlcea f~ fire inaurance Contact Bank One of Pome· 16Q dop. Call off,.; 4 :00PM,
448-9760.
covetege In (J.allia County .,..;y, 814-992-2133 .
for almost 8 centwy. Farm.
home and per1onal property For Sele-houM and garage Du~ex 2 bdr unfurnished,
oov•aue• ere available to on one acre In country. 119$ .mo. wotw pold, .,60
dop . Col 448-3949.
meet lndlvklual needs. Con- 812.600. Call 949·2890.
tact Eugene Holley. agent.
Phone 388·8890.
32 Mobile Homea
for Sale
15
Schools
lnatrl!ction

1----------

56 Pets for Sale

DRAGONWYND CATTERY
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pupplea. «;FA Hlmailya'l. Per· ·
alan .and Blorn- klttlruo.
Coii4411-3B44 otter 4PM. ·

For Lease

~-.,---- ·.

a.

l GAA'r ~AD IT, 8LAD'-15,

1-:::=:========

Pl::R\00.

.
&lt;:

• :.

sad-.

•

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.

•

0

A

•

'

...

!

; :
• ;..

fT SEEMS TIJAT OAH

LYON ¥1A5 H/ONIII'Pifll5
YOUR FRIEND LI86Y,
AHNIE!

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

'
'
'

'

ALLEY OOP

•.

LOOKS LIKE IT'S
GONNA. BE A
GIUiAT DAY

1 THI'-JK I'M KNOWIN' IT'S FIS~IIIi' 'IOU'RE

SO HEAR MY PLEA .. .WAlT UP FOR ME!

~ FISHI~'!

•

...,,
•

... '

_;,...
.., . r'"''k,

. '•'
..

~

=---110ft·

CMI . 448'

HARTl Ulad Cera. IiiHaven Wilt VIrginia. o20 leu e...,..olve ,.,. In
. .clc.

bedroom houae unf•n'nlihed, ·within walking dlltanc,.. North Polnf Orade '
school . 304·11711·2931 .

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

c.r"-fio'!:.,,..., ...

"" ,.,..,_?

.'"""

-~ ..-"""-

l· lC

(]) Screening Room

CD Bania lor the Family
· ~;

(I) (fi) Mystery! 'The Choir

Wherea5the child. Rover, is
K...n,,." it off!
uneqLHvocallll and ir refutabll.l Has
come
the leqal issue of Mrs.Beulla to take
Bump, and
whereas .. Rover?

.'

· ·~

WE KNOW YOU'LL
MISS US, BUT IT'LL

...

ONLY

~E

FEW

FOR A

DAYS•

~-

'I
'

...
' ' I

"

· a.

U1ru. tl7 •.000 mllee. 73.

4 room houoo. Prllfarably
eduhs, no peto. 814-992·
3811 .

(]) ESPN SportsCenter
Cil Andy Griffith
Clli!J Cll Family Feud
(I) Busin ~ss Report
® last Chance Garage
.Gl ~ Entertainment
Tonight
· B:OO D (1) Fame Bruno is embarrassed by his father's attempts to recapture his
youth and Doris dreads her
grandmother comi ng to live
wilh her. {60 min I
CDI Spy
(]) NFL Story: Uno By Une
(l) MOVIE ' ' last Train
Fmm Gun Hill'
Cll (l) NCAA Basketball:
Michigan at Ohio St.
I!J Cll ® Simon &amp; Simon
(I) (fi) Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey lyons take a look at
what's · ·happeninQ at the
movies .
Gl ~ Greatest American
Hero Ralph becomes involved in a scheme in which
a news anchorman tries to
take over a nuclear power
plant . {60 min.)
fil!l MOVIE: 'Air Force'
s:30 (1) MOVIE: 'The Man Who
Saw Tomorrow'
C1J Top Rank Boxing from
Adantic City , NJ
(I) Good Neighbors
(fi) Enterprise 'The · Dia·
mond Game .' Tonight 's prograrp looks at the intensely
secretiVe diamond market.
9 :00 IJ (1) Glmme a Break
carrs · sister-in-law decides
.that she doesn't want Nell to
bring up the girls .

oO

66

Pate for Sale

HILLCREST KEf!INEL
8olrdlllfl all · AKC
Reo- Dobonnana pupa llfd
D,...man Stud lorvloe.
Col144t-77M.
ft-ll
P0 0 DLE.GROOMlNG . ...
Ju~y Taylor Ill 1114-317·
7220.
Doberman pupo •too.
1114· 371·211'1!.
lletltttred !ngllah -nhound pulllllaa tor .....
304-871·. . 31 or 104&amp;71·7277.
'

CAliS t1001 trucb 1711
Available 111 loeaf , govammont aaiOI.CalllrelundaloleJ
t-119·1181·0241.

l--------71 J01p Wog-. '71

, _ Catallne, '10 c..-.,
Chav.ne, '71 Dodge Omnl,
'7' Chevy 2 1011 truck with
hydraullo lilt. Mobile
H""'""''72 Crown Hnen
1 14xll with htO tip out.
Pooplaa lank. 3104·871tUt.
11ii1t"";;;;;;;;;;;;Ri;i;'i;i,
11178 Vol...,....., Rabbit,
uaallant aonclltlool. 304171-4127.
'
I;_.
___
_ ___

85 ·

General H~ullng

JONES BOYS WATER IER·
VICE. Calloll14-387-7471
or 1114·387-0881.

.,

JIMI WATI!II SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier. 304-1171·

BARNEY

''

LISTEN

t
~
J

CHUCKLIN. IN
HIS SLEEP •· ·

.: ill

•

..
j '

.. ·••
,,'

PAW MUST
BE GLAD MV
BROTHER BUBBA
IS COMIN' TO
VISIT, US FOR
A WEEK

~:

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i'

.....'

-'
I

,.,

I

0

Wl-lAT DO YOU DO Wlfl.l -

,
i

A ~EPORT TI-IAT 6ETS. A
,, D. MINUS II? DO I(OU

Upholatery

I ...·

. SAVE .IT OR WHAT ?.

TRISTATE . ·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11113 leo. Aw., Oalllpatlo.
448-71313 Of 441·1833.

r
~ -

MOWRE.YI llllhoioMry Rt.
1 · loa 124. Pt. Ploaaant.
304-1711·4184.
.
1-20

"

.,

I'

Thai Wouldn't Sing.' The
village knows of a man 'who
is hunted to death.' but no
one is willing to tell who the
'hunter' was . (60 min.)
)Closed Caplioned)
Gl ~TBA
9 :30 ·IJ (1) Choero Carla reveals
that s.he is pregnant .
(1) MOVIE : 'Whose Ute Is
It Anyway'
01. 1]21 Too Close For
Comfort
i 1 O:OQ D (1) (l) Hill Street Blues
· Two underground radicals
· from the 60's are arres1ed
.on a murder charge and a
rookie officer helping Balker
is slain.' {60 mi n.)
(1) MOVIE: 'Pennies from
Heaven'
Cil TBS Evening News
ill Ill !lZ 20/20
0 (I) ® CBS News
Spacial
(I) Avengers
(ll) Newswatch
fi)INN Naws
10:30 Cil NCAA Basketball: U.G,.
L.A. at California
·
(ll) Alpine Ski School
fJ)In Saarch ot ....
11 :00 D Cll Newoconter
(]) ESPN SportsConter
(I) I!J Cll Gl ~ News
(l) Newo/Sports/Weather
(I) Da~o Allen at large
·
® Eyowitnoos Newo
® Sign Off
f!l!l Benny Hill Show
1 t :30 D (1) (l) Tonight Show
(1) MOVIE : 'The Chant of
Jimmie Blacksmith'
CD Another llle
Cll Benny Hill Show .
I!J Cll Quincy
Cll Sign Off
® All In tha Family
Gl !lZ Nlghtllne
@II Madame' o Place
:11:45 (1) MOVIE ' 'Convoy'
112:00 CIJ Bumo &amp; Allen
(]) FIS World Cup Skiing
·
Coverage of the Men· s
Downhill from Morzine,
France--is presented .
Cll Nlghtllne
® MOVIE: ' The love .
Mechlne'
(]I last Word
eGuMrnokl
12:30
(1) (!) ,Late Night with
David L.attermon
CD Jack lenny Show
Cll MOVIE: 'White Heat'
!1J I.Mt Word
G ())' MOVIE: 'McCloud:
Murder Arona'
i:OO ClliMarrledJoe n R I
(])
Auatra1len
u es
· Football 'Ca~tQn vs. Hawthorne .'

a
e

' PEANU,TS ·

'

8~

TO HIM-·

~:.f.

