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                  <text>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

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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
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·,:::'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.

�..

Comment

ltwnday, January 12, 1984 •

~~ .

Page--~-;e

•

Pomtro '

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO TilE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb ,..,...._.._-r. ,..,......,c:j,""'

Bm~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Pres s Assocla·
lion and the American Newspaper Publisher Association .
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed . They should be less than 300 word8
lon,. All letters are subject to edltlnr and must be •l&amp;ned with name, address and
telephone number. No wullcned letters wUI be publlshed. Leiters should be In
rood taste, addresslna: lssues, not penooalltles.

~Democrats

shape new
'84 policy manifesto

Some of the nation's most prominent Democrats, tcylng to shatter the
. Idea that their party lacks new Ideas, have unveiled an electlon·year
: program that calls for overhaullng the federal tax system and employing
. n,ore diplomacy In dealing with the Soviet Union.
: While not otflclaUy endorsed by the party or the leadership of the
: Democratic-controlled House, the policy manifesto Is aimed at helping
: shape the 1984 debate as Democrats attempt to re-take the White House
. and the Senate, both now In Republican hands.
: The wide-ranging !JO.page document, titled "Renewing America's
: Promise," accuses President Reagan of bringing the country
· astronomical budget deficits, faUing to emphasize diplomacy In foreign
: policy and anns rontrol, and abandoning women, minorities and the poor.
: The policy blueprint Is the product of three years' work by House
: Democrats and was published by the National·House Democratic Caucus,
· a newly formed organization headed by Rep. Glllls Long, O.La., chairman
: of the House Democratic Caucus, and Robert S. Strauss, former party
: chairman. It Is an expansion of a similar book Issued In 1982.
: The group's membership Includes 70 House Democrats and 83 other top
. party figures, among them former defense secretaries Clark Cllftord and
: Harold Brown, Investment_banker Felix Rohatyn, economist Lester
: Thurow, and tund·ralsers Pamela Harriman and Lew Wasserman.
· The document calls for sharp cuts In the growth rate of the national debt
: by 1988; permanent changes In taxation and the health care system; a new
: forum for rooperatlon between labor, Industry and government; new
: ~Nbllc and private Investment In research and Industry; and a revival of
. anns control efforts.
; "It Is Imperative that Democrats del'l'l&lt;instrate to the American people In
: 1984 that we are not asking for a return to policies they rejected In 198), that
. we have the will to lead and the resolve to make hard c~.· · wrote Long
; In a preface.
\.
: "T1!15 volume helps Democrats to re-establish our IdentifYas the party of
: growth,
growth Is the prerequisite of opportunity," Long said.
. Rep. Martin 0. Sabo, DM!nn., who played a major role In drafting the
: report, said the group hopes the document will berome part of the party's
; campaign platform later this year.
, Central toensurlngtuture growth and prosperity, the document states, Is
;erasing the bullt·ln deficits whlch have grown enormously during the
· Reagan administration.
; The group urged Reagan to join with Democrats In an effort to trim $150
:billion to tm bUllon from the deficit In 1!¥!8, mostly through gradual cuts 1n
:defense spending and entitlements, and through tax Increases.

tor

~Troubled

forecast

: · Gov. Richard Celeste has picked up ronslder-able newspaper space and
:broadcast time with his long· range plan for creating jobs and Improving
·the health of Ohio's economy.
; The "Strategic Plan for the Eighties and Beyond" brings to mind those
:five-and 1().year agricultural forecasts the Soviet Union Issues but never
·seems able to meet.
; · Measuring the success of Celeste's proposal probably won't be difficult,
:either - unemployment will be up, down or unchanged at the end of his
;tour·year term.
: But aside from the various proposals for breathing a spark of new lite
·Into the state's economic growth pattern, the report also offers some
:sobering forecasts about what may happen If the Celeste admlnlstratlor.
~taUs In Its effort to abandon the economic conditions which have prevailed.
· In looking ahead to the period from 198) to 200), It concludes that unless
;present rondltlons are changed:
: -Per capita lnrome wUI rontlnue to lag behind the national average.
: -Average annual unemployment will not go below 10 percent, meaning
·the state would rontlnue to have 7!iO,!XXl to 1,!XXl,!XXl persons unemployed
:and underemployed.
: -The labor supply will grow less rapidly over the next 20 years than It
:dtd during the past twenty.
· -Population out·mlgratlon - people moving out of the state- can be
'expected to rontlnue, particularly If the state lags the national economic
;recovery. "We can also expect that the largest group of out·migrants will
:continue to be those In their twenties with higher skill levels," the document
·says.
: -Population will remain "fairly stable," ranging from 10.5 million to
:11.2 million people. But there rould be a "substantial short·term loss" If
Ohio's recovery seriously trails the nation's.
-There will be no net job growth between 198) and 1990.
.• The plan points ·out that the projections do not represeht the
,.administration's view of what lies ahead.
• ·. "Rather, they Indicate where the state Is headed under the conditions
trui t have prevailed over the last few years.
~ 'They provide some Indication of where we can expect to be In the year
~If we do not develop and Implement a positive economic development
strategy designed to stabilize and modernize our basic Industries, diversify
the state's economy, rebuild our cities, and Invest In the training and
retraining of our most Important resource 7"" the people of Ohio," It said.

Tfoday in history
::: Today Is Thursday, Jan.l2, the12thdayotl984. Thereare354daysleftln
·
, Today's highlight In history:
: On Jan. 12, 1919, the U.S. House of Rep~tatlves rejected a proposal to
l!lve women the right to vote.
: On this date:
• In 1945, German forces In Belgium retreated In the World War II Battle of
!he Bulge.
: In 1958, the Soviet Union proposed a zone tree of nuclear weapons from
!he Arctic Circle to the Mediterranean.
• In 1966, President Lyndon Johnson said In his State of the Union address
that the United States would stay In South VIetnam until communist
aggression there had ended.
And In 1971, "AD In the Famlly" premiered on"CBS-TV.
Ten years ago: The North African nations of Ubya and Tunisia
iumouDced that they had agreed to merge as a new repllbUc.
: Five y~ ago: President Jimmy Carter tired Bella ·Abzug as
~ ot his National Advisory Comrrilttee on Women after an .
angry exchange during 'a meeting on women's Issues.

!lie year.

'

By Alltoc!ated PreM
players In double figures In the
Going Into Wednesday night's Redsklna' victory over Toledo. The
Mld·Amerlcan Conference college winners made 59 percent of their
basketball schedule, three teams shots from · the field. Toledo was
topped by Ken Epperson's 21.
were tied tor the lead with unbeaten
"In the first half, the offense
league records. By Saturday, that
figure will be down to one.
played good but not the defense. The
Miami defeated Toledo 78-63 serondhalf, thedetenseplcked up to
Wednesday night In a battle · compltmeill the offense. Our pass·
lng game was the key to controlling
Involving two of the co-leaders.
Meanwhile, Ohio University re· the tempo," said Miami Coach
Darrell Hedrlc.
main~ unbeaten In the MAC by
OhlooutsroredWesternMichlgan
defeating Western Michigan 83-58.
l!HJ In the first eight minutes of the
That means Saturday's game at
serond half to stretch a two-point
Miami between the Redsklns and
lead to 18 points. The Bobcats shot 61
Ohio will be a showdown tor the
percent to the Broncos' 23 percent In
conference lead.
the second half. John Deverea ux
Both teams will go Into the game
had 20 points for Ohio, while Cordell
with 3-0 ronterenee records. Toledo
Eley
topped the Broncos with 17.
and Central Michigan are 2·1,
Bobcat
Coach Danny Nee said he
BowJ.tngGreen, Kent State, Western
"stressed
to the players at halftime
Michigan, Eastern Michigan and
that
we
needed
more Intensity and
Northern Illinois 1·2, and Ball State
concentration," and his talk ob0.3 following Wednesday night' s
viously worked. Vern Payne of the
action.
Broncos said, " We were close In I he
Central Michigan edged Ball
first half, but we eventually got
State 81·79, Eastern Michigan was a
awaytrom thethlngswellke todoon
66-51 victor over Northern Illinois
offense and that hurt ."
and Kent Slate downed Bowling
Derek Boldon's layup with seven
Green 82-72 IO round out Wednes·
day's ronferenee schedule.
secondsremalnlnggaveBallState
Its victory over Central Michigan .
Sophomore guard Ron Harper
srored 16 points to lead five Miami
TheCardlnalshadromebackfrom

Soviets &amp; t_.e Olympics._ _ _ ______,·il~
f "~~;..

