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•

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)

•

�~ommentary
~

:::~~~·st.::

----------~-------;--~~~------~----------------------------~----------------------~--------------_!Th~u~~:d~ay~,~~~.~nua~~t!21~,~\~'!~

~

Berry's World

,

I

Gooy Nfws __

G

tI •!

11 d.IJ:. Ul\a.l~V 1,
Vl~ lt\UI'f~l
u A~ 11/\l\C• 1 tnrn
nn~ \,VI, WVt;.V

t'

::, !•
I
i '

(
More officials, less democrac"--~~:..._ob~er_t_~_mt~r._s

ljiJrl"\1
A.-r

ul
·
~ORLtJ
_._., .• ~ht"'
l"lOI ..~
V:."e&gt;rcrt 1
U 1 q
1

ft\E

l

~ .:. ·l

IS NOf

iO

CO~

LArse. .

[
l

.ttle WI.th Reagan
Ll
.• 1• • b
.

F-Ies

1

etween

ID

WASHINGTON (NEM- Leaders reserved for "party leaders and
oforganizedlabor,notoriouslyoutof elecled officials," while a third
touch with their rank-and-file mem- special categoty of more than 760
ben, are applying their talent to a
delegate positions can be filled by
new task enCQUraging the state party officials.
Democratic Party to lose contact
As a result, more than 1,600 of the
with its grass-roei.Honstituency.
estimated 3,900 delegates at the par·
The votes of union officials were
ty'il next presidential nominating
. especially Influential when a special
convention probably will be apDemocratic Party commission
pointed rather than elected by the
voted recently to revlsl! subvoters ' participating in the grassstantlally the . rules governing the
rootscandidateselectlonprocess.
selection of delegates to future
Democratic volepl "are aln'KI8t
presidential nominating con·
universally oppo!Jed to granting
vcntinns.
automatic votes to members of
For morcthan a det'ade, the PllrtY
Congress," says commission memhas soul(ht to democratize that ' her Thomas Cronin of Colorado.
process by expanding the influence
"The resentment will be even
of prbnary ek-ction voters and
greater when they (the politicians)
caucus participants in the selection
are nOotlhows" at the convention.
of delegates.
Ironically, both advocates and
Now, however, the 68-member
criticS of the controversial proposal
commission headed by North
carolina Gov. J~mesG. Hunt Jr. has
voted to signtiic~ntly dilute citizc~
representation at future conventions
by !!ranting automatic delegate
status to hundre&lt;ls of politicians.

Insist that tile addition of a large non and DNC members eex~t=
bloc of politicians will not produce delegate status with all P
tile only result it logically could be except the right to vote.
.
expeded to achieve- a convention
Althoughthereneverhu
in which the party's presidential notable clamor for enhanced
nomination is "brokered" by the ·the Democratic caucus of the~politicians.
adopted a resolution Jut au
Thus, the most charitable proposing that no fewer u..; 'll9lleii8JIIent of the entire scheme is thirds of its members be~~~~~~
that it will not produce any as voting convention delept.e4J
significant change. A less symThe formulation originally e
pathetic analysis suggests, however, vanced by the labor
..t
that the revisions (which still must Democrats in Congress~ hJe
be approved by the Democratic required reserving more tbail1,oeo
National ColiUllittee) will corrupt seats in the new, poUtit;!ar~Hnty
and distort a fundamentall)! sound category.
process.
'
In a compromise reached at a
1\&gt;e current delegate selection series of secret meetings, however,
rules, in force during the 1980 . that number was reduced to a mere
Democratic National Convention, 550- many of whom probably won't
already grant all Democratic take advantage of the opportunity to
senators, representatives, gover- display their supposed leadership

leaden .

Thts cartoon that was to
appear against more

GOVERNMENT SEC~~
hasbeendecl

l\\
~•~
,, ~1·~~·

~

"\\\,~)

~~(~
'-'

Bold stroke idea has caused ·problems

Letters to the Editor

Praises doctor

mended in 1!175.

''
get the money to replace them.
There will be Intense debate on
the swap, and there also will he
complaints in Congress and the
state capitols that the programi'
may not be handled fairly or funded
adequately in every state and
community.

fare and food stamps.
The
would come initially
from a fund financed by federal exelse taxes on alcohol, tobacco, telephone service and gasoline. By
1991, those federal taxes would be

money

Reagan's political adversaries
made that proposition into Issue
that hounded him all through his
l!J76 campaign against former
President Gerald R. Ford.
He never renounced It, bUt he e11mlnated and it would be up to the
spent a lot of valuable campaign
states to ltnpo9e their own levies to
time trying to explain lt.
The lesson was heeded in his Win·
ntng 1911l campaign. He did not
make the transfer ptan a major
point then and what he did say was
in general terms. Without specifics,
Reagan said he would seek to
transfer to state and local govern- . WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
ments "programs which do not be- Chalmers P. Wylle, R·Ohlo, has in·
long at the federal level.'"
troduced legislation to revoke the
What he Is suggesting now Is an spectal tax break congressmen
eight-year pian that ultimately voted for themselves before recessing last December.
·
would shJft responatbUtty lor more
Wylle saki he beUeves most of the
than 40 programs from Washington
to state and local governments.
congressmen who voted for the
Three gigantic programs are at measure. which was tacked on as a
the heart of the proposal. The fed· rider to anQther bill during the final
eral government would take over rush to Wind up the 1981 session,
financing of Medicaid, a state-run "didn't know it was there.''
program that provides medical
He said he decided to offer the btU
care for the needy, and the states after detennlning that by using the
would become responsible for wei·
m.&amp;-day automatic deduction for

an

'

Wylie wants to
revoke tax ·break
living expenses while in Washing·

ton there was a posstblllty that
congressmen would pay little
or no income taxes.''

.~me

"I didn't Uke the procedure that
was used," Wylie ,~ld . "It was
tacked onto the black lung bilL
which had to be passed because lh1i
legislation was due to expire,"
Wylle said his bill would "put
~ back where they were. It
reinstates the $3,00! ceiling on Uv-se
ing expenses for members while in
Washington.''

Slot machine addict.s. . . ______R_.us_t!_ty-=B~row::::.:.n

--- --

The Daily Sentinel
ts:m~ M"'-'L-.
,..., .......o:::~,.,.

~I'

'

'

ROBERT L. WIN&lt;iETr
Publbbrr

PAT WHITEHEAD

safer and less crowded than at the

casJnos."
The women gamblers were ex·
pressioniess, for the m011t part, lllti!
blase, mesmerized robots going
through a ritual for the zlllionth
time.

One woman, in her late 30s, I'd
say, wearing a navy Jogging suit,
told me she always plays with the
leftover change after buying
groceries. ,
"I play five times a week,
whichever store I'm in," she said.
She played as theugh she was in a
hurry to get it over with - four quarters at a time, hardly looking to see
if she had pulled a winning combinaUon. She only paused when she
made a hit and the coins came clattering oul But she didn't pick up the
pile - just popped her winnings
back into the mschine, one by one.
A squat, elderly woman, in
houBedress and canvaa shoes, took a
determined, flaWoot.ed atance In
front·of her favorite nickel machine.
That was her domain. Moments

, January 28, 1982

later,

bells buzzed and

flashed. Her hunch paid off.

lights

Nevada·Las Vegas says that while1
there is no comprehensive research
on the subject yet, being around
slots is "routine for children here
and not perceived as deviant activity or ImmoraL"
II would sure make an interesting
study to.observe Nevada·bred teens
suddenly transported to the Bible

Some women play as soon as they
walk into the store and do their shopping afterwards: but most, both men
and women, shop first. When the ice
cream gets soft or the bag of ice
starts to melt, they leave.
Minors are not allowed to play, but
the young hang around. A woman Belt.
change-maker sits on a nearby stool,
I didn't have the nerve to ask
monitoring the action and reminding anybody at the machines how much
parents that their children can't put they won or lost each week, or, if
in coins.
they had ever squandered the
I saw I~ and 12-year-olds head for . grocery money.
the Atari games while their mothers
But a ·new member of the local
made a betoline for the slots. I saw a Gamblers Anonymous reported
pre-schooler dance excitedly behind losing more than $100,00! last year
·her mother, knowing she would get a playing supennarket slots averal
share of any wiMings. I saw a hours every morning.
woman lay her baby in the ahopplng
She said: "I used to pmble to
cart while she played.
escape, but soon the es6pe became
I couldn't help but wonder what ef- the prison. I couldn't stop.''
fect, If •any, this early expOsure to
I couldn't resist either 8lld bought
gambling has on these youngsters.
a roll of quarters to '*':.~too
According to a news story in one of penurious to get hookld
.1
the local papers, a 80Clology pocketed my first jackpat · prlll- at the University of $1.75tothegood.

Pomeroy

/,117 '11leGreen'
~lated
Michigan
Bowling
ba p._ .
Bow 8.l.ffi·
umPh over Ball ~ta sketball tri- · lro · ling Green hit 55 ' percent
helped whittle
In the Mid

te - which
the fu"St·place teams

&lt;!own
-American Conference
"Weto;:'the ~ an Inside Job.
both their
inside against
.
lORe and man·tcrman de~·and that's why we shot
weU, Bowling Green Coach John
Weiner! said Wednesday night af·
ter his clu)J's 79-70 victory, " It
wasn't bad defense on BaU State's
part~ It was great offense from us."
TOO Falcons' victory combined
wtth Ohio University's 49-47 loss to
Wester Michigan lett Bowling
Green ed with Eastern Michigan
for th conference lead. 1n other
league games Wednesday, Eastern
Michigan defeated Northern IWnols 62-55, T~o rattled Kent State
96-75, ane~ ' Nflami beat Central

Mei~ gals
avenge loss

year.
while 9-2
Nelsonville
rcspct•tabie
mark. owns a very
Pam Crooks led the winners with
15 points, Kri.stin Anderson had 14.
Laura SmiU1 four, and Jenny
Meadows2.
N· Y was led in scoring by Tammy
Moleski with 12 points, Toni Bair ad·
ded eight, Nira Patel six, Diane
Boston three and Teri Lowery one.
In a low scoring first quarter.
Meigs doubled its opponents score,
8-4, in an attack to avenge its earlier
loss to Nelsonville-York. ·
On November 17, Meigs dropped a
47-26 decision to the lady Buckeyes.
Meigs increased it:; first peri&lt;otl
lead throughout the second canto
and again doubled N-Y's scores at
the half 16-a. Most of the evening
Meigs I(OI most of its offensive punch
from Pam Crooks and Kristin Anderson , who both had outstanding
nights from the floor .

DALE RO'IHGEB, JR.

50% OFF

.

m~e

returns.~.we could

save you money.
Ol!r carefully trained taK preparers are uP.to-date on all the IlK
credits and deductions that apply to the farmer. AtH6R Block,
we'll take all the. time necessary to do the job right because we
want you to PIIY the lowest legitimate tax.

..

,

- ·-

2nd &amp; Brow.- Sts.

618 E. Main St.

VISIT OUR NEW NATURE·
MADE NUTRITION CENTER

Pomeroy, Oh.

VILLAGE PHARMACY

PH. 992~3795

Mason, w. Va.

45769

25260

PH. 773-9128
HOURS:

HOURS:

Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9 to 6
Sat. 9to s

Mon .- FI"'i• 9 to 6
Sat. 91o 5

In lhe third round Meigs increased

its lead to 10 f26-10ithcn held on the
final round to pull off the win.
During tile last canto Meigs substituted freely with each girl doing a
good job. The visitor·s went with its
starting line-up in hopes o( pulling
off the win. but the Meigs e(fort
pro~t'd

to be tuo much. Meigs

claimed the 35-30 triumph without a
threat. At one point Meigs led as
11mch as II points.
Meigs hil14 of 46 fi eld goals for 28
percent and hit 7 of II from the li11e
for 64 percent. Nelsonville bagged
nine or 29 fr om the field for 34 percent. then hit six of 18 at lhe line for
33 percent.
Meigs ll&lt;ld II turnovers 18 fouls.
eigl1t assists lt·d by Smil h"s foUl·. and
32 rebounds. Anderson led Meigs
with 10 eanllliS and Meadows had
ci~l1t.

The visilnrs had 15 miscues, 10

louis. and 2li rebounds lc'll by D.
Boston with nine.
The Meigs reserves. after tt·aiiing
8-2 after one quarter and Jl~ at the
half, eame back to defeat the LitUe
Buckeyes 22·19 in a great per·
formanc~.

Denise Stefa II led the way with six,
while Mae Nakamoto, cathy Dean,
and Tina Reeves each had four.
Tanuny Lanthorn led N-Y with eight
points.
By Quarters:
8 8 10 9- 35
Meigs
4 4 8 14- 30
N-Y

Before you invest your money for retirement, carefully consider
the options. When you open a BANK ONE Fixed Rate IRA, you'll
earn 16.25°/o* guaranteed for the next year and a haK. And at
BANK ONE, your account is insured by an agency of the federal
government. There are no fees or charges to open or add to your
IRA, aod you'll get a monthly statemen~ that will report the status
of your IRA account.
Now is a great time for an individual to set aside up to $21000
in tax-deferred savings for retirement. Working couples cari invest
up to $4,000, and BANK ONE will even let you "roll over" IRA
accounts from other institutions into the 16.45%* Fixed Rate Plan.
When investing funds for retirement, it's important to know how
much interest you'll earn over the long term. So stop by any BANK
ONE office and ask about the Rxed Rate IRA.

MEIGS (lSI - L. Smith 1·2·•, L.
Oliver 0·0·0, J . Meadows 1 0·2, P.
· Crooks 6·3· 15, K . Anderson 6·2·14, M .
Dillard 0·0 0, P . Horton 0·0·0. P .
Swisher 0·0-0, K. Snowden 0·0·0, C.
Crooks 0·00, S. Lightfool 0·0·0.
Totals 14+35 .
NElSONVIlL E· YORK
(lO)
Bost on 1·1·3, T .jytor o 0·0, Mot eske 4·
4 12, Bair 4·0·8, Pate iJ -0·6, Lowerv 0·
1·1, Johnson 0·0 ·0. Totals 12·6-JO.

.•'
'
'

•

'

.

' '

•This is the interest rpte and effective annual yield.
There is a substant_
iallnterast penalty for early withdrawal.

'

'

5fTT¥aJT(N

'

.

.' •

A

Whcnctcr you think
of MIIIIIIIIOMY~our name
comes up flnt.

' wele••a&amp; '1"11tr ..._.. h 1111- .......... AD
LB'ITER8
are
.....OF
jodOPINION
..........
_
........ _ _ _ _ ......,.._

-.No_..... ........... ,..lll I I-...-.. ~ .... - . -

tax

~~de~!e=ns=-lv~e~g=am=e~of~th:.e~ye=a~r~,"~sa=l=dj_~~N~.~2~!'1d~A~V~E·~~=~=====MtiD~D~L~E~P~O:R:T~,OH:::·~l~::::::::::=::==~:::::::::::::::::::::~

~ea.n

_.....

.
prepu-e your
'

'

SPECIAL GROUP OF TOYS &amp;GAMES

Newt EdiCOr

_..

chols his 299th victory at the school.
The Rockets went ahead In the first
half 22·:&gt;Jl on a jwnp shot by Jay
Gast and never trailed thereafter
despite missing all eight of the~
shots from the charity stripe in the
first half.

..'

Farmers...
Let H&amp;R Block

BOB HOEFLICH

Aultbl•l P11blllltrer1Coatrotler

--~-·-

Bronco Coach Les Woethke.
"We've lost five games In the last
seven seconds, and we were due to
win one."
Led by Mitch Adamek's 23
points, Toledo posted a victory over
Kent State, giving Coach Bobby Nl·

m the floor, and Marcus Newbern scored 25 points for the Falcon
victory. Batt State was led by Ray
M~wn's game-high 31 points.
Bowling Green did a nice Job or
taking the game to us," saki Cardi·
naiCoachSteveYodl'r. "Youcan't r------------------------~1
let people drive the lane · uncon·
tested, but we did."
Senior forward Jell zatkoff .
scored 25 points and pulled down 14
rebounds to le~d Eastern Michigan
to its come-from-behind victory
over NortJiern Illinois.
"It was shakY for a while," said
Huron Coach Jim Boyce. "It would
have been a devastating loss.''
·- Northern Dllnols led at halftb:ne,
33-31, but the Hurons- using a !ull·
court press - held the Huskies
scrore1ess in the last five minutes of
the game to Win.
"We let It get away !rom us late In
the game," said NQrthern Illinois
Coach .John McDougal. "We
missed free throws late. We we11t
I
too long without hitting a basket."
A last·second shot by JohnJ)evereaux sklrt.ed off the rim to preserve Western Michigan's victory
over Ohio University. The Broncos
won the battle of the hoards, outrebounding the Bobcats 39-25.
·PH. 992-6669
"Without a doubt, It was our best

Sf1rllf 6111 FfUII
IIICIOitfiNf15

- ........

The Daily Sentinel . Pae• . 3

Middleport, Ohio

alcons win., Bobcats beaten

ROCK SPRINGS - The Meig•
Marauders' girls . basketball team
rolled to a 16-a halftime advantage.
then held on the final stretch to pull
off a 3:&gt;-30 victory over the Nelsonville-York Buckeyes here recently.
The win boosts Meigs to 7~ on the

re:.::::ein~~=~:·;o~'::~:;!

an almost soUdly unified bloc, the
~- , _ People are either with htm or against him. supportive or nonsupporU•e,
panel decided to award full voting
- confident or frightened, encouraged or despairing. Uttle concerning Ro- rights at the 1984 convention to apnald Reagan Ues in between.
proximately 550 Democratic memOr so It might seem, If you read only the divergent views of the U.S. bers of the House and Senate, goverChamber of Commerce and the AFL-CIO and Ignore all opinlons in nors, mayors and state · party
between.
,
leaders.
But the. two views do suggest the potential for development of a sharp
In addition to the AFlrCIO, unions
division of U.S. opinion as 'the Reagan economic program pursues Its represented on the commission inpolicy of pain today for, It says, a happier tomorrow.
elude the Amalgamated Clothing
AccOrding to a recent release from the Chamber's news department, the and Textile Workers, American
economic numbers "look good Indeed." As does the "wind direction,". Federation of Teachers, United
which It measures by tatting Inflation and iilterest rates, Indications of Mine Workers, International Ladies
sloWing government costs and a rise in savings.
Gannent Workers, United Steel
ln a statement now farnlllar to Its members and others, tt goes on to Workers, Communications Workers
declare the chamber "is committed to the Reagan combination of spend· of America, International Union of
iilg and tax cuts to restore stability iii the economy," and then offers a Bricklayers and United Aulo
comment from Richard Lesher, president.
Workers.
"Coupled wtth the other rorces leading to the decline in interest rates, I
The newly created delegate slots
think you are going to be very surprised when business demand picks up, · are in addition to the approximately
particularly durables and housing and autos, because there Is an . enor·--300~ convention seats previously
mous pent·up demand that going to be unleashed," Lesher says.
The chamber Is believing, supPortive, confident and encouraged by the
President's economic program, and It lets hardly a day go by without
saying so by means of speeches and interviews, and through articles in its
newspaper, magazine and TV show.
The AFL·CIO ts of opposite mind and just as active- in speeches, other
WASHINGTON (AP) - That
public appearances, comments to the media and in Its newspaper and "Single bold stroke" with which
magazine. As the Charnbe~ ,l'ra~s. the AF!JCIO castigates.
President Reagan wants to change
Reagan and his programS received the full treatment, for example, in the bWing address for the nation's
the latest AF!JOO News.
major social programs Is an Idea
It began with a grim story of the fourth-quarter economy, below which that bought him a lot of trouble two
ran a photograph of Mtnnesota "labor and citizen" groups assembled to campalgns .ago.
bring pressure on the legislature and the congressional delegation to
Reagan prOposed Tuesday nJght
"initiate action to counter Reagan administration economic poUctes."
that Congress approve the gradual
There Is more. Below the·!actory worker'scomments Is a warning from transfer of social programs that
Arnold cantor, AFL-00 economist; that "excesses and inequities of the now cost $47 bllllon a year !rom fed·
Reagan tax program will drlve the economy deeper into recession and erai to state and local governcould send unemployment as high as 10 percent."
ments, along with the tax sources to
Page eight, the final page, hits Reagan hard. "Economic Slwnp Signals finance them.
Collapse of Reaganomics" declares a headline on one of two stortes makIt Is a retlned, scaled-down ver·
ing up most of the page. "Economist Sees Disillusion With Reagan's sion of a proposal he first advanced
Programs," Is the other.
·
· •
more than six years ago, just beThroughout, neither word nor hint of praise for Reagan, and the distinct fore his first major run at the
impression that his economic program Is a disaster wtthout parallel. presidency.
There Is praise for a president - President Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
ln those days It was to be a too
who Is remembered "as workers' ally." But none for Reagan. His pro- bllllon transfer and - as Reagan
grams, says Thomas Donahue, secrelary·treaurer, are based on "18th and the Inflation flg!lter often points out
19th century theoretical models."
- a dollar bought more then than
now.
The plan Reagan outlined in his
State of the Union address would
Ohio State University and from the change drastically the way govern·
ments at all levels do business on
School of Osteopathic Medicine at
social
programs. But it Is not nearly
The integrity of a long-time Meigs Ohio University. Not "all" doctors
so
drastic
as the one he recomCounty citizen is being questioned. would take their time to give these
This is a man who has given a youn~ men an iooight into the field of
greater part of his life in helping his medicine on the doctor-patient level.
I am sure they are very grateful
feliow Meigs Countialljl. This man is
for the time they were allowed to
Dr. Rankin Ray Pickens, D.O.
"Doc" as he is known to both spend under his supervision.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (NEA) - Here
Over this span of public service
patients and friends has always been
on
my first visit to Sun City, I was
on the up-and-up in most situaliooo "Doc" has made many friends in the
not
surprised to see the opulent
whether it be medical or in everyday Bend area and no doubt some
casinos
along Fantasy Strip - or the
enemies. But no person serving the.
living.
croupiers
in tuxes and the glittering
"Doc" started his medical prac· public can satisfy all of the people,
chandeliers.
I was prepared for the
lice in the early 1950s in the Jones ail of the time.
millions
of
flashing
neon Ughts, starSome people who read this will say
Memorial Clinic in Middleport. He is
studded
marquees
and
the towering
still using this facility. Over the I have a biased opinion and I
hotels
spotlighted
against
the nig)i
years, renovation has been made to probably do. But it could not be
sky.
the clinic to. make it both more ef- otherwise for this man has given of
But I was totally unprepared to
ficient for him and his staff and his medical knowledge and his perfind
slot machines in supennarkets
sonal self to not only me, but to
more comfortable for his patients.
and d1111181ores - right at the end of
"Doc" was on the original staff of several members of ml!Jamily.
I am very sure had if not been for the check-out counters.
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
And "liOre than that, I was surstill maintains a position on the his medical alertness I would not be
prised
.il!l! rows of women, usually
h011pital staff. He also served as here to write this letter.
with.·
oag
of groceries on one hlp,
I am also very certain there are
chl.ef of staff for several years.
During his medical practice scores of people who share in my dro .ring coins and yanking down
th , handles, non-stop. Some played
"Doc" has helped trajn many young belief in D~. Pickens. - Betty
~P to five coins at a time to try for
medical students In his office from .Theiss, Racine.
the bigger jackpots, some played
two machines simultaneously.
Some, I was told, come twice a day
IIICollrtSirwl
to play, and since the supennarket8
P~aerey, Obkt
are open 24 hours, they can play dv
II~Jti.ZIII
DEVOTED roTHE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
or night- or day AND night.
"If! can'tsleep, I come here;'' one
woman
told me. "The parking lot is
~'h

Th

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Member FDIC

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up~ets 'Wild((ats

State
RACINE -

The high flying
Southern Tornadoettes behind a
balanced scoring attack, broke
away frilm a 21-6 halftime lead to
~eat Feder~! Hocking's Lancers
42-20 here Wednesday evening in
girls high school basketball action. ·
Federal Hocking drops to a very
respectable 9-4 record and ranks
second in the Tri·Valley conference,

period points, as the hosts rolled to a
and Laren Woife with 5. SHS Md 9
1:1-4 lead. The quick sure-handed . turnovers and 14 fouls.
Tornadoettes utilized a fast break
Federal Hocking hit eight of; 36
and also a balanced offensive attack from the field for 22 percent and hit
i~ the stretch to overtake the
four of 11 from !he line. Federal Had
hustling Lancer crew.
127 turnovers and 17 rebounds led by
TaleJ1ted SHS guard Mel Weese Connie Campbell with ~ight.
gained here only four points of !he
Southern plays at North Gallia
half in the first round.
tonight, whilj! Federal Hock ing
During the second round Southern plays Warren Local.
shot out of the gate fast, then settled
SOUTHERN (42) - Weese 7·0-14,
doim to outscore the visitors S.2. Salser 1-3-5, Wolfe 4-0-S, Evans 2-0-4,
E. Sm ith 3-2-8, Michael 0-0-0, R.
Each member of the Southern bench Smith
1-0-2, Johnson 0-1-1, H e m ~ley
came lhrough with a good effort, 0·0·0, Houdashelt O·O·O. Total• 18-6.·
while holding the struggling Federal 42 .
FEDERAL HOCKING (20) HoffHocking offense to jWit two points.
man 2·2·4, Campbell 4·0·8, Barnhart
At the half Southern led by 15 as . 2·0·4, Cox 0-0-0, Behar 0-D-0, ~ussell
the scoreboard lit up to the tune of 0·0·0, Ford 0·0·0, Matlack 0·\ll'j, Bartlett 0·2·2. Totals 8-4-20.
II
21-6.
By Quarters :
Six points by Y?eese got SHS Southern
12 9 11 lt}-41
4 2 4 1()--20
rolling . in the third frame, which FH

Soulhern was again led by sharpshooting guard Mel Weese, who canned 14 points, followed by Laren
Wolfe and Elaine Smilh wilh eight
markers each.
CoMie Campbell led Federal
Hocking with eight points. ·
Early in the game, senior Elaine
Smith paced Southern wlth six first

---·-

'

again W8ll claimed by Southern. The
Lancers, who have done an outstanding job all ,l!eason long, found
Southern's quickness to be the main
factor in the game.
· kn
Southern 's speed and qulc
ess,
coupled wilh a cold streak from the
floor for the Lancers resulted in a 3210 score after three periods.
By the time the fourth period
rolled around, Federal Hocking

FOULED- Southern's Mel WeeHe (14) appears to have been filed
duriDg her follow through for a jumper Wednesday night agalut Federal
H~ldDg. Weese led tile Tomadoelle!l loa 42-20 victory with l4 poloiH.

r

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Advertising Representative , Branham
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season.

