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Pllga-12-The Daily Sentinel
Area deaths
Ernest D. Gorrell
Ernest D. Gorrell, 29, CoolvUie,
dled unexpectedly at his home on
Monday.
He was Pc>rn at Parkersburg,
W.Va ., a son of, Howard and Elva
Martin Gorrell, Coolville. He was a
veteran of the U.S. Army.
Surviving In addition to his
parents are a brother, Richard of
Rome, N.Y.; four sisters, Donna
Henderson of Grove City, Fla.,
Karen Walraven of Little Hocking,
Joyce Mullins of Alba ny, and ,J a n ~t
Gorrell of Little Hocking; his
maternal grandfather, Delma s
Martin of Coolville: and 11 nieces
and nephews.
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
Wednesday in White Funer al Home,
Coolville, with the Rev. Eric Starr
officiating. Burial will be In Torch
Baptist Church Cemetery. Friends
may call at thcfuneral home after4
p.m. today.
AnnaM. Lee
Mrs. Anna Mabel Lee 92
formerly of Darwin, died Monday at
the Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Mrs. Lee was born in Bedford
Township of Meigs County on April
28, 1892, a daughter of the late
Charles Andrew and Ida Mae
Whaley Hines.
She was a member of the
Bearwa iJow Church of Christ,
Hemlock Grange, Pomona and
state and national granges. Mrs,
Lee was a former member of the
Walk-In Garden Club,
Surviving are two daughters and
sons-in-law, Jean and Garry M,
Eckard of Carmel, Ind., and
Maurita and Roy E . Miller of
Chester; fou r grandsons, Gary Guy
Eckard of New York Cit v, David
Carl Eckard of CrawfordSville, inct.,
Johii Lee Eckard of Danville. Ky,
and James Bernard Eckard of
Lexington, Ky. ;·anda granddaugh·
ter , Nancy Miller of Huntington,
W.Va .
.
Besides her parents, Mrs. Lee was
preceded In death by h~>r husband:
Guy W. Lee, In 1983; by four sisters.
Ruby Mulligan, Ina Jeffers, Hazel
Carol Hines <Uld Lena Hamms; and
by two brothers, Clyde Hines and
OmerHines.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday In Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home. with burial
in the Burlingham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 24 and 7-9 p.m. Friday.
"Military engineer' job created
Bottom.·line
Oil well blast
injures 5 men
ROUND TOP, Texas lAP) - A
runaway oil well exploded as
workmen tried to bring It under
control, burning five men and
sending a torrent or' flameS high
enough to be sa>n 15 mUes away,
witnesses said.
The well continued to burn
through the night (lespite flreflght·
lng efforts, authorities said. Red
Adair, a Houston wild well expert,
was called In .to help subdue the oil
<Uld gas well, said Angela McCaa, a
spokeswoman lor Cedar Hill Petrole um Co., the Bryan company that
owns the well.
Four of the men suffered second·
and third-degree bums over ~ to 30
percent of thelr bodies. officials
said. They were flown by helicopter
to Houston 's Hermann Hospital,
where they were In stable condition.
A filth man was Instable condition
at Brackenridge Hospital In Austin
with second-degree bums.
The well experienced a rapid tise
In pressure Thursday as It was
'drllled past 11,98) feet, authorities
said.
The oil company reported an
emergency to the Texas Railroad
COjllmission and on Friday the state
agency declared the well a "controlled blowout"
'"",
,,, ,,
PUll
Gal.
Forty-two members and guests
wen• on hand for the annual
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club
Christmas party held Friday night
at the Middleport MasonicTemple.
MembersofEvangelineChapter, ,----------------..:....------~
Order of Eastern Star, served
dinner after which time a merit
award from the club was presented
to Charles E . Biakeslee In recognl·
Uon of his dedicated and · unselfish
service Ill the club and the
community.·
President Bill Francis was In
.
charge of the meeting. Francis, a
florist , provided decorations and
polnsetrias which were awarded as
attendance prizes to Alwilda
Werner. Kim Blower. Mary
Pickens, Amy Luckeydoo. Lucille
Theobald , Betty Fultz, Mary Bowen
and Patty Pickens. Treats were
provided by Bill and Kim Blower.
Santa presented gifts to children
attending. Officers were given a
vote of thanks for their outstanding
work during the year by President
Francis.
~ Ch1i1tms1
.
m
~
$.
•Quality Merchandise
•Friendly Salespeople
•Plenty of Free Parking
.*Convenient Layaway &
Credit Plans
*Open Nights Until 8:00
Christmas Sale Prices On
Many Quality Gifts
Weather
Rain likely tonight. Lows in the
mid 40s. Rain Wednesday. Highs
betwe~>n 50 and 55 but turning colder
during the day. Thechanceofralnis
70 percent tonight and &! percent
Wednesday.
Shoppint Cente1
~ r-Trs---~~------~
Extended Ohio Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
A chance of snow flurries In the
north Thursday, Fair Friday and
Saturday. Highs In the30sThursday
and the 40s Friday and from the mid
30s to the low 40s Saturday. Lows
· through the period mostly In the 20s.
I
Lottery
II
TUESDA~ THRU SATURDA~ . I
. . 6:00 TO 7:30
•
·--------------------·
'
CLEVELAND (API The
winning number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 551. In
the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 4995.
HUE'S HOW TO DO IT: FIRST, coma in and co'mplttt
our Pre-Piannifll Form with our htlp. The form covers
all of the above-mentiOfltd thoietsand muy others.
SECOND. you will receive copies of tht fornt for lift·
kHpln1 with your lawyer, ~ecountant, dlsienatlll esllttldmlnlllralo! or family mtntbtr. THIRD. a copy rematns with uswhtch you may rniew from llmt to time
and updllt 11 JOU require.
·
(11.)
-•a•t
IOOLlf'!,.IIT, OHIO
GI.IIC
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Register To
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BUTTERMILK
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1 duding all 16 oz. Pop.
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PRE-PAYMENT OPTIONS: Stvtral prt-payiWIIt plans
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prt·pllnnlna does not mHn prt·Piyment. Stop by for
full dtlallt. · .
s,,;, Plfi...AH,,;,. ,, o,,.,
JAMES SIMPSON
BILL BLOWER
o.,,
POP
!~==-~~!!~:::.:.J Baking Soda .................. JA.cu..4'9c
FRESH PEANUTS 2 Liter Pop ...........UWA~9~~..... 89<
PLAIN & SALTED
lnst. Vanilla Pudding ..H':.9lv3 f$1
$)29 LB. Marshmallow Creme....U.Plv...9.9c
Frosted .Pop Tarts ........u.•u....69<
JELLO
301.$1
10115
Chocolate S ru .........1Mu....89 (
ICE
75(
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CLEANSER
14
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4 FOR
FREE
PAR/1./NfJ
Merry Christmas from
C.K. Supermarket Employees ·
WE WIU CLOSE AT 5:30P.M. ON CHRISTMAS EVE
AND WILL BE OPEN WEDNESDAY AT 9:00A.M.
$299 . liml12 ~
--~!~~~·!...1!:2.!:!!__
C·K CAMPBEll'S 101/• oz. C·K .
CHICKEN NOODl£ SOW
3 $1 ~0 ~.;, ~
Fot
12-21-11
'
2% MILK
I
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We Accept
"WIC" Coupons
!u~~~
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$119
Plus Oep.
C--K_c~l!".!':f!r!_!!:!.4!4____ J- __ _:!!'!n.!x!r!! 12·24-84
ARMOUR (HICKEN C·K I C·K
BIDSEY-.E----C~-~~--1
VIENNA SAUSAGE
5 OZ.
3/ $1
Umir 3
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1
COOL WHIP
1 oz.
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Limit 1
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COUPONS
UP TO soc
51 c TO 99c BDIIIiED FOR $1.00
·
$1.00 AND OYERRaiE.D FOR FACE VALUE
fHUISDAY·F-AY·SAtiiDAY...IOIKI COiPONS-MANUFACYUIIR'S ONLY
Effective
c.
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ON THE "T"
IN MIDDLEPORT ·
"FREE PARKING"
OPEN DAILY I SUNDAY -lA I to 9 p 11
"No Sal11 To Dealers" We Rtltrvt tbt lllllt to Limit Q1antltltl and 'correct'Printina Errors
Not
lor Typo&raphical Errors - We Accept Food Stlmpund "WIC" Coupons
No. 176
'P omeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wedneiday, December 19,1984
Copyrighted 1984
2 Soctiono. 1 8 P•goo
26 Cents
A Multlmedl• Inc. N_.,.....,
Jaymar oWner dOnateS golf course to cOunty
By NANCY l'OACJIAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
With no strings atiached, area businessman Jay
HaU Jr. has donated the Jaymar Golf Course, near
Pomeroy, to Meigs County.
The , Meigs ,County Commissioners announced at
Tuesday's regular meetll!g that they had accepted
HaU's generous contributlon. Approximately 70 acres
of land ·are Involved In the transaction.
Commissioner Rich. Jones, speaking on behalf of
the board of commissioners ·said, "This Is another
prime example of a very outstanding man continuing
to try to assist Meigs County and Its people.
"In accepting this contribUtlon from JayliaU Jr., I
might also state that -the Meigs County Commissioners have no thoughts of operating the golf .course
themselves. We will be the owners <Uld as such will
lease 'the course to Bill Childs and hope that under his
capable management It will grow and expand to
become a facUlty of which Meigs County can be •
proud.
"And In addition, the board of commissioners will
be lool!lng Into the development of a complete
· recreational complex for the county. Possibilities
might Include tennis courts. a swimming pool, picnic
area, and any other facUlties that might be avallable
through state and federal grants.
·~we are thankful for the contribUtion and hope In
years to come we can look back on this day as the
beginning of a fin~> recreational facility for the citizens
of Meigs County," Jones <;o!lcluded.
The golf course was begun by John Duerr
Duerr
approximately 28 years ago .
operated the
course for a period of time and was followed by Hugh
Custer, who operated the course untu 1!r19, when Hall
pure~ the property. Since then the course has ·
been under the direction of Childs.
In discussing the benefits of this gift, Childs briefed
the commissioners on his plan tor the continued
Improvement of the golf course, hopefully with the aid
of state or federal grants lor a complete recreational
complex.
. A l9llJ appraisal of the property, obtained from the
Meigs County auditor, places a truevalueot$82,9\IDon
the golf course.
Sine~' that time, many improvements have been
made, thereby Increasing the value substantially.
Included in those Improvements are remodeling of
the Clubhouse, locker rooms, renewing of the tees <Uld
fairways and rebuilding of the greens.
Hall credits ChUds for the renovations at Jaymar,
stating that the improvements are the result of Child's
work, foresight and planning. .
At this time, 131 golfers hold memberships with
J aymar. Childs noted that a successful program for
junior golfers has also been in existence atJayinartor
the last three years. '
· ·
Pomeroy attorney Bernard F ultz handled the
property transaction transfer on behalf of Hall.
Meigs County Commissioners have already been In
contact with representatives from Buckeye Hills
Regional Development Center In an effort to begin
securing grant money for development of the golf
course area.
....
~---
Government lists
disposal sites
Growth set at
2.8 percent
By MA'JT l' ANCEl'
-Yucca Mountain on the edge of
. A!IIOCiated Press Writer
NeWs Air Force Base and the
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Nuclear Weapons Test Site In
government was telling three U.S.
srut)lem•Nevada near the Callfar·
communities today, that they stand
nla bOrder. .
·
'the greateSt chance of getting ·a
.-The J;:nergy Department's
b;lckyard neighbor that vlrtuaUy no
Hahford
reservation
just northwest
,
.
I
one wants.,.. a permanent gtaveslte· · of Rlchl<md,
Wash. .
., .
for highly radioactive nucb!ar
-Davis C<Ulyon just outside the
wastes. •
·
bound!lfY Of Canyonlands National
FoUowing years or preliminary
Park tit southeastern Utah.
studies, the Department of Energy
-Richton Dome near the town of
was scheduled to releaseforthetirst
Richton, Miss.
time its formal assessment ranking
Though the assessments will not
the best of nine sites In six states for
be Issued In final form untll late
burying 70,000metric tons of atomic
sprtng, thedrattversionsef!ectlvely ·
waste.
.
eliminate from consideration four '
Although a final site wUI not be
other sites - one each In Utah,
chosen until 1990, the 15,000 pages of
Mlssl5slppl, Texas and Louisiana.
draft environmental assessments
The.soux:ce. whospokeonlyonthe .
Indicate which locaftties are precondition that he not be Identified,
ferred by federal ottlclals.
said ~was unable to'dlscern from
''They Clearly ,show which three
the ranking of each site In varioUs
we consider to be the top-ranked,
categories jusC which three are
plus two additional ones that we
·~nsldered · the overall best of the
vtew as the top alternatives,"
five.
Ginger King, an Energy Depart·
The top three sites, ·under a
ment spokeswoman, said this we~>k.
tentatlve timetable that calls for
A source with a copy of the
President Reagan to approve them
relevant draft chapters in the
In July or August, will be subjected
documents said the five sill's which
to four years of extensive drilling,
emerge as the top candidates are:
geological and hydrological studies
-Deaf Smith County about 30
at a cost of a half billion dollars for
miles west of Amarillo In the Texas
each locatlon.
Panhandle.
NEW OWNERS - On Tuellday .afternoon, on
behalf of tlie citizens ol Meigs County, Cclnuniallonen, left to right aroond the table, Mamdng Roash,
David Koblenlz and RIChard Jones accepted a deed
for the Jaymar GoU Course property, wtallngan area
of approximately 70 acres. The golf course, a gift to
recreailonal complex, dependlag upon the avallahlllty ol ROVennment p-ant& PQ!IIeroy attorney Bernard
Fultz, seated next to Jones, made the lranaactlon on
hehaU of Hall. BW Childs, sealed beside Fullz, wiD
continue to opera!Allhe nine-hole golf course hy lease
from the coumy.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
economy, as sluggish at yearend as
It was robust when 1984 began, is
expanding at an annual rate of just
2.8 percent In the final quarter,
preliminary government figures
Indicated today.
Growth for all of 1984 will still be
very strong at about 6.7 percentthe biggest gain since a similar
, Increase in 1955 - as had been
assured by the surging expansion In
the first halfoftheyear , according to
the Commerce Department report.
However, In the fourth quarter
alone, the economy grew at a pace
Utile better than the 1.6 percent
annual rate of the third quarter,
.which Itself had been the slowest
since. 1982. The figures are for
lnOation-adjustei:l gross national
product, the broadest gauge of U.S.
economic activity.
Today's report revised the third·
quarter figure downward from ~hi> ·
1.9 percent rate estimated one
month earlier.
Business expansion since mid·
year has been so meager that some
economists have dubbed current ,
conditions a ''growth recession"little better than the decllnlng GNP
that would mean an actual business
recession.
the county from Jay HaD Jr., maybeclevelopedlnloa
Tentative pay raise bill compromise ·reached
Your Choict
LG. BAG
E ERIC.
I
Plus .Dtp.
GEM, SIO & DOUII£ COlA
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CANDY OF ALL
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COUPON .
Fil. I. $11, OWIJ
$149
$149
'12 GAl. Sl3 9
12 GAl. $169
$)39 EACH• I . R.C. COLA
II 816PACK
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8 PACK 16 OZ.
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WIZARD CHRISTMAS
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VIT. D MILK
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3 Las.
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LUNCH PIES
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Oranges
Tangelos
Grapes
Appoes
Tomatoes
NEED NOT
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160Z.
loou · Cucumbers
P11due1
Bananas
3Lss.$1
I
Vol.34.
•
at y -. enttne
,, ,,.
FALTER'S
TOBACCO
Did you know you can pre-plan funeral services at no
charat7 You can. It will cost you nothing at all to make
your wtshu known as to your choice of servica e~sket
music. specific rudings from Scripture - even ar:
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Fann bureau chief
Alexander loses
POTATOES
FRESH '
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m Make Elhe1Feldt You1
Doi;
CIGARETTES
BLEACH
5
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6 89(
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Emergency runs
Admitted - Evelyn Hughes,
Pomeroy; Sarah Keeder, Middleport; Truman Priddy, Rutland;
Howard Barrett, McArlhur; Ro·
nald Sykes, Portland; John Motley,
Middleport.
Dlscharg~.V _Mabel Brace.
49(
See Pap I
,,
EGGS
· POPCORN
2 ..·
Ve,erans Memorial
cargo,
News stories which "speculate"
on the payload wlll be Investigated
b;Y the Defense Department as a
breach of national security, Abel,
Air Force director of public affairs,
said.
· If ..
TOBACCO
, Five calls were answered by local
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. lAP )
Payton, 36, ·born In Rock Island,
unlts
Monday, the Meigs County
- A new breed of astronaut, the IlL, has been working lor several
Emergency
Medical Services.
military engineer, will handle a
months with the satellite which is to
reports.
classified satellite on the next space be carried on next month'sfllght. He
, At 10:38 a.m., Tuppers Plains
shuttle flight, a mission considered
will join four career National · treated Shirley Jones in Tuppers
so sensitive that even the countdown
Aeronautics <Uld Space Adminlstra·
Plains with no transport required;
will be secret.
lion astronauis aboard the shuttle
at 2:05p.m., Rutland took Truman
Air Force Maj . Gary P ayton is the Dlsc'overy.
Priddy from Beech Grove Road to
first person selected for spaCI' flight
The Pentagon and NASA briefed
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra·
from the Manned Space Fllght
reporters on the flight Tuesday,
cuse
at 4: 26 p.m. took Bob Willis
Engineer Corps, an elite team of discussing Payton's role and out lin·
from
Syracuse
to Veterans Memormilitary speciallsts formed to
lng new and highly restrictive
Pomeroy
at 4:30 p.m. took
Ial;
deploy, operate and refurbish ground rules for covering military
from Pomeroy
Missy
Hammond
defense payloads.
shuttle missions.
Pike
to
Veterans
Memorial
<Uld at
They come from all the services
The first of these flights is 8: 43 p.m. Syracuse took Oris
and wUI play major roles as the scheduled to start Jan. 23, but Brig.
Hubbard from Fourth Street to
Defense Departmentacceleratesits , Gen. Richard Abel said the exact
Veterans Memorial.
use of the reuseable space plan ~>.
launch time would not be disclosed
In advance to "deny our actversaries" knowledge about the military
•
Rotarians hold
Christmas party
....,
....,
'Nutcracker' slated
By ROBERT E. MUJER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API State senators
adjourned early today after falling once again to pass
a politiCally sticky bill raising legislators' pay and
that of other state and local officials.
Senate President Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown,
<Uld Minority Leader Paul Gillmor, RPort Clinton,
bOth sald that they have a tentative compromise on a
bill scaling down the size of pay Increases and that
they believed there was a good chance for narTOw
passage of the measure today.
Meshel adjourned the Senate at about 12: lJ a.m.
after an 11-bOur day of closed door bargaining. The
Senate conducted a marathon session of almost
exactly the same length, and with the same results
last Thursday night and Friday morning.
· This tlme, the two leaders opted to recess until later
today after being advised of a delay of as long as two
more hours for printing of pay bill amendments.
"The problem right now is mechanical," Glllmor
said.
In a related development, Meshel and his caucus
came forward with a proposal for a temporary 15
percent cut In the state Income tax . The proposal is
not dlreclly linked to the pay bill but Is designed at
least In part to soften the political repercussions of its
approval.
However. that proposal was put aside temporarlly
after It appeared It lacked enough votes forpassage In
the 33-member Senate.
Members of bOth caucuses confirmed that the
tenta live pay Increase compromise Includes a
reduction In pay boosts for lawmakers from a
proposed new salary of $32,500, starting in 1!R'>, io
around $.ll,Oll.
Sen. Paul E. ?feller, R-Bucyrus, said that the
Increase would amount to 5 percent a year since the
.,,
last legislative pay boost In 1979 and that the bill would
call for Increases In 1986, l!m, and 19138 of a n
additional 5 percent a year.
·As approved by the House last week, the bill called
for senators and House members to have their yearly
pay increased from Its current $22,500 to $32,500 In
1!R'\. Another salary boost of as much as 10 percent
would take effect In 1987.
Pfeifer said the Republican caucus also will support
a reduction In pay boosts for county otticials. Those
pay increases would be reduced from 14 percent in
1!l!S and again In 1987 to 5 percent In each of the next
four years .
Meshel would not talk about that or ot_her parts of
the compromise but Senate President Pro Tern Neal
F . Zimmers Jr. D·Dayton, when told abOut Pfeife r's
description of It, said "That's close."
The House, meanwhile, conducted a brief session to
clear Its decks of routine measures and await Senate
·
Statistics show ·beginnings of
'turnaround,' says Bell
By CHRISTOPHER CONNELL
"-:lated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- Educa·
lion Secretary T.H. Bell fired a new
volley of statistics Tuesday showing
college entrance test scores up and
high school dropouts down, prompt·
lnghlm to proclaim "the beginnings
of an academic turnaround."
· At a news conference on his last
day In ottlce, Bell predicted that ·
President Reagan would not try to
abolish the Education Department,
·as he threatened In his 1!81
campaign. U he tries, Bellsald, "I
oon't think the Congress Is going to
enact it."
Reagan says he Is delaying
naming a suc<;eSSOr to Bell whlle he
considers the dEpartment's fate.
Bell Is returning to Utah as an
ectucatlon prafeslor.
Bell dlspl8yed the second lnBtal·
Jment of what he hopes will becOme
l
an annual tradition In his department, a wall chart of edUcation
statistics ranking the states by test
scores, high school completion
rates, teacher salaries, class size
and other measures.
He said the $tlstics provide
"some evidence that we're getting
the beginnings ot an academic
72.8 percent in l!m to73.9 percent in
1983.
BeU cited a "dramatic Increase"
In the graduatlon rate In North
Dakota, where 94.8 percent were
graduated In 1983. up from 87.3
percent a )'ear earlier.
Minnesota, at 90.7 percent, was
the only other state above the goal
·set by Reagan and Bell of reduCing
turnaroond."
"I don't believe that educator· high school dropouts to lOperrent by
s...OIIIht to be.al·all defensive about 1990.
Georgia officials, who chafed at
the data," he said.
Bell's
ftrst school .ranJdngs last
BeD's cJJart showed that between
JanuaJY, uncovered a mistake In
1982 and 1911&. there was:
-AO.l-polnlptnlntheAmerlcan the new Bat of teacher salartes,
Coilege T'eltllliiJI'OIII'am score to an whk:h showed Georgia as last in the
nation with a drop In average pay
· aver.ofl8.5,onaacalect1 to36;
tronl
$15,4441n 1981 to$13,0401n l!lfl3.
-A tour-point gain In Scholastic
Georgia
state school supertntend·
Apt!~ Test scores to 897, on a
~t
Olarles
McDaniel said the
scale of 400 to 1,tm,
average
salary
In 1983 actually was
-A rise In the ""Jll!l''"'!:e""'Diage of hlgl\ .
$17,412,
which
would
make Georgia
school students who graduate after
42nd
Instead
of51st.
enrolling four years earlier, from
DIICUS81NG DEn:NSE Secli elaty ol Defeule Cupar
w•~~erpr
,._ reporten at
lbe Ptlllapa Tuellday. WeJn.
berpr Rid lbat pel. . . biiCII oa
lbe BellpD lllknlalllnlloa's
...laM blllld-uptoo mucii..W
ll!lld lbe Wl'lllll llpal to lhe
Soviet Ualoa. (API a rpboto).
action on the pay raise . The measure will have to go
back to the House. for a vote on Senate changes.
Meshel said he has been keeping In close tough with
House leaders and that "I think they w!U go along with
any thing we have done so far ."
The two chambers hope to adjourn for the year this
week, possibly late today.
Shortly after midnight, Democrats gave up hope of
getting an irrunedlate consensus on their tax cut
proposal and decided to try again today.
Because Sen. Oliver Ocasek, 0-Northfield, is
absent due to illness, they would not be able to
approve the measure by themselves because their
Senate margin is only 17-16.
Most of the controversy centered around who would
get credit for the reduction - t.he Democrats now or
the Republlc<U~s later when they take' control of the
Senate at the next session which convenes Jan. 7.
Reagan ·will fight
for reduction plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - The lor Ute 1986 fiscal year, and several
WhlteHousesaysPresldentReagan
RepublicanS"In Congress have said
lsreadyto " showCongresstheway''
it will take subst<U~tial reductions In
toward lower deficits, but lawrnak'·
the defense buildup to generaie
ers of both parties say his three-year
Slipport for the rest of the program.
plan to reduce the defense buildup
But White H9Use spokesman
by$28bllUon lsn' t enough.
Larry Speakes, sounding a theme
"It's really not a credible pertor·
the president himself Used on the
mance," Sen. JohnChateeofRhode day after his re-election victory,
Island said Tuesday after Defense said Reagan would not hesitate to
Secretary (:aspar Weinberger un- make his case directly to tbe
veiled the president's decision on , American people.
.
Pentagon spending.
"The president will show ConChalee, the No. 3 Republlc<Ul In gress the way and will attempt ID
the Senate leadership hierarchy,
lead them and will not hesltateto(I'O
caUed the reduction "mJnlscule."
1D the people to present his case and
House Republican · Leader Bob . cany the day;" said Speakes. .
Michel was reported by analcletobe
In making his decision, the
unhappY as well. "He thinks It falls
president rejected a pl'qlOSal by
tarshorlofwhatweneedtoreachan
BudgetDirectorDavidA.Stockman
agreement In the House" on an
to scale back the defense buildup by
ov1>raU deficit . reduction plan," said
$58 billion over three )~earl~, A
an aide, who spoke on condition he change ctthat size would enable the
not be Identified.
president to meet hiB 0\'eriJIIIQII ot
Reagan has tentativelY approved reducing fedeml deftclts to 1100
domestic spendingcutsof$34 bUUon
bllUon by 1986.
�I
Comment
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA
~v
r:r"-''--r•.....--c:l• ....
..
ROBERT L. WJN.G E'IT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General . Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher / Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
I
A MEMBER of The Associated Press,' Inland Dally Press Associ•·
tion and the Amertc~n Newspaper Publishers Association.
.LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu than 300 words
long. A.llletter~ are subJ~t to editing and must besljned with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be !n
good taste, addressing. Issues, not. person~lttles.
