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                  <text>Ohio school districts feel cut effects
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP} heeded .
School district!; Tuesday began
Herbert D. Brum, director of the
feeling the effects of a 3 percent education department's school fl.
spending cut Imposed to help offset
nance division, said eight districts
a projected $1 bllllon deficit In
are expected to seek emergency
Ohio's recession-drained budget.
loans from the state before Aprtl1
The State Controlling Board reto avoid early closing of
leased $155.7 million In state sub- classrooms.
sidy payments for February, the
" That was befCire the 3 percent
first month to reflect the reduction
cut was finalized," Brum said.
ordered by Gov. James A. Rhodes.
He said an undetermined
School districts, which normally
number of aqdltlonal districts may
would have received about $166 mil-- have to seek the emergency aid to
llqn, have been warned that more ·keep their bu!lgets In the black.
severe cuts could be In store If
The state's 615local districts face
Rhodes' call for enactment of a
an Aprtl 1 deadline for certifying
temporary tax Increase Is not · they have enough money to con-

tinue opera ling through Dec. 31,
1982. Brum said questions abOut
possible future cuts In state aid
have put a cloud over that process.
"Schools are' facing a problem of
being able to sign their appropriation resolutions since It Is unknown
If this will be the final amount of the
cuts," he said. "They're facing
quite a·blt of uncertainty to finalize
that. "
I
The Impact of the 3 percent cut
will be spread over the rest of the
fiscal year which ends June 30. February's payments represented
about one-fifth of the total
reduction.

Brum said· the dollar loss varies
from one district' to another.
In other action, controllers a~
proved an Ohio Consumers' Counsel request to hire a consultant for
help In dealing with a $221 mllllon
rate Increase proposed by the
Cleveland Electric Illuminating
Co. The board OK'd a $29,960 contract with MHB technical Associates of San Jose, Calif.
"The $221 million request ... Is the
largest application for (a) rate Increase ever !Ued at the PUCO by
any utility and will affect over
640,&lt;XXJ residential customers," the

•

Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, R-Deflance,
said the wall, built by the state In
1925, has deteriorated drastically.
He said the threat of high water has
residents worried about whether
the wall will hold.

ertttne
l Sections, ll Pages
15 Cenh
A Multimedia Inc. Ne:rp:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 17, 1912

Copyrighted 1982

various northern counties during
heavy snowfalls from Jan. 10 to
Feb. 6.
It also OK'd $150,ml In Department of Natural Resources construction funds to rebuild a
retaining wa)lln Defiance that protects a library and other property
from the Auglalze and Maumee
Rivers.

•

at

e

consumers' counsel said In a written request for release of the
money.
About $130 million Is expected to
be associated with the construction
work In progress for the Perry Nuclear Unit 1. MHB Technical Associates will be responsible for
conducting an on-site Inspection of
the unit.
'
CEI announced lis Intention to
seek the rate Increase Nov. 13.
Bad weather figured In two other
requests approved by the board.
The panel released $17,800 In
emergency funds to pay Ohio National Guardsmen for active duty In

Legislative panel asks Columbia Gas
to impose uniform statewide gas rate
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-A
legislative panel today requested
Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc. to impose
a unifonn base rate statewide
natural ~as service.
The House Public UWitles Committee, chaired by _Rep. Ronald H.
James, r&gt;-Proctorvllle,lssued 14 recommehdations In a study of the
gas purchasing and pricing policies
of Columbia Gas and Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp. ·
"I consider these recommendations to be realistic," James said of

the 35-page report that has not yet
been officially adopted by the
committee.
James asked committee
members to study the report, consider possible amendments and
meet next .;·eek.
"I would like to see this adopted
by the committee as soon as

possible- next week If we can,". he
said.
Nine recommendations dealt
speclflclally with the Issue of unl-

form base rates. The base rate, separately determined for several
different areas around the state,
covers all costs of providing gas
service except the actual purchase
of natural ps supplies.

slon of severance taxes paid to
other states from the gas cost recovery rate and the base rate.
James stressed the report by the
committee merely requests a uniform base rate.

The committee also recommended that legislation be enacted
to require the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to conduct a management audit of Columbia Gas.
It also su~sted that legislation
be adopted to eliminate the lnclu-

"Columbia has resisted that In
the past Under the home rule provision of the Ohio Constitution~ " he
conceded. The home rule provision·
allows munlclpallt.les to set their
own gas rates by negotiating directly with Columbia Gas.

•

FERC statements ·offer little assistance
MEIGS COUNTIAN HONORED- Middleport oatlve Geo. James V.
Hartinger, left, was honored Friday evening by Vice President George
Bush at ceremonies io Columbus observing the 33rd anoual Goveroy's
Awards. VIce President Bush, as guest of booor, cmiferred the awards for
Gov. James A. Rhodes. Gen. Hartinger Is the HOD of Mrs. Violet Hartinger, Beech St., Middleport, and wiD be honored by his home community of Middleport this summer.

-

........ -

....

EW

Reagan scolds Nicaragua's polic,ies
WASHINGTON -Casting aside the usual niceties, President-Reagan welcomed Nicaragua's new ambassador to the United States by
scolding his government for "Inviting allen Influences and phUosophleS Into the hemisphere."
Franclco Flallos Navarro responded to Reagan's blunt note with
--one of his own. Although It was ct&gt;uched In diplomatic language, his
message was equally cleat: Nicaragua, the ambassador said, will
go lis own way and take help from friends wh~re It finds the!)l:
The exchange Tuesday was a marked departure by both sides
from the diplomatic curtsy that typically takes place when a new
ambassador presents his credentials to the president.

Two women, charged earlier
with welfare fraud, were placed on
probation Tuesday Tuesday by
JUdge John C. Bacon · In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
The two appeared for final sentencing upon their prior pleas of
guilty.
Carol Y. Baker, 37, Middleport,
had appeared before Judge Bacon
on Dec. 28 to enter a voluntary plea
of guilty that she had fraudulently

GUATEMALA CITY - Men In olive-green military garb Invaded
the northwestern Guatemalan village of Calante and massacred 43
people, Including six children, authorities said Tuesday.
Guatemalan television reported the victims' throats bad been cut,
either with machetes or bayonets, In the attack Monday night. Although the killers had guns, none of the victims appeared to have
been shot, the·report said.
Pollee and military spokesmen said the massacre occurred In the
province of El Quiche, about 160 miles northwest of here.
All the victims appeared to be peasants, residents of Calante or
other nearby villages, Guatemalan authorities said.

PARIS - Nineteen bombs exploded In Paris and VersaUies durIng the night, causing minor damage but no Injuries, officials said
today. A small group ot Corsican nationalists claimed responsibility.
No other detalls were Immediately available.'
The Agence France-Presse news agency reported that the Corsican National Liberation Front said It planted the bombs.
The tiny clandestine organization demands France end "colonization" on the French Island of Corsica.

Occasional rain or drizzle through Thursday. Lows tonight In the
low 40s. Highs Thursday 45-50. Chance of rain 60 percent tonight and
IKl percent Thursday. Winds southeasterly around 10 mph tonight.
Eldellded 01*1 FOI'eC&amp;IIt
'
Friday throuP Sunday:
Chalice of I!Mwen or 8110W llurrlell ..U. and I!Mwen poallble
IIOUth each day. HIPs IIICII&amp;Iy ID the 4811. ' - ID lbe .Did-IDs to lbe
mJcl.3lla.
.

,

•

missioner J. David Hught&gt;~. who
suggested "abuse may take a fonn
other than mlsrepreS!!ntatl'Jn or
concealment."
Edward Canter of the FERC trial
slaft followed the line of the policy
statement In his opening remarks
Tuesday. He said that In the staff's
opiJllop, alleg11tions that Columbia
acted lmprudentiy would not be sufficient to support deitlal of the passthrough costs.
An opposition lawyer, Stanley W.
Balls, Immediately challenged the
statement, accusing the FERC
slaft of abandoning lis position of
protecting the public Interest. Ba.Us, representing the cities of Charlottesville and Richmond, Va., said
'the FERC staff should be considered during the hearings as an
ally of Columbia.
David M. Neubauer, an assistant
Ohio attorney general representing

the PUCO, told a reporter the commission's policy statement was an
Indication of how the FERC Is
leaning.
Neubauer said his chief witness
will be John Borrows, head of the
PUCO technical staff, who did a
study on Columbia's purchasing
practice$.
Levant denied a Columbia Transmlss_lon motion for dismissal of the
case on grounds of lack of evidence.
The judge also denied a Columbia
motion seeking to limit evidence
and the scope of the hearing.
In addition to the Washington
hearing, Levant plans a field hear- .
lng In Columbus March 18 to take
testimony from private citizens.
Neubauer said anyone wishing to
comment then should send their
written testimony to the PUCO or
the Ohio Consumers' Counsel by
Feb. 25.

'obtained $1600 In Aid to Dependent
Children monies from the Meigs
County Welfare Dept.
Kareen Fahner, Cheshire, entered a plea of guilty on Jan. 5 that
she had fraudulently received AOC
monies In the amount of $1250.
Theft of welfare funds, as cparged,
Is a felony of the fourth degree.
The charges were contained In
bills of.Information prepared by the

office of Prosecutor Fred W. Crow,
m. following joint Investigations by
the welfare department lnvestlga·
tor, David Jenkins, and Paul Gerard, Investigator for the
prosecutor's office.
Assistant Prosecutor I. Canon
Crow representing theStateofOhlo
recommended that BAker and
Fahner each be Imprisoned for a
term of oot lt'!Ss than six months nor

more than five years In a state Institution, and that restitution be made
In full to the welfare department.
Judge Bacon placed both ·Baker
and Fahner on probation for a period of two years and ordered restitution be made as a special
condition of that proba lion.
Baker was allowed 240 days In
repay the money and Fahner was
allowed 400 days.

Accident
causes
outage

19 bombs cause minor damage

Weather forecast

eral Energy Regulatory Commission offer 'llo comfort to Interests
fighting Increased costs of natural
gas coming through Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp. plllflines.
The FERC trial staff opened a
hearing on the case Tuesday with a
statement recommending that MIchel Levant, the administrative
law judge hearing the case, reject
allegations that Columbia paid excessive prices or acted Imprudently In contracting for the
high-priced gas.

was available at lower, controlled
prices.
They estimated the excessive
charges could amount to as much
as $100 million.
The protest Is based on a law that
says pass-through of higher natural
gas costs resulting from "fraud,
abuse or ~lmllar gJ'O!Ulda;:' should
be denied.
.
Earlier this month, the commission Issued a . policy statement Intended to provide guidelines for
judges In the Columbia case and
four other cases before the
commission.
That statement, which one commissioner termed an overly restrictive Interpretation of the law, said
"abuse" would mean mlsTeP,resentatlon or concealment.
Some of the opposing lawyers
argued that the policy statement
did 'not have the force of law and
cited the differing opinion of Com-

Judge Bacon places pair on probation

Invaders massacre 43. villagers

CLEVE~ - The winning num6er drawn Tuesday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" was 255.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 19'70.
The tottery reported earnings of $678,115.50 on Its dally game. The
earnings came on sales of $1,004,000, while holders of winning.tickets
are entitled to share $325,934, lottery officials said.

Policy

Protesters, Including the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio and
the Ohio Consumers' Counsel, Intervened In the case with allegations that Columbia erred In Its
projections of customer needs and
contracted for too muciJ natural
gas at uncontrolled prices when gas

•

Winning Ohio lottery number

WASufNGTI&gt;N (AP) -

statements coming out of tl}e Fed-

·

· Some 400 customers of Tile Ohio
Power Co. and the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. were
without' se!Yice for some seven
hours as the result of an accident on
Pomeroy's West Main St. , early
Wednesday morning.
Pomeroy Pollee said a westbound truck driven by Kermit Buzzal'd, Syracuse, which out of control
near the Charles Eskew home, ran
off the right of the road, struck and
broke off a utility pole. The pole fell
across the street tearing lines from
the Eskew residence.
Buzzard escaped Injury but his
truck was heavily damaged. He
was cited to court on a reckless o~
eration charge.
As a result of the pole breaking
· ott and going across the road, not
only was tratflc tied up for a
lengthy time but 5ome J,50 customers of Ohio Power were witllout
servlcetromt2:40a.m. !o7:30a.m.
this morning and some 290 customers It the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. went wltliout service trom 12: 40 to 7: 35 a.m.

VOCATIONAL - 84ae 171 tupbouMN ol the
Seadlen lMa1 ud EU&amp;era Local Hlp Sc:booll were
at llle Metp Hlllt Sc:llool or-day wbere tlley were
liYell arlelltaU. - ' - .. the ~u-1 prognliDI

.

,,

al Help, 8tlldetltl tllell vlllted the varl•• vocatl-1'
enter~ wllere

m.tneten •tlloed the progrma of ID-

tlnlctlaa ctvea. b IIIII photo, Dale Harrl1011, elec·
tn.1n IDitncter, nplalaal the workings of a piece of
equlpmeat t o - o1 tile Eavtero sopbomorev.

�•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

17 1982

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy:_Middleport, Ohio

,_

High school
cage results

Wednesday, February 17, 1982

·lnvestigate Vietnam ?a____ _ _ _w_iu_iam_F._B___:uc_k_ley_J_r.

.... .... 8clllel .8oJ't " e ,.,
lly'llle•
d*dl"rww

Gen. Maxwell Taylor, sometime
chainnan of the Joint Chiefs.&amp; Staff,
has upbraided me for suggesting
lhal a congressional investigation
should be undertaken to establish
~m~ ~L--,-·~d·~
~v
what were the causes of our spectacular defeat in Vietnam. To be
ROBERT L. WIN GE'IT
sure, there is the intuitive answer:
l•uhlisher
We were defeated because we
PAT WHITEHEAD
decined
to do what was required in
BOB HOEFLICH
order to win. But why did we
A~~Jfjbtnt Publl!o ht'r/t:untr~tller
decline• To what extent was this the
responsibility of the military• How
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
much
of the misreckoning was a
Nt'Wii F..ditur
1 esult of defective intelligence?
The recent fuss was kicked up by
A MEM HEH ot The Assuc:htkd Pr ~1111, lrtlHml D11ily Pn·s~ A~~c~t• hi1Jon· uat.l the
Amerlun NewlipH~ r Puhl lllht'ni AlUiut'htUun.
Mike Wallace's CBS documentary
which sought to establish, and in my
I.E'ITI::RS Of OPINION arr wrlc~tmt.d. They Hbuuld 1w leHii th•n :100 wurd11 ltlllt All
ldtt.l"ff llrt' 11ubj l!(t lu l'dilillji! .111nd mu11t bt- lllgnr.d with name, ~:nldr t&gt;U 1111d telt'phttnc
opinion was entirely persuasive,
number. No unsigtwd lt'ltrr11 will b:r publlllht'd. Ldll"nshould lw In jlj114Jid w~~. uddr clisin~
that critical intelligence was bottled
J!iJLIOI, IIll i ~rlillllll lltie ll.
up at field level rather than for·
warded to the White House and to
the Joint Chiefs. The principal
target of Mr. Wallace's documentary was Gen. William Westmoreland who, on the Monday after
the documentary was shown, .called
a press conference at which he
heatedly defended himself against
what he called a "preposterous
hoax. ''
·
Now there are, basically, one inIn a series of especially deleterious actions throughout the past year,
terpretive
and two factual questions.
President Reagan has sought to drastica lly restrict the free flow of in- ·
Was there substantial evidence that
formation from the federal government to the nation's citizens.
in the concluding montha of 1967 and
Although the attempts to undermine the concept of open government have
in the first month of 1968 enemy in·
been presented to the public as unrelated ac.tions - often initialed in the
flllration down the Ho Clii Minh
name of protecting "national security''-a disturbing pattern now has
Trail increased substantially - in
emerged.
augury of the Tel Of(ensive• Yes,
. The most recent episode, involving a crackdown on " leaks" of supposedly
there is such evidence. Second
olassified data, was ostensibly touched off by the unauthorized disclosure of
question
: Did our mission in Vietpolitically sensitive information within the Stale and Defense departments.
nam falsely report the battle
Invoking the specter of damaging security breaches, the administraon has
strength of the enemy. arbitrarily
imposed a government-wide gag rule designed to shield its decision-making
relegating a certain category of the
process from public view.
enemy to a subordiruite status•
But last s!)ring - less than three months after Reagan assumed office and
Finally, did it matter? Gener9.1
ion~· before any "leaks" posed real or imagined security problems - the
Taylor
is laking the position that it
Re::ga•• administration iloiliated efforts to frustrate unauthorized
did
not,
that the U. S. military wotlld
disclo.surt"s.
have
proceeded
pretty much as it
Senior military a11d c;viiion ar.;coeJ.: wilhi;, thr Defense Department were
did no matter in which category you
warned t~~ "circl11Tl$pect" iu Jiscu~sin ~;: ,.·!ll • "u~; ide r!!t cmy issues that
listed the activist infrastructure.
"relate to sensitive internal deliberations"-regardless of . whether
· We come now to the big nhws. It
legitimate security considerations were involved.
llt.-9tz.-2J51
DEVOTED TO THE INTERf::.iT OF THE MEIGS.MASO!\ ,\H. f:A

a'h

was the inadvertent - or was it
inadvertent? - remark by General
Westmoreland at his press conference\ He said that he had told
Preside~! Johnson, in March 1967,
that "the war could go on indefinitely" if the United Stales did
not cut off the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Neither Johnson nor Nixon did this
- notwithstanding the implicit
recorrunendation of General Westmoreland and the strong subsequent
recorrunendation by Ambassador
Bunker.
So we have walked from a
situation in which Mike Wallace
charges that many of our reversals
in Vietnam were probably a"
tributable to a conscious underestimation of enemy strength, a
charge denied by General West·
moreland, to one in which General

TwJedaY• a-b

The latest crackdown has extended to the Agriculture Department - hardly a hotbed of national-security concerns- where senior officials have been
told that they must report all instances when they " receive an invitation for
an interview" with the news media to enable departmental leaders to "clear
·
it with the White House."
· Throughout much of the past year, briefings for the news media at vir. tually all federal agencies and departments have become increasingly infrequent and uninfonnative, with officials routinely responding to legitimate
inquiries by claiming they "don't know," "can't say" or have "no comment. ''
. Reagan himself held only seven press conferences during his first year in
office-far fewer than any other president in modern times.
When Reagan took office, government policies for the release of material
under the Freedom of Information Act called for withholding data "only
when disclosure is demonstrably harmful, even if the documents technically
fall within the exemptions in the act."
Those guidelines were promptly rescinded, and the administration now is
promoting restrictive revisions of the FOIA on the specious grounds that the
IBw is "a highly overrated instrument" for allowing public access to federal
records.
: The administration proposals would limit the authority of the federal courts to determine whether national-security classifications were properly invoked, add several new exemptions to the law, impose higher search fees on
those seeking infonnation and relax deadlines for responding to requests.
. In a parallel initiative, the White House is drafting a new ex.eculive order
that would reverse a 25-yearo{&gt;ld trend of discouraging federal officials from
lilVoking security classirications to cover up their mistakes or protect
politically embarrassing information.
· The administration also has endorsed pending legislation that would, for
the first lime in the nation's history, make publication of informa tion from
public records a criminal offense.
Finally, the White HollSe has expanded the government's authority to
penalize present and fonner federal employees who publish government in·
fonnation without the explicit permission of the agency or department af(ected.
Sleven R. Dornfield, representing Sigma Della Chi , the 28,IJOO.member
Society of Professional Journalists, suggests that the panoply of repressive
.Initiatives is the work of administration officials who are inherently un·comfortable with the concept of an open and accountable government:
"They lind the Freedom of Information Act annoying. They find jour·
nalislo annoying , They find public scrutiny annoying. They would prefer to
operate under a blanket of secrecy."

