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Page-D-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

January e, .19M

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Paint Pleasant, W.Va.

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Five hospitals served area residents prior to Holzer

By JAMES SANDS
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS- Holzer Hospllal
began In GalUpolls In 1910, but It
was not the first hospllalln the Old
French City. In.facttt was about
sixth, by our
count, having
been preceded by
the U.S. Army
Hospital (186165); The Marine
Hospital (begun
In 1883); the Ohio
and Surgical Institute (1884-1887);
the Oho Hospital for Epileptics
(1893 to the present); and the
Galltpolls Private EpUepitc Hospltal (1896-98).
The buDding we feature today
was the second home for Holzer
Hospital having housed the medical
facility from 1914 to 1917. We are
uncertalr. of the age of the house. It
was at one time the office and home
of Dr. J. T. ~Janson, although'we do
not believe It was he who l&gt;uUt the
structure.
Of the five hospitals that preceded Holzer, the U.S. Army
• Hospital was the most unique as It
was housed In 1861 In at least five
different locations In town Including
HOLZER HOSPITAL - This Is the second home for Holzer
Union School and Gallipolis
Hospital, In this house at 1135 Second Avenue, known at the turn of the
Academy.
During the early fall of
century as the Dr. J. T. Hanson house. Holzer, the sixth hospital In
1861
there
were . at least 400
Gallipolis history, was begun In 1910 at 3IYl Second Avenue, moving to 1135
,
wounded
Federal
soldiers In the
Second Avenue about 1914. Holzer Hospital left 1135 Second Avenue In
Gallipolis
hospital.
1977, moving to First and Cedar where H remained until1972.
BY THE SPRING of 1862 the

army had constructed one hospital . venture.
brietl)'' as Mills and JohnstOII
on what would today be the grounds
James Johnston was born tn lA'l4 dissolved their partnenhlp.
\
of the · Gallipolis Developmental near GalJ!pOlls 11n4 was a graduate
The GalUpolla Private EpllPptlo
Center and for the remainder of the of Starling Medical CoUege In the _Hospital was actually the brain·
war both Federal and Contederate year 1817. Johnston set up practice &lt;lhUd of John Vanee who
mOIItly
soldiers were t.reated there. Thl$ In Kygervllle, where he remained responsible also for brlnilni the
fact explalri!nvhy there are so for 25 years. His wife was a Ohio Hospital for . Epileptics to•
manyunmarkedCivllWarsoldters' daughter of Asa and EJecta Brad- Gallipolis.
..
graves In Pine Street Cemetery.
bury, one of tile prominent KygerI was Vance's notion that thm!
The Marine Hospital began about ville famllles .
ouaht to be a half-way houte tor
1883 In the Our House and was
DVRING IDS 'PRACDCE at patten~ released from OHE to .
established by the government for KygervUle Dr. Johnston helped to make the transition back to the
the services of ailing rivermen. One popularize the water from the Blue community smoother. Obvloutly
of GalUpolis' doctors was usually Sulphur Springs (near Kygervtlle) this was a notion ahead of Ita time.
appointed as overseer of this and Its curative properties. In fact Dr. Johnston appears to have
facility which lasted well Into the about the same time Dr. Johnston served as the consulting inedlcal
20th century and was located at moved to Gallipolis In the 1lBls a doctor for this Vance venture.
other times In the house at 409 First resort was developed near KygerOF COVRSE, Holzer Hospital
and In the old hotel buDding which ville (today known simply as moved from tbe Hllll80n Houae In
today houses NAPA Motor Parts.
Kyger) where persons could stay In 1917 with the completion !1.111 own
WE HAVE RECENTLY given
luxury while "taking the cure."
buDding at First and Cedar wherj!
the early history of the Ohio
Johnston was for many years on they would be located for the next 1!6
Hospital for Epileptics and will not the Board of Pension Examiners years before moving to U.S. ~repeat ourselves herein. The other which handed out pensions tp Civil West.
two hospitals In early Gallipolis War .veterans; Johnston also was
In more recent' times Gatllpolla
were connected to Dr. James health officer of the county. During also had a hospital for • ·few years.
Johnston.
the CtvU War Dr. Johnston was at Fourth and Sycamore known as:
The Ohio Valley Medical and activelntheloyaiLeglonwhichwas theGalllpolisCIInlcHospltal,which.
Surgical Institute wsa located on an organization of commissioned mei:ged with holzer and became an
State Street and according to Its at officers of the Civil War. The doctor · out-station of tlje ho&amp;pltal, hanclllril'
treated "chronic diseases, skin was activie In pollttcs 'and twice ran ophthalmology and lll!l)eral
diseases, and deformities."
unsuccessfully for Congress.
practice.
·.
Dr. Mills, a brother-In-law of Dr.
. THE OHIO VALLEY Medical
Jamee Sandt' 1 ~I - Ia Iox IIi·
Johnston was a partner In this and Surgical Institute lasted onty ClarbburJ, Ohio 41115.

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By BRYSON R. CARTER
Agriculture and CNRD
GalllaCounty
GALLIPOLIS - Our next Risk
Management · Farm Marketing
Meeting deals with the subject,

Exploration of a desk drawer reveals notes
parents of seven children, and there

are numerous direct descendants In
Gallipolis today ... and elsewhere.

IN 1797 COLONEL Robert Saf.
ford went alone by horseback to see
his mother In Vermont. He was
older than his brother, Dr. Jonas
French 500 moved In to previously
Safford, a Revolutionary War
buUt ~log cabins In What Is now the veteran and Vermont state legislaPublic Square. Robert was 96 years
tor. Dr. Jonas' home stiU stands
of age when he died July 26, 1863, In · 'today (1984) on the far slcte of· the
the middle of the Civil War. He Is
vault plant on Ohio 141. He Is burled
burled In Centenary Cemetery on a
In Pine Street Cemetery right next
hill back of Green Local School.
to his mother.

SUCH IS the case for this column.
It's like a meal of leftovers from
previous meals. The principal note
we have Is attributed to Frank Hill
under date of Aug. 6, 1982, and It
reads that Dr. Jonas Safford and
Col. Robert Safford, sons of Challis
and Lydia Warner, and the latter
(Robert) was born In Hardwick,
THE FRENCH remained beMass. July 7, 1768.
. cause the soU and climate suited
them. Col. Robert Safford - yeah,
ROBERT WAS 22 years of age we know, he wasn't a colonel untO
when he cut the &amp;st tree on the site later, but the "colonel" Is a klnda
of what later became Gallipolis trademark wtf him - married
and, of course, set the fliost foot on Catherine Cameron In 1'193, and she
the Old French City's area. The died In 1852. They became the

A SEPARATE no\e reads that Col.
Robert Safford's mother was Lydia
Fay, daughter of Jonathan and
Bethsheeba, late of Hardwick,
Mass. She was born Nov. 3, 1740,
and died at the residence of her son,
Robert, In GaUla County In 1828. She
was 88 years old.

Program will list new tax changes
'*

GUEST SPEAKER - Dr.
Dean Baldwin, Oldo State University, Extension Fann Markeang Specialist, wW speak on
the subject of the BrokerFarmer-Lender Pllltnershlp at .
the Tuet!day evening, Jan. 10,
Fann Marketing Meedng ·Prodnctloa Credit A8lloclatlon
lng, Upper River Road, GaDJpoUs. The meeting will begin at
7: 30 p.m.
·

Bund-

S-ALE

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SAVE ON QUALITY
WINTER CLOTHING
FOR THEENTlRE FAMILY.

SMITH SEEKS
SKYHAWK OWNER
We are making an e!!ort to locate Mercedes mad, so he took out and
passed ·h im at about !3l miles per · ·
the owner of the Buick Skyhawk
hour.
mentioned In the following report.
Tht.s really took the' man In the
It seems that a Skyhawk bearing a
West VIrginia· license plate, ran out Eldorado by surprise and when he
arrived In Columbus, he drove up to
of gasoline about 40 miles from
Columbus, and Onally a long, low the Orst Buick Si&lt;ybawk dealer and
asked the Skyhawk dealer to trade In
Mercedes stopped to ask him If be
his riew Eldorado Convertible for one
~uld help. He fortunately had a tow
of thole brand new Buick Skyhawkl.
rod In his car and agreed to tow him
Although the dealer wasn't exacUy
Into Colwnbus.
too surprbed, as buslneu had been
Before starting up, however: he
advised the fellOw In the Skyhawk very good that week, he did think tt a
that he was lncllned to do a lot of Uttle odd and asked the man why?
The customer replied, '"On my
speeding, and although he would try
to keep It down, hes'uggestedlhat the way. Into town on that flat stretch, I
fellow In the Skyhawk blow his hom was going about as fast as I could
and a Mercedes,went by me going to
If he was going too last. Or even blink
his Ughts, as maybe he couldn't hear beat the devil . That cllc!n't particularly bother me, but J1ght on his tall
the hom.
was a SkyhaWk who was goll!l just •
So they ambled along at a pretty
as . fast, but so dam mad at the
good rate and pretty soon an
EldoradO Convertible passed them · Mercedes, he was btowtn' his horn
both going about 95 miles per hour. and even bllnldng his lights trying to
get the 1fellow to ·move over so be
This made the fellow In the
could pass him."

.Smith Buick-Pontiac, Inc.
1911 Eastern Ave

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SERVIC E HE DUU ARTER S ~OH

A TOTALLY UNIQUE
IN MEMORIALS

Complete System Includes: ,

· •7'4" Danex Powder .Painted Steel Spun
· Aluminum Dish
·
•Janeil B~R·Z~ Receiver (wltlt cord typ~ remote) •
•Amplica U0° LNA
.
.
•CIItpparral Polarotpr II (for instant polarity switchin&amp;)
•SRS 3" SLM Polar Mount
.
·
•SRS Quad Pod Feed Sy::tem
•'125' Complete Cable Set
\.

*KELVINATOR
*SPEED QUEEN
*WARM MORNING
*SUNRAY
*LITTON

985-3307

Gallipolle, OH.

JANUAR·Y SPECIAL

*ZENITH
*SYLV:ANIA

RIDENOUR'S

TV &amp; AP~~MtCE
GAsSER
CHESTER, OH.

~

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I

Regular
Price. '1945.00 plus tax and
. Retail
.
. installation

·'15 sooo

SPECIAL SALE PRiCE

- (Tu and lnlllllltlon Is Atldttlenli)

~OGAN

~~5-JSIUJl:o

MQNUMENT COMPANY, INC.

VINTON, OHIO
· James 0 . .lulh. Mgr.

Scholarship winner

Story, photo Page 3

Photo on Page 5

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POMEROY. OHIO
Ph. 992.2188

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Vot.32,No.lll

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1 Section , 10 Paget , 20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newtpaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 io, Monday, January 9, 1984

CopyrJthlod 1914

================~-

Glenn's acid rain plan
draws mixed reviews
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.....,...lll""'rmJREAG.\N- FC!rme.t ~ he~Idellt Waller MDndaletold
a paeked co erence on acid rain that l'l'eSident Reagan did not accept
an Invitation to speak because he has nothing to say about acid rain.
Mondllle was among six of the Democratic presidential contenders lo
appear at the conference this weekend: (AP Laserpholo).

worst offender, we think it Is a very
Important step."
The Ohio governor's office says
The Ohio Democrat presented his
Sen. John Glenn's acid rain cleanup proposal at a weekend International
plan Is "progressive" and an conference on acid rain In Bedford,
· environmentalist says It Is "cour· N.H.
ageous," but a utility Industry
Glenn proposed financing acid
lobbyist says Glenn Is playing rain cleanup through a tax on
poUtlcs with the Issue.
electricity In 31 states, Including
"I think where Glenn said It, In Ohio. The tax would create a fund to
New Hampshire, and what he's aid ut tlltles and Industries In adding
doing there, running for president, · smokestack scrubbers and other
says It aH," said C. Luther equipment to reduce sulfur dioxide
Heckman, aformerchalrmanofthe emissions.
Glenn's proposal would reduce
Public UtUities CommlssionofOhio,
.who now heads the Coalition for sulfur dioxide emissions by 8mllllon
Environmental-Energy Balance. tons a year by 1993, he said.
The coalition represents utUity and
It would aU but ban switching
labor interests.
from high-sulfur coal to lessGov. Richard Celeste, who has polluting low-sulftir coal to meet
been reluctant to support acid rain emission standards.
legislation because of possible harm
"We're pleased that Sen. Glenn's
to Ohio's coal industry and Ohioans' blll addresses the concerns of coal
consumer utUity costs, considers miners In Ohio who want to keep
Glenn's plan "the most progressive their jobs," CosteUo said.
yet," said Paul CosteUo, the
According to theGlenncampalgn
governor's press secretary.
staff, the tax on electricity would
Steve Sedam of the Ohio Environ· last unt U 1999 and would cost
mental Council said Ohio environ· residential customers, In the 31
mentalists will consider Glenn's states an average of $1.25 a month.
proposal "a very courageous act.
Heckman maintains the cost for
We · don't consider what he Is Ohio ratepayers would probably be
P!WPS!!:ti to be perfect, but consid- morebecauseOhlowlllhaveamuch
ering that · It wUI mean major higher . quota to meet on sulfur
reductions In acid rain and consider- dlwdde reduction than most states.
Ing the fact It came from a man who
"There's no doubt the tax would
comes frot;n the state which Is the create a pool of money to use for

Installing scrubbers and that would
ease the effect on the ratepayers,"
Heckman said. "But Instead of

paying for It through electric rates,
(the ratepayer) would pay for It In
taxes."

ACID RAIN PROPOSAL- Sen. Jolm Glenn of Ohio lellsdelep&amp;es
at an lnternatlonal conference on acld rain that electric
CUitGmen Ia 11
would pay 8bout SU$ a monih to dean
up acid rain If his proposal is adoll'ed by Congress. Glenn said he wW

~

EMtena.....,.

Introduce legislation that would protect Industrial jobs affected by
changes In poUutlon regulatloll'i and would clean up the atmosphere.

(AP La.serphoto ).

Mondale, Cranston blast President's acid rain policies
BEDFORD, N.H. (AP)- Democratic presidential
contenders Walter F . Mondale and Alan Cranston
blasted President Reagan on Sunday for falling to
combat acid rain, but each offered sharply differing
approaches for fighting the pollutant.
"Ronald Reagan thi.nks that people who care about
the environment are extremists," Cranston told a
packed conference on what some bellevels the nation's
most urgent environmental threat. "Ronald Reagan Is
wrong. It Is he and his administration who are the
extremists ...
"It's extreme to endanger the health of the people ...
by pretending there's no such thing as acid rain," the
California senator said.
Mondale said he understood why Reagan didn't
accept an Invitation to address the conference.
"I don't blame him. If 1 had a record on the
environment like his, as lousy as his Is, I wouldn 'tshow
up either," Mondale said.
At the conference, American environmentalists
from ~states joined with a contingent of Canadians In

calling for a 50 percent reduction In sulfur dioxide
emissions In both countries by 1990.
The proposal would requtre a 12-miUion-ton cut In
emissions of the pollutant believed to be chiefly
responsible for acid rain, which Is blamed for
poisoning lakes and wreaking-other environmental
havoc In the U.S. Northeast and eastern Canada. The
,goal Is that contained In the toughest major bUls
pending' before the U.S. Congress. On Saturday,
another Democratic presidential contender, Sen. John
Glenn, DOhio, proposed a bUI calling for reducing
sulfur dioxide emissions by 8 million tons a year by
1996.
Four other Democratic presidential contenders,
Glenn, Gary Hart and Ernest HoUtngs and the Rev.
Jesse Jackson, earlier blasted Reagan for his "acid
leadership."
Mondale endorsed a tax or fee on electricity to pay
for an acid rain control fund, a proposal found In
several bills pending before Congress and one Glenn
said he plans to Introduce. But Mondale said the tax

should be designed to make the worst polluters pay the
most, something not found In many other plans.
"Today, dirty air and acid rain Is good business, we
must make it had business. Polluters must pay more,"
Mondale said.
Hesaldhehadnospecificplanformakingthecharge
faU more heavily on polluters. One plan backed by
Northeastern governors has such a feature, however.
It would raise money with two taxes, one on electricity
and one on poUution-generattng Industries and plants.
Mondale said the 48 contiguous states should
contribute to the proposed' acid rain fund. Other plans,
Including Glenn's, would burden only the 31 Eastern
states.
Cranston said the key to cleaning up acid rain is
reducing utility generating plant emissions by
reducing elecricity use. He said any one of three steps
In his national energy plan could cut sulfur dioxide
emissions In half by 1990.
His energy plan would set efficiency standards for
major appliances, create incentives for co-generating

electricity and set efficiency standards for electric
motors and lights.
Co-generation Is generating electricity with
Industrial energy that normally would be wasted.
Cranston said his program would reduce pollution
because old coal-fired plants would be retired, as
would nuclear plants, by the year mi.
The use of renewable energy sources - Including
solar, wind and hydro-electric- would be more than
doubled and savings from conservation would be
doubled, he said.
He rejected the use of scrubbers to clean up smoke
stack emissions at power plants. "Those preferring
scrubbers should pay for them, not share their cost
with those already paying alone the costs of damage
from acid rain," he said.
Cranston said his proposals "are simple, commrnon
sense measures that will make It possible to end the
damage from acid rain. They will cut - not raise electric bllls ... (and) make our economy more
productive."

Another Marine .
killed in Lebanon

Chin~se -P remier

arrives for talks
WASHINGTON. (AP) - The matte .exchanges on the question
Reagan administration wUI explore .. between Washington and Peking.
with Chinese Premier Zhao Ztyang
He wou.Jd not discuss these
this week tile use of Chinese approaches but said that the United
tnnueneetoretntnwhatWashlngton States does feel that "the Chinese
views as a "murderous" and have been acting to reduce tenslolts
Increasingly. dangerous regime In and the posslbUity of war In the
North Korea.
(Korean) peninsula."
"The whole Issue Is so Important
that we j(eep looking for new
"They have an Interest In so
openings," said one senior U.S. doing," he said. "The R.:lngoon
official.
·
atrocity underscores just how
. "We hope somethlng positive murderous and serious the North
could be nudged along'' (with Korean government Is. u • .
China) ," he said. "But It Is such a
He added: "I think ·the Chinese
difficult problem that you can't get hav!! lnli\Jence, and It's worth
your hoPI!S up."
exploring. We certainly Intend t~do
puna has longsupportedco'lliTlu- · that during tll!'! visit."
nlst North Korea and Its leader, Kim
Premier Zhao Is scheduled to
confer with President Reagan at the
D-Sung.
,
But indePendent analysts report White House on Tuesday and to
ihat Peking was "aghasl" and . meetwtthanuml;lerofothertopU.S.
"appalled" at the attempted assas- · leaders,lncludlngSecretary of State
stnatlon of South Korea's President George P. Shultz and Defense
1
Cbun . Doo-Hwan In Rangoon, · Secretary Caspar Weinberger.
· Bwma lilst Oct. 9tn an attack th!lt
'
killed senior members of the South
The ChineSe leader arrived ln.
Cabinet.
VIrginia late Sunday and was
· · 'The senior U.S. official, who expected to spend part· of today
, ·cllacussed the IssUe on the condition BlghtaeeiJii at Colonial Wlll1amshe not be ldenWied by ~· llllld burg before flying . to Waslllngton :
· ~ have beeil numel'(m dlplo- l!lls attermon.

.

