-
http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/e4cc3d46a6b3accc937116ce6f012014.pdf
8aa08b8d116fc33802698ad30cd2cd82
PDF Text
Text
.'
8EIIERIC DRUIS
Generic drugs a.re drugs without the brand names most peop.l e are familiQr with. l'he
formulas are basically th' same, The dlfferenc:e ... you can,save up fo 50% by asking for '
gen,ric drugs. We carry both generic an~ brqnd na_m e drugs. Ask our pharmaCist or
your doctor if your next' prescription c;:an. be prescribed
generically.
.
SAVE UP TO
60% 01 PRESCIIPTIGIS
Record deer kill ,
Christmas flowers
SklryonPqe3
Photos, story on Page 6
Nine straight
wins
.
.
days 'til
Christmas
'
See Rio story on Page 4
Mounting death toll
See story on Page 8
WE 01111 I ..ILin. LIIE
. , OF IEIEIII IIIII
.
WESTCLOI
ELECTRIC .DI&ITIL
'ALIBI
. CLOCK ·
-
ao 11oM
'
HEATLOG
PLUS '
Model A41SAL
Hydro Cl•an• Pump d•oign.d
ro oignilic.,tly roduco ·cloon-
FlEE 1• PIOI
IIY OlE Ill
lng In hard Water . oreal.
Automatic twitch control from
coHH brewing to k..P warm.
lET DIE FlEE
N~n-Stlck
$399
rang• of
COffu, tea, hot water for lan·
tant soups and cocoa. Almond
Solid otat• digital alarm wit~ ·
6/10 .j n
n. rod num•ralo in o
woocftiJraln con. Power
fallur• indicator: Drowo•:
alarm on Indicator flg~t. 3 ln ..
~lg~, 5·1/41.n. wid•, 2·t/4 ln.
· CLAIROL BODY BUILDER
•l.. ulerPrlce ...• ,, , ·,,., ,, , , , ,,, , , ~,.,., •• t1f."
. ,. . , ,• • ,
0
0
o > 0 o I
0
I
0
I
0
0
0
I
0
0
0
0
I
0 0
0
I
0
o 0 °0 0
1
, GIFT BOXES
·.·~··-·
.. -.,,
, , , ,. . . .
$1 2 99 .
.
Chol.. of twa hoot ....1., tSOO wotta (5120
ITU), 71q waHo (2110 I.TU). 100% •nerty effl·
clont. Durabl• HeaTu ...• ~ealine •lomont lor
reliable .,.ration ond long life. 51font opora·
.lion. n..rmootat controllod. Pocan ....... rain
cabinet with llrown ond pan•lo and
btuohH
contrai pan•l. Tlp·ov"' oof•ty
owltch, Portabl• d•olgn with conv•nlonl carry·
Ina handl•·
(
·STICK-ON
BOWS
wit~
Senlbtel staJf Writer
"We've got only two alternatives, either ~ the
Income lax ordinanL-e or let the village go down the
drain.''
..
This observation was given by Mayor Richard
Seyler a I Monday's meeting of Pomeroy Village
Council, as he and council were deluged With qUestions
from nine area men concerning the proposed Income
tax.
Two petitions protesting the tax, one signed by
approximately 165 Pomeroy residents, the other
signed by 32 employees of Midwest Steel, were
presented at the meeting by Robert Burton, Pomeroy,
and Gene Goodwin, Middleport, respectively.
Burton told council that out of all the people he
approached With the petl(lon against the tax, "only
eight or nine refused to s)gn."
Burton, and others, leveled ·questions at CO\lncil
concerning high water bills In Pomeroy: dilapidated
housing In several areas, poor street conditions, and
lack of recreational facilities. One member of the
gro\lp also accused council of " not listening to the
voters ·who obviously don't want to be taxed or they
wouldn't have voted down the four-mill levy in
November."
Jotm Anderson, council president, addressed the
Issue of the high water bills, explaining that updated
•LeuMfl .....te •.•• , ., ., . , •• , • , ,·,. ' ·' '' ,, ·4,10
Yaur Coot After hHie
Hair ttyllng bruoh
..
bron••
®
TANGLE
FREE Thormo-LaopTM brlolf•o t~ot
dellv•r body & fullne11 . Feotur11
IIICtranlc heating •Y•t•m. ccot1d
brl1tl•• · 7/8" stalnlen steel bar-
r•!. dual voltag•, r•ody dot and
49e
tangle ftee swivel cord . 120/ 2410V
MB
•
· ·oaf·~·
,.,.,.
:~·: BLO<DD
MIL.TON
MB
- CHRISTMAS WRAP
26" LOG ROLL
PAPER AID FOIL
IAGOP II
Llngort• lox (~ Pk.)
Shirt lo• (3 Pk.)
Ro... lox
(2 Pk.)
......ou:v
PRESSURE
MACHINE.
·'
CHRISTMtS T,AGS
AID. CARDS
.
-Onlr
. HOLIDAY
MICHAEL JACKSON
Polnra. Alii IG-adllll, 2-4 PltYtn.
DOLL
$799
....
CRAFT RIBBON
,
Auorted Pattem 1
And Width
Velvety Ribbon
Eaoy wrap cull hooko onto """"' arm ... wrapo a , ..,y ao a
ban~ Entire cull lo blood preaaure ••ntitl••· No .
mlc
• to allen with art•ry, No otethooco;. n•odod.
Automall:ally meaour•o and diGitally dloplayo Syolollc and
Dlaotollc lloOd "-••••· pluo Puroe. Culllo manually lnllatod
to a lliur• ollghtly highor thon your normal Syotollc blood
t...J•. Dlfltal dioplay tello you wh•n to otop in·
flatlflg, Lo,.., eaoy·ta·..od digital dloplay, ·lymbalo on
..gltal dioplay
you mochln• lo working, on •rror hao OC•
cilrrod, lratt•riH need repklcemer~t
Attroctlvo, compact,
cliorabl• orarage . -. O.tallecl, olmple -rotlnt and Mlup
lnatructlono. Helpful, on•·yoor tracking chart to rocord dally
r..... l"'fo. u- A "M" batt•rl•o nollncludod.
MICHAEL JACKSON
CORDLESS
ELECTRONIC
MICROPHONE
P""'",.
••II
YOUI CHOICI
79e
•tc.
' $4999
$1299
TRIVIAL PURSUIT
BABY lOOMER EDITION
No. 10
fran1111111 Your Voice fhrouth
,._
....
,
--""*·····
Any AM l•tllo
......
.....
Adorable pink and whit• plnafor•
with ut~dertormonte. Soft bloqu•
. .ailored vinyl armo and Iega. Prot·
ty - • " hair ond olooplng
...... 3andup.
or••·
$999
l.
ELEmiO 111 AIR
lORI POPPER
BRITISH
~"l'ERLING "
Trivial Pursuif
'lasrer Game,-Genus r.a:tuCIO
lmR SHIVE LOTIOI
owlvel-arm lrattle
grip. Comeo with army oc'
t•uorl•, weapan(o) and a blo
Ill• card. Som• with mGtcolt. ·
..... , 5 and up.
Two-Mnciod
$299 '
Seylerpolntedoutthat village lxloks are open for the
public to see and that "If this were not a fiscal
emergency, the state wouldn't allow the village to
enact this tax. The state auditors were here in March
and wah ted todeclarethevillage a financial disaster at
that time, but we talked him out oflt. If a village has to
be taken civer by the state, all services (lights , police
protection, etc.) are stopped until the general fund is
back In the black."
Anderson reported the village startect off In
November with$142,956. It collected $55,181.86 from all
sources and paid out in· unencumbered expenses,
••
.
•'This will betheyearof the deficit,
with a: capital D.' ' Straw commented. "Any consideration of any
bill will brtngwlth a discussion of the
deficit. That will be the m easuring
stone."
Straw said White House reluctance to approve wateiWay projects
In October was based In Reagan's
disappi:oval of the cost recovery
ratlo of other projects. Gallipolis has
been projected to contain a hefty
12-to-1 !lscalreturn, but Straw noted
that Gallipolis cannot stand by ltse.lf
for approval.
"I think one of Congressman
Miller's regrets is that Gallipolis will
not g'o through the House andSena te
as a single project," he explained.
"Water projects never go through
on their own merits . 1'h\'Y are
always lntroduced In bulk, and the
package has to be accepted or
rejected. It's regrettable, but It's a
legislative fact ofllfe,and we have to
live with it." .
Straw said Mlller will probably
reintroduce the Gallipolis project to
"whatever vehicle comes down the
road." That may be followed by
other congressmen adding their
projects to legislation.
But .If those projects again pass
the congressional treadmill, Straw
said the adminlstra lion has to be
convinced all projects are worth the
expense. To do this, Straw said all
Involved In the issue have to work
out a mutually agreeable costsharing plan.
··As far as the mechanism goes,
the administration, the (U .S. Army
Straw said Miller has been In Corps of Engineers) , 'the barge
contact with Rep. Robert Roe, lndustty and Congress must work
0-N.J., chalnnan of the water together. They have to come out
resources subcommittee, and Rep. with a solidified plan. The focus is
Tom Bevill, D-Ala., who heads the . that It has to be done In committee,"
appropriations subcommittee. Both he said.
Straw said the cost -sharing Issue
subcommittees are attached to the
House Appropriations Committee, Is not new, but "they've got to come
which holds the first set of up with a foiTDula. We don't feel
there's been a real universal
congr~ional purse strings on
approach
to funding."
Gallipolis.
Meigs County will recelve$111,600
lri community development block
grant mooey, State Rep. Jolynn.
. Boster said today.
This grant will enable Meigs
County to carry out several lrn·
provement projects, Rep. Boster '
reported.
the Meigs County
development block
grant application called for five
projects to be carried out. The
money was made possible to 81
non-urban counties through the
COillll1\llllty development black
grant · small cities -counties
program.
In September, the Meigs County
CommLuloners received 11 appllca·
lions from across Meigs County for
community
After Shave For Men
20z.
'
:
~~-~·
I,
2 Sections. 1 2 Pflges
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper
$82,262. "We spent approximately SJO,IJXJ mor~ than
we took In during November. This was not a typical
month , but it is the net trend over severa l months."
Anderson reiterated that fact that Pomeroy is In a
fiscal em ergency even though the village is not In the
red In a ll funds.
Council explained that certain funds are set aside for
certain purposes · and are not transferrable. An
example of this would be the c:emetery perpetual care
fund.
Council was also asked why more goverrunent
grants for Pomeroy are not being sought?. It was
explained that matching money must be available
from the vltlage in order to obtain grants "and we
usually just can't come ·up With the match," Seyler
said .
Seyler told the group "grants cost us money" and
noted that regarding grants for sewage line
Improvements, " we have to pay the added electricity
bills to operate these systems."
Anderson explained that because Pomeroy is built
on hills, it naturally takes more electricity to pump
sewage and water up hill.
It was also pointed out that Pomeroy does apply for
grants whenever possible and the two grants for the
sewer Une extension to Pizza Hut were singled out.
"And we are right now seeking gra nt opportunities
for sewage line improvements to the Monkey Run
'
area," sta ted council.
Alternative means by with to raise funds for the
village we re suggested by the group of citizens
Including freezing the wages of village employees.
Council member Bruce Reed replied , "Village
employees haven't Md a raise in three years."
Altematlve {unding
The only suggestion from the citizens given serious
consideration by cou nc il was a piggy back sales tax
for the village.
Council member Betty Baronick felt that a sales tax
would not produce the money needed by the village
but Anderson agreed to try tocomeupwithsometype
of estimated figure on a ~a les tax .
Counci l member Larry Wehrung told the group
that the state auditor's office and the state
department of taxation had been contacted and is
attempting at this time to com e up wit h a rough
estimate of the amount of m oney the income tax
would bring Into the village.
"Council' s job is to keep the village solvent .
Personally, I'd ralher pay sales tax too, but I'm not
sure it's the remedy. We' ll try to get the estimates and
then make a comparison before the third reading,"
Anderson said.
(Contlnued on page 8)
,
Dr. Conde
gatns vote
•
In
recount
e
.
Block grant funds at $111,600
$,359.
NELSON'S DRUG
now."
QyKEVJNKELLY
OVP staJf Writer
Combined efforts to create a
uniform cost-shartng 'plan will help
get Inland waterway projects llke
the new locking system at the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam funded .
Phil Straw, an admlnlstra tive
as5istatlt to Rep. Clarence E. MUler,
R-Oh!o; said the Reagan admlnls·
tratlon needs "peace of mind" about
the economic benefits of such
projects If they want the president's
approval.
Funding for GallipOlis and other
projects were close to appropMation
stage in October when a conference
committee dumped all water projects from a 1985 fiscal year
appropria lions bill. Congressmen
feared that President Reagan would
veto the bill because it contained
those projects.
In a recent letter to area
newspapers, Miller, recently reelected to his ninth term In Congress,
said he was "deeply disappointed"
by the dropping of Gallipolis and
other projects from the approprla·
tlons bill.
''I nevertheless rema!noptlmlstlc
with regard to Gallipolis being given
the priority that it deserves when a
new session of Congress convenes,''
he said. "I have the personal
commibnent from the leadership of
the House committees With jurisdiction over the authorization and
funding of Gallipolis that the project
will be given top priority this
sprtng."
She said
YOUit OIOICI
Enviromnental Protection Agency standards .had
forced the vlllage to make costly changes In the water
system.
"For years, general fund money was used to
subsidize the water system In order to keep the bills
1
l,ow. However, due to inflation In tbe last 10 years, the
village can no longer afford to subsidize."
Anderson further explained that raising water bllls
was one way the village tried to cut rosts and forestall
taxing the people.
"And as for not listening to the people, " said
Anderson, "we're Ustenlngrlght now. Wedon'twantto
force this tax on you people. We don't want to pay it
either. If there was something else council could do to
maintain the vlllage, I'd vote no on the income tax right
·cost-sharing plan
studied for inland
waterways proJects
' 10 .......
117 Count
Tbt ~IUmatt word llrDtl lllck It"
&on bilthir and bilhtr 11 yo• blllld
1ayen ot orouworcll for U\1 mall
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday. December 4, 1984
By NANCY YOACHAM
'
-
with medium brown occentl.
$799
d"P·
beY.,.,.... •
w~ol•
enttne
Petitions offe,red against income tax
2499
warm•r plat•. Eaoy
pour lO·cup carafe. lrews a
1Lb.
Vol.34, No.164
Copyright~d 1 984
llll.'lbastmaster.
••
at y
e
Proco-~·
10-Cup Automatic
Drip Ooffeemaker
•
proj~tssub-dlvisl:.nsandorganlza-
lions wished to carry out. The
commissioners gave priority to five
of the applications and the funding of
the $111,4m covery the cost of those
projects.
·
These projects include Middleport Vlllage, $30,000 towards the
purchase and renovation of the old
Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad
depot on First St.; Letart Township
Trustees, $20,537, !or paving three
I!Jidone-halfrillleso!road; Lebanon
Township, $7,900 for patching and
paving township roads 66, 4{Tl and
.. 400; Pomeroy Village, $32,000 sewer
extension work on west Main St.,
where the new Pizza Hut Is located,
and Racine VW!ige, $26,000 for the'
purchase of a new rescue truck.
A recou nt of the voting in four
precincts in the Nov . 6 election revolv.ng around the race between
Dr. Jotm Ridgway and Dr . J a mes
Conde lor the county coroner's post
- was completed Monday by the
Meigs Cou nty Board of Elections
with a va rianceofonlyonevore from
the official tally held fol!owiilg rh.elec tion .
The recount was done at the
request of Dr. Ridgway had asked
for the recounting of ballots cast in
the West· Chester. OlivPC!ale, Le·
banon and Orange Precincts.
spring, acconllng to Rep. Clarence Miller. The dam Is
seen here In the rue photo during painting of the roll en;
last swnmer.
PRIORITY FUNDING - Funding for the new
locking system at the GalllpoUs Locks and Dam will
be a priority llem on the congressional agenda next
On hand 10 witness the recou nt
Monday were Michael Mullen,
Pom eroy attorney representing Dr.
Ridgway, and Brien Conde, representing Dr. Conde . In the recount of
the four precincts , ha ndcbunted , all
of the votes remained the same
except ln Olivedale P recinct where
Dr. Conde gained 'One additional
vot e. According to the recount , Dr.
Conde received 955 votes in the four
precinctsand Dr. Ridgway rece ived
646 . The overa ll difference between
the two candidates in rhe county.
wide voting was Dr. Ridgeway4,88l,
and Dr. Conde 5.093.
Republicans claim surplus mounting
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Senate President-elect Paui" E . GUImor, R-Port Clinton, says the
Celeste Administration Is building a
huge budget surplus which documehts the need for a cut In the state
Income tax.
He referred Monday to a news
conference earlier In the day at
which state Budget Director Wll·
Uam J . Shkurti·announced a revised
estimate that thestatewould end the
fiscal year neXt June With a balance
of $155.8 million.
In early October, Shkurtl gave a
·
,
figure of about $135 million.
The budget director also ' said,
however, that tax revenues in
November were $30 million l!elow
earlier projections. He said the
recent slow down in the national
economy was responsible, and that
he may have to make further
revisions.
In a prepared statement, Gillmor
said the increased revenue estimate
provided evidence that Celeste's
1983 increase In the state Income tax
"was excessive a nd unjustified ."
He did not challenge any of
Shkurtl's figures, but he said the
income tax "c leariy can be cut
wilhout lessenin g services ar a ll. "
Gillmor and other Republicans
have promised to Introduce a bill
cutting the income tax by lOpercent
a yea r in each of the next three
years .
Shkurti said the $30 million
November shortfall could signal an
economic slide In Ohio. depending
on what happens on the national
leveL
"It's not time to press the pa nic
button , but it is time lo Oy the flag of
'c·.e)e·brates 80th year
.
.·
·
Savings Co. of Pomeroy is ·
on A\lg. 6, 190(. a charter was gnmted.ln the name
today.
of The Fanners Bank and Trust Company by the
·Reed, a native Meigs Countlan, Superintendent of Banks 0t the State of Ohio giving
1n a building on Court Street pennlsslon · to Issue 500 shares of stock that
the public for businesS on Dec. 4, represented a total capital O! $50,000. In 1921 the name
"Trust" was replaced by the WOrd "Savings" .In the
. was the seCond established by name of the Bank.
Havlilg steildy growth from the beglnnlng, the b,ank
reeched Its llrst mliJion In deposits In 1943. By the time
IIJelocal baitk until hi!Jdeathln · the bank l'I'IOYed to Its newklcationonSecond Street: In
tali!
T. Reed $1-. Aptll~. totaldepollll•'-':ere$9,000,~ascompared
lie re!lred In January,l962, . 10 over $40;000,000 In November, ~.
·
. was I18ITll!d presi!:lent of ille · Since tbe ' bank's beglitnlng, . ·j:ll!rsQtmel have.
~ bus1J1esS With t~r continued the policy of asststln( the sma,u lnYi!etot as
·Bfllc:e Reed, the fourth • illpl1led In their q a n - "We have aJ'IlWII because
actiVe. In the opei'Btlon. '
we hAVe helped others to arow1 ."
Theodore
.
caution:· he sa id .
Except through that implica rJon.
the director has refusPC!Io be drawn
into the tax cur discussion amond
Democra ts as well as Republicans.
So far lhis fiscal year. which
began J uly l.t hesra te hascollecred
$67 million m ore in taxes than
projected . Based on revised estimates. Shkurti sa id he now believes
the stale will end the fiscal vearwith
collections $155.8 m illion.
He made the new estim atedt'spite
November rax coll('c tions which
tota led $449.8 million a nd reflect ed
short falls of $9.3 million in the sales
tax a nd$17.7 million in the personal
Income tax.
··one month a trend does not
make, " Shkurti said, adding that his
office
have a much better idea Of
the state's short term economic
future after reports a rrive In
J anuary to reflect Christmas sales.
will
The director stressed tha 1 his
figures do not Inc lude receipts from
the lottery which are continuing to
come in well a bove expectations .He
sa id that it appears that the lottery
Will almost double the$170 million In
profit& which were forecast at the
stati of the fisca l year.
But he stressed tha t lottery
receipts are earmarkP<l by law for
pubUc schools and may not be used
In the general fund .
�Commen
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
They can quarre l throughout the
rest of history over who's prettier,
M,arUyn Monroe or Greta Garbo,
who's better, Mozart or Beethoven,
who was the better general,
Alexander or Napoleon , but one
.thing they can never disagree
about, and that is that the greatest
feat of moral Idiocy In modern
history was eommitted by Psychology Today In the. recynt Issue in
Which it proved th;lt sensiilve,
well-educated people can't, really,
tell the difference · between t'he·
Soviet Union and the United States.
The press release reads, " Nat'l
Survey Reveals Highly Educated
Americans Can 't Distinguish Between Unlabeled Russian and
American Military Actions." The
A~
~m~ r"'T"1--I...__-r-,......,.c::l,o=o
'qiv
ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
BOB IIOEFLICH
General Manager
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The A!ISOCialed Press, lnllllld Dally Press Assotlatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTER.~ OF OPINION art• wt~komt- . They should he less than 300 word.-;
lonK. Alllettt>r!iare subjt"Ct to edltln.- and must be ~lped with name , address and
telephonP nurnher. No unsigned letter"' will be p~llshed . l..t>Ut>ni she~uld ht• in
s:ood lu....te , addrt."!lslng isJMJes. not person~Jlttes.
first sentence of the story goes on to
say, "The widely hell! assumption
-that the arms race Is a siruggie
between right and wrong ... a good
and an evil superpower . ... was
today bebunked by a national
survey, devised by a Ph.D. candidate and a noted Stanford University psychologist, which· Indicates
that a · 'mirror Image' exists
between Soviet and Arrtderican
military conduct and posture."
And the grand· conclusion of the
·study? "If it Is difficult or Impossible to discriminate between unlabo>led Soviet and Amertcan actions.
It Is unlikely that global conntcl can
accurately be described as · a
struggle between good and eviL"
That, they apparently want us to
think, is psychology today.
How · did the two chapptes who
dredged this up go about it, and whO
are they? Well, the senior partner of
:!he team Is Professor Philip G.
Zlmbardo, a Yale Ph.D. whO has
written a lot of books, one of them
called " Canvassing for Pea<;e,"
another "Cognitive Control of Motivation," and It sure takes a ·tot of
cognitive control of motivation to
maintain that on the basis of
objective tests you can't tell the
difference between Soviet and U.S.
bo>pavior: The junior partner Is
Identified only as a graduate
student 'completing a doctorate in
psychology at Stanford University." His name (or should we
assume it Is a nom de plume•) IsS.
Regan's sales .p itch
If Donald Regan carne to your front door, the chances are !lO<Jd that he 'd
be able to sell you on the Idea that the American tax system has been
patched up too often and ought to be replaced with a new model that he just
happens to have.
,
He brought that sales pitch to the White House, but so far he hasn't been
able to register with his No. 1 client , Ronald Reagan .
"There can be no question in anyone's mind that the present tax system
Is too complicated, " says Regan, who worked on Wa ll Street bo>fore he
joined Reagan's Cabinet as secretary of the Treasury.
" It's unfair, and it retards saving and investment and eeonomlc
growth," Regan said .
His tax plan would cut tax rates, but also diminish .the el<emptions,
deductions and exclusions tha t make the tax system complicated and, in
his view. unfair.
Even before he put the plan out last week, those whose fortunes would be
harmed siarted raising cain, AU were not greedy fat cats, either.
Take charities. Regan would limit charitable deductions, which is
el<pected to draw complaints from charitable organizations that they'll get
fewer gifts.
City and state officials will pmtest Regan's proposa l to eliminate the
deductibility of state and local taxes: thereat estate and housing industries
will be unhappy over his proposal to limit the deductibility of mortgage
Interest; sellers of lul<ury cars and boats won't like his proposed limits on
how much interest taxpayers can deduct.
.
And so it goes. Every proposed change has its enemies.
Consequ('ntly, it would take a heavy expenditure of the president's
political capital to get any broad tal< no•vision through Congress. Such an
effort might be worthwhile If the tax changes would help solve the problem
cre ated by $200 billion deficits. but it won 't. It is, in fact, designed not to.
Reagan promised in running for re-election that taxes would bo>
tncrt>ased only "over my d('ad body." So Regan's tax plan is designed to
neither increase nor decrease government revenues.
But many in Congress believe solving the deficit problem is more
lmporta(\t than fixlng .the tax code.
Eve n the president seems wary of his Treasury secretary's plan.
Regan told a news conference that "ta x reform is an idea whose time has
come." But the initial reaction suggests It is an idea whose time is not yet.
Pious. S. Pious will not 'go far, if at
age 25 (or is he 151) he can't tell the
difference between the- twosuperpowers.