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grtilllley
AP co,...poadellt

At firSt glance, It lookS like a normal boxing glove. The pillowy padding
Is just thick enough to keep the mayhem It can generate within reasonable
bounds.
_
But then you get to the business part, the part where a lighter clenches ·
his hand, where the thumb folds In to Conn the fist. That's when you notice
the dlllerence. This glove Is not really a glove at all. It lookS more like an
ln!lated mitten without the thumb.
There Is a thin line over which permissible violence does· not tread and
boxing gloves are among !he best examples. They're built to lnlllct punishment and yet, at !he same time, to avoid serious damage. They are
marvelous models of the creativity of sports.
~Now that creativity has gone a step farther wllh the Introduction In New
York State of thumbless boxing gloves. They became mandatory lor all
non-title fights In !he state two weekS ago and !hat's why MadiSOn Square
Garden, once !he mecca of boxing In America, may soon tum Into a roving
promoter Instead of puftlng on bouts In Its own building.
The Garden was supposed to present an atlractlve six-fight card Friday
night In the Felt Forum, a small satelllte arena next door to the main
buDding. The shOw was headUned by a }().round junior lightweight bout
biotween a pair of undefeated fighters, Hector Camacho and Raphael

LOpe?;.
It was to be the second thumbless show at the Forum. A week ago,
former junior lightweight champ Allredo EScalera headed the first one
and the gloves did not get glowing reviews. Some fighters complained that
their lhumbs went numb Inside the mittens and that !he lack of feeling
·
extended clear up their arms.
·When Bobby Lee, co-manager an!l co-trainer of Camacho, heard !hat,
he decldell he wasn't about to risk the career of his bright, young boxer on
What still Is basically an experimental glove. And since Lee also had two
other fl~hters, Pee Wee Rucker and Alvin Hayes, on !he Forum card, the
program began crumbling.
That's when John F.X. Condon, president of MadiSOn Square Garden's
boxing division, called Jack Prendervllle, chairman of !he New York State
Athletic Commission, seeking a waiver of the thumblessrule. Prendervflle
said no and two days later, the Garden cancelled the Friday night show.
· " We have no choice,'' said Condon. "II the boxers don't want to use the
gloves and !he state says they must, !hen we can't put shows on In this
buDding."
But don't for a moment lhlnk the Garden Is simply going to slink oil Into
the night, discarding Its historic link to boxing. That simply won't happen.
"We will move our shows elsewhere," said Condon. "We're open for
business and we'll consider promotions In places like Atlantic City, Provl·
d~nce, Hartford, North CaroUna ...wherever suitable, wherever we can
make a good deal and put on a show representative of Madison Square
Garden."

PASSING GAME - An unidentified Sou!hem player passeH the ball
to a teammate while working for a good shot In Wednesday's t2-20 victory
over Federal H~klng. Providing defense is the Lancel'!l' Brenda Rua~~eD
(23) and Melina Hoffman (21).

\ College basketball results
Wed...aat• Coll@p IIMiu!tld 8eoftll

Kansas 7t, Colorado Ill

By 11M AMOdated ..,._

Kenyon 82, Ma11elta eJ
Lewta14, E.UIIoob 60

EAST
Baltimore &amp;2, TOWXI!l St. 51

Miami ~. Cent.Michl.gan 69
Mtsaourt 86. Iowa St. 73

CoJumtia 14i, seton Hau 73, OT
Delaware Ill, W.Cheller St. Ill
Drrllel 77, Falrlel&amp;h Dlddiuon 67

Notre Dame 79, Matne 511
OklahOma ~ l. Nebraska

Hoty Crou 60
t{(latra Mi, Wqner 54
indiana, Pa. 63, Edinboro SJ
tona 18, Fairfield 64

BOUI"ItWDT
ArkansaS St. ~.

Sl.JQ~ePh'•·

Pa. 00, Va .Commonwealth

"

Shi~JPM~burli

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St 77, Mantfteld SL 66

Slf'M 53, St.Frand•, N.Y. 49
S.Carollna St. 81, Md.·E.stme Ml

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Mei'C"ee' 14, Q&gt;f!U!nary 64
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Old Domlnlun n , Gt!orgto Mll!OII 113
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Ohio high school cage scores

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Sam Houston St . .a, Stephen F .AUitln

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During ihe fourth frame both
dull-&lt; matched baskets as Southern ·
rolled to another victory, 42·20.
During the fourth frame both
clubs matched baskets as Southern
rolled to another victory, 42·20.
Ironically, the Wolfe brothers
were a part of both teams as Duane
coaches Federal Hocking, while
brothers Larry and Hilton, Jr. share
coaching duties at Southern. Bolh
teams arc enjoying very successful
seasons at their respective schools.
Southern hit 18 of 45 from the field
for 40 percent, while canning 6 of 10
from the line. The hosts had 38
rebounds led by Cinqy Evans with 8

62
Kalamazoo 61), Alma IJJ

Gallon

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U

SCHOOL
AUTOMOBILE CLUB
ol so.utheastcrn Ohio
89 Columbu• Road

scorr

Athens, Oh.
593-"17
FEB. 1912

,,

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WIUIAM D. CHILDS

DOIIL MULUN
101111 F. MUSSER
CHARLES 8. MULUN
MICIIAB. L CHILDS

At hatltlme, Auburn had 22 rebounds to Alabama 's 12 and held a
35-34 lead.
Clutch lree-lhrow shooting by Oklahoma State's Eddie Hannon and
Raymond Crenshaw' propeDed the
Cowboy~ over Kansas State. Cren·
shaw and Hannon both connected
on two free lhrows each In !he final
minute and a baH when OSU held
one-point advantages. CrellShaw, a
sophomore forward, hit a pair wllh
1: 22 left, stretching the Cowboy
lead to 54·51. Hannon, a senior
guard, dropped In his pair wllh 34
seconds remaining.
Dale Ellis rebounded a missed
layup and dunked It wlth2lseconds
remaining to gtve Tennessee a
hard·lought victory over Georgia.
"ThlS was an Incredibly big win
for the team, emotionally," said
Tennessee Coach Don DeVoe. "We
are a very determined team. What
we lack In size, we make up lor In
pure guts."
Ed Pinckney scored 21 points as
Villanova trounced Big Five rival
LaSalle. 'The WUdcats outscored
LaSalle 16-4 at the start of the second baH, and Its lead ballooned to
as much as 45 points, at 82-37, wllh
14 minutes to play.

showing.

Tltfln worked the clock down to
!he : 30 mark before Guard Elmer
Jackson was fouled, setting up
one-on-one. But Jackson misfired

a

Southwestern shocks
Wahama five, 66-60
"It was one ~our bette• played
games," remarked Soulh'!estem
High School Coach Uoyd Myers
following the Highlanders 66-60 uph
set victory over visiting Wa amain
Jl makeup basketball game at
Patriot Wednesday night.
Southwestern built up a com-

In the reserve ~ame, Wahama
won, 5:&gt;-26.
Varsity box:
WAHAMA C60I Kendoll
Weaver . -4 ·7·15; EStell Lav ender, 3·2
8, Travis Gray, 0·1 1; Don van·
Meier . 4·5·13 ; Eric Embleton. 4 715;
J im Powell , 1-0·2; Ron Bradley , 1 2·
., AI • n Machir, 1 0·2. - TOTALS

fortable lead over the White
Falcons, then held ·off a fourth
period Wahama comeback to post its
tba ks
second victory against lOse c .
TheWhiteFalconsdroppedtof-8
on the year.
"We almost let them back in the
game in the final period, but our

SOUTHWESTERN C661 - Scoll
Lewis, 2·0·4; Gary Boker, 2-0-4; Rob
bie Pric. 2 -4·8• Roger WellS, 6' 4-16 '
Chuck Stewart, 0·0·0; Paul McNeaL
9 5·23; Kent Walker, 0-0-0; Randy
Lavton, 5·1·11-TOTAL526· 14•66 ·
Score by quarter• '
Wahama
12 11 13 24- 60
southwestern
13 18 20 15--66
lleserves - Wahama 55 Soulh

3-PC. OREL $291
BRUSH SET

boys did a tremeli\lous job," Myers
added.
Wahama trailed 13-12, 31·23 and
51-36 before
close in the final

11·24· &lt;)11.

..~
OOPS- Marquette and Memphis Stale basketball
players are caught In a shower of glass durinR Wed-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Char·
lie Lau, hitting Instructor lor the
Chicago White Sox, wtU be a
speaker at the Ohio High School
Baseball Coaches Association
Clinic Feb. 4-6 at Ohio State.
Lau first developed his reputa·
tlon with the Kansas City Royals
and New York Yankees.
He will be joined on !he clinic
stall by coaches Tom Petrol! of
Northern Colorado University,
Charlie Greene of Miami Dade
South, Jim Ward of Eastern Ken·
tucky University, Bob Morgan of
Kent State and Ohio State trainer
Mike Bordner.
Howard Bozman of Lancaster,
president of the coaches, also announced Dave Young of Tal·
!madge, George Sosebee of Hudson
and Roberi Smllh of Riverside will
be !he 19821nductees In the coaches'
Hall of Fame.

One cut of lh\1

Wahama outscored the host team
.
~au! McNeal paced the Hlghlan·
tiers allllck with 23 points. He !Picked 'I
off IDof Southwestern's 26 rebounds.
Roger' Wella chipped in with
poi~ and Randy Layton·u.
Ke!lllall Weaver and Eric Emb)~ p!lced the White Falcons with
15 )19intl ilpiece. Don VanMeter ad-

give molt eurf1c:t1 1

Dr._

·

Siluthweatem shot 49 percent from
the
(26 of 53) and 14 of 28 from
thefllal Une (50 percent).
'rielllehlanders had 13 turnovers.
Wlhama shot 18 of 51 from the
lleldifor 3li percent and 24-01-36 from .
1111 foul Une for 56 percent. The
, . _ bad 21 rebounds and 18 tur-

leld

SSS , . . . sr., MIDDUPOitT, OHIO.

~m.wiU host Easlem In

HOURS:

a

.

Valley Conference tilt
Wahama wiU host Kennit
S.turday night. .
·
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f'1I1!d Gary Totlarv:l, dl·

....,,., ot """"'"'"' Ma"""" RApp, '"' ·
"ba.U"".,..,,
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(WOOD . BRASS . CHROME)

ONI. y 8 MORE DA YSI '

roorJIA1.L

ClNCI~~i.,~~"""""""'
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Cl.I;,VEI.AND BROWNS
No""" Jtm

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OOUZ.OE

MARYLAND -

SAVE

SEMI-ANNUAL

c.",:::~:=..::~~~u,:;.-s.;:;:.,.

DETROIT LIONS-

-

.LIFESTYLE FURNITURE SHOWCASE

nou!mlN Asmos - s'""'~~ '""""

cleftoftltvt linl coach.

8 MORE DAYS!

ONLY

LaCorte, pltclv!r, to a ~~ar oontra('t.

lli'AH JAD. -

!han 7,&lt;XXl members, Including !llln
!he Cincinnati chapte r . Its golf tour·
na ments In 26 National Football
League cities raised nearly $500,&lt;XXl
for youth-oriented charities last
year, said Executive Dlrector Vic
Maitland.

.

Transactions ·

N•""" RAlph,_.

Lr,.}estyle

URNITURE Hour9~B: M9- sono_a&amp;i1Fyrl· .
SHOWCASE
(Open All Day
f.

ThUrsday)
CORNER THIRD AND OLIVE STREETS
GALLIPOLIS
446·3045

,.,..,..,_,.._
. ~~~~"*~~~J:tm~C~•:••:M:~~_:~~·____j_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.,.~~~

RIO GRANDE f"l _ McDonald ,
5·2·121 CiJ(ry, 3·0·6; Penrod, 5.o.101 ,
Jutre, 1·2-4; Mowery, 5·4-14 ; Wollenburg, l·l · t ; Morrison, 1 . • ;
Wallace, 0_1_1_Totals 23 _22-69. 0 2
TIFFIN ua&gt; - cardo, 7·•·18:
Jackson, 9·0·18; Jordan, 8·3-19;
R
c appell. 1-0-2:
ogon, 2· 1-5 ;
Howa rd, 1-0·2; Crall, 2-0·• . TotalsJO·
1-68.
·

1ij
ltfj,.•• ·WINTER SALE

24-15 in the laat canto.

v.ty.flat flnilh.
In about
lO mtnutM. WltPIItlle.
P

on the firSt attempt and McDonald
cleared the rebound.
Penrod then drive !he right side
of !he lane for what proved to be the
game winner with just: 14 showing.
The Dragns had a chance to win It
with ·two shots 1n the r1na1 :to, but
Curry cleared !he boards on the second m1s11re to cnnch the win.
The Redmen never Jed un\U Pen·
rod 's basket. McDonald led the
with 22 points nd IV\ r eRed
men
a
..,
bounds, Including a 12-15card at the
free-throw Une. Mowery added 14
and Penrod 10. Art Jordan led a
balanced Ttfftn attack wtth 19
points, while Jackson and Cardo
added 18 each.
Tltfto held a wide 31\-23 edge In
lleldgoals,butthedlllerencewasln
thelouiUne, wheretheRedmennetted 22 ol28 attempts lor 79 percent,
compared to !he Dragons' eight of
14 lor 57 percent.
leylbegame
P'oodlandatsomarkedOhloVal·
. Iilghl. Mrs. Judith
Curry was winner of the grand
Prtze, a !IJ.secontlshopplngSpree at
Ohio Valley Foodland.
RlowlllbebacklnactlonSaturday night when !hey travel to Can·
ton to take on Walsh. The Cavaliers
will enter the game tra!Ung the
Redmen by 1'h games In the con·
terence standing wllh a 5-2 mark.

ncsday night's game nt the Mid-South Coliseum. No
one was hurt. (AP Laserphuto)

Lau guest speaker --------------Tournament set---------------

r-w~e;s;te;r;n;66;,~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;~

pullln~
:~~~:~.%~::7sin

WAlL RNISH
lhleil and
CfMmV fonnula II "*"" to
vel-

ded Ia.

MOUAt. 7:00A.M. TO 5:00P.M.
. SAT. 7:00 A.lll. lO

us."

ons 33-14 !he rest ollhe way to record !he win.
Over the last six minutes, the
hosts went on a 1().2 scoring spree.
The Redmen trailed by nine wllh
just over six minutes showing when
Watson McDoriald coMected on
lour straight free. throws to cut the
lead to 66-iil.
Alter Tltfto's Frank Cardonetted
a jumper from the lane, McDonald
slipped In both_endsolaone-on-Qne,
Jerry Mowery a pair of·free.lhrows
and Dan Curry a drive to narrow
the margin to GS-67, with just : 53

- By
MILLER
Guard Rick Penrod capped a second hall rally with !he go-ahead
basket of the 14-second mark Wednesday night to lead Rio Grande's
Redmen to a m-68 victory over Tillin University In Mld.Ohlo Confer·
ence action.
r
The win moved !he Redmen to
21-4 overall and 6-2 In !he conference. The Dragons dropped to 15-5
overall and 6-2 In !he league.
The win also Improved Rio's record to 11.0 at home lhls season. Rio
Grande and Tllfln are co-leaders In
!he MOC.
.. ..
The Redmen leU behind early
and trailed by as many as 20 points
wllh just over 14 minutes to go In
!he game, but outscored the Drag-

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insurance
AGENTS:

of his 24 points in a 12-2 spurt midway lhrough the opening half, lead·
lng Depaul to an easy trlumpl! over
St. Louis. The victory, DePaul's
12th In a row , was the 6671h career
triumph lor Blue Demons Coach
Ray Meyer. The GS-year-old Meyer
moved Into a tie wllh ,John Wooden
lor llllh place among aU-time wlnn·
Ingest college coaches .
1be SecOIId 'l'en
Ennis Whatley hit four crucial
free throws and Eddie PhllUps sank
17 points as .Alabama defeated
Auburn.
"It was a great game from gun to
wire," said Alabama Coach Wimp
Sanderson. " Bolh teams had some
trouble early, especially wllh turnovers: The dlllerence In the firSt
hall was !heir ollenslve boards.
'They were able to get the second
and lhlrd shots, and !hat rea)ly hurt .

Redmen keep home record
intact with 69-68 victory

___,

DRIVER
TRAINING

TI-72, No.3 VIrginia downed Wake
Forest .69-$. .~ 4 DePaul outclassed St. Louis !IS-~. No. 13 Alabama beat Auburn 67-65,
Oklahoma upset No. 14 Kansas
State 56-53, No. 15 Tennessee
~pped Georgia 66-64 and No. 20 VUIanova walR&gt;ped LaSalle 117·82.
TbeTop Tea
Ricky Fraz;ier collected 21 points
and iour other Missouri players
scored In double ligures as the Tigers defeated Iowa State. 'The Tlg·
ers, playing their firSt game since
taking over the No.1 spot, Improved
their record to 17.0 lor the season
and 6-0 In the Big Eight. Iowa State
was led Ron Harris' 20 points .
"Our players didn't react any dlf.
lerently," said M1ssourt Coach Norman Stewart of the No. 1 ranking.
" lt was great the way our players
came out on to !he court very loose
and It showed In !he waywe shot the
baU. I thought we played better In
the first hall !han In our last two to
lhree games."
Jimmy Black and Matt Doherty
each scored a career-high 21 points
as North Caronna overcame a ninepoint deficit- In the second hall to
defeat Clemson.
The scoring honors were especially welcome because Doherty
did not scoff' In the last game
against Georgia Tech and Black
scored only lhree ~~Dints. Doherty,
who averages 8.2 points, was 8 of : 6
from the floor. Black, averaging
7.1, was 8 of 11.
· Tim Mullen scored a career-high
21 points as VIrginia held off Wake
Forest. Mullen, a 6-foot-5 forward,
go! 12 of his points In !he first hall
when VIrginia twice spurted to 11·
point leads. The Cavaliers made
!hose leads stand up, although the
Demon Deacons trimmed !he mar·
gin to' two on several occasions, In·
eluding a 6S-66 score wllh six
seconds left.
Vlrglnla guard OtheU WilSOn
!hen provided the final margin wtlh
!he firSt of iwo free throws and 7•
loot-4 Ralph Sampson blocked
Scott Davis' shot at !he buzzer.
Terry Cummings ~;~&gt;ntrlbuted six

eo

tormuta , tool• end hendl
~o~~tath up IPt 1019\' weter. CBW

PAY lATER

. mtserable36percenuromthenoor
1ndroppinga62-60declslonto0tter·
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
beln College Tuesday night.
1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• · 'The loss was !he fourth In a row 1tor the Redwomen and they
cfrOpped Into 5-6 overall.
Robin Hagen led a balanced Rio
'.,
Grande attack wllh 17 points, whUe
Sile Camp, Janet Groves and
DeaMe Davis each added 10.
.
'
'
The Redwomen will be back in
action Friday night at home
against Ohio Northern at 7 p.m.

mo~

biCIUII 'f'OU

'

AvP'1fthed Preas
was coaching at Soulh- '
In !he Pac-10 Conference,
yd.'s teams played In the
oiJ UCLA and generally
II!COIId fiddle.
N
!hat he's with Mississippi
State In the Southeastern Confer·
ence~yd has artolher liege basket
giant to contend wtth In
Ken~ky. But he got oil on !he
right toot against !he Wildcats Wed·
l
nesdaFt.
_
"I c
lnly don't want to negate
Ibis
victory, but I lhlnk we
caught J&lt;;entucky a little fiat, " said
Boyd alter a lbocklng 56-51 upset of
the natloll's No. 7 team.
To ~ the .game even more stg·
nlllcant In ~·s firSt year, It was
the tint vlctDry lor Mtsstsslppl
State In .the SEC after 16 losses.
"It was a great win lor us, and It
was-dice to end the conference los·
ing streak," said Boyd. "Our Kal·
patrick WeUs was by far !he best
defender on !he court. I don't lhlnk
!here Is a post man in the league
!hat can play defense better." .
WeDs blocked lhree Kentucky
shots and made two critical steals
late In !he game, whUe Butch Pierre sank key free lhrows lor Mtssls·
sippi State.
Mlsstsslppl State was leading 5249 wtth 33 seconds to play when Jell
Malone hit two free lhrows. Ken·
tucky's Jim Master responded wllh
two of his own, but his team
couldn't score In Its last lour
possessions.
Mlsstsslppl State last beat a Top
Ten team In 1976 when it edged Ken·
tucky 83-76.
Kentu~ky Coach Joe B. Hall credited Mississippi State with "an ex·
ceptlonaUy line game. The tempo
was such !hat It messed up our
game. They broke us down allen·
slvely and defensively. Their defense Intimidated us. They did what
they had to do to win, and they deserve it.''
In olher games Involving the nation's ranked teams, No. 1 Mlssourt
whipped .Iowa State 86-73, No. 2
North Caronna defeated Clemson

14.9%

A.P.R.

