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Controlling board won't bail out bureau
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The state Bureau of
Employment SelV!ces Is a step clos. to· taytng off
l,OOJ workers today after a ControUlng Board
member accused the bureau of nlsmanagement and
the board refused a request for $15.7 mllilon.
'the employment bureau sought $15.7 mUllen In
emergency state funds to offset federaJ funding
cutbacks.
"We don't have the money to replace federal
funds," Senate President Paul E . GU!mor, R·Port
Clinton, said Monday.
Although the agency cited federal cutbacks for the
problem, Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashiand,
called the matter a case of fiscal mismanagement.
"The bureau has knowingly ovt!'rspent Its federal
allocation by continuing to open offices and hire per-

sonnel even though there was never any federal money to pay for It," Van Meter sald In a letter to state
Budget Director Howard CoWer.
Denlai of the funding request had been expected.
Before layoffs ""-" he ordered, the bureau must
obtain certlflcation from the Office of Budget and
Management that a lack of funds exists.
Gary E. Stein, director of the agency's unemplpyment compensation division , said that once certlflca. tlon Is obtained, the bureau will Initiate civil selV!ce
procedures In the layo!fs.
"We wouldn't expect any layo!fs to occur before
March," Stein said.
Although It rejected the bureau proposal, the board
acted to ~ase a fiscal oroblem at the Ohio Veterans

e

•

at y

Voi.30,No.l04

Copyrightod 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport,

BE F
KLI
Big 9Sale!

.......

Co8metlcPufh
Gentle on your skin.
Choice of 300 regular
or 100 triple size.
78

~... 9SC
BuyS.,. Get
5 BaclrFree

BlcShaven

SPRING WILL WAIT - This groundhog at Bob EvaDll Farm In Rio
Grande, like PuDXllutawney Phil In PeDDllylvanla, peeked above bls
nestle of bay IOOay long enough to see hht shadow, which meaDll the area
ill due for anotherslx weeb of winter. (Deb Fox photo).

Details of tree offer on
each pkg . of 5 shavers.

Balsam and protein
formulas tor every
hair type. 1.6-oz.
84,85

81

. 6ft.

1~

Ultra Ban Deodorant
2-oz. size applicator.
$1 .00 rebate otter
lrom mtg. on each
package.
79

Blc Twin Pack

Butane Lighten

1~

Thousands of lights,
.adjustable flame. Pack
of two lighters.

on otOiay

• 18

9!k.

Share the secret ot
prettier skin! 4-oz.
bottle.
80

Option questions on ballot
.

CINCINNATI - Aboutl,&lt;XXl voters went tD the polls today to vote
again on whether four precincts on the city's North Side will continue
to seU liquor and beer.
Residents voted the precincts dry In November, but a court set the
election aside because of assertions by 16llquor license holders that
opponents of liquor sales misled voters.
The special election was approved by the Legislature.

JAN.I982

Gen. Dozier ignored warnings
.. IT IS Ben Franklin's policy' to h•ve all hems In stock dwlng the sale period. Because this cln:uler 11
printed eporolliiYletelv 90 davs prior to ttle sale date. there could be In unforeseen delay, or in some
cues non ·sh•pment of en item . We regret any inconvenience end will , to the best of our ability, offer •
suitable aubstitU"'e We do reserve the right to limit the quantity on some hems end special pric. . ere i"

SAVE!

effect only during the sale period while quantities lilt. ••

Sale Now In Progress

BEN FRANKLIDI

CHECK THESE I?AGES
FOR BARGAINS IN
EVERY DEPARTMENT

VICENZA, Italy · Brig. &lt;kn. James L. Dozier today said he Ignored warnings by Italian authorltles ·and falled to take adequate
precautions tD prt'vent his kidnapping by the terrorists of the Red
Brigades.
"You are looking at an embarrassed guy .... ! take full responslbUIty," the 50-year-old American general told his first question-andanswer news conference since his rescue last Thursday from an
apartment !n Padua where he was held cap\lve for 42 days.
"I was warned, but the warnings said the terroriSts did not have
U.S. personnel In mtnd ...and I was so busy."

Gunman road postal train
I

--..Rail's • Middleport, Ohio

.j

•

enttne
2 S.C~ons, 12 Pages

0: .io, Tuesday, February 2, 1982'

suits; two rechargeable lanterns
for one of the trucks and liners for
some of the older coats worn by firemen. The approximate cost of all of
the Items Is $3,&lt;XXl.
Council approved the January report of Mayor Clarence Andrews
showing receipts of $288) tor the village. A report by meter patrolman
Steve Hartenbach showed 598
tickets Issued during January and
colleetions of $1195 from parking Jot
meters and $492.50 !rom street meters. A request for a short term
meter near the Pomeroy Wine
Store was tabled .
Council discussed plans for the
establishment of the former Pomeroy Senior High School as a new
village hall. Orlg\nillly, It had been
planned for o!flces of Mayor Andrews, Clerk Jane Walton and Pat
Thomas, the mayor's secretary, to

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel S&amp;al1 Wrl&amp;er

• Terrific Values!
• Vast Selections!
• Prices You'll Like!

Revlon Flex
Shampoos, Conditioners

for colleges and universities as part of teacher trainIng programs.
Another $2.8 million was for contracts with nonprofit educational television corporations for Inschool pi-ogrammlng, while $356,~ was to be shared
by nine regional media centers which buy audiovisual materials !or classroom use.
In other action, controllers released $240,&lt;XXl for a
project at the Lake Edge Park In Cuyahoga County.
The project, In conjunction with the city of RockY
River, consists of buUdlng a l!Xkar parking area and
a 200-foot extension of a pier Into Lake Erie.
The board also approved a Department of Natural
Resources request for $30,658 to swltcll:oU boilers and
water heaters to natural gas at Punderson State
Park .
·

15 C.nts

A Multlmodia Inc . Newspopo;

Test well drilling approved

.. . I

SECTION A- PAGE A 12

ChUdrens Home In Xenia which stemmed from state
budget requirements.
It released $88,&lt;XXl In emergency !untls to retain
seven employees who otherwise faced layo!fs and to
fill four other sta!f vacancies.
Coocem over the state's projected $1 b!Won deficit
led the legislator-dominated panel to release just half
of $7 mllilon that ~n sought by the Education
Department.
Controllers held back the rest of the money as a
hedge against state government cuts that might occur beyond the 3 percent slash ordered over the
weekend.
"We don't know tfthe3percent Is theendyet," Rep.
Robert E. Netzley, R·Laura, said.
The Education Department had sought $3.8 mUllen

LUGANO, Switzerland - Gunmen boarded a postal train and
made off wltb an undetermined amount of mall and cash In wh3t an
official said was Switzerland's first train robbery.
·
Officials said a postal employee and a conductor were Injured In
the holdup Monday night.
The gunmen Invaded the maU car, took postal sacks containing
man and cash and fled In waiting cars, oHlclals said.

Nine die in vehicle ambush
MANILA, Ph!Upplnes - Armed men attacked a vehicle on a
southem PhWpptne highway today, kUllng nine ollts occupants and
wounding eight others, the Philippine News Agency reported.
PNA said only one of the vehicle's occupants was unhurt In the
midmorning ambush carried ou' by an unidentified group In Dlnalg
town of Magutndanao province, 560 mUes southest of Manila.
The dead Included two soldiers and a pollceman.

Winning Ohio loUery number
CLEVELAND - '111e winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 364.
The 1~ reported earnings of $746,737 from the wagering on Its
dally game. The earnings came on sales of $1,144,99&lt;1, while holders
ot winning tickets are entitled to share $398,257, lottery otflclals said.

Weather forecaliJt
Rain possibly heavy tonight with temperatures 'Steady or rtstng to
about 50. Occasional rain Wednesday. Highs In the mid to upper 50s.
Otance of rain 90 percent tonight and lJl percent Wednesday. Winds
southeaSterly 'to southerly 10-:ln mph tonight.
ExteDded fOI'eCU&amp;

'l'hunda7 lbroulb Salardaf:·

8aow pn-lhle, ~ Ia tile eu&amp;, 1111 'lburtlllq. Fair w·dher
F'rlda)' .... Salurcla7- .......... . _ lt-lt'l'hlll'ldaJ, 5-15 Friday

tllld 11-a Salurda7·

,

Pomeroy Village water subscribers may someday have better qual·
lty water.
Meeting In regular session Monday night, Pomeroy VUlage .Coun·
ell voted to have sollcllor Fred
Crow draw up necessary papers for
the Ohio Drilling Co. to proceed
with drilling test wells near Pomeroy. Through the test wells, the village hopes to locate a new well
water supply which would provide
a softer water.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar reported on the fire depart·
ment activities for the last six
months of 1981. The department
answered 71 calls, 251n tDwn and 46
out of town during that period.
Council authorized the purchase
of equipment requested by Chief
Legar. '!..&amp;!• Includes 500 feet of one
and one-half Inch hose; 500 teet of
two-Inch hOse; two two Inch n07Zles
at $225 each; five new tire fighting

be located on the second floor of the
glneer on phase one of the sewer
buUdlng. However, at lasi night's
project, reported bills Incurred by
discussion and upon the recom· · the firm doing the Installation work
mendatlon of David Bassett,
are being squared around and will
Athens architect on the project, tD
be paid this week.
complete only the first floor of the
It was agreed that Ralph Mitchell
building at this timesoo!flcesotthe • or Parkersburg will be employed to
mayor, the clerk and the mayor's
do the repair work on vtUage ra·
secretary will be located on Ule first
dlos. Mitchell Is to meet with Counfloor. The decision followed a visit
cilman Anderson to work out
to the building Monday afternoon
details today.
by Mayor Andrews, Bassett, and
Councilman Dr. Harold Brown
councilman John Anderson.
suggested the establishment of a
Reed Will of the street depart· park committee to oversee the
ment acknowledged that the road
mini-park and future parks In
under the Pomeroy-Mason bridge
Pomeroy. Council members will
Is In bad condition. It cannot be represent ideas on the suggestion at a
paired now due to weather condl· later meeting.
lions, but will be repaired when
John Koebel, local area Columweather permits. Meantime, mobia Gas of Ohio Co. representative,
torists are warned to travel that
discussed House Bill 156 and sug·
road at their own rtsk.
gestlons from the Ohio Consumer
James A. Schivtnsky, project en(Continued on pa~e 12 )

Object
strikes
Bush's.
vehicle
WASJITNGTON (AP) - An ar·
mored limousine carrying Vice
President George Bush to work
was hit by an unknown object early
this morning but no one was
Injured .
Secret Service spokesman Jim
Boyle said agents had not found
"anything at this lime to Indicate
there was a bullet Involved ."
He said the car could have been
hit by a rock. District of Columbia
pollee spokesman Joseph Gentile
said pollee "stU! don't know" what
hit Bush's car.
Secret SelV!ce spokesman Jack
Warner said the motorcade proceeded to the White House, where
Bush went to his office and took
part In what an aide caUed a "routine meeting."
Warner said agents and experts
were "going over the car .... Specu·
latlon Is that It was a gunshot, but
we have not definitively concluded
that."
A congressional source who demanded anonymity said Bush believed the object was a bullet.
Gentile, who earller said there
had been an unconfirmed report of
a man with a rifle on a rooftop, said
pollee and Secret SelV!ce agents
were launching a building-by·
bulld(JI&amp; search along two blocks of
L Street, where the Incident OC·
curred. The search was co~n­
traled on building rooftops.
.
Asked If the car could have been
hit by a rock or by a projectile fired
from a gun used to Imbed naUs In
concrete, Gentile said, "We:re
checking Into every posslbWty." A
new condominium-office complex
Is being bull! nearby.
Gentile sald the car's driver
"heard a thump" and, when hearrived at the White House, discovered a V-shaped dent In the rear
roof of the car.
Earlier, Warner said, "As far as
we can tell at thts time, the vice
president's Jlmou.slne was hit by
some sort of a projectile. It was hit
In the left rear In the root area."
Bush spokesman Shirley Green
said Bush "heard a loud nolle." But
Bush's presa secretary, Pete Teeley, said the vice president did not
reallze his limousine had been hit.
Two Secret Service aaents were
In the car with him, MI. Green laid.
Warner said the agents 'IBid the
noise "sounded like a gunabot" but
'that they could not be aure .

'
SE;FS
A SHADOW - Groundhog dub President
Charles M. Erhard, left, gelll the word from Punx·
sutawney Phil thai he JI8W bill shadow early IOOay and
tltere will be six more weeks of winter weather on tap

Punxsutawney Phil sees his
shadow, winter weather will
continue for six more weeks
;

·

'

By BOB DVORCHAK
"-dated 1'.- Writer
PUNXSliTAWNE.Y, Pa. (AP) -Punxsutawney
Phil, the underground oracle named for this town,
saw his shadow when he peered from his groundhog
burrow this morning and tradition says that means
six more weeks of the calamitous \'.'Inter of '82.
Charles M. Erhard, president of the Punxsutawney
Groundhog Club, roused the slumbering rodent from
his electrically healed burrow.
.
The long-range forecast Issued by the National
Weather SelV!ce concurred with Phll 's findings In a
year that has seen record cold temperatures
nationwide.
"The National Meteorological Center checked with
Uncle Phil before they put out their extended forecast, and they agree with his prognosis," said meteorologist Frank Lucadamo In Pittsburgh.
According to myth and legend, spring would have
been right around the corner tf PhU had not seen his •
shadow. The rodent has predicted an extended winter
•
every year but two since 1960.
Slmllar events were planned across the state In
Quarryville, Pa., and Sun Prairie, Wis. But townspeople here Insist that Phll, who has been making forecasts since 1877, Is a peerless prognosttcato~
The groundhog Uves In a gla.ss-i!I\Cioaed pen with
his mate, Phyllis, In the center of town. They eat a
diet, recommended by a zookeeper, of dry dog food,
animal vitamins, apples and carrots.

.
\

l

for the utlon. Jim Mea1111, Phil'• handler, loob on with
the rest of tbe club'• Inner circle lor the 95th
prognosllcatlon. ( AP Laserphoto).

·~

Phil is put Into his burrow on Gobbler's Knob just
before the big event on Groundhog Day.
There Is no scientific evidence that any animal can
forecast the weather. And the National Geographic
Society once pointed out that groundhogs normally
hibernate untU March, not early February.
But this town of 7,792, located ~ miles north of
Plttsb~rgh and named by the Delaware Indians for a
vicious species of black flies that once thrived here,
has cultivated International fame by pro!f~Otlng .a
myth that can be traced back to ancient Scotland.
To mark the occasion, the local high school crowns
a groundhog king and queen. And the town honors Its
man and woman of the year at a Groundhog Day
banquet, held afler PhU:s prediction, which Is duly
recorded annually In the Congressional Record.
"It's a. tun thing. fl.'s the kind of holiday thatlf It
didn't exist, we'd have tD Invent it. What eile would
you do on Feb. 27" said Elaine Light, a historian and
·former reporter who has written two books about
Punxsutawney and Groundhog Day.
"Besides, Punxsutawney Phll Is as accurate as any
television weatherman, and he doesn't make bad
jokes. He just says what he has to say and goes back
· to sleep," she said.
Feb. 21s the old Otrtstlan fea'st of Candlemas, celebrated 40 days after Christmas to mark the first time
Jesus was taken to the temple.
The Scots had thts saying: "U Candlemas be fair,
there be two winters In the year."

�.·

----.....

I

T~ay, February 2, 1982

~.; C
. ommentary

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

Tuetday, February 2, 1982

.,.· ----------------------------~..:.;.,_~---~
The Daily Sentinel

....
....
..

lllCourt Sired
Pl.lmt:ru~ . Ohio
llf..ttt-2151
DEVOTED TO THE INTER Fli T OF' tHE MEIGS.MASON AR EA

ar:b

~m ~

~v

r-T""'l...-1 L _
"""T'", r-T""'ta d

,~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WHITEHEAD

ROB HOEFLICH

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NewK Edltur

A MEMBER of Th~ A ~li~lll~ Pre11 ~ . lnlwnd Ol&amp;ll)r Pr~tt Allliu&lt;'lotlun aand the

..

Americwn N~wlipupt'r PubiiMhen AHlitH:'h•llun .

LETIF.RS OF OPINION wr~ Wt!kumed. Tht'y Htwuld bt• lt:llli lt'!Ul 300 WIJfdli lonl(. All
ldten Itt! !iUbjt!d to editlnac 11nd mud 1M- 11ignnl with llHI"IW , 1u.ldrn~ and t.elt&lt;phunt'
numb.!r. No umdj!ned lt&gt;Ul'rll will be publlxht'Ct. Lt!t~n llhould twin Kood ta~lt' , addrettdn~
hlfiiUetl, nutpUJ;U~IIIit!tt.

Reagan coalition
breaks ranks
A subdued yet unmistakable tone of disenchantment is emerging in.the
•• . assessments of President Reagan's first year in office being offered by the
political activists who long have been his staunchest supporters.
Leaders of the country's most aggressive and successful grass-roots
conservative organizations, many of whom worked tirelessly for more than
a decade to promote Reagan 'o the presidency, now apparently are
becoming disillusioned with the result of their efforts.
:
Their dissatisfaction with the Reagan administration far transcends the
ritual complaint that the president has frustrated implementation of his own
;: ideological goais by failing to recruit aides sympathetic to those ideals or
·, declining to aggressively promote conservative causes.
Those conventional objections were, to be sure, prominent in a carefully
.'
.• worded appraisal of the administration issued by more than 40 conservative
:: leaders on the day following the first anniversary of Reagan's inauguration.
•
Signers of that statement included leaders of the American Life Lobby,
National Coru;ervative Political Action Committee, Heritage Foundation,
Gun Owners of America and American Conservative Union.
" In one (government) department after another," their critique said,
"crucial positions are occupied by people who have small history of sym• pathy with, or understanding of, the Reagan mandate, the principles on
~; which it rests orthe sense of urgency it communicates."
•,
The comments offered by some of the most prominent signers in conjunction with the release of that statement were, however, coru;iderably har• sher on the president.
•'
::
For instance, Howard Phillips, national director of the Conservative
·•. Caucus, suggested that "to a very great degree, the administration has
•• become an in' boX administration" preoccupied with reacting to others'
~= agendas rather than initiating and promoting its own programs.
"People in the administration are ~!king about an increase in the
national debt of half a trillion dollars during this administraiton," he added
: ·. disdainfully.
Reagan was repeatedly portrayed as an inspired philosophical leader
~; but an inept administrator susceptible to being manipulsted by his closest
•• advisers.
"We have witnessed the contest between Reagan and some of his aides
•. who like to restrain his natural instincts," noted Paul Weyrich, head of the
Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress.
''The administration has not taken care to learn what's happening in the
various departments," added Phillips.
••
Stressing the need "to show the compassionate side of the president's
policies," Weyrich warned that "the administration is getting an imilge in
·• Middle America of not caring" about the country's middle-class citizens.
in a recent interview with a hometown newspaper in Milwaukee,
,~-.• Weyrich was even more outspoken on that topic, alleging that Reagan's
•·· policies favored large corporations at the expense of small businesses.
'.
Promotfl\ll a neo-populist philosophy, Weyrich claimed the ad:;. ministration was insensitive to the problems of blue-collar workers, " the lit·:. tie guys," and "the people from the other side of the tracks" while helping
·' the rich get richer through generous tax reduction for the wealthy.
:::
Most conservative activists remain determined to work enthusiastically
.. · on behalf of a successful Reagan presidency ("there is no good second
:: choice for us," noted Phillips) but an especially negative forecast has been
' offered by conservative political analyst Kevin Phillips.

,....

•'

:~.•

Letter to the editor

,•

:; We need answers
.· When I read the article in a recent
·'
:.
.:·
;:
:;
·:.··
·::
:.·
...
,. .
..
;.
;:
''
,.
'
;:
;:

Sunday paper about cance it made
me sick, but worse it made me
furious that Meigs county leads in
cancer deaths. As far as people
ignoring the symptoms and not
seeking medical help, I think that's a
bunch of bull.
My mother-in-law was having
symptoms of cancer in the colon.
She sought medical attention right
at the very beginning, and didn't
stop. The doctors were making little
effort in locating it, insisting that
something was wrong with her body
functions and receiving -little help
from this hospital, she sought fur-

~~

ther.

:,~

convince a doctor. she became

•'

Futbol madneSSo_______._J_am_e_sJ_._K_ilp_a_trrc_·k

Just short oftwo years of trying to

·· anemic. After such a long time of
,.
..• seeking medical help they finally
..; found it but it left her with a
::· colostom; and treatments of cobalt
~;
and chemotherapy leading to her
'
death a year later.
,
My sister-In-law had cancer of the
:. colon, but it took about a year and
several doctors in the tri-county to
:: locate it. She lives today, but she has
•• a colostomy.
As far as the region being a factor,
•. I can't believe that either. There are
·:
other regions with the same climate
~
and conditions that we have right
~. here in Meigs County.
•.:
I had a sister-in-Jaw in Chicago
·.• who suffered with cancer for about a.
'··• year before taking her life; another
~; · sister-in-law in Colwnbus, who was
~· lucky and alter her colon operation.
~
she's doing very well ... so far, it's
~ ::: • only been about six months since the

..

•:;.; operation.