Here Is how the test was
conducted. Readers of Psychology
Today were given 10 questions, of
which here Is a sample: "The
government of a country not far
from Superpower A, after discussIng certain changes In Its party
system, bo>gan broadening its trade·
with Superpower B. To revene
these changes in government and.
trade, Superior A sent its troops illto
the country and .milltartly bacl~ed
the original government. You the
reader then mark down who you
think Superpower A Is. Ready?
Fifty-four percent got it right.
About half. The answer is: The
Soviet Union. And the episode
referred to Is · the invasion of
Czechoslovakia In August 19ffi.
That Invasion was the brutal end of
the Prague Spring during which the
poor Czechs, under Dubcek, attempted to give the people just a ·
lew little liberties.
Another one: "In the 19005,
Superpower S sponsored a surprise
Invasion of a amsll country near its
border, with the purpose of overthrowing the regime In poweratthe
time. The Invasion failed, and most
of the original Invading forces Wl'J'e
killed or Imprisoned." Seventy-five
percent eorrectl:,;' guessed that it
was the United States sponsoring
the attempted liberation of C<1stro's
Cuba. That, In the moral reckoning
of Messrs. Z. and P., makes the
United States an aggressor. By
those standards, we aggressed
against France wllen our trooPs
landed In Normandy.
ThPre are other questions that, In
similar language, ch;~racterize the
invasion of Hungary by the Soviet
Union In November 1956; when the
tanks ran over the freedom fighters
Genetic A-bombs_~______J_ac__;_h_A___nd_e_rso_n
i
WASHINGTON - High on the · ties at eight different sites.
Classified CIA reports, obtained
agenda of any future disarmament
by my associate Dale Van Alta,
negotiations should be a subject
that the Soviets probably won't
give these chilling assessments of
discuss : their continuing developthe Soviets' program in germ
ment of biological weapons.
warfare:
These Include the germs and
- The Soviets malnt a in active
research projects ·on natural polgases that you might el<pect to find
in their forbidden arsenal. But
sons far more extensl.ve than would
something much more menacing
be needed to guard against agriculhas been added: The Soviets are
tural infestations or epidemics
developing biogenetlcaiiy engiamong the population. One secret
neered poisons.
· CIA report states, "The research Is
well-supported, Involves both milI first alerted you to this grisly
threat last February, wt)en I quoted
Itary and civilian Investigators, and
In many cases has been linked with
from one of the grimmest reports to
facilities associated with BW (biocome out of the National Security
Council. It warned the president
logical warfare) research and
development."
that the Sviets have mastered
"gene-splicing techniques as omi- The· CIA has learned that the
nous as the atom-splitting discover- Soviets are Investigating a number
Ies that led to the nuclear bomb."
of specific cor;npounds "which
Now I have more information:
appear to have considerable potenThe Soviets have hidden their
tial as BW agents." These Include
offensive biological warlare pro" biologically active sllicon eontalnlng and organofluorine comgram in the Defense Ministry's
pounds ... (and ) marine neurotol<seventh main directorate, headed
lns and blue-green algal
by Gen . V. L Ogarkov. The CIA has
neurotoxins."
determined that the program operates research and production faclli-The CIA has figured out some
of the features the Soviet scientists
are looking for in their . biological
agents. These properties Include
persistence, stability, adaptability
to special carrier solutions and the
ability to be disseminated In such
tiny particles that the poison will
penetrate gas masks.
- "El<trcmely rapid-acting lncapacltants are also of growing
concern," the CIA reports. Already
these . knockout gases have been
used In Afghanistan, where they
arc known as "the silent killer"
.because victims appear to have
been nash-frozen without even
knowing what hit them.
- The CIA llas received reports
that describe "Soviet research on a
sleep-inducing peptide," which
raises tile possibility that they're
developing other peptldes as well
for blologltal-weapons use.
-The CIA has gotten a wealth of
Information on Soviet biologicalweapons operations straight from
the horse's mouth - a key Sovl<'t
s6urce who was extensively debriefed after defecting. He reported
that In the 1970s a proposal was
made to the Central Committee and
the Ministry of Defense to do
research on psychochemicais as
promising chemical warfare
agents. The program was given the
go-ahead - and the funding.
The Soviet source told the CIA
that "yellow rain" - the toxic
weapon believed to have kiliecJ
thousands In Laos and elsewhen> _,;,_
was "a simple agent" compared to
those currently being developed.
"He described the new aS'!nts as
super-poisons of biological ortgln
that would not require a large
industrial production effort, but
could be produced In ·relatively
small facilities , possible even by
using genetically engineered microbial culture," a secret CIA
report states.
To say the U.S. Intelligence
community Is concerned about all
this would bo> a drastic understatement. The CIA reports make clear
that, far from having any Idea of
possible·antidotes, our Intelligence
experts can't even Identify many of
the biological poisons the SOviets
have been developing.
I love you, but•.• _________A_rt_B-;-uc_hwa_td
Whether we want to admit it or
not there are serious emotional
problems In the new man-woman
relationships.
Peter Ghastonernough, a young
friend, asked m e a very strange
question the other day. "Do you
think I'm a wimp."
"I don't believe so. Why 'do you
ask?"
"BON APPETIT"
-Today in history
SAN DIEGO (AP) -We:tcooneto
Don Coryell's nightmare.
It's a recurring dream, Oneofhls
fleet of receivers is striding toward
the goal line with a touchdown pass,
one that wtU lead to the defeat of a
highly touted opponent, when- just
llke that - t.he ball pops loose.
Fumble. Touchdown negated. Opportunity lost.
It happene<J Monday night, and
the San Diego coach feared the
worst But Bobby Duckworth
atoned for his miscue . with an
88-yard touclldown reception in the
fowth quarter, and the Chargers
dealt favored Chicago a 20-7 defeat
th;~t may keep Bears Coach Mike
Dltka awake nights.
" I couldn 't believe it, " said
Coryell, who watched in horror as
Duckworth, nea ring the completion
rif a 54-yard touchdown pass, lost
control of the ball and fumbled it
away at the 2-yard-line. " I thought.
'This can't be our night ....
He was wrong .. F'ive minutes into
the final period , Duckworth sUpped
behind defender Shaun Gayle, took
a pass from Ed Lutheroverhlsright
The difference_·________;·w_i_llia_m_F_.B_uc_k_Ley_I_r.
The Daily Sentinel
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
upset
Page 2--'The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tu.-ctay. December
"My girlfriend thinks I am ."
"Why does sl'\e think that?"
"Because she says I'm Indecisive
and I don't know what she wants."
" Did you ·a sk her what she
wanted?"
"Yes, and she said If! didn't know
what she wanted then I must be a
wimp."
"You have a problem. Do you
have any idea of the way she wants
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 4, the 339t.h day ofl~ . There are 27 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Dec. 4, 1783, Gen . George Washington said farewell to his officers at
Fraurtce's Tavern in New York City. In a choked voice. the departing
you to behave?"
- commander in chief of the Continental Army said, "With a heart full of love
"I think she wants me to be stmng
and gratitude, I now take leave of you."
and assertive and masculine."
On this date:
."Have you tried It?"
In 1816, James Monroe of VIrginia was elected the fifth president of the
"Every time I do, she says !don't
United States, defeating Federalist Rufus King.
treat her as an equal. She maintains
In 1875, William Marcy Tweed, the"boss"ofNewYorkCity'sTarnmany
the days of pushing women around
Hall political organization, escaped from jail and fled the country.
are over. She wants me to respect
In 1918, President Woodrow Wilson set sail for France to attend the
her feelings."
versallles Peace Conference. He became the-first chief executive to travel
"Have you told her you do?"
outside the eountry while In o!flce.
.
"Yes, and then she calls me a
In 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered the Uquldation of the
wimp.''
works Progress Administration, wlllch llad been created In 1935 to provide
"Are yoq sure this Is the girl for
'work for the unemployed during the Depression.
you?" ·
: Also 1n 1942. U.S. bombers .struck the Italian malnlandlortheflrst time In
"We're very mucll In love, ·but
there Is a lot more going on than I
World War ll .
.
1n 1945. the U.S. Senate approved this eountry's participation In the . bargained for. It's not easy being a
man todayc"
United Nations.
.
·
. 1n 1965 the United States launched Gemini 7 witll Air Force Lt.- Col.
"We're allawareofthat. Perhaps
' Frank &rman and Navy cmdr. James A. Lovell aboard. .
you should tell her your feelings and
: 1n 1~. four American churchwomen who llad disappeared two days
the problems you have satisfying
£artier after arrtvlng .In El Salvador wen> found murdered. Five former · her."
' national-guardsmen were eonvlcted of the slayings In May 1!1!4.
"If I told her my feelings, she
would think I was a weak person."
"Well, she already thinks you're
a wimp, so you really don't have too
much to lose."
"I could lose her respect."
"How did you get In this mess tn
the first place?"
"I think It' had something to do
with consciousness raising. When
we first met she said I was nothing
but a macho jock, and If I didn't
change my attitude she'd never see
me ·again _ So I made an effort to
change. When she wanted to do
something, we did tt, When I
wanted to do something, I left the
decision to her. At first she Ilk~ the
role I was playing, but pretty soon
she got ticked off and asked why she
had to make aU the decisions for
both of us.
"That could have been a signal.
Women may pretend they like It,
but they're much happier when
someone makes a decision for
them ...
"I'm aware of that, But I spoiled
her. Now when l make a decision,
she gets ma~.i'nd says It's only fair
that since we'repartnersshesbould
have as much of a say as I do."
"Maybe she said it but · dldn 't
mean it.''
"I asked her If she really meant
what she was saying, and she told
·me she was tired. of always being
questioned."
"On the basisotoureonverSation,
she seems to enjoy making life
miserable for you."
"I don't think so. I believe she's as
contused as I am.lt'snoteasy being
a woman these days.
"We all kriow that Why don't you
tak<' the bull by Ihe horns and ~o
back to bo>lnR the macho jl"rk you
were before?"
"I don't think she'd stand for it .
She's very much Into being a
liberated woman."
"Which means?"
"Even tf · she accep!ed it. her
girlfriends would never ·forgive
her."
"There has to be something
between Macho and wimp," l said.
"What happened to th<' new
liberated man?"
"We cry a lot."
'RR2l~!J
~~POMEROY
992-6687
No trades could mean
dull baseball meeting
HOUSTON (AP ) - News of a , - - - - -- - - -- - - - ' - - - - - - -- - -- - - possible deal that would send
speedster Rickey Henderson from
the Oakland A's to the Los Angeles
Dodgers enlivened what sta rted out
as a dull beginning for baseball 's
winter meetin g.
AI Campanis. the Dodgers Gen eral Manager , sa id Monday night ·
tha t he had asked the A's to either
acce pt or reject his trade offer believed to be pitcher Alejandro
P ena a nd another younger player ,
possibly Greg Brock- by noon EST
today .
The A's had let it be known before
the m eeting that Henderson, the
outfie lder who set a maj or-league
record by stealing 130 bases in 1982,
was ava ilable .
Ba ltimore reportedly had offered
pi tche r Scott McGregor and out fie lde r Cary Roenicke.
The day began with Commissione r Peter Uebo>rroth sa)ong he
would leave the week-longsessiont o
go a tt end the end of the Players
Association meeting in La s Vegas,
Our
Open House
DUCK SOUP - San Diego Chargenl' Bobby during the iourth qlll\rter of Monday night's game In
Duckworth cawhes an 8S-yard touchdown pass as · -San Diego. The touchdown proved ro he the winning
Chicago Bears.defender Shawn Gayle reaches In ~aln points In the Chargei'S' 20-7 victory- (AP Laserphoto).
Two area hunting casualties
nnarrecord gun-deer season
happened at about b p.m . Sarurday, ·each recorded more than 3,000 deer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (Af')- Deer
were killed in record numbers by · an hour after the hunt.ing season
killed .
Ohio hunters during the six-day closed, but no charges had been filed
Muskingum County led the state
against the other man as ofMonday. with 3,302 deer killed . Coshocton
gun-hunting season that ended
Saturday, but at least two hunters
ODNR's Paul Schiff said MOnday County had 3,077 killed and Athens
also died in shooting accidents, state
had :!,017.
that the numbo>r of victims could
wildlife officials say.
·
Other leading counties were
increase as sheriff departments
The Ohio Department of Na tural
Guernsey, with 2,638 killed; Meigs,
concluded their investigations.
Resources sa id Monday that hunOne hunter ·died last year and 14 2,450; Washington. 2,331; Harrison,
ters bagged 56.438 deer, compared
others were injured, Schiff said. 2, 2ffi; Vinton , 2,197; Licking. 2,115.
with 50,250 deer killed la st year.
and Perry, 2.007 . All are in Zone
This year, the ODNR had only fou r
The human victims were identi·
F'our.
reports of injuries as of Monday.
fled as Michael Border, 22, of
In 32 western and northwestern
Schiff said most of the increase in
Beveriy, and Rusty Bowers. 20, of t])e deer kill occurred in the 24 counties known as Zone One , 5.447
rural Lancaster.
central, eastern and southeastern deer were taken with Richland
Washington County sheriffs depu- counties known as Zone Four.
Count y recon:ling the highest kill at
ties sai~ Border died Saturday after
549. In Zone Two, comprising 22
Hunters there were alloWed to kill
being shot In the head while hunting either bucks or does without a southwester n Ohio count ies. 4.819
Wednesday. He died at a Parkers- special permit, a change from deer were taken with Jackson
burg, W.Va .. hospital.
County reporting 759 deer . Deer
previous years.
F airfield County sheriff's detecWildlife Officials said deer have Zone Three, 10 northeaste rn countives said Bowers died Saturday
been numerous in that a rea because ties. reported 2,1 55 deer with
night after a friend fired at what he
Ashta bula County recording the
of improved habitat management.
thought wa s a deer. The shooting
For the first time, three counties mos t a t 679.
Three SVAC teams in action tonight
A full slate of action is slated this
week tn the SVAC. The schedule
begins this evening with three teams
opening their 1984-&<; schedules in
non-league games. The schedule
finds Southwestern going to Oak
Hill; F'ort Frye visits Kyger Creek
and Fairland plays at Hannan
Trace. Eastern. North Gallia and
Southern which have already
opened, are idle.
Friday night, the leaguE' campalgn begins with Nort.h Gailla
visiting Southern; Kyger Creek
travels to Eastern and Southwestern meets Hannan Trace.
Southern, tbe perennia l SVAC
champ, Is off to an 0-2 record
following losses to GallipJlis and
Waterford . North Gallia surprised
Oak Hill, 78-00 last F'rlday night a nd
Eastern dropped Its opener, 74-60 to
Federal Hocking.
Southwestern goes into tonight's
game with fourreturnlnglettermen
.-------College scores ----'------,
( '~,••1C• '
Ba."iktitJilll Sl"'lf"l"::;
t:~'<~T
l)(>l~ •"'·un•
FOI~Ih<lm
Nuw
~.
i4. Gl a ~stx•ro Sl . A:i
K!, St. Fmncts, N Y ti.'i
1\ mN·k·an Ql.
No ri ht•t~sll·m 123. Suflolk ?.!
Plllsbun.dl !fl. l.i!f3 11('11t· ri6
Slrn 11 71 . Lt 'h ich tio' ·
W \ 'lq.!i llla K! f ltllo \\.'NOI(l\lan n
sm~•
Berry's World
shoulder and went untouched to the dr.>ss earlier this season. BendroSs
goal line to complete the game- inexplicably fum bled out of bounds
winning play.
near the goal line on a certai{l
He heldthe ball a loftbrlefiy before touchdown pass, a nd the Chargers
entering the end zone, but it was eventually lost to the Los Angeles
clutched tightly to his hand . He Raiders, <14-37.
didn't spike It, handing it instead to
The Bears' only score. a !().yard
offensive lineman Sam Claphan .
touchdown run ·by Walter P ayton ,
" I was happy the coach had cameafterafumble bySanDiego's
enough eonfidence in me to go back Earnest .Jackson put them In
to me again," the third-year pro ~~~:_!f'C~J~
si!!!ti~
on~·:,__ _ _ _ __
from Arkansas :;aid. "That is part of
the game of footba ll - the ups a nd
downs."
Hi s redemptive catch, which
preceded a 66-yard interception
return by Lee Willia m s, helped the
Chargers improve to 7-7. Chicago,
which lost its eighth straight
Monday night road game. fell to9-5.
Tile Bears, who last week clinched
Your BEST Insurance
their first-ever NFC Cent ral DivPolicy is a GOOD Agent
ision tltle, hurt their chances of
gaining home field adva ntage in the
post-season playoffs. Chicago ha s
not hosted a playoff garne since1963.
Duckworth's third-quarter gaffe,
whicn carne with San Diego traili ng
7-6, stirred mem ories of a si mila r
214 EAST MAIN
miscue by teamma te Jesse Ben-
·
AJab(lffi U 1111. I<. Tl'nn<'S."f't' St. 76
,\ uhurn ~). ,\ rm..•;rronJ,; S1. n
Bapti:-r tn. l 'oi L of C'harl ~t oo til
Dm 1dsHn 7.\, Erskin~• ~
Florida
~1.
!r.. Fklrlda Inn . .U
J.\lrman ti"i . Nl'wtx'm • ~1
H 1a~ston ll.i•ptist !i\. ~kholls Sl . 61
J al'kSOfl\' lllC" St. ~ - ;\uh.-MOnl g.lnlf' l:'- '
'i•i
l.outslana St. !U. TPxa.~ ~
Lo..uslana Trcll 75, Rb • 63
N. Carolina
n. Hownrd 61
N. Camllna ::it. ftl. Hartford 411
NE: l..ol!lslana 7.l, S. M Lo;sts.-.Jppl .i !l
S. Caro lina !M, Tht' Citadrl It!
Soolhcm U. &1 , Chlc:ij!;n St. 71
S8 l mblnna Bl . Ct'fllmaJ1' 9 1
SW l.oulslmm 101 , N.C.-Gm'nstrro !ill
Tml'll'W't' T£'Ch fl!. Dl.'lrrnn1 li7
Vandl'rbll1 !N , Mlo:lll' Tt>nn. Itt
Vlrf(lnl a til, VMI J7
Vl rRtnla T<'dl 91, Md.·E. Shorf' :M>
....,...,-r
Bul lf'l' 66. Valparaiso 51
I:K'Paul il, C"hlro Sl . :17
and high hopes of Improving last
season's 7-14 overa Urecord. Returning are seniors Steve P elfrey; J oe
Baker, Will Haislop and Mike
Bailey .
Ha nnan Trace, co-champ last
year a long with 5outhE'rn. has a
quick , veteran club which includes
three seniors. cent er Bill Swain ; and
forwa rds, Mike b a,;sandSteveStill
and two juniors with experience,
Deke Barnes and Phil Batley. both
guards .
Last year, Hannan Trace posted a
17-5 overa ll record and9-1 slate in the
SVAC.
Kyger Creek faces a rebuilding
year following the bo>st tbree cage
seasons in the school's history. Last
year, the Bobca ts flnishedwlthal6-7
record and 64 mark inside the loop.
Southpaw shooting guard Chuck
Vogel is the only returning starter at
tbls point. Another starter from last
year, Steve Waugh,
is stUI
recuperating from an fractured
ankle suffered during the season 's
fi rst football game in September.
Will Continue
All Week thru Sunday, Dec. 9
OPEN 9 TO 7 WEEKDAYS
SUNDAY 1 TO 6
REGISTER FOR DOOR PRIZES
Beautiful Display of Wr,oths,
Garlands and Arrangements
Nev .
Ue tler roth also challenged team
owne rs to find a new unity and then
expressed a bo>lief that " there's an
Smeltzers Flower Shop
ene rgy out there which says 'lel 's
get going."
Until the Henderson proposal
sur faced Monday nig ht, major
i<>ague · trade ta lks a ppeared
sta gnant.
453 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Oh.
Ask Santa
fora
ST/H£.
GIVE THE STIHL
09 SAW
WITH 14 " BAR
FS·SI AVE
NOW ONLY
$)2995
The Stihl elec troni c
FS-50AVE- a lig ht weight , ea sy -tohandle weed an•
grass tr immer.
tures a lo ng-runni
gasoline-powere ·
e ngi ne . No extensio n
cord neede d!
Wit h a quick-starti ng
ignition system .
The ideal gift tor
any homeowner !
FS SOAVE
$)6695
I
STIHL
Th e Stihl cha1n sa w you get lhr s Chns tma s to cut
the Yule log and keep th e wood prle stoc ked w11l be
dom g the same JOb next ye ar. and the next. and 111e
next .. rt's the best g11t you could get Or g1ve
ACCESSORIES AVAILABLE FOR
YOUR GIFT GIVING
Hempy chosen as
Player of Week
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP~ -Otterbein'
forward Dick Hempy, who has
averaged 25.3 points and 10.3
rebounds pergameln the Cardinals'
four victories this seaso~ . has bo>en
selected Ohio Conference Player of
the Week In men's collegiate
basketball.
Hempy, a 6-foot-4 sophomore
from Waldo, Is hitting 76 pereent of
his field goal a tt~mpts in Otterbein's
undefeated start.
Guard Tracy Weaver of unbeaten
Muskingum was chosen as the
league's No.1 women's player. The
5-8 senior from Zanesville averaged
19.7 points and 1.0 rebounds per
game last week as the Musldes, 3-0,
beat West Virginia WeSleyan a'nd
won their own tournament with
triumphs over Wheeling and West
Uberty.
•ANNOUNCING•
OUR SHOWROOM
QR.AND OPENING
DISHES ON DISPLAY
ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
IY THf rosT OffiCf
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 2·6
Sat. 11-6
.~
'
Come in and
Register for
.
)'
""' .
SONY Watchman TV
to bt given away. ($200
Retail Value)
Systems from $1695
install~d
378-6158
SONY dealer
POMEROY HOME AND AUTO
600 E. MAIN ST.
992-2094
STIH£.
POMEROY, OH.
�Page- 4 - The
Sentinel
Meyer upset despite
.DePaul's easy victory
Bengals in race
after lastest win
CINCINNATI (AP) - Anything
burgh's 23-20 loss to Houston.
is possible In the roughed-andThe Bengals finish with ga mes
tumbled AFC Central Division ,
against the 6-8Salntsln New Orleans
where the Cincinnati Bengals are In and a t home against the 2-12 Buffalo
a festive playa!! mood this week
Bills. Pittsburgh plays the 4-10
despite their 6-8 record.
Browns a t home next Sunday, then
The Bengals, written o!f after finishes a t Los Angeles ag~lnst the
starting the season 0-5 under 1()4 Raiders.
first -year Head Coach Sam Wyche,
" Pittsburgh is golng to have their
are now a serious threat to win the
hands full next week against the
dismal division, led by the 7-7 · Browns, and In Los Angeles the next
Pittsburgh Steelers.
week there's a good chance they'll
Cincinnati pulled off a wild 20-17 be playing a team tha t also has to
overtime vic tory Sunday over the win to make the playoffs," Wyche
division-rival Clevela nd Browns, said. " We still can't control tha t, btit
while the Steelers were losing In our guys believe they're going to the
overtime tot he Houston Oilers.
playoffs."
T hP result: Cinci nnati !ralls
The Bengals a nd Steelers splil
their two-game season series, a nd
P ittsburgh by just one game. and
would claim the division champion- the next tl~breaker Is divisional
ship with a better record In divisio n record . The Bengals' 5-1 record
games if they e nd up tied.
against AFC Central opponents
After struggling just to string would send them to the playoffs If
together decent performances for they finish tied with Pittsburgh.
If the Bengals win the division
most of1he season. the Bengals a re
finding a renewffl e xcitement In wlthan8·8 record, they'd bethdlrst
I heir Improba ble playoff quest
National Football League team to
" We've been hanging around like make the playoffs without a winning
a shoestring for so long," said record In a regular-length season.
defe nsive back John Simmons. The l!nB Minnesota team won the
" We're desl inffl to make the NFC Central Division with an 8-7-1
playo!fs."
mark, the weakest record of a
The Bengals m ade an Improbable
playoff team to date in a full-length
com e back from a 10-point deficit
season. Cleveland and Detroit made
Ia te in the game last Sunday,
the playoffs In the strike-shortened
blocking a punt with about minute
1!m season With 4-5 records.
- to play and then scoring the tying
Records aside. the Bengals now
points on a tackle-eligible pa~ play
are thinking about makingthelrfirst
from rookie qua rterback Boomer
playoff appearance since losing to
Esiason to offensive lineman An - the New York Jets In a first-round
thony Munoz.
playoff game in the 1982 season.
Jim Breech 's 3.1-yard field goa l in
"My optimistic nature was put to
the ultimate test," said linebacker
overt ime sen t the Bengals into the
club house for a celebra tion made
Reggie Williams. "lt's not over yet,
sweeter wh_e n a small television set
and it's not a thin string we 're
la te r flashed the score of Pitts - hanging onto anymore eithe r."
a
Two key Bengals
may face surgery
CINCiNNATI (AP ) .,- Qua rter ·
back Turk Schonert is losl for the
season and wide receiver Cris
Collinsworth probably will miss at
leasl one of the Cincinnati Bengals '
last two games, the playoff-hopeful
team learned Monday.