:Berry's World

"Tell me, Frankl How are you weathering the
recession? ''

Westmorellind charges that the war hoping that in fact General Taylor
cOUld not have been won, as of Mar- could imagine a greater disaster
ch 1967, without cutting off the trail happening to America than a
This conclusion he passed Oll..IO the congressional investigation of the
commander in chief but withheld callSes of the loss of the Vietnam
from the A,merican public.
War. And then of course any inWe come now to the surprising vestigation brings division.
statement by General Taylor on the
The scholarly and journalistic
matter of a congressional conununity will make headway in
examination of all these vexed instructing us on what went wrong in
questions. "I can hardly imagine," Vietnam, but as Woodrow Wilson
he said, "a greater distance for the said of congressional government,
Republic than nationwide battle of Congress' informing function is as
hard words now over who ws respon- important as its legislative function.
sible for all that 'appalled' in this un· I lim myself prepared if necessary to
popular war ... At best it would likely be offended, surprised, outraged and
result in little more than an' outburst to the extent possible (it isn 'I easy to
of divisive vindictiveness and hard swear n~ver again to vote for Lynfeeling which I hoped we had lear- don Johnson) vindicti ve, in order to
ned to suppress." That is a use the subpoena power of governremarkable statement.
ment to put these people on the wit·
Let's begin our analysis of it by ness stand and attempt to find out

thing else .

The match would seem to be a
natural, since pension funds are
buill up by otdlnary working Amer·
leans, the kind of people who ha·
ven'l been able to afford a new
hoiJle during the past three years or
so.
II such funds could be Invested to
provide funding for mortgages
now, as well as retirement later, II
would seem to be one of those rare
Instances when the ordinary citizen
gels double value for his dollar.
· It may not be that easy though.
The National Association of Home
Builders feels that new laws are
needed before the lunds can be used
to any great extent In housing.
ERISA, tt says, appears to be In the
way.

' .Thereare317days left
Today Is Wednesday, Feb. 17, the48thdayof1982

:

,In the year.

· Today's highlight In history:
· • On Feb. 17, 1964, the Supreme Court ruled that congressional dtstiicts In
each state must be relatively equal in population.
,! On this daie:
• In lS13, .Prussia's Wllllam ill declared war against France.
' In 1852, repressive measures were adopted In France, lncludlllg press

~

Fill.ls 54, Cuylltqa HIJ . 49:
~. Delaware 44

ChWICothe

an. Hua:bel 75. an. Withrow m

THROUGil FEB•.,20~ 1982

Col- Haml.llal Twp. 12, Tcay&amp; Val. • 7

Otvt. East 00, Cleve. E. Tech 63
Ck&gt;Ye. Hertta,e. !H., Wlkf fUdge t9
Columbiana CrnMew 52, Beaver Local

"

Conottorl Val. &amp;:l, Newcomerstown 43
ConlJnelltal 87, Pandora..CtiOOa 75

Convert CresMew n. UnroLnvk'w
CosOOctoo 67, Claymont $

oo

CrooksvtiJe 77, New Le:&lt;!ng\(Wl 49

Day. Belmo"t 58, Beaver Creek 55
Drily. Carroll 62, Miamisburg 60
Day. K.ber 67, Trotwood Madison 60

Day. Oakwood 68. SprlngOOro ~
Dlxle 91, NariCWial Tra1J 73
Doyqtown Ill, Canal Fulton NW 67
[)Jblln &amp;1, Fairbank$ !19
Eastlake N. 59,

$ 19
SCILJ~e~~e ................

Geneva~

Eaton 82, New Mia mi 12
Elmwood lif. F'oetoria ru
ElyMa Chr.

n. Clew. Wes!Slde

BALLARD'S

Bapt. 4l

Elyria W. 57, Mldvtew 51
Erie tPa .J

P~p

61 , Young. Rayen !W.

Fairborn Park HUJs 54. Fairmont W. ~

lOTI

Folrless ~. Strasburg 61
Farmington 70, Cardinal 68
Flrelallds 81, Wc:Ulngton G6
Flaget 7l. Adena r6.'i
Fort Recovery til, Minster f.4
F'rederklctown 59, CresW11e 38
Frontier n . St Mary.!l, w. va. ~
Gahanna Ill, Upper Artlngton 60
Garaway 63, Waynedale 44

RoLJnd

Bologna ............ ~

•s .

•1

Lima Shawnet&gt; M. Ltma t8. err

'

Lora in

~.

Lora!JI Southview !'&gt;4

LonWa Brookside

Stuart Lewis, NAHB counsel, has
testified before Congress that
ERISA, or Employee Retirement
Income Security Actof1974, prohil&gt;
Its financial transactions between
"related parties."
The restriction was wrttten Into
law to prevent the abuse of pension
funds, he told Congress. But, he
argues, the effect Is to deny the
funds, which he estlmtes at about
$700 bllllon, from Investing In a
market where favorable commercial standards and interest rates
exist.
Recent effortS to allow pension
funds to Invest In mortgages, Lewis
says, have proved "unworkable,"
whl~h Is one reason why the NAHB
endorses a bill flied by Sen. OtTen
Hatch, R·Utah, to clear the way .
That blll, he said, "recognizes
that mortgage Investment Is a stable, high yeUdlng,long term lnvesiment which has conslstencly
produced better earnings than comparable fixed-rate securities... "

Btl! not everyone agrees wth Lewis . Stim Ross , a partner of Kennetm.Leventhal &amp; Co., a certified
public accounting firm, told
builders at the .January annual
meeting of the NAHB "we don't
need legtslallon."
Builders could raise as much as
$500 million this year by marketing
mortgage-backed secwitles to pension lunds and other Investors, he
said. It could "spark a full-scale
revival ot the housing Industry," he
told tbe builders, 50 percent of
whom the NAHB says are In the
red.
"We already have the necessary

taxing~:._____R_ob_e_rt_~_a_
lte_
r~

challenges generally have been
rebuffed by the courts, the current
effort could - if sustained by the U.
S. Supreme Court, where the case is
now pending - deprive the stales of
$700 million or more in annual
revenues.
AI issue is the "unitary method"
of taxation, an approa.ch that emphasizes the consolidated financial
activity of not only the parent cor·
poration but also all of its various
domestic and foreign subsidiaries
and·affiliales.
·
A fonnula based on three factors
- sales, payroll and properly - Is
utilized to determine what1!(lrtlon of
the corporation's total bllSiness is
conducted in the stale and thus
legitimately subject to taxation.
If stales are deprives of the opportunity to rely upon the unitary
method, corporations can evade
taxation through internal ac·
counting techniques to manipulate
their financial records.
The pending court case involves
the right of Illinois revenue
authorities to liSe the unllary
method in imposing stale taxes on
the caterpillar Tractor Co., based in

Peoria, Ill.
'
Although the lllinois Supreme
Court has upheld that procedure, the
decision is being appealed to the U.
S. Supreme Court by the Chicago
Bridge and Iron Co. Supporting that
legal challenge are Mobil, Gulf and
other mullnational corporations as
well as the federal government.
An unfavorable court decision
could cost California $485 million
yearly in lost revenues. Other
estimated annual state losses include $75 million in New York, $28.5
million in Utah, $25 million in
Illinois, $10 million or more in Kansas, $7.5 million in Montana and $2
inillion or more in New Hampshire.
" The issue vitally impacts stale
reveilues." ' Oregon Gov: Victor
Atihey, a Republican, said in a
recent letter to the president. "The
imposition of such a federal restriction on states' methods of taxation
constitutes a serious encorachrnenl
by the federal government into
prerogatives rightfully belonging to
the stales."
In another strongly worded
protest letter recently sent to the
White House, Utah Gov. Scott

Matheson, a Democrat, warned tlu!t
" the states' effective participation
in this (New Federalism) partnership cannot be maintained if the
administration of our own constitutionally guaranteed fiscal
powers is unilaterally stripped
away."
Rep. Byron Dorgan, 0-N.D., In
another letter to Reagan, llllhi
federal intervention in the lawsuit
"appears contrary to everything the
administration stalids for in·the area
of federalism and states rights."
Added Dorgan: "The Justice
DePI!rtment position would d~prlve
the states of hundreds of millions Of
dollars in revenues which they need
desperately to cope with the massive
federal budget cuts ... It would compel the states to grant an enonnous
new tax break to corporations."
Indeed, the available evidence
suggests that the Reagan administration is considerably more
concerned about slashing corporate
taxes than aiding the states to
assume the new financial responsibilities imposed on them by the
federal government.

Avon 52

Maplewood M!, Cclrtland Lakeview 45
McDooald 57, J ackllon-MlliOn 41!
MeadoWbrook ~. Beallsville 64
MKhanlcsburg 72. Greenview 61
Medina Hlgtlland 16, Rlttman 59
Mlltoo·Unlon Ia Miami E. J9
Minerva M, MartlngtOn 57
""""' !1\ ............... 48
Mlsal.ulnawa VaL 5L F'ranklin Monroe

Instruments and market mecha·
nlsms avaUable to allow the pension trust s to make sound
Investments In residential real estate," said Ross . He suggested that
buDders join to Issue the bonds or
perhaps do so through builder
associations.
With views on the matter apparently contradictory, clartllcation
would seem to be in order. The pension funds would appear to benefit
because of the high returns and sta·
blllty, the builders from getting
new financing. But the biggest return of all might be for homeseekers.

PRISONS - A $599 million pro.
gram for construction and renova·
lion of prisons throughout the state.
Different versions passed by House
and Senate; pending In joint conference committee.

~.

Loratn King 79, i\Jnbent Steele 50

fl

Mortan ~. Phllo 63
Mt. Healthy 89, N. College Hlll.. 74

MI. Vernon n, Col. Franklin JltJ. &amp;2
Nap:~il!on 47, Bryan 4.'1
Newbury 66, Petry 57
Nfowton ~- An::.11 num 59
•
N. BaiU11'101'1!' 00, u.,erty Bentoa TI

Fryer Parts .......~•.

.
W1ene~ ...............

WILSON'S CORN KING
·

'

12 OZ. PKG.

N. Bend Tayklr 71. Cln. Christian U
Qak Gll&gt;n, W. Va. n . Jefferson Union 57

arrutcd Fans 61, Brooklyn

~

J '&amp;qua 61. 31. Marys 62, OT
Pret»e .,shawnee 66, Ansonia !18
Rkhmond Dale SE M. Paint Val. 47
Richmond Hts. 61, Lutheran W. 62

Ripley 52, Macon Eastern 00
Rtver 'l'fi, Skyvue M
fUver VIew 19, Maysville ~
~

St. Wf'ndclln 63. Nf'W Rleg£&gt;1

Salem 71. W. Branch 57
Solon ~. Bedford 76
Southington 8.1. Br1s4ol ~
Sprtng. Nonh 74, Te&lt;'\lrrac-h 11
Spring. Sa.lth 68, Day. PatiP.I'liOn ll.'i
Sti'EEtlboro 46, RaveMa SE -11
Strykf'r 78, Montpelier 75, J(YJ'
Tuscarawu Cath. n. Thtcarawas Val.

Status of Legislation
REDISTRICTING- Draws new
boundary llnes for Ohio's congressional districts, reduced from 23 to
21 thts year due to population shUts.
Passed 'the House; Senate vote
scheduled Tuesday.

MIXED·

U nll' Mlamt 66, Beth!!!-Tate~
Lockland 67, Cln . Wyoming 66
London 81, Madilion P lains 51

Stee~k ......L!.••

.BIG RED CHUNK

Independence 73. GUmour 70
Indian Valley N. 66, Dalton 4li
Jefferson 66, Grand Val. 60 ·
JOOI\!IItown ~. Big Walnut 4J
Kalida 60, Letpsk:
Kirtland T.l. A.shtabuW St. John 68
Ucltlng Hts. 50, Danvtll~ f4

•.

$ 99

.USDA CHOICE

Garfield His. 00, Cleve . South lj8
Girard 4ll. Struthers 61
Grove City 53, Col. Westland 50
Groveport €4, Westervtlle S. JJ
HamUtoo Badin 67. Franltlln 49
Hebrcn Lakewood 68, Granville 60
Hilltop M. Tinora 50
Hubbard n, Allttabula Ec:lgewooll 51

•

1-LB. ROLL or

.12 OZ. LINKS

Evellf"!E!n ~. ~ltisvtlle S4

"

~

United Local 73, Leetrmla 67,

FLAVORITE GRADE A

Turkeys ........"......L!"

err

vennwon 77, Avoo Lake QJ

I

Warr«1 Champion 59. Newton F'!:Lll'i S4
warren Harding 62, Boal'\'lma n 52
Warren Kennedy 76, Campbell-Me-

~""'"
Wal'l'('fl LaBrac Eli,

VIenna Mathtws 6.'1
Warrensv111e 71 , Clew&gt;. Hay 58
Washington C. H. 7U, E . QJ nton 66

Waterloo 82. Rootstown

~

Waynel'lt.Uc 82, S. Chark!ston SE 54

Weirton (W. Va.) MadonM

~

Steuben-

vtllf:o Cath. ~
WeUavllle 61, Buckeye N. 47
W. Jdftor!Orl 54 . Worthington Ou-. 50
W. MUJklngum !141, Tr1· VaUey 51
Westtall 71, Plkelon 42
WhlteluiU Ill. We!!tervllle N. 59
Wllmlrvton 72, Cllnlon-Massle 55
Wlndham 70, Cre!'itwtn.l' ~
Wlntei"'Villt? 69, E . Uverpool 64

Be~ne~nas ~ -.......... ;~· .

Woodmore 55, Otaeao :i3
Wonhlftllon 58, ~ldlbw'IJ 37
Yellow Sprln.gs 83, Day. ChrUtlan 63
Zalll'SVUie 59. Col.. Llnden-Mc KJnley 56

Girls scores

PARKAY

Sc._. Glrti. BMb!tba1
'lht AMocba&amp;ed

-·-

top

0t11o

II)'

!"'"-

Margarine........~·.

ClaM AAA TIMII'ri*IM!IIU

Eastlake- N. 82. PalnelrvtUe RI11C1111dt 'I1
Euclid 47, Cleve. Rl'gtna 2S

a... M

Clr¥~. Or-ange

'l'w.....amen&amp;a

57, Otve. Lwnen Cor·

ddlum 51

O.y. Dunbar~ Day. KUer J13
Day. Jetf('f'M) n 31, Day . FalrW&gt;w 'Z7
FlttJ,ands 51, Clew. Erle\llew J5
Galhell 57. CJn. Taft t2
LoraiD Cath. ~7. Elyr1a Cath. 44

Madeira 5&amp;. ctn. Wyomlna 40
Muon 44, BrookVtlle 39
MN!na Buckeye 32, Be-achwood 71.
a-ATmo•ooeiala
Olnton·Ma.ule 42, New Miami tO
FayenevUif' .S, Batavia :.! •
Minford 46. Hemlock Miller 27

College scores

.....

~·~·w·wScorM

&amp;ltlrnon&gt; 'M, ltotPr1 Mon1J, flO 1•
Olat.of Ccllumbta 74, Mortan St. 56

Faltftekl 78. Utlca 62
La Salle 67, HotJtta 64
Rider ~- OreiCrl !iJ
Rutpn 41, MauachUJetts 40
Seton Hall 61, ~tlcut 59
Temple 76. l...afa)"!tte 66
TO!Nton st. 96, St. Fra.nctl, Pa. 1tl

!101./1'11

. KOKO TIME

19
29
Chocolate
Drink
..
Peps1-Cola &amp;Mt. Dew.•
MR. P. FROZEN
SAN GIORGIO
$
piziCI ............... !~ ~~· .
Spaghetti......~~~.
DIET 9~ REGULARs PACK, 16 oz. aiLS.$

GALLON$

Jackaon St. 96. Grambltna: St. &amp;.l
Moretloutt 92. Lane Colt 8J
Norfolk St . 16, St.Paul't 64

-

N.Carollna St . 'r.l, Duke 56
Southm!

~h

110, Ga.!b.ilhwf!'s1em !'il

Vl.J'I1nll st. 83, va.Un!On 75

CLOROX BLEACH

........... ...............
Dll.ytOn It,

E .Kentucky !10

. MliMiW1 100. Iowa St. 71
Moortlead St. •• sw Mtrtaetott 87
Urbina ff7, Mt.Vemon Nazarme fB
Wli.·MUwallltee tlt, Bftott 58

_

llOOnllll8l'
... To..

Houlton 7(, Texu Ctlrtat1u II

Rk.e '10. Solltll!m Methodllt

~

CoD. 19

:censol'llhlp.

: Iii 19M, Belgium's King Albert I was killed while mountain cUmblng.

W.Mantana 73. Rcdy MWIUin M
w.waM~....- n, stmon Fr-Mft .r

'

P.~JC~~ _IN_EFFECT

Ctn. Pum!U 611, Ctn. GrEe nhills Sol

ctn. St. Bernard M. Batavia 6&amp;
Cln. Turp.n 1'2, an. McNicholal 66

Tau Southl!m lOT, Tau

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

E . PalesUne TI, Usbon 66

Feds attack states'
WASHINGTON ( NEA ) - While
President Reagan is publicly
espousing enhanced financial independence for the states, his administration is quietly attempting to
destroy one of the slates' major
sources of revenue.
The Justice Department - acting
on behalf of the Stale, Treasury and
Conunerce departments - has endorsed a legal challenge mounted by
a group of multinational corporations seeking to force abandonment of a method widely used by
the states to compute corporate tax
liability.
Similar civil suits have been
repeatedly filed in recent years in
both state and federal court&gt;; by
major corporations, but the federal
government never before has joined
in the attack on state taxation
systems.
The unprecedented Justice Department action raises doubts a bout the
sincerity of .Reagan's commitment
to the "New Federalism" under
which the states would assume a
substantially expanded role In funding government programs .
,Although previous lega l

Mon.·Sat. 8 •10 pm
Sundly 10.11ft·10 pm

carey 75, McComb fi1
C&amp;rlble 56, npp City 51

--:~,.,_.,_ _ _~w=ha=t~w=ent wrong:

'DOONESBURV

Today in history

Akron St. V-St M 82. MasUJlm M
AMa ~ Parkway 3t
~ n. 'iounc. Uberty 56
Bay 64, Panna Valley FQ~ie tl
BeiJefOn\alne 73, lndlan l...akf M
Bertin Hiland 81, Smlthvtl.le &amp;1
Bl!rlln W, RMeNe 8), Minerai Ridge~
Berne Union ~1. MWerspon 50
Bklom.Carroll U. Orclevllle 47
Brooldlekl 116, YCJUng. Cbal'll!y 56
~villi! 61, Twin Valley N. 47
CarW WinChester 61, Uberty Union 61
Cardinetoo 6t. Marion Cath. 62

Can pension funds help homebuyers??
NEW YORK (AP) - Desperate
for a new source of financing, the
housing Industry Is looking closely
at private pension funds, those
huge and growing bundles of cash
that geneally go to finance every

$lORE HOURS:

"""'"

a

'

·.Jn the name of
national security

•

AJaon Cowntry 71, Woodridgl' 59
Akron Hoban 73, WIX!IIter 50
Akron Manchestt'l' 7t, GT'H!Ubura:

IIICoortSirwl
Pum~ruy. OhllJ

p

r .. war

GALLON

69¢

GOLD MEDAL

FLOUR

89¢

FLAVORITE

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SUGAR

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Limit One Per Custome,
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Offer S"xpires Feb.
1982 :

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Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Feb. 20. 1982

••••

=~==

5-LB.

BAG

$139

Limit One Per Customer
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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, February 17, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, o:,io

'

Eastern pulls closer to second "place
with 65-49 victory over North Gallia
moments, however, Eastern again
"caught fire" and, tiy the midway
point, had built up an 11 point lead of
24-13. Dill and Cole carried the hot
hand in the second cantq as they
paced the fighting "Green and
White" in the 311-16 surge .
Eastern, despite a continued effort
by the Pirate crew, glided through
the third period and held a 5().35 edge
at the buzzer. Bissell had eight points in the stretch, while P . G. Riffe
came through with four.

By SCOTT WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagles, behind a three-men double
figure effort led by Mike Bissell's 24
points, rolled over the North Gallia
Pirates 65-49 here Tuesday evening
in an SV AC make-up game.
Following Bissell's game-high 24
markers, was Tim Dill with 14, and
senior guard Greg Cole with 10.
The Eagles, pulling closer to a
second place finish in the SV AC, are
12-' overall anct 6-3 within the
leagu~ .