Noad aomothlne haulod
IWIJ or ao-lna - 7
We'll doh. C.K441-3119or · .
It 4-21e-18117 alter e.

()

etlJ.News
·
·
e Sign Off ·
~ :30 e (1) NBC

ond trump.
This time East ros~ "
NORTH
1-20-83
the ace and returned
• Q 10 8 7
trump to dummy .
• A K 10 4
South was now in a dilemt7 3
m a. He coulct take a simple:
+QB 3
doamond Jmesse, retur n to
dummy with the queen of
WEST
EAST
clubs, repeat the di amond
+63
+A 54
• 9752
.QJ 83
fin~sse and score t he slam .
t8 54
t K962
The alternate play would be
+1 0762
+ 94
to play four rounds of clubs
to discard one of dummy's ·
SOUTH
diamonds and t hen take a
+KJ 9 2
ruffing finesse against the
'U
king.
t A Q J 10
South decided on the lat+AKJ 5
ter line because East had
Vulnerable· Both
shown up with one more
Dealer: South
trump than West. The play
losl and so did South .
Wesl North East
Sou\h
South should have thought
It
Pass
Pass
2+
a little longer at trick one .
Pass · 4 NT
Pass
Then he would have found a
Pass
Pass
6+
dummy , reversal play · to
Pass
Pass
Pass
a void a ny diamond problem.
Here it is. Cash the second
high heart , ruff a heart high.
Opening lead :
lead the deuce of lrumps to
dummy's seven . The best
defense is for East to win
and lead a trump back.
By Oswald Jacoby
South wins in dummy and
and James Jacoby
ruffs dummy's last heart
South studied• the ha nd high . Now he comes to dumbefore playing a high .heart my with the queen of cl ubs,
from dummy. The stud y, plays mit dummy's las t two
such as it was, . didn't work . trumps and makes the last
out the winning line of play. four tricks - the diamond
He led a trump a t trick two. ace a nd t hree top clubs;
East ducked. South led a sec-

•z

.'

.

,,

~~-~-.1"
1

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS

.....,

1 Competent
2 - pigeon

1 Soreness
5 Slovenly one
· 9 Newspaper
(sl.)
10 Esne
12 Volcanic
spew
13 Indian city
15 Watch
16 Willy of

3Sow

..

wild oats

4 Greek letter
5 Protection
&amp;Lotte
7 Superannuated

Yesl\'rday's Answer

8 Merry

rocketry
fame

friend
11 Prospective

G.I.

:17 "Brandy-"
18 Florida city

U Uncut
16 Swedish

ZOTownsman
!1 Falsehood

man's

19 Manx
and Persian
21 Judge's
chamber
22 Texas city

29 Cease-fire
33 English
river
34 British
farewell

23 Dolt

36 Spoil

25 Shofar

J7·Anclress
filnl

,.....:;nam;;:;;e:;.,.....,.- 27 Wann

23 Actress
Anderson
24 Encourages
Z5Winslow Z6 Fail ·
Z7Wig
28 Sprite
29 Italian cake
30 Electrical

·.
'

.

~

.,
.,

. '

unit
310perated

32 Late Cole
35 ill will
37 Hindu ·
deity
38 Legislate

39 Owl's cry
40 Lady Jane

41 Sicilian
city
,•

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Ia

Here's how
A J1: Y -D L 8 A A X R·
LONGFELLOW

to work ii:

One letter simply •lands for another. In this sample A Is
uaed for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, etc. Single letters, '
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words 'are all
hind. Each day the code letters are differe nt

."

CRYPTOQUOTES,

SE

PA

lEE. U

LWMYEUSTZA,
H

News

=Jt'lt
'GIIOI'dle'
(I) My Utile Mervle ·
Cll Sign Off

•'

.Dummy reversal does it ·

week's games.
(1) MOVIE: ' Meatballs'

51,

••'
~

'

I () . 0
·~~~-

BRIDGE

I'M Fr6T Tit~ 1~6ATIC)I

-

l::·

•u. •

'

"(IXliXIT'

.

N-.

·
TAFOO

OK 'with
me

INARREBj
( ) K

18711 Molco 12&amp;. t1110. · 0:
304-8711· &amp;.3IIO,call alter 11 • ;'.
p.rn.
,

-····-·

•

TAK~I\I

WIIVIS!

•100.:·~

g-

7i Chevy Suburban loti of

18 Wentad to Do

'IOU~ T~RRIE!LE:-

11- oondhlon .
F111
114-992·
ben, lights.
•delle Call
bagl.
felrtng, '• ••
781 t •
•·

