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                  <text>Pag1

10-The Daily Sentinel

, Pomeroy-Middi.,ort, Ohio

Tax hike out --states must
assume federal programs
'

;Voi.30,No.200
IYO£
tC.,.,o!tlhtod
J.

budget dellberlltlQDS were projec·

gone on the federal level," saki the
White House source, who asked
Ing cuts or new taxes, the federal
tllat he not be Identified.
deftclt would balloon .to more .than
Several administration and con$100 bUUon In llscal1983, which beggressional sources saki the presilns~Oct.1 .
dent would:
"We're balancing a sizable de~Eschew the advice of key
tlclt on one side vs. tax Increases on White House aides and call for no
the other," said one White House ·Increase In excise or any other
official.
taxes.
One plan to Increase federal ex·~unveU a progr!UJl, to take efelse taxes on whiskey, wine, gaso- fect In stages, In which exlsttng exline and tobacco products was said
else ~ are shared with the
·
to have been calculated to ralae states.
Unlon speech.
enough money to hold the detlclt to
~Propose closing cerlaln "loopThe address, to a Joint session of
holes" In federal tax law, making
11M! House and Senate, and a ll!lllon- ~ bllllon. .
Although sevei"al well-plaCed· sure large corporallons pay a minw!de televl.slon and radio audience,
sources said the tax plan was re- • Imum Income tax.
Is to begin at 9 p.m. EST.
jected, the ~ bUUon deficit llgure
-OuUlne a plan to transfer ap"Wbeil you tum on the TV, you'll
aet a heavy dose of budget eco119m· "Is stlll there," the White Houseof- proximately 40 federal programs
~ such things as welfare, food
tlclal said1cs and the president's hopes toleHe did nottndlcatewhatsteps are stamps, and education and transgislatively
Implement
his
contemplated to reduce the llgure portation projects - to the stales.
program; federalism Initiatives,
LEADERSHIP MEETING - Preildeat Rellpa O'Neil Jr. of Maaaebuaetta alongside. Iieagaa will
from SlOO bllllon to ~ bllllon.
The stales would run them, under
and a brief overvieW of foreign )l(ll·
speab duriDg a dbmer Moaday at the White liGUle lor deliver the State of the Uoloa mea•ce to a jolal sessloa
Woven throughout the speech ledei"al standards, In exchange for
ley with some stern words toward
of the House aDd Seute. (AP Laserpbolo).
coogret~~~lonalleaders, with HOWle Speaker 1bomu P.
will he an emphaSis on what the
the excise tax revenue. The federal
Intervention In the Western Hemispresident calls "New Federallam," · government wouid take over Medl· .
phere and stem words about Pohll proposals to hand over to the cald, the l)ealth care program for
land," said one White House
states
some of the programs he the poor now financed by a CQmbl·
official.
thinks
should be admlnlstered
nation of federal and_state funds.
Deputy White House press secrecloser
to
home.
In addition, one congressional
tary Larry s~ saki the presl·
Tuppers flalns Unit at 12: 24 p.m. '
"The
federalism
Is
the
bedrock
source
said revenue from the ~jxlsl· Family learn re-enlists
dent Is · weighing a crttlclsm "In
tOok Henry Hensley, Beverly HensReaganlsm,
the
return
to
the
states
lng
tax
lmpos.ed
on
oU
companles·
l
n
straight-forward terms" of Soviet
ley and Melissa Hensley to Parol
programs
he
thinks
rightfully
beAn
Army
husband
and
wife
conjunction with prlce decontrol
arms shipments to Cuba.
·
Pomeroy
Pollee
reported
two
ackersburg hospitals with . Injuries
long
there,
that
never
shOuld
have
would
he
turned
over
to
the
stales.
.
team,
Staff
Sgt.
.James
L.
and
SuAt the heart of the president's
cidents
due
to
the
snowfall
and
received tn an auto accident near
Thesourcesalsosaldacapwould zaMe M. Stewart, has re-enlisted In
weather
conditions
Monday.
the Intersection of Roules 681 and
the
U.
S.
Army
at
Arlington
Hall
be soughf for Increases In S&lt;realled
· A car driven by James Counts,
124.
"entlllen)l!nt programs," except Station, Va., for an additional three
Racine, backed Into a car belongSyracuse at 8:09 p.m. took .AI·,
.Social Si!curlty. A congressional , years' military .service.
Ing
to
Wllllam
Lucas,
WUkesvllle,
berta
Hubbard to Veterans Memor.. .
James Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
source said this would save $60 bU·
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
inlal
and
Middleport at 10: 06 p~m. :
Walley Manley of Route 1, Reeds·
lion over five years.
·
curring
medium
damages
to
both
treated
Mrs.
Ed Smith atherbome •
Congressional sources said Rea· ville; ,and hls wife Is thedaughterof
vehlcl'ls.
,
on
Park
St.
Pomeroy
at 9:46p.m. ·
gan would caU for creation of up to Mr. and Mrs. J~jmes C. Smelker of
At
4:31
p.m.
Monday,
a
truck
took
Charles
Valsteldon
of Me- five "enterprise :zones"·lo promote 22910 Imperial Drlve, Houston. She
driven
by
Myron
Mlller,
Pomeroy,
chanic
St.,
to
Veterans.
~marla!.
· business development In depressed Is a senior admtnls~ation specllillst
sUd Into a parked car owned by
Tuppers Plains at 10:52 p.m. took ·
COLUMBUS, Olllo (AP) - Officials seeking solutjons to a projected $1 urban areas over the next three ye- with the tJ. S. Anny Intelligence .
Ralph
Werry,
Pomeroy,
on
Si!cond
Elizabeth Lyons to St. Joseph Hos-·
and Threat Analysis Center. She Is
bUllon state government detlclt say clostag schools ahead of sclledule and · ars. They said the administration
St.,
Incurring
heavy
damages
to
the
pita!, Parkersburg.
•
cutting the state work week are possible options.
wants to Waive the minimum wage a 1978 graduate of Spring Senior
side
of
the
Werry
car
and
medium
One legislator says a combination o1 spending cuts and tax hikes could requirement for youths hired In High School, Texas.
to tlie MUier vehicle.
Veterans Memorial
eventually he enacted and predicts Gov. James A. Rllodes may anilounce those businesses.
Corretltion
spending cuts this week or early next week.
Although Reagan will outline hls
Admitted--Michael Hubbard,:
' Ideas for dealing with the budget crisis were discussed Monday at a · program for the coming year, the
Due to an error, the headline In
Syracuse;
PhllUp Radford, Pome-:
, meeting ol Rhodes, leg!slatlve leaders and state tlscal omcers.
speech "Is not a long laundry list of
Monday's
Sentinel
erroneously
roy;
Ray
Wolford, Middleport; ·
' No &lt;!eclslons were made. Some wanted to walt for January Income programs. It Is more uplifting In
Local emergency units In severe
ldenllfled
Fanners
Bank &amp; Savings
Marty
Morarlty,
Racine; 0us11n:
figures before recommending cuts which could be almost a! percent to nature and It wtU emphasize the neweather conditions answered eight
Co.
of
Pomeroy
as
Farmers
s&amp;L.
Huffman,
Pomeroy.
start.
cesslty of staying on course," said
calls on Monday, the Meigs County
The Sentinel apologizes for the
Discharged--None.
However, another meeting was set Thursday and legislative leaders one adnjlnlstratlon source.
Emergency
Medical Service
error.
.said Rhodes could order spending cuts at tllat time. The state Constitution
reporia.
Postpone meeting
Free clothi~ day
,,. requires the governor to balance the budget at the end o1 each tlscal year
Syracuse at 2:22 p.m. took Ml·
A meeting of the Meigs Local:
on June 30.
chael Hubbard, Syracuse, to Ve~
.
Chapter
of the Ohio Association ol.
Free
clothing
day
w1ll
be
held
at
Senate Finance Chairman Stanley J . Aronoff, R-Ctnctnnatl, said he had
rans Memorlal Hospital and
Public
School
Employes scheduled
The
Salvation
ArmY,
ill
Butternut
"just a gut feeling" that Rhodes' orders wUI come Friday or Monday.
Middleport at -5: 23 p.m. took Kim
for
thll
evening
has been postponed
Ave.,
Pomeroy,
on
Thursday,
Jan.
Arono!f said there was somedlscusslonaboutendlng the school year two
Smith to Veterans· Memorial. · At 5
until
7:30
p.m.
on Feb. 2 at the
28, from 10 a.m. untO noon. All area
• weeks early at the end of the 1!!82-1983 school year,
Pearl 'L Roush
p.m. Middleport took Ray Wolf9rd
Meigs
Junior
High School In
residents
In
need
ol
clofhlng
are
Senate President Paul E. CiUimor, R-Port Clinton, said a four-day state
to Veterans Memorial and the
Middleport.,
PearJ··L.
Roush,
73,
Mason,
died
welcome.
·work week also was brought up, but he wail not sure whether It would save
Monday at Pleasant VaUey
.a algni11cant amount of money.
Hospllal.
, HOWle Speaker Vernal G. RltfeJr., D-New Boston, lllidhelsanxlousto
Born May 17, 190lln Nitro, she
•see January revenue figures. He said thatllfhey areas disastrous as those
was
the cjaughter ol the late Roberl
of ~ber, they might help him betler understand the $1 billion deficit
L.
and
M)nnle F. Plunkett Dudding.
· projection that carne only two months after the Leilslature raised the
She Is preceded In de~th by a
:. 18les and other taxes.
Steve Jenkins, 27, Racine, ar·, "I'm not questlO{I!ng the Integrity ol Howard CoWer or anyone else. I just daughter, Agnes E. Roush and one
rested
by the Meigs County Shegrandson.
· don't see how. those ligures could have been so far off," Rlfte 'sald.
riff's Department on a warrant
The speaker and Glllmor were stuMed Jan. 14 when CoWer, whore- · She was a cook lor 18 years at from Athens County who was
.turned Jan.'l to the post he held with Rllodes In earUer administrations, Muon Elementary and atlended
turned over to Athens County authe Mason United Methodist
· ·announced the deficit
thorities Sunday night escaped·
· . He said spending cuts, If relied on solely to balance the budaet by June 30 Church and Its sunshine Class. She Monday.
was alSO a member ol the Mason
fhls year and again on June 30, 19113, would have to be 19.4 percent In the
According to Gary Wolfe, InvestiCounty Democratic W.omen's Club
remainder of the current fiscal year and 16.3 percent the next.
gator
for the Meigs County Sherlff's
"We were told on Dec. 29 that the budget was In balance. Now, less a for 40 years and participated on the
Department,
Jenkll!S, after eluding
month later, we are told tbere Is a deficit ol tllat magnitude,'' Rlfte said. Democratic Execullve Committee
officers,
took a taxi from /t.thens to
.
AronoH said the group looked at various kinds ol cuts and how slashes at for the y,iaggner District She was a
Racine .
member ol the Rllododendron
. ·vartous levels would affect state agencies.
Wolfe went In search of Jenkins
· He said they also lalked about graduated cuts, starting at less than 19.4 Homema~Cers Club and the Mason
and located hlm at the home of bls
percent but geared to double or even tr1ple In future months If state Firemen Auxll1ary.
(Jimklns) mother. Wolfe qotltled
Survivlhg are her husband, Eber
.. revenues continue In a tailspin as CoWer predicts.
the mother to return to her horne In
Aronolf said another tax hike was not mentioned at the closed door Roush, Mason; three daughters,
order
to let Wolfe enter the resi.' .meeting but tllat he stlll Insists one may be needed. "But the cuts are Ruth Ryan, Jean Grueser and Mtn·
dence.
Wolle then called Jenkins
nie Rlze~,, Mason; one sister, Mary
· ' Inevitable,'' the senator said.
and
told
hlm give up, which he did.
F. Dudc!lng, Mason; one brother,
Jenkins
Is presenlly lodged In
Robert P. Dudding, Mason; .slx
Meigs County Jan. Meigs County
grandchildren,
11
great·
authorities have a bench warrant
grandchUdren
and
several
nieces
(Continued from page 1)
on Jenkins for !allure to comply
and nepliews.
(Continued
from
page
1)
Funer&lt;il services wlll be held at 1 with a court order.
through personal contact or using
Improvement o1 Route 124. rrom ,p.m. Thu,rsday at the Foglesong
the mall claim service.
Route 7 to WilkesVille; raising the Funeral Home with Revs. Bennie
Mrs Adkins reported 51 new
level of Route 248 In one location Stevens and James KltUe will orftAU schools of Meigs County were
claims for unemployment benefits,
38 claims reopened, 588 continued above the 100 year flood stage; re- cate and 'bul1al w1ll he held at tbe closed Tuesday as the result of a
four lnch·'snow which fell Monday
claims, and 125 new extended claims habWtatlon of two bridges on Route Kirkland Mernorlal Gardens.
Friends may call the funeral
and the accompanylpg ley roads.
provided through the ,13 week ex- 681, general Improvements to
home on Wednesd;l.y between 1·9
All schools are over the live calamtension on unemployment benefits county roads.
Jennlngs spoke on the study p.m.
lty days to which they are entitled
(or the week ending Jan. 23.
In lieu of fiowers, the famlly reby the State Department of EducaOther area officers scheduled for made of housing, water and sewage
lion without makeup time being
closing include ClrclevUie, Logan, tn Racine, Portland and Tuppers quests dOnations be contr1buted to
required.
McConnelsvllle, New Lexington, Plains. He )l(llnted out fhat local the Mason Emergency Stiuad.
committees we~;e formed to maker---------~---;,...--------~
Waverly, McArthur and Caldwell.
In addlllon to thoee job service recommendations and plans for the
faclliUes, tlie bureau said Work In· communities. The. group outlined
. centive Program offices would be sites lor housing aa wen as needs:
fTSFORTREL.
closed In Youngstown, ·Springfield, Copies of the Study will he distribT'hlfs • you need to knOW'.
Uted to officials who might be help. 'Lani:aster, Ironton·and Painesville.
ful In development of additional '
In the· meantime, Dr. Robert facllllles.
· . Zlrrimerinan, G4Uipolls DevelopA discussion brought out that the
menial Center superintendent, re- state Is plann!nr a feaaiblllty study
)l(lrted . nothing ~ out of ·his of a road to the new Ravenswood
meettng last Friday with Ohio De-. bridge and Is planning to resurface
Served with Mashed Potatoes, Choice of Salad,
"partrnentofMenlaiRetardallonof- Route 124 from Route 338 to Racine
~oil and Drink
f!clals
over
proposed
job although that probably w1U not take
a!Jollsllmellts at GDC.
place this year.
Zbnmemlan said he lwd at leut
Fleshly cut fOf the season - .Joan Curtis does a
two more meetings slated with
sheer floral border dress in Celanese FortreJ®
ODMR staft and he doesn't anllcl· !\ Mail carrier hurt
· p()lyester knit. This drop shoulder dress has a self
DINING
ROOM ONLY ·
pate any further developments this
.
.'
bound .jewel neckline with center back slash and
week.
: Long Bottom Post 0tt1ce patrons
button clostJres. Block only. Sizes 8-16. Machine
· ODMR announced last Thuraday lare advised that their rural catrler,
washable.
.1
It popolled Job abolllhments to the PhliUp RadfOrd, waa InJured In an
superintendents · at the GaiUpolls, auto accident Moaday. He was •FORTREL Is a trademark of Fiber Industries, Inc .•
Orient and ColumbUs developmen- taken to Veteran&amp; Meinol1al Hospia subei~iary of Celanese Corporation. ·
'
'
.
tal centers due to decreasing client tal wherehewaaadmlltedfortreatpopulatlon. Officials said the abol· ment of Injuries. /1. subetltute Is
~ts were rnandaated by tile lleiDI Uled io lll!i'YI! the 101111! fOO
' State'I He!tnlal budget and not by . Pllnm DOmlaiJy II!I'VIced by
228 W. Main
. Pomergy; .Ohio
Ph. 992-5432
the preen! state detlclt
· Radford.

WASIDNGTON (AP) - Prest·
dent Reagan w1ll tell Congress ~ .
the American people tonight tllat '
he will not seek higher taxes, bUt ·
that the stateswtll have to takeover
apProximately 40 federal progJ;amS, well-placed sources say. ·
Reagan summoned Republlcan
CO!lile&amp;Sionai leaders to a WhlU!
House meeting this morning to
begin I'OU!Idlni up the help tllat wUI
be crUcial to passing the program
he wUI ouWne In bls State ol the

at y enttne
Economy still .problem

e

.,

uons that wiiiiOut additional spend-

Meigs County h_appenings
Check accidents

Shorter work week,
early school closings,
options in fiscal crisis

•·

•

•

. WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
\lent Reagan's pitch lor a "bold
stroke" transfer o1 $47 bllllon In fed-

deficits and the troubled economy.
· era! programs to the sta~ Is doing
Democrats and Republicans
lltUe to aUay the concerns of lawmakers preoccupied ~th soaring · alike were quick to say the proposal
Reagan outllned Tuesday night In
hls first State of the Unton speech
should not be allowed to divert national attenllon from coping with
pressing economic problems ..
The federal government, while
shifting the burden of the programs
to the stales, also should turn over
the revenue to pay for them, Reagan said. That would come from
e)(Clse taxes on gasoline, tobacCo,
alcohol and telephones, plus the socalled wlndfaU profits tax on oU.
Food stamps and welfare were
among the programs Reagan proposed turning over to stall! and local governments. The switch would
begin In October 1983, and he COJ11·
pleted In eight years, Reagan said.
During tllat period the programs
would cost approximately $400 bUUon, according to administration
esllmales.
In exchange. the federal government would take over full responslbllty for the·Medicaid program ol
· health care for the needy.
Rellgan conceded the nation was
"In a Ume of recesslon,''&lt;but said
the tax and budget-cutting ' pi'ogra_ms.Congressenacled athisbeh· ·
FIRST STATE OF THE UNION ADDRESS- President Reagaa adest last year need more time to take
. dresses a J"lnt Se881oa of Congre111 Tuesday night In the HOWle cbamber
hold. He cautioned against expectoa Capitol Hill to give bls first State of tbe Union Ypeeeh yiace taklag ofIng a "quick flx."
flee juMt..- one ye~~r ago. ( AP Laserphoto).
·
That
lo provide llttle ~

for the many leg!slators most o! them facing re-election In
10 months - eager for something
more than an admonlllon to hang
tough.
Senate Majority Leader Howard
Baker, R-Tenn., caUed ·Reagan's
plan to transfer more than 40 programs to the stales "a brave courageelis ·statement" that coUld_ be
approved by Congress this year.
But .Sen. Mark Hattleld, .R-Ore.,
chairman of fhe Appropriations
Committee, cautioned: "His success In achieving this remarkable
program ... wlll ultimately hiN!e on
an economic rebirth In the coming
year. The looli1lng specter or Increasing federal deficits and high
Interest rales simply cannot he
Ignored."
And Senate Finance Chairman
Bob Dole, the Kansas RepubUcan
whose appeal for an Increase In exelse taxes to trtm the deficit went
unheeded by Reagan, warned the
transfer Jllan Could "produce some
pitfalls.'• Federal deficits of Just
under $100 bUUon, the figure cited
by Reagan In his address, "are not
economically acceptable," Dole
added.
Democrallc crltlclsm was predictably harsher.
Senate Minority Leader Robert
C. Byrd, 0-W.Va., said, "I don't belleve Democrats or Republicans
(Continued onpage20)

Escapee back
in custody

Elberfelds In·Pomeroy

seemed

Candidate on 300 mile walk
DAYTON, Ohio- Walter Beckjord, who Is seeking the RepubU· ·
can nomination to a U.S. Senate seat from Ohio, reached Dayton on
Tuesday on his 39G-mlle campaign walk from Cincinnati to
Cleveland.
·
+ w ' :f!eckjord, a Cincinnati attorney and former Clactnnatl QouncUman, said tllat hls Jegtslallve goals Include "a revival of the economy
on a lasting basis, through removal of unreasonable rules, through
lncenllves for additional savings and lnveslment. and through the
revival of the Incentive system ... so those able to work will not pass
up Jobs to receive government benefits."
·

·columbm Gas joi'ns drilling effort
CHARLESTON, W.Va. -Columbia Gas Transmlsslon Corp. has
joined with a Louisiana company to buy oU and gas drilling rights tp
about 250,lm acres In Vermo'!,t. omclals said Tuesday.
Columbia aMounced that It has joined with Louisiana Land and
Explorallon Co. to buy the oU and gas leases from Ohio OU and Gas
Co.
Columbia spokeswoman Ellen Schweppe described the partnership as "50-50,'' but said the purchase prlce would not be disclosed
because "It's a prlvaU! business deaL"
She described the acqulslllon as "very speculative" and said Columbia wUI have to test before determining Whether drilling Is
jusllfled.

Police chief faces charge
WASHINGTON COURT HOUSE, Ohio - Pollee Chief Rodman
Scott and awdllary policeman Harold Balles. are to appear In
F;~yette County Municipal Court Friday at 1: 30 p.m. In coMection
With the alleged t~lt of cable television service.
Each man faces a third-degree misdemeanor charge of receiving
unauthorized cable U!levlslon service.
Both have pleaded Innocent to the charge.

Johnson••

Democrats ~ respond

Schools closed

Winning Ohio. lottery number

f

CLEVELAND - The wtnntng number di-awn Tuesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 134.
In too' 5emlweekly "Pick 4" game, the w1iln1ng number was 5676.
The lottery reported earnlngs .of $97,431.50 Its dally game. The
earnlllgs came on sliles of $930,557.50, wbUe holders ol w1nnlnll
tickets are entitled to share $833,126, lotterY olflclals said.

Weather forecast

'315

'Crow's Family Restaurant
'(

to address

WASHING'fON- The Democrats used President Reagan's most
effective forum - television - to respond to his State of the Union
message with a nationally broadcast portrait of the Reagan admlnls· •
traUon as rewarding the wealthy and Ignoring the hungry and jobless or America.
The 30-mtnuU! producllon, whose $65,lm cost was financed by the
Democratic National Committee and tbe party's House and Senate
campaign committees, was aired Tuesday night atler Reagan deUvered hls first State of the Union message before a televised Joint
session ol Congress.
Interspersed with fumed vignettes of citizens complaining about
tlfe In the Reagan era were results ol a Democrallc-commlssloned
poU unfavorable to the Reagan administration and crltlcal comments from Democratic politicians.

Ivery Wednesday Night Af

CROW'S.FAMILY RESTAURANT
BAKED STEAK DINNER

MAKF.'I POINT- Prelldent Ro1111ld Reagan lllllkes a point wblle addressing a Joint Session· of Coagreas Tuelday night on Capitol .Hill.
Reagan YBid that be would hold the line on tax lnCI'ellses but wanted more
help from stale and local governmeats on federal programs. (AP Laserphoto).

Lack of money
halts projects

·sPRING

Unemployment

Mostly cloudy tonight Low 1n the upper 30S to near 40. Bnsk winds
tonight Cloudy with a chance or shOwers Thursday. High near 45
with temperatures faUtng during the afternoon. The clwjce ol pre. clpltatlon Is a! percent ionlgbt and 30 percent Thursday.
I
Ohio ExteDded o.tlook
FridaJ lllralqb 8uDda1 - A 1'onoe of ,._,.•trt.lee
.. Ill lbe aorlbelllit
Fttday. Otaoe• wloe f81r.llflbiiD lbe m1Ht1 to-• Friday, Ill llle

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

low .... low . . lllliut'dar IIDd lbe mid .....IDd . . . . . ., • . _ .
llllbe . _ FridaJ IIDd .. lbe upper ..... low . . a....nta, IIDd
Swde)'. ....
~'

,DESCRJIIIIB BYPASS PL-\Ns- state Rep. Claire (Buzz) Ball Jr.,
&amp;-Aihenll (left), polnta .to a eect1on ol u.s. 3$ throulfl Gallla Cciunly
. slated for bnprovement through the creallon of a four-lane bypaa.
Hokllllg the other end of lbe map Is Walter G. Smith, deputy dlredor of
Diatrtct 10 ol the Ohio ~..-tment ol Transportation. BOth are pUIIhlng
lor lbe completion of destin plans and rtghHf-way purchaie for the
project, althoulh federal and lllate funding remains a lhomy question.

I

.

Commi-ssioners
•
votce
concer11
about closing

It's a message heard all too
often: Improvement of U.S. 35
through Gallla County can be accomplished by the construction of a
four-lane bypass, but money Is the
only thing standing between It and
Its creation.
However, an Ohio Department ol
Tr11nsportatlon oHiclal and a state
legislator told the Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday
design plans and right-of-way purchases must be completed to aUow
lor funding .
'\It's one of the most needed prOjects, and probably one of the biggest,'' said Walter G. Smith, deputy
director of OOOf's Dlstr1ct 10 ofnee In Manetta.
Smith said an Improvement plan
was being drawn up prior to AprU
1911) when money problems forced
the department to terminate Its
contract with the designer.
However. the designer had substantially completed work on most
of a three-section plan for 35. Smith
and State Rep., Claire (Buzz) Ball
told the chamber two sections of the
plan must be completed at the
same time for the pr,oposed bypass
to work.
The two plans call for the fourlane to begin just north --ol Rlo
Grande to a point near BidwellRodney Road. The road would then
continue from there to the present
35 Intersection with Ohio 160.
Since the bypass would go cro!IScountry, neither plan Is workable
unless buUt at the same time. Complellon of just one would lead nowhere, Smith explained.
A third plan, to create a four-lane
on the present road between Rlo
Grande and CentervUie, Is Important, "but not vital," he added, be-

cause traffic now drops oH between
the two vUiages.
Smith said more design work Is
expected to he done on the two
plans In June . The plans and purchase or land must be complete to
allow the project torankhlghon the
priority list.
Ball, an Athens Republican, said
funding on the project would be '75
percentlederal and25percentstate
.- provided the money's there.
"We all have to be optimists," he
said.
Estimated costs on all three seclions come to $22 million on the seclion from Bidwell-Rodney Road to
Holzer Medical Cenu.r, S26 mUUon
on the part from Rlo Grande to
Bidwell-Rodney and SS% mUUon OR·
the four-lane tci Centerville.
"We're getting close to $60 million, which Is no small project,''
Smith noted.
Even with everythlnK done and
the money obtained, however, actual construction on the bypaso
couldn't begin until the mld-1980s,
the oHiclals said.
The money problem faced by the
state Is also affecting other ·a rea
road projects, prlmarlly the Appalachian Highway, Ball and Smith
revealed.
While the Brown and Adams
counties project Is expected to go
through, stretches of U.S. 50 betWeen Athens and Albany and
Athens and Coolville have been put
on the shelf because the funding
Isn't available.
BaU said the 3 percent gasoUne
tax was Introduced last year to
raise revenue for such projectB,
and he thinks there may be a gas
tax Increase In the future as a
means of raising JI!Ore money.

