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~

Page-12--The

Daily Sentinel

...••
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

984 '

r::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=::::=;-r===:====;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;::::;:;::~--:-~--~~----------~T!~~~y~,~~nw~~~3~,~1=·= ;

By 'The Associated Press
Traffic accidents over the three-day New Year 's holiday W('('kend
claimed 24~ lives, fewer than had been expected.
The National Safety Council had estimated between 250 and 350
people could be killed in highway accidents between 6 p.m. local time
Friday and midnight Monday.
'
No traffic fata lltles were recorded in theGallia-MeigsArea and nine
were recorded In the State of Ohio, none In Southeastern Ohio.
Council sta tisticians said 290 deaths could be expected during a
non-holiday period of the same length at this tlmP of year.
During last year' s holiday. which was also a three-day observance,
268 people were killed In traffic. accidents. The worst New Yea r's
holiday occurred during 1965's three-day weekend, when 564 deaths
were reported.
The toll over the past Christmas weekend was 238- the lowest for a
three-day holiday since the council began compiling statistics. The
council attrlbu ted the low toll for that holiday period to record cold and
snow over much of the country.

Meigs. County happenings...•
Unit closes office

Free tree pickup
Middleport will conduct Its annual
Christmas tree pickups on Wednes·
day (tomorrow). Residents are
asked to place thelrtreesatthecurb.
Tree will be picked up by the street
department , free of charge.

...

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Earl
Glass, Middleport; Neva Nicholson,
Middleport; Daisy Schuler, Pomeroy; Jean Thlenel, Pomeroy; Carl
Schultz, Jr., Racine.
Saturday Discharges--James
Rickman, WIIJiam Pickens, Donna
Andress.
Sunday Admissions--Rebecca
Smith, Middleport; Gary Hysell,
Pomeroy; Robert McClure, Middleport; Mary Derenberger, Pomeroy; Mary Martin, Syracuse.
Sunday Discharge--Howard Sisk.
Monday Admissions-Vldla Girolam!, Pomeroy; Bruce Caldwell,
MiddlepOrt; Troy Ohlinger, Pomeroy; John Aelker, Sr., Middleport;
Carmen Marshall, Racine; Roy
~tter, Pomeroy.
Monday Dischargr-Earl Glass.

for remodeling job
OfficesoftheMeigsCountyUnitof
the American Cancer Society In the
formerChlldren'sHomebulldlngon
Mulberry Heights are now closed In
preparation for the renovation of the
building as a pan of the new housing
complex.
'
The office will open later In
officers at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Meanwhllethoselnneedof
lnfoiTlllltlon or seiVIce are asked to
contact Teresa Collins, R. N. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital, 992·
2104, Mrs. Delores Frank, executive
director, announced today.

Band boosters meeting
The Meigs Band Boosters will
meet this. evening at 1 p.m. in the
band room at the high school.

To end maJTiage
An action for the dissolution of the
marriage of Rebecca Jean Teaford
and Gordon Bruce Teaford has been
flleilln the Meigs Cowity Common
Pleas Court.

Pomeroy Lodge 1641 F&amp;AM, will
meet at 7 Wednesday evening with
David W. Fox to speak; refresh·
ments will be seiVed.

fiancee-, Roberta Hudnall,
Richard Duckworth
Pomeroy.
SeiVIceS will be held at 2 p.m.
Richard E . Duckworth.BO, Fourth
Thursday
at ' the Ewing Funeral
St.. Syracuse. a fmmer township
Home
with
oortaltobelnHoweUHlll
t111s1ee and village clerk In Syracuse ·
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
for 28 years, died Monday at the
funeral
home
after 2 p.m. on
Sunnyvlew 1'\urs lng Home In
Tuesday
and
anytime on
ZanesvUie.
Wednesday.
He was born Oct. 21, 1903 lri
Syracuse, a son of the late James
and Dora J enkins Duckworth. He Ruth A. Miller
was also preceded In death by his
Ruth A. Miller, 19, ~East Town
wife. Lucille . He was a member of
the Syracuse F irst United Presby- St., Columbus, former resident of
Gallla County, died Saturday at
terian Church.
Surviving are two brothers, Carl Pinecrest Care Center follownlng a
Duckworth of Zanesville and MD· brief lllnes. · 'She was a retired
lard Duckworth of Huntington, W. employee of the F &amp; R Lazarus Co.,
Columbus.
·
Va.
She
was
born
Oct. ll, 1904, In
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral Gallla County near Crossroads, a
Home with the Rev. Wanda Johnson daughter of the late Lewis Miller
officiating. Burial will be In the and Mamie Drummond.
. She is SUIVived by cousins, Joe
Letart Falls Cemetery. friendsmay
Drummond,
Addison; Mrs. Harold
call at the funeral home from 2 to 4
(Odella)
Mack,
·Cheshire; John
and 1 to 9 p.m. on Wednesday.
Ptg!llP Drummond, Waterloo; Blll
Mmer, Gallipolis; Mrs. WIIJiam
Richard E. Stone
(Opal) Uoyd, Gallipolis and Mrs.
RlchardEugene (Gene)Stone, 45,
Ernest (Ella Gertrude) Brown,
Route 2, Albany, died Sunday
Gallipolis.
She was a memeber of First
evening at Veterans Memorial
Baptist Church, Funeral seiVIces
HospIta! . .
Mr.StonewasbornMay31,19:JIIn
will be 10 a.m .. Wednesday at
Pomeroy, a son of the late Thurston
Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
Stone, Sr., and Laura Mae Nelson
Home, with the Rev. John D. Davis
Stone. He. was also preceded in
otfltlatlng and burjalln Mound Hill
death by two brothers and a sister. · Cernetary. Friends may Cltll at the
HewasamemberoftheChurchof • funeral home Tuesday, 7-9 p .m .
Christ In Christian Union, Shade
Pallbearers will be Blll Miller, Joe
River Coon Hunters Club and Meigs
Drummond, Bill Uoyd, John Phillip
Aerie 2111. Fraternal Order of
Drummond, Ernest Brown and
Eilgtes. He was employed as a dry
Harold Mack.
wall worker.
Swvlvlng are four brothers, Maniage licenses
Thurston Stone, Jr., Middleport;
Lawrence Stone, WesteiVllle; Bob
Two marriage licenses were
Stone, Middleport, and Tommy Issued in Meigs County Probate
Stone, Chester; two sisters, Kay Court to Jeffery Bnunfleld, ll,
Rupe, Pomeroy, and Nellla Seyler, VInton, and Linda Lee Jenkins
Pomeroy; a daughter, Usa Jo Mlller, 26, Vinton, 'and Everett J .
Stone, Beverly Hills, Fla.; an aunt, Michael, 39, Syracuse, and Sharon
Avanell Bass, Pome~ and his Marie Michael, 38, Syracuse.

over the hoiJday weekend answer- - Marth~! Fife, .to Veterans Memor- •
lng numerous calla, the 1'4elis Ia!; Raclne,l2:19p.m.,KlmLaw1011 •
County Emergency Medical Servt· from Fifth St., to Veterans Memor· .:
cesreports.
Ia!; 8:03a.m.Raclneto8ashanfor :
At2:l8a.m.Tuesday,theTu~ Bet1y Friend. to Veterans MenJor. ~
Plains Fire J:lepartl)'lent was called lal; 6:Mp.m . RaclneforSybiiRUfle. ·
to the Charles Weber home to to Veterans Memorial; 3:02 p.m., ;
extinguish a chimney ftre. There Racine, Mile HW for carl Schullz,j
werernoderatedamages.
Jr., to Veterans Memorial;'\:&amp;· ·
Monday calls Included: 5:39a.m., tJand, 9:1511 a .m., New Llma Road, '
Pomeroy, Vldla G1folaml from W. Neva Nicholson, to Veterans Mem· ·•
Main St., to Veterans Memorial orlal; Tuppers Plalns, 6:23 a.m., ,
Hospital; 6: :Ma.m ., Rutland, Vema Success Road for Agnes Ban1Jiaer •
Gibbs from Salem St., to Hoi2Jer no treatment required· Tu~ !
Medical Center, and Tuppers Plains Plalns, 6: 35 p.m. to ~te 248, an '
at 2: ll p.m., Marie Offutt from auto accident, with Kenneth Rock· !
Keller St., to St. Joeeph Hospital in hold taken to Veterans Memorial; ,
Parkersburg, W. Va.
9:56 a.m., Middleport to Vlllage ;
Sunday calla Included: Pomeroy Manor for Agnes Oldaker, to :
at 2: 38 p.m., Pauline Derenberger Veterans Memorial.
•
from the Pomeroy Health Care
~
Center to VeteransMemorlaiHospl·
tal; 3: 35 a .m ., Middleport' to Route
••
124 for Gary Hysell, to Veterans
Memorial; Middleport at 2: 13 p.m.
'
CLEVELAND (AP) The :
to VIllage Manor for Sarah Boyles,
to Veterans Memorial; Rutland at winning number drawn Monday ·
3: 35 p.m. to Pagevllle for Richard night in the Ohio Lottery's dally :
game, "'lbe Number,'' was178. In·
Stone, to Veterans Memorial, and
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday ,
Rutland at 5: 3'7'p.m. to Vance Road
throogh Frltlay. the winning
for Sandra Stanley, to Veterans
number was 5986.
Memorial.
The lottery reported eamtngs ot
Calls on Saturday were: 9:34
$419,486.50
frOm the wagering on
a.m., Pomeroy to Laurel Cliff for
''The Number.'' The earnings came
Tina Jacogs, to Holzer Medical
Center; 1: 24 p.m., Pomeroy to the on sales ot $954,536, whlle holders ot
Sunshine Center, W. Main St., where winning tickets are entitled to share
a dryer had caught ftre; Pomeroy, $475,049.50~ ~tery oftlclala said.

L

''

ELBERFELDS
SALE!

RED HEART

~

Red Heart

WINTUK
YARN

TL.-.
$}3 9 SKEIN II IC'

By &amp;be llelld .......... Pap~ U-7

C'a·d"'dd ............ P.,. 8-t-10
Cclnllm-TV ................:Pap 11
J)ea&amp;lll •• ••••• •• •••• ••• ~ •••• •• Pap 12

Eclltorllll ..................... Pep 2
Sporta •.•• •• .•,. ..•••. ••••.• Papa :H

medicine••

Weather
Cloudy IOJI!ght with a chance
of showers · mlxed with snow
nurrtes early at night , then
scattered nurrtes. Low 24-28.
Winds mostly westerly around
10 mph. Thursday, becoming

age

aily

he

I.

qua lty yam

4 ply hand knitting yam. Non-allergenic, moth PfOQf,
31fz oz. skeins. Solid colors and variepted. Stock up ·
now!

'l1lursday lbrougb Sa&amp;unlay: A
of flurries mainly IIOI1heallt
~ and Frida.J, odlerwl8e parily cloudy. Hlp. Ill &amp;be 30s
'l1mnday and 35to 45 Friday and Sa&amp;urday.l.-s In
'l1Junday
and Friday mornings and 25 to35 Sa&amp;urday.

the.

on any style,

aeyle~of

these brands.

(Full Flavor, Lights,
Ult~ Lights)

'

Consumer confidence at 5-year high
By"'be A"'""ekw' Press
Conswners' confidence in the economy has jumped
to a five-year peak, although the government's first
economic reports of 1984 glye a mixed reading of
industrial actlvlty.
The Conference Board, a research group whose
work Is sponsored by ruslness Interests, said Tuesday
that Its Index of consumer confidence rose In
December to 94 from 90.2 In November. The
December·readlng was the highest since reaching 94
In October 19'18.
The December figure shows the economic recovery
will remain strong well into 191W, said Fa blan Linden,

•

the board's director of consumer research.
He said rising personal income, a subdued lnfia tion
rate and an Increase In jobs all contriooted to an
Increasing sense of security among consumers.
The Commerce Department, meanwhlle, said a big
jump In orders for mllltary goods pushed total factory
orders to $185.8 billion in November, a gain of 2.2
percent from October.
Manufacturers boosted their shipping even faster
and their stocks of goods stayed about the same leaving the shipment-to-Inventory ratio at Its lowest
level In 33 years, the report said.
In a separate report, the Commerce Dej)artment

said the value of new construction put in place In
November was at an annua l rate of $211.9 billion, the
same as October. The October ra te had been 4.7
percent below September's. Private non-residential
construction was up 5.1 percent In November whlle
resldental construction fell 2.8 percent.
ln other economic reports Tuesday:
-General Motors Corp., F ord Motor Co. and
Chrysler Corp. said they will reduce the suggested
retail prices of their 1984 cars and some trucks an
average of SW because a federal excise tax on tires
was ellmlnated. American Motors Corp. said It will
not match the prtce reductions.

In revenue through the state tax.
Senate President Harry Meshel,
[).Youngstown, ·voiced support for
Those bills and a similar measure · the measure.
"We want to review that because
to be Introduced by Rep. Jo Ann
there
have been some apprehen·
Davidson, R-Reynoldsburg, were
slons
expressed
by people around
sparked by a change In federal law
under which some Social Security the country and some Ohioans that
relatively meager Income would
benefits becJIIlle subject to federal
end up being taxed by the state
Income tax Jan. 1.
which then would, In effect, reduce
Ohio's lnc6me tax is based on a their real earnings,'' he said.
taxpayer's federal adjusted gross
Ms. Davidson said new federal
Income. As a result, federal Inclu- law requires Social Security benefsion of some benefits as taxable Its to be taxed if Income exceeds a
Income would automatically be base amount of $25,(0) for single
adopted by the state unless Ohio Individuals or $32,(0) for married
statutes are revised.
couples. Halt of Social Security
Deputy Tax Commissioner Rl· benefits and all tax-exempt Interest
chard Levin said that If state law is added to other Income to
was not changed, the federal action determine If the base amount has
would generate another $18 mllJion · been exceeded.

to ban private ownership of exotic
animals and lower the marriage age
for males are among 22 proposals
legislators put Into the hopper to
begin the second half of the ll5th
General Assembly.
Introduction of the bills came at
lnfoiTlllll House and Seriate skeleton
sessions Tuesday attended by only a
handful of lawmakers. Voting
, sessions resume later this month.
Majortty Democrats In both
chambers began the new year by
sponsoring legiSlation. that would
continue to exempt Social Security
old age benefits from the state
incane tax despite recent changes
In federal tax law.
. ~ Separatl! l'he88ures to continue

.

MAIL·IN OFFER

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R~XWJU:J;tQ~Sd~
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mcottne. VANTAGE MENTHOL 9 mg. "taf',0.6 mg. nicotine, VANTAGE FILTER. FILTER lOO's, 9 mg. "tar".
0.7 mg. nicotine. CA_I.4ELUGHTS lOO's, 12 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine. CAMEL FILTERS, 15 mg. "tar", 1.0
mg. ntcottne, IN. per crgarette, FTC Report MAR. '83, WINSTON ULTRA LIGHTS 10D's, 5 mg. "tar". 0.4
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FILTER. LIGHTS lOO's MENTHOL. SALEM SUM
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ANY STYLE, ANY LENGTH

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lflncomeisabovethosetevels, the
lesser of one-half of Social Security
benefits or half of the amount of the
excess becomes taxable.

Sen. Tom Fries, 0-Dayton, Introduced the bill prohibiting ownership
of exotic animals by private
Individuals. He cited Incidents In
which people have been bitten or
killed by a lion, snakeorotherexotlc
animaL
Legislation by Rep. WIIJiam
Batchelder, R-Medlna, would lower
from l8 to 16 the age at which males
could marry. Batchelder said
current law allows females - but
not males - between 16 and l8 to
marry with parental consent. "That
seemed tome to be ... chauvlnlstlc, l
guess. Our code should be gender
neutral," he said.

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'

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•

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87 d'vonlogt O"ro Ugtltt Mtnl~t
II 0 VonfOtt U"fO Ughls
Mtnii!CM IOO's
71 OWiniiOnlo•
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78 OWinllon UIIIO llghll
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06onQwtlh~nameondoddM&amp;a. ondWit'IIMndyouo

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I_.,., that I om a""'*"' atreaot 21 ~"old

.

Chamber honors
Atty. Fred Crow
By KATIE CROW
Smtlnel staff

Presentation of a certificate of
appreciation highlighted the first
meeting of year of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce held at noon
Mayor Seyler did say it would be · at the Meigs Inn.
A certificate of appreciation lor
nice If salt could be used downtown,
outstanding
and meritorious seradding It takes lots of work to clean
vice
was
presented
to Fred Crow,
up cinders afterward.
Pomeroy Attorney by Ron Ash,
Attending were Mayor Seyler,
president on behalf of the Chamber
Blll Snouffer, clerk-treasurer, Betty
Baronick, Larry Wehrung, Bruce of Commerce.
Crow said he has been plagued
Reed , Henry Werry and Anderson,
with
lll health rut is much lmptoved
councll members.
and would be able this year to do
more for the chamber than he has
been able to do the past two years .
Crow said he has returned to his
law practice law, but is resigning as
solicitor for the vlllage of Pomeroy.
He encouraged the younge r
members to work for the chamber
and to assist Its president.
It's 1984, and It will be. a " big" election year In Meigs
Ash reported Crow has been made
County.
!»dan
1\onorary member of the
OffIces to be filled this year Include two Meigs County
chamber and of the board of
Commissioner posts; sheriff, treasurer, prosecuting attordirectors.
ney, coroner, clerk of courts, recorder, county engineer and
1n other business, Ash announced
probate judge.
the annual membership dues may
.Tenns of all of the offices which are open this year are
be paid anytime.
Ash introduced Jerry Rought.
four years with the exception of the probate court judgeship. It
Rought
and his wife, Ellen are the
Is a six year term. (
new
owners
and operators of Jay
The Meigs County Board of Elections has petitions of
and Ellen's Coln.pmatlc, former ly
candidacy and the deadline for candidates to file Is 4p.m. on
Duds and Suds.
Feb. 23.
· ·
Ash announced a meeting will be
For'the past seven years, primary !!lections In Ohio have
held .some,ttme In February to
been held In June, having been moved from May. However,ln
possibly !otrn·a Merchants Assocla·
tion after positive reaction from
19114, the primary elections will be held on May 8, according to
locai merchants had been received.
Ohio law.

Meigs positions up
for grabs this year

0

c

..

By .JAMES HANNAH
~•ted 1'..- Writer ·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rep.
ClaraK:e Mllk!r, R.()hll), has Invited
· U.S. .EnvtronmeillaJ Protection
Aaency'of!lclaiStosoutlleastOhloto. .
examtnetheetrectashutdownofthe

~

,•

·'

Reed also told council that Fenton
Taylor and Roger ' Stewan are
Interested In construction a recreation center for youth.
He stated that property is
available at the Fairgrounds and
near Veterans HospitaL He added
that -the. two men have been to
Middleport Council seeking support. Council last night agreed It was
worthwhile and did offer support but
not flnanclally.
Betty Baronlck stated she was
again going to try and clean up the
village , especially the streets.

Ash said he met with several
interested persons concerning the
keeping of the the extension o!U. S.
33 to tbe new Ravenswood Bridge In ,
the forefront.
C. E. Blakeslee recommended
that letters be sent to ooor
periodically In regard to the
highway.
Bruce Reed was asked the status
on the bulldlngs on Court Street
owned by Amy Kingsland Jones that
were destroyed by fire. Reed said
progress is being made and bids for
the removal of the buildings were to
be submitted by Dec. ll. He said he
hoped to have additional lnfOITllll·
lion following a meeting of Pomeroy
Council Tuesday night.
It was announced that the dining
room at the Meigs Inn is closed, the
Sweet and Eat Shop has changed
ownership and there is a new cab
service In Pomeroy called the Meigs
Cab Company. Darrell Brewer is
the new owner of the Sweet and Eat
Shop and Blll Francis of Gallipolis is
the owner of theca b company.
Joe Clark suggested that plans for
next year's Christmas promotion be
made by this summer .
It was suggested by Ash that the
chamber sponsbr some type of
activity this summer In lieu of the
Big Bend Regatta.
It was suggested by Rought that
possibly the chamber could sponsor
dances on the parking lot for the
youth on weekends during spring
and summer. It was also suggested
that there could possibly be river
activies and a walkway below the
parking lot to lower Pomeroy.

Cong. Miller wants EPA to examine Ohio mine

0

..

••

'

the first time as mayor, told councll
to bear with him as lje would no
doubt make a few mistakes until he
learned more about the position.
It was reported theclty'sbackhoe
was In need of repair In the amount
of $3.500. The village is presently
using a borrowed backhoe. It was
proposed council trade the old
backhoe In on the used one. No
action was taken.
Bruce Reed reported a request
made through the Department of
Natural Resourses for reimbursement for architect fees on the mini
park was denied.
Reed also reported bids for the
razing of the two !Julldlngs on Court
Street owned by Amy Kingsland
Jones have been received. Reed
Indicated the bld of Crest Excavat·
lng In the amount of$17,500would be
accepted. Reed indicated that tear
down of the wildings would possibly
get underway within a month or so.

OUI'STANDING MEMBER - Fred Crow, left, was presented a
cerilflcate of appredation for outstanding and merltorlus service to &amp;be
PonieroyChamberofCommerceandMelgsCowl&amp;y.RonAsh,presldent
of the Pomeroy Chamber of Conuneroe at Its first meeting of the year
'l'uesd8ymadethepresentatlon.Crow,whohasservedaspresldentof&amp;be
Pomeroy Chamber of Conunerce. has been a very active member of &amp;be
chamber.

$toft Coupon QOod 101 H.OO off your ne'rt cooon ot your Choice

tr•*"'

OA ...,IICI .,_, ..,..11. Air lltler Ill COMa!QI fiM . . COIIM Will ........ llllillr
US. • aN lfllld llllltll. It II_.......,.. Mil lUI' 110t Ill ,.,...,... ~ 11101 M

$4 0 Soltm l~hll I OCU
~~ OSoltfn uiho Ugtlta

loWl TO: IRAND Of 'I'OUR CHOICE
P.O, loa 1602, W I - - - Nollt\~111027102
EnciOM t.o COI1on end flopt from ony 01"4' ot !he.. bronC~

.

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u•r Otll COWOII PEl...... TO . . . .1121 YfAU Of: All GIDUEI.
IITAIUI: II. J .......... 1:1111c:ot.CoiiHftJ will,., ltct Wlllll qtcat~~~•• It ..,._, and

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530.....,., Ughlt

- Manville Corp. said It flied another lawsuit
against the federal government, charging that
otflcials did not fulfill contractual obligations when
asbestos products were used In U.S. Navy shipyards.
Manville said the Ui million claim is the third - and
largest - that It has flied In U.S. Claims Court In
Washington. •
-Getty 'OU Co. asked the New York Stock
Exchange to suspend trading In Its stock, a week after
Houston-based PennzoU Co. made a $L6 bllllon offer
to buy 2n percent of Getty's stock. The sUspension was
requested by Getty pending an announcement by the
company's board of directors.

Variety ·of bills introduced for second
half of Ohio's I 15th.General Assembly

..
I I 0 8tiglll •
82 0 I right 100'1
11 0 Ca!MI Regular
12 o Camel fllttfl
13 0
Hard Poe~
14 o Camel Ugllf1
I 50 Comtl Ugntt Hard Pocll
JIOComttUglllt IQO't

•

2 S.Ction1, 12 Pot"
20 Cent•
A Multimed ia lnc. New1p0per

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 4, 1984

Voi.32,No. 115

Copyn,hlocl ....

water lines. It was noted It may now
By KATIE CROW
be necessary to rebid the work.
Sei•IIII!INews&amp;alf
'The HUD grant money council
Appalachian Regional Corrunlsreceived
may be used for replacing
slon grant money totaling around
waterlines
with sewer lines not
$10,(0), will be used for water line
Included.
replacement and sewage extension
Councll, on Dec. 5, decided to
in the Kerrs Run area. ·
replace
waterlines beginning at the
This was decided during Tuesday
night's Pomeroy VIllage Council Kroger Store and moving toward
the main part of town, doing a block
meeting.
at
a time and going as far as HUD
John Anderson explained the
will
allow.
AftC money cannot be used for
1n
other business, councll ac·
waterline replacement alone. It
cepted
the resignation of Fred Crow
must be used for what It was
as
vlllage
solicitOr. Crow has seiVed
designated for and that is water and
In
this
capacity
for 39 years.
sewage. If Council would fall to use
Anderson suggested councll draft
the funds the money would have to
a resolution thanking Corw for his
be returned to ARC.
The sewer exten,slon and water- years of service.
Councll hired Doug Uttle, as
line projects begin at the~Beacon
.
sollcltor
to flll the vacancy created
Station, out U:S. 33 to Chester Street
by
the
resignation
of Crow.
and back around on SR 7, catching
Councll
also
elected
John Anderhomes on the right side of SR 7.
son
as
president
of
council.
Council earlier had accepted the
Mayor Dick Seyler, serving for
bid of Weber Construction to replace

Offer good

•

enttne

Grant ·money will be .used for waterline
project, sewage extens'lon at Kerr's Run

erica's Favorite Braflds.