• PROVIDF.'l SCREEN- With P. J. Riffe 130~ providing a screen,
Eastern's Bryce Buckley (22~ gets ready to fire a lwo hand set shot In
Tuesday's SV AC make-up game at Eastern. The Eagles won the I~ sixth
straight contest, 65-49. The victory puts Eastern In a second place lie with
Kyger Creek. Both have 6-31eague marks.

Differences grow
after first session
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (API - Ed group, which attended Tuesday's
Garvey, executive director of the session, also was "Insulted" that
National Football League Players
Donlan had arrived with only tour
Association, says he believes the
other negotiators - none of them
gap between players and owners
owners or a representative of NFL
probabl~ widened durtng the first
Commissioner Pete Rozelle.
day of talks on a new collective bar"We brought In 10 active players
gaining agreement.
a nd a bargaining team with full au"II anything, we're further apart
thority to negotiate lor all the playthan we were before we began," , e rs. What they brought was
Garvey said Tuesday alter the
virtually a subCommittee," said
ta lks, aimed a t producing a conUpshaw.
tract to replace the one that expires
Donlan said the management
July 15, were recessed until
proposal sought to make "correcThursday.
tions and adjustments" to the curRepresentatives for both sides
rent player contract, which expires
m_e t about two hours Tuesday
July 15.
morning to discuss procedural rna t·
But Garvey said some of the
ters and alter a lunch break rechanges sought to take away adturned for the start of actual
vances the unlon had m ade In the
negotiations.
past 14 years .
But almost. as soon as the negoThe union proposal reiterated the
tiating teams sat down to exchange
players' demand for a P.,rcentage
opening proposals, the first bar:
of gross revenues, but didn't set a
gaining session was over.
specific percentage. Instead, It
Jack Donlan, executive director
asks that management provide the
of the NFL Management Council,
union with more Information and
e merged from the bargalnlng room
statistics.
at the Diplomat Hotel less than an
The NFLPA earlier said It would
llour after the afternoon session beseek 55 percent of owners' gross regan and expressed disappointment
venues. Owners have claimed that
with the NFLPA's proposal.
42 percent a lready goes to players'
He described the proposal, which
salaries.
Included a demand for a greater
percentage of the owners' gross revenues, as a "self~seiVing, rambling 11-page statement with very
little specificity .
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP~ - Cen"It was not a traditional labor , ter George Sweigert of Miami Uniproposal where you address cerversity, after scortng 50 points In
tain problems and express detwo college basketball games, has
m~nds." s2id Donl~n.
been named the Mid-American
NFLPA President Gene UpConference Player of the Week.
shaw, meanwhile, criticized the
The &amp;-foot-9 Sweigert, from Fort
owners' opening proposal, saying It
Wayne, Ind ., hit 24 poh\ts In a 69-60
lacked substance a nd calling It ''an
victory over Kent State and folInsult to our members."
lowed with 26 points ln a 76-65defeat
Upshaw said the 20-man NFLPA
by Ball State.

Eagles
breezed
the 65--49
win.better
Eastern
had toone
of its
outings from the floor (hi tting 29 of
66 field goals for 44 percent), but
floundered at the line (seven of 18)
including going one of 11 in the final
stretch. North Ga llia hit 19 of 60 for
32 percent from the field, while zip.
ping 11 of 18 from the liqe.
·
2astern won the battle oj the boar·
ds 34--24 led by muscular Dill and
· high leaping Riffe with eight each . .
Kemper had 10 c'aroms for the
Pirates.
Eastern won the reserve tilt in a

32-30 barnburning victory over the
little Pirates. Rob Maison and Mark
Gaddis each canned nine points for
the winners with good efforts. Eric
Pennick had 14 for Nort)J Gallia.

Riffe

Four players hit double figures as
the Wahama White Falcons rolled to
a 61-57 victory over Southwestern
Tuesday night. The win avenged an
earlier loss on the Highlanders'
planks.
Kendall Weaver and Travis Gray
scored !3 each to pace Coach Lewis
Hall's White Falcons while Shawn
Paugh had 2 and Estil Lavender, II . ·
Getting double figure scoring for
Coach Uoyd Myers' Highlanders
were Randy Layton and Roger Wells
with 14 points each while Paul McNeal and Rob Price had 10 points

apiece.
The victory Improved Wahama 's
record to 7-11 while Southwestern
dropped to:J-.15.
Wahama gained the upper hand by
outscoring the visitors, I~ in the
first period.
Southwestern (57) - Layton 1,.,
Wells 14, McNeal 10, Price 10, Baker
5, Lewis .4 .
.,
Wahama (61) - Weaver 13, Gray
13, Paugh 12, Lavender 11 , Roush S,
Machir 5, Powell2 .

Wahama

5 13 14

2·0·4;

M.

Bissell

POSTMASTER : Send address to Tile Daily
Sentinel, Ill Court. St., Pomeroy, Ohio45769.

11 ·2·24 j

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Score bV quarters:
North Galtia
7 9 19 14---49
Eastern
14 16 20 15-65

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INC.

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COST ClJTTIIR CUT

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2,"$399

POMEROY AND GALLI POLIS STORES

WE IIESUVE THE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIH . NONI SOLD

COST CUTTEit RIAL

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GOOD SUNDAY fEI. lHHRU iATUIDAY ffl . 20. 1"21N

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$119

Cost Cutter,..,,.•• _
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vou are not sat•s

fled K1oge1 tvtll repl.ace yOu t tletn w•th the same brand or a
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Co1t Cutter
Appleaauce ·~::·
COST CUTTE. CUT

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Beef d ......
l)og Foo
&lt;••

75C

s;:d~l~h
Cookies ... P;,.
CUTlll OilY

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29
79

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Cost Cutter
Tomotoes ·~:: ·

25 ·511.
Roll

.00 $HU't5 flU lOLl .
COST CUTTER WHITE

Both

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jj ·lhlll

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Pot Roast. ... :.... lb.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .
BONELESS BEEF

Eckrich

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JUMBO BO.L OGNA • • • • • • • •1.79
Eckrich

Wishbone
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$39 9

Rib Eye Steak .. ........ 111. .
~·6-ll .
Fresh Picnics ......... .. _lb.
3
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Canned Hams ..... c~. ·

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Lb.

OLD FASHIONLOAF • • • • • • •2.09
Homemade

1 lb. Superior

LOOKING FOR TEAMMATE-NorlhGallla's Mike Mays (30)·100ks
for someone to pass off to durtng acllon from Tuesday's Easteru-Norlh
Gallla encounter. Eastern won 65-49 to tie Kyger Creek lor second place
In the league pending Friday's final loop game. Checking Mays are Bryce
Buckley !22) and Greg Cule (12).

Stewart to manage

DOWNING-CHILDS
-INSURANCE
AGENCY

CINCINNATI (AP) -..; Utility
player Jimmy Stewart. who during
his three years with the Cincinnati
Reds played every position except
pitcher, has rejoined I h&lt;• Na tiona!
League baseball club's organization as a minor league manager
and scout.
Stewart, 42, wtll manage the Eugene, Ore., farm team In the Class
A Northwest League, the Reds said

115 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-2342

r~Tuiiesdiiaiy~-~~~--~~.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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Tues.
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They definitely did not want that In
there. ''
Monge negotiated with the Phil·
lies and said they showed a definite
Interest In him . That Interest may
be keener now since Philadelphia 's
ace lefty, Tug McGraw, will be out
until June with arm problems.

going through baseball's tree-agent
draft.
.
"The way negotiations went with
tile Indians, I was looking forward
to starting with a clean slate,"
Monge said. "But when we could
not reach agreement on a no-trade
clause, I sort of got a funny feeling.

..

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

DOCTOR OF OPTOMETRY

'

par pelionnances the last two year;; hastened his Inclusion on the
Indians' trad.lng list.
The :ll-year-o1d Monge was not
surprised by tbe trade but said he
was shocked how quickly It happened. He signed a three-year pact
with the Indians last month alter

'· •

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

15 12 10 24- 61

Examinations by
Appointment, Other
Examination Hours
Available by Request

now. Trades are part of the. game.
I'm very hawy about this. I rate It
right up there with the day I was
named to the All-Star tf18m," he
said .
·
Monge, a member of the 1979
American League All-Star squad,
has not been the same since. Sub-

Newspaper Publishen As!wclalion, N~ttiona l

COST CUTTER

James L Schmoll, O.D.

9to12
and
1 to 5

McBrtde on Tuesday ln a one-torone deal.
"I grew up In tile (Ca!Uornta) Angels organization. I couldn't help
but cry a little when I was traded,"
Monge said Tuesday by telephone
from his Tucson , Ariz., home.
"I'm a little more experienced

CLEVELAND (AP) -The first
time left-handed rell~l pitcher Sid
Mpnge was traded , he sald he
couldn't help but Cl}'- This time, he
didn't shed a tear.
Monge 'was swapped by the
Cleveland Indians to the Philadelphia ?hUiles for outfielder Bake

Advertising Representallve, Branham
' Newspaper Sales, 733 Thild Avenue, New
York, New York 10017. ,

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Member: The Associated Press, Inland Dait
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(49)- Hollingshead

Sprague 1-0-2; Dill 5·4-14; R. Bissell
2-0-•1. Totals 29·7·65.

Sweigert honored

\Yahama defeats Highlanders

Galli~

1-5-7; Blackburn 1-0-2; Kemper 5-1tl ; Dee I 5·P· tO; Mays 3·4-10; Howe 30-6; Neat 1· 1-3. Totals 19·11·49.
Eastern {65)- Ritchie 2-0·4; Cote
5·0· 10; Buckley 1·0·2; Gaddis 0-1-1;

By the time the 5:20 mark rolled
around in the final canto the host
Eagles had built their biggest lead of
58-35 after recording eight straight
points. From this point on, Coach.
Eichinger substituted freely as the

North Gallia had three cagers in
double figures. Big 6-5 Matt Kemper
powered in II points, followed by
Greg Deal and Mike Mays with 10
points each .
Coach Dennis Eichinger's Eagles
pounced on the opening lip and
edged .il' way towards the fwst score
of the game, when Paul Sprague
connected underneath the basket.
After nearly two minutes of missed
goals and forced turnovers Mike
Mays hit a short jumper to knot the
score, 2-2.
Overall, the score was tied on
thrt!e more occasions before
Eastern took the lead for good on a
Mike Bissell scor~Senior Mike Bissell scored 12 points in the brief stint. The senior forward swished several of his patented
jumpers from the corner and
boosted Eastern to a 14-7 advantage
after one quarter of play.
North Gallia scored the first two
goals of the period. In the ensuing

Lefty Monge .not upset with lateSt trade

E8$tern plays at Hannan Trace
Friday, then return:; hnr.oe for un :n.- . - - - - . . . - - - - - - - portant contest with MiUer on SaturThe Oailr Sentinel
day. Monday evening Eastern plays
fUSPSlG-tle )
Soutllern at Meigs in tlle sectional
A Dtvllloa of MultJmedla, Inc.
tournament. Tickets fqr that contest
Published every afternoon. Monday t.hrougtl
are now on sale at both sehools.
Friday , Ill Court Street, by the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company - .Multimedia, Inc.,
North Gallia plays Southwestern
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, M2156. Secorld class
on Friday and again Monday in the
~ge paid .at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Class A Seciional at Meigs.
North

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedn41sday, February 17, 1982

~2·01

�The

Ohio

Sentinel

17 1982

Wednesday, February 17, 1982

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mis$ollri bombs Iowa State

Today's

By AMociated Press
The Missouri Tigers let Iowa
Sta te dictate the tempo, but the Cy- ,
clones jus t couldn't hit the high
notes.
Fourth-ranked MisSOuri shot a
club record 73.8 per cent from the
floor Tuesday night, with Jon Sund·
void contributing 18 points, to defeat Iowa State 100-71.
The Cyclones shot 40 percent as
they set a fast pace that Mlssourt
did not trY to change.
"They ran with us, and It got
down to who could get the ball in the
hole moret Tigers guard Prince
Bridges said. "We just kind of
opened11t up."
The victory assured Missouri of
at least a tie for the Big Eight Con·
terence title with an 11-1 record.
The Tigers a('e 22-1 overall, their
only loss coming to conference foe

Sports World
By WW Grlllllley
AP Correapoadeat

Did hypnosis tum George Foster from an anemic hitter in the minors into a
$10 mUIIon home run slugger?
What Foster has done with the bat since undergoing hypnosis indicates
that It may have, and It could be credited with putting the onetime hardhitting outfielder ol the Cincinnati Reds into position to sign with the New
York Mets lor one of the richest contracts In basebalL
The man responsible for the magical transition was Dr. Robert Bernstein oiindlanapolls, who operated two hypnott.smcllnlcs In the city. When
the Reds discovered Foster was having trouble hitting his hat size, they
sent him down to their Indianapolis farm team for more experience and
development.
The year was 1973. Here is the tale of "Baseball Success Through
Hypnotism: "
Foster, born in Tuscaloosa, Ala ., came up through the minors, had a
brtef stint with San Francisco and came to the Reds In um. A raw,
unfinished rookie, he was shunted to Indianapolis for more experience
after he batted only .200 and hit only two home runs In 1972.
"He came to us In 1973," said Max Schumacher, longtime general
manager of the American Association club. "He got off to a terrible start,
batting .192 and strtklng out every third time at bat.
"He looked okay In workouts but had trouble making contact with the
bat. Vern Rapp (later St. Cardinal manager and presently a Montreal
coach) was our manager. He batted Foster IUth and sixth In the lineup.
"Later, in desperation, he moved Foster to leadoff and told him just to
By Associated Press
'play pepper' with the ball, try to get on the best way he could. No way he
Although the Los Angeles Lakers
looked like a slugger. Personally, we doubted he would ever make it."
and seattle SuperSonics have the
Well Into the season, WOrd came down from theCinclnnatllront officebest records tD the National Basket"The organization, we never use persona l names," Schumacher said ball Association's Western Confer·
that Foster should report to a Dr. Bernstein.
ence, neither has had much success
After a few weeks, It was another Foster who reported to the ballpark. · lately.
He was blasting the ball all over the place. He hit Uke a reincarnation o!
Something had to give when they
Babe Ruth.
played Tuesday nlght, a nd It was
"The turnaround was amazing," Schumacher recalled Tuesday, from
seattle.
his offices In Indianapolis. "Before the end of the year, he had raised his
Although the Sanies outscored
average to .262, hit 15 home runs and ba tted In 60 runs.
the Lakers 19--3 In a four-minute
"The Reds recalled him and he batted .282 with four home runs In the last
span late In the game, It wasn't
couple of weeks of the season. You' know what happened after that. He
nearly enoujlh as Los Angeles took
became one ol the leading sluggers In the National League."
over first pJace In the Pacl11c DivIt was not until four years later, 1977, that Bernstein, who no longer
Ision with a 1~101 victory.
practices In Indianapolis, saw fit to bring the expertment to public notice.
The Lakers, WhO snapped a
Bernstein said he had only one more formal session with Foster after
three-game losing streak, lm·
1973 but the two kept In touc~ with each other for three years.
proved their record to 35-17, and
"Not everyone responds to hypnosis. Foster responds very quickly."
now have a haJ1,game edge (/Ver
Foster continued on the beam. In 1977, he hit 52 home runs, batted .320
the Sonlcs, ' who have lost four
and drove In 149 runs to win the MVP Award in the National League.
straight.
Just keep watching that dangling chain.
"I'm very pleased with our effort
In the second hal1, but there's no
question that physical and mental
fatigue hurt us," said seattle Coach
Lenny Wilkens. " We've done a lot
of traveUng before and after the All·
Star break. The Lakers looked very
good, but they stUI have to come up
to seattle. They were the better
team tonight:"
In other NBA games, Dallas
By George Strode
edged New York 112-110, Detrclt
trimmed Houston 111-109, Phoenix
tripped Chicago 91-86, Denver
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - Joanne Ineman continues to add to her
bombed Kansas City ll9-106, Warecord as the all-time scoring champion for Ohio high school basketball.
shlngt'on
nipped Portland 10097
The 5-toot-6 Olmsted Falls senior hit 171 points In ihree games last week,
and
Atlanta
beat San Diego 102-91.
Including a girls single-game state record o! 74 points against Medina
Kareem
Abdui-Jabbar
Starters
Buckeye.
and
Norm
1\llxon
ted
.. the Lakers
'l'be outburst ran her season's total to860 points ill 20 games, an average
With
26
and
22
patnis,
respectively,
of 43.0 points per start. Her career total of 2,756 points Is more than 100
but Coach Pat Riley was most
ahead of the boys state record scorer. Rex Leach of VIenna posted 2,581
pleased with the play of his bench.
points In 1951·55 for Vienna.
"Jim Brewer came In and did a
After her record one-game production, Jneman came back the next
great job of neutralizing Lonnie
night with 49 points against Bay VIllage Bay and followed with 48 points
Shelton," said Riley of his substl·
Saturday night against Fairview Park Fairview.
tute forward, who had a game-high
Around Ohio: Hecky Thompson, Latham Western's coach for 21 sea·
12 rebounds.. in just 22 minutes of
sons, has his 300th victory. Western's 63-49 decision over Portsmouth Clay
play. "And .13ob McAdoo Is really
gave the pipe-smoking Thompson a 30().158 career record.
coming around lately. The hunger
Racine Southern has won 34 straight games at home. Stewart Federal·
Is back In his heart. By playoff
Hocking snapped a 23-game losing spell In the Trt-County Conference by
time, he'll be a big factor for us.
surprising McArthur Vinton County 71·65.
He's an excellent acquisition for
Mike Smith, a 6-3 junior, broke the Old Washington Buckeye Trail
this team."
single-game record wtth 45 points against Beverly Fort Frye. He had 791n
McAdoo had 15 points In 21 min·
two games during the weekend. Steve Cluxton has Wilmington's singleutes In his 21st game since being
season scortng mark of 455 points, breaking the old standard ol451 John
acquired from New Jersey.
Petty established In 1967-68. Rick Hamilton now has the Macon Eastern
"Our third key reserve, Michael
school mark nf 51 points In one game, getting It against Lynchburg Clay.
Cooper, also played very well,"
Xenia has won Its fi rst Western Ohio League title since 1969 under Phil
added Riley. "When we can bring
Ander59n and Greenfield McClain Its first South-Central Ohio League
In players like Brewer, McAdoo,
crown since 1972. Ironically, Anderson guided the Bucs to their last league
Cooper and Eddie Jordan, It shows
title In any sport with the school's baseball team In 1973, too. Baker and
how strong we are on the bench."
Park HUls are merging again Into one Fairborn school, effective In the
1982-83 school year.
seattle rallied from a 62-48 hal1Ume deficit In the third quarter and
Art Meyers has guided the Peebles boys basketball squad to a 156-39
trailed 84-78 at the end of the period.
record•ln nine years. His Adams County squad Is 19-0 this winter . .James
But the Lakers made their first
Merchant of Oberlin averages 28.7 points per game.
Lima senior Is celebrating Its first victory at Middletown since 1965,
giving the Spartans the outright Greater Miami Conference crown. New
Philadelphia Coach J im Thompson has reached 100 career victories,
thanks to a 72-61 verdict over Wooster.
Charles Wasson of New Miami had 27 points and 14 assists against
Preble Shawnee. Hamilton Badin overturned a 10-polnt third-quarter deficit to beat Hamllton Ross 6.'Hi3, the first time In four seasons.

Nebraska, 67-51, two Saturdays
ago.
The game was the only one Tuesday night lnvolvfug a nationally
ranked team.
Missouri put It away In th.fe"arly
part of the second half. The Tigers
led 50-32 at halftime, then outscored
Iowa State 28--16 to lead 7S-48. Missouri's biggest lead was 32 points,
95-63, wtth 2:12 to play.
Cyclones Coach Johnny Orr saki
his team couldn't match speed with
Missouri.
"We cannot get up and down the
court like they can," Orr said.
"They moved the ball well, and we
couldn't unload against them."
Four other Missouri players
scored In double figures. Ricky
Frazier had 16, Brtdges 15, Michael
Walker 11 and Marvin McCrary 10.
Ron Harris had 14 paints for Iowa

Lakers snap streak
regain first place
nine field-goal a !tempts In the
fourth quarter to take a 102-82 lead
with 5: 42 left.
Then the Sonlcs put on their 19--3
rally and trailed 1!Ji.101 with 1:42
remaining. They didn't score
again, however, and the Lakers
added one free throw by Earvln
"Magic" Johnson and a field goal
by Nixon for their final margin.
seattle's Gus WUUams was the
game's leading scorer with 30
points, 21 In the second hal!, whUe
Shelton and Jack Slkma bad 18
each.
Mavertcks 112, Knlcks 111
Rookie Jay Vincent scored 40
points, but It was a comer
jumper by Wayne COoper with
one second remaining that gave
Dallas Its third straight victory.

