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WINTHROP
•

b Dick Cavalli
AND IT n.JF(!NSD our
THAT NONE OF LJ5
Ll Ke:D P!JDDJNq-1 Ern-tER .. ~

We l..eARNED HOW '"TO .MAK5 A
PU.JM PWDDI~ IN Mr&lt;e. L..COV.I'5S
COOKI~ CLAeES~Y.

Voi.30,No.201
Coprriet•lecl I 982

60 WS MADe rrWITH PA5T'RY"

CRUe5i5 IN51 &amp;AD.

"Tl-IEN HCfw COMe I FILED
IT LJNDS&lt; "l?t.L!M PUDDI~ 11 '?

SO WHAT YOLl ReALLY
MADE .
W,AI5A~ PIE.

Congress could
•
rewr"Lte budget
WASHINGTON (AP)- Despite
administration assertions that
President Reagan's new budget Is
essent1al for economic recovery,
leaders l)oth parties are suggestIng Congress will rewrite It to lower
the huge deflctts 1n the president's
version.
· The $757.6 bUllon 1!&amp; spending
plan f()l1l18}ly going to Congress today proJects record deficits of $91't6

bUllon this year and $91.5 billion for
the 1!&amp; fiscal year that starts Oct.
1.

To hold deficits to those predlc·
!Ions, Reagan Is recommending an
additional $2.4 bUllon In budget cuts
this year and about $56 bUllon In
savings for 1!&amp;, including cuts of
$27 bUllon In domestic programs.
Top administration officials attempted Sunday to cool clitlclsm of

/

-·
Three perish in apartment fire

Priscilla's Pop
I roN'T THINK I
WANT TO 00 OJT
THERe, PRISCILI.A 1

OH, HCLLYHOCK,
THERE~ NO
REAso.J TO 6E
AFRAJP.'

Ed .Sullivan
AT MY POP.'
BEEN' I=IVE YEAR$
SINCE .HE'S 6EEN
ICE SI&lt;An NG- .. •

"'6UT HE~
PICKING HIMSELF
RIGHT UP AND
STARTING OVER .'

"'AND SE:E

HOW WELL

HE$ OOING.'

LOS ANGELES - Fire surged through a five-story apartment
hotel In Los Angeles early Sunday, kUling three people and !njuling
11. Some or the Ul residents Jumped from ledges and windows.
Firefighters said an Inside stallwell acted almost like a chimney,
sweeping the blaze upward.
An unidentified 00-year-old woman and a 3-month-old Infant feU to
their. deaths, said fire department spokesman Steve Ventura. The
charred body or a third victim, a man, was found on~ top tloor of
the 45-year-old brick building.
One woman threw a baby from a Voflndow, and a fireman managed
tn catch the chUd by the hair.

Cancer victim has child
BROCKTON, Mass . .r- ·Susan Cummings, an unwed 17·year-old ,
former runaway and graduate of a drug rehabilitation program,
knew she was dying of cancer and that she would die ail the sooner If
she had her baby. But she did It anyway.
When Susan died nine days ·ago, she left behind, In her father's
words, "a piece of herself."
Her son, Blian, was born prematurely Nov. 25, addicted to morphine. He has had to fight for his life at Boston's Children's Hospital
since the dea\h of his mother Jan. 30.

.........

·~

.

'Prescription .drugs big problem
CINCINNATI- Pollee drug enforcement officials single out HamUton County as one or the state's problem areas for forged
prescliptlons.
Authorities estimate that thousands of piUs are obtained Illegally
each week from the 250 pharmacies 1n the county.
The problem Isn't confined to the southwest Ohio county, but drug
enforcement officers think there are several reasons to suspect that
It's more severe 1n the area.
"Cincinnati, from what I've been told by drug Investigators, Is a
fairly dry area for 'Class drugs,' or what we used to caD narcotics,"
said Tom Allen, president of the HamUton County Pharmacy Board.

!

'rOU HAVE 10 ADMIRE
HI'S DETERMINATION,
,BECAUSE·.. GVCH··· HE

KEEP5. TRYING-.'

AND LOOK AT
HIM PICK UP
&lt;SPEED A-OW.'

Offici6ls call off search
PORT CLINTON, Ohto - A search for a JS.year-old Port Clinton
man presumed drowned after Ws snowmobUe went off the Ice and
Into the open water of Lake Elie has been discontinued.
Efforts to locate WIUiam Oliver will not be resumed untO the Ice
thaWS or new evidence surfaces, the Coast Guard said.
The accident, early Thursday, occurred near the Marblehead
Coast Guard Station. A search faDed to locate the missing man, one
of. six snowmobilers attempting to cross the take from Put·In·Bay.
I'IINTEOINCANAOA

__ __by_ Art

_DUSTY CHAPS TM

..,..

,;~l,..'{

&amp; Chi'p Sansom .
'(~SUSI~SS
~~~SARal'T
~1\-(6~
' 1H&amp;'&lt; 1 ~ WRlTTetJ

/IDN6'{,

\-\eH-l-lSHl

entine

at

1 Sodlon, 10...... 15 C..ll
A Multlmodlo Inc. N - 1 *

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 8, 1982

or

.\

•

Weather forecast
Occasional rain tonight, changing to snow before ending Tuesday
afternoon. Lows tonight and highs Tuesday 1n mld·30s. Chance of
precipitation near 100 percent tonight and 70 percent Tuesday.
Winds northerly 10.15 mph tonight.
. Eldellded Ohio Forecast
.
Wed""""ay through~:
Sca&amp;terec18110WIIurrlee and.rold Weclneeday. GeDeraUy fair with a
wannlng lrelld 'lblll'lday and Friday. IIIKb8 In the mld-2jlo to midlOa w__.,ay,ID the 8011 Thlll'llday and mld-30810mld-4&amp;1Frlday.
Lon In tile llnJie numbers and teens Wed......,ay &amp;I'd Tlnlnday and
In the *early Friday.

FisCal Vw

Fiscal Year

1883

1982

Estimated

Est,mated

the plan by arguing that major
changes In the president's budget
would fuliher damage the nation's
reeling economy.
Presidential counselor Edwin
Meese ·m Sjlld enacting the spendIng cuts, reducing government benefits programs, closing tax
"loopholes" and Imposing the user
fees that Reagan wants "wiU raise
the confidence of Investors wWch
will ultimately work to bling down
the Interest rates."
Budget director David A. Stock.
man went tuliher, declaling "these
huge budget savings are neces·
sary, essentia l to keep the economic recovery program moving
forward ."
But Initial reaction to the new
budget on Capitol Hill was less than
enthusiastic - from members of
both parties.
"There's a little ' Allee In wonder·
land' view to this budget," said

::~::~ ~e J~~e:~ ~~~;;i

Gtanls to "'-''
and Locallttes
6

BUDGET COMPARISONS- This chart shows 11
comparison of tile U. S. bodget for the fiscal years 198%

Miss Oliver
award winner
Lynne Oliver, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Oliver, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy, Is the first Meigs County
representative to the Ohio Junior
Miss Pageant to come into the
winners circle.
Miss Oliver spent last week 1n
Mount Vernon attending activities
1n conjunction with the Ohio Junior
Miss Pageant staged over the
weekend.
Miss Oliver was one of two con·
testants selected for the scholastic
acWevement award. As a winner,
she was presented a sUver bowl and
a cash award of $300.
Winning the state Junior miss tJ.
t1e was Lorna Revere
Montgomery County and first runner-up
was Lisa Renee Cain of Harden
County.

or

0

'buli PA.'( FRoM'-

-

Deficits

800

- .,
400

200

0

1110

1881

1882

.1883

Estimate
Source: Office of Management and Budget ·

.AP

DEFENSE CHART- This Is a chart showing the eotlmaled bodget recelplll In 198% and 1983, propoiled
defeDIIe outlaysand bodget deflc!L 1AP Laserpholol.
.
·

Suspect nailed in cop killing
jury In January, had been sought
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . - The
by officials after It was announced
man wanted 1n connection with the
he was a suspect 1n the death of the
shooting death Huntington pollee
26-year-old pollee officer.
officer Paul .Jeffrey Harmon last
Officials also said extradition
Dec. 14 has been arrested.
proceedings against Stacy were ex·
Bobby Dean Stacy, 30, Colum·
peeled to begin today.
bus, was taken Into custody by the
Pollee were able fo locate Slacy
FBI and other autholitles at a
1n the 1111nolsstatecapltolafterhavmotel 1n Springfield, Ill., around
lng "developed the Information"
8: 45 p.m. Sunday.
the suspect was there. Early reAn FBI spokesman said Stacy reports Indicated Stacy had relatives
portedly offered no resistance
when captured. The FBI, assisted " In the area.
Wilbert Bethel Mayle, 31, Columby a Huntington policeman, a West
bus, named as Stacy's accompUce
VIrginia state trooper and San·
In the shooting, was arraigned on a
gamon County (Ill.) autholitles,
murder charge 1n Cabell County
had surrounded the motel where he
last week. Mayle was arrested by
was staying, and evacuated guests
Columbus pollee less than a week
before they prdered Stacy to give
after Hannon's death, and fought
up.
Stacy, who was Indicted for extradition back to West VIrginia.
murder by the CabeU County grand Mayle was also Indicted by the

or

grand jury last month 1n connection
with Harmon's death .
Harmon was shot five times at
the Inters ection of Jefferson
Avenue and 19th Street In Hunting·
ton early on the morning or Dec. 14
while answering a caD for assistance from another officer. Harmon
reportedly encountered two men at
the Intersection, which ted to the
shooting .
Authoritie s also believe Stacy
and Mayle may have robbed a fastfood restaurant In the ChesapeakeProctorvUie area ear~r 1n the
night. The two suspects are alleged
to have ned the shooting scene In a
green Buick, wWch wasJaU,rdlscovered 1n the Ceredo-Kenova area.
The car was reportedly registered
to Stacy.

Meigs youth dies in wrec.k
Timothy Allen Kessler, 17, Route
2, Ewlngton, whocompletedWsstu-

.,'

DeftnH
Outlays·

Receipts

Billions of Dollars

00.

F-\).)61 \'le'I..L WN\/6

and 1983 as estimated by the Office uf Marillgement and
Budget. ( AP Laserphoto) ,

,___ Budget Receipts ·Defense Spending .......

Committee. " I think the task for ·
Congress Is to honestly face
reality."
Jones added that studying the
projections 1n Reagan's budget
"you see no credible path for get·
tlng those deficits down. You see no
credible program to take pressure
off Interest rates. You see no real
letup 1n the deadening of long·term
borrowing."
· Consequently, "I don't see any
economic recovery" with the president'~, program, Jones said.
Senlo1 Republicans tn· the House
and Senate agreed that fights are
vlrt~Uy certain over each of the
major elements of Reagan's
budget - deep, new cuts 1n social
programs such as food stamps and
education; another large Increase
for the Pentagon; the rejection of
new taxes; and the huge de!lclts.
"The president's budget will be
difficult to pass In 11:!1 entirety,'' Said
House Republican Leader Robert
H. Michel of Dl!nols.
"I don't believe anybody realist!·
cally believes that we're going to
accomplish everything the presl·
dent suggests,'' said Sen. Robert
Dole, R-Kan. , chairman or the Senate Finance Committee.
However, Stockman Insisted that
when "Congress looks at the hard,
stark choices avaUable, they will
understand very quickly that un·
(Continued on page 10)

•'

.... '~
'·
'

\ .

dles at Eastern High School at midterm, was apparently kllled
Instantly In a highway accident on
Route 124 1n Vinton County, 3.6
mU~ east or the JackSon-Vinton
county line Sunday night.
The OWo State Patrol at JackSon
reported Kessler's car was travel·
ing west when he apparently went
left center and was struck by a
car driven by Delta Schoonover.
40, Chauncey. The Kessler vehicle
came to rest on an embankment,
the patrol reports. Schoonover was
not lnjw1ed.
· Young Kessler was pronounced
dead on the scene. ·
Meanwhile, a Bidwell resident
was cited by the Gallla·Melgs Pollt
the state highway patrol 1n the
village Sunday morning !1fter a collision with a parlted car.
The patrol said Marie G. Saunders, 60, backed from a private

or

, ~OtJ,

~~\i-HAA-"A.H~

or

I

III!:U' ENCLOII8 IIIIELTU BOVSI!! • , urt ..,. -a, Dl5le Jlnll,
n

ad a_,. Tyree, Jr.,

.wter IMue

' •

_..ledFrkllly
'ec' . Ira,
..., • - '

......... r...ay 'f1ree ....
~·

llld.d7.

_...at llle Mlddleplrt Leclea Part • MID S~ A

Ml6-

place.

Alllert

I

.

II betDC mverecl to

piOvlde

a meetiDC

'•'

s.

driveway on Third Street at 9: 15 tence. The dliver wasn't InJured In
the accident and there was slight
a .m. Into the dliver's side of the
parked vehicle, registered to Joyce damage to her vehicle.
No citations were Issued In a two- .
Roble, Rt. 1, Bidwell. The accident
vehicle colllslon at the Intersection
caused slight damage to both vehiOhio 124 and 338 Saturday
cles and Saunders was cited for Improper backing.
afternoon.
According to the report, a vehicle
In an otherwise quiet weekend,
dliven by Betty C. Roush, 62, Ra ·
the patrol was kept busy !nvestlga tcine, pulled from 338 to cross 124
!ng a string minor accldenl:!l 1n
and collided with a veWcle dliven
the area.
by James F. Powell, 21, Rt. 2, Ra·
A veWcle dliven by Stephen K.
cine, which was westbound on 124
Carson, 18, Mlddlepoli, was north·
at 2:09 p.m . The accident caused
bound on Ohio 3251n Meigs County,
moderate damage to Powell's vehl·
three-tenths a mile south of Ohio
cle and sUght to the .Roush auto .
124, at 1: :!1 a.m. Saturday when his
A veWcle driven by Zane A. Beeauto went the left lide the road
gle, 16, Rt. 2, Racine, was west·
and struck a mallbox, causing
bound on Letart Twp. Rd . 96 at 2:15
slight damage Ia the auto.
p.m. Saturday when It slid off the
· Troopeu said Elaine J. Smith,
17, Rutland, was · westbound on . right side of the road and struck a
telephone pole. Beflgle was unln·
Meigs County Rd. 35 at 8:40 a.m.
Jured
and the wreck caused slight
Saturday when her vehicle slid off
damage
to his vehicle.
the left llde ol the road, struck an
was killed at 6:44 p.m .
A
deer
embankment, spun around,
croued the road and struck a
(Continued on page 10)
.'

or

or

or
orr

or

I

�·com~entary
.

In re Cubaa.-_________W_il_lia_m_F..;_·'B_uc_kl......::.ey_J_r.

IIi Cuurt Strftc

Pome,.y,Ollo

114-lti.!U.

DEVOTED TO THitiNTERDT OF niE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

Bm~ ~L...--.-, M""'!!!!ril:::l•-=--

~v"

ROBERTL. WINGETT
PubiJIIMr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

A..Utaut Publlilwr/C1111trollrr

DALE RcmiGEB, JR.
New• Editor
A MEMBER ul The Auoclak'd Pru1, JDIIDd O.lly Pn!A: A.NOeiatloa 11Gd tk

AmrriCIIa Newt~.-per PubU1hen Ail~iatloa.

LE1TER8 OF OPINION ar. welcomed. Tiley lfltouJd ~ ln1 tltla 3eO wonb Mlc. All
ldlen 1:ft 111bjeet 1u edltiDI aad mu11t 1M! 1IJ;Dftl with tllllmr, addrn1 aDd U!l~e
IMimbtr. No uulgoed lrtkn wlli!Jl! pubii!Jised. Let~n 1buuld bela Rood latte, addmlliaK
U.un, DOt ptf'IOUIJUet.

Not deeply concerned

·

,.
.. ,
··

'.

'·'
·.·
~·
'

....

~.
~
.~
.~

'·
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'

,, .

For a change, there's a crisis in proo.ss in which American interests are
not deeply involved.
This one is in Africa, a military coup in Ghana on the last day of 1981 that
was perfunctorily noted on news pages and then vanished with the new year.
Possibly because in addition to there being no vital American connection, there was little surprise. If ever a govetnrnenl was ripe for overthrowing, it was the civlllan regime that had ruled the country for two years.
The economy was not merely at a standstill, it was moving backward.
Few of the country's few factories - mostly slate enterprises, the legacy of
an overly ambitious, erratically implemented industrialization effort in the
first years of independence - were still operating. Inflation was roaring
away at a 100 percent annual rate. The foreign debt was $1.6 billion,
depressed world.cocoa and coffee prices upon which Ghana depends for hard
currencies made it look increasingly like a bad debt and food supplies for the
home folks were beginning to pinch.
Sll for the second time an air force officer in his early 30s - Flight LL
Jerry Rawlings - felt compelled to lake over. The civilian government he
'had installed in 1979 after his first coup was sent packing, parliament was
dissolved and political parties banned.
Clearly a defeat for representative government, but no one in an otherwise crisis-obsessed Washington is getting noticeably excited about it.
Ghana's West African neighborhood is not at present one of the continent's
more sensitive areas. Rawlings did lnunediately re-establish diplomatic
relations with Ubya,: but considering the state Ghana is in the C&lt;Jnnection
C&lt;Juld be Col. MualjiJilllr Khadafy's lass more than gain.
Ghana iB a loss, howevet- one that occurred years ago.
·
Given the rundown state of the country today, it is easy to forget that it
was Africa's richest and most promising when it became the first of the
possessions of the old colonial powers to achieve independence after World
Warn.
,
That was in 1957. Britain, which bad ruled the country as the Gold Coast
for 113 years, prepared this beginning of a new era carefully. Ghana, which
took its new name from an ancient African empire, had a thriving export
market for its agricultural products and gold. It had almost half a billion
dollars in reserves. It had an educated class and a British-trained civilservice in place.
It also had Kwame Nkrumah, a leader of considerable capabilities,
idolized at home and respected abroad.
Unfortunately, he had a tendency to confuse the advancement of the
well-being of his own country with the enhancement of his stature as a world
figure. He pushed economic development too rapidly and into areas for
which Ghana itself or the timing were unsuitable. He spent heavily on
prestige projects, especially in an effort to 1nake Ghana the political focus of
the emerging free Africa.
.
By 1964, the promise was gone along with the reserves. The economy
was sagging. Nkruman assumed dictatorial powers and established a oneparty state. In 1966, he was overthrown in a coup, the first of the five - in·
cludiog the latest - that have been the major events in Ghanaian political
life since.
Ghana was supposed to show the way to the rest of the new Africa. Unfortunately il did for much of it - the wrong way.

Gun control
advocates have
new ammo
-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Advocates or tougher handgun control
taws tn Ohio may have some am·
munition from the FBI to bolster
thetr arguments.
According to FBI reports, the
deadly taU from handguns Iss sub.stantlally higher than uno!flclal fig·
ures presented to a House
· committee working on a handgun
registration btU.
The House Judiciary and Crimi·
na1 Justice Commlttee ts working
on the biD Introduced by Rep. Lee I.
Fisher, O.Shaker'· Heights, to requtre handgun owners and buyers
to obtain ldentlflcatlon cards issued
by pollee. It also calls for back·
ground checks on people seeking to
. buy handguns.
Testifying before the panel, Nel·
son T. Shields, head of a national
citizens' lobby against handguns, .
said the "handgun body count for
the stale of Ohio" showed 291
· deaths in l!m.
FBI statistics for 1981 are not yet
available, hOwever, 1!8l FBI reports showed that handguns were
used In 445 homicides In Ohio that

.year.

'

The number of homicides In
which llreanns of au kinds were
used was placed at 545, with hand·
guns accounting for 80 pe!Wnt of
the total.
·
RIOes were used in 29 homicides
and shotauns tn 65. In s1x staylngs tn
which ftreanns were used, the type
of weapon was undetennlned.
Current Ohio law raiSes few bar' rters to the purch8se. sale or pos·

-

.

session of handguns. It prohibits
sales to anyone under 21 years of
age, carryiDg concealed weapons
and use by felons.
But there are no state laws requiring Ucenatng of handgun dealers, registration of the weapons or
restrictions on handgun purchases.
Fisher's bill has been sent to a
subcommlttee for more testimony,
a move Committee Chairman Robert A. Nader, [).Warren, lnsiats Is
not an attempt to bury tile
measure.
Rep. Joseph J. Vukovlcll, vice
chairman or the judiciary panel,
said he wo\lld like to ·see the Issue
decided.

"I WOuld like lo see the Issue
aired · out In ·committee and voted
up or down - period," Vukovich,
O.Poland, said.
"(But) I just wonder if we're
buDding the dam after the flood,"
Vukovich said, noting the' thou·
sands of handguns already avana.
ble. "'l'he, ~.i.l; .wb!tdler the
btU we have befcire us ts going to
have any appreciable effect."
Evert If It should be~ by the
House, the meaaute iB almost cer.lain tp be bottled up this year In the
Senate.
'
Senate President Pro Tern ThomasA. VanMeter, R·Ashland,sakl
such bills have no chance or
pauage.
"I don't think yoU could find ITlOJl1l
than four...91: 1Jw ~ in ille Senate tlllft.ll'elleve 1n that type or lee·
lalatlon," Van Meter said.

Alexander Halg testified with Claremont Men's College, stresses
some solemnity before the Senate both the gravity of the Cuban threat
Foreign Relations Committee that and the difficulty of countering it. He
the Soviet Union has sent into Cuba quotes the great theorist Admiral
an entire extra squadron of Soviet Alfred Mahan who in 1897 wrote that
MIG-23 aircraft and 63,1100 tons of "Cuba has no possible rival in her
military supplies, giving Cuba "the conunand of the Yucatan Passage,
largest air, land and sea inventory of just as she has no competition in
the region." Secretary Haig went on point of natural strength and resourto describe the efforts, mostly un- ces for the control of the Florida
derwritten by Cuba, to export arms Strait which connects the Gulf of
in turn to Nicaragua an&lt;! El Mexico with the Atlantic." On the
Salvador, to press the ideological other hand, the invasion of Cuba
imperialism of Castro, the Silvie! wo\lld be comparable to the itlvasion
Union'ssatrap in the area.
of Okinawa in 1945, writes Rood.
It is hard to understand why the "That island has an area of 600
Senate Foreign ·Relations Com· square miles, and was defended by
mittee doesn't demand to hear from 120,000 Japanese soldiers; Cuba has
the secretary of slate either in open an area of 45,000 square miles and
session or in closed session what is has an army of 180,000. To conquer
our staled policy in the matter of Okinawa required the combined efCuba. If we have no strategic policy · forts of three Marine divisions and
in the matter of Cuba, then let news three Army infantry divisions of this transpire. Or is the position of
the Reagan administration that the
anning of Cuba has itself reached '·
such a point as to make resistance to
it impossible? But if that is the case,
then what are the consequences ci
yielding to Cuba in effect the
mastery of the relevant southern sea ...:.:
lanes, and a relatively unobstructed
opportunity to colonize central
Africa?
For many years we suffered under
the delusion that President Kennedy
. . ..
had won the great encounter of Oct.
22, 1962. Even so close a student of
these matters as Henry Kissinger
wrote in the Reporter magazine at
the time that one could assume only
that the Soviet Union had committed
a great blunder. Would that we had
C&lt;Jmmitted such blunders.
It would be impossible to maintain
that Cuba today is any the less
menacing to the United Slates than
it would have been if back in 1962
nothing at all had been done to interfere with the Sllviets' arming of
Cuba.
Harold Rood, veteran of General
Patton's Third Army and a
professor of political science al

the North American area for its
·
Then let us agree that an invasion naturaladvantages.
A declaration of war against
is not practical. But what else?
Cuba'
Surely what needs to be done is to
Exactly. Perhaps a declaration
reposture our juridical relationship
need
not be followed by Calonic
with Cuba. AI the present lime we do
military
activity. But such a
not diplomatically recognize the
declaration
of war - against the
Cuban government. But why doesn't
government
of
Cuba, in whose place
the Congress recognize that that
we
could
proceed
to recognize a
government is at war with the
government
in
exile
and seek
United States? That its
reC&lt;Jgnilion
of
it
by
Latin
American
aggrellsiveness for the time being is
allies
would
give
purpose
and
limited to other nations than the
dignity
to
such
measures
as
. we
United Slates is purely a matter of
thought
appropriate.
Moreover
it
circwnslance. But it is busy sending
will
signal
to
the
So.
v
iet
Union
that
arms, subversive materiel and suppori to declared enemies of the we are engaged in reasserting that
United States. It is doind so, doctrine enunciated by President
moreover, as an extension of the Monroe, which accepts what history
other great thermal nuclear power has quite simply visited on the
United Slates, namely primary
in the world. It is doing so, finally,
responsibility
for defending this
from a geopolitical vantage point ,
hemisphere
·
almost U11111iltchal)le anywhere in

over 100,000 men.''

~;

'

•

Jackson. defeats .·
Marauders, 7 6·62