·:•.; . To add to this Ust of cancer vic·~. ; limB Is my own mother who had a.
;::::: malignant brain twnor, and after
brain surgery, cobalt and

chemotherapy, she was a vegetable
for a year and three months before it
took her life.
I know the problem isn't financial
because at today's high cost of
health care, nobody can afford to get
sick. Some of these people were better off than others, but they all
sought medical help no matter what
the cost. They felt as I do, you can't
put a price tag on your health. To
prove they felt as I do, here is a list
of hospitals they went to, even
though none of them could really afford to: Veterans, Holzer, Pleasant
Valley, Camden-Clark, University in
Columbus, and the Mayo Clinic in
Minnesota.
As far as heredity factor, I personally don't believe it. I believe if
any group of people were to live
together for 20 years of their lives
and ate the same foods, drank the
same liquids and breathed the same
air, they would have the same
results. And if there is a concentration of s&lt;&gt;-called cancer
families in the area, there is
something here making them cancer
families.
I think it's high time we find out
what's causing the death rate due to
cancer to be so high in Meigs county.
How many.chemical waste sites are
there in the area and where are
they? What are we brething in the
air from the chemical plants in the
area? And what is being dumped in
the river upstream from us?
My wife and I moved away from
here when we were first married,
but we moved back because there is
no other place in the worhl we would
rather live. And we can't think of a
better place to raise our children,
Now I wonder, did we make a
mistake by moving back to the pllice .
we love? ~ Gene Goodwin.

MADRID - It wasn't until early
Monday morning, Jan. 25, that an
American visitor to Spain at last
caught up by radio with the big news
from home: The Cuarenta-Nueves
de San Francisco had defeated Los
Tigres de Cincinnati. One could envis~n . the wild excitement hack
home.
But our Super Bowl is high school
stuff compared to the forthcoming
event that has all of Spain in a fever.
Next June brings " EI Mundial de
Futbol," the World Cup of soccer,
and already the country is quivering
with anticipation. Quite conceivably
the eve~t could affect the future of
the ruling political party, the Union
of the Democratic Center (UDC).
It is hard for an outsider to grasp
the appeal of a s.occer match. Some
of us would as pleasurably spend an
afternoon watching paint dry. But
there the passion is intense. World
Cup matches occur only at four-year
intervaL•. The last matches were in
Argentina in 1978. This time 24
national teams will play 52 matches
over a period of 29 days in 14 cities of
Spain. The national government has
appropriated $40 million toward the
overhead costs. An estimated 7,500
sportswriters from around the world
will be on hand.
Until the matches have ended, so
this traveler is told, it would be impossible to divert national attention
to anything so unimportant as
parliamentary elections. The
present government of Prime
Minister Leopoldo Calvo-Sotelo
came into office about 11 months
ago . It has functioned with ·
reasonable competence, but Spain
has economic troubles· and Calv&lt;&gt;Sotelo has all the personal chann of
a cigar-store Indian. It is said that
the prime minister smiled o~ce in
1976 and has not been known to smiln
since that day.
Meanwhile, a truly charismatic
figure .has emerged on the Spanish
political scene - 38-year-old Felipe
Gonzalez, leader of the Socialist

Workers Party. He is described as
even better looking than our own
Sen. Gary Hart, with all the political
sex appeal of a born-again Ramon
Navarro. Where he goes, crow~
gather.
When the elections of March 1979
were held, the UCD under Adolfo
Suarez won 3:i percent of the vote
and swept 1~ of the 350 seats in
Spain's lower house. G_onzalez'
Socialist Workers clliirned 29 percent. If the elections could be called
for April or May of this year, the
UCD might squeak by again - but
who wants to wage a political campaign when the country is obse~~Sed
with El Mimdial de Futbol? Yet by
·autwnn, In a contest against the
stolid Calvo-Sotelo, the handsome
Gonzalez could be unbeatable. These
are the games men plliy.
Otherwise things go reasonably

have advantages for both sides.
Spain is hurting economically, with
a 12 percent to 16 percent rate of
unemployment and a I4 percent rate
of inflation, but the figures are Improving and the militant labor
unions are staging fewer strikes.
Life could be worse.
Some things change. Twenty
years ago, when this traveler first
went to Spain, you would not have
seen young ladies in slacks or young
couples necking in the parks.' You
see them now. But other things
never change. The paintings in the
Prado are dirtier than ever and the
traffic jams are worse.
I forget one thing. Among the
specially honored guests at El Mundial de Futbgl will be our own Henry
Kissinger. He is reportedly a COr&gt;noisseur of soccer, something I
never knew about Henry before.

Rice bombs No. 2 Longhorns
By The Associated l'retl8
Bobby Tudor hit five of seven first·
Humlllated? Shucks, no, said
halt shots and wound up with 18
Abe Lemons.
·
points as the Owls handed Texas Its
"I've never been hurn1llated over
third consecutive setback, all in
a basketball game . Turning SWC games. The Longhorns were
led by Denard Holmes With 19
against rour country might be
hnrn1llatlng, 'but not losing a basket- points .
ball game, " the Texas coach said
Texas, which hadn't lost until last
Monday night after the Longhorns,
week, was the only member of The
ranked No.l2 In today's Associated
AP Top Twenty In action Monday
Press college poll, were blown out
night.
by unheralded Rice 8049 in a
In another SWC game, Claude
Southwest Conference game.
\ Riley, whOse shot beat Texas In
Actually, It wasn't much of a \ overtime Satunlay, pumpi!d in a
game tor very long. Ricky Pierce \ career-high 38 points and pulled
pumped in 14 of his 32 points In the
down 18 rebounds to help Texas
first halt as Rice rolled to a 34-17 A&amp;M pound Houston 9:&gt;-77. The vic·
halftime lead and the Owls went on
lory lltted the Aggtes Into a tie with
to post their first home-court vic·
Arkansas for the league lead. RUey
tory over Texas since 1970.
hit on 15 of 25 floor shots and all
"Thts Is not the first time we've
eight free throws. Rob WIIUarns
played this well," said Tommy
paced Houston with 25 points.
Su!tts, who has rejuvenated Rice's
Still In the SWC, Darrell
basketball program In his first sea·
Browder's 30 points led Texas
soh as head coach. "We played Christian to an 83-~ victory over
some other games on the road, but
Baylor. Terry Teagle of the Bears
this is just the !lrst time the home led all scorers with a career-high :n
crowd has seen It."
points. Doug Arnold added 26 tor
Last month, the Owls defeated a TCU.
pair of nationally ranked teams, .
Kenneth Perkins scored 18 points
San Francisco and North Carolina
and Bryan Kellybrew added 16 as
State, to win the Rainbow Classic. Lamar stretched the nation's longThis time, they were off and flying
est home court winning streak to 52
from the start, hitting 13 of their gamesandtooktheundlsputedlead
first 16 shots.
In the Southland Conference race
"Any time you play Texas you've with 'ln 82-75 ti1umph over Southw·
got to make some outside shots," estern Louisiana. Lamar, which
Sultts said. "Before the game, I
has won or shared the SLC title for
was worried about our scortng, but
the last-four years, Is 3-0 in league
It turned out differently, didn't It?
play and 17-2 overall to USL's 3·1
We realized after the first few min· and 16-5. The winners shot a sizzling
utes that we could guard these ~percentinthesecondhalt,64per·
guys-.''
cent for the game.
But Texas couldn't guard Rice.
VMI, thelastmajorcollegeteam

to win a game this season arter an
().17 start, saw Its one-game win-

nlng streak snapped by Davldson
79-63.

Pastore's agent'
wants $17 5,000
CINCINNATI (APt - Pitcher who ts 1·7 and doesn't want tovtslt,"
Frank Pastore, who earlier said he he added.
trusted the Cincinnati Reds, Is
"Frank feels that the best thing
caught In a war of words between he can do, both for himself and the
.his agent and the ballclub over con· Cincinnati Reds, Is to concentrate
tract talks.
on getting ready for the season:•
"I'm sitting here with what I said Sloane. "He feels the negotia·
think Is an attractive offer for a guy tlons should be lett to me. He
who was 1·7 after the strike and I pitches for a Jiving. I negotiate con·
can't make contact," complained tracts for a llving."
Reds assistant · general manager
Sloane accused the Reds of tak·
Woody Woodward. He charged that ing advantage of younger players.
Pastore, 4-9 last season, was being "They try to make them dance to
shielded by his agent , David · their tune but not any more. After
Sloane.
two years you can me for arbitraPastore, 24 , 13-71n 1980, said Jan. tion. They have to dance to your
22 that he felt the Reds would be fair tune after that," said Sloane.
With hbn and wasn't sure he'd hire ·· Both sides expressed confidence
Sloane.
In the arbitrations scheduled for
But when the salary arbitration Friday.
ltst came out, Pastore was on It
"From our standpoint, I would
with pitchers Tome Hume and Ma· say we have a very strong case,"
rio Soto, catcher Mike O'Berry and
said Woodward.
lnflelder Rafael Landestoy.
Sloane went further.
"Why?" said Sloane. "The offer
"The only way we can lose IsH we
they made! "
don't show up or H the Post Office
Pastore was believed to have loses our exhibits. I think H they
made S!Kt,OOO last season and Is offered Frank $170,000 now, he'd
seeking $175,000. The Reds were be- tum It down. We know we're going
lieved to have offered $92,000.
to win. And I'm going to have a
"Arbitration's here to settle a dlf. good Ume spending their money,''
terence but how do you know what said Sloane.
your difference Is until you sit down
Woodward said the Reds were
and vtslt?" asked Woodward .
"very close.. to contract agree"I can't understand someone ments with both O'Berry and
Landestoy.

SVAC. teains face

Reagan was Informed.
The chief executive grtnned and
responded, "Not after six."
He reminded O'Neill's staff of the
speaker's oft-repeated claim that In
Washington, battllng Democrats
and Republicans become social
frtends each day after 6 p.m.
Then after some banter with the
O'Neill aides, Reagan did what
their boss often does In the same
offlce - recited Irish poetry and
told Irish jokes.
Some of the jokes were ones
O'NeUI tells regularly hlmse~.
"But the president put on a
brogue. He sounded very Irish.
O'NeUI doesn't talk with a brogue,"
Matthews said.

A busy month ts on tap for most of
1M sch.k'• In the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference as· teams
strive to complete their regular sea-.
son schedules prior to sectional
tournament action the last week In
February.
Action resumes tonlgtit With four
non-league encounters.
The schedule finds Kyger Creek
going to Wahama; Eastern Pike at
Southwestern; Fairland at Hannan
Trace, and Miller vtSlts North
Gallia.
League play continues Friday
when first place Southern hosts
Hannan Trace, second place Kyger
Creek plays Southwestern and
Eastern travels to North Gallia.
Saturday's schedule finds Trtmble at North Gallia, New Boston at
Kyger Creek al'\d Southern goes to
NelsonvllJe. York.
Southern remains unbeaten after
a two point victory over Southeast·
em of Rolls County Saturday night.
Coach Carl Wolfe's Tornadoes are
7-0 In the SVAC. The defending
champJ have three league games

O'Neill's office
· Senate Majority Leader Howard
H. Baker Jr., R·Tenn., has a new
Idea for saving tax dollars: Do
away with middle Initials In govern·
ment publications.
"I hav.e not calculated the poten·
tial savings but It could be slgnlfJ.
cant," he said.
·
Baker joked about the proposal
after the Senate's year-end report
came out the other day with the notation on the cover that It was submitted by "the Honorable Howard
N. Baker."
"Who Is this Howard N. Baker
and why Is he writing about the U.S.
Senate?" Baker asked.
"U I could find him, I would per·
sonally shake his hand."
Doing away with middle Initials

would avoid such mistakes and
eUminate confusion, Baker noted.
"After all, who ever jleard of Ronald W. Reagan, Bing L. Crosby
and Luke J. Skywalker?"
"Let us look on the blight side,"
he continued. 'U we do not use a
middle Initial, they cannot get It
wrong.''

It was a Utile more than the mid·
die lntlal that Rep. WUitam R.
Ratchford, D-Conn., got wrong
when he rose to welcome recently
elected Rep. Barbara Bailey Ken. nelly, D-Conn.,
Ratchford greeted her as "tbe
newest member of the House of Representatives, Barbara· Bailey
Connecticut."

•

JUMP SHOT- Meigs' Pam Crooks (12) leta go wltb a corner jump

Defining barbarism...________Rus_t..:__yB_r_ow_n
There's a rapist loose in our neigh- state police rape investigation
squad, more rape crisis centers and
borhood.
My life - and the lives of hun- more money for treatment of sex ofdreds of other apprehensive, in- fenders. He also wants more fUnds
timidated women - has taken on a for medical and psychological treatdifferent pattern. When !let the dog ment of victims, for which convicted
out in the backyard now, even if for rapists would have to help pay.
Most women are glad to see a
just a few minutes, I lock the sliding
women's
issue taking No. I priority
glass door.
in
a
political
campaign.
The chain is always on the front
But
Sego's
unique, prQ:woman
door, and I am training myself to
campaign
opened
up a Pandora's
leave it on when I answer the bell.
Windows are checked often to make box when he dared mention the word
sure they are locked. This is because "castration." It's not part of his forthe rapist comes through unlocked mal position, but when asked, he
said he might consider castration for
doors and windows.
Two men have responded to our habitual offenders.
The media took igunediate umfear. One went door-t!Hioor, posing
as a rape crisis counselor. Con- brage. "Castration?" shouted the
cerned women, eager to cooperate, eqitorial writers. "Barbarism! Are
we going back to cutting off hands of
let him in. He raped them.
Now another man claims he wants thieves and beheading adulterers?"
"Unconstitutional" and Han
to help women. We presume his pur·
pose is more honorable. His name is ·irresponsible position," is what the
William Sego and he's running for ACLU lawyers thought of castration.
governor of New Mexico- on an an- I presume all these spokesmen were
men.
ti-rape platfonn.
But some women I know weren't
His ideas are getting a lot of at·
so quick to condenm the Idea.
tention- more than he counted on.
"What's .wrong with scaring a
Sego proposes a million-dollar
program that includes a beefed-up rapist?" asked anelghbor.

Candidate Sego told me about a
woman who came up to him after a
talk and said, " You ask the media
which is more barbaric: rape or

While the debate continues between the enlightened, psychologists
and the " ey~or-an-eye" group,
rape steadily increases. Some say
castration.''
this is because more women are bold
She wanted to know: "What's enough to report it now. But reporcivilized about a woman walking ting isn't stopping it.
along the street and having a man
Richard Rhodes, in a Playboy arjump out of a car, force her inside ticle last year, wrote that only half
and rape her?"
the suspected rapists nationwide are
We all have read the researah that arrested; about tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of those
tells us that rapists are are prosecuted;•and less than half
psychologically disturbed, insecure,. (47 percent) are found guilty. If you
ineffectual men with overwhebning play percentages, that isn't much of
feelings of hostility, aggression and a threat.
anger. They rape a woman not out of
A 1951 study of rape over the
sexual desire, but because they can previous 100 years found it
dominate and hurt a female easier decreased in times of war and
than the society that gave them a severe economic depression. Wars
bum rap and a warPed mind.
take men away and hard times
On the other hand, Susan Brown- without jobs often make them Immiller, in her book on rape, " Against potent.
Our Will," argued that men rape
If castration is supposed to be bar·
women not because they are baric and justice for rape victims is
psychologically disturbed, but lacking, I would hate to believe that
because they have the biological war or high ilnemployment are the
equipment with which to do so.
only other options.
The typical rapist, ~rding to
But if these things ever come to a
her statistics, Is more likely to be the vote, don't count on women voting
19-year-old liVing next door in a against barbarism.
'
lower-class ghetto.

sbot during Monday's 5:!-27 victory over Belpre. 001lng In are Belpre
defenders, Vickie Morton (12t and Lori Van Meter (25). Dave Harris
pboto.

Marauderettes defeat Belpre
Meigs' girls basketball team cal&gt;"
lures its ninth win in 15 games Monday night, 52-27 over Belpre.
Kristin Meadows and Jenny
Meadows led the winners with 14 and
12 points respectively. Susan
Muscardi paced Belpre with 13 poin-

MeiKs also won the reserve contest, 17·10 as Denise Stegall led the
winners with five points. Becky
Misner arid Tami Dexter had four
each for Belpre.

ts.

Dillard 0·0·0; Crooks o·2·2; Horton 0·
0·0; Gordon 1·0·2; Dean 2·2·6;
Delong 0·0·0. Totals 22·8·52.
Belpre (271- Muscarl5·3·13 ; Van
Meter 0·0·0; Jackson 1·0·2; Morton 20·4; Johnson 4-0·8; Ellis 0·0·0 ; Moore
0·0·0 ; Malster 0·0·0 ; Aikins 0·0·0.
Totals 12-3·27.

Meigs jumped into a 14-3 first
quarter lead and was never headed.
Coach Ron Logan's Marauderet·
tes hit 22 of 59 attempts for 39 per·
cent and 12 of 39 for 31 percent.
Meigs collected 33 rebounds with
Anderson and Horton getting six and
five apiece.

Meigs (52) Smith 1·?-4 ;
Snowden 2-0-4; Meadows 6-0·12 ;
Crooks

4-0·8;

Anderson

6·2·14 ;

Score by quarters:

Belpre .
Meigs

3 7 19 27
14 22 38 52

Hughes joins
Ditka's staff ,
CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago
Bears Coach Mike Dltka wasted little time replacing resigned often·
slve coordinator Ted Marcltlbroda,
plucking Ed Hughes !rom the Phi·
!adelphia Eagles' coaching staff.
Marchibroda had stepped down
Ia te last week and Dltka announced
the job had been offered to Hughes,
who was offensive assistant with
the EagleS this past season. The
Bears wUl be the 11th National
Football League employer for the
much-traveled Hughes, who was
hired Monday.
Hughes worked with Dttka on the
Dallas Cowboys' staff from 1973 to
1976 after a stint as head coach ot
Houston in 1971, when he piloted the
Oilers to a 4·9·1 record.

-·· ___..
- -; I IIIIIIM
LOSES REBOUND, WINS GAME·-· Rice OwiH' Renaldo O'Neal (401
l011es the rebound to Texas Longhorns' Carlton Cooper during the lint
haU of Southwest Conference action Monday night at Autry Court on the
Rice campus. Texas' LaSalle Thompson (42) walche• during their third
IO!i•lna row In conference play. (AP Laserpboto).

GAN ~
RNER~
suranoe Services

.Auto-Owners
Insurance
Llf~. Home. Car. Business. Ont namt says It all.

busy schedules

President borrows
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Reagan wasn't content with
just trying to win over House
Speaker Thoma:l P . O'Neill's Democratic troops for his economic
program. He wanted to use
O'Neill's office as well.
· Reagan borrowed the room last
week for 20 minutes whUe he awaIted his cue to enter thhe House
chamber to deliver his State of the
Union address.
O'Neill was presiding over the
House at the time, so Reagan ended
up presiding over a room full of
O'Neill aides and their spouses.
O'NeUI aide Chrts Matthews
gave this account:
"This Is the room from which we
fought against you, Mr. President,"

well. The protOcol has been signed
for Spain's admission into the North
American.Treaty Alliance. Barring
a veto from Greece, which is ncit expected, · the fonnalities of mem·
bership should be complete by ApriL
Simultaneously, negotiations between Spain and the United States
for a renewed treaty of defense and
friendship are going smoothly. We
will retain our air and naval bases,
and Spain will wind up with the
fighter planes, transport planes and
other materiel she has asked for.
For the moment, at least, even ancient controversies appear to have
quieted down. Given new measures
of autonomy, the Basques may be
smoldering but they are not erut&gt;ting. Down in Gibraltar, which is
inhabited by a breed of Britons more
British than .the British, there is talk
of a new rellitionship that might

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

left, Hannan Trace, Friday;
Southwestern, Feb. 12 and Kyger
Creek, Feb. 19.
Kyger Creek, a seven point loser
Saturday night at Trtmble, defeated Hannan Trace last Friday
night to post Its tHth victory against
two tosses In the SVAC. Overall,
Coach Keith Carter's Bobcats are
enjoying a fine season with a 9·3
record.
Saturday night, the Bobcats hit 52
percent from the field, however,
the Tomcats did too.
Eastern Is In third piace In the
league standings with a 3-3 mark
whUe Hannana Trace Is close behind at 3-4. North GaWa and
Southwestern trail With I-4 and 1·5
marks resPf1Cttvely.

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'

' STANDINGS
SVAC
1\LL GAMES
TEAM
W L P
Southern
15 0 932
Kyger Creek ·
9 3 712
Eastern
1 6 653
Hannan Tra ce
7 7 810
North Galli a
2 9 669
Southwestern

2 11

716

OP
808
659
664

813
821
887

SVAC ONLY
1 0 471 330
Southern
Ky ge r Creek
5 2 385 383
Eastern
3 3 297 314
Hannan Trace
3 4 400 398 ·
Norlh Gal lIa
1 4 344 412
Southwestern
1 5 381 437
Tonight's games - Kyger Creek
at Wahama; Eastern Pike at South· ·
western; Fairland sf Hannan Trace

and Mfller at North Galli a.

Friday's games - Hannan Trace
at Southern ; Southwestern at Kyger
Creek and Eastern at North Gallia .
Saturday's schedule- Trimble at
North Gallia; New Bosron at Kyger
Creek and Southern at Nelsonville·

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�Tuesdc.,, ;'ei;ruory 1, ·1 ,s:z
Sentinel

Ohio

M~igs

Bengals' Lapham says NFL
free agency very overrated
Nt:;V. YORK (AP) -

READY TO PASS - Meigs' Cindy Crooks prepares to pass off the
ball during Monday's aclion agallltit Belpre. The Maraudereltes posted
their ninth victory 5:!-~7. Dave Harris photo.

