<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13978" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13978?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-06-10T12:38:19+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45078">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e319d20fb69448a0042f59a299ae49ea.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0d1afb71de79f95c97da8d763a31542c</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43713">
                  <text>0

e

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An

avalanche of mud and toppled trees
blocked rescuers troni reaching up
to 20 people trapPed today Inside
burled houses as mudslides continued to tear away hlUsldes around
San Francisco Bay a day after a
ferocious storm ended.
At least 20 people died In mudslides, drownlngs and other accidents related to the storm, one of
the worst In northern Ca!Homla his·
tory. Scores were Injured and an
undetermined number were

LISIL
DEIDIRIZIII CLEIIEi
BIG 21 OZ.
SAVE •1•

WIPES AWAY
GERMS THAT

99

.· ·• ~

111111
litiS
CIIUPOII

CAUsE ODORS

DOTHE ·
FIGHTER SHUFFLE

WITH THESE

HIGH VOLTAGE RESCUE - .Three flrefightei'H re•rue Mn. Hugh
Patenon from San Rafael, CaiU., from her car after hlgb-vollage wlreti
•lll'l'&lt;lUDded her car In San Rafael during a IIUill•lve storm that drenched
Northern Callfurnla. The woman •uffered a leg injury in the accident.
. (APLaserphoto) .

Cheshire

us

Karen R. Fahner, Cheshire, en·

ALL

tered a volimtary plea of guilty to a
grand theft charge lnvolvlni aid 10

dependent children m9nles al·
Jeilediy obtained fraudulently trom

6 ROLL FAMILY PACK
I

:

'

I

'

•

BATHROOM TISSUE

F~ll~a . $169 :
· ·

•

CHARM IN

TIS_SIE
SAVE 31'

'

SAVE

CIIIINI

31'

+ ·-t . ~?!QOI~Gf~·~!\?·z;;;~
. -~~!!:·. !:·~+~~D~ELICIOUS .

$16~

RITI'I

PLAITERS
SlACKS
SAVE 21'
-..

I
,..,;

001 BUSIIESS
IEGIIS WI1H
AWIG YOUR
PRESIIPTIOfiS

6.9e·-'

P'

II •• 'W. Ya.

,....._
~

In prison.
. ..
·The matter of sentencing was
continued unlli a pre-sentence In·
vestlgatlon and report have been
completed. Fahner was released on
a $5,001 personal recognizance

bond . .
Meanwhile, Carl Q. WOburn, 26,
Portsmouth, Is expected to face arraignment no later than tomorrow

.......

F ' II'

1,

•

ID

enttne
mudslides

The boy and tits two sisters were
trapped when a mudsllde and part

of an uphill home crushed their
house. The girls' bodies were recovered late Tuesday, and rescue
Workers and dogs , continued to
search tor the boy; who was pre-

Bob Lee, Racine , a student in
Marietta, was ·named to the Meigs'
County Fair Board Monday night.
Lee, who replaces Jim Carnahan,
will serve until November when the
aMual election is held. Lee will serve as deJli!rtment head of dairy cal·
·
tie activities for the board.
During the meeting, Wallace
.Bradford was named delegate to the
Ohio Fair Managers Convention

'Ibe mudslldes were caused by a
storm that pOUilded northern Call·
fomtaHrom Sunday until. 'JUesday
morning With an average _of 10
Inches of rain and gusts or so mph.
Brown's declaration treed state
missing.
money for repair work and allowed
GOv. Edm.und Sl'OWJI Jr. de- the state to request · low-Interest
clared a state of emergency Tues· loans from thefederalgove~t.
day In six storm-battered counties The counties are Marin, Contra
as estimates of property damage Costa, San Mateo and Santa Cruz
cUmbed toward $100 mUllon.
tor the current storm, plus HumIn the town of Ben Lomond, about boldt County for damage tn a storm
·
60 miles south of San Francisco, that began Dec. 19.
l!IUd churning down a steep canyon
Among the victims of mudsl~
toward Love Creek burled at least was an acclaimed 59-year-old proeight houSes, keeping rescuers fessor of Chinese language and lifrom reaching people trapped In· terature at San Francisco State
side and stranding uphill residents, University. Kal-yu Hsu died when
authorltles said.
mud engulfed his Tiburon home In
In Marin County, across the bay Marin County.
from San Francisco, two or three
In Santa Cruz County, mudslides
homes toppled down a Sausalito claimed lives tn Bould~r Creek,
hlll,ltllling one person; and from 450 Santa Cruz, Soquel, Felton and Ben
to 3,tm people were being evacu· Lomond.
ated from their homes, officials
"The death toll will probably rise
said. Mudslides forced closure of substantially In Ben Lomond" as
the Golden Gate Bridge.
rescue worlters fighting eight acres
Mudslides In Marin County were of mud and fallen redwood trees
undennlnlng U.S. lOlleadllig to the reach the burled homes, said sheGolden Gate Bridge and were riff's Investigator Joseph Henard.
threatening houses below .In SausaOfficials who flew over the mud·
lito, said Paul Douelas of the Cali- swain~ hlllslde esumated from
' eight to 15 people, possibly as many
fornia Highway Patrol.
In Pacifica, 10 miles south of san as 20, had been trapped In the burFrancisco, a father had just led homes.
grasped his son's hand to pull l)lm
There was "no way" to get, In
from their wrecked home when a Tuesday, although rescuers with
cascac!;: of mud swept them apart.
four-wheel drive vehicles lrled to
cUmb the mudsllde, Henard said.
said Fire L'hlef Cal Hinton .

' ••, ·,o. .

Wit

area,

• CLEANING UP AF'I'ER RAIN STORM - AU Ghadlrl and hll ioa
Mohbod, 7, dig out their San Rafael, Calli., yard wllere a power line fell
aeron the back of the houoe Tueaday after a violent rain atorm ~1'1!nched
Northern CaiUornla. (AP Laaerpholo).

'

the Swisher-Lohse Phannacy In
Pomeroy, also In November.
Wtll!)ll.·was woilnded In .a ·sho!r
Dec. 2. . .
tout with pollee officers aild during
the chase attempted 'to take a
Wll~ was arrested Monday In
Pomeroy
woman as a hostage. Wll·
Portsmouth.
son
Is
In
the cou.nty jail awaiting
Wilburn Is chal'g!!d with aggra·
U1al
on
charges
of theft of drugs,.
vated robbery or the Nelson Drug
kidnapping,
armed
robbery and
Store in Pomeroy In November and .
permitting
drug
abuse.
Mrs. Wil·
allgedly was Involved with Michael
son
Is
free
on
bond
on
charges
ot
and Anita Wilson, Reynoldsburg,
aldlne and aheting a robbery and
whO were apprehended, by area popermitting drug abuse.
llee officers alter the couple robbed

which started today and runs
through Friday.
William B. Downie was named
alternate.
Attending the convention are Mr.
and Mrs. Bradford and Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit. Joining the group Thul'sday
morning fdr the annual lair
managers' breakfast will be Downie
and William Radford .
Plans were maqe for several

members to attend a workshop on
managing and conducting
educational livestock and horse
shows at county fairs on Jan. 14 at
lbe Canter's Cave 4-H Camp in
Jackson County.
The workshop is sponsored by the
Jackson Area Extension Service.
Attending from the board will be
Danny Zirkle, Downie, Mrs. Leifheit
, Roger Spencer, John Rose, Virgil
Windon. and John llice, . county ex·
tension service agent, agriculture.
The board discussed evening at·
tractions for 'the August fair. It is
reported that only one professional
show will be staged at the ·grand·
stand at the 1982 fair.

The ~ntertainer will be "Sylvia," a
singer, reported to be rising fast in
the entertainment business. She will
be the attraction on Wednesday
evening.
Other grandstand evening attractions will include a horse pulling
contest on Thursday, a truck pulling
contest · on Friday and a tractor
pulling contest on Saturday . The annual demolition derby will be the
opening feature on Tuesday evening.
Serving as officers this year for
the board are Danny Zirkle,
pr~sident ; William B. Downie, vice
president, and Hugh Custer,
treasurer.

.

Roger B. HW was given his oath of office as a new member of the
Southern Local School Dlslrlct Board of Education when the board

... ........

with getting people that a re alive
out of the area," Henard said.
The Love Creak
a hilly red·
(Continued on page 14)

enters ·guilty plea

Smith leads Southern board

..

Homes In the higher reaches of
the canyon escaped the slide and
dozens ot. people managed to get out
but officials stU! were "concerned

sumed dead.

Lee chosen to Meig~ fairboard post

-

''THE
EVERYTHIIG
STOlES"
'
.
. ·· .
,&amp;

•

on an aggravated robbery charge
fourth degree cal'l'ry1ng a possible returned secretly against him by
~lty '2f !!X months to ~v~ years _ !lie ~elis County Grand Ju!'Y on

EACH

FRUTH PHARMACY
,., ....... ,

The otfenile Is a felony of the

CHEU IIALL$CIIEEZ QJRLS .
COD CHIPS
. SAVE 21' EA.

CHEEZ Ml•s.aEZ CURLS
COlli CHIPS
R£&amp;. 97' EA.

the Meigs CountY Welfare D!!parl·
ment Tuesday afternoon In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Fahner was charged with the of·
tense ln a bill of Information prepared by the office ot Prosecuting
Attorney Fred W. Crow m.

resi~ent

•

at y
20die

·FIIll'l

••

•

met Tuesday nlglit at the high school tor Its organlzatlonal sesston.
Administering the oath was Dennie Hill, new lleasurer 'of the
dlslrlct. The board named Don Smith as president for the new
calendar year and DeMy Evans, vice president.
Uablllty Insurance was purchased along with a bond for the treas·
urer. The board voted to continue Its rnerpbershlp In the Ohio School
Board ASIOCiatlon. Meetings w~ set for the second Tuesday of
each month beginning at 7: llp.m. The next meeting, howj!Ver. was
set for 6 p.m. on Jan. ~4.

All STORES
OPEl 7 DAYS
AWE£11

FREE PARKIIG

,Ollie

Juveniles face theft charges

NEW- JIIIMI Carpenter, R&lt;MIIe 1, Reedsville, lathe- uatstaat
MqJeUIDI!Idli.t ol tile Melp Local Sehoul Dlltrld. Carpenter, witll It
yan Ia tbe fieaddDI JN ufealoa, leu IIIUpt matbeiDIIUcs and Encllalo at
!be Metp Jaualor lliCh Selaoel for He IUid -alf yeal"'lo He was

,..vteu~y priarlp.t af tile Federal HedJnC lliCh khool for 11 yean 1811
bu 111111 oll:er teaeldq '!"Ji"' lence Ia Cohm.,_j Mlllenper1, Am.... ,
tile l'.uWrD Dlltrld IIIMI II Balla&amp; He pil'l r led frem Rio Grade
caDep ud reee1vec1 Ids
deane rr-·:xmer 1a eurcm.u. 11e
... . _ ll!lllu..l Wlll'k 11 ~ Ullhenlty. ear,e.ter wu ~ to
...,._. 0. E.~.- reti!idly . . _ . ~ the
dfatrld. Hil eGIIInet ra. 141 Jwly II, Jtli1. .
.

-ler'•

.r

1bree Meigs County juveniles and Trooper Dennis Hunter or the
have been charged with stealing Ohio Highway Patrol spotted. the
two automobiles on Monday.
car on Route 7. He stopped the vehiAccording 10 reports, a 1977 vehl·
cle In Which three Juveniles were
cle owned by Jenny Grln.stejld, riding.
;..
Pomeroy, wu stolen from the
Sheriff JameS Proftltt reports the
Melp Hlih School parking lot.
·trio confelled to taking both cars.
Within ~0 mlniltes after the
Chariel have been flied In the
broadcast reportlne the stolen car,
Melp Coilnty Juvenile Court. ·
a woman w11o was listening to lhe
Acta of vandalllrn and theft at the
scanner, called the lherlffs depart· Lebllllon TOWIIIhlp aaraee were
ment to Inform ott1cer 1 she had allo checked by deputlelr who said.
.-. a veblcle rna~ the llolen the praae was entered. ·Gallollne
car's delctlpllon on BaD Run Road. and dll!lel rue~were taken arxt ~
The car wuloCated and Ideo titled . wu poured Into the engine crank
aa the Gl'llrltNd automobile.
cue, tran1na1111on and tueliY*teiil
Later, 8IIOther Cll', owned by of a·road Jl'lder·parla!d In the earDon I!erker, wu lllllen from the
age. Arrygae havln&amp; lntonnatlon
CardfDal Store pu1cfna lot In Mid- about the Incident II alked to condlepOrt. Again, • repor1 on the
tact the lherlffaot!lce. Alllnfonna.Wien veblcle wu plit on the l'l4lo tlcn will be kept confidential.

Big Bend Regatta on agenda .
L

Whether or not to sponsor the annual Big Bend Regatta next swnmer wlll be the topic of the hour when the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce 'meets at 12 noon Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
The group will also dii!CWIII continuance of free parking ln downtown
Pomeroy on saturdays and the Christmas lighting project. All members are asked to attend next Tuesday's meeting.

Apartment fire kills five
CLEVELAND- Intense smoke and names hampered the escape
of several residents In an apartment tire that kllted five people and
tnjured about 20 others, authorities said.
The blaze Tuesday night started In a thlrd·Ooor apartment in the
six-story, 133-unlt Rockefeller Park Towers on the city's east side,
officials said. About 1M reslden\5. many of them elderly or handicapped, were temporarily displaced.
Among the 20 people Injured were four firefighters, three of them
treated for smQJce Inhalation and one suffering a broken leg.

Piggyback tax under sti.ul.y
ATHENS, Ohio - Athens County commissioners say they are
considering Implementing a 1 percent piggyback sales tax to resolve
nnanclil problems Instead of a· 0.5 percent tax originally 'dlseus8ed.
Commissioners said that If the larger sales tax was approved,
property taxes could be rolled back slightly, resulting In a lower
actual tax Increase.
Commissioners hopE' to approve an emergency resolution establishing a sale tax SQ collection can begin Feb. L
A piggyback 5\lles tax would allow the county to worlt on capital
lmprovments, Including care of the deteriorating courthouse and
county welfare offices, they said .

Participate in robbery spree
COLUMSUS, Ohio ..:. Two teen-agers, one a member of the East
High School varsity basketball team, have admitted partiCipating In
a robbery spree last month, armed with a pellet gun.
' Terry Slacum, 17, pleaded guUty Monday to two delinquency
counts of aggravated robbery and a deUnquency count of robbery.
BWy Washington, P.:SO 17, pleaded guilty to three delinquency counts
of aggravated robbery and a delinquency count of robbery.
Michael Bums, Franklin County assistant prosecuting attoniey,
said the pair faCed c!Jarges of committing fOUr robberle$ that netted
about $200 tn two
. hours.

.

Winning Ohio lmtery· number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday night In
• the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" was 163.
The lottery reported eamlnga of $449,193.50 from the wagertng on
Its dally game. Theearntngscarneort sales ot~.379. while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $515,185.50, lottery officials
said. -

Weather for.ecast
Turning much colder with scattered snow Ourrles tonight and
Tbunday. Lows tonight near 2:1. Highs Thursday tn low :nr. Cliance
of precipitation 40 percent tonlglit and Thursday. Winds nortliwes· ·
terly 15-2:1 mph tonight.
EldeiUd l t ONo Fooecaat

FrtdaJ lllnlua6 "''""If'

.

. Fair Friday. 8aow fllebo!Wunlay, F.Jr 8uDda)'. Hfalaa Friday
In tile ... tbelllunlflll oolder. Hip. SMurdl)' and Snnd•;r In the
. . IIIUd loon 1-U. '

•

')

�W~dnesda

Ohio
•

Pag~2-The

·.:C om_mentary'.

SOuthern posts eighth

Daily•Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Obio

' ;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~-:~:----------:~--~~~---=~--~--:;~----~----------~----------~--W~ed~ne~s:d~a~Y=·~J:a:n:ua:r:y~6~,~~~9:82:_
0
?.__ _____Wl
...,.-i_
llia_m_·F._;_._B_uc_kl_er_J_r.
The Daily Sentinel

Next in p land

111 Cwrt Slrcet

By Gene Moore
Coach Carl Wolfe's unbeaten
.Southern Tornadoes. behind the
scoring of Kent Wolfe, extended
their winning streak to eight
games TUesday night by handing
the Point Pleasant Big Blacks a
75-49 season opening loss.
Coach Lennie Barnette's Big
Blacks were constantly trying to
keep up with the much quicker Tor,
nadoes throughO!lt the contest.
Southern lumped out 10 a quick
5-{) lead before Hie locals scored
thefr first two points of the season
on a basket by Todd "Ice" Gibson
at the 6: 43 mark in the first quarter.
Point Pleasant cut the margin to
one at 12•11 on· ·a bucket by Ed
Legge with 2: '¥' remaining, only 10
have the Tornadoes open up a 20-15
lead by the end of the opening

Pamer•y, OhJo

114-IJ%..%15f

DEVOTED TO TilE INTERI'STOFTIIE MEIGS.MASON AR EA

ROBERTL. WINGETT
Publl ~ ber

•••• •
••••

.

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

AslliHUml Publl~&gt; h c r/ C •mlru ll t'r

••:t
..

•
~neral

MalliiJCtr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

••'••'
:•'

:'•

Newti Edltur

.

A MEMBER uf 1'bt! A ~lit.ld11ted Prt:n. lnl11nd Dally Prtt1~ AliaoclaUop ud
Amt'rlcHn NewtOpH(Wr PubiiKht!n Alii!OCillllou.

