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10-The Dally Sentinel

.

•

Propose cards for handgun buyers
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} the Ohio Bureau of Crtmlnal !dent!·
OhiQ8JIS will have to pass security
llcatlon and Invest1gat19n In
checks and obtain speclal ldentul·
London.
Cards would not be Issued to
cation cards to buy handguns If a
Cuyahoga County lawmaker has
those under 21 years ot age nor to
his way.
anyone convicted ot a crtme of viaRep. 1. Lee Fisher, 0-Shaker lence within the previous two yeHelghts, Is pushing tlie legislation.
ars. They also wouldn't he Issued to
whiCh also would·requlrethe llcens- anyone convicted of a felony viola·
lng and regulation of handgun
tlon ofOhlo's drug laws.
dealers.
Further, the measure requires a
His bill Is before the House Judi- 10-day walttog per19d from the time
clary and Crtmlnal Justice Com·
a person first attempts to buy a
mlttee, where heartngs are to get · handgun to the time the weapon is
under way Jan. '1:1.
· physically transferred to him.
Under the proposal, the owners
Fisher, a 30-year-old attoP~ey
and prospective purchasers of
serving his first term In the House,
handguns would go to their local
and other supporters of the bill In
pollee chief or shertff to get the
both political parties said they are
cards, which would display full- convinced that the continuing probface photographs.
lem of lliolent crtme l.s heightened
. Fisher said that In the process,
because It Is so easy fat anyone to
the applicant would have to fill out a
buy a handgun In Ohio.
form that has questions such ~
"Present Ohio- law Imposes few
restrtctlons on the purchase. sale
whether he or she has a criminal
record.
and possession of handguns," aLeBefore ISsuing the card. the poglslatlve Service CommiSsion anallice department would investigate
ysts of Fisher's bill states.
the Information on the !orm with

Patrol checks
three wrecks·
Three minor accidents were reported by the Gallla-Melgs Post ol
the state highway pa trot over the
weekend.
The patrol said a southbo~nd vehIcle drtven by Anthony J . Grtmes,
23, Eureka Star Route, droveoltthe
left side of Ohio 7, five-tenths a! a
rillle north o1 Gallla County Rd. 15,
at 10:15 a.m. Saturday and struck a
parked vehicle own!!d by Truman
J. Wolford, Eureka Star Route.
Moderate damage was listed to
both vehiCles and no citation was
Issued .
Nancy G. Wedemeyer, 26, Northup, was southbound on Gallla
County Rd. 40, nine-tenths of a mlle
SOijthofOhlo141, at 5:30p.m. Saturday when she apparenlly lost con·
trol on a curve and sideswiped ·a
northbound auto driven by Glenri
D. Graham, 52, . Rt. 1, NorthOp,
causl!lg moderate damage to both
autos.
.
Icy roads again took the blame In
a one-car accident on BulaviiJe.
Porter Road Sunday night, the patrol said.
According to the report, Tollison
·F. Burleson, 69, Rt. 1, Gallipolis,
was northbound at 7: 50 p.m . when
he slowed to make a rtght turn Into
a private drtveway and his vehicle
slid on Ice.
Burleson's vehicle went off the
left side of the road and struck an
embankment. and his vehiCle was
moderately damaged.

Local squads

k!P!rne~!Slads

were
kept on the move In spite of sub zero
temperatures over theweekend.
On Sunday the Pomeroy Unit at
3: 20 p.m. took Darlene Hicks from
Lincoln Heights to Veterans Memortal Hospital; at 10:23 p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit took Bob Roberts
from Union Ave. to Holzer Medical
Center. The Syracuse Unit at 11:57
a .m . took Llnnle Dowell from Sixth
and College Sts .. to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
On aturday, the Pomeroy Unit
at 2· p.m. took Bob Cummings
fro
the VIllage Manor Apartme ts to Veterans Memortal Haspita nil at~:47 .m. took Eleanor
Zelhe rom
home on S. Second
Ave., to
r Medical Center.
The Pomeroy Unit at 10:49 a.m.
took Janet Persons from the
Burger Chef to Veterans Memortal
Hospital and at 11: 06 a.m. took
MOdred Hawk from "Flatwoods
Road to Veterans Memorial. At
7:29 p.m. , the unit took Harry
MlliertromKerrSl, toHolzerMed·
leal Center. The Racine Unit at
4: 54 p.m. took Louise Delong from
County Road 35 to Holzer Medical
Center.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Adrnlsslon--Marjorte
Stewart, West Columbia, W. Va.
· Saturday Discharges--Aaron Williams, Betty Ssyre, Karen Eye,
Norman Schaefer, Clifford Demoskey, Tetry Little, Anna Martin.
Sunday
Admissions--Winnie
Marcinko, Reedsville; Darlene
Hicks, Pomeroy.
.Sunday
Discha rges-- Sarah
Roush.

Wednesday meeting
The Eastern Band Boosters will
meet Wednesday at 7: 30p.m.lnthe
band room.

day ott today In obsel'vance by the
state of Marttn Luther KlDg Day,
but the House retUrns Tuesday for
noor and· commJttee sesslons. Senate activity will be limited to committees thls week.
.
,
A bill drawing new congressional.
districts for OhJQ ~ expected to be
voted on by the House either Tuesday or Wednesday.
The legislation was worked out as
a compromise lletween Republlcans and Democrats In that
chamber. But It Ukely will face
rougll going In the Senate, where
even majority Republlcans are at
adds within their own ranks.
About a halt dozen GOP senators
would Uke to run for Congress and
have some dellnlt,e Ideas about
where boundary !toes should be
drawn In tbelr home areas.
The flling deadline for congressional candidates Is March 25, built
takes 90 days for a non-emergency
bill to become law after being approved by the governor.

'

Glenna (). Mayles
Glenna Powney Mayles, 67,
Hemlock Grove, died Sunday
morning at her residence.
Mrs . Mayles was bam In Athens
County the daughter of the late Wllbur and Bertha Thompson Downey. Her husband, Oeward (Dude}
Mayles was kllll(d In World Warn.
She was also preceded In death by
three siSters, Mary Bobo, Crystal
Clark and Edith Bowles; two brothers, Perry and John Downey.
She Is survtv~ by three sisters,
Marte Dalt,ey, Rt. 2, Albany;
Mlldred Staneart, Rt. 1, Albany.
and -Erma Carsey. Athens; four
brothers, Owen Downey, Chllllcothe; William Downey, Louisville,
Ky. ; Dan an&lt;) Paw Downey,
Athens; a close frtend, James H.
Smith, Hemlock Grove.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 11 a .m . at the
Hughes Funeral Home, Athens,
with the Rev. Cecil Call officiating.
Burtal will be In Memory Gardens.
Frlen~s- may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2 to4and 7to9.

Margaret J. Jones
Funeral services for Margaret
·Jane Jones, M, formerly of Middleport, were held at 2 p.m. today at
the Rawlings- Coats-Blower Funeral Home In Middleport with Mr.
Robert Melton and Mr. Ron Moyer
oltlclatlng.
·
Omltled from an earlier listing ol
survivors of Mrs. Jones were a sister and brother-In-law, Blanche
and Edgar Waite, Middleport.
Burtal was In Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire.

By ABMC!e'"'d Pre88
A parting burst of freezing rain left cars and trucks

..

skidding off Southern highways today as the worst
cold wave o1 the century receded, while a West Coast
storm that threatened more mudslides covered the
Sierra Nevada with a layl!r of "snow .
Highways were covered with Ice tlils morning from
VIrginia to Alabama and In eastern Oklahoma. Many
schools remained shut, althoug)l after a week o! subzero cold, temperatUres were easing across the eastem United States.
The 11-day cold wave, which has left 287 dead na' tionwlde, was moving oft the East Coast, but the
National Weather Service Said Monday the Midwest
and Northeast can expect more of the same.

t~

, ,., • fll/l!lll!f''t)

SW1n;;,

Sll7.1XXJ has been paid . Approxl'
mately $41 ,lXX! is being withheld.
At the suggestion Of councilman
Harold Brown, Schivinsky will assist
proved appropriation~ totaling
with tile projection of costs on the
$1,431,547.50 at Its regular meeting
new city building (Conner senior
Monday night.
1
high bulding).
A breakdown is a follows: General fund, $61,100; securtty of perBrown said he was very Interson
and
property
(pollee
ested In the cost of ullllties ,and depreciation of"the building. ·
department) s~.J.ID; parks and
John Andel'l!&gt;n reported he had
playgrounds, $1,(00; S~;~Wer construction, $655,(00; utility (lighting)
lnfo1Tl11!d the Pomeroy Chamber of
$36,360; street, transportation facil- Commerce what it would cost to
Ities, $63,!m; cemetery. $17,(00;
continue free Saturday parking, $75
water distribution and administraper Saturday.
The chamber was in full agreetion, $232,200; sewer maintenance,
ment and suggested that mer- ·
$91,700; general bond retirement,
$8,837.50; revenue shartng, $15,400;
chants be contacted to see If they
fire department, $19,(00; senior
wanted to continue with the tree
Saturday parking and If they were
high building, $100,(00.
James A. Schivtnsky, engineer
willing to make contrtbutions.
with Mo~an Englneertng and AsAnderSon tolq council he had consociates was hired as construction
tacted 11 mert:hants and all (the
merchants) felt that free parking
manager for phase one and two of
on Saturday should continue and
the sewer project.
Schivfusky Is to work with Burthey (the merchants) would be wilgess and Nlple for the benefit of the
ling to support I!Je project.
9ouncll agreed to extend the lree
viJ.lage.
Schlvlnsky reported the ortgtnal • parking for an additional three
contract for phase one ol the sewer
months with donations to be paid to
project was $1!!0,(00 of which.
the chamber. The chamber In turn

Deep freeze .r elief around comer

.

·:we've

Jonuary Clearance Sale

CLEARANCE
SALE PRICES

ON WOMEN'S WINTER
HATS, SCARVES, GLOVES
AND MITTENS.

WINTER'S STILL HERE ...
SO HURRY IN AND
STAY WARM.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY -.

The PTA m!!Cttog to be held at
Pomeroy Elementary
School
Thursday has been cancelled due to
weather conditions.

I
t

Mastermind jree on bond
MIAMl - Bernard Sansartcq, a gas station owner who masterminded an abortive plot to Invade his home,land of Haiti, Is free on
bond after being charged with violating U.S. neutrality laws.
Sansartcq was released Monday night froll\ a detention camp In
Mlal111 on $400,1XXJ bond. Two of his lieutenants were sllllln custody,
as were 22 others ordered held as material witnesses by U.S. Magistrate Herbert Shapiro.
The rag-tag force was returned to Miami Sunday by a Coast
Guard cutter after Its chartered boat broke down about 50 miles
north of Halt!.

Meets Tuesday
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at the ·
high school. All Interested person
are urged to attend.

Introduce disputed evidence .
ATLANTA- After two weeks of_testimony In Wayne B. Wllllams'
murder trtal, prosecutors have begun introducing the diSputed evidence that they say is a cornerston~ of their case - microscopic
fibers found on the bodies of the two victims .
State crtme lab microanalyst Richard Ernest took the witness
stand late Monday to Identify four packages of fibers and hairs
removed from Williams' car with a special vacuum tool durtng a
June 3 search.
Wllilams, a 23-year-old free-lance photographer and aspiring talent scout, Is accused of murdering Nathaniel Cater, Zl. and Jimmy.
Ray Payne, 21, and dumping their bodies Into the Chattahpacbee
River.

substitute teachers list and Dec, 17,
22, and Jan. 11, 12 and 13 were approved as calamity days in the
district. · The board approved ad·
vance draws from the county ·
auditor as needC!I by District
Treasurer Dennie Hill. Insurance on
a furnace boiler was purchased from
t!le Brogan-Warner Agency.
Supt. Bobby Ord and Treasurer
Hill will set the date and time of the
next meeting.

Study protection measures

. .

.

PARJ.S -u.s. Ambassador Evan Griffith Galbraith and hJs aides
are studying special measures to protect U.S. officials In France
following the assassination ol an assistant mllitary attache on Galbraith's stalt, Lt. Col. Charles Robert Ray.
Securtty was Increased tor senior members of the Parts embassy
statt two months ago after Charge d' Affalres Christian Chapman
escaped an assassination attempt. But no special protection was
ordered for lower-ranking oltlclals, Galbraith said, because It was
believed only the upper echelon were likely targets.

M tEW TAlWJEFBVIED NliVIlUAL RETIBENT ACCOUNTS-I'!As.

Knty doesn f have much money,
these days Bur 1·1 c. h d
•
' "" '
a tax·
deferred Individual Retirement
Acroum (IRA ) at The Farmers
&amp;nk81 she cuUkl have
lo f
.

'

a t o money m the days ro rome.
By depositing jusr $19.23
toward an IRA every W« k. she
could end up wlrh S255,8(Xl in 30

&gt;'"'"·'

That's worth reei ting: A
deposit of 519.23 a week rou ld
tota.l S255,8(Xl. 1
Of ""'""'· becawe the maliimum allowable yearly investment
has been increased to S2,000, ir's
poosible to earn even mort.
Maki"B deposits by th&lt; ~. by
the month, m; whalt'ver is mtiSr

DI.NNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

MVI

lin ill'

'served with Whipped
Potatoes, Chicken Gravy,
Cole Slaw, Hot Roll, Buher
·and' Coffee.

But whatever she invesrs rould
.

1

·

5000

Ph. 992-5432

be earning high-yield inreresr

to hdp make her golden years a
Ide
or more ir-l n.
. . .
And, because our mdtvidual
Retirement Accuu~:.·. are tflv deferred, Kitry ruuld deduct eoch

. 1

of her y&lt;arly invesrments from her
taxable inrume. Su ihe'd pay oo
fedenl rms on her IRA unril she
-stans wirhdmwing funds &lt;minimum age: 59V2l.
' Then when she Jetires, she'll
: pmbably be in , low"'" rax br:tdrer
paying k&gt;wer rrures.
If you'd like to set up an uffurdable IRA, a 1me rolk ro the profcs-

1 The F
B nk
armers a .
They'll how
h
s
you uw a regular
savings plan can help almost any·
one rt'tlre with &lt;1 quJrttr of a mlllion
dollars
~~- K'
Inc mg nry.
•This eKample assumes 12% interest,
com~•nded annually, based on the average
quart;;iy balante. H ~ intended to be an
eum· ·
pie of how regular deposits irrto an IRA can ·
·

s10na s at

1!J1JW

.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The·wlnnlng nlimber drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 838.
The lottery reported earnings of $175,587.50 from the wagering on
Its dally game. The earnings came on sales of $973.072, whlle holders
ot winning tickets are entitled to share $197,411\1.50, lottery offlclals
's aid.

.

into a substantial sum. It is not a 1\i&amp;rantee
of interssl rates or end financial resulls.

Weather forecast
Ught fteezlng rain or free21ng drizzle likely thls morning other·
w1se mostly cloudy with rtstng temperatures through the day.
Temperatures reaching 35 to 40 by late afternoon. Cloudy tonight
and WednesdaY with a chance of rain developing by Friday after·
noon. Low tonight 30 to 35. High Wednesday 45 to 50. The chance ot
precipitation IS 60 percent this morning, 20 percent this afternoon
arid tonlght.and 50 percent Wednesday.
t
ExteiHied Forecut
'1'hundaJ lbrCIIIIh 8aiurday
Cllaace of n1a or -non~~ aud 1'1111111011111 Tbunday aad Fricla,r.
&amp;c.ttered flurrlel mainlY north IIMurclq. Mild 11lunday 81111 Ftt·
dl,y, lhell colder by SaalrciiiJ. BJp. wpper . . nodlt to upper 4111

~

runvenitm.

WI'YI GOT THI

~

Crow's Family Restaurant ·
228 w. Main

t

aa

.,. ,,.,...Ciol\ ....,_...._..,,.,,.,

·Farmers
Bank

n

The Community Owned Bank

Pomeroy, OH.

11011111 'lbul'ldaY 11114 FttdaJ 111M c:oo'nCio llle upper IIIIo 111M 101
8Murda)'. Lon In llle mid
mid . . 'l'hundaJ .... Flidaf, lben
colder wlllllowa oliO ,to Ill ear1J !lalurday.

•to

·'

r.

enttne

at

I So&lt;tlon, 12 Pag" 15 Con"
A Multimedia Inc. Nawspoper

t '

.'

•

1...~--------------------L
I'

pays the vlllaee.
Bill Young suggested that revenue from amusemant machines
(approximately $1,200 a year) be
placed In the park fund. The Issue
passed 4·2 with Larry Wehrung and
Bruce Reed voting no.
It was suggested that the manager of Cable TV meet with council
at its next regular meellng to
I answer llltrlerous complaints concerning poor reception.

OKAYS SECOND READING

Thli Ohio Department of Trans,
portation Is planning additional
support on the Ohio side of the
Pomeroy-Mason Brtdge. Council
approved the second and third
reading of the ordinance granttog
permission for the work to be done.
Jane Walton, clerk, reported. she
had contacted the Ohio Department of Transportation regarding
whether or not the ortdge would he
closed during repair.
Mrs.Walton was told all work
would be done under the bridge,
ti'll&lt;:""'fore, there's no need to close
the bridge to traffic. However, closIng of the bridge would be up to the
(Continued on page 12)

INCUMBENTS-Incumbents beginning their new
tenntl ol o!flce on Pomeroy Council are 1-r BillYoung,

Fraud cases

r---:----------,-,.....-----------------------

All THE KENTUCKY
FRIED
.
.
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.

Beverages which
djtlano I price.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 19, 1982

By KATIE CROW
Senllne1 Stall Wrtter
Pomeroy village council ap-

Ivery Tuesday Night At Crow's

sorry, "o Subslilu'es except

,

then:'.
It only drlzzled Sunday night, but more nt!n pelted
Northern Callfornla on Monday, mostly In San Francisco and eastward', and not In the heavily damaged
areas south of the city.
Snow began falling Monday In the Sierra Nevada,
and the National Weather Service forecast heavy
snow for today and Wednesday. The storm that
caused the mudslldes around San Francisco dumped
several feet of snow In the mountatns.
The numbing cold weather that has held much of
the nation In Its grtp for more than a week prompted
Gov. Bob Graham to declare a n emergency In the
citrus Industry In central and south F lortda.

Pomeroy council approves .appropriations

r-------------....,.-----------1

.

massive pileup and a Knoxville thoroughfare was
strewn with cars from a dozen-vehicle accident. "Anything lh!tt's moving IS going Into a ditch," he said.
About 50 people m oved out of their houses In PacifIca. Calif., Sunday night and eight tamllles vacated
their homes In Lagunitas because of predictions of
nilil.-Three children In Pacifica died when a section of
a hlllslde collapsec\durtng heavy rains Jan. 3-5. They
were among at least 31 people who died In mudslides
and heavy rain to northern California .
Earlier In the weekend, a bout 50 residents ot Ben
Lomond were evacuated notfar from an area where
mudSlides In the remote Love Creek Inundated eight
houses . Authorities believe at least 13 people died

•

Board approves participation

-

•

Copyright.d 1982

Alice M. Grant

RACINE - Approval for students
to take part in testing proM rams was
Hiven when the Southern Local High
School District Board of Education
met Thursday night at the high
school.
The board approved 20 students
taking the Ohio Scholastic
Achievetnent test at $5 each and 29
agriculture and bW&lt;iness and office
education students participating in
another test at $1 per student.
John B. Bailey was named to the

natiO!,I.
"The 'Slbertan Express' l.s just temporarily derailed," said Harold Gibson, the wea!}ler service's
.
chief meterologlst In Manhattan.
Fog and freezing ram that left vlslbllity at near zero
In eastern Oklahoma closed roads and highways In
the Tulsa area tlils morning and caused numerous
accidents.
"In upper East Teruiessee, nothing Is moving,"
Mike Caudill of the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency said after five fuel tankers overturned
on Icy roads. eight tractor-trailer riJ;ls crashed In one

Voi.30,No. 194 .

late Silas and Lillie Reffitt. She was .
also preceded In death by her husNEW BAKERY. - Vauihau's Cardinal llllper- been,allno8t completelY remodeled aud redecorated._
band, ()elbert Hawart Grant, a son,
market In MldcDeport has opened a bal!ery, located The bakery's hours are lhe same as lhe lltore'e. EmJack, and two brothers, Estll -and
acnJM the atreet from lhe main alore In tile bulldiDg Ployee Pat Kllchen dlsplaya some of the bakery's
Berle Reffitt.
. which once housed Youn1'1 Market. The buDding has wares.
Surviving are two daughters and
sons-In-law, Vlrgjnla and Jim
Leech. Clarksburg, W. Va., and
Maxine and Sam Weeks, Joppa,
Md ,; four sons. · Wllllam Howard
trying to catch what heat "we can
(Continued from page 1) ·
"We have nowhere else to go,"
..
Grant, Edgewood, Md.; Char)es,
from
the oven. And the oven ain't
Said Mattie Thompson, who lives In
Two record-law temperatures
Baltimore, Md.; Billy, Danville,
been
doing
so well."
the complex with her six children,
were set In Mansfield: the weather
and Everett Minersville; two sisbeen staylng downstairs
service reported. The temperature
ters. Mrs. Forrest (Eva) Wills and
dipped to 18 below at midnight and
Mrs. Ada Powers, Salt Lake, Ky.;
tJtree brothers. Sheryl and Earl then slipped to 21 below at the air: .
port shortly after 6 a.m. Sunday.
Reltltt, both ot Salt Lake,.Ky., and
Frigid
winds ~nt the chill factor to
Del)&gt;ert Reltltt, Middletown.
60 below.
.
.
Also surviving are 10 grandchlldThe temperature In 'roledo and
,ren and three great· grandchildren.
Findlay fell to 17 below zero, t).otng
Mrs. Grant married her late husall-time record lows. Martetta also
band, Delbert Howard Grant; In
tied Its all-time record -law ot. 13
March, 1919. She was an active
below.
member at the Meigs County SeThe bone-chilling cold played
nior Citizens Organization.
havoc with uttllties.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Scatl'ered" power ·outages afTuesday at the Rawlings- Coatsfected thousands of electricity usBlower Funeral Home with the
ers In portions at Lake, SummJt,
Rev. Alan Blackwood offlclattog.
Portage and Cuyahoga- counties.
Burial will be In Riverview CemeSome Portage . County residents
tery. Frtends may call at the funwere forced to keep warm in a
•
eral home at anytime.
. sch09l bl!ildllll! In Kent after a
69,000-volt line falled at 5: 15 a.m.
Sunday. And about 12,(00 Ment&lt;ir
Meets Tuesday
residents lost electric power durtng
the noon hour Sunday.
Rutland PTO will meet Tuesday,
A breakdown In the heating sysJan. 19, at 7:30p.m. Refreshments
tem of an federally subsidized houswill be served. Everyone Is welIng complex In Cleveland left many
come to attend.
residents of ll)e Longwood Apartments depending on their ldtchen ·
Meeting cancelled ·
stoves for heat.

Mrs. Allee M.' Grant , 79, Minersville, died Saturday at the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Mrs . Grant was born March 13,
19021n Kentucky, a daughter of the

The service's 30-day forecast calls for below·

normal temperatures for the eastern two-thlrds\)fthe

e

·Area deaths

Granted divoree
In Meigs County Common- Pleas
Court Ssra Marie Seyler was granted a divorce from Richard D.
Seyler, II.

·M idwest to see · more bad weather

"nle House aild Senate took the

i

•

maki~g

Fraud, one of the least violent but
resldents _servtced by Duckey&lt;&gt; Hural Electric Coopera Uve received
most expensive ot crtmes, Is !lndvisits from men claiming they were
lng its way Into the area again.
working for the utility , making ln.·
With winter's cold hand making
Itself felt, area residents may be-" spectlons and demanding bill payments. An alert resident reported
come victims' of travelling scams In
thls to the firm , and a release exwhich people Identifying themselves as utility employees will en- plaining these men weren'i work·
ter your house, make bogus lng for Buckeye Rural was issued
Inspections and demand exorbitant last week.
"We're trying to Impress upon
sums for repairs.
people these are not our em- ·
Bu~ as one area taw enforcement
official noted, fraud isn 't seasonal. -ployees," said Glenn Smith, the
"You're not Immune from It at any · utility's Gallipolis oltlce manager.
time," he said. "There's always "Our people don't work at night,
somebody with a hell or a sob arid these men were showing up at
six o'clock In the night making restory."
Recently, some Jackson County pairs and collecting."

