<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13355" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13355?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-20T02:59:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44327">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/72733a9fafea9fc630cc83e700a26d99.pdf</src>
      <authentication>91d36e94d7676fbb53b8f58473b1b181</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41840">
                  <text>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'

�.'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV(YI'ED TO TilE INTE!mlT OF TilE MEIGS. MASON AREA

~lb

~:s:m~

~v

............. .._....... ,,....,.,.c::~,=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant

BOB HOEFLICH

Publ~s her/Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Preos Assocla·
Uon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

I

tlage-2-The Dally Sentinel ·

Bankruptcy
WASffiNGTON - The U.S.
.Congress always wlrids up near the
bottom of those polls that measure
confidence In public Institutions.
Even the much-maligned press ·
ranks higher than the Congress,
and only lawyers and labor unions
rank lower.
Why the low esteem? Observers
offer several reasons. The high
costs of political campaigning leave
an Impression that many members

cfiJI\ ® 1983 FOI1f W00l\

mu~d~e _____Ja_m_es_J._K__;ilp:__a_trlC_·k

are bought by their big contrtbutors. Congress takes long vacations.
and members seem forever to be
junketing abroad. An occasional
scandal stains the Image of integrity. All these things matter, but my
own thought is that the people are
disgusted with Congress for one
overrtding reason: Members wlll
not do the work they are well paid to
do.
Many ex,amples of Ineptitude

could be cited. Let me dwell upon
only one - reform of our bankruptcy law. It Is not the sexiest
subject ever addressed, but It Is of
crttica! Importance to the 551,(0)
persons and firms (and their
creditors) who went Into bankruptcy last year. Moreover, blame
for the mess rests squarely upon
Congress.
This Is the situation. In 1978. alter
10 years of study, Congress made

s~~-wc.eur.t."'­

HULME
~EA

LETrERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less than 300 words
lonJ'. All letters are subject to edlling and must be sl1ned with name, address and
telephone number . No unsl1ned letters wUI be publlshed. Letters should be In
rood taste, address.lnr Issues, not penonaiiUes.

Taking advantage
of the recess
Congress hasn't met since the week before Thanksgiving, but that hasn't
slowed the steady stream of news releases from Capitol Hlll. nor stopped
members from speaking out repeatedly, sometimes by long distance, on
every Issue that comes along.
.
·
Generating the largest flow of congressional reaction recently was last
week's release from a Syrian prison of Navy filer Robert 0. Goodman Jr.,
whose freedom was negotiated by Democratic presidential contender
Jesse Jackson.
For a while it seemed like everyone in Congress wanted to get into the act
and share a portion of the spotlight.
Rep. Mervyn M. Dymally, DCallf .• issued a statement praising
Jackson's success while at the same time declaring: ."Representative
Dyrnally was the first member of Congress to call for the captured
airman's release in a formal communication to Syrtan President Halez
al-Assad, whom the congressman met in Damascus in 1983."
Rep. Nick Rahall, D·W.Va., did Dyrnally one better. He noted that
Goodman's month in captivity "is certainly too long ... It could have been
only one day If the Syrtans had responded to my request for Lt. Goodman's
release on December 5."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's office issued two statements on the day
Goodman· s release was announced - one in which Kennedy praised the
development as a ··welcome humanitarian gesture" and another
announcing that the Massachusetts Democrat wasn't even in his office but
ltad been adrnltted to a local hospital and was undergoing treatment for an
ulcer and a mild case of hepatitis.
Many members have used the recess to hold news conferences or stage
committee hearings. Sometimes such events brtng out a large press
contingent.,..- because there is so little else to command attention. But other
times, depending on the subject matter, even being the only-show-in-town
falls to generate much enthusiasm.
For instance, a news conference by Sen. John Melcher, DMont., on the
effects of nuclear war &lt;;m farm animals and vegetables drew only a handful
of reporters. But that was a better turnout than an Energy subcommittee
hearing Melcher chaired.
At the hearing, on coal leasing on federal lands by railroad companies,
the only scheduled witness - a Union Pacific executive - failed to show
up. But that didn't stop Melcher from reading a half-hour opening
statement anyway. No other committee members attended. There were
two news organizations present and a single person in the audience.
Sen. Dan Quayle. R-Ind., took advantage of the winter recess to
announce that he would issue a Senate productivity award - a bronze
medallion that senators can award constituents for hard work - durtng
next month's Lincoin .Day recess.

Berry's World

' r------------------~

and ANOTHER depressing thing about
these major world crises - they make trivia
seem EVEN MORE trivial'"

Today in history

•.&gt;

Today Is Tuesday. Jan. 10, the lOth day of 1984. There are 356 days left in
the year.
. Today's highlight in history:
On Jan. 10, 1843, Vlrglnia Congressman John Botts introduced the first
tm(leachment resolution against a president, charging John Tyler With
corruption, malconduct In office. high crimes and rnl!idemeanors. It was
rejected on a vote of 1Z7-83.
On this date: ·
In 1776, American revolutionary Thomas Paine published his influential
·
pamphlet "Common Sense."
In 1917, "Buffalo Btu" Cody died In Denver.
In 19aJ, the League of Nation.S wasestabllshedas theTreatyofVersallles
went Into effect.
In 1928, the Soviet government ordered the exile of Bolshevik pioneer
Leon Trotsky.
And In 1946, the first General Assembly of the l,Jnlted Nations convened
Iii .London.
·
Ten years ago: Secretary of State Henry Kissinger called on all
"oil-producing and oU-oonsumlng nations to work for a long-term, ·
multinational agreeJ¥nt to solve the energy shortage.
~ ·

- ..

Meet the Southern Tornadoes

Pomeroy-MWclleport, Ohio
Tuetdcly, January 10, 1984

"It's a job offer from the Office of Management and Budget. They want
us to help project deficits."

comprehensive revisiOns In the
then-existing bankruptcy system.
The 1978 act abolished the old
bankruptcy "referees" a:nd provided new bankruptcy "courts" In
their place. The courts were to be
presided over by "judges," and the
law spelled out the terms and
conditions under which the judges
were to sit.
Now, Article III of the Constitution seems to be explicit on the
matter of federal judges. They are
to serve, In effect. tor life. They can
be removed only by Impeachment.
Their salartes never can be reduced. But Article I of the
Constitution also appears to permit
the creation of certain specialized
courts of limited jurtsdict!on, and
by inference it may be supposed
that the judges of Article I courts
may be differently treated.
The judgeships that were created
under the 1978 act had none of the
protections prov!dl!d by Article Ul.
Bankruptcy judges were to serve
tor terms of 14 years; they could be
removed by judicial councils; their
salartes were to be adjusted under
general law. Yet the new courts
were to have broad justification
over everything related to a
bankruptcy proceeding. They were
granted all the "powers of a court of
equity, law and admiralty." The
judges could Issue wrtts of habeas
corpus, and they' could punish tor
contempt of court.
Congress was abundantly
warned at the time of 1978 bll! was
pending that the judgeship provisions could be held unconstitutional.
So It turned out.

KEVIN TEAFORD
&amp;-2, Jr. Forward

Meigs girls down
Wellston, 48-30

8-l in question __________:J:....._ac_k_A_n_de:_:rs..:...:..:on
WASHINGTON - The Soviets'
air defense forces In the Far East
are surprisingly incompetent. This
is the conclusion of Intelligence
analysts who have studied the
circumstances surrounding the
destruction of a Korean alrl!ner last
September after it violated Soviet
air space.
The incident has convinced some
former advocates of the B-1 bomber
that this $30 bUllon program may no
longer be needed. The whole
purpOse of the B-1 Is to give the
United States the abillty to penetrate Soviet air defenses.
The tragic odyssey of Fl!ght 007
showed that an unarmed civ1l!an
alrllner - Its l!ghts on and its radio
sending out a frequent Signal, flying
at a sitting-duck 35,(XX) feet - was
able to penetrate Soviet air space
for more than two hours before it
was finally tracked down and
destroyed.
According to top-secret intelli-

gence analyses. the R~ssians never
even succeeded in identifying what
kind of plane they were chasing
over some of their most vital
military areas .
The best of the Soviet Interceptor
forces never got within 20 miles of
the Korean airliner as it flew over
the Kamchatka Peninsula. which Is
home base for the Soviet Pacific
Fleet's ballistic missile submarines. The airliner continued In a
straight line over the Sea of Okhotsk
and Sakhalin Island, heading toward the Soviets" principal base of
Vladivostok.
The Soviets scrambled eight
fighters, which could fly twtce as
fast as the lumbertng airliner. Yet
only one fighter even came close to
the intruder ~ and then only as it
was leaving Soviet air space for a
second time.
Intelligence sources. citing topsecret reports on the tragedy.
described the Soviet failure to my

associate Dale VanAtta. There was
an abysmal lack of coordination,
they said. between the Soviet radar
facll!ties on Kamchatka and
Sakhalin.
After first confusing lhe Korean
747 with a U.S. reconnaissance
plane that had been in the area
earlier, the Kamchatka radar
controilers failed to "hand over"
the intruder to their comrades on
Sakhalim. Crucial time was lost
before anyone realized it was the
same plane.
When the single Su·15 fighter
finally locked onto the airliner :·nd
fired two missiles at it , only one itit
the target. The Su-15's heat-seelong
ntissile found the airliners; Its
radar-guided missile missed.
What does all this have to do wtth
the B-1 bomber? Simply this: The
Soviets' inept pertormance against
a civll!an airliner was dramatic
evidence that they would do even
worse against U.S. B-52 bombers.

These old bombers were cons!·
dered virtually obsolete. But they
emit no radio signal or blinking
light. can fly low and take evasive
action to avoid radar and Interceptors. and have super·sophlsticated
electronic equipment to foil Soviet
radar.
It now seems certain in light of
the September Incident that our
B-52s are capable of penetrating
Soviet airspace. Then why spend
$30 b!ll!on on a new plane designed
to do the same thing?
Instead of wasting time and
money on the B-1. some defense
analysts recommend concentrating on the Stealth bomber. One
secret Pentagon report says the
Stealth could be ready by 1991.
Meanwhile, the United States can
safely depend on its B-52s, wtth
their alr·launched cruise misslles
- each of which is l,(XX) times
harder. for even competent airdefense forces to spot them a 747.

speak to him. Rev. Jackson then views ranged from hints that Rev.
went ahead with his plan wtth Jackson wa&gt; anti-Israeli and a eat's
positive results.
paw of President Assad to bold
Since Goodman 's release the statements that prtvatecitizens had
news wires have been buzzing wtth no business intertertng in del!cate
administration and pol!tical pun- state department negol!ations.
d!t.'s after-the-fact views, doubts Most of the crttics forgot two
and alarms. They never expected things: That most ambassadors are
Jackson's success and were caught private citizens appointed to their
With their pol!tical pants down. jobs for pol! tical reward ·and' that
With Goodman's freedom an estab, . Rev. Jackson was a disciple and
lished fact, with him home with his confidant of Rev. Martin Luther
family. there was nothing they King and has been Involved in
could do but approve, giin and bear negotiations much of his l!fe. Our
it. But their approval was lacklus- ambassadors are appointed by the
ter and·given with obvious discom· president to carry the administrafort. President Reagan said It was tion pol!cy abroad and for the most
wonderful and welcomed Goodman part are as ignorant of diplomatic
and jackson to the White HoUse. niceties as any other political
Each.oftheother seven Democratic appointee. They have career diplopresidential candidates briefly ac- mats to assist them but they carry
knowledged that it was Indeed good out administration policy and call
news but their enthusiasm was the shots. Perhaps If more prtvate
restrained, to say the least.
citizens were involved in foreign
It was left to the television and affairs, our m1l!tary would not be
radio commentators and news• involved In such rat traps as
paper columnists to view the Lebanon and El Salvador.
Jackson action with alarm. Their

.

,_.

_\"

-·

WELLSTON - m what Coach
Ph!! Hamson called the best
pertormance by the entire squad
this year. the unbeaten Meigs
freshmen rolled past Wellston 53-33
here Monday.
"We used the fast break well and
came out running. This was,the best
overall performance by our entire
squad this year. All 16 of our boys
saw considerable action," said
Harrison.
Meigs has now won nine straight
and aU bycomfortablemargalns. J .
R. KJtchen and Donnie Becker
paced a balanced attack with 10
points each whlle Huey Eason
added nln!'. Ervin led Wellston with

Box 100re:
Ernrnen1~2. Clark 1~2 . Houslon Hl-7.
Mullins ~2·2. Smtoh I·J.5. ror.u.s &amp;-14-11.
·-MDOS 1•1 - Dean 2-1-5. Haddox 4-2·10.
Gordon ~1· 1 . Han1son 2~ . MIUer H.J.
Meadows 9M3. Ne""'1~2. ~~. L.o11ts

J.J.9.

ror.u.s ..!MI.

~.

By~

Wellllon

Metp
Rfterves - Melp 38.

5 8 6 11-ll
II 14 10 13-41

WeU.ton 10.

proceded in opposite directions
since.
Federal Hocking owns narrow
wins over Vinton County (59-571.
Alexander 160-58), and NelsonvilleYork 165-58 overtime) along with
big wins over Mlller and Wellston.
Meigs, on th~ other hand, won
their first two then dropped six
straight by close margins untlilast
week's pasting of Wellston.
""This is a big game for us. We
really need to win. Federal Hocking
has really improved since we met
them and they have proven to be
tough on their floor. They have four
or five kids who can shoot well.""
explained Meigs coach Greg
Drummer.

Toam

Non-league games Involving
SVAC schools scheduled this even·
ingtlndWahllma'sWhiteFalconsat
Kyger Creek and North GaUl a
playing at Hannan, W.Va.
At Cheshire, Coach Keith Carter's
·
Bobcats trying to bounce back
following a 44-36 loss to Hannan
Trace, face a much-Improved
Wahama team which has lost!ts!ast
two games, 62-57 to Southern and
75-56 to Point Pleasant.
mtheWhiteFalcons'losstoPoint.
Ron Bradley dumped in 24 points
whlle Boyd Northup added 17. The
Bobca ts in IOSing the!r second
straight game to Hannan Trace In a
week now ·hold a 64 season record
and 2·7SVAC mark.

One of the most frequent accusations is that Rev. Jackson's motives
were poiltical. What of It? When he
entered the ling as a candidate tor
his party's nomination, he became
a politician sii ai!y action he takes
between then and the Democratic
convention is of a pol!tical nature.
He Is also a Baptist minister and If
the two professions overlap I. tor
one. can see no harm In it. Most of
our politicians came from a less
noble calling. When he first talked
of going to Syria, Jackson stressed
that his trip was for humanitartan
purposes, that he would be accompanied by a group of other
ministers and that the trtp was for
the purpose of freeing Lieut.
Goodman and nothing else. It his
trtp had been unsuccessful, it would
have been soon forgotten . Because
he accomplished his mission he Is
being attacked on all sides as a
troublesome meddler and mischief
maker.
Even success has its adversities!

Coach
Bruce
Wilson's last
Pirates,
an
81-51
victim
of Southern
Frtday
nlghl. seek their third victory
.
against the Wildcats.
Friday night, first placelsatstake
in the SVAC when Southern visits
Hannan Trace. Kyger Creek goes to
Southwestern and North Gall!a
travels to Eastern

SVAC STANDINGS
.UG-

Box SCOrE':
MEIGS (U)-

Team

SVAC ONLV

WLi' OP

wL p

OP

Soulhern ... ................... ........ 4 o 252m
Hannan Trae&lt; .......
.......... 4 o ll4 110
Kyger Creek .
. .... 2 2 :m 196
Southwestern .......
. ..... .1 3 IRJ 1!!7
Easoern ...... .... .. .... ..............o 4 164 206
Team

SVAC RESERVES

Kllchen 5&lt;!-10. Eason H9.
Howanl
5&lt;!-10.
Elllon
Han
Powt&gt;ll
HaR.IO'
2.().4. '1'01'.\Lil !».JS.
WEUBI'ON (SS) -Ervin IHl-12, Johl\50!l
1~2 .
:w&lt;;, Beckff
Cline~.
I·J.J. King 2.().4. TannehUI
~.
1~2 . Nelson 1~2.
1~2.
Fields~. Cassell 0.1·1. Weny~.

Musse&lt;

Southern ··················· ... .......... 9 0 525 511
Hannan Trace .............
.... 8 2 !11i5 415
KyR&lt;~" Creek ........
. ....... ...6 4 624 482
Southweslern .. ..... ..... ....... .... 3 7 486 :123
Nonh cauta ... ... .. ............... .. .. 2 1 461 5711
Easoern ...
....... .1 7 382m

Rlpelh 2.().4. Johns!on :H&gt;&lt;;.
Ashley 1+3. Nichols 0.2-2. TOTALS 14-5-SS.
By quuten:
Mel~
12 14 16 11-53

w L p OP
o 1&amp;1 140

Sou!liern ..... . ......... .... ....... 4
3
Easoern
···· ....... ...···...····
Nonh Gallla
....···· ·· :......·2
Hannan Trace ........ ~ ...... ........ 2
KyRe~"Creek ... ...
. .. I
0
Sou-ri::.~;i(~;;;.;;;:.. · ····

Ray 1-H

Wellslon

6

4

992-6687
Does paying your
business insurance premiums in one lump
sum . give you a lump in
your throat '
Then ask your inde pendent Auto-Owners
agent about our Pre ·
mium Finance plan for
business insurance . II
leis you finance your
premium 1hrough
monthly paymems.
Which shou ld make it
easier to swallow.

Scott Sinnett and Randy Matlack
both can flll up the hoop from 18 on
in and Alan Koker is a superb ball
handler.
Meigs is healthy and wtll start
wtth their usual Nick Riggs and
Rick Wise at guards, Jay Carpenter
and Mike Chancey at the forwards,
and Jay Evans at center.
Drummer expects to go to his
bench early and often agaijlst the
Lancers. Ready to play off the pine
are Lee Powell, Dave Fisher, Mike
Kennedy. and Jackie Welker.
In other TVC action. Alexander
visits Vinton County, Belpre goes to
Warren in a big game, NelsonvilleYork goes to Miller and Trimble
travels to Wellston.

..Auto-Owner.&lt;;

Insurance

Lire. Home. Ca r. Busines'i.
One name
. il

an.

Waterbed Sale

NO PAYMENT OR INTEREST TIL APRIL

....

-

z

D:
G.
c(

0

c

........
....
r-;::==========::;- ....
1~2.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

fl............................................~......................

The talented Meigs frosh travel to
Federal Hocking Thursday wtth
game time at 5: 55.

SVAC'cage
standings

teams play
this evening

-

0

$49999

THE ROSE

~

z

10 13-.13

"'0

)&gt;

. LORI'S PIZZA

Ill
2I ll4
m 164
2 164 171
2 161 un
131 190
'

1'1oooday.
Wahama at Kygf:&gt;r Cl'(l('k
Nonh Gallla al Hannan. W.Va .

f'lida1:
Soulhem at Hannan Tra«'
Kyger Cret&gt;k at SouthwestPrn
Norlh Gallla al Eastern

-&lt;

~
m

OPEN MONDAY-THURSDAY
11 A.M.-12 MIDNIGHT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
11 A.M.-1 AM.
WITfl LOCAL DELIVERY
SUNDAY 11 A.M.-11 P.M.

z

~

-rr--

~

CALL 992-6851

r.;~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;d~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

YOUR CHOICE

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO

$34999

)&gt;
"'0

::a

-

r-

WE DO
Disc brake overhaul
Wt'-11 installlront brake pads. new front

Top Twenty

seats anct brake h....,aro: roblli~ c~ipers .

Thf' T&lt;11 'I'Wmf:. tram.o; In lhr A!ViOt'l·
!llrd Prrs.o;' 19R.'HW roll~ baskt'tbD.II poll.
wit h flrst -pla&lt;'l' \'olf'll In pe11'nl..,.., tOial
points bavd on '.Jl- 19-1M7- lf\.1~14-L1-12 -11 ·

resurtace rotors, repack trnnt wheel bear·
lngs. inspect master cylind~r and brake
'"""·· bllld systom and add new fluid;
then road lost the c11.

Jll-9-R-';'-fi-!).4.,1-~ ·1 , 1'A."'f'd II'I"OUKh Sunday

"Alii $12 wilt• UIII·MIIIhc GlU , .. , "' ltWJIO
Sll&amp;lriCI S6 11)1 Uri IIIlO GM 1111111111 5Uie. Mll~fl

and IlL"' ~m·i' ranld~:

Rm:lrd Pill Pvs

lN . Carollnn 1:l!l1

10-0

11?9

1

'l.Kmtucilv t:l•
J.Ol&gt;Paul

m-o
11..0

mn

'l

r.l-1

1001

4.~01''n

..

t(M . :1

tO-t

9QI

ti.UCLA
7.Hooston

9-1
12-2
13-0
11·1

1m

10-1

M3 lJ

U.l.o.llslana St .

K-2

. t2.Wakr Fomt

tB-1
11-2

«10 9
t«\. R
376 18

10-1

18

to.SI. Jol'rl's

1:1.Frf'SM1Sf.

14.Nl'\·.-Lat; V~a~'

1."1.~8

8-2
• 8-i

6
81!1 7
'7'11 10
!17M 14

:a
J6f,

u

I&amp;.Orftlon Si.
:M9 L'
1 7 . 0klahomt
'

12-1

264

18. Bolton~

19.Mrmphll St.
l),'l\llsa

~
1~2

10-3
. . 13&lt;!

All BEDS INCLUDE:

4
!I

!!.Maryland

R. Trxas-El Paso
!UlllnOis

Headboard - Frame - Regular Pedestal - Deck - Heater • liner · Full Wave
Mattress - Fill Kit - Patch Kit - Water Treatment.
Delivered and .Set Up.