NEW CAR
FINANCING

NO PAYMENT FOR
~ DAYS!
"DRIVE IT TODAY,
SPRING IS WHEN YOU PA Yl"

THAT'S RIGHTI THIS LOW, LOW RATE AND
DEFERRED PAYMENT OFFER AVAILABLE TO
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS. ON 36 MONTH TERMS. OFFER EXPIRES FEB. 28th. SO DO NOT
DELAYI

�•
Poge:-6- The Daily Sentinel

Meeting notes
Racine PTO
1'

,.

Parent and teacher conference day was announced for
Feb. 5 when the Racine Elementary PTO met recently at
the schooL
Maxine Rose presided at the
meeting with Barbara Dugan
leading the group In the
pledge to the flag and the
Lord's Prayer. The treasurer
reported a balance of $825.27.
It was noted that more basketball uniforms were purchased
tor the tilth and sixth grades.
Plans were discussed for a
ham and turkey dinner with
the date to be announced .
Next meeting was set tor Feb.
15.

TOPS
Calorie charts and !,heir role
In helping members lose
weight were discussed at the
Wednesday meeting of TOPS
OH 466 held at Rutland.
Gloria Oller read a newsletter !rom the area coordinator,
Kay Sage, regarding workshops a·nd announcing the
Area Recognition Day where
members are honored tor
weight loss. Shorty Wright
lost the most weight for the
week, almost four pounds,
with Ellen Rife as the runnerup.
Mrs. Oller. leader, asked
that each member continue to
keep charts on calories tor the
duration of the contest. The
hearts tor the sweetheart
game were given to the weight
recorder, Nellle Haggy. She
will record weight losses tor
the members. Rules were discussed and members were reminded to take gilts,
something red, at meetings
))etween now and Valentine's
Day.
' Information on th e club
meetings may be obtained by
call1ng 742-3062.

What's
Cooking?

Social
Calendar
Thursday
Pomeroy Lodge 164, Free and
Accepted Masons. wlll confer
the Master Masons degree at a
meeting to be held at 7: 30tonlght
' at the Pomeroy Temple. All Masons are Invited and refreshments will be served.

.. . ......

;:

Helen Help Us

By DALE M. STOLL
Meigs County Exleasloo
Home Economist
F-rozen foods, correctly prepared,
are great, but when food free-tes by
accident or as a result of too cold
temperatures in storag~ areas,
there can be problems.
Some of the foods which may
cause problems are home-canned
foods and foods stored in glass jafl!.
If adequate l)ead space has not bee~
left in the jar, as the food free-•es tt
expands and can cause the seal to
break or the glasS container ill still
intact, the food can be refrigerated
and used immediately upon
thawing. If the glass cracks or
breaks, it ill best to dispose of the
food as it is nearly impossible to
assure that glass particles are not
· contained in the food.
Should commercially canned
foods freeze and . even bulge, they
are still considered safe to use
provided one ill certain that the
bulged can is a res~lt of freezing expansion and not of actual food
spoilage. If in doubt, it Is always
wise to throw the food out! Any cOm·
mercia! cans which ·have fro-ten and
thawed and are leaking should be
thrown away.
Foods which have been frozen and
thawed may taste and look different
from the same foods which have not
been fro-ten. The texture and quality
of the food will not be as good,
especially with fleshy fruits. The
nutritive value will remain about the
same unless freezing and thawing
has occurred several limes. Fleshy
foods like fruits and tomatoes should
be combined with other ingredients
and cooked or baked, for example,
fruit sauce, jam, or cobbler.
Special care should be used in
thawing food unexpectedly fro-ren. It
is recommended that they be thawed

Mime theater to perform
RIO GRANDE - Quiet Riot, a
(W()-man mime theater, will appear
Sunday, Jan. 31, alB p.m. in the Fine
llfld Perfonning Arlll Center on the
Rio Grande College and Community
Gollege campus.
I Admission is free for Rio Grande
~ollege students with ID, $2 for the
general public and $1 for public
3chool students.
: The show is sporu!ored by the
'!ludent programming board.
• Quiet Riot was formed in June 1977
~nd has grown in five years from a
!peal part time concern into a full~· touring company. Since its in. ception the company has strived for
k1novation, a company spokesman '
$aid. he said the Quiet Riot's unique

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

mixture of content and presentation
is an attempt to portray life in a
beautiful, humorous and compelling
way.
.
For further infonnation, contact
the college at (614) 24~.

Carpenter
Personals
Mr. and Mfli. Kenneth Crabtree
spent 10 days' va.cation in the
Clearwater, Florida area.
Earl Starkey suffered a broken
hip in an accident at his home near
here and is confined to O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Athens.
Mr. and Mfli. Denver Queen,
Bloomington, lliinois, were guests
of his brother-in-law and sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Thad Dye and family.

Announcement
The Gary Stewart Orchestra
of Pt. Pleasant will provide
music for a Valentine Dance
Feb. 13 from 9 p.m. ID 1a.m. at
the archery building of Royal
Oak Park. The dance Is sponsored by Eastern Local Band
Boosters and tickets may be
purchased at Swlsher-Lohse
Pharmacy In Ponmeroy, Harold
Newell's Service Station InChester or form any band booster
member.

\

Grandparents must hurdle
those 'stepping stones' too

l
I

slowly, preferrably in the
refrigerator. However, if the seal is
not brOken, food can be thawed at
I
room temperature, or if time ill of
By HELEN ,o\ND SUE BOTTEL
w1reachable
but
it's
only
becaUse
he
I,
too,
was
a
middle
son.
My
sister
essence, products could be thawed
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
is afraid to talk. - ONE 'fHO'S
and
brother
were
"perfect,"
but
I
under running cold water. Rapid
Our son has been divorced twice.
/I
didn't fit that mold. Loneliness and BEEN THERE
thawing under hot water may ' Each
ex-wife has a child from him,
DEAROWBT:
if
·
frUstration,
not
genes,
made
me
concause jafli to break. '
and several of their own from other sider suicide. I had no one to talk to
We repeatedly urge acceptant'!!
It is best to use the thawed foods as
marriages. Our grandchildren live
because I was gay and desperately and understanding .. But it would be
soon as possible. Should you have a
with their mothefl!, in different
cruel to answer a bereaved mother's
trying to hide lt.
quantity of goods frozen, you might
states.
letter with a ·plea for better comNo
more!
I
accepted
myselF
after
I
consider keeping them frozen by
I'd like to do special thin)ls for
left home: my lover and I have been munication. Our sermons are for the
placing them in a freezer or fr!Ylen
them, but feel, slnce they are with
together 12 yeafl!, we own a house living. We avoid any observatioru!
food locker until ready to use.
their " halves," I must treat all the
and a business, have traveled ex- that might heap more guilt on
Products such as ,pickles. fruilll
children equa)ly. So I send small
tensively, and have even managed sorrowing parents. - HELEN
and tomatoes will be soft and could
Christmas and birthday gifts to to adopt children.
be served with ice '. crystals still
each, rather than nicer things just to
My problem: though I'm very hap- DEAR ONE:
present in the food if the accustomed
our own grandkids. Our. budget ... py In my present life, my parenlll
We're glad you're well established
shape ill desired. Be aware that the
doesn't allow splurges.
1
and happy ..But tell us, how did you
stiU
cannot
undefl!tand
it,
nor
can
food will be · a totally different
We reaDy don't know the other my brother and sister. They'd rather manage to adopt children? May we
product but still safe and nutritious
children but still we don't want to pretend I'm normal."
hear more about your unusual
to eat. You· just might discover or
make them feel left out. How do
.
situation?
- SUE
Each time 1 visit, the old feelings
develop a taste for one of these new
others manage this particular step- of guilt return. My solution : I've
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject
foods!
problem? -Grandma
moved 700 miles away. We com- for diScussion, tw()-generation style?
Have · th~ potatoes you've
DEAR GRANDMA:
municate by phone and letter, but Direct your queslioru! to either Sue
prepared lately had a different
Why not send small gifts to all the mentally, I've cut them out of my or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
flavor? If the temperature where
children at Christmas ttme, but life.
want a combination motherthey are stored has dropped below 40
reserve birthdays . for your own
Please, H. and S., urge parents to daughter answer - in care of this
degrees F. it is likely that the starch
'
.
grandkids only, knowing that the on- accept
and dtscuss,
not dose out, the newspaper.!
contained in them has begun to
ce-removed "steps" will have real different child. He may seem
change to sugar. To · reverse this
relatives to fill the gap?- HELEN
process, move the potatoes to a war·
mer place for a week or more before
And invite the grands for summer
using again. The original flavor
visits whenever you can. That's the
should return. If your potatoes have
best way to make them feel special.
actually frozen, you may end up
- SUE
"School o! Music Days" are
Feb. I, at 7 p.m., the Band
throwing them out. They are not har·
again being planned for this
Boosters will meet In the ba~d
mful to eat but the quality is so poor,
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
year.
For
those
parents
who
room.
the texture soft and mushy, that few
You said, "Don't blame yourare
unfamiliar
with
the
propeople will even eat them ... From a
selves" to the couple whose middle
gram, It entails the convernews release prepared by Pat Glass
son committed suicide. Good advice,
sion
of practices to Saturday
and Betty Reese.
Dr. Carl Peterson and Rev .
but, Helen and Sue, please don't let
morning , In preparation for
For your free copy of a recipe for
Peterson, the former Janice
parents ease off in their efforts by
the upcoming concert March
cheese strata, contact the Meigs your implying the children might be · 4. Two days being planned tor
Tannehill or Middleport, are
County Extension Office at 99U(i96.
announcing the birth of a son,
practices ·are Feb. 13 and 20 .
born that way.
Carson Scott, born on Jan. 27,,
These practices wlll be held
at
the St. Rita's Hospital In Cofrom 9-12 In the morning and
lumbus.
The Infant weighed
attendance will be required .
slx pounds, four ounces. The _
couple have a daughter, CrysUpcoming' events, Jan. 28,
tal, seven. Mrs. Carol Tanne!rom 3:30 to 5 p.m. Brass and
hill, wife of the late Chester
percussion sectlonals. On
Tannehill, Is the maternal
grandmother.
II

Meigs Band Notes
Scott birth

Buckeye Rural offers
cash for college
Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc., is offering cash
help toWard a college l'ducation to
two ~radua tcs of Ihe 1981 ~2, school
year. Candidates must reside in a
house which is served by Buckeye
Rural. Winners will be chosen on the
basis of their scholastic rating, persomal achievement and school and
community activities.
Donal~ M. Robinson. Mana~el' of
Buckeye Rural, stales that each
school faculty will be asked to sulr
mit the names of one boy and one
~irl to the Cooperative offitc by
April!, 1982. A panel of three judges
will select a winning male and
female and alternates for each from
this~roup.

Winners will receive a $250
scholarship and an opportunity to
compete in the statewide conte.t in
May whel'e the top prize will be a
$1,000 scholarship.
Any high school senior who wishes
to be a contestant can do so by con-

his or her guidance coun.
selor or Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative, Inc. at 143 Third
Avenue in Gallipolis.
I..3st year's winners were Suzanne
Leall Forshey of Jackson High
Sdiool and Allen Evans of Gallia
l&lt;!ctin~

Academy. Evans received an additional $300 by placi n~ fourth in the
sl.ctlewidt! cowpl'lition. Tlw rumwn;Ufl were Rtl'llda Sue Brun~ or Sym·

mcs Valley and Derek Vaughau nf
Rock Hill .

Personals

PONDEROSA"

--

--AND THE
.
BANK ONE OF POMEROY. NA

614/99~·2133

20% DISCOUNT
ON ALL
'

~FRINGED LEATHER

COATS &amp;VESTS

OUTDOOR SHOES

"American Made"

OTHER.STYLES
IN STOCK

DISCOUNTED THRU JAN. lfl· 1982 .

MODERN SUPPL
399 w. Main Street
992-2164 1
Pomeroy, Oh.
The Store with "A II Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets- Stables- Large and Small Animals
Lawns-Gardens

.

'

The nine Explorer scouts are alloWed to work In the office and
make unofficial foot patrols of the
village. They carmot make an-ests
or ride In the village pollee cars.
The one cadet pollee otflcer, Jim
Forsythe, 18, Is the only scoot allowed to ride In patrol cars with

ween when a group of scouts spot- ·-ted an open door. Not being allowed
ID apprehend an Intruder, they radioed for an officer's aSSistaitce and
an anest was made.
. The cadet and the Explorers are
VOlunteers, although. Forsythe ad·
mltll, "I'm not a complete imlunteer. lgt!t a dollar a )llliU" and theft
they take lalU!S out. I gt!t about 88
· cents a year."
Truman said the scouts are being
taught arrest laws, search andle~­
ure procedures, accident lnvestlgatiop, crowd control and crlmlnoit
lnvest!gatlorl.
The volUnteers say they get some
harassment from thetr peers.
''They call us blue boys, but I think
people have respect for us and what
we're dolilg," said Ricky Sktlllter,
13, of Genoa.

Shoppers say

Remember )bur lldentine

Cars are nice but too high·
TOLEDO, Obi!&gt; (AP) -Fred and
Kathy MUdenberger loaded their
three chlldren Into the family's 19TI
- Pontiac and drove about 12 miles
from thetr borne In Whitehouse to
visit the Greater Toledo Auto ShOw.
They came, Mildenberger said
Wednesday, to look at new cars.
Like many people attending the annual event, sponsored by Toledo
car dealers, they didn't look first at
cafl! - they looked at sticker
prl~s.

used to be wrapped up. It was a big
secret what they looked like. All
that's gone now.

. "People want to buy, I really

Remember your special Valentine Sunday, February 14,
With a lift from Ru-n Stover Candies. Our beautiful
Satin, Foil or delicate Gincham Hearts are filled with "Only
the Fineat" chocolateL Our hearts are a traditional favorite
for all. Remember friends and relativea'with tbe finest in
chocolate. and butter bans. A heart ahaped box ol llllndyaomethinllany sweetheart would lon.1)
M (\._ ___ •

Andy Foley and his wife, Janis,
said they weren't suffering from
"sticker shock" - but the symptoms were showing, even though
he's a physician.

~£o:. ()l8V£It,

think they do. But they see those

stickers, shake their heads and
walk away. I don't lqlow what the
answer is."
I

Bill O'Donnell, general manager
ora Chevrolet dealership In Toledo,
said he couldn't generallze about
how much his salesmen will reduce
the sticker prtces or 1982 rnoci81s-~ .

.

•'

.'

..

''

.

· S_LIJ 15 ·HER L011-"-N_D_lii:_S
______.
H

"I just started a practice In BoWling Green, and I'm paytne17 percent on money bon-owed for that,"
satd Foley, who tonnerly practiced
In a clinic In Defiance. "Just because I'm a doctor doesn't mean I
can walk out and buy anything I
want. This Is a recession,
remember."

Phnrrno(..,

"-"'McC..IIottll.l.f'll . . Cl"'''"'m"·"·""·

__

NMII~~t

·"'•·IIfl ·.
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And like many people, they
'
looked, gasped, and looked again to
make sure their eyes weren't tool- clinch a deal. "On the one hand, I'd r-------------..1..------------------------------------~
· say whatever It takes," O'Donnell
Ing them.
"These prtces are just way too said. "But I guess If I had the
answer, I'd be selling a lot more
high tor what they offer you," said
Mildenberger, climbing out of the cars. One or the problems Is that .
front seat of a 1982 Buick Century many people have been out of the
sedan with a sticker prtceo!$10,318. n~-car market for so long.

Confused with IRA Rates and Terms ...

"I just talked with one man who
"My·old car puts everything to
sald
the last time ne bought a new
shame so tar," Mildenberger said.
one,
he
paid $3,WJ for a !arnlly sized
"As the saying goes, 'There ain't no
car.
Today
he walks In and the
way.' It's justtoomuchmoneyfora
same
car
has
a sticker or SlO,(XX)."
mid-sized car, which Is about the
size I want.l'lljust keep the car I've ~-----------1
got."
.
Added Mrs. Mildenberger, "Or
buy another used car. It seems like
the quality Is better on the older

iamon

'·

.'

'

. ' .,''

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•
I
•
1n

.

-

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"

...

WMPO

on

SATURDAYS
1 til Noon

INDIVIDUAL
RETIREMENT

AccouNTS

. ..

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

SAVE~&amp;

40-%

We "buy direct from the factory and in large volume,
which is a tremendous savings. l'llstead of keeping
t'1at savings for Qurself, we pass that savings along to
you, and throw In a big·savings to boot, giving you the
lowest prices nn living room suites anywhere.

ALL SUITES MARKED WAY BELOW
REGULAR -SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICESI

New 2 J1t. E. ( ' .'

ACME

• FLEECE .LINED BOOTS,

things."

.policemen. "I watch very carefully
my actions. I do not have the powers or arrest, but If an officer ordefl!
oH!cer.
. me to detain someone, that's what!
The ltnanclal problems raced by do," Fofl!ythe said.
the department left only the chief
As for the foot patrols, Forsythe
and one full-time officer In this sub- said, " I don't know whether there's
urban Toledo community of about a need for lt, but we walk In Genoa,
. 2,500.
.
checking locked doors and jllst be"They have really helped," Tru- Ing In the neighborhood."
The patrols pald orr last Hall()man
said.\I ''They dispatch, take
care of mlrior complaints - like If

The cai-s are beautiful, the
crowds agree. The sUcker prices
are the thorns among the roses.
"It used tD be that there were so
many people waiting to get Inside,
even the salesmen had to shove
their way through the crowds,'' recalled Herb Innes, a 20-)•ear veteran truck · salesman. "The cars

HOODED SWEATSHIRTS

• WESTERN
BOOTS
WELLINGTON

we have a dog running at large or
the minor misdemeanOr types of

.,

New.car shows are the closest
event tD winter ·entertainment that ·
Detroit produces. Under the roof of
the Lucas County Recreation Center, people can examine the exotic
Porsches, the engineered BMWs,
the now boat-like CadUlacs, the
sporty mld-~lzed A!"erlcan cafl!
trYing to compete with foreign
cars, even the traditional suburban
station wagon.

• INSULATED COATS
-+c

Gr1;0A, Ohio {AP) -Explorer
scou~ have come to the rescue of
the ~noa Pollee department.
Facing a manpower problem
with the loSs of five full-lime dlspatctters after a cut tnfederalltmds
and the layoffotlOparNimepatrol- .
men, ·the department now relies
heaVIlY on the Genoa Pollee Explorer troop.. .
The troop was started seven years ligo by Pollee Chief Gary Truman. It now numbers nine
explorers and one cadet pollee

police duties

ones." ·

Mr. and Mfli. Joe Gaston, Albany
Rt. 3, are announcing the birth of
their first child, a son, Aaron Mercy,
on Dec. 24, 1981 at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Athellll. Grandparents include Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Gaston, local, and Mr. and Mr,~.
Ronald Dille, Albany. Goldie
Gillogly, Albany, is a greatgrandmother.

. . .,0

Astrograph
January 29, 198Z
You are likely to be more restless than usual this coming year and
t'Onsiderable travel is likely. Several short trips, as well as one of Ion~
duration, could be in the offing.
AQUARIUS (JaiL 20-Feb. 191 If you're in need of a favor tciday
from someone you don't know too well, it's best to let a friend who
knows this pefl!On better intercede for you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Ma.-.,h 20) Don't be hesitant about standing up
for your rights today if someth!ng is owed Y.Ou. A gentle reminder
could set matters straight.
ARIES (March Zl·Aprll 19) Some adjusbnenL• may be required
today regarding a venture involving friends. If it's handled properly,
all will benefit equally.
TAURUS (Aprli20-May 20) Even though you may prefer to stay in
the background today, conditions could rnake it necessary for you to
asswne control of a situation affecting your reputation or career.
GEMINI (May 21·Juoe 20) Conipanions or associates could be a
trine lethargic today, so it will be up to you to arouse them to action if
you hope to advance joint interests.
CANCER (June 21-July Z2) Your possibilities for success in what
you set out to do today are very good, provided you don't rely upon
Lady Luck instead of hard work.
,
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Avoid making hasty judgments ord"ecisions
· today. You could initially overlook pertinent facts. You won't miss a
. trlck after a second study.
VIRGO (Aug. Z3-Sept. Z3) Try not to be preswnptuous today, or
feel your ideas are superior. Problems can be resolved if all concerned
. are given a chance to make a contribution.
LIBRA (Sept. %3-0ct. Z3) Don't be afraid to bargain a bit today tn
business, or wlien purchasing a costly item. You can gel better terms
' by negotiating a llltle further.
samPIO (Oct 24-Nov. Z2) There ls material opportunity around
you today, but lf you take things for granted you might overlook it. Pay
attention to even the smallest signals.
SAGI1TARWS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You c!luld start off a bit in; . differently today, but once involved in sQmething challenging, your en. thusiasm will be aroused and you'll play to win.
· ·cAPRICORN (~let!. ZWIID. 19) Your possibilities for personal
: gain _loot promising today in situations where YOII call the shot.s. In
.· matte~:' where others are involved, you may not do as well.

~outs ·handle

The

Diamond's IRA rate will be higher than any
advertised rate in Ohio. ·

FINAL DAYS,
ENDS SATURDAY
·
-. .

heritage house of shoes
N. 2nd Ave.

Contact your local Diamond office for full details,
or call Diamond's IRA Information Center.

Oh.

ALL LADIES'
~ESSES
/r 1h PRICE
-

TOLL FREE

..

1·800·472·9588

I.

New 2 pc. Livil&amp;
Room Suite

MISSY
r HALF&amp;SIZES

.,
I

D
SW..OS

D

....

.

BAHRCLOTH
Middleport, Ohio

••

AND' MN COMPANY

. . 216.W. MAIN IT. ·POMIROY. OH.

PH. H2-66S5

Accoun" lntutH to

sroo.ooo~, FSLIC

..,..
.,

�'

8 The

Daily Senti~l

. PotMror-Middlee!rt, Ohio

Thunclayr Janwu( 21, ~912
·
r
Culprit promises to not repeat offense
'1

-

Some 'find blackjack infectious
1'

. FARGO, N.D. (AP) - Sweartng
Is discouraged, the music Is likely
)o be a local band, and thedrlnl&lt;ll1g
Ia controlled, but' on most nlghts,
the blackjack tables are crowded In
North Dakota bars and motels.
~i'l)e ~ttlng llmlt Is $2 a hand. U
yoipose. the money goes to charity.
· Since the state put blackjack on
Its charitable gambling llst In July,
J'IIQre than ~· playing sites have
been opened across the state by service groups rangiJ!g from a com·
rmlnlty theater to the state's public
. tel~lon network to the Multiple
: SClerosis Society.
~argo. a city or 62,&lt;XXl on the Min·
lll!$0ta border, Is suddenly seeing
tourists from nelghbortng Mlnllea·
polls and Winnipeg, Manitoba
. come to play blackjack. " It's
c~aper than Las Vegas," said one
: C)lstomer.
: '· Bar sales are climbing and at
~tone motel has built a new addl·
:ttP.n just for l!lackjack tables.
North Dakota lawmakers are
s~ at Its success.
''We were looking for a way to
. !illOw people to do legally what they
: wm do anyway - gamble - and
lor a way to help out the charities,"
said state Rep. Pat Conmy, a co·iponsor or the blackjack law. "We .
'didn't think blackjack would be so
'popular, We were awfully naive."
The bars and motels lease sec·
.. lions of their establlshments to the
service groups. Larger motels
have from six to 15 tables In the bar
area, where players trade names
·and make small talk as the cards
) all, Profanity Is frowned upon; and
'pit bosses firmly escort those who
. have had too much to drink away
· !rom the table.
· "Youcanmaybewln$100or$200,
but with a $2 betting llmlt you have
:10 play quite awhile," said Duane
' Hoppe, who drops Into a local tav'ern three or four times a week to
.: play blackjack.
;' "I just play lor the heck of It, not
.• to win a bunch of money," said the
· tall bar manager from Moorhead,
. .: Minn.
: '• · He says bars In Moorhead,
across the Red River from Fargo,
•have lost business because or black·
.: jack, although they stlll get the col·
·. l~e crowd pecause Mlnllesota's
:·drlnklng age is 19 and North Dako. ;lA's is 21.
; : : "It's stlll too early to tell how

: ~much It's Increased our business.