76 Auto Parta
Firewood opllt.ocut to
Acceuorles
length, you pick up. Wo.
TWO mobile homes for rent
dollver. We accept HI;AP AKC Do ........n pups. II
on Rt. · 2 about 6 minutea Wanted to •••• ' tobacco cardo. Call 814-2&amp;e -8241 . w01ko old, 4 male. 31omolu
black a tan. 11211.00 ·a 71 FORD ..,. ton trucll.
from tOwn. Call aher e. p • . ndago. Call 814-3792146 .
.
304-875'-&amp;277.
.
GRAIN FED BEEF. Call 11110.00. C.i144&amp;-10&amp;8.
304-11715-3024.
114-268-8618 .
1---------~ :~~~~~~~~~
2 bedroom turnl~od
OFFENHAUSER croao rom
•• trao'ler.
59 For Sale or Trade dual
t7 11. tondom axle tnllar 7
t176 . month piUs utilities.
quad monllold lor am-'1
11. wlda. utra good cond .
Dopos~ Required ' 30451 Household
blpok ce-y.
nawr
875 -4622 or 304· 675 10 ply trailer tire&amp;. wood
uoad, IB0.- 3114-882·211114•
I _,o
_ 8_o_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1 - - - - - - - -..:ol..- floor rampo, light. Must nil. 18711 Buick Elactra 2 bdr..
PB. PI, AC, AM-FM otaro 4ll8 HEAVY . duty utHity
C.IIII14· 3B8· 9010.
r
t1
.810 or trada lor cattto, troller,
lor hauling
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; , FUR~ITURE Truck load of aplh -aonad firm equl_..,, or mobile firewood. phone 304-88262 Oliva St .. Galllpollo . Kfr!g• will cherry firewood. Call -home of equal val.... Call 323..
4411-41137.
coal &amp; wood heaters whh 614·3117· 7419 .
1-:7"--:------ALMOST now 4-G7B·111
Apar+ment
tan 8469, oot box oprlng &amp; ·
'•
r...,lar tireo. UO.OO '304·
mattreas $100. firm 8120, Sloba cut-up 111 full length
:----:: ~·
for Relit
871·4038. . .
aota-lovoooat &amp; chair 1199. 11 0 , PU load. round wood.
....
lorga truck load. Call 1114love seats $70, new coal •
wood heaters a1 low aa 2411-6B04. ·
2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apart- $399 with bloworw, uood
menta t200 per mo. or if coal 8a wood heater•, new Homeltte 160 chalnMw 61 Farm Equlpma11t 79 Motors Home.
Income io 810,000 or loll dinet ooto H6 &amp; up, rllfrlger- . HUn bar exc. cond .• and 2
lo Campara
HUD avolloblo. A-Ono Real ators; ranges, bunk beds 151n. Chevy truck - ·- JOHN D-. 10. 3 pt. hhch. - - - - - - - - Estates, Carol Yeeger, Real- complete •179, bunkleo Coli 4411·3400.
live - · g- condition,
tor. Call 304·&amp;75-51 04 or mattNIHI t40, cheaft,
304-182-3243.
Truck compor. ovon, refrlg ..
875-6386 or 676-7:786.
dr11oero. TV' o. Call . 446· John D-• hammer mHI, TORPEDO haalaro, Aluma,_,aleopl,l.enew
UIIO. Coli &amp;14-371-2817.
3159.
___,~ ....
oond .• 11,100. c.. 1114·
2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in 1 - - - - - - - - - --ptlce. 17.000 - - a318
Crown City. Call 814-268- GOOD USED APPLIANCES Firewood, 135. truc1c load. BTU 1410. 90.000 ITU 1---·-·- - - - cord. Bplh and 138&amp;. 113.000 ITU 1300.
6520.
~ weehera, dryers. refrigeraK..,_. lllfVIce Center, St.
toro, rongn. Skaggo Ap· delivered. &amp;14-143·3803.
Rt. 17. 304-BIII-3174.
Furnished apt. 1 bdr.• 920 plloncoa. Upper River Rd.,
4th Avo.Galllpolis. Adults. betide Stone Crelt Motel.
. cord
Fi,...wood
....
redredeso:
• 1'. Coaldall
dall
1411.
water &amp; ele.ctric pd, 8200 446-7398 .
81
Home
ton. Call Tom Hoaklnoll14·
Uveltock
mo . Call 448·4418 affor
I
mproVll!mel)ta
7PM .
949 · 2180 or 1114·742 ·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sola, chair, rocker. ono~ 2834.
1 at. floor part. furnished man, 3 tobias. {extra heavy
Purebred Poland China
opt. Utlltlos paid, ralornco by Frontlarl. 1886 . Sola. REPOSSESSED BIGNI No· boera, bNodlnt.. . age. T.J . STUCCO PLASTeRiNG •
required. Inquire at 631 4th chair ond loveooot. f-276 . thing downl Toko over pay· Fanno c..-a\lll!t. Oh .. 1· textured collings commar·
clal and realdontlal, lrM
AVe .. Gallipolis.
Sofas and chairs priced from monto •111.00 monthly, 4 X 814· 342-2034;'
oetimatH.
Call 814· 211 ·
1286. to IB96. TabiH. 145 8 lloahlng arrow olgn. N- ----~~-lc Furnished apt. $145 no and up to 8125. Hldo·l· bulbo, lattaro. Hale Slgne. Roglmred a....... Horea. 1,1B2.
utllitleo pd . 3 rooms. 701 beda,-$440 . and. up to Call FREE 1 -BOO· Ut- Ruth - - · AIIIO grada.
4th Ave. . Gallpolis. Call 1{;26 ., Recllnero, 1176. to 744&amp;. onytlmo .
Boddleo, b~dl11, wlnwr PAINTING · intoriclr and
446-4416 altar 7PM .
8360 .. Lampo from 828 . to
horae blenJr;ete. Weatern oxt-r. plumbing, ~aomo romodallng. 20 yro.
om-lm. B boots. &amp;t4-188-3290.
876. 6 pc: dlnoneo from 6' black
axp. Caiiii14-38B·BIIIIZ.
Garage AP.Brtment, 3 rm . &amp;: 899., to 1436. 7 pc .. 8189 . track. record player. 1160.
bath# furnished including and up . Wood table with six Childs rocker-recliner, AIDING h.,_ A
waaher &amp; dryer, adults only. choirs $42&amp;. to 1746. DHk ·brown •111 . 1114-742- 304-1178-2213, 1711-2111 o. Marcum Rooting a Spout·
lng. 30 yoa-.....- -.
no polo. Call446-1619 .
$110 up to 8225 . Hutches. 2706.
117&amp;-2121 .
IIMCfallzlng In bull up ~ .
1660. and up, maple or pine
1 bedroom Apartment for llnloh. Bunk bad complew White French Provincial IIX weak old ~IU a C.II.-114-38B-8867.
rant. Call 446-0390.
with monrosaao. 1260. ond · cheat. nice •ntique 't4 ·alae chickens. 304·11111·
11.
GENE'S CAJPET CLEANup to $396 . Boby bods, {rope) bad end mlltreaa.
ING. D- atoam c:loanlng,
Middleport upstairs 2 bdr. $1 10 . MettreaMs or box 814·1815-3147 . •
Scotchgaurd.
Fraa aatl·
apt .. 8160 plus deposit . Call t!prings, , full or twin. 858.,
84 Hey .Gral11
motH. L- .-&amp;14-882448-1788.
firm . 86B . ond 17B. Queen N- alx-place living room
11308.
oets, 8196. 4 dr. 'chesto. lulte. 304-875 -IIU2 olter
2 bdr apt. in Rio Grande, 142. 6 dr. cheoto. 164. 8ad 5:30p.m,
Mlxad hay tor oale. Coli RON '8 1Televialon BoNica.
acro11 from co'llege. all frame&amp;, 120.and 826 .. 10
448-10112 alter 6.
Spec:lolillng In Z - and
utilitiea paid, will. accept gun · Gun cabinets, $360., WARM Morning naturoigH
Motorola. Ouazar, end
children. Call446-0167 .
dinettechaira *20. and 825. haa18r, 85000 8TU. electric
houu ..., . Coli 17e-2398
Gaa or electric rangea, $32&amp; blowar. 1200. 304· 773or 4411·2414.
3 rm. and 4 rm. unfurnished up to 1375. Boby ma- 63411 .
apartmentt . UtilitiH paid, t,.ooao, 126 &amp; 136. bed
F &amp; K Troa Trimming, otump
no pets, no children . C~ll fromes 120. 126. &amp; 830. Firewood. 1111. your pickup.
,
. , _ ,, C.. ll711·1331 .
448-3437.
king I rome 160. Good aolec- 304-67&amp;·2010.
tlon of bedroom auitas,
RiNGLE'S IEIIVICE oxpaPOMEROY -2 bedroom un · cedar cheats. rockers, metal Chalnuw Remington, new
furnished apt.. $1 60. 2 cabinets. awivel rockers
18"·hoovy duty extro choln HAY, WhOit erul oateatrow, rloncad roofing, Including
bedr&lt;&gt;om houoe 81 86. Dep- Uud Furniture· · bookc&amp;Je, 1.17&amp;.00. Automatic ollar 304 · &amp;711• 2817 or &amp;711· hot tar lilllllciiiJon, carpenw. elec~. muon. Call
osit •1 00 . Call 614-992- range•, chaira, end .ta.blea, .$l-~. -3.0 4-&amp;711-118111.
3127.
304·&amp;75-JOBB or 171122BB .
washers, dryers, retr:igera4&amp;80. . ~ •
W.T.
RAWLEIGH
Prock/Cts.
tors and TV' a. 3 milea out
Apt. torrent. Half double-2 B~laville Rd . Open 9am 'to For hoolthlar. nicer looking
'""
' ..... '
w.t.r Wallo: Commorclal
bd.room Apt. Adults pre- 6prn, Mon . thru Fri. , 9am to pots, wo IUfiiiHI Mr. Groom
Do~c.• THI h - .
anjl
ferred. No peta. 614-992- &amp;pm, Sot .
animal cora producto. Dale
2749.
Auto• for Sale ' Purnpa 8alea and ~446-0322
&amp; Wilma Wood dlstrtbutoro, 71
304·87&amp;-t090.
- - - - - - - - - 304-191-3802.
Apartmonto. 304-676 - Whirlpool waaher 2 apd .. 4
6648 .
cycle aloo Whl~pool dryer 3 BABY boaalnett with okln, 1978 MG Mlaet 42.000 Get your korpat In ahlp
tamp .. 190 ea . Call 614- baby clothao, pumpkin aa!ll. miH. Muat aai. Coli 448- " " -· Wlltarromovai,FIIEE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
APARTMENTS. mobile 268 -1207.
maternity clotheo. 304- 7414.
CLEANING. CAPTIAN
homes. housea. Pt. Plea11nt
e711-3114B.
.,d Galllpollo. 814-448- RAY'S USED FURNITURE
12 pa~or Ford von, STEAMER 114-448-2107 .
8221 .
Rolrlgerotor f126, ~ ~~ LIVING room antique bar. 1171 modal. outo.. olr.
heatar 186. gao range 176, nlca condhlon. See et Ro- etoro-redlo. 12,0911. Coli
82
Plumbing
2 room efficiency apt. 1 - 2 piece bed'room auite gency apanmont 14. Bond· 441·41114.
304-8B2-2686 or 1-814- 11 26. couch 1211, dlnln- hill Rd.
·• Heating
992-7208.
groom table and four chaiirs
1878 Coowtte II,ZOOflrm.
186, coffee table 810, pair ATARI lor .oalo. 304·812· CoH 171-7147 otter 7.
UNF.URNISHED apartment Harp end tableo 126 ••· 26&amp;2 .
CARTER'S PLUMBING
for rant. 1 bedroom , Open 9 to 6, coll814· 387·
tll1 H..... Clvla auto.. air
AND HEATING .
1190.00 Call Automotive 0837.
REMEMBER THE RAW· oond.. AM-FM otero: Call
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Supply, 8-8 , 304·676 ·
LEIGH MAN I Rowlolah pro- 814·241· 1287 alter IPM .
Ph0111 448-3881 or · 4411·
221 B. 676-6763.
Hotpoint automatic wa1her ducta expanding In your
4477
rune good, hu small leak. area. Extn Income, we train, 1171 Bulat\ !llot,. 2 bdr ..
FURNISHED 4 room cot· 136. Coli 448.-3376 altar good benllflto. 304·871· PS. PI, AC, AM-FM otero
tage, adults. no pete. 304- &amp;PM.
1080.
11 .110 or tnoda lor cattle. 84
Electriclll
676· 1463 . .
form equlprn-; or mobile
Refrlgt~retlon
Round king olze bed red
horne of equal value. Coli
Unlurnlohed upstalro opt lor velvet headboard and cua- 65 Building Supplies
4411-4137.
rant, good location, 304- to'!' oproad, 1800. Coli
Mochine repelro,
675-1'302.
614-682-7164.
Building m•-•
1874 VW olr, s-. Dlehord SEWING
aarvlco. AuthorlrN Singer
block. twlck. pi-. botwry. n - - · now 8aiH a lllfVico lharpan
MASON WV. 2 bedroom Easy dryer ev~M:ado color. wlndowo
, llntola, otc. brakH. new ihocko. Coli Scl•aon. Fabric Shop.
apartment, unfurnlahed. reol nice. 190. Whl~pool Clauclo-taro, RloGrondo. 441·10112 alter 6 .
Pomeroy. 882 -22B4.
carpet. air. 1180. pi us utili· weaher avacedo, ex. cond .• 0. Callll14·241·11t21.
· -------ties. 304·B82-3368 .
$110 . Coii448·81B1 .
711 Gra. .da e cyl.. exc.
APPUANCE REPAIR
oond .. low mileage. aalo,lng ED'B
SERVICE
call City Fumhure
12.8oo; Coli 114-241· 304-11711-21108.
.
81111.