Korean

,

· Leo Vaughan, Mgr:

•

aily

he

'

Braker· Farmer-Lender understand the advantages of this
Partnership.
"partnership" systems.
Purpose of this topic Is to
3 - To have students better
demonstrate how cooperation be- unilerstand the o~ns of aervlceti
nefits all parties. Farmers who that could be provided by brokers
market grain may use credit to and lenders.
meet margin calls. Lenders can
The meeting Is scheduled for 7: :II
reduce pricing risk on loans by p.m., Tuesday evening, Jan. 10, at
encouraging their clientele to have the Production Credit Auoclatlon
a well-developed marketing stra- Building, Upper River Road, Galli·
tegy. Some lenders may not polls, Ohio.
understand hedging or Its Impor- · Refreshments wiD be courtesy of
tance. Lenders also face rlaks that the Ohio Valley Bank.
•.. ~
farmers and brokers will make
Last week's refreshments were
decisions wtihout cnsulting them, courtesy of Ohio Valley Uvestock
even though the lender Is a part of Co.
the transaction.
'
The broker, through cooperation
PubUcations available at tbe
with the farmer and lender, may Extension Offlc;e, 1502 Eastern
Increase the number of clients.
Ave., Gallipolis.
Specific· objectives .for the meet1-1984GardenCalendar,$2pl'us
tax
•
Ing are:
• · 1 - To make students aware of
2 - Agronomy Guide, $2.!50 plus
the need for communication and tax
understanding bet'ween the brker,
3 - Farmers Tax Guide - No
farmer · and lender In hedging Cl)arge
transactions.
4 - Farm Cust0111 Rates Paid In
2 - To help students better Ohio, 1983 - No Charge.

r;::::::::::::=======:::::::::;;:;;:;;:;;:;-l
January Clearance

WE ARE YOU R SALES

S_tiper Bowl bound

benefits all parties

Meigs County agent's comer

By JOHN C. RICE
.
quite Informal In their bQrrowtng
...comprehensive
approach from
Extel&amp;on Agent
and lending procedures. In many
Agriculture, Meigs County
Instances, farmers have been able lenders, Lines suggests that
POMEROY - Income Tax to successfuUy negotiate a loan farmers need to learn how to use
Update- Wednesday, Jan.llfrom armed with only a seed corn booklet anti understand th!:ee financial
10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Meigs Inn In of notes, a smile, a sound balance statements: the balance sheet - to
• Pomeroy. The program will con- sheet, and a reputation for paying address the solvency Issue; tbe
tncome statement - to address the
tain the new tax changes, PIK bills.
program In regards to taxes, and
When other businesses request profltabutty question:
plenty of time for questions and . loans, however, lenders usually ask
answers. The program wUI be
for five years of CPA-audited
conducted by me and the H &amp; R fnanctal
statements. And now,
BLock Company. There will t&gt;e no lenders are changing their standlunch available at the Meigs Inn.
ards for farm loans. Their emphaParticipants wUI be on tl!elr own for sis Is broadening from "balance
lunch.
sheet" lending to a more complete
Power Show In Columbus- Jan. ' assessment of the loan request.
27-29, 1984 at the Ohio State
Lenders will be using three
Fairgrounds. The show will open at criteria for assessing loan requests
noon on Friday. Hours will be 9 a.m.
from farmers, says Allan Lines,
to 5 p.m. except Friday, Jan. 27.
Extension economist at The Ohio
Closing time on Friday will be 7 State Unlverstcy. They are: solp.m. The Power Show Is large and vency- the l!bUity to pay all debts;
will feature construction, agricultuliquidity - the abUity to pay
ral, recreational, and lawn and current debts; and profltabUtty garden equipment. We have free the ability to earn a profit.
tickets at our office.
These aren't new Ideas · that
Pork Profits - A five-part series lenders are beginning to apply just
on por~ production and marketing to farm loans. They are used with
outlook for 1984 wUI be shown on TV virtually all other busineSses. Actustarting Sundays, Jan. 8 at noon.
ally, they aren't new to farmers
The programs will be shown on either; It's just that they've been
WOUB-TV, Channel 20 from
referred to In other terms and
Athens.
phrases, such as, . "It won't cash
Applying For Farm Loans flow," "I'm making money," "pay·
Many lenders are going to be asking back· period," "return on Investfor more Information whe~ farmers
ment," and "bankrupt" to express
apply for loans. Historically,
the same Ideas.
farmers and lenders have been
To be . .
' .

January 22.1984

Story, photos, Page 4

griculture and our community

PEEPS, A Gallipolis Dairy:
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS - If you will explore your desk drawer to start the new
year it's likely that you will discover some notes made In 1983 ... and fo~ ol'
Peeps the discovery could lead to the first Peeps column of 1984. That's not
phrased exactly correctly; it cOuld lead to materials from which the first
Peeps column of 1984 could be written.

Tampa, Florida

Editorial Page 2

A

C~peration

Tomadoettes beaten

Economic upswing

..

PREMIER~- Chlnele Pi'emledhao Zlyangstepsfrom
a presidential plane upoil arrival at·Langley Air Force Bille, Va.11po11
lrrtval from Hawaii S!md83' nlpt. The premier rode to Wllllamllburg
w11ere he wiD tour the oolcitilal Vlrglnkl capital before movlna on to
Wuldllpoa for a meetiq with Preslden&amp; Reagan later today. (AP
Luerphoto).
.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (API - U.S.
Navy heUcopters today landed
Marines tightened security today troops on the broad sidewalk of the
foUowlng an ambush which killed an boulevard stretching between the
American corporal, and pollee said British and U.S. Embassy buildings
six people were killed In new fighting Instead of the previous landing zone
between Druse and Christian mUlti- at a beach below the road where
Sunday's attack occurred.
amen south of Beirut.
PoUce said rival militias were
The half-mOe stretch of the
engaged In battles with mortars, boulevard' between the two em bas·
rocket-propeUed grenades and rna· sies is sealed off by waist-high
chine guns this morning In the concrete barriers and manned by
Kharroub region, 20 mlles south of Marine guards on both sides, while
Belrutandthreemllesfromlsrael's the former landing zone about 500
ffront Une along the Awall River. yards southward Is guarded by
Pollee said all six casualties were Lebanese troops.
civilians.
The chief Marine. spokesman,
Despite the fighting, negotiators Maj. Dennis Brooks, Identified the
met again today In Riyadh, Saudi dead Marine as Cpl. Edward J.
Arabia, In an effort to resolve final Gargano of Quincy, Mass., and said
detaUs of a proposed security plan his body would be flown back to the
that would disengage Lebanon's United States as soon as possible.
warring factions and stabilize an
Gargano was killed when-gunmen
often-broken tease-fire.
.
fired two rocket-propelled grenades ·
In west Beirut, the Marines at a 12-man detail of U.S. Marines
moved their heUcopter landing zone · who had been unloaded on the beach
several hundred yards northward · byaCH46SeaKntghthellcopter.No
ori the main seafront · boulevard group claimed responsibility for the
following a guerr!Ua attack Sunday attack.
In Riyadh, foreign ministers Elle
that killed a Marine. He was the
258thmemberoftheU.S.conttngent Salem of Lebanon, Prince Saud
of tbe multinatio'nal force killed ai-Falsal of Saudi Arabia, and
since the Martnes arrived In Abdui-Hallm Khaddam of Syria
Lebanon In September 1982.
met for the second straight day

�'I

.

I

..,..,.. '

\

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio •

1

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV&lt;YI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~~

~m~ ,........_,,_....,...,~doo=o

qjv
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Co.ntroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should he less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject to ediUng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

~edsldns-Raiders

Pae--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pameroy-Micldle~rf, Ohio
Monday, January 9, 1984
I

Assad for president ?__:,___ _ _w_i_llia_m_F_._nu_ck-:-ley_Jr.
0

When a GI gets back from a
that Congress wUI not have de- . mUitary hoosegow, we cheer.
.
clared a national holiday In honor or
Now here are a few things to bear
Jesse Jackson before these words In mind In respect or Lt. Robert
see prtnt. I do believe that a little Goodman Jr. The first Is that he
detoxification Is In order, as they was a legitimate prtsoner or war or
say In the alcoholic wards, before the government of Syrta. That Is to
the celebration gets completely out say, under International law you
of hand. But first ...
have the right to overfly a country
It Is an Important and necessary only by Its consent. Never mind fo'r
part of human convention that we the moment that Syrta provoked
should act In certain ~ays In our reconnaissance Olght over
response to certain Institutional Syria. The fact ofthe matter Is that
stimuli. When we go to a wedding, our Illegal airplane was shot down,
we celebrate. When we go to a the pilot killed, and the co-pilot,
funeral, we weep. When we go to a Lieutenant Goodman, detained as
political convention, we applaud.
the equivalent or a prtsoner or war.

I can see no legal or moral
difference between what the Syrtans did to Lieutenant Goodman and
what the Russians did to Capt.
Francis Gary Powers when they
shot down the U-2 plane: They trted
him and gave him a long prtson
sentence. A few years later we got
him out by releasing a Sov~t spy. In
due course we'd probably have got
Lieutenant Goodman out by handIng over a Syrtan spy, a breed as
plentiful as fruit files.
So then the Rev. Jesse Jackson,
who Is running lor president and
has always run lor publicity,
returns to the Middle East. I say

Nation's buying spree
picks up momentum
Consumers began the new year In a buying mood, as a spending spree
that lifted the economy out of recession more than a year ago shows no
sjgns of letting up.
· Some measures of consumer contldence climbed to all-time highs this
past week while retailers' and automakers reported the strongest sales In
~ars and the volume of stock market trading shattered records. '
~ Economlsls Said consumers' willingness to spend has been spurred by
rising employment and moderation In Inflation.
·
: COnsumer prices have been held to the lowest level In more than a
ctcade and unemployment continues to fall. The government said Friday
that .the 1!m drop In the civilian unemployment rate, to 8.2 percent In
Ileeember from 10.7 percent a year earlier, was the best labor market
ri!covery from a recession since 1951.
:And with the U.S. economy purring and Inflation still under control, the
dollar soared to new highs.
: The extended buying binge has surprised analysts, who had been
ptedlctlng the consumer-led economic expansion would be running out of
steam by now.
: "It looks like consumers are taking on a new burst of enthusiasm," said
&amp;!ward Yardenl, chief economist at Prudential-Bache Securities Inc., a
Jl{ew York securities firm.
·
: Major retailers reported double-digit sales gains In December, and
analysts said receipts did not falter after Christmas.
:Sears, Roebuck and Co., the nation's largest retaDer, said sales last
ll)Onth topped $3 billion for the first time ever, and tliat the 17.5 percent
sales gain In December from a year earlier was the strongest showing
since 1977.
U.S. automakers ended 1!m with a surge In sales, to snap the Industry's
longest slump since tjle Depression or the 19.1ls. The 6.8 million cars sold
last year was up 17.2 percent from a year ago and the highest since the 8.2
WASIDNGTON -The quadren- Atwood, director of the Democratic .
miUion models sold In 1979.
Senate Ca:mpalgn Committee.
nial hand has come around again to
~e Commerce Depart.rnent predicted f57 percent of the nation's
It had been thought that the
a presidential year, which for a
manufacturtng Industries would Increase shipments of products this year,
retirement of Majority Leader
Is
the
time
or
polltlcal
reporter
compared with the 72 percent that Improved In 1!m and the mere 31
Howard Baker, R-Tenn., and Sen.
maximum stimulation. It Is the
pei'Cent In 1982.
John Tower, R-Tex., woulddarhpetl
time
when
public
Interest
In
. "It's a very self-sustaining well balanced recovery," Yardenl said.
Republican prospects. But Clcl Cole
political
reporting
reaches
that
high
"Every Indicator suggests It's aU systems go, full throttle ahead."
of
the National Republican Senatorplateau normaDy reserved for
With the outlook considerably blighter than It was a year ago,
Ial Committee now believes, "we'll
· sports news and Sex crtmes.
consumers now have more money to spend and are more willing to spend
hold."
But In 1984, the presidential-year
it.
Some GOP candidates had been
fever
may
not
spread
far
beyon&lt;b
sindllnger &amp; Co. Inc., a private firm that has been sampling consumer
apprehensive about the Reagan
the
political
partisans
and
activists.
senllment for 29 years, said that In the week ended last Wednesday, It
shadow; now they are eager to bask
The voters at large are not
recorded Its highest reading of overall consumer confidence since 1973.
In his reflected glow. Asked what
sufficiently rrtghtened by Ronald
And It reported a record number of consumers said their current Income
would be the single worst thing that
Reagan
or
stimulated
by
Walter
was higher than It was six months earlier.
could befall his Republican oppoMondale,
the
two
likely
contenders,
The consulting firm also said expectations of wage Increases are at the
nents this year, Atwood said dryly,
to run up a temperature.
highest level since May 1973, with 45.9 percent of those questioned saying
"Ronald Reagan deciding not to
outlook
on
this
opening
day
of
The
they expected an Increase In pay In the next six months and only 12.4
run a_ialn."
another campaign year Is that
expecting lower earnings.
Something Is transmitted ln
President Reagan wiD be reBut the growth In consumer confidence also brought a warning from
Reagan's appearance, demeanor
elected.
Mondale
appears
destined
Albert Sindlinger, who founded and heads the Media, Pa., consulting firm.
and natural amlabUity that appeals
to become the latest In a succession
:·I don't like the belligerence we're getting on expected wases,"
to the public's need for pa\l'larchal
of undistinguished, unlnsplrtng DeSindlinger said. "It's the first time I've been concerned about a rise In
reassurance. He will be portrayed
mocratic
candidates
of
the
Jimmy
contldence."
by the Democr11ts as a president
Carter and George ~cGovern
Sindlinger said the high expectations of consumers could collide with the
surrounded by plutocrats, without
genus.
Federal Reserve Board's antl-in1Iatlon policies or Umltlng the growth of
compassion for the poor and the
The Democrats' dream of winfunds avaDable for spending.
blacks. But Reagan has a capacity
ning
back
a
Senate
majortty
Is
also
:'I'm worrted that this heavy rtse In cdntldence will top out In an Interest
to
float placidly above the partisan
fading.
"My
judgment
now
Is
that
a
rate rise," said Sindlinger.
squaDs that he may himself stir up.
Democratic majority Is about a
Mondale, for all of his quiet
50-50 proposition," says Brtan

returns to the Middle East because
he was there before, In 1979, being
photographed as trequeptly as now
he Is being photographers. His
mission then was to urge the world
to receive Yasser Ararat Into our
bosom, since Ararat was really 11
man of peace, never mind that the
leader of the Palestine Liberation
organization Is a professional
terrorist.
Now, Jesse Jackson having
figures In the release or Lieutenant
Goodman, the Rev. Jackson reports to the world over television
that President Assad "Is a human ·
being at heart." The trouble with
that statement Is that It Is only
biologically true. Hitler was liter-.
ally a human being, who had a
heart; as was Stalin. The notion
that President Assad has become
human In any relevant political or
humanitarian sense Is the klnd or
thing that works Its way Into
euglogles. The tombstone or the
president of Syrta Is not going to
read, "Here lie the remains or
Hafez al-Assad, who gave freedom
to Lt. Robert Goodman Jr. on' Jan.
3, 1984." Since Mr. Assad Is a
dictator, he will presumably dictate
what goes on his tombstone.' but If
Lieutenant Goodman figured at all,
It would be to the err~. "Here lles
Hafez al-Assad, ,who gave up one
American GI, and In return Increased the size or the Syrtan
Empire."

Meigs takes third m GAHS
event; Willford voted MVP ~
w......-

MORE YABD.\GEfte+!de fullback Jolm Rtat(M) &amp;willa far )'ardlp acllal&amp; 1be 8u ~ 4een 8uatlaJ at
Robert F. KemrQ llUdlum Ill W•.t'sr,o. RlgiM, lbe IIIUI!eadlq
Nlber Ill Natloaal F ..... Lellpe ltliltor)', ru for 1!1 )'ardl 011 II
cante. and IClOl'ed two lol•
(API mrpboto).

h.Hi-.

Three Rio players
listed in rankingS
'

Senate ·takeover____~---~J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rs_ori

0

Berry's World

candidate will be former Rep. Bob ·
Krueger, a moderate who has oil
Industry support and Is close to the
state's Hl~panlc leadership, {3ul his
opponent Is expected to be Rep. Phil
Gramm, the Boll W~WVIl Democrat
who switched parties and won
re-election easily as a Republican.
Texas was a wide conservative
streak, and Reagan Is popular.
Gramm could ride the· president's
coattails Into the Senate.
- New Hampshire: Conservative Republican Gordon Humphrey's New Right rhetoric - for
school prayer and against the
Equal Rights Amendment - has
alienated many voters. Humphrey
Is trying to soften his ultraconvervatlve .Image, and he's sure to
outspend Democratic Rep. Norman D' Armours. A tossup.
Iowa: Incumbent Republican
freshman Roger Jepsen faces an ·
uphill battle against Rep. Tom
Harkin, a popular moderate Democrat. The Democrals hope ·to court
moderate Republicans by painting ·
Japan as a puppet-manipulated by
Reagan. Harkin Is ahead.

loday in history
I.

Today Is Monday, Jan. 9, thenlnthdayof~. Therearre357daysleftln

the year.

Today' s highlight In history: .
.
On Jan. 9, 1964, anti-American riots broke out In Panama.
On this date: ·
IIi 1861, Mississippi seceded from the Union. .

t

•

,....,

Pta.

s::::: : : : : : : : : :: : : :: :::F:%
Pt.._.. ...................................... n

F.................................................. l8
NoftltG......................................... II
Ot-·P""Ir·

··················-····················14

--

Wetpt and lnl

SERVICE Dependability
Peace of Mind

lllrousb louJth plaoeoo .,..

• - llolley, GA: Cllllid,)o, L; Bnunllelol,
PP;-...,NG.
lti-CallldJ, L; 81 ·ken:Hp, ro: w~
F;-.M.
II!-~. M: llam&gt;w, L; .,_, 00:

Repoo. NG.
Ill - N - F: Plll'&lt;lll, L; Blllt, NG;
f'loley, Go\.
Ill - V111blbllor, L; 8oDdon, GA:
GalowJQ', F; Sllloa, M.
IJZ - lllylbe, L; &amp;adl. GA; Slodalr, M:

""""
00.
U8McBride. L; Ralke, PP: Roach. NG:
J-Go\.

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING .
SERVICE

.

ttl - -ord, M: 8 - , GA: SoDolon;

Clo;Semd,PP.

RIO GRANDE - Three Rio goal percentage (.555), ninth In
Grande College Redmen are scortng (14.2), and tenth In r~
ranked In the mid-season statistics · throw percentage (.720).
Guard Kent Wolfe, a 5-9 sophoGAHSplaced10oflts12wrestlers
released today by the Mid-Ohio
inore from Racine, Ohio, Is second In the finals. Ken Holley, In the
Conference.
All-Amertcan guard Jerry Mow- behind Mowery In tree throw 98-pound ampetltlon, ll!allded his
first Invitational champlonslllp,
ery, a !HI junior from WUllamsport, shooting with an .871 percentage.
As a team, the Redmen are tied while 167-pound Scott Smith also
Ohio, Is first In tree throw percen·
tage (.8TI) and assists (7.6) and Is with Walsh for first In scortng took hollli'B In his division. Both
second In scoring (16.8) and field average with an 86.4 aggregate, placedflrstlntheMelgstoumament
first In f1:ee throw percentage at twoweeksago.
goal percentage ( .602)
Flnlshlng fourth tor GAHS were
Dan CUny, a 6-7 junior forward .723, third In defensive average at
from Derby, Ohio, Is third In 66.7, and are tied with three other Craig Finley, 119 pounds; John
rebounding '(8.0), seventh In field teams for second In field goal Jackllon, 138 pounds; and Todd
percentage at 50 percent.
Sheets, 185 pounds. Third place
The Redmen are first In overall medalist for the Blue Devils was
victortes with a 14-3 mark. Walsh Ia Wayne Walters,l25 pounds. Second
1().2, TUfln ~. CedaJVIIle 6-5, Mt. pilp! medal wtnnen were Randy
Vernon 7·7, Malone ~. Urbana Sanders,l26pounds;JeftRoach,132
· pounds; RosS Swisher, 145 pounds;
Eastern's reserves roUed to a 12-6 2-14, and Ohio Dominican o-10.
League play begins next week and Steve Sanders, 155 pounds.
victory over Southwestern In girls'
with Rio Grande ..,;!raveling to
Logan took tour lndlvldual chamhigh school basketball action, shutCanton
to
take
on
Malone
CoDegeon
pions,
Meigs two, Fairland two, Coal
ting out Its roe 4-0 In the second half.
Jan.
10.
Grove
two and Point Pleasant, one.'
Krlstl Hawk lutd Patti Durst had
four points each for the winners,
whUe Tonya Savoy and Amy Young
added two each.
Hawk had eight rebounds, Mellsa
Nutter had eight and QUrst six' for
Pam Douthitt's team.
The little Eaglettes..)llt fiJ., or "rl
from the field for 19 pen.leu{~ two
ol10 at the line. They are now 1-4
overall and 1-11n the league.
S. Smith, S. McFaM, and L.
ArrOwood each had two for the
Highlanders.
In seventh grade basketball
action Eastern rolled to a 28-20 win
over Southwestern after leading
25-9 going Into the last frame. Bryan
ChadweD led ·the winners with 11
points.
Dave Mershan led SWHS with
eight.

111-llolmei, CG: Suodon.GA:-.

Transactions

_,_
IIASI!IWL

OUCAGO WH1'1'E SOX--Siped Julio
six·~ con-

CNz. IPCOnd t.&amp;eman. to a
orvo.

_,_

M; Sowen,L
117 - 8m111o. GA: lleno, PP: Blair, L;
Slllm,M.

a-, CG: Forerrwo, NG; Wallen,
GA:~
Ill$PP: Laac, Clo; W....,_ L;
115 -

81-8 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, OH.
H&amp;R Block Office Location .

SbeeU,G
Hwt. - G.-ay, F: Noble, Clo; Davia, M:

PH . 992-3795

v"""'' 00.

SAN DlllGO PAiliiES-Sipo!d Rldo
Gouagr, pllcher, to a ftve.)'Nl' cortract.

lloUU11WL

~ .........=ri....

