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1~The

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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.

•

�••

Wed,_.y, January J'J, ·.1984

Comnientary
the · Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEV&lt;YI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A~

'

__,

&amp;!m~ ~ ........,....~=·""'
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Asslslanl Publisher/ Controller

General Mana1er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER ol The Associated Preas, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
lion and lhe American Newspaper 'Publisher Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcomed. Tbey should be less than 300 words
loaJ. AllleUers are subject to ediiiDJ and must be siJned with name, addresa and
telepbone number. No unslrned letters wUI be published. Letlus should be In
&amp;ood lute, addressin&amp;lssuts , not penoaaUtles.

Letters to editor
A chilling experience
Now that the holidays are over

lind things are almost back to
normal, I feel this letter is way past
due.
'On Chrtstmas Eve, it was bitterly
cold outside and some residences of
Racine experienced a power outage. Well, such was the case at the
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McBane
.residence, where I was invited to
spend Christmas Eve and Christnias Day along with my 22-montholil daughter, Shell!. The home of
the McBanes Is totally electric, so
that should tell the story itself, and
I'll bet it will be a Christmas Eve
I'm not soon to forget.
The electric went out at approximately 5: 26 p.m.
:The McBanes have two small
clilldren, one nine months and one a
little over two years old. The small
children got cold real fast. When it
got so cold we couldn't stand it, we
went to Pomeroy to get warm by
the heater of the car.
:well, the trusty car got cold, over
heated and quit in Mlnersvlile. We
didn't know what to do, so I
SJtggested we call the sheriff's
department. They sent Deputy
Randy Forbes to our rescue. He
transported us to Racine. When we
got borne, stlll no electricity.
Right away, he called the sheriff's office which In turn got a call
trom a Mrs. Betty Pooler from ·
Middleport who was so kind to offer
us retuge at her horne, but because

we would have no way back to
Racine, we had to refuse her kind
offer. The sheriff's office then
called Racine Mayor Charles
pyies, and he Immediately opened
the Racine Fire House annex tor us.
When the electric service was
restored, Deputy Forbes returned
to the Fire House and transported
us home. Thanl&lt;"you, Randy Forbes
and Cary Hysell. After we got home
and things were on their way to
normal, out went the lights and heat
again.
This time we called Racine
marshal Alfred Lyons Sr. who
responded immediately, but by the
time he arrived, the electric was
back. But just the same he came on
Christmas Eve at 11: 30 p.m. He
doesn't know how much we appreciate htm.
We know this Is rather lengthy,
but so was our five and one-half
hour ordeal without heat, and we
want to make sure all tbat were
involved are properly
"THANKED" for their kindness
shown us on Christmas Eve.
We hope your Christmas was
richly blessed for your kind acts
and hope your Christmases tor
years to come are grand. We will
never forget your help tor many
years. Thank you all again. - Mr.
and Mrs. Paul McBane, P. J . and
Vada, Mrs. Barbara Stahl and
Shelli, and Ji.rnn1y McBane.

Couple needs your help
On August 12, 1!m, Mike and would not pmction. That Is wby he
Mary Lambert rushed to the could not laugh, or move, or talk. In
hospital to give birth to their first fact, his brain would not function
child Every mile closer to Holzer enough for htm to take a bottle.
Hospital brought more excitement. When Chlldren's Hospital sent him
Would it be a boy? Or would it be a ho111e. they made an incision into
beautiful girl?? Thoughts ran his stomach, where a tunnel was
through their minds ... They finally placed and liquids were poured
made it to Holzer, just in time.
directly into his stomach.
Someone said, "It's a boy." She
Because of several articles in the
waited patiently for the first cries of newspaper concerning a child in
her tlrst-born son. She waited, but New Haven, West Vlrglnla who was
there was no sound. It seemed like stmilar to Andrew, the Lambert
an eternity. FINALLY, a cry. She family heard about a program out
smiled. She saw the doctor coming ot Philadelphia, Pa. tbat helped
toward her. She walled eagerly for those with severe brain damage.
htm to say, "Mary, it's a houncing The Lamberts called and got an
baby boy." There was only one . appointment tor Andrew. The
thing wrong, HE WASN'T BOUNC- wa)ting Ust was very long. They had
ING. Andrew, (the name they had to wait tor over a year. But a few
already chosen If it were a boy) did weeks ago, the Lamberts (parents,
not breathe tor several minues Mike and Mary and Grandpa Ernie
after birth. No oxygen to the brain and Grandma Mary) along with
resulted in mild brain damage.
Andrew took the long trip to
Something unexpected, unex- PhUadelphla. After a full week of
plained happened on November 24, testing, the doctors there said that
1981 when Andrew was 15 months there was some hope for Andrew.
old. Without warning, his temperaAndrew was placed on a physical
ture went out of control. He went therapy program for 12 hours a day,
Into seizures. He was rushed to seven days a week. The call has
Holzer and for two days, doctors gone out tor help and a few have
worked on htm around the clock. responded, but not nearly enough.
They were able to get his tempera- We need 18 helpers a day to make ·
ture down to 101, but they could not the program work. The schedule Is
stop the seizures. Andrew was made u~ ~ team of three worlijng
rushed to Children's Hospital in for two hours. Won't you pleas
Columbus. For seven weeks and help? I wish it were possible for
two days Andrew lay there. That's every parent in Meigs County to see
really ail he did. He just lay. No Andrew Lambert. What has hapmovement, no sound, no laughter. pened to htm could happen to
In tact, the doctors tried to inflict anyone. The Lamberts are saying,
pain to get htm to cry- But he could "We cannot do it ail ourselves, we
not cry, just Jay.
need help." WHAT IS YOUR
Flnally, with no hope, Andrew ANS'M:R????
was sent borne. To the doctors,
If you would like to help, please
what had happened to little Andrew contact the Lambert famlly at
waS ' mystery. They could not phone number: 742-2545. If you
exPlaJn it. To the family, It seemed would like to go and observe before
1lki! a bad dream. But, believe me, · yilu volunteer, please feel tree to do
It was and is very real. Because of so. The Lamberts will ariswer any
the high temperature, 106 degrees, and ail your questions. - BasU
Andrew was lett with very, very Cremeans.
severe brain · damage. His brain

,.
'

0

' ftagl 2-'rt..p.ily ,lentkwl
, ;,.,...,. Ml~leport, Ohle ·
· Wecl1111dl 'f, .Ia~ ll nlt14

About Charles Wick _ _ _.....:.:.w-=ill=iam~F._.B_uc_kleY_::;...'·· .;;__Jr.
The bottom line, as we have been
taught to say,ls that I do not believe
United 'states Information Agency
chief Charles Wic~ should have
tape-recorded his telephone conversations. But somewhere above that
bottom line there should be room
tor an observation or two even if one
runs the risk of sounding like a
•
defense attorney.
1. Different people have dlffelJilt
personal habits. There are tJ&amp;e
who, for instance. do not throw
things away, never mind tbat the
things they might have thrown
away could embarrass them. There
are examples of this in tact and in
fiction : the murderer who cannot
bear to destroy the love letter ol. his
girlfriend, announcing her Intention
of going away with the Other Man.
Zap. Exit girlfriend. But there Is no
complementary Zap exiting the
girlfriend's letter. Along comes
Scotland Yard, and before you
know it, our friend is hanging off a
giblet, having speculated, just
before the trapdoor wsa pulled, why
on earth he was so dumb as to hang

'WA ..~?

·

on to that letter.
2. There are those who have no
crtmJnai turn of mind wbo also
hang on to this and that. Thls habit
can be ascribed to vanity, but is not
necessartly that. Quite the conI~. Professor John Kenneth
Galbraith so Intensely dislikes the
first drafts of his books and essays
that he destroys them for fear that
they should be seen. One wishes he
exercised such philanthropy with
respect to his finished drafts, but
never mind: He is, like certain
others, in thecompanyofthosewho
do not like to confront that which
they wrote, or spoke ,
extemporaneously.
3. Even as thewritercandeslreto
keep, or to destroy, his first draft, so
Is it with people who speak. Permit
the personal observation: From
time to time generous hosts press
into my palm, when I leave a studio,
a recording of what it was I said
extemporaneously on their programs. I would sooner die than
listen to such tapes, even as, along
with so many others, I cannot bear

to hear a program in which I
perform extemporaneously. That Is
a fonn of vanity. If you knock &lt;tf a
stretch of prose, or of oratory, that
you koow could be improved with a
blue pencU, you do oot wish to see
the unedited version lying about.
4. Richard Nixon Is the primary
hlstoric8J example of the man who
felt otherwise. That :~entlment ts once again - not necessartly a .sign
ot vanity. It is the historian's Itch.
Collect everything. If you think this
neurotic or vainglorious beyond
reason; talk to an archivist. He will
ask you, if he Is collect1ng your
opera, to save for him everything.
Literally everything. Even what
you'd have thought of as detritus.
A scratch-pad notation by John
Kennedy or T.S. Eliot, never mind
what it says, Is ''worth" something.
Worth something, conceivably, to
the historical archeologist who
seeks to piece together that which
might cast light on great historical
decisions (JFK) or great poetry
(T.S. Eliot). There are people In the
world who, although they are not

lfs114£.almEAriC&lt;?.MMtMIR~.-.w,ta~'ROLp I«S.
BS.L.~,Uto\,11' ~ LIU ~ GOIN61&gt; 'fJ 6
.

presidents or poets, nevertlleleu
incilne to the archivist's turn of
mind. Charles Wick wu one·. ''I am
going to be on the telephone with
Jim? Well, record OW' convenation. 'Might prove useful."
5. Might prove useful for what
purposes? It Is obvioUS from the iJne
ot patter going mat the expe111e of
Charles Wick tbat he alleae&lt;UY
iniended to accumulate a telpbonic
library for ugly reasons. I do not
think there is any evidence that
venal PUI'IJOiie5 wer:e on his mind. It
is, in my judgment, an ugly
accretion in the library of human
intercourse to record that which is
said eXtemporaneously. But to
record such matter Is rather a
reflection of bureaucratic Inclination than of malevol~ It is tor
that reason that one hesitates to
denounce Charles Wick for more
than an error in judgment.
If one were tree to accost human
tailings in a comprehensive, bureaucratic wa)!, the way to handle
the secret-recorder types is surely
obvious.
Doctors who specialize In the
problems of alcoholics tell you that
when brother-in-Jaw Phil drops by
on one of his binge-visits, what you
should do Is secretly record his
conversation, and then the next
day, quick while he's sober, play it
to htm, to visit on PhUip Sober the
awful sound of Pllllip Drunk - and
maybe that way persuade htm to
visit Alcoholics Anonymous.
So might we cause the NixonWick-Hoover inclination to go away
if we were to present them, after a
fortnight or so, with exact transcripts of what it was they actually
said, whUe relaxing over the
telephone, or in conversation. The
tape recorders would go away.
Meanwhlle? Let the federal
government propose a law forbidding the practice except when
sanctioned by the attorney general.
But there Is no need, meanwhile, to
hang Charles Wick on a sour apple
tree.

Thayer's skeletons _______Ja_ck_A_nde_rso_n
WASHINGTON -

Deputy De-

tense Secretary Paul Thayer's
abrupt resignation in the face of a
securities Investigation was an
embarrassment President Reagan
might have avoided If he had only
checked the man's record.
Thayer Is charged with providing
illegal "Insider" information about
· securities while director of LTV
Corp. of Dallas. He maintains he Is
completely innnocent. He may well
be.
But court records and Securities
and Exchange Commission flies
examined by my associate Jock
Hattleld show tbat L1V under
Thayer's management was repeatedly charged with fraud, mismanagement, deception and si!curlties
Jaw violations after he became the
company's executive director in
1970.
Members of the Senate Armed
Services Committee never learned

about ail the skeletons In Thayer's million from 1974 to 1978. The court
corporate closet because the White ordered the practice stopped.
House never told them. Associate
The overvaluation artificially
;
presidential Counsel David Waller -.a!sed the price of L1V stock.
said the White House accepted Purchasers o1. the over-priced stock
Thayer's own version of his back- filed a class-acdon suit and won a
'
ground without checking.
settlement of $7.75 rnllllon. An SEC
Ronald Reagan's loyalty to his investigation concluded that L1V
appointees Is legendary, but it has management had failed to enforce
gotten htm Into trouble from "the standards ot ethics that a
Richard Allen to James Watt. properly managed company should
Here's what he should have been maintain in its accounting
told about Thayer:
practices."
- In 1973, Thayer was accused by
- In 1978, L1V was found guUty
a stockholder of dumping 2,400 on 48 charges of co~plracy and
shares of L1V stock in violation ot a fraud in Its operation of a business
written agreement. But the court school claim from 1968 to 1973. The
found that Thayer had sold his stock corporation illegally collected moprematurely to pay off pressing ney from the federally Insured
del:b, not to cash In on Inside student Joan program - for
information.
students wbo did not attend the
- In 1979, the SEC charged L1V schools.
and its directors with overvaluing
L1V was fined $500,!XXI, and the
the Inventories of its Jones &amp; Justice Department Is preparing a
Laughlin subsidiary by a total of $26 suit to recover the student loan

Jackson isn't

money.

~

- In 198l, suits tiled In Pennsylvania and in federal court accused
L1V, Thayer and other directors of

fraudulently depressing the value
of Jones &amp; Laughlin preferred
stock: then buying it at a bargain
price.
According to the compfalnts in
the suits, Thayer and other directors lowered the steel company's
stock priceby$20ashare, through&amp;
complicated scheme involving
transfer of funds from partly owned
to wholly owned subsldta~es.
The suits also accuse LTV's
directors of illegally voting a large
block of preferred shares to take
over the company, In violation of
federal Securities Jaw, The state
case Is stl1l pending and the~
case was dismissed on the grounds
that it was a state matter.

here_--:-----,-----A_rt_B_uc-=--hwa--:ld

•
"Hello, this Is Jesse Jackson's Corsican separatists. But Mr.
campaign headquarters. No, the Jackson was just speaking about
candidate Is not here just now. He's the moral justification for a tree
in Moscow trying to persuade the Corsica, and did not go Into t.he
Soviets to come back to the political Issues. I regret you re
dlsarmarnen.t talks in Geneva. No, upset, Mr. Mltterand. No, I don't
I'm sorry, Mr. Shultz, I don't know think-you can talk to him'JIOW. He's
how to reach him ... I believe he has Oying to Cyprus to talk to Turkish
an appointment with Mr. Andropov and Greek officials about the
this afternoon, and Is dlnJng .with partition of that Island ... No, Mr.
Mr. Gromyko tonight before taking Jackson doesn't expect France to
ott for Peking to discuss the give up Corsica without· being
China-Taiwan dispute with Deng compensated for it. He made his
Zlaoplng. Yes, Mr. Secretary, he position m Corsican liberation very
tully understands he's not speaking clear to Barbara Walters on ABC.
tor the United States, but is only We'll send you a tape of it. Au
acting as a concerned citizen. I'll revoir.
tell htm that you called.
"Jesse Jackson's headquarters.
"Jesse Jackson's headquarters. Oh, hello, John. Thanks tor ca1llng.
The candidate Is not here. Wbo Is Tell Jesse things are going really
calling, please? Mrs. Thatcher ·,., well. The candidate has been on the
Margaret Thatcher? It's so nice to three major news shows every
talk to you. Unfortunately the night for the past month. He got
candidate is out of the country. Can tour minutes on his visit to El
I be of help? Yes, he does plan to Salvador, three wben he visited
stop In Northern Ireland. I'm sorry Kadaft, and. five when he went to
you feel this Is an Internal matter Brazil to renegotiate their loan with
tor Her MaJesty's qGVemmen~. But the United Slates. Ted Koppel had
Mr. Jackson belleYes you haven't him on "NighWne" all week
given enough attention to the explaining his plah to settle the
problem, 8Jid If ~...can.~ the lsraeli-P.LO problem. . aod~ Time
Brltlsh•troops out we'll all be ~er mag~ , put hlin m ·the cover
tor It, won't we? Pleaae cloo't sl\Oilt, three weeks In a row. Where are
Mrs. Thatcher. You should be you now? You're at the Vatican
happy that someone with Mr. talking tO ~ Pope about Poland?
Jacklon'ISr atatesrnilnlllri! qualities . Dldlliey Jet Ill the camera tfnM?
is willing to get .Involved. Yes, Great. 'lbi! Mondlle and Glenn
Today Is Wednesday, J!lll. the lith day Qf 1984. There are3155dayslett
Ma'I!Jn, -I'll tell h!m what you laid, peciple are goiDg craZy. ADd tile
but I doubt If the candidate will White . Houae is turnlng. The
In the year.
Today's hlghllght in history:
cancel his trip.
preslde(lt called a news coaterence
· On Jan. 11, 1963, the United States and the Soviet Union began talks in
·",Jesse Jackson's campalp the other n!lbt Oil torelp affairs
· headquai'ters. I'm sorry, the caudl- and IIObody came.
New York on a possible treaty to limit nuclear tests.
·
date Is still QUI of the country,
On this date:
"Where are you aolna from
In 17'10, the flrst rhubarb was shipped to America from London tiy . Monsieur Mltterand- Yes, I did aee Rome? ... You cloo't know? Jerry
his pn!lll Conterence with the tb1nJcs you ougbt to hop over to Iraq
Benjamin Franklin.

and then stop c1t in Tehran and see
if you can bring about a cease-fire
between those two countries. But
don't go unless you have assuran-

according to the Constitution, is in
charge of foreign policy, and that
·Mr, Jackson is making your job
much more difficult by negotiating
ces you'll meet with Khomelnl. Tell with ail the world's leaders. But he
the candidate we're holding down wanted me to assure you that he Is
the fort here.
not making any promises to them
"Jesse Jackson's headquarters. which will be impossible•for you to
The candidate Is not here. Who's keep. Oh, there was one other thing
caillng? Oh hello, Mr. President. he told me to ask you If you called.
Yes, sir, I did give him your Is it possible for htm to use Air
message that you wanted him to Force One while he's traveling
call you, but he's been terribly busy. abroad? Some of the Third World
Yes, slr,l did tell htm what you said countries are very dlttlcult to get to
- that the American president, by cornmerclal plane."

1\:fodem day
players join
Hall of Fame
NEW YORK (AP) - Luis
Aparicio, Harmon Killebrew and
Don Drysdale, wbo thrilled baseball
fans in three different ways, are the
newest elected members of the Hail
of Fame.
Killebrew made his mark as a
home-run hitter, Aparicio as a
sUck-fielding shortstop and basestealer and Drysdale as a pitcher, bul
1hey each carried their own area of
slrength to a spot in the Cooperstown, N.Y., shrine. Fonnal induction will be Aug. 12.
In balloting by the Baseball
Wrilers Association ot {\merica,
which released the results Tuesday
night , Aparicio was named by 84.6
percent ot the.voters, Killebrew by
113.1 and Drysdale, who made the
Hall in his lOth year of eligibility, by
78.4. A player has to be named on 75
percent of the ballots to be elected.
Killebrew, in his fourth year on the
ballot. Is the first member of the
Minnesota Twins, who started in
1961, to make the Hail of Fame.
Aparicio, in his sixth · year ot
eligibility, Is the first Venezuelan .
A total of 403 members of the
association voted in the election. so
303 votes were required. Aparicio
got 341 votes, KJllebrew 335 and
Drysdale collected 316.
Relief specialist Hoyt WUheim,
who appeared in more games than
any other pitcher in baseball
history, missed election by 13 votes.
Aparicio, Killebrew and Drysdale
represent the largest group of
players elected by the writers since
1972, when Yogi Berra. Sandy
Koutax and Early Wynn were
inducted.
Killebrew, 47, began his career in
1954 with the Washington Senators.
as a 17-year-oldoutofan Idaho High
School. He stayed with the learn later the Twins - for most o~ his
career, playing his final season,
1975, with the Kansas City Royals.

Alexa nd er defeated Vi nton
County, 58-04 In TVC contest
Tuesday night at McArthur. Bobo
led the winners with 18 points whUe
M. Bollender led the Vikings with 16
points.
All other games, Meigs at
Federal Hocking. Belpre at Warren
Local, Trimble at Wellston and
Nelsonville-York were postponed
due to inclement weather.