Ow

•
••'•
••

~.~------~
-~
- ~~~=-~----~
•
~

'•

''•·

i::

Power of truth

Although it is very difficult to do, it
is worth the exerciSe to attempt to
think through the Polish question
non-ideologically.
What do we most care about?
The answer soWids obvious on
being stated, but only the
restatement of it keeps it sufficiently
. clear in mind. It is that the United
States should secure the freedom of
its citizens without having to fight an
atomic war.
If we ask the same question of the
Soviet Union, we are entitled to
reason t'!at its leaders' desire, above
all, to effect their continuing
dominion over their subjects,
without subjection to a nuclear war.
In this frame, we should examine
Mr. Reagan's sanctions visited on
the Soviet Union in protest against
the great Polish suppression of
December 1981.
U the Polish CommWiists lost control of Poland, would the Soviet
government itself be threatened?
About this there is much
speculation. At one end we find t~or~
observers who believe tlll!t there is
little in common between the Polish
people and the Russians and other
etl)nic peoples under Soviet control.
Indeed Professor John Lukacs has
gone so far as to say that there is little sympathy among the Russian
people for the demands of the Polish
people. Whether this is so because
the Poles are asking for something
the Russians would not themselves
begin to ask for, or whether it is so
because the Russians look with
historical hostility at any uppityness
by the Poles, doesn't really matter.
On the other hand, victory by the
Poles, even if it did not bring sympathetic detonations in. Russia,
might well .do so within other countries in the satellite empire. This
fear, Professor Lukacs predicts,
·likely cause a formal annexatio11 by
the Soviet Union or Czechoslovakia:

Not the least significant respOnse Or the Soviets to Western outrage at
:: the brutalization of Poland has been increased jamming of foreign radio
:• broadcasts.
·
~:
The special target is Mynich-based Rl\dio Free Europe, whose hburly If&gt;,. :;,.minute newscasts in ·polish must penetrate a wall of interference from
:• Soviet, East German and Czech jamming facilities.
·
·
::
The effort is a testimonial to the power of truth. RFE was a long time in
.; shedding the ima ge, deserved or not, of a CIA propaganda operation. The
:; CIA link long since having been severed, RFE's dedication today to the ol:r
:• jectivity and reliability of its news product verges on fanaticism.
·
;1 . It pays off in audience numbers. More than 60 percent of adult Poles are
•: regular listeners, surveys indicate. Figures are somewhat lower for the
:: otl\er East European countrie~ to which RFE broadcasts, but still respec·
·• table. Significantly, among the lowest is Hungary, where the state broad::· casting service is more open than elsewhere in the area.
That's the good news, even under suddenly more trying circumstances,
!• from Munich. Back in Washin~ton , the news from another information
~,.,operation also encountering trying circumstances hasn't been so en.. • .couraging.
The Voice of Ameri ca differs from RFE, which is governmenl financed
but administratively automonous, in beiqg a government operation per se.
In a sense, it speaks to the world as the offficial .voice of Washington.
It .has, however, been no leo;s dedicated - as stated in its charter com'
mitmenl to "accurate, objective and comprehensive news."
There is some question as to how much longer that will be the case. The
Voice has been under increasing pressure to speak not·only for America in
general but for the policies of the American government specifically.
The intent was most clearly and startlingly spelled out by the new ·coordinator for commentary and news analysis, Philip Nicolaides: In a memo obtained and published by the Washington Post last September, he proposed ··
.that the Vol,ce cease behaving as "a journalistic enterprise of some sort."
Instead, its mission should be understood to be' that of "a propaganda
·
agency"thatshouldgoaboutitsbusinessofsellingU.S. intereststoforeign
audiences as advertising sells soap.
Literally. In a text studied with pWigent observations, Nicolaides
declared that "selling involves more thiln reasoning, it involves emotions:
WASHINGTON (AP) - President
people buy the sizzle not the steak ... the protection against 'offending,' not Reagan would' have to rev p"'~ him·
the bar of soap.''
self on .a c.t:ut1pHign ;:;letigc aud a
Submitted confidentially before the official appointment of Ni colaides, a presidential order should he decide
former Texas radio commentator and writeT, the memo was disavowed as to stiffen economic -sanctions againVoice policy by his chiefs, Voice Director James B. Conkling and Charles Z. st the Soviet Union by blocking or
Zwick, head of the parent International CommWiication Agency.
curtailing the biggest item dn
Nevertheless, the pressure to poiemicize Voice broadcasts continues Moscow's shopping list.
and has led to staff dissension and departures, most 'recently of' Bernard
That's Arrierican grain.
Kamendski, longtime news director and author of the Voice's
As a candidate, Reagan denOWI·
congressionally sanctioneg charter.
ced the partial grain emhargo Jim- ·
The concern in part is that it would be self-defeating to depart from stan- my Carter imposed two years ago
I
dards of objectivity such as were set by the British Broadcasting Cor- today because of the Soviet move inporation during Wotld War II. With BBC, which never dissembled to captive to Afghanisian. He promised to lift it
Europe, even about British defeats, truth became a powerful weapon.
and, as president, he did.
Propaganda, on the other hand, is always in abundant supply and of no
The sanctions Reagan has ordered
audience appeal. Poles and other peoples burdened with authoritarian because of the military clampdown
regimes gel plenty of that at home. They listen to Western broadcasts for in Poland do not affect agricultural
something else - facts they can trust, word of developments not only in the products, .which represent by far the
outside world but within their own countries that they can accept as true .
largest share of U.S. exports to the
RFE continq~~,.to ge_t'much of that through to Poland. The jarruning ef- Soviet Union. Farm pre&lt;Jucts make
fort is only unevenly successful, and not at all for some 90 minutes every day up about 70 percent of American
when optimum atmospheric conditions protect transmission signals from in- sales and almost all of that is grain.
terference.
But in a hint of possible action on
The period is called "twilight bnmunity." The Voice of America could that front if he decides further sancuse something like it in Washington.
tions are in order, ·Reagan ordered
postponment of negotiations on a
•
new Soviet grain sales agreement to
replace the one expiring next Sept.

r;

so that whatever else happened in
Eastern Europe, the.Soviets would
have a geographical terrain through
which to strike at Western Europe if
required.
Now if we reason that therefore
something less than a Polish "vic·
tory" would be acc~ptable, how best '
might the United States proceed?
Here we lean, with great ~espect,
on the reasonipg of Professor John
Hutchinson. He is an Englishman,
and a professor of industrial
relations at the University of
California. He is iniimately acquainted with Poland and was made an
honorary member of Solidarity at its
foWiding Congress of Solidarity in '
Gdansk, ·which he addressed .

Professor Hutchinson has addressed offer to the Poles? The terms of it
a letter to the erutor of the London would be that the West was prepared
Times, suggesting a ·course .of ac- to make a huge economic transtion. He_does this in an open letter to fusion into Poland -en the condition
General Jaruzelski in which he guar- only that the money be received, and
ds against any temptation to express subequently deployed, by Lech
the moral contempt he clearly feels Walesa and his designates. The
tor any quiallri'g doing the business of money would go to the
a foreign opp&lt;·essor. What is the ob- recapitullition of small industry and
of housing - all done through the
jective?
The objective is to ease the Poles private sector, with all the indices of
out of the vise .fashioned for them by the free marketplace coming to hear
commWiism. The Poles need huge on individual economic problems.
economic advances, and these can- Such an agreement would not entail
not come under doctrinaire com- the resignation of General
Jaruzelski's iron hold over the
munism.
What if Vice President George political life· of Poland. But.it would
Bush were assigned by President give the Soviet Union an opportWiity
Reagan the job of communicating an to ease Poland away from the track
of apocalypse

~-

'

; I~
,I

· ~·

.'

will

" ... and now, here to respond to this station's opinion, .. "

G •
ff
·
•
rrun cuto would break. promise

•

Tax reform bill
could come in '82

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
senators will try again to. pass a
significant tax reform blll this year,
says Senate President Paul j':. Gil·
lmor, R-Port Clinton.
Disappointed that the Legislature had to raise taxes In 1981 with' out being able to ac~leve property
tax relief and other revisions, Gillmor said, "There's going to be
another effort to get a tax reform
blllon thefioor. I don't know if it will
pass, but If we fail It is not going to
be for lack of effort."
Majority Republicans In the Se·
nate brought to the fioor last year a
combined school funding and tax
reform package, sponsored by Sen.
Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland.
But It was pulled from the fioor after some Republicans and a major·
tty of Democrats In the chamber
withheld their support. ·
GUimor said the new Senate plan
will contain key elements of the
Van Meter proposal: property tax

relief, increased school funding and
some unspecified changes In the income tax.
An ad hoc, blpartlsancommitt.;.,, ·
formed in the Senate last year. has
started meeting again. Gillmor
said members of the panel. headed
by Sen. PaulE. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus
"already have reached agree'
ments on some tl)lngs."
That panel will meet Wednesday
afternoon to discuss elements of the
tax structure with o!tictal.s of the
Ohio Department of Education.
Pfeifer's group wUI continue its
efforts, and a new joint committee
on taxes, established by the state's
1981·1983 budget btu, also will
pursue the same problems.
GU!mor and Houuse Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
say they expect the joint committee
to take lln in-depth look at Ohio's
tax structure, find the Inequities
and make recommendations• for .
cnange.

30.

•

.

,

"We will watch events in Poland Reagan criticized the Carter em· affected by the partial embargo:
The Soviet Union may not have
closely in coming days and weeks,'' hargo has been altered by the
hurt
for lack of U.S. grain, but the
Reagan said. " Further steps may be tightening of sanctions on other for·
Soviets
certainly want to buy it.
necessary, and I will be prepared to ms of trade. Candidate Reagan said
They
will
be able to purchase up to
take them."
farmers were being forced to bear a
23
million
tons of wheat, com and
Should those steps involve grain, special ,burden and argued that if
other
grains
during the year that enthere'll be some explaining to do. ~here were to be export sanctions
ds
next
Sept.
30.
When .Carter imposed the partial they should be spread across the
That's when the current grain
grain emhargo, Reagao said it was board.
.
the wrong thing to do. Later, he said,
Still, agriculture is where the sales agreement expires and
i~ had not served to punish the Soviet
business is. There's more to take negotiations were to have ~pened
this month on a new · one. That
Union, only the farmer. ·
away there.
"I've never thought that it should
Reagan lifted the Carter emhargo Reagan postponed those talks could
be seen as a warning signal but in itbe part of our diplomacy," Reagan April24, saying his action should not
said in Davenport, Iowa, On Jan . 7, be rea~ in Moscow as a sign of . self is hardly a sanction . against
Moscow.
1980, three days after Carter ordered tolerance for aggression. He said his
The effect of the agreement is to
the embargo. " I don't believe ouv - administration has made that point
farmers should be made to pay a . and "our position now cannot be set minimum and maxii'n4Jll limits
on grain sales, which is something
special price."
mistaken."
"It actually hurt · the American
Whatever the impact of the em- the United States wants to help the
farmer·more than it hurt the Soviet bargo on the Soviet economy, as government to keep a handle on the
Union," he said later in the cam- soon as it was lifted, they started· volume of trade.
Without a new agreement, and abpaign. And still later: "Jimmy Car- buying again. U.S. trade with the
sent
any sort of embargo, the Soviets
ter's grain emhargo, which has hol:r Soviet Union nearly doubled in 1981,
would
be just like any other foreign
bled American farmers for months largely because the grain emhargo
customer
and could buy as much
now, has had virtually no impact on was ended.
g1·ain
as
they
could get U.S. comtheSovietUnion."
·
Grain exports totaled about $1.5
panies
to
sell
them.
That probably
The administration could main- billion during the first nine months
tain that one of the grounds on which of the year, compared with $821 wouldn't feel much like punishment
·
million in 1980 exports that weren't to them at all.

traditional lOcale for the meetings,
But last spring the Reagan adbut a separate White House Con- ministration decided that individual
terence on Youth was moved to state conferences would replace the
distant Estes Park, Colo., deep in · Washington meeting "in koopillg·
the Rockies.
with the president's con)lnilment to
Although the official report issued rest~re leadership and responfollowing that Colorado meeting Sibility to state and local governdescribed the White House Con- ments.''
·
terence on Children and Youth as" a
venerable institution in American
There is, however, good reason
life," Reagan has unceremoniously to believ~ that if the Reagan adabandoned the custom. ·
.. mamstrabon was uneasy about. conAn interagency task force, com- vening a meeting of elderly citizeilli,
posed of representatives of all major
at Pr.Qbably was terrified when l'Dilfederal depa1tmen!S and agencies sadenng the prosJ)ect of organizing a
and headed by .members of the -~onferenl-e whose delegates would
White House .staff, beld meetings in anclude advocates of the programs
early 1981 to plan a national con- to assist children that have been
ferenee..,..whlch lbcuses on parents reduced or eliminated by the
nd the 'lotion of people helping president as well 'as irreverent
people to help themselves.':
YOWig people in their teens and 20s.

ANO MITCH
ff.A/!IiS,
at'AY? I fXNr

Can't he ·reached
I have no complaints on our local
hospital and doctors. In an emergen·cy there's always one oo. call. But
have you ev'er called your family
dentist or any dentist when you sud' denly got a bad toothac~e?? Well,
• - most are not taking any new patients

B)' 1be Alt!J 'dec' Pre.
EAST
Anny 51, RPI 54
Dartmouth 6'l. Massach""''" 46
Lehigh ·rfT, SusquehaMa !&gt;6
Princeton !il, Falrfleld 49, O'I'
ROOde Island 1;1, Widener 6'l
StPeter's '16, Dowling 511
Siena 71, Wagner 62

1HUIN6,

SOUTH
E.Telll"'eSSee St. 82, Funnan 74
Louisiana Tech 75. Waba&gt;h 62
Southern U, 85, Kentucky St. 75
SW Louisiana !II, Butlalo ;;r
Tn.-Chaltanooga 81. AIJiiola&lt;:hlan St. G3

Free throws In the final quarter
of Tuesday's non-league
Southwestern-Oak HW basketball
game stopped the Highlander push
and led to a 58-52 wtn for the Jack·
son Countlans.
Southwestern started off strong,
despite a CQncentrated effort by
Oak HW, and by halftimf' the High·
landers were ahead, 29-21. But top
scoring by OakHUI's JetfDurtn (19)
and Wendell French (18) soon
erased the deficit.
Gary Baker and Paul McNeal,
for Southwestern, were high scorers with 12 points each. The High·
landers were 53 percent from the
field, sinking 23 out of 53 attempts,
and .they also chalked ·up six out of
nine tries from the free-throw line.
Oak Hill was statistically outgunned from the field with 21 out of
64 tries for 33percent. However, the
Oaks were more successful with
their charity buckets, slnklng16out
of 25 tries .for 61 percent.
Southwestern is now Hi overaU,
and travels to Southern for resumption of league play Friday night.

992·234Z

BINGO
.

THURSDAY AND SUNDAY

EVENINGS

"J 7:00 P.M.
POMEROY
EAGLES CLUB

,I

EAST MAIN ST.
POM,EROY, OH.

CALL 446-5287 IN ADVANCE

Denver 10. N.Coloraoo 64

Gonzaga 71, Whlrworth M
Loyola, Catll, 75, Loo Anaeles St. 68, OT
Pepperdlne lll. Fullerton St. 76

San Francllco 111, San Jose St. 66
111URNAMENT8

Contused with IRA Rates and Term·s...

..-a-

CI\onlploaolllp

Stetson f17, New Drle&amp;ns 66

•

The IJail)· Sentinel
(USPS JG-illl
ADivision ol MW.tlmedll, .__

•

Member: 'Mle Associated Preu, Inland Dai·
Jy PreS!! !tBSOdation and the American
Newspaper Publishers AssoclaUon, National ·
AdvertiJint~ Rep ~~enl~live , Branham
Newspaper Sales, ~~ Third Avenue, New
York, New York 10017.

WI
•
I

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

By Carrier or Motor Roule

One week ....... ...... ........... .. •J.OO
One Month ......... , ....... .. ... , .. $4.40
One Year ....................... .. 152.10
SINGLE COPY
PI\ ICES

o . Total s 21 -"26- SB .

Daily ................... . ...... 15 Cents

Score by quarters :
Southwes ter n
10 19 10 14- 52
Oak Hill
21 2 . 18 17- 58

Subscribers not

desir~ng

to pay the carrier

•

may remit In adv.ance direct to The Daily

Sentinel oq,a 3, 6 or It month basl11. Credit
will be given carrier each month.

OUR NEXT BEGINNER
CAKE DECORATING CLASS
STARTS JAN. 21st

MAILSU8SCRlPTIONS
OhioatHIWett \llrJ(Ilia

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY
Ph . 992-6342

3 Month .. ........................ Sl3.00
8Mooth ........ . ........ , , ..... m .tO
1 Year .. .. .. .. .
. .... $44.20

aDd We~t Vtrci.U.

Middleport

••

1n

No subscrlptlom by mail pennltt.etlln town11
where home carrier service i.9 available.

3 Monlh .............. .. .......... 112.30
Six month . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ $2(1.110
I Year .......... . ................ $39.00
RatnOuloldeOIIIo

v1n

I

POSTMASTER: Send address t.o The Dally
Sentinel, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,'ONo45769.

Jim Slone 2-5·9; W endell French 9-0
18 ; Jell Dunn 8·3 19 ; Todd Lewis 0·0·

•

1amon

Published every afternoon , MondMy through
Friday, Ill COurt Street, by the Ohio Valley
Publlshln" Company - MuJUmedia, Inc ..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 , 112,.2156. Secotid cla.u
posta"e paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

on

.•

..

\VAUGHAN'S

INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT

AccouNTS

1

Diamond 's IRA rate will be higher'than any
advertised rate in Ohio.
Contact your local Diamond office for full details,
or call Diamond's IRA Information Center.

Phone 992-5546
- ·

.

WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY SPECIALS

FRENCH

.

•

TOLL FREE

.

CREA.~. HORNS••,............. 3/ $100
.
,FRESH
.
·
YEAST DOUGHNUTS •••••• ~.Z!_N•• 5189

1·800·472·9588

'

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDA"f SPECIALS

FRESH BAKED

CHERRY PIES

-

.

81NCH $299
Fresh White, 11i&gt;lian or French

.BREAD••••• ~·)··.··!·..~·'-~t~::~ 2JS1
FILLED

49

'

'

-o

,

OND

SAIINGS AND LOAN COMPANY
216 W. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-6655

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

I

8 15- 49

l7 26- 75

r-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~

MONDAY • FRIDAY 5 PM • 9· PM
MAIN Q.INIC FACILITY NEAR GALLIPOLIS

IU.-Chi.Ctrtle 64, Florida A&amp;M 6'l
Roosovell 79, George. WIWams Ql
SW Kansas 81, Tabor 74
S01!l1lWESI'
Arkansas St. 1'l2, Mo. -RDIIa 53
Texas 7i, TelUl.! Tf!il::h ~
Texas A&amp;M W, Texas ChrtstW! 54
FAll WEST
Air Force 57, Valparaiso 49

Price 1·0·7; Roge r We lls 3·3·9 ;
Chuck Stew art 0·0·0; PaUl M cNeal6·
0· 12; Randy Layton 5·0·10 . Tolals 23·
6·52 .
OAK
H I LL
( 58 1 -" Johnny
Harrison 2·7· 11 ; Sha ne M cCo y 0-1-1;

THetiNB!

i;

15 11
20 12

HOLZER CLINIC LTD.

VIrginia St. 115, Bowie St. 61
MII)WI!m

. SOUTHEASTERN (521 - Scoll
Lew is 3·1·7; Ga ry Baker 5·2·12 ; Rob

DOONESBURY

or tbe dentist is iii but is booked up
Witil next month. Then you look
around at an empty waiting room!
So yo.u suffer a month or so. Complain about our li&gt;eal hospital and
doctors! Then try to get a dentist·
you will find out it i_s not so easy:
Toothache can be very painful. - M.
C. Van Meter, RuUand.

J)OWNING.atiLDS.
INSURANCE
.AGENCY
MIDDLEPORT

AT

BeUannlne 64, YCiW\plown St. 61

~

f)tMMIT,

7RIJ57' 'TH/5
I- //lN(jfN6l
•

I

115 N. 2nd AV£.

ANNOUNCEMENT
NIGHT CLINIC

Why does Reagan fear kids ?.__R_obe_rt_w._a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - A
In 1970, President Richard M.
tradition dating back to the ad- Nixon was not especially admired by
ministration of President Theodore rqany young people and the United
Roosevelt - the decennial White States' military involvement in
House Conference on Children and Southeast Asia was vehemently opYouth - has been swJllllarily aban- posed by youthful political activists
doned by President Reagan.
·
throughoutthecountry.
The Reagan administration's
Although Nixon surely must have
heavy -handed attempts to been aware of the conference's
1nanipulate the recent White House potential for prOducing political
Conference on Aging received con- anguish for his administraiton, he
siderable publicity, but the abolition nevertheless simctioned a nationof the ocmpanion conference has wide meeting under While House
gone virtually Winoticed.
auspices - even though the con- ·.
Throughout the past half-century, ference was held one year late and
every president in office at the its unprecedented format apbeginning of a new decade pare~tly ~as designed to isolate the
Republican "!" .Democ_c,tic, lll!eJ@l ptesidenl s cntics. . .
dr conservative - has honored the
A White House Conference- on
tradition established by Roosevelt, a Children sponsored by Nixon was
Republican, in IillO._
held .here in Washington, the

WID

'fueldaY• Collep B··tett•D Scoree

Foul shooting
provides victory

317 N. 2nd

tended its lead by opening up a 32-22
lead, But the Big Blacks managed
to cut tbe margin, on baskets by
John David and Ed Legge, tJefore
haiftjme lilt.erm!sslon at 32-26.
Legge, David, Gibson and Rod
Uttletleld paced !hi! local atuick In
the half with aU scoring stx points
apiece.
the fioor.Kent Wolfe led aU
From. the opening tip of the se- from
Southern's
cond half on, which Southern scorers with 28 points, while team·
scored an easy two points, nothing mates Richard Wolfe and Tom Roseemed to go right for the Big seberry each chipped In with 10
points apiece.
Blacks. In the quarter Point Plea·
Todd Gibson led the Big Black
san! went through a four minute
scoring drought which allowed the attack with 14 markers, while Ed
Tornadoes to open up a command· Legge, Rod Littlefield and John
David added 12, 10 and eight points
tng 49-34lead by the end ol the third
respectively.
·
quarter.
In the fourth quarter, Southern's
David led In the rebounding deKent Wolfe, lollowtng two free • partment for the locals as he
throws by Rod Littlefield, scored gTabbed eight.

&gt;~

~

Letter to the editor

College results

NEW NFL COACH? ~ Univer·
sity of Southern Califumla head
football coach John Robinson is
on the brink of leaving hl!i post to
become coach of thf New
England Patriots of the NFL.
(AP.,.Laserphoto) .

six straight unanswered points to
widen the Tornado lead to 19 points
with 4:04 remaining in the final
stanza.
Both coaches emptied their
benches for the final four minutes
as the final score stQOd at '75-49.
The Big Blacks sbot 39 percent
(18 of 46) from thefioorwhlleSouth.
ern shot a hot 54 percent (28 of 52)

stanza.
1
In the second canto, Southern ex-

.....
-~ -

'

Accounrs insured to

SIOO,OOOby FSliC

I

�Pomeroy

Wednesday, January 6, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

Janua

Waterford posts eighth

straigh~

win

Bv qUarters :
EAST MEIGS - Despite a gallant first half, Easttl!'ll owned the second.
Buckley 0-0-0; Riffe 3-4·10 ; Bissell 4·
14 26 6 lG-56
Waterford
After
a
·stormy
first
half,
things
H
;
Dill
S·Hl
;
Bisseii6-0
12.
Totals
second half comeback effort by.
6 13 12 15-46
Eas1ern
~~~6.
Eastern, the state-ranked Waterford began to settle down.
Wildcats secured an exciting 56-46
In the fourth frame, Eastern made
victory for its eighth straight win the game more exciting as it pulled,
here Tuesday evening.
closer and closer. A balanced attack
Waterford ' is now ~ overall. provided the spark and Eastern
Eastern owns a 5-2 mark overall.
grabbed the 56-46 win.
Despite a definite height disad·
Eastern had a disastrous night at
DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY
vantage, (Waterford averaging 6-3 the line by canning two of I~ while ·
per man ), Eastern managed to hold Waterford hit 12 of 14 for 86 percent. . ·
its own during the initi.al stages.
EHS hit 20 of 53 from the field for 38 ~
The Eagles, playing with limited percent, while the winners hit 22 of .
••
forces , suited six upper classmen · 50 for 44 percent.
· and several reserves.
Eastern exhibited a balanced at- ,
Eastern's big man, 6-4 Paul tack, led by Roger Bissell with 12
Sprague, was out with pulled points, while Tun Dill added ll , P.
ligaments in his ankle .
G. Riffe 10 and Mike Bissell nine.
Tim Cunningham notched the first
Waterford edged Eastern on the
score for Waterford at the 7:26 boards of 26-24 led by Roe and King,
•)ur office will not be qpen for business on Dec. :Iii, 25, 31
mark, but senior Greg Cole returned while Bissell had nine for Eastern.
~ nd Jan. 1.
the favor with a long jumper at the
Waterford had 15 turnovers, and
6:40 mark. Steve Roe zipped the next 22· fouls. Eastern had 12 personals
Hours:
, · bucket for a 4-2 Waterford lead.
while the opponents had 12. WHS had
Shortly afterwards, pivot man Tim 12 team fouls, while EHS had 14
Examinations by
Mon
Tues..}
9: 00· 12:00
Dill locked the score at 4-4.
· fouls.
.
Appointment, Other
Thurs.
1: 00-5 : 00
From this point on Waterford
Waterford won the reserve contest
Examination Hours
Fri.
reeled off 10 unanswered points to 3&amp;-26. Troy Guthrie led Eastern with
Available by Request
take a commanding 14-ii lead.
' six. Eastern trave)s to Kyger Creek
Wed . 1:00-5:00
In the second period Waterford Friday.
. 6:00-9 : 00
was twice as hot in gaining control,
Box score:
46-19 atthe half.
waterford cstt&gt;
Raugh 2·
2·0·
4; ~-;:=====:::;;;:;::r==;r::;:::;:====r.;;==:;n:
·-~--r·:7·=·:;
Cunningham
3·0·6;- Watson
1-4;
Forward Steve Roe led the rapid, g 5-J -13 ; Eic h inger 4·0·8. Totals
fire attack with II points at the half,
22-12-16.
EASTERN (461 - Cole 2·0·4;
Just as Waterford controlled the

James L. Schmoll, 0. D.
443-C Locust St., Middleport
VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES
CHILDREN'S
VISION
.

PH. 992-6545

TOUCHING HANDS - Tim Dill, Eastern's fl.-4 center, fires over the
hands of Waterford defender, Bill Eichmlller (31) during Tuesday's non·
league battle at Eastern. Waterford posted its eighth straight victory,:;&amp;46. Dill had II points' in a losing effort. Eichmiller scored eight lor lh_e
Wildcats. Kris Wilson photo.
·

\

Last second basket
gives Redwomen win

Redmen post
MOC victory
By SCOTT MILLER
RIO GRANDE - Power forward
Watson McDonald ripped through a
rugged Walsh College defense for 33
points and pulled down 11 rebounds
here Tuesday night to lead the shorthanded Rio Grallde College Red·
rnen to a 7Hi5 over the Cavaliers in a
game between the top two ranked
teams in the Mid-Ohio Conference.
The Retlmen, who arc now li&gt;-3
overall and l-1 in the conference,
have been picked by the league
coaches to upend Walsh and defen·
ding champion Cedarville for the
cniwn this season. Walsh dropped to
8-6 overall with the l~ss and 0-2 in the
conference.
" We thought we did what \\'C had
to do tonight," Rio Grande coach
John Lawhorn sa id. "C urtis
(assistant coach Curtis Wooten) had
done a real good job of scouting
them in advance so we pretty much
liad a good idea of what their
capabilities . were and what they
liked to do"
The win also came at a time when
the Redmen were playin~ without
several key pcribnncrs due to injuries. Standout _point guard Jerry
Mowery was sidelined with a severe
ankle sprain after taking a fall in
sHturday's game with Tiffin and
joined forwards Dan Curry and John
Maisch on the bench with injuries.
And forward Paul Morrison also
suffered an ankle injury al(ainst Tiffin, but was able to compete
Tuesday night.
Rio Grande fell behind early by a
!0-5 count in the first fiv e minutes,
but wenl on a 23·5 streak in the next
10 minutes to build a Zl!-15 lead. The
Redrnen opened the 13 points bulge
with 6:11 to go in the half when the
Walsh coaching staff was whistled
for a pair or bench fouls.
Lawhorn then inserted Mowery,
an 88 percent free throw shooter,
who dropped in all four charity shots

on the tech!ticals to boost the buldge.
Lawhorn then replaced Mowery
before action resumed to protect his
injured ankle.
Walsh managed to cut the margin
to three on two separate occasions in
the final three minutes, but each
time McDonald responded with a
pair of free thro~s to put it back at
five. The Redmen held a 4!1-351ead at
the half.
The teams traded baskets in the
opening minutes of the second half
until McDonald hit a three point play
at the 7:07 mark for a 57-48 margin .
The Redriien were in the driver's
scat from that point on opening leads
of as big as nine pints on three
'
separate occasions.
Mark Zellman cut the final
margin to six with a drive at the buzzer.
-.
McDonald muscled his way
through triple coverage to connect
on 10 of 18 field goal tries ,and 13 of 19
free throws for a game-high 33 poin- ·
Is. Over his last six games, McDonald has averaged 26 points and
16 rebounds per outing.
Morrison was the only other Redman in double digits with 10 markers
and 10 caroms.
Jeff Szczepanski led Walsh with 18
points, while Zellman and Tony Harvey chipped in 14 each and Rick
Williams II.
The Redrnen will be back in action
Saturday night at Urbana College.
They will return to Lyne Center next
Tuesday when they take on Mt. Vernon Nazarene College in "O'Dell
Lumber Company Night."
WALSH (651 · - Arthurs 0 1· 1;
Dowell 2 0·4: Kowa lski 1 l ·J ; Szc zepanski 8·7 18 ; Wiliam s 5· 1 11: Ze lf·
man 7 0 14 ; Harve y 7·0 4. Total s 30-S-

65.

RIO GRANOE Oil - McDonald
10 13 33 ; Jutzc 3·3-9 ; Penrod 3· 1·7;
Burson 1·0·2; Mowery 0 4·4; Wollen ·
burg '1 2 6 : Morrison 4 2· 10 . Totals

-

.

RIO GRANDE - Forward Kim
Clingman netted a running back shot
at the buzzer here Tuesday night to
lilt the Rio Grande Redwomen to a
IJ8-j)7 comLLfrom-behind victory over
Ohio University-Chillicothe at Lyne
Center .
The win upped the Redwomen of
coach Jamie VanArsdalen to 3,-2 on
the season heading into tonight's 7
o'clock contest with Shawnee State
In Portsmouth. The Rangerettes
edged the Redwomeri by a 7Hi9
score in overtime in the opener for
both schools back on Dec. 12.
In Tuesday night's game, the Red·
women jwnped out to a quick 10-4
lead only to see the Hill toppers outscore them 27-8 during a nine minute
streak. The visitors held a big 45-29
bulge at the intermission.
_
OU-Chillicothe put the lead at 20

points early in the secohd stanza
before the Redwomen started the
surge that leU to victory. Janet
Groves of Gallipolis dropped in 12
points in the second half to key the
comeback.
Clingman led a balanced Rio
Grande attack with 15 poinfl;, while
Brenda Dillon adped 13, Groves 12
and Robin Hagen II.
Cheryl Ryan led the Hilltoppers
with 25 points, while Sue Wyskiver
added 14 and O.bbie Brwnfield 13.
OU -Chillicothe (61} -

Myskiver 7·

0· I&lt; ; Conk el 1 l·J; Gibson 3-0-6;

Rya n 10·5·25 ; Hammond 1-2-4; A ter
1·0 2; Brumfield 6· 1-· 13 Totals 29· 9:

67.

RIO GRANDE (681- Camp 4·1·9;
Cli ngman 6-3 15 ; Davis 3·2·8: Hagen
43 11 ; G rove s 4·4- 12 ; Dillon 6-1-13 .
Totals 27 -14· 68.
Halftime scor e - Chillicothe 45,
Rio Grande 29

·Athens gals de frat Marauderettes
In a close battle all the way,
league

leading

Logan Thursday.

Athe ns ~ downed

Athens

(391- Lee 3·6·12 ; Kroner

Meigs, 39-37'\n an SEOAL contest at
r..
E M ·
G
T d
...arry . orrlson ym ues ay

d·l·9; Douglas 2·1·5; Mollica 4·0 8;
While 21 ·5. Totals 15-9-39.
• Meigs (37)- Sm ith 1·4-6; Ol iver 5·

evening.

3-lJ ; Me adows 3-2-8: Crooks 2-0-.4 ;

Pam Lee loo the Lady Bulldogs
with 12 points. Mollica who finished
with eight points also led Athens'
rebounders with eight.
Pacing the Marauderettes was
J,-yne Oliver with 13 markers. With
48 seconds left, Meigs missed the fir·
st half of a oncLplus situation which
would have tied the game.
According to the charts, Meigs
sank 14 of 331rorn the field for 33 percent and nine of 18 at the foul lines.
Athens hit '31 percent from the floor
and nine of 17 at the lines.·
The loss left Meigs with a 4-4
record and 2-3 league inark. Athens
is 3-1 in the SEOAL. Meigs hosts

Anderson 3·0·6. Totals 14-9-37.
By Ouarlers •
Mei gs
7 16 22 37

All it takes i~ a woman's touch
to make a room feel warm. '
A Kero·Sun• Port•ble Heater Is
convenient and easy to operatejust press a lever and It's on. It
has a clean, modern look that Ills
any deccr. It fills easily with the
handy siphon pump that comes
with every model. With a KeroSun Portable Heater, llke this
U.L.-Ilstad Radiant 101 " model,
you can leave your thermostat
turned low and save money In the
·months ahead.
99.9% fuel-efficiency means
odorless, smokelesa operation.

Halftime score -

D.caus• you don't
havt monty to burn.

p•ICkens Hardware

•
~A:I~he~n~'----------~9~1~7-2:8~3~9_l!:::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::~
~

You Get
What You
Pay For.

r-------------------.,;_----1

23 -25-71.

Ri o Grande 40,

Wal sh 35.

And It needs no chimney. 9
models to choose from . See a
demonstration today.

Wahama heats Spencer five
The Wahama White Falcons
pulled away 111 the final period
behind the play of Travis Gray, Kendall Weaver, and Donnie Vanmeter

to post a 6!1-56 victory over Spencer
Tuesday night.
Bow: score :

SPE NC ER

(561

Knott

18 :

T(w lor 9; T. Buck a, Kea ton 7.
Van horn 6; Si mmons 4; R. B uck 2,·
Huoh '1'.
WAHAMA

(60')

-

Gray

19 ;

Weave'P 3; Vanr'neter 10 ; L.:~vcnder
8; Mac hir 4; POW CII4 : Paul? .
By quarter s: ·
Spe ncer
18 15 12 11 - 56

Wahama

16 15 14 15- 60

Jan11ary Clearance -Sale
SNOWSUITS, COATS &amp;
BUNJIN.GSr BY•• Tiny
Tots &amp;
Playland

50% OFF
ALL

20% OFF

JEANS

In this day and age of skyrocketing prices, the old cliche
"You get .what you pay for" probably holds true for most items
but t_here 1s one exception- a subscription to The DaHy Sent [nel.
For JUSt a f_ew do! Iars a month you'.ll receive home delivery of the
,best shopp1ng gu1de to better values. And if you learn to shop the
bar~ain~, clip the ~oupons, and take advantage' of .all our money
savmg tipS, the Da1ly Sentinel will pay for itself along with saving
you extra money .
.
So get the paper that's wor-th more thim you pay far .... The
Daily Sentinel.

Fall in Love
With this delicate
rose pendant and
matching earrings
accented with genuine
diamonds . ·tn 14Kt. gold
overlay by Krementz .
'

~~

EVERYTHING ELSE

STOREWIDE
30% OFF

.The Daily Sentinel

'Q'Jettelers .
21&lt; E . MAIN • POMEROY

KIDDIE SHOPPE
'n1

w. 2nd

· POmeor~,oh.

PH. 992-2156

tJ

6, 1982

Southern
sixth in
AP pol~
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Even .
with a new coacb, Canton Me Kin· .
ley shows no signs of losing any of '
Its Ohio boys prep basketball
·
prowess.
. The Bulldogs are right back
where they were last season under
veteran mentor Ken Newlon - riding atcip the Class AAA rankings in
The Associated Press poll. ·
Newlon retired after leading
McKlltley to a 20-0 regular season
record and a regional toUrnament
berth last winter. .
Mike Riley, who left an assistant's job at St.Louis Unlverslly to
replace Newlon, has the Bulldogs
saillng along with an S:.l record.
They own vlctQries over ·· teams
from Ohio, Pennsylvania and

SlURrROURS:
Mon.·Sat. ~ am-1 0 pril

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES GOOD THRU JANUARY 9, 1982

Mlchlg!lfl.

With tlle loss of guards Troy Taylor and Ron Stokes to Ohio State,
6-foot-6 senior center Jimmy Johnson has taken over the scoring lead· ·
ership. Johnson is averaging 16.6
Points per game for McKinley, ,
whose only loss was to No. 3 Ketter- ·
lng Alter 5!1-58.
McKinley earned 165 points from
a statewide panel of sports writers
and _broadcasters for the opening ·
Class AAA poll
·
lead with Columbus Northland
(8-0) second with 95 points and Alter (6-1) third with 92.
Willard, 9-0 this season and 82-4 in
the last lour years under Coach Bob
Haas, ranks No. 1 in Class AA with
148 points. Delphos St.John, led by
coaching veteran Bob Arnzen, pa· .
ces the Class A ratings with 197
points. .
Willard .faces the closest ratings
battle. The Crimson Flashes are
just 12 points ahead or second·
ranked Warsaw River VIew (8-0).
Columbus Bexley (1!1-1) is third tn ·
Class AA.
St.John (6-1), beating larger
schools Newark, Worthington, Dayton Dunbar and Lima Central Catholic this season, piled up the
largest to~ with 197 points. That
gave the Blue Jays a 87-po!nt mar:
gin over runnerup Sidney Lehman .
(11-0).
In Class A, Richmond Dale Southeastern was fourth, Anna tHth,
Racine Southern sixth, Kalida seventh, Old Washington Buckeye
Trail eighth, Fayette GorhamFayette ninth and Latham Western
lOth.

Free throws

U$DA CHOICE

$ 99

.

Round Steak.;....L!... l

$
249

BUCKET

QUA~ITY_ ~LUS .

