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WINTHROP

BUT AF!§f.;

SO I DeCIDEDIO ~F
A~ND R:R AN HOUR.

LAZY WHEN I ~r
HOME' FfqOM 5CHOOL- ...

I

zero.
.
"This Is a real emergency," declared Mayor J&amp;l)e Syn1e In Chicago, where t)le merCury dropped
fOUlld tra~lers stranded tn.bllnd·
·
to minus 26, the lowest temperature
tni blizzards and thousands left
ever
recorded In ~ Windy City.
wl~ power Sunday In wind
The Wlnl! chill factor wu mlnlis 81.
chWs
low as
. .as
;:
. .90 degrees below
.

I ~T KNON .'M-fY I BOTHER

HALF A LQA.F 15

13ET I ER THAl--l NONE.
f

,· i t

'

•

iO . I ELL HIM .ANYTHING-. ·

•

•

\

•

.

Priscilla's Pop
WHAT ARE '-rOU
PONii'ERING 50.
STUART?

.

I'M AE!OUT TO
I!UILD A
SNOWMAN/

.

.• -•
•

.'by Ed Sullivan:

CHILLY STROlL- Few people were folllld outside~ ~elr homes Ia
Cblppewa County, Michigan Sunday, the colde&amp;l spot ID tile utloo with
temperatures reacblng 31 degrees below zero. Northwest wlodJ of 58 m~
gave a 50-71 below zero wiud cblll factor. (AP Laserpboto,).

· 10 l'llgoo 15 Conls
1\1 -Mul~modia
Inc. N o -

0

At least U deaths were blamed

home today and let the few that
could travel to Des Mollles handle
and In western New York state, the formal q~enlng of~ 198'lleglswhere 2 feet of fresh snow !ell, the latlve session required by the state
Onondaga County sherU!'s depart- Constitution.
. .
metlt resumed il. search lor a 22Water pipes were frozen from
year-old hiker.
Vtrglnla to Dllnols and flretlghtei'!J ·
A J'!llnus 26 reading Sunday In were hampered bY frozen hydrants
Chicago was the coldest since ob- lrom the Great Lakes to Sedalia,
servers began keeping records Mo.
there lnl870andMUwaukee'sreadChicago kept Its buses running all
lng of 25 below zero was the coldest
night to avoid trouble starting ~bern
since 18'75. In Beulah, N.D., the , this morning, and w~
wtnd-chW Index plummeted to 100 D.C., kept 25l subway trains runbelow.
ning arotmd ~clock to keep them
Below-freezing· temperatures warm.
stretched Into the . South, where
Thousa'nds . of apa~tment
''People are doing a lot of praying,
dwellers In New York Clt;y and Chlbasically," said John L. Jackson . cago complained of no befit.
Jr., an agrlcult111'al extension agent
In Zionville,~ .• where gas lineS
In cltrus'rich Lake County, Fla.
froze, aulhorttles ordered residents
Blowing snow and blt1Jlg cold
to abandon 1,000 homes and leave
forced road crews to give up at- them unlocked so crews could get In
, tempts to clear highways In South to llght pUot lights when ~ gas
Dakota, Iowa and Ohio.
comes hack on. Pollee Chief Phil
A comblnaUon of the cold snap Pannelee ordered an overnight
and snowstorms have claimed 16 curfew to prevent looting.
lives since Sat111'day.
A shelter was opened at ~ ZIJeff Behrens, a National Weather onsville Middle School for refugees.
SeiVIce forecaster In 'Kansas City,
Natural gas supplies were al8o
Mo.. said temperatures In the threatened In seven communities
Midwest and East would not be In Iowa and In Atlanta, where ~
quite as cold today as Sunday but . temperature dipped to 5 below_
the arcUc air mass would keep today.
temperatures well below nQnnal
Power )lnes, made brittle by the
though Thursday. He said tempera- cold, snapped In 1\lgh Winds, leavtures in the South would begin to Ing customers without eJectrtclty
moderate on Tuesday.
fo~ hounlln Vtrglnla, Kansas, MlsSchools and factOries were closed sourt, okiahoma, Arkansas, west
• as tar sooth as Alabama. Molt VIrginia, Wlacorlaln, Dllonls, KenIowa lawmakers decided to stay
tucky and Indiana .

on ~weather over ~ weekend,

'1'ET IN5PIRIN6 .REPLICA OF
·. •THE UNCOLN MEMORIAL.

'

Meigs schools closed today;
Fire destroys Rupe family home
,

.

'

The·homeofMr. and Mrs. LarryRupe, Langsville, bumed to~
ground Sunday attemoon and almost all of ~tamlly's poaaesss''JRS

were loll.

c:.
c::::..

It was reported that~ blaze beaanuachlmneyf)i'efl.bout2p.m.
The famlly threw drawers of clothing out the upstairs windows, 'but
ttwucaughtln~htghwlndandwentlntotheflames.Someplct111'e

albums and yearbooks were save along with a few other Items.

DI'N~UR

.

Magistrate acquits instructor

WA!i,
HAVE IT"· ·
THE CLA~C · FtGURE.'

BECKLEY, w_va. -A 27-year.Old high school science tel\cher
has been acquitted ol charges result1Jlg from an overeager student's
deslrii to acquire claasroom bonUA polnta by robbing a grave.
Uberty High School students and teachers broke Into applause .
Saturday when a magistrate court jw'y found David W. Dodd 1Jm0.
cent of charges of contributing to ~ delinquency of a minor.
During the trial, ll).year-old Kevin Sarrett, a Uberty High School
junior, testltled he dug up the grave of a woman Identified as}cy
Snuffer In a family graveyard In Bolt, W.Va., In order to eam 500
polnta of credit" In Dodd's class.

MIGHT I3E

INTERESTING:'

Bills won't increase dramatically
COLUMBUS, Oblo - BIDs for customers of Ohlo Bell Telephone
· Co. won't Increase dramatically Pnless the PubUc Utilltles Commission of Oblo "falls down on~ joil," a fonner commisSion chalnnan
says.
.
"As bad as the PUCO Is, even tl!eY wouldn't allow Bell to get away
with 9lll1lethlng like that," said ~lumbus attorney Henry Eckhart,
who headed ~ commission trorh 1m to 1973.
ObJo Bellls'one of 22local telephone companies AT&amp;T must sell
under

~

settlement.

Will submit handwriting sample
COLUMBUS, Ohio- Rose Ann Basso's attorney has decided to
submit voluntarily a handwriting sample soogbt by the Franklin
. County pi'OIII!Cutor In ~ Investigation of a $1.3 mWlon shortage In ,
the state treasury.
.
. •
·Ms. Basso, of Sprtngfleld, Is an associate of former state cashier
Elizabeth Boerger, who was employed by state Treasurer Gertrude
Donahey when ~ Shortage occurred.
Asllstant Pna:cutor David Johnson had filed a motkJn. Dec. 3lln
Franklin County CornmoD Pleas Court seeking an order to compel
Ms. Basso to give ~grand jury a sample that had been prepared
earlier at the proeecutor's request.

lnsurrectioni$ts .larul.
'
. on islarul.

.
. "NOW, THEN...SHALL WE START WITH THE

.· LOOPI:iot.ES OR lllE DODGES?"

"...BUT WITH THE TAX CUT, IONLY NEEDED ONEI"
,

.1i·'--

..• -

M1AMI - A tiny group of i:nsuJTectlonlsts who said they would
Invade Haiti landed on a small Island off the nation's coast, bUt were
chaled Into ~ hills Sunday by aecurlty f()['!:e&amp;, a newspaper said.
A few llhotl were fired, but there were no lnjurlei on the -~
day of ~ effort by a Florida gu station owner and his band of
HalttaB exiles to foment an upr181ng In their homeland, the Miami
Herald reported.
'nil! Herald said about lliO BJ'ined soldiers were ready at Port-DePalx whfll the exiles came .uhore on Tortuga, a tamed 16th century
pirate refuae.
.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy lalliht with poulble flun1es. Lows around 0. Partly
cloudy n-~&amp;y. Hlgbs ~~~. ChaDceoflllOW40percent tonlibtand·

llpezcentTuesdaY- WlndsW'I!IterlytoeouthwelterlyaroundlOmph
~

WI f

0

I

0

,..,_.,"

I

I

"I FIGURE THAT IF THE GOOD LORD WAtm[) US TO DO

TRICKS 14E'D t4AVE MADE US ACAOBATSI"
..

.,
I

"TRY AQU~ POUNDI.IF YOU DON'T LIKE IT YOU
CAN ALWAYS:M.IT IN YOUR HUSBAND'S LUNCH!"

"u .. l'r!IIQ, . . . . .ltWI,
11J 1'rt11Q '!* I I
I

•

rt

I

\

I,... I, .......
"''ltolJ.II

1 .Fm11rw hr..al'ltdaJ.Notqufte

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

t

All Meigs County' school closed today as temperatures continued
below 21ero coupled wtth cold Winds which made the chill factor even

worse.

~lgs residents for the most part, however, were siaytng by the
home fires when (losslble and the county was faring well compared

JD other areas.

'l'lra
'SJnM 'loTIIGdlf

·

·

Those 1n the plumbing bus(Jiess were swamped with calls over the
•weekend as the dipping temperatures froze water pipes and lumaces went out of working order. Sue Ann Beegle of Ohio Valley
Plumbing said that she was recejvlng calls for help on the average of
every five minutes on Sunday.
People needing help with geUing their lumaces back Into working
order were being given priority over frozen water lines. By Monday
mOrning, only five furnace calla remains but ~re were numerous
frozen water pipe calls remaining,
The Oblo Power Coolpany reported this· morning that lt.had no
outages and while ~re were a couple of tire calls over the weekend,
there had been no wave of fires resulting from efforts of residents to
keep warm In ~ sub zero temperatures.
Stores were ppen as usual although cmtamers were scarce since
few were venturing out of their homes except In case of necessity:
Middleport pollee were busy wit!\ calls from residents who could
not get their vehicles started and there were some calls, referred on.
to servtcepeople,ln cases of furnace repairs and fro7.!!nwaterplpes.
The sheriff's otnce reported no calls related to the weather.
Ponieroy Vlllage was reCeiving routine calls of people having
difficulties with their cars, water and furnaces but theSe were being
re!errecl on _to service peop ,

By The A8IJoclaled ...._
Snow , bitter cold and klllflng Winds that sent the chill factorplung1ng tO more than 50 below zero stalled hundreds of cars, forced some
Ohlorns to seek other shelter arterthelrhomeslostheatandclalrned
at least one U1e, authorities said today.
At 8 a.m.,~ NaUonai Weather Service said the wannest !f!mper·
ature In the state was zero at Cleveland. The coldest locations, Akron
and canto!). reported 5 below and winds gustlngto39 mph, causing a
chill factor of 52 below.
Gov. James A. Rhodes said hlsofflcewaskeeplng aclosewatchon
the weather and ready to clrr out disaster aid If r;leeded.
''The severe weather conditions In Ohio and especially the snow
situation In northern Ohio are being mol)ltored ... I have advised
(disaster service) agencies to be prepared for emergency measures
If worsening weather conditions warrant such action," Rhodes said.
Ohio,National Guard troops were called out In Tlttln, Where they
used four·wheel-drive ambuli!Dces ''to pull people out of boines that
were withoUt heat," said Lt. VIctor Dublna.
Dublna saki about a dozen guardsmen were working with Seneca
County sheriff's deputies ln Tiffin. He said the guard also opened Its
BowUngGreen armory In case people ~re needed a place to stay.
At Painesville, poUce saki Wlll1am L. Reilly, ffi. Lansing,.Mich.,
died at a hospital Sunday night after being Injured when a tractortrailer truck skidded Into the rear of his auto on Interstate 90.
At Brunswick, Fire Chle~ Martin J . Rooy said about a dozen people
were housed In the fire station when power went out In part ot town.
Several .thousand Cleveland Electric lliumlnatlng Co. customers
were withOut ~r§unday , .the utility said.
The East Ohio Gas Co. said It sold 2.49 billion cubic feet of gas from
8 a.m. Sunday ro 8 a.m. today , a 30 percent lllcrease over the same
day last year. The highest figure for 1981 was 2.3 billion on Feb. 3.
From the U.S. Coast Guard station In Marblehead, Chief Petty
Officer Dennis DeGou!f today said temperatures on frozen Lake
Erte was so cold that most Ice !lshennen stayed home. Put-ln·Bay
pollee said blowing snow on the lake also kept Ice fishermen there .
.

Indoors.

Snow was worst In the northern part of the state, where vlslbWty
was aU tNt non-existent Sunday night and early today. Motorists
were adVIsed to stay off ~ roads.

Mason Countian.
dies in accident
B)' Lee Kampmeyer
Cold weather dipping below 0
degrees fahrenheit resulted In
power outageS tllrOUgbout Mason
County over the weekend and
created slick road conditions

wbloh contributed to the death of
a Point ·Pleasant man Saturday.
James W. CallJenter, !!8. ot 21.15
N. Main St., died from hea!llnJurles
IIUBtalned In a stnele vehicle aocl·
. dent on ltt.. 35..near Frazier's Bottom In Putnam County, according
to ·the sheriff's deparlrnellt there.
. Carpenter, who w.u operating a .
milk tanker, apparenUy hit an Icy
spot In the road, causlni his truck to
oVerturn. He died I!III'OUte to a
South Olarlelton hoiPital. ·
The cold weiltller IIIIo tl!lulted In
plenty of~ for MaDI
COUnty zf!IL'IN!tl whfll a main
traillfonner, owned by Appalacl1lan Power Co. failed yelsterday
~atLaldn. ·

Ell!
UIIIID .._
r'BJ lluuulh l'llllaJ:.
.

Governor summons' Guard

- plumbe~ swamped with calls_

'

ALTHOUG-H A

-

.

ICY AFfERMA111 - A b~ltdlng In Chicago Is covered wltll Ice
following an extra-alarm fire tllal gutted It and two other buildings durlilg
record low temperature Sunday. Seven multi-alarm fires hit Chicago by
ll p.m. Sunday, so far the coldest day In the city's history. lAP Laserphoto).
·

Bitter cold paralyzes Ohio

OR PERHAPS -A RESPECTFUL

I WANT TO
00 50METHING CLASSY AND
UNIOUE·..

0

Brutal cold continues

3C/.MINUTE5"
'MY MO'l'HeR eeNr ME
OUT ON AN 5~RAND. .

By .4uir' tod .._
The coldest day of ~ 20th
centli!Y for much of ~ Midwest

'NELL, 'IOLJ t&lt;NON 'THE
.
OL-D 5A'YING-•••

..

Pome..-, Mlddlepolt, Ohio, Monday, •uory 1-1,.1912

Dick Cavalli.

! WA5 FEE:LINGr VERY

enttne

at y

e

~

•

•

AI a relult ol tile outqe, cable

teli!YIIIon lt!I'VIce Will kno clled out
tempOl'll'lly for 7,(WIIIIIIeltben In
~. MeiP 8lld MuanCOUildel.
Mcordtna to Rlclwd Newell,
Sout!lenl DIVIIIaa ,........ ol Cab-~t. cable wu out

from 5 a.m. to 11 a.m. for~ com·

pany's sou~m system, which
serves ~ Point Pleasant, Hend!!r·
son and GalllpoUs, Oblo regions and
up to 9:30p.m; for the norlhern system, Including Muon, New Haven
and Middleport, Ohio areas
yeSterday.
Full aervloe was restored at ap.
.proximately 10: 30 p.m. yesterday
followlni attempts to alleviate ca. ble 1118ppage In the r_Jiall1 cable
trunk In four different locations.
NeweU said workers were delayed
making repairs because ot II mph
wlndi In -6 degiees Fahrenheit
weather.
•
Mayor J . J. Wedge _reported water prelllln! wu moderate now for
Point Pleuant 81 oppoaed to the
lncrealed pt e:uure dlll'ln&amp; ~wee­
lu!nd beca1181! ol the demand !or water. He IBid any problema wttll '
water )W!re back In order and said
warmer weather would Improve
problema wltll frozen pipe lines.

tJie .county were re-

he

VANDALISM-An act of vlllldalllm ooew 1ed over the weekend at t
portahllck tn10111espota, but'fho.. Elberfeld'• !!tore Ia Poineroy, d ;Me thuevere cold w~r. The g1all
mas ;'TUcker" Mayes, Malon Ia the troiil door wu brola ouuem llnw!ll11lardaJ 1iJPt and waa dl8c&amp;
.-..~.-tor tile w VIr vered lledaJ manlaa· Acour .... to tile report not111n1 w~ mlllllni fro111
County ......... eet - · tile ltllre. Gte~ 04n1, 11,-. who linmd·the cold MondaJ, Ia pic:
=~)'SIBid lUnd 88 11e waa &amp;Jterllic the IJtore Maadat ....... to do a bltoflhopplnlf.
Roads In

!'!:

�....
Monday, January 11, 1982

Commentary
·

......-2-Jhe Dally ....~ ...
M'd '1p llrt, OW.
1'· 1912

'-•••r

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0

"What are the Odds of s guy like me making It .
through the mid-/He crisis?"
·
,
I

'T hat's one way
of looking at it
The breakllp of AT&amp;TI That's one way of looking at It. But IB that really
what happened In the agreement between IJw world's biggest corporation
and the federal government? Or Is there more to It?
Sucb as the unfettering of a hamstrung lndu.strtal giant with unmatched
research · taclliUes, an existing multlbiWon manlifacturtng capacUty,
know·how In data transmiBslon and capabillUes In electroniC computing?
Couldn't you Ylew the consent decree as a magnificent stroke by whlch
American Telephone &amp;Telegraph dropped Its least profitable operatiOns
and freed Itself !rom regulation to competelnwhatmanythlnklB the great
growth buslness of the future, that IB, tntonnatlon services?
VIeW It as a move by whlch It freed Itself from regulations that have
shackled Its abWty to compete with Intematll;lnal BusinesS Machines or
General Electric, and that hav~ sometimes denied It the fUll benefits of
major research by scientists at Its reknowned Bell Laboratories?
AT&amp;T was a Gulliver !led down by Uttle things, namely regulations.
Several years ago, points out Leonard Hyman, analyst at MerrUI Lynch,
the company was ready too offer what It called AdvancEd Conununlca·
dons Systems, 1n whlch computers would transfer ma&amp;&lt;~lve amounts of
data !rom place to place, a seJV!ce for which the company seemed well
qwdltled.
·
.
·
.
It pulled back, however, because of uncertalnUes about whether It was
allowed to operate In thiB area. "The law said coommunlcations but not
computer services," said Hyman. The ll!w was conceived In another age.
"The difference between the two haa been fading away," said Hyman.
Now, by means of creating a subsidiary, a "Baby Bell," as they say,
AT&amp;T !ef!111S free to go ahead with ItS computer services. Tbey,COI!Id, by
the company's estimates, provide prollts In the hundreds ol rnlJllons of
dollars In five years or so.
'
Hyman gives another example of the f111Stratlons thai might now be
converted to opportullies. AT&amp;T makes a lot of tetmtnal equipment, Including hof4!l switchboards. Those switchboards were more than'lhat;
they told the front desk when air conditioners were being used or when a
maid had finished making up a room. And that brought up the question:.
Was the switchboard a telephone tennlnal device -or a computer? If It
was the former, AT&amp;T could )lloceed. If,the latter, II could not.
Continued computer and transmission Innovations are forging a world
of Information that cannot yet be fully Identified, but which Involves the
posslbWty of the home itself becoming a two-way lnfonnation center, tied
In to cable television, computers and what IB still referred to by that
old·tashiOned tenn "telephone seiVIces."
In such a world It Isn't difficult to conceive of Bell Laboratories, one Qf
the world's great th1nk tanks, and Western Electric, one of Its biggest
manufacturers, playing Important roles, now that they are free to
compete.

in ~- history

Today

Today IB Monday, Jan. ll, the 11th day of 1\£!. There are 3M days left In
the year.
Today's hlghllghtln history:
On Jan. 11, 1963, the United States aild Soviet Union began talks In New
York on a possible treaty limiting nuclear tests.
On thiB date:
In 1569, England's first lottery was drawn in St. Paul's Cathedral under
the patronage of Queen Elizabeth the First.
In 1962, an avalanche burted an Andes village in Peru,leavtng a reported ·
3,ro:l people dead.
,
In 19"10, the 32-month-old secessionist Blafran regime in Nigeria
collapsed . .

And In 19111, Iran warned of war If the U.S. Navy blockaded the Strait of
Honnuz In an etfort to free the more than 50 American hostages held by
Iranian militants.
Ten years ago, East Pakistan recognized the new state of Bangladesh.
Ftve years ago, Cyrus Vanql, who had been a top Defense Department
official when the U.S. expanded Its role In VIetnam, told a Senate panel
!hal, tn hindsight, It had been a mistake to Intervene.
One yeer a110, Israeli Finance Minister Yagael Hwvttz resigned, bring·
ing Menachem Begin's government to the brink of collapse.
Toclay's birthday: Fonner Conunerce Secretary Juanita Kreps Is li'l.
Thought For Today:,I am always ready Ill learn. but I do not always Uke
to be taught. -Sir Winston Churchill, Brltlsll statesman (1874-1965).

The Daily Sentinel

-.Ohio

111 C..rt Sbwl

llf.III.IIM

DEVOTEIITO'RIE INTERESTOF111EMEIG8-MASON AREA

.

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BfR~ ~._-.-,,...._o:;::~,,.