Spending cuts come
under examination ·
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Spending cuts o1 about 19 percent
are to be examined by Gov. James
Rhodes and' legislative leaders In
an attempt to brtng Ohio's budget
Into balance, Senate president
Paul E. Glllmor says.
But Glllmor, R·Port dtnton, said
the size ot the reduction that might
be Imposed' durtng the current fiscal year, which ; nds ~une 30, Is not
firm.
" That Is a very harsh cut. I think
It would be very painful," Gllimor
said. "'But the state of Ohio cannot
spend money that It does not have."
A budget analyst's mathematical
solution to the $983.4 million deficit
projected for Ohio's budget by June
30,1983, calledforaneltectivecutof
19.4 jlercent this year and 16.3 per·
cent In the fiscal year starting July

Franklin B. Walter, state superlntCndent of publlc Instruction, said
Monday that a 19.4 percent cut
would cost prtmary and secondary
education $163.2 mllllon.
He said the effect ol such action
would vary among Ohio's 615 'local
school dlstrtcts.
" A number ol dlstrtcts would
have to come ·Into the .loa n lund ,"
Walter said, borrowing from the
state In order to comply with laws
that forbid them I rom closing.
Walter said other steps. taken at
tbe local level, could Include reducIng expenditures for maintenance
and supplies.
" Probably there would be serious concern about personnel, particularly for next year It it looks Uke
the 16.3 percent cut comes Into be·
ing," he said.

1.

Larry Wehrung, Betty Baronlck and John Andenoon.
Shown with the group IS Mayor Clliren~'C Andrews
lourlh !rom left.

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area scene again
'

In this case. the one customer did
the right thing by checking with

Buckeye Rural. Pollee officials feel
crtmes of this kind would be le&amp;
sened If potential victims would
check wllh the company or with
them on the visitors.
Gaining entry to a home as a repairman or salesman - to either
defraud the owner or rob him - Is
the common pa ttem of this crime,
aci:ordlng to local pollee officials.
Another well -known ripoff operation occurs In the summer, when
strangers olter to paint a house
with one coat or blacktop a drtveway with oll. And officials see It Increasing In the near future.
"Money's tight, people are une mployed, and all they've got Is lime
on their hands to think up schemes
to rook people," a sheriff' s department Investigator noted .
The source said senior citizens
are the most likely victims, be-

cause they come !rom a lesscynical era In which trust was .
commonplace. But the situation
hasn't been bad. In this area, he
added .
Officials agree the crt me Is hard
to detect once It 's happened, but It
potential victims get a license
mumber of the vehicle !he suspect
person Is driving or a physical descrtptlon, It goes a long way to locatIng the subject before It happens
again. They're a lso urged to call in
when faced with an unusual
situation.
" It m ore people would do so.
there'd be less clime," said a spokesman lor the GallipoliS pollee
department.
Another common fra ud faced by
area merchants are bad checks,
and officials have repeatedly
stressed the Importance of followIng up and prosecuting rubber
check writers.

Huntington police still out
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (API lng valid excuses tor their absence
State pollee troopers will take over from duty.
SOIJ1C city pollee officers' duties
Many officers began calling In
Wednesday night It the "blue flu"
sick last Thursday, after contract
epidemic In the department Is not negotiations collapsed . Barton, actstemmed , says Pollee Chief Ottle
Ing on orde rs from the city council,
Adkins .
gave the protesting pollee ofllcers
Adkins said he and state pollee until 3 p.m . Monday to return to
superintendent John O'Rourke had
work or face dismissal.
agreed to start' Huntlngton's deAdkins sa id 24 oltlcers were papleted department with troopers
trolling the streets of West VIrgia nd that they made plans for deal - nia' s second largest city.
Ing with any law enforcement
Barton said he might have the
emergency. The two met Monday
first termination papers ready by
night In Huntington.
-F rtday. He said he might ask tor
The epidemic kept most Hunting-. medical exam inations or o!!lcers to
ton policemen off the job today, and
determine the sertousness ol their
City Manager Dick Barton said he
Illness.
was preparing to fire officers lack-

Johnson heads township officials
Mrs. Shirley .:lohnson, clerk of the
Leban,on Township Board ol
Trustees, was reelected i&gt;resident ol
the Meigs County Association of
'Cownship Trustees and Clerks at the
meeting last Friday evening at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Mrs. Johnson was the first woman
ever to head the group when she was
named 1'1 the top spot last year.
Other officers elected are Bob
Pickett, vice president; Paul Moore,
secretary·trea111rer, and Ralp~
Ours, executive officer.
·
At Friday's session Claire Ball,
Jr., representative to the Ohio
Legislature from Meigs, Athens and
GaUia Countiea, dlacuued current
leglalation in the Ohio HOUle and
Senate affecting townships. He

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urged everyone to write or call him

abOut problems which he mi ght help
solve. .
Mrs. Johnson introduced ~uesL•

and honorary members incl uding
Richard J ones a nd David Koblcntz ,
county corruni ssioncrs: Howard
F rank, copnty auditor; Ted Warner
of the Meigs Highway Department:
Phil Roberts, county engineer;
Claire Ball, Sr., an Athens trustee;
Jim Allen of the Southeastern Equirmenl Co., and Mike Swisher, Meigs
County Welfare .Departmcnt.
Swisher told the group about
general relief workers who may be
·available for work in the townships.
The state convention for trustees
and clerks was announced for .Jan.

23-23.

Shirley Joh080n

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Any county trustees or clerks '
unable to at~end Friday's meeting
may pay their local and state dues
by sending $'1:1 to Paul Moore, 32785
T.R. 100, Racine, 45ni .

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REELECT - Henry WeiiN,
Ball Run Rnad, haN been reelected preisldenl of \he MelgH County
Board of CommiNHione.-. for 1982.
Other member. of the board are
Rlc"-rd Jones and David Koblen•

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Commentary

Pag' 2-'Aie- Seetllnel
Pon,.,..- M' d ' 0 I, Ohio
TUIIclay, .Ill!' uary 19, 1912

·Texas

Meet Southern'~ Tornadoes

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Friedman at playt/_______w_u_lia_m_F._.B_uc_k-:-ley-:-:-1::-r. ~

The Daily Sentinel
' Ill Cour1 Str«t

" Hey, you're shorter than my
friend he~e, " the ski guide said to
the stranger in the crowded tram.
"Yep," he answered, looking over,
not down, at Milton Friedman.
" Maybe I should ski on your
shoulders' But t11en who would they
know to rescue ?" " The one with the
best watch," the ski guide volunteered. Friedman proudly exhibited
his watch, a Christmas gift frOJ"his
son, which gives the time in two different zones and has a little
calculator - " for when you're bored
and can't read," P1·ofessor Friedman explained. ·' Amazing, cost only
about $60."
.He doesn't have time to be bored.
He is now reading galleys on a
monumental work on monetary
history, the third volwne - it is for
this lha l he is best known
professionall y. the learned data on
the, basis of which he has converted
much of the economic world to
monetarism, catching, even, the attention of the Nobel Prize Com-

POillert.ly, Ohio

· IJ'f-.ttz..%151
DEVOTED TO THE MEREST Of' m E MEIGS.MASON AREA

~J:b

~ m~
~v

r""M..--L"""'r, r-"T""E2d• ~

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publ bi ~r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Allllilllll nt Publi~'h~r /Cun'trullll!r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NtW'II F.,diltn"

A, MEMBER 11f Tbe AKiivt' illkd

Pr~1111 ,

lnl111nd Dully

Prr~~ ·

AIIIU)I'illtlun und the

Amerll'MD Nt!WKpllprt Publlthll!l'll A!Jllncl.aUun.

I.E1TERS OF OPINION lin! wdt'llml'd. Tht'y 11huuld Ill' les11 than 300 wordli long . All
ll!ltertl are HUbjtd W tdilinH Mod mu~~ol ~ llll(n~ with Rame, ~~tddrellll 1111d telephone
number, No UIUiilCfkd ldkn will bt· publl11ht:d. Letknl ll hi.IUid lw in Mood 1Y111k, addn:n lng
l~~oJun . nul ~n;uw.llti~ .

.Big. g9vernment
bigger business
btc:iiness pages·.
It ma9 lie that the agreement b&lt;•tween the Justice Department and
American Telephone &amp; Tel e~raph under which the former is calling off its

anti-trust do~s in return for the latter's divestiture of the 22 operating phone
companies will mean higher local phone bills. Or it 1rtay mean no chan~e
there. but higher long-distance tariffs. Or it could be that·the inevitable rate
changes will bal~nce out to no essential change to the average hard-pressed
budget.
At this point,•you read your business writers and lake your pick of.lhe
usually carefully hedged opini on.
But it docs not.require any particular expertise at forecasting or simply
lucky guessin g to spot two especially interesting points about the deal.
One is that a business operation that long ranked as the world's largest
and is still righl ·up ll]ere at the top has high hopes for the future of the
economy and society to ·which it as a corporate entity and we are individual
conswncrs belong. High enough that it is staking $8() billion on it.
That is the tnini1nwn valuation of the phone companies, representing
tw().lhirds of AT&amp;T'spresent assets. In giving up so much of what it now has
in order to hold onto the remaining one-third - its long distance nearmonopoly, Bell Labs research facilities and Western Electric prOduction
operati.nns - and to gain freedom lo enter areas such as computer services
and information distribution from which it has been barred, AT&amp;T is in effect betting that il can do even better in the uncertain technological future
than it has done in its supremely successful past.
If it is right, millions of small .bettors who do not have AT&amp;T's freedom
of choice will also come out winners. There are othors, of course, who take a
somewhat different view since the telephone giant will now be competing
wi th other enterprises that would just as soon not be in the r111g with it. And
they .may slill be heard from in the courts. but that is another matter for the
future .
,
For now, another inlereslin~ point is what the big business case also
says about big government. It is bigger by far than those wh9 devise policies
and make decisions in its name at any given time.
The_Justice Department's case against AT&amp;T was instituted during the
Nixon-Ford administrations, but it was in the making long before. j3ack in ·
the Kennedy and Johnson years , governmenllal'(yers were looking into the
anti-trust implications of the ownership by the dominant supplier of
telephone services of the major producer of telephone equipment, Western
Electric.
·
·
It was a confro.ntalionthat lhc present administration, which took offi ce
vowing to reduce·governJnent intr-usion into private l!nlerprise and personal
affairs, would ~ladly have done witl1out.
And it has now divested itself of the problem, but only by exercising the
power of big goveriunent. It could not be a simple case of calling o(f its case,
as it did ahn"'!l simultaneously in the much more limited action against International Business Machines.
The AT&amp;T agreement is if anything an example of the govemment exercising its regulatory power as has not been done so far-rea chingly, as
numerous commentators havl" poinh~d out. since monolithic Standard Oil
was broken up oarly in the century.
And it is al.lhe very least interesting that it has been exercised.by an administration that says it would rather not .
Which suggesl1:i.that in govcrJllncnt as elsewhere what is saitl can be Jess
significant than what is done.

\J\Iorld

"I just hoPfl the Sovleis don't do somethln' crazy In Poland an' cause Interruptions during the
Super Bowl. "

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Tyron~ Brinager
. Junior forward

Another busy weekend of action
begins tonight In the Southern Val·

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Brain trust stresses fiscal cnsts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov.
Jamel Rhod~s assembled a collec·
tlve f~al brain trust of more than
15 years In office to stress the seriousness of the state government's
fiscal crtsls.
The bottom llne at a brtellng for
news reporters last week was that
there wiU be massive cuts ln state
services or another tax Increase and maybe both.
Howard CoOler, who came In as
budget director when Rhodes first
became governor ln 1963 and returned tor the third time Jan. 1, ran
the show.
But also on hand was Richard L.
Krabach. He held the title of finance director In the first Rhodes
administration and at the time was
Collier's pass.

And flanking CoOler were William W. Wllllams and WUUam D:
Kelp, his trainees wl\o served successively as budget directors from
the lime he departed In 1976 until he
returned some three weeks ago.
The reason the 72-year-old governor brought them all together was
not quite clear, although he Qb.
vtously wanted to show unanimity
of opinion about the graveness of
the state's money problems.
Rhodes Is not running for reelection this year, due to a ban on
three consecutive terms. Earlier
this month he squelched reports
that he might seek a seat In the U.S.
Senate, and few take seriously
other rumors that the governor wW
run for state auditor, a post he held
for 10 years ending In 1962.
Collier said he and the former !1!-

cal chiefs had looked at revenue
forecasts amlileterrnlned that Ohio
state government, due to the continuing economic decline, wW face a
budget delicti of almost $1 billion by
June :Jl, 1983.
He did not recommend specific
spending cub'at the time. Blltaldes
produced fl8ures sllow1Jig there
would have to be reductions of
more than 16 pettent to maJre up
the almost $1 billion.
The same aides prov1ded the revenue forecasts only two months
ago when the Legislature enacted a
record $1.3 bUllon la:JIIllke, having
been told it would ~alance the $13.4
bUUon budget which was enacted ln
the same package.
Collier and Krabach both spoke
of the Inexactness of revenue fore-

,.

casting. but it fell tile duty of a Col·
ller aide, Madlhew V. FUiplc, to try
to explain why the earller forecasts
were so far off. ·
·
: Flllpic said the sources of theeco- ,
nomic forecasts wert the nationally known firms of Chase "·
Eco~ !nc., a1Jd Data Resources, Inc., botll oi wt.Jrn have ·
been reUable tn the past. ';1.,
budget was passed In mid.
November, Just before those !Inns
revised their predictions shallllY
downward, FWplc said.
Some qbservers said they lJe.
lleved the gloomy forecasts might
have been a bltoverstall!d,andthat
Rhodes put out the worst possible
scenario In the event there may
have to be another tax Increase lJe.
fore he leaves office next January.

such as slates' rights. Now don't get
me wrong. I'm not for slavery. I
abhor it and always have. But I cannot allow my personal feelings to get
involved in a sensitive matter such
as this. The legal question we must
ask is, would slavery vio~te the civil
rights of those who are being enslaved?"
'
"Of course it would. A slave
doesn 'l have any rights."
"Is there anything in this Civil
Rights Bill that specifically forbids

someone ~rom owning a slave?"
" No, because there was no
question of slavery at the lime it was
passed."
"Well, perhaps this is not our case
1hen. After all, we can't go
proseculing people willy-nilly if it is
not concemed with our division. We
are short on lawy.ers as it is, because
we inherited all those bleeding heart
ci vii rights cases from other administrations.''
"But this \s not just another civil
rights case. This is the big enchilada. If we don't act immediately
slavery could come back to the

ley Athletic Conference with four
scheduled game~.
Non-league battles find Oak Hill
ai ·Southwestern, Hanna!) Trace at
Symmes Valley, Hannan, W.Va. at
Kyger Creek and Wahama at
Southern.
·
Friday night, SVAC play resumes with Southern playing a rematch .at Eastern, Kyger Creek
traveling to North Gallia and
Southwestern vl~itlng Hannan
Trace.
'
On Saturday, North GaUla goes
to Vlnlon County and Kyger Creek
plays at Hannan In a make·up
contest.
·
Southern, the defending SVAC
champion, continues to lead the
league with an 11.0 record overaU
and 5.0 slate against league
opponents.
Senior, guard Kent Wolfe continues to be the team's main offensive spark with 22 and 29 points In
his last two outings. ·
Wolfe, a fine defensive playel'.
has been joined offensively by
another Wolfe, Richard.
Southern relies heavtly on Its
bench which has provided the
much needed spark when caUed
upon this season.
Despite the loss last Frtday night,
Kyger Creek remains In second
place In the SVAC standings wlth.a
3·2 record. Overall, the Bobcats of
Coach Keith Carter are off to their
best start In 14 years with a 6-2
mark.
Although, no one player stands
out In the Bobcats' effort, all play·
ers have contributed In one way or
another to a successful start.
In recent games, fow;ml Jet!
Moles, a &amp;-2 junior and forward Tim
Prtce, a &amp;-3 senior have led the
Kyger Creek offense. Price caMed
a dunk shot tn the Bobcats' victory
over Wahama last Tuesday.
Eastern, 6-4 overaU and 2·21n the
league, bounced back after a losing ,

work for them, then we might conUnited States."
"I think you're overreacting, Pet- sider making a case agaillllt them."
"I can't write a letter like that. It's
tibone. Every lawyer in Justice
unconstitutional."
thinks his is the only case, But when
"Pettibone, I don't believe it's the
you're sitting in this chair you have
to be selective as to what cases the Department ot Justk-e's jOI&gt; to
department should lake and what decide what is uncolllltilutional and
ones we s.hould ignore. The o~ thing whctl isn't.''
"What is our job?"
this administration has pled~~ to
do is not clog up the courts with a lot
"To see that the laws of the laild
of petty matters that &lt;'fluid be settled are carried ouf as long as they don't
through reason."
offend the people who elected
"What do you suggest?"
President Reagan . Can you
"Why don't you draft a letter to imagaine the political repercussions
the people who are goin~ to bring from the ultra-right wing if it got inback slavery and indicate we are to the papers that we were thinking
taking an interest and we're willing of suing people who wanted to bring
to work out a settlement which back slavery 7 ·
would be satisfactory to both
" If you don't do anything about
sides?"
this I'll go to the papenunyself."
"What kind of settlement did you
"AU rtght, Pettioone, if you feel
have in mind?"
,
that strongly about it, get the eviden·
"We would requi:e them to justify &lt;'e together."
their reasons lor needing slaves. II,
" And the department will
for example, they could prove it prosecute? "
would have a favorable economic . " I didn't say we'd (lfa'Jecule, .but
impact on their community, then we we might submit a brief as a 'friend
might look the other way. But ifthey of the court.'"
just want slaves to do their dirty
W,IIIIAT IF I

AC1111111.1tf67'
Ill ,... 'If) CtJNWCTIIF; ?

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Southern
Kyger Creek

Eastorn

Hannan Tra ce

W l
11 0
6 2
6 4
6 6

2

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son and forwards Mike Wacker a.Dd
Vlrdell Howland.
Thompson, the nation's leading
rebouncler, had 31 points. Howland
had 26 and Wacker 24.
Texas shot a blistering 66.8 [)11fcent against TCU and continued Its
season-IOilg success at the tree

'l!ll'ns with a 1a&gt;-89 victory over
By ~lated fress
While freshman centers Stuart Texas cliristlan.
"I don't think there's any doubt
Gray of UCLA and Patrick 'Ewing
ot George!Dwn have been more that Keith Lee Is one of the best
highly touted this season, Moot-10 ·freshmen In college basketball this
Keith Lee has quietly compUed · year," said VIrginia Tech Coach
Charllf Molr. " We've got out backs
some brflllant slats for Memphis
to the waD now with two straight
State.'
Lee has Jed the Tigers to an U-2 home losses.''
"This was a big win for us," said
overaU record and :W mark In the
Metro Conferen~ with a 17.5 scor· Memphis State Coach Oana Kirk.
VIrginia Tech has an exceUent
lng average and 11.2 reboWlds per
team with super quickness. We are
game.
The lanky center from West a young team, starting one fresh·
Memphis, Ark.. was impressive man, three sophomores and a seagain Monday night, scoring 19 nior, I think that playing nine
points with ll rebounds to lead games at home helped us gain con·
Memphis' State to a 78-73 road vic- fidence for this i:oad game."
Memphl5 State shot 72.7 percent
tory oyer VIrginia Tech, which was
ranked 20th In last week's Asso- In the first half to build a 42·27 haU·
lime lead. Virginia Tech,·now 11-3,
ciated Press national poll.
ln the oilly game Involving a connected on )list 31.4 percent In the
ranked team , No.7 Texas remained first 20 minutes.
The Hokles cut the lead to two
•wall' the nation's four unbeaten
points at 75-73 with 43 seconds left In
the game before Otis Jackson, who
scored 16 points for Memphis State,
hit three free throws In the final
WUson's Pirates snapped a league
minute.
losing streak with a 71-67 victory
Dale Solomon led Virginia Tech
over Coach Lloyd Myers'
with 24 polrits.
Highlanders. ·
Top Ten
Junior fotward Mike Mays led
Texas, 13.0, was not expected to
the way with 23 points, Gregg Oeel · contend for the Sol!thwest Confer·
caMed lB and Bobby Blackburn
ence title this year. But the Longhadded 12. Roger Wells and Paul
orns Improved their SWC mark to
McNeal paced Southwestern with .5.0 with 81 points from the front·
19 and 18 points respectively.
court trio of center LaSalle Thomp.

throw line, hitting

Southwes tern
1 8
SVAC ONLY
Southern
5 0 35R
Kvger Creek
3 2 268
2 2 210
Eastern
2 3 289
Hannan Tra ce
I 3 282
Southwestern
I 3 128
North Gall i a

679

226
' 295
321
27 4

MIAMI (AP) -Miami quarter·
back David Woodley heard some
during the 1981 NFL season
but he took them In stllkle.
"1 don't take boolni L'l a pei'!!Onal :
way," the young quarterback ~d.
"The way I look at It, they're not .
booing me as much as they are
cheering for somebody else to come
In and take over.

noos

College's top 20

I . Nnrrlt Cnwiinn (MI)
2. Miumeri ( I)

J.

J'ir~nitr

~-

01'Ptru/

.~.

Minnr11010

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15- 1

11-2
II·!
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fl. lnllliJ

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l f.-0

Tf'XGI

1.219
1.1211

1,11 5

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8. Melw
9. Kfl nfur ll r
10. Tulta ·
JJ. San Frtm ri t rfl
12. OrP,OrJ !k
JJ. Gr("'1t'lnwn . JJ C
14. Nt~r~h CfJrtJlin• S1.
15. Arh•nN•

16. Alabom•
17. Louin•ilf,.
18. Kan••• Sr,
HI. HouJitln
20. Tl! nnt"st~

/Q. j

13-2
/ ,';. :!
12-1
14-3
1-J-1

11 -2

12·2

27-4

114

187

12-2

180

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Before you invest your money for
retirement, carefully consider the options.
Some programs advertise high initial
rates to get your business, but there is no
rate guarantee after the first 90 days.
When you invest your money in
BANK ONE's fixed rate IRA program,
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account is insured by an agency of the
federal government, and there are no
fees or charges to open or add to your

IRA In addition, you get a monthly
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Now is a great time for an individual
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savings for retirement Working couples
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will even let you "roll over" IRAs from
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not just the.next quarter.
Stop by or call any BANK ONE office
'
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There rs a sobstan!Jal inleresf penatty IOf early withdrawal.

By Th• 4N.M••rd P"'BASEB..\LL ·

PCJ~u .

H 0 US T 0 N ASTROS-Si'n"tl Ro,, K"'l"!· tltird bateman, lo a/h~-yNr co"·

,.

' Tftlt rS IN ll'tlereal lila •nd _,eclrva IMUIII ~ld

Am..,.lr•n li¥Uf'
MIUI'A VKF.E BHErl'f:HS- Si,nt&gt;d D~&gt;·
fflr T•uuno, pil ~""''• and Gui,ntorf him lo
~l«ltlon a/ 11te Collfarni• Lf'.,uf' .
'NE,. YORK l'A NKEES- NemPd Clvd,.
Kin, rlleir m-,jtJr 1-,rtf' adt'Gncf' •rntd.
-...d enna~~n~d tllof /1'// Torhnr1 and }ttr•
, fr IJ'ellrer. r:o.clte11, would •nwmfl ,,,.
,. roll! o/ pitdtin1 cood'"':
• TORONTO BLliE JA YS- S" "' Crr1
lrellt firtr b.e-men. to tht~ Mi"""'"l•
TIClill; fo MMIJif'l#' tile tNidf' fur uut/if'ldrr .

Natktnel Leapfi

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112

Transactions

n,y,,.

a half.

the next

Tonight' s gam es ·
Oak Hi ll at Southwes te rn ~ Ha nnan
Tri!cc at Symmes Valle y. Hannan.
w. va. at Kvger and Wahama at
Southern.