An~ther

rookie,
man, had 15
of his Rolando
17 points Blackin the
fourth quarter to help the Maver·
leks beat New York, which got 29
points from Michael Ray
Richardson.
·
The Mavs had a 11().107 lead bot
fore Campy Russell's ttlree-PQint
goal tied the score with 14 seconds
left, setting up Cooper's gamewinner.
Suns 91, Bulls 86
Phoenix snapped a seven-game
losing streak on the road by beating
Chicago, which has lost nine of Its
last 10.
Dennis Johnson ted the Suns with
18 points and Kyle Macy scored 10
of his 16 points In the fourth quarter.
Ricky Sobers paced the Bulls
wtth 18 points.
Nuggets 119, Kings 106
Denver kept Kansas City on the
losing track on tlie road as the
Kings lost their 12th straight away
from home.
Alex English, who has averaged
30 points In five games against the
Kings, scored 24 to pace the

Ohio
Sportlight

14 ofwhen
his
Nuggets.
English
points
In the
secondhad
quarter,

:i:;!~~~~t~~e~~~~t~~

State, now 7-16 and 2·9 In the Big
Eight.
Unranked Teams

Jay Shakir scored 13 points In a
second-half burst that carrted Bay,
lor over Texas, 62·59, as the Bears
won their sixth straight Southwest
Conference game. Shakir flnlshed
with 17 points and Te!T)' Teagle had
16 for Baylor, Hi--8 and 9-5 In the
SWC. Texas, which has lost seven
of nine since forward Mike Wacker
was Injured, fell to Hi· 7 and 6-71n the
conference.
In other SWC games, Rob Willi·
ams scored 24 points to lead Houston over Texas Chrlst~n 74-65, and
Ricky Pierce's 25 polilts triggered
Rice to a 70-48 rout of Southern
Methodist.
In the Atlantic Coast Conference, ·
Thurl Bailey ,hit a career-high 24
points to lead North Carolina State
to a 72·56 victory over DUke. Dan
Callandrillo scored 23 points and
seton Hall snapped an 11-game [OS·
lng streak by beating Connecticut
61-59 In the Big East Conference.
Glenn Rivers a nd Marc Marotta
scored 12 points apiece to help Mar·
queue open an early !~ad and defeat Duquesne 69-55.

f"hone 4118· 4524

PIICES-1
TillY Till
SiTIIIIY
FEI. 21

• Haircuts and Styles
tor Men and Women
eManicures
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18, 1981 the Company hereby
apprises the public of-the state
of electric supply In Its service

·For Pomeroy, Ohio

1

AIR WilD
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BEL TONE Consultant Who Will Be At :
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TRAY

$}29

RYE BREAD • • • • • • • • • • • 16• •oz.•Loaf• ' 79~

Generettng-capaclty ,.......,.

Hours:
Mondiy-Thun., Sat 9-5
ArdiJ 9-8

DYIIAIO

PEAS

FRESH BAKED

that Its coal supplies are ada·
quat a to enable It to meet the
anticipated elactrtc anergy
requirements of its customers
during the year.

oz

II"OFFWEL

PUll

ROlli HOOD FLOUR

me causes 01

111

CHEER

9AM to 12 Noon

which may be helped . some of

99•

70 IFF LIIEL

-''\, ' .

FILLED BARS

.ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Approximately 85% of the
AEP System's power general·
lng capacity le coal-fired, 10%
Is nuclear and the remalnden
Ia oil· or gas-fired, or hydro,
electric. The Company believes

oz

FEB. 18

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
H. William Mattingly

FRESH BAKED

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES
~pproxlmately

3:$1

11

WEDS. &amp; THURS. SPECIAl.$

area.

eKtend at

IOIUS PACI
3 DOZ FlEE

· Phone 992-5546

Commission of Ohio on March
The Company's electric
powel supply facilities - Including power generating
plants, major transmission
facilities and lnterconnecilons
with neighboring electric utility
systems - are adequate to
provide reliable electric ser·
vtca to Its customen~. Currently,
axcluillng temporary power
sales to other utility systems,
generating-capacity reserves
of tl'lll Amerlc•n Elect~c Power
(AEP) System, of which Ohio
Power Ia a part, are approximately 39 percent of peak load.
ResarYas ol at least this level

BREAD

THURSDAY

Every nurse deserves
a Sweetheart!

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY

•

79'•

$ 97

214 2110 STREET
POMEROY, OH.
STYLISTS- SANOY, JANICE, DEB, AND IMAGEN£

Pistons 111, Rockets 109
Rookie Kelly Trlpucka celebrated his 23rd birthday by scoring
30 points as Detroit snapped Hous·
ton's eight-game winning streak.
Trtpucka, who has been averag·
lng just under 30 points In the last
seven games, joined guard John
Long In a second-half flurry that
helped Detroit take a 1():1-94 lead.

Sweethearts are loyal but light·
weight. They support you gently
but firmly. And thanks to their
soft, bouncy urethane sole ,
Sweethearts feel as lighl on
your teet at lhe end of your day
as they do at lhe start. Now
that's a real SweetheM .

FAYSO
POP

FASHIOI
JEANS

CHATEAU
BEAUTY SA~pN

WHITE

18nLE

FLIP.POCIET
lEIII

TOW I
HOUSE
CRACKERS

JOlES BOY'S

RE.TURI

..
By
Appointment
Phone
992·7606

RC
RC 100

531 JACKSON PIKE · RI . JS W£ST

99~

RIIJITR
HAll AID
BODY
LOTIO I

11$119

EICEDRII
EJTU.STIEIITI
U 01
41 OT
TIILETI DIPSULES

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

OU will host personal
de"elopment program
Why do some J&gt;COple read to
pressure betterthan others? How
does a person's attitude affect his or
her own behavior a nd the beha vi or
of others ? What motivates people?
These and simila r question" will
be discussed at a personal dew lopme nt program scheduled from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. on Feb. 22 at Ohi o
University.
At the " Getting To Kn ow Yourself" seminar. particip~nls can
Jearn how to identify their personal
behavior style in interacting with
people, leam how to get othet·s to
respond more favorably. how to

become more effective group 111em·
hers, how to increase acceptance of

new ideas and methods ei lld how to
be a positi ve infl u t~ n , ·eon tJtlwrs.
OrJ!anizations sud l i::IS Jlnncywt·ll.
Mead Pa per. IBM. Wl'sk rn Airlines
a nd AT&amp;T have reg"krcd p"r·
licipcmt:; 111 lim; sc! II IIIH r w hid l wm;
developed by Persnna l Dynamics,
Inc. to help J&gt;COJlle understand their
own behav ior a nd the beha vior of
others.

Family Medicine
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistantyrofessor of
Family Medicine
Ohio University Cullegt~ _
uf Osteopathic
Medicine
Smuke Inhalation
A

killer
QUESTION:
have a £riend who
was in a hold lfre
recently. After a
SCHRECK
fireman rescued
her from the building he told her s he
was fortunate because of tile amoUJ1t
Andrew .!". Chonko. din·clor of of smoke in the building. What did he
·
Ohio Universily's Office of Work- mean by this?
ANSWER
:
The
fireman
was quite
shops and Conferences, has bt.&gt;en
correct
in
telling
your
friend
she was
trained and certified to conduct lilt •
lucky
to
be
alive,
because
most
fire
sc11dnar loca lly. For fee informati on
related
deaths
are
due
to
smoke
and registration procedures. perinhalati on rather than burns. In fact,
sons may (.'a ll594-6851.
approximately 80 percent of the
people who die in fires have no burn
injuries. For example, a fire several
years ago in a Kentucky nightclub
killed more than 150 people. Few of
them were burned. The majority
died of smoke inhalatron.
QVESTION : What is smoke
inhalation ?
ANSWER : Smoke inhalation is the
A rema rkable talented young
breathing
of toxic and noxious gases
woman, Eareckson is an artist as
and
particl
es which produce
well as an author, actress and
respiratory complications.
singer. She has learned to draw and
QUESTION: What is in smoke
· paint with a brush held in her mouth.
that makes it so dangerous?
Her works have been displayed in
ANSWER : Carbon monoxide is a
major exhibitions, as well as on a
dangerous component of Sli'Oke in a
number of network teJevision
lire. Carbon monoxide adheres
programs. More recently, her
quickly to tlie hemoglobin in the vic- ·
illustrations and painting8 have
tim 's blood . This, in turn, makes it
become the basis for a major line of difficult for oxygen to bind to the
greeting cqrds, plaques and framed
hemoglobin and be carried to all the
prints.
tissues in the body. Therefore, the
The pastor of thv church extends cells in the body die from oxygen
an open invitation to the corrununity
starvation.
to attend the film showing. There is
Another poison· in smoke, found
no admission charge.
especially in fires of fairly new
buildings, is phosgene. This poison is

Laurel Cliff Church
plans movie Sunday
At 7:30p.m. Sunday evening at the '
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church,
the film, '' Reflections of His Love"
highllghting the life and ministry of
.Joni Eareckson will be shown .
The color feature , produced by
World Wide Pictures, is the film
ministry of the Billy Graham
Association.
Eareckson is the star of a recent
theatrical motion picture, Joni,
.which relates the story of her diving
:accident, as a ycun!t girl, which left
:her paralyzed from the neck down.
It chronicles her struggle to piece
together her life and her faith in
God, in spite of the devastating cir·cwnstances.
·

released

durin~

the burning of

plasti cs and other synthetic
used in the manufacture
&amp;outs will observe Thinking Day ofmaterials
' the room furni shings and declnterrwtional Thinki11g Day will be
observed by Meigs County Girl
Scouts Sunday with a program from
2 to 4 p.m . in the Royal Oak arche ry
building .
The county-wide rally or Scouts
will be held in observance of the birthday of Lord and Lady 3aden
Powell, founder of Girl Guides in
England. Emphasis or the pro~ ram
is for· Scouts and guides to think
about each other.
Several troops will be taking part
in the program . Troops have selected countries and will be singing
native songs, and presentmg skits .

Meigs Band
news notes
This week several students altended the Columbus Youth Wind
Ensemble concert held at Capital
University in Columbus.
The ensemble was conducted by
James Arrowood, director of bands
at Capital University. It was comprised of outstanding musicians
from sever Columbus area hig h
schools.
Upcoming events : Friday , Fe b.
19, 6:15p.m. both pep bands in the
band room to rehearse for the ·
baskethall game. Saturday, Feb . 20,
"School of Music Day," 9 a.m . to
noon.

Announcement
THE EPISCOPAL CHurch
Women will meet Thursday at
12:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs .
Eleanor Crow . There will be a
sack lunch followed by a program
on the Holy Land by Mrs. Beulah
Ward. Eleanor Smith will host
the meeting.

s

vill be bringing foods from
"ntry and samples will be ser.. '
veo following the program .
Parents and friends of the Scouts
are invited to attend the observance
or Inte rnational Thinking Day.

17, 1982

Wednesday, February 17, 1982

Social Calendar .

suffered the most from smoke
111halation.
QUESTION: What are symptoms
of smoke inhalation?
ANSWE R: A burning pain in the
throat a nd the chest alld coughing
are the most common symptoms.
These can then clear comple tely
befOt'e developing into severe shortness of breath a few haurs or a few
days later. These delayed effects Of
smoke are quite ominous because
they point out severe injury to the
basic structure and function of the
lungs.
QUESTION : How is smoke
inhala tion treated?
ANSWER : The patie nt is
examined and a chest X-ray and
blood o"ygen levels are taken.
Results·or s uch tests may be nonnal
in the first hours of injury. However,
the patient is given air with a high
oxygen concentration to breathe. If
respira tory failure develops, the victim may be placed on a respirator
which takes over the function of
breathing while the lungs heal.
Still, the best treatment for smoke
inhalation is prevention, and this
means being aware of fire safety
measures. I will discuss some of
these in a future colwnn.

Curtis weds

WEDNESDAY
THE MIDDLEPORT Lilt-ra t")
Club will mCI'l Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Ben Philson. Mrs .
Roller! F isher will give the hook

PHONE 992-2156

BENJAMIN Salvant of Haiti
will be guest '&lt;peaker Wednesday
evening at the Middleport Independent Holiness Church on
Pearl St. Rev. O'dell Manley. invites the public to attend.

Or Write Daily Sentinel Class ified Dept .
111 CQurtSt., Pameory, Ohio45769

review .

JOHN H. BRYAN Jr. , Ironton.
District Deputy Grand High
Priest of the 12th Capitular
District, will be the inspecting officer when the annual inspection
of P om eroy Chapter 80, Royal Ar·
ch Masons, is hdd Wednesday.
Dinner will be .erved at 6:30p.m.
by the Pomeroy Chapter . Orde r
or Eas tern Star. Degree work will
be in the Pa st Master Dt,grce. All
Royal Arch Masons are invited .
ANNUAL INSPE CTION of
Pome roy Chapter 80, RAM. Wednesday by John H. Bryan, Jr.,
Ironton . district deputy grand
hi gh priest of the 12th capitula r
district. Dinner served at 6:30
p.m. by Pomeroy Eastern Star
Chapter ; degree work in pa st
1nasters deg r~ .

1HURSDAY
RACINE - A meeting of \he
Southern High School District
Board of Education has been set
for 7 p.m. Thursday at the high
school cafeteria.

Public Nolice.
LEG4L NOTIC E

First Bank

rr~~~~~~~~~~~1l

orations . Tile recent hotel fires in
this country have highlighted the
danger of phosgene generated from
the burning of the hotel's furnishings. It was also found from
these large fir es that persons trapped in a closed, smoke-filled space

Hil rold N . Hudnell, et a t.,
O e f e nd il nt s .

Pur sua n t to an Order of

Sale iss ued to me from t he
Court of C omm a~ ~l eas .

Me ig s Count'JI , Oh• o. •n th e
ilb:~ve · e nt i tl ed

MIDDLEPORT Child Conservation League, 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Grace Episcopal
Church Parish house. Speaker on
preparing for college. There will ·
be a white elephant sale .•

house, Meigs Co unty ,
Pomeroy, OhiO, a r 10:00
a.m., on the 13 th da~ of
March, 1982, th e- following
la nds and tenements, tn·
wit :
Si tu ated in the Townsh ip
of Scipi o, County of Me iq5
rtnd State of Ohio, to·wi t :
Parcel No. 1
Si tuated in Section . 1,
Scipi o Towns hip, Me 1qs
COunty, Oh io, being more
particula rly descri bed as
follows :
· Beg inning at the in
tersed ion Of the east line of
a 1,45 acre lot recorded in
Volume 222 . Page 189,
Meigs Cou nty Deed Recor
ds, a nd poin t 12 fpe t,
the r i
t
ce-nter li
No. 1 ·
d e~ .
to a
poont;
deg.
.SO' east
a point;
th ence
deg . 00'
East 208 .2
to a point in
the center the South con
crete b ridQe rc:~ il ing ( 12 fe-et
off the ceilter line of Slnte
Route No. 143 a t rioht
so Misc . Merc,..andice

MEIGS COUNTY Democrat
Central Conunitlee meting, 1
p.m. Thursday at Carpenters .
Union Hall, E . Main St. ,
Pomeroy.

OH.

PH. 992·6342

NEWI
STARTING THURS., FEB. 18th
DELICIOUS
CAKE-TYPE

CALL ••

.ERQ.y
pOM
.LANDMARK

DONUTS ·

' 614·992·2181
F0r
Farm
and

THAT ARE NOT FRIED IN GREASE.
COME IN AND TRY THEM ......

Home Delivery Of
Gas
Diesel

FREE SAMPLE DONUT

Healing Oil.

PRICED RIGHT
CAll TODAY'

THURSDAY. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

NEW HOURS

WE HEI.P YOU, HEI.P YOURSELF

DAILY SENTIN~L 992-2156
.
.
..

•

lr~c

Beo• nn1no South 38 deq
for th(' f oiiOWinq
t.
o.s· 4d" West
100
f~e1;
ceSnulh
67deg
. l3'
20'··the
ca n&gt;t
15 feel ; the nce sout h0 57

225.68 feet lo an iron p;n ;
the
nce246.01
northfeet
73 deg.
56' iron
40"
west
to an
~in , !hence nor th 21 deg.
222 ·88 fee t toan
6' lO"east
iron
pin; the nce
north 44
de g. 40' wes i90.00 teet Joan
iron pin; the nce north 07
deg. 15' ee~st 110.0 feet fo
the po; nt of beg; nn ;ng. con
ta ;n;ng 2.192 acres .
Deed Refere nce : Volume
2S2 , Page 811 , Meogs Deed
Records

Good

"fEMPTING
•PIN~

of roll ends

and

UD

'11l'P•I
tr:

1 Ruot

. NUGGET

Baockedl 1 Creek Bed
Cash 'n' Carry
1 Goldwl
Brown, Blue
H~
STARTING AT
.. M .
. Sq . Yd.
s~q•. ~yd•.•i•ns•l•a•lle•d. . . . .,.... . ~Y~d··.J ~~~

•GREf N
• IAN

a1e.9&amp;- e12.9&amp;

·1·2f5
..
..

'12"

1

"Decorated Cakes For All Occasions"
We have party favors, decorations, weddin&amp; supplies,
and do-it-yourself cake decorations. .

Drive A Little -- Save A Lot

RUTLAND FURNITURE

CHOCOLATE SHIPMENT- JUST IN
STOCK UP FOR EASTER!!

$1.95 LB.

"Nnt !o llbtrltlch

In Pomeroy"

47 LB. CASE $82.00

~;:::========::;~r;:==:::~~~;:=;rr=i;;;;~;;;,~;;;~::;ifr7tfi~ii=ffim~=ilr==:::::=::::~:=::::~Tr::::::::~iii~~f::::~
PULL INS
MILLER
v ·, nyi&amp;AiumJ·num
ANNOUNCING
'
.

MAIN ST.

742-2211

10 LB. BAG $17.95

WE'RE TOGETHER TO
SERVE YOU BETTER

•.,1
BEVERLY WICKLINE

SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING co.

B-A BEAUTY

" Beaulo·ful , Cuslom
Built Garages "
C.all for fre e siding
eshmales. 949·2801 or
949· ~860.
No Sunday Call s
3· 11

'· I

'

·fRIDAY
AND' SATURDAY
. ONLY (FEB; 19th &amp; 20th)
.

"From Red to Green
and everything in between.
WeVe gQt you covered."

WILLIAM D. CHILDS
DON E. MULLEN
JOHN F. MUSS£R
CHARLES B. MULLEN
MICHAEL L CHILDS

AGENTS:

I
I

ttc

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
custom kitchens and
appliar1'ces,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbing, electric , and
heating .

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992·6011

J&amp;f
CONTRACTING
• backhoe
•excavating
* seplic syslems
*water, sewer
&amp; gas lines
• dump !ruck
•limeslone
.
Licensed &amp; B!lllde~.
PH. 992·7201

.

Your,One Place To Stop For NAPA Farm Filters

MOTOR PARTS CO.

157 WALNUT ST.

Public Nolice

~~mrds~nu ~g~~· ~8!'/'j:

loca ted the reon .
sa ;d real estate and
mobile home appra ised fo r
Two Thousand Three Hun·
dr ed Th ir ty ·four and
00 / IOOth s
Do ll a r s
($2,334.00) and cannel be
sold for tess than two·third s
of that a mount .
TERMS OF SA LE : Fiv e
Hundred Dollars ($500.00)
cash or certified check on
the day of sale; bal ance
with ten ( 10) da ys of date of
sal e.