49

I APOL061ZI' ! I WA~ WRONG I

I NEVE!RGHOULD'VE

~-----------------18711 Ka-•kl 100. c..... :· ·'
vwy

Unscramble 11*0 ~r Jumbleo;
qneiotterloaachoquare,lolorm
four ordinary llpds.

.,THOGTEI

1881 Yamiho Moldm &amp;10. •;:,
8holi drlvo. Ub Mw. Excel- : •
ionJ CDndftlon. 1,1141 Ktuel '
m.... 814-882-IIM.
· ·,

Equipment
for Rent

byHannAmoldandBobloo

(I) nc Tao Dough
(l) ,Carol Burnett
Clli!J Cll Gl !lZ News
(l) Newa/Sporta/Weathor
Cll (ll) Powerhouse
® Eyowl~noso Ne.,.,a
fll Wonder Woman
8:30 D (1) CD NBC News
(1) Year That Was: 19s2
This show recaps the people and events that m8db
the· news.
(I) MOVIE: 'The Senator
Was Indiscreet' .
Now arrange lho circled lllll•ro 1o
(]) ESPN's Sportslorum
form the eurpriM enawer, ,u aug·
geslod by the above cartoon.
Cil Bob Newhart Show
Cll Gl !lZ ABC News
0 (I) ® CBS News
Print answer here:
Cll Dr. Who
(fi) Ovor Easy
.
.
•.
( • -~- tomorr-)
' 7 :00 D (1) P.M. Magazone
~~~··
vn
(]) NFL Films 'Super Bpwl . Yoslerday'sl Jumbles: MURKY UNCAP VESTRY CARBON
'VI' Highlights : Dallas vs. · : ·
·
Answer: What there were a lot of when he fell
Miami.'
· through lhelce-"CRACKS"
Cil Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(l) f!l!l Charlie's Angels
0 Cll Tic Tac Dough . ·
Cll (fi) MacNeiHehror&lt;
Aaport
® Eyewitness News
Gl ~ People's Court
' 7:30 D (1) ®I You Asked For It
(1) Inside the NFL Len .
Dawson an~ Nick Buoniconti
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
analyze this week's NFL action and look ahead to next

CAPTAN EASY

I,

~THATSCRJIMBtEDWOtiDIWIE

1£1 ~~··

I K)

18711 Kaw-ld 100 - t
bike. Runa good, looko ·
ocld. 1310. tor quick oolo. .
14·742· 2602 .
• .,

·Space for Rent

~

, ~.,

1/20/83

..

Motorcycleti

'ilflillM'tiD'ft

.;.;....~..;.E;,.;;V;;.;;EN;,;.IN;;.;G~--------~~~~------8 :00 D (1) Newacantor

0

~~~~~~"'~""'~'~···~'""~'~'"~""~T=========~
- - - - - - - - - - 114
48

THURSDA..v ·

a.

3 bdr., total elac. houoe In
Henderson, WV. $226 mo.
Call 448 -9682.

House for aale on land
contract. Cheshire, Oh. 7
rms., baaement, garage,
workshop, g'as fumance.
814-388-8278.

Adulto only or lam~y w"h
one child. No peto. Dapos~
required. Locoted 2 miles
out on SR . 143. 814-992 3646.