: • But we are seeing a number of peo- :;ple staying longer," one Fargo
; ri\~1 1118nager said.
·• Bob Myers, general manager of

:; 11M: Fargo-Moorhead Community

.

COLOR

•NoAgeUmit
•Umit I Per Person
eOne Special Per Family
•Single or Groups Taken
CHARITABLE BLACKJACK - With a bettlug
Umit of $2, blackjack is a way to •octaltze in North

direct figures, but "I suppose when
you consider the number of tables
and the people needed for each ta.
ble, It does add up to quite a few
part-tbne jobs."
Charitable gambling brought In
$3.5 mllllon In gross receipts last
year between July and September,
' That compares with $4.9 Jhllllon
during the first half of i98l. before
blackjack was legal. Bingo, rattles,
and sports pools were allowed
earller.
Blackjack managers say It costs
$12,(XX) to $20,(XX) to set up a black·
jack operation. The state allows the
groups 35 percent for operating

see the $2 llmlt Increased. Mean·
while, Conmy said he's received
calls and letters !rom people who
wonder whether the state .has gone
too far.
State Attorney General Robert
Wefald knows of four violations.
One,club manager mtsused money
and two other clubs ran gambling
activities not specified under the
law. A Fargo man was chargea 1n
December with keeping around
'$5,(XX) from a tip jar and bingo
operation.
IntemaJRevenueServtcespokesmen saY they are concerned about
the amount of money Involved 1n

costs and collects a 5 percent tax
which goes Into the general revenue fund.
·
Some operators say 35 percent is
not enough and others would like to

North Dakota gambling operations
and aretnvestlgatlngtheposstblllty
that some of it may be subject to a
business Income tax.
·
Fargo PoliCe Chief Edwin Ander·

son said he hasn't seen an Increase
in the crime rate because of black·
jack but added, "You've got a new
business,' which obviously is going
to create vtolaUons S0011E'r or

1

!.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

FLORIST
t;:H. 992·2644.

JS2 E. Main, Pomeroy

~iiiiiivioiuriFiTiDiFitioiriisti.iiii~~ij~

-

.••'" WESTERN BOOTS
•

~

..
.

· .REG . .39 .95

~

NOW '2500

SiMON'S
.PICK-A-PAIR · _. '
IN THE HEi{'t'YoF, .

RE HAVE WE

in the state of Ohio, at the close rf business on December 31, 1!1111, published in response to
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 181.
Charter number !1815

National Bank Region Number 4

- - - : - - Statement of Resource• and llablltttes
Tb-Ddlt
Cash and due from depository institutions •. ••.•••••••••• •• • •••••••••••••••••• 1,679,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities •• •••••.•••••••••• , •• •••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••• · ••• 2,069,000.00
Obligations of States and political
·
subdivisions in the United States . .............. . ......... . .. . ........... 1,377,000.00
All ot her secur1·t·1es ••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••••••••.••• •••• •••••• • • ••• • n~oo
, ·
Federal funds sold and securities purchased

.,

Less : Allowance for possible loan losses ........................ 129,~.00

GROUP MEDICAL BENEFITS .

---+-

for sm~ll businesses and individuals, we off~r bas1c co~erage, major medical, outpa·
, fle':'t, group ltfe, and disability benefits, and
· ret!rement funds. For personal attention,
. wr•te:

:a-

HARVEST INSURANCE
· C/o M . Taylor, Rt. 1, Box 164
Little Hocking, Ohio, 45742
or Phone: 1-989·2256
Between 6 anlt 8 p .m .

Iu.~===============~~~~~~

COATS

...
ID
c
...

t:

-

Bank premises, furniture and fixures, and

..

a •••••••••••

I •••••••

10,227,000.00

.

other assets representing bank premises.
lot IQI 00 - - ·
TOTAL ~ETS ••••••• • •• • ••. • • •••••••• •••••••• .. ••••••• • •••• • ~ ••• • • • • • •' 18,873,000.00
U

OU 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 OU 0 0 0 0 U

Demand deposits of individuals, partner.Jhips,

•• OU a

.1 2PRICE

.....

a O aU I

'

and corporations •• • ••••••••• •. •• • •• • • • ••• •• •• •••••••• • • ••.••• • •••••• •. 3,062,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
·
partnershiR8, and corporations ••••• •••••••••••• 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • .11,~,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ••• 1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 33,000.00
Deposits of States and political
subdivisions in the United States .................... . ... . . .. .... • •.• • ••• • ••• 828,000.00
Certified and officers' checks •••••••• •••• •• • •• • •••• • • • • • • I~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • tf1 ,000.00
Total DeP99its ••••••••• •• ~ •••••••••••••••••• , . .......................... . .. 15,473,000.00
Total detnand deposits. · •· .......... . .... •. •• .............. • 3,715,000.00
Total time and savings deposits ••••••••• •. •• •• • • • • •• •• • • • • 11,758,000.00 ·
-

Barren leads group
:' The organizational meeting of the
Rutland Township Trustees was
held recently at the Rutland Fi~
House with Charles Barrett, Jr.
being elected president, apd Leo .
Morris, vice president.
· Newly elected trustee, Charles
Williamson, was given the oath of of.
fk:e.
. Regular meetings will be held on
·the last Thursday of the month at
8:30 11.m. at the Rutland Fire House.
The budget for 1982 will be prepared
· at the Thursday, 6:30p.m. meeting.
The public is invited to attend.

TOTAL UABIUTIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures) •••••••••••••• ••••• ••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• 15.473.000.00
Corrunon stock
No. shares authorized
6,~ par value
No. shares outstanding 5,000 par value •••••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••• •••••· 125,1110.00
Surplus •••••••••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 125,000.00
Undivided profits and liierve for contingencies ·

and other capital reserves. •••••••••••••••••••••••• •. • • •• • • • • • •• • ~ • • •• • • ·I,I:IU,IMI.UU

.

1'()TAL EQUITY CAPITAL,,,. •• ••• , •• ••• •• ••• ••• • •• •• • • ••• • • • •• • • • • •• • • •• J,.,IIU,,'\N·'.,
TOTAL UABIIJTIES AND EQutTY CAPITAL •••••••• • • • •• • • • •• • •• • • • •• ••• ~~~~
Amounts outstanding as of report date :
=
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
of ,100,000 or more.,,. •• ••• •• ••• ••,, • • •••••••• •• • • • •• • •• ••• •• • • • •• • • •• •• • DJJO,UUOI.~
Average of 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
eoding with report date :
· Total deposits •• •.•• •••• ••••• ; ••• •••••••• ••••••••••• ••••• ••••• ••• •••••••• ~-.14,451,000.00
. hereby declare that thiS Report of Condition Is true and
correct to the best of my knowledge and belief.
1
Gary P. Norris, CaShier
January 22, 1982
We the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this sta~nt of resources llld
Uabllities. We declare that it baa been eumtned by us, and to the best of our.knowledge ad
belief is true and correct.
·
John T. Wolfe
Clarence V. Price - Directors

-)

~.

I ·

,

:..,.Mark~t report

.

'~

oi1o V•IJey Uvnt«k Co.

'
Mllrtel Report
. S.le ev~ry Saturdlly tl l p.m. Prit.'t..&gt;s taken
from lht• &amp;Ut.'lion of S.lurdly. J11n. 23. Tnmda :
Veal c11IVts !k'ady, feeder e~Uk! t tddy, r..&lt;uws tl

toll.IOI\W"'". Totallleodill.

. Ft.'l'tlt\' Sk-cN: Good •nd Choice, ~ to 300 lt.
'51411.51'. 300 to taO lt.. 41-M: 400 to 500 lbtl • .._
18.58: 181 to tOO lt.. 47.»46: IGCI to 700 lbs. 46-6.1 :
7«1 toiiOJbl. ~~ ~ • Mnd 0¥!1"41-63.$0.
• F~rHeifen : GoodlndChotl.-e 25fto300lbl.

~ !, Gary P. Norris, Cas~er, of the above-named bank do

Charles D. Yost

MUST GO!

Motor vehicle owners whose last ·
named start with A orB have until
Monday morning to have their new ..
liCense stickers on their vehicles. ..
;I'he Meigs Motor Vehicle Regis- ··
b-ar's office Is located at the former
Ctbbs Grocery building on Mul· .
~rry Ave., In Pomeroy and ls go- ~
· lng to be open from 5: 00 t 7 p.m.
Friday and from 9 a.m. to 12 noon
Saturday In addition to regular
110urs for the convenience of vehicle
owners.

Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) ........ . .... • .. • • . 10,356,000.00

0 •• • •••• 0. 0 . . . . . . . . . .

AND IT ALL

Tag deadline near

under agreements to resell •••••••••• ••• , ••••••••••••••••••• •••• ••• • • • • • 1,400,000.00

446·0332

N ESRU~~F2· aEAUT'FUL
HAD
ON OF
·.
COLLECT'
CHOOSE
MERCHAND'SE TO
FROM-

Thelma Eagle to Blauser Energy
Corp., Right of way, Olive.
Patricia F. Marcinko, Thomas J.
Marcinko to Patricia F. Marcinko, ·
Thomas J. Mar,cinko, Parcels,
Olive-Orange.
'
'
'Ellen Couch to Mary Elizabeth
Thomas, Walter Robert Couch, Lot,
Pomeroy.

~

LAQIES'

Thur-Sat
10am-9pm

Property
transfers

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

•

FURNITURE . Hours : 9· 5 Daily .
GALLERIES
9·8Mon . &amp;Frt .

WOMEN &amp;CHILDREN

POMEROY, OHIO
· Photos by Honey Portraits

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries of the

IAans, Net . ...................

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

Our January Clearance events are over
but we still have merchandlae that MUST
. GO! We've drastlcly reduced prlcea on
hundreds of name brand color TVa,
major appliance&amp;, and . thousand&amp; of
yards of beautiful carpets, but if the price
is too high, " MAKE US AN OFFER."

COLUMRUS - The proposed
Co1nprelwnsive Sod a I Scrvicl'S Plan
iCSSPI for Ohio for July L 1982-Junt•
30, 1983, will be available fur public
review and comment al county
welfare okpartmcnl&gt;; throughout I he ·
state between Feb. 1 and Mard 117. ·
The CSSP olt•tails the st!I'Viccs
countY welfare dcparhnL'I11 propose
to make available to clid blc persons
in Ohio in aco:ordance with Title XX
of the &amp;lcilil Security Act.
Public hearings on the CSSP will
be held by the county welfat•c dcpat··
hnenl in evl.!ry county between Ft'b.
I and March 17. Contact the local
county welfare departtrll'nt for date.
time, and 11iace. Tl-., Ohio Depal·
mcnt of Public Wclfart• will hold a
statewide hearing on Feb. 24 , 1982 at
9:30 a.m., in the Lobby Hearing
Room of the Stale Office Tower, 30
Easl Broad SLreet, Columbus. Ohin.
Written cnmment.s may be sent to:
Ohio Deparlmetil nf Public Welfare.
Title XX Unit. ao·East Broad Street,
33rd Floor, Columbus, Ohio 43215 .
The CSSP may be rcvicwt'ti at the
county welfare department or a free
copy may be obtained by sending a
self·addressed tnailing label to :
Proposed 1983 CSSP. Ohio Depart·
ment of Public Wt•lfare, Manual UI&gt;dates, Division of General Support
Servk,;,s, 30 East Broad Street, 32nd
Floor, Columbus, Ohio 43215.
..

REPORT OF CONDITION.

1~~;;;;;;;~~;;;:===:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~~~

.: River disaster

·',.' .

PLACE

Voor " Extra Toucb"

~rlatSln&lt;rtl57

;ii;;:--j

CORNER SECONDANDGRAPE
GALLIPOLIS

Fri., 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sal, 10 a.m. to 4:30
p.m.
. j

,-------------1

CLEA RA.NCE ·SALE

.

Photographer's
Hours:

later."

DURING ·
TOPE'S SEMI-ANNUAL WINTER

1ij
ORrJ'

Fri., Jan. 29th and
Sat., Jan. 30th

DATE:

Dakota, which legaliled the card game in July for
charitable purposes. I AP Laserph•itol

- - --......l--.-

MEMPHIS,
TeM. in
(AP)
-The ·.
:: WQrSt
rlver disaster
American
::; history will be replayed on nearby
:: IV!u&lt;! Island, beg1nntng In July.
The tragedy, which occurred
: north of Memphis, was the sinking
. - April 27, 1865, of the Mlsslsstpppt
. ;: River . steamer Sultana, which
· :: clabned 1,400 lives.
:,: . The theater on Mud Island is part
• of a $63-mllllon, !!0-acre education
- and entertainment center that will
·:' open this summer:

IJ'Jf'ICI/f •• •

for review

f sources we're drying up," he said.
•• "We felt our ability to deliver serYI• f- ees would be severely hampered- .
: : t!!ipectaliy our children's iheater -.
• ~ and that we mlght.be forced to raise

·-..

\tll~jll IN

Plan available

ONLY

"We ·realized federal cutbacks

Om. said
even were
casinocurious.
operators
:: from
Las Vegas
; "I think they expected wooden
' floors and spittoons," Drenth said.
: : · "Tiley saki it looked nice, but they
::; didn't seem worried about too
· .., much competition from us."
: Roxanna Clower, who runs · a
: dealers school In Fargo, estbnates
• 350 people have taken the 32-hour
~ ciourse since ttstarted.lnMay. She's
. ~ taught many coJJege students, a
:·. few lawyers and several
. ~ ; grandmothers.
•
"People need jobs and the hours
~ are flexible," she said. Starting sa·
: laries vary, but dealers can make
: ts or $9 a night.including Ups.
'
Fargo Chamber or Commerce
. :: Director Ken Larsen said he has no

Terty Deem was elected president
and Roger Wilford was named fire
chief when the Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Deparlme!lt held its
organizational meeting recently.
Others elected were Larry
Milhone, vice president ; Nita J ean
Ritchie, secretary : Carolyn .Tripp,
assistant secreta ry and Jeff
Householder, treasurer.
Bob Tripp was named board of
director.and Lamar Lyohs, assistant
chief.
In 1001' the deparbnent answered
11 structliral fires ; 10 brush fires ;
six automebiles; seven public ser·
vice calls and had four false alanns,
a total of 311 calls. The department
had a total income of $9,975.10 and
expenditure s
of $9,676 .18 .

IN LIVING

· ~"were on the way and that our publlc ·

; . DaveDrenth,whomanagesthe
:. theater's tables at the Doublewood

lJ*nddi't"•

·8x10

: ~based on economics.

..

TueiJia= ,

Deputy Dan Bendel' laid ~~~~ MS
on a routine patrol
ing when a call came
tilt!,
radiO that somebody wu
,
dog bowls from Maraha
front porch.
.
.
I
Ms. Stoddard said she ll..s que
' suspectstnmlnd,butlbeilnt~,a
neighbor's St. Bernard •.. Ud an
Iron-clad allbl Hewaa tied to a~·
Betlder said.

PHOTO SPECIAL

SAVE ON TRULY FINE _
FURNITURE NOWI

~~ =&gt;~yerssald, but"thetrendts

•

bY ·the name "Blacky," has been
set tree with a stem warning not to
be a repeat offender.

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jii;iii;;;::ijiiijj-ji-;jiiijjji;·

:·;::ticketprtcestothepolntwherethey
would not be attordable."
~ • With only a month's experience,
r the theater can't say yet how suc·!: cesstul its gambling operation has

•

The C\lnfi!SIIell cuJprtt, wbo goes

;.:·Theater.saldthetheater'sdeclslon
:.IQ sponsor gambling at a motel was .

·· :

DURANGO, Colo. (AP) - The
La Plata County Sheriff's Depart·
ment has cbed case No. ~
wlthom ashotbelngflred an arrest
being made, or a ~rd •b eing
spoken by the culprit.

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

28, 1982

~

•.
,,
)

II =300 IOtoO tho.S&lt;l, 1011 •• 11110 lbo. ll·

~:It;

sto to J100 tho, :tHUG; 110 \o 700 tho.37·

'"'.51;•

st

Ln albl . • .:.0.U.7$: D 1nd OVel 40-

~!r.;~... Buill'

tho.
t
h
o.
tho.
•i~:it,. ,...,...nd bullo300tol001ho.......
Built 000 tho.and up IWI.It.
•sa.w:hier cow• - atiltU. J!l.»; cannen and .

Good ond Olokt 110 to 300
10· 300·,. toO
47-61; tOll to 510 ""·
0 : OOo to 1DD &lt;IJHUO; _,to 7IID 1111.
11~7. : 700 In IDD lbo. IHIJi; 1110 Olld OYa' .

.fl

cullftl•down.

t, v'=.eo
c.toJ. ·
ves48-IO.

210to2111ho.IUHUO.
t 001n1..Ji.
f 1\Jp

POMEROY

t

'

Sowl.,
...lnd .. 41.ltl.-41.25.
PlgJ wtho-·
·~27

Purchases do not Include
delivery-but If you want It
delivered--

MAKE US AN OFFE;RI
'·
.

ILVER .BRIDG
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446 8390

�Pomeroy-Micldleporl,

Ohio

Thullllay, Jan..-y

.
..

21, 91'2

'l

28, 1982

Another paper folds
. PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Even
Ammerman, who told the 250 edt·
as The Buiietin's executive editor
tors and reporters that The Bullel1n
urged ,his gloomy staff to help the
would help employees find new
jobS.
134-year-old newspaper go out In
style, publlsher N.S. Hayden said
Subdued applaUIIe greeted Am·
merman's conclusion: ,.We've got
that lor afternoon da!Ues, there was
only bad
ahead.
two more days to go. Let's do It
" I have no hope lor afternoon
right"
newspapers In metropolitan
Charter &lt;;o •• the oU, communlcaareas," he said Wednesday as be
tlonli and Insurance conglomerate
announced The Buiietin, once the
lllat owns the newspaper, offered
nation's largest afternoon newsThe Bulletin for sale Jan. 6, and
paper, would cease publication
ordered It closed when no buyer
could be found.
with t\5 Friday Issue.
Hayden, whoalsolsthenewspapThe Bulletin Is the fourth large
dally to close In the past six months.
er's president, read the announcement Wednesday at a meeting with
Its demise follows the closure of the
afternoon Washington Star, the
employees. Some cried.
·New York Dally News Tonight edi"This Is one day I wish I didn't
tion and the morning Philadelphia
have to Uve," Hayden told employees. "It's nothing anyofyoudld
Journal.
The problems of The Bulletin and
or dlcln't do."
other afternoon daWes that closed
The closing wtil affect 1,743 fullgenerally have been attributed to
lime employees of lhe newspaper,
competition from evening teievlwhose longtime slogan was "In Phislon news, . tile rrdgraUon ot Sllb- · ladelphia, nearly everybody reads
scrtbers to suburbs and city traffic
The BUlletin."
that hampers afternoon
"In the final analysis, the paper
distribution.
·
was unable to generate circulation
"UntU Friday, no place In the
and additional advertising recountry will have better newspapvenues to create the positive moveers," ·said Executive Editor Craig
ment It needed to survive," J.P.

1'

news

7'

·.OJ'

'

investment; large return. Warit Ads

l
.
~~
~~."

th Jr., president of n....
1. ;
publishing sul;lsldlary.
• U.
statement from Charter'J ~­
quarters In Jacksonville, Fla.
The Bulletin'S Closing, leu ~ 1
two months after the Phfladelpljl- ,
Journal folded, leaves the~'i
!ourth·largest city with two dally . ~
newspapers, the Pblladelplda~·
qulrer and the Pb11adelplda
News, both published by
Ridder Newspapers Inc.
. The Bulletin was fOU!Ided,ln 11*7
.,
as the Cunnmlngs EventDITewraphlc Bulletin.
A gradual decline set In, ~
the early 1900s and the dall:f ctrculallon lead was lost to the Inquirer
In 19!ll, a lew months lifter the
McLean famlly sold the· JIIIP!!' to
Charter and media entreprerleur
Karl Eller, who bowed out a year
ago.
The paper lost $21 •.~ mllll9n last
year and Its clrculatiOD dropped to
less than 400,&lt;m. ·J!llluary losses
were $3 mlUion, IIIIOO,&lt;m inore than
a year ago.
''
'
Ammerman said many advertisers abandoned the newspaper after
August, despite a circulation
Increase.
S
. rrd

nouncement lhal lhe 134-year-old newspaper would
fold alter Friday's edition because of financial
problems. ( AP Laserphoto)
'

. OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -With

38 percent of the nation's 26,&lt;m

highway deaths last year blamed
on drunken drivers, state officials
say laws making II tougher on
Ohioans who drive whUe intoxicated can't come soon enough.
Hearings began In lhe Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday
night on a pair of tough drtvtngwblle-lntoxlcaled measirres.
Earler In the evening, a Columbus group caUing Itself "Mothers
Against Drunk Drivers" staged a
candlelight vigil of about 100 people
outside the Statehouse promoting
tough Dw:I laws.
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose, RHighway Safety Director Eari
Llma, traced the crossovers to DeReich
said he's all lor the
mocrats unhappy with boundaries
crackdown.
drawn In Cuyahoga County andRe"This Is an Issue which Is long
publicanswhollkedlhewaytheDe- •
overdue,
because there Is so much
mocrat plan dealt with districts In
havoc
and
bloodshed on our hightheir aJ'eas.
ways,"
Reich
said.
"Congressional redistricting bUis
The
two
bUis
keep Intact the curare first and foremost very parochrent,
mandatory
three-day jaU
Ial things," Rose, assistant minorsentence
for
first
time
offenders.
Ity leader, said.
·
But
one
of
them,
a
measure
by
He said the Democrat plan would
Sen.
Michael
DeWine,
Rresult In creatjDn of seven dlstrtcts
CedarvUie, stretches out drtvers'll·
Republicans would probably win
and 14 likely won by Democrals . .
Tranter said It would likely result
In 12 GOP districts and seven Democratic ones.
He said the Cuyahoga County
proposal would signal support for
women and blacks by preserving
dlstrlcls now held by U.S. Reps.
Mary Rose Oakar and Louis
Stokes, bolli Cleveland Democrats.
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Some
. But Ms. Boyle said the district In
slaylngs that now could be classiwhich Mottl and Eckart were
fied as voluntary manslaughter
placed was a prime example of gerwould become murder cases under
rymandering. "The fastest way to
a bill passed by the Senate.
get from one end of that district
(19th) to another Is by boat In Lake
Erie," she said.
A Toledo lawmaker- with some
help the Senate - combined two
anti-crime bills Into one Wednesday , and the end product appar. ently will be on the governor's desk
soon.