·
Wednnky. December 19, 1984
At one of those round-iable
tatkfests at which one Is asked what
will stand out In history as the great
event of 1984, a seasoned and bright
journalist said that tbe tragedy of
Bhopal In India would probably
emerge as ·the distinguishing feature, or scar, of that year. That .
probably wo11't, In fact, be the case.
One heated week after the event
of Sept. 1, 1983 (remember?), a ·
guest on Ted Koppel's nightly
television show predicted that tbe
event In question would be the
enduring nightmare of the postwar
era. A second guest (me) predicted
that the event, however Inflammatory, would not stay ln the memory
more than three. months. Fifteen
months later we of course re-
New law could make
~rime pay for tipsters .
j
State lawmakers are expected to complete passage this week of
legislation that would put non-tax money to work to help catch criminals.
Sen. Charles Butts, D-Cleveland, says his Iegtslatlon establlshlng a
statewide citizens' !'£'Ward program can convert profits from crime Into
rewards for people giving pollee tiPS that lead to a crtme being solved.
His bill, approved by both houses and awaiting action by the Senate on
minor House amendments, sets up a state lund for a reward program
simllat to otbers comrnoply known as "Crtmestoppers."
, BUt Instead of using tax dollary for funding, the program calls for th~
eannarklng of 25 percent of the proceeds froJ\1 sheriffs' sales and pollee
auctions of unclaimed property.
The sales would Include confiscated contraband.
Butts said the proceeds would go to local Crtmestoppers programs which
have been recognized by boards of county commissioners. Citizens who
offered a tip on a crime In their home county would then qualify for a
reward.
Currently, the local programs are funded only from private sources.
; 'The veteran Cleveland lawmaker cited Impressive statistics on the
j effectiveness of several existing programs In Ohio.
·,.-Figures from Crtmestoppers International Inc. showed programs In
Columbus, Dayton, Toledo and Cleveland have led to the solving of 2,527
crimes since they were established about,three Y\'ars ago.
'The solution of those crtmes led to the recovery of about $2 million In
stolen property. They also helped obtain convictions In 717 of 735 cases, for
a conviction rate of 98 percent, Butts said.
He said the statistics are Impressive.
"By turning the profits of crime Into rewards for concerned citizens who
111ve a tip to help solve a crime, I thlnk there will be a greater Incentive for
folks to ge.t Involved anq belp the authorities fight crime In tbelr own
·
neighborhoods," Butts said.
. He said he believes that once tbe state program gets going, It will provide
Impetus for the establish programs In some of Ohio~s smaller counties.
Letter to the editor
Celeste on the move
The "Celestltles" are running
true to form. First, they deceived
us, by getting us to vote for the 90
percent state Income tax, by telling
us our state was nearly bankrupt.
Then this fall, they tell us they have
ac€umulated an excess of $133
mllllon dollars. Now, "to rub It In
real good and make It smart," they
are going to dig down deep Into our
pockets and pull out a "huge sa lary
Increase" for themselves. It makes
a person wonder If they ran for
office to serve the needs of the
people or did they run to represent
their own wants? There's a lot of
difference between a need and a
want.
The Republicans chose the elephant, as their symbol, which
represents long memories. The
Democrats chose tile donkey, as
theirs. I'm sure everyone knows
'what the other.name for the do11kcy
Is. It seems the "Celestites" have
made "donkeys"-out of the taxpay·
ers In Ohio.
.There Is a time and place for
everythlng. So, 1986 will be the
" Time To Place" more "ele·
phants" Into the legislative body at
the Capllol bulidlng, and get us off
the one-way stree of higher taxes,
that the "donkeys" have placed us
on.
Most people make a "donkey"
out of themselves once In awhile,
hut It takes real talent to do It every
time you speak!
My life ls not a "bed of roses,". as
some would think. If anyone doubts
my word, come out sometime and I
will teach you how to use a pitchfork
and a shovel.
President Reagan and I have one
thing In common. We both started
out poor, but chose not to stay that
way.
Maxine Diddle Sellers
30480 Valley Bell Rd.
Racine, Ohio 45TI1
P .S. - Mr. Wlngen: I sincerely
"'sh you a speedy recovery and
hope you will be home tor
Christmas.
Today in history -
know now how many more. The
member the shooting down by tbe
RUSSians of the Korean~. but question that comes to mind Is: Was
we need to scratch our head just a . tbere evil Intent? What the lawyers
call "mens rea?" -In tbe absence
llnle to do so.
Six years ago when I learned that of which you are deatlng Mth an
900 men, Women and children, at entirely different phenomenon, as
di!ferent as tbe accident caused by
tile prompting of a demented
a dl'llllkei! driver ·a nd tbe accident
zealor, had. 1:1 tbelr little American
enclave In tbe jungles o( Guyana,
caused bY the murderer wbo
committed mass suicide hy drtnk· · Intentionally .runs his victim down.
There wiD be yean of legal talk
lng Kool-Aid with cyanide In It; I
on
tbe matter, but sEfiSlble people
doubted that that melodramatlc
w!U
lnnmedlately conclude 'that lt
event would ~ver be so far from
memory. But even Jonestown tends can luirdly have been .the Intention
of the managers of Union Carbide
to fade.
So MD Bhopal, and It Is worth Corp., Indian Division, let· alone
Danoory, Conn., HQ, to bring on
reflecting on just why this Is so.
It was tile largest lndustrtal sucb tragedy. The Joss of lives
apart, the very future of !be
accident In tbe history of tbe world,
killing 2,00lpeople and maiming we corporation Is threatened. We don't
.,;.and llAWi alot
ofneJJ~~
suomanre5 .
and amdft c:arri~
Clld bombs ard ...
TVGCap•· t'
WASHINGTON- China claims
to have so many nuclear weapons
Trl-..,. . .:.:,. . . . . . . . . .
have bere a demented leader
persuading his h~ follow·
ers to commit suicide, or a
blOodless leader In the Kremlin
committing 269 Innocent travelers
to a horrible death from 35,00> feet
over tbe Sea of Japan. It was an
uaccldent."
The qu"!!tlon wlll now artse: Was
It an accident that rea!OIIIIble
safeguards would )lave prevented
(that, of course, wW be · the
plalntlfls' aUegatlon) or was It an
accident In thl! sense that tbe pilot
who ran his plane Into !he Empire
State Building had an accl4i!nt?
It wW not be easy to Ideologize the
tragedy of Bhopal. Jane Fonda
completely forgot to warn us about
methyl lsocyanata, which tn India
has killed 2,00> rrore people than
have died from any accidents
caused by a nuclear plant. Moreover, tile poisonous Ingredients In
question were developed for the
purpose of controlUng the Insect
population. If we hadn:t encouraged the develpment of Insecticides
In tbe course of the last 50 years, we
would be dying by the thousands
and hundreds of thousands of
malaria, typhus, tbe plague, yellow
fever and whatever.
squirreled away that It no longer
fears the massive Soviet' missile
force arrayed against It. At least
two - probably four - of China's
long-range missiles are also capable of hitting the United States.
Peking's confidence (or at least
Its attempt to appear confident)- In
Its ability to strtke back Is stated
most plainly In a secret Defense
Intelligence Agency report seen by
my associate Dale VanAtta .
It quotes a high-level Chinese
defense official as claiming In a
private conversation that " the
Soviet Union no longer had a
flrst -strtke capability against China
because the Chinese nuclear arsenal Is so well hidden that lt msures
sufficient retaliatory capability to
InDict Intolerable damage to the
U.S.S.R."
The DIA deduced from tbe
official's statement that Chinese
nuclear 'j<!CUrlty depends on hiding
Us missiles rather than hardening
Marxist bottom line
gely to blame.
The study cites tour major forces
working to stifle economic growth:
- basic Inefficiencies .bnbedded
In the systems;
- suppression of human rights,
which devastates labor Ioree morale and encourages defection;
- the Impact of past policies
reflected In an obsolete plant and
equipment;
- and excessive emphasis , on
mllltary spending.
That last soould be of particular
Interest In 'this country, because of
the controversial heavx military
share of a deficit-burdened budget
ahd because the economic COIIIequences are most acute In the
Soviet Union.
It Is not only In tenns of budget
expenditure that tbe Soviets are
paying a heavy price for their
anned might.
·
.
Out of a total work force of some
140 million, 8:5 million are directly
Involved In tbe production of
mllltaryhardwareandtheoutputof
another 26 million Ia otherwise·
directed toward m!Utary consumption. A quarter ol the work force Ia
thus largely lost to crowth·
stlmulalfnl economic 8CIIvlty.
Higher up tbl! profealonal aeale, ·
half of all enetneen turned out bY
Sovjet edllcatlonallnatitutlons each
year take positions In militaryrelated activities.
· Finally, an estimated thTee·
quarters of au surplus Soviet
revenues are abllorbed hy lbe
military sectbr.
demolition munitions may be held
at higher echelons." The DIA
report adds: "Some tests -of low·
yteld devices during the 1970s
suggest that Chlila sought to
develop tactical nuclear weapons
and thatsomearenowavallablefor
delivery. Chlna may also be trying
to develop artillery-delivered nu-·
clear weapons, but lt ls unlikely
nuclear artUlery rounds would be
available before the end of the
decade."
·
The Chinese are believed to have
about i50 nukes available for air
delivery, the DIA report states,
adding: "The Chinese have employed extensive efforts to conceal
the strategic mlssUe force and
probably have successfully hidden
a significant part of the Ioree from
potential enemies. The statements
Indicate the growlh of China's
nuclear capabilities and the result·
lng corifldence (Peking) has In Its
ablilty to deter potential enemies
from using nuclear ..weapons
against China."
· Don Graff
The overall effect Is an economic
drag, which can probably be taken
as i!ood news for our side.
But there Is another aspect ol the
Soviet economic Imbalance which
can't.
"Despite all economic dlfflcul· .
ties, and howeVl'l' much the cost,"
tbe study· concludH, "the USSR
seems to have succeeded ln .outcJo.
lng the West ln the arms race, even ·
at the expense of more belt
tightening by, Its own people."
WATERFORD - Plilctng six
men In double flgurel, ,the Water·
ford Wlldcall defeated tile Eastern
Ea~ by a whopping 10fr49 SC9"'
here Tuelday' evening 1n boys'
non-league high sehoul basketbBil
action.
Leading the second half offensive
bombardment wen\ Keith Swingle
and JoeCampbell, Wbo finished tile
game wllh i7 pofuts each ·tor
game-high honors. Chris Campbell
and Scott King each sllared runner,
DOW.NING-CHILDS
MULLEN INSURANCE
KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES
....,,., .......
W
II
I
1
I
I
: YHI PIOFISSIONAL SEIVICE FOI
A
1
Robinson rompiled a :Hi record,
League re!Je! pitcher to register 100
st.rlkeouts In 1964.
j.:
.'
MUS re8enres win
'
ROCK SPRINGS - Huey Eason
swished a 28 loot jumper ,at !be ·
bll21JI'I' to give M•' . ~rves a
dramatic 56-!55, Mn over Alexand€r's ~serves' here Tuesday.
The Little Marauders . trailed by
six points In tile final three minutes.'
at ,45-39, Alexander came back to
take lea~s of 47-46 and their final
margin at 55-54 with nl~e seconds
left on junioi'Gralg,Wells' ll!Y·ln.
Easor 1r1 Meigs In scqring with
17 points, ·but lt was ~ ptay of
Marty Hart, 'who ended with 12
points, that kept tile Little Maraud·
ers In the baU game. Hi!rt scored six ·
points In the final two minutes
Including two crucial free throws ·j!t·
tbe 50 seconds mark that gave
Meigs a 54-51 lead. Phil King added·
10 points. Wells led Alexander with
24 markers.
·
Coach Mlck Childs' crew goes to
5-2 overal\ and .4·2 In the TVC.
,u.&UNDI!R
(115)
-
Martin
1-2~ ;
GU!hrtt" 1-2-4; Md.aln 000: McCarty 2-6-1&.
Wells 10+24: Chapman 4·!1-13. Tolalo 18-IJ.II.
MEIGS (!6) - King 1·2·10; llo<:ker 2-3-7;
Eason 1!-1-17: Musser tW-o; Powell 1.(>2; ·
Howard ti<HI: Hart 2·8-12: Long H-8: Shank
.,.,_.,.,
1).1)(), Tolalo iiii-11-M.
AlrlaJider j ............ ..... .. ....... ,9 10 16 ~56
~
......................... ....... ,8 12 13 23-56
The Dally Sentinel
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Friday. 111 Court St., y tht' ,
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Hl.Ltl11r1~ rw. \"ll l lr k ~ ·al Cull ~ 111 '
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or n•nt uCulliloliu 1Watt·r rnildiri~ mei nr
Orinki'nl-! \\'ntt ·r· H\'~f'lll t ~fort• Dl"'f'i'ntht•r2-l.JU."W mrii .\ ·tiull~·t amupnn for
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21'11 PAIIIII ST. ATHENS, OM.
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3.!1l earned run average and 10
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS .
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"
RACINE - The .little Soutbem
Tornadoettes ~ C9ach Larry Wolfe
rolled to a 14-2 halftime lead, !ben
· lengthened that margin 9f victory
to 35-11 over tbe MeteS Marau·
derettes here Monday' eYe,dna In
Racine. The Tornadoettes are
. currentlY 4-0 on the ~·
·
A well-balanced attack and total
team victory led to tbe win as
Crystal HUI alld Becky Evans
shared top-scortng honors with
eight points each. Dawn Johnson
added seven, Debbie Greathouse
six, Becky Winebrenner two, Leslle
Dudding two, and Melanie VanMeter two.
·
,
. Becky Evans and Dawn Johnson
were credited Mth "super floor
games, " while Crystal Hill, ,Becky
Winebrenner and Debbie Great·
house controlled the boards. Hill
had seven, Winebrenner six, and
Greathouse six.
Taylor had four to lead Meigs,
Woods, Ewing and Carl each had
two apiece, and H. Woods added
Robinson wins
'Hutch' Awanl
(USPS 14.1HNOl
'
still unbeaten
I
.4..· Dlvl!llon of Multimedia, IM.
Berry's World
Southem team
earlier had above average percen·
taa.es , Waterford, meanwhile,
ripped the nets for44 of83 attempts
5 I 31111 311)
Belpn! ............. : ................. .5 2 · m a
for
53 percent.
Mo!IJ ..... ......., .. ,....:............ f ' 3 MD 3!6
A
bilstertng third frame aUowed
~~~Yor~ .................. t 3 410 473
.. County .... .................. 3 • '26 OliO
Waterford to outscore the hosts
Foo!oroJ.Hocklng ..................3 ' 461 1111
36-17, followed by a l>-10sethack'In
~t:" Local .... .. ..... , , ......2 4 129 4S.I
the finale, resulting In the 10649
........................ .... .... .) 6 3011 042
Wl'llllton .............. .......... ......o 6 361 m
IU IUIOII
closing.
, ·
(TVC Only)
, IIADIAI
Eastern
hit
17
of
28
free
throw
Teom
WLPOP
IITII.IoiS
~nder ........ .......... ........ .!! 1 410 31111
attempts, grabbed jliSt 14 rebounds
-Trlmblo·, .. ........ ................... 5 1 3111 311l
according to the charts, had 13
WlfllWIU ·
Metp .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .• 2 391! 313
steals, 13 turnovers, and 21 fouls.
Belpr~ ... ,.. ........ ............ ....... 2 fll Jl) ,
StilL IRTU
Nelaonvttk' York .. ........ .. ......< 2 418 4011
Waterford canned 21 of 30 charity
Vlntm COunty .......... ,...........3 3 ~1 381
uphonorswlth16polntsap~.Jeff
tosses and literally won the game
Federal-Hacking ....... ,.......... 2 4 3!0 :!91
Warrm Local ......................2 4 429 W
St!JYer.had 11, Mlke -~Ws 11, Steve with 54. key rebounds, a total
Mille' ,................................1 5 '313 txl
Carter eight, Greg Heri,ry row:, and domination of the Inside game.
Wetllton ............. .......... .. .....0 6 371 473
Mtke Y011111 one.
.
,
. Chris · Campbell had 13 rebounds,
'l'olalo
• • an an
Doo.ll.........
'
Eutern had ~.men hit dOubJe . ·follol\'f!d by brotper Joe with nine,
Motp 12 ~- 63
'
figures, aU arwblCh taBled 12 p.olnts . and Scott King wlthnlne. WHS also
Belpre !6 Trtmbk> 55
Vllft011 COunty li2 Federii·Hocklng iO
each, Royce Blsiell, Kevin Barber had 18 turnovers, and 10 steals.
-lie-York Ill W"fMM Local 76
and Ed4fe CQUins:
Waterford won thi! reserve con·
' MUlot 61 Wollston 46
Eastern helt:llts own In the early test 54-40. The winners were led by
-.Upmeo:
Melp at Wanen Local
going, howeye,r one trend tl)at ·. McCutcheon with. 12, while Bryan
,c
TrlmbtPOt AJoxancter
:'Proved to be a underlying factor Iri .,. purst led EHS with 12 and Tony
Belpre at VInton County
one.
MOler at Feberai-Hocklng
t)le game was the Intimidation of Hendrix had six.
Southern led )0.2 In the first
f'
NeiSonvilk!-Yort at Wellston.
t~. much taller WildCats, who
Eastern hosts Hannan Trace on quarter, then opeOed up a 14-2 1-~....-'--'~-------------'-------I
, ."completely dominated aQ aspects Frtday.
halftlme advantage.
··01 the Inside game. Eastern trailed · Score by qaariers:
· 1,11-11 at )he'endoftheflrstquarter.
EAi'1'ERN t•l- Royre BL•"'II <+12:
• hootln
ks ·Kevin Barber <+~: Eddw Collins H ·12:
Whll
E
t
.
I! as ern S 5
g mar
Paul Collhm1-C>2; Greg Leachman 1-C>2; Jot!
slowly dropped to the cellar, Caldwell 1 -J.~: Jim Caklwoll 1).1)(); Mark
DA y:)'()N, Ohio (AP) - Don
Waterford wasjustgettlngwarmed Shr)Yers 2-Q.4, and Tone Chapman 0-H
1'olal8 UHHB.
Robinson, rebound'Ingfrom a fourth
AND
up by the eJ!l) of the first half,
WATERFORD OllBl - Steve Carter 3-2·8:
. operation on his pitching shoulder to
leading by a 35-22 score. Eastern . Greg llenry 2-04; .It'll SIOV!'r 5-0-10: Scoll
make a smooth transition to the
f 86 fro th fl ld King 5-6-16; Ke!lh Swingle 8-l-17; Schaad
cann ed just 16 o
m e e
2·2·6: Clu·Js 'Campbell W14: Ems 4-3-ll ;
Pittsburgh Pirates' bullpen, has
for 18.6 percent, an unusually cold Young ot-1: Joe. Campbell 5-7·17. Totato
been selected as the 1984 winner of
113 SECOND AVE.
perfornlance for the Eagles, who 41·1:1-1118.
baseball'~ Hutch Award.
POMEROY
. The annual award Is presented bY.
a panel of major leagUe baseball
CALL _992·3381
wrtters and tiroadcasters hi the
. 4192-2342
memory of 'Fied Hutchinson, a
'ACCOUNTING & DATA PROCESSING
former major league pitcher and
611 EAST MAIN $TWEET
manager.
. . . . . .E!l~BIIllllll.,_llll!IOIIM.,
992~7270
,OMEROY, OIRO 45769
Hutchinson was managing the
OPEN
Cincinnati Reds In 1964 when he died
of cancer.
/
The player selected has to
overcome some fonn of &dverslty In
the spirit and · tradition cit
Hutchinson.
·
'
Robinson went on tbe 21-d~Y'
disabled list In spring training with a
rectiiTeDCt! of shoulder ml!;ertes .
FOR THE WOllMAN
that have !lobbied him tllroultoout
'
'·
his career.
He did not pitch font~e Pirates
Ucenaed Public
I bttifa_gt house .
unt11June10,butwentonfromthere
,.,
PARTNERS and ASSOCIATES:'
tomake51appearances,50ofthem
KARL A . • MARY C. KEBLER.· JR •• E.A.'is
in relief.
,..
..
''F.nn,u~ to proticf! before thP Int ernal Revenue Sf'f'lliC'C'
lack Anderson
the missile silos. The remarks . detected missile sites In China are
hardened, but a number of sites
"Indicate that sufficient sites remain undetected ," the report consist Qf unhardeped buU~Jlngs."
states, adding:
In addition to the two to four
"While his remarks could be Intercontinental ballistic missiles,
based on mlslnfonnation, China the Chinese have as many as 10
presumably ls aware of published other long-range mlssUes, any·
Western estimates of the size of Its where from 85 to 125 Intermediatemissile force and may have found range missiles ' and 40 ·to W
such estimates to be low. On the short -range models, according to
other hand, the published figures Pentagon reports.
Another conversational "slip" may accurately reflect the size of
China's force, and (his) remarks this one to a visiting French ,
could be Interpreted to rillslead delegation - Indicated that Peking
potential enemies. 'The .latter as- Is slowly building a supply of
sumption Is less likely, since the tactical nukes. for air and artillery
Soviets would be the primary target delivery. According to the DIA
of such dlslnformatlon, but proba· report, yet another loose-Upped
bly would not be aware of . his Chinese defense official disclosed
"that China has no tactical nuclear
remarks."
weapons deployed at 'ground divThe secret report continues:
"Only one national stockpile slte Ision level or below.' He was
and no regional sites have been Interrupted by (a subordinate) who
observed In China. Thus, If nuclear sald that Information was beyond
weapons for air delivery are the scope of the discussion."
deployed to air bases, they have
The DIA's expert•polnted out that
been effectively hidden . Most of tile this statement and others "do not
deny that such weapons as atomic
B)' 8Cin'l' WOLFE
.
W !. P OP
-~ .................... ....... 5 I t'lp 311
I
China's nuclear force
z
, (AIIO-)
It Isn't hard to· understand tbe
fury of tbe Indian people. Fury Is
fueled by Impotence. Relatives of
the afflicted destre to punish Union
Carbide, but so does aU of India, It
seems. Never mind that the
managemeni of Union Carbide Is
convincingly traumatized bY what
happened. ~ Its chairman,
Warren M. Anderson, went to
Bhopal he was arrested: a gesture
designed excltislvely for public
consumption, and In a few hours he
· was out. What to do, when you don't
know what to do? The Bible comes
up with the correct fonnulation:
There shall be weeping and gnash· '
lng of teeth.
The outlook Is for slow groMh
and severe economic pressures for
the next several years.
That's not the latest report out of
Washington on the slowing UtS.
recovery.
Today Is Wednesday, Dec. 19, the Nth day o!l984. There are 12 days left . It's a forecast of what Is In store
In ·!be year. This Is the first day of Hanukkah, the Jewish "Festival of for Marxist ·style centraUy planned
economies just released by the
Lights."
Brussels' office of the Conference
Today's highlight In history:
)3oard,
the New York-based nonOn Dec. 19, 1843, Charles Dlckms first published his classic Yuletide tale,
profit
economic research
"A Chrtstmas Carol," In England.
·
organization.
On this date:
The study counts 25 such econoIn 1732, Benjamin Franklin began publishing his ." Poor Richard's
mies
, ranging from the Communist
Almanac" In Philadelphia.
·
g
iants,
the Soviet Umon and Chlna,
In 1TI6, Thomas Paine published his first "Amertcan Crisis" essay, In
to
countries
at the bottom of the
which he wrote, "These are the times that try men's souls."
In.1777, Gen. Georie Waahlngton led his anny of about 11,00> men to Third World heap such as Mazam·
blque and Laos.
Valley Fo~. Pa., to camp for tbe winter.
Altogether, they account for a
In ll!07, 239 workers died In a coal mine explosion In Jacobs Creek, Pa.
formldable40
percent of tile world's
In 1915, French singer Edith Plaf was born. ·
population,
but
only a tenth of the
' In 1932, tbe British Broadcasting Corp. began transmitting overseas Mth
trade.
world's
a radio transrrilssion to Australia called the Empire Service.
Some are In better shape than
In 19t6, war broke out In Indochina as troops under HoChl Minh launched
others.
Hungary, for a notable
widespread attacks against tbe French.
It has been edging
example.
In 1900, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower was named conunander of tbe
closer
In recent years to
steadily
milllaJY forces of tbe North Atlantic Treaty OrganiZation.
Is
beginning
to resemble a
what
In 19'12. tbe Apollo 17 spacecraft splashed down In tbe Paclftc, winding up
market IJConomy. Production and
.the Apollo program of landing astronauts on tbe moon.
per10nal Income are up and
Ten yean aao: .Nellon A. Rockfeller was sworn In as the 41st yice
Indications
are that the trend wW
president of the United States.
continue.
'
. FM! yean aao: The U.S. Senate appwed Its own version of a plan to
Also China, which Is In a similar '
bell out Cheysler C!I'P. with $1.5 bllllon In teilerlilloan guarantees.
rise
and, with S14 bWion ln foreign
One year
A Houle Armed Servlcel subcommittee concluded that
exchange
reserves, can afford tile
tbe !niCk-bombing that k1Ued :U1 U.S. servicemen In Beirut resulted from
of Western foodstuffS
purchases
the faUure of senior m!Utaey commanders to protect their troops against
technology
necessary to maintain
"tbe tuU spectrum of threats."
·
momentum.
Today's birthdays: .Producer and talk·show host David 'Sulsldnd Is 64.
That Ia a necessity common to all
Actress Ck:ely'l'ysal ld5. Actor Tim Reldls40.AC!ressElalne.Joycels39.
tbe planned economies with most
Actor Robert Urich Is 311.
Thought for today: "Three may keep a secret, lftwo.oUhem are deed." · much less well prepared to meet it.
The planners themaelves are lar·
-Benjamin Franklln's "Poor Richard's Almanac," July 1733.
aao:
Tr~Val~ey . · Wat~rford team. tops
Cage Standtngs Eastern ·r.ve, 10649
MIH'I~ ()hk)
The year of Bhopal?____
Wi_llw_m_F._B_uck_ley_J_r.
The Daily Sentinel
~~
!Simi!::!
Pome1oY
The Deify Sentinel-Page 3
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wadneldey, December 18, 1884
Page 2-lht Dely SudNI
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Wldnaedlly.
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'·
odmber 19, 1814
. · w.dneed.y, D~cember 19, 1984
The Season Of ving·
PRICES GOOD .