Truck• for Bela

1171 ~T ChiVY tNok. good :
tirw. now llettory.
on front tendon. good lor •'
form uaa. •1.0150 . C.1144t- · ·.
1700.
•

0

-

• 1•00
TeleVIS
•_g
.,. v•IeWin

-ruat. ·

Furnished Room•

The Daily Sentinel-Page- tl

Middleport , Ohio

1li7i Ford F-1 00 PU tNck.
Call 448-4111.

bedroom. unlurnlahad.
75 . All ut.IHtlao Included
axcapt alactrlc. 304·875·
1371 or &amp;76-3B12.

ot-.

1-- - - - - - - - -

31 Homes for Sale

Will care for elderly woman
or man in my private t'loma.
Good experience, reso,.ble
retea, call anytime. 15878329 Of 887-3402 .
-lcWould like to do houoowork,
will -ole Maoon or Gallla
County. Phone 304-6768874.

·Pomeroy-

------72

1.- -------_;_-

Sleaplng room 1126, utilities pc:l, single male. ehar1
both: 919 2nd Avo.• Galllpc).
lio. Coli 448·4418 offer.
7PM.

~~==~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~ home.
2 bd.room
mobile
Wefurnished
pay . utilities.
21
.

FURNISHED one bedroom
aportmant In Pt. Pleaaant.
Extra nice, no pet1. Phoi1e
304-876-1388.

WVa. Cill 304·882-2466.
--------·lc- ·
2 bedroom 1Ox60. Adulto KOUNTRY . MQBILE Homo
only. BrowJJ'a Trailer Perk, Park. Route 33. North of
Minorovillo, Oh. 814-992 · Pomeroy. large Iota. Call
3324.
992-7479.
.

Situations
Wanted

GINGER BR~AD STUDIO.
Art leaaons . Joni Carring·
ton. 898-3290.

a.

12x80 lumlihod • eonv•·
fient location. Upper River
Rd . Soc. dep. oeq . Cell
448 -8668.

The Rio Granda College
C.E.T.A. office ts currently
seeking twenty -five

20, 1983

Auto&amp; for Sale ·

71

1872 PONTIAC, 304-171- · .
2771 .
•

bed &amp;killed nu .. ing

home In Southeast Ohio.
Salary comansurated with

12

..

20, 1983

Ohio

YHTNS . -

PT .S
LHUR

LHR
WS

p A
WM · ZES

KHUUWMEZ

'

,Yetitenlay'a Cryptoqoole: .COMMON SENSE Jl; u.,;NJUS .·
DRESSED IN ITS WORKING CLOTHES.-R.ALPH WALDO
EMERSON

I'

�•
Thursday, January 20, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Area
Palricia Ferherdino

Senior Center
.. 1
deathssecretary of Its ladles aid society.
will elose
She was a charter member of Lucy

Local briefs....

The Meigs County Senior Citizens
Ann Chapter 79 of Order of the
Center
wni close at 1 p.m. Friday so
Eastern Star, servlpg as a past
that
members
of the stao: may visit
matron, and was chaplain of the
theHughesFuneralHomelnAthens
women's awdllary of the American
In a group to pay theirres~ts to the
Legion post at Pomeroy. A rpember
Rev. Robert McGee.
of the Senior Citizens Choir, she was
'Ille Rev. Mr. McGee was
also a former teacher at Lincoln
president
of the Meigs County
Elementary School.
'.
Council on Aging and representaShe married Frank Washington,
tive to the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
who survives, on Dec- 29, ~. In
Valley
Regional DeVelopment DisGallipolis. ·
.
trtct
Advisory
Council on Al:blg. He
Also surviving
tw_o nieCes,
was
also
vice
president
of the Meigs
Bernice Mosby of Columbus, and
County
ElderlY
Hooslng
Board.
Tomlko Lewis of Gallipolis.
Survivors
that
were
not
named In
Funeral services will be held at 2
·
Rev
McGee's
obituary
are two
p.m. Satuiuay In Paint Creek
step-sisters, Mrs. .Fred (Betty)
Baptist Church, with Rev. Grover
Kjsor, Carbondale, Ohio, and Mrs.
. G. Turner and ReV. Elbert McGhee
Joe (Barbara) Morgan, Albany;
o!flciatlng. Burlal will be In Pine
one step-brother, Bruce Carpenter,
Street Cemetery. Friends may call
at' Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral . Rt.l, Athens.
Mr. McGee was also afflllated
Homefrom7-9p.m. Fliday.
•
With
the board of communication ,
'Ille txXIy will lie In state one hour
West
Ohio Conference, conference
plior to the service. Eastern Star
nominating
committee, dlstrtct passervices will be held at 8:00 p.m.
toral care chairman, dlstilctMetho
Fliday In the funeral home by Lucy
dlst
Union Trustees, conference and
Ann Chapter 7'9.
dlstlict lay life and work board,
Pallbearers will be James Hogan,
dlsttlct office building committee
Robert Casey, Jack Carr, Tommy
and
past dlstlict dli"ector of lay .
Dunsmore, John Gllmore and
speakers
and past director of Meigs
James F. Wllllams.
County Cooperative Parish.