The best
exav&gt;ple of an Immovable object In
the National Football Leagu. ts a
free agent.
Baltimore Colts quarterback
Bert Jones and Atlanta Falcons
wide receiver Alfred Jenkins were
among 149 NFL players who became free agents Monday. They
are the last crop of free agents
under the collective bargaining
agreement between the NFL Players Association and the league.
That league and Its players must
,negotiate a new contract this year,
and free agency Is bound to be an
. issue.
As far as the players are concerned, free agency ts an Uluslon
because of the heavy compensa tlon
a team must pay to the club losing a
free agent. Only Norm Thomp_son
has managed to take advantage of
the NFL's free-agent rule since the
contract went Into effect In 1977.
Thompson, a defensive back, went
from St. Louts to Baltimore after
the 1977 season.
"It's no big deal," said Cincinnati
center Dave Lapham, one of the 149

·~
free agents. "It won't be n~"sworthy. It's very overrated."
But a talented array of free
agents will be avatlable this year,
Including seven Pro Bowlers Jenkins, defensive end Ed Jones of
Dallas, linebacker Bob Swenson
and defensive back Blll Thompson
of Denver, tackle Leon Gray and
wide receiver-kick returner Carl
Roaches of Houston, and linebacker Ted Hendricks of Oakland.
Also available are quarterbacks
Craig Morton of Denver r.nd Joe
Thelsmann of Washington; w1Qe
receiver Charlle Joiner of San
Diego; running backs Roland
Hooks and Roosevelt Leaks of Bu1falo, and Rob Ca'l'fnter of the Nf!W
York Giants, and kickers Nick
Mtke-Mayer of Buffalo and Efren
Herrera of Seattle.
Herrera seemed disappointed
that the Seahawks allowed him to
become a free agent.

tering Alte•· has replaced Columbus Norihla nd as the Class AAA
boys basketball leader this week In
The Associated Press' high school

poll.
Alter, pushing Its record to 14-1
with a 73-55 victory over Dayton
Dunbar, had been ranked secor.tl
behind the Vlklngs most of the

...----High school ratings----.
Other .schi;JOI.ll !'t"CCivlllli: 10 or more
JXllnts: 11. Groentleld McClain 43. 12, Ot·
rawa-Gia00or1 34. 1:'1 , ZanesvUJe May~vllk.&gt;

(:OLUMBUS , Ohk1 IAPI -

wldf' panel

or

How II sWtesport.oc wrlll!l"ll rmd broatl·

castors rates Ohio high sctlool ruulu!rhnU
~cams this wrek for 1'11&lt;' AssoclatM Preu
110 point! for fi rst to 1 pctnt for 10th]:
C..'I..A.S8 AM
I, KPIIP.rlng Alter. 14·1. 2£2 polnlS.

D . 14 {tie ), swanton and Youn~IOWl'l R.8·
yen 22. 16 ( tie l, Campbell Memor1al and

Doylf'stown ChJPPfwa 21 . 18, Oberlin Firelands &lt;ll. 19. Wellington 18. :lJO, WarreJU\11\e lfe[Jj:hts 16. 21. Oak .H ilrbor 14. 22.
Po r1 smouth 11. 21 ttle l, Hillsboro onll
llamlllon Badln IU.
CLASS A
I, Sidney Lehman, 1&amp;0, Z'f!J.
2, Ik&gt;l~~ St. John. 12·2, 21g.
3. Columbus AcuOemy, 14 -1, 211.
4, Kaclnl&gt; Southern. J5..0. ~
5, New Washington Budteyf! Ce11tra l, ''·
0, 16.'"1.
fi, Kalida, IH , 100.
7, A.n na , 14-1, 90.

2, Wa!Tl'n WestPrn Rl.'!iervP, ll- 1. 236.
3, Columbus Northland, 14 -1, :JJ9.

4, Nl"Wark, U -2, 100.
~. Lorain King, 13-1, 161.
fi. Dayton M eadowdalc-, u;. l , 157.
1, AJUance , 14·1, 14ll

8, L..odl CloverWa!, 1!).{). ill
9, Wlnkirsvllle, 14-0, lffi.
10, Akron Central-Howcr, 12-2, 56.
Otiler 5Chools receiving 10 or more
point.!!: JJ , ToledO ~ 39. 12, Miln.'l·
field Malabar 32. 13, Cleveland St. .Jnw(11
31. 14, F.ud~ 1fi. I ~ 100), Xenia, T oledo
St. J9hn'~ a nd Kent Roosevelt IJ. Ul,

8, F"ayt&gt;lle Gorham-Fayett e, 14-1. !ti.
9, Old Washlng1on Buckeye Tra!l, 14-l.

61.

10. Waterford, Ll- 1, «.
Other .'iCbooill l'l'CCMng 10 or more
points: II , Lora1r1 Ca th oll ~ 4.1 12.Rldl ·

Mentor 11 . 19, Cincinnati Ander90J\ 10.
CiA&amp;~ AI\
1. WlllaNI. 14-0. :\12.
2, ColumbWI Be1dey, 1~ 1 . t!ti
J. r-.:apoii.'O n, ll·l , \Kl.
' · Dayton Roth , 11-J. m.
:"1. Wars&lt;~w ll.lvf'r VIew, IH , !50
6. Culdwatc r. 1~ -0. 1!1.
7. Urbana, 1:1· 1. t l.l.
8, Hamilton IWu. 14·1. !14
9, Wtwc&gt;lcl'!lbu rA. Il- l, 11!.

mond Dale SOUUII'a.ttern 19. 13. W!Mham

'1&amp;. 14 aiel, Mc Donald and Peeb~ :1.4. 1~1,
Zanc!lvlllc. RoBc!craM 'll . 16 (tie), Leipsic
and Canal WlnchQicr 21. 18, Sebring 19.
19. Stras burll 17. 20. Kinsman EJadier 16.
21 lllf'J. Vk!Ma Matlw&gt;ws and Mansfield
Sl. Pet.P.r"s 1 ~. 1:1. SUgarcreek Garaway
13. 24, C l'l'('nw!ch South Cen tral 11. ?i,

10, MIM'nlll , 12·1,1iG.

Mrchanbburg 10.

AIH-IfMol ......... bc.

Publllhod ..,.. atlenl&lt;Dl, llondoo7 throogn
Friday, 111 eoort stroet, by tho 0t&gt;o van.;
Publlahlnt! ~y · Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, 01\lo W1611, 1181-21M. Second clal

team . ""
•. soon as pIayers get· there,
they get rid of them somehow.
Herrera said an offer received
from the Seahawks two weeks ago
simply was meant to retain the
club's right of first refusal
"I'm not going to accept," Herrera said. "I'm going to test the
market. I'v been sending letters to
all the teams In the league. We're
•-•""
~ 'U'6 to . be hopeful ' hope somebody can call me.
"A lot of teams nero a good rellable kicker. I consider myself one of
the top, " he said. "I'm not talking
too much money. I just want to be
one of the best paid kickers."
The NFL said the New York Jets
were the only team In the league
without a free agent. The Washington Redsklns led the NFL with 15
free agents, Denver had 13 and Chicago 12. Super Bowl champion San
Francisco listed five, and the team
the 49ers beat, Cincinnati, had just

pootqe paldotPomeroy, 01\lo.
.
Membe"
n.e
AIIOdaiA!d
Pnsa,lnla..t Doh
ly Preea AIIOdaUon .,.. tho American
N.,_per Publlsherl All&lt;l&lt;iiiUoo, Nottonol
Advertialnc Repreaentatlve, Branhom
~~=y~~ooW. 1l1ln1 Avenue. New
POSTMASTER'
addreu toOhio
n.e4&gt;7611.
DoUy
Sentinel,
Ill CourtSend
St., Pomeroy,
SIJMCRJPTJON RA'J1'.8

a7 eonwr ... Mator"'"'"

One week .... ····· · . . ... · · · ... . . ,..,,,
One
..............
...... ....
lf.IO
One Mooth
Year ......
...............
.... ·1$2.10
SINGLE
COPY
PRICES

~~=': :!.t:~dl':.:l'.i!M:~i;

Sentinel •• a 3, • or 12 month basia. Credit
wtubegtvencarrterea&lt;hmonth.
No suboCI'ipliona by maU pennltiA!d 1n towns
whe"' home corrter service Ia ayaU.ble.
MAILSUBSCRJPTJONS
01110111111
""' V~IJIIIII
3 Month ..•.......................

Sia month
1

LOYI
HIARTS

69_......

..no-.. KIT

.... .. $,49

SUNFLOWER SEEDS

M RI.'lo St . 73. E . Tcu~ St . ~
Lamar 82. SW Loutstann ~
McMurry til, Ausl ln Coli . ti4
Rice II) , Texas 49
SE Oklahoma 93, TcKas Wesleyan 91
Sli'phen F .Austin MI. Teus A&amp; I 49

Arizona 61 . Stanf(Jf'(j

m.

E.M'ontana ~7.

~

W.Montanu ~~

!t7, l.onJ~Beach St. 61
U.S. tnternaUonal 76, Hawaii Pacific 65
W.Orce:on 100, Wlllafl)('tt.e '7l

i!Ount
Ala .-BirmlnKham ~. JackMlnv\lli' ~7 .
Albany, Ga. Ill. Alabama A.Ar.M 1\1
Alcorn St . K2, Gramblln(l Tl
Ccntenury 84, SE Loul~lana 75
Cit adel Tl, Manh111l 1i2
DavW.hon 'rn. VMI fl.l
Dl:!lla St. ltl, Tmy St. li2
E .Te ~!J(!(! St. 9'.1, Ji'urman ~
,Jackllonvlllc St . 52, Mlulsslppl Coli. 41
t..oogwood 94, W.VIrgtnla T~ h twi
MrNL't."SC St. 12. lmlslmna Tec-h 64
MOff'}w)ad S t. 6&lt;1. Olnch Valley ~7

POMEORY,

l. MIMOUrl CrT\
2. North Ca rolina 1221

Ga.Souttwm !i.l
S.Carollna St. 81, Con~till Carolina 71
Th .·Cha!IIIJ1QU.C II trl, Ala.-H unt.s\1111' 47
TUlane fifi. F lorida Sl . 11
VIrgini A St. 74, Dowie St. &amp;ol
W.Carollna K7, Campbell tiO
W~t Georgia "Nl, LaGra nge 71
MIDWEST
E:van.IIVtiK.t 10. Vlilparabo 66
~,en1s St. 811, WI ~.- PBrk..'ilrk&gt; 7:'1
Loyola, 11\, 1:16, Detroit 81, JOT

Oral Robi'rU 97, Xuvl&lt;'r, Ohio 71
S.IIUnots 00, Crtlghlon 61

STAR

COFFIE

NUT
HEART

THE
MIDDLEPORT
Firemen's Auxiliary will meet at

:t. \'lrglnla !21
4. DePaul
~- Iowa

18- l
1~2

fi. Minnesota
7. San Francb«J
8. AlnbllmH

14-l
19- 2
16-:l

~'l
6l'-l

9. Kent\lcky
lU. oregon ~~
11. TWsa

14-4

614

1)-3

~

DOVE

DISHWASHINO LIQUID

841

12. Texas

1'-3

416

13. Wa"kf FOf('sl
14. Arkansas
1~. Idaho
t6. ~nnav.oe
17 . Fresno St .

14-4

17 -~
14-1
11-1
17-1
14-4

RETAIL
12.89

.$139
32-oz.

!t'/4

~

1...,.3

REG.

1 Oll

1).3

HI·DRI
BATHROOM

WINDSHIELD

TISSUE

!95e

:m

J68

l'J9

m

321
24R
132

NED·
SYNEPHRINE

14·3 . 132

·oowning-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen ·Insurance
AGE'P-ITS:

' ,'

WILLIAM D. CHILDS
DON E. MULLEN
JOHN f. MUSSER
CHML£5 I. MUllEN
llUCHAEl L CHILDS .

SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Masonic Lodge, 7:30p.m.
Thursday with work In Master
Mason degree.
MISSIONARY MEETING, 7:30
p.m. Thursday at Hysell Run
Holiness Church with the Rev.
speaking; public

recite, then be has not understood what he has read and he
needs to read it again. A substitute
for reciting is for the student to write
down the main points, and these
written notes will be useful in
reviewing later for a test. This
method of studying is very useful for
upper elementary, junior high, and
senior high students .
MATH. All studen~. especially
those in elementary grades and
junior high, need to know
automatically their basic addition
and subtractioo facts and the
multiplication and division tables.
You can provide drill in these facts
by using flashcards which are easily
made from index cards or slips of
paper. Parents can use a watch with
a second hand or a digital watch to
time practices of memory work.
Many students love to use
calculators, so you might pick out a
page in the math book that has
already been covered in class, and
have the student use pencil and
paper to work out the problems.
Then, using the calculator, he can
check his work and show It to. you.
This kind of practice should always
be review, and parents should be
careful not to jump ahead and get into work that has not been taught in
class yet.
SPELUNG AND VOCABULARY .
The key to learning spelling words
or specialized vocabulary for a
science or vocational class is a sim-

ple, three-word rule. Write, spell,
read. Spelling words can be
mastered if the student practices by
writing the word, and spelling. the
word out loud as he does so. As soon
as it is writlen, he reads the word. A
quick check to see if he has spelled it
correctly, and he repeats ,the three
stePil until he can write the word
rapidly and correcUy. When one
word is mastered, he can move to
the. next one. You can help by
listening to the spelllng and by proofreading the finished practices.
Another thing parents can do is to
give a quick pre-test to see which of
the words a student already knows
and which ones he needs to practice
more carefully. Educational experts
have proven time after time that
writing and recitation are productive ways of learning, not only for
memorized work such as spelling
and math facts, but for' all kinds of
learning.
GET INVOLVED. Once you have
conVinced your children that they
can do homework when they don't
think they .have any, get Involved in
what they are doing. If you take a
positive approach to homework, so
will they. Children work better at
home and in school if they know you
are Interested in what they are
doing. Children need and appreciate
your help.

Feeney-Bennett Post holds meet
Monthly parties at the Arcadia · on Feb. 22.
Mrs: Erma Hendricks preside!\ at
Nursing Home will be continued
the meeting with Mrs. Caton giving
through 198l and a report on the
prayer. Officers' reports were ,r ead
latest one was given at the Wedand it was noted that the midwinter
n•sday . night meeting of the
conference was held Friday and
American Legion Auxiliary,
Feeney-Bennet! Post 128, held at the Saturday in Columbus.
Leadership training will be held on
hall.
It was noted that Gerry Parson, April 17 at Gallipolis. A report was
given on Buckeye Girls' State to be
Peggy Caton, Becky Tyree, Erma
held in June and it was noted that
Hendrie!&lt;•. Jeannie Lipscomb, and
reservation
cards have been sent in
Mary . Madaen attended the party
to
the
director.
taking gifts for games and. refreshReported ill were Alma Newton,
ments. Fruit was provided by the
Edith Spencer, and Howard Dalley .
Legion Post. The legionnaires have
A sympathy card was sent to Mr.
set aside $50 each month for fruit for
and
Mrs. ·Eldon Walburn. A goulash
the residents there.
Birthday gifts were given to all of dinner was served to the Auxiliary
members and legionnaires before
the patients having birthdays in
January. Tbe next party will be held the·meetlng.

If the recent tax law changes have you coRIIIsed, we can
H&amp;R Block is offering a free brochure on the Economic
'ler.,nverv Tax Act of 1981 . We'll show how you can benefit
the new tax change$.

H&amp;RBLOCit ·
THE

INCO~E

992-3795
Hours:

Mon.-Fri . 9 to 6

sat.91o5

.
J -or --:.:"-,:o •.

a;.ow
~
·rh
Cf-&lt;1ver

.

SHAVIR
......

99c

Mrs. Powers who has been supervising the Middleport Library for
the past five years, began her new
duties Monday. Ellen Bell resigned
in January to accept a position as
director of the Washington County
Public Library in Marietta. For the
next several weeks, she will be spending three days a week in her new
position and three days a week,
:J'hursday, Friday and Saturday, at
the Pomeroy Library. On April! she
will begin working fulltime in
Marietta.
Mrs. Powers has been working in
the Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries since May, 1976 when she
began under the Community Action
Agency CETA program. She was
later named to replace Christine
Grueser who retired from the
library in August 1978.
She became deputy clerktreasurer in 11181, and assistant
director.' clerk treasurer in January
1982. Mrs . Powell will work
primarily at the Pomeroy Library.
Madhu Malhotra, a library assistant

since November 1977, will take over
at the Middleport Library.
Married to Frank Powers, a sheetmetal worker, the couple have a son,
Bobby Powers, Middleport; and two
daughters, Debbie Jones, Racine,
and Pam Marshall, Reynolds. They
also have a granddaughter, Mica
Jones.

I

I .
(

· '~

·.,
)

A Valentine Day dance will be held
at the Chester Grade School from 1
to 3 p.m. on Feb. 14 for fourth, fifth
and sixth graders of Meigs County
elementary schools.
The dance is being sponsored by
the Chester Safety Patrol. Music will
be provided by Danny Hood. The attire is semi-formal and the cost will
be 7o cents a student or $1 a couple.
Refreslunents will be sold .

SAUSAGE

~

773-9128
Hours:
Tues. &amp; Tjlurs. 9 to 6
Sat. 9 to 5

MAX._.A. .
REG., lUPER or
DEODOIIANT

. . •2··
lifO.

~rr.

14.70

DUnONDRUG

co.

TAVERN HAMS

12 oz. CAN

UROA IN MATINEES ON SAT &amp; SUN

AU SEATS JUST S 1..~0
MJMISSION E.IJERY TU£S0otl' I 1.5()

YALLIY IELL

.aunEIIMILK ••••• ,.~!!:~~~?.~

N

3 LB. BOX

..$1 !

lOYAL CltESY

2. MILK •••••••••••••••• ~.~~~~.N

9

ALL WEEK

IOY.AL CIEST

APPLES ••••••••••••••••••••~~~.s~. 99¢

COn AGE CHEESE ••• .•.•!~i~~!119
49
:
•
1
•••••••••

··cHOCOLATE DRINK.GALLoN

..

.

DID. RITE. RC100

BP""

$ 29

,RID. DEL:t!OUS

APPLES •••••••••••••••••••• :.~~::99¢

.

.VALLIYIILL .

'RC COLA '

:CARROTS ••••••••••••••• ~:~~:31s1 00
.
GREEN PEPPERS
••••••••••.•3/5100
GREEN ONIONS~ •••••••••••-3/sl 00
5 99
50 LB. POTATOES •••••••••••••• 3

HOM(). VIT. D MILK .~~.~.~~-~ ~99( .

IOYALCIIIST

$ 69

$ 29

99e

PRODUCE SAVINGS

99C

$ 6,9
HALF 11.89 LB.

GENERIC TEA BAG$ ••.. ~····················!~ .~~~.~!.99(
·GENERIC COFFEE CREAMER •••..•.•••..2~.~~-.~!~. •14•
HOLSUM KING SIZE.'...·;..•,..........••••••.••.••..•. 49C:
JUMBO EGGS••..........••. ~·······················~?.z.~~'99C
.GENERIC MOTOR OIL••••••..•.•............. ?~:.~J. 79C:
GENER,IC SALTINE CRACKERS......•..••• ~;~~~.69C:
SCOT LAD IODIZED SAL1 •.•..•.•..••~-~.s...~~~.;4/'1oo
.

..~·. ' ~

531 JACKSON PtM.E · RI .3S WEST
Phone 448 · ~524

LB•

0

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~~~~~~~179
..

ITAYPRII

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,
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WINESAf

10MIIii:AU7Y

APPLES ••••••••••••••-••••• :3.~::~99¢
IBANANAS ............ ~~ ••••••4ta~l 00
.

.

'

.\

WHOLE

• o o o • ••• o o • ol'o o • o o • o o o o •• o • o o o o o o o •

_

'

Revival services will begin Sunday at the Ash Street Freewill Baptist Church in Middleport. Clovis
Vanover of Columbus will be the
evangelist. Singers will be featured
each evening. Leslie Hayman,
pastor, invites the public to attend
the services which will begin each
evening at 7:30p.m. ·

LUNCH MEATS

swiFT's PREMiuM .. NEw" cHICKEN , PORK LUNcHEoN MEAT

,,

.

'

j

A revival will be held at the Nease
Settlement Church on Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenings begilming
at 7:30 p.m. Joe Gwlnp will be the
evangelist. There will be special
music and singing by Dan P · man
and the Country Hymn Tim,
''he
public is invited to attend.

1 LB. PKG.

LB.

~· j

'

Announcements

ENDS~N-PIECES

POLISH ·

'

Powers

SUPERIOR

BA

LB.

-..ouotiTON

POll AU. YOUI PIIIIUAIY
IHO"'INO NIIDS VISIT

$278

•

FOOD PRICES HERE 1111

.

TAX PEOPLE

17 reasons. One smart decision..
618 E. Main St.
2nd &amp; Brown Sts. ·
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
Mason, WV. 25260

n

DAIRY SAVINGS

$145
REASON #2: Free brochure
about the new tax laws.

~
HIGH

BOLOGNA

12-HOUfll NASAL SPAA 'f

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BETTER

LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Trustees meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday at township garage with
representative of Department of
Natural Resources to be pfesent.

BY THE PIECE

REO. RETAIL 12.7P

REO. RETAIL If'.

Call for Appointment: 992-2848.

ON

~~·$198

3 !kt$1

18-0 1.110:
1&amp;- 1 1,1"1!1
al- l 1,112

17. West VIrginia
19. Kansas St.
lil'. Mem~t)lls St.

Wright St . ~. Voulij(Stown St. 74

A PANCAKE SUPPER will be
served in the social room of the
Racine United Methodist Church
Wednesday from 4 to 7 p.m.
Sausage and coffee will be served
with the pancakes. The supper is
being sponsored by !he men of the
church:

RETAIL 12.20

7~~ -J-2- l:

1{),

WEDNESDAY

· ·~·· $133
SOLID

BAnERIES •••• Full Una

1br- Top "J'w(onty \l'nml In 1lle A.'I.!IOCI·
atl'd Prcsll'•eqllege bRske tba U pull, wtth
rtn l·place volt~ In parentheses, thl" !K'&lt;I·
91.m ·~ Tl."CUrd ond total polnl~ . Polnl~
batied on D- 1~1 ~ 1 7· 11H'). 14- 13-12·11- 1 0.9 -&amp;

li,")

THE REGULAR meeting of the
Middleport Lodge 363, F. and A.
M. will be held Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. All members are urged to
attend.

THURSDAY
THE REGULAR monthly
business meeting of the Bend 0'
the River Artist Council will be
held at the Barn Studio, 7:30p.m.
Thursday.