~~~~

Marie weinberg's own .story..__---:-_J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - The ABSCAM
story has taken a bizarre twist.
An inquest wilf be ordered into the
violent death of Marie Weinberg;
wife of the FBI's hired C&lt;Jn man.
Meanwhile, I have obtained a
dramatic l!l·page narrative, which
she wrote in her own hand the day
before she died.
This deathbed document implicates the FBI's ABSCAM teain in
an alleged criminal C&lt;Jver-up. She
decided to blow the whistle, she
wrote, after discovering Mel Weinberg's secret diary. In terse prose,
she related: "Nov. I, looking for
passport - find black book - read
book - sick."
She telephoned a confidant to
report the discovery. According to
her · account, he warned her:
"Marie, don't do anything rash.
They will kill for it."
Nevertheless, she began calling
the FBI agents who had worked with
her husband on the ABSCAM caper.
She had C&lt;Jme to regard them as personal friends. They responded with
varying degrees of alarm. She
quoted agent Bruce Brady, for
e~ample, as pleading : "Do me a
favor, Marie. Can you keep me out of
it?"
Next she "looked up Jack An·
derson clipping," she reported. "Hit

Success

me like a ton of bricks ... Now I understood." Then she picked up the
telephone, called my· office and
spoke t'o my associate Indy Badhwar;
She said that her husband had ocrnrnitted perjilry, that he had made
off with some of the ABSCAM brihe
money and that he had extorted
valuable gifts from the ABSCAM
defendants.
There were more telephone interviews; Badhwar also flew to
Florida twice to question her in person.·For the next three months, I investigated her story. Not aU . the
details could be checked, but I was
able to confirm many of her
charges.
This led inevitably to a confrontation with her husband. "I'm
standing in kitchen," she wrote.
"Mel sits at counter- very nervous
and looks petrified.' She gave this
account of their conversation:
Mel: jjWhere's the book?
. Marie: "What book?"
Mel: "You know what I'm talking
about."
Mar ~: "No, you tell me."
Mel: "You were talking to Jack
Anderson."
Marie: "No, I didn't speak to Jack
Anderson .. .' • She added in paren11

1

theses "(1 spoke to Indy)."
Mel: "They have you on tape.
What did you tell him?"
Marie : "Nothing.''
Mel (very frustrated) : "There'll
be a congressional hearing. Thef'll
make mincemeat out of you. You .
can't take !he pressure."
Marie: "I can't be hurl any more
... Alii have is the truth."
Mel : "I want to know your source
of information."
Marie: "I'll give you my sourceyou!"
Mel : "Let me tell you something.
If you talk to anyone, they'll find
out about your past - your attempted suicide. They'll make you out a
crazy lady. They'll take J.R. (their
son) away from you. And I can get
guys to say you were sleeping
around. You'll be an unfit mother.
They'll take J.R. away." Marie added: "The blinders came off. I saw
Mel as he really was. I was
scared."
Then Mel repeated: "Now
where's the book?"
Marie: "I burned it."
The FBI's chief ABSCAM agent,
John Good, picked up where Mel
Weinberg left off. He was one of the
agents Marie accused of covering up
her husband's crimes. According to
her handwritten statement, Good

called her frequently and urged her
to cooperate with him. Here are
some excerpts:
"John Good called: 'If I sent two
agents down to Florida, will you talk
~othem?' Marie: 'No.'
"John Good called: 'Marie,
remember (agent) Kenny Zucker? I
said no. John: 'He'sa good guy. He's
in West Palm Beach now. How about
me sending him over? You can talk
to him.' I said 'No.'
"John calls back: 'Marie, suppose
I C&lt;Jme down next week - Monday lll.jl2, I have to get clearance from
Washini:ton.' Marie : 'Sure, John.'
"John Good called frOm Sheraton
Hotel, Singer Island, Fla., 842-6171,'
Room 502. I had temperature - sick
- hypoglycemia - told John I
couldn't see him."
Meanwhile, Marie learned from
her son and a neighbor that FBI
agents had been prowling around
their condominium. She related: "J,
R. said right after I left cars were
riding around condo - strange men
- saw neighbor next morning agents all over - watching place."
Marie Weinberg's life ended on
Jan. 26. Shortly after her body was
discovered, police reported, Mel
Weinberg ransacked the apartment.
He. seemed to be looking for
something.

story~__________Ia_m_e_sJ_._K_ilp_a_tr_ic_k

ABIDJ~I,IvoryCoast-Overthe

past 15 or 20 years, most of the news
from Africa has confirmed Gibbon's
melancholy cormnent that history is
little more than a register of the
crimes, follies and misfortunes of
mankitid. Against this general rule,
one conspicuous exception stands
out. It is the Ivory Coast.
The story of this sturdy little
·nation in West Africa is aU the more
notable these days because of the
des~fl!te · plight of neighboring
Ghana. The one has succeeded, the
other has failed. To examine the
reasons for the contrast is to
discover once. more the truth of
another ffiiiXlm of historians - that
history is mostly billiii'ii"phY:
~
Ghana won its independence from
the British in March 11157. Ivory
Coast formally separated from

--=

France in August 1960. In Ghana
political leadership emerged in the
person of Kwame Nkrumah. In ·
Ivory ·Coast, the dominant figure
was a soft-spoken physician, farmer
and statesman, Felix HouphouetBoigny. ·
The two men scarcely could have
been more unlike. In Ghana,
Nkrtimah embarked upon an
overambitious program .of in·
dustrializatioin along socialjst lilies.
Not con~nt with 70 ·pe~cent bf 'the
seats in his parliament, Nknunah
swiftly won constitutional changes·
that would make him the powetful
president of a one-party state. With
~iament thus reduced to im"""iiC)til&amp;;'• mu llililm' "iiu ottiM -the
press, Imprisoned his enemies and
expelled m.. of the remaining
British civil servants. In the midst of

'

F1GHT FOR BAU • sOuthem's IUchard Wolfe ( 13) and NelsonvilleYork's Mark Pitts (14) fight for a rebound during Saturday's non·
eonlerence game at Buchtel. The Buckeyes roBed to an 83-81 victory
thus ending Southem's 16 game winning streak. Tim 'l'lwker photo.

,.

·'

festering corruption and a declining
economy, Nkrumah was overthrown
by a military coup in February 1966.
The authors of that coup demonstrated that boldness is no substitute
for competence. A second coup in
1972 swept them from power. New
leaders had learned the arts of
corruption from old ones. In 1979 a
third rebellion arose, this one led by
a young flight lieutenant, Jerry
RawUngs. With the fonnation of a
suppoeedly responsible govenunent,
he stepPed aside. Six weeks ago, bitterly disappointed by Ghana's continued deterioration, Rawlings and
his brother officei"B again seized
powef. The country \otters on the
bo brl of ' • •...,., ,Ita eoim and
tomatoes rotting for want of tran&amp;port and its gold and diamond mines
in disarray. Only a black market
'

thrives .
. By cOntrast, Houphouet embarked
in the Ivory Coast on a patient
program of agricultural improvement. He kepi a large French
infrastructure in place- a battalion
of 1narines still is garrisoned near
the Abidjan airport - and he concentrated on building roads, exlending electric power and
develpping port facilides.

!hs is not t~,lUj~ ylat everything is

bll~ful

tn • this· • small oasis , of
stabllity.,:I'he Ivoiian economy still
rests !llrgaly on coffee and cocoa,
and ·WI!JJd 1 ' mark~ts are soft ..
Houphou4\t .!l!jtige~'!11lt: a· new international
~ement that
would guarante,l a PJ:ofltable price.
but the Reagan a~ratiOn is.unwilling to-o al01111. ·

cacoa

'

DOONESBURY

Middleport, Ohio

.

The. Daily Sentinel-Page

3

Buckeyes surprise Tornadoes

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monckly, February 8, 1982

.

-

The Daily Sentinel

·:

PCIII'MtfVy

Poge-2-The Daily Sentinel

teamed up for a great offensive per- · F.rederick, who came off the bench,
fonnance by the duo during the did a good job, but were unable to
compensate for its opponent's torrid
frame .
In the first stanza, neither team pactl. A brigade led by Taggart,
led by more than a lhrJ'I! point Mays, and Maiden flanked by good
spread as both 1ea1ns took turns outings by guards Scbenz and Mark
sharing the lea,d. Five .lead changes Pitts were just too much for the local
took place with N-Y taking the 23-20 Whirlwinds.
advanta~e aHhe buzzer.
Taggard
hit statistics
seven of
In thethatsecond
half,
In that 'round, Maiden and Mays showed
eight
field
goal
attempts,
while
his
paeed the attack with eight and six
C&lt;Junterparls
fared
nearly
as
good,
poinis respectively, while the
"Wolfe Boys," Kent and Richard, despite · one lukewann streak that
opened the half. On the evening ·the
each had eight.
N· Y grabbed the second quarter Buckeyes canned 32 of 58 field goal
jump and sC&lt;Jred first on a short attempts for 55 percent and the ~
jumper by Mays, followed by a quick win.
S0uthern netted a warm 29 of 63
retaliation by Kent Wolfe. Richard
Wolfe went to the foul line at the 7:03 from U1e field for 46 percent, and hit
mark , but the hot-handed duet only 10 of 15 from the line' for 66 percent.
shot a total of two times the remain· SHS had lllurnovers, 19 foulds, four
der of the .period and Southern fell steals, 10 assists, and 22 rebounds
led by Beegle and Brown with six
off the pace, 37-26.
The Buckeyes again grabbed the each.
N-Y hit 19 or 2li from the line for 76
lip in the third frame, but il was
Zane Beegle who scored fir~l for the percent, while committing 10 turTornadoes at the 7:21 mark. S¢C&lt;Jnds novers and 15 fouls.
Southern J.V. Coach Howie Cald·
later, a long jwnper from Kent
well
utilized every player in a
Wolfe narrowed the deficit to 37-30.
hustling
52-37 reserve victory. Wade
Taggart hit a lengthy jumper from
Connolly
and Kevin Curfman paced
the wing at the 6:40 mark in what
Southern
with 13 each, while Mike
proved to be the start of a
McKnight
and Joe Vasco had eight
devastating aerial attack from the
each
for
Nelsonville.
Southern is
noor.
now
14-3.
During the last,leg of the third canSouthern travels to Southwestern
to,. N-Y unleashed a wide-open
Friday
then hosts the red-hoi Miller
sharp-shooting display by Taggart
Fallcons
Saturday. Earlier a
Robert Brown and Scott
scheduling misprint listed the Mlller
gartle as an away ·game i however,
the game will be played at Southern
High School.

By SCQTI' WOLFE
BUCHTEL - Behind an awesome
shooting display and complete control of the boards, the class "AA"
Nelsonville-York Buckeyes knocked
the visiting Southern Tornadoes
from the unbeaten ranks Saturday
evening with an impressive ~
non-league·victory.
The Buckeyes' awesome aerial
display was led by Tom Taggart's 28
points and Tim Maiden's 22 point
combination, while Brian Mays' 6-5
frame C&lt;Jntroled the boards with II
caroms.
,
Nelsonvflle-York is now 15-2 and
leads the Tri-Valley Conference with
a 9-2 slate. Meanwhile, Southern
continues to dominate the Slluthern
Valley Athletic Conference with a 1&amp;1overall record, and 841 loop record.
Offense and .control of the boards
boiled down as the key factor in the
Nelsonville-York victory, as the
Buckeyes muscled out a decisive 41·
22 rebounding edge, while continuously hitting the open man for
the percentage shot offensively.
·
Nelsonville-York, after grabbi ng
' the opening lip, scored first on a
short jumj&gt;er by guard John Schenz
at the 7:20 mark. From that point on,
a t1·ail-blazing pace that set the floor
afire and the nets steaming, kept
both crowds on their feet in a near
perfect j&gt;erfonnance.
Richard Wolfe locked the score at
· 2-2. while counterpart Kent Wolfe

Southern C68) -

JACKSON - The Jackson Iron- Meigs trailed by just four at 56-52.
men, led by Allen Collins' 32 points,
. Meigs grabbed the opening lip of
placed four men in double figures the final round, getting its chance to
enroute to a 7~2 SEOAL basketball . cut the lead to two and gain more
victory over the Meigs Marauders momentwn. However, Meigs lost
here Saturday evening.
the missed : shot and when the
Following Collins in scoring were fireworks hailed in the last round,
Doug Morris, John Clay, and Matt Jackson battled back to a 7~2
· . Bonzo with 19, II, and 10 points lriwnph.
· : . respectively. The win boosts the
Meigs hit 27 of 57 from the field for
• Ironmen to 9-8 overall and iHi within 47 percent, while canning eight of 13
; .: the SEOAL.
from the line. Jackson netted 33 of 65
; • · Meigs is winless in 17 starts and~ for 51 percent from the field and hit
• . II within the league.
12 of 17 free tosses.
; ; : · On the evening Collins hit 16 of 20
•· · field goals for an awesome ~ ight perMeigs had 16 turnovers and II
cent shooting average.
'
fouls.
while Jackson had 12 turPacking Meigs' attack was the
novers
and 12 fouls. Jackson had 30
SEOAL's leading rebounder, Bob
rebounds
to Meigs 28. Ashley had 16
Asley who had a fine 23 point effort.
caroms
and
Riggs had five.
Riggs followed with 14 and Randy
Jackson
won
the reserve tilt over
Murrsy with 13.
the
young
Marauders,
led by
In a fairly close first round of play
Stevens
and
Edgington
with
18 and
Jackson edged its way towards a 2117
respectively.
John
Smith
and
15 lead, aided ,by Collins and . comDave
Barr
had
14
and
10
for
Meig~.
pany. The second round proved to be
Meigs plays at Gallipolis Friday
much the.same, but Meigs lost five
and
hosts Wahan1a Saturday.'
points in the frame and trailed 44-33
BolC score :
at the buzzer.
Meigs - Ashley 11- 1·23: Murray 6·
In the third round Meigs found the 1·13; Riggs 6-2-14 ; Edwards 3-1-7;
right series of plays and worked for Wha ley 1-0-2; Chancey 0-3-J . ·Totals
21·8-62.
the open shot.
Jackson - Bonzo 4·2·10; Clay J·S·
While also producing more of- 1; Collins 16 ·0-32 ; Mor r is 7-5·19 ;
fensively the Marauders made the Davis 2-0-4; Finik 1-0-2. Totals ll·
transition from offense to defense 10.76.
Score by quarters :
very well and slowed the Jackson at· Me;gs
15 18 19 16-62
21 23 12 26-76
lack. By the end of the third frame Jackson

.

Bradbury 7·4· 18. Totals 24-16·64.

By quarters :

New Boston
Kyger Creek

New opportunity
OAKLAND ('AP) - Davey
Lopes' trade from the Los Angeles
Dodgers to the Oakland A's has
been arranged in what the all-star
second baseman said wiD be hls
"new lease on life" ,playing for A's
Manager BIUy Marlin.
"The deal has been consum·
mated," Lopes said In a telephone
interview from Honolulu Saturday
where ~ iB competing in a SUper- .
teams competition. "I don't want to
je&lt;J!)anllze anything, but it looks
pretty good.

29 6 20 22-48
23 14, 18 28~ 83

~~rm~~~i!~tE,~

ltAitOAIN MATM"ES CW SAT. J\IN
AH SEATS JtiST 11 ..$0
.AD&amp;IISStON EVEif'l" FUESp..\Y I 1.10

R . Wolfe 5· 1·11 ;

·oowning-.Childs Insurance
· and
Mullen Insurance
AGENTS:

IN BE'J;WEEN · Southem's Zane

Beegle Is caught between two
roughed non-conference game won by

WILLIAM D. CHILDS
DON E. MULLEN
JOHN F. MUSSER
CHARLES B. MULLEN
MICHAEL L. CHILDS

Buckeyes Saturday durlng a
NeloonvWe-York. The victory snapped Southem's 16 game' winning
streak. Proving the tight defen&amp;e are Tom Taggart (20) and Tim
Malden (30). Tim Tucker photo.

- ..

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10 16 1S 14 2 2~ 62
13 14 21 10 2 4-64

.