~v

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
hblltlo.:r

PAT WHITEHEAD

Many Catholic bishops are experiencing a most extraordinHry .
revolt. Nonnally, revol!;i against"ec- ·
clesiastic•l authority are induced by
actions deemed by the people as
abusive. Sometimes they are In the
other direction - the followers of
Archbishop Lefebvre believe that
Vatican II went overboard. Few
Catholics in the United States
grt'tlted the dispensation from the
old rule that no meal could be conswned "!' FridHys by definitely
eating only fish on Friday. But the
, recent decision by the bishops to
back the Hatch Amendment in
Congress is being most actively
resented by a nwnber of American
C.lholics. For reasons · that have
nothing to do with the bishops'
authority but with the issues in·
volved, many Protestant and Jewish
'opponents of abortion also oppose
the Hat!!h Amendment.
What happened was that the pending question before the relevant
committee of the Senate - whether
to declare that Congrt&gt;ss believes
that the protections of tbe Fifth and
14th Amendments exterid to hwnan
beings from the moment of conception, l"dther than from the
moment of birth - had been bogged
down. Senator Hatch, who opposes
abortion, was induced to give his
name to a measure which would beg
the direct philosophical question, ad·
dressin~
itself instead to the
jurisdictional question. Namely,
who decides whether abortion shall
be legal?
The Hatch Amendment would in
effect repeal Roe _vs. Wade, the
Supreme Court's 1973 ·ruling thai
unenwneraled rights of womei1 were
subordinate over any right of the
state over the practice of abortion·.
When word got out ,that the Hatch
Amendment would. receive the support of major anti-abortion groups,
the Catholic bishops included, there
were protests from those who
believed that the bill is not properly .
the subjeel for theological approval.
Whether it deserves political approval is another matter. Could II be
a first step, 01.1 the way to a second,

or a third, which wOUld result in
go·anting constitutional protections
to the unborn, even as it required a
siring of civil rights measures, stretching over 100 years, fully to emancipale·American Negroes?
,
On the political matter, Senator
Hatch was in for a most em·
ba1·rassing setpack. Because
somebody, somewhPre, got hold of a
memordndwn addre!!Sed to Senator
Hatch by his legislative aide, Mr:
Stephen Markman, who is also
!(eneral counsel of the Senate
Judiciary's Constitution Sub·
couuniltee. That memo, which has
bt!en dubbed a "smoking gun" by its
. critics, frankly discW!ses the
political prospects of th&lt;i proposed
bill, concedes !hat it probably will
not result in a constitutional amendment; and openly acknowledges the

likellhood that "some ~~enators may
feel that they can cut a politically
advantageous vote in support of the
amendment with tbe knowied~e that
the me!lllure will be defeated later
by the HoW!e or by the states." Tbis
is an old congressional habit - to
vote in favor of a bill you knOW·will
not be palllled: but in So analyting "
measure whose propulsive force is
entirely moral, such street-talk
analysis tends to sound a little
cynicaL
·
· It is the point of the critics of the
Hatch Amendment, in evaluating
the bishops' endorsement of it, that
you have here clasllically a political
measure which the bishops have no
business identifying themselves
with. II it is morally correct that a
fetus is a. hwnan being desesrving
.the same protections an infant child.·

de~~erves, then no civil authority
-o~ht tp have the pQWer to sanction

its execption. No Congress and no
slate le~islature, the antiabortionists feel, should have the
authority to sandion a form of murLier.
MY own view is that a civil sanction against abortion will u!Urilately
prove to be superogalory, the moral
case having been niade with sufficient resonance. I( tomorrow the
Supreme. Court discov~red that the
right to own a slave was after all an
extension of the right to privacy'
many Americans would rush to the
markets to avail the1naelves of the
new opportunity; although such a
ruling would almost certainly · not
repeal the .laws of supply-side

Rlek Edwards ,

not

However, Lindley and other officials pointed out tllBt the state tax,
Uke the federal, must be paid when
the money IB drawn out of the account. However,ln most cases, the
IRA holder Ill Ukely toll!! In a lower
tax bracket In retirement and wW
pay less tax.
Some members of Republican
Gov. James A. Rhodes! cabinet already are casting about for jobl,
looking ahead to January 1983\vhen
the four-tenn governor leaves
c(flce,

.

Rhodes can't seek n!oelectlon this
year due to a COIIIItltu~ prohlbl-

tlon agallllt three consecutive

~Tbe following IB a reapo1111e by
Thoma a W. Paakeo, Director of AC·
TION, the Natlolllil Volunteer Ageo~
cy, to the Jack Andel'IIOD column of
Friday, December 18,1981 . ~
Jack Anderson's colwnn regarding VISTA, is fraught with inaccuracies and does a disservice to the
ACTION Agency and the many
talented people who work in the ACTION organization.
First, the colwnn, apparently
authored by Corky Johnson uf Mr.
Anderson's staff, states that there is
"secret planning" under way and a
''sneak attack" to phase out the
VISTA program. 'this is simply untrue. Our intent to phase out VISTA
in 1983 was first publicly announced
last spring by then Acting Director
Dana Rodgers. It has also been
reported in nwnerOW! publications, .
and has been te~tifled to in
Congress.
Second, we are not "deny(ing)
certain nonprofit grou{lll an opportunity to reapply for VISTA
volunteers ... " With very limited ex·
t'eptions, any projec1 oemetl re»ewH1'
• lias appeal rights which are gover·
ned by the !lllme appeal pro&lt;;edures
thai were in place during the l!lllt Ad·

tteonomic~ .

TUPPERS PLA[NS - . The
Eastern Junior High girls' basket· baU team, now 2-:4, recenllysplittwo
decisions in cage play. Eastern
dropped a close 20-17 encounter with
Meigs, then rebounded to edge Bidwell 26-13 behinl) a 12 point final
quarter attack.
Although the girls of Coach Pant
Douthi~ showed a lot of im·
prov~ment in their' game, Eastern
dropped its .contest with Meigs 26-17
after outscoring its opponenlll-7 the
last half. Eastern loOked much bet·
ter at the foul line than in the !Jas~
but had problems getting its offense
off the ground in the first badf.
For winning, Meigs' M. Musser
and R. Zirkle had six points each, D.
Thomas had four, J . Couch two, and
G; Kennedy two. Erica Kessinger
aoo Beverly Wigal each had four for
Eastern, Krlsti Hawk three, Tonya
Savoy three, and Joy Brannon three.
Kristi Hawk had eight rebounds,
Kessinger five, Brannon five, Wigal
two, andKim Dent one.
In a well-played contest at Tuppers Plains, Kristi Hawk led the winners to victory over Bidwell with 12
points, the score 26-13.
Beverly Wigal had six, Joy Brannon four, Erica Kessinger two, and
Tonya Savoy two. For Bidwell V.
· West had eightandM. Robie five.
Eastern led 8-2 at the half, but Bidwell cut the lead to 8-7 in the third'
before the hosts recovered
to claim a
.

'"'l

l&gt;-8, Senior forward•

4-71eadatthequarter.Easternwas
KristiHawkandJoyBrannonalso
credited with playing both a good of- dominated the boards with 13 and
fensive and defensive game.
nine respectively, while Kessinger
Bidwell downed Eastern by six · and Savoy added three, Wigal pne,
earlier In the year, but this time Kim Dent one, and Michelle Wilson
around the hosts' patience paid off, one rebound.
by working the !&gt;all into the iwo low
Eastern plays at Shade tonight at
posts.
5:30.

Jp -;::

&lt;. ,'.

.8 a' 'I

f_...(,.

efficiency."

1"'.:___.:_':· __________:_____~---------~----------===========::._.:::::.:::.:=:_

1

,{~'-!

l

Urbana1

I

"'!"'

,·f

' ,'

• J .:

I

URBANA - Forward Watson McDonald led a furious Rio · Grande
comeback from a 13-poinl deficit in
the second half, blit it wasn't enough
as the visitors dropped a ~7 MidOhio Conference bout to the Urbana
College Biue Knights.
·
The loss dropped the Redmen of
coach John Lawhorn to a 15-4 overall
and 1-2 in the MOC, while coach Bob
Cawley's Blue Knights upped ·their
slate to 6-10 overall and. 1·2 in the
leai!Ue.
Rio Grande jumped out to an early
22-18 lead in the first 10 minutes of
action behind nine points by McDonald and eight by Vince WoDenburg. But the Redmeg went cold
from that point managmg only one
field goal in the next seven minutes.
The Blue Knights ran off 10 unanswered points during thai stretch for
28-22 lead. Rio's Paul Morrison
broke the string with one of two at
the line to cui the deficit to five, but
Lonnell CwTie slipped in a drive to
put the lead at 30-23.
Urbana held a 38-3llead at the intennission,
Currie hit a drive and an eight fool
jumper and Willie Flunoy a drive for
six unanswered points and a 4+31
Blue Knight lead in the opening four
minutes of the second stanza before
Rick Penrod netted a drive, McDonald a jwnper and Tom Jutze a
·tip to cut the margin to ~even with 15
minutes remaining.
McDonald scored 10 points as the
Redmen chipped away at the lead,
cutting it to three -' at 54-51 - with
just 6:37 showing. The teams traded
baskets unW the 3:17 mark when
McDonald hit a follow up to cut the
difference to 61-59.
,
Currie hit a free throw to put the
lead. back at three, but McDonaia
responded with two free throws to
make it 62-61 with just two minutes
left. Lorrell Huff countered with two
"free throws to put the marMl.il back
at three.

minl~tration.

We are presently - in early spring at the National program was politicized and shotreviewing the11e procedures, but we Press Club in Washington, D. C. throu~h with cronyism under my imanticipate· thai only a few modest Other Interested groups sub- mediate predecessor, Sam Brown
aoo his colleague, Marge Tabankin:
changes will be made. In addition, sequently received copies of the list.
ACTION has not been threatened by
Indeed, last year the Washingtonany commitlee of COI'lgn!IIS.
It is important to note that the list based Heritage Foundation, in its
Third, tile; criteria by · which is merely a small repreSMtation of " Mandate lor Leadership"
VISTA projeds 'are judged Is the literallybundredl of VISTA projects. publication, stales ita concern that
same as that which existed during and project descriptions that were the Reagan Administration look into
the Carter Adminllltnitlon - with placed into our recorda prior to my "effl'Ciively reslriciling) VISTA
one importalll exceplilll - we no ·arrival. Several of the projecta on volunteers from union organizing
longer reqllire projects to be in- the list have sinee been refunded, and from lobbying state and local
volved in "communil)' o•·ganizing" several have not been refunded, goverrunents und lei!islatures." Our
as a prerequisite to receiving VISTA ~~everal have not reQuested further files are replete with Congressional
volunteers or Federal funds. This finding, several have gone out of inquiries raising these same t'Dilkind of activity has often led to deep existence, and still more have not cernts.
divisions within communities rather reached their renewal dates.
than fostering positive relationships
Fifth, I am somewhat dismayed at
. The VISTA program has had very
among different segments of a com- the following asaertlon in the An- limlted success at a very high per
munity and pooling~ for the derson colwnn : "PBUken uaed hls capita volunteer cost' of appurpose of alleviating poverty.
training In covert operations wlien proximately $8,000. Furthennore
he prepared the 'hlt list' of 39 non- · more than 35 percent of all votuO:
· Fourtll,•" the An • • 1 col1111111 profit ~ ~ would be denied 1 ~rs do not serve .tlll!ir full tenna.
refers to ''die 'hit IW 4 • nonprofit fundllll.
·
\:. With tbe lour de force of a Houdini
groups." There simply IB no VlSTA
being tolaU) falae, this
Anderson t'Dlwnn lll!lnaged t~
"hit list" or list of "targeted" assertion lllilkes light of my having tum a perfectly proper and abovegroups. I am pen10118lly awa"' ,of volunleered to serv~_ln Vietnam~ board attempt to ,._ out the
only one lilt c02JaSTA Projecti. lt my short st1n 10. ~ 1n- .~A .JII'OIIrarn inCo some sort of 8
was compjleil to sbow the kinds of telllgence. Franld¥., I do rMJt un- .~er~~~tlonal and myStelious spyl
groups and pollciea that were ado de_rstaootherelev111CeorJ1111110Rof thriller. It is too bad the claims and
vocated in the . put aoo wu fint this g~twtoua re11111'11.
allegations were not checked rior ·
distributed - publicly, .I rnl&amp;ht add
The fact II .that the VISTA · to the article's releaBe.
· P

BANK ONE's IRA lets you set aside
tax-deferred savings of up to $2,000,
deductible from your income tax each year.
If you have a non-working spouse, you can
contribute up to $2,250. Of course, if you
and your spouse both wo~; you can each
open an IRA and contribute up to a total of
$4,000 to your plans. And you'll earn high
money market interest rates for an
inflation- proof rate of retum.
The chart below illustrates how quickly
your financial future can grow.
You can choose one of
two ways to eam your interest
at BANK ONE. ·
You can choose an
interest rate which is
set for 18 months.
Any new funds
deposited will earn

a

Bell._

DOONESBURV

---

•

·-

A liiEMBER tl Tloe Atoticlolorl Pratt, loltutol Doly Pna ..._.... ud lht
A1111rle. . Nrwap~ptr Pu'M hm A.IMNU..
,
LE'ITI:RIOP'OPINION1rt ,ekamei. fttJ ..... bleleN diu . . . . . . . . . AU
lttlen .,.. _.Jed to &gt;diU., uti .,.,, bt olpod .,.. aiDe, ud ....,.,_
=-.::=..~wlllbtJII-LetlmUooldbtlo ..... tute,_... I;

67.

...
'

.

YouWII~
AIAgtollll~

30

$ 966,926

20

$3,042,435

.. This assumes that you make Jl $2,000 contribution at the beginning or e9dl ytar at a 12"1. Interest rate ,
and that you leave funds In your IRA rhrougtl your 65th year.

There Is a substantiallntarest penalty If eatW.wittlchwal.

...
Stop_b yany
BANK ONE office

for details.

;

'This lslhe interet! rate and eHe&lt;flve aMUal yield.

Whc,..... you lhlnk .

.

URBANA (681 - Fonkenbrne 5·0·
10· Flunoy 10·2·22; Draher 2-0·•;
HuH 4·2-10; Davis 2-0-4; Curris 5-4·
14; Roberts l -0·2; vaughan 1·0·2,
TotalS 30'1·61.
Halfllme- Urbana 38, Rio Gran·
dell .

I"

In

.

the 18-month rate in effect at the time
they are deposited. (During January the
1'8-month rate is 16.25%~) Or you can
choose a variable rate plan. (The variable
rate in effect for January is 14.09%~)
Act quickly to get
.
the best tax advantage.
Whether you sign up for a fixed rate plan
or the variable rate plan, you will be assured
your money is earning inflation-proof interest
for your retire111ent. To maximize tile taxdeferred interest you earn, you shpuld make
your contributions as soon as possible after
the first of the year. ,You will receive monthly
statements on the status of the·Accqunt and
your funds are
insured by an
AGE
AI\,10UNT
When You Open
agency of the
lburiRA '
federal .
50
$ 83,~
government.
40
$ 298,667

ACCOUNT

RIO GRANDE (67)- McDonald
15·6·36; Jutze 3·1·71 Morri!Oh 0·2·'2; ,
Penrod 3-H; Mowery 2·0·4; Wallace
- 1·0-2; Wollenburg 4·1-9. Totals 21·11 ·

DALEIMOI:LIU'DDt:a.
... I._ N:;:~:..~
. ...
:.'\i,.3 , ,~ .~· ~~ ;
'
· ~~ ~ ~
-

_______

••
•

•

upsets
Redmert

BOBHOEFUCH

...........~lllltriC. . . . .

them to secure the win and ice a 72: 12.
Friday night the little Marauder.
~ v~IOJY, '
ville-Y~r~ Buckeyes· Placed tbfee ·
· Meigs hit a t;old 18 of 62 from .the · dropped a 36-32 decision despite. 10
inen in double , figi,IIU' !0 handily rle~canned mne of 1~ from the /me, ·point efforts from Jay Evans and
defeat ·Meigs' Mllra11def5 72~ here · couup~itt~ 14 personal fouls, 13 lur- Rick Chancey. Spriggs had 23 for
Wellston.
,
.
Saturday . evening ,in • non-leagu~ noven an~had 19 rebounds.
Meigs travels to Federal Hocilng
high school boys' bllsketball contest.
· N~!Sonvlllil-York canned 31 of 75,
The sh&amp;rp-shooti!lg trio of guarll sank IO of' 16 at the charity stri~, on Tuell!lay, hosts LoJ!an Thursday,
Torn Taggart, and !f51 men Brian had 12 fouls, 12 turnovers, and · ~ then again hils the road at Jackson
on Saturday.
Ma~ and Tim l&gt;Jaiden,·ignlled a :!4 rebounds.
.
.
Meigs (45) -Ashley 5·2·12; Riggs
poi~f secOnd quarter sh•IIing thai 1 In the prelirrunary COI)tesl the hi- 2·0·4;
R. Edwards 3-2-8; Ko~al&lt;hlk anever ·anewed the, ,Marauders to · Ue Maraude~ ~Coach M1ck Childs 0·16; Murray
D-0-0; Whaley 0·2·2; M,
recover.
,
·
p1cked up a . b1g victory over the Edwords 0-3-3. Totols11,f·45.
N-Y 1711 - Taggart 10·5·25; Man
Taggart. contrlllled the outside ! young Buckeyes. After trailing 14-12
; Pitts 1·0·2; Malden 6· 1· 1);
game with' 25 pOints, while Mays and at the_half, then coming up short 24- 7·2·16
Schentz 2·1·3; Woodson 0·1-1; Corl
Maiden flanked the Inside game with 23 gomg mt the final canto, Me1gs ney 7-'0· 4; Grantham 2·0·4. Totals J(16and~3pointsresPectively. ·
overcame the .hosts for a 3S-3~ ,win. 1D-72.
By Quarters :
Roger Kovalchik had another good Greg Taylor led Meigs with 13 ~lnts, Meigs
17 7 ~ 15-45
gamej with 16 polqts and Bob Ashl~y while N-Y's Randy Grantham had N· Y
18 14 17 23-72
dwntied In 12.
·
1
Despite dropping friday night's
. L'Dnlest to Wellston, Meigs put forth Montana'&amp; fulure
a tremendoW! conleback effort. That
--------------rnonienlwn carried over into SaturSAN FRANCISCO (AP~ - "In
BW Walsh of the San Franc!JCO
day's first fram~ as the Marauders two more years Joe Montana wW 49ers, said. "He's ptovldlng the
· trailed by jW!t orie at the buzzer, Ill- ' be a star quarterback In the Na- 49ers wtth the best quarterbacking
17. Unlike Friday.'s contest, Satur- tiona! Football Leaau_e," his coach, they' had 1nce JOhn Brodie"
day-'s cage tilt saw Nelsonville-York
...
ve alsoscompared Montana
· to
Walsh
.break open a 12-24 halftime lead
Dan Fouts, thecrackpaaserofthe
from which t he locals never
r_ I I
r {
I
San Diego Charaers.' "I th1nk Joe's
1 ~ career ts going to parallel Dan'a,"
recovered.
.
·~ ·
--' I
In the third frame, N·Y rat.tied off
. - /~
the coach added, "Joe may not
17 more points at a blazing pace,
\
throw for as many yardS bllthewW
while limiting the Meigs crew to jW!t
be the same as Fouta from the
six. In the final round, the winners
standpoint of leaders, hlp and
outscored the visitors 23-15 allowinll l 'u iiii.H "-lv.-.d...... ~u ... uv ' 4 .•)KI'

.

Thomas W. Paukeri

,...-------

Mark Friend

Hl, Junior forward

Young Eagleettes split two .games.

tenns. He wW have served 16 years agency; Robert S. RYJin as illreCtor
over a 20-yeai' span, slltlna out a ot elle!'iY, and T1mothy Moritz as
tenn !rom 1971-1!r15.
menial health chief.
One cabinet member said privately be was starling to look
Legislative leaders received a prearound for future employment and liminary report thiS week on a
would leave early If the right otter
study ·to detenntne what kinds of
camealong.
·
!nicks and other vehicles do the
Several Rhodes cabinet
most damag1! to Oblo highways.
members alreiu!y have departed,
But Alalstant Ti'ansporwtlon DIapparently amicably and citing rector C. Clark Street said the re- ·
various reasons.
port primarily outlines resean:h
The latest Is PhB!p s. Hamilton,
pl'oeedures to be used in the overall
·
who resigned u administrative Investigation.
services director ~ open his own · Language In the 1981·1983 trans-'
public relations f)nn In Columbus. porlatiOn budget requires the cJe:
Othen over the past several partment to "determine the
months Include James Mc!.voy
relatiOnship among highway activifrom the envl!'onmental protection ties - such as consructlon, design,
and malntenancl'

A response

Rlck Chaneey

'
5-9, Junlot'.Guard

Ohioans will get st~te tax break, too
COLUMBUS, . Ohio (AP) Ohioans opening those highly·
touted -Indepenclent Retirement
Accounts (IRA's)' wW get a state
tax break plus the federal break.
Tax .Commissioner Edgar L.
Lindley says the state Income tax
wW be lowered because of laws requiring Ohioans to calculate their
state IlabWty on the basis of their
adjusted gross Income for federal
lax purposes.
. Noting that the new federal law
allows single IRA holders to deduct
up to $2,(0) a year- $4,(Xxl for some
married couples- from their gross
Income, the commissioner said.
"That makes it automatic on the
state Income tax."

bomb Meigs

By SCOTT wOi.Flt
NELSONVIIJ.E .- the Nelson-,

_T he Hatch Amendment.,__-..,;.,:_w.;;.:.:.:mi.a:.::.;.,;m..;...:..F...;._.B~iwk~le:r~Jr.

Berry's World

'

Buc~eyes

MeeJ the·. Meigs Marauders

...... ,.,'*"
&lt;

The Dcilly Sentlroel ,, ,, 3 .

, Poie•Or Mlddi:E art, Ohio

olsnlniiiiOIICJiOUr 111me

comes up first. -

..,

--

BANKONE,M
BANK ONE OF POMEROY . - 'IJ)
'

~ember
'

·

._,

FDIC

POM!fl()Y•AUTLANOeTUPPERS PLAINS

.

...

.

'
'

..

�,Paa----4 . The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 11, 1982

The

Bengals, 49ers,.earn .trip to Super Bowl
.

,Helen Help Us

.