Will the Soviet Union boycott our
Olympics? At this point It Isn't
absolutely obvious that they won't
do so. There are the temptations.
rey are: 1) Punish the United
tales for having pulled out of the
Moscow Olympics ln198l; 2) Guard
against the temptation of Soviet
athletes arlivlng In Amelica to
head for the nearest McDonald's
hamburger stand, order a milk
shake, smile from ear to ear, and
defect. And then, 3) Soviet Olympic
athletes may not be so hOt this year.
It lsn'tuntUJune 2thattheSovlet
Olympic delegation needs to d~
~

clare Itself definitively In the
Games. And the presu:nptlon, of
course, Is that the Soviet Union will
Indeed send Its athletes to Los
Angeles, and that they wtll do well .
And why shouldn't they? No
Strasbourg goose Intended to yield
tole gras suitable for royal tables
was ever force-fed more roplously,
or more caretully, than the Soviet
athlete. If he does not win the gold
medal, or srore
up there, II Is

simply a failure of Russian biology.
Perhaps the next cultural exchange
program sponsored by tpe Soviet
Union will call for stud arrangements betwel!n prize· winning
Amerl~an athletes and hearty
Soviet girls. Sen. Walter Mondale
wtll rome out for It, In the spllit of
International Intercourse.
Soon after the Korean airliner
Incident (remember?) The Los
Angeles Times' Robert Gillette
published a story reporting on the
otficlal Soviet press' warnings to Its
athletesaboutllfelnLosAngeles. Is
It a "City of Angels or of Hell?" one
Soviet paper asked rhetorically.
The Soviets are warning not only
about danger In the streets, but
about the extra danger resulting
from the Reagan administration's
fomenting of "anti·Sovlet . hysteria." The pollee chief of Los
Angeles, whose mayor has been
black for a number of years, Is
desclibed In the Soviet trade union
newspaper under the headline,
"Daryl Gates Blusters.'' And the

question Is asked, "Will he provide
seculity for Olympians In Los
Angeles?" How rould he be ex·
peeled todoso, the Soviet periodical
goes on, given that he Is a rabid
antl · communlst "mournfully
known for his savage replisals
against blacks."
So the selious folks 1n Los
Angelesarewondelingwhetherthe
Soviet Union Is preparing to yank
Its athletes. Blither spirits, perhaps
less concerned about what the
absence of Soviet bionic men would
do to The Games, are otherwise,
and more healthlly, engaged. Lewis
Van Gelder, a journalist, published
a rolumn In Los Angeles magazine,
"The Magazine of Southern Callfor·
nla," giving a "translation" (a
spoof) of a Soviet article surveying
the Callfomia·Amelican scene, and
warning Soviet athletes what they
should expect In traveling to
America. "Such a hazardous unde!'·
taking will not be-as the Amert·
cans say-· a piece of Coke.' "
I like that. As also I like the

reference to the well··dcii!~th
proclivities of America tO
mas5acres. The "tranalatlon"b
trates:· "Vast Interior porttOna ot
the U.S.A., as Is well documented,
were taken outright from defense.
less Indian tribes In a series of
bloody massacres during the late
19th and 20th ,_turles Ma
~..,
·
ny
gunsllnglng western 'heroes' such',
as Alfred ('Wild Bill') Hitchcock
and John Wayne are still revered by
American schoolchildren and gloli- '
fled In Hollywood fllrn4 ~ the!
lit
I
r '
0 . In hooting nd •
exp s
s
a
sea ping'
entire villages."
The trouble with clitlclzlng thai :
kind of thing Is that, really, one cwl
litlclze
I
·
never c
as excess ve any •
attempted parody of Soviet polem·
lcs. In there such a thing? Well, you
can ham It up. Los Angeles
magazine goes on, "The 'gold'
state, as Its residents sardonically
refer to this bastion of poverty and
unemployment, has become a
magnet tor crtmlnals, sexual devlants and other assorted mlsti!J!
from the eastern ,territories. The
capital city of Calltornla Ia San ·
Diego, site of the Infamous 'Alamo,' . where western outlaws Davey;
Crocker and Pat Boone were killed
In a gun battle with Mexican
autholitles ... "Whoa!"
Too much? But feel the ferrous
spinal rolurnn. These are words no
Soviet athlete rom,tng to America ·
would read and dismiss. '1'he loved
ones you are leaving behind," the
article roncludes, "eagerly awalt
your swift return. We at the KGB
stand Inseparably with them In
rountlng the hours until you are
with us again." And the arctic air
blows over the whole enterprise In
Los Angeles and the smog and the ,
heat and the damp scurry ott,
chased away by the glacial airs of
Gulag.

Wolf). By day, he Is a doctor at the
National Hospital In Tegucigalpa.
By night, he Is an assassin for ELA,
the Spanish acronym for Anti·
Communist Combat Army.
The ELA Is a relatively new
death squad,- founded In 1979.
Unlike Its counterparts In Guatem·
ala, El Salvador and Argentina, the
ELA Is not made up plimartly of
paramilitary security forces, ac·
rordlng to El Lobo.
. Perhaps It was his amateur
status that made El Lobo Indiscreet
enough to brag to a Yankee
reporter: "We are affiliated and In
contact with similar groups In other
countries."
The ELA had close ties, he said,
with the Maxlmlllano Hernandez

Martinez Bligade In El Salvador.
This Is the group that recently
slaughtered nine members of a
peasant cooperative, Including two
pregnant women, as part of a
stepped· up campaign of terror.
Human rights groups estimate
that 40,(XX) people have died In El
Salvad9r since 1!9l; about half of
those were civilians wbo were
suspected of leftist leanings and
were murdered by the death
squads.
El Lobo expressed admiration tor
the Salvadoran death squad and the
general whose name It took. Gen.
Hernandez was a Salvadoran dicta·
tor who ordered the massacre of an
estimated :rl,IXXJ Indians and peasants after a communlst·backed

•

The report of the President's
Commission on Hunger Is expected
to be released an} day now and
even gees beyond my earlier
predictions. Aerordlng to advance
leaks publicized by the press, they
wtll recommend that government·
aid to the poor he cut back. Hunger,
they say, Is ron fined to the chronic
poor, the mentally 111 and lmmi·
grants. As these three classes have
notoriously poor voting records, It Is
safe to assume that well·fed
gentlen;ten on the commission felt
that many could starve between
now and the November election
without hurting the Republican
candidate.
It Is astonl~hg the number of
political glm cks the Reagan
forces can co e up with In order to
ronvlnee the American people that
the reelection of Ronald Reagan In
1984 Is Inevitable. Tell the people
often enough and they may come to
believe lt. During the last segment
In 1983 of the popular talk show,
Nlghtllne, Jimmy the Greek was a
guest to give his predictions on 1984.
In case you don't know who Jimmy
the Greek Is, he Is a widely touted
oddsmaker for sporting events who
usually confines his predictions to
~ horse racing, boxing, wrestling and
similar events. Not so on Nlghtllne.
He predicted that Ronald Reagan
will be a 4-1 favolite Iii the
presidential horse rare that will be
run Nov. 6. I suggest that Jimmy
study the administration of Thomas
Dewey who, aerordlng to a Chicago
newspaper, w~ elected president
·1n 1.984. Jimmy the Greek was only
the first who will use tree television
time to add to the Reagan myth. If
Jimmy will give me that kind of
odds, I am wllllnlt to bet my usual
case of Budweiser!
'
. Just In case Jimmy Is rtght, here
Is what you will have · to · look
forward to tor the next five years.
You will not only have the regular
government 'by the rich tor the rich

even $2 TRILLION I don't know
unless they are following the mall
order philosophy that a $1.99 looks
smaller In plint than $2. The
defense budget for 19841s already at
$250 billion.
According to budget documents
quoted ·by The Boston Globe the
succeeding four years defense
plans call for: 1~. $322.9 billion;
1986, $357.7 billion; 1987, $389.4
billion; 1988, $425.5 and $1989, $464.3
billion. The defense department
boys will never go down In history
as the Pentagon Pikers. The entire
national debt Is now less than $1.5
tlilllon.
Everyone believes In an adequate
defense but projections like the
above are ridiculous. By even

Tech to go 2·12 on thf' sea&lt;;On. Thf'
Bearcals a r~ wlnlc.,s In fou r
confere nce gam&lt;'s. Cincinna ti
m issed its fi rs t 10 shots in th e fi rst
half and thP first eight In the second
ha lf a nd fin ished tht· game with a .10
percent shooting a vPrage. Mark
Dorrl' topped thf' Bearcats with 20
point s.
"ThPrf' Is nowa y wf'ca n shool tha t
poorly and lx· in a ny gamf'." said
Cinci nna ti Coach Tony Ya tes.
" Over the lo ng h;, ul. vou can 't shoot
that badly and win ."

the shon end of a 67-66 decision.
Cleveland State, ~ 7 for the season
and ().2 In the Associa tion of
Mld·Cont lnent Unlverslllcs, was led
by Dave Youda th with 20 points.
"It' s tough . to lose so close .
Eastern Illinois Is a pretty good
team and we're not quite good
enough yet to gel those close 'W's.
It's a struggle for us. We have 10
scrap and st ruggle just to stay
€'\len," said Cleveland Sta te Coach
Kevin Mackey .
Clnclnnall dropped a 70.53 Metro
Confe rence decision to Virginia

fiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~!i_!!i!iii!!!!;!ii!!i!~~-----·

played
well." In Ohio college basket ·
Elsewhere
ball. Dayton fell to6-5 by loslng94-93

CORRECTION!