.

·

$}.
29
8

Shced Bacon·... ~.~-~ ~
FRESH PORK

••

Cube .Steak........ ~~- . · ··
USDA CHOICE
·
t
,
$}29
Chuck Roas ...... ~~·.. .

-

. $}·Jg

.

Steaks or Roasts.L!.
BALLARDS

Sausage!~ ~~!!!~.u.N~!.~ 1

19

provide win
An Intentional foul against Han·
nan Trace's Mike Waugh turned
the tide tor the WUdca ts In the last
seven seconds of Tuesday's nonleague game with Chesapeake and
earned HT ·Its lhli1:l down-to-lhewlre win of the season, 53-52.
The Wildcats opened the game
with good defense and otfense, particularly by Waugh and Toby
Sheets, but the effort against the
Panthers bogged down In the second canto, and, for the' most part
in the third quarter.
Cltesapeake led 24-22 at the hal!
behind the scoring of Bobby Corder
who had 14 points and nine points
!rom Rick McMaster and Sean
Hanis.
· However, HT began bounding'
. back In the fourth then came the
turning point when Mike Rossiter
stole a tip !rom Chesapeake and
knocked it over to Waugh, leading
10 the foul and two successful charIty shots to make the Wildcats the
victors.
. '!'he win puts HT's overaU record
at 4-5, while It is 1·2 In the SVAC.
Coach Mike Jenkins credited the
team with a strong defensive play ·
tor the final effort. Sheets was sin·
gle high scorer for HT with 18, and
was assisted by 12 from W~ugh and
nine from Jeff ~mes .
Statistlcally, HT shot 51 percent
(22 out of 43 attempts) from the
field and sunk nine out of 15 tries on
tree-thrOWs for 60 percent. Chesa·
peake was 56 percent from the
field, sinking 23 out of 41 tries, and
llagged only stx tries out ~ 19 on
charlty tosses.
Chesapeake tallled ll rebounds
to HT's 21, while IN:,WUdcats bad ·
15 turnovers and the Panthers ~• 'The Wildcats return to league ac- ·
Uon Friday night when they travel

to l'iorlh Ga11la,.
HANNAN TRACE (S31 - Kelly
Petrie 3·2·8; Greg Webb 3·0·6; Mike
Waugh S-2·12 ; Toby Sheels 8·2·18;
Jeff Barne• 3· 3·~; Mike Rossiter 0·0·
O; Dan Bays 0·0·0; Keitn Campbell 0·
0·0. Totals Zl-9-53.
CHESAPEAKE (52) - Tracy
west 4·0·8; Jeff Hamblin •·0-8; Sean
Harris 4·1·9; Scoll Moore 1·2-4; Bob·
by corder 6-2-14; Sean Rose 0·0·0;
Rick McMaster 4·1·9. Totals 2H-52.
Score by quarters:
Hannan Trace
21 2 6 2453
cnesapeake
12 12 15 13-52

u. s. ~0. 1

Wh1te

$}19

PotatoeS!!~~ ..
..

DARI FRESH•

•

2% MIlk ...........G::L~~-~
STARKIST
.
.

.

·Chunk Tuna.... !·!~:.
FLAVORITE

r ( J l 1I 1 (

4

BORDEN'S •

~ Large Eggs....... ~~.7

COFFEE

,

$599

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Expires Jan. 9, 1982

NORTHERN
TISSUE
4 ROLL

PIG.

.
·1,1

I~ ..

MAXWELL HOUSE

3 LBS. .

VALLEY FARMS GRADE A ·

· Ice M1lk .......•••••••••

Pinto ·Beans..• !~.~
'

.

99~

Limit .o ne Per custom.er
Good
at Powell's
OHer E
9, 1982

GAL

r • t J t 11 ) r J t'-1

'
CAMPBELL'S

FLAVORITE

TOMATO SOUP

SUGAR

10.75

oz.

5/$1

Limit One Per Customer
G~ Only at Powell's
Offer
Jan. 9, 1982

..
'II

$}69

T

5 LB.

.BAG

$}29

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at P.owell's
Offer
Jan . 9, 1982

�Page-6

The Daily sentinel

.'

Pomeroy

Wednesday,"January_6, 1982
.

Middleport, Ohio ·

. Wednesday, January 6, 1982

Meet the Eastern ·Eagles · 1 Householder.wont!ers. where
· ·h e'll play thzs campazgn

MIKE BISSELL

TIM DILL

6-1, Senlor Guard

6-4, Senior Center

GREG COLE
5-10, Senior Guard

Cincy's LaSalle .T hompson
"
~
leads 55-50 Longhorn· win
\_

ByAssoclatedPretlll

LaSalle thompsOn went up ... and
down cam~ Texas Tech.
"LaSalle really .got tired tonlght," said Texas Coach Ahe Lem·
ons after watching his hlgh·fiylng
center lead the Longhorns to a 55-50
college basketball victory over
Texas Tech Tuesday night. "That
was a lot of workouUhere for hlm."
The 6-foot·lO Thompson contlnu·
ally soared ·above the crowd to collect rebound alter crucial rebound
at tile Super Drum In Austin. He
pulled down 17 rebounds In aU, In
addition to scoring 14 points In the
battle between two of the Southwest
Conference's better teams.
The Red Raiders had rallied
from an 11-polnt halftime deficit to
make a strong challenge and
moved ahead by two points inld-,
way through the final perlod. But
with 7: 26 left In the game, Texas
outscored Tech 11-3 with the help of
Thompson and a tough defense to
cUnch the victory.
"Our defense was very good,"
said Lemons alter watching hiS
team force the Red Raiders Into
SE.'Veral second-half mistakes. "I
was pleased with that."
The Red Raiders had won their
first
game Saturday by upset·
tlng Arkansas, a 'fop Ten team, but
were not patient enough against the
Longhorns, according to Coach Gerald Myers.
"When we did get up, we didn't
handle the situation very well," he
said. ''Our shots were not great
shots. We should have taken better
shots when we had the lead, the

Angeles State and Texas A&amp;M
Claude RUey and 6-7 Roy Jones
stopped TCU 6().54 as the Aggie _ dominated the smaller Homed
front line of 6-11 Rudy Woods, 6-9 . Frogs.

··Legioq parti~ipates in projects _ _ .

·-

1

Nwnerous ChristJbas projects
were carried out by lthe American
Legion Auxiliary :of
w Webster
Post39, Pomeroy.
The Juniors of the itprovided70
tray favors for
adi1l Nursing
H?me along with •
··
cards
With $1 each -for the eterans there.
They also took a s ial gift to Bill
ROvJiak, the juni : "adopteil"
veteran, and sent C
tmas cards
withacjollilrelichtotheveterans;at
the Athens . Mental Health Center,
along with a giftfor John Harriso , a
veteran there.
The Seniors provided 26 packages
of homemade candy and 26 fruit

play lor the Reds, but If it comes
CINCINNATI (AP. - Paul
Householder hopes he's 110t lett sit•. down to sittlng on the ~h or playIng for another team; I'm better off
t1ng on the bench when the Cincinsomewhere else."
nati Reds finish playing musical
When the season ended, the
chairs with their outfielder.
Tile young ·outfielder, groomed . switch-hlttlng Hou.seliolder was on
the Reds' roster after batting .~
for a starting major league spot In
with 19 home rwls and 33 stolen
six seasons with the Reds' organibases ·for the indianapons farm ·
zation. thought lie had secw'ed a
tiam. It was the second ilme the
spot In the lineup with the deparReds had called up the highly rretures of Ken Griffey and Dave Colgarded outfielder at the end of a
lins after the 1!1!1 season.
season.
"Then the Reds acquired out'
Householder appeared to have a
fielder Clint Hurdle from . Kansas
starting role when the Reds traded
City and swapped third baseman
Grl1!ey to the New York Yankees
Ray Knight to Houston for center
and Coll1ns left as a tree agent. Now
fielder ·Cesar Cedeno, leaving the
Reds' outfielder of the !uturewond- he'll have to,tlght for a position.
"I got my foot In the door and now
erlng whether tomorrow wW ever
they're
slamming the door on my
come.
foot,''
HousehOlder
said. "I figured
"H they're going to pay Cedeno
11
one
spot
opened
I'd
have a good.
and Hurdle the kind of money
shot. But two spots ·have opened
they're gettlitg, I don't see how I'm
going to have a chance," the 23- . and I still don't have a place to go."
As
_now, _Reds Man·
year-old Columbus native said "I
a
John
McNamara
said Housedon't know what to cki. I'm kind of
'
ho
r
can
compete
with
Hurdle for
anxious to talk to them (the Reds),
the
right
field
opening.
but l haven't beard from anybody
"H we went to camp tomorrow ,It
since the season ~.
would
be (George) Foster and
"I'm kind of baffled by It all. I
Cedeno
and one of the other two In
figured I had paid my dues and I
right,"
Reds · Manager John
knew they liked to bring people up
McNamara
said. ··
IIU'OUgh the organization. I want to

.

.

.

McDaniel named in 'Outstanding Young Men'
Bruce Iglehart McDaniel or Rochester, N.Y., husband of the
former Thurtna Vaughan, 1laughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Vaughan,
Pomeroy, ts Hsted In tge 1981 edl·
lion of Outstnadlng Young Men of
Amerlca.
Tile edition highlights achievements of young men by their contributions to · the communlt\1 and
profession. The program recog·

..

nlzes and honors lndlvklual leadership. McDaniel was nominated for
the honor by the Chamber of Commerce. The program Is conducted
bY the U. S. Jaycees.
A graduate of the University of
Connecticut School of Law, he 1s
employed as a legal writer with the
·Lawyers Co-op PubiLshlng Co.· He
and his wife have_two :;ons, Ed and
Loring.

McDalllel Is active In numerous

civic projects. He serves on the
board of directors of the CPT HOUS·
lng Corp.; Is secretary of the Rochester Enterprises Corp; an
assistant scoutmaster with the Boy
Scouts of Arnerlca, acUve with the
Asbury First United Methodist
Church; serves on the Art Commission and the Miss~ Work Area,
and Is a member of the Amertcan
Sar As:~tlon and tile Connect!·
cut Bar AsSociation.

The Winding Trail Garden Club
held Its annual Chrtstmas dinner

I
•

'·

recently at Shoneys In Point Plea·
sant followed by a party at the
home of Mrs. Addalou Lewis.

Dances
succeed

Gifts were exchanged and secret
pal Jlames were revealed. A report
was given on the llghtlng contest
and tHanks were ·l;lxtended to the
merchants who donated gifts. A
new flag was raised at the Meigs
County Infirmary donated by the
American Legion. New program

Saturday night dances held over
the Ell Denison
j&gt;ost, American Legion, have
proven a success, according to Del·
bert Mitchell, legionnaire. Funds
from the dances helped to pay off ·
the mortage. It was noted that the
New Year's Eve dance was a sue-.
cess. A vote of thanks from the post
has been extended to the Bob
Snowden ramlly and Dennis
McKinney who have worked with
the dances tor the past years.

books were reviewed with the Janu-

arym~Ungtobeheldatthehome

of Ruth Moore.
Games were played followed by

amembPr~
social hour'vpn··
With relreshment,s.
All
presenl except
Jackt.bot'

~

By Edward Schrech, D.O.
Assl~IIIDt Professor of
Family Medicine

You can choos• one of
two ways to earn your interest
atBANKONE.
.

You can choose an
interest rate which is
· set for 18 months.
Any new funds
deposited will earn
'

.

•

INDIVIDUAL

RmRiMENT

.ACCOUNT

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Denny Fryzel and Nick Saban, two
of _BigTenConlerence~hamplon

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During January the
18-month rate is 16.25%~) Or you can
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in effect for January is 14.09%~)
Act quickly to get
the best tax advantage.

CHAPMAN'S SHOES

the television show are a classical · . .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . :
symptom .of narcolepsy, a competent physician will want to rule out 1
other possible causes for the
.
.
problem before completing his or
her diagnosis. These include

JOHN A: WADE, M. D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL·-

:GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
Phone: 992·2974
NEW WINTER HOURS:

Open Tues.thru Fri.

40 ·

$ 298,667

30

$ 966,926
$3,042,435

20

~

and thai you leave funds In ywr IRA through your 65th year.
There is a substantial IntereSt penalty for early withdrawal.
'
.
'

..

·

'

CALL (614)·992-2104
or (304)-675:-1244
:~
L~::::::::~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~==~

·oGRA'-IEI
,Y
liQII
""Y I .

Save400and·enjoythe
Sunrise ·Surprise!

PIUI F.E.T.
1.62 loo'l

MOUNTING NClUDEO
NO TRADE-IN tfOUIIEO

THE KM'78
"Our Best"
4--PLY
POLYESTER
CORD
BLACKWALL

26 97
•

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

PlusF . E _T·
1.58 ea.

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

~~M=

. C'-111~ ...

for details.

·~

If you've never tried Sunrise® Instant Coffee.
you're In for a delicious surprise!
.
You see. Sunrise Is real full-bodied coffee.
blended from choice coffee beans and just enough
chicory to get rid of any bitterness
· And right now. you can save 40¢ on any size
jar. So go aht;!Od ... try Sunrise Instant Coffee.
And surprise yourself I

Our Reg. 35.97 A78~13

Stop by any
BANK ONE office
Our Wikon collection of pans will implre you
to bake .nd decora1e rhe besr Y•Jemine tre~o~
ow:rl A lovely porcelain-handled cake ..,.,..,.
can ~ you" for jUII $1.95 when you moil

'22 =.12.88
..._.,. I I l l
Hllovy-dufy. IOt
fi'JCiny' cars.

=

truc:kl,

proof of pun:~ from •ny f&lt;&amp;~ured Wikon
Valentine p&amp;n 0&lt; !cit 10 Wikon. hi • $9.~
retoil valuo. Stop in Jod&amp;y for coupon &amp;nd
de!&amp;ils.
•

' This Jslhe tnlerest rate and etlectwe annual yield,

--------------------------------------------~"------Whcnc.-r you think .
·of snllil money, our name
Member FDIC BANK .ONE OF POMEROY
·cOmes up.flnt.
- ~
POMEROV•RUTLANOeTUPPERS PlAINS

BANK"ONETW --

ANN'S CAKE
:DECORATING ~PPUES..
Rt. 7, Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains

Call: 667·6485
I .

' r;

/}

,_
'I

Office Hours by Appointment Only

·1 Cora Beegle,

·

37.97

a

. EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

9 AM. IllS P .M.
Sat. 9 A.M. til I P.M.

01.&lt; hg . • 1.97 - P16&amp;180RI3

The congregatlon of the Laurel
CUff Free Methodist Church held a
New Year's party attheSenlorCitl·
zens Center. There was potluck
dinner followed by singing and
fellowship.

breathing problem while asleep. The
cause of narcolepsy is uncertain but
some Uleorize that it is genetically
determine-d .

SEMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

KM' SPECIAL
. FIBERGLASS
BELTED
RADIALS

Holds party

Whether you sign up fof a fixed rate plan
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
your money is earning inflation-proof in~er.est
for your retirement. To maximize the taxdeferred interest you earn, you should make
your contributions as soon as possible after
the first of the year. You will receive monthly
statements on the status of the Account and
your funds are
AMOUNT insured by an
AGE
·
When 'lbU Open
You-~
agency of the
. AtAgel5.,
'!bUr IRA
federal
50
$ 83,506
government.

'"This assumes that vou make a $2,000 contribution alth~ beginning of aiiCh year at a 12% Interest rata :

~.

•

medications, alcohol, excessive
weight and P!Ychological distur·
bances. If findings are negative,
referral to a sleep laboratory for further . evaluation may be recom·
mended. These specially-equipped
facilities (in Ohio there is one at
Ohio State University ) have
machines that can monitor several
·1 different body functions while you
sleep - usually brain wave patterns, breathing movement of the
chest and oxygen level of the blOOd .

-

'
tims however, usually don't have a :

Ohio Uolverslty College
of O.teopathlc
Medicine
QUESTION: I
QUESTION : How are these sleep ·
saw a 1V show the
disorders lrealed?
.•
other day where
ANSWER: With narcolepsy a
someone had a
s pe cial
medica ti on
called
sleep problem
methylphenidate or another called
that sounded
clomipramine Is utiliz~d .
strange. This guy
Sometimes, some difficult cases. of
would fall asleep
narcolepsy don't respond to
in the middle of the day, really sudmedication
.
• If the patient has sleep apnea the
denly, sometimes in the middle of a
monitor will detecL that the patient
sentence. I was wondering if you
With sleep apn ea the treatment is :
stops breathing for variable periods
could tell me if there really is a
more complicated. The trea_tment
As
the
blood
oxygen
while
asleep.
disease which would cause this to
level decreases, the patient's sleep may entail the use of a tracheostomy
happen.
Is characterized by thrashing tube, a surgical opening in the neck
ANSWER: As strange and bizzare
below the adam's apple . This
around in bed or making loud
as it may sound, there really iB .s uch
opening
enhances the oxygen flow to
sounds. This behavior at
a disease . It Is called narcolepsy. snoring
the lungs. The usc' of certain _an- _
night can be quite disconcerting to a
Although considered a rare disor- spouse and prompt a search for
tidcpr essant dru gs and heart der, . it is sowething a family
medical attention. Narcolepsy vic- medications may also be _indicatcd. •
physicillJ1 will see occasiona lly in his ·
or her pra~tice. In fact, I've . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - diagnosed about four cases in the
last three years.
In addili0/1 to narcolepsy , there is
another slightly more corrunon sleep
disorder of which you should be
a·ware. This disease, called sleep ap.
nea is characterized by the interruption of breathing for variable
periods of time while asleep. Some
physicians feel it may'"be a caUsative
factor in sudden infant death syndrome.
AT
QUESTION : How does a doctor
tell if a person has narcolepsy?
ANSWER: Patlenls with both narcolepsy and sleep apnea usually
have a long history of sleep
problems. Frequently It is five to
Next To Elberfelds In Pomeroy
seven years bj!fore they get proper
treatment. While the sudden lapses I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
into sleep that you saw portrayed on 1-

thf. past year at

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000,
deductible from your income tax each year.
If you have a non-wprking spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
and your spouse both work, you can each
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
money mark,et interest rates for an
inflation- proof rate of return.
The chart below illustrates how quickly
your financial future can grow.

The Daily .Se.n tinei - Page-7

Family.Medicine

Winding Trail holds .holiday dinner_

·The Top Ten
Eighth-ranked San Francisco,
the 11nly Top Twenty team In action
Tuesday night, defeated San Jose
State 7lHi6 as Quintin Dalley scored
20 points. The Spartans were n..Ver
1n the game. scoring justfour points
·a nd committing seven turnovers In
the ·first nine minutes to tall behind
16-4.
They trailed by 11, 32-21, at halftime and got within eight four minutes Into the second half. But USF
ran off eight straight polnls to take.
a 56-39 lead and the Spartans never
got closer than nine points the rest
of the way.
Unranked Teams
Russell Schoene had 24 points as
Tennes~-Chattanooga heat Appalachian State 81·63, ~lrlan Burke
scored a season-high 16 points to
lead Dartmouth over Massachu"setts 62-46. Winfred Reid's 23 paced
East Tennessee State over Furman.
82·74, two baskets and a free throw
by Dave Williams In the last two
minutes rallled Illlnols·Chlcago Circle over Florlda A&amp;M 64-62, Rich
Slrnkus scored his only field goal
with 1: 12 left In overtime to give
Princeton a 50-49 victory over Fair·
field, Orlando Phllllps scored 24
points and grabbed 15 rebounds to
lead Pepperdlne over FuUerton
State !¥.}. 76, Leonard Agee scored
six of hls game-high 27 pointS In
overtime to lead Loyola of Los An. geles to a 75-68 trlumph over Los

am

from local ~sidents and marked
" From the Folks in Meigs County."
It was note.J that the Racine Grange
has contributed annually to the
program sin~ it started and that
other special services -have been
provided by Hartley Shoes, Davis
and · Quickel, Mark V, and Powell
Super-Valu, Pomeroy .
A gift was also prepared by the
unit for a local veteran and gifts of
clothing were taken to'the son and
daughter of a deceased veteran.
The Meigs Eight and Forty helped
a cystic fibrosis child and family
with food, cl.othing and gifts during
the holidays.

A gift exchange and program on
The polnsettta plant was used by on the &lt;;:hrlstmas show With 12
Chrtstmas flowers hlghllghted the
the Axtex Indians to control lever. ·members assisting and making a
annual holiday dinner meeting of
Legend says that It was a roadside
total of 63 entries.
the Shade Valley CouncU of f'loral
weed which ·was miraculously
Mrs. Erwin and Mrs. Tom Karr
Arts held at the home of Mrs:· turned Into heautl1ul bloQms when conducted the therapy classes lot
Steven Frost. Turkey with all the
used to honor the Christ chUd and" December -at tile Chester Elementrimmings was served. _
has hei!n used at Clu1stmas since
tary School and Showed pictures of
.. Before the gift exchange, wrapthe 17th Century.
the terrariums made by the class
pings were judged by Mrs. Wood·
Holly was used In pagan worship members. It was noted that Mrs.
row Mora. a guest, with prizes
to repel witches because It was
Ewrwln with the help of her busgoing to )\fl'S. Terry steihem and · evergnien with blight red berries. . band and her son, Paul, made a
Mrs- Paul Curtis.
!lecause of Its abundance and avaUbird feeder which Is to be placed as
Mrs. Erwin gave the legend of . abWty It was adopted tor use by · a conservation project by the civic
the holly, poinsettia and Chrtstmas
Chrtstlans at Christmas Ume, Mrs.
committee.
cactus. She noted Utat t!,le cactus
Erwin noted.
·
Several plans for the ·club were
came from South Amerlca. When
Mora shared the story of Rudolph
made by the members who remisSionaries talked about ·Christsponded tO roll call 'by naming a
the Red Nosed Reindeer, which
. mas the Indians gathered blooms
'w as created In 1939 through a sales
memorable Christmas. Guests
and brought them as gilts to the
promotion ·by a Montgomeroy
were Mrs. Mora and Jeremy OsChrist chUd.
borne, three-week-old son of Mr.
Ward employe. A report was given
and Mrs. Gale Osborne. ,

pressure Was on them·."

Ohio State's defensive coaches, ap.
parently wW'not he rehired for next
foOtball season, an athletic depart·
ment source said Tuesday night.
The source, who asked not to he
Identified, would not . conllmi tile
' dlsmlsS&amp;I of a third assistant coach
to~ the Buclceyes.
Hugh Hindman. the school's athletic director, would neither conflr1n nor deny the firings while
attending an Ohio State Athletic
Councu meeting Tuesday night.
. Hindman, however. did conrtrm
that head Coach Earle Bruce Is ''reorpnlzlni'. his staff
expects
the reshutnlng to he completed by
next week.

cakes along with another large cake
for the Arcadia Nursing Home, sent
a gift to RovJiak, and prepared
packages for the veter.ans and Mrs.·
Jed Webster, Sr., a member at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center along
with sending a large sheet cake
there.
•
They also took a gift to each of the
13 veterans at the Athens Mental
Health Care Center.
At the Meigs County Infirmary,
the 10 residents ere remembered
with gifts and a cake. Twenty gift
boxes were prepared for the Meigs
County patients at the Athens Me11tal Health Center with donati?ns

Shade Valley Council holds dinrier

.

we

OSU axes three
assistant coaches

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

-"

"lt'i rich, and It's
not bitter."
David Brown

i

�..

,,

Page-8-The Da

198~

What's
Cooking?

.

By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County Extension
Home Eeonomlst
After the Christmas holidays, our
thoughts turn to recuperating from
the financial crunch of the girtgivi ng season and to shedding the
poundage thai somehow appears after the holidays.
Food is one area that is ideal lor
tackling both th~ money and weight
problems. It is a challenge,
however, 'to choose foods that are
bOth low cost and low caloric.
Eliminating high ca lorie foods from
your grocery cart will tc;Ually result
in a Iowerfood bill.
Here are some suggestiOns for cut-

" •

· Social Calendar

.• '• .·

Wednesday

.
.
milk cheeses, provide fewer calories
than their whole mi lk counterparts.
Following is a·reeipe for ve~etabl e
soup that can be made in a sll).
conker. It's t!asy , low in calories and
lnw in cost. Serve with cottage
l'hccse and peaches, and bran muf·
fins.

Vegetable Smip .
2 rans stewed tomatoes or 2 cans

tumalOCH, cut up
I can undiluted onion soup
l can water
2 10 ox. packages of frrrten mixed
vegetables, partially thawed or 21f,
cups of leftove1· veggies
I pound lean beef, cut in small
p1cces
.
2 medium ootatoes. diced.
2 beef bouillion cubes, dissolved in
a little boiling water
1/4 t. garlic salt
1/81. pepper
l small bay leaf

ting down on cal orieH (and savin~
money! J

1. Cut down on high-fat foods such

as margarine, butter, highly marbled or fatty meats, and fried foods.
Salad dresSin~s. cream s;Juces,
gravi es, and many whippe. 1 dessert
toppings are also high in fat.
2. Cut down on sugary foods such
as candies;-·sofl -drinks and other '
s u~ar-.sweetened bt!verages ~ u ch as
ades , and punches; jelly, jam,
syrups, honey ; fruit canned in heavy
syrup ; pies, cakes and pa!.itrit!s.
3. Use whole milk or whole milk
products, such as ice milk and skim-

Com bi ne all inv,rcllicJ its in a slomoker. Heal at high for low· hours,
then reduce tcmpel·ature to low I O!'
anothe r two-four hours, or until
vegetables HI'C tender.
For your free copy of bran ccrt!al
muffi ns. conta ct the Meigs County
Extension Office at 992.0096.

Announcements
&lt;-~.

Evelyn Mayer Johnson Is recuperaUng at home !ollowtng recent
hospltallzatlon. Cards may be sent
to her at Route 3 , Box 496, Beaver
Falls, Pa. 15010. A former resident
of Middleport, Mrs. Joh!lson is the
sister of Cleo Kearns.

Meetings of the Ecclesla Fellowship held at 128 Mill Street, Middleport, In the building formerly
occupied by Spencers Market, are
betng held on Saturday nights at 7
p.m. A revival will be held Jan.15 to
17 at 7 p.m. each evening. Mike
Vance will be th!l. evangelist. The
Gospel Tones will stng at the Satur·day night service.

The annual meeting of the Meigs
.~unty Association of Township
;'l)"ustees and Clerks has been set lor
;7·p .m. on Wednesday , Jan . 13, at the
Meigs Local Elementary basket·
·l'tock Springs Grange Hall. Rep. . ball will begtn on Jan. 16. A meeting
'Claire Ball will be the speaker and o! all coaches and concerned par: eounty elected officials and other iJI· ents has been set lor Wednesday,
; tvrested residents are invited in ad- ·Jan. 13 at 7:30p.m. at the Mlddle: .dltion to assoeiation mem bers.
port·Eiementary School.

'

Wednesd&lt;w, January 6, l9R2

MEIGS ASSOCIATION for
Retarded CitizeQS, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Comunity ·
School.

MIDDLEPORT Literary Club,
2 p.m. Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Dwight Wallace. Mrs.
Wilson C;lrpenter, will review lhe
book, " He.re I Stand" by Martin
Luther. Roll call will be a comment on the book. The annual
business meeting will be held.

TRUSTEES of Meigs County
Pioneer and ·Historical Society ·
meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Meigs Museum ; proposal to
reprint Hardesty's 1883 and

Larkins' 1908 histories will be
made. Open to all interested persons.
\

---

Friday
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution, I:30 p.m.

serve as Grand Treasurer of the
Grand Lodge of Ohio.
Grand Master Moody was. former
president of BancOhio National
Bank in the Zanesville area. He was
raised a Master Mason in Honor
Lodge 726 at Zanesville in 1952. He
~erved as Worshipful Master in 1960;
served as District Deputy Grand
Master of the lOth Masonic District
from i964 through 1966; was elected

Charles B. 'Moody, Zanesville,
receptry elected to serve as Grand
Master over some 240,000 Masons
throughout Ohio, will b4: visiting
Pomeroy Lodge 164, Free and' A&lt;•
cepted Masons at 7:30 P·!l'· Friday.
During the evening, the Pomeroy
lodge will be conferring the degree
of Master Mason upon Paul Reed,
~on of Mr. and Mrs .. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., Pomeroy. Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., was recently elected to

Grand
Master
to visit

Friday at the Meigs Inn. Mrs .
Ron Reynolds, .Mrs. ThoreiJ Cot·
terill, Mrs. Clinton Fisher, Mrs.
Charles Lewis, and Mrs. Nan
Vloore to be hostesses. Members
1 take stamps and soup.J.abels ... ,

MIDDLEPORT First United
Presbyterian Church, annual
t'Ongregati onal meeting, 6:30
p.m. Wednesday at the church, .
Potluck supper with members to
take a covered dish. Meat.
pntatoes, and rolls will ·be
provided.