Hefinishedwith573borners,more
than any right-handed batter in the
American League, but his lifetime
batting average was only .256.
Aparicio began his career in 1956
with the Chicago White Sox, with ·
whom he played tor seven years. He
played five years with Baltimore,
returned to the White Sox for three
more seasons, !llld finished his
career with the Boston Red Sox.
Aparicio was both a brillianl
fl~?lder and a potent offensive force
during his 18 major league seasons
tbat ended in 1974. He never played a
position other than shortstop in any
ot his 2,581 major league games;
stole 500 bases and had a lifetime
batting average of .262.
Drysdale played his entire career
with the Dodgers, both in Brooklyn
and Los Angeles. Hls209victories,a
Cy Young Award In 1.962, when he
was 25-9, and his six consecutive
shu touts and 58 straight scoreless
innings In 1968 were career
highlights.
Drysdale, who pitched for 14
years, finished with 2,486 career
strikeouts and a lifetime record of
209-166.
Pitcher Juan Marichal and third
baseman Brooks Robinson were
inducted into the Hall last year.
Others an the ballot and their vote
totals included Nelson Fox 246, BUiy
WUllams :m, Jim Bunning ~1.
Orlando Cepeda 124, Tony Oliva 124,
Roger Maris 107, HarveyKuenn 106,
Maury Wills 104, Lew Burdette 97,
BUI Mazeroski 74, Elroy Face 65,
Elston Howard 45, Joe Torre 45,
Thurman Munson 29, Don Larsen
25, Wlibur Wood 14, Jim Fregosi 4,
Jim Bouton 3, Dave Johnson 3,
Mickey Stanley 2, Bob BaUey 1 and
Clay Carroll 1. Nelson BrUes, Jim
Colborn and Rim Fairly failed to
receive a vote.
All players with fewer than ~
votes will be dropped from future
ballots.

ALFXANI&gt;F:K 151!1 - Bobo 11-2-18: Jeflen
J.t}.2: Culhrl£&gt; Wl6. Bl&gt;rtnrfl HJ-2. F'atres
4-1.,9. Comoc·y Hi-H. :v1cCialn . 0-l-J. Totall
2&amp;4-51!.
\To.'TOS COl ''TI' IMI - RadPk.Jn &amp;-2-!4:
Hommon 0.2·2. :-.1 Ac!IIPndPr 1.2·16: Womel·
dor1. W.JO: Doddrill 5-Q. IO: Almon 1.()-2.
Totai!!!U!I&lt;.

By qtuU"ter'i:
AIPxander
Vlmon Cou nt\
Kelier.e~ M:ort• County 44 .

HALL OF FAME- Hannon KUJebrew ,left, Luis
Aparicio, center, &amp;Dd DOn Drysdale were elected to
the baseball Hall of Fame by the Baseball Writers

everything.
,;There's something to having a
head coach watching while you run
down on kickoffs. It makes a
difference," said the former Indiana
University coach who had once been
a Bengals quarterback.
Wyche wW hire a runningback
coach and another offensiv.e coach
who wUI probably work with
quarterbacks and tight ends. Bruce
Coslet wUI continue to \YOrk with
receivers, however.
"We're not hung up on titles.
Bruce wanted to be called emperor,
but I said absolutely not," Wyche
quipped.
Wyche plans to hire a defensive
line coach to replace Dick Modzelewski and another secondary roach
to assist defensive coordinator Dick
LeBeau.
Wyche plans to hire five coaches.
Last week the Bengals announced
the appointment of former Houston
Oilers linebacker coach Dick Selcer.

Maurer leads football coaches
SPRINGFIElD. Ohio lAP) Dave Maurer of Wittenberg has
been selected as the president of the
American Football Coaches Association at the group's annual &lt;;&lt;&gt;ovenlion in Dallas.
Maurer. 51, will succeed Glenn
"Bo" Schembechler of Michigan
and wUI preside over an organization of 4,400 coaches. Maurer wUI
serve for ooe year.
Maurer joins a list of past AFCA
presidents that includes Woody
Hayes of Ohio State, Bud Wllkinson
of Oklahoma, the late Bear Bryant
of Alabama, John McKay of
Southern California and Darrell
Royal or Texas.
"This is one of the proudest

Association of America Tuesday. Aparicio Is famous
as a sUck fielding shortstop and base stealer,
KUJebrew is known as a home run hitter and Drysdale
is famo11~ as a pitcher. tAP J...aserphoto).

By 'The Allsociaied PreM
The idea of maldng the Hall of
Fame. was overwhelming to Harmon Killebrew and Luis Aparicio,
while Don Drysdale was happy to
share the news of his election with
friends.
"It's a great moment," Drysdale
said when told Tuesday night tbat he
had been elected to the Hall of Fame
along with Aparicio and Killebrew.
"I really don't know bow to react.
But I'm just very happy that so
many of my friends were around
when I heard about it .''
Drysdale, who was contacted at a
golf tournament in Rancho Mirage,
Calif., said he was able to share the
news wllh fonner Brooklyn and Los
Angeles Dodger teammates Duke
Snider and Sandy Koufax and
former major league manager
Gene Mauch . "My mom and dad are the ones
tbat I'm especially thrtlled for,"
Drysdale said. "It's hit me very

hard and that's the reason I can't
answer you the way I would like to
answer you. It 's something like
Fantasy Island . That's the way I feel
right now. I feel up on cloud nine."
As tJ!e first player from Venezuela
and the first from the Minnesota
Twins to make the baseball Hall of
Fame, the anticipation of gaining
the sport' s highest honor was
exciting tor Aparicio and Killebrew .
They were not available lor
comment Tuesday night, bul they
both were interviewed in the days
preceding the announcement .
"I can't help but get excited
thinking about lt. Just to come as
close as I did last year was an
honor .. " Aparicio, who missed
election by 29' votes in 1983. said
recently from his home in Mara·
caibo, Venezuela . "Every player
dreams of making the Hall of Fame.
People talk about il a lot here
because there's never been anyone
from Venezuela make it . There's a

Today._in history
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lot of anticipation."
" It' s the ultimate dream for a
ballplayer," Killebrew said recenliy from his home in Boise,
Idaho. " It 's the highest honor a
baseball player can receive."

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moments of my life," Maurer said.
"It is a vecy prestigious honor and I
feel very honored to be able to
represent the AFCA in ·thJs
Maurer called II the highlight of
his career tbat includes three Amos
Alonzo Stagg Bowl championships,
emblematic of supremacy in NCAA
Division ID. TheTigersalsofinlshed
as the national runner-up twice
under Maurer. He has coached
seven Ohio Conference champions.
"! very strongly believe in the
game of football." he said, "and
what it can mean to,a young man.
and to be able to serve the game in .
the AFCA Is a very gratifying
experience."

10 12 17 19-58
12 16 U 14-~
AlP;~tande r 47 Vintoo

'Baseball's newest honorees elated

Some college coaches
coming to Cincy staff
CINCINNATI (APl - Sam
Wyche, new head coach of the
Cincinnati Bengals, is not only
looking for college players to draft,
he's also looking in the college ranks
tor coaching help.
.
. Wyche, between trips to Palo Alto,
Calif. and Mobile, Ala. to scout
college all-star games, has assembled most of his staff.
It will feature some college
coaches who are strong on teaching
lechniques, he said.
However, detalls have lo be
worked out before they are named,
he said, Tuesday.
Wyche said he will have eight
assistants, two more than former
Coach Forrest Gregg had last
seasson.
"I'll be the special teams coordinator, of sorts," said Wyche.
He said each coach wUI be in
charge of one special team like punt
return, kickoff return, field goal, etc.
However. he will oversee

3

Spartans win

WOOD or COAL BUR" lNG·

a

·'

The Daily Sentinel- Page

0

. MASON, W. VA.
'

0

It.

�.

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

I

JACKIE WELKER

JAY EVANS
6-1, Senior Center

Power-hungry Indians may put · Jacoby ol) first
CLEVELAND (AP) - In an batted In - and the Indiana
effort to add some badly needed desperately need additional pqwer.
power to the Clevefand Indians'
Jacoby, a natural third baseman,
lineup, Manager Pat Coinles says batted .315 wtth 25 homers anctlOO
he's considering giving newcomer RBis for Atlanta's Class AAA
Brook Jacoby a tryout at first base. Richmond farm club last year. He
"Don't misunderstand, Mike Har· came to Cleveland In the trade that
grove Is still my first baseman," sent pitcher Len Barker to the
Corrales said Tuesday. "He Is not a Braves.
guy who wiD roll over and let
"l.j(eep thinking about a way to get
someone take his job. But If Andre Thornton, Toby Harrah and
someone beats out Mike, they beat Jacoby into the same lineup,"
him out. That Is true for any Corrales said. "I'm tcytng to get a
member of the team."
balance between speed and power.
Hargrove, 3!1, has been the Jacoby ts definitely someone I want
Indians' first baseman for four to see."
years. Last season, he hit .286 and
had his finest season defensively.
Harrah appears certain Iii' hold
But he dQes not hit for power- he the Indians' starting third base job
had only three homers and 57 runs again this season. Thornton, who Is

the -~ player on Cleveland's
40-man roster who hit more than 10
blg teague homers last year, wiD
return as designated hitter.

So Corrales must search elsewhere In the lineup for a potential
spot for Jacoby.
"The report on Jacoby Is that he
plays hard and has · home run
potential," Corrales said. "He Is not
very fast, which Is why I don't think
we'll try him In theout11eld. We need
power and I'm going to look at
anyone who can supply 11.
"~don't mean this as a knock on
Hargrove. I love the guy. He has
responded to so many challenges
durlnghlscareer.Helsrellable. You
know he'll hit .l9l, draw a ton of

Rozier confesses: he inked contract

il-9, Jr. Guard

l I

MIKE KENNEDY
il-10, Sr. Guard

Wednetday, Jan~ 11, 1984

PanleiOy Middleport, Ohio

Meet the MarQuders

DAVE FISHER
64, Jr. Center

Today$

Sports World

PriTSBURGH (AP) - The
Pittsburgh Maulers say they're
"very relieved and happy" that the
contusion involving Mike Rozier's
signing wtth the United States
Football League team has ended.
"I'm not necessarily sulllrlsed"
about the contusion, Maulers spokesman Blll Keenlst said late
Tuesday in Pittsburgh. "The fact
that Mike was halfway across the
world In Japan, the 14-hour time
difference. There were a lot of time
variables involved," he said.
"We are just very relieved and
happy that tbe contusion IS appar·
ently cleared up," Keenlst said.
''This whole thing was a mountain
made from a molehill over a
communications problem. When
you have 14 hours of time difference
and thousands of mUes, this kind of
thing happens," said Mike Trope,
Rozier's agent.
The Helsman Trophy-winning
running back from Nebraska con·
firmed in Tokyo on WedneSday that

he had signed a three-year contract
to play for the Maulers.
"Yes, I signed," Rozier told an
~lated Press reporter outside
the Tokyo hotel where he Is staying
wtth other players partlclpatlng In
next Monday's ninth annual Japan
Bowl football game.
Rozier would not say how much
the contract was worth and would
gtve no other details. Reports from
Pittsburgh had lndlcated the con·
tract was for $3 mWlon.
Rozier had refused Tueseday to
confirm an announcement by the
USFL expansion team that he had
signed a contract, saying he had not
decided whether to play for the
Maulers. He offered no explanation
for having made that comment, but
the Maulersand Rozier's agent said
It was because he had not been told
that the official announcement was
made Monday.
Hewas the top pick In the year-old
teague's coUege player draft last

Keenlst said the Maulers' offices
had been "in a state of contusion"
after receiving the confllctlng
report from Tokyo. Many prospec·
ttve season ticket holders began
calling to find out If Rozier would
actually be playing for the team.
The Maulers, who had sold ~
3,500 season tickets as ofDec .15, had
been getting "five times as many
phone calls a day" slnceJan.4, when
they made Ro:zler the first selection
In the USFL draft, Keenlst said.
The. club reportedly has more
than doubled lis season ticket sales
since the announcement, but Keenlst said the Maulers won't release
any additional ticket sale figures
until Jan. 15.
0

rr==========:;i

APC.t 1p 11•1

PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP) In each of his previous two seasons,
Hal Sutton sat down and figured out
his goals on the PGA tour.

needs $336,1XXJ In winnings this

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN tNSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.

POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

p

wafksand ptaywellln thefleld.Hels
my first baaeman unlesa someone
takes hl8 job." -Corralell speculates about a
lineup that would haveeenterflelder
Brett Butler - aliiO obtained from
Atlanta - second baaeman Toey
Bernazard and shorstop Julio
Franco as the first three hitters.
They'd be followed by Thornton,
Harrah, left fielder Pat Tabler and
either Hal'groveor Jacoby.
"With those players, we have
guys who can run and can hit ltoutof
the park," Corrales said. "I think
Tabler can be an Important player
for us. He was weak In left field last
year, but we are bringing him to
spring trall)lng wttli the pitchers
(Feb. ~) sohecangetaneartystart
on
'lis defense. We'll
have a
for him."

WeReMIIIeThe
Umlt Quentitlel.

,

MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEE

u

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C1n . Taft &amp;6, Falrft(&gt;ld ti4
C-. . W~l f'm Hill" R2. KPnM"Ina AIIM' fiS
On . Wyoml~ '79. Cln. Landmark 52
C'trl'lc...1Ut KJ, Trays Val. fi6
Claymont Ill. Sandy Val . ~
Clt. Bapl lsl ~ - l.ultv&gt;ran F: . ~ I
Or. Glmvillt 111, 0.... So..l th fit
Of'. Grt.Nold «'', l.akr RldRI• 42
C\1'. ~ ~ at. Hay !W
P,. Trtnlty fll. Or. 8rnf&gt;d!C1inf' 56
Ck&gt;. W. Tf'rll ~. Or. Marshall \'I
ColuntU !Z, ftr"o:*ty n 22
Cot.lmbiana 17, JadtJon.M IIton t\
Col. Eul 77, Col. Marixi·Fran kJin fl9
Col. Eutmoor 11, Col. Brookt\awn !14
Cd. Hort.... 11. Doy. T""""' ll6
Col. Ltndm·MC'Kintry Jn. COl. Brt~ r16
Col. MUllin 101. Cd. ,......,._.. Ill
Col. Wflf 76, Col Brfd'lcroft •
Col. W'hetltcw e, Col. Walrl.at R•
6i
CONICte~t· VaJ . . . Cdl 6&amp;
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No subscrlpllons by mall pl'rmltted In
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13 w..ta .................. .. .. .. ... .... 115.21
26 Weela ................................ $29 .64
52 Wt&lt;lul ............ .................... Si16.21

CUy- HtJ. II3. S . _ , , 1
Illy. Ounbwl0'7, WaPPonfta 'T1
Day. Oollwood a. Doy. Ctui&gt;llan "
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£linwood
S N. S.IUmon• 51
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FalrvWw Park &amp;1, Mf'dlna 47
FO)'!IIO !!&amp;. Sllyllfr "
Glrfttld Hta. 86. Pa rm~ Tl
Girard 19, YWJI«:. ("Mw")' 81

Cnnd RJvf'l' e. Ashtabula cttr. .11
Holland Spnla. 17, S)'tvanla NorUMtw
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Jf'f'ftnon t6. FairpOrt HardlnJ J6
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CHAPMAN SHOES
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219
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Mt.Hfalthy ~. W. ChtstM' LakOfl !\2
Napolfon '75, Wal.&amp;lf'OI'\ ~I
New Krocv111P ~. New Brcmm 49
- r y !10, Ledol&lt;'mOnt 42
NfwtCI115. Houston !KJ
N. Clbnlefd !Ill Rocky RtvM" 4R
~ 4ll. Elyria W. 34
Oreton Strltch 51. Tol. Woodward 40
OrrvtiW"61. Akron CO'W'fllrY !\1
PalnNvUif' Harvey 61, HudsOn W. fW.
Portln'IOUth 86. Wawrly 46
Pymltunlng Val. 6t, J&amp;n'\f'\'IIOWn. Pa. !18

KRAFT PARKA.Y

Ravenn1 SE 67, Windham 00

~ S!i, Nf'W('()m('ntown 40
Rittman ~7. Kkftn 44
Sf'brtiJ Mcf(Jnk'y !\7, [ .(I('IOOla 44

.,

Warrett LaBral' 64. BlldJM' 47
warrm

Ill

w. ~ 74. Yoona. Ur1u&amp;kv'

Watfi'klo 511, SllftVIOOro !10
W. Branch 'n;l. MIN&gt;rva JB, 01'
WHtlake n. Olmtted FaU!I 6.1

Whltellolllll. UP!l'f AriOtt&lt;lon '-~!
Wlcltlltle li3. W!Uqhby S. &gt;6
wtntrriVillf' 18. BroOlct. w.va. 58
, . , . _ 81. Clollwood 81
Youn,. Chrlltt.n 19, Sak'm RHl UJe 67
Youn,. Et" 71 Hubbard t3 .

46 OZ. HUNT'S

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FRUIT ·DR_
INK.S..•.•~~~~-.. 3/95e.

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-FACIAL TISSUES •.•...• ~~~~:79¢ .

l

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1
•

' 12 OZ. HORMEL CANNED SPAM

I

$

. 1'

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'

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l

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2/$1
Margar1 ne ...... ~~. _

Parma Va\Jtoy F&lt;I"Kt' 71 , ShakM"" Hts. 4.'\

"- Philo 61
S. ~ ~. Mlnenl RJ*r ~
Slow 71 Akron c.rtlf'kt ~
Tol. Central Cath. ti4, Tol. Wallr 42
Tol. St.Franrls 72. Tol. OI'VIIbtss !10
Tol. StJotrl ~7. Tol. MarombPr t6
Tol. Scott 76. Tol. BowahM' :"11
Tol. Libbey Ill, Tol. Start ~7
Trtway fll. W. Holmfol !12
Wal'l"m Champion 99. Yoorl$1:. llbtrty 66
Wamn HardlnR 61. Yoona. Moonty 54
WIU'Tffl How!Md H . AustlniONn·Fttr h

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Potatoes ...... ~o.L~. !~G

..... .

CREAM STYLE CORN ....c.~~ 59¢

KERS •.•.•••.. ~ .•.~~~. s.1.29

99

81. Y&lt;'llow ,....,"'"

Ml¥14lrP 8).

101h OZ. STOKELY WK or

•

Breasts • • • • • • • • • • • • •

~ ~'f' M. K1')'510ft(' ~
MtarrU Val. 56. O n. Cw nt~ Dey 41
Mlamtabwlr tl . Ltmon·MON'OP l9

MAND.ARIN ORANGES.~~.N.89¢

.

CHICKEN

Bacon.~~~·

Mlplfwa:ld 72. VKonna Mattwws :"11
Mannalha Chr. ~. Ohio ()(oaf ~
Marion Hlrdl.11t 56, Ot&gt;lawan- 40
MuaWon Wu hlnl(too 61. New PhUa·
dolp!U5.1
Maurrw Val. 74, Ann Arbor IMkfl.l
Gmn HUb67
Ma)'ftfld !lti. W. Qoa ~a ~1
Ma)'&gt;Yilk' 81. John Glmn "

11 OZ. DELMONTE

12 OZ. TOWN HOUSE BY KEEBLER

Sliced

MMdwtter 18. Pcna. East fiR
Mana. MldiJOn 63. Manslk&gt;kt 62

HAND SOAP ................... 79¢
DISH DETERGENT ... ~n:.. S2.09

LUNCH MEAT ~··~ ..•...~~t Sl.79

¢

KAHN'S CRISPY SERVE

-5.1
IJrnl Cath. lr7. O.y. 'Jt'ffR'ICJn 74
l..i5tJM 7:\ Cc*lrnblana OfttviN' 81
l..aKbl !10, Jonathan Aktl&gt;r 4fi
Lordsi&lt;M"n 1), Soufhln«!M 6.1
Lutheran W. 48. Flnolandll 46
Mdloa e. Eat~ N. 46

OYSTER STEW .... ~~~~. 2/$1.69

·sAVE

$}69

lMidM MalOn !W, Emanutl Ch.r.