Doctors decided that Schonert' s
sepa ra ted right shoulder - his
throwing shoulder - wUI need
surgica l repa ir.
Collinswot1h, limping badly on a
spra inffl left ankle a nd sore left
knee, may have suffe red ligame n t
da m age in I he ankle and is expected
to mi ss Cincinnati's game nex t
Sunday against the Sa ints in New
Orleans.
The 6-8 Bengals lost the highly
effective Schaner! and Collin s ·
worth. their leading receiver, as
they renewed their playo!f hOpes in
the AFC Central DMsion . The
Bengals hea t the Cleveland Browns
20-17 in overtime Sunday Ia mo¢e
just one gam e behind the divisionleading PiltsburghSteelers with two
gam es to play.
"This puts a huge burden on
everybody e lse," receiver Steve
Kreider said . "Turk has played
quarterback as well as a nyone in the
leaguc over the pasl four weeks, and
you don't have 10 talk about wh at
Collinsworth means to the team ."
Schonert, the Bengals ' No . .2
qua rterback, made his third
stra ight start Sunday in place of Ke n
Anderson. still recovering from a
sepa ratffl left shoulder. Schone rt
la nded on his rtght shoulder on a
qua rterback sack Sunday and gave
way to rookie Boomer Esiason, who
led Cincinna ti to the vic tory.
Schonert w as examined at Christ
Hospital in Cincinna ti Monday.
Doctors found a shoulder sepa ra tion
with torn ligaments, a nd recom m ended surgery.
WOLFE DRIVES - Kent Wolfe (12) came off the bench ro score :aJ
points for Rio Grande last night as the Redmen downed visiting
BlueDeld Stale, 121-97. Wolfe was also credited wllh seven as,o~lsts.
Bluefield defender Is Roy Benjoman, who tallied 16 for the Big Blues.
Rio Grande ties
Lyne Center
scoring mark in.
121-97
•
WID
seeand half as the Blue Deinoos
expanded a 32-16 halttlrne lead to
47-23.
.
Washington, 3-0, trailed 38-33 at
the half, but went ahead of TelUil;
Tech at 49-48 when Detlef Schremp!
canned a jumper with four mfuutes
lett In regulation. .
After Tech's Tony Benford tied
the game with a free throw at 3: m,
each team trled. and faDed, to hold
the ball for a last shot.
Benford's two free throws gave
Tech a 53-51 lead In the flrst extra
period, but another Schreinpf
jumper, this with three seconds lett,
forCed a seco!ld overtime that
wasn't settled until Fortier coverted
his own miss Into the game-deciding
bucket.
North Carolina's youthful Tar
Heels had hoped to Impress the
home folks for the first time this
season by making quick workof tiny
Howard. But North Carolina found
Itself trailing 37-35 at the half and the
embarrassed Tar Heels didn't take
the lead unill BU22 Pete!'Son sank a
layup for a 40-39 advantage.
Brad Daugherty had 13 points and
13 rebounds for North Carolina, 3-0.
By The ,4MOclatM Preis
Only three games Into the
post-Ray Meyer era, the DePaul
basketball team Is finding that life
won't be any easier under new
Coach Joey Meyer.
Despite i.he rriargln In · a 77:.J7
victory over Chico State Monday
night, the younger Meyer proved to
be just as harsh a critic as his father,
who held the DePaul reins for 42
years before rettrlng last spring.
"DePaul has a stigma that It
doesn't play hard In games It's
supposed towln. ItstW has that,'' the
29-year-old Meyer ~ld .
"You don't expect emotion
(against the likes of Chico, a
Division II team), but you expect
them to be In control, and they
weren't," Meyer said.
Second-ranked DePaul, now 3-0,
wasn 't the only Top Twenty team to
learn a thing or two Monday night.
No. 9 Washington needed Paul
Fortier's rebound basket with two
seconds left In the sec;ond pvertlrne
to subdue Texas Tech 59-57, and No.
16 North Carolina struggled before
beating Howard University 77-6'!.
In other games Involving ranked
teams, No. 10 North Carolina State
clubbed Hartford 83-46, No. 13
Louisiana State outscored Texas
87-79 and No. 14 VIrginia Tech
blltzed Maryland-Eastern Shore
91-46.
DePaul was never In danger In
running Its Rosemont Horizon
Winning streak to 29 games. Center
Marty Embry scored nine of his H
points In the first six mlnuies of the
Tuesdey.D~ber4,
1984
BE REA, Ohio (AP)- Cleveland
Browns' Coach Marty Schottenhelmer spoke softly, but It was obvious
the conduct displayed by a couple of
his defensive backS early In
Sunday's loss to the Cincinnati
Bengals upset him nearly as much
as the loss Itself.
"There's no place for that In our
game, " Schottenheimer said Monday, referrlngtotheexcesslveshow
of enthusiasm by Hanford Dixon
and AI Gross after Cincinnati wide
Actions
upset
Browns'
coach
· . Save now on ·
SINGER' Machines
.Mechlne Model247
. • Extra-wid~;~ zig ~zag •
Sews buttonholes, etastic and stretch fabrics
!USPS lts-HO)
25°/o OFF ALL SINGER MACHINES
Publ is hed Pvery arternoon , Monda y
THR~
throug h F rid ay, 111 Court St., y the
Ohio Va lley Publis hing Company/ Mul-
SATURDA-Y, DEC. 8
THE FABRIC SHOP
timedia , Inc., Pome roy, Ohio 45769, h.
992-2156. Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press. In·
land Dall y _PrE>ss Assoc ia tion and the
•A
American Newspaper Publishers Associa tion, National Advl'rt ls lng Representative. Bra nham Newspaper Sales.
College's top 20
lr~d em~ r k
o f Th e S.nger Companv
115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy
OPEN 9-S MON.-lAT.
FRIDAY 9•8
to The Da lly Sentinel. 111 Court St., Po-
meroy, Ohio 45769.
,-
~<!f*"
212 E. Main, Pomeroy
- - - --
~
AU in the latest, grea1est looks on
wonderfully lighl ·w efght soles .
MC·.l5Ut\
The Frigidaire ".Pixie"! The Microwave
's big en ough Inside for family-size c ooking-trim enough outside to fit
just aboul anywhe re' Convenient Defrost Cycle saves time getting foods from the freezer to the table. Just set the Power Selector to Defrost setting. Easy-to-Use Timer provides up to 20
minutes of microwave cooking tlme~wlth aU minutes marked
In 30-second Increments.
ONLY
$24995
RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211
Rutland
_See the Grate Boys for Some Great bu s
Snac k Scr.'('t Bouquet
Here's a beautiful
floral gift for everyone warmer Bouqoo
on your list.
·
~Call or visit our shop today.
CHAPMAN SHOES
Next To Elberfelds In Pomeroy
ARROW
HOME LITE
FACTORY AUTHORIZED SPECIAL
r
MGM FARM CITY, INC.
1So whet1 you
berour
ling hungry. remer_n 14'00
.. ~ :~1 family nights begl'(l al :
' pm and go on un.lll c osmg.
G.
care.' "
,.
TIES
10 Gallon
$64 95
Wet/Dry Sbop ¥ac
High Pe rformance Wet/Dry cl eaning, wit h I .25 HP moto ofor clean-
ing power. Includes hose with airflow control, ext. wands , noz·
zte, squeegee shoe, rug shoe, and 4-wheel dolly. MMP800-t0
Pomeroy, OH.
126 E. Main
PH. 992-2191
b
Send your greetings with special
$4995
PH. 992-2049
Serving Mti1s, Gallla and M010n Counties
614/11112-2844
&
WEMBLEY
NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
Drive A Utile and Save a lat-Frot Dllivtry Within 7S Milos
Yt1, We Service At Your la<al Hotpoint Dealer
Store Hours: 1:3'0 to 5:30. Mill CloHd at 5:00 P.M.
POMEROY. OHIO 4!17811
6 Gallon
For The Man
In Your Life.
WIJH THIS AD (While They Last)
F L 0 R Is T
Mo~ Coo.nry'• Oldar Flon.r
3!12 EAST- MAIN
Master
•
.
s.pec1a. I...................
Rta.531995 521995
.rtstmas
·•••••
T/t.ah.Ci,4..J
MECHANJC Q
SHIRTS
Every Tuesday
and wednesday
night. .
VALLEY LUMBER
PH. 992-6611
5.55 Park St.
Middleport, OH.
Unclaimed Srhool Orders
LIQUIDATION
Ne((hi's Education Department placed orders in anth:ipation of prnious year
salts. Due to budget cuts these sales ore undoimed. These machines must be
· soldl All machines offered .are new and the most modern machinn in' the ·
Necchi line. These machines are MADE OF METAL and sew on oil fobriis, Levi's,
canvas, uphaiJtery, nylon, stretch vinyl, silk, EVEN SEW ON LEATHER! Thtle
machines aro now with o 2S-YEAR WARRANrY. With new 1985 NECCHI, you
just set the color coded dial ond see magic happen: straight sewing, zig-iag.
buttonholes (any size!, invisible blind hem, monogram, satin stitch, onlbroidery, applique, sew on button• and 1naps, topstitch, elallic stitch, professional
urolna stitch. straiqht stretch slitch:- all af this and more without tht -d of
old-fashioned cams •! progrommors. Your/rice with this ad $188; without
this od $529. MasterCard and Visa accepti , your chtcksart wtlcamo. Showing in conjunction with Ntcchi Distribution Co., ManJfield Square Mall, 1200
Parle Avt. West, Manefield, Oltio. Toll Fret 1-800-221-4652 Ohio 1-800221 -41>45.
,
NA nON WIDE SERVICE POLICY INCLUDED
LAYlRPR PRICE WITH. THIS AD
wncOME
10 A.M. to 7 P.M.
Let us show you how to· convert ell Of part of your
mortgage into cash . For details, call today.
LAST 2 DAYS
~·
$1,11-INS
AccEPTED
TUES., DEC. 4th
WED., DEC. 5th
AT All 3 l()CATIONS
.
1312 Eastern Avenue (David Adams I •. ......• 446-4_113
A. Goldtone C1H . Champagne iji;JI . Black
toni . . ... .
1. Gtidtone case . White enaml!!l dial Black
or comforting soft leather c asuals
Kids Eat Free,
at Ponderosa.
Are you collecting payments on a real estate mortgage,
but would prefer to have a lump sum?
expressions of
Caravella 17 jewel excellence. Available with
Bulova's Add-A-Year
Program for extended
protection.
Elegant
Choose from our wide s election
Now
WE PURCHASE 1ST 8L 2ND MORTGAGES
AND LAND CONTRACTS
Fine
timepiece
traditions
"
•
REWARD
ARAVELLE®
by BULOVA
. Sag Me,g Ch1i1tmst
Mang Timetf Many Way1.
What a beautiful
spot to be inl
POSTMASTE R: SE-nd address changes
times," s tatea wwnorn, "but I felt
The Rio Grande College Redmen
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
we pla yed well, especially our
Bluefield Sta te College.
By Carrier or Motor Rou•e
.
bench. We got someplaYingtimefo~
121-97, a t Lyne Center Monday
Oqe WeE"k .......... .... ... .... .............. $1.10
One Month ................................ .$4.80
some kids who really needed it. Rick
night.
2.0klahom U6l,<l' l
9·1·1
l.(KJlh 2
One Year .... .... .... ........ ..... .. .... .. $57..20
.l.F klrida 1&1
~J . J
IJ\\1 :1
Fritz a nd Kent Wolfe each had
The 121-point ·outburst tied a
SINGLE COPY
t. WashlnJ:IIlll II 1
JO.Ul
91i.l 4
PRICES
record
for
the
most
points
scored
by
exceptiona
l
games
."
:l.f'l;{'brus k<l
9·2:{1
8B8 5
"According to the doctors. the
Qa lly ................ .......... . . ....... 25 Cent s
9·H l
811 6
liOhlo Sla tf'
Rio
was
lffl
in
scoringbyb-3senior
College
team
a
t
Lyne
a
Rio
Grande
' t
surgery should come out OK."
7.Sou lh Carolin a
11).1 .(1
~
7
Subscrl bt>rs not des lrln~ to pay the carforwa rd Greg Verhoff. The all!:!.Boston ("ollrRI'
!t·2.()
761 8
Bengals Head Coach Sam Wyche Center. The 1970 Redma n squad
ri P!' may rPmlt In adva nce direct to
9.0klaho maStalf'
~2.0
7'li !l
district
performer
connectffl
on
11
that
tota
l
against
Georgescored
said. "It's more corrective than
·The Dally Sent lru:.•l on a 3, 6 or 12 month
m.&..
Me1h0dlsl
!1·2.{1
QH 10
of 14 shots from the field and was
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
11.1-'-iU
R·2·1
!i2l 14
replacing or restructuring the town, Ky., on Feb. 17 -14years ago.
month .
t:l
.M:.uy
land
s-.
1
-0
4m
15
three-for-three
a
t
the
line
for
25
The
Redmen,
after
playing
seven
shoulde r. It should not affec t his
1.1.Miaml, F la.
R4 41
~ 16 16
straight games on I he road , didn 't · points. Wolfe came off the bench to
No :Subscriptions by m a ll per mitted in
14. UCl..l\
~-:UI
.l fl li
(throwing) motion. "
towns where ho'me carrier servh:e is
15.Fiorlda Stall'
7-J.l
m 12
spark the Redmen with 20points . He
Schonert said he wants the waste a ny time ente rtaining the
avail able .
lti.Auburn
R- :1·0
213 11
also had seven assists. Dan Curry ;
surgery as soon a possible. perhaps · home c rowd, jumping oft to a quick
17. Nofrf' Daml'
H.O
210 19
Mall Subscriptions
18. SOUi h(lrn Cal
B·3.o
191 20
who was the MVP of the Aldersonla ter this week, so he can begin 134 lead . Howeve r, the pesky
Inside Ohio
l !l.TC'~S
7·.1-1
1341 U
Broaddus Invitational, controlled
Bluefield State defense, which
13 Wee ks ................................ .. $14.56
rehabilitation.
~.W\~n.~ln
7.:1.1
74 - Oi hrrs ~dvlnji!; voii'S: 'fi'JUJS Chrl!ill atl
26 Wee-ks .................................. $29.12
I he middie with 18 points and seven
applied full-court pressure the
Wyche declined to sa y whether
52 Wccks ......... ....... ...... ............ $58.24
iTt. Hooston ~. Kf'llluck y 33,
e
ntire
game.
caused
Rio
problem
s
rebounds.
l\rkan'!.o1s 29. GrorJlia .z.a. Vi rJdnia 'f('('h
Esiason or Anderson will start
Outside Ohio
21, Tmn£'li!{{' Z!, Full£"r1on ~talC' 19,
13 Wt>eks ......................... ...... ... Sl5 .60
Bluefield Sta te had lwo playe rs
Sunday In New Orleans . Anderson and closed the gap to sLx points by
t\rmy 18, Virginia 18. Air f'O!'N' !t. Rul·
26 Weeks ..................... . ............ $31 .20
over 20 points as Barry Kitchens
probably will be ready to play the 12: 10 m ark.
Jt('rs i , PufdU<' 5. q«tr¢a 1'('('b 4. Iowa :J.
52 Weeks ......... .... ..................... _S59.BO
Texas A&M :1. WC'st Virginia 2, Nl'\·ada·
Redmen Lead at Hall
poured in 'n and Curtis Ray added 23
Sunday, he said.
Las Vl>g iJ.~ 1. Toledo I.
Back
court
specialists
J
erry
and
a·gam
e-high
13
rebounds.
. Wyche also said the Bengals were
conside ring signing another quar- Mowery and Kent Wolfe tossed in
Bluefield outrebounded Rio .----~---------'-------'------
Grande, 4().37. The Redmen confour mar ke r s apiece to up Rio's lead
terback to replace Schoner1 for the
nectffl on 47 of 71 shots from the field
to 38-24. Coach John Lawhorn's
rest of this season.
for
66 percent, and hit 31 -35atthefoul
Collinsworth's sta tus is more cagers added to that ma rgin and
enterffl the locker room with a 60-43 line for 89 percent. The Big Blues
cloudy. He was hit ha rd afte r
were 39 of 90 from the floor for 43
ha lftime advantage.
.
ca tchlng a pass on the Bengals' first
Second
half
heroics
belonged
to
percent a nd 16of25from the foul line
play Sunday, damaging his knee
nde.
second
string
as
the
Rio
Gra
64 percent.
for
and a nkle and getting his memory
three
reserves
scored
in
double
Pikeville Next
jumbled. Wyche said Collinsworth
win
leftRio Graitdeunbeaten
The
figures.
Will miss next Sunday's game and
"
"th
a
9-0
mark.
Bluefield State fell
Within
15
seconds
,
the
Big
Blues
might be out for the rest of the
to
3-5
on
the
year.
were
hit
with
back-to-back
technical
season.
T he Redmen will return to action
fouls. Wolfe hit the free throws lo ap
Collinsworth, who goes to the
Wednesday
when Pikeville's Bears
Rio's
lead
to
90-68.
United Slates Football League's
invade
Lyne
Center for a 7: :JJ p.m .
Bluefield
cut
the
margin
to
13
Tampa Bay Bandits after this
The
game
will be sponsored
contest
twice,
but
was
una
ble
tocome
points
season. said he still hoped to play
by
l"oodland
Stores.
any closer .
Sunday against New Orleans a nd in
Loca l_producl Don Jones, a 1984
Lawhorn cleared his bench as Rio
the season-ending home game
graudate
of Pt. Pleasant, is a
inc reased its lead to ]]5-97 heforeb-9
against Buffalo. But Wyche was less
member of the Pikeville varsity
freshman center Doug Fogt brought
optimistic.
squad. J ones, a 6-1 guard, is
the crowd to its feet with a
"The doctors a re saying It
slam-dunk with 40 seconds remain- expected to he In the starting lineup
(Colllnsworth's ankle) could heal up
aweekal
Ing in the game.
·.
for the Bears.
in time for the Buffalo game or the
.
.
.
ht
happens
twiCe
Box score:
Wolfe then addffl the icing on the
playoffs," Wyche said. "But not this
mgd u~der eats free wherl
These days family
by
dishing
out
a
behind-thecake
week , no. I don't think I'd risk
h'idJOan "
I
BUJ .::.AEU> STATE - (!]) Jf'rt)' Saundl"r...
Ponderosa. Any c I dull who buys a mea . hot dog
back pass to b-6 freshma n forwa rd 4·2·ut Sam J001•s. ~ -IHI: IX' rick Y.'hUwort h. J.(l.!: Rick
putting him in this week ."
anied by an a
. f hamburger or
Ron Rittlnger , who laid the ball on Wilson. ~.. J.JI: Lal't}' Kllchms. 9-K-27: C'u rl l.~ Ray.
Collinsworth said doctors diag·
IQ.:J-'!1: R ~· Bmjom.an. !H· lti . lUrAl.'!i JS.IS.!n.
acco;e
kids
get
th~ir
ch~~h~
World's Biggest, Best
the glass for the record-lying
nosed a damaged bursa sac in his
RIO (;RAfoot'DE (12!) - Jf'rry MIMTrj', 4·:!-10; Dan
.
t
h
fre11ch
fr1es
an
,CW1':\'. t;.G.JR: Cr~ \'C'rhoff. 11 -:l-:!.<1; ,JOf> Vl' rOOff .
bucket.
left knee. which may need arthrosalong WI
"
terrifiC
.f.~ 13; Floh Shaw, ~1-G : Mik<:>Smlth. (W.O: K('flt WaUl'.
Players
Praised"
Rio
copic surgery if it doesn't heal on its
IH\: 20: Roo Fournll'r. 1.0.2: Jpff Shaw·, 2-l}4: Rk·k
Salad Buffet.Grown-ups can order one~ ~~~ny other
"Bluefield State has great quick · Fritz. .a.:\. I! ; Ron R.lllln,!!f•r. :!4-R: !))ug F'~. 2·M .
own.
47-31· l:ll .
, ,11
family;z1fl~t~~ddrosa dinner.
ness and· forced us to be pa tient a t 1UI'AL"!!
IILLlltimcst:ore - RloCra ndl-00, Blul'fl f"ld 1.1.
ue 1c10
r kids start get-
defeatffl Wiseonsln-Green Bay.
Caroline Mast , a junior from Ohio
University, was the MAC Playe r of
the Week In women's basketball .
· Mast, who was the conference's
Player of the Year as a sophomore
last year, scored 82 points and
grabbed 45 rebounds In Ohio's first
three games. The product of
Wa rsaw, Ohio, had 20polnts against
Southern Mississippi, 33 points
against Virglnla Tech and 29 points
against Youngstown State.
.
1-yard llne wtth seven~lettln
the fourth quarter. Cincinnati
scored on the next play, a surprise
pass to tackle Anthony Munoz, ·
sending the game Into ove rtime.
"I have to look a tit (on fUm ), but!
did play aggressively and kind of
went through hlm i receiver Stev~
Kreider)," Dixon sa id of the pass
Inte rference .
Schottenhelmer , though , said
Dixon was not to blame for the
penalty.
Ths Pe~lset Chtllflflll Slit (
. ._ _ _ _
8)' 'Die Alltoc.iak'd Pr<wl
--------------------~---
following the tackle by the Browns '
Frank Minnltiekl, It appeared that
DlxonandGrossweretauntlnghlrn.
" I've told the players this: The
guy across the line of scrlmmage Is
/
73:t Thi r d Av e nuP, NPw Yor-k , Ne W
Yor k 10017.
,
game.
. As Collinsworth lay on the ground
enthuslasfn that goes Into it. But ... It
better not happen again."
Collinswonh, the Bengals' lead ·
lngrecelver, Injured hlsankleon the
play and did not return to the game .
Dixon. who denied he was
taunting Collinsworth, nonetheless
blamed himself tor helping the
Bengals rally for a late touchdown
that tied the game.
The cornerback was called for
pass Interference to give the
Bengals a flrst down at Cleveland 's
CHOOSE-A
FAMOUS
BRAND
CHRISTMAS
81FT~ ....
Faahton Mate• Zig-Zag
A Dlv ~ lon of Multimedia, Inc.
you. He just happens to wear a
different uniform," Schottenhelrner
said.
The Browns' coach was visibly
angry with the players during the
game , but he declined to say If
anyone was tined.
"It's lntolerabletome," Schottenhelrner said . " !don't like to see it. I
have too much respect for what It
takes to play the garrie. I talked to
them both on the sideline.
"There's a certain amount of
receiver Crls Collinsworth was hurt
In Sunday's 20-171oss totheBengals .
Collinsworth was dazed after
catching a · 7-yard ,pass on the
Bengals'flrst play fromscrlmmage
In the National Football League
'
HOLIDAY SALE
The Daily Sentinel
The Daily Sentinel- Page-S
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Front drop-ln bobbin
ThP. TCll Twmty leams In the- Associ,
aled Pr('!l~ nnal rrgular·seasm roll('!lit'
foot ba ll poll, w\lh fl~l · pl 3('(' '' ott'S ln par·
m th<-5c's. 1~ I'«''Tdo:, total iXJinrf> ba.'W'd
on 00. 1 9-lS-17 · 16- I ~ IHl 12· 11 · 1 0.9-S 74:).4·
3-2·1 ond rankll1RS In ttx> pr<"Jious pjl! :
Rf'coi'd Pts Pv!i
i.Bil!hm YOil$t t3.1 ~ 1 '12.()41 t.C!U Y, 1
oul~cored
Palombizio, MAC Player of Week
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP J - Da n
Pa lomblzlo of Ball State, a transfe r
from Purdue. has been chosen
Player of the Week in MidAme rica n Confe re nce me n 's
basketball.
The b-foot-8 forward from Michig a n Cily, Ind .. had 44 points and 25
re bounds in the Cardinals' 1-1
performa nce last week In the Sun
Net Classic in F resno, Calif. He
scorffl 18 points in a loss to
Was hington and came back with 26
points In 26 minutes as Ball State
.
December 4, 1984
HOLIDAY
HOLIDAY INN
INN
450 Pikt St.
II. 7 & U. 5. 35
Rt, 50 - 1-77
PAIKERSIURG, W. VA.
HOLIDAY INN
701 Pike St.
1-77 & If. 7
MARiffi
GAWPOLI OH.
OH.
Family Night
Specials
• f.Bonr
StHlr Diflllrr with BevrrtJtlf1
---L
• Big c~to~~,ed st......
Dlllller'
..
·Klbruade..-JOeat
$4.99
$439 95
$3.99
$3.99
$2.99
with s.vr•~ with Bevrnlfl'
• Ribere s~1 IIIIth , . , . ,
• Fish V•lue
(reel ·
.
r
Sllrakr.-n· .... -
RCA 19• diagonal
XL-1 00 Color TV
with ChameLock
Digital Remote Control
_
' . beer and wrne.
k
fJtlX!rage offer excludes J~~~~pected 100 ,~, chopped bee stea ·
Chopped steak 1s u.s.o.4 ·1'0141
Ill j>i,fleep81hts,.,
•
=-=...