BETTER MEAT

'

11em. we "Mil o""' you vour chOice of a comparable ltlf'T'I ,
wtoen a-valllble. reflechng the ume M\'rng&amp; or 1 ratnchecll
lllot\l(h Will entine rou 10 purct\Ue the adVtntNCi rtem 11 the
advtfttMCII)I"ICt 'Nrthrn :1) dly1.

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE
E\let)1tlrng y0u buy 11 Kroger • guaranteed for 'f()l.lr tOtal
llllltfiCIIOilr-v-rdlaa ol m.~ nJ f aclu rer II you .are not sat•s·
r.d, JC.rOQtf wiu replace '(OUr Jtam w11h tht same blend or a
ciomperable brand or rtlfund yOu( purchna priCAI .

EVANGEUNE CHAPTER 172,
Order of the Eastern Star, Thursday, 7.: 30 p.m. Last date to pay
dues without penalty.

GOOD SUNDAY' . JAN . 3. THIOUGH SATUIOA"f . JAN .
ltl2 ; IN ·

c_pst cunu

USDA

WI IIESUVE THE ' RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTifiH . NONl
SOLD TO OEALEIS .

CHOICE

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
(2-LB . ROLL . . . 12.77)
GUNNOE'S

I
I

Country Sausage
1-lb.
Roll

SJ38

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

.

LIMIT 3 LBS. WITH COUPON
liMIT ONE tO UPON .PER FAMILY

I
I

CIU1'111 IIIOIIUI Ill. l IHIU Ill Ill. ' · 1111

12

L•••••••••••••••
OF

SIIIJ(CT

ro Affi.IC.Il( ST&amp;H l

LOUt TillS

••

Boneless Top
·Round Roast . . lb .
KA~N'S

• 1· lb.

$169

Shced Bacon ....... --.... g.
1-lb. S169
Ka. hn,s w·1eners :.. Pkg
.

9· 11·LI. AVy. WHOLE

Boneless
Smoked Hams

SALE NOW IN PROGRESS
BLAZER
BONANZA

EVAN·
PICONE
1portn•ear. Bla1en, 1klrt1,
bklue1, llack1 lD 'pey, camel,
blatk, plafdl IDd DO\Itlty prflltl.

Slouf.JI.

IUI!I lid IIIDrled tweed1 ,
Womea'1 1lln t-11.
1

SALE1j

3

Homemade

110 pen:e.11eryllc nHee, New V·
aeek lt)'le•la pey, •vy, tr U&amp;bl
blat. 01"1!111 1elec.otloa fnr Joutaa
or louctq at heme. Sb:e• 8-M·L.
Re .....

10 lb . l d a h0$1 ol k lnQ

POTATOES .... ...... '::·~.sl.89

Quarters
$
MARGARINE~.~:.

119
·•

1 Lb.

PERCH FILETS ••••••••••••.•••f:~~~s1.79
40 oz .

CHEF ·BOY-AR-DEE

RAVIOLI.c.a.~ s179

16 oz . Del Morlte

PEAR HALVES••••••••••••••••••••C.~~ .73~
49

lAveiy aew 1tyle1 lD aeeyUe1

-o.

Soft aboolder ·otyle Ill
lllt1lral lUcie Willi rt4 or IOid
metoutc otrlpeo. Placut froat
otrlpe Ill paoll!b or brlil&gt;fl. Collar
atyb In ""II•, blie or lilac wltll
1old lrllll.
SA LE

1299.

\

oz .

GA~N DETERGENT.~~:~;:.:~:r.~~:.s2.15

can

lOJ ,, oz. Campbell's

WOMEN'S
ICc;J,ATS &amp; JA4~KI!T!
Long and Short
QuOted loBI I obol1 'aekell Ill
patty, lui ud cbntoat. Loq
coats la lbakJ aDd pewter. Sllt1 ·
1-1•. Hall abet •vllllble hlloq
jadlolo Ill leal allll cbeohlol

Rei· -

SALE

35 99·45 99
IZOD
FOR KIDS
Llrlt IIIOI'tllla.t Ia
brabo olm. Sileo
Jolaat tllroqll II.

46 oz. Dole

PINEAPPLE JUICE•••••••• ~ .~::•. s1.19
15 1'20Z.

w/ Beans
w/ 7c Off

.

Can 89~
ARMOUR 'CHILl •••••••••••••••••••••

OFF

~ paoli iD plaid or IJ'OY
ftaa.l. C.nlaroy •l,lr• ba &amp;reeD.
oayy, red, or ptlll&lt;. BIUy !be ltld
jeusla cordVoy, dealm, o ~tw UI

tauvy, ttmel,l\. blat or oruwa.

tJauoJ ud oslanl oletll.
IIJHHI:

A11or1ed 1tyl11 IAclllde plaid
tftli! !~rtl, 'Wl'llp •kirh 1D lrtY,
UY)' or l'\llt IDd talottel ba
meuy tweed-l~tt~kl . Slut ~ll

.

CoHage cheese ...

2A-oz .
Cinr.

MULTI·GRAIN

1

KROGER HOMOGENIZED MILK
GAL. CTN ... $1.99

SALE

Whole Lamb .... .. . tb .

1·499

Green
.
Beans...............

$139
-

CF

COST CUTTU ltEAl

39

$

17 ·oz.
cans

CREST

6.A-oz$

Toothpaste .. .:..: ... .. rub•

OFF

8

$1

2-Ct

Light Bulbs .. .. .. .. .. Pks:

FamOill •me 1~-tketl,
• ,. nltl ud pnm•
froiD QuOII!-. Weatber
Til mer •ad Jatk T1r.

HOT,

Fresh
Broccoli

Boyo

R;nd
White 20J 199
Potatoes ... .. . aoa · ,
23c
69c

lb .

'

5
.Grapefruit ..... .. ,

lb.

For

Delicious Apples .. Each
·.

,

.

l -Ib.

69 C
(EY!IYNY ltwi'IICIJ

Mushrooms ..... .... earton

-

V'

MIOOII ,ROliN

FlESH lAKED

0

Gllt11d
Donuta

14·0• .

"•·

COST CUTTEII

w

COST CUTTU

FRESH lAKED ICED MELTAI'fAY

Ml1 ..
(mtYIAYLtWPI'"}

$149

Sweet Rolls .~i.e;:
SANDYMAC,DELISTYLE
$299
Boiled Ham ..... lb.

-

V'

COST CUnll CHICKEN

Vienna
SaUSage .. .

;;~AR •••

5 •01 .

Con
'lo

'

C•
.

c

39
.

·Gol.$12 9

Cream,...... ""'·
HI. AV•G.J

,

......
..... S11~.

Hot Cocoa

2&lt;4-oz.$129

Apple P1e .... Pte

89

....

=~wlch ... ·::~~~.$119 :

lb.

88 ·

$159

33° .

139

Each

American
Cheese

ORI'INK

131 SIZE WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY
RID OR GOLOIN

• •

•

C

~~:~~i.~~ SJ2 9
Ch~;;d'"" $169

WHOLE LOAF ,YELLOW

40 SIU INDIAN RIVEI WHITE

MISH

$149 '

FIESTA MEATY I DELICIOUS l2 ·0Z . WITH
2•PKGS. CRACKlRS

Ham .......

Salad Jomatoes .. .

AVAilAill

Country Owen
Prein I ..... •·••·
•••

-

C

11om · 7p~t~~

115

Yellow Onions ......

wtater moat111 abead.

89
99
$

Pap,,
100·( 1,
Plates . , . "•·
~~hcumuuro

IN STOIU WITlt

I

Gl'ftt bi)'l lor the C.ld

Marshmallow

· Ol ,
Creme .. .. Uhar

CO$T CUTTU t ·INCH

DIU DIPAITMINTI

60, 75 011100 WATT WESTINGHOUSE

IVESAVER

GOLD ClltUJ

69C:

"

,.

Whipped
Topp Ing ... .....
"'•·

AYAlLAIII ONL T

38

cans

2
Corn ....... ..... ... ..

piEEN GIANT

oatt'CuHe~,....
,, .••.

roa 1ng

.

Detergent ·:~·: ·

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

216-o~.$1

CREAM STYLE OR WHOLE KERNEL

CbUdrtD'I llzet Z-14,

'rRBB

Jo•

$139

RETURNABLE BOTTLES

GREEN Glf NT KITCHEN SLICED 011
REGULAR CUT

PAS HI

$299

10·•• ·

Country Club
Ice. Cream

MOUNTAIN DEW,

TBB

lnatant
Coffee .

lb .

U.S.D.A. CHOICE FRESH AMERI'CAN LAMB
;·SS·LI . AVG.

2
$119
Kroger Bread .. .". ~~:~·

Gal.
Ctn.

SALE 1/3 OFF ·

OPEN
Monday.-Saturday 10 a.m. 9 p.m.
Closed Sunday

lb .

COST CUTTEI

COST CUTTU

KROGER

NAMES
FOR BOYS

Flauel-look 1laclil from lfHd
Lid ta uvy or cUDel. Mc:Gnaor
aDd Good lAd 11drb In white,

wl7c0ff

CORNED BEEF HASH. •••••••c.a.n•• sl.19

1;3

ggc

Kroger
Pot Piu

KROGER

·•' ·' '

1;3

FIOUN

Chocolate 1
Chlpi
:;~~

WOMEN•S
SKIRT$

SALE

Whip .
•·•• .
Topping . c1"'

Mixed Fryer Parts

Grade A
Large Eggs .... ooz . .

GoW1II ID.d pijamat Ia aevelty
prblfl. Robto Ill paoll!l 10llda.

KIOGIIfiOUN

'"'''AaATil~N TIME

stan 4-1,.

Denim aad cordaroy t tylea ror

~-~

Banquet Dmners·.. Pkg . ·

1tyln. some wttb removable de1 .
Val•• to f!I.OO. Great Bay1.

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

Kroger
Pie Shell•

12 ·cu .
Con

49c
59C
33c

FIOZfN (HI ·OZ . SIZE )

$ 29

ll · Ol

0

'

Big II
8everagu

HOLLY FARMS , U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

3$ 29

l · lb.
Pkg .

Sliced Bacon .,.. ... .

CoUoo-po1y blead1. A1urted

WRANGLER
FOR KIDS

SALE

BOUNTY TOWElS ••••••••. ~ •••• ~.o~~.99~
15 oz. Armour

OLE CAROliNA

FROZEN

u .s . GOV'T INSPECTED
FRESH GROUND

Chicken
Breast ..........

. Kroger
White Bread

Pork Stea~s . ... ... ·. lb.

·

.

\

99

boy1 ud RlriJ. Slael 4·14 plus
leen sbt· ~ for 11r1s.

CREAM OF CHICKEN SOUP••• 2/79~
30 Count Jumbo

SJ69

u29 99

latladf oovelty palloven ud
conllp .. Ill aprko~ IDac, pl ...
Jt. blue, yeDow, wblte ud 11.

CARROTS ............ :.&gt;.~. 35'
5 lb. t\il q White
.GRAPEFRUIT... .... ::·:~. 1 1.39

lb.

To 'Ia &amp; More Off

NOVELTY
SWEATERS

16 ol . Ce ll o f' il d

1 lb. Teen Qu een

••'
•

'I•

OFF

JOG SUITS

APPLES·••.•• :•.•..• ..~~:~~. gg•

CHEESE...... ~.~: . ~1.99

I

Choole fnm. 1 ·beaudful 111011meal Ia wool, urduroy, or
velveteea. Colon lndude
craaberi'J', browo, bllck, camel,
UV)', (rey, bU.riUDd)', ru11;

FamCIIII braJMt.•me ' womea'•

Potato
Chips .

HOLLY FARMS . U.S.D.A. GRADE A

WHOLE FRESH BOSTON BUTT ,
SLICED. INTO

·NEW BLOUSE
Assortment
Plaids, Stripes,
Novelties

COUNTitV 0\llN

Any Size Pkg.
Ground Beef

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

age
89c'
20c

Grapefruit
Juice .

t.

POMEROY AND GALLIPOLIS STORES

MISSIONARY MEETING ,
Hysell RIJJI . Holiness Churd).
Mary Myers speaker at the
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. service.
Public Invited.

ggc ~

46 -oa .
. Ctnr ,

CCPV.:IGHT 1912 · THE KltOGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICE$

I

Ohio Colby Longhorn

COMPARED TO OTHER BRANDs• AT KROGER. ·

ADVERTISED ITEM·POUCY

..

•

SAVE 10 TO 40'Yo 01
SOOPER COS1 CUllERS

Each o f lhNI! advert.-.d tlems 15 requrr8d to be
INdlt',o ava:lable !Of sale rn INCh Kroger Store, ettcept '"
~ nor.t IIi ct. ad . If we do ,run QJt of., .:Mw11Md

LEADERS of Meigs County
Girl Scout troops are to meet at 7
p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Inn.

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••~~}1.39

ville and Muskingum County. He is a
member of the Ohio Stale llntl
Mu skin gum
Co unty
Bar
Associations and selves on the board
of Bethesda Hospital Assoeiation
and is board chairman of ·
Muskingum Area Technical College.
He is also ll·easurer of the Bethesda
Hospital Foundation.
All Mastpr Masons are invited to
attend Friday evening's event.

and delicious avery time. Top quality pork ,
U.S. cholc• Ani~trlcan lamb , prim• veal . and
grade A poult~ y.

D11p11nd on th11 Krog11r mao! deportment for
the b11st of evervthlng . Ov11r 200 kinds ond
cuts. U.S. c"oice beef that cooks up l11nd•r

Thursday '

JUMBO BOLOGNA ••••••• ~ ••• ~.b~. $1.69

'"

and Fran klin Pniversity Law
School. He received his juris doctor
degree from Capital University in
1966.
Grand Master MOody is past
president of the Zanesville Board of
Education, Zanesville Rotary Club
and the area 'c hamber of conunerce.
He is past treasurer of both the
United Way and the Community
Development .CorporaU~n for 7.anes-

'FOR SOME SOOPER COST CUflERS, 110 OTHER IRANDS AlE STOCKED.

POMEROY LODGE 164, F. and
A.M., Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
llw Pome•·oy Masonic Temple.
with a practice lo follow the
meeting.

F.ckrich

to receive the l3rd degree in
masonry in 1967.; was elected Grand
Treasur~r of the Gr~nd. Lodge in
1973 and was reelected ml977 to that
position.
Moody retired as president of Band)hio NatiOnal Bank ·in the Zanesville area last fall alter 42 years In
the banking business. He attended
Park College, Parkville, Mo., and is
a graduate·of Ohio Slate University

for the b
of everything
including the price!

MEETING Eli Denison Po•l
467, Rutland American Legion, 8
p.m. this evening at the hall ,

SMOKED SAUSAGE ••••••••••~~.!1.89

The D.aitv Sent·ine i- Page-9

. Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

il:;k;;e
.....
Peas ........
con

Coat CuHer1...c•.
Napld•• .... ... .

33c

59 C
COlT CUTTII

.,......65' ~.

Brownie
Ml1 ...
KIOGll

"···$45~
.,.,,
....
.....
_,.,., ...c..
..•. . 479..
L111a ·

leona ....... c..

.

QIVOIAIU COMfOIT

2407 Jackson Ave. Point Ple.nt1 W. Va.

..

c;osr c:UTn•

Phone 675-6455

Chill Tomato
C•n
Din fttr . , •·••·

,.

''

69~

�Page- 10- The Da•Jy Sent 1nel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh10

dJO~

gifts were Duma BmJ:{ a nd Mr

and Mrs Ri chard Wilt
Earl1e1 m the week Mr and Mrs
Howalll SoTHlh HICk anu rracy of
Blunl W Va eclclll a leu woth Bon
nc Mr s Thelma Garten grea t
granumother of Bonne sent a g1fl

By HELEN BOITEL

Mrs E&lt;la Rous h ob&lt;erved her
90th bn lhday Sunuay w1th a dmne1
at

d

Ravenswood r e:;li.iurant

h o~t ell

by he1 daughter 111 l,ow Gao roc
' Roush w1d da ughleos Holda Davos
and K alh r yn Pnn
Hclurmng to hc1 hoonc the) were
JOIIlell by other r c lat1 vt.:s f01 t: akc

bakeu by a daught&lt;O mlilw Jlah
Rou&lt;h and other 1d rcshmcnls

Sm1th

Mrs Roush wa s a lung tllnc t.:ouk
at the PortlanJ st..: hool

Foster

Smith
rhe fu st bo rthda y of Bonne J oyce
Sunlh daughtco of Gocg and Voek1
Sm1lh was obse r vcLI rcnntly w1th a

party at tht home llf her grand
father Larry Poekens
A I edd y Be" ' t heme W&lt;l !':i cell ned

out for th e pa oty and a cake
dct..:Oralcd

Ill

lhu theme was

sc 1 vcd

w1th othe1 1ef1cslunents Allcnd1ng
Wl! l t:!

the honor Ce S part Il l S and

~ ranrJf ilh e1

Scott

Pu.: kc n~

RomJJ c

Je11 y I and I anuny Dor st~ usler
nf Shade

e~ re announc lll ~

the birth of

a son Sha ne Alan on Dec 21 at the
0 Bleness Mcmonal Hospital Ill
Athens
Grand pa r cnts e~ rc Mr and Mrs E
Mao tm Dm st Shade allll Mr and
M• s George Foste1 Coshocton
Mrs Bern1cc Meeks Athens Route
5 and MIS Sobyl Dorst Pomeroy
Route 3

M~1gs

Janet I Morns Lo Ja Eugene
M01r1s I ot 13 Baum sSub Chester
Max F Tayl01 , Esta M Taylor to
Hc1 a hi 011 anu Gas Co Hig ht of
Way SCipiO
Emmell Douglas to Hco aid Oil and
Gas Co Roght of Way Sc1p1o
Wilham Hay W1l11ams Iris M
Williams to Ken Trak R1ght of Way
Rutland
Wm1fred

I or 1 ence

John

Da1sy Vance to Ronald Vance,
Cert of Transfer ScipiO
Joseph A Young, Rowena E
Young to Herald 011 and Gas Co,
Rtght of Way Sctp!O
Buckeye Rural Elee Coop Inc 10
Hoght of Way Easements Pomeroy
Wesleyan Umted MethOdist Chur
eh of Raeme Oh10 to Wolbert Me
Ciani I acre Sulton
C) nth1a Baca Nau Bernard I
Nau Jo to Roya l Petroleum Proper
lies Inc Ea&lt;e Bedford
Floyd Ross Edith RoSH to Royal
Petroleum
Properlles
In c
Easement Bedford
Denms Parker to Blauser Wall
Sci\ ICC Inc H1ght of Way Orange
anu Chcslc1
Charles W Chapman Connoe Kay
Chapman to He1 aid 011 and Gas
Company RoghtofWay &amp; 1p1 o

E

roo renee to Lsther C Rudolph Par
eels Orange
Janeahe H Johnson to Hoyual
Pelr oleum Prop lnc
At.: cess
Easement Salisbu•y Bedfm d
James W Cl ifford Faye F Clif
ford to Roy,ol Pel! oleum Properti es
Euse and Meter Sole Agree Bed
fu1d
Heed Jeffcos Helen E Jcffcr&lt; to
Gene Jeffers Mal t11a JdfeiS P or
eels Coluo nbw
May Holler to llarry Holter
G1 oo gc lloller Pm eels Sutton
Billy W West, rc1 esa A West to
Ca d E Smolh Inc H1ght of Way
Olive
Chao lcs Will ~am Chapman Conmc
Kay CIMpman to H" aid 011 and Gas
Co Roghl of Wa) Sc1p10
Kenneth C Welsh guardian
Ad11cnnc F 1cnc h to He1aid Oil aolll
Gns Hl!'hlof Way Pomeroy
Wilh,nn F1 ed Stmth Sr Beat1 1Ce
c; Sn nth to Gcooge Casto l uc11lc
Casto I ot No 185 Boswo• lh s Mod
dlcpoot
&lt;- R~eh.trd I Chambc1 s Deed to
Mao tha B Ch,unbc• s Cert of
roans MllhllcpOII
Belly l ou Dean to Paul Hawk
Belly and Jean Hawk 2 02 li&lt;I cs,
Cheslco
Bank One Pomeroy N A H B tc
Dwame E Allen Soma J Allen
Parcel, Rutland
Gem gta Barnett Cla1 cnc'C W
Rantett to Ca t! E SM1th Pet Inc
Ohvc
Lenm a Le~fhe tl Rogel LCI!hcltlo
Hugel Letfhelt Lenota l.eoflMt 2 65
ac1cs Cheslci
Robe1l D Davis to Max A
E•clnngcr Judtth F E1chmgcr Par
eels Sa hsb~• y
Max A E1ch1nger Jud1th F
E•clnnger to Robert Dame! Dav1s
7 3551 acres Chest"'
Howard E Parker, Wilma L
Parke• to Blauser Well Serv1ce
Inc , H1ght of Way, Chester
Paul H Huffman Maxine Huffman to Blauser Well Service, Htghl
of Way, Chesler
Glenms Hoffman, Dolores Hoffman to Blauser Well Servtce, Right
otWay, Chester
Albert E Parker, Dorothy Parker
to Blauser Well Servtce, Rtghl of
Way, Chester
DaiSy Vance to Drexel Vance,
Cert of Transfer, SctpJO

OctllliS l H oush Ruth E Housh to
Columbus ami Suulhern Oh1 0 Elec
t1

t Cnmpan) case ment (A bianon
Hoi&gt;Crl Our sl Max tnt: Dtu st to

Oh1oans have only two more
weeks to mall thetr cmrunents on the
proposed U S Department of
Agnculture pro~ram for conservm~
soli and water resources Comments

G~:~ry

Lee Warner Tcry R Wa1 ner

Iii Columbus and Southern OhiO
E lcdru;
Snprn

Company,

easement

Paul E Snyde1 Hel~n T Snyder
Iii Columbus anu Southern OhiO
E lcdru: Cnmpcmy casement Tuppers Pla111s
Kmgsbu• &gt; Home Sa lcs and Se rv1q: Int.: to Columbus and Soulhc 1n
Ohio Eledru: Company casement
fuppm s PhHnH
R T Summerfield Carolyn Sum
lll~ lfl c ld to Herald 011 and Ga~o
Right of Way, Salisbury
.1
Pau I E W1II D0 ILte W1II to Hera 1u
011 ami Gas Co H1ght of Way
Sa hsbUI y
Mary El Jzt:l be l l1 Tllomase~ ka Mary
Ehzabcth Hartmgcr Thomas tu
Wtlhalll 8 Thorne~s Cc1t
Trans
Ohvc

or

Esta I Dav1d to Manley E
Ch11sly Mal111da Chnsty lot 48 and
Paot of L"l 49 Behan s Add Mid
LllcpOI t

lr ll Compa n) cascrnt nt Leba nun
1u y R Warnt 1 to Culmhbus a nd

Way Salisbury

Keith Wood Paula J Wood to
Kcoth 0 Wood Paula I Wood 117
acJ cs Chester

Meigs County
correspondence
Here for ChriStmas and the 39th
wc..Jdmg anmvcJl)ClJ y or Mr and
Mrs Leo Vaughan we ae lhetr
t: hth1rcn Thur ma McDamel and

sons Eddie and Lormg Hoeheslel
N Y M1 and Mos Hobert (Hila hi
Lav nc and tla ughtcJs Am tty ami

1 aoa Cedar Bluff Va Leo L
Vaughan II , B1sl1op Calif Mr and
M1 s Roy R Vaughan Salem Cen
lur and Tony Vaughan Lawrence
Ga Also a guest for the holidays wa s
Demsc M Massey of Boshop Cahf
First I t Randy Becker Dayton
spent Chnstmas Day Wllh hts g1and
ntolhcr, Mrs fhcrcsa

Bc~.:ker

Mrs

Beckel's d,mghler Bcllte Gladwell
Cohmwus also was here for the
holiday a long •woth her &lt;On Larry
Gladwell Ins wife Debboe and thetr
&lt;On Shaun Bedford
M1 and Mos Henry Heibel Mr
and Mrs Donley Heibel, Donna
Sha to and daughter Knsten
Gallipolis weo c guests of Mr and
Mrs Slt!ven Craig and Sara for New
Yem s Day suppet at the1r home on
Mmm sv1lle
Chnstmas guests of Mr and Mrs
lloyd Wroght Pomeroy were Mrg
Beulah Och1er, Lancaster and Mr
and Mrs John Anderson and
daughter, Kelly Mane, Cambndge
Spendmg Christmas holidays with
Mr and Mrs George Whtte of Rock
Spnngs were Hospttal Corpsman
James While of New Londoh, Conn
who is statiOned on the U S Grant
Mr and Mrs R V Kcsher Of Mansfield , Mr and Mrs George White,
Jr , and farruly Of Ptckenngton The
George White, Jr family also vtstted
her mother In Blytheville, Arkansas
and attended tHe Liberty Bowl m

are to be mailed to the Soil Conservallon Serv~ee, Robert R Shaw,
SCS·state conservaliOillst reports
The .J!llllonal conserva tiOn
program prepared by Secretary of
Agriculture John R Block would 111
crease the roles of local .and state
m c.:onservallon work

and target ;1 greater share of USDA

Robert Mc1er Mar1lyn Meter to
Heo"ld Oil and Gas Co Right of

t C:ISt.! lll t.! lll St: Jp! O

DEAR HELEN
Do you know of a support group
for women whose husbands have
had affatrs wtlh other women'
My husband 1s a good man a
good father, except for hiS
weakness for females Three of
hts affatrs were w1lh farmly
members my s1ster, my mece
and hts ftrst cousm Others Illeluded my best fnend hts
secretary and a cO-worker
I thmk our mamage IS worth
trymg to ptck up Ute pteces but
I'm havmg trouble dealing wtth
pam and humthallon because we
seemed, to me and everyone else
the perfect couple For two years
now I ve !ned healing myself
wtthoul much luck
If you don I know of a self help
group that ftts my need, perhaps
some of your other readers Will
- NEEDSHELP
DEARNH
Contact W1ves Self Help Foun
~alton, SUite 202 8001 Roosevelt
Blvd , Philadelplua Pa 19152
The orgamzalton sponsors groups
for women exper1 encmg martlal
ur personal stress I understand 11

(614) ~10
Address for the non-profol
National Anorextc Atd Soctety ts
P 0 Box 29461 Colwn bus, Ohto
432229 Send a stamped selfaddressed envelope for personal
reply
Def1mltons Anorexoa nervosa
1s the abnonnal fear of gammg
we1ght, a slr1vmg for thtnness
whoch pushes Its v1duns toward
starval1011 sometnnes death
Bulnma the bmge-vom1t syn
drome an cxtrem~l y dangerom;

gov~rnments

Col umllus ,ond Southcon Oh1o Elec
Southctn Ohnl Elt:dt H.: Cmnpc:!.tlY

the Holand Chapel Chur

ches Of Chrtst In Christ an
Un1on
Saltsburv Town

ship Meogs County Oh io

and the.r unknown hetrs at
laW next Of ktn deVISeE'S
legatees the1r executors
admrmstrators custOdian
s as~ugns or guardtans
and
the
unknown
executors admtn1strators
guardtans custOdtans or
ass 1~ns or het rs at law next
of k1n devtsees or legatees
of any persons who have a
vested
conttngent or
r ev1s1onary tnterest m the
real estate known as the
Hiland Chapel Churches
Of Chnst In Chrt$tJan
Un on
Sa lisbury Town
shtp Me1gs County OhiO
Whose
Res1den ce 1s
Unknown

has chapters m your area I northern New Jersey)
Personal counseling however,
omght better benefit you and your
husband When you truly believe
the affaors are as past tense as
your letter states then you can
learn tulruslaga m - H