I...Cfi A.NGEL&amp;c; l.A.KERS-Acttvated
Kurt Rlrnbb.. b'ward. P'l.lced Lany
Sp1cp, forward. on the ln)u.rtd Jist.

TURNER'S SATELLITE
RECEIVER SYST EMS

.......:="',_
GREEN BAY PACKERS-Named JftTy

Wampfk!r u olenatve Une COICb.
LOS ANGELES RAID~Piaoed
Rick """"" toodo .........,....
l'ftft\"e k
Acttvawel Che*r wuua. ru-

qq2-55&lt;32

••-·

~--._

Ol&lt;l.AHOMA QlTI'lAws-Named Jlm
defenstw line CXlldl and Frank
Novllc ntmn&amp;: twk COidt.
HOOlEY

DISHES

~

N--Lo-

.Fiberglas
llesh
Aluminum

PHILADELPHIA
FLYERS-n.d&lt;d
Ride Macl.Nh. cent«. 10 lbr Drtroh Red
Wklp for fuf\ft mnlklerltim.
WASHINGI'ON CAPITAlS-Sent Pat

8'x20'

A1Y1erDn
· "Hockey
' " ' -·l...eague.
10 - RecaJkodofDlwo
""'

Meet the Tornadoes

Pamoo goalie, ond Boyan Eo1d&lt;sooo. """'
""" h'aTI Hershey.

saara

APPLIANCE SALE!

0

"

KENMORE
18.0 CU. FT.

Local bowling

should know about lt."
find out their battle clothes will
"When the Pentagon makes a make them sweat," Fetzler told
mistake 1! Is perfectly equipped to me.
admit lt. It doesp't need a bunch of
"I guess you're right. If you were
Sandlnlsta-loving reporters to tell me and wanted to prove your
the country what; we're doing loyalty to Amertca what would you
WJ:~:&gt;ng," Fetzler said.
.
write?"
"But wouldit't a story on the
"If you really want to prove
uniforms stop the Army from you're on 'our' side, why don't you
wasting the taxpayers' .money?"
wrlte a story oh how tacky the
· "The money's a drop In tlie . Cuban fatigue uniforms are combucket compared to the damage pared to ours?"
you could do to our troops lf they

_...,_

Eo&amp;VW-.,

..•

KEVIN CURFMAN

DARIN ROUSH
U, Jr. Forward

DocomberiS,llll

I'll.
Tony's Carry Out ................................ ,.811
Roach's Gun Shop ............ ........... .... ...... 'Ill

'l'eom

ALL~FROSTLESS

M,,Sr. ·Forward

REFRIGERATORFREEZERS

E ..... Club ........ ..................................tlll

No.5 .....................................................

Smlth-Nellon Motors ............................. 11
Frtend1y Tavem .. ..................................!l6
IIlah - Speed Ruuell iiiB, ~... .
Pllelpo SIB; Pat C...... !103, Clydo Sayre f//f1.
lfllh t~~me - Jtrnrny Hawley 183, Speed
~ IB2; Helen Phelpa 1'18, Pat c:.non 1'16.
Rooch'a Gun Shop 18«1-

Teom-Tpam game -

#46E73821

No. 5 1113.

IN STOCK

Lopsided victory

THi~ Ba~ ;~ ~cuRe. '-'le

NEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio
(AP) -Iridian HUla Christian high
school basketball Coach SteveMDier
88)'1 hi$ team's 136-17 drubblna of
Wintersville Christian In a boys'
basketbllll game was a III!W
experlen(e for him.
·
· "I Just sat there. I had never been
lnvolv!!dlnagamel!kethis,"besald
after Saturday's i8JIII!.
·
1beChlefaout.-:oredWintersvme
a.-2 In the fl1'lt quarter and Miller
puDed bij ltaiterl betore his team
1'111 ilp a 1M halftime lead.

3Re CaMOUFLCIGeP FROM
~;..;;:.:::::..::.:_;Pe'Tl:3ciiON.

wtnlet'IVIIle tortelted a aeamd

pme with Indian HUla ·ICbeduled
..Jater this seaiton.

.. READY TO DELIVER"

0
$5·25°

fl .@

-

J-U, Sr. Guard

.--....:..-....:..------------------i
OF OHIO, INC.
•

N. 2Nb AYE.' . .

'·

•

fRUTH PHARMACY .
'

MIDBLEPORT, OH

1. 2nd Avi.

GREGG &amp; PAm GIBBS

''Special Chrlatmas Houl'l!'

1PH: (Ohio) 992·2178

to
llndly
to
.,-992-3.106

HOURS: ·

•. llon~•Sat.11:009:00 1:0010:00
HoURs
PH. 991-6491
·

· ' ln~lu~es

Sh1ppmg

WADE CONNOU.Y
5-11, Sr. Guard

.TONY DEEM

!

\

GAHS, which Is 14-2-1 on the
season, wUJ participate In the Hupco
tournament In Huntington, W.Va.,
Friday and Saturday.

Eaglette reseroes
post 12-6 victory

B_:..:.uc..::..:....:h..:..:...:wa:.:..::.ld

''WOW/ What B'COMMUNICA TORI/ even think
our deficit situation is TERRIFIC now... "

Logan held Its position as team
champion at the conclusion or the
Gallipolis lnvlllitlonal wreslltng
tournament Saturday.
Gallla Academy placed second In
competition.
The other teams placing, third
through elgh~ In the eight-team
conrest, were Meigs, Coal Grove,
~lnt Pleasant, Fairland, North
Gallla and Olesapeake.
Meigs' Mike WUiard was selected
most valuable wrestler In the
tournament, based on coaches'
voting.

0

Let them .sweat _________A_r_t
''Then you think I better not say
"I'm In a jam," I told Fetzler,
anything about It?"
who works In the Pentagon.
"What's the problem now?"
"If you did you'd be giving aid
"I want to do a story on the lousy and cor:nfort to the Kremlin, which
camouflage fatigue uniforms the Is what the press likes to do."
Army Is Issuing to Its men."
"What about the cOmfol'! or the
,
"Why are you In a jam?:' he Amertcan soldier?"
asked.
"That's none or your business.
"Because If I wrtte It I'D just be Why don't you wrtte about what's
confirming ~hat Secretary or State good In the Army and not always
George Shultz and President Rea- what's bad?"
gan said about Amertcan reporters
"Don't get me wrong. I'm on '.our'
not being on our side any more."
side," I said. "B11t o~ly the
"What's wrong with the Army goofed and refuses to. admit
fatigues?" .
they made a mistake. I don't W1tnt
"You should kljow better than I our boys fighting, In the tropics In
do. 'rhey're too heavy· for the heavy fatigues."
"VVould It surprtse you to know
tropics, they are made or 50 percent
nylon and don't breathe, and when · the Pentagon Is aware or the bad ·
they 'get wet It takes roiever for reviews on the battle dress and has
them to dry 0"
appointed a commission to study
'
"They weren't meant to be used it?"
"It wouldn't surpriSe me at all," I
In the trOpics. they were meant to
be worn In northern Europe."
said. "But why are they going
"Then why didn't the Army Issue ahead with the $432-mlll!on order
the troops going Into Grenada when ~·s a: question lf they're
_
lighter Unlfonm?"
any good or not?"
"Because It's going to take 12 to 15
"Becausew'edldn'thaveany.But
months to design and est a, new
we're working on one rliltt now."
"I found this out, but If I write It, ·fatigue unUmm."
, "Didn't the Army test the pne
Shu!~ and the president will think
I'm on Castro's side."
they have now In the tropics before
"why c1o you have to wrtte tt?" they onJered It?"
F~er wanted to know.
''That's Jut tl)e kind of quesilon
"Despite. tbe complaints, the that. makes the president wonder If
Army Ia going ahead and orderllig . you peopll! are on ourslde," Fetzler
13.4 mllllon more sets at a cost of 'said.
''I'm not trytni to make waves,"
$432 million. TIJey've already
Issued 6.4 mllllon at a cost, of $2(Xi I protested. "My problem Ia that
wbere the Amerlc111 GI Ia COil·
mWlon and the GI's hate them."
''The people In the Pentaaon cemed be sbould at leut bedresled
know what's best for the Gl's. After ,f.or the war be's aaked to fiabt ln.
all, they're aeueraJs."
And If be llll't, the AlDerlCIII public

that helped the Raiders build a 2().()
halftime lead. Then he threw a
3-yard touchdown pass In the third
period to Marcus Allen.
Allen rushed for 154 yards, 13 :
yards less than the entire Seattle
offense achieved, In his bestgameof ·
the season. "I don't want to sound :
conceited," he said, "but lf I have a .
good game, It opens up things for ·
everybody else."
·
It was almost a complete reversal ·
of the teams' two previous meetIngs, swept bySealtle38-36and34-21
thanks to 13 turnovers by the :
Raiders.
"They beat us when they had to," .
said Dave Krieg, who started at ·
quarterback for the Seahawks but :
was replaced by Jim Zorn midway :
In the third period after completlngg ·
only three of nine passes for 12 ·
yards, throwing three Interceptions
and getting sacked three times.
"The biggest difference between :
today'sgameand theothertwowas ·
that we were a much better team:'
this time, " said Raiders Coach Tom
Flores. "We played like we should.
play. We played with a lotofsptrtt:'' :
They played with more than that.

Riggins scored from a yard out In
the third period and Thelsrml!an
made It 21-0 on a ~yard scortng
pass to Charlie Brown.
Halden dump Seabawb
Meanwhile, The game plan the
Los Angeles Raiders' usj!d to beat
Seattle Seahawks In the'American
Conference championship wUJ be
kept alive and used against the
WashlngtonRedsklns In Super Bowl
XVIII.
"We're not going to change a
thing. We're just going to go after
them," linebacker Rod Martin said
after the Raiders slammed the door
on Seattle's rookie super runner,
Curt Warner, wrecked the Seahawks' passing game with five
Interceptions and roDed to a J0.14
victory Swlllay.
Now they have to slam the door on
John Riggins, the Redsklns' buUdozlng runner, the record-breaking
Most Valuable Player In last year's
Super Bowl game.
Plunkett's passes to Malcolm
BamweD set up Frank Hawkins'
1-yard and 5-yard touchdown runs

•

· While Jesse Jackson was In Syrta
celebrating the humanitarianism or
President Assad, Mrs. Jackson was
In Nicaragua celebrating the
virtues of the Sandlnlsta government, which has repealed, not just
. lor blacks but lor everybody, the
BUl of Rights to which her husband
Is ostensibly·devoted. Perhaps the
problem runs In the family.

competence, comes across as the
Democrats' answer to Somlnex.
With his heavy lids and ·hangdog
expression, he sometimes seem&amp; to
be putting himself to sleep. His best
chance would be to choose as his
ruMing mate a woman, who would
attract the political spotlight from
him.
The battle for control of the
Senate will likely be decided In five
states where the Democrats are
mounting their strongest challenges. My reporters William Montague and Lucas Rivera Interviewed political experts In these
crucial states. Here's how the races
are shaping up:
- North Carolina: Republican
Sen. Jesse Helms, darling of the
New Right, was 20 points behind his
Democratic challenger, Gov. Jim
Hunt, a few months ago. But Helms
Is the ac!&lt;nowledged champion of
. fund-raisers and, therefore, wUl be
able to outspend Hunt by a big
margin. Helms has l}lready closed
the gap to nine points In the polls,
and he has barely started spending
yet.
-Texas: The likely Democratic

in ·Super Bowl XVIII : :

WASHINGI'ON (AP) ""'It waa a winnel', a 25-yarderwlth44seconds
strua1e tor both the .Waalllnaton remaining In p!8U~atk&gt;n time. But
Redlldnl and Mark Moeeley, but tiie 49ers were Uvld wer calls
coach Joe Glbbl' team 11. on the against cornerbaCks Ronnie Lott
verp of joining an exclullveclub In and Eric Wright that played amajor
role In the final drive.
the National Football League.
Thankl to Sunday's U-21 victory
The Redsklns bunt a 21-0 lead
ln. the National Conference title pulllngoutevery'trtck In the book.
game In which the San Francisco
Held In check by 1111 aroused 49er
49ers were hit with two crucial defense, Washlngto.n trted everypenalties In the decisive Redskin thing from fake Punts to flea
drive to Moeeley'a game-wlnnliig flickers, from fullbacks throwing to
field goal, Wuhlngton can become punt returners tossing footballs the
on1y the fourth team to w1n width or the field.
back-to-back&amp;lperBowls.
After ascorelessflrstquarter, the
The Green Bay Packers, Miami Redsklns scored on a second-period
Dolphlns and the Pittsburgh Sl.eel- touchdown runs of 4 yards by John
era, twice, have done lt. On Jan. 22 · Riggins, set up by a 43-yard pass
theRedsklnswllltrytoaddtothellst ' from Joe Thelsmann to tight end
wben they meet the Los Angeles Clint Didier.
Raiders In &amp;!per Bowl xvm at
Safety Dwight Hicks, defending
Tampa. The Raiders won the on the play, claimed and was
American Conterence champion- supported by replays, that Didier
shlpSundaywitha00.14vlctorywer had pushed orr on the play.
"lt'salegltlmatecomplalnt, there
the Seattle Seahawks.
Moeeley, the Redsklns' usually deflnltelywascontact,"saldDidler.
sure-footed kicker, mlssed_fourfleld '"The call could have gone either
goals before_ booting the game way."

'-

I write on the rtsky assumption

The Daily Sentinel-Page-3

•

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG
MERCHANT
Middleport, OH.

Va.) 773-9577

.

.•

�Page

~

The Daily Sentinel

...

Pomeeoy-Middleport, Ohio
,.

Comeback falls short

Birdfeeder
•
•
gtven patients

'• 1
•

•

l

Athens' gals stop Tomadoettes
By SCOTT D. WOLFE
ern gals, despite a colorful effort,
suffered just their second loss of the
In one of the most dramatic
basketball games of the year, the season,bothofwhichcame toClass
hustling Southern Tornadoettes,
"AAA" Athens.
traUlng by 21 points In the first half,
Southern Is now 7-2, whUe Athens
manufactured an exciting comelifted Its mark to 8-2. Athens leads
back effort that pulled them within
the SEOAL league with a 4.{) mark,
one point, 56-57, In the fourth frame,
suffertng Its only losses to non• before losing a 7().65 &lt;lf:lslon to
league toes Newark and ZanesvUle.
Athens.
Coach Tim Smith's Athens gals
were led by senior captain Joy
This exciting girls' non-league
~sketball contest, played Satur- Sudnlck's 25 points and three
, day night at Racine, was quite a n . assists. Two weeks ago In the
Inspiration as the Tomadoettes
Athens Holiday Tournament, Sudstarted the game · with three
nick was held scoreless by a tight
regulars absent from the starting
Southern defe nse, however,
line-up. The much smaller SouthAthens' strong Inside game on

TIPS PASS- Janice Huwe of Atbeas ilps a pus from a~
player during action of Saturday's noiHlOIIference game at Racine.
Athens won the thriller, 71Hi5, as a fourth quarter Tornado comeback
feU five points abort.

Saturday opened up an. outlet for girls, SHS put the visitors In foul
her success.
trouble and puUed closer at 53-50 on
TeammateJanlceHuwenotched two buckets by Debbie Michael,
16 Important points, while six-foot- who had eight points on the night.
three Lisa Willoughby tossed In 14
Finally, at the three point mark
markers for the winners.
Southern puUed within one, 56-57,
Despite a slow first half South- then started to run out of steam
em's Amy Littlefield led all scorers despite a sptrtted bid for victory
with a game-high 26 points and that feU short as the curtain feU on
three assists, while teammate the 'ro=65 finale.
Laren Wolfe had an outstanding
Southern hit just 25of68from the
Inside game for 20 points. Jenny field for 36 percent, but was
Bentley was credited with an hampered by a first half shooting
exceUent floor game, had 11 points, stint of only 26 percent, eight of 31.
and puUed down nine rebounds to The winners hit 31 of 63 for 49
lead the team.
percent, while canning eight of12at
Athens grabbed the opening tlp of the line for 67 percent. SHS hit 15 of
the game and guard Beth Carlson 21 at the line for 71 percent.
drove It In for the score at 7:45,
According to the charts, Athens
before Wolfe tted It up at 2-2 shortly grabbed 65 rebounds as Janice
after with a 15 foot comer jumper. Huwe had 17, Ann Stemeckert 12,
From that point on to the end of~ and Lisa Willoughby 12. Southern
frame, the tempo and momentum managed just 20 caroms led by
was controUed by Athens' doml- Bentley with nine, Littlefield eight,
narit Inside game, which flaunted and Wolfe two.
Athens had 24 turnovers, 14
three girls above the six-foot-one
mark. With Athens unreeled seven assists led by Carlson's four, five
unanswered points for a command- steals, and 19 fouls. Southern had
just eight .turnovers, four assists, 14
lng 30-9 advantage.
FoUowlng a Southern time-out steals, and 14 fouls.
the hosts went to · the line, then
Athens' Coach Tim Smith said
dropped Into a surprtslng full court after the game, "When It's all said
press, cutting the deficit to 37-25 at and done, I'm not sure If Southern
didn't deserve to win! Most teams
the haiti
Midway through the third perfod would have quit and waited for the
Athens held a constant 14 point next game, but they didn't let up. I
margin, however, Southern's per· w~ Impressed with their hustle
slstent press again wore down Its anll aggressiveness.
opponent. On steals by Wolfe,
"For their size of school we
Littlefield, and Bentley. SHS, at one haven't played anyone better.
point fought back to a 4944 score They're as tough as anyone we wUI
before the llreworks ended at the play. They should be a gpod
buzzer, 51-44.
tournament team. Southern just
With one player missing and . has to realize that they are as equal
anotherseelngllrnltedactlondueto to any teams around ·ln the state.
illness, freshman Rachel Reiber Tonight we were fortunate to win."
was on the point for Southern,
Southern Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr.
handling the pressures of a dra- was pleased with his team's great
malic fourth quarter comeback comeback saying, "We let their size
quite weD. Continuing to press and Intimidate us In the first quarter
directing Its attack at Athens' big but our girls didn't give up and r~

Littlefield awesome against Pirates
RACINE - I,ast Frtday night at

Vinton, Southern's playmaking
point guard Rod Littlefield hit l8 of
20 field goals and totaled a
career-high 41 points to lead the
Tornadoes to an Impressive 81-51
trtumph over the North Galla
Pirates In . a Southern Valley
Athletic Conference game.
Littlefield's awesome statistics
reveaJed a 90 percent shpotlng
accuracy from the floor as weD as a
good five of seven night from the
foul line. The Southern point guard,
now averaging 26 points a game,
had only 14 points at the half, but
enjoyed a great second half for

Coach Carl Wolfe's unbeaten
Tornadoes.
Coach Wolfe · ·Jied Littlefield's
performance .ne of the most
outstanding ~. •!vidual performances he has witneSSed by any player
he had ever coached. Wolfe
coached at Middleport and Meigs
prtor to coming to Southern 11 years
ago.
It also marks the first time In
Wolfe's coaching career that a
player on his team has cracked the
40 point barrter In one game.
Former Southerner Kent Wolfe,
now with the Rio Grande Redmen,
came close on two occasions with

39, Including . a storybook performance In the state tournament two
years ago.
Littlefield left the game with a
little over three minutes remaining
and at one point equalled the 41
point total of North Gallla's entire
team.
Littlefield Is the son of Daniel and
Shirley Littlefield, Racine, and has
a twin sister, Amy, whoaverages25
points a game for the Southern
Tornadoettes. An older brother,
Bill, had four fine years at Ohio
University, while another brother,
Matt, starts for the Marietta
Pioneers.

A three foot bird feeder. constructed by Mlddillport Boy Scout
Troop 245, has been erected at the
Arcadia Nursing Home.
A special Chrlslmas project for
the troop, the feeder was constructed with materials donated by
Ace Hardware and Donald Lowery.
Assisting with the project besides
Lowery, committee chairman,
were Lanny Tyree, scoutmaster,
Donald Haning, and Sherman Mills,
assistant scoutmasters, and scouts,
Eddie Baer, Scott Haning, Donald
Stein, Buddy Thompson, Jimmy
Grueser, Billy Haggy, Walter
Haggy, DeU Laudennllt, Andy
Hawk, and Jeff Hawk.

SCHOlARSHIP RECIPIENT -

wu awarded the Veterans Memorial llolpltal
Auxiliary !ICholariNp of S100 Saturday. She received
• for her flnt year, and wBI get lhe remainder next
year. A U82 graduate of Melp lllgh School, llhe

Calendar

for the Lady BuDdop. IJUieleld llnlshed wlih 28 poiJD wldle Lana
Wolfe dumped bt 211. However, the Lady Bulldop won the -leque

affair, 71Hi5.
the press reaDy weD. I was really
pleased with our effort and just
being able to be-back In the game.
One big girl we could defense, but
three ... that was nearly Impossible.
We should be-In good ·shape by
tournament time and this was a
good game for us."
In the reserve contest Athens
claimed a 22-15 over Coach Kim
Grueser's little Tornadoettes.
Sherry RusseU had seven for the
hosts. L. Farley had eight for
Athens.
Southern next hosts Gallipolis,
now 8-1, on TUesday.