Senate ready~ to ax
congressional bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A bill
Ohio Is losing two of Its 23 seats as
cutting Ohio's congressional delea result of population shllts noted In .
the 19!ll censu5.
gation by two members has cleared
the House amid charges of genyThe Democrat-drafted House
mandering from both parties and
measure ellrrdnates the seat now
apparently will get th!' ax on the
held by Republican Rep. Clarence
Senate chopping block.
Brown of Urbana, who Is seeking
the GOP nomination lor governor
The House sent the bill to the Senate on Wednesday. Senate majorIn the June 8 primary,
Ity Republicans said they will scrap
It also dissolves one of lhe four
It In favor of their own plan.
congressional "lstrlcts In Cuyahoga County by moving DemoSen. Paul Malia, chairman of the
cratic Reps. Dennis E. Eckart of
elections committee, said the GOP
proposal would be substituted lor
Beachwood and lumald M. Mottl of
the Democratic version.
Cleveland Into the same district.
"We very fairly cut one DemoThe squabbling probably m~ans
crat and one Republlcan," said
the matter will eventually have to
Rep. Terry M. Tranter, the Cinclnbe debated In a House-Senate con. na t1 Democrat who sponsored the
ference committee.
bUt.
The 53-44 House vote was not
Not everyone- agreed.
along party lines. Majority Demo"The districts drawn here will Incrats found 13 of their members votIng against the measure, while 11
deed favor candidates wearing the
label Democrats," Rep. Michael A.
Republlcans crossed party Unes to
Fox, R-Hamllton, said.
support it.
"I would subrrdt to you that the
Redlstrlcllng falls to the General
district carved In Cuyahoga County
Assembly following the federal census every 10 years. Boundaries are
Is one of the worst examples of gerto be drawn to keep the population
rymandering we could come up
with," Rep. Mary 0. Boyle, Dof the districts as nearly equal as
Cieveland Heights, said.
possible.

Passes district plan
COLUMBUS - By a vote of 53 to
44, lhe Ohio House or Representa-

l

tives has passed congressional redistricting legislation with the
support of State Rep. Claire Ball,
R-Athens.
The Athens attorney said the
house measure, House Bill20, basically leaves the lOth Congressional
District of Southeastern Ohio the

same.
"The lOth will remain a 13-county
district comprised of parts of Musklngum and Scioto counties and aU
of Athens, Fatrtleld, Gallia, HockIng, Jackson, Meigs, Lawrence,

Schools•.•

Morgan, Perry, VInton and Washington Counties," Ball said.
"The bUlls good for our area," he
said, "because !t preserves the region's traditional boundaries that
Involve counties with common Interests." He also noted that the new
district will enhance the reelection
of Congressman Clarence Muter
who "has served our region so

-.

Dismisses suit

(Continued from page 1)
for many of the economic problems
In Ohio but did not believe It would
Impose further burdens.
"! don't thi111&lt; Congress will perrrdt more penalties agatnst the Industrial states; we have sullered
enough," Rhodes said. "The people
of Ohio shOUld not · be saddled by
something they cannot control, and
welfare Is au controlled by the federal government."
The governor said Reagan Is "at
the whip end" of econorrdc problems, but that he has veryUtUecontrol over them.
"Unless something Is done about
the national debt, we're going to
have
'OK Corral' shootout-;-and
Paul Volcker has all the guns," he
said.
Volcker Is head of the Federal
Reserve, which controls lhe Oow of
lpOney. Rhodes blames most of ·
Ohio's economic problems on the ·
siphoning effect of · the national .
debt.
"The national debt Is Ukegrass In
the front yard, and nobody mows It,
so you have weeds," Rhodes said.

an

Suits dismissed In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court Include Lloyd D. Johnson and Ardella
M. Johnson against Larry R. Harman; the Farmers Bank and SavIngs Co. against Leonard L. Lentz,
and the Jackson Production Credit
Association against Lentz.
According to an entry !lled In the
court In the action of the Meigs
County Welfare Department and
Mary Ruth King against Joseph
Dale Lawrence, the plalnutts were
were awarded $2,45ilin child support paymen~. ·

system:·

The director said many ciUzens
drive while Intoxicated because
"they have every reason to believe
they can avoid punishment" and
will continue as long as judges and
and prosecutors are not In ·some
way constrained from. plea
bargaining.
Sen. John Kaslch, R-Columbus,
drafted the second bill, which calls
for Wetlme license suspensions for
drivers who cause fatal accidents.

Reich said many of the provisions !n the DeWine bill were
among recommendations made to
Gov. James Rhodes by hJs Study
Group· on Alcohol-Impaired
Driving.
One such Provision Is one under
which .10 pereent blood alcohol content, now used to lliake a presumption that a driver Is Intoxicated,
would become legal proof of 11.
Drivers tested and found to have
lllat amount of alcohol In lhelr
blood would have their licenses suspended immedla!eiY.
Kasich said he Introduced his
measure alter talking to a constttu.
ent wllose husband died In an accident caused by a drunken driver,
leaving her with two chJidren to
support.
"I'm really sore on thlslssue," he
said, adding lhat the least the state
can do In such cases "Is to see that
they never drive again."
Judiciary Chairman Paul
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, llrnlted tlie In·
ltlal hearings to sponsor testimony
and that of ~ch. Other Interested
parties will get the Chance to testify
later, ~e said.

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial

Admitted Lena Baxter,
Coolville.
Discharged - Kenneth Reed,
Marjorie Stewart, Phillip Radford,
Michael Hubbard, Marty Morarlty.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER .

DISCHARGES JAN. 27.
Carolyn Bandy, .Martha Bevan,
Clyde Brown, Diane Carruthers,
Charles Claytor, Jenny Connolly,
Todd Cox, Thelma Crtsllp, June EIchinger, Ruth Fellure, lsalh G(bbs,
Mrs. Jeffrey Gray and daughter.
Ava Greenlees, Wilmer HalfhJU,
Juanita Harrison, Debra Hleronlmus, Lisa Honaker, Joh11 Hopkins,
Dennis Houck, Elsie Howard, Dar. l~ne Johnson, Ace Kerns, Jessie
Kerns, Debra Kinder, Paul Knox
Jr., John Minor, OpaiMltcheil, WtiUam Mullins, Margaret Ohlinger,
Mrs. Jack Payton and son, Darrell
Petrie, BUiy Powell, George Reltmlre, Christina Sheets, Mrs. MIchael Srrdth and daughter, Troy
Snow, Leslie Stepp, Archie Swartz,
Robert Walker.
(

Republican Rep. David Karmol
stood In the gallery as the Senate
passed 32.0 his House-approved bill
to close a loophole In Ohio's voluntary manslaughter statute.
At his request, lhe Senate added
an amendment letting municipal
pollee go outside their city llrrdts In .
· emergency situations to assist victims of crime.

en\ law Is loose enough that In some
situations, · defendants have been
charged with voluntary manslaughter when their actual oltense
was aggravated murder.
The bill strikes "extreme emptional stress" from the law andreplaces It with "the Influence of
sudden passion or In a sudden fit or
rage, either of whlch Is brought on
by the serious provocation of the
victim ..."
Kar.mol said he Introduced hJs
municipal pollee n;easure as a result of an Incident In Toledo last !aU
In which businessman Peter Sawicki was slain.
An emergency call went to the
Ottawa H1).Is Pollee Department,
which was closer, but the call was
relayed to Toledo pollee and by the

daughter, GaWpoUs.

Marriage license

A dlvoree was granted Randall
C. 'Friend from Lucanne S. Friend
In the common pleas court and the
marriage of Dennis L. Musser and
Karen D. Musser was dissolved
with the malden name of Barrett
llelng restored.

FUing lo~ maiTiage Ucense In
Melgs County Probate CoUrt was
George J . Korn, Jr., 26, Pomeroy,
, and Carolyn M. Bartels, 31,
Pomeroy.

An order of foreclosure was flied
In the amount of $4,839.64 In the ac·
tion ot the First Bank of Marietta
against Harald N. Hudnell, et al.

Work will 'li! In the ~raft
degree at a special meeting at
Shade River Muon1c Lodge to be
held at 7: :.1 tonlght.

Meetinar: toni.rht

--•e-:.-·-

,:j....

Moctern Electrical
Equipment
SIMMON'S OLDS.·
CAD.· CHEV., INC.
Ph. 9f.2·U14
308 E . Main Pomeroy,

The \Daily Sentinel
NOTICE OF
SALE
By v;rlue of an Order of
Sale ;ssued out of the Com ·
mon Pleas Court at Meigs
County. Ohio, irlthecaseof
1st Fonanc.;al . Sav ;n9s &amp;
LoanA.ssoc•at1on , pla•ntiff,
vs. Dennis Tillis. et. al ,
defendants,
upon
a
· d
IU gment , thereon ren ·
di!red, being Case No.
17,944 in said Cqurt, 1 will
offer for sal'e, at the front
door of the Court House in
Pomeroy, Meigs Countv
Ohio, on the 27th day of
February , 1982, at ten
o'clocka .m.,thetollowing
lands and tenements , to

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is ~~ereby given
tt1al on Saturday. January
30H! , 1982. at IOoOO a.m. a
public sale will be Mid at
105 Union Avenue
Pomeroy, Oh;o, lo sell for
cast• t1'1e foltow 1· ng
collateral :
19110
. Ford, se·' 1·at No .
FX26
GUHOI608
- F 250 44
n 1 ~ F!Brmers Bank and
sa v 1 ng s
com pan v,
Pomerov. ·Ohio, reserves
the right to Did at this sale,
~nd to withdraw H1e above
vehicle prior to sale . Fur·
tf•er , The Farmers Bank
and Savings CompanY

witSITUATED
:
in the Town ·
ship of Rutland, County of
Me;gs.
Oh ;o, and
boundedState
and of
described
as
1Sollot~s. 8 to wit: Seing in
ec 10n , in the Village of
Rutland. Beg;nn;ng 786.7
feet east and S03 feet north
from the southwest corner
of Section 8, at the nor·
thwest corner of the Chur ch lot; thence South 75
degrees east 181 .5,· thence
north 15 degrees East 90
feet; thence North 75
degrees Vlest 181 .5 feet to
the street; thence south 15
degrees West 90 teet along
the street to the place of
beginning, containing .35
acre, more or less.
Deed Reference: Volume
142, Page 829, Meigs Coun·
ty Deed Records .
The real estate was ap·
·
pralsedatS11,000.00
Terms of Sale: $1,000
cash at time of sale with
the balance in .cash within
thirty (30) days after date
of sale . Deposit to be
waived if sold to plaintiff·
first mortgage holder . .
James J . Proffitt
Sl'leriff of
Meigs Countv
Ill 21.28 I2J 4, 3tc

reserves
to relect
any
or all the&gt;
biasright
subrhitted
.
Fur1t•er , vehicles are
sold
' in lt•e COndlt;on they
~rei~ with no ex.pressed or
lmplledwarrl!nt•esgiven.
(1)25,26, 27 , 28. 29,ltc

S&amp;W TV
· •
and

APP
LIANCE SERVICE
Chester., Ohio

.pH, 98"-~•259.
985-.• 301
Y'

1

Vt' nyl &amp; Alum•'num
SIDING

BISSELl
SIDING CO,

"Beau'tiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding
estimates, 949·2101 or
949 . 2860 .
No Sunday Calls
3·1Hfc

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

GET

AMIIIOI

And Home Maintenance
e Roofing of all types
e Siding
• Remodeling
• Free estimates
e 20 Yrs. experience

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Let George Miller
check your present
electrical system.
•
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
sE RV l·c E"

- ••••••:.. nmodo&gt;;n0

- Roet l llt•ndt.llntrwor~

- •••ctriulwork
P'"m';"''"' '
C Fret Estimates)
V. C ~ YOUNG Ill
.
992·,621Sor992·731 4
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·tfc

PUUINS
EXCA
. vATING
••• Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks

•La-Boy
• Trencher
ewater esewer
eGas Lines
• SePtic
SYstems
large or Small Jobs
· PH . 992·1478
1·21 ·1 mo. pd .

t&lt; eep This Ad For
Future Rtftr~nce

APPUMCE
SERVICE

Call Ken Young
·r r=or Fast Service
985·3561
PAilTS AND

s'E A' VICE

ALL MAM ES

,---------:-------------1 1~:-:"'""=='"':-:;:o;;;:::---':!!.1
1
·

Curb inflation II.
I
I Pay ·Cash for III
I
I Classlfleds and 1l
· .
1'
1_ 1. 1
Say.
·I'
I
l.
I

ha••

lo ,,..... we·u
1o
you folks over 10 dinner at
piaet real lOOft! "

'5 tfr;

•uv

lt-Ra~IIIO,

TV ,
&amp; Cl Rt!Nir
11-Wantecll To Do

eFINANCIAL

nan, R-Cinclnnati, who handled the
l~llon In the Senate, said pres-

3. - - - - ''--4. _

-

__:;::..__ __

s. - -;--- - -

'· -i-- - 7.
•· -+- - - -

Answers 3 caDs

2t- lutlfttll

20. - - - - - -

'· + - - -- 29.----- 10. -+--- - 30. _ _:_,·_ _ __

Three calls were answered.by local emergency units on Wednesday
and thJs morning, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service

11. -+-~--12- + - -- 13.
. 14.

-+- -- - u. -+- - - --

reports.

-1--- -- -

":

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

I, Ca~u~~nwith Remittance

sentinel
111 Court St.
,..,nerCIY, Oil. 45769
na.llfl

eRENTALS

41 -HOVI... torlltrlt
42- Mtbilt Hotrt"
hWRMI
...._._.,. ...,"Mntt ror REnt

U-fllurnhMd RMml
44-SPitl fOf" Rtnt
47-want.-" Rtnt
46-l!lllul,flttltr fer Rent
49-fllor Lttll
S1-H.,US.tltl4 Goods
u-ca, TV,Itldlo equipment
n-An.Uqun
Sf-Mite. ~ctltndllt
H - llllhUnt SUPitiiU
St-Pttl tor S.lt
17-MIIIIc:tltnstrumlt{lf
.st-Fr111t1 &amp; Vf91t••m
n-For Sttt or Tratlt

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
, 1_ Farm Equt,.,..,.t

to •uy

d-LI""tOCk

IJ-PrOfHiiMal
Slrii'ICU

eREAL ESTATE
lt-Hom4ttftr5111
U - MOftflt Hllt-.s
fW Ult
JJ-FarlftiiH S•ll
).t- ltrtkttU lvllflltlt

hta
...-H•y&amp;Or•ln
u-SMCt &amp; Fertlllror

eTRANSPORTATION

71 -Autlllllf'S.II
11- Tru£kl f.- hit
71-Vtn1A4Wf'. D.
7+--M.torcrctft
n-- I uti I Moten

n - Loti a Acn•••

76-Auto Parts I

36- Ritl EStlte w•ntH
31- RilltOrl

n-.t.uto Rt,.lr

A(CIUM ..I

71-Citrt,.•l EQUIIIN'IIflll

SERIIICES
Wani·Ad'lld ..rllslng
Deadlines
Mol'ldt'f 7:00on S•turd•v
Tutth&gt;V ftlrv FrleiY'l :ll t' .M .
, ..... ., ....... lutiiCitiOn
swn..y 2:11P.M. Fr.,..y

33.
34.
35.

BEVERLY WICKLINE
NOW AT

8-A BEAUTY
IN RACINE

1··2-i· l mo.

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN
used Color TV Sets for

Sale.
SALE PHONE NO.

992-6259

U6 Svc•more St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21 · tfc

r~~==========~·~·~c~~~~~~~~~~~~

•1-Wat~t.-

~ll'f

U - MOMV 10 LOU

21. - - - - - 22.
23.
24.
25.
26.
27. - - -- - 28.------

6 IS tf

eMERCHANDISE

11-Http W1nlecl .
n-Sttutti.,. Wtntecl
tl-tns.uraftc.
!4-luslntss Trtlnlnt
IJ-5Ct'IOOIIIniii'IICtiCMI

_

AIINOUNCI NG

c. R. MASH

CONSTRUCTION

Custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bllthrooms. remodeling.
pt~mblng, electric. and
healing.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 9?2-6011

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

1.
2. _ _ _ __

Mon .·Fri.8: JO to 4: oo
Ph. 992-6564
1·7·1 mo .

8·20·tlc

7- Yud Stll
t-Pultllc Stll

.

P:.~~~n:4~fstl

I

AI$
...... 1.011 tnd f&lt;OU!Id

-

P&amp;~t~3~~'f.ls~GS

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

~HippY

17.
18.
19, - - - --

Jl.

CALL 949-2320

eDI•hwuhen
e Hot W•ttr T11nllt

PHONE 992·2156

1:-C1 rCI of TINinlll
?-In MtmOrltm
:J-Annovnctmtllll
4-0ivtaway

)Wanted
) For Sale
)Announcement
JFor Renr

Iron &amp; Metal)
Now picking up junk
e~uto bodies . Top prices
paid for auto b~les,
scrap Iron and metals.
1
mile west of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt..

.....
"•··
•DIIpoul'

WANT AD INFORMATION

eANNOUNCEMENTS

• J

·-..

Meigs Co. Ana Codt
614

992-Middteport
Pomeroy
915-Ch..ter
343- Portt•nd
241-Letort Foils
·t4t- Rac lne
7C2-R utland
667-Cootvllle

Mason Co., w. va.
Area Code 31H
675- Pt. Pl~asant
458-leon
516- Apple Grove
77l-Mason
882-New Haven
89S- Lefart
937-Bulfalo

tensive remodeling.
• E lectric~l work
• R ooflng work
14 .Years Experience
Greg Roush
Ph , 992-7583
or 992·2282

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
1n Meigs County

1n Gallia Countv

446-2342

1 mo .

992-2156
675-1333

BOGGS

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

SALES &amp; SERVICE
.ut · · as t
.
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deater
Farm Equipment

Parts &amp; Service

1·3·tfc

'

_,

s Rt so E

11- H.,..tlmprenmttth
U --PIUifiiUII &amp; HttHftl

1:1-IEI!CIYIIiltf
114-Eitcftlelll

Rllffl..,an..

IJ-Gtlttrll H"lllftt
...... M.H. R,_.r
17- U,....Itrr
,

Rates and Other Information
u,touwor.. ... IM .. 'fl•Mrti• · ·· · · · ··· ····· ··.·· · · · · · ·· u ...

Ul to 1S wordl .. . HlrHd•y Hllef'fi~W~ .. . ............ . . , . , , , , , M.ll
U.. te UwMrft ... •1•41ySNIMrlllln .. ... . .. . .. . . . . .... , , • • . $7,11
CAvtt.,.4w--.,.rtiM)
~.. HMN II in. tM 'V tnl Utft I n I CCI"" MIY Witrl Col"wltft .,.... . 2S Ctftf cfNirll ..,. 14111 carryfnl It• NumW I• c.,, er
T,_JitiHMt.
fiM "•ltlhlwr
rillllt tel ••• tr rtitct '"Y aft-.....
MlljKt....l. ht "-'~lltfter Wltl Mf . . ,...,....,... fir tMN IUa M1
IMGI'rec:t tMtrfit11.

...,_...,Hit

wan1Ad

G£TYDUR-W1111A

!P
. omeroyScrap

HAll STYLING

~7

Write "your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. cancel your ad by pnone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

w•NTED
n
. TO BUY
SCRAP

!lothMso&amp;IIDmon

• Df',-en

Sizes from 4 ro I and an
wood buildings 24xl6.
Insulated Oog Houses

Nam•~--------------~

Water·S!!wer·E lectric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook -ups
Septic Tanks
CounfyCertlfled
Roush Lane
Chest11re, Oh.
Ph . :U7·7560
1·7-ltfc

-.Tho11o&amp;lot.

Utility Buildinp

I
I

REESE • . ·. . .' :.. .
TRENCH. lNG
SERVICE

.w.,...,.

All SlEEL

AdCJreu---------

PH . 992·5663

'"

- concnte-.Of'k

Sizes st•rt from JOx24"

time they arrived, Sawicki had
been fatally shot, he said.
Karmol said the reilson lhe Ottawa Hills pollee could not respond
was that It they were Injured, they
would not be covered by dlsab1Uty
benefits.
He also said their survivors' peQ,
slon benefits could be Jeopardized,
as well as their governmental
Immunity.
Municipal officers can go Into adjoining communities to help with
law enforcement under present law
I! the cities Involved have a contract, Kar.mol said.
H~ bill riow goes lllick to lhe
House for COnsideration of the Door
amendment and some other
changes by the Senate Judiciary ; • •
Cornrrdttee.

" ' South Third

Middleport, Ohio

CONSTRUCTION

New Homef='-eK-

1-1-1 mo.

'BUILDINGS

.
Kannol and Sen. Richard H. Fi-

At .10:40 p.m., the]'omeroy unit
took VIckie Heldreth from Fl•her
St. to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
.The Rutland Unit at 1: 23 p.m.
took Cathy Riffle, Beech Grove
Road, to Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland al8o took Jackie Petrie,
Beech Grove Road, to Holzer Medl·
cal Center at 5:14 a.m.

For all vour
wiring needs.

· REPAIR WORK
1 Gas &amp; Electric
eCutting
1 Braiing
120 Yrs. EKp.
Reasonable Rates

ROUSH

Real Estate

Ge,.er'al

REALTY
George s. Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
OFFICE 741·1003
MOBILE HOME
14'x52', excellent condl·
tton, total electric, 2
bedrooms. equipped kit·
chen. Must see this,
asking $9,500.00.
PRICE REDUCEOII Ordlnarv? No way I! Or·
dfnarily this home could
not be offered for such t~
fantastic price, but the
owner wants to move
out of state. L.ovely 3
bedrooms, total electric, 1'12 baths,.carporet .
Situated on I acre .
Ask;ng only $30,000.00 .
Super 1errltic buy! I I
HANDYMAN'S DREA·
M ....: This older 3
bed.room home needs
repair but the location Is
excellent end Is situated
on approx . 2112 acres
across from the Rutland
Grade School . Asking
$18,000 . 00 .
Make
reasonable otter.
\
SPACiOUS
AND
BEAUT! FUL - Total
electric , 3 bedroom
home with l,.x16 sitting
room, dining room' with
bay window and built-in
china. Modern ki1chen.
FUll ba's ement w/wOOd·
burner . ~eated garage
With automatic door
opener. Priced very
reasonable tor the
qua IUy of the home at
565,000.00. Located on
Mulberrv Avenue in
Pomeroy .
Give us a call 1nd as~
abOuf our Owner Finan·
ced properties with only
1a 10% Interest retell
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·3111 .
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742·3"2
Real Estate

WELDING
lO Years EMperl£!nce
Small Pipelines A
Specialtv
North of R' a~ine
on carmet Road
at Sawmill

J. R. PARSONS

.KINGSBURY

&amp;mss.

- - -· --- - - - -

·:c-c:-~-:-:
Announcements
SWEEPER and sew 1·ng
machinerepeir , parts,. and
supplies.
Pick up and
dellverv . Davis vacuum
c
h
·leaner, one a 1f mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call
U6·029.. ..

l

complete line of Muzzle
Loading Guns and Suppl ies.
Spring
Valley
Trading Co, Spring Valley
Plaza, oi46 · 80~5 .

For bulk _del ivery of
gasoline: heating oil and
diesel fuel. call Landmark.
992 ·2181. Pomerov, on .