Meigs County CommiSSioners gineertng design for the county enTuesday voiced their concern atier gineer's approval to move the
small streat 30 feet along Forest
learning or the state's decision to
close the Meigs oHice of the Ohio
Run-Road.
Roberts verbally approved the
Bureau of Employment Service.
plans tor re-locating the stream. A
The board lssu~d the following: "We are shocked to hear vla
public hearing w1ll be held In order
· (Continued on page 20)
• the news media ofthe state's Intent
to close the Ohio Bureau of Employment Service office In Meigs
County.
"In addition we are highly disappointed that the State of Ohip has
seen fit to make an announcement
without first even discussing the
matler with the Meigs County
CommiSSioners.
"Much time and eHort went ·Into
establlsblng this office In our
county In 19'T7 and the convenlence
Candidates for lour county-level posts will be nominated In the June primary elections, the Meigs
and economic advantages have
County
Board of Elections rewrts.
·
worked out wen lor the citizens of
· Candidates ffn- any of the four posts have until 4 p.m. on March 25 to file their petitions with the
this county.
'
board.
"Havfng not been advised by
Positions opening this year for nominations by the Democrals a~d Republicans include one seat
state •autliorltles of the closing ol
on the board of county commissioners, a four year term, now held by Henry Wells, Republican ; the
this oHlce, we fall to see the ratiocounty audltO!''s post, now held by Republican Howard Frank who announced that he will not seek
nale of the state when more and
nomination and reelection as has Wells; common pleas court judgeship held by John C. Bacon, and
/more people are becoming
an unexpired term for county recorder.
·
unemployed.
Manning Roush, a Republican, has flied his petition for nomination to run for county com"It Is our Intent to Immediately
missioner and Bill Wickline, chief deputy In the office of County Auditor Frank says he wil! Meek
contact Representative Claire Ball, .~
nomination and election to the auditor's post.
Jr., and Senator Oilkley Collins to
Charles Knight, Pomeroy Attorney, has filed his petition to run for the common pleas court
see If ~ythlng can be done to sav"'
judgeship.
· this agency for Meigs County."
. Emmogene Holstein, R., of Syracuse was recently appointed to serve as county recorder for 1982
County engineer PhU Roberts ,
replacing the late Eleanor Robson .
and county highway superintend·
· In ihe May primary, candidates will be nominated to run for the two years remaining on the
ent, Ted Warner, along with repre, unexpired term of the late Miss Robson.
sentatives of Coal Power, lnc.,
MelgsCountians will also elect a county court judge in the fall, but candidates for that post do not
Gene McGrath and Ray Fassnacht
file until August since It is a non-parllsan post.
.
1
dl:lcussed the development ol a coal
The board of elections expects a•blg election this year, not only from the local level standpoint,
mining operation on the Ed Baer
but from the standpOint of slate level officials who will be nominated in the June primary.
p1ope.:ty In Sutton Township.
McGrath presented the basic en,

Four county-level posts
highlight June 8 primary

. ,

·-

1S C..,to

"==:per

Ia~

Squads kept busy

Area deaths

2 Sodlon, 20 Pagot
A Multin:odb Inc.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, .Januart 27, 1982

\

I

' ·~

\.

f

,

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Wedlle$day, January 27, 1982

Must phone

Meigs' three cage teains In.action Friday
After taking a day off Tuesday seventh win of the season,
Wells, Randy Leytori, and Scott 233 of 682 attempts for a 34 percent up following a lengthy injury. .goals for . a 37 percent shooting
night, aU three Meigs County high
Last week Eastern became the Gewis. Paul McNeal is South- shooting percentage.
Sprague is an important man inside average.
schools' cage team~ will reium to only team to shut down Southern's western's top rebounder and also
Four year man Tim Dill again has for the Eagles.
Individually Bob Ashley leads the
action Friday evening. Undefeated offense and 1n doing so limited the has had several outstanding of·
been
leading
the
Eagles
offensively.
At
Waverly
Marauders
both in scoring and In
Southern returns to its home hard- powerful Whirlwinds to just 37 poin· fensive perfonnances of late.
Dill
now
~as
212
points
on
the
season
Also
Frid!ly
evening
the
Meigs
rebounding.
The .all-time leading
wood where the perennial power· Is. This week Easter!} hopes to make
The Eagles of Coach Qennls !or a 17.6 average overall. Within tbe Marauders take their act to the road Meigs rebounder owns a 16.6 scoring
house . battles the North Gallia its defense even tighter against the Eichinger have scored 594 points on
SVAC Dill owns a 17.4 scoring to Waverly. After a long draught,
Pirates.
struggling Highlanders, who stand the year for a 49.5 scoring average. average, ranking among the best In )l'leigs is seeking its first win of the average this season with 232 points.
Next comes Randy Murray with a
Eastern 's Eagles travel to Palriot at 1-9 overall.
Its opposition has tallied 613 the league. Dill also has been the top season, Meigs· is now tH4 on the 9.9 average, follOWL'!l lby Roger
for a match with tHe Southwestern
Southwestern is led by Paul Me· markers for a 5I.i average overall.
season. It has scored 714 points on Kovalchik with a 7.7 r!lark, Nick
Highlanders, while winless Meigs Neal, Gary Baker, Rob Price, Rnl(er _f'ro'm the fi~ld Eastern has canned f'l!bounder on the Eagle club.
Mike
Bissell
with
101
points,
has
a
the year for a 51 point average, while Riggs,a 7.5 mark, and Rick Edw!lrds
hits the road to Waverly for an
8.4
average,
while
P.
G.
Riffe
con·
aUowing
941 points for a 67 point a 5.3 mark. All games are slated for
SEOALtilt.
tinues
to
increase
his
average
to
7
.9.
rnark
per
outing. From the field 8 p.m. starting times, with reserve
Southern, in quest of its sixth ·
Charlie
Ritchie
owns
a
3.7
mark,
Meigs
has
canned 290 of 786 field tilts selfor 6:30a.m.
straight Southern Valley Athletic
Greg
Cole
has
a
5.5'mark,
and
Roger
.Conference title, will host North
Bis!iell a 3.1 marie. This week Paul
Gallia at Southern High School. The
r-------~~--------------Sprague
hopes to return lo the lineAAROM BOONSUE, M.D. and
,
Tornadoes first captured the league ·
croWil in 1977 with an undefeated 18) ·
FRANCIS FUGARO, M.D. .
0 regular season record. Since that
Announce
time, Southern has dominated the
league and not relinquished the title,
also racking up sectional, district,
and regional crowns along the way.
The Tornadoes of .Coach Carl Wolfe
are currently l:Hl.
The Pirate Crew of North Gallia,
8:~ P~M.
now U, will sail into Racine under
new leader Bruce Wilson.
Leading the ranks of the Pirate
TelephOne
67.5•1675 .
.
·crew are senior Gregg Dee! and
AUTOMOBILE CLUB
of Southeastern Ohio
junior Mike Mays, two cagers who
89 Columbus Road
consistently reach double figures.
Athens, Oh .
2511i.and Jefferson Avenue
Flanking Dee! and Mays are Bob
593 - ~677
TIM
DILL
(directly
behind Fruth Pharmacy)
KENT
WOLFE
FEB
.
I,
1982
Blackburn, Eric Holle, and big Matt
I'Ol~t
Pleasant, WV.25550
6-4,
Senior
Center
Senior Guard
Kemper.
The Pirates are bigandstrongand ~-------------------------L==-:_=======-_.:..J).
~old a lot of potential for the future,
powever, last time out, Southern
. dwnped North Gallia 78-50. During
the uprising Southern placed every
rnan in the scoring colwnn.
This time out, Southern hopes to
rebound from two slow starts and .
agai~ force the Pirates to walk the
plank.
Southern finally got a much
needed rest after Tuesday's off day,
and 'is looking ahead to ·a great
outing Friday.
Saturday night Southern goes to
Southeastern of Ross County.
Two years ago, in this tot&gt;"notch
Class "A" rivalry Southeastern
pulled off a convincing victory, but
last year Southern squeezed out a
52-5! win . This year's game at
Richmond Dale will be the rubber
rna tch between the two schools.
Southern has outscored its opponent 898 to 620. Southern now
a~rrages 60 points per game, while
allowing just 47.8 per outing. From
the field Southern owns a 45.2 per·
cent shooting average, hitting 356 of
711,6 field goals through 13 games.
Kent Wolfe leads the Southern offense with ~ points for a 21.6
averagll overall. Within 'the league
the hot-handed southpaw owns a,n 18
point average.
Robert Brown has totaled 129 poin·
ts for a 9.9 average and is the team's ·
leading rebounder.
Talented outside shooter Richard
Wolfe owns a 9.5 scoring average
and Is also a leading factor on the
boards for Southern. Another sharp
outside shooter Jay Rees has "a 7.6
scorin~ average, Zane Beegle has a
6.5 mark, and Tom Roseberry has a
4.5 average.
The hustling Eastern Eagles a·re 66 on the season, but still hav~&gt;a chance for a great ·season. .Four of
Eastern's losses have come at the
hands of state-ranked teams .
Eastern's record may be deceiving
and its tough schedule beneficial
going down the stretch and into the
last half of the season.
Eaglet~ on road
Friday evening the Eastern ·squad
travels to Southwestern for an important battle with the Southwestern
Highlanders. Last time out against
Southwestern the Eagles, despite a
cold spell from the floor, held on for
a 50-42 win . This.tlme as in the past
the Eagles hope to sw~ through .
the Highla~ds and bring home its

rate~ ri~e ?._______·_·_R_ob_e_rt_Wt_al_te_rs

Ill Court Str~t
Pomt!ruy, Obh1
tiHIZ.%151
DEVOTED TO THE JNTER~TOF THE MEIGS-MASON ARF.A

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publhlher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Allllt~bhll

BOB HOEFLICH

Publl.d wr /Cn lllrt.lll~r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News F..dllo r
A. MEMBER of The Allilllll' htkt.l Prt"t~ll , hiland DHily Prl"llll Allt~Ot'IHiiun 111nd tilt'

A.m~rlca n Nt'WNpa&amp;per PubliHhti"N Allllodatlun.

LE1TERS OF OPINION lllrt' wt&gt;ltumt"d . Thjjy Hhould lw lt&gt;!ill Uwn lOO wurdt~IOnH. All

~tten lllrl' Hubj~l

tu editing and must be tdl{nt.od with name, auldrtllll ud klephune
number, No uRJilgoed l~ lkn will !II': publl~hr-d. l..dlt'111Nh11uld bt' in KIMKI tad•~. addrt!tjt~JnK

lnun..}IOt ~rNunalJIIt'll.

•

Operation Memorial

WASffiNGTON (NEAl - When
the country's largest corporation
deploys its awesome resources
behind a misleading propaganda
campaign, a great many people (including some who ought to know bel·
ter) are going lobe deceived.
That's essentially what the
American Telepone and. Telegraph
Co. has done in promoting the myth
that any attempt to break up the corporation would surely lead to
staggering increases·in the price of
local telephone service.
The ploy has been used in·
cessantly in recent years to
stimulate pubirc opposition . to
initiatives in Congress, the federal
courtS· and the Federal .Communications Corrunission that would
force AT&amp;T to divest itself of some
of its subl;idiaries.
Thus, it was hardly surprising that
the same fraudule~t formulation
promptly reappeared after AT&amp;T
agreed to a major restructuring of
the company in order to reach an
out-of-court settlement of a Justice
Department antitrust suit.
The proposed divestiture would
require AT&amp;T to relinquish control
over the 22 ••(lCrallng comparties that
comprise t!le B•ll System . while
retalnin ~ .~s Lnw LineS Department, whit:h 1"'-"~&lt;!·. k .. ~ ong..Wstcmce
serviee; and other ciimponents.
Company officials we~ . Jl,qick to
renew their longstanding propaganda campaign. "The long distance
subsidy will be gone and obviously
the local companies will be under a
lot of pressure to raise prices," announced one AT&amp;T spokesman.
"AT&amp;T's long-distance charges
are still supporting local service,"
. added the president of a major Bell
System company. "After
divestiture, we will receive no 'subsidy. Local rates will have to double
in the next five years."

Some of the country's major news
organizations were euchred by those
proclamations. "Consumers to Face
Higher Bills for Local Calls," ~aid a
front-page headline · in the
Washington Post. "Local Rate Rise
Viewed as Likely," said a front-page
headline in The New York Times.
In fact, there is not now and never
has been any long-distance "subsidy" of loc~I telephone service.
Moreover, the djvestiture .proposal
contains no language whatever that
would · affect the current
arrangement.
'
In a simplified example of, a
typical long-distance call, three
companies are eligible to share In
the revenues obtained from the
customer placing the call - the two

local service companies in the communlt,les where the call is originated
and tenliinated and the AT&amp;T Long
Lines Department.
(One or both of thll!Mflocal service
·companies could be Bell System af·
fillates, but there also are more than
9,500 local telephone companies
throughout the country that are not
affiliated . in any member with
AT&amp;T).
The payments to the companies
participating In the transmissi~n of
the caD are apportioned through an
arcane process, known as
"separations and settlements," that
assigns a value to the service
provided by each compan)'.
_
The formula governing the
separations and settlements process

is established by an obsccure
· organization, known as the "Joint
Board," composed of three officials
from the Federal CommunicatiOns
commission and three represen·
tatives of the state agencies that
regulate telephone service.
· Under pressure fr&lt;m AT&amp;T, the
Joint .Board is in the process of
revising the formula to allocate
more of the revenues generated by
long-distance calls to AT&amp;T's Long
Lines Department and less money to
local companies.
·
But those modifications are the
result of AT&amp;T's need to compete
more effectively with l'&lt;!CI, liT,
Southern Pacific and other firms
that in recent years have drastically
undercut AT&amp;T's prices for long:
distance service.
'

IW

AhW SUITABLE

I

1

EVENING OFFICE HOURS

DRIVER
TRAINING

.

SCHOOL

. 'DESIGN fOR A ·
VIETNAM .WAR

The Vietnam war itself may be receding into history, but it is still much
.too soon to be able to say that we have put behind us the bitterness it caused
within the American polity.
Consider the furor that has been raised anew over the planned·Vietnam
memorial in Washington. It might have been expected that it would be the
idea of a memorial that would be attacked by those who opposed the war,
whose numbers became legion. ·
Not so. ·Even the more celebrated ·firebrands have beeq quiet on this
issue. lt is, essentially, the otherside that has taken up critical arms at the
target is the design that has been selected for the memorial.
: It is, admittedly, subdued for a Washington awash ·in flamboyant
P!'Sturings in nei}-Ciassic marble. Selected in a national competition, the
memorial design specifies two low walls of polished black granite meeting in
a shallow V. On the walls are to be inscribed the names of 57,692 known dead
in Vietnam and 2,500 missing in action .
The effect of the low-key approach has been to outrage some military
and congressional quarters. It has bee n termed a "black ditch," "an insult
to those it is intended to memorialize" and a potential "wailing wall" for an·
!\-militarists by spokesmen for the former and is the subject of a letter of
protest to President Reagan from the latter.
·
Most seriously, from the point of view of the memorial's backers, In·
terior Secretary James G. Watt was moved to put a hold on final release of
~~----~~----------~~----------~I
the site, national parkland on the capital's Mall donated by Congress. ·
~: None of this surprises Jan Scruggs, the Vietnam veteran who heads the
j)rivate committee established to construct the monwnent. He sees it as
ivevitable.
. "Every time the word (Vietnam) is spoken, it brings back all the bit·
NEW YORK (AP) - A!Aer hav· may ~ above 9 percent, If It has
terness of the war," he observes. ''Emotions come to the surface and people
They are accepting the turn of that people are willing to endure
lng
been softened by years of go- • not already.
start firing away at each other."
economic fortune, and appear to be paln because they feel they brought
vernn1ent handouts and easy
At that level, numbers appear In' doing so with good grace. There It on themselves, and that they feel
· They certainly do.
credit,
the ques!4on _arises: Can the
official reports that can't be dupli: This is only the latest of the trials of the memorial project. Its supporters
seems even to be the suggestion up to the job of working their way
· previously had to correct the mistaken impression that the granite would ordinary American still endure eco- cated without going all the ')'BY
back Into economic health.
.
back to the late and unlamented
o::arry no mention of Vietnam. It will. It is also intended, contrary to much- nomic pain•
You judge. More than 16 million 19309 and the Great DepressiOI'I Berepeated criticism, to fly the flag at the site.
Amertcans
are job-damaged: uncause comparable records weren't
: And those who served and survived as well as the casualties will be ·
employed,
worlilng
part time or so kept back then, the popular tenn
~membered. The dedication inscription as now approved is to read : "Our
nation hours the courage, sacrifice and devotion to duty of its Vietnam forsaken they have ceased looking. for tbe Increasingly bad jobless picMUUons of families needing houses
Yeterans.
ture Is "postwar high," but It really
: The design is defended as neither pro- nor anti-war but designed to en- caMot afford them, nor can they
means
"worst
since
the
afford cars.
Depression."
c,ourage reflection.
.
MIJUons of fam!Ues have lowered
As If things weren't tough
· Despite the continuing critical barrage, Scruggs is confident that the
!hell'·
diets:
the
consumption
of
red
. WASffiNGTON (AP) -A year lem," said Wright, ·who has spent
enough,
there remains a posslb!Uty
project will be completed. It still has the official approval of the major
meat,
considered
a
good
measure
after
the roof fell In on other con·
that
'taxes
wlU
be
Increased
for
the
V.eterans organizations, including the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the
most of the past month exiled to the
of
high-cost
taste,
has
been
falling
ordinary
person.
Various
excise'
gressional
Democrats, the ceiling smaller, district office he has In the
American Legion. Almost $3 million in donations from organizations and in·
taxes on consumer goods might be started coming down on House Madividuals has been raised toward the estimated $7 million construction cost In recent years after at least two
LongWorth House Office Building
decades
of
steady
rise.
jority Leader Jtrn Wrtght, Dsought;
If not Immediately then
of the privately financed memorial.
while repairmen worked on theCa·
Increases In purcbaslng power sometime In the next few years.
Texas.
: Scruggs expects groundbreaking to lake place as scheduled March I at
pitol office he rates as amjortty
have been almost Insignificant of
"Pieces oflt were landing on my leader.
Mlnlmlim income taxes might be
the site between the Washington and Lincoln memorials.
late, and now workers are giving
desk, falling Into my coffee cup. It
Imposed, too.
· If it does, and is carried to completion, the memorial may do more than
Meanwhile, as the long congres·
back
benefits
they
won
earller.
In spite of the pain, surveys show, was hard to keep my mind on what
add a different look to monumental Washington.
slonal Christmas recess drew to a
many people who have been hurt I was doing," Wright said.
; To our benefit as a united nation, it could mark the last major operation They have Jo~ because of Inflation
close, other workers were busy In
too;
the
1970
dollar
Is
worth
50
cents
Another Republican uprising?
continue to belleve sacrifiCes are
of our most unfortunate war.
other parts ol the Capitol getting
now.
No, jus! another casualty of the
necessary:
and
they
seem
wl!Ung
to
rooms and corridors ready for the
'
In part beause of that decline,
detertorallng West facade of the
continue In the same direction, hop1982 session.
Amertcans switched economic phi·
Capitol b~ildlng. Moisture had
Ing thereby to work things out,
The "ladles only" lounge In the
loso1,1hy and changed the party In
Theanswertothequestlon, there- seeped Into the walls and celling of
House of Representatives, for
oftlce. The problems grew worse,
the majority leader's office, caus- .women members and congresfore, seems to. be that A!tlertcans
and there are many tnlllcatlons the
are wUUng and able to endure pain, Ing plaster and paint to chip, peel
sional wives, was refurbished
worst has not yet been reached. Unand falL
at least while they think It will do
comp)ete with pink woodwork.
employment, to cite one example,
some good. .
·
"It's not an Insurmountable prob·

to

·•
patn.
endure

ItS a -new year
·~with a
new look. ,,

·•

problem not
·Republicans' fault ·

'

Berry's World

The devil and 't he
"The devll will quote scripture for
his own purposes."
That popular aphorism fits the
running controversy over tax exemptions for segrcgalt..'ll schools.
It fits the mad1inatiuns of. White
House Couoselor Edwin Meese, who·
helped engineer a rev~rsal of anllyear·Oid policy prohibiting a taxpayers' subl;idy for organizations,
particulat'\y schools, that practice

" Sorry! I only deal in ELECTRONIC funds
transfers. "

Letters to the Editor
Roberts tribute
, Pomeroy lost a great man when
Bob Roberts died. ·Everyone who
~new Bob had the highest respect for
him. He was the kind of person you
liked when you first met him. He
'!ways had a laugh and a kind word
(or everyone.
He was a teacher for many years,
and everyone that he ever taught
had nothing but praise for him.
I have yet to ever hear a person
k,y anything against Bob Roberts.
He was a coach for a Pomeroy l..i~tle
IA!ague Baseball team for years.
l\sk anyone who ever played for Bob
and they wlll tell you they learned
about f~ir play and sportsmanship
from him.
: He was not a coach who went
around cursing and complaining. He
knew every kid on all the learns, n·ot
just the ones he coached, and they
'

all had the highest respect for him.
When it was still Pomeroy High
School, and the teains in football,
basketball and baseball would be
playing at home or away, you would
see and hear Bob Roberts cheering
louder than anyone ; he was a great
fan of the boys.
When Bob was named "Man of the
Year" a few years ago, I agreed one
hundred percent, but I believed it ,
was many years late coming.
I would like to see a monument of
some kind dedicated to the memory
of Bob Ro!Jtrts. I believe Pomeroy
owes. him that much, for all the Jove
and kindness he has given us. Bob,
you may not have been the greatest,
but I believe you are with the
greatest now, the Almighty God.
Thanks, Bob, for being my friend,
and giving your love and kindness to
so many people. God bless you, Bob,
and may you·rest in peace. -Robert
Burton, 26 Cave St., Pomeroy, Ohio.

,.

Bible~-----'---Ju_lia_n_Bo_nd ..

him firmly in favor of equal oi&gt;'
president and his men simply wanportunity but whose administration
ted Congress, not the IRS, to sci lax
daily dismantles the legal structures
policy,
.
erected to enforce it.
1t was clear.oeut,'' Meese said
Since 1971, those defenders of
later·. "not havin~ administrative
democracy have included Sectton al(encies makin~ social policy.'
50! (C)(3) of the Internal Revenue
The move reflected · the
Code w· ·· '· •·sl:.o"li•hed criteria for
RepuWican platfonn's promise to
lax '-':'l1 Hq)( ;,,l:s ~" ·q lt.r ll't. gt'·:crnstop IRS 11 harassment"
of
meut'' a1uhty It' wr\hhclu i!•e111. · segregated private schools as well
More than IOU sc~oul• with r·adali~
as the traditional conservative comracial disrrimination.
restrictive policies have been denied plaint that agencies like the IRS
It fits the faceless minions of the tax exempti~ns on the basis of l~at don't jusyenforce the law, but write
Treasury and Justice departments
""- is as ll!di_v.6!1d it signaled the
1 section.
who anonymously dropped the an·
This policy pf the Nixon ad· "'-r. s nght Chat the Reagan adnow1ceme11t of their policy shift late ministration was continued under ministration would reinforce their
on a Friday afternoon, hoping that it Presidents Ford, Carter and Reagan
racism.
would receive scant notice in the unlil Jan. 8, when the federal
Initially the White House said that
press.
government made public its plan to it would not reco11unend to Congress
It fits the defenders of Christian drop out of a court battle against two
what its policy on tax exemptions
apartheid, who believe that the God schools that had been denied tax should be. But that was before
who made all men didn't intend for exemptions.
liberal and civil-rights organizations
all men to mix In school or in
The reversal wasn't an en- (and some conservatives, such as
marriilge.
dorsement of racial bias, the ad· Sen. Mark Mattingly, R-Ga.) ex·
It even fits President Reagan, ministration said. Rather, the
ploded.in unanticipated protest.
whose public pronouncements place
11

The president decided four days
after lhe announcement to do what
the White House had said it would
not do - that is, to ask Congress to
deny tax exemptions to segregated
schools. He also issu a statement
declaring that he was '
lterably
opposed to racial discrimi lion in
any fonn ."
Meanwhile, Meese's colleagu s in
the White House triumvirate Chief of Staff James Baker and
Deputy Chief of Staff Michael
Deever - discovered that Meese
had known about the policy change
before Christmas.
As the dust settle'!! and the Whitt•
House prepared to 'send its tax·
exemption bill to Congress, the ad·
ministration was clearly revealed to
have no positive civH-rights policy.
"
And blacks in the Reagan govern·
ment were shown to have only after· .
the-fact input inio decisions with
racial overtones.

Bob A.llhley
&amp;-1, Senior cealer

•

"
' '

..
'
'

h

L

.t,

·'··''

Bank One has remodeled its main office and we're
pleased to invite you, our customers and friends,
to an Open House January 28 from 5 to 7 p.m.
Stop by to meet our staff, have some refreshments
and take a tour. We've carpeted, papered, painted
and rearranged things to our hearts' content. Now
that it's finished we're ready to celebrate.
The Bank will also be open for tours and
refreshments January 29 and 30 during regular
bank hours.

Young. Marauders
post 42-31 victocy

.'-

.'

Effective February 1, 1982

__________________________

~oof

11

MONDAY, niESDAY, THURSDAY AND FRIDAY
. ,6:30 ·

Point Pleasant M"lcal Center

MEhmAL

Americans willing

•

•

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Paii,.r'Oif Middleport, Ohio
W~netday, January 27, 1982

'

The Daily Sentinei-Page--3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

The Meigs Marauders' seventh .
grade basketball team recently
defeated Southern's seventh
graders, 42-31.
Huey Eason led the balanced
scoring attack for Meigs with )2
points. Donnie Becker chipped in·11
pointa, and J. R. Kjtchen had nine
points. Steve Musser had 12 rebounds for the Marauders.
Matt .Harris led Southern with 10
points. The fdarauders are now H
on the year. They will play Jackson ·
Wedneliday, Jan. 'll, at the Meigs .
Junior High School.

/

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POMEAOY•AUTLANO•TUPPERS PLAINS
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STDRES

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\

\
newg conference In Anaheim, CaUl., Tuet~day:
Jackson, form~rly a New York Yankee and now a free
agent, announced Tue!iday that he was signing with the
Angels. lAP Laserphotol.

ME7 AN ANGEL? - llalleball great Reggie
Jaeksou, left, casts a glance at CaUfornla Angels'
slugging ouUieider Don Baylor after Baylor playfully
baloneed an Angels' cap on Jackson's head during

Flamboyant Jac'-'~on signs
multi-year Angel contract

Montana, right, as he carries
game
the fleid
following the 49ers 26-21 Super Bowl XVI win over the
Bengals Sunday. ( AP Laserphotol.

CONGRATULATIONS, FELLA Clnclnnal
Bengals' defensive player Rose Browner (791,
congratulates San Francisco t9eni quarterback Joe

Mood changes after viewing film
CINCINNATI (API -The mood
of Cincinnati Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg Soured considerably a!ter he saw a television vldeota.pe of
the first hal! or the team's 2S-211oss
to the San Francisco 49ers ln Super
Bowl XVI.
"I feel much better now that I've
seen the first hal!. I know where the
problems were . I know what happened," said Gregg'on Tuesday. He
was In remarkbly good splrlts after
the game Sunday In Pontiac, Mich.
· "We ·had some people playing
that first hal! like they were In a .
dream - veteran football players
thatshouldn't have. lt was amazing
the things that happened to vefe..

G eg
ld th th
r be~a beat ere Is a differ~~~~ed. een lng tense and being

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what I saw . ... When the blg one r.;;;;~iij;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;-jijjiiijjiiiiiiiiiiiiii1
col)les, you find out who ls and wtto 1
Isn't," said Gregg.
Old he change his opinions on
some of his players ln the Super
Bowl?
"I can't say that right now . It
would be very unfair to say so. I
saw It In a limited situa tion," he
said.
But the more Gregg talked, the
angrier he became.
He bristled a t the suggestion that
tension was the sole reason lor the
Bengals' mistakes.
"Don't give me this tense stuff.
When I was a player, we had footbaD play~rs who'd go Into the john
and throw up 1l they wre so tense,
then go out and have a great game.
"I never went Into a ball game In
my ll!e that I Wasn't tense .~. but
once the game started, that's lt. It's
the same way every ball game, and
1t should be. If we got guys who are
not tense, I'm not putting enough
pressure on them," said Gregg.

Vorlc, New Yorkl0017.