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR
Your Farm
Equipment

Store
992-2668
·meorv, Oh.

By Lint REG. 1239.95

WHEN YOU BUY THIS NEW UVING ROOM.SUITE AT THE
REGUW PRICE OF '499.95. ·
.

STOP IN AND MEET
. OUR sn~USTS
'

·CATHY JO &amp; BRENDA

The Daily Sentinel
(USPSit$·. . 1

A Dlvltloa of Mullhnedlo, lac.
PubiiJhed every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street , by tile

POMEROY - Special meetIng of Pomeroy Chapter ~.
Rqyal Arch Masons Monday at 7
p.m. Work In the royal arch
degree.
POMEROY Pomeroy
Royal Arch Masons,
will meet at 7 p.m . Monday at
the temple with work In the
Royal Arch Degree. Refresh·
ments will be served.
Chapter~.

Ohio Valley Publlshtna Company . Mill·
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Literary club has meeting

11JESDAY
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at
7:30p.m.

MIDDLEPORT

The Middleport Literary Club novels, she noted .
'The Bronte novels, Mrs. Owen
heldltsJan.'4meetlngatthehomeof
noted,
showed Intense feelings and
Mrs. Chester Erwin. Presldlng at
shocked
contempori\r,les by depictthe club's annual business meeting
was Mrs. Richard Owen, president, lng women loving Instead of merely
who welcomed members and led In betltg loved as was. the Victorian
the club collect. Mrs. Robert Fisher tradition.
Mrs. Nan Moore then reviewed
gave th annual treasurer's report.
Mrs:'Owen reytewed ''The Bronte · Miss Bronte's most famous novel,
Story" by Margaret Lane. 'Ibis was "Jane Eyre." The heroine of the
an account of the English novelist, same name becomes a governess In
the family of a man to whom she Is
Charlotte Bronte, theeldestofthree
sisters, all of whom were notable as fanally married.
Candy was served to members
wrtters. In 1847 she published the
and one guest, Mrs. JamesJohnson.
story, "Jane Eyre" with InstantaneNext meeting will be on Jan. 18, at.
ous success. Although severely
criticized, It Is admitted to be one of the home of Mrs. Robert Fisher. For
roll call members commented on
the most remarkable of English
the books rev(ewed .

XI

Gamma M!J Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will meet at
7:30 p.m . Tuesday In the social
roOm of the Middleport Fire
Station.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Pomeroy
Chapter ~ Royal Arch Masons
will meet Wednesday at 7: 30
p.m. along with Bosworth CouncU 46 Royal and Select Masters.

·carpenter
happenings

Drug abuse
program gtven

We Are Not Just A Beauty ShOp, We Are A Gel·
lery of Complete Heir Arts.

, Laura Jenkin&amp; Is now at her West
MaiD =~ID PuM-oy atteJ; ,

.. :

CORNER OF 2nd &amp; COAL '
MIDDLEPORT

NOW SERVING
DINNER SPECIALS
EVERY DAY
ALSO A COMPLETE
SANDWICH MENU.
FREE DELIVERY TO LOCAL BUSINESSES.
KITCHEN OPEN
10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
CALL US WITH
YOUR ORDER TODAY

Army Pvt. Johnetta Kaye South·
em, daughter of John and Mary
Southern, Doran, Va. and granddaughter of Mrs. EUa Quillen,
Syracuse, has completed basic
training at Fort Jacl&lt;son, S.C.
While In basic training she
received a marksman medal tor
firing of a M16Al rlfle and a
sharpshooter medal for throwing_
hand grenades. She has been
reassigned to advanced training
also at Fort Jackson. ,
'
Southern Is a 1981 graduate of
Richlands High School, RlciJlands,
Va. and attended Radford Unlverslty, Radford, , Va. prtor to her

~to University ·

LORI'S PIZZA
OPEN MONDAY-THURSDAY
.,11 ' A.M.-12
MIDNIGHT
.
'
.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
11 A.l:-1 AM.

WITH .LOcAL DELIVERY
D · A 1 1

SUN AH1 .1.-1 P. .

CALL 992-6851
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Willi ctiU ~ OII
UIIIIT I UPII[S I li·l4 ,

SUNDRY COUPON

ECOTRIII

992-9903

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f-~eillls==tmen=·=t.=~==· ===:;i

Returns home .

\

LUNCH ROOM

Southern· bast·c
training end.f

PERMS ..........................:. '17.50, '20;00, 130.00 .
Shampoo, Style Cut &amp; Blow Dry ........ :....... 18.50

Hoepltal Columbus.

MARY ANN'S

Sister Janet Rectenwald gave a
progriiin on drug abuse ' at the
Thursday meeting of the Catholic
Women's Club of Sacred Heart
Church held In
the actlvltles
'buUdlng.
A report was given on the
Christmas cookies sent to shut-Ins
and parishioners more than 90years
old.lt was noted thatthenallvlty set
made and donated by Barb Mullen
and Phyills Hackett had been won
by Rose Fife.
Hostesses were Barbara Smith,
Carolyn Kom, Diane Bartels and
Bernie Anderson.
.. ·

GUkey, Athens, and herbrother,and
sllter-ln-law, Mr. and Mi's. Ted ·
OUkey and Cfystal, Albany.
: Tile Cllrtstmas pl'il8ram at the
temPle church was weD attended.
.....
.
Mr. and Mra. Bryan Jordan spent
Chrlslmas; night with relatives In
Portsmoutl!. Ohio. '

Jllvlng .

Mary K. Holter, news reporter;
Charlotte Grant, news reporter,
assistant; Lora Damewood, Opal
Hollon, . Ada BlsseU, delinquent
committee.
Other committees are Dorothy
Ritchie, .JOiis Grueser, Esther
Smith, Opal Hollon, "'iary Showal·
ter, Fern Morris, Mary Hayes,
Ways and Means; Erma Cleland,
Marcia Keller, JoAnn Baum, Helen
Wolf, Ethel Orr, Thelma White,
Good of the Order; Sadie TruseU,
Eileen Martin, Zelda Weber, Faye
Kirkhart, Home and Orphans;
Leona Hensley, Mae McPeek, Ada
Bissen. Vlrglnla Newlun, Leota
Ferrell, MlsceUaneous; Erma Cleland, Mary Showalter, Goldie
Frederick, Resolution; Goldie
Krackomherger. Ihla Fae Kimes,
Darts Koenig, Eva Robson, Alta
BaUard, Mary K. Holter, Flowers;
Keith Ashley, Helen Wolf and
Clarice Alen, Pianists.
Named to the January kitchen
committee were Fern Morris, Mary
Showalter, Dorothy Ritchie and
Mary Hayes .

•.

Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Dixon for Christmas dinner were
her mother, Mrs. Vesta Canode of
near Pt. Rock and their son-In-law
and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Bolen, Lisa and Tara, local. The
Dixons just recently moved Into
their new home near their daughter
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Devine,
Columbus, spent a three-day weekend here with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsey Jordan.
Freda Smith spent from Friday
until Monday In Kettertng with her
son-In-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Reece Prather and Theron.
.. Those who joined them for a famUy
gathertng were Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna from Edison, Ohio.
Those spending Chrtslmas with
Mrs. Oma Starkey were her
son-In-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Wiseman, ~bany, and
granddaughter's famUy, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Clark and daughters of
Middleport.
. Chrtstmas guests of Mrs. Beulah
Crabtree were Murl Galaway, Dale
Dye, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Crabtree and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Crabtree and Cindy, aU local.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan,
Joshua and Jeremy, entertained
famUy members for Chrtstmas
including her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Cllntqn GOkey, Webster, Fla., his
parents, Mr. apd Mrs. Mendal
Joi'dan, local, her sister, Karen

•
assistant recording
secretary.
Mary K. Holter, councilor, opened
the meeting In ritualistic form. It
was noted that AdaBlsseUhasanew
great-grandson. Theauditlngreport
was read by Opal Hollon, trustee,
and accepted by the membership.
Mrs. Ballard, new councilor.
named her committees: Everett
Grant, color bearer . with Dorts
Grueser, assistant; Charlotte
Grant, color hearer with Thelma
White, assistant; Esther Smith,
team captain; Dorothy Ritchie,
team captain assistant; Dorothy
Ritchie, council captain; Elizabeth
Hayes, council captain, assistant ;

New officers were ~Ued at the
Tuesday night meeting of the
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held at the hall.
lnstalled by Erma Cleland were
Alta Ballard, councUor, Fern Mor·
rts, vice councUor, VIrginia Lee,
associate vice councilor, Mary K.
Holter, junior past
councUor,
VIrginia Newlun, associate junior
past councUor, Margaret Tuttle,
Inside sentinel, Faye Kirkhart,
outside sentinel, Lora Damewood,
financial secretary, Ada BlsseU,
assistant financial secretary, Opal
Hollon, treasurer, Esther Smith,
recording secretary and Ethel Orr,

Racine VU!age
CouncU will meet Monday at 7
p.m . at village hall.
RACINE -

LONG JUMPER - Amy UUJelleld (3) pula up - ol her nine
baskets against Athens Saturday nlghl. Joy Sudnlck provldee clef-

altA!nded IChool In Florida and recently retumed to
Meigs COIIIIty. She will enter the nursing program at
Hocldng TeclJnlcal School tiM mOI&amp;h. Miss '1111ls, a
candyllrtper for approximately four years, Is
pldured here wlih Swtt Lucas, hospital administrator, and Mrs. Katheryn Metzger, aurilary president.

Vlclde Ferrell was crowned Miss
Chrlstmastlme at the annual holl·
day party of TOPS OH 1456,
Rutland.
Top weight losers tor the past
month were Linda Bailey, Nancy
Vance, Joann Eads, &lt;;~nd Sherr!
Darst. Runners-up were Vickie
Ferrell, Sandy Hysell, Pauline
TUlls, and Beulah Colller. Members
who lost over the holiday season
were paid a quarter per pound lost.
Members are asked to take In an
Item for the home for the current
contest. The club meets every
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center.

Chester council installs officers

MONDAY

ROD LI'ITLEF1ELD

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Steve
Alford, Indiana's prtze freshman
guard, caUed the Hoosiers' 73-62
victory over Ohio State Saturday
night the biggest of the season.
"It's our biggest because It's our
first game In the Big Ten this year,"
Alford said after scortng a gamehigh 24 points in his first 39 minutes
of conference basketbaU.
Uwe BlabcomplementedAlford's
outside jump shots with six straight
successful hook shots from 12 feet. "I
work on my hook In practice all the
time," said the 7-foot-2 West
German who had 19 points, eight
rebounds and four shot blocks.
"Sometimes 11 Isn't too good. But
tonight It was pretty good."
Knight must have been referrtng
to the one-two punch of Alford and
Blab when he said: "We had a right
combination of things tonight, Inside
and outside. We took advantage of
things as weD as we have aU year."
Indiana, rebuUt with four new
starters around Blab from last
year's Big Ten title team, hardly
played like a squad peppered with
four freshmen .
The Hoosiers, ex)llbltlng a patient
offense and an aggressive man-toman defense, roUed to their sixth
straight trtumph. Indiana, 8-3 overall, widened lts35-27 halftime lead to
48-:j() In the first 5 1-2 minutes of the
second half.

Bedd 'lmts,

claupur of the Rev. and Mrs. Amos 1'11118, Rutland,

•!S-15-415.
ATHENS (70) - Sudnlck 11-3·25: Huew
7·2·16: carlson 2-G4: Stemecken 2-1-5:
Willoughby 7.().14: RIIJSell 1-0-2. and BarT
1-2-4. Tolalo 31-3-70.

Indiana dumps Buckeyes; Miami, OU post wins
..

NEW YEAR SAVINGS
AT YOUR SUNDRY STORE!

TOPS meets

SOt1111ERN (II) - Uttlelleld ~26: Wolfe
7-6-ll: Bentley $-1-11: Houdashelt ~:
Michael 4-G-B: Lyons~: , Relber~ . Tolalo

·

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeeoy-Middleport, Ohio

I
-------·----· oo----- --

. . . . . . If/IN,"'" ...............
. . . . . . . . . .'AIIls . . ~}. . . ._
....

..

........
I h. BEST EQUIPMENT ................
at the BEST PRICES
HOME SATELLITE TE.LEVISION IS
AFFORDABLE!

TouR cHOICE!

WITM COU~II
liMIT I UPIRU IIU4

SUNDRY COUPON

SELSUII BLUE tt oz. OIL!
$459
WITH COOPOII
UMH I Um£5 I li·U

SUNDRY COUPON

ALII SELnER 25's
$149
NOll"'~

For mor.e ·information CALL: (614) 378-6158

· Sllverblrd
Satellite
Syate•a Ree~sville, Ohi9 45772
\

20c OFF

Ualll I UPIHS t·tU4

SUNDRY COUPON

COIIGESPIRIN36's
$129
WllM UIUPOI
Llllllll UP\HS 1·11-M

..

�•
Page. 6 .

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, January 9, 1984

Celeste faces dilemma over
acid rain cleanup commitment
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Envlrorunentallsts say
this Is the month for Gov. Richard Ce_leste to carry out
his campaign commitment to acid rain cleanup.
"We're saying that the 19th of January Is going to be
- a litmus test for Dick Celeste. And the envlrorunental
community tully expects Dick Celeste to live up to the
cornrnltments he made during the campaign," said
Ron Good, the Sierra Club Ol)lq Chapter lobbyist.
Environment and health groups that drafted a $7
billion nationwide plan for acid rain control, to be
funded by electric utility customers, are waiting for
Celeste's testimony Jan. 19 before a congressional
subcommittee In Cleveland.
Meanwhile, coal Industry representatives expect
the governor's support.
Nea!TostensonoftheOhloMinlngandReclamation
Association was asked If he thought Celeste had an
acceptable outlook on acid rain and high sulfUr coal.
"I don't think It's so much what I think as what the
governor's done. He's been at the National Governors
Conference on the acid rain committee. He's stood up
apd fought for Ohio. So I'm very cornfortablewith what
he's"done so far," Tostenson said.
·
Celeste fears that utility users In Ohio and other
Industrial states will have to foot the multibillion-dollar
cleanup bill while high-sulfUr coal becomes lncreas·
lngly unusable. He has said a .national solution Is

needed.
His concern appears well founded. A Michigan
utility which had been burning Ohio coal has been told
by regulators to stop the practtce, a move which
threatens 5al jobs at a Perry COUnty coal mine.
Celeste, who Is trylngtosoivetheresultlngeconomlc
problem, plans to Introduce legislation this month
setting out how the state will Invest $4 mllllon In
cleaning methods to make Ohio coal more attractive.
Ohio coal has a high sulfUr content. When burned It
produces sulfUr dioxide which some scientists say Is
carried long distances by air currents, falllng to the
ground In rain or snow.
,
'"'be governor's litmus te:;t has been his own career
In which he has fought contlnuaUy for protection of the
environment," said Paul Costello, Celmte's press
secretary.
To renlnd Celeste of his past pledges, the Sierra
Clubdlstrlbutedexcerptsfromstatementshemadeas
a candidate In a meeting with the group's leaders.
Celeste drew a contrast with former Republican
Gov. James Rhodes, who said, "BiamlngOhloforacld
rain Is like blaming Florida for hurricanes."
Celeste said In the Sierra Club session, "I want to
·serve notice that things have changed, that Dick
Celeste Isn't a young Jim Rhodes~n this Issue, that In
fact he has a different agenda."

Ten killed on Ohio highways
.. ; By 1be As!MICiete«'l'ress
.. Th,e Highway Patrol said 10
people, lncludlngthreepedestrtans,
were killed In Ohio traffic accidents
c7ver the weekend.
·· The ))1\lrol counted the weekend
fatalities from 6 p.m. Friday to
.m,ldnlght Sunday.
·· Thedead:
.
SpNDAY
COLUMBUS - Marla L. SpU·
63, Columbus, a pedestrtan
slruck by a car on a Columbus
street.
. DELAWARE-WayneK.Grose,

Iman

16, and Michael Holcomb.l9, both of
Marysville, In a one-car accident on
a Union County road.
WEST CHESTER - WUllam
Richards, 73, of West Chester, In a
two-car accident on a Butler County
road.
SATURDAY
ELYRIA- Sheila J . Battista, 19,
of Wellington, In a two-car accident
on Ohio 58111 Lorain County ..
CLEVELAND - Michael Manz,
17, of Lakewood, In a one-car
accident on a ci~ street.
CLEVELAND- Brenda F . Bell,

32, of Cleveland, a pedestrian-car
accident on a city street
FRIDAY NJGHI'
COLUMBUS -.credell Beel, 49, of
Columbus, who pollee say had been
lying In a city street, died after he
was struck by a car.
BATAVIA- Stuart .W. Homan,
18, of Cincinnati, In a one-car
accident on a Clermont County
road.
ZANESVILLE - Daren L. Mos·
ler, 19, of Chesterhill, In a one-car
accident on Ohio -18 In Morgan
County.

Happenings around Meigs County••
Financial aid topic Squads kept busy
.a.t Meigs session

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

r
-:======::::l!::::::======:r.:========;;t;::::=:=:=:::::!:=:=:::;"lr,:=======::;l
GLASS • GLASS • GLASS
GUN SHOOT
PULLINS
RACINE
EXCAVATING
FIRE
DEPT.
, Point • Mason
Baahan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

6:30P.M.

Roofine &amp; Sidin&amp; Co.
Route I
Lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067
12·20-tlc

,"' _.......

7 Auto Glau
~~

"AUTO GLASS
OURSPECIALTYI"

When You Need Gloss You Need Us ... We Can Handle
YO&lt;Jr Every Glass Needl
·
Your Business"

12

Factory Choke
Gauae Shotauns
Only

Rl. 33

window Into the tlrst·fioor apart·
ment. Pollee returned fire with
shotgun blasts and tear gas grenades, DoMells said.
At 5 p.m., after waiting through·
out thedayforsomecommunlcatlon
from Inside the thfee.story brick
buDding, a remote controUed robot
n
1n fro N
y k City
r-own
m f!W or
entered the buDding and sent back
televlskm pictures showing the two
men In the bathroom, both dead.
"It looked llkeone had committed
suicide and It looked to me like the
other one did, too," said New York
City Deputy Chief John Lowe.
Donnells refused to speculate on
how the two·men died, but said that
"one of the victims was found In a
sitting position and an apparent
sawed-off shotgun was across his
lapashesat there."
Chemung. County Medical Exa·
miner Edward Droleskl Identified
one of the gurunen as Frank

The Daily Sentinel

...... ...

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

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

....,.~

::-. ..........

. .. ··-·............

,..............
....... ....
:"".:.;
.................

...........
·-·-

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

::,...........::-

.u.-.......... -

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

Mason,

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport
ROGER MANLEY

authorities say. (AP Luerpholo).

Owner

PH. 992·3194
992-2388

Cop killed ·in fierce shootout
ELMIRA, N.Y. (AP) - Two
parole vlolaters apparently killed
themselves after a fierce shootout
that left one policeman dead and two
others wounded, but authorities
waited 12 hours before sending In a
robot to confirm the deaths, otflclals
said.
.The shooting In a public housing
project began at ,(!bout 5 a.m.
Suncjay, after a 1&lt;00 driver alerted
pollee that two men had hijacked his
cab In another town 60 miles away
and forced him to drive to this
N~" York town.
SOUth ~traJ
~~··
~"
Pollceevacualed the60to70unlts
1n the project ""fore three officers
""
.
entered a darkened apartment
buDding, where a "very heavy
gunbattle " bmke
•- out, said Elmira
PollceChlefThomasJ. Donnells.
Two otflcers were wounded as
they entered the buDding and the
third, Sgt. John Hawley, 40•was shot
to death as he climbed through a

1»1) 773-5710 . 773-5118

(formerly Lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

EAfORD

AuthorltiesbeUevedtheot ..erwas
JerryMitchell,22,otNewYorkCJty,
but denial ' and fingerprint cherts
wlllbeneededforposltlveldentlflca·
tlon, Chemung County District
Attorney James Hayden said.
Bo h
ed
1
t men were want on paro e
violation warrants, according to
Hayden. He said pollee believed
they had holed lip' In the apartment
of a female acquaintance of one of
the
men.
The wounded policemen, Invest!t
Frank M
40
d
ga or
arrone,
• an
Officer Daniel Collins, 38, taken to
local hospitals where Marrone was
listed In fair condition and Collins 1n

2 BEDROOIIS - One ftoo! 4
room · small house. Bath,
lumace and larae ~ irr
Middleport. $2.100 down.

and much pciential, reclaimed
spring. could have gas.
$7,000.00.