·Mother nat\lre
assists Bengals

'

down and one IIE'kl goal, refused to
"We were dressed for It; the only
people It really a!!ected were the ·
quarterbacks - they weren't
dressed lor it. We have no ex·
cuses," said tight end Kellen Winslow, who. SCOJ'ed San Diego's Only
touchdown. He caught a sc~rr
· pass tram quarterback Dan Fouts
that went lor 33 yarils In the second
quarter.
"I can't tmagtile a w!ndler,
colder day. We were just lucky It
wasn't wet," Fouts saki. The
Chargers' quarterback, who threw
for an all·tlme league record of
4,tm yards during the season, said
his' hands were numb during an un·
characteristic 15-!or-28, J.8.'&gt;.yard
per1ormance.
"The two Interceptions I threw
.MUNCIE FUMBLi;;s - San Dlej~O Chllrgel'll numlng back Chack
were the difference," Fouts said.
MuQcle (46) looes the lootbaD as he Is upeoded by Clnclmlatl Beagals
Meanwhile, his rival, Ken Ander·
son, did not throw a single lilterceplinebacker Reggie William~ dllrlng llllrd qurter actloa of the AFC cbamtion and the Bengals had one
piOilllhlp game Sumlay In ClnciJu!all. Benpbt linebacker Jim~ (55~
meaningless fumble.
ill In background. Muncie lambled lhree limes in the coaletil. (AP Luerphoto).
The NFL's Most Valuable Player
In 1981 hit 14 of 22 passes lor 161
yards and two touchdowns, 8 yards
to M.L. Hams In the first -quarter
that gave the Bengals a 1~ lead
and 3 yards to Don Bass In the
fourth quarter.
Pomrruy &amp;wiJa&amp; l...aHtl
IAn!!Sholx
·
Elrly Wedaeldly
High ~~erie:t - Bob He1~Jey 803, Carolyn
"It was just a matter of survival
Mix..SLeape
Boc:lv&gt;erllll; John Tyree~. BeltySmlthOOII.
out there," Anderson said. "Play·
....... 1M2
High game - Bob Hensley 222, Carolyn
Zide'sSportShop
a.cm.r 232 ; Bob Hensley m, maxine Du..:an
lng In the Super Bowl Is beyond be- Tony'sC.rryOut
201.
tiel. Maybe somebody better pinch Ea~lesCiub
Team aeries- Eaglt~~ Club 1992:.
Sm1th's Body Shop
Team game - Smith's Body Shop~·
me. It may be a dream, and I may Smith-Nelllon
Motor

Local Bowling

wake up.''

Cincinnati cornerback Louis
who Intercepted one of
Fouts' passes, thought the
Chargers' quarterback had more of
an adjustment with the weather
than did Ander'son.
"He (Fouts) likes to throw the
ball down field. Youcouldn'tdothat
today because of the wind. Kenny Is
more adept at medium range. That
helped us,'' B~en said.
B~en,

to."

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Quar·

alibi.

LonjjShots
High series '- Ray Roach $75, Isabelle Couch
572 ;,RlpiS Car1011 $73, Betty Srnilh rm.
H1gh game - RWIH Cai'Dl 222, Isabelle Couch

214; DobCouchiOI BettlSmJthtot.
r~am ~ies - zltte·IIJ Sport Shop 21fT.
Team KJ~nle- ZIIJ(MSportShop'n2.

Zldc:'•Soort Shop

Tony'• ~rry OUt

Ml.ledLnpe
Det:.IUMl

1'11.

Tony's Carry OUt

8

Ea.:les Club
Zid.:'sSport Shop
Smith's Body Shop
Smilh-NciHon MotorM

Pll.

Elo!ks Club

Eartyw_,
T"'m

Dee.•• 1181
Tr.•

6
6
2

2

14
12

10

Smlth'l Body Shop
8
SnilfP.:Nelson Mol""
I
I..OOIJ Shota
\2
High aeries - Bob Hensley ·590, Pat Can~on
~74; ftly Roach571, Debi Hellllley $10.
Hhth 111me - Bob Hensley 225, Pat Coll.nmn 212 ;
RMy Roach 212, Pat Carson 208.

Team ltlries - Ea~lt!s Club 21176,
Team ome - E"MIC8 Club 726 .

The 49ers were 2·14 In 19'19, when
Montana was a rookie 9ut of Noire
admitting to deltrlous dlsbelle!,lnto . Dame, and both1tte 49ers and Ben·
gals were &amp;-10 last season. This yeSuper Bowl XVI.
"I dell'! know bow I'll\ going to ar's Super Bowl will be the first
~ It All I know Is that I'm not since 1969, when the New York Jets
&amp;001( to miss curfew In Pontiac," upset the BaltimOre Colts, that two
sMd offensive tackle Keith Fahn· teams with no Super Bowl expe.
bont. cine of the few old pros oo the rlence will be meeting.
team that beat the Dallas Cowboys
28-27 Sunday to claim the National
· "I'm just glad for my teamFootball Conference mates, both the ones here and In
championship.
Cincinnati,'' said San Francisco
runittng back Lenvll EDiott, a
Molitana directed an 89-yard former Bengal, who cartled four
drtve ag8tnst Dallas 1n the closing times lor 31 yards on the gameWinning touchdown drtve Sunday.
minutes. He rolk!d to the right and
Success-starved .49ers' fans,
threw a &amp;-yard touchdown pass to
making
up most of record Can·
wide receiver Dwight Clark, who
.
d
lestlck
Park crowd of 00,525,
leaped high near the back of the end
erupted
'
I
nto
a celebt'atlon of joy as
zone to make the catch with 51 seRay
Werschtng
klcked the extra
coods remaining.
point after Clark's touchdown to
Coach Bill Walsh, the man who break the temporary 27-27 tie. ·
~ the plays tor Montana, called
A lew seconds later, when Dallas
It "oneollhe'treatestcomebacks!n quarterback Danny White comNatlooal FoOtball League history."
pleted a pass to the 49ers' 44-yard
"1bat last 49ers drtve for some line, the celebrating seemed a bit
reast11 was unstoppable," said
premature. But on the next play,
Charlie Waters, the veteran safety with ll seconds on the clock; llefenwho was hoping to make his sixth
sl ve tac.kle Lawrence Plllers
Super Bowl trtp with the Cowboys.
sacked White to Ioree a fumble and
The 49ers will be playing lor the the 49ers' Jim Stuckey recovered
NFL crown lor the lint time In
the ball at rnld!lekl.
their 32-year history. They will
The Cowboys, nicknamed
meet the Clnclnrratl Beilgals In the
"Amertca's
Team"tn NFL circles,
Super Bowl Jan. 24 at the Pontiac,
wel1! playing In the NFC title game
Mich., Sllverdome. The Bengals
lor the ninth time In 12 years. They
whipped San Diego :iunday In the
su!!ered
a 45-14 regular-season loss
AFC title game, 27-7.
at Candlestick but went Into thereThe 49ers'1J.3 regular season re,match favored because of their
cord was best In the NFL and In·
post-season experience.
eluded a 21-3 trtuinph over the
Benpls, who were 12-4.
, "It hasn't quite sunk In yet that
"We were just a lew .minutes
we're going to the Super Bowl,'' away from the Super Bowl," said
said Montana. "Our last drive was Doug Cosble, the tight end whose
typical of the whole season. It was a 21-yard TO catch early In the final
matter of us sCoring when we had period gave Dallas a 27·2llead.

terback Joe Montana wW be lead·
IDi the San FrandacO 49ers, a team

lt

•

[Upsets.
highlight
weekend
action
college
..
..

'

By Allloclated l'l'e88
brtng the Hokles within two a! the . time, No. 11 Arkansas nipped NeCardinals.
, , The University of Louisville has a
braska 51-!JO, No. 14 Hbuaton beat
!~Jroud basketball tradition.
With 16 seconds left In regulation, Texas Tech 7!1-68, No. 15 North Ca·
•' But Coach Denny Crum Isn't
Solomon fouled Louisville's Derek rollna State beat,Georgia Tech~
:Very proud of his team's latest
Smith. But Smith, who led the Car· 49, No. 16 Alabama .defeated
:i!!art.
·
dlnals with lB points. missed the Mississippi ~.' No. 17 Oreeon
,. "We just didn't play well enough
front end of the one-and-one and State routed California 74-43, No.lB
!jo heat them, even though we had VIrginia Tech freshman AI Young Idaho beat Northern Arizona 59-46
lwportunitles to," Crum said alter
went the length of the court lor the and No. 20 St. John's topped Provl·
basket that tied the game. Then In dence 76-62.
'his 12th' railked club was upset 75-74
;In overtime Saturday lly VIrginia overtime, Calvin Oldham's llp-tn
In the . only game Involving a
:4-ech. "Maybe our players learned
with two seconds left gave VIrginia ranked team on Sunday, No. 13
;iomethlng today. I sure hope so,
Tech the victory.
Georgetown walloped BoSton Col·
:Jlecause tlie games won'tbegettlng
"I was so excited near the end, I lege 67-51.
dldn 't know who tapped In that last
·~ny easier as the season goes on."
The Top Ten
:, ·The Cardinals, whom VIrginia
shot untu I got to the dreSsing
James Worthy scored 17 points,
Tech Coach CharUeMolrcalled "as
room," said Motr. "I don't really Including a key Jump shot with less
good as any team In Amertca,''
think a! this as an upset becawe I
than four minutes remaln.lng to
seemed to have the game under
think we're a line basketball team, lead North Carolina past VIrginia
control with a 67-60 lead with 4:44
too. Our players never quit - I'm despite a ~tnt per1ormance by
left In regulatlon. But .they started
so proud of this te'am."
the Cavaliers' Ralph Sampson.
missing foul shots near the end, al·
The game was one a! five Worthy's Jumper with 3:47 lett put
lowing the Hokles to catch up.
shockers on a weekend that also In· the Tar Heels ahead for the· lint
"We blew It tho;!re at theendofthe eluded losses by No. 3 Kentucky, time smce midway tn· the second
second half when we missed four
No. 9 Wichita State, No. 10 Tulsa half, 55-54, and capped a North Ca·
straight front ends of one-and·
and No. 19 UCLA. Kentucky was rollna comeback !rom a nfne.polnt,
ones," said Crum. "You have to be
upset by TeMessee 70-E6, Wichita second-half deficit.
able to hit pressure shots llke that to State was beaten by Bradley 55-47,
It was the second meeting of the
put teams away. Tech dldlttouson Tulsa lost to New Mexico State 74- nation's 1·2 college basketball
the boards. too. Gordy Bryan had . 66 and tfCLA was beaten by South· teams In two weeks. North Carolina
ern Cal ~71.
rrtne o!!enslve rebounds alone,
earlier defeated Keniucky 82-ftl
while our whole team only had
Elsewhere, No. 1 North Carolina when the Wlldcats were No. 2.
eight. There Is no way something turned back No. 2 Vlrglnta 65-EO,
Kentucky missed two crucial
ltke this should. happen with the
No. 4 Missouri beat Colorado 72-50, free throws In the final minute and
leapers we have."
No. 5 DePaul edged Dayton 71-69, Tennessee's Tyrone Beaman
Dale Solomon scored 23 points No.6 Minnesota trtmmed Michigan scored live consecutive putnts to
and led the VIrginia Tech come- State 64·58, No. 7 Iowa stopped IIII· lead the Volunteers' upset of the
back. He hit a field goal and then · nols 5&amp;50, No. 8 San Francisco Wildcats.
converted a three-point play to edged South Cilrollna 72·711n _overwen on
"Tennessee
. plays. very
'

Can't stop him
EVANSVll.LE, Ind. (AP) -A
broken thumb was not enough to
sideline John Vernasco, the University of Evansville quarterback.
Obviously, lie couldn't pass. But
he lnsls(l!d on returning to action as
a wide receiver. The thumb was so
bad he couldn't put the car keys In
the lgnlllon. "Different guys had to
tie. my shoes and take my boots
o!!," he Sajd.
Despite that, In the last two
games of the year, he caught six
passes In one contest lor 76 yard&amp;and one touchdown and two more
aerials the next week for 74 yard&amp;
against double coverage.

their home floor," said Kentucky
Coach Joe Hall, whose Wildcats
have beaten the Vols only once In
the Jut 10 n'leetlngs at Kiloxvtue.
"I'm not too disappointed In losing.
It's very, very dlf!lcult tow!ndown

here."
1Miaaow1 beat Colorado as Ricky
Frazier and Steve Stlpanovlch each
scored 13 points. The Tigers ted lly
only stx points at the half.
"In the first half, I thought we
made too many sDiy fouls and put
them at the tree throw line too
much,'' said Missouri Coach Norm
Stewart. "We got good balanced
scoring and help !rom our bench. I
thought our defense was the single ·
IIIOiltlmportant !actor, though."
Bernard Randolph sank two free
throws In the final minute as De- .
Paul edged Dayton In the 1,1Dlth
game for Coach Ray Meyer.
Trent Tucker scored 17 points to
lead Mlnne!ota past Michigan
State. Mark Garmon had 15 and
triggered a second·half surge that
paced 'Iowa over Dllnols. ·
Eric Slaymalrer made Sae!t In
overtime to lead the Dons over
South Carolina.
Mitchell Anderson's 17 points led
Bradley's qpeet of Wichita State.
The Sbockers were Ice-cold tram
the field, hitting.only 25 per cent o!
their shots.
"Anytime you shoot as bad as we
did, you can't expect to beat too 1
many teams, especially a good :
team Uke Bradley," said Wichita
State Coach Gelle Smithson.
Jaime Pena scored 20 points as
New Mexico State stwmed Tulsa.

1be Second Teo
Darrell Walker's foul shot with27
seconds left paC'!d Arkansas over
Nebraska, Rob WUllams' 25 points
led Houston over Texas Tech, Sid·
· ney Lowe's free throw with nine seconds left enabled North Carolina
State to beat Georgia Tech, and
Mlke Davis' lB points led Alabama
over Mississippi.
I..es Conner's 23 points paced

Oregon State over California, Gor·
die Herbert had 23 to lead Idabo
over Northern Arizona. Maurtce
WUIIams scored 22 points as South·
em Cal stopped UCLA and Chrts
Mulllri's 26 points led St. John's
over Providence.
Ertc Smith and Mike Hancock
combined !or 20 points In the second
half as Georgetown pulled away
!rom'Boston College,

The Voily Sentinel
1~8PSI-I

ADlvll""' al Mulllmcdlo, loc.
cl'llbllohed evel)' oltemoon, Mondoy lllroujjh
Friday. Ill Court Sired, by the Ohio Valley
PUbllahlng Comoony • Mulllmedla, Inc.,
I'Omei'O)I, Ohio 41781, lm-2158. Second '""
pootogepaldal Pomeroy,Oillo.

-r:

fs
•

COntest winners announced

Eastern Star
holds meeting·

•I

Garden club holds party

r,-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d=;;~~~~~~~~~~

·Cherokee Homemakers meet

Rates of Taxation for . 1981

Ntwlplper Solei, 733 fhlrd Avenue, New

York, New York ,ocn7.

.County correspondence

~TN.ASTER : Send addn!!f.A to The !Aiily
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an...eel&lt; .................. .. ...... 11.01

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992·2668

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MAO.SUIISCRIPI'IONS
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OllldWe~tVlrll""'

BEGINNER

At
the Middlepor
'Elementary School in
Middleport....Oh.
PH. 992·~896
Info.

.-Rocchl•s Restaurant

is pleased to ha,v e Dian.n Jewell Returning
to her staff.
"SPECIAL FOR THE MONTH"
•s•o. o~f on any perm
.
For Appointment Phone 773-5404
Operators: Connie, Marilee, Diann, JanetStreet
Mal!lon, WV

•

two 9toeuiM S,eeiob

. Served wjth

DALE HILL

POMEROY .. Mr . and Mrs . Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
WUber Parker entertained the des· Parker, Mr. and· Mrs. Howard
cendants of Peart and Addle Sta· Parker, Aprtl and Aaron, and Honeartat a holldaydtnneronDec. 27. ·mer Parker, all of Meigs County;
Their hOme was decorated In the Rodney, Brenda and Brian Parker,
Christmas motif. Martha Poole
Parkersburg;· and Will Poole,
made the pinecone centerpiece lor Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
215 w.-..ail\
the main table. Willis Parker, Par·
During the hotl~~&amp;ys, Mr. andkersburg, asked the blessing. T. Mrs. Wilber Parker talked to their
Pomeroy
Sgt. Joseph Poole, Wright· sons, Mr. and Mrs. Eric Parker,
Patterson AFB, took pictures.
· Bend, Oregon, and Edward
Others present were Mr. and Parker, Everett, Washington.
Mrs. "4arlon Parker, Dennis _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..:__ __;_~=====::::::::===~

SUBIICIIIPI'ION RATES
By Curlft:r or M•lor Route

3 Month .. ...... .. ................ 111.01
8 Mooth .. .. .. .............. .. .. .. 123.40
l Year ...... .................. .. . IIOJil

TUES., JM. 12
AT 7:00 P.M.

992·7·177 .

.

Tho ._ucled Preos, Inland Dally Prell AuocliUon and the Ameli~an
Nens-per PubUahen Aasoctation, N'aUonal
Advutbling Representative, Branharn

Mom Roechi'• OJW~alltman.S•uce,

Freth Grated Romano Cheete .t BuUered Garlic Bread
You can tell your kids that
' money doesn't grow on trees until
· you're red In the face. But the best
way to teach them about money Is to
let them go out and earn some of the
real gr~ stuff themselves. ·

SPAGHETTI-Ravioli
SPAGHEM'l-:-Tnaly llallan
$2.11
RAVIOU
Meal FWe.l, Herbto 6 Spices
$!.71

Janet's Ha~r Go Round

WHERE DID IT GO?- Geor1elowo Uulveni'Y's Pat EWtacleob ap
wondering where the ball wenl as·lte bad It lallea •w•y from him b)' Mal'
Ua Clark of &amp;lion College. Acdoa too1t pl8ee Ia die lint ball o1 their
. gameatlheCaplla!Cenlre'SQdlynlpL (APIMerpheto).
·