ANAHEIM, Ca111. (AP I -

1

rans," said
Gregg, who
hasmm•
not
viewed
the coaches'
game
yet.
Gregg refused to name names,
but he brought up the Interception
!hat quarterback Ken Anderson
threw alter the 49ers had tumbled
the opening klckoll. Gregg then
mentioned a rumble by wide receiver Crls Collinsworth that ended
another first-hal! touchdown drive.
He:atso·sald that he was unhappy
with the overall play of the defense.
·:I know what I would do 11 I had
them .ln a meeting this morning,"
said Gregg, whqwon'tseetheteam
again untU the mlnl-camp next
summer before the regular
summer camp.
'!I think I'll hold the mlnl-camp
eacty ," he said.
"I'm not too damn happy, I! you ·
want to know, espectaUy after I saw

Memtwr: The Associated Press, Inland

Sertes and had been selected to the .
Reg- year contract with the Angels be.
Ueved
to
CO.!ltaln
clauses,
Including
American League.All-Star team l.l
gie Jackson shpwed up before 28
attendance,
that
could
make
lt
times. Hls 425 home runs rank him
microphones, a room run of repor$900,!MXI
~
year.
No
figures
worth
18th
on the all-time Ust.
ters and the cowboy owner ·of hts
were
revealed.
"I
expect to give evi!rythlng I ·
new American League team and he ·
as
"Mr.
October"
lor
h1s
Known
have
everyday I go on the field,"
signed h1s name to a new multi·
World
Series
performances
with
Jackson
said when asked I! he exyear contract.
the
Oakland
A's
and
the
Yankeees,
pected
to
be a deslgoated hitter.
All was part of the ballyhoo welJackson
was
asked
,
when
he
come of the 35-year-old outfielder
Neither Jackson nor Don Baylor,
who has Switched lor the 1982 sea- . thought he might play again In Oc·
both
outstanding hitters, has been '
tober
since
the
Angeles
have
son from the American League .
noted
for h1s fielding, but each has ·
playoffs
only
once.
reached
the
champion New York York Yanoutstanding
power.
"If
we
win
enough
10-9
games,
It
kees to the also-ran Ca111ornla ·
Jackson
said
lt was "dt!flcult
could
be
the
World
Series
this
Oc·
Angels.
.
New
York.
Playing there .
leaving
Iober,"
the
ebulllent
Jackson
Jackson neatly skipped questions ·
me
strengthen
my chances. ·
helped
repUed.
.
on whether hls spats with Yankees .
Most
of
r.}i
~xperlences were gOOd . .
Manager
Mauch
later
said
that
owner ·eeo~e Steinbrenner'' fig· .
I a ppre ciated wearing the
havtng"a hitter such as Jackson 1n
ured In h1s signing.
pinstripes. ·
the
lineup
would
bolster
the
morale
· "I can't compare Mr. (Gene) Au·
"I think I am a better baseball
of
the.
pitching
staU,
but
admitted
trY or Mr. Steinbrenner," the
player
today. I may not be able to
·
the
Angeles
needed
more
mound
player said. "I had my differences
sustain
a 162-game series but I un·
strength.
with Mr. Steinbrenner,.but that 1s
derstand
the Importance of certain
hitting
Jackson
The
left-handed
not Important now."
games."
10
home
runs
In
the
.World
has
hlt
Jackson signed a reported tour-

rumble. He said that he thought at
the time, ',';nus 1s what we came
here to do.
·
"Tense ls apprehe!lslveness. r~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
Scared is being afraid offallure ... 1
tense Is the uncertainty of 11. Afraid
Is being afraid of not measuring
up," he said.
Gregg said he dldn 't know If the
204 Condor St.
Bengals were scared and added
Pomeroy, Oh.
that he felt that the mood or the
Phone: 992-2974
team was good In the warmups and
~EWWINTER HOURS :
Open Tues.1hru Fri.
after the kickoff.
9 AM. !II S P .M.
"! thought o11t team was loose .. . I
Sal. 9 A.M.Iill P.M.
thought a good Indication of what tt
was llke happened on the first
~GRAVELY
play,'' he said, noting that the Bengals recovered the 49ers' opening

NEW' YORK (AP) .;""- Some of
baseball's biggest names, lnclud·
lng New . York Yankee pitcher
Tommy John and Amerif;an
League batting champion Carney
Lansford, are among neariy 100
major leaguers seeking salary
arbitration.
In taking their cases to an 'Jrnpartlal arbltraior, players hope to get
more money than team owners are
wiUlng to give. But the players also
face possible retallatlon, said Marvtn Mlller, executive director of the
Major League Players Association.
''The bullying never stops,''
MWer said Tuesday when he announced this year's llst of dis"g;untled players, "Some players
don't know their rights. Some are
wary and w111 swallow a lot. I have
to tell them that they have td conslder the retallatlon an owner can
take. n
Miller said an owner can retaltate by sending a young player to
the minor leagues, or In the case of
veteran pitcher Ken Holtzinan, "an
established player...can be burled
In the bullpen."
John, the Yankees' wlnnlngest
pitcher over the _last three y~rs, .

repo':fedly wants more. than the
$475,!MXI offered for 1982.
Lansford, who batted .336 forBos)On last season, !Ued tor arbitration
despite being offered a "tretnendous Increase" In h1s salary, said
Red Sox owner Haywood Sullivan.
Others who !Ued for salary hearlngs by the mlgnlght Monday deadline Include I,.os Angeles outfielder
Pedro Guerrero, · Detroit pitcher
Jack Morris, outfielder Paul Molltor of MUwaukee, lnflelders Ken
OberkleU and Tom Her:r of St.
Louts, and outfielders Dwayne
Murphy and Rickey Henderson of
Oakland.
Players may negotiate with their
teams right up until an arbitration
ruling 1s rendered, and most cases
never reach formal hearings. Last
season, only 24 otl(Jl cases actually
went before an arbitrator.
This year's llst of 103 players who
!Ued by the mldnlghtMondaydeadline dropped to 98 by late Tuesday
with the announced'slgnlngs of Clncinnatl's Mike LaCoss, Rick Sutc111fe of Cleveland and Jim Clancy,
Jerry Garvin and Al Woods of
Toronto.
.
In arbitration hearings, the

player and team each submits a
single salary figure and arguments
supporting lt. The arbitrator then
picks one figure or the other.
Final figures must be exchanged
by Thursday, with hearings scheduled tor Feb. 1·20 In New York,
Chicago and Los Angeles.
. The number of players seeklng
arbitration thls year ls the secondhighest total since the process
began.
"I think through the years, as
players become more familiar with
the arbitration mechanism, tbere 1s
a greater incUnatlon to use lt," said
MWer.
Players who have come away
from hearings as blg winners IncludeoutfielderSteveKempandrellet pitcher Bruce Sutter. Kemp
won ruUngs twice, getting $210,00&gt;
!rom the Detroit Tigers In 19fll and
$600,1XXl in 1981.
In 1980, Sutter was awarded was
awarded $700,!MXI, double what the
Chicago Cubs wanted to pay hlm .
Cincinnati players llllng were
pitchers Tom Hume, Mario Soto,
and Frank Pastore, Infielder Ralael Landestoy and catcher Mike
. O'Berry.

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�wednesday. Janwry 21, 1982

Baylor upsets
By 4.-d•led ~
WIUI Abe Lemons away ...Ule
Texas Longhorns won't play.WIUI their coach In Oklahoma
City because his brother was hav·
lng surgery, · the fifth-ranked
Longhorns played one ot their
worst basketball games of Ule season Tuesday night.
The result was a 69-591oss to Baylor Ulat ended , Ulelr unbeaten
streak at 14 and reduced Ule Top
' Twenty to one undefeated team,

... KNEE INJURY - Mike Wacker, Unlvel'!llly of
1exas forward, holds his left knee after falling under
Clle Texas b!lsket Tue!!day night In Waco, Texas. Texas

10111 Wacker for the test of the gaille, and also lost a 8959 dedslon to the Baylor Beal'!l, suffering their fil'llt
loss of the season. ( AP Laserphoto 1.

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grlllllley

AP Cormpoadeal

"'
'jhe car Is flaming red, a

handsOme tribute to Joe Montana, most
vjiluable player of Super Bowl XVI.
It :WW be waiting for him to return
f~m hl.\1 next few ports of call Henolulu Sunday for the Pro Bowl
~and then Kenya and Nairobi
f~ a 10-day African camera safari.
Jbere Is one problem, though.
Tltls particular model Is not
ecjidpped wiUI a sidecar. It ought to
hf'e ~me ...or two, perhaps ... to ~~:c·
· commodate placekicker Ray
\'ferschlng and linebacker Hacks41w; Reynolds. That's because as ·
IIJ)Portant as Montana was to San
~lsco's Super Bowl triumph,
tl)e kicker wltll bushy mustache
aijd Ule Unebacker wltll the !ntrlgul1ij nickname did their share, too.
~The 49ers scored 26 points on Su·
~ Sunday and 14 of them were
ptpduced by Werschlng. He kicked
a:·record·tylng four field goals and
al,jhough Ulree of Ulem were short
rqe chip shots, Ule fact remains
~t he did put Ule ballll!!tween the
li!)rlghts everytlme. Those Ulree
. ~ts per pap wore down Ule Ben~· Remember,ltyou'recountlng
dillY touchdowns and extra points,
c;lnclnnati won Ule Super Bowl, 21·
Werschlng's'fleld goals were the
dtfterence on Ule scoreboard.
. ~But It you absolutely refuse to
tjilnk about making a kicker MVP,
wjll lhPre·s an alternative. You .
~ld also make a very strong argu~nt for Reynolds, fhe. heart and
spul of Ule_49er defense.
•l'hree times, ClnclnnaU drove In~ Ule 10-yard line and each time,
Bengals c~me up empty,
to Reynolds and his pals.
Lfte In the Ullrd quarter, San Fran~o's brilliant goal-line stand

1•:

Gaul featured
in sports hook

lion's ranked teams, No. l2 Arkansas escaped with a 64-63 vletocy
over Texas A&amp;M and No. 17 North
Carolina State held off Georgia
Tech 49-40.
Top Twenty
Darrell Walker raced downcourt
and hit a :!).foot jump shot wiUI two
seconds to play, rallying Arkaris8s
. over Texas A&amp;M.
The . winning shot came after
A&amp;M's Rudy Woods sank a tree
Ulrow w!Ul eight seconds lett to give
Missouri.
Ule Aggles a 6U2 Iliad. But Woods
"We're still 14-1 and there's a
missed his second shot and Walker
long way to go," said texas assist· · sprinted to Ule winning goal, giving
ant Coach Barry Dowd, who IIUed
Ule Rai.orbacks their second oneIn tor Lemons Tuuesday night. · point victory In tour days. T)!ey bad
"Baylor played well and Terry Teabeaten Houston 67-4i61ast Saturday.
gle was just super."
The Razorbacks fell behind 22-W
Teagle scored 22 pplnts, l81n Ule
w1Ul8: l2 to play In Ule first halt and
second half when the unheralded
did not lead again Ulltll Walker's
Bears raced past the Longhol11B.
spectacular jump shOt. 'J'he Aggtes
Texas, second-leading rebound- . led 39-32 at halftlrile and jumped
Ing team In Ule country, was beaten
out to a 49-34 advantage after six
badly on Ule backboards, 48-28,
minutes. of Ule second ha!1 before
mainly because Texas' sophomore
Arkansas ratlted behind Walker,
sensation, Mike Wacker, Injured
who led all scorers wiUI 23 points.
his left knee In Ule first halt and
never retumed.
early
leadCarotlna
behind the
outside
shoot·
North
State
bull!
an
Dowd went to his bench to try to
lng ot Dereck W'lllttenburg and held
replace Wacker but couldn't find
ott stubbom Georgia Tech. W'lllt·
Ule help he needed. The Bears Ulen
tenburg finished w!Ul 20 points,
proceeded to doUble Texas' rewhile tmward Thurl BaUey added
12.
bol!Dd 19tal and outdistanced Ule
·Longhorns in the final five minutes.
Coach Jim Valvano's Wolfpack
"It was a great victory ·tor the
used Its rebounding and Whitten·
Baylor Bears and our program In
burg's shootlng In an at~empt to
general," said Baylor Coach Jim
make sure It didn't tall victim to
Haller. "I think this victory will
Georgia Tech's slow-paced play
and tightly-packed zone defense.
again prove Ulat our league; from
tOp to bottom, can hold Its own wiUI
Lee Goza led Georgia Tech wiUI
, any In the nation. Terry Teagle and
14 points.
Ou!U Hall completely oveniha·
Valvano, whose club was upset
dowed LaSalle Thompson Inside. .
last week In a slow-tempo game
"0/A!ll was able to do some things
against Duke, deCided to let Whit·
. wltllout Wacker playing. It hurt me
tenburg fl!'e away at Ule Yellow
tD see Wacker go out because we
Jackets.
were very close during recruiting."
"Yes; we wanted to send Whitten"Sure, we missed Wacker but
burg to Ule basket," valvano said.
Ulere' s no way to tell what Ule outI'He's an acrobatic athlete and he
was eftectlve. '!
come would have been w!Ul him In
Ulere ...we missed his reboun(jlng,"
"Our program Is sWI strugsaid Dowd. "They outrebounded us
gling," said Georgia Tech Coach
brutally, and Ulat's one place we
Bobby Cremlns. "The guys don't
had been beating people."
have the confidence they need to be
In oUler games Involving Ule nabig winners In Ulls league, but
we're Improving. I guess you have
to crawl before you walk and tonight was an example of Ulat."
Games caUed off

David E. Gaul, a junjor at Eastern
High School, and son of Richard and
Betty Gaul, Chesie, has been chosen
to be featured in the upcoming
edition of the " American High
School Athlete." This past fall David
-started at tackle on Eastern's undefeated . cha111pionship .football
team, earning ali..SVAC honors and
all-district honors along the way.
Besides excelling in sports, he also
owns a high academic average and
is a member of the National Honor
Society at Eastern High School. His .
selection in the "American High
School Athlete" identifies him as a
member of a prestigious group comprised of less than one percent of all
students nationwide.

turned back Ule Bengals tour times
after a first down at the 3-yard line.
Dan Bunz, Lawrence Pfilars and
Ule rest of Ule 49er defense all contrtbuted to. Ulat stonewall stand.
But Ule man In Ule middle of It, the
man who held It together, was
Reynolds.
There can be no argument Ulat
Montana constructed two Impres- ·
slve TD drives - one of Ulem
stretchtog a Super Bowl record 92
yards. And he made· no mistakes.
There were no lnterceptlons, no turnovers when he was on Ule field.
When he couldn't complete a pass,
Top teacher
he didn't force Ule Issue. He simply
Ulrew the ball away. He was cool
NEW YORK (AP) -Jane Read
and competent, the way a Super
h,a s been named the LPGA
Bowl quarterback ought to be.
Teacher-of-the-Year for 1981, comThe MVP selection Is dlfflcult bemissioner Ray Volpe announced.
cause Ule Sport Magazine poll of
Read works at correcting hooks
voters begl!is with eight minutes
and sllces .a t the Ora~ Bl'QI!k
left In the game. Little room Js left
Country Club In Hollywood, Flit: 'l'o'
for late heroics, like Wersch!ng's fl.
quallty tor the award, a teacher
nal two field goals which sealed the
must be a Class-A or Master Proverdict, for example. So, the tentesslonal of the Teaching Division.
dencylstogowlthtllesafecholce She must have shown exceptional
In this case, Montana.
leadership and dedication to the
This Super Joe had an edge going
game of golf. She must have conin because of the position he plays.
trlbuted to the promotion of golf by
Nine of Ule 16 Super Bowl MVPs
promoting women's and junior
have been quarterbacks. They are
golf. And she must have supervised
MVPs all right- Most VIsible Pertournaments on local and suite levformers . But most valuable?
els. According to Volpe, Read quaUPerhaps, only perhaps.
!led on all counts.

Jones hit

a

17-foot jumper wltll

seven seconds lett to give Ule Red
Raiders a 25-24 victory over Prln·
ceton In a slowdown game, Norm
Bailey scored 13 points and Mike
McKay and Comy Thoropson each
had l2 as Connecticut stopped Yale
63-57 and BW Calhoun scqred 18
points and~ Cooper added 15 to
lead Fordham to a 73-56 victory
over Manhattan.
Also, John Bagley hit an 18-toot
jump shot wiUI eight seconds to
play to give Boston College a 44&gt;44
vlctocy over Rhode 'Island, Doug
Arnold scared 30 points and team·
mate Darrell Browder added 23 to
pace Te~s Christian to an 85-82
upset ot Houston, Brett Brown
came ott the bench and scored a
career-high 21 points while directIng Boston University over Northeastern 82-64 and Nevada Reno's
BUly Allen scored 21 points and
handed out four assists to lead Ule
Wolf Pack to a 73-71 victory over
Idaho State.

~~,i~~~~~~~~,~

Tournament set
Sam Jones of Glouster has announced Ulat the 1982 Southeasl\!m
Ohio Golden Glove Tournament wiD
be held at Jacksonville-Trimble
High School, on Ule weekend of Feb.
20-21.
Weigh-in for the event will be
Thursday, Feb. 18. Any interested
person in Meigs County should contact Carl Hysell, Meigs County
Juvenile officer.

Alc:ron

.

'tOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ray McCallum, who scored
:f; points in two games, has been
rilrl!ed Player of Ule Week In Mid·
Mnerican Conference basketball.
5-foot-9 junior from Muncie,
]Jid., hit 14 points in Ule Cardinals'
~ overtime loss to Ohio UnlverlitY and a game-high 24 points In a
'*:tory over Central Michigan.
· )::Meanwhile, Kin Worden, a 5-11
feiward from Westem Michigan,
W.s named Ule league's Player of
tfle Week In women's basketball.
111e senior from Lansing, Mich.,
IJI&amp;d 28 points against Bowling
.&amp;een. 24 against Detroit and l8
~alnst Indiana.
~rd

:.;roo

Berkshire 65, Bloomfield &amp;i
8emt'- Union 57, U lleny UniOn M
Bethel 85, Bradford 4B

Bklom-Carrol.l 68, Falrf\!Jid Unloo 66,

rrr

298 SECOND ST.

Brookvtu.r 79, Natlonal Trail 7Q
~ S. ~ Je(!erson Union ~
Buckeye TraU til, Shenandoah 52
Cadiz '10, &amp;ckeye N. t8
·

POMEROY,O. ·

Canal Wlnche!l1er 90, MUlersport 46

. Ca nton Hei'itage 59, Ccaup Chr, i'i
Canllnrton 57, Northrnoc :16, 20T
OlarOOn 69, Je«enon 4~

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH .JAN. JU, 1982

ctn. Locklarxl £7, Jla,l.avla 56.
Cln. Moeller 61, Cln. Prtnceton 60
C1D. Oak HUis ~.

C\n, Weslem

ctn. Reading 66. Norwood ~

Hllls !i2

Chi. Taf1 48. •WUmlnglon 16

Cleve. Glenville 57, Ck&gt;ve. E. Teth 51
~- Kennedy 66, Cleve. Ha~ 49

.

Clew. U ncoln -West l57, Cleve. Manhall
Cleve. W. Tech i'l, Ck&gt;vP. SOUOI 5C
Clew!land Hts. Tl. Carneld Ht.s. 5'1
Cloverleaf 58, Medina 57
ColuQlbht fi.1 , Brook.lyn :'ill
Col. Beechcroft b,l, Col. U ndt'n-

McKlnley 48
Co!. East 61, Col. CeDte Mla.l 57
Col. HarnUlcln 'JWp. 48, l.ofotn Elm 43
O..yahoga Falls 70, Rllvt'nna ED
Day. Klser 91, Day. Christian 4J
OubUn ~\, Col. Wauerson 49
E . t:anton 5!1, Ca ndlton ~9
·
E. Uverpool 12. Oak Glen. W. \'a . 56
E. Palestine 75, &amp;!aver Local 13
Eaton '{!. MiddJC'IOWn Mj!dl90n 56
F1relancb 119, Lu!Mran W. 43
Fis her cath. 71, Arnanda-Cleaf'('r«!k 60
F'ort Jennin.lt"S !'1!1, Pandora-GUboa 48
F'ranklln 116, Day. 0.JTOll 76
Freder1cktown ~. Sparta HJgh.land .1'1
Frontier 65 , St. Marya, W. Va. 5:1
Geneva Kl , Ashtllbula St. John 39
Grandvii."W 56, ax. Ready ~5
Greefl!'vUie (1), Day. Oakwood 56
Hamilton Badin 58, Day. ·JeUerson ~7

M1amlsbura 59. Lebanon 53.
M oQ~an !51,

DINNER BELL

:Down-ing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
WIUIAM D. CHILDS
DON E. MULLEN
101111 F. MUSSER
CHARLES B. II!ULLEN
MICHAEL L CHILDS
'""'7_ _ _ __

a

8••••

$ 99
Boiled Ham.........~~ ..

SLICED

DINNER BELL

$ 79
Chuck Roast .......L!•••
USDA CHOICE
$ 99
Round Steak .......L!.•••
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

ar

Tr1·Va!lcy 00

Newbury 69, Grand Val . 67

Newton 56, MUton-Unlon ~.or
Olmsted Falls e!, ElyMa W. 61
f&gt;C(&gt;blrs 71, LalhBn . Western 66
Perry~W'IJ 63. Anthony Wayne 45
River VIeW 100. Philo 47
.

Rootstown 54, Ravenna SE 00
Rosldon:l 77, Sylvanl.a Southview 67
St . HC'IU'}' 14, Mlu lssll!awa Val. 4!5
Salem 14, Struthers 52
Sebrtng Mr:Klnley !52, Southern Lmll42
Shtl1dan tiO, ~ Lellin((tOn 53
R Amhenl t8. CUyahoga Hts. 46
S. Chark&gt;tton SE 50, MadliOn P!aiM 48,
20'1'
Spl&gt;ALt&gt;rvUic 6.1. Uncolnvlew 6:2
Sprtn ~ CathOliC 411. Y ~ lkJw Spr1ngs 45
Sprtna. Northweste rn f7, Graham 41
Sta nton Local !\7, Oerghol7. SprtnR. :16,
CIT
Slcubcnvilk' 82, New Phll* lphla 69
St cubcn\11~ Ca th. ~. Wellsv1lle 4:1
Stow !17, Nordonla 41

Whole Picnics ..~~.

Waynesville 49, Uttle Miami 41
Wt'IMoo (W. Va. t Madonna 81. Mingo !ill
W. carTOUIOfl 6), Plqiia 57

W('storvllle S. 21, Col. WhetstOne 24
WhltC'haU 71 , Upper Artlr\gUln "

Wor1 hlna1m

au-. 64, Ott.lo Dear :\5

Xenia 74, F'alrborn Bakrl- 67
YOUJtR . Raye!'l !iJ, Young. Chaney 45

You/l[ . South 92, Vounx. E as1 T7
Zanesville 66. Col. Eastmoor 59

Top Twenty
· By 'lite A.adated PreM
The Top 'l'wettty teams in 'llr Atuocl·
ated Pres.!' ~ blits~tbaU poll, with
!tnt-plate votes In parentheles, thiS sea son's rtCOrd and total jJOlnDI. Polnu
bilsed 00 :» t9- 1&amp;-17- 16-1 ~ 1 4-ll-U. ll- l ().'-8.
7-6-5-4-H -1:
1. Mluour1 t.l:h
16-0 1 . 1~
~ . DePaW

"(1111~ ................. ~~

14-1 1,1.34
18- 1 1,101

lS I
14-0

6. Iowa

1J.2

7. Ken tucky

~

919
8:8

U. Idaho

12.-J
til
14-2 ~ 6&amp;6
lM · 821
12.J
618
1&amp;-1
~

ll. Arbruas
lJ. Alabama

1.1-2
11-2

!512

14. l(f.nlllJ St
a Tl!llneut'll'

IH
13-3

428

8. Oregon St .
9. San Franclllco
10. MIMCtOta

lJ.3

3M

17. rb"1h Cu OI Ina Sl
11. wm Forest
19. Fmno St .
2:1. Vlllanou

15-3 .

211

l.J.l

IJ-3

til9
66

Mhrdlr•~

JlltWiry 13. 1tl2
T~am

ZhJe'sSportShop

Eagle:. Club

Tony 't~ Carr)'Oul

Smlth'll Bot.ly Shop

PltJ.
U
22
11
14

Smit.b-Nelson MolorN
.·
10
LoogShOOI
•
Hl!!l'l serit s- Bob HeruJley ~11, Mn!rte Dul(ln :
566 ; RtwCarliOil515. Carolyn Bachner605 .

HlNh ,~~:arne - Bob He-rudey 202, Mninr DuKHn '
MD; ClydeSiyre :IU, carolyn Bachner 115.
Te»m 1erie21- Smith'sJI~y Shop IN7.
Team M""k! - E1..~~:1e~ 708.

Wanl!! lo coach

~oe Nolan has agreed to a new one-

~ar contract wltll Ule Cincinnati

Jfeds.
: Nolan, 30, was acquired by the

Beds u a tree agent In June 19fJl.
lie 'hlt .~ las! season In 81 games

ts ,the Reds i'egular catcher and

.l!'lllle In 26 runs.

: . Terms of the contract were not

Zllsclosed.
•.

r'

,,

•0 Mobil Oil Corporation 1982

$

~9

m

Elr1Y WednMiay

~olan signs contract
•'
.
:: ClNCINNATI (AP) - Catcher

GALLON

2% M1lk ................ .

m
a

16. 1\ti.N

1~1

DARI-FRES~

Local bowling

••

.

Waterford !'i1, Wam:!n Local !115
Wa terloo 62. Magadore !'17
w ay!M!dale 00 1 Trtway 6IJ

5. Tex.u II )

It's not a one-time offer. Not a special deal. It's a price cut on all Hetty,
Trash Bags and Tall K1tchen Garbage Bags starting now!
And Hefty d1d 1t without cutting strength or quality. Hefty Trash Bags
have a triple-thick inner layer-they're tough enough to overstuff ~ -so
you can use fewer bags and save money: And Hetty, Tall Kitchen Garbage
Bags have a tough inner security lining that holds even the wettest
k1tchen mess without leaking.
So.remember next time you go to the store- now Hefty's a greater
buy than ever before!

Smoked ·Sausage ..L~.

Warrm Champlofl 66, You ng. U ~rty 64l

1. North Carolina 1 ~ 1

prices
1mmechately reduced up to 20%.

$ 59

.

·sMOKED

Stra.srurg lB. Comlton Val. !t2
St n!OOiboro 61, Crestwood 411
Tecu ~.v&gt;h !52, Beavt'rc-reek 49
Tol . Wllltmer .55, Tol. BowMer !12
UniOntown J....a.ke 79, Sarxly Val. 70
Utica &amp;1. Ucklnr Hla. ~

l. Virginia (91

~tho~t cutting quality,

WHOLE

BoneIess H
.ams.. ~

Newark 78, Col. Wehrlr 62

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BEnER

$. 69

Col. Northla nd 7B,' Col. BrookhaVPn 44

Mllloory Lake 47, Bowll.nl!ll Gl'l'l!n 42

'·•' ··

~

Kenmore 7!1, Ma nsfield 76

Akron Silrin J. Gt , Kent Roosevelt 61
Alhland 8). Wooner 58
~l pn&gt; 7U, Fort F'lj'E- 42

..

..

SIORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
'
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

~

Akron Cent·Hower62. WadSYo/OI"th 44

tSe
tbianks

f:iayer of week

n.e 4 1Mdat:ed ..,._

Mcnt or 6'J, W. Ge~:~uga 45

r--------------------------::------------_JL_...:.._________________

Announcing

-

lndcprnde~ 63. BreckavOk&gt; 61
Indian Valley S. 66, Guei'TlE)I Cath. :'16
Iron ton 51, Wa\'t'rly 5()
John Glenn 66, Croobvtllc ~7.
Kalida 75, ColumbuS Grove f;9
Kenston 76. Eastlake N. 66
Kenton 71. Van Wert 6:1
Lei psic 1l, Conllnenial 57
umu Ca th. e . Bath 43
t..oek.land ti7, Data VIa 56
Lora!n 58, Lo raln Cath. 51
I.nra ln KIA@ 82, Brunswick 40
LordstoWn 74, LowcU\1IIc ~
Macon Eastern 74. Cln. ~\·m Hills fil
Marion Ca lh. :M, Mt . Gile.ad 52
Ma rtlruJ Fe rry 78, Toronto 66
MU!!Uio~ 69. Aqulnu 68
Mayfield 62, Ch agrin Jo~all.s oiJ
Maysvtlle 61, W. Musldngum 51
Mt&gt;chantc.•burg 73. &amp;&gt;njamtn L-oRan !'6

Elsewhere, Colgate forward Eric

AGENTS:

·Ohio
high school
cage scores .
..... """""..,. ..........
a,
......

HWtard ~9 , Col. Westland 47
Holland Sprtnk. "72, M•umee 49
Hopewt&gt;U-Loudon !51, Ottawa Hills 34

r--~~~U~runudred~~~T~e~anM~~~~j_~~~~~~~~~~~~

Due to bad road oondlllou, Tu""'
day's basketball schedule featuring
Soulhem VaDey Atblellc Confer-'
ence teams was pootponed.
Those games Included Wahama
at Southwestern and North GaDia
at Adena.
Acllon resumes Friday wben •
Norlh GaDia travels lo Soulbera,
Eaalem Is at Southweelem and
llanDan Trace vl!llta 'Kyser Creek.
Sa&amp;urday's schedule finds Kyger
Creek at Trimble and Soutbem at
Southeastem of ~ County.

27 1982

CLEVELAND (AP)
Cleveland Brown tight end 0zz1e Newsome wants to be a college football
coach when his pro career ends.
"A coach doesn't r.l8ke that big a
.salary," he saki, "but I think I will
enjoy ,coaching and I like being
around ldds."
Newsome, a graduate of Alablpna, will help Coach Paul "Bear"
Bryant wltll Ule 'Barna SQuad In
spring practice, serving as a part .
time assl.stanl
"Havjng Bear's name on my w
sume won't hurt a bit," he said.

WAGNER'S

FLAVORITE

HYLAND CHUNK

.
f~~~en P1zza .•....••

5
Orange Drink...!2;

Marge~ri ne.........L!~

29
Dog Food .... ~.~~~..~
JOAN Of ARC LT. RED

GOLDEN WHEAT

KIDNEY BEANS

MAC. &amp; CHEESE

·~5.500~3/89¢
Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 30, 1982

I

7lh0l

5/Sl

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
:Offer Expires Jan. 30, 1982

.

10 oz.

FlAVORITE

COFFEE .
39 OZ. CAN

$569 .

Limit One Per Customer
Good
at Powell's
30,

SUGAR
5-LB. BAG $}29
limit One Per Customer
Good
at Powell's
Offer
Jan . 30; 1982

�Wednesday, ,January 27, 1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Poge-8-The Daily Sentinel

r

I •

.

.