SYRACUSE - HI% down wil
buy you this home on·a 30 yr.
fixed t1tOrtgaee. One ftoo!, 3
bedrooms, nice la!IIB kt
aulontltic heal

SALEII lWP. - Nice motile
oome, huge picnic sheltel, PI·
age and extra trailel' lot.
$30,000.00.
•

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulited Doa Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine: Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
10-6-tfc

I

S&amp;W TV

ctie ltithen. larae utility room.

AND

outstanding storage.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chtsttr, Ohio...

REALTORS
Htnry E. Cltllnd, Jr.
GRI 992·6191
Jt1n Trumll 949·2660
Dottie Tllrntr 99"2·5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

Ph. 986·4289

II No Anawtr, Call 915-4312
D-yne Wlllilma
&amp; .Scottie Smith
All M1kn ond lodtls
Antenu lnstallltion
House Calls and Shop
Stn~lce AYiill~l•

....................._.1
.. ·"" ,., .... 'Dar.,,.
.......... .......,.&lt;h.......

sue

. .....

".

.

..

.....

•,

'f

eltctri~

(FrM Eatimoteo)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

v: C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or

·-·

Curb Inflation I MINE RUN
STRIP
Pay Ca~h for .f.
COAL
Claulfleds and II
S3QOO
Savelll
.
I
· wrlle
own-ad
order by mall will! ffllll
'

and

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
, results. Mqney not refundable.
.
1

PH . 992·2280
2-23-llc

I

AL TROMM

Cuahion to 1 aofa brown S.
orange. Found on At . 7,

742-2328

614-266·1 18B . ..

10/20/ tJn .

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328

AddNI~-------------

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
White's Hill Road
Rutl1nd, OH.
(1st Rd. ltlt up
New Lima)

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

( )Wanted

NOW IN

( IFor Sale

( )Announcement

( )For Rent

17.-----18. - - - - - -

Pomeroy, Oh.

20. _ _.,.:.__ _ _

·o~POSITORY

21. _
--_
-_
- -......
22.
_
__

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
~u.P.S. - PUROLATD.

19,-----1
.------2.--...---3. _ ___;.._ _

s. -----______
~~-----.....­

PARCEL SERVICE

23• ...;__ _ __

2~.• .....;.__,
- - -_
-25
__ -

BOGGS

port. Only 114.900. loll

SALES &amp;SERVICE

11. - - - - - - -

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE . OHIO
Authorized John DHre.
New Holland. Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer

•Waahers •Dishweahera
•Rangea
•Refrigerators

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

•Drvera •FrMzen

1~. . . . - - - - - -

15. - - - - - 16. - - - - -

MEIGS

CAB CO.

Rt. 124.P-y Ohio

WILL OPEN

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .

-DEC. 30th

Also Tranamission •
PH. 992-5682

104 COURT ST.
POMEROY. OH.

or 992-7121

PH. 992-3383

' Mall Tllll CCIUpon wltiiRen~muce

RADIATOR
SERVICE

WELL'S GARAGE

Haven

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Development V2-time . Work
load fluctuate&amp; . Work w ith
voluntHr&amp; in 8 aoutheaat
Ohio countiea. Develop ment experience. excellent
communication akilla re ·
quired. Team member capa bilitiet . Car neceuary .

wv.

Ranch on 5 acres. beautiful
s ett ing w ith tall pine•
around the houae. Spaciou\
livingroom which overtookt

tho pond. 4 bedrooms, util·

ity room a'l&amp;l kitchen hat a
built -in ·range . Auume paymenta with a small down

es.ooo to 110.000 to otart.

Send reaume, portfolio selections: Planned Parent -

hood of Southe11t Ohio, B payment. 168,900. Coli
North Court StrOll, Athono. 446-3176.
Ohio 46701 . Deadline: 1·
6 room houae, bath, 3 acre.
20-B4. EOE·AA.
ground, near Porter on Old
Rt. 180. Call 448·2B67 or
448-4202 .

12
Auction every Tuesday

night. Pt. Ploooont. WVo.

Owno1

Situations
Wanted

M~ot

Sell! Fireplecel

lncl(.;dea some furniture! Incredible Low Price! Middle-

port. Coli 614-992·8941 .

Pearson

Auctioneer

PH. 992-7844

Rt. 681 West-tt D1rwin

667-3402.
Service. Eltote. Form. An·
tiquo &amp; llquidotion ulea. House cleaning any type
Ucenud &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp; Point Pleaunt and vicinity.
WVo. 304· 773-6786 or Re11onable rates. Referen304·773-9186.
ce•. Coli 304-876-390B.

Jerry

Coin-0-Matic
Formtrly Duds and Suds
Attendant on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2.00 a Load
One Day Service
Phone: 992-5937
1·5·1 mo.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER ond oewing mo·
repair,

parte,

.

4

•

We have buyers fOr homeetn

tho 140,000 to f66,000

Work wanted. tree wort...
prunning, topp i ng, take
downa . Free Ettimatea.

r•nge. list wnh ua. A -9ne

mo•chondiu every weak. 304-876-7889.
welcome. Richord Reynold•
Auctioneer. 304 -276·
3089.

Located in Sy.-.cuae. Neir
ochool &amp; owimmy.g pool. 3
bedroom anuated on onethird acre lot. Price redu~

13

Insurance

123,600. 01 will rent for
e240 mo. 304·B56-3934.

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
Wanted To Buy

Jim Mink Chev.· Oidt Inc.
BHI Gene Johnoon
448-3e72

Wonted to buy uoed cool &amp;
wood heatera. Swain Furni-

ture, 448-3169, 3rd. &amp;
Olive St .. Gollipolio, Oh.

Standing timer, will pay top
priceo for red &amp; white ook.

Coli 814-3B8-9908 otter 5.
or anytime w"kenda.

Will poy top price. Coli
1-814-379-2166.

aurance Co. haa offered
11rvice1 for fire inaurance
coverage In Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm,
home and personal property
coverage• are available to

HOUSE FOR SALE -fl
rooms, basement. double
gar1ge, 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill, Pomeroq.
Excellent condition ~

...- individuol neodo. Con·
tact Harry Pitchford, ogant.
Phone 814-448-1427.

16

t32 ,900 . , ·814 · 8·7B2613.

4 bedroom houae wnh orre
plus acre at Mt. Alto, W. V.a.
Priced on inspection. 304-

Schools
Instruction

896-3840.

onHring aervice. Cell Rod·
ney
Howery

814·898-7231 .

addition. all brick. assume
8 .5 loan. moderate d&amp;Wh
payment. 3 bedroom. 2
baths, dinning room . built in
kitchen. garage with auto
opener. Central air-cond: ,
large lot. priced mid fiftiea.
Shown by appointment

Rouonoblo ratao. 304-876·
681B .

18 Wanted to Do

only . NO REALTORS.
Phone 304-676·3446. ·

Gollipolit Ferry, thr01 bed·

Ught dozer work &amp;. landacaping. u K,Qtalic Landacap-

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

and

304-676-6B61 .

Cleaning houua, otficea.
etc. FH negotiable. Call

.

onytima.. 61 4-268·1134. ·

Excellent Point Pleasant location , hospital, achoola, )

Babyaining in my home.

111uma 81h loan : 304-67!-

bedroom 2 botho, e48,600.
1219.

126 week po• child. Call
rancy. Top prices. Ed. Bur· 446-7402.
kott B1ob11 Shop, 2nd. Ava.
Middleport. Oh . 81 4-992· Home appliance or electrical
3478.
repair. Call 446-7402 oftor
8PM.
Row Fur Buyer. B01f &amp; Dell
Hides-Ginseng. Trapping
Supplioa. George Buckley,
F1nanml
Rt. 2. Athena, Oh. Phone
814-884-4781 . 1-9 Dally.
BEDS-IRON, BRASS old
Furniture. gold, oilvor dol·

.

BY OWNER. Moodowbrook

College student with associate degreea in business
administration will tutor studentl · age 12 and over.

Wonted to buy. N-. uood &amp;

antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete houae-

21

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
T R I · STATE M0 B I·LE
HOMES . USED- CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES . CA~L
61 4-446·7672.
•

Business
Opportunity

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
houoeholdo. Write M.D.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
Miller, Rt. 4. Pomeroy. Oh
I NOTICE I
RT 35. PHONE 614-446·
46789 or 81 4·992· 7780.
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB- 7274.
LISHING CO. recommends
that you do butinesa with
1977 12x60 mobile homo, 2
.people you know, and NOT bdr
EIIIIJIIIVI111!11 1
.• furnished, good cond .,
to send money through the
$7,600. Coli 814-266·
Serv1 t: 1:s
. mail .until you have inYesti- 861B.
.
gotod tho offering.
Must Salt 4 bdr., 12x86,
Cigarette Diatributonhip .
pluo
12x20 room, Cl\, stor·
11 Help Wanted
Instant caah flow! We are a
age building, porch &amp; awn-

lara. wood ice boxea, itone
jars. antiquea, etc. Complete

aupplleo.
Pick up ond
delivery, Dovlo Vocuum Truotworthy middle ogod
Claoner, one half mile up lingle tedy to live In with
:Georges CrMk Rd. Call elderly ladles . f1 ,poo
1814·448-0294.
month. Send reoumo: Box
·
P.30, in care Pt. Plaaunt
Gun ohoot Racine Gun Club. Regllttr, 200 Main St. Pt.
Every Sunday ltorting 1 Pl. WV. 26660.
p.m. Factory choked g u n • l - - - - - - - - only.
S ALES P E R S 0 NS
WANTEDI We ore now
Voconcy: Julio's Per10n11 expending oal~• force In the
Coro Homo . Formerly lmmediote area. lntorvl-•
Marcer Canvaleunct willbeheldonMonday.Jan.
Homo. 18 yoaruxperionce. 9th &amp; Tues. Jon. 10th,
Clifton, W.V . 304· 773· 1984. ot our Pt. Plaount
office. Cablentortolnment,
lle73.
·
1410 Jlfforaon Blvd. Pleou
Riverview Peraonol Coro opply in penon.
Home now hu 1 vocancyfor ..::.:...:.._;_ _ _~-a oldarty person. 304· 773· NMded two people now for
·1188;!.
pert time help. 304·876·
22911.
Harper's Aduh Care Home
hot I VICOncy for inother
retidont, olderly person. Coli AVON Poy' your Chrlotmu
304·8711· 1293.
billa, moke money 2 woya.
Coli 814-448-3368.

Discover Enpp-A·Car, the
modem answer to IOIIInc
new ear pricesll)riw \" vehicle. of your choict ... any
mike and modtl. No dowi1
peyment. '-- mon!IIIY
()IYIIIfPis. Rlld all lbaut if.
Sti1d lor F111BoMitl L-16.
Bob B!acUton, an autho.riDd indtpeniltilt E.-.
A-Car llrolter. Box 326~ ,.,.

Ohio 45769.

Announ r.e me11 Is

chine

financing

Conaigmenta of new and
uMd merchandiae alwaya

Buying daily gold, llilvor

*Body &amp; Fender Repairs
•Expert Refinishing
•Insurance Claims
Welcome
•Free Estimates
12/15/ 1 mo.

and Ellen's

3 bedroom. Superior loci·

tion. 10% down . 10%

Real Eotata, Ca1ol Yoapr
Realtor. Call 676-6104 or
676-6386 .

coins. ringt, jewelry. aterling
ware, old colna. large cur·

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL

Men or women . Call

3 bedroom ronch otyled
homo. Coli 448·01 09 otter
614- 6:30.

holda. Alto complete Auctl· ing. Coll448-3100.

PAT HILL FORD

111eawtlt.
Peln•OJ,OIL4S/6t

,.

Route 1
Shade, OH. 45776

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

J

Tile.,.•., .......

New

We need tobacco poundage.

3-24-tfc

12·29-t mo.

. POMEROY •
PARCEL SERVIC~
618 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

35. _ _ _ __

blue.

Comm . Bldg . Sotu•doy
night. 304-773-6727.

9

Roger HyseU·
GARAGE

BIINii YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPIIEIIT TO:

,. _ _ _,....iill/lo._ _

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

1-3-llc

30. ··__,.._ _ __

~

tinted

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloadt of new

985-3561
All Makes

31. _ _ _ __

12.------32. _..,.....,_ _
1 3 - - - - - - . - . 33
• ....__ _ __

Lost pair wire rim glaaaet

KEN'S ·
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

DEliVERY

26. - - - - - , 27. - - - - - - -...

10.~----

old. Siooy. Collor. Welt
Columblo. 773-634B .

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

~DOOR TO DOOR~~

e. _
_ _ _ __
·1
-----'·.- ----;- .21.-----29------

Slleot , Athono . Ohio Call 448-0276.
46701 . Deadline: 1-20-B4.
EOE·AA.
3 bd• .. Both. Eat·in kitchen.

Auct . Lonnie Neel. Youth

I

Phon•-----------------

Homes lor Sale

hou se away from River on
Henderson St., Henderaon,

cheat and feet . 9 months

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and ins!JIIation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

31

- -- - - - - - - ' - 4 bdr. ranch home. large LA ,
full beaement, with garage.
wood burner included. city
achoola. 2 milet from town .

LOST ·Male B1ittony Spo·
after 6 p.m.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Ita. Send reeume . name two
profetlional referencea . Kay
Atklna. Executive DirectCH"..
Planned Parenthood of Sou·
theast Ohio, 8 North Court

Real Eslale

Oiningroom. Carpet. Large
lot . Large basement. car-

Forked Run orea. 667-6427

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

tans for e26 .. regular e3&amp; .

man -

Raccoon Bridge area. Call

nlel. Orange with white.

Pomeroy,

I

Name

•

with white

Wanted tobacco poundage.

begins W

~Aac. ~~fl.

- Pfumbhtg •nd
wolk

Ught brown

choot ond morfdngo. Childs
pet. Fomolo, Reword. Colt
Jim Boughmon. 614-268·
8536.

Coli 448-0373.

:J..ogim murder trial

t

- Concrete wort

12-9-1 mo pd

·CHECK-lHE

Year-End
Clearance Sale

- Addonl and remodetlng
- Roofing end gutter work

11

end voluntHr ataH nrving
6 , 000 clientl . Athena ·
baaed. Car required . Some
evenlngt and weekend

loat and Found

We pay ceah for late model
clean uHd cera.

IIIDOL£PORT - 3 bedroom
ranch home on a quiet street.

...

Medical
Transcriptionist

analyze-utiliz'ltr.data

Good wotch dog. Port bleck agement tool. Close cooper- Top of t he Staira Seau!'f
Shepherd. Mole. 814-742· ative work with Director . Studios, next to Stifflera :n
Pomo•oy . Phone 614-992·
2586.
Demonstrated personnel
6720.
skill a. Supervise 7 ait!IJI, pa id

Rick

Sizts St1rt Front 12:116'

Housing
Headquat ters

your

e14-2ee-e3o7.
Pupplu to good homo. Coli Ch11fenging Po si tion Diverse Reaponaibilit ie a.
Angoro hompotor. Coli 814- Aatiltant Director for Pro· Athono, 1-800-341 ·6654
448-8832.
.
gram . Priv1te, non· profit.
Professional
comprehenaive family plan - 23
8 port Husky puppieo. e wb. ning agency serving 8 Sou Services
old. Coli e 14-448-8832 o• thNot Ohio couotioo. B.S.
448-2203.
dogr01 end hoolth bock· PIANO TUNING Lowe•
ground; minimum 2 years
One yoor old block mole cot, aupervlaory experience . pr ic.es- reguler tuning,p declowod. Coli 448-4727. Demonl1rated management diacount l to Santor Citizene.
ebility In 18rvicea delivery . Chu1chaollt Scho'olt . Word's
3 Auot•elion Shepherd pup· Energetic per aon with Koyboo•d. 30.4·875·3824.
pleo. 2 fomote. 1 male. proven initiative, communi 814-992-8884.
·cetlon akill a, ability to TANNING SPECIAL -15

LOST Mitoing: Englioh Bul·
ldog diuppeored Jon . 2nd. wool&lt;. t 16,000 plut benof·

GRAVEL
HAULED

CARPENTER
SERVICE

22, Money to Loan

Cont11 Bldg., Comden St. Will core for tho elderly In my
814·387-7101 .
home. Lots of references .

IIIDDUPORT - 2 bedroom
ranch home, separ.tte utility,
kitchen · dining with ref.-Bnge.
Nice ~ with patio. $24,000.00.

GORDEN B.. HEL£N L. SUE
IIURPHY AND IIILTON
ROUSH - REALTORS.

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

New Homts-htensiYe
Rt!llodtlinl
lnsurenct Wort
Culto.111 Pole Bldas.
G1r11es
Roolina Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
111 Ye•ra Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7683
or 992·2282
ll·l·tfC

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

ELBOW ROOII - Approx. 33
acres with nice 3 bedroom
r.tnch, 2 balhs, full basement
wrth summer kitchen, family
1oom with fireplace, patio, large
metal barn. $47,500.00.

12 ACRES - Nice 2 bedroom .
r.tnth home with ps furnace.
rur.tl water, fuN basement. root :
•
and ;!lam. Only $4.000
down

__
:=::c:.-

SOUTHERN DISTRICT - 5
bedroom home, enclosed sun
porch, lari!! kitchen, ·spacious
dining · living 1oom, part basement, 3 tal garage, 2 bedroom
l8l1tal house lur extra income.
l.a!ge lot. $39,900.00.
.

1

IN TOWN - Nice kt 3
bed1oom!. all city utilities. h~
water heat. basement, storm
windows and oon. Walk to ltie
stores. $4,000 down.

==·
.--.......
. .;. :·=
......=
:::;.:.:. ..::,,._... .,._.....,

lui 12 IICte buiding site in the

oountry - on a paved road

CHESHIRE - level .65 ol an
acre on Rt. 7. Six room r.tnch
home, new natural ps lur·
nance 'and drilled well. Aluminum siding and insulated. •
$4,000 down.

_
·-.......
,._........
-......
....
··-.....-- --u.............
................ ··-=- .._
.......
...

BAlD KNOB ROAD -lleJuti·

4.n ACRES- Near Pvmeroy.
7 mtS., bath, carpeting full
basement 2 porches and la1ge
cat'port. $3.000 down.

Pollee saldJhe Incident began at
about 8 p.m. Saturday In Bingham-'
ton when cab driver Edward Gould
was taken hostage at gunpoint and
ordered to drive to Elmira.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

E. Mait•W.III
POMEROY,O.
"2-2259

LAND CONTRACT $2,500.00 down. $215.10 a
month at 13% klr Jill
payments. Has 3 bedrooms. .
modeln tub bath, natur.~l IllS
with 45x.I46 lot. Sale Price
$19,500.

good condition today.

,

YOUNG'S

Help Wanted

HOM E LOAN S FIXED

Lo1t -Btack pit bull with
white markings on face and

Phone

PHONE'992-2156

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

or

Business or Residential
L------12·21·1100.

1-(614)·992-3325

Tricks With Terry

...

pd

VIRGIL II. SR . . IIUl
tt6 F. . tnd 51.

Folnsbee,22,ofnearbyHorsE&gt;he~.

Pair escape injury
in Pomeroy mishap

'•

1112 I mo

11

Giveaway

RATES 12 %% purchase or
refinance. 1 1 1/~ % adjultable
ra te . le a der Mortgage .

6

officer end "'ounded lwo otlli,n before belngldlleclln
a shootout 'with pollee at a dowatown apartment,

SHOCYr OUT SCENE - Elmira poUce officers
use a fiOUIJd d18lt to try and detect any 80Wids coming
from an apartment where two IIJIIIIlen were hiding In
Elmira, N.Y., Sunday. 1be R~U~R~en ldlled one pollee

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

.,

Ooms '
Backhoes
Dump T!UCks
lo-Boy
Trencher
Woter
Sewer
- GIS lines
- Stptic Systems
lAR(fE 01 SMAU JOIIS
PH. 992-2478

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

...tt...........
....-...

..