Front-and alignment
·$1375
U .lltlltll Clll CM"'1111tl ,.. lilY CIIIPCII '.
wo 1111\·wtttl ..... ,.. Of lht l'kl111 """' ...'
"' all ..1111* ......

wo·usot castor. cambtr and lot ·l• lo

LARGE SELECJION OF

manufacturer's OfiQinat specl11cMio11S. No
utra cl!lfgo tor cars wllh factory alnor
torsioo btrs. Parts utra. II needed. catt

WATERBED
COMFORTERS

tor your appointment

FOR

21:\ 17
19

uw

U4

1/2 PRICE

-

3 PC. PADDED

. RAILS
$3995

LARGEST
SELECTION OF
WATER BEDS
IN THIS AREA

POMEROY HOME f!l AUT9
600 Eaat Main Sireet

-Phone (6J.4) 992-209-4

_.,...-; Wayside ·Furniture

·Pomeroy, 0. -45769

.CHAIN
SAWS
•

-

Marauder frosh
humble Wellston

WELl8TON 1•1- J ...... I·J..l. McClooo

TwoSVAC

'•I r
'

Wellston managed only eight of 44
t!eld goal attempts for 1B per cent
compared to Meigs' 19 of 59 tor 32
per cent. Both teams shot 50 per
cent from the foul tine, Meigs 10 of
aJ and Wellston 14 of 28.
The Marauderettes had a 49-38
rebounding edge. Meigs had 28
turnovers and Wellston 24. Meigs
committed 22 fouls and the losers
17.
In the reserve contest, Coach
Kim Adkins' little Marauderettes
moved to &amp;-3 on the year with a 38-10
shellacking of Wellston.
Julie MUler led Meigs with 13 and
Massey's slx paced Wellston.
The Maruaderettes are in action
again Thursday when they host
Federal Hocking with the reserve
game starting at 6: 00.

In the season's most pivotal game
to date. the Meigs Marauders begin
second round action in the TVC
tonight when IIIey travel to Stewart
to battle Federal Hocking.
~The Lancers. 74 overall and 5-4 in
the TVC, have won five straight
games, including tour In the loop.
Coach Joe Crislip's quintet have
lost but one game on their home
boards this year. a 6648 loss to
unbeaten Trtmble.
Meigs defeated the Athens Coun·
tains 62-52 in the Marauders season
opener. but the two teams have

12.

The Jackson success.______L_aw_e_.ll_W_·in_ge_u
I can't remember any humanitartan act of national importance
being received WIU!such grudging
approval as the del!verance of
Navy Lieut . Robert Goodman from
a Syrian prtson. Perhaps it is the
fact that Rev. Jesse Jackson, the
del!verer, is a Democratic candidate for president that makes the
publ!c and the administration
approval seem to be given wtth
their fingers crossed.
The mo&amp;t Important thing in all
our minds should be that Lieut.
Goodman is free after being shot
do\vn over Lebanon Dec. 2. President Reagan couldn't free him , the
state department couldn't, but Rev.
Jackson thought he could and did.
in spite of the less than enthusiastic
support of official Washington.
Paramount on our minds should be
the fact that the airman Is free alter
IJeing the victim of an ill conceived
mll!tary order made personally by
the president for a reprisal bombing on Druse and Syrtan positions In
Lebanon. His companion In . the
plane shot down was killed. The
Incident has been so widely publicized that further details are redundant and only the skepticism of the
news media, the administration .
and the public Is worthy of
comment.
You will remember that when
Rev. Jackson first announced his
intention of making a personal
appeal to Syrian President Assad,
effo~ we(e made by the state
department to dissuade hlrn. He
was called Into the depa!1ment
offices In Washington and told that
an effort by a prtvate citizen might
even Interfere .with the depart·
ment's efforts to free him. Jackson
said be would give up his planned
appeal to President Assad If
President Reagan would ask him
personally. When the news media
disclosed . that Mid E~t EnvOY
Donald Rumsfeld had .· held a
meeting with the Syrians and had
not even mentioned Goodman's
name, Jackson made tour calls to
President Reagan, ·who would not

Marauders begin second half play
in ~VC at Federal-Hocking tonight

DEAN DRIVE;- Melp' Calh)'Deaa(30)drtvesput We118tonplayer
In this Dave llarrt8 ptao dw1ac 1111t aJchi'a Trt-Valley Conference
basketball oontest. 'lbe Marauder prts won, 48-30. Deaa had five point&amp;

ROCK SPRINGS- An Improved
Meigs Marauderette defense
proved the difference as they
defPated Wellston 48-30 here
Monday.
Meigs held the Rockettes to three
first halt field goals In building a
~13lead.
.
"We won the game In the first halt
when we held them to only three of
24 in the field goal shooting. We
have been working on our defensive
play since the Warren lo&amp;s."
commented Meigs coach R.on
Logan.
•
Jenny Meadows was once again
the Marauderettes' dominating figure as she was the game's top
scorer with 23 and rebounder wtth
18.
Rhonda Haddox added 10 points
for Meigs whlle B. J . Gordon
. chipped in seven rebounds.
McCloud led Wellston with nine
points.
Meigs, now 8-2 overall and 7·2 In
the TVC, moves Into the second
place tiE: with Trtmble. Warren
local leads thepackat9-0andsports
an lHl overall records.

JASON lULL
&amp;-2, Sr. Forward

.

.

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

241 THIRD AVE.

'·

.

�.....

Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Southern ranked I Oth
•
ID Class ·A cage poll
By GEORGE STRODE
and Dayton Dunbar tied for lOth.
AP Sports Writer
In Class AA, Portsmouth ranked
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (API- Unde- fourth, Willard fifth, Dayton Oakfeated Canton McKinley and Mans- wood sixth,' Bucyrus Wynford
field Malabar and once-beaten East seventh, New Concord Glenn
Canton grabbed the leads today In eighth, Coshocton ninth and Greenthe opening poll In The Associated field McClain lOth.
Press' Ohio high school boys
basketball ratings.
McKinley, third ranked In the
state last winter, has breezed by 10
COLUMBUS. OhiO !API - Hoo.· a sta tt&gt;
straight opponents this season and
panel ot Sp:lr1s WT1tl'rs and broadcastl'rs
led the Class AAA ra lings with 251
rat~ Qh1o tlleh scOOoJ boys baskPiball
reams this week for Tik&gt; A.ssocla t£'d Pn&gt;ss
points, 91 more than second-place
riO points for first to 1 polm lor JOI:h 1:
Akron Centrai-Hower (10-0) and 114
ClA!Ol .....
I, Canton MrKlnley, Jl).{), 251 points
ahead of No. 3 Springfield South
2. Akron ( ('f)trai·Howt&gt;r. 10.0. Jill
(10-0).
3, Spingtleld Sooth; 11).4, 147
4, l..aatn Klng. 10-0. 96.
Malabar, one boy under the Class
5, Mkkilecown. UH. 93.
AAA enrollment limit, paced the
6, Barberton. 11).0. n
7, Toledo Sl. F'Tancts, 9-0. 64
Class AA ranklngs afler starting
8, ToleOO Sroll. ~. 56.
with a 10-0 record. The Mansfield
9, ClevE-iand St. JOlll)h. OJ. I . .W
10 Hit't , Uma SmiOr. 9- 1. and Dayton
school had Ul points to 121 for
Dunbar, 9- 1, .Jot
.defending state tournament chamOther schOOLs rPCeMng 10 or monpolnt5: 12, Clnctnnall Oak Hills ll 13, Co:plonColumbusBexley (11-1) andll3
~mbus West Jl. 14 Uk&gt;l . Lancasler and
for third-rated Columbus Whitehall
Ctncinnall EIOOr ~- 16, WafTffl We-stPrn
A.est'n't'
)1 . 17 ltiE't , Bay Vlllagt&gt; Bay and
(10-0).
Chi.lllrothfo :a&gt;. 19. Canton Timken 17 ~­
Whitehall won the AP's state
Cleveland GlenvUle 16. 21. Canton South
14. 22 ttlel. Chesterland Wl'S t Gt&gt;auga and
Class AA poll trophy a year ago.
U&gt;banon 12. :M OIE'I . Troy and ToleOO St
East Canton (10-1) earned the
Jolvl"s ll.
Cl.ASSM
lead In Class A from a state panel of
, }. Mansneld Malabar. 16-0. 1.'11.
sports wrtters and broadcasters,
2, Columbus Bexley, 11 ·1. 121.
3. Columbus White hall, 1(}.{), llJ.
collecting 106 points. Wellsville, a
t.P~.:.a·
former AP state poll champion In
5, Willard. 9-l, 71
6,
O.ytoo &lt;Rkwood. 9-1. 65.
ClassAA, was second with86polnts
1, B1.&lt;yrus Wynfonl. 10&lt;&gt;. 64.
and defending champion Delpbos
8. Ntw Can:ord Glmn, S.O, 60.
9. C:C.toctoo. 9-1. 54.
St. John's (8-1) third with n
10. GreenGed McCialn. 9- 1. 46.
Warren Western Reserve, last
Other schools l"t'Cl'Mng 10 or mofl'
poU\ts: ll, Na varrt&gt; Falrk'ss 42. 12. Akron
year'sCiassAAApoll king, was 16th
In the ftrst of the weekly regularseason polls.
In Class AAA, Lorain King was
fourth, Middletown fl!th, Barberton
sixth, defending state tournament
Eighth Grade Wins Two
champion Toledo St. Francis sevThe
Meigs eighth grader.s upped
enth, Toledo Soott eighth, Cleveland
to6-2'With a patrol wins
their
record
St. Joseph ninth and Lima Senior
last Thursday and Monday. The
Marauder Babes edged both
Nelsonville-York 72-68 In overtime
CoUege scores
and Belpre 53-48.
C.O,..Sooreo
Against N-Y, Meigs trailed 26-6
a1 nw~PnM
with
4: 13 left In the second pertod.
EAST
Drexet iii. Niagara 55
Coach
Rusty Bookman regrouped
GrorRl'f~ n· 74, Monmouth. N.J. 54
his team and they outscored the
Loyol.a, Md. 9'2. St . Ftands, Pa. 75
RulgE'n-Carnden 74, UncOOl, Pa . 72
Baby Buckeyes 42-12 over the next
Yale SJ. Vermont;,&gt;
pertod and a half.
!!00'111
Citadel 84, Marshall 76
Michael Bartrum was phenomiDuke 86, Bucknell fi7
nal as he scored 22 points Including
E. Tml'll'S5I!l' St. Rl, W. Carolina 76
George Muon 83, E. Carolina 66
10 of 10 from the foul line and
Qtorgl.a Tech !ll, S. Carolina Sl . Eli
grabbed 10 rebounds. Soott WUIIKmtucky 76, Alabama 66
N.C.·Charkllte 61, Davtdr.oo 56
ams added 17 and Billy Bfi&gt;thers 18.
New Orleans 72. Georgia St . 58
Other Meigs scorers were Don
Old DominiOn 84, Howard &amp;I
RIChmond 61, VMI il
~
Dorst With seven, Joey Snyder six,
Va. Commonwealth 72, James Madlson49
and l?aiii"Melton two. Chad Savage
MllllmlT
[)e(rolt 7~. Butler· !~. 6J
• and Brad Spencer each had :.!! for
N-Y.
By quarters:
Meigs
6 23 19 16 8-72
Nelson.-York
Wl08248 --68

Van Buren rated fourth In Class A
with Springfield Catholic Central
fifth, Mansfield St. Peter's sixth,
Richmond Dale Southeastern seventh, Strasburg Franklin eighth,
Berlin Hlland ninth and Racine
Southern lOth.

Ohio high school ratings

I

Quail season may
reopen in Ohio

.
·:
:.

Against Belpre, Williams took
control In the fourth quarter In
leading Meigs to the win.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -The
Williams had 15 whUe Bartrum
quail, off-llmlts to Ohio hunters added 13. Other scorers were Don
since severe winters In 1917 and 1978 Dorst with 12 along with nine
decimated the blrd's population, rebounds, Brothers nine, and
could be back lngunslghtsagaln this Snyder had four. Randy White led
ye'Thar. tate Dl lsi
f W ""'
BeBipre with 16.
e s
v on o
ilw.ue
Y quarters:
11
proposesfroto ~old
h ~ntln~ · ~lfre
· 1 ~ ~~ 1 ~ ~
season m ov.
g ov.
e gs
1 1

tu2:

\\'hUe
drastically
shortening
the
pheasant
hunting season.
Changes
In bow hunting and fishing regulations also are proposed.
' There will be dlstrtct fish and
:: game hearings on the proposals at 1
:: p.m.Jan.29andastatewldehearlng
· Feb. 3 In the Division of Aviation
: hearing room at Don Soot! Airport
: north of Columbus. The final
· ·decisions will be made at a hearing
at the division's offices In Columbus
onMarch2.

Sprtngi'lekl ~ton RJc1ie J:l. 18, Wllf"Ttfl
Kennedy '11 . 19 ttit'l. lDJ.lsville Aquinas,

Bfdtord Chane! and Nonh Co1k&gt;gP Hill 26.
22. 'vwngst~ Ra)'t'fl 2S. 23, Ctrcll'\'tlk&gt;
:M. lf, Warren Ownpnn :IJ. 2S, Uma
Central Catholk' 19. 26, Ravt:rlna South·
east 16. '11 . Hk&gt;l Ashtabula Harbor, L..oratn Catholk and Eut CUnton 15. ll, El·
yr1a West 14. J1 nN&gt;t , Clt-vt&gt;land UnivPr·
slly Schooj, Ell'Uefont.alnt&gt; and SaM.Islcy
Pl&gt;rkim 12. .M t iWI , Ywngstown South.
&amp;lpn&gt; and Mansneld Madison 10.

CLASS •

1. East Canton. 10.1. 106.
2. Wl'l.lsvUie, S.O. 86.
J. Dl'lpft:ls SI:.Jotrl 's, IH
4. Van Buren, 10.0, 91.

n.

5. ~d Cath:l&amp; Central, IQ.l , 67.
6, Mansfield StPeter's, S.l. 64.
7. Richmond Da.le Southeastern. 9-1. 62.
8. Srra.sburg F'ranklln. 10-1. 61.
9, Bertin Hiland. H. 61.
10. RacW 8cuthmt. .... 55.
Other schools ~tng 10 r# more .

points: u . Petties 49. U tUet , GkM.Jsk&gt;r
Trtmtit and Ma rla Sll'ln Marton 50. 14,
NE'W Washlngtoo BuckfY" Central 40. 15.

McDonaljl 31!. 16, SeOring Md&lt;lnl.,- 34. 11.
Colnnblan~ 33. 18 tdet, Ondnnat I
Academy ol Ph:Y*'al Educatmn and Ottovilli' .II. ll. MCWOI.'Yille 21 n. Cortland
Maplewood Zl. 22. M~own Fenwldt
19. Zl, ~ 18. M t!Jet, Jat.'kson
Cl!lter and Bl'aYl'l" Eastern 17. 26.. Columb.ls Academy 16. '11. Fottorta St WendeUn
IS. 28, South Arnhl'rst 11.

Meigs junior high action

L--------..J

:·

St Vlncen t·St.Mary B . 13, Stf'Ubtnvlllf
ll. 14. Fostaia :rl. 15, Lancastl'l" Falrlk&gt;ld
Union 32. 16 1tin Qak Harbor and

Seventh
Graders
Spilt Two
The
Meigs
seventh
grade
trounced Belpre 53-26 In their best
game of the year Monday afier

I

losing to Nelsonville-York last
Thursday 39-31.
Against Belpre, Matt Baker set a
new school record with nine steals
In breaking Huey Eason's old mark
of seven. Baker also led In scortng
with 13. Other Meigs scorers were
Kevin Oller with 12, Wesley Howard, 10 points and 10 rebounds, Todd
Powell five, Jerod Sheets four,
Decker Cullums, Soot! Barton,
Soott Nelgler and Keith Mattox had
two each, and Chris Becker one.
Benton led Belpre with W.
By quarters:
Belpre
5 3 10 8-26
Meigs
5 18 16 14-53
In the N-Y loss, Howard led with
15, Baker had eight, Oller and Jeff
McElroy three each, .and Cullums
two. Eckels and Russell had 17 and .
15 respectively for the winners.
'The Meigs seventh graders are
now 6-2 on the year.
Junior Wgh Girls Win Big
'The Meigs junior high girls raised
their record to 6-2 with a 51-8 waltz
over Shade Monday.
Soortng for Meigs was Tammy
Wrtght with 12, Missy Woods 10, '
Shelly Stobart and Shelly Wolfe six
each, Stephanie English three,
Lesley Carr two, and Teresa
Johnson and Dee Henderson one
each. Teffens led Shade with six.
By quarters:
Meigs
2 15 10 10 4-41
Shade
2 4 0 2.:.. 8
All three junior high teams play

Redskins must Wln, or· 1983
season .· will be a ·jailure-Milot

\

has been Installed as a three-point crlbed hlmaelf as tit.
By IRA ROSENFELD
"We'll walt untU the last poulble
favorite against the AFC champion
AP Sports Writer
mcment
to decide," saJd Glbbl.
)'UIIders
lnSuperBowlXV!Don.Jan
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - 'The
Washington Redsklns were happy 22. The Ralders,l4-4, also advanced
just to be playing In the Super Bowl a Sunday, beating the upstart Seattle
Seahawks 30-14.
year ago. Now, nothing of a victory
A the very least, the Redsklns,
over the Los Angeles Raiders will be
acceptable to the defending who beat the Miami Dolphins In
champions.
Super Bowl XVII, sbould be rested
LANDOVER, Md. (AP) - Pa"Last year everybody was ex- because Gibbs has given them four
trick
Ewing · scored 19 polnta,
cited about going," linebacker Rich days oft.
grabbed
13 rebounds and blocbd
"We will bring them back Frtday.
Mllot said Monday. "This time, If we
seven
sbots
to lead tourth·ranlt.ed
don't win It's almost as If the season At this tlmeofyeartheplayersneed
Georgetown
to
a 74-M victory over
was a failure."
to get away from football for·awhile
Morunouth
In
coUege basketball
Coach Joe Gibbs calls It the and recharge their batteries,"
Monday.
Gibbs said. "It's a long, long 5eason
monster - the monster of success.
The victory, Georgetown's etpth
and you get tired. It Is hard to keep
"Any team that has been winning
straight,
raised the Hoyas' ret'Ord to
playing at the same level through
Is expected to win. So when you do
13-1.
win, It's a relief, " Gibbs explained. four preseason games, 16 weeks of
Ewing sat out the tlnaJ nlnf
"It's like you have avoided losing. the regular season and the
afier taking an elbow to the
minutes
That's what I mean In football when playoffs."
head.
Georgetown
omcta1s decided
With an extra week to prepare for
I say you buUd your own monster. "
to
rest
the
All-Amerlc811
center as a
this year's Super Bowl, Gibbs Is
'The Washington monster has
precautionary
measure.
grown to outlandish proportions. planning on two days of practice
Monmouth, playing Its first year
Since losing the first five games of before leaving Monday for Tampa.
In
Dlvtslon I, was led by JesseSiout'a
And
!bose
sessions,
Gibbs
hints
the 1981 season, Gibbs' first as head
17
pollnts. The Hawks, 3-9, hit just 10
coach, the Re:lsklns have won 35 of strongly, will offer less In thewayof
of
33 field goal attempts In the
fanfare than a year ago.
their last 41 games.
opening
half as their leading scorer,
"We were lucky last year because
A National Football League best
Mason
McBride,
waa scoreless for
16-2 record Includes this season's we just sort of fell Into everything. I
the
half.
He
finished
with 10 points.
longest winning streak, 11 games still want everyone to enjoy themGuard
Zachery
Trueblood
added 10
selves this year but there Is a line In
and counting.
points
for
Monmouth.
"A nice 12-gamewlnnlngstrea,l( to there where you have to have your
Forward Bill Martin came off the
take Into the oft-season would be privacy to practice and
bench
to chip In 12 points and seven
something to think about," said concentrate.''
reboundsfortheHoyas.Hisbasellne
Redskin Park was nearly deMllot, as he cleaned out his locker In
preparation for next week's tJip to serted Monday with the exception of drive with 13: lOtoplayconcludedlll
Tampa. Fla. There, the Redsklns !bose players checking an assort- 8-0 spurt that gave the Hoyas a~
lead, and Georgetown coasted the
will try to join Green Bay, Miami ment of bumps and bruises.
rest
of the way. ·
The only pla:v.er questionable for
and Pittsburgh as back-to-back
Ewing
had seven points, four
winners of pro football's ultimate the Super Bowl remains kick
rebounds
and
three blocks In the
prize.
returner Mike Nelms. Eligible to
opening
tour
minutes
as the Hoyas
Washington, which captured the return from the lnjure(J reserve list raced to a 15-4 lead.
NFC championship on Sunday with afler suffering a strained right knee
a 24-21 victory over San Francisco, four weeks ago, Nelms has des- ~-----------

Ewing injured in
Georgetown victor)

Meigs places third in
recent hQliday mat tourney
The Meigs Marauder wrestler
team took third place honors In the
Meigs Round •Robin Tournament
held over the holidays. The local
grapplers were seven points away
from a team trophy, but couldn't
manage a win due to some
no-shows on the team .
Sean Jeffers, 98 lb. class, lost his
only match as two entrtes were
given 1n that class.
In 100 lb. action, Butch Stein
finished fifth with al-3slate. Robert
Sisson 1n the 1261b. division was 3-3
with a fourth place finish Including
two pins and a major decision
before losing 11-2 to the eventual
champion.
Craig Sinclair, 132 lb. class,
wrestled well both days pinning
four of six opponents and notching a
5-1 record for second place. His only
loss came to Jeff Elng of Trimble,
the tourney 's Most Valuable
Wrestler.
Tony Shoemaker was a- 2 and did
not place In the l38 lb. class.
In 155 lb. action, Larry Romine,
4-1, took second place despite
wrestling with a hlp Injury from a
fall. Romine had two pins and two
decisions before losing to the

(USPS 14J-. . )
.\ Dtvllloo ol Molllmet!lo, 111&lt;-

Ohio Valley Publls hlnR C&lt;&gt;mpany - Mulllmedla , tnc .. Pomeroy. Ohlo4576!1. m 21.16. Second clan Pllllll&lt;' paid II Pomeroy. Ohio.