Fr iday. Southern at Eastern .
K yqer Cr ee k at North Gal li a and
Southwestern at Hannan Tra ce.
Sclturd ay , North Gallia a t V1 nto n
County and Ky oer Creek at Hannan.

can earn 16.250!0

Mow

244
271

M -5-4·3·2·1:

"'' ':-'

record and 2·3 slate against SVAC
foes.
Greg Webb, senior gnard, con·
tlnues to pace the Wildcat attack
and remains one·of the loop's most
productive scorers.
Southwestern and North Gauta
with 1-3 records trall the rest of the
pack.
· La&amp;t Fiiday night, Coach Bruce

Boos don't bother

613

txmJ on 20-19-18·1 7- 16-IS- 14-IJ-12-// . Jo.QJJ.

DOONES8URY ~·
t---~----- ·

speD to defeat Ha n Trace, 66-54
last Frtday night
Big Tim Om, 6-4
or center,
has been the Ea s most plotent
offensive weapom. He has been
joined by senior toward Mike
Bissell.
·
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
Trace WUdcats hold down fourth
place In the leagne with'! 6-6 season

I

'

WIWM• ,OUthlnk
ofi&amp;I• • IIIOMJJOUF RlftiC

........ ftnt.

Member FDIC

BA'NK
ONETM
BANK .ONE OF POMEROY
POMEAOY•AUTi.ANo-TUPPERS PLAINS

J

I reel .

' '

--

,,

~~~

Ulll'lllked
Elsewhere, It was Boston lleae
82, Seton Hall 71; Fordham , Massachusetts 65; Niagara 87, Colgate
72; West VIrginia 75, PeM State 68;
George Mason 89, Navy 79; Jacksonville 84, Baptist 59; Nogth
Carolina-Charlotte 112. Georgia
State 74; South 'Carolina 811, Biscayne T7; Southern MISSissippi 73,
New Orleans 66; Clnclnna.ti83, Loyola, lll., 72; IUino!S State 65, '$est
Texas State 53; Oklahoma City 75,
Evansville 54; Oral Roberts 83;
Butler 50 and UCLA . 75, Artzona
State 59.

OP
692
435
509
7.10

Thr A P Top Twrnty
By Th4&gt; """o"l•lfii Pr....
Til,. Ttip flt!f'rrf ,Y lram • irt Th r Au ,!f" i·
arf'fi p,,.,,•Mil,.,,. htJdlf'lhell pnU, u•i rlt
/irtl·piiK't&gt; r •Off'~ in pnrrnlhr11r11, lh it H'tr·
sun '• rPrunl nnd lrlfol 1min1l. Puinl ~

.,

•

6

P
796
4-44
524
699
498
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w. va .

1•.

1

Seott Fn:deriek
Senior forward

3

unbeaten·

SVAC STANDINGS
TE~M

North Galt; a

•

Question of civil rights_____A_rt_B_uc_hwa_l_d

Rudy Cumming•
Junlur gnard

still~

SVAC .swings .into action tonight
·•'

• •

"The anti-slavery side, sir. li's our
duty to defend the Constitution
which is the law of the land, and the
Constitution says you can't have
slaves."
•
"That's true, P.ettibone, but there
are other constitutional amendmenls which must be considered,

Today Is Tuesday, Jan. 19, th&amp;19th day of 1982. There are 346days left In
. the year.·
Today's highlight In history:
One year ago today, the United States and Iran reached final agreement
on the rele~se of 52 Amertcans held for more than 13 months by Iranian
mllltants.
On this date:
In 1918, the Bolsheviks dissolved the Russian ConstltutionalAssembly In
Petrograd.
In 1938, Gen. Francisco Franco's Nationalist Air Force bombed the
Spanish cltte5.p! Barcelona and Valencia, kllllrV 700 people.
In 1945, Soviet troops took Cracow, Poland, In Worid War D.
In 196!1, Attorney General Robert Kennedy met In 'l'oiC)'o with fJidoae.
sla's President Sukamo In an ettort to ease host1llttes betwl!en Iniloneaia
and 1\{alaysla. ,
In 1966 lndla 's new prlrtle mlnJsler, Indira Gandhi, pledged to !oUow a

I

On the domestic front, Friedman
bewails that the supply-siders lfuve
claimed too much .f6r their idea.
"The worst thing that happened to
the supply-siders," he says. "is the

~

11

take?"

Today i-n history

pa~:,:~~~:"'~~~e::::a~·the ~nlted

~

would say he Wa.'! Ji4ving the rich."
But Jsn1 II the role of economists
and other analysts to urge on the
president the right course of action,
with only contingent attention .to its
polilkal marketability? " Well yes,"
Friedlnan says, and ·promises to
relum to his recommendation early,
in his Newsweek column. Concernjng the political future, Friedman crtticizes the Fed lor wild
dollar .ewansion during the swnmer
of 1980. "That's responsible for the
present recession, which should
have begun six months earlier.
About now, Reagan would· have
begun to experience an economi c
lift, and at election time in November the people would have been a lot
lrappier." Still, there is always a
, chance that by June the re&lt;:ession
wilJ.have begun to ebb.

asked him, " you shrink when I hug
you . but you let the king Of Sweden
do it' What's he got that I haven't
got?" "A hundred thousand dollars,
among other things.")
" I don 't like to talk about foreign
policy, because it is not my field. I
think the forei gn situation is more
dangerous than ·the domestic
situation,n }i'riedtmln is saying... It
doesn't seem to me we have come up
with a' strategy. There isn't anything
we can do to the Russians over
Poland that would really hurl them,
but we should answer them in
Europe by taking them on in the
Caribbean." He likes the idea o! a
naval blockade of Cuba which would
stop any ship carrying guns, thus
stanching the now of guns from communist European countries to Cua
and on to Central Americ~. We could
then also shoot down planes that
L'arried arms? Thcv wouldn't send
those planes if lhey\new we were

There is a feeling by some people
in the country that the present
Justice Department is soli on civil
rights. and is trying to turn back the
clock on wogress made in this field
over the past20 years.
This is not true. Just the other day
a lawyer in the Justice Department
went in to sec his supervisor. "Sir,
there seems to be a group Of people
in th~ south that is going to bring
back slavery. I think we'd better get
on it right away."
"What's the rush, Pettibone?
There's no sense jwnping into these
things unless we know we're on solid
legal ground. Now you say these
people are going to bring ·back
slavery . What side are you
proposing the Justice Department

.

States would get tough
with !orelgn governments which exproprtated prtvate American holdings.

cls~where? "

passage of Kemp-Roth. Sitre, it isn't
exactly the ume as Kemp wanted,
but it Is substantially the same, and
it just isn't · going to yield high
enough re'!eniMis to beat the deficit.
That's one reason some of them are
now shifting their emphasis to the
need for a gold standard."
Is he saying that supply-side
doesn't work? "Heavens no, of course it · works . But wllat President
Reagan should have done is what for
political reasons he &lt;'OUidn't do,
which is brins down a top tax of 25
per&lt;'elll." Did Friedman stand by
his predidion Of two ye&lt;~rs ago that
such a refonn would instantly
generate substantial federal
revenues? " No doubt about it, beginning immediately, federal revenues
would rise . But Reagan couldn't
come out for that because his critics

mittee. r"How come/' a friend once

It wotild require a supremely confident reader of the future to.due in
conswners of the pn~cise eonscquenccs for them of the big news on the

Berry!~

serious about it.
" As fn• "'""ope " Friedman said
~
'
'
"what is the reason for our continuing to accept responsibility lor
its defense? I'd say to them : In exactly five years, there won 't be one
American soldier in Europe, i10t one.
We'll help in any other way. Our
navy will be out there, our defense
factories at your disposal. But the
local muscle will have to be
European. Mler all," Friedman's
baby laee looks up pleadingly,
"aren't they as wealthy as we, as
nwnerous as we, and don 't we have
more direct responsibilities

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Iii)

~

I.

I

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

'" _

Tuetday, Januoz 19, 1982

Pomeroy-Middl.port, Ohio

'

Cancellation riles writers
PONTIAC, Mich . (AP) -Cincinnati Coach Forrest Gregg, bristling
ai an unscheduled early Invasion
by Super Bowl media, canceled an

Impromptu press co nfere nce
shortly after the Bengals showed
up at their headquarters.
San Fra nclsco Coach BIU Walsh

HE'S SMILING NOW - Cincinnati Rengals coach Forest Greg
smile"' for newsmen during interviews Monday nighl at the team'¥ hotel
in Troy, Mich. Tht• Bengals will la!'e lhe San Frimcisco Forty-Niners Sunday lnSuJl"r Bowl XVI. (AP LaNerphulo).

sultered Its most serious disruption
since Mlllnesota Coach Bud Grant
complained about sparrows In the
VIkings' training facilities belore
the 1974 game tn Houston. That out·
burst eventually cost Grant a SS,&lt;m
fine. It seemed unlikely that ·
Gregg's display of stubbomess
would result In any of!Jclai repri·
mand. But It was In stark contrast
to the relaxed atmosphere surrounding the 49ers . • ·
Super Bowl Wl'l'k news conferenGregg played In three Super '
ces usually begin on Tuesday, but
Bowls - two with the Gfl'l'n Bay
when the San Francisco team ar- · Packers and one with the Dallas
rived Sunday night. the schedule Cowboys. He said he'd learned that
was pushed ahead. The 49ers made
the demands lor Interviews were
a number of players and Coach
the most disturbing aspect lor a
Walsh available afterthelrworkout
player to handle.
Monday.
The Bengajs were
"You have so much practice
asked to do the same and the word
time, and time for meetings: Alter
from Cincinnati was that they
that, you try to grab ·sorne time to
would, But when the team arrived,
relax, some time for your own,"
Gregg told his public relations dl·
Gregg said .
rector that the players would not be ·
"You were really never allowed
on hand for the press.
to do that."
More than a dozen 49er players
The Bengals didn't appear .to be
showed up at their ln\l'rvlew seson edge as they flew from Clnc(nsion. When that was concluded,
natl Monday afternoon, then took a
NFL olflclals, unaware that Gregg bus rlde from the airport to their
had put the Bengals ott-limits, ted a
hOtel.
busload of wliters to the Cincinnati
During the flight, linebacker
club headquarters. It became apReggie WUllams walked doWn the
parent there was a problem when aisle carrying copies of a new Benthe writers wPre kept on the bus for gals' song that he and two teamabout 15 minutes whlle the league mates recorded.
people tried · unsuccessfully to
Led by punter and songwriter
change Gregg's mind.
Pat .Mclnally, sever8! of the play"They asked for a few players," ers !Jeld a sing-along of 1960s hits on
the c.o ach said. "!told them It would the bus rlde to the hotel north of
be me because they (the players)
Detroit.
have obligations and I have
"They looked !Ike the same guys
obllgatlons. "
I've been with all year long," Gregg
It was Suggested that Gregg .said.
seemed annoyed at the whole
The big dl!ference was In the
affair.
number of cat:neras and pens ready
"There was no press conference to record their arrival, he said. "It
scheduled by the league for today." really hasn't been that way for us
he said, adding caustically, "My un!U now," Gregg said ot the cover- ·
dinner's getting cold."
agp. ''I Imagine the rest of the Wl'l'k
With that, Gregg left and the Is going to be dl!ferent for us. We'll
smooth SuJler Bowl schedule had try to maintain our schedule as best

the big school poll to 228 for runnerup Kettering Alter (11 -1) andlOO
for third-place Newark (10-2) . Newark moved up one spot when
Toledo Scott, No. 3 last week, lost
twice and fell all the way to 21st this
time.
Willard (11-0) commanded the
biggest lead In any of the three dlv·
Jsions. 1be Crimson F lashes, who
beat Nmwalk 59-43, earned 289
polnts, 94 more thari Urbana (10-0),
the new runnerup after advancing

three spots. Columbus Bexley (131) remained In third place with 184
points.
St.John (9-1) swept by Van Wert
6446 to kl'l'p Its No. 1 spot with 267
points. Sidney Lehman, unbeaten
In 13 games this season, held onto
the second position with 224 points,
while Columbus Academy (11-1)
was third again with 197.
A statewide panel ol sports WrJ.
ters and broadcasters rates the
tearys Wl'l'kly for the AP. The panel

•

ID

•

•

LOOSE BALL - West Virginia forward Lester Rowe (2~) ba&lt;k as
Penn State forward Mike Lang dives in front of him to try lor a grab at the
ball. Rowe and his Mountaineer teammates downed tht• Nittany Lions by
75-68 night In Morgantown . I AP Laserphotu) .
•

Judo
The Tani club
Judo Clubto
willmeet
meet at 6 I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
p.m. Wednesday night at the PPHS
~ym . The Judo Club has a J'91D·
Jl"titivc tea m that will llegin
preparation tor the Stale of West
Virginia Judo Championships and
the AAU finall; to be held in Apr il ·
and May resJl"ctively. New mem-

Crash!

.

couraged to attend.

Transactions
•

COL!.f.G&gt;:
CA ROU NA

Elliol Ur. Plflf'. t'11rl .~m i rh rm.l tl11IJ ."i1111 " 11
auiAI•III / twllu!ll C'rHrrhr••.

_

OGAN ~
RNER~

ROCHti:STER IN!\ TITI I'ff..' Of" 'f'l~."f.'/1 .

1\'0LOG 1'- Namt'•l Jl1illirm• G. Tif'rrtf'y
heed locrouf' f'fJnl' h .
S 0 U T II ERN M6T/IOIJIST- Nnmrr l
)lobby Cnllifu head /oorbnll rollf' h.
SOUTHERN MISSI .f i,IPPI - Nnm f'tl l1'm
Cormody hf'otl/o~tllHrll moch.

TENNESSEE- Nam,•tl AI .Sn1irtd r·,.. ru·

tlo~torlt

jofllbo/IN,rJCh.

for your car! Without
• it •.. you sund to late!

I

:H"A Tl-.'- ,\ 'uml •d

_

.. suranoe Services

Filrmerly

CHILLY RECEPTION - San Francisco Forty·Niners quarterback
Joe Montana dons a heavy rout as he is greeted by light snow while
leaving the Pontiac Sllverdome Monday after practice for SuJl"r Bowl
XVI. {AP Laserphoto ~.

I

can.··

we
There was some good news for
the Bengals Monday, even before
they left Cincinnati. Kick returner
DaVId Verser, the only seriously Injured Bengal player, worked out at
Spinney FJeld for a little more than
an hour with just a brace on his
Injured right thumb.
VerSer damaged ligaments on
the right thumb 1n Cincinnati's 27-7
Victory over San Diego In the AmerIcan Conference championship
game and had It put In a cast. But
Gregg said the teams' leading kickof! returner should be ready to play
In the Super Bowl Jan. 24.
"He caught the ball very well today, so I don't see any problem,"
Gregg said.

The Vuiiy Scnt.inel
(USPS I - I
A DlvltJoa ol M111Umedia. IIC.
Published every afternoon, Monday througt\
Fridsy, Jll Court $treet, by the Ohio Val,ley
Pub'ishing Company • Multimedia, Inc. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769, !N'1-%15e. Second clul
postage paid 11t Pomeroy, Ohio.

Member: The Associated Press, Inland Oaf.
ly Pre3s Aasocialion· and the Amertcan
Newspaper Publlshers Association, Nalional
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 7l3 Third
York , New York 10017.

~

Av~ue,

New

POSTMASTER : Send addre85 to Die Daily
Sen tinel, 111 COurt St., Pomeroy, Ohlo45719.
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No subseriptions by maU pennitted in towns
where home carrier servict! is available.

Ross ninth and Coldwater lOth .
Racine Southern was fourth In
· Class A followed by Ji'ayette
Gorham-Fayette In fifth , Richmond Dale Southeastern In sixth,
Anna In seventh, New Washington
Buckeye Central In eighth, Kalida
In ninth and Old Washington Buck....~eye::~Tr:a~U~In~N~o~
. 1~0:_._ _ _ _

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Obloud We~~t VlrPDia

3 Mooth ..... . ............ .. ...... •12.3&amp;
Six month .
.. . . ...... .. .... S20.11q
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Rtltn (hll.llde Ohiu
aodW~t VlrllD11
3Mon tl1 ....... ....... . . ........• • 13.00

6 Month ......................... .'12:1.111
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_jL,::::;::::::::::::::::::::::_

PUT LIFE IN YOUR CAR

Mr: and Mrs. Amsbary
MIDDLEPORT - · Middleport
Heath Uriiled Methodist Church was
the setting for the September :; wed·
ding of Merri . Christine Aul~
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William L.
Aull of Middleport and James Ken·
neth Amsbary, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Hugh Custer and the late Dr. Kenneth ~bary oCPomeroy.
Rev. Mark Rowland of Cincinnati
and Rev. Robert Robinson, Middleport, · performed the ceremony
following a program of music by
Kathy Johnson and soloist Janis
Carnahan. Their selection included .
11
A Time For Us," "Endless Love"
· and "BlllSSed Fatlier, I Have
· Promised," with church chimes
during the ceremony.
Two seven-branched candelabras
flanked the altar decorated with
lavender rose arrangements. White
bows and rosebuds marked the
family pews. Registering the guests·.
were Karen Johnson, Gallipolis, and
Christi Reynolds, alSo of Gallipolis.
Given In marriage by her parents
and escorted to the altar by her
father, the-bride was attired in a for·
mal gown of white chiffon over tal·
8 fitted bodice of chantilly lace,
pea;is and· 8eqtilns accented by a

teta

214 W. Main
9H-UI7

Pomeroy, OH.

•nd D•leC. Womer

..

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

stand-up collar. The fitted sleeves of
chantilly lace featured cliffs
crystal accordion pleats. The full
skirt had a design !II the ""mline
which was tiers of chantilly lalie and
crystal accordion pleats that made
into a chapel-length train. The bride
wore a fingertip veil of illusion
edged of matching lace aod pearls.
Also a blusher fell from a headpieCe
designed of miniature pearls, all
designed by t)le bride's mother.
She carried a cascade
arrangement of silk lavender roses
and miniature white roses and
baby's breath with white satin
streamers. Her som'ething old was
her engagement ring that previously
belonged to the mother of the groom.
Something new was her weddin~ attire, something borrowed was her

MEIGS
ATHLETIC
BOOSTERS Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
at the l!igh school. All interest~(!
persons are urged to attend.

or

Following the wedd.ng, a reception was held at the Senior Cillzens
Center in Pomeroy. On. the bride's
table of all silver service was a fivetiered. cake of ail white : with
miniature lavender flowers, _staircases and a fountain of lavender
water. A buffet dinner and champagne punch were served.
Serving at the fej:eption were Debbie Weber, Reedsville; Janice Fetty,
Pomeroy ; Debbie Glaze, Hemlock
Grove , and Christi Reynolds,
Gallipolis.
After the honeymoon at Sanibel
Island, Florida, the.couple resides at
66\'z Court St., Gallipolis.
·
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
High School and is employed as a
stylist at Headquarters, Gallipolis.

Wednesday
EAST MEIGS - Eastern Band
Boosters will meet Wednesday at
7!30 p.m. in the band room.
EASTERN BAND Boosters
Wednesdlly at 7:30 p.m. in the
band room.

THE

N.M.W ,S. Service of
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
scheduled for Jan. 13 has been
rescheduled for Wednesday at 7

P-1!1·

THE MIDDLEPORT Ulerary
Club w!ll meet Wednesday at 2

p.ni. at the home of Mrs. Chester"

Erwin. Mrs. Richard Owen will
give the book review.
THIRD
WEDN~SDAY
HOMEfriAKERS CWB, city hall,
Syracuse, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Wed·
nesday. · Members to take a
needle, black or brown thread.
Potholders will be made. Potluck
at noon .

is a graduate of Eastern
School and i&amp; employed at

f

holiday
•
proJectS

MAINTENANCE FREE CONST.

22 F-42 MOS................................. $45.24
24 &amp;24F-48 MOS.......................... $55.16
WITH EXCHANGE

• POMEROY --Several service
:11roject.s were carried out by the SaIJ!sbury Brownies during the holl-

f

''
!t

Jeannette Miller Rndford
'
Has Joined 1'/ie Staff!

JANUArfY SPECIAL .
'5.00 OFF ON ALL
PERMANENTS.

f

'tf
•

Call 773-5352

IJAifOAIN MATM'ES ON SAT &amp; :AM

.UL .UAJ'S JUST I 1.10
ADMISSIONEVEIW ~SOon' lt50

r. FRIDAY lhru TIIUIISOitY I ::1

L.IANUARY 15thru 211

606 E. Main

Ph.992-2094
Fronl End ~li&amp;nment - Most Cars

Pomeroy

' Brake Semce

~11'1
Fumiture Galleries
'UJl ~Q ·CORNER

SECOND AND GRAPE STREETS

Winter Drapery Sale
SAVE

15%

~

°CUSTOM DRAPERY
0
8EDSPREADS .

191J

SA

THE MIDDLEPORT Child
Conservation League will meet at
7:30 Thursday night at the horne
of Mrs. Thelma Osborne. Carl
Hysell, juvenile officer, will
speak on "Laws of Our
Children." There will be a white
elephant sale.

20' 0, L.ARL

HIAD &amp; 'I HOULDIRS
·sHAMPOO
~$14'1
lifO. ~fT. IU .'

THE WILIJNG Workers Class
of Enterprise Church will meet at
the home of Dorothy Long Thursday, Jan. 21, at 7:30p.m.

t

CRIST

Topa'a will rneuure, help you aa1ect from hundreda end
hundreda of fabric choices, insii!M the T~avene Roda 1111&lt;1
Drepery end 1hen prof 11 ionellY .tiNim them to elegant
. p81facllon.

FURNITURE !FREE ESTIMATES!
GALLERIES
GAWPOUS · 448-()33

Jc

.....99c

THE POMEROY ELementary
School PTA will meet at 7:30
Thursday night at the school.

. lf!T.

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

lUIS IIIIIIY

~~~

YIT

~.
~~ $219
~ ....
REO . REf. ·U .fl

..OUNCE

FAULTLEII

OXY•
WASH

SPIIAY
STA.CH

......

--

,.~.69c

...

ltlO. lfET. W

PLASTIC FOOD ITORAOE ~

tft'AY MATE

NRTABLI
IMALL IIAIITS
OROANIZIR

REASON #12: The changing tax laws.
The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 affects every
taxpayer, regardless of Income. Your H&amp;R Block tax preparer can show you how the new tax law helps you save
money on 'your 1981 taxes, and point out changes that
could affect your taxes in 1982.

BOWL :
SIT

·-~It#. -:- ~369

... $109

'"

1·plnt

REO. lilT. 11.11

~f
IIIOICATIOM
OXY•IeD'IIIA

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Rf"Q. Rfr. 11.11

I

..•2··
~10.

.
....--•••••c•

DfiY IIOA111D

KAIIIIH

••••

MAIIUI'S

SftiSPlllll

17 reasons. One smart decision.

;::'1"

Mr. lUI

MG. MT. " ·"

SfUTIIICftGr

IIOO£aN I'IOBLIMS

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s..•...,. s.-.••·
sow uo laS$1(

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"""*'- ...

tlfll . .. , . ... ' "
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WE'RE tOGETHER TO_
SERVE YOU BEnER

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
AGENTS:

IILLmE
RAZOR

~OIL

~

10

(Sale Ends Wed., Jan.,27 ONE WEEK LEFT)

I

Mason, W. Va.

Thursday

10 Nil lAG

SIPER
• Manage Your
Budget
• Track .

IIT-.TI

IIIWAII D. CHILDS
11011 L IUWI
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sister's pearl
something
blue wasearrings,
a garter ofand
old I"
lace belonging to the bride's godmother, the laie Katherine (Sis)
Wise. .
Serving . as maid of honor was .
Angela Sisson , Pomeroy. BridesIllllids were Donna Sees, Columbus, 1
and Niese! DuVall, Reedsville .
·
Their matching gowns were ·
fashioned by a tee strap underlay of.

:daY season.

• The Brownies made Christmas
'tree ornmaments and decorated a
for the nursery clasS at the En,terpme· United Methodist Church.
frhey also made up fruit trays and
:.dellvel-ed them to shuUns · of the
\church
r
. caroling to them at the
,same time.
: Later they enjoyed a Christmas
!party at the home ol Mrs. Judy
:Humphreys. 1be Brownies ex•changed gifts and sang carols.
:Each girl received a gift and a treat
!trom the leaders. Refreshments of
:Chrlslmas cookies, chips, popcorn
, and punch were served.
~ Attending were Shelley Smith,
•Mandy EbUn, Yvette Young, Aniy ·
: Rouse, Missy Leach, Aniy Warth,
•, Heather Singer, Tracy EbUn, Tara
fHumphreys, Carrie Bartels, Amy ·
r Whaley, Stacy YoWJg, Pam Wha- .
ley, Mrs. Judy Hun\phreys, Mrs. ,
Jennifer Warth, and Mrs. Janet
Simpson, leaders.
·
~ For January, the troop will up. date Its first aid klt. Plans are also ·
~ beiDa made for vtalts to the fire department and the library.
·

Mountaineer Power Plant in New
Haven, W. Va.