5.1

GRAPE JUICE ............~~~.99¢

10 OZ. TROPICANA

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c-.. lrdan HUI TJ. C'tn. 1\.lrpln 62

PUDDING POPS ....... ~~~. st-99

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Canton Herilaat&gt; 112, Wacbw(rth lind. '
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PIMENTO LOAF .........L~~ SI.79

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Da lly .................................. 20 CE'nts

BOLOGNA ................... ~~~ 89¢

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61. G.....pon "

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HAM SALAD ..............L.B~$1.59

•

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One Week ..................................11.00
One Month ................................ $4 .4{)
Onf' Yea r ............. ~ .................. S52.RO

SLICED BACON .......... ~~~; gge

CONTINUES

w. Rett&gt;rvr

42

CRISiP-N-Sm£

a EARANa

Nordontit tl

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Mf mber: The Asaoc lated Preaa, In·

Phone 142- 2100

OUR BIG

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RUTLAND

r;;;;;~~~~;~~;;;;;~;~~;;;;~~~;;;;;;;i

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
Prices Effective Thru Sat., Jan. 14, 1984

PLAYERS OF 11IE WEE&amp;,
Nick RIIJII, U Sr. CapWD,
made 10 of 18 lhota from lhe
Door, IICOI'ed polata, had ave
reboundl anc1 chipped In wllb
four Ullllla anc1 111ree ateall In
Frtda,y's '13-11 win at Welllloa lo
help Melp end Ita six pme .
loalnl streak.

DEPARTMENT STOR E

"In the beginning,
w9}1Jd
breaks
~d go-to
Springs
for some
relaxatlon
and golf,'' Ihe
said.take
"I never
Intended
to Palm
sponsor
a tournament.
Bing (the late Bing Crosby) already had one and I enjoyed yearly outings
there.
"The original tournament In Palm Springs was called the Thunderbird.
But It got into a bind and they asked If I would help get a sponsor. 1 got
~sler. Before I knew It, It was the Hope Classic."

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

season
to mWion
become In
thethree
first player
to Il-~==========:::...L:=========:::
reach $1
seasons.
"We werepaying special trtbute to General Eisenhower and hewas sitting
And winning three tlUes, while not
in the stands wtth Mamie," Bob Hope recalled as he prepared for the teeoff
"I dldn'twant to~t tl!ose goals at particularly unusual, was not
today In the 25th of his Bob Hope Desert Golf Classics. "Without his knowing
an outlandish level," he said. "I achieved on the tour last season.
It, we had an army band with a color guard march up the 18th .fairway.
Sutton set out In pursuit of those
".Mamie told me It was the first time In 35 years she had seen Ike cry." . wanted to set a goal to shoot at,
ijope'sunlqueflve-dayevent,mlxlngthegreatestgolfersoftheworldwith something that was.attainable but targels today as one of the leading
still something that would make me· contenders for the $72,1XXJ first prize
movie stars, pollttcal and industrial tycoons, has come to represent the
work," Sutton said.
·
in the five-day, 00-hole tournament
harbinger of the new season.
The
goal
for
his
rookie
year,
1982: thaI Is spread over four desert golf
It Is the first tournament of the PGA Tour to be televised nationally by a
f'rrr:r. Ill· .. lrvr: lllltl S tl .I ti l 11 I JH I
network. Traditionally, because of the time slot, the beautiful Palm Springs, win a tournament. ReSult: he won a courses.
Sutton was in the group that
Calif., setting and Hope'sfialrforthe theatrtcal, It gets the bestratlngsofthe tournament, wasRookleoflheYear
VAC.
and set a money-winning record for played La Quinta today. Thursday,
year, exceeding the Masters, U. S. Open and PGA.
hewWcompeteatEldoradowlththe
!'!andwlched between the National Football League conference first-year players.
The goal for his second season, premier ar~~ateur team, former
championships and the Super Bowl, It wiD bealred byNBC4: :.Jto6: :.!p.m.
1983: win a major tournament i!nd President Gerald Ford, the host
EST both Saturday and Sunday.
HOMEMADE
"AU winners since 1963 are here this year wtth the exception of Jack place in the top five money·wlnners. comedian and House Speaker Tip
Nicklaus, " said Hope. "Jack Is out building another golf course. You know, Result: He won two tournaments O'Neill.
lpcludlng a major (the PGA) and ted
he builds one a day."
The-format calls for the 136pros to
SUPERIOR "BIG RED"
/
Arnold Palmer heads the distinguished cast of alumni. Arnie won the first the tour in money-winnings wtth play one round on each of the four
$426,668.
courses,
each
day
with
a
dlfferent
Hope Classic In 19ffiand added four after that tobecometheall-tlmewlnner.
With that record of achieving and set of amr.teur partners. After 72
It also was his last tour victory In 1973.
"I know Arnie's here," Hope quipped. "I saw his tractor in the parking suljlassl~~g his announced targets, holes, the field wiD be cut for the
ECKRICH PICKLE &amp;
the announcement of !'iutton's 1984 pros-only finish at Bermuda Dunes.
lot," a reference to Palmer's TV commercial for Pen117DU.
In addition to Sutton, other leading
Therelsaspeclalmagnetlsmaboutthlsgolftoumament.Itlshalf-golfand goals wa.S of more than pass~1g
players include Ray Floyd, Cal
half-lawn party. Top golfers rarelymlsslt. CorporatemWlonalres ~llwlres Interest.
"There are two things I want to Peete, Ben Crenshaw, Tom Kite,
to get op the invitation ltst. The movie colony pours down from LA. PoUtlcal
DAIRY
PRODUCE
accompltsh,"
Sutton said before Ray Floyd, Curtis Strange, Fuzzy
wheels fly in from Washington, D. C.
3 l8. flEW YELLOW
1-1.8. lUll QUEEII QUART£11$
teeing off today in the $400,1XXJ Bob Zoeller, Craig Stadler, BID Rogers,
"Golf doesn't play polltlcs," Insists Hope. "We in;nte Former Pr~ldent
ONIONS
Hope Desert Golf Classic.
Gerry Ford and Tip O'Netu (Speaker of the House). "
Jim Colbert, Rex Caldwell and GU
MARG~RINE ....... 21*1.19 24 COUNT ............... ~~~.. 99'
"I want to win three tournaments. Morgan, alongwtth Arnold Palmer,
Former VIce-President Spiro Agnew has figured In two dramattc and
12 OZ. 16 SliCE SlfiGLES
And I want to go past $1 million tn the only five-time winner o{ this
HEAD LETTUCE ...~~~~. 79'
unsettling episodes.
AMERICAN PROCESSED
II CT. CAliF.
event. ·
One year, driving off, Spiro conked his playing partner, Doug Sanders, winnings before the year Is out."
KRAFT CHEESU~.~·. '1:97
Both are very much within the
Portions of the final two rounds
wtth an atrocious. slice. Alarm was great at first butdamagewasmlnlmal.
Another time, during the riotous 19®5, a man charged Agnew in the stands, realm of posslbWty, but both would Saturday and Sunday wiD be
represent major achievements. He televised nationally by NBC.
screaming obscenities.
"A kook," Hope explained, "quickly ejected."
The Eisenhower Influence remains strong 15 years afterhlsdeath. The La
Purchase Rockets
Quinta Country Club, tournament headquarters and one of the four courses Braves' pitcher cited
12 OZ. WEL"CH'S
used in the event, sits beside a meandering road named Eisenhower Drive.
SANTO
DOMINGO,
Dominican
DALLAS (AP)- Dallas BasketA large part of the proceeds go to the Eisenhower Medical Center.
baD Ltd., parent company of the
"We contribute to 40 charities," Hope said. "We already have given $11 Republlc (AP) - Atlanta Braves
Dallas Mavericks of the National
mUIIon to Ike's Center. We raised $350,1XXJ at our kickoff party Monday pitcher Pascual Perez was char-ged
wtth possession of cocaine in the
night."
Basketball Association, ~rchased
1()lh OZ. HILTON
the defunct New Jersey Rockets of
Eisenhower led victorious armies and presided over the natton during a Dominican Republlc, pollee said.
The 24-year-otd Perez was
the Major Indoor Soccer League fof
period of Its greatest tranquility but his passion was golf. He set up a winter
charged
wtth possession and wtth
$500,1XXJ.
WhtteHouseatAugusta,Ga .. slteoftheMasters,andusedgolfasanantidote
the Intent to dtstrtbute one-half
5 OZ. LIQUA-WITH 15• OFF
Mavericks General Manager
to his pressures.
gram
of
cocaine.
U
found
guilty,
Norm Sonju said that the new team
It provides the Same escape valve for the amazing, ro.year-old Hope, who
would begin play in November and
seems to be on a constant treadmlll, If not entertaining troops overse;tS. then Perez could be lielltenced from two
would have the first choice In the
doing hour·long spectacles for TV, fllmll!goommerclals and tra"ellng·the to five years in jail and fined
32 OZ. JOY
between
$500
and
$2,1XXJ.
next MISL college draft. ·
theater circuit. People wonder w!,uln he Itnds tlme 101&gt;reathe.
·

li was the day Ike cried.

ELL

I'

The Daily Sentinel

week.

Sutton·seeks big win
in ~b Hope Touptey

By wm GrlmlleJ

.

BROUGHTON'S

Paper TowelsJu~~.~~69¢ 2% Milk • • • • • • • • • • • •
PLASTIC GAL

MUELLER'S ELBO ·MACARONI 0

$1

DINNER TR~AT

Spaghetti .....L~.~~x ·/ · Pot P1es • • • • • • • •oz.•
8

$}59

,
••

�d •

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel'
Wednesday, January 11, 1914

NBC gets' out
of cellar first
time this season

'

Community Corner

Cold weather relief?
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Dally Sentinel Staff
It was nice to hear about Dorothy
Harley, long-time
Middleport resident who left here
eight years ago to
take up residence
In the Ohio Masonic Home at
Springfield.
Joe McCloud visited Mrs. Harley
that
over the weekend and
whlle she Is confined to a wheelchair, she's alert and active, and
was delighted to see someone from
her old home town. Mrs. Harley
would love to hear from folks here.

r.evorts

The past few months have
brought a bumper crop of greatgrandchlldren to Mr. and Mrs.
WUllam Fred Smith, Bradbury,
bringing their total toan evendozen.
On Aug. 28, Anthony and Kim
Smith of Cheshire had a daughter,
Brandy Nicole, on Oct. 20, William
and Emma Smith, Mansfield, had a
son, William Carter John, and on
Jo.1. 6, John and Kathy Smith,
Rutland, had a daughter, Rebecca
Marie.
Opal E. Barr, Page Street,
Middleport, Is a surgical patient at
University Hospital, Room 8li,
Columbus, and her friends here
report that she would really
appreciate cards.
The high cost of gas has gotten to
all of us, what with the cold snap 1n
December and theblllsnowfllterlng
Into mailboxes.
And. somehow when we think
about It and all the gas and oil which
Is supposedly beneath us -- at least
one Cuyahoga County city thinks It is
-- It makes one wonder If we're
missing something.
Middleburg Heights, a suburb of
Cleveland, continues to consider tlie
posslblllty of contracting with an oil
and gas exploration firm for
extensive drUllng here and then

Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - · Pomeroy
Chapter 80 Royal Arch Masons
w1ll meet Wednesday at 7: ~
p.m. along with Bosworth Council 46 Royal and Select Masters.

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS -The Rock
Springs Grange wUI meet at 7: ~
p.m. Thursday at the hall. There
wUI be a practice for degree day.
The Eleanor Circle will meet
Thursday at 7 : ~ p.m. at the
High Street, Middleport, home
of Mrs. Emma K. Clatworthy.
There will be a white elephant
sale.

Happenings
Church dinner
MIDDLEPORT - A congregational meeting and potluck
d!Mer wlll be held at the
Middleport First Presbyterian
Church Sunday following the
morning worship service. The
deacons wlll furnish the ham,
noodles, rolls and beverages,
and those a !tending are to take a
vegetable dish, salad, or dessert.

piping that gas Into the city.
Now If they can do that, (and the
feaslblllty remains under consider·
atlon) and stU! provide some
financial relief to gas customers,
how practical would It be for Meigs
County to get In on some of the
action.

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Teamwork, spi'c:Itlcally "The ATeam"
lllld · the Orange Bowl college
football teams, rescued NBC from
the television ratings cellar for the
first time this season.
After 14 consecutive weeks In the
No. 3 spot, NBC garnered a
second-place position behind CBS
for the past week thanks to "The
A-Team," which was third, and the
Orange BoWl telecast, which was In
a three-way tie for seventh place.
CBS won the .week ended Jan. 8

For those who attend the Meigs
County Speech and l;learing Cllnic,
please note the time change.
Carolyn Heines, coordinating
therapist, advises that for the rest of
January, February and March, the
clinics w1ll be held on Saturday, 9
a.m to 1 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Tile change 1s being made to
accomodate patients and parents of
patients who prefer to travel by
daylight rather than dark when the
roads get bad. For tlv:&gt;se who have
questions or want Information on the
program, just call Mrs. Heines at
9854163.
It'snot a pretty picture, but It will
be shown at the First .Southern
BaptistChurchonPomeroyPike,at
7 p.m., Jan. 29.
The title Is "The Burning Hell,"
and the Rev. David Hun.t Invites the
public to view the film which depicts
''20,1XXJ degrees fahrenheit and not a
drop of water" produced by the
Ormond Organization.
Now 'bout that big white horse
that appeared at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Archie Rose just before
Christmas.
No, Sailta didn't leave lt.
It belonged to Dr. Margie Lawson
and Is now back home. The Roses
report that they got many calls after
a story of the strayed horse
appeared In this paper. Just how It
got from the Lawsons to the Roses,
several mlles apart, is anybody's
guess.

KIDS PRAISE - 'lbe mU8ical, "Kids Praise!" wW be preeented by
tbe Rutland NIIZIII'elle You&amp;b a&amp; tbe Rutland Clmrch of tbe NIIZIII'elle
Sunday at 6: II p.m. Del!ra J. Gilmore Is dlrectlngtbe preeentatlon with
recorded nwslc being Juuided by Mike Gilmore. 'lbe musical places the
emphasis on vabls of famlly Ufe. Talilng roles In tbe vresnatlon are

Officials from the David Lawrence Mental Health Center In
Naples, Florida toured Woodland
Centers, Incorporated In December
for a demonstration of the organization's computerized management
Information system.
CMHC Systems, Incorporated, a
Columbus-based firm which
markets computer software systems to 80 mental health organizations nationwide, selected Wood-

land Centers as a demonstration
site because the agency "has had
the system longer, developed It
further and uses It better" than any
other organization In the region,
according to Myron Taylor of
CMHC Systems.
The officials consulted with Rick
Moore, Manager of Information
Systems and BUI Cantrell, Fiscal
Officer, regarding management
and financial computer

·

appllcations.
Woodland Centers, which operales professional counsellng and
family service clinics In Galllpolls,
Jackson and Pomeroy, uses the
Management Information System
(M.l.S.) for medical records, management and clinical reporting,
ellen! and stat! demogratphlcs and
word processing, as well as payroll
processing, billing and accounting
functions,
to RickSystems
Moore,
Manager according
of Information
for Woodland Centers . .
For more Information about the
M.I.S. system at Woodland Centers
contact Rick Moore at 446-5500.

Each of thoto od11ortltod ltomt It rof11wlr.4 to be roMIIy owolloblo for
tOfo in OCNh lhOtOf Storo OICOpiOI tpec"k:OIIy ftOIOd In fttit ad . tf "0
do
o\lt of .,. odwortlte4 Item . we will oHor rou rour choke of •
comporolllte Item . wh011 ewellolllo . roftectlnt tho ••me towln 11 or a
reinchoda whlcfrl will entitle rou to purchoto ftlo odwortlted Item ot the
edwortltH price withlfl )(I dert . O~tlr OM 'IOftHt cewpon will be
occopto4 ,., Item pwrchoted .

""t

A continued witness training
program for four trainees Is being
held on Tuesday evenings at the
First Southern Baptist Church,
Pomeroy Pike. The program Ineludes an hour of study and
memortzation of scripture and an
hour of actual field witness training.
Conducted by the Rev. David Hunt
and SoMy McClure, the tralnlng.
covers a 13weekperlodwithanother
set of trainees to begin the study
after that.

I4. Tle-"Knots Landing," CBS,
21.8 or 18.3 mllllon.
16. '"!'rapper John , M.D.," CBS.
20.9 or 17.5 mllllon.
17. "The Love Boat." ABC, 20.8or
17.4 mUIIon .
18. "The Fall Guy," ABC, 20.6 or
17.3mUilon.
19. "Webster." ABC, 19.9 or 16.7
mUUon.
20. "Goodnight Bean town," CBS,
19.6 or 16.4 million.
20. Tle-"Cheers," NBC, 19.6orl6.4
milUon.

r-.~~iiiiiiliti

. ....
~

Kroger
Pinto Beans

A Christmas party was held
for employees of the Three
In One Restaurant In Pomeroy,
with refreshments of soft drinks
and pizza served to those attending.
A gift exchange and bowllng were
enjoyed by Jim McCIUfe, Bill
McClure, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Owen,
Margaret Corsi, Donna Hysell,
Alberta Schultz. Dave Hysell, April
Ellls, Jonl Jeffers, and Linda
Powell.

HOLLY FARMS . U.S .D.A.
GRADE A

-lb.

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING

JIFFY

Route 7

Attendance at the Free Methodist Greenfield, Mr. ~nd Mrs. Larry
Old VFW Hall
Church New Year's Day was 107.
Lyons and children spent ChristTuppers Plains
Mrs. Tina Jacobs is a medical mas with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell .
patient In Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Pearl Gllkey-vtslted
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilmore Saturday with Mrs. Della Stahl.
spent Christmas wltn their daugh·
Mrs. Emma Fox had Christmas
Jenkins returns home
ter, Mrs. Sandy Darft and tWo dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Roy 1-----------....L__________:....
daughters, Columbus.
Howell.
Lloyd Jenkins has returned home
Mr. and Mrs. Faye Countryman,
from University Hospital and Is , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - recuperating at his residence, 540
Main Street, Pomeroy.

icken Leg
Quarters

Country Club
Ice Milk

4

Bag

Laurel Cliff area happenings

million.
3. "The A-Team," NBC, 25.3 or
21 .2 million.
4. "Magnum, P.l .," CBS, 24.~ or
20.5 mUIIon.
5. "Dynasty," ABC, 23.9 or 20.0
mUIIon.
6. "00 Minutes," CBS, 23.6or 19.8
million .
7. "AfterMASH ," CBS, 23.5orl9.7
million .

7. Tle-"Newhart," CBS, 23.5 or
19.7 mllllon.
7. TI~TheOrangeBowl,NBC,23 . 5
or 19.7 million.
10. "Falcon Crest," CBS, 22.5 or
18.9 million .
ll. "Riptide," NBC, 22.3 or 18.7
mutJon.
ll. Tle-"The Jeffersons," CBS,
22.3 or 18.7 million.
13. "Scarecrow &amp; Mrs. King,"
CBS, 21 .9 or 18.4 mllUon .
14. "Hotel," ABC, 21.8 or 18.3
million .

lOl Al SA liSfACliON GUAIANllf
,
herrthl"l rot.~ llt.~r ot 1Cro1er It IWOroftt. .tl for rowr toto! •otisfoctlon
ro1erdteu of mo~tufoctt.~ror . lf row oro not sotltflod Kro1or will reploce
rowr Item with tho some llro~td or o comporolll• bro~td or rofw~td rowr
pwrchoto price .

ree~ntly

VISff WOODLAND CENTERS- Rec:ently, officials from David
Lawrence Mental Health center In Florida toured the Woodland
Centers. ~lctured from left are Myron Taylor; Rick Moore, Woodland
Center MIS manager; Ron Meserve and Mark Spiker.

1. "Simon&amp;Simon,"CBS,aratlng
of 25.4 or 21.3 mllllon households.
1. Tle-" DaUas," CBS, 25.4 or 21.3

includ•ng

AOYUTISID ITIM POLICY

Party given
for e!Jlployees

Star Grange
meeting held

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS .
.

Witness training

Health representatives visit Woodland

Thoughtfor the day .....
From Runbeck -- "Happiness Is
not a station you arrive at, but a
manner of traveling."