THIU MONDAY
DECEMIEI 24, 1914
• -
.~.Gift
The Dilly Suliiii...;.Paga I
Porrletoy-Mi+'IPlf't, Ohio
FOODLAND
~-.
. .
.
·
Certificates, Party Trays, Fruit Basketsll!
•'•
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COUNTfiY STYLE CUBED BEEF
HILLSHIAE SMOKED SAUSAGE OR
:f.L~B~'iA .... .......
.... . L•.
2
19
1 29
LEAN BONELESS
.
ITEWIN.G .
. .
BliP' ............ ... ... .. .....
BACON ....... ....... .... 1 LB. PKQ.
249
=~:::~
Boneless ·Shoulder Ro~:~st
Falter's Hams
LB.
ILICID
TEN!»ERBEST USDA CHOICE BEEF
OLD FASHIONED
WHOLE
LB.
•!
2
,.• 9
'
.. .. .. 1:2 L& AVCL Ll.
3
. .. .. 12 oz.
.
Turkey Breasts
'AUORrED
1
...
=~~=:
;:~:::
I OZ.
-S8
Taeter'•
... ..• oz. 5
1
'I g
Purex Detereent ...
1
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Sunlight Liquid .:. .u oz. arL.
Choice ~
JAR
ASSORTED
STOKELY
DISH DETERGENT, 500 OFF LABEL ·
12
OZ. PKCL
1
49
8'9 •
DelMonte Fruit 1&-17 oz. cAN
c2 oz. sox
.
... • ... ...... 11,e oz.'BTL.
Dot P'ood .. .. ... .. .. . .25La eAa
21• OFF LABEL. '
4-6 LB. AVG.
WILSON'S
SUNSHINE .
REQULAR•DECAFfEINATED INSTANT
99
TENDEABEST•AEG.•THICK•THIN
•
.
liON.. DEC. 24, 1814
'
LB.
ASSORTED FLAVORS
3 1 00
,.llo Gelatin . . aoxu
.
Alb Eye. Steaks
..
.
7
3
FROZEN
... 499
LOUIS AICH•OVEN ROASTEO•SMOKEp•BAR...a
~~=~:~ .~
LI. 2
P'REIH
OYITIRI.. .
•• ,.
TENDEAIEST USDA CHOICE BONELES.S
"'199·
1
.. . . ,(..... .
39
STANDARDS
·
Plokled Beet• ...... 11 oz. cAN
CHOCOL~~~ ...... .noz. PKa.181 ::=~~::~
- :~t:~~~~~-~
. . .'.2~~~!199• :~fNKI . ... '.... ...
3 88 · Tomato Juice .......
79•
7 9•
•PAINT •ASSORTED
NESTLE'S
ASSORTED FLAVORS
. ... c~.~o. 7 9 ~
140
. STOKELY
00
.
41 oz. CANS
FOODLAND
4eoz.cAN
.
Veeetable 011 ....... 3.11 oz. BTL.
.
138
~RTED oSWEET •DILL .
Vlaelc Ploklea ..... 11-n oz. JAR .
FOODLAND •SMOOTH •CRUNCHY
ARMOUR
FOOOLAND
Corned Beet .. .. .. .... 12 oz. cAN
1••
Peanut Iutter .... ... ..1e oz. JAR
3DIAMOND
. - ....
.
22 oz.
JAR
Coffee Creamer ..... ... .
LUCKY LEAF
:::~~ I.
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2 ~~1 00
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. ..,. .
11 oz.
9.
1 88
1 ••
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cAH5 9.
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Sugar
Laundry Detergent
\~_,!<.'\
. FOODLAND
Coffee
WhiteBread
E= ·,
1 •.
WHITI
'
11 Oz.
Loo1
$
u:-.
99
.a Lb.
•ORAN
11UtT •AI'PLI
Troplcana Juice
If.
159
. ."i:!r
..... .
~
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•
lb2
·•
12 Oz .
Pkg .
48 ·
•
I
•
140z.
Crtn.
·~·. · ·~
.
.Dog llood
$ '
99
1111 Oz .
DLA
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•
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;......_~
D
Margerln•
$
·~69•
.t
Pkg.
'
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(
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Con
...
11 Oz.
Deluxe Pizza• ·
Milk
88
-
'•
4''
~
59
HOMEBEST SHAPED ELASTIC
·The .best investment· you'll ever ·make!
I•
Potato Chlpa
-
12 Oz.
Poinsettias
• '
LIG •REG.
Qlendal• Pop
&gnaus ,Encyclopedlas s ·~ ·~
I
.il
Cream C.heeae
'.
-
lit~'·
--
Star-Kiat Tuna
Con
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•REGULAR
•DIIIP
•ELIC PIIIK
Con
$
• • .,
1. . . . . . . .
American Cheese
.
Diapers
Jd
1111•
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,.,,
99•c:t.-..
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.
'
�•
Pegs 6- The Daily Sentinel
Pomerqy- Middleport, Ohio
I
'
Tuesday's
.
Til
na•n• Mn
NEW-STORE HOURS:
Ml
l
.
1
.
)
"'C<i.
Cal. B - 15, Cd. . _ , . .
Brol*hl*i
high school
scores
Newt:lury M
"'-"·""""!I
...... .,
.
-
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0.~
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31, JOdzwl Cbr, •
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"Ga.hanrw 57, Cot
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E\lrlld ~. Genfrr• •
. . . _ . . . . _ .. 0.. - l l
Fektry n, BIIIWI 47
nt'ftmdl 11. MeOina &ackeyt s; (11'
Fr~ J'Vn~tt Gf'fiefl 52, Pon. Eu1
BellffoniAN 741, ~j.wnlR L..opn If!
Brlprt • . 1'rlrnllli!! !!5
Elfrllll Ctr. w Reterit' •• Stbrtng :a
&rUn HllMcl SJ, lldah Valle)' N, 62
Belhfl..Tate 31, Clet'rftont NE 3t
Blocm.cam:ILI n, CAnal Wlncbel1er i4
BowllnH GJ'tle'R e. R!.lord
~ N. '16, Tom~to rll
8A.M. to. 10. P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
.
N. , . _ 15,
GnM ""' . . ClnOMilo Ill
COMIIIII! • • ~ Cl
. BMwft:rM 13. Trutwood M.u.a !18
Elfdlonl Chanel '13, Pa~ Rtv·
2
101'~ ~ 'It,
0
Butl!rtcm .. Kl!llt ~ t7
.
Elm"'
Cal. ... .....,. ... . _
Col. 9t.tlwW •. a, Wabll tl
COl. bill '15, Cal.
'el72
CoL Tl'lt' or Life 11, Faittl Clr. S1
Col. Wt~~: 15, Hlllud Q
:rr
I
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Grud RtYet e. A11111M11 Quo, ;n.
Orood Vol. G, W.,. ~ 11
Giww.._ 11. E. Cllllla.ll
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AmtiLI 1111. Galllta
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Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
........... SI. Allnl>-111
Akrm 9t.V.at.M 1\ 0.. (QIIiu
An:alla .. U.rty Baton 51
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LOCUST AND.PEARL ST.
.MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•'
Wadi uday, o.o.ma- 19, 1184
Wadneadlly, December 19, 1984 ,
I
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R.MnWP It, Hardin N. Sf
I
\WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
...
'
SALE DATES
Domino
'
December 18 thru
December 24, 1984
Not Roeponelblt For
TI'IIOG..,..ICII or
'
PlctOttat Errore.
·Quantity AlgMe A-rvad .
•
Dark Brown, Light Brown
or Powdered
From The Frien91'v Folks At Krogerl
. 21b.
box
AU. PURPOSE
YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE WILL CLOSE
MONDAY DEC~MBER 24th . AT 6:00pm
•
ENFIICI ED FlOUR
'1
l
•
•
CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY
·Tuesday, December 25th•
.HERRUD ROYAL CROWN
1~1~LB AVG. SMOKED
\
••
....
· Re-Open Wednesday December 26th . At 7:00am And Resume Normal Hours
Semi-Boneless
Whole Hams
•
'
•'
'
'
!
'
Duncan.Hines
Cake Mix
••
I'
•••
becorator or
Designer Roll
18.25-oz.
SLICED
FREE
.'
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .
NO NE SOLD TO DEALERS .
.
VAC PACK
Pound
~
CQPYRIGH T' 1984 • TH E KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. DEC . 16, THROUGH MON.
DAY DEC. 24, 1984. INGALUPO. ~ oo'i'OMERO'f SilliES.
Maxwell House
Coffee
3-lb. Can
Kroger Welcomes
Your Federal _
F~od Stamps
JUMBO
•·,~
·'''
'.,
•'••.
'·< .
J
.1
••
•'
THORNE APPLE VALLEY 7·9-LB . AVG.
ROUND OR BUFFET S'I'YLE
VAC PACK KROGER COFFEE
3-LB . CAN $5.99 (LIMIT 1 PLEASE)
'
Boneless
Smoked Hams
A[RCHIEF
113 SIZE
Pound
California
Navel Oranges
18·
.•
•
SLICED
FREE
Ohio Pack .·
Semi-Boneless
Each
'·
FOLLOW THE'
MOUNTAINEERS
TO THE
Ful~ Cooke~
Blue Bonnet Bowl
For salads, desserts,
or an exciting
176 SIZE
Win A Trip ·To Houston!
Tangerines
Mall Name, Address And
Telephone Number To:
gamlah.18 oz. can
BLUE BONNET BOWL
2007 E. 7TH . ST .
PARKERSBURG, WV. 26101
.1
OR 125 SIZE
Tangelos
Attn : Harley Sa"ders
AOVERTISID ITEM POLICY
Each or th9111 a(Wen ised jt i!(TI~ i1 r ~tqulrlld m be
..
'
513·9
Portions lb.
tt!.td rly !tYIIrlllble for sa~ rn e11ch l( roger StrJftt.
' ' " ' ~ '' ao> sr ~t+r.tf tr.attv mlltt<l 111 !hoot 16d. II wtJ rio
""' ""' "' .r)r '"'"!rlltwr1 rtum , Wi t wrll nlllll 'f'!lu
·TOTAL SATI SJACTIOI GUARANTEE
l~t· 'VIhllt !i
\·r•ur
'/'f OIIf
Ylht lm v ,rt Kruger rs UUitf,ll •lt!t!oii UP
,..,,~r
~~~ ~~ l .rnron
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rtlll<1lol,lctllr t r It \' O<J arl> rt01 " ' r~ t lf!d , K roger
wdl rf'pli! Ce voui •••·m wrlh 1h1 uml! hfand or 11
<' r>tllj>.ll lllflf• '" il lh l 111 lt• fUnd VflUI l ltl ll' fli1t4•
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cheD. ~A~hiCh """ entrde vou to purchnl! me
Htlv&rtrsed hem at the &dvl!rl rsed Qt!Ce wnhirr JO
rl,ty-5 OHI¥ Ullfl vrlnfflu cnuf"',., w~l lift acceptml
re~ll t dh •t .t
ve1''''"' PlWt hn5e'fl
vegg~es
French Style or Cut
Green Beans Cream
Style or Whoie Kernel .
ComorPeas .
.Kroger 2%
Lowfat Milk
·fresh
MEDIUM TRAY
SERVES 14· 18 PEOPL E
--s
Jumbo
Shrimp Tray ·
With Coupon On
Each
P1ge 2 I S10 Purch11t
'
. "'
•
PartY
Relish Tray
Each
*J&••
lb.
l
•
SMALL TRAY
SERVES 12·18 PEOPLE
MED IUM TRAY
I SERVES 12·18 PEOPLE!
Connoiaaur's ··
Choice
Each
'
*Ia••
Gallon
•
�Hickman begins duty
Hudson birthclay
Nutcracker presentation
set for Friday at RGC
Anny Spec. 4 Carmen J. Hickman, son of Bonnie L. Hlckrilan of
Rural Route 2, Point Pleasant,
• 1
.
Ohio
'lbe 11rst blrtbclay ol L)'IISI Gene
Hudloo was celelnled ~
with a party at the borne ~J:
perents, Gene 8lld Dreams H ,
In Middleport.
.
I
W.Va., has arrived for duty in .
Friedberg, West Germany.
Retrealtmellts ol calre,lcecre,am,
mints and nutawere~. A "tare
bear" theme wttil yellow and r· hie
Vi.slon.s · of Sugar Plum FairieS
come to ute during the Nutcracker
Suite peu1onnance scheduled for
Friday, Dec. 21. at 8p.m. In the Ji'ille
and Perforrnlng Arts Center audltortum at Rio Grande College.
32nd Anilor, was prevtous!y as-
PRE-INVENTOIY
WHITE ELEPHANT
SALE
•
Tbe ParkerSburg Civic Ballet
· Company will be presenting program tor the fourth consecutive
seuon In the Ohio River Valley
£VEIYTHING
hduolini Gv• I I
u.wtion
area.
NOW THIU J~N. 5, 1984
EBERSBACH' .
HARDWARE
·
,._lOT, OH.
._GmeHudaoa
'
I
1
Is pack leader and lamllle8
8lso
Cooney, Jason Witherell, IIGanle Cuto, Nalluln
Brown, Nau..t Baloy, Chuck ¥011111.
SANtA CLAUS ·
TheRo5eGardenCiubat'l\:ppel'6
ChrlstJ!I4s
cohostess.
·
.
Mrs. Rice was in charge of the
dlr<otlonal period reading · the
Qn-lstmas story from Luke and a
stol)', "WhytheChlmesRang".Roll
call . was answered by
ton, BeUe Prairie Council, agift for l'ppointed to be the new Deputy
giving
their favolile Chrtstmas
having served as Deputy National National Councilor.
tradition.
"Now Is the time to" WliS
Councilor. The spring'club meeting
A gift exchange was held and
given
by
Mrs. Doris Koenig and
was announced for Aplil 28, 12:30 favors at the tables were miniature
Mrs.
Mary
Jane ~bel had the
p.m. at the University Inn, Athens. crocheted mail boxes, made by
verse ot the month.
.P ractice tor the spring rally will be Elizabeth f{ayes of Chester. The
The hostess gift was won by Mrs.
on March 24 at 1:00 p.m. in Logan door prlzewenl to Barbara Sargent, ,
Vercta
Stout and thetravellngprtze
Ches~r.
withtbesprlngraUysetforMarch30
giVen by Mrs. Rubel Caldwell was
.In Logan. Charlotte Grant, Chester
Councils represented at the diswon by Mrs. Goebel. A covered dish
Council, was appointed to work on . trtct meeting were Logan, Perry,
dinner
was followed · by a gift
the national ways and means Belle Prairie, Chester, Syracuse,
exchange
and games.
and Golden Gleam. . ·
commlttee for District 13.
·
'six councils were represented at a
District Deputies and Past CounclIars ClubllfDistrlct 13, Daughters of
America, meeting held at the
Western Slzzlin' Steak House In
Athens.
A 1:30 dinner with Betty Roush
giving prayer was followed by a
meeting conducted by Esther
Smith, District 13 Deputy.
Following the routine opening,
Dorothy Ritchie, on behal1 of
Dlstrtct 13, presented Faye Hose!-
members
,;r:::"~:;:N;;:~:~'=~ ~~~~~u~M~~l"'v'::n~:r~IRowe,
Chapl'nan, Hank Cleland, John Conley, Ecldle
Sixth grade- Jason Circle, Ja.nod Circle,
Crook.S,LeahDanlels,LISaDarst,BlllyDoczl,
Angle Dooohue, Kelly Douglas, Jill' Vurst,
Wendy Gilkey, Deanna Haggy, Mary Hale,
Ryan Harper, Wally Hatfield, Marc Howard.
Shannon Counts, Jenny Damrort. John
Lambert, Tammy Lambert, Shannon
Hoback. Mel~sa Just•, Colin Mal<lens,
Norman Matson, JI!IU)I!er Smith, Angel
Snider, Jan WWiams~ .~!f!IY Winebrenner,
~;M~ay;la;Yoa;c~ha;m~.;;;~;;;;;;;-.af
(2} SSQOO
-~~-~~
cent Laudermtlt, Brett Little, Cindy May·
Todd P......u. Lon Prtce. Mindy RJggs, nna
Romine, Christie Sauters, Jared Sheets,
nard,
Meter.
Soon
Mellon.
Kevin
oucr.
JoanleElise
Simpson,
Sonja
St«,>ele,
Kathy
Thomas,
Monica Turnf>r. ' Richard VallCfl, Laurie
The second
lllx ~'l.'l?k.!l
grading
Wayland,
Sabrtna
WUson,
Reneeperiod
Young.honor
roil at the Salisbury Elementary School has
been annoull«'<<. Making a grade of B or
abow In all their subject.!l tu be named to the:
roll were:
First grade - Stacy Davis, Cynthia Klein,
Heather Stewart, Karyn Thompson, Jame>
WhJte, Nicole Bentley, Autumn Conde,
Keremy Hubbard, R.ana Jusll.'~ , Dorothy
LeUhell, Bel1 Ma.sh, Mindy Patterwn, Wade
Pooler.
Second grade - Amber Blackwell, Frank
Dickens. Janod Folmer, Jeremiah GUlette,
Chrl.sty Grogg, Kelley Grueser, Heidi Huffman. Annie Jessie, Robby Jones, Shllo
Moore, Manhew Morris, Ernie Robie,
Amanda Well.
Third grade - Ryan Conde, JPITOd
Douglas, Rebecca Hoffmari., Brad Knotts.
Jason Morris, MeUssa Pl:x.Jler, ctu1s Roettker,
Angit'Teatoro. Marol While, .Jason Witherell.
• Fourth grade - Carrie Bartels, Elizabeth
DownJe, Trevor Harrison, Jason Huffman.
Courtney MldkUt MLsty Powt'll, Mandl
Shret.!i, Steve Swatzel, Yvt'ttt' Young.
Filth grade - Rebecca Bowers, Connie
saucers.
Sixth grade -
Randy
Corsi, David
',
~o
r· e
·~~~
.
.
.
.
-~
,
e.
·
~
""
IS fiour.S
. I
For On'•• $299.I
.
1·
~-
I
1
•~~
Happenings
POMEROY 'The lzaak
Walton Club will start its annual
muzzle loader target shooiS on
Dec. 23 with additional shoots on
Dec. :llandJan.6. Matches each
Sunday will begin at 1 p.m. with
prtzes of bacon, turkeys and
cash. No scojles are pennltted In
tihe regular matches.
·The Ladies Auxiliary of the Mount
Mortah Church of God, Racine, held
Its Chrtstmas dinner air Duff's.
Tliere was a gift exchange. Atlendlng\Vel'e HarrletLaudermilt, Tessie
Wolfe, AlLsha Findley, Wilma
"Powell, Anna Wolfe, Margaret
PoWell, Anrt Findley, Juanita PoweU, Sandy Boothe, MUdred WWIams, .Slilrley Simpson, Tamtny .
Bable. Lon · Simpson, Joan Bable,
018118.Sinipson, Lois Wolfe, Debbie
Nelson and Anna Tucker.
(
*'!'r!!TAqfl.~llf/llfl
*BASKETBALLS
*SOCCER BALLS
*PLAYGROUND BALLS
STEARNS & FOSTER
MATTRESSES
15 Year Warranty
ASLOWAS
S99~g ~:~~
WI/I Dsllre~ F11 C''lttm11
liilrl~.B !I J1 14~ &• Jhlflil""'S.r/18t"·-~
ALL SEASON
lA DlAL
_,
·- f.
PISS/10113 ....... $42
P175/70R 13 ........ 49
P175/IOR13........ 47
PIU/10113.. ....... 41
"95/7 Sll4 ......... 54
~~~
•
•
I
contains .
MIDDLEPORT - · A New
,Year's Eveservlcewiil beheld at
the Ash Street Freewlil Baptist
Church In Mlddleporl. several
guest speakers will be on hand
along with the singers, Wayfartn'
S(railgers of Columbus. Tbe
service will be from 7: 30 to l2
midnight.
~ _..
I
·'
This PrOduct
Muzzle loader
target shoot
New. Year's
servtce set
1118
lfr~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f
..
,
' MON-F'RI
""'-""•·'"'fh
IIIIIII.,IBI!:BII!BIIllllllliiB•IIIIOiilnlleMIIIIIII.IM,. . . . !. .IIIllllliiiiiiiiiiM'. .II
-·
Auxiliary
· dinner held
tlfl
.
COMPUTER BALAN. (lNG - l'l
12 Price
Located on Main Street in Rutland, Ohio
Ph
742 3088
MasterCard & Visa Wekome
December 24
li.:B::~IIiiiiiiii!iiliiiliiM!jjQiiiiiiBII~I
This
Ad
I
II·
. . I
I' .a''..__,.,
B
.
aldas
. f or I
liP
ClJffee
Fl
I WI
e .·
d
Juice
I"Mm·ute•.Mai . .
I
,
Other Tit• Sins Similarly low Priced
Tri~":.~M;"iJ'~kl~~n~~chris
lle<ker. James Brumtleld, Henry Buchanan,
Fields, steve routkroo, Tammy Hawley,
Rhonda Hooper, Wesley Howard, Stacy
Hysen.
Tracy Hysell.
Calhy LaudPrmJlt,
Kerr. Nick K!ni.
Cathy Laudermllt,
Loretta
Vln·
P·ISS·SI13 - 127.50 I.W. ar 4 for 199.00
To Be Given Away
Register For
Clad Carson, Shannon Coates, Slacy Dalton,
Patrtda oav•. s...o11 Edmonds, Chartoue
. ·=----
T'.n0 ESE IOC"II aonoM PRICES
GIFT CERTIFICATES
~~~ =-~~':'·~:~.\~h~~~:
aiarlene Cadle, Metod! Carl, Lesley Carr,
CHECK
P-ISS-IOR13'34.00 ww.P-17S-IOR13 - 131.00fxtr~ P-165-101113
Spociol Prico -'37.50 I.W.
P-115 IOR13 - 140.00 - P-115·75114- IJ2.00 I.W.
'·"5-mu _ 1u.oo ~ P-2os.mu- 146.00
P-205 75115 - 141.00- P·2U 75R15- 148.00
p.m mnh-151.00 - ·P-td35 .7St15 - 1S3.SO
T 1M Pricll Inc1uII FrH Mounting
Froe Bubble lalance, frot Valve $1tms
New-
SUsie Sprouse, Cllfryle Slovens, SlleUy
. POMEROY - The Magnolia
at 6 p.m . Thursday at the Meigs
'club wiU meet".Thul:sday at 6: :11
lrin. Members are to meet at·5: 45
p.m: at the Holiday Inn. Follow- · . p.m. at the Legion Home prior to
· lng dili!1er a partywtil be !Jeld al
tlhe party. . .
the llonle of · Edria . Slusher-:
· RAqNE - Racine .American
MembersaretotallecOOkles.
Legion Auxlllary will_have a ·
~ttnas.'party Th~rsday. at6
RACINE~ The Racine Amerp.m. ·a.t the MeigS Inn·. Members
lean_Legion Post Ladies Auxll- · are ·to meet at the legion hall at
5:45p.m.
1-------__;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___.._ _
TE~~~~o!M!!I ~!e~!e
u and.UDder.
~ i¥Y will bold a Chrtstmas party
THuRsDAY
•
From
9:00 A.M~·Noon
'
..
"Getting You There Safely"
Fourth grade - Heather Hlll, JuUe Htu,
~.
· Calendar . · ·
Out Treats
_SATURDAY, DEC. 22nd
RUTLAND nRE SALES
~fi~~1;€;5~~;~1 ' ~~~~~I?~~~~i"~
Jay Humphreys,
Danny
Kennedy,
King.
Marsha King,
Kenda
Kloei;, Krislln
Karen
'ibeater. F'rldaY. s p.m.u1s llpODIOted by u.e va11ey
Altlst Series and the Frasdl An Coki!:Y, and wiD be
Blanche Moldlney, Toledo, was r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~;;;;;;;;;;;;;n;;l1
Meigs honor rolls
announced. Maldf18 a gr,ade d. B cr above ln
Handl~~t
Tickets will be avaDable at the
box ofllce. however with limited
seating 'capacity, prf!'tlcket purchases are.advised. Tbe production
Is sponsored by the French Art
Coiony and the Valley Artist Series.
'
DIAMOND
SAVINGS & lOAN
Past Councilors conduct meeting
or the Fine and Performlna' Arts
Center ottlce at the toll f~ number
BALLET PlANNED- 'l1:e "N~' Will be ... mtec1 b)' the P~ CMc Wet. Tickets
J!l'l'lleUUied ·..t the Fine and PerlomJnjt; Alii: Center Will be liv"l•ble at the door,l51or adullll and S:UO lor
Will It At
party at the home of MrS. ElSie
CUlley ..;th Mrs. Anna Rice as
$2.50, l2 years and under ticket tees.
For more Information on the
Nutcracker production, contact the
French Al1 Colony at (614) 446-311M
The 40-member ensemble 'will .--~----------i
Include the complete choreograph
of tliis RUsslan-ortgtnated story ol
the glit of the nutcracker. Colorful
and delightful. costuming. wilh
added special efforts will enhance
the chal'll\ and character of this
beloved holiday production.
Rose Garden Club
conducts meeting. ~ ·
Georre Wright
~
( : >1, I , I
t-!00-282-mt.
10%-50% OFF .
Tracey Grueeer.
Plains held Its annual
~
Hickmari, an armor crew
member. wiUI the First Battalion,
CQiors . c~ out ~ the
deCorations.
.
'Ibolie atteodlna were L)'IISI's
great-grandmother, Velma Tay)or;
grandpare!lts, Blondena and )famdRalner; Chrts,JulleandBnlolre
Nichols, George and PbylllsL:
Kenny, Tammy, Altllle and ..
Searles, Kevin and Jay OUer jmd
Charlie and Scott Hud&on. Seadlng
gilts were Bob and Bernie ~·
T<m, Bessie and Craig Darst iiJJd
TRAIN RIDERS-Cub S!loul Pack M&laakalraln llll8ld. Scoutl. at the train are: front from left, Chuck
ride .., the~ Claus ,.,.,w.J ol the Hacldng VaDey Pll'br, Kelih Smith, Jeremy Heck, J-nCarpenter,
Seenlc Ballroad In the N~nvWe area on Dec. s, JGIIh Heel!; bad!, Eric While, Bey.., W...,., Ira Van
~
LIFESTYLE FURNITURE
Open Sunday 1· S P.M.