Pa trtcla Anne Ferberd!no, formetly of Pomeroy, died unex~t­
edly Tuesday at her home In Upper
Arlington, Ohio.
She was born March 22, 1947 at
the U.S. Maline Corps Barracks,
Quantico, VIrginia. She attended
Pomeroy Public School! and graduated from Northern University
with a major In Medical Technol·
ogy. She received post graduate
· ··_, training In Cytology at Akron
General Hospital and the Gelsinger
Memorial Clinic, Danville, Pa.
She was a professional CytolO.
gist, registered with the Arnelican
Society of Clinical Pathologists,
and was employed by Brown
Laboratolies, Columbus.
· She Is survived by her husband,
Rev. Robert McGee
AHred J . Ferberdlno; her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie F. Fultz,
Funeral' services for Rev. Robert
Pomeroy; her paternal grandMcGee, pastor of the Pomeroy
mother, Mrs. Eddlth , F . .Fultz,
Unlted'Methodlst Church, who died
AtHens; one brother, L. Michael
Wedn!!sdaY at O'Bieness Hospital,
Fultz, Chicago; and two sisters,
Athens, will be held Saturday at 2
Mrs. Thomas H. (Terrt) Becker, - p.m. at the Pomeroy United
Lebanon; and Mrs.· Alan G.
Methodist Church. Frtends may
(Cathy) Telzrow, Hudson.
call at the church from 10 a.m.
Funeral Mass under the direction Saturday W)tll time of services.
of Msgr. Anthony Glannamore will
Masnlc lites will be held at the
be held at Sacred· Heart Church,
Hughes Funeral Home, Athens, at 7
Pomeroy, at 10 a,m. Saturday.
p.m. Frtday, by Amesville Lodge
Interment will he at Sacred Heart 278, F&amp;AM,
way, Elm and Railroad Sis. to
Cemetery.
provide sewage service to residents
The family has requested that In Olive M. Spencer
at a· cost of over $570,IDJ. These
lieu of flowers, dona lions for
Olive M. Spencer, 89, formerlY of improvements were made with
Memorial Masses In her name be
HUD funds at no cost to village
made to St Joseph Cathedral, 212 Meigs County, died Wednesday In
residents.
East Broad Street, Columbus, Oh. Delaware, Ohio. .
-A yearly program of street
Mrs. Spencer was born July 00,
43215; or to Sacred Heart Church,
resurfacing
was Initiated five years ·
152 Mulberry Ave., Pomery, Oh. 1893, a daughter of the late Rnse and
ago
with
funds
provided by a
45769. Cards of sympathy may be Elza Morrts. She was marlied on
three-mill
current
expense levy
mailed to Alfred J . Ferberdlno, Feb. 15, 1916 to Alban Spencer who
which
has
been
heavlly
supported
preceded her ln death, along with a
2448 Southway Drive, Columbus,
daughter, her parents, a daughter· by you, the residents of Middleport.
OH. 43221.
More than $125,IDJ ln much needed
In -law and a grandson.
Surviving are a son, Denzil resurfacing has been compleled
Esta M. Dickson
. Spencer, Delaware, with whom she during the past five years using
made her home; a daughter-In-law, these fuhds and giant funds. The
Esta M, Dickson, 77, RU, Albany, 'Barbara Spencer; two granddaugh- reconstruction of Page Street was
died Wednesday at the Russell ters, a great-granddaughter, seven also accomplished through lhe
active solicitation of grant funds.
Nursln&amp; Home, Albany, following step-grandchildren, eight step-Numerous Improvements
an extended illness,
grandchildren and several nieces
have been made In the fire and
Mrs. Dickson was preceded In and nephews.
deattt · by her parents, Asa and
Friends may call at the Bennett- emergency service provided resiMatilda Dingess McCallister, her Brown Funeral Home In Delaware dents by our volunter firemen
husband, Mark, two brothers, two from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Fliday. during the past several years. the
most recent improvement Is the
sisters and one infant daughter.
ServiceS will be held at 2 p.m .
She was a former mem!JI!f"of Saturday at the funeral home with construction of .a new addition to
Town House Methodist Church and the Rev. Wllllarh Malanowski the firehouse with ' funds which
Hemlock Grove Christian Church.
officiating. Burtal will be In the were made available tl)orugh your
approval of · a two-mill levy.
She Is survived by two sons, Carl Radnor Cemetery.
Purchase of the lot for this·addltlon
Dickson, Albany and Glen Dickson,
was made with federal funds.
Columbus; one daughter, Mrs. Paul Minnie Washington
A Middleport fire and emergency
(Carolyn) ' Sinclair, Shade; three
grandchildren · and one stepMinnie L. Washlngton, 81, 51 Pine
communication system was regrandchild; one brother, Brusie St, Gallipolis, died at 10: 10 a.m .
cently put Into operation with funds
McCallister. _Griffithville. W. Va., Wednesday In Holzer ·Medical · from the federal government and
and one sister, Anna Egnor, Center. _
.
from our own fire department. A
Hamlin, W.Va.
new truck · was also purchased
Born March 17, 190L at Rodney,
Funeral services will be held at daughter of the late Dick and Hattie
severa) years ago with funds made
the Bigony-Jordan Funeral Home. Collins Mosby, she was a member of
available by residents approval of a
Albany, Saturday at~ p.m. with the Paint Creek Baptist Church for 70
one-mill levy
' ·
Rev. Willard Love artd the Rev. years, church clerk for 37 years and
- Improvements have been
Roger Watson oO:Iciating. Bulial a member of the church senior choir
made possible In the police depart·
. will be In Alexander Cemetery. for 50 years.
ment by use of exlstlng funds. Six
Fliends may call at the funeral
She was also chaplain of the
full time pollee officers are now
hOme Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
church missionary society and
available. Several years ago there
_ were only three. Two

are

Hoffman ..._ _ _ _ __

Litter Control Board plans meeting

·Classes to he presented ~~the Hocking Valley Fire School io be l:)eld '
a t Galljpolls In September were discussed when the Meigs County ·
Firemen's As,soclatlon met Wednesday night' at the Pomeroy Fire . ,
Station.
'
· President Charles Legar was In charge pf the session during which •
time a discussion was also held on the serviCe of 18 years olds and
handling protection benefits for . these younger fire department
members. President Legar announced that a baslccoursewlllbeheld ·
for all interested members throughout the county In the.near future.
Two fllms on fire. fighting were shown. The-next meeting was set for
March 16 at the Middleport Fire Station.

Clark makes clarification
'Ille Paul E. Clark who was fined in the court of Mlddieport Mayor
Fred Hotfman Tuesday nli;ht IS not the Paul E. Clark who resides at
740 High St., Middleport.

Gub Scout Pack 245 will meet tonight (Thursday) at the Masonic
Temple, 6: :Jl p.m.

Veterans Memorial infonnation
Admltted--Betly Roush, Racine; Donna Harvey, Reedsville;
Raymond Fischer, Pomeroy; Mae Lightfoot, Middleport; Thelma
Grueset, Pomeroy; Klrnall Hysell, Pomeroy.
Discharged-George Reis, S~.ella Curtis. Gail McHugh.

.

Fire causes $1,500 damages
Damages were estimated a I $1500 as the result of a fire at the Patty
Capehart residence on County Road 26 Wednesday night.
Pomeroy FireChlefCh'arlesLegarsaldthat the fire was ln the living
room of the home and was caused by a woodburner settlngtoocloseto
a wall which caught fire when the stove became overheated. The
house Is owned by the Karr Construcilon Co.

'•

N. 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT

COM~

EARLY
MANY ITEMS ARE
ONE OF A KIND.
EVERYTHING TO THE
BARE .·
.
WALLS MUST
SOLD
REGARDLESS
COST.

30 40°/o OFF
TO

QUALITY WINTER CLOTHING FOR ·
MEN, WOMEN, JUNIORS, BOYS AND CHILDREN .

*WINTER SLEEPWEAR
*COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR
*COATS
*MATERNITY WEAR
*SWEATERS
*BLOUSES
*DRESSES
*KNIT ACCESSORIES

MEN'S &amp; BOYS' DEPT.
*DRESS SHIRTS
*SWEATERS
*MEN'S DRESS SLACKS
*COATS &amp; JACKETS
*SPORT SHIRTS
*flANNEL SHIRTS
*VESTS

OFF

CHILDREN'S DEPT.
*COATS &amp; SNOWSUITS
'
*SLEEPWEAR
*PANTS
*TOPS
*DRESSES
*SPORTSWEAR
*HATS &amp; GLOVES

DEPT.
*DRESSES *SWEATERS
*SPORTSWEAR
*COATS &amp; JACKETS
*BLOUSES
·*PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR

PREMI.UM BEDDING
HURRY IN

FLORAL

SOFA

·,

Page2

Page3

Page4

I

QUANTITIES ARE UMITED

SOFA&amp;
CHAIR

SOFA &amp;
CHAIR

•

at y

e
Voi.31 ,No.l U
Copyrighted 1982

I

.

.SOFA &amp;
LOVE SEAT

.

.

1 Seclion, 10 Pages
1SCents
A Myltimedio Inc. Ne¥itlpoper

.