Bernice Mldkltf won first place In
tlie state baking contest held at the
recent meeting of the Star Grange at
the hall.
The contest was judged by
Westlna Crabtree and AMa Halliday. Members were reminded that
the national sewing contesi w111 be
held In AprU.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
Meigs County delegates to tile Ohio
State Grange convention, gave a
report on the procedlngs. It was
aMounced that county degree day
wUI beheldonSunday,Jan.15atl: ~
p.m. at the Rock Springs Grange
hall. Star Grange wUI practice on
Saturday at 8 p.m.
Get well cards were signed for
Catherine Colwell and Neva Nicholson. Guests were Keith, Emma,
Rachael and Whitney Ashley with
Keith serving as pianist for the
meeting. Followtog the meeting, a
soup supper and social hour was
held.

Gwn.

wlthanetworkaverageof19.1. NBC
was second with 16.5 and ABC was
third with 16.0. The networks say
this means that 1n an average prime
time minute 19.1 percent of the
nation's television homes were
tuned to CBS.
· NBC's move out of the cellar did
riot affect the season-to-ilate stand·
lngs. CBS was first with 18.2, ABC
second with 17.0andNBCthlrdwith
15.1.
Here are the 20 highest-rated
programs:

.
.0 f ever~thin9
for the b~st the price!

COPYRIGHT 1914 • THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY , JAN . I , THROUGH SATURDAY JAN
14. t914 , IN Gollipolb IOd "-or.
'
'

,.
left to right, front, Amber Hankla, Laurie Black, Aaron Gnie, Anile
Blaf.k, SheUey Black; middle row, J1111011 Black, Tracy Me~,
Tamara Grate, Mandy Black, and Gretta Kennedy, IUid lllldl nw,
Tamara Black, Jeff Carson, Marlene Barrett, Chris Black, IUid Glelllla