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

The Dally Sentinei-Page--9

OSP commander
announces decline in rural deaths
.
-

J.t: E. W. Wigglesworth, c.om- during .the year: " ;fhe lieutenant.

and shoulder harneases. " Less than
three percent of those killed in rural
traffic accidents were ~ring their
seat belts at the tlfue of the crash,"
he said. "Stalistically, It lias been
shown that 40 or 50 percent of those
killed would be alive today if they
had worn passenger res.traints."
Lt. Wigglesworth pledged to con·
tinue the fight against rural

highway."
with histories of fatal and injury acThe grant is provided by the cidents,'' Lt. · Wigglesworth said.
National Highway Traffic Safety Ad- · "The results were good as can be
ministraion through the Governor's seen by fewer deaths during the '
Traffic Safety Representative in the year. We're not going to let up now;
Department of Highway Safety.
the goal of the Highway Patrol in
Officers of the Gallia-Meigs Patrol 19112 is .to reduce fatalities by an adPost made 362 apprehensioqs for ditional five percent statewide."
driving under the influende of . ..Lt. Wigglesworth also emphasized
alcohol last year.
the importance of wearing seat belts
"We tar~eted our efforts in areas

mander of the Ohio Stale Highway stressed that saving lives on Ohio's
Gallia-Meigs Patrol Post, todan an- highways is one of the Highway
nounced a 1!!81 statewide reduction Patrol's major goals.
in ruralfatalities over 1980 figl!tes.
"In studying traffic fatalities
"There were 1,112 rural fatalities we've found that 40 percent are
in 19111 in Ohio •. 153 fewer than in alcohol-related," he said: "In
1980," he said. "We wantto thank all response to this situation we inl'e!lidents of this area who practiced stituted a federally-funded engOOd driving habits for doing their · forcement program in 1981 aimed at
part in support of traffic safety removing the drunk driver from the

fatalities in 1982.
"Working together - the trooper
enforcing the law and the motori;i
obeying the law - we can cut our
fatality rate in half," he said. " That
means a saving of nearly t,OOO lives
every year in Ohio - a goal worth
working lor. We may not be able to
find every drunk driver on the road
'
butwe'resuregoingtotry." .

.

-.

for ·.t hebes ·Of everything
Including the Price I
BETTER MEAT

.

·

Depend on the Kroger mecit deportment for
the best of O~itrythhlg. Over 200 kinds and
cuts . U.S. choice beef that cooks up tender
•
•

.

·

•

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CDIPAIEITDOT~E~~~~~~~:DCER.

'FOI Sill IMI COST CIMIS, II OTHEIIUID$ liE $lOCKED.

and delicious every time. Top quality pork,
U.S. choice American lamb, ptlma__vaal, ond
grade

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
bch of theN ~- ttems •• t«1Utted to be
rMdtly 1viMible lor Jlle 1n Meh Kroget" SIOfll, e•c.pl -.
............. ~.lttwld lf""'dOt\JI'IOUIIlillr'l~
Item, we Wilt otter vou 'f(h.lr c~ of • comperlblt •tern.
wtllf't av..W.. reflectll'lg the ume U\ltngs or a ra•ncheck
¥Aer"l 'Nil( en11fte ~ to purc;NM the .c:tvert..,o •tam 11 the

ld'olerttted priCe Withtn

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Nt!SiiCII()n ragar~ ot m~nt.JfiCti.Jtet' If yOI.J art not Utllfled. KtOQif w•ll repltct 'f(h.lr •tern With the wme br1nd
oomperable br•nd or rllfund vour purchtM price

Of

onins•

a

Jif~NUARV

COST (UTTEIIII

Gt'aptfrvit •t-oa .
Juice . .. .. . c••

24 . THROUGH SATURDAY .

JANUAI'f 30 , ltll . INPOMEROY ANO' GALLIPOL'ISSTOR
WE II'ESlRVE THE RIGHT TO LIMit QUANTITIES .
SOLD TO OIAlUS.

~::·

Juice. .

~ONE

Pot.to

HOT OIMILD
FISCHEl'S MELlWOOD

•·••·

....

:J

gc

l·lb.

:l

::
c

R·on

1
I
I

I

LIMIT 3 POUNDS WITH COUPON
liMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMil V

COIP'OII GOGO IIOIIIUIII. 14 IMII UT.. Jll. II. 1112,
IIIJICI 10 lffliC.UliiTIII l lOIII IIIII
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1• •

r,~g;~

.

Meat Bologna .. .. tb:

as

COUIIITRY CLUB

Canned

99 c

I
I
I

Sirloin Steak ..... lb.
FISCHER'S MELLWOOD

•

REGULARFISCHER'S

Fresh Picnics
.... ..... .. lb.
.

3
Cook1ng Bags .......
FROZEN BANQUET
•

89

•·01.

PltOZIN(IO.Ol. ,KG.)

•

Kroger

Pit 51!•11•

$149
1-lb ..

Whip
Topp1·ng ... •·••·
c••,.

.

••ouN

Kroger
.Pot Pltl .

Kroger
White Bread

$1

KROGER . U.S.D.A. GRADE A

COST C\JTUI

Fresh Young ·
Turkey 'reasts

lnat•t
Coffee

1 •01 .

. . Pll 1 .

10·,.,···$299
(funtaUtWI'IICIj

-

U.S.D.A. IN"ECTED
~-6·LI. AVG. FROZEN

8

3

2·Ct .
. . Pllt .

KROGH 'IOIIN

.

•
Meat
W1eners
...... Pkg.
•

C

49c
59c
33c

.

$179
1-lb.

.Sliced Baco~, ........ Pka.

3 $599
Hams ...... c!~· ::~v·

H .. LB. AVG. WHOLE

.

Baking Hens .. ,. ........ lb.

49

C

'

Taste Smokers
Turning To MERIT. ·

Coat CuHer
Fro1tlng .: ~~~:· ·

Shoulder

CO!T CUfTIIt IIAl

Chocolote
Chlpa.. . ·~;;~

In a second part of the
same study, .smokers
confirm that MERIT taste
is a major factor in com~
pleting their successfu~
switch from higher tar
brands.
Higher Tars Meet
.Confirmed: 9 out of 10
Taste Match.
former higher tar smokers
In impartial new tests
report MERIT is an easy
where brand identity was
concealed, the overwhelm~ switch, that they didn't ·
give up taste in switching,
ing majority of smokers
reported MERIT taste e9ual and that MERIT is the best~
: to-or better than-leadtng tasting low tar they've ever
tried.
r~ higher tar brands.
Year after year, in study
:· Moreover, when tar levels
after study, MERIT remains
were revealed, 2 out of 3
\: chose the MERIT combina~ unbeaten. The proven taste
alternative to higher tar
~ tion of low tar and good .
smoking- is MERIT.
taste.

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·~

Discusses winter bird care

Electa Circle plans visits
Visits to shut-ins on Valentine's
Day were planned at TueSday
· night's meeting of the Elecla Circle
of the B. H. SanbOrn Missionary
Society of the Middleport First Baplist Church.
.
' Held at the home of Mrs. Maxine
Tucker! the members enjoyed a
potlucW l~ncheon followed by group
singing of "I Need Thee Every
Hour" accompanied by Mrs. Tucker
at the organ. Cathy Riggs presided
at the meeting and gave devotions
using scripture from Phil. 3 and the
topic, "ATime to Forget."
'

Reports were given on Christmas . bandages as lin added Contribution
and birthday projects and thank you
notes were read from several
remembered. A ChriStmas letter
from Glynda Rice, former scholar·
ship student, was read telling of her
aCtivities with youth in the Columbusarea.
The circle will remember Mrs.
Roger Getz, Thailand missionary,
with a gill of money for her blr\hday. Freda Hood had the dosing
prayer.
After the meeting members rolled

to the White Cross quota.
Others attending • were Ethel
Hughes, Mary Brewer, Rhoda Hall,
Katheryn Metzger , Lillian
Demoskey, Mary. Ann McClung, and
a guest, David Riggs. ··

""::====·=======t.
t

The Aoating t-kart

Announces obstretiCs manager·

'The russin' tax'

.

PRESENTED BOOK- In observance of March of
Dime~~ Week Dr. James Witherell, who is in charge of
the weD child clinic, was presented with a book on birth
defeclll Tnesday by Susie Pnillns, chairmnn of the

Meigs Unit of the March of . Dime~~ and Joanue
Williams, treasurer. Pictured, l·r, are Mrs. Pullins,
Mrs. Williams and Dr. Witherell.

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) -Heck ~-------------1
no, Maryland's lawmakers aren't
NOW IN
fussln' about cussin' for nuthln' NE\IV
LO.CATIQN
they're putting their money where
their foul mouths used to be.
The Senate Budget and Taxation
Committee has agreed on what It
unofficially calls the Undeleted Expletive Revenue Enhancement Act
of 1982. It's better knOwn as "the

ANIII'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

cussln' tax.''

The bUI provides fines for com- ·
mlttee members each time one of
them utters I! no-no word.

Witherell receives book
Dr. James Witherell, who is in
of the well child clinic, was
presented a book on birth defects
Tuesday by members of the Mei~s
Unit of the March of Dimes.
· Making the presen!Jltion were
Susie Pullins, chainnan for the Mar·
ch of Dimes, local unit, and Joanne
Willia1ns, treasurer of the local unit.
Mrs. Pullins announced that the
annual mothers' march will be held
on Jan. 31.
Chairmen of the area are, Susie •
KBrr, Tuppers Plains and Chester;
Jane Ann Karr, Bawn Addition near
county garage; Brenda and Melanie
Bailey, Five Points and Crow Addition; Helen Blackston, Rock
Springs; Barbara Fry, Salisbury;
char~e

Susie Pullins, Enterprise; Jenny
Warth, Rose Hill; Xi Gamma Mu
and. Ohio Eta Phi Sororities,
Pomeroy, Middleport, Bradbury,
and Syracuse; Rutland Friendly
Gardeners, Rutland; Mrs. Harry
Wilford, Racine.
The Meigs Unit of the March of
Dimes has awarcted six area girls
with nursing scholarships in the
amount of $300 each; purchased two
area children with corrective shoes;
purchased medical supplies for one
area child; purchased Freemount.ain toys for a children's clinic.
Mrs. Pullins advised that nursing
scholarships are available and per·
sons interested may contact her or
Mrs. Williams.

. Rt. 7, Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains

the Chester Elementary School.
Mrs. Terry Stethem will take care &lt;i
the sunshine project this mont~ . It
was noted that Mrs. Earl Bender,
regional director, has been
hospitalized.
Mrs. Frost used "Let's Fef(l the
Birds""as het topic. Her reference
material was taken from a bOok entitled "Song Birds in Your Garden"
and in her program Mrs. Frost
stressed the need to continue feeding
the birds through the winter if you
start in the falL
She said that birds come to rely on
food at certain locations. As for
feeders, Mrs. Frost said they should
be at a comfortable height for the
birds and thai the post shbuid· be
wrapped w\th tin to keep "critters"
away.
She said that feeders need to
•
be protected from the wind and to be
near bushes.
·
I
As for the things birds like to eat,
Rev. Robert McGee, pastor of the she mentioned bread, suet, {)ellnul
Pomeroy United M~thodist Church, butler, table scraps, sunflower
and director of the Meigs seed's, walnuts, fruits , cooked
Cooperative Parish recently at- spaghetti, cracked corn, gri t, and
tended "A Symposium Exploring
Cooperative Ministries" held in In·
dianapolis, Ind. This was an event of
the North Central Jurisdiction of the
United Methodist Church. This
jurisdiction encompasses Ohio, in·
diana, Michigan, Illinois, ·Iowa,
Minnesota, Wisconsin, North
South Dakota.
Three Bishops of the church addressed the group; they were James
Armstrong, Leroy Hodapp and
EVERnHIII MUST
James Thoma~ . After each ad!lress
participants had an opportunity to
WE HAVE COMBINED THE STOC1I
question the speakers.
FROM DUR PT. PLEASANT 11nu.,..
Cooperative parishes are no
MIDDlEPORT STORES
longer confined to just the town and
FOR THIS BIG
country ministries, but there were
almost as many in attendance who
CWSEOUT SALE!
are serving in urban cooperatives.
One thing that became apparent is,
that many Of the same problems are
encountered in .either an urban or
rural setting.
· The partic,ipimts also had an op- '
portunity.to visit churches in the Indianapolis area representing a wide
diversity; from a rural church
slowly going urban, to a downtown
church that is struggling with the
night to the suburbs. Opportunities
to visit with both the laity and the
clergy of these churches was afforded.those in attendance.
This is an annual event, and the
meeting next year is scheduled to be
held in Wisconsin.

sympostum

CRAFTED BY B. DAVID CO.·

Totally unique .
The totally appropriate gift
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inyourlife.
•

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Ti~

egg shells. She suggested dipping
pine cone&lt;~ in meat drippings ·and
then rqlling them in bird seed before
hanging on shrubbery.
"Hang It Up" was the topic of
Mrs. Koblentz's demonstration on
wall hangings. She said that in any
·nower arranging, one .needs a good
idea, materials, an occasion or purpose to make something, a place to
put it, and a skill which can only be
aequired throdgh practice.
She conducte-d a quiz on what a
good arrangement should have
noting the need for balance. depth,
and scale, contrast, fonn and lex·
lure, along with pattern and r)lythm.
She talked about an arrangement
being sui!Jlble for the occasion and
location, and suggested making a
sketch before beginning the

A nature review on winter bird
care and a demonstration on wall
,hangings highlighted the recent
meeting Qf the Shade Valley Council
·ci Floral Arts held at tho: home of ·
Mrs. Richard Koblentz.
Mrs. Paul Curti~! presented at the
meeting during which time pldns
.were made for the open meeting to
be held in March with Paul Strauss
as the guesl speaker. The flower
· show scheduled for April was post.poned until 5!lptember.
.
It was noted that Mrs. Koblentz
and Mrs. Steve Frost had conducted
a therapy program for January at

Ma:Jee attends

Ann Holter Fox, R.N., daughter of Cliljic at Franklin.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Holter, Route 3,
Mrs. Fox is a graduate of the Ohio
Pomeroy, has been named manager Slate University School of Nursing
of the Obstetrics Department . at having received her bachelor of
Middletown Hospital. She has been · science in nursing. She is married to
serving as director of ·the Conover Dr. Richard Fox and the couple have
two children and reside at Mason, .
Ohio.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesdcr(, January 27, 1982

Wednesday, January 27, 1982

Pomeroy-Middl.port, Ohio

receives life membership 1

A life membership was granted to
Mrs. James Titus in appreciation for
her contributions to the Rutland
Garden Club at Monday night's
meeting held at the home of Mrs.
Chris Diehl.
Mrs. Titus, known for her excellence in flower arranging and her
assis!Jlnce \O garden dubs over
southeastern Ohio, is a past eounty,
regional and state officer of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs. She
has been an accredited judge of the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs for
many years and worked with the
late Mrs . James Jackson in
organizing the first garden clubs in
this area.
During the meeting conducted by
Mrs. Virgil Aikins, the club planned
vale11tine remembrances for the
Meigs County Infirmary residents.
The committee named consists of
Mrs. Ralph Turner, c&lt;&gt;-hostess (or
the meeting, Mrs. Chris Diehl, and
Mrs. James Nicholson, who will

arrangement .

Mrs. Bill Francis had the
educatiOnal exhibit, "Winter Wonderland." Next meeting will be held
at the home of Mrs. Paul Curtis with
members to take plants and
terrarium containers. ·

receive contributions from the mein- aids and examples. He talked about
core drilling as a tool in choosing
bership.
A report was given on remem· housing and industrial sites as a
brances for Mrs. Russell Uttle and preventative measure in slippage
Mrs. Titus. It was noted that Mrs. and sewage problems.
To promote productivity, Rice
Grace Colwell, a past president,
1954-55, is convaletSclng at the home talked about erosion and control
of her daughter, Mrs. Rex through ~rass and contour strip far·
Shenefield, after an extended 1ning commenting on U1e saving in
labOr, fuel energy and the use of ex·
hospitalization. ·
"Mrs. Turner gave devotions using pensive equipment. He noted that
scripture from Luke 4. Each mem- there is currently an agriculture bill
ber responded to roll call by naming being considered which would help
to su~e and preserve prime fann
fern of sever11l varieties.
Wintertime suggestions for plant land for agriculture use.
The agent displayed nwnerous
eare were given by Mrs. Nicholson
who suggested frequency of misting, gardeni'ng leanets and literature
and awareness of damage which can available to Meigs Countians.
Mr8. Eugene Atkins and Mrs .
be caused by salt. She also
suggested that now is a good lime to Marvin Wilson received door prizes
do some cutting of Dowers for for- and hostess gifts. The "paradise
cing, including forsythia, pussy· mystery cafe" prepared by the
hostesses featured a four-course
willow, and hyacinths.
·
· Jolm Rice, Meigs County ex-. menu for the social. hour which
tension agent, presented a program followed the meeting.
on soil conservation using vis~al

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

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~ ~~
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212 E. 'Min, Pomeroy

ENTIRE
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MUST BE
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a.,.....

Call 667-6485

r-------------:------------L-----------..:..l---- -- - - - - - -

COME EARLY!
DUE TO TilE FACT THAT THIS IS
A CLOSE-OUT SALE. SOlE ITEMS
AlE II LIMITED SUPPLY •

STIFFlER STORES
129 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SHOP EARLY

$1 00,0~0 IIVEITORY SACRIFICED!.·

Holds .skating
pa:rty

Social ·Calendar
Wednesday
REGULAR MEETING of Ohio
Valley Commandery 24 Knights
Templarat 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
Sir Knights requested, to bring
swords and belts for full fonn
Practice.

Thursday
THE PRECEPTOR Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet at noon Thursday at the Meigs Inn for a luncheon meeting.

I

OIUO VALLEY Commandery
24, regular meeting at the
Pomeroy M11sonic Temple, Wed·
nesday, 7:30p.m.
A BLOOD pressure clinic will
be held at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center on Thursday, Jan. 28, from 10 a.m. until
noon. The Center is 16cated at the
multipurpose building on
Mulberry Heights. In the event of
serious weuther condition!:l, the
clinic will be cancelled.

Astrograph

January28, 1982
Hard work and luck arc likely to be synonymous for you this
coming year. In areas where you expend worthy effoi'ls. Dame Fortune will try to free your pat11 of obstructions.
, AQUARIUS (Jan. 21)-Feb. 19) This could be a day of surprises aJ\d
unusual turns Of events. Where you expect to profit you may not, but
you might gain where opportunity looks nil .
PISCES IFeb. 'oo-March 201 Don't let others influence you tOday as
to how you should feel about a certain friend. If this person has treate-d
you fairly , judge him or her BL'COJ'dingly.
ARIES !March 2l·Aprill9) People cooperating with you will be
miffed today if they aren't given adequate credit. Acknowledge su}1'
porters.

. •,~vl~W:•JI t'f:~Cd
SECIIIE FUTURE. .

As of.January 1. 1982, there's

no reason.why you shouldn't
start a sensible savings plan for
yourself. That's the day Individual
Retirement Acconnts (IRA'S)
officially berome available to every
employed American, worldng with
or without a pension plan. And
that's the day you can begin to put
your saVIngs away In a program
that works for you now-and later
on In life.

t

TAURUS 1April21).May 20) Co-workers may not be as pOsitive as
you arc regarding the outcome of events today. Don't lel lhose who
labor at your side lowe•· your expectations.
GEMINI (May 21-Junc 20) Though others may be selfishly
motivated laday, act in accordance with your hi ~h standards. Success
comes by giving, not by withholding.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A'misundcrstandirig might arise today
in an important relationship. What occurs won't necessarily be of yom·
doing. However, be the first to apologize.
'
LEO (July 2:1-Aug. 22) Something you're involved in could be subjected to negative changes today. AI first it may appear as if you can't
handle them, but you can.
VIRGO (Ang. 23-Sept. 221 Seek companions tOday who know how
to have a good time without blowing their budget. Extravagant buddies will encourage you to spend like they do.
LIBRA (Sept. 2:1-0ct. 23) In the long run it will prove to be more
rewarding tOday to be helpful to olhcrs than to be concerned only with
your own interests and necods.
_
SCORPIO fOci. Z4-Nov. 22) Be hopcfu] and positive in worldly
matters today, but don't let your rose•colored dasses distort reality.
See things for what they are.
SAGI'ITARIUS !Nov. 2:1-Dec. 21l If you arc involved in something
where you feel you've ~otten the short end of the deal , renegotiate the
situation today for better terms.

CHAPMAN
SHOES
.
.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
NIKE

DEXTER

CONVERSE

HUSHPUPPIES

KANGAROO'S
STRIDE RITE

CONNIE
FOOTWORKS

DINGO

CHIPPEWA
N~ SP.JUNG

SHOES ARRIVING DAILY

CJ.IAPMAN SHOES

YEAR AFTER YEAR. IRA'S WILL
RF.liAII YOUR lOST VALUIBLE
IIYESTIEIT.
Think about Ule resolll"QS
you're going to depend on in the
future. Pension plans. social security.
whatever they may be. one thing's
for certain-thenne£rtainty of a
sumtant!al return.
Now look at a Central Th.Lst IRA.
Every yffif, you're guaranteed a
return at high interest mtes, and
the Interest you earn is tax-free
nntil the funds are withdrawn. And
for yoi.JI' ~nvenienre. CentralTh.lst
provides for automatic payroll
deduction or automatic deductions
from your Central Th.rst checking
orsavtngc; acrotmt In addition,
every year. your money is .
insured up to $100.000, so your
investment is safe.
Clearly, there's no savings

.GET THE lOST FROI YOUR IRA
WITH CEITRlLBUST'S IIIH

ITBIST OPTIOIIS.

Now Central Th.Lst has turned
thls valuable asset into an even
better investment by offering fooc
high-int:m'st IRA options. Sensible
ways to keep you In control of your

· funds while earning the moot
rnmpetitive lqterest rates tn town-

money market-level rates that
make your investment work hard
now. so you can retire with a
sumtantlal nest egg later on.

YEARS

ThiS chart shows how a sample yearly
deposll ofjust 82.000 can grow over 30
years, But you may choose to deposit as
little or as muth as .YOU Wish. up to $2.000.
stnce there are no mlnlmums or depostt
frequency llmliS on most op~ons . lfyou're
mamed to an employed spouse. that .
wnounl doubles.

Current rate of 15.00 ,-. guaranteed through February 1,1982.
Subject to change on monthly

--

SAVE!

•

OFF
REGULAR
PRIC£

-'OIIIG OUT Of IUSINES$IIOYS' liiD GillS' WAIII WIIITEI

GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS

KNIT HEADWEAR
Boysknit
' ond v;,,.·
w"mcaps
win·.
ltr
hill and
.
Assorted t.i.J:es and styles .
Spec ia l low pric e for
closeout .
,

$1 00
'

EACH

-'OINC OUT OF IUSIIES!IIEN'S MD IIIllS' IIIUICAN MIOE

·GYM OXfORDS
Mtn 's .. nd bOYf' l.ct to the
tot stylt 9Ym oltfords with
cushlori lnsolts. Auorl~
silts . Reeuler JS ,tt Val\ltl

MEN'S lONG Sl£EVE
SPORT.AND DRESS

ClOSEOUT GROUP
MEN'S BETTER DRESS

SHIRTS

OXFORDS

FINAL REDUCTIONS
ENTIRE STOCK MUST IE SOLDI
-OOIIIG OUT Of IUSIN!S SALE-

MEN'S 4 and 5 BUCKLE

· A hymn sing will be held on Sun·
day, Jan. 31 at 1:30p.m,.l\t theMt
Olive Community Church, Long
Bottom. 'The Harmonies will be the
singers. 'The public is invited.

WORK ARCTICS
Take Your dlo1ce Df tour or
flye

buttlle

Amtriun

mode worh arcllcs. Good
flf].lf Df tiltS IYIIIIblt.

Low, low ~trice I

Honor rolls
Steve Eilnl~le, direct.or ~ Educatlcx1 at ·
Gallipolis Buaine~~ Collfl!:t, hal listed the 1
following atudenta as b(einK on the honor roll lor
theFillauarterwhichended ~. 17. 1911 :

•

B or 'bett,er - Detnh S.rtebJ, EIIICiniM .
Bechtle. Deidle BlUe, 01\dY BleMIIIfl, Bonnie
a-. Melinda Bryon. ' Kim ·Bumcanlner.
Palnela Burton, Jgonit Butcher, hill Cwd,
· 10m COrpeftl«, Rill Carpen~r . T...- ChoJn.
bin: Rondy 011- l e;lh Dye, Wlllllnl

•

..
MEMBER ; .FDIC

1

children . Auorfflt sl1es,
styles •n·d colon to
chooH from .. S•v•t

The regular monthiy meeting of
the Long Bottom Community
li!ISOCiation has been cancelled. No
meeting will be held in January.

Interest rate deteimtned for full
portant to.find the saf~ surest
18 months on date of Initial
way to your future security. Central . deposit.
.
1hist IRA'S are yoW: ma;;t smslble · 3. 30-lllliTH IIPTIII
solution. Today they re an tronoml- E ch d
It
ded 1 paid
all tax shelter. lbmOITOW, Central
a
epos recor
s
at
'IIust's high-interest options will
the 30-month Money Market
help make them the backbone of
rate current at time of ~eposlt.
a more secure retlrenlmt for you.
4. 1-..-nl·~·
If you'd llke·to open an IRA
$10,000 mlnlrrtum deposit
or receive more tnfonnation on
required. Account Is paid at the
your four IRA options. vi'slt any of then current 6-month Money
Centrallh.rst'sronvenientlocations. Market rate.

· ElllNLIIirsll~_..lillieGienn. ConnleGoaol- •
.... ,.Wtom Gr:~~~,., J""'. Orinimiho.~ '
8lllny . - , Bob ' - ·
Rld10nt
LMla. Joyco •....-. Mit)' -

_,.,,Gory .: COnAGESOS
-aAUcla
_,...,llalby -·
. AND DRAPES
Kaltlr70-

ao;..... J.
IIJollmml,fttnSII.....,,Brondo._

-

Aftlelo -

-t• ·

.... ·.
1.111

99~

· O.rlo Wllltt. (loll iiiii~
_

. •-

.

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�Poge-14-The Doily Sentinel

Wednesday, January 27, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

From ugly duckling to swan
•

By HELEN BO'ITEL
told my friends ... until last night
P.S. An inexperienced swan can
DEAR HELEN :
he a sitting duck for office hotshots. whe1i the man who might be her
l was a scrawny, shy girl Stay resistive.
father knocked on my door. ·He'd
throughout school, wearing braces,
straightened up, got a gOOd job and
glasses, etc.; not popular with the DEAR HELEN :
found my address through a
guys but the girls' best friend,
relative. He wanted to apologize, not
I broke up with my boyfriend when
Imny early 20s I married the first I learned he was dealing drugs.
knowing I had a child. When he saw
man who asked me, figuring it might
To get even, he and folD' of his her, and realized, he started L'rying.
be my last chance. My husband is gang pushed into my apartment and
Helen, he said he was high on
neither exciting nor successful.
raped me. lie said if I reported drugs that night and didn't know
Now, at Tl, I'm a late bloomer, them, it would be five words againsl what he wa• doing. He seems
with a trim figure and face to match. , mine, that I invited them in for a changed completely hack to the good
Suddenly I'm popular, especially party. They'd he'out on bail, he said, person I knew before dope took over.
with the professional men who work and then watch out.
I'm confused . l should nate him,
al my offiee.
I kept quiet through fear artd but I'd rather trust him. He asked to
I'm not accustomed to turning hopelessness. The next week I asked · see me again. Am l crazy for letting
males on, and l find il great to flirt. my company for a transfer and him hack in my life? - DOREEN
Of course I enjoy the favors, treats, ·moved to another state.
DEAR DOREEN:
free lunches and after-hour drinks.
l don't know.
When I learned I was pregnant I
lntereo;ting pro~itions flatter me, went for an pbortion but couldn't go
If you' re detennined to take a
but so far I've resisted.
through with it. How could I make an chance. on this man, then go slowly
How can ! now turn these fellows innocent baby pay with its life for and be alert for flaws . People can
off? - TOO POPULAR ONCE tf1e violence of others'
change. They can also revert to old
UGLY DUCKLING
As months went on I discovered I ways, suppressed violence. Tempe~
DEAR T.P.O.U.D.:
wanted this child. Being level- forgiveness with awareness, and
Do you really want to turn these headed, I put aside the trauma of her don't lose that level head. You'll
men off? My !GAP {"I'm Guessing beginning. I made up a blighted need it! - H.
Again Perception" ) says you think romance for my new friends and put
you've outgrown a husband you a fictitious father's name on the birGot a problem? An adult subject
never loved, and it's big decision- th certificate.
for discussion' You can talk it over
time in your ilk
My lovely daughter Karen is now in her column if you write to Helen
Lei's hope you make the right eight years old. She's a joy. I'd Bottei, care of this newspaper.
1'hOice! - H.
almost come to believe the story I

•

Stattie's head is. still mtsstng
'

HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (AP) -Pollee tn Huntsville got a break the
other day.
They found the missing Ronald
McDonald - not the actual clown,
a missing statue of the hamburger
peddler.
Officers said they found the

Restaurant manager David Hes- .
· ter said he was "overwhelmed" to
have most of the statue back again.

Personals
TRANSPORTATION STUDY- Ruth Chambers
wheel• one year-old Chin Betancourt In a wheelbarrow

near Home•lead, Fla. recently while Chin •tudieo up on
""""advanced methods of transportation. ( AP Laserphot.,l.

.,-

/Super
Bowl
XVI
ends
up
on
- ..
•
~~top of Nielsen TV rattngs
..