2

t lady

By JOHN CHALFANT
the exemptions were offered by Sen.
Aww:lakw' 1'..- WriW
Wllllam Jlowen, Delnclnnatl, and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Bills Rep. Ronald Suster, ~land.

$}69

Tonight, partly cloudy. Low near 32. Southwest winds 10 to 2n mlles
per hour. Wednesday, mos~High near 45. Chance of
percent Wednesday.
precipitation: 10perceno:!night

'The Middleport !-olterary Club will
meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Chester Erwin.
Sara Owen will give a book review
on "Bronntes" and Nan Moore will
give a book review on "Jane Eyre."

•
ottery Wl.nner

r--------.------- -------

Weather forecast

Meets Wednesday
Meets Wednesday

.I ~'!~=.2u:r~J!~~tr1

I

Holiday accidents
claim 245 lives

Inside toda y

I

•"

'

Sunnyhill coal mine• would have on
the region.
.
A ruling by the Michigan Air
Pollution Control Comnilsslort last
November resulted In a Michigan
utlllty's decision tO end Its contract
with the Sunnyhlll ~e sometime

this year. Sun.'lyhlll,ln Moxahala,ln
Perry CoUnty, employs more than
400 miners and ships about 90
percent of Its coal production to the
.utility. '
"We feel as though the U.S. EPA
should be Involved and should

examine all of the factors," Miller
assistant Phll Straw said Tuesday.
!ita lettertotheEPA, Miller said a
provision of the 1970 Clean Air Act
requires the agency to examine any
potential job loss resulting from
attemptS to meet air standards.

�,

•

..

,
.Wednetciay, January 4, 1984

Commentary
~~

sm~ ......,__,~-r· ,...,..c:::~ . ""'

~v

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD .

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisher/ Controll er

Gt•npral Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inl a nd Da lly Press Assocla·

tlon and the American. Newspa pe r Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less than :WO words
long. Allletten are s ubj ect to editing and mus t be s igned wllh name. address and
telephone number . No unslcned letters wUI be publl!hed. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing lssues, not personalities.

Today in history
Today Is Wednesday. Jan. 4, the fourth day of 1!ll4. There are 362 days
left In the year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Jan. 4, 1966, Ronald Reagan announced his candidacy for the
Republican gubernatorial nomination in California.
On this date:
In 1493, Christopher Columbus left America for Spain aboard the Nina.
In 1785, German fairy tale writer Jakob Grimm was born.
In 17!Kl, George Washington delivered- the first annual prt&gt;Sidentlal
message to the nation.
In llll9, Louts Brame, who invented the raised-point method of writing for
the blind, was born In Coupvral, France.
And In 1885, Dr. William West Grant performed the first appendectomy,
an 22-year-old Mary Gartside In Davenport , Iowa .
Ten years ago: President Ric~ Nixon rejected the Senate Watergate
Committee's subpOenas for White House taPt&gt;S and documents.
Five years ago: President 1Jimmy Carter and the leaders of Britain,
France and West Gebnany arrtved on the Caribbean Island of Guadeloupe
tor two days of meetings on mutual problems.
One year ago: Former VIce President Spiro Agnew paid the state of
Maryland nearly $270,000 dollars, Including lntert&gt;St, for kickbacks he had
received as governor. '
Today's birthdays: Actress Jane Wyman Is 70. Actor Sorrell Brooke and
actrt'Ss Barbara Rush are 54. Former heavyweight boxing champ Floyd
Patterson Is 49. Actress Dyan Cannon Is 47. Actor John Bennett Perry Is 43.
And U.S. Sen Sen. Dan Quayle of Indiana Is :rl.

Letters to editor
wp can do

·Be prepared .best

Lowell Wingett made the followIng comment in the paper, " that we
should accept Communism for
what It Is and learn to Uve with it."
Again In Friday's paper he stated
"The bt'St we can hope to do is
understand them and live on the
same ea rth with them (Communists) ."
No, this Isn't the bt'St we can do.
Far from It! They have one goal In
mind and that Is to conquer and rule
the world, one nation at a time.
First comt&gt;S the propaganda then
the sneak a ttack.' After that they
Invade if they can, occupy and then
moved on to another country.
The best we can do Is to be
prepared for that blood·thlrsty,
atheistic, murderous nation. President Reagan and our government
are fully aware of all their tactics
and Reagan's enemies here at
home are frantically scramlng
their heads oH. It seems they think
more of politics than they do of their
country.
I'm sure that Mr. Wingett has
heard of what I a m going to say, but
I want ~erybody that reads this
paper !If know of it also. In
February of 1961 GUS HALL, the
top Communist in the United States

a t that time made the following
statement at the funeral of EUGENE DENNIS, another Commu·
nlst pal of his. Quote, " I dream of
the hour when the last Congressman Is strangled to death on the
guts of the last preacher - and
"since the Christians seem to love to
sing about the blood, why not give
them a little of It? Slit the throats of
their chlldren and drag them over
thfi. mourners' bench and tlie pulpit
and allow them to drown In their
own blood; and then see whether
they enjoy singing these hymns. "
Another Communist leader, NIK
ITA KHRUSHCHEV, had this to
say about the United States. "We
Will bury you so gently, you won't
even know you're dead. " Have you
forgotten this so soon, Mr. Wingett?
If Lowell lived in Russia and
made the statements about their
leaders that he makt'S about ours,
they wouldn't take the time to send
him and his family to Upper
Siberia. The KI;emUn would have a
firing squad a t the door, shoot them
on the spot and bury them. End of
Wlngetts, period. Happy New Year,
Mr. Winget!! - F1oyd Brown,
Middleport, Ohio, phone 992-6732.

It ain't over, yet ________J_eff_G_r_ee_nfi_ie_ld
When I ran into Marty Trelbaum
In a well-known Washington water·
ing hole the other evening, I
couldn 't believe what I was seeing.
The world-famous political pundit,
columnist , lecturer (at $7,500a pop)
a nd TV commenta tor was sobbing
over a stiff scotch a nd soda .
"Marty," I said, "what's wrong?
We're e ntering the presidential
year, the Big One, the Run for the
Roses, the Fall Classic. This Is
when the bloom comes back to your
cheeks, when you're heading out In
January for Iowa, in February for
New Hampshire, a nd 11 full months
of portent9us speculation and
prognostication."
"I know," Trelbaum moaned,
" but this is 1984."
"Oh, come on, Marty," I said.
"Orwell wasn't writing a prediction. There's no Big Brother, no

thought pollee; w~ have our
freedom-' '
. "No, no, you Idiot," Trelbaum
snapped. "I'in talliliig about the
1984 presidential campaign. Haven't you been watching what's
happening?"
"That's It! ' ' Trelbaum shouted,
knocking_over a dish of beer nuts
and drawing quizzical gazes from
other patrons. "Nothing's .happenIng! Unless Reagan pulls out or gets
sick, there Isn't going to be any
Republican campaign at all! And
the convention - my God, tour
days In Dallas In August when
absolutely nothing's going to
happen!"
"Yeah," I replied, " But the
Democrats-"
Trelbaum grabbed me by the
lapels. "Tell me about the Democrats," he said between clenched
teeth. "Unless something happens

soon, Mondale's going to have It all
wrapped up ·Wore Groundhog
Day."
I tried calming Trelbaum down.
"Look, Marty," I said. "Remember
'68? Romney got brainwashed, LBJ
pulled out, there were riots In
Chicago. Remell}ber '72? Muskle
had It wrapped up, and the
McGovern won lt. Remember '76,
when we all laughed at the pe3Jiul
farmer from Georgia? And what
about 'a!? Teddy had It won;
Reagan was too old. Presidential
politics never turns out the way It's
supposed to ... "
Trelbaum looked stricken .
"Yeah ... yeah," he choked. "But
suppose .. . suppose this Is the year
when the expected actually
happens? Do you realize what that
means? Do you think the network
news programs are going to book
me to talk about Reubln Askew's

e'f1t\ @1~83 ~ ¥-1~ rn, '1UE6ti:A"'
HUI..ME

.

·

.

t&lt;E~

chances In Iowa? Do you think the
National AssoclaUoJ\ of Sllocon
Chip Brokers Is going to pay me to
come to Its convention In Palm
Springs and dope out the Pennsylvania primary? And what about all those sweet young- Uiieral arts
majors who used to Oock to my
speeches? Do you think they'll
come back to my hotel room.to hear
the Indirect scoop on George '
McGovern?"
Trelbaum began to moan again.
The bartender was making deCidedly unfriendly gestures toward our
table. Recognizing a potential
emergency, I called B111 Burley, a
veteran sports reporter, and asked
him to get over to the bar as soon as
he could. Within 10 minutes, B111
was at Trelbaum's side, murmurIng words of reassurance In his ear.
"It ain't over WI It's over," Bitt
,., _
said. ·
" Yeah, " Trelbaum replle&lt;l.
"The opera ain't over 1111 the tat
lady sings," B_ltt said.
A dim Ught tuckered In Trelba. urn's eye.
"The game Isn't over till the last
man Is out," Bitt said.
Trelbaum rose slowly to his feet
and squared his shoulders.
"You bet," he said. "Maybe Gary
Hart In Iowa ... "
B111 followed Trelbaum
he
walked out of che bar.
.. "Remember the Mets In '69! "
Bitt shouted. "Remember the U.S.
Hockey team In ·~ "
"I got It! " Trelbaum shouted
back. "Can Hollings triumph In
New Hampshire? Can Glenn win In
the South? I see a column ... no,
three, four columns! I see guest
shots on aU the morning news
programs on TV, maybe on
'MacNeil-Lehrer'! I see lecture
fees! C&lt;H!ds! Book contracts! "
Trelbaum rushed oH Into the
night.
I put a friendly arm around B111
Burley's shoulder.
"Bitt," I said. " I think you saved
a life tonight. Happy new year! "

Scoreboard ...
Basketball

I(

"It stands for 'ripped out phohe' - that's where my old friend sat when I
could afford it."

z

llot1on

Phlladt-&gt;JpNa
Nt"W Yor-k
WUhlni[t~
New Jerwy

Mllwaukfto
f.RtrOII
AUanta

OUcaeo

Makatl, the financial suburb ofloo
Manna, Armacost dwelt at length
on the " brutal political assassination" of Aquino. He noted pointedly
that Aquloo had articulated "political beliefs most Americans sharea bellet In a tree press, In tree
elections, In due process otlaw." As
his listeners well knew, Marcos
tolerates none of these.
The ambassador also warned
that failure to conduct a thorough,
honest Investigation of Aquino's
murder would "ln~tably complicate" U.S.-PhUipplnes relations.
In another speech, to the Manila
Overseas Press Club, Armacost
sarcastically brushed aside suggestions In the Philippine press that
American media crltlctsm of Mar·
cos played an Important role In the

David Stockman: "Mr. President, I think there shOuld be a little
more tat In our soctal programs."
The editor of Pravda: "When
we're wrong w~·re wrong, and we
should admit lt. The Soviets
overreacted when the United Statt&gt;S
placed Pershing 2 missiles In
Europe. They're not the threat to
the Warsaw Pact "nations that we
thought they would be, al)d we
wnuld like to return to Geneva as
quickly as possible."
James Watt: "If I had It to do all
over again, I would have kepi my
mouth shut and taken time to smell
the Oowers;"
. Anne Gorsuch Burford: "We au
make mistakes, but the EPA was
my department and I . take fuJJ
blame for the chaos."
Johnny Carson: "I believe a wtte

deserves every penny she can get
when she feels she's been

Utah

wron~. ''

A power company executive:
"We have just dlscoveted that our
new nuclear plant was buUt with·
cheap materials and shoddy labor.
This Is no fault of our customers and
therefore we Intend to pay tor our
mistakes without passing on any
cost to the consumer."
The Japanese Minister of Commerce: "Japan can no longer
export more than It Imports without
upsetting other nations' balance of
trade. We are therefore lifting all
restrictions on foreign goods, so
other countries may compete fairly
In the marketplace."
President marcos: "It's time we
had open elections supervise\~ by an
International ocmmlsslon selected

19 12
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ManhaU 92. C'har\nton. W.\'a . 58

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lll.·OUcqo ~. Bol«on U. 10
DllnoU St. 61, C'relgtlton sc
Lle'ola. Md. t(l;, Delaware 88
~nl Mercy 79, SW MlJuftc:U 63

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Akron Cen-Hower 61. Kerlt Roolewlt 40
""""' Garilold Ill. Qoploy 46
AJcron St. V.· St.~ . 8l Akrm N. m
AIHdla W. Fnmom St~h 53
Atwalt'r Chr. S:Z. Akron Chrbtl.an 28
AustlnkJWn.~ldl SC, Boa.JOnan !'il
Be~Chwood 66. lt.lctl'nlOO Ht1. 42
&amp;avt'r"l:Mtem !3. Oak Hill 64

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Hiland !13. hxll., V...,. N. 43
Botldns 56. WayneDeld-Goahen 4!1

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Ph)rs. Ed. 90, Nt'W Miami l2
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Cayton Nontmont 67, Tecwnseb .S
Or. Glenvtlle 52. Wammvtlle f9
at. Marlhal1 e . Cle. Llncoln·W. 43
ae. OraniiP 45. WkX!Ifre 43
Cle. ~Uy 61. Young. Wilson S2
Olntm-Ma-.ie n. S. Charleston ~ 63
Columbl.tna ~. Berlin O r. W. Revrvtt

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Ebton 4. N.Y. J.st.ndm 2
Pltlladtlpltla 7. P I - '
St Louis &amp; Toro\lo 3
Edmonl&lt;m 9. Calpry 6
Vancouver 4, 1..a1 AnRrif'l 3
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Col. Betchcroft 68. WestE&gt;rvUk&gt; S. &amp;.1,
0'1'
•
Col. HamUion 1'Wp. 49, New Albany ,m
Col. Ready 55, Col. Fran~ Hts. 49
Col. Watnut ~ 59. Pldterlngttw~ t.~
Col. West 72. Hnllard ~
· Cortnth Ott. 61. Young. Chrtstlan SC
Cr1denvWe Perry 6t. Hardin Northern

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New Jmey a1 N.Y. RAnaen
Tororuo at Chk'llftO
MtnneiOta at E&lt;montan
VIJI{"()U\.-'M" at U. Anaek!i
n.nday's GIWN'JI
Quf.&gt;tJec a1 Bolton
N.Y. ls!Anden at Hartlmt
Detroit at Mmtrt'al
W\nnlpe(l: at Phlladl'lphla
St l.mls at Wu hlnatoo
Mlnne!OI.I at CaJaary

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---

F'oltor1a St WendeUn

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" 66. Macon Eastern 64, OT

O.EVELAND 8ROWNS-&amp;IP1t'd Tom
Flkk, quarterbock.
D E T R 0 I T LIONs-Signed Vlncf&gt;

to a

.Jl"M'n-Sdo !18, Indian Valley S. «l
Kmston 61 . Olankln 55
t&lt;Jn., ,., Sp'lnamu 49
Kirtland n ..Aidora ~
Lakeland m . Mai'Yem 48

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Mapk' Hll. 49, WUic&gt;ogtoby S. :1!
MaplewoOd &amp;l, l.a'dstONn 52
Muon FA W. Chesi:Pr Lakota &amp;t
Mai.IITW 19, Bedford, Mich. Ill
Mayfteld 83. Eastllke N. ~
Maysv!!Jio !It, Costo:too 49
. . . - ... - 4 6

1..00 ANGElDi EXPR.ESS-Namt'd
John Had! trad road\.
WASHI NGT0 N
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S-Annoulk.'fd
rt"tlrMTimt
of
Kim
McQuUkerf. qua r1t"1'back.

HOa&lt;E\'
Nadonal Hotkrr Leape
CALGARY FIAMD-Called up Mike
Vernol\ goalfendtr, from Colorado c:l thE'
Central HOC'key l.eq!Je.
ST. LOUIS BLUES-AJattpO&lt;d RJk Wttaon.
defm&amp;eman, and Alain Lenrleux, cttn·
ter. to Montana of tht&gt; Central Hodcey

Medina HIJh.land CS....Canal F\lltoo NW

43
Ml"ntor 61, Ck&gt;. Brush 44
Miami 'J"race lll. Chilllrolhfo tr1
MogaOOre 61, S«reret~SS
Mt.Healthy 6(, Cln. Nort~l 4.1
Napok!on ~ ArdiOOid ~
ti&gt;
New Richmond IIi. Amelia st
Newbury 49, Berk!hlre 48 .
N. Adal'n$ 6C, Latham Wetttm M
oy GRn, W.Va. 66. Bt&gt;awr Local~
Parkenbwll:, W.Va. 70, Marietta ED

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Peeblel 62, LucasvWe Vat 32
Pteuant 57, Marion Cath. e
l'lllaltd

The Daily Sentinel

!ient&gt;taJl' 8S. E. P-ine 46

-..w... -.~w0b.ter61

Roctne Satlloom 62. Waltama, W.Va. '-'
Roolat!M'II :rr. Crfttwootl Sl

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WEWSPAPER POWER. GO FOR ll

StrutNrw11. Newarnentgwn ~
SI~!II.N.'OllrotetiM "

'hoys Va1.111, ~Elm :II

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Tot. St.nuc!a !II, Tot. UllbeY !l ,
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TrtWay . . ea,way •
Trioowood '19, G.....,.llle Ill
Troy86.Sith!o&lt;M
1\&amp;lcll'IWII Calh. !16. RldJewooCI C2
u-. lAioo f1, ._.,...,..Val. 52

gotnsi

Unltod -Loeal 85. Soulhom Local !II
Valloy VIew !l, Twtn Valloy S. «&lt;

.

, v.. Bttn!o 8L Carey 311

Vanclalll Butler 5I, PIQIII !14, 40T
•• FanNtocf&lt;ll !II .•

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Wlllioorth 5I. Nonoo a

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Wati"'D

w. ~

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andiltl
•
Wayne 'l'raco Tl; Ottlo City !14
W~lll.
Yellow Sonoll"'
.
.

.

.• .
·'

"

..

Newspapers have just invested $2 million in a major research
effort to measure and ,define the medium for advertisers:
Simmons and Scarbdrough carried out 225.000 interviews iri
markets that account for 66% of the U.S. population ... 67% of
retail sales. Data are available by 24 demographic measures. far more than are available on local TV or radio audi:
ences. These studies are supplemented by CAN DO, the
Newspaper Advertising Bureau data bank that provides
audience estimates for every daily and Sunday newspaper ·
in the country. If you 're tired of guesstimates and want
greater media buying precision, contact Uldis Grava. vice
president. marketing services. Newspaper Advertising Bur"
eau. 485 Lexington Ave.. New York . NY 10017. (212) 557-1854.
Or your local newspaper representative. 992 -2156

~' ~ PymatunJna Val. ~
LonckJn t6, W. Jeffenon
Lorain 'Brookskkt ~ Columbia

P HI LADELP HIA
EAGI..ES-Stanf'd Mark Pok!\z, otfmslvt&gt;
Unmw.n.
u_ _ •

•

~ H~ - lm·

Girard 72. NN'ton Falls 61
Goshen 55, BataVIa 46

FOOnAU.

0

They bring
a·new precision
to audience
measurement

FUTell. Pa. 73. Campbell ............, n

ron! met.

tullback.

Newspapers.

e.

SAN ANTONIO SPIJRS...Piacod Jot1tny
Moore. ~. on thE' JnJu~ list Si&amp;nt'd
RobM1 MJJJt&gt;r. cmtt&gt;r, to a J().day

Thompaon,
contract.

w. CaJTOIJtm ~

El)'rta "'· Bay "
El)'rta Open , _ " · Griswold 46
Euclid
Bfcltrd '1!1
Falrtleld 72, Lemon-Monroe 62

IINlD'I1IAIL

.

O.y. OUwood 74.

De&amp;aware 15. Ok!ntangy ~
E. Knox ~. Mt.GIINd !ll

Letter, friendship big help
Yt'S, Mr. and Mrs. Dale Walburn,
It Is a sad time here at Christmas
and New Year's for my brothers,
our children and me' but you have
no Idea how much your letter
helped us through the holidays.
It has been very hard 011 us - our
father pa5slng away so soon alter
olir mother (only eight days apart),
we felt Uke we were In a nightmare
that would never end. We had been
such a close tamlly.
. On t!Je day your letler appeared
In the paper when I came home
. from work I was so low,. so much
ha4 happened to us I wasn't sure I
could make It through the ~lldays.
There sat my brother, Roger•.

Cuyatqa Falls '111, Akron Ellt( :W

Transactions

by the United Nations."

II&lt;-"'

61. Oayton.('ham.Jul· ll

0'1. Norwood 65. N. Bend Taylor 53
Cb. Oak HUll 66. C'k!.. Fort'll Par1t 61

[)eocrolt 7, Hartb'd I

From Oklahoma City, Earl
David Shafter wrltt&gt;S: "A housecleaning of our court system Is long
overdue. American citizens are
victimized by ttooked lawyers who
take advantage of their legal
training to escape punishment."

W. 98, Weirton IW.Va. l Ma·

donna"

I9~~1fi2188
Z)
4 :W 1~ 161

L"J
IS 22 · 3

CITIZENS' WATCH: Of aU the
complaints that flood Into my oHice
from my citizens'. network, proba·
bly th~ most frequent have to do
with lawyers.

8redl.lvll)(' 73. Parma n OT
Bnltol Sl , Sou.thl:n&amp;ton 41
8roolcftftd S'.l:, Wam.'ll LaBI"'l' 48
&amp;odteye Trail Ill. &amp;2
Buckeyr S. 82, Jertenm UNon 00

18t92.11W6t49

Lao -

800l'e8

. , . . "-dMee ' " -

&amp;WA!

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

Edmontoo

800l'e8

Akron • • Oa\11 6 Dllm S2
Cedarville 1111. Frlttld&gt;o Ill
lnd. ·P'\ar.·Ft, Waynp 61, Wriahl St. 53
ONo w~ 81.
Xa\1er 92, Central SlaV! 62

"

Hart""'

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-Colop-

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--

~I"NI

otoo s:z

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

Phi~Mk&gt;Jphla 11 Mttwaukfto

lldfaiO

~tral St .•

81, llotmr 46

College

'nwlldQ'• Gln'M'

P!nsb.ifllh

92.

w.-..,."'