Score by quarters :

Soulhern
Nei. ·York

WE 1 RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BETTER

'

points for a 4Jl.44 lead going into the
final quarter. Leading that period
scoring were llradbury · with 12
points and Tim Price with six.
Brian Bowling had II points for
New Boston.
The Tigers kept coming back then
knotted the score at 58-58 on two foul
shots by senior Dave Tolbert.
Tolbert was also under heavy
pre.!1Sure as the Bobcats took two
consecutive timeouts.
AcC&lt;Jrding to the charts, Kyger
Creek sank 24 of 60 attempts for 40
percent and 16 of 'll at the free throw
lines. New Boston hit 23 of 53 for 43
percent and 16 of21 at the foul lines.
Coach Mark Hartman's · Little
Bobcats claimed the eserve game,
43-37. Steve Waugh and David Martin led the winners with 12 and II
points respectively. Jon Mayes and
Jack Spears had 10 each for New
Boston.
Kyger Creek travels to New
Boaton Tuesday, Eastern Friday
and Hannan, W.Va. Saturday.
NEW BOSTON (62) -Cooper 7·0·
14; Jenk;n• 0·1·1; Tolbert 3-J.9;
Mays 3·3·9; Hols;nger 3·4-10;
Bowl ing 5·3·13 and Donathan 2·2-6.
Total• 23·16·62.
KYGER CREEK (64) - Clark 1·0·
2; Sands 2+8; Mole• H -20; Price 5·
0·10; Barr 1·0·2; Mart;n 2·0·4 and

Brown 3·

~~~~~~~~~~~

Bobcats capture
•
•
overtime
victory
Jeff . Moles in a pressure-packed
-situation stepped to the foul line and
converted both enda of a one-plus
Saturday night giving the Kyger
Creek Bobcats a thrilling, double
overtime victory over New Boston.
The victory, KC' s lith of the
season, ties the school's most wins
mark established by Coach John
Wickline's 1966-67 Bobcats.
That season, Wickline's team won
the SVAC and Gallia County Cage
Tournament but finished with an
overall, 11-9 record.
The Bobcats were eliminated from
the Sectional Tournament by Mid·
die port.
Saturday's triumph against the I·
15 Tigers didn't come easy.
During the second overtime, New
Boston took a two point lead on Dale
Holsinger's two free throws. They
were matched later by David Sands'
two charity tosses before moles
came through with just seconds left.
After Moles was fouled, Coach Steve
Jenkins, · who had two limeouts
remaining, called both of them.
Kyger Creek whicli \\olis forced to
(!()me-from-behind in the first overtim e had a \ chance to win it then but
missed a laSt second shot.
1be regularion game ended in
similar fashion as the Bobcats
worked for a winning basket only to
Sands' attempt go in and out at the
buzzer. Coach Keith Carter's Bobcats held a 13-10 lead at the end of
'; . the first period after leading one
time, 741.
New Boston came on strong
during the second quarter to cut the
lead to 'll-26 at the half.
First half scoring honors went to
New Boston's Dave Mays who had
seven points while Ted Cooper can- ,
ned four.
Moles paced KC with seven points,
sophomore J. D. BradbUry had six
and Ron Martin came off the bench ,
to get two baaketa in the Bobcats'
14 point second canto.
Kyger Creek's offense got moving In the third quarter netting 21

Rees1 · 2 · ~ ;

Frederick 3·0·6;

H ; Roseberrv H ·•i Beegle 5·5-15 ;
K . Wolfe 10·0·20. Tol•ls 29·10·&amp;8.
Nelsonvi11e (Ill - Taggart 1H·
28; Mays 5·2·12; Pitts 2·3-7; Malden
10·2·12; Shenv H ·IO; Adams 1·2·4.
Totals 32·19·83.

Sometimes a sweater is better.
When the temperature drops, dO you reach
for a sweater instead of the thermostat'? Do you
remember to close the damper when your fire·
place isn't being used? Are you washing full
loads of dishes instead of running your dishwasher half full?
.,
.
If you've answered yes to the above, t~en

you 're already saving energy and money. And
there are hundreds of other easy, just about
effortless ways to do even more. We've listed
them In our free booklets, available at any office.
So why not pick up your copies soon?
'Cause sometimes a sweater could be better.
A{ld saving energy is nicer still.

, I

We give it ourbest.

Ohio PovlerCompany
·,

'I

'

r.
'

:

�•• 1912

, Ohio

4 The Dai Sentinel

•

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, February 8, 1982

oster to -get $8.5 ,m illion .
NEW YORK (AP) - Slugger
George Foster has agreed to a liveyear, $8.5 m!IUon contract which
will brtng hlm to the New York
Mets, with the formal signing ex·
peeled later this week.
"We have agreed on the figures
and the general parameters·of the
contract," Mets' General Manager
Frank Cashen said Sunday.
Cashen returned home following
two days of marathon negotiations
with Tom Retch, Fo§ter's agent; in
FlOrida .
"When we finished, we were both
exhausted and there was nobody
around who could type up a memo
of agreement," Cashen said. "Tom
was going to the West Coast for
some arbitration business. He'll be
coming to New York Monday. We
left It at this. We have nothing in
writing, but we have an under-

standing of where we are at aral
where we are going."
The Mets and Cincinnati Reds
agreed to a trade last Thursday
with New York shipping three playl'rs - reportedly pitchers Jim Kern
and Greg Harris and catcher Alex
Trevino - to the Reds tor Foster,
one of the most dangerous hitters In
baseball. The slugging ouUielder
had one year remaining on his current contract and the Reds had said
they would not satisty his demands
lor a new deal paying in excess of $1
million per year and a $1 mJ!Uon
Interest-free loan.
· .
·
After agreeing on the deal with
the Reds, Cashen left Immediately
for Florida to meet with Retch.
"We had dinner Thursday," he
said. "We held no negotiatiOns then.
We Just talked baseball. Then we
started Frlday morning and went

until about 2: :JJ In the morning Sat·
urday. We were back at It tor a couple of more hours Saturday. Then
Tom had to leave."
So the deal was placed on hold
until the two sides get back together
In the next day or so_. But Cashen
said he was optimistic !,hat It could
be completed by the end of the
week.
Cashen credited the Mets' ownership, Chairman ol the Board NelsOn
Doubleday and President Fred WUpon, with helping to put together the
Foster deal.
"We have outstanding ownership
and that's an Important point," he
said. "If you'vl' got to go back to
committees every time you want to
make a move, you'll blOw more
deals than you make."
Cashen said he thought the acqul•ltlon of Foster would help the other

Mets' hitters, Including Dave Kingman. ''They won't be able to pitch
around him anymore," he said.
F011ter batted .295, with 22 home
runs and 90 runs batted In, last season, dlisplte being Umlted to 1&lt;1!
games because of the seven-week
basebl!ll strike. He had averaged 35
homers and 116 RBI for the five full
years before the strike-Interrupted
1981 season.
"I'm a great bellever In averagIng .t hings," Cashen said. "All I ex-.
pect from Foster Is an average

year."
That, of course, would Include·
those big· power numbers, something the Mets have had trouble
producing untU now.
"U he does that, I'm not going to
took back on the (financial) ligures,
even though they are big."

Reds must rely on pitching, defense
CINCINNATI (AP I - It'll be a
dramatlca11y different Cincinnati
Reds lineup that takes the field next
month In Florida.
Once a team that reUed on muscle to produce clusters ol runs, the
Reds now are more likely to
scratch for a lead and then count on
pitching to hold It, Manager John
McNamara believes.
"I Would have to think we can't
sit back and walt for people to get
on base," McNamara said. " We'll
have to play for one run more and
go for our pitching and defense."
U the New York Mets succeed In
signing left fielder George Foster to
complete a trade with Cincinnati.

to make up his Offensive production
the Reds will feature a Uneup with
would be naive. U the deal goes
at least four and probably five new
through, we'll have to adjust."
starters this season.
No other Reds player came close
The Reds are on the verge of reto matching Foster's production In
placing their e11tlre starting out·
the strike-shortened season ol1981.
field. Mets General Manager
Foster led the club with 22 home
Frank Cashen said Sunday that he
runs and 90 runs batted In for 1&lt;1!
had reached general agreement on
games. Johnny Bench was second
a contract with Foster, who would
In homers with eight and Dave Congo to New York in exchange for
three yet undiSclosed players.
. cepclbn was RBI runner-up with 67.
The loss of Foster, the Reds' cleaThe Reds reportedly would receive catcher Alex Trevino and two
nup hitter and most prolific run producer In the lineup, would change
Mets pi\Chers lor F011ter. Trevino Is
considered a solld catcher defenthe club's offensive strategy,
sively, but he has not hit a major·
McNamara said.
"You don't make up for a George
le&lt;1gue home run.
Foster," McNamara sald. "To try

0

Announce tournament drawings
Netsonvllle-Xork which knocked
Southern from the _unbeaten ranks
Saturday night was top-seeded Sunday In the Class AA Sectional Tournament scheduled to hegln Feb. 23
at Athens High School. .
Meigs, 0-17 plays Sheridan, 5-11,
In the opening game Feb. 23.
Second seeded Belpre, W-7 battles Warren, 4-12 In the secoi1d contest at 8:30p.m. Nelsonville-York
which drew a first round bye plays
the winner of the Meigs-Sheridan
game on Tuesday, March 2. On
Wednesday, Feb. 24, New Lexington, 7-9 meets Alexander, 10-7.
The winners of the BelpreWarren, New Lex-Alexander

gai!U!S will meet at 8: :JJ p.m.
March 2. The tournament championship game Is set for March 5.
In the boys' Class A Sectional at
Meigs High School, action begins
Monday, Feb. 22 with Southwestern
and North Gallla meeting at 6: :JJ
p.m. followed at 8 p.m. by Eastern
and Southern.
· Southern was top seeded with its
.10.1 record whUe second seeded
Kyger Creek, 11-4 took a bye.
The Bobcats will play the winner
of the North GaUia-Southwestern
'contest Feb. 24. The championship
game is slated f!)r7::Jlp.m. Feb. 26.
Winner goes to the district at
ChllUcothe.
·

Scoreboard...
P&amp;eaam n, Hardm Nllr'thf!m M

High school
scores

n. a.uevue '!!
Poi'W'nouth 14, GaWpollJ ~
Rolecrana 61.

7; Echslenkamper 5-4-14; Lanning 3·
5-11 ; Campbell 5· 1-11 ; Fouls 1·2·4.
Totals 25·16-66.
NORTH GALLIA (59) - Black burn 4·2-10; Kemper 8-0-16; Dee l 6-1·

The Uaily Sentinel
IUIII'S141-1111

ADM•._ ......u.edia.s.t.

13 ; Mays 7·6·20 . Totals 25--9-59.

Published every afternoon, Monday ~~ .
Friday, Ill Cout1 Stn&lt;L, by the Ohio VoU.y
Publlahing Company • M11Uimtdla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45718, 892-2llil. Second clasa
pDSt.age paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Score by quarters:
Trimble
18 19 12 17- 66

Member:

North Gallia

18 10 11 2Q-59

GALLI POLIS (42)- Sheels 2-0·4;
Madisonl-4·10; Lane9·220 ; Glenn 10·2; King 3·0·6; Sk idmore 0·0·0; .
Lan ier0·0-0. TOTALS 18·6-42.
PORTSMOUTH (441 - Gentry 102·22 ; Parker 3·0·6; Clay 1·1·3;
Barre ll 1·1·3: Cobb 1·4-6; Jackson 1r-0-~2-;_co_l-lin_s_,_-o_·2_.r_o_r_A_:~:,_s_,_a-_8-_••_._ _,

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pOSTMASTER 1 Se.-.1 addres~~ to The Daily
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51

~~~...~~~
' s .l,o~Searching

•

for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be published February 12th, and offer you a truly unusual
way to proclaim your love and best wishes.

. ·

Trtm~

SAY "I LOVE YOU" Wlllt A

65, N. G allla !Ill

Tualaw ~1. Minerva 56
Upper Sancl\llky lli, Kenton 53
Utica 71, Hebron Lakewood 49
VlUey View Ill, Mlddktown Madl«ln 49
Vandl.lla BuUer CG, GrtenvWr 43

) I\

Vmnilkln 88, Amhl!nt Steele ~
Wakl.ron, Mk'tl.. 68. N. C!ntraJ !!&amp;
WapakOnetlo 5l. o.y. Wtl.lte !10, or
Warrftl W. Rfterw 11, Bl'oolditld S3
Wauaeon 63. H111to1» flO
Wfilirwton 68, N. IWpvUlt ~
w. Holme~ !16. Dover e
w. Je&amp;r-.m •• ~ Alt.ny t9

~

$1.00 SENTINEL VALENnNE AD.

&lt;

(Umit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

W. MUtm 17, Gratwn61
WhfelertbUr'l 91!1, Rock KW !D

arc~

46, Lopn Elm J8
Claymont 62, Carrollton !12
Clear F'ork ~. Shelby 44

WIWIJT\tbull: 17, Betnti-Tail! Sl
Woodmo~ 13, Eutwood 5I
Wootter 58, MaMWoo Jacbon 56
Wortl\tna:ton Chr. 86, Mkldletown Chr.

Cl(oo.oe. Hay 51, Canton South 49

Ctoverltat 77. Nonvayne 52
Col. Academy S2, Jonathan Alder 36

M

Col. Brookhaven 82, Akron N. 00
Covington 49, Fm1 Lorumle 4J
CUyahaira Hts. 'm, Cleve. Hawken 62

To My Wife, Ann ...

To Mom and Dacl.,.

After

We couldn't have pic,ked
a nice r pair of parents In
the world! Have a Hap·
py va lentine's Day!
Mike and Sue

Woller z.

s.t.&amp;nlaT• c...p ......... 8oarM
8)''111eA

Amertcan u . 1!1,

~

GrandvieW 6t, N. Unk&gt;n li2
GreeM11'78. 'l'ecllmll'h 73
Hamllton 11, C\n. Alkenll
Hamllton tw. 62, Oxford 1'alawanda 00
Hdlate tO, OttavWe 72
'
lndlan Valley S.. Ill), Conottc.~ Val. 46
Jack8on 76, Metp 62
Jeffersotl Sl, Perry 46
JohnaloWrl &amp;1, Newark Clth. e
Kalida 56, BJutfton .9
Kettffini Alter 57, Otw. SL lll\lltiUI :IC
Klnp Mllla f4. LovelaOO :r1
Ky~ C!'ooll M, New Bolton 62, 101'
Lakeland n. Uberty UniOn &amp;:1
Lancaster M, Athenl !ll
Uck.Jrti!C Hta. S5, JotwlllWrl Northrtllp

i.tma 68. W. Cbnter Lakotl !!0
Uma stwwnee S7. Cellnl t3

London Ill, Sp'lnJ. Shi'Nl'lee :18
Lonlr1 Ca tJI: 89, Lulhmn W. 49
Mans. Chrlalian 'r.l, El)1'1a Qlr. 86
r.wu. Madlloo MaN.neld "
M.apk!llln M. Norwalk St. Paul C7

eo.

Mar~aretta 67, Llketkle 56

Manon Local ~. MWbllnawa Val. SJ
MasailiOfl 68, Akron E..t 40
Meadowbrook 67. 8atlltWWe 51
Mec:banlcllbw'J; !H, Fairlawn 67
Miller City M. McComb SJ
Nellonvffie.Yorlt 83, Racine Southern Ill
New La1don ~. LUC'AI 4!1
New Richmond CS, F'elkle;y co
Newark 88, Col. Walnut RJdlre !II
New Philadelpllll 61, E. Uverpbol 5C
()a)c Harbor ID, Genal ~
Cb!riln 89. Mkl'dlew 63

wonderful

still head ·over·heels in
love Wifh you!

College scores

Day. Cham-.JuiiN, Day. Dunbar Ml
Day. Jff(ei'IOn 78. Col. Beechc-roft 70
Day. Roth 'r.l, Cln. Wllhrow 66

14

years of marriage, I'm

Ywng. East 6:2, E. Palestine t!l

CVCA !!6, Oew. Baptlst 40
Day. Bt&gt;lmont '19, Centerville 51

"· ~,.P.Y 00

~r

Swantm '19, Anthorly Wayne ~
Tot DeVUbUI un, EvefiT'ftll n
Tol. Elmwood :B. OW,O !If.
Tot. St. Francta 73, Sylvanl.a Northvk&gt;w

Cftlarvtlk !!9, 'Twtn Vallcy N. 47
Chardon 57, Kirtland 4o
Ctn. Bl(."')fl 69,-Cin. Walnut HWa ~
an. Elder 62. Cin. Princeton Mt
Ctn. Summll 96. Cln. SPven Hills 61

-

Moore 7·0-14 ;

Sprl. ..
3l ""'""" """"""' ... Sherwood Falrvlew 66, Bryan f7
SmlthvWr 12, Kklron C!

.
.

Boyd County, Ky .. Tl, lrmton 71
Buckeye TraU n . Caktwetl 41
canton McKII\Iey !0, Maumoo Peny oW
Ca nton Tlmken ~. Zal'ft'l!lle :II

Oltnf.lniY ~ Buckeye Val. 32

(66) -

S..Jin,lw, Mk::h. !15, Tol. Scott !It
Sl. Marys 17, BenJamlll Lopn ~
Salem 14, wan-en Kennedy 73

~rurvllll! 61, Coi')'·Rawmn. J8
Sprtna. Chrtl.tWn 6!1, S.thPida 4!1
SprtnJ. NortheUtern 0 , BeUefatliiM

~

Ottawa-Glandorf ~. Pallklfte 25
PIME 81, Divine Word 53
Panni Pallial 59, WarrtftiYtlt 57

TRIMBLE

Morris O·l · J; Holbert 1·0-2; Koon 3·1·

Tell that specialsomeoRe wiih

Put Your
Love On
the Line •..

S. Wet.ter 47, Porta. West 411

Berlin HUand 71, Danvmc ~
Btdef 61, Dublin ~
8li! Waln.-t 72, Maryavtlk&gt; 6G

.

Area .cage scores

River 63, Frontier S5

Anna M. DeGndf Rlvenldt ~
AIIAOI'III 19, Otllo City St
J\Jitwerp 73, Ulleny center 6'1
1\rtltlgton ~- Allen E. IJl
l\wtlrltown-F1tcb «l, Board{nan :W '
1\yersvtUc 58, Pettilvtllf •t l
Badltt'r 68, Maplewood Sli
Barberton 78, BredusvlHr. 59
Batavia II. Amelia :18

Findlay 54, Cln . Moeller 11
Fort .lenn.tna• 10. Dl!lpho&amp; Jetrenm
GlblorlbWl n, Kanus Lakota 53
G rand Val. M. Canlll\11 ~1

0

Pori Cli'lton

8aturdaJ'• Kflubl,
Ada.M , New KMxvWe ~
i\kron Cen·HOWt&gt;t 76, Akron Sprtq. l9
Akron Ellet 56, Walsh Jt'IUII 5J
Akron Manct~sler 63, Stlfttaboro 54
AJUilf'IC(' m, AqWnaa to

\.

chance to play centerfield when the
Reds report to their Tampa, Fla.,
training site. Clint Hurdle, acquired
lnatradewiththeKansasCityRoyals, and youngster Paul Householder have Inside tracks on the
other two outfield spots_ ·
"There isn't any question In my
mind," McNamara saki of the outfield. "Clint Hurdle has played and
has very good abUity. Paul Householder has paid his dues and 11 he
winds up In right field, he deserves
the opportunity."
Bench, In line to ta~ Knight's
plaell at third base, Is a likely heir to
the cleanup spot In the Reds' Uneup.
But McNamara said he has not
setUed on a player to . flU the
opening.

WINNING SMILE - Bing CI'O!Iby NaUonal Pro-Am wluner Jim
Simollll is all smiles as he is cong111tulated by his caddy after the fiDal
hole SIUiday. Simollll shol a 14-under-par 274 lo win by two strokes. ( AP
Laserpholo).

Ravenna 73, Twhaabl,q ~
Ripley II, Cln. Couratry Day 43

Ohho IU&amp;b Sdla:OI ~
By '11111 •......&amp;s!ed p.,.

Beachwood llfl, Richmond fila.
BOOIOrd 66, ~· - oran&amp;P 1&amp;8
Belpre ~. WarT'I.'II l..Deai ~~
DeriUJhtrc ~. Newbury ~1

In the Class A girls' sectional at
GaWpolls, Southern was top-seeded
at 11-1.
Action begins Feb. 17 with North
GaUia, 3,6, playing Federal HockIng at 8 p.m. with the winner meetIng Southwestern, 11-6 on Feb. 23.
Southern will play Oak Hill, 6-9,
at 6 p,m. and Symmes Valley, 7·8,
meeting Kyger Creek, 2-lOatSp.m.
on Feb. 19.
The winners of those games will
. play at 6: :JJ p.m. Feb. 25.
Eastern, 9-5, will meet Hannan
Trace, 2-11 at 6: :JJ p.m. Feb. 23 .

"We may have to change our
style of play, but llourpitchlngisas
good as we think It can be, we'll be
all right," McNamara said. "And
we'll probably be better defen·
alvely If the trade is made- catch·
lng and In the outfield."
The Ojltileld wiU be manned by
three new starters lithe Foster deal
Is completed as anticipated. Clnclnl)lltl traded center fielder Ken Griffey to the New York Yankees, and
right fielder Dave Collins left for
the Yankees as a tree agent after
the 1981 season.
Cesar Cedeno, acquired In a
trade for third baseman Ray
Knlght, likely wtiJ get the first

,

lrn.

urr

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

Hobtl'l&amp;l

Baltlfi'IOI"e 74, Vermont 67
Boaton U. S2, ClndauU 50, OT
Brown 11, O.rtmoutb 36
Bucknell a . Rider n

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT
OR MAIL IT WITH 5 1~00 BY FEBRUARY lOth TO THE
DAILY.SENTINEL, P.O. BOX 729, POMEROY, OHIO
16 WORDS 51.00-CASH WITH ORDER

Canlahll Ml. StFrancls, N.Y. 66
CdllmiU 3J, P'r'IM!IOI'I 31
ConnectiCUt 67. Bollton Coli. ~
Difll.ware 19, LebJih 'IV

Dell.ware St. If, Bethune-Coolun.n 'n
Falr6eld 64, Amly' 56
Falr~h

Dk'klnaon IIi, BroddYD CoU

13
Fordham 13, lona

m

Geor'll" Muon n.1..0y011, Md. 16. OT
Georaetow-n, D.C. ut, Sltoll Hall 73
Lab.yette •· West 01e1ter 61
..... loland U. II, St. ....._ 1'11. II
Mlrlst '19, eotaall! Tl
Md.·E.Shore 1.1, florltla AIIM 8\
NIJI'theulem 7'1. Mau.·lbton :!0
hnn 51, Cor-M] 46
Pfnn St. 82, Navy 54

Plt1

eo. MuuctuJettJ !II

RlKM:te bland' 91, St.BonaYenture..,
&amp; .. -·, Po. II, Old lloml.... E3
St.Pflr-r'l 71, Manhattan I)

s.....- 86. """""""' n ·

~IW.~M

Udca ffl, Alban)', N.Y. !Ill
vtllanoYa 8J, MaiJit m
Wiper 1'1, SIMI 11
w. v~&lt;;~n~a

,., o.or.,

w........, n

v"""'~~arvan~rr
. 1100111
AlCorn St. 81,

Tn.. Soulhl!n ,

een. .ry 11. Ga.8auttllm M

'

E .~

St toe, VMIIJ!I
F10rtl1a •• Aubin 86
GoooJi,l at, VaodorOOit IT
ProJr1e Vkw "'
J~~eUon St. 11, !bullfln U. ll

o..-,.,

1.