... and the Author of the·Upcoming
the·. mind, and perhaps, E.A.K.,
By HELEN IIO'M'EL
·
that's why you switChed to coun- Le~·Har ·: •d Book.
DEARJiELEN:
I· know. ,,hy we southpaws are so
selihli, rl~ht?- H.
My felloW 110\lthpaW ...
much smarter than ordinary people:
Include me In the research lor
We must develop double talent. tact
.
"Fellow,Sacramentan's" ·upComing DEARin:LEN ,
Uke you, I am a shifted sinistral : .and Skill 1n adapting to the huard.s
book on ~-handednes!. ·
·6o y® knOw what the French and My lelt hand was tied down at school ol ·a pght·handed world. A tew InItallans ·think of ua lefties? French so I'd learn to use my rilht. Now I'm clude: school desks with the writing
wortt for lett "'gagche", me~~ning . ambidextrous- ;--wfth preferences: 8nl\, on the rlghf side; ' spiral
':tackl"l!lri soCial grace; awkward." . Write with my right ~nd, eat with notallooks; smeary pell!l (upsldeItalian ·I! "ltiustra." How slnlSter my· left, etc. Perhaps because of dofr{ writers always have Ink·
•
this, I have much difficulty with ·. 'Ia!ned left hands l; learning shortcanwebe? "
I've aotle qUite well with my soutp- people telling me to turn left or right hand - it was Invented for rightist·
paw for 7~ years ,, I played tromJ:to!ie . while ·ctrtvlng. I get an automatic writers; sports equipment (try to
find'S golf glove, fishing feel, or arand used '!pssors · right-handed, · signal for the other direction. chery set for "us"); knitllng inGENE
·
thrOugh necessity. My left-handed
structloll!l;
stick shifts; eggbeaters;
DEAR
HELEN
,
son discovere&lt;l sciwors have tbelr
even
the
measuring
numbers .on a
Frustrations of left-handedness?
blades crossed ln. ;ruch .a manrler ·
cup
or
blender
can't
be read when
ti)at ·when the lefty closes them to I'm forever tightening what I want
·
vou
hold
them
with
your
left hand.
cut; ' he or ahe puahes ' ~ bl~des · to .loosen: all screws, faucets, even
As
'a
leftle
I
1~1
special,
an overapart instead of.t.ogether. This, Com- the twist-em wires on bread wrapcomer
of
difficulties,
but
I'm far
. bined with awkward (for us) han· pers, turn the wrong way. Of course
from
unique.
Jsn't
the
number
of
dieS, makes cutting almost lm- the righties in my family have
left-handed
people
Increasing?
prob}ems too: They've gotten · acp&lt;lSSible.
.
I wanted to be an illustrator but I customed to turning those twist-ems WTSOF COMPANY
.
got my hand irl the fresh ink so many bacJtwards If I've packed their lun- DEARLOC:
the
vast
numbers
of
Judging
from
tin)eol I gave UP on that. When·I ap- ches - ·and unpinning iny "back·
leftle~ who answered my request lor
plied as a macbiQist at a railroad wards" pill!lln diapers, hems, etc.
left-handed
research, I'd saywe're a
Best gift I ever received was a
shop, they said!·I'd ~ever rruike it
TilE WINNERS - Eleanor Smith, history l!llsay School, fln~t place winner In the contest, pictured wll!l
sizeable
minority,
probably Inwith right-tt,nded inachine. Not so. pal~ of left·handed sclssol'!l. No more
cbalrman for Return Jonathan Meigs Chllpler, her mother, Mn1. Roy Long; and the bronze medal&amp;.~
creasing
beyond
the
asswned
10 per·
There was no machine I could not bllstef!i! - B.H.
Daugblen of the American Revolution, left, presented Elizabeth Smith, Racine Elementary School, pictured
cent
level
ndW
that
most
of
us
are no
,
operate. I'm now a Christian COlin· DEARB.:
a sliver medal to Larissa Long, Chesler.Eiementary with her mother, Ml'l!. Darrell Smith, left to right.
longer
"switched"
In
childhood.
:Another advantage to 'teft·handed
selor and ·hypnosis consultant. scissors: Your right-handed H. .,
E.A.K. SR.
children don't uae them to cut paper,
DEAR E. :
Got a problem? An adult subject
No machine you can't master? tin, or other dull-making things. for
dillcWISion? You can talk It over
How about an old-fashioned hand· H. ·
county-wide contest· will be presen· operated can opener! I still say we
Medals were presented to the win· of near Chester.
in her column if you w~ to Helen
Second place winner in the history ted certificates by Daughters of the !efties do better with machinery of DEAR·HELEN :
ners In the American History Essay
Bottel, care of this newspaper.
. Contest Friday at a meeting ·of essay contest was Elizabeth Smith, American Revolution. The invitation
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell to participate was extended to all
· the Daughters of the American Smith, a fifth grader at the Racine Meigs County schools and ~ntries
·.T he Gingerbread
Revolution.
·
·
Elementary School.. She wrote on were received from Racine, Tuppera
Plains, Bradbury, Letart, Chester
First place winner was Larissa Cynis McCormick.
House Pre.SchooJ
and Syracuse.
Topic for the eS.says this year was
Long, sixth grade at the Chester
Judging
was
by
Maxine
Philson,
Elementary School, who wrote on " A Famom:; American· Born in
Ellen Bell, and Carl Weese.
William Henry Harrison. She is· the February."
has space available .
Larissa's entry will now he subStudents who participated in the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Long
.,.
I
-· ~
• mitted for district co1npelition. •
. The charter was draped lor Pearl
ved by Kathryn MltcheU with t.fliS.
for 6 students.
Reynolds and Erruna K. Clatworthy
Bechtle as a contributing h011tess.
gave a tribute to her at Thursday
Bob King gave grace and a social
·
night's meeting of Evangeline Chaphour was held d~rlng the refresh'rO ENROLL: .
men! period.
·
CALL:
. ·,
Riverview Garden Club's annual
the club members. These were to be reading a Christmas verse. A remin- . ter,'f&gt;tder 1J! the Eastern ~r. held
Christmas Party' and buffet dinner
der: Now Is the time to begin feeding
delivered at a later date.
Maxine
Kesterson,
worthy
!lie Middleport
Masonic Temple.
was held at the home of Mrs. Okey
The program "Christmas our fine feathered friends so they at
matron , and Robert Kuhn, worthy
Connolly. She was assisted by Mrs. Traditions of Different Countries" will know where to find food on
patron, presided at .the meeting.
Ronald Cowdery', Mrs. Ray Young
,
was presented by Mrs. Donald Put· snowydsys.
PrO:tem officers were Naomi King,
and Mrs. Tom Spencer. Each mem· man and Mrs. HermaQ Grossnickle.
Attending were Mrs. Frapk Blse,
conductre~•; Paul Darnell,
•
•
· t
•
ber brought a potlucl&lt; dish £or the A candle lighting service was UJied Mrs. Walter Brown, Mrs. Lyle
.
.
chaplain, and Rosemary Lyons,
Osteopathic Physician &amp; Surgeon ·
dinner. Favors were reindeer made and singing of carols was 1~ by Mrs . Balderson, Mrs. Hartis Frank, Mrs.
Martha. Doris Karshner collected
ISO
Mill
St.
Middleport, Oh. 457611
from wooden clothes pins by Mrs.
Herman
Grossnickle,
Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead, A reading
the sWishlne Q(ferinR. ·
Spencer and her son, Jared. Thes.e "We've Come a'long Way Since That Claremont Harris, Mrs. Roy Han'·were placed at each place setting . First Ch;islmas ·b ay," was by Mrs. nliJD, Mrs. Donald Myers, Mrs.
PH. (614) 992-7271
The worthy matron stressed the
· The Connolly home was beautifully Gros.Snickle.
Ronald Osborne, Mrs. Donald Put·
importance .of the school of in·
. decorated for the holiday season.
Games were played with several man, Mrs. Denver Weber, Mrs, Er·
structlon to be held on Jan: 28 at
· Gifts for exchange were placed un· winning prizes. The door prize was nest Whitehead, Mrs. Gene Young
OFFICE HOURS:
Marietts. Dinner reservations are to
der a lighted tree. Gifts for Mrs. R. awarded to Mrs. Ronald Osborne. and the hostesses. There will be no
Mon.·Tue&amp;.·Thurs. &amp; Fri.
be made before Jan. iB•with VIda
roll call- was answered by members m~ting in January.
• E. WilliBms, Mrs. Mabel Hetzer and
9:00 a.m.·l2:00 Noon
Carson. Further Information may be
· Miss Naomi Pickens were bought bv
200 p.mA:OO p.m.
obtained from Bessie King.
Members were reminded of an
WEDNESDAY
auction to be held at the February
.9 :00 a.o·~:·2:00 p.m .
meeting. Proceeds wiU . go to lhe
LETART..The .liome of Mr. and !Ions and lighted tapers. Christmas son, Mr: and Mrs. Charles Stone,
.'
Heart Foundation.
SATURDAY (By Appointment Only)
· Mrs. Alva !-uckeydoo, Letart, W. music was played.
Mr. and Mrs. David Dewhurst, Mr.
Jack and Euvetta Bechtle were
9:00 a.m.·l2:00 Noon
Va. was the setting !or the hOliday
Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo was and Mrs. Oscar Casto, Mr. and
reported Ill. Refreslunents were ser·
dinner party of the Cherokee. chairman lor the program. Santa Mrs. Roger Luckeydoo, Mr. an4
Homemakers Oub.
arrived with gilts. He also gave a Mrs. Denver Gibbs, Mrs. VIolet
Turkey with au the trtmmtngs reading, "Yes. VIrginia, There Is a Stanton, Mrs. Allie Browning, Shel·
was prepared for the occasion by
Santa Claus." Pictures were taken ley and Kimberly Casto, Amy and
Lee Luckeydoo, Stephany and An·
the members WhO Invited their bus- with Santa. ·
bands as guests. 'The tables were
Attendlngwet'eMr. andMrs . Ge- nett Gibbs, and Mr. and Mrs. Alva
centered with Christmas decora·
raid aark, Mr. and 1!41;i. Harold Luckeydoo.
In panuutce of Low, I,. Georre M. Colllat, Treuurer of Metro County . C)hlo, i• •·omplh•nu with re•·
fted Code No. 823.08 of State of Ohio, do hereby gh·e notice of the R01tn of Taxation for the Tax
.
O'Dell,. Mr. and Mrs. John Fergu·
y., of 1981. Rltn oxpr~ In dol~ ond e011to Oft udl mo thoUCICUid doflaro tax •aluatlon .

DR JAM£$. P CONDE INC

.

.

Comhloatlo~$2.85

VEALPARMAGIANO

AReal Delight
Breaded Seasoned Veal. SP.Bitelll
Parmaglan Ch-., Smothered
Ill Our OwD Special Sauce.
$1.15

Pl~omeJIUide

JUST CALL OUR CIRCUlATIOII
·DEPARTMENT TODAY FOR
MORE INFORMATION.

paay Special $2.95

ADd Homentade Pies
Also Alall6 Hanly Me1111'
Fwllrealllat, I..lmt!IIA Dinner.
Fallllet:vlce • FreU Coobd ·As Ordered

Open h.m. to I p.m.
. . z..tenAve.

I

L#fties share problems, woes

Montana paces
49ers' comeback

'

By GEORGE STRODE
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - The
· tags-to-riches Cincinnati Bengals
'found a new ally, old Mother Na·
.• tull!, for their tlrstSuperBowl trtp.
,.. .. Despite brutal playing conditions
· "- It was 9 below zero with a w!nd
ehlll factor of. intnus 59 degrees at .
game time - the Bengals played
near perfect football In beating the
" San DlegoChargers27-7 Sunday for
··the American Conference .title.
' Cincinnati's ·14-year-okl expan·
sian franchise, beaten 10o!l6times
,. a year ago, will carry a 14-4 11!C0rd
·· against the San Francisco 49ers, 15. 3,1n the Supe~ Bowl Jan. 24 In Pontiac's Sllverdome . The 49ers
: defeated Dallas 28-27 for the Na. tlonal Conference crown Sunday.
To a man, the Bengals thought
the !rigid Ohio weather worked
against the Chargers.
' · The San Diego players down• played the poor conditions, but It
· must have been a shock to their bodies. They had played In 84-degl1!e
Miami eight days earlier. It was a
swing, counting the Wind-chill factor, of 143 deg11!e5.
Perhaps Cris Collinsworth, Cln·
clnnatl's all-pro rookie wide re. celverfrom F1orida, best described
.
' lt.
"It took me a couple of weeks
when I came up here to get used to
this cold," he said. "I knew there
" was no way they could come here In
:: two days and play their normal
~ game. I knew our ball-control of·
; tense had an advantage aver their
.. big-play o!!ense ."
! Dan Ross, the Bengals' top re: celver with live catches against the
• Chargers, said, "We knew we had a
! !eeUng lor the ball In the cold. We
: dressed dl!!ereiltly than they did.
; They just had sweat shirts on."
ThE' Chargers, after committing
} lour turnovers that led to one touch·
..