Trustees.

c~~not

ANTHIE~IPIIIIIANT D£000~AN T ,

TIRS

•MUFFLER &amp; EXHAUST •BRAKES •SHOCKS
oOIL CHANGED &amp; LUBE •MINOR TUNE-UP

AP'':' Top Twenty

ar

Daughters of America, 7:30p.m.
Tuesday at hall; charter to be
draped in memory of Erna Jesse
with all members to wear white .

iiOLI..oN

REO, lfET. 11.01

GARAGE IS OPEN
FOR AUTO SERVICE

NCY .· La.~ Vc~~:a s

SCranton l.tu. Cnllmlk U. 7fl
Turts 1!7, Boston St. 11
W.Connc-ctlc ut 6.1, Kwnr St. !'.16

South Ca,rollna

124 W. MAIN ST.

Texas-San Antoolo 87, Nicholls Sl . 63

s r.f'.llrlliVI'nl un' ~. Nlitllara 81

• 7:30 p.m. Wednesday night at the
fire department. All members
are urged to attend.
SU'ITON Township Trustees
will meet at8 p.m. Tuesday at the
REORGANIATIONAL SESSISyracuse Municipal Building.
ON for Boy Scout Troop 242,
Syracuse, at 7 p.m. Wednesday at
POMEROY Chapter 186, Order
Syracuse
Elementary School
of the Eastern Star, will meet
with
Pa·
u
l
Curtis to serve as
Tuesday at 7:4li p.m. at the
scoutmaster.
J'omeroy Masonic Temple. A
layette shower to be held
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
following meeting for Kathy
Club
will meet Wednesday at the
Workman. All officers are to
of Mrs. Wilson Carpenter.
home
wear chapter dresses.
The book review will be given by
Mrs. Chester Erwin.
CHESTER Council 323,

TIJF..SDAY ·

FIEQUU it Uf!ISC!.HTI!D Of FIIIIESH SCEHT

89e

MOORE'S

Tcllils SouthErn 58, Jackson St . 54
.... WelT

Loyola, Mtl. ~19. llof~tra 5K
Robert M_orrl~ AI. St.Francls, Pa. 6!!
Hlll)iCI"N
S.lli ·E'AII'."U Hisvlllf' 45

New Or\NIM ~. Wl~ . .(;l'('f'n Bay
Old Dominion 71, l}oston U. 61

~~b.)

SOtmiWNIT

TI.'XQ!O A&amp;.M !'-!, HoWitoo T7
Texas ·Arllngtoo Sl, Arkansas s t. 62
Texas 0\rlstian 113, Baylor II)

looks at you with stunned disbelief in
his eyes, a student can read over
again pages or a chapter that have
already been discussed in cla"ss. It is
common practice for teachers to
assign pages for reading before
class discussion, but re-reading
chapters can also be very useful in
fixing information finnly in mind .
One big problem for many students
is that they read several pages silently, and then have dilficulty remembering what they've read. A good
way to remedy this is for the student
to read the parag~aphs after each
heading and then slop and cover the
material wil!t a card or his hand .
Then he should recite aloud, to himseH or to you, the main points of the
paragraphs he has just read. If be

·Social Calendar

..

(2 '1\-lb.)

Ccnt.Connectlcut W, Army 6E
Cheyney St. 7'J, Morgan St . SJ
Cunncc11cut 47, Providence -i~. OT
OlcK.ln:;on ?H. Susquehanna $IS
t-'a lrmont St. ·Mi. Whef'llnJ.:: 34
LonQ h\1\nd U. 8.1. WiiKIIIIT fi7

Mrs. Ruth Powers of Middleport
has been named acting director of
the Pomeroy-Middleport Public
LJbraries by the Library Board of

I

BAND-AID

or WILD BIRD SEEDS

Bradk'}l ~. Penn St. 42
Can~tu.~ !ll. Nf'W H;unp~hl n• 84

Often at grad~ card time
especially when their children'~
grades aren't as high as they wish
they might have been, parents
resolve that from now on, more time
will be spent on homework. Then
the first evening the new·homewor~
plan is to go into operation, So!llly or
Sis says, " But I don't have any
homework tonight," or ''Teacher
didn't give us anything to write."
StudllJ!ts. and sometimes parents,
forget that it 'IS possible to practice
lessons or study from a textbook
without having specific, written
iiS!rigrunents. What are some of
these "no nomework" kinds of
homework, and what can you do as
parents to encourage s uch
homework?
TEXTBOOK STUDY. Even if he

'lU~

SA

..

Helping your children with homework

... ... . · · .... · ... . · ..... flO.!!

season.
St.John was only two points ahead
Columbu s Whetstone's 26-24 of Academy and 10 up on No. 4 Raupset of Northland, the Vikings' cine Southern (J5.0) .
MARSHMALLOW
first in 15 games this winter,
Newark kept the fourth spot In
cleared the way for the Knights to Class AAA while Lorain King
move Into the No. 1 spot for the first moved up one position to fifth, retlme In 1982.
placing Dayton Meadowdale, now
A statewide panel of sports wrl- No. 6. Alliance was seventh, Lodl
REO.
RE::IL
~ .
ters and broadcasters accorded AI- Cloverleaf eighth, Wintersville
ter 262 points lor a 26-polnt lead nlnthandAkronCentral-HowerNo.
I YJ -oz.
over Warren Western Reserve, se- 10.
cond with a 13-1 rlll:ord. Northland
In Class AA, Dayton Roth
DAY
jumped two notches to fourth with
dropped to third with 209 points.
Meanwhile, Willard in Class AA Warsaw River Vlf!W up two to fifth,
and Sidney Lehman In Class A con- Coldwater sixth, Urbana seventh,
tlnued to lead the other dlvtslons 1n Ha milton Ross eighth, Wheelersthe statewide, regu lar-season
burg ninth and Minerva lOth.
ranklngs.
Urbana, second last Week, and
Willard, unbea ten In 14 games Wheelersburg, No. 4, both were
this season, collected 312 points to
beaten once, but stlll remained In
pace the Class AA ratings. Columthe top ten.
In Class A, unbeaten Racine
bus Bexley (15-1) was a distant seSouthern · retained !ourth place,
cond with 198 points willie Napoleon
(12-1) was third with 181.
New Washington Buckeye Central
Sidney Lehman, undefeated In 16 moved up two positions to fltth with
starts In 1981-82, earned 279 points
Kalida up three to sixth, Anna up
REO. llfTAIL IIUO
to top the Class A poll, 60 points one to seventh, Fayette GorhamFayette eighth, Old Wasl\lngton
m ore than the new runnerup, Del·
Buckeye Trail ninth and nf!Wcomer
phos St.John (12-2). The Blue Jays,
the statewide leader earlier thts
Waterford moved Into No. 10.
IIIIAIID SI'IIIH
&amp;HEifl or PLASTIC
season, moved up from third place,
Gorham-Fayette s uffered Its
swapping spots with Columbus
first de!eat of the season against
Ayersvtlle and tumbled from fifth
Academy (14-1).
The race for the No. 2 position 1n
place last week. Buckeye Trail
ClassAhasdevelopedlntotheclosmoved up one spot from a week
~---~L__c~ -~~=~=::::-I~;:;::;;;_~·.::R•a. RETAil$1
r-es_t,...ba_t_u_e_ln_th_e_three
_ _:_dl_v!s
__i::::ons::::.:...
. _a.:_go_.- - - - - - - - - l I
WILSON

Trus~ees name aaing direaor

Local Teachers Association

....$109

College scores
Mooday'MColleJI! BukethMI.I :icoml
8)' TIM: AMoc!RUd ~
FA'IT

'
. 1~een"

08117 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Year · iiaiai,;;oiid,;oo~...... !38...,
1
aodll'ettVIrpail
113 00
· ' .. ....... $23.10
·
·aaMonth
Month ................
............. ............
"I don't know If It ts strictly dol- .-..:La=p:ha=m.::·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __j_!:=IV=ea=r=..="='="="='="="='=
" ="="='="="=·=twa==
Iars and cents, tcylng to get rid of
veterans to save money and forget
about winning," he said. "We don't
have too many veterans on this

Southern still fourth in Class A poll
By GEORGE STRODE
COLUMBUS, Ohio (Af) - Ket-

The Uoily Scntine(
IUSPsliHII,.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

.

.

�.:!'age

•

1982

8-The Daily Sentinel

The

Ohio

'

The -Daily Sentinel

Helen Help Us

'

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court 51., Pomeorv. Ohio 45769

Is it true what they say about cold breakfast cereal?
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
···DEARHELEN :
We rt!ad in a magazine, I think,
. that cold breakfast cereals were in~ented to reduce se" drives. One of
the originators said a bland diet (low
on meat, eggs, and other inllaming" foods) would help keep
: men celibate until age 30 and cut
· down sex to once a month after that
- a muciHieslred state, he insisted.
Also, if cold cereal were eaten by
chjldren (this from Mr. Kellogg himself) they'd stay "pure" and avoid
masturbation.
11

Since seeing this tidbit, my
hll.!lband has avoided cold cereal,
and my breakfast chores are much
more complicated. Please tell him
there's not a grain of truth in these
old beliefs. - LOATHES COOKING

handy excuse for avoiding it.
Perhaps a doctor-in·splred
discussion of the cholesterol content
of bacon and eggs might lead to compromise ... ? - H.

EGGS

DEAR HELEN:
I'm a cop. I've inet quite a lot of
lady cops and lady lawyers. Believe
me, most aren't 'In real life as
they're shown on TV. Have you ever
seen a non-beautiful, non-glamorous
female cop or counselor on the tube?
How come they show men, warts
afkl
TV · the lmp1~ion

DEARLCE :
Your husband already knows that
a breakfast of champions does not
lead to the agony of defeat, nor does
it take even the tiniest snap, crackle
and pop out of sex drive.
What we've got here is a man who
dislikes cold cereal and has found a

•
'

LENA HONORED - Ador James Mason and
Binger Leoa Home share a convenalloo to New York
Suaday night at a New York re.tauraot where Miss

POINTEDMAN

DEAR DIS:
Your signature implies you're
almost as chauvinistic as TV
producers who . believe that only
beautiful women qualify as
heroines, while ordinary, not-soshapely types should be cast as
comics or vlJiains.

National Commander Jack W. Flynt
of Dimmitt, Texas, on the programs

and-policies of The American Legion
having national sign!ficance, and on
his recent tour of the Far East to
talk with military and diplo!1llltic officials.
National Commander Flynt was in
the state for his official visit to Ohio
Legionnaires. In private life, he is an
insurance undenvriter and has also

The Morning Star United
Methodist Church won the banner at
the Meigs County Youth Bible Bowl
held Sunday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
Mark Flynn, pastor of the
Southern United Methodist Cluster,
origininated the Bible Bowl for
Meigs youth. Quesllons were on the
book of Acts. The next bowl will take

place in March at the Rock Spring&amp;
United Methodist Church and will be
on the book of Isaiah.
Refreshments were served by
women of the host church. On the
host church team were Lynn Slater,
Debbie Downie, Sherrie Southworth,
and Beth Mayer.
Vaughan Spencer was the
moderator.

Service news notes
Lewis
Spec. 4 Jeffrey Lewis, son of Allie
L. and Mary L. Lewis of Mason, W.

Va., bas arrived for duty at a post in
Glessen, West Gennany.
Lewis, a personnel action
specialist, was previOUSly assigned
at Fort Jackson, S. C. He is a 1981
-'lraduate of Rio Grande College.

Mitchem
KEY- LyDne Ollver, Pomeroy, Melp High Scbeolaeator, Meigs

for die Olllo Jlllllor Mia SciMlan.,p Propam flDall Friday 111111 S.tw-•Y llfPt, Feb. I lad I.

Thomas M. Mitchem, son of
Richard and Vivian Mitchell of 125
Kerr St., Pomeroy, hu bene
promoted in the u. 8. Army to the
rank of specialiat four.

Mitchem, a supply spxlali.~l at
Fort Campbell, Ky., Is a 19'18
graduate of Jlorlh . Gallia High
·SchoOl, · · Vlilfon, Ohio. His wUe,
Stacey, is the daughter of Chester
and Sandra Johnson of Route 1, Bidwell.

Correction
Mr. ·and Mrs. Samuel Smith of
Rutland are grandparent~ of Ronnie
Samuel Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Smith, Rutland. Their ll8lllell
were unintentionally omitted from
an earlier announcement of the infant's birth on Jan. 7 at the PIMUBt
Valley Hospital.

JI -Hom es for Sale

•

ll ·Help Wanted
12-Situation w anted

Staff Sergeant
Well gets honor
Staff Sergeant1Wayne Well, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well, Hemlock
Grove, was selected as Chanute Air
Force Base Non-Commissioned Officer of the quarter.
He _was named the top NCO of the
base alter successfully competing·
against,. other nominated NCO's
before two preliminary boards.
For the accomplishment, S/Sgt.
Well received numerous base
privileges, a traveling trophy for his
unit, a personal desk set and plaque
plus personal recognition from
Major General Norman Brown,
Chanute AFB Cente7~Commander.
SISgt. Well has been in the air for-

ce for eight years and has been
stationed at Chanute ~B. Illinois,
since October,l9'19.

54-M isc . M'e r ch and ise

18-Wanted To do

~)

Business Service·s

30 Years Ex peri ence
Small Pipelines A
Specialty
North of Racine
On (arm el Road
at Saw mill

J. R. PARSONS
1 R· l mo. pd.

• oorcrs
• Backhoes

EVERYBODY

• Oump Trucks

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.

alo· Boy
• Trencher
• Water • Sewe r
• G;as lines
• Se ptic
Sys t e m s
Longe or Small Jobs

BEVERLY WICKLINE

Real E1t1te Gener11

HOWAT

HOBSTETTER REALTY

Weds.. Thurs. &amp; Sol.
~IR ST!LING
Both Men &amp; Women

992-6259
'276 Sycamore St .
Middleport, Ohio
·
9·21 · lfc

PH . 992·2478
t ·n t mo. pd

WANT AD WAY

IN RACINE

SALE PHONE NO .

CALL 949-2320
1.. 24·1 mo.

LAFF-A-DAY

been engaged in ranching and farm
related businesses.

of the Ohio State Highway Patrol.

Other speakers at the conference
included Anthony J. Celehrezze, Jr.,
Ohio Secretary of State, who is a
graduate of the U. S. Naval
Academy and a Commander in the
United States Naval Reserve;
Father John D. Kempf, Ohio
American Legion Chaplain; and
Colonel Jack Walsh, Superintendent•

On Sunday morning prior to the
conference, a hr kfast was hosted
by state co
nder Dominic V.
Belloni of Bre
r, Ohio, for the
National Co1':!'X~er and several
Ohio Congn
n. Commander
Bellon! heads
135,000-plus member Ohto Anleric Legion veterans
organization and e conference was
under his directio

2f.

C. R. MASH
' t1 CONSTRUCTION

:I
"'
!Jj7~7 '

custom kitchens and
appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, and
heating.
·

"See, I told you this judge wa5 a

PH. 992-6011

·--------

bers were asked to pray for specific
areas of the world.
Attending were Sadie Karr, Sue
King, Sylvia Zwillln~. Rhoiean Me-

Clure, Janet 1\taithews, Betsy
Newman, Rachel Lefebre, and Jane
Newman.

FREE
ESTIMATES

·softie .' he just sentenced that

Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Available
or You Pick Uo

' A Iso Wood Spliller
For Rent
John Wise

S~eM r .

February 3, 1982
All the studying and preparation you have done to prepare yourself t~ do a better job in your field of endeavor should pay off this
coming year. Advancement is likely.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. .IB) This should be a very pleasant day,
provided you disengage yourself from your normal routine. Give vent
to your spirit of adventure.
PISCES (Feb. :!&amp;-March !0) You should be able to see ways to
make changeo today which could be beneficial for those you love. If
they don't grasp what you're trying to do, ~ct alone.
ARIES (March 21-April19) Much can be done today to shore up
important friendships and alliances. Encouraging words and sup.
portive gestures will mean a lotto the recipients.
TAURUS IApril 2&amp;-May %8) Your p08Sibillties for material gains
look very promising today. Devote your energies to enterprises which
could spell profit.
GEMINI (May !!.June 28) Step in and tl!ke charge of situations
today If you see others floundering. You'll know what ·to do to get
things back on course.
CANCER (JIIIIe !l..July 22) This is a good day to put the final touch
on matters you haven't been able to wrap up as.yet. You're a strong
finisher now. •
' LEO (July ZS.Aug. 22) You have the ability today to talse the level
of hopes and thoughts of persons with whom you'll be dealing on a oneto-one ba:lls. Use your gift.
VIRGO (Aua. 23-Sept 22) Major achievements are poulble today
in financial or career art!as, if you choose to apply yourself. Establish
goals. Don't settle for second best.
LIBRA (Sept. zs.&amp;t. D) You're a lak~harge type today and you
should be able to do just that by making what you want to accomplish a
game which will attract the proper supporters.
SCORPIO (Sept. ~L 23) Don't be disturbed by shifting condttiona today. What OCCtirs could work out to your ulllmate benefit.
Flow with events.
SAGnTARIUS (Nov. D-Oe&lt;!. 21) Even though you prefer to
operate independently, partnerships could be far luckier for you today
than that wbicb you attempt on your own.
c'APJuCORN (Dee. ZWu. 'U) tie alert today for developments
wlllcb eould benefit you either finaDcillly 01' caremriae. Something
ClppCII'tWie Ia apt to he stirring in both areu.
'
·

APPLIANCE SER~ICE
Chester, Ohio
PH. 985--4269 or
985-4382

and

All makes and models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
service available .
t ·3·tmo.

All STEEL
BUILDINGS

... ,.

Slr:es from 4 to tl and all
wood buildings 24xlll .
Insula ted Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt . 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 61H43-2591
6·15·tfc

• Siding
• Remodeling
Free es timates
• '20 'I' rs. experience

Modern Electrical
Equipment

e

- Addons o1 nd r•miHielltiiOI
- R oollng •nd gulll!r Wllf"k
- concnle work
- Pl umbi ng and

e lectriul wor k

(Free Estimates)'

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621 s or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·1fc

SALES &amp; SE~VICE
U.S. Rt . SO East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Oeer,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP
(Pomeroy Sera p
Iron &amp; Metal)
~

Now picking up junk
auto bodi es. Top prices
paid for auto bodies,
scrap iron and metals.
1
mil e
w es t
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt.
3).

Mon .- Fri .8 :l0 to4 : 00

Ph. 99HS64
.

1· 7· 1 m o.

Mon., Feb. t
thru
Sat .. Fob. 27
Reg. UO Now l17.SO
Reg. US Now $22.50
Reg. S30 Now l27.SO
us Wave Length
For.Longer Hair
Now$29.50

Kay's &amp;.uty Sllon

·Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service
..

3· 11 ·1fc.

119 N. 2nd

Mldclopoot

WELDING SHOP

REPAIR WORK
• Gas &amp; Electric
• Culling
• Brazing
• 20 Yrs. E.xp .
Reasonable Rates
866 South Third
Middleport , Ohio

2-1-l mo.

1·3-lfc·

ebJ.l'

REESE
TRENDUNG
SERVICE·

water·Sewer· E lectrlc
Gas Line· Ditches
water Line Hodk·ups
septic T~nks
county Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire. Oh.
Ph. 367 ·7560
1-7· 1 tfc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For al your wiring I

APPUANCE .
SERVICE

can Ken Young
For Fast Service

~;tum..I!Wpllir

985-3561

service and
lna1all llw.
Rul c1endel

PARTi ANDiE RVIC f
ALL MAKES

II Commen:lll

Call 742-3195

•WuMn
• Drrttt

•••n,.•

•OhpHIIS
• DilltwiSittrl
.MIMWitfrT" n•t

S4

Misc. Merchandice

Reduc ed to $22,500 .00.
Owne r w i 11 help with
fin anci ng.
COUNTRY SECLUSIO·
N - Privac y y et close to
town. 7'12 acres with
tou'r b ed roo m , 2 bl!lth
home, fu l l basement. 1
ca r g&amp;rage. $&lt;45,000.00.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc.
Phone 742-3 111

Real Ettate General

'

POMEROY
LANDMARK

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E . 2nd St.

W f~ t i O..

Phone.
1-(614)-992-3325

614-992 · 2181

For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT
CALl TODAY! ·
Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF CHARLES W.
HAYES, DECEASED
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 16, 1981 , In
the Meigs county Probate
Court, Case No. 23561 ,
Esther Bonn Hayes, 13 Oak
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio was
appointed Adm inistratriM
of the estate of Charles W.
Haves deceased , late of 13

(2) 2, 9, 16, 3tc
Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPONTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On January 22nd, 1982, in
the Meigs County Probate
court, case No. 23654,
Robert Riggs, Route No . 1,
La ngsville, Ohio was ap·
pointed Administrator of
the estate of Hobort F.
Riggs, deceased. tate ot SR

Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge/ Clerk
!212. 9, 16Jtc

•...

Up to 15 Words·... Th r ee day in sl' rll on....

.. ..... $3 .00

Up to 1.) Words ... One day

insertion .............. 54 .00

Up to 1swords... Si )( day

insertion .

.

.. ..... S7 .00

(A verage 4 w ord s per l ine )
The Publisher rese rves
the r igh t to ctl it or reject
a ny ads deemed ob
iectional . The Publisher
will not be respon si ble for
more tha n on.c incorrect in·
sert ion .

Yard Sa le, In Memory.
Cord of Thank s are a c
cepted only Cash in Ad
vance.

Classified Ads

In M emoriam

extra cash
for
shopping sprees
Real E1t1te Gener11

E. Mairnl..lo.llttt

lh memory of James P.
Snider who passed away
12 years ago feb. I, 1970.
Dear Jesus up in heaven
above
·
Tahe a.message to the one
we love
We can'l send a leiter or
reach him by phone
So !ell him we miss him
since he tell ourilorne:-

POMEROY,O.
' 992-2259
YOU CAN BUY A
HOME AT BELOW
CURRENT INTEREST
RATES WITH THESE
ASSUMABLE
OR·
SELLER
FINANCED
PROPERTIES.