5.

-···

--

....

2.
6.

3.
7.
11.
' 15.

4.

8.

12.
10.
14.
16.
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PHONE M2-21 56

THE DAILY SENTINEL:

~Philip

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Morris Inc .,1912

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Page

Monday. Nbruary 8,

6 The Daily Sentinel .

locally-awarded scholarships are
relatively s1nall, one-timtl-Only cash
awards. All colleges and universities
offer scholarships, too, to deserving
or talented students. These are
usually listed in the collegc/univer·
sity catalogue.
Work-8tudy Programs
Once a student has received
whatever grant he qualilies to

J1PU don't have enough money. Or do

JOlu want to Send a son or daughter to
ClJllege but the budget is already
B!"Cichejl·out of wpe' Welcome to
a. very large group; many of us who
8fe In the same situation keep
~ng, "What•will be do?"
t A man with the answers will be
&lt;ilnductlng a workshop on Tuesday,
Peb. 9, at 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs
Jflgh ~hool library. James L.
Slephen!, director of financial aid at
1\larietta College, will discuss pll
~·· Or student financial aid, will
wer questions from students and
ren~•.llnd will assist in preparing
uired fonns at this meeting
&amp;r)'l!nged by John Redovian, Meigs
High SchOOl counselor.
Mr. Redovlan recommends that
all parents of seniors in any of the
three Meigs County high schools
plan to attend this workshop. He cons~ers Mr. Stephens to be "an ex·
cellent source of information" in this
field, and Stephens' discussion will
c9ver financial aid in general, not
jljSt that available at Marietta
College.
:In preparation for the workshop, a
b(ief background discussion of the
tyPes of possible financial aid might
bt helpful. Terms to be considered
ate grants, scholarships, work-study
programs, and loans. All of these
types of assistance are available for
tw(H)r-four-year colleges, technical
sehools, or trade schools.

receive and is awarded whatever

scholarshipS money he deserves,
many schools will 1nake up the dif·
ference between the grantscholarship total and the total cost of
going to college by arranging a
work-study program with the
student. In this program, the student
will work parttime at some cam(ius
on campus-related jobs; his wages
will be paid by the school.

i

I,

Grants
is awarded a student
bjlsed on financial need alone, and it
does not have to be repaid.
Academic ability is not considered ;
i~a st.~dent is accepted by a college,
he can be eligible to receive a grant.
Federal, state, and local grants are
.
available.
Scholanihlps
Scholarships are based on competition, with recipients often deter·
mined by high school grades and
AfT , and/or SAT scorest Most

:A grant

Announcement
Friends of Larry and Beverly
Rupe, who recently lost their home
by fire, will host a household
miBcellaneous shower for the couple
oh Friday, Feb. 12 at 7 p.m. in the
feUowship room of the Langsville
Church. The shower is open to the
public.

DEMONSTRATION - Mrs. Sally Andrews made several
arrangemenbl in her demolllltrallon on the topic, "Bark and Branch
Beauty" at the Wedn.,;day night meeting of lh.e Chester Garden Club.

HARRISONVILLE Chapter,
Order of the Eastern Star,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. The office of
Ruth will be honored with all who
have served in the office to be
recognized. Members are asked
to take candy and baked goods
for a sale, the proceeds from
which will be used for the
matron's project.

Demonstration with bark
focus of Chester meeting

meet Monday (tonight) at the club
house in Racine. A chili dinner will
be served at 7 p.m. All area shriners
are invited to attend.

Club will hold a free blood pressure
clinic Wednesday, 12 noon to 1 p.m.
at the Center on Hill Street. The
clinic is open to the public and will
be conduted by Barbara Van Meter,
R.N.

TUESDAY

are to take succulent plants for ex·
change. There will also be a white
elephant auction.
Edna Woods, Twila Buckley, Sally
Andrews and Ada Holter presented
the program. Mrs. Woods gave
devotions on friendship; and a contest "Qarking Up the Right Tree"
was presented to the members with
Mrs. Buckley showing several slides
on trees for identification.
"Bark and Branch Beauty" was
the subJect of Mrs. Andrews' demonstration of designs using bark and
bare branches . Two of the
arrangements were done in oriental
design. Harry Louders' walking
stick, and peach tinted silk tiger
lilies were used in one arrangement
while sweet gum branches and pink
silk miniature glads were used in
another. Mrs. Andrews also did a
modern design using driftwood, tall
line material, dried fern and browneyedS~ans.dried in silicpne.
An arrangement by Mrs. Ada
Holter incorporated red poinsettia
blooms and fantail willow.

CHESTER - A spring flower
show was planned for April 24 and 25
at ~ Royal Oak Recreation
building when Chester Garden Club
met Wednesday night at the home of
Mr Wyatt Chadwell with Mrs.
Rosemary Young as the contributing hostess.
Mrs. Bill Buckley presided at the
meeting with members responding
to roll call by showing and identifying a piece of line materia'!
suitable for arrangin~.
A report was given on the holiday
flower show with several ribbons
being won by club members. Betty
Dean won "best of show" with Pat
Holter taking the reserve ribbon.
There were 13 blue ribbon winners,
nine red ribbon winners, four white
ribbon winners, and five honorable
mention exhibits.
Mrs. Mace! Barton, horticulture
chainnan, . announced that anyone
interested pn becoming top night
gardener should contact her for
details.
At the March meeting, members

TIJE RUTLAND Silver Circle

MEIGS High Vocal Music
Boosters will meet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. in the music room at the
high school.

REGULAR. meeting of the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club will
be held Wednesday at noon at the
Meigs Inn.

..
'

1!.1.

'

'~

''

Homemakers discuss classes
Classes being offered by the Meigs
County Extension Service were
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Third Wednesday Homemakers
Club held at city hall, Syracuse.
It was noted that the kick-off
meeting for the sewing classes will
be held Monday {tonight) with the
classes to begin Feb. 15, and be held
weekly for six weeks. There will be a
$5 fee to help pay the cost of supplies.
Also announced was a microwave.~
course in cooking to be held at tlie
Extension office on March 4 and II
from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. Registration
is due by Feb. 26. There will be a fee
of $2 per class session.

The Daily Sentinel

To E. R. Hoffman ak a
Elza R. Hoffman. Rosa
ourt of Common Pleas , ~o~f'!' an and R. D. Harper,
eigs County in the above
1f 11v1ng , and ttre Unknown
named case, 1 will e)( pose
heirs, nex t of k in, dev i s ees~
for sale at r,ublic auction on
le9atees. e)Cecutors1 adthe fronts eps of the Meigs
m mistrators, successors,
County
courthoU se , . assi gns and spouses of E.
Pomeroy , ·ohio, on Satur- R. Hoffman aka Ella R.
day, the 27th day of Hoffman , Rosa Hoffman
February. 1982, at 10 :00 and R. D: Harper, ad·
o'clock A .M ., the fol lowing
dresses unknown ; vou are
described real estate, t o·
herebv notif ied that vou
wit :
ha ve bee n named defen·
Situate in Fraction One,
nfs in a legal ac tion en·
Ttown 6; Rang e 14, Rutland da
t itled Jon M . Gru ese r. et.
ownship,
Villag e
of
Rutland, Meigs County, al. , pl aintiffs , ·vs· E . R.
Oh io, and being part of Lot ·Hoffman aka E lza R . Hoff·
man, et. al. , def endants .
~umbers 11 and 12 of the
plat' of the Town of Rutland
Th is action h as been
as recorded in F- lat Book 3,
assiqned Ca se
Number
Pages 13 and 14 in th e 18,084 and is pending in
records of the Meigs Coun·
the Court of Common
ty Recorder' s Office and
Pleas of Meig s County,
being more fu II y descr ibed
Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 .
"''S follows:
Commencing at a point in
Th e object of th e c on\·
the northeast corner of Lot
pla int is a part it ion ac ti on
Nu'mber
7 and
th e
concern ing the oil. gas and
southeast corner 'Of Lot
all other m inerals un·
Number~ of Turner' s Subderiv ing the following
d ivision Number OnP rt c: · descr ibed real estate :
Situated in the Township
record ed in Plat Book
of Orange, county of Me1gs
Number 4, Page Number 4
and State of Ohio :
in the records of the Me igs
FIRST TRACT : In Frac·
County Recorder ' s Off ice
tion 6. Town 4, Range 12,
and the existing southerly
Ohio Company's Purchase.
right·of·wav line of Bryant
Beg inning at the southwest
Street; thence S. 67 de9rees
corner of said Fraction 6;
20' ()()' ' E . along the e)(ISting
thence north 113 rods and
southerly righl -of ·wav l ine
10 links ; then ce east 169 1/2
of Bryant Street, 125.97 feet
rods; thence south 113 rods
to a point in the grantor' s
and 10 links ; thence · west
north proper tv corner and
169112 rods to the place of
the real po int of beginn if'_lg
beginning . Sa 1d tract of
tor
the
land
here1n
I
land as described contains
de!&gt;rrihPrl: thPnrP ~ ft7
120 acres and 21.03 rods,
deqrces 20' 00" E . co nti nu ·
inQ alonq sa id line and tt 1e more or less . The ·tract of
land to be conveyed by this
grantor's north properTy
deed is 10 acres off the nor·
line, 88 .60 feet to a po1nt in
thwest corner of the above
the grantor's northeast
described land : Beginninq
property corner; thence S.
th e northwest corner Of
o· degrees 00' 00" E . along at
the above-described land :
the grantor's east property
thence south 61 ·7113 rOds ,·
line and passing the north·
thence east 26 rods; thence
east corner of said Lot
Number 11 at 50.30 feet a north 61 ·7/ 13 rods ; thence
total distance of 119.30 teet to the place of beg inrling,
to a point in the grantor's contain1ng 10 acres.
SECOND
TRACT :
southeast property corner ;
thence N. 90 degrees 00' 00" Situated i·n Fraction 36,
12, Oh io
w. along the . grantor's Town 4, RangePurchase
.
south Property line , 198 .00 Company's
Commenc ing in the center
feet to' a point in the gran- of
the road leading from
tor' s south11est propertv
Sumner to Keno on the east
corner and the west line o'f line of said . Fraction 36 ;
said Lot Number 12; thence thence south on said frac ·
N. 0 degrees 00' 00" E . tion line 46 rods and 31;,
along the grantor's west feet ; thence west 1 r'od ;
property line and the west then ce north to center of
line of said Lot Number 12 said road ; thence following
and passing the northwest center of said road to place
corner of said Lot Number of beginn ing , c ontaining .
12 at 69.00 feet a tolal 46·1/ 5 square r ods, more
dislonce of 118.99 feel to a or
less .
point in the grantor' s norTHIRD TRACT , Situated
thwest property corner;
thence S. 75 degrees 45' 00" in Fraction 6, Town 4.
Range 12, Ohio Company' s
E . along the grantor's nor·
Purchase. Beginning 33
th property lihe, 100 feet to
a point in the grantor' s rods and 16111 links south of
property corner; thence N . the northwest corner of
18 degrees 51 ' 00" E . along said Fraction 6; thence
the grantor's west property east 47 r ods and 13 links ;,
line. 55.21 feet to the point then ce south 105 rods and
of beginning and con · 81h links ; ·th ence west 41
taining 0.557 acres of which
0.157 acres is in said Lot rod s and 13 links; thence
Number 11 and 0.157 acres north 105 rods and 8112
links to th e place of begin·
is in said Lot Number 12.
ning, conti'l ining 31 acres
The said prOperty is appraised at $31,800.00 and and 28 r ods, more or less.
cannot be sold for less lhon
Sa id three parcels of r ea l
2(lrds the appraised price.
estate are subject to al l
_,_Terms : Cash In hand, easements and hi ghways of
""Y of $ale.
record.
; JAMES J . PROFFITT
Deed Referenc e: Volume
SHERIFF 236, Page 57 ; Volume 277 ,
"'
Meigs County Page 55 and Volume 281 ,
Page 689, Mei gs County
&lt;1125, !21 1. 8. 3tc
Deed Records.

Jane Teaford gave devotions using
Psalms 33 and Esther Harden read a
poem. Thirteen members answered
roll call with comments on
something to accomplish' in 19112.
Carol Cundiff presented the .
program on how · the apple got ita
name. There was a quiz on apples
and then members cut out apple
potholders which tbey will make at .
home and bring back to the next
meeting.
others attending were Irene
Parker, Virginia Salser, Pauline
Morarity, Goldie Radcliff, Ada
Titus, Janice Lawson, Donna Smith,
Genevieve Schneider, Linda Ferrell,
and Glenna Davis.

PHONE 992-215G

,-~-------------------- 1·

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeory, Ohio 45769

Curb Inflation
Pay Cosh for
Classlfleds and
Savell
I
.

I'

1:
I·
1:

A nnouncernents

•

'I~

1-Card of Thanks
2- ln Memoriam

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

tJ

Real Estate

3:Announcements

'.

Classified pages cover the

4-Giveawav

Transportation
Misc.

S·Hoppy Ads
6-Lost and Found

7-Yard Sale

Jl ·Homes for Sale

a-Publ ic Sale
&amp; Auction
9 ~ Wanted

34-Busrness Buildings
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36·Real Estate WanTted

SS· Bvilding Suppli es

Rentals

1S·Schools Instruction
16·Radio. TV.
&amp; CB Repair
17 ~ Miscellaneou•

18·Wanted To do

~)

X

Services

8l·E)(cavating
84·Eiectrical &amp;
Refrigeration
8S·General Hauling

6l · Farm Equipment
62 -Wanted to buy

63·Livestock
64·Hay &amp; Grain
65·Seed &amp; Fertilizer

'. 21 · Buslness0pportunitv
Services

fN THE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
OP MEIGS COUNTY,
I
OHIO
JOHN BECKER AND
ELIZABETH BECKER
Plolnllffs,
·
·VI.
ARNOLD J. OCTEAU
and
BARBARA J . OCTEAU
. Derend•nts.
Case NO. 18015
NOTICE BY
1
PUBLICATION
To Arnold J. Ocleau and
Barbara J. Ocleau. w~ose
last known oddre.. was R
D., . Racine, Ohio1 anci
otherwise whose place of
rflidence Is unknown ond
cannot with reasonable
dltlgence b•! ascertained; .
'YDIJ are hereby notified

Publi&lt; Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
.TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Januory 29, 1912
Contr•ct Sates Legal
Copy No. 82·103
UNIT PRICE
c;ONTRACT

befendants In a legal ac· ceS:sive wee~s . The last
tion entitled John Becker publication will be made on
and Elizabeth Becker, March 15, 1982, and the 28 1
Plaintiffs, vs. Arnold J . Oc· davs will commence ori
teau and Barbara J, Oc• 1that date,¥
leau Defendants. This ac ~
In case of your failure to
lion has been asslgn.d case i answer or otherwis-e
no. 18085 and is pending In respond as required bY.
the Court of Cpmmon Pleas Oh1o Rules of Ci'll'll

of Meigs County, Pomeroy.
Meigs County, Ohio 45769 .
The object of the Com·
plaint is to Quiet the title ot
the Plalnllfls agolnst lhe

___:P_u:::b lic Notice

(0.00·2.25) - Stale Route
692, in Meigs county, by
resurfacing with
concrete.

Pavement

varies.

asphalt

Width

,'

'

bids

Mltctlon of roll ends

::;~~and uu...,.••

House Cillls and shop
service available.
1·3· 1 mo.

Sq . yd. installed

Save A lot'

RUTLAND FURNITURE
MAIN ST.

742 2211

NOtice
-·-+·------

l:luHsified fHII(f!ll rover the
following tele[1hon1• exf'hllnKeH ...
Go lila Co. Area Code
614

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

12) B. 9, 10 , 3tc

AIINOUNCING

BEVERLY WICKLINE
NOW AT

For all your wiring
~ furnlleel repair

1ervica
R111 E1tate Generel

and

lnltllladon.
Raeldantlal
8t Commercii!!

TEAFOR

IN RACINE
RHs., Tho,. I Sol.
HAll STlliNG
llolh Mtft I Womon

CALL 949·2120

C.H 742-31915

1 ~~ 24 · 1

446-GIIIIpolls
347-Choshlro
311-VInlon
2~5-Rfo Gronde
256-Guyan Dis!.
643-Arabla Dlst.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

mo .

458-Leon

576-Apple Grove
773- Milson
882-New Haven

895- Lelart
917-Bulfalo
TO PLACE AN AD CALL

PH . 992·2478
1 ~ n 1 mo. pd.

ly

Country

home . on

large level lot. Has 3

nice size bedrooms,
modern bath, modern
kitchen with range and
refrigerator. Lots of
closet$ and nice car·
peting . Garage for 2
cars, one with storage.
$49 ,900 .
JUST LISTED - 301,
acres , more or less,
good garden, lots . of
trees, 3 bedrooms,
house belng overhauled.
Bath, good woodburner
chimney . . garage and

other buildings . Only
$19,500.
BUILDING LOT - Ex ~
ceptional view from on

lop of Pomeroy, Has all

utilities,
garage .

and

2

car

POMEROY - One acre

lot with a 2 bedroom

reasonable home. Bath.
all utilit ies, front porch,
4!nd full basement with
garage . Onlv 516,500 .

12 ACRES - Southern
School
District. 3
bedrooms, bath, all
FOR

RENT -

Fur·

Ho11sing
Headq11arters

Mon., Feb. 1
thru

Sizes Stilrt from l0x24"

Utility Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all

wood buildings 24x36.

For Longer Hair

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

KqslllluJySIIon

Rl. 3, Box 54

1&amp;9 N. 2nd
Mldcllopcwt

Racine, Oh.

Ph. &amp;14·143·2591
6·1Hfc

Colt992-272&amp;
2-1· 1 mo.

In Mason coun1v

675-1333
- -Ads- =
S- - Happy
... .........
.. ,. ·-···. . ........
.... ..
_,

Mixed Hardwoods
Delivery Awailable
or You Pick Uo

~

Also Wood Splitter
For !tent
John Wise

(614) 742-2131

~

In Memoif•m

2

cookie, custom decorating.
Order now for Valentine's

missed by family .

S9.00

yeors ago Feb. 6. Sadly

David Price

'Eat Your Heart Out' Send :
vour love a glent heart
shoped chOcolate chip ·

In memory of Fred
Jenkins who passed away 2

16141 992 ' 3556
1 · 13 ~ 1 mo . pd .

3
An.nouncemenls
L----------'1 SWEEPER ond sewing

Day or any special dayl·
delivery

included .

Call MoJo's 406~ J67S.

mllch!ne repair , parts, and

6- L oStaild Found
,.-.,.,,-,":'M:-•""·G:-,-..,-:-w-,-,."""""•'"•~,.,..-.., I dellverv. Davis Vi!lcuum LOST 2 wal~er dogs, 70 '
Cleaner. one half mile up lbs .• male, black. white &amp;
FRONT·END
Georges Creek Rd. Coif tan . 55 lbs. black &amp; while, ·
446-0294 ..
spotted . Reward offered.
ALIGNMENT
388·8194.
With Genuine GM
Complete line at Muzzle
Parts I
Loodlno Guns ond Sup· Reword for 2 dogs lost Sun,
plfes. Spr ing Vaffey d•y In Bedford Township. ·
supplies.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

CUSTOM

WELDING

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

jo 'f'eolrs Experienc e
Smttll Pipelines A

Speciall.v
North of R ilcine

"Beautiful, custom

On t armel Road

Bui11 Garages"

Call for

free

estimates,

949 · 2101

siding
or

949·2860.
No sunday Calls

.lt

Sawmill

J. R. PARSONS

J · IJ ~ Ifc

'

I 8· 1 mo. pd .

Pick up ond

Trad ing Co., Spring Valley
Modern Electrical
Equipment

SIMMON'S OLDS .·
CAD.-CHEV., INC.
Ph. 992-6614
JOI E. Main

Pomeroy,

Ploza, 406 ~ 802S .

ROSENBERG RECYCLf ·
NG
Opening
spe ci aliz i ng

ALUMINUM

soon
in

CANS,

aluminum siding, sheet &amp;
cast alum .• copper wire,
brass, radiators, auto bat·
terles &amp; IBM Cl!lrds. Wath

t - - - - - - - - - - - 1 ! - - - - - - - - - - - - + - - - - - - - - - - - ! t h l s paper for location and

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - ex·
tensive
ing.

remodel ·

Greg Roush
Ph. 992· 7583
or 992 ·2282

gr~nd

D&amp;D

WELDING SHOP

REPAIR WORK
eGas&amp; Electric
eCutting
a Brazing
e20 Yrs. Exp.
Reasonable Rates
866 South Third

Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992-5663

1 ~ 31mo .

1·7 1 m o.

opening . Rosenberg

REESE~l

Recycling, 140 Columbus
Rd .. Athens, Oh 45701. Call
1-614·7477.