Me mber : Tht Associated Pf'ftt, In ·
land Dally Press Auoclalon and the
American Newspapt~r PubllJhers A• ·
socla tlon. National Advertising ~~
sentallvt. Branham N(IWspaper Salf'l, ·
711 Third AvtnUt', New York , New

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send addre11 to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St. Pomeroy,

Ohio 45769.

~: 11,
Trimble

Falrlllnd

·.-des91ed'"""'

• flmilue ~ lnsh

• Sef-'*'*'9 t-inges

• An atra)l d corwenience

...

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

MIDDLEPORT
XI
•·· Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorortty will meet at
7:30p.m. Tuesday In the social
room of the Middleport Fire
Station.

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

1HURSDAY
POMEORY - The Narazene

Women's Missionary Society
will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday
at the church with the Rev. John
Douglas as speaker. On Thursday at ll:ll a.m. The Women's
Ministry will meet at fellowship
hall .

Debra and Rodney Chevalier
were Installed as· worthy matron
and worthy patron of Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, In ceremonies held recently at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Oth~r officers Installed for 1984
were Chlorus Gaul, associate matron; Roger Gaul, associate patron;
Sylvia Midkiff, secretary; Doris
Snowden, treasurer; Cathy Workman, conductress; Kathryn Windon, associate conductess; Pam
Massie, chaplain; Helen Wolf,
organist; Dale Smith, marshall;
VIrginia Salser, Adah; Joan Kautz,
Ruth; NataUeCiark, Esther; Mabel
Goegleln, Martha; Beth Schneider,
Electa; Ellzabeth Well, warder;
and Zlba ~ldklff, sentineL
Walter and Jenlce Marik, of
Dlst rtct 2, Deerfield, were the
Installing officers. Assisting them
were Pauline Hysell, Inviting marshall; Donna Nelson, Installing
marshall; Ruby Vaughan, conductress; Thelma DUI, chaplain; Jane
Wise, organist; Sue Soulsby,
warder; Ann Hensley, SentineL
Malik presented the new worthy

POMEORY- Pr-eCeptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorortty will meet at 7: ll p.m .
Thuf9day at the Rlverboa t Room
of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.
GALLIPOLIS - Pomeroy
Chapter, Women's Aglow FelloWship, wUI meet at 6:ll p.m.
Thursday at Duff's In Gallipolis.
No reservations are required .

you notes were read from N :~rrna
Goodwin, Edna Lee, Norma
Parker, and Gladys Smith.
Theworthymatronhonoredtbose
having birthdays In January IncludIng Cathy Workman, Mabel Moore,
Roger Gaul, Rodney Chevalier,
worthy patron, and Sylvia Midkiff.
Refreshments were served by
Ellzabeth Well, Texanna Well, and
Doris Snowden.

Silver Circle

:
O.tlllde Ohio

A closed wound, or Internal
Injury, should always be examined
by a physician.
Veterans Memorial Hospital's
emergency department Is staffed
by a physician 24 hours a day to treat
just such emergency Illnesses and
lnjurtes.
Suspect Internal wounds If the
patient has fallen or received a
severe body blow.
If any of the following appear after
the victim has been In an accident,
medical attention must be sought

:I::

: . : . ·· : :

lil ~==~
~:~
52 w..ks .
. ........ .......... S-'16.21
f~~~~=======~~==========~

l
CELEBRATE - Kari Owen and a young friend note Owen's 90th
tuthday recetly during a celebration In Meigs County.

.' • "Grobot" (126-2527, $19.95)
• "nmebound" (126-252&amp;, $19.95)
• "FHp Side" (128-2528, 119.95)

The 90th birthday of Karl Owen,
Middleport, was observed on New
Year's Day with a family dinner
party In Point Pleasant.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Price (Anna Margaret) of
Pataskala; Mr. and Mrs.John lies

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kloes entertained with holiday dinner parties
at their home In Syracuse. For a
pre-Chrtstmas celebration they
were joined by Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
IOoes and family of Gahanna. On
Christmas Eve their dinner guests
were Mr. and Mrs. Jon IOoes,
Wend!, Kenda and Aimee, Mrs.
Ruth Ann Sellers, Krista and
Gregory, and lt1rs. Betty Sinlth and
Mark Miller.
Gary and carol Russell and
fa_mlly have been here visiting area

14 COLOR PORTRAITS
2(8x10s}, 2(5x7s), 10 wallets
TRADITIONAL POSES OHL Y

'

relatives durtng the holidays. Russell, formerly stationed at Scotts
Air Force Base, llllnols, and his
family will be leaving sOQn for his
new assignment In Panama.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Hines and
Mrs. Marte Chapman, Pomeroy,
spent Christmas In New.ark with
Mr. and Mrs .. Roger Hines and
Andrea. Others at the Hines home·
were Mr. imd Mrs. Chlis Burger
and Derek, Gallipolis; and Mr. and
~- Ray Hines and sons, David
and Doug, Belpre.

Poses Olir selection. Beautiful backgrounds available .
+ $1 .00 sitting rae rcir each additional aubje&lt;lt In portrait.

rB6 N. 2ND AVE.
.
-

a.

'

~NUARY 6 thru 1~
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY:

GIRLS FASHION

BOOTS

ONLY

•

$}400
tannin,g, one wrong step and it could cost you down the
road. The same is true with tax preparation, and that's why I
always go to H&amp;R Block. My preparer is trained to know all the
special problems that farmers face. And that saves me money. So
I'll do the farm work while Block does the tax work."

SLACKS &amp;BLOUSES

People who know their business go to

In

"

H&amp;R BLOCit

"

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
Sund•y 11:00 to 8:00

can be complicated
these days. Same _
goes for income
taxes. So I go to
H&amp;R Block."

DRESS
BOOTS

.

'

•

LADIES'

In 'The Rear of Slmon'a Pick-A-Pair

,·

.'

annual grange&lt; banquet for sometime In Apr11 and the national
grange sewing contest to be judged
at the May meeting. Star Grange
members were hosts. 'There were 25
members attending.

AWE'S BLOUSE and SlACK SHOP

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

..,.

Degree day was set for 1: 30 p.m .
on Jan. 15 at the Rock Springs Hall
when the Meigs County Pomona
Grange met recently at Rock
Springs.
The group also discussed the

MIDDLEPORT•.OH

H-OU.RS:

PHOTOGRAPijV HOURS:
.
, Wld. 'a. Sat. 10.1, 2-8
Thu11. Ftl. -te-1·. 2-11:30, e,a
Sunday 1·11 - LunCh 1-~
' '\"

Four churches Including the hem" was presented with roles
Middleport Independent Holiness being taken by Donna Manley,
Church, the Pomeroy Wesleyan narrator, Roger Manley Jr., Kim
Holiness Church, the Danville Hudson, Tracy Manley, Allen
Holiness Church, and the Rutland Manley, Ted Dexter, Crystal ManBible Methodist Church joined for a ley, Tomek, BobSearlesJr.,Joanna
watchnlght service at the Middle- Light, Dennis Searles, with music
by the Rev. Steve Manley and
port church .
Pastors of the churches respec- Tomek and group singing of "Joy to
tively are the Rev. Odell Manley, the the World." The farewell was given
Rev. Earl Fields, the Rev. Ben by Tina Manley afier the program
Watts, and the Rev. Amos Tillis. directed by the Rev. and Mrs. Steve
There was special singing for the Manley, Margaret McDaniel, Debservice by the Happy Hearts Trio, bie Light, and Nancy Manley.
the Eblin Trio, the DeLong-Eblln , - - - - - - - - - - Trio, with duets by the Rev. and
Mrs . Steve Manley, George
Thacker and Sonny Hudson, and
solos by Marty Dugan, Steve
Tomek, and George Thacker. Guest
speaker for the evening was the
Rev. David Light.
Music, meditations, and recitaIJARGAM IMTWEES S4T &amp; SUN
tions by the youth were featured In
ALL SEArs 12.00
the annual Chrtstmas program of
ADMISSION EV£R"Y ruEsa.r 12.00
the Middleport Independent Hallness Church.

Christmas Is." Anna Ellzabeth
Turner had a poem, "Chrtstmas,"
Jestle Molden, "The Finest Gltt,"
and Mary F. Baumgardner, "The
Old Fashioned Christmas." The
group sang "0 Holy Night" and
"Away In the Manger" and "Silent
Night" followed by sentence
prayers.
Members exchanged Christmas
Light led in carol singing with
cards and refreshments were
Manley
giving the prayer. The
served. An appreciation gift was
primary
department
and youth had
presented to Mrs. Barbara Van ·
recitations lndudlng. "My Speech"
Meter, R.N .
by Jay Gllmore, "The Bell's story"
by Jeannie Gilmore, "A Favorite
Story" by David Manley. "Merry
Christmas" by Stevie Manley, "At
Our House" by Sootty George, "My
tmmedlately; pain and tenderness Little Candlelight" by Dorothy
at the site of the Injury, vomit that Older, "Special Wish" by Cassie
resembles coffee grounds, coughed George, "Proving His Love" by
up blood that is bright red, pale, cold Jonda Manley and Lee Ann George,
skin, rapid pulse and breathing, "At Chrlstmasttme" by Ricky
dlzzlness, swelling, restlessness and Gibbs, and "Shepherds on the
thirst.
Hillside" by Jim Jones.
There Is little that can IJel?done
A star dr111 was performed by the
untll medical assistance Is reached. children followed by a reading of the
·Keep the victim lying down and Christmas story by Manley and the
quiet. Do not give him anything to song, "We Three Kings," a trio by
eat or drink, Including water. 'The the Rev. Steve Tomek, the Rev.
·victim shourd be kept reassured as Steve Manley, and Roger Manley
much as possible.
Jr.
A play, "The Miracle In Bethle-

ssoo &amp; ssoo

OF OH.IO, INC.

•

PAATICIPr\TING STORES AND DEALERS

Watch night service.held

.

FRUTH PHARMACY

• Stmegy Gllmea for Ages 10 a~ Up
1 CCW. Progl'lllli·Requlre Extendtld BASIC,·

.. PHOTO DAYS: WED., JAN. 11 ·SUN., JAN. 16

A DM8ION OF TANDY COAPOAATION

(Barbara) and David, lngelwood;
Mr. and r,frs. Paul Winebrenner,
Letart, W.Va.Adecoratedcakewas
served following the dinner.
Telepbonlng congratulations but
unable to attend were Mr. and Mrs.
John Bowman, (Jane) ofPa taskala . .

Bend area personals

·JoyatJclcl lind C8IMtte Recorder

conducted

WINNER - Robin Rood, a tlfth grader at Rlven'iew E1emE11tary
School, was not onty the winner but set a record In the Eastern Local
School Dilltnd elementary schools annual rope jumping oontEIII. ROOm
made 1,002 jumps before missing winning over corn~ not ontv at
Riverview but also the Chester and Tuppers Plains ElemEIItary
Schools. She Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fosler Rood of ReedsvWe.

Pomona grange meeting held

Owen 90th birthday celebrated

• Play Action Games, Teach Your Kids, Set ·
Up a Home Budget and Much More
• Uae Our Plug-In Program Paks or Lnm
To Program In BuiH-In BASIC Language
• Eight VIvid Colors With' Sound E;ffects
• Full-Size Typewrlter•Quallty Ke~rd

matron with her gaveL The junior
past matron, Pam Massie, was
presented a gift from the Chapter by
her mother, JoAnn Kautz, and
James Soulsby, junior past patron,
was presented a g11t by his wife, Sue.
The sunshine collection was taken
by Mrs. Dill and amounted to $8&gt;.64
which went to ESTARL Presented
were Geneva Kincaid, deputy grand
rna tron; Lena Smith, grand representative; dlstrtct officers, Ruby
Vaughan and Linda Davis; worthy
rna trons from Deerfield and Middleport, Dlstrtct 24; and worthy
patrons, of Harrlsonvllle, Thro,
Racine, Middleport, a'ld Mrfleld.
Past matrons of Pomeroy Chapter Introduced were Mrs. Massie,
Joan Vaughan, Sue Soulsby, Pauline Hy~. Ann Hemsley, Ruby
Vaughan, Marte Curd, Thelma Dill,
Dorothy Woodard, Joan Kautz,
Sylvia Midkiff, Mabel.:ioegleln, and
Marge Crow; and past patrons,
Dale Smith, James Soulsby, and
Denzll Goegleln. Masonic members
Introduced Included Bob Reed, Bob
Kuhn, Clayton Smith, Dale Smith,
and Tom Karr, deputy of District 12.

Let doctor check wounds

Inalde Ohio
13 w.. k, ...... ...... .. ....... . .......... S14 .1H

~~ ~~~~

Joseph Porter In last spring's
production of " H.M.S. Pinafore, "
Charles Hanington, Sharon Beebe,
Elizabeth Flum, Yolanda Moncayo, Mary Jo McKinstry, Rhonda
Walls, and Beth Robison, who will
sing the role of Barbartna.
Tickets may be purchased at the
Memortal Audltortum Box-Office
Monday-Frtday, noon-4 p.m. The
cost Is $6 general admission and S3
for students.
For more Information call the
box-office at the following number:
1614) 594-6807.

m~eting

Annual holiday party of the Silver
Circle Club of Rutland was held
recently at the HUI Street meeting
placeofthesenlorcltlzensclub.
The group sang carols, had
readings and recitations for the
program. Mrs. Florence Kennedy,
Columbus, wasaguestandreadthe
Christmas story from Luke 2.
Readings Included "God's Gift " by
Marcia Denison; '"The Heart Gres
Home" by Emma Ledley; "Christmas Is Remembering" by Edith
WUllamson. 'There was a round
table discussion on the topic, "What

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns wht'rf' home ca rrlt"r servlct" Is
avallablt".
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

tl8
~~

North Gallla

Plans for seJVIng the Ohio Valley
Cmunandery dinner on Saturday
night were made when the Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, met Tuesday night at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Debra ChevaUer, worthy matron,
noted that the dinner will be served
at 6 p.m., and requested that all
members help. Maurita Miller took
the'sunshine collectloli, and tha!lk

Subscribers not dtslrtna to pay the car·
rler may remit ln advance dlrt"Ct to
Tht&gt; Dally Sentinel on J, 6 or 12 month
ba sts. Credit will bfo given carrier each
month.

r---------,-------......

RACINE
PLANING MILL

Syracuse

TIJESDAY
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM wW meet Tuesday at
7:lJp.m.

~

Eastern Star installation
conducted in Pomeroy

Calendar

PRICES

Wednesdaywith
when
to eventual
Eastern
the they
girls'travel
game
Lexington. champion from New
starting at 5:00 and the boys
Butch Stiles, 167 lb., was 0-5 and
followll)g.
did not place although Coach Larry
---------=:::.:.;.:.:..::.:.::.:.:.::.:.:::.:.:::::.==-=::.:.:~

iiCCeWCA les

992-3978

duty here, It wlll move on to
Eugene, Oregon for another production of Mozart's masterpiece.
Under the direction of Edward
Thomas Payne, the OU Opera
Theater has mounted 14 tull
productions since 1979. Some of
those Include "Don Giovanni," "La
Traviata," " Cannen," "La Boheme," "The PlratesofPenzance,"
and many others.
There are several students from
the Athens area who will be
participating In this production,
Rob Pettigrew, who starred as Sir

Dally ........ ........................ 20 Ctnts

23

~:.!;",.;'~~~k

Was $239.95 In Cat. RSC-10

out llli)S
• Sold ook frames. doas f,

"'The Barber of Sevllle," It was the
first play of the Figaro trtlogy to be
produced as an opera, and Rossini's
"Barber" was not composed until
30 years later.
'The OHio University Opera
Theater production will Involve 35
student singing ~lsts and approximately 40 student members of the
Ohio University Symphony Orchestra. The scenery for this lavish
production Is designed and constructed by Roy King Assocla tes of
NeW Yprk, who has designed this
set specifically for the OU stage.
When the scenery completes Its

Onf' Year ......... ...... ................ $52.fQ
SINGLE COPY

143
1.16124

~::.,Local

159~0
ilteriots

The Ohio University Opera
Theater wlll mount a fully staged
production of Wolfgang Amadeus
Mazart's ''The Marriage of Figaro"
on Jan. W at 8 p.m.; Jan. 21 at 8
p.m., and a matinee on Jan. 22 at 2
p.m. In Memortal Audltonum on
the main campus.
Mozart 's rolllcklng comedy Is
based on Beaumarchals' play "Le
Martage De Figaro." The opera
takes place In the palace of Count
Almavlva durtng the late seventeenth century.
Although "The Marrtage of
Figaro" as a play Is a sequel to

SUIISCRIPTION R.\TEII

'1:4

.

'Marriage of Figaro' -ser at Ohio University

RyCamerorMolor-..
One Week ... ............................. .. SI.IJO
Ont' Month ....
. ........ $4 . .0

flNAL RESULTS

MEIGS TOURNAMENT

Page-S

Pomeroy 0 ES making plans

Publtshl"d evt"ry afteornoon , Monclly
Ihrough Friday, til Court Su-..t, by lho

Tuesday, January 10, 1984

....... .,

The Daily Sentinel

Grtmes feels Butch has come a long
way In this, his first year on the
mats.
Denny Welsh, 175 lb., was 0-4 and
did not place, but Is also Improving
according to Grtmes.
In the heavyweight division,
Danny Davis was 1-1. good for
second place. Davis lost to Bob
Galloway of Fairland, but defeated
Miitt Kemper of North Gallla, 6-1.
Two champions for the Marauders were James Snyder In the 112lb.
class, and Mike Willford, 145 lb.
class.
Snyder 'was 5-0 and pinned every
opponent In a minute or less.
Willford also was 5-0 Including three
pins. WUiford dec!sloned Ross
Swisher of Gallipolis, 6-5, In the
finals .
The Marauders scrimmaged .
Federal Hocking last week and won
12 of 14 matches, taking a 66-12 win.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

16K Standard BASIC

• A&lt;juslabie sheM5 ond -

-. # .· .

•

NEW LOW PRICE!

• Wtpe-OeM Leisure- Tme"

'. ..

TUftdirt, Janucry 10; 1914

-·-·

..

.

The Heart of Pomeroy
PH ••992-3830

-

KARL KEBLER-OWNER
PHONE
118 E. Main St.

992-3795

Pomeroy, Ohio 46769

�.,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuetday, January 10, 1984

Ohio

Kentucky_press ~ops Alabania
By KEN ~POPORT
AP Spolia Writer
Alabama's Crimson Tide held the
fort as long as they CI?Uid, then the
roof caved In at Rupp Arena .
, "We played as hard and as
lnteUlgently as we can for 35
minutes," said Alabama Coach
Wimp Sanderson after Monday
night's 76-66 loss to the second·
ranked Kentucky Wildcats, "We
then had five very poor minutes
against the press and that took us out
of the baUgame."
Alabama led 52·51 with 11: 49 to go
when the Wildcats put a trapping
press on the Crimson Tide and ran
off the next 15 points to virtually lock
things up for Joe B. HaD's team.
"We didn't show up tonight untO
the second half," said HaD, "but I'm
glad wedld."
In other games Involving the
nation's ranked teams, No. 3
DePaul edged St. Mary's (Calif.)
76-74, No. 4 Georgetown walloped
Monmouth (N.J .) 74-54 and No. 14
Nevada·Las Vegas tripped

California·hvlne 83-68.
Top Ten
Kenily Walker and Winston
Bennett scored 17polnts apiece and
powered a second·half scoring nm
that cBJT!ed Kentucky past Ala·
bama. Walkerscoredlliofhlspolnts
In the second half, Including seven
during a 234 surge that helped the
undefeated WUdcats bur,y theCrlm·
son Tide for. their 11th victory.
"I thought our press kind of woke
us up and got us moving better and
madeusmorealert,"HaUsald, "We
gut some easy baskets that turned
the game around In the second half. I
was pleased with our play, Our
defense plckedupandwedldarouch
better job."
.
Marty Embry scored two key
baskets In theflnall ~minutes of the
game, helping DePaul survive a
scare and beat St. Mary's.
The Gaels, who lost their eighth
straight game, led by as many as 12
points In the first half. They were
ahead ~. but DePaul, If~. went

Busin~s Services

Cut Home . Formerly
r.::::=====:=-:;,-;::=======~r.:=======::;l
Mercer Canvaleetnce
SAVI
Homo. t8 y.. rsoxperlonce ..

ahead to stay on a layup by Embry
with 1: ZJleft and took a 73-70 lead on
two free · throws by Raymond

Vacency : Juff1'1

Now IN

McCoy.
Patrick Ewing scored 19 points,
grabbed 13 rebounds and blocked
seven shots to lead Georgetown over
Monmouth. The victory, George. ·
town's eighth straight, raised the
Hoyas' record to 13-1.
Ewing. sat out the final nine
minutes after taking an elbow to the
head. Georgetown offlclals·declded
to rest the AII·Amerlcan center as a
precautionary measure.
Second Ten
Frank James scored 23 points and
RJchle Adams had 15 points and 15
rebounds to lead Nevada·Las Vegas
over UC·Irvlne.
The Rebels never trailed despite
the absence of starting center Paul '
Brozovich, who was out with a
sprained ankle. Adams took his
place and hit seven of 12 field goal
attempts and blocked two shots
before fouling out with three
minutes remaining.