: : NEW YORK (AP) - An esll·
• rt)ated 1!l; mUI!on viewers saw all
• ar part of Super Bowl XVI, CBS
: says, and the prime-time segment
:of· the game registered the highest
:cey ling ever for that portion of the
•lnt football championship.
: • The rating of the prime-time seg~ tnent, 7-7:50 p.m. EST Sunday, was
• 50.4, well below the 53.3 rating for
,: Jhe record-setting "Who Shot
~-tJ.R.?" episode of CBS' "Dallas" In
·:November 1980, but the highest
:inark for any program this season,
: 11gures from the A.C. Nielsen Co.
: showed.
·
• . Nielsen says the prime-time rat: tng for the Super Bowl means of all
: the country's TV-equipped homes,
·:~ust over 50 percent saw at least
·P.,rt of the game's coocluslon.
:: CBS won the three-way competl·
: Uon with ABC and NBC for the
: week ending Jan. 24 with nlneofthe
- week's 10 highest-rated progra,ms.
~ · The post-game show on CBS was
:.,~econd, with two consistent hit
··..,bows, "60 Minutes" and "Dallas"
:;..-·also on CBS - close behind.
.:· The rating for "60 Minutes," 34.8,
· ~was the highest ever.the newsmag:· azlne, which has been No. 1 four
..~ urries' this season, to seven for
:~~ ·oauas."
;::: At least two previous Super Bowl
-.p.rnes, Including last year's, began
'

...
-,

-

at 6 p.m . EST, and consumed as
much as two hours of prime time.
The rating for the entire Super
Bowl XVI between San Francisco
and Cincinnati, which began at 4
p.m ., wUI be available Thursday.
CBS won the networks' ratings
race with a ra ling of 21 to 18.2 for
ABC and 15.8 for NBC. The net·
works say CBS' rating means In an
average prime-lime mlriute during
the week, 21 percent of the nation's
homes with TV were tuned to CBS.
The only non-CBS program in the
Top 10 was an ABC movie, "Fanta·
sies," in ninth place.
CBS' "l"alcon Crest" finished in a
tie lor lOth , the highest standing for
any of the season's new sertes.
"One of the Boys," on NBC, was
No. 18.
Three news shows 'were among

the week's five lowest-rated programs. "NBC Magazine" was No.
68, with an NBC News special, "Nothing to Fear- The !?DR Legacy,"
69th and a "CBS Reports" produc·
lion, "The Uncounted Enemy: A
Vietnam Deception, was 72nd.
HThe Making of 'Superman"' on
ABC was No. 70, with another ABC
special, starring John Denver, 71st.
. Here are the week's 11 highest·
rated programs:
Super Bowl XVl. with a rating of
50.4 representing 41 .3 million

homes, Super Bowl Post-Game
Show, 39.6 or 32.4 mUllon, "60 Minutes.'' 34.8 or 28.5 million, "Dallas,"
31.1 or 25.5 million, "One Day at a
Time," 26.4or 21.6mlillon, and "Archie Bunker's Place," 26.3 or 21.5
mUI!on, all CBS; "Dukes of Haz.
zard" and "The Jeffersons," both
24 .8 or 20.3 million, both CBS;
Movie-"Fantasies," 24.1 or 19.7 mliiion, ABC, and "Falcon Crest,"
CBS, and "Love Boat," ABC, both
23.6 or 19.3 mUllen . .

Announcement
Ecclesia l"ellowship Church, 128
Mill St., Mldddleport, wUI show a
30-mlnute film entitled "More Than
Meets the Eye" tonight. The fUm Is
on mislonartes smuggling Bibles
Into Russia. Anyone interested In
seeing the
Is Invited to attend
the showing.

film

Homer. and Pearl Proffitt and
Roy Proffitt have returned from a
visit with Mr. and Mrs. James Proffitt at Mllton, Fla. WhUe there they
visited In Saratoga, Fla. ~th · Herbert and Gladys Hams, brother
and sister-In-law of Mrs. Proffitt.
Homer Proffitt also visited his son,
Mike Proffitt and family In Millon,
Fla. who have a new son, Christopher Alien.
-

Mrs. Eula Proffitt returned from
llllnols recently after gotng there to
be with her daughter and son-In·
law who have a new son. WhUe she
was In llllnois, another daughter,
Candy Cox of RavensWood, ·spent
time in the Portland community
with her lather.
Mr. and Mrs, Ray Wilson who
have been working in Columbus
with Sears, are now laid off and
have returned here to move into
their home on Ute Bashan-Bald
Knob Road. They have a five
month
old
son,
Matthew
Chrlstopoher·.

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•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Ohio
State University President Edward
Jennings has Imposed spending
cuts he says will al)ow the university to avoid immedtate tuition
hikes and employee layoffs.
Vice presidents of Ohio State,
with an enrollment of 55,000 students at its matn and branch campuses, are huddling with their statts
to determine the specWc impact of
$19.6 miUion In cuts that stem from
a state budgei crunch.
The $19.6 million is part of a $55
rnllllon loss that Jennings said
T&lt;~esday the university could expect between now and June 30, 1983,
under higher education cuts proposed for dealing with a prolected
$1 bU!ion deficit tn the state budget.
Although state officials have not
decided on the precise amount to be
slashed, Jennings said he was planning for the worst.
"We face a financial problem
that can still be estimated only In
approximate terms," he said in a
speech. "But even the estimates
are twice the percentage cutbacks
we faced in the Great Depression;
and so enormous that immediate
action is absolutely essential. The
potential is enough for me to act."
The largest cuts will reduce the
budgets of vartous campus operating units by$6 mUllan. Undergradli·
ate and graduate colleges wt11 be
trimmed by $1.5 million, while admlnlstration and operations wt11 be
reduced $1.9 mOtion. Student services, which Include funds !or athletics, wtll be cut by $760,000.
Another $4.2 million will be saved
through cuts In operations for
which funds are appropriated by
line Items in the state budget. University hospitals will lose $1.3 mtilion, whlle the Ohio Agricultural
Research and Development Center
at Wooster wtll be cut by $1.2
rnllllon.
Dr. Henry Crambiett, vice president for health sciences, said he
hopes to know lly Friday the specific effects of the cut in subsidies
that were aimed at making up for
incremental costs of using tbe hos- ·
pltals as teaching facilities.
1
"I can guarantee you this wt11 ·
mean a cut In some of the programs; those charges wt11 not be
passed on to. patients," Crambiett.
said. But he also pledged the reductions would not alter the basic education of OSU medical students !\rid
would not affect patient services.
Roy Kottman, dean of the College
of Agrtculture and Home Economics, said 'th~ figures released Tuesday represent the first hard data he
had seen on spending cuts at the
VVoosterfacil!ty.
"We have 300 research projects
there, and 1 just don't know at this
point whether we wUl do anything
other than put them on hold so 1o
speak," Kottman said. "Some of
them certatnly wUl be very much
slowed down."
OSU also hopes to pick up $4.5
million by initiating or raising fees
charged to university and nonuniversity groups for use of
faciUtles.
Cancellation of a special onetime allocation for library acquisitions and equipment that had been
approved last month is expected to
save $3.6 rnllllon.
In addition, part of a $3.3 mUI!on
emergency fund wtll be used to bat,
ance the school's budget, leaving
$2.6 million In contingency funds.
"It Is a dangerously thin cash bal·
ance lor an Institution of this size
and complexity, espeaially when it
Is remembered that the state's estimate for the deficit may be too optimistic," Jennings said.
Another $500,000 savings is proJected though a reduction of energy
use by turning down thermostats
and saving electricity.
"It's going to be colder In our
buUdtngs," Jennings said .
Unlike Ohio Budget Direclor
Howard Coiller and state schoolSu·
pertntendent Franklin Waiter, Jen·
nlngs did not call on the Legislature
to increase taxes.
" I think it's the Legislature's job

to talk about taxes," he said. "I
don't lobby. I give them Information about Ohio State University."
Jennings left no doubt that student tuition, . which he said is a\·
ready among the highest In the

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Jennings said that If the fiscal
crunch were to be solved soleiy' by
raising tuition, fees would have 1o
be doubled.
"U·we double tuition, we reduce
opportunities for individuals In a

nation for land-grant universities,
ultimately will have to be
increased .
"Sure, it's going to go up," he
said. " But we've got to ask the question 'How much?'"

way that I am not at aU certain this
state or this nation is prepared to
accept," he said.
The Institution is Ohio's largest
state-assisted university and operates on an annual budget of $601

• • • • •

• •

Can
I

I

I

I

mUUon . Jennings said that$179mti·
lion of that amount, or29.8 percent,
comes from the state. The rest is '
generated by student fees, resi·
dence hail fees, hospital revenues,
athletic Income, gifts and grants .

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The Doily Sentinei-Poge-15 .

. 2/59'

46 oz. Del Monti!

James L. Schmoll, O.D.

Pomeroy Middleport; Ohio

Ohio State University president announces spending.cuts

Helen Help Us

•

Wedne1d1:1y, Jcmuary 27, 1982

I

I'

79'

SAVE20~

NEW YORK (AP) -More view·
ers have seen Mlcheiangelo's paintIng of the ~tine Chapel here In
New York tn one day than pilgrims
to the Vatican see in a week.

when you buy

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More than 352,!Dl visitors and ·
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monthS to make the picture.

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U&amp;JM rnwnl JM1 r.d 111~ t•llil ll( t ol putt~ IUI~ttrcl uto~ltciOI'"jl6 Gt'*ti ftllfl
C01' tou11111 • •1 IIIII lit 1111111fd ltm1lrrrlll Dr lfpt MIICtf C~ \!OIIItl "'UI PtT
.., nftt Ill 'tttl •lltft "Oki!JIIN IU"' "lt\II ICII, &amp;f ft• G&amp;ti! ~ ... 1~ US.
,itii"'D IIK DI "'I ~ S ~vi 1ft IIIII C u~ u rur lo tG• G!Hpon -~ ~ 1101 DIIIGfttltf tl
lfflt!llldf!lftjjlft h'llfllr I(III(IU Dlllill" 01 01 f ill· • tit I ll lief lttlii lr\111111101\
llf IIIII -l~IIICh \1 1M lptUfiUIIy UIJIIII' II Id bJ' II IO ~~· ..."' UU,.~\"' ltft"'tt
hon lor l fiii i!IPI!tlt II fi'Gflllll fl(f"ld l ftd ft 1nG ro ~11111)1)11 "'~Ill Gillf!ll ''*'I
C011 '0 laoiOl bn~••• !l 601(11
Tll&gt;t '~" illll Olllt"' ''"~llt 11 P&lt;OCwCI ~~drt ll14 h1 1111tr ~II tiDII thMtt
tralllll

The large transp&amp;Tency magnifies the 16th-century painting with
such clarlty that commuters on the
noor or the termtnal actualiy sa•
more detaU than.villtors to the Vall
can City shrine, according to
l(odak. The colorama measured 00
feet wide and 18 feet high, making it
the
world's
J.a1'8e5t color

..,.,,.,.. tc ..... II. INt.

i

.

Ultii~IH CIINI 'II MCMK

t;P.Nt:MAL fOODS CORPORATION

tranlp3l'eiiCY-

..

.'

.

.

7$
.'

�,•

Page

16-Th. Daily Sentinel

27

wednetday, Ja~uary 27, 1982 ·

PDmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Small .investment, .large

Ginna nuclear plant brought
to 'cold shutdown' after leak
By RICH KIRKPATRICK
AMOOialed p..,.. Writer

...
...

"

_..,.
~_,..

~

•

POINTING OUT THE BREAK - John Oberlles,
geuerul manager for public relations for Rochester, N.
y. Gas and Electric points out the tubing inside the

steam generator which leaked Monday causing small
amounts of radiation to enter the outside atm.,.phere.
I AP Laserphoto),

ONTARIO, N.Y. (AP)- The nation's chief nuclear power regulator says he thinks steam generator
pipes will continue to cause problems at facilltles like the R.E.
Glnna plant, wh)ch was brought to
a "~ld shutdown" after a rupture
caused a radiation leak.
A plant spokesman sald officials
hope to get their first look at any
damage Inside the steam generator
Saturday.
''There will be no major benchmarks (In the recovery .elfort) belore we physically Inspect the
steam generator," said John Oberlles, chief spokesman for the plant's
owner, Rochester Gas &amp; Electric
Co.
The plant, which stands on tbe
shore of Lake Ontario 16 miles northeast ol ROchester, was brought to
a cold shutdown - a state of tow
pressure and temperature - Tuesday afternoon, about 31 hours after
a number of tubes ruptured within
one of two steam generators.
Three bursts of radioactive
steam lasting a total of two minutes
were released Into the atmosphere
Monday and ll,(XX) gations ol
mildly radioactive · water .spilled
Into a sump In the basement of tbe

Public: Notice
PUB~ ~ C NOT ICE
Not1ce t5 hereby g i ven

" We have been having trouble
plant's containment bulldlng.
with steam generator tubes, due to
Oberlles said no traces of radiacorrosion," Palladino said. " As
tion were found Tuesday outside
the plant gates. Traces had been
(NRC Regional Administrator Rodetected Monday.
nald) Haynes reported. we've had
Wiih cold shutdown, temperathree oiher Incidents that have had
tures In the reactor's primary coolreleases comparable to or greater
Ing system dropped to about 200
than this Incident." However, Paldegrees Fahrenheit, at 4: :.J p.m.
ladino said It was unlikelY any fu·
TUesday, and the pressure was lowered to about 15 pounds per ' ture Incident would be worse than
the Gtnna InCident.
square Inch - the same as that In
the atmospbere at sea level.' Heat
Radioactive water heated by the
removal systems were kept on to
nuclear
reactor runs through a netcut the temperature to 140degrees.
work of pipes In the generator,
The normal operating temperawhich Is filled with non-radioactive
ture of the reactor Is about 600 dewater that drives the plant's powergrees, with water under pressures
ful turbines after It turns to steam.
of 2250 psi.
Normally water trom the two systems does not mix -only heat Is
exchanged - but In the TUesday's
The radioactive water was to be
Incident at the Westinghousepumped out of the eQntalnment
designed
Glnna plant, one of tbe
building basement today and traas·
tubes
carrying
radioactive water
ferred to tanks. Eventually, the raburst
and
leaked
into the nondioactive elements will be removed
and sent to a disposal site.
radioactive water.
At least !IeVen American nucleaF
power plants have been shut down
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
at least briefly since November
Chairman Nunzlo Palladino said
191ll because of tube leal;s, accordTUesday night on public TV's
Ing to NRC records, and the Glnna
"McNeU-Lehrer Report" that he
thinks there will be steam genera- plant has a history of corrosion In
the type of tubing where the leak
tor tube problems at other nuclear
occurred.
power plants.

that _ on
Saturday,
301h,
1982,
al 10 :00January
a.m . a

public sale w ill be held at
Uni o n
Avenue
Pomeroy . Ohio, to sell tor
c ash
tt1 e follow i ng
collateral ;
1980 F ord Serial No

Beginning 62 rods west of
the northeast corner of Sec·
tion a, Town 6, Range l.t,
Ohio Company' s Purchase.
thence west 20 rods; thence

RUTH SCHAR TIGER.
Administratrix

of I he Eslate of

south 301/ " rods; thence

Nortt• 71ll• degrees east 31
rods to county road ; thence

Howard L. Searls,
Deceased

(1)

school
dist.r •ct
spec ifi cations, all safety
requlations and current
Ohio Min imum Standards
tor School
Bus Con ·
structlon of th e Depart·
m ent of Educat ion adapted
by and with t he consent of

'

ALL. MAKE S

P&amp;S 6UILDINGS

o Wa , hen
• Dryers

CALL:

Rt . 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh.

Ph . 614·843·1591
15-lfc

9 S tf c

Public Notite

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-992-2181
For
Farm
and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil .

Anything for your
Mobile Home .

Cll 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, Sic

GET YOUIL-Winl A

KINGSBURY

Want Ad

Rl. 124

54

&amp; ACCESS.·
Ph. 992-5587

JANUARY CLEARANCE!
Rulllnd F11111i1111 Clrpe( Shap

....

IIUS-$12.115

'12"
Sq. yd . installed

Drive A little

·1~. Yd.

ANNOUNCING
lot

BEVERLY WICKLINE

IN RACINE
Weds.,.Thun. I Sit
HAIR STYliNG

CALL 949·2320

.

tensive
ing .

" The Greek will be Selling"
sale SOl t., Feb . 6th, 7 : 00 p.m .

we are also having a

remodel -

• Electrical wort(
• Roofing work
14 Year s Experience

,----------------------~

or 992 -2282

S~veiJ _ I

'

Write vour own ad !nd order b-.. m!il With this
coupon. Cancel your !d b-.. phone when you get
results. Monev hot refundable.

I

II
I

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1- card of Thank •
2- ln Memoriam
5-- H&amp;PIIV Adt
6- L.o•t and Found

7- Y&amp;rCISIIt
I - Publ i c S•le
&amp; Auct ion
9- W&amp;nltd 10 BIIY

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

'
IWanled
1For .Sale

)f

I

_

_

_

5. - - - - - 6. - -- -- -

8. - - - - - -9. - - - -- -

-

.•

;

u.s . Rt. 50 Easl
Guvsville, Ohio
Authorired John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deater

10. -- - - - 11. -- - - - 12. ---~-13. - - - - -14. -----~
15. - - -- - 16. -- - - - -

--~----~---

ce Repa ir

Mall Thls Coupon with RemiHance
The Dally Sentinel
111 court st.

~----"!"::::-:.':!:..~:..~7~9--

lor Rent
44- Apertm ents for

REnt

eeBackhoes
Dozers

- concrelework

eOumpTrucks
• Lo-Boy

- Piumbing .llnd

4t- Equlpment lor Rent
.. t - Forlealt

eMERCHANDISE

~ 1 -Holllthold Good•

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

oSeplic

Sy s tems

PH . 992 ·1478 .
1 21 1
·

30 Yeilrs Experience
Small Pipelines A
Specialty
North of Racine
On Carmel Road

d

· mo. P ·

J. R. PARSONS

72- TrUCIIIIOr 51ft

7t- Motorcycles
1J- 8NII &amp; MOicWs
7t-Auto Part. I

AcunorN•
71- AIItO Rtp&amp;lr
7t-Cemplng Equipment

\

SERVICES
Want· Ad Advertising

•' - Home lm~troYtmlnts

Deadlines

U - Ptumi:Unt &amp; Htltint

Moncla v 1:00 on Saturde v
Tutsdav lftru Frldey 2:00 ,. ,M.
the da-, twfore publlc:allon
S11nd1'1'2:00 P.M. Frida-,

I J- E•caYafint
It-Electri cal &amp;

Refrigentlon
1$- Gentr&amp;l HAUling
li-M.H. Rlpalr
11- lipholsttr'f'

r

.

Rates and Other Information

J

_____ j',

Office

L___
.._.._'_"_"_
...
_ ..._...
_ ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J

Dotie Turner

992· U92
H2· 2259

AW

LOTS

L evel
J
l ots w i th
Lead ing Cr . wat er and
electric. Onl y $5,000.00
or on tim e.

NICE

3

or

ever~

Sun·

LOST : Black &amp; wh i te Fox
Terrier . License No. 88.
F iv e Points ar ea . Name
Gr.asshopp~ r . $50. reward .

992-3479.

LOST in the town of Mason,
small brown Chihuahua
dog,
chlldr~ns
pet,

Reword, 304-773-5019.

-------------------~-;

LOST -TNT area, black &amp;. ~
white English Seller, red '
collar wllh bell. 304-6754380 belween 8:30·4:30.

Krlner·Sandhollow

Rac ine Fire Dept. sponsors

a Gun Shool, Sal. nlghls
6:30p .m ., Bashan , Factory
choke 12 gauge sl:lotgun .
Flea

Mark e t .

-.

General Store. 992·6370 .
Incom e
tax
servi ce .
Federal and state income
fa)( forms, quarterly repor·
ts, and W·2 forms will be

done by appolnlmenl . See
Wanda Eblin, 41000 Laurel
Cliff Rd ., Pomeroy . 992·

2272.

following : 1976 Chevorlel · '
Malibu Classic, 1974 Buick .
2 door hardlop, 1979 Hohda , .. ·
XLSOOS molorcycle . The :
Re cine . Home National'
Bank reserves the right to ·

relect any or all bids and .. ·.
mav remove any or all
Items from the sale at any
t i me .

.
'

.'

'

"

''

9.___w
= a"'n.:.:
le,_,dc:leoo_,B,ucr__
WANT TO BUY Old fur·
nifure and Antiques of all
kinds , call Kenneth Swain, · ' •·
256·1967 In I he evenings.

-,

CA SH PAID for clean, lale
model used cars. sm llh

Bulck ·Pontlac , GAll ipolis, .

Ohio. Call44&lt;1·2282.

·' '

BUYING GOLD&amp;. SILVER

Jim Lanier, 304-675·7397 .
Camp Conley .

LAND CONTRACT -

4

ANY PER SON who has

woodburn ing fi replace,
large f a m il y r oom, ·
modern k i t ., garage and
3 acres .
3 ACRES ~ On good
county road in Rutland
Town sh ip . Ex cellent for
three houses .
VERY NICE - Corne r
lot with ·qa r age and 2 ap·
ts. Also thi s lovely 3
bedr oom
ins ulat e d
Mm e. Hot w aer hea L
a ir ,
full
c entral
base m e n t,
forma I
din ing and nice k it .

Feb. 11, 1982 allO a.m. the ·
Ra cine Home National .,'.
Bank wlll offer for sale at . ·
Publi c
Auction
the .'

J IMS Water Serv ice. Call . pay ing cash for anything

One lev el acr e, out ·
buildi ng -43 x36 u sed as a
garage and storage.
Nice 2 bedroom hom e
furn ac e .
f u ll
w i th
ba sem er'\1 , on Sf ate r oad
n ear s t o r es . O n ly

$32,500 .
LARGE 10 ROOMS FREE GAS. 2 full ba tll s.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

8

New

Opening. 7 days a week .
The Hearl of Mlddlepoil. 20
N. 2nd St . forme rly Marlin

4

bedr o o m s ,
b a th .
moder n kit ., basem ent,
nat. gas fu r nace. and
ce ntral .a ir . Carpet ing. 4
porches, and .M of an
acre. Cit y water .

Giveaway

anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in thi s
column . Th ere will be no
charge to th f advertiser .

3 female 112 grown kittens

to give away . Call446·1256,

stamped lOK, 14K, 18K and

,1

dental gold . Class rings, ,. ,

.wedding rings. silver coins

'

Slore. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992·20541n Pomeroyl

...

or
anything
st&lt;!!!tnp ed · ·~
sterling . Clarks Jewelrv .. ·' '

Bu y i n g
Gold,
Silver , ·' '
F.?.latlnum, old coins, se ra~ ·,'
rings &amp; silverware. Dlllly · .1
quotes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale .
Spr i ng
Valley · "

Trading, Spr ing Valley . .
Plaza, 446·8025 or 44&lt;1·8026. , "

3 Kittens, 9 weeks old .
Housebroken, 446 ·2258

we pay cash tor late model
clean used Cllrs.
~
Fren&lt;;htown Car Co.
Female Calico kitten. Call ,
Bill Gene Johnson,

245·9347, ask for Pe nnv .
3 half grown kittens. One
bl.e ck end wh ite, long ha ir ·
two bob tailed, r eal n ic e.

Cal144&lt;1·3318.

4 mo.

old -..euow Persian

cal. 304·675-2635.

How;,;,g

Hcarlquattets

..

1

44&lt;1·0069.
wanled lo buy tie 100•.

Paying up ro S140 per
thousand. Ca 11 256·6363 or

63,·3131.

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal ,
auto bodies, and cars. Bat ·
ter les, a lumium, brass &amp;

copper . Gallipolis Block

..

Co., 123 112 Pine St ., 446· ...
2783 .
•

J
~

Top rabbll Beagle. 13 10 13,
1/ 2 Inches loll, 3 to 3 112·
years old, nol gun shy, gOO&lt;(.
hunter &amp; tracker . Must not.
run deer or fox . No fast
dog, two w eek trial. Oon · ..•

ced. S2•.900.00
MOBILE HOME WITH
EXPANDO - A huge

(Aweraee4worcls perlintl
Mobilt Home Wltltnd Yt rd ulu are tccrpttf ontv wittl'tuft
wiUI O'rdtr. n nflt Cllllrte lor adt. urrvtn1 101 NumiMr tn Cart tf
T... Stnll"tl .
Ttif Publi1her rnervn tiM rlehllo tdlt or rtltct aJIV ICis NefnN
DeltctiMII . Tht P (d~lllhfr wilt not IN rtiPOn~bll lor mort ttlen one

1

TRAILER

. :Rea=l
= E=SI·=Ie = G=ene::ra::,
l

Up,olSwordi ... ontdlyinstrlio!' ......................... lUo
uptouwordl ... ,tlrtttllylnserllon ..., ... , ....... ·. .... . . . . M.OO
UploiSwo.rdi ... SiadayllnHrtk'" .... , ...• ..•...•.......• $7.00

English Setter, red

Call

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

JUST LISTED - 20 yr .

1·7·1 mo.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,

Rd .

For bulk delivery of
gasoline, heati ng oil and
diesel fuel. call Landmark,

old 4 bedroom er . 2 full
baths, l ar ge family
room .
base m e nt.
~a rag ~ and pat io. Large
lot above a II lloods In
M idd le port .

PH. 992-5663

GRI
992·6191
Jean Trussell . 1 949·266t

LOST TNT area black and

w~ite

Rd.

try home of 3 bedrooms,
car peting, bath , modern
kit .• full basement. furnace and large lot .

866 South Thil"d
Middleport, Ohio

good buy al 519,500.00 .
REALTORS

club.

Phone
1· ( 614 1· 992·3325
JUST LISTED - Coun·

REPAIR WORK
• Gas &amp; Electric
• Cutting
• Brazing .
e20 Yrs. Exp .
Reasonable Rates

bedrooms, could have
full basement. House
approx. 6 years old, has
a front porch, and is a

Cleaner, one h~lf mile up

dav lPM Gallla Co. Coon

VIRGIL B. SR .
116 E . 2nd 51.

D&amp;D
WELDING SHOP

$13,000.00.
LARGE KITCHEN - 3

delivery, Davis Vacuum

992-2181, Pomeroy, Oh .

Ph. 367·7560
1·7·11fc

f r ame
rooms, 3 bedrooms,
dinin g room
with
1
fireplace, and a large
n ice lot . House needs
· some repa i r . Asking

machine repair,
and
SWEEPER
andparis,
sewing
Pi ck up and

supplies.

Also Wood Splitter
For Rent

Real Estate- General

· Water- Sewer~ Eiectric
Gas .Line·Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Seplic Tanks
County Certitied
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .

l lf2 story
home with 7

Announcements

Shooting Match

Frulhs Phar ·

1· 13-1 mo. pd .

TRENCHING
SERVICE·

RUTLAND -

3

Fobdland,

macy, Barrs or J ohnsans
Grocery . If found please
caii446·14B6.

collar with bell. Call 304·
675-&lt;308 belween 8:30 and
4:30.

Loading , Guns and Sup·
plies . Spring
Valley
Trading Co .. Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 .

David Price

REESE~,-: ·

su.ooo.oo.

73- Vans&amp; ol W. O.

Thanks to each of yOU tor
your help and concern for
me during the death of my
friend , Howard Kitchel~ . If
1 was appreciated .
Lucill e, Braley .

Complete line of Muzzle

(6141 991-3556

1·8·1 mo . pd .

CLOSE IN - Over six
acres of nice laving
c leared land with a
drilled well. Electric
cr osses land, but would
have to be put in . Ask ing

LOST Lad les Arml1ron
Quartz watch. Color-Silver
tone. Lost-Saturday around

Delivery Available
or You Pick Uo

John Wise

NEW LISTING - 2 B.R. trail er on very ni ce lot ot .
QUi.et stree t , Kit chen has stove, r efrigerator . dinette
set , (:Orner dish display ca binet, &amp; easy v iew into
spac iou s L.R . This pldce could be ve r-.. ni ce living
for. you or used as investment procprty . Now r ents

for 5175. Asking sn .ooo.
JUST LISTED - New dOll type 3 B. R. nome. COZV IS

land . $9,000.00 .

11 - Autos for Sale

992-2156

lost and Found

·4

.. ,,._ ... , ro

~ori~iL Creek

(614) 742·1131

SION This tw O
bedroom home has new
carpet in the living
r oom . new aluminum
sid i ng ,
i nsulation.
garage and a two story
cell ar buiding with 1 1/ 8
acres whic h part is fen ·

.,.

Mixed Hardwood•

a! Sawmill

room, . 2· 3·
~dream , Jl/2 baths, all
underp inning, 2 porch es, w indow A.C., and
equ ipped kitchen . No

eREAL ESTATE

J1- R8altors

'J
1
I.
I
I

WELDING

A liT·

,, ,,~

Large or Small Jobs

Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·tfc

POMEROY,O.
992· 2259

.,,. .