-

Radio Dlapelched

I:GO.Io t:GO

Seven calls were answered by
local units over the weekend, the
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Meigs County Emergency Medical Court Gary Eynon entered a plea of
Services repilrts:
guilty to five counts of breaking and
Sunday calls Included 3: 21 a.m., entering.
Or WI"' Dtlly 1tottot1 CltuWit• 0.,0.
111 c..o St.. ,_,.,_ 0111o mn
Middleport to S. Sixth Ave. for
Enyon was placed on probation
Martha Searls, taken to Holzer for two years and sentenced to 51
Medical Center; Raclneat1:34a.m. days In the Meigs County JaU with
to Hoback Road for Kay Hatfield, credit gtven for time serve.
taken to Veterans Memorial and
Defendant also must pay costs of
== nz =
1-Calll .. ,...... . . . .......
later transferred to St. Joseph action within one year, make
"
u.
.... -.
'~"""""--•to.
................
--. •ua.tva ............,.. ,,,
Jo/1
......, ,..,.,.._ .......,... Hospllal, Parkersburg, W. Va.; restitution within two years and
,
Racine at 5: 11 p.m. to Vine St. for prohibited from patronizing estab.,,....
~...
f., ..-....... .....,
,.,
._...
.._
:t::=:~
Candy Lee, to Holzer . Medical lishments that seD alcohoilc bever_
Center, andRutlandat7:5la.m.for ages by the drink.
, ...,
,._, _
~ ·
4nY Barr, taken toHolzerMedical
In other court action, Clifford
..._.
Meets tonight
..,_
_
center.
1',1urray, Jr. entered a voluntary
Saturday calls lncludecf2: 03 p.m., plea of guilty to trafficking In
,,.....,_
................
............ ~
..........
t-----:.:...:.:....:_____-1
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
Pomeroy, to Pomeroy Health Care marijuana.
,.......
...........
...............
...,.M__,....
..... ,......_.......... _._....
meet this evening at 7:ll p.m. at the Center for Ora Rice, to Veterans
t~~-~IY;;!O~CI.....
~--lUI
· Sentence was continued upon
1
................
17-~
.,. .......
_ .. .....
_......
- ------..•••
hlgh school.
Memorial; Middleport at 3: 10 p.m. completion of a presentence Invest!·
__!"~~~~~~----~..~·-~~~--~-----------------· -----L--------~------------~
to Route 124 for Penny Biggs, from gation and report. Defendant was
. Meeting set tonight
the scene of an auto accident to released on a $2,000 bond.
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Vete_rans Memorial; 2:26 p.m.
._· The Meigs County Association of
MEIGS COUNTY
Rutland to Salem Cemetery for
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL.NOTICE
NOTlCE OF
Township Trustees and Clerks, will Daiilel Swisher and Randy UpsBOARD OF MENTAL
SOUTHERN LOCAL
PUBUC
SALE
Nottce •s hereby g.ven that
RETARDATION
&amp;
meet at 7 this evening at the Meigs . comb, from an accident to Veterans
SCHOOL DISTRICT
The l ollow tng desc n bed
the an nual meetmg of the
DEVELOPMENTAl
Btds ~r:tU be recet"Ved by the Items wtll be offerP.d lor publ•c
County Senior Citizens Center, Memorial.
stockh olders of The Farmers
DISABIUTlES
Sou thern l ocal School Board sale to the htghest btdder on the
Ban k and Savtngs Compariy of
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. All
CARLETON SCHOOL
lor a 1965· passenger school
21st day of January. 1984. at
211 West Second Street.
(814)992-8883
elected county otflclals are Invited
Heavy damages were Incurred to Pomeroy,
bu s and a 22 passenge r school ten o'clock a.m
Oh•o.
wtll
be
held
at
Veterans
Memorial
MEIGS
INDUSTIIIEs",
a car Involved In an accident on the office of sa td Bank m
bus B1d forms are ava•lable at
to attend.
19.79 ChAVrolet FIBAtStde
INC. (814) 992-8884
the treasuror's offtce tn the PtCk ' up Ser No CC L449F
Lincoln Hill at 10:33 p.m. SUnday, Pomeroy. Oh•o. accordt ng to us
P.O. Box 307 Southern l ocal Htgh School
Saturday Admlsslons-Marabel but two persons escaped Injuries, byl aws. on the th 1rd Wednes ·
433782
Seeks divorce
JOHN STREET
and can be sec ured by wntmg
1979 Oldsmobtle 4 dr sAd.
day of January. 1984. at 4.00
Frecker, Pomeroy; Carolyn Neut· ·
SYRACUSE,
OHIO
Pcmeroy Pollee report.
Btds are to be returned by Set. No. 3J()9F9G44 7298
p.m. for the purpose of electtng
zllng,
Middleport.
46779
Mary Kathleen Stanley, Rutland,
noon on Jan. 12. at the
Sale of the secunty hsted
Pollee said a car driven by d.rectors and the transactton of
Treasurer' s off 1ce.
Saturday DlscllargeH)sie Hend·
above w1 11 be held on the
such
other
bu
s•n
ess
as
may
has rued suit for divorce against
:
Rodney Manley, Pomeroy, was
December 30. 1983
prem•ses of The C•ty Loan· &amp;
Michael Stanley, Pomeroy, and the erson, Troy Ohlinger, Ethel Moore, headed east on the hill. Manley was properly come before satd
NOTlCE OF .
1121 19; 26. 11 1 2. 9. 41c
meet1ng.
Savongs Company. 125 East
Mayme
Manning,
Roy
Rutter,Allse
PUBUC
HEARING
·_marriage of Harold Jones and
blinded by the l.lghts of an oocomlng
Matl'l Street. Pomeroy, Ohto.
Paul
E
K
loes.
The
Me1gs
County
Board
of
Findlay.
Terms of Sale Cash
,Sheila Jones was dissolved.
•
Sec retary · Mental Aetardallon w1ll hold a
car, lostcootrol of his vehicle which
Items
may be sold 1n un115 or
Sundayi\dmlssions-None.
1121271119.
15.
17.
4tc
public heanng at Carleton
, hit an embankment and then turned
1n parcels Seller reserves the
Sunday Dlscharges@Ncine.
School on John Str eet 10
Cancel meeting
rrver &amp;Otng over a wall in front of the
nght to b1d and the nght to
Syracuse on Tuesday, January
re1ect any and all b1ds. Pr•or to
Carter
residence.
31.
1984.
at
7:00
P.M
The
· The Syracuse PrO meeting To celebrate birthday
the dat e (9f sale. arrangements
purpose of the hea rtng 1S to
Fire and emergency personnei
mav be made to tnspAC:t thts
seheduled to meet Tuesday, Jan. lO,
gather publtc comment on the
11
Help
Wanted
merchand1se by call tng 992·
Mlna Hart, Woodside VUiage were called to the scene. However,
ComprehenSM 'I Servtce Plan
.bas been cancelled.
2171 belween the hours of 9
lor Ca rleton School and Me1gs
Care Center, Marlon Road, Mt. both Manley and a passenger, Todd
a.m and 5 pm
lndustnes.
A
copy
of
the
Smith,
Poqleroy,
escaped
Injury.
Gilead, Ohio, will celebrate her92nd
_Open door 8e88ion
proposed Comprehenstve Ser1\f II' WAN f f lJ
Pollee are l!lso Investigating a
· Ill 9. ltc
birthday Tuesday, Jan, 10. She Is a
,.
vices Plan Will b A ava ilabl e for
hlt-sklpoverthe~datlmW.
revtew by tnterested pe r so n ~ at
. A representative from Congress- former resident of Meigs .Plunty.
Carleton School on or about
man Clarence Miller's office will Cards may be sent to her In care of Main St. A van &lt;lWM\, by Timothy
Wednesday. January 25. 1984.
Demoskey
was
parked
In
the
the
above
address.
conduct an open door session on
drfveway when It was struck In the
JOHN S FOSTER .
· . Wednesday, January 11.
Su penntendent
rlgh'rearbyaredcilrwhichtookotf
We are now acceptin&amp;
Surgical patient
after striking the Demoskey van.
applications for experh
Ill B. 9. 27. 2~. 4tc
enced Medical Trnscrip·
Mrs.GaldysWalburn,Middleport
Is a surgical patient- at Camden Meets Thursday
tionists. Only experi·
edhesd~
Public Notice
.
., Clark Hospllal, Parkersburg, room
enced trnscriptionists
'
need apply.
' LOGAN - A trial scheduled to 143.She-lsmuchimprovedandcarcls
The Southern Local Board of
would
be
appreciated.
NOTlC.E OF
Send Resume To: ·
begin Wednesday In HOcking,
Edll!:atlon will hold Its organlzaPUBUC
SALE
· County Common Pleas Court In
tloilal meeting at Southern High
Veterans !llemori•l
The ,lollowtng• descnbed
School Thursday, Jan.l2, at 7 p.m.
connection with the deaths of two Meets TUesday
nems .WIII be oflerAd for publtc
Hospital
sa le to the htghest bidder on the
·:teenagers ·Is expected to last three
115 E. Mtmodal DriYf
18th day of January.· 1984: at
weeks, cow-t offlc18ls said.
The Southern ·Athletic Boosters
Poineroy,'OH. 45769
10 a.m.
Dale N. Johnston, 50, New will meet Tllesday, ·Jan. 10, at 7::11 Weather forecast
2 end tables
Attention:
2 lamps
' f'lymooth, waslndlctedlastSept.29 ,p.m. at Southern Junior High.
. Personnel Dept.
1 Sylvanta tv
Per kids of rain tonlgbt. Low near
E.O.E.
· 'ror the mutnatm murders of his
1 Hotpo1n1 range
34,
Winds
.
easterly
11).15
mph.
· stepdaiJihter, Annette Cooper·
1 library table ·
1
7
Tuesday, rain likely changing to ~6~4::-::-:M::-Iac-.:-:M::-e-rc1!-an-d-::-l•-•
2 fan!
JollastGI, 18, and her fiance, ~ Ohio lotto winner
pc, bedroom suites
snow early In tbedaywlthllurrles In 1 - - - - - ' - ' - - 21 39 pc;:.
r•Sobultz, 19,1n October 1982. ·
dihing room suite
CLEVELAND
(AP)
:
nierewas
thl!atternoorl.
Ternperaturesfalllnlr
1,-.::'"--------.
"' '1be trial wu to bave started-tbls
1 Hotpoint retng erator .
;'tnondnl. but Judge J&amp;me. Stllwe11 Clle wtnniDa ticket, worth about $5 to the mJd.21a by late aftemoorl.
Sale of the .security hsted
7208
above will be held on the
, 111 lllllaS a two-day CQ!!f1nt•II!Clf! to . mJIUon, IOidcorrectJyll8inlqilllalx aaence ot pudpttatm IJ percent
premises of The City Loan &amp;
' Johnltoa's . attorney, '1bomas numbers aeiecied Saturday ~tIn tonllbt and Ill pel cent T)aday.
Savings Company. 125 East
Ew•WOIIIoll'l!recM&amp;
. j'yack. TY,ack requeated a delaY In the weekly "Ohio Lotti)" :game,
Main .Street. Pomeroy, Ohio.
AT
Terms of Sale: Cash
.
1 , lllroqll FrlilaJ:
: the trial to 'obtaJD a depolltlon from otllclal81181d.
Tum llllJ ltib:htn towels In Ill a
mav be sOld In unitS or
• ··Dr. Lwlle M. RObbln,s, a forensic , · 1be bolder of that tJc1let must
Pomeroy 'Wo;..,_ 1n h:ems
ptacticalltft Ill.
·
parcels. Sttller reserve the
!.antiiJqloqist at t1!e University of report to any reglonallohe!y otlla!
1me1r
lhanr,
housewarminc
·
right
to
bid
and
th.e
right
to
Rifts, bma1 sellel$! Crochet
-4ia totlleapperitll nOnbaad· . landmark •
re1~ct any and all bids. Prior to
:t;orthCarollna. . ,
In the state to bave tbe ticket
bordetS on lillY towels lor ipron
992·2181
I the date of sale, arrangements
:' Robl;llns will answer questions Ina verified. ~ otflclals wW not
•
J'
.ONALL .
and handy button-on. teny tiiWtl
may
be
made
to
insP.ect
this
to 18 aboVe _..,
· -1lldeo'apetobepresentedtoday.She · know wbo tbe w111ner Ja .unw the .loon mercha.ndise by calling 992·
plus a ~. Pllllni 7201:
Wr
Clm«v
llld
'l.1alnlaJ, wann- .Hotpoint Appli1nces
2171 between tlie !lours of 9 diiiCticias.
vertftcatm
Is
cornpleted.
·
,
Was to feltlty In the trial, but Is
General Electric TV's - a.m. and 5 p.m. ·
1ur uc:h paltlm. Add
; CII1TI!IItly undergolllg cancer treat·
Thewllullng numbers were 19, '17,1· . llltolNIFrt!IQ.
soc
ItCh Pltllm lur IIOIIIIt
Hoover Swttpers
' ment.
28, 33, :lllllld 40.
1119. ttc
nd handlin1. Sn~ It:
'
,.
"'

4

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ina - Sldlna - Concrete
P1tlos - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
ntodtiiRI .:... Custom Pole
Barns.

'

The Daily Sentinel Page 1

Business Services

B&amp;E charues bring
o
jail term, probation.--------------------------

. Students and their parents from
au high schools of Meigs County are
lllvtted to attend a college financial
aid meeting to be held at 7: ll p.m.
Wednesday at Meigs High School.
· Meigs counselors Martha Ven·
~ and Jolul Redovlan will be In
chargeoftheprogramandJamesL.
Stephens, director offlnancial aid at
Marietta College, will meet with the
group on financial aid providing
quick estimates of financial aid
ellg1bllltywlth the data appllcableto
any school of college.

,

'.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Bonded national firm ex-

pending into tho oroa. If you

are aeeking 1 secure bull-

noll opportulnty. We
vide all rotoll
·

ing. Cornel lot. at Quail

Creek, French City Broker. ag8'Sorvica. Ca11446-934b.

Priced to ull. 1979 Sterling
14x70, 2 bdr., CA. vinyl
Ill
Port"'~~~~~~:.~~:~~
skirting. French City Broker12,
. . Winoton · ,oge
Service. Call446-9349 . .
Solam· Koola. 1-B00-241 ·
226B.
1972 mobile homo. naado
repairs, with 1 Y.z acres
Stripping Furniture &amp; Motel. some
very reasonable. Coli 4"4&amp;lnatant caah flow I Firlt time 0083.
In thia area: Our expert ataff
hu many yura of expa· . 1978 Shultz 14x70 centr,ol
rience and haa Mt up restoration centen throughout

air, all new furniture.

u..

tho U.S. ond Europe. We cond . on rented lot. c·au
·furnished equipment, chem- evenings 446-2075.
icolo, oupplioo, ond on ex ten·
alvt training courae at one of ATIENTION-Do you need to

·our aucceuful centers nearyou. Total colt :
I•••
*32,600.00 'Bonded' Coli

move into a nice mobile

homo w"hout the ho11lo pf
We have o 1979
Froodo·m 14x70 deluxe

'Toll FrM: (800) 241 ·2289
or write for more info: U.S.
a lot in the Countrv
1Stllpplng,
17711
Ex·
Homo Park. This
lchange, Suite 800. A~~·q. ! ~.!';~ hos a front . ~lni~ll,. .
.... -.-with wooden - ·bow
,'GA 30339 ~· ··
fwitndo•w. o circulor kitchen
Office clerk for 1 mino- [Cigorette or VIDEO Diotrib·
of cebineta, 2
Giu111way
induotrial oolea co. Some 1utorehipo. Routeo available. lbe•dro&lt;&gt;ma. la1go luxury lla!h
experionce preferred involv· 1We provide money for extub. Price ' of
ing: lnwntory, cord ox IYI· lpanaion, olllocotiona, trein·
tom, typing, generel office ling &amp; a BONDED staff to !~~~:~~·:• patio
Includes
metal
cover, atepa,
re~m. and telephone ·uleo loalliot you In utting up your
and • dryer. Eve,Ydutlet. Send reoume to Box own part or full time buoi·
tip:top conditiOn.
mole pup, e 102 in cere of GoiWpollo [nell. From *3,9110 to
to Nvo in. For inform•·
304-8111·3390 Doily Tribl!na, 8211 Third 1110.00. Winaton•Solem·
coli 814-992-7034 "or
Ava .. Gallipolis, Oh 46831. Koola. 1 ·800·24 1·228B.
and 7pm.
1114-992-8284.

••

'

�'

Paga 8 The Dally Sentinel

.Pomen~y Middleport; Ohio

32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

,Mor*y,
71

61 Household Gpods • . 84 Misc. Merchi ndl1e

.

Ohio

9, 1

9, 1984.

ft. bolt. never been In
CoM 814· 288·1 111 .

78

Unocromlllllhoee lour Ju- .

e
e

lilly Lee'• Tlrea end Battery
BalM: New and uoed tlree.
eloo, tiro repelre. 1803 Jof.
fereon Avo. Point Ploaoant.
304-871·8406.

\ !'I Vll

81

1

8:00 • (J).(Il (!) • (IJ (j) •
()J Newo
~
(IJ New Treaouro Hunt
(IJ Uttlo HouH on the
Prelrle
(IJ illl 3·2·1 . Contact
Buclc Rogero
6:30
(J) (!) NBC New o
(J) HBO ROCK: Air Supply
In Howell
(IJ Rifleman
(I) 1984 Rooe Bowl HllitH
(IJ
()J ABC Newo
D (IJ ()) CBS New o
(IJ Buolnon Report·
illl To Be Announced
7:00
(J) PM Megazlne
(J) SCTV #4 Set at a slightly

Auto P8rts

CAPTAIN EASY
THEIR. R EA~ NAM E~ ARE
I NEVER SHOU ~D
ROCCO MID GINA FRE~CO. HAVE Li~TE NED TO
THE Fll HA5 ~~~~PECTED
VOU,EA9f.
TH! M OP DRU6 ~MLI6 6LI N6
FOR ~ OM E TIME NOW. 1
RAN INTO THEM A FliW

I

Home
Improvements

b
I

lour,ordlnary ~-

EVENING

lit Acce•10rles

~

one 111t1r 10 ooch 1quaro. 10 form

1/9/84.

Knouff Firewood Ploltup or
Delivered. 12"· 22" ~ed
In yord. HEAP vender.
promP! delivery. 814·288· ·
8246. .
.

WYSEN

(]

·'

I I I . tJ

e

seedy television station in

mythical

Melonvilie.

the

ILANFIE !

POciRY, iHI5

15

WHAi DAD FINALL.Y
SA ID.

(J

D 'l
Saturday's

I

Now arrange the cirded letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
geslod by the above canoon.

I I XI 'I J,( t IJ?"

~er. "(

crazy crew includes conniv -

ing president Guy Caballero
(Joe Flaheny) . brash stat•on
manager Edi th Pnckley (An·
drea Manin). oddball Ed
Grimley (Manm Shonl and

(Answers tomorrow)
SOLAR VERIFY BEYOND
Answer: What a podiatrist does for a livingBILLS THE FOOT

Jumbles: FLUTE

loudmouthed com1c Bobby

1978 14x70 Kirkwood mo·
bllo homo. goo hoot, 3 br. 2
botho. Iorge kitchen &amp; living
room. underpennlng, out
bldgo. Mult Sell. 89000.
304· n3-&amp;023.
1972 Kirkwood 12x80, 2
bdr., mobile home. worm
morning we. Coll814.388·
8189.
1979 12x86 Uberty. unfur ..
gaa hHt.
ltove, exc.
cond. t8,400. 814·388·
9326 or 246·6176 .

u••

Farms for Sale

33

For u&amp;e or rent 40 acres
farm with 8 room houH on
Rt. 218. Call 814· 268·
8317.

I~ IF lHE~'D ~R M'/
MANC-INI?
~D WI~.

Nlcly fumiohed modern mo·
bile home, In city. 1 or 2
odulto only. Call 448·0338 .
2 bdr. mobile homo portlally
fumlohod . Coli 448·4292.
2 bdr. troller 2 mi .. from
hoopital at EvorgrHn privoto
lot. Call 448-0167.
Nice 2 bdr. mobile home
good locotlon. kitchen
range, refrigeretor, waaher
&amp; dryer. carpet, expendo.

natural gaa

furn~nce.

IT DOE5~'T MATTEA. OH- 'f/ELL.
I'LL q!VE
/TI5THe' ~ OF
THE 1'10RI75 Tt!AT 15 IT A TRY..
IMPORTANT.

CA.

*200 mo. lncludeo wotor &amp;
treoh collection. Coli ovo'o
448-0264.

McMahon host this look at
scenes never intended for
v1ewing by an audience . (60
min.)

(J) Not Necessari ly The
Newo
(J) MOVIE: ' 1941 '
(J) Don't Ask Me. Ask God
(I) . NCAA
Basketball:
Alabama at Kentucky
Cil MOVIE: 'Cent ennial'
Part 2
(IJ
Gl
()J
That's
Incredible! Today 's pro·

36 Lots lit Acreage
36 ocru at Rodney on W.T.
Watoon Rd. OwiMir flnanc·
lng ovollablo. Ca11448·8221
after 8 wHildayo.
21otoln Crown City on Rt. 7.
Call 814· 268-1444.

HouH trailer at 322 Third
Avo .. odulto only, 448-3748
or 2611· 1903.
Furnished, nice mobile

41

homo. 3 · bodroomo. All
eloctric-contral air. Good
location, acrou .from pool in
Syrocuu. 8260 per month
pluo utilitloo. Oopooit reHouses for Rent ' quired. Call 992·2869.