~a~HJ/a ~Ut6

Complete

BATTERY

~~~~=~~~~~~

,

MIDDLEPORT - Group II of
Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church will meet at
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Dwight Wallace. Mrs.
Robert Woodward will be cohostess. Devotions will be given
by Mrs. Donald Lowery.

WITH ANEW

both or either school after Its
Investigation.
At first; Knight refused to comment on the exchanges he had with
officials, Taylor or Eldon Miller,
Ohio State's coach.
But on his Sunday television show
(WI'VN-TV), Knight said: "From
the Ohio State coaching staff or anything else, there wasn't even the
slightest concern for Jimmy Thomas, which, I think, Is something to.
be expected from that operation."
1be Indiana coach sent an assistant, Kahn Smith, to Columbus.
Ohio, Monday with tape from India·
napolls station WTl'V for media
members to View the foul . That
came after Knight read where Taylor said the Indiana coach swore at
him, saying, "He (Knight) started
screaming at me andcaUed me everything In the bOOk."
Knight says the only thing herecalls saytng was: wThere's no excuse for something Ilke that, get
him the hell out of here.' That's the
only comment I made, and I didn't
say It directly to the kid."

Ohio

Social Calendar
Tuesday

ON

Protect your investment ..
•
get ·collision 'coverage

bers or prospective 111cm~rs are en-

NORTH

Is Your
Car FuUy
Insured?

•

Class ·A rattngs

Knight, Hindman
take cases to
league officials
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - lndi·
ana Coach· Bobby Knight and Ohio
State Athletic Director Hugh Hindman have taken their cases In a
basketball game squabble betwl'l'n
the two rivals to the Big'fen Conference office.
· Herman Rohrig, supervisor of
Big Ten officials, confirmed Monday lhat he has heard from both
schools after the game In Bloomington, Ind. , Saturday, won by the
Hoosiers 66-61.
1be center of the controversy Is a
flagrant foul called on Ohio State
guard Troy Taylor against India·
na's Jim Thomas with 11 seconds
M&gt;malnlng In the game.
Thomas, a junior from Fort
Lauderdale. Fla.. was fouled ·by
TayiQr, a freshman from Canton,
Ohio, as the Hoosier drove for a
layup. Team olflclals said Thomas
suffered a sprained wrist and a cut
face. He was removed from the
game.
Jeff Elliott. a Big Ten olflclal,
said Rohrlg will review videotape
or movies of the game. "Herm will
ml'l't with ·(Commissioner) Wayne
Duke, and we would determine If
we want to go any further than that.
Each case Is handled separately,"
Elliott said Monday. ,
Elliott did not Indicate whether
the conference office would take
any dlscipUnary action against

lavender covered by chiffon flowed
overlay . Long sleeves were designed
with tie cuffs. They carried loose fan
arrangements of roses and car·
nations of lavender and white, with a
fan ~~I for streiuners.
·
David Weber of ReedsviUe was
best man. The groomsmen were Tim
Baum, Chester ; Randy Young,
Pomeroy; Donald Stivers, Middleport, and William P . Ault of
Pomeroy.
They wore matchiTheir boutonnieres were white carnations. The
groom's and father's boutonnieres
·
. were of lavender roses.
For her daughter's wedding. Mrs.
Ault wore a .formal gown of eelery
green. The groom's mother wore a
formal gown of turquoise blue.

•

has voted wuiard and St.John Into
the top sp&lt;its all three Wl'l'ks the
1982 ratings have been conducted.
In Class AAA, Warren Western
Reserve was fourth, Dayton Meadowdale ftfth, Lorain J&lt;lng sixth, AJ.
llance seventh, Warren Howland
eighth, Akron Centrai-Hower111nth
and Lad! Cloverleaf lOth.
In Class AA, Napoleon ranked
fourth, Wheelersburg fifth, Dayton
Roth sixth, Warsaw River VIew
seventh, Minerva eighth, Hamilton

PonHH'O)'-'Middl.port,

Meigs County couple exchanges wedding vows in Middleport church

had dressed up as a hotel doorman
Sunday. night, offering to help arrivIng 49er players with their baggag.., but Monday, Gregg put an
unscheduled mi'I'Ung with the media ott-limits for his team.
Shortly after the Bengals arrived
at their hotel headquarters, Gregg
admitted that the extra attention
that surrounds Super Bowl teams .
wasn't one of his favorite things.

.Tornadoes advance to fourth
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Columbus Northland, WUlard and
Delphos St.John all came through
with victories last week to protect
their leads In 1be Associated Press'
Ohio boys high school basketball
ra tlngs today.
Northland, the leader In Class
· AAA for the second straight week,
beat Columbus Walnut Ridge 71-43
a nd Columbus East 89-58 to run Its
record to 11-0.
1be VIkings earned 286 points In

Tu.rdmy, January 19, 1982

1110. lflr. , ,

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DUTTON DRUG CO.
,

·, "1

MIIJIH I I' OJ! I

AND

•
r

Ott

�·,

n. Daily Sentinel
Announcements

Pap•

T~ uday, January 19, 1982 ~

a~

Helen ·Help Us

POMEROY- NIDe men of the
Rock Sprtngs United Methodllt
Church who put a new root on the
church last fall were honored at a
dlnuer there recenUy.
In the hooOred group.were BDf ·
Radford, RDWn Radford, George
Slason, Wendell Jet!en, Bob Sloan,
Harold BlacbtDn, A very GoesJeln,
Lollllle Darst, and Thor Carsey. A
candlellaht service followed the re-

By HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN:
I feel 30. I look 80. I can't afford
plastic surgery. Besides, it wouldn't
help the crinkly skin un my lega and
arms - and my shape alill aDowa .
shorts and sleeveless blouses.
If they' can send men up in space,
.why oh why can',! they invent a stlnshrinking cream that elimi~ ·
. wrinkles and crepe? I've tried .
evecything. Nothing · helps.
WRINKLED WINNIE
DEAR WINNIE:
If onjy someone would ... !
Come on, you scientists out there:
work a little .)larder on thai elusive
fountain'. (or cream) of youth!
Meanwhile, I like thla poem written by my friend, Beth Tigner:
I gaze in the mirror and what do I
' see?
That tired, drawn countenance
belongs not to me.
I'm not one to complain, but this
seems a disgrace: It looks like my
outlook will outive my face! - Helen

driver's license to caah a penonal have dinner together.
check : If the licenae "- been stolen, · I swear it wasn't planned ·or exthe piWellter, hit with an unex- pected, bill when he brought me·
pected questioii, may not remember . home - he stayed the night. The
the dille Ull the fi'GI'It of the card. next moniing we agreed it must
He'U give hil own birthdale inllead, have ~n the wine, and it woul&lt;!
and the alert clerk could catch i
never happen aga.in. We don't want •
thief.
an affair. We feel terribly guilty. We ,
Also, in many states, the birthdate truly do love our ""tes and this, we :
· Is uaed In determining the expiration know; wasami.stake.
·
:
I
date ofUie Ucenae. It'a good business
I
practice to auure vaUdlty of ldenWl' haven't met as couples since, •
Uflcatioo. ·
and I'm wondering if we can ever :
As a fonner bank teller, I always get back to the old friendship. should :
chedted and noted birthdates and that one night break up our terrific ;
:
e;q~iratiOIJ .dates on ID cards. This foursome? - NEVER AGAIN!
tsn't an "invasion of privacy," as DF)ARN.A. :
I
your corresp~~ndP:IL cl:~i:ne•t. h•rt
If your signature says it for both '
proCectlon fer the cunsumer 88 'o"~il yoil' and Ted, then file this one ;
a.s the retailer and banker. - ·mistake under ~~finished business,' ' ~
H.A.M.
and get on with your terrific four- :
some. ·
,
DEAR HElEN:
It won't be diffictilt when you ad- ;
Ted and I have been good buddies- mit. that wine and propinquity sim- l
for years. Ever since achool days he ply blurred tbe borderlines of frien- •
:
wulike the brother I never had. AI· dship. _.:. H.
I
ter we both married, the four of us
,
'
continued as beat friends .
·
'
DEAR HELEN:·
Lillo"! week when Ted's wife Patty
Got a problem? An adult subject :
I'd like to ex!lllin the reasou for waa visiting her parents. and my for discussion? You can talk il over :
a.J&lt;ing the birthdate when a Alvin left on a business trip, it ' in ht!r column if you Write to Helen ;
L"Witomer presents his or her seemed only natural that Ted and I Butte!, care of this newspaper.

cqgnltlon dlru!er.

POMEROY- Sue Zirkle Who re- .
·sides at 125 Peacock Ave. lll Pome-

roy wm start a knlttiDg clus for

beglnnerl at her home on.Wedne&amp;-

.~Y afternoons, 12: iiO p.m. 1be serll!lol fOW' to llxclaases.la ~.Each
pei'IOII enro11ec;1 wm he iaught an
buiC atttches using scrap natel'lals
bUt ·wm IIIIo complete one proJect.
FOl' further lllformatton on the
cla a, residents may call Mrs.

Zirkle.
The Salem Township Trustees
have set the last Monday · of each
month at 10 a.m. for their regular
meetings at the fire hall .. The fil'l!t
meeting will be held on Jan. 2:'&gt; at 10

un.
Nora Eason a)lll DOuglas Little
have been named to the Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation
replacing M~1ming . Webster and
Maxine Goeglein whbse terms have
expired. New president of the board
is Jeannette Thomas of Middleport:
Helen Dorst, Tuppers Plains, is a
gl'llduate of the recent class of
residents completing a paramedical
course conducted at Veterans
Memorial Hospital by Sharon
Dailey, R.N.

I

.

WINNER - Daisy Taylor, Pomeroy, was the wluner of the $500
diamond ring given away by the Clark Jewelry Stun, Pomeroy, u a part
of its holiday promotional program. Joe Clark ill pietured presenting the
ring lo the wii!Der.

Cancer Answerline
A re~ular feature (lrepart~d by the
American Cancer Society. to he Ip
save your life.fr·miH:aneer.
QUESTION: I have chronic constipation. Is this a sjgn of cancer'
ANSWERiine: Constipation has
many csuses ,and, allhou~h il could
renect l~e presence of a cancer obstruction in one's bowel, the ch'ances
are that cancer is not the e8use.
However, any prolon ~cd change in
bowel habits such ·Ill! cons\ipalion.
diarrht!a, bloody stool. etc. should be
b110ughl tillhe alieni ion of your ,dlll•tor. Should cancer be present, prom·
pi allemption may save your life.
QUESTION: Is !hi! cause of b,ladticr cancer known?
ANSWERJine: Research shows
dearly that · enviromnt~nlal agents
al'll a leading cause of bladder cancer. Ont! spe~ific eausative a~ent is

aniline dye used in the rubber and
!'able industries. A compound used
;n the dvt'lllakin~ prlll't!SS has also
lll"n fo~n~ to be carcinoAenic. ln addition. sew•·al other chemicals of
lht• a1·oonalic hydrocarbon group
hav" been found to be hanoifullo the
bladd.,r. The bladder is a storage
orJ,!an for urine. 1f the chemi ca ls
have abllorced , the organ is exposed
to loom fo~ lpng periods of lime. An
assocalion between s1noking and
bladder cancer has also been
demonstrated in several shidics.
S..ccharin: the artificial sweetener.
has been found to cause cance1· in
animals. and. although the animal

QUESTION : Docs il maller wh•l
l)Ospilal I ~ " lo for cancer treatm ent ~

ANSWERiine : Yes. All hospilals
do not have adt..'quale fa cilities or
}lCI'SOnnel to handle the hi ~ hly
SllCL'ialized procedures for effective
therapy of all forms of lhc di sca~e .
The hospital to which you go tnusl
have an operating room, access to a
laboratory of micro sc opit•
examination and diagnosis of tissue,

What's

Cooking?
By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County Exteosion
Home Economist

It's been snowing for days and you
can't gel out. All you have qn hand
for dinner is a can of tuna, a lillie
cheese and several eggs. How can
you stretch these items to serve your
family?
Assuming that you have milk
(canned, fresh or dry) and some
flour and a few other staples you can
whip up a delicious tuna-noodle
casserole. ·First you need to make
your own noodles. If you've never
done this before, you're really
missing a treat. II isn't hard at all.
doses w~n· vm·y high, this cv itlcnct. •· This recipe has a little oil in it which
l'annol be ignored. The Alnel·iean makes the dough easier Lo handle.
Cancer Society thcrerore 1"\!l'OIIl· Noodles are good either thin or a little chunky.
ll)t•nda caution Hlld modl'J'alion in
tl1c ust~ of artificial sweeteners .

Small.Divestment, large
return~ Selttinel Want Ads

Homemade Noodles
11/3 cups flour

and x-ray equipment suitable for
diagnosis and treatment. II must be
slaffed by physidans who · are
trained to make effective use of
these fa cilities. Your physician,
local medical sOciety, .or the local
Unit of the American CaOJccr Soj:iely
know which hospitals in you1· area
qualify in these respects.
For further information call the
Meigs County unit of the American
Callc't!r Society al992-7ii31.

providing funds for books at the

Pdmeroy ·Library Is an on-going
project Of the Chapter with the goal
being to provide a section of
biographical or historical books for
those on the intennedlate level.
Plans were made for presenting a
flag to a local )!irl scout troop and
also one for the new Meigs Community School for the retarded once
It II cOmpleted. The DAR also
agreed . to donate a tree comniemoratinR the 250th aMiversary
of George Wa!lbington for the land·
seaping at the schoo).
Peggy Milhoan was welcomed 88 a
new member of the chapter. The
project of collecting games, puzzles,
clothes , 1nagazines, and

miscellaneous items for the •
Veterans AdminislratiOil ijospital al
Chillicothe was dikcussed. Wed- I
neads:y Mrs. Clarence Struble aiul ;
Mrs. Ingels will take the material to :
Chillic;othe.
.
;
Present at the meeting to receive ;
medals for placing first and se.;ond, ,
respectively, in the American :
History essay contest were Larissa :
Long, daugliter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy ;
Long of near Chester, and Elizabeth :
Smith, daughter of .Mr. and Mrs. ;
Darrell Smith, Racine. The other 34 •
students who entered the contest will'"
ret:eive certificates from lhe chap- '
. ter. The entries were judged by Mrs. ;
Maxine Philson, Mrs. Ellen Bell, ;
and Mrs. Carl DeWeese.

gr~up

to

''Beautiful, cus. lom
Buiit Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or

th

.

Address:
Pinnell St. Ripley, W. Va.
Office Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
By Appointment Only

949-2160 .

No sunday Calls
3 1111c

CUSTOM '
' WELDING

January ZO, 1982
Although I!Oille of your goals may appear to be out of reach or have
too many obstacles to overcome, if you continue to work diligently
towards them this coming year, you'll gradually inch your way forwatd and reach your mark.
AQUARIUS (Jau. ZO.Feb. 18) Some people only get confused when
they get a lot of input from others, but not you. A multitude of ideas
. freshens and revitalizes your outlook.
PISCES (Feb. -.March !I) Even if bold lli('Rsures are called for,
you're,not likely to be deterred today from the COUI'I!e you sel for yourself. If you team up, be sure It's with one who's equally fearless.
ARIES (Mardi !l•April It) Because you find everyone and
everything you encounter today exciting, the exainple yoil'll set for
those who are in your company is electrifying and inspiring.
TAURUS (Aprll,..May It) When another needs assistance today,
you'll be the flrat to volunteer to help out. This attitude will bring you a
bonus you didn't seek.
·
GEMINI (May %1..Jw 20) It Isn't likely anybody will be sitting
around wondering what to do, when you're on the scene. You're
ch&amp;J'lllld with energy today and will keep everyone hopping.
CANCER (Jane Zl..J11ly !%) Activities Involving domestic proJects
will afford you the greateat pleaaurable ouUeta today. You'll enJoy
doing tblnlll for your home and family.
UlO (July ZS.Aag. !%) Your Interests are likely to be directed
more toward thillf!ll of a fun and social nature today. You'll even turn
duUful obligations into a game.
· VIRGO (Aq..za.Bept. !Zt You're a hard worker for those you love
today, and wm try extra-hard to g(ve them what they desire, whether
their needs be material or emotional.
·
LIBRA (Sept. ZS.OCI. %3) If you feel your Ideas are better than
those .of yoiar &amp;IIOCiates, you won't be Umid today about bypas.'ling
theln, yet you'll do so without offending them.
liOORPIO (Oel. J+Nav. !%) There II an Inner resolve in you today
to attempt to do what'a necessary to enhance your aecurity. ,You'll
quietly, but lntenlely, push toward your goal.
SAGMAIUVII (Nov. IS-Dee. 11) It'D be Important to be with per- who me doera today, 10 It'• belt that you seek out thole who have
: a hlltGr)' of doUig, and fGregO rniJI8Ilng with unfamiliar groope.
CAPIUOORN (Del!. JWaa. lJ) By not ralllllg attenUun too much ·
10 yoanelf you'D wiNiy handle ccmpetltlon today. AI you bei:Gme I• ·
vl.tible, OCIImlet down their defelllel.
.
·

C.· R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

J. R. PARSONS

J·

heating .

Antenna Installation

~

9·30·tlc

REESE~·:,·
TRENCHIN(i
SERVICE·

Meigs' first

Water·Sewer·Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush .Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. :U7-7560
H ·lllc

W11ntttl
1J-In5UrlftCt
14-llusintl' Trt lnlni
1So-Scfloolllnltrut'fkln
1._R.dio. TV,
&amp; CB Rtp.-ir
11-Wtnttd To Do
12- SIIuo~tlan

I FiNANCIAL

Ohio

21 -:-luslntU
., OJ190rlunUy
U - Money lo Loin
2l- Pr oftulan•t
StrviCtl
' ' - Hom•• tor s~11
U - Moblt• Ho"-"
lor S11it
3 J- Fo~rm • tor Ule

34- lulintn lu ildint •

SERVICE

U - LOI I &amp; AUIIfll

36- Aelll Estate W!lnled

n-• ••nors

Call Ken Young
For Fast Serv ice

&lt;Pomeroy scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk
auto bodies, T•p .prices
paid for aut~ bodies,
scrap iron and metals.
1 mile
west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.
33.
Mon.· Fri.8:l0 lo 4:00
Ph. 992-65'4
1-7·1 mo.

•
•
•
•

.w..

AlLMAI( U
h•u

• or.,(!n
•RAnees
•DI,ponh
• DllhW.UI'Itrs

Ph. 992-7201

5·21-tfc

SALES &amp; SERVICE

W. Mtd 1 saln oritnt1d man or

Dealer
2~--~~~
n~M
~•~m
~o~r~ia~m
~---

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

lo loolo1
-

'"'""'1 fJf

o..., E.

olio ,..... ..., 110. " ·

t 1-F•rm Eiqu!Pmtnt
t 2-W•nted tc Buy
Sa l•

three

u - Ht"t &amp; Gr1 in
U - htcl &amp; F ~ rtlllrer

home,

electric

Grillflrs.

•Pritltld Palllm 4602; Mitses
Silts 8. 10, 12. 14, 16, II. Size
12 (bull 34) 1111n t II Jllds
60-incil flllric.

.......... ,...
=--=.....

.

SUSIIr-" ...... MI*

•• as ... •

.t9l

. ,·n . DallY s.l.iiiaill

..

10 ... 17
..1L 1'11111

'

,,.

.

'

•I'll""'
•llllllrf CllartJIB

-Ono Lot- •
•"""""'"'
-Ono
Lol-

· - Slwo

•Truck TIIJII. All Slm
•f'ICIO W!tnclltt

eGIIII-

•Taor-

THIS IS APAIITIAlliST OF
ITEMS TO BE SOLO ALL
SUBJECT TO PlliOR SAL£.

•l*' Slwl
•EioclrlcaiTopo

•Troullll LIQIIII
•tlclft Colllrl ••

-

All Merclalnd!M GUiflnllld

. _JE_: _,Of~

AUCTIOIIEEt 110R .Ill

, For bulk deliver y of
gasoline, heat ing oil and'
·diesel fuet. Ce ll Landmark,

9'17 2181 . Pomeroy, Oh.

11!1 bath . t otal
on 1 acre on
Lim a
Rd .

Gun Shoot Raci ne Gun
Club. Every Su n. starti ng
a t 1 p.m . Factory c hok ~ '·

$32,000.00.
NEW LISTING - MIDDL E PORT Lovely
two story hom e, one
block from river, J
bedrooms, l iving room ,

.

72- Trucks lclr S. lt
7J-Y•nt &amp;• W. O.
74- Motorc.,C'Ie '
7i-&amp;~Jo~h&amp; Motor s
76-Auto Po~ rll &amp;
Acnuorl"
17- Auto Rt pll r

guns onl y .

.Racine Fire. Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoo!, Sa t. nl ghls ·
6:30p.m.• Bashon. Faelorv ·
choke 12 gauge shotgun . · ' '

roo m , l amil y
la rge k itc t,en,
g;trage · on nice· corn er

dininq

roo m ,

Equ ipm ent

IOI. $35,000 ,
LINCOLN HILL • POM E ROY

I I- H0 mt tmprove m enh
11- Piumbingl Hea ting
n - E•CIVI I Int

Beautiful t en room
home on nice priva te
lot . Tlli !:l qu alily built
home tenfures equipped

..- E it(lriCII &amp;

Relrittrttlon
IS- General Haul ing
16-M.H. Rep•lr

Flea
M ar k et.
Open ing . 1 days a

·

kitche n wi th birch
cabinet's, li vi ng room
with

d ining

f i r epla ce,

room , f.1 mily room . 5
bedrooms, 21f:z baths,
uti 1ity room . $75.000.00.
2 acr'es

ACREAGE with ran c h

style 3
bedroom home. Large
li vi ng roo m, dinin g

room.

full

N ew .,

week .
The Heart of Middleport. :ZO '•
N. 2nd St. formerly M artln •l
General Store. 997-6370.

----·---tax se rv i ce.

Incom e

Feder al and sta te income
tax forms, quarterly repor:
ts, and W·2 form s will be
done by ap pointment . See
Wanda E bl in, .41000 Laurel '

Cli ff Rd .. Pomeroy. 9'12· ··
2777.

-- -·-· - -· ----.

basement .

ca rport . storage bldQ .
Ohio Power all electric .
$45,000.
.

Phon•------------

1

)Wanted
)For Sate
)Announcement
)For Rent
1

dows. Price was $38.500.

kitcrien, modern
bath. lots of good car·
peling, porches . and
patio. Out of all 1100&lt;11.
Only 132.500.
BARGAIN - 5 room '
frame home with bath, 1
all city utilities, large
.buement tor the 1
and 3 lot$. Just

.. nice

E. MalnBII
POMEROY,O.
992-2259

NEW LISTING - Mid·
deleporl

Excellent

-

n c i ~hborhood,

J

bedroom hom e with
chain li nk fence in rea r.
Lots of c loset space,
F . A.
gas
hea l .
Re m odeled throughout .
AsSume loan. $29,900.00.

1. - - - - - 2. - - - - - - 3. - - - - - - 4, _ _ _ _ __

5. _ _ _ _ __
6. _ _ _ _ __

7. _ _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ _ __

9. - - - ' - - - -

Mlnature shep herd and
puppies. Ca ll367-0687.

4

Three Killens. 304·576·2861 .
PUPPI ES. part Beogle, ;
.
304-882·2981.

--

DARK brown, 3 week old

mice. Ca\1675-1353.

17.
18.
19.
20.
21.
22. - - - - - 23. - - - - - - 24. -------- - 25. - - - - - - 26. - - - - - - '27. - - - - - 28. - - - - - 31 .
3'2.

15. - - - - - -

3.4. - - - - - --

2'1. - -- - - -

30. - - --.---

------

33. ----,--,---..j

35. - - - - - -

Mall This Coupon with RemiHance
Tile Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oil. 4mt

!·

, '- - ~ oil and Found
SI,OOO REI'/ARO for return
of Man 's Gold Ring . :

li vin g room , front and
rear
por ches, co a l
stoker fu r na ce . Nice
lar ge lOt. Good place f or
c hildr en to pl ay

B. Woo&lt;J a patient of Holzer
Medica l Center. Cont-.c;t
Mrs. Wood room 515 ~
Hotzers al4ol6·.5668,

Mi ssi ng fr om Dr . Vernon

$26,700.00.

10. - - - - - 11 .
12. - - - - - 13. - - - - - - 14. - - ' - - - - - 16. --~---

4
Gtveawa
ANY PrR SON who ha~ ·
anything to oive awey and
does nol otter or allempl to
offer an y other thing fOr
sale may pl t~ce an ad in th is
colum l') . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

POMEROY - A nea l 3
home with new
roof , full ba sement,
garge, dining room ,

bedroom

This Week Only SJO.OOO.
,MIDDLEPORT
Automatic hoi water
heat 1gas fired) , Iorge
carpeted living, 3
b edrooms. insulated.
lull basement, garage
on
.and lull

'! ~~:.::~N~3:ii~be~ drooms•.

GIT
AmiiiOI

NEW LISTING
Syracuse - 3·5 bedroom
hOme on 200'x 100' lot.
l lh story frame with
FA N.G. heal. Ca r·
p e t i ng .
Garag e .
$20,500.00.

Estate - General

Phone
1-(' 11 )·992-3325
. NEAR POMEROY Level lot, woodburner. 3
bedrooms, carpeting. 2
po,rches. basement,
·storm doors and win·

I

f

I·

Addr•••---------

VIRGIL I. 511.
· 2U E. 2nd St.

6·1n .. 8-ln. &amp; IO·In .

ell.lttory
-"' Clllilt
eAr" and Wtldl119 HOMS

New

• TRANSPORTATION

Nom•~-------- ~

,. ..... , . ., "'' boll;
011, ......... ,. ..... rill!
51111! ...... ., •• wilt,
dlil4rtto, filii~ 1 M -

Shop Tools &amp;
Power Tools •
Farm Suppllta . Air Toola

•o:

..
•

extra cash

NEW LISTING - NICe
bedroom ranch

U - LI VIIIOC'k

I

....,.,
-.,...-,..,.,...

offer fOf sale at public auction, a
large\ Hlectlon of new, brand name heavv duty lnduttrlal toolt. ]'nere will be many jOO.Iott told, to