S1dly missed by wile,
children, grandchildren and
greal·gran dda ugh ler.

11

JUST
LISTED
Rem ode led 6 bedroom
home, m odern bath,
dinin g,
2
porches,
ba se ment and a wood·
worki ng shop 2.4x42 .
Land contr8ct S32,soo.
JUST LISTED - 7 room
frame, out of higtt
water, bath , • natural
ges, and city water.
Only $9.800.
RT . 7 FARM - 18 ac,es,
some fen ce. old farm
house, a 2 bedroom
trailer, and other out·
buildings . T. P . water.
$32,000.
RT . 143 - s yr . old 8
rooms , 2 full bathS, ca r ·
p et i ng , rang e, Obi.
ov e n.
2
door
relrigerotor . Level 1.88
acres. $37,900.
2 HOUSES - or w il l sell
separate. 3 bedrooms
each. city water &amp; gas. 2
garages, level Jots •d·
joining . $28.500 .
MIDDLEPORT 8
room house, out of all
floods. 3 or 4 bedrooms,
b8th, basement. new
gas furnace. 2 tots. Only
f$21,000.
NOW IS THE TIME TO
LIST YOUR PROPER ·
TY WITH US FOR
SPRING SALE. CALL
n2-3t76.
SUE
MURPHY,
HELEN AND GOR ·
DON TEAFORO, ALL
REALTORS .
HOIISt fl.rJ
Hl!&lt;lci(/II.Jfii!IS

Help Won teet

SALES AGENT
WANTED
Nalionau,
mart~~fldurer

·

known ulendar
and tptCiilty ...

nrtislnr compa1, ottm an o,:
po~uni~ lor 10 lodustrlous Mit·
stlrtlf fOf full or part tiN WOft
We ntttd 1 Wts Dfilnttcl m~n ti
woman to prnent tur lldntw
cliondar~ lu~..,. ~lb ""' II·
lonll" od"'lllinllpttlat~ _ ..
ment to firms within the HIAMt&amp;
communllt. Tllf Thos. D. Morpllt
Ccl., Is 1 pklnttr In !Itt Httttkin1
fielcl - since 1111. Comm!IMM
are p1ill lmmedlltttr. Must be
upable of ora1•irinr "'" OWl
time . tnd d"trndninl rot' Ptf·
sonal succm. W11lt ''' Murl'hJ,
P.O. llr11 382. Rod 0.11. lowo
51566.

Assume· this loan with
$2 ,500 down ~ 12% in ·
ter est , apprO)(. 29 years

to pay. $302 per m onth
( ,'[IINNi{ied JIH/(l'N l'OIJer the
inc ludes ta .. es and in·
surance, total $29,500 followinl( lt•lt•phmw l'lct'hHn/(t'N .. •
Hom e on State Route
12.t, twa bedroom s. Jlh
acres .
seve ral
Meigs Co. Area Code
Gallla Co . Area Code
buildings, garden space,
614
614
large rear enclosed por ·
992- Middteport
446- Gallipolis
ch, many features.
Pomeroy
367- Cheshire
Owner will help tina nee
985- Chester
388- Vinton
this newly constructed
343- Porttand
24S- RtoGrande
English tudor, split .en·
247- Letart Falls
156- Guyan Dist .
try home, close to M id·
949- Ractne
643- Arabia Dist.
dleporf . Featuring 3
742- Ruttand
bedroom s, 2'1l baths,
667- Coolvllle
fa mHv r oom. la r ge
living
room
with
Mason Co., W.Va .
separate di ning r oom.
Area Code 304
ga rage ,
workshop .
675- Pt. Pleasant
. $49.900.
458- Leon
Assume this loan at
576- Apple Grove
111/:r% with $3,400 down,
773- Mason
appro)( , 28 years to pay,
887'- New Haven
$302 per month. in cludes
895- Letart
taxes and insu r ence 937- Buffato
tot•l
$29.900
3
bedroom home on ex·
TO PLACE AN AD CALL
cellent street in M id·
dleport. Nice lot with
In Gall ia County
In Meigs county
c hain
l i nk
f ence,
re modeled thr oughout.
13% Rate Available on
thiS F . H.A. assumabl e
In Ma son Counly
loan on a J bedroom
home near Pomeroy . In
excell ent condi tion with
full basem ent, wood
burnin g fireplace, nice
,, .,
3
Announcements ·
rooms. Large lot - gar·
den space, $5,000 down ·
appro)( . 29 years to pay .
Card of Thanks
Control hunoer and lose
Principal and in terest
weight with ·New Shope
SJJ0.20 per month · Total
We would like to thank Oiet Plan and Hydrex
price $34,500.
the Pomeroy Emergency Water Pills. Jl'ruth Phar·
Owner will finance this :
Squad , V eterans Emergen·
build ing lilt. Approx 1
cv R,oom Staff. Ewing macy .
acre cleared la1'1d w it h
Funeral
H ome ,
Rev .
city water and elet.trlc
William M lddleswarth and
For bulk d elivery of
available . $500 down ,
all fr iends and neighbors
gasoline, h e~ tlng ott and
term J y ears et 10% that helped during the
d iesel fuel , call Landmark.
pavment of $48.41 mon·
death of M•rle Young.
992·2181,
Pomeroy. Oh.
thly, principle and in·
Husband CLi fford •nd
terest ...:.. total price
Son Ski p.
$2 ,000 .
Gun Shoot Raci ne G9n
Blended rate aVailable
Club. Every Sun. starting
3
Announcements
at li%, on a 2 bedroom
al I p.m . Factory ch9ke
home, on approx. 1 1/ 8
SWEE PER and sewing gunsonlv .
ac re
lot .
Lots of
ma ch ine repai r, parts, and
remodeling, forced air
supplies .
Pick up and
Racine Fire Dept . sponsor s
heat, aluminum si ding.
delivery , Dav is Vacuum a Gun Shoot, Sa t. nights
30 Years term. 10%
Cleaner, one ha lf mil e up 6:30p .m ., Bashan . Factory
down, l76!.s3 per month
Georges Creek Rd . Call choke 1'2 ga uge shotgun. :
pri ncipal and interest -1-46·0294 ..
total price$24,900 .
------~
Seller Financing - This
Flea
Ma rke t .
New
Complete line of Munle Opening. 7 days a w~k .
newly
constructed
Loadin g Guns and Sup·
energy
efficient
J
The Heart of M idd leport. :10
Spring
Voll ey N. 2nd st. tormerty Martin
1 bedroom
!'lome near · plies .
Tradi ng Co., Spring Vall ey General Stor e. m -6370. •
Pomeroy with fu l l
Plaza, 4-16·8025.
basement on approx .
1.75 acre tot. SS,OOO down
In come
tax
serv ice.
- 12% Interest - :10
ROSENBERG RECYCLI · Federal and state Income
year term neQotiabte!
NG
Opening
soo n fll)( forms, quarterly reporToto I price 5&lt;2 ,000, mon·
specializ-ing
in ts. and W·2 form s w ilt be
thty poyment of l40UO
ALUMINUM
CANS, done by appointment. See
principle and Interest.
aluminum siding, sheet &amp;: wanda E blin, 41000 Launt
REALTORS
cast alum., copper wire, Cliff Rd ., Pomeroy. 9;92·
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.,
brass, radiators, auto bat· 2272.
GRI
"2-6191 · ter les &amp; JBM cards. Wath
Jean TRulloll 949·2660
thi s paper tor location •nd
· oo«te&amp;
grand opening . Rosenberg Bauer's Barber Shopmwlll
Roger Turner 992·5692
Recycling, 140 Col umbus be open a ll day ThurSdov
Office
992-2259
Rd ., Athens, Oh 45701. Colt December 31. Happy New
Ye.,r .
1-614-7477 .

446-2342

CALL:

tl4, Rutland, Ohio 45775 .
9$· 1lc

168,000.00 .
CONVENIENT LOCAT ·
tON - Eight room two
story home situated on
corner lot in Middleport.
Possible owner flnan ·
ci ng to qualif ied buyer.
535.000.00 .
GOOD LOCATION SPACIOUS , and in mint

1·7· 1 m o.

Clerk

Keep This Ad For
Future Reference

washer and Nu · tone
food center , dining room
with s liding doors to
patio. Centra 1 va c uum
and ·inter com . Large 3
story ba r n and 3 tractor
e quipment
shed .

PH . 992· 5663

Oak Street, Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
Rober t E . Buck
Probate Judge&amp;

Cal 992-2721

Georges . Hobstett er Jr.
Broker
OFFI CE 742 ·2003
NEW LISTING - 48
acres
M IL
with
minerals. and 5 yr . old
split - level
home
featur ing 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, family roo m
w / stone
f i rep I ~ce,
14' :d O' liv ino room . kif·
chen has bullt·in cor·
ning
range ,
self ·
clea nin g oven, dish ·

condition .
Three
bedrooms. 11h
baths,
kitchen and family
room
w / fir e plac e .

D&amp;D

TOM HOSKINS

VALENTINE
PERM SALE

BOGGS

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Cttll for free siding
estimates, 949· 2801 or
949·28&amp;0 .
No sunday Calls

Ph.949-2160 or 949· 2482
7·S·tf c

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Sizes start from JOx24 "

Utility Buildings

OHIO VALlEY
ROOFING
And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types

Ph . 992-6614
l08 E . Ma in Pomeroy,
t - 8-lfc

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

1 3 1 mo .

· With Genuine GM
Parts!

David Price
(6141992·3SS&amp;
1·13· 1 mo. Pd .

Astrograph

Greg Roush
Ph. 992 · 7583
or 992 · 2282

Goodwrench For A

SIMMON'S OLDS.·
CAD .-CHEV., INC.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING.

remodel-

• Electrical work
• Roofing wor k
14 Y ears Experience

FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

(614) 742-2131

S&amp;W .TV

tensive
ing .

8·20· lfc

guy to two hours in the cor ·
ner ... "

FIREWOOD

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex-

~7 6- Appl e Grove
77l-Mason
882- New Haven
89S-Letart
937- Butfalo

bring you

ANNOUNCING

B-A BEAUTY

4S8- Leon

X

81. Home Improvements
82· Plumbing &amp; Heat ing
83 E)(cavating
B.t E lec trical &amp;
Refriger ation
85 Ge ner al Hiluling
86 M .H . Re pa ir
87 Upholster y

~====~~~~=======;t=~~~~~==~====~Shopsthe
HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN

991- M lddleport
Pomeroy
98S-C hester
343- Portland
147- Letart Falls
949- Ra cine
742- Rutland
. 66 7- Coohdlle

2S6- Guyan Dlst.
643-Arabia Di,st .
379- Walnut

~

61 Farm Equipm ent·
61 ·Wanfed to bu y
63 Livestock
64 Hay &amp; Gl'ai n
65-Seed &amp; Fertil izer

21 Business Opportunitlp'
22-Mon ey to Loan
n -Protessiona I
Services

WELDING

446-Gallipofis
367-Cheshire
JaB- Vinton
245-Rio Grande

67S- Pt. Pleasant

Services
Farm Sup11lics

Meigs County
Area Code 614

M ason Co ., W V
Ar ea Code 304

:..,

48· Eq uipm ent for Rent
d9· For Lease

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

. Gallia County
Are~ Code 614

55 -Bu ildi n g Suppl ies
56 -Pets for Sale
57 -Muscia l Inst ru ments
58 Fruits &amp; Veg£&gt;tables
59-For Sa le or Trade

41-Houses for Rent
41 Mobile Homes
for Rent
43 Fa r ms tor Renf
d4 Apartment tor Rent
45 Fu rni shed Rooms
46 S p ~ce for r en t
47 wanted to Rent

17-M iscell aneous

CUSTOM

He daily instructs air force students arriving from , basic trianing, in
the areas of 1 Soviet military
capabilities as cqmpared to United
States military dapabillttes, Soviet
ideology, cornnjunJst goals and
nuclear weapo"l!l capabilities. The
overall purpose ip to help new airmen reaUze the $portance of their
jobs and prepareiem for entry in
their air force technical scbool.
S/Sgt. Well is p jected to stay at
Chanute until Oct r, 1982.

Rentals

13-1nsur ance
14 -Business Tr ai ning
I S-School s Instru ction
16- Radio, TV ,
&amp; CB Repair

-

following telephone exchanges.

•

71 -Autos for Sa te
72 · Trucks for Sale
73 ·Vans&amp;4WD
74 Motorcyc les
75· Boats &amp; Motor s
76· Au to Par ts &amp;
Accessories
77 Au to Repair
78 Camping Equ ip m ent

51-House hold Goods
52 CB . TV', &amp;
Radio Equi p m ent
53 Antiques

33-F arms for SalE&gt;
34-Business Buildings
JS Lot s &amp; Acreage
36-Reat Estate wanted

f

9

Misc.

l'l·M.obile Homes
tor Sale

Employment

J

Morning Star wins Bible Bowl

·· :c.aty'• .hullor Mill, reeelvea ae tey to MOIIDI ve.... from Mayor Bet.ty Wllud S.lunlaJ •ller anlval for a week's1tay millet cltJ pnpirilll

6-Lost and Foun d
7· Yard Sa le
8-Public Sale
&amp; Aucti on
9-Wanted to _,u y

Baptist church's WMU members prepare gifts
Loaves of brt!ad tied with ribbons
and bells with Bible verses aitached
were presented to each family in the
church.
The women prepared a Lotlle
Moon visual and poster ll.!ling the
theme, "How Shall They Hear."
Red, yellow, black and white paper
dolls representing the people of the
world were distributed and mem-

Real Estate

J·An nounceme nts
4·Giveaway
5·Happy Ads

Financial

•

Transportation

a

1-Card of Thanks

PRESENTED - S/Sgt. Wayne Well, 1011 of Mr. aad Mn. Denver
WeD, Hemlock Grove, rec:eives a pei'IIOIIal desk set wblcb was oae of
several awanla he received In recognition of having been selected
Cluuiute Ak Force Base Noo-COIIIIDiaslooed Officer of the quarter.
MakJog the presentation on the left Is Col. Joseph Sbaoaban, 333ltlt
Technical TrafolngWing Commander.

Classified pages cover the

CLASSifiED AD INDEX

2·1nMemoriam

Residents return frotn conference

Gerald Rought, commander, and
Joe Ekllch, adjutant, Post No. 39,
people.
Drew · Webster Post, Pomeroy,
Judging is based on a point system American Legion, were among the
in five categories including mental nearly 1,200 Legionnaires and ladies
alertness and confidence, scholastic of the Legion Auxiliary from
achievement, creative and per- . throughout the state who attended
forming arts, poise and appearance the Ohio American Legion's annual
and physical witness.
Mid-Winter Conference at the
Three sponsor contests, un- Columbus Hilton, Columbus on Jan.
derwritten by Kraft, Simplicity and 31. During the meeting· they were
Kodak, will also provide additional briefed by American Legion
scholarship award opportunities.
Five finalists will be selected from
the 2a contestants in the weekend
finals and the winner will he selected
from that group. The Ohio Junior
Miss will represent the state in the
silver anniversary America's Junior
Members of the Women 's
Miss,thts spring in Mobile, Ala.
Missionary Union of the First
Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy met recently at the church
for a work session in conjunction
with the Lottie Moon offering.
Gift boxes were prepared for three
shut-Ins and seven In the armed .forces. In each box was also enclosed
newspaper clippings, cartoons,
pamphlets and other materials.

'1 ~•

Announcements

Pity ... -H

DEAR HELEN:
About those reformers who, as you
· said, Helen, have " Jumped on the
'ban' wagon," may I quote H. L.
Mencken who defined Puritanism as
"the haunting fear that someone,
somewhere, may be happy." He also
wrote, "Time is a great equaUzer,
even in the field of morals." TOLERANT .
DEAR TOLERANT:
I like this Mencken quote: " It is
the dull man who Is always sure and
the sure man who Is always dull."
And speaking of quotes, I spent a
recent rainy afternoon with the new
edition of Bartlett's Famlltar
Quotations (Little, Brown), a fivepound book whose index alone
covers 600 pages.
May I share some of its gems with
you?
"Few things are harder to put up
with than the annoyance of a good
example." - Mark Twain.
"No one can make you feel inferior without your consent." Eleanor Roosevelt.
"We must laugh before we are
happy, for fear we die before we
laugh at all." - Jean de La Bruyere.
"There is nothing harder than '· ~
softness of indifference." - Juan
Montalvo
"Living well is the best revenge."
- George Herbert.
And now a hitherto unprinted note
from Helen Bottel : "I have but one
ambition: to someday be quoted, if
only on one line, in Bartlett's
Familiar Quotations." - H.
Got a problem? Arf adult subject
\ for discussion? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Home was honored by the Dance Theater of Harlem.
Bolte!, care of this newspaper.
She Is currently starring in her own one-woman show
on Broadway. (AP Laserpholo).

Miss Oliver begins
week long activities
Lynne Oliver, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Oliver, Union Ave. ,
Pomeroy, was one of 28 Ohio Oljtstanding senior high school girls
arriving tn Mount Vernon Saturday
for week-long activities leading up to
the Ohio Junior Miss Scholarship
Program.
The Junior Misses will participate
in numerous program activities and
rehearsals during this week before
the finals on stage of Memorial
Theater on Feb. Sand 6.
More than $90,000 in cash and
scholarships are being offered by
program organizers. The program is
designed to recognize and encourage
wholesome achievement In young

that all policewomen, etc. , are
dishes. They aren't! - DISAP-

992-2156

675-1333

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

, .,

~

,.,,

r . r . ••·•~•

.

..

AlB

McDaniel's Custom But·
cherlng. Open from 7:30
om tll6 pm . 304·BBl·3224 .

JIMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lo nier. 304'675-7397 .
Camp Conley .

�Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel
Giv~e:!
a~
w~
a2
y _ __

4

A N Y PE R SON who ·has
an yt hi ng to give away and
does not offer or atte m pt to
offer any oth er thi ng tor
sa le may place an ad in t his
colum n. T here will be no
cha r ge to t he advertiser .

l2

They'll Do It Every Time
L!NSEEP

NTSA

NEW/.OCI&lt;
OHH!S

A11/1?7!11ENT
~ ····

To give a way wood pa ll ets,
pie:kup at the side of 1&lt; ·
Mart. L i m i ted suppl y.

7ot!HV-HE

Puppi es to good hom e. 675·
9782 .

i.tXJ&lt;EU HIS
1&lt;6VS !HSIPE

6

NE LP··· ·

Cute 6 wk . o ld pupp ies, part
Dachshund , 2 males, 2
females, free to good home .

Te rr ace,

~---

7

8

Public'Sale
&amp; Auction

Feb. II, 1982 at 10 a .m . the
Racine H ome National
Bank will offer for sale at
Publi c
Auct i on
th e
following : ·1976 Chevorlet
Malibu Classic, 197.4 Buick
2 door hardtop, 1979 Honda
XL500S motorcycle. The
Racine Home National
Bank r eserv es the right to
reject any or all bids and
may r emove any or all
items from the sale at any
time .

9

wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
niture a nd Antiques of al l
kind s, c all K enneth Swain,
256·1967 in the evening s.
CASH PAID for cl ean, late
model used cars . Smith
Bui ck-Ponti ac , GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call4462282.
Buying
G old ,
Silv er ,
Platinum , old coin s, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes av a il abl e. Al so
coins &amp; c oin suppli es for
sa l e.
Spr i ng
Vall ey
Trading , Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 or 446·8026 .
We pay c ash for l ate model
clean used c ars .
Frenc htown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson,
446·0069.
TOP PRIC E Sc r ap M etal,
auto bodi es, and cars. Bat ·
ter ies, a lumium , brass &amp;
copper . Ga llipoli s Block
Co., 123 112 Pine St ., 446·
2783.

A nice build ing lot. Will pay
cash . Call 379 ·2617 .
Last day 1 wi ll buy fur for
this 'season is Saturday,
Feb . I J, George Buckley,
664·4761. ·
BED S· IRON . BRA SS, old
furnitur e, gold , silv er
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone ja r s, antiques, etc.,
Compl e t e
hou se hold s.
Write : M . D . Miller, Rt . 4,
.Pomeroy , Oh. Or 992-7760.
CH I P WOOD . Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on la rg est
end. S1 2.50 per ton . Bundled
slab . $10 .50 pe r · ton .
Oeliverd to Oh io Pallet Co.,
Rock
S prin g s
Rd .,
.Pomeroy . 992·2689.
Gold , s i lv er , sterl ing ,
1ewe1ry, rin gs, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Bar ·
ber Shop, M iddleport. 992 ·
3476 .
BUYIN G
DEER AND
BEE F HIDE S. Gene Hines
Rl. 1, Amesvi lle, Dh 448·
6747 . Buyin g r aw fur after
Dec . 12. D a il y 6 PM to 9
~M , cl osed Sundays.
O~D

FURNITURE , beds,
Iron, brass, or wood . Kitchen cubbards ot all types.
Tables, round or square .
Wbod Ice bo•es. Old desKs
.and bookc ases. Will buy
complete household . Gold,
5llver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
etc. Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby M artin 9926370.
-----.-~·

72

Apartm emt
for Rent

1970 2 bdr ..' extr a nice, new
ca rpet &amp; hot water tank,
natu r al gas, se t up r ea dy to
move into . City li mi ts. a
barga in, $3,650. Call 4468252 , alter 5 call 446·4291

Fu r n ished
ro om
$85 ,
utiliti es pd ., single ma le,
r ange, refri g. shar e. bath.
446 4416 after 7PM.

USED MOBI LE
576·2711 .

F urnished apa r tment for
r ent. Call 446-3937 .

HOM E .

2 bedroom
furnish ed
mobile home, large lot.
ref eren ces and deposit
required . Camp Conley.
675·3219.