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points. Roosevelt Chapman scored
31 and Ed Young 28 for Dayton.
The lead In the Easte rn Illinois·
Cleveland State game changed
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uprising In the 1930s.
"He handled communists the
light way," said E!Lobo." He killed
every one he caught."
El Lobo gave this aerount of the
International fraternity of death
squads: "We go tp annual ronteren·
ces. I went to last year's. It was In
Buenos Aires. The Triple A put It
on."
He was not referring to an
automobile association, but to the
Argentine Antl·Communlst AI·
llanee. This Is a clandestine roofed· .
eratlon of pollee, military and
paramilitary goons responsible for
thousands of mUrders and other
disappearances during the "dirty
war" of the 1970s.

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,.

Housing, hunger, EMP_____Law_e_u_w_in....:...:..ge_u
The coldest holiday season In
almost a century has been partlcu·
larly rough on those who are always
hurt most by adversity - the poor.
This year there are more hungry
and homeless than ever before with
two mUllon homeless and more
than :rl million living below the
poverty level. The present poor do
nothaveeventhesemblanceofhelp
from a sympathetic government.
I recommend that everyone especially those sitting on their
well·cushloned bottoms In their
well·heated homes - read the
article on the homeless In the Jan. 2
Issue of Newsweek. They will find
out, regardless of the government's
so-called largesse with the $200
mUllon for housing, that poor
families are allowed $66 per month
for rent, a sum that would not
provide room In a pigpen In most
cities. Then compare the $200
mUllon with $42.8 BILUON subsidy
which the rich and middle class
receive In the form of home
mortgage tax deductions. They will
read that due to the revitalization of
the . cities In the '70s bulldlngs
housing single-room occupants and
low rost apartments were torn
down and replaced with high rise
condominiums from which the poor '
were excluded. Even If the poor
were allowed an adequate sum for
rent, the housing Isn't there any
more. They wtil I;ead that New
York City, In making an extraordl.
nary effort to find housing for their
homeless, Is being ripped oft by
landlords and ho~lng personal Into
paying $1,400 a month per f;lmlly
and $24 per night for · single
occupants In squalid welfare hotels.
Most states - with the notable
exception of Arizona - and most
cities are doing the best. they can
with the help of churches and
charltJes but that help Is Inadequate
In this roldest winter In years. In
Arizona, they simply sic the pollee
dogs on you If you are homeless and
hungry. Just sub!f_a~f.Ul..roUIIQJL
from $42.8 b!lliOn and you will see
that being well oft pays!

VICtOrieS Wednesday

r~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Death squads_________~la: : :.ck:. :. A.: . :nde: :.: : . .: rso: : :. :n
WASIDNGTON - Beh!Jid the
violence In Latin America are not
only left·wlng guerrillas but light·
wing assassins who belong to death
squads. They have cast a dark
specter over the peace proceSs.
I have learned there's an lnterna·
tiona! league of death squads,
which operate from Mexlro to
Argentina. Ordinarily, they math·
taln the strictest secrecy about their
operations. But through a contact In
the Honduras secret pollee, my
associate Jon Lee Anderson ar·
ranged a face-to-face Interview In
Honduras with an outspoken leader
and founder of the Honduran death
squad.
He Is a thin, falr·halred man In his
30s, whom I wtll call El Lobo (The

Page- 3

•

•

field goal tlies and shot 56 percent
for the game.
Ma rvin Robinson a nd Larry
Robbins each srored 19 for. the Flashes. David Jenkins ' 21 paced
Bowling Green.
"We had a nice game offensively
because of where we were getting
our shots. We were trying to be a
little more selective with our shol
selection," said Kent State Coach
Jim McDonald. On the other hand,
his Bowling Green counterpart .
J ohn Welner1, said he "would be
hard pressed to find someone who

a 79-69 deficit with less than two
minutes lett io tie' the game at79-79
on Larry Jones' layup with 22
seconds left . Ball State got one more
chance to tle·the game, but a final
shot by John James was off the
mark.
James Mitchell srored 18 and
Boldon 16 for Central Michigan .
Chris Shelton and Marcus Lacey of
Ball State tallied 23 points a piece.
" II was a heck of a comeback lo
gel that.close and tie It ," Ball State
Coach AI Brown said, but he added
that lack of consistency was
responsible for the 10.polnl deficit In
the first place.
Vlnee Glles and Percy Cooper,
with 20polnts apiece, did most orthe
damage for Eastern Michigan
against Northern Illinois. The
Huronsoutsrored the Huskies 1741n
the final 4:13. Tim Dillon was
Non hem Illinois' o:lly double· figure
srorer with 16.
Kent State hit on 13 of its first 16
field goal attempt s against Bowling
Green to win Its first conference
game of the season. The Flashes
made 67 percent of their flrst ·half

The Daily Sentinel

·

Ohio

MAC

Redskins, Bobcats capture

.

------------------------------~------------------------------------------------~~:~:Mb~~~~:":,~1~2,~1~~~ ,
The Daily Sentinel

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communications In America. In 10·
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�•

Page

4_ The Daily Sentinel

Ohio ..

~outhem

Mee~ the Meigs Maraud~rs

at Hannan· Trace
• top SVAC cage encounter
In
By SCO'IT WOLFE
A full slate of area high school
basketball action Is scheduled this
weekend, Including a full card of
Southe~ Valley Athletic Conference games that sends NorthGallla
to Eastern, Southern to Hannan
Trace, and matches Southwestern
against Kyger Creek .
Both Meigs County Schools,
Southern and Eastern, face crossriver foes on Saturday In nonleague affairs. Saturday, Southern
hosts Ravenswood In the first
meeting between those schools,
while Eastern hosts Wahama.
In last week's case action Southem blasted North Gallla 81-51,
Hannan Trace slipped past Kyger
Creek 44-36, and Southwestern
outlasted Eastern 5144.
SVAC headliner
This week's SVAC headliner
matches two unbeatens Inside loop
play as the Southern Tornadoes
Invade Mercerville for a head-on
clash with the Hannan Trace
Wildcats. Both clubs boast 4-0
records In the first round of loop
play. Overall, Coach Mike Jenkins'
Wildcats are 8-2 while Southern
·remains unbeaten In all games, 9-0.
Currently, Hannan Trace plays
!lie underdog team as the stateranked Tornadoes, now lOth In
ohto's AP poll, have repelled every
opponent, regardless of size or
strength so far this season.
•In Southern's victory over North
Gallla last week, senior shooting
aee Rod Littlefield fabricated a
spectacular shooting performance
that single handedly gunned down
the Pirates, 81-51. Littlefield canned
18. of 20 field goal attempts for an
unheard of !Xl percent shooting
average, and sank five of seven at
the foul circles.
, Littlefield's offensive efforts lead
the Tornadoes with an outstanding
scoring average as well as a
sparkling floor game. Littlefield Is
averaging 25·. points a game now,
while teammate Dennls Teaford
averages 11.5.
The winner of Friday's game
would have a stronghold on this
year's league championship drive,
however, a rematch In the final
league game of the season could
make an Interesting conclusion to

the 1983-84 seasqn.
Both clubs are strong defensively, limiting their opposition to
under 50 points a game. Offensively, Southern holds the sconng
edge by nearly 14 points; although
Southern's fast break against HT's
successful patten) offense could be
the result of those statistics.
Defensively, Southern has allowed 436 points In nlne games for a
48.8 cUp per game. Hannan Trace
has given up 426 points In 10 games
for a 42.6 average. On the offensive
side of things Southern has become
dominant among area teams,
scortng 565 points for a 62.7 average
and HT has scored 492 points for a
49.2 average.
One key to both clubs' success Is
their outstanding shooting pe~n­
tages which are only a few points
apart. Southern has canned 218 of
445 attempts for a very warm 49
percent, while Hannan Trace has
hit 213 of 481 for 44 percent from the
field.
A key In Friday's game could be
between Southern's slight advantage In size with Dennis Teaford
under the buckel, and Hannan
Trace's tremendous quickness.
Although not scoring a considerable amount of points this season,
Wade Connolly has contl1buted
greatly to Southern's success with
his outstanding defensive abilities
and quickness. O.nnolly has earned
much praise around the league for
his defensive efforts.
Hannan Trace's line-up Includes
players with double-figure averages. Flve-10 senior Jeff Barnes
owns a 15.2 average with 152 points,
while another 5-10 senior Rob
Brumfield owns a 12.5 mark with
125 points this season. Following In
line are 5-6 sophomore Deke Barnes
with a 7.3 average, Alan Bailey a 7.0
mark, Billy Swain 6-3, Steve Stitt 1.5
and Rick Randolph a three point
mark.
Eagles-Pirates
In another SVAC game, Eastern
hopes to untrack Its offensive
efforts with a victory overt he North
Gallla Pirates. Eastern staged a
late game comeback last week
against Southwestern but Its bldfell
short, 5144. Eastern has played
well at times but needs just a little