all dealers, wholeaalera and aalvage buyers be
sure to atlend. Depending on lhe loaders at o~.:~r
warehouse, then truckl,lhotJid contain lltorled
quantities or the rollowlng:

lllirb . jumperrt u a ~~~~~~­
pinafore. Wllip rt up in a mornint
of -denim, poiislled c:otton,
·01aon blends. Easr!

bring 10u

REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr . ·
Broker
OFFIC E 742-2003

NOnCE: We will

-

O.S~

Real Estate --' General

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

results. Money not refundable.

111-0tllod_al,..,
w ... ill how ,.. dllll,
To - , . . coold oot ..,

Ae111

,WRAP . it
SIJ!e or -

Valley

Classified Ads

Write vour own ad' oncl order bY matt with this
c011pon. Concet your ad by phone when vou get

Alilt!" Ifill, I lilac~ - •·
It •• It IIIII lrilh., • illll.

ntURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 7:00 P.M.
AntENS COUNTY JR. FAIR BLDG.
FAIRGROUNDS
AntENS, OHIO

el'loncn &amp; C~MI Sols
•Power Hack S..s
• Mlny Olllor Mllcolllnoouo
lilmt
'

·s pr ing

Shooting Match every
Saturday lPM Gal!ta Co.
·coon
c lub . Kriner ·
SandhOIIow Rd .

,It •• Iowa

n - for hll or Tnc:te

Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

New Holland, Bush Hot
Farm Equipment

•Honcl TOOio et.Jr110 Drill
Pfn111
•Truck JackS

•

Tradi ng Co ., Spri ng Valley ·
Plaza. 446-8025.

ti!WI 111d dtterminin&amp; ,., l)lr·
lOIII UICCts:S. Wtitl
Mvr~thf ,

obleC'fionll . The Publilher will not t:HI rl!lpomlble for mare than on.
incorrtct in11r1lon .

mo.

IUCTI
..... NEW TOOLS-

W""'lltt
•Sockll Sets, All Sl.1 n
•Huvy Ou~ Powtr C..blt
•Tifl &amp; Olo Solo
eExt'n C«tts

pli es.

"' poid loliM&lt;I~IoiJ. Mull Ito
upablt of lfllll~!'l ,our own

The Publi sher rut rYII tnt r lthl to tdlt or rtJ I(I •nv • ds deemed

Of .... " " " - ., Ill.

eOpon EIMI &amp; b Encl

"""" ldftrtlllna spocialtr H1orl·

•

li ne ot Muzz le ..
Loading Gu ns and S~p- ..

communlt,. Tlte Tta. 0. lllu•piiJ
Co., i1 a p-r In "" adft~ilina
•iltl• - slnu Ill&amp; Commllslons

Ttll! S.ntlnl!l .

Ph. 992-SS87

Authorized John Deer,

eAtr COI'npfnsors
•Shop V"""""

Complete

m111t to firms within tftt busiltU

w ........... 11M ull,

•Jto Slws eSanGtrs

woman to prtlllt our ttchniM
..,.,..... bull- lifll 111d ,..

Ca ll ..

742· 3171

U.S. Rl. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio

ei\ir ltr'l!*l Wrenches. 1/ 8,
'II • ., oncl 1lr&lt;n.
•HN'I'f Duly ~· ln . and 6·1n. e1mpac1 Socket Seta, All Slzn
Vises
• Body S""' AI• TOOis
e311 and ¥t Inch DriHs
eAtr Orllts
1
eOJlll BHs. High SpMd
eBocty Gllndlfs eFioor Jacks

, Georges Creek Rd.
446·0794 ..

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Phone 742·3092
Cheryl

I !Ill.

elilrg~Btnch

~ '

.. • •

machi ne r epai r , parfs, and
Pick up an d ·
supplies.
dellvery , Davis V acuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

llf.

P.O. los 31!, Rod

•

Announcements
SWE EPE R and sewi ng ,

llltisloa campo., Ilion ., .,.
portunltr tor on i1141111lrloos self·
s111111 tor full or IIIII liNo won.

51 - HaUit holcl Qoacll
n -- cB, TV, Rldlo Equl pmtnt
5:1-- Antloud
SC-MIIC. Mtrcfl•ndllt
SS -- Bulldlng Supptlu
M- Pt h for S1t•
17-- MutiCIIInttrumtnt
H - frulll I Vttt tabttt

• J

.
KINGSBURY ,----------------------·-.(,(
I
Le mle y, Assoc.
&amp; ACCESS. II
Phone
Curb
Inflation
I
R!. 124
I
IIL..- - - - --1
Minersville, Oh.
- ..

• BOGGS

AlsO Wood Splitter
For Rent

miiUfiCtUfll

••• "

3

h•••
caltn-ar
lftd JpKialty ,

•Natlai.anJ

Up to IS words ... on • da y ln'lrlion ................ , .
. . U.OO
Up to 11 ward • ... lhreed•y ln•ertlon . . .
. ...... i4 .00
up to 11 woa rdt ... ,,. a•ytlnl t rtlon . . . . . . .
, ... , l .. J7 .00
( Aver•v• 4 wor d1 per line)
MOCile Homt u ltt •nd Yard ••111 an .ltcepJecl only wl! l'l C'UI'I
with ord•r. U ttnl chllrit lor ld1 ct rr yl11t Bo ~ Number in Can oj

Anything for your
Mobile Home.

Ma son County

SALES AGENT
WANTED

Rates and Other. Information

MOBILE
-HOME
PARTS

, Licensed &amp; Bohded

Mixed Hardwoods

95Ht

.,
,~

992-2156

•

17- Upltallll!r"t

aHot~•t•r TAnh

• DurripTrutk

Delivery Available
or You Pick UD

Oea~llnes
MoncAv ~ : 00 on SltUrdav
Tuild• 'f thru Fr lclol't 2:00 .. .M.
the dn btl ore publtut lon
S.unda.,2 :00 P.M. Frid ay

PARTS AND S.ER VICE

B•ckhoe
Excavating
Sepllc Systt'I'S
Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines

FIREWOOD

Want-Ad Advertising

.,

-· ...................... . . . .

•MERCHANDISE

71 - Co~ mpi ne

.·'

675-1333

41 - Houstllo, R~nt
42- MobU• Homes
tor Rent
44-A p.utmtnlt torR Ent
IS--F urnldltd Aocm s
U - Sp•u lor Rltfll
41- W•n'-d to Rent
41--Equlpm•nt for R ~ nl
4f- Por L••n

.

•(
••'

In Meigs County

Gallia County
In

IRENTALS '

11 --.t.utot lor hit

Pomeroy

446-2342

PRICED RIGHT
CALL

SERVICES

985-3561

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

John Wise
(614) 742-2131
David Price
(614) 992-3556
1-13·1 mo. pd.

COrrection

ti - Hetp W•nt.cl

eiiEALE5TATE

Call742-3195

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP -

(Free Estimates)
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

a EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Let George Miller
check your present
electrical system .
Residential
&amp; Commercial

- Rooflnt •nd tuner work

-COflcrete work
- Piumbint •nd
eledriul work

7- hrdS•It
t-Public Ute
I AuctiOI'I
t-Wo~nted ·tt Bu.,

PH. 992-5663

wiring needs.

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282
1-3·1mo.

- Actdonl •nd rtmlldtlin9

.. ·LCsUnd Found

8" South Third

For all · your

ll!llsive remQdeling.
• Electrical work
• Roofing Work

2-ln Mlmorlarn
)-Announcem•ntt
4-0iv .. w•y
5- H•PP't.Adl

• Gas &amp; Electric
• Cutting
• Brazing
• 20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates
Middlepo~t..

In

AD INFORMAnON

•ANNOUNCEMENTS

WELDING SHOP
. REPAIR WO-RK

MIUER t::.U\11
.ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
SERVICE
New Honies- ::_ ex -

614-992-2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
.H eating Oil.

,

D&amp;D

Rl.l, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·1Hfc

POMEROY
LANDMARK

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

and all

fo 6

_

915-Chester
lO-Portland
t•7-Let~ut Falls
949- Roclne
742- Rutland
667- Coolvllle

Mason Co., w. Va .
Area Cocle 304
67S- Pt. Pleasa nt
451- Leon
576- Apple G.ro• e
713- Ma $on
882- New Haven
695- Letar1
9l7- Buttalo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

CALL:

Or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

,.

614
992- Mlddleporl

614

446- Galllpolls
:U7-Cheshlre
381-Vinlon
245-RioGrande
256- Guyon Dlsl.
643- Arabla DISI.

PHONE 992-2156

Ph.949-2160 or 949-2482
7-5·tlc

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

14 Years E xperience

" OUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Pomeroy, Ohio

W~T

TOM HOSKINS

buildings 24x36.
Insulated Dog House.s

8·20·11c

House ca lis and shop
serwice available.
1-3·1 mo.

frem 4

wood

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

All makes and moclels

·-·

.,

Sires

Secretarv

1-c•rd of Th•nt'

Utility Buildings

plumbing, electric, and

APPLIANCE
Chester, Ohici .
PH. 985-4269 or
. 985...382

• Free e5timates
elO Yrs. experience

Sires start from JOx24 "

appliances,
custom
Uthrooms, remodeling,

S&amp;WJV
and

• Remodeling

BUILDINGS

the transaction of
business as may
om e betore said
C
Paul E. Kloes,

112) 76' I 1l 11 . 17, 19, 4tc

OHIO VAU.EY
ROOANG

ALL STEEL

Custom kitchens and

H -1 mo. pd.

holds .meeting

Sycamore st.

And Home Miintenance
• Roofing of all types
•Siding

o'

•

.

9·2Hfc

30

Reports 011 holiday remembrances wards · delivered the holiday 'made by IIi'.! sixth gradel'l! in the
for shut-ins and the therapy arrangements to lhe shut-ins. Thank therapy class conducted by Marjorie
program with the sixth graders at you notes were .read from Ethel Bishop, Margaret Johnson, Janet
_the Rutland Elementscy School Taylor, Rosalie Ntchola, Fern Stans- Bolin and Judy Snowden.
were given al a recent meeting of · bury, Jessie Grueser, and Ether
'
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners Chapman.
Officel'l!' reports were given. Joan -·
held at the . home of Mrs. Judy
Stewart reported on the picnic table :
Snowden.
It was noted that christmas trees for the Rutland park and contacts ·
Marjorie Davjs and Margaret Edfrom natural materials had been wiil he made about purchasing_ one.
For roll 'call members named tht!ir
2eggs
favorite
Chrisbnas carol.
2 tablespoons water
A dinner al the Holiday . Inn :
1 teaspoon salt
preceded
the ineeling at the •
2 teaspoons oil
Michael David Gapers, son of Mr.
Snowden
residence.
Before the gift ;
Place the flour in a large bowl.
and Mrs. Thomas A. Gaspers, Route
exchange,
wrappings
were judged
Combine remaining ingredients.
I, Reedsville, was Meigs County's
Mrs.
Snowden
taking
first;
with
Add to nour. Mix thoroughly. Knead
first baby of 11182.
and
Mrs.
EdJoan
Fetty,
second,
for 10 minutes, adding flour if
Weighing seven pounds, seven
wards,
third.
necessary. Cover and chill for one
Olinces, Michael was bom at 2:14
hour or longer. Roll out until very
a.m. on Jan. I at st. J011eph Hospital
The traveling prize brought by
!hin, sprinkling the board and noodle
in Parkersburg. lie and his parents
Janet
Bolin was won by Ml'l!.
dough with flour ~nly when
received a nwnber of gifts from Big
Stewart.
Hostesses were Mrs. J olulnecessary. Lei dry about 30 1nlnules.
Bend merchants taking ·part in the
.
son,
Suzy
Carpenter, Marie BirchBefore it becomes brittle, roll up and
aMual Dally Sentinel first baby of
and
Mrs.
Fetty.
field,
cut into strips 1/4" wide for soup or
the year contest.
112" wide for casseroles. To cook,
Grandparents are Mrs. Loretta
add to lobi of boiling salted waler
Gaspers, · Route I, Reedsville, and
and cook until tender, about 8-10
Mr. .and Mrs. Delbert Hall, Houle I,
minutes. Add to soups or use in
Ora Hrumftleld sent a thank you
Litlle Hocking: Mrs. Garnet
casseroles. Makes eight cups cooked
note
to Bethel Ladles Aid for a fruit
Dequule, Rollte 1, Uttle HIICking, Is
noodles.
basket
received for Christmas, not
a great-grandmother. Michael hu
Ora
Gilmore
as previously
While the noodies are drying,
. two siltel'l!, Chlisty, 5, and Amanda,
prepare the sauce for the casserole:
reported.
4, and a brother, Jolm, 2.
Tuna Noodle Casserole
Noodles - one recipe homemade
· Public Notice
noodles or 4 cups cooked Doodles
Public Notice
Public Notice
· Public Notice
114 cup butter or margarine
FINANCIAL
License Tax Fund 1
To1al
7U.800.72
1981
999 15
Balance. Jan. 1.
E IUMncfltures
!/4cupflour
REPORTOF
Exp, Plus Bal ..
·
TOWNSHIPS
General F'und
16,214.16
l'ltl
3.527.16 Tolal
Dec. 31. 1981
4,146.17
2 cups milk (recOIItilituted dry,
For Fiscal YHr
· Receipts
Motor Vehicle
Cemetery Fund
Motor Vehicle
License Tox
fluid milk or canned milk )
Ending Doctmber
31, 1911
15.2M1.11
License
T a..:
13,38&lt;4.98 Balance. Jan. 1
Fund
l'ltl
1.524 78
I/4 teaspoon sa II
Lebanon Township
Gasllllne Tax·
Total Receipts . 13,38H8
Receipts
·
20.436.61 -Total Beginning
Fund
112 cup to I cup of grated cheese
Melts County
Generel Property
Balance
Plus
Road
and
Bridge
-'•••'-ed
h
Portland
O~lo
1
Tax - Real Esta te
2 ha '"""""' eggs, c upped
· January,,
1912
Receipts
16,912.14
Fund
.3,147 .02
and Trailer
Ex,.ndltures
3.1.&amp;5.82
19 ounce can luna, drained
I &lt;ertlly the following Cemetery Fund
(Gross)
2.644.~
Total Exp. Vegetables, if desired . X ·
reporl'lo Shirley
be corrKI.
·
, Federal Revenue
of LOis
75.00
A. Johnson
Sharing Fund
2.426.00
MiSC.
11,7.16.95 Sale
Feed
225.00
15.10
Malnl.
3.501 .16 Total
Melt butter or margarine in a
·
Township Clerk Misc . Fuf'ldS
Receipts
2.944.68
60,633.52 Grand Tolal Exp. .
. saucepan. Aud
·' nour
TtiNo. Total
Total Be q innin ~
med1um
s1ze
'141432105
Motor Vehicle
ll•linct
Balance Plus'
L icense Ta~
Dec. 31, 1"1
and blend to fonn a •..estn. rlemove
SUMMARY OF
Receipts
4..169 ol6
Funcl
3,951
,20
Fund
15.248.11
Generol
E~~:penditures
·
from heal and add ..,{;Jk c li&lt;tle at a
c:~~~fpLT1 '1~EJ,
Balance~ Dec. 31,
Motor Vehicle
. 1'/tl
1,664.03 Salaries
License Ta&gt;c
lime until smooth. Rtiturn (o heal
EXPEND lURES '
TrusteP.s
1.821.25
Balance
l,&lt;!M.Dl Total Exp. Plus Bal.,
Fund
of
and cook until slightly thickened.
Jan. 1, 1911
Dec. 31, 1'/l)l . 16,9.12.14 Improvement
Ga$01ine Tax
Sites
385.00
Fund
221.10
Add cheese and stir to melt. Add General Fun
s 3.18Q.83
G•~llntT~x
New Buildings ana
· Motor Vah ic le
Road and Bridge
· Fund
Add
ition::.
323.55
tuna, chopped eggs, and vegetables
~icense Tax
9'1'1 . .15 Balonce. Jan. 1,
Fund
Expenses
616.02
3.527.16 Cemetery Fund
1,323.64
1'/tl
. 1.208.11 Other
(if desired). Combine with cooked,
G:s~~~~e Tox
Jotol Exp.
3.145.87
'Rtctlpts
Federal Revenue
Dec. 31 ,
• .
drained I)OOdles. Place in a ~reased
Fund
1.208.88
Sharing Fund
2.001.01 Gasol ine Tax • 19,455:83 Balance,
1'/tl
1.323.64
10,167.10
Totol
Receipts
19,455.83
Total
casserole. Top with crushed potato Roaelond Bridge
Tolal Exp. Plus B•l ..
General Fund
Total Beglnn;ng
'chi"",
Fund Fund
266.98 Balance,
Dec. 31 , 1981
4,469..16
.- or buttered bread crumbs. Cemetery
1,524.78
Jan. 1,
Bal•nce Plus
~edert1l Reserv~
1981
3.ol80.83
Receipts
20,664.71
Bake, uncovered, lllltil hot and bub- Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund •
Rtctlpll
Expenditures
bly. .
Shoring Fund
1.917.01
Balance. Jan . 1.
Misc. Funds
15.10 General PrOPerly Tax
Total Exp. 1981
1 917 08
- Real Estate
Misc.
9.686.15
x - NOTE ,ON VEGETABLES : Total
. 11.941 .51
. G
Receipts '
·
.
.
Total·
Receipts
one!
Trailer
•
Malnt.
10,749.76
rants 16,1184.53
II 2 cup of cooked or frozen peaa, General Funcl
(GrOll)
lO,Mil.OI Grancl Total Exp.Federal
.
7,510 .00
Estate Tax
• Gasoline Tax
beans, carrots or other vegetables Motor Vehicle
Total Receipts
2 510 00
(GrDIS)
1,143.15
Funcl ,
20,436.61 Total
Beginning
'
· ,
may also lie added.
. ~ ~~- Tox
13.....91 Local Government
·Balance. """· ~1 .
Balance Plus
IUNT: This casserole would be Gasoline .Tax
Slltelnco"1e ••845.25 'TJ!:.\:Jfp. Plus Ba!..r, 221.10
4 ..t21 ~
Receipts
-'th .
h
Fund
19,o155.83
· . Expenditures· ·
super served · '"
a · crunc .)' Road and Bridge .
Cigarette License
. Dec. 31, 1981
..,,1164.71 Equ1pment
2,,. 26 .00
Fees ancl Fines
RNIIand I rill..
vegetable gelatin salad and baked
Fund
3,879.19
Total Exp.
2 426
(GrDII)
114.15
Fu... •
apples. .
'
Cemetery Fund · 2.9«.61
Barance. Dec. 31,
' ·00,
Feder~ I Revenue
AdiustmentsanCI
Balance, Jon. 1,
1981
.
1
Refunds
10.00
1981
211&lt;1.'/t Total fi'xp. Pius Bol .oo1.0a'
IUNT: When making gravy or
Shorong Fund
2,510.00
Totiil
Receipts
16,1184.53
Roctlllh
·
159
21
Dec. 31. 1981
"4, 427 .08,
cream sauce, always remove the fat Total .Total R.Ktipr.• ·
Total Beglntllno
Gerwral Prooerty TaxMlsceol;lneous
BalancaPius
'Real Estate
and fiOW' paste from the heat when
and llalancos
Funds
20 165 36
Roce!ts
;10,165.36
ana Trailer
adding Uquid. Add liquids a Uttle a! a ~~ro~Vtt.Y~
• ·
IGrQIS)
3.179.19 ·Balance, J~n. 1, •
oipendlturu
l'ltl
15 Hr.
Total ....-., TOtal Rtcelpll
3.179." '' Total
time to avold&lt;lilmps. What if you get
~~,:'It Tox '
Beginning
· ~~
Adm.
. 15.36•. 11 TotallltGII!IItno
16 912 1
Balance
lS.IO •
' lwnps in a sauce? Place the sauce in Gasoline Tax
•· ·'
Fire
llelenct PIUI
F. xpenditures
. · .'
· Prot.ctiOII
150.00
ReceiPIS
4,146.17 Other Expenses
the blender and blend a few IM!CCind8
Fund
· 20-'64,71
15 10
Grand
Total
E~.·
Expenditures
·
to reinove lwnps.
ROICiancl Bridge
Total Exp.
1s'eo
16,214.16 Total Exp. General Fu .
Expendilures Plus ·
BalancecDec. 3 ,
Misc.
·
3,145.82 Total
For yOW' free copy of a recipe for cfrllgfery ~unci
~.~.
~
Balance Dec. 31.
"
1911
3.951.20 Grana Totaljxp.Flderll Revenue
1981
baked applea, contact the Eltenaion
Sllarlno Fund
4,427.08 Total Exp. "\" Ba6,
ROICiancl fridge
15 . ~~
Dec. 3[, 191
.... 161.:16 . I'unci
. .
3,147.02 (I) 19, lie
Officeat98U898.
- Mlsc. l'unds
15.10
Metw Volllcle
ll.llanta, p.c. 31,

.•

m

992""U11!259.

MiddlePort. ·Ohio

Phone(304)372~550

Years Experience
small Pipelines A
Specialty
North Racine
On Carmel Road
at Sawmill

bylaws, on the third
of

Used Color TV $ets for
sale.
SALE PHONE NO.

.

e prac11ce o1 tnternal medicine.

Gaspers

Astrograph

LEGAL NOTICE
that
the annual
meeting
of
is hereby
the!'lotice
slockholilers
of given
The ,
Farmers Bank and savings
Company of 211 West
SecondwillStreet,
Ohio,
be held· Pomeroy,
at the oi-

...•

'

Meigs Co. Aru Code

Gallla Co. Area Cocle

YOUR NEEDS'

;========~Tr=========:!::::::::::::::::::::t;::::~~;:;:;:::::~
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
5101 NG
1V SERVICE
STEVE R• KES
BISSEI!
. . SEL, M.D.
Nnw
·
~~:i.er~v.
b"~?o. :,~~eli~~
UIJ
its
Wednesday
Januarv.
SIDING CO,
OPEN
l~
l.
r,198~~7Fa
,
·~~~
4:00
p.m.
the .
Announces the opening of his office for
of eleclingfordlrec-

.~

Rutland

SATIS~Y

Business·Services

D of·A to purchase history books!
Ret~ Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
11\e Daughters of · the American ,
Revolution, meeting recently at the
Meigs IM, voted to give $50 for the
purchase of biographical or
historical books on the fifth and sixth .
grade level for the Pomeroy
Library:
Mrs. Donna Jenkillti, Mrs. Sandy
Luckeydoo and Mrs. eileen Buck
were the committee appointed to
select the books: Any teacher interested In seeing certain books
selected is asked to contact one of
the committee members. Thlllle with
~ood used books were encouraged to
· contribute them to the library.
Mrs. Pat Ingels, re8ent, noted that

l:ls~~ified JHtl(t'tc rover the
ft~llowilll( telephone exchHnl(etc ...

MIOOLEPORT

-

2

bedr oom hom e in con·
venit•nt location . part
basement. L arge lot.

$19,750.00.

POMEROY - Stately
older home with ·up to
four bedrooms, original
woodwork ,

l•h

baths.

Firep lace.

forced air
ga! furna ce . Large front
tsitt ing porch. Many

features. S29,900.oo.

RIGGSCREST
5
bedroom coloni a 1 home
Wifh large rec. room ~
utility, 2'12 baths, total
electr ic. Double garage,
off ice. deck in rear on
large 101. 563.000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E..Cieland, Jr.
992-6191
Collie Turner 992-"92
Jean Trussell · 949·2'60
Office
992•2259
I.

8

PUblic Salt
&amp; Auction
Auction every Wednesday
at the Hartfor d Community
Building. Sa le time 7 p.m.

COn$lg nments of new and
used merchandise al ways
wel co me .
Ric hard
Reynolds Aurt ioneer . 1·30.4-

275-3069,

9____ Wanled lo.BuL_ __
WANT TO BUY Old fur·
niture and AntiQues Of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain.
256·1'167 In the evenings.
CASH PA I0 'for clean, lote
'model
used cars. Smi th
1
Buick·Ponlloc, GA II Ipolls,
IOhio. Call4ol6-2782.

.

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
f or anything
II
IOK , 14K, 18K and
gold . Class rings,
wedd ing rings, sil ver coins
or anything stamped
s1erllng. Ct•rks Jewelry
Store. Goll lpolis «6·2691 or
In Pomeroy I
ll'~~:,v.::~edcash

I

�Page-l 0-The Daily Sentinel
9

---

Wanted to Buy

B u ying

Gold .

They'll Do It Every Time

Silver,

Plat.num , otd ·cotns. scrap

MI07NeR #eAJMCHe OF#AVIM;
&gt;t:IO'R ~e IN ltl/.l'l HOMe · · ··

ring s &amp; silverware Daily
quotes available
Also
coins &amp; coin suppl ies for
sale .
Spr ing
Valley
Trading , Spnng Valley
Plaza. 446-80'25 or 446 ·8026

fi'f.,)f'/1?/111!?/ WHO

TIJOI&lt; MV SUBUR8.4N
PHOH&amp; 80ol&lt; ? I
A!OKEP AU. 01' \OOU
TO QUIT 1AKING

-------

VOlA HAl&gt;
fT.' 'IOU WERE
POIN' A STR()N(;·
o\IAH TRIG/&lt; -n:y111'
TO TE-A'" IT IN
U.4LF/

"""-

SITTINeoON
IT fM~IN/!o
TH~ PIANO!
IMLATE fOR
SCHOO&lt;-!

TI-4/N&amp;S FflOM t-IERE!
lHIS IS: .44)1
OFFICE.!!

We pay cash for late mOdel

clean used cars.
F rench1own Ca r Co.
BiLl Gene Johnson,

4ol6 0069.

households .

Pomeroy, Oh Or 992·7760

P~~-er_o~ ~ ~ ~~---

__
Gold, sdver. sterl1ng,
1ewe1ry, nngs, old co •ns &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, Middleport 992·
3476

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDES Gene H~nes
Rt. L Amesvill e. Oh 448
6747 . Buy1ng raw fur after
Dec . 12. Dally 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sundays Alsg
closed Dec . 24 &amp; 25.

- -------·RAW FUR buy er Beef &amp;
deer h•de·glnsrang Trap
ping supplies . George
Buckley, Rt 2, Athens, Oh

614 · 664 · 4761
even1ngs.

Open

OLD F URNITUR E. beds,
1ron, bra ss, or wood. Kit
chen cubbards of all type s
Tables, rou nd or square
Wood ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases Will buy
complete household. Gold,
silver, old money, pocke t
watches, chains, rings , and
etc . lnd •a n Art ifacts of all
types Al so buy•ng baseba ll
car ds . Osby Marti n 992
6370
Small copy mach1ne to
reprodu ce ta x forms G E
Reuter , 614 992 2490
Raw furs, h1des, scrap
metals,
b a tt e ri es,
radjators, ginseng, yellow
roo , and mer chandiSe
brokering Harper· Halste
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675 5868 .
Also Flea Market open
daily. Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm
11 - --· Help Wallted-

-- ·- ----- ---

-

·"'1,*:--paramedic full time for
Gallia Co
Emergency
Med1 cal Service. Call 446·
9628
Earn
20
per
cen t
ret i rement on $2,000.00
wholesale •nstead of 3 per
cent
retirement
on
17.500PV . 614·875-9749 or
614-477· 1414.
Maintainence Superv.sor
for apartment compl ex
Call675·5104
SALES PERSONELL
Do to new Audio·Visual
prog ram
rap1dly
ex
pandmg firm has several
open•ngs in 1ts outside sales
depl If you are amb•ous
and well groomed, we may
have a job for you We offer
paid vacat i ons, pro fit
sharing,
pay
hospitaliz'ation, ll eX'i bl e
110urs. Car &amp; high sc hool
educatton requtred
Op·
portuntties of $1,000 per
. mo and up . For mtervtew
ca ll between 10 AM &amp; 2PM
only. 61.4 · 446 - 76.4~ .
GET VALUABLE tr at nmg
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some gr ee~t gifts as a Sen
tinel r oute carrier Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992
2156or992·21S7
POSITION : Home VISitor·
Me1gs County Head. Start
Qualtficattons: Requ•red
H1gh School Diploma or tts
equtvalent, Val1d Ohto
Dr i ver's
License
and
Dependable
Tran
spo rtatlon .
Preferred
H1gh School Diploma and
pr .or experience work1ng
w1th pre·school children .
Dut ies :
Primarily ,
working with Head Start
ChildreM ·.Parenfs
on
Education,
Nutrttt o n,
Health and Parent In·
'!Oi v ement actiVIties in
their home ' Available
February I. 1982 through
June 4, 1982 w ith possible
contract renewal August or
September, 1982 Salary · 40
hrs .·wk . at $4.15 per hour .
Applicattons : Available at
the Gallia·Metgs C A A . Offtce in Cheshire, Ohio .
Deadline for accepting ap
pl1ccitions will be 4:30p.m .
on January 22. 1982. The
Gallia Meigs Commun1ty
Action Agency ' s Hea d
Start Program IS an Equal
Opportunity Employer.

OLAN MILLS has several
immediate openings for
telephone
appointment
clerks, no experience
necessary, we train . M ay
work 9 a.m. to 1 p.m or sr
p m . to 9 p.m . Apply to
Jackie Carsey, Scottish
1nn, Pt. Pleasant, WV.
Wednesday January 20th. 9
a.m . ·12: 00 noon. 5-6 p.m .
E .O.E., M · F .

•s •

- --Furnished Rooms

72 - -Truck's for Sile-

SLEEPING ROOMS and
11ght housekeepi'ng apt,
Park Central Hotel.

1974 FORD F ·250 new stake
bed and dual wheels. Call
256-6413, 12 p.m . to9 p.m.

.

I

5 rooms, 3 bedrooms. bath,
utility room . nice and