Sheriff
Ja mes J . Proffitt
Mei gs Count y• Ohio
(2) 10. 17, 24 , 3tc
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The Ohio Balance of
State Prime Sponsor is an·
nouncing a State Pr ime
Sponsor Council meeting
on March 4, 1982. to be held
at the Ohio Bureau of Em ·
ployment Services at 145
South Front Street in
Col umbu s, Ohio . Th e
meeting will comm ence at
10:00 AM c:~nd is open to the
general public . A record of
the proceedings is main·
tal ned by the Office of Man·
power Developme-nt, 1160
Dubl in Road. Columbu s.
Dh io , 43215.
(2) 17. ltc

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is he reby given
that on Satu rday, February
20t h, 1982, a t 10 :00 a.m. a
public sa le will be he ld a t
10 5 Un io n Av e nu e,
Pomeroy, Oh io, to sell for
cash
the
f oll owinq
collat eral:
1977 Ford p;ck up
serial no. F I4H LY53116
The Fa rme rs Bank and
Sav i nq s
Compa n y ,
Pomeroy , Oh io, reserves
the right to bid a t this sa le.
and to wit hd raw t he above
veh1c 1e pri or to St11e . Fur
ther, the F ar mcrs Bank
rt nd S ~v i nq s Comp any
reserves the riqh t to re jec t
any or all bid s subm itted .
Further, veh1c lcs a re
sold in the cond il1on the y
are in wifll no expressed or
1m plied warr anti es qiven.
(2) 17, 18, 19. 3tc

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
MOM &amp;GRANDMA
·WE LOVE YOU!

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

*On d UPA fw111 and Auto111oti:a Flta1s
M OH S.aded Ust Pike· Case Lots
When The Name Ia NAPA The Standard Is Quality.

•-~.. ---................
~

,....,.

Modern Electrical
Equipment
SIMMON ' SOLDS .·
CAD .· CHEV., INC.
Ph. 992·6614
JO B E . Main . Pomeroy,

IN RACINE
We~,Thurt. ISat.
HAIRSTYLING
Both Men I Women

CALL 949-2320
1•. 24 . Jmo.

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Mon., Feb. 1
ttiru
Sal., Feb. 27
Reg. $20 Now $17 .50
Reg. $25 Now $22 .50
Reg. S30 Now $27.50
us Wave Lenglh
For Longer Hair
Now $29.50
I(Jy's Beauty Salon

And Hom e Maintenanc e
• Rooting of all types

• Sid ing
• Remod eling
• Free est imates
e10 y rs . C)lperience

TOM

189 N. 2nd
Mlddlepott

P h .949· 2160

Coli 992-2726
2 - 1- 1 mo

OOIJ,
l mi. weslRon d
124 towa1d utlan

AUTO

Ph . 992· 2772

2·15·l m1J

or 949· 2482

YOUNG'S
SERVICE
o~

- Adtlonund "rnodelio1
-Roofin1 ond iUtlto WO&lt;k

•

~mtewofk

-~lumbin 1 ond

&amp; TRANS.

elechical wiKk

(frnbtimates~

REPAIR
PH 992 5682

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.
.
or992-7121
10
2·11·1mo.

99H215or992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh;o

From: S~nny Florida

JAN, DON &amp;.FAMILY

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Sires start from JOx24 "

Utilitu~1 Buildings
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x~6 .
Insulated Dog House s
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. 3, Box S4
Racine, Oh .
Ph . 614-843·2591

~~=~~~~g6~1~5-~lf~c~~=~§~~-~-~2~·3~·1§m~o.~
Keep This Ad For
Fulure Reference

HARRISON
TV SERVICE

APPLIANCE

ca~~~!~~~ng

NOW

OPEN

For Fast serv ice
985· 3561

used Color TV Sels for
Sale.
1
SALE, PHONE NO.

P A~T S

AND H: R V I(£

All MA I&lt; E S

e Won tl en

992~259

•

D rv~n

• ft"n'u

276 Sycamor e St.
Middleport, Ohio
9·21-lt.c

• Oispo u ls
• D i shwA s h er~
• HG!WAtuT"nk l

REESE··:
TRENatiNG
SERVICE·

41 S !! c:

ATOZ
HOME MAINTENANCE
AND REPAIRS
10 Years Experience
Plumbing, Carpentrv,
Roofing,
Electrical ,
Cisterns, Cement , Stone
walls, Chimney Repair .
All Home Repairs
Trailer Roofs and
Underpinning
PH. "2 ·3872
2·3·1 mo. pd .

Water· Sewer· Electric
Gas Line· Difches
Water Line Hoo~ · up s
Septic Tantls
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh .
Ph. 367·7560
1 7 1 ttc
Reel Eltete General

You' II

tract it down
much faster
wi t h a

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
H614) ·992-J325
JUST LISTED - Lovely
large 8 room bri ck ranch. 2632 sq. ft . 2 full
cera m1c baths, family
room , 3 car ga rage, bir·
c h k i t c hen w i th
refr ig e rator , ran ge,
dishwasher and 2 pat ios
on 180•120 lol. On ly
$69,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Level
corner lot near stores. 3
large bedroom s. balh,
automati c gas hot wa te r
heat . Formal dining,
storm drs. and windows,
full basemen!, large
POrch, garage and car·
pori. So40,000.
. GOOD BUY - 5 rooms,
bath, full basement, ci ty
utilities and J lots for

only sn.ooo.

HANDYMAN SPECIAL
- Here you go with a 4
room house and .H{!.
acres 'of woods at only
$6,000 cash.
REALTORS
Garden Teaford
Helen Teaford
lind Sue Murphy

"2'3176

Ho11.~·;ng

He, u lr '""' tcrs

l

JUNK CARS .........~~ ~.~~?.~.~ ~: ..

Guysville, Ohio

Authorized John Deer,
/'lew Holland. Bush Hog

BUYERSOF

Deater

1 J ·ll c

Ph . 992·7583
or 992· 2282

E.Ma;ln...W
POME
,0.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - 3
bedr'Oo m, energy eff i·
cient. home in Pomeroy.
Fully
in !) ul a t e d ,
beaut iful interior witll
new ca rpeting, WB FP,
$45.000 .
NEW TOWN - A 4
bedroo m home. ba th,
dinin g room , on ap·
prox . l;.. acre tol. par
ti a ll y r e mo d e le d .
$28,500.
PRICE REOUCED Exce llent ·location tn
M id dl e po rt
3
bedrooms, gas F A.
heat, porches, fu ll base·
ment . $29,000.
MARBLE FIREPLACE
- and bea ut iful wood·
work in thi s 4·5 bedroom
home . Fam il y room,
la rge foyer. Approx . 'J:oo
acre tot In Racine.
$45,000.
IN POM EROY - I V&gt;
story home · wit h 3
b ed r oom s.
full
basement. pantry a rea,
bat h, fam il y room . J ust
$22.900.
REALTOR
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.,
GRI
992-6191
Jean Trus sell 949-2660
Roge r &amp; Dotti e
9n·S692
Turn er
Offic e
992·22S9

A lB
.

~

WANT AD

..
\

,,,,

~j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;~~

CENTRAL REALTY
LOVEL v 3 BR brick home , has wood burnin g
firepla ce in !i'lli ng room. 111? bath, well constr ucted
&amp; insulated. One floor plan. Asking $35,000 ..
OWNER S.AYS SELL - We ha ve reduced thi S home
from $17,000 to $12,900 . Owner will work ter ms. '1 or
3 B R home kitchen with brea kfast bar . s to.v ~ &amp;
ref ~iQE. r a tor , 't aundry room off kitc hen. Larqe 11 vlnQ
room has fir epl ace . New furn ace a nd ce l t ~1 r .
.
UNUSUAL HOME - Call &amp; qe t d et a il~ on th1S
lovely J BR, 2117 bat h, ~ · fra m e, on 6 plus ncre~~
La rge work garaqe, root ce ll ar, loca ted close
Forked Run Sf a te Park . Asking $73 ,000 . .
n
NEW LISTING - 2 BR trailer on very n1cc ~ Of 0
qu iet st reet. Ki tcnen has stov e, ref r iQerator. d.n~ t!e
set, corner dish display ca bine t &amp; easy ~~ew. · ~ o
spa cious L.R .. Th is place could ·be very n1ce llv ~tq
for you or just as investm ent propert y, Now re s
for $175. Asking 512,000.
JUST LISTED - ,New doll !ype 3 BR home. cozyn os
the key word here . Kitchen com ~s complele W II i 1
year otd self clean ing oven. r~ fr 1g e r a t or &amp; ~ cha r
woOde n dinette ser. This hom e IS about 1 . ~ m.lles out
of Middleport on 2 plus acres. It nas outb uildings f ~r
storage. Rental income fr of'T" " trailer Sl75 · All th•s
for orifv $35,000.
.
.
.
RENTALS AVAILABL E - N1 ce bn ck h om~ 1n
Lelarl, OH . . $250 a month plus 5250.00 depos ol &amp;
references .
CALL US TO BUY OR SELL
Nancy Jaspers - Associate
PH . 843·2075

1

Mor'OR'S. ...........:.:~-~~?.~.~~: ..~1 50

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

New Homes - ex·
tens,· ve remodel·
·ne
'• lectric.ltwork
·
•Cuslom Pole Bldgs.
• Rooting work
14 Years E11 peri ence
Greg Ro· ush

$1()()

APPLIANCES .......~.~~ · ·~~ .~.~~: ...

Farm Equipment

7:30p.m .

Ch es ter·Ma sonic Hall
Tuesday 10 : 30 a.m.
Mason"Methodist
Church
Tucsda~ 7: 30p.m .
·PomerOY-Methodist
Church ·
Thursday 10:30 a.m.
Pomerov-Five Point
Call : JoAnn Newsom e
lecturer
992·3382
Membership
U.SO
Weekly Class
SZ.SO

$125

BUYERSOF

U.S. Rl . SD East

CLASSES

Mood_,~

$

Pomeroy Scrap Iron Metals

&amp;SERVICE

BA nERIES

ROUSH
CONS.TRUCTION

CARPENTER

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and
ins1allation.
Residential
&amp; Comrnen:ial
Call 742-319fl

$

BOGGS

7 5 tfc

Roger Hysell's
GARAGE
Pam

HOSKINS

eDozer s
• Backhoes
eoump Trucks
elo· Boy .
T
h
• rene er
eWnter • Sewer
eG.aslin ~s
e sc pl ic
Sy s t e m s
large or S m.1ll Job s.
PH . 99 2·7478
mn. pd.
1 71 1

James Keesee

SALES

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

EXCAVATING

Vinyl &amp;
s ·d ·
Aluminum I .ng
elnsulation
eStorm Doo rs
eStorm Windows
R I
ent
• ep acem
Windows
eNewRoofi'lg
FreeEstimate

1·28-tfc

PERM SALE

Sl. Rt.l24

INSULATION

~~~==~;:;;;~2-~l-~l~mo~.~i===O~pe~n~9fAM=·~~5~:3~0P~.M~.~~~;;~~~~~~9-~3~;1f~&lt;~~iiii~~~2~·1i~·~ltm;o~.~

To: BERTHA BING

Free Coffee
·and Cookies
.

FRONT -END
ALIGNMENT
Wilh Genuine
Paris! GM
~

NOW AT

Public Notice

Downing-Childs Insurance
and
Mullen Insuranee

GoOCiwrrmcfiForA

t

eastdrq
100 feet
I hence
th
57
20' ;20"
westnnr175
t eet: lhcnc(' no rth 67 dNl.
lJ ' 20" CclS I 25 feet t o tt '('
po1 nt of bcQ1 nn1nQ. COI'l
t.:~1 n 1 nq 0.46 acrr morl' or
less.
•
Deed Refer t"nce Volu me
153 , Paqe 449 . M e 1qs c nun
Ty Deed Record s.
Parce1No. 2
Si tuated in Sec tion no. 7,
Sci pi o Townsh1p, Mc iq s
County . Oh ;o. and be• no
m o re
p nrt 1c ul ar 1y
descr ibed as fatlows ·
Beqi nning a f the 1n
te rsection ot the cas t I me of
a 1.45 acre lot reco rded in
Deed Book No. 222 . Paqe
No. 189.- Deed Records of
Mei gs Co unty, Ohio and a
point 12 feet at r1qht a nqtes
from the cen ter line of State
Route No. l 4J ; thence south
83 deq. 40' east east 200 to a
poi nt ; thence south 78 dt?9·
00' east 208 .2 teet to a po1nt
in the center !Of the. south
concrete br id!Je rai l1nQ ( 12
fee t off the cenTer I ine of S.
R. ld3 at· rtg ht anglesj and
the tru e point of beg inn inq
for the follow inq descr1bed
tr nc t ·
The nce south 67 de g . 1J'
20" east 254 .05 feel; the nce
sout h 38 deq _ 05' 40 " west
100 feet; thence sou th 67
deq. 13' 20" eas t 25 fee t;
the nce south 57 deg . 20' 20"
east
175 feet05', th ence
38 deq
40" sout11
west
(passi
ng
an
or
on
pin
at
89.46
fee t) for a total d1sta nce of

25 Rolls Carpet in Slock lo picl from.
·=rt.blcbci, CWJ)tlinslalledfnowitll

CHAPMAN'S
SHOES

Business Senices

r~~nc~o~g~;;, j~~tc2~5\ .fd:

•.1! p y d
Buy Now &amp; SM I .2 • ... • •

•
.,

d eo 13' 70" e.:~st 15.:t.OS f ee t .
th e true poin t o f beqi nninq

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

NOW AVAILABLE, TWO YOUTH ROUTES

BOTII IN POMEROY, ONE .BEING ON THE EAST
END, EARNING IN EXCESS OF $30.00 PER WEEK, AN
EXCELLENT ROUTE. THE OTHER IN mE WEST
END OF POMEROY, EARNS YOU APPROXIMATELY
$10.00 PER WEEK, WITH GOOD POTENTIAL.
EITHER ROUTE WOULD BE AN EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR YOUR CHILD TO LEARN THE IMPORTANCE OF HANDLING MONEY, SMALL
BUSINESS AND MOST IMPORTANT OF ALL, ,HOW TO
COMMUNICATE WITH OTHER PEOPLE.

- --;P;:u:;:b:;;lic No- li-ce-·- it nqle'$) : rtw nce s0uth o7

~~~~~~~~~~J.!I~O~Qe~l~h:
e~r~w~~
; 1:h~a:..~l~97~0 ~
,
·
FEBRUARY CLEARANCE

Astrograph

WE OFFER MORE

case, be.ng

nu.nbe: r 17748, I w il l ott er
tor sa le at publ ic auc tion on
the front ste ps o f the Court·

OPEN 8:00 A.M. TO 4:30 P M.

February 18, 1982
An unusual proposition may come your way this coming year.
Although at first it might seem farfetched, follow through on it. It could
have tremendous merit:
AQUAIUUS ( Jau. %0-Feb. 19) You may have thought this day was
supposed to be a quiet one, but prepare yourself for something exciting
·
which could get your adrenalin flowing .
PISCES (Feb. 20-Marcb 20) It'll be a much more satisfying day if you
associate with those who are clever and stimulating. You may hear from
such persons today.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll19) You can handle people today in just about
any situation in a way to do you proud. Possibly unbeknownst to you, one
who can do you a lot of good wlll be watching and be impressed.
TAURUS (AprllZO.May 20) A proposition which could be materially
beneficial in some manner may come from out of the blue today. Your
friendly, cordial manner will precipitate it.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) In joint~~entures today, it will be you who
will come up with all the bright and clever ide1111 which could make the undertaking successful. Don't hold back your thoughts.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) As others watch the efficient ann fast
manner in which you organize your wor'&lt; tod•v , the( !l williugly
cooperate with any geme p~1n yryu forrn,Uatc. ·
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Including someone who could be important to
your work or career in your social activities today should prove to be a
wiser choice than you first realized.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Because you're so quick and adept, you
should be able to comfortably lind time today to handle you• domestic
chores and also enjoy yo11r social interests .
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) There's a good chance someone will volun·
leer today to help you get your tasks out of the way early, making it
possible to take a break away from your nonnal routine.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You have a certain instinctive shrewdness in money matters today. If you get any sudden 'ilnpulses, act on
them. They should work out.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your enthusiasm is aroused if you
see an opportunity to turn a dollar. Chances are, you're going to get a
good one today. You'll know eXl!ctly how to handle it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jaa. 19) You conununicate well today . If you
get a moneymaking idea which needs another to make it go, don'tsit on it.
Go right to the persons who can help.

Mari e tt a ,

vs.

Education meeting, 7 p.m. Thursday, high school cafeteria.

Middleport,

of

Plaintiff,

SOUTHERN LOCAL Board of

317 N. 2nd Ave.

Mr. and Mrs. Perry Curtis, Reeds·
ville, are announcing the marriage
of their daughter, Sandra Kay, to
James MacDonald on Simday, Feb.
.14, atFainnont, W. Va.
Saturday at 2 p.m. a reception will
be held in their honor at the home of
her brother and sister-in-law, Paul
and Shelia Curtis, Pomeroy .
Relatives and friends are invited
to attend the reception.