1-(614)·992-3325
JUST LISTED - Coun·
try ho'me of 3 bedrooms,
carpet ing, beth, mOdern ·
kit., full basement, fur ·
nace and large lot.
JUST LISTED - 20 yr .
old 4 bedroomer . 2 tull
baths , large family
room ,
bas e ment,
garage and p!tio. Large
lot above all floods in
Middleport.
TRAILER LOTS
Level 3 lots with
Leading Cr . water and

Gun ~hoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun . starting
at 1 p.m. Factory choke
guns only .
Racine Fire Dept. sponsors
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights
6:30p.m., BaShan. F!ctory
choke 12 gauge shotgun.
Flea Market . New
Openlng. 7 days ~ week .
The Hearl of Midoleport. 20
N. 2nd St . tormer1v Martin
General Store. 992-6370.
Income
tax
service .
FeQeral and state income
tex forms, Quarterly repor ·
ts, and W·2 forms will be
done by appointment . see
Wanda Eblin, oilOOO Llll.jr,el
Cliff Rd.. Pomeroy . 992 ·

2212.

.

J 1MS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 30&lt;:675·7397.
Camp Conley .

..

Female Calico kitten. C!ll
ask lor Penny.

2~5 - 93_.7,

3 half grown

.. --- .

CALL:

•,

POMEROY
LANDMARK

2 puppies. smell good with
children. Calloi.t6·71S2.

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

PRICED RIGHT
CAU TODAY!
JA

,.._
f

1

kltt~ns . One
black and white, long hair ·
two bob tailed, real nice.
Call446·3318.
'

Two full blooded German
Shepherds 379·2168 .

'

I

~

S/ITISI'Y YO/IR NEED&lt;;

...

.s puppies.
Half Shepherd and half
Collie . Call388·9306.
To gOOd hOme

4 mo. old yellow Persian
cat. 30H75·2635.

'

'

....
~

,- - Los aridFound
LOST Ladles Armltron : •t
Quartz watch . Color·SIIver
tone. Lost·Saturday arourid . '
Foodland , · Fruths PIUir· · . ·
nnacy, Barrs or Johnsona
Grocery , If found please
call ~- 1486 .

Red Ir ish Setter with fleo
collar, vlncinity of bidwell.
Caii38H710.

992·2259
IIIRGILB . SR.
216 E. 2nd St.

Announcements

4
= =c;;
G:;'IY":e'=
a '::
w':'
ay - =
Bleu,
Ftoorest people crowd
.Jails. Studv . Library . Law. ANV PERSON who has
Science .
Health . anvthing to glve .awev and
Econom ics , · I Military . does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
Weapon7vocat ons .
sale mav place an ad In thts
Rohello
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

E.Mai&gt;•W•
POMEROY,O.

·;:====1=·8=·1=m=o=
. P&lt;l=·=~~ electr
ic. Onlv
ss,ooo .oo
or on time
.
NICE
l or 4
1
bedrooms,
bat~ .
mOdern kit., basement.
nat . gas furnace, and
central air . Carpeting , 4
Mixed Hardwoods
porches, and .66 of an
Delivery Available
acr~ . City water .
or You Pick UD
LAND CONTRACT .One level acre, out·
building •Jx36 used as a
Also Wood Splitter
garage and storage.
For Rent
Nice 2 bedroom home
with furnace , full
John Wise
b3sement, on State road
1614) 742·2131
near storeS . Only
$32,500.
David Price
I LARGE 10 R'OOMS (614) H2·lS56
FREE GAS. 2 full baths,
1·13·1 mo . pd.
woodburnlng fireplace,
large family room.
mOdern kit., darage and
3
acres .
.
MOilLE
3 ACRES - On gOOd
county road in Rutland
HOME
Township. Excellent for
three houses .
PARTS
VER'Y NICE - Corner
Anything for your
lot with garage and 2 ap·
Mobile Home.
ts. Also this lovely 3
bedroom insulated
hOme . Hot waer heat,
ce'ntral air , full
basement ,
formal
dining and nice kit .
Rt. 124
MIMrtvilte, Oh.
· Ph. "2·5517

FIREWOOD

Utah,

General

Phone

CUSTOM

3

Card of Thanks
The fem;ty of Leone Bab·
cock wishes to express
the ir gratitude to relatvies
and friends tor _th~ kind ness shown during her
illness and death and also
thanks to Rev. Vince
waters . Husban· d

j·==========-t:========::;~=========:;l["-;;;:;;,;;:---;;;;;;-i Oscar,sisters
Leota,
and Fern.

'""----------1

His amendment contained the
same language as another bUI he
Introduced In lhe House bot hss
been unable to get heard.

.

Of

Allmakesillndmodels
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
serviceavailable.
l ·J· Imo.

&amp;.t.Ucnon
t-W,ntlld to

• The voluntary manslaughter
pi-oposal Is designed to prevent situations In which accused ldllers
can claim they were under "extreme emotional stress" at the lime
of the crtme.

WELOING SHOP

SERVICE

,_

In Mason Coun1v

Public Notice
- ----------

!.---·-·~~!'1"-·~-·-·--~-~-----

..

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT ,
With Genuine GM
Parts!
(...,

643-Anbla Olot.

D&amp;D

See Mf. Goodwr.nctl For A

Ph .949·2160 or 949· 2482
7·l ·tfc

BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Spurlock,

more

Glllll Co. Area Code
614
446--GIIIIpolls
367-Cheshlro
3N-IIInton
245-Rio Grande
2S6-GU'fin OISI.

1

Thet'1 rlthtl When you 1118
column Inch ·
or
In newiplper edvertielng be it
dltplay , or claaalflld you rtiiCh thouaenda
of poten_tlal buyers th111t ere eiger
to recei"'t, your money-Mving
me1t1ge
ln ...
.

11

C:lllllllifiedtNtRI'II rtJver the
ftJ/ItJwinfl teleflhtJne exrhllnfletc •..

Business Services

TOM HOSKINS

Some slayings could become
·murder·.under Senate bill

w~ll . "

The legislation now goes to the
Senate for consideration. BaU expects lhe bill to be In a conference
committee before It reaches the
Governor's desk.

cense suspensions. The
suspensions would go from 30 days
to slx months In lhe case of first
offenders, to two years lor a second
and life tor a thlrd oltense. Currently, the Penalty lor a second and
subsequent offense Is the same as
that of a first.
DeWine's bUI also would require
a year behind bars for previously
convicted drtvl)rs caught violating
suspensions.
Reich said there were 98,1XXJ DWI
arrests In the state last year but
lllat six out ot 19 of them got off by
plea bargaining - adrrdttlng a
l~r offe!ISE! - . "or sUpping
through . some olher crack In the

SSFUL BUSINEssIS ACINCH
IF YOU USE THEe INCH!

.

Legislature after drunken drivers
NEWSROOM GLOOM - Employecs of the
Philadelphia Bulletin appear to be In shock Wednesday
during a large meeting In lhe newsroom where
PubUsher N. S. "Buddy" Hayden made formal an-

The

NEW LISTING - A J;l·
tie more than a half an
acre of level yard with
a garden area and a
12'x60' Skyline mobile
hOme in the country but
close to town. Total
electric , public water
and readv for vou .

$12,1ioo.OO.

IMMEDIATE POSSES·
SION
This two
bedroom home has new
carpet In the living
room , new eluminum
siding,
Insulation ,
garage and a two st'orv
ce-llar bUiding with 1 118
acres which part is ten·
ced . $24 .900 .00.
MOBILE HOME WITH
EXPANDO - A huge
living room, 2· 3
bedroom ; 1112 bl!ths, all
underpinning, 2 por ·
ches, window A.C.• and
equipped kitchen . No
tano . $9,000 .00.
CLOSE IN - Over six
acres of nice lay ing
cleared land with a
drilled welL Electric
crosses land, but would
have to be pul in. Asking
$11,000.00.
RUTLAND - Ph story
frame home with 7
rooms, 3 bedrooms,
room with
1dining
firep1ac1, and a large
nice lot. J:touse needs
some repair . Asking
$13,000.00.
LARGE KITCHEN - 3
bedrooms, could have
full basement . House
appr,ox. 6 years old, has
a front porch: and is a
gOOd buy al$19,500.00 .
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
GRI
H2-6191
Jeln Trussell 949-'l&amp;&amp;O
Dotie Turner
992· 56f2
Office
992-2259

LOST : Black llo while FoK
Terrier. License No. 88 .
Five Points area. Name
Grasshopper . SSO. reword .
992·3479.
LOST In the town ol Mason,
sm'all brown Chihuahua
dog, c hildrens pet,
Reward~ 304·773·5019.
LOST·TNT area , block 11o
white English Setter, red
collor with bell, 304-67.54380 between 8: 30·&lt;:30.
LOST·black &amp; tan German
Shepard, Longhollow Rd.
area, 304·895·3473, 30H7l·
191l.

,- - · PUblic Sale

___ !- Auc.!l!r!_. _ _

Feb. 11. 1982 atlO a.m . the
Racine Home National
Bank will Offer tor sate lit
Public
Auction
the
foiiD)'J iog : 1976 Chevorlet
Malibu Class ic, 1974 Buick
2 dOOr haratop, 1979 Honda
XLSOOS motorcycl~ . The
Rac ine Home National
Bank reserves the right to
re ject any or all bicts and
may remove any or all
items from the sale at any
time.
-

-- -···

9 _-:-:~ant~u y­
WANT TO BUY Old lur·
· niture and Aritlques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,'
2.56·1967 in the evenings.
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bu ic k-Pontiac, GAllipoli s,
Ohio. Call ~46 · 2282 .....,....__

___

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
s tamped I OK . 14K, 18K oM
dental gold, Cl3sl rinqs,
we(jd lng r ings, ~ liver coins
or anvthino stamped
sterling . Clarks Jewelry ·'
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691or
· 992-20l&lt;ln Pomeroy!

·'

.,

�Page

l2-The Daily Sentinel

Pamii'O'(-Middleport, Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

by Larry Wright

Houses tor Rent

IAAf~ ~~ U\':&gt;TI;Me t iNViTe

Al-t)ttle lo Di~ WiTHaJT
1\f,K; 1116t iF ~e~ Au.eR~C ~

UNFURNISHED house,
white frame. 3 bedroom,
electric heat. kitchen not
fui"nlshed wih stove &amp;
refrigerator. Utility rOom
with . washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 acre garden &amp;
yard . MailinQ address
Gallipolis Ferry, lease &amp;
depo5i required. Owner·
ship management. Phone
Huntington, 304·522-1990.

/

cleafl used cars.

\

Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson,
4A6·0069.

lot,
garden
spac~ .
Available Jan. 25 . Racine
area. 992·5858 .

3 bedroom home. 992·6309.

CAIS .

we pay cash tor tale model

Wanted to buy lie logs.
Paying up to SUO per
tnousand. Call 256·6363 or
634·3131 '

--.---- - - -

THREE bedroom , 2 baths,
family -recreation , laUn·
dry, workshop, 2 car
garage fenced · yard, S.25.
plus deposit, 508 McNeil
Ave. Pt. Ple~sant, phone
304·675·5r53 .

TOP PRICE Scrap Metal .
auto bodies, and cars . Bat·
terles, alutnlum, brass &amp;
copper.· Gallipolis Block
co., 123 1/2 Pine St., 446·
2783.

;,_~
~
.
hunter
&amp; tracker.
not ~~::::::::~~~~::1:~~~~~~~~~~
years.old.
notgun sMust
hy,goOd
run deer or fox. No fast

iHR fE
am 1 y· reckreha

dog, two week trial . Con·
tact Bill Carter al446·3413.

2
garagewor
fenced
yard, $425,
drv,
sop,
car
plus deposit, 508 McNeil
Ave. pt. Pleasant, phone
304-675·5453.

II
Help Wanted
F= ull charge bookkeeper
BEDSd RON, BRASS, old to 2 years r'ecent e)l&gt;
furniture, gold, si lver pcri ence i n general
dollllrs; · wOOd ice boxes, bookkeeping, preparation
stone Iars~ antiques, etc ., of payroll , taxes and sales
Complete · households . ta)(es .
Send
sa lary
Write: M .D. Miller, Rl. 4, r equirement and resume to
Pomeroy, Oh. Or '192· 7760.
Box 505 in care Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 3rd .
CHIP WOOD . Poles max. Ave, Gallipolis, 45631 .

diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.60 per ton. Bundled
slab. $10 .50 per ton .
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co .,
Rock
Springs
Rd .,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.

Free Lance Cinematogar
phcr / reporter ·found, si len ·
;, and video tape for TV
station. Write News Depar ·
tmenf, P.O. So:.; 13, Hun
tington, WVa . 25701 . E .O.E .

Gold, silver; sterling ,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed BurkeH Bar·
ber Shop. Middleport. 992
3476.

GET VALUABLE training
as a young bus iness person
and ear n good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen ·
tine! route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility l ist at" 992 ·
2156 or 992·2157.

- -- -- ·-·- -

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDES . Gene Hines
Rl. 1, Amesville, Oh 4.&lt;18·
6741 . Buying raw fur after
Dec . 12. Daily 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sundays. Also
closed Dec . 24 &amp; 25.

ADO $60 . IO $70 . weeklY IO
your
income,
sell
cosmetics part time. Call
Pt. Pleasant Employment
Servi ce, 304·615 ·2170 .

RAW FUR buyer. Beef &amp;
deer hide ·ginshang. Trap·
ping supp l ies . George
Buckley , Rl. 2, Athens, Oh .
614 · 664 · 4761.
Open
·ev!!nings.

TRI ·CHEM liquid em ·
broidery
i nstru ctor s
needed now . Excell ent ear·
ning poten ial. Elsa Cox 304·
675 5187 .

OLD FURNITURE, beds.
Iron, brass, or wood. Kit·
chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or square.
Wood ice boxes. Old desks ·
and bookcases . Will buy
complete household. Gold,
sil\ier, old money, pocket
watches. chains, rings, and
etc . Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseba ll
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.

Situations Wanted
wanted : Person to share 2
bdr . apt. Call245·5835.

Baby car seat. 304-713·5013
after 5 :30p. m .
R.aw furs, hides, scrap
metals ,
batteries ,
radiators, ginseng, yell ow
root. and merchandise
brokering . Harper· Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also· Flea Market open
daily . Open Sa turday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm .
Raw furs , hides, scrap
metals,
batteries,
radiators, ginseng , yellow
roqt, and merchandise
brokering. Harper·Halste·
ad Selvage Company, 300
E leventh Street. 675 ·5868.
Also Flea Market open
dally . Open Saturday and
Sunday only 1·5 pm.

USED plano, $50 to $75.
Call after 5 p.m .304·675·
6363.
I•
USED plano. $50 IO SIS.
Call alter 5 p.m .30H75·

USED black &amp; while TV'S .
Must work . Will pay cash ·
or non·cash receipt for in·
come tax deductions .
Needed
for
student
m ic rocomputers .
Call
Richard Austin, 304·576·
2026 .
L

Help wa,_,
nt'!
e~d_

Earn
20 per
cent
retirement on $2,000.00
wholesale instead of 3 per
cent
retirement
on
$7,SOOPV . 614-875·9749 or
614·477·1414.

Homes for Sale
'!._- -'-'===-==-

31

2 bedroom brick house.
large patio. Sliding door,
full basement, garage, 1
acre lot on state Rt. 35. Low
SO's. Call446·0755.

3 or 4 bedroom

ho~se

w ith
bath in country on 2.3
acres . Storm windoWs,
rural water, garage, lots of
storage space, close to all 3
mines . Price reduced for
quick sa le . $15,600. 742 ·
2602.
_.:_

______

Or rent-3 bedroorn fur ·
nished home on e·ud Chat,
tin Road on big level lot.
576·2711 .

2 bdr . and 3 bdr. mobile
homes . Call446·0175.
'
Mobile home at 322 T!lird
Ave. Adults only, no pets.
Caii4Atl·3748 or 256·1903.
Centenary, 2 bdr .1 private
lot, ref. &amp; ·d ep., $160 mo.,
adu lts. Calll -614-643-2644.

2 bedroom house trailer 111:
Racine. Available Feb.l.
$200 month. $75 deposit.
You pay utilities. 614·367·
7811 .
Construction
workers
trailer for three. Phone 304·
773·5651, Mason .

MOB 1LE home tor rent
with option to buy, 304·576·

2711 .
T)NO bedroom, furnished
mobile home, large lol,
references and de-posit
required, Camp Conley,
304·675·3219.

2 brd. apt. HUD e.cepted,
kitchen turn. Call675·5104.

18

Wanted to Do

Babysitting In my home.
Ca ll 446·0390.
Will do house cleaning ·ot
any neture. reasonable
rates. Phone 367-0490 or
. 446·1402.

1N home sitting for the
elderly. Experienced nur·
ses at d. 5 days a week . Witl
.discuss wages. Call after 5
p.m . 304·576·2297.

1973 New Moon mobile
home, 2 bedroom 12x65, un·
furnished . Call446-6545.
12x65 underpinned, carpet
all new, nu-sash windows,
rural water, e)(cellent con ·
dillon with patio &amp; awning .
Call-4¥·2395 after 5 :00.
1973 Champion mobile
home. Set·up &amp; ready to
live in. Call «6·8286, after
5 :00PM ca ll -446·8127 .

REPOSSESSION : 1981 all
electric mobile home, set
on lot ready to mQve Into.
Payments $159.47 month.
All State Modular Homes.
576·2711.
USEO MOBILE
·s76·271l.

HOME .

Lots &amp; Acreage
35
24lf2 acres for sale. Call614·
667 ·3609.
-- · ~----

2 · ·bdr. furnished · trai ler .
Call446·3522 .

44

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furnished
room
$85,
utilities pd ., single male,
range, refrlg . share bath .
4At1·4416 after 7PM.

2nd. floor
fiency apt.
Gallipolis.
Adul1sonly,

furnished ef·
729 2nd. Ave ..
Call 4At\·0957 .
no pets .

Furnished apartment for
rent. Call446r3937.

Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.

'2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in
Crown City. Call256·6520.
APARTMENTS
FOR
RENT . APARTMENTS · 1
AND
2
BEDROOMS .
RENT STARTS AT : 1
BEDROOM $152,
2
BEDROOMS
$188 .
DEPOSIT $200. CALL 4Atl·
2745.
Furnished apt. a rooms
with private bath , Referen·
ces preferred, 845 2nd.
Ave., Gall ipolis. Call 4Atl·
2215 .

2 room

furnished
adults. Call446·0168.

opt.,

Now accepting ap plications . for 1 bedroom
handicapped apartment ,
Only handicapped or age 62
or over need ~pply_. Rent
amount based on income.
Equal
Holising
Op ·
porlunlty . Cafl 992-7772 for
further Information .

- -~-- - --

WhY settle for less, sell the
beSt. AVON . Call 446·3358
or 7d·2354.

41

Associate needed to ·Columbus First Mortgage
manage local office . Should
Company F HA·VA Finan·
ha-ve gOOd sa les or business
clng Loan Rep. Cookie
background . Income com · ·Krautter 1304)675·3473.
mensurate to abiliiV. Send
resume to P .O. Box 1084, ' ' REFINANCE or purchase
Newark, Oh 43055. :.__: _
your home. JO year fixed
&gt;rate. WVa . &amp; Ohio, Leader
WANTED: Full·lime llve·r Mortgage, 77 E. Stale 51 .,
In Housemanager ~nd part· ·Athens, Oh . 592·3051.
time Relief Housemenager
(weekends) to work w!th
Professional
23
persons handicapped with
Services
mental retardation at
group home In Gallipolis.
Plano . i'unlng· Be kind to
Job require• that . you : your ears. Call Bill Ward
supervise staff and that ' tor appointment. 446·4372.
vou train and supervise
clients in personal hygiene
Plano &amp; Organ lessons.
and home living skills.
Mary
Lucas. Call446·9787. ·
weekends oft.
Room,
board,
and benefits
proVIded. send resume to Accountlng· lncome Tax.
John Lehew. P.O. BOK 9011, 'Individua l and small
business. For appointment
Gallipolis, Oh 45631. Equal
opportunltylomployer. ·
call367-0268.

HoUses for Rent

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

2 bedroom family rm .• $300
per mo. plus utilities, $300
dep. required. Call 4A6·
4554.

i

I .

73

7:00
~

\lans&amp;4W.D.

NOW ALL WE
HAVIS TO DO 15
THEM.

7:05
7::10

.
·

45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt .,
Park Central Hotel.
Have v·acancy for elderly
man or woman in my
home. Reasonable iates,
gOOd experience. Tuppers
Plains667-6329 or 667·3402 .

51

Household GOods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, ot·
loman. 3 tables, $SOil. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S27S.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a ·
beds,$340., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $17$. to $295.,
Lamps from $18.' to $65. 5
pc .. difelles from .•79. , to
$385. 7 pc .• $189. and up .
r · ~~~&lt;lltab le with .. chairs,
10 $495. Desk SliD.
SJOO. and $375 .,
maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
S275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Matlresses or box
springs, full or twin, $58 .•
firm, $68. and S78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49 .
4 dr. chests, $42 . Bed
frames, S20.and $25., 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinet·
te chilirs $20. and $25. Gas
or e·lectrlc ranges. S295. Or·
thopedlc super firm, $95,
baby rnatresses, S25 &amp; SJS,
bed frames$20$25. &amp; SJO .
Electric . fireplace, · gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; A chairs.
Use:d,
Renges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri., 9am to Spm, Sat.
4At\·0322
.

A car.r y out businesS closed
down and has all beverage
coolers for sale. Call 1·614·
286·5740.

Firewood $35.00 pickup
load, tour loads $100.
delivered. Call388·9823 .
Regular .size buck Stove,
wood or·colttt·lnsert or free
slanding, 3 weeks old, $800.
Call446·3063 .
Win. M·12, 30' lull choke.
Win. M -12, 28' mod. Rem .
M·31, 30' full choke. Phone
446·3413.
Quitting frames, book
shelves, picnic tables, or
lawn furniture. Call 446·
0978.

RAY ' S USED
FUR ·
NITURE Bunk beds $6.5,
coal stove S85, livir~g' room
suite $35. couch S15,
bedroom suite $65, dinette
set $35, refrigerator $45.
Call-367·0637.
Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Main St ., Pomeroy, Ohio.
992 2205.

'1

F•rm Equipment

MASSEY FERGUSON 96
bushel
grinder· m i &gt;&lt;er,
same as new condition, 304·
372-9773.
HAY elevator, $100 . 304·
882·3601 after 5 :00.
FARM
JIVIDEN'S
EQUIPMENT
446·1675
Special Sale on NEW
TRACTOR!
Price
Model
HP
$4924.00
26024
5295.00
26024
4924.00
16024
26024
5295.00
31()28
31()28
31()-4x4-28

5594.00
5983.00
7072.00

35
35

6555.00
6945.00

41.941.941.9460-4X4-41 .9-

7353.00
7995.00
6857.00
9619.00

51()48.551()-4x4-48 .551()48.5-

7778.00
9886.00
8A50.00

461)461)461)-

61 ()64
931'4.00
61()-4X4- 64 - 11.304.00
Plus Freight

Single bed. bookcase head·
board and dresser. 992·
7565.

Sale Date March 13, 1982
CALL NOW!

Used tires. Hanshaw's
Tires on Lucas Lane . 675·

63

7360 .

Livestock

work pony. hay . Call 379·
2761.

NEW buildings at factory .
All j:Jarts accounted for. All
structural steel carries full
factory
guararite_e.
Buildings 10,000 square feel
to the sma l lest 1.200 square
feel. Must sell
lm ·
mediattev. Will sell" cheap.
Call toll free 1-800·248·0065
or 1·800·248·0321. Ext. U7 .