~~~~~~~~~§~11~i~i~iiiiiH cou~ry
1_1 ---~~

Want.ed
serv 1t: e Manager Needed
for au tomobile dealership
Exper i ence
r eq uired .
Repl•es kept conf •dent•al
Send resume to Bo x 729 H
co
Dally
Se nt•nel,
Pomeroy, Ohlo45769

Automobi le
Salesma n
Needed . AmbitiOUs person
w1llmg to m eet th e public
selling new and used
automobiles .Some ex ·
perience required Repl1es
kept conf1dent1a1
Send
r esume to Box 729 ·C, c o
Daily Sent1ne1. Pomeroy,
Oh10 457 69
R N 1mmed 1ate openmg .
Pharmacy based I.V te am
wor~
for profeSSional
h os pita l
Ph a rma cy
managment co. ParH1me
days .
No
ex p erience
necessary Call V M Phar
macy 992 6297 . E 0 E
11 ___ Sit ~afion~

~~ted ~

wanted : Person to share 2
bdr apt. Call 245 ·5835.
Have vacancy for elderly
person Room , board and
care Reasonable 992·6022 .
13

Insurance

~

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

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surance Co has offered
serv1c es for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century .
Farm , home anp personal
property coverages are
availabl e to meet 1n
dividual needs . Contact
Lew•s Hugh es , agent
Phone 446 3318 .
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been
can
cel led ?
Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992·2143
1~ _ YJ'..!!!!ess Train~-

15 - SCh-ools-Instruction

--

----

REGISTER
NOW
for
vanous Arts and Crafts
classes to beg•n soon For
more information call 304
675·3365 The GAZEBO, Ar
ts and Craf1s supplies, Pl.
Pleasant
18

Wanted to Do
------------

Baby si tting 1n my hOme
Call 446·0390
Will babys,t day or n1ght 1n
my home (il l\ 446 4337 un·
til 7PM
TWO experienced and
depe ndable lad1 es W1ll
wall paper or pa•nt in your
home or business. PhOne
304 458 1835 or 458 · 1536
--·-CARPENTER &amp; hom e
maintainance, 304 675·3190.

-·-------

so:anELtt:
21
Bus1ness
___ -~-~P..O!tuni_ty__ _ _

Have a highly profttable
and beautiful Jean Shop of
your own . Featuring The
li'ltest in Jeans, Den1ms,
Sportswear and Wes ter n
Wear $12,500 00 mcludes
Deginntng tnventory, f1 x·
tures and training . You
may have your store open
in as little as IS days C&lt;tll
any hme 1 800·255·9049,
Ext 7.

--------2~ - ~oney t~.l:E_C!!!_____
.

Columbus First Mortgage
Company FHA ·VA Financing loan Rep. Cookte
Krautter 1304)675·3473. ,
REFINANCE or purchase
your home JO year fiXed
rate wv a &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St ,
Athens, Oh . 592·3051.
23

Professiona I
serv1ces

Homes for Sale

31

250 Neighborhood Rd .,
Gallipolis. Owne r will
fma nce, 3 bdr'. ranch, 1
bath, country k•tchen, 1 car
detached garage · with
workshop, also attached
carpor t .
Unfinished
basement,
1ncludes ap·
pliances Washer &amp; dryer,
range &amp; refrig. Gas heat.
city water, sept ic tank . 1
acre lot mcludes 2 trailer
pads-with electrtc &amp; water.
$40,000 f~rm Fmancmg 3
yr land contract, 10 per
cent down, 12 per cent in·
terest only Call col lecT
Wayne C lar~ . 614·262 3929.
Please no r ealtors.
Larg e home, 4 bedrooms,
fam il y, 1tv1ng &amp; dining
room, full kitchen. full
basement 2 acres Large
swimm 1ng pooL 985· 4290.

/

f

Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. Ususally one or two
days service. Dismuke's
405 2nd . Ave., Gall ipolis,
4ol6·0474.
Y.OUR Federal , State, City
Taxes prepared. 17 years
experience with tax firm .
Kenneth Adkins, SO Olive
St ., Gallipolis, 446-7475
Income
Tax
SerVice .
Federal &amp; State. Wallace
Russell, Bradbury. Phone
9'12,m8.

·-----------

3 bedroom house, referen
ces. no pets. 675· 1365.
THREE bedroom .
unfurmshed house
derson . $175 per
plus $100. depOSit,
9760.

2 bath,
in Hen·
month
304-675-

All electric home with
ga rag e and full s1ze
basement. $250 month .
Phone 675 3217
42

Mobile Homes
fpr Rent

2 bedroom unfurn•shed
mobile home. Located 2
m1les out 588 Adults only,
1175.00 mo Call4ol6·2300.
2 bdr . and 3 bdr mobile
homes. Call446·0175.
·

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FU~NITURE
Sofa , cha~r, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, S500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, '\275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $795. T abies;
S38 and up to $109. Hide· abeds.S340 .• queon siZe, $380.
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5
Rec liners,
pc.
dtfettes $17S.
from to$79$295.,
, to
$385 1 pc., $189. and up,
Wood table with 4 cha irs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
Hutches. $300. and $375 .,
maple or pine ._ finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak , $675., Bassett Cherry,
1795
Bunk bed complete
w 1th mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
$275. complete . Baby beds,
S99 Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58.,
firm , $68 and $78. Queen
sets, S19S. 5 dr . chests, $49 .
4 dr chests, $42. Bed
frames, $20.and $25 , 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
te chairs $20 and S2S. Gas
or electnc ranges, $295 . Or·
thoped1C super firm, $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames S20 $25, &amp; 130.
E ledr•c fireplace , gun
cabinet, Living room su1te,
wood table &amp; 4 cha ~rs
Used.
Ranges,
refr1gerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
tf'\ru F n , 9am to 5pm, Sat.
4ol6·0322

6ef lt4iS
[tpe &amp;o
r:-.,.,[) Me?.
r~w

~~~i~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~g~

----- - - -

____ --

·--

"'

~-

---------

----

wu·J ....,n
""""'" I

/"/
//

--

S4·

Misc . Merchandlce

Lad1es coats, 1 cashmere
royal blue size 14, 1 black
fake fur &amp; fur trim size 12
Cal1446·2430.

AKC Reg. English Springer
Spaniels. Liver &amp; Wh•te $85
Call 446·8234.

F 1rewood $35 P•ckup load,
stacked. Ph. 388·8770 or 388·
9737 -

Ftsh Tank and Pet ShOp
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasant . 675· 2063 . Mon .•
Thurs., I Fri. 11 to 6 , Tues ,
Wed .. I Sat. 11 to 4. Check
our F1sh Spec tal

Pyrodex now in stock 16 oz
can S8.95. Also Red Dot,
Blue Dot, Green Dot, and
Dupont Power '" stock.
Spring Valley Trad1ng Co.,
Sprmg Vcil!ey Ptaza, 446·
8025.
28ft 76 Impala camper for
sale lor $5,000. Call 367·

---- -------

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

7238.

Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main Sf., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992·2205 .
DUAL HEAD Freeze K1ng
soft serve ice cream
mach i ne in very good con dition . Have diSContinued
selling ice cream. Must ex·
pand Carry-out bus1ness .
No phone calls. Can be seen
at Shammy's Carry·out.
605 W . Mam St, Pomeroy ,
Ohio.
New Firestone 721 rad 1a l
t1re 13 1n on wheel 614·992 ·
5227 .
Norge Coppertone range,
electrtc 992·3590
Whirlpool dryer, 3 cyc le
Norge washer. 2 speed, 3
cycle, heavey duty, 18 lbs
614 · 992 · 6594 .
Leav e
message.. S100 both
Maytag automat1c washer,
$40. Fngadare refrigatt)r,
$40. 30 in . gas range, ,$40
Double built in oven, $85.
Gibson automatic washer,
$20. 614·7.42·2352
4)(9 Tanden ut il 1ty tr ai ler,
new l1ghts, rebuilt. Call992
2075
rt- -- -~-------Used tire's
Hanshaw's
Tires on Lucas Lane. 675·
7360
Sony
cassette
de c k.
diacoust i c
spe akers.
re.:ii1St1c amp. S300 Phone
675-mJ

DACHSUHUND
mixed
plott &amp; Beagle, 1 red male,
1 black female, 6 months.
Trade for domestic rabbits.
Phone 304-675-1076
BEAUTIFUL
AKC
registered
German
Shepard puppies. All shots
and wormed, call 304·675·
4217

~

-

---· ------·Musical .

_

- ~trum_~s_ __

1 acreof onthe
the f load
Midd leport
s1de
road ,
beautiful loca tion, $5,000.
Call 992 5236

41

Houses for Rent

'-'---'-'==='-"=-'--

2 bedroom w ell insulated
house near Rio Grande
College, $200 per month
plus util ities and $100
refundable
deposit .
References required . Call
245-9325 or 2~5 - 5364.
FOR RENT OR SALE 3
bedroom home located .5
miles from town on Rt. 218.
Call4o16-ll58.
THREE BEDROOM home,
IQCated 1n the city Call-446·
1158.
2 bedroom house adults
preferred plus deposit. Ca11
1
4ol6 43.AO.

~.:::::;::;::;;::::.:.:.:_L:-.:-:-:-:.-;:-,::.:.:.:.:.:.~
OUR BOARDING HOU~E

with Major Hoople

TWO .chevy small block
engmes, GMC r ear end &amp;
springs, GMC truck r ear
bumber, 1970 Impala for
parts, bedroom suite,
drums and synthesizer,
stereo, antique dresser, 350
turbo transm•ssion , 304·

logs,

ss -

MdinQSUpptieS. _,

Budding materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. lmte ls, etc . Claude
w.nters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Caii24S·5121 .

56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220
---DRAGONWYND
CAT TERV - KENNEL AKC
Chow
puppies ,
CFA
Himalayan ,. Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call &lt;lat6·
3844'3fter4p .m
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
,lndoor·outdoor facilities .
Also AK C Reg. Dober·
mans. Call4~7795.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cock~r Spaniels .
Call388·9790.
ACK Reg. black male
Labador ·1 1/2 yr. old . Very
'good with. children. Call
367-7ol81 .
HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies .
Everything
Imaginable In horse equipment. Also belts, boots.
Riding lessons and troll
rides.
698· ~290. . Ruth
Reeves.

,.
J

•'

1980 Chevy Scotsdale 3A
ton, 4 wheel drive, 4 speed,
am-fm, regular gas, 29,000
miles. good shape. 773·5150 .

-

81

I i\CCIOEMTALLY I&lt;.HOCitED
YOUR PUI\5€ OFF TH'
MIG5 li:EWEL, AN' IT HIT
SANDY'S PAW! IT'S 50
HEIWY, THAT-

··AMO HE!iC€FO!i:TH I'LL
YOU HOT TO TIW'Eii ~ '"WITH MY THIH$!

a furrier

--- ----- --Home
-~---~----

8:58
11:00

..

RON'S Televi s•on Service
Speczializmg in Zen1th and
Motorola , Quazar, and
house calls . Phone 576 2398
or 446·2454.

Je~;siC;a

in her new min it., And 1m
stoop 401.1
owinq us
whl~+ !':1 success
all that
1--...:. ..:--¥~~~:'""
Wilmer is!
money!

•

It's ~our fault
for trustinq people
like Wilmer I .

'

F &amp; I&lt; Tree Trimming,
stump remov al 675 1331
RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason, rooter.
carpenter,
electncian,
general
repairs and
rem ode ling Phone 30o4·675·
2088 or 675·4560 .
Water wells . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes
Pumps Sales and Servite .
304-895·3802

-~- · ---- --

WINNIE

'50 7HAT'S WHY

··-------~-

LOCKSMITH ·Serv ice:
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service Call
882·2079

HORSE Feed Specia l, lOON
S8 95,
January
18 ·23.
Yauger Farm Supply, Rt.
35 Sol)thside, wv .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

81

GOOD second cutt!ng, or·
chard grass hay, $1 75 per
bal~ 304·895·3879

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Ptne
Phone .446·3888 or 446·4477

....... , ...........
~ H .&gt;

=o_-_-=Excavating
.-===~=

8l

i! __ Auto for S~e_~-

GallipoliS D1vers1fied Con ·
sf €o Custom dozer &amp;
72 Pontiac , exc. cond., very
backhoe work . Spe,ial
little rust, new vinyl top,
can be seen 107 Chillicothe · farm rates Call •Js tor free
estim ates. 446·4440
Rd.

WE'VE SENT

.

EVERYONE 1'/tJME
. •• WHILE lYE
COMPLETE

1HI5 PlACE LOOKS
AS EMPTY A5

THE :IO'/NARA?

$ONE IUJWR'5.11\.

OF COlii1'5E, IT'S
NOTHI~ THAT

WINNIE, TELL ME ...
TIME OFF RJR SO MAN .~ ..
SO 500N AFTER THE
HOLIDAYS .. . 15 /T NOT A

CAN'T I!E COMPLETEr? IN A
r?AY OR

fi'NANtrAL PRAll/

rwol

ON YOUR COMPANY&lt;'

·I&lt;

GWlAI&lt;

~­
...
*"
. ',
.....

IT'5M:7~

FO= YOU .

~

..·'.
•'

'IEP-- VORE NEW

_ ~~efr!.9!!!!!!t~ -- ~
SEWING Mach1ne rE-pairs,
serv1ce. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service1 Sharpen
Sc1ssors
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2274.

I

-"'

85

.VORE NEW

HAT 15 PLUMB
PUJ3TY, LO~EZY

HAT IS

PLUMB
PURTY.
LOWEEZV

'

Ge
_::n_::e;:r:=
a ;';
IH
c;=a:=u::;h;=
. n"'g:::-~

,,

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 ·7471 or
367-0591 .

•
PEANUTS

NOW HI)ULING hOuse coal
&amp; limestone for drivewavs.
Call for estimates 367· 7101.

I

MARCIE! WAKE UP!

Upholstery

TRISTATE ,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave., Gallipolis.
4o16·7833 or 4ol6·1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant,lll4
675-41.14.

I

~~:~ ttii'MMantl~az ..
.
~~~IHYILLE
RFD
11 :05
ALL IN THII! FAMILY

RIGHT NOW , I'D SAY
SHE'S THE MAYOR
OF "ZONK CITY"!

12:00

ATVARC

I I I

1

WHAT KIND OF
PLAN5 WA5 THE
A~CHITECi MAKI1&lt;.16

[J

1

FOR

I I K J I

HIM~

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by !he above cartoon

ITJt I I XI XI)

Answer hero:

(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles

Veslerday 5

LILAC PAUSE JESTER KINGLY
How she tell when she arrived home after a
shopping binge-ALL "SPENT"

Answer

Jumble Book No. 20, containing 110 puulea, 11 avall•bleiOI S1 95 potiPIIId
from Jumbet, c/O thiS ntWIPIPif, BOK 34., NCHWood, N J 071W8. 1ncluc:M your
name, addntst, a: code and mtkt cMc:kl a ab.. to Ntw•
a

BRIDGE
Pick a way to win
By Oswald Jacoby
ODd Alu Soatag

NORTH

+ K 10 8 2
t73
tAJ962
WEST

EAST

+s

+Q
• 10 9 8 6

t KJJIII

.KJ532
• Q 10 51

+at

+QH

hearts, there are no finesses

SOUTH

Many players would have
bid seven with the South
hand after North showed
two aces, but this South settled for six
A flnesser plays the queen
of hearts at trick one. n loses to East's king. A red card ,
comes back and sometime
later South must go after
clubs. A good guess as to
which way to finesse and he
Is home with his slam. A bad
guess and the slam has disappeared into that place

lr71

needed.

from

I·II·IJ

.AQ

There are a lot of ways to
bid today's hand. Seven Is a
reasonable contract. All
South needs to do to make It
is to finesse the winning way
for the queen of clubs. Also,
If North holds the queen of
clubs instead of the queen of

...

tAJI!II!

which

returns.

no

tA

+K 10 3
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
We11

Nortll

It

Eut
Pau

Pass

••s•
6t

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

p.,,

p.,,

,.

So.,.

!t

fNT
5NT

II+

Opening lead:

traveler

A player who knows about
end plays refuses to take the
heart finesse . He rises with
dummy's ace of hearts,
leads a trump to his ace,
cashes the ace of diamonds,
leads a trump to dummy and
ruffs the last diamond .
Now he leads 8 heart It
doesn•t. matter where the
king Is. Whoever wins the

bungling procett terv·er
dream• or becoming a Sam
Spede·like detective; and t
timid man yearna to earn the
r11pect of hit family. (Rep..t;

'

'
•

12:30

..
tric"k muat either lead a club
to take declarer's llnesse for
him or lead a red card for
declarer to ruff In dummy
and discard a club from his
hand

'I

DOWN
I Resource
2 Tint

ACROIIS

I On naval

maneuvers

3 Actress

5 Violin's

ancestor

Shirley

10 Food ftsh
11 Vendor

4 Hoosier w1t
5 Construct
8 Trees

12 Satisfy
13 Judicial

7 Mill

chamber
If Taro
., root
15 Vegetable
16 Proffer
18 Scottish

8 Most strange

river
19 Suffix

9 Crinkled

Yes~y'a IDiwer

20 "I Almost Lost

fabrics
II Terrify
15 Rozelle
or Rose
17 Actress
Wynter

25 Exhaust
28 Curtain
29 Expire

My -'.'
21 Italian marble
2% Friend (lawyer)
23 Breakwater
24 Postponed

30 Join In

..