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Houston VI. Utatl. al LA1 Vepa

WutW!f(lon

•,

Oral Roberti 114, Ttxu-ArllnJ'on 87
Pan Amelbn Ill. Ha-Sinun&gt;ro "'
1)IJsa 121, W. Tnu Sl. 82
J'AIIWIBI'
F\£Umon Sl. 11 W. DJtnoil 62
Nev.·Reno 72. A$. Cdo 10
New MeUm 8t U.S. lnlf'tnatlonal 74
l'llnJancl 62. E.
San llfoao 81. 88; Na")) 81

II

NY ........
Plollado&gt;lpHa

Hannan Trace ................... . 8 14 21 17--8J
Fairland .
. ............... 24 14 B JS-QI

liOO'I'IIWEIII'
Mo.·RolloiD. ""'"""" 81 . "

S'h
9\1

.SC.nito 11 Dalla

. NY 151el

IIANNAN TRACE (II) - J . Barnes 5-9-19;
Bnunlleld 6-2·14; Randolph J.2-8; Ba0ey
6-3-B; D. Barnes !1+4. T..... · - ·
'
FAIRlAND (II) - Rooe J.2-8; Mlllll.0:2;
Chapman 7-I ·B ; Toot 2-2-6; Wilkes 12-J.27;
Burd 1.0:2; Crager ~2-2. T...........
Score by quar1en:

w. Kentucky?&amp;. canon.Newman 11

1\1
8

J"*"
Phomtl Drtrott

j

Croulanes ............
. ... 8 B 8 16-47
Kyger Creek .................. 13 lD UN \IIt-51

1\I.J.ane 8&amp;. MacMurray .m

'lf"•O--

w• c

Martin 9.J.l9 and Myers~- ToUio II-JUI.
ByQuanen

-

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6
6\1

W....,JtCJn II Bolrm
U. Anaeies I I C'leYeland
ChJc110 a t lndtlna
New
at Atlanta

Hockey

French ~;

Nldlolls St. 6'l, Tnu Southt'm !'tl
S. Carolina 7&amp;, Fb1d,s St. fill
S. F'1or1da 81.. Maris! !J
SYf l.oulliana El, Webl'r St !WI
Tm~ Ted! &amp;J, MWipn .s

l'llnJancl 123, lWIIu City 100

Kaniu CUy II Sin

sa. m

MonWJJ~r IN, AJban)'

""""'lx ,

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1100'111

Doiron 1115. New .~mey m •
New von 117. 1..o1 Aneel8 Uli
W..,_cton 100. l:let,ut lU2
s.n An!Dnkl 1J7. utit. lll
Mltwau.lu!e lOI, ~ 92
Ollc... l&lt;l2.
Dlll.u 119, Houll&lt;l'l U7
SHnito 110, Dalvtor UB
Goldon Sll .. w. ~ to;
..

(41)

.JI

L1 17
H 19
L1 :1)
12 :1)

,......,..o....

San llfoao

~

Shall.,. 8-5-21; Roblda ().3.3; Splres:l-2-8; Bulb
2-1·5 and Kendrick W-1. T..... 18-11-47.
KYGER CBEE&amp; (14) - Vogel 2-2-8;
Waugh Hl·2; LIM 5-5-B; Bcadbury 4+12;

AJa twN St. 87, Jackson St. 6f
Austin Pety 86. c~ Coli. ftl
~vidlon 'XI. Funnan fli

.61J .516 J
!ll1 31,7

lOB
.U!
.424
.JN

dropped to 2-2. KC viSits Hannan
Trace Friday In an Important
SVAC contest!

S)'lliCUJt 79, VU1anov11 70

7'h
.Ul 10 ~

.

12.

According to the statistics, KC
sank 21 or 44 floor attem[lls for 48
pereent and 12 ~ 20 tree throws.
The Bobcats collected 20 rebounds
and committed 13 turnovers. Crosslanes hit 18 of 48 field goal tries for 45
Percent and 11 of 16 foul shots.
Kyger Creek also won the serve
game, 41-38. In capturing Its first
victory this season, Coach Mark
Hartman's team was led by
Rodney Morgan's 11 points whlle
Gary Pennington dumped In 10.
Kerry Kendrick led the Little
Warriors with nine points.
The victory gave the Bobcats a
6-3 season record whlle Crosslanes

Prtnreton e. t .A:tlt~ rr

1~

6~

.56.1
.M1

-p-:1)

o...v...

refusal of International banks to
renew credit to the PhiUpplnes.
"As a g oup," Armacost observed, "bankers do not tend to
make their deCisions simply on the
basts of news and media reports. "

Madame Marcos: "I couldn't
agree with you more."
A Big Ten football coach: "I con't
care It he's All-American material.
If the kid can't keep his grades up I
don't want him on my team."
Fidel Castro: "I've been shaving
with this Remington ,elecirtc tor
months. Hiked It so much I bought
the company."
Howard CoseU: "I'd rather not
give my opinion on that because 1
don't know anything about lt."
Prince Andrew: "I'm sorry,
dear. I'm third for the throne, and It
would not be right for me to get Into
a hot tub with you."
Ayatollah Khomelnl: "In the
name of Allah, and I'm not saying
there-Is qne ... "

"""'""

'M

.733

9 23

O.Uu
IWY.as Ctty

They won't say it!________A_r_tB_uc_h_wa_ld

Here are some of the things I
doubt you'll hear said In 1984.
From John McEnroe: "Sir, my
ball was out, and you called It ln.
Jimmy Connors deserves the
point."
From Jesse Jackson: "I have no
Another purpose of this letter is to
intention of making waves In the
remind the public that the Syracuse
Democratic Party. The system as It
First Aid Squad and other first aid
now operates Is fair to all the
squads are vital to our country and
candidates."
communltit'S.
President Ronald Reagan: "I
Without them, I would not be here
received a touching letter from a
today. So, a special thanks to the
litlle gtrlln Madison, Wisconsin, but
members of the Syracuse First Aid
I have no desire to read lt ·to you."
Squad, namely, JeH Hubbard,
Secretary of Defense Caspar
Donna Aleshire, Dave Smith, Eber
Weinberger: "We overt&gt;Stlmated
Pickens, Gene Imboden, Pam
our defense needs, and we're
Imboden, a nd Chris Jacks. Also,
asking Congress to cut our budget
thanks to - the doctors and Julie
In half. "
Byers and especially .to my son,
An IRS agent (any IRS agent):
Rick, and may you all have a
"You're right and we're wrong."
Happy New Year. There may be
Frank .Sinatra: "Look at aU the
others that I have overlooked, but
photographers. Let's go over and
tht&gt;Se are the Individuals that I was
have our picture taken."
advised who participated. - Fred
Joan DeLorean: "I believe we
W. Crow Jr.
have the finest Drug Enforcement
Agency In the world."
Yurl Andropov: "I think I'U Jog
around the Kremlin for a few
hOW'S."
readlngthepaper.Noneofuscould
Henry. Kissinger: ~·1 have no
ead It without crying, but we were . comment."
so proud and happy th8.t someone
Nancy -.Reagan: ·- "What's tliat
felt that good about our parents to
llttleklddolnglntheWhlteHouse?"
put It In writing.'
.
SecretaryofStateOeorgeShilltz:
I 'sat Christmas Day and went "See that the press gets a cpy of
through aU the cards people had everything we citscusaed here
seht us and I can't believe all the · .today."
wonderful people that loved and
VIce President
Bush: "(
respected them.
hope President Reagan Isn't
I am sure our mom and dad knew to run, because I'd Uke to gi&gt; for It
that.
·
myself." .
' Mr. and Mrs. Walburn and all, of
Rev. Jerry FlllweU: "If there Is a
you around Middleport that knew God, and I'm ilot saying there Ill ... "
them, thank you very much ahd
Fritz Mondale; "lf"l am elected r'
may GOO bless you all. - Rosem· will .contfnue tile. policies aJ¥1
ary Hysell, Roger, Raymond and phllosopey of President Jimmy
La~ce Manley Jr.
Carter."

16 14
14 JH

·In the seconctperlod, Croeslanes
came on st,r ong as Shatter and Greg
Squires led the second quarter
come back.
. ·
Love paced the Bobcat attack
with five points.
Kyger Creek lumped Into a lead
with 5:58 lett In t•e third quarter
when Martin· got h. • third basket or
the quarter to put ·the Bobcats
a head, 29-25. Shatter led all point
makers with 21 points on eight
baskets and five tree throws.
Martin led the Bobcats with 19
points and seven rebounds; Love
had 15 points and Bradbury added

EMf

L Pet. 01

H

foul line aqd converted both ends or
a one-plus for a 5245 advantage.
Later, . Love sewed-up the game
with two mort&gt; free throws.
In the fourth quarter. J .D.
Bradbury connected on a baskl!!
;md two foul shots and Chuck Vogel
and Steve Waugh had one basket
apiece.
The hosts jumped Into a 13-8 first
period lead only to see the Warriors
bounce back to tie tht&gt; contt&gt;St just
before the half at 23-23. Martin and
Bradbury led the first quarter
scoring with slx a nd five points
respectively whllt&gt;Shaffer had four
for the visitors .

Manhaltan ln. Columbia n
Norlheaaft&gt;m Kt Maine IU
J-\'&gt;nNI)'Ivanla !10, Amf&gt;r1can ¥1

8 :n
, WEI!'II!:JIN OONnlii!N&lt;Z

First lady feuding _______J_ac_kA_nd_e_rso_n
leader Benigno Aquino last August.
The U.S: alm Is to hedge against the
day when Marcos dies or Is forced
out.
In angry retaliation, Mrs. Marcos
has engaged In guerrtlla warfare
against Armacost, Inspiring art!·
cles In the governrnent-controUed
press to the effect that the
ambassador Is "Interfering'' In the
Internal affairs of the PhWpplnes.
A State Department source told
my associate Lucette Lagnado
about a strange report that Mrs.
Marcos accused Armacost of say·
lng_ that her husband had rt&gt;Signed.
This was regarded as an attempt to
damage the ambassador's c~lbU·
lty In both Washington and Manila.
Armacost has returned the tire.
In a speech to the Rotary Club of

11

w

22 8
lil 14

u u

Ct.vt-land
Indiana

Booton

WASHlNGTON - A strange and
Ironic feud has erupted In Manila,
between the Philippines' first lady
and the American ambassador.
The Irony lit'S In the fact that until
recently, Ambassador Michael Armacost was widely regarded aS one
of the few friends of alllng Presl&lt;lent
Ferdinand Marcos' beleaguered
regime. The ambitious first lady,
Imelda Marcos; continues to play a
powerful role In her husband's
government. Now she apparently
feels that, with friends like Armacost, who needs enemies?
For his part, the ambassador Is
trying tp out some distance betw~n the Reagan admlriistratlon
and the marcos dictatorship, which
many Filipinos hold responsible for
the assasslnaton of opposition

--

College 8COres

N-~--­
FA8'n!JtN OONn!ltitNt'l!

as

Lived to express thanks
On Saturday, Nov. 26, I strangled
on a ham sandwich. My son, Rick
Crow, along with my neighbor,
Julie Byer, tried to dislodge a piece
of ham from my windpipe. The
SYt'acuse First Aid Squad was also
called.
Purpose of this letter Is to thank
the Individuals of the Syracuse
First Aid Squad, Julie Byers, my
Son, Rick Crow, Dr. Martin and Dr.
Witherell for saving my ute. On the
way to Veterans Memorial Hospital
a ,code blue signal was given on two
occasions. This m'l!ans that my
pulse had stopped beating.
Fortunately for me, I was able to
regain breathing and today and
perfectly well In every way and
· returned to my law practice In
Pomeroy.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ol!lo

With three players hlttlng double' mark In the final stanza.
figures, ho!ij Kyger Creek defeated ' With senior forward f&gt;avld Mar·
the Crosslanes Warriors, 54-47, In lf'l ettjoylng his best game this
non-conference cage action Tues- season·, the Bobcats jumped Into a ..
day night at Cheshire.
live-point lead at 48-43 with 2: 54 to
Carrying a precartous 35-31 lead go. However, Gary Shaffer congoing Into the fourth quarter, Coach nected on two foul shots to cut the
~l!h Carter's Bobcats saw the margin to three.
Warriors tie the game twice before
With 31 seconds remalf\lng KC
taking control at the three minute forward Brent Lo~e stepped to the

111 Court S treet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVIJI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE ~IEIGS.MASON AREA

·'

Ky-g er Creek ·wj~s, Hannan·
Trace loser in Tuesday play
.·

,····

The Daily Sentinel

.

'

. ."'•. .·

~·

'

.

•

�.

.
. . . ' . ' ' ' ')I

••

..

' Ohio

~.

1984

The Daily

SoU-them inf11cts first
·lOss of year on ·WHS·
.

LfMLEFIELD DRIVE'&gt; - Southern's Rod
Uttlefleld ( 13) glides through the air enroute to one of
bls nine buckets against host Wahama Tue8day night.
:others In Ibis Scott Wolfe photo are·Southem'sDeonls

Teafonl (52), Wahama's Boyd Nortlaap (21), Bill
Cledlnuln (32) and Ron Bradley (11). Uttleflekltanled
2'7 points as Southern won, 62-53.

~eorgia
•

Winner
~in loop
ppener
•

· By The Associated Press
: Now that football season is over, .
c;e&lt;&gt;rgia can tum Its attention to
college basketball. And the Bulldogs
gut right Into the spirit during their
Southeastern Conference opener
&lt;~galnst Tennessee.
··The lith-ranked Bulldogs used an
aggressive defense to pull away
from a halftime .tie and came away
~th a 71-57 vlctocy over visiting
Tennessee Tuesday night. The
game was the only one of the night
lllvolvlng a Top Twenty team.
·: "We basically divide the season
lilto three dl!ferent sections I&gt;reseason. conference and conference tournament," said Georgia's
Gerald Crosby, who scored 14

e;n~;=~ro~~ !d ~
·: Georgia upped us ll-'CQrd to 9-1.

:-Tennessee managed just six field
gOals In the second half, a period In
1!Vhich Georgia made 21 of 23 foul
shots.
: Dan Federmann scored ll points
rb lead Tennessee, now 9-4.
; In other games, Louisville, which
d_ropped out of the Top Twenty this
week after dropping two games In
{Iawall, had little trouble In beating
Morehead State 85-50. M!lt Wagner
Scored 19 points and Lancaster
Gordon had 15 for the winners.
: The Cardinals, 64, led 34-26 at
halftime and outscored the visitors
:iJ-6 to start the second half.
: Dwayne Washington scored 28
. polntsandGeneWaldronadded20to
boost Syracuse past VIllanova 79-70
lit a Big East game. The.Wildcats
dropped to3-6, their worst start since
tl)e 1974-75 season.
:. Jimmy Foster scored 28 points
and grabbed 18 rebounds, leading
South Carolina past Florida State
7G-68.
: RickY Johnson's 15 points paced
Dlinols State over Creighton 63-54 In
tne Missouri Valley Conference
C?Jlener for both teams.
. Tulsa ran Its record to 11-0 as
Herbert Johnson scored 24 points In
11 121·82 rout of West Texas State.
Thlsa leads the NCAA In scoring,
averaging 96.7 points per game.
~ Sophomore George Almones
!\COred 25 points, had 10 assists and
three steals In Southwestern Lou lsi·
ana's 69-58 win over Weber State.
: Mark Acres had 24 points as Oral
Roberts took a 21-polnt halftime lead
iind cruised to a 114-87 triumph over
Texas-Arlington.
:. Senior guard Phil Smith scored 28
1101n1s and set a school record for
&lt;?areer free throws to pace New
Mexico to an 82·74 vlctocy over U.S.
:{nternatlonal.
:. Freshman Bruce Lefkowitz
Scored 13 points to help Penn defeat
American 5047. Lefkowitz's layup
gave the Quakers a 40-32 lead with
10: 15 remaining.
: Senior forward Kenny Wilson
(allied 22 points as Davidson
C?Vercame~_a 10-polnt deficit In the
second hall to beat Furman -~ In
the South~m Conference.
: Sophomore guanl Anthony Wat·
son scored 26 points as San Diego
~te clowned Navy SS-81.
: In other games, Phil Robinson, a
· senior guard, entered the game with
five seconds left, ran the length of the
court and hit a 26-foot jump smt to
11ft Northeastern over Maine 83-81;
Tulane's Jon ·Johhsoii scored 16
P.&gt;lnts as \he Green Wave r;olled"
McMurray 84-35.
·
.
t

BATn.E FOR REBOUND - Wahama's Boyd Nortlaap (21) and
Southern's big
Dennis Teafonl (52) battle for a rebound 1n
Tuesday's non-league game at Mason. Southern won, 62-$3, to remain

man,

aten_F_··.;-----·
.
--,-h----W---.-1-d----~

rlunhe
__

.

·

rom

e

By KEITH WOOD
Meigs Game Protector
The Ohio Statewide deer Primltive Weapons season opened Tue5day and continues through Jan. 5
for buck or doe.
Weapdns legal tor the three-day
season Include a single shot muzzleloading rifle .38 caliber or larger,
muzzleloadlng shotgun using single
ball, longbow and crossbow.
Hunting deer during the priml·
tive weapons season Is unlawful
unless the hunter Is wearing a hat or
cap or vest or jacket that Is colored
Hunter organf.
Hours for tli'e primitive hunt are
one-halt hour before sunrise to
one-hour after sunset. Don't forget
to obtain landowner's permission. .

I

Tree and shrub species are
available at no cost tor the
Improvement of wtldilte food and
cover.
Plant species available Include
white pine. Norway spruce, autumn
'olive, American cranbercy, silky
dogwood, hawthorne, and black
chokebercy. -Applications are avail·
able at the Meigs County A.S.C.S.
office, located over the Farmers
Bank In Pomeroy, or by contacting
me at 985-4400.

I

By SOOl'1' D. WOLFE
· MASON- The hustltng Wahama
White Falcons battled cross-river
rival Southern on nearly equal
terms for three quarters, giving the
unbeaten visitors a scare early In
the game before losing 62-53, here
Tuesday evening In non-league
basketball play.
Wahama led the first period,
trailed just 23·22 at the half, and was
tn contention much of the third
quarter. However, a string of nine
unanswered points In the fourth
period by the Tornadoes broke It
wide open to give Southern a
17-polnt lead at the 4:42 mark.
From that point on, the unbeaten
Southerners rode home ,to victocy
amtd a healthy TomP"o tailwind.
The triumph left Southern with a
9-0 ledger and anchors a Tornado
stronghold among teams In south·
em Ohio. The previously unbeaten
White Falcons dropped to4·1 on the
season.
Although shoddy floor play and
aggressive defense by the White
Falcons took away much of South·
em's offensive punch and curtailed
the visitors' scoring chances, sev·
era! Tornadoes whirled up good
offensive games at the !l.nlsh.
Floor leader and sharp-shooter
Rod Littlefield paced the winners
with a game high 'rT jlotnts and 11
rebounds, while teammate Dennis
Teaford deltvered the second punch
of 13 points and 13 rebounds. Kevin
Curfman added eight, while Tony
Deem and Wade Connolly netted
five each.
Wahama's success was attribUted to a balanced effort led by
Boyd Northup who sank 11 points
and controlted the boanls with 16
rebounds. Ron Bradley and Donnie
· VanMeter sank 10each, while Matt
Dawson and Btll Clendinnln
notched eight.
Southern took control of the
opening tip and quickly raet!a to a
score on a twisting drive by Rod
Littlefield at the . 7: 54 mark. A
poised Falcon offense worked the ·
ball around the hom and found Bill
Clendlnnln underneath for a 2·2 tie
and cJuutce for a three point play.

'

f Thetreethrowwentwi~,however,
and ag81n Li~leld penetrated the
Falcon zone tor a 4-2 SHS lead.
A plague of turnovers then hit the
visitors, as did a tenacious zone
defenlie, which kept southern
around the perimeter where finding
the bucket didn't conne easy In the
first period. Two goa)B by Matt
Dawson and another' by bon
VanNeter gave WHS an 8-4lead at
the 4: 25 mark. When the friction of
the period ftnally ceased Wahama
held a '12-8 advantage and the
momentum going Into the second
round.

•
Early In the second rpund the host
Falcons had Its portion of the
capacity crowd afiutter, while
Southern sputtered ,8esptte much
hustle. Finally Southern got rolling
and overcame Its 16-12 setback with
eight straight points, regaining the
lead at 20-16, Its first lead since the
first score of the game. Tremend·
oils hustle by Rod Littlefield and
several goals by Kevin Curfman led
the Tornadoes to a 23-22 halftime
lead.
A tight nip-and-tuck battle developed early In the third quarter as a
free throw by Boyd Northup and
goal by Ron Bradley tied the score
at 25-25. Southern grabbed the lead
on a Littlefield steal and lay-up at
the 5: 59 mark, part of an eight point
spree by the SHS guard that
maintatned a two point Southern
lead to the ~1·29 score, where
Dennis Teaford took control Inside.
While WHS concentrated on Littlefield's ballhandllng and perimeter
shooting Dennis Teaford went back
door for two consecutive scores and
a 35-29 SHS lead.
Southam's defense started to gel
and a Teafonl goal at the buzzer
gave SHS a 39-29lead at the buzzer.
Littlefield ended the frame with 10
points, while Teaford canned the
other six.· In the frame Southern
outscored the hosts 16-7 In what
proved to be one of the keys to the
'game.
In the fourth round Southern
controlled the tempo with a fast, yet
somewhat deliberate pass, while

·· worklne tor the good shot. Three
Inside power drives by Dennis
Teatonl and a Kevin Curfman steal
thai connected with Wade Connolly
on the scoring end gave Southern a i50-33 lead . with 4: 42 remaining,
prompting a WHS time out.
Coach Carl Wolfe's boys once led
54-37, before spending the rest of the
game at the foul line, where they hit
-eight of 10 attempts to secure the
vlctocy.
With 2: 39 left In the game Coach
Wolfe substituted freely giving all
12 Tornadoes some action. The
visitors held on despite some
turnovers and a three point play by
Northup at the end, the score 62·53.
Southern hit 22 of 53 from the field
tor 41 percent, while the hosts hit 23
of 58 for 40 percent. Littlefield hit
· nine of 18 attempts, Including a near
perfect second halt. SHS canned 18
of 26 at the line tor 69 percent and
WHS hit 18 of 25 for 70 percent. ·
Southern had 32 rebounds led by
Teaford's 13 and Rod's U, whUe
Northup had 16 and Bradley nine of
Wahama's 36 rebounds. Southern
had 15 steals, four assists, 25
turnovers, and 20 fouls . Littlefield
l)ad four steasl to lead Southern.
' Relerves Unbeaten
Southern's reserves of Coach
Howle Cardwell remained unbeaten
at 9-0 with a 60-32 win. Todd Adams
paced the winr1'ers with 18 points,
Matt Harris had nine, Scott Wickline, eight, Keith Allen six, Jay
Bostick five, and Kelley Grueser
five.
·
For Wahama Riehle Clark had a
nne game of 15 points, Mike Wolfe
had six, and M. Roush 5.
Southern pi'!YS at North Gallla In
an SVAC match Friday, while
Wahama Is at Point Pleasant.
t!Oln1lmN

(It) - Kt&gt;vln Cw1man 4-J.S:
Steve Teaford~ Darin Roosh GM: Kevtn
Teaford ~ Dennis Teaford 6-1-13: Jason
HUI ~ Tony Doem 1-3-5: Scott Shultz 04-4:

Rod Littlefield !1-!1-27: Wade COMOIIy 2·1·5:
Trfovor CarQ)ne 0-().0; Tom Gl'{lalhousc 0.0.0.

Toi.IIID-IUZ.

WAHAMA (U) - Ron Bradley H~ Don
VanMeter 4-2-10: Matt Dawson 4.().8: Boyd
Northup 4-.l ll: BUI Clendtnntn 4.().8: .Jolt
Bamltz ~ Brian Fielder 2·3-6: Phillip
Hoaman OM. Tololl D-7-53.
Soon! b)' qiiAI1en:

By HERSCHEL NfiSENSON
AP Sports Writer
It began lnall!plclously for the
University of Mtaml Hurricanes
with seven turnovers In a 2S-31oss to
· Florida, the worst setback ever
suffered by a team destined to
become college football's national
champions.
It didn't get much better the
following week until Jeff Davis
klcked _hls third field goal late In the
first half to give Mtaml a 9-7 over
Houston In a game the Hurricanes
went on to win 29-7.
' But It was all downhill after that
and It culminated Tuesday when
Miami was named national champlonfor1983bytheAssoclatedPress
In thewakeofastunnlng31..tlupset
of No. 1-ranked Nebraska In
Monday night's Orange Bowl. It
more than made up for the state
championship the Hurricanesdldn 'I
win.
"After we got by the loss to Florida
and thl! first halt against Houston,
we had pretty smooth salllng (until
late In the season),:· Coach Howard
Schnellenberger said Tuesday at a
morning-after news conference.