- - ·- -· - -

UNION labeled imprinted
political
advertising
specialties, New ariT1y field
jackets, (liners) clothing,
combat leather boots, (sur ·
plus rental .clothing), new
heavy winter clothing, Sam
Somerville, Pt. Pleasant
304·675·3334. !warehouse 7
miles east of Ravenswood
Old Rt. 21 . )

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive Sl .,
Gallipolis. 3 piece living
room ·suites S199. maple WOOD-304·458·1833.
rockers $.19, several chest
of drawers, new &amp; used
wood burners, new table 5~5~--"'
B~u_,ll~d·~·n~g'-'S,_,u,_.p,_.p,_,li"'e,_s_
lamps $18, wood cook
Build
ing
materials block,
ranges, new 5 piece dinnet
sewer pipes. win·
sets $150, kitchen cl!lbinets,
lintels. etc . Claude
several dinnet sets, sliver
stone·all sizes, bunk beds Winters; Rio Grande, 0 .
SlOO, new tools of all kinds, · Call245·5121 .
wringer Maytag washer,
L 1noleum rugs 9x 12 $1 O, u ____~P~e~ts~f~o~r~s~a~te~--and lots more. Hours lOam
POODLE GROOMING .
to 5pm, 4Atl·3159.
Coil Judy Taylor •at 367 ·
7220.
GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
wftshers,
CAT ·
dryers,
refrigerators, DRAGONWYND
ranges.
Skaggs
Ap - TERY · KENNEL . AI&lt;C
CFA
pliances, Upper River Rd., Chow puppies,
Himalayan,
Persian
and
beside Stone Crest Motel.
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
446· 7398 .
3844 after 4 p.m.

" --~H~aYL·~&amp;~G~r~a~ln~--Nice Spelt straw. Coolville
614·667·3838.

.............. . . ...
• • • I l l' I

4 Bedroom house in Pt.
Pleasant on Moseman Clr-· 1!;:;;;;;;!~
cle. $300 per mo. plus ~ 11
damage deposit. 446·8234.

71

Aula for Sale

1972 Volkswagen Super
Beetle, auto., b lue, S850.
Call 446·1615 or 446·1243.
vw 1969, $500 . Last year of
this style, 8,000 miles on
overhaul, rebored, needs
repair. Call Forst·Mitchell.
4Atl· l136 .
For sale 1978 Chysler Cor·
doba automatic, AT, PS,
PB. air. cruise, leatl'ler in·
terior, low mileage. Must
sell. Call245·5841 .
1972 Pont iac . In perfect
cond., has new vinyl top.
can be seen at 107
Chillocothe Rd ., 2A5·5879 .

1975
Cullas Supreme
automatic, floor shift,
swivel bucket se~ts, rust
proofed. Midl!ls. e)(haust
system. Call256·6519.
49 Chevy S.W. runs, new
brakes. wood In good
shape, $1,200 or best offer.
Call379· 2364.

1969 Plymouth wagon . 318
auto. 985·4346.

- - - -- - -

1976 Honda Civic. GOOd
condition . 614-985·3816.
HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia . Over
20 less exPensive cars in
stock.

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now avallab'through loeal sales, under
ANTIQUE player Pillono .. j $300.00. Call 1-714·569·0241
electrified, 100 rolls.
tor your directory on hOw
phone JO.H75·1652.
to purchase: Open 24 hours.

59

Musical
Instruments

Far Sole or Trade

1'74CHEVY 112 ton ClO, PS,
PB, AM·FM stereo, 8·
track, 3114·675·3985.
Trade·1978 Camara 305,
loaded, silver, red Interior,
for a 4·wheel drive pickup
of equal value. Call675· 1104
8AM1o4PM.

1978 I"'TERNATIONAL
Scout, 31,000 miles, $4,000.
phone 304·895·3477.
7::16
7:18
8 :00

Motorcycles

1980 Honda CX-500. Black.
Exc. cond . $2,000. 614-992- :
3312.
;
76

Al&gt;lo Parts

..,

77

' '

Auto Repair

Quality Aulobody &amp; Paint
work . Insurance worlc.
welcome. Sunroofs · ir),
stalled from $200·$230. Auto
Trim Center. 446· 19~.

OKAY, 50 I
A SUPE!i:STAR OF
READ '!00 GIXX:I!
IILL PEOPI,.E
I'IHAT'6 A FOOT9ALL
COOLDI'I'T CONCE4L
61JPt!R67111l HAF'Tl\
HISILLITEI&lt;:ACY.
RaiD I'Cit .AHYWAYS?! Vf:RY LOHq ~AND
I'IHAT

I'«JULD

HAPI'Eti TllllN?I

.,.

s

.---7:---~
81
Home

·~
~

Improvements

STUCCO P!-ASTEf!ING · ~ :
textured ceilings com·
·~ ;
mercial arld res.identi.el, 4 ~
tree estimates. Call 256· ··
1182.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car ·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brother.s..-Cu"Stom
Carqets. F.r~ estimates .
Caii4Atl·2107.

... THIS BIG TURKEV WAS

PAINTING · Interior and ;,
exterior, · plumbing. ~
roofing, some remodettng ...
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

68 THUNDERBIRD, 69,000
actual mllri, $600. 3114·675·
4201.
1971 DODGE Challenger
340. Phone 3114·675-1936.
1977 THUNDERBIRD, ex·
cellent condition, will con·
slder a trade, 3114·675·&gt;1#16.

Calt 446·2801 for termite, :
roach, bird, rodent, spider, :
and fleas control. Free ..
estlmates,sBill Thdmas . ~.:

GASoUNE ALLEY

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

RINGLES'S SERVICE e• ·
perienced mason. roofer,·
carpenter,
electric i an, ~
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 30t4·675·
2088or675·4S60.

Shes
jes'
011

Weter wells . Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps· Sales and Service .
3114·895·3802.

i;h'
lamf
'

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Call .
882·2079.

.

WINNIE

t:'II'N'T 1 TELl ,
)tll)l THE OTM.~
GUESTSCIINCElEO
IN THE FINAL

I

WANDLING
Electrical j
service, old work end neW 1
work. small app liances, .2.c-. 1
hour service. Phone 304: ·
675·6663.
!

MOMENT~:'.

~

~~====~~~~~~
-'
Plumbing ~ ·'

i11EI/5liAL
AUSIS .,. COLI/6.,
!W7 WEATHER . ..
PfMANDING

1

WE REAL~(THAT

LE'AVES MC!Fre. TI111E
FOR TOPICS OF
NMUlUAL

sPOuses ...

e!JT WHAT rJOf5
JT MATTER?'

12

. &amp; Healing

. :;

I

CARTER'S PLUMBING' ~
AND HEATING
\
cor. Fourth and Pine'i
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477 ' ~

-===;::===
Excavating

'·

-~~

\.i.

13

-·

==-=---=:-....::..=..._
--::--_ ---z:::• ,
Electrical

NI!WI
CIJ NASHVIlL! RI'D
TOR IN TH! HOUII!
11:011
IN TH! PAIIILY
11:30
TH!T~IHOW
Guilt Hoet: David Brenner.
Gueata : Joen Embery, Sue an
Stlflt Jomeo. (80 mlno.)
A~RUI'!
II!NHY HIU.IHOW
Cll CH LATIIIOVI!
ABC CAPTIOIIID NI!WI
MOVII~IIIA)•• ¥.''Girl
Fr0t11Petto¥11e"1174
ABC . .w.. NIOIITUIIE
Anchored by Ted K-1 .
11::16 ClliiOVfi·(ADVI!NTU"!)
.
··~ 11Johnrtroutt.'"1113
11:18 ~ CIHUPDATI!NI!WI
· 12:CIII
-AND ALLIN
'-IC NIWI NIOHTLINE
Anohoroel by Ted K-1.
·
Cll Pel LATI!NIOIIT
12:10 I])
IIOVII!
"(ICIINCa-PICTION)•• ''Tile

VOUT~INK,

__ &amp; Reft!I!enll'"!._

JACKS REFkt-GERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial,
Industrial ,
Phone882·2079 . 1
_ .

=-=-==-==k---.
u
General Ha~ling-JONES BOYS 'WATER .
SERVICE . Cell 36r 1471 'Or- :
367-0591 . '
.
-

87

U

holster

~

11::10 I ] ) . (J) TOIIOAIIOW
COAIT·TD-COAITOuoata :
·RingO Starr. AngleOicklnaon ,
Allan Carr lnterwlaweoavld
NaUIIhlon and Mllta O'Kooto.

•

~

-';eomm,)

~

.

·- - . •

.

,

JACKHNIIY
V!QAI Blnzer and hla
girlfriend are martted lor daath
byaklllerwhothlnkethacouple
IIW him at the ICine of I
(R-t: 70mlna.)

TRISTATE
L
UPHOLSTERY HOP
'
1163 Sec. Ave ., G llipolis 1
4A6· 7833 or 446-1833,
·
~

'
• Yesterday:s

"t I I I I I I r

(Ana"ro tornoJIOW)
Jumbles: ELOPE ROBOT STYLUS FECUND
Answer: What life waa foi' the unlucky gardenerNO BED OF ROSES

I

No. 20, CGfttolfling 110 _ . . . , lta¥1Nabta lor 11.M paotpalcl

JumWo -

tram .luftlbll, 010 WI Nwa-::rer,loi 34, HeNWOOd, N.J. 01141. IMNdl ,._
name, tlddrMI,

make chicks

code •

•bit 10•N

...._..,_ ·--·--·-

a.

BRIDGE
.Uae the count squeeze
By Olwaltl Jaeolly
... A1u Solltat

NORTH

tU
.AKIJ

South loob at dummy and
wondera wbere North found

tl018

Ilia tbreHpade bid.
_ West ope111 the kihl of

tu:u
lWT

!I'II8T

diamonds and continues with
tbe ace alter Eut playa the
nlae. Eut ruffa the tblrd
diamond and leads back a
trump .
· Moet brldce playera ettber
coac:ede don one or play
the band out lackadalaiCally

!"u
"'101

+u
.QHI

~U

lOUTH

+AXQJIO
.714

tJ74

and 10 down one, but ff

to

tQt
tQHII ·

·I!AKUJ

••••

South knowa about count
1111- and he counta eor·
recUy he can find a lOth
trick.

1·-

Vulaerabll: Both
Dealer: North

,

N-

W111

He bu to cull four apadea

pull Weat'a lrwnpl and
muat tllacard two hearts

from dlimmy. He II now

dawn to a ·llx-cercl endtnc
and If be can decide juat bow
m111y elube and hearts ·Eut
baa retained u hla laat alx
cardl be can acore that vital
lOth trlclt.

l!:ut

It

P..,.

tNT

Pta
Pta

M
p..,.

Pta
p..,.
PU.
PtoU

Openlnclead: +K

Suppoee · East Ia boldln1
th- of each. South almply
playa ~ rounds of clubl
to ruff the third one and
atablllll dummy's .la1t club
ua winner.
Sup~ Eaat Ia boldln1

kina of bearta and aela up Ilia

four clube and two hearts.
South calhes dummy's ace-

three hearta. The IIIIUMJe
could not develop.

own aeven of hearts aa . a

winner.

.

Suppoee West wu dealt

dltlcW ••. ,
lty fHOMAS )OSIPH
ACRols
s Showed
1 Tlt\clllllce
mercy to
I 01an

i Footprint
t Volcenle
peak

portrayer
7 Bullcllnc

It Oppollte
IJ Ul'Je 111
U Ready to roll
IJ In no place
17 Slllor

winl

BOf nl8tles
II Aehleve
14 Old bualneu
VestetdtiJ'•.,..
II Delerve
II Oiallce veil 21 Oakland pro :UW!toll,y
UDilteb._
II Palm leal
!I Con on
being U Nota bit
21 CrlmiJW'a
lite nin
ridiculed
aiCUt
douler
Z2 Bedapread
Zlll..eller
It French
:U Unlnler·
fabric
nobility
pronoun
estJng
%3 Poetical
311 Pay dirt
ZIDilteb

21one

!5 Pallld

adverb

aeeter

21Burn

27 Frolllnl!
device
Zl Trlcted
Zl- Patch
3t Congregated
31Splre

ornament
32Severe

17Submlt
• Playlblng
Cll'relbyter

a F!'elhly
4

Met and Jo'1
fWiter-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
0

Is

lD

work It:

AXYDLIAAXR
LONGFELLOW

ODe letter a Imply 1tallllo for another. In

UU.

umple

A II

liNd for the three L's, X for the two O'a, ele. Slnllle letlerl,
~ the len~ and formation ol tho wonll are Ill

hlata. Bad~ dar the code lettara are dUierenl.

l!thlm"" 1_110

NOW- HAULING h~.;,-~.;;1'
&amp; limestone for dri ewavs.
Call for estimates 7·7101 . •

- ...

Print answer /Htre:

illle

\

- -- -- --

I

!Brain! Timber wolf

I

OL'BU(LET

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Ser_\vicel Shor~n
Scissors. ~· abric ShOp,
Pomer9y . 992· 2274.

Now anango the clrclld latlora to
form tile iiUrpriM ans"r, u aug·
geatld by lhe obo.,. car100n.

CIJndlao plant
u Unearthly
a lloandery
DOWN

m

B'ARNEY

SEE WHAT

H

..

:~: ffir~~a.TI!~~3.z.

,_

Gallipolis Dlvers!fied
- ·con·,.,
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp; ·~
backhoe work . Special .....
farm rates. Call us for free
estimates. 446 ·~ .

. J KJ

l

..

RON'S Tele-vision Service. ·•
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and .
house calls . Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

tBYSMOL, .

m

ie und•rpre11ure to decide Who
wlll•nd will not perfOrJf'; and,
Bruno alrugglee to oyeroome
hlaahyneaaaohtcenpeliormln
tront of hi I Cl111mate1 for 1
mld·term IKam. (to mine.)
Cll HATIONAL OI!OORAPHIC
II'!CIAL
~ COLlEOI! IAIKI!TIALL
OSU VI Wk:hlgan
• Cll all IIAQNUII, P.l. 'private lnveatlgator with
amn1111 11 realty In trouble, a•
Magnum dlacovera after 1
nter-fatll •ccldent With U'l
Ferrarlleav11 him In that
condition. (110 mlna.)
Cll SH!AK PIII!Vl!WI CrHice
Gent Sllkll and Roger Ebert
review the neweat movlealn
town, Including eoeneelrom :
'On Golden Pond' lttrrlng
Katharine Hepburn and Henry
Fon.da; 'Whoa• Llf1111t
Anyway?' with Richard
Dreyfuei: 1nd 'Four FrNtnda,' 1
drl(nlabout coming of ageln
tho tlieo'a.
11Ji. MORK AND IIIIIDY
8:05 [)) IIOVII! ·(COMEDY) ''Iii
••wer Between Men And
Women" '1872
1:30 I]) 110\111! -(ORAliA) •• "Jou
linger" 'IIINIO
,
(I)
IIOVII!
·(IIUIICAL-COIIEDY)"
''Gar Divorcee''
11134
liD Q.IINI: NI!W PIIONTII!R
iW. liST OF THE WIST
Mar•haiSemBeattrl.. toguard
1 captured outlaw, and
prepare• to deland the town
agllnet an lttiOk by tht
bondll'a brothera. (Ropaal)
8:58 Cll CINUPD'-TI!N!WI
8:00 Cll . ', (!) Dlff'IIINT
STROKllloll. Drummondgoea
away on a bualn111 trip and
Arnold. lett alone, h••
nlgntmarea that hi will be
orphtnld
again . .
ond-Coplloned)
700CLUB
(I) ill) KNOT8 LANDINO
SH!AK PRI!VII!WI Crltloo
Gene Sllkelend Rogar Ebert
review the newaat movlealn
town, Including acen11 frqm:
·on Golden Pond' etarrtng
K1tharln1 Hepburn and Henry
Fonda; 'WhOitlifela It
Anyway?' with Rt'chard
Oreylu..; and 'FOur Frltnde,' 1
drema 1bout coming of •g• In
tho tlieo'a.
ilJI··A-V IIILUR
8::10 I]) CD QIII. . AIRUKino
vulnenbla moment, Nail
accaptaadatearr.ngedbyhar
employ1r, but tha man, 1 cop,
1urn1 out to be 1111 than
ICCeptlbll. (Repeat)
liD THIIOLDHOUI!Hoot Bob
VIII IN. .HIIhl IHICIIftO)' Of
the hleatlng plf!nt. then
demon1trat1e thl rtmoval ol
old
'!lllipapar.
(Ciolld•
Ca~tlonod; U.S.A.)
!WeTAXt
10:00 I]) •
CD HILL STREIT
ILUI!I
Cll!W • 2D-20 Hugh Downa
hoetethlt weekly magazine
profiling noteworthy eventeln
newa, eclt.na. end entertain·
mont. (50 mlna.)
• (I) dllNUR&amp;I!.
Cll1, CLAUDIU8
NEWI
10:01
TIIIVININO NI!WS
10:21
CIN UI'DATI! N!WI
10:30 CIJ IIOVI! ·(COII!DY) "Iii
"Chaech And Chong'a Nut
Movie" 1110
liD ALI'RID IWTCHC()CK
PREII!NTI

&amp; .Accessorie,

ONE 360 Chewy engine, one ·
327 Chevy engine. Both sso . .
One 76 Chevy truck hOod .
$20. Chevrolet truck bed,
one 6.50 . duel line HOlley
Carb. $50. One 76 truck rt~r
end S15. One 350 turbo Iran·
smlssion $60. Phone 304·
615-6760.

H
.
A

• etudent benefit, Montgomery

......... .

Frigidaire dryer $60 .00.
Kenmore washer ·perfeCt · HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
shapeSilO.oo. Caii4At1·8181.
indoor·outdoor facilities . 1980 El camino. 614· 742·
Also AI&lt;C Reg. Dober· 2784.
BEIGE sofa, excellent con· mans. Caii4Atl·7795 .
dillon, • 30~ · 675 · 7112
·FOR Sale by SeA led Bids.
evenings or 675·3230 ext.
BRIARPATCH KENNELS 1979 Chevrolet lour door
305 days.
Boarding and grooming .· Impala, automatic, P.S.•
with
air,
AKC Gordon sefters, P.B ..
English Cocker Spaniels. mechanicallv good shape,
~
Misc . Merchandice
needs bOdy work. Can be
Call388·9790. ,
Lump Coal S32 per ton .
seen at Rutland Ohio. Con·
Zinn Coal Co .• Inc. Caii4Atl·
tact vernon Weber or Jerry
Reg.
cocker
Spaniel
pups,
1408 between 9 and 4.
Black. Mark on outside of
color blonde. Call 446·1262.
envelope cruiser bid and
mail or hand ·to Vernon
For Sale I&lt; lichen table and
Weber. clerk Rutland
2 chairs, $25. See at 769
Vlllape, Rutland . Bids will
Brawnell Ave ., Middleport .
be opened Feb. 2, 1982 at 7
p.m. In Rutland. CDuncil
reserves the right to accept
or reject all bids.
Fish Tank and Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pl.
Pleasanl. 675·2063.. Mon.,
Thurs .. / Fri . II to 6. Tues .•
Wed., 1 Sal . 11 to 4. Check
our Fish Special.

1979 FOUR Wheel driv~. ·.
Chevy. ~ lon,' 4 speed, .
$4,SOO. 304'67,5·1578. Aile( - ·
3:30675·1320.
..

74

moYIH, IPOftl anclapecialaon
HBO In Fobruory.
(I)
ENnRTAINIIENT
TONIGHT
PPY DAYS AO. AIN
Cll TICTAC DOUGH
&lt;JI) IIACNEIL-I.I!IIRI!R
RIPORT
ill) NI!WI
11Ji. IIUPPET SHOW .
'(I) CAROL IU-TT AIIO
fiiiiNDI
~YOU ASI&lt;!D FOR IT
ANOTHERUFE
INIIDI THI NFL
.
eCil FAIIII.YFEUD
UV!IINI! AND IHIRLIY
AND COIIPANY
Cll
N10HTLY IUIIN!M
REPORT
IJI)
RICHARD IIIIIIONS
SHOW
liD ALL CRI!ATURIS ORIAT
ANDIMALL
lftl •
I!NTI!RTAINII!HT
TONIOHT
IIAIIfORo AND ION
.!&lt;IIJ'!UPDATI! NI!WI
eCD FAIIiiE '-•chairman of

i

HOPI;~

GOE6&gt; WITH

New wOOd stove, half price,
never used, S360. Can con·
vert to turnance. Call 256·
1216, Gallipolis.

I LYMANl
I KX)
I DILIOBj
I I r I

Stiller 1potllght the upcoming

miles, aluminum
wheels, oil tinted · glass,
radio, bucket $e~1s, .ex·
cellent cond., $6,000 . Call
675-1932 .

TWO bedroom ap~rtment.
hospital area, excellent
condition. 304-675· 1962. ,

~PIIIIIAOAZINI!
W!!KENO OAIII)!NIII
IIII!AI( PIII!VI!W: f!·
IRUAIIYAAneMHr••ndJerry

35,000

APARTMENT for rent,
$160. per month, 304-675·
1972.
.

57

3 bdr. house Plann Sub
Dlv .• .1115 mo., 1100 dep.
Ph. 446·3617.

'

()

I VINING

. \.
78 Cherokee -1-Wheel ·drive, ' •.

RABBITS 304-458· 1761 .

2 bdr. house on lower Rt. 1.
Dep. required . Call 256&lt;
1413.

THu-AY
JAN.I8,1N2

1981 Ford 350 Cargo truck.
14,000 actual mllesi. Ex·
cellent condition . . Cpnlacl
Jon Karschnlk at f'a~mers
Bank x Savings Company.

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street.
Mi!Son, WV. 773·5651.

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

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services tor fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
·avai lable to meet in·
' dividual needs . Contact
Lewis Hughes, agent .
Phone 446·3318.

1972 12x60 mob ile home fur·
nished with extras. Finan·
cing available. Call 367·
7175.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes, I houses,
Pt.
PleaS~~nt and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or 614·245·9484.

Space tor Rent
2 bdr, trailer furnlst,ed, 46
adults only, Brown Trailer COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, 992·3324 .
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
One bedroom furnished ex· m-7479.
tra nice . Ideal for couple.
$150 plus utilities and dep.
....... . ....
"
992-7479,
'

Country home in Pomeroy.
F!f.twoods area. For ·sale
or rent. 2 Story, 3 bedroom,
171 acres, large pond . 614·
446·2359 alter 6 p.m .

CARPENTRY, Siding &amp;
remodeling, phone 304·576·
:2989.

_

YOUR Federal, State, City
Ta&gt;&lt;es prepar'ld. 17 years
experience witf:l tax firm .
Kenneth Adkins, SO Olive
St .. Gallipolis, 446·7475.

'

Television
•
•
VIewmg

Apartments . 675·5548.

lor Rent

E)(Cellent typist desires
part time employment. Ex· 32
Mobile Homes
perlenced legal, insurance.
for Sale
Wrlle Bo• 729·1\ c/o Dally
MOBILE
Sen1inel, Pomeroy, Ohio· TR I· STATE
HOMES. Ga ll ipolis. Price
A5769.
reduced. used mobile
Have vacancy for elderly homes. CALL 446·7572.
person. Room, board, care,
CLEAN USED MOBILE
and laundry . 992-6022.
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
Wanted to .buy.,. Jent or HOME SALES, 4 ML
lease business in Mid· WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
dleport or Pomer9y . A lso
like to buy C· l and . C·2 35. PHONE 446·3868.
Liquor license . Would like
to rent empty building hi 12•60 2 bedroom Buddy
Middleport. Phone 992 9981 mobile home. Set up with 2
or P.O . Box 405. Pomeroy . or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan·
Serious inquiries only .
clng available . Phone 446·
1294.
'
13
Insurance

li

Excerolze bike. 675·5909.