P20517SU4 ......... 5I
P20517 Sill......... 60
P21 S/7 Sill......... 63
P22S/7 Sill.. ....... 66
SALE ENDS DECEMBER 21
_,
I
og .saccharin.
Frymyer, Lori Hayes. Missy Leach, Teny
Reuter, Kristen Slawteor, JeMlfer Taylor,
Amy Wagner, Amy Warth, Pam Whaley.
'
The secoftd six weeks grading period honOr
roll at the RadneEJementaryscOOulhasbeen
announced Making a grade of B or above ain
all t~ subjects 10 be named to the roll were:
Ftrst grade - John Card. Janna Manuel.
·cHRISTMAS SAVINBS
second grade- Grant Circle, SCott Grace,
Beth Hysell, Kevtn Ihle. Shannon Mora11ty.
Travts Mugrage, Kendra NorTis, Courtney
RoUsh. JeremY Smith.
Tb1rd grade- Beth Clark, Rachel Hensler.
THUSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Holiday dinner held
300/
~.2Pr!!
- tO Off
WOMEN'S SUEDE
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Nease
entertained wiUI their annual family
holiday dinner at their Forest Run
Road Sunday. Pictures of the get
together were taken.
Altending were Stanley Nease,
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nease, Westerville; Phillip and Johtl Nease,
Columbus; Mrs. Hazel Hayes, ,
Syracuse; Mrs. Ruth Powers,
Richard Powers, Grove City; Miss
Susan Powers, Cleveland; Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Nease, Chester Road;
Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson,
Jamie and Brian, Forest Run Road,
and Mr. and Mrs. WW!am Nease,
Jill and Travis, Pine Grove.
AND
TIE-UP
YOUR CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING ·
DRESS
This piCICiuct
and Grey
u;
-----------------------------·
WOMEN'S DRES.S FLATS and CASUALS
seru
fleflaa#s
20°/o Off
Bcu.pfs for .
1000/o NUTRASwEm. 100°/o TASTE!
WiTCH FOI SUNDAY'S PAjia FOI
GliAl SAYIIIGS DllliG OUI
SUNDI Y KOUIS
12:00 NOQN • 6 P.M.
CHAPMAN SHOES
5/32" Autumn IMural Dtsign) ............UI.lttllll...... S7 .00
15/32" Mohave ....................- ...............iJa.lttllll...... ss.ao
•
-I S/32'' Mallagan ....,.....- ..~·-·····............ l.ilJIII'k ...... •s.oo
15/32" Sancht- tan ...........................1JII.lla..... ss.oo
I All Ptl"' Ftotil lilt W••k ,,
I
Ne•t to llberftl. In
•·
.,
PIMONJ
"The Way America Send. Love"
.I
.•I
I 5/32" Slllolley lllountltin lliclcory..,.....Z..ill.ltllll ...... ss.oo
I
"C6tltt••• Ad"
AH ltlll/11 Ellut.
il.
:1
ROY
FLOWER SHOP
108 BUnERNUT. POMEROY, OH .
PH. 882·2039 or 882·11721
We A0cept All Major Credit Cerda,
end Wire Flowe,. Everywhere
I HOGG & ZUSPAN
.
CO.,
l
MATERIALS
0....,... .......
INC.
. MASON, W. VA.
•
773-5554
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ._ _ _1. . . . . ...
<
I
j
I
Collectin
PATCH DOLL TO BE GIVEN
AWAY ON DE(. 24TH
So if you want the tasJe of 100% NutraSweet ·and ~ot the
taste of saccharin, choose new Diet Pepsi and Diet Pepsi Freel
· That's because in most areas Diet Coke, Tab and Caffeine
Free Diet Coke still c6ntain saccharin- in fact alm0$t twice
as much saccharin as NutraSweet. ·Check the facts and compare the taste. We think you'll choose Diet Pepsi and Diet
Pepsi Free.
I UMinD QUANTITY PANEUNG CLOSEOUT
1 1/e" Valley For• lirch .._ ..,........ - .......Z.JIIJIIIIII...... S6. 50
I
I
1
1
I
REGISTER FOR A CABBAGE
OIEl' PIPS!. Olfl JIB'SI·COIA Olf1' PfPSj.fiH . ANODfT Pl":f'SI.COI.A flU oi.Rf liiAOEMMI(S Of PI~ , INC
'NOfJASYitlT"AHOtHf ~''I'MIOL Alf TIIAtOEMAe:SOFG C $1AN'CO FOfiii511N'C!Of 5VIt'BflNING INtiltOilHl.
DlfTCOO, IAIANDCAHfiNE Jill OlE' CC*f .._.llfOIS"JWOtRAOOAAR(! Of 111f COCA-C<UOOI/IN!tHV
.,
Here's a bea~tiful floral gift forevel)'On~ on your list. Fresh,
holidJy flowers an elegapt, solid copper serving piece.
Later, each one will be treasured in so many ways.
Call or visit our shop to have a Copper Collection Bouquet
delivered anywhere in the U.5. and" Canada.
'
"
�Wedn111tey, ~ 19,1984
Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio
Engineer anested for selling bomber plan~
Bym'ABEUQQI
.4i.odated ..._Writer
~ ANGELES (AP) - A
NortllnlpenglneerwhogaYI!secret
plans lor tile "stealth" bomber to
•
.
FBI men 1J011D1 U SOYiet aaeats
tlley-klla~them ..._,"tlle
JeCUI'tty•
FBI 1114
FBI agents l8ld Cavanap allo
tookallltofaubcolltriiCIOI'Ifromhls .
employer, Nol'lllrop's Advaced
SysUms DMsJon In Plro RM!ra, 12
miles southeast of downiOWn Los
-.ooo
C.Vanqh, 40, of lllbwilan Downey amtted Tuesday at a
Bonds forfeited
Pomeroy court
•
. HOUDAY ADOPI'ION - 'The Meigs County Humane Society Is ·
looking for a family to provide a Christmall gill of a good home for lids
•rmed breed, tour RIOIIIh old male puppy. 'The pufiPY has all of his shots
and the SQCiety wW help pay lhecost ol neutering whi!n that time comes.
Anyone wlshlq to provide a good home is aslred to caD 992-41505 or
!III'M42'7.
developnent on the stealth proIIW!lin0ctoberl!8l.butllttl.about
tile program has been dlacloried
since tben.
by
CONVERSE
NIKE '
·.c
Dance 9 p.m. ttl .
1 a.m. NatiOIIII
Guard A..-y .·
PONY
K· SWISS ·
. 298 SECOND ST . .
POMEROY, ·OH.
.· '
PRtCES IN ~FFECT
lUCKY
WINNER
WILL BE
REIMBURSED
THEIR
PURCHASE
COST
TkM" 1MY llo
purcha,... ot fruth
"*'='.:.''
loy
304.6rs~so ..
304·615-1393.
( ...los
_,L_...-.
GRADE A
BLACK& DECKER
E
POW·ER
TOOLS
PIS5/80Rl3.. .............. 29.95
Pl65/80Rl3.............. 35.00
Pl75/80RIL ......... .. .. 36.00
Pl85175RI4 ................ 38.00
Pl95175RIL ............. 39.00
P205175R14............... 41 .00
P205175Al5 .............. .. 43.00
P215175Rl5 ................ 45.00
P225175Rl5... ........... .. 47.00
P235175Al5 ............... 49.00
LEG QUARTERS
Chi-cken •••••••!B•···· 39<
*SANDERS
*DRILLS
*SAWS, Etc.
PICKENS HARDWARE
The Meigs Chapter of AlcohOlics
Anonymous will meet at 7: ll p.m.
Thursday at the multipurpose
buildllng on Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy.
· ·
.
WhOle Fryers •..'! 49<
& SKILL
mergency runs
AA meeling
Giveswsg
THRU SAT., DEC: 22, .1984,
U.O.I.
IIIDDlEPOIT .
Fourcallswereansweredbylocal
l1!llts Tuesday the Meigs County
Emergency JY!edlcal Services
reports.
At 8:111 a.m. Rutland went to a
chimney fire at theCharlesWilllamson resldenCI' on Dye Road; Racine
at 11:14 a.m. took Leona James
from Letart to Veterans Memortal;
Pomeroy at 6:18p.m. took Kenneth
Lunsford from 368 E. Main St. to
Veterans Memorial and' at 10:40
p.m., Middleport tOOk Candace
Barber from 157. Dock St. to
Veterans Memorial.
G,o~etg
•
su Ptr o.,...
FOOTJOY
Imboden, Pomeroy, mJ and costs,
unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.
SIGN UP 'FOR A
CHANCE TO
WIN ONE OF
20-$25.00
GIFT
CERTIFICATES
TO BE GIVEN
AWAY DEC.
24TH
'
FRESH
Pork Steak •••••• $1 .09
LB.
.
SWIFT BUn~RI~U 16-22 Lb.
09
51
·Turkey ••••,•••••••L~~
BONELESS·,_.,' .
·.
$ t9
MASON, W.VA.
·
INGELS
LB.
Rump Roast ••••• 1
19
(bound ·Beef ••:! Sl
jewelers
COOK'S 4-7 LB. AVG. SMOKED
PICNIC HAMS ............... !~-........ 89<
SHREDDED S2.19 LB.
SMITHFIELD
. Dsilg
STORE HOURS
. Mon. -Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
' Sunday 10 AM-1() PM
'
Ntw y10r'• h•
SIGN UP TO
WIN 2
"CABBAGE
PATCH
BOILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••!!· S1.99
DOLLS"
HOMEMADE
"
PRESIDENT -
Gary
M~
chael of Racine has been elected
president of the Meigs County
Fann Bureau Board of'l'rultees.
Gary Michael
chosen fann
bureau board
president
.
The board of trustees of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau Federation
baa announced the election of Gary
Michael, 45144 Pomeroy Pike,
Racine. as president of the board.
Michael and his wife Sharon have
three children. Todd. Man hew, and
Kimherly. He has been a member of
the local organization for several
years. Helsa beeffarmerandlsalso
engaged In the poultry buSiness.
Otller new officers are Lany
Montgomery, vice presidenf; Sylvia Midkiff, secretary, and Jack W.
Carsey, treasurer.
The new president anllilunces that
l!ei membership are coming in
well, but reminds \inpald members ·
that in order tokeepthelrmaximum
Insurance In force their dues shOuld
be submitted to theofflceprlor tDthe
end of December 1984. A ·weu•
rounded program for members will
be developed forthecomlngyear, he
commented.
Racine 8quad
elects officers
New officers have bten elected by
the Racine Emeramcy sQuad.
'fhey are George Cummins,
chief; Unda Diddle, aSSIIIIllt cl\lef;
Wayne Lyons, captain; Jack Lyons,
.first assistant captain; BW Roberts,
S€COIId assistant captain; Bill Roberts, lieutenant; DonnaRaeWolte,
president; John Holman, vice
·president; Gene Lyons, secretary;
Martlyn Wolfe. treasurer; and
Beverly Cummins, reporter.
Members are reminded that 1!*!5
dues are payable at the January
meeting.
HAM SALAD ................l~; •••• $1.29
SUPERIOR BREAKFAST HAM
.
LUNCH MEAT ...............!!.... S1.97
1-Lio. 1- a- Qtrs.
MARGARINE ......... 2/S1.19
MilK ............................. 69<
1~-------------COUPON
OPEN
1:00·
. UmL
..
'".,_.,.,..,..
5 lb. lag
YOUR CHOICE
WHITE
. GRAPEFRUIT .........~.~!S1.59
3 Llo. lag GOlDEN
$34995
Lady'a Dlnntr Rln«
Res. 'Mil
DELICIOUS
·b
APPLES ................,.~~ S1.29
.
-
0.
I
I
I
,
~
~
..
•
$_
1
59
·Oranges •••••••••••
Solitaire
Earrtn~~:a
Lady'!!
17 OZ. WILD PRINCE
YAM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~••••••• 79<
16 OZ. DEL MONTE SLKED
.
BROUGHTON
Jackrts
't!O .
R.,..
.......
........... t'a
I
CARROTS •••••••• ~ •••••••••••• ~~~••••••• 79<
20 OZ. DEL MONTE SUCED
PINEAPPLE ••••••••••••••••••• ~~~••••••• 89<
Lady's Opal a 2 Diamond Rl"«
'119
R~ .
30 OZ •. UIIY'S
PUMPKIN'PIE MIX ••••••• ~~~••• Sl. 19
46 OZ. DOLE
PINEAPPLE JUICE ••••••••• ~~~••• S1.39
6 OZ. MAXWEU HOUSE .
INSTANT COFFEE ......... ~~~... S3.89
•16 oz.
COFFEE-MATE .............. !~~ ... S1.99
17 5 COUNT KLEENEX
.
FACIAL TISSUES ........... !~! ...... 89<
'l!Ml
ALL 14K
GOLD.
30% OFF
· CHAINS ,·
·•111
R•R. '299
b&l'.
BAKER'S FLAVORED ..
••
,
3 OZ. IEGIUR
.
JELLO •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2I 79<
12 OZ. NESJLES SEMI-SWEET
· . .
CHOC. MORSELS .......... r~~... Sf.99 ·
'
I
$169
·I
I
2°/o Milk ••••••••••
·!
KR4FT AMER. IND. SLICES
$l
9
4
se
,
(hee ••••••••••••••
.
.
-
•
•
, MU'I Dtamoftd Rtna
BIRDS-E~E
9
9
(
.
l)etergent •••••••••
P·lzza •••••••••••••••••
JENO'S
. 42 Oz. Box
10
•
oz.
.99(
$HURFINE SUGAR
106 I. llltll A".
. H!·t•JI
••w•••-.••M~•rtrt
YELLOW ONIONS
19(
3lb.Bag
-MERRY
CHRISTMAS
5-lb.
r
licit
$149
,
Limit Qoo ,., Cus'-<
Geool tWy AI Ptwoll's
Offor bplm DM. 21. 1914
SUNSHINE DOG FOOD
~~
$339
limit OM Por Cuotomor
GOe4 Gilly At Ptwoll'o
Offor bplm Doc.
1914
n.
TOMATO SO!JP
101/4
oz.4 jS]
Uo.it 0no Por ( U I GoM 01!ly At Powell'•
Offer lapiNI lit<. 22, I 914
,,
FLAVORIH
ICE CREAM
99 (
I
'---------------·
,..-------------. COUPON
I
WESSON
COOKING OIL
48 Ot.
C.od Ftldtg 011lg
limit Onf Per Custramer
Geod Only At '•well's
. Offer Geoo1 fri.. Dt< . 21 , 1914
•
CAMPIEU.'S
r--------------COUPON
f/1 Gal.
~.'110
and JEWILIY
Clld Tli•lldtg 011/g
limit Ono Per Customer
:
Good Only lt Powell's
Ollar Gaod Thurs., D1<. 20, 1914 J
...I ______________
~hoc. Chips.~!:~~~ 99< Cool Whip ••• :~~••• 69<·
·154 OZ. HUNT'S
MANWICH •••••••••••••••••••• ~~~•••••••99<
39(
20 Or.
loaf
~-------------r--------------1
COUPON ·
12 Oz. Pkg.
RINSO
.
GAY 90's BREAD
I
BRACELETS
Man's Onyx A Dtlmond RIII$C
BETSY ROSS
I
Gal.
•
Gild Wldlletftlj 0111/j
:
limit One Por Customer
-1
Good Only At Powell's
1 Olftr Good Wed.. Doc. 19, 1914
SLb.Bag
~-'195
8 Diamond
TV DINNERS •••••••••••••••• !~~-··~··· 99<
10 OZ. BIRDS-EYE
· .
CHOPPED SPINACH ...... m•...•.. 89<
11
FLORIDA
•
11 01.
11
Siln Up
Fot A
· We llt141rw The lllpt To
litDit OUintilits
waa ~elected u pt1me
contractor - lnltlal mearcll and
Nmhrop
ATw-a·c
SHOES
RMI
A1ep11 l!lltatiVeoltheAmerlcan
Grants and Scholarship Prograrh
out ol1 Marietta baa not been
authorl2!!d by . the Meigs Local
School District tocollectfundstobe
used In helping Meigs Local
students
receive arants and
scholarshiP.s~ Meigs High Schllol
Principal James M!lier said today.
All business houSes of the county
should note that the Meigs Local
School Dlstrlct baa not Issued such
authOrization, MUJer stated.
Three fmed in mayor's court -
m
A.n&eles.
lrrepara~bileiiidama&'eiiii
. ~to-U...S•.na·tlona·l·~-------•t
OPEit UIIITIL I
No aga eement set
f,
or coIIedions
.
Four defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined tn the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hotrman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Leonard L.
Hurlow, Mason, W.Va., $450 posted
on a chai-ge of driving whlle under
the lnlluence and $50, .driving li'ft of
center; Thomas M. Roush, MasOn,
$450, driving whlle lntoxicatetl, and
$50, going the wrong way on a one
way street; Robert Hewitt, Pomeroy, $450, drivingwhllelntoxlcated,
and Dovey Wise, Middleport, $00,
· falluretoyll'ldtllerlghtofway.
Fined on.five charges was Alfred
Birchfield, Middleport. The charges
includeddlsorderlymanner,$50and
costs; aSSIIult upon an offiCI'r, $200
and costs and 10 days in jail; ·
and costs;
reslstir\g arrest,
aSSIIult, $100 and costs, and aggravated and menacing threats. $100
and costs. Others fined were
Charlotte M. Newell, Middleport,
·
said their
WOIId belp him
gain "qJ III!Cri!t" c:imrlle aad
leadloeven~valuablelnforma·
tlon, authorllleuald.
meelllli wltb Ulldercover agmts at
Themu Patrick CaV8JIIIb 'l lld a hotel In Cmunerce. He Is IICCUied
thedocwnenla<llatealthteduloiiJIY of, attempllng to deliver .to tile
,
•
.
·
fQr maldng bcmben lnvllll:J!e to _Sovlell manuals, blueprints, d~W·
10
ra~ ''wen! of the~ value to lnpaaddoc\lllelltsonU.S.natlonal
tile U.S. government aad that DDCe dell!nse.
Eight clefendanti. forfeited bonds theywerelnthehandloftheSovletll,
In Wuhlngton, FBI Olredor.
• post~'!! on speedlrig charges In the .
·
WUJiam H. Webster said disclosure
court o1 Pomewy Mayor Richard
oltlledocumentswouldhavecaused
Seyler Tuesday night.
'l'hey are James Bush, !'tactne.
$44; 9arla Gibbs, Mason. W.Va. ,
$43; susanna Heck, Pomeroy; $46;
Steven Ashcraft, Ripley, W.Va.,
$18; James Ginther, Syracuse, $45;
Glen Bissell, Long Bottom, $45;
ThomasBatey,Mlddleport,$45,and
Jeffrey Reltmlre, Pomeroy, $54.
FlnedweteDonni~Stone,Middleport, $313 and costs, resisting
arrest; $113 and costs, lntoxlcatlori,
and $63 and costs: disorderly
manner; Gerald Arnold, Pomeroy,
$25, no operator's license, and
Steven Boso, Racine, $<16 and costs,
speeding.
The Daily
$199
Umit Ono Per Cuotomor
Geool Oftly lt Powell's
Offer bplm lit<. 22, 1914
••
•
••
Geool S.t..-""y Only
MAXWEU HOUSE
COFFEE
•
llb.$599
Can
a.. ""
I
limit
c..,_,
GMII Chlly •t '•well's
I
I
I
!
II
1 ·--~~~~~~~~!J
'
I
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.
I
•
Page 12- The Daily Serltinel
~
r
Marauders only·one
game o~t of top spot
·after 72-63 triumph
.
recoros -
.
T-
son•0.2-2; OavL'!i !Ml-12; Sayre .J.0-6: Campbell
e,....,....,
a.tprc .............................. 16 J3 16 U-!16
2-0-4: L.onl 5<!-10. Totalo 11-3-!16.
Trimble ,... ,.. . .. .. .• . .•. . .. .. .... 20
16 6 JJ-!16
. _ ... - ll<'tpre 59, Trimble 38.
Vlldnp 'l'rllunph
McARTHUR - VJnton County's
Steve Hamon sank twQ free throws
with seven second~! leJt to bf!!ak a
~tie and &tve the Vlklnp a 62-Ql
win over hard-luck FederalHocking. The Lancers' Randy
M~ttJack led all scorers with 26
points whUe Keith Barnhart added
13. Mark Saunders led VInton
County with .19 and Hamon added
16.
.
•
FEDI!:IIAirHOCKJNG 1•1 - Matlack
1:HJ-26: Tate 2-0-4: Deeter 1>2-2: Etlll'lcl&e
;J.~J.<;;
t-().2;
Bamhan 6-1-13: WaiJon 1.().2; flooNclt
Klncade 2-1-5. T - IHtl.
VINTON COUNTY (AI - Hamon 6-4-16;
t
\.().lly--=
2.- · --
Warren Loco! .... ....... ....... .. 12 17 21 »--16
Nel.-York ........................... 21 17 32 19-89
. Kews •• - Warren Localli, NellonvtllfYork 28.
MIDer Willa Flnt
HEMLOCK - Beblnd Keith
Roberts' :rr polnll, MOler won Ill
lint game ·of the ye~ with a 61-46
~Jon
over winli!Ba Wellston.
After a 7-7 tint period tie, the
FalconJ niounted quarter Jew of
25-22 and 43-36.
'Mi-
WDU1'0if <•l
i
~; Rlf:e .
2·2-6; Frick HJ; Deok 3-:141 Dotoo U.lf;
11--
JarJ::
3-:141 -1-1-3.- ~ (tl) - CraJa s-1-13;
12-3-77; Docore 2-U; Todi I·U: Campboll
0.1·1; Role 3-0-4; Crlwtord 1.0.2; 'l'boiiWI
2.().4.-lly I
laL
'"" ••
Wotlaton .. .. ............. ......... .... 7 1!1 14 ·
Mlltor ............... ..... .. .. :........ 7 lB 18 ~
RMintM - Mlllet 6l,,WellltUil +I.
'
'
~'
j
..'
!
SKmiG
o.
St. It, lU, P-oy
TEAM
CLEAN
season.
LEE CODNER
949-2030
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTEtS FOR
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QU[[N LAUNDRY
•GilSON IEFRIGUATOR
"
was
the Falcons ahead for the tlrst time
with one minute to play and led the
team in rebounds with nine.
Senior forward . Keith Taylor
topped the Falcons' scoring with 18
points.
Princeton, which led at halftime
33-22, waspaefdbyJohnSmythwith
17polnts.
BowUng Green Coach John Weinert made no effort to hide his
pleasure over the Falcons' 60-59
comeback victory r:ro;er Princeton In
college basketball Tuesday night.
' "I thought we did a lot of good
things," Weinert said. " Coming
from 15 points behind on an
undlsctpllned'team Is one thing, but
coming back from 15 down on ·
Prtnceton Is another. They are a
very dlsclpllited team." .
The Falcons shot 65 pei-cent In the
second half, with freshman Anthony
Robinson scorlngl2ofhls 14 points In
the final 20 minutes. Robinson put
.
RIDENOUR
TV & APPLIANCE
Da~y
--=•=
Alhley
-
. .....
_
_.._ ··.._
...................
............. ....... ,......
....
~
IIOUIWWDI'I!IIN (M) - Baile)' 9-1-19;
2-0-t: . Colley 1-1-3: ~ 7+111:
-1.().2: Jelfenll«.-11-tNL
VAlLEY t•l -
B-Id
~~~; Sllopllerd 2-Q4; Pack 1-3-6; 111.,.,
2-U; Smltb ~11 -23; WIUIMnl 1.().2. Talolo
1H1·._
Authorized John Deere,
New Holllnd, Bush Hoc
hrm Equipment
AIIM••••
•Wiahlrt •DIIhWiehere
F•r• E•••tt~••t
Pert• & Serwl11
>I>
1·1-tt.
lnsur1nce Work
CultQ.nt" Pole Bldp. ·
lilr.aes
•
Roolina Work
Alu11lnum & Vinyl Sidin1s
111 Yeero Experience
GREG ROUSII
PH. 992-7583
or 992-22(!2
INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd lib to iotroduc:t you to
EnPCt·A-Cor. tho modem ••r
to dri" the vehicle of your
.
No Down P1yme11
Lower Monthly P1yrnent
& Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875
Call 614-992-6737
'"'t.•r.:. . ., _. _,.. . .
[';;7 :.:::............. 169.95
, ................- ......... •110
_191
frl-Sat.
& Sun. 10 to 5
.......,. 10 till
CIOMd Thursday
4 •· , ................__sn
a-. SINh fhho<
rt-12 ChonHo Grilh .... -'U
. F......:..............- .... •111 ,.,• . _ , GriHo --..··-175
for4 att01 Cho" Toil Gel11
£1111 of Rt. 7
•r
11119 High School
Torw loft, .,,., Twp. r., l.st
WIIAJIY'S. All · PAm
*i•ow., ., rit\'!/30/1 moe
service, truekina (limes-
Call: 742-2407
12·6·1 mo.
CARPENTER
SERVICE
co:riY
CWI .-~
.
TROMM EXCAVATING
ware. Furniture.
Stone Jars. Etc.
V. C. YOUNG Ill
949-2801
99t-6tiS 11 99HJt4
,,•.,.,. o•••
''",..,__......
,._ ..,_......
IM - &--. . .
.
. Public Notice
lOIN nAFOID "":.."·
PH•.742·2328
·
1-0-c
On July 12, 1984. rn lhfl
Me•ns Cou·m y Probr1 te Co urt
C.1 s1~ No. 24 4 2 1. Maqbnc
Mil tor. At 1 Box 4~ . M•dd iP.port,
Ohio 45 769 was appo•m ed
Adrnr rustra tnx of tho estate of .
Ernest Gnte Newh,,m , rlccP.ased.
la!fl ol Apnl 9. 198 4. Bqx 1!2 .
LonQ Bott om. Ohro •
Robert E Buck.
Phon•-----------
Bv Lena K. Nesselroad.
Clerk
11 21 19. 26. 31. 31c
space
tlllal or OU..oltt~s
cauntsese
iieind~~~~~
n1
- - •_:-:~~~~~~~~
delcrlbe ~~- •
''
T~ sentirwi:T~a~I~S~~~~~~;
I
9. - - - - - ' - -
: 10.- -~--..:...-
1
1-11.12, ----------
'I
I
I
13. - - - - - - 14. _ _;__ _ __
'I
t..