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedllftday, January 11, 1984

~~~n ~uHin

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0

Page-8-The

Sentinel

-

11 1984

Ohio

.

200 church diplomats
watch 107 countries

I I

' ;:1 .,
~~

Wednetday, January 11, 1984 ·
.

Braz!J.
Uke other diplomats, the Vatican envoys represent
their head of state, In this case the pope, In political
affairs.
But as representatives of the Roman Catholic
Church and the Holy See, they also give voice to the
special concerns of church teaching, religious Uberty
and other theological and humanitarian Issues.
Thus, the papal envoy In Iran, acting on papal
Instructions, made appeals to Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khome!nl tor the release of the'b .S. hostages seized In
November 1979.
· Particularly In Catholic countries, the Vatican
envoys often have access to sources that other
diplomats might not have. Vatican observers say the
expanded relations with the Vatican could open up for
Washington new channels of Information from
sensitive areas, such as Latin America and the Middle
East, where churchmen havebeenactlve!n the search
for peace.
Papal diplomats In Chile and Argentina laid the

Savei_JImell

aueum. the exact .anbef o1 plckels 1n the Jar, a.

Jud)' Croob, MJoM!epori, -1Upolllldol ~for

14

David Koblentz was reelected
president of the Meigs County Board
of Commissioners and Manning
Roush was reelected vice president
at the .conunlla!oorr's organizational meeting Monday afternoon.
Mary Hobstetter was appointed
clerkoftheboardo!comm!ss!oners,
Jim Cornell was named custodian
and John Stahlwasnamed janitor of
the courthouse and jail.
Clarence Taylor was appointed
dog warden· and Everett Holmes

Rehoboth, Mass. 'lbe driven of Ute truck and the bus
were bolh ldlled, and pupils from lhe Anawan
Elementary school In Rehoboth were lrealed for
Injuries, pollee said. (AP LaseJ11hoto).

home. Cause of fire Is unknown. The
property Is owned by Claude Dry.
The fire department answered a
fire call from the WllllamsBa!derson home recently. The fire
was confined to the chimney. No
damage was don~ Several firemen
answered the call.

3. _ _ _ __

s.
~- -----_ _ _ _ __

'-------

The agency up to now has been
conducting Its Investigation through
Its Division of Communicable
Diseases.
Jesse Drake, chlefo!theadmln!strative services bureau, said the
$aJ,fm. used to employ researcher
Lynn Konchak of Columbus for one
year wlll come from sro,&lt;m In
federal funds set aside for the AIDS
effort.
"This really Jsa highly specialized
area.
have nobody Involved In
our own area specialized enough
with Acquired Immune Deficiency
to be able to go out there and do It,"
Drake said.
He said there has not been a
comparatively large number of
cases In Ohio.
"No, there aren't, not considering

·,

we

to

11. ------

13. - - - - - -

JiiU

16. - - - - - -

'

f

•

22. _ _ _ __

23. _ _ _ __

I

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&amp;J

10/20/ tJn.

446-2342

992-2156

~

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

TV &amp; APPLIANCES

627 Jrd Ave .. Gallipolis. Oh ..
PH. 446-1699

Gu 1nd Eloc. Orytrs, Aoto. Wuh·
trs. Gas 1nd Ute. bnps, RtfriJtnlorJ, TV stts.

TV &amp; APPLIANCES

Open

Oaily &amp; SaturdaJ til 6 P.l .
PH. 446-1699

Real Estate General

675-1333

your
marketplace
FRENCH QUARTER
PRESENTS'
Thu rs Nrghl Dance Classes
6:00 p.rn Soc1al Dancrng
Sloo&gt; O.non!; Swrnt Walt! Poloa
S5.00 rou~~SJOO •n~e
7:00 p.m Western
leu ~

Swmb:

Cowbo1· Polka. 1em l mes
S500 Couple-Sl 00 Srn1re
8:00 p.m. Cloggrn£
Basrc Steps: Freestyle. '1he Gil·
1e1": Conon·EJe Joe. Mount11n
Hoedown: Sanaton10 Slloll: Ap·
palachran ShuHie. $3.00 couple-$2.00 srn11e.
'
'Those "odents lakrnrlhe 6·00
p m &amp; 7:00pm classes !el Ihe
B·OO p.m class fREE'
Instructor M1kk1 Casto
' "Former
Ar1hur Murrl\ Instr uctor··

the company ·refund all fare money
It has received.
A slrtll1ar suit was flled In
MtMesota ·by the state attorney
general, Hubert Humptu:eY III.
The Plain Dealer said It tried to
'reach von Feldt but that the phone
Usted tor his company ·had been
disconnected. .

EAFORD

Train To Drive
Tractor Trailers

i:.·~E.'
l.rarn tn Drit·r A ·

TRACTOR TRAILER
Train ·" " rhr Road

FULL OR PART ·TIME
Tuition Anistonct Availablo
Job Plaetnttnl Anlstonct
Wttkdoy or Wotktnd Trainlna
Kttp your praunt job whilt
you train. Approved lor tht
trainina of Vttorans.
AnEND FREE SEMINAR
Thurodoy,. Jan. 12, 1884
3:30 p.m. 6 7:00p.m.
Meig1 Inn

121Va E•at M•ln
Pomeroy, Ohio

IITA Sdtoot Adntluion's Ollict

114 Church St.
Jackspn, Ohio 45640
• IITA School R. T. SITE
445 Glado Run Road
Wflt Joflfiton, Ohio 43162
REO II·OJ-0137-T

Reel Eatite General

II. L. "Bud:' lcGhte, Broker
Cheryl Ltmlty,
llei11 County Assoc.
Phone 742·3111

' L. , Matlack, Sr.,
Howard

MMR 535- Stately 2 story colonial home. T.otai electric. in excellent condition. Formal dining room has buih~n c~ma .an.d asunny.
-window seat Full basement has woodburner and~ entrance.
Two car hea\ed gar~ge. Nestled In Maples on Mulberry Avenue'"
Pomeroy. Asking $55,000.00.

or .

MMR 536 - ' Cottage on river. Neat and dean and lumished, too!
Lot is 125'x200'. located above Antiquity. Only $7,000.00. ·

Harold Jt..

.

MMR 537 - A just right sta~ home. 3 bedroom ranch, tcQI
electric. t:tas altached,girage. This home is in excellent conlition
anti has a ma11rteriance lree outside. N1ce leYel yard. located '"
Rutland: Seils tor $36,500.00.
.
.

PH. 992-3383
12-29-1 mo

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

304-882-3210.

...

E. Main
POMEROY,O.

992·2259
BALD KNOB ROAD - Beauti·
lui 12 acre building site in the
country - on a paved road
and much potential, reclaimed
spring, could have gas.
$7,000.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT - 5
bedroom home, enclosed sun
porch, large kitchen, spacious
dining - living room, part basement 3car garage, 2 bedroom
rental house lor extra income.
large lot $39.~.00.
SAlEM TWP. - Nice motile
home. huge picnic shelter, prage and extra trailer lot
$30,000.00.
ElBOW ROOII - ApprOK. 33
acres with nice 3 bedroom
ranch, 2 baths, full basement
w~h summer kitchen, family
room with fireplace, patio, large
metal barn. $47,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom
ranch home, separate utility,
k~chen · dining with ref.-range.
Nice lot with patio. $24,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
ranch horne on a quiet s1reet,
cute kitchen, large utility room.
outstanding storage.
REALTORS
Henry E.· Clel1nd, Jr.
• GRI 992·6191
ltln Trussell 949·2660
Dottle Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 915-4466

a. IB
A

IOUUI

BOGGS

Found Male German She·

VIRGIL B. SR . I£All0tt .
216 r . 2nd st.
Phone
1-(6141·992·3325

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

pherd, Sand Hill Road . 304676-6493.
Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

LAND CONTRACT $2,500.00 down. $215 10 a
month at 13% for 1110
payments. Has 3 bedrooms,
modern tub bath. natural ~as
with 45xl 46 lol Sale Price
$19,500.

Moving Sale Wed .-Sat. 447
Second Ave . Behind 76
Station . Furniture. TV. toys ,
houaehold items. Everything

Dewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith

All llakes and Models
Antenna lnslillation
House Calls and S.. op

mull go. 9:30-Dark .

Service Available

1191 mo

Public Sale
8t Auction

8

pd

-.GUN SHOOT

4. nACRES .._ Near Pomeroy.
7 rms., bath, carpeting, full
basement. 2 porches and large
carport $3.000 down.
CHESHIRE - level .65 of an
acre on Rt 7. SiK room ranch
home, new natural gas furnance and drilled well. Aluminum siding and insulated.
$4,000 down.
2 BEDROOMS - One floor 4
room small house. Bath,
lumace and large lot in
Middleport. $2.100 down.
IN TOWN - Nice 1~. 3
bedrooms, all city utilities, h~
water heat basement storm
windows and oors. Walk to the
stores. $4,000 down.
SYRACUSE - IO'IIr down will
buy you this home on a 30 yr.
fixed morlgagt. One floor, 3
bedrooms, nice large Jot,
automatic heat
12 ACRES - Nice 2 bedroom
ranch home with gas furnace,
rural 'water, full basemen~ root
cellar and bam. Only $4,000

down.
GORDEN B.. HELEN L, SUE
MURPHY AND MILTON

ROUSH - llfALTORS-

Housing
Headquarters

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa .
Auct . lonnie Neal . Youth

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Center . Bldg .. Camden St.
814-387-7101 .

Boshan Building

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm. An tique &amp; liquidation Nles.
licenoed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

WVa . 304 -773 -57B5 or
304-773-9186.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns

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

Only

NOVV IN

SAVE

Authorized John Oeere.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment ·

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
"'U.P.S. - PUROLATOR .t

\DOOR TO DOOR .f
\DELIVERY/
PARCH PRIORITY SHIPIEN1S
FOR LESS THAN U. S. IAil
SAVE !Olio 10 5011. AND lORE

742-2328

BRING YOUR PACKAGE:
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
v- 618 Main St.

Pomeroy, Oh. _

"'

~._-.~~located in H&amp;R 1-0"J;..
~o Block Building ~

ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH. 992-3194 or
992-2388
Business or. Residential
'L----...:-12-21-1 mo.

that you do business with
people you know , and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have inveatl:
gated the offering .

22 Money to loan

and

Georgeo Creek Rd . . Call
614-446-0294.

.Riverview Personal Cere
Home now has a vacancy for

a elderlv person . 304-7735882 .
Pink sale. Open house. Cosmetics 50-70 percent off.
McCoy home, 6th street in
Syracuse. January 12.13-

1Oam till Bpm. January
14·9am till 12 noon .
S.Sayre and C. McCo~ . Call
992·5082. .
musical

Nazarene Youth. Sunday
evening. January 16th,

1984 at 8:30PM. Rutland

Church of the Nazarene.
Deborah J . Gilmore. direc-

Furniture, · gold, silver dollars. wood ice boxes, stone
jars. antiq~s. etc . Complete
households . Write M . D .
Miller, R·t . 4, Pomeroy, Oh

46769 or 614-992-7760.

Employment
Service s
11

Help Wanted

AVON Pay your Christmas
bills. make money 2 ways .

Caii614-446-335B.

Office clerk for a mineindustrial sales co . Some
experience pr~ferred involving: inventory, cardex syatem, typing. general office
reports, and telephone sales
duties. Send resume to Bolt
102 in care of Gallipolis

Daily Tribune, 825 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, Dh 45631 .
Business opportunity looking foi someone to buy out
and take over clothing busineas. Includes inventory,

fixtures. supplies. 304·8751317 or 675-3217.
Situations
Wanted •

4

Will care for the elderly in my
hOme. lots of references .

Collie. C1ll after 6PM, 4463797.
'
Free to good hOme male

Beegle dog. Call446-9850.

Real Eslale
31

Homes ~or

Sale

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR,
full basement, with garege,
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town .

Call 446-0276 .

Ranch on 6 acres. beautiful
setting with tall pines
around the house . Spacious
livingroom which overlooks
the pond. 4 bedrooms. utility room and kitchen hes a
built -in range . Assume payments with a smell down
pa~ment .

446-3175 .

$58 .900 . Call

6 room house. bath, 3 acres
ground, near Porter on Olct

Rt. 160. Call 446-2857
446-4202 .

Of

Owner Must Sell I Fireplace!
Includes some furniture! Incredible low Price! Middle-

port . Call614-992-6941 .
3

bedroom

ranch

styled

We have buyers for homes in
range. list with us. A -One
Real Estate, Carol Yeager

Sell or trade for farm of
equal value . 3 bdr. houaa,
Sanders Hill. city schools.
garage, kit -dining area. cen-

tral AC, gas heat. Call
446-2151 4PM to BAM.
Located in Syracuse -Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Price reduced
$23,500. or will rent for

S240 mo. 304-B55-3934.

HOUSE FOR SALE-'6
rooms , Qasement. double
garage, 1 and one third acre
lot . Rose Hill, Pomeroy.
Excellent condition.

$32 , 900 . 1 -814 -67B2513.

4 .bedroom house with one

plus •1:1-e_.t Mt. Alto, w.Va.

Priced on iifS'pection . 304-

895 -3B40 .

12

Puppies Yl Doberman 'h

Phone 614-992·

Realtor. Call 675-5104 or
675-5386.

tor. The public is invited to
attend.
Giveaway

Pomero~ .

6720.

Wanted to buy. New, used &amp;
antique, furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete house holds. Also complete Auctioneering service. Call Rodney
Howery

1

Clifton, W.V. 304-778 5873 .
- - - - - - - -lc-

tans for 125 .• regular 136.
Top of the Stairs Beauty
Studios, next to Stifflera in

the $40,000 to $66,000

p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
Vacancy : Julia's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 1B years experience.

TANNING SPECIAL-15

Wanted tobacco poundage.

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.

Every Sunday starting

Keyboard, 304-875-3B24:_

Call 446-0373.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS old
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up

PIANO TUNING lower
prices - qtgular tuningadiscounts to Senior Citizena,
Churctles &amp; Schoola. Ward's

3 bedroom. Superior location , 10 % down . 10%
financing

Middleport, Oh. 614-9923476.

SWEEPER '"and sewing ma-

Professional
Services

We need tobalco poundage.
Will pay top price . Call

Buying daily gold, silver
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware , old coins , large currency . Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .

3 Announcements

repair, · parts,

Athens, 1-B00-341 -8554

home. Call 446-0109 after
5:30.

614-698-7231 .

Kid'a Praisel3 ... a

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommendi

anytime

or

1-614-379-2155 .

presented by the Rutland

(Formerly · lawrence
(Dobbin) M1nley's Route)

Wanted to buy used coal 6
wood heaters. Swain Furni ture, 446 -3 159, 3rd. &amp;

oak. Call 614-3BB-9908

4·ZJ.Ift

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport '

446-3672

after 5.
weekends .

Announcements

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

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

Standing timber. will pay
top prices for red &amp;. white

17 17 1 mo [ld

AL 'TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

Olive St .. Gallipolis, Oh.

PH. 992-2478

Formerly Duds and Suds
Attendant on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2 .00 a Load
One Day Service
Phone: 992-5937
1-5-1mo.

3069.
9

DEPOSITORY

chine

Business
Opportunity

23

Ph . 985 -4269
If No Answer. Call 985-4382

PARCEL SERVICE

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
Jerry and Ellen's
Coin-0-Matic

21

RATES 12 %% purchaae or

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Stwer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS

Financtal

refinance , 11 1ft% adjustable
-·- -- Gaiiliioii_s________ _ rate
. leader Mortgege.

Pomeroy, Oh.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

,

HOME LOANS FIXED

AND

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Parts &amp; Service

surance Co. haa offered
aervices for fire lnsurence
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Ferm,
home and paraonal pro~
coveragea are available to
meet individuel needa. Con·
tact Harry Pitchford, agef!tl

I NOTICE I

lost in the Mason Pomeroy
area . 1-15 foot log chain .

S&amp;W TV

s &gt;Ji
\'40-M

SANDY AND BEAVER k,.

614-949-2907.

2-23 -llc

Discover Enpee-A·Car, the
modem answer to soarin1
new car prices! Drive the vehicle of your choice -~- any
make and model. No down
payment Lower monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Seiid fol Free Booklet l-16.
Bob Blackston, an authorized independent EnpaeA-tar Broker. Box 326. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614-992-6737
L,__ _ _ _ _ ll ! U!!n

Insurance

triever . Pomeroy Middleport area . Childs pet .

PH. 992-2280

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
long Bottom, OH . 45743
985·4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tfc

13

Loet and Found

Call 992-6919 .

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

304-875-1293.

LOST-Female golden re -

S3QOO

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing - Sidin1 - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modelin1 - Custom Pole
Barns.

""per' s Adult Care Home
haa a vacancy for anothtf
resident , elderly person. Cell

Phone 814-446-1427.

Grove Rd . Rutland . Call
814-742-3045 .

STRIP
COAL

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

Sltuatlona
Wanted

Found -Red and black male
beegle. Found on Beach

MINE RUN

3 Announcements

In Mason County

Twrf·Step

One cute two month old.
Garman Shepherd puppy to
a good home. mala . Call

•Rongeo
•Refrlgeratoro
•Drvero •Freezero
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tfc

1-3-lfc

In Meigs County

In Gallia County

l eu~

•Washers •Diahwashers

7.

- -..

643-Arabia Oist.

\"

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

3-24-tfc

PH. 99? 7844

~----------~~---------

TO

Good peto. Cell 986-38B4 .

31.------

Pomeroy, 011. 457"

every Tuesday o( the month at 1: ll
p.m. In thelrotf!ceat the courthouse.
Attending the meeting were
David Koblentz, Manning Roush
and Richard Jones, commissioners,
and Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

•
104 COURT ST.
POMEROY. OH.

All Makes

32. _ _ _ _ __

Mall This Coupon wltll Remlttlnce
The Dally Slllfinel
111 Court St.

Wlcld!ne.
The comm!sslonen wW · meet

escrow sa

· (API nerplloto),l

21 .

Marjorie Reuter.
Named to the Public Assistance
Examining Committee were David
l&lt;olllentz, Robert Buck ~ Bill

decamp, 62.84 acres, Lebanon.
ceased, to Yvonne Barkle.- Lola
James QuUien to Marvel Qulllen·
·Carol Ta~r, Howard L. M.atlack • Petry, Parcel, Rutland.
Jr., Cert. of 'J'nlns., Orange.
Harold L. Newell, Betty E.
Cai1W l'o'!· Kina to Ra!nh WJiu. . Newell to WIIUam Buchanan, Doris
ama, Peer.! Haning, Charles W!IUA. Buchanan; Pareels, Chester.
.
passenaer ll!l'Vlce, llst!ngFeb.lSal . ama, Triicts,.aediord.
·
HennaR Ulhle, deceaSed, Elea·
a startlllg date:
Board Melp' County CommJs. • nor L. Lohle, ;Jennifer L. Sheets,
Stelany said that_wben the CAB •loners to.0111o Power
Rtiht
A!fldavlt, Middleport vmage. ·
leamecl that the finn had about
SallaiJurY.
'
··
Eleanor Lollle by Atty. In tact, to
26,&lt;m reiii!!VIltlons for the widely
Mattie Allllon, Paul AIIIJon to
LohR, Elizabeth B.
advertised flights, It told Kevlll Y'OII Mqnum I.~~. -and Oii IDe., of Lohle, Pt. Lot 7, Lot 6, Mldc!leport
Feldt, listed 'as President and chief COJorado,-nqpn of Way, Chester. .
VIllage.
executive of Hawaiian Pacific, to · L. R. Gluesencamp, LouJie Glu·
' PlxlebyD.J?alley,~llburDaUey,
.
put the money 1n
11 could esencamp to Patrtcla A. Gluesen· ~avlt, Columbia. •

'DIE STATE'S NEW SENATOR ~Sen. Robert Paul GIDmor, ~bul, after,Ne,wuiiWOI'II
Ney, R-Bellalre, lllakee handl 'l)leeday rib Sen. ' 11t1te -u:my replaces, Sam Speck who ft!lllned.

------

15.------

Property trU,tsfers ••

w._y,

II
I

•------12. _ _ _ _ __

'

eo..

"·
20.

25. - - - - - ......- -

9. - - - - - - : - -

when you compare us with Cal!for- epklemlolog!st, said work that has
n!aorNewYork.Ofcourseyoudon't been done so far has been picked up
know how many cases might be as part of extra duty.
around. That's one of the Ideas. We
She said that of the 22 confirmed
want to f!ni:l out If there are more. AIDS cases since 1981, 14 \:Vl!l'e
Maybetherearemoreout there and fatalities.
we're going to start finding them,"
"CUyahoga County has the most
Drake said.
casesso!ar. 'lbeyhavesevenofthe
As of last Dec. 5, the Centers lor confirmed cases an&lt;\ tour ot those
Disease Control placed the number
were fatalities," Ms. Hall said.
of cases nationally at 2,8Q!.
"That's what you would expect.
Ms. Konchak, who holds a ·CUyahoga County Is one of the most
master's degree In publlc health populated and ... so It's not unusual
specializing In epidemiology and
to find more cases from that area."
!ntect!ous diseases, was under
Hamllton County has had lour
contract with the department last cases and two fatalities. Franklin
year to study Toxic Shock County had three cases and two
Syndrome.
fataUties.
.
Drake said an additional expert
AIDS has been a legaUy repor!a·
may have to be hired later.
ble' Class A dl~ase In Ohio since
"I think basically we want a good Sept. ll, 1983, meaning physicians
reporting system. Epidemiology Is are req~ to report each case to
the whole business of contacts·, state health otflclals.
where these Individuals might have
Major risk groups Identified by
had access to some conditions that the CDC are homosexuals or
would produce the disease. Right bisexuals; Intravenous drug abusnow everybody has theories on how ers; persons of Haitian decent and
that can come about," Drake said. ' hemophiliacs. .
Lois Hall, health department

be refunded were the flights not
approved.
u.s. DistriCt Judge J.,c. Pra~t of
Washington then Issued an order to
block the company from advertls·
ing, taking re!fe~Vatlo~ or selling
tickets unlesS It h8s CAB approval.
SteranY also said a hearing Is
scheduled Jan. 31 on a request that

1

26.
71.
21.
29.

10. - - - - - -

Hawaii' flight ., no~ goyemament approved
CLEVElAND (AP) -A California finn which has advertised
flights from the Midwest to Hawaii
for $422 does n&lt;it have government
appfiJVal to .o!fer the flights,
according
SUe Ann McConnell,
trade director of the Cleveland
Better Business Bureau.
She also safe! that the finn,
HawaUan Pacific of. Studio City,
catlf., has never'nm an alrnne and
doesn't !!Yen own \'r !elise any
a1rcratt capable of ptov!dlng the
,service It adVertised.
. The (Cleve~) Plain Dealer,
which had l!!lbllahed meoftheads,
sa!&lt;tlt was tOld by Wallace Statany
of the Civil Aeronautics Board Ill
WasiJin&amp;ton th8t Hawaiian Pacific
applied Ill· September to operate

11.

7. _ _ _ __

~~-

3

r

1.-----2.------

State hires AIDS study consultant
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- 'lbere
have been 22 conllnned cases ot
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome In Ohio since 1981, and
officials fear there may be more, so
the Health Department has hired a
consultant to Investigate the deadly

( )For Rent

17.------1

)Wanted

I )Announcement

members are certUled as advance · . to plaques to James Daniels and
firefighters. Some ot the highlights Everett Bachner In December In
of the department's year Include ~t!on of 40 ~ars service.
December caUs totaled 39, eight
Completion of the addition to the fire
tire ca!ls and 31 ennergency runs.
station In January; responding to 22
Meanwhile, Middleport Pollee
fire caUs, a record number, In
March; purchase and placing In arrested 64 persons during Deservice ot set of air bags tor heavy cember, according to the report ot
Pollee Chief J. J . Cremeans.
rescue work In Aprtl; open house In
Fifteen accidents were Invest!·
May to show the addition to the
station; first ISO Inspection In 13 gated and parldngmetercollectlons
years!nJune; purchaseandplac!ng tor the month totaled $455.50. There
was $.11 In merchant pollee collecIn service a new Initial attack
pumper In July; seven members tion and 193 parking meter tickets
were written during the month.
atlend!ng the Ohio State Firemen's
Convention In August and awarding

Apiary Inspector.
Named to serve on the Commun·
!ty lmprovement Corporation were
Paul Patterson, Rutland, David
Koblentz, Chester, Howard Frank,
Racine, Katluyn Crow, Syracuse,
E. F. Robinson, Pomeroy, and
Bernard Fultz, Middleport.
Named co-clerks ot county court
were Linda Bentz and Donna Boyd.
Deputies named to take recognlz·
ance bonds were Dorothy McKell·
z!e, DoMa Ward, Edith Sisson. and

( )For Sale

I
I

f

992·2198
Middleport, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Also Transmission ·
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

JIO''IMII Pldureclln fronUa J h Wrflb&amp;; t.cHr,
are Linda Priddy, J - ·VIIJICooney, lllld Bedl
V&amp;lllhln 8clmelder who wuln duqe of the ClldM
Unable to be pr't'84!ll&amp; (or the picture wu Jud)' CroolaJ.

PAT HILL fORD

Sizes St1rt From 12'x16'

REPAIR

d!sel!se-

.

Roger Hysel t
. AUTO &amp; TRUCK

com1nc the doiMt to the lcUI weiJitl. She au-d

out radiators. We also
repal' r Gas Tanks
'

6

GARAGE

4

'

1-11 ·1 mo -pd.

Rt. 124,Po-oy Ohio

Olive Township firemen kept busy

•:.

~~mppedto~
'
sptciiiCitions. flat. Dtptndlblt Strvict.
CALL:-742· 2789
or 742-266

Phon•------------

.Koblentz reelected president --~

keep water Unes from freezing.
The fire department was ca!!ed to