'
FOR MEN and WOMEN
20°/o OFF
BUCK KNIVES ••• 2 5°/o
0°/o
OFF
Cb11/ie, V1nde1bilf, Jovan,
Rev/on 1nd'mo1e. .
Off
'
INGELS FURNITURE
& JEWELRY
MIDDLEPORT
••
~00
SALE
COLOGNES
CASE ·
KNIVES
REGULAR
S529
EBERSBICH HARDWARE
VILLAGE PHARMACY
PH. 992-2811
PH. 992-6669
10 W. Main
Pomeroy, Oh•.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport,
OK
. .. ...
�..r--1
By
_Tuesday, December 4, 1984
Th~
1he Da_ily Sentinel
Bend
Humane Society gives winter
tips for keeping pets healthy
Tuesday. December 4, 1984
Page-6
The Meigs County Humane
Society has Issued Ups on winter pet
three inches above the group to
keep the bedding in. They note that
care.
cedar chips make good bedding
since they are comfortable and gtve
off a pleasant odor.
It was furlher suggested that the
doghouse roof or one wall have
hinges to open lor easy cleaning also the roof can slant toward the
back to allow rain to run off . The
house should be raised but the air
space below should be blocked off to
prevent drafts. Heavy canvas over
the door will keep out wind, rain and
The group suggests that pet
owners who keep tHeir dogs
outdoors provide ' weather-proof,
comfortable quarters for their
animals, a lthough they stress that
the Society does not condone pet
dogs livln!f fulltlme In an outdoor
dog house.
The local Society reports that the
Animal Defense League of Canada
distributes plans for an outdoor
doghouse with a door opening cut to
·one side to reduce drafts and about
-
weekend at the Senior Citizens Center. Other wlnnen;
were front from left, Billy Crane, reservebestofshow;
Ben Crane, and Jamie Erwin, blue ribbon winners.
BEST OF SHOW- Taking the Best of Show award
In artistic design was Betty Dean with her entry In
''The Husband of Mary." The arrangement featured a
wood carving of the Holy Family on a walnuthasewlth
In Jtne with Its commitment to
serve all girls, Girl Scouts of the
U.S.A. have, as of October 1984,
opened their membership to girls
who are five 'y ears old or in
kindergarten. These new girl scout
members are named for the founder
•of Girl Scouting ln the United States,
Pomona Grange conducts meettng
Meigs County Pomona Grange
Office Conference was held recently at the Rock Springs Grange
Hal!. .
Secretary Awards were pres·
ented to Westina Crabtree, Columbia Grange; Jean Alkire. Racine
Grange; Francis Goegleln, Rock
Springs Grange; Sylvia Midkiff,
Hemlock Grange; Ruby Lambert ,
3tar Grange, and Pauline Atkins.
Harrlsonvllle Grange.
Awards were presented to Mary
Meigs County flower show winners .named
By CllARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Wrirer
Elegant arrangements enhanced
by glitter, candles a nd baubles
galore, holiday wreaths a nd wall
hangings, · berried branches and
blooming pla nts. -presented Chris tmas in a ll its beauty a t the Meigs
Count y Ga rden C\uhs annual flower
show staged over theweeknd at the
Senior Citizens Center.
The over 260 exhibits were judged
by Faye Collins, a n Ohio Association
of Garden Clubs accredited judge,
who was enthusiastic In her appraisal of the qua lity of the s how._
Taking the Best of Show a ward in
the "A · Christmas Story book"
themed show was Be tty Dean of the
Cheste r Garden Club a nd the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arls for her
arrangement in "The Husband of
Mary" class.
Bernice Car')X'nte r of the Bend 0 '
the River Club took Reserve Best of
Show for he r a bstrac t design in
" When Fa the r ·c hristmas Wa s
Young." whi le Pa t Holter ca ptured
the Crea tivi ty Award · for he r
"Chdstmas Stonns and Sunshine "
design .
The horticulture sweepsta kes
award went to Evelyn Hollon of the
Wildwood Ga rden Club, with the
junior division winners being Donia
Ct·a ne, Best of Show a nd Billy
Cra ne. Reserve Best of Show."
Ot her fea tu res of the show
included a large displa y of decora ·
lions for the home using natural
materials arranged by Melanie
Stethem. a nd a n exhibi t by Cindy
Oliveri. Meigs County Agricultural
ExtPnsion Service. There we re
contrin'CI flowers and decorated
Christmas packages using recycled
items to round out the holiday show
chaired by Shelia Curtis. Ribbons
were awarded in four places in eac h
class a nd the winners, listed first to
fourth res pec tively. were as
follows:
Artistic Arrangements
"Christ mas in Our Town," a
dinner ta ble setting with decorations: Jane Thompson, Winding
Trail Garden Club and Shade Valley
Council; Helen Sauer, Middleport
Amateur Gardeners; Betty Dean.
Cheste r Garden Club; a nd Eva
Robson, Rutland Garden Club.
"The Holly and the Ivy," a
traditional design: Melanie Ste·
them , Shade Valley; Sheila Taylor,
Shade Valley; JaneThompson, ·and
Eileen Buck,Bend 0' the River.
"Even Unto Bethlehem," featuring the Christmas Madonna: Mod ern Design- Ruth Erwin, Chester
Garden Club; Janet Bolin, Rutland
Friendly Gardene1-s; Evelyn Hollon, Wildwood Garden Club; Jane
Thompson, Winding Trail and
Shade Valley. Taditional designPauline Atkins. Rutland Garden
Club; Peggy Craine, Winding Trail;
Jane Thom pson; and Ada Holter,
Wildwood Garden Club.
"When Father Christmas Was .
Y6ung.'' an abstract : Bernice
Carpenter, Evelyn Hollon, J\inet
Koblentz. Shade Valley; and Jane
Thompson.
"The Husba nd of Mary." including the Holy Family: Betty Dean;
Ja ne Thompson, Evelyn Hllon, and
Kimbe rly Willfo rd,
Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.
"Christm as Day in the Morning,"
a still life: Pat Holte r , Wilovene .
Bailey, Fernwood Garden Club;
Melanie Stethem. Shade Valley
Council of Floral A11s: and Peggy
Cra ne.
"Christmas Storms and Sun·
shine," special light ing effects: P at
Holter. Betty Dean, Ruth Erwin,
a nd Shelia Curtis, Shade Valley
Council.
"Snow for Christmas," a stamobile: Sheila Curtis, Betty Dean,
Bernice Carpenter. a nd Jane
Thompson.
" How Come Christmas, " interpretive arrangement: Pauline At ·
kins, Rutland Garden Club; Me·
Ja nie Stethem , Kathryn Johnson,
Fernwood Garden Club, and Pat
Holter.
"But Once a Year," all dried
materials: Eva Robson, Jenny
Machir, Chester Garden Club and·
Shade Valley Council, Evelyn
Hollon, and Shelia Curtis.
"Christmas in Maine," featuring
treasured wood: Bernice Carpenter, Kathryn Johnson , Pauline
Atkins, and Ada Holter .
"The Other Wise Man," Japanese
design : Alice Thompson. Jane
Thompson, Betty Dean, and Peggy
Crane.
Jtmlor Exhibit Division
"The Littlest Angel," a miniature
eight inch design: Ben Crane, Jo
Ellen Crane; Lisa Stethem, and
Billy Crane, ir) the first division; and
Amber Thompson, Aaron ThompSon, Claudine Thompson, and Tina
Thompson, of the second division.
all of the Show and Grow Club.
"The First Christmas Tree,"
evergreen branch: Donia Crane,
Jamie ElWin, Billy Crane, and Jeff
Stethem .
"The Bird's Christmas Carol," a
favorite design·: first division,
Amber Thompson, Donia Crane.
Jeff Ste them, and Ben Crane, and
second division: Jamie Erwin;
Aaron Thompson, Jo Ellen Crane,
and Billy Crane.
Horticulture
Dried roadside material (junior
class): Aaron Thompson, · Billy
Cra ne, Donia Crane, and Ben Crane,
with honorable mention to Jo Ellen
Cra ne, Donia Crane. Tina Thomp·
son, David~· Thompson, Amber
Thompson, Ben Crane, and Billy
Crane.
Handcrafted ornaments from
nature (junior class) : Jo Ellen
.Crane, Billy Crane, Claudlne
Thompson, a nd Amber Thompson.
An anima l or character made
from fruits and-or vegetables: .
Donia Crane, Btlly Crane, Donna
Curtis . both third and fourlh.
Potted Plants (Juniors): Tina
Thompson, Amber Thompson, Aaron Thompson , and Claudine
Thompson.
Potted P lants, Christmas Cactus:
Evelyn E . Hollon, Ada Holter,
Wilovene Bailey, both third and
fourth.
African VioletS: Thelma Giles,
Fernwood Garden Club; Binda
Diehl, second and third, Rutland
Garden Club, and Helen Johnson,
Fernwood.
Foliage Houseplants : Evelyn
Hollon , Gludrun E . Schaekel, Chester; Jane Thompson, and Helen
Johnson.
Cact\orsucculents: SheliaCurtis,
Jane Thompson, and Shelia Horky.
Berried branch specimens: Jane
Thompson, Ka thyrn Johnson, Janet
Koblentz. and Eva Robson.
'
RACINE - The second six weeks grading
pedod honor roll at the Southern Local High ·
SChool has been announcro. Making a grade
of B or aOOve In all their subjects to be named
to the roll weff':
5eniors - Jon Clark, Alan Crtsp, Da vid
Ebers bach, Karen Hemsley. Lois lhle,
Charlott e Lyons, David Poweli. Lori Si mpson,
Lor1 Stewan. Ke>vtn Teaford.
,
.
Juniors -
the ve ry sick are especially susceptible, and even short periods of
exposure by someone in these
groups can result in hypothermic
injuries.
The diagnosis of the severely
hypothermic person is rarely diffl·
cult. Stiff limbs, unconsciousness,
pulselessness, and apparent death
are easy to detect. However, there
a re lesser forms of hypothermia
th.at present symptoms that are
more subtle and, therefore. more
difficult to detect.
Loss of the usual ability to
periorm simple tasks, slurred
speech, an apathetic mood, poor
decision -making ability, poor
judgement, and unusual sleepiness
all may be the first and only signs of
hypothermia.
There are, of course. many other
diseases and Injuries that can cause
these symptoms, but all such
symptolllll should be taken serlously this time of year and in cold
environments, especially In the
elderly and the sick.
Before talking about the treatment of hypothermia, a more
important Issue to address In this
Injury Is prevention. Death from
such an easily preventable Injury .
should never happen . Physical
conditioning, adequate body insulation, good nutrition and a healthy
respect for cold weather and Its
effects are basic and essential to
prevention.
There are several areas of the
body that need special attention
when it comes to insulation. The
head, which can lose up to 70
percent of the total body heat
production if left uncovered, the
hands; the feet, and the neck are all
areas that need Insulation in any
cold environment.
To avoid the tragedy of accidental in-home hypothermia and
death, safe Indoor temperature
standards for the elderly and
socially disadvantaged must be
maintained. The inclusion of a few
blankets, some extra food and
water. and some sort of signalling
device in the car on the start of a
Revival
RTJTI..AND - Revival services at the Rutland Bible Methodist CVhurch will begin this
evening and continue through
DeC. 9 starting at 7 each
evvenlng. The Rev. Coy McGinnis, Portsmouth, will he the
special singer and speadker.
eligible to enter these contests.
Exchange programs for the year
were drawn with Racine Grange to
go to Hemlock; Star to Rock
Springs; Rock Springs to Racine;
Columbia to Ha rrisonville; Harrisonville to Laurel; Laurel to Star,
and Hemlock to Columbia.
The County Grange banquet was
tentatively set for April 26, to
coincide with Grange Week April
21-27.
There were 28 members present
from six granges in the county.
Lori Adams, Todd Adams,
Smith, Tammy Thf:>tss, Kim Wll~ord, Bruce
Wolfe, Tammy Wolfe.
' Freshmen Jt>nnlfer Arnold , Shawn
Amotl , Parri Ash , Chrts Baer, Bridget Bing,
Angle Bo5tlck, Ronnie Burkhamer. Patrec<>
Circle. LPanne Oar·k, Richard Cummins.
Wendy Fry , Angt£' Grueser. T ammy Holter .
Darla Lambert, Scott. McPhaU, Donlta
Manuel, Donnie Rlfrle, Kim Ryan, Hr•alhpr
. Shuler. Tina Slater, Donene Talbott.
David Ju.s tls , MLcMel McKelvey, Amy
M oor e, Amtxor Ohllnge~. Stephanie Sa yn-,
Jan'l:l Stewan .
Grade four- Kevtn Amott, Bethanv Bass,
John Bt-ntley, Roberta Caldwell. i r nnifer
C~s . Val erlP Connolly, Wendi Ha1·mon,
Ta m ara Hayma n , Kim be r! ~' Jenkirrs.
Heather McPhail , R<'lx'cca Null.
Grade fi ve -
Kelly Grueser. Sea n Cruf:'Ser, Jodi€' Harris,
Heath Hill, Mindy Hlll , Penny Hyse-ll, Melissa
Ih.lt>, Mark Jarrell. Pam Johnson. Alana
Buller, ConnlP Milliron. Ryan Oliver. Usa
Parsons, Kelly Rizer, K£>nda Rizer, MC\rvln
Teaford, Andy Rose. Harokl Roush, Robin
Savage, Teresa Shu lf:'r, Becky VanMetl'f",
SCotT Wickline, Paula Winebrt?nner, Jimmy
Wolfe, Tanva Young.
~phom.irC'S - Kim Adams, Cindy Arnold.
Kenny Brown, Tony Connoll y, GeorgE>
Coo!X'r. Angie Da vl~. Mike DE't"m. Annette
Filch, Ma1y Flagg, Joyce Fon •man, Mat!
Harris. Tracie Hubbard. Todd Kimes. Lisa
papr, Rachel Relbt?r, Diana Sim~o n . Ka rla
CREATIVITY AWARD - GUtrered leaves with birds of paradise 9Dc1
a red rucker light in an aerial design won for Pat Holter the creativity ·
award at the "Christmas Storybook" Dower show ..
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Pre> will be sponsoring a
Christmas bazaar 'at 7: 30 p.m .
Tuesday followlng the regular
PrO meeting. The publlc Is
invited.
Wreaths: J a ne Thompson Sheila
Horky, Eva Robson, !hind and
fourth.
Wa ll Hanging: Jenny Machir,
Sheila Taylor, Thelma Giles, and
Melanie Stethem.
. Decorated Christmas packages:
Shelia Taylor, Evelyn Hollon,
second, third a nd fourth .
Contrlved flowers : Evelyn Hollon, Eva Robson, second and thid, ·
and Jane Thompson, fourth .
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Garden Club Christmas parly
will be held at 6 p.m. Tuesday at
Trinity Church where dinner will
be seJVed. The group will go to
the home of Dorothy Morris for a
program.
POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, will
hold its Christmas dinner at 7
Assumes command
long trip might prevent severe
hypothermia injury or even death
should unexpected severe weather
conditions suddenly arise.
The most obvious and useful
pre-hospital treatment for a suspected hypot he rmic injury is to
prevent further heat loss.
·
R emove the patient from the cold
environment as quickly as possible.
Avoid any exertion on the part bf
the patient, remove any wet
clothing, and add insulation in the
form of dry clothing or extra
blankets.
The process of gradually rewarming the body's core should .
then be accomplished and this can
be done most effectively by trained
hospital personnel such as those at
the emergency department at
Veterans Memorlal Hospital.
SYRACUSE - The second slJt weeks
grading period honor roll at the Syracuse
Elementary School has been announced.
Maldn~ a grade of B or atnve In all thelr
s ubj ect~
to bP named to th~ roll were:
Anita Collins.- Rochelle
Grade- onp Jenklfl!'i, Jeannlfer LawreneP, [)plla Pugh,
.
SamrrU Sisson, Rayan Young.
Grad(' two- Brian Anderson, Rarx:ly Bin~.
Mary Chaney. Mason Fl"iher. Adam Krawsc·
zyn, Andrea Moor<', Michael Null, Amy
WravN, M<'lodY Weaver, Ryan Williams.
Gr ade thref' - Andrt>W Fields , Chrts
C ulnthN, Crystal Harmon. Jodi Hobbs,
p.ni . Tuesday at the post home. A
meeting will follow the dinner.
MIDDLEPORT - A regular
meeting of Middleport Lodge363,
F&AM, wUI be held at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday. Refreshments will be
seJVed following the meeting.
FRIDAY
Gr adro six - Jaml e Anderson . Andy Baer.
Tan ya Ing('ls, M ica Jones . Jennll£'r Lisle.
Ch<'r l.v Papc-, Joetta Pizzino, Robyn Stout .
Andrea Theiss.
'
The Society further suggests that
A Christmas bazaar will be held
Thursday and F.riday at the Senior
Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, from 9 a.m. to4 p.m. both
days.
Crafts, ceramics, baked goods
and candy will be offered. A publlc
dinner will be held from 4 to 6 on
Frlday with the menu to include a
choice of beef stew or creamed
baked chicken with cole slaw, roll
and beverage for $2.50. Dessert will
be additional.
Following the dinner, a round and
square dance will beheldfrom7to10
p.m. with music by the Stringdusters. Admission is $1.
Dye birth
Madge Dye, Carpenter , is announcing the birth of a granddaughter, Christa Rebecca, Nov. 9, to Mr.
and Mrs. Grant Price, the former
Rebecca Dye. Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. P rice ha vesjxsoris,
Dan. Nick, Chad, David , Michael
and Joshua. Dale Dye. Carpenter, is
a great-grandfather.
Thanksgiving was celebrated
Leferbre, Jack and Janet Needs,
with a traditional turkey dinner by
Jim and Jenny Whitlatch, Sadie
the First Southern Baptist Church , · and Ernest Carr, Richard, Sue,
Pomeroy, at the Rock Springs
Amy and Michelle Metzger, Mer·
Grange Hall.
she\ and Rhojean McClure. Donna
The Rev. Da\1d Hun t, pastor.
Wilson, Gerald Wilson, Eri c
gave the blessing before the meal of
Spencer, Brian Coy, Gary a nd
turkey , dressing and all the trimJuanita Griffith, Duke Kennedy,
mings. Those a ttending were then
Lee and Jenny Husk, J eff, Sandy,
given the opportunity to tell for
Scott and Evan Needs, Bob Mills,
what they were thankful. Jim
Mrs . Bonnie Landers, Goldie FredButcher, pastor of the Hope Baptist
ericks .a nd Mr . a nd Mrs. Cecil
Chapel, had the closing prayer of
Frazier.
Thanksgiving.
Attending from the Hope Baptist
Attending were the Rev. and Mrs . Chapel were the Rev. Mr. Butcher
David Hunt and family. Michael
and daughter, Joycelynn, Gary and
and Christy, John, Judy and Jason
Avis Lawson . Tom, Christy,
Riley, Greg, Barbara, Matthew and
Tommy and Dustin Fellure. and
Jeremy, Gatrell, Lee a nd Racheal
Floyd McClellan.
531 JACKSON PIKE · Rl35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN
All SEATS $2.25
AO.JSS!ON EYER< TUESDA< 12.25
TREASURER - Ralph E.
Hazelbaker, president and cllairman of Amertcare Corp.. has
been elected treasurer of the
American Health Care Assn,,
basedlnWashington,D.C.Amer·
icare Corp. is owneHperator of
rnnnerous nursing centers ln·
eluding Pomeroy Health Care
Center, Rock Springs Road,
Pomeroy .
Hubbard's Greenhouse
Now Ope11· Fot
Chtittm~r Se~ton
Poinsetlios · Polled & Hanging Boskot~
foliage Plants • Polled & Hanging Bosktt~ Christmas Cactus, Aft-icon Violet~
Christmas Troes. Wrtaths, Grave Blanktt~ Condit Arrange.,.,., Homemade
Applt Butttr & otl!tr novtltits.
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sun . 1 to 5
PHONE 992-5776
1-------:-------.L.-----"--------EGGS
Do•
19C
I PACK -16 OZ.
chalnnan.
•
locallll In lad111, OH. ·
-.·- · -----~
(1141 --141
'MtDOlfPOIIT,OHIO
ALL 2°/o MILK
Sl 59
P.O.
$179.
GAL
4/$100
"Whil• S•,tv lnlt "
FROZEN FRYERS LB.
49C
GROUND BEEF
94c
TOMATOES
79(
NO. 1·POTATOES
10 LB.
LB. PC.
89C Ll.
!LICID
SMOKED PORK
HOCKS
II.
99(
SUPERIOR MOUNTAIN BRAND
APPLES
BOLOGNA Lt. 89< PIECE
CENTER CUT RIB CHOPS
LB.
$p9
CENTER CUT LOIN CHOPS
89(
BANANAS
4 liS. $1 OO
So, too, must we earn your trust. You should betomforta·
ble discussinc your funeral wishes w1th us. As your lawyer. we conduct our affairs on a proftssio,nalle~.el. We
want you to consider us 111 member of YOII leam ready
to help make pre-planned arrancements or provide information in advance of need.
We welcome your questions and comments.
LB.
SMOKED JOWL BACON
59(
lB.
§;,.~ ,Yt,.e
"SPrt'illf( With A Smilf•"
POP
.
She points out that a team of experts (a_lawyer, accou~t
ant. and investment counsotor) can provtde the prof~ssJo
nal advice that well-meanin& friends and relattves srmply
cannot. All of us !!II~ need some or all of that "team." Ms.
Morse counsels a w1dow. especially. to seek out a lawyer
with whom she can communicate frankly and comfortably.
He must be "richt" for her. and he and the other counst·
tors must earn her confidence and trust. Only throu1h th11
trust can they chart her short and lone-ranee courses of
action.
~~~ rtoah-f!B~
P.D.
tum B•v
oz. 8 PACK
All 16
19(
LUNCH PIES &
LUNCH CAKES
"It is a truism in thtlecal profession that the vast majority of widows lose 1 substantial part of an uncontrolled
bequest within seven years." So states Ms. Theresa Morse
in her book. "Life is for tho Livinc." ·
RESERVE BEST OF SHOW-Bernice Carpenter was winner of the
Reserve Best of Show" award with her artistic arrangement, "When
Father Chrllltmaa Was Voung" an aiJMract design wllng driftwood with
holly and vine lo show rnotlcHi, and accented with Orne p-een cordone
pufle. Pictured wl&h Mrs. Carpenter, rll!hl, Ill Sheila Cul1ls, the show
Hk.
lt. 01..
B•m B•v
SEEK OUT A PROFESSIONAL
!,.,1,, PEPSI
l_!!OV
30 thru DEC_!]
FRIDA< t h" THURSDAY:
c
POMEROY - The Family
Support Network Board will
meet Friday noon at Veterans
Mernorlal Hospital, East-West
Conference Room. Noreen Ondrusko, project coordinator, will
give an update on participant
response to the program, there
will be a slide presentation on
Family Support Network, introduction of training sessions,
projected solutions to some
common blocks, such as transportation and respite care.
SUN FUN
year olds. They wtll meet under the
leaders hip of trained adults-one
adult for every fi ve girls.
More than a decade of research,
pilot projects and a nalyses of
environmental and social trends
were ca rried on by GSUSA before
the decision was made to la unch the
Daisy program.
In Bl ack Diam ond Girl Scout
Council . of which Meigs County is a
part , instructors training is beg\n·
ning this month and leader's
tra ining will be available in the
spring of 1985.
Anyone interested ln further
information ma y contact their
nearest Girl Scout Service Center .
or Blac k Diamond Girl Scout
Council, 7~Big ley Avenue. Cha rles·
ton, W.Va . 25.})2. •
Juliette Gordon Low, known a s
" Daisy" to her family and friends.
Daisy Girl Scouts participate In
the Girl Scout program tllrough
ac tivities especially designed to
meet the physjcal, intellectual.
social and emotional needs 'at five
Holiday Bazaar
set at center
Thanksgiv:ing dinner held
P'ENNZOIL
"
snow.
3lBS.
Installation set .
POMEROY - Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164, F&AM, will
hold Its annual Installation of
officers at 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
James Harbage, past grand
cornrilander of the grand lodge
of Oliio, will be the Installing
otncer. All Master Masons ilre
Invited to attend.
K lm Han·is .
Jeff Allen. Carl10n . Dru mmt'r , MichPa Bentz.
Calendar
TUESDAY
Stacr>y F.'cy, Marcy Hill.
Amber Cumings. .Jason Amott.
Bt.>cky Allen, Theresa Bing, Dixie Dugan.
Hypothermia is a major threat for elderly
By HR. GUY "O'CONNOR
The tlmt> of year has arrived
again whe n temperatures are
dropping (and not bouncing back) ;
and our exposure to colder tempera ture will soon become more
frequent. Beca use of this, a dange rous and yet easily preve nta ble
cold-related inj ury known as hypothermia will become more frequent
also.