Emplayment

35

wanted to Oo

1t

Help Wanted

E a rn
20
per
cent
r etirement on S2,000.00
wholesa le instead of 3 per
c ent
ret i rement
on
$7,500PV . 614·875·9749 or
614·477·1414.
Why settle for less, sell the
best. AVON . Call 446·JJ58
or 742 ·2354 .
WANTED : Full· time live·
in Housemanager and parttime Relief Housemanager
(weekends) to work wifh
persons handicapped w i h
mental retardation at
group home In Gallipolis.
Job requires that you
supervise staff and that
you train and supervise
clients in personal hvgiene
and home living skills.
WeeKends off . Room,
board , and
benefits
provided. Send resume to
John Lehew, P.O. Bo)C 906,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631. Equal
opportunity employer .
Full charge bookkeeper 1
to 2 years recent -experience
in
genera l
bookkeeping, prepara1ion
of payroll, taxes and sales
taxes .
Send
sa l ary
requirement and resume to
Bm&lt; 505 in care Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 Jrd .
Ave, Gallipo lis, 45631.

W ill care for an elderly
man or woman in our
home. S600 per . mo. C.~lll
446·8163.

L

12

Situations Wanted

Wanted : Person to share 2
bdr. apt. Cai i245·58J5 .
Have vacan cy for elderly
woman or man in my
private home. Good ex·
perien ce.
Rea sonable
rates. Call 614·667-6329 or
614-667·3402 .
Have vacan cy for elderlY
person . Room, board, care,
and laundry . 992-6022 .
Wanted to buy , rent or.
lease business in Mid·
d teport or Pomeroy . Also
like t o buy C·l and C·2
L iquor license . Wou ld like
to r ent emptv building in
Middleport. Phone 992·9981
or P.O. Box 405, Pomeroy .
Serious inquiries only.
Bookkeeping, income tax
service, individual and
business . Call Richard
Bailey ol 992 ·3861 after 6
p.m .

House 2 bedroom, 733 3rd.
Ave ., Gallipolis. Deposit
required. Call 446·3870 or
446· 1340.

REFINANCE or purchase
your home . 30 year fixed
rate. wva . &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage. 77 E. Stale St.,
Alhens,.Oh . 592·3051 .

2 bedroom house on Lincoln
Hts . New floor coverings,
gas heat. Adu lts preferred .
No pets . Ref. and dep.
r equired. 992-30 '3 4.

Professional
Services

UNFURNISHED hou se,
white fram e. 3 bedroom ,
electric heat, kitchen not
furnished wih stove &amp;
refri gerator. Utility room
with washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 acre garden &amp;
yard . Mailin g address
Gallipoli s Ferry , le3'se &amp;
deposi required . Owner ship management . Phone
Huntington, 304· 522 · 1990.

Piano Tuning -Be kind to
your ears. Ca ll Bill Ward
for appointment, 446·4372.

a.

someone to care for goats.
Milk
and
feed .
Ex peri enced. 256-6642 .

T R I·CHEM liquid ·e m ·
broidery
i nstru c tor s
needed now. Excellent ear·
ning· potenial. Elsa Cox 30.4·
675·5187 .

RIGHT DOWN TOWN
Newly
dec ora te d
unfurn ished, 3 rm . house.
Suitab le for single per son
or retired coupl e. Garden
space, deposit &amp; references
required. Call 446-0450 or
446· 1291.

Money to Loan

•

Rubber Stamp &amp; Business
Cards. Ususally one or two
days servi ce. Dismuke's
405 2nd . Ave., Gallipolis,
446 0474 .

Part tim e RN for 7 to 3
shift . 2 to 3 day s a week .
Ca ll Mrs. VanMeter at
Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
ter . 992·6606.

4554.

THREE bedroom, 2 baths,
fam l l y· recreation, laun dry, workshop, 2 car
garage fenced yard , $425.
plus deposit, 508 M cNeil
Ave. Pt . Pleasant, phone
304·675·5453 .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

2 bedroom brick house,
large patio, sl iding door,
full basement, garage, 1
acre lotonstate Rt . 35. Low
SO' s. Call446·0755 .
1972 Concord Mobile Home,
12x65. Call 446·7015 after
5 :30p .m .
J or .4 bedroom house with
bath in country on 2.3
acres .f Storm windows,
rural water, garage, lots of
storage space, close to all 3
mines. Pr ice reduced for
quick sale. $15,500. 742·
2502 .

THREE bedroom hou se in
Henderson, $125 . per mon ·
th. $100 . deposit. New 1
bedroom , furnished apart ·
ment, $225 . per month . 304 ·.
675·9760.
WHITE frame , 7 room, 3
bedroom , el ectr ic heat, kit ·
chen not furnished with
stove &amp; refr igerator, utili ty
room w ith washer &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 Acre yard &amp; gar ·
den area . Mailbox address,
Gallipo li s Ferry . Deposit &amp;
lease required . Ownership
management. JOA·522· 1990.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr . and 3 bdr. mobile
homes. Ca ll 446·0175 .

2.12 acr es of land wi th 6
rooms and bath on Mid·
dleport Hill . For lurther information conta c t ·the
o~ner at 650 South 2nd Ave,
Middleport or 992-6755 .

2 Bedroom Trail er par·
tially furni shed . On r iver,
responsible adu l ts. 256·6002
after 6 .

THREE bedroom house,
Haven Heights, fi r eplace
with heatolator, hardwood
floors, family room with
sliding glass door , forced
air fuel oil heat. 8_ %
assumable loan . Fm·HA
Call 304-8'15·3610 or 304-675:
4380 ask for Beverly .

2 bdr . trai ler furnished,
adults only , Brown Trail er
Park , 992·J32A.
Nice 1 bedroom furnished
mobile home . 9 mile from
Pof11eroy on Rt. 33. Phone
for appolntmenl992-7479.

OJJ8.

St

2 brd . apt . HUD excepted,
k i tc hen.furn . Call 675-510.4.

LAYNE'SFURN!TURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
toman , J tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $795 . Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide·a·
beds,S340., queen size, $380.
Recliners. $175. to $295 .,
Lomps from $18. to $05 . 5
pc . dllettes from $79., to
$385 . 7 pc .• $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495. Desk $110.
Hutches. $JOO. and $375 .•
maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Bassett
Oak. $075 ., Bassett Cherry,
$795. BunK bed complete
with mattresses, S2SO. and
up to SJSO. Captain's beds,
$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, ful l or twin, $58 .,
firm , S68 . and $78. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49.
4 dr. chests, $42. Bed
frames. S20.and S25., 10 gun
· Gun c abinets, $350., dinet·
te chairs $20. and $25. Gos
or electric ranges, S295. Or·
lhopedic super firm, S?5,
baby malresses, $2~ &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25. &amp; $30.
Electric fireplace, gun
cablne1, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; -4 chairs.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV 's,
3 miles out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri ., 9am to5pm. Sat.
446·0322

Furnished apt. 3 rooms
with privat e bath . Referen·
ces preferr ed, 845 2nd.
Ave., Galli poli s. Call 4.46 ·
22 15.
2 bdr. completely furn., all
electri c, carpeted, adults,
no pets, 458 2n~ . Ave.,
Gallipoli s, $225 per mo.
plus deposit. Call 446·2236
or 446·2581.
Furnished apartment, up·
sta ir s, 4 r ooms and bath .
One or two adults, referen·
ces and security deposit
r equ ir ed . Ca ll 446·0444 af·
t er 5PM .

Furnished apt., 3 rooms,
e lectri city &amp; water paid,
$200 mo. Call 446~ 4416 alter
7PM
Effici enc y
apartment .
Roush Lane, Cheshire. 304·
773·5882 .
A partments . 675 -5548 .

S4

APARTM E NT for rent,
$150. per month , 304·675·
1972.

New wood s·tove, half price,
never used, S350. Can con·
vert to furnance . Call 256·
1216, Gallipolis .

FURNI SHED I bedroom ,
all elec tri c apartment,
adults only , no pets, call

Win . M ·l2, JO' full choke .
Win . M · l2, 28' mod . Rem.
M ·31, 30' full choke. Phone
446·3413.

304 ~ 675· 3788 .

45

.

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
l ight housekeeping apt.,
Pa rk Central Hotel.
46

Space for Rent .

Large tr ai ler lot. Call 4.46·
4265 or 446·4736.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pa rk, Route 3J, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992 7479 .

-.4\"-K·I&lt;I\FF!- WE 60CI"'L

,O..L'WA'i.S RUN

A PI LOT PR06RM•\

1'0 ELIMINATE
F'061N OUR

QUE6TIONS!

"'NY

'

RAY'S
USEO
FUR ·
N I TU R E Bunk beds $05,
coal stove $85, l iving room
su ile $35, couch $15.
bedroom suite S65, dinette
set SJ5, refrigerator S4S.
Call 367-0637 .
Furniture for sale. Leaving
area must sell. Regular
Buck stove excellent con·
difion (free standing&gt; $600.
8 fl . pool table, $300. Com·
pl ete Groyle Hill l iving
suite w / tables, $1,000 . Call
446·7497 or 446·4942 .

Merebandlse

Firewood $30. a PU load.
Within 10 mile radius
cheaper. Ph . J .J . Justice,
388·8246.

51
Household Goods
--· - - - - - - - - SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St .,
Gallipolis. 3 piece li ving
room suites $199, maple
rockers $49, several chest
of drawers, new &amp; used
wood burners, new table
lamps $18, wood cook
ranges, new 5 piece dinnet
sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
se veral dinnet sets. silver
stone·all si:zes, bunk beds
$100, new toots of all kinds,
wringer Maytag washer.
Linoleum rugs 9x 12 $10,
and lots more. Hours 10am
to 5pm, 446 ·3159.

3 graves for sa le at Ohio
Valley Memorial Gardens
at $400 . Call·245·5682.
Maytag automatic washer
rebuilt.
guarenteed ,
$12() .00. Easy dryer rebuilt,
guarenteed, $90 .00 . Call
446·8181.
Excelsior Oil Co.. 636 E .
Main St., Pomeroy, Ohio .
992 ·2205.
Craig AM· FM cassette
with Craig SO watt power
booster . 742 -3154 or 992 7467 .

GOOO
USEO
AP ·
PLIANCES
wa shers,
dryer s,
r efr i gerators.
r a nge s.
Skaggs
Ap pliances, Upper Riv er Rd ..
z::.i~~ ~to ne Cr~st Motel.

8

3 cu shion sofa with matching cha ir and an oval cof·
fee table with matching
end table. exc. cond . Ca ll
446·156 9.

THIS IS IT · OUR ANNUA~
SALE . Gel up to $125.00
savings on World·Book En ·
c yclopedia .
Monthly
payments availab le. Call
Margaret Pierce, local
school servicP. represen tative . 304·675·3775.
Lowrey organ, like new,
SBOO.
Coppertone
refrigerator $125. 675·5304.
Horse saddle, like new . 882 ·
2750.
ss

Building Supplies

Bui !ding materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, wi11;
dews, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0 .
Call245·512l.
S&lt;l

BRIAR PATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English CocKer Spaniels.
Call 388·9790.
Reg .... cocker Spaniel pups,
color blonde. Call446·1262.
FOR sale or trade -running
treeing Walker Coon
Hound . 304-675·2745.

&amp;

57

Musical
Instruments

Used piano below $100 . Call
388·9015 .

Mobile Homes
------~~~
or~s
~a~t~
e ______

13
Insurance
3 bedroom house wUh nice
CLEAN USED MOBILE
1ot and g a rden space that AUTOMOBILE
KESSEL'S
IN · HOMES
will pass government in ·
MOBILE
SURANCE
been
con · . QUALITY
spectlon on good road.
celled?
Lost
your HOME SALES, 4 MI.
close·ln West Virginia by · operator' s License? Phone WEST, GAL~IPOLIS, RT
April lsi. Phone 675·5396 .
35. PHONE 446·3868.
992· 2143

'

TUESDAY
Pll. a, tii8Z

Truck' s for Sole

1979 Chevy I ton , flat bed
truck, $4,200 . Call 446·4782.
Chevy C·lO power st eer ing
&amp; brak es, AM ·FM stero,
good cond. Cal1446·7654 .

Stiller apolllght the upcoming
.movies, apona and epeelalaon
HBO In February.

CIJ

CAPTAIN EASY

ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
CD HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Ill()) TIC TAC DOUGH
CIJ IIiJ MACNElL·LEHRER
RI!POAT
\lD) NEWS
IIfl. MUPPET SHOW
7:05 Cll CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIENDS Gueata : Steve
Lawrence, Tim Conway .
1:30
YOUASKEDFORIT
[}) ANOTHER ltFE
(]) ltZA MINNELLI The
inimitable Liza returns to HBO
with her dazzllno.nlghtclub act :
taped at the New Orlean&amp;
Theater for the Performing

!101.0 'IOU trD

WE-'LL NEVEJZ:. ~ELL ANYTH!N(;
TO THF: P6V//.!

I.EAD U~ !tiGHT
HeRe TO ACME
INI7U~TR!E7!

1975 Ford T880 15 in steel
dump , gas 5X 4 J4M Rears.
2 airlift Ayles. 1 Eaton 2 sp
Rayle. I J50 GM engine
1t
Ph
~ J8
comp
e . . one n2· 61
after.6ep.m

me

7;;;3= =';'
v;:a=:n:::
s=;
&amp;=4;=;W
;;;=.D
;;=.==
1978
Chevy
Blaze r
{Cheyenne) V·8, 4·WD, new
tires, regular gas, e•tras.
Call446· 1882 after 6PM.

Af11.

Cil DCil FAMILY FEUD
CD ~A VERNE AND SHIRLEY

'

For sale or trade 73 lnfernat ional Scout, standetrd
transmission and lock out
hubs. Call 256·657.4 after 6
PM.

C.OfJCE\VE:D t" I. DID Tf\8 0f?D\JI-JDWORK1 ,.. •; •DID ALl lH~ .., r::;::::~~r"::::'i'\1
1\IC IDeA~ ThiS' SbLD'ffi~ c.ue~C4.l1J.\~
WR\TI~IO AW £Val
\Del&gt;. I ~p UP
S~TQ..\f;D OlJr 1J.le

1979 Ford F ·150, 4·wheet
drive lock outs, AM·FM,
auto, PS, PB, AC, $4,795.
Call 446· 1724.

l~::::::::r:-J ALL. lllE.

ART \l.lORK I BUT L.n

A~~L~S .. ,

1HitJ0 00

1979 FOUR Wheel drive,
Chevy, J-4 ton, 4 speed,
$4,500. 304-675· 1578. After
J: J0675·1J20.

'IJ~AW

com

61

Farm Equipment

JIVIDEN ' S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446·1675
Special Sale on NEW
TRACTOR!
Price
Model
HP
260-24
$4924.00
260-24
5295.00
4924.00
260-24
5295 .00
260-24
JIQ28
JIQ28
JIQ--.4-28

5594 .00
5983 .00
7072 .00

J60-J60--

6555.00
6945.00

J5
J5

460-460-460--

41 .'1-41 .'1-41. '1-460--4•4-41. '1--

7353 .00
7995 .00
6857.00
9619.00

51Q48 .!&gt;51Q-4x4-48.!&gt;51o48 .!;--

7778 .00
9886.00
8450.00

61Q64
61Q-4•4-64

9314 .00
- 11, 304.00
Plus Freight

Sale Date March 13, 1982
CALL NOW!

MASSEY FERGUSON 96
bushel
grinder -mixer,
same as new condition, 304 372-9773.
1965 MF 35 gasoline !rae ·
tor, one 6 foot scraper
blade, price 27 .95. Phone
576· 2297 after 5 pm .
64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay tor sa te. Ca ll 367·0157 .
For sale ear corn . Call 614384·4514 .
Hay
$1.75 per
bale,
minimum 50 bale, ground
ear corn $82 ton.614·985·
3581.
100 or more Timothv hay.
742·2416.

- ..................
............
-........
~·

71

Auto tor Sate

1972 Pontiac . In perfect
cond ., has new vinyl top.
Can be seen at 107
Chlltocothe Rd .• 245·5879.

New Auto Parts $20,000
stock , fit most . 25·50 per
cent cost . Porter, Oh . Call
367-0236 or 367·7101 .

~mina . )

81 Dodge Colt, 41 MPG,
front wheel drive, 5,000
m i tes, must sell. Call 675·
2343 or 675·1540.
1980 Toyota Corolla Tercel,
AM·FM, a ir cond ., auto,
low miles, $3,895. Call 446·
1724.
1978 buick Regal silver, e.·
cellent cond., 57,000 mi.
BooK price $5,300. Sell tor
$5,000 firm . Colt 992-7866 af·
ter 4PM.
1979 Chevy Monza V -6,
auto. PS, new radial tires,
37,000 miles, ex . cond . call
446· 15&lt;19.
1980 BuicK Skylark. 22 .000
miles : PS,
PB ,
AC,
aut-omatic . Like new .
$5: 450. 614-949·2273.
1970 Olds. Cutlass. Needs
transmission . $125. 949·
2179 .

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNE~. AKC
Chow puppies , CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
3844 after 4 p.m .
.1977 THUNDERBIRD, ex·
cellent condition, will con HI~~CREST KENNE~ · • Sider a trade, 304-675·4496.
Boordlng all breeds, clean
indoor·outdoor facilities. 1976 NOVA SS, 305, 3 speed
Also AKC Reg. Dober· on floor, $1,600, 304·675·
2745.
.
mans. Ca!l446·7795.

B€TTER,8LOCiiEI' BETTER --AN'
CR.IPE51 l JUST LOOKED LIKE
CLOWN! so •. I'll JUST ;:~::.:E:::A..~.;Nc..IN'-G-1
60 01'1 UKE l BEEN
IT DOE511'T

1 pair chrome running
boards for Ford tru ck o r~
Bronco $80. 2 grey captain
chairs S75 . 675·6438.

77

AATTEIZ IF

ABUM

Au1o Repair

~1

FIGUREDTHEY'D

!lETTER 1\HO\'I HOI'/

TO HllHIX.E

TliEIR

WEAP005. THIS
HOUGE BELONGED

lOA FORMER
POLICE CHIEF -

CAH'T

Qua lity Autobody &amp;· Paint
work . Professional custom
pa int work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center , .4-46·1968.

-

81

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
tex tured ce ilings com ·
mercial and r esider !i al.
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

ALLEYOOP
TE~~ ME, MY
DEAR, w:1W THAT
IT'S COMPLETED,
WH"'T ...RE YOUR

PLANS~

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Clea ning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carqets . Free es timates.
Call 446·2107.
PAl NT I NG · interior ilnd
ex t e rior , plumbin g,
root ing , som e r e modeling .
20 yrs exp . Call 388·9652 .
Call 446·2801 for t erm ite,
roach, bird , rodent, spider ,
and fl eas c ontrol Free
estimates, sBill Th omas.

GASOLINE ALLEY

1heij's
wu'se ihin's

RON' S Televi sion Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazei'r, and
house calls, Phone 576-2398
or 446 2454 .
·

than bein'

onth'lam!

-------

F &amp; K Tree Tr imming ,
stump removal. 675·1331 .
RINGLE S'S SERVICE ex ·
perienced mason, rooter,
el ectric i an ,
c arpe nter.
g e ne ral repa i rs and
rem od eling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675· 4560.
Water we lls . Commercia l
and Dom esti c. T est holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304·895·3802 .

WINNIE

LOCK SMITH
Servi ce
Res identi al, automotive .
Emerg enc y service. Cal l
882·2079 .
82

49 Chevy S.W. runs, new
brakes, wood in good
shape, $1,200 or best offer.
Call 379·2364.

ANNIE

- HECK, 1\IEY RllH SETTER , THilEW

S·SOME "UNFIN15HEP

THE 1'1/lST ORDER OF

81/SINESS" TO

EIUSINE5S WILL EIE
THIS BOTTLE ••• ll16HT

ATiENP

ror

ON 'fOUl( lfEAP.. ,
IF YOU PON'T GET
OUT OF THE

P1umbing

WAY!

&amp; Heating

CAR T ER ' S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

=-c-- ·

-cc_--·-- :-.

8] ~ _ . Excavati ri_9 __ _
Ga llipolis Divers if ied Con·
st. Co. Custom dozer &amp;
backhQe work . Spec ial
f arm ra tes. Cal l us tor f r ee
es timates. 446·4440 .
·- ---...
E lectriCa 1 · 84
~~efrig~~'!. -

-- --

SE~ING Machine r epair s,

se rvtce. Authorized Singer

Sal es &amp; Service1 Sharpen
Sc i sso r s. Fa bri c Shop ,
Pom ero y . 992·227.4 .

BARNEY

CHAIN-STITCHED,

WOVEN
POLVESTER AN'
COTTON

JACK S REFR! G ERAT IO·
N. air c ondition ser vice,
com mer ci al , i ndu stria l
Phone 882·2079.
85

General Hauling

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPr&lt;O~STERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis .
446·7833 or 446· 1833.
MOWREYS Upholstery Rl .
1 Bo• 124. Pl. Pleasant, J04·
675·4154.