Lionberger Ridge Road for 1981
Plymouth car driven by Cl!ffort
Longette.
The O!!ve Township Fire Department was called ·io the IJ'Sidence of
Clifford Rockhold near Reedsvi!!e
for a fire In the upstairs of their

CAB CO.

wllll tills

12

7 wk . old Norweglon Elk·
hound puppy, fomolo. Coli

MEIGS

Addre'u.--------

WINNERS - As a result of a COiieli&amp; held at
Vaughan's cardinal In Mlddlepolt lbree ,......,.... of
Meigs Coun&amp;y are the reclplmta of p-ocerleL A buTel
of groceries wu won by lJacla Priddy, Pometoy.
Persons jwJt had to repter to enter the coMelt. Four
year old JeMica Wrflht drew the w1nn1n1 tiet.
James VanCooney woti a large jar of plckels for

Giveaway

t;:=::;:::======;,;:::;::;:=====~~r=======i1":"""=======:;1 814-387-0184 oftor 3.
Now Open
RADIATOR
"CUT OUT
~;;_·a~~\~ ohlrto Coii814Jerry's Custom
s"RVICE
FOR FUTURE usE" 2 cats to give ewey. Adult
mole ond femole. 814-742SLAUGHTER
We e~n repair andre·
KEN'S
2238.
core radiators and
APPLIANCE
heater cores. We can
WILL
OPEN
BHI and Hoes
Kittens end ceta to give
"From tht firm
'db d d
SERVICE
away. Female and male .
to the Freezer"
also act 01 1an ro
OEC 0th.
985-3561

Nam•-------------------

The Middleport Fire Department
answered a total of 566 caUs In 19113
Including 116 fire and rescue calls
and450emergencyruns,ChlefChlef
Je!f Darst reports.
The department put In 14m.8
manhours In answering the numerous fire caUs including 39 structural
fires; 14vehlc!e!!res; 13brushflres; .
11 mutua! aid caUs, 18 rescue caUs
and 21 false alarms or service calls.
Total estimated loss In the 116!ire
caUs was $125,850. All vehicles were
driven 12,167 miles during the year.
The department spent 536 manhours on fire training and aU but two

The O!!ve Township recently
respnded to the fo!!ow!ng fire calls:
Barbara Richards and her four
ch!!dren were left homeless when
their mobile home on Rt. 124 near
Reedsville was pestroyed by fire.
Twenty members were at the
scene. Cause of the fire was thought
to he a heat.Jpmp which was used to

ordor by

4

Business Services

couPOn. cencet your 1111 by phone wt1en you get
, results. Money nqt refundMIIe.

The potential diplomats, who must be priests under
the age of 35, take courses In the history of Vatican
diplomacy, diplomatic protocol and International law.
They must be proficient In two foreign languages as
well as Latin, the language of the church.
They aim to work their way through the Vatican's
foreign service system to the top-level, ambassadorial
posts.
The diplomatic corps In still heavily Italian,
although the Vatican has moved since the 1900s to
make It more International. There are seven
Americans among the group.
The envoys report to the Council of Public A!fa!rs,
the Vatican's equivalent of the State Department,
which has a staff of 40d!plomats.

The Daily Sentinel Page 9 ·

.,

I ·Write ~our own Old -

Firemen answer 116 alarms

BUS.TRUCK CRASH ....: 'lbe body of Mary Jane
Noons, driver of a kindergarten school bus, lies next to'
the overturned and crumpled bus Tuesday after Ute
bus and a tractor-trailer collided on Route 44 near

-----------·-------·. Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and

groundwork for Pope John Paul II to mediate the
territorial dispute over the Beagle Channel that
brought the two predominantly Roman Catholic
countries to the brink of war. Vatican spec!aUsts are
continuing efforts for a solution.
John Paul has said the Vatican seeks "to promote
and to maintain a climate of mutual ll'ust and ot
dialogue with all the living forces of society, and,
therefore, with the authorities who have received the
mandate of fostering the common good."
While the sons of Roman nobility once made up the
backbone of the Vatican's diplomatic corps, !Oday's
envoy Is a graduateo! a rigorous two-year course at the
Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy.

VATICAN CITY (AP) -An eUte corps ofWOchurch
diplomats serve as the pope's eyes and ears In 107
countries around the world, combining a political
mission with religious duties.
The United States on Tuesday became the 10'7th
nation with formal diplomatic relations with the Holy
See. Thecountriesrange,tromCommun!stYugoslavia
to fundamentaUst Moslem Iran, from heavlly
Protestant Britain to predominantly Roman Catholic

·.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Men or women . Call 614·
667-3402.

:

BY OWNER. Meadowbrook
Addition . all brick. assume
8 .5 loan , moderate down
payment. 3 bedroom, 2
baths, dining room, built in
kitchen . garage with auto
opener. Central air -cond.,
large lot. priced mid fifties.
Shown by appointment

onlv . NO REALTORS.
Phone 304-675-3445 .

GallipqHs Ferry, three bid·
room, brick, four car garage,
plus wood building . Phone

304-675 -6851 .

By owner, Gallipolis Ferry,
three bedrooms, two baths,

100x200 lot. 9.8 per cent
assumable loan. 304·8752t83.
32 Mobile Homes
for Saie

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-446 -7572 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S O.UAL:
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
House cleaning any type
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
Point Pleasant and vicinity .
Reasonable rates. Referen- ' RT 36 . PHONE 814·446n74 .
ces. CaM 304-675·3908.

�I .
)

Page-10---The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1977 12x60 mobile home. 2
bdr .. furn ished. good cond ..

S7 ,600 .
6618 .

Call

614 -266-

Must Sell 4 bdr., 12x66,
plus 12x20 room. CA. storage building, porch 8t awn ing . Corner lot at Quail
Creek. French City Broker-

48 Space for Rent

63

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Largo lots. Call
814-992-7479.

Uld colns·lndlon head pannleo. Wholl ond etc. No
Sunday calls. 81 4-g49 2801.

49

64

Priced to sell, 1979 Sterling
1 4x70, 2 bdr .. CA. vinyl
skirting. French City Brokerage Seryice. Call446-9340 .

0063 .
1978 Shultz 14x70 central
air. all new furniture, ex.
co nd. on rented lot . Call
evenings 446 -2076 .
1979 12x65 Liberty. unfur..
gas heat. gas stove, axe.
cond. 56,400 . 614 -3889326 or 614 -246-5175 .
1979 Bayview 12x60 with

12x8 expando. AC. exc.
cond. Call 446 -9416 or
446-2217 .
1972 Mobile home 12x65.
unfurnished, 2 bdr .• good

con d. Call 446 -7 171 after
5, 446 -8288.
1980 14x70 Fairmont Bayview 2 bdr., large LR, 1 bath,
den, alec . range. gas heat.
washer - dryer , CA. furnished. In Rodney rented lot.
paid water, trash pick -up.
. Assumable 7 yr . loan

13.29%, $2,000 down . Call
446 -1016 after 5.
ATIENTION-Doyou need to
move into a nice mobile
home withoUt the hassle of

set-up. We have a 1979
Freedom 14x70 deiUice
model on a lot in the Country
Mobile Home Park. This
home has a front dining
room with wooden bow
window, a circular kitchen
with lots of cabinets. 2
bedrooms, large luxury bath
with garden tub. Price of
$12.500. Includes metal
building. , patio cover. steps.
washer and dryer. Everything in tip-top condition .
Ready to live in. For in forma ·
tion call 614-992-7034 or
614-992-6284.
ATIENTION-Is there such a
thing fS a clasaicl In mobile
homes'? When you view this
Holly Park we think you will
agree there is. A 1 969
12x66 Holly Park w"h 2
bedrooms. 5 x 10 tip-out in
living room. Completely set
up in nice perk. Includes 40
foot patio turniahings. evan
a waaher and dryer. completely akirtad and ready to
occupy. There isn't a cleaner
or well kept home in the
area. Jult Uke brand new.
You mutt see to appreciated. All of thia for
$12,9.0 0. Financing available. Low down payment ind
low mon't hly payments. For
information call 614-9927034 or 614-992-6284.
1972 Skyline, 1 bedroom
furnished . Ideal for couple.
Ready to move in : $4760.
614-992-7479.

'·

1976 14x70 Kirkwood mobile home. gas heat. \3 br. 2
baths. large kitchen 8t living
room. underpenning, out
bldgs. Must Sell. $9000.
304-773-6023.
12'x65 Mobile homeloceted
Hartford. w. Va . 304-882·
2794.
.

33

Farms for Sale

For sale or rent 40 acres
far'm with 8 room house on
R• L18 . Call 614-2666317.

35 Lots 8t Acreage
36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financing available. Call446-8221
after 6 weekdays.
Lot on Rt. 775 near Leete.
hal septic tank, level
ground, 83,000. Call 6146~3 -0168.

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

For sale rent . Two story
house. 4 bdr .• $250 per mo.
$Z60 dep . req . Buy
$29,500. Call 446-4222.
9:;10-6:00.

Duplex, $260 plus utilities.
Avail. now, 2 bdr .. LR, new
remod. kit .. &amp; bath. large
fenced yard, new carpet.
658 3rd. Ave., Gallipolis.
C411 446-2457 or 4460332.
V8ry nice house in city,
ready by end of month,
unfurniohed, all carpeted. 3
bdr .. yard. plenty parking,
quiet neighborhood. Call
Earl Tope or call 446-0332
dayo . or 446·0161
aveninga.

6 room {two otory) house 66
Garfield Ave .. no p_ets and
mu~ ·give references. Will
take two or three small
chl(dron. Inquire in rear after
10:00AM . .
2 bdr. houoe on Bulaville Rd.
Ref. &amp; dep. required. no
pats. Call 448•4344.

For Lease

For lease, Chovron Station,
Maaon a...... . Good location.
304-67 11P2 after 8pm.

age Service. Call446-9340.

1972 mobile home, needs
some repairs. with 1 112 acres
very reasonable . Call 446-

MI! n: 11 a11111 oI!
61

Household Goods

1----------

r--------

Two bedroom furnished or
unfurnlahed at Southside.
304-8~6-&amp;186.

Two bedroom all electric
m.obile homo, Aohton Upton
Rood, t126. per mo. tliO.
deposit. 304·87&amp;-4088.

46

Furniahed Roome

For rant Sl..plng Rooms
and light ~ouoe keeping
fooms. Pork Central Hotel:
Call &amp;14-448-07118.
·

Country oetting, 3 bedroom
remodeled home, new
foroed air furnace, nice
SIHpl~g room t1211, utilikitchen, city water, near
Tupjlero Plaine Ohio. t22&amp;. · Two bedroo"' mobile hol'l!•· . tiH paid Moloo only, ronr.
Without utllitlll. 614-887- one mil; out s•nd. Hill Ad. ... refrl~. Col! · 448_-44 e·
after 7 p.m. -304-6711-4046.
3974.
•
- r -:-•.
..
.
~--

~

'·

fiT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Antlqu11

by LlnY Wrlghl

78 •

Pqmero -Midd'!~· Ohio

DICK TRACY

lilly Lee'o Tires and lottery
8olos. New end used tlreo
also, tire roPIIIro. 1803 Jet:
feroon Ave. Point Plossont.

Knouff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"-22" stocked
In yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 814·2118824&amp;.

81

.

1---------1---------66

90, ONI!

THO~ANP

OOLLARS IS
lt'J HISH AIJ

'fOU'LL SOl

BORN LOSER

M~lum size round boleo of
hoy for sole. Firat cutting.
Evenings: 9U -3B48 or
992-7302.

LET IJE. IIITROOOCE 'K:V TO
1\IE 'I.ITTI.E. 'llFF'{' Wl-lOLE

Building Supplies

Building materials
block, brick. oewer plpas,
windows, lintels, etc.
Claude Wl~toro, Rio Grande,
0 . Coli 814·245·&amp;121 .

G;ound oar corn te.IIO par
100. Bring own cOntainer.
304-87&amp;-330B. No Sunday

......

.

Why walt? Build your own
24ftx32ft. o•••o• or workshop, t1.&amp;9&amp;. Call 1-814·
BB&amp;-7311 .
LUMBER - Rough cut, ook,
poplar, 2x4, 2x8. 2x8. 1x4.
1xe: 1 x8, length available. 8
foot through 14 foot . Hogg
&amp; Zuspan, 304-773-&amp;&amp;&amp;4
daytime.

-==========
-

68

EVENING

Home
Improvements

Mercum R6oflno. • SpoutIng. 30 yeoro oxparlenco,
spaclollzlng In buHt up roof.
Call 814-3 88-98&amp;7.

Coel and wood furnace.
phone 304-&amp;78-2785.

Pete for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Selling
Happy Jock Dog Food.
Doberman puppift: Stud
Service . Call 814-448779&amp;.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
814-387-7220.
Brlorpotch Kennels Profosslonol All-br- grooming.
lndoor·outdoor boarding focllltlos. English Cocker Spa·
nlel pupplos. Call 814·3BB·
9790.
Drogonwynd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow pupplos. CFA Himalayan. Por·
sion and Slomeoe kittens.
Coil 814-448-3844 after 8.

f I diiSIJIIII,JiitJII
71

•i

ROOM HE'ATER~c.ur'IOUR
tJ/6 BILLS WA'/ DON~!

RINGLE' SERVICE experlencodi1 roofing, Including
hot tor opplicotlon. corpen·
ter, alectriclen, m1son. Cell
304·875-2088 Or 675 4&amp;80.

I

'

Wetar Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumpo Solos and Service.
304·8911-3802 .

Autoa for Sale

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
piece cu11om fit your homo.
TOP CASH pold for late Guaranteed. Advanced Gutmodel und coro. lmlth tor, {Day • 814·1192·4086,)
·8..:2..:0.:.11..:
.1_
Buick-Pontiac, 191 1 East· ~_f_n_:lg:_h_t_&amp;_14_·_&amp;_9.:.8:..
ern Ave., Golllpollo. Colli'
814-448-2282.
GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
2-1871 Volkswogon Supar STEAMER . Water removal,
Beatlae. excaNent running fumhure cleaning, free eatl·
condition, price vary reoso· ,_m_•_t•_•_·_30_4_-_&amp;_7_&amp;_-2_2_9_&amp;_.__
noble. Call 448-0848 oftet 1·
15PM.
R. G. Moye1 and Son. Dlosal
Service and major over·
1978 Chrysler Cordoba ,hauls. Experienced In all
1974 Codlllolc Coupe Do· typal, dieoel , and gasoline
villa both In very good cond. englnos. Industrial or auto,
&amp; naw point. Reasonable hydroullc and electrlal oar priced or will trllilo for 4WD vice. Located at Moson Co .
pickup. Call 814·379-2314 lndustrlisl Pork, Point Plooor 814 -379-2898.
unt. 304·87&amp; -7422 .

ANNIE

I .• ER .. GUE% YOU'RE
FIIC!HT•.I f70H'T HEM
ANYTI11HG NOW

Part 4

1980 Ford LTD PS. PB, Building remolding, all corAM -FM 8 track, crulu. low pantry, roofing, plumbing
miiNge, exc. oond. Call and concreto work. 30481 4-2118-1333'. ..
. 878-2440.

ALLEYOOP
WIO'D RATHER DO

1
- - - - - -Locksmith Service, Shar-

WHI&gt;.l ABOUT THE DATA

I'LL PICK THAT
STUFF UP, DOC!

EVENTUALI..Y,

1979 Plymouth Chomp
48,000, air cond .. sunroof, pening &amp;orvlce, Glou ond
4 spd. with 2spd axle. Call Screen Wire lnstolled .
Subken Service Co., 304after 4PM, 441-7414.
878-31194.

IT'L~

I-IER!

Groot Done 8 mo. old, U6
cost of shots. Coli 4489280 before 6 or 814-3B89783 after 6.
AKC Regiotered block Lobredo; pups. Shots on,d
wormed. t100. 614·9927286.

67

Muaical
lnatruments

For ule·Spinet-Console Pl-

ano Bergain . Wanted Responsible party to tok.o
over low monthly peymante
on Spl..., Plano. Con be
seen locally. Write Credit
Monogor:P.O.Boo &amp;37 Shelbyville, ln. 48178.

-·

Wonted old pianos. Paying
t20. and t40. each. Flrot
floor 9nly. Write ' giving
directions. Written Pianos. Boo 188 Sordlo, Ohio
43948. Phone 814-ll831806.
New Rou Flonger. llot
• 1B&amp;. •so. 304-&amp;7&amp;-6843.
New Alverez Mandolin with
hord cooe, liot t4211, will sell
• 1eo. 304-8711-11843.

I dllll Stipplll:'&gt;
.~ ltvr ·slrrLk

82; Wanted

to Buy

WANTED TQ LEASE tobacco oNotmento' In Mason
·Cqunty. Phone 304-41181078.

83

Uv11tock

land .
(J)700 Club
(!) NCAA
Basketball:
Illinois at Indiana
(I) Gl (l2i Dynasty
0 (I) MOVIE: 'Modem
Problems'
(I) @ Walk Through the
20th Century with Bill
Moyers 'Marshall. Texas ;
Marshall, Texas · Bill Moy·
ers returns to Marshall,
Texas. where Moyers . Y.A.

Tittle.

1970 Plymouth fair condi- Cat 2111 hoe, dozero, crone.
tlon, reasonable price . loaders, dump truck. Call
Phone 304·773·6800.
814·448- 1 142 between
7:00AM &amp; !1 :00PM.
1981 Olds Cutloso. 3 0 4 - 1 - - - - - - - - --:.
67&amp;-7478 after 8:00:
.,
Good-1 Excavating, bose~ -·"
.menta. footera. driveways.
oeptlc tonka, londscoplng.
72 Trucks for Sale
Coli anytime 614 -4484637. James L. Davison, Jr.

DESPITE YOUR GREAT
EFFORT AND TALENT IN
MAKING THIS MANSION
INFINITELY BRIGHTER ...
MORE LIVABLE ••• ,

1 g73 GMC Supar 'cuotom.
Nnl good, doesn't uoe oil.
PS, PB, 360 auto.. S300.
Call 814·2&amp;8 - 1919
anytime.
1981 Toyota long bed, air,
AM·FM tope. &amp; opd, excellent cond .. Call 448-0844.

73

Vans

8t 4

W . O.

1977 Dodo• von fully car'peted "' customized. 318. 2
berroll, ·auto., sun-roof, very
ohorp. Call 814-992· 31B7.
1979 .Jeep CJ-&amp;. II cyl .. 3
opd .. loaded ¥With extroo, ex.
cond., U ,300. Call 448011111.
. .

'
1978 CJ7Jeep blue with rag
top, oxcollent condition
U900. 304-773·11023 .•

!==========
84

8t

SEWING Machine r9pairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Soles &amp; Service Sharpen
Scluors . Fobric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 614-992-2284 .

86

Gene!al Hauling

BARNEY

I AIN'T GOT
A FRIEND
IN THIS
WHOLE
WIDE

PEANUTS

1.::::::::::::::::::::::;::=

:;

'·

.,

6111NN News
11 :00 . . (]) (I) (l) 0 (I) ® Gl
(l2i News
(]) MOVIE: 'The King of
Comedy'
Cll Another Ufe
ffi SportoCenter
(I) All In the Family
Benny Hill Show
11:30-8 (]) (l) Tonight Show
(]) Not Necellarily The
News
Cll Best of Groucho
(!) NCAA Basketball:
Notre Demo at Oregon
(I) Cotllno
(I) Soap
D (I) Pollee Story
(I) L.otonlght America
® All In the Family
8 (lJ Nlghlllne
• Twilight Zone
12:00 Cll MOVIE: 'The Thirty·
Nine Steps'
Cll .Bums &amp; Allen
(I) MOYIE: 'Trouble Along

·lha W.-y'

.

(I) Nlghtllne
.
(JI I\IIOVIE: 'The Reincarnation of Peter Proud'
Thlcke of the Night

bbltt,

.'

GOODY!! .
HOW ABOUT
LENDIN'ME
TWO--·

Bittman (Eugene Levy) .
(I) TBS Evening News
IIJ Gl (l2i Arthur Hailey's
Hotel
® To Be Announced
@News
10:30 Cll Blondie
(I)
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour

·e

n-.

H

min .)
(]) MOVIE: 'Airplane II :
The Sequel'
(]) SCTV #4 Set at a sl•ghtly

• loudmouthed comic Bobby

Need something hauled ' ,.. ....
away. or aomathlng moved?
We'll do lt., Coll 446-3169
bet~en 9 and 6.

79 CJ-11 e cyl.. 3 opaecl,
maroon wi!~ blo'Ck top,
white llo gold otrlpea, 304 . JIMS WATER SERVII::E. ·
Call Jim Lanier, 304·876 angina. 304-882-31184.
7397.
.
·Pigs for ulo-Call 114-378•11111 or 8114·378-8221 . 1 979 Ford· 4 WD·. ••~•llont
condition, II~•
22,000 _Dump truck for hire. Will
uo.
mllei, loaded, teeoo. 11171 haul cool or limestone: 304·0
2 cows for uli 01 trade; Call VW, excellent ·condition, 871!1-31-90.
118110. 814-448•1084 or
1114-992· 7898.
.•
4411·1387.
87 ·Upholstery
P 0-LL E D HE R E F 0 R D
lULLS- From A.l. bt'Mdino . 715 .
Boa·ta and
to ,. the top bulle In .. tho
country. Agee - 1 month•
Mot~"' fcir Bela
T"IIITATE
to 3 yMN. Pllce 78 cento.,. 1-'--r------'----,'UPifOLSTERY SHQP
boutid. Contact ARROW
11113 S~tc . Avo .. (jolllpolls.
~R~s .... Atl1'•~· tlltlo.
ft.
nailer . be.~ ;;, 814.448-.71133 or 111'4-4•81833.
. .•.
':"~ 1·~14-1183·•~14. . ·._-...,.:..t.,...r_._c""u_•...1_4_·2_s_e._1_11...:11).._
..
.·'
3 heifers Anguo • Hereford
mixed. CoN 814-2&amp;11-1871
If no lnower try again.

Auchslander and Joan Halloran press for an investiga·
tion into the ci rcum stances
surrounding an exclus1ve private hosp1tal's refu sal to ad mit an elderly pat1ent . (60

(Joe Flaheny). brash station
manager Edith Pnckley (Andrea Martin). oddball Ed
Grimley (Manin Shon) and

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Call 614-367-7471
or 614 -387-0691 .

Woter hauling, Fist Service,
low rotos. Call 614 -2661743.

AND WHAT
IT'5 RAPIDLY BECOMING
A HOUSE DIVIDED. I HAD NO ABOUT YO~
IDEA 'THE CHILDREN BORE DEAR WINNIE?
WHAT ARE
SUCH HOSTILITY AGAINST
)10~ TRUE
THEIR FATHER.
FEELINGS ABOUT
YOUR HUSBAND?

seedy television station 1n
mythical Melonville, the
crazy crew includes cQnniv·
ing president Guy Caballero

Electrical
Refrigeration

Pasquale Electric Co. all
phases of electric work. all
work guarenteed . · Aerlel
truck rental . 814-446 4088 .

Johnson

'Hannie
611
MOVIE:
Caulder'
9:30 IJ•(]) (l) Night Court
(]) Paul Simon: Hearts/
Bones
10:00 IJ (]) (l) St. Elsewhere Do

WINNIE

1ge3 .Chev. S-10 ext. cob 1-ow_ne_r_._ _ _...,-::--plckup, Tahoe equip. pkg:. J .A .R. Construciion Co.
Y·8, air, powe~ steering, Water Lines. Footers.
AM-FM coso. tape, olldlng Drains. All kinds of Ditching.
reorwln~w.2tonepolnt,4 Rutland, Oh . 614-742WD, 4 oPel .. 17,000 mi.. 2903.
axe. cond. Call 448·93114.
1977 ford 1 ton, V-8 eng .. 4
opd. trans, low mllooge; llke
new. Call 8.14-387-0294.

Ladybird

and James Farmer all grew
up. {90 min .)

e

,.

1'15 DFI:INI&lt;S
WAS I&lt;NOWN AS.

Now arrange the etrcled letters to

THE

form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested t&gt;y the above cartoon

'T I I

xxxr xxr

!Answers tomorrow)

Yesterday·s

Jumbles AROMA QUEER BANNER PA TIER
How many times was the " pet menu "
revised ?- ''UMPTEEN "

I Answer

Jutt oft tht prne, .1urntM Boc* No. 23, contaiNng 110 puutta, 61 tY•bbllt for S1.t5 pll,al
5StJ*taQI'Mdhlfd6ngtromJumb6e, clotNs~, Bol34, Norwood, N..J.07141.
Include yourn1me, MdrMI, dp cocM tnd mak•
t ptfablt to
t ·1

N•••P•;•

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Two wrongs make a game
NORTH
+AK3

the hearts in order to disca rd his jac~ of clubs.
At this stage of the proceedings he had to lose one
trump: his probl em was to
lose only two diamonds .
His best percentage play
would be to lead a diamond
from dummy and plan to
play bis nine if the ace or
queen"'!!id not appear from
East. If this loses to the 10
he could still lead toward
dummy's king. South wasn't
that good a player. He had
some idea of developing an
end play against his opponents to force one of them to
lead a diamond . so he ru ffed
a dub and then threw West
in with the queen of trumps.
West wouldn't cooperate.
He simply led another club.
South had to ruff and lead a
diamond to dummy's king.
East pickled it with the ace.
Now all East had to do was
lead another heart, but East
had been wool-gathering
along the way and had discarded two hearts on the
trum)l·leads. •
East had to lead a
diamond . South guessed.
played his nine and the contract he had tried to ch uck
had been thrown right back
to him.

1-tl -84

• AJ 2
t K62

+A 54 2
EAST
WEST
+Q 109
+ 5
.10 8754
.96 3
t A 10 7 3
• Q8 4
+K 10 7
+Q 96 3
. SOUTH
+J8 7642

.KQ
tJ 95
+J 8

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North

Pass
Pass
Pass

lems develop wh~n Tootie's
successful lawYer -mother
comes to lecture at East -

.,

M5wef:

POU~eD IH06E

EXT~A

- (] K_

(I) @ National Geographic
Spacial ·Amo~g the Wild
Chimpanzees.·
Tonight ' s

jCiosed Capttonedl
NCAA
Basketball:
Illinois at Indiana
Ill Children Between Life
and Death
8:30 0 (I) Empire
9:00 IJ (]) (l) Facts of Life Prob·

WHO

ITALNEDb

West

®

XJ

I K]

mediately begins to lose h•s
nerve over what he' s done .

program documents the
pioneering research of Or .
Jane Goodall who hved
among the wild chimpan·
zees in Tanzania. (60 min.)

BE RE-

TURNEDlO

1:;;::=:;=:::==== .,.

1989 Chevy 1 ton , rebuilt JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATmotor, new radiator and ING. Rt. 1, Box 366, Galli·
he1ter cora, new tlret. polis. Call 814-367-0676.
Mach: A-1 . Call AI at
814-742-2328.
.
83 Excavating
1982 Z-28 Indy 600 .
•s.eoo.oo can 304-876- 1 - - - - -- - - 1915 after 6pm.
DOZER . WORK By Ted
·Hanni. ponds, ditchea.
1987 Mustang, slo cylinder, basements, etc. Call 614auto. good condition. 448·4907. Corter &amp; Evans
t1,2&amp;0.00. 304-458· Traneportation .
166&amp;.

8 :00 B&lt;IJCIJCllD CIJ®GI
(lJN....
(]J Hletory of Pro Football
'l'he 64-year history of Pro
Football is presented.
(]J MOVIE: 'Spirit of the
Wind'
I]) Now Treasure Hunt
(!) Flohln' Hole
(I) Uttle House on the
Prt1irle
(I)® 3-2·1, Contact
• Buck Rogers
6:30 • (]J (l) NBC News
I]) Rifleman
(!) SportsCenter
(I) 8 (lJ ABC Newo
8 (I) ® CBS News
(I) Bualnau Report
® Everyday 'Cooking
7:00 8 (]J PM Magazine
I]) Allao Smith and Jones
(!) NCAA Baoketbell:
North Carolina State at
Virginia
(I) Canol Burnett
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(l) Charlie's Angels
D (I) Wheel of Fortune
(I) State of the State
/'ddress
®Newo
®
MacNeil/ Lehrer
Newohour
8 (l2i People's Court
• Jefferson•
7:30 II (]J Tic Tac Dough
(]J Conoumer Reporu
(I) Hogan' a Heroes
(I) Entertainment Tonight
0 (I) Family Feud
(I) Silver-Haired Legislature
® Wheel of Fortune
Gl (l2i Entertainment
Tonight
• One Dey at a Time
8 :00 8 (]J (l) Real People Tonight'a program features a
special salute to the Olym·
pies and Olympians of the
past and present . (60 min.)
(]J MOVIE: ' Kitty and the
Bagman'
(]J
MOVIE:
'Snoopy,
Come Home!'
Clll Spy
(I) MOVIE: 'Centennial'
(I) Gl (l2i Fall Guy Tern
sends Colt alter a 'hit lady '
who turns her lethal talents
on Colt . {60 min .)
0 (I) Domestic Ufe Man in
blows up during a broadcast
of the evening new s and im·

87 . Ford LTD good body,
parts. runs parfoct, I·
2 AKC Reglotered mole ex6o
teoo. 70 Ford needo trans- 82
Plumbing
Cocker spaniels· blonde &amp; ·
8t Heating
yrs. old, red 3 yrs.. good mission, U&amp;O. Call 614blood line, good tempara· 2158-1318 .
ment. Excellent for breedCARTER'S PLUMBING
ing. Call 448-9372 after 19711 Dotsun truck, 1 985
Chevelle wogon, 71 Dodge
AND HEATING
5:30PM .
Colt. Coii448-7B32 .
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Lhou Apso puppies AKC
Registered will be ready Jon. 1971 Volkswagen for oele. Phone 614-448 -3888 or
Call
after
8
PM.
992
-3981
.
814 -446 -4477
2111. UOO·. Coll448-0706.