Hypothe rmia ca n be defined
simply as a lowering of the body's
temperature IX>iow normal. The
healthy, protec ted huma n body has ·
thi!' rema r kab\e ability to mainta in
Its temperature within a very
narrow and " normal " range.
This precise temperature regulation Is needed to keep all of the
body's ve ry sensitive cells working
a t peak efficiency. Hypothermia
destroys the ability of these cells to
maintain their critical functions ,
resulting In severe disability a nd
even death .
Anyone can become hypother·
mlc. Overexposure, lack of adequate lnsulation, physical exhaustion, poor conditioning, inadequate
Indoor te mperature maintenance,
and alcohol Intoxication all Increase
the chances of hypothermia.
The very old, the very young, and .
VIrginia Easterday, Racine
G range. for her Women's activity
notebook. Awards a lso went to
Linda MontgOmery, Slar Grange;
Helen Qulvey, Hemlock Grange;
Barbara Fry, Rock Springs
Grange; Pauline Atkins, Harrison·
ville Grange, and Elizabeth Jordan,
Columbia Grange.
State Contests for the coming
year Include QOey gooey butter bars
from the state baking contest and
candlewick pillow top for the
sewing contest. All grangers are
Meigs .County honor rolls
Broadleaf evergreen: Evelyn
Hollon, Janet Koblentz, Evelyn
Hollon, Jane Thompson .
Narrowleaf evergreen: first division: Evelyn Hollon, first , !hind and
fourth, Eva Robson ; second; second
division, Evelyn Hollon, first and
third, Jane Thompson. and Shelia
Curtis .
Evergreen groundcovers: Eva
Robson .
Educational
Door Decorations: wreath, Janet
Koble ntz. J a ne t Horky, Betty Dean ,
a nd Bernice Carpenter; swag, Oct a
Ward , Rutland Garden Club,
Evelyn Hollon, Eva Robson.
Thecornerstoneforthenewbulldingwhlchconnectsto
tile church parish house was laid on Sept. 23. The
fac!Hty Is expected to be ready for use by Christmas.
•
magnolia leaves, feather grass, dried hydrangla
blossoms, In greens and browns. Presenting Mrs.
Dean with the special award is Faye Collins, Mlalord.
the inside of the hOuse be cleaned
and sprayed with an Insecticide to
prevent fleas and ticks from
moving ln .
According to the group, outdoor
dogs require a pound of food a day
for every 25 pounds of dog. Also
their outdoor water supply should
be checked every morning and
evening to be sure It hasn't frozen.
· Another bit of advice from the
Society is that rock salt used on
streets and sidewalks should be
wiped off the feet of pets before the
pet has a c hance to lic k It off.
Girl Scouts are expanding to 5-year-olds
NEARING COMPLETION - The new Christian
educaUon faciHty helng added at Grace Episcopal
Church, E. Main St., Pomeroy, is nearing completion.
JUNIOR WINNERS- Donia Crane, back, took the
"best of show" award with her anbnal creared from
vcggit'S in the junior division of the Meigs County
Garden Cluhs' annual Christmas show held over the
The Daily Sentinei-Page-7
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
--5-LB.-SUGAR--(..
ta.
SJ 59 . .
SJ89
FAMILY PACKEND
$
..----~·~:_e_i~:_!~l~~--j~!!_T_~E!~ __i:!; ___J29
C·l
2°/o MILK
99<
<-1 II c.K.
I,
·•
SUGAR
1
I
99<
1
S Ll.
1
Ont with a $12.00 additional 1 One with a $12.00 additi_.
purchase trcluding ail 16 ar. Pop. 1 purchase ucluding all 16 a1. Pop
Coupon hpiros 12·1·84
Coupon hptres 128-84 _
______________
JI _____________
GAL
I
POTATOES
I9
<·K 1 C·K
llwcL
I
R.C. COLA
I Pack
( .(
SJ19
16 Or.
P.D.
Coupon Expires 12·8-84
OI'EN 9:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P:M.
JAMES SIMPSON
BILL BLOWER
7 DAYS A WEtl
�Brothers
•
·commit
suicide
Death.toll mounts
in India disaster
BHOPAL, India (AP) ~ The
death toll surpassed 600 today in the
deadly gas leak from a U.S.·bullt
pesticide plant .In central India as
relatives flocked to mass burials
and security forces gathered bodies
from Bhopal and nearby towns.
.Indian officials said most of the
victims were children and des·
crtbed the leak, which occurred
early Monday, as the worst environ·
mental disaster in recent history.
Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi
called the incident "horrtfying," set
up a $400,(XX) government emergency relief fund and said he would
IDur the city of 895,!Xlllater today.
The leak of methyl isocyanate gas
affected an estimated 20,(XX) resi·
dents of Bhopal, capital of Madhya
Pradesh state about 370 miles south
of New Delhi, and triggered a mass
exodus frotn the city.
Bhopal was almost a ghost IDwn
with most offices and businesses
closed today, an officially declared
day of mourning. Streets were
littered with carcasses of water
buffalo, dogs and birds. Survivors
attended mass burials and mass
cremations.
The deadly white cloud of gas had
cleared but alr samples tested today
were found to still contain dePQSits of
the deadly gas.
Pollee and army trucks' were
picking up bodies from a roughly
nine mile radius around the Union
Carbide plant, where state Chief
Minister Arjun Singh said one of
three 1,1nderground tanks leaked the
deadly gas for 40 minutes early
Monday.
.He told reporters the number of
deaths was likely to rtse and said it
was unlikely the plant would be
allowed to reopen at its site In the
heart or Bhopal.
Singh also said five plant officials
- all Indians - were arrested on
charges of negligence. A majority of
the Ullion Carbide's stock in India is
ownro by In.dians .
Thomas Sprick, spokesman for
the U.S.-based Union Carbide Corp.
in Danbury, Conn., said the gas that
leaked was methyl Isocyanate,
which he said can be fatal if Inhaled
or swallowed. The United News of
India earlier · had called the gas
methyl isocyanide.
Sprick said filters that should
have removed the polson from the
gas before it leaked did not function
and the company did not know the
. reason for the failure.
Union Carbide Corp. called an
lrrunedlate world)VIde halt to production and shipment of metiiY!
Isocyanate, and dispatched a doctor
and four technicians to India to
lnv~lgate. India's Central Bureau
of lnvestlga tlon also was probing the ·
Incident.
Union Carbide's managing dlrec·
tor In India, Y .P. Gokhale, said the
gas began leaking when a storage
tank valve broke under rising
pressure. Within 40 mmlnutes, the
cloud of gas had settled over a
25-square-mlle area inhabited prim·
arily by poor laborers, he said.
The United News·o!lndia Said the
factory siren did not sound to alert
the neighborhood untll two hours
after the leak began, and said pollee
and doctors did not come into the
' area until four hours after that.
Panic-stricken people, many car· ·
rylng luggage on their heads,
walked as far as 25 miles to escape
the poisonous white cloud. Many
who fled Bhopal were reported to
have died in the neighboring towns
of Sehore, Ashta and Hoshangabad.
The cremation ground In one
district, Chhola, ran out o! firewood
to burn the bodies streaming in
Monday evening,. the Indian Ex·
press newspaper reported. A spo·
kesman at the grounds said most of
tl)e dead were children, especially
vulnerable because of low
resistance.
The Union Carbide plant In
Institute, W. Va. , halted production
and shipment of methyl Isocyanate
on Monday until the cause of the
Indian tragedy is known, spokes·
man Dick Henderson said. ·
Petitions presented
(Continued from page 1)
"Be patient with us and give us a
chance to do what we think we can
do." "If at the end of the year you
think the money's been wasted, vote
the income taJ< out," Seiyer
emphasized.
"We want to Improve the looks of
the vUiage with better streets and
possibly new sidew_alks. We'd also
like to go after some of those
delapidated buildings in the village," councilman Reed replied.
Before leaving the meeting,
Middleport resident Gene Goodwin,
who will pay the income tax because
he works in Pomeroy, ID!d council,
"You seem to have your minds set.
But my company is going to make
up somewhere for having . to pay
income tax. U I get laid ·Off, I'll be
back."
The proposed income tax ordl·
nance, now number~ ordinance
. 547, unanimously passed its second
reading by council.
Another Pomeroy resident was
present ·at the meeting asking for
Improved lighting on Hill Street.
Council said the matter would be
checked into and ifthevlllage had an
extra light, It would he installed.
A resolution was passed formallz·
ilig the decision fort he Meigs County
Commissioners to administer both
grants for the sewer line extension to
Pizza Hut.
And free parking for holiday
shoppers has been designated In
Pomeroy for Dec. 10 through
Christmas.
Ali Pomeroy vlllage council
members were present for Man·
day's meeting.
Meigs County happenings ...
Two emergency ealls
Two calls were answered by local
units Monday, the Meigs County
Emergency ,Medical Services re·
ports. At 2:46p.m., Middleport wne
to 98 N. Second Ave. for Roy
Sansbury, treated by not transported, and at 7: 13 p.m., Rutland
weni to a garage fire on the •..,..
Lima Road.
Police probe thefl
Pomeroy Police are investlgallnll
the theft of a tool box and $400 worth .
of tools. The theft was reported to
pollee Monday afternoon by owner,
Ralph Day, Welshtown Hili, who
said the box and tools were removed
from a truck parked in front of his
residence.
State funds received
Veterans Memorial
Admitted .. Clifford Kauff, Middle·
port; Robert Parsons, Racin~ .
Oischarged .. Sabrina Drake,
John Tiemeyer.
Clin~ !let
tonight
A bbldJII1.'$5Urei:Unlcwill he held
7 p.m. this evening by the
f..')'l'lOC'IlW Fire Department at the
II."" .liOn ..
•· •10
Tftllileet~
to meet
Sutton Township Trustees will
meet at 8 p.m . Tuesday (tonight)
evening In the SyraCU$e Municipal
Building.
Weather forecast
Tonight, Increasing cloudiness.
State Auditor Thomas E. Fergu· Low around!!(). Wednesday, raip or
son's office reported the October.
snow ' developing. High -in the
" 1!&, distribution of state motor . mld·30s. Thechanceofprecipitation
vehicle registration fees totaling
Is near zero percent IDnight and !ll
$15,255,488.09. Meigs County's share
percent Wednesday.
Extended Forecasl
was $15,!Hi.ll.
1blll'!lday through Saturday:
Ch~ olsoow'Thursd113'. chance
ol
Ountes norilieast Friday. Other·
Meets Thul'!!day
wise fair Friday and Salurday.
IDghll In the :alB and low 30s
The Middleport Presbyterian
1bunday
and Friday lllld In the
women's Association will meet
Jppel'
30s
to
mld-«lsSaiunlay. Lows
Thursday evening at 7: llp.m. atthe
In the upper teens and 208.
church. Devotions will be presented
by Faye Wallace.
Plan Saturday dance
A dance wlll be held' Saturday
night at the Racine American
Legion Hall and RecreatiOn Center
from 7 p.m. to l2 for ages 13 and up.
Prices wlll be $1 single and $1.50
couple. A pool table, f007JI! baD table,
1and video gameS will be offered . .
•
JOINING TJQ: RANKS~ Cl)lcago teachers tm1oo
preddent JackqueUne Vaughan, center with hat,
Dashes a victory sigf!l as she nuvcbes with picketing
teachers in front of Whitney Young · IDgh School .
December
4,
Ohio
M!Nidayln Chicago. VaugbnkJidplcl!ets, "We're going
to Win.'' as they marched In 25-degree weather. (AP
Laserphoto ).
Ohioans offer gov~rnor suggestions
percent. neutral or undecided.'' the
CINCINNATI (AP) - Ohioans the pollsters who conducted the
poll concluded.
want Gov. Richard Celeste · to bimonthly survey.
Other responses cited by the
reduce unemplllyment, · Improve
About ,one ln.every five s;!ld they
as priorities for Celeste
Ohioans
educa tlon, lower taxes and bring would ask him to reduce 'unemploy·
ln.~luded . helpiJtg the poor, 3.4
new business tO'the state, according ment, 13 percent wanted better
percent; · . reducing government
to the latest Ohio Poll.
schools, ll percent thought taxes
spendiJtg, 3.4 percent; heiplng the
But almost 4 percent of those should be lowered, 7percentwanted
elderly, 3.2 percent; reducing
questioned said they would, if they new business In the state and. ~.3
crime, 1.4 percent; helping the
had the chance, tell the governor to percent wanted him to put a stop to
economy, 1.3 percent; stop busing
resign or not seek a ~econd term.
welfare abuses.
as a desegregation method, 1.3
The Poll, produced by the lllStltute
Among those questioned, 3.6
percent, helping small businesses,
for Polley R.e~arch at the Univer· percent said they would suggest that
0.9 percent.
sity of .Cincinnati, asked 824 Ohio Celeste either resign from office or
Researchers in the university's
residents between Oct..22 and Nov. 3 not run fora second term. He stands
Institute for Po'licy Research con·
what they would tell the governor if for re-election in 1!1!6 and has said he
dueled the telephone survey from
they had a private meeting With would like to run again.
Oct. Z!throughNov. 31ntervleo,ving a ·
him.
"The governor's approval ratings
.
rand()rn sample of 824 adult
The largest segment of those have changed little over the last
Ohioans,
questioned, though stlll a rrunority, year, when measured )Jy the Ohio
With ·that sample size, re·
drew.;~ blank.
. Poll in October 1983, February 1!&,
searchers say there is only one
"One-fourth of those Ohioans May 100!1, September 100!1 and
interviewed could not think of October 1984, the governors's appro- · chance In 20 that the survey resUlts
anything to tell the governor," s~id . val ratings haVe hovered around 45
would differ by more than 3.5
percent approval and 30 percent .. percent from what would be found if
every Ohioan had been called:
disapproval with the remaining 25
Robbery
suspect
arrested
The Daily Sentinel
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP)TWo brothers, one in Morgantown
aDd the other in their hoine state of
Alabama. shot ihelr girlfriends and
then committed suicide In 5eP!1rate
Incidents five months apart, pollceS!lY·
..
Jesse Richard Thomas, a :j4-year·
old Greensboro, Ala., native; kllled
his Uve-lp girlfriend, Doris J.
Cornwell, with gunshotblasts to the
chest anMace at tbelr Morgantown
apirtment on Sunday, said city
Pollee · Chief John Cease. Thomas
then shot himSelf In the head.
Thomas' 35-year-old brother,
Toby Thomas . Jr., wouitded his
girlfriend by shooting her twice In
the neck and then · cornmltted
suicide on June 25, said Greensboro
Pollee Chief Gary Blce said; who
added that the Incident involved the
"exact same clrcumsla!lce" as
Sunday's deaths.
Bice said both brothel'!! had
l""'g!hy crtrntnal recOrds.
"I. had been dealing with them
both for quite a while.'' he said.
Cease said authoritlel!do not know
what prompted Tl!omas, who came
to West Virglqla in 1!191 on parole
from Alabama, to shoot Ms.
Cornwell ·and klll himself six hours
Ia ter while pollee urged hlrn to
surrender.
Ohio lottery witmer
CLEVELAND (AP) ~ The
winning number drawn Moilday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "'I."he Number," ~as 8fl>.
In the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 00111.
The lottery reporied eamings of
$98(579 from wagering on "The
Number."
The earnings came on sales of
$1,409,615.50, while holders of win·
ning tickets are entitled to share
$425,036.50.
PHONE
992-2156
Or_Wfile Dfillr Sentinel Ctlssitied Dtpt
Ill Colr1 St .. PoMeroy, -OIMO 457&9
'
=.;;.,,
•.
_
_
_
...........
"""_
....._
..,._.......
_ .........,,-e...•
..........
, ..............
. ... .. ::.:=t:r::"
~c...
~
.. ..... .==u...:..
.................
.
-~
,__ .,
..
Good S.loction Of
*N
or way Spruu
*Scotch Pine .
.
*white Pine
"
9 A.M. to 9 ,.._ Wtlk.._
1 p.A\ to 5 P.M. .,....:::!.'
--r•
1 Mile ~If Rt. 7 On
St. Rt, 143, Pomeroy
Wotdo For Signs
lt/30/ 1 mo.
.,_.....,,.
--.
.................
,
........
111-..... a.l.
··--
......
,
-.......
j
U. S. R.T. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE,
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm equipment
.Parts & Service
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) ~Police
Chief Totn Knox said all avallable
officers were searching for the
woman w)lo took a 2-day-old baby
boy from · its mother at Fort .
11
Hamilton-Hugh!'S Hospital.
Knox said the FBI had also been ·I
notified, Ali FBI spokesman In 1
Cincinnati said, "We are aware of I
the situation. We don't kliow if we ·I
have any jurisdlctiQn right now. ·
We're stU! trying to determine 1
1
that."
.. :1
Knox said a WO!J1811, 25-.ll. with I
large hips and legs and a scarred 1
face,poslngasanurseiDokthebaby 1
from Patricia and Daniel Reece: 1
She said she was to take It to the I
:1
:j
1I
'i
II
C >Announcement
( )ForRent
Cionf'Y liJif"
SIFT SIIOP
/1 IJ1w Op111
Tues.·Wod.. fri. & Sat:
10 to 5
Mondays 10 to 8
Closed Thurs. & Sun.
Owner: Sarah Fisher
End of Rt. 1
By Meigs High School
Turn left, enter Twp. 79. lot
dri.-i way on right_
RT. 62 NORTH
POt NT PLEASANT
WEST VIRGINIA
Sl NGLE $24. 95
304 675 6276 .
· lrv ~ Enterlllinlll(>t1f
· FrceH . R.O.
__,....._
·l<itrhl.'netfes
·14 H our 5Wikf1bo:.ro
R!' SfolLJr;lnl
A.A.A.
3Q4·675-6276
11·5·1 mo
·- '"-·
mtm11 an
A. - - - - - -
s. - - - - - -
6. ._ _ _ __;,_
7.
8.
9.
tO.
n.
12.
13.
tA.
15.
16.
992.·2156 .
_ _ _...............,_
-----------------~--
----------------_ ......_ _ __
-------
21.
211. - - - - - - - : - - -
'11. - - , . . . . . - 28. _ __;_ _~
29-------
30.
31 . ....;...,..;--,-----
32. _.....;._ __......
33.-----~- -------
35 •• _
m c.urt ••·
P.dl·. J r. il t lor~
....._ _ __
.
.
Pomeror,OIL4576f
.
&.. __.._______
.___________
_
I
11 .
A.M.
CONSTRUCnON
"Backhoe
0
Dump Truck
"Septic Systems
•Cool & limestone
"Bonded & Licensed
Phone: 742-2225
or 742-2167
I 12/1mo.
DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUSTCALL!
•
'
•
z
-
SPE;CiAL DEER, REWARD YQUR EF·
Office of CommiSSioners of
Jurors. Meigs County, Ohio
Tl1f
SONAL AnENTION IT DESERVES TO
GIVE YOU A MIZE TROPHY TH"T
LAST FOR YEARS AIIIO YEARS.
November 30, 1984
To All Whom It May Concern:
On Tuesda•;. lhf! 11t h day of
Dr.cqmi"Jet 1984 . ut 9 00 o·c ·
il l lhR o ff te e o f th e
ComrniSSlOn ers o l Juro rs of
M e.1 gs County. Oh1n. JlJro r s wil l
t:J e publlclv dr awn for· t he
Jonuat"V 1985 Te.rm of th e
Commor1 Pleas Coun of sa1d
lock A M
Coun1v
Notice
Wall ace Brad ford
CommiSSIOners
of Jw ors
I I 2 1 <1 . ·11 C
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&Commercial
can 742-3195
.Or
"Sp r<· inl I u 1 rfJdu cro r.v
BLACKWOOD .
ltOME SPAS
l l/ 121 1 mo.
WANTED
. Cheryl Lemley,
Meigs C~unty Associ•te
Phone 742-3171
graJ;tu.ate . Ohio Drivers li·
cense with 5 years driving
Adult Doberman, appro)(. 6
yrs . old, to good home. Call
experience . No tickeu. accidents, convictions . We train
you as Driving lnnructor.
Call 9 :30 to Noon . 1 -800 -
good homo. Call446 -9346 .
245·5640.
Puppies: Collie mixed. Good
ChristmaS present . Call
farm, two 1 112 year -old dogs .
Medium sile, black -white . 1
male. 1 female . Make good.
watch dogs or kid's pets .
Call 304-895-3850.
10 week old blac k female
kitten,_ housebroken, very
friendly and lovable. 304·
end
Phone
Roy Bickte
446-2062
.Certifie_d Chimney Sweep
11 ·8-ttc
AUTO & TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmiscion
Vinyl & Aluminum
half
Beagle,
7
Lost and Found
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding es·
timates, 949-2801 or
949-2860
No Sunday Calls
PH: 992-S682
or 992-7121
] II It(
TEAM
CLEAN
3·24·tlc
- Ad dons and ·remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work
Your House Cleaned
Weekly. call:
LEE CODNER
949-2030
Fo1 AH You1 Plillfinl W
Plus:
NEW VEHICLE
11126/ 1 mo .
54 Misc. Me· ·chandise
Monday 3 p.m.-5 p.m..
Tuesday 6:30 ~.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesday 3 p.m.-S p.m.
Thundoy 3 p.m.-S p.m.
Friday 1 p.m.-2 p.m.
Saturday 10 a.m.. 11:30 a.m.
MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
POMEROY
AND
~ou
to
to drive the vehicle of your ·
choice .
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &
TRUCK LEASING
Wedding and Graduation Stationery, Magnetic Signs, Rub-
992·3345 .
3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMALL ANIMAL HOURS
Box,' 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
,
For Faster Service
Call
614·992-6737
MIDDLEPORT
"Ou1 Bu1inm II Buill
On Smiee"
BUSINESS~REStDENTIAL
For Trash Pickup
Service Call
992-3194
ROGER MANLEY-Owner
11-29·1 mo.
We tan repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. ~e can
also acid boil and rod
out nidiators. ~e also
repair Gas Tanks.
· KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·5561
Allltleku
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Rangai
•R8frigarat"ora
•Dryera •Fr&el:ira
PARTS and SERVICE
SWEEPER and sewing ma·
chine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up •nd
delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
tall
614·446 ·0294.
LOSE WEIGHT NOW . ASK
ME HOW . Tho fun & easy
Yard Sale
.
'
Experienced Qr trainable
bookkeep er wanted . Up to
$250 . week according to
experience . Some comp uter
experience helpful" but· not
necessary . Only those who
are not afraid of work and
can pass a reference test
need apply . Position open
immediately . Send resume
and or pertinent emp lo yment data to: Book,keeper,
P.O . Box 193, Pt . Pleasant,
wv 2.5550.
paychack .. NO LAYOFFS .
304 -675-3950 or 1-800·
642 -3619 .
on At . 124 Call 614·742·
217B .
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR , Red"-'ced rateslimi1ed ,
tin,e only. Wa rd's Keyboard,
304 -675 -5500 . or 676·
3B24.
Yard Sale 6th &: 7th at
Centenary Townhouse .
Some antiques, clo1hing .
dishes, pots & pans , and
many miscelfaneous items .
Alma Wood .
..... ··F;o'mt!rov ·· ·······
Middleport
& Vicinity
YES Open all Winter . Satur·
days &. Sundays. Christmas
savings on too l s, elec1ron ics, housewares. glassware.
and collectables . ,Always
fresh baked goods and pro. duce. Free 1reets for 1he
ctli ldr en . Gallipolis Flea
Market, former Ttlater Ford
Building, next to Fruths, Rt.
Wanted To Buy
We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
Wanted to buy used coal &
wood heaters. Swain Furni ture, 446-3159. 3rd. &
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.-
Midd leport Home . Priced to
sell ! And we mean priced to
Sa\1! 1 Call 614-992 -6941
Remodeled 2 bedroom v inyled home , carpe1e d, 2
aCres, 12-24 pound tobacco
allotment , city s c l;'lools ,
$22 .500 . Call 614 ·245·
5296 .
Price d f or qu ic k sal e h~u5e .
i 7 V2 acres. off R1 . 7 , 2 miles
above Crown City. Call
614 -256 -1295.
For Sala on land Contract : 3
bdr ho use on O ld Rt . 160 at
Evergreen , 2 mi. from hospjta t. bUilt new 1975 ,
537 , 500 w ill se ll on land
contra ct. $285 mo . pay ments . Call 446-0 157.
Six ro om house, 2 baths,
vinyl siding,insu lat ed , remodled ,douljte g arage and
newly carpete d. 4·43 6th
Ave .. Miqdleport , Ohio. Cal l
614 . 992 -3029 and aftet
6PM call61 4-992·7875 .
By o wn er 3 or 4 br ho use,
B,u ck sto\le , large ga rage. 5
year s o_ld. 575 ,000 . 304 -
675 ·6365 .