,.1
I
I
16
· ------
'
·'
~
THANKS
z
-
LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
like to place an ad,
Licensed Clinical Audiologist
cantact ·Donnie DudL..;;.dl..:ng::._a_t_9_4._9_;·~~~~~
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213 1
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
. MANlfY'S
/Year
29. _ _ _ __
Now Hiring,
Y- Area.
30-----ll . _ _ _ __
Call 105·617·6000
32. _ __..__ _
Ert. 1-tiOS
33. _ _ _ __
34._ _ _ _ __
.
....
I
I
I
~=- W
(
CAROlYN McCOY
Good used relrlaer•tofs,
WIShlls, dryers, ps llld
electric flli&U 1nd 1V sets.
OP(N ITO 6
'
44&-lllt
I
ALL STEEL &
POLE BUILDIN<;S
llatltletls
...
SUPEI J-14"
240-16'' .·
240-11" '
IUO
MGM F
.
SYRACUSE - Quality s~ws
in this 3 bedroom 1anch ~me.
•!bath, b!!autiful .!amity room,
·nice kitchen wrth all appl~ances
Jndudl~g dishwasher,_washer
1o dryer. larfl yard wrth cham
link le11te· New wood s!irage
blildinJ $44,500.00
..
' .
•'
.
'.
'
Sim Start From I2'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes ·trom 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
In·sulated Dot,Houses
P&S BUILDINGS
R1cine, Oh ..
Ph. 614-843 -5191
96.5 ACRES - Free gas. fur·
nace, 9 rms., Ia; barn, lots of
crop land. Easy linancing
'
I'OIIEROY - Two bedroom
home with new lYing room.
Dedi area"lor coo!tow, etc.
$13,900.00.
IACJII£ - Like new modular
MIDDLEPORT - Nice 3 BR
home near schools. Nice car·
~ng, gas .furnce, fuH base-
ment swimming pool & dbl.
garage. $39,900.
RURAl WATER - Good build·
tng s~e. T.P. water available, 5
aeres.
2 YR.OLD- HI ~ full
basement. tg.. rec. rm.,ele. B.S.
heat In the woods
IIIDDUPORT - 2 8R frame,
good location near &rQCerl..
borhood. $33,90000,
LG. IUSINESS 8I.DG. - 4
2 business rentals
$800.\X) plus more spo. All
occupied.
witll a
raom lllded on. Good netgh-
IIDOUPOII - Thi~ A¥1.
- 'Nell home in ·!Pld kmon.
3 betitQOml. blth, firepllce .
· wLTOIS
. ..1 Cleilnd,
H•ll!ll.
Jr.,
992-1111
J1t11 Trn1tll Mt-26&0
Dottle T1mtr tt2-Mt2
Jo Hill 915·4461 · •
A-_:
ID·6·1lt
RUTLAND- Smal emoom>
cal home. Gas furnce, fllCXi location. Pr~ed right
unit with 3 bediQOIIIS. central
1tr, equipped l<itthen
NING
FIBERGLAS
~.
COIIIITRY UWIIG - 2Ii 8R
ranch. Good oondilion on 12
ICIIS. AlducttltD 131,500.
- IACIHO£S
-DUIP TIUCXS
-
IO·BOTS
TRENCHER
WATER
SEWER
--GAS liNES
-SEPTIC STSTEIS
lARil , $MAn IOU
· Pl. 992·2471
11123/1 mo. pd.
{ ('
'1 /I , I ,
f
'' '
I ' I
J .R .
tc INC , 5 ~1e Rtprtlt"llll iiH'
INSUlATE YOU·R ATTIC
~
OR WHOlE HOUSE
..,.
IUSIHESS-HSIDENnAl
For Trash Pickup
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
E POINT
Service Call
992-3194 .
c...,,.,'
,, c,,,,
,.,,
2MilHDIIRIIWMthlW,
Off St. II. 7
IN -DlEI'OIIT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.
OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
446-2062
PT. PlEASANT OFFKE
3305 JACKSON AVE.
•completa Chimney Cleaning
•Certified Chimney Relining & Repelr
· *Experienced and Insured
!lUll AJIMAL HOUtS
. . . , 3 ,. .... ,,....
r..-, .. ,. ,...... ,....
w.--,
ft."'Thot..., 3I,.p.m.-5
... , ;....
Phon a
446-2062
6
LAIGl AIIIUlS AND
SUIGIIT IT APPOINOINT
12-J.tln
DECEMBER PRICE BUSTER
Warrt~ntyl
The PRICE:
S129 500
I,._TntlltiiiMitltt.llonl
IUYSVIlE, OliO
5I IJt
12/7111110. pd.
geted the offering.
22 Money to Loan
purpoH.
Lefter
LOST Small dilmond wod ·
ding ring ol groot oentlmen-· 23
.. r vatuo. A-ord. Coli 448 7001 .
FOUND: CoNco cot In Ro ·
cine. Coli 614 -949-234&.
Black ond ton Coon Dog loot
in Morning Star •nd Bow-
m•n Run •r••· C1ll 814·
992· 6778 or 814-992·
5088 .
Ladle• lilver w•tch . lost in
Pomeroy. Rewerd . Phone
814-992-7378.
LOST lemolo Pht Butt. bleck
with white ch..l. red coller,
vicinity R•yburn Road, Cllll
Public Sale
& Auction
Profeasional
Service•
Pieno Tuning and Repair,
Bruniconll Mulic Co .. 448·
0187 . Twontloth yeor of
qu11ity ..rv6ce. lane Da-
niela, 814-742·2951 .
Unwented fec::ill or body
heir? Perm~~nent. painle11
removal by EurQpean Elec·
uonic Depi~tor. M•ry it
certified In thie new compu·
terired digital lyltetn. C•ll
toclly 614-892-1720. Top
of the Steira, full Hrvice
Hlon . ·
PIANO TUNING AND AE·
PAIR . Reduced rotoo limited
tlf!IO only. Word ' a Koyboord,
:104-176-5500 or 1753824.
Auction every fridey night 11
tho Hertford fi:ommunlty
Centor. Truck!Oitdl al n,...
merchllndiae every week .
Conligments of new Ill uMd
morchrlndloo olwoyo wei·
comad. · Rlchord Roynaldo,
AuctionHr .. Coli 304-2711·
3089.
1-=-o---:-:-~--o---::--:-
31
Home• for Sale
1--------Remodeled 2 bedroom vi·
nylod homo, ..,...tid, 2
ocroo, t 224 pound tobacco
oltotmont, city ochooto.
f22 ,500. Catt 1114-245·
52111.
9
Wanled To Buy
5 minute drive from town,
We pey Ciih fo r .. te model
clean unci cue.
Townohlp, 3 bdr .. 'LR, kit· .
Bill Gene Johnaon
f42.000. Colt onytime 448·
9398.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oido Inc .
. 446·3672
W1nted to buy uaed coel •
wood heat••· Swein Furni ture. 446-3159. 3rd. &
chen. t•mily room. 1 'h beth.
Middleport home, priced to
ooltt And Wit Mun Priced To·
Soli II Colt 814-892-11941 .
In Southern School Diwtriot .
A•w Fur. Top price• paid .
Lllke Jackson Fin • Fur.· Oek
Hilt , Oh. 114·1182·7448 .
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE , Bed1, iron.
wood. cupbollrds. chaiir1.
che1t1, buket•. diah•• ·
ttone jars. lntiques. gold
end ailver. Write - M . D .
Modlllllll A-lromo on ti
ocroo. Fully corpotad with
wood bumor. FHA. VA, or
conver,tion•l kten wll buy it_
Owner moving out of etete.
Alking 135,000.00 "'molto
ofllf. Colt 814-843-83e4.
2 br houoe, nowly· doco-·
rated. 304-1711-1090.
Goltipolio Forry e" yeor old
45789 or colt 6U·992· brick ,.nch , 4 c~r 11rati:
7710.
f43,ooo .oo. Phone 304175-8851 .
Buying doily gold, litvor
coina;, ringa, jewelry, aterting -::
wo;a, old colno, Lorgo cur· 32 Mobile Homea
roncy. Top pricoo. Ed. Bur.
for Sele
kott Borbor Shop. 2n~ . Ava .
Middleport, Oh. 1114·992·
347a.
- - - - - - - -lc- NEW AND USED MOeiLE
BUYING RAW FURS. -~ HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
and Door Hldeo.Ginoong ond 4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
yottow root . Setting · AT 36. PHONE 114·448·
trooplng oupplloo. Wheat
lighto. night tlghto . Goorge ~_7_2_7_4_
. -:---,---Bucktoy ,phono 114-1114· ,T
4711 ,houro 1 2-BPM dolloy. t2XIII orch, 2-3 bclr, total
-;;:::;:;::;:;=::::;===
Free •t.nding flreplec. , ~d
gas. includH •II ICI'Mnl •
ltorm windowa. C•l 114·
!umber or born wood. 304- 448 "71 32 ·
1·1-:-9:-:7:-:3-:R:-o-11_m_o_m_2--bcl-t.
773-1818 or 882-3188.
14x85 •••-• condition. .
Don't rnlu th11 one 111,100.
Colt II 14·448·01 71.
I II Jl' ' ,· 'II' I' 1
"! ,. r •
1
1973 Gronvltlo 12xl0. 2
bclr.. toto I oloctric, 2 - - .
dow olr condttlonaro. CIDon
'·
11
•nd goocl condition, owner
moving. mult Mil, •e.400.
Help Wentecl
Cot! 441-4301 or 441·
1171 .
SIMI limo to 1111 Avon lor 1- - - - - - - - Chriotmn end rocolve our- Schult 3 bedroom priM gift olfar. Colt 441 - homo, control Dir, lhod, K •
21111.
K No . 31 . CaM 304-17111417 .,..,_4:00PM.
M•l• l. .d linger for IXC*f·
3 Announcement•
'
SWEEPER end -lng mochilll rapalr, """'· end
ouppllao.
Pick up ond
delivery. D•vie V1cuum
up
Ciao-. one helf Cloa•lft c_, Rd.
814·448·0214.
eerr
aountint
calo=~ no4 "
- •• lollnt
rlw. no ...rvation dleta, no
+ + + + + + + + Jt<.;_.~
662·5311(6141-Etllllngs
A, 111111111 '·''1111' 1111
LOSE WEIGHT NOW. AIK
ME HOW. The fun • MIY
PDQ
money through the
Mortuouo Co., 814-182·
3051 ,
.
Sotw.., 10 O.M.·11olt .....
. I
811t Y~l•• •• ••• Mer..t T•••Y
~end
mail until you hiVe ln"nti·
for eny
Lost and Found
Fri.., 1 ft.l"-·1 tt-'"-
i 1-B-rtc
Moii.·Frl. 9.9
11m Ntlsen
9tl-2tOJ
luti!A• T ler
t9Z·U
TOWN & COUNlRY
VETERINARY
CUNIC
Chimney
Care
The DISH: Cw111111* I' Spun ~
The FEED: ClliifDial ,.1101 I
TheiECEIVEI: Duct~ DXP-1100-01
AFCr Stereo, Cord Remote Control
to
Mille.r , Rt.2 t Pomet'oy. OhiO
IOGEI IIANlU ·Owner
11 -29· 1 mo.
Why Wait Till Winter To Remember '
You Were Going To Call Us? ·
CJ .Yr; factory
S1t. 9-5; Sun. 1-5
0
C , A. NEWMAN , Prtlielf'nl
614 ·UH56•
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- DOZ£RS
. . . . (lllb 11111 utilly. Only
I ' I
s,,,, .
Belpre, Ohio
Ray Bickle
Nov. S-Dtc. 8
$15,000.
"Otr 81•1"" I• 811ft
0•
SeoaoQiae £JJo11e .9nsu2ottoa .9ar.. · ·
Certlliad Chimney Swoep
TUlLO l 011£ ACIIE - ~
2BAs,- !lin-
wcrk...,
MIDDLEPORT
11-21· 1 mo .
•
2!1 8 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(814)-992· 3326
HOT AIR HUT- Re~ family
~me above. all floOO~ 3' Ig.
BRs, new bath, new kitchen,
and lots of goG!~ carpeting;
Owner linacing. ' ·
F
'
35.' ~-----
s....
t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUS·
LtSHING CO. racommondo
thet you do bulineu with
paoplo you know, end NOT
HOME OWNERS;Rolinonco
to low fi•ed rate. u.. equity
Olivo St., Golllpollo, Oh.
AND
1'\W'NI!:: RS·COR
Monday,5afur4ay
Real Estate General
POMEROY
WITH
St., Syracuse
Buaine..
Oppo!1unlty
- - - - -- - -
773-9117.
1
BERRY lASKO
Cllllllry Gift-Atcmaiies
21
1- - - - - . , - - - - locotod on Rt: 588 In GrMn
TWit SERVICE
10AM·SPM
CLOSED llUISDAY
0,..
Dec. 9, 16, 23
12·6 PM
Opon ly Appoirmllmnet-11 _
"'yful. loveble. helf grown.
m1l1, Tiger, kitten, 304·
who
NOW JIKDtG II» II
ne«fs fin~hed. Owner will
finance.
-;5':'4-;:M-:;i;-IC-.-.:M::-il:-r-c::-he'-nd...,..l.-. . : . ;
I
Any busi111n or pa·
trans who would
8-lllln
6th
urge llllck """'" dog.
good with child...,, obo· ·
dlent. 304-&78· 2581 .
4 klttono, 2 oroy, 1 block ond
white. one long haired,
304-875-7782.
8
ligh Schoal Yw book.
Computerized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · Interpreting Services
11/26/ 1 mo.
MIDDLEPORT - New Ui-level,
2 BRs, good wor~ good mate-
' ~rt~.
W.PNeltl ...
'
~
l:
PH. 992·5612
or :992-7121
ria~.
s16,559-$50,553
JOIS
'17. _....._._ ___,
21. _ _ _ ___
'
Real Est!te General
(! 2) 12. 19. 21c
26.------
'
ii2
Alto Tre•e•l~tlo•
992-3345
I
F•~''''
''"'-!f
01 SAU
AM; .
~~~:~: =:::: S ~ : N~ ;:~ iL----=-~=~:.~-~~----..:_j
.
..
.
. .
.
.
5106 1 S R2~B
Lorig Bonom.· Ohio 45743
16 14 985-4244
UG. PIICI IJlt,ti "
.
L - - - - - - lOJ·Iic
Olive •ownsh1p
GOVERNMENT
•111- COUrt St.
.:•
eQUivalent. Ttle Board of Trus.' "
tees reserve the righ1 to reJect
anv or all bids. To obta•n
spec,llcat•ons, co ntact Barb~a Hpnnum. Clerk'
,..
23.-----u. _ _ _ __
s-....
y .......
J
HOMILDI
CHAIN SAW
24.. ·_ _ _ _ __
~~~ThiS Coupon with Remltt.aniCtl
Th ftAII
I
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL·FILL DIRT
~~
ihe purchase of a new Ar:r•ctJ'!
lated . Motor Gra ner or its.
'
1. , . - - - - - 2. - - . . . : . . . . - - -
1
..
''
~
31Sl day ol December 1984 1Df
w 11rlnl Alt.
11. - - - - - -
5: - - - - 6. '....:....---7. ----~1. _ ___.,_ __
992-3410
or
843-5424
PUBUC NOlle!
The Board of Olive Township,
Me1gs County, Oh10. w1ll receive b1ds unt• l 6:30 p.m. th e
CountY Appliance, .Inc.
1I,_,....,.
.Pflce.the right ro
I cr-,:r. edit or relecl TaU
I""Y . Your ad will e.
1put In the P"-r TaU
· ct-lflcetlon 11 you'll
Theleeullrall!l
-1thec:k the . , _ box
lncludedilalunt
'I1below.
. 1 1 1Wanted
.I 1 JFarSele
,
'I I JAn.--ncement
17. - - - - . , ,I c )Far R~
J. - - - - - -
,Ill
CllfiY Sonk11, Itt.
255 . . Sf•••••
104........., "· '-oy
(ll
z
AUTO & TRUCK
REPAIR
Oflkt ki(IIIIK & f•niturt,
WMdlng and Graduation Sioti-,, .....11, ·~ ....
bot S t - luoinon Formo,
DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
P(obme Judge
I Print ·i,;..;:,;:
4. - - - - - -
GARAGE .,
Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohro
Plus: •
-rl
liter 0 :00, 304-675 -3419.
have prewiaflllv pltad
an ad In tht Southern
Roger Hysell
Ill AI V•,., W
3/ 11/tfc
Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF"
. MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF ERNEST GALE
NEWWN,D!CEASED
Caolo No. 24421 D-. 12
Poge 428
NOTICE OF
A.PPOtNTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
-.1·N,an••·---·_.....,:·.....,:.....,::.__~
'I
~~
NO SUNDAY CALLS
THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP
.
H U ..
LIMESTONE
· HAULED
Buying Coins,
Antiques, Glass·
•
SAlE
. - ..
Cluk.................. _, •s.lsa·
'"".,. .................., 15.130
.
HOOOO .. OO.. HO S11o.tiQ
lllottl c....................i 11
Glt'n ...................._ SJ ..S7
lallo..................... 11.11,50
ShHI .......- ......... 13Q.I5Q
Grips ..........._.-.12.50
_,.,II
Room ond -.!lor oklarty.
Atoo
roomo. Col
114-ti92-1022.
.
Would llko to do bob'(·llnllio
In my-·" - InT--.
Plttno • - tun ofl IUCGDH
PuiiPieot Would mDioo • nlco fld
. .,.r11ng oround Fob. 1.
Clvlotm11 gift. Colt 441· · ReaMneble
r1t11 both
8301 .
hourty ond wookly . ..........
Fomar. Dot*man to give COIIYIIif41blo. Coll·l14·141·
IWOy. 8payad. 3
old. 2H8 witllln the "'"' f Coli 814-882-2471 oftor wMh if lnteruted .
8:00pm.
1B Wanted to b o
Klt.. no toglvolwoy . 1 I!JIIo,
bf41ck ond wlllto. 1 lonuolo,
11t block. Slomo11 Mother. Wilt bobyolt In my homo. Colt
Celt 814-882-8312,
814-388-8191 .
Mote Poodle to give -•Y. 2
yura old, oprlcot color. Cot!
f tnolll.l.il
114·812-1348.
tone & dirt).
CliiiSIIIAS
10PM-12P~ .
Oiv•w•y
3815 le1ve number.
Will do all typos of ex·
eavatiq, llndscapina.
buemants. stWip,systetls, Wiler & ps lines.
water well drillinc and
12/17 I mo.
GLENN'S .
ANTIQUES &
COINS
4
FREE CHRISTMAS PUP·
PIES, holl ubHor Rotriver
hall Golden Rot-r, 1H
motee, prony, 304-895-
MEIGS
EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY
,,., EstlmattS.
YOUNG'S
work
(Free Eetlmete•J .
11·14 IKorl·(pa
, ...... ___ .,__._......... _ 1"
--lloriloo 2 dr. or
......
o,
••
fiiiS.·Wtd ••
·c.,....., __ .,_____ ..
Complor. lemodtling
S.rvko
Ol!ality WO<kmCHtohip
DAVID D. GRINDSTAFf
949·2061
- Concret• work
TM C.llt~ Left
. liFT SHOP
HOME
CONSTRUCTION
(uslom hHI !'l•w llamto
30 '~" hpolienco
No joti loo !Jit or too Jmoll
- Plumbing end .ttctrlcll
73·7t f«d Tl.
·
, .......................,......... 59
10-14 f«d Tr.
.72•10 Dollgt Tr.
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &
TRUCK LEASING
- Addon1 1nd remodtliftg
- Roofing 1nd guHer work
SIO·SIJ
Trl............- •10
......a...,
..._..___
"·12 (~~"::"
Cor f
···-·--·--' "
rt-10
...,..
.
1
...... .. _ .. __., ........ 1110
Residential
·
Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For filler StiVict
10/4/tfc
Ml·tfcl
·11·14 Cltnr Tr.
For 111 your wirina
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
l).l.lk
992-2191
_Middleport, Ohio
FJ;:.~.~!.~~:- ..........,.-"0 0-~~ :::':....~:~...... _.........s~2
· MILLER
· ELECTRIC
SERVICE
New Hotlles-htensive
letllodelln&
'
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gaup shotcuns
Only
,
Curb Inflation
..
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
.
·
.
Savel I I
.1
..........
··-=-
949-2801
IM - JII, ,.,_..
................... '-·
l'rl- ... turkey~, bloon
oncl-. N o - parmlt·
1M irJ raour.r motchrlo.
EVERY
l'f·UIMI*"Y
. <IJUIIOI1. cane,. your· lld by phone ·When you gel
, resul1s. Money not retundllble.
1
1
"Free Estim1tes"
....... -·malo or fa.
malo, 21 to 31 to lw In wlllt
~rDoc.
..1'11"1 - · lun·
23td, Dec . 30th,
oncl Jan. lth. Each Iunday and hauoohold dudn, Col
""'"'h otlrtl ot 1:00 pm. 448 - 3118 7AM · IPM ,
,...._.Ri ig
PAT HILL FORD
oRo.
•Retrlgerotore
•Dryere•F,....•
I_
PARTS end SERVICE
lltualon•
Wam.d
The tuDio Wlllon Club -
cloy,
IACifE
filE DEPT,..
WI c1n repair aild rt·
core l'ldiltors and
he~ter cores. We can
1110 1cid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gu Tanh.
915·116t
DillII
PH . 992-7201
~
•• · a..IIMM~ot
. ·Write your awn ' ad and ordoir by malt with this
1
1
Blown In Insulation
IJ .• - - .
••
1
1
.......
..-
........
.................
.................
. ., .
'-
I
I
t1omes end Siding
_
.
.
c::=
....
..._- ___. .
r:-.:...,.
,.
..,
...
............
,._..-....
.....
......... .....
.. .... .......
..............,......_ ......
~~c-~ :::::::::::::::::::::1:~~~ .1 15.------
. BISSELL
~
GUN SHOOT
to tht Ill 't
Clus~(tl
Cu1tom Built
1
H-3: NunnH8.-
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
JIM CLIFFORD
choict.
rot
ICEWI
-APPLIMOE
SINCE
SALES & SERVICE
OIL UNES
1111111~
CONSTRUCTION
SV's reserve raWed to defeat the , 1
Highlander lqlllld, 27·19, with Mike ·I
PattersonpoltlnalO!ortheVlklngs. 'I
Daney Patrick waa high point man · 'I
forSWwlthseven.
1
-~
•
-
..
Yll'tr
"CII 011.
•••• HI"
'
Ill Court St .. 1'-.ow. .._ IS751
turnovers each.
v,...
,,4.¥JA~1•1•..
PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrllt
lttl!iotl
Otfl.
2lrebounds.Bothteamsrecorded15. ·I
KYaai CUZII. (..) IJ.7·2J:
W•!!Ih~2-l2:
Ktr.-4-08: ')'1!1111fyll-Ql2;
r.IGrl:ln 2-U: Edilo :144: l'!illllntlllln U 11;
~n!lfWII.().l'l'll•lt-..-11.
Wo\U'ON 1•1- Cox H ·l7: Hll'fl ~~23;
U.·fttXE
________
'.
1
seven, while
SW scored
only two
VIkings
were able
to pull ahead
by
more points.
SW
Mike Bailey led in SCOring •or
••
with 19, and Steve Pelfrey added lB.
SV's C. Smlih had 23 points, while
Sylvester Bloomlleld added 15:
From the floor, the Highlanders
were3lpercent (Wof63),andsank
lOofWshotstrom!hecharttystrlpe
for 50 percent. SW had 2t rebounds,
with Sean Colley · the leading
rebounderforSWwlthelght.SVhad
. "W• btl F, 1.m"
81lllpelle,
BOGGS
•WATER , GAS •
CALL
446·4522
"'·''
'
.regulation
play,atwith
. the VIkings
lralllngby three
thehalfancltylng
golnglntothethlrdquarter. Thefree
throw by SV In the final 50 seconds()!
the game forced the game Into
overtime.
During the first additional quar·
ter,' both sides again tied, but the
"DOZEII • IACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
"O!L FIELD IERVICEI
'OUMP TRUCK SERVICE
"CONCRETE WORK
"CUSTOM BUILT HOMEI
RENT ACAR
BowUng Green Improved to 6-1 Nonnan scored 17 points, leading
whUe Princeton dropped to 2-6.
four other teammates Into dauble
In .other major ·ohio coll~e figures, as IWnols Improved to 5-1,
basketb811 Tueday night, It was matching Clncblnati's mark lor the
IWnols 87, Clnclnnatl65; Loyola 78, · season.
Toledo 66; and South Florida. 634
Derrick McMUlan led the Bear,
Youngstown State 56.
·
cats with 14 points.
Fourth-ranked illinois handed
!Uinols dominated the boards
Cincinnati Its first loss of the season
against shorterC!ncinnalt and led at
by a resounding 87-65 margl,.:n::·.::.K:::e:.:
n_· c....;;
'h;:;;
alft:;::;.lm;:;;e::.;JS.:::.::23;;;._ _...__~-:-
~=andersledallthewayin l.Addre·U.------------.
-
.•..,
...... , f•ll fl•e
·•ht ftthltlll
Bowling Green rallies to beat Princeton
By 1be AMocla&ed 1'.-
Jlltf
CONTRACTING
12-31·1 mo.
' •ZENITH
Schneider, who had flnlsM!i llllrcl
in the European Cup last year,
timed in2mlnutes1 36.56oaVildlillr
tworuns,edglngrunner-upTamara
McKinney otolymplc Valley;~by 1.10 seconds. McKinney's finish
was her best of the season.
'T..:;=~;:.::;,:::;::,:;.::::;:;.:::.._.,:::..,::;;:.;.;,.;,::.;:..:;;..:;:_.;__,..;._..:.,'T
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
If You Need
Your House Cleaned
Weekly, call:,
.•
Business ServiceS ":
12
3 Announcemenu
nan lheU annuel muu1e
lhtth .... Sitos
· 11/30/1 liD .
MNTA CATERINA VAL· :
FURVA, Italy (AP) - Vrenl :
Schneider, . a 'little-known Swlaa . •
skier who made Mr debut Ill the
women's World Cup this seuon, .
scored a surprtslngvlctory tnaa~Mt
slalom race, while the Atnerlcan
team registered Its best showlni ol ·
the
.,.