boost to get over the hump for a
better last half of the season.
According to team statistics
Eastern and North Gallla are near
equal.
Eastern has scored 382 points In
nlne games, Is 04 In the league, 1-8
overall, and averages 43 points a
game. North Gallla Is 2-7 overall
and has scored 422 points for a 52.8 .
average. Defensively, Eastern has
given up 4TI points for a 53 point
average, while North GaUia's
defense Is somewhat looser, allowIng 502 points for a 62.7 average.
Eastern has canned 149 of 54 field
goal attempts for a 32 percent
shooting percentage, while North
GaUia has netted 155of 414 attempts
for a 37 percent clip.
Eastern's Jim Newell leads his
team with a 10.6average, scol1ng96
points on the year. Troy Guthl1e Is
next In line with a 9.1 mark.
North Gallla Is led In scoring by
6-0 E11c Penick, who has 13.6
mark as the lone Pirate double
figure scorer. Anthony Blackburn,
a 5-6 guard has an 8.25 average,
Larry Lee7.5, JackieGlassbum4.4,
Wayne Diddle 6.5, and Bnan
Hawks, Thurman Holiday, and Tim
Smith alf with 3.6 averages. A
newcomer to the Pirate Itne-up Is
center Aaron Beach, who made his
debut last week against Southern.
He scored four points and grabbed
nlne rebounds for the Pirates and
should be a threat as the· seasn
progresses.
KC.SW
In Friday's other loop game, · It
will be the lof1ller player vs. the
former coach as Kyger Creek
travels to Southwestern. Keith
Carter, who played for Lloyd Myers
In the late 00s, will take his Bobcats
to Southwestern. Two weeks ago, In
the consolation game of the Gallla
County Holiday Tournament, the
Bobcats dumped Southwestern,
65-42.
In 10 games, KC Is averaging 62
points per_game whlle permitting
48.2 points. Southwestenr has been
averaging 48.6 points on offense and
52.3 on defense. The Bobcats are led
offensively by junlor guard chuck
Vogel and senior center J. D.
Bradbury. I:toger Wells Is the
Highlanders' big offensive gun.

a

Ohio Sportlight

Knights oWn 31 game streak

••

•

Meigs hosts Falcons Friday
Meigs at 3-6 Is two games away
from fifth place Federal Hocking,
whom the Marauders were to play
last Tuesday but game was post-

With first division visions very
much In sight, the Meigs Marauders host Miller Friday at the Larry
Morlison Gymnasium.

Three share lead
·in Desert.Classic
PALM SPRINGS, Callt. (AP) Bruce Lietzke stood on the practice_
tee at Eldorado Country Club, took
his first swlngofthectay- a little nip
with a wedge - then clutched his
chest.
.
"I thought I was having a heart
attack," he said.
"Then I realized It was the same
kind of pain I've had before on
numerous occasions - a pulled
muscle.Butanytlmeyougetachest

pain, the first thing you think Is
'heart attack'.
"I've pretty well ruled that out .
but I think I'm going to a hospital to
have It checked out," he said after
shooting a 5-!IJider-par 67, his first
competitive round In this country In
five months and an effort that was a
single stroke off the first round lead
In the five-day, 90-hole Bob Hope
Desert Classic.
Fonner PGA champion John
Mahaffey, rookie Willie Wood and
Russ Cochran, a left -bander who
won two events In the Tournament
Players Series last season, shared
the top spot with 66s.
Mahaffey, like Lietzke, played at
Eloorado. Wood played without a
bogey at La Quinta and Cochran
spiced his effort at Indian Wells with
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) aneagle-3.
Dan Tumey's 16 points · led 13
In addition to Lietzke, thegroupat
Marshall scorers as the Thundering
Included Johnny Miller, Curt
Herd trounced VMI 79-53 ·In South- lit
Byrum, Ronnie Black and Bobby I
em Conference basketball actlon.
Wadkins. Black and Byrum played
The Herd led by as many, as 33 at Indian Wells. Wadkins at La
points, at TI-44 with 5:45 left Quinta and MU!er, a winner of his
Wednesday night, and played much last two starts, was at Bermuda
of the game with backup players. Dunes.
Thirteen of Marshall's 14 players
The format requires the pros to
scored, three of them In double play Ory! round on each of four desert
figures.
courses, eaclj. day with a different
Marshall jumped to a 15-2lead at set of amateur partners, before the
13: 37 and toyed with VMI the field Is cut for the pros-only windup
remainder of the game, removing Sunday at Bermuda Dunes.
most of Its starters for the ftnallO
The blg group at 68 was headed by
minutes of the first half. Marshall PGA champion Hal Sutton, Fuzzy
led 31-25 at halftime.
Zoeller and Craig Stadler, all of
VMJ gave up 41 turnovers and 25 whom played at La Quinta.
steals, while Marshall surrendered
Defending champion Keith Ferjust 18 and seven, resl)ectlvely:
gus - who tiad former ·President
Behind D_an 1'=€Y· David Wade Gerald Ford, House Speaker Tip
scored 13 points and grabbed five O'Neill and tile host comedian as his
rebounds and Sam Ervin scored 10 amateur team - shot 71 at La
points. The Herd Improved to 1~ Quinta. Ford, Hope and O'Neill. all
overall and 2-11n thP conference.
with·IS handicaps, had a team effort
Gay Elinore led VMI with 18 of66.
points and Cedrlck Wlnscontl1buted

Marshall tops

VMI, 79-53

poned due to bad weather.
Miller sports a G-11 overall and 0-9
TVC record. they were defeated by
the Marauders 49-33 earlier In the
year. The teams were tied at 17 at
the halt, but Meigs went on a torrid
third period tear to put It away.
Only one of five scheduled TVC
games took place Tuesday when
Alexander 11sked the ride to VInton
County and It paid Off with a 58-54
win.
The Meigs-Federal Hocking date
Is not deflnltely set, but It appears
that game will ,be played In the
season's final week. Tlimblewas to
play Its game last nlght at WeUston,
Nelsonvllle-York will play Miller
J an. 21, and Belpre goes to Warren
on Feb. 14.
Coach Greg Drummer's Marauders, tired of falllng short In the final
moments, blitzed Wellston In the
fourth period to post a 73-53 win In
their last outing.
The Meigs reserves, tied for first
place with Belpre and Warren at
7-2, take on. a Mlller nve that gave
them all they could htllldle In their
first meeting.
Coach Mlck Childs' charges
posted a narrow 42-40wln at Mlller.
The little Falcons have fallen on
hard Urnes since with only a 1-8
slatr.

-;=========::::;

Professional Counseling
, and ·
Family SeNices

The

Daijr Sentinel

(U8P811ii-. . l
A Olvbtloo II Mollt.....Ua, loc.

modif ications . Si x

215ft. Sl&gt;co nd c lass po!II,Jt:t" paid at Po-

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Wl'llslon

MEIGS FROSH - The Melp Marauder
freshman ~~quad, shown above, has nan off nine
lltral..- wins a&amp;ainllt no lo8iie8. No team has come
within 10 points ol 11118 talented crew. Team members
Include, first row,left to rl .... Jeff Nelson, Phil King,

.7

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row, Chip Werry, Brian Tannehill, Marty CUne, Greg
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row, Steve MW18er, Jesse Howard. ScoU PoweU, Huey
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Harrlson.

Indians' starting pitching set
CLEVELAND tAPi-Cleveland
Indians' Manager Pat Corrales Is
convinced his starting pitching staff
Is just about set. He's not too
convinced about his bullpen.
"I lhlnk our starters are In pretty
good shape," Corrales said. " I've
talked to Rick Sutcliffe and It sounds
like he'll sign 11~th us. We also have
Neal Heaton, Bert Blyleven and
Rick Behenna. If we re-sign Lary
Sorensen, then we'll have five
starters. "
Sutcliffe previously asked to be
traded, but seems headed back to
the Indians. Sorensen went through
the free agent draft and was picked
by several teams, but the Indians
have shown as much Interest In him
as anybody.
The left-handed Heaton moved
Into Cleveland's starting rotation
last year, while Behenna joined the
team tn September from Atlanta
and went 0-2 with a 4.15 earned run
average.
The veteran Blyleven came back

:n

Trimble ....
.. ...: .. !9
:12 :11-102
WoiL•Ion ....... .. .
.. .... t6 I~ 13 :II- 64
fteRen'(' M.'Ort' - T'rtmbl(' 47 W('ll!iilon :t'l.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 14 .
RAVINSWOOD vs. SOUTHERN

'

~('\f!O,

same ease and dominance she
dlsplayro 0 ~ tennis courts aU over
the world , tast year, Martina
Navr&lt;!tUovawas a runaway winner
as the 1983A~- &gt;elatedPressFemale
Athlete of the {ear.
star
A naltvet f Cz.echoslovakla who Crockett, college
becaJVe an rnerlcan citizen In 1981. Chery!Mlllero!SouthemCalltornta
Navl'fiWOV garnered 82 votes In and golfer JoAnne Carner received
natloh~~ balloting of sports wrt· . one vote each.
.ters nd broadc '!Siers announ~
capturtngTheAPMaleAthleteor
\odaJ
tr~~k
star Mary Decker, the . the Year award on Tuesday was
Jo
I
track.and field star Carl Lewis.