Small 3 bedroom hc. us~ ,
211 1 lincoln Av e, will trad,e
304 -675-2749.
4 '12 acres tan d. Bud Chattin
Road , S6 ,000 .00 . 30 4·
675 -4464 .
Bric k
ho me cont aining 8
2 ba th s, central ·ai,,
full y car peted , located 1
mile from Henderson. 1 .5·3
acre s. new bnck building ,
city w1te r and natural gas , .
r oo m.~ .
ca ll 304-675 -3747 or 675 1840 alter 5 PM.
32 Mobile Home s
for Sale
NEW ANO USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL ·
tTY MOB ILE HOME SALES .
4 Mt . WEST . GALLIPOLIS ,
RT ' 35 . PHONE 614-446
7274 .
446 ·6592 or 245·9592 .
Will care for e lderly in our
home , men and women .
LPN cere given . Call 614 ·
co nd . new carpe t,
stove & re1 rig . S4 ,900 . Call
197t 2 bdr., 12x65, clean.
good
992· 7314.
446 ·8038 .
Room and bo11rd for elderly
S200.00 per month . Also
have personpl care reasona ·
14x.6 5 2 bdr.. f rt den . e)(c .
co nd .. ga s heat, will accept
any reaso nable offer . Call
9439 .
Relia ble cleaning lady with
references . Fa st and effe cient . Ca11446 -7471 .
Care for eld erly people in
their home, 5 days . Calf
614 -256-6426 .
Must S~ll ! 1971 T orch
12X65 , 2 bd r." unfurnist"led.
Mak e an offer . Call 614 -
446 -7132 .
1973 Rosemont 2 bdr.
14)(65, ucellent condition.
Don't mi ss th is one . $5 ,900 .
Ca ll 614 -446 -0175.
1982 Happy House . 141l56:
Gas heat, bay window, large
master bedroom, furnished .
Excellent co ndilion Pri ced
upon inspectio n. Cal l 614 -
742 ·2979 aftec 7 •00 or
w or k 614 - 992 - 3~45 .
CHRISTMAS SPECI AL• 85
Spring Brook 141l70, 3
bedr oom , total electric , d e·
luxe applian ces. gar den tub,
bay , w i t:ldow . Only
$12 ,950 00 . 85 Rockford
Financia I
21
614 ·446-017 5.
O.Weber .
Christian lady wilt babysit
for c hildren under four , in
her home . Call 446 · 9635 .
35 9 AT . 160 . Call 446·
7037.
Auction every Friday night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
Consigm,n1S of new & used
merchandiSe always wel comed. Richard Reynolds.
Auctioneer Call 304 -275 ·
Homes for Sale .
446·9422.
YARD SALE• Old lnterna· bte. Call 614·6022.
Public Sale
& Auction
31
Settled lady to l ive in and
help share expenses. Call
Situations
Wanted
tional Building, Fourth St . . - -- - - -- - - side . back of 13owell's Su·
pervalue , Pomeroy . Dec. 6th
and 71h . Starts 9 :00 am 18 Wanted to Do
both days . Clothing, adult
and chi ld ren, t oys . Doris
Ewing .
Witt do babysitting in my
home, have e)(perience . live
inside ci ty limits . Call 446 -
8
Real Es1ale
1972 1 2X60 Vintage. good
con d .. 2 bdr _, 1 Y, bath. fJe"'!'
furr:uce , fi rep lace with
blower, good carpet . stove ,
refrig .. washer, dryer . w indow air cond , drapes, some
furniture . outsi d e building,
Lot 97 Ql,lai l Creeek , Call
12
Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE !
THE OHI O VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends
1hat you do buSiness with
people you know ." and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have inves1igated the offering .
Own your own bus iness. Be
Your Own Boss . Potential
income great . Sales expe ·
rience would be helpful but
no1 necessary . Modest in-
14x7 0 , 3 bedroom , 1 Y2
bath , t otal elect ric , self
storing st o rms . pl ywo o d
f loors . deluxe appliances.
Onl y $12 .4 50 .00 , de livered
and bl Ocked Blocks , vinyJ
un derpinn1ng and st eps in ~
elude d tn price . USED :
1 2x60 or 12x70. 3 bed room . Both real n ice co ndit ion . 55950 . 0 0 e ach .
Gene ' s M obile Homes . Inc ..
Rt . 177 and Rt . 2 Raven s-
woad . Ca ll 1-30 4-273 ·
5135
1979 Bayview· 14x70, Mo·
bite home, all elec. central
ai r, 2 bedr ooms, wuher end
dryer . porch . new re f and
ro of . S12,000 .00. Phone
304 -675 -4276 .
vestment. Call AC 304·824· 1- - - - - - - - - 7828 or 824·3552.
Schult 12x65 with 12x24
add on, 3 or 4 bedroom,
Raw Fur. Top prices paid .
Lake Jachon Fin 8r Fur. Oak
22 Money to Loan
Hill, Oh. 614·682-7448 .
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bods, iron.
HOME OWNERS·Refim,nce
to low fiKed rate . Use equity
for any purpose . Leader
exc
cond, ce ntral air and heating. part ially furnished , loca1ed in K & K Park, will
sacrifice fo r quick sale.
owner moving , see to appre ~
ctate. financ ing available.
304·676 -1870
Mortga.ge Co., 614 -592- 1- - - - - - - - - way just 4 steps to losing
3061 .
weight, no counting calo33
Farms for Sale
ries. no staniation diets, no
excercising . Call anYtime 46769 or call 614-992 - 23 Professional
only if Interested in losing 7760 .
.
Wanted . small acreage for
Services
_w e,ght & feeling healthy .
home s~1e . Close to paved
Call 446 · 31B8 or 446· Buv.ing dally gold, silver
road . R1o Grande-Gallipolis
2061.
area . Call 614·245 -5239.
coins. rings, jewelry, starling
Gun ahoof 11 Racine Guil
Club every Sunday, t :00
p .m . Factory chocked guns
only.
wood. cupboards, chairs,
chesta. baskets , dia.hea,
atOn"e jars. antiques, gold
l[lnd silver. Writt:t· M . 0 .
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
ware, old coins , large cur ~
.rency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop , 2nd. Ave.
Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co .. 446 -
0687. Twentieth year of
quality service. Lane Da-
Middleport. Oh . 614-992 - niela. 614· 742-29'61 .
3476 .
- - - ' - - - - - - - - ·10-
'
Worth , Tx 76101 .
7
446-3672
3 Announcements
TEXAS REFINERY CORP.
BEST KEPT SECRET IN
9
Announce menls
613-563·9647 .
AMERICA -- Army Nationa l
Guard . Join and you have a
good part -tim e career -- good
benefits - - monthly
3069
R~~~C121
TRUCK DRIVERS needed
6653.
NOW PICKING UP IN
Engage-A-Car. the modern way
Offi" Supplies & furnllurt,
2SS Mil St. Middlepoot
104 ~ Av, Pomeroy
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
INTERESTED IN A
·
ber Stamps, Business Forms,
Copy S.rwices. hc-
OPEN EACH
1·1 mo .
992·6215 or 992·7314
Polltrof, Ohio
THE. QUALITY
PRINT SHOP
'·
LARGE ANIMALS AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT
12-3-tln
If You Need
(free Estimates)
lost - Part labrador,black :
·long -haired female dog in
Arbaugh additiOn . Has 10
collar on. Reward.answers
to Sheba . Call 614 -667-
& Vicinity
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M .
roy. Ohio 45769.
6
CliNIC
SID.ING CO.
Person wanted for part ·time
help in medica l office . Must
have experience in typing
and dictaphone. Computer
and accounting experience
helpful. Variety of hours.
Send resume to The Daily
Sentinel, B ox 729 M ,.Pome -
cash bonuses. fringe benef it!$ to se mHetired person in
Point Pleasant area . Regar ·
dies of experience. Write 0 .
V . Sears. Pres .. Box 711 . Ft .
VETERINARY
IN MIDDlEPORT
6671
offers plenty of money Plus
TOWN & COUNTRY
BISSELL
HABILITAT ION
SPEGIALIST- Bachelor ·o r
higher degree in Habilitation
prOgramming ·f or MR-00 or
related field . One year experien ce working with MA -DD
i ndividuals ability to secure
certificate.' Begin January
2 , 1985. Contact O~io Job
Service. Pomeroy 614 -992 -
weeks old. 304,675·5815.
...... tiiiiii>oils........ .
SIDING
365-1035.
Minimum experience. Call
742·2521 .
•complete Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chitnney Relining & Repair
•Ex.p erienced and Insured
"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
l. "Bud" McGHfE
One V2 Airdale and V: black
~b . male puppy - left! To
Found: Medium Blue Tick·,
male. No collar _ Call 614·
8:00 to 5:30
II f. J mo
Professional ••
Services
Oeer heads mounted: Quelity mounts. Over 25 ve&ra
experience. Eas.t of Au11and
Babysit1er iri my home in city
limits for 2 month infant,
8 _·4 . Experience a must. Call
Trainee 1984 car . gas, inaurance supplied . high school
LOST: in viciriity of Pizza Hu1
3 1f2 month old Pit Bull solid
tan. with white under neck.
yellow eyes, very friendly .
Please return · reward . 41 112
Lincoln AVe, Gallipolis .
PH. 667-6715
Monday thru Friday
23
446-1422.
Giveaway
675-6f45.
446-2062
I .
Broker-Auction Service
, PH .
Chimney
Care
Pomeroy, OH.
Call 985 -3805
1·13·t1c
at lea st 1h1 ny (301 davs alter tne
4
Priee.- ."
·•
Real Estate General
SHOP
tiM. RO.
.
IUlli\NO. OH
Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
You Were Going To Call Us?
. 992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
No bids c ar~ be wt thdraiNn for
Fifth and Vine, Racine, Uhio .
nilel
PAT Hill FORD
al l bios.
26~6 . Aline' s Beauty Shop.
4 puppies half Brittany Spa ~
•rear Round Pleasure
992-5875
Sec tt C>Il t.1!) 11 76 o f the Ohto
· Rev1srJd Code and all other
pentnenl proVISIOns of taw.
SpC1:111\.Cli1 0 ns and tn struc1111ns to brdct'ers may be
obtau1Hrl at the offlCe of the
Treasurm . Middleport . Ohto
A corttlled check payable to
th e Tn~as ur er of the above of
ed uca uo n or a s ~U1sfactory btd
bond executOO by the bidder
ond th e sl'iretv company. in an
am oun t equal_ to five . perce nt
(5%) of thfl btd sha ll be
su bmttted w1th each bid .
SaiCI board oi EtducauoP'I
reserves the i-ight to waive
~n! ormnh t 1 es. to accept or.rejec1
any ,ar:u1 ill I or par:ts of any anct
TAXIDERMY
CALL TOOAV FOR CURRENT PRICES
ON·
AND OTHER GAME
We 'd like to in1roduce
MILLER
lf!OPH'f ONLY
EACW MOUNT IS GIVEN ~H E PER·
Use
Tuppers Plains, OH.
Help Wanted
JOiNS. BEAUTY SHOP :
T~ same home. preferably
T~UST YOUR
r_;T~O~·~"'~O~FE~SSJIO~N~AI.!2!~L'"""
I
BRING I
V. C. YOUNG Ill
3·15·tl
REMEMBER,
FORTS WITHMOUNT
A QUALIT-Y,
LIFHI)(E
SHOULDER
ATOURSTUOIO
•R•Ialling
RAW
PINE POSTS
C. V. POSTS
11
Tr•ci Maarn·s woUld lik' to
announce h8r employmen1 Governmen1 jobs . $1 6 .559·
a1 Aline's Beauty Shop . · $50. 553 -year. Now hiring .
Curly Perms $16 .00. F.legu · Your area . Call 805-687lar &26 . 00 Parms..- now 6000. oilt. R-4562 .
wolf. 1 year old . Call be seen
8t 1 18 4th Ave .• Gallipolis.
INC FINALLY PAY OFF WITH THAT
CARPENTER
SERVICE
JIM CLIFFORD
Ser v1 ces
•
home in'
country part Doberman &
WHEN THE MANY HOURS OF HUNT·
CONTRACTING
OIL LINES
•
67~-5164 .
YOUNG'S
•oUMP TRUCK SERVICE
•
Puppies, adult black dog ,
need a good home. "3 04 ·
Perfect Family Gift
•Affordable· ~
•Portable
•rherapeudi!
.
~Indoor-Outdoor
•
No h"-'nting Or trespassing.
day o,r night. on Charles E .
Yoa1 FarmS.
~ike 10 give to good
Bashan Building
10/4/tfc
Wanted To Buy
BUYING !lAW FUllS. Boo! . Unwanted facial or body
RANCE
POLICIES
RE
·
and
Dear H idea.Ginaeng and
HAVE YOUR LIFE INSU ·
hai.r? Permanent. painlna
VIEWED AND UPOATE·D. ye .l l c;W root. S•lling · remQval by European ElecSome tile insurance policies -t rapp·ng auppliea . Wheat tronic Depilator . Mary -is
allow the insurance com · ligM!., night ljghta. George
panioo to keep your savings. BUckl _e v .phone 614- 664· c~ rtified in th.is new comp\1·
upon death . We offer a wide 4761 .hours 12 ·9PM dailey. t•rized dig-i1al sy11em . C..l
today 614·992·6120 . Top
variety of insurance. IRA's
of the Stain, full 1tuvice
and Ia• oholtorad annuity .
salon .
d
Em~l!lymenl
pMraort.unc6111.4
C99o2nt7a0ct220sby
- - - - - - - - · IC1
446·9301 alter 4pm
RACINE
FIRE DEPT•.
J&F
•Otl FIELD SERVICES
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213 .
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
"
. 8-13 tin
10-8-tic ·
•oozeR · BACKHOE
· •RECLAMATION WORK
Licensed Clinical Audiologist
GUN SHOOT ·.
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio
or
843-54214
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL-FlU DIRT
LISA M. KOCH, M.S·.
1-1·21-1 mo.
Roger Hysell
GARAGE
992-3410
PH. 992,7201
NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Separat e and tndependent
sc hedul~ clost ng t1me fc)(
btds wrtl be rece ived with . recetpt of btds.
' res pect to th e chass ts and Qo dy
Meigs lo ce~l Board
type and will state th at the bus
of Educatton
.when ass ~rn bted and pnor to
Jane Wagner. Treasurer
deltvery co mply wtth ·all ~choot
621 South Third Avenue
dtstnc t Spec tftca tton s. all safety
Middleport. Ohio 45760
regulatt ons and current Ohio
(6 t 41 9~2-5650
M1n imum Standards for School
I:;\ us Construr. uon of the Depart·
(t 1)27. (1214. 1t. 18, 4tc
ment of Educatt on pur~uant to ·
,
I·
Mall Tllll Coupon Wlftl RetnltflftCI
The Dilly lentlnal ·
Public
Sealed rro posal'5. will be
recR1ve<1 by thf'! Board o f
, Education of thn M ~tgs Local
School D1 s-trtt t o f Middleport .
Oh10 at the Treasurer·s office
' unt1l 12:00 .noon on Thursda y,
Ja nua ry 3, 1985 . and at that
lime o p'er.~e d by 01f! Treasurer of
said Board. tabula ted. and a
·eport thereat rnade to said
13oard at 1ts ne)(t scheduled
. meeung -as provtded by taw for
_three (3) 65 passenger school
buses. e~ ccord1ng to spectft catto ns o f S<ll d b o ard of
25. _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Any business or pa·
frons who would
like to place a'n od,
contact Donnie Dudding .at '949-2600.
i:i
Comput~rized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · Interpreting Services
::t
CAROlYN !'&COY
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-5191
the businesses who
hove previously placed
on oct in the Southern
1191 School yec.book.
i
Open By Appointment
Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns
Only
to
z
12·6 PM
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses
THANKS ·
Cl
Monday-Saturday
10 AM-S PM
CLOSED THURSDAY
Open Sun. ~ 9, 16, 23
Sizesirom 6'x6' Up
10-6-tk
~EDNESDAYS
FREE HEARING TESTS
6th St., Syrocus~
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
P&S BUILDINGS
9-IJ.tlo
9
$20.00. Phone 614-949·
BERRY BASKET
UTILITY BUILDINGS
·•,
20.
24.. _ _ _ _ __
Public Notice
WISSIFIEDS
I
Public Notice
AUTO PARTS
*WATER, GAS &
PW61NTO,·
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
THREE SCHOOL BUSES
FOR
MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
22.
23. __,_ _ __
I
ar Fenders .................. 60
79 ·80 Mustang
Car Fenders .................. 60
81-84 Escort-Cynx ,
Fenders ........................ 49
Omni-Horizon 2 dr. or
· 4 dr. Fenders ........... ..... 75
Chevy & Ford
k fenders ............., .... 98
PU Bumpers ............ 69.95
72-80 Dodge lr.
7H2 Cnevette Grills ........ lB
Fenders ........ ioid an~ 1~hevy ~~~~ GRa~~er Grills · ' 75
11 111 ,
*CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
·I REAL ESTAtE I
I
I
I
CHESTER-~85- 3307
Sizes Start From 12'd6'
*CONCRETE WORK
I APARJMENIS I
18._
-_
-"""'
-:"'_
-_
-_19,
1. - - - - - 2. - - - - - 3. - - - - - -
.1
CARS
TV
RIDENOUR
& APPLIANCE
11· 12·1 mo.
Kim Nelson
992-2903
Ruth Ann Taylor
992-3566
include diSCDIH!1
17.------
All STEEL &
POLE BUILDINGS
Mon.-Fri. 9-9
Theoecashra~
( )For Si!le
falllpolls. hlo
,
11
Sat. 9·5: Sun. 1-5
1
! >Wanted
AUTO
St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 orth
Nov. 5-Dec. 8
1 Phon•----~.-------------
nursery.
But the baby, Cody Reece, born
Saturday, :.vas taken from the
hospital instead. A bassinette was
found near an exit door.
"He Is a good, healthy baby and Is
in n0 mediCal danger;" said Karen
Kuhn, hospital spokesman.
OHIO
2 Miles out Flatwoods Rd.
Off St. Rt. 7
1
below.
U-SAVE
SALES & SERVICE ·
Counttg Ctslt
Show
Ham•----------
check the •proper boX
"We R111 F11 l11l"
BOGGS
lit ........... .... ....- .. - ... _.....
JOBS
3 Announcements
~!"~'•!'.:: ····· ..··, ............ 11 0
S·I1>·S11 Cheyy Tri.
fenders ......... .. ............. 80
73-79 Ford Tr.
Fenders ......... ............... l9
80-84 Ford Tr
Fendm ...................... ItO
Fo1d Ranger ·
C0111try Gift-Aa:essories
. 11/tlrt
Se~valll
Baby taken
from hospital
CALL
44&-4522
lfr Garages.
111- ......
Curb Inflation I
Pay Cash for
Classlflads and
RENT A CAR
Roofing Work
Alummum & Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 99Z· 7583
or 992-2282
,., _ ~
U,llll . . . . ... n.. ..- . -
IJ.II ..M_. _ ,
l f·U........
u Dutr
PH. 992-2478
11/2311 mo. pd.
New Homes ~ Extensive
Remodeling
·
Insurance Work
Cu5to.m Pole Bldgs.
: :=.
...............
:t~...... e~& ......... 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
........,........._
u,wte . . . .:.. ...,...... ·- .... n .•
~
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•S. PEED QUEEN. lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR .
Wt lien /1. Fall TIMt
Shtp Tte~llelll ·
.
lARGE H SMAll. JOBS
CONSTRUCTION
MI- ..... Dill.
11·"""'
EXCA W,
- DOZERS
- BACKHOES
-DUMP TRUCKS
-LO-BOYS
. -TRENCHER
- WATER
- SEWER
-GAS LINES
-SEPTIC SYSTEMS
ROUSH
,. . ~
., - ~-U.
.
,.._ .,......
The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9
Sl
MOTEL
· (:l,..lf,..,, 1•11r• ,..,n·ror llllr
/t~lluttlttlf lf'lrpllmw r•.rrltltftjllt"t ...
Ohio
r::;~~iii~~~;;:::;rr:======:::::::;:Tir=7.:=:::::::::~;::;=::1Jr;:::;:;;;:;::;;:====:t:;;:;;;:;;:;::;:====~~
CHRISTMAS TREES
.
·
PU LLJ
NS
WE ARE YOUR SALES
.,.n,diis : ;>....... 7
.
AND SERVICE
''
· ··' °
Fenders ........................
FOR SALE
76·82
UAJI NG
HEADQUARTERS FOR
C Che•ette ·
Po me roy -Mason Bridge
..................
........... .....
Pomeroy-Middleport,
·Business ·Services
8 mile s from
KANAUGA - An Athens man
was arrested Monday afternoon
following an attempted robbery at
l l ·llltllltMCIIM!I-.
u .M..., .. L_
11-tl,f'llll.............
Federal Land Bank Association of
~~-~---:t=.ll!fi"
' .,.~,
Gallipolis, 228 Upper River Rd.
11 -!fllllllllit. ....
...,.............
George B. Williams, 44, was
..,_
,
_
-t
, . .................
lodged · in the Gallia County J all
,n .a.. • ....,.
pending a hearing in Gallipolis
Municipal Court.
·
........ ..__
Williams was arrested by the
IIJ.f-IIIIIIIN
44-A..,_,..,...,.,
41-f!IIMIIM .. _
Mason County Sheriff's Depart·
........ ht ...
ment when he attempted to cross the
...,.......u.......
................ fiMI
Silver Memorial Bridge Into West
41 - ft~tl••
VIrginia following the attempted
robbery.
Gallipolis City Pollee said June •4 ---------------------~
Vantankln, an employee at the :I1
I
lending institution, told them WUli· 1
ams came Into the bulldlng at 1: 12 1
p.tn. and told her he wanted a loan.
I
After a short conversation, · siJe I
said Williams brandished a pellet I
pistol and told her to give him all the
money. After informing him there .
"'
1
was no money at the facility, .1
Vantankln said Williams made her .I
Write your own ad and oraer by mall with this
give him $169 from her purse, put 1 coupon.
Cancel vour a" by Phone when vou get
her in a closet aild told her to count to 1 results. Monev nat refundable.
100.
•
•
•
While she was counting, Williams
I
left and Vantankin called
Addreu..-------authorities.
An employee at Jackson Produc·
lion Credit, Diann Sanders, told
pollee she heard the door close and
Print one ward In eac11
saw a yellow car tum south onto
space below. Eacll 1ft.
I tltial ar group Of fiiiUAS
Ohlo7.
I counts as a ward. Count
WJlllams was charged by police , 1 name and acldr- ar
with aggravated robbery following '1 pllone number if used. _.:_:~~~~~~~!!J
the attempted theft.
You'll get better results
·1 '' vou ~~!!SCribe tullv,
,I
give price.ffie
Tilerlgllt
Sentinel
· reserves
10 ~~~t~~~f;~lwJ
claSllify, .edit or ~iect _T_o_2S-t--+--+-:--::f--!
any ad. Your ad will be
put In tile proper lT~o~3S~~~~~~~~:!'j
classification if you'll -
1984
U- Build -it. 3 bdr. Wilderneia
Home Kit. $6.996 . New
model open. Call 1·614'
886-7311 .
..
'
1'
..
�Page
33
10
The Daily Sentinel
Farms for Sale
Tuesday, December 4 , 1984
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
61
They'll Do It Every Time
37 ocro form on Golllo
County Rood 218. 8 room
houH. lond. bern. out build-
Household Goods
54 Misc . Merchandise
{Coal Dellvoredl good lump
UO.OOO ceoh or can be
bought' on lend contr•ct.
Call ~14 - 742 - 2170 . ·
TV oato . Open SAM to &PM .
Mon thru Set. 446·1699,
627 3ni. Ave. Gallipolio,
OH .
Jim Lanier 876· 7397 or
304-6 75-1247 .
35 Lots & Acreage
Trade Canter Kana uga.
Ohio. Furniture outlet, Why
Pay Morel
c h lid rtn I suits · heavy
Gen
l ot for sale in Marcervilla, 3 · .-----"""""
trailer hook..,.pt, electric, ru ral water. septic tank.
88 ,000 . Call 814 -256 6618 .
air
range .
fully
equipped . Coli 446-9409.
30" elect. range $95. Ken·
more 30' gas range nice
$125,
harvest gold gas
range $96. and other gas
Spaces tor rent. trailer lots,
ranges to choose from . GE
washer $96, 4 others to
choose from . WhirlpoOl
sewer and water fumi1hed .
Small children accepted .
304-675-1076 .
woaher l!o dryer t245. GE
single door refrig. like new
e125, GE fro•t free rofrig.
Renlals
8126. wrinQer washer $65.
Kenmore dishwasher $76 .
Skaggs Appliancea, Upper
River Rd. GalliPolis, 446-
7398 .
FrOst free gold refrigerator·
fniezar. Call 446 -6247 .