The Daily Sentinei- Page -9

The Daily Sentinel

CAROUSEL CONFECTIONERY

McDonald

"

Ohio

'2.00 Each

Also Buyers of Radiators and Copper
" We Al so Sell Used Auto P.lr ts"
Located on Rocksprings Rd .
POMEROY, OHIO
West of Fai rounds
PH . (614)

- A nnouncements
SWE EP E R and sewing
ma c ~ln e re pair , pa rts, and
suppl ies.
Pick up and 1
del ivery , Davi s Va cuum
Cleaner, one half mil e up Ga rage Sale 128 Pack
Georges Creek Rd . Call Dr ive, Pt. Pleasant. Thur.
446·0294 ..
&amp; Fri. 9·3. Lar ge clothes;
childrens &amp; baby cloth ing,
Complete line of Muzzle curtains, whatnots, ap•
Load ing Guns a nd Sup· pli ances, &amp; Li nsey water
pl ies.
Sprl ng
Va I ley soft ener.
Trading Co-., Spr ing Valley
8 =-==--P~bti c"s;;:a::;l::e==::
Plaza. 446·8025.
&amp; Auction
French City Meats are Large Farm &amp; lndu s trl~l
booking Cu stom Cattle. auction. Feb. 20. 1982 a t
Ca ll446·3472.
Ravenwood, WVa. Sa le
yard loca ted 4 miles East
Fi shing Licen s on sat e. of 1·77 at Rav enswood ex it
come and see our new ship· 146. Take Rt . 56 lo the in·
menl of 1981 Fising Rod s. lersecllon of Rl . 21. Tak ing
Ree ls, &amp; Lures . Spring cons ignments starting Feb.
valley Tr ad ing Co.. Spring lS. Fa r m tractors, frOc ks,
tr ailers, dozers, backhoe,
Valley Plaza, 446·8025.
etc. McCa ul ey Trac tor
Sa les. 304-273·2611 or 273·
Turkey Hunters We have 3700
..
mouth c c:~ ll s, slate box
calls. ca m o gear &amp; Qecoys
-------in stoc k. Spring Va lley 9_____ ~an!ed lo_Bu·
t__
Trading Co., Spring Valley
WANT TO BUY Old fUr ·
Pla za. 446 8025.
niture a nd Antiqu es of all·
kinds, cal l Ke nneth Swain ,
Bleu.
256·1967 in the eve ni ngs .
Syste m uses science To
-------pawn the u nlearned poor !
Bu yi ng Go ld, ·Silve r ,
Pla tinum, old coins, scr ap
For b ulk deli ve ry ot ring s &amp; silve rw are. Da lly
ga so line , hea ting oil a nd quotes ava il a bl e. Also
diesel fue l, c.all Landmark . coins &amp; coin supplies for
s a le . SPri ng Va 1le y
997·21B1. Pom eroy , Oh.
Trad ing , Spri ng Vall ey
Gun Shoot Raci ne Gun Plaz a. 446·8025 or 446·8026.
Club. E ve ry Sun . startin g
at 1 p.m . Factory choke We pay cash for la te model
clea n used ca rs.
quns onl y.
Frenc htown Ca r Co.
Bill Gene Johnson ,
Racine Fi re Dept. sponsors
4A6·0069 .
a Gun Shoot, Sa t. ni ghts
---- - - - - 6:.30 p.m .. Bashan. Factory
TO ~ P RIC E Sc ra p Metal ,
choke 12 gauge shotgun.
aufo bodi es, and ca rs. Bat·
teries. alum ium , brass &amp;
spC.Cia l Feb., March &amp; Apr . copper. Ga llipolis Block
only . Ge ne's Dee p Steam co ., 123 112 Pine 51., 446·
~a rpe l
Clean in g. Scolch 2783.
Guard · F ree Es timates .
- - - - ·--992-6309 .
BEDS·IRON , BRASS, Old
furn iture, go ld, s il ver.
McOa n ie t custom bu t doll ars, wood icc boxes,
chery. 304 ·882·3224 .
stone jars, ant iques, e tc ..
Comp let e
house hOld s .
J IMS Water Servi ce. Ca ll Writ e: M.D. Mill er, Rt . 4,
Jim La nier , 304·675 7397 . Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992 7760 .
Camp Conl ey.
CH IP WOOD . Poles max .
4-::c=-= ~~~ dia meter 14" on largest
end . $12.50 per ton. Bundled:
ANY P E RSON who has sla b. $10.50 per ton.•
Deliverd to Ohio Pa llet Co.,·
does not offer or atte mpt to Ro c k S p r i ngs
Rd . ,·
anything
giver away
Offer a nytoothe
thing and
tor Pomeroy . 991 2689 .
sale may pla ce an ad in this
column . There will be no
Gold , s ilve r , s ter ling·,
cha~e to the adver tiser
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
cur rency Ed Burk ett Bar·
Beaut iful black Germ an ber Shop, Midd leport . 992 1 •
shephe rd, 4 yea rs ol d. 3476
.
Unable lo keep. Call 675·
5720.
OLD FUR NIT URE, bed•.'
iron, brass, or wood. Ki t•,
Prosobee, baby ce rea l. Ca ll chen cubbards of a ll type,.
304-458· 1057.
Tables, round or squa re .
wood icc boxe5. Old d esk~
l
Ha
!ds
and bookcases. Will bu\o
complefe house old . Gold,'
To MOM a nd DAD ,
sliver, old money, pocket:
Happy Va le ntine's watches, c h t~l n s, r ings. andCay.
etc. Ind i a ~ ArJifp&lt; ls of air.
Love alwa ys,
lypes. Also buylng baseba H.
Angl e
ca rds. Osby Mart in 99~ "
6J70.
Los! and Found
6
-~ -Flute head. Los! al Hannan J UN KE D cars, sc ra p
Trace High School last me tals, a luminum ca n$,
Thursd a y evening. Ph . 446· tr an smi ssi ons, motors, ba t:·
tcries, radi ators, oi I wei(
6597:
drill ing bits, tungste n ca r··
t ide. hig h speed steel,'
LOST Crown s haped bir· waste paper, c a r d b oa rd ~
thslone pin. 6 birlhstones. raw ftJr s, hidt s. glnsinp
Reward. Caii61A·742-2823.
and yell ow root. Ha rper:.:
Halslead Sa lvage co. 300
LOST black and while Eteventn St., Pt . Pleasa nt,
Beeg le vic lnlly of 2600 304 ·675 -5868. Al so fl ea
block of Llnco)n Ave . An· ma rk e t ope n Mo nd ay,
swers1o Clipper . 615·126• .
throug h Friday , 1·5 p.m ..
l

--

------·-

-.

�10- The
9

Sentinel
42

They ' ll Do It Every Time

Wanted to Buy

c;:A SH PAID lor c lean . tate
mode l used c a r !, . Smith
Bu ic k Pont iac, GAll ipol is.

CHA~ t;;E

THE

ro · sc~

010 l TELL
THf PEAN "TkAT
CRt88LY IS
GorNG TO 8E
A 170CTOR OR
.A NUCI..EAR

Oh;o _Call446 2282 .
50 t o 150 e gg ' incubator ' .

Call675·5054 .

SCIENTIST

Exercise b icv cte. Ca ll 675
2192 .

NAM E:
~u N ­

(Y= ·'rHE: ·MILL K IOS ' AN[7
THE MOlHEJ&lt;l:~ WOU LP
L ET 'iOU ~ LON E: · · ·

.

2 bedroom mobile home
partially furnished . Call
675 · 4.1~4

ONE" MQTH&amp;12 SAY
'[..G'T THE KID PI(Jl.
OUT WHAT HC

---.----~-

Furn i shed 2 -b e droom
mobile home . Deposi t and
some utilities pa id. Call
675·6512.
M obile hqme, 2 bedroom
ni ce porc ti &amp; yard . Call 675:
3030 or 675·3431.

44

schooling may help you ~-=~~~~~~:::~~~=~========~-

prepare for a well paying

-----

23

+-

--

Professional
Ser vice s - -

trPart t1me L PN to d ispense Piano
Tu
nin
g
&amp;
m edicat ion to r~~ id e n ts of
an
in t ermedia te ca r e Repair .Cal l Bill ward for
W a rd ' s
l ac ility for mantally retar· appoin t ment,
ded in Bidwell. Hrs./days Keyboard, 446·4372.
-~---~-

vary

depending

3S
Lot~ &amp; Acre~ g~
5 acres SR611. near Tup ·
per s Plains . Good buildin9
si te. 614 ·855-1116 after 5·30
p .m .

Rentals

on

when medication needs to
be di spensed . S5.75 hr . Con tacl : Ca t hy Nea l 388·8195 .
Buckeye Comm unity Service ~
is an Equa l Opportun ity Employers.

C 1!. L Bookkeep;ng . Com ·
plete bookkeeping and tax
ser vice for business and individuals .
Carol Neal 446·3862

Adver ti sing special ities.
Book matches, ca lender s,
as a young business per son pen &amp; pencils, dicount
and ea rn good money p lus coupon books . Di smuke's
some grea t gifts as a Sen· 405 2nd . Ave .. Ga ll ipoli s,
tin e! r oute ca rri er . P hone 446·0474

41

Houses for Rent

1 bedroom family rm ., $300

mo . uti lit ies and de p.
required . CiJ II446 -4554 .

GE T VAL UABLE lra;nlng

us right away and ge t on
th e el igi b i lity li st a t 992 -

2156 or 9922 157 .

Pia no' s tun ed and ser
vi ced. Ca ll Bob Grubb, 446·
4525.

Posi t ion Availab le t or Sub·
st itute Teacher for Guiding
HARPER Ad u lt Ca r e Cen·
H and
School . ter·providing th e perso nal
Qua lif ications-m ust have a car e your elderly need in a
valid teach i n g ce rt if ica te
from the Department of home like atmosphere .
Educat ion .
Respon · Vacancies now ava il ible.
si bilities· dur ing teacher' s ca ll 304·675· 1293 .
absence, being r espons.i ble
for prooviding educa tional
programming for groups of
studen ts. Salary -$35.00 per
Real &amp;stale
day . Availability ·immed ia ·
tely . Appl ica t ions ca n be
Obt ained tram : Mr . David
Homes for S,ca~l~e_ _
Ratliff, .P .O . Bo&gt; 14 , 31
Chesh ;re, Oh 45620, 614-367
1972 Concord Mobile Hom e,
0102 .
l2x65. Call 446·7015 alter
5:30 p.m
Night baker 32 to 40 hrs .
per week, 10PM -6Am . No 2 bedroom br ic k home, full
experience necessa r y . Ap - basement, garag e, 1 acre,
ply at Mr . Donut, Point · 51. Rl . 35 . Ca ll 446·0755.
Pleasan t in person .
------~-

Help wanted -babys itter. for
two sma ll children includes
housework , 8·5, fiov e days a
R efe r e n ces
w eek .
req u ;red Ca ll 675·59 14 a f·
te r 5PM .

-----w anted babysitter in my
home, excel lent ref er en·
ces. Ca /1675-1546.
12

Situations Wanted

Part tim e work wanted .
Cle ri ca l, office or shop
work . Call 675·4340 ex t. 300
a lte r6PM .
13

15

School s Instruction

Di's Cra ft Supply , Spri ng
Va lley Plaza, 446·2134 . X ·
stitch headQuarter s, ALL
color s DM C. Free lessons
Ka r ate the ult imate in se tt·
defence al l priva te lessons,
M en, women, &amp; children.
l nstr uc t iion thru bl ack
belt . A lso ava ilabl e Karate
uniforms pu chin g and
ki ck ing bags, and pro tec tiv e eq ui pment .
143
Burli ngton Rd , ka son, Oh.
Ca ll 286·3074.
11

- Mi ~c~_l arleOu s

__

Two 12ft . I beams 15ft. ea .
1978 V 6, black. M ax M er·
cury , 16 ft . fibergl ass
R un abo ut &amp;
tr a il e r .
sidemount tool boxes, 8f t.
tr uck bed with pullout
shelves &amp; locki ng doors.
· Used gun oi l furnanc e for
M .H. Coleman comp lete,
80,000 BTU. 32 ga l. Tee l
g lass lined storage water
sys tem Ca ll 675-6277 after
5.
18

·-·

Wanted ro Do

Will do babysitti ng in my
home in Ga ll ipoli s ar ea .
Ca ll446·8046.
Wil l babysi t in m y home .
895·39 11 .
M cDa n ie ls Custom Butchering. Ca ll 30 4-981-3224 .

·-·

-.----

FIAHA£131
21

New Incom e Lim its. If you
earn between $.9 ,000 t o
$15,000. a year, you may be
able to buy a 3 bedroom
house (not a mobile home)
tor as littl e as $135. mo. No
down paym ent . Ca ll 9927034 .
Comfortab le 3 bedroom
home. 8 lf2 percent
.assumable loan, and is
near PPH S, large fence d in
yard, kitchen appli ances
and
more .
We are
rel ocati ng and carl share
real tor's f ees by se ll ing
now . Ca ll after 6 pm 6751625.

RIGHT DOWN TOW N
Newly
decorated
un lurni shed, 3 rm . house .
Suitable tor sing le per son
or r etir ed coupl e. Garden
space, deposit &amp; refere nces
req uired. Ca ll 446·0450 or
446· 129 1
House 2 bedroom , 733 3rd .
Ave ., Gall ipolis. Deposi t
r equired. Ca ll 446-3870 or
446·1340.
.
3 bdr . house, 2 fir epl aces,
central ai r , garage, fen ce &amp;
swimm ing poo l. Call 67551 04 .

--------Lar ge house, downtown
Ga ll ipol is. Call 446·7265 or
446·0644 .
J bedroom home 5 m iles
from town. Deposit &amp; no inside pe ts. Ph one 446-11 58 .

2 houses . Call 446-7472 after
4:30.
Furn ished house, 1 bd r .,
$200, water pa id, near
HMC . Call 446·4416 a fte r
7PM .
4 bedroom house with l arge
living roo m, dining room .
and ga rden. $175 month .
Security depos it . Ca ll 992
5692.
.
2 bedroom house. Some
carpet. No inside pets .
Deposi t req u ir e d 992·5039
or a fte r 5 992 ·3090 .
Hom e ond apartmen ts, and
offi ce space for r enl. Call
Cleland Realty , 992-2259.

Insurance

SA NDY AND B EA VER In·
surance Co . has off er ed
services f or f ire insurance
coverag e in Ga ll ia County
for almost a centu ry .
Farm , home and persona l
property cover ages are
av ai l ab le to meet in ·
div idu al neer:J s. contact
L ew 1s Hu ghe s, agent.
Phone 446 33 18 .

Business
Opportunity

Own your own paint and
decorating!' store. AAA-1
painl manufacturer needs
distributor tor this area .
M odest investment . Ca ll
collec t 13041 743·507 1 Man ·
da y-Friday or Write P.O.
Bo)( 308, Milton w va 25S.t 1.

-----z_z___MOnetacoan- -

-- - APartmfrTit- -

Furni shed r oom $125,
utilities pd ., sing le male,
range, r efri g . share ba th .
446·.4.416 afterJ PM .

train ing one weekend each
mon th and two weeks eac h
year . Benefits include low
cost life insurance, ex
eel lent pay and a free pension plan . Plus the A rmv
Guard's val uab le technical
Ca ll

---------for Rent

W i th the Army Nati onal
G uard, you'll have a part
time job with full t ime
benefi ts. You wil l attend

may

s1

For rent mobile nome , Pt .
Ple&lt;1 sant. Cal1446·8221.

I'vE ONLY HAD

f'

Mobile .H omes
for ~ent

RJR

Empluyment
ser"ltes

civ i li an occ upation .
675-3950 .

House meadowbrook -Ad d i1ion 3 bedroom , f am ily
room w i th fi r eplace, central air, ba se m ent , 304-67 51542.
Home sa le or re nt Rt . 6"2 N .
7 r ooms, 2 bath, basement,
carport, dep . &amp; r ef. r eQ.
Ca ll 1·6 14·928 4339 a fte r
5 .30 PM
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HO ME S. Ga iHpoHs. Pr;ce
r educe d , used mob il e
homes. CA LL 446·7572.

2 bedroom tlou se. Call 675 3431.

42-

...:. -

-

- -----r- - - -

- -MobileHomeS - for R:::_
e,_
n :t____ _

2 bdr . a nd 3 bdr . m obile
homes . Ca ll 446-01 75.
Centenary , 2 bdr .• priva te
lot. ref . &amp; dep ., S160 m o.,
adu lts. Ca II 61.4-643-2644 .

----·3 bdr . double wide loca ted
in Johnson's Mobi le Hom e
Park . No pe ts, deposi t
requi r ed, all utilities pd .
exce pt elect r ic, newly
deco rale d,.SJOO month . Ca ll
446 · 35~7 .

CLEA N USE D MOBIL E
H O M ES
KE SS EL ' S
QUAL IT Y
MOBIL E
HOME SA LE S, 4 MI.
WE ST, GA LLIP OLI S, RT
35. PHON E 446-3868.
12x60 2 be droom Buddy
mobil e home. Set up wi th 2
or 4 lot s, gas heat. r ura•
water, c lose to town, fin ancing ava il abl e. Mtone 4.46129 4.
.
For sa le 12x50 Dari an
mob il e home, 1973 model,
$2,500 . Needs some repairs.
Ca ll 446·3lJ3 .
For sale l 0x35, 1 bd r .,
house t ra; le r . Ca ll 388·9684 .
1978 Sky l ine Hil l c res t
Mobile Home in e).cellent
conditipn. 8)(8 r oom atlta ched. Asking $9,200. u nfurnished . 992-3.422 .

- - ----. USED MOBIL E HOM E .
576·2711'
MOBILE HOME S MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Ca ll
304·576· 2711.

74 Sch ultz traile r l 2x65 a ll
e lec tric . Ca ll 304·458· 1775.

•

33

Farms for Sale

For sale 18 acr es toba cco
base, rural water, 600 ft.
level road fronta ge, l4x70
mobile home. Call256·1156.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

Nice level homesi te in
Clearvlew River EstatesSewer-Water· Eiec . · $500.00
down . Phone 256·1216.
~ arge tract of land loca ted

Pomeroy, Ohio. Ca n be
R EF I NANCE or purchase financed at 12 percent 992·
.
you r home. JO year fixed 5786.
rate. WV a. &amp; Oh;o, Le ader
Mor tgage, 77 E . Slate St., Trailer si tes. 10 percent
Athens, Oh . 592·3051 .
992·2571 or 992·3830.
1"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh•o

Ohio

Delu xe f urnished . apartment, excell ent location, 1
or 2 adu lts , on ly $275, ref. &amp;
dep. r equired . Call 4460338 .

-------

Hou ~~old GOOdS=

2 brd. apt . HU D excepte d , bed frames $20$25. &amp; $30.
ma t resses, $25 &amp; $35,
ki tchen fu rfl, util i t ies par - baby
El ec tri c firepl ac e, gu n
tially pd .l!l. excelle nt
location . Call 675-5104 or cab 1net, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; .4 cha irs.
675·7284 .
u se d ,
Rang es,
re fr;ge ra tor s, and TV's,
Apa rtm ent t,or ren t . Call 3 mi les out Bul oov i lle Rd.
446·039() .
Open 9am to 7pm, M on .
thru Fri. , 9am to Spm , Sa t.
446·0322
3 room apt. util it ies paid .
Ca ll446·3437 .
-----·-- GOOD . U SED
AP ·
washers,
New 1 bd r . unfurnished PLIANCES
r ef rig e rat or s,
ap t., wi t h new stove &amp; dry ers,
Skaggs
Ap ref r ig . No pet s. $169 mo. rang e s .
plus S50 dep. , water fur - pliances, Upper River Rd .•
bes1de Stone Cr es t Motel.
nished. Cal l446-36 17.
446·7398 .
3 bedroom unfurni shed
apa rtment. 992-5434 or 992 · For sale Sea r s Coldspot
rige r ator,
15.2 cu.ft.
59 14 or 304·882 ·2566 .
Bronze tone, m int condi ti on, li ke new . $375. Ph .
3 r oom furni shed apt . 446·2206 9AM til 5PM .
ut; l;t; es paid . 356 N.' 41h St., Even ingsca ii446·27J4.
M iddleport .
Apa r t m e nts . 675·5548.
A PAR TMENTS , m obi le
homes,
hou ses ,
Pt.
Pleasa nt and Ga lli po li s.
614·446·8221 or 614·245 ·9484.
E ffi ciency rooms by th e
week on M ain Street.
Mason, WV . 773·5651.
Garge apar t men t , tw o
mobile homes on Rt. 2, 5
m inutes from town . Call
675.3000 a fter 5 ca ll 675·6277
I bedroom ao t . Jackson
Ave ., Poin t Pl easa nt. Call
675·3000 before SPM .
45

Furnished'Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
li ght house keeping apt..
Park Centra l Hotel.
46

Space for Rent

w an ted to r ent house on Rt .
2 or Rt . 7 be t we e n
Ga llipolis &amp; Huntington .
Cal l446·3009 a fter 5 :30 .

COUNTR Y MOBI LE Home
P a rk , Rou te 33, Nort h of
Pomer oy . Large lots. Ca li
992-7479 .
1 acre country tr ailer lo l .
F latwoods . $70 mon th p lus
S70 deposit . Phone 404·8608405.
Tr ailer tots for rent . Sewe r
&amp; water furni shed . Call675·
1076.
49

-~r Leilse -

~

For lease, with op t ion t o
buy . Doub le wide mobil e
home, two ba t hs, th r ee
bed ro om s, r ang e, ref.
w asher &amp; dryer , tw o large
lots, $325 . mo. 446 4380.

Merehandi5E=
S1

Household Goods

----·-

53

1
r.:-=-=-=-:.:.-____

3 bedroom
furn ished
Mobile Home with washer
&amp; dryer on priVate lot .
Deposit required, no pets .
949·2253 .

Motorcycles

"

•
-"

7:00

'""
'

1975 Honda 750, drag p;pes,
6 over front e nd,
King/ Queen sea t, ex t ras,
SlOOO . Call Calvin anytime
446·6638.
For sa le 1974 CJ500, Ca ll
675 -6345 or see Tony Jor dan, Crab Creek Rd.

~~=:=~=:;:=~=::;~;::::~=~::===1 76

-.