446367318245256-

•

'
THROUGH THE MIDDLE -Kentucky's KeiiiiY
Walker went between Alabama's Darren Neal (40)
· _ aad Jerome White ( 11) to get the baD to a teanunate

during the first baH of Kentucky's 'l6-88 Southealltem
Conference with Monday nlghl. (AP Laserpboto)

news release as saying he was
· "extremely happy" to join the club,
and also as saying that the contract
gave him financial security.
"I'd like to make more money
than Herschel," Razler told the
news conference here. "U you look
back at our records, I'vedoneallttle
more." He added that he would be
happy to be paid "around his
(Walker's) figures." '
Saying he wanted to play for a
team with "a good offensive line"
and one that Is "close to home
(Camden, New Jersey)," Razler
acknowledged that the Maulers
qualify In both categories.
However, he said, "whether I play
for the NFL or USFL, It makes no
difference to me .. . I just want to be
secure. I want what's good for me
and my family."
The Mliu!ers reportedly offered a
$3-mllllon contract for the ~foot·ll,
:nl-pound running back, and said
they had signed him last Tuesday.
the day before the USFL draft In

which he became their first pick.
Alterthenewsconference,Raller
told a reporter who approached him
again to ask about whether he had
BgJ:'eed to play for the Maulers:. "I'll
decide when I get home."
Rozier Is on the roster of the Japan
Bowl's West team, but Is stU!
recovering trom an ankle Injury
suffered In formerly No. 1·ranked
Nebraska's upset loss to the
University or Miami In the Orange
Bowl on Jan. 2, and said Tuesday
that "unless there's a miracle," he
doesn't expect to be able to play.
''This Is just an opportunity to
show my face and to meet people,"
Rozier said.
Meanwhile his close friend Irving
Fyrar, also an All·Amerlcan as a
receiver at Nebraska, said he
doubted that Razler had signed.
"No, I don't think he signed," saki
FryartoldRKORadlosports!nNew
York when reached by telephone In
Tokyo. "He would have told me he
signed. I would know, you know."

614

Galiipolis
Cheshire
Vinton
l!lo Grande
Guyan Dis I.

'985343247949-

643- Arabia Oist .

""""'""

Getting a jump

Willford, Snyder remain
unbeaten in their ·classes

Monday sports briefs.•.

Vote on
gr~des set
for March

;attempts

'
~ '

'

"

.

.

Pomeroy ·

Chester
Porlland
Le .. rt Falls
l!acine

742-2328 '

949· 28o0

10/ 20/ U.n.

No Sunday Calla

~

J. ll ·tiC

~~~~v~~': h==~·::c~nc~~~~

AVON Poy your Chrlttmao

675458176773-

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:
POMEROY

881- New Haven

PARCEL SERVICE

895- Lelart
937- Buffalo
TO PLAC E AN AD CALL
In Gallia Countv

618 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
.I

:..~located in H&amp;R
~o· · Block Building

In Meigs County

446-2342

992-2156

?

1-011

..,_

In Ma son County

675-1333
IUISOAI, WliAIIY10, 1984

Smart Smocked Look

and handl1ng . Stnd to:
Alice lkMsCttlb
..... lltil

The Daily Sentinel

1984 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG.
Over 170 varied designs. J free
panerns. Send $2.00
AU WfT IOOIS. .$2.50 lldl
All . . . . Cltlill M41 .

*

IICII ,.,_.. •

- Addont 1nd remodeling

- Roofing end gutter wort
- Ptumbing Mel .tectric..
work

lfrH Ettlmeteo)
REDUCED WINTER RATES
V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomoroy, Ohio

......,

135-01111 ' Clllllls 01 , ....
134-14 O.ta ~..tilts
133-fllillllllllle .
132-Qiilt Orilla*

GARAGE

New Homes- Extensive
Remodel inc
Insurance Work
Cu1twn Pole Bides.
GIIIIU
Roofina Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sldines
16 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992· 7683
or 992· 2282
ll ·I·Hc

Rt. 124,Pomero~ Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

J27...... ·~· Dlllils
I26-TiuifiJ Crilly fiMts
12S.PIIal 01i1b

bills, meke money 2 weya.

TANNING SPECIAL· I 5
tans for *25 .. reguler •36.
Top of the Steira Beeuty

Office clerk for 1 mine induttriel aelea co . Some
experience preferred involv·
ing: ioventory. cerdex
tam. typing, generel office

Studios, next to Stifflera in

Herper'a Adult Cere Home
has a vee~ncy for enother
resident , elder1y person . Cell

304·675·1293.

4

Giveaway

PH.

llt.£11r All II FIMr C.llel
116-llifiJ r~~~y O.illl

IIS.Eao, All llliiHie C.llel
IIU..pltll Gift lllal
109-Stw+hil (llsicliltlt iftd)
IOS.IIISIMt ~
I01-Qiill lllal Ct11ecti11 l

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

In Mi&lt;ld leport

Owner

120-CndMI ,., . . . .

992-3194
992-2388

or

Business or Residential

L - - - - - 1].21·1 mo.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo·Boy
-T11nchtr
-Wtttr
-Stwtr ·
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

Year-'End
Clearance Sale
AT

Pomeroy
Landmark
992·2181
ON ALL
Hotpoint Appliances
General Electric TV's
Hoover Sweepers

l

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
in&amp; - Sidin&amp; - Conetete
Palios - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modelin&amp; - Custom Pole
B11ns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
lone Bottom, OH. 45743
985·4193 01 992·3067

Discover Eneace-A·Car, the
modem ans- to soarin&amp;
new car prices! Drive the vehicle of your choice .~. any
make and model. No down
payment lower monthly
payments. Read all aboot n.
Send for Ftee Booklet l·l6.
Bob Blackston. an authorized independent EnpeeA·Cat Broker. Box 326. Po·
meroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614·992·6737
11!2/l!n

MEIGS
CAB CO.

.•
MILLER
ELECTRIC

WILL OPEN

SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs ; furnaces repair
setvice and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

DEC. 30th
104 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PH . 992-3383
1229·1 mo

Call 742-3195
Or 992·5875

MINE RUN

GUN SHOOT

Nam•-------------------

STRIP
COAL

RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

Addre·u..-------

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT .

Phone------------

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns

Only

S3QOO

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

6:30P.M.

PH . 992-2280
2·23·1fc

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

WELL'S GARAGE
Route I
Shade, OH. 45776
PH. 992-7844
Rt. 681 West.at Darwin

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·tiC

S&amp;W TV
Train· To Drive
Tractor Trailers

17. - - - - - •18. - - - - - 19, - - - - - -

UnennpiOlltd Ot llid Off?

20. - - - ' - - -

lien
&amp;
. Women

21 . -_
-_ 22.
___
23. - - - - - 24.

I.C'arn to -Drit•r A

25. _ _ _....__

8.------:9. . , . _ . . - - - -

10. -_
11.
__
___
12. _ _ _ _ __
13. - - - - - -

u . _ _ _ __

TRACTOR TRAILER

27.--------.

FULL OR PART-TIME
Tuition Asslsttnct Avtlltble
Job PltciiDtnt Asslsllnce
IIHkday or Wtiktnd Trolnlna
Ke19 rour prosent lob while
rou troln. Approved lor the
trtlnlna qj V.ttrtnl. · ·
. AnEND FREE SEMINAR
Thuroct.y, Jon. 12, t
3:30p.m. a 7:00p.m. ·
MNalnn
t 21\\ bot M•n
.
ttomoroy.Ohlo
IITA School Admission's Office
114 ehurch St.
Ja~aon, Ohio 45640
. ITA School I. T. SITE
445 Glade lfn lotd
Wnt Jt"tiiOII· Olllo 43162

Train on

21.- - - .1
29.----I

30. _ ___,.._ _

·32.
31. -_
-.
__
..;.._...._

I'
I

14.------

32. .;....._.,.....__

15.-----

35.------ I·I

16. - - - - -

J.C. - - - - -

Mail This coupon with Remittance

The Dally Sentinel
111 courtSt.

..

Pomeroy,OII.417.,

.
,

,

I

·a

1
I·

j

lhP

7 wk . old Norwegian Elk ·
hound puppy, female . Cell

614·367·01B4 after 3.

3 Australian Shepherd puppies. 2 female. 1 male.

614·992·6B64 .

Good watch dog . Part black

2 cats to give away . Adult
male and female . 614 -742 -

2238.
One

schools, 2 miles from town.

Needed two people now for
par1 time help. 304·676 · Call 446·0276 .
2296 .
Ranch on 6 ecrea, beeutiful
Help Wanted , waitreu
wanted , apply in per10n
1pm-4pm Wednesday at
Tet ' t .
Business opportunity looking for someone to buy out
and take over clothing busi neJs. Includes inventory,
fixtures. supplies. 304 -675 -

1317 or 675·3217.
12

small

male

pup, 8

montho old. 304·B95·3390

Road

...,'----------~-------~. L--'~!.!!:!!!!!!!:!....--'
•

Situations
Wanted

between 2 and 7pm .
One cute two month old,
Germen Shepherd puppy to
1 good home, male. Call

304·BB2·3210.

6

Lost and Found

LOST Mining : Englioh Bul·

AND

.,..

··~'"
AUI'O Nlnlll

'r·

APPLIANCE

SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

Ph. 9B6·4269
II No Answer. Ctil 985·4381
Oewayne Williams

Scottie Smith
All Makes and Models
Antennt Installation
House Ctlls and Shop
Service Avtiltblt
Ill

11-9-1 mo pd

JERRY'S
CUSTOM

\~~~~~~.,
· Rutlagd, OH.
(1st Rd. left up
Ntw lima)

742-2789 or
742-2515

1219/1 mo. pd.

DUPONT

I

setting with tell pines
around the house. Spacious
livingroom which overlookt

tho pond. 4 bedroomo. utll·
ity room and kitchen has 1
built-in range . Assume plymenta wh.h a small down

payment. $68.900. Cell
446·3175.
6 room hou se. bath, 3 ecru
ground, near Porter on Old

Rt. 160. Call 446·2B57 or
446·4202 .

•

Will care for the etderty in my
home. lots of references .
Men or women . Call 614 -

667·3402.

House cleaning any type
Point Pleaaant and vicinity.
Reasonable rates . Referen -

cn Call 304·675·3908.

ldog diaappeared Jan. 2nd.

Grove Rd . Rutland. Call
614·742·3045.

LOST -Female golden re triever . Pomeroy ·
Middleport area . Childs pet.

Owner Mutt Setll Fireptocel
Includes some furniture! Incredible Low Pticel Middle·

por1 . Call614·992·6941 .

3

bedroom

rench

styled

home. Call 446 ·0109 after
5:30.
3 bedroom, Superior location , 10 % down, 10%
financing
We have buyers for homes in

Insurance

the $40.000 to •65.000
range . UJt with us. A -One
Reel Estete, Carol Yeager

..

~·-·IQI

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

•Body &amp; Fender Repairs
•Expert Refinishing
•Insurance Claims
Welcomt
•Free Estimates
12tl5/l mo.

A1111 u1111 Gl~ 11 11~ nl s
3 Announcements
SWEEPER ond oowlng mo·
chine re.,.lr, ptr1o, and
oupptleo.
Pick up end
delivery. Devil Vecuum
ct.. ner. one hill mile up
George• Creek Rd. Cell
81 4·448·0294.

Hrvices for fire ir\aurence
coverege in Gallie County

Sell or trade for farm of

for almost a century. Farm.

equal value. 3 bdr. houae,

home end personal proP.ttrtv · Sanders Hill, city schools.
covereges are availablit to garage. kit -dining area. can meet individual needs. Con - tral AC . gas heat. Call

tact Horry Pitchford. agent. 14_4_&amp;_·2_1_5_1_4_P_M_t_o_B_A_M_._
Phone 614·446·1427.
,.

located in Syracuse-Near
school 8t swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Price reduced
&amp;23,500 . or will rent for

614·949·2907.

lost in the Mason Pomeroy
area. 1-16 foot log chain .

Call 992·6919 .

phord. Sand Hill Road . 304·
676·6493 .
Yard Sale

7

$240 mo. 304·B66·3934.
18 Wanted to Do
1 - - - - - - - - - HOUSE FOR SALE · &amp;
Light dozer work &amp; landsceping. Kotalic Landsceping . Call 448-3100 .

&amp; Vicinity

Home appliance or electrical

Public Sale
8o Auction

4 bedroom house with onplus acre at Mt. Alto, W. va ~
Priced on inspection. 304:

repair. Call 446· 7402 after l-89_5_·_38_4_0_.-~--6PM .
BY OWNER. Meadowbrool

Moving Sale Wed.- Sat. 447
Second Ave . Behind 76
Station. Furniture, TV. toys,
household items. Everything
must go. 9:30-0ark.

8

rooms , basement. double
Qarage. 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill, Pomeroy:
Excellent condition f

$32.900 . , · 614 · 678 .
Babyoining in my home. 1 _25_1_3_.----------.;
S26 week per child. Call 1·

446-7402 .

······Gaiii"j)oiis·········

Addition, all brick, assume
8.5 loan. moderate dowft
payment, 3 bedroom, ~
baths. dining room, built io
kitchen , garage with aute
opener. Central eir -cond ;,
large lot, priced mid fiftiei
Shown by appointment

Financial
21

only . NO REAL TORS·.
Phone 304·676·3446.

Business
Opportunity

Gallipolis ferry. three bed&lt;Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt . Pleasant. WVa .
Auct . lonnie Neal . Youth
Center Bldg.. Camden St.

614·367·7101 .

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate. Farm. Antique lr liquidation sales.
Licensed 8t bonded in Ohio lr

WVa . 304·773·5785 or
304·773·91B6.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments pf new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 - 275 -

3069.

9

•Washers •Dishwashers

.

( )Wanted
( )For Sale
f ) Announcement
t· !For Rent

Beagle dog . Call 448·9650.

Found Male German She·

Authorized John Oeere.
New Holland, Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment

12·20·tfC

own ad and order by mall with this I
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get I
. results. Money not miJ!Miable.
1

Free to good home meJe

Found -Red and black mele
beagle. Found on Beech

Parts &amp; Service
I.J.rlc

I
I
I
I
'I
I
I
I
I

Need 10 ladies to work from

home 10 houro per week . 31 Homes for Sale
Puppies v, Dobermen V, Earn *76 . to •160. No - - - - - - -- Collie. Coli after 6PM. 446· inveatri1ent neceaa1ry . 4 bdr. ranch home, large LR.
Evelyn Holter . 614·949· full basement, with garag_e,
3797.
2360.
wood burner included , city

Jerry and Ellen's
Coin-0-Matic

1·5·1 mo

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Real Eslale

Jim Baughman. 614·256· SANDY AND BEAVER In· Realtor. Cell 676·5104 or
8535.
aurence Co. has offered 675·53B6.

• 21-ltc

BOGGS

12li'lmopd

I

102 in care of Go IIi polio
Daily Tribuna. 826 Third
Ava .. Gollipolio. Oh 45631 .

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL

Formerly Duds and Suds
Attendant .on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2.00 a load
One Day Setvice
Phone: 992·5937

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

742-2328

54 Misc. Merchandiae

Savel'll

992· 2196
Middleport, Ohio
1· 13·tfc

Pomeroy . Phone 614 ·992·
6720 .

reportt. end telephone aelea
dutill. Send reaume to Box

cheat and marttinga. Childs 1- - - - - -- - pet . Female, Reward . Call

TRASH SERVICE

O.ilts

Curb Inflation
Pay c;ash for
Claulfleds and

PAT HILL FORD

•v•·

light brown with white 1 3

(Fotmetly lawtence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)
ROGER MANLEY

124-Eisr Gills ••• 01-'1
123-5~ 'rl Ptldl O.ilb

-------------------

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
'UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rtcine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·5191
10·6·tlc

cfi~eouf'lta to Senior Citizen a.

Churcheo Ill Schoolo. Word'o
Keyboord. 304·675·3B24.
Coli 814·448·l31S8 .

Shepherd. Male . 614·742·
2665.

MANLEY'S

l»s..n.r--..S~as:~a.~
IZI·~ Pllchln Qlilb

IZZ.SIIIft '1' P1ft

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Concrete wort

All4r-.
z;, ,..... ·~-.
YOUR NEXT CRAFT is1n our NEW

. write vour

CO~STRUCTION

YOUNG'S

.. 153, 01- Qellee 511., 11ft
,... Ill 10113. Prill .....

The new day.evenmg sweater IS
smartest w1th 11ch smock1ne.
Hreh·style pull~t~e• with smock·
ed Vyoke and hem; squa1e neck·
hne; 10unded slee'le tops. Kn1t ol
worsted w1lh synthetiC mohall
lor smock1ne. Panern 7029·
MISses S11es S.l 0: 12·14 1ncl.
$2.75 lo• each pane1n. Add
501 each pattern 101 posta~e

Roger Hysell

ROUSH

Help Wanted

•6882
elderly person . 304·773·
.

declewed . Call 446·4727.

Area Code 304
PI . Pleasant
Leon
Apple Grove
Mason

PIANO . TUNING lower
11

One yeer old black male cet ,

"""*

Players of week

AL TROMM

BY
,. u.P.S. - PUROLATOR
"'~DOOR TO DOOR~~.
DELIVERY j

Ma5on Co., W. va .

a

ctroweil

DAllY PICK UP SERVICE

CO.

Profe11ional
Service•

prlcea -reguler tunlnga -

Clifton , w.v. 304· 773·
5873

667- Cooivllle

Marshall upset
• d J
b Y CIta e

NEW YORK (AP) -It was a bad
Conference.
- North Carolina trounced North
wellk for North Carolina Stille, but a
VIrginia, another ACC team, was . Carolina State81.00, while Kentucky
gOOdoneforthestateofOklahoma!n the-poll's other casualty, dropping thrashed Louisiana State 96-10.
college basketbaU.
from m place after los!IJg to Duke Kentucky ran Its streak toll games
Transactions
Alter dropping games to both 78-72.
with a 76-66 victory Monday night
NBA results
MOIMIQ"s Sp:m ~
Maryland lind top. ranked North
The state of Oklahoma, mean· over Alabama.
CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP)
Na&amp;louiBMktthaU AMoctatlon
M8EMLL
Meanwhile, there were no
Mclndq's G..,....
Regan Truesdale set a new school Carolina, the defending natiOnal while, Introduced two new teams to
Ntw Jenry 107, Washington lnl
[_,.
NF.W
YORK Y ANKEES-NamE'd
Jim
champlol)
Wolfpack,
ranked
No.
12
the
ranldngs
with
Oklahoma
and
changes
among the .top seven
41
points
and
record
by
scoring
\
NEw Y&lt;rk lll , P hlladt&gt;lph!a 73
Mars hall manB.f~:E'r of Nash\·tlk' In thP
lastweek,droppedcompletelyoutor
Tulsa.
Oklaboma,
12·1,
broke
Into
teams.
DePaul,
Georgetown, Mary·
'l'uelldll¥'11 OlUnm·
propeU!ng
The
Citadel
to
an
84-76
SoJ tiK&gt;rn League, Don McCann tmiM' of
GokiPn State a t Atlan ta
NashvWe. Jack GUlls manager of Sard.sola
the
Top
Twenty
on
Monday.
the
Top
Twenty
at
No.
!17
after
a
land,
UCLA
and
Maryland kept
upset
victory
over
MarshaU.
Cleveland at M\lwaukf'E'
ot thf Gulf Coast Rcoldc U&gt;aauf'. Bob
Indiana at Chicago
Then,
a
few
hours
after
the
week
that
Included
a
big
Victory
pace,
.
while
undefeated
Texas·EI
Truesdale
hit
on
22
of
Z1
from
the
W ale pltcfllnJI: coach of SaraSO!a, and
ballas at Kansas City
Mike Notaro coach of Sarasota.
ranklngs
were
released,
they
lost
to
over
Syracuse,
while
the
HuiT!cane,
Paso
moved
up
three
notches
to No.
·
charity
line
and
led
his
team
with
Las Angeies at Hoostoo
-[_,.
PhoEnix at Utah
lJ.O, defeated three Missouri Valley 8.
nine rebounds and four assists In Clemson 63-61 for their third
NEW YORK M~Promorro St(".'E'
San Diego at St-anko
Garland from assistant to hMd traiM'.
Rounding out the Top 10 are
Monday night's game. He posted 15 successive loss In the Atlantic Coast Conference opponents to replace
San Antonio a t Portland
fOOI1IALL
w~q " G!'ffi £'8
VIrginia at No. ~.
Illinois, which advanced five
points In the first half and roared
Unled Stales FOOiball Lraaut·
Golden Starr at Boston
NE W
J ER SEY
back In the second with 26.
Otherwise, The Associated Press notChes to No. 9, and St. Jolm's,
Cblcago at New Jerse\·
GENERAL.'i-51s:ned Gr£11: R.olx&gt;rt ~. otft'n·
Washlngtoo at PhUa ~Jphla
Neltherteamcouldgalncontrolln
poD represented few surprises, as whlchadvancedtoNo.10troml3tha
slv!' guard, Don Caltoun. ruMin~ bock. and
D.&gt;trott atlndJana
Bob Hom. Unroack:Pr.
the
first period, with the lead
No. 1 North Carolina and No. 2 week ago.
Utah at Dallas
San Diego at Phoen iX
changing
nine
times.
The
biggest
Kentucky
continued their torrid
Louisiana State and Wake Forest
OKLAHOMA OU11.AW5--Nam«&lt; Ed
San Antonio a t Omvc&gt;r
C'hlt&gt;tek orrenstvr coordinator.
lead MarshaU could manage In the
pace.
each fell out of the Top 10 to rank at
IIO&lt;XEV
.first half was fourpolnts-42·38-at
A panel of 60 writers and Nos. 11 and 12, respectively. The
Natton.l Hockey Le~
CLEVELAND (AP) -Thanks to
NEW JERSEY DEVD.S-Rl'achfd am
halftime.
gave 39 first·place Deacons had been upset by Georgia
broadcasters
Hockey results
!Tact ;tgl'1"l"fll('f't wilh Sti'VP Baker. goal
The Citadel's biggest first period the .wonders of technology, the
votes to North Carolina for 1,179 Tech 68-58.
tl'fl&lt;k&gt;r . and WIJZ!lf'd him to Malnf' of thf:&gt;
Cleveland . Forrce or the Major
National Hockey Leape
American Hockey Ll&gt;a$:U€'. AS\IsUK'd HMor
lead was three on four different
points, while Kentucky received 21
Fresno State and Nevada Las
Monc11Q"11 Gamt&gt;
Marlnt. rlght wing. to MaiiK' If tk' dcars
Indoor Soccer League Is literallY.
occasions.
Edmontoo 7, Dt&gt;t roi t 3
and1,161. Thepo!ntssysternlsbased Vegas continued their rise In the
walvf:'r.&gt;.
"getting a jump" on Its rivals, even
'l\leMda,y'11 GameH
NEW YORK RANGERS-Call€'d up
MarshaU was hot early In the
on~ points for each first place vote,
weekly poD, advancing to 13 and 14,
Plltsbur)!:h at Quc&gt;lx'&lt;'
MlkkO' Le\noll('fl and DavE' Barr. ct&gt;ntmJ,
on
a day off from league play.
second
half,
outscoring
The
Citadel
19
for
second,
etc.
respectively.
New JeiV)' at N.Y. lslan(l('rs '
trom Tul5a of the' Central Hockey
The scene Monday was the Force
Hartford at Mlnnc'SOia
l..E'af(UE'.
1S.91n
thefirstlOm!nutesofplay
and
Both
the
Tar
Heels
and
Wildcats
Completing the Second Ten are
Vancouver at ST. l.OJis
QUEBEC
NORDJQLJE&lt;;-CaiiOO
training facility . In WarrensviUe
taking a 60491ead with 9: 221eft.
had 1~ records when the poD was Georgia, No. 15, Oregon State, No.
W~ftld i,Y'11 Ganle!l
up Jean·Franrots SaUW&gt;. Cl'fll('f', from
Township, just outside of Cleveland.
Boston at Drtmll
thE' f'itrderlctoo E Kplt'$'1 of t tl(' A.rrM'ri·
The Citadel then came alive.
released. Each was a convincing 16, Boston College, No. 18, apd
Philadelphia at Buffalo
&lt;'an Hockr,' t...eague.
The activity was... jumping.
outscoring the Herd J.2.3 In the next
wlnneroverTop~schoolslastweek
Memphis State,.No. 19.
Montreal at Toron to
Monitoring the ups and downs
Edmon1oo at Chicago
OLYMPICB
five
minutes
to
even
the
score
at
WIMipeR: at ( algal)'
USOC-NamE'd Larry McCollum dlrrewere staff members of the spons
61·aD.
Washln~oo a! Los Al~R{'Il'S
rcr of the U.S. OlympiC' 1'ralniN!: Cmt('l'.
The BuUdogs then scored nine medicine department of the Cleveland Clinic hospl~l. the second such
unanswered points to take a 7().61 •
testing for the soccer players sri far
advantage with 3: 18 remaining.
this MJSL season.
MarshaU ~n pulled to within two
"Theplayerstookthesametestas
at 76-74 with 35 seconds remaining.
:
FOOO'BALL
Brent Rushlawquallfledatthetopot
part of their physical exams In
For the second time In two weeks matches for Meigs was 126 lb.
PriTSBURGH (AP)- Officials of the heap as the U.S. Bobsled The Citadel then hit eight free September," Aaron Galpert, the Meigs' Mike Wntford and James Robert Sisson, a fourth place
the Pittsburgh Maulers of the Federation named Its team for the throws In the last 35 seconds to take team's trainer, said;
Snyder were champions In their finisher and 1·3 In the tourney.
the !!4-76 victory.
United States Football League 1984 Winter Olympics In Sarajevo,
· Donald Kirkendall, who heads the Te~~pectlve classes and both reIn 132lb. class, Craig Sinclair was
The
victory
1m
proves
The
Citadel
announced that Helsman Trophy Yugoslavia.
exercise physiology section of the malned undefeated on the year In 3-1 and placed third; losing only to
record
to
5;4
i&gt;veraU
and
1·1
In
Winner Mike Rmler had signed a
Rushlaw and brakeman Jim
hospital's Sports Medicine Depart· the Gallipolis Tournament.
the champion. Sinclair pinned 1n all
"gener:ous" contract, but Rqder,ln Tyler, bothofnearbySaranacLake, conference, while Marshall falls to ment, put severn! of the players
Snyder,
a
junior
In
the
112
lb.
_
his wins.
Tokyo, said he · has not decided covered the 5,1~foot Mount Van 9-3 overaU and 1·1ln conference.
through a one-minute, repiUtlous class, Is 12.0on the year. He was the
Tony Shoemaker, 138 lb. class,
whether to play for the Maulers and Hoevenberg course In runs ofl: 02.52
jump on a measuring dfvlce to test top-seeded · wrestler aile! had no won 1·2 on·the day, Winning his first
·wiD not make a decision until he and 1:02.07, completing a lwo·day,
leg power.
trouble proving his ablllty. He high school match with a pin.
le!ums home next week.
·
tour·heat National- Cup race In
"We're trying todetetm!nepower pinned aU the way to the finals
Larry Romine, 155 lb. class, was
BASKETBALL
4:07:62.
perunltofbodywelght,&lt;lrwattsper where he won a ,major declsjon 3-1, losing to a Gallipolis opponent .
•~ NEW YORK (AP)- Top· ranked
HOCKEY ,
. ldlogram of body weight," said against the number two sli!d.
on what Grimes called a terrible
r!Sorth Carolina and No. 2 Kentucky
MON'fREAL (AP) - Center
Kirkendall. He and assistant Glenn
"Thls Is probably the best I've officials' call. Romine finished third
&lt;tOntlnued their tonid pace and Wayne Gretzky of the Edmonton
Street also counted the number of ever seen ·James wrestle. He's
and had three pins.
,
.
·S!ayed atop the Associated Press' OUers was named the National
jumps within a minute while a worked hard In practice anll stayed
In the 167 lb. class, Butch Stiles
:J'op~~llegebasketballpoU.
Hockey League's Player of the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) _ The machine metered how long each late many Jlights to run and 11ft was 2·2 to take a fourth place.
" North Cl!rolinll,. 1~, received 39 Weekforthethlrdtlmelnfourweeks State Board of Education Is ex· . player was a!Qft.
extra,.. commented Meigs COjiCh
Heavyweight Danny Davis was
ftist.place votes arid Kentucky, also · and seventh time this season.
2·1 to take third. Davis pinned two
"Sincetheplayersusuallyitaveto Larry Grim~.
11J.(),got21.Roundlngoutthet0pfive.... , 91'1l~. who became the first pected.vote In March on w])ethelteOrthehl
W01'II hard .on the Door, .this Is
Willford a!BQ put On quite a
oi&gt;ponents ln~ludlng a 6-3: 295 lb.
0
'were .. DePaul, Georgetown and player In NHL history to record state'sschooldlstrlctsandt
pretty good test," said Kirkendall. performanCe, demolishing his opbruiser trom'Coa! Grove.
,Maryland. North Carolina State and eight points In a game twice In a High School Athletic Association
"It's,a relatively new test here, but ponents on the wa•• to a first place
Tw the M
d
~ require:r
o o r arau ers who coil·
VIrginia
out of the Top~. career, coUecled 15 points In only should u....,.
.
Kal Haaaldvl said he once did It In and Most Valutile Wrestler Award.: . tlnu.e to Improve were Danny Welsh
ments for athletes.
Finland." .
Wlllf'-'-' Inned both
while Oklahoma and Tulsa entered three games last week.
u• u p
opponents
and Artie Leark. Both are freshmen
1he ranklnw;.
A high school athlete In the state Is . ·KlrkendaU said he would like to before winning an 8-1 decision over and wrestled weD but made rookie
~ .NEWYORK(AP)-PurvtsShort
testtheplayersagalnneartheendof GalllpoUs' Ross •Swtshi!r In the
mistakes.
·
stWellglbletoplaylfheorsheearns
of the Golden State Warrtors, who
a 0.6 grade point · average, or
the MISL eeuon to detemtlne a fillals
·
M. '""'
, approxlmatelythreeDsandanF,on
·
·
....__..:.... •
. e....,· next match Is Wednesday
scored a single-game, season·hlgh
• a4.0.maxlmumgradlng8cale.
. cwve of fatigue for each player
"MI!ce lias really c~ l!ls at 6:00 at ·Athens. Saturday, lite
fJ7 points against San· Antonio last
COLUMBUS,Ohlo(AP)-Guard ·
tested.
·'
attltudeonhow,t(lWrestlethebetter · ,· locaJgnipp·lerstraveltoWarrenat
~. was named the National CordeD Ejey of Western Mlcltlgan been
~members~theboardhave
"'lbe steaily p1ayers will show a opponents he .,........
'•""" He .......
pushing for adOption of a 2.0
,_.. to .alt 1• : oo.
.
.
BasketbaU Association's Player of and forward Caroline Mast of Ohio
steady line, whlletlnew)l)playllke l!ack to counter their moveS, letUng
nNAL RI!IIVLTS OF
the Week.
University are the Players of the gradepolntmlnlmumforellglblllty,
budltl and tben fade will show, up, them IJI8I!e the ll'llstakl!s and then
GAWPOUII 'IOOIINoUIEI&gt;fr
·: 'Short sank 24 of 38 field goal Week In Mid-American Conference but the final recommendation Ukely too," he saki.
'
.
winning by a point or two, making
Teom
'
• Pto.
and hauled lnJ.S rebounds basketball. ·
. ~be=~ decided
Thebull~thetesdltglstodestin the match·look clole. Now he has ' :=nlpollo
~~~~
against t)le Spurs, and.for the season
TheS.footEiey,ajunlorfromFort
·
better. training~ for each taken to his OJlllOII
. tlon and Is , · ~a-!oil!
·
dultlg work Swlday and Monday to
....... ••••
90
111 . averaging 20,4 points, 5.6 reWayne, Ind., had ll pqlnts In the sulmlt to the tun board a· ~~. .
player, KirkendaU said.
_ _ !Jeatlng them ~ a larger margin,' · Pl. Ptewnt ,
71
•)Jounds and 2.6 assists per game.
Broncos' 116-10 trluinph over Ball
.
·~~~·
,"We can't assume the ·same thllslooklngllkeabetter~," · , Fairland
6tl
State and followed with 221n a 7().67 · m : ' ~ upllftl!tg of the
training tecltniqueB wW work for · said Grimes.
·
, . NOI'1h Glllla
l!fj
•" ·
BOBSLEDDING
.
8
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (AP) - · tossatMlaml(Ohlo)!'
' I ac
t everyone,"hesald.
·
Also wrestl~~ and flnnlng
~
~-.~~
·