TRENCHING
SERVICE,

Will provide answer ing ser ·
v ice or wake up call. 304·

Water-Sewer-Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hoot&lt; ·ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
RoUsh Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

Ph. 367-7560
H ·l lfc

------

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

- Piumbint •nd

tlttlri&lt;.al wor~o

New Holl•nd , Bush Hog
Farm E.qulpment

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Custom

~lichens

and

IPPiilnces,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric, 1nd
heating.
·

Blonde short h~ired female ~
Bull Terrier. Leroe black ·
male with brown markings :

ond a bob toll. 992·3964.

.

Red Pomeranian In Rllclne
lJrea . Answers to Red.
Name on collar . Call 949· ·

2591.

.

Lost : 1 Catholic medal. lm· :
maculate conception. Blue ·
on sliver chain . 992-5070.

Reword .

------

Set of 3 keys on red lag.
Vicinity of Posl Office. Call
67H399.

675·3734.

------·---·

For

bulk delivery of
gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark ,

992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.
Gun

Shoot Ra cine Gun
Every sun. start ing
at 1 p.m . Factory choke

Club.

1-----------1-----------f-----------1 guns only ,

937-Buflalo

hOuse, ·80 head of callle,

992-2156

FIREWOOD

Now 529.50

• Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years E )l[perience

18°1,
Acres of n tce laying
wooded ground , with an
older home . Allotil ities,
septic etc. Ne.ar Meigs

S~t. , Feb. 27
Reg . S20 Now $17.50
Reg . S25 Now S22.50
Reg. SJO Now $27.50
S35 W•ve Length

lnsulilted Dog Houses

Deposit

required.

PERM SALE

BUILDINGS

ment out of town. S125.00

month .

446-2342

All STEEL

utilities, storage and on
hard road .

nished 1 bedroom apart·

1n Meigs County

In Gallia County

216 E. 2nd 51.
Phone
1-(614)·992· 3325
JUST LISTED - Love ~

Pomerov

985-Cheslor
343- Portlond
247-Letarl Falls
949-Ratlne
742-Rulland
667-Coolvllle
675-PI. Pleasant

~· tAl l OW

VIRGILB.SR .

Meigs co. Area Code
6U
992-Middlepcrl

Mason Co., w. Ya .
Area Code 304

• Dozers
• Rilckhoes
e Dump Trucks
e Lo-Boy
• Trencher
• Water e Sewer
• Gils Linos
eSeptic
Systems
L.uge or Sm.lll Jobs

8-A BEAUTY

all equipment . Call for
more info .

Racine Fire Dept. sponsors

a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights

6:30p.m., Bashan. Factorv

choke 12 gauge shotgun.

Fleo Markel . New
Opening. 7 doys a week .
The Heorl of Middleport. 20
N. 2nd St. formerly Martin
General Store . 992-6370.

8- -·-- PUblic Sal_e _ _ _
&amp; Auction
Auction Sale. 1975 Cose 450

dozer, 6 way blade, new
engine, new tracks. MF

255, MF 135, MF 40, 860
Ford, two 20·10 John Deere
troctors. 6S61H diesel, 250
IH diesel. Long 465 die!el,
Long 310 diesel , MMU
16001 H dump truck 4x4.

Good

section

more

items

of

corner

planters, plows . disc,
spreaders, and hay equip·
men!. Saturday Feb. 13th,
11 :00. Several hundred
eKpected .

Siders Equipment Co .• us .
highway 35, _1 mile South of

Pl. Plea•ant. 304·675·7421 .

- - - - --

Dealer

MOBILE HOME ANO
LOT - A nice 3 Bdrm.

Theseca5h roles

Up to 15 Words ... Si)( dav

insertion ... ...... ...... 57 .00

- Include discount

ranch

1.

=== }~b]c Noti~- =-~

2.
3.
4.
5.

DAVID L. WE IR
D.! RECTOR
Rev. 8·17-73
(2) 8, 15, 21C

6.
7.
8.

bids .

9.
10. _ _ _ __ _

- 55,123 feel or 10.« miles.
" The dale set for com ~
pletion of this work shalf be
.~s set forth In the bidding
prQPosal. ''
Each bidder shalf be
required lo fife with his bid

11 .

12.
13. _ _ _ _ __
14. _ _ _ _ __
15. _ _ _ __

16. - - --

mobile home with over
1'1, acre lot, porches,
storage bldg ., most fur·
niture. Near Mine 1.

$17,900.00.
POMEROY - One story

IW•nted
)For Sale
!Announcement
1For Rent

The Publisher reserves
the right to edit or reject
any ads deemed ob ·
jectional. The Publisher
wi II not be responsible for
more than one incorrect in ·
sert!on .

cordance wolh Chapter 5525 the office of the District
Deputy Director.
Ohio Revised Code.
The Director reserves
Plans and specifications
are on file In the Depart- the rlohl to reject any all

APPLIANCE
Chester, OhiO •
PH. 985-4269 or
985-4382

Drive A little

Guvsvlllt, Ohio
Authorized John Deer,

ment of Transp()rtation and

,_will

SLINDERELLA
DIET/ EXERCISE

- Rc.olint •nttgvlt&amp;r work

insertion ...... .. ....... $4.00

in ac·

9 5 l tc

• Hot W•ttr T 11nt.1

- Concrete worll

Project and Work Length

Procedure 1udgment by
'! default whl be rendered
Sealed· proposals will be
against vou for the relief
demanded in the Com - received at the office of the
Director of !he Ohio Depar ~
l Piaint.
a certified check or
tmenl of Transporlofion
Defendants and to order
Dated : February S, 1982
cashier's che&lt;:.k for an
forefeiture of a land In·
Larry E. Spencer Columbus, Ohio, untll.10:00 llmount
equal to five per
stallment contract between
Clerk of Courts A.M., Ohio Standard Time. cent of his
bid, but in no
TuesdaY February 23,
the Plointiffs and the
Meigs County
1982, for Improvements in ; , event more than fifty
Defendants and for other
Common Pleas Court
thousand dollars. or a bond
Athens and Meigs Coun·
(2) 8, 15, 22, (31 1, 8, 15, 6tc
relief .
lies, Ohio, on ATH-S.R. 56- for ten per cent of his bid,
You are required lo an·
(0.00·3.611 - Stale Roole payable to the Director.
swer thf3 Complaint within
Bidders must apply, on
.56 in Alhen• County;
28 days after the last
MEG·S.R. 68HO.DO-O.S8)- lhe proper forms, for
publication .x. this notice
Slate Route 684, In MeiJIS qualifiCBfion at least ten
which will be published on·
County; andMEG·S.R . 1192· days prior to the date set
'tHat you hav.e been named ce each week for six sue·
1

for oPenin9.

eotspoull
• Oishw•,lltn

Farm,
170
acre~,
several barns . etc .. m ilk

Public Notice

.., llow&amp; 1M $2 · tUwhnl

,H lloill Cllllll In IIDcl 10 !Ill* flol!.
I=-liocUd.-corpotlMtallod

AIf makes and models
Antenna tnslallatlon

elilntei

U.S. III. 50 East

Up to 15 Words ... OfJe dav

Public Notice

ew.uM"
• Dr·u rs

- Addons .and rem041ellng

.Publl&lt; Notice

Public Notice

PAitTS AND SfliiVICf
All MAkES

675-Pt. Pleuai1t
458-Leon
S76-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882- New Haven .

Yard Sale. In Memory .
Card of Thanks are ac ·
cepted onJy Cash in Ad·
vance .

?3· Professional

Call Ken Young
For Fast service
985·3561

High School. $22,200.00 .
NEW LIST! NG - Dairy

86·M.H. Repair

22·Money to Loan

APPUANCE
SERVICE

Rutland Furniture Clrpet Shop

S&amp;WlV
•
and

- - Public
--~-

NEW LISTING -

(Average 4 words per line)

87· Upholstery

Future Reference

m a, 15, 22 (3) 1. 8, 15, 6tc

Phon•----------

Up to 15 Words ... Three day insen1on ... ......... .. $J .OU

81 ·Home Improvements

82·Piumbing &amp;Heating

Keep This Ad For

FEBRUARY CLEARANCE

'------------i----------4-----------

Addr•••---------

895-L~Iarl

~

Farm Supplies

41 ·Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homes
for Rent ·
43·Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45· Furnished Rooms
46-Space for rent
47·Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49·For Lease

247-Letilrt Falls
949- Racine
742- Rutland
667- Coolville

Area Code 304

~

TOM HOSKINS

f.. M•i•n•olrlll
POMEROY, 0.
992·2259

Mason Co., WV

57·Musciallnstruments

58· Fruits &amp; Veget• bl es

ll ·Help wanted

Nam•----------

985- Chesler
343-Porlland

379- Walnut

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING

Write your own od and order by mall wllh this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money nol refundable.

Pomeroy

256-Guyan Dist.
643-Arabia Dist.

59· For Sale or Trade

12-Situation Wanted
13-lnsurance
14· Business Training

Fin.r11r:1.rl

367-Cheshire

L..----------,----------"T-----------l

"

• •

992- Middleporl

388-Vinton
245-R lo Grande

56· Pets for Sale

'·

Meigs Countv
Area Code 614

446-Gallipolis

74·Motorcvcles
75-Boats &amp; Motors
76·Auto Parts&amp;
Accessories
77 -Auto Repa ir
78-Camping Equipment

Radi o Equipment
53· Antiques
54-Misc . Merchandise

33·Farms for Sale

'f

IJ.Vans&amp; 4 WD

52CB . TV , &amp;

tor Sale

Employment

-

Gallia County
Area Code 614

71 ·Autos for Sale
72 · Trucks for Sale

.S I · Household Goods

32 -Mobile HomeS

to Buy

9

following telephone exchanges.

•

and tne prayer is tnat thr;;o
tlbovc desc nbed es tate be
parti
; off
t hat
th e in· I'"'
terestt ioned
s be ~et
or ordered
s_
old if i t cannot be par·
t1ti oned ,· for an allowance
of attorney f ees her ei n and
cos ts.
You tlr e requir ed to an ·
swcr the compla in t w it hin
twen tv·eigh t (28) days af·
ter the las t publicatmn of
And Home Maintenance
this not ice Wh 1Ch w ill be
• Roofing of all types
published once each week
eS iding
for six (6 ) s u ccess1 v ~
weeks. The las t publi cat ion
e Remodeling
wil l be m ade on March 15,
e Free estimates
1982, 1982. and the twenty
e20 vrs. e•perience
eight (28 ) day s for answer
will com mence on th at
date.
In cnse of your fa ilure to
answe r
or
othe rw ise
Ph ~ 949·2160 or 949·24f2
r~s po n d as r equ ir ed by th e
n tfc
Oh10 Rule s of
Civil
Proc edure , judgm ent by
defe~ult
w ill for
be t re
against you
hender
re lied
ef 1
de manded in th e C'om·
pLni nt . ""
L arry-:: . Spencer
.
M c1q s Countv
Co m mon Pl ea s Court
DATE : February 3. 1982

I

WEDNESDAY .

THE TWIN CITY.Shrine Club will

NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

~

MIDDLEPORT - The Grubb
Family Singers will perfonn at
the revival a't Ash Street Freewill
Baptist Church Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. All are welcome.

UNITED METHODIST Church
women, 7:30 Monday night at
Heath United Methodist Church.

· VS+

E . R. Hoffman aka Elu R.
Hoffman, et al.,
De lend ants .
Case Npo. 18,G84

HARV.EY RUSSELL and
JEAN RUSSELL
Rutland, OH
, Defendants
Pursuant to an ORDER
F SALE issued by the

free
blood pressure cllnlc will be held
at Harrisonville townhal1 Tuesday from 10 a .m. to 1 p.m. Fern·
dora Story, R.N., wUl be the
nurse ln charge. The public ts
Invited to attend the cltnlc_

RACINE - Twin City Shrine
· Club, Monday, at the club house
in Racine. A chili dinner will he
served at'7 p,m, All area Shriners
are invited to attend.

Jon M . Grueser, et . al .,
' Plaintiffs,

Plaintif
, · vs·

JII\RRI~ONVILLE --A

EASTERN
ATHLETIC
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at the high
school.

Loans

A linal possible source of fil)llncial
aid is a low-interest Joan, either
from the college itself (from federal
money for this purpose) or from a
private lender (credit union or
bank.) These loans must be repaid
after the !ltudent completes his
schooling, but no interest is charged
before that time.
According to Redovian, the vety
first step to take when seeking financial assistance is to complete a
Financial Aid Form, available in
any high school guidance depart·
ment, and mail this fonn to the
College Scholarship Service. The
CSS computes the ability of the
student and his family to pay for a
post-secondary education, and informs the schools named by the
student that he qualified for aid.
· Briefly, the grants and scholar·
ships available to Meigs County
students are as follows : Pell grant
(federal), fonnerly BEOG ; Ohio Instructional Grant (state l; Kibble
Foundation grant (local) to five area
schools fOSU, OU, Marietta, Rio
Grande, Hocking Tech) ; Ohio Board
of Regents scholarship (one per high
school) ; local scholarships such as
alumni groups, PTA's, Kaiser
Alwninum, Buckeye Rural, AEP,
Kroger's, etc. ; speciality scholarships for athletics, music, art.
drama, etc. ai each college; and a
National Direct Student Loan or
Guaranteed Student Loan.
For more infonnation about any of
the available financial assistance,
meet with the experts on Tuesday at
Meigs High School, or contact your
local high school guidance coun·
selor.
·

beheldat7:30p.m. Tuesday with
work In the ~r Mason
degree. All Master Masons are
invited.

PUBIJC MEETING for all
Racine residents interested in the
new gas rate ordinance 7 p.m.
Monday at Racine Village Hall;
Bob Gibson of the gas company
will be present to answer
questions.

IN THE
COU!lTOF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO

The Daily Sentinel--Page 7

Business Senices

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS, MEIGS COUNTY ,
POMEROY, OHIO
Case No . 17898
PARK FINANCIAL INC .
columbus/ OH

of Racine l»dge 461, F&amp;AM, will

MIDDLEPORT - A revival
will begin Monday evening at Ash
Street Freewill Baptist Church in
Middleport with Clovis Vanover
of Columbus as .the speaker.
· There will be singing each night
at the 7:30 p.m. services. Leslie
Hayman, pastor, invites the
public.

Pomeroy · Middleport, Ohio

Public Notfce

RACINE - A regular meeting

MONDAY
So you want to go to college, but

Monday, Februaty 8, 1982

Social Calendar

eigs Local Teachers Association
••

1982

_

-'--

with

basement, WBFP , cen·

18.
19.
20.
21 .
22.
23.
24.
25.
26. _ _ _ _ __
27. _ _...:.__ __

Reduced to $17.500.00.
STATELY OLDER

28. - - - -- -

29. _ __ __

tral

air,

home in M iddleport, this

bdrms., ' formal dining,
family f'!oom, fireplaces.
three room garage

apartment. $35,000.00.
FIVE POINTS

Almost new ranch style

home

with

full

basement, A .C. unit,
nice kitchen, 1 acre of

Yard. $4-4,900.00.
REDUCED - Beautiful
newer split entry home.

garage, nice lot near

30.
31.
32.
33.

Estern

High

Schoof.

Must be seen, now onlv

,$54,000.00. F inan~ing
available, coli today .
REALTORS
Henry E. Clelond Jr.,
GRt
Dollie Turner HH692

34.

35.

Mail This coupon with Rem !Hance
The Dally Sentinel
111 court.st.
Pomeroy, Oli. 45769

... --------~~~--~~. --- ... ·-·-·"~.
\' "

garage .

9 room nome and up to 5

Je1n Trussell

il

full

17.

.

OffiCI

,~,-2660

H2·2259

1V SERVICE
N(M
OPEN
Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.

SALE PHONE NO.

992-6259
276 Sycamore St.

Mlddteport; Ohio
9·2Hfc

CALL:

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614·992·2181
For Fa.rm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

PRICED RIGHT
.CAU. TODAY!

Po!"eroy Scrap Iron Metals ·

------. ---- -·- ..

$125
jUNK cARS ......... ~;~~.~~~.~~~: .. .
BUYERSOF
·
$100
1
APPLIANCES.......~~~. .~.~~: ...
UNCLEAN
$150
MOTORS ............ ~!~.!~.!:~~: ...

German Shepherd temole
pup. Call446·3281 .

BAnERIES

Eleven heavy white hens,
good shape. Not abfe to
take cate of them . Phone
256·6853, Berkley Myer•.

BUYERSOF

'2,f0 Each

Also Buyers of Ridiators and Copper
"We Also Sell USed Auto Parts"
Located on Rocksprings Rd.
POMEROY, OHIO
West of Fal•rgr·outlds
PH

OLD FURNITURE, beds,
2 Blue Tick puppies and
German Shepherd 3 yr. old,
good wotch . dog. Call 446·
63,10.
2 month old puppie!. Call
367-0567.

Pari Beagle pupp ies, 8
weeks old. Coil 446·1204 af ·
ter 5 p.m.
3 Cocker Sponiels. 985'4168.
7 male 6 wk. old puppln.
304-675-6145 or 304-576-2490.

iron, brass, or wood . Kit·
Chell cubqards ot all types.
Tables, round or square.

woop Ice•boxes. Old desks
and bOO~case• . Will buy
c'lil)plele,.household. Gold,
.,, Ofd money. pocket
hel1 chaln1, ring$, and

t

ll'ldian "'rllfacls of .all
Also buying baStllall
Osby Martin 992 ·

.

---~---- -:.

KED caro, scr.ap·
ri1-'als. aluminum can$,

transm issions, motors, batteries, radiators, oil well

driiiJno bils, lungsren car·
bide, high speed steel,,

wa1te paper, cardboard ,..
raw furs, hide.,

ginslnq

yellow root. Harper·
.Halstead Salvage Co. 300
Eleventh St.. Pl. Pleasant,
cats, one neutered 304·67s :sua. Atso flea
one femlJie, good

304-576·21161 .

~

market

open

Mondav ·

through Friday, 1·5 p.m.

·

�Page-S..;...The Daily Sentinel

,- - --w.ified to Buy

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-

They'll Do It Every Time

~1 -·- HOuSeSiOrRe~

WAN T TO BU Y Old fu r ·

Small

niture · a nd Antlques of all

located on Sa nders Or .

&amp; references.
evenings 446·0254.

2.56·1967 in the evenings.

2

CASH PAID for c lean, la te
model used cars . Sm ith
Buick-Pontiac, · GAl lipolis,
Oh io. Call ~- 2282 .

3054 .
Older 3 bed r oom all elec t r.ic hou se in Pomero y. Car·
pet ing, porc h, pat io, yard,
and gard en space. Oep .
and r ef . requ ired. $250 per
month . Wr it e Box 729-S,
Pomeroy , Oh 45769 .

Bill Gene Johnson,
~ - 0069 .

wanted : Person to share 2
bdr. apt. Caii2 4S·5220.
Have room and board and
laundry for elderly per·
sons. 992 ·6022.

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old
furniture. gold. silver
dollars, wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc .• Will care for elderly in our
complete
households . home. women an~ men .
Write : M. D. Miller, Rt. 4, ~Trained lind expenenced.
Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992·7760.
992·7314.

-............
... ..... ..
'" "

Income tax service . Prom·
pt accurate . Martha Fry,
Pomeroy . 992· 3414.

Need to rade rides to O.U.
any week day . Call992·6013
after 5.
Organizat ions &amp; clubs earn
30 pet. profit on items used
in most homes. Inquire 9921
2088 after 6 p.m.
Be your boss . If you have
as many as 10 friends this
business will work for you .
Inquire 992-2088 after 6
p.m .

'N~eii ' ' babysiller · in
Harrisonville area . 4 hours
every evening . 992·5264.

'

&amp;er lees

Insurance

13

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
sur,ance Co. has offered
11
Help Wanted
services tor fire insurance
Earn
20 per
cent coverage in Gallia County
retirement on $2,000.00 for almost a century .
wholesale Instead of 3 per Farm, home and personal
cent - retirement
on property coverages are
$7,500PV . 614·875·9749 or available to meet in·
d ivldual needs. Contact
614·477-1414.
Lewis Hughes, agent.
Why would 2 Diamonds, 6
Emeralds, over .40 pearls
and 500 Directs switch? 20
per cent retirement on
$2,00.00 wholesale. Caii61A·
«6-4273 or 614--146-9332 or
· wr ite S G Associates, 336
· 2nd . Ave, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631

Phone~-3318.

15 Schools Instruction
Di's Craft Supply, Spring
Valley Plaza , 446-2134. X·
stitch hea-dquarters, ALL
colors DMC . Free lessons.

Guitar lessons, ind iVIdual
classes, personal attention.
RN position available for . MOdest prices . Call304-675·
R N Supervisor for 11-7 3734 ·
shift . Exc . starting salary
plus a complete benef it 11
wanted to Do
package. For a personal in·
tenliew call Mrs. Judy Will babysit In my home
Holley, Director of Nur· Mon. -Fri. Any hours. Must
sing, Pinecrest Care Cen· be potty trained . Call 367·
ler, «6·7112. E .O. E .
0136.