9 AJL .. 9 P.M. W I 1
1 P.M. .. SP.M.~
1 Milt .tflt. J
CHESTER-985-3307
wheti
Boliender 3-2-8; Gtlllbnd J..0-6: Saunders
•
TENN8
*Scotch Pino
*WW.. Plno
<'I
»US.
the half and Into the third quarter, In
KC had 49 rebounds, with Rodney
which the visitors were outscored
Morgan catching nine, and Hayes
23-15.
· snatched six of Walt9n's 26 reWalton came back In the fourth
bounds. The Bobcats had 72
quarter and narrowed the scortng turnovers, while Walton had 43.
deficit to two, but the game ended
In the reServe game, the junior
with the Bobcats, now 1·2 overall,
Bobcats handed Walton a 51-19loss.
holding an 18-point advantage.
RJchie GUmore was top scorertor
Statistically, both teams did not KC with 20, and Eric Shaffer had six
fare well from the floor, with the for Walton.
Bobc!lts tallying 35 percent on 32 of .
The Bobcats , retum to action
00 shots, and Walton sinking 23 ot :;5 Friday
they travel to
for 41 percent. From the foul line, KC SQuthern.
was 66 percel!.t (14 of21) and Walton
8W Drupl Toughie
was 14 of 26 for 53 percent.
Two missed foul shots by Southw·
estern and a single marker on a foul
by Symmes Valley led to a double
overtime at Symmes Valley Tues·
day with the Vlklngs posting a 55-50
non-conference basketball win over
the Highlanders.
. ' The·loss was SW's foUrth in a row
TRIMBLE
Belpre's Russ 9-149; Bales 2-U: Boolhe J.H
LOgue dropped In both ends of a one Il,-.
ey~
.
and one with 13 seconds left to llft
F<d.·Hocklng .. ........ .. .'•., ..... 16 ~ 12 17-6!
VInton Co................ ... .. .; ... 18 l2 19 13-62
the Eagles tq a 56-55 win over
- . . , . - .Play Thunday nlghl.
Trimble to hand the Tomcats their
~.-., _.. (Girts' varsllyl
Vinton Cou ntl_56, Federal~ 54.
first loss of the young campaign.
'
IIUCUyt!ll IIGII
Trimble had three shots at the
BUCIITEL
- NelsonvUle-York
bucket after Logue's free throws,
rolled
for
32
third
quarter points
but all missed the mark. The win by
enroute
to
a
wild
89-76
win over
Belpre marked a comeback that
.
Warren Local.
saw Trimble leading 36-29 at the
...
The
Buckeyes'
6-6
center
T.
L.
half and by as much "as five points {
21
points
and
Bentley
scored
late In the fourth quarter.
grabbed 18rebounds to pacing N-Y.
Neither team could find the range
Sam
Savage added 20 points. Dave
at .the foul line as Belpre made but
Mitchem
led Warren Local with 22.
four of 11 and Trimble a horrendous
,
WAJIIIEN
LOCAL (11) - Huffman
three of 14 Including. only one of - 2-04; tnaram 2·3-7:
Palmer S-&-tt; Mllchml
eight In the fin al quarter.
11-1>22: Heuon J.:l-8: Jameoon QJ.ll Alklro
J-5-11: Rauch 2-J.~: Ryan H-3: JoluuonQI-1.
BEI.PRE (!161 - Ruble 3-0-6: Roddy ().()11;
1'alall .18-11.
l.lli!U• 7 - ~ 17: MeAl.., 2-0-4; Simmons 1·0-2:
NELtlONV1JLE.YORK c•J - lllilOck
Holder 2-0-4: Mlllor 9-1 19; Nowberry 2-0-4.
1-J-9; llonlloy JJ.~JJ; KJtne 7-J.17; SaVIll' .
Tolato 21+51.
5-11>20: Wallen 2.().4; PmioM ;J.~J.<; ; Gueu
TRIMBLE (55) - Galcn.ll0-1-21; Mon1-
*Nefway Spruco
NORWALK, Conn. (AP) ·- Jolin
McEnroe and·Martina Navratllova
for the second straight year are the
world's the top male IIJI!I female .
tennis players o~ 198C, accordlua to :
the a1111ua1 year-end ranldnp ol . •
Teiutls Magazine.
· McEnroe holds the No. 1 IP,OI : : .)
among men, having won 13 touma· :
ments, Including the U.S.,Open and •
Wimbledon. Navratllova, winner of ' :
three Grand Slam events in BIN, Ia
ranked No.1amongthewCIII'IA!IIfor
the third straight year, kJslng onb'
her first and last tournamenllolthe
f
year.
I
Belpre. hands Trimble
first league setback
Gtlll S."- Of
I
Bud '
Grant, who led . the Mlnnelola .
VIkings to tour Super Bowls,
accepted a lifetime contract to .
returnasheadcoachoftheNatlonal
'Football League team, Vllclngs
' ·General Manager Mike Lynn~·
Grant's surprise appointment '
came a day after the VIkings fired
Les Steckel, who led the te<!fll 1111984
to Its worst season ever with a 3-13 '
record:
NEW YORK (AP)- Dan Mlarlno
of the Mlliml Dolphins, who set .a
new stanclanf for quarterbacks in
only hla second year ln.the National
Football League, was"named as The
AssOciated PreSs -Offensive Player
, of the .Y11ar.
·
In a season--long progression of
brllllan~, Marino not only broke a
series of Jong:S\Bndlng
he
shattered them, averaging three
touchdown passes per game and
MEIGS' Rklt: Wile cbtves &rOUDd Atex......a Kellh CampbeU Ill
became the tint NFL quarterback
the Mlunlor poiJit pard Wile n1111 111e Manuder oaenae. Wise led
to !broW for s.~ yards in a season.
Melp w1111 1t po~ata, atvtnr him 40 1n . . JaM two pmc!ll. Melp
NEW YORK (AP) ·- Pltsburgh
Defealed AJeXIIIIder '7H3 to qe within one pme olllntt place In &he
safety Donnie Shell, .wll<;lse two
we
·
'
InterceptionS· helped propel the
Meigs travels to Warren Local
MElli$ ('!%) - Rlck ' Wt"' J-13-19; Bl'ad
Friday while Alexander hosts Robinson ().().(1; Dave ~shtT 1..0.2! 'Jay Steelers Into the National Football
Carpen ter 7-1-15; Mike Chancey oJ.-9-17: Lee:
League playoffs, and record-setting
Trimble.
!'oweD 2·3-7: Chris Kennedy J.l.J: Shawn
wide
receiver Mark Oa>11Jn ' ·of
ALEIUNDER (113) - SCot! Ferris IO-O.ro:
Baker 2-~9: Rodd Harrison Q.O.O. ~
Miami. whohelpedknockDallasout
Brad Jelfers Hl-2: .Ryan Carney 2-1-5: J<ellh 111-11-12.
CamPbell :w-1~ Brian Bllckle 4-2-10; Tom
II)' quarler!J:
of them, were named the American
Farley 2-04; Kevtn Sldders 1.0.2; Stt've
Alexander .. ..................... .... 8 10 19 ~ Football Conference Players of the
Grissett 2-0-4; Bryan WUson 3-0-6. TGoalo
Meigs ........... .............. .... ... 12 21 20 19-72
Kyger Creek hands,Walton quintet
78-60 non-loop cage loss;·SW loses ·
After posting a 10-polntlead at the
half, Kyger Creek went on Tuesday
to hand Wa-lton a 78-60 basketball .
defeat in non-league action .
Both KC's Chuck Vogel and
Walton's Eddie Hayes were high
point inen, postlng 23 markers each.
Vogel was backed by Steve
Waugh and Brian Wamsley, each of
whom scored 12 points, and by Gary
Pennington, whoaddedll. Mike Cox
supplied 17 for Wa tton.
The Bobca ts claimed a 16-9 lead
over Walton going into the second
quarter and maintained It through
CHIIIISTMAS T.ES
FOI SALE
Week.-
MINNEAPOLIS (AP)
.
________..,.______.__
Sports briefs•..
• F'OOrBALL
ROCK SPRINGS - Excellent free throw shooting and a sticky
man-to-man defense enabled Meigs to puJI within one game of the
1VC lead with a 72-63 ~in over previously unbeaten Alexander here
Tuesday.
Meigs held the hlgh-scortng Spartans to only 10 points In first 12
minutes Of action as ttu: Marauders built a 25-10 ~ead they never
surrendered. Meigs' defense stymied Alexander s Inside game,
many times Intercepting passes that penetrated the Jane.
The win put the Marauders right high-scoring Brian BUckle each had
back tn the thick ()! the TVC race 10 points. Ferris led Alexander in
with a 4-2 slate. Meigs Is 4-3 overall. rebounding with nine and fl)lckle
Alexander lost Its flrst game In six bad eight.
outings, att TVC games. The
Meigs converted 32 of 44 free.
Spartans remain tied lorflrst with throws for 73 percent 'as the
Trimble, who lost to Belpre 56-55, at Spartans were whistled for 3<1
5-1. Meigs Is tied with NelsonvUte- personals, many coming late In the
York and Belpre for third .
game as Alexander attempted to
Wise Leads Attack
get back In the game.
Rick Wise, quickly becoming the
On the other hand, Meigs comfloor general the marauders were mitted but 13 fouls and Alexander
missing earlier in the season, led was only three of eight from the foul
Meigs in scoring with 19 points. The line. Alexander out-field-goaled
5-9 j unlor drew praise !rom Coach Meigs ~20.
Greg Drummer, who said, "He
Coach Drummer was pleased
deserves a tot of credit. He has with his team's performance and
rea tty improved his ball-handling said, " I thought our defense was
and leadership."
·
excellent, especially In the first
Mike Chancey followed with 17 half. Alexander Is a very good ball
points and led In rebounding with club and when we go to their place, I
10. Chancey had only two points expect another great ball game. I .
with two minutes left In the third was: really shocked we outscored
period, but kept Meigs In the lead them In the third period (2D-19)
during a furious Alexander come- because we didn't play well. We
back In the fourth quarter. ·
were going too much one on one."
Also hitting for ·double. figures.
Alexander CQach Mike Meek had
was 6-2 senior Jay Carpenter with high praise for Meigs, saying,
15 points. Carpenter, who had seven "They're an excellent basketball
rebounds, scored 10 points in the team and they just plain outplayed
first half when Meigs rolled to a us. We started flat and received a
33·18 lead.
COUple of calls against US, and then
Two Marauders came off the were down by 20 points. But we
bench to play lmpol1ant roles as 6-5 battled back and came within eight
junior Lee Powett had seven points (64-56)."
and· four rebounds while 5-11 junior
' TQUih On Board!!
Sha wn Baker had nine points.
Meigs outrebounded the Spartans
Ferris Top Scorer
45-34. The Marauders had nine
Alexander's Scott Ferris led all turnovers and Alexander ·J3. M~lg~
·scorers with 20 points on 10 field made 20 of 58 from the field for a
goals, most cming from deep In the cool 3<1 percent while Alexander
corner. Keith CamPbell · and t he was 3(J"of 64 for 47 percent.
.
I
•
---~
- --~--~~----~~
.
;
By KEITH WISECUP
•
d~feat.
Meigs hands Spartans first
.
•
Wedn11dly, O.C.mblr 19, 1984
Wednudlv. December 18. 11M,
Mlddlepon, Ohio
e•aorlllng. Con onytimo..,ly
HIn,.•- ill loolng ~::•
• IM!Ing hDDithy. Colt
.
zot1 or 441·3711.
Gun 11 Racine Gun
Club - . , lunclly, 1:00
p.lll. Faatory chookad gune
only.
tont IO<mlng rock -bond. For 1871 Gem ' ' - M lnformetlon,
e~~ll
Jim
at
Home , 12111.12. 2 bedroomt,
114-812·7172 orl14·892- gn hMt. locotad on K • «
lot. Point Jl'teu~lt't,
3117.
S4.000.00. l'hane •••
Ucly to Uve In with oidatly 1711-t211..,_ I:Oa •fiM .
lady. Mull heve , . -....
Celt 814-949-2041 lftar lchulto 1872 1111112 wlitt
... out wll ... ......,. ....
.1:00pm.
nllhod or _,._... 011
MilD or r. ....r. to """'o prieD. 304·871·7111.
--"ntmon" by -phone 1 ------~...._
partfma In Pl. Ptoaunt of. 1-=:::-:--:--=--:--..__ _
lieD. No oellng lnvolwcl. 35 Lots & Ac.....
e.----.. . .
814 - 812·3~83
from l'ltonl
I to I
PM. cllly.'
IEIT KEPT 8ECFIET IN
AMEIIICA--Anny Notlonlli
.....
_,., _Jain 1nd you- •
good ,..,..time ca-r--good
banolltl · ·monthly
poychock-- NO LAVOPFI .
304-171-3810 or 1-eoa142·3811.
Lot tor .... "' M•._ ..... '
· -· -...._, IIIOWII, tu•
rei Wltor, Mitte tetlk, '
•e.ooo. Call 114-lle111e.
·
•-tar- __
1- ' - - - - - - - ·- IMI.
C'
...,. 304-t7t,•=:
flirt '''••·
....... .
.I
�.. -
-·
Plg1
14- The Daily S!llltinel
Wedne1day, December 19. 1984
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
They'll Do It Every Time
64 Mite. MerchendiH
54 Mite. Marcha.ndiH
KIT 'N' CARLYLI
78
®bJ Lany Wrlll~l
C<lHI~IW'fH
HOUHI for Rent
HouM for rent in M.rcer,viHe
...... Call Kenneth Swain
448 · 31 59 or 814-268 ·
1552 aw.ninga.
Furnlthed houH. 3 ' bdr., 29
Neil Ave.. Gollipolls. 8225
plus utittles. roforon..-s. Coli
448·44111 oftor 7PM.
Small house located at 1701
Chntnut St. e1 111 mo .. 876
dop. Call 448 -3807.
Hou•• downtown, 3 bdr .•
•176 .00 plua depoolt. Call
614-949·2801 . No Sunday
calla.
2 or 3 bedroom houses in or
near Pomeroy. Furnished or
unfurnished. Rent and utili-
till negotiable. DaY 614992-2381. evenings 614·
992-8723 .
8 room house with bath . in
Longaville . $200 .00 per
month plus d8posit . Reference required. Call 614-
992-7286 after 6:00 ..
3 bedroom Hous8 in Middle-
port. 8250.00 month, Call
e14-992-736&.
House in Middlepon. 3
bedroom•. new kitchen.'car·
petirig downstairs. Call 1·
304· 882-2811.
Nice , redecorated 2 ·
bedroom home in Pomerov;
in•ulated. 1tove and refriger·
ator pro..,ided. storm win·
dowt. *186 .00 plus aec'U r·
ity deposit . Sorrv- - no
chUdren or pets. Phone
814-992·6292 evenings or
Saturdavs.
3 br · houae, bath,full bas~
ment. garage, available Oec.
21. *260·. References and
depollit roquirad. 304-6751090.
Mi . Vernon Ave, 3 bedroom,
btlaement. nice yard, will
occopt Hud. 304-676·3030
or evenings 675 ·3431 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. trailer for rent, pear
Mercerville. Call 448· 3-1 59
or 1114·266 -1552 after
6 :30PM.
3 bdr. trailer with 2 baths. in
Evergreen . Call davs 446·
1329 alter 6 call 614-2469170.
Furnished 2 · bdr., clean.
quiet, nbla. beautiful river
view In Kanauga . Fotters
Mobile Homo Pork. 44611102.
2 bedrooms, e~ttended livingroom, all modern $176 mo.
f 100 depoaft plua ytilities.
See tt 314 3rd. St .. Ko·
noygo. 446-7473 .
14•70 "total electric 3 bdr .,
fumiahed, plua w11her &
dryer on private lot, 10 min .
from town. f200 mo . plus
deposit and utilities. Ref.
roq. Coli 814-266-1393 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Natur1l gat heat. Racine
o -. Call 614-992-5868 .
Furniahed 3 bedroom mobile
home with washer and
dryer. No pets. Phone 614 949·2263.
14 x 70 three bedroom with
Iorge yord. 8185.00 month
plus depoait and utilities.
One child. Call 614-98543117.
Mobil• home in Gallipolis.
nice for aenior citi1ens or
,...rrled couple with one
child. no peto. depoolt and
reference• requir.-. K • K
Mobile HOtnes. Inc.. 304·
875· 3000.
2 bedroom ell elec: mobile
homo. •136.00 plut utilitiel, locat.ci Gallipolis Ferry.
304-8711-4088 .
44
2 bdr. dupleJIC e~t . location in
town $260 mo. with a
fenced backyard. Call 4488293 altar 5PM .
3 rooms with priavte bath,
111. floor . Call446-2215.
Furnithed efficiency 8146.
utlltlao pd, ohare both. 807
2nd . Ave. Gollipolia. Call
446 -4416 alter 7PM.
Country ·u..,ing 2 bdr: livin··
g,oom , stone fireplace, large
diningroom, eat In kitchen,
hookup for waeher & dryer.
Largo gordon , $285 mo..
bottle gaa & utilities extras.
Bilrn and pasture available
for $3& extra . Call 448·
2751 or 612-246-9176 of·
tar 6 .
New efficiency apt, with
garage . appliances fur·
niahed. washer-dryer hookup. Private yard . $210 mo.
includes water. dep . re·
quired. Call 446· 7209 or
44&-3287.
.
Furnished apt .. 1 bdr .. 8225
utilit,es paid, 920 4th A'ofe.
Gallipolis. Adults. Ca.ll 446•
441 6 after 7PM .
.Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens. •1 30 . Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities. 61 4·
992-7721 .
Furnished 2 bedroom apy in
Middleport. Adults. no pets,
security deposit. Call 614·
992· 3874.
Nice efficiancv apartment,
suitable for one or 1wo
people. Co11304-773-6882.
Betty Mercer.
Unfurnished apartment for
rent in Syracuse . Call 614·
992 · 7689 .
Small upstairs apartment,
with all utilities furni1hed .
Onlv su itable for 1, in
Middleport . Coil 614-9925262.
.
APARTMENTS . mob ile
home•. hou1e1. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 814-448 ·
8221 .
In Middleport, 2 bedroom
furnished ep1, ,1 child, 1 304-882-2666 .
45
Furnished Rooms
Used bedroom tulte, Love..at hldo-o-bed. Corbin 11o
Snyder Furniture. 966 Se~
cond. Gallipolio, 446-1171 .
!Coal Daliverod) good lump
house coal 1 to 7 ton. call
Jim Lanier' 676· 7397 or
304·87il-1247.
Twin bad complete 860,
maple draater with mirror
$40. good cond. Coli 1114388-9334 after 8PM.
firewood *20.00 pickup
load UO .OO delivered onytimo. Coli 304·468-1728.
Gas range; Harvest CJold .
30" S96, 3 other rangee tO
choose from, Speed Queen
auto.•weaher 19&. Kenmore
auto. washer *160, Refrig.
side by lide white *196 ,
Refrig . Coppertone. tingle
door 196, Meytag wringer
wa1her 876. Hoover porte ·
blo dryer 966 . Dlohwoohor
Kenmore p9rtable *71 .
For rent Sleeping Rooms Skaggs Applionceo Upper
and light house keeping River Rd . Gallipolia 446·
rOoms. Park Central Hotel. 7398.
Call 6t4-446-0758 .
Sean lady Kenmore portaFurnished room, $126 . Utili· ble washer & dryer harvest
ties, range, ref. Share beth . gold, 1100. Coil 814-216Men only. 919 Sec. , GeUipo· 1166.
lio . 446-4418 after 8 p.m.
Valley Furnituri. new &
used. Large section of quality furniture . 1216 Ea1tern
4" Space for Rent
Ave., GaUipoliJ.
1974 Cato 680 back hoa
loader •1 0.600.00. 304468-1610 .
Warm Morning wood sto'ofe,
exc cond. 304·468-1917.
Control hunger end lo1e
weight with New
Grapefruit·PPH . Combo.
Fruth Pharmacy.
Judy Cutloo : Soft·
oculpturod Cobbogo Kldo:
Mr. T.'o, Bollorinoo, ate .. all
oizaa. Booutllul worlc. 304·
675-5131 .
14 ft, olumlnum boat. 2
awivel bill Hltl, anchor
holder tilt traHer new 28 lb.
thrust electric motor. new
marine battery. 2 life
jackets. peddle and net.
8860.00. 304-675-1189.
Mobile homelo1, $76 Water Pickens used furniture . 304·
paid , 4th llo Neil, Gallipolis. 876-6483 or 676-1460.
Call 446 ·3844 after 7PM .
SWAIN
COUNTRY I'/IOBILE Home AUCTION 11o FURNITURE
Pork, Route 33, Nonh of 82 Olivo St .. Golllpolio. Now
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call & und wood-coal atovei, 6
pc wood LR oulto ·1399.
&14-992-7479 .
bunk beda I 199. ontrqn
reclinert •99. uMd bedroom
suitel, ranges , wringer
49
For Lease
washers, & ahoe1. Cell614446-3159.
Give the bift that payo for
itllilf and keeps on giving.
Give 1 Whltt'o Motol Dotoo·
tor. 304-176·29011.
Apt. for leaae, overlooking
54 Misc. Merchandin
lnteleviaion with 4 car·
trldgn. 304·773-11289.
Knauff Firewood Spilt- 86%
hardwooda. Seasoned or
. green . You pick up or we
Flotbeda, Trip Leooe or deliver. HEAP vendor. 614Laue . 269 · 2305 . Ohio 258·8246 .
Watt 800-282 -2888 . lntarttoto Watt 800-836-741 3.
Stereo oil wood coblnot.
AM -FM radio, turntoblo.
very good cond, have to 118
to appreciate, meke nice
Chriotmao gift. 304-17a3000 oftar 5:00. 304-17a8277.
city park, LR. kitchen, stove.
refrlg., dining area, 2 bdr ..
both, 8190 mo . piua utili ·
tioo. Call PJ ' 448-1819 .
' FOR LEASE with option to
buy, nice. clean four bedroom houao. 304-676 -3282
after 4 PM .
Apartml!nt·
for Rent
BoNed springs and mattress
e&o.oo. &Yo ft. of &'Inch fluo
liner with ecceaaori8a .
•46.00. Call 614 -985 3979.
Trade Cantor Kanaugo,
Ohio . Furniture outlet. Why
Pay Morel .
1 ~---.,..------
1,;
·, .
CAPTAIN EASY
Clearence Sale, 18in soft
ie:Uipturo Cabbage Patch
Dollo ond Mr. T D~lo. K llo K
Mobile Home lot no . 46,
304-876·6480.
Go Cort, good C!Jnd, 304176-23118.
'
68
'
Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boordlng o[l ~Nado. Heated
indoor-outdoor fecilltiet .
AKC Doberman puppleo:
Stud Service. Call 814-44e7796.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Cell
614-367-7220 .
Briarpatch Kennell Profea·
aional All·breed grooming.
'ndoor-o~tdoor boarding fa·
cilities. Englith Cocker Spa·
nlil puppleo. Call 614' 388·
9790.
Dragonwynd Cettery Kennel. CFA Himalayan, Paraian
ond ShimaM kltteno. AKC
Chow puppie1. Call 6144411-3844 aftor 7.
CHRISTMAS Puppies. AKC
regist•red Cockttr Spaniels.
buff In color. 1126 . Excellent Chrlttmoo gift. Call
814-388-9766.
Chrietmaa puppies! Pure
bred & Rat Terrier puppies.
Coli 614-268-1467.
AKC MiniatUrl ·schnauzers
born 10-02 -84. Nearly
houtebroken. Good with
children. 1 mole ond 1
fomolo . Coli 614-992 ·
2388.
Parakeets, babiea, all colors.
new cagea. Hold for Chirat·
moo. 304-875-6030 after
6 :00 and weekends :
AKC r-.giatered Boston Ter·
rier Puppies, phone 304675-2169.
Good broke Coon Hounda
for sale or trade anything
••capt other dogs. 30...
468 -1572.
57
Musical
Instruments
Old German violin, ~ery
nice: 8100.00. Flat top
guitar with case. like new,
t75.00 . Call 614· 949 2801 .
Lowry Organ . Double kev:
board, pedal•, various in ·
·Btruments and rhythm1 .
Bench and book1 included.
Excellent condition . Origi nally 12400 . 00. now
1900.00 . Call 614 -949 2719 evenings.
Wurletzer Organ : double
kevboard . ·E•cellant condl·
tion . Good price. Phone
614-742-2103or614·742 ·
2178 .
58
Fruit
& Vegetables
Apple,, bushel *6 . fruita,
vegetablel, produce, candv
and nuts . Jack's Fruth
Market, At. 36, Henderson ..
69 For Sale or rrade
Would like tO trade my 6 year
old electric dryer end range
leacellant condition) for gas.
Call 814 · 986·4417 .
For Nle or rent, three
bedroom houM with beth
end carport on large lot In
Rutlond. •110.00 month or
•11.950 .00 . Might conaider mice mobile home on
trodt or tor mo . Coli 814742 · 24eO or 814-742 '
21182, ..copt Sunday.
!liN_.
•Jetl.,_,o
7 :30 • _(J) Tic: toe Dough
@ Auto Aodng '84: World
Rally Championlhlp Cov. eraga of the R.A.C. Rally is
presented from Great .Britain . (60 min .)
· ·
tD Artdv Griffith
tD • (I) Family Feud
(l) J - d y
lli WhHI of Fortune
Sil(:llill:s
11 ,
Autoa for Sale
/<; il'll'~l'it.k
81
Farm Equipment
1971 Doltli BS ·Oidomob!lo.
· 2 door, nice work car.
Farman H tractor, •aoo or 1350.00 or boot offor .' Call
best offer. Coli 814 -388- 614-992-528B oftor 6:00
9303.
pm .
Gravely trector with 1ulkv a.
mower. Coli 4411-8136 .
1977 Nov•. four door. Tilt
wheel with PS, PB. Body
and motor In A · 1 shape .
11196 .00. Call 614-378·
6349 .
HOME LITE CHAIN SAW.
this Ia 1 'pre inventory one
shot dool. Supar 2, 141n bar.
list 1244.96 Hie U89.96.
246 AO, 1etn ber. lilt
$309.96 aalo 8209.96 . 160
AO 181n bar lilt t319.95
oolt *219.911 . Super EZ-AO
18in bor, lilt f3119 .9li Nlo
8259.00 . 330 AO. 18in bar
lilt t374.91i oole t269.95.