Reglotored English · Pointer
pups, chomplon .blood Una,
t1 00 ••· Call 24&amp;-5027 or
448-2107.

Unscr~mble theoe four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary -do.

. 1/11/84

PLASTERING · Now and
repelr commercial and real·
dentlol, free ostlmotes. Call
814-2&amp; 8-1182.

Umeatone, Sand, Oravel.
Delivered in Mason, Molgo.
Golllo or pick up at Rlohords
&amp; Bon. Call 448· 77BII.

ftft\1Nl OOft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME
\.9 ~~ · t&gt;yHenriArnoldandBobLI!I

~

W-:ONESDAY

304-8711-11~011 .

S1: 1 v11.1: :.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11 .

Television
Viewing

Auto Parte

8t Acce11orl~1

Misc. Merchandl11

. ADD-ON Woodburnlng furnace, •uto. controla. water
heater Included. Never use&lt;l.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE tli90. Ph . 814-2&amp;e-1218.
82 Olivo St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; uud wood • coolotoves, Llmeotono delivered. t1 0 a
8 place wood living room ton. c•n 614·288-1427.
suite with 8 Inch ftot arms
*399. bunk beda complete
whh bunklas t199, 2 place
1----------~---------~ ontron
llvlngroom sultos
I
1199. antron racllnero t99,
other recllnero tBO, maple
dinette sots t179, box
1prings • mattre11 twin or
41 Houses for Rent 44 Apartment
full 1100 nt regular-firm
for Rent
1120, mople dinette cholro 4-1 2' radiol snow tires, V. G.
136, wosh stands t34, cond. 1&amp;0. Call 448-7828.
maple rockero tli9, 7 piece
Unfurnished house. 4 rooms
and bath. Completely car- Small furn. houN 1 or 2 chrome dinette set t149. 5 For oole 86,000 BTU Worm
peted. Storm windows and odults only, no pats. Call place dinette oat t99. used Mornlng gu heater, 1 yr.
bedroom suitea. rafrlgera· old, ex. cond.. 1428. Call
doors. 614-992-3090.
448 -0338 .
tors. rangea. cheat. dreuera. 448-8221 .
wringer waahera, TV'a, dryHouse with bath and large 1 bdr. apt. Call 446-0390.
eta, &amp; shoos. Call 814-448· 1 pc. wood group, teOO, 1&amp;
yard . Near Racine. 614KW electric furnonce teO.
992-6868 .
2 BR Apt.. $129 mo. 3169.
Call 448-8328.
Utilities partially fumiahad .·
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
For rent in the Eastern ...... · 3 bdr .· houn for ule
District . Neat modern 4 on land contract. 304-876- Sofa, chair, rocker. otto- Will cut and deliver firebedroom house. Full base- 6104 or 304-875·1!1386, men, 3 tables, (extra heavy wood. Coll614-21i8-11i28.
by Frontier), t885. Sofa,
ment. S200. month plus Carol Yeager Realtor.
choir and loveuot, t275. Lerge size buck atova, 1 yr.
deposit. References re quired . "Jean Trussell. JACKSON ESTATE Sofas and cholra priced from old, oxc. cond .. t871i. Call
APARTMENTS {Equol US&amp;. to t896. Tableo, t45 448-8221 .
Evenlngs-61 4-949-2660.
Housing Opportunity) has and up to t12&amp;. Hlde-o6 room house. Basement, one and two bedrooma. rent beds.t440 . and up to 10'x20' Garage. Will move
natural gas, rural water. 1 starting ot S167 for one t525 .. Recliners, t 176. to to your lot. 448·1102 .
kid accepted. Large yard, bedroom and t193 par 1376 .. Lamps from t2B. to
garden, no pets. drunks or month for two bedroom. t76.&amp; pc. dinettes from Baby crib llo mattress. like
dope. John sheets. 3Y.! miles with S200 deposit located t99., to 436. 7 pc. t189 n-. 446-2837.
South Middleport. R- 7 . near Foodland and Spring and up. Wood table with six
367-0611.
Valley Plaza, pool and TV cholro t425 to t7415. Desk Equipment trailer tandem, .
ont. Coli 446-2745 or leave t110 up to t226. Hutches, 18ft, t1 .000. Also Gravely
t560. and up. maple or pine backhoe, t1 .200. Call e 14·
Extra nice two bedroom message.
finish . Bunk bed complete 2&amp;6-1427.
home. 304-676-3798 .
3 bdr. opts. Honeysuckle with mattresses, t2&amp;0. and
Five room house. 2324 'h Hills across from Highway up to t396. Baby beds. frHzer for ,ala. like new.
Lincoln Ave. S136.00 per Patrol. Appliances, water &amp;. 1110. Mottresoes or box Call 446·4428.
month. 304·676-3669.
aewer furnished . Rent starts springs, full or twin, t&amp;B ..
at t240 por mo. Call 448- firm, t88. and t78. Queen 1O'x20' garage. Will' move
Three bedroom house Camp 3344 or 446-1 134. Equal sets, t 195. 4 dr. chests. to your lot. Coll448-1102 .
t42. 6 dr. chests. t64. Bed
Conley, 304-676-6016 af- Housing Opportunity.
frames. t20.ond ue .. 10 Dozer with end loader CaM
ter 3pm .
Nice 2 bdr. apt .. ref. &amp; stove gun · Gun cabinets, t360. 310, t4,600. Coll814-288fumished, Moln St .. Vinton. Gas or electric ranges t375. 1427.
Baby mottresoes, t26 &amp;
42 Mobile Homes
Call 614-246-6818 .
t36, bed frames t20. t25. Matching vanity &amp; bed, 8&amp;0
for Rent
2 bdr.. port. turn.. newly .&amp; 130, king frame. tliO. motorcycle. old lanterns,
remodeled, gas heot, park Good nlaction of bedroom lamps, 4 choirs, childo pisuites, cedar chests, ano. desk. Call 448-82&amp;3.
12x60 2 bdr. modern fur- front view. water paid. t176 rockers, metal cabinets ,
mo.. references. Call 448·
niahed trailer. convenient
Kitchen table and choirs
swivel rockora .
location, Upper River Rd. 3919..'
Used IC\trniture -- bookcase, t40. Hotpolnt 40 ln. oelf
deposit req . Call 614-446- Brand new 2 bedroom du- ranges, chairs. dry,ers, re- clean electric range. e140.
8668 .
plex apt.. on one floor. frtgeretora and TV' a. 3 miles Kenmore electric
equip. kitchen, utility room, out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am dryer.t160. All like new.
Nicely furnished modern carport &amp; atorage room,.. to &amp;pm, Mon. thru Fri .• 9am 814-992-8281 or814 -992·
mobile home. In city. 1 or 2 large lot in country Nttlng. to 5pm, Sat.
11883.
adults only. Call 448-0338. but city school syotom. 8t4·448-0322
Woodburner-Uaed HomaaGarden space, $260 par
2 bdr, mobile home partially month
plus depooit. Call TV &amp; Appliances, 827 Third teader wood and coal burnfurnished. Call 446-4292.
446-4477 or 448-3B88.
Ave:; Gallipolis. 614-446- ing. Moy be seen at Rutland
1 699. Spin washero, gas &amp; Bottle Goo office. 614-7422 bdr. trailer 2 mi .• from
Nice 2 bdr. carpeted apt. In electric dryera. auto 2&amp;11.
hospital at Evergreen private
Kanauga with washer &amp; washero, gos &amp; electriC 1 - - - - - - - - - lot. Call 446 -0167.
dryer hookup, t 176 plus ranges. refrigerator•. TV New woter bed. King size
with head board. t600.
utilities. Call 1-304-273- tat I.
Nice 2 bdr. mobile home
814-992-7201.
9746
.
good ' location. kitchen
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
range, refrigerator. waaher
Washers, dryera. refrigera- Shotgun,over and under,
&amp;. dryer. carpet, expando, 1 bdr. opt. newly decoroted tor~, rangeo. Skaggs Ap- point 41 0·22, t1 00 or trade
completely
furniohed.
468
natural ges furnance. CA.
2nd. AVe. $190 mo. pluo plioncos, Upper· River Rd. for aluminum boat. For 11le,
8200 mo. includes water a.
deposit"
Call 446-2238 or besida Stone Crest Motel. pigaona, domestic fancy
trash collecttbn . Call eve's
614-448-7398.
breeds. 992-5188.
446-2681.
446-0264.
1 bedroom Apt. $196 . mo. Waahara &amp;: dryers ex. nice Mobile home supplies: nonWith or without furn .•
Including utilitiea. Equal variety. Avocado, harveat toxic ontlfreezo-t6.60 per
12x80. 2 bdr .• nice &amp; clean.
Housing Opportunity. Con- gold, white, turquoise. Also gallon. Wotor heating aleNo pets, dep. req., ref.
tact Village Manor Apts. Maytag 1 4,1 6,18 lb. capac- menta, water heater. step a.
preferred. Call 614-256- 614-992-7787.
ity woshero. Call 814-266- ·windows. doora. f1uceta.
1636 before noon.
b.reaken. ate. HotPoint
1207.
heavy-duty electric dryoro,
Riverside
Apts.
Middleport.
2 bdr. trailer comp . . furSpecial ratea for Senior Used GE refrigerator, West- this month only t279 .
niahed. 3 miles from Holzer
Citizens. e130. Equal Hous- inghouse electric range. liv~ Kingsbury Homes Parta end
in Evergreen, ax . cond. Call
ing Opportunities. 814- ingroom suite, familyroom Accessory Store. 900 Eaat
614 -246-9170.
992-7721 .
suite. table &amp; 6 choirs. Main St.. old Bookmobile
Corbin
&amp; Snyder Furniture. b~ilding in Pomeroy or call
House trailer at 322 Third
3 rooln Apt. furnished . No 966 Second Ave. 448- _99_'2_·_&amp;_68_7_·......,,-----Ave .. adults only, 446-3748 pets. 614-949-2263.
1
1171.
,.
or 614-266-1903.
New wood burning atove
Furnished Apt. 814-992- Portable Necchl sewing ma- with fireltrick t326. each.
12x60 2 bd,. unfurnished on 6434 .
chine all attachments, like 304-875- 1·578 or 676Rt. 36. Dep. &amp; ref. required .
new. See at 631 3rd. Ave. l-7-89_8_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
Call 446-4369.
Apt. for rent. 614·992· After 3:00PM .
Used waaher, dryer, atovea.
5908.
Furnished, nice mobile
refrigerator. 30 day warhome. 3 bedrooms. All 3 bedroom furnished Apt. ill Baby crib It mattreaa. like ranty . One Baldwin organ,
new.
Call
448-2837.
electric-central air. Good Syracuse. 614-992-7689
double keyboard. J&amp;S Pawn
location. across from pool in after 5 p.m.
Shop. 314 Main St. Pt.
Swivel
rocker.
li~e
new.
Syracuse. $250 per month
P1easapt.
block
nougohyde
with
ottoplus utilities. Deposit re2 bedroom Apt. in Middle- man. 304-876-6843.
quired. Call 992-2669.
Firewood. 304-678-2684.
port. S176. month plus
utilities
..
Oays-614-992White
Hotpoint
stove40in.
Two bedroom mobile home
6646. Evenings-614-949- oven, warmer drawer and Sam Somerville's Army Sur12x60, near Pomeroy and
2216.
two storage drawers. Call plus, Eaat Ravanawood.
Middleport area. 614 -992Normally open 1 :D0304-1394.
6868 .
7:00pm Friday, Saturday,
Semi-furnished. 1 bedroom
Apt. on 2nd. floor . Coates Nine piece oat of family Sunday. {Closed for .Repoiro
1Ox60 mobile home. 2
in Middleport. room· furniture, includes Jan. 14-Jon. 28). All olzes
bedrooms. No pets. 61 4- building
N.2nd.
Ave.
Call at Apt.18 lamps and tables, UOO.OO, now heavy clothlng·Boots in
949 -2424.
or call 614-992-7347 or only two yeoro old. Wooden stock cheap all winter. We
. 614-992-2610.
child's highchair, 830.00. have Corhart·Ciothlng. 304Nice unfurnished 3 bedroom
876-3334.
Coli 304-876-3831 .
mobile home. Large yard.
Pomeroy
Cliffs
Apart\"ents
Convenient location. 8166.
Used Freshtron no. 2000
is now accepting 8pplicaplus deposit and references.
bun 'oteomor. llot t990,
tions for one:.bedroom apart- 63
Antiques
614-986-4367.
1300. 304-876·&amp;843.
ment. Only . Handicapped,
disobled or egos 82 and over
Furnished 3 bedroom mobile need apply. Equol Housing
brafting tabla with drafting
home with waaher and Opportunity. Call 614-992· Old ' Colt rifle-1887. 22 machine, 304-87&amp;-41574.
dryer. No pets. 614 -949- 7772 from 8 om to 4.30 caliber pump. t160. No
225'3.
Sunday calls. 814·949- Fence 300 iq, ft. with pootl,
p.m. week days.
2801. 1160. '
1100.00. 304-67&amp;·4374.
12x60 in Syrocuoe. Air .. Apartments. 304 - 875·
washer and dryer. t200. 6648.
plus utilities and dapoait.
Also 12x60 In Syrocuoe. APARTMENTS, mobile
$1 80. plus utilities and homes, houses. Pt. Pleooent OUR
HOUSE
deposit. Reference• re- and" Gallipolis. 814-448quired. 814-992·7808.
8221.
2 bedroom furnished. t 1 6&amp;. TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
month plus utilities and Apartments now,ovalloble to
depo~it. No peto. Country
elderly &amp; dlubled with on
Mobile Homo Park. 814- Income
of leu· than
992·7479.
• 12,300. Renting fol- 30
of adjusted lncom•
2 bedroom mobile home. parcent
.Phone 304-478•81179.
New corpat, utilitiea paid, no
pat~. drunks, dopa. 1- kid
Nice 1 bedroom apartment,
accepted. John &amp;heats, 3'12 utilities furnished, 304-87&amp;miles South Middleport. R- 7112.
7. 387-0811.

~

Wednetd!ly, January JJ, 1984

Pameroy-Midclleport, Ohio

.-

Wednetday, January 11, 1984

North

East

Sou th

2 NT

Pa ss
Pass
Pass

3+
Pass

t+

4+

Opening lead :

t+

+3

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
The club lead was won by
dummy's ace. South wasted
no time in playing the hand.
He cashed dummy 's ace and
king of trumps and ran off

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

~tNa1M.,tat'

·•

THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Likewise
ACROSS
by

3 Final effort
4 Single

I Nimbus

5 Flunky
10 Dash
II Nasty

5 Plucky

person
12 African fox
13 Appear
14 Tyke
IS Late Miss
West
16 Sea eagle
17 Black
19 Huge barrel
20 Foreign
(prefix)
21 Alpine
snowfield
22 Lab device
24 Shipworm

6Poem
7 Constantly
in wait
8 Impress
upon
9 Make a
second run
II Game
like bingo
15 -Blanc
18 Beverage
21 Nuzzle
22 Mailing fee

Yesterday's Answer I-ll

23 Sluggishness
24 Commanded
26 Leafy
shelter
28 Baseball's AI

32 Seaweed
33 Tobacco
(51.)

35 Ripen

36 Baker's
specialty

ZSGood
pw1ch (sl.)

26 Male voice
27 But (Lat.)
28 Western
event
29 Threefold
(prefix)
30 Have loans
to pay
31 Statute
34 Relaxed

36Shaft
37- Rogers
38 "Gloomy

Dean''

39 Conswrted
40 Gadzooks!
DOWN
I Warmth
1· 11 .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

Here's how to work iti .

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter simply slands for another In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for lhe 1wo D's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilterent.

·.'

CRYPTOQUOTES
LQ

OQN

XDQC

EAAQC

•

QO

NTR

X DEW W

DQEL

QJ

J D Y R 0 L WT Y S .
X Q R J J D Y 0...
Yesterday's Cryptoquote:
ONE OF TiiE BEST THINGS
ABOUT UFE IS TifAT WE ARE HAPPY MORE TIMES THAN ··.
WE·ARE UNHAPPY.-ANDY ROONEY
.

�12-The

,....

Sentinel

Emergency runs ·

Kissinger report
recommends
intensified efforts

·'
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Kissinger Commission on Central
America is presenting a report to
President Reagan that endorses the
main outlines of his policy toward
that region but calls for intensified
U.S. e!!orts to achieve the admlnis·
tratlon'sobjectlves, sources say.
After being presented in late
morning to Reagan by Commission
Chairman Henry A. Kissinger and
the 11 other panel members, the
report was to be made public at 3
p.m . EST.
Reagan has ~arned against the
dangers of communist penetration
in Central America and U.S.
officials said Tuesday the report
reinforces the president's position
that American security interests
could be seriously affected If the
United States turns Its back on the
region.
One key recommendation reportedly calls for increased inilitary aid
to El Salvador. According to
informants, the administration is
expected to cite that recommenda·
tlon in requesting an aid increase
later this month tentatively set at
$100 mlillon to $140 million. Current
military aid to El Salvador is $64.8
million.
Reagan formed the panel last
summer, believlngAmerlcanobjectlves in El Salvador cannot be
achieved without a bipartisan
consensus. Officials said they are
hopeful that the endorsement of
commission Democrats for most of
the recommendations will lead to
greater support for adrnlnlstratlon
policy in Congress, which repeatedly has trlmmed milltary aid
requests for El Salvador.

l

I

AmongthepromlnentDemocrats
on the panel are former Democratic
National Committee Chairman Robert Strauss and San Antonio Mayor
Henry Cisneros.
The study reportedly wlil recommend an ambitious, long-term
program to deal with the region's
social and economic crisis, including steps tailored for "basic human
needs."
U.S. sources, who asked not to be
identified, said the commission will
recommend a variety of initiatives,
including a guaranteed five-year aid
package worth over $1 billion
annually, to help the region recover.
Particular steps would be aimed at
the millions of Central Americans
sufiering from malnutrition, dis·
ease, illiteracy and lack of adequate
housing, they said.
They said the commission also
will urge renegotiation of the
region's debt and a resurrection of
the Central American Common
Market.
The measures represent a broadbased e!!ort to raise productivity
and living standards in Central
America, where the bulk of the
population has little stake in
preserving the existing systems and
often look upon violent revolution as
an attractive alternative.
Denying reports he had filed a
"dissent" to a commission recom·
mendation tying military aid for EI
Salvador to improved human rights
performance, Kissinger said Tues·
day night that he instead added "an
eight-line statement on how I would
recommend that a clause that I
agree with should be inte'llreted.
That is not at all a dissent."

Area deaths

Legion. He served with a tank
battaliopln the U. S. Army during
World
War II.
Raymond F . "Red" Hoce, 0/,
Surviving
are his wife, Ada West
well-known Pomeroy resident, died
Hoce;
two
sisters,
Anne Provost,
Monday evening at St. Mary's
Dayton,
and
Margaret
Maloon,
Hospital in Huntington, W. Va.
Kettering, and a brother, Charles
Mr. Hoce retired as store keeper
with the Columbus and Southern · Hoce of NeisonvUie.
Servtres wlil/lle held at 2 p.m.
Ohio Electric after 42 years seiVIce.
Friday
at the E\\ling Funeral Home
He was electrician for the Meigs
with
the
Rev. Jerry Neal and the
County Fair Board for seVeral
Rev.
James
Corbitt officiating.
years.
Born at Parkersburg, W. Va., on Burial wUI be in Meigs Memory
July 31, 1916, he was a son of the late Gardens. Masonic rites wtll be
conducted at 7: lJ p.m. Thursday at
Charles and Catherine Hoce. Bethe Ewing Funeral Home by
sides his parents, he was preceded in
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164, Free
death by a brother.
and
Accepted Masons, and graveMr. Hoce was a member of the
side
military
rites wUI be conducted
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
by
Drew
Webster
Post 39. Friends
all Masonic bodies for 25 years, the
may
call
at
the
funeral
home from 2
Disabled American Veterans and
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.
Drew Webster Post 39, American

Two women injured in Meigs accident
a.m. accident on U.S. 331n 13€'&lt;lford
Township.
Gandee was driving her car north
on the highway when she lost control
on a curve. The vehicle ran off the
road striking a guard rail. The car
then continued, went off the left side
of road and struck guard rail again.
After a 6:10 p.m. wreck on Third
Street in Syracuse, the Meigs EMS
transported Hubbard to the
hospital.
t ' The patrol reported Hubbard was
east in her pickup truck when she
lost control of the vehicle on the icy
road. The vehicle went o!! the road
and struck an embankment.

Meigs Co,Unty happenings ....
Veterans Memorial

Funds distributed

Admitted--Mary Pickens, Clifton,
W. Va.; Alfred Lyons, Racine;
Clarence McDaniel, Rutland.
Discharged--Cheryl LaudermUt,
Carolyn Neutzling and Homer
Graham.

State Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson's office announced the January,
1984 distribution of$58,790,9171n Aid
to Dependent Children to 653,669
recipients in Ohio's 88 counties. Of
the total Meigs County received
,931 for 2,399 recipients.

Meets Thursday

s:m

Meets Monday

The Southern Local Board of
Education will hold its organizational meeting Thursday, Jan. 12, at
· 7 p.m. at the high school.

Ohio lottery winners
CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Tuesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number, " was 398. In
the " Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
uumber was 1199.

LORI'S PIZZA

COMMISSION CHAIRMAN - Fonner Secreand Ch~ of the Klssln«er
Commission, Henry Klsslnarer talks lo reporters as he
arrived at lhe Capllol for a meeting with Senators on
his commission's report. The report Ill due for
tary of State

The Eastern Alhletic Boosters
will meet at 7: llp.m. Monday at the
high school.

presentation lo Reagan on Wednesday and Ill
expecled lo endorse the underlying raUonale for
much of the administration's policy 'I owan! El
Salvador. (AP Laserpholo).

Two defendants were assessed
costs only when they appeared In the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Dick
Seyler Tuesday night.
They are Don Bolin, Pomeroy,

Clear tonight. Low11H5. E aste rly
to southeasterly winds 5-10 mph.
Thursday, mostly sunny . High28-32.
Chance of snow near zero percent
tonight and 10 percent Thursday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
Chance of snow Friday. Other·

CALL 992-6851

FOR "MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN

SAVE UP TO

•

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OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
(BAR ONLT IS CLOSED SUNDAY

IN POMEROY

'

BATH
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HAND
TOWELS

HARTLEY SHOES
21 0 EAST MAIN
p

and lows zero lo 10 above.

TERRY

WASH
CLOTH

• Assorted solids
and prints

SJ EA

PACK OF

4.!1

~2"~ ­

RUGS

POMEROY
H. 992-5272

HOt,IRS: Monday-Friday 9-5; Saturday 9-8

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

our rich
roasted taste.

TERRY

DISH
TOWELS

KITCHEN
TOWELS

• White with assorted colored
• 15"x26"

• Assorted kitchen
design

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with the richness of Brim.

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EA.

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The moment you pour yourself a cup of Brim"
Decaffeinated Coffee, the full rich aroma tells
you you're about to experience something
wonderful. Our rich roasted taste. It
has a flavor ihat's deeply satisfying.
And it makes your coffee moments
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Right now, you c.an save 50'
on this special coffee.

FINGER TIP
TOWELS

• Assorted colors
with assorted
designs
• Machine washable

• Assorted solid colors
• 100% polyester with
100% nvion binding
• 72"x90'1

47

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CLOTHS
• 100% cotton
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• 12" x13"

PACK OF

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e

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4 :::"$1
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NOT GOOD 0112-tZ. OR TRIAL SIZE

when y~u buy .

1-

MEIGS INN
,'

VELOUR

.,
3.0. 5

THE MEIGS INN
HOTB DESK: eA.M. to 12 Midnight
BAR &amp; LOUNGE: 4 P.M. to 12 Midnight
PIZZA SHAO&lt;: 4 P.M. to 12 Midnight

TERRY

• Assorted solid
and prints

50°/o
ON SOME ITEMS

wlsefalrandcold.Dallyhighsli&gt;-25

NEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio
(AP) -A woman fired in 1971 for
trying to organize her fellow
discount store workers into a union
is receiving more than $102,00&gt; in
back pay, following legal battles
that carried all the way to the U.S.
Supreme Court .
.~ "I faced torment, disgrace, discrimination," said Lena Barnhardt,
55, of Dover. "I didn't think it would
last this long. I was told they would
fight me in every court, and we were
in every court."
The National Labor Relations
Board awarded the backpaytoMrs.
Barnhardt in 1981. The U.S. Supreme Court in November cleared
the way for payment of the
settlement when it refused to hear
an appeal filed by the store, S.E .
Nichols.
Mrs. Barnhardt received half of
the settlement Dec. 24 and expects
the remainder thls month.
She . started working at S.E .
Nichols in 1900 for minimum wage .
- then $l.!ll an hour - while her
husband, a steelworker, was put of
work.
· 1n 1971, Mrs. Barnhardt and
another clerk, Carolyn Moore, were
fired for their efforts to organize a
union.
•
In March 1972, the NLRBruled the
firings violated the National Labor
Relations Act and ordered the
women back to work.

SALE STARTS TODAY ...
ENDS JANUARY 22nd

Satisladion Guaranteed

ON NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS

Weather forecast

Woman wins
back pay suit

IS OPENI

GENERAL~ STORES

OUR BIG CLEARANCE
SALE CONTINUES!·!

charged with intoxica tion, and
Gerald Arnold, Pomeroy, charged
with issuing menacing threats.
Je!!rey Ginther, address not recorded, forfeited a $113 bond posted
on intoxication charges and John
Davis, Jr., Syracuse, forfeiteda$375
bond posted on a driving while
intoxicated charge, and a $50 bond
posted on an excessive speed
charge.

Five defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hollman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting were Mike Shoemaker,
Middleport, $225, posted on a petty
theft charge; John D. HUI, New
Haven, W.Va., $450, driving while
intoxicated; Carl E . Nottingham,
Long Bottom, $40, speeding; Charles W. Thomas, Middleport, $450,
drtvlngwhUe intoxicated, and Vicky
L. Carpenter, Hemlock Grove, $45,
speeding.
Fined were Paui1lalrleld, Dexter,
and Ricky Priddy, Rutland, $50 and
costs each on disorderly manner
charges; Kenneth Mitchell, Langsville, $100 and costs, driving while
under suspension; Bill Powell,
Middleport,m $100 and costs and
restitution on des! ruction of propterty charges.

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

SHOP AT
YOUR NEAREST
DOLLAR GENERAL STORE

