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                  <text>Monday, January 24,-1983

Japan trip may be_. next for
Waverly man's eye treatment -WAVERLY. Ohio (AP) _ wu11am Gullion bas ~pent $'!),!00 lor
treatmentslntheSovletunlonofhis
deteriorating eye condition. Now,
he'll
J
lf
hesays
toIf apan
necessary
'.or med1catigo
b
on
e can 't getIt a t

degeneration. treatmentdoesn'l work.
,
"Islncerelybellevethetreatment
"HI didn't think the treatments
would do any good, I wouldn't be
basaldedmelnkeeptngsomeolmy
vision," Gullion said.
spending the money," be said.
According to Gullion, Soviet
GuUJJontsoneorthreeAmerlcans
leicacldln'"trea'""
- t l y In M~· lor the
doctorslnjectrlbortuc
u.,
..,. ·~~·
~v~
.I
··-"
dlssease.
· are Todd
borne
,--eyes and buttocks aver a two-w.,.,..
_ __ _ ....__
""' others
Gumon,59,wboreturned!romthe period.
•
· Cantrell, 13, . or Dalton, Ga., and
SovletUrilononSaturdaynlght,sald
Hesaldhewillcontinuehisannual
Roger Buchanan, Z1, of Canton.
· doctors there now belleve a Japa- r-trl...;p:...s_to_._M_oscow
_ _lf_the_
. _J_a pan...._ese~__ _
N_.c_._--~-----nese eye medication could jmpn;Ne
his eyesight. The · medication,
katalln, may not be available In the
United States.
''Doctors over there think these
MEN'S
special eyedrops can help,'' said the
retired tumlture siore owner. "I
don'tlmOwlficanget It here, but If I
can't, I'll do whatever It takes to get

7

JANUARY

WINTER

WELCOMING DAD HOME -William GuiU011,
a Waverly, Ohio, ~ suflerbtl a rare eye dl!leaae,ls
greeted Saturoay night at a Co~mbus airport by!IOII!I

I

Area deaths

\

on Aprtl 12, 1943, and two sisters.
Edna Austin and Frances Collins.
He was a Navy veteran of the
Surviving are two daughters,
Korean confllct and VIetnam. He
Mrs.
Eugene (Margaret) Porter,
served on the following ships, USS
Kitty Hawk, USS Independence, l Huntington, and Mrs. Dale (VIrgiUSS Tarawa, USS Bulcan and USS ' nia Ann) VanSickle, Galllpolls; six
sons, Dorsal, !'oint Pleasant, Capt.
Inchon. He retired from the Navy In
Alfred A., Point Pleasant, James
1975wlth20yearsof service. He was
and Daniel, Henderson, Charles
a fanner credit manager for
Carroll, Gallipolls Ferry, and
Doctor's Hospital. Nelsonville, and
Samuel,
Middleport; 20grandcblld·
was a lite InsuranCe salesman for
ren and several great People's Life Insurance eo: He was
grandchildren.
a member of East Athens Church of
Funeral services will be at 1 p:m.
Cbrtst and K. T. Crosson Post 21,
Tuesday at the Wilcoxen Funeral
American Legion, Athens.
Home, POint Pleasant, with the
In addition to his mother, be Is
Rev. O'Dell Bush officiating. Burlol
survived by his wife, Joan it.
will follow In Concord Cemetery,
Hysell; three step-daughters, Cheri
Henderson.
McMooes at borne; Carla Knight,
Friends may·call at the funeral
Ft. Walton Beach, F1a., and Cindy
borne alter 2 p.m. today..
Rose, New Marshfield; one son,
Danny Hysell, Phoenix, Ariz.; two
daughters,• Diane Mitzen, Bensalem, Pa., and Debbie Church,
ShtnglehOUSe, Pa.; five grandcblldren, two sisters, Janet Roberts,
Zanesville, and Mona Jean Jacks,
Sprlngfleld.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 1 p.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home, Athens, with Wll·
lard Love officiating. Burial will be
inAthensCountyMemoryGardens.
Graveside mllltary services will be
conducted by VFW Post 3477.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
Contrlbut,ions may be made
Echoing Meadows, 319 West Union
St.. Athens, Oh. 45701.

Andrew j. Brozak

.

Andrew J. Brozak, 61 Hudson
Ave.. Athens, died Saturday nlghtln
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Athens, following a brief lllness.
Born In Cherry Valley, Pa., son of
the late Andrew M. Brozak and
Mary Lesko Brozak, who survives
In New England, Ohio, be was a
World War II Army veteran,
supeivlsor of carpenterS and pain·
ters at the Athens Mental Health
Center, where he was employed for
31 years, and custodian of the
Athens Medical Center, wbere he
worked for 28 years. He was also a
member of Constitution Lotlge 426,
F &amp; AM at New Marshfield and
VFW Post3477 at Athens.
· Also surviving are his wife,
Margaret R. Brozak; four stepdaughters, Sandra WUlls of Cheshire, Brenda Henson of Gallipolis,
Sue Grim of Oakland, Calif.. and ·
Angela Hudnell of Marlon; ·a
stepson, 'Robert Grim of Middleport; .nine grandchildren; five
brothers, Emory of Cleveland, and
Mike, Charles, John and Rudy, all of
Rt. 1, Stewart; and three sisters,
Margaret Goodrich of San Diego,
Calif., Mrs . Raymond (Julla)
LaFrlnere of Athens and Mrs.
Charles (Helen ) Chase of Albany.
He was also preceded In death by
a brother.
Funeral services will be held at
10: 30 a.m. Tuesday in Hughes
Funeral Home, Athens, with Rev. .Thelma C. Plants
Ray Price officiating. Burial wtll be
Thelma C. Barker Plants, 77,
In Athens County Memory Gardens. Henderson, died Saturday evening
Friends may call at the funeral In Holzer Medical Center, Gallipohome anytime today.
lis, following a short Illness.
Masonic services will be held at 7
Born Nov.l2, 1900. at Henderson,
p.m. today In the funeral home, and she was the daughter of the late
mllltary graveside rites will be Alfred Barker and Olivia Carol
conducted by VFW Post 3477.
Barker.
She was a member . or the
Pleasant View Church, Galllpolls
George K. Hysell
Ferry, was a riverboat cook for the
George Kermit Hysell, 48, 100 Hatfield and Campbell Creek Coal
Maplewood Drive, Athens, died Company and worked for the O.F.
Saturday morning at University Shearer and the Ohio River
Hospital, Columl;ms, following an Company, from which she retired In
1969,
extended Illness.
Her husband, James ·Ottmer
Mr. Hysell was born In Rutland
the son of Lucille Hysell Hiett of Plants, preceded her In death May
Zanesville, and the late Daniel 30, 1951. She Walj also preceded In
death by a daughter, Carrie Louise,
Webster Hysell.

ON YOUR
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Write to th... con.reamen and .encourage them to vote
for H.R. 1966 to repeal the 10% withholding provlslona

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2221 DlrkiiD Senate OfOce Blda.
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Wathlqtoa, D.C. 2Hlt

'

Farmers
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REGUIAR'l79.99_

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Page 7

Page 10

•

"

Your Community Owned Bank

Member FDIC

I

I

••

at y enttne
·648 board asks Plummer to resign
Voi.31 ,No.187
. eopyrlghtod 1982

1 Section, 10 Pag••
15 C.nt1
A Multimedia Inc. N.w1paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 25, 1983

syJeffGr~mu2

resign.·

·

Plummer and Nlehm "have
break a tie, according to Plummer .
·fall~ to demonstrate leadership" In
Board members agreed .to meet
resolving ilu&gt; often bitter confllct
with their attorney as soon as
between the center and the 648
possible · to decide what further
board, the report states.
action they should take. No meeting
State mental health officials
date was set.
formed the review group In October
Rice said he Is notsurelfthe board
bas the authority to demand . as a result of the confllct.
Reconunend changes
Plummer's resignation.
The group recommended slgnHIThe board's decision to ask for
cant changeS at both the ~ board
Pluriuner's resignation resulted
and the center because of problems
from "the review report and public
found at the two agencies.
sentiment," Rice said.
The final report of the stateAmong other problems, the panel
appointed Conununlty Services
found "the general spending pos·
Review Group, released Jan. 7,
lure of (Plummer) and certain (648
·called for the resignations of
board) staff has been that of
Plununer and Bernard Nlehm. . extravagance."
executive director of the GalllaMany mental health center
Jackson-Melgs Community Mental
programs are "Ineffective and
Health Center.
lneff!climt," the report said, be-

When board · .members began
discussing how much time the
executive director shOuld be given
to respond to the vote, Plummer
said "I can save you the trouble.
"I w111 not resign. That's my
answer. So you can just go on to the
next step," she said.'
Plummer ~d she will meet with
her attorney to determine what she
should do next, but would not
comment further ,
. She Indicated, however, she will
ask for a hearing before the board.
Plummer told Rice after the
meeting that the vote may not be
valid because Rice .! voted with the
other members.
648 board bylaws state Rice, as
chairman, should baveonlyvotedto

OVPstaff

.
.. , . . · .
·
By a &amp;-5 vote, the Gallla-Jackson· · MeigS 648 board voted Monday to
·;: .. ask for the resignation of Its
·. · :, executive director, Maxine
' . , Plummer.
.
Plummer, who came under fire
!rom a state review group, vowed
she will not step down.
·
·. , The board also voted to cut the
bQ&lt;ird's staff from nine to four or
feWer, to reduce the budget and
• write regulations concerning salary
. lncre~. nepotism and travel
expenSes.
·
' Plummer showed no emotion as
648 board chairman John Rice of
MeJgSCountyreadtheresultsofthe
Secret.ballot which called for her to

:Bridge problems
won't get better

.

By.KATIE CROW

Sue Johnson Fisher, RN, New
Richmond, Ohio, a grad,uate of
Pomeroy High School and St. Joseph School of Nursing, has been
seated as a member of the Ohio
House of Representatives from
Clermont County.
Fisher, 46, from Monroe
Township, was sworn In twice as
. the representative from the roth .
district.
.
Her swearing In ended almost
a tull year of campaigning.
Fisher, a Republican, had to ·
detea t four opponents In the
primary last June. In November
she finished first in a lour-way
race.
· 1be 66th district Is a new, self·
contained area made up of the
western Clermont County Townships. It was created last spring
when the state legislature reapportioned the 65th district.
Fisher has long been active In
Clermont County pdlltlcs;· Including several years as county
Republican chairwoman. It was
the first lime she tried tor an
elective office.
Her first office oath was taken
on the floor of the House of Representatives. Her husband,
Ted, held the Bible and Clermont County Prosecuting Attorney George E . Pattison
administered the oath as more
than 30 of her campaign workers
and Clermont County officials
looked on.
She plans to stay, at the home

That means they can barely
handle cun-ent traffic patterns or do
not meet requirements for bridge
construction, be said.
Such bridges might have problems with superstructure, support·
tng structure or the deck, Moore
said.

·

,

lie said the state restricts the
weight on Dl state-owned bridges
because of deteriorated conditions.
The department doeSn't keep such
figures for city and county bridges.
Barnhart said a vigorous state
tnspectipn policy p~bly Is help- ·
tng reduce the number of bridge
disasters In Ohio. Inspecting
bridges frequently means the most
serious safety hazards usually are
found before something happens, be
said.
But Barnhart said Inspections 1
can't prevent all disaster5. "A lot of
things can happen that even the best
engineers cannot see," he said. ·

Cloudy tonight with a 40 percent chance of snow. Low 20-25. Winds
northwesterly to northerly 10.15 mph. Sixty percent chance of snow
Wednesday. High ll-35.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Chance ol rain or snow each day. Highs IIIOiitly In lhe :lOs Thursday,
low 40s to mid-50s friday and upper Jls to upper 40s Saturday. Lows
111-20 early Thursday, wannlng to the mld-208 to low 30s early Friday
and Saturday'

'

cause Nlehm has not shown
"administrative Initiative or
leadership."
The board met about two hours In
secret session Monday night with
Plummer and staff members and
one hour alone.
After the secret session, board
member Rev. Frank Hayes made a
motion to request Plummer's
resignation. Board member Bobble
Holzer seconded the motion.
Paul Barnett moved that the vote
be held by secret baUot. Dr. David
Evans seconded the motion.
The board voted 10-1 to vote by
secr-et ballot, with Rev. Hayes
dissenting.
· ·
The board also voted unanlm·
ously to Instruct Its personnel
(Continued on page 10)

of her parents durlitg the three
In-session days of the
legislature.
Her second Inauguration was
hE!Id In tbe afternoon. In groups
of 15, inembers or the il5th session were sworn In by Ohio Supreme Court Justice Anthony .
Celebrezze.
.
~lind her husband have
two children, Jan Kathryn, who
teaches nursing In California,
and a son, Mark, of Rochester,
N.Y. Her grandmother Is Ellen
Wilson, State Street, Pomeroy:
Her parents are former Po!lleroy residents, Kathryn and VIr·
gil Hayes of Columbus.

REP.F!SHER

Council seeks
legal advice
BY BOB HOEFLICH
SenHnel staff

Middleport Village Council will seek legal advice from Solicitor Bernard
Fultz on actions It can take on Improving Hudson St.
Residents of Hudson St., were present again at Monday night's council
meeting co.ntinulng their two month effort for Improvements to the street.
After a discussion and map study of the Hudson St. area, councilman
Dewey Horton Indicated that council does want to take action to Improve the
street. Mayor Fred Hoffman Indicated that, perhaps, the only way Is to
have a survey done since there Is some confusion on property lines and right
ofways.
·
While the village officials did agree to proceed with a ttirn:around area on
village property along the street Mayor Hoffman was asked to contact Fultz
to get advice on the right of way, width and IengthofHudsonSt.; direction on
what village officials should do to accomplish the improvements and
Information on Diamond Hollow Road whichapparenlly ties Into Hudson St.
Residents of the street last night attended their fourth consecutive ·
meeting of council to complain about the narroW11essofHudsonSt., parkinli
problems on the street. speeding and the lack of any place to turn around
except on private property.
Council Indicated that It will have direction from Solicitor Fultz by the
second meeting In February.
·
l
.&amp; tabllsh committee
'
Upon the suggestion of councUman Robert Gllmore, councU agreed to
establish a conunittee to study the acquisition of a civic center for the
commynlty. Gilmore said the tov.in needs a bulldlng In which to stage
dances, concerts, little theater group activities, wrestling matches and
other events. Rents from such activities would provide additional Income
for the towri without Increasing taxes, Gilmore said. Council voted to form
the committee with Gilmore as chairman. The committee will study the
feasibility of SI!Ch an acquisition.·
·Mayor'Hoffman reported the project for the relocation of the storm sewer
on five acres of property owned by the village across from General
Hartinger Park has been advertised for bids and bids are to be opened at
2:30p.m. on Feb. 8. Engtneertngcosts on the project which would Include
relocation of 825 feet of 30 Inch pipe are estimated at .$53,0ll. The mayor
announced also that a public meeting to display recommendations on the
rejuvenation of the business dlsfrict, done by the Reiser firm of Athens. bas
been setfor7 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 2, at the Middleport Fire Station.
(Continued on page 10)

"

'

.

Maxine PIIDIU118r

For Hudson St. improvements

Pomeroy graduate
joins.Ohio IJ.ouse

to standards set by his department.,
He said 5,420 of the 24,562 county
bridges and 213 of the 1,533 citY,
bridges also aren't up to standards.

ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -One or
every six Ohio road bridges doesn't
meet the standardS set by the Ohio
Department of Transportation, and
pfffclals say the situation Isn't likely
to Improve soon.
·
"The numbers are just staggerIng. By the lime we get all th&lt;l"'!
bridges fixed, we will have anoth.:.
batch that needs repairs,'' said John
Barnhart, structure maintenance
Inspection ,!!Nit~r for the
department.
I..ast week, a county bridge near
Antwerp collapsed, killing five
people and Injuring four as autos
plunged one by one Into the gap.
That bridge was 10 years old and
considered to be In good condition,
county officials said.
Dave Moore, the Ohio IXIT's
assistant Inventory engineer, said
6,!BS of Ohio's 40,510 state, county
. and city bridges bave been judged
Inadequate by state Inspectors and
local government consultants. All
Ohio bridges are Inspected
aruiually.
Moore said 1,263 of the 14,415
bridgesownedbythestatearen'tup

.

. $319.99

~

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Burns up to tO hours

on 1.6-gal. of pure kerosene. Electronic lgnl·
lion. TIIH&gt;••r switch.

rc::=1 ·

CABLENTERTAINMENT ·

Recently, Congress quietly passed a withholding law· that will cost Amerkan,savers and
investors the use of 10% of their interest and dividends.
- ,
In simple ter-. t1s, effective July 1st, 1983, this new law requires banks and other financial
institutions to deduct 10% of the interest or dividends you earn on your savings and
investments. That money then g~s to the Internal Revenue Service in much the same way as
payroll deductions are now handled.
The sponsors of this law have told us it was designed to catch a small minority of
Americans who evade taxes on their interest and dividends. But the truth is the law penalizes
the great majority of America's savers and investors who pay their taxes faithfully: What's
more, the federal government is now receiving all the necessary information to curtail tax
cheating.
Though the law does include exemptions for some low income and elderly Americans, if
they go through the red tape of filing an application, most savers and investors will forfeit
some of the money they could earn in compounded interest.
We urge you to join our efforts by writing letters to your representative in Congress and
to the two senators from tliis state. Thll them you want the 10% withholding tax repealed,
because it would impose an unfair penalty on savers like yourself.
.
For assistance in contacting your representative•and senators please ask any of our ·
bankers. If we all act now, Congress
get a clear message from the voters back hqme, and
they
··.
. will work to repeal this needless law.

on 19,700 BTU
portable
kerosene
heqter

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Page 5

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Our remaining stock of
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S thruXL

Dailey's ·Restaurant
to open in Racine

Weather forecast

Save $140

RERECTION
HEATER

COATS

Gullion said American doctors
know of no cure for his eye aliment
.:.. retinitis plgmentosa-a degener·
atlve disease of the eye that first hits
peripheral and night vision and
usually leads to bllndriess.
The treatments have not lm·
proved his sight, be said, but they
have . prevented further

CONGRESS WANTS A PIECE OF YOUR SAVINGS.

99
$179

ONLY

it."

Lan-y, left, ud Toay, ceater, a,rter retumln1lrcm ~
Sovlel Uoloa
where. he received treatmeol that
Is
•
I
unavaDable In the Unled statea. (AP LaserphOto).

Southern seventh
in AP state poll

Check presentation
kicks off RGCCC
business ·c ampaign

Goal of local planners: SELL Meigs County
By BOB HOEFUCH
Senlinel staff
The Meigs County Commissioners are expected
today to take action towards setting up a meeting
between local representatives and the director of the
Department of Development, Alfred Dietzel, In
Columbus to sell Meigs County.
, This Is the result or the annual meeting of the Meigs
County Regional Planning Conunisslon held Monday
· evening In the agricultural center of The Farmers
Balik BuUdlng.
At that meettng Meigs Commissioner Richard
Jones said be thinks a
should be held with the
director or the department to make this area known
to him. Jones suggested the delegal_lon Include
representatives of village and county governments,
the community lmpravement corporation, the
planning commlsslon, along with James Jennings
who serves as a consultant to several local
governmental groups,
The conunlsslon agreed that the meeting should be
set up af1d Cominlsslon President David Kobleniz
Indicated that the comrnlssloners will take the
Initiative In getting the meeting set up. Jennings,
present for Monday's session, urged that the Meigs
County group move qUickly In setting up an
appointment with the department cllnrt&gt;r.
·
· Susan Isaacs of the Buckeye Hills·Hocking Valley
RegllliiBI Development Dlatrtct, met with the
planning commission Monday and complied lists or
assets and problems or the ·county In attracting
Industry as a 1Jart or her studY known as the action
, plari: The plan Is being drawn as a possible aid to

meeting

.

,,

..

tmprovtng the economy and securing more jobs for
Meigs Countlans.
Tom Classer, also of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley organlzation, while offering the services of.lhe
MarieWt·based group stated that the development
district must be aware of the priorities of Meigs
County and want It would want done.
Closser noted that statewide Southeastern Ohio has
been "treated as a stepchild" In the past, lndlc!(ting
that perhaps, with new administration the picture
will change. Closser said that he, too, Is working
towards settlng up a meeting with state meeting for
representatives from this area. He predicted that the
economy will change and said that this area must be
working as unit wht:&gt;n the opportunities come.
Closser said the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Plstrlct Is setting up a regionalized computer system
which will be·completed In the next several weeks
and which should preyeol great valuetothearea. He
also commented that Meigs County has the best
senior citizens program In the eight county area
served by the district--a proglram which should be
used as model.
Koblentz reported the final application on a $25,0ll
.Utter control program for Meigs County will be
completed Friday and Indicated that It appears that
the grant will be forthcoming. Next year the council
will be eligible to receive ten dollars for each one
dollaF earmarked for such a program, Koblentz
reported.
Brtdp report
Frank Cleland; a member of the Southeastern Ohio
Regional CouncU's Highway Use Committee,

a

a

.'