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THIS WlEK'S GAMES
FRIDAY, JANUARY 13
· '' ·' MILLER v•..·&lt;1-MEIGS
'

1;.1 )

\\'. I. P. OP
10 () 124 ft
• 2 f.47 561

Trlrnhlf•

TRIMBLE (11121

, JOiN KEITH CONNORS AN.DDAVE HARRIS
FOR THE HIGH SCHOOL GAME OF THE WEEK
'ON 92 'FM, WMPO-FM, MIDDLEPORT .

w;

11'\T OSL\' 1

TEAM

1-toopl'f 4.0.K: Sayt&gt;rs

bas~etball

-1

~'ffl~

o 11 ,nm

M ll lf'f

Trimble rips Wellston

1982 winner, was a distant second
with 44 votes.
Finishing third was Tamara
McKinney, a downhill skier, who
had six votes. Distance runner
Grete Waltz of Norway reo:-elvelrtwo
votes, while volleyball •·ce Rita

7
l
.1
1
.!

Vlnl on c,,unt\

Intermission.
The Dltnl trailed by 11 points,
45-34, after an Alford free throw with
12:58 to play In the final pedod, but
1Uinols charged baCk with 13
consecutive points. Altenberger led
the streak with six points on three
loqg jumpers and Efrem Winters
contributed five points.
Franz could have produced a
victorywlthout theextrapenod, but
he missed the first of a pair of free
throWs with 14 seconds remaining.
He then made the second attempt.
glvtng.Indlana a 61-59 edge. Allen·
berger, then found the range from
about 19feet to force the overtime.
The loss gave .Illlnols a 11-2 mark
overall and put the Jlllnl at 2-1 In
league play. ·

By quari&lt;"":

2 f.41 ll!l

J&lt; 2~~29
1 1 llJ\ &gt;l,

f'• 'lk'r .:~ l l lr.ol'ki n ~

Navr.a Jilova, AP's top woman athlete

OFF

sealing
arou11d
'tavBI:odes and kitetM!n sinks.

)

BLOOMINGT9N, Ind. !API Freshman guard steve Alford
scored a coli~ career-high 29
points, including six on free throws
In overt lrne, andsenlorguardChuck
Franz had a career-high 20 as
Indiana upset ninth-ranked Illinois
73-68 Wednesday night In a Big Ten
basketball game.
Alford, who made 15 of 16 free
throws. gave Indiana a 63-61lead by
making both l!llds of a one-and-one
with '2: 58 to play In the overtime.
Bruce Douglas' bld to tie with a
jumper was wide and Mike Glomi
grabbed the rebound for Indiana .
The Hoosiers then patiently held
the ball, nearly losing It once. to
Illinois' Quinn Richardson. Then.
with 1: 28left, Glomi scored to put
Indiana up by four. Doug Allen ·
berger, who Jed the Illlnl with 21
points, sput a pair of free throws.
Indiana Coach Bob Knight had
only eight players available due to
Illness and lnluries, but the Hoosiers
scored their seventh consecutive
victory, climbing to 2-0 In confer·
ence play and 9-3 for the season.
The 6-foot-2 Franz, who scored
only 56 points In Umlted duty In his
first three · l!l!asons at Indiana.
connectl!(loaa 3-polnt play with four
seconds In tbe first halt to give the
Hoosli
a1 31-26 lead at the

4,0%

125 volts. IMOC·6C~

.•

:"1•) \' IJfk

IU upsets Illini

'

Publis hed r very ilrernoon, Monday
lllrou~h F r ida y. tlll!'oun Sii'O('i, by liM'
Ohio Vall&lt;')' Publl o hlo~ Company · Mul ·
!I media, Inc., Poi1M'roy, Ohio 4:1769. 992·

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'

111860)

dues In ~IICrlflcf end often pain - and keep looking for the ultimate
reward, lnductlon Into baaeball's Hall of Fame.
For sqme, the super great, the WUUe Mays and Hank Aarons, the call
comes qulck,ly and on time. Others, such as Hoyt Wilhelm, Enos (Country)
.Slaughter, PhU R~to and Pee Wee Reeseperkupthelrearseachyearonly
to receive~ slkince. Then there are the tragic ones for whom the bell
never tolla 1111· 1
Hannoit' l!l;ri!w, the onetime smsll town kid trom IdahO who could
knock thebaU a t!alntry mile but was said to "throw like a girl," was sitting
with his wife by the telephone lnOnlario, Ore., when he got the word that he
was a member fbaseball'sHall o!Fameclassof '84.
"I hod been lrifpnnetl that I was among the leading candidates," he said.
"So I walt~ f_PPr tpe phone to ring. NowordJcanexpressmy feelings. If! had
to walt 40 yeirj, Jl_ wu worth If."
Don Drysdale, the tall, handsomerlght-handl;rofthe Dodgers, was aware
that hew as high In thebaUottngbut refused tobeUeve the honor would flnally
come his way atter being passed over nlne times.
So he went out and played golf with his buddies, Sandy Koufax and Duke
Snider. at ~Mirage, Call!.
"I guess I wouldn't let myself believe It," he said. "I pushed It out of my
mind. Maybe It's 81Jperslltlon." He had to Interrupt his golf game to take the
Important message.
"First thing Idldwas teU my rnomandpop," hesald. "Afewtearsflowed.
11 was a scene you couldn't put whipped cream on to make It better."
The third of the 1984 selectees, slick-fielding Luis Aparicio, was doing a
baseball television commentary In Valencia, Venezuela. Hlsbossrefusedto
call him to the Pl10ne"Even when I Impressed on him the Importance of my message, the
manager said he couldn't take Luis away from the microphone," said Jack
Lang, secretary of the Baseball Writers Association of America .
So Aparicio, despite strong Hall of Fame pressure, could not be lured to
Wednesday's formal press conference In New York.
So It's on to Cooperstown, N. Y., for slugger Killebrew, flreballer Drysdale
and flashy ApariCio- called by Commissioner Bowie Kuhnoneofthe "most
versatile classes ever- the perfect mix."
The selection ended a long drought for "glovernen" and Kuhn suggested lt
might herald a new look for defensive players. The last shortstop to be
selected was ~rnle Banks In 1978 and befo!'l' that Lou Boudreau In 1970.
The major complaint against the Hall of Fame has been that It tends to
favor "glamour guys" -home run hitters and shutout pitchers.
Killebrew and Drysdale nt neatly Into these categories. Only the great
Babe Ruth hit more home runs In the American League than Killebrew. now
a plumplsh, belding, gray-haired man of 47, who hit 573. Drysdale, 6-foot-6,
sun-baked Californian, teamed with lefly Sandy Koufax as the mound
terrors of the'Doclgt!nlln the 1950s and 196ls.
It was another year of disappointment for Hoyt Wilhelm, the renowned
knuckleballer who pitched l,(T10 games In a 21-year career with a variety of
clubs In both leagues, starting with the old New York Giants. He missed by
only 38 votes In 1983 and 13 votes this time.
While he took the news sportlngly, the 60-year-old Wilhelm must have
begun to feel theblttemessofotherbaaeball men whose records seem to get
lost In the passing of Ill!! years.
Country Slaughter 18 one of them . Twenty years after he became eligible,
the old flrehonieoftheCardtnals, the PeteRoseofhls 1\me. lsstlll waiting for
the phone to ring. '
"Nobody gave Ute game more than I did." he says. " I batted .:m for 19
years. I plaYed hard.l put statistics In the books. But the kids voting today
· never saw me play.
"I'm ellgjble this year to be picked by the Veterans Committee. U I'm
going tobeelectedlothe Hall of Fame, I want It while !'maUve."