Washer .& dryer $160, elect-
ric stove f100 . 1949 Chevy
$260 . Coll614-367-7264.
House for rent in Mercerville
area . Call Kenneth Swain
614-256-1552 evoningo .
3 bdr. house in town with
ca rport ,
private
location,
S275 mo. Call 446-8293
after 5PM .
Mobile home with large
added on room. Coal or
wood burning stove, unfurnished . 3 mobile home Iota
for rent. References. Call
614-256-1293.
Modern bi-level for s8'1e or 1- - - - -- - -- -lcrent, 3 bd r .• 2· b at h , Ig.
livingroom w -dlning area.
stove. refrig., finished basement. carpeting throughout,
2 car attached garage. patio,
deck. 1 acre. 4 mi. out Rt.
218~ S300 plus utilities. sec .
Trailer in Tuppera Plains·
,new furnace. $176 .00 plus
deposit and utilities . Call
614-667-3487 .
2 bedroom trailer for rent .
Partially furnished . 8100.00
dep. l!o ref. Call446-7044 or deposit . $150 .00 par
month. You pay utilities. See
446-8080.
6 rm : house for rent , 10 min .
from town, Clay School dist.
Coli 446 -2706 .
2 bedroom house. fully
carpeted . $200 per mo. plus
utilities . Deposit & referen ces. North of Cheshire on
old Rt . 7, 445-9786
8 :30AM 10 4:00PM .
3 bdr. home on Rt. 141
&275, 3 bdr. home in
Addison $250, 5 bdr. home
in town $326. 4 bdr. home
in town $350. 3 bdr. home
on Hedgewood Or. $275,
2-3 bdr. home on Rt. 775for
relit with option $275 .
security deposit and refer·
ences
required .
Call
The
Wiseman Real Estate Agnecy, 446-3643 .
House for rent at 55 Gar·
field , no pets. lnguire at 67
Garfield .
N8wly remodeled house, 2
bdr, 1 full bath, lg . furn .
kitchen. located in Middle·
port . Send resume to Daily
Ser1tinel. P.O. Box 729 -V.
Pomeroy , Oh 45769 .
2 bedroom duplex house.
Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Spacial rates for Senior
Citizens. •130 . EqUal Housing Opportunities . 814 -
992-7721.
Furnished 2 bedroom apt. in
Middleport. Adults. no pets.
security deposit. Call 614 -
992 -3874.
992-2448 .
people. Cell304-773-5882,
2 bedroom mobile home.
Natural gas heat. Racine
area . Call 614-992-5858 .
Fully furnishod . Coli 614992 -7314 or 614 -9926216
on
Terr.
$200.00
morith and $100.0() deposit . Call 614-992-5815
alter 5:00 PM or 614 -9922049 daytime.
In Middleport . new kitchen .
c arpeting. wood burner, 3
bedrooms . Call 304-882·
2811 .
Very nice. newly remodeled
2 bedroom home in Pome·
roy. Low utilities. $200.00
per month . Security deposit
and referencel required. Call
614-992 -6763 .
- ----:-----:- a-lc3 bedroom hou•e in Middleport . Fully carpeted. atorr:n
windows. No pets. Phone
614-992 -2061 .
Home in Racine. All electric .
$200 .00 per month . Daposit and references required .
Ca11 ,614-949 -2849 .
For sale or rent : 3 bedroom
house with detached garage
on 34 acres. In Portland
a rea . Call after 6 :30 pm
304-273-6272 .
Small 3 bedroom house,
2111 lincoln Ave, Point
Pleasant, $275 .00 month
plus deposit . Phone 304-
675-2749 .
dis-
614-992-3617 in eveflings.
Hickory Wind, 141 But,ernut Ave. Old furnist\ings.
collectibles and gifts . Sun-
day 1 :00-5:00. Monday thru
Thursday 10:00-5 :00 .
8280 .00 Per. month . Utili304· 773-
54 Misc . Merchandise
APARTMENTS, mobile
Knauff Firewood Split- 95%
hardwoods . Seasoned or
green . You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614-
Call446-7785 .
Mobile home in Gallipolis.
nice for senior citizens or
married couple with one
child. no pets. deposit and
references required. K & K
6 PM .
firewood cut up slabs. $1 5
PU load . larger loads deli ·
vered. Catl for prices. 614-
homes. houses. Pt . Pleaaant
1--""""--------
Furn'ished apartment downtown, no pets. one bedroom.
call 304-676-3788 .
Mobile Homos, Inc .. 304-l----- - - - - Furnished one bedroom
apartment, new carPet. 402
21st Street, preferably
working aingle. 304-6752661 . Also furnished upstairs apartment on Mt.
Vernon Avenue. Clean. nice
for one person .
uuuu
1- --...:______
In Middleport. 2 bodroom
furniahed apt, 1 child, 1-
304-882-2666 .
45
44
Apartment
for- Rent
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS {Equal
Housing Opportunity} has
one and two be~rooms. rent
starting at $163 for one
bedroom and $198 per
month for two bedroom.
with S200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 446-2746 or leave
message.
Furnished Rooms
For rerit Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
256-6245 .
Limestone. Sand . Gravel.
Pick up at Richards & Son .
245 -5804 .
Top' Soil and fill dirt and
landscaping. Call 614-256 1427.
Will cut and deliver fire ·
wood. Call256-1528 .
Free standing fireplace for
trailer. Call 446-2502 or
614-245-5004 altar 6PM .
125 ,000 . BTU Lennox furnance. for sale S200 . Call
Diamond clusters new and
pre -owned, starting at $60 .
Frank's Pawn Shop, 430
2nd. Ave ., Gallipolis, 446-
Furnished room. $126 . Utili ties, ranae. ref. Share bath .
Chain saws. Frank's Pawn
Man only. 919 Soc .. Galllpo •
lis. 446-4416 after 8 p.m. '
RCA color TV, 26in acrean,
$150.00. Phone 304-6752213.
Brand new. never out of the
box.
' ' Baby
Name". Call
Noods
A
after 4:00,
304-675-5289 .
Full Aki stereo system, tape
deck. recaiver, amplifier,
Pioneer 100 wt speakers.
57
Atari 400 home computer
with keyboard and seven
games. $190.00. 2 black
vinyl boon bags $10.00
oach. Ca11304· 675-1 371 or
575-6917 .
Yamaha amplifier for guitar
or piano. Asking $326 . Call
446.-4626 .
Storv and Clerk piano, axcel lant condition plus 9 vol.
Scribner Music Books
81500 .00 firm . Call 614·
949-2446.
Peavy Mace Seriea amplifier
with cabinet. no speakers.
304-675 -6517 .
614-256-6307 .
Call 446-3844 after 7PM .
Kerosene stove . 19 .000
BTU'a-new, King coal &
wood s1ove-new. bicycle
used. new tires, used dishwasher undercounter. All
at reduced price! Call 446-
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
Merchandi se
61 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION l!o FURNITURE
62 Olive St. , Gallipolis. New
& used wood -coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR suite e399 ,
bunk beds e199, antron
recliners e99. used bedroom
suites, ranges , wringer
wishen. & shoos. Call614446-3159 .
1 bdr. completely furniahed,
carP!ted. all electric. 458
2nd . AtJe .• adults. ref. &. sac .
0 . Call 614-245-5.121 .
Rough Cut Lumber. oak .
poplar, and pine. 2x4 ' s,
2x8's, 1x6'a, 1x8's. As·
sorted lengths . Call Hogg
and Zuspan MaterialS
Co .. ln c . 773 - 5554 ,
daytime .
Now open for business,
Mountain State ·Block. Rt .
33, New Haven . Complete
masonry supplies. 4", 8" .
12" block . Delivery service .
Phone day 304· 882-2222.
ovoning 882-3239.
56
Fuel oil tank for sale. Call
3828.
Oak furniture. tebles.chaira,
cupboarda. pie uta, telephones, desk, alao antiquea
and glassware. Open Sundays. Conkel's Tuppors -
plalns. Rl.7.
About 600 ·{priced to sell)
McArthur,Ohio.
Route
1.
Cell 614 -696-4282.
58
Fruit
& Vegetables
Pets for Sale
condition. 8200.00.
614-992-7589 .
Call
1976 Plymouth Volore Station Wagon, 41.000 miles.
$560.00. 1976 GMC '4 ton
pick·up. $8110 ,00. 1974
Plymouth Fury. e196.00.
Coll614-986·4174.
Stud Service. Call614-4467796 .
614-367-7220.
condition. Coli 11.4-9853949.
F.11111 Suppl11:o
/ix L1 Vl:oloGk
61
Farm Equipment
5 ft . bruoh hog, hoovy duty,
$295. Call614-288-6522.
1984 Long 360 4 -WD tractor. with front end loader.
Priced to sell. Call614-286 6522.
For sale Farmall Cub tractor
cultivators, plowa, disc,
weights . Call. 814 · 2666846 after 4PM.
62 Wanted to Buy
83 Dodge Omni 4 opeed. 4 ,
door, AM-FM· caaaette, de ~
luxe cloth interior. Call 614~
McDaniel Custom Butchering. open liX daya a weak,
1 984 Chevotta, AC. AM-FM
63
Livestock
radio, 4 spHd, still under
worrenty. 304·675-2863
after 5 PM .
59" dapple grey mare. very
gentle. shown in 4·H. Call
·1"974 Lincoln Mork IV.
phona 30~-876-3668 be-
614-288-6622 .
tween 4 and 8 PM .
4 yr. old Quarter hors mare
sOrrell pony. Shown in 4-H,
19~1
Super Beetle. no rust,
new exhaUst and brake
V8,e~o.PB.PS.
Dregonwynd Cattery Ken ~
nel . CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614-
duel whoelo. Coll448 -4149 .
Call 614·256-1467.
Pit Bull pups, red·red nose. 1
AKC Miniature Schnauzer
puppies. 8 w:~eks old .
Wormed and ahota. One
male and one female . 8176
for male and f200.00 for
female . Call 814-9 9 2 .
2386 .
'80 Monte Carlo landau,
Rice's Pig Ferm .
64
Hay & Grain
6286 .
'79 Chovrolot El Camino,
Royal Knight SS. loaded
with extras, 87,000 miles,
'73 Nova, good cond,
8400 .00. Geo furneca
f76.00. 403 Locuot st.
Henderson, W. Va.
Hay n .71, 300 gallon fuel
oil tank, food grinder. Phone
304-671-2108.
72
1984 Mozda II opd. 1981
Ford Courrlor 4 opd . 1980
I r.lll'llortallllll
Autos for Sale
TOP CASH pold for '80
model and newer uaed cara.
Smith Bulck-Pontloc, 1911
Eaotern Avo .. Galllpollo. Coli
614-446-2282.
Chevy
1552 alter 5 :30PM .
Furnished 2 bdr.. clean.
quiet, cable, beautiful river
view. Kanauga . Foster Mobile Home Park . Call 446-
1602.
Bachelor apt. for rent, larg~
fireplace. ref. raq .. $226
mo. 164 First Ave ., Gallipo-
Mobile Home, 2 bedroom,
12x70 livingroom expando,
furnished . C8 II 446 • 9669 ·
lis. Call 446· 1616 or 4461243.
Furniahed efficiency apt,
private· bath and entrance.
suitable for one person . Cell
Very nice 2 bdr. duplex apt .•
completely furn. , water
paid, no inside peta, Main
st .. Chaahira. Caii814-246-
Used Furniture --· head
boarda, and 2 bedroom
suitea. 3 milea out Bulavilla
614-246 -9498 .
7209 .
12x66 trailer for rent in
1 bdr. portlolly furnlohed."
e190 mo .. utllltleo pold, e110
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Woollon, dryero, rofrlgora -
dep. 8 mo. '-taM, no children
lnd no peto. Coll4411-31117·
after 6 .
John's
Rd. Open 9om to &pm. Mon.
thru Sat.
614-448-0322
tora, ranges. SUggs Ap~
plloncoo, Upper River Rd.
bolide Stone Cre" Motel.
814-441-7398 .
18711 Chovy Monll 400,
v;8, outo. olum. oloto. much
more. Coli 4411· 7340 otter
4PM.
1979 vw nobblt,. ·ono
owner. low mllo. .e. 1112
Honda cBno. Coli 4410122 after 4pm.
18711 Conloro ~ oondl·
tion.•
1.0 0. - call ottot
IPM, 814·2111·14110,
•a.
scrambles, number puzzlers
and history and mystery
games are all here to tease
your brain.
ANNIE
•• SCOUTING - ff!, ~.q£
E5TIIrf! tOCIIT/OifS
60METIME5 TAI\EG
ME IHTO GOME ~
PLACES,.
YOU JUST
DON'T GTp;I~E
ME A6 A f!EAL
E5TATE MAN '"
fJl Sport Goofy
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Kiss Me
Goodbye '
IMAKI
MOVIE:
'Tho
Passionate Friends'
8 :30 IIJ Who' s the Boss? {CCI
Fetty Tree Trin1ming, stump
removal . Coli 304· 876 1331 .
fj) Gift for Granny
0 Cil AfterMASH
9 :00 Cil 700 Club
(!) Top R,ank Boxing
(() Ill @ Barbara Walters
Spacial !PREMIERE! Bar-
RINGLES'S SEF,IVICE. ex·
perienced carpenter, electrician, mason. painter# roof-
ing {Including hot tor
applicltionl 304-676-2088
or 676·7368 .
82
Plumbing
• Haating
(j) Wild America Special
(llJ
Glenn
Miller:
A
Moonlight Serenade Van
Johnson. l ex Beneke and
Julius LaRosa pay tribute to
the tim eless music of Glenn
WINNIE
Miller. 12 hrs.)
fJ) MOVIE : 'An American
Christmas Carol'
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Golllpollo. Ohio
Phone 614-448-3888 or
614-448-4477
9 :30 [MAXI George Stevens
10:00 ·o (]) CD Remington
Steele Laura and Remiilgton
are hired by veteran film
s' ars Dorothy ~!am our . Lloyd
Nolan and Vtrginia Mayo af·
ter t hey e)(perience a serie s
of odd accidents and receive
ominous notes. (60 min .)
JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Box 3111>. Golll·
polio. Collll14487-0171_.
ffi MOVIE: ' Dr. Strange-
Excavating
Good-1
Ex~ovotlng.
love Or: How I Learned to
Stop Worrying and Love
the Bomb'
C1J DJ @ Paper Dolls !CCI
boN-
W esley attempt s to seduce
Colette and Grant fights to
mak e the Ferrier Cosmetics
ac qui sition a rea li ty. (60
min.)
BARNEY
Call anytlmo 81 4-441·41137, Jomeo L. Dovioon. Jr.
I]) Chamber Week
[HBO] Not Necessarily the
News
Ditches. panda, roads, land
84
!MAXI MOVIE : ' Chariots of
Fire'
10:30 Cil Celebrity Chefs
(HBOI Video Jukebox
11 :oo o rn m m o ()) ® 111
fti News
I]) Bill Cosby Show
fj) Bonny Hill Show
IHBOI MOVIE : 'Spring
Elactrical
& Refrigeration
SEWING Machine ropoirs.
1978 Ford S-2110 . 4 whHI
drive, V-8 . Body rough b~
runo good . e111oo.oo. Coli
61 4-992· 7789.
Pomeroy. 814-992-2284.
Solao & Sorvloe Shorpon
Sciuon.
86
Fabric
Break'
1 1:30 IJ (]) CD Tonight Show
Shop.
SNAKE!!
let
Genaral Hauling
•
James Soya Water Service.
Also poolo fRied. Coli 814'251·1141 or 614·446·
11711 or 814-446"7911.
Kon'o Wotor Sorvlce. Wolll.
ctottrno. poole flllad . Phono
114-387·0123 or 814-387·
7741 night or doy.
Dump truck for hlro will hiul
coal. limewtone. etc . 304·
I
.'
•
\.
'
("nswara tomorrowl
PURGE LANCER HUMBLE
Yesterday 's .
Answer· Somet h ing a woman Hnds eas ier to do with
her face than wi th her minCI- MAKE UP
I
Jumbtes . CHOKE
By Jameo Jacoby
For ..tertainment as well as for
sharpenint! your declarer skills, try
Denio Priest's "Problems in Play: a
Secolld Book of Bridge Problems "
(Ualversity of Queensland Press).
Today's offering from this work
blghllghts a quite unusual play.
Wbell South bld two spades after
first makiDg a takeout double of the
one-heart opening bid, be showed substantial extra values as well as at
least a five-card spade suit. North
was happy to bid game with trump
support as well as prime cards (spade
king and club ace).
Declarer won the opening lead with
the heart queen, played A-K of spades
and tb.en took a diarflond finesse .
Wben that worked, he played aee of
diamonds and his last diamond, won
by West. Since the dilmends did not
split, declarer eventually had to lose
three more tricks (two hearts and a
trump) for down one.
Since malting the contract involves
rutting a looing heart ia dwnmy,
South should think about bow best to
accomplish this. U he plays A·K of
spades and tllen plays hearts, East
will win the lead and play his high
spade eUmlnatiog dummy's last
trump. But playing hearts before
drawing two trumps will give Wes1 a
NORTH
+K 72
12+84
32
• 76 42
+A 5 4
WEST
+98
EAST
.QJIO
•K987 6
· • io
t J 9 53
+Q98632
t
K 10
+KJ7
SOUTH
+A654 3
.AQ54
IAQ8
+10
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West
Nortb East
Pass
Pass
2t
I. •
Pass
Pass
4+
Pass
Soalb
p..,
Obi
2+
Pass
Opening lead: •1 0
heart ruff.
Tile !IOlution? Allow the 10 of
hearts opening lead by West to win
trick one. Whatever is led at trick
two, declarer can win, play A-K of
spades, finesse the heart queen and ·
·>trump the fourth looing heart,. Now a
successful diamond finesse makes the
contract.
0
•
PEANUTS.
I Vi 8EE!ol Tl-l1NKIN6
ABOUT THIS PAST
Upholatery
BASEBALL
i:
SEASON .. .
KNOW, 6ASEBAl.i l-IAS
BEEN 600D TO ME ..
'(OU
I llOI'E TJ.IAT SOMEDAY
I'LL 8E ABLE TO
WI-IAT IF IT DOESN 'T
i
.61VE s0METI-HN6 BACK ~
TO TilE 6AME ...
I
WANT IT ?
......,,,r
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
f1 Afford
I Police
DOWN
1 Remainder
2 Athena 's
action
5 Memorable
years
8 Different
9 Pamphlet
11 Observed
3 CZech river
4 Toothed
(Zool.l
12 Redford
5 Disin-
title
tegrate
Yesterday's Answer
14 Pungent
29 Dramatist,
15 Newspaper 6 Nobel Prize 19 Spigot
employee
I& A Bronte
18 Reverence
19 Eschewed
food
%Z- service
Z3 DeisyUke
flower
Z4Food
physicist 2G Oregon city Jean 7 Man-made Zl Airline
31 Marquis
fabrics
employees
de
9 Tendency %-4 Indian
33 British
10 Mason 's
title
title
implements 25 Jolite
13 Covenant
or spinel 34 English
17 Saul's
27 - over
river
relative
(studied ) 35 Set righl
fish
26 Colorado
Indian
27 Sissified
26 Intimidate
29 Enter
· 30 Blackboard
item
32 Dutch
cheese
· 36 Albanian
capital
37 Enthuse
38 Said
further
39
Egyptian
()) WKRP in Cincinnati
the - !"
DAII..Y CRYPTOQlK1I'ES- Here's how I!! work II:
(() FaH Guy Colt be-
comes suspicious when a
friend, who is also a stunt
man. suffers a near-fa1al fall
on B sel. {R)(60 min .)
110
'
t~~
(}) Best of Groucho
0
II,
1
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Sec. A,.,, q•lllpolls.
814-441-7133 otli,4-441·
1833j
.J
A winding path
to 10 tricks
deity
40 " Quiet on
ill SportsCenter
••·
••
1711-3190.
87
Guest host Joan Rivers·
guest is James Caan. (60
min .)
(]) Latonight America
® Taxi
G (jJ Nightline
• Twilight Zone
12:00 (I) Bumo l!o Allen
(!) Mezda SportaLook
(l) MOVIE : ' Fathom'
(}) Nlghtllne
(!] MOVIE : 'Lady L'
GJ Eva on Hollywood
•Gunsmoke
(MAXI Maxtrax
12:30 1J (]) ffi Late Night with
David Letterman Tonight" s
e
guest is Dick Cavett . (60
min.)
(I) Lo,. That Bob
ill College Basketboll:
lndione at Notre Dame
'
r
I I J" [ I XI
bara's guests tonigh t are
Sally Field . Farrah Fawcett
and Shelley Long. {CC)
CD Riptide
0 (()®I MOVIE : 'Blazing
Saddles'
Rotory or coblo tool drilling.
Moot wello comploted Hmo
day. Pump HI OS ond 101'\11coo. 304-896-3802.
Mrvtce. Authorized Singllt'
1830,
(llJ Nova {CCI "Jaws ; The
True Story .· The fact and fi ction surrounding the great
wh ite shark is C)(plored by
underwater cameraman AI
Giddings. {60 min.)
Tony and Angela use fals e
identities in order to land
dates w ith Intere st ing new
·Social prospects.
U8&o.oo. ·coli 814-7423008 or 814-742-2743.
1170 J ..P. tru!lk •. 4 Wheel
drlvo, good orid. 304-171·
Ad\/
liJ Nova
® Ill @ Billy Graham
houH colla. Coli ·304-6782398 or 814 -446-24114. ·
ciHrlng, etc. Coli Motor Cor
Brokers. 448-81192.
1170 lntomotlonal leo~
4x4. good condition.
11.100. 304·488·1 843.
WPBV
RON'S TeleviSion Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
1978 F-250 Ford-'' 4 ton with
utility bod. 8 cyl. power
brakeo, otd. ohift. Coli 448 8139 otter 6:30PM.
AM · FM. t?lo.oo firm .
304-8711·2248 otter 4 PM.
Kicks Off Nature Nite
...OUR PROBLEMS WITH
THOSE TWO "TROUBLE·
MAI<ERS \I.OULD BE
304-773-6131 .
Dozer Work by Ted Honno. ·
cond, 307 VI, auto trane.,
® . Nova Looks At Sharks
D .and M . Contractora. Remodeling, vinyl stding, pain·
ting!lndoor and outdoor,,
replacement windowa. Call
or daytime on weekends.
good
Jack 8)(periences jealousy
and
competition
wh en
Vic ky's old boyfriend arrives
in town and opens a restaur·
ant close to t he Bistro .
Christmas Bugs Bunny and
his fri ends tell the stories 'A
Christmas Carol' and 'Tw as
the Nioht RAfnrp n.~; .... ,... ...... ·
I ...... ·
owner.
Von.
8 :00 IJ (]) College BasketboH :
Kentucky at SMU
Cil Gentle Ben
(IJ MOVIE : ' Miracle on
34th Street'
(() Three's A Crowd (CCI .
Cil A-Team
0 ® Bugs Bunny's
Coli collect 1-1114-237·
0488. 9 o.m. to 5 p.m.
82,000 with oUde in 8'
comp0r, $1760 with out.
Call 614·245-6271 after ·8
1972 Chevy
F!E'AL
ESTATE. ID
FORGOTTEN,
Unconditional lifetime gu•·
rantH. local reference•
furniahed. Free ietimetea.
menta, footera, drlvew1y1.
septic tanka, landacapfng.
engine, 4 ap"d overdrive,
power ateering and brakes,
AH, YES _.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1978 Dodge 0160, 318
1972 Dodge convenlon 1977 F 160, ~ord pickup,
VB outo. runo good, body
von. aooto 8, 318 3 opd., PB, good. 304-676·11B22 .
good cond., 1900. Call . ~==;::==;::::;::;:;::::
614-388·8848. '
-::
Vans • 4 W . O.
83 Dodgo Omnl 4 opeod, 4 73
door, AM·FM co...tto. do·
luxe cloth Interior. Coli 114- 1879 Ford F-1110 28.000
2411· 111 31 or 81 4-2411 · mlloo. exc . cond.", u.eoo.
con 448-0888 .
961111 .
large beau.iful, 3 bdr., loll
of extras. Rocky Run Rd,
S280 mo . plus utilities. lola
Double wide 3 bdr .. 2 both. _58_18
_. -------4 mi. Nonh of Holzer. Never 1
New
efficiency apt with
before rented! Call 446garage, unfurn., applienc••
2566 otter 4 .
turn.. washer-dryer hook2 bdr. trailer mostly fur- up, private lot, $226 mo .•
nished in Rio Grande. Call water included. Cell 448-
Kyger Crook School di.,.
e100 dep,, e1eo mo. call
448·4008.
auto.
1982 S 10 Chevy Plck·up.
$200 mo., plus $100 dap- Barcus Richardo. 1-703 ooil. 314 3rd St. Kaneuga . _4_ 5_ 1_ -_2_5_9_1_._ _ _ _ __
1
Call 446-7473 .