Card of Thanks

eGas L!nes

li v i ng

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

In M eigs County
1'n Mason Couoty

_ ,

• Trencher
• wafer • sewer

el e.ctrit.ll l work

$12 ,000.00.
IMMEDIATE POSSES·

4J- FurnilfiH Rooms
4.,..._s.,.ce tor Rent
~7 - W•ntect to Rent

eTRANSPORTATION

31. - - - - - 32. _ _ __ __

---~---

U - Mobll• Homu

2:I.:.. Proleulonal
hrYicel

J4- Buslneu Bull4inlils
Js- L.otli I Acr .. '"'
l6- Reo11 E&amp;ta le Wa nted

30. - - -- - -

35 •

- Acldonl •nd r~mocltl lnt
- Aoofl11g • nd tulltr work

ti e more th an a Malf an
acre of level yard w ith
a garden area and a
12'x60' S_kylin e mobile
h om e in rne country but
close to town . Total
electr ic, publi c water
and ready tor you .

eRENTALS

CALL

446-2342

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

CARPENTER
SERVICE"

601

41 - H~~t~stllor Rent

~0

In Gallia Countv

7-S· Ifc

"YOUNG'S

E . Main

61 _:Farm EquiPmtnl
n - wanteo to llu.,'l- Livtstock
Slit
U - Hay &amp; Gra in
+s-Sted a F l rlllller

3 t - H 0 mtiiOr Sale
n - Moblle Hom u
lor Sal•
ll- Farms lor Sl it

- - -- - ----------- ----- -- ---'--- - - - -_ _ _ __

34. _ __ _ _ _

TO PLACE AN

Ph.949·2160 or 949-2482

1

H - Muticaltnslrument
SI-Fruiis &amp; V•lilll&amp;bl15
Sf- For S.le or Trtde

21 - Buslneu
Opportunit'l'
22~ Mon • 'l' to loan

33 - ---~-

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3·1fc

14- llll ineu Tra i ning
15- Schooll lnslruclion
16- Radio, TV ,

eFINANCIAL

2. _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ __ _
4, _ __

Circulation DepL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

!1- Help wanted
12- 511u• tion W&amp;ntta
ll- lnsurance

11- Wanted To D o

.

BOGGS

n - CB, TV , Red lo Eoulpment
SJ- Antlqllts
S4- MIIC . Mnchandlll
U - BtJIIdlnlil Suppliu
s.-Peh for S&amp;le

&amp;

1, _ _ _ _ __

9l7- Bulfalo

675-1333

10.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
:t-Annot~ncem&amp;flt s

17 .
18 .
19.
20.
21.
22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27 .
28.
29.

882- New Haven
895- letart'

TOM HOSKINS

3·1Hfc

NEW LISTING -

t-Giveaway

l

1·7· 1 '

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classi~ Dept,
1 I 1 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Phon•-----------------

'I

Ph . 992-656 '

PHONE 992-2156

I
I·
I

Nama~------------------- ~
Addra111----------------

.

WANT AD INFORMATION

27 C2l 3,10, 3tc

, ~th roule8 are medium in size and earn approximately
t20.00 per week, and with your children eaming a qttle EXTRA
eaeh week, that gives ~ ole Mom and Dad the chance to save
· .
·some money, and that 8 something now-a.day11.
.
The Sentinellikee to think that "We help you help youl"'lelf."

Mon. -Fri.&amp; : 30 to 4 : oo

Curb Inflation II ~~~~9~~~~~
1 · 3 -~'!:..J
Pay Cash for
IIL..------..!.::C.
Classlfleds and !Ir-----t----~

I

•

Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals .
I
mile
west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.

33.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex -

AUCTIONEER : DON ROSSER

!

(Pomeroy Sera p
I ron &amp; Meta I)

1·· 2&lt;1·1 m o.

Lots of good m erchandise to be sold .
Not responsible for accidents .
Terms of Sale: Cash or Check with Positive 1.0 .

1

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

458- Leon
576- Apple Grove
773- Mason

• Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Y rs. experience

No Sunday Calls

8·20·tfc

Both Men &amp; Women

SATURDAY, JANUARY 30th
7:00P.M.
AUCTION

and

kitchens

appliances,
(us tom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.

NOW AT

742 2211

PAGEVILLE
HOUSE

CONSTRUCTION

247- Letarl Falls
949- Racine
742- Ruttana
667- Coolville

643- Arabia Oist.

Mason Co., W. Va .
Area Code 304
675- Pt. Pleasant

•

PH. 992-6011

AUCTION

II

l4S- Rio Grande

156- Guyan Dlsl .

• siding

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call lor tree siding
estimates, 949· 2:801 or

949·2860.

Pomer oy
985- Chester
143- Portland

And Home Maintenance
, ROofing of all types

992-611Sor992-7314

276 Sycamore St.

8

THE

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

(Free Estimates)

l ·B· tf c

9·21 ·tfc

45760
6'14-992· 5650
11 120. 27 12! 3, 10, 4tc

I

Meigs co. Area Code

'
614
992- Middleporl

OHIO
ROOFING

V.C. YOUNG Ill

992-6259

B-A BEAUTY .

AT

Residential

Middleport, Ohio

RUTLAND FURNITURE
MAIN ST.

Check Your presen I
electric a I system .

FREE
ESTIMATES

Instilled

Save A

Let George Miller

SALE PHONE NO .

IGIMnH'"tll

d.

ng need S.
W·r·
I I

Custom

Used Color TV Sets tor
Sale.

tCIOitlhl

STAATrNG AT

your

mO.

'NOW
OPEN

3 ROLLS

Cash ' n' Carrv
Brown, Blue

all

&amp; Commercial
Call742 ·3195

TV SERVICE

....

. Kitchen
Rubber Back

For

•

ol ,.....,
......... u.........

NUGGET

614
446- Galllpolls
367- Cheshire
388- Vinlon

l!~;~~~~~~~~j~~;;~;;~~~t~~~~~~~~~~rr~~~~~~~;;~
HARRISON
C R MASH
CUSTOM
FIREWOOD

Goool -

SHAG CARPET

All makes al'!d models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shOp
service available.
J·J· 1 m o.

Minersville, Oh.

Misc. Merchandice

Good Sel•ction

PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382

MILLER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

MOBILE
HOME
PARTS

an-.. or al l bids submitted.
Further, veh ic les are
sold in the condi ti on th ey
are in witt• no ex pressed or
implied warranties given.

PRICED RIGHT

7. - - - - - -

I

PARTS AND SE: R 'II (f.

oHotwaterT Ank s

Chester,· OhiO

from· .4 to 6 and au
wood buildings 24x36.
Insulated Dog Houses

Jane Wagner ,
Treasurer
621 South Th i r d
Av enue
Middleport, Ohio

Call for more information, it's worth it!
992-2156

Ads

.

Vinyl &amp;·Aluminum
SIDING

and

Si~es

with INcl.

The Daily Sentinel is now accepting applications for two youth routes
in the Middleport area.

I

APPLIANCE SERVICE

Utility Buildings

Call Ken Young
For Fast Serv &lt;ce
985·3561

Misc . Merchandice

) For Renl

lrellt llljared ffremu DaD Caller at . . see~ ola pr~~e­

Sizes start from 3011:24"

o Oi1hw.ut1en

54

) Announcement

tlce flft Ia Boulder, Colo. Tuesday mol'lllllg. 1'be pn1c- CAP Luerpboto).

S&amp;WTV
•

••DilpoUII
"""Iii"

Start

dee fire gel eat of llud ud rlahned tbe Uves f!l two
ffremell ud laJared Clltler ... - oilier flrellgllter • •

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

luv Now a Sn1 U ·W Per Ylrd
25 Rolls Clrllfl In stock to pick rrom.
R"ullr INckltd, c:arpet ln1talled lrn

Give Your Children A Head

FIREMEN INJURED - Am~Julute paralllelllaJ

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Sav.ng s
Co mpanv
Pomero{, Ot•io, reserveS
tt•e rlgh to bid at t his sal e
and. to wit~1 draw the abov e
ven tcle pnor t p sale. Fur·
ther, T be Farmers Bank
and. Sav i ng s company
reserves the r ight to reiect

in Meigs during December

tt•an ~a- thirds of the ap·
praised value, and tt1e ter·
ms of the sale are cash In
hand on date of sale.

Keep This Ad For
Future Reference

Th~ Farmer s Bank and

Retail, motor vehicle taxes. up

.

.

~

t----------r..:.--------:--,----------"T"----------,-----------11

F26GUH01 608' - . F 25D - .
4X4

Senate gives approval to
prisoner work legislation

·

ret~rn. Want

17. .-

l:IHssifil'd {Ntl{l'll moor thl'
fol/owifll{ lf!/ephom• PxrhHni(I'H •••

Business Services

105

set In 1976, when $66.4 billion In red
slon that has pushed
WASHINGTON (AP) - PresiInk was accumulated.
.
unemployment near Its highest levdent Reagan, relilslng to try "to
Reagan's
refusal
to
seek
higher
els since World War II.
balance the budget on the backs of
taxes marks a major victory for
Reagan promised at the start' of
American taxpayers," says he has
Rep.
Jack Kemp, R-N.Y., and taxhis presidency to baalance the
no Intention of changing his ecocut advocates In the Treasury Debudget by 1983. One year later, be
nomic poUcies despite the prospartment, who had been counseling
said he Intends to reduce the dellepects of giant cjellclts.
the president against major new
Its that now loom abead by proposRejecting his advisers' call for
tax proposals.
Ing further cuts In social benefits
higher taxes, Reagan told Congress
have to agree to accept the offender
son's sentence, Aronoff said.
By contrast, the president's deciand 'Other domestic programs,
TUesday
night
that
he
was
sticking
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A bill .
Aronoft's bU!' was suggested by
before a court could require the
sion Is a serious setback for his se1
plugging
$24
billion
worth
busito
his
ta)\-cuttlng
course,
predicting
0
designed to save local government
work.
Judge Clayton E. Shea of HamUton
nior economic advisers and some
ness tax "loopholes" through 199,1
that It will put the nation back on
dollars and Improve community
The court could llx the period of
leading Republicans In Congress.
County Municipal Court. He said In
and
achieving
olll&lt;1r
savings,
such
"the
road
to
prosperity"
this
year.
life .b y giving some prisoners a
community service work and dis·
a letter to Aronoff that It costs $57 a
That warning was repeated earas selling oft surplus property and
But In his first State of the Union
cllanctrto work ratl1&lt;1r than sit In
tribute the period over weekends or
day· to keep a prisoner in the
Iter TUesday by Federal Reserve
speeding up sales of oft-shore oU
message,
Reagan
forecast
a
record
Jail Is · In 111&lt;1 House· after gaining
other times so a prisoner could
workhouse.
·
Chairman Paul A. Volcker, who
delicti "starllrig at less than $100 "and gas leases.
Senate approval.
keep regular employment to take
For a person servlng a full, siXwarned that recently rising interest
Proposed cuts In benefit probillion
(In
fiscal
1982)
and
declinSen. Stanley J. Aronoft,' Rmonth sentence at Cincinnati's
care of dependents, under the bill.
rates could quash an economic rec.
grams
eJ~cludlng Social Security
over
the
next
two
years.
Ing"
Ctoolnnatl, drafted the proposal,
Community Corrections Institute,
Shea . said , many community
overy unless the president and ConwUI
total
$63
billion
over
the
next
"Higher
taxes
would
not
mean
whiCh the Senate unanimously sent
the cost to taxpayers Is about . needs could be met, such as cleaner
gress act forcefully to keep deficits
four years, he said.
lower dellclts," Reagan said.
to the House on TUesday.
. streets and parks, and that the
$10,())), the judge said .
from
soaring.
Reagan
did
not
ctetan
any
other
"Raising taxes won't balance the
The community "will be the real
budget problems laced by so many
"For hardened criminals, we
Volcker told the Joint Economic
budget.
It
will
encourage
more
gobudget
plans
for
fiscal
~983. which
beneficiary. A judge now will Qe
Ohio communities "could In small
have no choice but Incarceration.
Committee of Congress that "It's
vernment spending and less pribegins Oct. 1, but one administraable to Impose a real work program
part be alleviated by this bill."
But lor many other convicted crimcritically Important that you take
tion
o!llclal
said
the
president
Invate tnvestment ... slow economic
on people who have oftended soThe Senate approved two other growth, reduce production and desInals, there must be alternate
tru! oppartunlty you have" to keep
tends
.to
lower
the
deficit
by
about
ciety ' but whose record Indicates
forms of sentencing," Shea said.
measures TUesday. It returned to . troy ,lllture jobs." ·
the deficit Irom topping $100 billion,
UO
billion a year In 1ga3 and 1984.
someuilng less than a maximum
AI:onoft's bill provides that ln adthe House with amendments mea·
as .some forecasts predict. OtherThe new budget Is scheduled to go
Reagan made 11 clear that he
tooarceratlon should be imposed,"
sures to updatl! county election
dition to Initial senleoctJ}g, the comwise, lenders will be unwilling to
to Congress on Feb. 8.
wouldn't revise his economic proAronoft said.
munity service work can be
board procedures and require state
cut
interest rates to help spur an
The largest deficit on record was
gram despite a deepening recesHis measure, whne not new In
certification of automatic sprinkler
assigned to inmates as a condition
economic recovery, ne said .
concept, Is believed drafted In such
of parole.
system designers. The House had
a way that existing work·release
no TUesday sessions.
Local agencies, subdivisions, or
programs will become more
cl&gt;arltable organizations would
Public Notice
Public Notice
practical.
Public Noll'ce
Public Notice
~;'resent law limits the hours a
IN THE
nortt• 34'12 dP.grees west 5
NOTICE TO
person may work to 80, even If that
the D ir ector a t Highway
COMMON PLEAS
rods ;
thence north 17
BIDDERS
Sa fety pursuc1nt to Secti on
COURT OF
person Is sentenced to three or even
degrees west about 16 rods
PURCHASE OF
451 1. 76 of the Ohio Revised
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
to place of beginning, con·
FOUR SCHOOL
six months. "That's not enough
Code and a II other per·
RUTH SCHARTIGER, AD· tainlng 4 acres, more or
BUSES F()R
t1nent provisi on of law
MINISTRATRIX OF THE less.
time to get anything (a community
MEIGS LOCAL
Speci fi cat ions and in·
ESTATE OF HOWARD L.
Saving
and
excepting
the
BOARD OF
project) going," the senator said.
stru ctio ns to bidders may
SEARLS, DECEASED
followinq described real
EDUCATION
be
obtained at the office of
PLAINTIFF,
The bill, which applies only to
estate s•tuated in Sec . B.
Sealed proposals wi ll be the Trea surer . Middleport,
With
the
increased
Ulx
motor
6, Range 14, Rutland
Both reUiil and motor vehicle
rec ei ved by the Board of Ohio.
misdemeanors, increases that limc~1·R LES WILLIAM . Town
Township, begi nning in
Education of the Meiqs
vehicle sales tax receipts were up SEARLS, ET AL
A certifi ed check payabl e
sales tax receipts for December
Itation and sets limits for each of
center of road at the
Local School District of- to th e Trea surer of th e
DEFENDANTS.
southeast norner ·of lot
M
iddleport.
Ohio·
at
the
were up in Meigs County for Decem- 26.10 percent from $29,511.72 for
the four classes of misdemeanors.
NO. 11,170 · owned by M . C. and C. F . Treasurer' s Office until above board of education
December, 1980, to $37,215.72 for
or a satisfa ctory bid bond
ber, 1981, compared to December,
NOTICE OF
For first-degree misdemeanors,
Ratt•burn ; thence Nortt1 34
12 :00 noon on February 19, executed by the bidd er and
PUBLIC SALE
degrees west 82 112 feet;
1980, according to the report of State Deceniber, 1981.
1982
and
at
that
'
t
im
e
which carry a maximum sentence
In pursuance of the Or- thence north 17 degrees opened by the Treasurer of the suret-.. company . in an_
amount equal to f•ve per
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey.
der of Probate Court of west 99 feet ; tt•ence south
of six months, a prisoner could
said Board, tabulated, and cent ( 5 per ce nt ) of th e bid
Meigs County, Ohio, Ruth 73 degrees west 80 feet ;
However, during last December,
a
report
thereof
made
to
work 960 hours under the blll.
Schartiger, Administratrix 1t1ence south 17 degrees said Board at its nex t shall be subm itted w i th
Marriage licenses
eac h bid .
the sales tax charge .in both areas
of the Estate of Howard L
Other sentences and work limits
east 99 feet; thence souttJ 34
sc heduled m eeting as
Snid boi'lrd of educ ation
Searls, Deceased, will offer degrees east 02112 feet;
was up by one cent on the dollar.
provided
by
law
for
fOur
(4)
would be, tor a se&lt;oJ~&lt;rl·degree; 90
Marriage licenses were issued to tor sale at public auction on
r eserves the r ight to waiv e
1ttence north 72 3/.. degrees 65 passenqer school buses, informrtlities. to accept or
Retail sales tax receipts for the
clays, 4M hours; third, 60 ct~y:;. 3~
Monty. Clark Caplinger, 37, Reeds- tt1e 17th day of February, _ east to the place of begin· according to srecificat ions re jec t any and all or parts
1982, •110 :00 a.m. allhe.of·
conta1ning one·third
month
were
of said board n education .
up
only
1.02
percent
last
hours; and fourth, 30 days, 11;0
ville, and Connie Lou Mays, 23, f ices of Fred w . Crow, Ill , ning,
of any and all bids.
acre, more or less.
·
Separate
a nd
in ·
, No bids can be with·
December
with
receipts
lotaling
196
west
Second
Street,
Reedsville; Gale E . Wolfe, 39, Rt. l,
.hours.
,
REFERENCE
DEED
:
b
ids
will
be
dependent
Pomeroy, Ot1io, the Vol. 259, Page 55, Meigs r eceived with rr.s p~ ct to the drawn for at l ~ a s t thir'ty
$117,517.46
compared
to
receipts
of
As at present, the time worked
Reedsville, and Charlotte L. Wolfe, following described real County Deed Records.
1301
days
aft er
th e
chassis and body typc&gt; and schedu led closi ng time -for
$116,328.70 for December, 1980.
estate :
would be applied against the per·
41, Rt. l, Reedsville.
c
The premises are ap·
will
state
t
hat
the
bus
when
receipt of bids. ·
Situate in the Township praised al $3 500.00 and
and pri or to
M eigs County Board
of Rutland, County of must be sold 'lor not less assembled
delivery compl y with all
of Education
wit :

The

Gall Ia Co. Area Code

Presi.dent will follow plan

Meigs and State of Ohio, to-

Ohio

1

the key word ller e. K itchen comes compl ete w ith 1
year old self cl ean ing oven, refri ge rator &amp; 6 chair
wooden dinette se t . Th is home is abou t 1.5 m iles out
of Middleport on 2 plus acres. it h as outbuilding ~ for
storage. Rental incom e from a tr' ait er · $175. A.ll this
For only 535,000.
VERY NICE - This home has 3 nice size B. R.'s,
closets, eat· in k i tchen. O. R, or F .R ., &amp; an ex tr a L. R.
Lot is 3 plus ac r es, garage. several other n ice
buildings. fruit .trees, se ver al v ari et ies of berry
bushes. curtains, woodburner , di shwa sher, all st'ay ,
Give us your offer in the $SO's.

LAND FOR Si'LE - Close lo Rt. 7, 20 acres . As king
$13,000 . Owner will lc1nd contract · 10% down &amp; work
tOgether on balance.

RENTALS AVAILABLE -- Nice bri ck home in
Letart, OH . 5250 a month plus S250 deposit &amp;
references.
·

RENTAL AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY - Close
to Rl. 7 rn lhe Chester area . 3 B.R. 5300 a monlh
plus deposit &amp; reference.

RENTAL - Porlland , 3 B.R.. counlry home.
$150.00 plus deposll of $100.00. Slove in home.
' CALLUSTOBUYORSELL
Nancv Jaspers- Auociafe

PH. 143·2075
Vl~gihia Ha'vman - Associate

PH . 915-4197

,

lacl Bill Carler al446·3413.

BEDS· I RON, BRASS. Old
furniture, gol d , silver
dollars. woOd Ice bOxe s,
stone Iars, entlques, etc.,
Complete
househ olds ,
Wr ite : M .D. Miller, Rt . 4,,

Pome roy, Oh. Or992·7760 , . •,

---

.,.

CHIP WOOD . Poles max.: . :~
diame ter 10" on :-targest · "" ""

end . 512.50 porI on. Bundled · &lt;:
slab . $10 .50 pe r lon .,·,

Delivefd to Ohio Pallet co ·~ .. ; ..
Ro c k Spr i n gs Rd .'; .. .;
Pom eroy . 992 ·2689.
• • :·

----------

... · ~

Gold , si l ver , s terl i ng
~.
jewelrv, r in'gs, old coins
:~
cUrrency , Ed Burkett Bar 0: · ~
· ber Shop, Middleport . 992· :• ~ ·

&amp;•

·

3476.

·'· ...
'·.
---------I
" '\,
BUYING DEER AND- ~ ·

BEEF H IDES. Gene H ines: :!~!!-"
Rt. 1, -Ames~ille , Oh 448·· ' .. ..
6747. Buy ing raw fur after . : ..."
Dec. 12. Dallv 6 PM to 9 ., •:
PM, c losed Sundays. Also •• "" ..
closed Dec . -2~ &amp; 25.
:~

:.!

RAW FUR buyer.

-

Be;&amp; ' --::~.). .

deer hlde -glnshano . rrep·" ~. 1
ping s uppl ies . Geor.ge • ...,,

Buckley. Rl. 2, Athens, Oh .
6-14 · 664 · 4761.
Open
even ings.
~---....._.

__ ..
.•

�•

Page-18-The Daily Sentinel
9

•
Wanted to Buy

27 1982

Ohio .

They'll Do It Every Time

OL D F URNITURE , beds,
rron. brass, or wood. Kitchen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or square.
WOOd ice boxes. Old desks
and bookcases. Will buy
complete household. Gold,
sil ver, old rnoney, pocket
watches, cha ins, ringS, and
etc. Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 9926370.

~ - HOUSeSforRenl-UNFURN I SHED hOuse,
White frame, 3 bedroom,
electric heat , k itchen not
w ih stove &amp;
I' r..rriio••••t•&gt;r. Uti li ly room
w i th w;:tsher &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 acr e garden &amp; ,
vard . Ma i ling address
Gallipolis Ferry, lease &amp;
depoS I required . Owner·
ship m anagement. Phone
Huntin-gton, 304·522 ·1990.
THREE bedroom, 2 baths,
famil y-re creation , · laun ·
dry, workshop , 2 car
garage fenced yard, $425.
'plus deposit,- 508 M c Nei l
Ave. Pt. Pleasant, phone
30H75·.'ir53.

Would like to buy up to 3
acres of land around
Rutland area . out of high

water. Prefer blac k top
road. contact Larr y Barr
7~N149 .

i4 - ~ partmemt
for Rent

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

by Larry Wright
,, , .... "1- .. A . .

Partly furn ished apart·
ment. CloSe to shopping in
No pets. Adults.
Sl25 per month . 614-9n.
3201.

Cl\~1.-'/t.e

.-

1J

TR I · STATE
MOBI L E
HOMES . Gallipolis. Price
reduced , used m obile
homes. CALL 446·7572 .

M obile home at 322 Third
AVe. Adults on 1y' , no pets .
Cal l m ·3748 or 256·1903.

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance ·co. has offered CLEAN USED MOBILE
servi ces for fire insurance HOMES
KESSE L 'S
coverage in Gallia County QUALITY
MOBILE
for almost' a century . HOME SALES, 4 MI .
2 bedroom brick .house , Farm, home and personal
lan;,e patio, sliding door, property coverages are WEST, GALLIPOLIS , RT
full basement, garage, 1 available to meet in· 35 . PHONE ~46 · 3868 .
acre lot on state Rt. 35. Low divldual needs . Contact
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
50's . Ca ll ~46 · 0755 .
Lewis Hughes , agent.
mobile
home. Set up with 2
Phone m ·3318 .
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
3 Qf .4 bedroom house with
water, close to town, finan bath in country on 23 acres . AUTOMOB I LE
IN ·
Sform windows , rural SURANCE been can· cing available . Phone 446·
1294.
water, garage, lots of celled?
Lost
your
storage space, cloSe to all3 operator's License? Phone
1970 12x60 Buddy central
mines. Price reduced for 992·2143
heat and air. Set up and un·
quick sale. $15,500. 742 ·
derpinned . Phone 446·7402
2502.
after 5:30PM .
18
Wanted to Do
Or rent -3 bedroom fur · Babysitting In my home .
$9,000 . 1968 Cherokee
nished home on Bud Chat· Call m ·Q390.
trailer on lot, partially fur·
tin Road on big level lot .
nished, has new fuel oll fur·
576·2711 .
Will do house cleaning of nance with 300 gal. tank,
any nature. reasonable has new 10x20 ft . porch
,. Bedroom house in Pt . rates. Phone 367·0,.90 or
with awning &amp; solid oak
Pleasant on Moseman Cir· ~ · 1402 .
deck, new underpinning,
c l ~ . S300 per mo. plus $200
very · well insulated, has .2
damage deposit. 446·8234.
Will do Plumbi ng &amp; small bdr ., full bath, k itchen ,
carpentry jobs . Call 675 · living room, rural water.
5 room hOuse, bath, large 5760.
Call388·9059 anytime .
!o 't, garden
space .
Available Jan. 25. Racine
CARPENTRY, siding &amp; 1972 12x60 mobile home fur·
area . 992·5858.
remodeling, phone 304·576- nished with extras. Finan·
clng avai lable. Call 367·
2989 .
FURNISHED 2 or 3
7175.
bedroom mobile home . Un·
furnished I bedroom apart·
FIRaRelal
1973 New Moon mobile
ment 304-675·1371 or 675·
home, 2 bedroom 12x65, un·
3812
furnished. Cail-4.46·6545.
22
Money to Loan

Centenary; 2 bdr .• private
lot, ref . &amp; dep., s160 mo.,
adults . Cal l 1-614-643·2644.

13

Insurance

USED plano, 550 to S75 .
Call after 5 p. m.30H75 ·
6363.

11

Help Wanted

Earn
20
per cent
retirement on $2,000 .00
wholesale instead of 3 per
cent
retirement
on
S7,500l'V . 61H7H749 or
614-417·1414,
We can pay now or pay
later. The delinquent child
of today is tomorrows
prison inmate. We can wait
till tomorrow and pay for
prisons and crime and law
enforcement or we can
take care of the problem
tOdey . Make an Investment
in the future become a
f!&gt;Ster parent . Call Juvenile
Court m · 38~2 .
Why settle for less, sell the
best . AVON . Call m ·3358
or 742-2354 .
Assoc i ate needed to
manage local office . Should
have good sa les or business
background . l ncome com·
mensurate to abi lity . Send
resume to P.O. Box 1()84,
Newark, Oh 43055.
WANTED : Full·time live·
in Housemanager and part·
time Relief Housem~tnager
(weekends) to work with
persons handicapped with
mental retardation at
group home In Gallipolis.
Job requires th!t yoU
supervise stall and that
you train and supervise
clients in personal hygiene
and . home living ski lls.
Weekends off . Room,'
b'Oard,
and benefits
provided . Send resume to
John Lehew, P.O. Box 906 ,
Gall ipolis, Oh ~31 . Equal
opportunity employer.
GET VALUABL E tr!inir1g
as a young business person
e~nd ear.n goOd money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility llsl at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
As soc late needed to
manage loca l office. Should
have good sales
or
business background . tncom'E! commensurte to
ability . write Econom ic
Associates, P.O. Box 108&lt;,
Newark, Ohio 43055.
ADD $60. to S70. weekly to
your
income,
se ll
cosmetics part time. Call
Pt. Pleesant Employment
Service, 304-675·2770.
fRI ·CHEM liquid em ·
brOidery,
Instructors
needed now. Excellent ear·
nlnP. potenial. Elsa Cox 304·
675·5187.
12

Situations Wanted

Have vacancy for elderly
woman or man ·in my
private home. Good ex·
perience .
Reasonable
rates. Call 614-667-6329 or

61H6J.JA02 .
excellent typist desires
part time employment. Ex·
perlenceG legal, Insura nce.
Write Box 729·A c/o Dally
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio
4J769.

Col umbus First Mortgage
Company FHA ·VA F inan·
cing Loan Rep. Cookie
Krautter (30~)675 · 3473 .
REFINANCE or purchase
your home. 30 year fixed
rate. wva . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St .,
Athens, Oh. 592·3051 .
13

Professional
Services

Piano Tunlng·Be kind to
your ears. Call Bill Ward
for appointment, ,.46·.4372.
C &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in·
dlvidua ls.
Carol Neal m ·3842
Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. Ususally one or two
days service. Dismuke's
405 2nd . Ave ., Gallipolis,
446 ·0474.
YOUR Federa l, State , City
Taxes prepared . 17 years
experience with tax firm .
Kenneth Adkins, SO Olive
St ., Ga llipoli s, ~46 · 7~75 .

12x65 underpinned, carpet
a ll new. nu ·sash windows,
rural water, excellent con·
dltion with patio &amp; awning .
Call m ·2395 ·after 5:00 .
REPOSSESSION . 1981 all
electric mobile home, set
on lot ready to move into.
Payments $159.47 month .
All State Modular Homes.
576·2711.
.
Jul~_oL'o!o~t~
s.!!&amp;coA~c'o!r.!e~ag!!!e:__
~

2, 1 acre house lots, on 554,
tow downpayment, land
contract, rural water,
Columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 256·6413 , 12
p.m . to9p .m.
241!~

acres for sale . Ca l161 4·
667·3609.
36

Real Estate
wanted

Used 2 bedroom mob ile
home wanted for Young
Professional man In Rio
Grande·Galllpolis area .
Land contratt preferred .
Call m ·7065 after &lt;PM.