Rubbei" Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. Ususally one or two
de"ys service . Disr'!"'uke's
405 2nd. Ave., Gallipolis,
A46·0474.

They'll Do It Every Time

Deluxe furnished apart·
ment, excellent location, .1
or 2 adults, only S275. ref. &amp;
dep. required: · Call 446·
0338.

=====
42
Mobile Homes

FURNISHED 2 or 3
bedroom mobile home. Un·
furnished 1 bedroom apart·
ment 304-675· 1371 or 675 ·
3812

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been can ·
?
Lost
your
~Jf;:~.f~c:"s License? Phone

6363.

c &amp; L Bookkeeping . Com·
plele bookkeeping and tax
service tor business and in·
dividuals. ·
Carol Neal446·3862

Ohio

1

comfortable 3 .b edroom
home , 8 1!2 percent
assumable loan, and Is
near PPHS, large fenced In
vard, kitchen appliances
and
more . We
are
relocating and can share
realtor's tees by sell ing
naw. Call after 6 pm 675·
1625.

Have vacancy for elderly
woman or man In my
private home . Good ex·
perien ce.
Reasonable
roles. C~ll 614·667·6329 or
614·667·3402.

would like lo buy up to 3
acre&amp; of land around
Ru't lanp area . Out ol high
water. Prefer black top
road. Contact Larry Barr
742·3149.

23

Professional
Services ..

.

Apartmeml
tor Rent

bedr"f.~·n. 2 b1aths,
aun·

Top rabbit Beagle. 13 to'l.3
112 Inches tall. 3 lo 3 112

11

44

5 room house. bath, large

Buying
Gold,
Sliver.•
Platinum. old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin suppfies for
sale .
Spring
Valley
Trading, Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 4Atl·8026.

1'

41

t

12:18
1:CIII•

MOWREY$ Uphol tery Rl. ,·
1 BOM 124, Pl. Pie
nt, 3Q.4· ;
675-41.54.

'*·

I.......... ,....

Cllt..oltriiii1'911T

LI'IOP IIIU'f
t:ao MY unur IIIAI!QII .
1:&gt;10
MDVII •(COII!IIDY) ••
'' IRaretllltle lluln•ln e
~

"

·-

t.'li'YPToQUOTU

BMJ

HBZ

ANz ·
YSJAL

1-

F Z .

WNFUL

TPNA,
ISTCQ

QCU

NIA
SI

EPBMASULQ

BMJ
QCU

HBLUDC

TJSUY

LMIISULQ
DNJFUJ

Y ~CrJPIIIqtlote: CHII.OREN HAVE MORE NEED
01'
THANOFCRJTIC'!I.-JOSJilPHJOUBERT
I,

•

�14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

1982

Thunday, Janua'Y

Senator Collins opposes closing decision

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.,

"

.-~ · '

..,

END OF THE MONTH

CLEARANC~

ean•nc It yet another bardlhlp for Soulhem Ohio'a
l!llell)ployed, State Senator OU1ey Colllnl, R., Ironton,
Tbunda;y aftemoon voiced IU stru1g objection to the

BEGINS FRIDAY, JANUARY 2.th -~9:30A.M.

cloelng of the Pomeroy Office of the Bureau of Em-

plo;yments.mces.

.

CHILDREN'S

CORDUROYS

'

CHILDREN'S

VAN HEUSEN SlS.OOto$19.00

WINTER
TOPS
Flannel Shirts
Sweaters . ljl PRICE
Knit Tops,

-

···-

and

WINTER BLOUSES

1f2 PRICE

1

h PRICE

· WINTER

JUNIOR DRESSES:

-1h PRICE-

employment services sucbas lob referrals, counsellng,
testing and job placement.
•
Collins said that Meigs County Commissioner
- Richard Jones alerted him to tHe Pomeroy closing.
"We agree that this doesn't make much sense,"
said Collins. The 17th District Senator said that unemployment service has beriefltted downstate Ohio and
that the bureau has had a positive effect in reducing .
llllelllpioyment and In providing ~ imp&lt;hant servicei for people who have suffered job layoffs.
~ ·There la nothing lei be gained by cutting a
program that works," Collins !ald. He commented that

bureaiiCl'IIUc lnaenaltivity to the' ~ of Southern
Ohio. U people would e&lt;me down here and - for
tbemeelves bow crltical .the situation Is, I think the of·
flee -.Jd stay open," Collins said.
Ohio wtll lase :n of Its 130 unemployment offices
8Cl'OI8 the state within 90 days as a result of federal
budget reductions.
'
· "Unfort~tely, we have Utue control over the
declalooa made In Wuhingtoo on this matter. The
reduclim Ia a reality, but I think that our district is
hav!Jig to bear more than Its share of the butden,"

-

WOMEN'S

DRESS SHIRTS

eli~~ to SUin, the cuts .wtll fall beavi~ on

.

"It la an unfortunate dec;Won and one that llhowa

ALL SALES FINAL- NO EXCHANGES- REFUNDS- OR LAYAWAYS

.L

Collins commented;,

-WOMEN'S
WEAR

SWEATERS AND
SWEATER·VESTS
Cardigans and Slipovers ·

JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR

-th PRICE

Girl seventh explosion victim
OKLAHOMA CITY - A 10-year-old, girl Thursday became the
sevel)th person to die from a water heater explosion that rained
eJass, COilC1'I!Ie bloCks and shrapnel down pn an .elementary school.
The death of Angela Martin, who had_been 1p "extremely critical"
condition," came nine days after the blast at Star Elementary
School In suburban Spencer.
Five other children and a teacher were kUled In the blast. Thirty·
!pur people we~ Injured and a ponceman suffered a heart attack
alter !living mouth-to-mouth resuallatlon to 10me of the Injured.

h PRICE

1

MEN'S

MEN'S $29.95 to $99.95
WINTER

VELOUR SHIRTS

.JACKETS AND
-COATS

Good Style and
Color Selection

PRICE

Blames inspectors' low morale

/2 PRICE

1

'5 &amp;

YS' WEAR

MEN'S
S, M, Land LX.

1h PRICE
COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR
Dotty

h PRICE

1

h PRICE

1

' The Hlehway Patrol sald the slngle-eoglne aircraft was found in a
lleld aboUt 10 miles north of London In Madison County and that It
had !lllle-dlved into the ground.
The patrol sald tile pUot was a.34-year-old UJ'bana man, Wayne
Enderle II, and said he was alone In the plane.
· Enderle had llled ilo fllgbt plan, the patrol said.

Driver honored for his effort

''

h
PRICE
\.~----------------------~ .

CHILDREN'S

.,&lt;'
••

WOMEN'S

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

KNIT ACCESSORIES ..'

KNIT HATS, SCARFS and GLOVES

Gowns, Robes, and Pajamas

•

1h PRICE

MEN'S $19.95 to $29.95

h PRICE

1f2 PRICE.
BOYS' WINTER JACKETS .
Sizes8to20. Reg. $18.95to$49.95.
Knits.

lf2 PRICE

PRICE

MEN'S WINTER HEADWEAR
TOBOGGANS AND CAPS

1

h PRICE

:CHILDREN'S WINTER COATS
SNOWSUITS, .COATS AND JACKfiS

} WINTER DRESSE~

·lh PRICE

LADIES'

WINTER SLEEPWEAR
I

ROBES, PAJAMAS &amp; GOWNS

h PRICE

1

Supplies stolen

Free cheese costs local agencies

Pomeroy PoUce report 110me
h300 In cleaning supplies and
equipment stolen from a storage
area for supplies at Powell's Super·
Valu 10metlme Thursday. A lock
was broken on the door of the room
tO ealn entrance. Pollee are contln·
u1J1i their lnvestliatlon.

COLUMBUS, OhiO - Presldeni Reagan's plan to give away surplus ~' won't coat COI1IIIITierl a cent but It could COlt local
agencies which store and handle the cheele. ·
Some locallljjl!lldel which have already ,vOlunteered their servl·
ces are having leCOIId thoughts since getting letten from the Ohio
Department or AeriCUlture about handling charaes.
Ohio 1.1 to get 1,4:fl,lnl pounds of cheele wrappecl in ftve.pound
packa&amp;RS. It will come on 43 trucks, each carrying 33,Ql pounds of
dleele. It would provide one pack to each of 286,lnl tarnlllell in the

''

111CJ1111Da.

.

.

.
Winning Ohio lottery ·number

Weather forecast
'

'CioudytanlPt with raiD • • taalllbta.l Satai'U,y. ~

-"Y lteady Ill the upper 401 ••••..,.•• llllb Saturday In the low • •
The cb•nce of raiD II -llXI pawut tnnlaN ml Satai'U,y.
OIJIDI! I '10

7

JL

&lt;

8 'rllll AT 'J-fllr,IIIIILI!IIIa.•s . , _ .
M
T
,.a-U IIIII;·
I

,

........

I

The Eastern High School buDd·
lng 1.1 structurally sound, but 'wiD
need watching.
.
This was the gist of an enemeering study presented when the dJ.s.
trlct'• board of education met
Wednesday nl&amp;bt but Superlntend·
ent Richard Roberts did not release
details untU today.
According to the report, the~ are
no dangers lnyolved lri the IIYlM&amp;·
slum, but the enjiDeerlng ftnn has
etven the board a puge to jnatall10

rneetlni

rooms be pointed up and
redecorated.
The board approved Dec. 17, 18,
and 22 and Jan. U and 14 as calam·
lty days. The district Jt.gv... t1W
days on the five peiaiJitted by the
State Department of Educallpn for
calamity day• without niakellp
time

required.

\

'

.

To make up one of the two days,

il!e board decided to hold clauea on

Feb. 5 when parent·teacherconfer·
ences were acheduled and reschethat a watchful eye can be kept on duled the parent·teacber activities
that area to aeelf there Is any lhlft. to Saturday, Feb. 6.
ing which might create a danger
The board received several bids
sltuatloq.
on a new school bus, but rejected all
. The report lllllie&amp;ts that the foun- of them when It was determined
dation of the otrk:e areas be studied
that the state department of eduCato determine what 1.1 causing tion has lipptoved 'thi! iiw'CI!Ue oi
rmved in thole areas. ItJurther in· · two more buaea and It waa decided
dlcated that there Ia no danger In· to advertise again for bid. on a total
volved In cla.iiJWms where walla of three buaea. The tire bill of Firehave separated from the floors stone In Parkersburg, W. Va., was
since the walll are not the support· accepted.
Approval was given for the 'boys
.ing type. It hal been suaeated that

varsity and reserve basketb8U
cosches and the glrla varsity and
Junior high basketball coaches to
atte!id their respective state
tournament.\.
Ralph Wigal was authorized · to
attend the stale baseball clinic.
The board authorized Dorsel Lar·
klns of the board and Supt. Richard
Roberts to af:!end a conference In
Columbus on Feb. 23 at which time
funding and reduction of staff wiU
. be dllcu&amp;!ed In view of poealble
school.lncome cuts.
A group of parents was on hand to
dlscuas with the-board the development of a baaketball program for
fourth through sixth ifaders and
the use of the buildings for these

proerams.
Meantime, offlctals at the high ·
'school are battling broken water
lines which have at Urnes cut the
entire water supply In the building
or redljced water semce In the
. bulldln&amp; to about one-halt.

New hope--is recession end near?
·111 APOOI•W , _

compared with 126,lnl reported budget office al.lo estimated that
unemployment would average a
last week.
Iotty
8.9 percent In 1982 after rising
-Preliminary Congressional
.
above
that level early In the year.
Budget ottlce figures •how the
-The
Commerce Department
economy decllnlng 0.1 percent In
the nation's foreign
reported
that
19112 - the third straight annual
trade
deficit
I'OIIe
about 9 percent '
drop- despite the recovery beein·
ntng In thll year's second quarter last year to $39.7 billion, the third·
hlglles! total on record. The 1!81
that both budget offtce and White
trade deficit was $36.4 billion .
House economists predict.· The

layoffs tempered economists'
enth111laam.
The Commerce Dllpartment said
Ita Index of LeadiJJe Indicator&amp; roae
0.6 percent in December, 1Janallng
that the economy lhoulr,t beein rec·
overing before Ione.The atreaeth of
that recovery, however, lefteconomllta divided.
.
. 1..esHncouraein Dews shoWed
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. (AP)reduction plant's manager, said
only that the company was review·
up 1n four other reporia:
The local preGdeftt of the Steel·
tne the propoeal.
-froductlvlty In private bull· Ml!'kers union at Kalller Aluminum
Staton sent his proposal to
nesa piUfllled at an annual rate of It Chemical Corp.'s plant says he'I
Kaiser, government and uUllty
7.2 percent in the fourth quarter o1 interested In RM. Mlck Sta:ton'a
1981 aa the rece~~lon clamped down plan to keep the company' a reduc· · company officials, and said Wednellday that even U It lln't foUowed
- the ~· drop since the p
lion plant open.
•
precllely, his plan would "help
venunent began keeplne such lie·
The w~ VIrginia ~bllcan •
ltlmulate· movement toward some
ures in llM7- and productivity was plan calla lor tax and pi'otlt lneen·
1011
of 110lut1on" to the unemploydowrl 0.1 perctmt tor 1t11 at 19SJ., the _ t!vetl, u weD continued labor nego.
ment
problem in this Jackson
Labtor Ilei;Jartlillin said.
.
tlatlonJ, to restore the Jobl of 750
RaiGNICD - IIIII.
County
eommuntty.
-The !IW'Dber of U.S. auto- wortren at the tlnanclally troubled
.IMJ.' 11M I . . 'M IJ 1Jr
workers on indeanlte layoff roae plallt.
·
I , llf ....... c...lf ...
Since last year, Kalserhasc105ed
However, Local 56611 Prealdent
.an.ay ...lire M. L Mn. . thllweekto:M3,500from229,27!ilalt
week, wblle car produ"'lon ear- Cbellowl!tb sald Thunday fouralumlnumpotllnesatltsreducllumped U.9· pmcent from 1a1t ·that the- P1U would bave Utile
tlon plant In · Ravenawopd, and
1111111111 M J6111llllt 11M h f'rd
week
to
...
Ml
can,
lndUitry
re·
cl!enoe
of
plnlne
the
company's
~ than 1,lnl workers have lost
........, . . I IS ... their jobs. Thj! company cited re: uw .... ...,..~ porta aid. At General Moton Inters~.
Corp., wblch !ICM' 11 neaottallrll a
"I woulcl say tt would ~ve two , duced clemar!ll for aluminum/ high
C
I I
I. 111'1. , _ . . .
ClOIIIrKt
with
lbe
United
Auto
chaMel~
Slim aiJd none, Chenooperating cost and labor producUv- '
1!1r I I ed, a!lf, wLt 11ri!
lty problems as re&amp;IQIII for the
aPneiiJ .......... naldl • ._., WOIWrl 1!111011, i38,lnl WOI'ken woeth said. '
were 011 lndeftlllte iayoft thll week
Emmit Boyle, the RaVI!IIIWOOd flrlnes.

give~

Plan

Her body was found Wednesday morning.
'

by ll!e M"lp C.Uty Republlcu Cealrill

Report says ·building sound

But other reports lll!awlna another
t!roP in productlvtty and more auto

'

CLEVELAND - The winnlni number drawn 1bunday nl&amp;bt in
the Ohio Lottery's dally pme ''Tile Number" ~ 00.
•
In the aemlweeldy "Plck ·~· pme, the ll'llulln8 number was 21m.
The lotterY reported eamlnp of $'7«1,31.4 on Itt dally pme. The
·earninP came on sa1et olll,lnl,512, willie bolders of wlmltng tlcketa
are entitled to share $ZI5,IM, lottery off!cla!o said.

IIPfi'l"leil

c.8rralttee.

The tint Increase since July lri
the government'a -key gauge of fu.
ture economic health lifted hoPes
that the receaalon 1.1 neartne an end.

CINCINNATI:... Women are annlng themlelves or stlcklngclole
to escorts and a two-allmty poUce taak force la tl'acklng numerous
leads aftel' the 10th woman abducted in the area waa found llaln In a
CJennont County barn.
Clermollt COunty Coroner Dr. Nick Capurro said Thursday that
the latest victim, Jerll)11 Stanlleld, :Jl, of Andenoo Township! a
Cincinnati suburb, waa raped and ltabbecl. Her hlllldl were bound.
Mn. StaDtleld disappeared from the Eutpte Shopp1na MaU the
afle{noOil r4 Jan. 13. Security euams there found bel' car the next

S.M. XL. Poly -CQtton Blends.

1

an

Women begin arming themselves

SPORT SHIRTS

'
Sizes 29 to 42 waist - Fuller cut
style included in this sale .

son County after an Investigation
was made by tht! sherltf's department, the Bureau of Criminal Investigation; the Ohio Highway
Patrol and Gallla Courtly Proaecu. tor Joseph Cain.

.tate.

·MEN'S $12.95to $18.00 .

CORDUROY JEANS
.

Robinson, who deputies ~
worked In a general rellet P!'OIII'ilm
In Middleport, was taken to Jack·

WASHINGTON - WUUam G. Yates, a 55-year-old Springfield,
Ohio, truck driver who Is credited with saving the life o&amp; an auto
'accident vlctlm, has been named driver of the year by the American
Trucking Auoclatlonl Inc.
Yates, who works for the Hobart Corp., has driven a truck protes.slonally since l!leG without having a preventable accident:
While driving near Jackaonvllle, Fla., In l9'11l, Yates passed tlie
,~eene of a tratllc accident and saw that a man and a woman were
trappeclln
automobile. He freed the couple and dl5covered that
. the woman was having dltllculty breathing.
'

file_.. a•-.
r.-

lbe late I'Jenr
CIM!dalel for lbe p!lllt wiD
l!an a.
yelir
tl!e two ~n ,mlcl! J'e!l!8la Clll
lire~ term, llllud 1184. Mn. Holallia wli

1!1 Holzer

Medical Center l!Y the Ga1Ua EMS,
and died in the llllenllve care l!ntt
at 2:41 a.m. Thiii'Sclay.
Dr. Edward Berlllch, asslltant
GaUta County coroner, reported
Spencer's death waa cauaed by a
single gunshot wound to the head,
but the matter was ltlll under invesilcatton. The .bodY was later removed to Franklin County for an
autopsy by the COf!)IM!r, and was
later releaaed to.the Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy.

LONDON, Oblo - A prtvatep~ !hat crashed, apparently durIng the weekend, was found Thursday with the body of the pilot In It,
the Hlihway Patrol said.

1

BOYS' SHIRTS

·

~ .WIIJ -~

Regular, Slim and Husky SizesPlus Students 26 to 30 Waist.

M, L and LX. Good styles and
cOlors . .

,.&lt; iannels - Westerns · Sizes 8 to 20.

1f2 PRICE

CORDUROY JEANS

SPORT SHIRTS

$7.95 to $24.95

·

RobinsOn, Robinson apparently
. wanted to leaVe - the four bad
come to the scene in Robinson's car
- when an 8flll!llll!lll ensued and
RobiliiOD aileaediY shot Spencer
once with. a .38-callher revolver
around 9: e P·lll·
.,

"We have 25 percent fewer inspectors now than we bad lnl9'18and
there are nearly 450 more coal mines in operation," Cbiii'Ch sald
alter a meeting in W~'(ton D.C., this week with Vice President
George Bulb and Labor Secretary Raymond .~an.

BOYS $14,95 to $17.95

MEN'S FLANNEL

,

ace~nt.s.

1h PRICE
WOMEN'
. S
SWEATERS
1h PRICE

Ladies

s,

JUN lOR COATS

WORKSHIRTS

Values to $32.95

Trissi,

Deputies said Robinson and
Spencer, 8ccompanled by their
wiv..~. had 110111! to Stewart's resl·
de!!C4! that night to buy a television
set. When the set was purchased by

MEN'S $1Q.95to $20.95
HEAVYWEIGHT FLANNEL

KNIT SHIRTS

Devon, Bradley,
Mann and others.

Road.

WASHINGTON ·Untted Mine Workers President Sam Cbiii'Ch has
blamed the recent string of coal mine fatalities Oil low morale among
federal inspectors, who he said have been dwindling In numbers
whJ!e being forced to CIUTY an Increased workload. ·
Cbl!rcb sald budgetary and organizational problema In the federal
Mine S1tety and, Health Administration have led to the recent

LADIES' ·

WINTER·
COATS
· Misses and Half Sizes
1f2 PRICE

A MultlmecMa Me.

u Conn

Russell Robinson was arraigned
Thursday afternoon In Galllpolls • .
Municipal Court ·on a murder
charge In coiUlectlon with the shoot·
~death of PaulE. Spencer, 24, Rt.
1, Cheshire.
Judge James A. Bennett reduced
Robinson's bond from $15l,lnl to
$100,00) and set a prellmlllary bear·
lng in court tor 1: :Jl p.m. Tuesday.
Bennett appointed Ronald R. Cal·
houn as the defendant's atiomey,
and Robinson was returned to the
Jackson County 1a11.
The 24-year-old Robinson, also
Rt. 1, Cheshire, was arrested by the
Gallla County Sheriff's Department shortly after 10 p.m. Wednesday at a mobile home oWned by
Hubert Stewart on Bulavllle·
Addlson-· Road, near Possum Trot

WINTER

MISSES AND HALF SIZES

'w rer

, SoctloM, ,,,.,...

Bond set in ,
murder case

1h PRI~

WINTER DRESSES

enttne

Pom=y-Midcl!eport, Ohio, Friday, ~nua'Y ~. 1982

WINTER VESTS

WOMEN'S

file for unemployment C~J~J~pensatlon after the'
Pomeroy Office closes Its doors."
Collins ezpressed roncem about the Inconvenience
and additional cost to thoae out of work. "It's going to
mean longer lines, longer trips and more gasoline " he
said.
'
News of Bureau of Employment ·Servtce layOffs
and dflce shutdowlis comes aa Ohio records Ita highest
unemployment. The state's 11.8 percent unemployed In
December Ia second only to Michigan with 14.4 percent:
Collins said he will continue to Investigate the
possibility ol obtaining funds to keep the Office q~en but
cautioned that except for lobbying Ohio's
Congressional delegation, there Is little Ohio's General
Assembly a~n do.
"I Intend to pursue any allernatlve to keep Job services in Meigs County," Senator Collins concluded.

•

at y

Voi.30,Ne.20:1
Copr...hhicll912

BOYS' $19.95

1h PRICE

1/2

•

e

..
MEN'S

In alllalmess Ohio·has done better than many other
~tea In forestalling the cloaure of job service olflces.
!ne '¥1 offices will close up shop March Sl, 11112•
Some states dOlled their offices u early u October. Michigan, for eumple, has cl~ more than
half of Its I~ offices and has l4ld off 1,750 people,
Collins reports. He states that Tezas has ciOIJed 74 out
ofl35 offices and bas laid off 1,325 people. In CG!Itrut
Ohio has reduced-Its force by 325, the senator said.
QlnUnulng, he said:
"However, the state plans to lay off a total of 1,000
Bureau of E!Jlployment ~ce worllers. The criteria
for closing offices by the bureau Is baaed on claim load
and the recommendation of the local office q~eratlons
divislon.
"Meigs County's unemployed will be forced to
travel about 20 miles to the GaiUa Office In Gallipolis to

Collins has made _a caae for malnlalnlnc the
Pomeroy Office In Meigs County before ~ Stein,
. director of the bureau's unemployment ca~tlon

=· ...

......................
a:rr.

•

.
.

interest

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