-~i s~.~e rchandice

Lum p Coa l $32 per ton.
Zinn Coal Co ., Inc. Call446·
1408 between 9 and 4.
For Sale Kitchen tab le and
2 cha ir s, $25 . See at 769
Browne ll Ave ., Middl eport .
New wooo stove, half pr ice,
never used, $350. Can convert to f ur nanCe. Cal l 256·
1216, Ga iHpol;s .
Qui lt ing fr ames, velvet
throw pi I lows, book cases,
picnic tab les, lawn fur niture, and 1 w ill do
repa irs . Ca ll 446-0978 .
Plas ti c Septic Ta nks. St ate·
and county appr oved. 1,000
ga l. tank , pri ce $340 . Other
siz es in st ock, haul In your
p;ck up t ru ck. Ca ll 61 4·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh. RON
EVAN S ENTE RP"RISES
r -

1969 Ford 2 ton cabin
chassis, new 300 motor, 5
spd trans ., 2 spd. r earend,
new t ires, new pain t job,
ou tsta nding conditon . 3 yr .
old Dalmatian, male. Call
367·7533 .
Kerosun heater, solid oak
couc h &amp; ace. t able, g lass
l ire sc r een, 50 gal . drum
with pump . Call446-41ll .
Mov ing must sell Kenmore
heavy duty . w asher &amp;
dryer , like new, $500 for
pa ;r . Ca ll 245·5624 or 446·
4942 ._

54

Misc. MerChilndlce

64

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories
New Auto Parts 520 ,000

Hay&amp;Grain

20ft . telephone poles for
sale. 304·675·6918 .
_ _ _ __ _ _ _ ___
Ai r compressor $675; large
advertisi ng sign $350 ; Nova
pa ri s 68· 72 mode l. H igh
performance model 350 4
volt main short block $275;
39 Chevy body 5500; new
couch $500; 39 Chevy sedan
$1,000. 304·576·2602.

71
Auto for sale
'-'---===~~-1977 Trans Am, au to, PS,
PB , air, low miles . 1979 VV"
4-spd ., ;:Jir cond. Ca ll 446-

Used tires. Hanshaws Tirl .
on Lucas Lane. Call 675 ·
7360 .

1975 , . ck Regal c rorr.e
wheels .111 ne' ' ti res, craig

Stack 3 antenna Ham 1t
r otor 70' cable &amp; coax, 45'
t ower. Call675· 5066.
Used .e lectric furnance.
Ca ll 304-675·3099 .
Myers sha llow well pump,
t ank, pressure gauge, swll ·
ch box, $100. Call675·2799.

Oak f ;rewood . Call 675·2757
alter 4 : PM .

Large round bales
each. Call458· 1656.

$15.00

Transpertatlan

2599

AM· FM radio, buill in CB .
8-tra ck player, crusie con·
lrol. Call&lt;-46·3346 .

- - - -----74 Chevrolet pickup, PS,
PB, good cond .• $1,200. Ca ll
446· 7654.

1979 Chevy Che velle. Four
door , hat chback, factory
luggage
rack,
und er
coating, new radia ls, one
owner , very low mileage.
Pri ced under book . Wi ll acce pt trade in . 667·3085.

Miller 16 HP gasoHne 1980 Dodge Mirada and
w elder on trailer, like new . 1975
c orvette . Both
Call 446·7383 .
loade d . Call a fter 5:30
p.m . 742·2271.
Building Supplies
ss
HART S Used Cars, New
Bui lding materials block,
brick, sewer p ipes, win· Haoven West Vi rginia . Over
dows, lintels, etc. Claude 20 less expensive cars in
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . stock .
Ca ll245·5121.
1975 Volkeswagon Super
Beetle, new paint, sunroof,
56
Pets for Sale
low miles, other ex tra s,
P OODLE GROOMING .
$2,600 . 304·675·2415 after
Call Judy Taylor at 367 · SPM .
7220.
70 Chall e ng e r
RT 440
DRAGONWYND
CAT· maginum . Call675·1606.
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow
puppi es,
CFA 1973 Plymouth Va Hent 6
Himalay an, Per sian and cy l. , ver y good con d. Ca ll
Sia m ese kittens . Call 446· 675· 2529 .
38(4 after 4 p .m .

----- - - - -

77 Thunderbird Town Landau and 7.4 Camara Z28 .
Ca ll304·458·1775.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boa rding all breeds, cl ean
indoor-outdoor fa ci l i ties .
A lso AKC Reg . Dobe r ·
68 Chevy . Ca ll 675·5019 for
mans. Call446·7795.
more informati on.

- - - - -- ---

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming .
Go rd o n se tters,
AKC
English Cocker Spanie ls.
Call388·9790.
Sm a ll part Ch;h uhu dog .
Call 379·2168.
Reg . Cocker Spani el pups,
b lo nd e colo~ . Ca ll446· 1262 .
Dobermans show quality ,
large type, gentle' temperment, beautiful ear
c rop, red femal e, 4 months
old . Ca ll992· 7888.

- ---

- - --

Rabb its for sale. Call 304·
675 · 7428.

For Sale or Trade
2 May tag w ashers, 1-$65., 1$45 . Clothes Drye r $65 ,
Di s hwasher $40., 23" B&amp;W
portable TV S35. Double
bum in oven $25. 742·2352 .

... _.. ,,. .... .
...............
-.

· ·~ - ·

,

I bl il!SIDEfl
61

Farm Equipment

JIVIDEN 'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT
446·1675
Spec i al Sale on NEW
LQNG TRACTOR!
Mode l
HP
Price
260-24
$~9U. OO
31()28 5594.00
31G-4x4-28 70l2 .00

36!)--

35 -

h
. -!
51()-

1976 Chevcrol e l Ma ll;bou
C 1assic
stationwagon ,
$2,300. Cash or t a ke ove r
payme nts. Cal l 304·576·
2456.
-:,--.,-_- - -- - 78 Chevelle automatic,
41 ,000 miles, exc . cond .,
$2,900. lOAM to 7PM, 2316
1/2 M ount Vernon Ave., Pt.
Pleasant .
·-

72

Truck's tor Sale

• r

2 bedroom mObile home for
rent .
Rou s h
Lan e,
cneshire, flhlo. 304·773·
5882.

5 yr. old ma'r e and 9 mo. old
filly . Call 379·2168.

MOBILE home for re nt
with option t o buy , 304·576·
2711.

3 registered ROlled herford
year,ll ng bull }:afls. ~14·985·
4107.
•.

2 bdr. mob ile hom e unfu rnished, COlJples on I y .
Call675·1076.

, 2 red Angus bulls, 2 years
old. Call675·5054.

ltve.s teck

f

r
Li~W/1.~!

... AT LEAGT Tl£ OOCTOR
DIDH'T
THINK TOfW'5
1
1 WOUND WAGTOO ~EIZIOUG!

I \'IE CAN CHECK !liTH

~~~~~~~~

•. DON'T FEEL TOO BAD l ~NOW, ANNIE •
AllOUT TH' GUY YOV THAT'S WHAT l'M
GHOT .• HE'LL LIVE! UP!lET AflOOT" .
YOU JUGT 60T ' IM
IN TH' THI61f!

1973 22' Sta r c ra ft ca m per
sleeps 6, se lf contained,
mint condi tion, $3,000 . Ca l l
446·8681.

SeF'IItes

•

---~- ------

Home
Improvements

STUC CO PL ASTER IN G
textured ceil ings com mer c ia l and r esidenti a l,
free est;ma tes. Cal l 256
1"182.
CA PTAI N STEEMER Car·
pet Clea ning fea tur ed· by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carqet s. Free es timates.
Cal l446·2l07 .

~AI ;;T-;~~nte;!ol a~d

ex t e ri or,
plumb i n g,
roofing , so me r em odeling.
20 yrs. e&gt; p . Ca ll 388·9652 .
--, ----~·-

~

A

dollars
worth,
Slim,

RON'S Television Servi ce .
Spec ializing in Zenith and
M otorol a, Quaza r , and ·
house ca ll s. Phone 576-2398
or 4.46·2.45.4 .

I'll qetthe

e~·dropper!

~asurea.

DYNASTY Blake
feigns bllndneaa and uae1 the
atory of N lck'a I ntended
revenge to teat Krystle; Alalda
wins an unauapected vi ctory
over Kryalle; and Colby balta
Claudia with Information about
Llnduy. (80mlna .l
CIJ NON-FICTION T£LEVt·
SION 'No Mapa on My Tapa'
George Nierenberg offers a
look at three black jan tap
dancer a, Sandman Sima,
Chuck Green and Bunnv Briggs,
who reminlace about the past
and a how ho w they are
co ntinuing a vary special

)OU 'RE .ef';:NT!I
THE ONLY PERSON
ON PECK 1$ ...

JYAtr/

~MEONE'S CQ\IING

O.JT OF-THE CAJIN
NOW! ANOTHER
A/lAB.•• ANO••• .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEAT ING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 446·4477

- --

10:20
10:28
10:30

D &amp; K Plum bing . Licensed ~
ca ll any t ime, 675·3378 .

THROW MY MAN
84

',

____

EleCiric a-, - - -

SNUFFY IN TH'
HOOSEGOW FOR,
SHERIFF?

FOR
BREAK IN'
AN' ENTER IN'
CALEB'S

HENHOUSE

NOW I GOT
ANOTHER
CHARGE
AGAINST TH'
VARMINT

10:58
11:oo

BREAK IN'

AN'

LEAVIN'

Generai"iiiluting

air cond., PS, PB, heavy JO.NI;S BOYS WATE R
duty suspension, crusie SE RVI CE . Cal l 367 ·7471 or
control, ralley wheels, low 367·0591.
mileage, $2,200, Call 1·304·
458· 1313 ,
97
Upholstery
For safe . 1978' CJ5 Jeep
TRI
STA TE
Renagede, good cond .,
UPHOLSTERY S HO P
$4,000. Call675·65&lt;15.
1163 sec . Ave., Gallipo lis .
446· 7833 or 446· 1833.
1979 chevy Sport Van 305,
auto., PS, PB, lilt wheel,
$4,000.00 firm . Call 304-895· MOWREYS Upholstery Rl .
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
3611 ,
675·4154.

'

ISHORUC~

ffi •CIJ CIJ .

CIJ®ltDI ID

~~~8HVILLI! RFD

Prlnranswar hare:

M

DICK CAVEn SHOW
c;JN UPDATE NEWS
11:30
•
COLLEGE BASKET·
BALL Flor;da ve. Ml11lulppl
ANOTHIR LIFE
BENNY HILL &amp;NOW
TN I! TONIGHT SHOW
Gueat: StiiVe Lawrence. (00
mlntJ
(I) CBS LATE IIOVII!
ABC CAPTlONI!D !~~!WI
MOVIE •(IIYITI!RYI•••
"1¥ SenctiOft" 1176
\
IBI• ABCNI!WINIGHTUNE
chorod by Tod Koppol.
11:00
TIS!V!NlNG NEWI
12:00
BUANI AND ALLEN

i t :28

I

Now arrange the clrcled leners to
form Ihe surprise answer, as sug gested bv lhe above cartoon.

r I I I I I XI )
(Answers tomorrow)

Yeslerdoy·s

I Jumbles: GLOVE

WIPED FO RGER BLEACH
Answer· Expec t a bicycle tycoon to be trea·ted like
this - A BIG WHE EL

JumbM Book No. 19, cont•l,..lng 110 puults, 11 aVIIIIble lar $1.95 pottpel .
from Jumb... c/o thl1 rteWIJ)Iper. Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 076ollla. lnclude 'J
name, add,.lt, zip code and mak• checks payable to Newapaperbooh .

BRIDGE
Take a second look
By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Soa1ag
NORTH

1-17-!t

+K

Today's ha nd looks like a
lay· down after the spade
' opening. Declarer has three
spades and two hearts as a
starter and plenty of ttme to
set up lour tricks in either
diamonds or clubs,
In actual play the hand Is
really a complicated one
since there are real problems In getting to cash those
malor suit winners. Suppose
declarer leads a diamond
from dummy at trick two. If
East takes his ace every·
thing ill hunky·dory. but East
· can duck and win a second
diamond. Then If East
decides that South must hold
both ace and queen of
spades, Eut ca n lead the
queen of hearts and will
wind up with two hearts1 two
clubs and a dlanlona. If
South plays a club a fter that
first diamond holds that
heart shift by East wlll still
defeat the contract.
The only winning play Is
for declarer to lead a club at
trick two. East wins and can
still lead a heart, but now
declarer can play a
.1 diamond. East will duck that
· · first diamond, but South will
win In his own hand, cash
one hlgluud_e and then lead

.A K8 5
• Q 10
.QlOI!II

EAST

WEST

• J 10 g 8 6

+14 !2
• Q J 10 I

.743
+632

tAH

+74

+AK
SOUTH

•8 z

+AQS
tKJ98 7

.J62
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
West

Nortb

East

1•

Pass
Pass
Pass

Paso

1•

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Opening lead:

South
It
2 NT

Pass

•J

a second c lub to score four
clubs , two hea rts, two
spades and one dia mond.
By the way. if West had
opened a heart the defense
could have collected five
tricks against a ny line of
play.

t:!lou•~•~"
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
DOWN
1 Wrap
l Provender
5 Wa lked
2 Nimble
10 Seaweed extra ct l ~'right •
11 Lombard
4 Work unit
12 High·pitched
5 Docume nt
sound
6 - you there?
ll Primates
7 Pic k up
14 Wallach
BSad ve r se
VIJ!Ite rday's An•wer
15 " We composer
Not Alone"
9 Signify
Z3 Italian
30 Playing
16 Conc eit
11 Proofreading d e licacy
fi eld
17 Get we ll
mark
24 Chaplin prop 31 Illustrious
t9 In good shape 15 Vouc h
25 Visigoth king 38 Before
2() Witticism
18 Foreshadow 26 Ve nnont city
Tues .
21 Flower
21 Famed
28 Scr een
37 Wome n's
22 Company
patriotic

24 Dray
25 Irish Islands
26 Interdiction
27 100 stotinki
in Bulgaria
Z8 Nursery
visitor•
32 Friend CF r . I
33 Anger
34 Ve nice's

ca d' 35 Boarder

37 Coffee
klatc h
topic
:Jll Smitten
39 English
composer
40 " The Mutiny"
41 Interpr e t

DAILY CRY.PTOQUOTE J uere's how to

11':4 i'EiiAIEEN
'(OU S~D TAKE

A NAP..

I

I

J

J
~

Z- 17

~C NEWS NlGHTLINE

i

chorod by Tad Koppel.
.
ftlllATENICIHT
• LOVI! BOAT A call girl,
... klnganowtKa,lothroal ...d
by a formM olfonliCopt. Stubfng
goea on a fitne•• program; and
two lonely people , each
grieving thelo.. or a loved one,
find happlnoaa wi1h eoch other . •
epeot; 70 mlna.)
.tACK RNNY
12:30
LOVE BOAT A call girl ,
aeeklng a new lift, 11 threatened
by a fo&lt;mercnent·

ffi

work

It:

AXYDLIIAAXR

Ia

L 0 N G PI E. L L O"ft'

One letter almply atandl for another. In thla aample A· Ia
uoed for the three L'a, X lor the two O'a, et c. Single letters,
apoetrophea, the lenath and !onnotlon of the wordo ore all
hlnta. Each day the code lellera are dille rent . .

ffi

PEANUTS

600D nl1N65 LAST
E16HT SECOND5•• BAD
llHIN65 LAST lllREE WEEK5

H~AVEN :

"Jazz

~

WHICH DO 'rtlli THINK
LASTS LON6Eit IN LIFE,
THE 600D THIN65 OR
THE 8AP THIN65 ?

r

tJ

()

P'UL..L..C:D 5-0ME:
61Fil:'lNI55 IN

ger" 11180

f;.;i"~ Re_!~igerat"io,n:____

85 -

CBN UPDATE NEWS
SING OUT AMERICA
ALFRED HITCHCOCK
E8ENTS
C.BN UPDATE NEWS

tt) MOVIE oCDRAMA) "

SE\1\'IN G Ma chi ne repairs,
ser~\i( e. Authori:zed Singer
73
lians &amp; 4 W. O.
Sale$ &amp; Servi cel Sharpen•
1977 Ford Bronco, 64,000 Sclss.o rs . Fabric · Shop,
miles, good c0f19, $3,200. romeroy ' 992·2274 ,
Cell446· 4l8S or ~ -7013 .
jAf;:KS REFRIGEi!ATIO·
1978
Chevy
van, ft . air condition service,
industr ia l .
c~sromlzed. Call &lt;146·7015 or. ~om~ercial,
F'hone 882·2079,
4-16·3084.

76 D\"1111! van &lt;100 e ngine,

~lrad~:::::I ~:)NEWS
1

---~-----.'

_.._

tDI.

lJ)

WHAT DID "'OU

71 Fdrd pickup truck, $350 .'
Call il.4-675·3123.
·

i

CBS WEDNESDAY
Nl.GHT MOVIE
8:30 ill G crJ LOVE, SIDNEY
Lauria's c haracter I a being
written ~ut of the soap opera
and Laurie haa to get another
job unleu her leGion of fana
comes to the rucue.
CIJ CHARLI!S M. SCHULZ: TO
REMEMBER A doc umentarybiography of the creator ol
'Peanute,' Including Interviews
with Schulz and frlenda ,
revealing the autobiographical
nature of Charlie Brown .
(jj) LOVE TAPES
8 :35 ()) NBABA8KETBALLAtlonlo
lifwka '!!..Utah Jazz
10:00 W . W QUINCY Quincy
jeopardlzaahlacareerwhenhe
tria a to prove that a killer smog
Ia reaponalblafor the dealha of
two people . (80 mlno.)
(I] THE GREAT PLEASURE
HUNT Pro'tloc.llve documen·
tary apaclat that aaarche1 the
globe lor the uttlmate ln aaxual

:.t - 1"1

LOCKSMITH
Se r vice .
1980 Toyota, SRS Pickup , Residential , automotive.
am -fm,
5- speed,
low Emergency servi ce. Call
mileage. Excellent . $5,500 . 882· 2079.
742·2877 a fter 5.

1950 Chev . pane l truck .
Runs good, rebuilt motor
and parts truc k. $650 . Call
742-2316 evenings.

·
• crJ REAL PEOPLE A
howling contest fordogt~~lnloa
Angeles: a MinnesOta m·an who
Ia devoted to pyramid power; a
prollle of dlac tockoy Dr .
Demento ; and a group ol
California youngelere who race
midget care. (8D min a.)
(]) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
SPECIAL
(J) MOVIE oCDOCUMENTARYI
•• "Thi.J1aEivle"1t81
()) tDI• THE GREATEST .
AMERlCANHERORalph , Pam,
Maxwell and the kid a become
the targeta ol a terrltylng
voodoo cult on a Caribbean
lalandwherepollticago hand In
IJ.!nd with murder. (60 mine .)
Ill C1J ®J
WKRP IN
CINCINNATI
CIJ A HOUSE DIVIDED :
DENMARK VESEY'S REBEL·
LION In 1822,1n Charleaton,
South Carolina, i pros perous
tree black carpenter turned hla
beck on hit owri freedom to lead
a rebellion to tree the elavea .
Vaphet Kotto and Antonio
Faroaa have the lead role a in
this special program . (90
mine.)
(jj) GOLDEN AGE OF TELEVI·
SION ' The.Comedlan.' a play by
Rod Serllng, atara Mi c key
Ro oney a a a megalomania c
comedian who thrives a a a TV
star by devo uring everyone
around him. (90 mine .)
8:05
A_LLlNTHEFAMlLY
8:30.
CIJ®l THE TWO OF US
8:35
MOVIE -(DOCUMENTARY)
••~,~a "In Search Of Ancient
Aetronauta" 1tt7!5
8:58 (]) .(;_BNUPDATENEWS '
8:00 (I). (f) THE FACTS OF LIFE
On a visit to New York City with
other girl a from the school,
Nata11aaees her father having
lunch wilh a woman who Ia nol
her mother and muat decide
whether to confront him with the
knowledge.
Cll 70Q_CLUB
())tDim THEFALLGUYColl
goes into high gear when he.
agreaa to help a beautltul
woman flnd her bro ther, a
gambler ahe leare will be killed
by the mob for hla debta. (80
mlnY

&lt;&amp;.a...... ._

Mar c um
Roofing
&amp; .
Spouting . 30 years ex- ·
perience, speci alizing in
budrup r oof. Call 388 9857 .

82

PROFILES IN ART
•
ENTERTAINMENT

CJCIJ®l

~-

Call 446·2801 fo r te rm ;te,
roach , bird, roden t, spider,
and f leas control. Free
estim ates,s Bill Thomas.

Water well s. Commerc iat
1979 Ford Ex p lorer, 24,000 and Domest ic. Tes t ho les.
miles, topper , many ex - Pumps Sa les and Ser vice .
tras, exce llent condi fion . 304·89 5· 3802.
Call446· 8034 a ft e r 3 :30.