Piano &amp; Organ lessons,
Mary Lucas. Ca11446·9787 .
Accounting-Income Tax .
Individual and small
business. For appointment
call 367-0268 .
HARPER Adult Care Cen ·
ter·prov iding the personel
care 'fOUr elderly need in a
home like atmosphere.
Vacanc ies now evellible .
ca ll 304-675·1293.

31-

Homes for Sale

3 brm . home newly
decorated , near city . 2 out
buildings &amp; carport. Vinyl
siding and carpet. Call 446·
3897.
2 bedroom brick house,
large patio, sliding door
full besement, garage,
acre lot on state Rt . 35 .
50'S. Call 446·0755.
3 or '4 bedroom house wlth
bath In country on 23 ecres.
Storm windows, rural
W8ter, garage, lots of
storage space, !=lose to all3
mines . Price reduced for
quick sale . $15,500. 742·
2502 .
Or rent·3 bedroom fur·
nlshed home on Bud Chattin Road on big level lot.
576 ·2711.
comfortable 3 bedroom
home, 8 117 percent
assumllble loan, .and Is
near PFtHS, large fenced in
yard, kitchen appliances
and more . We
are
relocating ~nd can share
realtor's fees by selling
now. Call after 6 pm 475·
1625.

32

Mobile Homes
· for Slit

USED MOBILE
576·271].

HOME.

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom family rm ., SJOO
per mo. plus utilities, $300
dep. required . Call 4.46·
455&lt;1 .
RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
decorated
un furnished, 3 rm . house.
Suitable for single person
or retired couple. Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
required. Call 446·0450 or
446·1291.
9 room house In Rio Grande . Call 4~6 · 3~85 .

5 bdr. house in Gallipolis
near park , 5400. Call 446·
7265 or ~46 · 0644 .
Two bedroom house on
Roush Lane in Cheshire
near Power Plants . Un·
furnished, dep. &amp; ref . No
pets, yard &amp; garden. S225
mo. Call m · l527 .

2 bdr. mobile home adults,
no pets. Call.u6·1158.
2 bdr. mobile home for rent
in country with garden
space available free, Sll5
mo. plus· deposit and ref.
Call61080394 after 5.
2 bdr. trailer furnished,
adults only, Brown Trailer
Park, 992-3324 .
2 bedroom mobile home In
Syracuse . Washer and
dryer. Deposi t required .
61Hn.3625.
One bedroom furnished ex ·
tra nice. Ideal for couple .
$150 plus utilities and dep .
99H479.
2 bedroom house trailer in
Racine. Ava il able Feb. I .
$200 month . $75 deposit .
You pay utilities. 614·367 ·
7811 .
Construction
workers
trailer for three. Phone 304·
773-5651. Mason .
MOBILE home for rent
with option to buy, 30,.·576·
27 11.
.

TWO bedroom furnished,
S150. per month plus
utilities, N.ew Haven, 304·
882-2466.
TWO bedroom, furnished
mobile home , large lot,
references and deposi t
required, Camp Conley,
30H75·3219.

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished
room
$85,
utilities pd., sing le male,
range, refr ig. share bath .
m ·4416 alter 7 PM.
2nd. floor
fiency apt.
Gallipol is.
Adults only ,

furnished ef729 2nd. Ave.,
Call 446·0957 .
no pets.

4,_,lc__..:F
:_u::;r:.:n"'is,h,e,
d~R,o,o:::
m!!..
s

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt .,
Park Central Hotel.
Have vacancy for elder ly
man or woman in my
home. Reasonable rates,
good experience. Tuppers
Plains 667·6329 or 667·3402.
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
F&gt;ark, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large · lots. Call
992·7479.

2 trailer spaces in Syracuse
Trailer Park . 1 all electric.
614-992·3625.

--- ------S1

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, of·
loman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa,
chair arld loveseat, S275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285 . to $795. Tables,
S38 and up to S109. Hide·a·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to $295.,
Lamps from S18 .. to $65. 5
pc. difettes from $79., to
$385. 7 pc., $189. and up.
WOOd table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk S110.
Hutches, SJOO. and $375.,
ma'Pie· or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, S67S., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, S250. and
up to $350. Captain' s beds,
$275. complete . Baby beds,
$99 . Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58 .,
firm, S68. and· $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr:. chests, $42. Bed
frames, S20.and S25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinette chairs $20. ltnd $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
thopedic super firm, $95,
baby ma tresses, S25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; $30.
Electr ic fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wOOd table &amp; 4 chairs.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri., 9am to 5pm , Sat.
m ·0322

New wood stove, half price,
neve~ used, $350. can con vert to furnance. Call 256·
1216, Galllpoll•.

'
A carry
out business closed

FirewOOd $35.00 pickup
load, four loads S100,
del i vered . Ca ll 388-9823.
Firewood $25 toad . Split &amp;
stacked. Call 38H700 or
388·9313 .
Regular size buck Stove,
wood or coa l, insert or free
standing, 3 weeks Old, $800 .
Call ~· 3063.
Wil).. · M ·12, 30' full choke.
Win. M ·12, 28' mod . Rem .
M·31, 30' futt choke . Phone

- - ---- - Apartments . 675 ·55•8 .

Excels ior Oil Co., 636 E.
Main St., Pomeroy , Ohio.
992-2205.

5 room house, bath, large
lot,
garden spac~
Available Jan. 25. RTcTne
area. 992·5858.

4 used Firestone 13 in
radials. S15 each . 614·742·
315Aor99H467 .
Single bed, bookcase head·
board and dresser . 992·
7565.
.,

UN tON labeled imprinted
political
advertising
specialties, New army field
jackets, ( liners) clothing,
combat leather boots, (sur·
plus renta l clothing), new
, heavy winter clothing, Sam
somerville, Pt . Pleasant
304-675· 333~ , !warehOuse 7
mites east of Ravenswood
Old Rt. 21 . )

ss

Building Supplies

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, elc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Ca ll245c5121.

German Shepherd
SIO. Call ~· 3281 .

pups.

Reg. cocker Spaniel pups,
color blonde. Call ~ · 1262 .

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2&lt;13 Jackson Ave., Pl.
· Plellsant. 675·2063. Mon .•
Thu"" I Fri. 11 to6. Tues .,
Wed., I Sat. 11 to 4. Chock
our FIsh Special .
RABBITS ~ · 45tH741 .
extra large Iron kettle.
Good condition. 304·675·

HOUSES on stale Rt. 87,
rural
water, Wendell
Fauver, 304·895·3879.
·

1864.

6750.

'

--·~ -

'1

CAPTAIN EASY' .
JUST ONE Of' THOS£
THINGS 'I'OU PICI( UP
IN SHOP CLASS..

1980 220 MF diesel tracto_r,·
used 221 hrs., also rear
mower with tractor . All in
exc . cond., $6,700. Call "'-46·
1700.
1979 Massey Ferguson end
loader, plow, disc, grader
blade, fines, chains, bush
hog, 112,000. 446·2971.
MASSEY FE RGUSDN 96
bushel
grinder -mixer,
same as new condition, 30,..
372-9773 .
.
HAY elevator , $100. 304·
88n501after 5:00.

~pelt

straw. Coolville

61~ · 667 · 3838 .

'$7 "

Musicll
1nstrumonts ·

ANTIQUE player piano,
electrified, 100 rolls, S400.
phone ~H75· 1M2.

71

BORN LOSER

1978 INTERNATIONAL
Scout, 31.000 miles, $4,000.
phOne 30H95-J477.
Motorcycles

74

1980 Honda cx-soo. Black .
Exc . cond . $2,000. 614·992·
3312.
16

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

ONE 350 Chevy engirie, one
327 Chevy engine. Both sao.
One 76 Chevy truck hood
$20 . Chevrolet truck bed,
one 650 duel line Holley
Carb. SSO. One 76 truck rear
end $75 . One 350 turbo fran·
sm lsslon $50. Phonp 304·
675·6750.

ANNIE
YEG~E~T

Auto Repair

77

THAT WU
SPOiLED lfiE
JOHE IH THE

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Insurance work
welcome . Sunroofs in·
sta lied from $200·$230. Auto
Trim Center, 446·1968.

$TRIP.

-HO, I
DIDN'T!
IT'S JU5T

ADIJMB

JOHE!

Hay &amp; Grain

Good mixed hay, never
been wet. Call 61H86·2394
after 5.
Nice

after 3 p.m . 304·

--------1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, 3Ao ton, 4Speed. 1979
Volkswagen Rabbit, 2 door,
4 speed, 30H75·1578. After
3:30675· 1320.

Auto tor Sale

1972 Volkswagen Super
Beetle, auto., blue, $850.
Call ~· 1615 or m ·1243.
1975 Mu,tang II as Is S900.
Call 367-7~19 .
.
VW 1969, $500 . Last year of
this style, 8,000 miles on
overhaul, rebored, needs ·
repair. Ca ll Forst-M itchell,
m ·1136.

_ __
1mproveme"ts

c:---~
H,o_
m_
e

81

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com merc ial and residential ,
free estimates, . Call 256·
1182.

ALLEYOOP

CAPTAIN STEEM E R Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free estimates.
Call446·2107.

WHO'RE

'IOU,

PAINTING · inter ior and
exterior, plumbing ,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call388 ·9652. ·
Call ...&amp;6-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider.
and fleas control. Free
estimates,sBi ll Thomas .

1969 Opal wagon,
Phone367 -0541 .

$325 . ' RON'S Television Servi ce.
Special izing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazarr and
1972
Datsun
pickup house calls. Phone 516:2398
wrecked still runs, good or ..46·2.. 54 .
recaps, S35. Ca iiA46·2971.
------F &amp; K Tree Trimming ,
For sa le 1978 Chysler Cor- stump removal. 675· 1331.
doba automatic, AT, PS.
PB, air, cruise, leather in- RINGLES'S SERV ICE ex·
terior, low mi leage. Must perienced mason, roofer,
sell . Ca ll 245· 58~1 .
carpenter., electrician ,
general r epa i rs and
1972 Pontiac . In perfect remOdeling . Phone 304 ·675·
cond., has new VinYl top. 2088 or 67H560.
Can be seen at 107
Chill ocothe Rd ., 245·5879.
Water wells. Commercia!
and Domestic . Test holes.
1975 Cutlas
Supreme Pumps Sales and Serv ice.
automatic, floor shift, 304·895·3802 .
swiv~l bucket seats, rust
proofed, Midas exhaust LOCKSMITH
Se rvi ce.
system. Call256·6519.
Residential , automot ive.
Emergency servi ce. Call
1969 Plymouth wagon. J18 882 ·2079.
auto. 985·,.346.
WANDLING E l ectrica l
1980 El Camino. 614-742· service, old work and new
work, small appliances, 24
2784.
hour serv ice . Phone 304·
67H&gt;663.
1973 Camara, new paint,
runs good, some work
Plumbing
needed, new air shocks, 8'2
&amp; Heating
good tires. perfect interior.
S700. 61042' 3063.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
FOR Sale by Sealed Bids.
Cor . Fourth and Pine
1979 Chevrolet four door Phone ,.46·3888 or 446·4477
Impala, automatic, P.S .•
F&gt; . B . ,
with
air, l l
EXCilvafirlg
mechanically good shape,
needs body work. Can be Gallipolis Diversified Con·
seen !1 R utlllnd Ohio. con· st . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
tact Vernon Weber or Jerry backhoe work . Special
Black. Mark on outside Of farm rates. Call us for free
envelope cruiser bid and estimates. 446 ·4440.
mall or hand to Vernon
Weber , clerk Rutland 14 - e lectrical
Village, Rutland. Bids will
&amp; Refrigeration
be opened Feb. 2, 1982 at 7
p.m . in Rutland . Council SEWING Machine repair s.
l.r,;se,rv~s tlii
to accept service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Servicel' Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,
HARTS Used tarsi NeW Pomeroy . 992·2274 .
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars In JACKS R~FRIGERAT I O ·
stock.
N. air condition servi ce,
commercial, indu strial.
GOVERNMENT
SUR · Phone 8BH079.
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now ovai lable 85
General Hauling
through local sales, under
lONES BOYS WATER
SJOO.OO. can. 1-714·569·0241
·ERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
for ·y our directory on how
' 7-0591 .
to purchase. Open 2,. hours.

GASOLINE ALLEY

we can't

Must I hide out
like a common
criminal

let Pert
serve that
SLitnmons !;:.~, P.~.-:\

1910 FORD Falrlane, 500,
$600, 304-475·2508.

"'OW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367-7101.

1979
CHEVY
Malibu
Classic, landaO fop, 36,000
miles, $4800 .,304-675-2508.

17

78 . Monzo, V·8, S2200.
automatic, 30076·2971 .
1968 CHEVELLE, 396
oulomlllc, good condition,
$2850. caii304·37H544.

""('~;..

CIJ ·TliE NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
.
([)
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
(1) HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Q([) TICTACDOUGH
(]) (fi)
MACNEIL-LEHII!R
REPOI!T
&lt;lDl NEWS
MUPPET SHOW
7:05 ([) CAROL BUliNEn AND
FRIENDS
7:30 (]). YOUAIK!DFOI!IT
C1J ANOTHER LIFE
(]) DECOYS: POLICE UNDER
COVER A Now York City
underco&gt;~ercrlmeunil walk I the
street a disgulted •• helpleaa
·victlma ualng thlalntrlgulng
method of criminal justice.
([). ([) FA MILVFEUD
(1) LAVERN! AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY .
([)
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
'
llJl
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(fi) PROFILE&amp; IN ART
. &lt;121 •
ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
1:35 ([) SAN,OAD AND SON
7:58 (]) CBN_!IPDATE NEWS
S:OO ( ] ) . (1) REAL PEOPLE
Female prize flghterelnlowa; a
he ndleapped park ranger In
Voaemlte NatiOnal Park; a
~iollnial in California; ateatlval
in Colorado that honora a
Ia moue 19th century m1d1m;
and: an Atlanta woman who Ia
the voice of the telephone
company•a time ll)d weather
recordinG• ecrol8 the country.
(Bepeat: eo mina.)
(I) NAnONAL OEOORAPHIC
SPECIAL
([)&lt;Hie THE GREATEST
AMERICANHEAOAiopronlllng
Thai genejoafgathera a dlveree
group of men toget,er to trigger
a bralnwaahed reaponae
implanted In each of thamyeara
!Q_O in VIetnam. (80 mina.)
DCililJlCBSNEWSSPECIAL
REPORT 'In Converaellon With
The Prealdenl' Dan Rather
interview• President Reagen
concerning hla State Of The
UnlonAddr..aand hia flrll veer
in office . (80 mlna.)
([) KENNEDY CENTER TONIGHT ' Greet Vibeel Lionel
Hampton and Fflenda' Alributa
to Lionel Hampton klcka olf the
new aeaaon of the Kennedy
Center Tonight aeries, with
performance• at the White
Houaa end the center. Stephan·
le Mill a, Zoot Slms , L,ouia
Bellaon and-many other Jazz
greata aalule Hampton at thil
euepicloua o.. ebratlon. (60
mina.)
(fi) RAMBLIN'
8:05 ([) NBAIASK!TBAUAtlonta
Hawke ve D1tro1t Pietona
1:30 (])MOVIE · (DRAMA) ••
''Paplllon'' 1073
8:58 (])(;IN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (])e(1) 114! FACTS OF LIP!
Feerfullhet Mra. Garrett will
never remarry , the girl aarrange
lor her flrll data In 15 ~earaend
Blair end her boyfriend go along
lo chaperone.
CIJ 700CLUB
([) &lt;121. THE FALL OUY An
accident occur1 on a movie
. at unt, a ndthe ttuntman, a friend
of Colt' a. gel a inJured leaving
Colt to take oyer ll'le atunt end
diecover how the accident
occurred. (80 mlna.)
8([)1lJ) CIS WEDNESDAY
· NIOHTMOYIE 'TomHom' 1880

&lt;12la

(I) WRITE ON The Fifth Annual
Fe1tival of New American
Pia va, one ofthe maJorevent aln
American theatre takes place
each year attheActora Theatre
in Loulavme J&lt;entuckv. where e
new generattbn ol playwright a
un&gt;~eif outatandrno new work a
· during 1 unique featl&gt;~el . (80
mina.)
(fi) KENNEDY CENTER TON·
IGHT ' Great Vibul Lionel
Hampton and Friande' A tribute
to Lionel Hampton kicks off the
new aeaaon of the Kennedy
Cenler Tonlgnt eerln, with
performancea et the White
House an !:IItie canter. Stephanie Milia , Zoot Sims . Louie
Bellaon and many other Jazz
greats aa lule Hampton at thla
auapieloua celebration .

•
•

WINNIE

AREN 'T YOU
GOING TO
WAIT FOR THE

THERE' IS USUAW'
MORE THAN JUST

OJWGUt::ir

Ol?IC/?5?

ciJ il PM MAGAZINE

Stara : Steve McQue~tn.linda
Evane.

AT A A'\RTY,
ISN'T ll1ERE ~ •

8:30

~~CD LOVE, SIDNEY

ceo

10:00 ( ] ) . (!) QUINCY Oulncy ' a

inveatigetlon ol a autplcloua
a high rlee building leada
him to 1 finding ot trton tnd Into
the companv of a dangeroua
QliOmanieo. (eo mlna.)
l1J &lt;121e DYNASTY
([)
NON-FICTION
TEU!VIIION
NEWS
t0:20
TIS EVENING NEWS ,
CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:21
10:30
ALFMD HITCHCOCK
PREII!NTI

lire'"

I

:~: ffiWM~ar~;~.

NI!We
(I) NAIHVILU! IIFD
(]) DOCTOI! IN TH1! HOUlE
tt:20 ~liiNTHI,AMILY ,
11;21 ·
IINUPDAT!NEW8
tt:30
TH!TONIGHTIHOW
Que at Holt : Joan Rivera .
Gu..ta: JQhn Ritter, Charo. (80

.G IT BACK IN BED,
TATER·-IT AIN'T All
THAT SCAIRY ~

mlnoJ
(]) .(N,OTHI!R Uf!
(]) HX IIA THII!!LI'nER
WORD Michael c,rera,
Profe..or LOfnl. Ferrel and Dr.
Phlllip-Farrelleuwer the
queationa moat uked about

·- =======

Hlllnd HXUd;ty.

I

-

AICCA~DNEWS

-

,(]) MOVII•(DIIAMA). •••11
...,...., 11101'-" 1e80
([) AIC NIWI NIGHT LINE
. An-eel by Ted Koppel.

iJI'~":mATTwo

MOWREYS UphOlStery Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675-415~ .

_, c::,
·-"

.
'

'

••

)

'() '(
tSUSTLY!

()

) .I I

.···-od: ....

newi)'WMaeredletraatadby .
the eppeararK:e- of the bride' a
~ ollhlr1Hn·
~·· otdaexperiencl nrat love:

WHA"'r L.IFE WAS
FO~ 'THAI UI&lt;JL.UC.I&lt;.Y
GARDENE~ .

.

IJ I (]
,..
Answer: NO( I I )IT)( XI I Xl ::
Now arrange the circled leners to
fofTTl the surprise answer. as suggasted b)' the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
· VoS1erdoy's l Jumbles: LINER MINUS CHARGE PENMAN
Answer · Metal devices that help keep locks in place
- HAIRPINS

. r ..

Jumble look No. 11; containing 110 punlt1, 11 •vailllbl•lor St.IUi pottptld
from Jumb'-, clo thl1 MWtptper, IQ• :J-4, NDIWDOd; N.J . 07848. Include your
Mini, addrlas. lip code and malce checlca payablt 10 N•wapaperOooka.

'· .

BRIDGE

., .

"

The squeeze fineaae
By Oswald Jacoby
ond Alan Sonto1

NORTH

1·27-81

•8
'AKJ73
t9! 4

Phil Feldesman, one of
our most successful players
of the IHOs, has not playM
any tournament brl~ge In
the last dozen years. Here
we see him in a rubber
bridge game. '

.AJ 8 5

•s

WEST

EAST
.962

.10 8 6! 2

•Qo

.J86
• K Q 10 9

He bid the hand in typical
rubber bridge style. In other
words, he lookM at ~Is own ·
nine top tricb and used
BlackwOOd to find that his
partner held two aces and a
kin1. That lave him 12
tricks off the lop and on the
cenerally effective theory
that any time you start with
12 you wlll jet a 13th some
way, Phil biCI seven spades.
The 13th trick was there
based on a play sometimes
caiiM a squeeze finesse.
West.'• king of clubs Ie.ad
markM him with the queen
so if West also . held the
queen of diamonds he would
be the victim of ·a simple
squeeze, but West did not
hold that queen.
Phil cashed all eight
spades while discarding two
hearts, three diamonds and
two cluha from dummy .
Then be casbM his ace of
diamonds.
West had to hold tbe queen
of cluha and come down to
two hearts. Now Phil knew

.KQIO!II

+78

SOUTH

,,.A

.AKQJ 10714

'
·"

•au

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
Wul
Pass

Pass

North
••

s•

Pass

&amp;+

Pass

Pasa

East

Pass

Pasa
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

Soutb ·
tNT

7.5NT

+K

that U West held the queen
of hea~ts It would drop so ·
thai he simply took .
dummy's ace and kln1. Eaat. ·,
had been dealt ·just two . '
hearts so his queen had to •
.drop. ff East had held three ·
there would , have been no ..
play for the grand slnm · •
after the club openinlf
.·

j-te~,-,-J---.-.-,(-=--~;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;' ·:
by fHOMAS JOSIPH

··

OOWN

ACROSS

I African lake

I Confab

5 Accumulate
10 Laporld •
11 Varnish

%Zenana
3 Redolence
4 Goddess (Lat.)

5 Wonder
Ingredient
Woman,
13Vennuelan
for one
copper center
6 Elltlnct
14 SeaiM
Hawaiian
glass vial
15 E(IYptlan deity bird
7 Snake
II Nitrogenous
8 Learner
17 Snuggery
9
Suppress
18 Lanza
12 Nucleus
zo Confine
The elder
Zl HOitelry
(Fr. )
zz Fonnerly
19
Fastening
%3 Have a yen
bolt
Zl Archbishop's

is

headdresa
!7 Douglas novel,
wtth ~~The"

·'
·'
'•

20 To the -

:il Clrcwnvent.

(peritnent)
%31nvenl
24 Bellowing
25 Lack
:11 Companion
28 Ukesome
winter

3% Grazing
ground
34 Leander's
love

coats

31 Require

,

..

, ..

311 Drunkard · .
39 Ending for .:
rub or jab. ,

6-+-+-1--

28 Pallid
29 Orient

30 Aquatic
animal
33 "Just lhe Way

You-"
34 Fanning
· lmpleinenl
S5 Large truck

3'1 Gaudy
31Curse
M Repeat
perfonnance
41 Flange

4Z Progress

..

43 CoUege
in Oregon

• 'l •;

. . ,,,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFE. LLOW

II

"

ODe letter almply aundl lor 1nother. In thia aample A· ia ·. '
UJed for the three L'a, X lor the lwo 0'1, etc. Sin1le Iettera,' •. ::
apoatrophea, the lenllh ond formation of the words are 111 ·"
hlnll. Eocb d1y the oode lettera 1re dltrereht.

~-

CAN YOU 8EUEVE TH!tr
I'VE NEVER TASTED
GRILLEC' SHOWFI~?

TRISTATE
UPHDLSTERY·SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave ., Gall ipolis.
446·7833 or. ~ · 1833 .

II!NNY HIU IHOW
(]) llU LATE MOYIE

MOYlE •(DIIAMA) ••
"D-Ioll Of 8111100 Kldu,..
k "1171
AICNI!WINlOHTIJNI!
AllchOr.clbyTeciK_.. t 1:50 ([) liD VII ·(DIIAIIA) • ,..
•.,.......,.,, 1110
12:00 (])
1U11N1 AND ALLIN

'

PEANUTS

Upholstery

'

I

7:(!0

Farm Equipment

Used tires. Hanshaw' s
Tires on Lucas Lane. 615·
7360.

3 bedroom home. 99H309.

House for rent, $200. a mon·
th plus deP"'il, 304·675·

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

64

2 bdr. tlOuse on lower Rt . 7.
Dep. required . Call 256·
-1413.
Countrv home in Pomeroy,
Flatwoods area . For sale
or rent. 2 story , 3 bedroom,
17 acres, large pond . 6U·
~ · 2359 after 6 p.m.

Trade·1978 Camaro 305,
loaded, silver, red inter ior.
for a 4·wheel drive pickup
of equal value. Call675·1104
8AM!o4 PM.

~ · 3~13 .

AKC English Springer
Spaniel. Mele, liver and
whi te. 8 weeks old. S85.
Lump Coal S32 per ton.
Zlnn Coal Co., Inc . Call446·
1«!8 between 9and ~.

1974 CHEVY '12 ton CIO, PS,
PB. AM ·FM stereo. 8·
track, 30H75·3985.

down and has a II beverage
coolers for sale. Call 1·614·
286·5740.

56
Pets for Sale
SWAIN
POODLE GROOMING.
Furnished apartment f or AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
rent. Call ~46 · 3937 .
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St., Call Judy Taylor at 367·
Gallipolis. J piece living 7220.
Deluxe furnished apart· room suites $199, maple
CAT ·
ment, exce llent location, 1 rockers $49, several chest DRAGONWYND
KENNEL. AKC
or 2 adufts.. only $275, ref. &amp; of drawers, new &amp; used TERY
CFA
dep. required. Ca ll 446· wOOd burners, new table Chow puppies,
lamps S18, wOod cook
Himalayan, Persian and
0338 .
ranges, newS piece dinn~t
Siamese kittens. Call m ·
sets S150, kitchen cabinets, 38«after,.p .m.
2 brd. apt . HUD excepted, several dlnnet sets, sliver
kitchen furn. Cal i 675·510...
stone·all sizes, bunk beds· HILLCREST KENNEL
SlOO. new tools of all kinds,
Boarding all breeds, clean
Apartment for r ent. Call wringer Maytag washer,
Indoor-outdoor facilities .
Linoleum ru9s 9X:12 $10,
446·0390.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
and lots more. Hours lOam
mans. Call4~· 7795.
to5pm, 446·3159.
2 bdr. unfurnished apt . in
Crown City . Ca ll 2566520 .
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
GOOD
USED
AP ·
Boarding and gronm ing .
PLIANCES · washers,
AKC Gordon
setters,
APARTMENTS
FOR dryers,
refrigerators,
English Cocker Spaniels .
RENT . APARTMENTS · 1 ranges .
Skaggs Ap ·
Call388·9790.
AND
2
BEDROOM S. pllances, Upper River Rd ..
RENT STARTS AT : 1 beside Stone Crest MoteL
BEDROOM
$152 , ' 2
Puppies mother ACK Reg' .
m ·7398.
BEDROOMS
Sl88 .
black Chow·father Collie
DEPOSIT $200. CALL 446·
and St. Bernard . Excellent
Frigidaire dryer $60.00,
27~5.
Chow features, 2 females. 1
Kenmore washer perfect
black and 1 tan . Call 367·
shape $110.00 . Call ~·8181 . . 0663.
Apartment. good location
carpeted. Utilities paid,
$185 mo. plus deposit . Ref .
ACK Reg. black female
required. Call .446·7482 mor·
Chow 1 112 yr . old, gOOd
njngs.
temperirlent, gOOd breeder.
Call 367-0663.

~Pleasant
B..ar00111
house In Pt. ~:::;;::::::::::::::::..1..==========-l
on Moseman Cir·

cle. $300 per mo. · ~Ius S200
damage deposit. &lt;46·8234.

54 Misc. Merchandlce
For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs, S25. See at 769
Brownell Ave., Middleport.

green thumb

EVENING

79 DODGE power wagon, -4wheel-drive, 29,000 miles, 8

ForSaleorTrade

~

I I K (J

MDNI!IDAY
JAN.27, 1. .2

1979 Ford F·250 4 wheel
1drive. GOOd work truck .
Phone985·4339 af!er 4 p.m .

59

He just doesn't have

VIe~g

·vans &amp; 4 W. O.

r~~:;;:::;:::::::::::=r;.;::~~~~;~~==1 cyl.
call
675·3898.

•

••

Truck's for Sale

1981 Ford 350 Cargo l'r uck,
U,OOO · actual miles. Ex·
cellent condition . Contact
Jon Karschnik at Farmers
Bank x Savings Company .·

TWO bedroom apartment,
I older child, all utilities
paid, 30H75·5679 after 5
p.m.

TWO bedroom apartment,
hospital area, ex cellent
condition, 304·675·1962.

USED piano, 550 ..to $75 .
Call after 5 p .m.30H75 ·
6363.

Television

·u Ford 'h Ton Pickup,
33,000 actval m iles, new
tires. Like new condition.
4.46·3537 .

APARTMENT for rent,
Sl50. per month, 304·675·
1972.