--

reported on the recent public meeting held In
Pomeroy on the construction-of corridor road from
Rock Springs to tbe new . Ravenswood Bridge.
Highway' officials, Cleland ·said, Indicated the
corridor road might be as far away as eight to 10
years, a discouraging factor. Cleland also said the
project has been misunderstood as an extension of
U.S. Route 33 from Rock Springs to the bridge. The
committee Is not suggesting a change In Route 33 and
does not want the corridor road to be known as Route
33, Cleland remarked. He noted the recent opposition
of West VIrginia communities to the project because
they feel It would moving Route 33 from Its present
location.
Jennings repOrted on a recent meeting of
represeillatlves of four chambers of corninerce-·
Pomeroy, Athens, Logan-Hocking and Lancaster·
Fairfield and at that meeting the representatives
· decided to set up hospitality suites· at the Ohio
Chamber of Commerce meeting to be held In March.
Legislators and state officials attend th~ meeting and
the hoSpitality suites will serve as headquarterS
' where the needs and requests of Southeastero Ohio
can be passed on to these people, Jennings reported.
The Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Will
participate In paying for the establishment oi the·
hospitality suites at the state meeting. Jennings
asked Middleport Mayor tred Hollman to encourage
Middleport to join the Ohio Chamber of Commerce.
Thereon Johnson, president of the commission who
presided over. Monday's meeting, pointed out that It
should be made clear · that other counties of
Southeastern Ohio are joining Meigs County In
.
-

a

·pressing for projects such as the corridor r&lt;iad to the
new bridge, not particularly lo help Meigs County,
but for the benefits which they, too, will derive from
such a project.
County Engineer Phil Roberts discussed with the
commisslon,local hlg~way plans. He Pointed out that
the county highway department has onll' so mucjl
money but that efforts are made each yea~ to do so~
paving. He ' noted that ·a bad winter can abSorb
considerable amount of the funds on hand through
maintenance requirements. Roberts reported that
· the county has 100 miles of paved roads and 150 miles
of unpaved roads. He said a report Is prepared
annually on goals of his department for the year tn
regard to roads, bridges, and ditching projects. The
report will be prepared by April 1 and copies wUI t:Je
available to the commission m~mbers, Roberts said.
Some years, goals are met and at other times they
cannot be met tf SQme -emergency such as the
replacement of a bridge arises, Roberts pointed oul.
A report was given on the Tuppers Plains sewage
project with Jones pointing out that a public meeting
on the feasibility study had been held in November. A
resolution to accept or reject the proposal of the John
David Jones Co, was drawn up following the meeting
and that resolution was to be before the county .
commissioners today. It was indicated that It 1.111l
probably be approved. The · plan then Is to be
submitted to the Ohio E .P.A. for approval.
Officers were reelected by the planning commls·
slon lor another year and C. E. Blakeslee was again
employed to serv'e as executive director of the
organlzatlon.

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lll CtNtrt Strct'1
Pumeroy, Ohln

··t-112:·2151

l)f. \'OTEO TO THE INTEREST OF' THt: MEIGS-MASON ARf~ A

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ROBJ;:RT L. 'WJNGETT
Publlltht-r

BoB HOEFLICH

!'AT WHITEHEAD
,\~Ni!;UI IIl Puhli!!iht:r/Cuntrollt·r

DALE ROmGEB, JR.
Nrw1Edltor
A MF:MBER ur Tlk Au•lll'i.al.t!ct Prn.s, I.U.nd O.lly
Amui n&amp;n Nc~· lipa;JW r Pllblishen A1snd11iun.

Prr-s.~

AstmdaUun atnd lhr

LF.1TERS OF OPINION lillY • ·elt11med. They 1buuld b.- InKthaD 310 wnrd11ltmK- All
lrlirrs ~m· subj~:rt ln ~itinJI, illnd mu1l br Kl&lt;ltfd wilh name, addm11 1nd lrlephnt)f
numbt&gt;r. Nn UDiiiMMd lettt'rs willlk' publ111hed. Utlen 11ht1Uld lx in K'"ld Wte. •ddret~~~~
l!i!i U~ . nul pt"_naJIUI.IUIH .

Furor o¥er budget
is not the same

The Daily Sentinel - Page-~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middle,lort, Ohio ;
Tuesday, January 25, 1983 ,

.The end of Reagan? .

The Daily Sentinel

.1-.

Tuesday, jarwary 25, 1983

Commentary
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A great deill has been concluded
as a resuh of the ligures given out
last week that reveal that Ronald
Reagan'spopularltyw!ththevoters
Is lower at mid-term than that Of
any of the past !our elected
presklents. The poll shows that
Reagan's 41 percent low ·rontrasts
with John F. Kennedy's 76percent,
the historic hlgh. l:low Mr. Reagan
has done I~ not, of course, exactly
the same question as how popular
he Is. Just as the war was
concluding, the most heroic British
figure In mode history was voted
out of offlre. U Winston Churchill
can he tos~. out by the voters, I~
shoold notsurprlsethatonedayMr.
Reagan might be tossed out.
But the Gallup Poll ligures are
otl:l!rwtse Interesting. Mr. Kennedy
'was the most popular president at
mid-term. _And what happened to
him one year later? One year lllter

The furor surrotinding President Reagan's stW-unpubllshed budget Is
di!lerent this year. Almost all of It Is coming trom Republicans.
·
GOP lawmakers demonstrated their concern-about the economy and
the 1984 elections by reacting critically to every twist and tilrn In the
decisions and trial balloons that come out of the White House.
That Is a role nonnally left to Democrats in a RepubUcan
administration. But this year, the Democrats are sitting serenely on the _
sidelines, waiting to use their increased strength to rearrange Reagan's
budget after he presents It, not before. Reagan's bitterest foe In Congress,
House Speaker ThomaS P. O'NeW Jr., D-Mass., has had virtually nothing
to say - except to embrace the bipartisan rescue plan for SocliJ.] Security
that the president also supports.
Not so the Republicans. Most are frightened by the situation they are in,
with deficits of $;JXI bllUon or more In 1987 unless taxes are blcreased or
spending is cut, and the prospect that they wt11 be held accountable In two
years.
Some are angry that Reagan's solutions don't go far enough in some
directions. Others are angry that they go too far In others. ·
All seem ready, wWing and able to reject proposals trom the man with
whom they marched two years ago to smashing tax and spending
victories.
Social Security Is a good example.
The White House hailed the agreement with the Demqcrats as proof
positive that Reagan is stU! capable of exercising strong leadership on a
dli'flcult problem.
.
But no sooner had the president embraced the compromise bailout plan
than two Repllbllcan conservatives, Sen. WllUarn Annstrong of Colorado
and Rep. William Archer of Texas, began organizing opposition.
Armstrong Is chairman of the Social Security subconunlttee, and hls and
Archer's actions probably assure a major struggle as Reagan and the
congressional leadership try to win passage for the plan. But at least
Reagan has the leadership's backing on this one.
Not so on defense.
Under pressure for months to reduce the deficit by trtmmlng back on his
defense buildup, Reagan finally did so earlier this month. He agreed to a
cut of $8 bllUon - the same $8 bWlon he agreed to cut last year and then
took back, Incidentally. ,
.
But that seemed to satisfy few, If any, of the top Republicans In "the
Senate.
Next came taxes.
Reagan's illdes put out the word he was considering conditional tax
blcreases that would go Into effect beginning In 1986 If the deficit hadn't
declined below a eertaln level. That seemed a neat compromise for a man
under pressure to reduce deficits yet determined to hold down taxes. Initial
Republican sentiment was .frosty .

It

. _ William. F. Buckley ]r. .
.

'

he calcula,~ that he w~as~lll::-:-clo=ae-::t-o-o;lthls~.-:tha=t-:there==ts~t~ota=tlll;;';:-ty-:ln:--v-&lt;t:-e-r--:ch:-ar-ges--:(o-r_so_l:-t-ts-repo--rted-}-on
the posst6luty of l01lng the forth·
populartty, and fbat to make any taxes, and he Is about to submit a
coming pi'ESidentlal election to flriaJ bets on the basis Of what Mr. budget that anticipates a deficit of ·,
Barry Goldwater that - as his QUJup tells us Is, well, not very $185 bllUon. This ts not lo suggl!st ;
.biographers coilcede - he needed bright. And Of course, )ltterly that he Is the authOr of the
. to tie up the support rt what might uillnformatlve c1 whether pres!· . legislation, much of whlc)) gives
prove to be the swing state. dent deserves to be unpopular, or him no choice than to submit a hlgh •
AccordJ!tg!y, he decided to take a tor that matter, popular.
budget. Mr.· Reagan has been less ;
trtp to Texas, his last trip.
.
My own feeling Is that Mr. than voclfetous In his opposltk&gt;n'lo .
The Issue rt Tfnle magazine that Reagan .shows signs of slipping, ·I
the budget-busting entitlement prO. ,
appe&amp;J'ed just before the lissas!Jlna·
don't mean slipping In popularity, grams enacted over the .years by
lion of Mr. Kennedy reported that wlllch Is as unimportant as the Democratic leglstatures.
the race between Mr. Kennedy and - u~pularlty' o!tbeooctorwhotells
So: the~ssuresareonhlm,and
his Republican oppOnent would be
his patient to stop smoking cl·
his critics are so happy we really ·
so close that, Indeed, Texas might
garettes. The sUJipage I refer to ought to tax their elation and solve
prove to be crttlcill. And Of course reflects a softness In the matter of
the budget deficit problem that '
the whole world Is familiar with
framing, and merchandlsllig, a
way. Mr. Tom Wicker writing In ·
Harry Truman, wholn tllesprtngol consistent plctilre d what It Is that The NewYorkTirnescommentson
1948 was so unpopular It was ails America. In recent days Mr; -- the Washington press that finally It ·
generally conceded that Herbert
Reagan lias approved a Social
has caught on to the horror
Hoover could have beaten him In
Security compromise that could
occupying t'le \Yhlle Hoose. "Pack ,
the November election, which
have ' been ~tten by Claude
journaUsm," he ci'Es ouJ, "where
Harry Truman proceeded to win.
Pepper. And he Is talking abQut
were you when we needed you?
The pOint of the above Is simply contingent taxation Including sutProclaiming the Reagan Revolu.
·
tion, that's where/' he chides, as
though he were addi-esslng Nero
after Rome had burned down.
- The same Issue a! Tile New York
Times, which Is superbly dutl!u lin
relaying hard data, pubUshes excerpts from Mr. Reagan's US-page '
document;'distributed to the p-ess,
covering the first two, years of his
presidency. Under the heading of .•
"TIIen and Now," then being Whel'\
Mr. Carter lett c1!1ce, now helng ·
now, we see a number of entrtes,
Including the following: Inflation,
then 12.4-percent; now 4.6 percent. .
Treasury BUis for 90 days, then 17 ·
percent; now 8 percent. Housing
starts, beading down one half· '
ml)llon per year toward 1982 nadir;
now, heading up by one halfmUllon. TIIen, gas prtces heading
up; now, gas prices heading down. ·
Here Is an interestlngquestk&gt;n for ·
the critics, and maybe Tom Wicker '
should lead the class here by oolng
the research. When b1 tills century ·
I'
'
has ecooomlc Improvement on ,
·~
such a scale been out:lassed in two
years by any president? Hmm.
Jnterestblg question. But then ·
Interesting questlonsouglltto be the :
specialty of those who, whBe :
holding that Mr. Reagan has not
oone enough, are wWing to ask just ' ;
how much can reasonably be
expected of a man gl ven the
Augean stables to clean ou L

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Share the spirit
Share the refreshment

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Lawmakers on the
WASHINGTON - Members Of
Congress oon't have to sit by the
teleph(Jie walling ilr Invitations to
parties, eVen )Vhen the parties are
at 'ancy resorts In Florida, Las
Vegas or Japan.
Particularly If t!Ey're on certain
Important committees, our law·
makers are ardently courted by
well-heeled lobbyists for the Indus·
tries their committees oversee.
Junkets to far~way places - all
expenses pilld by the Industry
groups, of course - are commonplace for congressmen and senators with an Itch to travel.
The generous lobbyists piously

Letter to ·editor
Seeks understanding

they can care less about a man's
child?·
·
I'm not complaining about the six
month sentence I got. My conCP.m
Is finding out Information about my
daughter.
The trouble with disarmam~nt
The court refuses to give me 48
talks
Is that every time one side
hours out to find out. I'm not going
sul!l!:esls sc.methlng, the other side
to nm; that would really be stilpld
rejects It out c1 hand. The reason Is
of me. The court let me out for
that
If one o! the parties suggests It,
Thanksgiving, but refused the
then
It musf mean It's bad for the
l Bob Mltcbell, have been lrylng other holidays. But now I'm wantotl:l!r
side.
Ing out for a good reason and I'm
tn see Pat O'Brian on a matter that
Is how It goes:
This
refused. I feel that I've been a good
. Is very tmportant to me. He refuSes
"Klzlnsky,
we've decided to
prtsoner here. I haven't given them
tn see me. Tile matter that! want to
NATO,
withdraw all Amerdisband
see Judge Pat O'Brian about Is as any trouble.
Ican troops !r&lt;n~ Europe, and
I know I did something wrong.
follows.
depend
on the goodwill of the
But
that's
no
reason
to
deny
me
the
On Saturday, my wife came up to
·
Sovlell!
to
remain within their own
tell me that my two-month old right to find out Information about
borders."
daughter, Katherine Elaine, wtll my daughter.
''This Is the most rkllculous
My. wife won't tell me or my
have tn 1go Into the hospital for an
proposal
you have suggested so far,
operation. But my wife refuses to friends anything.
How can we verify how
Downey.
Even Paul Gerard Is as heartless ·
tell me when or where. All I ask of
are facing us without
many
troops
Judge Pat O'Brtan Is that he let me as the courts. He said he would see
NATO?
Suppase
I tokl you that my
what he could do. But as I write thls
talk to him for five minutes. rwant
government has Instructed me to
to ask him If the~'s any way possl· ' letter to you, I've still not.heard a
tell you that we are wDUng to tear
ble he could let me out for a couple word from him.
up the Warsaw Pact alliance, and
of days so I can find out about my - Meigs County Is full of cruel and
•
let
the SoY~t satellites fend for
heartless people, especially In the
daughter, the where, why, and
themselves."
·
so-called justice system.
when of the whole deal.
wBI
get you nowhere,
"Threats
They can take five minutes and
Judge Pat O'Brian sent word'
Klztnsk~&lt;
Do
you
\hlnk we Would
b8ck to me by the female deputy put you behind bars, but they can't
accept th~ breaking up of the
named Becky that he had no tnten· take six minutes to see you after
Warsaw Pact militarY 'infrastruclions of seeing me. I am not asking you are put there.
ture lor one moment? Our entire
I've been in here since Dec. 13,
for that much from thls court, just
defense
strategy Is hased on Its
48 hours to find oot the Information 1!112. I've even written Sheriff
existence.
But I'll teD you what we
that I need to know. I have been James Proffitt a letter to try and
will
do.
We'll
dismantle all our
given six months. I have been w.rlt· see him. That's been a month ago. I
ICBMs
and
tilrn
them Into plow·
tng O'Brian letters !or aver a month stiU haven't seen him.
sbares
at
no
cost
.,
yo~."
·
I hope that you can understand
and this Is theftrsttimethatlgotan
. "I'm trying to keep my temper,
what I'm trying to say. I just want
AnsWer back.
.
Downey, rut If you think my
Is there no feeling in people's out long enough to find out the
country ls going to stand by while
hearts any more? Don't IJI!OI'Ie when, where and why of mydaugh·
you people dtsman.tle your Interconcare about other people? Are the ter's operation. - Bob Mitchell,
tinental
missiles, then we ·llllght as
courts so cruel and, heartless that County JaU.
well
adjourn
these ta]ks." .
.
.
/ 'WhY" do you saY that?"
''Tile only reason your..slde wOuld
tilm Its ICBM&amp; Into plowshares Is
that you've developed a plowshare
Five years ago: 'The Se'nate majority and minority leaders said they
that .could bo mOre damage than (Ill
would offer a joint amendment to the Panama Canal neutrality tree.ty ICBM. You iaiow very WI!U wecan't
. ~teftningthe United States' right to send troops todefendthecanalatterthe
turn our1 SS-20 missiles Into
plowshares."
year :ml.
• One yeat ago: Polish leader General Wojctech Jaruzelskl condemned
'·'All rtgbt, we're willing to give up
lhe economic sanctions Imposed by the United States and Insisted the · the plowshare Idea. What If we
·.; Imposition or"martial law was needed to avtild civil war In Poland.
~ledourB-lbomberprogram?
• Edlior's !llote - Juclce Pldrlck
O'Brien was contacted J'eiiii'CIIIIc
Ute following Jetter. Judge O'Brleu
reports MllcheD was released from
jaB lor 'II1anksglvlt\g and during
tba1 time aDep!id.IJ •ppnltfd Ids
...ue. .lud(e O'Brleu also states that
nae MJicl)ell's daup!er Is UDder
n.edkoelion, there are no plans for
Mil &amp;Eli .. tiD tbne.

road-L...----,.---'---J_ac_k_A._nd_e_rso-..:....,n :

Insist thai the junkets are simply
Intended to tmprove communlca.
tlon with the legislators - and
surely, they add, no orie could
serklusly believe that a congressman's vote can be bought with a
weekend at the beach.
I certainly hope mt, but the subtle
blfiuence of poolslde parties and
lavish cabaret shows cannot be
Ughtly dismissed. The memory of
good times can't help but.make the
guest rmre recejtlve to the eental
host's point of view, and that's
really all the special-Interest
groups want.
From House and Senate

flnanclal-dtsclosure torms, my reporter Jock Hatflfld was able to
Identify the most openhanded party
givers - and the congresst&gt;nal
junket junldes who are their
targets:
.- No one does a better job of
en_tertalnlng members c1 Congress
than the Natlonal Association of
Broadcasters. In l9!!l. and 1982, a
total d 32 members enjoyed
all-expense mlnl·v&amp;Gatlons at the
NAB's conventions In Las Vegas
and DaDas. The trips Included
airfare, lodging, food and entertainment by the likes c1 Bob Hope,
Steve Allen and Rich Ut!R. Of the

All the chip
__s_____.,;__ _

32 congressional guests, 17 were

I

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members c1 the House or Senate
Commerce Committees, which
have been considering legislation to
deregulate the broadcasting
Industry.
- The National Association of
HomebuUders runs the NAB a close
second. In 1981-1!2, despite the deep
depression In their Industry, the
homebuilders managed to scrape
upei)OUghmoney tosponsor31 trips
lor at least 18 members of Congress
to their Las Vegas conventions. The
builders' guest lists· favored
members o! the House and Senate
Finance, Baking and Appro!J'Ia·
tlons committees.

. :-:·..

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Ar_tB_
· u_chwa,...--ld

___,e_ _ _

"Yes, but we didn't think you
Would )UU accept that?"
"Of course we would net accept would agree In oor proposal. Once
it. We have spent 200 million rubles you bought It we realized It was a
developing a defense against lt. Put bad Idea. The fact that you want to
someth!rig on the table t!la t wtll at put a bomber out of ranee mearui
It's a much better plane that we
least make some sense."
"Your side hasn't put anything on thought. Did you tell the Kremlin
the table that makes ·sense to us." we are wWing to back oflthe MX
"What about our agreement to Dense Pack program?"
"I did, Downey, and they Inremove all our Bacldlre bombers
out or range c1 Western Europe?" structed me to tell you lfyooglveup
"Washington thinks the Idea Dense Pack a.s a viable weapon,
stinks. We never thought the they wW cancel all wheat purBackfire bomber was much of a chases from the United States."
"Why would they do that, Klzthreat to begin with."
!nsky?
I thOught the Soviets were
"But you were the ones who
brought up the Backfire bomber in scared sUiy of the MX Dense Pack
system.''
the first place."

''They were until you rtfered not
to build lt. Usten to me, Ile'wney. In
order to play disarmament you :
have to have chips. It's obvious
every chip you've offered so far Is
something you don't need to
threaten us."
"You haven't come up with
anything of substance yourself."
"What would you say If. I told you
we wUI put every one of our nuclear
submarines in mothballs, and le
you keep the ones you have now?"
"Get · o11 It, Klzlnsky. If you're
really serious about the arms race
give me something solld I can take
back n Washington."

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·Today in .history

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·-- - ·-- --

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Warning, The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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Sentinel

T

Ohio

Sports World

Reds'_manager plans
tougher training camp
CINCINNATI (AP ) - Cincinnati
·Reds Manager Russ Nixon promises a tougher spring training
-schedule this year with a stress on
fundamenlals for the team that had
a 61-101 record last season.
' Nixonsaidoneofthefundamental
changes will be the elimination of
the head-first slide, · pioneered by
former Reds star Pete Rose.
Second baseman Ron Oest.er, ·a
Cincinnati native like Rose and also
a switch-hitter, must unlearn the
dive slide, Nixon said.
' "We're going to try to teach
Ronnie to slidefeetfirst. !think he'll
last longer that way. He went
through too much pain last year, "
Nixon said. "We'll have to work It
out so it becomes second nature -to

"I never mind working, " said
pitcher Joe Price. "That's what
we 're down there lor. I've alwa ys
been amazed at how easy it was.
And I'm notblg on golf, so that
doesn't bother me at all."
When the Reds open camp at
Tampa, Fla. next month, there will
be more runnL~g. Nixon has added a
three-mile jog to the wind sprints.
Players will spend time studying
videotapes of tbe!r wqrk each day,
and more classroom time is
scheduled, he said.
Nixon wants his players to work
on bunting and more int.ersquad
games.

him."

· Oester wasn't convinced that
lliJing to the feet-first slide will help
him, bUt said he was willing to go
along with the Reds' plans.
"If they want me to dolt, I'll try it,
but sliding head first is an instinct
lor me. I still think sliding head first
Is !he quickest way," Oester said
Monday.
Oester strained his right shoulder
last season diving back to second
base on a pickoff attempt.

Players not assigned to games
will have specific fundamenlals to
master ~In addition to hitting and
running.
Nixon already has established a
$100-per-pow'ld fineforthosewhodo
not meet there assigned weights.
"Most of them, from what I've
seen, are in pretty good shape rigllt
now," he'sald.

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4. NPV.·l.as Vegas 0 I
5. MemptUs St . Ill
6. Yilltlnla
7.Si. John'l'i
H. U:Julw i lk&gt;
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IOJ&lt;mt ucky
li.VIIlallO\·~
l2 .Arkans.as
llM!!';.r;ouri

ltlow11

SAVE· 20o/o
ON

•SHEER DRAPERY
•VALANCES .
•SHADES
PLUS FREE INSTALLA~ION

L&gt;l
ii-I
1 ~2

1 ~.\.oorJtt town

12-.1
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16.M\IU'I('f.Ota

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17. 1111riots ~!a l l'
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19.Wal«&gt; Fon."St
:!l.Oklahorna Stat&lt;'

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114
I&lt;J •

GAllERIES

lost in overtime 33-25 to Jackson .
EJGIITHGRADE
Coac)l Rusty Bookman's tall a nd
talented little Marauders outscored
Jackson 21-4 in the third quarter and
coasted totheir10thwinaga inst one
loss.
J . R. Kltchen led Meigs with 20

points while Huey Eason added 12
points and 13 rebounds. Oth~r Me igs
scorers were Phil King, six, Steve
Musser, five, Jesse Howard and
Mary Cline, four each, and Tim
Cassell aixl PaulDailey, two a piece.
· Cantor led Jackson with 15.
Kitchen was awarded the "defensiver player of the week" while
cassell and Cline were each pointed
out by Bookman for ou !standing
play coming off the bench.
SEVEN11f GRADE
The hard-luck Meigs seventh
graden; fell to 3-7with an over ti me
loss although coach Ron Drexle r
called it the best llis team has
played aU year.
Down 24-19 with two minutes to
go, Meigs scored three straight
buckets to go ahead. Missing the
' ' · ~~d of a one and one with 16
seconds left, the little Marauders
fouled in ·a scramble for the
rebound. J ackson made one of two
to tie It up and bring about the
Player of week
overtime.
One factor dampening l'(fel!r.i'
CANTON. Ohio (AP) - Gloria
ho~ was the sickness of Michae.
Banks, wllose !ll points and 33 · Bartrum and John · Sisson, neither
rebounds helped Malone College to
being 'able to play.
three victories, has 'been named
Don Dorst and Scott Williams
National Player of the Week in
each had 10 to lead Meigs. Bill
NAJA women's college basketball.
Brothers added three and Joey
Snyder two. Perry led Jackson with
16. Although not scoring, the fine
The &amp;-foot-2· senior center from
Barberton also had 19 blocked shots · defensive play of Paul Melton was
pointed out.
and eight steals in triumphs over
Mount Union 94-57, previously
unbeaten Grove City (Pa.) ~55 and
Rio Grande 89-33.