•

I Consumer prices rose 3.9 percent in 1982
WASHINGTON (AP) - Consu'
mer plices, restrained at the end by
a bigDecemherdecline,rose just3.9
percent in 1982, the smallest gain in
a decade, the government said
·
today. In the la,st month of the year, the
. Labor Department's Consumer
Prtce Index recorded a 0.3 percent
price tumble. The monthly drop,
only the.second recorded since 1965,
equalled last March'sdecllne.
The advance posted for the full
year was less than half the 8.9
percent of 1981.
'Ille department said that plung·
!ng mortgage, Interest ·rates and a
further easing In energy prices were
responsible for about three-fourths
of the madera lion In the yearly
Inflation measure.
'
In December alone, housln!' costs
overall tumbled 0.8 percent, drtven
by a sharp 4.6 percent drop In home
financing costs. Home prices themselves rose a tlny 0.2 percent.
Food · plices also fell , oO: 0.1
percent.
Gasoline prices declined 0.9

percent. At year's end, such plices percent increase of a year earlier:
-Natural gas p~ were up 1.2
less than half the gain of 1981. __ ,
were 7.6 percent below their March
percent
In December, helping to
While the producer price rftea1981peak.
Houslngcostsfortheyearrose3.6 , §Ure '§a Gll9'1!/!rQlll~ter of.how
boost those prices 25A percent!orall
Medical care cools, as they had all percent;-well under the'tlllatp"'10.2 · . foOd, energy and other commodity · of last year. Gas plices h8.d risen
year, rose. Such expenses were up percent Increase of 1981. Home
prices will move at the retail level, 14.9 percent In 1981. Analysts
0.7percentlastmonth; fortheyear , financing costs tumbled 6 percent;
the CPI checks plices for a broader generally attribute thesurgelnsuch
they shot up ll percent.
range of Items, Including medical plices to congressional decontrol of
they had soared 20 percentthe year
Of all the components In the Index, before.Buthomeprlcesthemselves . care and housing, than does the ·new-gas cdSts.
rose at a sharper rate last year, · PPI.
only medical care costs grew at a
Since decontrol began in 1978,'
higher rate last year than In 1981.
jumping 7.5 percent after a 1.2
Ifretallpricesfellfor12monthsat nat11ral gas cuSto!llers have seen
Overall, economists attlibuted percent gain ln 1981.
their bills more than double,
December's rate. theyearlydecllne
the Inroads made last year In · The full-year consumer plice would be 3.2 percent. The annual congressional Investigators said
controlling in1latlon mostly to the lncrease was the smallest since the
rate reported by the department Is earlier this winter.
serious recession, good crop harv- 3.4 percent of 1971_and 1972, when
based on a more precise calculation
-Home heating oil plices fell 0,6
. ests and the worldwide oil surplus.
wage and price controls were In
of monthly changes than the figure
percent In D!!Cember, and, tor the
Indeed, the Labor Department effect.
year, were down ·o.7 percent. Such
•
made public.
Infla lion was 12.4 percent in 1~
said gasollne plices for the year fell
costs had surged 17 percent In 1981.
In today's report, the Labor
6.6 percent, the most since the and 13.3 percent In 1979.
-Prtces fell last month for beef,
'Today's announcement was the Department provided these other
Depression year of 1935, when
pork, poultry, eggs and fruit. Prtces
second time In a week that the details on consumer price activity: · tor meals eaten In restaurants rose
records were first kept.
-Overall transportation cosis 0.6 percent whlle alcoholic beverage
Gasoline plices had risen 9.4 department had reported a sharp
full-year
easing
In
a
major
Inflation
were
unchanged last month after a
percent tn1981, 18.9percenttheyear
plices were up 0.1 percent.
0.3 percent Increase In November.
befor that, and 52.2 percent In 1979, measure.
-Clothing plices In December ·
Last Frtday, the department said for the full year, such costs rose 1.7
when Middle East oil producers
fell 0.4 percent. For the year,'such
raised their' prices and gas lines Its Producer Price Index for percent, compared to an 11 percent
costs posted a1.6 percent gain; they
finished goods - the wholesale increase in 1981.
appeared around the country.
had risen 3.6 percent In 1981.
Used car prices rose 1.5 percent
Food plices. refleclng In part the plice Index - climbed 3.5 percent
-Entertainment costs Inched up
bountiful harvests, rose only 3.2 last year, the smallest rise In 11 last month whlle new car plices
0.1 percent last month. They rose5.6
were up 0.4 percent.
percent last year, down from the 4.3 years and, like the r etail price Index,
percent tor all of1982after climbing
7.2 percent in the previO!JS year.
-Rents rose 0,3 percent In ·
December, down from recent
months.

Winter storm watch
posted all over Ohio
By The Associated Press
.'}winter storm watch was Issued
for the southern third of Ohio for
possible hazardous conditions this
afternoon and tonight.
'Ille precipitation •was being
pushed northeast Into the Ohio
Valley well ahead of a low pressure
area just south of New Orleans.
That small storm center was
pushing milder and .very moist air
Into the colder air which has been In
place over the Ohio area for the past
fewdays.
.
'Ille low pressure system glazed
!Ill!ctl ·!lf Kent_!~C~ an\!_ exlrerne
southern Indiana t'hls morning. The
glazing resulted In some closed
highways and Iiower failures In
Kentucky.
High pressure over the Great
Lakes region continued to hold
command over the weather picture
for most of the rest of Ohio this
morning. 'Illat strong high will
likely retard the northward movement of the Ohio valley precipitation today.

LouisVille, . Keptucky ear Jy this
morning causlng'liliilterous traffic
accidents and hazardous driving
conditions.
Meanwhile, the mixed prectplta·
lion will likely change to liquid rain
In the southern third of the state by
dawn tomorrow. It Is this extended
period of freezing pr.eclpltation
mixed with the snow or perhaps just
!reezlng precipitation by Itself that
weathermen are watching closely.
Temperatures through tomorrow
will be In the 20s tb a few degrees
above freezing with the mildest
~ather being ln the southern
counties.
Accordlngtoweatherobserversa
winter storm wah;h Is In effect
tonight and Satul,'day. There's a 70
percent chance of snow mixed with
freezing rain or sleet tonight before
changing to rain toward morning.
Conditions may become quite
hazardous before the changeover.
Low near freezing. Winds easterly
10-W mph. Saturday,. 60 percent
chance .of rain cootlnu!ng. High

'Ille precipitation should reach
the southern t'hlrd of Ohio tonight or
possibly durtng the afternoon hours.
It may also reach central Ohio
tonight and even Into the nort)lern
third of the state tomorrow. ·
'Ille storm hit Lexington and
.
·--.

The weekend eXtended ·outlook Sunday through Tuesday- calla for
a chance ofsmwnortll Monday and·
fiurrles nortlleast Tuesday. Other·
wise mostly fair weather. Highs
from the rnld-lls to low 40s. Lows in'
the20s.

-~."~urner ---------.

Pric;e
Index

'

295•
' 290•

bill

285•

275•

CPI F ALUI - The unadjusted Consumer rPrlce Index_
for Deoomber stood a&amp; 292.4
meaning that goods costing SIO
In 1967 would have cost $29.24
last !Dooth. (AP ~111hoto
Chari).

Ca~didate ·

petitions
at election board _

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP)- Gov. Rkhard Celeste has signed his first bill .
Into law since taking office Jan. 10- a home financing measure designed to
boost the housing market .
'Ille 4:&gt;-year-old chief executive signed the bUI Thursday as legislative
leaders and housing Industry representatives, alongwithlaboroO:iclals and
others, looked on.
,
q:~este praised the new law, sponsored by Rep. Troy. Lee J_ames,
0-Cleveland, saying It can put from 7,IDJ to 10,IDJ construction workers
back on the job "In 1983 alone."
He said the proposal will le t many Ohioans, unable to buy a home In the
past few years due to high Interest rates, enter the houslng market.
Celeste said that a few years ago, two of every homes bull tor purchased In
the state were tor first -time homeowners.
"'Illat figure now Is one of every five,"' he said.
.
One of the major thrusts of the law Is to provide loans at lower than market
Interest rates to people who have not owned a home within three years
preceding their applications.
Senior clttzens 62 and over. seeking to buy Into multi-unit housing
facilities, also will be eligible for loans In the bond Issue-financed program.
'Ille bUI provides for creation of a Housing Finance Agency which will sell
up to Sax&gt; million in bonds to channel loans through banks, savings and loans
and other lending institutions.
James and other sponsors say that If the plan were In effect currently,
borrowers could get interest rates 2 percent to 3percentbelowcurrent rates
of13-13~ percent.
.
'Ille appointment of members of thejtnance agency- seven named by
Celeste with the directors of development-'and commerce serving as
statutory members- apparently wUI be the next step.
·The agency must adopt rules and fine tune the new law with regard to
s~lfic loan eligibility, requirements for participating lending Institutions
and other technical matters.
Officials said they hope the program will be under way no later than
March.