. Ot: BULLET ALWAV6
LIKES TO HEAR WHAT'S
ON TH'MENU

ENTERTAINMENT

TONIGHT
7:35 CIJ SANFORD AND SON
7,58 I]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 [}) DCD FATHER MURPHY A
klan · like group of hooded
blgotawamaMoaeeGage, who
is black, to leave the achoolorphange or tace death . (60
mlna.)
(Closed-Captioned:
U.S.A.)
I]) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL
()) (12) II HAPPY DAYS
G ()) \lD) BUGS BUNNY'S
VALENTINE Bugels already
amltten with romance when he
encounter• a diapered Cupid
bueily ahoollng hla Valenuna·a
Day arrows, one of which hit a
Bug a and turn a him Into a
carrot·eallng
Lotharlo .
(BepUI)
Cll LIFE ON EARTH 'The
SwarmlngHordea'Theamazlng
world ol inaecla, from the ir
alliance with planla to their one
milllondlllering apeclea.la
examined by host David
Altanborough. (60 min a.)
8:05 CIJ MOYIE ·(WESTERN!"•
''Five Card Stud'' 1H8
8:30 ()) IIf) II LAVERNE AND
SHIRLEY laverne and Shirley
try to dig up some dlr1 on a notao
nice celebrity , but then have
aecond thoughts. (Cioaed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
Ill()) \lD) POPEYE'S VALEN·
TINE : SWEETHEARTSATSEA
Alter Popeye forgets Valen·
l ina'a Day once again iA their
marathOA romance, the
long · aufferlng Olive Oyl
deciclaato leave Popeye ancl
the past behind her and algna up
for a cruieein hopes ol meeting
'Mr . Right .' (Repeal)
8:58 I]) CBN UPDATE NEWS
G:OO CIJ D CIJ BRET MAVERICK A
baautllul woman saves
Maverick from jail just ao She
can aeclucatlim; andwhen Mary
l o u falls for a notorious
gunslinger , Ma~erick 1r1d
Guthrie lear for her ulety. (60
mine .)
'
CIJ 700CLU8
ffi MOVIE · \THRILLER) ••
" Frfd".L Tho 13th" IG80 '
())IIfl.THREE'SCOMPANY
Jack Terri and Furley conspire
to get an obnoxious efllciency
expert ofl Janet 's back and out
of
her
flower
shop.
(Cioaed·Captlonedl
Q CIJ \lD) CBS TUESDAY
NIGHT MOVIf: 'MilliOn Dollar
Infield' 1982 Stare : Rob Reiner ,
Candy Azzara , Gret c hen
Corbett .Story olth lrd baaeman
Monte Miller and hla affluent ,
eub urbanllelrle nda whoaeUvea
reV"olve around 1heir softball
team. (2 hra.)
()) AMERICAN PLAYHOUSE
·Sanae ol Humor: Who Am1 Thil
Time? ' Kurt Vonnegul , Jr. ' a
acclaimed ahortator~ Ia
brought to the screen a a
ChriatopharWalken and Suaan
Sarandon portray actors in a
am all town play who eventually
tind IOV'8 .
liD LIFE ON EARTH 'Tho
SwarmingHordea'Theamazlng
world of inaecte , from their
alliance with plant a to their one
milli on differing apeolea , Ia
examined by hoat David
Attenborough. (80 mlno.)
g,30 ()) IIflll TOO CLOSI! FOR
COMFORT April and Jackie
devise a plan to get Henry and
hi a brother 8111 togelhar when
Bill makea a atopower In
Ooklond.
10:00 (}).(I) FLAMINGO ROAD
Julio Ia accused ol Theft al the
Weldonmanaion ; Lute · Mae
learn a of Mike Tvrone'a plan tor
ner to run hla gambling caalno:
and Sam prOpoaea marriage to
Lane. (60mlne.)
(J)Ilf). HART TO HART
()) FIRING LIN! Hool: William
F. Buckley, Jr.. (80 mlno.)
liD NEWS
10:06 Cll TBS EVENING NEWS
10:10 CIJ TBS EVENING NEWS
10:28 ffi CINUPDATEN!WS
10:10 liD TOP OF THE WORLD
10:1111 Cil !:_INUPDATI! NEWS
NEWS
NASHV!LLI! RFD

~

eEAUTIRIL.,
MA'AM ...

byHonri Arnoldond Bob.Lee

I ICME¥3
I.........,__
I __ _ []

_

I KJ

j

...

I DINGHij
1

rx

I

tROESIE

I) I

.

Now arrange the drcled tett er! 10

form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

Print answer here: •..

r I XI I I XI ]":
(Answers tomorrow)

YeSlo&lt;day·s

I Jumbles : ESSAY

FENCE DETACH MOROSE
Answer : .What grapefruit Is more than MEETS THE EYE

Jumble Booll No. 20, conttlnlng 110 pual••· Is Ullllbltlor $1 .95 poslptld
from Jumble, c/o lhla new1p1per, Box 34, .Norwood, N.J. 07~
. 8. 1ncludtyour
namt, eddreaa, 11 code 1rtd mlkt chich a able to News 1 rtlooh .

BRIDGE

The triple grand coup
By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Sontag
A trump coup occurs
when you sborten your own
trumps In order to get down
to the same number of
trumps as your right hand
opponent. It Is called a
"grand coup" when you ruff
one of dummy's winners for
this purpose. A triple grand
cour takes place when you
ruf
three · of dummy's
winners to achieve the
desired goal.
We have set up Ieday's
hand to show a triple grand
coup. Never mind the
bidding. If this band were
actually dealt, North would
surely lind hi! way to seven
no-trump and go one down
agal111t good defense.
South takes dummy's ace
of diamonds, comes to his
hand by ruf1ing a club and
plays his ace of hearts
Intending to draw trumps
and clafm but West shows
out.
South pauses a second
leads a spade to dummy and
ruffs a second club. He gets
to dummy with anotber
spade and ruffs a third club.
East could ruff this third
club but South would just
overrull and draw trumps.
So Eas~ discards a spade.

ACROSS
breaker

5 Sweet scented

'

t613
'AKQJi711

•....
t72

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Nonb
2t

Ea•t

Soutb

Pass

4 NT

Pass

5t

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

"

Wes1

O!&gt;"ning lead:

tQ

South Is now down to the
same number of trumps as
East and must get to dumflly
with a spade or diamond . He
gets there with a diamond
ana leads clubs until such
time as East ruffs whereup·
on South overrufls. East has
been couped out of his trump
tricks.

DOWN
I Brew

item
II Polynesian
forest god
IZ Expand
the lungs
13 Gaelic
14 Horseshoe
Utrow
15 Second name
18 Haul
17 Persian
gateway
18 In (bodily)
!0 Languish

Z Engrave
3 Goose genus
4 Notion
5 Novelist,
lgnazio 8 Freshly
7 Tea variety
8 Easier
to reach
9 Dancer
Powell
10 Earthly
II British
CllnservaUve

Yesterday's Alllwer

19 Starchy
foodstuff
20 Salver
Z3 Argued
24 Finished
Z5 sP,.re time
2i Grotto
28 She won
two Oscars

31 European
river

32 Fabric
33 Register
35 Geraldine
or .Pattl
38 Top off
39 Added
payment

U"Wbo!e

' Honey

- You?"
zt Meltican city
!3 Procras-

6-+-+-1-

tinate

!8 Novelist,
John Le -

!7 Robert 28 Traitor

Z9 Radar sound

30 Unwilling
34 Want 35 Pastry Item
:It Egger
3'1 Tropical
bird

b:-:::+-+-1-

31 Civil wrong •
40 Infuriate ··

n American
playwright

DAILY CllYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
.

AXYDLIIAAXa
LONGJ'BLLOW

Ia

One letter almply otando for another, In thla umple A II
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Sln1le !etten,
apootropbea, the lenllth and formation of the wordo ore all
hlntl. Eaeh day the eode !etten are dllrerenl

cavnOQuOTES

DX

CSAMAJD

cenfpaign to help promote hi•
new 'happy burger.' (Ropoot)

tAKQJIOII
EAST
WEST
tJ 9 ~
t 10 8 7 2
'to 81l2
....
t983
tQJ 1081
t6 a
t7H2
SOUTH

profound
43 Gaze

Return'' 1aad

launc,ee an achertialng

.. . .

tAK~

4Z More

I Strike·

FK

eCil

'

t.y tHOMAS JqSEPH

FD

()) DICK CAVETT SHOW
liD ALFRED HITCHCOCK
PAI!KNTI
11:06 (() ALLINTHI! FAMILY
11:21 ()) ~l!UPOAT!N!WS
11:30 ~THI!TONIGHTSHOW
Guelt : Lynn Redarave. (60
mlna:)
()) ANOTHI!IIltFE
()) KNNYHIUIHOW'
CIILATIIIOVII Allee '
'Mel'e H•PPY Burger' Mel

NORTH

tAKQ

tS,, .•••.r.

CIJ
ffi

MOVIE
•"(8Cfi!NCI!.ftCnONI 0 • " The

WELL, I'LL NEVER

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

Unscramble ]heM tour Jumbtos,
one letter to each square. to form
four ordinary words.·

n:oo CIJ e Cil CD e Cll ilDl IIIl •

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367 ·7471 or
367 ·0591.
NOW HAULING house coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call for estimates 367·7101 .

AND COMPANY
NIGHT~ Y BUSINESS
REPORT
\lD)
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
liD SPROCKETS ' Gulliver 's
Travela' Max Fle l aher'a

l!2l Gl

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

ID"

CIJ

anima ted tantea y adapted from
Swift ' s 18th century satire Ia
replete with laugh a ana even a
tittle burleaqueln I hie tale about
I he ahlpwrecked Gulliver
landed In LUilput , the land ofthe
thumb -high cantankerous folk .

0\J~ 1.-\TTI.-~

'ftflli~

~ ~ ~~ $

,

I!VENING

BLAMe'?-

Hii.RTS Used Cars, New
Ha¥en West Virginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in
stocK.

32

•
•
VIewmg·
1:00 [}) .
PM MAGAZINE
[})
JOHN ANKERBEAG
SHOW
(]) SNEAK PREVIEW: FE·
BRUA.RY Anne Meert and Jerry

76

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
1

By owner, close to schools,
hospital and pharmacies.
675·5-468.

;,-··-·---,;~is for Sate

WOOD· J04·458· 183J.

W,O..iGH MY 1'EGHNIQ\JE CL05ELY
A~ ! ~I&gt;.I'E itiE FI~~T CALL !
~C.I ENii.ST.S

Misc . Mer.chandice

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

Effi ciency rooms by the
w eek on Main Street,
Mason, wv . 773·5651 .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Sandhill and Oshel Road ·
This is a 47 acre plot .
Beautiful ro111ng and level
land . Has a 2 story house
with garage. Small woods.
All mineral rights. Just a
few minutes drive from
town. Somerville Realty
675·3030 or 675·4232 . Jean
Casto 675·3431.

Household GOOds

Lump Coal SJ2 per ton .
Zinn CQal Co., Inc. ·c all 446·
1408 between 9 and 4.

APARTMENTS , mobile
hom e s,
houses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipol is.
614-446·8221 or 614-245·9484.

~=========:...l:::::::::::::::::::J

HOUSE in New Haven,
small down paym ent,
assumable loan , 304·882·
2754 .

c ,.,.,.JCA, ~oe.

r~:;~~~~~~~;;:i;;:;;~~;::~~;~~

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom ·fami l y rm ., $300
per mo. plus uti l ities, $300
dep. required . Call 446-

Flnanelal

Taking Application s for
Gril l Cook. Now taking
taking applications at Bob
Evans Steak House .

GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good m oney plus
some great gifts as a Senti nel route carri er . Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility li st at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

41

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

C
,L Bookkeeping . Com·
plete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and individuals.
Carol Neal446 3862

Real Estate
Wanted

Television

DICK TRACY

'72 Ford 112 Ton Pickup, VB, auto., TS, PB , godd con·
dit ion . 446 ·0648 alter 5.

Furnished efficency. $135
mo., 1 per son, uti lities
pa id . Ca ll 446·.4416 after
7PM .

Will babysit in my home
·weekdays, day hours only ,
located in town, have ex ·
perience. Call 446·8320 .

23

&amp; Acreage

Large tract of land located
in Pomeroy, Ohio . Can be
fin anced at 12 percent . 9925786.

Babysitting in evenings in
Cheshire area. Child 1 year
and older. Call 367·77 18.

Free Lance Cinematogarpher/ reporter -found , silent, and video tape for TV
stati on. Wri te News Department, P.O. BO)( 13, Hun·
l ington, WVa . 25701 . E .O.E.

Part time general office
work. Sfnd r esume to Box
506 in care of Gallipolis
Da ily Tribune. 825 3rd .
Ave., Gall ipoli s, Oh 45631 .

36

Jackie'_s Cake Decorating
&amp; Candies . First house past
Scott's Bait &amp; Bar, just
South of Eureka . Taking
orders for cakes &amp; candies
(fancy and pla in) . Cal l 256·
1367 or 256·6571.

12

~ots

1 acre lot Kemper HolloW
Rd . Close to HMC. Call 1·
614-592·5639.

Babysitting in my home.
Call 446·0390 .

ser .lees

Yard Sale

Rummag e Sale Gra ce
Methodist, Cedar St. Ent .
Fri . Fe b. 5-9 to 4PM. Very
good items, house hold
QOOdS .

'

FURN IS H E D 2 or J
bedroom mob ile home . Un·
fu r n is hed 1 bedroom apart·
men ! 304-675·1371 or 675·
38 12

Crown City . Cal l 256·6520 .

18

Au to for Sale

1978 Chevette, automatic,
41 ,000 m i les, w ill accept
older car as trade in. see at
2316'h M t . Vernon Avenue,
Pl . Pl.

MOBI LE home f or rent
with option to bu y, 304·576·
2711 .

2 bdr. unfurn ished apt . in

LO ST :
Browni sh-orange,
medium size, short ha ir
eeegle. Has littl e white on
i) . Lost in Long Bottom
area. Rew a rd . 985-4275 .

71

12• 60 2 bedroom Buddy
mob ile hom e. Set up w it h 2
or 4 lot s, gas heat, ru r al
water , c lose to town, fina nci ng av ailable. Phon e 446·
1294.

a.

Lost : Brown dog, par t Ger ·
man Shephard . Goes by
Sparky . Blac k collar . L in·
coin Hill a·r ea . 99H556.

'N' CARL VLE '"

1978 Camero. $.4995 or trade
for p ickup of equal vatue.
675·1104 8·4 pm or after 4,
895·3579 .

Delu xe furnished apartm ent, exce llent loc ation, 1
or
2 adults,
d~p.
r equi onl
re d.y $275,
Call r ef.
.446·

Lost : l
round
shaped
locket . Y e llow gold with
several ch i pped diamonds
on front . L ot of sentimental
value as it was a gift to me.
If found please call Li nda
Mayer 992·5954.

~v e ning s

KIT

by Lorry W r ight

bedroom
fu rn i sh ed
TRI · STA T E
MOBI LE 3
HOM ES . Ga llipolis. Pr ice Mobile Home with w asher
reduced,
used m obile &amp; d ryer on pr ivate lot .
homes . CALL 446·7572.
Deposi t r eq uir ed, no pe ts.
9A9· 225J .

LOST Ch i ld 's pet dog bl ack
&amp; white male Bor der COllie
about 5 m os . old. Reward
Call 446·2486.

Reward. Lost 2 beagl e
dogs, 1 ma le, 1 fema le
Black, brown and whi te.
Vicinity of TNT area . Ca l l
882 · 2631
or
882 · 2075

Mobil e Homes
-fo-r Rent
----

1he Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, February 2, 1982
42

~4

Lost and Found

106 P eo pl es
Pomero y.

Mobi_le HomeS - to.- Sale

197 3 Champ ion m ob il e
home. Set·up &amp; rea dy to
live in . Call 446·8286, after
5:00 PM call 446·81 27 .

ANUWAN7S

7 mi xed bree d puppies, all
ma le, 6 w eeks old . 1 f em ale
wi re ha ired terri er , .5 •h
months old . 67HI 45 or 576·
2490.

Tuesday, February 2, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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7•a Cr)....DOtoe: WHEN TIIRDUGH ONE MAN AUT·
TLE MORE UGiri' AND TRUTH OOMES INTO TilE WORLD,
niEN THAT MAN'S UFE HAS HAD MEANING. - ALFRED

DELP

�Pomeroy-Midd~port. Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

I

Area deaths
l

Alta L. Hutton

February 2, 1982

Ohio Bureau may get federal help

Ohio begins belt tightening measures
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- State
government Is tightening Its belt because of Gov. James A. Rhodes'
cost-cutting moves and legislators
are predicting a fight over tbe goven.or , proposal to raise sales
taxes.
Legislative leaders say tbey

ters, Mrs. Florence Tatten of Wln!leld, W. Va., Mrs. Anna Caroway
and Mrs. Unnle Gallion, both of
Mrs. Alta L. Kincaid Hutton, 71,
Dawes, W.Va.
Columbus, former resident, died
Two sons, a daughter, a sister
Sunday evening ln Columbus.
and six brotbers a lso preceded In
Mrs. Hutton was a member of
deatb.
Faltb Center Baptist Church at
Funeral services will be held at I
Canal Wlnchester.
p.m. Wednesday In the Sharon UniShe was a daughter of the late
ted Metbodlst Church, Sharon,
Mr. and Mrs. James Kincaid and
W.Va
., wltb the Rev. Nina Atkins
was also preceded ln death by a
rcontinued from page 1J
officiating.
Burial will be In Sharon
granddaughter and
two sisters.
j
Cemetery.
Friends
may
call
at
the
Council tbat communities In five
Surviving are her husband,
deceased's residence after 4 p.m.
Henry G. Hutton, Sr., daughters,
counties unite to negotiate lor natuTuesday.
Doris Ryan, Indianapolis, Ind.;
ral gas contracts.
Marlene Rich, Barbara Marcum , The body wlU lie ln state one hour
Koebel expressed his preference
prlor to tbe service.
and Alma Murphy, all ot ·Cotumfor home rule and lndlvidual negotibus; sons, H~nry G. Hutton, Jr.,
a !Ions and stated tbat tbere Is really
A. Keith McClung
not much variance In negotiated
Reynoldsburg; Kenneth D. and
Herman, both of Columbus; two
rates among the communities.
A. Keltb McClung Sr., 83, HartKoebel did point out that cards
brothers, Herman Kincaid of Midlord, died Tuesday morntng In
are available tbrough tbe gas comdleport and Fred Kincaid, ColumHolzer Medical Center.
pany for use during montbs when
bus: a sister, Clara Rlchmod, West
Born August 29, 1898, at Rupert,
VIrginia, 18 grandchildren and five
bills are calculated. Customers
W.Va., he was the son of the late
great-grandchildren.
place ihe cards on tbelr meters at a
Lewis Edgar and Margaret Callidesignated time and at a designed
Services will be held at 11 a .m.
son McClung.
setting and the amount o! gas used
Wednesday at the Glenn L. Myers
In addition to his parents, he was
Is reflected on tbe card which Is reFunral Home, 40W . Third Ave., Copreceded In deatb by his wife, Florturned to tbe company. By use of
lumbus, where friend may call this
ence Juhllng McClung, wllo died In
evening !rom 7 to 9 p.m. Burial Will
tbese cards custorn!!rs can have an
1966.
'
actual use blUing . each montb
be In Glen Rest Cemetery. OfficiatHe was owner and operator of the
ratber than a calculated reading
Ing at services will be the Rev. LawFarmer's Smre In New Haven and
·
every
otber montb. Residents can
: renee Grandy.
was president of the Mason County
secure tbese cards by contacting
Bank. He was a member of the
tbe company.
Basham
Hartford Baptish Church, a veteCouncil also received a letter urgran of World War I and belonged to
Ing tbat communities of five Soul\ilary Etna Basham, 85, Bidwell,
the American Legion Smlththeastern Ohio counties joln In
died at 6 p.m. Sunday In Holzer
Capehart Post 140 at New Haven.
negotiations tor natural gas rates
Medical Center following an exHe attended West VIrginia Univeras suggested by tbe Ohio Consumer
tended Illness.
sity and was active In tbe DemoCouncil. Council will consider tbe
Born May 22, 1896, In Boyd
cratic political pacty.
proposal further before maldng a
County, Ky., daughter of the late
Survivlng are two sons, A. Ke ith
decision.
Grant and Lydia Falin Bradford,
McClung Jr., Baltimore, Md., and
Attending the meeting were
she was also preceded In deatb by
Dr. Hugo Juhllng McClung, ColumMayor Andrews, Clerk Walton, and
her husband, William Davis Babus, Ohio; and five grandchildren.
council members, Anderson, Dr.
sham In 1963.
Funeral services will be con·
Brown, Wllllam Young, Betty BarSurv!vlng are four sons, Gilbert
dueled at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
of Arnold, Md., WIUiam o! Oceanonlck, Bruce Reed and Larry
Hartford Baptist Church wltb the
Wehrung.
side, Call!., Carl of Bidwell and
Rev. Bud Hat11eld officiating. BurSherman of Rutland; four daughIal will follow ln Suncrest Memorial
ters, Mrs. Melvin (Louise) Cross of
Extend deadline
Park.
Langsville, Mrs. Mike tBessle)
. Friends may call from 7-9 p.m.
Floccarl of Middleport, Mrs.
'The deadllne tor the payment of
Wednesday at the Foglesong FunJames (Pansy) OWens o! Bidwell,
real estate and holl8e trailer taxes
eral Home In Mason.
and Mrs. Myrtle Jeffrey of Charleshas been extended. Meigs County
In lieu of flowers, tbe family reton, w. va.; 14 grandchildren and
Treasurer George Collins said tbls
quests contributions be.made to tbe
13 great-grandchildren; three sismorning he ha8 been given perrnll&gt;Hartford Baptist Church.
slon from the Slate Tu Comml&amp;slon to extend the deadline from
Feb. 8 to March 5. The period covered by the payment Is tbe tlnl
haU ol198l.