For .... rent. Two atory
houM, 4 bdr .. UIIO per mo.
t2110 dop . roq. Bu y
829,1100. Call 448-4222,
9:30-6:00.
Ouplax. t260 pluo utllitloo.
Avoll. now, 2 bdr.. LR. n.W
rllmod. kit .. . both. Lorgtl
foncod yard, now carpet,
IIIII 3rd. Avo.. Galllpolio.
Call 448· 24117 or 448·
0332.
8 bdr.. 3 fuN botho. mult
...... ox. roforoncoo. Call
814-294-8837. In Galllpollo

Two bedroom mobile homo
12x80, noar Pomeroy and
Middleport arM. 81 4·992·
IIBIIB.
. .
1Ox60 mobile home. 2
bodroomo. No pete. 81 4·
949· 2424.
Nice unfumlohod 3 bedroom
mobile homo. Llrgo yard.
Convlonont location. t186.
pluo dopolit and roforoncoo.
814-986-4387.
Furnlohod 3 bedroom mobile

.....

home with

waaher

and

4 roomo &amp; both, fumanco
heat, at 660'1!1 3rd. Avo.,
oalllpollo. Adulto only. no·
pato. Call 448· 1 183.
:

12x80 In SyrocuH. Air ..
wooher ond dryer. *200.
pluo utllltloo and depooit.
Aloo 12x60 In Syrocuu.
t 180. pluo utilitloo and

Very nlca houH In clty.'
ready by end of month, !

depo1lt. Reference• re -

dryer. No poto. 814-949·
2263.

quired. 814·992·8238.

unfurniahed. a:: carpeted. 3 1

bdr., yard. plenty perking, .
quilt neighborhood. Call
Earl Topo or call 448-0332
doyo , or 448·01 81
evenlnge.

2 bedroom fumlohod . t 166.
month pluo utKitloo and
dopolit. . No peto. Country
Mobile Homo Pork. 814·
992-7479.

8 room (two otory) houu 66
Gorfiold Avo .. no p• to and
mult glvo roforencoo. Will
toko two or thrH omall

Furnlohod mobile home. 2
bedroomo. utllltloo paid .
Couple preferred. 1 or 2
children. 814·992-6443.

children . Inquire In rear after
1.~:~AM .

4 room houae outdoor toHet.
clotorn water, 1 milo from
Holzer hoopltol, teO mo.
Rluo depoolt. Call 448·
4326.
"leo 2 bedroom houH near
Eaotorn School dlotrlct .
t160 month pluo utllitloo.
l)epooit t 160. No potl. No
sondoy cello. 814-949 · .
2801.
'
2 bedroom houH, '"cloud
front porch. noturol goo. In
Chootor. Roforenceo. Phone
814-774-1498.
Country uttlng, 3 bedroom
remodeled home. new
fot cod air furnace, nice
kijcl\en o city water. neer
Tuppero Plolno Ohio. t226.
without utllitloo. 814-887·
3974.
•

Two bedroom oil electric
mobile home, Alltton Upton
Rood; t126. per mo. t60.
depooit. 304-876-4088.

l- ----- - - - 43 Farms for Rent
2 bedroom Apt. In Middle·
port. t176. pluo utllitloo.
814-.9 92·6646 doyo ond
614-949-2804ovonlngo.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnlohed Apt. 814-992·
6434.
Apt. for rent. 814-992·
6908.

Unfurnlohod houH, 4 roomo
ond both. Completely car·
peted. Storm windowo and
dooro. 814-992-3090.

1 bedroom, furnlohod Apt. In
Racine. 1 child permitted,
no pato. Coli 814-423-82117
or 814:949-2948 for IP·
polntmont otter 4 p.m.

HeuH with both and largo
yord. Near Roclno. 814·
892-118118.

3 bedroom furnlohod Apt. In
Syracuoe. 814-992-7889
after II p.m.

Two bedroom houH, TV
room, boument, foncod In
·boclc yard. Cell 304-8711·
42611.

Aportmontl . .304· 8 711 .
6648.

APARTMENTS , mobile
homeo, houHO. Pt.P\ooolnt
4 room houH with botlti' and Golllpolio. 81 4-448·
ochool buo, moll route. Evo.'. · 8221 .
·
rett KHfor, 304·8911·3886\·
TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Extra nice two bedroom Aportrnonto now.ovollobla to
elderly &amp; dlubled witl1 on
horill. 304·876·379B. '
of lou than
~·ntlng fiir 3lr
percent ot odJuot.d IncomeMobile Homes
.Phone 304-1171-8878.

42

for Rent

FOR RENT WITH OPTION
TO IUYII NICE 14' WIDE,
AU ELECTRIC. MOilLE
HOME, lETTING ON NICE
LOT. READY TO MOVE
INTO. t176.00 MONTH.
304·178-271 1.

Nice 1 bedroom operlmont,
utllltloo furnlllted, 304-871·
7112.

2 bdr., port. turn .. newly
remodeled, goo heat, pork
front vlow, woter poid, t176
mo.. reforoncoo. Call 448·
3919 .

DO 'IOU

New woOd burning atove

COUNTRV MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Lorge loto. can
814-992-7479.

49

For Leese

For luu, Chevron Station,
Mooon oroo. Good location.
304·875-2982 after 8pm.

61 Household Goods
Good uud double bod • 100
or bolt offer. Call 448-4983
or 814-379-2352 after 11.
Town ond Country LP goo
heater with blower and line.
Mox Input '711,000 btu, Min
Input 46,000 btu, t160.00.
304·896-3078.
Brown living room oulto.
304·876-79411.
Swivel rocker, . like new,
block knaugahldo with ottomen. 304-8711·6843.

with firebrick 8325. ooch.
304.·875- 1678 or 876·
_7_8_9_8_._ _...,.._ _ __
1
Und waoher, ·dryer, otovoo,
rofrigorotor. 30 day war·
ranty. Ono Baldwin orgen,
double keyboard. J&amp;B Pown
Shop. 314 Moln St. Pt.
Plouont.
Firewood. 304-875-2684.
Sam lol1)trvlllo'o Army Bur·
pluo, Eolt Rovonowood,
Normally open 1 :00 ·
7:00pm Friday, Soturday.
Sunday. (Ciooed for Ropolro
Jon. 14-Jon. 28). All olzoo
now heavy clothlng·Bootoln
ltock cheap oil winter. We
hove Corhort Clothing. 304·
11711-3334.
.
Uud onow tlreo, 2-E7if'1 4;
t40. 2-F78 14, otuddod
polyolter t36. 304·8711·
1224.
Couch ond chair. 304-8711·
6289 . .

67

Football is presented .

9:00

Woohero Ia diyere
variety.- Avocado,
gold. white, turquoiH.'
M""'og 14, 18, 181b. capec·
ity Wllhort. Coli 814·218·
1207.

Uoed GE refrigerator, WHt·
lnghou11 eleotrlp '*"'Il• lv·
lngroom oulte, femllyroom
N- one bedroom aport· oulto. table • • .. 01181ra.
In Middleport. Fur· Corbin &amp; lnyd41r Furniture.
nlohod and unfurnlohed. 968 Second Ave. 448814-992-11304.
. 1171.

"*''"

•;

83

Now Alva- MM. with
caee, Hot *426, *1110. 304878-6S43.

home-

ExC8vetlng

- - - -- or-i...d

18711 Chevy C-30
cob
duelly, loeded. low miiM,
•4.700flrm. caa 448-171111

WORK By Tod
pondo. dltchoo,
ate. Coli 814·
Corter &amp; Evano

otter 12 noon.

111

\ l

".

(!) MOVIE: 'Secret
Air Force'
(J) 700 Club
Cll
()J
MOVIE:
'Something About Amo·
lia'
0 Cll ® AfterMASH,
Father Mulcahy ban les the
VA when he·s told he will

I .. I'

I

II "

GooN neck hotM tf8Mer
211' ·4 horeer w-lloeplng
qtro., U, 700. CoR 448.
17118 otter 12 noon.

LUMBER - Rough cut, oak,
poplor. 2x4, 2x8. 2x8, 1x4,
1x8, 1x8,1ongth ovalloblo, 8
foot through 14 foot. Hogg
• Zuopon, 304· 773·111114
daytime.

Farm-oN luJIII' C cultivator,
plow, dloo.
lllttde, 2 1813 Chlv. 1· 10 ext. o8b
mowing maohlneo •1.1100. piollilp, T•hool equip. pl&amp;g.,
Call 814·268· 1433.
V-8. llr, poww -~~~~.
AM·FM · t8pl, llldlng
,.., window, 2 t - point, 4
63
Uveltock
wo. 4 epd .. 17,000 mi..
axe. cond. Cllll 448·8384.

Farm Equipment

g,...,.

PI go for oaie-CIIII 81 4-378·
81811 or 814·378-8221.

uo.

Plgo t26.00 Ten Milo Reed,
2 mlleo off Rt. 82, flrot
houH polt Yauger Church.
304·!411· 1683. .

Judy Taylor Grooming. Coli POLL.ED HERE FOR:D
BULLI- From A. I. blledlng
81 4·387· 7220.
to tho top bulle In· tho
country. Agoe - 8 montho
to 3 '"'"· Prloe 71o-pw
pound. C - ARIIOW
FARMS, Athena, Ohio.
.Ph-1 ·114-113·1274.

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:=::JL:=:;======~

1877 Chevrolet truck
31,000 milo. AC, PI, PI,
auto. AM · FM oooootte.
83,600 or beet offer. Cell
814-378-2721.

73

V•ns .. 4

'The Magic Flute .'

on the meaning of life. (3
hrs., 30 min.)
9 :30 0 Cll ® Newhart Ste·
phanie attends a poetry
reading to check out the eli-

,84 •

•

lit

ElectriC81
Refrigeration

BARNEY
HE JUST
MADE HISSELF
DISAPPEAR

WHAT IN
THUNDER

ARE VOU
TALKIN'

ABOUT?

SEWING Machine repolro,
...,lc• . · Authorized · linger
Sel.oo &amp; lorvlce Bhorpon
Scluoro . Fabric Shop,
Po....,oy. I 14 -892' 2284;

an

1
Dodge 'tully carpeted .• - l i d . 3'18, 2

........ auto., Min-roof. vory . 88

General Hauling

Ill Cll Columbo

lhllrp. elllll14·112·3117.

1 :00

71 CJ·I Jeep, 38.000 mi .. · JONES BOY I WATER BER·
c.n 81 4-371· . VICE. Call 814·317-7471
or 114·317-0181 :
27441 otter •.

n.•oo.

1 :1 5

1171 Jeep CJ·I, I oyt,, 3 .W- houlng, Foot Borvlca.
7643.
opd., loeded
ex. ' low rotll. can 814-218·
• .
OOtid..
448· 1743.
.
·lilY for. llle-*1 .10. bole. 0111.
'JIMI WATER SERVICE.
114-141·2114.
Cell Jim •Lanier. 304·871·
7317.
.
Ground - .-n 11.10 per 11n c;n .....
reg
100. lrllitl own _...,_ tOJ!, eaoellent oondltlon
Dtlfllll truclt " for · hlte. WDI
· 304-171·1301. Njl lundiy ul00.104-77a.~aa.
lt8ul 00111 or IIIMaton•. 304.71 CJ·I 1 oyt..
itpled, 171-3190 .

I

'

2:411

........)"'= ...... . . .

·'.

13:00

·lilY for oalo. Cal 814·387·

...... .

c.•

1:30

WHY·CAN'T I WEAR .
THIS .SHIRT TO SCHOOL?

blue-

--with . . . . ....
a

....... ICM411-1114.

,
-··""·=··
. ............ .

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

87

117tl'eni4WD,.

1812IX.
......
- · o...un
200
114-lt2·11U
•

PEAN~TS

with--.

u.aoo.

vw;.:•••••
, • _ ....

Host

James Levine explain s the
mysteries of 'The Magic
Flute,' Mozan 's meditation

()J News
(l) Another Ufe
Cil All In the Family
@II lanny Hill Show
1 1 :30 1J (J) (!) Tonlght Show
(J) MOVIE: 'Yea, Giorgio'
(l) Best of Groucho
Cil Catlin&amp;
Cll Soep
0 Cll Hart to Hart
® All In tho Family
G ()J Nlghtllne
Ill Twilight Zone
1 1 :46 (J) MOVIE: 'Whiokey
Galore I'
12:00 (l) Bums • Allan
(I) SportsCenter.
(l) MOVIE: 'The Prince
and the Showglrl'
Cll Nlghtllne
(j) MOVIE:' 'Viva Maria'
• Thl~ke of the Night
12:15 (I) NCAA Basketball:
Notre Oame .. Waohlng·
ton
12:30 8 (J) (!) Late Night with
Oavld Lotterrnon
(J) Jack lanny Show

J.A.R. Conotructlon Co.
Wotor Llnu. Footoro .
Draine. All kl~do of Oltchlng.
Rutlbd, Oh . 814-742·
2903.

, Paequole Electric Co. oil
11•11 QMC aci PIIMnglf. : Pho- of lloctrlc work, all
bul48~; 4 epd, tiOod oond· : work guaranteed . Aorlol
•11100. Cllll441·2138. " ~::. rental . 814 · 448 ·

•aoo. caa 448, 1~01.

Cll ® Greet Performencea

, , :oo u m rn m o m em a

w.o.'

1872 Feitd V8!1. 302, V·l,
rebuilt treno, new water
pump, reiiUHt he8!1•. rebu!lt
- · · new fuel pump,

have to foot the bill for the
operation that saved hi s
hearing .

gible men.
10:00 (J) MOVIE: ' Elting Raoul'
(J) MOVIE: 'If You Could
See Whet I Hear'
(I)
NCAA Basketball:
Pittsburgh at Villanova
Cil TliS Evening Nawo
0 Cll ® Emerald Point
N.A.S.
l!li)INN Nowo
10:30 (l) Shirley • Pat Boone
Ill Comedy Time

11 ~ 11 1 1

SUPPOSE YOU .
METO WEAR
twm'"" CLOTHES!

AND I WANNA WEAR
MV ,SOOTS!WHV CAN'T
I WEAR MV SOOTS 1

2 :00
·2:1 5
" 2 :30

Upholstery

Till ITATI! ·
u:'aPfiOLaTIIIY IHOP
...J:;.~':·· 114
C18111pallo.
1111.
..
'441--

11

•

•

baked
bread!
WINNIE

I ·r

.84 H•y lit Grllln ,
GOOD USED APPUANCEI
Waohero, dryero, rofrlgero·
toro. rangoo. lkaggo Appllan-. Upper R~ Rd.
bolide ltOIII Creot Motel.
814·448-7398.

This is
the f irst
bar I've
been in
that
smelled
like

The church
replaced t:he
window6 they
took away!

Why walt? Build your own·
24ftx32ft. garage or worll.
ohop, •1 .696. Coli 1-814·
886-7311 .

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boording all broedo. Seiling
Happy Jock . Dog Food.
Doberman puppleo: Stud
Service. Call 81 4-448·
7795.,

1J (J)

a

81

Pets for Sele

skating compeptiorf held in

MusiC81
ln1trun111nt1

Now Rou Fl•ngor, llot
• 1as. •eo. 304-176·11143.

•

..

•.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A good defensive bid
NORTH

•s

t AQI064
+ KJ 975

WEST
+ AJ9864
• J9
t8 3 2
86

+

'
\

.

g()JNowe
(l) I Monied Joan
(IJ Ent.,..lnment Tonlght
g ()J CNN Headline News
(I) MOVIE: 'Portnero'
(J) MOVIE: 'BIIItlo'
.CIJ Lovo That Bob
(!) Nowo/Sign Off
(I) Bachelor father
_( ll CBS Newo Nlghtwatch ,
(I) SportoCenter
(I) Ufe of Riley
Cil "NCAA . Biliciibeii:
Al8bame It Kentucky
(()MOVIE: ' Nora Prentlu'
(I) HIWNy of Pro FOotball
Tho 84-year hislory of Pro
FootbeiH• presented.
.
(I) MOVIE: 'Education of
Sonnyc-'
(J) 700 Club

EAST

+K 3
. KQ 5 4 3
t J9 75
!0 4

+

SOL'TH
+ Q 10 7

. A!0 762
t K
+ AQ 3 2

Vulnerable: Nort h-South
Dealer: Soulh
West

North

Eau

South

2+
Pass

3t
Pass

Pass
Pass

3 NT

Opening lead:

writing and the many features that are well worthy of · ''
study ."
Oswald: "Since I am the
,,
inventor ol , the weak jump
overcall, which is almost
standard today. I like their
treatment of il . Here is one
example."
Jim: " If West merely
overcalls with one spade,
North bids two diamonds, •. ~
South two no-trump. and . ,
North three clubs, af!er
which the wi nning five-cl ub
contracl is reached."
Oswa ld: " West 's weak
jump overcall of two spades
forces North to bid three
diamonds. South can make
no better bid than three no- , ..
trump and North will pass • ·
with his two small spades.
West leads his fourth-best
spade and the defense takes • ·
stx tricks. Instead of being · ' plus 600, North and South . ~•
are minus 200."
- !J im: "This book was writ·
ten back in 1954 and revised
in 1968 but back in those · '
days the negative double had
not reached the KaplanSheinwold system. Today, , .
over two spades an expert
.
Nortlt would double to show . . ·
the unbid suits, South would · '
bid three clubs and the club · •
game would be reached in
Sflite of Wesl's two-spade
btd."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
.

.

1·9-81

• 52

Mns. King
Cll l]l) Skate America Host
Judy Sladky presents high·
lights of the three day ice
Rochester. NY . (60 m\n.)
Ill NCAA Basketball:
Alabama ot Kentucky
8 :30 (J) History of Pro Football
The 64-year history of Pro

Building motorlolo
block, brick. Hwor plpeo,
wlndowo, llntolo, ate.
Claude Wlntero, Rio Grande,
0 . Coll814·245·11121 .

66

'THIN K

OR.GETTERICH
IS IN THIS J UST
FOR THE FUM
OF IT :&gt;?! OF
COURSE NOT!

Antiques

Brand now 2 bedroom du· 63
plox opt.. on one floor, - - - - - - - - - 1 4 Inch he mol ito choln HW.
equip. kitchen, utUity room,
Good condition. teO. 814·
carport • ltorage room. Old Colt rlflo-1887. 22 986-4348.
caliber
pump.
t
160.
No
large lot in country aetting.
but city ochool . oyltom. Sunday collo. 81 4·949· Excellent condition ,
Gordon opece, 8260 per 2801 . t150.
Kroehler big early omerlcon
month pluo dopoolt. Cell
eofo lnd choir. borll void.
Old
colno-lndlon
hood
pen·
448-4477 or 446-3888.
nloo. Wheat and otc. No Coil Andoroono It 81 4·149·
21534. u ·ao.
. 1 bedroom Apt. e198. mo. Sunday coll o. 81 4· 949 ·
2801
.
Including utllltioo. Equal
Woodburnor-Uoed Homeo·
Houolng Opportunity. Conteador wood orid coal burn. toct Village Manor Apto.
Moy be 111n ot Rutland
64 Misc. Merchandise Ing.
814-992-7787.
Bottle Goo offlca. 814·742·
2611 .
Rivorol4• Apto. Middleport.
MOVINGI
MUST
SELL.
Wo·
Speclol rotoo for Senior
Frlgldolro choot ltylo
Cltizono. •130. Equal Houo- tor bod, 1979 JHp CJ-7. freezer. 13 cubic foot. Good
boby
boulnot,
tub,
humldi'
lng Opportunltleo . 81 4·
flor, rototill or. electric ron go. condition. t86. 814-949·
.992·7721 .
Remington Model 742 with 2719.
Rodfiold ICOpl. Phone e14·
3 room Apt. fumlohod. No 986-4368.
New wotor bod. King olu
petl. 814-949-2263.
with hood boord. t500.
Goo clothoo dryor-t86. Au· 814-992·7201 .
46 Furnished Rooms tomotlc wuher and dryer· For Hlt·Simmmono hoopl·
t1 26 . Moytlg wringer
tol bod with full length olde
For rent SIHplng Roome woohor- t 100. 30 ln. eloc. rollo. t300. 814-992·8022.·
range,
copportono·t1
00
.
and light houH keeping
roomo. Pork Control Hotel. 30 ln. 911 ronge-t85. Cop·
portono. Self dofrootlng UHd Froohtron no. 2000
Coil 814·448-0768 .
rofrlg.- t100. 40 ln. gil oteomor, lilt t990. 8300.
rongo-t85. 81 4· 742-2362. 304-8711·5843.
SIHping room t1 26,
peld. Mole• only,
end under. Drifting toblo with drottlng
rofrlg. Coll446-44 1 8 ·"···••
t100ortrade mochlno, 304-8711-4874.
p.m.
aluminum boot. For Hil,
plgoono, domootlc toney
brHdo. 992-5168.
46 Space for Rent

gram features a motorcyc le
jump over three helicopters,
a blind fencer and some tri plet s w ho are reunited after
57 years apan. (60 min .)
0 (IJ ® Scarecrow and

.