LEEPO*EIL
8-4, Soph. Center

RICK WISE
~~. Soph. Guard

MIKE CHANCEY
&amp;-3, Soph. Forward

,FOR MEN
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COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP) enrollment Umlt . Of their first 10 28-game homewtnntngstreak ~ROO Lltilefleldhlt 18of00tihotsand
. Toledo St.Francis' defending Class tl1umphs, eight came against Class
AAA state tournament champions AAA squads. Steve Martenet, a 6-6 scored 41 points for RacllleSouthem
own the longest current wlnnlng senior postman, leads Malabar with in a vi~ over North GaDia. It
marked the first tbne In Southem
streak of 31 games In Ohio boys high 20.2 points and 12 rebounds·a start.
school basketbalL
Some farnlliar names are crop- Coach.Carl WoUe's 21-year coadlThe Knights have started this ping up at Middletown and Hamil- lng C8l'l!el' that a playencored 40111'
winter with -10 straight victories ton. Crts Carter, the brother of the more points for hbn. Li*ilefleld, a
after postln~a 21-0 season In 1983-84 Indiana Pacers' Butch Carter, Is a HI senior, Is averaging 26 poilU
and bringing Toledo schools their 1,000-polnt career scorer as a 6-2 this season.
Coaching milestones: nl victofirst state boys basketball crown.
senior for the Middles. Norm
ries - Rick Brook at Sebring
Todd Mitchell. a &amp;-foot -6 senior Grevey, a &amp;-foot sophomore, Is the
McKinley and Rich Voters at Bay
center already committed to fourth brother to play for Hamilton
Vlllage ·Bay. 100 victories- Kevin
Purdue University, has helped schools. His most famous brother Is
McGlaughlin at MUier City.
St. Francis to Its successful start.
Kevin Grevey, now playtngwlth the
1,()()().polnt career scorers: Mike
Around Ohio: Scott Tedder, the Milwaukee Bucks.
Bobo, Albany Alexander; Mark 11. .
only returning' starter from ColUJnCincinnati PrtnceiOI\, the Division
VMI fell to4-7 overall and1-21n the
Cochenour, Beaver Eastern; and
bus Whitehall's 1983 AP state poll I state football playoff champion,
conference.
Denlse
Wllllams,
VIncent
Warren.
champions, scored a career-high 40 broke a 28-game losing spell In
points in a victory against ChUii- basketbalL by defeating Fairfield
cothe. He's a 6-1 senior playing 65-59. Princeton won despite having
Inside and outside for the 11-0Rams. three players out for disciplinary
Stan Klrnbrou;;!:, a &amp;-foot point reasons.
guard, has broken Clark Kellogg's
Two long winning streaks have
single-game regular-season scoring ended In Trumbull County. Warren
record. Kimbrough collected 46 Western Reserve had won 46
GOLF
FOOO'BAU
points In the school's 104-55 rout of regular- ~ason games before falling
PALM SPRINGS, Callt. (AP)NE\Y. YORK (AP) -Joe ThelsKent Rooseveit .'St.Joseph Is aver- to Austintown Fitch 48-46. Kinsman
aging 90 points per gam!&gt;, reaching Badger snapped Warren Cham- John Mahat.ey blrdled four of his mann, quarterback of the Super
Bowl-bound Washington Redskins,
the century mark four tlrnl'S this pion· s girls' 19-game victory stl1ng. first six holes and coasted to a
&amp;-under-par
66
and
a
share
of
the
was named the National Football
Two coaches, each with more
season.
firstround
lead
In
the
$400,000
Bob
League's Most Valuable Player by
Charlie Huggins Is up to his old . than 200 career victories and state
Hope
Desert
Golf
Classic.
the Pro Football Writers of
coaching tricks. After quitting as tournament experience, have come
Mahaffey
·was
tied
with
rookie
·
America.
Gnadenhutte n Indian Valley out of retlrement. Alan Bums Is
Theismann received 210 of the
South's coach a few years ago, back at Boardman and Bob Willie Wood, who played at La
Quinta,
and
Russ
Cochran,
who
votes
cast. Teammate John Riggins
Dawson,
former
Wellsvllle
mentor,
Huggins has Berlin Hiland rolllng
with a 7-1 start. Huggins. who had at East LiverpooL Both were out of posted an eagle 3 In his effort at was his closest competitor, collectIndian Wells.
Ing 72 votes:
state tournament champions at coaching three seasons.
Strasburg and Indian Valley South,
Heath's boys are 10-0 for the first r----------..,..~------------~
time since the school opened In 1961.
Is in his second year at Hiland.
Mansfield Malabar, playing Its Jennifer Grandstllff of Heath has
toughest schedule In history, has Its scored 31 or more points In the last
best-ever start of 10-0. The Falcons, seven games. The 5-7 senl(ir
averages 34.1 points per game.
top ranked In Class AA this week,
Holgate ended Patrick Henry's
are one boy under the Class AAA

1265

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ot!io

Thursday, ~nuary 12,' 1984

from arm troubles and posted a 7-10
record and 3.91 ERA last season.
"I know Behenna was with us only
in September, but he showed me
enough to merit a chance to be a
starter," Corrales said. "Heaton
coukl be a tremendous pitcher,
whUe Sutcliffe and Blyleven have
fine records."
The Indians last year had the
second-highest earned run average
In baseball, 4.43, and only the
Callfornla Angels registered fewer
saves.leadlngtoCorrales' concerns
about relief pitching.
Because of those concerns, he
expects to take a long look at a
number of rookies during sprtng
training, which opens late next
month.
Jeff Barkley, Tom Waddell. Roy
Smith and other young pitchers in
the Indians' system could be the
beneficiaries .
"Barkley has been a pro for only
two years," said Corrales. "He's not
on the 40-man roster, but I saw him

For right deal, Ross
may remain in NFL
Ross said he had not heard from
CINCINNATI tAP I -Tight end
the
Breakers but has heard the team
Dan Ross, who Is to report to a rival
starts
camp on Jan. 20
United States Football League team
this month, may remain In the
National Football League If a deal
can be struck with the Cincinnati
Bengals, according to Ross' agent
Tom Toner.
Ross signed a futures contract
with the Boston Breakers oft he NFL
for about $1.5 million over three
years whUe playing out his option In
Cincinnati In 1983. However, the
Breakers wlll be playing In New
Orleans this sprlngandcouldusethe
money to sign other players, Toner
said. ·
·
The Breakers had planned to use
Ross, a Boston native, fora publicity
campaign there, Tonersald. He said
he believed the Breakers would
agree to negate Ross' contract now
that they've changed locations.
Toner said he had discussed
contract wlthMlke Brown, assistant
general manager of the Bengals.
NEW GAME PROO'ECfOR
Toner said the Bengals were
- The Division of Wlldllfe of the
unwilling to match Ross's USFL
Ohio Department of Natural
offer. But he said two other NFL
Resources has asslped Charles
clubs were Interested If the Bengals
H. Slon!l as the new game
agreed to trade or glveupthelrNFL
protector In Washington County .
rights to Ross.
Stone completed the Division of
"Mike Brown did Indicate to me
WUdllfe game protector training
he'd be willing to listen to whatever
school on Dec. 19 In Colwnbus.
arrangrnent might be able to be
1be fonner resident of Meigs
constructed (with another team I."
County attended Meigs High
. Toner said.
School and Hocking Technical
Toner refused to name the two
College. He wW be responslhle
NFL clubs Interested In Ross.
for enforcing wlldllfe taws and
However, The Cincinnati Enquirer
II!ISistlng with ftsh management,
reported the clubs were believed to
wlldllfe management and edubetheNewEnglandPatriotsandthe
cation prograrm.
Washington Redsklns.

pitch three times In the Florida
Instructional League. Let me tell
you somet hlng, the kid has one mean
forkball . It is a big league pitch all
the way.
"The one question about Barkley
Is If he's ready now for the majors.
He began last season at Class A
tWaterlool and finished at Class
AAA (Charleston!. It was a big
jump."
Barkley. a 23-year-old right hander, was 5-2 with nine saves and
a 2.68 ERA at Waterloo. and h£' was
3-1with a 4.63 ERA at Charleston. At
Waterloo. he struck out 6.'&gt; hitters in
37 innings; at Charll'Ston. he had 51
strtkeouts in 58 innings.
Waddell, 25. is a right -handerwho
compiled a 13-2 record with 11 saves
last year. splitting hfs time between
Class AA Savannah and Class AAA
Richmond In the Atlanta BravE'S'
farm system . The right -handed
Smith, 22, was6-8 with a 5.16ERA at
Charleston last year, but he was 7-1
in the Florida Instructional LeaguP.
Corrales also notes that veteran
Dan Splllner. who was just 2-9 with a
5.1Y7 ERA last yrar. remains
prominent in Cleveland's bullpen
plans.

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UP TO

fR IDAY thrv

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and under get a h~:S~~fan adult meal.
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t Salad Buffet!'"
World's Biggest, Bes u h 2112184. kids 12

II;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

R WINTER

8ARGAM 1&amp;.41WfES SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS 12.00
ADMISSION EVERY TIJESOAY 11.00

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(Across from the Airport)
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'

Page-6- The Doily Sentinel

.

Thunday, .lanllf!ry 12, 1~ :

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

FRlDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of DAR
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Heath
l:Jnlted Methodist Church. Guest
speaker will be Betty Clark,

Gallla County Extension Agent
who will speak on early foods .

SA1URDAY
·RUTLAND - A dance will be
held at the Rutland Civic Center
Saturday from 8 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Music wUI be by ltomlc Sounds.
Admission Is $2 a single and $3 a
couple.

POMEROY- The Meigs
County Genealogical Society will
meet at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Meigs Museum. A work seso.ton
will be held. In the event of
Inclement weather, the meeting
may be cancelled but an announcement wUI be made on
WMPOradlo.