Test

Mary

Meigs County happenings

Advance ticket sale

Tuesday,

doubt tbe tax hll&lt;e proposal can
pass either house and !bat more
budget-cutting will be needed to try
to overcome tbe slate's projected$!
billion budget deficit.
. The omce of Budget and Management said Monday tbe tax hike,
along wltb otber fiscal recommendations from Director Howard L.
Colller, was being drafted and wiU
be sent, probably by Thursday or
Friday, to legislative leaders with a
cover letter from tbe governor.
Rhodes announced $354 mllllon
worth o! budget cuts Saturday and
proposed a temporary, one-cent
hike In the sales tax which would
raise $542.5 mllllon before going ott
tbe books June 30, lll83.
The first cuts, 7.2 pei'Ctl!lt !rom
Feb.1 untll tbeendoftbeflscalyear
June 30, were starting to be felt
Monday altbough the formal order
will not go out toslateagencles until
later tbls week.
Several agencies said were mak.tng plans not tD till future vacancies

Jury awards sum
A jury has awarded Laura J.
Bond $20,750 as compensation for
land owned by Mrs. Bond ln Sutton
Township and taken by tbe Department of Transi&gt;ortatlon lor road
construction, according tD an entry
!Ued ln tbe Me111s County Common
Pleas Court.
In anotber entry, Ken Shutts was
ordered to pay Valley Lumber and
Supply Corp., $3,792.24 plus lnterest
and anotber entry !Ued In tbe court
gave The Farmers Bank and SavIngs Co., tbe rlght to collect
$13,182.96 from Doug's Marlne
Sales and Service and $4,1'19.93
!rom Johri and Barbara R.
Douglas.

.....----------'=----1
CORRECTION IN
TOOAY'S
FRUTH'S INSERT
DUE TO PRI NTER1SERROR
Clairol Kindness Hair Setter
No: k4205 Should Be

29.99

1

And Northern Steam Vaporize&lt;
No. 1350 Should Be

7.99

1

management of tax dollars."
However, Franklin B. Walter, su·
pectntendent of p~bllc InstructiOn,
said Ohio's schools will be barely
able to manage tbelr 6 percent cut
and !bat If further slashes are made
"tbere will be some of tbem whlch
won't be able to make It to
December."
"I tb1nk !bat It revenues do not
lncrease, tbe problem will simply
be unmanageable," he said.
A spokesman for tbe Ohio Civil
Service Employees A;&lt;;soclatlon deplored tbe budget crisis and called
for tax changes lo solve it.
"We are convinced !bat If tax reforms are Implemented, no layotts
or salary reductiOns of class!f!ed
civil service employees will be required," said Arthur Evans, executive director of Ohio's biggest
public employee union.
He recommended, In tbe meantime, a state hiring freeze, cuttlng
personal service contracts and
ellmlnattng personal use o! state
cars.
Evans said that If layoffs are required, pol!tlcal appointees should
go!lrst.

and the Natural Resources Department imposed a hiring free2e.
· Colller sa1d the first cut another of 6 percent Is on tap for
July 1 - wiU not require a significant number of employee layoffs.
But If tbe Legislature doesn't a~
prove the tax Increase, tbere wt11
have tD be massive cuts and the
number of state employees ' 'wiU be
decllnlng dramatically," Cottier
said.
Senate President Pro Tern Thomas A. Van Meter, R-Ashland, said
he !bought Rhodes' cuts were not
deep enough.
Van Meter, who voted against the
last tax hike tbe Legislature passed
ln November, called for further reductions In spending, saying "It's a
sad day when Increased taxes are
an easter alternative than sound

Boosters to meet
A meeting of the Eastern Local
Band Boosters has been set tor 7: 30
p.m. Thursday at tbe high school.
Among other Items of business up
tor discussion Is a valentine dance
which tbe group will sponsor on
Feb. 13 at Royal Oak Park. AU
members are asked to attend.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Ohio Bureau of E'mployment Services, whlch plans to lay ott 1,001
workers and close 37 offices because of lack of money, could get
help In its financial jam If Congress
acts quickly.
Assistant Labor Secretary Albert
Angrtsan1 said Tuesday !bat because of pending legislation prov'ld·
lng $2.3 bllllon In supplemental
funds, all states have been told not
to close any employment services
offices.
Under an order Issued last week,
Pomeroy's Job Service Office, was
scheduled to close sometime ln
March. If that happens, people fil-

e

'

.
) )\

$1488
MEIGS' FIRST FAT4IJTY - WWiam Anhur
Orr, 78, Rt. 1, Long BoUoln, became Meigs County's
llr8t lralllc tatallty ol tbe year when his car crashed
Into the rear of a state grader driven by Warren Van
Meter, 116; Reedsville, at 10: U a.m. Tuesday on Ohio
124 ~ Racine and Syracuse, Dr. Norman Efl.
Unger, acting coroner, said thernatter l!l'!iUil Wider

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

If more tban !l) Gallipolis Developmental Center clients are placed
Into otber tacWties this year, the
end result Is the eltnnlnation o! a~
proximately 125 jobs for the cen." •
1·
~rAn
s personne
Ohio Department
of Mental
Retardation official who met wltb
GDC stall on Monday said If there
areanyjobabollshmentsattbecenter tbey wW be related directly to
tb~ client population.
Ray c. Anderson, ODMR assistant director, said GDC had reached
by Jan. 31 !be standard department
statf-cllent ratio of 1:1.59, and all
steps to maintain tbls ratio would
be taken, pending tbeavallablllty o!
money. He assured the staff maintalnlng the stall-client level meant
no Immediate job abollshments at
' GDC.
However, It was revealed proposed placements ot GDC clients
Into tbe community or Intermediate mental retardation faciltlles
was upped from 35 lor fiscal year
• '1982 to 84. If tbe placements are

'

\::
(limit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

After 14 wonderful
vears of marriage, I'm
still head·over·heels in
lov_
e with you!
Welter z .

We couldn't hawe pi&lt;;ked

a n icer pair of parents in
the world! Have a Hap·
py Valentine's Day! .
Mike and sue

I
• Manage Your
Budget
. • Track
Investments
• Games for
The Family
• Learn to
Program

~.

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT
OR MAIL IT WITH 51.00 BY FEBRUARY lOth TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL, P.O. BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO
16 WORDS 51.00-CASH WITH ORDER

1, _____ 2. - - - - - 3 . _ _ _ _ _ 4. - - - - ·
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9.----10.-----11.-----12.----1
u.
14. _ _ _ _ _ 15. _ _ _ _ _ 16.
. 1
~------~-------------------------------------·
PHONE 992·2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL

~de by July 1, then 125 personnel

will lose their jobs.
This means the staff level may
drop !rom Its present level of more
tban 825 to 701, according to
Anderson.
ODMR officials announced two
weeks ago job abotlshments at Gal·
llpolls, Columbus and Orient devel·
opmental centers have been
recommended. The amount of suggested staff reductions for GDC
was set at 140. At tbe time, It was
noted that 1! GDC continued discharging clients lnto the communtty or into otber centers, It would be
operatlng at a deficit by year's end .
No word has been announced yet
on whetber or not the placements
will occur, but Nick Damopoulos of
ODMR's communications staff
said If tbe abollshments take place,
approJdmately 45 wiU be done
tbrough normal attrition. The remaln!ng !l) or more may have their
jobs spared tbrough cost-savlng
measures taken by GDC admlnlstratlon. Employees also have the

option of relocation to jobs at new
state developmentAl facllltles In
Clnclnnatl or Dayton, he added.
On which department at GDC the
ax would fall remains to be seen,
Damopoulos said.
"It' s a p~s w hic h hasn 't been
finalized yet,
he commented.
GDC staff were Informed this week
periodic reviews o! placement prajectlons, as well as statflng levels,
are planned by ODMR.
The final decision, Damopoulos
said, will remain with Superlntendent Robert Zimmerman and NQrmand Tremblay, ODMR's Region
VI deputy commlsslonel\
This latest word ln the proposed
job abollshments at GDC comes as
tbe state prepares layoff and abo!·
lshment notices lor otber state em·
ployees. ODMR officials, however,
said tbe abollshments are not being
brought about by the state's surprise budget deficit. They were decreed by the demands of the
department's budget lor tbe 1982-83
biennium.

Cheshire man bound over;
bond continues at $100,000

r---------------------------------------------

1

Investigation, but he heBeves Orr !lllftered a ooronary
just prior to tbe crash. Orr was p~ dead at
the scene, and the state highway patrol said he was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by tbe Racine
emrgency squad and later released lo the Ewing Funeral Home.

125 jobs cQuld go at GDC ·

SAY ..1LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENnNEL VALENnNE AD.

To Mom and Dad. ••

tbal program.
"Last year, WIN took 350,&lt;XXJ people ott the welfare rolls and put
tbem to work," he said.
The program was funded tor $77
mllllon last year, but It also has
been cut and employees were laid
off, Stokes said.
Rep. Dennis Eckart, D-Ohlo,
among sponsors of the btu to restore funds tor employment services, criticized the administration
tor cutbacks during a time when
Ohio unemployment Is over 12
percent.
''Workers seeldng jobs need Increased services, not r\l(luced services, " he said.

•

enttne
Underground mines big help
to Meigs' sagging economy

Size 27 fo 36 waist-Length 30 fo 36. No Fault prewashed
blue denim - Slim fit - Straight leg style - Limited
Quantify ,

To My Wife, Ann. , ,

"!think It (economic situation) Is
going to get worse. We're headed
tor problems ln otber areas,"
Stokes said. "This Is just one area In
which tbelr (adrnlnlstratlon's) miscalculations have begun to wreak
havoc on the states.
"As we go along, you're going to
see this magnified.. with more businesses closing. It's going to have a
ripple effect tbroughout the economy," he said.
Stokes questioned the Labor Department representatives on the
WIN, Work Incentive Program,
and said he expects to see the admlnlstratlon asking for another
supplemental appropriation for

2 s.cr1om. 16 pu c.,;,.
A Multimedia Inc. Nowopaptf

ELBERFELD$
Special Purchas~
WRANGLER SI995 DENIM JFANS

Sale

Angrlsanl said tbe earlier lorecast was "based on a somewhat
volatile situation" and tbat he could
give no guarantee of tbe accuracy
of the latest one.
Re!errtng to projections made
last year, Stokes said, "We knew
tben they were predlca tlng tbls on
some very rosy economic assumptions which just weren't rooted ln
fact."
He said he also doubts tbe latest
unemployment forecast.

at

State auditor Thomas E. Fergu. son's office announced tbe Febru·
ary distributiOn o! $47 ,046,2361n aid
. to dependent chldren to _549,503 recipients ln Ohio's 88 counties. Meigs
County received $149,439 or 1,853
recipients.

Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30p.m. Wed·
nesday at tbe temple. Refreshments will be served.

forecast?"

•

Receive ADC funds

Meets Wednesday

employment rate of 7.4 percent for
1982," said Stokes.. "Now you stated
It will be 8. 9 percent. How do we
even know 8.9 percent ts a reliable

Voi.30,No.205

Tell that special someone wiih

Put Your
wveOn
the Line ...

floor vote ln the House Tuesday.
Officials of the Ohio employment
agency said Tuesday tbey had not
heard frOm Washington.
Ohio Employment Services Administrator Albert Giles had annQunced 1,&lt;XXJ people would be laid
off at job service offices because of
cutbacks In federal funds, and tbat
37 offices would be closed.
· Stokes, of Cleveland, and otber
Democratic members of the subcommittee grilled Angrlsanl over
tbe forecasting error that led the
Labor Department to underestimate the needs of the state employment services.
"Last year you projected an un-

. Copyrighted 1982

Veterans Memorial

Admitted : Dorothy Schwab,
Tickets lor Saturday night's Soutbgate, Mich.; Alfred Gans,
Nelsonvtlle· York-Southern game Pomeroy; Raymond qheen, Ra·
will go be on sale Wednesday and cine; John Wheeler, Jr., West CoThursday at the Southern High lumbia, W. Va.; and Mallie
School office. The school has re- Teaford, Portland.
ceived 325 adult tickets and 175 stuDischarge: Michael Hewitt, Oris
dent tickets to be sold on a !lrst Hubbard, VIctoria Imboden.
come, first served basts. Tickets
are $1 tor s tudents and $2.50 tor Emergency runs
adults.
Two calls were answered by unMeanwhile, Southern's girls'
team will play Eastern tonight at 6 Its of tbe Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service Monday. At 3: 00
p.m .
the Pomeroy unit went to the
Couples end marriages p.m.
Union Avenue resident of Lee
Two petitions for dissolution of Roush and transported him to the
marriages have been !Ued, a disso- Holzer Mesd!cal Center. At 1: 52
lution was granted along with a dl· p.ln. the Rutland squad transvorce In the Meigs County Common ported Allee Spauldlng !rom EdPleas Court.
mundson Road to the Holzer
The petitions for dissolution were Medical Center.
tiled by Nora D. Cassady and Ray·
mond C. Cassady, both o! Tu(&lt;pers
Plalns; and Robert B. Harvey,
Ask to wed
New Haven, and Patricia J . HarMonty Rae Hart, 24, Pomeroy,
vey, 846 Maln St,. Pomeroy.
A dissolution of marriage was and Cathy Jane Mulford, 27,
granted to Pamela L. Hart and Pomeroy.
Kenneth Lee Mays, 24, MiddleBarry w. Hart. Linda Ellen Knittel
was granted a divorce from WI!· port, and Trlna Darlene Hudson,
Uam L. Knittel on charges o! gross 26, Middleport have applied lor
marriage license In Meigs County
neglect of duty with Mrs. Knittel
belng granted custody of a minor Probate Court.
child.

lng claims lor unemployment benefits or seeking job placements ln
Pomeroy would be forced to drive
tD GaWpotls. However, employees
of tbe Pomeroy Bramch would be
!oreced to join staffs at eltber
Athens or Marietta because tbey
(!bey employees) are In a different
division than tbe Gallipolis office.
Angr!san! testified on tbe Reagan
admlnlstratlon's .req11est lor addl·
tiona! funds shortly before a House
subcomrnJttee approved tbe request and sent tbe bill to tbe ApproPril\tlons Committee for action.
Rep. Louts Stokj!s, D-Ohio, a
member of tbe subcommittee, said
he expects tbe measure to reach a

l

Russell Robinson, charged witb
murder In tbe shooting death of
Paul E . Spencer, 24, Rt. I, Cheshire
last week, was bound over to the
Gallla County grand jury followlng
a prellmlnary hearing Tuesday afternoon In Galllpolls Municipal
Court.
Judge James A. Bennett denied a
motion to reduce Robinson's
$100,001 bond, and another motion
to transfer Robinson from the Jackson County jail tD tbe Melg!' County
taclllty was also turned down.
Bennett and sher1tf's department
spokesmen said tbe latter request
was denlect because Gallla has no
, worklng agreement wltb Meigs for
lncarceratlon of county prisoners.
The 24-year-{)ld Robinson, also
Rt.1, Cheshire, was arrested by tbe
sherttf's department shortly after
10 p.m. Jan. '1:1 at a mobile home on
Bulavllle-Addlson ROad after tbe
department had received a report
of a shooting. Deputies reportedly
found !be body of Spencer lying on a
couch Inside tbe mobUe home, shot
, but apparently still breathing. He
• was taken to Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, wbere he died at 2:41a.m . .Tan.

28. .
Under questioning from Prosecu·
·'tor Joseph Cain, Recta Faye
Spencer, Rl 1, Cheshire, the deceased's ex-wife •.saki s!le, Spencer,

,,

Robinson, Robinson's wife Mary
and tbelr chUdren, went to tbe mobUe home, owned by Hubert (Brownie) Stewart on the night of Jan. ?:l
to buy l! television set, which was
purchased by Robinson.
Although Mrs. Spencer admitted
she had trouble remembering tbe
events of tbe night, she said at one
point she had gone. Into tbe batbroom to help two of the children,
• and when she came back, she testified she saw Russell Robinson wltb
a gun, stating he would shoot PaUl
Spencer.
She !ben went back Into tbe batbroom wltb the children.
According to }her testimony; ·
Mary Robinson hiler came Into the
batbroom and told her Spencer had ·
been shot.
Earl!er reports lnd!ca ted Robinson and Spencer had gotten Into an
argument over whether or not to
leave whi~h led to tbe Incident In
which Robinson Is alleged to have
shot Spencer atound 9: !1.5 p .m.
Deputy Rick Wiseman, who was
one ot the first olf!cers to respond
lhe ICeJII! after !be sherltf's department had been called at 9: 58 p.m ..
said be found Spencer's body on tbe
couch In tbe mobile home. He noted
Spencer had been Shot OD tile right
side rl. the forehead. He cillled tor
!be EMS, and assisted by Deputy I
. r

By BOB HOEFLICH
Two underground coal mines
which will provide employment for
from 80 to 100 people wiD he opened 1
in Meigs County, one of them within
60days.
This was announced by Larry
Hunt, president of Coal Power, Inc.,
which will be doing extensive mining
in Meigs County, at Tuesday's luncheon meeting ·of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
( Chamber members were enthused
~receive word of the mining projec·
ts particularly since Hunt indicated
tbat Meigs Countians will be given
employment preference.
The unemployment rate in Meigs
County for December, 1981, was 11 .5
percent.
Hunt said he has been in the coal
mining business 19 'years, basically
underground operatiQns, and repor·
ted that core drilling and
engineering aspects have been com·
pleted on the two mtnes to be opened
1
ln Meigs County. One of the mines
will ·be in the area of tbe old Pittsbu~gh COlli Co., where, he said, there
is plenty of reserve coal.
Coal to be mined is of good quality.
It wiil tJe taken from the mines to a
loading facility in Minersv11le then
barged down the Ohio and Mississi~
pi Rivers where it will then be shipped to Holland from New Orleans.

ce. He said he Is well pleased with
Coal Power, Inc., has a five year
contract to export 20,000 tons Of coal
the labor market.
a month through Zenith Coal Sales,
When the first mine is in full
Hunt reported. The amount can be
operation some 60 peiJple will have
jobs underground while an ad·
increased, he said.
Hunt stated that Coal Power has
dltlonal 15 or so will have jobs
trucking and loading on the outside
leased 1,500 acres of land for the two
mines and has a third location selecof tbe mine.
The second mine w111 probably
ted if arrangements can be made
with the property owner.
have the same number Of employes
The coal company president poinwhile a third mine planned would
employ probably twice as many
ted out that while the coal market is
bad right now, contracts do help to
workers as eitber of the first two
keep business moving.
. , mines, Hunt remarked.
By the same token, money and
The first mine is expected to he
producing In about 60 days. It Is 80
lea se arrangements are also
necessary.
percentready.
Hunt did point out that
of the
Hunt pointed out that operation to
financing is completed for the first
the fullest capacity is a slow
process. At first, only 15 workers
mine and the financial picture for
tbe second mine is expected to be will be employed for one shift In one
section. Then a second 15 workers
completed this week.
He said that local and state for anotber shift in that section wiU
cooperation in tbe efforts of tbe com· be put to work, he said, witb the
pany has been 100 percent.
company gradually phasing In all
Hunt also touched upon the in· workers neede~ for aU sections.
teres\ of the company In becoming
His firm, Hunt promised, will obey
involved in community events and the laws and will hole! pollution down
particu!a~ly, being supportive of
In their operations. He pledged 100
junior sports programs.
percent cooperation to the comThe speaker said already the com· munity.
pany ruis 300 applications on file
The company has no objections to
from miners, many of whom are workers Joining a union, Hunt said.
well qualified, for local positions However, he stated that the compointing out that Meigs Countians pany plans to provide wages comwill be given employment preferen(Continued on pa~e 16)

all

• •
mining
Officials outline
.
•
operations to commiSSion
'

Road usage and operations of
Coal Power, Inc., which will open
tbe first of two underground coal
mlnes ln Meigs County withln the
next 80 days, were discussed when
tbe Meigs County Board of Commissioners met In regular session
Tuesday afternoon.
Meeting with the board concern·
tng the coal operations were county
engineer Phil Roberts a nd highway
superintendent Ted Warner and
Gene McGrath, Larry Hunt and
Randy Reichenbach of Coal Power,
Inc.
It was decided to hold a public
hearing at 1: 30 p,,... on Feb. 8 to

discuss tbe mining operati ng. The
hearing wUI be In tbe county
courtroom.
Coal Power plans to mine tbe
coal from underground mines,
transport It by truck tD a facility at
Minersville where It will be put on
barges. The coal wUI then move
down tbe Ohio and Mississippi Rivers to New OrLeans !rom where It
will be shipped tD Holland.
Dave Brlckles and Stanford
Stockton, Bedford Township Trustees, discussed tl'\8 road which Burl
Walker Is constructing to his trailer
park, off Route 33. The trustees
stated that tbey would meet with
Walker to determine whetber to

.

take the road Into the township road
system once It Is approved by the
county engineer.
Bob Bailey, coordlnator ot the
Meigs Emergency Medical " service, recommended that all EMS
communication equipment be put
under a service contract at an annual cost of approximately $3,00&gt;.
Bailey will not present tbe proposal to tbe EMS board of trustees
for approval before returning to the
commissioners with the board's
recommendation.
Present for tbe meeting were
Henry Wells, David Koblentz and
Richard Jones, commissioners,
and Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

Roger Thomas, notified Robinson
Of his rights.
"He (Robinson) said he didn't
see. how It mattered," Wiseman
testtled. "He said he had shot the
victim."
Wiseman Indicated Robinson
had "apparently" been drtnklng,
but wasn't Incapacitated.
Dr. Edward Berldch, assistant
Gallla County coroner, testified he
examined Spencer after he died
and detennlned he had died of a
single gunshot wound to tbe head.
The body was later removed to the
Franklln County morgue for an
autopsy.
AlthOugh the written report
hasn't been sent tD him yet, Berldch
sald he discovered tbrough a telephone conversation with tbe Franklin coroner his original ruling was
confirmed.
In his closing remarks, defense
attorney Ronald Calhoun requested the charge be reduced because no evidence had been
presented showing a murder had
been comrnltted .
"We have just as mUCh evidence
of an accidental shooting as we do
anything else," Calhoun said before
Bennett determined there was
probable cause murder had taken
place.

TAKEN TO COURT- B-ell Rothaoa, M, 8&amp;.1,

pion Carl Lan&amp;ford (left) and James MArriner. Rowu bound over lo the grand Jury , charpd
1\leeda1 altemoon b)' Gllllla County llbeita'l lnvMII- · wtthlheallepodmurderofPaulE.Spencerlaltweek.
Ctm' Ire, Ill mooned IIIIo Ga!Hpolfll Mllnldpal Court

•
•

~

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