DEAR HELEN
Wtlh rega rd to
Pnvate
C1tozen' who resents certam
merchants askmg for her b1rth
dale as well as her dttver's hcense nwnber when she wants
credo! There s no need to request
thts mfonnat10n The month and
year of your b1rth are contamed
woth1n the last five digtts of your
license number - JUST FOUND

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Address
Me1gs County
courthouse
Pomeroy
OhiO 45769

Case No 18036
NOTICE

The General Board Ot
Trustees
Churches Ot
Chrtst In Chrest1an Un1on
Pehttoner
VS
The Unknown persons who
have a vested. contmgent
or revers1onary 1nterest .n
the real estate known as
the H1land Chapel Chur
ches Of Chnst In Chnst1an
Umon
Salisbury Town
Ship MeigS County OhiO
et al
Defendants
Pla 1nflff has brought thiS
actton namrng you as
defendants 1n the above
named Court by flltna 1ts
Petttton on November 25

OUT
DEAHJFO
Not on my driver s license
they aren I' However my birthdate IS prmled below my name,
should any merchant (pertsh the
thought 11be thts snoop) - H
Got a po oblem' An adult subfor dtscusston' You can talk
tt over 111 ht!l L"Oiumn tf you wnte
to Helen Bottcl care of tins newspaper

JCcl

1981

Agrt•cuIture Department wants comments

Meigs County property transfers
Dor ot hy Ro se ben y Cecil
Roseberry Hobert P Burns Betty
F Bw ns to Hao olu Proffitt Eula
Proffitt 7 I acres Lebanon
Jam es J Ryan D1sl Director In
tel nal Reven ue to Robert T
Rudolph Parcels Orange
James W Stockwell to Rhonda J
Stockwell Pa rce ls Sc1 p10
Edward H Amsbury to Herald
Oil &lt;!lld Gas Co Ri ght of Wa y

offshoot of anorexia - H

READERS ALL
The Naltonal Anorexic Aod
Soctety has been men honed Often
111 lh1s colwnn It has dtrecled
ma nv of you with severe ealtng
d,, 1d ' s toward local help
Dor•elul Patncta Howe Ttlton s
quarterly newsletter plus her
personal letters have brought
hope to thousands of anorexta
and bulimia vtcluns and theor
famohes
Now, I'm happy to announce a
new NAAS serv1ce a hot line
where troubled people may
recetve mstaitt mfonnatlon and
encouragement The nwnber

Barrett
Mr and Mrs James D Barrell of
Route 1 Langsville are annuum:mg
the b1rth of theor son 0 R10n James,
born on ov 1 He we1~hed mne
pounds
unees and was 22 mehes
Jon,
r and Mrs Barrell have a
u ter Stephame, mnc and two
Neil and Matthew, seven and
Grandparents are Mr and
Mrs Douglas D Grover Rulland
and Mr and Mrs James Barrett
Northup
Great
Route I
grandmothers arc Mrs Senda Hall
Northup and Mrs Garnet Barrett
Kenova W Va

To the Defendants The
unknown persons
who
have a vested conttngent
or reverstona ry t nterest In
the real estate known liS

Hotline service available

\

Roush

The Datly Sentmel-

OhiO

Pom

Mt.!mplus Earlier vts ttors were
Wayne and Carl Maxwell
Mr and Mrs B11l Matlack,
Pome1 oy and Mrs Juamta Bachtel,
Moddl&lt;port, spent the holidays m
San Jose Calif vosttmg Mr and
Mrs George Dallas and fam1ly
From there, Mrs Bachtel went to
Phoemx Aroz to vistl her son, But
e h and hts farmly She wtll return
home nexl week Meanwhtle, Mrs
Carol Bachtel and children Jeremy
and Katie, were called from Phoemx
to Moddleport due to the death of her
~randJnother

Holiday guests of Mr and Mrs
Kenneth McLaughlin have been
their sons, Alan of Fostoria, and
Kevm staltoned at Camp LeJeune
111 Jacksonville N C over ChriSt
mas and Mr and Mrs Btll Howells
and sons Robbie, Scott and Kacey
Rtllman Duane McLaughlin called
from Hampton, Va , and Debbie
Cooke from Arl8chena Sardma
Italy Gary Cooke wtll be returnmg
to Charleston, S C for etght weeks
of schooling sometune lhtb month
and then wtll be returmng to Italy
Hts wtfeand daughter, Bethany w11l
' m Pomeroy wtlh' Mr
spend that hme
and Mrs McLaughlin

Fairview
Russell and Bemtce were dmner
guests of Mr and Mrs Dana Lewts
at Chfton Sunday
Mr and Mrs Russell Rou.sh and
children Cindy and Edward spent
Christmaa Eve with Mr and Mrs
Eddte Hupp and Jeremy lind Mr
andMrs ArnoldHuppatPortland

'

dollars and people to enlical resource problems and areas
For more mfonn~t10n on the
program and to obtam a

r~sponse

form for mathng c01runents contact
the local SCS Off1ce by phonm~ 992
6647 or at 221 West Second Street 111
Pomeroy
,
The block program IS the USDA

responSe to the Soli and Water
Resources Conservation Ad of 1977
(RCA) Details of the program are
presented Ill the revised program
report whoch ts available for
reference at SCS offoccs throughout
the &lt;late C01runents must be mat led
to the SCS sla te eom;ervaliOmst
before Jan 15

Small investment, large
return. Sentinel Want Ads
•

r==~:;,~;;;:;::::::-,-:==~::::;:,:::;:,:::==l"-:-:-:::~;':7;::::-:::-:-T-:"-:::-:~:::;;:;::::::::Public Notice
Publtc Not1ce
Pu~t £.Not•~
ORDlNANCE
NO
An Ordmance to establish

Vollage Jobs and Wage

Rates
and estabhshtng
leq;\1 holidays vacat1ons
and SICk leave
Be 1t orda1ned by the

Counc ol of the Vollage of
Msddleport as follows
Sec I That the follow ng
wage scale tS hereby adop
ted for employees of the
Vtllage of Mtddleport
Ch1ef of Polt ce $975 per
month
Regular Patrolman

over 1 year Of servo ce
$4 54 per hour

Less th an I year of ser
vtC e 54 32 per hour
Part t•m e pa t rolm an

$4 32

per hOur

Part ttm c patrolman
(probationary 1 $3 89 per

hour
Street Employees
Over I vea r of servr ce

S3 81 per hou r
Less than I year of ser

vtce SJ 35 per hour
Pool and Park Otrector
$450 00 j:ler month
Lifeguards
$2 25 per
hour
Secretary to M ayor
$421 00 per month
Extra Clcncal Help
$.4 22 per hour
Clerk
Ce m e t e ry
Trustees S109 oo per month
Volunt ee r
Ftreman
S:l4 00 per year
Co un c I
$8 00 per
mecttng C2o4)
Cou nctl
Prestdent of
S10 00 per meetmg (24)
Board of Pu bh-- Affa rs
$.4 00 per month ( 12 )
Clerk Board of Pubhc
Affatrs $663 00 per month
Rest de nt Dtspatcher
5143 00 per month
Cl erk
Water Depart
ment less than 6 months
servtee S55800permonth
Clerk
Water Depart
m ent over 6 months ser
v ce $635 00 per montfT
Water and Sewage Supt
$500perhour
(I h times over o40 hours)
S7 50 per hour
Water and Se wage Ass t
Supt $4 07 per hour
Meter Reader $4 14 per

-r

Water and Sewage Dept
Extra Help
Over 1 year serv•ce 53 81
per hour
Less than I year servtce

anseJ sa d emerg ency qf
extra hours to be approved
by Council

SEC 11 1 The tollowmg

ar e her eby declared as
legal holidays for the em
ployees of the VIl lage of
Mtddleport
New Year s
Day Memor al oav In
dependence Day
Labor
Day Thank sg vmg Day
Chr stmet s
Day
em
plovee s
btrthdrty
Veter ans Dav
SEC
IV
That sa1d
sa tanes wtll be m effecr on
13 nd after January 1 1982
SEC v Eac h lull t m e

employee ot the Vil lage
shall be ent•tled to s ck
lea ve tn th e amount of one
and one fourth Cl &lt;1) davs

per month and sha ll be en

t1tl ed to accrue satd s ck
leave up to one hundred

twenty 11201 days
SEC VI Eac h lull I me
emp loyee of the v II Etge tn

cludtng lull t•m e hourly
rate employees- shall be
ent tied durtng each year
after the f rst yea r to two
week s vacat ton exclud ng
leqal holtdays w tt h pay
E mployees w t h ftfteen or
more years servtce sha ll be
cnt tflcd to three wee-k s
vacatton w t h pay each
year
SEC
VII
Each em
plovee of th e Vtllage en
tttl ed to va ca tton shall use
the vnca tton ttm e tn year of
entflement or shallbe pa1d
for any unused port on
vacat on at th e•r preva l ng
wage rate at the t1m e of
paym ent If at the end of
any year any such em
pta ree has any accr Ued and
unused vacatton t•m e th e
Clerk sha ll make payment
to the employee for such
unused ttme w•thtn thtrty
days (30) after the end of
th e vacat.on
y ea r
Vaca tt on ttme shall m ea n
each 17 month per od
fotlowtng the t1r st fu ll year
of employment
SEC VIII That a gr oup
hospttal and med•cal m
surance plan be provtded
tor all full t1me emp loyees
of the Vt ll age of Middl eport
who elect n wnhng to
~rl c opaMon~ ~ -

and that the prem•um
therefore be pa td by the
V1lla9e up to the amount of

53 35 per hour
MechaniC $4 66 pe r hour

k
ong rec6Fd keeping
hourly employees be em
ployed at a max1mum of 35

That all lull

ttmc cmp lovccs des r.nq to
pilrttctpate n the plan shall
til e nn e ec tton w th the
CIE.&gt;rk w•th•n t en days after
the etfec hv e date of 1hts or

f:
4

SEC

XV

Th s

Or

dtnance shall take effec t
and be n force from and
after Janua rv 1 1982

Attest

Jon Buck
Llerk

M L Kel ly

dtnance

Pres1dcnt of
Counc11

SE C X T hat sala r eu
employees who do not elect

to parttc tpa te be patd an 1121JO 1116 2tc

ext r a $50 00 per month m
addtfton to th e present
salary schedule and those
employees pa d on an
hour l y basts who do not
elect to part c1pate 10 the
tn surance plan be pa d an
addtftona! 30 cents per
hour Any emploo; ec mao; at
any 11me elec t to wtthdraw
from the plan and n such
event such etectton for
w thdrawal shall ltkew tse
be f led m wnttng wtth the
Clerk Any employee who
elects not to parttc1pate tn
the pl an may ftl e a sub
sequent elec t•on to par
ttetpate and tf acceptable
to the tnsurance company
on a non r ated basts th en
su c h employ ee
mqy
become a part1crpant 10 t l'le
plan Upon part to pat on tn
the plan th e add tl!onal
compensation sha ll b e ca n
ce lled L kewrse any em
ployee who parttctpates m
the plan may ftl e an elec
t on to w•thdraw from th e
plan tn whtch event h s
wages or Sillary as t he
case may be shall be ad
,us ted as provtded tn th s
paragraph
SEC XI All Ord nanccs
n con fl ct w•th thtS Or
d nancc
ar e
her e by
r epealed

SEC X I That all lu ll

t me hour ly personnel shall

be pa td an ad" tttonal three
cents (3 cents ) per hour for
eac h year of consecuttvc
fu ll t me serv1 ce Wtth the
Vtllage and that an full
time sa lary per sonnel sh all
bt? patd an add•ttonal stx
dollars (S6 00) per month
tor each year ot con
secu t•ve full ttme servt ce
w ith the VIllage
counc: 11 shall determtne
wh ch employees
arc
classtfted ,,s tull t1m e em
piO'l_f'CS

SEC XIV That lhoS or

d nance s hereby declared

to be an emer gency 1n that
no pay scale has been
establtshed tor 1982 and no
other meetmgs. of council
are schedu leo TO en acT such
an ordtnance
Passed the 14th daY of
December 1981

~~:tra N1cc Furn•ture and Appliance s

1

o4 pc ltv lnq room sutte 1 pc 11 vr nq room su te s1 ng P.
bed Maytag W.lsher &amp; dryer Harvest Gold 7 pc
d nc tte set 5 pc d nette set 23 m color console _,
tel cvtston con so le stereo w•lh AM FM radt o 3 pc
match10g cottee ttnd end tAble set stde by stde
r efr.gerator freezer refnoerator fr ee zer electr ic
dryer new gas dryer never hooked up automatrc
washer 3 mos old SW ivel chrurs wnngcr witshcr
chairs cof fee tabl es end tables metal~wardrobe
h 1
tl
h
r'Ockcrs gas range Qit$ e~ er new re c tttns
~ome anttq ues and col lectors tlems
ttems too numerous to mention
Not responsible for accidents
Terms of sale Cash or che-'11; w1th pos1t1ve I o

Eats Available
IIUCTIDNE ER DON ROSSER

hours per week except&lt; for
Our Saturday ntght sale Will follow tmmediately af
an emergency that shall ll~'::;e:.,r,::th::e:.;s:::•,::Ie:;.,_ _ _~-~--------.J

Chapel Churches Ot Chnsl

In
Chrtsttan
Unton
Sttuated .n the County of
Metgs tn the State of Ohio
and m the TownshiP of
Saltsbury and bounded and
descrtbed as follows
The followtng parcel of
land namely seven rods
square bounded on the
State Road on the west
stde of satd Road and on
the west side of the Creek
near the South east corner
of Fract1on No 32 Range
No J1 3 TownshtP. No 2 The
above descr1bed
real
estate be ng n Salisbury
Townshtp Mergs Countv
and Sta te of Ohta
Last Transfer
Deed
Record Volume 189 Page

261

Sa•d prem ses betng also
known as Htland Chapel
Pomeroy Oh o
Pet1ttoner ts The General
Board of Trustees of The

Churches Of Christ tn
Un1on
The
Hotand Chapel Churches

Chrtst1an

Of Chnst In Chpst an
Unt on tS a regularly ad
mttfed member of the
South Central Dtstnct of
the Churches Of Chnst In
Chr1st 1a n Unton
Sa1d
Hiland Chapel Churches

Of

Chnst

In

Chrosttan

Un on havmg become ex
ttnct Pettttoner seeks (l l
the sale of the above
descrtbed real estate pur
suant to Sechon 1715 14 of

the Ohoo Rev osed Code (2)

an Ol"der of satd Court
authoriZing and d~reG:ttn g
Pet tt loner to hold the net
proceeds derived from sa1d
sa le of satd rea l estate pur
suant to the terms and con

SHAG CARPET Good Select•on
Kitchen
3 Rollsto
Rubber Backed
Peck From

'12"

3 ROLLS

Cash n Carry
Brown Blue

START INGA T

Sq yd mstalled

\1~Q

REESE ~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

1 Blue Rust
1 Creek Bed
3 Golden
Harvest

'12~

y d

Vd

I nsta lied

water sewer Etectnc
Gas Ltne 01tches
Water Lme Hook ups
Sept1c Tanks
County certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire Oh

Buy Now &amp; Save $2 So Per Yard
25 Rolls Carpel 111 stock to p1ck from

Regular backed, carpet mstalled free
w1th pad Good select•on Roll Ends Rem
nants S2 50 up

Ph 367 7560

1 7 I tt c

11

1962 Htll cr es t mobt l e
home Ser No 561 016 12
Sale of the secu r tv hsted
i'! bove w 11 be he d on the
premtses of The Ct ty Loan
Company
125 E Ma .n
Stree t
Pomeroy
Oh10

45169

Term s of Snle Cash
Seller r eserv es the nght
to b td .-.nd the rtg ht to
rc1cct an y and all b ds
pr or to the da te of sa le
nrr rm ge m pnts m ay b e
made to nspec t tht s mer
chand• se by ca lltng 991.. 217 1
be tween the hours of 9 00
n m ~n d 5 00 p m
( I 6 I tc

MAIN ST.

TOP OF THE STAIRS

742-2211

Public Notice

Fitness

1..::======~~~.

dlt1ons of Sect1on 1715 14 of
the.Oh.io R:ev1sed Code and
( l for such other and fur
ther rel1ef as may be JUSt
and proper tn the prem1ses
You are requ~red to an
swer the pefttron w1fhtn
twenty e1ght days after the
last pubhcatton of thts
noftce
wh•ch will be
publtshed once each week
for s1x success ve weeks
and the last publicatiOn wtll
be made on January 6

POMEROY,O
992 2259
NEW LISTING -

1982

7

room house wtth a large
front sttftng porch
ftreplace pantry ar ea
full basement
large
foyer ar ea and a 2 yr
old roof sn 900

HANDCRAFTED
CLOCKS

VACANT LAND - Ap

Made from Cedar,
Cypress
Walnut &amp;
Cherry

(Note ThiS not ce IS ISSUed
and published pursuant to
Rule 4 4 of the Ohto Rules
of Ctvtl Procedure)

LOTS - and a 5 room
one f loor hom e wtth new
c arpet new storm wtn
dows and tOS\Jiat1on
Recently remodeled and
ts very econom c ally
heated S29 900

t12)2 9 16 1J 301116 61c

CUTE

-

.......

14 Available

From 534 95
T0$79 95
PH 992 3269

CORNER

Pubhc Nottce
----

OHtO VALLEY
ROOFING

COZY

&amp;

nea r the mtnes
appx
1 acr.e w th a 3 bedroom
hou se th at has n1cc
woodwork a bay w n
dow and a fam1ly room

9th 1982 at 10 00 a m a
public sale wtll be held at
105
Unton Avenu e
Pomeroy Ohto to sell for
c,:~s h
th e tallow ng
cO flatera l
1979 Pont1ac Grand Pn x

S30 000

Seroa l No 2J37Y9P58485 7
1974 Ford T B rd Sen al
No 4Y81Alt8915
1977 Olds Cutl ass 4 Or
3G29CID191534

N EW
E NGLI SH
TUDOR - w lh splol en

NOW
OPEN

SALE PHONE NO

992-6259

'I" our chan ce to own a 3

ri\n ch

hom e
full
b~l sc mf'n t
elf' C
11t i'l t r~ r cond
d•n nq
r oom on n 10n..:J6t lo t
tor o nly S20 000

11134561861c

b~•th "1
Q M 'l(JP

7

Henry E Cleland Jr

992
949
992
992

Jean Trussell
Oottte Turner
Office

6191
2660
5692
2259

I Buy these
and rent one out 3
bcd r 60:ms tn
eac h
ni'lturi'll gas heat baths
,1nd c ty water Vt ew of
nvc r on East Matn

BO!h tor S28 500
521 000 oo - 8 room 2
story frame home tn
M tddlcporf
3 or 4
b ed rooms
bath
basement new gas for
CCCI atr furnace and 2
lots

Housmy
Headquarwrs

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

51- HoUsthold Good'

30
31
32

12
13

lt - Bu&amp;

N

~

15
16

34
35

mo

•

0

- Addanl 1nd fl!madtllng

East

LUU!

RadiO Equ pment
53- Ani que1
54- Mtn MerchandlU

Bulldlne

Sup~!

u

~PI!II

for Satt
57- Mus CIIII\JIIrl.lmenl

SI- Fru I l l 1.1fge1o1bln

- P umD ngud

III IKirlul worM

1Free Est1mates)
V C YOUNG Ill

992 6215or9921314

Pomeroy Ohto
9 30 lie

SKATE-AWAY

Open Wed Fn I Sat
7 30 ToiiiO 00
sunday 2 oo to 4 30
Prtvate Parttes
Available

Backhoe
Excavattng
Sephc Systems
Water Sewer &amp;
Gas L1nes
• Dump Truck

h it

onll

a&lt;~ - HIY

n-

eREAL ESTATE
lt - Hom•&amp;tors a e

I Gra in
seeo&amp; Ft rttllur

eTRANSPORTATION
11 - A 11 tos far

S•te

tor S•te
U - Farmslor S.le
l4 - Bultntn IIUIUhngs

H- Lo" &amp; Acreatte
Real E'llllll! W"nlf'O
JJ - Reallors

l6

Want Ad Adveltes•ng
Deadlines
MOnO"''r' 1 Lllon Salurday

Mall This Coupon with RemiHance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy. oil: 4S769

11

I

I,

Tutldty tltru Frlaay l oct,.. M
the CitY IMfore pvbhui!Of\
SllndayJ "PM ~mtay

MOBILE
HOME
PARTS
Anyth•ng for your
Mob1le Home

remodel

KINGSBURY
PARTS Rl&amp;12ACCESS.
4

Mmersvolte Oh
Ph 992 5587

1:~=====~1~3~1~~~~~~~~~~~7~3~l~l~m~o~~
S&amp;W TV
and

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
• Dump Truck s
eLo Boy
• Trencher
• Water • Sewer
• • Gas L1nes
e SeptiC Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH 992 2418
12 701 mo pd

Stnftftlt

...,._

_______
carifor Thanks_- -

preclatton
to all the
friends
s nce re thanks
and
ap
and neighbors for all th etr
deed~ of ktndness com
forttng
words
food
flowers and ca rds at the
loss of our beloved sister
and aunt Pearl Reynolds A

spec ia l thanks

to the

mtnlsters and Church of
Christ for all their e•tra

special
Bland

help

F~m1 l y

The Nina

3
Announcemenls
SWEEPER and sewing
ma ch1ne repair parts end
suppltes
Pick up and
delivery Davt s Vacuum
Georges Creek Rd
Call
Cleaner
446 0294 one half mile up
Complete ltne of Munle
Loading Guns and Sup
plies
Spring
Valley
TradtnQ Co Spnng Valley

Plaza .w. 8025

For bulk delivery of
gasoline heating all and
d1esef fuel call landmark

992 2181 Pomeroy Oh

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club Every Sun starting
at 1 p m Factory choke

c hoke 12 guage shotgun
Flea

Market

New

Openong 7 days a week
The Heart of Middleport 20

N 2nd St formerly Martin
General Store 992 6370

In com e
ta x
serv 1ce
Federal and state income
tax forms quarterly repor
ts and W 2 forms Will be
Wanda Ebltn 41000 Laurel

Pomeroy

9'12

Traders
Dav at Eagle
Rtdge Foxhunters Cabin
Saturday Jan 9 Bob Cion

ch

ON THE ROAD AGAIN
The Joint Hetrs Gospe l
S1ngers are now tak i ng

en9agements 895 3854

1982 Happy Hollow Farm
Pollc oes The followong wotl
be applicable lo unem
played &amp; government
check reclpoents IS S SS I
welfare)
Ftshtng
per
mtts same 1basis
as Lyle
Austtn tnit ated 1/J century
ago! 2 •1.. 1!;1 d1scounts on
berries &amp; 'Vegetables 3

Substantial discounts on

camping•

,I- H0 mtlmpra... tmtnh

POMEROY
lANDMARK

lhlrtterattan
U - Gtneral Haul ne
U - M H Rep.,r
17 - Upflollltry

OI'Wdliylnterf•on

UOO

" " " d•y Insertion

u · oe

tt•d•v• flltrlton

1700

I
L----------------------·-· I L~-::----'-----~----------..1
TM Pua!llfter re"rvH IM ritl'lt 10 edlf er rete&lt;llft~ ld' deemed
oCli!KIIoNil TIM Ptl~lther wtll not Itt re,por!IUtlt lor mon tn11n ..,,
tncorrt(t lftUrt!on

614-992-2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
D•esel
Heatmg Otl

PRICED RIGHT.

C1go1rcttu
c.ntont

u

61c P•lCk
tS &amp; u u

Open 1D•v• 11

wee~

Open Mon Tflun

Phone 304 773 5392 or 304
615 1393
G~~~ '(_ - -

•

does not offer or attempf to
offer any other th1ng for
sat e may place an ad •n this
column Tnere will be no
charge to the adverttser

---··-----

2 puppies to g1ve away
Great house pets Ca fl AAO

..
__
2 ij,Qs- pari Bea gte- 1 vr
2945

------.---

-

__._

old Call 319 2796

thru S(ntdr1'f t1f f p m

01'1 N 74 HOUff~

F' rt ~UN
!\cttf f 1 Pit W ( &amp;
( OCol Col 1 l'roduch by
lh1 6 &amp; I l•tiCk .tnd .11-.o
en hit r bf)tfh t'l
Authnr11e.. !'.unt)owt r
n. olh r !\uti or til"'
I he,, ~ ... n-.

11 " lh

675 2856

Public Sale

8

&amp; Auction

Auction every Wednesdl!ly

at the Hartford Community
Buoldlng Sale lime 7P m
Consignments of new and
used merchandise lllways
welcome
Richard
Reynolds auctioneer 304

115 3069

Wanted to aliWANT TO BUY Old fur

9

nlture and Antiques of all
kinds call Kenneth Swain
256 1967 in the evenings

CASH PAID for clean late
model

osed cars

Smith

Buick Pontiac GAllipolis
Ohio Call 446 2282

BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER

paying cash lor any'thlng
dental gold Clnss rings
wedding rings Sti ver co tns

or

anything

stamped

sterling

Cl arks

Jewelry

Buying

Gold

Sliver

Store Gallipolis 446 2691 or
992 2054 In Pomeroy1
Pla,tnum old coins scrap
rtngs &amp; silverware Dally
quotes available
Also
coins &amp; coin st.Jppltes for
sale
Spring
Vallev

Trad ong Spring Valley
Plaza 446 8025 or 446 8026

We pay cash for late model
clea n used cars
Fre nchtown Car Co
Bill Gene Johnson

446 0069

- - -- -------

Wanted to huy 5 to 7 II bush
hog a pull type Call 256
61&gt;15
BEDS IRON BRASS old

furnitur e
gold
$liVer
dollars wood Ice bo•es
stone 1ars antiques etc
Complete
hous ehold s

Wrlle M D Miller Rl 4
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 716/J

CHIP WOOD Poles max
10

on largest

end $12 50 per ton Bundled
stab $10 50 per ton
Oellverd to Ohio Pall et Co
Rock Springs Rd
Pomeroy 9922689
-~---..._.

Gold
sliver
sterling
jewelry rmgs Old coins &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar

ber Shop Modd leporl 992
J4 16

BUVIN G DEER AND
BEEF HIDES Gene Hlne•
Rt 1 Amesville Oh 4.18
6747 Buymg raw fur after

Oec 12 Dolly 6 PM !o 9

ClOSed Dec 24 II&lt; 25

RAW FUR buyer Beet

&amp;

deer htd e g nshang Trap
ping supplies
George

Buckley Rl 2 Alhens Oh
614 664 4761
Op en
eve n1 ngs

OLD FURNITURE beds

- - _ ___, - - - ...

''' m to 10p m
Opunfn ,1t6.1 m

WI

German Shepherd found
around Salt Creek area

PM closed Sunday s Al so

PERSON who h~s
·r~~=~~~~~=;;:;~~ANY
anything to give ewey and

Specialties

Ca n be claimed at The
Oatly Sentinel offi ce In
Pomeroy

dtameter

Oh10
PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382

Our

11- Piumblnt &amp; Ht1llng
n - E•u •tahng
a.- E IKtrfu l I

r ,. ... .,.,. • worCI' ptr llneJ

a Gun Shoot Sal nights
6 30 p m Bashan Factory

ITOMIC Sounds' Mobile

.All makes and models
Antenna lnsta llatron
House calls and shop
scrvtceavallablc

stop light In PI Pte•sa nt

stamped 10K 14K 18K and

drsqockey School dances
prtvete parties proms &amp;
class reunions etc Type of
musfc prices and referen
ces available upon requ~s1

Chester,

Found S keys on double
rmg Found In area of tirst

We wish to express our

APPLIANCE SERVICE

CERTIFIED GAS

Rrp• r
11-C• mp ng Equ,pmenl
n ~Aulo

MMI .. Home '•In •nd Y•rd witt •re •cteJrt~ anty wtlh ca1fl
w1tt1 or41., :n c.nt c,._r. . tor ad' urr~'"l ••• Numlter In Clre ef
The

•

done by appoontmenl See

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex

74- MotartYCII!'
1s-B"" 1 Moron
,._,.lito Parh &amp;
ACCI!UOrlts

Rate! and Other lnformatron
Upto1SwNrcl!t

985-3929
985-9996
12 16 1 mo

SERVICES

Uplol5word'
Up to 15werts

lost In 5 Points llrea
medrum stze femal e coon

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

n - Truck1lor Sale
1J- vans 1 • w o

l1 - Moblle Homu

or

• Backhoes

u - Farm Equ llmi!MI
•~ - wanted lo 81.1'1
u - L ••stock

Sen us

I
I
I
I
I

Identify tetter Inside of ring
call 446 2343

Racrne F ire Dept sponsors

• Dozers

eFARMSUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

neu

23- Pr~en

_

.....,Raol ng 1ndguner wurll
- contrtft wor~

Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583
or 992 2282

st- For Solie or Trade

OpPOrtun ty

~

\l'lw" ' 11 ' n

CARPENTER
SERVICE"

• Roof1ng work
14 Yc.u s F.Jt pcn cncc

n - cB TV

ss -

l l - MOtltY tc LO.ln

24

11

•D ~IKI'"'~

• E lcctnc 11 work

e MERCHANOISE

•FINANCIAL

11
18
19
20
21
22
23

29

o.,.,.