DEPOSITORY

BISSELL
SIDING
"Beautiful, ::u tom
Built Garage.: ·
Call for free sidin~ es·
timates~ 949·2801 or

23

f lllidllyllll!lll
SerVICI!:,

Per.onel

742- Rutland

North Carolina retains top spot

Scoreboard ...

PARCEL SERVICE

Meigs Co. Area Code
614
992- Middleporl

Gallla Co. Aroa Code

Vinyl 8o Aluminum
siDING

GRAVEL
HAULED

Pomeroy, Oh.

Clttlllli{it•d fllll(t'll t·m•t•r tht•
fullufl•illl(lt•lt•flhullt• I'Xt'hlllll(t'/1,.,

Rozier says he has 'not decided'
TOKYO (AP)- Helsman Trophy
winner Mike Razler said today he
has not decided whether to play for
the Pittsburgh Maulers of the
United States FootbaU League and
will not make a decision untO he
returns home next week.
At a news conference after he
arrived here for Monday's Japan
Bowl aD·~tar game, the University
of Nebraska All·Amerlcan was
evasive when asked about statements Monday by officials of the
new Pittsburgh franchise that he
had already signed a three-year,
multl·milllon doUar contract.
"I don't know !fit's trueornot," he
said. "That's press talk."
otflclals of the expansion team In
the year-old league 8IIJ)OWICed on
Monday that Rm!er had signed a
"generous" contract that report·
edly would make him the second·
highest paid player In pro footbaU
after the New Jersey Genemls'
Herschel Walker.
The Maulers quoted Rmler In a

3 Announcement•

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

446·3672

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters. Swain Furni -

room. brick, four car garege~

I NOTICE I
plus wood building. Phone
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· 304·675·6861 .
LISHtNG CO . recommends 1--------~

thet you do business with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering.

Excellent Point Pleaaant 10:.
cation, hospital, schools. l
bedroom 2 baths, $48.500'.
assume 8 112 loan. 304 -67(.
1219.

Cigarette Distributorship .
Instant cash flow! We are a
Bonded national firm expanding into the area. If you
are seeking a secure business opportuinty. We provide all retail locations and
all necesaary training. Full or
Part time . Investment from

12x66 Mobile homalocataa
Hartford. W. Va. 304·BB22794.

$2 . 000 .00 . Winston ·
Salem·Kools . 1·B00·241 · TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · JCARS.
2268 .
1 - - - - - - - - TRUCKS . GALllltOLIS:.
Stripping Furniture Ill Metal. CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
Instant cash flow! First time
in this area. Our expert staff

614 -446-7572 .

ration centers throughout

ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,

eat

bdr., furnished , good cond...

has many yearo of expo· NEW AND USED MOBILE
rionco and has oet up resto· HOMES KESSEL'S QUAl·

tho U.S. and Europa. We 4 Mt . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
furnished equipment. chem· RT 35. PHONE 614·446·
icals. supplies. and an ex ten - 1.7_2_7_4_
. -----....:....
siva training course It one of •·
1977
12x60 mobile homo, l1
our successful centers nearyou .

Total

coat :

ture. 446·3159. 3rd. Ill $32.600.00 'Bonded' Call
Toll Free: IBOOI 241 ·2269
Olive St .. Gallipolis. Oh.
or write for more info: U.S.
Standing timer. will pay top Stripping. 1775 The Ex·
prices for red 8t white oak.

change , Suite 600. Atlanta .

Call 614·38B·9906 eftar 5, GA 30339 .

or anytime weekends .

We need tobacco poundage.

Will pay top price. Call
1·614·379·2155.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1- - - - - - - --

Cigarette or VIDEO Distributorships. Routes available.
We provide money for expansion, all locationt, train -

$7.500. Call 614·256:.
6618 .

1- - - - -- - -...:..

Must Sell 4 bdr .. 12Jl65.

plus 12x20 room , CA. stor-

age building. porch Ill awn·
ing. Comer lot at QUail
Creek. French City Broker--

age Service. Call446·9340.
Priced to sell, 1979 Sterli_,g •

ing 8o a BONDED otall to 14x70. 2 bdr .. CA. vinyl
Wanted tobacco poundage. assist you in setting up your skirting. French City Brokerown part or full time busi· ago Service. Call446·9340.
Call 446·0373.
ness . From '3 ,950 to
Wented to buy. New, used 8t $6.0.00 . Winston·Selem · 1972 mobile hOme, nMds
some repairs, with 1 'h acres
antique fur~iture . Will buy 1 Koolo. 1·B00·24 1·226B.
reasonable. Call 446.·
piece· or complete houte- 1 - - - - - - -- holds. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Call Rodn 8 y
H 0 w 8 r y
614-698 -7231 .

Own your own Jean Sportswear. Ladies,Apparel : 1--------~
Combination. Acce11oriea, 1978 Shultz 14x70 centr,al
Large Size store. National air. all new furniture. ex.
brands: Jordeche, Chic, Lee. cond . on rented lot . Call
lhl"'iAg dtih· gold 1 tilutr . Levi, Vanderbilt , lzod . a_v_en_in_:g:_s_4_4_6·_2_
0_75_._~
col~ I. rlngs,j~welry, tterling Gunne SeJC. Esprit, Brittenia. •-1
ware. old coint, lerge cur- Calvin Klein, Sergio Valente, 1972 Kirkwood 1 2x60 .. 2
rency . Top pricet. Ed. Bur· Evan Picone, Claiborne. bdr.. mobile home, warm

ketc Borber Shop, 2nd. Ave. Membero Onty, Bill Bien,
Middlepor1, Oh. 814·992· Orgonicotly Grown, Health·
3476.
tex, 300 others. *7,900 to
U4,900. Inventory, elrfore,
Raw Fur Buyer. Baef Ill Deer training, fixtures. grand op·
Hidu·Ginoeng, Tropping ening. etc . Randy Keenan
Supptieo. 'George Bucktay, 161 2) B88·6555.
Rt. 2. Athena, Oh. Phone ~~~:;::===;===
814·864·4781 . 1·9 Daily. 1·22 Money to Loan
BEDS·tRON. BRASS otd
Furniture. gold. oitver dol·
lere, wood ice boxes, atone HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES •12'h% purchaoe or
reflnonce. 1 1'1•% ed]uttoble
rote . Ltodar Mortgega ,
Athena, 1·800·34 1·11554

morning WB . Caii614·3BB·
B169.
1979 12x66 liberty. unfur ..

gas heat, gas stove, exC.

cond . $6.400. 614·388·
9325 or 245·6175 .

1979 Bayview 12x60
12xB expando. AC . exc.
cond. Call 446·9416 or
446·22t7.
1- - - - -- - -,....
1972 Mobile home 1
unfurnished, 2 bdr.. gob&lt;!
cond. Call 446·7171 after
5· 446 ·82&amp;8.

�Page-8- The Daily Sen~nel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Tuetday, .la11u4iry