Next game for the junor high
teams Is Wednesday at home
against Federal Hocking a( 5: ~ .
The 8th grade matcll-up should be a
" Jim Dandy" as the little Lancers
only loss last year and this·year has
been to Meigs. Meigs won the first
ga me4943.

r-;:==========:::;
The Daily Sentinel

Point-Mason Auto·Glass
Will Be Closed
All Day
Wedn·esday, January 26th
For The ·Funeral Of

By WILLIAM R. BA6NARD
:
AP Sports Writer
Vlllanova found out the hard way ··
that It doesn't pay to give free
throws to the St. John's Redmen.
St. John's, ranked seventh in The
Associated Press college basketball
. poll released today, hit 36 ol39 free
throw ·trtes to defeat the lith-rated
W!ldcats ~71 Mo~y night. The
loss 'snapped a 10-game winning
streak for VIllanova and boOsted St.
JOhn's, 17-1 overall, Into tile )31g
East "confel'('nce lead with a 7-1
record, whUe the W!ld~ats.dropped
to5-L
VIllanova's slar center, John
Pinone, was benched for four
minutes after picking up his fourth
petsonal foul with 13: 19 to go and St.
John's trailing 47,39. The Redmlm, ·
who hit 27 of 29 free throws in the
second half, cut the margin to 49-4\l
before J'lnone returned.
In other game:; involving the new
Top Twenty, No. 3 North Carolina .
smashed Georgia State95-55, No.12
·Arkansas ripped Texas 83-64 and
17th-ranked illinois Slate trimmed
Tulsa 61-55.
.- David Russell led St. John's with
21 points, white Kevin Williams, the
Redmen's sixth man, added 16
polu.ts..and hit all eight of his free
throws.
·
. In previous seasons, Williams
complained about his lack of
playing time and being relegated to
a reserve role. But now he's content
with his role in relief of point guard
Bob Kelly.
''The coach Is a genius at seeing
what's wrong with the offense and
telling the point guard what plays to
call," Williams said. "My job is to
settle the guys down and the right
people the ball."
"Kevin Williams put points on the
board and got the ball to the right
guys," carnesecca said. "It doesn't
NO DUNK - A pair of hands reaches In .to knock the ball from the
grasp of Clemson's Raymond Jones (23) as he aitempi8 a slam dWtk.
Clerrulon defeated the Georgia Tecll Yellow JaAlkets by a score of 118-M
on a Iaiit second jump shot In LittleJohn Coliseum. (AP laserJiholo).

Southern seventh,
Portsmouth eighth
•
•
In state ratings
•

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·Banks, the AlAW Division ill
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Year last season, is averaging 21.2
points this season and passed 2,00)
career points laSt week.

Mrs. Manly Conird

FURNITURE .

in playoff payoffs for Miami· s first
three games and will get either
$18,!XKJ or $36,!XKJ moredependingon
who wins Sunday's contest.
Those payoffs are double what
they used to be before the sevenweek strike. What's more, tl\e new
contractprovidesforseverencepay
and fixed minimums, making Den
Render's return a financial windfall . His minimum salary, as a
result of the settlement is $140,!XKJ.
His severence, should he retire after
Sunday's game, will be another
$140,001. When he retired originally,
his severance wa s $0. _
.

CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Quarterback Joe Thelsmann wU) carry an
· extra title wben he leads the
Wasllington Redskins against the
Miami Dolphins Sunday in the ·
SuperBcwl.
. The former Not:I:e Dame star was
named Monday ~s the Man of the .
Yearinl!m in the National Football
Leaguec
. The award , administered by the
Pro Football Hall of Fame and
sponsored by Miller High Life Beer,
Is determined on the basis of a
player's contributions to the community as well a s for his playing
excellence.
The other finalists were linebacker Reggie Williams. of the
Cincinnati Bengals, wide Fiver
James Lofton of the Green Bay
Packers, defensive tackle Marty ·
Lyons of the New York Jets and
pla€e-kicker Rolf Benlrschke of the
San Diego Chargers.
Theismann, in his ninth NFL
season, guided the Redskins to an
8-1 record In the strike-shortened
1982 season. Washington's record
was the'bestinthe NatlonalFootball
Conference.
During the season, Thelsmann
won the NFC passing titiewitha91.3
ra ling. He completed 161 of 252
passes for 2,033 yards and 13
touchdowns.
. Off the field , Theismann was a
member of the Corporate Board of
Childrens Hospital National Medical Center, where his daughter once
underwent open-heart surgery. ,
Along with· Nancy Reagan and
former White House press secretary James Brady, he wasco-hostof
a program for orphaned children.
He also served as a club spokesman
for a promotion that helps Special
Olympics and Childrens Hospttal.

Meigs freshmen, 8th graders win .

flrst-plact• votes In pan-ni ~ . rf't'Onis
and total polnt.s. Potnts bosro on :.!0- l!l-IK·
1 7- 16- l ~ H- l.l- 12 - 11 - 1 0.9-R- 7..0.!;..4-l-2-1:

Winter Drapery Sale

This year you're faced whh over 100 changasln the tax
laws and forms. Old you know that working married
couples may deduct up to $1 , 600 for the first time?
There's even a new entry for charitable deductions on
the 1040A ahon form. And that' a just the beginning!
We know every change on every form.
.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio \AP )
Lorain King held onto its big lead in
Class AAA, but Willard In Oass AA
and St.Henry in CI,ass A we re
Involved In close battles today In
The Associated Press' weekly Ohio
boys high school basketball ratings.
King, unbeaten In 13 games this
season. earned 286 points among the
large schools, good for a fiS.point ·
lead over new runnerup Wa rren
Western Reserve (12-0) . Dayton
Dunbar, second a weekagolnClass
AAA, was upset at Toledo Scott and
tumbled to elghtll place this week.
Wllland, beaten only by Class
AAA Mansfield Senior in 13 games
this winter, had 225 llOints to pace
the Class AA poll. However, the
Crin1son Flaslles were only 18
points ahead of Coldwaler and
Columbus Whitehall, tied for second
place.
Whitehall, third a week ago,
bumped off Gahanna and Hillard,
two OassAAA teams, to pull even
with Coldwater, idle last week.
Willard posted victor ies over Norwalk and Bucyrus,
'
The closest race in the balloting
by astatepanelofsporiswrltersand
broadcasters was In Class A. ·
St.Henry (12-0) owried a 247-244 lead
over runnerup Delphos St.John's
(13-n).

St.Henry knocked off New Knoxville 74-62last week while St.John's
defeated Rockford Parkway 86-48
and ClassAA Van Wert92-67.
In Class AAA, Canton McKJnley
moved up one spot to third with
Cincinnati Mount Healthy fourth ,
Akron Central-Rower fifth, East
Cleveland Shaw sixth, Dayton
Dunbar seventh, Wintersville ninth
and Middletown, a newcomer to the
Top Ten, taking over the No.lO ~pot.
.l n Class AA, Oak Harbor, Akron
St.Vlricent-St.Mary and Columbus
,Bexley were fOurth, !tfth and sixth
again with Wellsville seventh,
Portsmouth eighth, Clrclev1lle
'ninth and Youngstown Rayen lOth.
.It was Circleville's first appearance
of the season in the Top Ten.
In Class A, New Washington

Buckeye Central held onto to No.3
with Ottoville and Old Washington
Buckeye Trail tied for fourth,
Kalida sixth , Racine Southern
''seventh, Anna eighth, ·B ucyrus
Wyntord nintll and Moga~ore lOth.

High school ratings
COL UMBUS. OhiO f AP I -

How a stat&lt;'

~ nl'l of ~IDJ1s

ranks

()hK)

wri!Prs and br0adcastf'r5
ltiR:h school bask('tbutl !C'arns
lor 'TIV' A.'-.~laTC'd Pn:&gt;ss

this w['('k
tnanl(' ol S('l'aJ is . wun·lffi1 z'(l('()h:IS a nd
JXIInl!'i l:
1. Lorain Kln~. l.'J.&lt;l \fti points
2, .W&lt;J !Tt'n W&lt;'Ster n Rt 'Sl'I Vf', 12-U, 2l fl

.'\. Canton MC'I&lt;Jn l('y. n 1. 1M
4, Clrrlnnall Mount Hea lth;.·. 14-{l, J;JR
~1, Alrr'Cin Cl'n,t ral · H~w. 11·1. 1~
t:. East Ck'\•('la nd Sh.1w. 12-ll, 142
7. D;.yron Dunba r . lH llH
~.

Columbus Non hluM. 12-1, 91

9, Wini!'I'SV\lk'. 1:.!·1. .l li
10. M ldd ~ 1 own . 10.2. :r1

OHr r SC'hooL'i 1'('('('\\in£ 10 or

mort'

No..I

Ra.\-' 17. Hi. Man.&lt;:l k&gt;ld

~,nlor

IIi. 17, t,o.

ra in Sr-niof l·t IR Canton Tlmkl•n 11. 19
difo 1. Lima Sr-nior and Tolf&gt;do ~r.l 11 .
21
!11&lt;'1, Fairfk'kl and
Clt'\'f'ia nd
St . J{)!;l'lph 10.

.

c ·u·~ .t. ;M

1, Willard, J.2·1. 22'i
2 t tk'l , r otdw;:H('r,

\~ 1. and

Columbus

Whltl'hi.IU. l.UI, 2m .
-1 , Oak Harbor·. ! H ). l!Jl
!i, Aluun SL Vincrni·SI. Mmy, 10.1. 1-111
ti. Colurnbw; B£oxlf'Y. 1-1·1. 121

7, Wl'lls\11](&gt;. 12{1, llH
X. PQrw nouth, C! ·2, ffi

9. Cin·k·vlllt•. 11 ·2. :\1
10. YounJC~own Ra ~·m. 9-.1. l1
Othl' r ,WmL'&gt; m:'('IVIrlJ!: 10 or tnOI"C'
points: 11. lor-d in CaiOOlk' 18. 12. Mllk.•r ·
~

Wrst Holrnl's :!G. 1.1. Lmrastcr

Union l!l H tllf&gt; l, Bl&gt;U('\IU{',
MasSUJon Tusta~· and Gira rd 17. 17, Ham ·
Uton Rem 16. 18 U ~L Zdfk&gt;S\i ltr Mit)'·
Jo~a irl'k'kl

svltk' aro Sfrubmvllk' l!'l. :n HI&lt;"L Pnl·
ncsvUif&gt; Harvry and McCtllmPI!ov lllt• Mor·
,R..t n 13. 22. OM.•r land Un\V('nlt~' 12. 2.1
Ilk'! ,' Wrst Millon Mlllon·UniOn a OO Nl'lsoovlll('.York n . 2';, Man lru! Fc&gt;ny 11~
MA'ti,A
1. St. Hl'rtry, 12-fl, :U7
2. IX&gt;lp~ St. JOhn's, l.l-0, 2a.t
:t. Nt·~· Wm!lhinxton Burkf&gt;yf' Cf'ntml. 12·

0. Z.!:l
4 HIP!, OltoviiiO, 12-fl, ond Old W!lShlt\j:l ·

ton Rud«':O'l'TI·alt , 12·0. 15fl
6. Kalida, 13·1, l2H
7, RaC'ifl(&gt; Souttv&gt;m, tn. ~
~. Anna. \ 2·1, !10

9. Bu&lt;"YNS Wynford. 11·2. 00
10, M~dof"(' , U -2, 44
Other S('hools I'E'l't'l \'~ 111 or morp
polnts : 11. Prcl&gt;Jcs 28. 12! Frt'-cpol1 Lakrland 'li. IJ, Glallst('f 2'J . J.l, Mlddk&gt;to"''n
Ff'nwi('k l!l. 1~ . &amp; •awr Eu sll'm lR. lti,
Cortland Milpkwood 17. 17, Za t'lt'S'Ii llr
Rosl'c'rans 14. 18, YPiklw Sprl~ 1:!. J9,
Chilllroth!' Flugf'l 11 . I) ttlrt , Columbus
A.cadMn,Vand MC'Dona ld 10.
·1

By The Associated Press
UCLA, Indiana and North Carolina kept the top three spots today in
The Associated Press college basketball poll, while a loss to
previously unbeaten Arkansas allowed five m embete of last week's
Top Ten to move up one notch.
In a nationwide poll of ro sporis
writers and broadcasters, UCLA
grabbed 28 first-place votes and
1,146 points, and Indiana had 25
first-place votes and 11 fewer points
than the Bruins. Last week, the
Hoosiers trailed UCLA by only eight
points.
North Carolina stayed in third
with 1,004 'points and five first -place
ballots.
Nevada-Las Vegas, the only
NCAA Division I school with no
losses, and Memphis Sta t.e got one
first-place vote each and took the
fourth and fifth spots in the poll with
974 and 905 points, respectively.
They each jumped one spot from
last week's Top 20 as Arkansas lost
to Houston 75.00 and fell from fourth
toNo. l2.
Also moving up one place were
No. 6 Virginia, No. 7 St. John's and
No. 8 Louisville.

.

D~P ~M.

ANNOUNCES THE .
REOPENING OF HIS

Pomeroy, Ohio

.,

An SVAC make-up contest and
two non-league battles highlight
tonight's action in the Southern
Valley AthleUc Conference.
Eas tl!rn takes Its winless record
to Hannan Trace for a make-up
gBIII-e postponed !rom last Friday
nlgl)t. Coach Mike Jenkins' Wlld'cats, small but scrappy, own a 7-6
overall record and 2-3 league slate.
The Wildcats dumped Symmes
Valley, 62-00 in their last outing, a
week ago.
Meanwhile, . Eastern has an
overall mark of O-i2. Although the
Eagles· have . been In most of tlleir
games, they llave still come up .
short at the buzzer. In SVAC action,
Coacll Dennis E!clllnger's crew is
0-5.
Non-conference engagements
lind Adena ~ Ross County vlsltlDg
North Gallia and Soutllwestem
going ·i l Wahama.
Coach Bruce Wilson's North
Gallla Pirates have posted live
vlctortes since · Cbristmas. North
Gallla dropped Southwestern, 67-57,
last Fri:lay evening. ·
• Meanwhile, Southwestern Sllffer-

Rounding out the ·first 10 were
Houston, which leaped from 14th to
ninth with Its victory over Arkansas, and Kentucky, 11th a week ago.
The Second Ten is VUlanova,
Arkansas, Missouri, Iowa, Georgetown, Minnesota, lllinois State',
Syracuse, Wake Forest and Oklahoma State.
·Tillnois State, which improved its
record to 14-1 by beatlngThlsaGl-55,
and Wake Forest, 13-2, were not ·
ranked last week. They replaced
Virgtnla Tech, which lost to Virginia
and Tulane, and Auburn, whiCh lost
to Vanderbilt.
~t 'week's Second Ten was
Kentucky, Missouri, VUlanova,
Houston, Syracuse, Minnesota, Virginia Tech, Oklahoma State, Georgetown and Auburn.
St. John's 71).61 victory over
VUlanova Monday night came after
the votes were cast. Missouri
dropped from 12th to 13th after
losing to Marquette In, overtime
Sunday, Iowa slipped from lOth to
14th with a two-point defeat to
Wisconsin, Syracuse fell from 15th
to 18th after losing to St. John's and
Oklahoma Slate tumbled from No.
18 to 20th after a 21-point loss to
Missouri,
·

ing from a long losing streak, plays
Wahama which broke Its only
losing string Satunday night by
tripping Meigs ; 65-59, In an
Friday's sclEdule has Eastern at
overtime. • North Gallla at Kyger
Southern;
Creek, and .Hannan Trace vlsiis
Southwestern.
On Saturday night, !;outllern goes
to Logan lor a big game agalns t the
SEOAL Chieftains,
TEAM

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
W I

P

11 3 9ofT 783
7 6 6!B 817
5 7 l!l'7 675
c 9 7:r&gt; 756
' 0 12 ~~ 11)6

Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace
Nol'lb Gallla

Southwestern
Eastern

SVACONLY

Southern
Kyger CrEek

6 0 161 327

Southwestern
HaMan Trace
North Gallla

3 3 3.'50 367
2 3 2of1 345
2 I 341 !157

Ea. tern

0

I 2 109 339

5 234

JORDAN FOR TWO- Nonh Caronna's Mlcllael Jordan, 23, goes'
lor two points against Georgia State's Joe Brus,left, and Eric Ervln,l4,'
during Monday nlgllt's game played In Chapel Hill, N.C. Jordan scored
16 points to help the number tllree ranked Tar Heels'to a 9~55 win over
the Panthers. (AP Laserphoto).

Xavier tops Loyola
· CINCINNATI (AP) - Junior
guard Anthony Hicks scored .31
points, 24 In the second half, as
Xavier Unive rsity wrested first
place in· the Midwestern Cities
Confernce defeating Loyola of
Chicago84-78 in a college basketball
game Monday night.
.
Xavier, 11-2 In its best start since
1958, Is undefeated In four conference games. Loyola, 9-6, dropped to
3-1 in the conference. They had been
tied for the.conference lead .
Xavier built a 16-polnt leadof6044
before Loyola , led by 6-foot:5
forward Frederick Hughes, with 26
points, started its assault.

Wabama .
Friday - Eastern at Southern; Ncrth
Gallta at Kyga- Creek, and Hannan Trare at

-···· ......._

·'

1.oa11 10 ualarquelly /VIID lnlurlliolwz.~e~w
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19 W. Washinaton St. Professional Bldi.. Athens, OH.

,.

Second Ten

Darrell Walker had 28 points and
five steals as Arkansas rebounded
from a 15-polnt loss to Houston by
beating Texas.
Walker hit 11 of 14 shots from the
field, while ba~kcourt pariner Alvin
Robertson added 14 points on 6-of-9
shooting.,Robertson had six steals.
The Longhorns, who got 23 points
from Bill Wendlandt, shot 66
percent from the field, but turned
the ball over 27 times and shot 31
percent from the free throw line.
Hank Comley had 13 points and 10
rebounds to pace llllnois State to Its

NobOdY can prt'romtecDI"+t your

PODIATRIST OFFICE ·
,.

Top Ten
North Carolina won its 12th
straigllt game after a 3-3 start as
Michael Jordan scoredl6 points and
freshman Brad Daugheriy 15
against Georgia State.
The Panthers tried to counter the
Tar Heels' height advantage with a
zone defense, but North Carolina
blistered the nets with 73.7 percent
field goal shooting in the first half to
take a 61-35 lead, North .Carolina
eventually led by as much as 95-54
late in the game.
Chavelo Holmes led all scorers
with 20 points for Georgia State.

Four S VA C teams play tonight

(

DR.
M.'K. FUGATE,
'
.

n-74 victory. DeU Curry scored 22
points to lea d the Hokies, who fe:ll
from ·the polt released today af(f.r
losing two game" last week.
·
. Auburn, ra nked 20th Mond&lt;(y
night but an absentee from today's
pcll;lost ~ T7 tQ Tennessee as Da le
E llis scored :l6 points for the
Volunteers.
1n other games, It was Clemson
58, Georgia Tech 56; Mississ ippi 64,
Alaba ma 63; Mississippi State 00,
Louisia na State 65; South Carollha
85, Va nderbilt71; NewMexlco Sta:te
72, India na State 70 in overtime ;
Brigllam Young 73, Air Force 61;
Texas Tech 54, Rice 50 in Qvertime
and Utah 79, Colorado Sta te 58.

position ~

points:

II, Toli'dO !\t, F n uw ls ' 26. 12,
MansfM•Id MalaOOr ?&gt;. 11. Tol(do lhi"'!JI:ol·
'!1.. 1-1. Worthlnl!lon :Kl. 15. Bay \'li la ~

matter who starts the game, but · eighth straight victory, including
who finislles It."
·
six in a row in the Missouri Va lley
St. John's also gota blgboostfrom
Conference.
The Redbirds spotted Tulsa a 19-8
Em Wennlngton, a 7-foot reserve
lead, but roared back with 10
center, who delivered a clutch
straight points to cut the deficit to
three-point play giving the Redmen
one. Illinois Sta te managed a 28-27
a 56-53 lead with4: 54 remaining.
halftime lead despite shooting only
St. .John's leading scorer, Chris
41
percent from the field in the first
Mullin, was held to two points In the
20 minutes and its 8-2 streak in the
first half, when VUlanova led 37-35.
first six minutes of the second half
The sophomore guard hitallofhislO
free throws in the second half and .allowed the Redbirds to cruise to
victory.
finiShed with 14 points.
Other Garnes
Stewart Granger scored 18 points
Virginia Te&lt;;h , ranked 17th at the
fQr VUlanova, which got 16 from
time of Monday night's game,
Pinone and 15 from Ed Pinckney as
outscored
Southern M!Sslsslppl13-0
the Wildcats outshot St. John's 55
percent to 45,
·
in the last five minutes to claim a

I

•
•
UCLA maintains

505E. Main

Ph. 992-2094
Ftont end Alignrnenl Moot Cars

. . EFFECTIVE JAN.. 25,
1983
.