S~par XL-AO 1 &In bor lilt
e4o9 .91i aalo ua9 .95 .
Keefers Servce Center. St.
Route 87, ~eon . . W. Yo.
304-896-3874.
1976 Muotang 2. PS. PB.
Auto., low mile1. $660.00 .
1974 Plymouth Van .
1660.00 . Phone 614-992·
6566.
1972 Ford, 4 door station
wagon, 302 engine. lots Of
TLC. $BOO.OO. 304·676·
6730.
'80 Monte Carlo landau,
VB, 'outo, PB, PS. AC , AM,
rear defroater, tilt, 304-875·
8286.
8 N Ford Tractor. &0 Mooooy
Ferguson. plowe, diac. 304·
678-2328 or 675-2808 .
63
1979 Ford Pinto Standard
Shift, 4 cyl, Inquire 509
Holloway St, Henderaon. W.
Va.
·
Livestock
Aggreeeive Ouroc boars,
satisfaction guaranteed ,
Roger Benlty, Sabine, Oh .
&13· 6B4-2398.
' 74 Mercur1y Montego MX.
73,000 miles. good cond.
PS. PS. AC. $1 .050.00.
304-675-6747 between &
and 9 PI\A.
Nice bl~ck Angua bull, ready
for aorvloo. Call 614-3888333 .
Horsemen Corral, 2413
Jackson Ave, Point PleaAnt. HorN 1nd barn equip·
ment. Veterinarian euppliee
end grooming aid1 .
Hay & Grain
Trucks for Sale
73 Chevy runs good.
$400Jittlo rust. Call 614388-9360.
Large round boloe of hoy 820
each. Coli 448-10e2aftor6 .
· 1982 ford 1.4 ton pick ·up.
300 cubic inch-6 cylinder. 4
Tr~ n>port ~111on
'opood,PS. PS, AM radio.
40,000 miloo . 16000.00.
Autos for Sale . Call 814, 698-6384 and
614-949-2293.
TOP. CASH paid for '80
model end newer uJtd cars:
Sm1th Buick· Pontiac, 1911
Eattern Ave .• Qellipolia. Call
614 -44e -2282.
77 Pontiac Grand Pri~t 301 '
good condition.· Call 1fter
&PM. 44e-0137.
1973 Ford Grand Torino
wagon. new battery, tirea,
brokto , AM-FM radio,
70,000 mil... oxtro oharp,
81,000. Con· 446-4482.
1981 2 dr. Ford Eocort 4
spd, radio, a.lr, tinted glats .
opony, t3, 199. John'oAuto
~:.~-:4 :..~~~~~~ Rd. Golll~~-
1978 Ford F-160, postlvo
traction rear end. heevy duty
springs, 400 engine, Ull
regular gas, insullted
topper, 23,000ectualmilet,
one ownor. •8.600.00flrm .
304-895-3879.
1978 Ford F-1110, pootlve
traction rear end, heavy duty
1prings, 400 engine, UN
regular gal, insulated
topper, 23 ,000 octuol milll.
one owner, •8.500.00 firm .
304-896· 3879 . .
1980 Toyota C01rolo, 4 dr,
de1uxe, air, powerateering a.
braket, autQ, am·fm, 1tf11rwo ,
N . A . D . ~ . rotoll •41100 pr!ce
13860. 1910 lmpola, 2 dr,
Original Southern car,
l7 .000 mi., 1uto, power
otoorlng llo brokoo- 'Show
Winnor' •11395 . Coli 4468098 "•vo muaogo .
73 Chevy runo good, $400 .
CoH 614· 388 -9380.
i
___ _ _ i'
81
1978 Chevy y, ton pickup.
4x4, 3110 auto, PS. PB. Call
448-0516 .
1973 Scout II one owner.
$896 . Approx. 90.000 mi.
can 446-1185.
1977 Chovy Blazer
Cheyenne packege, like
new. must sell. Call 614·
246.·9527 .
1------'-- - - -- -
'.
•
'
Ma rcum Roofing & ' Spout· ..
ing. Now intt1lling rubber
roofs. 30 ye'ers experience, ,
apecialiling in built up roof.
Caii614-3BB·9B67 .
I'mow.. ITS
THE .OrNE!f
;I'ATTER Trllrr
COI'ICERI'IG
ME /1\0flE ...
H & S Home Improvement•
vinyl a. aluminum · siding.
roQfing, seamiest gutters,
storm window•. overhang.
Coli 614-367-0409 or 1114367-7244.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING .·
Unconditional lifetime gue~ !
rentM. LoCal referenc.a "'
furnlohad. F"" ottlmoteo. '
Coli collaet 1-114-237- •
0488 , 9 o.m. to II p.m.
Rogers Beae.ment
Waterproofing .
Roofing. glittering. aiding. •
plumbing. corpontry woo1< .
and concrete . work. Free·
ootimateo. Coli 446-3171 . ••
RON ' S Television Service . I
Specializing in Zenith and I'
Motorola ~ Ou1zer. • and •
haute calla. Cell 304-578·
2398 or 614-446-2464.
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-8711·
1331 .
.
.
I
RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex· . :
perienced carpenter, electri- '
cien. maeon. p1inter, roof- 1
lng Oncluding hot tar
application) 304· 876-:MI88
or 8711-7388 .
Rotary or cable tool dfilling. ·
Most wellt completed Hme
d•Y· Pump alas and eerviceo . 304-895 -3802.
Abtten Home Improvement
Speci11ist. new homes, ad·
ditions. roofing, tiding, can·
erato. dry woll. 304·46B1686.
82
Plumbing
& Heatil)g
CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor . Founh and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 114-448 -3888 or ;
614 -446-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING llo HEAT- '
lNG . R.t . 1. Box 356, Galli· .
polia. Call 814·367-0678.
83
Boatland
Motor• for Sela
1 boat ond lrlillr tor oole.
con 114· 21..,18111.
(jj) A ChriMomooy . (CCI This story.
written and narrated by the
late Truman Capote , recaUs
his childhood and a special
relationship of his thai re·
valved around Christmas .
(60 min .)
• Nearly No Clviotrnaf
(MAXI
Mo/IE:
"C.H.O.M.P.S.'
:
8 :30 (!) NFL'a G;-.:11 Momenta 1973
'Champion Miami (Jlolphins and
1974 Worlif Champion
Pittsburgh Stealers Highli!!hts. 160 min.)
U (I) <lD E/R
9 :00 II(}) Ill Feet. of Ute (CCI
Blair, overcome With the.
Christmas spirit , inadvertantly volumeers Mrs. Garrett and the girls to pu1 on a
ChristmAs show at a prison .
(I) 700Ciub
I]) • ~ Dynoaty (CCI A
joyous reunion takes place
for the Carrtngton family un. til it is in1errupted by Ale•is,
Daniel Reece shows up in
Denver to make Blake a
generous offer concerning a
rae~ horse for Krystle and
De• has unresolved feelings
lor Amonde . (60 min .)
0 (I) ® MQVIE: 'Privrrte
Benjamin'
•
(I) (jj) Mark Ruasoll
RusseH
COtnedy Marl<
pokes ~un at pompous polili• cian s and bumbling bureau·
crats.
•
America"• Top Tan · .
Chriotmll
IHSOI
MOVIE:
' The
Guardian' (CCI
9:30 • (l) CD lt'o Your Move
Norman tries to convince
the Burton faniily of the im·
portance of believing in tra·
ditional holiday values.
86
Excavating
Gel)eral Hauling
BARNEY
.-
-··
--~
~-----· -
.. ----....
......
l,...,.ndent Nowa
;
MOVIE: 'Twilight
..~,- - The Movlo'
1 0 :16
HINidllne News
10:30
M11111il
Sailford ond Bon
•
11 :00
•
FOR SALE: Upholotary ohop
eq",tf ond ouppllto, lnCIIu
-lng mochlrie
coa 1 4·1411·2202.
•.
c·mon-gat wtth 111
\
I t)
•
'
() (
)
()
~i:Rjlfl
\Lfjrlp tlJ
~: A"(
u/u A"T
THE
6EOLOe/6T WHO
51'ECIAL.I ZED IN
WA~.
EAKTHQUAK!I$
I XI I t ( X1 I I I]
(AftlweN tornonow )
Vtslerday·s
I
Jumblel GOURD HIKER ALBINO. BEL.LOW
Answer What they said abOut that evening gown• " LOW I - l BEHOLD"
.kaMIIIIa.okffoi10aftll 11_......._ . . ., ...................... -
.... ~ tnwft JumDII
• , ,0 , ... 111, ,....,..,
e
cJo ...
....,,_rwM......t.• . -....... d-* ....... tol:lca
·Plan in advance
for extra chance
..
12- 111-14
NORTH
+H2
.A t0176
--
+KB743
By JaiDH Jaeoby
Writers like to make bridge a game·.:
of adA&es. and I am no exception. :,
"Two cbanC:ell are better .than one' ' is
one of my favorites , but sometimes a ·
player bu to be careful to make sure ,
be leU tile teeond chance.
South won the queen of spadeo and,
uerclliD& normally good declarer
tec1m1que, be ducked a club. Tile
defenders cleared tile spade lllllt.
Declarer played tbe club ace and was •
a lOt*'· If be pve up a club to East,
be would be uaable tO enjoy his blgli
diamonds. If he cashed A-K-Q of
diamoadll, Eut, upon getting in with
his lut club ·winner, would lead a dla·
mond to partner's jack al!d Weot's
spade winDers would Jet the band.
If clubs are going to split 3·2, South
~lly doesn't need all that communi·
cation. He sbou1d play a dub to the
ttng and a club 1*11. to the ace. If
clubs apllt, fiDe. He can give up the
last club wblle he still bas tile heart
ace for a duminy entry. Bllt wben
they do not divide in friendly fashion,
he Is now in his own band and can
play a low diamond. Because the diamond jack eventually cornea down. he
EAS'i'
·•u
WEST
+KIOTS!
• KJ3
.JU2
+9
.QH .
+9865
+QJ 102
SOVTB
+AQ4
.52
tAKQ107
+A65
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
w..t
Pus
1•
Pass
3+
Pass
Pass
Pass
Paso
Pus
-I.
2NT
3NT
Opening lead: +5
.
can
scoie f our
diamond tricks, two
heart for
his ~tract. ·By playing in tbiJ
manner, be preoerves both cballcel
for tile contract - tint, a ~bit
club division; second, tile Nc-!OIId
jack fa !liDg.
:..
spades two clubs and one
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
t:!\1
M1AI "() •"'
lly THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
. DOWN
1 Leafy fare 1 Psyche
1 Niggard
%Assistance
11 Each
3 Shelf
1% Finnish
4 Verb !onn
lake ·
5 Joan Collins
13 Loaded
'IV program
U Make tardY I Casaba, e.g .
15 Kadola , e .g. 7 Actress
18 Fuss
18 Wood core
11 Minimize
,...,
Balin
Yes!Alrday's Answer
8 Diabolical :U Abstracted 3Z He killed
9 Hennit
25 Superlative · Goliath
10 Backed out
in grammar D Prince
n Dress,
as stone
17 Scottish
21 De!Alrgent
Valiant's
river
!7 Gadabout
wife
zo Ginza drink a "Three"
31 Sly gaze
Z3 "Pistolin Udine
Jl Girl's
zz Conswned
Z3 Insect
:U "Vanity
Fair"
Packin'
heroine
31 "WestSide
name
Story" role U Old note
-"
!7 Accel·
eraied
Z8 She (Fr.)
ztCap
30Daisy-
Scraggs
31 Naval ·
34 Japanese
verse
35 Bird's beak
31 Whole
38 Biblical
mount
40 Embank·
ment
UHappening
43 The best
44 Libyan city
45 Bw-ghoff
'IV role
h-4-++-+AXYDLBAAXR
111:30
•
TRISTATE
.
UPHOLSTERY BHOP
1.1 e3 Soc. Ave., Golllpolio.
II 14-448-7833 or 814-4481833,
Unocr...,.._ .. -lo lon ·
--to--.
-..-y-.
Is LONGFELLOW
'
;
• ·
;
Will houl coal, aarld ond . •
grovel. 304-468- 111118.
Uphol1tery
-otball:
when they return to England
and encounter hostility and
prejudice on the pan of the
villagers. (AI 90 min .)
!MAXI . Al.bum
Floah:
Culture Club
1 0 :00 • (]) Ill St. Elaawhere A
·
Nobel prize-winning ~~tor
visits St . Eligius10 rem1msce
with his old friend Dr.
Auschlander and to find a
kidney donor for an African
boy, and Drs. Craig and Ehrlich risk their lives try1ng to
e •tract an explosive bullet
from a patient . (60 min.)
(I) • ~ Arthur Hailey' I
HoteiiCCI
J1mes Bov• Water Service. ;
Aloo poolo filled. Gall 814· ;
208 -1141 or e14 -446· ,
1f75 or 614-446-7911 .
·:
Ken·• Wlter Service. Welle,
clttorno. poolo filled . Phono
1114· 367·0823 or 814· 3117·
7741 night or doy.
College
cess bride are shattered
SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Salas • Service Sharpen .
Sclllort. F1btic Shop, • ~
Pomeroy. 814-992-2284.
87
76
ffi
UCLA at Brigham Y (1) Direct Una: Waohl{lgton/Moecow This program
presents
satelli1e·in1er·
connected dialogue between major public figures in
Washington and Moscow
on the subject of why the
· U.S. and U.S.S.R . do not understand each other. (60
min.)
(jj) Soilor' a Return (CCI
The lives of a British sea .
captain and his African prin-
1
1980 CB750F Hondo. Su·
por Sport. 81100 mllu. Nbttttry ond rur tiro . Exoa~
lont condition . t1280.00.
Coli 814·882·31112.
ha'ofe 1heir work · Cut out for
them when a miserly busi·
nessman wants to expand
his used car business at the
expense of a local orphan"l!"· (60 min.)
rn Fl._
tD NIA -otbell: Loa
AngaleS Lolcors at Houoton
(I) . (lJ Fall Guy (CCI Coh
becom's a Big Brother to a
young boy suffering from
Oown·s Syndrome who has
come to Los AngeleS to participate in the Speciai · Oiym ~
pies and whO has witne~sed
a murder ~ t()O min.)
1!1 ffi ® thorlnin Chorgo
@
1979 Chevy 'II t6n, 4 ~I
drive with utility body, exc
cond, 8 3. 760.00. Phone Good-1 Exca'oflting, base· !
'mente. footers , dri'ofawaya, ' '
304-458-1610.
aeptic tanks. landec•ping.
1973 Cheynne Super 10, Coli anytime 814 -448·
good cond, AC, AM· FM 4537. Jamaa L. Davi1on. Jr.
radio, CruiM ContrOl 1nd owner.
now ti reo, 304· 773· 6270.
Electrical
1978 CJ-7 Joop, 8 cyl. , 3 84
& Refrigeration
opd., hardtop, t3,800. col
_3_o_•_
-e_7_&_·11_9_&_11_._ _ _ _
1981 Chevy Luv .4 whool
.1 981 Robblt DieHl. 73,000 drive,• diooal, *3,800.00.
1._ _ _ _
mllaa, g~d cond .. U900 . _3_0 4_ ·_8_8_2-_3_6_8_
Coli 379-21 38 eve; good 1
MPG.
·
1984 S -1 0 lour wheel drive
)Nith toppor, •a.ooo.oo.
1978 Ford 'A ton plcl<up be cond. 304-882-31181 .
4x4. •1.200 or beot.offer.
Call 814-388· 9303.
7 4 Motorcycle a
19811 Chivy Balolr t286,
engine • body In gol)d cond.
Coli 4411· 711o,fadtemp
111111 Chivy lololr Ulli.
engine • body In flOod oond .
Con 448-71113 oftar 4PM .
Home
Improvements
.., _ _ MIIaOLM
Heaven Jonathan and Mark
'j
73 · Vans & 4 W.O.
1978 Plymouth Fury. auto ..
air, PS, PB. radio. new paint
job. •1&99. John'o Auto
· Sales. Bulaville Rd . Gallipo·
lio 448-4782.
1972 Impala Chevrolet, 2
dr .• 350 engine, new paint,
new 'ofinyl top, good motor,
good tlroo. Coil 448·1638
after 6pm.
1989 Jerry Camper . . 18 ~
Perfect condition .
$1800.00. Ed Brown. Call :
e14-992-8140.
•
foo~ .
--- ------ ·
72
71
BORN LOSER,
1975 Corvette. air, PS.
powe.r windowa, T ·top, 1
$4,600 .00, Domogad right
fonder. 304-882-3681 .
Iron HorH Buildert . Farm & ;
Commercial Pole Bldgt . .
1915 Nova, 4 door, 8 cyl, 614- 332, 9746 Colloct .'~l
euto·trani. seU or trade. leon
Flu Morkot , 304· 468 - ~~~~~~c':~~~:~:: d':!~~·j
1672.
t5236 orocted .
1
laying hens, 'young rooa1era,
Botoms. 304-4S8 -1 690.
64
(it N - Name That
Tuna
• WKRP in Clncinnoti
IHBOI -lof1nnv
Cnh' e
A Speclol
America
a-tit
Perlormence
Johnny salutes Am:erice .tn
this musical benefit from the
Kennedy Cent._r in Washing·
ton. D.C.
B:OO 0 IIl CD Highway to
•
~
Will trodo 1'9B3 32ft. •
camperfOf late model motor~;
homo & pay boot. Coli
e14·268-1218. ·
I]) Wheel of Fortuno
® MocNeii/Lohrllr
Nowohour
18 ft. campor, WMpl 6, full ·
tMth, range with oven. re· ~
frige111tor oper1te1 on g81 or ~
electric. wall to well ~carpet· .t
lng, loto of oxtru, tJ.eoa. \
1978 Honda troil70, 1100,
CoU 446· 4127 oftor II.
JACKSON ESTATES
Big 3 or II bdr. homo built on
APARTMENTS (Equol
your lot • 11,1100 • up. s..
MI~ r 1.11 d IIIII sI~
our modo!. CoB 1-81 4-B811·
Houliftl Oppo;tunltvl hoo
7311.
one and two bedroom•. rent
lllllnillg It •183 for one ·
-room ond •191 por
61 Household Goods Singer oowlftl mochlno for
month lor two badroom,
..... golden touoh ond oow.
with 1200 depoolt locoted
Coli 114· 388-1118, like
now . .
MOr Foocllond ond Spring
Volllv Plou. pool ond TV RICK'S NEW l!oND USED
ont. Coli 441-2745 or luve FURNITURE . Uoed ttOVII Drl-y llono hlulad ofld ·
and refrigeretort. Compare &prlld. Coli L. ~oul Mortln
mellll•·
our Prices, save today. 114-2118-8777 or 'Oovld
Mortln 114· 2118-1221.
1113 Third Avo. two· ! bdr. Phone 304-773-11430.
optl, lllrtlng 11311 to 11811
Ufad 215 ln. IMro TV Uti,'
mo. Water includad. dap req. Kenmore white etec range
neado f100·f1110 ropolr.
Coli ,t48·4222 b e - g & cont cleaning oven. uaed
yr . •110 .00. 304·6711- Call 448-4033.
II .
8747 between 6 and 9 PM .
Early American Console
1 bdr opt.. 2 bdr opt ..
11110-UIIO. Coli 304-11711- King si1a water bed, Stereo, chett of drtlwert.
7213 f711·11104 or 11711· tt 110.00. like new. 304- Coli 245 -110811 ·or 24116711-3566.
6e58.
11318.
D
. I])
,
!
24 ft. Mlf contained .. mp· .
lng trailer. Coli 614-261- •
1291 .
I
i
I .irll'
.
(it Emertainmont
~~of FOttuna
Bulldl~g liloterialo
Block. brlc~. oowor plpoo.
window a. llntolo . at e .
CloudoWinton. RloGrondo.
0 . Colil14· 245·11121 .
Firewood. t20 .00 pick up
load. 130.00 delivered .
304-876 -2991 or 875 6762.
I-_:________ _
I]) •
Firewood lor oolo • •26
pickup food . Uli 'dollvorod.
Coli 814-268-620B.
-lc .....
Olk furnituN, _.blu.chalro.
cupboarda. pie Mfe. tele·
phonao, doole, olao ontlqu11
ond QIIN-ro. Opon Sundaya. Conkel' t Tuppert· ·
ploino, Rt. 7 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sqfa. chair, rocker. otto·
man, 3 tables. (utra hiaVy),
8686. Soloo and . chillro
priced from 1285. to 1891.
Homemade bedapreadt for
Tabloo. S50 and up to 1126.
Hide·a·beds.*390. and up . 1111 with ahama. They are
booutlful. Coli 814· 742·
to 1660 .• sofa bado 1146,
2969 .
Recliners, 1225. to 1371 .•
h,b2.1clol42
Lampo from 128. to 1126.
pc . dinettet from *109 .• to
14•70, 3 bedroom with
435. 7 pc. U89 ond up.
Iorge V!lrd- 1186 .00 month
Wood table ~ith the .chllire
pluo dopoolt and utllitleo.
1286 to 1746. Deok t110
One
child. Coli 614·986·
up to e225 . Hutcheo. t660.
43117.
Bunk bed complete with
mattr8sue, 8276 . and up to
8395 . Boby btda. •110. Boyo 20 inch BMX Froo
Spirit bicycle for ••le. Call
Mattresua or bo• springe,
boforll 3 :00. 614 · 992 ·
full or twin, 168 ., firm, 188.
and 878 . Queen sets, *1 96. 7342. '
4 dr. choota. t49. 6 dr.
CoJeco Cab~~~· Patch Prae·
c~e1ta , t59 . Bed frames,
120.and 125 .• 10gun - Gun mie. Black boy. 1511.00. Coli
e14-992-6161 .
cabineu, 8360 . Gas or
electriC ranges *375. Baby
Homtlite chain 11w, new.
mottroooeo, 126 • Ul, bad
12 inch. Homelite chain
!romeo 120. 126. & 130,
oow, uoad, 10 Inch. Smoll
king frame •&o. Good selection of bedroom sulte1, gee furnace uted. Coal stove
uood. CoB 814·992-11409 .
rockers. met•l cabineu,
headboards •38 • up to
Poroketo $10 to 113. Cock866.
otlels 130. love birdo $60 a
poir, finches Ill, upright
Used Furniture •· electric
plano e165. Call 114-986·
fireplace. 6 pc . dinette, head
4212.
boarda, and 2 bedroom
suites. 3 miln out Bulaville
Poroketo $10 .00 to 113.00.
Rd. Open 9am to 5pm •.Mon.
Cockotlolo $30.00. Love
thru Sat.
birdo $80.00 o pair. Finches
614-446-0322
$& .00 . Uprl.ght piono
GOOD USED APPLIANCEs· et 66.00. Coil 814-986"
Washers, dryer~, refrigera- ,t212. la,b2, fclir73
tors, ranges. Skaggs Ap·
For Nlo, one cobbego Patch
Pliancet, Upper River Rd .
Kid doll. Phone 304-773boaiilo Stone Croot Motel.
6905 or 1!14-992·7674.
814-448 -7398.
County Appliance. Inc .
Good used appliances and
TV ooto. Opon SAM to &PM.
Mon thru Sot. 446-1899,
627 3rd. Ava. Gollipolio,
OH .
@ ~
(J) ~Pyle
7 ft . truck toppor, bluaj
Phono 304-8711-4840.
,
1~~!::::=====:;;;:::;::;;==:::;;=;;;::=====~ Call448~2217.
1.!/1 ~~ ·
(J) H.,. CorM 1he llridea
Wont to buy loft front Iondo!'
from 1 1977 or 1!178 Plntoo
304-171-1141 8 or e ·7 5•
8069 .
•
•
·af PM M;,gu~,; ·
7 :00 •
ft~fj}\'J . f!a'I'MAT-·e·-
~
I FLEAY
12/19/84
79 Moton Home•
& Campers
,_n,
Fur!'lilhed apt ., next dOor to
Library, one professionll
adult only. Call 446 -0338 .
~
66 Building Suppliet
Rough Cut Lumber-. olfk.
poplar, ·end pine. 2x4 't,
218'1, 1 x6 't, 1 x8'a . AI·
aortod ltngtho. Call Hegg
and.. lnc
Zuepan
M1tar-ial1
Mobile home new
and · Co
. 773
· 6664 ,
doort. lnlide. outlide,atorm doytimo.
doort. . trailer window•.
About 600 lprlcad' to Hill Now opon for buolneu,
McArthur.Ohio, Route. 1. MouP3!' Stote !' 1ock. At.
Coll814-1198-4282.
33,
Heven . Complete
ma1onry aupplies. 4". 8",
Fire wood for ult. UO.OO 12" block. Delivery oervico.
picked-up. tJii .OO doll · Phone day 304-882· 2222,
varad. Call e14·982·1448. evening 882-3239 .
nice f160 mo. Call 614e75· 6104 or 8711-5386 .
f
llgier gal heal IIOVO . Coil
4411-2108.
For rent with option to buy 3
bdr. hOIJM, deposit required,
cloM to town . Calf evenlng1,
448·4348 .
Nice two bedroom in Eatt·
ern School Diatrk:t. Natural
Gae.TPC water end no pets.
\
For ..to: Coml!lata 1974
Deteun truck l or pert•!
UIIO.OO . Coli 814· 742,
2421 .
Polllor 1 2 '""'" dOuble •ldwln fun mochlne. fully
btrrol
Model12 Win· equlppacf oquorlum . 304·
"""- 12 ,.uge, 30 ln. full e7•;•899 otter 4 :00.
chokt tiOO. Coli 378· ' lp:~;;;;;';;-;;;,--;-;;;;
2110.
·
I Plre uood tor -.. all hmt
wood, 1110.00 pickup foeti.
wll cltllwr. 304-1711·1.,8.
For Nle hlriCIIMill dollo
houNirom e8o tons. Cal Orlginol Cploco Cobbofll
Potch Pnoomlt doll •es.oo.
441-4130.
One Cobloege Potch KooAo
Uvlnoroom 'tumitl!fe In ••· onlmol •1(1.00. 304·882·
ellont condition. 111211. Coli 2804.
4411-2131.
eeoo.
· Houoo f01 rent. Coli 304·
8711 · 7213 11711-11104 or
11711· 5388.