,

Ph. 992-2156

. San. 8 •.m. tot p.IIJ. ·
G81Upolli, 011.
I

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,,

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BEDFORD
Meln Local

s. n..... uo

··--

~'=!===

.036168 .086144

1.70 2c.oo
1.70 21.00

.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 '1.00

2.00
2.00

3~.70

CHEliiTER
Eaatem LocalS. D. ___ 4.80 2.60 21.00
~~~ Local 8 . D. · --- 4.80 2.50 24.00

.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00
2.00

31.50 .060678 .047484
34.50 .046180 .048366

COLUMBIA
Alexander S. D..... . . 4.30 3.70 27.70

.40 .10 .20 1.00 2.50

2.00

41.90 .:265574 .106782

LEBANON
•
/
EMtern LocalS. D.•• • c.ao 2.10 21:00
Southern LocalS. D. -· 4.80 2.70 24.00

.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00
2.00

31.70 .056610 .057609 ·,
34.70 .086786 .062687

.40 , 10 .20 1.00

2.00

35.20 ,ij49090 .05208i :

.10 .20 1.00

2.00

82.70 .061810 .060265

.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00

4.30 · 2.30 24.00
4.30 1.00 24.00

.40 .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00
5.50 2.00

34.30 .042521 .041101

4.80

.40 .10 .20 1.00

2.00

33.70 .086168 .038144'

2.00

88.70 .086153 .036144
88.40 .072884 .064978
88.00 .076612 .071230

Eutem Local 8. D. __ _4.80

LETART

· Southem LocalS. D. __ 4.30 8.20 24.00

OLIVE

EMtern LocalS. D. . • - 4.80 3.70 21.00 · .40

ORANGE
EuW!l Local B. D. . ... C.80 2.50 21.00

RUTLAND
Mein Local s. D.....
Rutland VIUare ......
'sALEM
Meip Local S. D.....
SALISBURY
Melp Local B. D. ---MlcldiiPOrt Vlllare ....
Pomeroy Villar• -···-SCIPIO
· KelP Local

S.

1.70 24.00

4.80 1.70 24.00
uO .20 24 .00
uo .20 24.00

D.... . UO, 2.40 24.00

Strri'ON

Boatbmt Loeat s. D.· •• 48«1 2.10 14.oo
RM~Do Vlllan -----·- f..ao,· .eo 24.00

117r- VIllar• ··---- uo . .eo
SUTTON

f.'"'

14.00

.40 .1Q .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00 '
.co .10 .20 1.00

8.20 1.00
5.80 2.00
2.00·

.40 .10 .20 1.00
.co

.1o .20

1.00
.4o .10 .20 1.00
.40 .10 .20 1.00

•

2.00
1o.t0 1.00
uo 2.00

30.70 .039686 .089677

~8 . 60

.0866154 ..065978

84.40 .045592 .04.61
3UO .089871

.087615a

42.70 .t28702 .085681.
87.90 .074880 .080321 '

2.00
34.10 .089871 .087668
Kelp Loeal8. D.-- ~-11.10 14.00 .40 .10 .20 1.00
=...:~---_;-~;..;.
.,.;,_=;-=~~~:""'-.....
·:e
-4~
Rool Eotate taxll which have not been paid at the clo•e of each collection carry a penalty of ten
per CODt. T&amp;XIIlii&amp;J','IIe paid at" tho offlee ol tho !")unty treuurer or by ·mall. Plea.. briu your
· lut tax nceJpt aDd Jt 10u paJ by mall be oure to loate your p~rty hr taxinr diolrfct and on·
elooe otamped Mit lllldrooMcl •volope.
AlwaPI - I M ,._ tex l'*!elpt to ... that It .;.••;.all your property. Offlee Houre 8:80A.M.
to 4:10P.M~ IIGDcla~ lhru Friday, C~ 1)11 Saturday.
GEORGE lll. COLLINS, Moir• Cu. TN111.

__

:="-:=::=......

�':'r

6

n.. Dally s.n.m.~

. ~Ohio

Monday, ..Jcmua'Y II, lt82

Ptotn•••

·.
Cleland, Opal Hollon and Alta aad
committee: Cbarlotte Grant. Everett Grant, Max aad Mary Folmer,
Harian BaUard. May; Keith and
Emma Ashley, Inzy Nelliell, JuJil
Carolyn Holley, Pam Davis, Sadie
Trussell, ways and means.
Rose, Mary K. Holter, Thelmla ·
· Alao e~ were Eather Smith, · White, June; Daisy Canter, Fay
the hall. .
.
Klmes, Thel.rrut McMjlnnls,
Eilzabeth · Hayes, Goldie Freder·
Installed were Dorothy Ritchie.
Beasley, Nina Windle, July; Jeap
lck, Vlrglnla Lee, Margaret Am·
councilor; Charlotte Grant, junior
Frederick, Pau1ine Ridenou~ ,
berger, Zekla W~. Ruth and
paat councilor; 'Carolyn Holley, as.. Penny Smith, good o! the order.
Betty Roush, Susie Pooler, Mary Jo
soclafA1 councilor; Alta Ballard,
Ilarrlnger, August; Corolyn Hoj,
Enna CJeiand; Marcia KeUer,
warden; Dbde ~air, conductor;
ley, Vlrglnla "{ewlun, Margaret
Lora Damewood, Ethel Orr, Inzy
·Mae McPeek. llnarw;taJ secretary;
Tuttle, Sadie Trussell, September,
Newell, borne·and orphans commit·
Margaret Tuttle, recordJDa secretee; ~rma CJelllnd, Ethel Orr; Charlotte Grant, Everett Gran\.
tary; Ada Bissell, assfltant ftaan·
aad Mary Folmer, Pam DaOpal Hollon, resolutions; Doris
e ta! · secret'ar.y; · ·Margaret
vis, October; Mary Showalter.
Grueser, Thelma McMannis, Mae
Amberger, assistant recording seFern MoiTis, Mae McPeek, LeoiL$
McPeek, Doris Koenig, Goldie
cretary; Esther Smith, lre8$urer;
Hensley, Ada Bissell, Ruth Ste:
Frederick, JuDe Rose, Nettle
Erma Cleland, trustee; Vlrglnla . Hayes, and . Paullne Ridenour, · them, November; Estber Smith,
Lee, outside senllnel:r I
Ruth Smlt1t, Helen Wol!, Marcia
!tower committee.
Mrs. Rlltchle apPointed commitKetler, Betty Roush, Dorothy Rlt:
Named to the refreshment comtees lor the year including Thelma mittees were Ellz8beth Hayes, chle, Iozy Newell, and Penn:r,
White, Linda Beasley, Cl)lor bearSmith, December. .
J
Estber Smith, Goldie Frederick,
ers 1; Doris Grueser, Pam Davis,
Betty Denny, Middleport, was
Vlrgtnla Lee, and Margaret Amcolor beilrers 2; Esther Smith, M(s.
reinstated Into the D. of A. A thank
berger, Jal)uary; Martca Ke:I,
Rltchle, team captains; Mary K.
Doris Grueser, Dora I)amew
, · you card was read !rom the BaDHolter, councu captain; Mary K. · and DQrothy Ritchie, February;
cock lanilly lor kindness at thil
Holter, Ellzabeth Hayes, news redeath of Leona BabcoCk, and tbf
Charlotte Smith, Doris Karshner,
porters; Charlotte Smith, Dixie and . Linda F)tch, Dl:ide and Dixie Lee
charter was draped In her m il'
Dixie Lee Bealr, Betty 'Roush,
mory. neaudlllngreportwasrea?
Bealr, and Elleenn Marlin, March;
Mary Jo Barrlnger; Susie Pooler,
by
Erm'a Cleland. The stUlbOm
Nettle Hayes, UUian Demoskey,
Eileen Martin, miscellaneous comgrandson ol Pauline Ridenour wal;
NeUe Werner, Eva Dessuaer, and
mittee; Mae · McPeek, Esther
noted as was the death ol Zana
Betty Christopherson, AprU.
Sinlth, and Ada BlsseU, delinquent · Mary Wolf, Zelda Weber, Erma · Gainer's sister. Ruth Stethem wa);
reported IU.

or

POMEROY-Ins1allallon o!tlc"ei-$ by Betty Roush, deputy ·state
counc:Uor. hlgi\Ughted the Tuesday
n1gbt .meeting of Chester CouncU
323, DaUihters of A!nertca, held at

DENTAL HEALTH- Margie Lawson, D.D.S., left,

Pomeroy Elementary School Friday. Each of children

:aullled by Becky "l'eaford, a dental assistant, gave a· received a brush and Ooso and were given lodlvldnal
delnODSira!loa oa the proper way to brush and Ross to Instruction on their uoe. ·
the sixth grad~ cl!ls• of Darlene RuoseD at the

.,

S&amp;W lV ·

'.

Announces the opening of his office for
the practice of internal medicine.

., CUSTOM .

WELDING
lO ·Years Exper•ence
Small Pipelines A,
· Specialty
North of Rilcine
On Carmel Road
at Sawmill

WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP
(Pomeroy Scrap
1ron &amp; Met all

.'

'

Now picking up jun"
auto bOdies. Top prices
paid for auto bodies, '
scrap iron and metal's.
1
mile
west
of
Fairgrounds on Old Rt ..

33.
Mon .- Frl.8: 30 to 4:00
Ph. 992·6564
1·7-1 mo .

Whether you want extra body, curls, or an

.
I

D&amp;D
WELDING SHOP

are HALF PRICE. ·
Reg. $22 .50 to $42.50

$11.25 to $21.25

.REPAIR WORK
• Gas &amp; Electric
eCutting
• Brazing
e20Yrs. E)(p.
Reasonable Rates

now through Llj!Jti2 w1 lh a copy of !hi$ ad .
Haircut not included.

We rotlll
M.Q. P1oducls -

8" South Third
Middleport, Ohio
Silver Bridge Plaza

PH . 992·5663

· 446·l3S3

1·7-1mo.

Disrusses plans for new year
SYRACUSE--Plans lor the new
·year were discussed at a recent
council meeting .of the NWMS of the
Syracuse Nazarene Church presided over by Mrs. James B. Kittle,

president.
The meeting followed the prayer
and lasting hour. Attending were
Mrs. Kittle, Fannie Aleshire, Jan
Lavender, Sis Cundiff, · Thelma

Miller, Gladys Presley, Ma1y J &amp;ne
Arms, a nd Ora Bass. A progressive
prayer m eeting was planned lor
Jan. 28. Regular meeting
the
NWMS will be held on Wednesday
at 7:30p.m . at the church .

--..!P~u~btic N,_,_o,t.!.!
lc~
e__

HARRISONVll.LE PTO will
meet Tue~ay at 7:30p.m. at the

school. Plans lor the spring carnival and other money-making
proj ects will be discussed .

Company

_Astrograph
January 12, 1982
Although the coming year may bring some restrictive conditions
don' t let this overwhelm you. Your opportunities to become more I~
dependent and mobile are walling in the wings.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Today you could step. out of
character and make thoughtless remarks about a friend. Fortunately,
this person is a forgiving soul and will pa rdon your comments.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Feb. 19) Be very careful about making snap
judgments in business or money matte rs today. II you take lime to
study things, you'll see what you initially overlooked.
PISCES (Feb. ZO.March 20) Do not select compapions today on the
bas!Jl of what they can do lor you. It's not the proper foundation upon
which to build a lasting relationship.
ARIES _(March 21·Aprll 19) Lady Luck will back you in specific
areas today, but she might ignore you completely In dealings with
associates arid C&lt;)-WOrkers.
TAURUS (April ZO.May 20) Take time to e njoy'yourself today, but
not to the extent where you disregard yo ur work and re8ponslbillties.
Negligence will cause complications:
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) Events and outsiders could disrupt
your schedule a nd routine 'today, but try not to let it rattle you. Keep a
cool head. You'll be able to sortthings out.
CANCER {June 21-July 22111 you ha ve had a misunderstanding
with a family mem ber or a co-worker, t ry to patch things up today .
Constructive action heals scars. .
.
LEO (July 23-July 22) Financial conditions are apt to be mixed for
you today, because in some Instances you may use unwise or impulsive judgments. Fortunately, your mistakes are aU correctable.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your optimism and positive a 1litu ~e
could tie put to the. test today, but if you persist In thinking "win.'' you
will. Be netpfut regardless of wnat occurs.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Be wary today of putting obstacles 1in
your own path. There's a chance you might make things harder for
yourselfthan they need be. Lady Luck won'tletyoudown.
·
SCORPIO IOct. 24-Nov. 22) You might feel today that you're doipg
everything for others and getting little or nothing in return. This may
· be true now, butthe wheel wlll tum shortly.
SAGI'l'I'ARRJS (Nov. !I-Dee. 21) You could become so lnunersed
·In seH-lnteresta today that you'D fall to 'l"eeognize !he help of others
.and think they are being seHisb, when perhaps it's you.

of

211

I

I .

to its bylaws, on the third
Wednesday of January, ·

·t

1982, at 4o00 p.m. for the

purpose of electing directors and the transa ction of
suCh other business as may
properly come before sa id

PHONE 992-2156

meeting.
·

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

RUTLAND - A free blood pres.
sure clinic wW be held at the HIU
St., Rutland Chapter of Rutland
Silver Circle, Wednesday from
noon to 1 p.m . Barbara Van Meter, R.N., will have charge.olthe
clinic, which the OP,Cn to the
public.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eRENTALS

eANNOUNCEMENTS

41 - H,.,stl f~tr llhnt
42-Moblle Homes
for Rent
44-Apulmtnltlor R En!
t s-Furnittlftl Jloo"ms
U-Sr»aet tor Renl
41- W•nted tctRent
41-E qulpmtnt lor Renf
49-;- For L••n

. 1- c 1 rdoiTh1nk1
2-ln Mtmori•m
J-Announctmtntl
+-G IVtAWIY
~ Hipp-, Ads
6----Losl•nd Faunct
1- Yitd Slit
1- Public hit

I Auction

f- Winttcllo Bur

EASTERN BAND Boosters, 7
p.m. Wednesday in band room of
high school.

eMERCHANDISE
51- HoUithold Goods
.n-CIJ , TV, R•d i OEqUI~Ifll
Sl--AntiQUtl
S4-Misc . Mtrchandllt
U - luildlnt Suppl i es
"-P'th tor hie
,

e EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
1 1- Help WlnltCI

1

Hetzer
celebnites
birthday

11 - Situat l~tn W1nted
ll- IAI\IrlftCt
14-Bu•intu Tra ining

Sl - MusiCIIInslrumtflt

15-Scttoolttlutrueilon
t .,_ A.dio, TV ,
&amp; C8Rtpair
11- Wanted To Do
.

Jt-Frulh &amp; Vtltf!llblet
Sf- For Slit Or Tr,ado

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp;' LIVESTOCK

.

eFtNANCtAL
Opportunity

t3- Livtltock
Slit
44- Hay &amp; Gra in
4~ Stlld I Ftrtil lltr

2.2- Mctnty IO l .ol n
2J- Prof1nlonal

The 89th birthday of Mrs. MaDel
Hetzer was celebrated recently at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Atte nding were Marion and Shirley
Hetter of Toledo; Arthur and Nancy
Hetzer of Belle, W. Va.; John,
Cheryl and Jennifer La Plante, &lt;t
Oregon,- Ohio ; · J.a mes and Cecille
Hetzer of Coltunbus; Brenda, AUcia ·
and Sherri Lynn Robertson· of
Charleston, W. Va.; Rawleigh
Shirley; Mark, Charles, Kelly, Stev~
and sue Hel:!er Of Akron ; Mary
Frances and Pam Smith of Dayton;
Delores, S~dtt, Sybil and Sarah
Foster of Belpre; Frank and Mary
Alice Bise, Jackie and David Bigley,
Fred, Dian and Therese BiBe and
Gladys Heiney, all of Reedsvllle.
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer was a f.911Der
re:ddent of Reedsville.

Strvlcu

eTRANSPORTATtON

eREALESTATE

11- Auto• for Slit .
12-Truclll for Slit

ll- Homtt for Slit
n - MablltHctrh ••

7J-Vanl &amp; 4 W.D.

,... for Slit
. JJ- F•rmllor 5•1•
)4- IUJifttll Bul ldintl

Ph. 367·7S60
1·7-1 tfc

74-MOtofCf~IS

112) 28, (1 ) 11 , 17, 19, 4tc

Phone
1-( 614 1·992-3325
NEW LISTING -

•

l6- Real Est•1• Wlr'lltod

AcCtiiOrltl

Large and roomy, view
of the Ohio, all ci ty
NOTICE OF
util ities an d l ar ge vard .
APPOINTMENT OF
I Excellent locati on for
FIDUCIARY
busi ness . No zoni ng, use
On December 28, 1981 , in
for what you want .
the Meigs County Probate
1 ACRE - 2 bedroom,
· Court, Case No. 23631. Berfull basement home.
tha L. Arnold, eO)( 20.
Coal furnace, 2 car
Route I. Stewart, Ohio
garage and all ci ty
~5778
was . appointed
utilities. Onlv S16,SOO.
E xecutrix of'the es tate of
Owner f inancing.
Ann
Bailey Watson ,
12 ACRES - On State
deceased , late of R.O. 1.
Rt., ci ty water , natural
Minersville, Ohio.
gas. 3 bedroom home
Robert E . Buck
overlooking the Ohio
1.
Probate Judge/ Clerk
River .
(1) 4, 11 , 183tc
CHEAPIE - 4 acres
cover ed with young
trees for fir ewOOd . 4
1
room·frame house. ·Only

!

SATISFY YOUR NEED!&gt;

Wani·Ad Advertising
Deadlines

Housing
Headquarters

END OF YEAR ·CLOSEOUT
Pick From

11 - Homtlmprovt"'tft"

12- f"lumltlne I Htltlttt

yd. lnstatted

1)-EXCIVItl~t~

Monday :l :OOon Sa turday

11

Cash 'n' Carry
Brown, Blue

......

STARTING AT

1 Bl~e. Rust
I Creel&lt; Bed
J Golden

R•triWtrtllan
U - G•ntrll Haulinl
..-M. H . It11Nflr

17- U,MIItetY

Rates and Other lnlor.matlon
Up to IS words ... •n edly lnstrthtn .... . -- .... _ .. . .. ... .... . IJ.M
Up to !Swords ... three d1y in~trtion , , , , • , , , , , . , , , , , . , .. , , , , 54.00
up to u wo.rds ... alw days !nstrllon .. , . __ .. . ............ .. . SJ .00
[Aver•. . 4 words per llnel
MObile ~ome .. ttl lnd Ylrct H .. l ar• ICCIPtlet onlr Wltll Clift
wlttl onltr . 2S ctnt charM tor •Ill• urrying loll Nvm!Mr in Cart ef
Ttl• StntirMII.
Tht Publisher rtMrVtl ttM rlllflt te "It or reject 1ny
Obi11Ctlon11. The Pubtltt.t'r will not M nt,.,llbtl fw mort ttwln one
incorrKIInsertlon.

aft...,._. ,

Sizes start from lOx24"
1

'1

14 Avall.,ble
from Cedar,
Cypre.ss, Walnut &amp;

Ph . 992·5587

From U4.95
To $79.95
PH . 992-3269

FAIIPLAIN TRACTOR
. SALES, INC.

Rt. l, Bcuc 54

Racine. Oh .
Ph. 614·843·2591
6·15-tfc

TOP OF THE STAIRS
;::; Atness &amp; Beauty
Salon
202'12 E. Main St.
PH . 992-6720
Mary Powetl
Owner/Operator

,

Trudy Roush·Stytlst
Catl lor Appointment

'••

:

~;

Perm Special
J0%0FF
12-11 -1 mo.

dustrl~l

• Roofing qf an types
eSiding
e Remodeling
• Free estimates ·
e20 vrs. experience

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
SALE PHONE NO .

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

: Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
:.
SIDING

25 Rolls Carpet In stock to pick from
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rem nants S2.SO up.

I

·

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

" BHuttful, Custom
Built Gar1ges"
~ c•ll 1 for
frH siding
-tlmateo, 949-2101 or
~

:J4f·2UO. •

••..

No Sunday Cotls
3·11-lfc

I

•

Ferguson In·

Equipment.

C. R. MASH

1 2. - - - - - I 3. _ _ _ _:__ _

·I

J
1I
1
1

I

7. - - -- -- 8. - - - - - - 9. - -- -

10. - - - ---'-ll . -

plumbing, electric, and

1

heatinv y

FREE
ESTIMATES

PH. 992·6011
8·20-tfc

---

18. - - - -- 19, - - - - - - 20.
21 .
22. - - - - 23. - - - - - 2A . - - - - - 25 . - -- -- 26. - - - - -27 . - - - -........028 .
29.
30. _ _ _ _~

12·16·1 mo .

CALL TODAY!

Serve! Gas Air Condi ·
tioning, Sheet Metal

you all

tnat was shared wltn us
during , tne
Family's
bereBvment.

Rnl Esjate - e&gt;enorat

Arnold Croml i·
s~.

-ddOf'IS an~ nmodeUnt
Roatlnat:nct IU1tfr wort~
c oncr• 1e wctrt~
Piumblr.e ilncl
electrictl work

MtODLEPORT good

ALL MAKES

•Wtsnen

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT -

··"""'

•DIIpoUII
•Dishwltllen
•HatWaterT .. nh

Farm Equipment
Ouler

9 !11 tit

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

• Backhoe

PUWNS
EXCAVAnNG

•

POMEROY -

If VOU

want your own business
and only need the
building, here it is! !
Business on Main Street
with 2 apartments over
to fix up lind rent . This
may be the bfoginning of
something great for

• Excavating

you : Catt lor details.

• Septic Systems
eWater, Sewer &amp;

TUPPERS PLAINS -

G~s Lines
eOumpTruck

Licensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201

eDozers
• BackhO's ·
• Dump Trucks
eLo Boy
eTrencher
· • wafer • Sewer
eGa5 Lines

1

This

home features a wood
burning fireplace, large
llvinO room, beautiful
formal dining room.
study and doll house at mosphere bedrooms for
the kids. Basement, nice
kitchen for. mom; deck

area and sitting porch
for dad w11n a l&gt;i!autifut
view of the river all for
ontv SA5,000.

•Dryers

Authorized John Deer,

2· l

garage. 516.000.

ca 11 Ken oung
For Fast Service
985· 3561
PARTS AND SUVICE

street .

bedrooms,
kitchen ,
bath, on large level lot
with ga rden space and

APPUANCE
SERVIC£

BOGGS

This

furn ished older nome on

keep This Ad For
Future Reference

PH . 949-2202
12·15·1 mo.

5·2Hf.c ·

Nice ranch type home
with 3 bedroorps;• car·
pet, patio, storage
building·,
in
oood
location, on a level 3/,.
acre tot . ~riced to sell .

SJ2,500.
SYRACUSE -

A neat

double wide home with

CERTIFIED GAS

• septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH . 992·2478
12·7 ·1 mo. pd .

Our Specialties
Clg•rettes
Uc pack
C•rtons
Sl.95 &amp; sus

ROUSH .

Open 7 Dns A Week.
Open Mon.-Thurs.

CONSTRUCilON
N- Homes - ex·

'o .m. to 19 p.m.
Open Fri. at 6 a.m.
thru Sunday ot9 p.m.
· OPEN 2• HOURS
. Frt.·SUN.

remodel -

• ElectriCII work

we sett Pepsi, R .c. &amp;
coca· Cota Products by
tiHr 6 &amp; I Pack and atso
in liter bottles.
Authorized Sunflower
Deeltr. Sttt or R'ent
Ttlest Slgnl.
12·16-tfc

• Rooting work
14 Years Elperience

Gteg Roush
Ph. "2·7513
or992·2~82

1·3-lmo.

•,

446-2342

equipped kitchen plus
dishwasher ,' electric
heat. stor~oe building,
wOOd bUrner, nice lot .

.SJ2 ,000.
POMEROY
bedroom .

3
private

location. E•celtent. con·
1 dllion. Fireplace, futt
basement,

.

garage . ~

S34,SOO.

REALTORS
Henry E. Ctetand, Jr.
GRI·ft2·6191
Jeafl Trussell
Nf·2UO
Roeer &amp; DoHie Tur.,er
ft2-S692
ftl-2259
,otflce

992-2156
1n Mason County

675-1333

THREE half BUgle pup·
pies, JOA-895·36A1 .

SANDY AND BEAVER tn·
surance Co. has offered

Insurance

Neect exira money for
holiday bills? Art·Craft
Concepts now seeking

services for fire Insurance
coverli,ge !n Gallla Cot~nty
for almost a c:e-ntury.

0h call' hours, and Cf.n
work 32 1/2 hours per week,

v , rlous Arts and Crafts
classes to be-gin soon. For

2S6·19671n the evenings.

please call 594-5233 . AP· more Information call :lOA·.
pllcations accepted unt il '675·3365. Tne GAZEBO, Ar·
January 22. 1982. WE ARE ts and Crafts supplies, Pt ,
AN
EQUAL
OP · Pleasant .
PORTUNITY
EM ·
PLOVER.
18
Wanted to Do
Direct Care Staff needed
Butcher's Shoppe Custom
by Resldentat and Day
butchering &amp; processing.
Treatment' Program serCatl 446·2851, Gallipolis,
vicing retired adults with
Oh.
behavior disorders. Ap·
pli cants must be unWitt do baby sitting In my
derstanding, patient &amp;
home on Chillicothe Rd .
creative. Interested people
Call ~-9845 .
must have prevlou~ experience working with

CASH PAID for clean, late

flexible

.

FARMERS ·turn tnat un·
needed

machinery

Into

hard cash . Siders Equip·
ment Co. is now taking consignments
for
the

kl·nds, ca ll Kenneth Swain ,

.

people and be able to work

$10,000 year

Ohio Resldental Servi ces,

BUYING GOLD II. SILVER Rt . 1 Bo• 7 ,Milt Creek,
paying cash for anytnlng Gall ipolis, Oh •5631.
stamped ]Ot&lt;, UK, 18K and
dental gold . Class rings, GET VALUA:BI.E' lralnlng
wedding r ings, silver ~olns
or anything atemped

sterling . Clarks Jewelry
Store. Gallipolis 446·2691 or
992·2054 in Pom~roy1

as a young business person
and e,_rn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier . Phone
us right away and get on

Buying

the eligibility 1151 at 992·
2156 or 992·2157 .

Gold,

Sll'ver,

Platinum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware . Dally
quotes available. Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sate .
Spring
Valley

Trading , Spring Vallev
Plaza, 446·8025 or ~ · 8026 .
We pay ca·sh for late model
clean used cars.

Frencnlown Car Co .
Bill Gene Johnson,

lnMemorllm

----·--BE DS·tRON , BRASS, o ld

was always tnere . 11 wasso
hard. to tel you go. We love
and miss you so very much .
Sadly m issed by wife,
children and brother .

hour~ .

model used cars. Smltn salary for .45 hr. work week
Bul ck· Pontlac, GAllipolis, pius otner benefits. If In·
Ohio. Call 446·2282.
terosted send resume to :

Dollie Towle, l.lnda
Yeakle, &amp; David Cromtlsn .

In Memory of Charles
Stewart. Three veers ago
you left us . We m tss your
sweet smiling face, that

992·621S or 992-7l14
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·tfc

In Meigs County

In Gall ia County

13

«6·0069 .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Racine, Oh.

those who sent

flowers, c&amp;rds, food, and

{Free Estimates)

Trim Shop

..........
... , .
............... .........

_

for the prayers and love

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSTERY &amp;

.'

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

9 SHEPHERD puppies, to
good home, JOA-773-5798 .

9
Wanted to Buy
WANT TO. BUY Old tur·
nlture and Antiques of all

1 • Card of Thanks
me Famlty ot Arnotit
Cromltsn wlsnes to tnank

PRICED RIGHT

w. va.

Area Code 304
675- PI. Pleuant
4S8-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773- Mason
882- New Haven
8U- Letort
937- Buttalo

. To a good home 2·7 month
Otd kltlens, good mouser.
Will deli ver. Calt 388·9001 .

1
I
I

WANT AD

Diesel

Heating Oil.

Pomeroy

915- Chesllr
343-Porttond ·
247-Letort Faits
949-Racloe
742- Ruttond
667- Coolvltte

M asan Co.,

TWO CAL ICO CATS, both
female. One mostly black,
one most lY while. Catt 388·
8510.

February 13th . Auction .
30H75·7421.

You' I I
tract it down
much faster
with a

. 614·992·2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of

Arkla ·

Effective Dec. 15th
Thru Jan. 15th

sale may place an &amp;dIn this

Meigs Qo. Arta Code
114
992- Mtddtoport

Gotua Co. Areo Code
114
44t-Gotupolts
367-Chtshlre
311- VIniOI!
245-RioGronde
256-Guyon Dlst.
143- Arobia Dlst.

column . There wlll be no
~harge to tne advertiser .

1

I
L
I
L------------------------

PH. 985·3929
or 985·9996

Bar Stools
S2S.OO
Truck Seats
'1100.00
Labor &amp; Material

1

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
TheDallySentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Gas

Reupholstery
SPECIAL

r
1

I

Private Parties
Available

-

ANY PERSON wno has
anylhing to olve away and
does not ¢fer or attempt to
otter any other thing for

275-3069 ,

I

I

&amp;

Work .
&gt;UN RISE HEATING
&amp; COOLING
Rt . 2, Albany, Ohio
614·691-6791
11 ·16·tfn

(.'litlflli/iffi JNII{f!ll rmwr thl'
fi1llt~winl{ tf!if!Jihmw f!XrhHnf{f!ll •.•

ot

welcome .
R i chard
Reynolds auctioneer. 1·30.4·

··I
I

31 .
32·
33 ·
34.
35.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~l~5=4==M==Is:c:.M~e~rc:h:a:nd=l=c=•~
SKATE-AWAY
CALL:
POMEROY
Open Wed .. Fri . Sat.
7:30 Tit 10:00
LANDMARK
Sunday 2:00 to 4:30

Furnace, COleman Air

tenslve
Ing.

4. - -- - - - 5. - - - -- - 6. - - - - - - -

Custom kitchens and
appliances ,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,

SUNRISE
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
Tappan Recuperative
Cond itioninQ.

17. _ _ _......,...:__

I l Fpr Rent

j 12.
I 13 '
I 14'
I 15.
1 16.

CONSTRUCTION

Ph .949· 2160.•or 949·2482
H ·tfc

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN

( ) Announcement

rr~~~~~~~I

TOM HOSKINS

delivery

6
Lost and Found
FOUND Gallla Acadmey counselors, . tra ining now, Farm, home tnd personal
High School Class ring. start In Januery . No In· praperty coverages are
Graduation year Is 193'1. lt ve'stment, 'no delivery, no ava liable to meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact
Is. a Woman class ring. To collecting . Caii2S6·6S72.
Lewis Huones, agent .
identify tetter Inside ot ring
Phone A46·3318.
call4oi6·2JA:l.
. Why settle for less, sell the
best . AVON . Call ~ · 33S8 --·~-~LOST-Small black purse, or 742·23.5A.
vlcln itv ol Mai n and
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
Pi ,asant Valley Apts.
SURANCE been .c anVINTON
COUNTY
Reward. 675 ·7426.
l.ost
your
HEALTH DEPARTMENT cel.ted?
lsaduat agency Involved In operator's License? Pnone
8
Public Sate
BOTH public health nur· 992·2143