CORIER
I,

1 They led the league in total
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
decade ago, they were the Nodefense, allowing 256.9 total yards
Names, a crew of mostly anonym- . per game artd their yield of justll4.1
ous defenders proud of their lack of
per game passing also was the
glamour, who merely led the Miami
NFL's best in that department.
Dolphins to 16consecutlvevictories.
Containing the B's will be the job
The last hurdle for the perfect
of Washington's offensive line,
season was Super Bowl vn. All the
wlllch has lagged Itself the Hogs,
Bill Stanfills, Nick Buonicontis, · treasuring their own anonymity
Jake Scotts and Dick Andersons had
mucll thewaytheMiamiNo-Names
to do to make National FootbaU
did In 1972. The senior member of
League history was beat the
that crew is 34-year-old tackle
Washington Redskins.
George Starke, the only Redskin left
No way, said the oddsmakers,
from Super Bowl Vll.
who made the No-Names threeComing back turned out to be a
point underdogs , But Miami won
most profitable decision for Den
14-7, despite the Ill-advised, imHef!ler. He'salreadyearned$34 ,!XKJ
promptu passing of place-kicker
Garo Yepremian.
Perfect.
Now, 10 years later, the Dolphins
RACJNE,--The Meigs Marauder
are back in the Super Bowl and, just
freshmen
broke away from a 20-20
for old times sake , Washington has
half-time
deadlock to defeat the
shown up, too.
graders 40-27 llere
Southern
ninth
This time, the odds-makers Uke
night.
Monday
' tbe ·Dolphins' chances better. This
In winning their third straight
time , Miami is the three-point
game,
Coach Tim Saunders' crew
favorite.
upped
their
record io 7-5. The Meigs
"It's deja vu ," said guard Bob
mentor proclaimed this the little
Kuechenberg, who was clearing
Marauders
finest performance of
tacklers away lor LaiTy Csonka, ·
the
year.
Jim Kilck and Bob Griese in 1972
Shawn Baker paced Meigs with a
and performs the same function for
14 while ever-Improving
game-high
Andra Franktin, Tony Nathan and
Lee
Powell
dropped iii 11. Other
David Woodley now .
scorers were Chris Shank with nine,.
Kuechenberg, 35, and defensive
Brian Himdashelt fotlr, and Chris
end Vern Den Hender, 34, are the · Kennedy had two.
only members of the Class of '72who
Mark Jarrell led Southern with
showed up for the reunion in
seven while Scott Wickline and Jay
uniform. And DenHerder,oneofthe
Bostick each had six, Jeff Frank
No-Names, almost didn't make It. ·added four, and Keith Heath had
He tried to retire this year but was
four .
coaxed back by Coach Don Shula to
Meigs outpointed Southern 18-11
back up Kim Bokamper, one of
from the field while each te11m was
Miami's Killer B's on defense.
four of 10 from the foul line.
The Killer B' s are this year's
Meigs's next game is Wednesday .
version of the No-Names, They
at home against the strong Athens
earned the tag because So many of
freshmen at 5: :JJ.
them have names begining with the
Meanwhile, In Meigs Junior High
letter B - Bokamper, Bob Baumbasketball action here Monday
hower and Doug Betters up front,
night, the 8th graders romped over
linebacker Bob Brudzinski and
Jackson 55-31 while the 7th graders
safeties Glenn and Lvle Blackwood.

in ttK&gt; A.sso6
atcd Pws..o; rot ~ baskf'tl);t\1 !XJU . with

Nixon

CaHiornla. 'lbelsman and the rest of t~,l\.edsklns are In
Calllomla to begin preparation lor itext Sunday's Super Bowl against the Miami Dolphins. ( AP

Oddsmakers favor Dolphins

B)' "-oclatH P're!oi!i

Ru.~.~

lng at his hotel Monday night in ~

Laserphoto )-

ilx' Top

: ''They shouldn't worry about the
·. time. There's not going to be any
.:dead time with people standing
'· around. And they can play golf if
:they want after 4 o'clock."

.CUSTOM DRAPERY
•BEDSPREADS
•1" IINI-BLINDS

RING AROUND TilE QUARTERBACK - Washington Redsldns' quarterback Joe Thelsman calls
to a teammate as he tries to work his way through a
group of autograph seekers and admirers alter arrlv-

College's top 20

" I missed four or fivedayswhen I
first hurt it beca~I couldn't raise
my arm. l probably should have
stayed out two weeks but I thought I
cbuldn't help the team on the bench
and that made it worse. It affected
my right-handed hitting," Oest.er
said.
,, ,
Nixon's first training camp as
rrianagerwlll be heavyonrejletltion
and longer hours, he said, adding
: that the team will practice from 9: .Jl
&gt;a .m. through atleast 2 p.m.
, · " It's probably a hour or an
&lt;hour-and-a-half difference" than
··fomier Manager John McNamara
.· worked the team, Nixon said. "U
·: thingsaren'tgoingright, we maybe
:out there a little longer. The
: response has been positive.

free throws help Rednte~ top Villanoy~

Theismann
is NFL's
man'ofyear

Today's

LOS ANGELES (AP) - It ought to be a wha le of aSuperBowl- this pro
football showdown between Mla m j's a nonymous "Killer B's" and all those
cleated anonymities from D. C. who keep saying, "We get no respect."
Outside of Joe The!s mann and big John !l.!ggins lt 's a 2-1 bet that \he first
person you meet on the street ~a n't na m e ~mother player on the Wa shington
·
Redsklns roster.
Y{'t they '11 be in the big one at Pasadena next Sunday with the best record
in thP Nationa l Football League - 11-1 overall, counting playoffs, almost
perfect .
The .Miami Dolphins, who had a perfect 17-0 reo;ord in 1972, are a
developing team after a decade of frustration and, .as·the Redskins, are a
surprise guest a t the big pariy.
- Everybody was looking for Dallas' computerized robotS, Los Angeles'
rambunctious, transplanted Raiders or possibly San Diego's high· scoring
Chargers on Dan FoutS ' iron wing.
But, no, it ·s Mia mi and Washington , and fans could not-have a sked for a
more intriguing matchup .
,
Take the Redskins. Stripped of draft choices by George Allen, whose
philosophy was " the future is now,' ' they have been puttogetherwith bailing
wire and adhesive tape.
Twenty·nine members of the roster have been assembled in the last .two
seasons under Coach Joe Gibbs, 15 of them free agents, others players
scrounged from near the bottom of the college draft list, largely Ignored.
No big stars. No Heisman Trophy winners. No prtma donnas. Just a
bunch of guys who have found their destiny amid the memorials and
politicos of the na tion 's capital.
Two men have been largely responsible for this sudden resurgence Bobby Bea tha rd, the general manager who was director of player
, personnel for the Dolphins in Miami's halcyon 70s, and Gibbs, a pleasant,
deeply religious guy whom national TV caughtonhiskneesleadinghist.eam
. in reciting the Lord's Prayer after last Saturday's startling upset victory
ove r Dallas.
Bea thard is the architect. He got the pieces and put them together. Gibbs
Is the master mecha nic. He gets the wheels spinning and does the
motivating.
Gibbs wasn ·t surprised to find his Red skins a three-point undeidog on the
gamblers' books. That's the way it's been all year. The smart' guys keep
saying the Redskins are a freak or a re lucky. No way they should be doing
wha t they're doing.
"People look at Miami differently than they look at us," Gibbs says With
mixed hurt and resignation .
: Don't discount the Redsklns. There is a mystical quality about them as if
they've Ia tched their destiny to a star a nd a lot of little gremlins are working
:invisibly in their beha lf .

25, 1983

a.aus.M&lt;e

.'

)

Pomeroy, Oh.

I

�------

------~-

Tuesday, January

25, 1983

Prope~y

The Daily Sentinel

•By The Befid

Tuesday, January

Page-6

ROO-FitlG

Can women get ·every attribute.·in one man?
nm soon got aver
the disappointment 81\d dkln~ say
much about It later. But similar
thlng!l have happened In the past
and I'm atrald ,they may happen
again. It Isn't that Ollie Is selfish or
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I'm going with a man that I like a lilconslderate - he just doesn't
lot. So does nm, my slx-year-&lt;&gt;ld realize that chlldren's "little proson and the feeling is mutual, jects" mean a lot to them. Should I
except;that Ollie (my guy), doesn't tell hlm? - NOT SURE .
..
understand the Importance of DEAR N.S.:
Since you three "like one another
promises to a ci)Ud
Take tast week: Ollle had told a lot" it's only fight that you share
Ttm he'd be at the championship per!Dnai feeltngs.
By all means tell Olne that a
hockey game (made up d. first and
chlld's
"IIttieproJOCts" areveryblg
second graders). Then a friend got
tickets to a big tee hockey game on to a little boy. ~SUE
that same day and Invited Olne' DEARN.S.:
But do it in a way that will Ollie
along.
Olile figured Ttm would under· feel important as Tim's friend, not
stand that the big game was criticized as a no-show father
special, with tickets very hard to figure. - HELEN
get. A slx-year-oidlsn'iverygood at
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a
reasoning. Tim was really crushed
because he'd told the other kids subject for discussion, two·
(whose fathers always showed up) generation style? Direct your ques·
that "his good friend Ollle" was !Ions to either Sue or Helen Bottel or both, If you want a combination
coming.
I don't want to make an Issue of mother-daughter answer - In care
this or Ollie will think we' re getting of this newspaper.))

Where In the world can I find a
perfect·comblnat!on man w)lo
would really ·twn me on yet could
make a grea( parent? -WOKING
DEAR WOKING:
Are you a "perfect-ccimblnaton"
woman? Who Is?
So find a man you can love, and If
he tsn 't 100 percent !deal on all
counts, well, neither are you. HELEN
LOOKING:
And remember, nice guys are
like fine wine: The~ Improve with

aglf· I know - I rnarrted one; am
the daughter r1 another! -:'" SUE
I'll 9r!nk to that! - HELEN

'

Calendar
1lJESDAY
~

SUTI'ON TOWNSIDP Trus·

tees will meet at the residence of

the clerk Tuesday at 7 p.m . Appropriations tor 1983 will be ,
approved.
POMEROY - The junior and
senior American Legion Auxil·
!ary of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, will meet Tuesday at
the hall. The program Is on
national security and members
are asked to take gifts for
veterans.
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter
17, Ohio Association of Public
Employes will meet at ·7: 30
Tuesday at Meigs Junior High
• School cafeteria.
POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs ~ ­
Sharon Stewart and Patty Circle
will have the program, and
Margie Lawson and Belinda
Johnson will serve the
refreshments.
HARRISONVILLE - HarM·
sonvtlle Senior Citizens will
meet In regular session at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the townhouse. New
olficers will be Installed.
Members' dues will be collected.
In the event of Inclement
weather the meeting will be
cancelled.
POMEROY - Bend 0' the
River Garden Club will meet at
hOme of Mrs. Ben PhllSon at 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday tor a prograrp by
Esther West on "Knowing Yo)ll'
Evergreens.·'
· POMEROY - Meigs Area
Holiness Association wtll hold its
January rally on Tilesday at
7:30p.m. at Middleport Church
of the Nazarene. The public Is
invited.
RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education will meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. In the high
school cafeteria.
POMEROY - Meigs Area
Holiness Association will hold Its

January rally on Tuesday at
Middleport Church of the Naza·
rene at 7:30 p.m. The public is
Invited to attend.

WEDNESDAY
WNG BOTI'OM -Long Bot·
tom Community Association
will meet Wednesday at 7: 00
p.m. In the community building.
PAGEVILLE - Revival In
progress at Pagevtlle FreeWtu
Baptist Church. Evangelist is
Clouts Vanover of Columbus.
Services are at 7:30 nightly.
There will be singing each
evening.

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Commandery 24 Knights Temptar will meet Wednesday at
7:30p.m.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Women's Fei·
lowshlp, Meigs County
Churehes of Christ, Zion Church,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Devotions
to be given by the Rutland
Church. Paul Gerard wtll speak
on self-protection In the horne.
POMEROY - Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapier, Beta Sigma
Phi ·Sorority, 12: 30 p.m. lun·
cheon at Meigs 11m, Thursday.
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet Thursday at
the high school at 7 p.m. A final
decision on whether band stu·
dents band students wtll go to Six
Flags OVer Canada In April will
be held. Ali members urged to
attend.
POME~l.OY

- Free Clothing
Day will he held at The Salvation
Army, Butternut Ave., In Pomeroy from 9 a.m. until noon
Thursday. All area residents In
need of clothing are welcome. '
MIDDLEPORT Y9uth
League will meet Thursday at 7
p.m. at Middleport Vlltage Hall.

Astrograph
January 26, 1983
Conditions affecting your work or career will be improved this
coming year. You'll have opportunities to rise to greater heights.
However, you must be prepa~ to work hard for what you get.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Do not procrastinate today In taking
care of matters which could enhanee your security or add to your
resou~ces . Time and tides are your allies.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) When dealing with others today your
take-&lt;:harge qualities are likely to surface. However, none should be
offended by the methods you'll use to guide them.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Your greatest assets today are your
persistence and tenacity . This is the time to clean up situations which
have seemed too trying to tackle.
TAURUS (Aprll20-May20) Your loyalty Is numbered among your
many splendid qualities. Today, a pal who may need your support wtll
see this a !tribute In action,
. .. G~ (Ml!.y 2l.June 20) Give vent to your ambitious urges
today. Substantial rewards c~n be reaped from sitUations tor which you
are prepared to do work. '
.
CANCER (June 21.July 2%) You could be confronted by some
.challenging deve!OpJTI•nts today, but don't let this disturb you. It's what
you need to bring o• the best that's In you.
LEO (July 23-A~g. 22) To be most effective today, you might find It
necessary to delegate what needs doing. You'll know how to motivate
others.
VIRGO (Au~:·. :IS-Sept. 22) ln your one-to-one-dealings with friends
tod~y be fair, but also be firm. Specifically request certain concessions
tf you feel you're entitled to. them.
. .
.
·
LIBRA (Sept. %3-0d. 23) OVerdue rewards or acknowledgement
. for your efforts where your work or career Is concerned ~ld begin to
trickle In today.
··
· .
..
SCORPIO (Oct. U.Nov , :!) Serious matteri! should be taken
serioUsly today, but also try to temper your outl&lt;!Ok with optimism. A
dash of hope will make "things go smoother. .
.
·
SAGriTARIUS (Nov, 23-Dec. 21) Owing to another's kindness, a
umtted opportunity may come your way today. Don't discount it, It can
be enlarged upon . . ·
.
'
CAPIUOORN (DeC •.Z2.Jan. 19) It shouldn't be difficult today to
awaken an Interest In others for Ideas or plans about which you're
enthUSia.stic, even ~gh they may Initially reJect them.

'

Rutland Garden Club
Robert First will talk on soU
conservation at the Monday night
meeting of the Ruu.ind Garden Club
to beheldatthehomeofMrs. Ralph
Turner, Monday at 7:30p.m.
"Inviting Birds to Your Home"
will be the topic presented by Mrs.
Dorothy Woodard and "Guides for
Geraniums" will be given by Mrs.
Dayton Parsons. Mrs. Binda Diehl
will be co-hostess for the meeting.
For roll call memQers will name
song birds. Gardening tips for
February will be given by Miss
Ruby Diehl.

CCL
"Dear Abby" letters written by
the members were used lor a group
discuSSion at the Jan. 7D meeting of
Middleport Child Conservation
League held at the home ri Peggy
Harris.
Suste Soutsby presided at the
meeting which opened with the
Mother's Prayer and the pledge.
Mrs ..Harrts for devotio'!S read "A
Little Pool of Quietness." Ann
Col burn thanked the club . for
flowers sent to her wh lie
hospitalized.
Arrangements were . mdae to
provide valentine gifts for a needy
child. Carla Soutsby wtll be In·
stalled as a new memberofthe club
at the February meeltng. Both the

hostess and traveling prizes were
won by Ann Colburn.
Janet Dully and Peggy Houda·
shelt were hostesses and served
refreshments to those named and
susH! Abbott, Thelma Osborne,
Janet Duf!y, Eloise White, Helen
Blackston, Clarke Kennedy, Peggy
Houdashelt, and Nancy Morris.

YOUNG'S

.Bib~e

9tth dllltrtct representative which Includes GaDia, Melp lllld Aibeas Counlles, are, rlgllt, Nonnan 0. Weber and Raymond W. Larldil8, left, bollt or
TuMfS PlaiDs. Others attendlns were Mr. lllld Mrs. Henry BIDlter, Mr.
and Mrs. Roben Ma.Nt, Mr. and Mrs. John lhle and Mr. and Mrs. Nick
lhle.
'

Candy and coffee were served by
the hostess.
'

Star Garden

..,.,11

'

ELECTRIC

SERVICE'

For all your wiring I
needs; furnaces
repair' service and
installation.
Residential .
&amp; Commercial"
Ciill 742 •3195
3.7.1fc

SIDING

Sl Dl NG CO,

SAT. NIGHT

'"Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages" ,
Call tor free sidin~
· es.tima1es, '49·2801 or

EVERY

Ga!J~!

PHONE
992-2156
Oaillr SentiMI C'-ssititi Dept.
~-

-

,

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21

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·· - - · _ .• ..,._.

RIVER BEND APARTMENIS

tDJSING ·fOR lHE ELDERLY
Now ....tina 25 -bedroom ~~rtment units,
ntltlng tor 30 peo
Of your lldltlltell Income
under the Dep,lrtment Of Housing &amp; Uf'Nn
Denhlpment Sedlon I progr1m. All utilities
lncludld.
.

*'

G)
t:... tn. .••

The follcming described item
will be oHered for sale 10 the
hi-gh~st bidder on th e premises

29th day of January. I 983 at
10:00 a.m.

1978 Dodge Aspen. Senal

Pflone .182-3121
New Haven, W. V.

No NL29H88323093. Terms

of sale. Cash . Seller reserves
the right to bid and the r ig ht to
reject any or all bids.

. ______ ~

- .

NOI'ICE OF
PUBUC SALE
ol Bank One of Pomeroy,
'Tuppers Pla1ns. Oh1o on the

v~--- ·-----~L-~.;;;._.

I

11 124. 25.

I

1 Curb Inflation 1I:
Pay Cash for . I Stilllinaer like 1 son&amp;,
I
the wondtrfullile ws had
lo1ether
Classifieds and ·1I ThOUih yoo've been aone so
lona,
you wero taken lro111 us
Save8 II
II Why
We don't fully underst1nd,
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel I
results. Money not refundable.

Nam•--------------Phon•-------------

'.

'.

.'
'

. I 1t. . , - - - - - I 12
1 13;
I

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SALE ON

30. ----,"---,--

31

32 '
33.

·
SPACE HEATERS

-~---

. 30,000

BTU
90,000 BTU
150,DOO
BTU

34 ·

35. _

Prices Start At

$}99 95

Mall This Coupon with R,tmiHance
The DIU II Sentinel
Ill Court St.
· . Pomirov, Oh. 45769
.

•

POMERO"'

II

' I ...... --------------~---~~~

'LANDMARK
_ _
614 992 2181

'

3-ll · tfc I '

26. 3tc

February 4. 1983 at 10 :00a.m.
a private sale w ill be held at the
offices of Central Trust Co. NA
of Middleport. Oh1o 1o sell for
cash the following collateral to
Wit: 1 1979 Dodge Magnum
XE .2 door spec1al Serial No.
XS22K9R131554 . Cent ral
TrustCo. NA Middleport Ohio
reserves the right to bid at this

Ph.

Chester, Ohio

OPEN 9 to'5 MON. thru

985-4269or985~382

SP£

L.
TRANSMISSION FILTER
AND FLUID CHANGE

0· n ly'319"
•
· '"'

.

PI!OBATE COURT OF
C...No. 23966

N011CE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDt:JCIARY

·

C:l f!rk

'Il l 11 . 18 25. 3!•

Associate

Home Ph. 742-3092

'VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

SALES &amp;SERVICE
· · u.s. Rt. ~o East

2707.

.•

.

.•

-=a--=P"'"'
ub-:-:lt'c- s=-a-ta_ _
··

~

&amp; Auction

.•

Guysville, Oh'io

~

Authorired John Deere,

oil

New Holland, Bush Hog
FatlflD~~r!~ment

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEf'lEE
PH. 992-27 2

~

WVa State Cha~pign Aucti·
oneer Rick Pearson'; E~.tates'

~

•

Farm Equipment
antiques, farm. housaholdlo: &gt;
Parts &amp;Service
Licensed Ohio-WVs . 304· ·:
1·3-tfc ' ,' 773-5785
or 304-773d
9185.
' I .,

--------..!.11' -:--------~'
~
Auction every Fri . night at .1

Conaigmonts of new and •
used merchandise always ;
welcome. Richard Reynolds ·•

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

THE DABBLE SHOP
I OPEN 9-5
CLOSED THURSDAY
PIASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
Check Our Spoic;alo For
The Month of January
DABBLE SHOP
251'h W. Main St
Pomeroy, OH,
12-24-1 ,..,_

Auctioneer. 276·3069 .