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

They'll Do It ,Every Time

61 Household Goods

154

Misc. Merchandlea

KIT

'N' CARLYLE r•

r-----------~------~

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE Umutona delivered. e1 0 1
ATTENTION -Do you need to
82 Olivo St .. Golllpollo. Now ton. Call 814-288-1427.
move intto a nice mobile
&amp; uood wood &amp; cool otovoo.
home without the heule of
8 ploco wood living room Firewood delivered . U5
aet-up. We have a 1979
oulto with 6 Inch !lot 1rm1 pickup lood, 10 loodl UOO.
Freedom 14x70 deluxe
f399, bunk bodo comploto Co11614 -256-1427.
model on a lot in the Country
whh bunkloo e199, 2 ploco
Mobile Home Park . This
antron livlngroom aultea Firewood cut up olob1 e1 8
home has a front dining
1199, ontron ,.cllnero t99. pickup load. Coli 81 4-245·
room with wooden bow
other roclintro eao. maple 5804 .
window, a circular kitchen
dlnotta •••• e179, box
with lots of cabinets. 2
springs &amp; maHre11 twin or 25 " conoole color TV, like
bedrooms, large luxury bath
lull • 100 101 regular-firm now. S450. Coll448 -4164.
with garden tub . Price of
1120. maple dinette cholro
$12,600. Includes metal
135, wuh stand• 134. South Bond motel bench
building • patio cover. steps.
maple rockero e69, 7 ploce lathe 9' owing 11,6 volt one
washer and dryer. Every chrome dinette oot t149, 5 third HP motor ·or 3 phooo.
thing in tip-top condition .
piece dinette aet t99, uaed •1 .200 firm . Coll614-2411·
Ready to live in . For informa bedroom auitea, refrig&amp;rl · 6671 .
tion call 614 -992 -7034 or.
tore. rengea, chest, dre11ers,
61 4-992-6284.
wringer wa1hers, TV ' s, dry- 4-12 ' radial snow tir81, V.G.
"'· &amp; ohou Coli 614-446· cond. S50. Coli 446-7828 .
ATTENTION -Is there ouch e
3159 .
thing as a ctassicl In mobile
- - - -- - -- - - For sale 86,000 STU Warm
Morning gaa heater, 1 yr.
homosl Whon you view this
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Holly Park we think you will
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto- old, ex . cond .. 1425. Coli
•
agree there is. A 1989
men, 3 teblea. (extre heavy 446-8221 .
12x65 Holly Pork with 2
by Frontier). •ea5. Solo.
t ·t~J
bedrooms. 5 • 10 tip -out in
chair and loveseat, t275. 7 pc. WOOd group, e800, 16
living room . Completely 18t
Sofas and chaifl priced from
KW 446-6326
electric furnanct
e&amp;o. - ..
...
.
Coli
up in nice pork. Includes 40 1:=::::=======:::=:;::::::::::~~~ 8286. to t896 . Toblll, 145
foot patio furnishings, even
and up to $125. Hide-aPata for Salt
• washer and dryer, com beds. t440 . and up to Will cut and deliver lire· 66
pletoly skit1od and ready to
t525 .. Recllnoro, t175 . to wood . Coll814-258-1528. - - - - - - - - occupy. Thoro ion' t o cleaner 41 Houses for Rent
44 Apartment
S375 .. Lampo from f28 . to
or well kept home in the
for Rent
f75 .5 pc. dlnatteo from Large 1i1e buck stovt, 1 yr. HILLCREST KENNELS
area. Just like brand new .
t99., to 435 . 7 pc. •189 old. axe. cond., 1675. Coli Boordlng oil broedo. Selling
Fi\le room house. 2324 VJ
You must 1ee to eppreand up. Wood teble with aix 446-8221 .
Hoppy Jock Dog Food.
elated . All of this for Uncoln Ave. 8136 ·00 per
cholro 1426 to f746 . Dook
2 bdr .. part. !urn .. newly t110 up to f226 . Hutchto. 10'x20' Goroge. Will move Dobormon puppl11: Stud
S12,900. Finencing ovoila- month . 304 · 676 •3669 ·
Sorvlco . Coli 814 -448·
ble. Low down payment and
remodeled. gaa heat, park *660. and up. maple or pine to your lot . 446-1102.
77911.
low monthly payments. For 4
front view, water paid, '175 finiah . Bunk bed complete
information call 614-992 ·
2 Mobile Homes
mo., raloroncll. Cell 446- with mottreoooo, 1260. ond· Baby crib &amp;. mattre11. like
Judy Toylor Grooming. Coli
7034 or 614-992-6284.
for Rent
3919 .
up to 1395. Boby bodo. new. 446-2637.
814·387-7220.
t11 0 . Mattreasea or box
Kitchen
table
and
chairs
Brand
new
2
bedroom
dusprings, full or twin , S58 .•
1972 Skyline, 1 bedroom
Brlorpetch Konnelo Profoo·
fumished . Ideal for couple. 12x60 2 bdr. modern fur- plex apt., on one floor, firm, 188. end t78 . Ou11n UO . Hotpoint.40 ln. oell olonol All·brlld grooming.
equip.
kitchen,
utility
room,
Reedy to move in. S4750. nished trailer, convenient
1111. t196 . 4 dr. ch11t1. clean electric range . $140.
Indoor-outdoor boerdlnllo614-992-7479 .
locetion, Upper Ri\ler Rd. carport &amp;. atorage room, t42 . 5 dr. chilli. t64. Bod Kenmore electric cllltieo . Englioh Cocltor &gt;PI·
large
lot
in
country
setting,
dryar.S150.
An
like
now.
!romeo. 120.ond S26 ., 10
depooit req. Coli 614-446but city achool ayatem. gun · Gun cobinato, S360. 814-992-8281 or814 -992· nlel puppl11. CeH 814· 318·
DRIVE A LITTLE SAVE A 8558 .
9780.
Gorden
opeco,
UIIO
per
LOTII For the best buy on 1
Gu or aloctric rong11 1375. 5663.
new or uaed mobile home Nicly furnished modern mo- month plua deposit. Call Baby mettrt11e1. $26 &amp;
Drogonwynd Cottory ·
come ond SEE USII No bile home, in city. 1 or 2 446-4477 or 446-3888.
135, bed lromu 820, 125, Woodbur"er-Uaed Homea- Konnelo. AKC Chow pup·
wood
and
coal
burnteader
&amp; 130, king !rome 150.
reasoneble offer will be odulll only. Call 446-0338.
Nice 2 bdr. corpeted opt. in Good oeloction of bedroom Ing . May be aeon ot Rutland pill, CFA Hlmoloyon, Perrefuted, low down payment.
olen ond Blom••• klnono.
Kaneuga
with
waaher
&amp;
bank financing available. 2 bdr. mobile home partially
aulte1, cedar cheats , Bottle Goo office. 614-742- Coli e 14-448-3844 otter e.
dryer hookup. 1175 pluo rocken , metal cabineta, 2611 .
All STATE MODULAR fumiohed . Call 446-4292.
utilities. Call 1-304-273 - •wivel rockers.
HOMES, half way between
2 AKC Roglotered mote
Huntington ond Point Pita· 2 bdr. trailer 2 mi ., from 9745 .
Und Furniture -- bookcaM. New Wlter bed. King size Cocker openlllo- blonde 8
with
hood
boord
.
1500.
rangea. cheira. dryers, ,..
oont on St. Route 2. 304- hoapitalet Evergreen private
yro. old, red 3 yro., good
1 bedroom Apt. 1198. mo. frigeratora and TV' a. 3 miles 614-992-7201 .
676-2711 .
lot. Coli 448-0157.
blood lint, good temperaincluding utilities. Equal out Buloville Rd. Open 9om
mont. Excollont lor brlld·
1978 14x70 Kirkwood mo- Nice 2 bdr. mobile home . Housing Opportunity. Con - to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri .• 9am For 11le-Simmmona hoapi- lng. Coli 448-9372 oftar
tal bed with full ltngth side
bile homo, goo hoot, 3 br, 2 good location , kitchen tact Village Manor Apts . to 6pm, Sot.
roil a. 1300. 614-992-8022. 5:30PM .
bothl, large kitchen &amp; living range, refrigerator, w11her 614-992-7787.
614-446-0322
room, underpenning. out &amp; dryer. carpet, expando,
lhooo Apoo puppleo AKC
bldgo. Muot Sell. S9000. natural gea furnence. CA. Rlveroido Apll. Middleport. TV &amp; Applioncoo, 627 Third MOVING! MUST SELL. We- Roglotarod will be roody Jon.
Special
rates
for
Senior
tor
bod,
1979
Jeep
CJ-7.
304-773-5023.
Gollipolio.
614-446Avo..
$200 mo . includea water&amp;.
2ht, 1200. Coll448-0708.
truh collection . Cell eve's Citiztno. 1130. Equol Houo- 1699. Spin woohoro, gu &amp; baby bo11inet, tub, humidiing
Opportunities
.
814
fier,
rototiller,
electric
range,
electric dryers , auto
446-0254.
Brlttony Sponlel 5 moo. old,
992-7721 .
33
Farms for Sale
washers,
&amp;. electric Remington Modal 742 with AKC Roglotlfed. Coli otter
ranges, refrigerators , TV Rodliold ocope. Phone 814- 2:00, 448-4385.
2 bdr. trailer comp . fur985-4358 .
New one bedroom apartFor ule or rent 40 acres nished, 3 miles from Holzer menta in Middleport. Fur- Sltl.
farm with 8 room house on in E\lergreen. ex . cond. Call nished and unfurnished .
Roglotored Englloh Pointer
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Gu clothll dryer-185. Au· pupa, champion blood line,
Rt . 218 . Call 614-266- 614-245-9170 .
614-992-6304.
Washers. dryers. refrigera - tomatic wether end dryer- e100 eo. Coli 245-11027 or
8317.
tors. ranges. Skaggs Ap- fl 25 . Moytog wringer 448-2107.
House trailer at 32~ Third
3
room
Apt
.
fumiahed
.
No
pliances. Upper River Rd. wuher-1100. 30 ln. olac .
Ava., odulu only, 446-3748
pell. 614-949-2253.
betide Stone Crest Motel. range , coppertone - t1 00 . AKC Roglstored black labor 266 -1903.
30 in . goo ronge-e86. Cop614-446-7398 .
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
pertone . Self defroatlng rador pups . Shota and
Furnished , nice mobile Furnished Apt. 614-992 ralrig .- 1100. 40 in. goo wormed. 1100. 81 4-992·
••.lclot51
homo. 3 bedroomo. All 6434.
rongo -166. 614· 742-2352. 7285.
36 acres at Rodney on W.T. electric-central air. Good Apt . lor rent. 614-992Washers &amp;. dryers ex . nice
Watton Rd. Owner financ- location, ecroaa from pOol in 5908.
variety. Avocado , harvett Shotgun.over end under,
ing ovoiloble. Coll448-8221 SyrocuH . S260 per month
gold, white , turquoiae. Alto point 410-22. 1100 or trode 67
plus utilitiea. Depotit reMuaicel
after a weekdays.
1 bedroom. furnithed Apt . in Maytog 14, t 6,1 e lb. capac- tor aluminum boat. For .....
quired. Call 992· 2859.
Instruments
Recine. 1 child permitted. ity woohero. Coli 614-268· pigeona. domeatic fancy
lot on Rt. 775 near Leete.
no pell. Call 814·423-8257
brtedo. 992 -5188.
haa septic tank . level Two bedroom mobile home or 614-949-2946 lor op· 1207.
12x80.
near
Pomeroy
end
ground. •3.000. Coli 814Used GE refrigereto~. West- New wood burning atove For oole-Spinot-Conoole PI·
Middleport area. 814-992- pointment after 4 p.m .
843-0168 .
inghouse electric range, liv- with firebrick S325 . ooch. eno Bargain. Wanted·
5858.
3 bedroom furnished Apt . in ingroom suite, familyroom 304-675 - 1678 or 676- Reoponolblo porty to toke
over low monthly poymento
Syracuse.
614-992-7689 suite, table &amp; 8 chairs. 7896.
1Ox60 ·mobile home. 2
on
Splnot Plono. Con be
after
5
p.m
.
Corbin &amp; Snvder Furniture,
bedroom•. No poll. 614Rr.nlal s
965 Second Ave. 446 - Uaed washer, dryer, stovea. ooen locolly. Write Credh
949-2424 .
refrigerator. 30 dey war- Monogor:P.O.Boxli37 Bhel·
2 bedroom Apt. in Middle· 1171 .
ranty. One Baldwin organ, byville, ln. 48178.
Nice unfurnished 3 bedroom port. •176. month pluo
utilities.
Oeys
-614
-992
double keyboard . J&amp;S Pawn
Universal
electric
atove
with
41 Houses for Rent mobile home. Large yard. 6645 . Eveningo-614-949double ovono . Call 446- Shop. 314 Moln St . P1. Wonted old plonoo. Poylng
Convienent location . t186.
120. ond e40. Itch. Flrlt
Pleaaant.
1525.
plus depoait and references . 2216 .
- - - - - - -- --'!floor only. Write giving
614-985-4367
.
For ule rent . Two story
direction•. Witten Piano•Semi -furnithed . 1 bedroom Good uoed double bed •1 00 Firewood. 304-676-2584.
houoo. 4 bdr .. S250 per mo.
. Box 188 Sordlo, Ohio
Apt
.
on
2nd.
floor.
Coat11
or
best
offer.
Cell
446-4963
12,60 dop . roq . Buy Furnished 3 bedroom mobile building in Middleport .
Sam Somerville' s Army Sur- 4394e . Phone I 1 4 -483f29,500 . Coli 448-4222, home with Wither rOD.d N.2nd. Ave. Collet Apt.18 or 614-379-2362 alter 6.
plua;· East Ravenswood, 1805.
dryer. No pets. 614-9499:30-5:00.
or call 614-992-7347 or Porteble Necchi aewing ma- Normally open 1 : 00 ·
2253 .
New Rou Flonger. liot
614-992-2610.
chine all. attachmenta, like 7:00pm Friday, Soturdoy,
Duplex. 1250 pluo utllitieo. - - - - - - -·lce1&amp;5. eao. 304-8711-11843.
lor
Ropolro
Sunday.
(Cioood
now.
Soe
at
631
3rd.
Ava.
Avajl. now, 2 bdr .• LR, new 12x80 in Syracuse. Air., Pomeroy Cliffs Apertmenta
Jon. 14-Jan. 28). All olzu
remod . kit., It bath . Large washer and dryer. S200. is now accepting applice· Alter 3:00PM .
new heavy clothlng -Bootl in New Alvare1 Men. with herd
fenced yard. new carpet. plus utilitiea end depoait. tiona for one bedroom apartatock cheap all winter. We CIH, lilt e421i, 11110. 304·
and
Country
LP
gu
To.i.n
Aloo
1
2x50
in
Syrocuoo.
568 3rd. Avo.. Gollipolio.
ment . Only Handicapped, heater with blower end line, hove Carhart Clothing. 304: 8711-5843.
*180.
plut
utilities
and
Coli 448-2467 or 446deposit . References re - disabled or agea 82 end over Mox input 75,000 btu, Min 676-3334 .
0332 .
need apply. Equol Houolng Input 45,ooo ·btu. S16o:oo.
quired. 614-992-7608.
f ,11111 Srq:11lt1"
Uood Freohtron no. 2000
Opportunity. Cell814 -992- 304-896-3078 .
. .4 rooms &amp; bath, furnance
7772
from
8
om
to
4
.30
steomer.
liot
1990.
1300.
/&lt;, l i VI' :.illl.
hoot, ot 650'12 3rd. Avo .. 2 bedroom furnished . S166. p.m . week days.
Brown living room suite. 304-676-6843 .
GoiHpoHo. Aduho only, no month plua utilities and
304-676-7946 .
dapooit. No petl. Country
peti. Call ~48-1183.
Drafting table with drafting
Mobile Home Pork. 61 4- Aportmo~to . 304 - 676 ·
6648 .
61 Farm Equipment
machine. 304-875-4574.
Very nice houae in city, 992-7479 .
63
Antiques
ready by end of month,
Fence 300 1q. ft. with posto. Goooo nec:lc horoo troller
APARTMENTS , mobile
unfurniahed, all carpeted. 3 FOR RENT WITH OPTION homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
• 100.00. 304-875-4374.
TO
BUYII
NICE
14'
WIDq
28 '-4 horoer w -oleeplng
bdr .. yord, plenty parking,
and Gallipolio. 614-448· Old Colt rillo -1887. 22
qtro.. U, 700. Coli 448·
quiet neighborhood. Call All . ELECTRIC, MOBILE 8221 .
caliber pump . 81 60. No
1788 oltar·12 noon.
Eorl Tope or coli 448-0332 HOME. SETTING ON NICE
doyo, or 448-0161 LOT. READY TO MOVE TWIN RIVERS TOWER . Sundoy colla. 614-949 - 66 Building Supplies
2801 . 1150.
INTO. 1176.00 MONTH.
evenings.
Apartments now available to - - - - - - - - ' - 2-lc304-676-2711.
63
Livestock
elderly &amp; dioabled with on Oid colno-lndian head penBuilding motorlolo
6 room (two story) houoo 66
income of leas then
G.orflold Ave .. no pall and Two bedroom furniahed or S12,300. Renting lor 30 niea. Wheat end etc. No block, brick. oewor plpeo,
Sundoy colla. 814-949 - windowo, lintolo . etc .
mu.t give referencea. Will unfurnished at Southside. percent of edjusted income2B01 .
Claude Wlntero, Rio Grondo, 3 hollaro An guo • Htrtftlfd
tl"l two or three small 304-676 -6166 .
.Phone 304-676-8679.
mlxod. Coli 814-288-1871
0 . Call61~· 246 · 11121.
children . Inquire in rear after
If no onower try ogoln.
Two bedroom all electric
!O:OOAM.
mobile home, Aahton Upton Nice 1 bedroom apartment, 64 Misc. Merchandise Why woltl Build your own
241tx321t. goroge or work- Plgolor oole-Coll 814-378·
Road,
•126 . 11•r mo. •so. utllitieolurniohed, 304-8754 tOom house outdoor toilet,
7112 .
ohop, •1.696. Coli 1-614- 8185 or 814-378-8221.
304-676-4088 .
depooit.
cittern water. 1 mile from
Knouff Firewood Pickup or 888-7311 .
UO.
Holler hospital. t60 mo .
Two bedroom mobile home,
Delivered. 12"-22" atocked
pl~l depooit. Coli 44846
Furnished
Rooms
.
LUMBER - Rough cut, ook, 2 cowolor oola or trode. Coli
ono mile out Sand Hill Rd.
4326.
rn yard . HEAP vendor. poplor, 2x4. 2x8, 2x8,1x4. 614-992-7898.
304-675 -4046 .
.
R
prompt
delivery.
614-256For rent Sl eep1ng
oomo 8245 _
1x8, 1x8. 1ongth ovolloblo, a
Nice 2 bedroom houae near ~~~========
ond light houH keeping
foot through 14 foot. Hogg Plgo 825.00 Ton Milt Rood.
E•stern School district . 44
A r1
t
roo mo. Pork Control Hotel.
11o zuopon, 304-773-56114
2 mlloo off Rt. 82, llrot
11110 month plu1 utilitieo.
pa men
Call614·446-0766.
Umeotone, Sond. Gravel . daytime.
houoo polt Yougor Church.
Depooit 1150. No poll. No
for Rent
304-468-1583.
Delivered In Muon, Moigo.
Sundoy calla . 614-949 Sleeping room 1125, utiltieo Golllo or pick up ot Richard•
2801 .
'd M I
I
&amp; &amp; Son. Coll448 -7786 .
POLLED HEREFORD
Smell !urn . houoo 1 or 2 par · 1 •• on y, ronga
Pets for Sale
66
BULLS-FromA.I.brtldlng
Country oottlng. 3 bedroom odulll only. no pell. Coli rolrig . Coll448-4418oltor7 ADD-ON Woodburnlng furp.m.
to tho top bullo In the
remodeled home, new 446-0338.
nace, auto. controla, water Beeutiful pupa, part Cock-A- country.
montha
foiced air furnace, nice
hooter Included. Never uood.
3
r1 7•
·
1
bdr.
apt.
Coll446·0390.
te80.
Ph.
814·288-1218.
Poo
ond
port
Poodle,
to
YOire.
ce
ucontoper
kitchen, city weter, near
Tuf&gt;pero Plolno Ohio. U25.
46 Space for Rent
~========:J~I:5:0;.o:o;.3:0:4:·•;7;5:·5:3:8;1;.~pound:
Contact ARROW
FARMS. Athono. Ohio.
without utllitieo. 814·867- 2 BR Apt.. •129 mo.
Phone 1-814·513-8274. ·
Utllltiao portiilly furnlohed .·
31174.
... .... 3 bdr. houoo lor oole COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Urjfurniahed houoo. 4 roomo on lend contrect. 304·871- Perk, Routt 33, North of
64 Hay 8t Grain
ond both. Completoly cor· 6104 or 3Q4·878·5386, Pomeroy. Lorr· toto. Coil
814-992-747 .
peted. Storm windowo ond Corol Yoogor Reoltor.
doi&gt;ro. 814·992-3090.
Hoy for 0111. Coll814-387·
JACKS 0 'N ESTATE
7143.
.
For lea18
HoUII with both ond largo APARTMENTS (Equol 49
yerll. NMr Roclno. 814· Houolng Opportunity} hu
Hey for ule-•1.110. bolt.
one ond two bedroomo, rent
192-88118.
814-141·2814.
otortlng ot e1117 for one For 10111, Chevron Btotlon,
For ront In the Eeotern bedroom and e193 per Mooon .,..1 Good locotlon.
Ground eor corn ee.so per
Dlotrlct. Noot modern 4 month for two bedroom, · 304-875-21182 otter Bpm.
100. Iring own c:Ontolner.
bedroom hou11. Full boll· whh UOO depooh loc:oted
304·8711-3308. No lu~
mont·. 8200. month pluo noor Foodlond end Spring
111ft.
.
. .
depoolt. Relerencoo ,.. Volley Ploza, poOl ond TV
qulred. Joon Truooell. ont. Co11448-2745 or laovo
Evonlngo-814-848-2880. , _m_•_•oa_g_•·- - - - - - -

9••

1- ---------

Am• - 1

1---------

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

1

'"I

4 room houoo with both,
ochool but, mail route. Eve·
..n Keefer, 304·8911-38811.

3 bdr. opto. Honeyoucklt
Hlllo ocrooo from Hlghwoy
Petrol. AppHan.-o, woter &amp;
oewer fumiJhed. Rent ltlrto
ot U40 per ·mo: Cell 4483344 Of 448· 1134. Equol
Houoing Opportunity.

61 Holiaehold Gooda

Swivel rocker, like n blec:lc knougohlde with ono:
mon. 304-878-11843.

1--,..--------

40in. Whitt Hotpolnt IIOVI·
Nice 2 bdr. opt .. ,.f. &amp; otovo ovon, wormer drawer end
Extra nice two bedroom fumlohed, Main St .. Vinton. two otorogo drewtt11. Cell
home. 304-8711-3798.
...,c_._n_81_4_·2_4_s._s_a_1a_._ _ .,_3_0_4-1_38_4_.- - - - -

7

•i

.. .

r

TUESDAY
1/1 0/84

;

EVENING

81

0

PLASTERING · Now ond
repelr commercial and reei dentlol, friO utlmotn Coli
814· 281· 1182.

6:30

CAPTAIN EASY
POOR GIRL . I THIN I&lt;.

Mercum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng. 30 y11ro oxperlence.
apeciell1ing In built up roof .
Coli 814-388-88117.

THAT EA SY '-lEED S TO
&amp;E SET 5TRAJC&gt;H T
A&amp;OU T ROMANCE ·
EDNA .

AND I THI&gt;JK
WE'RE JUST THE:
ONES TO TE~L

HIM. ~ U r.JE .

7:00

Appllonco Service oil mokeo ·
• modolo rolrlgartoro .
Wllhll ., drytrs, ranges ,

Autoa for Sale
71
I - - - - - - - -1880 Ronouh loCor 2 dr. 4
opd .. full ounrool. AC. AM·
FM, opere' tire, •2.495 .
John'o Auto lolto Bulovlllo
Rd. Co11448-4 782, Golllpo·
llo, Oh.
1911 2 dr. block Chevy
Chlvono. 4 opd .. AC, luggege rack , wire rims .
13,118. John'• Auto Soloo
Bulovllio Rd. Coli 448 ·
4782, Golllpollo. Oh.
19n Cwwne T·top, cover.
toodod. ea.eoo. con 814·
387-0232.
2-1171 Volkowogon Iuper
...tleo, oxceMont running
condition, price very rtiiO·
noble. Coil 448-0841 oftor
IIPM.
78 Buick Rogol CNIM, tHt,
olr, PS, PB. oxc. cond. Coli
448·4094.
1880 Mercury Cougor XR7,
e•c. cond., ti,OOO firm .
Coil 448-7109.
1878 Chryolor Cordobo
1974 Codlllolc Coupe Do·
vUlt both In very good cond.
• new pelnt. Rea10n1ble
priced or will trode fllf 4WD
pickup. CoM 114-379-2314
Of 814-378-2888.
1980 Ford l TO Pl. PB.
AM· FM 8 Utck, CNIII, low
mlloogo. oxc. cond. Coli
814-2118 -1333.
1979 Plymouth Chomp
48.000, olr cond., ounrool,
4 opd. with 2 opd oxlt. Coli
oltor 4PM, 448-7414.
1982 &amp;porto cor. Dotoun
200 sx. 814-992-8137.
1882 Chryoler Now York If.
Good condition . 811.000
mil••· e 14-992 -7128.
1870Chlvollt Iuper aport.
484-4 opoad . 814-8811 3948.
1982 Z-28 Indy 500 .
18.800.00 Coli 304-8751918 otter lipm.