:;=::::;;=:::;:::;:=;= ==-

Bookkeeper . Only e• ·
perlenced need apply . Send
resume to Box 507 in care
Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
825 3rd. Ave., Gallipolis, Oh
45631 .
With the Army National
Guard, you'll have a part
time job with full time
benefits. You will attend
training one weekend each
month and two weeks each
year. Benefits Include low
cost life Insurance , ex·
cellent ~ay .and a free pension plan . Plus the Army
Guard's valueble technical
schooling · may help you
prepare for a well paying
civilian occupation . Call
675-3950.
GET VALUABLE training
• as a young business person
arid earn good money plus
some great gills as a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
.us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .
. Occasional weekend and
da.y babysitter for 6 month
· old baby, must be married
and without children or
with older childre n. 992·
7739.

MANAGEMENT
OP ·
. PORTUNITY. We are ex' . panding our Sales Staff Into
·· this area. We are looking
for a person who after two
years sales training can
manage this area . Full
commission plus salary
and full fr1nge benefit
package . Please send ·
resume to : Woodmen Ac·
elden! and Life Co.,
Charles E . Hughes Sr.,
Agency Manager, 536 4lh
St., Marietta, Ohio 45750.
Resident manager couple
needed . Small senior
citizens apartment com "plex In Middleport area. No
experience required. Will
train. Apartment and all
ulllllies paid plus salary .
we are looking for mature
couple. This Is an excellent
opportunity for t,h e retired
or seml ·retlred looking for
additional income. Send
brief reply to P . Osborne,
9121 Twigg Hupp Rd., Sunbury, Ohi043074 .
TEXAS
REFINERY
CORP . oilers plenty of
money plus cash bonuses,
fringe benefits to mature
person In Pl. Pleasant
area. Regardless of ex·
perlence, write H.H . Sears,
Pres .. Box 711, Fl. Worth,
, TX, 76101 .

un-

2 bedroom house on Li ncol n
Hts in Pomeroy . New floor
coveri ngs, gas heat . Adults
preferred. No pets. Ref .
and Oep. r equir ed . 992·

Frenchtown Car Co.

BUYING DEER AND
BEEF HIDES. Gene Hines
Rl. 1, Amesville, Oh 4486747 . Buying raw fur after
Dec . 12. Daily 6 PM to 9
PM, closed Sundays.

house,

Apa rtmemt
for Rent

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE '"

F ur nished
r oom
$85,
utilit ies pd., sing le m ale,
r ange, r efrig. share ba th.
446-4416 after 7PM .

Will
do sewing
and
alterations. Call ~- 2524 .
Will babysit In my home .
895-3911 .

THREE bedroom house,
Haven Heights, fireplace
with heatolator, hardwood
floors . family r oo m with
sliding glass door, forced
air fuel oil heat. 8_ %
assumable !Olin. Fm·HA .
Call 304·895·3610 or 304·675 4380 ask for Beverly .
HOUSE in New Haven,
smal l d own payment,
assumable loan, 304-8822754.

Sandhill and Os hel Road ·
This is a 47 acre plot.
Beautiful rolling and level
land . Has a 2 story house
with garage. Sma.ll woods.
All mineral rights. Just a
few minutes drive from
town.. Somerville Realty
675·3030 or 675·4232 . Jean
Casto 675-3431 .
By owner. close to schools,
hospital and pharmacies.

675-5468 .
For sale or rent . 2 bdr .
mobile home . Caii675·41S4.
House meadowbrook Ad·
dltion 3 bedroom , family
room with fireplace. cen·
tra l air, basement, 30-4·675·
1542.
1972 Concord Mobile Hom e,
12x65. Call 4-46·7015 after
5:30p. m .
l2

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Price
reduced . used mobile
homes . CALL 4-46-7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST , ~ALLIPOLIS , RT
35. PHONE 446·3868 .
12x60 2 bedroom Buddy
mobile home. Set up with 2
or 4 lots, gas heat, rural
water, close to town, finan cing available . Phone 446·
1294.
1970 2 bdr .. extra nice, new
carpet &amp; hot water tank,
natural gas, set up ready to
move into. City limits. a
bargain, $3,650. Call 446.8252, after 5 call446·2491
For sale 10x35, 1 bdr . house
trailer. Caii38B-9684.

21

Business
Opportunity

SALES ASSOCIATE
Ground floor opportunity in
Mason Co. area . Training
at our expense . Stock
bonus. Yearly conventions
for qualifiers. Protected
accounts .
$20· $25,000 .
possible first year. If you
have sales experience or a
strong desire to make a
career in sales. for personal interview, send brief
resume
to :
Regional
Manager, P .O. Box 3271 ,
Parkersburg, WV 26101.
22

Money to Loan

REFINANCE or purchase
your nome .. 30 year fixed
rate. WVa. &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage, 77 E . State St. ,
Athens,_Oh . 592-3051 .

23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning -Be kind to
your ears. Call Bill Ward
for appointment, ~ - 4372.

c a. L Bookkeeping . Complete bookkeeping and tax
service for business and in·
dllilduals.
Carol Neal «6·3862

USED MOBILE
576-2711.

HOME .

1982 Nashua 14 x 70, 7 x 21
e&gt;c:pando. factory firepla ce,
2 baths, $3000 down and
assume balance. Phone
576·2706.
1971 KIRKWOOD, 12•65, 2
bedroom, family room . un·
derpinned, 10x20awning, a·
c. w·d. Good condition . 304675 ·5739,
evenings
&amp;
weekends.
!977 SKYLINE, all e lec tric ,
central al'r, two bedroom ,
$14.000, 304-675·6986.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

"'----_:::=.::.:===-

Nice level homesite in
Clearview River EstatesSewer-Water· Eiec . $500.00
down. Phone 256·1216.

WHITE frame, 7 r oom , 3
bedroom , electric heat, kit·
chen not furnished with
stove &amp; refrigerator, utility
room with w asher &amp; dryer
hookup. 3 A cr e yard &amp; gar ·
den area . Mailbo&gt;c: address,
Gallipolis Ferry . Deposit &amp;
lease requir ed. Ownership
management. 304·522· 1990.

HOUSE , unfurn ished, 5
rooms, bath, basement,
2714 lincoln, $250., small
deposit. Inqu ir e next door.
_.,

_______________

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. and 3 bdr . mobile
hom es . Call446-0175.
Centenary, 2 bdr ., pri vate
lot, r ef. &amp; dep., $160 mo.,
adults. Call 614 · 6~3 - 2644 .
Mob ile home, 2 bdr ., adults
only , no pels, 322 3rd. Av e,
Gall ipolis. Cal l 446-3748 or
256-1903.
3 bdr . doubl e wide located
in Johnson' s Mobile H ome
Park . No pets, deposit
required, all utilities pd.
exc ept electric , newly
decorated, $300 month. Ca ll
«6·3547.
2 bdr. mobil e home at
Evergreen . Cali 446·7032.

1972 Ford F -250 4-Whee l
Dr ive. 985-4339.

TWO bedroom, furni shed,
mobile home,large lot,
r eference s and d epos i t
required. Camp Conley,
304·675·3219.
TWO bedroom, furnished ,
New Haven, 304-882-2466.
44

Apartmemt
for Rent

2 bedroom fur nished apar'·
tment. 992·5434 or 992·5914
or 304·882·2566.
3 bedroom unfurn ished
apartment. 992 -5434 or 9925914 or 304-882·2566.
2 bedroom unfurnished.
Kitchen partia ll y fur ·
nished. Dep . requireQ, $165
without uti I ities. 992 ·2288
after 6 p .m .

Apartme nts . 675 -5548.

m-

APARTMENT S, m obil e
homes ,
hou ses.
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·446·8221 or614-245·9484.

Trailer sites. 10 percent
down. 992·257! or 992-3830.

Efficiency rooms by the
week on .Main Street,
Mason, wv . 773·5651.

Large tract of land located
in PomerOY' , Ohio. Can be
financed at 12 percent.

5786.

3 bdr. apt . also 2 bdr .
trai ler. Call675· 4045.

DICK TRACY

Television
•
•
VIewmg

stai rs, 4 room s and bath.
One or two adults, referen ces and secur ity deposit
r equired. Ca.ll 446·0444 af·
te r 5PM.
Furn ished efficency . $13$
mo., l per son, utilities
" id . Call 4-46·«16 after
7PM.
Furnished apt., 3 rooms,
electricity &amp; water paid,
$200 mo. Cal l 446-4416 after
7PM .
Ve ry
nice
apt ..
un furnished , ground floor,
convient in town, quite
neighborhood, 4 rooms plus
bath, all carpeted, has
range and ref rigerator,
large kitchen, covered
patio and ya rd, two car
reserved parking , $210. mo .
Call Earl Tope 446-0690
business hours and 446-0161
even ings &amp; Sundays.
Apartment for rent. Call
446·0390.

SWAIN
AUCTION FURN ITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis. 3 piece living
room suites $199, maple
rockers $49, several chest
of drawers, ·Maple rockers$49, several late mOdel
bedroom suites, variety of
desks, Cedar wardrobe.
9x12 linoleum $10 and $12,·
several refrig., gas &amp; elec·
tr ic ranges, coal &amp; wood
cook stoves, several chest
of · drawers, variety of
chest,
lamps,
and
mechanic tools of all kinds,
. new &amp; used wood burners
some with fans, new table
lamps $18, wood cook
ranges. new 5 piece dinnet
sets $150, kitchen cabinets,
several ,dinnet sets, silver
stOne-all sizes, new tools ot
all kinds, wringer Maytag
washer, Linoleum rugs
9x12 $10, and lots more. We
have everything to set up
housekeeping . Hours lOam
to5pm, «6·3159.

I'IHOE-VEP. YOU

WHAT lfi(E YOU
&amp;OING -TO DO,

IF YO U "I RL~

ARE, .WHATeVER

DON'T &gt;iiJRRY

YOU WANT-

AND 516111

IT UP

FELl.A t

THIJ!IT: Plfl'/if/5,
I'LL- ·

54

Lump Coal $32 per ton .
Zinn Coal Co., Inc. Call~ 1408 between 9 and 4.

qs

For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs, $25 . See at 769
Brownell Ave .• Midd leport.

Furnished Rooms

Space for Rent

Trailer space at M er cer v i lle. County water,
la rge lot. Call 446·1157 or
367·7218.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.

51

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa , chair, rocker, at·
lom a n, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
cha ir and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $109. Hide· a·
bods,$340., que en size. $380.
Recliners, $175 . to $295.,
Lamps Iron+ SIB . to $65. 5
pc. difenes from $79.. to
$385. 7 pc. , $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to $495 . De sk $110.
Hutc hes , $300. and $375.,
mapl e or pi ne finish .
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Oa k, $675., Bassett Cherry,
$195 . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain 's beds,
$275 . complete . Baby beds,
$99. M attresses or box
spr ings, full or twin, S58.,
firm , S68 . and $78 . Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $49 .
4 dr . chests, $42 . . Bed
frames, $20.and $25.. 10 gun
· Gun cabinets, $350 ., dinet·
te cha irs s1o·. and $25. Gas
or electric rang es. S295 . Orthopedi c super firm , $95,
baby matresses, $25 &amp; $35,
bed frames $20$25, &amp; $30.
Electric fireplace , gun
cabinet. Living room su ite,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
Used ,
Ranges ,
refr igerators. and TV's ,
3 mi les out Bulavilfe· Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
tnru Fr i., 9am to 5pm, Sat.
«6·0322
GOOD
USED
. AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers ,
refrigerators.
rang es .
Skaggs
Ap ·
pliances, Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446-7398 .

DRAGONWYND
CAT TERY - KENNEL . AKC
Chow
puppies,
CFA
Himal~yan; Persian and
Siamese k illens. Call 4-463844 after 4 p .m .
HILLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call446-7795 .
59

For: Sale or Trade

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

Want to trade washer and
dryer for a portable set.
Call614·949·2506.

1971 KIRKWOOD 12x65
Mobile Home-will trade for
goOd late model 4x4 pickup.
304-675·5739 evenings &amp;
weekends.

Mise, Merchandice

F u rn is hed
apt.
$230 .
utilities pd .• 1 bdr .• adut•s,
nea r HMC . Call-446·4416 after 7PM .

New wood stove, half price,
used, $350 . Can con vert to turnance . Call 2561216, Gallipolis.

neover

7:30

61

Farm Equipment

JIVIDEN ' S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
«6· 1675
Special Sale on NEW
TRACTOR!
MOdel
HP
Price
260-24
$4924.00
260-24
5295.00
260-24
4924.00
260-24
5295.00
28
28

5594.00
5983 .00
7072.00

35
35

6555.00
6945 .00

41.941.9-

Maytag automatic washer
rebuilt ,
guarenteed,
$120.00. Easy dryer rebuilt,
guarenteed, $90.00. Call
446·8181.

,460-460460-

460-4• 4--~1 . 9-

7353 .00
7995.00
6857 .00
9619.00

I King wood and coal bur ·
ner. 1 stero JVC turntable
with 1120 Luxman reciever

51Q-48.5-51Q--4.4--48.5-51Q-48.5--

7778.00
9886.00
8450.00

and 2 Bose speakers. Call
388·8556.
For sale freezer beef . Call
446·4053 . .
Excelsior Oi l Co., 636 E.
Main St., Pomeroy , Ohio.
992·2205.
Firewood S35 in M eigs Co.
$45 in Gallia or Mason Co .
Call 614-985·4108 or 614-9853887.
Rebuilt Maytag automatic
washer. $85 . 7~2 - 2352 .

41.9~

61Q-64
9314.00
61Q--4•4- 64 - !1,304.00
Plus Freight
Sllie Date March 13, 1982
CALL NOW!

tary apeclal thlt'a81rchea the

~ai(fi'fAIIILY FEUD
1!:J LAVERNE AND•SHIALEY

20 ft. telephone poles for
sale. 304·675·6918 .
Will babysit in my home .
1980 Harley Davidson SL T.
1977 Ford . Diving outfit,
30A-675 ·5870 .
Air compressor $765 ; large
advertising sign $350; Nova
parts 68·72 mOdel. High
performance model 350 , 4
volt main shall lock $275 ;
39 Chevy body $500; 390
Ford motor Sl25; 300 6 cvl.
motor $200; new couch
$500; 39 Chevy sedan
$1 ,000. 304·576·2602.

BORN LOSER

1\E.l.LO,aRLLllAII~,

~IS IS"~

76

~ WAAIJIW ·'/00 ?BVERAL.
~KS WdJ 11-V\T lHIS

M16HT f-IAf'I'I::.N . .

'{)!.) COULD

·HAve

down on paper ee a college
IIIHient 15 yeara ago.
iliJ •
ENTERTAINMENT
NtOHT
.
7:35
SANFORD AND SON
7:58
l&lt;_B!i_UPDIITENEWS
8 :00
• CIJ LITTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE Swearing that he
no longer drinks or gamblaa,
Heater Sue'e former huaband,
Sam. who deaertad her years
tetor1 for anOther woman,
arrlvet In Walnut Grove to win
her bOCk. (80 mine.) (CIOIOd·
Caplloned; U.$ .A.)
(]) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

PRitJTt5D

I

BATGH
,b,HE).D
OF

PA~R 1•

-nw:::

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

2-B

ANNIE
-- A~E

t\'i'cBl~

GETTING ASIGNAL
()I

I

MRG. CAR.500'5

"t'EARTLINE" " r;-"'----, . ~-.--1

OueJity Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom
paint work on motorcycles.
Auto Trim Center, 446-1968.

SeF\'IEes
81

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured cei I ings com·
merc ia! and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.

8 :58
11:00

ALLEYOOP
I CI&gt;N'T WAIT TO VISIT
MY OLD FRIENPS ALLEY!
I'LL SEE

..ou LATER!

CAPTAIN ~TEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by
Haffel! Brothers Custom
Carqets. Free est I mates.
Call ~ -2107 .
PAINTING · interior and
exteriOr.
plumbing ,
roofing,/ some remOdeling ,
20 yrs. ~·P- Call388·9652.
Call 446-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, r odent, spi der,
and fleas control. Free
estimates.sBill Thomas .

6~

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

GASOLINE ALLEY

now We're

Not

being sued for a mi Ilion
dollars!

For sale ear corn. Call 614·

384-4514.

71

Auto for Sale

1979 Chevy Monza V-6,
auto, PS, new radial tires,
37,000 miles, ex . cond . call
446·1569.
----------------Gospel Group wants to se ll
traveling bus, 36 ft . GM
Coach, sleeps 6. Call 3792261,$2,000.
Forsale : 1971 Ford stationwagon, V-8, auto. trans.
Driveable, $175.00. Call256·
1919.
in, auto., 6 cvl. ,
miles. nice, $1.400 ,
goOd gas mileage. 256·6459.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE experienced mason, roofe r,
carpenter , e l ect r ici an ,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 30-4-675·
2088 or 675-4560.
Water well s. Commerc i al
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304·895·3802 .
LOCK~MITH

Servi ce.
Residentia l. automotive.
Emergency service . Call
882·2079.

1974 DOdge Dart. P .S.,
P.B. , air, new rad ials. Exc.
cond . $1,000. Larry Hill,

Gallipolis Diversified Consf . Co. Custom dozer &amp;
bac:~hoe
w ork . Spec ial
farm rates. Call us for free

Porlla~p 11 . _

~

PIIIN'T 'IOU
INFORM

Excavating

7HI5 COtiiP

NRtiN·

11:05
H :28
1 1:30

.

··WHILE I
GO FETCH
'fOUR
COD-LIVER
OIL

.

~46 - 4440 .

.~ · 0474 .

12:00
1978 CheveHe, automatic,
41,000 miles, will accept
older car as trade ln. See at
2316 •;, MI. Vernon Avenue,
Pl. Pl.
.

-· ....... . . . .......
... ..

31

~~

-.

,

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

Homes for Sale

Friendly Ridge. · Double
wide, 11 .5 acres, 3 bdr ., 2
baths, family room, shed.
$29,500. Call256· 1668.
Comfortable 3 bedroom
home, 8 'h percent
assumable loan, an9 is
near PPHS, large fenced In
yard, kitchen appliances
and more . we are
relocating and can share
realtor' s fees by selling
now. Ca ll alter 6 pm 675·
1625.

House 2 bedroom, 733 3rd .
Ave.. Gallipolis. Deposit
required. Call 4-46·3870 or
~ - !340 .

House near park
in
Gallipolis. Call 446-7265 or

44-60644.
For rent 3 bedr. home, 5
miles from town on Rt. 218.
Call ~ - 1158.

9 room house in Rio Gran·
de, Otl . Call446·3485.

,,

AKC regl&lt; ..1 Chlhuhua,
8 mos ." old, $100. Shlhlzu 3
mos. old, $100. Both has
shots. Call388·9373.

For sale or trade. P.urple
ribbon registered red bone
coonhound pups. Three
month old and worr'ned .
992·1577.

1975 Mustang II 4 cyl.,
asking $2,000. Call 304·6755124 after 5:00.

~IIOVIE111UBICAL)" "Tho

l

lmlltot" 11180
T881VI!NINO NEWS
CBN UPDATE NEWB
SINO OUT AMERICA
~R!D HITCHCOCK

I IHVILLI! IIFD
K CAVETT SHOW
IN THE FAMILY
UPDATI!NEWB ·
THI!TONIOHTSHOW
'The Beat Of Careon ' Guaata:
Angle Dicklnaon. Melia a a
Mancheatar, Bud Green1pan .
opoot; 80 mlno.)
ANOTHER U,E
IJ!NNYHIU
(I) CBI LATE MOVIE
AIC CAPTIONED NEWS
·
MOVIE
·{IIYITI!RY· COIII!OY) •• 'N
·~111ng In Dixie" 11143
()II. A8CNEWBNIOHTLINE
flllchorod by Tod Koppol.
(J) IIOVII-(COIIEDY) 00 !1.

iLW:.:::i:::::on't"

ABC NEWS NIOHTLINE
-~horod by Tod Koppol.
811 LATEIIIOtiT
• UC 110¥11 0' THE
WEEK 'Looking For Mr .
Goodbar' t877 Storo: Olano
~ton, Rlohord Ooro.
12:11 ()] HCOYI: ~.ICIUIIIIIR

JACKS. REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial , industrial.
Phone 882·2079.

GOVERNMENT
SUR ·
PLUS
CARS
AND
TRUCKS now available
General Hauling
through local· sales, under 15
$300.00 . Call 1·714·569·0241 JONES · BOYS WATER
for your d irKtory on how SERV'ICE . Call 367·7471 or
to purcnase. Open 24 noun. 367-0591.

~~WI

l

~ARNEY

11:35

Plano's tuned and ser·
vlced. Call Bob Grubb, 4-46·
4525.

BRIDGE
Defense, defense
and Alan Sontag
Oswald: "When the crowd
at a football game yells
'Defense, defense ' It recognizes the fact that while the
offense sets most or the
credit, the defense Is just as
Alan: "In bridge articles
we usually show the declar·
er at work because It Is easl·
er for our readers to watch
him operate. It Is also easier
'to be a good declarer than to
be a good defender since
declarer plays with 26 cards,
each defender with only 13."
Oswald: "North's raise to
sli&lt; notrumJllS cdnservatlve.
With 19 HCPs he mlsht \Well
have tried to /et to seven,
but his 4·3·3· distribution
held him back."
Alan: "When South looked
over dummy he saw that If
clubs broke he would still
need to set two heart tricks
to make six. He wdn the first
club, led a second and then
saw that only a miracle
could brlns the slam home.
He needed three heart

•962
.K74

tricks."
.