~

·

~Dozers

~

9

-Backhoes
~DUIIIP Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer

~

Wanted To Buy

:,

WA _NTED Tc;l BUY 01&lt;1 ':
f~rn1ture and Antiques of all :
kmds, call Kenneth Swai~ ,
446-3159 or 256-19671~ •
the evenings .
~

- Gas Lines

Sys1e111s
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
.
PH. 992 2478

-~ptic

~

Buying Gold. Silver, Plati· ·C
num , old coins, scrap ring~

1

&amp; s1lverware . Daily quotes •
available. Also coins &amp; coin·· ~

l-12·3 m~ d

'----------4-----'-----...J
r

suppliea fQr aa'le. Sprlnv-...~
' Valley
Valley Trading
Co .. Spring
Plaza, 446-8025
or :•

44 6·8026 .
:
We pay cash tor late modal ~
clean u•d cars .
~
Frenchtown Car Co .
~
Bill Gene Johnson
~
446·0069
,.. , ••
----~--- •'
Wonted to buy Square · :

COMPLETE
. 1 Kitchen Cabinets-;- Roof·
RADIATOR
ing - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
SERVICE
Patios - Sidewalks From tfle S1118llest Heater
New Construction .- Re·
Core to the lariesl Radiator:
modelit1 - Custom Pole
Radiator Specialist
Barns
NATHAN BIGGS
.
35 Yrs. Experience
"'HARLES SAYRE

POMEROY, OHIO

"

Dancing outfits . All sizes

·•

r:::6.':.sW woman ·•· c.ti

SMITH NELSON
AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding Co.
MOTO RS • INC •
Pomeroy, Oh.
Lo Bo Roullt 1H
Ph. 992-2174
I
ng ttom. 0 · 46743
·26-tlc
1
985·4193or992·3067
2
'-------.;.,;...Jj
._..__ _ _._ __..12""·20-lf~c..J

~

Will pay cash for used •~
mobile homes . Damages"' ..

rap_ossed or insuranc~ . ~
claims conudered . Call ,.
446-0175 .
;:

1----------j----------1 Old stoneware jars, jugs , :.:~
ALL STfEL

NEAR DEXTER.,.. 45 acres of ~round with all minerals, and
all fenced. Six room house wijh 4 bedrooms, 2 enclosed
porches, a huge bani wijh hay loft, and a garage with work·
sh~ . Asking $50,000.00.
. ·'

crocks. &amp; milk pitchers. also ' ·:
old w1cher baskets . Call ;•

MANLEY'S

&amp;

614-367·013B

SERVICE

PH. 992·3194
992-3305

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Bo• 54
Racine. On.
Ph. 614 -843-2591
·'
10-6-Hc

'

"CUT our
FOR FUTURE USE"

•

POMEROY + T.hree bedroo111 house, tV((! story, fireplace,
bath, gas hot Wiler, heat. $8,900.00. ,
REALTORS
H111ry E. Cltlmd, Jr., Gil. ........................... 992-6191
Jtm Tnntll ............................................... 949-2660
.Dottit TurMJ ................................................ 992-5692
Offtct ......................................._..................992-2259
.
· .. .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
'SERVICE

4761 . Weekdays 5 to 9

•

.

·:

••

Write : M .D . Miner, Rt . 4 ,"' ;:

· Pomeroy , Oh . Or 992 · · •
7760.
•

'' ----------

~old , si.lver, sterling , · :'
J&amp;welry, rmgs. old coin• &amp;~' .~
currency. Ed Bur.kett Barber ...
Shop, Middleport. 992·, ::
3476.
•

Pit 992·7583
or 992-2212

~~------- · ··

Want· to buy-standing pine _, ~

11 -11-Hc
I.

•

1

15 Y.-s Ettperience
GREG ROUSH

· PARTS liM SERVICE

Complete houaeholda .

'

ofloofq Work
""umiru~~ &amp; Vinyl Sidings

: ·:

.furniture. gold , silvef ·•
dollar~ •. wood .ice boxel ,' · ~
stone Jars. antique•. etc ,, ..

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
. ' New Homes - utensive
!Omodelill&amp; .

&lt;Rq•

4-$-tft

" .;

BEDS-IRON, BRASS , old

..~'::':..

...

~

1' · •

Wanted to buy ·tobacco ;:
poundage. Call Joe Call a't ' r•

1·5·1 mo.

· - •DIIh-

Wlllll

·~

•

9906 .

.Custom !'ole Bltlp.
&amp; Gmaos

,,

Standing timber . White oak, ·· . :
red oak. walnut , poplar . Any · ~
amount . Call " 614 · 388 -' l ~

or

o£1ecbic wor1&lt; '

. .,

weekend• 12 noon~to gpaa'
. ·~. ~
~ .
d eer hides and ginaeng and
~
trapping supplies . Rt . 2 , :
Athens.: Oh .
• .•

No Sunday Calls

SS5·l5Gl
All Makes

m
1..13

•

Gaorga Buckley. 614·664:

614-266·6024 .

POMEROY - Older home on Main St. that could be 2-3
apartments. Has 10 rooms, w~h 5-6 bedrooms, Ill baths,
and a block garage. $14,900.00.

' ••

I

Buy raw fur and beef hides

TRASH
Weekly trash pickups in
Middleport, Bradbury,
and Leading Cieek Area.
"You Call, We'll Ha~l."

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizts st~rt from 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'•6' Up
to 24'136'.
Insulate~ Do&amp; Houses.

A1\'tSTORYframehomewithaluminumsidintL dining room,
2 bedrooms, and ful basement, with 3 lois. Askin'6
$19,500.00.
POMEROY -large 2 story frame with 3 bedrooms, dining
room, huge lamil1 room, big foyer, nice level lot Insulated
and has storms. $31 ,900.00.

(L,_,.;:.;.;,.=;,;;,~,_-.J_ IIL---":-:---.:_---~--'--,...--~..J,

~

1

608 E. MAIN

A

· "'

Hartford Community .•
Center . Truckloads of ne~ •'
merchandise every week '·

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING- lot is block to block- andJs leiHll.lar.
shille trees, pretty shrubbery and unusual dormers make
this home picturesque. It has 3 bedrooms, ful basemen!,
~rage apartment. and a garage with a workshop.
$5l,!DO.OO.
SYRACUSE- Here is a pr~erty that sltoukl be sold. Ill
story older home with 3·5 bedrooms, two IOOxlOO lots in a
~oiJI nei~borhood. Owner wants an offer. Asking only
· 20,500. .
·

"'

Lost and Found

Lost: Dog, black and white ~
in Bald Knob area . 843· ,,

BOGGS

Associate

PH.992.2259

·

'-~--------f----------1 the

CHERYL LEMLEY

:=====::;:::;:;::::;:~;:::::;:===:::;=!

"

•

1

Pomeroy, Ohio 45760

Phone 742·3171

·

tfc

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

12·31-1 ""·

Anh&lt;·" E B,ck

Prohn iP .JrJkw/

~

l -14·

elnsulation
•Stonn Doors
•Stann Windows
•Raplecwoent Windows .
•New Roofing,_..

On J. rr1uary 4 . 198 3. rn ihr&gt; M n r ~ I S
Co 1rn1y Pr otxr1 f! Courl. C.1s11 Nn ,
23966. Mlry lr i B oo r~ ~ 1105 Gran1
S!reel. Mrfidi P, p o rl. Ot1r" 11 5760
wa s .:muomlnrl Mm il\l~ lr rlfn ~ ol lhf!
P.S iell ~ ol V1 0IP.I Hn r 1111r1f':-l riP.I:P.itSf!d.
1;)1fl o l 389 BP.ec h SlrP.el. Ml drtl!'!·
port Ohro 45760

:

,..
00

6

MEIGS COUNT'( OHIO
ESTATE OF VIOLET HARnNGEA. DECEASED

"

.Sears portable dishwasher·.~
Sea ra washer , T a pp 8 n ).
11
electric range. all ne&amp;d •
repairs . 304 ~ 676 · 5860 •; .
after 6 p m
•

Repair,
es. Tune-Ups, etc. . ,

lervica.available
J5J
.
.' · m~. Pd.

RESIDENTIAL and COMMERCIAL

. .

2266 .

SAT.

A:i
'll·. sofAuto

House calls and shop

(1) 23. 24, 25. 3tc

Puppies. Part 8 eagle and ~
part Shepherd. 304· 676- ""

·1

Antennelnstalation

sale.

~

Beautiful white dog, good ~
with children, very good .•
watch
dog,
grown.
-- full
-- -Call
- •:
446·3992.
•,

omeroy, ·

OawayneWiliems
8t Scottie Snith
Allmekeaandmodets

OFFICE and HOME - 992-5739

'

,.

TIVINSMISSION CO.
TIB W. Mlin
P
OH
AUTOMAJIC

SERVICE

George S. Hobstetter, Jr., 810ker

VELMA NICINSKY

·,
:

Part Bleck male Cock.er •

ANDTV.
S&amp;W
APPLIANCE

PUBUC NOTICE
Public
Notice
Noli co is hereby give n that on

HOBSTmER REALTY
. 215 MuiiMny Avenue

'~e

5 mixed bred puppies need
good home. Part German
Shepherd. 446-8196 .

1-:::::::;:;;:::;:=.::::=-tr===~=====;t;::::::::::::::::::::;j full
Spaniel
. has
had
all •hots,:
I·
grown.
Call
446-3992.
•

·u

I

'••

No Sunday Calls

tguns Only.

r,

· ANY PERSON who has '•
anything to give away and :
does not oflllr or attempt to •
offer any other thing for sole • ·
may place an ad In this:
column. Thoro will be no~
charge to the advertiser.
~

To Be Done Right and
. On Time
CALL 992 •6'l73
or 992·6206
1213011 mo.

·I

•

--------~

Now-Accepting New
Clients ·
L Rat
OW
es
15 Years Experience
All Wort Guaranteed

Real Estate General

But we don't doubt the worts
of God
Who 's wiser than mere mon.

Hehadtohlvtaneedlotyou
For he judps what you're
worth.
Address•-----------And to us you werun Ancel
.
Here upon this hrth.
•
1
1
Perh1ps tomorrow, ... be
1
.
called
1 Print one word In each
For we are growina oid,
I space below. Each In·
If we art. we'll walk in peace
tilfol or group of figures
To-ther. down the struts
I counts as a word. Coon!
•·
·1 name and address or
of cold.
1 Phone number if used. Wordol
Dad, ilom, and Family
1 You'll get beller result! --j-..:.j.:.:.:.:j....:.~-;,; I L . - - - - - - - - . J
1 i~iv~o~rlg:.·~~bese~~i::'e,..1~0~1~5 .)_~~~~~~...!
1 reserves the right 10 _
1.classify, edit or re/ect Tols
1any ad. Your ad wil be --+--1f--1--1f--1
Public Notice
I put in !fie properT·~o:_l:SL_J~~~~~~~
classification if you'll PROBATE COURT OF
1
• check the proper box
These cash rates
MEIGS COUNTY,"OHIO
I below.
.
include d_i_~ount
ESTATE OF CAROLYN SUE
1
....,
TRIPLETT. DECEA&amp;Eq
r
c ... No. 23974
I. ( ·l Wanted
I.
NOTICE OF
I ( l For Sale
APPOlNrMENT
1 · I I Announcement
17. - - ' - - - - - - - 1.
OF FIOUCtAiiV
1 I I For Rent
•
I'
On December 22; 1982. '"
18
t
· ----'....:..___ I the Mei gs County Probate
I
19, -'-- - - - -- I ·Court Case No 2397 4. Ernest
I I. - - - - - - - 20. - - - -- - - 1· Tr iplet!. 826 PrincelonAvenue.
2. - - - - ' - - - 21. - - - - - - - 1 East Liverpool, Oho 43920.
I 3.
1 was appointed Administrator of
22. - - - - - - - · the eState of Carolyn Suf;!
4. --------'-23. - - - - - - - 1 Tnpleu. deceased. late of 389
1
5
Will1ams Street Middleport
I · ----24. - - - -- -- 1· Oh1o 45760.
· I 6. - - - - ' - - - - 25. _ __ _ _ _ _ 1: ...
Raben E. Buck
I 7. - - - - - - - 26 . - - -- - - - 11!
Probate Judge/
I
•
Clerk
8. - - - - - 27. · - - - - - 25
(2 I I · 8 · 3 tc
11
1
·
I
1 9· ----~- 28 · - -- - -1 10. - - - - - 29. ----~

94~·2860.

____;.:..-=-;--::-:--.:..-=----;-----

Of

Write your own ad and ordt:r uy mal.l' 'With this

Gun shoot. Racine Guh '
1 p.m.Every
Factory
choked
guns
Club.
Sunday
starting•
only.
-IN_c_o_M_ET_A_
x_s~ER~V~IC_:.~ ·:
Federal end State incoma·
taxes . Quarterly roporta-, ·,
W-2 forms. Done by tappointment. 614-992· 2272•·
or see Wanda Eblinat41 000,
Laurel Cliff Rd ., Pomeroy. ,
Income Tax Service . Fed~;;:;:
&amp;. State . Wsltaca Russell ,:
Bradbury. Oh . 614-992-•
7228.
~
' Beginning and advanc~d ~
knitting classes starting Feb.':
2. For more information \
contact Sue Zirille614-992 -~

Public Notice

Public Notice
WITH LOVING MEMORIES
OF OUR SON
JOHN IICHIAL WARTH
On His 17th Birthday

12

1-3-lrm.

~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~lf=~~~~~~~~==l
[
A_......

Tile · Januacy Meigs County
. United Methodist Yout!l Bible Quiz

'

&amp;PM. 12 gouga only. Krimrc
Rd, off Rt . 218 . Jan. 29 ,
1983.
-

MILLER

BISSELL

FIRE DEPT.
Bas han 8Utlding
·

r.

I

111 C.ort St .. P-roy. Ollio 4~769

•'•
•

Larllentations, Wjn be avaUable at ·
the January quiz and may he
WUlbeheldat2p.m.onJan.30atthe
obtained after Jan. 30-from Mark
Pomeroy UnltedMethodtStClturch.
Flynn.
·
·
. The quiz will cover Hebrew and
... A commit~ will soon he formed
James. The quiz Involves children
to administer · the Bible Quiz.
aJid youth through the ageofi9. Only Anyone whow01ild be willing to help
JNSTAII,ED ~ Bret Showanl waa tn••""'l 116 IJUI8ter coUDCUor,
two or three players are needed to with the progran\ is encouraged to
Adam MarCin u 'IIC!IIIor COIIIIdlor, and John Arnold 116 Junior~ at
form a team.
. contact Flynn or !llle of the officers
lite
·wtal IDif'"p!!oo of oftken of Melp Chapter, Order .of
The study material f~rthe Marcli of the COIDity youth councll.
DeMCJIQ.
quiz, which wUI cover Jeremtalland

RACINE

"acto~Choke

Or Write

The projects of redecorating the
..
rest rooms and donating money tor
.,•
camp supplies were discused at the
•
recent meeting of the Missionary
"
Society of Pomeroy Church of
Christ.
Held at the home of Anna
Davidson. the meeting opened with
devotions by Janet Veney., Betty ' Spencer had the prayer and lor roll
call members displayed baby
pictures. Reports were given by
David so n, secre tary; Mrs . '
Spencer, treasurer; · and MPS.
Venoy, flower fiind.
For roll call in February, "
members are to take old valentines.
Present officers were retained lor
another year by vote of the group.
Naomi Ohlinger will host the next
meeting.
Refreshn'lents were served by
Davidson to those named and
Charldlne Alkire arid Sherrl Might.

"

HarleyGrate,GladysL.Grateto
Harley E. Grate, Gladys L . Grate,
Parcels, Salem.
Do
L
res ·. · Arnold, Mildred E.
Arnold, Henry G. Arnold, deceased, · Affidavit of Deatlt,
Salisbury.

.The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy
Church of Christ

quiz slated to be
held at·Pomeroy church·

..

sponsering Shooting Mat~

every. Saturday atarting· at

3066.

P' M •
6 •30
' ·

roll call members gave suggestions
lor a home flower show in June.·
Stella Atkins received the hostess
gift. Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Diehl tothosenamedandAnna
Ogdtn, Virginia Nelson, Ruby Diehl,
Pauline Atkins and Neva Nicholson.
Mrs. Atklits and Ruby Halllday
wil host the February meeting.

1-

Gallia Co . Coon Club

Leonard Dalley, Helen Dalley to

Area '"wl eal Campalpt In Metp COUDty of Rio Grande Collese and
Conun1111Ky Cone,e. RIB:p, local rein-entauve for tbe Jolm Hancock
IIIIIID'IIiloe Co., has beell named Melp County Qullrman lor the campalpt. Tbe Area B•nh!ees Campalpt seeks aid from )m'e-naes and
profesidonalslocally and repo!laily, asldng unre&amp;trlded giftiiiOJ' U8e In
operating the collepl. In retum; the college seeks to graduate students
who aie capable of going Into bnob 11 and lndll!ltrles ~ed with an
educallon that WID help further lite goals o1 organlzatloDS.

BALL ~Several Melp Couallaml.utended Oblo's Goveraor's ;Jill an

Jan. 10 at tbe Al..tdln Temple In Columbus. PlcNred wlllt Jelyua BoMer,

oewi~

t;:::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::::::;t;::::::::::::::::~ -- - - - - - - - :
=~~~r., Crystal Dalley,
GUN SHOOT
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
·-:4:----:::G::-iv-e-aw-ay-~ =

KICKOFF - 'lbeodore T. Reed Jr., prealdent or Tbe Fanners
BallkandSavlnpCo.,left,prese~~i&amp;achecktoGeneRigptoldckoffihe

Clubs, Portsmouth; William Er· was held.precedlng the installation.
Frank Howard, Mrs. Osby Martin
ItwaspreparedbytheMothersCiub
win. governor of 11th District.
and Mrs. Dan Arnold with corsages.
OeMolay. Athens; Bruce .Teaford,
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bechtle. A
Each mother was given a red
reception loilowng the illlltallation
Ike Spencer, Scott Reuter, Greg
carnation following a •talk by
Bush. past master councilors, honored the elected officers and Mr.
Clayton.
and Mrs. King. Red and white were
Among the distinguished guests Meigs Chapter; lierman A. Carson,
out In the table decorations.
carried
DeMolay;
Mrs.
Merri
Ams·
senior
introduced were Mr. and Mrs.
Praying
bands were center pieces.
bary,
past
sweetheart
of
District
11,
Robert V. King who were honored
for their many years."of servtce to Meigs Chapter ot DeMoiay, and
Organist for the installation was
past hOnored queen of Job's
the chapter. Roush presented Mr.
Mrs:
Kathy King Johnson, a past
and Mrs. King with a plaque In Daughters; James Buchanan,
· state honored queen of Job's
appreciation for their service. King chapter adviser.
A c)Jill and vegetable soup dinner Daugh,ters.
is a past governor · of the 11th
District, and his wife Is a past state
. treasurer of the Demolay Mothers
Club. Mrs. Marvtn Monk presented
a framed ,composite of pictures of
the DeMoiay members on behaU of
the Mothers Club. King family
members present for the- recogni·
lion were Mr. and Mrs. Tom King,
Nick and Russ, Mr. and Ml's.
Darrell Brewer and Stacy, Mr. and
Mrs. Tim King, J,..iberty and T. J.
Other distingUished guests bring·
ing greetings were Robert W. Long,
R.S.O. 20th District · chairman,
Lancaster; Craig Higgins, past
state sentinel; Steve Clayton, Ak·
ron; Traol Jackson, grand repre_sentatlve to CaWornla, Rainbow
Girls, Athe!lS; Dixie Dugan, honored queen, Bethe_l· 62, Jobs
Daughers; Mrs. Elizabeth Slattery,
state parllrnentartan of Mothers
'
.

...

oger

Hysell

,.

446-0294..

Middleort, Ohio
1·13-t1c

QUve.

Literary Club

,

R

l

machine repair. p1r11. and
supplies . Pick up anil ·
dalivary , Davia Vacuul1't
Cleaner , one half mile up
Gl..orges Creek Rd . Can,

992-2196

:'t

A program on care of the birds In
winter was presented by Binda
Diehl at the recent meeting of Star
GardenCLubheldattheDieh!home.
Introduced by program chairwoman, Wanetta Radeldn, Mrs. Diehl
\3Iked on seeds from plants
·.'The book "Seems Like Yester·
_Including fO}rtaU, asters, corn·now·
day," written by Ann Buchwald
ers and portulaca Which birds feed
with the assistance of her husband,
on and also discussed the need for
humor columnist Art Buchwald,
protection and nesting provided by
was reviewed by Mrs. Carl Horky
shrubs
and n;ees. Water for
at the Wednesday meeting of
drinking bathlngwasalsodiscussed
Middleport Literary Club held at
as were vartouis ways of feeding the
the Horky horne.
birds. She gave a recipe for a suet
Mrs. Horky In her revtew told of
hanger.
the marrtage of Art, a Jewish boy.
A contest was held by Mrs.
to Ann, a Catholic girl, In Paris, the
Radekln on naming our feathered
adoption of the!J: three children,
friends. Members exhibited homeand the ensuing experience of their
made flower containers at the
lives together.
meeting. To use contrast of texture,
Mrs. Richard Owen presided at
color and form to a void .monotony
the meeting opening with the club
collect In unison. Mrs. Horky · was thePrrangtng h!ntofthemonth.
Allegr• Will, president, opened
showed slides of paintings of
the meeting with the club prayer
famous American artists describfollowed by devotions by Mrs. Diehl
Ing each one and givtng a resume of
who used scripture from Solomon.
the artist's ltfe. The pertod Included
She
read "Eighty Years" and
1560 to 1913.
"Kitchen Prayers." There was also
It was aMounced that the next
meeting wtll be held at the home of a reading "Sequel to a Lady My
Mrs. Robert Fisher at which time Age" by Emma Turner, a guest.
the annual business me..tlng wtll be The club creed and collect for club
women was given In unison and for
held.

'

SWEEPER and

We can repair and
recore radiators and
heater cores. Ws can
aleo acid boil end iod
.out radiators. We also
· G T k
repatr as an s.
PAT HILL FORD

GARAGE

Meigs Demolay chapter installs officers
Brei Howard was Installed as
master councilor at the 27th
sem!-annuallnstallatlon of officers
of Meigs Chapter, Order of Demolay, held at Middleport Masonic
Temple.
Other elected officers instlled
were Adam Martin, senior·councl·
tor, and John Arnold, junior
,
councilor.
. Appointed officers Installed were
Jet( Elliott, retiring mastercouncl:
lor, scribe; Melvin Van Meter,
senior dearon; Mark Elliott, junior
deacon; \Vlillarn Carswell, marshall; Paul Riggs, senior stewart,
Vaughan Spencer, junior stewart,
Michael Cline, chaplain; and Allen
TeJTy, standard.
Chapter Adviser Harry Roush '
Introduced the Installing team
composed of Paul A. Clayton,
Akron, a past master councUor,
past scribe, past state director and
· chevalier with the blue honor key,
the InStalling master . councllor;
assisted by Wade A. Huffman, past
inaster .councllor, state junior
deacon and state chevalier, Athen.S,
the Installing senior countllor; and
Steve Shemtt, past master councl·
lor, state DeMolay Week chatrman,
the lnstallng jmunior councilor.
The newly Installed councilors
presented their mothers, Mrs.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

r~:;~~~~~~~f.~====~~~~b~~~~~~~~j

County organization members hold .meetings

RACINE - Public soup
supper, beginning 11 a.m. Wed·
nesday atRaclneFireStationby
the fire department women's
awdllary.

'

too possessive.