Wanted : Person to share 2
bdr. apt . Caii24B835.

The

WANTED TO BUY a Lale
MOdel 2 ton tr uck-fllttbed
or cab and chassis. Ph. .u6·
&lt;782.

Effi ciency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Ma•on, wv. 773·5651.

TWO apirtments,
persons
only, near single
down
town area, Dr . Slack, 304·
67H267 .

27, 1982

Auto fOr Sale

68 THUNDERBIRD, 69,000
actual m iles, S600. 304·675· , ,
A201 .
72

No,CII121.VL-e!
Be A ~® KilleN,

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes.
houses .
Pt.
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614-446·8221 or 614-2~5-9'484 .

71

' ..
"

CRYPTOQUOTES

.

JQMBZSLR
IHZLBG
EHGLNQ

QCFL
OQCR

I HSL

HK

'

R L I.. Z .,'

'•

JSMOMJG

EHYTL S O

.·'
,,

..... .f

..... "'

.
Yetlmll)''a1:rypleqaote: PRACJ'ICAL PRAYER IS HARDER : :.
ON THE SOLES OF YOUR SHOES THAN ON THE KNEES OF
YOUR TROUSERS.-AUSTIN O'MAILE'{ ..

'

I

�•

•

•

Page-20-The Daily Sentinel

P.Hneroy-Middlepolf, Ohio

Patrol checks four accidents
Four minor accidents in the area
were Investigated by the Gallla·
Meigs Post o! the state highway patrol Tuesday.
The patrol said a vehicle driven
by Theodore P: Hayes, '!7, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, lost control on a curve on
Ohio 143 in Meigs County at 7: 00
a.m. The vehicle overturned alter
driving into a ditch.
Hayes was not Injured and his
vehicle was moderately damaged.
According to the report, Marshall M. Burnette, fU, Rt. 2, GalllpoUs, was northbound on Gallla
Cuunty Rd. 5, onemllesouth of Ohio
588, at 10: 15 a.m. when he lost control of his vehicle on a snow-

covered road and struck a fence,
slightly damaging Ills vehicle.
A northbound vehicle driven by
Charles L. Queen Jr., 53, Washington Court House, applied his brakes
on Green Twp. Rd. "47 (Paxton
Road) at 2:30 p.m. and slid lett o!
center Into a southbound auto
driven by G~rald J . Spencer, 23, Rt.
2, Gallipolis. Both vehicles .were
moderately damaged.
The patrol said Herman R.
Simms, !36, F.t. 2, Crown City, was
travelling on Ohio 7 at 8 p.m. when
his vehicle struck ans killed a dog
which wandered Into the ~ad . His
vehicle was moderately damaged .

'

Meigs County happenings
Emergency runs
Four calls were answered Thesday by local emergency units, the
Meigs Co\mty Emergency Medical
Service reports.
At 1:04 a.m., Middleport treated
John Normal at the Riverview
Apartments; Pomeroy just after

midnight took Birdie Davis from
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 1: !l! p.m., took Paul
Burns, Monkey Run, to HolZer
Medical Center and the 1\Jppers
Plains Unit at 5:57 p.m. took Ronald Grady from County Road 28 to
St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg.

12 forfeit bon(ls

Commissioners

I

~ea . deaths

Pouglas L. Dlll'l!t

Wednesday, January 27, 1982.

..

I

Economy
w1ll want to stand

s t i l l - &lt;eontinuedfN!llpage 1&gt;

still while our

Retired, .she had worked tor 21
years In the nursing field at local economy continues to deteriorate."
Fred Harrison, president ot the
hospitals. She was a member or the
National
League o! Cities, called
Mlnersvllle United Methodist
Reagan's
plait " the boldest propChurch and was a volunteer worker
osal
Sblce
the 19.'lls" and said It
at the Meigs County Senior Citizens
would
"greatlyslmputythewaygtK
Center.
She was preceded In death by her. · vemm.ent works."
Jl.eagan put to rest the posslbWty
parents, her first husband, John
that
the admlntstratlon would back
Wesley Roush, a son, her second
an
increase
In excise tal!:es on conhusband, John r;elson Wise, and a
sumer
goods;
a route the president
brother.
ha!l
considered.
·
Surviving are four sons, George
"Raising
tal!:es
won't
balance
the
Roush, Walkerton, Ind.; Robert
budget,''
Reagan
declared.
"I
w1ll
Roush, Cbarleston, W. Va., and
Jerry and Jacob Roush, both or seek no tal!: Increases this year and
Pomeroy; five grandchildren; a I have no intention of retreating
great-grandson, and several nieces from our basic program of tax
relief."
and nephews.
!!ervlces wt11 IJe held at 1 p.m. • The largest tax Increase in his·
Friday at the Ewtng Funeral Home tory - a 25 percent reduction over
with the Rev. Ca,rl Hicks and the three years - was enacted last
year, along with about $35 bllllon In
Rev. Stanley Merrltleld officiating.
·
spending
cuts as .the first part of
Burial w1ll be In the Su\ton MethoReagan's
economic recovery
dist Cemetery. Frleods may call at
program.
the tuneral home from 2 to 4and 7 to
· As he has done In the past, Rea9 p.m. Thursday.
gan suggested the nation's eco-

Douglas L. Darst, 70, of Roush
Lane, Rt. 1, Cheshire, died at 6: :JJ
p.m . Thesday In HolZer Medical
Center, having heen In faDing
hli'alth for the last two years.
Born Sept. .7, 1911, In Meigs
County, son or Alonzo and Elizabeth Simms Darst, he was a retired
farmer and member of the First
Church or God.
He marrted the former Mary GOmore, who. survives, on April 7,
1934, In Kanauga.
Also surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Dale (Grace) ElltsotRt.
1, Middleport, Mrs. Brady (EUen)
GObert of Rt. 1, Ch.e shtreand Mrs.
Gleason (Helen) Gilbert of Gallipolis; a son, Richard of Nelsonville;
15 grandchildren and five greatgrandchildren; two brothers, Walter of. Mesa, Ariz., and James o(
Albany: and two sisters, Mrs.
Pearl Marklns of Northup and Mrs.
LUllan Stewart of Toledo.
A son, a brother and two sisters
r-------------------~--------------------~----1
alsoprecededhbnlndeath.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday In the Waugh-HalleyWood Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Bill Price officiating. Burtal w1ll be
In Gravel HUI Cemetery, near Cheshire. Friends may call at the tunera! hllme from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
Thursday.

Fourteen defendants forfeited
(Continued from page I)
bonds~-12 of them on speeding
to have publlc Input concerning a charges--In the court of Pomeroy
mining operation being conducted Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday
within 100 teet ·of a county road.
night. .
Coal Power, Inc., will provide the
Fortelling were Dale L. White,
Margarella Wise
county with a $50,000 bond to cover Ripley, W. Va., $31; Cynthia Faulk,
any damages that might occur to Pomeroy, $35; Sharon Hemsley,
Mrs. Margaretta Rea Wise, 72,
.the road as a result of the mining Dexter, $33; Orlen Roush, Langs- 1102 E. Main St., Pomeroy, died
operat!Qn.
ville, $38; Dennis Osburn, Ripley,
Wednesday morning at Veterans
Mildred Jacobs submitted her re- W. Va., $35; Danny Harrison,
Memorial Hospital.
signation as ·matron of the county Pomeroy, $45; Mildred Johnson,
Mrs. Wise was a daughter o1 the
home effective Feb. 1.
Middleport, $45; Billy Runnion, Rulate George and Jl1argaret Thomas
Jacobs saldt she would volunteer tland, $44; Barbara Grover, Route. Rea.
her services through the month of 4, Pomeroy, $44; Terry Harmon,
February 11 she 1s needed.
Kerr, $46; John L. Arnott, PomeMike Swisher, welfare director,
roy, 31; Billy Kennedy, Middleport,
discussed the lease of the !orrner $46, all on speeding charges; Clyde
Columbia Gas building In MiddleR Raines, Elinor. W. Va., $63, runport tor additional office space.
ag~nt
ning a red light, and Joseph R. WUSwisher stated that the buUdlng
son, Middleport, $63, falling to
should be ready for occupancy · register a motor vehicle.
Betty Sayre has heen named colearly next month. ·
lection agent for water and trash
The board, In other business,
bills tor the village of Racine,
agreed to advertise for bids lor
Frank Cleland, clerk, announced
three new emergency vehicles with
Damages were moderate to both,. today.
bids to be opened at 2: 30 p.m. on
a car and a school bus In an acciWater and trash bills may be
dent on W. Main St., at 1:37 p.m.
Feb. 16.
paid to Sayre at Racine DepartEleanor Thomas was appointed
Monday Pomeroy PoUce report.
ment Store which Is open six days a
to the MetropoUt~n Housing AuPoUce said that a car driven by
week from 9 a.m. to 5.p.m.
thority for a three year term .
Kiln Grueser, Minersville, skidded
Racine VIllage Qluncn w1lJ meet
It was also decided that the
on Ice and snow Into the rear ot a
In regular session Monday, Feb. 1,
county w1ll replace the bridge on T school bus driven by Faye Manley.
at 8 p.m. The Board of Public At300 In Orange Township at an estiThe bus was stopped discharging
_falrs will meet prior to councU
mated cost o!$32,1'l7and be done on passengers when the a~ldent oc- meeting at 7: 30 p.m.
an emergency basts by the Ohio
curred. There were JW charges
Bridge Co., and upon the recom- !tied due to road conditions, pollee
said.
mendation of the county engineer
Veterans Memorial
who has declared the old bridge a
Special_meeting
physical !allure.
Admitted -- Birdie Davis ,
Attending were Henry Wells,
Pomeroy.
Shade River Lodge w1ll meet b)
president, Richard Jones, and
Discharged- Ray Wofford, Winspecial
session Thursday at 7: 30
David Koblentz, commissioners,
nie
Marcinko, Mabel Lee, Thomas
Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Mar- p.m. There wtll be work in fellow . Hayman.
craft degree.
, tha Chambers.

SOFAS

'

With Durable, Floral
Nylon Covers

Man .
List Price

Jan .
Sale

ALL

WINTER
MERCHANDLSE

1fz

PRICE .

JEANS
20% OFF

I

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 9:30 til 5

Pomeroy, Oh.

.

Pomeroy,
Ohio
..
'

Fuel savings and hmtin&amp; c"aplrity ~estimates t..,m

on current Buek.Stovc users. ·
r
You r ICiual fuel savings and heatina Clplcity a., \'11)'.

· Slate Nn. 2%3X

of P11mer11y, Ohio and F11rei~n and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of

business December 31, 1981, a state banking institution or~anized aud nperatin~
under the bankln~ laws of this State and u member of lhe Federal Re..,rv.
System. Published In a""ordanre with a call made by the Slate Balking
Authorllles,and b~ lhe Federal Rese.rve Bank 11f this District.
.
ASSETS ·
. Cash and due from depository institutions ................ . ..... 2,340,000:00
U.S. Treasury securities .. . .................................. 5,566,000.00
Obligations of U.S. Government
agencies and corporations ....... . ..... . .............. . ..... 3,822,000.00
Obligations of States and polilical subdivisions
in lhe United Stales . . .. ........... ...... . .................. 3,417,000.00
All other securiries ............................. . .. . . ... ....... 30.000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under a~r.t!ements to resell .. .. ....... ..... ......... . ... . .... 2,000,000.00
a, Loans, Total (excluding unearned
income) ...................................... 14,853,000.00
b. Less: allowance for possible loan losses .. . ........... . 147,000.00
c. Loans, net ......... ......... ............. .. ...... . . ...... 14,706,000.00
Bank premises,Jurniture and fix lures, and
other assets representing bank premises ....... . . . .. . . , . .. . . . . . 336,000.00
All other assets ................. ·................. .... .. .. . . . .. 392,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS ............ . .. . ..... ... ................. ... 32,609,000.00
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits or individuals.
partnerships and corporations ............................ . . 3,933,000.00
Time and Sllvings deposits of individuals,
·
.
partnerships,and corporations ...... . ... . . . . . , , . . , •........ 2.'1,374,000.00
Deposits ol United States Govermnent . ............. .. ... . ........ 20,000.00
Deposits of States and political'subdivisions
·
in the United States ............. ....... . . . . ...... , .......... 2,403,000.00
All other deposits ............. . . . . . . . .. . ......... . .......... .... 6,000.00
Certified and officers' checks ... .. ... . , .. .. ...... .. ....... . .. . ... 99,000.00
Total Deposits -· . -. -.................. .. . .. . . . .. . .... .... . . 29,835,000.00
a. Total demand deposits .. ... . ...... . ........... . . 5,031,000.00
b. Tots! time and savings deposits .............. . . . 24.804,000.00
All other liabilities ........ ... ....... ............ . . ... .... ..... 573,000.00
TOTAL IJABIUTIE,S rexcludin~ subordinatOO notes
and debentures) . .... . . . ......... . ...... . ....... . . . ....... 30,408,000.00

I

MARYSVILLE, Ohio- A combined reward-and-memorial lund
has heen established in Marysville to honor Union County Sherltt
HarryL. Wolle, who wasgunneddownlastweekwhllerespondingto
a burglar alarm.
The money collected will be used as a reward , II necessary, for the
capture of Wolfe's assailant. U not used as a reward, It w1ll be
earmarked for a memorial to the sherltt, said Wllllam Streng or
Marysville, who started the lund.

Note increase in claimants
'•
COLUMBUS, Ohio -Continuing claims for unemployment compensation declined In Ohio last week from the previous week, but the
number or claimants newly unemployed Increased by 12.5 percent.
In addition, there wel'li' 29,888 applicants In the week ending Jan. 23
who !tied new claims tor extended benefits. It was the first week for
Ohio to resume the program which extends unemployment benefits
tor 13 weeks under a joint federal-state program.
The Ohio Bureau or Employment Services estimates there were
259,tXXJ clalnui nts last week who had been unemployed for one week
or more. That compares with 278,007 in this category the previous
week.

State extends deadline for HEAP .
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Ohioans sufierlng through a very cold winter are getllng some good news: The deadline to !Ue for the Home
Energy Assistance Program Is being extended a month.
The program Is designed to help low-Income people with their
wtnter heating bills by paying between 13 percent and 40 percent of
the bills for December, January and February.
·
James, Duerk. state development director, said today the program ~dllne has been extended to Feb. 28.
·
I

Winning Ohio lottery number
(LEVELAND -The winning number drawn Wednesday night In

Ule Ohio Lottery's dally game' "The Number''· was~ ; The lottery reported earnings G! $417,523 from wagering on the
game. The earnings came on saleS of $1.~.745.50, while holders or
winning tickets are entitled to share $589,222.50, lottery offlclals saki.

I

Buck ScOW!: "' a ~-A!d tt.lemart.
Mountain l!nterprlsd, lnt.

.,

'

l

~eather forecast ·.

I. Partly cloudy this afternoon. Mbstly clear tonlgllt Low In the mid

~-- Cloudy

..., .

MECHANIC ST., POMEROY, PH. 992-3671

with a chance or shoWer&lt; Friday. High 40 to 45. The
'. · . ot precipitation Is 10 percent !hiE afternoon and tonight and~
t Friday.
' •
Oldo Extended Oullook
~ llnlqb Moada)'- A ctWw ..r !lllft'ltw or lhowen earlr
lliol ..,, Olhes wile llllr. HJp. _ , 4111 !IUirday and In 1111! Ill
H I lq and MGada)'. I.otn In 1111! ...
.

~

'

State of Ohio, County of Meigs ss : Sworn to and subscribed before me this
20th day of January,l982.
.
JoAnn
. Crisp, Notary Public..'My ConuniSsion Expires July 17, 19C3.

Eltierfel.ds Warehouse

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A new trial will be n~ry In Franklin
County Common Pleas Court to determine damages In the libel suit
brought by Penthouse magazine publisher Robert Guccione against
Larry Flynt and Hustl~r magazine.
The Ohio Supreme Courl refused Wednesday to hear appeals !tied
by both sides to an Oct. 9, 00, decision by the Franklin County Court
of Appeals that ordered the new trial solely to determine the amount
of damages to be awarded·In the llbel and Invasion-of-privacy suit.
"Obviously, that's disappointing news," said Herbert Brown or
Columbus, who represents Guccione, The publisher had sued Flynt
and Hustler over a picture In the June 1979 Issue o! the magazine In
which a llkeness of Guccione was depleted in a homosexual act.

Establish Memorial-reward· fund

. We, the undersigned &amp;irectors, attest the correctness of this report of condi·
lion and- declare thst it ljas been examined by us and to the best .cf our
knowledge and belief has been prepared in conformance with the instructiom;
issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State
, Banking Authority and is true and correct.
.
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
THEREON JOHNSON- Directors
FERMAN E. MOORE

~ 1980 Srr.oty

LOVELAND, Ohio -The partially decomposed body of a woman
found Wednesday In a hay barn near Owensville Is that of Jerilyn
• Stanflelf,l, who apparently had heen abducted from a suburban Cincinnati shopping center, according to the victim's father .
Clermont County Coroner Nick Capurro said the body was tully
clothed. But he said positive Identification had not heen made.
Mrs. Stanfield, 30, of Anderson Township, disappeared Jail. 14
from the Eastgate· Shopping Center, according to her husband ,
David Stanfield.
Security guards found her car In a parking lot early the next
morning. PoUce said the woman's keys, purchases, money and
purse were still In the car.

COLUMBUS, Ohio -Ohioans may begin paying an extra 1.4cents
tal!: per gallon of gasoline and diesel fuel on March 1, says David V.
Finley, spokesman for the Ohio Department of Transportation.
That would raise the tax to 11.7 cents per gallon, up 4.7 cents since
J~e30.
·
Finley said the Increase Is based on the formula speclllc in the fuel
tax law passed by the Legislature that took effect July 1. The Increase would come In the wake of $1.3 bllllon In new taxes approved
late !;1st year by the legtslalllre.
·

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition has been prepared in conformance with the instructions issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the .
State Banking Authority and is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger.W. Hysell

'

ALMOST READY TO GO - ThJs
fonner Rutland .Wgh School ·
gymnaslwn Is being renovated
and wiD open In early spring $&gt;
the Rutland Civic Center, whUe
at bottom right, · Shennan Basham, Rutland Village . employee, supervises the
renovation of the gymnaslwn, as
well as does some ol the work.
The Door has been repaired and
now the walls are being painted.

Body that of missing woman

Higher gasoline taxes expected

EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock :
a. No. shares authorized 16,000
b. No. shares outstanding 16,000 .... .. .. ....... (par value )
400,tXXJ.OO
Surplus ...................... . .............. . ....... .. ..... . . 600,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for
&lt;'Ontingencies and otherca~ital reserves
1,201,000.00 '
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL ...... .. . . ....... . ... .. .'............ 2,201,000.0
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL . . ..... , ....... . ..... .. ................ 32,609,000.00
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report dale:
b. Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of$100,000ormore .. ....... , ... ........... ... .. . . ..... . 1,090,000.00·
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month 1
ending with report date:
a. Total deposits .................... . ................. . ... 30,098,ooo:oo

In

.GALUPOLlS- ARt. 1, Cheshire man died at 2:41a.m. today In
HolZer Medical Center from a wound recetved'in a shooting Incident
In Gallla County Wednesday night.
,
The victim Is klenttfted as Paul E. Spencer, 24. Dr. Edward Berklch, assistant Gallla County coroner, said Spencer died or a gunshot
wound to the head, but the Incident Is spn uoder Investigation.
The Gallla County Sheriff's Department said the Incident occurred around 10 p.m . when Spencer was allegedly shot by Russell
Robinson, 24, Rt. 1, Chestilie, In a mobUe home on Possum Trot
Road ott Addison-Bulavllle Road.
Robinson was taken Into custody by deputies at the scene. Spencer
was taken to HMC by the Gallla EMS, where he was later transferred from the emergency room to the Intensive care unit, where he
died.

New libel suit trial necessary

Savings Company

Elberfelds Warehouse
On
Mechanic Street

.

Gallia man shot, dies this morning

The Farmers Bank &amp;

Its a lm easier "than you think All it
takes is one Buck Stove&lt;tD ·
The Buck Stove is differe nt from
most wood burning stoves. (In fact, its
a whole house heating system.) With
a built-in the rmostatic blower, it can
heat yuur entire house- up to 3,000
square feet.
Now we can't promise yuu'll
never have to use yuur furnace. But
current Buck Stove owners report
savings o f up to 80% on the ir
heating bills.
Thats nothing to sneeze at.
w.mt to know mote? call or visit

15 Cents

I
I

Council names
collection

•

14 P1ges

l-.D

IDDIE SHOPPE

a

enttne
2

111 W. 2nd

Moderate damage

•

at

e

.

sgoo ·ssgg.
. $519

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

•

Renovation project underway
By CHARLENE IIOEFUCH
. A' renovation of the old Rutland
High School gymnasium into a
civio;.center is well underway .
The building, whi ch had
deteriorated extensively as it stood
unoccupied after the Rutland , Middleport and Pomeroy school consolidation in 1968. It was turned over
' to Rutland Village by the Meigs
Local Board of Education two years
ago for the pulllOSe of converting it
into a conununity facility.
·According to Rutland Mayor John
Miller the structure should be ready
in·the next two or three months for a
variety of activities.
Currently auctions are being held
, every Saturday night in the
auditoriwn with a percentage of the
proceeds going into the village
treasury for work on the building.
A church meeting or two and an
exercise class have also been held in

the building.
Miller 1111id auction money Is
laking care of cui-rent heating bills,
but the village has a producing gas
well which will be used once It has
been piped Into the building.
Plans are also underway to drill
two additional gas wells on the
village property located behind the
auditorium.
.
Funding for most of the work
already completed was provided by
the Rutland Alumni Association,
which two years ago, gave l2,1i00
toward the project. Some other
smaller donations, along with much
volunteer labor, and work of village
employees, have helped the
renovation go forward.
The hardwood floors in the 150x100
foot gymnasium, bulged and
unevened by frozen water beneath
the floors, have been straightened
out and some new sectionM huve

been added. All but one small sec·
lion under the bleachers are har·
dwood.
Now that repairs huve been completed, plans are to Sllnd and refinish
the floor. In addition, walls are being
painted beige, the ful'118 ce has been
restored to use, the roof has been
repairs, the plumbing is in good
operation, as is the kitchen where
the firemen are currently selling
refreshments at the auctions.
All halls have been painiL'II, and
one small room at the front of the
building is being used as council
chambers and for mayor's court.
Two back rooms will be used to
house the emergency medical serVIl e equiptment of the Rutland
statio•. ~nd serve as a met!ling room
for its peisonneL Flretnen will also
be using ont qf the rooms while
another will be a.::•ignated as a par,ty

room, available for rent to any
groups.
Mayor Miller reports he has been
contacted by many groups concernIng the use of the gymnasium. Teen
dances, basketball use, adult dance
clubs, weddiDM receptions and
even roller skating are among the
activities bein~ considered by the
board of directors composed of
Miller, Jerry Black who has charge
of renting the facility, Dick Felty, a
council member, and Bob Eads and
Janet Bolin, citizen representatives.
Rent will remain flexible, according to Miller, with the amount to
be determined by the directors. '
Donations are needed to continue
the work , either cash or material,
and volunteers to paint, sand, and
repair are needed, according to
Sherman Basham, " village em·
ployee, who is surpervlslng the
renovation.

•

Suspect sought in carryout robbery
duct tape and putting her In a walk·
In cooler.
He was unable to get the cash
register opened so he got Ms. Brink
out o! the cooler to show hbn which
button to push to open the register.
He then put her back In the coolver
but the door dld not close tight. The
thief then took $150 from the cash
register.
,
The suspect Is described as a
white male In his 20's, long blonde
hair with a thin mustache. He was
wearing blue jeans and a rust colored ski jacket.
A witness reported seeing a
pickup truck, long bed, medium

The Meigs County Sherltt's Department Is Investigating an armed
robbery at the Ridgeview carry
Out on Route 681 near the MeigsAthens County Une Wednesday
afternoon.
Deputies said an unknown person
armed with a knlle robbed the establishment about 2;45 p.m.
According to the store clerk, Ann
Brink of near Albany, she was
alone In the carry out when the Intruder entered and purchased acan
ot pop then left. He returned
shorlly, placed a knife In her stomach before taping her hands with

brown color with chrome strips and
an orange stripe between the strips
In the vicinity.
The Athens County Sheriff's Departmant and the Olilo State Patrol
assisted In a search of roads In the
Darwin vicinity which failed to uncover the suspect.
In other action, Charles G. Lantz,
32, Coolville, was cited to Meigs
County Court Monday evening by
the sheriff's department for pulling
a sled with a motor vehicle on a
state highway.
According to ortlclals, the sled
was attached to a vehicle and

Randy Shields, 1\Jppers Plains,
was riding on the sled when the vehIcle pulled from the Sohto Station In
1\Jppers Plains aod the sled struck
pumps causing damage to one of
them. Shields was not InJured.
Sheriff James Proffitt reports
Allen E. Young, 18, Chester Road,
Pomeroy, was arrested Monday at
the county jail for allegedly attempting to pass a marijuana clgaret to a prisoner. He was given a
60 days jail sentence, 45 being suspended, when he appeared before
Meigs County Court Judge Patrick
O'Brien Wednesday on the charge.

Staton unveils plans to restore jobs
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP) Rep. Mlck Staton has unveiled a
plan calling lor tax and profit Incentives, as well t:ontlnued labor negotiations, to restore the .jobs or 750
workers at the financially troubled
Kaiser Aluminum Corp. plant.
The West VIrginia Republican
sent his proposal to Kaiser, government and utlllty company officials,
and said Wednesday that even It It
Isn't followed precisely, his plan
would "help stimulate movement
toward some sort or-solution" to the
unemployment problem In this
Jackson County community.
" Frankly, l think It would work,
but It's not the only one that w11J . I
just dldn 'I want to sit here and let
weeds grow up around the place,"

Staton said. "People complain
about unemployment and we need
to do something about II."
Since last year, Kaiser has closed
lour aluminum potllne5 at Its reduction plant In Ravenswood, and
more than 1,000 workers have lost
their jobs. The company cited reduced demaod tor aluminum, high
operating cost and labor productivIty problems as reasons for the
firings .
Staton said his plan Is meant to
provide "economic and negotiating
ln~ntlves so that Kaiser wt11
reopen a mlnbnum ot two ot Its potllnes, " employlni up to 750
workers. He said his plan cOuicJ restore $15 -mllllon In &amp;Mual payroll to

·Schools are

'~op

de!lcltl. "ltwDIIakelntesUnalfortltude to make thoee declalons - and
l want to ~ you I have that."
Rhodes, In CIDctnnau tor the announcement of charlty golf tour-

a

nament IPOIIIOred by the NFL
Alumni, i'efuled to either IUpPort
or COIIdemn Prelident Reapn's
PfOPCll8l thst the tec1era1 aovernment swap reapanslblllty for some

-,'

·--

tor

priority'

tty despite projected state budget

CINCINNATI (AP) - Gov.
James Rhodes says he w1ll not allow budget cutbacks to close public
schools, and that, II . - r y ,
heavy cuts w1ll be made In other
areas to avoid Interrupting ·the education or Ohio's youth.
"You can't take little children out
of schoOl; that's wrong," ~
said Wednesday, pledglnc that education would have the highest prior-

the Kaiser plant, Ravenswood's occupation taxes anyway," Staton
said. "Government has always had
largest employer.
Under the congressman's plan, a feeling that whatever somebody
Appalachian Power Co. and the has, some or It belongs to them (gostate Public Service Commission . vernm.ent) . I'm saylngforgetabout
that for a while."
would allow Kaiser to place Its
power bill payments In an Interestbearing escmw account tor two yeAlso, the plan calls for Kaiser to
ars. Staton said APCO would
accept a contract offer made by loreceive a tax break lor agreeing to
cal steelworkers' union representathe plan.
Uves earlier this month. Under
In addition, the plan calls tor the
Staton's proposal, Kaiser and Unistate to exempt Kaiser !rom busi- ted Steelworkers District 5668 also
ness and occupation taxes and would agree to continue negotiaJackson County 'to forgo property
tions and accelerate contract negotiations for 198.1
taxes on the reduction plant porllon
ot the KaiSer tacWty two years.
Late last year, Kaiser shut down
· " U you're riot producing any- the poUines after workers turned
.thing, the state Is not getting any- down concessions demanded by
company officials.
thing In the way or business aold

Rhodes

social programs with the states.
"We want to help him, but we
want to see whatlt (the cost) Is; we
want to take the wrapping off,''
Rllodes said.
·"We have to look at the bottom
line In Ohlo.1We're one ot the few
states that pays out $1.33 and gets
back $1 (In federal tunda) . We have
to look at It In a co.t-accountblg
way - not the rriotlves, good or bad

- but what It means to taxpayers."
Reagan, In his State or the Union
address Tuesday night, propolll!d
that the federal government tak.!
aver Medicaid and transfer to stai~
and local governments the fOOt!
stamp, Ald to Families with IJe.
pendent Children and other welt ate
programs.

Rhodes said he blames~
(ConUnued on page 10)

•

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