35-40.

,$49995

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 21, 1983

--

'

AP odds-makers
like Dallas, Jets

Celeste signs ·houS ·

BAKER RJRNITURE

JANUARY
QEARANCE SALE

•

must make decisions

Buckeyes whip
Michigan, 7 5-68

Fire classes topic.~f session·..

·Cub Scout Pack to meet today

are available to ·provide residents
with the services and protection
which they need and deserve.
-Several programs have been _
In t1a ted to assist the low Income
and retired home owners In our
.community and It Is anticipated
that there will be mo~e of these
programs In the future."
"All of these and other improvements have been made possible by
the splendid cooperation which has
been shown by councU members,
the chamber of commerce, organizations and businesses In our
community, and · residents of
MlddleiJOrt."
"I certaL"1ly feel that much more
can he accomplished d urtng the
next four years which will make
Middleport a better place In which
to live," Hoffman stated,

648, center boards

board

'Ille. Utter Control BOard, appointed by the
of countY ·
COmmissioners, has called a public meeting to be held at 1 p.m. on ."
Jan. 24, at the oO:Ice of the county board of education, Mulberry •
Heights, Pomeroy. ·
·
· ,
. .
:
Puqx&gt;se of the meeting Is to obtabt comments from citizens,
businesses and others concerning the needs and eondltlons of the
local litter controL
.
Persons who wish · to comment but will he unable to attend 'the
. meeting are asked to write the board of cQmm!ssloners prfor to the ·
Jan. 24 meetlng.

Petitions d. candidacy for vlllage whose ter_ms expire ln Middleport
of!lces In Pomeroy and Middleport · are Cari'' Horky and William G.
are available at the Meigs County Walters.
Pomeroy's Incumbent clerkBoard of Eloctions otrlce.
treasurer
Is Ellen Rnught and
This year voters of Pomeroy and
~
Mlddlepprt will elect mayors and Middleport's Is Jon Buck.
Middleport's Incumbent mayor,
two council members.
In Pomeroy one Iieroon will be Fred Halfman, has announced that
elected' at the board d. public he will ·seek reelection. Pomeroy's
affairs and In Middleport two mayor Is Clarence Andrews. The
members will be elected to the term of E. F. Robinson on the
board of public affairs. Voters will Pomeroy Board of Public Affairs
elect clerk-treasurers In both expires this year and In Middleport •
the terms of Freddie Houdashelt
towns.
Council members whose terms and Tom Anderson on that town's ·
expire this year In Pomeroy are Dr. board of public affairs expire this
Harold Brown and Bruce Reed. year.
Incumbent councU members

Congress wants
Soc. Sec package
finished by May
recommendations Feb. 1, and the
WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
gre5s wUI try to enact legis Ia tlon · Senate FlnanceCommltteealsowUl
begin work on Social Security next
overhauling Social Seculity by
month.
ear ty May to allow time to make
Commission members voted 12-3
adjustments If July's cost-of-llv!ng
to
approved the recommendations,
hike
Is
delayed
for
36
million
SIGNING HIS FIIIST BilL- Governor Richard Celesre signs his
which
also won support from the
beneficiaries.
first bill Thursday In the Statehouse as guests and reporien watch. The
president
and congressional leadThe
National
Commission
on
biD puts Ohio Into the housing development buslne!S BDd could pt&amp; 7,000
ers,
Including
House Speaker ThoSocial
Security
Reform
went
out
of
to 10,000 lald...,fOhlo construction worken back on thejob, Celestes ald. \
mas
P
.
O'Neill
Jr., D·Mass.
business Thursday; sending Prest·
Standing directly behind &lt;;;eleste Is Speaker of the House Vern Rille; ·
Conservative Republicans ln Condent Reag;m and congressional
sillllCIIng ne~ · to RUfe Is Senate President Harry Meshel (AP
gressaiready
have begun attacking
leaders
a
$168
billion
ptan
to
get
the
Lase.,hoto).
provlsons that would lncrease
retirement system back Into the
taxes.
.
black through 1!ro with: -A
A coalition of 25 organizations
six-month delay In this July's
representing millions of active and
cost-of-living Increase. ·
retired 'federal and postal workers
-lfigher payroll taxes In 1984,
Section 4 of the Constitution:
- the Fund for Assuring an
1988 and 1989 for employees and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Ohio
"No member of the General ' employers.
Independent Retirement, FAIR Republican Party Chairman Ml·
Assembly Shall during the term for
kicked oO: a campaign Thursday to
~A permanently higher payroll
chael Colley raised questions today
which he was elected, or for one tax on the self-employed starting In
defeat the recommendation that
about the constitutionality of four
year thereafter, be appointed to any 1984.
newlY hired federal employees be
appolntmrr)ents by Democratic
covered
by Social Seculity.
publll!
oO:ice
under
this
state,
w1Uc)l
-Taxation
of
one-half
of
Social
Gov. Richard Celeste.
Seculity
benefits
office
was
.created
or·the
compimsafor_
·middle-and
Meanwhile,
organlza tlons represColley, ln a letter to Celeste, cited
tlon
of
which
was
Increased,
duling
enting
retired
people and small
upper-Income retirees.
a secti6rt of Ohio's Constitution
the
term
for
Which
he
was
elected."
"
-Provisions for bringing all new businesses have criticized various
prohibltlngmembersoftheGeneral
panel recommendations.
Colley said that section "presents ·federal workers and non-profit
Assembly from being appointed to
Reagan appointed the commisan apparent problem" when cons!· groups Into the system next year.
any public office during the term for
dered with a 1981 budget bill that he
Now It will be up to legislators to sion In December 1981 after the
which they were elected or for one
White House and congressional
said Increased the pay scales of run a gauntlet of opposition · to
year thereafter. · ·
leaders agreed it was the best way to
Hementlonedfourformerleglsla· offices to which Celeste's appoint· various provisions ofthepackageas
defuse political warfare over Social
they tiy to meet an Informal
tors, Sen. Kenneth Cox, Rep. Dale ments were made.
Seculity.
Celeste's
secretary,
Paul
COS·
, The panel's members
deadline of early May for enacting
Locker,, ReP- Ronald Jarpes and ·
tello, said he hild not seen Colley's
· served wlthouf pay and they spent
Rep. Myrl Shoemaker. Celeste
bailout legislation.
Action by then would ·give the less than $500,IDJ In fashioning the
named Cox as his highway safety . letter and that there would be no
Social · Security Admllilstration report - weU under.its budget of$1.2
director and Locker agriculture response until the governor's office
enough time to make adjustments mllllon.
.
·. .
director. Shoemaker, who was had reviewed it.
. Colley said no further action was
The package they proposed would
necessary If JulY's estimated 5 .
electecJ lieutenant governor, also
not only solve Social Seculity's
percent cost-of-living hike Is dewas named natural resources being considered.
"'Ille
letter
speaks
for
Itself,"
he
crtsls
In the 19ro.;, but'it would wipe
-.layed because of fund shortfalls.
director. by Celeste, with James
"Our
i)urpose
was
simply
to
said.
. out two-t'hlrds of the system's
appointed his deputy. . ·
The House Ways and Means
advise the governor of an apparent ,
projected $1.6 trillion deficit over
Colley quoted from Article U, problem."
Co~lttee opens hearings on the
the next 75 years.
- ... • •
J :·
•

·Question appointments

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