Oswald: "South cashed the
last top club and since East
had chucked a diamond and
a spade, he ran those suits
also. Then he threw West In
with the fourth club and
West had to lead a heart. He
led the four."

~ON

'

6\IWS!

1976 Chevrolet 112 ton, 6
cyl., standard, body needs
repair, $800 firm . Call «6·
8155.

----- - - - -

.J

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wet.l

North

E11t

Soutb

Pass

8 NT _ Pass . Pass

I NT

Pass
Opening lead:

+J

Alan: "This put It rtshl up
to East to save the slam. The
10 was played from dummy.
II East played the jack,
South would take hla queen
and have a wlnnlnil finesse
against West's kfna. But
'Defense ' .came throuah .
East played a low heart and
the slam was doomed."

I DisiBH Iitle 8 Book by Thoreau
6 "I Am - "
7 Time· honored
II Macaw
8 Mimic
12 Animate
t Caucasian
13 Arte Johnson language
portrayal
10 English river
15 Wapiti
14 Cereal plant
16 Family
18 Proofreading
member
mark
17 Before
19 - a clef
30
18 - to
20 Nonsense!
(spoil)
21 Taro root
31
20 Type of race 22 Hllmble
23 Wanderer
24 Cartographer's
27 Redolence
creation
33
28 Medieval
25 GoU score
war dub
28 German
34
29 Hauled
article
31 Candle

Yesterday'• ADiwer
Just about 135 Sordid
asleep
' 30 Nonna 's
Y .A. of
" Cas!B Diva "
football
38 Boutique
fame
39 Bactertol:
BrazUian
oglst's wire
tree
40 Ruaaian city
Seaweed
4Z Strlpllng
extract
43 Wally -

oTr"Tll"-Ti:~:::-1

3! Drlll
34 Polynesian
beverage
37 Decide
38 - Canals
4t Ogler
44 Assumed
name
45 Untied
4t Prepare
47 Cast
out

DOWN
I Fashioned
.,Z,.Seed
· coating
3 Without
light

t Sklll

DAILY CRYPTOQt10TE- Here's how
II

to

work It :

AXYDLBAAXa
LONGPE. LLOW

One letter almpl)' atanda for another. In thto aample A· Ia

liNd lor 11M three L'o, lj: for ,the two 0'1, etc. Stn,le

lett~ro,

apo&amp;trophea, the lenJlh and formation of the worda are all
hlnta. Each day the code letter.are dUI:erent.

CEYI'TOQUOTU
WHZ

FH

UOHZPDZD

DUU

ZMU

12:30
IHBEF

z.

:tMU~
Upholstery Rt.
Pt. Pleasant, 304-

+PIS
.J832
•us
•9764
109 7
.4
SOUTH
.J 10 4
'QU
• A 10 2
~A KQZ

.., THOMAS JOIIPH
"CROSS
5 Distress signal

p

Truck's for Sale

EAST

~

IPZM
72

•

t -1-11

.865 3

essential."

PEANUTS

GOOD JOKES ARE

NORTH
.AKQ
'A 109
.KQJ
WEST

Ill A

I{OU KNOW WHA"T
THIS MEANS "

.-- ----'---,

By Oswald ~acoby

.(!)

~~;: ttJi'MMW~.

)I'X/~()01.!'

6£/i'WS/,_.__0

~

~II!HTB

ME

EARLIER,

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATIN G
Cor. Fourth and Pi ne
Phone 4-46-3888 or 446 ·4477
83

10:21
10:30

WHY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1979 Thunderbird, power
steering, power brakes,
am·fm radio, eir cond .•
goOd cond . Rear 'd efroster.
Call after 5 :00, 4-46·2418 .

Jumble Book ~o . 19, conttlnlng 110 pup:"'· Ia avslla!Jtelor 11 .95-potiPIId
from Jumb6t, do thla ntWipapar, Bo11 34. NorwOod, N.J. 07641. lncludl your
n1me, lddrna, :dp code and make checks paya ble to Ntwtpaperboc*s .

NJAMIN

l

10:15

Wandl ing Electri ca l Ser·
vice. Old work and new
work, small appliances, 24
hr. service. Ph. 304·675·
6663.

82

"TI!'IADES"

tiD) IIA. IIERLIN
GREAT PERFOR·

C_B!t_UPDATE NEWS
11181: THEYEAAtN
T!U!VISION Dick Cavett, Lee
Remick and Robart Guillaume
holt thla apacial t~at looks at
soma of the moat memorable
momenta of the 1S81 televlalon
year. Among thoae scheduled
to appear era We Her Cronkite,
Howard Haaaeman, Bob Hope,
Andy Kaufman, Sarah Purcell,
oeniel J . Trnantland Bruce
Woltz. (2 hra.)
(]) .l.O!LCLUB
eCIJCJil M.A.S.H. Winchester
become a a pain to the ent ire
•o77th when he gate e tooth·
· ache and refuii!JI to aea a
!!lnllat.
&lt;Ill
BERNSTI!INW
BEETHOVEN M"'lmlllan
Schell. on the podium of the
Mualkvara i n , intr o du c e•
'Symphony No . 31n E· Fiot
MaJor, Opua65,' 'Erolca,'which
lapla~ed by Leonard Bernstein
and the Vienna Philharmonic
c~~- (80 mine .)
11:30
HOUSE CALLS
OLIVIA NEWTON10:00
JOHN: LET'S GET PHYSICAL
SinoerOIIvla Newton -John
etaraln thla apeolal filmed in
Hawaii and London ; eo no
highllohtelnctude aeleotlona
tromherlateatalbum, 'Let'eGet
Phyolcal.' on~ the ballad
'HopelelliY · Devoted.· (60
mlntJ
GCIJ(JD) LOU ORANTTha Trlb
dlacovera the plight of
frightened and e~tplolted
refugeea after It hires a
Vietnamaa• photographer
whoee talent almoat makea up
for hla breaking lha city room
IJ!!u. (80 mlno.)
W THEY CAUED Hill THE

Xj OFt XXX)

(Answers tomorrow)
, [ Jumbleo : JOKER DAIS Y BEATEN TETHER
S IIIU rd I)' I
Answer: It's a red - making " lo ng speeches "-

MANCES 'Bridlahead Rtviait·
ad : Sebastian Against the
World' Sebaatlan turna on hie
friend when Charlee diacovers
him drunk . Charlea baglna to
realize how deep Into trouble
Sebaatlan hu Iallan, and trias
tg_help him. (80 mine.)
8:05 liJ MOVIE -(DRAMA)" " X,Y
dZ. . " 1012
8:30 ~MOVIE -(HORROR)' "Fun
l!guN" 1881
•
(I) ' tiD)
PRIVATE

Auto Repair

Now arrange the c..•• C(tld letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggest~ by the above cartoon.

rI

Prlntanswerhere:

MONDAY NIGHT
MOVE'Superman' 1978Stara:
Ch•~l·:~pher Reeve . Ma•got

'!OOGTili

6eT"TIN\S&lt;.

I

Federal Elltpreaa, that Smith put

UP A

c::euv~RBD

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Power steering for 1973 &amp;
newer
Chevy
trucks ..
Power brakes set up for
same. Custom sunroof, new
rings, main bearing, rod
·
bearings, tim ing chain, ·
gasket set, for 350 Chevy
engine. 3/ 4 ton Chevy truck
rea rend . Call388-9684.

THIRD

DA'I I"-\ A FO(J
"'IU HAIJal'T

14 fl . John boat, 7 112 HP,
outboard motor. Cali 388·
8801.

Cherokee 2 horse trailer,
good tires, perfect shape,
$1.100. See Gary Johnson 3
mi. out Bulaville Rd .

Hay &amp; Grain

AND COMPANY
())
NtOHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
flD)
Rt&lt;i:HARD SIIIIIONS
SIIOW
(ll) CAEI\ TIV1TY WITH BILL
IIOYEAI! "Fred Smith: Corpor·
ate Creittlvit~' look• 11 the
aucceaetul bualneae venture,

MANIC:U~I1ST 1 5
CU5TOME~ WAS

IARXOTH

globe tor the ultimate In aexual

Boats and
Motors for Sale

RON'S Telev ision Service.
Spec ializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quaza r, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

WOOD-304-458-1833.
THIS IS IT · OUR ANNUAL
SALE . Gel up to $125.00
savings On World-Book En·
cyclopedia .
Monthly
payments available. Call
Margare1 Pierce, local
school service represen lative. 304-675-3775.

75

~"an!l~~SKED FOR IT

W.-tA"T THE

JII

ANOTHER LIFE
THE GREAT PLEASURE
HUNT Provocative documan·

Motorcycles

For sale Honda XR -80, 1980
mode l good cond. Call 245·
9277 afte r 4:30.

77

Restaurant
equ i pment
reconditioned by RADCO .
Call 304-523·1378. Hgtn ..
WVA .

Adve ~ti~lno specialities·.
Book matches, calenders,
pen &amp; pencils, dlcount
coupon books. Dismuke's
405 2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis,

.

l

trade . C~ll304·675· 4327 . ...

74

l1J. PIIIIAOAZtNE

TlC TAC DOUGH
IIACNEILUHRER
REPORT
!t_EWS
• IIUPPET SHOW
7:05
CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIQIDt Gue1t1: Joan River1,

Goods

POODLE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor at 3677220.

I K'J

~

:;:=:;:;:::::;;:~;;:::;:;:;::::-~~~~~i?i;;;=~~~~ miles,
rack, AM·FM
stero.
24,()()()
will take
older
...
~
Household
56
Pets for Sale
wheel drive automatiC on
Furni shed apartment. up·
51

[ ·upvn

IO~y DAYS AGAIN

1979 Jeep Wagoner quadra
track, AC, PS , PB , rear
defros1. cru i se, tilt wheel ,
aluminum wheels, luggage ·

~~ot

UniCI"amble lfloM lour Jumblel,
one leHer to each squant, to fonn
tour ordinary words.

(])
A GREAT DAY TO
I!JIIEIIBER
(J)
ENTI!RTAINIIEHT

78 Jeep CJ -5, 6 c yl ., 3 spd.,
$.4,000. 304-773-5684.

Apartment s- t and 2
b edrooms · Rent Sta rts a t ; 1
bedroom $152, 2 bedroom
$188, de posit $200. Call~2745-

by Henri Arnold and BoD Lee

EVENING

CAJ'TAIN EASY
1979 FOUR Whee l dr ive,
Chevy , 3/• ·ton, 4 speed,
$.4,500. 304-675·1578. Alte r
3:30675·1320.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

\1)}1}1.\,f} fij)'jl

r:1J ~ ~ ~ 01

MONDAY
FEB. 8, 1g12

. 7:00

2 bdr. completely furn ., all
electr ic, carpeted, adults,
no pe ts, 458 2nd. Ave.,
Gall ipoli s, $225 per mo.
plu s deposit. Call 446·2236
or 446-2581.

Nice 1 bedroom furni shed
mobile home . 9 mile from
Pomeroy on Rt. 33 . Phone
for appointment 992·7479 .

MOBILE hom e for rent
with option to buy, 304·576·
2711 .

The Dai

Ohio

Jeep Wag oneer 4X ,.,
327 engine . Automatic,
automatic front hubs, ·n ew
brake S~&gt; good body . 614·985·
4209.

2 brd . a pt. HUD e•cePted,
k itchen f urn , uti lities par ·
t i all y p d .. exc e lle nt
location. Ca ll 675-5104 or
675·7284 .

46

2 bedroom tra i ler close to
school. stores, and park .
Deposit required . Mid ·
dleport. 992·5914 .

8, 198'2

Monday,

19 1 8 cnevy
B l azer
(C heyenne) V -8, 4·WD, ne w
.t ires, regular gas, extr as.
· Cal l ~ - 1882 afte r 6PM.

Deluxe fur nished apartm ent, excellent loca t ion , 1
or 2 adults, on ly $275, ref . &amp;
dep. requi red. Call 4460338.

SLEEP ING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Cen t ral Hotel:

2 bedroom house trailer in
Racine . $175 per month. $75
deposit. You pay uti lities.
Unfurn ished but kitchen.
614·367·7811 .

---

Von• &amp; 4 W.O.

1978 CJ5 J ee p. v ery good
cond . Wil l consider small
car on trade-i n. For more
information c al l 992-651 2.

2 bdr. trail er furni shed,
adults only , Brown Trail er
Park, 992-3324.

3 bedroom
furni shed
Mobi le Home with washer
&amp; dryer on pr ivate lot .
Deposit required, no pets.
949·2253 .

n

Furnished apartment for
re nt. Ca ll4-46·3937.

141 3.

We pay cash tor late mOdel
clean used cars.

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

bedroom

Ca ll

fur nished on Lowe r Rt . 7.
Deposit r equ ir ed. Call 256·

Buying
Gold,
S ilver ,
Platinum, old coins, scrap
r ings &amp; silverware. Da ily
quotes ava i lable. Also
-coin s &amp; coin supplies for
-sale .
Spring
Valley
. Trading , Spring Valle y
Plaza, «6·8025 or ~ - 8026 .

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end . $!2 .50 per ton . Bundled
slab . $10 .50 per ton .
Deliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Spr i ngs
Rd .,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.

house

Deposit

ki nds, ca ll Kenneth swain,

Last dey I will buy fur for
this season is Saturday,
Feb. 13, George Buckley,
664-4761 .

1 bed r oom

--

44

Monday, February 8, 1982

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~age-l 0- The Daily- Sentinel

Monday, February 8, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

No one objects
tO mining plans

32 ·people die in hotel blaze
TOKYO (AP) - A flre raCEd
through the two top floors of the
!().story Hotel New Japan In central
Tokyo early today, kllllng 32 people
and seriously lnj uttng more . than
two dozen others.
A number of foreigners were
among the victims, InCluding an
American wonian who was badly
hurt when she jumped four floors
and a San Francisco man hospitalized with smoke Inhalation. Some
50 other American s from HawaU
escaped unhurt.
Officials said there were no
sprinklers on the upper floors of the
50().room hotel In the busy Akasaka
nightclub district. A new sprinkler
systetn was being Installed , but the
work was not completed on the top
floors, the president of the hOtel,
Hldekl Yokol, told reporters.
Fire officials also said the hotel
· was built with hollow spaces In the
walls between rooms. The fire code
now requires fireproof blocks
which might have Impeded the
spread of the flames, they said.
Officials said at least three ·people jumped to their deaths . One guest, Donald Ross McGhee of
Melbourne, Australia, said ·he saw
a man clinging to a sheet dangling

I

. t

CLINGS TO BUILDING - An unidentified
pajama-clad guest at Tokyo's New Japan Hotel clings
precariously to the building and an emergency ladder

early Monday as flames roar from the Interior of the
hoteL Thirty-two people are believed to
died in
the lire, although this rrwo was rescued. (AP Laserphoto) .

have

I

Area deaths
John H. Thomas

the Rev. Waid Radford, a former
resident and a frequent visitor to ·
Meigs County; three children, Bill
Root of Akron; Barbara Stacey of
Rochester, N. Y.,andHelenJaneo!
Columbus.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Wednesday at the Hammersteln·
Cox Funeral Home In Beaver
where friends may call alter 4 p.m.
today.

John H. Thomas, 88, formerly of
Middleport, died Saturday at the
jenkins Memorial Nursing Home
In· Wellston.
·
Mr.Thomas, a retlred conductor
with the New York Central Rail·
road, was born Dec.23, 1893 at Cottageville. W. Va., a son of the late
Isaac and Rosa Rollins Thomas. He
was also preceded In death by his
Timothy A. Kessler
wife, Cora Matheny Thomas; a
son, Ernest, In 1981, lour brothe rs • Timothy Allen Kessler, 17, Rt. 2,
and three sisters.
Ewlngton, fatally Injured In a trafSur.vlvlng are daughters and
fic accident Sunday night on SR 124
sons-In-law Including Hazel and
In VInton County was born May 21,
Lester Bowers, New Carlisle; VIr1964 at Chillicothe.
ginia and Robert Arbaugh, Colum·
Surviving are his parents, ,Jim
bus; Maxine and Carroll , Balser,
Kessler, Hamden; Mr. and Mrs.
Mansfield ; sons and daugJ!ters·ln- Doyle (Skip) Smales, Reedsville; a
law, Harry and Marie Thomas,
brother, Scott Kessler of Hamden;
Route 1, Pomeroy; James and Ann a half sister, Angela Kessler of
Thomas, Route 1, Middleport; · Hamden; grandparents, Mr. and
Irene Thomas, Wellston; 14 grandMrs. James Kessler, Sr .. Route 1,
children, 18 great-grandchildren
Ewlngton, and Mrs. Sam Riffle,
and several nieces and nephews.
Hamden, a great-grandmother.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Grandparents, Pearl and Dorothy
Tuesday at the Rawlings-Coats- Camp, Hamden, preceded him In
Blower Funeral Home with the death.
Rev. Lloyd Grimm, Jr. , otflcialtTimothy was a member of the
lng. Burial will be In Gravel Hill Trtnlty Christian Assembly at
Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends Coolville.
may call at the funeral home from 2
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.
Wednesday at the J.P. Rogers Funeral Home In Wellston with the
Frances R. Radford
Rev. Gilbert Spencer officiating.
Relatives have received word of Burial wll be In Radcliff Cemetery.
Friends may can at the funeral
the death of Frances Root Radford
home from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9 p.m .
at Beaver following a long lllness.
.
Tuesday.
Mrs. Radford resided In Middleport a number of years ago and was
a graduate of Pomeroy High
School.
She Is survived by her husband,

Congress
(Continued from page l)
less measures of the magnitude
that we have proposed ... are
adopted that then there CQuld well
be a severe threat to the economic
recovery" a nd "to the financial
markets."
He alsosald, " It would be dangerous to tamper In any substantive
way with the defense buildup we
have underway." Reagan has proposed a $33 billion Increase In Pen-.
lagon spending for 1983 - a rise of
18 percent.
Meese made his comments on
ABC's "This Week with David
Brinkley." Stockma n was Interviewed on CBS' " Face the Nation."
Republlcans ·used their majority
strength to enact Reagan's proposals lntactln the Senate last year,
and then attracted e nough conservatives from the Democratic majority In the House to prevail there
as wen.

Police cite driver
A car was heavily damaged and
Its driver charged with reckless operation as the result of a one-car
accident on W. Main St., Pomeroy,
at 1:22 a.m. Sunday.
Pomeroy Pollee said that a car
driven by Emily G. Price, Shade
Route 1, and traveling west, went
·out of control, went left of center
and struck a utUity pole.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
transported Price to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for lreat,.enl of
Injuries.
Pomeroy Pollee also reported
three other Incidents under
• Investigation.
· The windshield of a car owned by
Keith Klein, Pomeroy, parked on
Mulberry Ave., was damaged
when lt was struck by gravel
thrown by a passing car. A battery
wa,s stolen !rom a vehicles owned
by James James, Nye Ave., and
, Sunday, a bottle was throen
" lhrough the · window of lbe Meigs
Veteranarian Clinic on Mulberry :
. Ave.

Meigs ...
(Continued from page 1)
Sunday on Ohio 7 In Meigs County
when It ran Into the path of a northbound vehicle driven by L.C. Bealr,
21, Bellefontaine. The Bealr vehicle
was moderately damaged, the patrol said.

from a 9th floor window.
"Finally the flames got to him
and he dropped," said McGhee.
"It was. extremely hard to
breathe and the situation was near
panic," said McGhee's son Andrew, 25. ''People were falling
down the stairs of the fire escape."
Most of the deaths were from asphyxiation, offlctais said.
It was the second highest death
toll In a Japanese hOtel fire since
World War IT. A flre In the resort
town of Kawajl In November 191:ll
kllled 45 people.
Fire officials said more than 60
people were Injured, six died In the
hospital, 33 others were kept In the
hospital, and the rest were treated
and released.
One of the Injured was Sharon
Pot!, 33, the wife of a U.S. Air Force
officer stationed In Okinawa, )llho
broke her pelvis and both arms
when she jumped from a ninth-floor
window and hit the roof· of the
fourth or fHth floor. She was In Tokyo to attend a comouter tralnlne

Saturday Admissions--Mark
Slater, Rutland; Timothy Hysell,
Pomeroy; Annette Boyd, Pomeroy; Clarence Swauger,
Middleport.
Saturday Disharges --Aifred
Gans, David Wolfe, Della Roseberry, Lydia Kendricks.
Sunday Admissions--Emily
Roggs, Athens; VIrginia Hayman,
Racine; Opal Kauff, Hemlock
Grove; John Scarbrough, Long
Bottom; Delbert Bruch, Pomeroy;
Linda Imboden, Racine; James
Meadows, Portland.
Sunday Discharges·· Lilllan
Gardner, Marie Dudding, Timothy
Hysell, Lois Cornell, Jeffrey
McKinney, Opal Cummins.

Local emergency units answered
seven calls over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
On Sunday the Middleport Unit at
11: 'J:1 p.m. took Bertha Custer !rom
&amp;tonewood Apartments to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; the Pomeroy
Unit at 1:22 a.m. took Emily Price,
Main St., to Veterans Memorial
Hospital, following an accident;
Rutland at 2: 30 p.m. took Randy
Tackett from Mine 2 to Holzer Medical Center, and Raclneat8: 3la.m .
took Len Casto from Barringer
Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
On Sunday, the Middleport Unit
a t 11 : 59 a.m . took Clarence
Swauger from River Drive to Veterans Memorial.
Rutland at 2 p.m. took VIrgil Yar·
brough from Beech Grove Road to
Holzer Medical Center. Racine at
10: 52 a.m. took Mark Combs from
Mile Hlll Road to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.