32 "Dies - "
33 Afford
3t Clout

,.,..;....,......,........,,....

for
doctor
21) Err
21 Malacca
23 Liquid

measure
Z4 Infonnal
goo bye

25 Transgres-

sion
%8 Curve

27 Hawk
31 Portable oven
34 Operated

h-c+-1-

35 Bacall
3t Engrossed
37 Task

38 Church
section

39 Outmoded
40 Gaze

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
It
LONGFELLOW

work

it :

,.
One letter olmply stands for onother. In t hio ,.,;,ple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single lettera
opoatrophea, the length and formation of the wordt are ali
hints. Each day tho code lettera are different.

CRVPTOQUOTES
LP

PH M B V

PGB

PEFPG

HDW

HDSPGBE

p J

s

SDB
PS

'

•to

PS
PS

VYBHM
VYBHM

' GBHE . - PGSEBHF

lilml·~ lDMOIIIID~

COAIT·TQ.COAIT Ouooto :
Sterling Hayden, Bucky Den~

..

bv THOMAS JOSEPH

AIC NIWI NIGHlLINE

ill'f'tNTAIV liLAND A

. _.,

~~..,.~-

~IINI AND ALLIN

(f)

'

' I

Mchcnd~ol.

i

•••

t IX

"'-1om

1

17

rJlESENl..S

CIIIUPDATENEWS
eCDntETONIGHTSHOW
'The Beet Of Caraon' Gu11ta
Bob Hope, Ray Chartee. Terl
Garr. (Repeat, 60 min a.)
CIJ ANOntER LIFE
(1} MOVIE ·(DRAMA, •• • 'At
"EtephllniMo~" 11711
(I) .I_ENNY HILL SHOW
.(() CBSLAll! MOVIE Allee
'Mtl'eCup' Allctcontrlblltenn
old trophy cup of Mel ' a to a
church rummege ••Ia without
realizing that It lean lrrtplact ·
able memenlo . (Repeat)
McCloud: 'TopoftheWorld.Ma'
The ayndlcate trlu to frame
football playtt Bubbt Smith for
murder. (Repeal) .
(]) ABC CAPTIONED NEWS
iBJMOYti·(MVITIRYl"""
''!ll4flllbl U.O." tiiiiO
llll. ABCNIWINtGlfTLINE
&amp;JohoredbyTedKoppot.
11:38 ClliiOYti-(ADYINTURE) ••
"1-1 AI
Hill"

------•--

78 AMX 6 cyclinder
automatic AM · FM, 40
channel CB, gOOd gas
mileage. Call"-'6·8122 .

-

~

NEWS

CBN UPDATE NEWS
FIRiNG LINE ' Roaolvod :
Thla ho uae approve 1 the
aeon omic lnltiatlveofPrealttent
Reagan .' Part I. Gueal. John
Kenne1h Galbraith . Hoat :
William F. Buckley, Jr (60
!!l!_na.)
11V ALFRED HITCHCOCK

11:28
1 1:30

BARNEY

===- =-::::.-===...J---::::
=-::;
Electrical

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N . air condition serv1ce,
commercial, inQustrial
Phone 882·2079
·

10:28
10:30

l GUE:75

TRYING TO/

~

C:.Blj.JJPDATE NEWS
• CD BRfT MAVERICK
When a Propoeed rallroadroute
thraatana to deatroy hla ranCh,
Uaverlck concocta an elabor·
atacounlar·attack agalnat 'big
buaine.. : (60 min a )
Cil 700CLU8
(I) SEX IS A THREE LETTER
WORD Michael Carrera ,
Profe11or Lorna Farrel and Or
Phillip Farrell anawer the
quutiOna moat aaked abou1
u.x..tnd aexuatlly.
(JJilZl. THREE'S COMPANY
Chaoa hila thelrlo'a apartmenl
when Cindy hlf.6!1 on a a a
parl·tlme maid to make aome
extra
money.
{g_loled·Captloned)
g (I) IBJ CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'Marian Rote
White' 1982 Slara · Nancy
Cartwright, Charlaa Aidman.
Ruth Silveira . True atory of a
normal girl who, because of her
poor eyulghtand unusually
high aplrlta, waa placed In the
Sonoma California Slate
Hoapltal for the Feebleminded
for 30 yeara. (2 hra.)
[fi) LIFE ON EARTH 'Building
Bodlea' The aealalhealteofthe
earlleat forma of life on aerth.
and ducendanta or the these
Ute forma can be found today.
Thla eptaodelooka at three
groupa ol marine Invertebrates
thathaveenduredtheagea (60
IJ!i.no.)
0:30 l!J MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE)""
'~l!!!!dlllto" t077
(I) llZlg lOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT Henry re ceiV. a 1
aerlett)fmyaterloua tan letlera •
from en edmlrer Who tlgna hla
name ')(.
11:50 (]) TBI_EVENING NEWS
tO:OO CIJ!Dlg HART TO HARTT~o
HartevlaltJannlfer'toldhomaln
Maryland where they dlacover
thatherfather 'e paal in the OSS
makea him and them Ute target
otlheaonof a Nazlwarcrtminal.
(60 min a.) (Cioaed·Caplloned;
U.S.A.)

.li:

84

PB, PS, air conditioner,
new tires, excellent con·
dition . Cell 446·7838 or -4.46·
7447 .

(Cioaed·Captloned;

S.A. )

Carpentry and remodeling
Plumbtng and some elec ·
trical work . 614·949·2006 or
614·992 3851

Ground ear corn. $82 ton.
Caii614-98S 3581

73 NOVA. JOH7S-~.

placing hie grandmother in a
nuralng
home
(Closed·
CaP.tiOI!!d: U S .A.)
a(]) 1W SIMON AND SIMON
(]) UFE ON EARTH 'Building
BodMte'Thaeealathetltaofthe
11rl1eat forma of life on earth,
and deacendanta of the theaa
lila forma can be found loday.
Thla eptaode look a at three
groupe of rnarlnelnvertebratea
thathaveenduredtheavee. (60
mlna..J
8:30 (]) llll .. LAVERNE AND
SHIRLEY Shirley Ia horrified to
leun that the blind date
Levernearranged for haria with

Ca l l 446·2801 for termite,
r oach, bird. rodent. sp•der,
and fleas control. Free
estimates,sBill Thomas.

Hay &amp; Grain

H'\RTS Used Cars, New
Haven West VIrginia. Over
20 Jess expensive cars in
stock.

Ia laced with the dilemma or

--~- ·

-

elJJ

~Viii HAPPYDAYSFonzle

PAINTING
tnter•or and
exterior,
plumbing,
rooftng, some remodeling .
20 yi'S. ex~. Call388 9652 .

BUTCHERING hogs, JOA
675 2288

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

'I

.'

1h blood Beefolo cows. 614
742·2630after 5: 30p.m .

1973 Pinto s.w. GOOd on gas
and good condition. Air
conditioner 25.000 btu. 61'•·
667·6636. '

'I

-

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleani ng featured by
Haffelf Brothers Custom
Carqets Free estimates.
Call4462t07.
~· ·

Registered Quarter Horse
filly,
Reg i stered
Ap
paloosa, 4 yrs old'and gOOd
blood li ne Call 256·6413, 12
pmto9pm

1969 Plymouth wagon. 318
auto . ~85· 4346. .

.. 'OOIJL-0 136 IF 1 '+W?
HeR OUT,
I Alt-)'T.

~m_e~vt!.~_!~~ - -·
STUCCO PLASTERING ·
textured ce ilmgs com·
merc1al and res1dent•al,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182
.

___Live~~! __ _

- -. -------78 Mustang I L .4 cylinder,

l

197S DODGE 4 WO, 31• ton
f?U . 318 auto., PS , PB, Exc .
cond .
Call
446 ·0515
anyt•me

Case tra ctor 3 point hitch
and snow blade . Call 446·
0885 after 5PM

1977 Mecury Marque low
miles, Michelin tires. All
options Phone 614-AU.-4«)6:

&amp;Y TOMORROw-

- - -- -78
Camping
. ___ Equlpf!!!!l_
l __

JIVIDEN'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT. See the hay
equipment of . the future,
new from Vermeer . Also
large r nund httiP movers &amp;
feeder plus a full lme of
equipment, from Long,
Vermeer. Kuhn, Kelley,
and many others. And see
us to get your parts &amp; com ·
p lete
serv1ce
USED
EQUIP . T.f"actcirs . 1 IH
Hydro 70, I 44 ~ Long, 2 MF
135, 2 Bush· hogs, 1 Tobacco
setter, cultivators, 2 rakes,
haybtne, large ba le mover,
bale unroller, 76 Jeep
PIC kup.
NH
manure
spreader . CHECK OUR
PRICES B. COMPARE!
446 1675

1958 Jeep, metal top, runs
gOOd, $750.00 . Call256· 6769.

AN!7W!:R

Quality Autobody &amp; Patnt
work . · Insu rance work
welcome
Sunroofs •n stalled from 1200·$230. Auto
Tnm Cen'ter, 446-1968.

~1 ~-_!_~ rm E~ipmen!_ _

'• ' .....

·.

NUN~·

Auto Repair

77

r arm suaanes

.._ o ,0 ..

IF WE: DO&gt;J'T HAVIO

FOUR H-78· 14 t1res, moun·
ted on aluminum slotted
wheels, like new, $200.
phone 304·882·2936.

----~---- -

•

I
I

, CAPTAIN EASY

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuories

16

304· 882·

2747 .•

EVENING
. 7:00 CIJe PIIIIAGAZtNE
CIJ
JOHN ANKERBERG
l!tOW
(I) MOYIE ~ (DRAMA) ... '4
"lre•ker'Morent" 1180
C1J
ENTERTAINMENT
NIQHl
PI'Y DAYSAGAIN
nC TAC DOUGH
IIACNEIL-LEHRER
PORT
!j_EWS
• MUPP!T SHOW
7:05
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Guetle : Anthony
owJy, Dick Morfin .
7:30
• YOU ASKED FOR IT
ANO.ntER UFE
FAMILY FEUD
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
CIJ NIGHlLY BUSINESS
REPORT
1BJ RICHARD SIMMONS
IIi OW
[fi) SPROCKETS 'Song of
Freedom' 1838 Paul Robeson,
Elizabeth Welch.
iDl •
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
7:35 Cil NBA BASKETBALL Atlanta
Hawke ve P'ortland Trail
Btuera
7:58 CIJ ~B!LUPDATE NEWS
8 :00 Clle CD FAntER MURPHY
Left In eherge of the school,
Moaea Qage reluctant!~ allow a
!t to be turned Into a pan·tlme
gambling den, which glvea
nemeela Howard Rodman all
the ammunition he neada to
cloaa It c,:Sown . (60 mine .)
(l;loaed-Coptlonod: U.S.A.)
C1J NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

·,'

1978 CJ5 Jeep Renegade
w1th Lev• ktf, 12000 mtles,
excellent condition call
between 6 p.m . &amp; 9 p.m .,
phone number 304·458·1092.

675 ·6750.
SOFA table, eouch , 2
c hatrs,
refrigerator,
washer &amp; dryer, trash com ·
pactor,
all
kinds
of
housellold furniture ,,.riding
lawn mower &amp; much more ,
304·675·6750

TUESDAY
JAN. 111, 11182

;

79 DODGE power wagon, 4·
wheel ·dr1ve, 29,000 miles. 8
cyl. &lt;e all after 3 p.m. 304·
675· 38~8 .
•

&amp; Llw tSiBEI«

64

•
•
VIewmg·

anyttme.
cond
. - Call
-0515
- - -446
-1977 Jeep Wagoneer 4·
Wheel drive, new mud &amp;
snow ttres. 56,000 miles.
Phone 388-933A

WURLITZER Studio piano
w1th bench, excellent con
dition, 3 years old, 304 675·
7822 after 5 · 00.

6J

Television

"

1975 DODGE 4 WD, If• ton
PU 318 auto • PS. PB. Exc.

Maestro electric piano,
w1th amp , $200, excellent
cond•tion . Call245·9258 .

-

-BUT SAFe FUSION
ReACTORS CAN PRODUCe

..•

•

vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

-----~-·----~---

BIG air compressor, $700.
68·72 Nova body parts
Rebuilt 390 Ford motor ,
S250. 39 Chevy Coupe body
SSOO. Large lighted ad ·
vert is ing s1gn on stand
$375. Couch $600. New
d1nette set, 6 chairs, $115 .
304 576·2602

MCNur

-"
-

NIG..,TMARE-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

A THREAT TO THE
ENVIRONMENT-AND
IN COLORADO.l THe
IMPORrANC:E OF SUCH
CONCeRNS IS

THE

AKC registered Golden
Retr•evers, shots and war
med, 614-742· 2957

51

A

•

71 FORO Rang~r with topper, power steermg, power
brakes, good shape, S600 .
304-895·3997.

AKC registered German
Shepard, 7 months, $100
phone 304-675·2200.

------~--- -

-·----------

Pets for Sale

Sf

TO SOME IS

•

.'

1972 Dump truck, F600
Ford, exc . cond. $3,000. 992 ·
2772.

I

Or r en t·3 bedroom fur ·
Kenmore washer $125 .• GE
nt shed home on Bud Chat· Look1ng for mature' person dryers $85 ., Whir lpool
tin Road on big level lot . to share mobile home on w as her &amp; dryer pair $225 .
576 27 11
' George's Creek Rd Call Call250 1207
446 4789 after 5PM.
Comtortable 3 bedroom
SWAIN
ho m e, 8 1/2
percent 2 bdr trailer furnished , AUCTION FURNI TURE &amp;
assumable loan, and 1s adults only, Brown Tra11er PAWN SHOP 62 Ol1ve St ,
n ~ar PPHS, large f enced in
Park, 992 3324.
GallipoliS 3 piece l!ving
yard, k1tcheh app11ances
room suites $199, maple
a n d more
We
ar~
workers rocke(S $49, several chest
r eloca ting and ca n share Cons truction
of drawers, new &amp; used
trailer
for
three.
Phone
304
r ealtor's fees by selling
wood b-urners, new table
773·5651,
Mason
now Call afte r 6 pm 675·
lamps $18, wood cook
- - - - - - - - - - - - - ran
162 5
ges, new 5 pie&lt;;e dtnnet
44
Apartmemt
sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
____,f~
or R-"'
en"-'lc __ _ several d1nnet sets, Sliver
31
Mob1le Homes
stone·atl sizes, bunk beds
for Sale
Furn•shed
room
$85, $100. new tools of all kinds,
ut i lities pd., smgle male, wnnger Maytag washer,
TRI · STATE
MOBILE
range, re fng. share bath Linoleum rugs 9x12 UO.
HOME S. GallipOliS Year
446·4416 af1er 7PM
end sale, price r educed,
and lots mor-e.
used mobile homes. CALL
446 7571.
2nd
floor furn tshed et GOOD
US E D
AP ·
f1ency apt. 129 2nd . Ave., PLIANC ES
washers,
Gall1pOI1s
Call 44~ 0957 dryers,
CLEAN US E D MOB I LE
refr 1gera tors,
Adults only, no pets
HOME S
KESSEL'S
ran ges .
Ska g gs
Ap ·
QUALITY
MOBILE
pliances, Upper R1ver Rd,
HOM E SALES, 4 Ml
2 Bdl; . Apartment, 458 beside Stone Crest Motel .
WE ST, GALLIPOLIS, RT · Second Ave Large I1V1ng 446·7398
35 PHONE 446 3868
r oom, kitchen, bath, newly
_.
------decorated .
Completely 2 4,000 BTU space heaters
furn . Adults. dep &amp; ref S65 ea ., 2·30' gas ranges
12&gt;:60 2 bedroom Buddy
r eq $225 mo. 446·2581 or avacado &amp; gold $75 ea ., 12·
mob ile home Set up with 2
4ol6 2236
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
retngerators and 2 deep
water, close lo town, finan
freezers , 2·GE washers
c1ng available Phone 446
Furn•shed apartment for avacado &amp; gold Skaggs
1294
Appliances, Upper River
r en t . Call446 3937
Rd , GalliPOliS, 446·7398.
- - ----- ~-- -1972 12 x60 mobile home.
Del uxe furnished apart
--new ca rpet, central atr
ment, excellent 1ocat1on, 1 S4
Misc.
Merchandice
cond Call 245·9520 after
or 2 adults, only $275, ref . &amp;
6PM .
dcp . requ1red Ca ll 446· Lump Coal $32 per ton .
Zmn Coal Co .. Inc. Call 446 ·
0338 .
1408 between 9 and 5.
1969 12M60 Buddy tra•ler, 2
l;&gt;edroom . $4,800. 667 ·6427.
2 brd . ap t . HU D excepted,
TOP PRICE Scrap Metal,
kitchen furn Call675 5104
Alumnium, Brass. Copper,
2 bedroom mob1le home.
Battenes
Skidmore
Set up nn Depot St ,
Apartment for rent. Call
Foster, 123 '112 Pine St.
Rutland . Lot available. 614
446·0390 .
Gallipolis Block Co, 12~ 112
992 2490.
Pine St .. 446 ·2783.
APARTMENTS· 1 AND 2
1976 Wm sor 14x70 central
BEDROOM S
RENT
3· 8 ft . showcases w1th
a~r and heat, underpinnmg,
STARTSAT, lBEDROOM ltghts, 1 large bedroom
concrete stepps, storm w•n·
$152 . 2 BEDROOMS S188,
suite, double dresser and
dows W•ll se ll unfurnished
DEPOSIT $200. Call 446· chest.
2 antique clocks, 1
or part turn. Call 992·2006
2745
meat slicer and mrsc .
,or991 3401
gro~ery store equ1pment
Apartments 675 5548
Call 256 6413, 12 p.m . to 9
TRA IL ER, Mason C1ty
p.m
Sate or r ent , 30 4·675·3770
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
hous es,
Pt
For Sale Kitchen table and
REPOSSESSION 1981 all
Pleasant and Gallipolis. 2 cha1rs. $25 See at 769
elec tn c mob•le home, set
614· 446-8221 or 614-245·9484.
Brownel l Ave., Middleport
on lot ready to move 1nto
Payments $159 47 month.
Efficiency rooms by the New wood stove, half pr1c&amp;,
All State Modul ar Homes.
w eek on Main Street, never used, 5350. Can con·
576 2711 .
Mason , WV . 773·5051
vert to furnance . Call 256·
1216, Gal It polls.
USE O MOBIL E HOME
FURNISHED
4
room
apar·
576·2711 .
tment, adults, no pets, 304- A carry out business closed
675· 1453
down and has all beverage
Farms for Sale
33
coolers for sale Call 1 614
Farm , loc ated on Rt. 218, 40
TWO bedr oom apartment, 286·5740
acres, 1200 lb. tobacco
1 older child, all utilittes
base . Call after 6, 245·9222 .
paid, 304-675 5079 after 5 1 old cas t iron bath tub.
good shape, $25 1 14' plow,
P m.
$150. 1 ne'IN heavy dUty
Lots &amp; Acreage
35
TWO bedroom apartment, hoist retails $1.978 ask•ng
2. 1 acre house lots, on 554, 21st. street,. $175 . plus 1700. Call 367 7878
low downpayment, land utilities. 304-675 1174
•
contr ac t. rural water,
Fuel oil tank &amp; stand for
Columbus and Southern
$35 00. Call4o16·3784.
FURNISHED
1
bedroom
Electric . Call 256·64131 12
apartment in Pt. Pleasant,
p m . to9 p.m .
extra nice. adults only, no Gas heating stove 60,000
pets Phone304-675-1386
BTU . Call4o16·2637.

Piano Tuning· Be kind to
your ears. Call Bill Ward
for appointment, 446·4372 .
c &amp; L Bookkeeping. Com
plete bookkeeping cind tax
serv•ce for business and tn ·
div !duals. ·
Carol Neal-446·3862

clean 4.46· 1519or992·2430.
home In Pome~oy,
Flatwoods area. For sale
or rent. 2 story, 3 bedroom,
17 acres, large pond. 614·
446· 2359 after6 P m .

78 Dodge 0 · 150 .pickup. 4·
wheel drivE', 32,000 miles
with camper top, in ex ·
cellent cond Call446-7so.t.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-'

WANTED TO BUY a Late
Model 2 ton truck·flatbed
or cab and chaSSIS. Ph 41&amp;6·
4782.

/;'

2 bedroom family rm ., $300 COUNTRY MOBILE Home
P&lt;if mo. plus utilities, $300 Park, Roote 33, North of
dep. r-equired. Call 4.46· Pomeroy . large lots. Call
9'12·7479
4554.

51

Tuesdc:iy, January 19, 1982

/

Weekly rates available S60
3 or .4 bdr. house in Pt. and up in Circles Motel.
Pleasant near hospital. Call4ol6·250l.
S300 mo. rent S200 deposit.
Call 4ol6·8234
46
Space for Rent

2 bedrQS1m ranch style
home . An electnc 1 mile
from Racine. Available im·
mediately S175 month. 614·
949·2849

~--

OLAN Ml LLS needs people
tQ do light delivery work ,
must provide economical
transportation . Apply to :
'J ackie Carsey, Scotttsh
Inn, PI , f.l~~sant, WV
Wednesday January 20th ,
9 a .m .·12 · 00 noon . 5-6 p.m
E .O.E .• M ·F .

Homes for Rent, Lease, or
Land Contract in town or
country Strout Realty, 4460008 .

Ave, Pomeroy . Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6
$195 . month not •nclud•ng
uti lities. 992· 2188.

Miller, Rt 4,

CHIP WOOD . Poles ma x
d1ameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 p~r ton . Bundled
slab
$10 50 per ton
Deliverd to Oh10 Pallet Co.,
Rock
Spr i n gs
Rd ,
9 2

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom house. Spring

,stone jars, ant •ques. ere ,
Wnte · M 0

41

- - - - -- - --

BEDS IRON, BRASS, Old
fu rn i t ure , gold, silver
dollars. wood ice boxes,
Co mpl ete

Tuesday, January 19, 1982

Pome_roy'-Middleport, Ohio

Yettenlly's Cryptoquote: ... THE FIRST TEST OF A TRULY
GREAT MAN ISHISHUMIUTY.-JOHN RUSKIN

·'

�Flight recorders ·missing

Page

Sentinel

12-The

WASHINGTON (AP) -Salvage
crews hoisted tile faUotanAirFlor·
Ida jetliner from tile frlgid grlr'lle of
the Potnmac River on Monday, but
the crumpled secUon did not yield
two flight recorders which could uii·
ravel the causes of last week's fatal
crash.
Investigators were lniUally exul·
tant when, after batUing the frozen
rlver for five days, divers managed
to tie straps under the Boeing 737's
,tall and Uti It !rom a crane on !be
brldge overhead. But the objects of
tile operation ..- the crltical cockpit
voice and flight data recorders weren't Inside.

State budget cuts cause problems

With that, divers took to the wa· 1,CXXl g's of pressure and tempera·
ter once more, but darkness IOI'Ced tures ol2,o00 degrees Fahrenheit.
suspension of the effort for another
Asked I! he thought the recorders
day.
would be found Tuesday, he said, "I
In an evening brletlng, Francis certainly hope so."
McAdams, an NTSB member, said
Divers stopped searching at 6:15
divers were getting "two distinct p.m. because of darkrle&amp;s and plan
and separate plnglng sounds" from to resume early today, lnvestiga·
the re&lt;;orders and that he believes tors said.
they are In the 27-feet-deep water
somewhere around the area from
Pollee Inspector James P.Shu·
which the taU seclon was retrieved. gart said It was possible the reMcAdams said he would be sur- corders dropped back Into the
prtsed I! the so-called "black IC&lt;H:aked water as the blue, green
boxes" were destroyed or greatly · and white taU section, st!U bearing
damaged, explalnlng that they are Air Flortda's "AF" logo, was being
designed to withstand a force of hoisted ~nto the brtdge.