SUNDAY
POMEROY ..., The Gabriel
Quartet will be featured at Mt.
Union Baptist Church of Carpenter Hill Road Sunday at 6: :Il
p.m.

nower arrangement, Francis FlorIst, Pomeroy; $10 gift certificate
from Powell's Super Valu, Pomeroy; a baby cup, Clark's Jewelry,
Pomeroy; $10 savings account,
contest.
. Central Trust, Middleport; threeJoshua, weighing eight pounds piece feeder set, K&amp;C Jewelers,
and 15 ounCfS and measuring 22 Pomeroy; $10glft certificate, Elber·
lnches, arrlv'ld t5:0fa.m.onJan.l feld's, Pomeroy; a meal to the
at Holzer MedlfiW Cejlter. ·
parents, Crow's FamUy RestauGrandparentaoftl!ecounty'sfirst rant, Potneroy; $15 gift certificate,
babyof1984areMr. jllldMrs. Harry Pomeroy Landmark; two Royal
Surface, Middleport, and the Iates Crown toboggans and two cases of
Bob Lynch, and ~r.,'and Mrs. Roger R.C. Cola, Royal Crown BottUng
Riebel, Long Bottom. Great· Co., Middleport; $10 gift certificate,
grandparents are Eulah Haggy, Pomeroy F1ower Shop; S5 gift
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Jess Cobb, certlftcate for baby Items, Village
Akron, and Mrs. f\1ae Lynch of Pharma~, Middleport; $10 savings
Langsville.
account, Bank One, Pomeroy; three
As winners of the 1984 derby, boxes PamiJers, Swlsher-Lohse.
Joshua and his parents wUI receive Pomeroy; case of baby formula ,
the following gifts given by Big Bend Kroger's, Pomeroy; pair baby
merchants who sponsored the shoes, Hartley Sboes, Pomeroy; $3
lli\IIUI\1 event: case of baby food, gift certificate, Fabric Shop, PomeC.K. Supermarket, Middleport; roy; large pizza, The Pizza Shack,
case of diapers, Fruth's Pharmacy, Pomeroy; $10 savings account,
Middleport; case of baby mUk, Racine Home National Bank, Ra·
Vaughan's Cardinal, Middleport; cine and Syracuse; $5 gift certifibottle of champagne, Pomeroy cate, Middleport Department Store,
Wine Store; baby balloon and cut and a S5 gl{t certificate, Heritage

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Men's . Fellowship wiU
meet Monday at 7: :Jl p.m. at the
Bradford Church of Christ.

1984 FORD THUNDERBIRD

Will birth announcment made

Dances scheduled
GRADUATES - Shari Ann
Drehel, dauglaer of Mr. and Mrs.
James Drehel, graduated In
December from the Hocking
Technical School where she
received an BSIIOCiate degree In
marsing. In Febnlary she wiD
lake her state board examlnaUoo
to become a reglstefed mll'se.
She Is currently employed at
V~ans Memorial Hospital.
Miss Drehel lflllluated from
Meigs lOgb School in 1981.

The Vererans of Foreign Wars,
Post 9926, Mason, wUI have dances,
FrldayandSaturdayfrom9tolp.m.
at the hall. Muslc willbeprovldedby
Ray Van Meter and the Country
Connections.

Hospitalized
Gary F. Hysell, Route 4, Pomeroy, Is a patient at the St. Mary's
Hospital In Huntington. He underwent back surgery there Tuesday
and cards may be sent to him there,
Room321.

son, Joshua Daniel, age 2.

NO\\

lam[}S lint

place; and comedian Joan Rlvers In fourth place because "In
borrowed rags she proves the
House of Pancakes stU! have the
best."
Actress-model Twiggy took
the No.5 spot for resembling
"Lady Godiva dressed for a
Roman orgy." Actress Kathleen
"Koo" Stark, sometime gtrl·
friend of Britain's Prlnce .Andrew, was described as "a
fashion Frankenstein waiting at
the palace gate."

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The press conference was meant as a
promotion for a public television special on American art, but the
limelight shone on the documentary's coordinating producer Caroline Kennedy.
WNET, the New York City public TV outlet which Invited Ms.
Kennedy to Wednesday's press conference at the Century Plaza
Hotel, urged reporters In vain to keep their questions to the scheduled
topic.
But Ms. Kennedy, the 26-year-old daughter of the late President
John F. Kennedy, said the extra attention was "not really a problem
forme."

She appeared uncomfortable only when asked If her mother,
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassls, painted. She looked down and, with a
blank expression, said softly: "You'll have to ask her."
The two-part documentary, "New World Visions: American Art
and the Metropolitan Museum," will be broadcast In the spring.
Ms. Kennedy, who works for the office offllrn and television at New
York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, . did research for the
documentary. ·

. Caroline Kennedy

whc"t•l. c· rui~&gt;t ·

tilt ' IN ·r

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Pill

mud 11hrt•ls.

al'n•nl 11.rnup

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IS

Acting, politics, sports join forces
SAN DIEGO (AP) - Former first lady Betty Ford, San Diego
Padres outfielder Alan Wiggins and Terl Shields, mother of actress
Broollfl Shields, joined forces to help dedicate a new alcorollsm
trealrnent center at Scripps Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Ford. ":i, said Wednesday's openlilg of the new McDonald
Center means · people may come Into treatment much sooner, before
they get so ill."
.
"When I went Into treatment, the number of women ~lng
treatment Increased," she Sllld. "This Is a progressive disease and
unless treated, It cail be fatal."
.
Mrs. Shields and baseball star Wiggins also have overcome alcohol
or chemical dependency problems.
Mrs. Ford said she didn't know whether her son Jack might be 1111
alcorollc. His Callfonila driver's ~se was suspended last month
because he refused to subml! to blood, breath or urine tests when he
was arrested In August for Investigation of drunken drlvl!lg.
Ford, 31, pleaded guUty to reckless drlvl!lg, IUid a ml.sl!emeanor
druilken drlvl!lg charge was ciuipped.
.
•
"I have no Idea whether my son Is an alcorollc," Mrs. Ford told
reporters. "I have to truSt that he knows about It (~ disease of
alcorollsm) ."

Mtdmllht eanmn rffi . V·ll ••na . fad air 1 nnd .

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r rHISI' ront . am f1 n nulln s tt•rt"' · ws" rnd1al
tirf'' (lOI\'t·nst macl whtt•lll. ru ~ t tlftMII . rear
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int "'Pf'fl'. t• ru\~w t·cm t am -fn, radiu sh•rrn.
Iran ~

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radial t\rrs. poi\'I':Jst road 11. het•l!l . remutr

11 ""

r••n' ruirror ... rrar wm•l rk•f . lhzht 11rnup
!'~lock

'\:n. 1600

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$13,929

00

'12,491

00

FORD THUN
\lf'd tUI\1 r\t'"l'l"l IIIII IUt"hll I •1\l()l ' flu·t &lt;Ill" t'Oild .
hra tf'r ..·,"PI'""' tran~ 11 "inr1 . 11111111r lrw:k...
r nrnl'rtOI! la m p~ lint win~&lt;~ . !ih .. tN•r ¥-' h ~'t·l.
rC'nl• •ll' t·ont n • trrt•r ~ n•ar "mrl del mtt•n·a l
Wtf)f'rs
Stock \u. lliflll

"i(ll'rs tw•o!N au t" trans nvt·rdrt\'e. p
' " "'r . r hrakr!'. o v.·Jmtow&lt;~ . p st'lls . p tluor
lnt' k" r1htitol f'lnrk tint Mll .~ll . lilt !llet-r
11 h('('\. •·rutsl' t'fllll
am fm "h'n"'· remult
t'IIOI nurrnr!l puht·ast rnad whr1•ls rf'ar
11 tnri drf . lillhl L! rnup
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$13,670

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lrAO!i

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"
•
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I
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11 I

Blue, white roof, 2-dr .coupe, fact .
a-c, vinyl roof, heater, auto.
trans ., p.s. p.b., thlt. glass, am1m, wsw radial tires, wheel
covers, 45,000 miles.
Stock No. 46091

A holiday family buffet and gift
exchange party was held on
Christmas Eve at the home of Mrs.
Margar e t McDani e l Sr ..
Middleport .
Mrs. McDaniel' s chUdren and

1983 FIREB

mlr., r-w del . 7,000 mi.

wire

covers,

remote

cont.

1981 CHEVROLET C·10

'
ton pickup, V-8 eng ., auto.
trans., p.s. p.b. long'wide bed,
gauges, rear step bumper, am
radio, brown.
WAS
NOW
112

$2495.

'1995.
J-10

Local
ton pickup, 4
wheel drive, 6 cl. eng., auto.
trans., p.s. p.b. longwlde bed,
gauges, rearste~ bumper, am
radio, wheel covers, blue. Only
33,00 miles. Deluxe .Topper.
No. 46251
NOW

1982
TOYOTA

ton pickup, V-8 eng., p.s. p.b.
longwlde bed, gauges, rear step

1/ 2

bumper, fact . · a.c, am-fm , wsw

tires, wheel covers, tan topper .
Stock No. 45791
WAS .
·- NOW

$6995.

'6495.