Southml ......... .. .......... ....... R L~ 16

23--;;2
Wahama ..................... .. 12 10 7 24-53

Cornhuskers received 4'h first.
place votes Md 1,109 \S points.

before Schnellenberger took over In

1979.
Schnellenberger, who played two
years for Bryant at KentuckY and
was an assistant coach under him
for five years at Alabaina, during
which the Crimson Tide won three
national titles, said he was "deligh·
ted" about winning the Bcyant
Trophy, which will be formally
presented at a later date.
"I can't think of a more ftttlng
nameforthenatlonalchampionshtp
trophy and I'm simply delighted to
be a part of the first one," he said.
Wtth 59 of 60 voters responding,
Miami received 47~ first-place
ballots and 1,168~ of a possible 1,00
'PQints. The HW'rlcanes were first or
second on every ballot.
Nebraska, which was bidding to
become the llrst team to be ranked
No.1everyweektrom the preseason
poll through the postbowl poll,
slipped to a second·place ftnish. The

AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY .
CALL ·992-3381
992-2342

(U81'!11411-9410)
A 01\lhtlon of Mulllmedla, Inc .

Wanda Eblin hosted a recent
meeting of the Laurel Cll!fWomen's
Mlsslonacy Society, with Brenda
Haggy giving devotions from Luke
2:1-19.
Readings were given by several
members and Included "Ten Commandments For Christmas" by
Mrs. Wright, "StW No Room" by
Donna Gilmore, "She Dtd What She
Could" by Janice Haggy, "Praying
Hands" by Janet Eblin, "Heaven's
Grocecy Store" by Eva Robson, and
"The Forgotten Tree" by Shirley
Friend.
Prayer requests were given and
Karen Stanley had prayer.
Mrs. Eblin, Donna Gilmore and
Tina Jacobs were hostesses for !hi!
meeting with Macy Miller giving
prayer before refreshments were
served to those named and Emma
Fox, Shirley Meadows, Becky
Eblin, Ruby NlclnskY, Genevieve
Ward, Linda Friend, and Iva
Powell.

PubiiJhOO every art ernoon, Monday
throuah Friday , 111 Court st .wt, by t he
Ohio Va lley Publl!lhlng Compa ny . Mul -

timedia , Inc., PomE&gt;roy, Ohlo 45769. 992·
2156. Second class posl agf' pa id a! Po·

meroy, Ohio.
Mcm~r : Thl• A ssoc lalf:'d Pn.•ss. In land Da lly Pr&lt;'ss i\s!loc lal on and lh!'
America n N("W5PIIJX'r Publlshl'r s A " ·
fii OCiallon, National Adver!l slng R€'prc ·
S('ntallvc, Branham Newspaper Sa l£'s,
733 Third Ave nuP, N('w York. New
York 10017.

POSTMASTE R : Send add ress to T he

Dally ~ nlln £1 1. 111 Court !-i t., Pomeroy ,

Ohio 45769.

RUE.~

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Wook ......... .......... .. .. .... ...... SI.OO
Ono Month ......
.. ... .... :... $4.40

Ont' Y!'ar ...................... ...... .. .. $.';2.RO
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Dally .... .. .. ............. ........... 20 Cl'nt s
Subscribers not des lr lnR to pay thf' l' ar rler may re-ml! lrl adva ncf' dlrl'c l to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis . Credit will be ~\ v cn ca r rlcr r nc h
month .

DOWNING-CHILDS

No subscriptions by mall jX'rrniiiC'd In
towns Wh(lf(l homf' carriPr se r v ll'f' 1 ~

available.

13
26
52

13
26
52

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMEl!

•

A layette shower honoring
Dreama Hudson was held recently
at the Middleport First Baptist
Church. A pink and blue color
scheme was carried out In the
decorations\
~
· Games were played with prizes
going to Macy Brewer, Pam Crow,
and Betty Sayre. Martha Klein
baked the cakes for refreshments.
Attending were Tracy and Donna
Grileser, Cathy and David Riggs,
Sue Imboden, Carolyn Davis, Blondena Rainer, Velma Taylor, Fran
Parker, Dorothy Anthony, Katy
Anthony, Macy and Macybeth
Brewer, Edna Wilson, Betty Sayre,
Nancy Oller, Joy Oll~r. Doris
Batley; Marilyn Fultz, Tammy and
Brad Seales, Dale Luster, Phyllis
Luster, Darla Thomas and Alilber,
Joann Hayes, Amanda and Allison,
Nadine Barton, Mala Roush,. Pam
Crow and Meredith, Flora Marie
Gibl!lon, Jennlne Petrel, Peggy
Lewis and Penny, Ellen and Cindy
Lewis, Maxine Tucker, Martha
·Klein, Becky Wilson, Joshu.a .and
Aroy.
.
Others presenting gifts were
KattJecyn Metlger, 'June Kloes,
F.rances Smart, Beulah White, Nora .
JQnlan, Oulda Chase, Wancla
Shank, Marge Walburn, Roma .
Hawkiils, Gladys DWon, 'Mary
McClul'li-;-Mirge Barr.. Caroly!J
.Snowden, Carla Mae Darst, ·and
Bemlce Jetter's. '

tr;jjjjj;jjjjj;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

•

-lheSIKld news In home heali IQ.

Team
WLP OP·
Southern ........ .. ....................... 7 0 382 336

HaMan Trace ..... ................... 7
Kyger Creek ...... .. ................... 5
North Gallla .. ......................... 2
Southwestern ........... ............... 2
Eastern ................... ....... .. .....1
SVACONLY
Southm1 ... .... .... ... ... ... .. ......... .3

Hannan Trace ........... .. ·........... 3
Kyger Creek ..... :..................... 2
Southwestern .. ....... ............ .....0
Eastern .. ...... ........... ... ...... .....0
SVAC Rl!liERVES
Southern ................... ........ .... .3
Eastern ...: ............ ........ .... .... .2

I 4.'11
3 424
6 426
7 4.11
7 338

321
391
497
479
420

omw
0 160 134
I 166 152

3 Ll2 1SJ
3
1511

w

0 1.16 91

11111 119

North Gallla .................... ....... 2 I 129 U7

Hannan Trace., .................... .. :2 I 126 124
· K.Yaer Creek ....... ......... ...........o 3 n• 1.:1
Southwestern .. ...... ........ ...... .. : 0 3· 90 134
Friday: Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace:
Southwestern at Eastern and Soulhem at
NorlhG~.
·I

..

Radiant 10"'
Rated at9,600 BTUs per hour. Most
~lar l'ldlant kfrosene heater in
.mertca. Clean, mOdem look fits
~.dacor. any room in yourhouse
~up to 37 hours on t.92 gals
...._ 2._ 19ll;',h1Lg1Ju: 21 ·: wide; tsv.:·
~ 8 lbe. y. • Sled.
·

JOHN A. WADE, M.D.,-Ir1C::·
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL ••

EAR,-NOSE &amp;,THROAT·
GENERAL ALLERGist
.

CALL. (614) 992•2104.
' 0~ (304) 6~5.·1~44
'

'

.

(

OHice Hours by Appoifltment Only

ll

ON~Y

I

PI~KENS
. ·..

· ...

$}59Q.O
H.ARDWARE
· . .

. tMJON, W.

'

~

•I ,

'
)

r

We Jlnerve The Right To
Umlt Ouentltles.

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., Jan. 7, 1984

U.S.~.A.

C OICE

·

Round Steak.....L~·

$

•••

19 9

Ground Beef...... !~.~.l

19
¢

HOMEMADE SANDWICH

Sausage.~················
QUALITY PLUS SLICED
$

.

3
9
Bacon~ ................ ~~..

.1
$ }g
Sausage..............~~ .. 1
HOMEMADE

Bananas .............4&gt;l$1

Layette shower

MAIL SIJBSCRJPTI ONS
Inside Ohio
Woeks ...
.. ........ ... .. . SI4.1M
Woeks .................... ...... .. .... $17 .30
Weoks ........ ..... ......... ........ .. S.'ii'.4R
Outside Ohio
Woeks .......
.. ........ .. .. . $1 5.2 1
Weeks .. ....
... .... . $29.64
Weeks ... .. .
.. ... ... $!\t~ l

1

SVAC standings

Friendly
Neighbors
dinner meeting

Missionary
•
soctety meets

T~.~.. Paity Sentinel

SUBSCRIPTION

Alfred Sunday School attendance
Dec. 18 was 41; church attendance,
25. No services were held Dec. 25
because of the Inclement weather.
Alfred Church held Its Christmas
program Dec. 18. Dorothy Calaway
and Flbrence Ann Spencer were
leaders; Marilyn Roplnson, pianist .
Choir members were Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Dillinger, Florence Ann
Spencer, Thelma Henderson, Ger·
!rude and Nina Robinson . Two
plays were presented. The cast of
Mrs. Santa's Sauc!' Pan were
Santa .. Kevin Brooks; Mrs. Santa,
Lisa Henderson; Mrs. Winter,
Tammy Calaway; Emmy, Michele
Donovan; Jemmy, Todd Dillinger;
Cook, Brenda Reed; Brownies,
Ccy~tal and Lea Reed, Trlcla
Burke, Marta Dillinger. Cast of
Spreading Christmas Cheer were
Debbie, Jim and Bob Brooks, Lisa
Burke, Missy Calaway, Randy
Dillinger, Todd Flanders, and Lea
Ann Robinson .
The Nativity Scene was shown by
the small children while Doris
Dillinger read from the Christmas
stocy by Luke. A vtslt from Santa
and gift exchange completed the
program .
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Poole and WUI
entertained Dec. 18 with a famtly
holiday dinner. Present were Mr.
and Mrs. SamuttJ Michael, Por·
tland; Louise· MTchael, Mr. and
Mrs. Gacy Michael, Matthew,
Kimberly and Todd, near Chester.
Christmas Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Garland Caldwell were Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Caldwell, Carrie
and Crlssle, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Weber, Shane, Shannon,
Sasha and Shalyn, Eagle Ridge:
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ritchie and
Larcy, local.

A Christmas potluck and gtft
exchange was conducted by the
Friendly Neighbors Club of Salem
.Township recently at the home of
Mrs. Lue Shenefield.
For roll c:llll nnembers responded
with Christmas readingS. Devotions
were given by Mrs. -Shenefield.
Following the potluck, the 12
members and four guests sang
carols. Next meeting will be held at
the home of Mrs. Anna Ogdln on
March21.

Miami named national champions

The Division of Wildlife reminds
evecyone that with the cold snowy
winter days upon us, don't underestimate your ability to not getting
cold while participating In outdoor
activities.
Plan your hunt or hike by letting a
District Fish and Game Hearings family member or neighbor know
will be held In each OHio Wildlife where you· are going to be at or a
District on Sunday, Jan. 29, at 1 general vicinitY.
p.m. Those Interested In particlpat·
The preiJared hunter must under·
lng In the public hearings tor the stand hypothermia, know how. to
1984-85 proposed regulations should guard against It, be able to detect It,
"We were never ahead· against
plan to attend. Location for District -and, finally, know how to real -It Florida and we lost badly. But
4 will be held at the Athens Hypothermia means "heat loss" or almost to a man, our football team
Recreation Center, 733 East State more specifically, a lowering of the graded out as winners." ·
St. In Athens.
temperature of the body's Inner
By virtue of Its thriller over
In c&amp;se of bad weather the district core. The first line of defense Is to Nebraska that ended the nation's
Fish and Game Hearings will be avoid exposure by staying as dcy as longest winning streak at 22 games,
rescheduled to Wednesday, Feb. 1, possible.
Miami became the second team
at 7 p.m. (same location) .
If you can't stay warm or dcy ever to vault from fifth place to the
The State Fish and Game under existing weather conditions,
aresult of
Hearings will be he~ on Friday, get out of the wind and rain Into anational
bowl championship
triumph. The as
Hurricanes
Feb. 3, at 9: 30 a.m. at Don Scott some type of shelter and build .a also became the (lrst team to
Airport, Division of Aviation (Con· fire. Under certain CQI!dltlons, capture ihe new)y named Paul
terence Room), 2829 W. Granville hypothermia can occur at tempera· "Bear" Bcyant Trpphy, formerly
Road (S.R. 161), Worthington, Ohio. lures above freezing. Any tempera- known as thl! AP Trophy but
Deadline Is near for the Habitat ture below 50 degrees can be renamed following Bryant's death
Planting Stock Program. Ohio dan~erous.
.
· · lastJanuacy.
landowners have··until · Jan. 15 to
Be prepared, plan, and know
~ Orange Bowl cothpleted a
apply for the Division of Wildlife's survival techniques to survive. storybookrls!!forMiaml, whlchhad
assistance program.
Have a safe and enjoya~le hunt.
only two winning records lnllyears

---

Alfred
happenings

.' '
;

'

FABRIC SOFENER

SANDWICH MATE. IND.

g.¢

Downy...............!!.o!.gg¢ Amer. Sllces ...~ •: ~. 9
1 1

4./" 1

31·
1
.
•
Bean-s or Corn..
- Pot P1es......... ~~~·.. .

ELF CUT GREEN·.· RED 'Or CHILl

15 OZ. CAN

$

GOLD MEDAL ROUR .............·L-VORITE SUGAR

~a~b.