•Ro~nvt~

•
•
•
•

tens1ve
mg

41 - Houst' lor Rtnl

4f- For

16- Ridll) TV
&amp; CB Rt!N ir
11- W.Inltd To Do

!Wanted
)For Sale

Graduation year is 1939 It
Is a woman class ring To

If~=========~~~~~~~~~~=~ 2272
Chi! Rd
I"

eRENTALS

&amp; Auct on
t - W•nttd to 811r

14- Bul .-eu Traln,no
15- Schools tnstr'-!ct•on

These cash rates
mclude d1scount

10

0

; :J

lor Renl
..- Ap•rtm e r~lslor REnt
H - Fvrn ~h~ Rooms
" - spau for Renl
47- Winlec:l to R11n1
•t- Equ Pm l!ntfor Rent

U- lns~rance

8
9

ALL MAM &lt;&gt;
•WII \ I'IU \

Ph. 992•72011 nc

42- Moblle Homes

11- Hetp Wuted

'J FOR

Shops the

Or Wrtle Datly Senlrnel Classtfted Dept
111 Court St , Pomeroy, Oh 45769

ll- SIIUI Ile»n WllftltC

ONLY S31 900

PARHA~OH:AV u

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

EVERYBODY

PHONE 992-2156

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Phone
1 (614) 992-3325

FOUND Gallla Acadmey
High School Class ring

~~=========~~======~==~~=========~ gunso~~----

WA/U AD INFORMATION

216 E 2nd 51

25
26
27
28

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service
985 356 I

Lrcensed &amp; Bonded

•1111 0 11

rooms 'l baths wood
burner carpettng lArge
ba ck. porch washer and
dryer stove r etr gerat
or &lt;"nd level 1 88 acres

APPUANCE
SERVI

Farm Equ1pment
Parts &amp; Servrce

~

4- G "'1way
J- H1ppy Ad'
6-lOS!Ind Found
1- Yird Slit
1-Publ c Salt

5
6
7

l&lt;eep ThiS Ad For
Future Reference

Guysvtlle OhiO
Authonzed John Deer
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Middleport Ohto
q 71 If(

f

I m waiting for M1ster Rllhl
at leasl a very rich Mtster
Wrong

1,

PH. 992 -6011

&amp; SERVICE
SO

6- ---"lost and Found

hound While with black on
head 992 7888

FREE
ESTIMATES

Ph.

Phon•----------------

18

SALES

276 Syc,,morc St

WANT AD WAY

I

kotchens and

appliances
custom
bathrooms remodeling
plurnb~ng electr.c and
heating

BOGGS

US Rl

Used Color TV Sets for
S.lle

N F \N LI STI N G Jl.R
n/IUGH .AO DIT ION -

w th

Custom

Truck Seats
SlOO 00
labor &amp; Matenal
Effective Dec 1Sth
Thru Jan 15th

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

675-1333

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Reupholsterv
SPECIAL
Bar Stools
$25 oo

1

In Mason County

._

f

Kac1ne un
PH 949 2202
12 15

992-2156

LAFF- A- DAY

_:;\ _

:':'~
l ~;==========irr=========~t=·~~w~"~":':'~"'='=~':'
..
s

S49 900

b~droom

Ph 1304) 372 9875
or 1304&gt; 372 S479

614 698 6791

Tr Im Sh Op

try 3 bedrooms 2lf'.ba th s
large f am ly
room
garage
and
w ork shop Owner w t t
f na nce wtth l arge dcwn
As ktn g
p aymen t

The Farmers Bank and
Savtngs
Companv
Pomeroy Oh o r eserves
the r ght to b1d af thiS sale
and to Withdraw the above
veh c les pnor to sa le Fur
ther The Farmers Bank
and Sav, ngs Company
reserves the r.ght to re tect
any or all btds submttted
Further
vehiC les are
sol d tn the cond1t1on they
ar e 1n w1th no e•pressed or
mplu~ d warrant es gtven

• 11r

work
SUNRISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rl 2 Albany OhiO

TOM HOSKINS

In Meigs COUI'\t?~

In Galha County

446-2342

Massey Ferguson In
dustrlal Equipment
We sell the best and
servtcetherest
On Rt 13 w
R1pley w Va

Tappan Recuperaftv e
Furnace Coleman Atr
Condtt om ng. Arkla
Servel Gas Atr Cond t
ttontng
Sheet Meta l

Ph 949 2160or9491482
J 5 li e

l - AnMI.Intements

8

895- Letart

FAIRPLAIN TRACTOR

SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

SNODGRASS
UPHOLS TERY &amp;

IN THE COUNTRY -

Not• ce •s here by g.ven
that on Saturday January

rEAFORo(]

FLOOR

6 1S lie

SALES, INC.

And Home Maintenance
• Rooting of a ll types
• Stdmg
• Remodehng
• Free estimates
elO Yrs t"xpertence

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

4

Racine Oh
Ph 614 843 2591

l~~===========~:;:=====~t~1~1~6~1~fn~~=~~~~~~8~2;0;1;c;rl

$24 900

PUBLIC NOTICE

Nam•-------------------l
Address, __;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ 1I

1
2
3

Mason co w va
A rca Code 304
.,5- Pt Pleuant
•sa- Leon
S76- Apple Grove
773- Mason
88l- New Haven

Hnu~P'

Rt 3, Box 54

No Sunday c,, ll s
1 llll c

12 3 1 mo pd

d esc rtbe s
th s
2
bedroom hom e w th an
equ ppped
ktt che n
uhl•tv room fron t porch
and n ce l eve l lot

I

) Announcement

t~ll

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Beautiful Custom
But It Garages
Cr11t far free Sldmg
CS tlmtlt('S 949 2801 or
949 2860

FOR CHRISTMAS

px 56 acres w th appx 5
t1ll able and ba la nce s
wooded
Southern
school dtstr ct near the
new br~dge S23 900

LARGE

742- Rulland

661- COOIVIIIe

r.=::::::~~~~l;l~l;m~o~~====~~~~~~==~~==~~~~~1~2~18~1~m=o==~ ~--

In case of your fa lure to
answe r
or
otherwtse
respond as perm1tted bY.
the Ohto Rules of C1vtl
Procedure wtthtn the t1me
stated
\udgment
by
default wt 1 be rendered
aga nst you for the relief
1emanded tn th e Petttton
Larrv E Spencer
Clerk of court of
Common Pleas
M etg s County Oh o
Me1gs County
Courthouse
Pomeroy Oh o

Wrtte your own ad end order by mall wtth this
coupon Cancel your flld by phone when vou get
results Money not refundable

1For Rent

lnsulatf!d Dna

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Perm Spectal
30% OFF

ioniW~........

E

General

ACRES Some
t e n c~d
smal l stream
o lct 7 r oom f arm house
b 1rn corncn b shop and
QM'tgc 12x52 Schultz 2
brdroom tra ler w fh
T P witte r on Rt 7
ne"tr Efts tern School
RANCH 8 room ~
IM ClC f nm tl y r oo m wtth
woodburner
3
b('odrooms 7 full baths
nsul&lt;lted garage and 1
/(&gt;ve l acre plus 2 yr old
A s ~ lnq $59 900

Sites from 4 ro 6 and

wood buildings 24x36

247- Letart Falls
949-fl acine

256 - Guyan D1st

643-Arabla 0151

Bulldmgs

Ut1hty

Vmyl &amp; Atummum
Sl DING

&amp; Beauty

202 11 E MaiM Sf
PH 992 67l0
Mary Powell
owner/ Operator
Trudy Roush Styltst
Call for Appo,ntment

I- card al TflanMs

VIRGIL B SR

w1rma nl!l!d~
Let George M1ller
check your present
electncal system
Res1denllal
&amp; Commerctal
Call 742 3195
78 lfc

Salon

Re•l Estate- General

2- ln Mtmorlam

Real Estate

Sizes start from l0x2•

Pomero'f

985-Chester
343-Porlland

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Curh Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savel_ll

ilm

446-Gallopolls
367-Cheshtre
311-Vlnton
245-Rio Grande

BUILDINGS

your

Meigs Co Area Code
614
992- Middlepdrt

GalltA Co Area Code
614

Drive A little - Save A lot

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

The foll ow ng desc r bed
.tern w II be ..ofl ered fo r
publt c sa le to th e h ghest
b ddcr on th e 20th dil}t of
January 198 2 at 10 o clock

all

r·ovt&gt;r thf'

followinl( lt&gt;lephom• 1•xrhHnl(t&gt;H .•

ALL STEEl

Mll:J.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For

('/1111111/it&gt;d JHt!ft&gt;ll

937- Buffalo

REALTORS

NOTI CE OF
PUBLIC SAL[

ONE

pc soltd oak bedroom sutte complete double beet

The ob1ect of the Pettt1on
tS the sale under the
prov1s1ons of
Sectton
1715 14 of the Oh10 Rev1sed
Code at the followtng
descrtbed real estate
known as the Hiland

Business Services

END OF YEAR CLOSEOUT

Public Not1ce

SEC XIII That votlage

JANUARV 9thiSATURDAY I2 OOf'M

$3 35 per hour

the hourly rate )
SE€ 11 That secretarial
I ertca I and/or book

SEC IX

Moved to p,lvcv1llc .Au chon House due to weather

Lesslhanl yearservoce

tA ll extr~ hours for
hourly employees will be at

presen t c ontrr~ct

EXTRA LARGE HOUSEHOLD
AUCJIQN

Ce m etery
Over 1 year servtce S3 81
per hour
Reltef D•spatcher SJ 62
per hour
sw 1mmtng Instructor
53 75 per hour
Custodian
$50 00 per
month
Office of Community
Development
E
xecut•ve Secretary
54 00 per hour
1

the prem um quoted for th e

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

NOtiCE BY
PUBLICATION

Helen Help Us

-

Barrett

1982
PubliC Nof1ce

Meigs' births and birthdays
and Cookoe Salser Pal and Ora
Somth Becky Amberger Steve
Dreams and Stefano Poekens Sen

Wednesday, January 6, 1982

•ron brass or wood Kit
chen cubbards of air types
Ta bles round or squ8re
Wood ice boxes Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
compl ete household Gold,
silver o ld money pocket
watches chams nngs and
etc lnd1an Artifacts of llll

types
6JIO

Osby Martin 992

Wanted to buy Reese h1tch

complete 992 6370

Raw furs hides scrap
metals
batter1 cs
rad1ators g nseng yellow
root
and merchandise
brokertng Harper Halste

ad satvaoe Company 300
Eleventh Street 615 5868
l&gt;,tso Flea Market open
Open Monday
LOST long h~or CaliCO c~t. dally
named Candy Vtc tntty Friday 1 5 pm
Meadowbrook Sunday Ch
old s pet Reward 675 7554 13 Inch or 15 Inch wheel tor
or 675 3763
Subaru Phone 675 4154

6

Last and Faunce-

�(

..
io

Pomerov-M
1l-TheDa

Ja

nel

1}~=Hiiii":wai1ieit__ _

Need extra money for
holidav bills? Art·Croll

Concepts now seeki"O
counselors, trainin~ now,

wanted ;;, Do - ~

18

- -.-·

-~

----- ---

Will do sew ing for Woman
&amp; children Call 245-~213 or
245·5601 .

start in January . No in·
"Vestment, no delivery. no
col lec tin~ . Ca ll 256·6572,

Reliible wom a n to babyS it
tn your home We-eknights
or weeke nds. Call 245 ·9213

Babysitter Rodney area .
Re' .:!' r-enee reQUired . Phone
245 9520

FIHidEiai

--

~-----'--

wanted dOWntown
needs

interested

pe r s on .

store
fem111e

ex perience
preferred but willing to
train for wtles person Mer·
chand1s1no l!lnd inventorv

control . Send resume to
Box 503 in care of the
GalliPOliS Daily

Trtbune,
B253rd. Ave ., Gall1polis, Otl

. 45631.

Why settle for less, sell the

_______

best. AVON . Call 446 33511
or _
742·23S.C.
"

------·----PART TIM E Non ·fOOdS

se rvice

stocker

In

G a11ipolis · Pt . Ptusanr
a rea . Approx . 20 hou r s per
week . Must have car . Send
resume to E Knotts, P 0 .
1303, Chorleston. WVA .
25325, 1nctude phone num·
ber .

----

~~,~~ ~~~d~~~N~~~:

22

Columbus Firs t Mortgage
Companv FHA-VA F inan·
ci ng Loan Rep Cookie
Krautter 130~)675 · 3~7 3.
Professional
Servocu _ __

P1ano Tuning·Be k ind to
your ears. Call Bill Ward
for appoldtm~nt ..446·4372 •

C &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com·
plete bookkeeping and ta x
serv tce for bus1ness and tn·
divlduals .
Carol Nea\446·3862

-_

.._

_________ .

2 bedroom unfurnished
hou se . 15
V i ne
St .
Gallipolis. No pets &amp;
reference required .. Call
446·2419or 446·3949.
2 bedroom house. Spnng
Ave., Pomeroy . Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6 .
$195 month not including
utilities. 992 ·2288.
Unfurntshed very nice 2
bedroom house. St . Rt . 248
985·4244.

--------

4
Bedroom remodeled
home in Recine area, near
schools . Deposit and ref .
required. 773·5778.

Gatilp()ii-s - o nlY- -RUbber
Stamp Shop U ~ usally one
or two days service .
Dismuke's 405 2nd . Ave.,
446·047.4.
HARPER, Adult Care Cen
fer -providing the personal
care your elderly need in~
home like atmosphere
Vacancies now availible.
call 304-675· 1293.

~--------

5 rooms. 3 bedrooms. bath,
utility room, ni ce and
c lean Phone 446·1519 or
992·2430."

___ _______ _

2 bedroom nouse, carpeted,
stoVe, refrigerator . $275
plus deposit . 2 miles from
downtown Gallipolis 675·

FULL OR PART- TIME
Welcome
Wagon
hiS
posi tions as r epresentives
open to career mined M &amp; M Electric . All electric·~ J6SS, - -·
_ "
_,______
women &amp; men . Have a car? work guaronteed a. bonded .
Like meeting people? Call 304-675·2236.
6 room
house , full
about J&amp;nuary opening in
basement. Two 'and three
Ga\lipoll•, Pt . Pleasant, a.
bedroom mobile homes,
Mlddlepo&lt;t area . Call N.n·
furnished or unfurntshed .
cy !&lt;elley 6 to 9 PM Thur·
Caii675-1J71 or 675·3812 .
~dav Januarv 7th . 8 to 10
AM Fr iday. 446·0090 E .O I!
lj ~-= H0me5i0r Sale _..=.,
TWO bedroom furnished
house, $150.00 plus utilities,
3
or
4
bedroom
house
with
GET VALUABLE troint""
New Haven, 30~ - 882 · 2466 .
as a young business person batn in country . On 2 3
and earn QOOd monev plus acres . Storm windows,
some gre1t gi fts as a Sen· rural water, garage, lots of 42 ---Moiiiie Homes - tinel route carrier Phorw storage space . Close to aiiJ
for Rent
us nght away and get on mtnes. Price reduced for
quick
sa
le
.
$15
,500.
614-742·
the eliglbllitv lis t at 992·
2 bdr. and 3 bdr . mobile
2502
2156 or 992·2157 .
homes. Call 446·0175 .

__

___

~

----

Automobile
Salesman
Needed Ambitiou s person
willing to m eet t he public
selimg new and used
automobiles. Some ex ·
per ience rt-Quired. Repun
kept confidential. Sond
resume to Box 729·C, c·e
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy,
Oh t o~5769 .

Phone sotlcttor. Part ttmt.
.mainly evenings. Call after
10 a m 992-7440.
Ex perienced man to do
body work and painting .
APPlY tn person at Hy~ll
Used Cars, Rutland , Ohio.

RELIABLE PERSON to
clean downtown Pomeroy
offices once a week in
evening . Write Box 7~B.
Da ll y Sentinel, Pomeroy ,
Ohio 45769
12

Sityetions Wanted

-~------

Have vacancy for elderly ,
Home cooked meals, hot
water heat . 992 6022 .
Car pool . to
Marshall
Univ e rsity,
s prtng
semester M ·F . 8·4. Call
675·5688 after 5 pm .
NEE D ride from Marshall
University to Pt Plea!H!Int,
Spnog semester, Wed
nesda Y ewn ing, 9:00p.m .,
304-675 ·4506
ll

---

Insurance
---

-~-

Or rent·J bedroom fur ·
nished home 'on Bud Chat·
t in Road on big level lot
576·2711.
House-Meadowbrook Ad·
dit1on . J bedrooms, family
room wilh fireplace , cen·
tral air , basement. 304·675·
1542.
House on Broadrun Road,
Wtll take half down and test
bv month . Coli Lu c v
Kavlor882·2407 .

-------

Sandhill
Road, Pt.
Pleasant, 3 bedrooms. 1
and half baths, double
garage. Owner will finan ·
ce. 304-675 5817.
Newly
remod e led
2
bedroom house, cltv water .
garbage . pickup, 2 acres
ground Loc8ted 4 miles
from Pt . Pleasant on Rt. 62
S. .Call Andy Wtlson 675·
4281 after 5 and on weeden·
ds.

J2

·-Mobile HOmes--- -tor
- -Sale
-

TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . Gallipolis. Year
end sale. price reduced ,
used mobile homes CALL
446·7572

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
S URANCE
been can ·
your
ce lled?
Lo s t
operator's License? PliOM
992·2143

- ·- - ---·
-· -15
Instruction
. Schools
------

G UITAR
lessons ,
in ·
d iv idual classes, personal
attention, mode st price-s,
call 304-675·373&lt; .

CLEAN USEO MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUAL IT Y
M Q.B I L E
HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS . RT
35. PHONE ~~6· 3868 .
1965 General mobile home
12X65, completeiV ready for
setup, Includes cement
blocks &amp; skirttng, $4,600.
For more information call
446 0511 .

12x60 2 bedroom Buddv
mobile home . Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, ru ra l
water, close to town, finan ·
cing available . Phorle 4.46·
1294.
10x50 mobile home, Sl.200
Call 388 · 935~ .

For · Sale 19M . Rem brant
,ouse trailer 12x60, 2
bedroom, woodburner &amp;
air cond itioner. Call 256·
1669 after 5. " ·;

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

2 WheeitraiTN$for5aie.
Call 446-0871 .

-------

33 -- -;:~rmstOrs1 ~

18

FArm. locoted on Rt. 218,
40 acres, 1200 lb. tobacco
base . Call after 6, 246·9222.•

Butcher' s Snoppe Custom
butchering I. processing
Call ~46 · 2851. Gal\lpolis,
Oh .

34

Jockie's Cake ·Oecoratina
&amp; Candles. First house past
Scott 1 s Bait &amp; Bar, just
South of eureka . Taking
orders for Cil'kes &amp; candles
lfancv or plain) . Call 256·
1367 or 256-6.571.

....
Wanted to l""ch Chlidren'a
. "'

Gvmnasllca and Lodlft
excercloe c~ ..... Call ...·
8074, He\"'.

Will do bai&gt;V sitting In m,
h§me pn Chillicothe Rd.
Call .u.\·9US. .

J bdr . tr ailer in vmton . Call

446·4258.
2 bdr . mob1le home below
Eureka . call256· 1922.
2 bdr. mobile hOme - com ·
pletelv turn . Call 446·9669 .
2 Bedr~o~- TrailerT i n
Cheshire
Adults only .
Ploone 367· 7329.

.
--- -·--.------

Two bedroom unfurnished

mobile home located 2
mtles out 588 . Adults only
$175 mo. 8. deposit. Call
446 2300
------~-

2 bedroom trailer, par·
ticallv turnoshed . Respon·
sible person, riverfront.
Ca \J 446·7044 9 to 5, after 6
256 6002"

FOr reOt2bfdrG001 tra11er .

Trailer and lot 1972 all
electrtc 2 bedroom ooi a 200
x 100 lot. Gallipolis Fer ry .
_ ____

_

Bu!lnes• Buildings._

Large building for-lease or
rent in Middleport. Former
Citv,
lc~~
and Fuel
building 7~2 - 3195 .

35

Loh &amp; Acreage

2, 1 acre house tots, on 554,
low downpayment, land
contract, rur11 water,
Columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 256·6~13, 12
p.m . to9p.m .

41

HOUStl lot Rtnl

ALL electric hl&gt;me with full
size ba~menf, ~-675- 3217.

PASTURE for rent for 50·
60 ""ad cattle, 304-895·3117 .

Furn1shed
room
$85,
utJIIties pd ., single male,
range, refrlg . share bath.
446 4416 after 7PM .
M obile home in city central
.
d •· t d it
1
dep ~ .. 0338
• • a u s on y,
aor •an'tV.

·~a

~::::::::::::;=::::::::~J
5-.t- -Hou.eiloiiiG...S-

J rooms w i th prtvate ba1h,
845 Second Ave Phone «6·

2215.
Furnished Apt. 1st floor .
utilities furnished . Ref .
required. No pets. Adults
preferred . Call at 631 4th
Ave.
2nd. floor furnished ef·
fiency apt. 729 2nd . Ave ..
Gallipolis. Call ~46· 0957 .
Adults only, no pets.
Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.

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

2·3

room furn ., apts .
paid, dep. &amp; ref.
required. S22H250 per mo.
Call446·0952 .
Utlitie~

7 room house Jackson Pike
behind Pinecrest Nursing
home $200 plus deposit a.
ref. and 2 bedroom apt $175
mo. down town plus
deposit . 446·3919 or 446·
0021.
3 bedroom ipt. In Mid·
dleport t150. month 992·
5692 .
Small 3 room furnished
opt. Pomerov . Short walk
from center of town .
Responsible person only .
992·2588.
2 bedroom furnistled up·
stairs apartment. $150 per
month plus utilities. SSO
deposit . No pets. 9A9·2875 or
949·2271.

-----,----- Aportments. 675·5S.C8
··--- -

APARTMENlS, mobile
homes,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Ga\tipo\ls.
614·446·8221 or 614 - 245- 941~ .
Efficiencv rooms bY the
week on Main Street.
Mason. WV 773·5651.

a.

MT Vernon Ave ., 1
2
bedroom
apartments .
Newly decoraed, walt to
wall carpet, washer &amp;
dryer hook·up, excellent
condition . Reference and
deposit required Call 304
675 ·1962.

2 bedroom tra1ter . Brown's

2 bedroom , 60 x 12, Flat·
woods . $150. per month pius
util 1t1es and deposit. Par·
tially furnished . Adults
only . 992 5834

2 bedroom 12x60 mobile
home. Must have reteren
ces and deposit . S175 mon·
thlv Home 992 ·6201&gt; after 5,
bustness992 6173.
Constru cti on
workers
tratler for three . PhOne 304·
773·5651, Mason.

12x65TRAILER near leon,
WV, partially furnished .
Deposit
&amp;
ref e rence
r equired, 304· 458· 1978 after
5
Two and three bedroom
mobile homes. furnished or
unfurnished 6 room housej
full basement Call 675· 1371
or 675 3812 .
TWO bedroom furnished
trailer . $150 . 00 plus
utilit ies , New Haven, 30~·
882·2461&gt;.

APARTMENTS for rent,
304-675 ·3929 .

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

45 =- -. ~=urnTshedfi;o~~

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping ept .
Park Central Hotel.
Trailer lot for rent. Call
446-4265 .

"!~·- --sioal'~f~r"R~.;t ~ ~
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route ·33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

S4

F·or ·Gi'se- -

House for lease in Pt.
Plei'lsant . 3 bdr house with
basement, tam llv room.woodburner, $350 per mo.,
S200 deposit. Call «6 - 123~ .

sl" - iioiiijhOidG.Od.one year old frosttree
refr1ge_rator and stove, in
good condition. $600. for
both or $350. tor ref . &amp; $250.
Jor stove Col\ ~ 46 . 0562 .
.
'

1_,;.;:.;:;;;:.;:::.;:;-:::.;-:.,:::;:-_L_;,...:.:;"-:.;-~-.;-:.:-;:-;:-:.;-;.-;:_~

1-

They'll Do It Every Time

ANOTf.IER

. "OLD
FRIENO"

TO CAI..l-

.

Misc. Mercholllllco

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
tomon, 3 tob\es, 1500. Sola,
chair and \oveseaf; '"$275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $215 to $795. Tobles.
$38 and up to $109. Hide·• ·
beds,S340., queen lire, $310,
Recliners. $175. to $29S. ,
Lamps from S11. to $65 . 5
pc . dlfetfes from $79., to
$385. 7 pc., S119. ond up. Rear w indow louver for 79
WOOd table with 4 chairs, to 11 4 dr. Omni or Horizon.
$219 up to S495 . Desk S110. Brand new. $75. 742 · 315~ or
Hutc hes, $300. and ,&gt;Jl 3'· ' .I..H2c:r Mo7
maple or p·i ne
.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675 .• Bassett C""rrv. Kodak M22 I nstamatlc
$795 . llunk bed complete movie c:-mer1, movie
with mattresses, $250. ond light, Sears Do All super 1
up to $350. Copteln's beds, projector, $100 . Sound
5275 . complete. l!obv beds. Design AM· FM l ·track
$99. Mattresses or box stereo receiver and 2
springs, fUll or twin, S58., speakers. $75. 12 x 10 red
firm . $68. and $78. Queen sculptured shag carpet,
sets,.$195. 5 dr. chests. $49. $90. Itt. truck topper, $75.
Chevelle
V· 8
4 dr. ch@st•. $42 . led 1969
frames, $2().and S25 .• 10 gun Automatic, new paint, fair
· Gun cabinets, S3.50., dine!· · Condition, $~50 . 1975 Mer·
te chairs $2(). and $25. Gos curv Monarch 6·cvl. 3
or electriC ranges, $295. Or· !!ipeed, new pi!iint, and new
thopedlc super firm, $95, tires, $1395.
babv motres~s. S25 a. $35, -I..------- - r - - - bed frames $2()$25, a. S30.
Starfire engagement ring
Electric fireplace, gun with Keepsake mon ond
cabinet,
ing room suite, womans wedding bands.
wood t•ble a. ~chairs.
Appraised volue $710. Will
Used,
Ranges . sell for ssoo. H2·2909.
refrigerators. and TV's,
3 miles out llulavllle Rd .
FIREWOOD-split oak, $&lt;40
Open •am to 7pm , Mon. a riel&lt;, $70. 1 cord, coli JO~ ·
th"r u Fri., tom to5pm, Sat.
675·3137 anvtime.
...-0322

u. .

WANTED to buy· Farmall
C or Super A with or
without cultivators. John
L.'' CIIdWel\, Box ~ Rt.
Ona, wv 25545 ·
Hov conditioner, Allis
Chalmers mowing mechine
•nd plows. 11'15·3441 or 895·
3A71 .
Livestotk

63

Registered Quarter Horse
lillv.
Registered
Ap·
po\ooso, ~ yrs. ol". and gOOd
blood line. Call 256-6413, 12
p. m . to9p.m
White face Hereford Steer.
Grain fed read-; for but·
chenng. Approx . 800·150
lbs 2~7 · 2141.