&amp; Auction
sing and home health nurng services . We h""ve a
Auction every Wed. at. lhe si
availeble for a
Harlford
Communtty position
Bui lding . Sale time 7 p.m . registered professional 1S Schools lnstrucllon
Consignment of new and nurse to assist In tnese
. If you desire NO R E GISTER
NOW for
used merchandise always programs
1

•
I )Wanted
I ) For Sale

1 ·--~---

We sell the best and
service tile rest. .
·
On Rt. ll w .
Ripley, w. Va .
Ph. 1304) 372-9175
or (304) 372·5479
12-18·1 mo.

And Home Maintenance

New Hotland, Bush Hog

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

•

Massey

OHIO VALLEYROOFING

Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24x3,,

tnsutated Dog Houses

These casn rates
Include discount

12·31-1 mo.

Cherry .

12·3·1 mo. pd.

bulk

Female dog with one male
pup . Female &amp; male cat.
Call245-5089. ·

Oh .

Made

For

Free 4 ·puppies Coltie &amp;
German Shepherd .· Catt
4ol6·8138.

PARTS

Utilitr Buildings

'

Buy Now &amp; Save.S2·S6 Per Yard

Addreu; _ _ _ _ _ _ __

MOilLE
HOME

U.S. Rt . SO Eut
Guysvltte, Ohio

'

.

Antenna Installation
House calls and shoP
serv~Ct!' available.

Harvest

14-EitclriCII·I
I

.All STEEL
BUILDINGS

Rutland fumnure Carpet Shop

'12

!ERVICES

2·8· tfc

$6,000 ca sn.

3 Rolls to

11--CIImplng Equipment

Let George Miller
check your present
electrical system.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742·3195 ·

2 FAMILY HOME -

Public Notice

your

wiring needs.

On

3 ROLLS

11- ,.uto Rl.,.ir

For ·all

top of the world at
Pomeroy . This building
lot w i ll gi ve you fresh
air and view of the
beautiful Ohio plus the
surrounding hills .

1t-AUIO Plrtll

11- Real,t on

MIUER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

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

7S!-8MU &amp; Moton

l 5- lot1 &amp; Acre• qe

Tuhdly tnru Frlday' 2;00 t',M ,
1111 d1y btlore publlutlan
S1.1ncl1y t : OO P . M. Frldly ,

Paul E. Kloes,
Secretary

,, _ ,.rm EQulllmtrlt
n - wantM te luv

2t- luiintu

'

Real Estate- General

West

Second Stree t, Pomeroy,
Ohio, will be 'held at the off i&lt;;:e of s~id Ban~ In

.. WANT AD INFORMATION

-""Wednesday

Water -Sewer-Electric
' Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook-ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roysh Lane
Cheshire, Oh.

1.r~~========~:;~

Pomeroy, Ohio. accord ing

POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club noon Wednesday at
Meigs Inn.

,

the stoc ~holders of The
Farmers Bank and Savings

Social Calendar
Tuesday

,w.·: .

REESE
TRENCHING ·
SERVICE·

LEGALNOTICE
Notice is hereby given "',.~r
that the annual meeting of 111

or

Nam•------------1I

All makes and models

KINGSBURY
HAN NI-Dar-rrn
IM\IV'IW
PARTS &amp; ACCESS.
CLOCKS
Rt. 124
Minersville,

H ·1 mo. pd .

Small investment, _ large
return. ·Sentinel Want Ads

-~382

I
li
I

Home.
~=======:j;========~~ Mobile
Anything
lor your

Perm Spectllcular

••slotant, Becky "l'ealoro, highlighted the teacher's
unit on dental health.

Write your own ad and order by malt with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

. PH. 985-4269 or

·;

1f2PRICE

BRUSHING the right way wa• emphasized by Dr.
Margie Lawson who assists Jonathan Dunn, Pomeroy
· sixth grader. The program by Dr. Lawson and her

Chester, Ohio .

Office Hours:
Mon.-Fri. 9 a.J'II. to 5 p.m.
By Appointment Only
Phone (3041372-8550

J. R. PARSONS

easy· care .hairstyle, we have a perm that'S right
for you r hair and a stylist that's right for you.
-Our tOp of the lln9 perms- One Better,
4t.Jntperm and Uniperm Acid, and Glmme Curl

APPliANCE SERVICE

Address:
Pinnell Sl Ripley, W. Va.

A short business session was c~
dueled by the president, Ronal4
Osborne. The members voted to
retain the same officers lor anothet
year. The January meeting will ~
at the Osborne home.
_
1

and Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Myers, Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead, Mr. and Mrs. Denver .
Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Barliss Frnak,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hannum and Mr.
and Mrs. Lyle Balderson.

and

STEVE R. KESSEL, M.D.

lJndll

Group holds holiday ~eettng
The Community Builders Club of
Reedsville ate out at a restaurant in
Rave nswOod, W. Va. for their
holiday meeting. Attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens who
are charter members of the club
which was . organized in 1947, Mr.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and III
I
Savell I
I
I

3~~===~Announc•ments

I oasottne. heating oft· and
I diesel fuel, call Landmark,
I 99'2·2181 , Pomeroy, on . .
I
I

l

Mai

~ ·.

0..

- - - - - ... ----------------~I

D of A installs officers
,

r

M' ' ' p 1.

furniture.

gold,

sliver

dollars. wood Ice bo•es,
stone Iars, antiques, etc .,

Service Manager Needed

for aulomoblle dealersnlp.
Experience

required.

Replies kept confidential.

Automobile

Salesman

Needed. Ambitious person
witting to meet the publi c
selling new and used

Reliable woman to babvs lt
in your home . Weeknights

or weekends . Caii2AH213.
' Sandblasting-old

cars,

trailers and smaller Items .

Call 446-8274 after s . As!&lt;
for Rick.

Will do babYSitting In my
home . Day shift only, Call
A46·4158.
ELDERLY tady or ge n·

tlen1an to ca re for in my

nome , private
room,
phone, 304·576-2103 .
TWO e•perlenced and
dependable ladles wttt
walt · paper or paint In your
home or business. Phone

JOHS8· 1B3S br 4S8·15l6.

automobiles . Some ex·
per lence required. Replies

kept

conlldentlal.

Send

resume to Box 729-C, c ·o

clean downtown Pomeroy
diameter 10" on largest

245·5601 .

Send resume to Box 729-H

c ·o
Dally
Sentinel.
Pomeroy, OhloAS769.

Dally 5en11net, Pomeroy,
Complete
house holds . OhiO 45769 .
Write : M.O. Miller, Rt. A,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992-7760.
RELIABLE PERSON to
CHIP WOOD. Poles ma•.

Will do sewing tO'r woman
&amp; chi ldren. Cotl 245-9213 or

offi ces once a week In
evening. Write Bo~ 729· 8,

end. S12.50perton. Bundled D,~lly Sentinel, Pomerov,
3
Announcements
slab . SIO .SO per ·ton . Ohio 45769 .
SWEEPER and 5ewlng · Deliverd to Ohio Pallet co .•
Springs Rd ., R.N. Immed iate opening.
machine repair, parts, and Rock
Pharmacy baled I.V . learn
supplies.
Pick up and Pomeroy. 99'2 ·2689 .
work for professional
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Pharm'a c y
Cleaner, one half mite up Gold, silver, s terling, hospital
Georges Creek Rd . Colt jewelrY, rings , otd coins &amp; menagment co. Part-tiMe
-IA6·029A ..
currency . Ed Burkett Bar· aays . . No uper lence
ber snop, Middleport. 992· necessary . Call v . M. Phar·
macy. 992-6297. E.O..E.
3476.
complete tine of Muzzle
Loading Gun• and Sup·
-ptles . Spring
Valley BUYING DEER AND Sales trainee opportunitv
Trading Co., Spring Valtey BEEF HID ES . Gene Htnes available. E•cellent ear ·
Plaza, ~- 8025 .
Rl. 1, Amesville, Oh «8· nino potentiaL Salary plus
Company
6747. Buying raw fur after commission.
benefits . Otd
Anyone hav ing furn iture Dec . 12. Pally 6 PM to 9 paid
established territory . No
for repair at the residence PM. closed sundavs. Atso e)(perlence
necessarv .
closed
Dec
.
24&amp;25.
of the late Harold Ru•sett
Complete
training
make arrangement• to
Management
pickup by January 31, 1982 RAW FUR buyer . Beef &amp; program.
promotions
readily
aft unclaimed wtll be sold. deor hlde·ginshang. Trap- available.
For addllloMI
Colt ~·1881 after 5PM.
ping supplies. George Information. colt Richard
Buckley, Rt . 2, Athens. Oh. Flsher99'2·2.SO.
Open
614 · 664 · 4761 .
Gun Shoo't Racine Gun evenings_
Babysitter needed In my
Club. Every Sun . •tartino
at 1 p.m: Factory choke
home, day shift, need own
OLD FURNITURE, beds, tranaportation . References
guns only .
Iron, brass, or WOOd. Kit' required. Phone 675-5628
cnen cubbards ot all types. after4pm .
Racine Fire Dept. sponsoro Tabies, round or square.
a Gun Shoot, Sat. nights Wood ice boxes . Otd c!esks N
6:30p.m., Bashan. Factory and bOOkcases. Wltl buy ' 0
E.XPER t ENCE
choke 12 guage snotgun .
complete household. Gold, REQUIRED for tnls nigh
silver, otd money, pocket • Income opportunity wl~h
Flea Market. New · Watches, ci\"arns, rings, and national Dll company In Pl.
Opening . 7 days a week. etc. 1ndlan Artlfacls of alt Pleasant area. Regardless
The Heart ot Middleport. 20 lypes: Also buying baseball of ""per fence, 11/!nle M. K.
N. 2nd St. 'tormerly Martin cards. O.by Martin 99'2· Read, Box 1116, Dayton,
Gene.ai.Store . 99'2·6370.
6370.
O!l!hlllii!.O.!!H~1L.·,.,-.,...,,.,.--;-..,-12
lttuotions Wanled
1ncome
tax
service. Cash for old and used Wanted : Person to. share 2
Federot and state Income books; no paperbacks , ~ bdr. apt. Cel1_245-5835 .
tax forms, quarterly repor- schools bOOks, or book club
ts, and W-2 forma wltl be edition. Also buy otd oil Have vacancy for elderly .
dOI1e bY appointment. see patntlnos. Bo• i14, Athens, Home cooked meats, hot
Wanda Ebtln, 41000 Laurel Oh. 45701 . 593-8915.
wale~ heat. 992-6022.
Ctllf Rd., Pomeroy. 99'2·
22~2.
Raw furs, htdes, scrap , Wilt care for elderly
mefals,
batterlel , woman or man in my
GIVING PIANO ltssons ln radiators, ginseng, yellow home . Good e~perience .
Bradbury. $4 n.lf hour. root, and merchandise Reasonable rates. 661·3402
Adults and children over B. br~ · .erlng . Harper-Hatsle· or 667·6329.
·
Catt 99'2·.5071.
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. "5-~.
Witt do babysitting In my
TRi·CHEM l.lquld. Em· Also Flea Market Open home . Rel iable. 99n 667.
III'Oidery. E~clttttnl ear· dally . Open Monday·
nino opporlunlllft. Hold Friday 1·5 P~ ·
&lt;:arpool
to Marshall
cla~~e~·recelve free gilt$ or
IP rIng
paints. E INI Cox, :JIU-675· 13 Inch or 15 Inch - 1 for U n Ivers It y ,
aemester .' M·F . 1·4. Call
511!. .
Subllru: Phone 675·415-4.
675·5618 after 5 pm .

21
Facemver Cab Co. &amp; atso
Includes Yettow Cab .
Equipment &amp; everything ·
goes. Calt379 ·2404.
·
Money to Loan

22

Columbus First Mortgage
company FHA·VA Ftnan·
clng ~oan Rep. Cookie
Krautter (304)615·347].
REFINANCE or purchase
your home . JO year ll•ed
rate. wva. &amp; Ohio . l.eader
Mortgage, 77 E. State St.,
Atheno, Oh. 592 ·3051.
23

Professional

Services
Plano Tun lng·Be kind to
your ears. Call Bill Ward

for appointment, A46·4372.
C &amp; L Bookkeep ing . Complete bookkeep!oo and to•
serv ice for business and In-

d ividuals.
Carol Neat

~ · 31162

--

-~

G;iifpoi;, - Only

Rubber

S t t~ mp

or

Shop. U susaUy one
two davs ser v iCe.

Dismuke's 405 2nd. Ave.,
446·0474.

---~~~~---

3.!.__..

Home$ fo r ·Sale

--.

3 bdrm. hOme , carpet;
beautiful cabinets, vinl i

siding,· outbuildings, carpet, nat. gas, city water &amp;

schools . 446·3897.
3 or 4 bedroom house wit"
bath In counlry. On 2.1
acres . Storm windows:,.
rural water, garage,
o(

lor'

storage space. Close to all J
mines. Price reduced · fof
quick sale . $15,500 . 614-7A2.'
2502 .
.
Or rent·3 bedroom fur ·,
nlshed nome on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big level 101.
576·2111 .
'
sandhill Road , Pt ;
Pleasant, · 3 beltrooms, 1
and natl balhs , doUble
garage. Owner will flnan·

.

ce. 30H7S·S817 .

�Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

"'""'

•

Newly
remodeled
2
bedroom house, city water,
qarbage pickup, 2 acres
qround. Located 4 m iles
from Pt . Pleasant on Rt. 62
~ - Call Andy Wilson 675·
ds.

room, two end a hell baths,

garage, extra large lpt,

0

showing only . Pho~ 675·
2634.
· 32- ,- MObile Home-s - for Sale

REFRIGERATOR ,
675-3954, call after 5.

TRI · STA'fE
MOBILE
HOMES. Gall ipoliS. Yeaf
end sate, price reduced,
used mobile homes. CALL
4-46·7572 .

II"~~~~~~~;;;~~;:r==~~~~~~~~
44
Apartmemt

lnclude;s

cement

blocks 11o skirting, 54.800.
For more Information call
4-46·0511 .

TWO bedroom -furnished
house, $150.00 plus utilit ies,
New Haven, 304-882·2466.

3 rooms with private bath,

845 Second Ave . Phone
2215 .
2nd . floor
fiency apt.
Gallipoli s.
Adults only,

1294.·

2,3

For Sale 1976 Rembran't" ces, no pets. 675·1365.

)louse . trailer 12x60, 2
bedroOm, woodburner &amp;
air conditioner. Call 256-

1669 after 5.
1976 Castle, 14x70, $3,495.
1973 Fleetwood l4x65,
$5,995. 1972 New Moon
12x65, wlexp., $5,995. 1964
Champion 20x44, S7 ,9'15.
1965 castle 10x55, $3,495.
Kanauga Mobile Homes,
Rt . 7, Kanauga ~ Oh. Call
4-46·9662 .

ATTENTION · M .
U.
STUDENTS . 4 bedroom
house, 2 blocks from Marshall, 2 baths, Ioint kitchen,
furnished refrigerator,

washer, dryer , beds.
dressers. S8S pper student

per month plus utilities.
Please coll675·5056.
·

ALL electric home with
garage &amp; full
size
basement, S2SO. a monfh,
phoneJOA-675·3217 .

For sale two 12x60 trailers
1969 Liberty, 1968 Winston,
$9,000 for both. (:31f".f.o0·4745
or 446·1630.
'
1972 Skyline 12 x 4~ 1
bedroom furnished, good
condlfion . Also small
tr a i fer for rent. 992· 71.79 .
Trailer and lot. 1972 all
electric 2 bedroom on a 200
x 100 lot. Gallipolis Ferry .
675·4096.

Mobile home, 2 bedroom,
furnished , (clean ), citY.
utilities, 2 miles out, $115.
Call 446·0939.

2 bdl' . and 3 bdr. mobile
homes . Call"-46·0175.
Centenary : 2 bdr .• private
101, adults. ref. llo dep .
Eureka : Riverfront lot, 1
bdr .. adu lls, ref. &amp; deposit .
Calll -614·643·2644.
~---

TWO bedroom 12x60, par ·
flally furnished , gas heat, J
miles out from Pt .
Pleasant.
Rt .
62,
Charleston Rd. call after 4,
304-675·3741 .
6~ TWO bedroom, '· trailer,

$1200. 30~ · 675- S,jjjl.
12 x 60,

197~

model. 2

ac, furnished. Located 66
Burdeffe Addition. Phone
675· 220~ .

Farms for Sale

FArm, located on Rt. 218,
40 acres, 1200 lb. tobacco
base. Call after 6, 246-9222.
115.7 ACRES secluded
farm, "10 mile SE of Pt .
Pleasant., priced on lh ·
s pecllon, Todd Bush, 304·
675·5016 . .
Business f'ulldings

Large building for lease or
rent In Middleport. Former
Cl tv ,
Ice , and Fuel
building . 742·3195.

•

l..ots &amp; Acreage

2, 1 acre house lots, on 554,
low downpavment, land

contract,

rural

water,

Columbus and Southern
Electric. Call 256·6413, 12
p.m. fo9 p.m .

2 or J grave lots for sate at
Gallipolis Ohio Memory
Gardens . Will sell cheap.
Call245·5682.

Rentals
41

2 bedroom mobile home
partially turn., eKtra nice,
in Gallipolis. $250 per mo.
plus gas, S150 dep., adults
preferred . Call 4-46·3791 af·
fer S.

2 bedroom
house .
15

unfurnished
Vine
St.
G~llipolls .
No pets llo
reference · required . Call
446·2419 or 4-46·3949.
2 story farm house. 4 m i.
from town. K.C. dlst., yard
11o garden . Ca ll 446·0648 at·

ter s.

3 bdr. house catpeted,
large yard on Rt. 218. Ref.
11o dep. required, $200 mo.
Ph. ~46·6697 after 4PM.
House for sale in Vinton .
Call after 5. 388·8823.

2 bedroom house. Spring
Ave .. Pomeroy . Carpeted,
remodeled. Call after 6.
$195. month nol Inc luding
utilities. 992·2288 .

7 ~;~se. carpeted,

stqye, refrigerator. $275
plus deposit. 2 miles from
downtown Galllpoll•. 675·

REMINGTON ·
30 · 06
automatic model 742 with
sling
swivels . Excellent
condition . $300.00 call 304·
675·4828.

Firewood-seasoned har ·
dwood, $35 pickup load
delivered . Cal1446·4176.

$~ . 00.

2

1 adult, clean, no pets. Call

446 1519.
Samll First Floor Apart·
ment. Utilities furnished .
Call at 631 41h.Ave .
2 Bdr . Apartment, •sa
Second Ave. Large living
room, kitchen, bath. newly
decorated .
Completely
turn. Adults, dep. &amp; ref.
r~q. $225 mo. 4-46·2581 or
446·2236.

·----

J bedroom apt. In Mid·
dleport. $150 . month. 9'12·
5692.
Small 3 - room f.urnlshed
apt. Pomeroy. S)1ort wa tk
from center of town .
Re~ponslble person only .
9'12·2588.
.

---

FURNISHED 4 room apar·
tment, adults. no pets, 304·
675·1453.

---------

4S

2 bedroom 12x60 mobile
home. Must have referen ces l!lnd deposit. S17S mon·
thiY. Home 9'12-6206 after 5,
business 9'12·6173.

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping aPt..
Park Central Hotel .
Weekly rates available $60
and up In Circles MoteL
cati446-2S01.

46

Space for Rent

Trai.ler lot for rent. Call
4265.

«·

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
9'12·7479.

House tra i ler for rent In .
Middleport. Call 992·3590.
Coppertone electric range . OFFICE space for rent,
304-675·1415.

.....
..... ., ".......
....... .. .

Constru-ction
workers
trailer for three . Phone 304·
773·5651, Mason.
TWO bedroom mobile
home in New Haven .
Adults only, no pets, 304·
675 · 1~52 .

2 bedroom trailer on
Jericho Road. $1SQ n:&gt;onth .
$50 deposit. Call675·3858.
Two and three bedroom
mobile homu. furnished or
unfurnished . 6 room house,
full basement. Caii675·1J71
or6?5·3812 .

TWO bedroom furnished
trailer, SlSO . OO plus
utilities, New Haven, J0~ 882·2466.
FURNISHEO 1 bedroom
mobile ho,me, all utilities
paid, outskirts of Hen·
derson, 304-675-6730.

5 rooms, J bedrooms, bath,
utility

room, nice and
clea~ . Phone 446·1519 or
9'12·2430,
Nice 3 bedroom
rent. If• mile from M!tlgoi(
Mine 1. 614-7~2·2126 .
44

'

T~REE

A.partmemt
for Rent

bedroom and 1
bedroom apartments In Pt.
Pleasant, newly remodled,
clfan,
conveniently
located, 304-675-6020.

55

.,_,

S.l__HOiJ$0ho~Cid$LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S275.
Sofas and chairs · priced
from $285 . to S795. Tables,
SJ8 and up to $109. Hlde·a beds,$340., qu~n size, $380.
Recliners, $17$. lo $295.,
Lamps from Sl8 . to $65. 5
pc . difettes from 579., to
$385. 7 pc .. $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to 5495. Desk SilO.
Hutches, $300. and S375.,
milple cr pine finish .
Bedrocim suites · Bassett
Oak, $675 .. Bassett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed complete.
with mattresses, $250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
S2.75. complete. Baby beds,
S99. Mattresses or boK
springs, full ~ twlnl sse.,
firm, $68 . and $78. Queen
sets, Sl95. 5 dr. chests, S49.
.c dr . chests, $42. Bed
frames, S20.and $25., 10 gun•
· Gun cabinets, $350., dlnet·
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, S295 1 Or·
thopedic super firm. 'S95,
baby matresses, $25 11o SJS,
bed frames$20$25, 11o $30.
Electric fireplace, gun
cabinet, Living room suite,
wood table &amp; 4 chairs.
used.
Ranges ,
refrigerators, and TV's,
J miles out Bulavllle Rd.
0~ 9om to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri., Pam to5pm, Sat, .

Bulldlrtg

SUI!!!!~

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dews, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio · Grande, 0 .
Call245·5121.
56

Pets for Sale

POOOLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies , CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Slame$&lt;1 klffens. Call 4-46·
3844 after 4 p .m.
HI LLCREST KENNEL ·
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
m -1 ns. Call"-46·7795 ,
BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
AKC Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call 388·9790 .
dog
and
minature German Shepard
dog. Call"-46·2203.
D~schund

HOOF HOLLOW Horses &amp;
ponies .
Evetything
imaginable in horse eQuip·
ment. Also belts, boots.
Riding lessons and trail
r ides.
698· 3290.
Ruth
Reeves.

.- --·~-

2 trailers 12x60 un furnished, S175 mo ., SlOO
deposit . Call ~46- 47~5or446 16JO .

P J·ann in storage. Respon slbie party may lake on low
monthly payments. Call
·credit manager collect,
614.· 642·5180.

A cl!lrry out business closed
down and ha~ all beverage
coolers for sale. Call 1 - 61~286 - 57~ .

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pieasant . . 675·2063. Mon ..
Thurs., I Fri . 11 to 6 . Tues.,
Wed., I Sat . 11 to 4. Check
dur Fish Special.

Homelite Chain Saw, like
new. Coii2AH212 .
Long wood burning stove,
Free Standing and
l ireploce Inserts. Call 4-46·
1675.

AKC
registered
· Pekingeese puppies, 304·
Excelsior OH Co., 636 E . 882· 2683.
Main St., PofTieroY; Ohio.
- ------~-

9'12 · 220~ .

DACHSUHUND
mixed
plott &amp; Beagle, 1 red male,
1 black female, 6 months.
Trade for domestic rabbits.
Phone 304-675-1076.

Rear window louver for 79
to 81 .cdr. Omni or Horizon.
Brand new. $75. 742·3154 or

9'12·7467 .

Doberman
pups,
registered . 675·7763.

Kodak M7.2 lnstamatic
movie camera, m ovie
light, Sears SuperB proj ec ·
tor, $100. Sound Design
AM · FM B·track stereo
receiver and 2 spC'akers,
575. 12 X 10 red sculptured
shag carpet, 590. 8ft . truck
topper, $75 . 1969 Cheve lle
V·8 Automatic, new paint,
fair condition, $450. l91S
Merc ury Monarch 6-cyl, 3
speed , new paint, and new
tires, '1395 . Call9'12·5388 .

57

Musical
Instruments

1939 Plymouth. 1974 Dodge
Colt . 1973 Gremlin. Phone

675 . 3 ~ 70 _

NEW Cqnqueror 5·slrlng
banjo w ith case, S2SO. 9926548.

1977 RENAULT LeCar. 40
mpg, good condition, new
tires, $1400 . 576· 2127 .

Splnet · Console Piano
Bargain . Wanted : Responsible party to take over low
monthly payments on
spinet p iano. Can be seen
locallY .
Write credit
Manager : PO Box JJ,
Fridens, PA 15541.
'

64 FORD Fa lrlane 500, 2
door with 69 302, 4 speed
engine, has low milage.
Call after 6, 304·895·3603.

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

· ~

'

Farm Equipment .

JIVIDEN 'S
FARM
EQUIPMENT See The Hay
Equipment of the future,
New from Vermeer also
large round bale movers &amp;
feederplus a full line of
equipment, from Long,
Vermeer, Kuhn, Kelley,
and many others. And see
us to get your parts &amp; com·
plete
service .
USED
EQUIP·:· Tractors : 1 IH
Hydro 70, 1 «5 Long, 2 MF
135, 2 Bush ·hogs, 1 Tobacco
setter, Cultivators, 2 rakes,
haybind, large bale mover,
bale unroller, 76 Jeep
p i ckup , NH
manure
spreader. CHECK OUR
PRICES llo COMPARE!
~46 · 1675 .

Almost new 255· Ferguson
tractor, 450 round hay
baler, 7ft. hay bind, used·2
corn pickers, ·h-ay baler, 2
hay rakes, 2 row corn plan ter, small farm . 675· 1858.

·------·----

'l

Live,~s.,_,
to,c,
k_ _ _

RegiStered Quarter Horse
"filly ,
Registered
Appaloosa, ~ yrs. old and gOod
blood line. Call 256-6413, 12
p. m . to9 p.m .
Buckskin mare &amp; 2 colts.
100 bales of good horse hay
and rabbits. Call 379·2761.
Two :J4 Nubian Does, bred.
Gentle 12 year Appaloosa
Gelding. 304-937·2003 after 6
pm .

1981 TRANS ·Am, loaded
with T·fop, $8700. 304-6753137 anytime .
1970 FORD Torino, 2 door;
$600. 304-675-5625.

1979 Chevy Mal ibu Classic,
landau top, 35;000 miles.
$4800. 675·5625.

1947 Ford, good motor,
sol id
body.
Serious
Inquiries only, 675·2207 .

1977 Dodge Monaco wagon,
4 door,
power;
air,
automatic, $800. 1974 vega
wagon $500. 675·3962 .
1965 Oldsmobile,
2811 .

304·675·

CAPTAIN EASY
. AT!LY, 5EVPRAL OF THE NOVICES
iAVE Hf!ARP 'WMAT THEY CALLED THE·
IOICE OF 5ATAM. IT!; TO 8&amp; &amp;XPECTer
CON~I~EiliNG THE ~E5TRICTf0NS. OF
OUR CLOI!OUREP LIFI'. BUT !!ii5TeR

.. . . . ......... .
......................
·~

"'u"'tc:o•to
=r:c5;:0:-;1::
e- 7;;1- -_- A

actual miles, $600. 304 675
4201 .
1979 3/4 GMC truck, 4·WO,

3,600 mi. Great tor win.ter,
$4 ,400 firm . Call"-46·3675 or
446-3824 before noon .
1974 Ford F-250 new stake
bed and dual wheels. Call
256·6413, 12p.m. to9p.m.
1976 3/4 ton Ford 4x4 tru ck
wilh topper, 69,000 miles,
$2 ,500 . Call 446-9285 after 12
noon.

.::.=------ ====

For sale 1977 Ram
Charger, eKcellent con·
dition, low m ileage. Call
245-9213.
1979 Dodge pickup, low
mileage . Call446· 4185.

1979 3/4 GMC truck, 4-WO,
3,600 mi. Great for winter,
$4,400 firm . Call 446·3&lt;&gt;75 or
446· 3824

before

noon .

1980 Chevy J;., ton 4 wheel

drive. Auto trans with over·
drive. .1nsulated topper.
trailer hiflch, manv·e&gt;&lt;1ras.
Call9'12·312.9 afler 5 :30p.m .

72 Pontiac, exc. cond., very
little rust. new vinyl top,
can be seen 107 Chillicothe
Rd.

1978 Mustang II,~ cyl., PS,
P8, air, neW tires, ex.
cond. Call 446·7838 or 446·
7~47 after 5.
76 Ford Torino, 2 dr ., $900.
Call379·2)56 .

1976 9 passanger Chevy
station wagon . Cal l 446· 1881
after SPM .
Cutlass Supreme.
loaded. Call256· 1667 .

1979

r

1?69 Plymouth wagon . JIB
auto . 985--1346.
1973 Pinto s.w. Good on gas
and good condition. A~ r
conditi oner 25,000 btU. 61~667·6636.
~ARTS

Used . Cars, New
Haven West VirVinla . Over
20 less expen1lve cars In
stock .

1962 FORD Falcon Ran·
chero pic kup with shell ,
runs good, needs paint.
$700. or offer 304·576-29,21 .

SURE THj' MEETINe
t&lt;:OOMS READY.

?:01

BORN LOSER

oubloct 01 thll ftroleplo-. (1!0
mina.}_
(jJ) •
INTIIITA*MINT
TONIGHT
? :31 ~ IANPOIIDAND7:88
CINUPOATINIWI

Home
Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings com s
mercial arid residential.
tree estimates . Call 256·
1182.
f

'

collorod by hlo.llrotoooo of

PR.C6'LY GOIN'

TO AI&lt;IEETI~l-Y*EN
Y' GIW\'f UP Y' 60 TO
LOTS 0' MEETING&amp; ..
DON'T ASK ME WHY-

puppy love when hi epote 1
cuddly _glrl poodle who 11 ·I
member of aolrouatct. Sttoopy

~HEN

T' BE

beoomtl a eire.,. perfonner, a

I GUEGG

canlnacktwn,andaeterry·tred
captive ol romance a a he
toUowe the clrout In purtUit of

AIN'T

ELSE

hlolovo. (Ropootl
•
(J) GMAT PIIIII'OIIIIANCIII:
DANCIIN AIIIIIICA ' Poul

T' 0() ..,

Taylor : Thrett.tod~C'-t16cl'

The Paul Taylor Dance
COmpanr't partormanoe at the
taft A,..riOinDonoofottlvol.
hold In Durflom, Nonh CttOIIno .
(§&lt;)mini.)
8:01 (£ IIOYII•(COIIIDY)"If&lt;

Call 4-46-2801 tor termite,
roa ch. bird, rodent, spider,
and fl eas control ~ Free
estimates,sBill Thomas.

''J~t'!'ouohol-"1181

1::10 e&lt;IJtJIIUGIIUIINY'IIIAD

ALLEYOOP

w~lchfollowo Loncloft 'ollf•lroon

through hi I rejaotlon of hil
IUOOIII, ,10 hil return tG

Colltomlt.

---·~--

8:68 Cll !:lilt UPOATINt: WI

Water wells . Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service .
304-895· 3802 .

9:00

CARPENTRY
11o
remodeling , electr i..:al and
plumbing. 304·576·2989 or
576·2587 .

GASOUNE ALLEY

- . - - - - - - --

See 14o.uat
noonihen,
Jessica!

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

..•

--- --~---