"!I!!V!!"D"II'""
3 Announcements

HIO
.
Casby Meadows III, M. Lynn
VALLEY
1.1 L WRITESEl
Meadows to Edison M. Baker,
ROOFING
'J-,
BernlceJ. Baker,Lots,Middleport. ,
•'Gutters
James Vennarl, Martha Vennart
AND HOlE MAINTENANCE
•Downspouts
to First Baptist Church of Mlddl~
' RoormJ of 18 typos
N
R ·
~
lltsiclontill &amp;
• fNI or epa~r
port, Inc., Lot, Middleport.
[
Cclnmertlal
•Painting
Alma Miller to Connie Lynn · ·"hmodtiq
'T
Browning Lo Mlddlepo
. 'Siorm Windows &amp; Doors
FREE ESTIMAtES
• t,
rt.
FREE ESTIMAlES
Wllllam F. Harris Jr. to Racine
.20Yws ElporioncP
Ph. 99.2·2791
. Home National sank, Sher1ft's
lOM HOSI&lt;IIIS·· I. • ·
or 949·2263
·Deed, Sutton.
Ptl, 742-2834
,.-,
,
Racine Home National Bank to
• Or ~9:2160
· 7-14-tic
Wayne S. Wilson, Betty Wllson, .43
A., Sutton.
,
~
Charles Wllllamson, Leo Morris,
,
Charles Barrett Jr. to Althelrs 011,
--- '· ,
Inc., Right of Way, Rutland.
CARPENTER
Mary J Freeman to J k B
SERVICE
•
ac
·
.
Freeman, 1.76 acres, Rutland.
-Addona and romodelfng
St. Rl. 124 Pomeroy, 01
Allee M. Osborn, deceased, to
-Roofing and g.-wort
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
Nancy L. Cole, Richard Cole,
=~=
Dorothy Barcus, Cert. d. trans.,
"""biclil wurk
REPAIR
Olive.
IF..., Eoti11111teoJ
Also Transmissiorr ·,
V. C. YOUNG Ill
pH. 992·5682_
Nancy Cole, . Richard P. Cole,
Patltla A. Cole, Dorothy Barcus,
.
or
•
or 992-7121
992 6216 992 7314
Lester E. Barcus to Leonard
Pom.oy, Ohio
3·24·tfr '
11 -26-tfl::
Datley,Jr.,CrystalDaUey,Parcel,

.

By HELEN AND SUE BO'I'IEL
DEAR HELEN AN!) SUE:
My mother always told me that
when I got ready for marriage, I
shwld look for a man who would be
a good father to our children.
I've dated lots of fellows, but they
fall Into two categories. The
handsome, "fun," glamorous types
wouldn't pass Mom's test. The
" father" type Is dependable,
worthy, but kind of plodding and
dull. I can'tlmaglne llvlng with one
of them tor long:

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Business Services

transfers

25, 1983

Helen help us
.

rt, Ohio

. •·' Pomero -Middle

timber ·in Meiga or Mason

Co. 614-992-3859 .

�Tueaday, Janua
Page-

S-

Pomeroy-

The

The
Rio Grande&lt;~~.'!::~:!
C .E .T.A. offic~:t
is
seeking t wenty - fi v e

persons to par1 icipete
food

1ljj~j~~;;;;J

tenllce

4!1

2 bdr . unfurn ished mobile
home, 1 Z.80 on Rt. 3&amp; . Coli
448-4229 .

Sleep!nv &lt;OOm •12&amp;, utMItieo pd. ,Ingle molt, ohora
both. 918 2nd Ave .. Golllpollo . Coli 440 -4418 olttr
7PM .

2 bd.room furnlohed mobile
homo . Wo poy utllltloo .
Adults only ~r family wtth
one child. No pets. Depoait
required. Located 2 mil••
out on SR . 143. 614-992 ·
3848.

U ne mpl o y ~
ah o ~ld c_
o nta ct the

prog.r a m .

local Bur M u of Em ployment
Ser v ic es for f urt her detai l s

and to arran ge'. for

42 Mobile Hon'i81'
for Rent

Nearly furniehed 2 bdr .
tra ll1r . lnquir'e et Shepard•
Solu 6 Service , Flrot &amp;
Olivo St, Go II polio.

siona l clauroo m t ra i
person

Middleport, Ohio .

~n

i nt e rvie w . AN E QUAL

OPPORTU N I T Y
EMPLOYER .
P.o ·. No. 26040 .

3 bedroom Mobile Home .
Approximately 6 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport.
814-992-6858 .

Older lad y to live i n 8nd do
light house wo rk for elderly
gentleman , Coli 614-3792622 ..

by Larry Wr1!11ht

71

Cat-s wae t..irte.l ~Y ·

811Gi ellt ll.l,l~iills -t.,

If'

""'"'",.,, -tltvs bct'olrt;,.,
~Itt. f;lit a/a~lrl dock~ Nt.t u..t;/ D.e fat~ ~+J,
ce~~tu~&lt;~, ia~AVet:. t.Jil!&gt; -Me ~Ht tf.-,,t.J cat
pelf'«t".
.

46 Space for. Rent

74 Toyota Corona·. Need•
motor work. 304 - 67 6 5490.

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

:::·; ·==

=.~·==;·

E.O.E.M-F ·H.

23

The West Vwginia Oeparimen1 of Heatth it seeking a
full· time Ho1pitll Adminil·
tutor for i ts Fairmont
Em.rgency Hoaphal. loceted in Fairmo"t , West
Virg inia . Raquiramenu :
Baccaleureete degree plus
two years of experience in
hospital or health servicel,
or busineu 1dministration .
Thio 44-bed fecilitv pfOIIIdeo
long - tt!llrm skilled nuning
services and outpatient
clinic 11rvice1. Applicant•
1hould a~bmit resume• and
application• to: L. Clark
Hanabarger, M.D., Director
of Health, 1800 Waohington
Street . East. Charleston.
Weat Virginia 26305 , by
DecembOf 16 . Solory negot·
iable . Equal Opportunity
Employor-AA Plon-M-F-H

baby~itting

in my

home . Prefer evenings or

midnight . Have references .
: {;oU 446-8067.
' GINGER &amp;READ STUDIO.
: Art lenons. Joni CatTing~
· ton . 698-3290.
o ·ump truck for hire . Will

haul grevel or mo1t anything. Call614-992· 3869.
13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER
lnaurance Co . hu offered
aervices for fire insuranc,e
Coverage in Gallia County

for almost a century. Farm.
;... home and personal property
coverage• are available to
· meet individua l needs ,
Contact Eugene Holley ,
- agent. Phon a 3BB·BII90.
· 15

C&amp;l Bookkeeping
TaKReturns&amp;booldceeping
for Individuals &amp; businesses .
Carol Nool

34

446· 3882

Business
Buildings

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appointment , Ward ' s Keyboard,
446-4372 .

For rent downtown of fica
1pace with parking . Call
446·3432 .

P E R M A N E NT H A I R
REMOVAL- Profauional
Electrolysi• Center, Inc ..
A . M.A. Approved, Dr.
Referrals. Gift Certificates.
n·e w hours . By appointment,

Bualnoso ,.;, eolo in Middlepon. CerouMI ConfectiOn·
ery . Cake decorating and
condy oupplioo. Cal 814·
992 -6342 or 614 -982 ·
6501.

304-676-6234.

I:;:;==;~;====
36 Lots

36 Acres at Rodney on W. T.
Wataon Rd. Owner Financ ing ovolleblo. 446-B221 .

3 bedroom house for sale .
New carpeting throughout.
Located on Beahan Rd. and
sits on 3 •ere• of lend .
Exceilent term• to right
party. MAKE AN OFFER. 30
year financing available .
Contact Bank One of Pome·
roy. 614-992-2133.

&amp; Acreage

36

Real Estate
Wanted

1- - - - - - - - - -

House for sale or rent . 7
rooms &amp;. bath. Ga1 furnace,
wood burner. car port . In
Racine . Contact Wayne
Wilson at 247-3622 .

Wanted: Form of 100 to160
Acres. rolling land. Ripty to
Box 6000, iri c-o Gallipolis
DailyTribuno, 826 3rd Ave ..
Galllpollo 46631.

Schools
Instruction

Karate the uh ima1e in aelf
. defence ell private le11ons.
. · Men. women , It children .
~ ·lnatruction thru black belt.
Allo 'available Karate
uniform• puching and
kicking·bagj,, and protective
equipment. Jerry loW1)ry Ia
AIIOCiltll Kerate Studio,
143 Burlington Rd., Jackoon, Oh . Coli 614-286·
3074 or 614-384-8160.
1 B Wanted to Do

House, all electric, 6 rooms
and bath. en dosed front an~
back porch, full basement
and garage. Acrotl from
Post Office. Mt. Alto, WV.
304-895-3388.

Backhoe endloader. dig1 8
ft .. luge bod pick up
haullble, operate yourMit.
890. pOl' day. 304-B963841 .

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency Inc . Aport menu $200 per mo . or if
income i1 e1 0.000 or le11
HUD ovoilable . A-One Reol
Estatea, Carol Yee,ger ,
Rooltor, Call 304 -676 6104 or 676 - 53B6 or
876-7786 .

2 bdr. Unfumiehed apt . in
Crown City . Call 614-2666620 .
Furnlohed apt, 1 bdr .. 920
4th Ave. Gallipolia. Adults,
water &amp; oloctri&lt;: pd. $200
mo. Coli 448- 4418 after
7PM.

1st . floor per·, , furnished
apt. Utllitioo poid. refernco
required. Inquire at 831 4th
AVe ., Gallipolis.
Furnished apt. e146 no
utilitiea pd, 3 rooma . 701
4th Ave . , Gollipolio . Coli
446-4416 aftor .7PM.
1 bed room Apartment for
..nt. Col 44S-0390.
3 rm. and 4 rm . unfumiehed
apartmentl. Utilitiea paid,
no peu . no children . Call
446-3437.
.
Furnlohed Apartment 1226 .
Utilitiea pd .. adulta. 1 BR.
243 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, 448-4416 after 7 p.m.
PO'MEROY-2 bedroom
unfurnished apt., e160. 2
bedroom hou1a 8186.
Deposit $100. Call 614992-22B8.
Apt. for rent. Half double-2
bd .room Apt. Adulta pre·
!erred. No, pets. 614·9922749.

Effeciency Apt . tOr 1
working peraon . Utilitie1
and cable paid. Coli 614992-673B.

2 bd.room Apt . , pertly
furnilhed ~ bd . room auite,
stove, relrig . 1176. month
plus utilitiaa. Cal 614-949-

HOUSE. 2 bedroom. No. 2
Burdette Addition . Pho .. e
304-676-1185 oftor 6 p.m.

Situ11tions
Wanted

Will do

207 acre firm. Lang1ville.
Mineral rights induded. No
houoe . $12,000 down. Will
carry reot . 614-388·9346.

Services

1-----------

LOOKING FOR A PART
TIME JOB that hao good
pay, life insurance, retirement plen, that will teach
you a valuable job oklll. plus
help with a college or
Vo-Tech education? There's
only one around! High
School Seniora or graduat•. you may even qualify
tor 1 c11h bonue. Cohtact
the Wea1 Virginia Army
Nationai .Guard . For more
information call Sergeant
Serv•nt Lutton at 304875 -39 50 or cell toll free.
i-800-642-3619.
:12

Professional

44

2234.

Good location $126 mo .
A- One Real Estatei, Carol
Yeager Realtor, 676-6104
or 676-6388 or 676-7788.

Apa rtmen tl . 3 04-6 76554B.
APARTMEN:TS . mobile
hom11, hou111. Pt. Pleannt
and Gollipollo. 614-446·
8221.
.