72

Trucka for Sele

1883 Chorcool groy Ford
otopolde 'ill ton PU, v8, 8 ft.
bid; auto .• radto, aun roof,
vinyl covered bed.IIPI,.tlro.
ohorp, priced to Mil. John'•
Auto Solee, BulovHio Rd ..
Golllpollo, Ohio. Coli 4484782.
1978 Ford 1110 Super Cob
4x4, looded. outo., •4,000
firm. Co11448-17119 otter 12
noon.

oompaoton, . dishwashers,
mlcrowov11
Hooting &amp;
Cooling, Shoot Motol Work.
Gollio Rolrlgorotlon Co.
814-448-4088 .
RON'S Ttlevl1ion Service.
Spoclolillng In Zenith ond
Motorola , Quaaar. and
houoo colla. Coli 304-8782398 or 814-448-2454.

RINGLE 'S SERVICE oxporlen.-d roofing , lncludlnli
hot tar oppllcotion, corpon ter, electrician, maaon . Cell
304· 878· 2088 or 875 41180 .

1973 GMC Super cuotom,
rune good, doeen't UM oil.
PB, PB, 3110 euto .. e300.
Coli 814-288 - 1919
ony11mo.

'-;;:::;:;::=;:::;:;;:;:=
1~

73

Vana

8t -4 W.O.

1977 D ....
f II
o..,e von u y cor·
poled • cultomlzed. 318.2
borroll,outo.,oun-roof.very
ohorp. Co11814-992-3187.
78 CJ·Ii Jllp, 38.000 mi.,
U,4CO. Coli 814-379·
2748 alter II.

1--------1971 J - CJ·I, 8 cyl., 3
opd .. looded with extroo, ox.
cond .. 83,300. Cell 448011111.
1878 CJ7 1-. blue with rog
top, excellent condition
eaeoo. 304-773-8023.
71 i::J-11 8 . cyl., 3 opeed,
mefO!)n with black top,
willto • gold ....... 304
........ 304-112·3184.
:1171 ford 4 W.O.- eacllltnt
oondltlon, Hlte - · 22,000
~leo,kMded,III00.1871

Bolita and

Motor~

fOr Salt

WOO 'NN.IT

1D HeAR -n\8M!
8:00

YOU

CAM RECfiLt.

TO. Ml~ Af'i'fiE ~

!Closed CapJIOnedl
0 CI1 CZl Riptide
(I) MOVIE: 'Dusty'
(}) MOVIE: 'A Clockworl&lt;
Orange '
(l) 700 Club
(I)
&amp;I
(jJ
Three 's
Company A forme' football
player belteve s that h1s wtfe
is hav• ng an affa•r w1th Jack

or Mr Furley. [Closed Captoonedl
0 (I)® MOVIE : 'IJcense
to Kill'
(I) Phillippines : To Sing
Our Own Song Ph11i1ppine
nation alist Jo se 01okno re ·

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Golllpolio. Ohio
Phone 114-446-3888 or
814-448-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rt. 1, Bo* 356. Golll·
polio. Coll614 -387-0576 .

Hooq~'s

house
now has
windows
from

E11cavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna. ponds, ditche.a.
booemonll, otc. Coli 614448-4907. Corter &amp; Evan•
Tr.hopot1otion.

veal s h1 s own perspec tive of
l1fe '" the Ph•lltppmes . (90

But then there

are lois of
things one doesn't

m•n _)
(ff) Issues

9:30 (I) &amp;I ~ Oh Madeline
10:00 0
(}) CZl Remington
Steele
(!) Nfl's Greatest Mo·
ments NFL ' s Greatest Mo·

gettosee ...

ments prese nt s highlights of
Super Bo wl 'Ill' featuring the
New York J ets vs. Baltimore
Colt s

abar!
It's a

riot.
Mother!

CD T8S Evening News

(I) &amp;I (jJ Hart to Hart Jen·
mfer IS stalked by a p sychotiC stage manager . (60

m•n ) !Closed Capt•onedl
(I) Firing line
@ News

10:30

8t

, , :oo

~ News

Electrical
Refrigeration

BARNEY

SEWING Mochint rapelro,
oorvico. Authorlred Singer
Bolo• &amp; Sorvlco Shorpen
Scluoro . Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 814-992·2284.

I SHORE WISM I
HAD 50METHIN'
EXCITIN' TO

General Hauling

'

TALK ABOUT
AT ELVINEV'S
TEA PARTY

.

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Call 814-367-7471
or 614-367-0591.
Need oomothlng hauled
owoy or oomothlng movedl
We'll do h. Coil 446-3169
between 9 and 6 .

..

...

Water houling, Fost Service, , .,.
low · rotoo. Coli 814-258·
"'
1743.
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Call Jim lonltr. 304-8757397.

I

PEANUTS

1

I KNEW I SHOULDN'T
I-lAVE WORN THIS PURPLE

Dump truck for hire. Will
heul cool or limeotona. 304·
178· 3180.
•
Upholstery

o mm m o m® m

(I) MOVIE : 'Valley Girl'
(I) Another life
(!) NCAA
Basketball :
Stanford at UCLA
CD All In the Family
(I) Dr. Who
fJ) Benny Hill Show
1 1 :30 0 (}) CZl Tonight Show
(}) MOVIE: 'let's Spend
the Night Together'
(I) Bast of Groucho
CD Catlins
Cll Soap
0 (I) Magnum P.l.
(I) latenight America
® All In the Family
G) (J2I Nightline
@I) Twilight Zone
12:00 (l) Burns &amp; Allen
CD MOVIE: 'In Enemy
Country'
(J) Nightline
® MOVIE: 'Vanishing
Point'
'
@I) Thicke of the Night
12:30 D CI1 CZJLote Night with
David letterman
(l) Jack Benny Show
0 (I) McCloud ·
Gl (J2I Newo
12:45 CII MOVIE: 'I Ought To Be
in Plcturea·
1:00 (I) I\IIOVIE: '5 Flnge111'
(l) I Married Joon
(!) NFL'a Greeteot · Moments NFL' s Graa,.as1 Moments presents highlights of
Super Bowl 'IV' featuring
the Kansas Cily Chiefs vs.
Minnesota Vikings.
(J) Entertainment Tonight
• (J2I CNN Htldline News
1 :30
love Thll Bob
(!) Inside tho PGA Tour
CZl News/Sign Off
2:00 (l) lllchelor Father
.
(!) , NCAA
BIISkatbali:_
Connecticut at St. John' a
(]D CBS Newo Nlghtwstch
2:15 (I) MOVIE: 'Whlt'l So,
Bad About Feeling Good7'
2:30 CI1 MOVIE: 'Cannery Row'
(l) Ufe of Riley

Paaquele Electric Co. ell
ph1111 of electric work, all
work guaranteed . Aerial
truck rontol. 614 · 446 4088.

86

CIJ Video Jukebox
(I) Blondie
(!) This Week in the NBA
{jj) All New This Old House
fJ)INN News

J .A .R. Construction Co .
Water linea. Footen .
Drolno. All kind• of Ditching.
Rutland. Oh . 614-7422903.

84

!Closed

amorous stu dent wrea k s
hav oc w•th Joan•e·s ftrst
teachmg assistant ·s JOb .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

83 ·

Yesterdays

Capt•onedJ
fJ) MOVIE : 'Splendor In
The Grass'
8:30 (I) G) (J2I tiappy Days An

ENGINEERING PRO.JECT IMlUL.D
BliNEI'IT Mlo.NI(IND!

DRESS TO SCHOOL! .

OF COURSE!.

SOME60D~ ALWAYS

THEY SAID I LOOKED
LIKE A T~LL GRAPE !

50METJ.liNG!

m

...
••

., .

TRISTATE
"'PHOLITERV SHOP
1183 loc. Ave.. Gilllpollo. ..,
17ft. boat, blln In 814·448·7833tlf814·448tl!'l1er. CaR 114·281:11111. .__
18":37"'3_._ _ _"'--- · __..
'
1

II

rI'

J

.

. . .. . .
~

MENU" ~E V1 6EDr
Now arrange the o rded letters to
form the surpnsa answer, 11 aug·
gested by the above cartoon

Print answer here :

cal and soc1ai-- are exam -

9:00

WAS TH E "PET

t

tRATTEP

I

r

"(I XXI I I

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles NEWSY CROON FINALE SOCKET
Answer When Jun•or seemed to be spending too
much 11me readi ng poet ry, th is is wh at Dad
final ly sa1d- " TE NN !~ , SON ?"

''

Join lht Jwnb6t LO'Iefl FIn Club lnd ~ s D -'Ght.word Super Jumb6H..,.,.., month.
FOtlrH umples wrtte to: Jumble Lonrs F1n Club, Clo this MWSI)Ipet, Boll ~41 ,
Orand Centr1t St1tlon, N. . Yortl, N. V 10163.1neh.MM your name, .cktrHI lnd rtp cOde.

..

BRIDGE

·

. ~

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Judgment in balancing
NORTH

1· 10-14

• iO7 3

.,

+K J 7 5

EAST

WEST

+K 10 3

+ Q7·6

.2

• A Q 9763

.AK 865
+ A Q 10 4

• 963

SOUTH

t AJ 85 4
• 84
• QJ 9 4

+ 82
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : East

I.2.

Wtst

I.

North

East

Pass
Pass

2+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Dbi

Opening lead: t

South
Pass
Pass
2+
Pa~

2

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
One of the great fea tures
of th e Kaplan -Sheinwold
book is their discussion of
balancing situations. They
point oul that the decision to
balance must be ba sed on

..

'

yo ur study of just wh at the
opponent 's bidding has
shown about their hands.
Take today's South hand .
You don't have any good
reason to overcall East's
di am ond opening. Wes t
responds one heart. East
r ebids tw o clubs. West goes
to two hearts and East passes.
Should you balance? They
explain why you shouldn't.
The opponen ts were r eady to
go on. but East had passed
for the obvious reason that
he didn't like hearts. They
have no lit and there is no
reason for you to expect to
find a s pad e fit with your
partner .
If you do bid tw o spades
and West doubles as he
should. you ca n go down
1400 ag a in st
perf ec t
defense. 1100 agamst good
delense and BOO against
almost any defense.
Keep the same hand, but
l et's consider diflerent bid ding by East and West with
other hands. East opens a
heart. West raises to two and
East passes. Now a twospade ca ll can't be hurt.
Your opponents have found
a lit. but have stopped at
two. Your partner surely has
spades and some high cards.

• 92
• K J 10 2

The
man y
faces
of
atcohohs m-- med •ca l, h• ston -

VOU KNOW, IT'S FUNNY.f.WE
WERE UiD lO 8ELIE\IE HE
RESULTS OF "TI-llS GENETIC

r'

HOW MANYTIM!6

Mississippi
(I) {jj) Nova ·Alcohohcs
ltfe Under the Influence ·

lockomlth Service. Sharpening Sarvlco. Glo11 ond
Screen Wire instilled .
Subken Service Co.. 3048711-3894.

82

K)

I

1iJ (I) ®

m1n .)

...

I ERQUE

took at celeb nt•es '" unmt entJonal and humorous Situations

(60

going io
serve

--.::--.-...::::""'- ...

(J) (JHI
(J2I Newo
(I) MOVIE : 'Cannery Row'
(l) New Treasure Hunt
(I) Unto Houoe on the
Prairie
(J) (jj) 3· 2· 1, Contact
• Buck Rogoro
D CII CZl NBC New•
(l) Rifleman
(!) Thio Week In tho NBA
(J) • (J2I ABC Newo
0 (J) &lt;1D CBS New•
(J) Buoineao Report
(jj) Why In the World
D CI1 PM Magazine
CII MOVIE: ' Hard Country'
(l) Aliao Smith and Jones
(!) SporUCentar
(I) Carol Burnett
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CZl Charlie' s Angels
0 (J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) (jj) MacNeil/ lehrer
Newahour
® Newo
Ill (J2I People· s Court
1!11 Jefforsons
0 CII Tic Tac Dough
(!) lnsida the PGA Tour
(I) Hogan' s Heroes .
(J) Entertainment Tonight
0 (J) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune
Ill (J2I Entertainment
Tonight
1!11 One Day at a Time
0 (I) CZl A Team The A
Team goes to the sky to bat tle a 'Blue Thunder' -type

Ined .

Never kno w
what she 'll

I I I rJ

terrorists. (60 m1n .) .
(I) Growing up Stoned
Th1 s documentary focuses
on drug abuse .
(l) l Spy
Cil NCAA Basketball:
Connecticut at St. John' s
(I) MOVIE : 'Centennial'
Part 3
(I) Ill (J2I Foulups, Bleeps/
Blunders Do n Rick les and
Steve Lawrence hos t th1 s

THE 'IIOROS BY
~ IMPLY OECIOIH(l

to form

I MAORA ~

hehcopt er b e1ng flown by

Building remolding, oil cor·
pantry, roofing, plumbing
and concrete work . 304·
875-2440.

87·
78

~

R. G. Moyoo ond Son, Dleool
Service end major over houlo. Experienced In oil
typeo. dltMI ond gooolino
onginoa. lnduotrlol or outo.
hydroullc oftd oltctrlol oor vico. locotod ot Muon Co. •
lnduotrlal Pork, Point Ploooont. 304·875· 7422 .

Good· 1 Excovoting, booo·
menta, footera, drivewaya,
ooptlc tonka, londocoping .
Coli onytlmo 614 · 4464537. Jomeol. Dovloon. Jr.
owner.

1977Ford 1 tQrl, V-8eng .. 4
lp\1. trono, low mlleege, like
now. Coli 814-387-0294.

AASIT 1D DISC-USS M'/
i1&lt;00BLI15 WITH
PECR.6 WIP OOfi'T
JJE, .

GET your corpot SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Wotlf ,.movol,
lumlturo cloonlng, lrM oltl·
met11. 304-8711 -2295.

1982 Ford F-1 80, PB. Pl.
tenko, olumlnum
whMI o. axe. cond .. 17.000
mll11. Coli 814-2411-9228.
1983 Chev. 8-1 0 oxt. cob
pickup, Tohot equip. pkg ..
V-8, olr. power oteerlng,
AM·FM co11. tope. ollding
reor window, 2 tone paint, 4
WD, 4 opd .. 17,000 mi ..
exc. cond. Coli 448-93f4.

... WE'RE: 1\l~O~ L.'/

BEAM LESS GUTTERS. One
p'-c:e cuttom fit your home.
Guorontoed . Advonced Guttor, (Doy 814·592 -4088.1
(night 814-898-82011.)

Cat 215 hoe, do1ers. cr•ne,
loedoro, dump truck . Call
814 -448·1 142 between
7:00AM-&amp; 5:0pPM.

p••

r OOW'T MJ.J&lt;6 IT A

Water Welle. Commercial
ond Domootlc . T11t holoo .
Pumpo Solt1 ond Sorvlco .
304-898-3802.

1971 Chevy C-30 cr- cob
duolly, looded, low milia.
e4,70011rm. Cell448·1759
otter 12 noon.

twin

7:30

F &amp; K Trll Trimming, otump
romovol . Coli 304 ·878 1331 .

r:, ~;~~·:d:'luor•.

D CII CIHll 0

8 :00

Homa
Improvement•

,.

Unocrtombll lhltl four Jumblll.

Viewing

f(fi

~

Autoe for Stle'

TOP CAIH paid for lato
lrnlth
m!ldel uoed 011'1.
llulck-Pont1110,- 1111 Eel!·
ern Ave., GelllpoNt. Cell
8.1 4-441·2212.

lT~UMda~-~~~tl10~,~1~~~--------------------------------------_!P~:=~~~~·~-=~~rt,~Oh~io~--------~~~----~~~~~~Da~i~ly~Se~nh~'ne!:I~Pa~!9e~9!_ ,
oicK TRAcY
Television
J&amp;MID!1rn!"AT~===~~

Auto P1rt1
&amp; _AQCtiiOrlll

S1:1 VI II ': .

VW, eaoellent oondhlon,
11.10. 114-441·8084 or
441·1187.
.

71

78

1984

lilly leo'o Tiro• ond Benery
lelu. New end uood tlreo,
oloo, tlr~ repeiro. 1803 Jef·
feroon ~ve . Point Pl11oont.
304· 8'1e·ll401i.

~~o~·~~.,~~~,.~..,~·~·~·~·~·~··~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~

t-

Two bedroom houoe, TVI
room, boMment. lanced
bock' yerd. Coil 304-8711·
421111.
'

by LIII'I'Y Wrtgllt

,J .

IU,

'·

....
.

~

...

-'

.-..
..,

·"
-"

(NE WSPAPER ENTE RPRISE ASSN I

~.",.,~'
by T-HOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Colombian
city
5 Unconunon
9 English
river
10 Grapevine
tidbit
11 Plant stem
12 Whatever
fellow
14 Beverage
15 Hebrew
measure
16 King
of Judah
17 Crime
19 Kook
20 Ught beam
21 Israeli dance
22 Showy flower
25 Orange
variety
26 Simon 27 Chinese river
28 O'Neill play
29 Underworld
hootility
33 R.R. stop
(abbr.)
34 Memorable

2 Spanish
city
3 No great
mingier
4 Angl~xon
king
5 Dripping
6 A Carter
7 Royal
Russian
family
8 Steno's
22
mistake
23
10 Pluvious
13 Brazilian
24
seaport
25
15 Find out
18 Manitoba
Indian
21 " Suspend" 27
a rustler
.,.....,.,.__,.,....,..,...-

29 Edible

Emulative
Seedless
raisin
Disloyalty
"Strange
Interlude"
heroine
French
river

birds

· ·•

.&lt;

30 Fabric

31 Burns' Ia~- _
partner • •
32 Laughing 37 Wee bird ...~
38 " I - Ideas' : ~

0951 song) u.

~-+-t--+-

time
35 Hebrew
for " Lord"
36 Accelerate
36 Festal
39Twnult
40 Equalize
41 Before (Lat.)
42 camping
shelter

DOWN
I Conspirators'
gr6up

.

DAILY

J-10,_,:•

CR'YPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N G F IE L L 0 W

It; ·.._
-~
-~

•

. ..1";.

One letter simply -stands for another. In thtS .sample A io .. ,.
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's. etc. Smgle letter'$, ·rl
apostrophes, the length and formation o f lhe words are all ..,.
hinls. 'Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
PY

PSF

0 FR M

MXF

..
,

.I 0 P L M

QTYF

XI UUC

WPZF

IZF

TR

MX I M

MTWFR

LSXIUUC . -

!SA C

;

M X T S B R"'':
KF
M X IS

••
....,.

I ZF -

.

;

...

K F·"'

ZPPSFG. ·-i

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE IS A WOMAN AT THEl•·. r.
B!lGINNINGOF ALLGREATTHINGS.-i A. DE LAMARTINE -

'

�I.
1~The

r---

January 10, 1984

Sentinel

Local briefs:--.. Governor...

Squads answer five calls
Five calls were answered by local units on Monday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 2:16p.m .. Pomeroy tookW111lamMorrlsfromRoute l43toHolzer
Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4:13 p.m. took Gladys Moore from
Wright St . to Veterans Memorial; Middleport at 8:24a.m. treated
Brenda Templeton, Condor St.; Middleport at U:22 p.m. took Mae
Lewis. North Second Ave .. to Holzer Medical Center and Rutland at
3:21p.m. took Don Statler from Meigs Mine 2 to Veterans Memorial.

Schools closed in Meigs
The first snow fall or any conS('(juence closed all schools In Meigs
County Tuesday.
Eastern student s were sent home at 8:25a.m., Southern&lt;llsmissed
at 10:30 a.m. and Meigs began dismissing students at 11 a.m.
Earlier this month schools were dismissed due to Icy road
conditions.

Suit filed in court
A foreclj)sure suit in the amount of $12,697.56 was filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by McArthur Savings and Loan Co.,
McA11hur against Richard Fetty, Jr. and Betty Fetty, Rutland and
the Meigs County Treasurer.
In other court action a judgement in,the amount of$3, 788.85was filed
by Al1hur Knight and Charlsse Porter Knight against Liberty Mutual
Fire Insurance Co.. Reynoldsburg, Ohio, and John L. Strong,
Reynoldsburg for breach of contract for the defendants !allure and
refusal to pay the loss when a basement wall collap;;ro less $250
deductible as they were obligated to do according to tile entry.
A judgement and injunction was filed by the Syracuse Home
Utilities, Racine. against Progressive Oil and Gas Inc., for damage to
a regulator and gas distribution line causing a gas leak.
Karen Bennett, Dexter filed suit for divorce against Gerald David
Bennett, Dexter, and the marriage of Rita K. Hoschar and Jeffrey L.
Hoschar was dissolved and Rita K. Hoschar was restored to her-maiden name of Rita K. Hayman.