69¢

~~~B.~ 149

BANQUET

PURE X
DETERGENT
147
Box

Oz.$369

FOLGER'S

.,P

...

INSTANT COFFEE
8

Oz. $299

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expints Jan. 7, 19&amp; \

�•

,
'

The Daily

By The Bend

.
Sentinel~

In the service
Snider

Wednetday, January 4, 1984

•
Pvt. Ralph R. Snider Jr., son of
Connie A. Caaey and atepaon of
James W. Casey of 684 N. Second
St., Middleport, has completed a
motor transport operator course at
the U.S. Army Training Center,
Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
During the course, students
received training in the operation
and maintenance of light military

'Heartburn' originates in the esophagus

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
squeezing along the IPngth of thP
Assistant Profe!ISOr of
breastbone. Other people expe·
FamUy Medicine
rlence heartburn as· a burning
Ohio University CoUege
sensation In the back of their thraot.
of Osteopathic Medicine
Some have a dry burning sensation,
QUESTION: What exactly is while others feel as if they have hot
heartburn? I keep seeing TV ads for liquid In that regton.
preparations to help it, but I don't
Because the term can be used to
understand what
mean various kinds of discomfort, a
' doctor may have to ask a patient
discomfort.
several questions to determine
A NS WE R :
Despite the word
what type ot- pain is Involved in a
particular case. The physlcial also
' · he a r t ' ' I n
"heartburn," the•
will listen to the patient's heart, just
pain described by IP
·' to make sure no heart problems .
the term does not
, actually are involved.
·
come from the heart. Instead, it
QUESTION: What causes
usually ori'gtnates in the esophagus, heartburn?
the tube leading from the mouth to
ANSWER: The part of the
the stomach. Patients often lies· esophagus which empties into the
cribe heartburn as a burning or stomach includes a muscle (sphinc·

.. •

terl that normally contracts to
prevent stomach contents from
going back up the tube. Control of
this muscle is influenced l5y special·
!zed hormonPS produced in the
body, by a person's emotional
reactions and by reactions to
different foods . When the sphincter
isn't working properly, it can open
and allow the acidic contents of the
stomach to flow back into the
esophagus. The irritation of the
esophagus this produces is usually
the cause of the pain we call
heartburn.
Heartburn pain often gets worse
soon after the patient eats or when
he or she lies down or bends over.
Certain types of foods , including
coffee, spicy foodsandcitrusjulces,
aggravate the heartburn.

Most cases of hear~burn can llj!
diagnosed through a medical history and physical examination and
without elaborate testing procedures. However, a doctor might
need to do an endoscopy, a test that
Involves putting a long tube through
the mouth and esophagus and
enables the physician to look
directly at the esophageal lining.
Other tests are occasionally done to
see if stom11ch contents are backing
up into the esophagus.
QUESTION: How is heartburn
treated?
ANSWER: After other diseases
that may minnie heartburn pain are
ruled out, treatment for heartburn
can begtn. This means ellrnin;~ting
factors that decrease muscle tone
in the esophagus and , bring on

'

Calendar
EAOhE RIDGE -The Meigs
County Foxchasers Association
will meet at their cabin on Eagle
Ridge Friday night at 7: ll p.m.
Dues are payable at this time.
ROCK SPRINGS - Pomona
Grangewlll meet Friday, 8 p.m.,
at Rock Springs Grange Hall,
with Star Grange as hosts. Plans
will be ma&lt;1_e for the annual
grange banquet.

SATilRDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - Star
Grange will meet Saturday, 8
p.m., at the grange hall. State
baking contest will be held and
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
state convention delegates, will
give their report.

Wolf Pen area
•
communtty news
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma and
Mrs. Larry Barr, David and
Michelle, were Christmas Day
guests of Mrs. Iva Johnson. Also
visiting were Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson, Tammy, Terry and Mrs.
Jerry Holley and Calvin Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald R~ll. Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Russell, Manda
and Michael, Mr. ·and Mrs. Steven
Haggy, Stephanie and Brad and
Carl,Jlussell of Columbus and Mrs.
Ethel Clark of Pageville were
Christmas Day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Russell and Bertha
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Karl,
Kevin and Charles, Mr. and Mrs.
:Daniel Worley, Stacy and Daniel of
Daniels, W.Va., Miss Barbara
Hatfield and Miss Robbin Brown
were Christmas supper guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill and
Carolyn, Mr. and Mrs. Les Frank,
Sara Beth,'- Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Darnell, Jeff and Melissa were
Chrtstmas Day visitors of Mrs. ·
Gladys Tuckerman. Also visiting
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves
and family.

Nowlin
Airman Michael K. Nowlin, son
of Dana L. and Helen J. Nowlin of
Rural Route 1, Apple Grove, W.Va.,
has been assigned to Sheppard Air
Force Base, Texas, after complet·
ihg Air Force basic training.
During the six weeks at Lackland

Air Force Base, Texas, the alnnan
studie&lt;l the Air Force minion,
organlzatio and customs and received special training in human
relations.
!n addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward
an associate degree in applied
science through the Community
College of the Air Force.
The ainnan will now receive
specialized lll.struction In the civil
engineering field.
He is a 1982 graduate of Hannan

~~«DI:IIa

A proclamation designating January as March of Dtmes Birth
Defects Prevention Month in Meigs
County was signed by Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday.
Meeting with the mayor for the
signing were Marion Michael and
Norma ToiTes, members of the
advisory commlttee of l,he • Meigs
County Chapter March of Dimes.
In .the proclamation, the Mayor
noted that appi'OXI!n{l!l!IY 15 miiiion
Americans are a1fiicted with physical and-or mental d~ as a

.,...

ouun.

.

. of ever~thin9

-.,.

ADVIImSID JTIM '01.1CY

fOTAliATt"ACTlON GUAIANTII

Kroger
tomato Soup

lnrythlftt pv atuy et .,. .., It ..-rontH411fer yovr totol totltfDCtlon
OftVf.ctv,.,, lfpvore RettetllfiH . Kro,., will rop ..co
,.vr ..._ wlftt the MMD ltr-.... Of' o comperolt .. ltrond or refvn4 yovr

.,...,...,ot ...

pvrclteteprico.

Route 7
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains

Cost ·cuHer
Apple Sauce ....·~::·

667-6485

COST cunER

33C

~=efr~it ~::"75 C

\O.l5•0lo
tans

A contribution of $500 toward the
repair of the organ was · among
several donations made at the
holiday meeting of the Loyal Men
and Women's Class of the Middleport Church of Chrtst.
';!'he class also donated $100 to
Grundy Mission along with Clothing'
and 60 tubes of toothpaste.

A dinner and gift exchange was
held at the church with the' pastor,
Bob Melton, giving grace. Mildred
Riley presided with Martha Childs
giving a program, ''The Story of
Christmas," with scripture from
Luke 2, and a reading, "The Legend
of the First Christmas Tree" by
Mrs. Riley.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow
entertained the day alter Christmas
with a party In observance of the
11th birthday of their granddaughter, Lori, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Crow, Zanesville.
Others attending were Robbie

REAL ESTATE
Three acres with a nieely, constructed concrete _
block home 26x60, 3 bedrooms,·one bath, ·12x15
living room and 24x24 family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel· oil furnace with'facilities·for woodburner. 12x15 block st()f'll8 building, 20130 blo.ck
·garage. Right off Rt. 248, country setting, '12 mile
east,of Chester, Ohio.
·

MIDDLEPORT. OH ·
"Spe~lal Chrlitmas Hou.rs"

Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
HOU.RS·: Sunday
U:OO to 8:00

Home Na.tional Bank
949-2.21:o:·

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106
•

J '
, ...

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0 0

..........

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

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Kroger ·Dutch
Cocoa Mix

c

c

12·01.

20-01.
Lvs.

KROGER WELCOMES
YOUR FEDERAL
FOOD STAMPS

Pkg.

HOMEMADE

D.............L~:.$1.59

HA

88 CT.

OHIO COLBY LONGHORN

CHEESE ........... lB. s1.89

jt.\

.

ORANGES .............. 3/a9'

KROGER

·ORANGES .............. 2/39'
HEAD

IN THE DELI·BAKERY

LIMA· BEANS ............. !.K.~.. 79¢

Fresh Baked
French Bread

1-LB. BOOTH FILLETS

•••••~~~; $

\

Homogenized
Milk

72 CT. CAL) F.

10 OZ. BIRDS-EYE FORDHOOK

.99

&lt;._

8¥2 OZ. JIFFY

CORN MUFFIN MIX ....~~~~29¢

16·01~

Loaf

8 QT. CARNATION

INSTANT MILK ........ ~~~. $3~39

••

,

c

13 OZ. DUNCAN HINES BLU

Gal.
Jug
U.S. NO. 1 WISCONSIN
RUSSET

..

==~:••......·. zt:$ 299

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE BEEF .
BONE IN

FQII Cut
Round Steak

3 LB. BUTTER FLAY.- SHORJENING

CRISC.O .................. ~!!~ $3.29
15 OZ. ARMOUR (W/7' Off)
·
·.
CORN BEEF JiASHc~~s2fS2J9

Country Style
Sliced Bacon

4 ROLL PACK CHARM I~

TOILET TISSUE .......~~~;. Sl.29

c

46 OZ." HUNT'S

TOMATO JUitE ·.•.·-..... ~!.~ .. 99¢

10¥2 OZ. CAMPBELL'S OlD FASHIONED

VEGETABLE SOU.P .. ~~~~ t/79¢'
118. S . FI~LD VACUUM . PACKE~
. .
p E· .. CANS . 2/Sl 79
P'
•

·,

REGULAR OR MARSHMALLOWS

HONEY LOAF .............~~: $1.99

I I I ·, .. .. I I I I 1 .1 I

'

.

1'

''

89
lb.

USDA
CHOICE

,

'\_

99C

USDA GRADE A

Holly Farms
Pick Of The Ch~x

'•

'J'

. .
MOO~O

16·01.
Box

HAM LOAF .•............ ~~~. $1.99

MUFFIN MIX ........... ~.o.x. $[29

Crow, Zanesville, Mr. and Mrs.
James Crow, Meredith and Wesley,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Rod Gilkey
(Debbie Crow) and Jodi, Lancaster,
Vera Crow, Carol Crow and
children, DanleUe and Clayton, and'
Bob Wingett.

Kroger ·
White Bread

,.

RUTENBURGER BREAKFAST

89 4

Crow birthday celebration noted

OF OHIO, 'INC.

Cost Cutter
Saltines

SLICED BACOJ4 ........L.B~. $1.99

I-LB. KRAFT PARKAY QTRS.
MARGARINE ......... PKG ..

Loyal men, wom_en's class meets

MCGumDN BIRTHDAYA;Ja I.vD McGiotbln, daUghter of
Alan and Beverley . Wlllloa,
celebrated her IMlOOIId bbihday
receatly. A Smurf cake was
served with Ice cream. Glflll
were presented to her. Amoog
tholle 'Mteadlag were her llillter,
Marla LyneUe, ~Pn!llt8,
Gerald and HaUie Sellen,
Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mr.
Robert IWIJe.

LSMIT 7 CANS PL£AS£

1 LB. SUPERIOR VAC. PACKED

RUTENBURGER

~
.:;. ~

tnClU I

tech .t th... e4wettiM4 lt..ws ~ fe41VIre4 to ~ '•odlly owollolt'- lor
• • IR MCtl .,..., ltere , ••c.,. .. tpocNkoMy notH In thl• o4 . If wo
M "'" Mt .. .,. MwortiM4 tt.M , .,. wiiJ .tfor yov your choke of •
CIMIJO Ale ....... wt.OR 0.,..... , rott.cflnt tho lOme IO'f'lftll or 0
ro~ ... ktl will ......_ ,.., te ,utcheto tho o4'f'ortlted Item ot tho
e4'f'ertho4 ,nco wMt.la, Jl My. . Ottly one 'f'OtMior cov,.,. will be
ecc.,-.4 ,., fteM ,uteheMtl.

........,py New Year!

Normal'om!s,membersoftheadvlsoryconunllteeof
tile Meigs Coonty Chapter March of Dimes.

result of birth defects.
A fund of promlse," says Mrs. Werry. "By
drive will be held in Meigs County joining tbe Mothers March you can
during January with the proceeds help some of these promises come
going into research, medical servi- true in the prevention of birth
cesanljeducationfortheprevention defects. Our nation's most serious
of birth defects.
health problems affect more than a
Rose Werry, chalnnan · of the quarter-miiiion newborns every .
annual drive, Issued an appeal for year with physical or mental
volunteers for the March of Dtmes damage," she concluded, To join the
Mothers March this month and Mothers March, Mrs. Werry asked
asked for community cooperation, residents tocall992-3576or992-3219.
noting that all contributions to the
Paul Simon will be sollctting
Mothers March will go toward contributions to the March of Dimes
programs of research, medical in the business section of Pomeroy.
services, public and professional A volunteer Is still needed to handle
health education.
business solicitation in Middleport,
"Each new yearboldsagreatdeal Mrs. WerrY noted.

ThompSon

WI ftUIVI T&gt;ll liGHT " 0 l - Q(JANTITiiS . NONI SOLO TO

Seyler Is pldured here with Marion Mlcbael, left, and

March of Dimes month proclaimed

Bottom,

COI'YIIGHT Ita · THI · - CO . ITIMS AND •IICIS GOOD
SUNDAY , JAfl. I, THROUGH IATUIDAY, JAN. 7, Ita , IN

..
BDml DEFECI'S PREVENTION MONTH Pomeroy Ma)'OI' IUcbanl Seyler In a proclamation
signed Tue!day deelpated the IIIOIIth of January ils
Mardi of Dimes B1rib DefecCB Prevl!ldloa Month.

Vanaman

repeived special training in human
James E. Vanaman, son of
relatio111.
In addition, airmen who complete Nathan E. Vanaman of Rural
basic training eai'n credits toward Route 1, Rutland, has been proAirman Davti1 L. Thompson, son . an associate degree In applied moted In the U.S. Air Force to tbe
of Charles E. and Audra M. science through the Community rank of master sergeant.
Vanaman is a medical ·supply
Thompson of New Haven, W.Va. , College of the Air Force.
supervisor
at the Air Force Hospiail1lli!D
wlll
now
receive
The
has been assiiiJied to Sheppard Air
specialized
instruction
In
the
clv11
tal,
Grand
Forks Air Force Base,
Force Base, Texas, after completN.D.
engineering
field.
ing .Alr Force basic training.
His wife, Darlene, Is the daughter
His wife, Pamela, is the daughter
During the six-w~1!5. at Lackland
WWiam J . Smith of Rutland.
of
Rural
Route
2,
.
of
Dorts
Peters
of
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
The sergeant Is a 1967 graduate of
studied tbe Air Force mission, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Rutland High School.
organization and customs . and
High School, Frazier'
WNa.

Senior Citizens
party condutced

J"ANUARY
11'&gt; 1,29"

FRUTH PHARMACY
f786 ~. 2ND AVE.

vehicles. I111truotion iJ also given in
the transportation . of personnel,
equipment and supplies.
He iJ a 1983 graduate of Meigs
High School.

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

..

r--.iilii~~~~ijfiiij~

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING

Laurel Cliff
happenings
Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Dec. I8 was 100. Choir
members present were 10. A
special song was sung by Steve
Eblin and· daughter, Miss Becky
Eblin.
The Christmas program, held
Sunday evening with 100 attending,
ws very nice:--·
Attendance at the Ouistmas
morning service was 96. Pastor
Miller delivered the sermon. Choir
members present were 12. The
teenagers sang two songs.
Mrs. Wanda Eblin has been
reported ill.
. Mr. and Mrs. Wlillam Jacobs,
Columbus, spj!llt Christmas with
Mrs. Tina Jacobs.
Mrs. Della Stahl and John Stahl
were Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs.· Pearl Gilkey.
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Schaefer
had their Christmas dinner with
Mr. and Mrs. Vern Story and son,
John.

relief of:Irritate
heartburn
may actually
further
the esophagus,
so
patients should always consult their
doctor before trying an antacid
product. Patients may · also be
advised to elevate the head of their
beds on blocks about four to six
inches high - this treatment uses
gravity to help keep stomach
contents from Oowlng back up into
the esophagus while patients are

sleeping. It these simple measures
don't work, several dltferent kinds
of medications may be prescribed ·
Relief from heartburn is usual!)!
possible if the patient follows thj!
doctor's suggestions.
·

Music by the Sloane family ,
Kenny on the guitar and Wanda on
the electric auto harp, highlighted
the post·Chiistmas party. 'or the
Harrtsonville Seritor Citizens.
There was group singing and
refreshments during the evening
including cheeseball and crackers,
homemade cookies . and candies,
fruit punch and coffee. Attending
wereC!yde and Wanda Sloan, Nellie
Borgan, Ray and Louise My,ers.
Millard apd Erma Christian, Ernest
and Sadie Carr, Ora Carsey, Kenny
Sloan, and Brian Carr.

..

FRIDAY

heartburn. These include smoking,
eating large meals, coffee, · spicy
foods and alcohol.
The use of antjlcids may also be
indicated, but some over-thecounter products advertised for

.

~

Page 6

Family medicine

Pomeroy~Mlddleport, Ohio

Wednetday, January~· !984

lb.

�.'

•

'

W~netday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Janyary 4, 1914
4, 1984

Syrian president grabs center stage
By NJ(X)JAS B. TATRO
A"'""aled Pl'lllli Writer
Syrlan President Hafeoz Assad,
who treed captured U.S. Navy pilot
bt. Robert 0 . Goodman Jr., has
thrust himself onto center stage
during the past year wtth a goal of
, proving himself Indispensable to
any fUture peacemaking In the
Mtddle East.
With skill and a sometimes
ruthless cunning, Assad has succeeded In turning military defeat
ln!Dpolttlcalgalnafterhisarmywas
manhandled by Israel In the 1982
war In Lebanon.
He has:
-Forced Palestine Uberatlon
Organization chairman Yasser Ara·
fat out of Lebanon and taken firm
control of the remaining guerrilla

·organizations.
-Persuaded an lnt~reluctant
Soviet Union to Invest Its prestige In
·the rebuDdlng of ~·s mllltary
forces.
-Consolklated his control on
nearly one half of Lebanon's
terrttory and reasserted Syria· s
political ·tnnuence with leftist mil·
I!las and traditional Moslem leaders
opposed to the U.S.backed government of President Amln.Gemayel.
-Fostered guerrilla attacks designed ID pressure the United States
and Israel Into puWng their troops
'out of J..eba1!on and forSaking the
U.S.·medtated Lebanon-Israel
agreement. The pact signed Mayl7,
1983, could have forced Syrtan
troops ID leave Lebanon and given
Israel a de facto peace treaty with a
second Arab country.
With remarkable alacrity, the
5.l-year-old Assad
moved slmul·
taneously on a variety of fronts to
turn the tables and force recognition
of his central role.

,.

·'

.

has

BACK wrrH FAMILY- Navy U. Robert 0.
Goodman with his wife Terry Ann and ciaupters,
· Morgan, 2, and Tina, 6, are shown together . at

Andrews AFB, Md. Wednesday I1IOI'IIIn&amp; alter llylu&amp;
from Gennany with lhe Rev. Je1111e Jackaon who
&amp;aiDed his rele&amp;~~e from Syria. (AP Laaerphoto).

Releasing the U.S. Navy flier shot
down over U!banon Is seen as part of
Assad's attention-getting political
campaign. It also serves to embar·
rass President aeagan, who lg·
nored him In the pursuit of the
Lebanon-Israel agreement and who
failed ID mention restoration of
Syria's Golan Heights In his
September 1982 peace plan. '
Reagan had caUed for a Palestl·
nlan homeland In association with
Jordan. Altafat's talkswithJordan's
King Hussein feU apart under
pressure from dissidents In the
PLO, who feared Arafat was ready
to compromise with Israel, and
Assad gave his backing to the
dissidents.
The PLO rebels eventually drove
Arafat and his loyalists out of
Trlpoll, Lebanon, with Syrian tanks
and soldiers behind !hem.
Moving on so many fronts at the
same time has taken Its toll on Assad
personally, however. The Syrian
leader suffered a heart atttack on
the eve of a summit meeting with
Gemayel Nov. 13. It remains
unclear whether hel wru tie able to
resume tu11 control or If so. for how
long.
But he apparently was well
enough ID appear srnlllng In
photographs with Jesse Jackson
}'Uesday as Goodrium was released.
Assad's mllltary buildup has
raised concern In Israel about the
long-term prospects of a new war.
Prime Minister Yltzhak Shamlr's
government has been alarmed by
the Soviet Union's Increasing lnvol·
vement and the expansion Of Its
army ID 700,001 men.
Israel has stressed It does not
want war with Syria but tensions
have remained high because of
Syrlan-sponsored guerrtlla attacks

Sc:.velll
your

· Write
own oct end order by IN!II wlllt 11111
coupon. Cencet vaur ld bv phone when
get
, resul!s. Money not refundable.

- H THE 11AH't H0Ut1S Of HUNT·
1HG FINAU Y PAY Off WITH THAT
ftCW. IXER, REWARD YOUR EF

EAQ4 1110UNT tS OWEN TH£ l't:R ·

SOHAl ATTENTION IT DESERVES TO
GfVE YOU A PRtlf TROrHY THAT
LAST fOR YEARS AHO YEARS

Phon•----------~~---

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

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......... ......
,..........
,_

,/ Point • Mason
r ·Auto Glass
I
I
I

I !For Sale
1 1Announcement

17. - - - - - -

( )For Rent

1e. - - - - - 19,------

20. - - " - - - 21 . - - - - - - -

~- _ _ _ _ __
s.

22.
22.------

7. _ _ _ _ __

24. -_ 25.
___
_
:¥. _ _ _ __

9. _ _ _ __

'17. - - - - - - ,

-----:-'-----•------- '21·-----

Brtan Johnsdn, ~rat Marietta
College, made the dean's list for the
taU semester. Johnson Is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson,
Portland.

29. _ _ _ __

10. - - - - - -

11.-------

12. _ _ _ _ __

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16. - - - - - -

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31.-------

32.-------

33. _ _ _ __
34. _ _ _ __

25. _ _ _ __

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..........
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Mall This Coupon with Remittance
Pomeroy, 011. 457"

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

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( :/mct~ifil•rliHI/(f'tf l'lll'l'r th1•
{ollm11inl( lf•if•l•hmu• f'Xf'hllll/(f'tf, ..

_

Gallla Co. Area Code
614
44.--Galllpolls
367- Choshtre
311-Vtnton
245-Rio Gronde
2U-Guyon Dlst.
643-Arabla Dlst.

_

.....__...______
.......,....
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.....

,
:~·-----~------~~~~---------~
~-

LAFF·A·DAY

Public Notice

Early child
~are reported
decreasing

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The Stille of Moigo County.
Common Pleoo Court
F'orat Family M""Cotp. of Florido

....-=-=·=---···

Public Notice

~------

-

1

,.,

surface. •esP.rv1ng also as an
easemen t lor rhA locat10n and
ma1n tenance lor tho water p1 pe
ltne and sto1agP. tank as now
construc tAd that part of the
above desc r1bAd lot as follows
Begmn1ng at the aforesa1d
corner betwf!fln l o ts 7 and 8 m
sa1d l.ne of lmco ln Road .
then ce w1th sa1d road hne.
westerl y 5 feet. thf!nce north·
f!rly oarallel to and 5 fef!t
westerly from rhe l1ne betwee'ft-../

Public No,ice
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The Stille of Moigo County.
Common PleM Court
The Fe,_ llonlc &amp;
Sovingl Company

...

Plaintiff

Jemes Nouuling end
Jonice Neutzting

Delendont
C.oe No. 83-CV-271
In pursuancP. of an OrdP.r of

SaiP.I tn thA above entnled
ac11on. I wtlf offer for sale at
publtc auctton. at the door of
the Cou rt House 1n Pome• oy. 1n
the above named County. on

Saturday. the 2 1Sl day of
January. 1984. at I 0·15 o·clock A M . the foUow1ng des cn bect real estate. s1tuate 1n the
County ol Metgs and State of
Ohto~ and n the Vtll age ol
Pomeroy. to-w• t:
Sttuated 1n the V1 llage ol
Pomeroy. COunty of M e1gs. and
State of Ohio·
Be1 ng known and destgnated
on a map of l tncol n Hetghts.
made by Breece. &amp; Carper.
Re9tstered Ctv~r EngtnP.Ar s.
Hunttn gton ..W es t Vtrg1n1 a.
dated October 17,, 194 2. a
copy of wh•ch map Was fired m
the offtce of the RP.corder of
M e1gs County. Oh1o. on De-

cember 17. 1942. and re·
cordea •n Plat Book 3 at pages
43 and 44. as · Lot-No. 7. and
betng more parttcularJy des cnbed as follows. Beg1nmng at
a ·potnt m the north hne of
ltncoln Road at the cornflr
between l ots 7 and B. as
shown on sa td map. thence
wtth the satd ltne of ltn coln

Road. 'North 79 degrees 51
minutes weSt. 50 feet thence

with the line between Lots 6
and 7, north 10 degrees 09
minutes wesi 324.34 feet to a
point tn the south hne of North
Street:· thence Wtth sa td line of
North Street. North 54 degrees

40' minutes
east. 35.35 ieet
1
theOce Contlrluing .'IJhh satd'
'street line. North 80 degrees 42
minutes east. 26 .71 teet .
thence with the line between
said Lots , 7 and .a; .Soulh 10
degrees (19 minutes west
358.45 teet to· tho poinl' ot
l:)eginning; reserving'. hOWever,

· the coal ·and all other minerals
in and underlying' the above
described property. togelher
wilh the rlghllo mine the same
w ithout encumbrance to the

•

t 70. Page 653 and Volume
250. Page 34 1. Me•gs County
Deed Record s
Propert y app r a1se d

I"

446-2342

627 3rd Ave .. Gtllipolis
Ph. ~6-1699

$15.800 00 and cannot be

LOCATI ON

1679

1121 21. 28. 1114 3tc

REAL

Phone
H 6 141·992·3325
IN TOWN - On 124 Natural gas furnace, bath, city
water, lp, lot. l~itchen and 4
bedrooms. $3. down.

Public Notice
NOnCE OF
PUBUC SALE
Nott e A 1s hAre by g1ven th at on
Janu"'y 14. 1984 al 12 00
noon a pu bl1c sale wtll bA hAid

ABOUT 5 ACRES - 5 rm.
home, bath, automatic heat
farm pond in Southern schools.

ar 0 Js Tr ad1ng Postlold Valley
Lu mbAr 8u1ldtngl loca tAd at

923 S 3rd Ave . Moddleport.
Ohto to Sflll for cash
lollowmq collatAral to W1 t

thf!

I 350 case Dozer 0 3 105.
Se,.al No 3037303
1 Sharu Posi Pounder. nonA

I MF Hay Baler. 2-10 15
1 JO

Manur P.

SprAader.

038416
.
.
1 End loader Iter Tractor).
10896
t Fo rd Mower. 80607
1 Ford Corn Planter. 109825
The Central Trust No .. NA ot
M1ddiP.port. OhtO reserves the
right to b1d at thts sale.

111. 4. 5. 6. 3tc

$2,550.00 DOWN - Remodeled 3 bedroom home. Nice
bath, ·.gas furnace, basement. .
mittl gattlen near stores.
MARVELOUS BRICK VENEER
- This 3beflroom home ~ for
you. Has 2 nice fireplace$; 2
,garages, 2 stories, full base- ·
men! and landscaped lot lor
$125,000.
OffJR WELCOMED - Aslling
$17,00) for this 8 rm. older
home. Hasbath,ps'FAfumace
and l4acre in Pomeroy. $1,5oo
' down.

11011£11 - 6 rni. rinch wi!li'
~· basemef)t, 2 baths, ~rpet1

•n&amp; and carport on 2 ICI)IS!
OnlY $3,500 down.

..·

'

!!6.5 ACIES - r.leip i:hools,

Rt. 33

&amp;'.:...)
~:8!1.11.

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
U.P.S. - PUROLATOR ~

.,

RTO DOOR.f'f

~DELIVERY ~

"""-

---·
ll
~~
. •Body &amp; Fender R• ~airs

PARCEl PRIO.ITY SHIPI!NTS
FOR LESS THAN U. S. IAil
SAV! lOll TO lOll AND IOIE

BRING YOUR PACKAGE:
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
618 Main,St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

PH. 992-3383

No Sundey Calla
J.ll ·tiC

1229-1 mo

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•bACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•liMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONOS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478
1:1 11·1 mo ·pd

GRAVEL
HAULED
.AL TROMM
10/20/ t.f.n .

I

Real Estate General

P0MER0Y,0.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Chnltr Quaint coontry charm! This 3
bedroom home has. many
features such as hardwood
flooB, full basement gas heat
insulated, screened sunporch,
separate traHei hookup, plus
unysual rustic decor, 2 car
garage, approximately 211
acres, storage bui!din1. assumable loan. $36,200..
·MIDDLEPORT - Beautiful
home for children, woodburning fireplace and furnace lor
cheaper _heating bills, garage,
basemen!. family room, all in
great oondition. Must be seen.
$49,000.

"

IONDED &amp; WORK GUARANTEED

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY
742-2328

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona ond remodeling
- Roofing end gutter won.
-Conete~ wort
- Plumbing and electrlcll
worll

(Free Eotlmoteo)

REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Oeere.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Form Equipment

PAT HilL FORD
992-2196

Middleport. Ohio

Parts &amp; Service

1- 13-tfc

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
in1 - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction ..: Re·
modelin&amp; - Custom Pole
Btrns.

CHARLES SAYRE·
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067
i2·20-tlc

Bring This Coupon In

home for the bejjnning family.
Two or thtee 'bedrooms with
evetY!hing. carpeted. A lUI
liie~t tn tin !tel' in; aquarf2r
acre of land 1o clll your own.

MANLEY'S "'
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport
ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH. 992-3194 or
992-2388

FOR FUTURE USE"

Expires Dec. 30th

APPLIANCE

Wanted to buy. New. uaed S.
antique furniture. Will buy 1

piece or complete houaehoids. Also complelo Auctl·
oneering service. Cell Oaby
A Martin 614 -992-6370.

rency . Top pricea. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Avo.
Middleport. oh. 614 -992 3476.
Raw Fur Buyer. Beef • Deer
Hides -Ginaeng. Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley,
At. 2. Athen1. Oh . Phone
614-664 -47B1 . 1·9 Dolly.

BEDS-IRON. BRASS old
Furniture. gold, silver dollara, wood ice boxes, atone
jar~ .

antiquea. etc. COmplete

households . Write M . D .
Miller, Rt. 4. Pomeroy, Oh
46769 or 614 -992 -7760.

985-3561
All Makes

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport. OH.
PH. 992-2725

General Welding

CUT &amp; WRAPPED

Salem Twp. Rd . 180
Dexter. Oh .. 45726
Bill hkew

FOR SKINNING

PH. 949-2734
Maplewood Lake

MILLS'
ELECTRIC
RESIDENllAL-New ,
and re-wirin1
COMMERCIAL &amp;
'INDUSTRIAL
All Work Guaranteed

Call 614-742-2214

After 5 P.M.

•Washers •Diahwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerator ...
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

Tri-County

PH. 742-2456
ladders for ..
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
"Your Place or Mine"
10/ 12/2 mo pd

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodel in&amp;...
Insurance Wolf
CustQm Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gtraees
Roofin1 Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15· Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH.

992-7583

or 992-2282

lrl5·1mo. pd

11-1-tlc

Annou nee 111 P. nl s

Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDI
Racine; Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-Hc

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Pltnt
I y, II. Etst of Pa1eville
On Township Rd. 141
We Specitlize
in Aluminum Only

PH. 992-3466

I

10/ 19/ 2 mo. pd

B A BEAUTY SHOP

"Holiday Special"
S.hampoo - Haircut
Blow Qry

'7.00 '
Call 949-2320

Ask for Tina Pierce

Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.

Discover Ene~~t-A·Car. the
modem answer to soaring
new car prices! Drive the vthicle of your choice -~- any
make and model. No.down
payment lower montllly
payments. Read all about it.
Seild for Free Booklet L-16.
Bob lllaebton, an authorized independent EngageA-Car Broker. Box 326, Po.meroy. Ohio 45769.
Wtnt Fnter lnformttion?
Call 614·992·6737

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OT~ER
ROOTS •

$21,500. .

Year-Erid ·
M.L.
Clearance Sale · CONTRACTING ·. AT
RECAMATION
•Excav•ting

•Ponds

•septiC: Tanks
•Hauling

S&amp;W TV .
AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio
Ph.

986-4269

It No Answer, Call 915·4382
Dewoyne Wittlomo
&amp; Scottie Smith
· All lloktS and llodals

Anttnns lnstallstlon
HOUSI Cslls and Shop
Service Available

Giveaway

Racine, OH.
I·Htc

Britt male 1 Y.t yrs. old. Free.
Call614-367-0688 .
Puppies to giveaway mi•ed
breed, born Thanksgiving
Doy. Coli 44~·4818 .

3 pups Dashund • Terrier
mixed . 7 weeks old. 2310
Monroe Avo. Pt. P1...,304676 -7476.
Slack and white Cocker
Spaniel, spayed, to good
homo, 304 -896-3936 .

MILLER
.ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wirin1
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Or 992-5875

6 Lost and Found
LOST Missing: English Bulldog disappeared Jan . 2nd.
Light brown with white
cheat ond marking a. Femelo,
Reward . Call Jim Bossman.
614-266-6636 .
LOST - Mole poodle pedigreed . Loll Thu!'lday.
White . Handsome reward .
Coil night or day. 614-9927227. Coli collect if you
have dog. 676-1124 or
676-8608 .

8

Public Sale
8s Auction

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

12·9·1 mo. pd.

Call 742-3195

949-2293

GARAGE

·JERRY'S
CUSTOM ·
SLAUGHTER
White's Hill

Road
Rutland, OH.
(1st Rd. left up
New lima)

742-2789 or
742-2515
12/9/1 mo.

Assistant wanted

Elementary .._Education..

LOST pair reading glasses in
case. in Point Pleasant 304676 -6248.

Roger Hysell

otderv lady pert time. Cell
oftor 6. 448 -4637 or 446 2168.

Ubrary

11 12/lln

·•

BUYING

AVON Pay your Chriltmaa
billa, make money 2 ways.
Cell 446 -3368.
I.

Gun shoot Racirle Gun Club. part time. 13 houra a week.
Every Sunday starting 1 Apply It tho Pomeroy
p.m. Factory choked guns Ubrory .
only .
---------lc:..
lead Guitarist wanted for
Vacency : Julia's Personal heavy metal rock band .
Care Home . Formerly Contact Vital Signa ot 614Mercer Canvaleaence 992-8749 or 614 - 992'·
Home. 18 years experience. 3100.
.
Clifton. W .V . 304 -773·
6873.
Truotworthy middle oged
- - - - - - - - l c - single lady to live in with
Riverview Personal Cere elderly ledioo . $1.oo·o
Home now has a vacancy for month. Send resume: Box
o elderly person . 304· 773- P.30. in core Pt. Ploourit
6882 .
Regiltor, 200 Main St. Pt.
Pl. wv.
Harper's Adult Care t-:ome
has 1 vacancy for another Teacher for Pt. Pleasant
resident, elderly peraon, call Hood Start Center. Need
304-676-1293.
degree in Early Childhood Qr

.

Chester. 011.
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Niles
7:30 lo 10:00
Available for private pat·
ties Mon .. Tues .. Thurs.
Nites, Sat. or Sun. Afternoon.
•
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI .. NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC. 16
PH. 985-3929
or 985-9996
11-14-1 mo.

•.

Help Wanted

SWEEPER and sewing mo·
chine repair. parts, end
at~ttplies .
Pick up and
delivery , Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile Up
Georges Creek Rd . Cell
446-0294 .

Five puppies, four female
one malo. 304-676 -3634.

SKATE-A-WAY

11

3 Announcements

4

All STEEL &amp;
POLE· BUILDINGS

Se rv1 ces

Local lady wanted to cere for

DEER
PROCESSED
$5.00 EXTRA

n

E111 Ioytlll: nI

SERVICE

4-5-tlc

$2500

ries .Ohlo River&amp; old Hiatori·
cal materiafs,Hock- 'tocking
books. Box 114 A,nena,Ohio 46 701 or phone 814693-8915 .

KEN'S

Monday thru Friday

Business or Residential

273-3407

Hoover Sweepers

"CUT OUT

For 10% Off
Any Service

Free kittens. Ceii44B-4999 .

1 mile below 2nd Kaiser
Entranci at 102 Carney
Dt., Corner of St. Rt. 2
and Carney

Starter

We need tob•ceo pound1ga .

Will poy top price. Cell
1-614 -379 -2166.

books. Also old lettera,dia-

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992· 7201 3-7-tt

(formerly lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

'Lowest Rates
·Around
·oump Truck
Servic.e
E. MAII•-

RADIATOR
SEilVICE

-Dozers

992-2181
ONALL
Hotpoint Appliarim
General Eleetr.ic TV's

Headqu;u tN ,\

DEPOSITORY

Rt. 681 West-at Dtrwin

fiXED RATIS Of·,

Hnlf ',lllf/

PARCEL SERVICE .

PH. 992-7844

Pomeroy · ~­
Landmark

. JmRiJI'

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh.

Route 1
Shtde, OH. 45776

free IllS. flinace, 2 lice
·firepliCes, 'blnlt 111m and .
minerals. $4,500 dqwn.
' '

NOW IN

WELL'S GARAGE

742-2328

THE COUifTRY -

Mason,

(304) 773-5710 . 773-5118 '

-Septic Systems

~,.I .

IN

949-28110

Standing timer. wilt pey top
Pficn for rad • white oak .
Cell 614· 388-9908 oftor II.
or anytime weekends .

Cash for old books. No texte

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

-GIS lints

Real Eatate General

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

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY. OH.

1-3-rlc

Radio Dispatched

1

-s-r

L•ncoln

He1ghts. Pomeroy . OH
James J Proff 1tt
Shenlf
M e1gs County

,oo

I:OO

-Trenc~or

675-1333

Spin W.sl!tro: G10 .. d Eltc.
DTJtrt, Auto. Woolltrs. ~ &amp;oloc.
........ ••trlltrtton. lY 1111.

DEC. 30th

Your Business"

Free

-Wiler

In Mason County

TV &amp; APPLIANCES

2-23-tlc

-Dump Trucks

992-2156

627 3rd Avt.-Ph. 446·1699

WILL OPEN

" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949:2301 or

When You Need Glass You Need Us ... We Can Handle
Your Every Glass Need!

-lo-Boy

In Meigs County

In Gallia County

'

PH. 992-2280

-Btckhoos

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

at

sold for less than two -thtrd s of
that amount
Cash 1n hand bel orr. s•gntng
dAP.d

614
992-Middloport
Pomeroy
915-Chosier
343-Porlland
247-Lelart Falls
949-Roclne
742-Rutland
667-Coolvllle

Mason Co., w. va .
Area Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
451-Leon
·
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882-'New Haven
895-Letart
937- Butlalo

"Try not to sweat, I'm on a low- sa•d Lots 7 and B. 65 teet.
salt diet."
thence westerly at nght angles

to satd ltne 25 feet. thence
northerly and parallel to sa1d
line. 30 feet. th ence easteily at
nght angles to satd ltne between lots 7 o1nd 8. 30 feet to a
po.nt there1n. thence wtth satd
l1ne. sout herly 95 feet to the
beg 1nn1ng
RefP. r f!ncP. Deed Volume

Meigs Co. Aru Code

STRIP
COAL

$3QOO

"AUTO GLASS
OUR SPECIALTY!"

•Exper1. R ~; o01shin1
•Insurance Claims
Welcome
•Free Estimates
12/15/1 mo.

The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

ll.cl.t¥1 . . . .........

'-

,_,.,,Ollie 417lt

CAB CO.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

ON O((R AHO OTHER GAME

, :::;::;-•

On dean'slisl

.....
...

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only.

•

MEIGS

Buying doily gold, oliver
coins, ringa. jewelry, eterting
ware , old coina. lerge cur-

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

PHONE
992-2156
Or
11oft.

,,.,...
,.....
,.,....-.

SIDING

CAU TOOlY fOR CURRENT PRICES

WIMo Dolly- ClouWio4

·~

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

MINE RUN

FUed In the court also for '
foreclosure was a suit by 'The
Farmers Bank and Savings Co.,
Pomeroy, verSI!S Anthony E. Car·
dlllo, Route l, LangsvUle, for failure
ID pay a note.

lllc..rt St..

. WASHINGTON (AP )..- NavyLt.
Robert 0. Goodman Jr., proclaim·
Jng "God Bless America," returned
ID U.S. soU today after a·month In
-Syrian captivity. then headed for a
White House . reception with the
,Pemocrattc presklenttal hopeful
who negotiated his release.
"I would just ltke to say I
appreciate all the support I received," Goodman saldafterheand
Jesse Jackson stepped out of a
mllltary transport jet provided by
President Reagan.
Jackson and Goodman were to
'meet with Reagan at the White
House later today.

r~~~~~~~:;~~

.-:::;;;;;::;;;

The Daily Sentinel

Vinyl 8s Aluminum

6:30P.M.

FORTI WITH1!01/NT
A QUAliTY
. UfE-UKE
SHOULDfR
AT OUR
STUOIO.

AddN~--------------

I )Wanled

Wanted To Buy

Wonted to buy uood coot &amp;
hooters. Bwoln Furnl·
446· 31 119, 3rd. &amp;
Olivo St .. Golltpollo, Oh.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

vou

Nam•------------------

Foreclo$ure filed

9

I __;...____....,_ _,________..;..;~..;;.--~-----,----------r~-------'1 wood
I'
turo,

Baohan Building

TlwMC&amp;IIIrlndl,lde dlocount

The

Business Services

Curb -Inflation ··
Pay Cash ,for
Claulflads and

'

and IBraelt counterattacks frcm the
air, IJ)cludlng one today In Leban· .
on'sBakaa Valley.
Several Israeli polltlclana have
stressed the need for some form of
an agreement with _Syna over
Lebanon ID reduce the rllk of war
and Shamlr Indirectly acknowl·
edged tl)e central role !hat Asaad Is
now playing In the region.
"Ever since our state, was
established, there has always been
anArabrulerlntheMlddleEastwho
fancied himself another Saladin,"
Shamlr was quoted as saying In the
dally Maarlv newspaper. Saladin
was the 12th century Arab leader
who defeated the crusaders and
captured Jerusalem.
"Once It was (the late Egyptian
President Gamal) Abdel Naaser.
There was a time when Saddam
Hussein, President of Iraq,
dreamed !hat he would carry out
this mission. Now It's the turn of
Syrian President Hafeoz Assad,"
Shamlr reportedly said.

.,

Goodman heads for White House

Ohio'

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Ploooent, WVa.
Auct . Lonnie Ne•l. Youth
Center Bldg.. .Camden Str
614-387·7101 .
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, Antique &amp; liquidation aalas.
Uconaod &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;
WVe . 304· 773-11786 or
304-773-9186.
Auction avery Fri. night 1t
the Hottford Community
Center. :rruckloadl of naw
marchandiH every weak.
Conaigment1 .of new and
uaad merchandiae always
welcome. Richerd Reynolds
Auctioneer. 304-2763069.

Apply in person by Jan. 6,
1984 ot 640 6th Ave. Hunt ..
WV. Southwestern Community Action Inc. An Equal
Opportunity Employer.

HELP WANTED, excellent
opportunity, looking for
someone to take over clothing busineu. lncludea inventory, fixtures and supplies. · 304-676 · 1317 o_r
676'· 3217.

12

Situations
Wanted

Will care for the elder-ly in my
home. Lots of referencei.
Men or women . Call 6673402.
House cleaning any type
Point PleaNnt and vicinity.
Reasonable rates . Referen ces. Call 304-876 -31!08.

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER hrsurance Co. has offered
services for fire inaurance
coverage in Gallia Cou"ty
for almost a century. Farm •
home and personal property
coverages are available· to
meet individual needs. Con tact Harry Pitchford, agent.
Phone 446 -1427.

•
18 Wanted to Do
General Hauling and Tra.,'h'
removal Service. Reliatife
end dependable. Coli 4463169 between 9 end 6.
Light dozer work &amp; Ianda·
caping . Kotalic Landscjlping. Coli 446-31 00.
Cleaning houses, offices,
etc. Foe nagotieble. Clill
anytime, 614-266 -11.34. " ·
Babvsitting in my home, any
shift. Cell 446-7761 .

FlllilllCiiil
21

'Business ..
Opportunity

\i.

I NOTICE f""
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO. recommoilclo
We poy c01h lor lote model thot you do ·buoinau with
clean uaed care.
·
people you know. end NOT
Jim Mink Chev.·Oido Inc. ' to und money through tho
BUt Gone Johnoon
metl until you hove invest(·
446·3872
tho offering,

9

Wanted To Buy

�'

..

.

Page....:. 10- The Daily Sentinel
21

They'll Do It Every Time

Business
Opportunity

44

WNV PO THEY CAU. IT SO.I.I7AIRt: ? ·

Cigarette Distributorship .

ponded national firm ex panding into the area . If you
are seeking a secure busi ness opportuinty. We pro -

• HEV,

vide all retail locations and
all necessary training . Full or
Part time. Investment from
S2,000 . 00 . Winston ·
Salem ·Kools. 1· 800· 241 ·
2268.

BL.ACI'
9" '

Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooma. rant

(;RMIP..

otartlng at $167 for one
bedroom and $193 per

~DS

QN

month for two bedroom,
near foodland and Spring

Valley

r

oza. pool and TV

ant . Ca:• 4 \ G-2745 or leave
men ar

---·- - - - 2 bdr. unfurnished apt., with

garae. adulta prafirred, no

.J.~ td
_,,. 171.1!41'1•
.JifA..rroti.IO •

SAil. .t£;~,AS

SEIJORITA PI\TRICE AtoP

5f~OR NI CK. AMERI CAN

A~T C O~~ E CT ORS .. , VEFtY

41

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

pansion, all locations, train ing &amp; a BONDED staff to
assist you in setting up your
own part or full time business . From $3, 960 to
S60 .00 . Winston · Solom·
Kools. 1·800· 241 · 2288 .

~ IIU61N~SS. THAT'!;
~~I. IIS,.UNP M~ IN

Citizans. $130. Equal Houo·

Houses for Rent

446-3933 .
1980..14x70•Foirmont Bayview . ..,_ bdr., 1 bath. don.
partially furn. . super nice!

Call4411· 1016 after 5PM.

HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'11% purchose or
refinance, 11 1.4% adjustable
rata . leader Mortgage.
Athono, 1-800· 34) -8554

1977 12x80 mobile homo, 2
bdr .. furniohod , good cond ..
f7.500 . Coli 814-258·
8618.

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING Lower
prices-regular tunings -

discounta to Senior Citizens,
Churches &amp; schools. W1rd ' s
Keyboard, 304-875-3824.

tlond. $160. month. 814·
742·2378.

homea? When you view this

774-1498.

Holly Park wo think you will
agree thoro io. A 1969
12x85 Holly Park with 2
bodroomo. 5 x 10 tip-out in

Two bedroom house. TV
room, basement, fenced in

ble. Low down payment and
low monthly peyments. For

informotion coli 614-992·
7034 or 814-992-8284.
DRIVE A LlnLE SAVE A
LOTII For tho boot buy on a

tall plnoo

new or used mobile home

around the houae. Sp1cloua
tivingroom which overlooks

como and SEE USII No
roaoonabla offOf will bo

tho pond. 4 bodroomo, util·
ity room and kitchen haa a
built-in range. Assume paymenta with a small down

poymont. t58,900 . Coli
448-3175.

45
country, 304-675· 7866.

33

located in Syracuae-Near

11 0 acre farm: 40 acrea

Farms for Sale

tilloble, neot in peoturo; good
fences. 7 room remodeled
house, 2 cor motol gorago, 2
borna. 2 outbulldlngo,
10,870 lb. y01rly tobacco
booo. Call 814-258-1922.

school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one-

third acre lot. Price reduced
U3,600. or will rent for
e240 ·mo. 304-856-3934.
HO ,USE FOR SALE-6
rooml', baaament, double
garage, 1 and one third acre,
lot, Rose Hill, Pomeroy.

70 acres woven wire. fence.

1500 lb. toboccci booe. born
and approx. 20.000 ft .
timber. Call814-258 · 1_!~2 .

Excellent condition .
t32 , 900 . 1 - 614-878 ·
2513 .

35 Lots

For sale by owner. Four
bedroom home in Mason,
W.Va . Setting on extra large
lot for more information call
304-773-9147.

&amp; Acreage

Watson Rd. Owner financ-

ing availoblo. Call448-8221
after 6 weekdayo.

35 Acres, 'h: mile from
hospital. Farm land or devel-

Priced on inspection. 304895·3840.

Call 446-0758.

46 Space for Rent
12x80 2 bdr. modern fur·· - - - - - - - -- nished trailer. convenient
location, Upper River Rd.

dopooit req . Call 814-448·
8558 .

3 bedroom home, 2Yl ytflrs

adulto only. Call 446-0338.
49

Home

for

Rent;

fdulto only. fully furnished .
Call 446·4110.

home.

3

bedrooms.

Depoait re-

quired. Coli 992-2859.
Two bedroom mobile home
12x80,near Pomeroy and

Middleport area . 614-992·
5858.

814·985-4387.
Furniahed 3 bedroom mobile
home with waaher and

304-773 -5751
9520 .

or 773 ·

Nice Homesitea. 1 acre or 2 bedroom mobile home
mora. t5000. an aero. At 5 $175. per month. Deposit.
Located Jorrico Rd. 304points. 614·992-2571 .
·875-730B.

Rental s

Ferry, throe bod·

41

roDm , brick. four car garage.
plus wood building. Phone

Houses for Rent

FOR R~NT WITH OPTION
TO BUY II NICE 14' WIDE,
ALL ELECTRIC, MOBILE
HOME, SEniNG ON NICE
LOT, READY TO MOVE
INTO. e175.00 MONTH .
304-576-2711 .