- ______,___

___

~

- ·--

Pigs For Sale, 11 weeks old.
S25 eoch . Phone 985·4104.

So

..
.. .... ...
....... .......
~

a.

15'!to discount on WOOd
coal stoves while supply
lost Gallipolis Block Co ..
123 1/ 2 Pine St., •46-2713.
Flrewood·see!aoned har·
dwood, S35 pickup load
delivered . Ca\1446 · ~176 .

OPEN Saturdav·Sundays
1 :00·6 :30 p m onlv Sam
Somervilles Warehouse,
lfleld jacl&lt;ets) . 7 Miles east
Ravenswood's bridge 304·
675 · 333~

i~fi . ;;, ~~~~; ,...;;~;;-= 5
spP ., standard. fa ir cond.,
M,OOO. Call 256·6605 .

Warm morning wood stove .
used, 3 vears old $225. Also
Chevy Luv truck pilrts .
Col\ 304·576·2728

1969 Plymouth wagon. 318
auto 985-4346.

3· I ft. snowca~s with
lights. 1 large bedroom
suite, double drHser 1ncl
cnest, 2 antique clocks, 1
meat sli ~ er and ml!!ic.
grocery store equipment
Call 256· 6~13, 12 p.m . to '
pm

Moving out of state. Must
sell immediately . He1vy
c:tuty half ton rear end $75 .
Parting off 1970 Chevrolet
Impala. Chrome and gll!lss
dinette set. Drum set. Ele'c: ·
trlc synthesizer . Antique
dresser and lots of misc .
items. 675-6750.

For Sale Kitchen table ond
2 chairs, $25 See at 769
Brownell Ave .• Middleport.

Laroe lighted advertl!!iing
sign with sliding letters on
stand ~00 . 576·2602 .

New wood stove. half price,
never used. $350. Can con
vert to furnance . Call 256·
1216. Gallipolis.

1972 Ford ~x~ 360 with
header!!i, 5975. I H1rris cut'
ting torch and hOse &amp;
gauge. Call ~46 ·"38 .
wnlrlpool auto wasner S'IO.
Frigidaire dryer $90, both
in ex . cond. Call ~ · 1181 .
Fir~wood $30 00 pickup
load . four loads S100.,
delivered . Call 388-9123.
197 ~

Chevv p\ckiJp, $750.
1977 Harlev Davidson,
$3 ,150 1910 Coleman com·
per. $1150. Call .u.\·123~.

1977 Mecury Marque low
mi les. Michelin tires. All
options : Phone 61H46· ~406 .

Beauty shop equipment .
Call 675·4399 or 675·1526
SEW\ NG machine, late
model Sinqer Iig·ug, e• ·
cellent tor beginners, $70.
call 30~ · 675-433~
useD awnings tor sale.
call 30~ · 675 · 1393 .

·,- - .....- - - - - - ·-·

--

5~ __ f!ultcl_l'!f_!'!J'l.l!!~ _

.Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Gronde, o .
Call 2&lt;1.5·5121.

- ·-------- --

~ =- :::-:::iiits]O! Solo_ _ :::

HARr"S Used Cars, New
Haven Wl!!st Virginia Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .
GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS . now avoll•ble
through local sales, under
$300.00 Call 1-71~ · 569 · 02~1
for your directory on how
to purch~se . Open 2~ hours.
7~

VOLKSWAGEN tor sale
or trade, 30~ · 675-6 153.
1966 Chevy Blscavne. 2
door, 213 four speed, 40,000
actual miles. excellent con·
&lt;!jlion. S1500. 112·2936.
1975 FORD Granada, 6cvl ,
$650. 304·675·7577. Call otter
3 p.m . :·
1939 Plymouth . 197~ Oodge
Colt. 1973 Gremlin. Phone
675 · 3~70 .

TH\7 15 WHE\1:1! I
&lt;;;e;r OFF, OL' SHBP.
YOU'D 81!TTE!It 8E
HEADINS 8ACK
WHe~e YOU
&amp;EUlN5,rpO.

THAT'!&gt; Teii:ENCE, THe
CONVENT'S 006. I WONI1ER
HOW HE SOT L005E:f

" Poter ••d Tloo Wolf" 1118 t
ENTERTAINMEIIT
NIGHT
'
·
PPY DAYS AGAIN
nCTACDOUGH
;
IIACNEIL-L!HREA
PDAT
!I.E WI
• MUPPETSHOW
1 7:01
CAROL BURNETT AND
IDDS Gueat: Tim Conway.
7:30
• YOU ASKED FOR IT
; ANOTHERUFE
THI! YI!AR THAT WAS:
1881 Po trick O'Nnl noou
video scrapbook of the year' a

ONE?

Cll

IN THAT CASe,
srAY lt15HT H~~.
TEFtE.~~E. !VE 8!Etl
LOOK INa FOit At-1
EXCUSf TO VISIT
ER\f\1,

I

•t
,7-

itt) ' .

~

IIELL,IJSUAI.LY -BOT
aM GTH3EET WJNDG
AIWUND 'N' AAOUND,

1182 .

GO

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffett Brother ~ Custom
Carqets Free estimates .
Call 446 2107

WHEN

GHE'G IN
AHURRY ... ,

W€ WANT

- SHE ~YG GHE
TAK.ES A SHORT-

CUT,. BUT I DON'T

YA T'llli&lt;E
AIIIE55A6E

K.NOI'I WHEltE
ITI!; ...

T' TOIW,
TEACH! ...

Fr ench Cttv Paint1n g
Residential , commercial,
interior, e)(fenor, paper
ha nging , and texured
ceilings Ph 367· 7784or 367·
7160
Call .t46 2801 for termite,
roach , bird, rodent. spider .
and fleas control. Free
es timates,s Bill Th om as.

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
penenced mason, roofer,
carpenter,
etectrtcian,
genera I ' repairs and
remodel mg . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560.

GASOLINE Al.l.EY

Water well s. Commer cia l
and Domestic: . Test holes.
Pumps Sttles and service
304-895·38()2 .

M

CARPENTRY
8.
remOdeling , electrical and
plumbing. 304·576 2989 or
576·2587 .
LOCKSMITH
Se rvic e.
Residential. automot1ve .
Emergenc'( serv1ce. Call
882-2()79.

DYNASTY
KANAWHA COUNTY ON

WINNIE
WINNIE, EVER S INCE
YOU'VE' HAll LUNCH
WITH OMAR J A6AR

---·

YOU'VE~

Plumbing

!*EN

TALKING

- ~~ -- !!!~·~·--­

AIONSE/fiSE/

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth'anl:t Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446· 4471

10:28
10:30

~S/ WI TH IN5TA "

I REAI7 TI1E ,ow'E.(f
81RI7JE ... /1\EN LJKE '
JA8ARARI:F/,;::t"~17N~7 I
TO THIS COUNTRY!
LOOKING FOR

BILJTY ASROAI7,

:~:~ 1!)~/if~~w;~.

~MONEYJN

NEWS

THE 6001/ OU7

CIJ NASHVILLI! RFD

U.S.A./

INVESTMENT.

I]) MOVIE · (DRAMA)'"
''lnllda Mo•••" 1180
DOCTOR IN THE HOU~E
11:01
ALL tN THE FAMILY
11:28
CJNUPDATENEWS
t1:30
•
COLLEGE BASKET·
BALL Unt!/eralty of Kentucky we

I

- E !c=;;~~=~ ~~

Auburn
ANOTHER LIFE
B!IINY HILL SHOW
THE TONIGHT SHOW
Guaat : David Steinberg. (60

Gallipolis· Diversified con
st. Co Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Spec ia l
farm rates . Call us for free
estimates 446·.4.440

~

~CBBLATI!MOVII!WKRP

" BARNEY

E tectriCal

In Clnoinnetl: ' The Preacher'
TheRov.LittloEdPtmbrook,on
ex · wreatler,la turning hie
Sunday broadcaats on WKRP
inlo a rip-off by aelllno relig ious
ertuacta . (Repeat) 'Aituale'
HH8 Stara : Hal Holbrook.
Lawrence Dane. Five doctore
meke their annual camping trek
to the fore at, but their Idyll turna
Into 1 tight toreurvl\lal when thay
tall prey to evil lurking In the
wllderneea.
C1J ABC CAPnONED NI!WS
i1DJ
MOVIE
· (ROIIANCE·DRAMAJ" \Ito

. __ &amp; ~t!r~!!~~~n

JUG HAlO·· DON'T l.fOU
WANT TO HEAR ABOUT
'' C.INDERELLV "?

SEW\ NG Machl.ne repairs."
servtce Authonied Singer
Sa~es &amp; Servtcel Sharpen
Sctssors. Fabr1c Shop
Pomeroy . 992 ·2274.
'
..... ' --- --------·
JACKS REFR IG-E RATIO·
N._ air condition service,
commercial, 1ndustr io:tl
Phone 882·2079.

'·

.

"llwX" ~()1).
ABC NEWI NIGHlLINE

MclloredbyTodKop..l.
11:36 lVM0¥11-(DitAIIA) 0'\Io "No
· 111JnltM-d"tM2
12:00 {))
BUN CITY GOLF

675·6663 .

=-=::::-:::-::-

15 - "• ~en!r~IJ:I~.'!'ihg
JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 · 7~71 or
367-0591 .

PEANUTS

NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for dri veways
Call for estimates 367·7101 .

I ~INK '{OUR FAl.LIN6
ASLEEP IN CLASS 15 A
gEAl. PROBl.EM, SIR ,

I

'

.

I Jumbles

FRAME LEAVE SLEIGH CIRCUS
There's no wai ti ng at th is kind bf
restaurani-SELF·SEfiVICE

Rabbit's mixed-up slam
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontac

NORTH
f·f.ll
+AQJ
9 A 10 6
• 65
+foKQS2
WEST
EAST
K764
+IO 9 8
Q
9J9H
UQJIOIT!
8
+Jt0763
SOUTH
+uz
9KI432
+A92
+91

One of Victor Mollo's
"Fourth Dimension" charac"
ters is the Rueful Rabbit. He
Is an exceedingly nice young
man who makes every con·
ceivable type of mistake, but
seems to come out with win~
ning results althougp he nev"
er really knows what Is
happenJng.
In today's hand we see
him up In the stratosphere
because he thought his nine
of diamonds was the nine of
hearts. In other words the
Rabbit thought he had six
hearts.
He won the first trick with
his ace of diamonds, led a
trump to dummy's ace and
cashed the three lop clubs in
order to discard his deuce of
diamonds. He still hadn't
found that his nine ol hearts
was really the nine of
diamonds.
He ruffed a club, took a
successful spade finesse,
ruffed dummy's last club,
took another spade finesse,
cubed dummy's ace of
spades and led dummy's last
diamond.
The Hideous Hos. sittins
East, was down to trumps.
He ruffed with the seven and
the Rabbit played his red

'

••

Vulnerable: North"South
Dealer: West
WMI
It

••Pau

North

Eaat

Db!.

.Pau
. Pau
Pau Pass

s•

Opening lead: • K

nine. When li turned out to
be a diamond he apologized
to everyone, but the Hog
wasn't happy.
He was on le'd and had to
lead hts real nine of hearts.
The Rabbit let it ride io
dummy's 10 and had made
his incredible·sJam .

"'

t~~,.,.
,t
loy THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 Show sorrow
I False show DOWN
5 Golfer's
I Marksman
problem
2 Flutter
10 Hindu
3 Texas shrine
festival
4 Wire measure
II Mexican
5 English
dish
13 Face shape
14 Paint
15 Egyptian
deity
16 Shriner's
cap
17 Actress
Bartok
18 Sand novel
20 Swedish
county
21 Anger
22 FootbaU's
Kyle or
Tobin

essayist
6 He piByed
Caruso
7 " - Dreamer"
8 Vanessa
Redgrave
film
9EMoble
12 Bird
16 Duffer's
shout

,.

19 Deep mud
22 Composer

28 Dancer Ben

,

3() Very (mus . )
Nino
31 Poker tenn
23 Drool
32 Cause joy
24 In name only 36 Stage
25 Give life to
article
26 Slmba's
38 Somewhat
tresses
39 Statute

'

23 Take can,tiv••l;r-f---j-26 Anthem
27 Single
26Tub
29 Friend (Fr. )

30 ~~ ... all created

equal"
h

33 Energy
34 Mineral
Mountain
37 Empower

35

39 Ananiaa
10 Class of bird
II Concerning
42 Pretend

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Ia

'

Here's how to · work it :

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply •lands for another. In thia 'ssmple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the ·two O's, ete. Sinsle letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formolion of the words are all
hints. Eaeh day the code letteu are ditrere nt.

rt,cloorod ~od::fpel.

'

CRYPTOQUOTEB

a!) lt~1 :'oAT A womon

mlatakanly ballevea her
huoloono:f lo going to dlopo .. of
her It IIA btCALII. hl ' l '
rom1ntlcally Involved with
Julie ; 1111c fall a helpleaely In
lov• with. atamoroua ttlr; lfld
• mon lolhhhlp'o blggoot bore
until celebrity chulng
PUII!IGOf'l mlotokololm f0&lt; o
world ·ranowned jewel thief .
(!!.epeot: 70 mint.)
12:30 Cll LOYil BOAT

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gollipolis .
~' 7833 or ~· 1833 .

MOWREYS Upholsterv Rt.
1 Box 12~. Pt. Pleasant, 304675·4154,

FCP

EFVPWIFC

MPVQ LPM
BX

QF E

Yt~terday:t

'

BX

XVBH

·c B H

J

• WJ FQBW· · QE

~·c p

QW rP IVQ f K

PE.

ZBWXR7. QRE

-..

..

C1')'1118quote : BE CAREFUL, AND YOU Will.

SAVE MANY MEN FROM THE SIN OF ROBBING .,
YOU.-EDGARHOWE

__
'

)

CttALLEIIOE
Cll ABC NEWINIOHTLINE

•c ·-~ u.P~i!'!r:L::~~ .

._,_

IINO OUT AMERICA
ALFRI!D HITCHCOCK

rJ~ESENTS

THEY'RE SINKIN6

.

___

~(jJ).
~~=:~PDATENEWS
mint. )

EXPERIENCED car ·
penter available for home
or business r emodel ing or
new structures . Free
estimates . References
Will beat any signed writ:
ten estimate. 304-675·2440.

h

r I IX I

BRIDGE

l

F &amp; K Tree Trimm ing,
stump removal. 675·1331.

:

YA~N6 .

Now arrange the circled leners to
fonn lhe surprise answer. as sug·
geS\ed by lho abov; cartoon.

Answer

· (jJ)I

RON'S Televiston Service
Specializing in Zenitn and
Motorbla, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454 .

•• :· •

OF

NIGHT

THE GREATEST
Mtllll!CAN HERO
.CJ)()J)MR.M!RUN Zaouaea
Merlin'• magic potion In an
audition ror tha part ot Romeo,
to gat c lose to the pretty girl
playing Juliet, but 1oa1a hi I beet
friend, Lao, when he wlna the
f!!rt.
lV ~OHN CURRY SKATES
P!l'ER AND THE WOLF Tho
chorl!ooraphy Olympic gold
medllilt John Curry ia featured
In th~• lea extravagann which
atao atara JoJo Starbuck. (tlO
mlna.)
(fi) RAIIBLIII'
8:05 ·CIJ MOVIE ·(DRAMA) "o.t
'_1,ove M• Tender" 11158
8:30 C1J MOVII! "(DRAMA) " ' o.t
"B~ktl'' 11184
DlV WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Momma Carl eon hire a a radio
conaultant with en ulterior
motive who 11aotumaout to be
~old buddy of Andy'o.
1W WKRP IN CINCINNATI
Arth urea ria on' atond memoriea
of hi I wifa Carmen uklng him
aut on their tlret date are Jarred
when they attend a 25 year
iege reunk)n
8:58
CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00
700 CLUB
THE FALL GUY
(I)
CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVfl!
Cll (fi) GIULINI CONCERTS
'L.oa Angelea Phllhermonlc
Bioentennlel' In thla concluding
aoncert, Maeatro Glullnt
exptor11 the depth of feeling ol
hi a countryman, Italian
compoaer Gluaeppe Verdi ,
whoae epirlt tranacenda atrict
91!.'!!1! !grmulu. (80 m\no.)
8:30 W.liJTHEFACTSOFLIFE
When Blair' alate grandfather' a
truatdon•tee a large aumto the
Eaa11and School, Natalie
reaearchea the family' a hlatory
lorthe achool' 1 nawapeper end
learnt that the old man waa a
armlned reelat.
8:10
IJS_IVI!NING NEWS
10:00
• aJ QUINCY Quin c y
letrntlhat a teenager who died
of a drug overdose haa bean
accuatomad to taking weaker
dOll I of other , aimllar
aubatancea and he 1111 out to
prevent other fataUtlea •by
calling the publlc'a attention to ,
the danger• of took -alike drug a.

PAINTIN G · tnten or and
e)( ter1or_, plumbing .
roofing , some remodelm'Q
20 vrs. ex p Call 388-9652

Wandling ' s Electric Ser·
vice. Old work and new
work. 24 hour service 30
years e:.perlence. Phone

&amp;\le&gt;H"T !!Je KNI'T
WI"TH ~E K INDS

(Answers tomorrow)