Mod·ern 3 bdr . ranch,
garage. carpet, Rodney
32 Mobile Homes
1r11. Depoait.referencea 2 room efficiency apt .
for Sale
roquir,d . 1286 per mo. 1-304 ·882-2686or 1-614Strout Realty, coli 446- 992-7206.
0008 .
TRI - s'TATE MOBILE I - - - - - - - - - UNfURNISHED apartment
HOMES . USED-CARS , 4Roomaandbllfthforrent. for rent, 1 bedroom.
TRUCKS . GAlliPOll S. lower Rt. 7 . Phone 446- 81 BO .OO Coli Automotive
CHECK OiJR PRICES . 4849between6&amp;9p .m.
Supply. 8-6. 304 -676CAll446-7572 .
2218.875-6763.
;J bd . ferQ1houae new doxol 1-:::---:-:--:::-::::-:---CLEAN USED MOBILE goo furninco, dop. &amp; ref . FURNISHED 4 room cotHOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· req. Coll614-245-5329.
toge , adulto , no pets.
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
304-876-1453.
4 MI . WEST. GAlliPOLIS. Very nice 2 bdr . duplexju,;~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;,;;;;_;~
RT 36. PHONE 446-7274. homo, furniohod, Moin St..
upotoirs apt for
Choohire. Oh. Coli 614location. 304·
Mobile home a. Iota tor sale, 246-6818.
1967 Buddy mobile homo I-:----::-:-:-----:-- l - - - - - - - - - - - 14x60, 2 bdr. gas heat, Nrlll Pomwoy·2 bd. room unfurwa1er, set up with 2 or 4 nished houae. e196 . mo .
lots. Call 446·1240:
Socurily dopooil. S100 . pluo
utilitie1 . After 6·call 6141974 Schu~z mobile home, 992-2288.
~~~~~~~;;ft;;;,j~;;
2 bdr., exc. cond., 12x66
1
with 4x1 0 exp1nclo, 9x24
awning, central air, dis~
hwasher. range . retrig ..
includes new c•rpet &amp;
drapeo, 18,700. Call 614387.·0191.
In Pomeroy $175', month
plus utlltioo. no. dopooit.
78 Na1hua mobile home Coli 614-992-7284 .
14~70 eKecan.,t cond . Cell
814· 367-7468 aftor. 8PM .

r~~~;~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~1

For Lease

W-anted to buy tobacco
poundage . Coli 814-3792145.

Household Goods

WAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
82 Olivo St.. Golllpolio. King
coel • wood heet•• with
ton 1469. oat box oprlng &amp;
mettreoo S100, firm •120.
oofo-lovo-t &amp; choir •199.
love 11111 t 70, new coal &amp;
.wood hea.t en 11 low as
8399 with· blowers, ueed
coal &amp; wood heaters, new
dlnet oeto t76 &amp; up; refdgar·
etor,a, range1, bunk beda
complete 1179 , bu nkloo
mattreeaea t40. cheatJ ,
dfesaera, TV's. CaH 4483169.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
• waahere, dryera, refrigerator•; rangae. Skagge Ap~
pliencea. Upper River Rd .,
beaide Stone Crett Motel.
446-7398.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottomin. 3 tablea, tex1ra heavy
by ~rontlor). t886. Solo,
chair 1nd loveseet, 8276 .
Sof11 end chairs priced from
$2B5. to 189&amp;. Tobleo. •46
end up to •126. Hlde-ebeda , S440 . and up to
1625 .. Roclinero, 1176. to
I 360., lompo from t28. to
•76. 6 pc . dinette• from
199., to 8436. 7 pc .• 11 B9.
and up. Wood table wtth six
choiro 1426. to $746. Daok
1110 up to 8226. Hutclleo.
1560. and up, maple or pine
finish. Bunk bed complett!ll
with mattre1111, 1260. and
up to 1396. 8oby bodo ,
$110. Ma1trene1 or bOIIC
springa. full Or twin. 868 .,
firm. $88 . and 178 . Queen
seta, S196 . 4 dr. cheua.
142. 6 dr. cheou. •64. Bed
!romeo. 120 .and 126 .. 10
gun- Gun cablnete. *3&amp;0:,
dint!llttecheiree20.and *26.
Gaaoretectricrangea, $326
to 1375. Boby me!ti'OIIIOI, 126 &amp; 136, bed
fromoo UO. 125, &amp; UO.
king !rome UO. Good
Hlectionotbedroomauhea,
cedar chooto, rockers, metol ·
cobinoto,owlvelrockero.
UoedFumlture -- bookcooe,
range1, chairs, end tables,
wuhero, dryers, rofrigora toro and TV'o. 3 mileo out
Bulevillo Rd. Open 9am to
6pm, Mon. thru Fri. , 9emto
Spm, Sot.
446-0322

Pets for Stile

A KC •&amp;o.
Garman
h ord -;;=~:;::=:;t
· ~··;"~·
pupo
·uch.Shop
304-468~
16611 or 304-876· 7641.
Vans &amp; .'4
67

Musical
Instruments

For sawe lump coal •
firewood . Zinn Coal Co ..
Inc. Call448-1408.
Firewood split,1cut to
' length , you pick up. We
deliver. We accept HEAP
cerdo. Coll614-268-8245.

8 piece Ludwig drum aet ,
304-876-5296.

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

Slobo cut-up 11ii fuH length POTATOE 18 .00 100 lb .
bag No. 1 Wisconsin Rus•t .
110 PU load, round
lerge truck ·load . Cell Coli 876-3747.
8 14-246-6804 .

Homelite 160 chain11w
18in bar eKe. cond .. and 2
16in. Chevy truck wheels.
Coli 446·3400.

69 For Sale or Trade

1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr.,
PS, PB, AC, AM -FM otero
John Daere hammer mill, •1.950 or trade for cmle.
136.0 . Coll614-379·2817. term equipment. or mobile
home of equal value. C•ll
New cool bumlno furntnce 448-4637.
heats 2600 oqft. Will sell for - : ' - - - ' - - - - - - y, price . Coli 614-268· 1.$ 47 WillY Jeep, 4 wheel
1216.
l,·d,rlv,t. white spoke whoelo.
~-=-·~~16 tlru. •1060.00.
~eat ca11 8ft .. produce 1 4
II,VY bus , f•ctory
fl ., freozoro 6ft &amp; 8ft., ott.r ~·b~-~lt motor, 1600.00. 16
, ml~&lt;: . grocery otore equip- ft . fiberglas• boat • trailer,
ment. Coli 614-387-0378 40 H.P. Coott G""rd equip between 10AM &amp; 3PM, ment , 1776 . 00 Phone
Mon-Fri,
304-676-2870.
6 Pc. dinette 181, like new.

446-2978.

New Persian rug. 3•6 . Call
8 14-246-9319 .
8 h. pool 'toblo &amp;
rlea. good co ..
448-1168.

TORPEDO 1pace heaten ,
1pacial eele price. 97,000
BTU U10. 90, 000 BTU
1396. 83,000 BTU 1300.
· K•tera Service Center, St.
Rt . 87. 304-896 - ~874 .

Firewood, 136. truck loed.
166 . o cord . Split enp
delivered. 114·843-3103 .

63

Firewood deliv.e red 88Q,. a
cord. Coal delivered $46 .
ton . Call Tom I "''kina
614- 949- 2180 0 . 614 ·
742-2B34.

Purebred Poland Ch int
booro. brooding ago . T.J .
Farms Crooksville , Oh . .
1-814-342-2034.

Dry cherry and walnut
lumber. 614-9B6-4117.
Firewood. 130. plckuplood,
split a. delivered . Call
614- 247·2192 or 614·
945-2028 .
BABY b111inett with akirt,
baby clothn. pumpkin ••t.
maternity clothes . 304 ·
876-364B.

Livestock

---------------kRegiatered Quener Hone .

64

Hay

&amp; Grain

30"GASstove,hey- e2 .
bole. 304-882· 2422 .

HAY . 304-468 - 1658
304 -B76-764 1 . .

----::-:~----

WHIRLPOOL wooher &amp;
dryer, 1 year old. alm~i'ld,
1360. 304-876-7660.

Meot.d playpen •1&amp; .-!Porta
crib 826 . Cor ooat 120.
304-1175-4072 '.
65 Buildi11g Supplies

Building material•
block. brick . aewer pip ea.
windows , lintels , etc .
Claude Winten. Rio Grande,
0. Cal 814-241 -5121 .
BUILDING MATERIAL. Flet
metal 1heet1 porcelan·
enamel aooted. 4ft. by 8h.
thru 4ft. by 12h. n .oo to
$9 .80, odd oizoo U.OO to
n .oo. 114-le?-3081.
Peta for Sale

... . .. . . ".......
...........
"

71

Siamese kitten. pruebred .
Cell 448-81108.

e

week old pupp i l l .
reglatertd elk hound - ~
collie. looll llka Ilk hound.
111.00. 814,948-24118.

7 yr. Rog.Wolkor62 yr.R1g.
Red Bono. Good t,. d!'O•·
Priced to otll. B82-20·11 . .
8 pupplao. Mothor ~lo­
tered Golden Retriever.
1114-742·2&amp;q1 .

79

1981 Hondo Civic auto . • oir
cond., AM -FM 1tero. Call
61 '4 -246-6287 oher 6PM.
1976 Buick Electro 2 bdr ..
PS, P8, AC, AM·FM otero
11,960 or trodo for cattle,
farm equipment, or mobile
home of equal. value. Call
4411-4637.

Think before playing

~ONG, ~R!i.

76 VW cAmper, stove, sink,
oloapo 4 , $3 , 000 . Coli
446-9366.

Fffli'.

l THINI'. l KNOW WHAT
THAT 'A~FOL' ~ATTER
THAT DAM ••E~ .. MR.
FEER- ALLUI?ED 10 IS...

-AHD IT AL50 IH\QLVEG
IINff/E, AM 1 CaiRl'CT?

79 ChillY Suburban lou of
extraa, 67,000 l'l'!iles, 73
Vego wagon . Coli 448·
3400.
74 Gremlin, good mlloege.
Coli 814-246-5485.

1980 Chovotte. Coli 448·
4171 .
1981 Chavena4ct&lt;.,4opd ..
low miiHgo. like new. Call
441-93'0 oftar 4:30.

715 Dodg~ Cornett, pric
1460. Cell 448-9224 efter
&amp;PM .

1 974 Maverick 4 door. p.o..
• .._to., a. c., good tirea,, body
good cond . •826 . Call
814-985-4l24.

.54
+

- THEN IT INVOLVES
AS WELL -AND IT
WILL &amp;E RESOLVED
WI Tff lolE ...OR WITH
TliE IMITHOR/TIE5.

.7

Home
l~provemenu

PAINTING · interior and
exterior. plumbing. roofing,
aome remodeling. 20 yra .
up. Coli 614-3BB-9852 . '
OH WHY, AMIDST THIS
AWFUL DISS!:NSION , DO
I HII.VE TO RA.TE A.LL
THE ATTENTION ?

GENE' S CAJPET ClEANING. DMp steam cl•ning,
Scotchg1urd. Free eatimltt!lla. lew ,.,e• . e 14-992 ~
11309.
RON ' S Tolovlolon Sorvlco.
Speciellring in Zenith 111d
Motorola. Ouaz1r , end
hauM colo. Coli 671-2398'
or 448- 2464.

F • K TrM Trimming, ltu"lp
removal. Clil ·876-1331 . •

...any attempt to conceal;
hide or extricate th' boy
from these

...will resl.llt in charqes
of the most serious

Get your karpet in ahlp
shape. Wl1ar removal. FREE
ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING . CAPTIAN
STEAMER 614-448-2107.
M• 8 Septic tenk cleanIng
service. Reasonable rates .
Call any dey after 1 p.m. ,
304-675-4843.
Plumbing
Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING ~
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
:.."ne 448-3888 or 441;

lit

Electrical
Refrigeration

-.

SEWING Machine rapeir~t ,
service. Authoriz.ed Singer
Sale• &amp; Service ·sharpen
Scieaors . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy . 992-2284 .
·

.

.

ED'S APPLIANCE REPAIR
SERVICE coli C~y Furnitur;
304· 675 -2608.
.
B5

'.'ORE WIFE'S GOT
'THREE AILMENTS.
SNUFFY

WHAT
THREE?

..

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Collo614-367'
7471 or 61'4 -367-0691 . :

Naed 'aomething hauled .
1wey or 1omething moved~
We'll da it . Call446-3169 or '
814-268 -1967 after 8 .
•

'

JIMS WATER SERVICE '
Coli Jim Lanier, 304-676 ;
7397.
.
B7

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP :
1183 Soc . A .... Golllpallo,
446· 7B33 or 4411 -1833. •
MOWREY&amp; Upholotory
.
1 Box 124, Pt . Pleooont,
304-1176-41114 .
1-------~---

nature!

~~,.. VH:d'

min . ~

General Hauling:

In c:e1e people i~ this
community don't know, I'm
still trucking . Call 446~
4861, leRoy Caldwell for
free eltimates.
·

a:

••

STUCCO PLASTERING tex., ntd ceilings commer~
cial and residential, free
aotimateo. Call 81 4·2561182.

B4

•

BRIDGE

lit
12 paueneget Ford van
1970 model, auto .. air ,
ltero . radio, $2,096 . Call
441-4564.
•

· ()) Tic Teo Dough
CIJ Carol Burnett
CIJ D CIJ • ~ Newa
C!l Newa/Sporta/Wuther
SOMETIMES
(I) 3 -2 -1, Contact
HANE&gt;INIS A~OUNC'
&lt;m Eyawitnooo News
(jj) 3 -2-1 . Contact
A FAUCET.
• Wonder Wom11n
8 :30 . . (f) C!l NBC News
())
MOVIE:
'ArNZon
""11100
tho clreled lo
form
tho
IU!prleo anawtr, N lUg•
Ouest'
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goollld by lho - -·
(I) lob Newhart Show
Prlntlllswer here:
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Yeetorday·sj Jumbloo: ROBOT MOUND 1\IRWAY TAWDRY
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:W, Norwooll, NJ. 07!WI.I - Y&lt;!Uf
(I) Gomer Pyle
n1m1 ldchH~ coN ind makl ohecll:,_plyeblt to New•
C1J En1ertainmen1 Tonight
C!J 81 Charlie's Angels
Ill (I) Tic Tao Dough
C1J · (jj) MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
® Eyewitnesa News
Gl (jJ People's .Court
7:30 . . (I) GJ You Asked For It
(f) HBO Magazine
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
Cil .ESPN SportsCenter
CIJ
NIA
Baoke1ball:
Phoenix at Atlanta
CIJ D CIJ Family Feud
(I) Business Report
his ace of spades. He
l1ll This Old House
returned a diamond to
Ill (jJ Entertainment
West's jack. West had no
Tonight
NORTH
1·15·83
problem in finding the lead
8:00 0 (f) C!l Ne11\i&amp; Spacial:
• Q 10 7 3
of another diamond and the
Lebar In the Promioed
Land News correspondent
ruff had sent another ironK 10
Mike Jensen reports on the
clad
game to Davy Jones'
+AK962
labor movement in the U.S.
locker.
WEST
EAST
160min.l
The hand caused a lot of
+9 852
tAH
(f) MOVIE: 'Magic'
discussion, mostly of
• 962
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vitriolic nature. North point+QJIII2
(!) This Week In tho NBA
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zie is called for active duty in
had simply ducked the first ,
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the Army Reserves . (Ciosed
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game would have sailed .
• AKQJIO!l
Ill (I) ilC Wah Disnay 'The
home.
•
+943
Shaggy O.A .' First of two
South replied that anyone ·
parts . A district attorney
could have made that play .
candidate periodically as~
Vulnerable: Both
after seeing all the cardS .
sumas the identity of a
Dealer: North
But that if -west's lead had
Sheep dog . 160 min .l
been queen from queen-j&amp;ck
West Nortb East
Saulb
(I) (jj) Nova 'The Pleasure ol
doubleton, the duck play
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Pass
1•·
Finding Things Out.' A canwould have been the loser.
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1+
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••
did portrait of Nobel PrizeWest tried to pour oil on :
Pass
Pass
Pass
Winning physicist Richard
troubled waters by compliFeynman is presented. !60
menting his partner's play of .
min .) [Closed Captioned!
Opening lead: +Q
the ace of spades before the ·
1!11 MOVIE: 'Elizabeth tho
diamond,
but merely got ,
Queen'
grunts
from
North and
8 :30 ill MOVIE: 'Vice Squad'
South.
(!)NFL Films 'Football FolWe agree that the best
lies.'
)
By Oswald Jacoby
percentage play by Souih
CIJ Ill (jJ lovome &amp; Shirley
aud James Jacoby
would have been to duck, but •
laverne manages a musical
want to point out that
group . [Closed Captioned!
'
As soon as dummy hit lhe South's real guilt Is in not :
9:00 ·O (f) C!l State of the
table, South reached over thinking abouf that first play
Union Messaage Live cov·
and played the king. East before making it.
erage of President Re~gan ' s
took his ace and then cashed
annual State of the Union
Message, followed by the
qemoCratic rebuttal . (2 hrs.)
()) Battle for the Family
(!)
NCAA · Basketball:
Georgia at Florida
CIJ 81 ~ Three's
Company
Ill (I) ilC Reagan's State
of the Union Address
by THOMAS JOSEPH
CIJ American Playhouse
'Miss lonely Hearts.· A jour~
ACROSS
39. Maintain
nalist is forced to write a
I Magnwn DOWN
lovelorn advice column for a
big city newspaper . 160 min.
5 Tapestry
1 Mountain
illl Fred Astaire: Change 10 Ascent
nymph
Partners and Dance
11
Hail
2
" - Passes"
9 :30 CIJ Gl (jJ 9 to 6
1% Fencing foil 3 Think
9 :46 fT' TBS Evening News
10:00 ,::,
MOVIE:
'Fighting
13 Killtime
properly 1sl. )
Sullivans'
14 Gl's address 4 Observe
(I) Ill ~ Hart to Hart
5 Tantalize
llJ CIJ ® To Bo 15 Stannum
16 Mirung
' find 6Hgt.
Announced
Yesterday's Answer ·
(I) Firing Line
17 The . 7 Concen21 Word
25 Person ·
(jj) Newswatch
(afternoon
trat•
on
with
gravy
27 ltsy-bitsy
fl) INN -News
tea)
10:15 (f)
MOVIE:
' Sleeping .
8 Repeat
22 In the
28 Prototype
Dogo'
19 Woman's
9 Tranquil
qpen air
29 African
10:30 @Inside Washington
name
11
Backbone
23
Raw-bOned
antelope
fl) In Search of....
2t
Hibernia
15
Elephant's-ear
24
mind
34
Performed
11 :00 0 (f) Nawscenter
21 - noir
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18 Fiber
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22 Norwegian
C1J D CIJ Ill !l)l News
city
C!J News/Sports/Weather
CIJ State of the Union 23 Be careless
witli
Address
ilC Eyewitness News
24 Hokwn
@II Bonny Hill Show
25 Radiate
11 :30 0 (I) C!l Tonight Show
26 WWII
Guest host Joan Rivers is
joined by Ang ie Dickinson
theater
and Gregory Harrison . (60 · 27 British

""x

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

B1

I I t)

Caru110'

) ()

l THI"'I&lt; TH15
EQUIPMENT WILl.
WORK OKAY,
EASY.

78 FORD.,. ton truck.
304-676-3024 .
. .

B2

74 Toyota Corono Mark II,
good cond . , 2 dr .. air .
AM·FM, outo, t700. Coli
evanlnga, 448-2492.

•.

~!

Autos for Sale

1974 Grond Prix model
·J-400 engine. rodlalo. B
track , axe . cond .. •1 . 000
firm . CoH 448-8087.

t

TO SPLASH

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domaedc . Test holea .
Pumps Sales and Service .
'3 04-896 · 3B02.
.

ATARI for oolo, 304-B82 ·
28~8.

76

Grode and Roglotered
Belgiana .' A lao 72 Dodge
Dart. end 74 Dodge Colt .
Call 814-949-2466.

Bodyman tor hire, own
tOola, 10 yra . experience .
CoN 448-3872.

Mobile ho.mo'5 mi . from
EKcellent condition &amp;
town, no pet1. Cll 44 8 •
location -- all ready for
1158.
immadiete oCcupency---....,-------2 I&gt; r , trailer In Cheohlrt,
lnt:•e.t r8tes are dOWrl and
odullo preferred. Call
probabiHty won't be l-or.
S14-387-7328.
.Home and or rental
. I roo dway -.M id dlaport . 1 97 3 VI CT 0 R lA N troll or. 1-::--:---::--:--:----:-""'-:Modern buolnaoo bldg .. ! I aet up on rented lo't In 3 Room••INrth.completely
Court lt., Galllpollo. 112+ Rlploy. 2 Badroomo, good furnlohed. No pets. no
acrn whh 2 homao Golllo condi1ion, will aell lower children, Gerner For_d RoM
County. Call t12 -.3287 or •thon book prl ... 304-372- neor Rio Orondo. 4482987.
2223.
8711-2518 mnlngo.

li~RE'S

1!178 Jeep CJ5, fair condition. Coli otter 6:00PM.
448-766B.

Ruth Reeves. Al1o grade .
Saddlea. 'bridle1, winie1
horse blankeu . W111ern
booto . 614-898-3290.

1977 Mercwy Monarch· air,
PS. PB. Aoldng 12,000, Coli
814-379·2320.

71 Sur 12 x&amp;O . . 2
...• :roont
with stove, refr.ig.·,
e .c . . LP gaa. porch end
ewning . Very goo_d cond .
Sot up on rented lot. ·
t8,500 . Coli '614-9925841 .

CAPTAN EASY

·yv:n.

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. Including
hot tar epplicetion ,. carperir
ter. electrician, muon. Cell
304-875 -2088 or 875 4660.

1879 Oldo Doho 88 ,Royal
air, AM·FM stero.' elec1ric
door locka, rear window
dotonor. Coli 814-378 2320 .
.

· Business
Opportunity

.

M1rc.um Roofing • Spout~
ing . 30 yeanaexperlt!llnce.
1pecillizing in built up roof.
Coli 614-388-9857.

locuat pou for aele .
further information
814-258-1148 .

General Hauling 1end Trash
remOve! Service. Reliable
and dependable . Coli 446·
3159 after 8PM 268 - 167. '

21

6 :00 . . (f) New.center
(f) MOVIE:
'Gulliver'•
Travela'
(f) MOVIE: 'The Great

; ;:

73

1/25/~3
EVENING

f710. CoH 441-0940.
1979 Ford F-100 Ranger In
excellent condition . Priced
to •II. 304-896-34l6.

Eeey dryer evacado color,
real nice, e$i~O. Whirlpo_ol
weeher evacaclo. ex. cond .,
•110 . Coll446-8181.

66

1979 Bayvi- 12x60 with
12K8 u.pando , axe. cond .,
energy aavin g to1al electric.
central air, awning a. patio,
8xB utility building . Coli
446-9416.

-- -1'~ .0.

76 Ford· .,.T Ranger XLJ .

66

-ocl.

51

TuesoAv··

Trucks for Sale

61 Household Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise
49

; Vie~pg .

73 Cod lilac, ucelle~t·
condition : low mileage
11200. flr,m. A Texo 0 cor.
304-B96·3882 .
72

91

Television
-

· Autos for Sale

1972 PONTIAC. 304- 576·
2771 .
..
- -- Teot for Pt. Ploaoont
1976 CHEVY luv truck, coli
. 304-171-2086.

47 Wanted to Rent

Equipment
for .Rent

The DOily Sentinel-Page- -

OICK TRACY

CARS 11001 trucko t761
Avliloble ot loall govol1l·
ment oolao.Colllrotundable)
1-619-689-0241 .

KOUNTFIY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . large lou . Cell
992·7479 .

48

Middleport, Ohio

.

For rent dpwntown office
opoce with perkl'ng . Coli
446-3432 • .

'7.::---;:--:----:--

Pomeroy-

HARTS Uoed Coro , New
Hovm Well Virginia . Over
20 1111 expentive car• in
·otock .

WANTTO RENT HOUSE IN
COUNTRY. lam and. peotur'e for 2 honea. Call
Charle1 J . Ohlinger at
814-992-6418.

A S S I 5 T A NT C H I E F 21
Business
32 Mobile Homes
Toe ~no log i u - laborotory .
Opportunity
for Sale
Ja c:k son Gener•l Hos pitll ,
Ripley, W. V. is now i~t• ·
vi ew in_,; i or 1n aniltant
Willl-se Pennzoil Stotion USED MOBILE HOME .
C!'l~e f Tech nologist for the
~
576-2711 .
le~ re t ory . Job will requ W
e on bu1y Rt. 7 in Gallipolis. I - - - - - -- - -• bi~rtv to work in alel1re11 of F or information write : J .
Sinor , P. O . Box 1 948. JUST like new. take over
t~ l lob . scheduling &amp;
t t'l in j; ng. 111ist in writing Parkera.b urg, WVa. 26101 . poymento. 1982 oil elac:t ric,
14x70, 1V. bo~ho, 3 bed pr!oce d~X t menuala, main·
room mobile home. 2•8's,
u in i ng quelity contro l
16" on cen1ar. beat home
records. ma intenance' of 22 Money to Loan
modo . 304 - 937-2396 or
eq.uipm.nt. including min304-678-2711.
i..-.! ropoir &amp; calibration &amp; HOME LOANS 12% fi•od 1' -----~---some weM!and wortc Ou1ii·
·
tied person will have 2 v•rs rt!llte . Leader Mo r1g age , 1976 Nashau mobile home,
of a:~:pwienca in 1 Medical 1 _1_
· 6_1_4_·_6_9-::2-3-::0:-6-1_.-:--:-:-~ 12 ft. x 60 h. centrel air.
oxcollont condition . 3041·
Laboutory . have 1 B. S . Busineaa &amp; Second Mor1· 896-3884 Or 304-676deogrea in M.mc.l Technol· gage lo1ns . Equity Re~ 2420.
ogy • be A.S .C.P. regll· 1 o u r 1 e s . i n 0 h i o
ur11d . lntoreot•d persono 1 _800 . 99 2 - 2361. out of I·
moy coli Poroonnol Dept . at o · 513 26B 0112
33 Farms for
304
·
372·273,1
Mon
.
-Fri
.
l-:;;;h;io::::;1;
·
for more information ·. I·
1- - - - - - - - - -

25, 1983

Tuesday,

25, 1983

PF: i\Nl!TS

'
1- 2 $"

c:i 18!:1 United FMture S ynd!U.Ie. lnc.

()) Another Life
C1J MOVIE: 'Destination
Tokyo'
CIJ Benny Hill Show
llJ (I) Quincy Quincy suspects homocide in the death
·11 of a race car driver. IRI I60
min.)
® All In tho Family
illl Sign Off
Ill (jJ Nightline
Ill Madame' • Place
11 :45 (I) Democrat's Response
1o tho Stole of the Union
12:00 (f) MOVIE: 'Tho Exterminator'
(f) MOVIE: 'Whose Life Is
it Arrvway'
Ill Bums &amp; Allen
ffi ESPN Preoen's Seturday Night at the Fights
Live coverage of Eddie Mustafa Muhammad and Jerry
Cele:stine in a ten-ro.und bout
from lake Tahoe , .Nev.
CIJ Nlghtline
ilC MOVIE: 'The Southem

Star'

custom

30 Japanese
volcano

.31 German

I

nwnber
32 - - pros.
33 Tyrannized
35 Italian river
36Stalling
37 British
carbine
36 Indigent

h&gt;:+-lr

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One ·letler . simply st ands ror another. I n •his •ample A 1!
used for lhe three L's, X ror lhe two o·;, elc . Single lctler:.
lpos!rophes, the length and !ormalion •J ( I he words are ali
hlatt.- Eoch day the code letters are dilfercn t.

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lost Word
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12:16 (I) Sipn Off
12:30 G (f) C!JIAie .Night with
David Letterman David is
joined by James Brown and
Larry Walters. IRI 150 min.)
()) JaCk Banny Show

CRYPTOQUOTES

.

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Wife: The Dalldly
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1 :00 (I) I Manled Joan
ellJNewa

to work it :

NCJD

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Yesterday's Cryptoqaote: WHOLE!;OME FOOD AND DRINK
CHEAPER .'11fAN DOCTORS AND HOSPITAl..S.-DR
CARLC. WAHL

ARE

'.

�Governor says -Ohioans can-expect
higher taxes, reduced state services
..

'

CINCINNATI 1AP) - Gov.
Richard Celeste , says Ohioans
st10uld be prepared for a combination of higher taxes and reduced
services to overcome a state
government deficit of $500 million.
"We must work together In a way
we· have not since we faced the
challenge of World war II," Celeste
S&lt;'id·at the Cincinnati Club Monday
evenlng. He spoke in Dayton earlier
Monday.
Celeste said no state office or
department , except transportation,
will be exempt from possible
spending cuts.
He said he was studying possible
courses of action, but that he. is
convinced there will be anextension
of the 50 percent income tax
surcharge beyond Malfh 31. That
will generate an estimated $110

rnllllon, he said.
Celeste, without mentionlng specifics, warned that some state
programs could be eliminated and
others consolidated. ,
"By the same token, It Is
Important to realize that this
problem Is so large, poses so much
of a challenge to our ablllty to carry
on at all, that In some measure,
every department and agency has
to be prepared to assume some
pleceoftheburden," he said. ---' ·
Education would not be Immune

fro;a~~:~o~e~~~one department to escape the budget axe
because of the Lncreased federal
gasollne tax funds which are due to
flow into the state for highwaywork.
Celeste complained of the high

coots of Medicaid health care, which
the state has had to asswne.
"It's on the order of $125 mUllion.
We are probably gpendlng S2 on
health care benefits for every dollar
we spend on basic income mabttenance - and that Is simply wrong,"
he said.
Celeste said he would appeal to
everyone provldlng health care to
cut costs.

been completed on the OVP press
earlier In the day.
A Fin-Cor representative from
the Youngstown, Ohio Electrtcal
Services, Ted Suszczynski, arrtved
in GaiUpolis early this morning to
repair the OVP Press console.
Wingett said . the local press
should be back in operation sometime today. It was the first time In

cheaper.
Paul Jaros of Jaros. Firestone &amp;
Mullln, Columbus, Informed the
board he has spent the last month
examining different kinds of roofing
material. He said a product
manufactured by Johns Manville
appears to meet the needs of parts of
the KCHS roof which may suffer
severe water damage before the
end of wlnter.

l

f""'·
'

.

.

family owned facility wUl open Friday, dan. 28, wUb
opeia hoUse to be o'-rved Sunday, Jan. 30. I'rlzes wDl ••
be awarded at tbe open house.
~

CO.MANAGER - Rhonda Dailey wDl serve as