MINING OPERATION - Meigs Cou~ty Commissioner Henry Wells, County Engineer Phil Roberts,
and Join! Grueser, a Forest Run community resident,
pictured tell to right, review a map showing the
proposed location of the coal mining operation of Coal

Special meeting
A special meeting of Ohio VaUey
Commendery :M will be held at 7
this evening. The Order of Red
Cross and Order of Malta wm be
conferred. All Knights Templar are
Invited.

Power,lnc. at Forest Run, with Jt.oy FO!isnach~ a com·
pony offidal, ·second from tell. A public hearin" on thr
project conducted by Gen• M&lt;Grali, Obio Mini~B Consultant, was held Monday afternoon in the r.lclgs County courthouse.

Voi.30,No.209
Copyrighted 1982

LD
Four shot in prison incident

SEE OUR NEW SELECTION
ON THE SECOND FLOOR
Toddlers 2 to 4, Children's sizes S (4 to 6) (6x to
7), M ( 8 to 10), L ( 12 to 14) . .
.
Women's sizes Petite. Small, Medium and
Large.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PETROS, Tenn. - Seven white Inmates at Brushy Mountain
Penitentiary look four guards hostage just long enough to steal their
keys and shoot four black Inmates In their cells. killing two of the
prisoners and Injuring two others, authorities said today.
The white prisoners gave up and the guards were released unharmed In Monday night's incident, which lasted 40 minutes In a
maximum-security cellblock of the prison 40 mUes northwest of
Knoxville, said WArden Herman Davis.
The seven white Inmates, who weren't Identified, were locked In
solitary ronflnement pending an Inquiry by the Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation.

· Safety inspections underway
TOKYO- Officials began safety Inspections today at 960 hotels, a
• day after 32 ~pie were. killed, Including an American, In a qulc!&lt;speadlng fire In a 10-story hotel.
More than 300 people were In the Hotel New Japan when the fire
broke out. Sixty people,lncludlng two other Americans, were hospltallzed. Sharon Pol!, 33, wife of a U.S. Air Ioree officer stationed In
Okinawa, was In "stable" condition this afternoon, her husband ,
Capt. James Poff said.
Mrs. Poff, a.Marchlas, Maine, native, suffered a broken pelvis a nd
left arm when she jumped from the ninth Ooor to a roof on the fourth
or fifth Ooor level to escape the flames.

MANILA, PhUipplnes - Philippine troops have resc ued missing
sportsman Tommy Manotoc from outlaws allegedly supported by
Communist rebels, a spokesman for President Ferdinand E. Marcos said Tuesday.
Manetoe, a 32-year-&lt;&gt;ld amateur golfer who last year secretly
married Marcos' daughter, had been missing for 41 days.
The golfer's brother, Ricardo Manotoc Jr., said the family had
received no official word of the rescue. Earlier, Manotoc's family
had accused Marcos and his wife, Imelda, ot' havlngsomelhlngtodo
with the disappearance because of their opposition to Manotoc's
marriage to their daughter lmee.

Three children die in home fire
BENTON HARBOR. Mich. -A stove left on to warm an unheated '
kitchen apparently sparked a fire that kUied three young children
whlle their mother was away, fire officials said.
Firefighters found the bodies of the children In a bedroom closet of
the second-floor apartment after the Sunday night blaze . .The dead
were Identified as Jermalne Holmes, 8 months; his brother, .Ja mes,
2; and a sister, Consuela, 4.
Benton Harbor Pattrolman Robert O'Brien said the children' s
mother, Kathy Holmes, 21, told authorities she was visiting someone
at a local hbspltal and left th~ chlldreq unattended .

AT
CROW'S
FAMILY

~RESTAURANT

Shuttle launch may go earlier
Every TuesHay Night

FOR JUST

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING RQOM ONLY ,_..,

l1-£ I'EW TAlftOEFERRED NJIVDUAL R£mEMENT ACCOUNTS-IlAa.
tng funds {mtmmum age 59' 2)
Thafs a ndtcutous quesnon ot course
WttAT ATAiollffDIMD IU CfJULD II£UI TO YOU

Because everyone could use an extra
$540.585 toward thetr rettr ement
And now wtlh a ta)(·delerred tndl-

Chicken Gravy, Cole Slaw. Hot

The Formers Bonk almost

everyone can have an extra $540 585
Even 1! you·re already covered by a
company penSion plan
To bJ1ld such an 1moress1ve nest
egg. you II need to sail away $2,000 a
year - tor 30 years - 1nto your own
h1Qh·y1eld retirement account
Or. as demonstrated 1n the b:J11
at right. you can oeposll less than

Roll, Butter and Coffee.
SollY. No substitutes except bevenps which have an additional

price.

Every Wednesday Night

$2 000 a year and st1ll end up w1th a
s1zeable amount ot cash
You tan even set up a co nven~ent
payment schedule Mak1ng depos1ts by
the week by the month or whatever
SUitS yOU beSt

BAKED STEAK DINNER
DI~ING

ROOM ONLY

Choice ofrlad. Roll, and Drink.

For Business on Monday,

Crow's ·Family Restaurant

Feb. 15, In Observanc'
Of Presidents' Day.

'

OH.

'

12'1],

~~~~~ . ~

I

lf'IIWIIIrl

Then when you rettre you II pi-otr
ably be 1n a lower tall bracket oaytng

tower taxes

s

.

s 30,000 s 60,000

15,000

,,.. ~

: ~:.:.,.
J' oer

1•""

!

Sl35,146 5270,292 S540,585
1

Note ThiS Cflaf11S IOIEJlOeCIIO 00 31 exam~
how re~JUiar ~sirs u1o an IRA can QlOW 1n1o
a Sll'lSia11al SIJ'T1. Tn1s 15 not a ~irltee o1

~
1 iniEreS!rales«eod lma~.al~

If you re tntngued wtth the thought

ol reductng your tax toad whtle tncreas,ng your secunty call or -.LStl the oro·
lesstonals at The Formers Bonk
tor all the detatts
They could help make your rettre- ~'
ment much more enroyable At&gt;out
$540_585 more enJOyable

-~

And because our re11rement
accounls are taii,Cieterred. you aeduct
your annualmvestmentlrom your tall·
able mcome 59 you 11 pay no Ieder.:~ !
1ax on an IRA Until you star! withdraw·
J

WI'YI GOT THE ANSWIRS.

I

We Will Not Be Open

.

...~

Substant iit l f'enaltv For F:Cirly Wifhdraw.al.

I$335

Served with Mashed Potatoes.

[

vtduat Aettrement Account (IRA ) tram

$325

Served with Whipped Potatoes.

''

1 Section, 10 Povn ,15 t.\tt
A Mulllmodlo In&lt;. Nowspaptf

At Middleport

r ____________________:.____--J

•

to 60 feet from the centeo·line from coming from the sc'lliment ponds
Route 7 onto County Road 30. Less will be treated and all state
than a mile from there, a bridge will rc&gt;quiremenl•dor water purity and
be erected on the hauling road to be safety will be followed.
constructed by the company. The
Primary concern of most of the
relocated creek, according to residents of Forest Run attending
McGrath, will have erosion protec- the meeting was what coal.
tion.
operations might do to the roads.
The project engineer displayed McGrath said a $50,1100 bond will be
several maps showing the area
deposited for road repair and t},e
which is expected to be mined. He · "usual wear and tear from usage."
noted that a public · hearing is In response to a question from one of
required if the mining operation is
the residents, he noted and thst mud
within 100 feet of the rig11t of way of and coa l droppings will lJe taken
County Road 10.
care of by a company sweeper.
McGrath notc&gt;d a small area will
Susie Grueser posed the question
be stripped to make access to tt··e of using Minersville Hill and was
area for a deep mine, which will en.assured that the trucks will travel
ploy between 20 and 50 people.
!rom the hauling road down Forest ·
The maps showed plans for two
RoUl Road to Route 7, and then to
sediment ponds to handle water
Minersville where a tipple Is being
from the mine with the project
constructed along the Ohio River.
engineer emphasizing thai the water
(Continued on page 10)

en tine

at

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, February 9, 1982

Troops rescue missing sportsman

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT

•

e

•

LEOTARDs-TIGHTS-LEG WARMERS

Three divorces have been
granted In the Meigs County Common Pleas Couo;1.
Sharon C. Haller was granted a
divorce from Michael J. Haller on
grounds of gross neglect of duty .
and extreme cruelty and was given
custody of three minor children.
On the same charges Tammy Cleland was granted a divorce !rom
Thomas L. Qeland and Ervin Phil·
Ups was granted a divorce from
Naomi Boring Phillips on charges
of willful absence and gross neglect
of duty.
In .the same rourtJohn and Elizabeth Becker of Colorado Springs,
Colo., filed .a petition to quiet title
on real estate In Meigs County
against Arnold and Barbara J .
Octeau.
··
Sl\ella C. Haley, Middleport, fUed
suit for divorce against Mark A. Haley, Middleport, charging gross
neglect of duty. Mrs. Haley asks
restoration of her malden name,
Edwards.

Squads kept busy

Investigators said the cause of
the fire had not been determined,
but It appeared to have started In
room 938, occupied by a foreigner
ldentUied phOnetically by the name
''Daker." The man's fate was not
known.
· ·

AIJANSI(/N®

End marriages

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
No objection to the proposed
mining operation and creek
relocation of the Coal Power, Inc. in
the Forest Run conununity was expressed by the approximately 30
residents attending a public hearing
held Monday afternoon at the Meigs
County courthouse.
Gene McGrath, project engineer
for Ohio Mining Consultants,
outlined plans for the operation in
the Forest Run area, one of two planned for Meigs C{)unty. He was
assisted by Ray Fassnacht, an official of Coal Power, Inc., who unolficially announced that a third site
for coal mining operation, is being
sought.
The creek, according to McGrath,
will be straightenc'll out and set
closer to the road, approximately 50

The dead Included Kim Taedong, 63, a former comniunlcatlons
minister of South Korea, and three
other South Koreans.

ELBERFELD$

Meigs County
happenings
.

Veterans Memorial

course,
The other hospltallzed American
was Identified as Malcolm Kravlt,
33, of San Francisco, who was suffering from smoke Inhalation.
Forty to 50 other . Americans,
·members of a tour group from Hawau; escaped Injury although some
lost their belongings, said E~wood
Wilder; 70, of Honolulu, one of the
group. Like other survivors, Wilder
said he and his wife heard no alarm
but realized there was a fire when
smoke began filling their room on
the eighth floor.

Farmers
Bank
The Community Owned Bank

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.- The Columbia may reach the launch
pad two days earlier than expected, as preparations for the space
shuttle's third mission continue faster than expected, NASA says.
"In fact, we will soon be almost four days ahead of schedule and a
possible rollout to the pad is under consideration for Feb. l7," Rocky
Raab, a spokesman at Kennedy Space Center, said Monday.
Because of the speed of the preparations, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration announCEd It would allow more Sundays off for technicians and engineers.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVElAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 137.
The lottery reported earnings of $285,tll5 from the wagering on Its
daUy game. The earnings came on sales of $1',165,522, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to share $!Bl,437, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast
Rain chaglng to flurries by Tuesday evening. Highs In the mid-40s,

bu\ temperatures falling to near 30 by evening. snow flurries likely
Tuesday night. Low 15 to 20. Pai-Uy cloudy Wednesday. High around

20. The chance of precipitation is near 100 percent Tuesday and 60
percent Tuesday night.
Eldended Ohio Forecaot
·•
Fltday tllroulb SMunlay:
Chance of rain or about Friday. Fair Tllunday and Saturday. lfllhlln the Iipper :11111 to upper 3111 'l'llill'llday, Ill the mld-3011 to
mld-401 Fltday 8Dd !Wurdaf. LowiiiiOIIIIy 5-15 early 'lbunday and
In the mld-1111 to rnlci-30B Fltday and !lalurday.

. see ' approach
Council takes 'waz.t,
•
•
•
concerntng uniform rate nel{o tz.atz.ons
By BOB HOEFLICH
Middleport Council Monday
night took a " wall and see approach" to the joint community ef·
fort underway to negotiate with
Co!--mbla Gas of Ohio on a uniform
gas rate.
The action came aft&lt;;r Mayor
Fred Hoffman read a lelter from
Rep. Ron .James urging Middleport
to join with other communities over
a five county area In banding together to negotiate with Columbia
Gas of Ohio. The letter stated that
small commuQitles who negotiate
on their own sometimes because of
their size and lack of funds to hli-e a
professional negotiator, pay a
higher raw than other towns and
clUes. The letter recommended
joining the combined effort which Is
being recommended by the Ohio
Consumner Council.
However, a discussion brought

omental Protection Agency. The
out lhat while Middleport does not
several steps that are taken before
vllage had a grant of $144,900 to
have a lowest rate, It also does not · a lurn oft of service actually takes
carry out Its facilities planning proplace at the home of a customer.
have the highest. Thus, It was degram through the EPA. However,
Questioned on the $4.65mlnlmum
cided to take a " walt and see" apcharge, Koebel stated that custoIt was determined by EPA that all
proach to the union of communities
mers pay that amount and then nat- of the recommended actions would
In the five county area.
ural gas Is charged for the amount
not he required and the amount to
John Koebel of Columbia Gas
be returned II is that which Is not
of gas used on top of the $4 .65
said his company had used home
charge. That charge Is levied
needed since some of the projects
rule for many years and had found
were ~ancelled by the EPA.
whether any gas Is used or not. Cus·
It a most equlltable way of handling
. The vUlage voted to enwr Into a
tomers who voluntarily have their
His
contrads for natural gas.
supplemental contract wUh Floyd
gas service discontinued due to not
company, however, ·has no objecG. Browne and Associates lor addi~on to a uniform rate, but he
, being at home or some other reason
are
charged
the
figure
when
the
gas
tional engineering services, actupointed out that some communities
turned
off
and
again
when
It
Is
ally
a continuation of the contract
Is
with lower rates, as a result, will
with
the firm which ha s been In efturned
on.
However,
he
said,
there
have to pay a higher rate.
fect
stnce
l!rnl.
Is
no
cbarge
tor
turn
o!fs
and
turn
He explained that hls rompany
Council
gave
a first reading to an
Instances
such
as
rental
propons.ln
cooperates rompletely with custoerty
or
In
cases
where
a
property
Is
ordinance
recommended
by the
mers In trytng to keep service going
sold
and
$()me
time
wlll
Ia
pse
beVIllage
Board
of
Public
Affairs.
when he was questioned about tum
fore It Is aga:tn occupied.
The ordinance requires that resioff policies of the company. He said
dents
In new or renewal water lines
Allen
Lee
King
and
Wllllam
WalU a customer Is making an honest
use
three
quarte r Inch copper or
ters, councilmen, objected to that
effort to pay his gas buts, \he complastic
pipe
of a designated qua lity
charge feeling that some gas usage
pany works oul a plan. He outlined
and that they Install turnoff valves
should be Included In the minimum.
on lines running from the meter to
Koebel said the next contract rould
the home.
be done so that gas Is Included In the
APPROVE APPOINTMENTS
minimum charge but added thai
Council approved the appointthe bills of customers would still be
ments of Willis Anthony to serve on
the sa me because the rate for gas
the board of public affairs. There
used would have to be higher.
was a vacancy created on the board
OPI10N TAKEN
when no candidates flied for elecIn other major business, council
Stacy refused to waive his extradl·
tion last fall. Anthony has been
look an option on 12 acres of la nd
lion rights, said Stuart Schiffman,
serving on the board for several yejust o!f Grant Street owned by Anna
an assistant Sangamon County
ars and was des ignated to continue
and Lloyd Blackwood, after Mayor
state's attorney.
l or ano th er l e rm by the
Hoffman explained that the village
Schiffman said the case was conappointment.
has a $125;!XXl HUD grant for proptinued until March 8 so that a warerty acquisition.
rani !rom West VIrginia authorities
Council discussed looking Into Its
Kim Shields, Marietta . advisor
can be produCEd In court.
efforts to secure the abandoned delor the village, will have the la nd
Stacy Is being held at the Sanpot on Front Street. It was pointed
surveyed and have other studies
gamon County jail.
done which might be Informative to'· out that the village has applied for a
Wilbert Bethel Mayle Jr., 31, also
gran I with which to secure the propthe village In acquiring the land.
of Columbus, was charged with
Price of the land has been set !or erty II It becomes available.
murder In the Hannon case Thurs·
Clerk Jon Buck read a communi$2,!XXl an acre, but It would have to
day after being returned to West
be appraised before It could be pur- cation from Columbia Gas IndicatVtrglnla from Ohio under tight
Ing that the cost recovery tee tor
chased . The option Is for 60 days
security.
gas on the March 12 blll will be
with the cost being just $1 . There Is
Harmon, 26, was killed while ln$36.64 cents per 1,000 c ubic feet.
a 25 foot right of way from the land
vestlga ling a report that two men
Atten(llng the meeting were
to Grant St.
were behaving suspiciously near a
Mayor Hollman , Cle rk Buck, and
Following an explanation by
service station. Harmon apparCouncilmen Walters, King, Bob GilMayor Hollman, council also 'auth·
ently was struck on the head and
more, Carl Horky , Dewey Horton,
orized him to make an application
then shot with his own p(stol five
for the return of $31,300 to the En vir- and Jack Satterfield .
times In the head, neck and
shoulder, authorities said.

Shooting suspect's
bond at $1 million
SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) Bond was set at $1 million Monday
for an Ohio man wanted In connection with the shooting death of a
Huntington, W.Va ., pollee officer.
The suspect, Bobby Dean Stacy,
JO, of Columbus, Ohio, was ordered
held In lieu of the bond until a
March 8 hearing. He has been
charged by West VIrginia a uthorities with the Dec. 14 shooting death
of Huntington pollee officer Pa uJ
,Jeffrey Harmon :
Stacy was
In a Springfield
hOtel late Sunday a nd charged by
federal authorities with fleeing to
avoid prosecution.
But thOse c harges were dis-.
missed Monday during a heartng
before U.S. Magistrate Charles H.
Evans, and Stacy was turned over
to state authorities.
·
During a hearing before Circuit
Court Judge Eugene 0 . Duban,

seized

Pa_~r . receive

prison tertns

Two men were given prison sentences on breaking and • entering
charges when they appeared before Judge John C. Baron In the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Monday .
Both men entered voluntary
pleas of guilty to the charges.
Jerry Ray Moore, 18, Middleport
was charged as a result of a breakIn which took place on Feb. 4 at the
BUI Grueser residence. He had appeared before Judge Bacon last
Frtday on another breaking and entering charge.
,
Lance Tyrone Herman, 18, Mld·
dleport, was charged as the result
or a break·ln on Jan. 3I,1981, at the
Firestone Store In Middleport.
Both men were charged In bills of
Information prepared' by the office
of Prosecullng Attorney Fred W.

crowm.

·

Judge Bacon sentenced Moore to
a term of not less than one nor more
than five years In a state prison, to
. be served concurrently with .the
sentence Imposed In Friday's case,
and sentenCEd Herman to a term of
not less than six months nOr more

'\

than five years In a state prison.
In othe~ court business, Judge
Bacon denied a petition for a writ of ,
habeas corpus filed ~n behaU of
Larry Mitchell. Mitchell is being
held In the Meigs County jail awaitIng extradition to Illinois where he
is wanted-for burlary.
In Judge Patrick O'Brien's
Meigs County Court, Rex Butcher
ot Pomeroy and Doug Reeves, Reynoldsburg, appeared on charges of
trafficking In marijuana, a second
degree felony, and posted bonds of
$25,000. A preliminary hearing for
them was set for 1 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 10.
In another case, Michael A. Wilson, 28, Reynoldsburg, was taken to
the Ohio States Refonnatory at
Mansfield Monday by the Meigs
County sheriff's department to
begin a 14 to 50 year sentence.
oThe sentence was handed d&lt;wn
last week In the Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court when Wilson
faCEd six charges related to robberIes of four local drug stores late last
year.

P9meroy's ORES
closes March 31
The Pomeroy Job Service Office of the Ohio -Burea u of Employment Services will close March 31.
That's accordinl: loan official communication o·cccived by Edith
Adkins who has charge of the P0111frOy oflicc lrnm Ge or~e Curnutte ;
chief or the Land and ~uildings Dephrtment.
Mrs. Adkins said the Bureau is continuing with the origi nal plan to
close 37 olfices across the state unlit , or if, there is sullicie nl Iund in~
for their operation .
She said 906 claions wer. received at the Union Ave. oflkc concerning benefits last week. That included ii4 new cla ims , 12 new extended claims, and 7.24L-ontinued claims.
As for the recipient of benefit.,, Mrs. Adkins said their claims will
be processed through the Gallipolis office after the loca l office closes
with claimants having the option of rcoqucstlng a t1·a nsfcr to anothel' olfice, such as Athens or Marietta .
She said registering for unemployment can also be done on a once
a month basis.
The move to close the 37 job service offices in Ohi o is being made
despite instructions earlier this month to the contrary !rom the U.S.
Labor Department.
However, Gary Stein, deputy administrator for the OBES, ordered
his staff to go ahead with the closing and layoffs pending the receipt of
supplemental funds which he Indicated would prob•bly not be sufficient to restore all37 of the offices being shut down .

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