~~~~=-·

l'm havinq
lunch witli
Mrs. Wilmer

tanctdklabHnilato63yeareln
prleon lor g~WUnntng , Ita nama
11 Frank Terpll, Uelng lntervtew1
with family , frlende, b\11lne11
IIAOCIItlllnd Ttrpll hlmealt,
thla prooram prttanta 1
haUnting ponratt of a wanted
man.

· Plumbing
&amp; Heating

ilD

Excavating

-----

OKAY••• LET!$
PRETEND HE li'OF5

ASGWIR GENI?S
HIS Me5SENGER 70
WINNIE 'S OF;flC.~ OOO!r..J

"

HAVE DES/eNS ON
OUR' COMPANY / '
WHAT MAKES YOU
THINK ~f 'V MAKE

I'P HE/IF~? 5£/L
Tl(£ cr:JMIHN'(
SJRDtE! BUT I
AM 5U5PICIOUS

Electrical

_ _&amp; Refrigeration

A lftWAN:s'
!NTt.I!T/OA/,
SI~DIE. I'VI'
BEEN RIGHT

8EI'ORf, YOO
KNOW .. •

Yf,AH .. lHE LAST
TiliNG lOU WER'E
RIGHT ABOI.IT WAS

OUR' fiNAAtYA£

77?0UBI.t:.l

YOU A i.OAN1'

1:30 W(J)!lllHQUIIc;.ALLIAdoclor II brOUGht Into KW!tlng·

ton Hoapttal to head yp 1 druo
rehoDIIIItllon program, but hit
future Ia thraate~~ed when Dr.
Packler team• M Ia 1
homoMxual.
10:00 C1J MOYII-(IIIUIICALI"If&lt;

OF OMAR'5'

SVPPEN

SEW'I NG Machine repa irs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sates &amp; Servlce1, Sharpen
Scissors. Fabr ic Shop,
Pomeroy . 992-2274 .

INTEREST.'

'

JACKS REFRIGERA T IO·
N. air condition ser vice.
commercial, i n dustri .;tl.
Phone 882·2079.

tO:OI
10:21
10:30

CIOIIIOOk If I myiiiFIOUI

tllmen.t which atrlktl and·
fraquantl~ kill a ohlldran
batwtan
,!ght _ _tha agee of one and

IHl

11:01
11:21
11:30

f

JONES BOYS WATER •
SERVICE . Call '367·7471 or "r
367-0591.

•

a.

87

MA'AM HOW COME
MARCIE GOT TO BE A

_

50100. PATROL PERSON
AND ·I DIDN'T?

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave .• Gallipolis.
446·7833 or 4-46·1833.

I

I D DO ANY'THiN6

Pt1ntan1WIIhete:

'

Th9 alam ~ldn't • • •
'

....

i

•

117 Onr.Y J. .y
... AiuS.taa
O.Wald: "Ia tbe OctOber
'Bridle World,' Terence
RleM abon al:r b1nda
plaJed bJ lbe Brltlab team
ill !be ~
abiiJI• . a... 11 botlllbe Brlllab and Runcar·
laD ND1111 playera lllled to
fllld lbe wlliDIIillead aplnat
a llaac! alam .. . _ lhlnb
lbey altoald bave."
Alao: ''Tile balld loob u
11-madeltupua
problem, but II really wu
ilealt With proptrl ...
O.Wald: "l'be tlddln.l In
till bo:r toot place at tiotb
tabl-. We UP the blddln&amp;.
Wllt'a lib diamond openilla
bl aelllltlllc, but It
II a 10011 bid alld
lat~lt tlii l!:ut play·
en lor ralalal to liVID with

•• 1·11-11

cbam:.c:

::r.:;

OJielllltt ~
,..; .(.,.
'••

lbe ace of lnmiPI and other

.

pocll•."

· Alan: "80th North Jayen

opened tbe bta.f ace.

Declartr ruffed, caabecl the
ace of elabl, ruff-.! a ,elub,

dllcarded a club 011 tbe ace
of IPidel1 ruffed bact to· Ida
baaa, ruft-.1 Ida lut low club
with · till ace of · trump11,
l'llfled baell to Ida lUnd,
dmr trumpll and clllft*l
JI:Ut'a ralll to 'wu a
vilry lood bid, but a trump
1ucl would bave defeated
lbe eontrld fliDce oaly cioe
club could bave been

ruffed."

--..

Qulnov '"""find • ~­
l_gor_watllwlecl-

BE A PATROL PEK50N ...

~
lioyfMOMAIIOIDH
ACJ\081

IUIIBI'II (Lat.)

1 Gypiy, e.g.

llndlall

Zorouirtan

liRellon
lli.AIIIroul

U'l'roll
It Go hllltll')'
11 Ptn:elved

-

by the

17 Onarchlll'•

llan

u Yale man
ltFintSUte
(abbr. )

IS Tarry

DOWN
.
1 BWiard lllot
ZWindow
.lltyle
aThey illvolve
''lave"

4~

I Ruulln CCH~pZIGIYe the •
7 Inlet (Sp. ) ZIBet IIII!Jit
I Have It
Zl 'hlw 1111

CllllliDi

'

IIIW CII"IIO

Zlllillrolllld

• Tumed

Zlllea eaaJe
ZlCapone

llplide

•

~seta

Zl AffedBUOII

....

Zl- a clef
ZIPay dllt

r!Novellll
RIIW
.• Qqanlon

a Allow

IIQnlly
hSblpbeak

N ltlller ,
wbale
II Nllllllt
rl Olllalld
• lndlall City
•~~eeaotne

mare
prafound
UOimb
In I ,WII}'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -"-".AltYDLaAAil
LOJI(.QJ'I. LLOW

II

ODe letter llmpiJ ttandl lor anetller. ID. .Ie Ado ·
_ . lor tbt t11rw L't, X for tbe two O'o,
le.l ltro, ·
~ the

llhlta. laell

lenllh

&lt;SYPTOQUOTII

FDCKC

WH

ere oil" '
J_ ;

.·
I

'

'

' '

A.

PC .

HX

Y....,.,, CIS I

u
lie: MEN WHO

WITHOUT BEII~G TOLD
WAGJI:II.-EQWAIIDSTUART
\

.C
dlf f l '.

ud fOI'IIIIIIOII

417 the code !etten m

KXLCKF
.

Nurwr. .

11111'6

down

-~·-ol-

.

dd:.;::lil! ~

I Wall embel- U
lllhmlnt
Ptl,eraJi,

1 1110 VII

Qolooy, M.l.: 'T-OITnolll'

,

ro

MOWREYS Upholstery R't .
1 Bo~ 124, Pt. Pleasant, J0~675·"54.
-,.~----

~r·::.:-

• .,..,_,
uPDATIITMlTOIIIIIIJIIIOW
'Tho lett Of Carton' Guooto:
Candice lergan, Mac Dawll!.
-t;IOmlnl.)
·
AIIOTHIIIIM'I .

1I"::ai.'"u

PEANUTS

'

Upholstery

ALI'IIID IITCIICOCK

:~: fra~MWL.

Generol Haulini__

NOW HAULING house coal
limestone for driveWays. ~
Call for estimates 36N101 .

NIWI

THIYINIIIOMWI
C811UI'DA'IW NIWI .
MYI'IIYIIOIIOIII: ntl

CHILD MIUIII Hooted by Bob
R,.an , formarly altha Todly
Show, thlt proortm.llkll 1

'IE PLAVED DEAD REAL
GOOD, Ol: BULLET--· HERE'S
'/ORE GUMDROP

~

.

l

l'!'hi!.IUa" ••,.
())Ill LOU GIIAIIT

IS

1979 Jeep Cherokee, 4
wheel driVe, 1 owner.
Phone 446 ·1873 between 8
and5.

NOT IN A THO UlAND
Y!AIII Tho olluotlon In tho
nawly·lndepantlant Afrloan
country of Zimbabwe, whara
lhl pravloualy wbHI pam·
mant 11ld maJority black rwla
wowld coma 'not In alhOullnd
yaara, 'leaxemlnedwlthafooue
on tha new prime mlnletar ,
!!2bort !oluttbo. (I!OmiM.)

WINNIE

1971 FORD ' Range~ with
topper, PS, PB, good
shape, $600 . Phone 304-895·

1971 Volkswagen van, good
family or work van . $900 .
4-46·9748: call after 5 on
weekdays .

.

e ())

or

REFRIGERATOR, washe - ·•
r, dryer, range r~pair ser · •
vice. Cltv Furniture, 304· '•
675-2608 or · evenings 614 ·
446·8295.

·- - - -

CJleCIJ MONDAY NIGHT AT

iD!iliiAIICIIONDAYNIGHT
110¥11 'VIotlmt ' t882 Sllrt:
Kate Nelligan, Ken Howerd,
Howard He111m1n.
!lll II.A.I .H. Hot Llpo .
atruttglea to ram ova all
ObiiiCIII to hlr lltlrly
twoltod JlYnt 10 Tokyo.
()) WOiiLD 'Frank Torpll:
Conftlllona of a Oangaroua
Man' Brooklyn born, he became
on a of ldl Amln'a o.toaaet
advleora . A auppllar of
axpfoalvaa .to Llbya'a COlonel
Qtddtfl, ho hot booo - ·

EXP E RIENCED c ar · ,,
penter available for home
business remode li ng or •
new structures. Fr ee
estlma.fes . Reference s.
Will beat any signed writlen estimate. 304-675-2440.

1962 FORD Falcon Ran·
chero p ickup w i th shell,
runs good, needs pa int,
S700. or offer 304·576·2921.

Vans&amp;4W.O. - ..

. I () -

THIIIj)VIll 'leo Cotllu"
107Q &amp;tara: Robby Benaon.

---------·

73

WITH SPARKLING TEEm!

the elume of San Franoleoo,.

·-1980 Chevy ·~ ton 4 wheel
drive . Auto trans with Over - Wandling's Electric Ser ·
dr ive . Insulated topper, vice . Old work and new
trailer hitlch , many extras . work. 24 hour servi ce. 30
Call992·3129 after 5: 30p.m . year s ex perience. Phone
675·6663.

------- --

FELLI&gt;.S

America '1 greattlt wrlterell
portrayed In thlt docu·drl,.l

1976-3/4 ton FJ-;d;x.O-;uck
with topper, 69 ,000 miles,
$2 ,500 . Call446·9285 after 12
noon.

39'17 .

Bug a' background 111 danoer,
comedian a·nd all · aro•nd
performer makea him the
M)"tcl condldolt '"' thiiOIJ .

OH , R . ..J. , I REALLY GO FOR

DIP R . ..J. GO? ·

Wid~~: ~~::NOINO':~To~

Gallipolis Diversif ied Const . Co . Custom dozer &amp;
backhoe work . Spec ia l
farm rates. Call us for fre e
estim ate! . 446· -t-440 .

1979 Dodge pickup, low
mileage. Call446·4185 .

~WHERE

RINGLES'SSERVICE ex·
perienced mason, rooter.
carpenter,
electri cia n,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304-675·
2088 or 675-4560.

83

ton. 39o, uses no oil, SSOO.
Cal l "-46·2459 .
·

deoideatohlreanewpre~Hfeftt ,

OKAY, MEN! LET'S HI G H TAIL tT OUTA HERE!

1974 Ford F·250 new stake
bed and dual wheels. Call
256·6413, 12 p.m. to 9 p .m .

69 Ford XL · Ranger, 314

WOIILD ·OP TILlY! liON
Whtn lhl dltllfuntlod loanl of
,OiroclorootthtQTTVNofwolk

F &amp; K Tree Tr imming,
stump removaL 675-1331 .

84

unu NOUII ON

~1.111110-Bnoapygeto

ANNIE

French City ,Pa inti ng
,Residential. commercial, .. •
Interior, exterior, paPer
hanging , and te~ured
ceilings. Ph. 367·1784 or 367·
7160.

---- -· - - --·- - -7! _ _Trucks~!:.!~!! _

- f9-7l -!l;;-;,

Cll

THIPRA· .
(J) NAnONAL GIOCIIIAI'HIC
IPIICIAL
CIJ 110¥11-(DIIAIIA) '''10
"llreikor -Jill" 1110
()) illi W
i'HAT'I
INCII!DIIU!
• ())(Ill UP!II A CIIICUI, .

PAINTING · interior and
exter i or , plumbing ,
roofing, some T'emOdeling .
20 yrs. exp . Call 388·9652 .

CI\RTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HE ATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or "-46·4477

For = -;Oie
Charger, eMce11ent .con·
dltion, low mileage . Call
245·9213 .

e

8:00

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola.. Quazar . and
house ca:l s. Phone 576·2398
or 446·2454.

·jPAMNECh

IIC~nlqUII tO ClpUtrl thl
eeaenc:e ott he creative
peraonellty. Waya Angelou,
wrltar and pertormer,la the

St!r lees

82

-

.()) PAaYPIUD
LAVIIINI AND IHIIILIY
AND COMPANY
•
(J)
NIGHTLY 11111111..
R!POIIT
(Ill
IIICHAIID IIMMONI
SHOW
ilD CRIATIYITY WITH IILL
IIOYEIII •A Portrolt of MIYI
4ngelou ' ln thla new aert11
about creative people and the
creative proceee, 8111 Moye;'re
Ultll dOc~,~mentarlea, p'r oflltl,
interview•. film and oth•r

~-------

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car ·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffell Brothers Custom
Carqe ts. Free estimates .
Call446·21'07.
·

I

PR.IIDI

·

Quality Autobody &amp; Paint
work . I nsur~n ce work
wel come. Su nroofs i n·
stalled from S200-S230l Auto
Trim Cen t er , 446-1968.

lll·.-:~:::-"
.CAIIOL IU-n ANO

tl) ·_

?:30 ~ AIIO_ntlll UP!

MICHAEL !ORIN IS. THE FII&lt;:ST TO
IJ.EE HIM.

-· ------

1970 Plymouth GTX . 440
magr) um, all stock, ni ce,
rare, price reduced for
quick sale. 742 ·2143.

JEEPS, . CAR,~ , TRUCKS.
Many sell for under $200.00
at local government sales.
For
purchasing
In ·
formation call our Surplus 79 OODGE power wagon , ~·
Sales Center 602-998·0575 wheel·drlve, 29,000 miles, 8
cyl.. call after 3 p .m . 30•·
Ext. 7965 .
675·31198.
.

(

I'D I;IETTEI&lt;: 60 MAKE

--·----~'!Jo Repair

81

INTIIIT-NT

i'li®TlCTACDOUGIII

68 THUNDERBIRD, 69000

-------c=-~-

SEARS chord orQan, full 1980 Pontiac Bonn . diesel,
rhythm section, like new, eMcellent
cond .,
low
originally $1100.00 -now mileage. Call446·8318.
$550.00, 304·882·2350 after
'
~ : 00 .
1973 Pontiac ex. cond.,
complete new exh8ust
GI8SON Les Paul Guitar, system, USO . Call446·8398 .
.will sell to best offer, call
304-675·5027 after~ 73 Crysler Station Wagon,
DUAL HEAD Freeze King
good work car $200. Call
soft serve ice cream
WURLITZER Studio plano 256·1141 •Iter 6PM .
machine in very good con ·
with bench, excellent con ·
dition. Have discontinued
selling Ice cream . Must ex - dition, 3 years old, 30.C·675· 1976 Malibu 4 dr .. power
pand carry ·out business . 7822 after 5:00.
steering, power brakes,
.No phone ca lls. c;an be seen
air, neW tires and paint,
at Shammy's Carrv ·out , SEARS , Silvertone 30 62,000 m iles for 51.850. Call
60S W. Main St ., Pomeroy , chord organ, like new, 4-46·2888.
Ohio.
make offer, 304-615·1033.
----l.;.;;;;;;;:,;;;:;;;.;:.;;;:!::::..;:.:.JL:::::::::-:-:-:-:::::-:.::~ 1975 Cutlass Supreme
bucket
~eats ,
floor
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
wlih MajOr HooDie automatic, AM· FM stero.
Call256·6519.
------1966 Chevy Impala, 283
automatic:, power steer ing,
runs good . 985-4346.

[146·0322

I

---.,------

--.---

DAY TO

TOII!QHT
!I/~Y DAYIAGAIII

Six. 920 tir es. Phone 675·
3148 . . .

n __

1976 Chevette. 675-6445.

CJl A GIIIAT
g--11
(J)

Windshi eld broken? · Call
Southern Auto · glass. Insurance claim s welcom e,
Free
mot,)i le
service
available . Call44li- HH l.

61
Weights, bar-bell, and ben·
ch, $3,5. Call"-46·0562.

All case knives 10 per cent
off. Spring Valley Trading
Co., Spring Vallev. Plaza,
446·8025.

Effi.clencv rooms by the
week on Main Street,
Mason, WV . 773·5651.

?:00 (J). -. .. IIACIAZ1NI

.

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE ·
Auto parts. auto repair,
wrecker
service,
buy
llutomobi les, r adiat ors and
batteries. «6 ·7717.
·

C"'r"'
os=
.s-=m::air B-B's $1 .09 per
1,500.
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025 .

Ice fishing supplies now In
stock .
Spring
Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
l&gt;laza, 4-46-8025.

Mobile home, 2 bedroom,
furnished, (clean), citv
utilities, 2 miles out, S175.

''

cassette deck,
d.iacoustic
speakers,
realistic amp. $300 . Phone
675·1513
.

Used fireplece insert.
'Free heat Machine' . Dual
blower system, e)(c. cond.,
$175. Call "-46·4885.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes ,
ho.u ses,
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipolis.
614·4-46·8221 or 614·2•5·9484 .

2 bedroom, 60x12 , Flat·
woods. $150. per month plus
utilities and deposit. Par·
tially furnished. Adults
only . 9'12·583•.