Ves terdavs

~~~"

~P~!.e.!!1~1!t~

~

I

Prln~answerhare:

man wl'lo watka up walla. (90
!!ll.no.)
liJ NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

STUCCO PLASTERING
te xtured ceilings com ·
merclal and residential ,
free estimates Call 256·

13 __

. ,.,

rJ
IDEWLO~
I I r

tattooed grandmother, and a

ser"lees
-- Home
·---

.

tJ

1

ENTERTAINIII!NT
.
7:31
SANFORD AND SON
7:58
C.toWPDATE NI!WS
8:00
• aJ REAL PEOPLE A
'Rill People' Reunion Show;
Including cllpa of a one· arm•d
gymnaat, a baaeblll team of
senior cltlr:ena, a person who
teachaa ballet from .. wheal·
chair, a human echo, a lady
whoa a wi1oje environment Ia
red, white. and blue, an 80 year
old lllf·defanaelnetructor . a

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work
Insurance work
welcome . Sunroofs 1 n·
stalled from $200·$230 Auto
Trim Center . 446 1968:

.

.... "'

~roDEN PLACES

tires. Phone 675

n

I.YASMID

MID COMPANY
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
,
iiDJ RICHARD SIMMON&amp;

Windshield broken? Call
Southern Auto 91ass. In·
surance claims welcome.
Free
mobile
~ervice
available. Call 446-1011.

14

77 DODGE Monaco station
POODLE GROOMING .
wagon. ~D. power B &amp; s .
· - ----·- ------ Call Judv Tavlor ot 367- 'air conditioned~ automatic,
1 Singer Stylist zlg· zag 7220.
~$ some body work .
sewing machine with
,LISt&gt; tor $2,200. will take
cabinet. ex . co,nd ; Coll ~ · DRAGONWYND
CAT · $1,200. Will toke WOod
826&lt;1 after 5PM for more In· 'TERY - KENNEL.. AKC work\~ tpol•. table saw
to.
Chow
pupplts, CFA ond etc. on ,!rode or might
Him•l•y•n. Perslen and trUe lor p lck ·up. Phone
New llvl~g room suite . Coli Slam•~ kittens. Col\ 446· ]().....75-3962.
Jl« olter ~ p.m.
~·1379.
. ·-------- -·- 1917 REN.O,UL l: LeCar, 40
Usoif · iir!PI.it.- lnsert . HILLCREST KENNEL
,mpg, good . condif\on, new
• Free neat Machine' . Dual Boarding all breeds, clean tires, S1«lll . 576·2127 .
blower system, exc. cond .• indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. DOber·
Sl75. Call 446-415.
mans. Col\ ~46·7795.
197~ Ford F -250 new stake
Ladles coats, 1 cashMere
bed
and dUll WheelS. Call
BRIARPATCH
KENNELS
rovol blu~ size U. 1 block
take fur a. fur trim size 12. Boarding ond grooming. 25~·6413,12p . m . to9p.m .
AKC
Gordon sellers,
Call 446-2&lt;130.
English Cocker Spaniels. 19?1 Ford van cu1tomlzed
ond 1971 Chevy truck 112
Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E. Coli 31..,790.
ton. Clll.u6·1012.
Moln St ., l"omerey, Ololo.
ACK Entliah Sprinter
99H~ .
Spenleis. Liver I. wllllw, oil 1f76ltA ton Ford ~x• truck
shota and _...,..., liS. S20 with ' - ' • .,,000 miles,
Western 1 11. hydroullc Will hold. Clll ...·1234.
$2,500: Coli 446-9215 alter 12
snow blode. Electric con·
noon. "
trOIS. Lights. Like new. 7~2 ·
HOOF HOLLOW Horses I.
31S.C.
ponln .
Everything For ~ale n71 Ram
lmllllnablt In horse equlp- cn~rger, excellent cor\"
Mixed wood . $35. load. Not rMnt. Also belts, boots. 691· dillon, low mileage. Can
stacked . 675 · 1~78.
3290. Rulli Reeves.
, 2&lt;1.5·9213.

~

Cll

81

I I I

~~VIE · (JUVENILE)•••

M"lm
FAMILY Fl!uo
1!\ LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY

1976 Chevetie . 675· 64~5 .
Bearcat ' scannerf 10 chan
ne\, S100. 1973 Vega $500.
675 -2041 .

•
(I) THI! NI!W BIBLE BAFFLE

REMEMSE~

THIS

BREPO

.Cile PM MAGAZINE

batteries. 446· 77

-····- .. ...

3
registered
polled
Herl!ford bulls. Gilead 115
breeding . SJOO and up. 742SEASONE D oak foreWOod, 2753.
GOOD
USED
AP · call 30~ - 675 · 2757 after •
· - ""·PLIANCES
washers. p.m .
GRAIN iedA~;;-s beef.
dryers,
refrigerators,
n- - "--- _ --~ _ · ~ ·" · _ cents lb. live weight. 30~·
ranges .
Skeggs
Ap ·
pllances, Upper River Rd .• Used tires. Ho,nsha•N'!&lt;"I 675·2902
beside Stone Crest Motel. T1res on Lucas Lane. 675· ----------·-~
7360 . .
Two :V.. Nubian Does, bred .
4&lt;1&lt;1· 7398
• Gel\tle I~ vear AppaloosoFor -Sate g&amp; ri nge. sio. &lt;f9 CHANNEL Side band Ge\!ling . 304-937 2003 after 6
Call 388·11655 . ·
cobra )&gt;i!se a. DIO&lt;. still in pm.
··- - - - · -~-- box, S200 .00, 30~ · 675 · 1564 .
' '
RAY ' S
USED
FUR ·
NITURE . We hove I
KP 750 Pioneer In dash
room suites, .VI,stii!·r;·; ~1 euto reverse dol by svstem .
' .
dryers ,
Milsub\shi Power Am · 7..!. __ ~o lor Sole
refrigerator! , brei
ph \iller. 30 wotts per chan ·
sets, beds, dres~rs and nel. 6 band graphic 76 Malibu ~ dr .• PS, PB.
chests. Col\ 367·0637 .
equaltzer . TSx9 2 wov high AC, 350 2 barrell, new tires
performance speaki!rs, all a. p•lnt, 61 ,000 miles. $1900. ·
Call 446 2888 anytime.
------------new$350. 304-675·3133 .
54 Mile. MerchOIIdict
Lump Cool $32 per ton
Zinn coal &lt;;o.• Inc . Call 446·
1401 between 9 and 5.

7:00

1962 FORD Falcon Ranchero pick up with shell,
runs good. needs pa int,
$700. or offer 304-576 m1 .
-~&amp;4W . D.

e :"'.;..~-· -

EVI!NIIIG

ON?

D

Ill

WIDNESOAY
JAN. S, 1882

Spinet -Console
Plano
l!argoln. Wanted: Respon· 76
Auto Parts
sible part.y to take over low
&amp; Accessories
monthly payments on --~-'"===-'--spinet plano. Can be seen CHARL IE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts. auto repatr,
Man•ger
locally . : Wro"te
PO Box
cred33,
·ot wrecker service , buy
Frtdens, PA 15541.
automobiles, radiators and

SEARS chord organ,. full
rhythm section, like new,
originally $1100. 00· now
John Deere Bulldozer • $550 00, 304-182·2350 after
mod@\ 3.50 with winch 4 :00.
gasoline operated. $6,000.
Coli 7~2·304-4 .
- -"··- - - - -- - - -- · · - '"" '' "''.,.
2 circulating Warm Mor·
nmg hl!aters. Automalic
controls" and fan I 65,000
btu, 1 40.000 btu. 992-6370.
61
Form Equipment

992-7~79 .

49

TRACY-

YOU ·HAVE=

1975 Chevy Cheyenne
pickup. Phone 67 5 2375 af·
ter4 :30.

71

small furniShed house.
adults onlv . Call 446·0038.

3 APARTMENTS In Hen·
derson, SlsO per mont h,
304-675 ·1972

Syracuse.

MUSICOI
Instruments

1980 Chevv lf• ton 4 wheel
drive. Auto trans w ith over ·
drive. Insulated topper,
tra iler hltlch, many ext ras.
Call 992·3129 after 5:30p.m .

Piano In storJge. ResPOn·
slble party may 1ilke on tow 79 DODGE power wagon, 4monthlv pavments. Call wheel ·drive, 29,000 miles, 8
c;redlt mahager collect. cyl. call after 3 p m. 304·
61~-...2-5180.
675·3898.,

Apartmemt
for Rent

Modern I bedroom fur ·
nished apartment, adults
only , no pets. Phone 675·
3768

Trailer Park ,
992·3324.

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
Jackson Ave. . Pl .
Pleasant. 675-2063. Mon .•
Thurs.,/ Fri. 11 to6. Tues.,
Wf!d .. I Sat. 11 to~ . Check
our Fish Special .
2~13

57

1 -bedroom-·m- ob i ie - horlie
part1ally turn ., extra nice,
in Gallipolis S250 per mo.
plus gas. S150 dep .. adults
prefer red . Call ~46 - 3791 at·
fer 5

12 x 60 Cameron, ' 3
bedroom , partially fur ·
nished. extras. 675· U24.

6~5:~~· "-~·

~ 522 .

---~

wanted to teach Guitar ond
Base. Cali .u6· 107~ .

.

2 bdr . trailer in city, adults
only, no pets, S150 security
deposit 8. $150 month . Pay
all utilities. Calf 446-4051.

Priced to sell . Three used
mob ile homes, 2 bedrooms,
can be seen at 0 and W
Estates. formerly K and K,
Rt . 62 north , Pt. Pleasant,
wv

P HYSI CS &amp; chemtstry
classes evallable evenings
starting Januery 12 3
Evenings per week vleld 1
college credit hours toward·
instrumentation, medical
ca reers, &amp;. electrontcs .
Ohio
Valfey
College ,
P ar ker~burg .
Tran ·
sportation Is avail able free .
Call Rtchlrd Austin, 304·
576·2026.-

----·--~,

Centenary : 2 bdr., private
lot, adults, ref . &amp; dep
E1Jreka : Riverfront lot, 1
bdr ., adults, ref . &amp; deposit .
Ca ll t 614-643·2644

Call446

~-

SANDYANOBEAVER\n·
surance Co. has offered
servi ces f or fire insurance
coverage in Gall1a County
tor almost a century
Farm , home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in·
divldual · needs . Contact
LeWIS Hugh es, agent .
Phone 44&lt;1 3318

r----------------.,.---.,
White American Eskimo
Spitz dog, male, 3 vrs. old.
Pedigree: C4rln Terrier
Pedigree , female, 9 mos.
old. 992·3551.

Sentinei- Page--13

Television
•
•
vtewmg·

by Larry Wright

'N' CARLYLE ,.

For rent. 6 acre farm , 3
bedroom . ·2 full bath mobile
home. $225. monthly . 742·
2261&gt;.

44

•

I

-~-

--.----- - -

- Service Milnager Needed
tor automobile dealership .
Expertence
required .
Replies kept confidential
Send resume to Box 729·H
c·o
Daily ~ Sentinel, ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .

KIT

.

Mone to Loan

23

4r- -Mobilo iiDrnes~tor Rent
2 bedroom . well insula ted
TWO bedroom mob tie
house near Rio Grande
College, $200 per month home in New· Haven .
plus utilities and $100 • Adults onlv, no pets, 30~retu~ab le
depo I . 675 · 1~52 .
References requ ired .
245-9325 or 245·5J6.4.
2 bedroom trailer cin
Jericho Road . S150 month .
LOCATED in Oak Hill . 5 $50 deposit . Cal\675-3858.
rm . house. vedry nice . Call
-......,
-1--.- 1&gt;82-6010.
4_!_ 1'!!:!!1• fo~ -

41 _ ~ ~ous es to rR-,;;,- ~

1982

The Dail

...

�•

•
Page--14- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePOrt, Ohio

I

~o _ tha_nk you

given

. What wO!J)d you have done?
Following Christmas Mr. and Mrs, Don Hubbard, SyraCUS;e, thelr
daughter, Mrs. Don1UI Clay, and Mrs. Hubbard's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth WUt went to Florida for a vacation .
Arriving a t Key Wes~. the Hubbardsrenteda carat the airport and
went to thelr motel.
Later, Mr. Hubbard and Mr. Wilt went f!shlng the the three
women went .tO .a shopping center. When they left the shopping
center, Mrs. Wilt opened the trunk Of the rented car to place packages Inside it. She found a brlel case Inside the trunk.
The three women returned !D. the motel and emptied the trunk.
Mrs. Hubbard opened the brief case and found that It contalnect
$15,001 ln cash, mostly ln .$100 bills. She tOok the brief case with the
money !D the police and they traced down the owner.
Mrs. Hubpard reports the brief case belonged to a gove~nt
official who had rented the ear earlier and had apparently left It
Inside.the trunk. The o!{ic!al was going out of the country and hence,
the large amount of ca sh on hand, according to the lnformatlon given
Mrs: Hubbard .
The briefcase a nd m oney were 'returned to the ot!lclal.
- Meantime, Mrs. Hubbard, to thts potnt of time, has yet receive a
" thank you " for her honesty.

to

ditioilal Kaiser layoffs coming

Village mayors terminate ·court cases·
Eleven defendants forfeited
bOnds posted on speeding charges
ln the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
The group lnl!l\1\led . Bryan C.
Gheen, Route 4, PomeroY. $36;
Raymond Donohue , 'Route 4;
Pomeroy, $34; Eddte M. Turley,
Racine, $33; Richard Russell, Parkersburg, ,W. Va., $32; John D. Hill, .
New Haven,- va .. $31; Coral B,
Davis, Syracuse, $33; Dennis · J .
. Ault, Pomeroy, $31; Jim E . Davis,
Rutland, $32; Sandra K. Stanley,
Dexter, $36; . Rebecca J . Smith,
Route 2, J&gt;Qmeroy, $31; Dennis
Booth, Pomerov. $32.

_Fined $.lXl and costs In the court
on a petty larceny c)large was Allen
Young~ Pomeroy and Don Snodgrass, Racine, was placed on six
m!lnths probation on a .disturbing
the peace cha~ge , Forfeiting bO'nds
tolatlng $127 posted on open flask,
disorderly manner and speeding
charges was J e rry A. Stone,

w.

Po~roy ,

ter, West Columbia, W. Va ., S23and
costs, speeding; Richard Caruthers, Jr.. Pomeroy, $l!iO and costs
and three days In jail, drtvlng while
·tntoxlcaterd; . David Allen Doerfer,
Pomeroy, $25 and costs, no driver's
license; WUUam Wlll.tamS, Middleport, and Velma Sl~rs. Middleport, each $25 and c!osts on
disorderly manner charges;
James - Fisher, Middleport, $150
and costs, hampering with pollee

business; Sidney R. Wise, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner; William L. McKinney,
Middleport, $100 and costs and res- · ·
titutlonona&amp;$tructlon~p~

charge; Bill McKinney; M~le- _
port; $50 and costs, fighting In

public.
Forfeiting a $.'il bond posted on a
charge of taU1ng to have Ucense
plates _was John R. Tyree ,
Middleport.

__.
--: 417 'Second Ave .

· 20 die in mudslides

Gallipolis, Oh .

PARKERsBURG, W.Va . (AP)
- United Steelworkers ot!tctals say ·
that Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Co11&gt;. otflclals were not Interested
In contract cllanges ihe 'llnlon offered to keep the company's Ravenswood Works o~n .

.

~Predict

higher
gasoline prices:

ELBERFELD$

SALE
PRICES

Mon.-Fri. 8:30 to 7:00 ·

Sat. 1:00 to 5:00

DENIM JEANS
e SLIM SIZES 8 to 16 . ,
"

e REGULAR SIZES 8 to 16
e HUSKY SIZES 8 to 20
e STUDENT SIZES 26 to 30
100% cotton _~o Fault In·
digo Blu e denim that will
not shrink . Bring your
boy in to try on a pair
. ..

.

BOYS WRANGLER
CORDUROY JEANS
INCJ-UDED

•

SALE PRICES

"The changes would have been a
m a jor overhaul of the seniority system. revamping of the overtime
and training agreements a nd would

•

Voi.30.No.186
Copyrighted 1982

have at!ected very dlrecUy the
manning of the operation," Rusen
satd a t a press conference In
Parkersburg.
Rusen said the union proposals
resulted from· "extensive m eetIngs" Involving himself,, asslstanl
director James Bowen of Dlstrlcl
23, E lswick. Chenowe th anct the local's negotiating committee.
A state ment Issued by Kaiser
said company officials are willing
to eontlnue talks with the steelworkers In a n atte mpt to reach conlract a greements lha t could keep
the Ravenswood plant open.

" We ha ve a host of cost and competitive problems In a U of our departments. These problems must
be solved If our long-term viability
IS to be assured.'' the statement
said.
"Several unprofitable product
lines have been at!ecte&lt;j and o_thers
a re threa tened because of these
problems. We musl make continu ous progress In soly\1,, ·our com petlt lve and qu a lity orobl e ms
throughout the plant ll we are to
avoid losing m ore produc t lines and
becoming and Increasing ly smaller
opera tion, " It said.

•

at y

enttne
1 Sect ions, 12 Pfl g('S
1S Cenh
A Mu ltimediil In~ . Newspaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio_, Thursday, January 7, 1982

Crumbled roads slow rescue efforts

Mon.·fri: 7:00 p.m. to 10:00. p.m.
Special Starting Jan. 4th
2-For-1

lal

LD··

Phone 4464108
-

.

CommiSsion adopts record budget
Meigs County comm!ssoners adopted a record high budget for
1982 ln the amount of $7,663,653.24. Last year's approplatlon totale!l
$5,751,324 .!1l.
Approplations from the general fund tolaled $1,404,545.16. some
$60,(XXJ less that requested for 1982 by the various departments.
Commissioner Richard Jones said the general fund approprla~on
doesn't aUow any pay Increases for court house employes. He said
appropriations are based on 100 percent collection of property taxes.
Appropriations for the sheriff's department !Dtaled $99,123.44,' but
Includes only money for salaries tor deputies through March 1982. A
union contract with the sheriff's employes explres ·at the end of
March.
·
Jones pointed out that the contingency fund conta•ns only
$102,247.97 and that payment for sheriff employes for the remainder
ofl!E!, even at the current rate of pay, wtll amount to approximately
. $88,(XXJ,
•

U.S. Steel controls oil company
-NEW YORK- U.S. Steel COil&gt;-gained control of Marathon Oil Co . .
at one minute after midnight Thursday In the second-largest corporate takeover m· hlsiory, only hours after Chief Jusllce Warren E.
Burger turned down a last-minute bid to block the deal.
, . J3urger,011 W\!(lnes4ay refl}sed Mobil- Co11&gt;.' s request to delay the
$6.3 billion acquisition, clearing the way lor U.S. Steel to begin
buying Marathon sl\ares after midnight Wednesday.
The acquisition by U.S. Steel was second only to DuPont Co.'s$7.8
billion takeover of Conoco Inc., another oil company, last summer.
Mobil had also sought Conoco.

,

'

Ohioans will get surplus cheese
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Gov. James A. Rhodes says Ohio wtU receive 1.4 mUUon pol(nds of su!lllus cheese from the U.S. Department
of Agriculture for distribution to needy people.
Ohio's allocatlon:!s about 5 percent of the 3D miU!on pounds or
cheese the USDA Is distributing nationwide, the governor's office
saki Wedneday.
.
Rhodes said the &lt;;heese wUl be distributed In 5-pound pac kages. A
committee composed of represenlatives from the departments of
Agriculture, Education, Welfare, Economic &amp; Community Development and the Commission on Aging has been appointed to oversee
the dlstrtbutlon process, he added.
·

Isn't that·the kind of insurance you
want for your fut:\-.lre fmanclal

no i-eason why you shouldn't
securtt)l?
start a sensible savings plan for
GET Til lOST FIIOI YOIIIIRA
yourself. That's the day Individual
Retirement Acrounts (IRA'S)
WITH CEITUl TRIST1 HIGH
offidally become available to every
IITEIIEST OPTIOIS.
-employed Amelican. working with
Now Cen_tral'lhlst has twned
or without a pension plan. And
that's the day you can begin to put thls valuable asset Into an even
better Investment. by offering four
your savings away In a program
Th iS chan shows haw a sample yearly
d eposit ofjus l $2.000 can grow ouer 30
that works for you now:....and later hlgh-lnte:re&lt;it IRA options. Sensible
tJI?O.rs. But you may choose lo deposit aC~
ways to keep you In oontrol of your
on In W'e.
liltleor as much as you wish . uplo$2,000.
funds while earning the ma&gt;t
st,ce t.llere arc no mlntmums or deposlt
frequenq) llmtl.s on nost oplton.s. "If you 're
competitive
Interest
rates
In
town
YE&amp;I AfTER YEO. Ill'S WILL
ma nied loan employed spouse. that
money
market-level
rates
that
· amOunt doubles.
IEIIII-IOST YllUOlE m3ke your Investment work hard l18-IOOH
..af RATE IIPTIJI
. IIIYESTIEIT.
now, so you can retire willl a
Think about the resources
substantial nest egg later on.
Current rate of 13.75 ,..guaran,
teed through January 4, 1982.
you're going to depend on In the
future. Pension plans. social security, FOR I Til IREII WITH SECURITY, subject to change on monthly
whatever they may be, one thing's
for certain-theuncertainty of a
CHDOSE IRft. FOR --IITEREST
Rim RATE IPTIOI
su1:.6tantlal return. ·
OPTIIIS.
IRA'S- Currentrateof15.00%guaranNow look at a Cefltral l.hlst IRA. ·
CEITRll TIIJST.
teed ~ugh January 4, 1982.
Every year. you're guarantetrl a
As a working person It's lmInterest rate determined for full
return at hlgh Interest rates, and
portant to find the safest. surest
18 months on date of initial
the Interest you earn Is tax-li-re
way to your future security. Central deposit. ·
until the fimds are withdrawn. And •l.hlst IRA·s are your mret sensible 131..-nl OPTIOI
, for your oonvenience, Centrall.hlst solution. Today they're an eronomi· Each deposit recorded is paid at ~
provides for automatic payroll cal tax shelter. Tomorrow, Central the 30-month Money Market
deduction or automatic deductions l.hlst's hlgh-~terest options Will ·
te
t t tim 0 f d
1
help
make
them
the
backbon~
of
ra
curren
a
e
epos
t·
. from your Central
Th.Jst
chA&lt;'Irlnif
.
~. "5
orsavlngs aocoun.t. In addition,' '
a more secure retlmnent for you.
4. a-.111 . . .
ffyou'd like to open an IRA
$10,000 mlnimwn deposit
every year, your money Is
or rerelve more lnfonnatlon on · required. Accotmt Is paid at the
insured up to $100.000. so your
lnvtstment Is sate. .
·
your four IRA options, v1sit any of then current 6-month Money
Centrallhlst'sconvenlent locations. Market rate. .
Clearly, tlxre's no savtngs

Exposure ruled in women's death
FREMONT, Oll!o -1\.48-year-old woman whose body was found
Wednesday apparently froze to death while taking a shortcut home
last Saturday nlgnt. ot!tctals say.
1be body of Janet Emrich, 48, of rural Sandusky County was found
by a carelaker Wednesday near a creek which flows through Fremont Country Clul1 grounds.
1be Sandusky County coroJl!!r, Dr. Samuei Lowery, said Mrs.
Emrich apparently died of exposure. She was reported missing last
weekend.
Lowery s peculated she was taking a short cut to her house after
leaving a store and coUapsed after crossing the creek.

Police fail to find Dozier's body
VERONA, Italy-- -Anonymous callers to Rome newspapers said
Wednesday that Red Brigades terrorists had killed kidnapped U.S.
Brig. Gen . James L. Dozier. and his body would be found near at a
farmhouse ln centtal Italy.
Police fanned out ln the area near Pescara where Ihe callers said
the body was left but found nc sign of the general several hours after
the telephone call&amp;
Copies of a seven-page Red Brigades slatement - descrtblng an
"Interrogation" of the general but saying nothing about hiS being
killed -were found ln Rome and Padua after telephone calls to two
other newspapers.'!_! was the third wrttten statement Issued by the
Red Brigades slncf Dozier's abduction . •

~~:iom

-'*

The company was not asking for
changes tn the wage and benefit
sections of the current contract.
which expires In March 1983.
Local President Carson Chenoweth said h1s members vot~
against the . proposal because
Kaiser had prom!sed to !&lt;eep the
production line open tor just
another year If the ot!er was accept~!. He saki the union did not

want to sacrifice contract rights for
a " temporary" reprieve.
On Monday, the steelworkers offered their own version of contract
CODC!!$51ons designed to keep the
Ravenswood plani open.
But Paul Rusen, director of USW
Dlstrtct 23, said Wednesday that
the company rejected the union's
ot!er, saying they dltl not go far .
enough ..

MEN'S HOURS

-ELBERFELD$
.IN POMEROY

5668 to agree to less ~trtctlve craft
agreements and additional free-dom to reorganize departments at
the plant.

e

.

1

BOYS

Kaiser officials said the concessions, which covered. among other
things, seniority, job upgrading and
job tralnlng agreements, were designed to keep the plant open. The
C!)mpany also wanted usw Local

.

101, EVERY -II&amp; IIIERICAI
HAS I CHAliCE FOR I Mil

SECURE FUTURE.

as

\

are

As of January 1, 1982; there's

1.,..__

" All tar I know they're going to
shut down the potllne effective Sundainlght," Dallas Elswick, the unIon's International
.
. staff
represenlatlve at Kaiser's Ravenswood plant, saki Wednesday. "And
If so, that w!ll mean 400 additional
layot!s .... I think between now and

Open Under
New Management
.
DONNA FISHER • MANAGER
WOMEN'S HOURS

(Continued from page 1)
But late Tuesday, after rescue
'lvood forest accessible only by a · workers dug out the g1rts' bedroom .
narrow road, was altered com- and found mattresses and clothing,
pletely by the disastrous slide and Hinton speculated that their bodies
was almost unrecognizable, offiwere deep ln the mud.
cials saki.
"! was ·In my bedroom and , I
In Pacifica the bod.les ot Michelle heard this noise like an earthquake.
Velez, 14, and 2-year-old Melissa
I heard ...screamlng," saki Karen
were found and the search con- Lacey, who lives just -beloW the
tinued for 7-year-old Billy Velez.
Velez home. ·
,
Day-long efforts with a 30-foot
"! raq out and Mr. Velez ran up
crane cleared most of the debris
and said, 'Help, Karen, I. know
from
the
site,
and
workers
assisted
those kids are down there." '
DOE predicted U.S.- petroleum
WASffiNGTON (AP ) - The
by
dogs
froin
the
Cautomla
Reseue
Then he muttered, '"There Is no
consumption will decline by abOut 1
price of gasoline wtll rise 6 cents a
God, .. she··recalled.
·
Dog
Association
searched
\~
mud
percent th!s year, continuing a
gallon and homeownerS- who heat
Into
the
night.
Hinton
said
Velez
made
It
back
to
With natural gas will see thelr an- trencl that slarted after the 1979
Otflclals
at
first
thought
the
clJildh1s
so_
n
's
bedroom
and
"had
hlm
by
nual bllls rise by $110 during 1982, Iranian revolution.
- ren might have escaped the mud ln
the hand but the mud took hlrn
according to the Ia te~t government
a corner of the single-story house.
awav/ '
predictions.
However, It predicted that des-• The Energy Department also plte the drop, the nation's appetite
says foreign oil Imports, which for foreign oil w\n rise by 2 percent
have fallen Sha!lliY the last two ye- In 1982 to 6.21 mllUon barrels a day.
ars, w!ll resume thelr upward Th!s would come on the heels of 19
cUmb In 1982.
percent and 11 percent declines In
Natural gas custome rs, who oil lrnports ln 19!1J and 1!*11,
have enjqyed a substantial price - respectively.
break over their neighbors with oil
Ed Rothschild, director of
furnaces, wUl see th.at advantage Energy Action, a coliSuiner group,
eroded somewhat In 1982, the DOE said the Sha!lllncreases preillcted
for natural gas prices show that acsaki.
The gove rnment predicted natu- celeration of the current decontrol
ral gas prices for residential custo- program would be unfair slnceconmers wlll Increase 22 percent ln sumers already
seeing thelr
1982. Natural gas, which cost $4.58 blijs Increase by more than 20 perper.thousand cubic feet In 1981, w111 cent a year.
cost $5.57 In 1982, the DOE
predicted.
For the average residential cus- Veterans Memorial
tomer buying 1]J.,(XXl cubic feet a nnually, that wlll mean a total
Admitted -- Kenneth Keesee ,
Increase of approximately $110.
Pomeroy; the Rev. W. H. Perrin,
Price controls on natural gas are
Pomeroy; Juanlla Chapman, Cutbeing Ufted gradually under a 1978
ton, W. Va.; Charles Mash, Pomelaw, which the Reagan adrillnlstraroy; Ruth Lalrson, Racine; James
tion has atlacked for working too
Meadows, Portland.
·
slowiy. Energy Secretary James
Discharged--Thelma Garrett,
Edwards has said the administraDora Wood, Janice Cundlt!.
tion wlll ask Congress next month
to speed up the decontrol process.
Emergency runQ
Homeowners with fuel oil furna·
~
ces also are likely to see their bills
Local emergency units answered·
rise ln 1982, but only sl!ghtly. The
three
calls Tuesday, the IV!elgs
DOE estlmates that fuel oil, whlch
Emergency
Medical Service reavera(!ed $1.21 per gallon In 1981
ports.
At
1:40
p.m., the Rutland
wlll seQ for $1.23 In 1982.
Unit
took
Kevin
Gallagher from
Gasoline prices wlll rtse by 6
Meigs
Mine
1
to
Holzer Medical
cents a gallon during the year, the
Center
and
at
6:54
p.m. took 'Mlke
DOE saki, from a $1.36 average tor
Mine
2 to Holzer
Cadle
from
Meigs
all grades In 1!*11 to $1.42 th1s year.
Center.
The
Syracuse
Unit
Medical
· However, the department estiat
12:
&lt;13
p.m
.
took
Leota
Cooper
mates th!s Increase actually wlll
~more constant and more
from her residence to Pleasant Valtrail the country's overall Inflation
profitable over an exllnded pertod
ley Hospital.
rate by 3 percent.
·of time. And In times like these.

March 31 there's going to be additional s huldowns ln \he plant because of the economy. I don 't think
we'll be a ble to avoid that. I think
tha r s a fact of ute."
·
Last week, union members at the
plant oveiWhelmlngly rejected contract concessions proposed by the
company.

Winning Ohio lottery number
.

.

I

.

'

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Wednesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 960.
The lottery rep!ltfed earnings of $573,136 from the wagering on Its
daUy game. TI!e earnings carne on sales of $992,911.50, whUe holders
of wtnn1ng tickets are entitled to share $419,175.50, lottery ot!lcla!s
said.
·

Weather forecast
Cloudy tonight. Lows 10.15. Mostly sunny Friday. Highs 25-ll.
Chance of precipitation 10 percent tonight and near zero percent ·
' Friday. Winds westerly around 10 mph tonight.
Neaded Ohio Foreeut
·
SManlay fbrolllll tfoDdq.
Very cold. A ~ of flurries In IIJe northe a_al over IIJe
w r' ""'·
wlioe flllr weather 1Jurou11t IIJe peilocL lflablln IIJe ·
teeM 111111 . . SlllurdQIIIIII 111D1aJ 111111 In IIJe Ills 111111 . . M..S.,.
1.-. 15-211 s.lurday,_1-18 Suaday 111111 5-15 Mood!ly.

oct"''

·MEMBER • FDIC

.
•(

SANTA CRUZ, CaUl. (AP) Rescuers struggled past toppled
trees and crumbled roads today to
reach up to 500 people stranded by
rain -triggered mudslides . The
storm killed at least 23 people and
ot!iclals feared 'up to 20more bodies
might be found ln the rolns of !helr
homes.
Dannage from the rains that
pelted northern CalUornla from
Sunday !D Tuesday exceeded t.m
mUUon.
More than lDl Callfornla National Guardsmen were on patrol or
Hood duty, mostly In Mal'ln County
north of San Francisco. where ~
homes were leveled by mudslides
and 150 damaged during the rains.
Army helicopters made three trips
Wednesday. rescuing stranded or
sick I""'Ple.
Gary Patton, chal)man of the
board ot supeQ1sors In Sanla Cruz
County, 70 miles -.&gt;uth ot San Francisco, estimated that 100 to 500 people were Isolated In the county as
.fallen trees piled up In lO(!jams and
bridges washed out .
"They have no water, no heat, no
food and they can't get out, so It's a
slgnUicant problem," Patton sah1
of those Isolated . "People are
trapped In bad situations."
The COIIII!)i's prlor!Ues were
"reaching Isolated people, recover-

I~=~:~PS:c~icGas&amp;El~t-

·
ric customers here were without
power for 46 hours until Wednesday
evening. Another 20,(XXJ remained
without power Into tbe night.
- A mudsllde ln Ben Lomond, just
north of Santa Cruz, wiped out a
wooded h1Ilslde and Its only road, .
and Patton said It may be "weeks"
before·the area Is dug out.
A massive mudsllde In the Love
Creek area of Ben Lomond pummeled houses Into "matchsUcks,"
said flreflghter Ross Harriman.
"The whole mountain moved and
carrie down on the 300 acres," saki
Roger Lee, an emergency medical
technician with the rescue
operation.
Sherlt!'s tnvestlga tor Joseph Henil.rd and Lee estimated that as
many as 20 people could have died
In the Ben Lomond mudsUde. But
volunteeer firefighter Earl Robertson, a spokesman for the rescue opera lion, said, "There are
approximately four or eight missIng persons and no conllrmed
deaths."

Two days arier the d!sastro~s
rains ended , chest-high mud still
fiUed some streets In Soquel, east of
Santa crur.
.
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.. who
earlier declared emergencies In six
counties, on Wednesday asked
President Reagan for federal disaster ald. and the White House said It
'Was studying the request.

\

MUDSI.IDE VICTIMS EVACUATED - Jill! Jnncs
and her sun, Casey, arc helped .frum a hell cuplllr at
San&amp;¥ Cruz, Calli., Wedne•day after being e\:H~Wllcd

!rum their home hi the l'we Creek area. Authurlllc•
believe a• hl~h •• 20 pcuplc may have died In the Love
Cr.-ck area .us 11 rc•ull .ol a vloh;t nur tbcm Cilllfornlli
slurm . l AP um·rphulol

Chillicothe man gets priso_n .term
Meigs County Common Plea s
Court Judge John C: Bacon Wednesday sentenced Joseph G . Stout.
20. Chllllrothe, 'to a term of not tess
than five years In the Columbus
Correctional FacUlty after Stoud
entered a guilty plea to grand theft
charges.
Stout wa s charged with fraudu lently obtaining aid to dependent
children monies from the Meigs
Courity Welfare Department. The
char~ was conlalned In a biU of
Information presented by the office
of Prosecuting Atlomey Fred W.
Crow
Stout Is also wanted by
Ross County authorttles on a
forgery charge, ot!lclals report.

In a bUl of lnformntlon tned by
Prosecull ng Attorney Crow .
Theft. as cha rged, Is a felony of
the fourt h degree carrying a possible pena lty of·stx months to five
yea rs In prison and a fine up to
$25m .
A pre-sentence In vestiga tion was
ordered for Young who was released on a personal recognlzant-e
bond .
Meanwhile . Carl D. Wilburn, 26,
P&lt;Jrts mouth, a ppeared before
Judge John C. Bacon Wednesday
morning on a n aggravated robbery
c harge returned secretly aga inst
him by the Meigs COunty Grand
Jury on Dec. 2. Wilburn was arrested Monday In Portsmou th.

Stout was remanded to the c ustody of the sherlt! to be transported
to Columbus.
Unda K. Young. 34. Route 2,
Pomeroy, also appearing before
Judge Bacon Wednesday entered a
voluntary plea of guilty to a charge
of grand theft Involving fraudu lently obtaining aid to dependent
children from the county welfare
department. The charge was made

Wilburn asked for a n a ltorney
and his case was continued until
Friday morning a t 9 a. m .
Wlburn Is c harged with aggra ·
vated robbery of the Nelson Drug
Store In Pomeroy In November a nd
a llegedly · was Involved wi th Ml ·
chael a nd Anita Wilson, Heynoldsburg, who we re a ppre he nded lly
area pollee officers after the couple

m.

robbed lhe Swisher -LohS£' Pharmacy In P omeroy also ln Nov.
Joseph Stout, 19, Rl. 1, Long Bot-'
tom was a rrested Sunday on a
bench wan-ani from Meigs County
Court c ha rging failure to comply .
wi th the judge 's orders according
to the Meigs Counly Sheriff's
Departme nt.
.
Stout a ppeared Wednesday
morning In Meigs Co~nty Court and
was sente nced 10 28 days In the
county jail .
Later, yesterday the prosecuting
atlomey's ot!lce filed a bill ot lnfotmaUon cha rging S!Dut with for:gery
Involving a check In excess ot $150.
Stout wu tved his rights and entered a guilty plea to the charge. He
was senlf'Ced tO serve a term of six
months to flveyears ln astatepenal
Institution .
Stout was also being held for the
Ross County Sherlt!'s Department
a t Chlillcothe whe re he has another
forgery c ha rge pending against
him .
Ross County officers af'(' to transport him sometime today t.o face
c harges In Ross Coun ty.

Larkins ch9Sen
as president
Meeting tor Its organizational
session Wednesday night, the Eastern Local School ~trtct named
Dorsel Larkins, president. and WUllam Buckley, vice president, for
the next calendar year.
Larkins Is a reelect to tbe board
and Buckley Is a new member.
They were given the oath ~ office
by Treasurer Eloise Boston. Buckley replaces Deryl Well on the EastBoard·.
Regular meetings were set tor
the third Thur.!llay ~ each month
at 7 p.m. r • -' temporary budget
was actop·ed until the permanent ·
appropriations resolutloa can _b e
completed. It was agreed to conilnue memberlhlp In the Ohio ·
School Boards Aleodatm and to
enter Into a malntenant-e agreement on the computer I)'Jiem.
Other board ·mi!mbers are Roger
Gaul. James CaldweD and Bernard

em

Shrlevers. Supt. RJchard Roberts
also attended the meeting:

VIIIT.\'I'ION-Ciillllel B. Moody; ZaneovWe,

Gnllll IIMia' til the Oldo Metoalc Lodge, wiD vWt
f'anWIIUJ Lodp JM, Freund Acce!Med ~ It
7:a p.m. Frlller- 8liow1l ereoalcenof lhebooltlodle.
'lbeJ ere fralit, Ito r, n-lare T. Reed, treai!Urer;
Jlolk+ee' Kelly, aecrelerf; O,U Vlllllhan, wonlhlpful

•

IJUUiter; &amp;bert Dwbln, llelllor warden; Michael
Walker, junior warden; -..ad, Ito r, Tom Reed,
llelllor deaClO!I; Joe Clark, junior deoieon: Frank Slot8011, lelllor oteward; BnJCe Reed, Junior lteward;
back. Dick Vaugllan, chaplain, and Kenneth WIS~~M,
lodge edutallon officer.
·

,-

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="107">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2673">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43715">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43714">
              <text>January 6, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