~~~4-875-8851.

Two atory hous8, 4 bdr .•

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HPMES. USED· CARS,
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
448,7572.

8250 per mo. 8250 dep.
req. Call 448-4222. 9:30·
6:00.

44

Duplex, $250 pluo utilitleo.
Avail. now. 2 bdr .• LR. new
romod. kit .. &amp; both. Lorge

Smoll furn. houoe 1 or 2
adulto only, no peto. Call
446·0338.

fenced yard. new carpet,

658 3rd. Avo .. Gollipolio.
Coli 448-2457 or 446·
0332.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Galli polio. Now
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stovea.
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
t399, bunk bado complete
with bunkies $199. 2 piece
antron livingroom

sultea

18 80 2 8

$199, ontron reclinaro $99,

Antique•. oak furniture re-

other recliners eso. maple
Nice unfumiahed 3 bedroom dinette ooto $179. box
mobile home. Urge yard .
aprings &amp; mattresa twin or
Convienent location. $166.
full $100 oet regular-firm
plua depoait and references. -

payment.

only . NO REALTORS .
Phone 304-875-3445 .

51 Household Goods

Syracu..,. e260 per month
plua utilities.

sot-up. 814·949-2486 .

2

Merchandise

All

electric-central air. Good
location, acro11 from pool in

addition. all bricK, a11ume
8 .6 loan. moderate down
baths, dinning room, built In
kitchen, garage with auto
ogener. Central air-cond.,
large lot, priced mid fifties .
Shown by appointment

304·676-2982 after 6pm.

Furniahed . nice mobile

completely furnished,
city ochool. Coli 448-3933. Wither and dryer. air-cond .•
carpeted. Meaon, W. Va .,
1 acre, Sutton TWP. trailer,

For leaae, Chevron Station,
Mason area. Good location.

lot. Call446· 0157.

mt from hoap., rural water,

BY OWNER. Meadowbrook

For Lease

2 bdr. traHer 2 mi., from
hoapitalat Evergreen private

'h acre lot on Mitchell Rd . 1 Two bedroom mobile home,

or priced lo 50's. 304·6758713 mornings.

Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call

Nicly fumiahed modern mo·
bile home, · in city. 1 or 2

opment. level . $37.600. dryer. No pats. 814-9492263.
Call 446-0803.

old. assumable 8% pet. loan

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park. Route 33. North of
992-7479 .

1 Ox50 mobile home. 2
bodroomo. No peto. · 614·
949·2424,

35 acres at Rodney on W. T.

4 bedroom house with one
pluo aero at Mt. Alto, W.Va.

42 Mobile Ho{TieS
·for Rent

Mobile

Rt. 160. Call 448·2857 or
448-4202.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houae keeping
rooma. Park Central Hotel.

ALL STATE MODULAR
HOMES. holf woy between

ground. near Porter on Old

One bedroom partially fur·
nlohod. all utilltioo paid.
304-675· 7112 .

ThrH bedroom, 1 Y, baths. in

2 bdr. mobile homo partially
fumiohod . Coli 448·4292.

oant on St. Route 2. 304·
576-2711 '

.Phone 304-875-61179 .

back yard . Coli 304-875·
4255 .

refused, low down payment.
bank financing available.
Huntington and Point Plea-

6 room house, bath, 3 acre•

than

percent of adjuated income-

e12,900. Financing availa·

Ranch on 6 acres, beautiful

leas

front porch, natural gaa. In
Chester. References. Phone

area. Jult like brend new.
You mult sea to appreciated . All of this for

Coli 4:'6·0278.

of

AnENTION·II thoro ouch o
thing •• 1 clooolcl In mobile

or well kept homo In tho

schools. 2 milet from town.

elderly &amp; dloablod with on
t12,300. Renting for 30

occupy. Thera isn't a cleaner

4 bdr. ronch home, Iorge LR,
full baoemant, with gorago.
wood burner included, city

Apartments now available to
income

pletely oklrted, ond ready to

Homes for Sale

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .

2 bedroom houae. enclosed

living room . Completely aet
u'p in nice park. Includes 40
foot patio fUrnishings. even
a waaher and dryer, com-

Real Estate

2 bedroom houM, garage,
unfurnished. Salem St. Ru-

Apartment
for Rent

Furniohod apto. 1-4 r"'. &amp;
bath up. Clean, no pato,
adulto only. Ref. roq. Call
448· 1519. ·.

N
HEWMEASN.
KDESUSSEEL~SMQOUBAILLE· 3 bd r. house, 1'Lb
iP
, at h, Rt. 7 ,
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES. Cheshire. t200 mo. Coli 3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.
4 ·MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS, ,_61_4_·_44_6_·_9_7B_8_BA_M_·4_P_M_. · u1llltleo peld, edulto only, no
RT 35. PHONE 446·7274. ,8 br, 3 fulll bothi, mu11 hove poto. Call 448·3437.
ex. referencoo. Call 614·
1975 121i60 IOI@I electric, 294-88~7. In Golllpollo 1 room eao week for 1
peroon. no week for 2
1 v, batho, Spanloh otyle, 2 area.
per10n1. 1 room wijh waterbedroom n.ooo. Coli 614· 1 - - - - - ; __ _ __
George'• Crook Rd.~ bdr .. 2 bod e3o • night. Call 446·
388·9B37 or 4411·4204.
bath1, very modern. 1.300 2501 .
•
AnENTION·Doyouneedto oq.ft.llvingopeco. Coli Hugh
move Into 1 nice mobile. Groham 1t Golllpollo Bov· 1 bdr. apt. Coli 446-0390.
home whhout the houle of rnga, 448-3832.
aot·~P· Wo hove 1 1979
2 BR Apt .. •129 mo.
Freedom . 14x70 deluxe Ownlf Muat Selll Flroplocel Utilltl~o pertlolly fumlohe'd.·
model on elot In \he Country lncludeo some furnltunel In· . .. ..... 3 bdr. houoe for sale
Mobile Home · Park. This cnodlble Low Prlcel Middle· on lond controct. 8711-11104
home has a front dining port. Call 1114·992·11941 .
or 875·5386, Carol Yeager
room whh wooden bow
Rooltor.
;
-wt~dow. a clrculor kitchen 4 rooms &amp; both, fumanco·
with- Iota of ceblnotl. 2 heat, ot 5110'11 3rd. Ave.. Attic Apartmeot, fumlahed,
bodroomo, Iorge Iuxury both .Golllpolla. Adulto only, no e1711 u1illtlea pd. Men only.
wtth gordon tub. Ptlco of poto Call 448 1183
Shane both. 919 -2nd Ave.. ·
e;l2,1100. Include• motol
Gelllpollo. 448-441 II alter 7
building , petlo cover. 11opa, Nlco 2 bedroom houM near ,p.m.
waohet and dryer. Every· Eaotern School dlotrlct. 1:....-----..L.--thlng In tip-top qondltlon. .•1110 month pluo utHitlea. Furnlohed Apt .. 1 BR, $2311,
RaodytoUveln.Forlnforma· Depoah 11110. No pots. No utllltleo pd. Jlclulta. ; 243
tlo" qall 814·~92·70~4 or Sunday call•. 814-949, Jackoon · Pike, ·Oelllpolll. ·
814·982-8284.
2801.
'448·4418 lifter 7, p.m.
·

production, mloc. hemo. Use
our Chril1mooloyowoy plan·.
Conkolo, Tupporo Plolno.

$120. maple .dlnatto choiro 'carpet Spoclol 25 rollo of
t35, waoh otondo t34. heavy commOflcol for U.95
maple rockers $69. 7 piece oq.yd. 992·8208.

chrome dinette sat $149, 6
piece dinette ·aat 899, uaed
room' suites. refrigeras, rangea. chest. dre11era,
nger Withers, TV's: dry-

Carpet Special 25 rollo of
heavy commlficol for U .96
oq.yd. 992-8206. 614·992·
6173.

~

&amp; · ohoes. Call 448·
·Kenmore auto. wether and
3159 .
dryer . e300 . Kenmore
TV &amp; Appllonceo. 827 Third woohar and dry,ar. e126. 30
Avo .. Gallipolis. 446-1699. ln . coppertone electric
Spin washers, gaa &amp; electric renge. $100. 30 ln. gal
dryera, auto waahera, gas &amp; coppertone range. 8100.
electric rangao, rofrigaro· 814· 742,2352.
toro. TV oets.
1- - - - - - - - - ·ICOro,

'·

·,

Red mow Deutchund. Coli
814·3117·05B1 .

.

Booutlful pupo, port Cock·A·
Poo and port Poodle,
eso.oo. 304-875·5381.
57.

Musical
ln•trumenta

72

Trucks for Sale

1983 Chev. S10 ext. cob
pickup, Tohoe equip. pkg ..
V-11, olr, powlf 11Hrlng,
AM·FM coos. tape, oHdlng
roor window. 2 tone point, 4
WD. 4 opel.; 17,000 mi ..
exc. cond. Coli 448-93114.
19119 Chevy 1 ton truck;
PIS, bool1or broko. 12 ft.
otHI bod, 350 outomotlc.
e1500. Coli 814 · 388·
9303.
1983 Chorcoal groy Ford
otepalde 'h ton PU. v8, 6 ft .
bod. au1o .. radio, oun roof,
Vinyl covered bod,oporotlre,
oharp, priced to _,11. John'o
Auto Boles, BuleviHe Rd ..
Gelllp\llo, Ohio. Coli 4411·
4782.
.
.