Sony

1 Singer Stylist zig -zag
sewing machine with
cabinet, e)( . cond. Call 446·
8266 after SPM for more In·
fo .

S&amp;W 38 ,speclal amo. $11.99
per 50. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, "-46·802_} ·

House trailer 'on 322 Jrd .
Ave., Gallipolis. Adults
only, no pets. Call 446·3748
or 256· 1903.

1 GREENHOUSE, 4ft.x8ft.,
304-895·3879.

rooms &amp; bath, downsta irs,

Nice J bdr, trailer . Water
furnished , on 'private lot,
good cond, one child, no
pets. "-46·0514.
'

I

e.

New wood stove, half price,
never used, $350. Can convert tO furnance. Call 2561216, Gallipolis .

Apartments . 675-SS,jjj,

For · Rent Mobile Home.
Phone ~46 · 0756.

2 bedroom cottage, fur ·
n lshed, S200, wafer paid.
Caii&lt;W&gt;·.U16 after 7PM.

TOP PRICE Sera: Metal.
Alumnium, Brass, CopPer...
Batteries .
Sktdmore
Foster, 123 1/2 Pine St.
Gallipolis Block Co ., 123112
Pine St.. 4-46·2783 .

For Sale Kitchen table and
2 chairs. · $25. See at 769
Brownell Ave., M iddleport.

Furnished efficiency, $145 .
Utilities pd., one person .
Call"-46·4416, after 7PM.
apartment,

Beauty shop equipment.
Call675·439'1 or 675· 1~26 .

3· 8 fl . showcases with
lights, 1 large bedroom
suite, doub'e ,dresser and
chest, 2 ant ique clocks, 1
meat slicer and misc.
grocery store equipment .
Call 256·6413, 12 p.m . to 9
p.m .

7 room house Jackson Pike
behind Pinecrest Nursing
home s2oo plus deposit 11o
ref . and 2 bedroom apt $175
mo. down town plus
deposit. 446· 3~1.9 or 4-46·
0021 .

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom well Insulated
house near Rio Grande
college, $200 per month
plus utilities and SlOO
refundable deposit .
References required . Call
2~5-9325 or 245·5364.

3655.

furn ished ef 729 2nd . ·A ve .,
Call 4-46·0957.
no pets.

room turn., apts :
Ulllties pa id , dep. llo ref .
required . $225·$250 per mo.
Call"-46·0952 .

Furnished

Large lighted advertising
sign with sliding letters on
stand. $400 . 576·2602 .

Mfsc. Merchandice

Remington Thunderbolts
22 LR, S12.75 per 5 hundred.
Spring ,Valley Trading Co ..
Spring ''Valley Plaza, .w,.
8025,_

--- -----

bedroom, gas heat/window

ll

2 bdr. mobile home com pletely turn. Call"-46·9669.

~46 ·

.
....11110

--

Now Open MIL LE RS
\J SE O AUTO P A RT S.
Adamsvi lle-.H arr i sburgh
Rd. Open 9·5 Weekda ys, 9·
noon Sats . Ph. 245-9102.

Lump Coal $32 per ton.
Zlnn Coal Co., Inc. CalloW&gt;·
1408 between 9 and 5.

Furn ished
room
S85,
utilities pd., single male,
range, r~frig . share bath.
4-46·4416 after 7 PI!-.

12x60 2 bedroom Buddy THREE bedroom un ·
mobile home . Set up with 2 furnished house in Hen·
references &amp;
or 4 lots, g~s heat, rurlll derson,
water, close to town, finan· deposit required . 30•·675·
clng ·available. Phone .W,· 9760.

3 bedroom house, referen·

S4

~----

&amp;Accessories

tires. Hansnaw's
Lucas Lane . 675-

o~

Furniture. 304-675-1773.

for Rent

- ----=-

7, -- - 'A-ui6 Paris-

GOOD
use d Moytag
. automatic washer , e&gt;e ·
cellent condition, $175 .
Used dryer·, $65. Village

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QVALITY
MOBILE 41
Hou•e•forRent
HOME SALES, 4 MI. 6
room hOU$e. full
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT basement. Two and three
35. PHONE 446·3868.
bedroom mobile homes,
furnished or unfurnished .
1965 General niobhe home Caii675-1J71 or 675·3812.
12x65, complelely·ready for

setup,

good condition,
S1800. 30•·895· 3815-leave ,
phone number.
-~-

•

VIewmg

Win9,

War m morning wood stove,
used, 3 years o!p S225. Also
Chevy Luv tr uck par·t$.
Call 304·576-2728.

304·

•

1976 GL 1000 Honda Golden

n---- u sed
Tires
7360.

DICK TRACY

81 suzuk i 850 L full dress; "
shaft drive. like ~w . · :
Phone 256·1141 after 6PM . ·•

SEASO NED oak firewood,
call 304-675·2757 after 4
p. m .
.

USED ·apartment size
refrigerator, · gO()d con·
dillon', $75.00, 30..075 ·2226.

covereq patio, priced on

74

FIREWOOD-split oak, S40
a rick, $70. a cord, call 304675·3137 anytime.

G . E . · douqle
door
refrigerator, almond, 1
YearoldS125. CaiiB95·3618.

basement, la rge tamitv
room , dining room . ,living

.. ---- --:----- - -Motorc cles

..

They'll Do It Every Time

site. bottle gas
cOOk stove. 45,000 btu gas
·heater. 992-2077 or 9'12-7476
after 4p.m.

.

Greatly
reduced .
4
bedrooms, tr He velall elec·
tric. new kitchen, full

·-

Apartm~nt

For ~ele gas range, $30.
Call 388-8655 .

THREE bedroom house,
lot, Lecn. 304·768·4041 . •

35

--------~---~-

54 _, Misc. Merchandice

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES · washers,
dryers.
r efrig era tors,
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap pliances, Upper River Rd. ,
beside Stone Crest M otel.
"-46·7.398 . .

.(281 alter S end on weeden·

34

_ __ _

s1 .. - iio..i!~e!!_oldoOOCii--

by Larry Wright

KIT ~ N ' CARLYLE '"

11, 1982

•
---·~---- - -----------_;_...;;.._..._

DRAW

,.

_ __ _ __ _ ..
cot
.............~--

�..
M&lt;oftclay, .laiiUCifY 11, 19d

10-The Dally Sen.tinel

Kaiser official· declares
ideas were.n 't adopted
Uiuon (Unite&lt;! Steelworkers) today area shoUld be to exhaust e~--ery
.
By .Judy OWea
An Inter-office memorandum and over the next two years for a means to combine Jobs and cllangie
dated Aprll20, 1981, which has been heavy attack on tho9e restrlctive duties as techilology c~ cr
circulating· among workers at agreements In 1983," has no real changes In work p10c "''! give us
Kaiser Aiumlnlim's Ravenswood relevance to the ltavenswood the contractural support to do so,"
.said Ulat the Ravenswopd
·15 •
Works, contains personal Ideas and plant; Ireland said In a . telephone
suggestions from the fabrication Interview Saturday. Most of there- plant Is a modern plant and that ·
.
plant's manager .of employee rela- cent layoffs at RavenswoQd !lave ·Kaiser Is continually modenllzlne·
resulted from the ·closlng down of itsfacWtleslnordertoslayeoinpet·
potllnes In the alumlnJUll reduction itive aDd keep up with technology. :
dlvslon of the plant, Ireland said, He de~. however, Ulat workers
and are not related to the fabrlea- were being replaced with
tion department which CundJff Is mach)nes.
31 •
52
·6,4 ·70 •
~:~a:n~um l!lld Chernlcal affiJJated with, nor to suggesitons
Cundl1f also suggested In the
made In Cundltf's memo.
memo Ulat, "We shoUld take the
•
· &gt;51 • 60 • 65
-- 78 • 85
The letter, which was delivered
He did say, however, that tlllire position with the Union that we·
.
to the .news media Friday bY l!ll
has
been some reduction In force In - Would allow attrttion to take Its ef- ·
·52 ·60 ·68 ·76 ·81 -88
·103 unl&lt;nown source, was written bY
the fabrlcation division and submit· feet rather than have wholesale reted figures Ulat sho)v 2,986 em· duction. This will be easier for the
-58-67 - 75
-89
ployees (2,:m hourly and 681 Unlonandcommunltytoswallow."
·63 - 70 -78
-94 ·101-109
salaried workers) were on the fabCundltf's Jetter further sbQwed
rtcation devtslon's roster at the end concern with communicating .with
·67 -72 ·83-90 -98-105-113'·123:=nt.at the fabrication of l!m cOmpared with 2,191 (1 ,596 . workers and the pubJJc,and lrelalld
houry and 596 salarl!!d) at the end ·· added Ulat the company has been In
- 69 - 76 • 87 • 94 - 101 -116 -128
According
to
Ireland,
Cundltf,
o!
1981.
·
direct communication as fuJI as.
, new to the Ravenswood plant In
In response to a statement made possible with employees to explain
(Wiltd speeds trtaftr fh1n 40 mph
~~~a~.?rr~k!~nfi- bY Cundltf In the memo Ulat, "In the cost .competitive problel'ns at
hm liffle 1ddifiOIII chilli11 tffecf) dential" · memo which outlined the area of engineering, we should . RavensWood.
;D strategy for dealing with problems make sure ·Ulat we are designing ' Ireland said he had no Idea how
out as many Jobs as possible as we workers came Into pos rssion of"
•••••a
t the plant.
The Jetter, Jn
which
,
, Cundl1f
told Frostenson
Ulat
''In Install and modify equipment. 'The the memorandum.
short, we must~ to prepare the role of employee .rela.tioll$ .ln!Uthls!!!!!.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

ueland

Wind 35 31 25
• 5 ·11
2t • 25 · 31 · 35 · Q -45
.
MPH
...,.
.
.Ill Cl1ll · I.IEI
Calm:O 35 eo 25 .20 l5 1_L5 D -~ :!t..:.n -28 ·25 -·30 -35 -40 -45 =~=~~oseas~~:S:,
s· 33 21 21,.16 ...... 12--r:1.....-6FlJ':IJr.:;21.;. 2&amp;~31~35 -41 -41 - ~co=::a~~=· ~=
10 21 , 16'9
2 ........ - 2~9 _;15..-t"2 ·27 •
38 •45 , • ·58
77
15 1 &amp; ; ' J 1 x · 6 -11 ~
. 18 • 25 •33 ·40 45
-7D
-90
,
20 12 3 -4- -9 ·17 · 24 ·32 ·40 ·46
-9&amp;
25 7 0 ·7 -15/22 ~ 29 -37 ·45 ·52
·Bl ~ 9&amp;·114·112:~~C::~~~v::
30 S -2 -11 ·1B -26 ·33 · 41 ·49 ·56
· 87
-117 ~P=:,~~a~~~~
35 3 -4 ·J3 20 · 27 ·35 ·43 -52-60

.a

40

1 ·4

·-15 - 22 - 29 • 36 · • 45 -54 -62

VERY 8/TTfll Y
COlO COlO

UTifMf COlO

,

,•

•••••••••••••1111!1••••••••••••••••
NEA official vows to fight cuts
COLUMBUS, OffiO (AP) Na·
tiona! Education Association off!·
clal says the group will try to make
polltlclans pay for their "IM!" votes
on education Issues.
"We're gearing up for the elec· ·
tlons next November," said Mary
Hatwood Futrell, NEA secretarytreasurer. "The NEA Is joining forces with various groups - labor,
clvU rights, women's groups, any
group we Cl!ll bulld a coalition with
- to oppose lilly cuts.
..
"We'U be recording any 'no'
votes on education Issues (In O:&gt;n·
gress) In our new~tter, the NEA
Reporter," Ms. Futrell said. "Whenever there's a '110' vote on education after November l!E!, they'll
have w contend with the NEA."

i

Ms. Futrell says Reagan admlnlstratiQn cuts In federal funding for
education wm hit hard In most of
the 50 states.
•:tr Mr. Reagl!ll has his way with
his budget requests, pubUc education as we know It will no longer
exist," she.said.
Reagan has proposed cutting tbe
level of educational funding almost
In half, sbe saki. "Forty out of the 50
states are not In a position to absorb
those cuts.ln many Instances, we'll .
have to cut out Important
programs."
A junior high school teacher from
Alexandria, Va., Ms. Futrell was
the keynote speaker at the union's
three-day Mid-Atlantic regional
leadership conference, which was

attended.
·
The association, the nation's larg-

est teachers'.union with 1.7 mlll1on
m111llbers, has favored. more fed . .
era! financing of schools l!lld per·
suaded former President Carter to
create the U.S. Department of
·
Education.
Ms. Futrell spoke to more than
150 teachers Friday night about the
dilemmas educators face as a result or President Reagan's proJ~ted cuts In education spending
and the threatened demise of the
.
education department.
"Education doesn't face just a
crisis," Ma. Futrell saki. "It'smore
than a crisis sl~tion/ '

.•·

Velerans Memorial

Pomeroy PoUcr ·report that' the
glass from the front door of the Elberfeld Department Store was
broken out late Saturday night or
earlier Saturday morning by
vanll!llll.
.
Inwstigation Is continuing In Ulat
matter as well as the theft of ll £!!!
battery from the vehicle of Loulce
Carsey parked on Condor St., and a
window being shot out at the busineSs establishment or Dr. David
Krawsczyn on Mulberry Ave.
sometime Satui'day.

Harrisonville Eastern Star will
Saturday Admissions--Russell
meet Tuesday at 7: ll p.m. to honor
Fitch, f&gt;l!lddleport; Ann Martin,
the station of all past Adah's.
Middleport; Sarah Roush , Minersville; Arch Markin, Athens.
Saturday Discharges--Timothy
'Thompson, Brenda Petrle, Rock·
Mee~ing cancelled
ford Spurlock, James Meadows.
Sunday Admissions-VIrgil tol'The publlc games scheduled lor
Jins, Cheshlre,m John Hlte, Middlethis evening bY the Middleport Fire
port; Pauline Taylor, Middleport; · Department have been canceJJed.
Henry CuMingham, Pomeroy.
'The event will be held next week,
Sunday Discharge-- Willard weather permitting.
Lucas.

Meets Wednesday
Pomeroy Chapter ~ and Bosworth CouncU 46 will hold a regular
meetil1g at 7:ll p.m. Wednesday.
'There wm be full form opening
· practice In the Royal Arch Degree.

Special meeting
A special meetlng o! Middleport
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be held at 7
p.m. Tuesday. ')'here will '-e work
tn. the entered apprentice degree.
AU members are asked to attend.

Area ·
deaths

~aE.J~

'
Miss Ema Elizabeth Jesse, 68,
376E. Main St., Pomeroy, a former
manager of the Sttmer Store In
Pomeroy, died Wlexpectedly at her
home Sunday afternoon.
'The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to jhe residence but ·
Miss Jesse was dead on the unit's
·arrival.
Miss Jesse was a member or the
St. Paul Lutheran Church In Pomeroy alid of the women's organization of that church. She was a
·member of the Middleport Business and Professional Women's
Club, the Pythlan Sister Lodge, the ,
Magnolia dub and the DaughterS

Items and clothing and persons hav·
lng anythl!'g to give are asked to
call Lois Snodgrass, 742-2900, or
Lawrence Rupe, 742-2745.
Sizes of clothing needed Include:
Mr. Rupe, trousers, 36 waist, 30
length, lG-16% shirt, 10~ D shoe;
Mrs. Rupe, 18~ dresses or slacks,
large tops, 7 to 71,) B shoe; Jason,
11, size 12 trousers, 12·shirt and 6 ~
shoes; Amy, 9, size lOdress, skirts,
slacks, size 3 shoe; Jeremy, 8, size
10 shirt alid slacks, size 3 shoe.
There Is some Insurance coverage on the home located on the Dexter Road. All of the famUy was
home when the fire started.

Designer Print

··--

ASSORTED

• COMBINATION • CHEESE
• HAMBURGER • PEPPERONI
• SAUSAGE

Five calls were answered bY local emergency units over the weekend , the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports.
On Sunday at 12: 15 p.m., the Racine unit took Jack Hyattk to Ve~
rans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 1:45 took Paullne
Taylor from S. 'Third to Veterans
Memmorlal and the Pomeroy Unit
answered a call to East Main St for
Miss Erna Jesse.
On Saturday at 8:16 a.m. Janet
Nakamoto was taken from the
scene of an accident on Route 124 to
Veterans Memorial bY the Rutland
Unit and the Pomeroy Unit at 1: 24
p.m. took Cheryl ·MIJJer from the
scene of an accident on Route 33 to
Veterans Memorial.

.

••

Thai s a M1Culous ques11on ol course
wtiAT A TAl·DEFf.IIRED IUCCIUUJIIUII TO YCIU
84HdiiPI'I l"t~ ~
Because everyone could use an e.:tra
·- ·-r
....
......,-~..' ;-;--j
...
I lfi\IUTMIIIT •nih•lfl wwdr•urn
$540.585 toward lhe•r re11remen1
I
~"~__'_!!_!~...,~·.u. .... a._..'l lhi'J .!""'
And no•,•· w1th a 13)1;-aeterred lnd1-'
l/1duat Retirement Account (IRA) from
~:: ...... s 16,000 $ 30,000 s 60,000
The "Formers Bonk atmosl
.... -·
91/eryone can have an exira $540 585
'
.
'
:
[~·· -~. $135,146 1$270,292 5540,585 1
Even 11 you re already covered t?Y ~
~":_''
I
I
company pens,on plan
To build such an 1mpress,ve nesl
1 Note Thas 111M is anleniled 10 lle .,exa&lt;TIJ!e 01 I
egg you'll need to salt away $2 000 a ·
now rf!9.ilar ~SIIS 1nto an lflA C3'l graN 1nto
I a SUOSiafltlat SlfT1 Th1s IS not aI)JCI!Wltee ot
. year - lor 30 years - tnto -your own
II lflleresl rates Of eod ltnanc1alreslJI!S
_j
high-y1eld ret1remenl account
--~-·Or. as demonSirated 1n .the box
And becaiJse our re11rement
al nght you can depos1t fess than
accounls are !a~t- deterred you deduct
$2 000 a year and Shit end up Wllh a
your annuat1nve,stmenttrom yo'...r lax·
SJzeable amounl of cash
able income So you II pay no lecleral
You can even set up a conven1en1
1ax on an IRA unt1l you Slart Withdrawpayment schedule Mak.r"'Q dePOSitSby
the ....-eek. Dy lhe momh or whalever

r

.

Served : with Whipped
Potatoes, Chicken Gravy,
Cole Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter
and Coffee.

".

'

.

SUitS yOU best

.

1ng lunds (m1n1mum age 59 \f.t)
Then. when you relirP. yOIJ II orotr
ably be .n a IQwer ta~~: bracket. pay1ng

''

•

lo.....er taxes
11 you re 1n1ngued w11h the thought

ol reduc1ng '{Cur tax load wh1le mcreas1ng your secun 1~ call or v1SI! the pro-

lessiOnalsal The Formers Bank
lor all !h8 detatiS

,..

'

'

They co u!CI help make you( retiremen! much more en,oyable Aboui
$540 565 more en,eyable

..

..
•1:

·-'
'

r

~

WI'YI GOT THI ANIWIB.

S ub !!.t~nrial f'~n.ally For Ea rly Withdraw a l.

(FBJ l:annen
Bank
.
·t 9 t

•

Pomeroy, OH.

'

·• . '

.

~

-

:···

r•
"•

I '

•"'

A

•..

The Community Owned Bank.

F.

anytime. .

i·

.

Supplement to: Pomeroy Dally S4intl.
. nel

·crow's..Family Restaurant ·
228 w. Main

·

LIMIT 3 WitH 11115 COUPON AND A001TIONAL '!I• PURCHASE 0000
TH£ WEE K OF JAN II. 1982 REDEEM AT SUPER VALU STO RES ONE
COUPONPF.R F-AM11.Y
.

DINNER ONLY
DINTNG ROOM ONLY

Ph. 992-5432

S9
-G
---------

Jeno'•
Plazas ·::..--· . _ . ~

.,. I

dlllonal price.

•••••

l!MrT I WITH THIS COU PON -NO ADDITIONAL '5• PURCHASE GOOD
THf WE Ek OF JAN II 1982 REDEE M AT SUPER VALU STORES ONF.
COUPON PEA FAMILV

\' ..

ad~

,..•. pq~

sy•
....

.

Beverages which have an

'•

S,"s·.·.&amp;
~.

ao ·a1
GeTatln

PRICE BUSTER COUPON

Instant
Collee

EL"ERFELDS
IN
POMEROY

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
.
CHICKEN YOU CAN ·EAl

. Sorry, No Subslllutes except

~

MAXWELL-HOUSE

READY TO WEAR
2ND FLOOR

Emergency runs

-·

·s9A...

ALL FLAVORS

LIMIT 2 WITH THIS COUPON AND i\OOITIONAL &lt;!• PURCHASE . GOOD
THE WEEtc Qf,,JAN. 11 , 1982 . REDEEM AT ·SUPER VALU STORES. ONE
COU,PON PER F-MILY.
.

Every Tuesday Night At Crow's ·

of Amerlca.

A daughter of the late Christopher and Ottlla Wonkee Jesse.
She was alsO preceded In death bY i
five sisters and six brothers. Sur-·
viVIng are several nieces and ne'lphews among whom Is Ramona K.
Compton of'Pomew;.
.Services wm be held at 1 p.m.
Tue!a..y at the Ewing Funeral
Home'iiillth the Rev. wmtam Mld·
dleswarth o1.tlclatlng. Burial will be
In Beech Grove Cemetery. Frlenda
may call at the funenll IKme at

PRICES GOOD THE WEEK OF
JANUARY 11, 1982.
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED .

.JUMBO aou

Meets Tuesday

The Larry Rupe famtly of Ru·
til!lld which loss their home In a fire
Sunday Is In need of household

o • , • , , ' o •• , •

Bolt
Towels

•

Probe vandalism

Its here, the latest offering of HANG ·
TEN®'s famous 'Active Sportswear" line.
Bold stripes and solids in shorts and tops all
made to mix or match. Color-on-color or
color-o'n-white.
DYNAMITE!

.SIZES FOR JUNIORS

Meigs County happenings
•

Family needs
personal items

ELBERFE~ ••
•
.
Ta-l
, • " • ,, •

SPORTS '82

held through Sunday at a Columbus
hoteL Teachers from seven states
and the District of Columbia

'

j

J,

..

•"
~

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