Television
Viewing
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41
The Daily
Ohio
O..nber 18,1814
One letter stands lor another. In this sample A Is t-'
for lhe three L's, X for tile two O's, etc. Slncle Jetlen,
r,pcilb ophes, tile ien(lth and fomlltiOII of tile WGrdl81'e Ill
hints. Each day lhe code letterure different. •
CRYPTOQUOTE
12-19
WH
PGO
•
PEANU1'S
HEY C~UCK "' DID
fl,llli E'JEl lAW 61.A5156 ?I
WIIAT PO .VOU MEAN,
• MAA't-~07"
IN 'fl.IE !liSLE~ DOes IT
5AY AH'IT~IN6 ABOUT
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'fl.IEN I-lOW CAN MARCIE
f'Lfl« MM~ INSTEAD OF
AND 'fl.IE TEAC~ER.
I'M 601N6 TO 8E
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VKXYKNHPWANP}VXA
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WORm MoRE- ntAN THE GIFT. - PIERRE COR·
NElllE
.
0 1tl41itlfll FMtufft Syftdl<.•·· II'IC.
'
�•
Page 16 The Daily Sentinel
I
Area deaths
Sara Sally Murphy
"
sa
. ra San Y Murph Y' R·N-· ""•
Portland, died Monday as tberesult
of massive head and chestlnjurtes
at the scene of an a uto accident on
Olllo 681, one-mOe south of Albany.
~s. Murphy was born March 30.
1940 at Findlay, a da ughter of tbe
late Woodrow and Betty Clyner
Steiner.
On Feb. 12, 1982, she marrted
WUUam Murphy, who survives,
along with her stepfather, Ulysts
. Reichenbach of Bluffton; three
brothers,
of Hauch·
· J John
s Steiner
!Bluff!
d
on, an
town, ames telnero
Richard Reichenbach of Ada;
a
c(J
)
1st
M
W
I
s er, rs. es ey oyce ooxry
of U r ba na; and her 1>11I erna I
·st 1n
f
grandm ot her, Mrs. Sa rah e ero
Bl tt
u ton.
Mrs. Murphy was graduate of
Bluffton High School in 1958 and in
a
Bus bids approved
Bids lor twoTI-passengercaplclty
school buses have been accepted by
the Southern Local Board of
Education.
A bid from G ibson Truck Parts,
Atbens, was accepted for the
chassis. A bid from Edwin H. Davis
& Son, Langsville , was accepted for
the bus bodies.
In other business, the board hired
Sue M. Grace as a substltuteteachEir
for the 1~-85 school year and Carla
Shuler as compu ter coordinator for
the 1985-86 year.
The board alsO approved ·the
school closing on Dec. 6 due to Icy
road conditions and renewed the
vision plan as It now stands.
Approval was given to amend the
approprtatlon for the Educational
Lottery Profits Program
Application.
Permission to transfer funds was
given Clerk Denny HilL
The date for the orgarilzational
meeting was set for Monday Jan. 7
at6i30p.m.
Present for the meeting were
Susie Grueser, Don Smith, David
HID, Joseph Thoren, Bobble ·Ord,
and benny Hill.
I
1961 graduated ~ the Llina
Actions
filed
Two actions haw been toed . in
Meigs County CCJmmonPleas~rt
by VeleransMetnortal Ho8pltal.
!,;
Two Kyger Creek plant em-
MemorialSchoolofNurslng.ln19'79,
ployeeswerelnjured, oneserlously,
- · ~~ 10:30 a m
In an exp!oslon a'""'...
sherecelvedherbachelorofsclence
- ·
Tuesday at the plant.
degree in health care at the
University Without WaDs In CoOpenlumTaken toHolzerMedlcaiCenierat
bus. She was cofounder ol the
Gallipolis were John Edwards, 26,
Door Clinic In Columbus and for 14
Henderson, W.Va .. ·and Bob "Artie
Workedasapsychlatrlc nurse
years
Foo" Burton, 54, Pomeroy.
with the Columbus Area Communtty Mental Health Progt:am.
Services wiD be held at 2:30p.m.
Hospital otllclals today said
Thursday In Paul Diller & Son
Edwards was transferred to Unlver·
slty Hospital In Columbus with
Chapel, Blutlton, with the Rev.
SE,'COnd and third degree burns over
Mark Weldrln Otllcatlng· Burial will
the
t
k r hi bod H 1 1n
be in the Clyner Cemetery in Union
lnt uppelr run o s
y. e s
Township. Frtends may call at the
ens ve care, and Is reported In
sertous condi·tlon.
.
funeralhomeafter2p.m.todayuntU
time of services.
Burton was treated and released
. _ burns of the lett
Friends may make ·contributions for first ,
~... =
wrist, elboand face.
to the Open Door Clinic or the
A spark from nearby welding
ColumbusAreaCommunltyMenta1
equipment apparen' tl·y Ignited
H ealth Program, A memorial
SErvice will be held In Columbus in
cleaning solvent in the pulverizing
t he
lut re
·
area, causing the explosion.
~-n-ea_r__u_.-----------~-'-------1
The lint suit, eplnat ~j
..
Curry, Pomeroy, _
reques a ....,.ment of $5,~ on 111 oveJ'I!Ue bU1
.... _
nd It
lor medlcal care. ""' seoo su •
llled against Betty L. Stover arid
Clinton P. Stuver, Rutlalld, requests
judgment ~ $3,334.96, also on an
overdUe biD. ,
Free cloth'
day
. ang
The Ga~-Melgs Community
Action Agency will hold Its tree
clothing day lor low Income persons
untO
Frldaytrorn9a.m.
noon.
The a<>ency'e clothing bank Is now
...,
!Cleated In !¥ old high school
building at Cheshire.
Meeting cancelled
Admitted- Donna Rice, Racine;
'l1le D,ecember meeting of the
Meigs Coonty ~tic Execu- Helen Burkhart, Mlddlewri; wutive Committee scheduled for helmlna Thoma, Long Bottom.
Disch~ - Judy Lee. Martha
Thursday evenbli has been canFife.
celled due to-the boUday sea50n.
Henry Hunter, chalrr!wn, an- Church slates
nounced today.
Christmas pro8J'IU'l
Christmas p.-ognm
The Long Bottom United Methodist Church Christmas program w)ll
be heldat7p.m. Sunday. The public
Is Invited.
Iii"·.
II:IJII II:trk
C6H
llrl IU I II~'I It'i
1~:n · tu
D
o 100 ha-c a II(Wdcil'tf in )'OL'J ilouxholcl OfOfl( 1h1r
would wtl<on'it 1 behind-dle-trhttl t(frnhacou rxl
AAA't Dri•drTrtinin& , . irofferina
rflc opponunity ro pu!Chut Chrinmu sift cmificatn
•
.
.
',) 7
h 1L-~
' "'''1
...-:., ·c~
J------------------'-----------1
79
Lottery ·
CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 783. In
the "Pick 4" -game, the winning
·
numberwas2395.
Marriage license
A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to WIUlaril Kellh WOlle, 23,
Pomeroy , and Brenda Lee Saxton,
20. Gallipolis.
YELLOW 01 WHITE GOLD AYAUilE
FREE RING SIZING
ALL DIAMONDS NOW 2 S·%
ND & BIRTHSTONE
CLUSTERS
Weather
NOW
, Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, December 20. 1984 .
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel ~Writer
GAWPOIII
360 IKOIII A¥1.
CLUSTERS _
$ 95;;~;':;~00
.at y . enttne
Meigs County's railroad crossings are to be
nepalred Immediately, according to the Meigs County
Cilrnmlssloners.
A telephone caD from a Conrall representative In
Columbus came during Tuesday"s commissioners
· meeting at the Meigs County Courthouse.
The representative told Commissioner Rich Jones
during tbe conversation thai "trucks with asphiilt are
right now O!l the way from Columbus to Meigs
County."
.
.
In an effort to rajse the height of the crossings for.
faster moving trains, Conrail hired a contractor to
work on Meigs crossings earlier In the fall.
The contractor did not get the job done as quickly as
had been, hoped and then had a difficult lime getting
asphalt.• Between 10 and 12 cross!nilS In the county
r
were left In a condition making It hard for vehicles to
cross over thl'l'll.
.
The crossing at !Jobson, on one of Meigs County's
busiest roads, received the most complaints from
area residents.
In the past few weeks, the commissioners have
attempted to reach ConraD representatives to discuss .
the crossings. However. not unto Rep, Clarence
MOler was made aware of the situation did Conran
begin to take action on the problem.
The commissioners beUeve repair to the crossings
will be finished tight away. A cold mix Is to be used In
the repair this winter, to be replaced In thesprtngwlth
a hot mix.
Bid recommetldadon
A recommendation from the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service board of trustees has
been received by the commissioners.-
The EMS board recommends t!Uit the commission·
ers accept a $45,350 bid from the Horton Co.,
Columbus, for a 1~ambulance.Horton'sbldwas the
only one offered for the ambulance.
Otticlal notification that Meigs County Is the
recipient of a $25,700 Utter control grant has been sent
to the commissioners. The Utter control program Is
scheduled to begin shortly.
Tim Knopp and Mary Beth Bill from Buckeye HUis
Regional Development Center were present at the
meeting to dlseuss the Community Development
Block Grant program lor fiscal year 1~.
On questions ahout government grants for
recreational development at Meigs County's newly
. acquired Jaymar Golf Course property, Knopp told
the commissioners he would begin making contacts to
see what would be avallable and then report backata
later date.
or
S7,036.m.
The commissioners' next meeting wiU be Friday,
Dec. 28 at 9:30a.m. In the courthouse.
By BOB HOEI'UCII
Sentinel Staff Writer
Resume on Dec. 26, 1984
FARMERS
BANK
21 W. 2nd
P0r,1ERO'Y, OH.
CE
.TRUST
COMPANY
Widows sue
Kaiser for
·ss million
. dale set by board
The Following Banks ·
Will Close At 12':00 Noon
On Monday, December 24, 1984
In Observance of Christmas
HOME
NATIONAL
. BANK
25 Cento
Knopp pointed out that the value of the ptopei ty
might be used as a match for the Land and Water
Conservation 50-50 match grant program under ll)e'
. direction of the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources.
Final ·b ulinell .
The name or James G. Mourning, certified pubUc
accoutant , has been sent to the state for approval
before Mourning can begin a year-end audit of
records for the commissioners.
In final business, the board approved several
Inter-departmental transfers ol funds. Approved
were the EMS. $57,350; county Infirmary. Sl49.94;
planning commission , $249.92; board
mental
retardation, $295.46; and the highway department,
I· MHS .gradUation
Business Hours
2 lectlono. 1 4 Pageo
A Muttirnecu.lnc. New1p1p1r
·Conrail repairing Meigs railroad crossings
;m;lthr· fn,·h , ,r i, ~~t·•l ••ttl'~.
20°/o
Off
........
•
a rl· a ).! rt ·:11
hriJ,!hk n \ 1111r rrc"t·
for behind !h( wheel Jlld c.lus1oom i(IStruction
Girccerrif~~:1 1a for ur (tuirc drivtl educ ~r ion w ul lt in·
dud ing eight hoo rs or behrnd chc whed lnd .ciciK houli
or CllSUOOm instruction U R bf: purrhncd 01 11rnply l IWD
ho•u $eUion o£ bc hirnl ·lht·wllrtl inuruccion . Gifc cw ifi·
CllC!IrC rafct mablr rhmu1h 11}8, . Oaisr(IDIII in!lf\ICtion
is hcld . NEXTCLAUUBEGINJAN. 7th
OALLIPOLIS & POMEROY
SeePap8
•
e
Vol.34, No.176
Copyrtghied 1984
Special AAA Christmas Gift For Driver Training
To purchalt • .11Ift eenifiCitl or for
addltlon'l Information <tn th1 dtfv•r
tr1fnln11 progr~m a c•tl
1
8porlllonl'ap 5
.
dlrytp• .
Beat.of the Bend
Victory Circle
TheannualChrlstrnasprogramof
the Mount Hermon United Brethren
Church has been set for 7: 30 p.m.
Sunday. The public Is Invited.
ORNAMENT SALE
Trim your tree with memories. .
Christmas services·
Edllorial• Pap I
1
-1t~
Iff Ill'
.....,
.. , , _
,
OPEC problems
-~:llff':.'/IH,:~~:l'f!:"=~" ~- "';;l'f!!,'/IH,:~I!:lfr.IH.~~l'IG
r;:=::=::::=:=;;;;;;;;;;;:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d
'
•
Wednelday,
Pomeroy _Middleport. Ohio
· ·
2
Bl88l IDJUI'e8
KC employ,ees
Dec8TI* 19. 1984
Veterans Memorial
•
NA
$12995
WAS S169.9S
SAVE S40.00
All MONTHS EITHER YELLOW
OR WHITE GOLD MOUNTING
Graduation day for Meigs l:ilgh
School seniors was set for the
afternoon of Sunday, June 2, whe!l
the Meigs Local School Dlstrtct
Board of ,Education met In regular
,
session Wednesday night.
Superlntendebt Dan C. Morris
said that In past years, It has been
acceptable to graduate seniors as
much as a couple of weeks before
schools ci()S('.
However, Morris said, this policy
Is no longer permitted 'by the State
Department of Education. Morris
pointed out that the last day of
classes for all students wiD be May
:.>, and so last night the baccalaureate and commencement were set
forJune2.
However, It was pointed out that
the date 'Is subject to change
depending upon the number of
calamity days that take occur
between now and spring. A spring
break wUI allow some adjustment
without changing graduation and
the closing ol schools If the calamity
days are not too numerous ; Morris
said.
The board approved the sale of
$.'Dl,tXXl in bonds to A. G. Edwards &
.Son Inc., Toledo. There were six
bidderS and the Edwards bid was
considered tbe most favorable with
an Interest rate of 8 percent and a
premium ofSIB7.
The sale of the honds was
necessary due to the approval of the
$.'0},00) tax tree bond Issue approved by voters of the district In
November.
Mary Miller was employed as an
aide for the Rutland kindergarten
lor the remainder of the school year
and maternity leaves were granted
· (Continued on Page 10) -
FINALLYREPAIJUID-n.rallruadm I gat
H~.
jlllt below MlddlepGrt. haa llnally been
n.d.he.t
replllred. QJanO
the job ."'--ay evening.
Mo&orl!tl8 have had to gingerly cl'O!lll thele tradal for
the [NI8t several weeks.
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) Thewldowsoltwoworkerswhodled
oflnjuriessutlered lnallreatKal.!ier
Aluminum & Chemical Corp.'s
Ravenswood Works have flied suit
against the company.
Raomi Jean JeweU of Point
Pleasant and Janice Ashworth of
· New Haven each are seeking $5
inUUon from Kaiser, plant manager
. J .W. Scelfo and production manager Richard DaVId Flnch, according to a suit filed · Monday In
Kanawha County Circuit Court.
The suit claims that plant
conditions were u.n.t;afe. when the
explosion and fire occurred Aug. 10.
The company announced eartler
this mmth that an Investigation by
an englneertng and design firm
indicated that the fire probably was
caused by exposed electrodes or
(Continued on Page 10•
Tax. reduction plan defeated in Senate action
Cloudy tonight with a slight
chance of early rain or drizzle. Lows
In the upper 20s. Mostly sunny
Thursday. Highs in the mld40s. The
chance of precipitation ls30percent
tonight and ten percent tomorrow.
Extended forecast ·
Friday through Sunday:
A chance of rain Friday and
Saturday. Fair Sunday. Highs from
the lower 40s In the northwest to the
mid OOS In the southeast Friday and
Saturday and between 35 and 45
Sunday. Lows from the 20s Friday
and sunday to the 30s Saturday.
By ROBERT E. MD J.ER
Allloclated 1'.- Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State senators have
gone through the motions of trying to cut taxes but the
effort appeared doomed from tbe start as a result of
pre-planned posturing for future legislative elections.
Democrats offered .t he proposal Wednesday before
the Legislature closed up shop lor the year, built lost
on a 15-15 tie vote. Tiley brought the measure to the
floor of the 33-member Senate, aware that au 16
·Democrats would have to support It • whUe one
Republican would have to join ln.
One Republican did, but two Demccrats voted
against It and three senators. two RepubUcans and
one Democrat, were absent.
The Taste I Like
But the amendment put the Democrats on record as
proposing the cut before tbe GOP gets Its ~hance to
pass a· permanent 10 percent cutin the state income
tax when It takes over the Senate Jan. 7.
And the Republicans retained their chance to draw
the political spotlight next month whim they offered
an amendment to lower the Democrats' 1~ percent
temporary reduction (for six months l to 10 percent
and make It permanent.
They were aware that no Dembcrat would support
a permanent eut, especially In view of Democratic
Gov. Richard Celeste:s pubUc opposlt.lon to such an
action at the just-ended lame duck session. Celeste
says he wUl propose a cut In early 1!1!5.
Senate President Harry Meshel, 0-Your.;;:::..,wn,
left the rostrum for an emotlonaUy charged floor
speech In which he assailed Republicans lor refuSing
the temporary cut. He reminded them that the prior
Republican administration used a sertes of temporary tax Increases In 1982 In an unsuccessful bid to
solve a state budget crlsls.
"Temporaries were created by you guys. You are
the parents of that illegitimate chlld," Meshel
declared . .
·Sen. Richard H. Finan, RCinclnnatt, shot back that
Democrats botched the handling of one budget
surplus earlier this year in a bill that gave taXpayers
rebates averaging about $15.
Finan and other Republicans said excessive
mailing expenses and other problems resulted,
costing taxpayet:S several hundred thousand dollars
Celeste expected to approve
state, county pay increases
The Fiber/
~40% Bran Flakes
gives me both.
Airbag saved
trooper's life
..,.
With my al'tivc lifestyle I can 't afford to
sacrific.:e nutrition for Rood taslc:. With POST'
40'X, Oran f' lakc~.l don't have to. POST' 40% Bran
flak~ RJ"'s me: 1ht- flhc:r I ntt'd with .1 crl,.hearty
flavm I prt'ft:r to the otho 40'Xo bran flake.
ByROBERTE.MDJ.ER
AMoclated Presti Writer
Choose from five great big Rax. sandwiches:
• CHICKEN·· •TIJRKEY BACON CLUB
• BIG RAX • BEEF, BACON & CHEDDAR (BBC,.)
• PHILLY BEEF 'N <:;HEESE,.
•1..-----..
------·
$LOO
I . Dink .I
.
.
-
Nowthlnk
off!
·
.
l2 Phl~-:.~eese.M I
I
I
I
I . . . ,.
Thts offer not ooltd I01Ih lll!f other dtocount or . ·
coupon. Sola tax charged
applk:ablo. Offer
oood Ill P1111dPalinp
·
Rax ~On¥
Any Baked ~~to
This offet not vehd IMth any other diocount or
· coopon. Soles tax c~
·
where applltablo. Offer
oood at partldpotlng
·
1.
I
I
=·-.::=.-~
GALLIPOLIS
Ru. Restaurants onl',.l.
l.ciiii ...-::.~~-.-- .L
-----------··--·
abused childreRFinal approval of the pay bW
canne when the Houle voted ~27 to
accept &!nate amendmenta Which
lowered the
by abrut 7
1503 f,:astern Avenue
GENERAl FOODS CORPOR~TION
. '
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Althc;ugh Gov. Richard CeleSte says
he will veto hlsown salary increase,
he Is expected to sign Into law a
major round of pay boosts for state
lawmakers and other elected state
and local officials.
- They all were l;ent to him
Wednesday In a blp;trtlsan bUI that
was part of a flurry of activity which
brought the curtain down on the
115th General Assembly.
Only skeleton sessionS wiD be held
until the Senate and House give way
to the new Legislature which
convenes Jan. 7.
Nearly ihree dorzen other measures were cranked out of · the
legislative pipe, covering a wide
·
range of subjects. · .
Some of them Included proposals
limiting publlc utWtles' authority to
pass along certain construction
costs to ~ta,nera, establlahlna a
· state bond sale plan to make more
capital avallablefortann loana, and
giving state and local pollee more
tools tolocateandprotectmlsalngor
percent frlm
mcree-
,,._approved
by the
HOWII! laltweek, The Senate paned
''
~
the measure 19-12 earlier Wednesday, with 10 Democrats and nine
Republicans joining in support.
Celeste's aides said he Is Ukely to
approve the legislation although the
governor said earlier he will use his
line Item veto power to reject an
InCrease the measure contains Ior
him.
House Democrals, ~ously
weary of debate on the pay raise bill
which had been going on In both
houses 11nd behind the scenes lor 10
days, voted to complete passage
after only a few minutes of heartng
the Senate amendments explained.
"I think we should vote tor this bUI
and goontootherthlngs," slild Rep.
Waldo Bennet! Role, R-Lima. who
helped draft the orlilnal pntpolllll.
A week-long Senate deadlock on
the meuure waS' broken earlier
Wednesday when Democrats and
RepublictiM for'med a coalition that
supported scaled-down ralles for
lawrnaken and all theotheroftlclals
Included in the lllll.
Genera4y. but wlth~fni!XL'ep
tlons, the redrlllted wUi
glve~~~percentnextyear
with fUrther lnc!reeles~5percent a
year tor the next four )ll!llrl.lnaome
cases, the ra!lel would be applied to
prevlola yeana.
For inltance, Houle members
ulclleaalln wW have their ularles '
boolled J.D. 1 trcm S22,!Wayeer to
¥ '
$30,152. Sen. WIUiam F. Bowen,
D-Clnclnnati, and other sponsors
said the total representedralsesof5
percent a . year since' t.he last
legislative Increase In 1979.
In 1!1117, lawmakers could receive
an Increase of up to 10 percent under
a provision wlllch .ties legislative
salaries to aU .S. Labor Department
eronomic Indicator known as the
Annual Average Salary lor Ohio.
The House earlier had voted an
Increase for lawmakers to $32,500,
also Including the future economic
Indicator boost.
As the'bUI went to tbe governor,lt
caUed for an Increase for that ottice
from $11i,<XII to S'79,1Dlln 1987. The
House had )ll'OilO!ied SIII,(XX!.
'l1le Ueutenant governor's salary,
currently $35,00l, emerged as
U2,883, after the Houae had set It at
$t6,222.
'l1le salaries of other statewide
tress·
otfldals - attorney
urer, aecreiary ~state, udaudllor,
would Increase In 1987 trorn ~.<XII
to $00. Tl5, as compared to$70,00lln
the Houae venlon.
ameral.
Senators IIC8kid down the House:
approved aalartes ~elected county
officials trorn 14 pl'l'l't!lllln 1985 and
another 14 pen:ent In 198'1 to 5
pera!nt In each of the next tour
yem,
which could have accrued to their benefit. "I suggest
you should not try to make that mistake again, " he
said.
The amendment would have meant a revenue loss
of about $189 million. The O!flce of Budget and
Management estimates CUITently that the state wUi
end the flseal year with a balance of about $155
mUiion.
However, Republicans and some Democrats Insist
that the balance will be substantially higher after
future adjustments In revenlll' forecasts.
Sens. Robert Boggs, )).Jeffet'!IOn, and Marcus
Roberto, DRavenna, voted against Meshel's amendment. Sen. William Ress, R-New Philadelphia, voted
for it .
U. A. CORNETl'
U.A. Cornett
died yesterday
Urban A. Cornett, 79, G111ilpolls,
co-founder and p~ldent of G & J
Auto Parts Co., died at 4:30 p.m .
Wednesday In Holzer Medical
'
'
Center.
Cornett helped found G & J In
Gallipolis In 1929 with C.W. Todd,
and bec:une owner and president of
the company In 1937. By the time of
his rettmnent In 19'19, the con\pany
had expanded throughout tbe Ohio
Valley, withi5htores Ill qJeratlon.
He was born Aug. 4,19m,ln Noble
County, 1011 of the late Louis John
and . Mary Warner Cornett. He
·graduated from Caldwell High
School in 19:15.
(Cantlnued on Page 14•
GALLIPOLIS. Ohio <APl -State
Highway Patrol Trooper Patrick
McDonald says he'd forgotten his
cruiser was equipped with an air
bag as his cruiser began plunging
Into a huge tree and the safety device
lnflatedsoqulck!Yhedidn'tevenfeel
it. He credits the cushion from that
experimental safety device with
saving his Ufe.
"My last thought just before I hit
the tree was, 'That's probably the
last tree I'll ever hit,' " McDonald
said, explaining he was convinced '
the crash would leave 111m ctead or
crippled for llle.
McDonald, 25, was Injured IIISI
Wednesday when his patrol cruiser
slammed Into an 8-lool-dlameter
tree ln.Cheslllre. north of here. about
8 p.m. His Injuries were minor,
however, and he was released from
the hospital two days after the
accident. He expects to return to
duty In about a week.
McDonald was the third Ohio
trooper cushioned by analrbag Inan
accident since last !!pl'inc, when the
patrol began participating In an
experimental )II'Oiram of the National Highway Tranapcriatlon
!:i..:~{y Administration, 181d Maj.
Richard Saunders, ccmmander of
the patrol's field services. State
pollee cars ln'six state arenttedwlth
the fedl!rally supplied air 1»p.
In au three cues, Salllldenl181d,
the alr bags "have been beneficial in
lessening the injuries.''
"I didn't even know the bag had
come out," McDonald said. "ldtdn'l
even see it. I didn't feel it at the time.
It Inflated tbat quick.''
Federal Investigators IntervieWEd McDonald ani! ex&mlned
the wrecked cruiser Monday. Their
findings will help determine how
useful air bags are In preventing
serious Injuries.
• One of the previous accidents was
similar to McDonald's. In the other,
a cruiser struck .a deer. saunders
said.
The bags are mounted In the
vehicles' steering wheels. The bags
Inflate to a diameter ol about2 fl!'et
and a thickness of about a foot,
saunders said.
The leder11i government supplied
the patrol with 75 bags, enough to
equip at least one cruiser at each
patrol JlOII\.
•
McDonald said he was en rouie to
a reported accident ~ 'In •
GaDta. ~nty and was PBIIIna
anolher car when It tur1led left In
front of him. McDonald •~otr
the !'Old to avoid the other em-, and
hta cruller crashed lllto the tree at
Ohio Rootes 7 and 15M.
' He wu going about ill mp11. and
wlthollt the baa, he~ •Piubtlblf
~ lllvt!
lll&n!d - · · ~
(Continued on Pill'! 10•
�
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December 19, 1984
murphy