COLUMBUS, . Ohio lAP) - A
budget-sUclni knife poised over
Ohio schools and l!gencles as a result at a $1 biUJon deficit will cut
dev!!staUngly deep unless the Gen·
eraJ. Assembly Intervenes, state
controllers have been told.
· Howard Colller. director .Of the
Office ot Budget and Management, ·
said Tuesday he will have to begin
Implementing huge spending cuts
.soan If tile state Is to avoid rarung
Into almost S1 bUllon o( red Ink by
June~. 1983;the end ot the current ·
budget.
.
"I don't a.gree,profeslonaJiy with

~,

I

./

the outcome of the cuts. I think
sponstbie .lor the bottom lalllng out
they're rtdlculous," Collier told the
of tile state's 2·month-old budget. It
legislator-dominated State Control·
Included tax hikes aimed at produc·
ling Boarct.
lng $1.3 bUIIon, but which experts
· No state agencies have been or·
say will actually yteld tar less.
dered to reduce spending so far,
Collier; .who says "an economic
and Collier could not predict when
and social depression ... has a ftrm
such a directive might be Issued.
grlp 9n Ohio," blames federal poll·
"I can only deiay so long or tbe
cles lor much at the economic woes.
matllematics just become ~en
"Federal Interest policies have
more overwhelming," t)e said. "I
created a shambles of the constru~·
think that within a weeki have to dO
somethlng.' 1
lion and·. housing tndustrles," Col·
Fiscal analysts said slumping · tier said. He said foreign autos are
fioodlng tile nation whlle domestic
tax revenues and hlgher·lhan·
anticipated welfare coots are re- · manufacturers face tarl!f restrtc·

Tree p.a ckets now available
Tree packets and ~round cover
plants are available from the Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation
District.
this year the district has a
firewood special for $12 for 50 black
locust and 50 white ash seedlings.
This is an excellent chance to start
something that will be very useful in
future years.

Wild!ite Packets
Large
Small
Packet s
(S20) - Variety
10 - Sc otch Pine
10 ~- Austrian Pine
10 - Red p ine
10 - ,White_pine
10 - N orw ay Spruce
10 - White Spru ce

100 Packets
($12)

s

s
5
5
5

s

10 - sweet Gum

5

10 - Black Walnut
10 - White Birch
10 - DouqlasFir

5
5

5

Totat' seedl i n gs
Song, Bi rd Packets

Large
Packets
IS11) - Variety
5 - Wh ite Mulberry
5 - Redoiser Dogwood
5 - l_,ank ing Cherry
5 - H'ackberry

Small
Pack ets
(S6)

25 Total Seedlings

Alfred Wolfe was named president
and Warden Ours, vice president,
when the Chester Township Board of
Trustees met for its 1982
organization! session.
The bOard will meet lor a regular
session at 7:30p.m. on Jan. ?:1 at the
{own hall in Chester. The third member of the board is Gary Dill . John
Riebel is clerk.

~mergency

Tickets lor the Eastern·&amp;flthern
baske'tball game, to be played Frt·
day night at Eastern, will goon sate
In the offices of both high schools
Wednesday. Tickets are $2 for
adults and $1 lor students. Doors of
the Eastern Audltortum wiD open
at 6 p.m. Frtday preceding the
game

· To order yo~r tree seedlings, contact the Meigs SWCD by March 4.

'"

RECOVERY OF WRECKAGE- The toni tall of
an Air Florida jeUiner tiangs from a crane over
WaYhington's Potomac River Monday, after it was

SPENCER, Okla. (AP) -An ex·
.ploslon that killed five chlldren and
a teacher In an elementary schopl
cafeterla was caused by a water
heater that malfunctioned and built
\IP a mighty head at steam a few
hours after being repaired, officials
$ald.

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE ,

SAVE~&amp;

ALL SUITES MARKED' WAY BELOW
REGULAR SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICESI

100

1

With
Extra Heavy
Oak Frame

Served with Mashed Potatoes, Choice of Salad,
Rolland Drink

DINlNG ROOM ONLY

'335
Crow;s Family Restaurant

1'-·

Room Suite
~eg.

$239

'138

·,·

Pomeroy, Ohio

The &lt;ltio Compaf!Y

~. \
..

417 Second Ave. , Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-2125
Member New York St&lt;?Ck F.xchan~c

STAY WARM AND COlY THESE
COLD WINTER NIGHTS.

11

\

NAME ------------------~----------~---------------

ON OUR ENTIRE STOCK
OF WOMEN'S
'WINTER SLEEPWEAR.

r--'ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Mt:mhc.·r S.I.P.C.

Plc~sc se nd me a free copy of "Plan Tomorrow Today" so that I can learn more
about IRA's.

Clearance Sale Prices

''\\.;·
..,

2 S.Ctlon~ 16 Pagot
15 C..h
A MultlmecUa Inc, NawtpoF*

ADDM~----------------------------------------------

f

'
BLAST RIPS SCHOOL - The cafeteria
aad ld~hen area of Spencer
Elemenlary School" was reduced to rubble Tuesday wbeil an expl011lon occurred about aoontime. Six peuple were killed and more than 30 Injured.
( AP Lai!t!rphilto) .

A cook In the elementary school
kitchen turned on a tap around
lunchtirnl! Tuesday, but the faucet
only coughed steam, Oklahoma
City fire department spokesman
Phfl Cooksey s:ald.
. The cook went to report the problem, he said, and minutes later an
explosion rtpped through the kit,
chen .wan, blOwing off part of tile
root and raining glass, metal and
conCrete blocks on chlldren In tbe
cafeterla.
Thirty-five other students · and
adults at the Star Elementary
School were hurt, but Oklahoma
Cit;·. ochools superintendent Tom
Payzant said many children play·
lng In the schoolyard were saved by
the unusual ~ weather. In
severe cold, be said, chlldren often
huddled against the waD of tbe onestory brlck building In tile nor·
theastem Oklahoma City suburb.of
Spencer.
Officials estimated the blast did
$100,CXXl worth of damage.
"I don't think tbere was any ques·
tion as to the caule," Cooksey said.
"The 75-gallon water beater experienced an Internal steam explosion. The satety mechanism
failed .."
The blasted heater was found 200

feet from the building, Cooksey

said.
Cooksey said state fire marshals
and Investigators from Spencer
were trying to'flndout why the heat·
er's safety mecbanlsm didn't work.
Payzant said at a news confer·
ence that a school maintenance
worker was calli!d to fix tile water
, heater before classes began Tues.
day. He said the gas flame under
the heater had gone out.
The worker was not Interviewed
by school officials, and Payzant
sald he would leave an Inquiry Into
the cause to ftre offlctals.
But kitchen employee Florence
· Hardy, who was knocked to the
floor by the blast, said one of two
water heaters located against tile
northwest wall of tile green.palnted
kitchen had been making waier too
hot earUer In the morning.''
"It had been running the dlshwashlng water way up abOVe 200
degrees and that's way too hot.
They took It ~the hot water healer)
out and brought It back·a little later,
an'd It was supposed to have been
fixed/' she said.
Frantic parents rushed to the
school after hearing of the blast, al·
though Qfflclals pleaded vta radio .
and TV for parents to go Instead to a
community center to pick up their
chUdren.
One woman, Susan Brown. ran
three mUes to the school after her
mother·ln·law called her. Her 8Year-old child, Holly Chase, said
she had llnlsbed ·eating and was
waiting for her table to be n!cessed
to the playground when the blast
knocked apart the kitchen wall.

GRIEVING RELA TIVF.S - Falh~r Richard Jagger cumforls
grieving pareqlli of •tudenllj who were in Star Elementary School In Spencer, Okla., whim an·explosloln erupted ah&lt;IIIJ noon Tuelld11y. Six pt;t&gt;ple
were killed and more than 30 Injured. (AI&gt; La•erphoto).
.

CITY------'---------- STATE----------- Z I P - - - -

LD
Divers recover flight recorders
wASH1:NGTON - Divers today recovered the two crltlcai on·

bOard recorders or "black boxes" that may provide clues to last
week's crash of an Air Flortda jelllner Into tile Potomac River.
Both the tllght data recorder and one recording cockpit conversa·
. tions were rushed to the National Transportation Safety Board labor·
atorles for examlnatlon.
'
Board spokesman Robert Buckhorn said It was not Immediately
known whetller either recorder was damaged.
The recorders were pulled from the rtver seven days after the
Boeing 737 erasbed on takeoff from National Airport.

GNP figures Cf!nfirm deep

rec~ion

WASHINGTON - Confirming the deep recession, the govern·
ment said today that the economy decUned In the final quarter of
1!1111 at tbe fastest rate since the record quarterly downtum of spring

i98l.

The IIinauon-adjusted gross national product- the broadest mea·

sure of economiC activity - decllned at an a!U)ual rate ol5.2 percent

1n the last three months ot 19sl, the Commerce Department said.
It was the economy's worst showing since the plunge at a 9.9

percent rate at tile deepest point of tbe 1981 recession.
For au of 1981, lntlatlon·adjusted or "real" GNP rose 1.9 percent,
!hailks mostly to the robust galn of 8.6 percent at an annual rate In
the first quarter at the start of tile Reagan administration.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVEWD - The winning number drawn Tuesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number' ' was 173.
1n tile semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 1510.
The lottery repo~ eamtngs ol $176,032 on Its dally game. The
earnings came on .sales of $873,193, while holders of winning tickets
are entitled to~ $697,161, lotlery o!llcla\5 said.

.

Weather forecast
Considerable cloudiness today. High In the mld..lls. Cloudy tonight
· with snow or freezh1l rain developing alid chanilng to rain later
tonight. Lows tonight around 30. Occaslonl rain Thursday. High 35 to
41}, The chance of precipitation Is 10 ~t today and 90 percent
tonight and Thursday.
.
,. .
1 II ForecatM
Ew(
FrldaJ 1ftnU1b 8aaday- P..._.al..,.; aorih and rala , . . _
1GUib FrldaJ ud Slllarda7.
8 lq. lfllblln Cbe mid-• to
mid . . FrldaJ ud 8alulda7 ........ --to Jllld.llllluDclll,f,
JAn In Cbe . . l'rldq, '-to ....... ft I ..., _.lrurn I to 11

'*

Se=' , .

•
.i

•

•

Racine council okays appropriation;
veteran clerk -treasurer resigns post
•

These and a multitu9e of other questions will be answered
when you fill out and mail the coupon below. Do it today. '

f'·.

f I. J

pc. Living .

Many people are already aware that changes have been
made, in 1982, regarding indtvidual retirement accounts. Bits
and pieces of information have been given to consumers, but
there are still several very important 'questions that may remain
unanswered.
• What is an IRA?
• Who can open an IRA?
• How much money can I invest and do I get a tax break?
• What if I can-only invest small amounts?
• How do I open an IRA?
• Where can I inwst my IRA money?
• Should I invest early in the year or later~
• Can I direct the investments in my IRA?
• When can I start to withdraw from my IRA'

WOMEN'S
WINTER SLEEPWEAR

I

New 2-

CONFUSED
ABOUT
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS?

January Clearance Sale

.. ....

40.%

We buy direct from the factory and in large vol!lme,
which is a tremendous savings. Instead of keeping
l~at sa~ings lor ourself, we pass !hat savings along to
you, and throw in a big·savings to boot, giving you the
lowest prices M living room suites anywhere.

Admltted·-Ray Ungaro, Letar\.
W.Va.; Mandy HIU, Racine; Kenneth Reed, Middleport; Lydia Ken·
drtck, Rutland; Ida Dudding,
Middleport.
Discharged.. Walter Wells.

CHOW'S FAMILY RESTAURA_Nl
•
BAKED STEAK DINNER

Ph.. 992· 5432

enttne

recorders. (AP Laserphoto) .

Veterans Memorial

PROMOTED- Trooper Rod·
ney C. Cook, promoted to sel'
geant In the Ohio Highway
Patrol, began his duties with the
Athens PO&amp;t of the patrol tGday.
Cook, 34, a 1965 graduate ol
Southwestern High School, grad·
ualed fmm the patrol academy
In 1971 and was ,f1nt IIMipled to
the Ironton PO&amp;t. He was lranalerred lo the Gallla-Melgs POflt
In 111'76.

Every Wednesday Night At

228 W. Main

•

Six die in .school explosion

pulled from tbe wal~r. As It was lifted, a body fell from
tbe tal~ but.salvage workers could not find the cMkplt

Pomeroy...

runs

Local emergency units answered
seven calls Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Ser·
vice reports.
The Middleport Unit early Mon·
day momlng took Barbara Smith,
Park St., to Holzer Medical Center
and at 1: 50 p.m. took Don Sprague
from the office of Dr. James Conde
to Holzer Medical Center; at 2:22
the Middleport Unit took Lydia
Kendrlck to Veterans Memortal
Hospital from the Langsville area.
The Pomeroy Unit at 6: 10 p.m.
took RObert Hall from Meigs Mine 2
to O'Bieness Hospital, Athens, and !
tile RuUand Unit at 1: 49 p.m. took 1
David Jamison from that mine to
O'Bieness Hospital. RuUand at 5 ',
p.m. took Oavid Saltman from
Meigs Mine 2 to Holzer Medical
Center.
The Racine Unit at 8: f!l p.m. took .
David McMillen from the Racine
Junior High School to Veterans'·
Memorlal Hospital.

Controllers were told that while
Welfare Department operating
costs would be subjected to cuts,
benefits would not be reduced.
Although CoHier made no specl!lc requests for action by the

He sal~ work also should proceed
on legislation providing for tile ren·
ovation and construction of prtsons.
"It's not going to get any easler and
It's not going to get any cheaper,"
he said. Flnanclngforsuchprojects
Is ha11dled through bond Issues.
The deficit Is projected lor the
general revenue fund from which
state government draws Its money
to finance dally operations.

verely on prlmaiy and secondary
ediiCatlon, where $162.6 m1111on
would be siJced before June ll, and
higher education, which Is set for a
$66.5 mt!Uon cutllack.

2
2
10

Meigs County happenings
Tickets on sale

ot that size were ordered. The
budget knife would fall moot se-

panel, he saki he hoped the Leglsla·
ture would accelerate pending capl·
tal Improvements projects "to help
put people back to work."

Pomeror-Middlepert. Ohio, Wednesday, Janual)' 20, 1982

Coprrithtod 1912

on contacts with potential custo- buy. It Is an extremely good tlme to
mers who seem wUilng to take a buy for Investment purposes,"
{Continued from page l)
gamble.
Dayton said.
"The best deals that are avalla· contractor.
"They just seem to suddenly real·
The ordinance gives permission .
lze It's not going to get any better," ' ble other than a low-Interest rate
Rice said. "I think people are real· (loan ) assumption are avallable for the ooar to construct addl·
lzlng It {a horne) not only Is a rest· through owner flnanc[ng," he said. tiona! support for the first girder
dence, but It Is an Investment," he
Ms. Myrna Kobre, owner of M.
span of the brldge by erecting a
said.
Kobre and Co., Bexley, said that steel bent support near the anchor
Richard E. Bruner, Elayton, part while 1981 was the worst ·of ller 15 pin on the Ohio side ·and patching
owner of the Big HID Real Eslale years In the business, It also has the anchor pin.
The monthly report of Mayor
a
valuable learning
Co., said·a solution to the Industry's been
low sales problems must come na· experlences,
Clarence Andrews · showing retionally In the form of lower Interest
"We've learned to run our busl· ceipts In the amount of $3,791 was
rates.
' ness quite dl!ferentiy because approved.
"There's a tremendous pent-up
Pollee Chief George Stitt asked
we've had to," she said. Efforts to
demand for people to own their own
economize have centered on i'edUC· approval to purchase two tires lor
real estate," Bruner said. "(But) I
lng overhead costs while sWI pro- · one of the cruisers. Council apdon't think that we're going to see a
vidlng customers with needed
proved the request.
decent housing market untO we gei
services.
The meeting was opened · by
bllck to a flxed-rate loan."
prayer by Mayor Clarence
Although some of the brokers at
Andrews
the association meeting voiced opAltendlng were Mayor Andrews,
timiSm about chances lor a turna·
Betty Baronlck, Larry Wehrung,
round In the depressed market,
Bruce Reed, BUt Young, John And·
others said they are bracing for
erson and Harold Brown, council
another tough year.
members, Mrs. Walton, clerk and
Kenneth L. Dayton, a business
Chief Stitt.
development CQnsultant with
Realty World's Ohio Regional Cen·
Meet Thursday
ter, predicted that the 1980s WUI be
the decade of the Investor.
The Executive and Central Com·
"A lot ot bad publicity has been
mlttees of Meigs County Demoput out that It's not a good time to
crats will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday at Carpenter's Hall, E.
Main St., Pomeroy.

Named president

tile dollar· loss that scores of state
agencies wOUld experlence If cuts

2

Creative financing answer
COl.UMBUS, Ohio {API -High
Interest rates have turned many
home ownership dreams Into nigh I·
· mares, but Ohio realtors say the
public should be aware that It's still
possible to buy real estate.
Stokers and sales associates at·
tending an Ohto Association o!
Realtors meeting Monday say
creative financing, can help.
Franklin D. Rice cit Wooster, who
won salesman-of-the-year honors
for 1!1111, said lbere Is a consumer
demand to be tapped I! agents can
adapt to dl!ferent methods.
"Conventional financing as we
know It Is practlcaUy gone. We
have to team dl!ferent things,"
Rice, of Wooster Gerspacher
Realty, said.
"People want homes. You're not
selling homes today, you're seUing
financing," he said. ~·The house Is
almoot secondary."
Land contracts, lease options,
owner financing and blended-rate
mortgages are among the vartety
of approaclles available to help
cope with the high cost of borrow·
1ng money and the virtual disappearance of long-term, fixed-rate
mortgages.
Rice bases his optimism not on a
possible drop In Interest rates but

Voi.304No.l95

2
2

A matllematical solution to tile
projected deficit drawn by Collier's
statt provides lor an effective
spending cut of 19.4 percent over
the 5~ months that remain of !be
curTent fiscal year. It also calls for
reduatlons of 16.3 percent In llscal
year 1!112, which starts July 1.
Collier gave CQntroUers a ltst of

at y

e

50

5 - Whil e P ine

•

tions on tllelr exports.
The budget director said social
program benefits were being cut at
a Urne when Ohio, pla:glied by
dOubJe.dlglt unemployment, needs
them most.

RACINE - The fulcine village
council Tuesday evening accepted
the resignation of clerk-treasurer,
Mae Cleland, who has held that
position for nearly 29 years. Council
unanimously appointed Racine
resident, Frank Cleland, to fill the
position for the remainder of her
term .
The resignation was prompted by
a recent illness and hospitalization.
Besides holding that position .she
was also clerk of the bOard of Public
Affairs and served as the dispatcher
for tbe fulcine Volunteer Fire
Department and rescue squad.
Mrs. Cleland is the wife of the late
Waller Cleland, a former community leader and integral figure in
the Raci ne Volunteer Fire Depart·
men!.
Upon accepting the resignation,
Council highly commended Mrs.
Cleland lor her years of service. The

new appomtee served •as the fulclne
Posbnaster for many yeats and held ·
the clerk's office prior to Mrs.
Cleland.
In other action, council approved
the budget for the Board of Public
Affairs at $211,332. Current receipts
total $26,340.
The village budget was also approved totaling $39,649. It includes:
Police salary and wages, $2,100;
uniform and expenses, $300; fire
department operation and main·
tenance, $4,600 ; street li~hting,
$5,000; electric bills, $1,500 ; and
natural ga.i. $195 per month or
$2,400; landfill dwnping 'fees, $960;.
town personni!l salaries, $4,800;
gasoline and diesel fuel for equipment, $6,500 ; street patching, $2,100;
repairs to town cruiser and town
trucks, $2,000 ; mayor's salary, $450 ;
and village solicitor, $50.
Council salaries are $864 ; in·
surance-constractor, $424; election

fees, $50; telephone, $750; clerk·
lreasurer, $600; stamps, $300.
It was reported that $3,252 is
available for revenue sharing .
Money currently owed includes
$2,100 for street paving, $1,600 for
town back hoe. and $2,800 for the ftre
engine.
The insurance policy on town
property and t'l)uipment was
reviewed and liability insurance for
council members was discussed. At·
torney Frank W. Ptlrter was ap·
pointed as village solid tor.
Herb, H. L. Gibson, new pre~fdent
of The fulcine Gas and Service Com·
pany; Natural Gas Service in
Racine, discussed a new ordinance
involving the gas company.
The only change In the ordinance
involves a $5 service charge per
customer each month.
This service charge will go towar·
ds replacing badly needed lines and

for maintenance.
All interested residents of 11Jiclne
should attend the next rn eeti1ig if
Lher~ are any questions concerning

this matter. The onlii\ance must un.
dergo three readings.
It was indi cated that the major
supplier will still be Columbia Gus.
An olfi.ce IJesidc the Star Supply Har.
dware store will house the gas com.
pany office.
Earlier, under an emerg,ncy ordinance, three readi~wdfoe made
to mer~e ·the town cli!rk-treasurer
duties with the duties of lhe Clerk;
Board of Publl~ Affairs with one set
sala•·y.
· Ben Pctr~l was elected council
11resident.
It was approved for Rizer to haul'
Oy ash for the streets during bad
weather. The new town council
voted to recess until Monday , Jan.
25, at 7:30 p.1n.

Area resident killed in accident
A Jackson County, W.Va. man
was killed In one-car crash on
W.Va. 2 In Mason County Tuesday
morning, according to the Mason
County ~rlff's Department.
Danny B. Price, 34, Mlllwoocj,
was dead on arrival at Pleasant
Valley HoSpital at 10 a.1JI. He died
of a fractured skull, reported Dr.
John Grubb, Mason CQroner.
Deputies sald Price was appar·
ently southbolmd, five miles south
of the Mason-Jacklon county Une,
at 8:30a.m. when he last control at
his compact car on Ice as he approached Pleasant.Ridge Road .
The car 1tllen skidded Into tile
northbound lane and overturned. It
then slid 15 teet and atruck a fence
post, overturning again and com·
1ng to rest on Ita wheels. An illvl!ltl·
ptlon sbow8! Price had been
hurled from tile car throuah a IUD
roof.
,
Price wu lalu!n to PVH by tile
Point Pleasiint Relcue Squad.
A Minersville man oo.pltallzed

a

In a two-vehicle accident In Meigs · cine emergency squad to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital, where he was
County Tuesday morning.
admitted
for observation. A hasp!·
The Gallla-Melgs Post ol tile
sta~jj highway patrol said Roy E.
tal spokesman said thts morning
Armes was In gOod condition,
Annes, 62, was southbound orr Sut·
ton Twp. Rd. 100, four miles north
of Ohio 124, at 8:55 a.m. when a
The patrol saki a vehicle driven
northbound auto driven by' Carl E . by Diane L. Frasher, 26, Gallipolis,
Hicks, 68, Racine, slid lett ot center loot control wben the brakes were
and struck Annes' vehicle head-on.
applied on U.S. 35 at 5: 25 p.m. and
The collision tllen forced Amtes' hit a culvert.
veh!Clelntoadltch. Moderate dam·
Moderate damage was reported
age was reported to both vehicles to Frasher's car and no Injury was
and Arines was taken
tile Ra·
re(lorted.

Several rofficers back on job
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - Many offlcerl upset over stalled COO·
tract tala bave returned to worl&lt;; but aay IIley want an outside audit
conducted to detenn1ne tile ctty'sabUity topaytbem higher salaries .
Lt. Tom Trtppy, president of Hunttnaton'i Fratern!!l Order of
Pollee chapter, aald Tuelday that olflcen who are weD would return
to wolk.
·
.
The statement came lifter a flve.day s)ck-out trtggered by a col·
la(llle of contract neaotlettoU between tile city and the FOP, tile
ofllce!s' baraalnlni qent. The ''blue nu" epidemic bad kept 87 at
Hunttntrton'• U2 polkll!men olf tile job IInce Thursday night.

REAPPOINTED - l.etlli F.
Fultz, Pomeroy buslnes•man,
ha• been .rcappolntc..t to serve a
fwr 'year 'term on the Melga
County Board of ElcctloliH by the
executive committee of Melg•
' County Repilbllcan•.

'.

"'

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