.».manaser of Dalley's Coontry Restaurant, Tblrd
street, Racine, ~~long wltll her husbalid, steve. 'lbe

...

15 years the OVP press was unable
to complete a run because of a
mallunction.
Publisher Wbtgett today thanked
Messenger Publisher G. Kenner
Bush, along with General Manager
Richard Paynter and Press Foreman Wllllam Conrad for their help
In getting the Register and Tribune
printed Monday.

By KATIE CROW

Dalley's Country Restaurant loca ted on Third Street in Racine will
open for business on Frtday, Jan.
28. open house for the newly decorated faclllty will be held Sunday, .
Jan. 30, according to Rhonda DalLey, co-manager of the new
restaurant.
The restaurant was formerly
known as the Steam Boat fnn. On
Jan. 15, last year, the restaurant
was destroyed by fire.

The restaurant features two cllnlng rooms, formal and Informal.
The decor bt the formal dbtbtg
room features a homey atmospbere. The informal cllnlng room
which has a rustic decor Is In the
center of the restaurant while the
formal room ts In the front of the
building.
Counter space has been shortened to five stools. The restaurant
will feature home-cooked meals,
soup and salad bar and homemade

Council seeks legal advice~~ ..

"You've tried to patch it before,
and that's Band Aid, really," Jaros
said. "We've seen other products,
but you haven't found the cause of
the problem. You're only buybtg

(Continued frCI'l! page 1)
Hoffman also reported that state
representatives had visited the
community In December to inspect
HUD block grant activities and
have issued a report thatplansofthe
town are "progressing In good
order". The report Indicated that
the officials are interested In the five
acres of tan!l across from the
General Hartinger Park as an area
for houstni: for loW and moderate
Income people.
A letter of thanks from the
Middleport Elementary School was
read thanking ·the village for
limestone placed on a drive in back
of the school and council renewed a
fire contract with the Salisbury
Township Tiustees. The contract
provides for a payment of $1100 by
the township for fire protection

time. ''

Property transfers

durtng 1983.
Councilman Jack Satterfield reported on the Inspection of six
locations from which complalnts
have been received that street
lighting is inadequate slnoe Ugh:S
have been removed as new street
lights were installed in other
locations. UpOn the recommendation of Satterfield, it was agreed to
return the lights to the locatior\s
which include: the e nd of Hooker
St., end of North Fourth; intersection of Oliver a nd Dew; Walnut and
Coal near an alley; Mill and Third ,
and at the end of Brownell.
Councilman Allen lie Klng
reported that Beech St., west of Ash
St., also needs additional lightlng.
However, council members said
that decisions on more street
lighting are not being made until the
· new lights have been installed ln
each location ,
Councilman Carl Horky asked the

street committee to take a look at a
dralnage problem near the Ace
Hardware Store. Council agreed to
do so, but pointed out that earlier
efforts for a cooperative arrange. ment with the property owner for
resurfac ing both thE' street and the
area in Ironto! the store to provide a
better drainage situation had not
worked out due to the failure of the
property owner to assume his part
of !he project.
Council also discussed a drainage
problem near the Intersection of
Logan and Broadway Sts., and
Mayor Hoffman said he will look a!
the proble m. Councilman King said
that . the area around the ~eUy
Manufacturing Co. building is not
being properly drabted.
Atiendlng the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman. Clerk-Treasurer
Jon Buck. and Councllinen Horton,
Horky, Gllmore, King, Satterfield
and William Walter.;.

ON YOUR

DOORSTEP SOON! .

Y2

""'

PRICE

White~ Westinghouse

A suit to quiet title was filed ln
MelgsCountyCUmrnonPleasCourt
by William L. Carr and L!lcllle F.
Carr, Rt. 2, Coolville, against John
Tansky, Logan.
Accordlng to another entry
Cheryl Looney filed for support
under the Reciprocal Agreement

Admitted: Richard DeMoss,
Pomeroy; John Dean, Pomeroy;
Homer Graham, Raclne; Mae
Brewer, Racine;. Sharon Pierce,
Raclne; Luvenla Hayman, Long
Bottom; Mlnnle Harris, Mlnersville; Edgar Taylor, Raclne; Elizabeth Moodlspaugh, --Middleport;
and"Maggie Nelson, Mldclleport.
Discharged: Perry Mitch, Pam-

SLINDERELLA
DIET/ EXERCISE CLASS
Mon. Night-5 Points Class-6:00-7:30
Tues. Morning-Mason Class-10:00-12:00 Noon
Weds. Mom.-5 Points Class-10:00-12:00 Noon
Jo Ann Newsome
992-3382

Schul
s~=====================~~
648 ~ard_-'-(eo_·n_tln_eu_ed_f_rtrn_e...:r~-g-e-1_)
____ I

Act against Joseph Ray Griffith.

Ia

committee to rewrite job descrtp- have the jlolicles and · procedures
tions for staff positions by July 1. committee reWrite rules and reguThe staff should be reduced to four lations as recommended by the
members or less, the board decided. . review group. ·
The financial committee was told
Rice said after the meeting the
to reduce the budget, also by a
board has not taken action on all of
. unanimous vote of the board. the recommendatiOns of the review
However, the board clld not specify panel. He said other Issues may be
taken up by the board later.
what areas to cut.
Board members voted 11-0 to

JANET'S HAIR-GO-ROUND
. MASON, W. VA.

PERM SPECIAL-S50(1 Off
ANY PERM. THIS MONTH. ·

PH.

V3~5404

Marilee. Connie, Diann or Janet

Page6

PageS

NOTICE
Keith Riggs, D.D.S.; is announcing new
hours for · his practice of General Dentistry
eHective immediately.

Monday-9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Tuesday-12:00 noon to 6:00p.m.
Wednesday-9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon
and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m ..·
Friday-9:00 a.m~ to 12:00 noon
and 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Saturday-9:00 a;m. to 12:00 noon .
Dr. Riggs is Now Acceptirw Piltiems
With Welfare and Geneml Relief Cards.
,,

Humidifiers
RELIEVE THE DISCOMFORT
ASSOCIATED WITH DRY AIR

0 3-Speed

Fan
I 0 Au!omatic

Shut-off ·

' o Water

Level
Indicator
o Refill
Light
0 Automatic
Humidistat
0 Woodgrain

finish .

,.

•

•

enttne

at

1 Sedlon , 14 Pages
15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 26, 1983

Democrats asked to help cure economic ills
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan's midterm appeal for a
standby tax hike and the ''strong

medlcbte" of a domestic spending
freeze faces trouble bt Congress,
eVen though Democratic leaders

Reagan PropOsals
rsiPEHtifl~il

Freeze owerall federal spending about5 percent abowe current leftls; freeze
federal pay and retirement benefits
for one year; cost of liYing Increases
In Social Security and wet benefits
delayed lor six months

'A standby 1 percent Income tax
surcharge and a SS·a-benel oil tax,
taking eHect Oct. 1 1915, only II the
admlnfstrlttion't fiiQI year 1986

•

Middleport
Department Store

Court actions filed

Page3

•

desserts. There wUI be dally spe- : ~
clals and carry-out servloe will be '',
available. There Is also a walk-up .
window of tlie building that will be
used mastly ln the warmer months. Steve and Rhonda Dalley are co-· ·
managers of the family owned res- taurant. They have 10 employes.: ·
The restaurant will be open Man·
day through Thursday from 5: ll;
a.m. to8_p.m., FrtdayandSaturday·.
from 5:30a.m. to 11 p.m. and Sun-.·
day from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

The architect noted th&lt;lt although
Johns Manville Is presently reorganizing under federal bankruptcy
laws, the company has established
an $11 million trust fund to hack up
its products.
.
The apparent low Qid bond In the
bid opening conducted last Dec. 9
was
offered by Carl T. JohnSon,
f
In~ .• Logan,at$266,443. To correct a
Barbara Arnold, Gene Arnold,
Electric Co., Right of Way,
story In Monday's Tribune, Marco
VIcki Arnold to Dores L. Arnold,
Bedford.
Roofing, Dayton, offered a bid bond
Mildred E. Arnold, Parcel,
Fr!IJiklln Earnest Shiltz, Bertha of $445,00l. Its "system 1" specificaSalisbury.
Shiltz to Southern Ohio Coal
tion was $148,500, which was
Dores L. Arnold, Mildred E.
Company, Parcels, Columbia.
reported as the original low bid.
Arnold to Dores L. Arnold, Mildred
Homer D. Goegleln, Mabel M.
Superintendent Gary Toothaker
E. Arnold, Parcel, Salisbury.
Goegleln to Homer D. Goegleln, · noted that bids taken on KCHS' roof
James A. Bernard, Elnora Ber- Mabel M. Goegleln, Tracts , three years ago were rejected.
nard to Dave E. Hysell, Diane L.
Rutland.
"I would think it would be worth a
Hysell, 5.28 acres, Orange.
H. D. Goegleln to Homer D. chance to rebid it, especially if we
James A. Bernard, Elnora Ber- . Goegleln, Mabel M. Goegleln, came up with lower costs," he said.
nard to Karl R Russell, Llnda L.
Tracts, Chester.
·
A motion to rebid the project was
Russell, 10.51 acres, Orange.
H. D. Goegleln;Mabel Goegleln made by board member Carl
Emergency runs
James A. Bernard, ·Elnora Ber- to Homer D. Goegleln, Mabel M.
Waugh and was accepted by the
nard to Karl R. 'Russell, Llnda L.
Goegleln, 70/100 acre, Lot 303, board.
Five calls were answered by units
Russell, 9·.29 acres, Orange.
Pomeroy.
of the Meigs County Emergency
Ottle G. McKinney, Winnie
Larry Lee Cleland, Bonnie CleMedical Service Monday.
CABLENTERTAINIENT
McKinney to Jerry Michael Johnland to Charles D. Estep, Charlene
At 12: 24 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
Meets
Wednesday
son Jr., Dorothy A. Johnson, 1Y.
M. Estep, Tracts, Rutland.
·was called to the Route 3, Pomeroy
Jean L. Frederick, Oris L.
acres, Sutton.
SPECIAL OFFER!
The Wildwood Garden Club will residence of Leroy Eichinger, who
HAS
Paul Nelson Aikman, Llnda Frederick to Oris L. Frederick,
was
treated
but
not
transferred;
at
Pollng Aikman to Linda Pollng Jean L. Frederick, Parcels, meet at 7: lJ p.m. Wednesday at the 12: 49 p.m. the Racine unit went to
1 RACK OF MEN'S
home of Mrs. Marcia Arnold. The
Aikman, Parcels, Salem.
Chester.
the residence of Elizlx'th Cleek,
program
topic
will
be
"Taster's
Ernestine Evelyn Price to James
Zuelelia Smith, deceased, Lula
WINTER JACKETS
State Route 338 and transferred her
E. Dldclle, Right of Way, Meigs.
Belie Hampton to Carter P. Choice."
to Jackson General Hospital; at5: 59
AND VESTS
Terry A. Willis, Jeanne Willis to French, Carolyn S. French, Parp.m. the Mllldleport unit took Ralph
James E. Didclle, Right of Way,
cels, Pomeroy.
Frazier from the Sunoco Station Ln
Salisbury,
Call 1-800-624-9080
Middleport to Veterans Memorial
Ask lowed
James E. Qualls, Marc1a E.
Marrtage licenses were issued l!l .Hopsltal; at 6:26p.m. the Syracuse
Qualls to James E . Diddle, Right of Thursday meeting
Meigs County Probqte Court to squad transported Edgar Taylor of 1------------....1..~-.:...-----'----­
Way, Salisbury.
Kenneth B. Lawson, 70, Syracuse, Bashan Road to Veterans MemorWilma V. Bah!, deceased, VIctor
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Ill.
The Meigs Band Boosters will
and Ann Marie Fleming, 46, Long ial, and at 9:42p.m. the Middleport
A. Bah!, Cert. of Trans., Chester.
Furniture styled
·
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
Bottom; ·Charles Melvin Miller, 25, unit took Maggie Nelson from her
Mary G. Genhelme'r, deceased, school. Plans will beflnaltzedforthe
Pomeroy, and Jeanetta May residence at 161 Pearl Street to
George C. Genhetmer, Affidavit, trip to Six Flags over Georgia.
Veterans Memo rial Hospital.
Roush, 33, Mason.
Long Bottom.
Parents are urged to attend.
David K. Ramey, Beverly Ramey, Mark A. Grueser, Nancy S.
Grueser to Columbus and Southern

Veterans Memorial

Bob's Beat of Bend

Vol.3i,No.1B8
Copyrighted 1983

.Gallia board ·to rebid project
Kyger Creek High School's roof
repair will be sent out to bid again
after the Gallia County Local Board
of Education, on the recommendation of its architect, decided to seek
other specifications for the project.
. Meeting Monday nigllt, the board
was Informed it could get new
material for the roof not only a's
effective as that outlined in the
original bid. but also $50.00l

Knox leaves Bills'
'
head coaching post

e

Celeste said his austertty moves
are based on the prospects Qf slow
econOmic recovery.
''For the rest of 1983, for example,
we need to assume that unemployment does not average below 13
percent, and then, In 1984, as it
begins to come down, that it will
decline more slowly than perhaps
other parts of the country," he said.

Malfunction disrupts OVP printing Open house set for . new restaurant_

Due to an electric mallunction on
controls opera tlng the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company's press In Gal·
'lipolis, distribution of the Gallipolis
Tribune and Pt. Pleasant Register
was Ia te Monday evening.
Publisher Robert Wingett said
the two papers were prtnted on the
Athens Messenger press late Monday after the Dally Sentinel run had

Eaglettes win;
.Eagles beaten

deficit forecast exceeds 2'h percent
of gross national product

Six-month extension of unemployment
compensation; taa,c:redlts lor hinng
unemplo,ed; more job training funds;
lower wag~t for teen summer jobs

Adjust the defense budget to save
Billion ower 5 years . But, th•
proposed freeze - l d leaM room
lor an inere1se of 1bout 14 percent
In the defense budget next year,
according to 1 White House official

sss

Ap

are

. PROPOSAUIIN STA1E OF THE UNION SPEECH- 'lbe8e
some of the key propclllals In President Reagan's Stale of the Union
speech: ( AP Laserphoto ).
--

Meigs official
•
certain grant
.approval near

say they will accept his summons to
fbtd a bipartisan cure· f!lr the
nation's economic llls.
The president, Ln his nationally
broadcast State of the Union
address to a joint House-Senate
session Tuesday night, called for
holding federal spending at about
roughly 5 percent above current
levels - except 1 for defense
programs.
And he urged a 1 percent Income
tax hike to take effect Oct. 1, 19851f
economic recovery falls to matertallze. Reagan also called for
excise taxes on domestic and
Imported oil.
Reagan said cost-of-living Increases In Social Security and
government retirement benefits
should be delayed for six months.
And he said federal pay and
retirement benefits, both military
and civilian, should be frozen for one
year.
"The state of our union is strong,
but our economy is troubled," ·
Reagan declared, adding: "We
havealongwaytogo ... butAmertca
is on the mend."

He called his plan "bipartisan,
fair, prudent (and) realistic." ·
And whlle praised by Republican
leaders, the president's prescrtption was greeted with skepticism
and even ·sharp criticism from
leading Democrats. They complained !he proposed freeze would
still pennlt an Increase of defense
spending of around 14 percent a
year.
"I fo\U\d the speech was neither
fair nor realistic," saki Senate
Democratic Leader Robert C.
Byrd, D-W.Va .
"He's freezing the wrong thing:
He offering a fr_ee?.e_·on Medicaid

payments Instead of a nuclear
freeze," said Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass.
However, Kennedy added :
''There Is a strong bipartisan feeling
on the Hill totrytowork together on
the principal issue of the economy."
Treasury Secretary Donald T.
Regan was to defend t)\epresldent's
new proposals today before a
· meeting of the House-Senate Joint
Economic Committee.
Congressional leaders on both
sides of the aisle said Reagan would
bave a bard time winning approval
for his provisional tax lncrease,
either In the GOP controlled Senate
or the Democratic-led House.
Reagan's" proposed standby tax
surcharge would be levied as of Oct.
1, I985 only if the deficit is projected
to exceed 2.5 percent Of the gross
national product - and only if
Congress has first adopted his
freeze proposal.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker, R-Tenn., called Reagan's
proposals "heroic and necessary"
and said they "will be controvertsal
but I think Congress will respond to
the challenge he utl!'!red."
Reagan, referring to .the highest
level of unemployment since · the
Depression, agreed this was "a ·
painful period" for the nation's 12
million unemployed. And he declared: "We must all do everything
bt our power to bring their ordeal to
an end."
Reagan said his freeze proposal
- to be contained bt the budget he
~ubmits to Congress next week would hold the federal deficit at
about $189 billion In fiscall984, the
year in which he once promised to
balance thE! budget.
(Continued on page 10)

'

· the economy and soclal security Issues. (AP Laserphoto).

More layoffs
setatGDC

By KATIE CROW

David Koblentz, president of the board of commissioners said Tuesday he
feels-sure that a grant of $25,00l will be forthcoming for the Utter control
program through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
The grant, which will be used to clean up dumps, should be announced
around March.
_
Koeblentz btdlcated a supervisor would have to be hired with the Litter
Board having the controlling power. Through the cooperation of the county
highway department, townships and GR workers for the welfare, It Is felt
the grant can be extended and much can be accomplished.
Koblentz noted that all towsnshlpswlllhave tosubmit applications to haVlj
· dumps cleaned_because grant funds will be pro-rated.
Providing that the work done Is satisfactory, In phase II' of the program
whatever money the county puts Into the program would be matched 10
. times _the county's amount. Some counties are in phase II and m of the
program at the present time.
Phil Roberts, county engineer, reported that through the"on systems for
highways" federal and state funding is available. Several highways In the
county are on the system but several have been taken off.
Roberts explained he would like to set up a·five-year program to upgrade
roads througn state and federal funcllng.
He lncllca ted he would check with the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Marietta to try and get as many roads on the system as
,
possible adding they do have to meet certabt requirement$.
Roberts explained that county road 21, near Hobson to the Middleport
OiJ1l., Is on the on system and lsellglbleforfundlng. The main thing required
is guardrail in thi&gt; area which he stal\?d will~!!? taken care of.
Roberts also reviewed another pfOgram hewasgoingtotry to get started,
s!gns'mark!J)g all roads In thecounl)'. He said he would like to~ve the name
of the road as It Is listed In the house numbering program, ·
Roberts observed that the county does have a sign machine and If he can
possibly get it to work, the county will make tbiir own signs.
"One way, or another, we will get signs for roads bt the county," Roberts

ADDRESSES THE CONGRESS- President Ronald Reagan addresses a .Joint Session of Congress Tuesday night on Capitol Hill where
he deUvered his State ol the Union mfSSlage. 'lbe president touched on

MAY

~UBLE

TAX SURCHARGE - Ohio Budget DireCtor

Cbrllltlna Sliles stands-behind an overhead proJector at a Tuesday press
,oonlerence In Columbus where she told reporters that Governor RIchard CeQte may deelde to double the personal income tax surcharge
no)¥ In eflect. (AP Laserphoto),

GALLlPOLIS- Effective Feb.9,
104 more Gallipolis Develepmental
Center employees will lose their
jobs in the biggest job abolishment
yet at the center for mentally
retarded clients.
In making the announcement this
morning, the Ohio Department of
Mental ·Retardation also predicted
another 51 jobs could be eliminated
sometime within the near future.
To do that, ODMR has Instructed
Q!Xl: Supertntendld't Robert Zimmerman to draw up a new table of
organization. This action has already been outlined In a memo to
center staff, an ODMR S(Xlkesman
said. ,
· The spokesman said the abollshments were recently approved by
the Department of Administrative
Services, which had reviewed -the
situation and ordered that abolishments be conducted according to
regulations.
Dr. Rudy Magnone, ODMR
director, said In the annolincement
that delnstitutionalization of retarded clients at developmental
centers around the state Is the cause
for layoffs at GDC and several other
Ohio facUlties.
The Ohio General Assembly

SALE PRICE
-

$1 0999

REGULAR '145.00 - U GAL CAPACITY

SALE PRICE

$_12399

,.ECHANIC
ST. WAREHOUSE
'
'
.

'
Celeste Is trying to. offset a the two was cut to $528 mUllan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
• Roberts reported he met with Rhonda Dalley at Veterans Memortal
projected
$528 million deficit and . because money was carrted over
Richard Celeste's budget chief
Hospital concerning lighting at the hospital, paving of a crosswalk and alsoa
balance
the
state budget by June 30, from the last fiscal year ,
predicts two years of doubl~t
sj)eed limit to be imposed. It was suggested that the speed limit should not
Celeste Is to tell the Legislature
the end of the fiscal year.
unemployment ln Ohio and says tax
exceed 10 miles per hour'
"The problem we're dealing wi~ Tuesday how he wants to deal with .
Meeting with the commlssloners was Dick Pennington of the Dravo . hikes and gpendlng cuts alone won't
In
the next five months Is not unique the money problem.
cure state government's long' term
Cot'P .• regarding a sand and gravel operation In Letart Township near
Seriate President Harry Meshel
to
the next five months. Thlslsnot a
money shortagE'.
·
Apple Grove.
'.
said
he opposed f~Jther Income tax
hiccup.
This
Is
not
something
that's
To cope with current bUdget
Pennington asked to conduct surface mine operations to the boundary
Ms.
hikes.
golngtobeflntshed
tomorrow,"
line of the eounty owned sand and gravel pit.
· problems, the Celeste admlnlstra·
"It's one that Idonotfavorat this
Sale~ld.
'
lion Is ·considertng doubling the
· Roberts reconunended the request noting that they could utlll1,e aU
tilne,
but that does not mean that
She . said she expected double·temporary sui:Charge on the state
material. It was agreed that a barrier·~ be placed In the area. ·
won't
be a ·consideration," Meshel,
btcome tax for three months, ' digtt )lllel'l;lpil&gt;yrnent, wblch cut tax
.· The comrnlssloner5 agreed to approve
the document as soon as it
. and sign
.
Cristina Sale, director 6f the Office . revenue $368 m!lllon, to Unger for D-Young5town, said. "The preferts prepared.
·
ot Budget and Management, said two more years. Ohio's jobless rate ence for many people Is to extend,
:-- Also meeting with the commissioners was Everett Schultz, Olive
not tolncrea:se," thecurrentlncome
now Is 14 percent.
Tuesday.
Township trustee, concerning repajrtoa truck loaned tothe~pbythe
·
The
lost
taxes,
plus
unexpected
.
tax
surcharge scheduled to expire
Leaders of the Legislature, which
rounty highway department.
.
expenseS
of$206lnllllon,
caused
the
March31.
must approve the tax hike, said they
.-. Ted Warner of the county'higbwaydepartmentstated thatthecountywill
budget
deficit.
The combination
He said iin:,_: _tax hikes must be
were
skepUcal about it.
- -.
.
- . Of
·
· ·
(Continued on page 10) .
r •

.

..

~I

..

mandated more than a decade ago
that retarded people be discharged
from such centers intotheconununlty or into outside service programs.
As of this week, GDC employed :
694 people. The new abolishment
will reduce itto590, accordbtgtothe ·
spokesman. With the posting of a
new table of organization, there
could be another 51 jobs ellmlnated
in the "near future," which the
spokesman said has already been
"roughed out" by the department.
The February layoff brings to 166
!he number of GDC employees
whose jobs have been abolished In
the past two years. Fourteen lost
their jobs on May ll, 1981, and
another 48 were furloughed last July
20.
.
fn a memo to staff, the February
layoffs will extend to 34 Class I
hospital aide supetvlsors and 20
. hospital aides. Twelve food service
workers will also be discharged. '
There will also be ihree painters'
jobs and three ma intenance repair '
workers' positions abolished, arid •
two ·each · in the followi!lg job '
classifications: clerical specialist,
typist II, cook 1 and custodial
worker.
(Continued on page 101

Tax hikes, spending cuts won't cure $$ sho~age ·

iald.

REGULAR '129.00 - 9 GAL. CAPACITY .

·-

(,

,_

.,.

coupled with spending cuts to lessen
opposition to them .
Senate Minority Leader Paul •
Glllmor, R-Port Clinton , said,
"Considering the increases In
spending in most areas of stall! '
government recently we would expect that most of 'the shortfall
would be made up by cuts as ,
opposed t0 tax increases."
•·
Ms . Sale said 5 percent annual
spending cuts for most · state ·
agencies, anC\ deeper cuts in some :
programs, · were being studied. ;
Since a 5 percent annual cut would ·
be In effect for less than half the ~
. flsc;llyear, ltwould comeoutasa iO :
. (Contlnued on page 10!
'r:.

..

--' -·

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