BRIDGE

Newshour

(j) News
Ill ()J People's Court
Ill Jaffaraona
7:30 IJ (J) Tic Tac Dough
(J) Freggle Rock
(I) ESPN'a SideUnea
Cil Hogan's Heroes
(IJ Entertainment Tonight
0 (IJ Family Feud
(j) Wheel of Fortune
81 ()J Entertainment
Tonight
Ill One Dey at a Time
8:00 IJ (J) (!) TV's Bloopero,
Commercials &amp; Prati cal
Jokes Dick Clark and Ed

., .

Binman (Eugene Levy) .
(J) Allao Smit h and Jones
ill SportoConter
Cil Carol Burnett
Cil Entertainment Tonight
(!) Charlie's Angela
0 (IJ Wheel of Fortune
(IJ illl MacNeil/ Lehrer

I CQI'T OOW WI·N Prof't..E. ~p
BOM-R.Af'PII&gt;lb 11-lEM.,. LET'S S&amp;~,

.

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WHI:.N JUNIOR SEEMI:.D
TO 5 E SPENc:&gt;ii&gt;J &amp; .TOO
MUC.H i iME READII&gt;J&amp;

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Daily

ftft~~fi}n ~ THATICIIAMIL!OWORD QAME ,
~ \!!} ~~ e
by Honrl Arnold lnd Bob Lao

Television
Viewing

Boat11nd
Motol'l fOr S•le

The

••

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By Oswald Jacoby
aad James Jacoby
Jim: "The 1968 revision of
the Kaplan-Sheinwold bid·
ding system is well worth
reading. Not for the whole
. system. which both Kaplan
and Sheinwold have a ba ndoned. but rather for the fi ne

..

tiMJ.~flll''
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
6 Coast
1 Vestige
7 Color
6 Energy
8 Advantage
11 Hand over
9 Syrian city
12 Large spoon 10 Media
13 Swift
native
15 Old note
14 Lack
16 Lamentable 18 Shopping
17 Dutch
places
conunune
19 Tendency
18 French
·ZO Family
painter
ZO Leave
· 23 Captivated
· 2'1 Worship
28 Fragrant
wood
29 Lummox

30 Kithless
31 Tolerate
33 Singing

.,

..

..
. . ...

28 Reach
30 Feral abode

member
21 Taro root
2% Ward
heeler
24 Fruit drink
25 Intimate

37 Arrow . ; .

poison ·• .
32 Postpone
38 Acute
33 Ski lift
39 Whirlpo01
34 Split
u Surname~!
35 Irish
(Fr. )
Z6 Essay
islands
42 Anger · ..
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syllable
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37 Presidential
nickname
40 Stupid

43 Use
t4 Set of
beliefs
t5French
annuity
fa Itsy-bitsy

DOWN
1 Comer
2 Unaffected

3Seaweed
4 "East
of Eden"
char8cter
SJunkyard,
e.g.

DAILY CRYP.J'OQUOTE -

H e r e's

bow to work it':.'·

AXYDLBAA X R
Is L

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N G F E ·L L 0 W

One letter simply stands for another. In Ibis sample A Is' ;
used for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single· letters ·
opootropbes. the lerieth and formation of the words are a~ •
hints. Each day the code letters are. different.
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CRYPTOQlJOTES

HVYPY

KX

S Y T K Z Z·K Z T

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�Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

.

'

/

*MEIGS MARAUDERS
*EASTERN EAGLES
"'

Inside today
By lhe Bend .. ;,,............. Page 5
Clallilled8 ............... Page~~ 7, 8
c.omtc.TV .... .............. Pace 9
Editorial ..................... Page 2 ·
!!porta ............... ... .. Page~~ 3,4,6

*SOUTHERN TORNADOES

Weather
Cloudy tonight with a chanoe
of snow. Lows 10.15. Northerly to
northeasterly winds 5-15 mph.
Wednesday, becoming sunny.
High 23-28. Chanoe of preclpllta·
tlon 50

2

•

'

he Daily

I S.Ct ion . 10 Pogn

Voi.32,No.t19

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 10, 1984

Copyrighted 1911&lt;4

·•
e

e

By BOB HOEFl.JCH
Sentinel Staff Wrker
Middleport Village Council voted
Monday to offer the marlna area as
a tree site for a planned Meigs
County recreational facility.
Councilman Bob Gilmore re·
ported that some 12 Meigs County
citizens have held several meetings
to plan for a recreational building to
serve the entire county.
A 100-by·IDfoot building Is the
aim of the group, which hopes that
grants can be secured to finance the
project. Sites have been offered at
Rock Springs Fairgrounds ancl on
county-owned property near Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Council voted to offer the 17-acre
marina site on Railroad Street free
of charge following Gilmore's
report . The site would provide a
parking area large erough for the
recreational facility and the village
would extend water and sewer
service at no charge.
Free water and sewage service
would be provided for at least three
years. The village would provide
tonsultlng services to assist ln
securing any possible grant funds
and help provide Initial designs and
Ideas through an architect provided

vs.
Federal Hocking-Away-Jan. 10
Miller-Home-Jan. 13
Nelsonville-York-Away-Jan. 17
f·

EASTERN
vs.

NEW ONE'i- Treasury Secretary Donald Regan
and U.S. Treasurer Kalheme Ortega. display new
one doDar Wls beamg Ortega's signature, at the

North Gallia-Home-Jan. 13
Wahama-Home-Jan. 14
SOUTHERN
vs.
Hannan Trace-Away-Jan. 13
Ravenswood-Home-Jan. 14

SOUTHERN RESULTS

TORNADO SCHEDULE

jan. 6 .............. .. ..... .. at Hannan Trace
/n.
~avensWOOd ..... .. ... ......... Home
/n . . ouhwestern ............. ... .. Home
an. 27 ...... ... .. .... .... .... . at Kyger Creek
~an. 28, Wahama .... ... .. ....... .... .. .. Home
Feb. 3 .... ... ... ... ..... .. ....... ... ...at Eastern
eb. 4 ... ... .... .... ... .. ... at CeredO' Kenova
~e~. ~~· ~orth Gallla .... .... .......... Home
Fe . . untlngton St. Joe .... ..... Home
eb. 14 .... .... .. .. ..... ..... ... at Ravenswood
Feb. 17, Han,nan Trace .. ... ... .. ..... Home
HEAD COACH - CARL WOLFE \
RESERVE COACH-HOWIE CALDWELL

Ito

EASTERN RESULTS

Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 48 '
Kyger Creek 44 E)astern 42
Hannan Trace 49; Easte~
Southern i4 Ea~tern 37
.·
Waterford 44 ·Eastern 34
Federal Hocking 56 Eastern 37
Eastern '61 Wtrt Co. 49
·
Wahama 68 Eastern 40
WON 1- LOST 7

EASTERN SCHEDULE ·

Jan. 14, Wahama .. .... ............ .. .. .. Home
Jan. 20 Kyger Creek ...... ....... .. .. .. Home
Jan. 24, Ravenswood .... .. .. .. ........ Away
Jan. 27, Hannan Ti'ace .. ........ .. .. . Home
Jan. 31, Fort Frye, Away .... .. ..... Away
Feb. 3, Southern ........ ...... ........... Home
Feb. 10, Southwestern ........ ........ Away
Feb. 11, Fort Frye .... .. ... ....... ...... Home
Feb. 14, Waterford .. .... ..... .... .. .. .. Away
Feb. 17, North Galli a .... ... :.... ... .. . Away
HEAD COACH-DENNIS EICHINGER
RESERVE COACH-DON EICHINGER

Treasury Department In Washlnpon Monday. tAP
i..aser'photo) .

State. officials vaw
to resolve questions on
new ·auto insurance law
...,_

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Officials vow they will
resolve legal questions and keep a new statute
requiring Ohio's motorists to have auto liability
Insurance or show proof ·of financial responslblllty.
Highway Safety Director Kenneth R. Cox said
Monday he will ask for an oplnlon from Attorney
General Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr. regardlngsectlons
of the statute which were challenged ronstltutlonally
. by several judges after It took effect Jan. 1.
lt the attorney general disagrees with the judges'
claims, Cox said he will then seek a writ of mandamus
from the Ohio Supreme Court setting forth a final
resolution of the question.
And If that falls, the director told a' news conference
he wUI send the legislation back to the ·General
Assembly with a request to make whatever
corrections are needed.
Cox and Rep. Michael Stlnzlano, D-Columbus,
House Insurance committee chairman and a
co-sponsor of the law, stressed that rulings by two
municipal judges In Columbus last week are not
binding and are subject to appeal.
Those rulings held generally that the law Is
unconstltutlonal because certain enforcement tunc·
!Ions - such as drivers' lloense suspensions and the
lifting of violators' auto tags - are Improperly
assigned to the judicial branch of government. Other
lower' court judges have said they agree.
"The law Is stlllln effect. It IS golng to be ln effect.

MEIGS RESULTS

MARAUDER SCHEDULE

Jan. 10, Feder~ I Hocking ..... .. .. ... Away
Jan. 13. Mlller ......... ...... .. .... ....... Home ·
~an. 17, Nelsonville-York .... ........ Away
Jan. 20 Vinton ............ .. ........... ... Home
Jan. 21, Wahama .... .... ...... .. .. ... ... Away
Jan. 24, Trlmble ......... ...... ......... . Home
Jan. 27, Belpre ........ .... .... ... ... .. ... Away
Jan. 31, Alexander ..... .. .. ....... ..... Home
Feb. 3, Warren .. ......... ............ .... Away
Feb. 10, Wellston ..... .. ...... .. .. ... .. .. Home
Feb. 11, Wahama .. .... .... .... .. .. .. ... Home

Local response appears positive
to a proposed four-county small
business enterprise oenter conoen·
tratlng on providing new jobs In the
region.
Ron James, director of the
Lawrenoe County Economic Devel·
opment Agency, said It could take
six months before a full proposal
paclqlge can be presented to the
state.
"It's not something that
happen .overnight, or next month,"
he said.
In tlie meantime, , James, a
former slate legislator and Ohio

wUI

- neparunent·· of Natu~ ~roes
· offtclal,

.Is aeeklng support from

leildlng lnltltuttons, chart)ber.s of
CCirinler'oe and commissioners In
GaWa, Meigs, VInton and Lawrence
counties.

•

,
you. put together a
packa&amp;e tor economic development, lt'saJwaysneoessarytoshoW
that local support," Jatnes said.
~ propoaed SBEC will Dee!~

".AIJYtlme

\

•

........

.,._ -

assist ln the payment of utUitles on
the recreational buildingfortheflrsl
year.
The advantages to planners cited
by Middleport ottlclals ln offering
the free site Include:
-Property with eaSy access from
all areas of the county, exlstenoeof
an exoeUent highway directly to the
site.
-Close pnJJtlmlty to one of the
best lndusb1al sites ln the county at
Hobson.
-Unilmlted expansion not only on
the existing village property but on
adjacent land. the owner of which
has Indicated that he would sell
some of the property.
-The possibility of developing
water sports and hlldng trails ln the
area.
-The possibility of obtaining
assistance funds from the u.S.
Army Corps of Engineers not
avallable to other sites.
-Adequate fire and police
protection.
GUmore announced another plan·
ning session for Jan. 19 at 7 p.m. at
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American
Legion Home and he urged other
vlllage officials to attend that

meeting.
Gilmore said that he fears that a
site ln Middleport or Pomeroy
might be a problem ln that the publlc
might believe the recreational
facUlty Is a Pomeroy or a Middleport building rather than a county·
wide service building.
However, Mayor Fred Hoffman
said that he did not expect that
attitude slnce he doesn't look upon
Veterans Mernorlal Hospital and
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center, both ln Pomeroy, as
Pomeroy buildings.
Pennlts dropped
In another action, council passed
a motion todo&lt;~waywithall parking
pennlts ln the village, generally
purchased for a month at a time, as
of Feb. 1 and establishing a free
municipal parking lot ln an area on
Mill Street and Second Avenue.
The lot wUI haveoniy oneentrance
and parking meters on the lot will be
removeel .
The action to establish the all -day
free municipal parking lot took
place after YvoMe Scally and Paul
Dalley, opera tors of the LaSalle
Hotel and Restaurant, had appeared before council and asked
!Continued on page lOt

Youngstown facility gets
$5 million loan fro~ state

Anyone Involved In an accident costing $400 or more
or causing personal Injury will lose their license for90
days If they cannot prove financial responsibility,"
Stlnzlano said.
Charles R. Saxbe, spokesman for the Association of
Municipal Judges of Ohio, said association members
"did not oppose the legislation and have taken no
position on lt."
He said the rulings against the new law were those
of the lndlvldual judges and not' those of the
association, which Is willing to work with the
Leglslatureand the department toresolvethematter.
U the attorney general agrees with the Columbus
judges, Cox said, "We'll go back to the Legislature. I
think It's a good law. One of the real beauties of this
law Is that the work Is shared (between the courts and
the bureau of motor vehicles) ."
Stlnzlano said he expects the Legislature would act
promptly If It Is determined that the law needs
amendments. Support for It was virtually unanimous
when the bill passed originally, he said.
The Columbus lawmaker said the law must be
retained If Ohio Is to deal effectively with uninsured
and Irresponsible motorists.
Last year, uninsured drivers who could not pay
damages were Involved In more than 70,(XX) accidents
In the state, he said. He estimated that more than 1
mUllon Ohio motorists may be on the road without
Insurance, some perhaps waiting to learn the fate of
the new law.

By JOHN CHALFANT
As8ociated Press WrMer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP I -A $5
million slate loan will help turn a
failed venture ln Youngstown lnto a
job-crea tlng aircraft refurbishing
plant, an officlalln the new project
says.
With Senate President Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown, urging ap·
proval, the Controlling Board on
Monday agreed to the loan, at 7
percent Interest for 15 years, to
Advance Turbo Manufacturing Inc.
ATM. ln which Wright Airlines
President Gilbert Singerman Is a
principal, was created for the
remanufacture and general over·
haul of military and civilian
aircraft.
It expects to move into a plant
which the now-defunct Commuter
Aircraft Corp. was to use to build
new planes. That project. ln which
the slate guaranteed 40 percent of a
$10 mllllon loan. never got oft the
ground, raising the prospect of
foreclosure and a loss to the state.

...... ,.

seed money from the four counties,
and James proposed that If all four
counties could kick In a total of
ld
get
$:D,cro, the program cou
underwav.
James met with county, chamber
and Gallla-Nielgs Community Ac·
tton Agency representatives Mon·
day, presenting the small business
program and Its plans to provide
Information and retention of small
bu.Siness In the region.
'!'he center, to be based at Ohio
University's southern campus In
lronton, but with branch offices In
the other counties It proposes to
serve will provide practical train·
'tng
otgantzatlol!al marketing
an'd financial skills· tntormatlon on ·
business ~lopment opportunltles; prOvide referral services; .
andserveasafocalpolntaroundthe
state for all sinan business actMty.
The conoept w.as created by the
slate developml!llt department and
was Introduced tbJames' agency. •
AlthoujJhsearchlngfor.relocatlon

ih

smau

.·.

,,

ATM backers said the company's
pUrchase of the facility , with state
help, amounts to turning a sure loss
into a job-creating project.
About 350 persons are expected 10
be employed by ATM .
In a separate move. Singerman
said Wright Airlines would consoli·
date its general offices and malntenance ln Youngstown, transfering
150 jobs from a facility in Clarks·
··
burg, W.Va .. and another 150 fro m
the Cleveland area.
In other action, the Controlling
Board, on a 4-3 vete. approved a
$216,cro Oeveland Slate University
study on the feaslblllty of a domed
stadium In downtown Oeveland.
The contract Is with architects
Dalton-Dalton-Newport Inc. and the
accounting firm of Laventhol and
Horwath.
Richard Cadwalader, CSU asso·
elate vice president for business,
said the study is expected to take
about 60 days.
Cadwalader said an earlier study
concludedthataconvocalioncenter

withseatlngfor about15;00lpersons
would adequately serve the unlver·
sity. An expanded study- to Include
a domed facUlty seating up to 70,oo:J
for professional baseball and foot .
baUgames-wasrequestedbyGov.
Richard Celeste.
Rep. Robert Netzley, RLaura,
said it might be cheaper to find out
whetherlhereshouldbeadomeover
theagingClevelandStadium. "Ohio
Stadium Is old. Maybe we ought to
put a dome over that and also
Rlvertront (Stadium ln Clncln·
nat!)," he said.
Cuyahoga County commtssiorers
have separately proposed the constructlon of a 70,000 -seat
retractable-dome stadium downtown, uslng $150 million raised
through a proposed property tax
Increase.
Cadwalader said the university
was not party to the county
commissioners' plan . "They have
decided apparently to make the
announcement at this time for
whatever reason. Apparently it
makes good press, " he said.

Governor Celeste
greeted by robot

Response to four-county
proposal appears positive

HEAD COACH -GREG DRUMMER
RESERVE COACH - .MICK .CHILDS

by the village. The village would

~

By ROBERT E. MnLER
AMoclaled Press Wrker

Meigs 62 Federal Hocking 52
Meigs 49 Mlller 33
Nelsonvllle York 54 Meigs 48
VInton Co. Meigs 51
Trimble 70 Meigs 69 (OT)
Belpre 64 Meigs 61 (0T)
Alexander 69 Meigs 66
Warren 55 Meigs 54
WON2- LOST6

20 C.nts

A Multimtdio Inc. Newapaper

Middleport Council·
offers marina area
for ·recreation project

MEIGS

Southern 50 Gallipolis 47
Southern 49 Southwestern 30
Southern 58 Kyger Creek 45
Southern 64 Eastern 37
Southern 71 Miller 57
Southern 68 Logan 57
Southern 62 Ross Southeastern 57
Southern 62 Wahama 53
WON8-LOSTO

enttne

of major lndustrtes In the area wUI
remain the a "prlrmuy function,"
the regional center woold concenIrate on small llyslness considering
expansion, providing :.&gt; to 40 more ·

jobs In an area, he added.
"They're coming In smaller
lncr'ements now," James
remarked.
Jamessaldheneedssupporttrom
county government because of the
.J "
,, If
counties' control over conimunity
development bloclt grants, and a
NEW BOARD MEMBER push from area banks and savings · Don CoiiiR!i of the Rook Spmgs
and loans ·.to show Interest In the
Communly has IJellll named a
new .member of lhe Melp
program.
·
.
County Board of ·EleCttoaa. He
Previous' J;ll'(lgl'ams have been
ooUtontbat.basts,Jamessald.
wu recommended by the Melp
"It's very lmportantthatw'ewere
County Republican ExecuUve
able to get all these different .
Commlltee. 'lbe l'l!llOIIIIill!
tlon wu approved by SecreWy
agencies to work t~r. and this
Is exactly what we want to do with
of State Sberrod Brown. Collins
wDI ftD the WJeXplred lenn (two
the SBEC," he said. "We need to
look at southern Ohio ~on a
yean) of Leslie F. Fultz,
rer!k&gt;lla1 basts. We can t atford to · Repibl!can, who ri!oend.y relook at each county's economy ' lllped, Fulla ball eerved 011 lhe
alone."
board AlOe Mardi,

,I

l

l

mo.

;j

~

r

The robot said, "Hello, Governor
CINCINNATI (AP) -Mr. T3. a
waist-high robot, symbolizes the Celeste. Welcome to the mechanical
partnership between Industry and engineering department at the
education that the state needs for University of Cincinnati. Let me
economic Improvement, says Gov. Introduce you to Mr. T-3."
Dietzel said the Department of
Richard Celeste.
Celeste was welcomed by the Development has earmarked $116
robot at the University of Cincinnati mU!Ion to foster such patnerships
when he came here Monday with between universities and Industries
Ohio Development Director AI to pool their resources.
Dietzel said the state would
Dietzel tooutllnea plan for creating
provide the money on a 5().50 basis to
new technology and resulting jobs.
The- slx-ruds, talking robot was help Individual projects ranging
created by Steve Roell, a mechanl· from $50, (XX) to $250,oo:J.
Dietzel said there Is another $16
cal engtneerlng student, and two
million
available to establish up to
'friends.
"That's terrific," Celeste said. six technology appli&lt;:atlon centers
"As you know, Cincinnati Mtlacron around the state. ClnciMatl has one
Is the world's largest manufacturer planned on the grounds of the
of robots, a little bit different than LOngview Slate Mental Hospital.
Celeste said a third part of the
the friendly Individual who greeted
slate's
goals Is to strengthen the
me .here. And the University of
economy
by creating jobs through
Cincinnati Is ihe largest recipient of
sponsored research (by Industry) of locally tundeel Small BUsiness
any of the slate universities In Ohio. Enterprise Centers.
On other matters, the governor
It Is this klndofrelatlonshlpwhich,lf
properly undertaken, strongly sup- said It was decided to put Soviet
ported, strengthens the economic vodka back In slate liquor stores
climate of this community and our after ''we made 011r polnt" ln
(Continued on page 10) .
state." .

li'

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              <text>January 9, 1984</text>
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          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