For oalo·Splnot-Conoolo Pi·
ono Borgoln. Wonted·
pliancas, Upper River Rd .
$250. Phone 614· Reoponolble port to toke
betide Stone Crest Motel. 11olo.
OVOf low monthly peymento 1978 Ford 150 Super Cob
992-5070 . .
446-7398.
on Spinet Pion.,. Con bo 4x4, loedod, auto .. e4,000
. 1 Cred.lt firm. Call 448-1759 oftor12
hor .nd ·dryor $250 · -- n .locolly. Writ
G. E. matched washer / dryer W••
Monoglf:P.O.Box6378hel· noon.
· 814 992 3941·
· _ _ byvllle, ln. 4817•.
Pair. Whirlpool heavy duty _P_a_o_r._ _•__·___
washer. Other waehers anti 1
o _;__ _ _ _ _ _ __
' 1979 Chevy C-30 crow cob
dryero e75 each. Call 814 • 1976 Pontloc Venture- o·
dually, loaded, low mlleo.
258-1207.
$300. Kimball plono-e4110.
e4.700flrm. Coll4411-1759
~ IIIII Slliilllll'
King Woodburner-UOO.
llftOf
12 no,on.
Town and Country LP gao 814-986-3529.
•.. IIVI",IIII,k
hooter with blower and Una. 1 - - - - - - - - - 1882 Ford F-1110, PS. PB.
Max input 75,000 btu, Min Uoed waohar, dryer, otovea,
twin gas tonka, olumtnum
lnpu145,000 btu, $160.00. rofrlgerotor, 30 doy war· 1----..:.__ _ _ __
whHI'o, uc. cond .. 17.ooo
304-B95·3078.
ronty. One Boldwln orgon, 81 Farm Equipment
miles. Call 814-2411·92211.
double koyboord. J&amp;B Pown
To~la, four chairs, buffet, Shop. 314 Moln Sf. Pt. GooH neck horoo traiiOf 1981 4~'- Toyota truck.
phone 304·875·6292.
Pleasent.
"
211'·4 holler w·oleeplng 111.000 mlleo. Cell 814·
892·2881. •
.
qt
e2 700 C H 448
r
17119
'---~--------------;..,.j
ro.. lifter• 12 .noon.
a
.
1978 Ford Courier au1o·
matlc whh topper, 411,000
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
'
with Malor Haople
mlleo. Exc.Cond. U,OOO.
•83
Liveatock
304: 8711·87.40.
For aale-1 autumn haze mink

For oale·1 0 laying ~no. Also
hey. Orchrird grau alfalfa
and clover. 11 4· 742-21211.

fo;

Plgo
oale-Cali 814·378·
U811 or 814-378·1221.
UO. ·
•
·
Plgo $211. Ten MRe Rood e 2
mi. off Rt. 12, flrot hou• •
P.l~ ~auger Chu!')h. Ric••·
Boar
'
1.873 DodIll VIII, 1
5· .p ill•·

=, 8 :11 .:g:~:
84

.

'

Hey • G111ln

Gro.~ncl

•

.

'

ee.lo

ear oorn
per
1oo. Iring own l101!181n•.
J0+-871·330•. fllo •und!IY
11111:
.·

,

'

Molo 12 wk. old Siomese
kitten; U5. Call 448-4230.

GOODUSED APPLIANCES $20. pickup lood. You haul.
Waohoro, dryaro. refrigera· 1-6-14_·_7_4_2_·3_0_4_5_._ _ __
toro, rangoo. Skaggo Ap·

1--·.:.·- - -·--·_ _:_

________

2 AKC Ragl1terod mole
Cocklf oponlelo· blonde 5
yro. old, rod 3 yra., good
blood line, good tempero·
mont. Excollent for breed·
lng. Coli 4411-9372 ofter
5:30PM.

73 ·.

Vena • 4 ~.D.

18811 GMC 30 pa-nger
bu• 481; 4 epd, oood oond ..
n II~. Call 448-~138.

BORN LOSER

RON ' S Telovl,lon Service .
Speclolizlng In Zonlth •nd
!
!

Quezar . and

houoe collo. Coli 578·2398
or 448-2464.

.,
I

F a. K TrH Trimming, otump
romovol. Coll875·1331 .

ter, electrician, mason. Call

304· 1178· 2088 or 1175·
45110.
Weter lNollo. Commerclol
ond Domootlc. Teot holoo.
Pumpo &amp;oleo ond Service.
304·195·3802 .

WE'L.L HAVE 10
ON
THE I'Witor:
DISCU56 IT

SE~IIALES6 GUnERS, One

Guoronteod. Advonced Gut·
tor. (Dey 1114·592·4088.)
(night 8,4·898-82011.1
•
GET your corpot SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER .' Wotar removol.
furniture cleaning. fr"' ootl·
mateo. 304-875· 2295 .

engines. lndultriat or auto,

hydroulic ond olectriol oor·
vice. Locotod ot Mooon Co.
lnduotrlel Pork, Point Pleo·
oant. 304· 875· 7422.

LIKE A CHARM, ALLEY!
RIGHT NOW THEY'RE PICK·
lNG MISIE&amp; SOMEWHERE
BACK IN 141H CENTURY
'TRANSYLVANIA. I

Building romoldlfte. Ill Cll·
pentry, roofinv, plumbln1
111d concrote work. 304·
1175· 2440.
Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dowltt'o
Plumbing . Coli 614-3870578.

Th' Rev 'und qot
a power
what LjOU

..

WORK By Ted
ponds,

Slim!

ditches.

booemento. etc. Coli 448·
4907 . Carter &amp; EvaM
Transportation .
Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane.

loodoro, dump truck . Call
814-448·1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM .
Good-1

E~covatlng,

booo·

ments. footers, drlvewaya,

ooptlc tonko, londocaplng.
Call anyti!YIO 446 -4537.
James
owner.

L.

Davison ,

Lines,

Footers, ~·

Drolna. All klndo of Ditching. ~
Rutland, Oh . 81 ~ - 742 · ":
21103.
B4

Electrical

Puquale Electric Co. all
phaooo of electric work, all
work guaronteed . Aerial
truck rental. 814 · 4~84088 .
•

I

SEWING Machine ropoiro.
oorvlce. Authorized Singer
Boleo &amp; Service Sharpen
.Sciuoro . Fabric Shop.
Pomoroy. 992·2284.

PAW KNOCKED OFF
BOWLS OF

THREE

e
e

.,•
•

Water hauling. Foot Service.
low roteo. Con 814-268·
1743.
. • '

w

"io
PEANUTS

MI~T
WAY TO

. I TIIOU6HT IT

BE A GOOD
MEET

CHICKS!

Uph.o latery

TRI StATE
", '
UPHOl8TEIIY SHOP
~
1 183 leo. A•.. Galilpolla. '
441·7833 or 44~1133 ~ ..-,:

•

•
I•

f'

/

••

..

G

~--------~~~~ l"o

,. 87 .

....

~

We'll do ·lt. Coli 448:316&amp; ~
between .~ and 5.
,

'1i78 Bluer 118,000 mi ..
good 'hape, aaiJing $3,1811. --------~------~-- · ·
JIMS .WAtER 'SERVICE .
.Cell 814·2411·9491.
_ ___,__·.,...---~ Coli ,;.l.l m Lenior, 304··11711· '
' '
1977 d~ge v~n. FuU carp· 7~9'7.
ted • ouotOmed. 371.two · Dump truck for hlro. Will ••
barrell,auto,lun·roof,vilry houl coal or llm11tono. 304· :
t~~arp. !=•11114:812·,3117. • 676· 3180. '.
...
· 1971 Vol~ 'camper·
Vflll •11o0d ootril. Call lifter
4:30pm. u;7oo.oo. 304·
.171:1180.

a.

Need oomothlng hauled
lw.ey or something moved?

m

e

MV SQUASH AN'
ONION DELIGHT

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SEA ·
VICE. Call 8,1 4-367-7471
or.814·387·059t.

r

......,.,.....,,.......,,.......,~

&amp; Refrigeration

B5

ouo·

BRIDGE

rom o

Jr .

J .A .R. Conotructlon Co .
Water

Now arrange tho cirded lettera 10
(I) • &lt;lZ ABC News
lorm lhe surprise sns-. ..
Ill (I) CD CBS News
gestod by lhe above cartoon.
(I) Bualnell Report
(fil To Be Announced
7:00 • CIJ PM Magazine
Print answer here:
(IJ Alla1 Smith and Joneo
I])
NCAA • B11ketbell:
(""-1 IOmOmJW)
VIrginia at Virginia Tech
Jumbles IRONY ENACT INJURE SHREWD
Yesterday's
(I) Carol Burnett
Answer That not·SO·brlght fat guy went to the paint
(I) Entartelnment Tonight
storelo gellhls- "THINNER"
.
Cl) Cherile'o Angell
Ill Cll Wheel of Fortune
(I) (fil MecNeii/Lehror
r1
Newahour
CD Newo
• &lt;IZ People's Court
Ill Jefferoono
7:30 B CIJ Tic Tee Dough
II) HCI@"'I Herooo
(I) Ill (I) Family Feud
CD Wheel of Fortune
Ill &lt;IZ Entertelnm-nt
~ --~~~------~~------~--­
Tonight
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
Ill One Day ot e Time
8:00 B CIJ Cl) Real People Tanight's program feltures a
throe-time Olympic gold
medalist, a look at the 'for·
tune bagel' craze and a
attention to the bidding,
three-wheel go-cart race .
except to get South to the
(60 min.)
,.optract be wanted to
(IJ MOVIE: 'Yeo. Giorgio'
NORTH
t.u4
discuss.
CIJ MOVIE: 'Boat Frienda'
+74
West leails the king of
(IJ I Spy
.. AQ
spades and South sees imme- ·
II) MOVIE: 'Buck end tho
• Q8 4 2
diately that if diamondl
P,..cher'
+KJ972
break any way but 4-0, be
(I) GIIHI Fell Guy
can draw trumps, knock out
WEST
EAST
Ill (I) Domol11c Ufe
the ace of clubs and claim
+KQJ63%
UH
(PREMIERE)
Harold
his contract.
..
10
7
~ 43
..
K
9
6
2
dumbfounds his family
U West has all four
tJ !OH
when he brings home a
trumps,
South can do noth·
+a
3
+A~
girlfriend to 'meet his par~ _,..
ing
about
it, so South starts
SOUTH
ants.'
""'"
his diamond play by leading
(I) (fil Ufe and Adventure•
+A 10
toward dummy's queen alter
.. J8
• of Nicholas Nlckleby Third
winning the first trick with
of 4 parts. Nicholas finds
tAK963
the ace of spades.
employment with the twin
• Q 10 6 4
West shows out and South
brothers Chearybla and
Vulnerable: East-West
leads a second diamond
falls in love with Madeline
Dealer: South
from dummy. East plays the
Bray. (2 hrs.) [Closed Cap10. South takes his ling and
tioned]
Wtsl
Nortb Eut
Soot
must get back to dummy to
CD NCAA Baaketboll: Iowa
lead another diamond. He
at Mlchlgen St.
3+
3+
2+
decides against a heart lead
• TVS Collage Basketboll
Pass ~•
Pass
Pass
since if be leads that, be
Preview
Pass
must take a finesse be
8:30 Ill (I) Empire (PREMIERE)
doesn't need.
9:00 • CIJ (I) Fecto of Life
Opening lead: • K
He leads the 10 of clubs.
(IJ 7QO Club
I])
NCAA
Baaketboll:
Maybe West would duck
with A·x·x. South covers his
Maryland at North Corolina
10 with dummy's jack. East
Stata
By Oswald Jacoby
(I) IIIli}) Dynuty
takes his ace and leads a
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'The
and James Jacoby
spade to his partner. West
Gauntlet'
leads a heart, but now South
•
NCAA
Beakotboll:
Some 40 years ago, the can rise with the ace.
North Carolina State at
late Arthur Cowperthwaite
He does so, picks up East's
Maryland
wrote a series of bands COY· J-x of trumps and discards
9:30 B CIJ (I) Night Court
ering basic principles of his second beart on the long
(PREMIERE) An eccentric
play for Bridge World maga· club.
judge presides.over a Man(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
zine. He never gave mucb
hattan night court with an
assortment of lawyers. prosecutors and oddballs
~in_i__ for his favor.
10:00 Ill C2.J (I) St. Elsewhere A
bag lady and her boyfriend
charm Or. Morrison and a
parole violator learns that
he has been shot. (R) (60
by THOMAS JOSEPH
min .)
ACROSS
5 TV test (IJ MOVIE: 'Things Are
1 GI's photo
6 "Volpone"
Tough All Over'
(IJ MOVIE: 'The Long
6 Rhode
servant
Riders'
.
Island's
7 Alas!
(I) Gill}) Arthur Halley's
· "Hope"
(Irish)
Hotal
11
Sports
8
Any
day now
(I)
Provin
end
the
setting
9 Tissue
Plttaburgh 'The British Fes·
tivaJ.' · Tonight's program
1% Color
10 Suburb
presents highlights of
13 Boat hoist
of Paris
Pittsburgh's 'British Festi·
14 Bombard
16 Ordnance
val.' (R) (60 min.)
.15 Medieval
(abbr.)
CD To Bo Announced
sword
18 Algerian
(fil News
' 28 Eisenhower
37 Lariat
17 No vote
port
10:1511) TBS Evening News
was one
39 Biliy18 Hockey great 19 Make tidy
10:30 (IJ Blondie
(fil All That Glitters
Wiliiama ·'
30 King (Lat.)
%8 Eradicate
21 Irish fairies
11:oo • CIJ
(I)®
32 Gary Cooper
41 Knight's
22 Hinder
%3 Ancient
II}) News
film role
tiUe
24 Sword handle
Syria
(IJ Another Life
34
Remainder
4%
British
..
27
Bedeck
%5
Flintstone
I]) SportsCenter
35 Potpourri
island
(I) Dr. Who
28 Boxer
26 Neophyte
fll) Benny Hill Show
Cooney
11:151]) NCAA Boaketboll: Iowa
29 "A Doll's
at Michigan State
House"
11 :30 • (I) (I) Tonight Show
heroine
(I) MOVIE: 'Eating Reoul'
30 Coat style
(IJ DOble Gillla
31 German city
Ill Catllns
(I) Soap
33 Japanese
Ill (I) Pollee Story While
vegetable
trying to prove e psycho·
34 Spoilage
path is guilty of murder,
36 Putforth
Keitlinger and Giacino try
38
Baffle
to clear up their marital
40 Awaken
~oblems. (R) (60 min .)
CIJ Lotenight America
43 Fathered
CD All In tho Femlly
44 " - iD Paris"
GIIHI Nlghtline
45.Melodies
Twilight Zone
46 Cautious
11:45 (I) MOVIE: 'Foot Compeny'
DOWN
12:00 (IJ Burn• Allen
II) I\IIO'{IE: 'BU!Id_!Qid'
1 Apartment
(I) Nlghtllne
(sl.)
CD MOVIE: 'Play Dirty'
2 Author Levin
Thick• of the Night
3 Gone forever tnrl--t-t-+-12:30
(I) (I) Lata Night with
4 Etats. David Letterman
(USAI
(IJ Jock Bonny Show
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'Cur11 of
Klng_Tut'a Tomb'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:· . ·
GI(IJ) New•
AXYDLBAAXR
1:00 (])MOVIE: 'The Challenge'
LONGFELLOW
(IJ 1 Married Jo,~n , .
(I) Entartelnmen\Jonlght
One ·letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is .
Gl &lt;IZ CNIII Headline Newa
used for the three L 's, X for I he two O's, etc. Single letters, ·· .
1:15 I]) ESPN'a SideLine•
apostrophes, the length and formalion of the words are all ·
1:30 CIJ MOVIE: 'The Next Man'
·
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.2:00 Cll Boohelor Father
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2:1 II I]) SporUCenter
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2:30 I]) Lit.-of Riley ·
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State
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WHILU ·
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Yesterday's
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(IJ 700 Club
BODIES GET SHORTER AND OUR STORIES GET~ .::
3:15 (]) MOVIE: 'C.rl1la at
LONGER.-R.QUI~N
Central High'

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R. G. Moyeo•nd Son, Diooll
Service on• mojor o-.
heulo. Exp-nced In ol
typeo, diesel ond gooolino

Hanna.

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piece custom fit your home.

Excavating

TENNIV

Guarding against 4-0

RINGLE 'S. SERVICE expo·
rlenced roofing. Including
hot tar oppllcotlon. corpen·

1- - - - - - - - - -

Mixed aeasoned firewood.

1----------

weahers. dryera. rengea.

compoctoro. dlohwoohoro,
mlcrowava1 . Heating It
Cooling, ShHt Motol Work .
Golllo Rofrlgerotlon Co .
814-4411·4088 .

B2

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,1\pplionce Service oil mokoo
6 modolo refrlgertoro.

Motorola,

--HYNIS-

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II .IIISIIIII I.illll ll
Autoa for Sele
N- wood · burning otove 71
with flrobrlck t3211. eoch. 1 - - - - - - - -- 304· 875· 11178 or 1175·
TOP CASH peld for loll
7898.
model uMd coro. Smith
FrHzor12 cu. ft . cheot type, Bulck·Pontlec, 1911. Eut·
liken-; electric ty-riter. orn Ave.. Golllpolla, 448·
2282.
Coli oftor II p .. m. 304-8711· ' - - - - - - - - 3481 .
,1887 Chyollf convortlble
38" Annie doll with com· new pelnt, runo perfect. Cell
. - - -Old Colt rifle-1887. 22 plote wordrobo e100. Cab· ,_•1_4_·_2_4_11·_9_2_7_8_
caliber pump. e15Q. No boge doolgn pepera t22 . • r·
Sundoy collo . 814·949· e40. Quellty croftomonohlp. 1883 Honda proludo. 1981
304·8711·111311.
Hondo prelude, both coro
2801 . $150.
loaded. WJU consider tnede.
Old colno-lndlon hood pen· Bunney cogeo. 304-e 711 • _c_e_l_l8_1_4_·_3_87_·_7_4_8_5._~..,
1
nleo. Wheot ond otc. No 11182 .
711 Mercury lobcot wagon
Sundoy collo . 814- 949 ·
2801.
.
1 'h yeor old more colt. '72 loodod e7110. 81 Hondo
Chevy Novo. Two clolrnoto. 200. 3 wheeler e8211. Cell
388·8808 eftor II. or ony·
304·4118·1575.
time weekendo.
54 Misc. Merchendiae
r.
Firewood for oalo, cut ond 1----z-.--;-bl-ock--.-.l~lv-eopllt, delivered U5.00 per
lood. 304·895-3335 .
T·top, tw, 4 opel .. oc, pw. pi,
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
rd, em/ fm ceoa .. heedlf ond
Delivered. 12"· 22" otockod
olr ohocka. N- tlreo. Cell
iD , y~rd . HEAP vonder.
814·387-0407.
5~
Building
Suppllea
prompt delivery. 1114-2511·
6245.
1980 Reneult LoCer 2 dr. 4
opd .. full ounroof, AC. AM·
Building metariolo
Umestone, · Sand. Gravel.
FM, opere tiro, $2,495.
Delivered In Mooon, Meigs, block, brick, 11wer plpeo. ~ohn'o Au1o 6aleo Bullville
Gollla or pick up ot Rlchordo wlndowo, llntelo, etc. Rd. Coll448-4782. Golllpo·
Cloudo WlntOfl, Rio Orondo. lla. Oh.
&amp; Son . Coli 448-7785.
0 . Coli 1114-2411-11121 .
'
ADD -ON Woodburnlng fur·
1981 2 dr. block Chevy
nace, auto. controla, water Why wolt7 Build your own Chevett•. 4 opel .. AC. lug·
heater included. Never uted. 24ftx32ft. goroge or work· gage reck . wire rims.
ohop, e1,1195. Coli 1·11 14· e3.195. John'o Au1o Seleo
$590. Ph. 814·258·12111.
8811-7311 .
Bulovllle Rd . Coli 4411·
Umeotono 'dollvorod. e1 0 1
4782. Gelllpollo, Oh.
LUMBER - Rough cut, oek,
ton. Coll614-258· 1427.
poplor, 2x4, 2xll, 2x8, 1x4, 1977 Corvetto T·top, covor.
Firewood dollvorod. t35 1x8, 1x8,1ength ovalleblo, 8 lqodec\. es.8oo. Coli e 14·
pickup loiOjl. 10 loedo t300. foot through 14 foot. Hogg 387-0232 .
&amp; Zuopon, 304· 773-115114
Call 614-258-1427.
doy11mo.
1978 Buick Jlegol 350
Firewood cut up olobo e15 · ---------~ cruloa, olr, PS. l&gt;B. tilt . Coli
pickup lood. Coli 814-245·
448-4084.
56
Peta for Sale
5804.
1882 &amp;porto cor. Dotoun
Muot Sell N- '83 model
200 sx. 1114-982-8137.
tawing machine was $110, HILLCREST KENNELS
20 loft for e79. Heovy duty Bordlng oil breedo. Selling 1972 Buick Electra 225.
26 year guarantH.
Hoppy Jock Dog Food. Now tlroo ond trono. Bettery
Dobormon puppleo: Stud good ohope. e4110. 1972
1 1h HP air compre11or on 80 Servlco. Coli 448· 7795.
Dido Cutleoo. Good ahepe.
gallon tonk e350. Coll4411·
e5110. Con bo,..., ot 803'12
0499 after 5, 448-7818.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Coli Brownell In Mllldloport.
81 ~ - 387· 7220.
Nice, clean living room sofa,
1971 VW Super Beetle. Exc .
2 chairs. pecan tablet and l!rlorpetch Kennelo Prof,oo· condltlbn, e1.1150.00. 1114·
lamp. Coli 446·91127.
oional All·brHd grooming. 448-80114 or 4411·1387.
Indoor-outdoor boordlng fa·
25" conoola color TV, like cllltleo. Englloh Cock" Spo· 19113 Ford Golule, body
new, $450. Coll446·4164. nlel pupploo. Coli 1114·388· good ohope, no motor UOO.
9790.
Collanytlmo 304-875-11208
South Bond motol' bench
or 4118·1727. •
lot~o 9' owing 115 volt one · Dregonwynd Cattory third HP motor or 3 pheM. Kennelo. AKC Chow pup· 1978 Comero oHver with rod
e1.200 firm . Coli 814·245· pleo, CFA Hlmoloyon, Por· interior, eutomatic, •·c, pa.
5671 .
sian end SiemeM kittens. pb, om 8 trock 11200.
Coli 4411-3844 ofter e.
304·1176-4181 .
.

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rJ r

992 ·7721 .
New one bedroom apart menu in Middleport. Furnished and unfurnished .

Wowl That look
some doing I

(])~Center

THHI MOUNTAIN!I.

ing Opportunitiea. 614 -

Fully carpeted, air cond .•
diahwasher. woodburner ,
drapes, stero, refrig .. &amp;
ltove, other extras. Close to
town on ranted lot . Call

22 Money to Loan

NICE PEOPLE. NOBOO Y
TO 810 S. USPI CIOU5 OF,
BELI EV E MS .

AH, Yl-, IA~Y. 1'16
THROIJ6H WITH THii

614-992-5304 .

Cigarette or VIDEO _Distributorships. Routes available.
We provide money for ex-

G~llipolio

Home
Improvements

Riverside Apts . Middleport.
Special rates for Senior

-&lt;"
d
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3 bedroom.

B1

614-992-7787 .

change, Suite
600,The
Atlanta ,
Stripping,
1775
GA 30339 .

oettlng with

(IJ MOVIE: 'I Ought To Be
In Ploturea'
CIJ New Treaouro Hunt
I]) Flahln' Holo (Premiere)
(I) Uttle Houoa on the
Prairie
(I) Bpecea
@Bpecoo
• Buck Rogoro
8:30 • CIJ Cl) NBC News
(IJ
MOVIE:
Whiskey
Galoner
(IJ Rifleman

1 bed room Apt. $196. mo.

$32,500.00 'Bonded' Call
Toll Frea : (8001 241 -2289
or write for more info: U.S.

31

CIJ (I) &lt;Il Ill (I) CD Ill
&lt;IZ New•

8:00 •

pall. Call 446· 3713 .
including utilitiea . Equal
housing opportunity . Con tact Village Manor Aptl .

Unacrtmblo lheH lour Jumbles.
one 1ett11 10 oach oquaro, 10 lorm
lout ordinary llfOfda.