1975 Ford F 150 p;ck up
tru ck 51.250. 949 ·2544 .

I I I X)

7:3511s':~oRD
AND SON
C..BNUPDATE NEWS

. H05PITALLATER ...

81

ISMOTEGt

7:58
8:00

W8'Vt:. Bt:e~ SPE'IJD1~0

rJ

1

ow

l

ANNIE

1979 23 fl . Layton t rave l
trailer $3,500. Loca ted in
Racine, Ol"'t . Call247·3925 or
247·3774.

PM MAGAZINE
(]) THE NEW BIBLE BAFFLE

l

I.

1975 Ford T880 15 fl . stee l F &amp; K Tre e Trimm ing, ·
dump , gas, 5 &amp; 4 trans .• 34 stump removal . 675-1331. ·
rea r r ears. 1972 Ford T9000
20ft. alum . dump, ttriaxle,
318 Detr iot, s &amp; 4 trans., 38 R ING LES'S SERV ICE ex·
perienced mason, roof er,
rea rs. Phone 614-991·3861 .
carpent er,
el ectric ia n ,
gene r a l repa i r s and
70 Interna ti onal pickup , re m odeling . Phone 304·675·
good cond. , $450. Call 256· 2088 or 675· 4560.
6309 after 6PM .

'

•

I

Auto Repair

camping
Equipment

m•

i
!

r WANT" TO TEACH YOU
iVEilYTHINo THAT '!&gt; ~EI'UL.,
HA~DY AND HeL-PFU L, FRIDAY.

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . Professional custom
pai nt w ork on mot orcyc les .
Auto T rim Center, 446-1968 .

~--~ 't

3 bedroom
furn i shed ,
washer, dryer, air, and
awning . No pets. Deposit
and utilities. 992-7479 .

;

8' Ford tru ck be d. Ca ll 773 ·
5528 or 773·5950 .

78

EVENING

ENTERTAINMENT
TONIGHT
HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH
(jj)
MACNEIL·LEHRER
REPORT.
NEWS
• MUPPET SHOW
.
7:05
CAROL BURNETT AND
lEHDS Gueat: Jim Naboro .
7:30
• YOU ASKED FOR IT
ANQ.TIIER LFE
. ( I ) FAIIILYFEUD
·
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
ANDCDMPANY
CIJ NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT .
®J RICHARD SIMMONS

For sa le 1973 to 1980
Chevrolet power steering &amp;
poer brake changeoover . 3/ 4 ,
ton Chevrolet truck· frame
and
rearend . Custom
sunroof, poli shed crank
shaft for 350 cu.in. Chevy
eng ine. 350 cyl. heads . Ca ll
388·9684 after 6 :00.

6555.00

48 .5- 7778 .00
51G-4X4- 48.s- 9886.00
51()48 .5- 8450.00
61()64
9314.00
61G-4&gt;4-64 - 11.304.00
Plus Freight

2 bedroom mobile home for
re nt. Call675· ·3885.

- .- - -- - - --'-- -

stock , fit most . 25-.50 per
ce nt cost. Porter, Oh. Ca ll
367-0236 or 367-7101 .

17

() I

~OW

CAPTAIN EASY

h

TIPAL

WEDNESDAY
FE8. 17 , 1e82

1977 Harley Daovidson 1200
custom·. Must see to appr ecia te~ Ca ii446-701S.

Sa le Date March 13, 1982
CALL NOW I

. I

78 4·WD Bronco 351, air,
Automatic, new tires,'
stero· tape, captain chairs.
Call675·6438 .
,

1978 Subaru 4 w :D. s tat;onwagon. Needs engi'ne work .
30·35 m .p .g . $1,400. or
might t ake gun , roto·til ler
or Grave ly as partial
t rade in . 992-7241 ..

Antiques

------~'-

Television
•
•
v1ewmg·

73
Vans &amp; 4 W,D,
':!._~~~~-

74

SWAI N
A UCTI ON F URNI TURE &amp;
PAW N SHOP 62 Ol1ve St..
Ga lli polis . 3 nice bedroom
2 bd r t rail er in Kanau ga, suites, gas &amp; elec tr io
par ti ally furnished . Pay ranges,
5
us e d Whirlp ool 30' el ec tric
'Own utilti es. Cal l 446-7044 refr igerator s, 2 new frost r ange,
ni ce .
Maytag
be twee n 9·5.
lree refrig . a l $275.00, 3 automati c- washer . Norge
pice livi ng ro om sui tes e lec tric dryer . Ca l1446·2674
Tr ailer t or r ent. Call 446· $199.00, 2 p iece living room or 446·8181.
0756 or 446·4225 .
suites $140 .00, love sea ts
$70.00, wood dinet se t wi th 4
shape butcher block
2 bdr . trail er furni shed , c aptain chairs ( new) counter top, 6 ft . .x 4 It , SSO.
adults on ly, Brown Tra iler 175.00 , li noleum ru gs 9x 12 Kitchen light to match $25.
$ 10, large owl la mps $25 .00, Bot h brand new. Call 367·
Pa rk , 992· 3324 .
padded map le rocke rs 0394.
$34.00, new &amp; used wood
Ni ce 1 bedroom furni shed bu rn ers f rom $60.00 to
mobile home . 9 m ile fr om $275.00, severa l chest and Kin g coal &amp; wood burner,
Pom eroy on Rt . 33 . Phone dressers, varie l y ol si lver $300. Ca ll II conta;ned, m;nt
co nd lt ;on, $3 ,000. Cal l 446·
fo r a ppo; ntment992· 7479.
stone cook ware , .d uti l ity 868 1.
kitchen cabi nets, TV ' s,
2 bedroom house tra iler in dinet sets, beds, desks, and
Ra c ine. $175 pe r month . $75 lots mor e. Open lOam to Excelsior Oil Co., 636 E .
Ma in St ., Pomeroy , Oh io.
deposit . You pay util it ies. 5pm , 446·3159 .
992·2205.
Unf,;n loh!!d 1bul k;tc he'1··
11
·
614-367-nn : · •·
-'
Maytag ma tch pair washer
1
1!. dryer , fully guarant eed, 8 H . P . Gr ave y Riding
2 b e droom trailer c loSe t o s225 _Call 256 _1207 _
Mowe r . Exc . c ond . 5450.
sc hool, s tor es, and park .
949·2544 .
Deposit requ;red . M id ·
_:..:JL:.::========~
dleport. 992·59 14 .
Mobil e home for rent . Ca ll
446·0390.

Wright

'J,~ ,r

Antique horse wagon show
condi tion, harness &amp; bridle,
$600 . C a II 446·6309 .
S4

by larry

c-....·. ~ -

19 c u. ft . re fir gerator .
La rge f reezer, avocado G.
c. $200. Huff y 10 s pd .
b icyc le , new, Sl35 . Call675·
2635 .

1 stero JVC turntabl e with
1120 Luxman rec iever and
2 Bose spea kers, will consider se lling separate. Call
388·8556.

-·---

KIT 'N.' CARL VLE ...

LA YNE ' S FURN ITURE
Sofa, cna1 r , rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
c ha 1r and loveseat, S275.
sota5 and chairs priced
from &gt;285. to $795. T abies,
$38 and up lo $109. Hide· a ·
beds. $340 ., queen si ze. $380.
Rec11 ner s, $175 . to $295.,
La mps fr om St 8. to $65 . 5
pc. difettes from $79., to
$385. 7 pc ., 5189 . and up.
Wood table wi th 4 chairs,
19 up to $495 . Desk SllO.
Hutche s . $300. and $375 .,
maple or pine f inish.
Bed room suites
Bassett
Oak . S675., Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete
wit tl mattr esses, $250. and
up lo $350 . Ca pta in's beds,
$27 5. co mple te . Baby beds,
$~9 . Mattresses
or box
spr ings. full or twin, $58 .,
f irm , $68 . and $78. Queen
sets. $195 . 5 dr . c hests, S49.
-4 dr . cnests, S42 . Bed
fram es, S20.a nd 525 ., 10 gun
Gun ca binets, $350., dinette chairs $20, and $25. Gas
or eledr f ranges, $295 . Orth oped ic super fi rm, $95,

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

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AXHNTAH

Yetlerday'l Cryp!Gquole: WHEN SOME MEN DISCHARGE
OBUGATION YOU CAN HEAR THE REPORT FOR

AN

MILES AROUND.-MARK TWAIN

�PomeJOy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12 The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Februaiy 17, 1982
j

Meigs ASCC
The Meigs County Agricultural
Stabilization and Conservation Committee has begun accepting applications for the 1982 farm
programs.
Secretary of Agriculture John
Block recently announced acreage
reduction programs for wheat, corn,
grain sorghum, barley oats, ric~ l!'ltd
upland cotton.
To be eligible for loans and target
price protectior. fanners must sign
up and comply with the acreage
reduction program requirements,
Holter said.
For reducing their wheat acres by
15 percent, farmers will be eligible

ac~epts

for the $4.05 per-bushel 1982 target owned grain reserve. Feed grain
price for wheat, a regular loan rate · reserve loan rates are $2.90 a bushel
of $3.55 per bushel, and a grain for corn, $2, $2.37 for barley and
reserve loan rate of $4 a bushel.
$1.49 per bushelfor oats.
,
The acreage reductions and
Farmers who reduce their feed
grain acreage by 10 percent will higher Joan rates will help
receive federal target prices of $2.70 strengthen farm prices, Holter said.
per bushel for corn; $2.60 for The tand taken from production and
sorghum and barley, and $1.50 per devoted to conservation uaes must
bushel for oats. They will also be be eligible cropland and protected
eligible for loan rates of $2.55 per from wind and water erosion.
Participation in the 1982 farm
bushel for corn; $2.42 for sorghum,
$2.08 for barley, and $1.31 per bushel programs is voluntary. However,
·
for oats.
only th~ farmers who take part in
According to Holter, 1982 wheat the program will be eligible for
and feed grains will be eligible for benefits, the ASCS official said. The
immediate entry in the farmer- sign-up period ends April16.

Squads kept busy

ladder truck. The cab of the truck was dangling
precariously 25 feet off the ground after an accident on
Interstate 20-59. ( AP Laserphoto).

TRUCKER RESCUED- A truck driver who spent
anxious minutes clinging to the wreckage of his tractor-trailer rig was rescued by firelighters In a hook and

I

Area deaths

Bessie Hill

I

Mrs. Sheldon (Frances) Fishman,
bolh of Lansing, Ill.; a son, John A.,
Chicago; grandchildren, Craig, MIMrs. Bessie Hill, 50, Columbus,
chael,
Cathy, Michelle and Allison;
former Meigs resident, died Tuesclose
frtends,
Patrtcla and Stanley
day at Mt. Cannel Hospital In
Berta,
Cheshire;
brothers and sisColumbus.
ters,
Edith,
Veda,
Harold 11nd HasMrs. Hill was born March 4, 1931,
and
several
nieces . and
kell,
a daughter of Grace Glaze, Middlenephews.
.. '
port, and the late Homer R. Glaze.
Mr.
Mole
was
a
veteran
of
World
Surviving In addition to her
member
of the
War
II.
He
was
a
mother are three sons, Ray and
Retailers
Assn.
and
had
Gasoline
Carl Byers, Cincinnati; Marc of the
Oll
been
affiliated
with
the
Clark
U. S. Navy In San Jose, Calif.; four
daughters, Loucrtta Cheatam, Or- Co. for 25 years.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
lando, Fla.; Louanna Smeck, Pa- ..
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
taskala, an IX:nlse Byers and Usa
Home with the Rev. Lloyd Grtmm
Byers, both at home; tour brothers,
VIrgil · Glaze, Middleport; Carl ·officiating. Burial will be In Gravel
Hill Cemetery at Cheshlre. Frtends
Glaze, Longview, Tex.; George
may call at the funeral home at anGlaze, Walton Beach, Fla., and
ytime after 6 this evening.
Harry Glaze, Fort Dlx, N. J.; two
sisters, Anna Pullins, Columbus,
and Louise Radford, Pomeroy, and Harvey C. Rockhold
Harvey Clinton Rockhold, 78,
four grandsons.
Preceding Mrs. Hill In death In Reedsville, died Tuesday at hls
addition to her father were five
home.
brothers, Donald, Ray, Homer,
He was born In Wood County, W.
Va., a son of the late Marcellus and
Herbert and Glenn.
. Mrs: Hill donated her body to Marteena Barber Rockhold.
·science. A family memorial serSurviving are a daughter, Helen
vice will be scheduled later. DonaBartlmus, Reedsville; two sons,
Donald, East Uverpool, and Woodtions may be sent to the heart fund
row of Toronto, Ohio; a brother,
In her memory.
CUfford, Reedsville, several grandchildren, great-grandchildren and
James C. Mole
great-great-grandchildren.
Besides hts parents he was preJames Carroll Mole, 55, Checeded In death by his wife, Lula Bell
shlre, formerly of Varnville, S. C.,
In 1974, a son and a daughter.
died Tuesday at Veterans MemorServices will be held at 2 p.m .
Ial Hospital.
Thuisday at the Eden United
He was a son of the Ia te Willie and
Brethren Church In Reedsvllle with
Lllla Prtester Mole. Two brothers,
the Rev. Eldon Blake officiating.
Hersey and Wallace, also preceded
Burial will be In the church ceme·
him In death.
tery. F'rlends may call at the Whlte
Sury\vlng are two daughters,
Funeral Home In Coolville at
Mrs. Richard (Linda) Garnes and
anytime.

Commissioners
accept b~d
New motor vehicles to. vartous
agencies were dlsdissed at Tuesday's regular session of the Meigs
County Commission.
The board. received one bid for a
new bus for the Meigs Community
School. ·Thls was from Edwin H.
Davis and Son for a 19 passenger
vehicle with a base prtce of $17,800.
The bid was accepted subject to flnanclng arrangements to be made
through the commissioners and the
board of mental retardation. Commissioners expect to finalize acceptance of the bid by Feb. 23.
Commtssloners received bids on
three new ambulances for the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
. Service. Submitting bids were Graham Ford, Inc., Columbus; Bruan
Industrtes of Oakwood; Rolland
Specialty Vehicles and Products,
Toledo; Springfield Equipment
Co., Dayton; Burgess Hearse and
Ambulance Sales, Loudonville, and
Shoemaker Ambulance Sales of
Norwood. It was decided to table all
bids to give the commissioners and
the EMA Board of Trustees tlme to
study them.
The commission appointed the
Rev. Robert McGee of Pomeroy to
tierve on the Gallla-Meigs Community Action Agency Board of DIrectors to rm the unexpired term of
Barbara Roush who recently
resigned.
Jane Walton and Carson Crow
were appointed to serve on the Tuberculosis Board of Trustees to fill
positions vacated bv Dort~ Ewing

Pick up day set
Customers of the Meigs County
Food eo.op program are to pick up
· their orders on Thursday from 3: :.1
tO 4 p.m. at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy·

and Barbara Knight.
Commissioners received a notice
from the Ohio Department of Ll·
quor Control stating that objeclons
to the Issuance of a new D-5 permit
to Roger L. and Sonya D. Prater,
doing business as the Candlelight
Inn, Route 7, below Middleport,
must be filed with the departmPnt
by March 1.
All members of the board, Rlchard Jones, David Kobletnz and
Henry Wells, along with Clerk
Mary Hobstetter, were present for
the meeting.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Michelle Adams, Ru·
tland; Eugene Smith, Pomeroy;
Anna Koenig, Reedsv1ue; Lora
Luellen, Middleport; Norma
Evans, Portland; Martha Hopkins,
New Haven; Freda Buchanan,
Long Bottom.
Discharged--Michelle Adams.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK!

Eight calls were answered by 1&lt;&gt;cal units Tuesday and on Wednes·
day morning, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
.
At 7: 22a.m. Wednesday, the Rutland unit took Everett Shuler from
Meigs Mine 2, to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
On Tuesday, the Middleport Unit
at 2: 22 a.m. took Barbara Stahl
from N. Second Ave., to HoJzer
Medical Center; at 10: 48 a.m. took
Lori Louellen from High St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 3: 50
p.m. took Roy Boggs from Second
Ave. to Veterans Memortal; at
11: 12 p.m. treated Willlam Imboden at her residence on Oliver
St., and at 12:45 p.m . handled a gasoline spill In Cheshlre. Pomeroy at
10: 26.a .m. took Ellen Koenig from
Route 7 to Veterans Memorial and
Rutland at 11: 21 p.m. took Howard
Zlerler frrom Meigs Mine to O'Bleness Hospital In Athens.

PIZZABURGER

$1.09
With Fries • . . . . . s1.49

Adolph's Dairy Valley
PH. 992.2556
570 W. Main

"located at the End of the
Pomeroy· Mason Bridge."

Pomeroy, OH.
•

MAKE
BOOKKEEPING
SIMPLE
. Easy Check-Writing/Check-Recording

M'eets Feb. 25
A meeting of the Eastern Local
School Dlstrtct Board of Education
scheduled for thts Thursday even·
lng has been changed to 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday, Feb. 25, at the high
school.

applications

ALL

WINTER
MERCHANDISE

Program Designed for' Small Businesses!
Syatem u Shown

50% OFF

Serves as cubmaster

ALL NEW

Charles Willlams is currently
serving as cubmaster of Rutland
Cub Scout Pack 240 rather than
Paul Musser as listed In a Cub
Scout report In Tuesday's edition of
The Dally Sentinel.

SPRING
MERCHANDISE

,... ~r

20% OFF

,, .

, .

:&gt;.

··•.

-

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BIDDING
PURCHASE OF
THREE SCHOOL
BUSES FOR THE
EASTERN LOCAL
BOARD OF
EDUCATION
Sealed proposals will be
received by the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local School District of
Reedsville, Ohio, at the
Treasurer's Office until
12 :00 noon, March 12, 1982,
and at that lime opened by
the Treasurer of said
Board as provided by law
lor three (3) ~ passenger
school bus according to
specifications of said board
of education.
Specifications and in·
structions to bidders may
be obtained at the office of
the Treasurer, Eastern
High School Building .
A certified check payable
to the Treasurer of the
above Board of Education
or a satisfactory bid bond
executed by the bidder and
the surety company In an
amount equal to five per·
cent of the bid shall be sub·
milled with eer" ~id .
(" · · _ . . u, u ut Education
reserves the right to waive
inlo~malilies to accept or
re1ect any and all or parts
of any and all bids.
No bids mar. be with·
drawn for at east thirty
(30)
days alter
the
scheduled closing time lor
receipt of bids.

STORE HOURS

Mon.-Sat. 9:30 till 5:00

TRS-80 Model m Desktop
Computer
.
o Line Printer VIll For
Checks, Reports
o Check Writer-80'" Program
o

ftad1e lhaek
IDDIE SHOPPE
111

w. 2nd

Pomeroy, Oh.

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

Replace y(Jur pegboard
sy~eml Fill In the checl on
the screen, then prlflt checks,
expenl8 sumrnarln, end
registers-end even reconcile
statements.

SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST
'RAOIO SHACK STORE,
COMPUTER CENTER
OR PARTICIPATING DEALER

PRICES MAY VARY AT INOIVIDUAL STORES ANO DEALERS

ELBERFELD$
MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

SALE! METAL STORAGE CABINETS

BOARD OF
EDUCATION OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
ELOISE BOSTON
TREASURER OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900 SR 7
REEDSVILLE.
OHIO
45772

(2) 17, 24 (3) 3, 3tc

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;w1

REDUCEo20%

ARTCARVED SILADIUM®

CLASS RING
NOW*7995
WITH THIS AD

'

PLUS up to 126
of custom options FREEl
Plus Full Lifetime Warranty

liRTQ1,~YfQ
~c.

WARDROBES- BASE CABINETS -CHINA CABINETS
UTILITY CABINETS - White, Grain or Almond Finishes
Sturdy Construction
•

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212 E. Mel!!, Pomeroy
•wrNo IN THII AD ,01111111 mciAL cw'EA.

•11~82 ArtCIMid Ci•u Alnga, Inc. Otter upirt~s Mly 31 , 1982

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ELBERFELD$ 'IN POMEROY

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