~~~~~

Mayor's ·c ourt

1

Raymond •Red' Hoce

Two women sufiered minor
injuries in weather-related accidents in Meigs County yesterday.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio
Highway Patrol reported a total of
15 accidents caused by snow
Tuesday with three occurring in
Meigs and 121n Gailla counties.
Treated and released at Veterans
Memorial Hospital were Suzanne L.
Gandee, ll, Ripley, W.Va. for
sprained ankle and neck strain and
Linda S. Hubbard, 40, Syracuse,
neck strain.
The state patrol transported
Gandee to VMH following a 10: 10

Six calls were answered by lOcal
units ')'uesday and on Wt!(lnl!lday
morning, the Meigs County Emer·
gency Mepical ServiceS reports.
Wednesday morning caiiB In·
eluded Racine at3: 53 a.m. toDorciiS
for Clifford , Beegle, !allen to
Veterans Meinorial Hospital, and
Racine at 7:52a.m . took Bob White,
Elm St., to Veterans Memorial.
Calls on Tuesday Included 4: 114
p.m. , Racine ror Sarah Congo, Elm
St., to Holzer Medical Center:
Racine, 6:42 p.m ., College St.,
Syraucse, for Mary Martin, to
Veterans Memorial; Syracuse, 6: 27
p.m. for Linda Hubbard taken from
the scene of an accident on Third St.,
to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy to
ihe Darwin a rea at 10:15 p.m. for a
rtrerun.

J

.I

�GENERAL•

STORES
DOLLAR
JANUARY
.
HI
..
E
SALE
•
W

Sale Starts
Today... Ends
January 22nd

MEN'S

FLANNEL
SHIRTS
• Assorted Plaids
• SizeS, M, L, XL

sa

MEN'S, BOYS' OR
YOUTHS'

JOG GERS

• Assorted plaids
• Size 8-18

THERMAL
TOPS OR
BOTTOMS
REG. $10

---••

'6

ATHLETIC
SHOES ~·""
• Men's slze6Yl·12
• Boys' size 2Yl~
• Youth ~ze 10Yl ·2

ADULTS'

• Assorted colors
• SizeS, M, L, XL

YOUR'4

CHOICE

JACKETS

• Assorted styles
• Men'ssizeS, M,L,XL
• Ladies' size 5, M, L

C!IS

.p

YOUR
CHOICE

ADULTS'

2 aox~~

8"x10"
EA.
5" X7" ....•. 75('

FOR

• Medium point
• Blue ink
BROCK ~

CHOCOLATES
10 OZ. PGS.

KITCHEN
TOOLS
• Slotted turner • Small turner
• Basting spoon • Slotted spoon
• Soup lldlt • Potato masher

YOUR CHOICE

75e

2F~)
$
.
3

• 10 oz.

•
3

[

" x3 1/z" x 1"

Mu lt i-$ Pu
rose
pl

..

::

'

•

~CL.OPAV

....

SHELF
LINER
• ZIQ N' Fit

PANTS

• Assorted colors
• Sizes S, M, l, XL

•
N

I•
0. ·

$E) PR.

• Assorted styles
• Boys' sizes 8-18
• Girts' sizes 7·14

YOUR
CHOICE

.

''.....

'- · ::r ·.

.

.

.

YOUR CHOICE

'~-.\
,,. . . ;. . . ..
I \ .·.

.
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.

.

$

•

,

.
·...--- -.-:-:.:
~ '.:.~

\ \

FOR

DISPOSABLE

DIAPERS

PACKS

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Tote caddy
16 qt. utility tub
15 qt. deluxe spout pall
4 pc . mixing bowl set
14 qt. rectang ular dish pan
1 V2 bu. laundry basket
Twin size deluxe dish rack
20 q t. round waste basket

YOUR

- ..

50

•
•
•
•
•
•

CHOICE

• 24~x6' or 12$

Cheese Popcorn 2 1/8 oz.
Cheddar Fries 2 oz.
Cheese Curls 2 3/8 oz.
Cheese Snaps 3Yl oz.
Hot Fries 2 oz.
Plain Popcorn 2 1/8 oz.

YOUR CHOICE

3 .'1
FOR

FOR

SWEAT

1

SPONGES,(... .··.· l.-~~:
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• 6 1/4
'" ,. ~.~
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FILTERS.
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COFFEE
· MUGS

ADULTS'

• Chocolate Covered
Peanuts
• Chocolate Covered
Peanut Clusters
• Malted Milk Ball s
• Chocolate Bridge Mi x

.., ~r::-.~,

CELLULOSE

COFF EE ~~

STACKING

HOODED
ZIPPERED
SWEATSHIRT

• 6 3/4 oz.

-'2

100
MEN'S OR LADIES'

N'PEANUTS

YOUR CHOICE

YOUR CHOICE

'I

~,

CREW
NECK
SWEATSHIRTS

GLASS
BAKEWARE
1 qt. bake'bish or 2 q t.
casserole

• Kitchen Can « qUO ct.

YOUR

POPCORN

PYR·O·REY

MEN'S, BOYS'
OR YOUTHS'

• Trash Bag 26 gal.· 15 ct.
• Truh N' Yard 33 gal·tO ct

CHOICE

FIDDLE
FADDLE

'I

PKG.

YOUR
CHOICE

COUPON

83~"

d iameter

REG. $12

COUPON

• 16 count

NYLON

• SizeS, M, L, XL

$8wiTH 'IOwiTH

PICTURE
FRAMES

•

$650 . . . . . .

• 100% cotton

JEA Ns

PLATES

YOUR
CHOICE

FLANNEL
SHIRTS

• ~~~:.sdesigner
• Size S.15 or 8-20

METAL

• Men's size 6'12·12
• Boys' size 2112-6
• Youths' size 10'h·2

BOYS'

ADULTS'

CHI NET

l

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16·PAK

PLASTIC
HANGERS
• Unbreakable
• For drip-dry hanging

~A~ FOA$1

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9-VOLT 2-PACK
B. 0-CELL 4-PACK
C. C-CELL 4-PACK
D. AA
4-PACK

�Cage roundups

Cut your own taxes

SeePaae4

Tax feature Page l!

Meigs' first baby

Budget breakdown

Story, photo Page 7

Story on Page 10

he Daily
' Vei .32,No. l91
Copyrlfhted 1914

WHIRL

DOVE

PINE OIL
CLEANER

• Cleans, deodorizes, cut arEtas&lt;e·rljJC

• 20 reusable sheets

• 22 oz.

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POLISH

AIR FRESHENER
HERBAL

DISINFECTANT
• Eliminates odors
• K111s household germs

• With lemon oil
• 14 oz.

• Adjustable air freshener
• 7.5 oz.
-

2 ... SJ

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SCOTCH·BRITE®

CARPET FRESH®

RUG AND ROOM ~
DEODORIZER

KITCHEN SCRUB
SPONGES

• Anti-Soli formula
• 9 oz.

· a:~'i

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BIC®

MENNEN®

• Cleanser with
chlorine bleach
• 14 oz.

5 ..~1
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SPEED STICK
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BAR

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• Refreshing deodorant
soap

5M•••'I

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CONDITIONER

8 ·$1

Fires damage house, cafe -

FOR

AIM®

Damages • were estimated at
$5,001 as the result of a fire at the
Charles Warth residence on Rose
Hill early Thursday morning.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said the blaze started In the
chimney and spread Into the walls.
Most the damage was confined to
the area around the chimney but
with smoke and water damages the
loss was estimated at $5,001.
Firemen put out the fire from the
attic of the Warth home.

TOOTHPASTE
• With fluoride
• 4.6 oz.

• 7 oz.

25
·,:::'1

1 Section , 14 Page~
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 12, 1984

VIsitors had to pass through metal
LOGAN, Ohlo (AP) -A man on town known as West Logan.
detectors
and sign a register.
trial for the m11tUat1on slaytngs of
The naked torsos were found Oct.
Veldt said he would prove that a
h1s stepdaughter and her fiance had 14ln the Hocking River, which Oows
a relationship with h1s 18-yearo()ld through this town of 6,&amp;Xl. Other bootprlnt taken where the txidy
stepdaughter that exceeded normal body parts were found Oct. 16 In parts were found could be traced to
"bounds of Intimacy," a prosecutor seven shallow holes In thE cornfield -1he defendant. He said fiber tests
show that Johnston "transported
says.
.
along the river.
Dale Johnston, 50, a farmer and
The three common pleas judges the body parts at the time In
'
construction worker, was pathologl· hearing the case, James StUwell of question."
Veldt, who outlined the case he
catzy jealous of A,nnette Cooper Hocking County, Mlchaei'Carrjgan
Johnston's relationship with Todd of Cuyahoga County and Joseph will present during the three-week
Shultz, 19, and was prepared "to do Cirigliano of Lorain County, visited tl1al, said witnesses would testify
anything and everything .to break It the Johnston farm, thecornfleldand that Johnston and the victims were
up," Hocking ·eounty Prosecutor other sites corutected with the seen together on Oct. 4. He also
Chris Veldt said Wednesday In killings before . hearing opening referred to reports of an argument
between Johnston and Schultz over
ope!ling h1s murder case before a arguments Wednesday.
three-judge panel.
an
automobblle.
Security was tight In courtroom.
Defense attorney Thomas Tyack
Johnston faces two counts of
said the .evidence was
aggravated murder with death
circumstantial.
penalty speclllcatlons stemmlng
He said Investigators had picked
from the October 1982 slay!ngs. He
Johnston to be the defendant shortly
waived h1s right to a jury trial.
after the bodies were found and
"Threats and violence were part
"simply Ignored or set aside"
Of the relationship," Veldt said of
evidence pointing to Johnston's
Johnston and his stepdaughter, who
Innocence.
had moved In with the Schultz
Tyack disputed the evidence,
famUy about two months before the
saying defense witnesses would
killings. "Their relationship cer·
testify that none ofthethreepalrsof
talnly exceeded the bounds of
shoes taken from Johnston's house
Intimacy that would be expected of a
could be conclusively linked to
normal parental ·s tepfather
where the bodies were found.
relationship."
He also said the bootprlnts were
Veldt said Johnston killed the
taken 15 days 'after the bodies were
teen-agers at h1s farm sometime
1
found and that the area had been
~tween 6: :Jl p.m. Oct. 4, 1982, and
well traveled by _then. He said
6:llp.m: Oct. 5.
ballistics tests "exclude" as a
Johnston shot each more than
Annette
Johnstoo
weapon the .22-eallber riDe,
murder
once, Veldt said, then hacked up the
Tod Schullz
cartridges and shell cases taken lr. a
bodies and carrled the parts In feed
search of Johnston's home.
sacks to a cornfield near a part of

VALU·PLUS

LIKE MAGIC
SPRAY

enttne

Prosecutor Veidt says
defendant was jealous

ALPINE

FABRIC
$OFTENER

DISH
LIQU ID

••

cafe. That area was gutted and a
block wall between the drive
through and the main building did
prevent the spread of the fire
somewhat although there was
extensive water and smoke damage
and some fire damagE to the main
structure. Firemen answered a call
to thesceneat7: 13p.m. and were on
the scene for three hours. Owned by
Steve Van Meter, the establishment
has been closed since early De-cember. Monetary loss was not set.

Chief Legar said that there is
InsUrance. Firemen and four pieces
of equipment went to the scene at
1:33 a.m., returning to the station at
3:Wa.m.
Cafeflre
Meanwhile, a fire of undeter·
mined origin caused extensive
damages to the City Limits, North
SeCond Ave., Wednesday night.
Middleport firemen reported the
fire apparently started In the
drive-through area in front of tile

AT TilE SCENE - The three judge panel
hEaring the aggravated murder trial of Dale
Jolulston, second from left with sunglasses, stand
Wednesday at the entrance to Johnston's home near
Logan. The judges, from left, Joseph Cirigliano,

Michael Corrigan and James SUJwell, will hear
evidence against Johnston charged with the
mutilation deaths of his stepdaughter and her
boyfriend. The defendant is In the background. ( AP
Laserphoto)

0

Miner dies in accident
GAlliPOLIS- Gallla County's first fatality of the
year occurred early thls morning when a Bidwell man
was iduedlna head-on vehicle collision on Rt.160, north
DEar Ohio 5541n Springfield Township.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol
·reports the deceased is James F . Edmonds, 32, Rt. 3,
Bldw_ell. The other driver, Donald Barnes, 18, Rt . 1.
Bidwell, Is in serious condition in Holzer Medical
Center's Intensive care unit for chest injuries.
Edmonds. who was a coal miner with the Southern
Ohio Coal Company, Meigs Mlne 2, was heading home
from work prior to the 2:55a.m. accident.
According to Gallia County Coroner, Dr. Donald R.
Warehime, Edmonds died a t the scene as a result of

multiple Internal Injuries and multiple fractures of the
ribcage.
Barnes was transported to HMC by the Gallla
County EMS and admitted at 3:55a.m.
Edmonds was traveling south in his Chevrolet
Chevette while Barnes was going north in his Ford
Pinto. TroopEr J .S. Jagers, investigating for the
patrol, said Barnes' vehicle traveled left of center and
struck Edmonds' car head on.
Edmonds was pinned in his car so theGallia County
Sheriffs Department used Its jaws of llle to remove
him.
Jagers said he found the heavily damaged vehicles In
the highway.

GDC administrative office to ·move
We Reserve The Right
To Limit Quantities
· On Any Item

...

t

THANK YOU FOR SHOPPING

DOLLAR GENERAL® STORES
"Shopping Us First Just Makes A Whole Lot of Sense"

GAlliPOLIS - Following a
remodeling project, administrative
offices for Gallipolis Developmental
Center will be moved Into the nearby
dining hall.
The Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation has confirmed that
plans to make the move trom the
stately administration buUdlng are
being made. No plans for the old
buUdlng's later use have been
decided, but a department' spokes·

All Items Sold On
A First Come Basis
Early Sell Out Possible

• CIRCLEVILLE, OH
129-131 West Main Street

• FAIRBORN, OH
1212 BI'Oid Street

• GREENFIRD, OH
226 Jeffenon Street

• LOGAN, OH
38 West Main Street

• THE PLAINS, OH
70 North Plains Road

• DAYTON, OH
3906 LJnden.Eutown S/C

• GALLIPOLIS, OH
312·316 Second Avenue

• HAMILTON, OH
221 HIP Street

• f()MEROY, OH
202 East Main Street

• XENIA, OH
81 East Mlln Street

~

t

Cheryl Claypool of ODMR's
public Information office said the
project Is subject to the approval of
the state controlling board. Four
architectural firms were exam:.Oed
by the public works department.
Acock Schlegel designed the new
cottages on the south end of GDC
grounds. Claypool explained that a
fee will stU! be negotiated with the
firm .
(Continued on pagE 14)

person said alternatives will be
studied.
Acock Schlegel Architects, Columbus, has been given the design
contract for the conversion of the
dining hall, opened In 1979. The
project Is estimated at $150,001.
Wayne Schlegel, a partner In the
firm, said this Is Acock Schlegel's
12th building project at GDC.
Schlegel was expected to he at GDC
today to look over the facUlty.

;

~

~

FIRST GALLIA FATALITY - James F.
Edmonds, 32, Rt. 3, BldweU, died In a heado()n collision
Thursday momlng on Ohio 160 north of SR 554. A coal
miner with Southern Ohlo Coal Company, Meigs Mine
2, Edmonds· was driving home from work. His

i

-

Chevrolet Chevette Is shown heavily smashed al
Baird's Auto Parts &amp; Body Shop In Kanauga. The
driver of a Ford Pinto, Donald Barnes, 18, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, Is In serloos condition for chest injuries at
Holzer Medical Center. (Photo by Lee Withrow) .

Spencer case decision due Monday

'

crew ~hed In~·~ to clean up the ~ce
of water that oovered the Door.

I'

,,
'

'

Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight said that a decision o!l the
changE of venue of the retrtal of
Pamela Spencer, Syracuse, will be
made public Monday at 10 a.m. In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Courtroom.
A mistrial was declared De-cember 12 following a week long
jury trall for Ms. Spencer, charged
with Involuntary manslaughter and
endangEring children as the result of .
the death of her new born baby last
May.
In other court matters, Michael
Stanley, charged with two counts of
forgery, entered a voluntary plea of
g\IUty.
Stanley was placed on probation
for three rears and Is make
restitution In full within slx months.

In another court action, Kevin
Sick and David Mould entered pleas
ofguiltyonachargEofbreaklngand
entering. They were placed on
probation for two years and each

defendant Is to serve 30 days in the
Meigs County Jail.
According to another court entry,
Jeffrey Alan Miller was appointed
deputy sheriff of Meigs County.

Layoffs coming to balance budget
CINCINNATI (API -Cincinnati
will furlough about 43 of Its 968-man
pollee division as part of a $14.4
mUllon cut to balance the city's
$245.7 bui:lget.
Cincinnati City Council also voted
a host of other cutbacks that could
mean several hundred more layoffs
In other departments.
City Manager Sylvester Murray,
who had recommended firing 72
pollee officers, said the actual
number of layoffs would be deter·

mined later.
Other cuts include the closing of
one fire station and cuts in the parks,
recreation and other city
departments.
The city has 968 pollee officers.
Murray estimated that the cutbacks
would Involve about 33-35 white'
males, and 7·8 black and female
officers. CouncU vote d to make the
layoffs according . to a federal
court-ordered hiring plan to Integrate the pollee ranks.

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