Middleport
1Conttnued rrom page__
11
. ... ___
__:,_:.

about the possibilities of renting the police officers this year. Under the
same lot for their customer parking new action, regular pollee officers
area.
will receive $400 a year for clothing
Complaints lodged
allowances and part-time officers
Scally and Dailey also lodged will receive $:nl a year.
strong complaints against thefts
Horky elected
Council reelected Carl Horky as
and damages that are taking place
at their places of businesses. They president of council for 1984. He and
charged that they have signed Councilman William Walters and
warrentsagainstseveralpeopleasa Hoffman are beginning new fourresult of these incidents but that the year terms in their respective
warrants have not been served by positions.
pollee.
Hoffman reported that t'hc village
Under-age people are on the ended the year with a balance of a
streets as early at 3:30a.m., Scally litlieover$30,00J in the general fund.
arid' Qalley continued, aJid.they This balance was the result of a
asked if the village does have· a $17,00J savings on the gas bill
curfew. Hoffman said that the town brought about with the free gas
does have an 11 p.m. curfew for
clause under the new contract with
those under 18 and stated that the Colwnbis Gas of Ohio; $15,00J from
curlew is at times enforced.
the current expense levy and $6,00J
Scally said that officials are going in Interest from the board of public
to have to get the town cleaned up affairs.
U these three Incomes had not
and charged that in some Instances
pollee are not doing their jobs been available, the town would have
properly. She reported that she ·operated $8,00J In the red for the
heard a pollee officers ca!JJ'd foul year, Hoffman reported.
Council gave a first reading to an
names by offenders and that the
nrdlnance recommended by the
officer took no action.
Scally said that she would be Middleport Boaid of Public Affairs
coming back to council and will to the effect that Interest on the
bring others with her until officials water tank fund monies be turned
take action to reduce the incidents over to the town's general fund.
lJoffman reported that in 1984 the
taking place. She said Hoffman has
been cooperative and has expressed board of public affairs has changed
his opinion on how things should be. Its regular meeting night from the
However, she charged, things are first Monday of each month to the
not as they should be.
second Thursday.
Council reported that new street
Hoffman reported that the police
department made &amp;l arrests during lights near the Friendly Tavern and
December - Indicating that they the Grueser apartment building
. gsomething ·
have not been Installed. A letter will
must be dolO
Councllmalntalnedthatthepolice besenttoColumbus&amp;SouthernOhio
cannot be everywhere and later In Electric Co. on the matter.
the meeting several council
Also, thecompanywlllbeasked.to
members indicated that they feel change a light near an alley on
the pollee department is doing a Walnut Street so that the light will
good job.
provide more light in the alley.
Councilman Jack Satterfield
Fire COnt "-act approved
Council voted to send a letter of praised the street department for its
commendation to Don Roach, tong workduringtherecentlceproblem.
time pollee officer who retired
recently, for his faithful, cooperattve service to the town.
A fire contact with Cheshire
Township for protection by the
Middleport Fire Department at
$4,650 annually was approved as
was Hoffman's December report
showing receipts of $10,m2 in fines
and fees for that month.
A second reading was given to an
ordinance which will put Into effect
the $5 permissive auto license tax In
the town.
Hoffman reported that portable
traffic lights at the site of a slip on
Middleport Hill have been Installed
and are working ·.veil. No word nas
been received on the village's
request for a grant to repair thr sUp,
the mayor stated.
Council approved a list of full-time
employees for 1984 and voted to
double the clothing allowances for

r--~~~~=::~~:::

(Continued !rom page 1)
protesting the .shooting down of a
South Korean airliner.
Celeste's order kept Russian
vodka off the shelves during the
holiday season, but state officials
say It Is being offered again to
determine whether the public wants
to buy it.
Celeste declined to say what he
will tell a congressional subcommlt·
tee meeting on acid rain Jan. 191n
Cleveland.
Acid rain, which some scientists
say Is created when pollutants rtom
coal-burning power plants contamJnate rainfall, Is blamed for killing
fish In lakes and streams In the
northeastern United States and
eastern Canada.
Celeste, hoping to avoid a cleanup
solut(on that would hut1 Ohio's
Industrial economy, has said he
considers acid rain a national
problem requiring a national solu. lion, not one that should be borne by
a few states.
·

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospllal

Admitted - Shelly Proffitt,
Portland; Andrea Cleland, Racine;
Courtney Scarberry, Pomeroy;
Donald Statler, Athens.
Discharged
Mary
Deren berger.

PEPSI
COLA

Issued marriage licenses In Meigs
County Probate Court were George
Joseph Ratcliff, 'rl, Rt. 1, Mlddlt&gt;port, and Peggy Ann Searls, 17,
Rutland, David Alan Bates, 19, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, and Darlene Kay-Nelson,
18, Rt. 1, Rutland.

Acarwasdarnagedafter It struck.
and killed a c;Ieer on County Rd.''IO In ·
Bedford Township Monday.
The driver, Donald E. Chronister,
Jl, Ripley, W.Va. was southbound
on the county road when the animal
entered his path. The accident
occurred at 9:30p.m.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND 1API _ The
winning nwnber drawn Monday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 568_In
the "Pick 4.. game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was 4546 _
The lottery reported earnings of
$658, 748 from the wagering on "The
Nwnber." The earnings came on
sales of $1,&lt;m, 733.50, while holders
of winning tickets are entitled to
share $418,985.50, lottery officials
said.
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $154,307.50. Holders of
winning tickets are entitled to share
45 percent, or $69,454. Any winning
$1 straight ticket earns $7,752, while
any winning $1 boxed ticket earns

__S646~~----------~

,------------------------------,
2 FOR 1
This Coupon Good For One FREE Admission
with One Paid Admission At Regular Price.

SKATE-A-WAY

L£tiE.!!.E_!!..~~·--------~---!~:..!_8~:!.!!~.

'

HOTEL DESK: 8 A.M: to 12 Midnight
BAR &amp; LOUNGE: 4 P.M. to 12 Midnight
PIZZA SHAO&lt;: 4 P.M. to 12 Midnight
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
(BAR ONLY IS CLOSED SUNDAY

MEIGS INN

mutilation killings

A$5,9al,438.47 approprlationreso·
Iutton for 1984 was approved
Tuesday by the Meigs County
Commissioners.
Last year's appropriation totaled
$5,~430.68. The budget shows a
$412,007.791ncrease.
Main reason for the Increase is
d\le to the Emergency Medical
Services levy, a mental retardation
levy ,higher costs for welfare and

99¢

8 PACK

the count y running scared, but I don 't think that' s
occurring ."
Vor a while after Johnston was arrested, the
sheriff's department rerusi&gt;d to say where he was
confined, fearing for his safety.
"There are some people that have some
deep-seated feelings about this type of thing," the
mayor said. "It makes a good story, but generally it's
just talk ."
Sheriff Jim Jones said security for the trial will be
light. Everyone entering the courtroom will be
checked by metal detectors. The security measures
are precautions, not kindled by any threats against
the defendant or other trial participants, he said.
"ll's better to be safe than sorry. ll's my duty to
protect the judges and the defendant. any way I
want," the sheriff said .
Schultz had been laid off from a printing company
and had signed on to become a Logan volunteer

firefighter . Miss Johnston was studying computer
science at Hocking Technical Institute.
Schultz's mother. Sandra, said her son and Miss
Johnston had abruptly left the Schultz home on their
last day. Miss Johnston had lived with the Schultz
family since moving from her parents' mobile horne
two months earlier. Mrs. Schultz said "family
problems" prompted the move.
"I felt something was wrong" when Miss Johnston
left alone that day, Mrs. Schultz said. "Todd always
walked her to the door."
Mrs. Schultz convinced her son to go after his
girlfriend.
"Todd caught up with her and soon they were
walking back towards the river. He looked up at me
and waved as if to say 'everything's all right and
we're going for a walk,"' she said. "That's~
time I saw them ."

auto, license and gasoline revenues
are up approximately $100,00J.
The increased budget also provides mandatory salary increases
for elected county officials provided
by Ohio taw. There is no Increase
provided In salaries for county
employes. Revenue Sharing money
Is down from last year by $16.00J.
Up over last yea.M the weUare
lund by $.'Ul,OXJ, auto license and

gas approximately S100,00J and
landfill receipts up $12,00J.
Bill Quickel of Davis-Quickel
Insurance told commissioners the
firm is now an agent for Blue Cross
and Blue Shield. He asked thaI
commissioners consider transferring from their present agent, out or
Jackson, to Davls-Quickel. The
matter was tabled for study.
Phil Roberts. county enl(lneer.

recommended tnat two roads in
Rutland and one In Salisbury be
placed on the Rutland and Salisbury
Township system. Roberts said the
roads have never been placed on
mileage by the State of Ohio.
Roberts also reported that road
signs have been placed on Pomeroy
Pike, Bashan Road, Flatwoods
Road and Locust Road.

Ruling pending on Gallia re-trial motion
. NORTHERN

TOILET TISSUE ........... ~.f~S:JC. ••••••• 99¢

2% MILK ................ PN-lO~ •••••• Sl. 59
VALLEY BELL HOMO. MILK ..... ~~~~~IJ&gt;JHMTPIC. $1.19 '
VALVOLINE
ANTI-FREEZE ..........~~~Wt. ..... S3.99
ENGLISH WALNUTS ............... ;.Lv,.~~"········ 89¢
Jo Bo
DOG FOOD ................ ~~M~ fSl.OO
KRAFT MAYONNAISE ............. Ar.;M ••••.. Sl.69
REYNOLDS
PLASTIC WRAP ....... \UQ.fJ•.ROJ.J.••• 25¢
CLAR~ BARS OR ZAGNUT CANDY .BARS .. 7.PA~~. $}.39
CORONET (Family Pack) ............. ~.Jijl.~~ ........ Sl.69
RED OR YELLOW DELICI
APPLES .)~lU.JWL. $1.19
VALLEY BELL

50 LB. UNCLASSIFIED

RED GRAPES

POTATOES

·Accept

$4.99

1 LB.

YELLOW ONIONS

,"WI C"

CARROTS·

3 LB. BAG

Coupons

' 31 L-B.j$}QQ
Double the value of manufacturers' cents off coupons
up to 49' in face .value.

SAVE DOUBLE $$
AT CX SUPERMARKET

THURSDAY, JANUARY 12th
•R_edeem your manufacturers money-saving coupons at C.K.'s andrecetve double the value when you purchase the specified item. One coupon per tt~m. No ~xptred coupon~ a~.cepted. Double redemption offer
does not apply to F'ree Merchandtse , coupons or coupons over 49' in
face value. No cash refunds when Double Coupons value exceeds.price
of item. Ciprettes and certa_in other items are excluded by taw. 'ro insur~. P,roduct to al! our customers, we are 1imitini our "Double Coupon offer to one tar of Instant Coffee and one can of Ground Coffee
~:~:.hopping family. Double Coupon offer good Thursday, Jan. 15,

.

I

'

..;.

' I.
-~

.

-~ -;:-·'-

·

We Reserve the

ACCEPT

Rig~t

.

-

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

to Limit Quantities.

D Sl

P.. M.

I

~~--~-- /4t..
STORM DUTY - Boston Mayor Raymond flynn peers from the
pa~~~e~~pr lllde of a Boston PubUc Works Department plow as he roured

city cleanup operaUons during Tuesday night's snow storm, which
dumped about nine Inches In the area. ( i\P Laserphoro).
~

Schools remain closed
With the temperature standing at
10 degJ ees and snow and Ice
creating hazardous driving condlt·
ons, all Meigs County schools
remained closed Wednesday.
Yesterday all three districts,
Eastern, Southern and Meigs,
dls!nlssed early due to the road
conditions. Earlier In the month
Schools here were cancelled for a
day by Icy roads.
While the roads became a glare of
tee as the snow and slush froze early
Tuesday evening, local law enforcememt departJTlellts rep&lt;irted no

major accidents. Several minor
Incidents did occur, however, as
motorists skidded about on tee.
All of the sports events scheduled
tor last night were cancelled. The
game between Meigs and Federal
Hocking has not be rescheduled yet,
but the girls game between Southern and Gallipolis has been set for
Jan. 21 at Southern. Also cancelled
luis been tonight's junior high game
between Meigs and Eastern.
Tuesday's postponed Kyger CreekWahama game has been rescheduled for Jan. 18. ·

Losses put at $10,000
Losses were set' at $10,00J as the
result of a lire which struck the
trailer home of Mr, and Mrs.
Ilougljls Carr near Darwin, Tues·

OPEN DAILY '&amp; SUN'D~Y-~:00 AM. TO 8l00

SECOND &amp; MILL ST. ·_

79¢

BANANAS
4LB. $1 00

B~GS

COrlPON J~VIN6S

69 ¢

I
,·

c!&amp;Yqight.
.
POtnero.V firemEn w.ere called·to
the acene atg 10:15 p.m.,' when the
lire was reported by neighbors. The
traller home with a ·Ux20 ,foot
llddltion On the rear WI!S engulted In
Games when flremell arrived. All or
Ita CODI.ellta ,wefl! destroyed along

PJcku,p

.\Yith'a
tJUCk !JeiOnglng.tocar,
parlced.near the traller.

--+- - ·--· .. .
..

•
ID

three weeks, court officials said.
The slayings stunned the town or 6,600 when they
occurred.
The Rev. Randall Stump of Immanuel United
Methodist Church said, "I don't know how to express
It, but there's a feeling that at last this thing's going to
be resolved, sort of anxiety and relief."
"I think It was this small-town atmosphere," Stwnp
said. "We think we're pretty much Immune to these
type ofthlngs, and all of a sudden we haveoneofthese
things that does affect us."
While SQme church leadPrs say they noticed people
praying more after the killings and some parlsoners
talked about guns, other resident s say things pretty
much have returned to normal. ·
"I think the people ... are just waiting for the justice
system to work," said Mayor Edward G. Tucker, 38.
"I don't read anything special into it. I've read about

DR. PEPPER

$1.29

'l Sections, 11 Poges
20 C.ntl
A Multimedia Inc. New'f)Opet

County budget at $5,920,438

RC COLA

COUPON EFFECTIVE SATURDAY, JAN. 21 ONLY

"Skate Rental Extra"

'•

LOGAN, Ohio (API-A panelofthreejudges today
began hearlng,the case against Dale Johnston, who Is
charged with the mutilation killings of a teen-aged
couple, one of them his stepdaughter.
After hearing several motions, the judges left the
courtroom to tour various Hocking County sites
corinected with the crime. Johnston, 50, waived his
r1ght to a jury trial on the two aggravated murder
charges.
Judges James Stutwell, Michael Corrigan and
Joseph Cirigliano looked over the Hocking River,
where the torsos of Annette Cooper Johnston, 18, and
her fiance, ·Todd Schulz, 19, were discovered In
October 1982. They also looked at a cornfield where
other' body parts were found burled and at the
Johnston property outside Logan.
More than ~ witnesses have been subpoenaed to
testify In the proceedings, scheduled to i-un about

THURSDAY ONLY

~PACK

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 11 , 1984

Trial begins

$}. 79 LB.

Ucenses issued

Vehicle damaged

Voi.32,No.l90
C:O,.,rltlhtod 1914

EN·GLI.SH
ROAST
-8 PACK 16 OZ.

•

aily

FRYERS

ALL WEEK

Story on Page 8

Story I plloto Page 3

WHOLE

Olive Township Trustees held
their organizational meeting for
1984 electing Everett Schultz as
president. Bernard Bennett was
named vice president and John
Smith was named fire chief. The
trustees will meet on the first day of
each month during 1984. On months
when the meeting falls on a Sunday,
the session will be held on the
following day.

THE MEIGS INN
.

59
RE~ULAR .WIENERS ......................... s :
KAHN s
BEEF_FRANKS ................... $1.69
99
KAHN'S
BIG RED SMOKEYS ............ 1.
BEEF &amp; CHEDDAR ............. S1.79
KAHN'S
12 OZ. KAHN'S BOLOGNA ................ ~ ........ S1.29
·12 oz. KAHN'S BEEF BOLOGNA ................. $}.
$}

KAHN'S

Page 4

Firefighters' report

Hall of Fame election

.

The basketball game between
Federal Hocking and Meigs to be
played at Federal Hocking this
evening has been cancelled as
Federal Hocking schools are closed
due to weather conditions.

~r does sign,

Letters on Page 2

Schultz heads group

Game postponed

Fat contract

Help sought, given

"

I--~--

·•

The family was not at home at the
time of the fire.
Thomas Werry, a,!Sistlll!t chief or
the Pomeroy Fire_ Oepartn'lent,
reports cause of the fire Is not
known, 'There. Is Insurance coverage, llowi!ver, Werry said. Jamie
Ash, a fireman, was taken to
Veterans .Memorial Hospital for
treatment after running a nalltnto
his foot during the fire. FlreJnen
were on the sceme approximately
two hours.

GALLIPOLIS - Judge Richard
C. Roderick Is expected to rule
sometime this week In Gallla
County Common Pleas Court on a
motion to re-try the Charles Lee II
murder trial.
Roderick heard arguments from
Lee's attorney, Hamlin King, and
Prosecutor Joseph Cain during a
1~- oour hearing Tuesday In court.
Lee, 17, Point Pleasant, was found
guilty Dec. 9 In connection with the
shooting death of Barbara L.
Twyman, 17, Rt. 1, Ewlngtoil. on or
about March 20, 1983.
King filed the motion Dec. 20, and
claims that the trial, covering nine
days of testimony and one day of
deliberations by an eight-woman,
tour-man jury, was conducted In a
''circus-like atmosphere."

King also objected to the presence
of "conspicuous and excessive
guards" from the sheriff's departmE'nt being present in the courtroom. Another objection dealt with
testimony or sheriff's investigator
Sgt. Raymond Pope over a derrin·
ger allegedly owned by the main
prosecutlo~ witness, Shirley Furst.
During Cain's closing argument
to the jury Dec. 8. King alleges that
Cain referred to Lee as a witness .
King said that called attention to the
tact Lee didn't testify In his own
defense during the tr.al.
Additionally, King filed objections
to the introduction Into the trial or
several hours of tape recorded
telephone conversations Furst

made with Lee in late August and
early SeptembPr 1983 and the
admission of a photograph of the
victim because of its "prejudicial
value."

Cain filed a lengthy motion
against retrial, noting the trial
proceeded " In a very orderly and
expeditious fashion .'·
Cain said that If he did refer to Lee
as a witness in his summation. "it
was totally inadvertent." He noted
that wiien King objected to the
reference, "the court noted to the
prosecutor and nothing further was
said In summation."
The validity of Furst's position as
a witness for the prosecution was
emphasized by the prosecutor. She
recorded the tapes on a voluntary
basis, he added.

Celeste hopes for steady recovery
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API -Gov.
Richard Celeste says that although
he'sworkingonthestate'seconomlc
recovery, Ohioans shouldn't expect
quick results.
Celeste said Tuesday night on the
public •elevlsion program "Issues
Ohio," broadcast live from his
statehouse office by WOSU·TV at
the end of his first year In office, that
a long-term economic boost Is his
administration's goal.
"Don't expect this to happen next
week or next month. We have a long
way to go In terms of recovery and
that recovery is going to take some
time," he said.
He says he'll look for the first signs
of economic recovery a year fro"\
now, when he hopes to have begun to
broaden the state's Industrial base,
developed an applied technology
center tnOhio.andrelateduntverslty
research to new businesses.
"I'll see that as thestart of success
- the real test will be five years
down the road," Celeste said. ·
He said he believes his efforts to
bring new jobs to Ohio should
overshadow criticism of his adminIstration by the time he runs for
re-election three years from now.
On another topic, he said the law
granting Ohioans a taX break If
times get better Is astgnofthe"good
faith relationShip" between Ohioans
and the government.
"It's a token of good faith - as
things begin to recover we will have
.some tax relief for our citizens,"
Celeste said.
But the governor says there Isn't
any extnl money Is.the state cotters

to give a tax refund now, and warns
It may be some time before there's

enough to talk seriously of a refund.
On other topics, the governor said
he expects his task force on acid rain
to issue a proposal within a month
for resolving the issue in a way that
will protect the environment, promote use of Ohio coal and call for
nationwide sharing of acid rain
clean-up costs.
He said he doesn't have an opinion
on what should be done with the
troubled ztmmer nuclear power
plant, but said he' ll support a
measure now In the General
Assembly that would keep consumers from paying for utility
management's mistakes.

&lt;

Appropriations
given approval

The governor said judges should
be allowed to sentence convicted
drunken drivers to alcohol interven Eastern' sBoard of Educa lion has
tion programs, butonlyifthedrlvers approved temporary appropriastill lose their freedom for three ·ttons totaling $2,384,157. A breakdays. The House has passed a bill down soows$2,001,:nl In the general
that would let judges impose fund ; $19,750 In the bond fund
intervention instead or the current ; $172,006 in the lunchroom fund and
taw's mandatory three-ilay jail $188,:nl in federal, state and other
sentence.
local funds.
If approached by the Mondale
Dorsel Larkins president of the
campaign, Celeste said he would board for 1984 and Roger Gaul was
"tell them we're going to carry the named '~ce president.
·
state for John Glenn.'' The governor
The board voted to join the Ohio
said Glenn's strong second position School Boards Association and to
still gives him a good chance or purchase liability Insurance for
getting the nomination .
board members. Each member will
be paid $40 for each regular meeting
with ~sions to be held on the third
Monday of each month. The next
regular meeting will be Jan. 23.
The resignation of Margaret Ella
Lewis as a special education teacher
aide was accepted. Tim Wilhelm,
Cqmmon Pleas Court Judge Lynette Van Reeth and Mary Price
Charles Knight has delayed a w'tl'_e granted leavecs.
file board granted the TupperS
decision on a change of venue
motion .filed In the retrial of Pamela Plains EMS permission to use a
schooland approved $250 for use in
Spencer, Syracuse.
Judge Charles Knight heard purchasing survey forms for high
arguments this morning by Freder- school needs assessments. Federal
Ick Crow III, prosecuting attorney and state programs for 1984 were
and Steven Story, attorney for approved.
It was agreed to change certlflSpencer.
ca
te of deposit accounts to checking
·- Knight Indicated he will make a
Ill
and lc'l hold classes on Jan. 16
decision within the next two days .
when
a parent-teacher conference
A mlstrall was declared Debeen
scheduled but to close
had
cember 12 following a week long
schools
on
Jan . 20 for Martin King
jury trial for Ms. Spen~r, charged
Day.
Parent-teacher
conferences
with Involuntary manslaughter and
have
been
rescheduled
for the
.endangering children as the result of
evening
of
Jan.
19
and
the
morning
the death of her new born baby last
ofJan.20.
May.
Jl

Change of venue
decision pending

--&gt;1

Admissability of photographs in
such a trial has already had
precedent in Ohio, Cain said, and
helps in identification purposes.
Pope's testimony, Cain continued, was limited to a Bureau of
Criminal Investigation examination of the derringer and the kind of
bullet it fires. Cain said King's
questioning dealt with identification
of the derringer from a pootograph.
"Clearly, this was entirely a
different question than whether he
(Pope I examined the derringer
owned by Shirley Furst," Cain's
motion said.
Lee was arrested by Invest iga tori;
April 6, several hours after Twyman's body was found in a well near
Ewington. He was the first juvenile
to be tried as an adult in recent
county history.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="104">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2667">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41842">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41841">
              <text>January 10, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