1/4/84

S1:rv1t:1:s

11 · ·

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EVENING

Cor parts for oalo. 302
2·berrell Ford motor. Runo.
e1 00 firm . 448·8803 doya.
After II p .m. 304-875·
.7412 .

with $200 deposit locotod

Stripping Furniture &amp; Metal.
Instant cash flow! First time
in this area . Our expert ataff
has many years of experience and has set up restoration centers throughout
the U.S. and Europe. We
furnished equipment. chemicals, supplies, and an exten sive training course at one of
our successful centera nearest you . Total cost :

23

lilly LH'o Tiro• and Bettory
Sol••· ~ow .and uoad tlroa.
olao. tiro ropelro. 1 803 Jef·
feroon Ave. Point Ploooont. : :
304··75-114011.

Page

. fllJI)~!l)'i} ~THATICIIAMBL!DWOAOQAIII ..
~
~~e
by Henri Arnold ond Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

Apartment
• for Rent

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS (Equal

Instant cash flow! We are a

Sentinel

Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·

t
'

·•

.

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Page--12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I Council reviews

I

---Local briefs:-Amusement machine licenses due

Linda Rous~ Johnson

Mayor Fred Hoffman reminded Middleport businesses today
that amusement machine licenses tor l!WW are now due. These may
be obtained at the mayor's office Monday through Friday from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m .

Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman stated today that receipts Into
the mayor's office In 1983 totaled $69,810.34. All mayor's oftlce receipts are deposited In the General Fund and used tor the general operation of the village.
Receipts were listed as follows : mayor's court bond tot1eltures,
$49,786; tines, $16,220.70; court costs. $1,900; accident reports, $42;
merchant pollee collections, $730; parkttTg permits, $568; zoning
permits, $90; trash hauling permits, $150; poster permits, $40;
building permits and various other permits, $258.64; and
miscellaneous receipts, $25.

Squads answer five calls
Five calls were answered by local units Tuesday and Wednesday
morning, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At6: 52 a .m. Wednesday, the Racine Squad went toBashantorDora
Hysell, taken to Veterans Memortal Hospital. Tuesday calls Included
10:59 a.m., Pomeroy to Meigs High School tor Brian Hayes, to
Veterans Memorial; 3:38p.m., Pomeroy to41440 Kingsbury Road for
Zelda Davis, to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 3:28p.m. to
North Second Ave., for John Vroman, treated, no transportation;
Racine, 8:19a.m., fo~ Ura Morris to Veterans Memorial.

·,

Cheese distribution Friday
Distribution ot government surplus cheese for unemployed and
disadvantaged people will be conducted Friday, Gauta-Meigs
Community Action Agency reported today.
The distribution Is slated to begin at locations In CAA's coverage
area around 10 a.m., said Sidney Edwards, executive director.
To receive cheese, potential recipients must show the following
documentation to establish their poverty-level status: food stamp
card, AFDC card or award letter, supplemental social securtty
Income award letter, general welfare card, unemployment book or
application letter, Golden Age card or W-2 form .
No cheese wlll be distributed unless that documentation Is
produced, Edwards said.
Cheese will be distributed In Gallla County at the Senior Citizens
Center (for senior citizens only); the junior fairgrounds, Mount
Cannel Baptist Church In Bidwell and the Guiding Hand School In
Cheshire.
.
In Meigs County, cheese wlll be distributed at the Senior Citizens
Center (for seniors citizens only). the fairgrounds, the tire station at
Tuppers Plains and the American Legion hall at Racine.

Albert V. Cadle, 86, Shrewsbul)',
W. Va., died Tuesday at hls
residence following a lengthy
lllness.
Mr. Cadle was a retired Penetac·
ostal minister and a veteran of
World War I.
He Is survived by hls wlte, Sallie
Cadle; one daughter, Mrs. Thelma
Banks, Pomeroy; three brothers,
Richard Cadle, Sylvester, W. Va.;
Chilton Cadle, Pomeroy; · Charles
Cadle, Indiana; tour sisters, Mrs.
Nettle Belcher, Akron; Mrs. Emma
Jean Mullens, Bloomingrose, W.
Va.; Mrs. Edith Mitchell, Walton,
W.Va.; Mrs. Dona Hunt, Cleveland;
eight great grandchildren and 13
great grandchild· ren.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the Cook
Funeral Home Chapel, Cedar
Grove, W. Va.,wlththeRev.Davld
Callison ottic!atlng. Burtal wlll be In
Ward Cemetery, Ward, W. Va.
Friends may call at the. ~!lfral
home today from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.

$200,000 sought
A suit tued In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by Eva Marte
Daney Enterprises, Ind., Racine,
against the Property Protection Co.,
Charleston, W. Va., Is tor $llX),CXXl
rather than
as reported
earlier.

m.cm

Seeks divorce

Andrew Bernard Warner, 73•
Route 1• Guysvtlle • died unexpect·

FlUng tor divorce In MeigsCounty
CommonPieasCourtareKimberly
Ann McClellan and Ricky Lane
McClellan, both ot Middleport.

n.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Ura Morris, Racine;
Helen Wllltams, Middleport; Shelly
Fox, Middleport.
Discharged - Robert White,
Grace Welker, Julla Haynes, Bruce
Caldwell.

Carrier needed
A Sentinel newspaper route Is
open In Syracuse VIllage. The route
has approximately 60 customers to
provtdeacarrlerwlthlncomeandln
addition, he or she can earn
Interesting and va,!l!.&lt;~~le prizes
working with the route. All those
lnteresle(l are asked to call The
Dally Sentinel Oftlce, 992-2156.

SALE!

The Meigs County AsSociation ot
Trustees and Clerks wlll meet

Lottery Winners
CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 748. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Frtday, the winning
number was 4629.
The lottery report€() earnings of
$753,412.50 from the wagering on
'"The Number." The earnings came
on sales of $1,002,002, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to
share $339,279.50, lottery officials
said.
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $145,423. Holders of
winning tickets are entltfed to share
45 percent, or $65,567. Any winning
$1 straight ticket earns ~.424, while
any winning $1 boxed ticket earns

Community Comer

Coffin business drops

·~t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State government may
have to come up with $59 mlllion, Instead of a
previously estimated $100 million, to close the books
on an embattled but now-defunct federal job training
program.
State officials"' say the debt to the federal
government has been reduced as a result of eftorts to
locate and reconstruct old program records kept
under the Comprehensive Employment Training Act.
Roberta Steinbacher, administrator ot tl!P Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services, on Wednesday
credited aCETA strike force appointed last April by
Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste after hls new
administration found Ohio's CETA program In
trouble..
.
..
Following a prellrnlnary audit , the s trike force
reported thai state and local CETA agencies could not

... puts 9 gallons of
moisture into the air of
your home every 24
hours. Two speed fan,
automatic shut off.

ELBERFELDS·
WAREHOUSE

aily
tor

$100 million In federal funds allocated
ove r eight years to CETA programs In 56 COijlltles.
Ms. Steinbacher said the strtke force, after an
exhaustive but still Incomplete Investigation, accounted tor $49 million of the funds, reducing Ohio's
obligation to $51 million.
But accountants discovered another $8 mllllon
CETA grant which could not be tracked. Records on
that 1975 grant are " proving extremely dlftlcult to
locate," Ms. Steinbacher said.
She and Jerry M. Hultin, strtke force consultant,
called a news conference to report on the Ohio
close-oot ot the CETA program which was
terminated, except tor accounting purposes, Sept.ll.
CETA Is being replaced with the federal Job
Training Pa rtnership Act, which some have said will
be more effective because of Involvement of the

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FIRST- Howard E. Frank, a paat Melp Count)' Auditor, was the
first to pld&lt; up a petition of candidacy for a county ottlce Ibis year In
preparation for the May primary _eledlon. Frank, who completed b1s
work as auditor on Jan. 10, 198S, had not ft1ed for reeledton to the post.
He wlll leek RepubUcan nomination to nut for sheriff of Melp County
for the tenn of otflce heginnlnl Jan. 2, 1985. Frances 'lbomas, director
ot the Melp Board of EJections, hands Frank the petition.

Dollar· rebounds
on foreign market
{JyThe Associated Press
The dollar Is back on an upward
track, propelled to record heights In
·relation to the currencies of several
European nations by high Interest
rates, International tensions and
technical market factors, analysts
say.
This Is good news for American
travelers because Increases In the
exchange value of the dollar. which
had been slipping In the last few
weeks of 1983, -make overseas

ALL BEDS IN&amp;~UDE:
.
.· 1
':,
Headboard • ·rrame - Regular Pedestal - Deck-=-Heater- Liner - Full Wave
Mattress - Fill Kit • Patch Kit - Water Treatment.
.Delivered and Set Up.
LARGE SELECTION OF
WATERBED.
COMFORTERS .

'

FOR

NATURALIZER
SEBAGO
,_ FLEECE LINED BOOTS
EASY STREETS

' 1/2

RAILS $3.9 95

Waysi~e

\

"MIDDLE OF THE UPPER BLOCK IN POMEROY"

.

·3 PC. PADDED

241 .,HIRO AVE.

POMEROY·

LARGEST

SELECTION -OF
WATER BEDS

IN lHIS A'R£A

Pumiture
GALLIPOLIS,, OH.

·,

purchases and U.S. Imports
cheaper. But U.S. exporters coinplain that a strong dollar makes
their products less competitive on
world markets and many of
Ari1erlca' s trade partners In EW'Ope
say It hurts their economies.
While the dollar was surging on
foreign exchange markets Wednes·
day, U.S. stockprtceswererlsingas
well, postlrig the- biggest gains In
more than a month.
The closely watched Dow Jones
average of JO lndustrtal stocks rose
16.31 points - the best single-day
rtse since Nov. 29 - to 1,269.00.
Trading volume exceeded 112.9
mllllon shares compared with 71.3
mllllon the day before.
The dollar hit new heights In
hectic trading against the currencies of France, Italy, Norway and
Finland and reached a 10-year peak
against the West German mark.
Analysts said the dollar was helped
by the continuing high level of
Interest rates, a heightening of
International tensions and technical
market factors. •
One other development:
Getty 011 Co. ~d Wednesday It
has agreed to be merged Into . a
company to be formed by -Pennzoll
Co. and Gordon P. GettY In a deal
valued at $5.28 bllllon. The48 mllllon
· Getty shares.not already controlled
·by Pennzofi or Gordon Getty - the
youngest son ot the company's
founder, J . Paul Getty -are to be
purchased for $110 apiece.
·

420 return to work
..... ~.~·· .}~

Source: Teterate Systems Inc.

NEW LEXINGI'ON, Ohio (AP)
-About 4alcoal miners returned to
work this week at Peabody Coal
Co.'s Sunnyhlll Mine, but another
. 100stillarelaldotf.
Peabody on Tuesday recalled the
4almtnerslaldotrDec.2l,saldRyan

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Dewl fill' a.rwa,·bat bad ·IW expalten. 'lbe

dollar wu I&amp;Joapr .. . . . -~ currenclel,
.

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have previously said the Marines
would remain In Lebanon until
_foreign armies leave , the administration has stopped emphasizing
this point.
While Israel has Indicated it would
cooperate with the new securtty
plan, Syrta' s attitude remains In
doubt.

'

IN THE REAR OF SIMONS PICK-A-PAIR
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

992-5272 '

Stelbacher said. After that, "Ohio may be required to
fund with state tax dollars all additional close-out
activities," sbe said.
The admlnlstrator said sbe thinks the strike force

.•

ALLIES BLOUSE &amp; SLACK SHOP

HART·LEY SHOES

pullJ(lse.
The strike force has completed. the first halt ot Its
Investigation, and the federal government wlll cease
funding the strike force operation March 31, Ms.

wlll be able to reduce the $59 mllllon debt but she
declined to predict the amount. "We won't be a ble to
clean it all up," she said.
Hultln said the state anticipa tes legal action whel1
the time comes tor a final settlement with thr federal
government, and that the strike force believes the
teds may have caused at least part of Ohio's
problems.
He said federal officials deterred audits of the Ohio
program for several years after the Administrative
Services Department, which handled CETA wit II
BES took it over in December 1981, had requested
them.
It there Is litigation over the settlement, "We wlll
raise and use a 'clean hands' argument and say that
the federal government knew about this and let it go
on," Hultln said.

WASHINGI'ON (AP)- Reagan
admlnlstrationomctalssaytheyare
optimistic that a plan to expand tbe
authority ot President Amln Gemayel' s government In Lebanon
wlll eventually mean U.S. Marines
stationed there wlll be removed.
They hope the government and
rival Lebanese factions can

Dollars vs The World----------,

\

..
.SHOES FOR WOMEN

1 SectH&gt;n , 14 Poget · 20 C.nt1
A Multimedia Inc. N•wlfXIpeJ

New Lebanon plan
could lead to U.S.
troop withdrawal

• The state Is protesting the decision rendered by the lioard of tax' appeals
that reversed a 1981 decision bY then-Tax Commissioner Edgar L. Lindley
to redistribute lJ percent ot local property tax ~ue created by the
Kyger Creek and James M. Gavin generating plants at Cheshire to other
Ohio counties.
The appeal was tiled by James C. Sauer, an assistant attorney general,
who claimed that the board erred In rejecting the tax commissioner's
formula tor apportioning the value of taxable public utility property.
Additionally, Sauer charged that the board's decision Is " unreasonable
and unlawful" because. It reverses valuation certl11cates and revenue
distribution of public utility property already established .
The state had 90 days from the Issuance of the decision In which to
appeal.
.:rite board's tlndlng for Gallla County was hailed as a "major victory" by
local otflclals, who said the loss ot nearly $76 million would affect county
operations. The county school system lost $1 million In the first year of the
redistribution, resulting In program cuts for the 1982-83 school year .
"We're trying to work cooperatively with all agencies In the county to
coordinate a response to the appeal, so that every option Is covered,"
Toothaker said.
... ......
Among those options are a brief hearing before the supreme court. Other
avenues are being Investigated at this time, Toothaker added, but no
decision has been made.
Toothaker said that working In the county's favor Is the decision, with the
burden now placed on the state to prove Its point.
"We will have to respond to specltlc Issues raised by the attorney
general's office," he explained. "It's not open season on the whole matter,
and it's llmlted In that they ask only questions raised by the board of (ax
appeals."
The matter may be resolved this year. the superintendent said.
"I think the merits ot the board's decision 1Jill stand up under the
scrutiny of the supreme court," Toothaker commented.
The county tiled an appeal with the state In October 1981, and the county
schools joined In the effort In February 1982. A hearing with the board was
held In Columbus In October ot that year. Sauer represented the state at
that hearing ..

z

2.PIECE ·SUITS

•

private sector for the first time In job training and
placement.
Hultln said the strike force found "no evidence of
crtmlnallty" In Its Investigation "except tor two or
three grants the FBI Is looking Into." But he said the
group did find that the state tailed to establish
adequate management procedures under CETA
although federal funds were available tor that

Gallia braces
fpr tax appeal
'tl»tbtk:@r ......

THE ROSE

·

enttne

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP staff

SLACKS AND
BLOUSES

FOR MEN

story on Page 9

COLUMBUS - Gallla County and one of Its school systems are
marshalling their legal forces to face an 11ppeal tiled In the Ohio Supreme
Court by the ~ttorney general's oftlce to a tax decision Issued In late
November.
Copies ot the appeal were received by County Auditor Ronald K.
Canaday ani! Gall Ia County Local Schools Superintendent Gary E.

........
.-......

8

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 5, 1984

NO PAYMENT OR INTEREST TIL APRIL

THESE ARE NATIONAL BRANDS, SHOP EARLY WHILE SELECTiON IS GOOD

210 EAST MAIN

Pbolo on

Strike force trims big CETA debt

A motion to change the location ot
the retrtal of Pamela Phyllis
Spencer, Syracuse, has been tiled In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
FlUng the motion was Spencer's
attorney, Steven Story. ·
A
week-long jury trial In
December ended In a "hung jury".
Spencer had been charged with
Involuntary manslaughter and endangering children as a result ot the
death ot a baby which she gave birth
to last May.
Following the hung jury, Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow tiled a
motion tor retrial of Spencer and as
a result ot that action, Meigs
Common Pleas Court Judge Cha·
rles Knight set the retrial date tor
Jan. 23.
Spencer'sattorney
· alsohastlleda
motionthatatranscrlptottheentlre
. proceedings of the trial against hls
defendant be provided the
defendant.

-&lt;

.

·1

Slorles, Pages 4-5

VoU2 ,No.116
eop.,,ightod 1914

SLACK SHOP

20%,' 30o/o, 40% AND 50% OFF

'

Motion made to
change lOcation
of retrial

)&gt;

ALL SA.LES FINAL!

Meigs' poster -child

he

AND

$300 TO

Cage roundups
Charlene's col. Page 7

Waterbed Sale

ey Shoes·~FaU &amp; Winter Clearance Sale

FLORSHEIM
HUSH PUPPIES
LEVIS

~~~~~~-~.l~

II"

PRICED FROM

$226.

SHOES

session Saturday, revieWed 1964
approprlatlona and ~ lo take
action on the budgel at Its' reau~
meeting on Jan. 9. ·
·
It was Indicated appropriations
wlll be more than $116,CXXl. Resl·
dents are Invited to attend the Jan. 9
meeting at 7 p.m .
Council extended thanks and
commended Bob Campbell of
Hemlock Pipeline tor donating his
time and equipment on Chrlstams
day to repair a water main.
main on SR 124 near the Methodist
Church sprung a leak during the
night, leaving residents without
water untU tbe afternoon ot Christ·
mas day.
Meeting_with council were Larry
W.olte and Betty Sayre of the Board

z.,

ALLIES BLOUSE

Monday at 7 p.m. at the Senior
Citizens Center.

Racine VIllage CouncD,ln ~~·

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:liiiiii

Ward, Middleport, 10 days In jall, r;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:Fii;:;en;:;ds;:;ma;:;y;c;all;:;a;t;the;:;tu;:;ne;;;ral.-j
Issuing menacing threats, and $50
and costs each on two counts of
disorderly manner.

Plan Monday meeting

2 p.m.

Andrew Warner

LeoandEilzabethWarner.Hewasa
veteran ot World War
Mr.
Warner had worked tor the McBee
Co., the Athens State Hospital and
retired as a carpenter tor Ohio
University In 1974. He was also a
tanner all of hls lite. He belonged to
the Athens Chapter ot the Veterans
ot Foreign Wars and the Athens
Chapter ot~D
-·'"
rlcan
Veterans.
Survtvln
his wlte, Mattie
Leota Glllllan Warner, and six
step-grandchildren. Besides his
parents, he was preceded In death
by a step grandson, Orland Russell
Cullums.
Services wlll be held at 11 a.m.
Fliday attheHughesFunera!Home
In Athens with the Rev. Everett
Isaacs omctatlng. Burtal wlll be In
the Clark's Chapel Cemetery,
Athens. Mllltary lites wlll be
conducted at the graveside by the
Athens Veterans ot Foreign Wars.

Hospital news

after

Albert Cadle

ed1y Tuesday at his home.
He was born In Carthage Town·
ship, Athens County, a son ofthe late

'

Forfeiting bonds 1n the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hottman
Tuesday night were David R.
Wentzell, Letart, w. Va., $450,
posted on a charge ot drtvtng while
Intoxicated, andAlbertD.Roush,St.
Albans, w. Va., $41, speeding.
In other ccourt actions Llllle A.
Clark, New Haven, W. Va., was
tined ·$17 and 'costs, speeding;
Michael C. Dorst, Middleport, $25
and costs, no operator's license;
Jerry D. Swartz, Middleport, $50
and costs, driving under suspension; JamesD. Prlddy,Rutland,$25
andcosts,falluretopayoldtlnesand
ordered to pay those tines; George
McDaniel, Middleport, five days In
·jail, disorderly manner, and John

home anytime
Thursday.

Linda Roush Johnson, 40, Box 2ll2
Onbrldge, Ontario, Canada, died
Dec. 31, In Sunnybrook Hospital,
Toronto, Canada, following a
lengthY Illness.
She was born JuneJO, l943 to Ivah
E . an Lily F . Roush of LeGrande
'Boulevard Gallipolis, who survive.
Also surviving are her husband,
Reid Johnson and son Ivan, both ot
Onbrldge, Ontario, nine stepchild·
ren, nine stepgrandchUdren . and
grandparents Mrs. Esther Roush,
Portland and Carl Autherson,
Syracuse.
·
Mrs. Johnson, formerly ot Meigs
and Gallla Counties, was a teacher
In -the GaUia County School District
at BldweU-Porter School tor several
. years, and an active member ot
Grace United Methodist Church
before marrying and moving to the
Cleveland area.
She and her husband have lived In
Canada since hls retirement from
teaching.
They were active members ot the
United Church of Canada.
Funeral services were held Monday, at lp.m .attheOnbrldgeUnlted
Church of Canada with the Rev.
Keith Ramashwar officiating.
In lieu of Dowers, the family
requested contributions be made to
the Onbrldge United Church BuUd·
lng Fund, Onbridge, Ontario, Canada, POR-lHO, to aid Incompletion
ot Its current building project. Keith
Beggs Funeral Home In Thessalon;
Ontario, was In charge ot
arrangements.

Village receipts total $69,810.34

Bonds forfeited

Area deaths

J

_........
1"
hi h _ ..... ·hew..... German
""""""''
a .,.year I a,_ •
....

mark. '8111 grapblc details the doling~ In New
York. (API uerpholo),

·.

,.
.

.

Tew, a Peatxx~I s_pokesman.

and was discussed with Gemayel on
hls recent visit to Washington.
The plan would extend autholity
ot the Gemayel government over
much of the 40 percent of Lebanon
that Is not under Syrian or Israeli
control. However,lt wouldn't lead to
what the Reagan administration
has said Is Its main goalln Lebanon,
thewlthdrawalofSyrtanandlsraeU
armies.
An agreement tor the withdrawal
of those armies would be lett to
follow-up negotiations.
John Hughes, the State Department spokesman, said Wednesday
the withdrawal of all foreign iorces
remains the goal of U.S. policy In
Lebanon. But he said tbe securtty
plan, as It Is being called, would be
"a welcome development."
Although President Reagan and
Secretary of State George P . Shultz

O.feat\u'eoftbe .~to
pt.
BU·

thortty Into areas Beirut now
controls by prtvatemllltiasmlght be
the designation of the Beirut airport
as a neutral zone, said one official,
who Insisted on anonymity.
Most of the 1,600 U.S. Marines In
Lebanon as partofthemultinatlonal
peacekeeping force are based at the
airport where they have sustained
heavy casualties. If the airport is
declared a neutral zone. the Marines
could be deployed elsewhere and
possibly some of them could even be
withdrawn onto American warships
offshore.
Redeployment of American and
other peacekeeping forces is defi·
nitely a part of the plan, said an
official. "The MNF could play a role
In expanding the area of (governmen!) operations and could perform some useful patrolllng tunctlons," he said.

Celeste unveils
new jobs plan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl Gov. Richard Celeste's administration unveiled jolJ.ereatlng
plans today and said It Is trying to
swtng the state away from an
economic course that could keep
the jobless rate In double-digit
figures.
--"-··
Theadmlnlstratlon'sgoalsare
to 'estatili'sh Ohio as a business
leader, make Ohio's businesses
more · competitive worldwide
andusestateandtederaltundsto
speed up job creation.
The "Strategic Plan for the
Eighties and Beyond: .Jobs and
Ohio's Economy" does not spell
out how many jobs Celeste hopes
wlll be generated. But It says the
state wlll need 1 mlltlon new jobs
by 1990 It It Is to reach "anything
near" a 4 percent jobless rate.
"Under the conditions that
have prevailed In the Industries
located In Ohio over the past
several years, the average
annual job growth would only be
around lJ,CXXl per year for tbe
next eight years," the plan says.
"This suggests that unless the
pattern ot ecoOO,rnlc groWth Is
altered, Ohio's average annual
unemployment wlll not go below
10 percent. This, In tum; means
Ohio coukl contlnuetol1avea pool
ot ~tween 750,CXXl and 1,CXXl,CXXl
unemployed and underemployed peJ'SOns," It said.
The report said the state wants
to speed up economic di!vetop-

ment by helping local government businesses and schools.
Mc..;t of the proposals are being
Implemented under the state
budget that took effect July 1.
Legislation detaUlng other sections of the plan goes to the
General Assembly early this
year. Tills Includes legislation to
authorize Investment of institutional funds In business ventures
and creating a Coal Deve lopment Agency to spur use of
Ohio's high sulfur coal.

GOV. RICHARD CELESTE

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