2 bdr . mobile home at Kerr
luv
Tahoe package. V·l, 5
opead, AM -FM. tilt whool.
factory fiber glee• topper.
Very good condition.
Holly Pork wosher-dryer, ref. _4_4_6_·_
1 _2_3_2_.- - - - - &. dep . Adults only. Call 1
3 rooms with priavta bath.
614-387-7743 .
111. floor . Call446-2216 ,
furniohad . Call446-1232.
Home
Improvements
83
8293 elter 6PM .
2 bdr. trailer for rent. near
Mercerville. Call 614-266-
81
Auto Soleo. Bulovlllo Rd ..
GollipoRo. Dh. Call 4484782.
2 bdr. duplex ·ex. location In
town $260 mo .· with a
fenced backyard . Call 446 ~
for Rent
Trucks for Sale
gestad by the above cartoon.
[HBOI Braingames Worq
$4,700.00. Phone 304·
876-4230 during doy 304·
876-4863 in ovonlngo .
Largo rllund boleo of hay.
820 eoch . Call 446·1 062
attar 6pm.
71
Ac. AM,
rear dafmster. tilt, 304·676-
4 pigo. 6 weeks old, 10 Mile
Road. 2 mileo from Rt. 62 ,
female. 3 males. Call 4464043.
Shepherd pupo, 875 .00 .
Cell 614-986-3849.
Ava.
Printenswarhete: [
Now arrange the cif.ded letter~ to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
Tune
f.l) Rainbow Brite
Plaotorlng & Plootor repoir,
free ootlmoteo. Call 1114·
268-11B2.
more. Cell 446 -7340 attar
4PM .
tYEKTUR±
J I r: J
m Jeffersons
·
1976 Dodge Charger clean.
1976 Chevy Monzo 400.
THE 1!51\S&EST
F 16H .
PA~T OFTHE
7 :30 IJ (]) Tic Tac Dough
(l) Andy Griffith
Cil 0 (() Family Feud
.m Jeopardy
®l Wheel of Fortune
Ill I.W New Name That
trade for tools or other
245-6131 or 614-246·
9556.
9839.
rJ
I KJ
Newsholir
lent condition. Will Hll or
R. ogera Baaement
Waterproofing.
Alpine stereo, EPI apeaker.
mag wheels. tilt. crulae.
window tint . Call 814-388-
LIFTLE
®J News
Factory flberglooo top and
Cell 614-388-9857.
NADA retoil $16,850, likIng n 4, 900 or boot offer
(Muot aeiiJ. Cell Ron Saund ers or phone 446-9384.
KJ
I
News
Tonight
(I) Wheel of Fortuna
0 Cil Wheel of Fortune
(]) (llJ
MacNeil/Lehrer
rear Hat for Blazer, excel-
mi., auto door Iacko, white
For sale Gravely tractor,
elect. atart, 8 spd. ; rotary
motor, cultivator. sulky ,
Call 614· 388-9755 after
7PM .
Four Goodyoor whlto olclowoll radlolo whoolo. looking
wire whool cov1ro with lock.
Of 19SI Monte Corio 14110.
304'878-8421 7:30 o.m . to
9:00p.m .
....
NISHY
Rifleman
Indiana at Notre Dame
(IJ Gomer Pyle
lil Ill il}l Entertainment
landau top, dark red metal- 1 -----~-~--
llc, touch air cond.. wire
H &. S Home Improvement•
whoelo. light monitoring vinyl
a aluminum aiding,
syatem. 8-way power ~eats.
rear window defogger, AM- roofing, aeamleaa guttera,
storm windowa. overhang.
FM casiBtte radio with
Coli
814-367-0409 or 614concert speaker aound lVI· 367-7244.
tern. excellent condition,
niel puppies . Call 614-3889790 .
.
CHRISTMAS Puppios. AKC
WHO
• Accessories
ltemo. 304-896-31183.
1J (]) ffi NBC
Spor-tsCenter
Carol Burnett
G) il11 /IBC News {CCI
0 (j) ®l CBS Nows
(]) · Nightly
Business
Report
(llJ Body Electric
FJ) One Day it a Time
!MAXI
MOVIE:
'C.H.O.M.P.S.'
7 :00 IJ CIJ PM Magazine
(I) Here Come the Brides
(!) College Basketball:
. Auto Parts
roofl. 30 yeera eXperience,
spaci•!lzlng In built up roof.
oyotemo. 81;000.00. 304·
676-3184 or 2017 Madison
registered Cocker Spaniels.
buff in color, $200. Terms
available' for good homes.
EJtcallent Christmas gift.
76
1984 Buick Riverie 12,000
3 yearo . Call 614 -2866522.
446-3844 after 7 .
~~~~
apeed, new tlrea. Excellent
Hen'deraon .
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indc;tor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppiea:
AND IT CO NTA I ~!> COMPI.ETe
IN!I-TRU CT IONS FOR &UILDIIIJ6 THE<
PEFE~5~ SY$TEM l'/~" R~ ~U I LDIOI6
FOR THE GOVE~NMENT.
!>TOLE
IT t
1976 Voltowagon Beetle,
Apples. busheL $6 .00 : good condition . No rust, 1--~-------
fruits, vegetables. produce. good tires. 81200 .00 ot
candy and nuts. Jack's Fruit but otter. Call 614-992- Marcum Roofing • Spout:
Market, Route 315. 7312.
lng. Now inataHing rubber
AKC registered German
For ule: Fuel Chief fuel oil
furnace with new motor,
275 gallon oil tank. Good
1979 LTD 2 door. 302
engine, auto .. PS. PB. V-top.
AM·FM Storoo Tope. 1976
Mollbu Claooic. 350 engine.
PS, PB, auto. AC. AM radio.
Call614-387-7760.
V-8 , auto, alum . slots. much
Pure bred Rat Terrier pupa .
Mobile home new parts and
doors. Inside, outside. storm
doors, trailer windows .
Autos for Sale
., ,
fJl Diff' rent Strokes
(])
(!)
(l)
(})
1970 Chevelle SS 464. 4
55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
windows . lintels . etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
71
10
. ___
M--
(}) Dr. Who
6 :30
l>yHenriArnoldlltldllobLao
I
I AGGYB
(llJ 3 -2-1 , Contact (CCI
1980 KDX 400 Kovuaoki .
Good condition. 11100.00.
Call 614-9811 -3949.
Musical
Instruments
.
(I) Hot Potato
(!) Mazda SPortolook
(l) Lucy Show
CAPTAIN EASY
jlllntATICIWIIII.EDWOIIDGAIIE
UIIICfornt>ll-""" Ju-.
o mCiim D CIJ® e
~ News
~------....,r-------~-1 ==--.,.....---=--~
$500.00. 304-675-2464.
Brlarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed groomiog .
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa cilities. English Cocker Spa-
Mobile home lot, $75 water
paid, 4th & Neil, Gallipolia .
pets. adults only. Dop& Ref.
required. Call446-1519 .
adult only. Call 446·0338.
675 -5364.
King wood & coal stove.
Valley bumper pool table.
-~-------lc -
Furnished apt., nax1 door to
library. one profeuional
Quilt, large 80x89 inches.
nice Christmas gift . 304·.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
Coli 446 -2004 .
Oownstaira. 2 rooms &
bath, furnished . clean, no
1 bdr apt .. 2 bdr apt ..
8150-f250 . Call 304-676 7263 675-5104 or 675·
5386 .
lamps. 5x8 outbuilding .
304-675-5428 after 4:00.
Shop. 430 2nd . Ava., Galli ·
polis, 446-0840 .
46 Spaca for Rent
1- - -- - - -- - -
5.
odulti only . Call 448-0338 .
31"91.
Chest of Drawera. 1 pair
6:00
11.
one ~ to tach aq-.llre, to lorm
four orCIInory ·
EVENING
1981 K E 100 .KowoHkl.
900 mlleo . Excellent condl·
tlon. 1460.00. · Coli 614992 -18110 during· doy ond ·'
6.14·982~311171n evenlnga.
----
675 -6370.
304-882-3224.
0840 .
Call 446-4222 betwaon 9 & 614-992 -7479 .
Nicely furnished modern
mobile home in city., 1 or 2
For sale or rent, stage
lighting sys~em complete
with road casea. 1-304·
446 -0501 . .
Call 614.-446-0766 . ·
513 Third Ave. two-1 bdr. COUNTRY MOBILE Home
opts, S!arting $135 to 81 66 Park, Route 33, North of
mo . Water included. dep req .
Patch Preemie, $76.00firm .
ftft~rut
. !i)
Ill 'il
~ -~ ~~ e
12/4/84
811 Yomoho 200·4 whulor
with onow plow, helmet,
bloda. N-. moving ewoy.
11885.00. Coli 614-88211882.
Phone 304-882-2904.
Cabbage Patch Dollo. loto of
crafts. phone 304-675 -
Television
Viewing
19B1 Vomeho 60 1360. Coli
448-0338 .
\~
Original Colaco Cabbage
The Daily
Ohio
1981 Hondo CR80R .
bought now 1982. ex.
cond.. e1100. Coli 448·
31114.
JL~-~~
Model M 14, Bell Sow. oaw
mill 40 in blede. 2 yro old.
$2,000 . 00 . 304-67"6 7758.
Thrtte badroQm, one bath
and furnished . Call 614992·6908 .
One bedroom apt, in Henderson, 304-675-1972 after
2356 .
iacketo. lnoulatod coverollo
$27 .50 . Sam Somarvllla'oEAST Ravenowood-ONLY
Fri. Sat. Sun 1:00-7'00 PM .
lather dayo efter 5:30 pmJ.
RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Usod slovos
nished. 304-675-5051 .
Three bedroom 14x70 all
electric. 1 2X28 built on
room. wood burner, very
clean. some furniture, utility
building. one acre. $200.00
month. $100 .00 depoait .
Jerrys Run Road. 304-675-
ormv
8ft. pool table. 314 inch slate.
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221.
.
675-3000.
SURPLUS·OENIM Jockots
821 .00. camouflogo
675 -6483 or 675 -1450.
Phone 304-773-5430.
5423 .
December 4, 1984
Motorcyclaa
1813 Hondo ATC {3
whoolerl. llko now. d... I
tronflr with 4 . - trona.
Uoad v..-y little. CoM 441·
9314. Aoklng eBQO.
houae coal 1 to 7 1on. call
304-675-6517 .
Two bedroom apartment .
dep .. f196 mo. Call 4462236 or 446 ·2581 .
42 Mobile Homes
Whirlpool
hwasher. $50.00 . Call614992-5650 during day and
12x65 mobile home with
tip -out: · 2 bedrooms. furnished with washer and
dryer. $200 plus utilities,
water and garbage fur-
plus deposit . Call
Wehe
Portable
and refrigerators. Compare
our prices, save today.
614-949 -2801 .
Three bedroorn . bath and '12
2133 .
Batty Mercer.
ties paid. Call
2 bedroom trailer above
Kawasaki shop in Pomeroy.
Uvingroom furniture . exc .
cond. Please contact, 446-
Pickens used furniture . 304·
Nice efficiency apartment.
Suitable for one or two
top road . $160 .00 per
month
dop. Call 446-3474 altar 4 .
at 40588 Kingsbury Road.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 614-
downtown Pomeroy . Furn.
or unfurn . $225.00 plus
utilities. Coll614-992-2381
day or 614-992 -6723 night.
Two bedroom in Eastern
School District with black
Brookside Apart ments 1
bdr. laundry, water-trash
paid, no pets, $217 mo. plus
74
DICK TRACY
County Appliance, inc .
Good uud appliances ·end
Ing end large tobacco tMse.
KIT 'N' CARLYL~ ®by Larry Wrltht
•
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's , etc. Single letters ,
apostrophes the iength and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPI'OQU<YI'ES
OWQOF
H PM R A I
PZBNZRU
GY
OZBC. -
HPGRU
PH
12-4
UI
GR
XHPOHLHW
X C F Z R T,
OFC
HWB
UWHKZHR
Yealft'day'a ~: TilE MISER DOES NOT
POSSESS GOLD; GOUl Pfi'ISES.'ES lUM, BUT mE
MEEK pn<;,CIFS! IT. - THE BffiLE
'
�Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel
Tu~v.
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Tainted beef puts
indictments against.
meat wholesalers
PHILADELPIDA (AP) -Thousands of schoolchildren , hospital
patients and Air Force personnel in
five states ate "putrid and decomposed" beef butchered from dying
and diseased cows, a fede ral grand
jury concluded .
During the 3\<2-ye;tr cons piracy,
the ca nle went from f;trmers to a
pet -fOOd comp4ny to a meat
processor to wholesalers, who
shipped tainted hamburger patties
a nd stew beef to Pennsylvania, New
Jersey, Delaware, Virginia and
Arkansas, according to a 31-count
indictment handed up Monday.
Federal officials said they could
not determine whether the m eat had
caused any illness.
Each week "from October 198J to
Februar;•1984, theprocessorsolqup
to 15,000 pounds of rpeat that
"consisted in whole or in part of
filth~·. putrid, and decomposed
substances and was unsound, unhealthful, unwholesome and otherwise unlit for human food," sa id Joel
F riedman, director of the Philadelphia Strike Force In · charge of
organized crime.
The indictment named Vincent
Pet-ry Sr. . 50, ofWest Chester ,owner
of the Summit Beef Co. in LinwOOd;
Berwin Taylor. 63, of Chester
Springs. owner ofTaylor Pet FOOd in
Downingtown; his son, Wayne
Ta ylor, 34, of Downingtown; and
Dominic lmpagliazzo, 68. of
Chester.
The four were charged with
conspiracy to sell uninspected meat
for huma n consumption. If convicted, they face prison terms of up
to 53 years and fines of upto$170,00l.
The indictment described Taylor
pet food as a "4-D operator," a
company that bought, slaughtered,
processed, prepared, sold and
transported "dead, dying, disabled
and diseased animals and parts of
carcasses of animals that died
otherwise than by slaughter."
According to Friedman, the
Taylors a llegedly acquired dead
cattle, carcasses of ca ttle and meat ·
from cattle not yet inspected by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture and
arranged to have the meat brought
to Ta·y lor Pet-Food.
"The Taylors then boned the mea t
from these sources, then sold it to
Perry for resale for human consumption," Friedm an said.
The live cattle the Taylors bought
had been treated with veterinary
drugs shortly before they were
slaughte r ed and were processed in
unsanitary conditions , the indict·
ment said.
Jmpagllazzo picked upthe m eatin
unmarked vans owned by Perry a nd
transported it to Summit Beef,
where the meat was processed as
ground beef, beef patties and stew
beef, the Indictment said.
Summit Beef falsely labeled the
meat containers with "USDA In spected" before selling the beef to
wholesalers, who had contracts with
Veterans Adminstra tion hospitals
in Little Rock, Ark., and Salem, Va.,
with four Pennsylvania state mental institutions and with Delaware
school districts in Claymont, New
Castle and Wilmington, f riedman
said.
The w holeSalers also supplied
Dover Air Force Base in Delaware
and McG!Iire Air Force Base in New
J ersey, he said.
Cont~olling board
Schroeder's recovery
has been remarkable
chairman and medical director.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) Twelv;e days ago, William J.
Schroeder told Dr. William DeV·
SchrOeder couldn't lift his head from
1ies, the surgeon who put the heart in
a pillow. Now, with a mechanical Schroeder's chest, that he felt
heart beating "like everything," he
"fantastic'' with " no pain, no
says he feels fantastic and doctors ·discomfort," and said of the heart,
are moving on to study how he'll
"It's just a-pumping like
react to drugs that affect the everything."
The 10-mlnute conversation with
circulatory sYStem.
A month before a Jarvik-7 DeVrtes; w ho led the Implant team,
a rtificial heart was Impla nted in was videotaped at the heart institute
Schroeder 's chest, tests on his Sunday, one week after Schroeder
crtppled heart showed " practically became 'the second human recipient
no m_otion. The heart basically of a permanent , artificial heart.
didn't contract a t a ll," said Dr.
Schroeder was being kept in the
.D avid Dageforde, a heart spcclallsi cardiac care unit as a precaution,
at Humana Heart Institute.
Dageforde sa id. On Sunday,
"It's quite impressive to see all Schroeder sat in a chair, stood,
these m arked c hanges a ft er weighed himself a nd "kidded
s urgery, ... to remem ber t ha t, on around," indicating he probably
Thanksgiving Day, he couldn't even was well enough to be moved out of
lift his head off the plilow," the unit, he said.
Dageforde said.
·
· Schroeder spent another hour
Monday on the portable power pack
that can keep his m echanical heart !.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..
bea ting up to three hours at a time. ·
SChroeder's condition was up+~......!..
graded to serious from critica l, said
Dr. Allan M. Lansing, the institute's
instead of a g rant.
'
Hinig sa id assistance from the
state's industr ial inducem ent fu nd
usua lly is given in the form of
low -interest loans.
" I just don't understand the
rationale," Hinig said, after being
told, in effect, that knowledgeable
state and company officia ls were
not on hand to explain the proposa L
Technically, thecont rolling board
deferred action by refusing to add
the request to Is Monday agenda as
a n emergency item. lt probably will
IJP resubmitted as a regularagenda
ite m at the board's next meeting in
two weeks. officia ls sa id.
Premix-EMS proposes to use the
$500,000 as part of a $2.5 million
package to purchase and remodel
the former Ray-OVac ba ttery
m a nufactu ring facility. The company makes rear panels for certain
types of new a utomobiles.
In other business, the boa rd:
-Appro,·<?<:! an indus trial inducem l' nl loan of $.'J4 ,000 to a compa ny
owned by Ben E. Espy, a member of
HEAP allocations
up in Meigs L.u•utu·v
TilE BIG HOUSE :- Chef Salvatore Pascluto puts the tuilshlng
touches on a giant gingerbread house In the lobby of a Boston Hotel
Monday. The hotel's Christmas gift to Its nelghlx.rhood took 300 pounds
of gingerbread, 250 pounds of icing and $1,100 worth of candy. (AP
Laserphoto).
PUCO council checks
vacancy applications
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Mem bers of the Public Utilities
Nominating Council spent eight
hours sifting through applicants for
Columbus City Council, to help a seat on utilities commission , with
purchase a n existing office building m ore inteiViews pla nned for later
in Colwnbus.
this week.
_ -AuthoriiedtheexpositlonscomThe 12-membernominating counmisslontoenterintoacontract with ell interviewed e ight candidates
Rackoff E ngineers, Inc., Columbus,
Monday to flU the seat left vacant
to replace the roof on the Multiwhen PUCO chairman Michael Del
P urposes Building on the Ohio State
Bane died last month. Among those
Fa irgrounds.
inteiViewed wasstatelotteryDirec-OKed an lndustrialcommission tor Thomas Chem a, considered to
contract with Northeast Midwest
be a leading candidate.
Associates, Cleveland, for a "com Chem a said after the interview
prehemsive evaluation plan " for a · tha t the process was "very interestproposed Walker Rehabilita tion
ing from my point 6f\1ew. I learned
Center in Cleveland. The contract is
a lot just by listening. to their
for$97,650.
questions."
- Authorized a Department of
Chema sa id running the lottery
Natural Resourej's contract for and deciding utilities cases have
$42.965 with. Michael Baker Ill,
Beaver , P a. , for additional work on
the Village of Barton Reclamation
P roject in Belmont County.
many similarities.
"The skills required a re close.
Both a re in the forefront of public
perception and visibility, " he said .
....1-E1·
.;.,::
·..;··-·.'
,JiW.
"WE'RE LOADED
WITH THEM AT
BARG~IN PRICES."
·GENERAL
TIRE
SALES
"Wh ere the Rubber
Mee ts the R oad."
N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. 99.2-7161
'
The more,
the merrier!
112SMain Street
Milton, w. va.
120 W. Second Sf reef
Vlrellston, Ohio
ONE STOP SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
ALL STORES OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!
FREE PARKING!
Ohio Rt. 7 East
Wish everyone w ell
th is Christmas with
our Ha llmark. Big
Va lu e Assortme nt-36
assorted ca rds a nd
enve lo pes for o nly
SET OF 100
$449
GIANTRSF'
O
ot
i
FILLED
=
5 WAY FLASHING
When One Goes Out The
Others Remain Lighted
() 1$84 Hallmark Cards, lnc.
Among the others inteiViewed
were 11lomas Creed, an energy
consultant from Struthers; former
state Rep. Ron Nabakowski of
Amherst, now a Lorain County
commissioner ; and Nathan GrundPOMEROY OHIO
stein, a management professor a t
Case Western ReseiVe Univesity.
Ohio Supreme CoUI1 Jus tice T~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
J ames P. Celebrezze, who was
defeated In the Nov. 6 electio n, is
· WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
scheduled for an inteiView F riday.
Michael Adler, chairman of the
nominating council, said the panel
will subm it four names for the
Dining Room Only
Served with
$53,00-a-year post to Gov. Richard
Mashed
Potatoes,
Celeste on F riday.
The governor has 30 days to
Choice of Salad, Roll & Drink
approve a candidate, whose .name
would then be sent to the s ta te
Senate for confirmation. Celeste
also could reject the slate and
CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
r~req~u~es~t~a~n~
e~w~o~ne~,~s=a=id~P~U~C~Oj~~P~H~·~9~9~2~·5~4~3~2~~~~~~~~~~P~o~m~e~ro~y~,~O=.H~-~
Todd Ambs.
CHRISTMAS
STOCKING
FILLED TO THE BRIM WITH 25 OR MORE
EXCITING TOYS FOR BOYS AND GIRLS
.ONE WILL BE GIVEN AWAY IN
EACH FRUTH STORE DEC. 17th
• You May Register Daily
• No Purchase Necessary
• Winner Will ,Be Notified
WE ·CELEBRATE THE
GRAND OPENING
OF OUR NEW PROCTORVII.LE OHIO STORE
WITH OUR ANNUAL
LAYAWAY
NOW FOR
AT ALL FRUTH PHARMACY
CHRISTMAS
COKE • SPRITE
·DIET COKE
2 Liter
OHIO STORES
W. VA. STORES
36''
JUMBO ROLL
OF
CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP
WITH 12 COLOR
COORDINATED BOWS
IN CORE
Santa Says:
BARGAIN
•CHANGE-OVER
TIRES
•USED TIRES
*TRADE-IN Tl RES
State Rep. J olynn Boster said
.today tha t allocations for emer·
gency HEAP in Meigs County have
been increased by $50,000.
"Emer;,gency HEAP will provide
up to mJ to any qualifying low
income hou sehold in • order to
prevent winter heating emergencies," Boster said .
The new allocatlon r aises the total
funds provided by the 1984-85
Emergency HEAP P rogram to
$150,00.
In addition to emergency funding,
regular HEAP is available to pay
1442 percent of an applicant 's billed ·
usage for Dec!'mber , January a nd
February . Applications are ava ilable through jan 31, 1985.
Boster reported that as of last
Wednesday, 1,375 applicants have
been declared eligible for regular
HEAP in Meigs County ..
Huntington, w. Va ,
786 N. Second St reel
M ddleport, Ohio
Ir-;===========::~:;::::::::::::~::::::;1
,.
ATTENTION
HUNTERS/
Jackson Pike .
. Gallipolis, Ollio
•
reconsiders>grant
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) Members of the state controlling
board may take a closer look in two
weeks a t a proposed $500,000
development department grant to
help a Lancaster firm expa nd.
T he board, while not rejecting the
proposal. ra ised questions Monday
abOut the plan which officials of
Prem ix-EMS Inc . have said would
preserve 600 jobs and create 50 new
ones.
Rep. William E. Hinlg, DNew
Philadelphia, and Sen. William F.
Bowen, D-Cincinna U, among others, balked when a department
spokesman was unabi.e to explain
why the litm was not given a loan
Decmnber 4, 1984
a nd sure to be popular o n her hand for
many, many years to come . Our craftsme n
have unlocked the secret o f mo unting 7
diamonds together to give the m ood and
maqic of o ne big diamo nd .
QUANTITIES LIMITED
ONLY
$9995
MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY
OTHER CLUSTERS STARnNG
AT
$7995
INGELS FURNTURE
and JEWELRY
106 N. 2nd, MIDDLEPORT
992·2635
"'Give a gift
subscription to the •..•
Daily Sentinel
'
It s a great way to say
Merry Christmas.''
.
A subscription to the Daily Sentinel will convey you~ best wishes
every day of the·week all year long.
·
·
Send tlte Daily Sentinel to your friends who have moved away to
college students, or to friends and relatives away in the service.' .
Add the perfect gift to the top o-f your shopplng·ust and call 992·2158
lor more information today.
.
.
To Be Given AWO( In Eod> Fruth Store On
Dec. 17th · No Purchase Naccesarry·Courtsey Of
CoCa Cola-Win- Wi II Be Notified.
,.,
.3 99
Sq~~re
~
Feet
·
~
J
:p:
9·
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
12. December
Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Newspaper
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
December 4, 1984