Black on black, 4-dr se., V-8 eng.
fact. a-c, vinyl roof, heater, a-t,
ps, pb, pw, p.seat, p dr locks, b-s
mldg. dig cl., tint gl ., tilt s-w, c-c,
am-fm stereo tape, rem . cont.
Stock No. 46151

Ph . 949-3011

1979 FORD F-100
·v, ion pickup, 6 cyi. eng., stand.

trans ., p.s., · longwlde bed,
gauges, rearstep bumper, am
radio, wheel covers, blue.
Stock No. 46031
WAS
NOW

$4995.

•

l•3995.

112 ton pickup, V-8 en'g., p.s. p.b.
longwlde bed, gauge~ slid. rearglass, rear step bu per, tinted
~lass, am-fm, WSW t res, white.
Deluxe Topper.
Stock No. 40541
1
I
NOW-

'8495.

CELICA

_.

•

ssooo

REBATE

Sylvia Carpenter, who resides at
the Haines Boarding Home for the
Elderly at a24 E. Main St.,
Pomeroy, wUI observe her 91st
birthday Thursday.
A life-long resident of Meigs
County, Mrs. Carpenter has two
daughters, Neva Curtis, Chester,
and Anna Haines with whom she
makes her home, and a son,
Eugene Carpenter, Portland. She
also has three grandchUdren and
six great-grandchUdren. A famUy
observance of the birthday Is
planned.
Othef nongenarian residents of
the Haines Boarding Home, who
will be joining Mrs. Carpenter In the
observance wiU be Frank Samatowitz of Colchester, Conn., who was
91 on Dec. 29, and Nina Wagner,
Letart Falls, whowas94 on Nov.ll .

·~ 1~

their families present Included Mr.
and Ms. David C. Jacks, David Jr.,
Patrick and Bridget Renee, Middleport; Mr. and Ms. PaulL. McDaniel
Jr. and chUdren, Michelle Dawn and
Paul McDaniel Ul, MlnersvUle.

VCR

sso

ita!i'- r

REBATE

CHEST FREEZER

WE WILL BE CLOSED ·
MONDAY, JANUARY 16
lN ,OBSERVANCE OF
MARTI.N LUTHER KING
DAY
WE WILL RE-OPEN FOR BUSINESS AS
USUAL TUESDAY, JANUARY 1!

ssooo

u

REBATE

ht

ssooo

Rebate

. I. I

On Dean's List

1981 FORD BRONCO
4 wheel drive, 6 cyl. eng ., 4 sp.
trans., p.s. p.b: locking differential, rear step bumper, am1m, wsw tires, bucket seats,
brown.
Stock No. 45021
WAS

Racine

5th &amp; Pearl

Console Color TV 575°0 Rebate

Also at the family get-together
were Mrs. McDaniel' s parents, Mr.
and Mr. Arthur C. Barr, Middleport,
who that day observed their 51st
Vonnie Johnson has been named wedding anniversary. Besides Mrs.
to the dean's ilst at Musklngum · McDaniel. Mr. and Mrs. Barr have
College, New Concord for the first four others, Gladys McCauley,
semester. Students must achieve a Columbus; Shirley Sinclair, Shade;
grade point ratiO of 3.6 out of a Ruth Samltawltz, Coalchester,
possible 4.0 to be named. Parents Conn. and Barbara Huffman, .
are Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Johnson, Chester.
Middleport.

$AVE

1975 FORD SUPER CAB

........

McDaniel family buffet, party

E

mirrors, rear wind. del.
Stock No. 45391

-

Birthdays noted

Frank Samatowltz

rad. tires, w.cov., rem . cont.

SPENCER'S SNACK SHAC~

RCA
19"
· diagonal

NlnaWaine(

""'"'' l'ru tst· 1'1111 •lnl ·fn • rnthu .,lt•rt&gt;u. lit vlr1l
1'1~111 11 hN•I., 1 urnt •rinw 1&amp;111 1'1'1

CAR

p.wlndow. p.seat, p.door locks,
tint. glass, tilt steer. wheel, am1m, stereo tape, wsw radial tires,

·I

ELLIOTT'S

·.....

"'"'c;_ftl

TOWN

J~~~t~~~8,

OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY 11 A.M.-10 P.M.
SATURDAY 12 NOON-1 0 P.M.
SUNDAY 5 P.M.·lO. P.M .

MEIGS BABY - Altbough he emerged as winner of the
1984 Dally Sentinel new baby of the year oonlest, Joshua Keith Lynch,
sleeps onln the anns of his mother, Beth. Jostua was born at 5: 02 a.m. on
Jan. 1. 1118 parents are Beth and Keith Lynch, Middleport.

,,

"' ··rrlr n •r· ,,
ft: hr~tkf's . p wmd
p · r•:11 rh u1l :tl 1· ~\.U it llls~ . till " lt'l'f

1983
LINCOLN

Local car,
tact. ac, heater, a. trans. ps, pb, pw. p.
seat, p. dr locks, tint. gl. t-s
wheel, c-c, am-fm , s-tape, wsw

(

NO\\

'10,96817

•

'6595.

SPENCER'S SNACK SHACK

:I

liahl 11.rnup

I

$7495.

/ ~~;;;;;;~~~;;;;;w
NOW OPEN IN RACINE

MICROWAVES
,, ,rr••r" rrllr "mdt-1" ckof

rran!l
\11 nrl .

2-dr . hardtop, 6 cyi. eng ., fact . ac. auto. trans., p.s. p.b. &amp; p.
windows, tlnt.gtass, c-c., am-fm,
wsw radial tires, bucket seats.
Stock No. 30541
WAS
NOW

)

'

2 DAYS ONLY, FRI. &amp; SAT., JAN. 13 &amp; 14

~ -wa t . p tlr~~r ~~\_\,· 1 du•·.k nrM1r ma t" .
lin! UlllSS. !ttl l:I'J ,, IIf'i'l t 'rUI~t· 1'01\l , ol m ·
ft p r;tt1ill Sll'rl'" r·a"'t'll l' W~Y. r11fiiAI lifl•l!,
"' ' h·rl n..;ut llh t 'i·l ~ n•n 1 1'11111 mtrn•n . rear

one owner . 2-dr .
hardtop, V-8 eng., fact. air cond.,
. a.trans., p. steer., p.dlsc brakes,
bodyslde mldgs., tinted glass,
crulise control, am fm , wsw tires,
wheel covers. 35,897 miles.
Stock No. 45531
NOW

'

r

for Cora Webb who was ill and
unable to an end.
Attending the dinner party were
Mr. and Mrs. WUIIam Stewart, Mr.
and Mrs. Emes1 Wingett, Mr. and
Mrs. Bert Grimm, Mr. and Mr.
Arthur Nease, Mr. and Msr. WUson
Carpenter. Mr. and Mrs. ThereOn ·
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Philson,
Mrs. Gretta Simpson. Mrs. Roy
Johnson, Pat Webb, Mr. and Mr.
Bernard Diddle. Mrs. Laura Circle.
Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs. Mae
McPeek. and Mrs. Lillian Weese.

INSTANT REBATE DAYS

!'itnct. '" 1 ~.:.1

l':lrpt•l st rilll' ~ htNotl ht •itl!•r aut"
"''f'rrlnvt· 11 ~ '"' ' r . ,,
hrakt·" 11

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11 r1i &lt;~ t ' hrakl'··. r "mrtu'A" p ~a l p fluor ltK·ks
ll!orli .. Uit- mlrtu~ tml itl:hs . 1111 "h't·r "ltt'1'1.
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:1111 f!ll r:ttiiU ~ lt•n•, I ' H!'o!&lt;WIII '

. ' "i
-':

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'13,012 11
'12,490 00 $14,551"
'12,886 11 $13,92900
14,42410
1984 MERCURY COUGAR 1984 FORD THUNDERBIRD
984 MERCURY COUGAR LS \11-rlimn
rMt 1111'1 . \' ll1'nlil . fad air mml . tnl

serves a hot meal at noon each day.
Call 992-2161 to make a reservation
for a meal no later than 9 a.m., the
day of the reservation.·The followIng menu Is planned for Jan. 12 and
13:
Thursday - Pork tenderloin,
sweet potatoes, lime perfection
salad, apple crisp.
Friday - Sloppy joe In bun,
potato soup, orange gelatin with
peaches, Texas sheet cake.
Choice of milk, tea, coffee
available dally.

Caroline works with public television

Betty Ford

11. l a s~

l"lm t . :-~ m rm rtutiu

Blackwell names worst dressed women
with every scene.
Boy George, lead singer of the
British rock group Culture Club,
earned the lOth spot for remindlng the designer of "VictorVictoria In bad drag."
In between on the list, announced Wednesday, were BarbraStrelsandinsecondplace, "a
boy version of Medusa" In her
poseasamaleyeshivastudentln
her tum "Yentl"; rock singer
Joan Jett - "a Bronx Pocahonras In black goes porn" -In third

t'nrJ)('IIlroup. hl'alt•r . :tu1n uve rdr lvt' trans . p
"trr r . p rtiS(· hrak•·~ . ,, wmcl . p !Wnt . dtlil
1·lo('k . t·ornl'rl nll lamtl!\. ltllhlllruup ttul wli1s11 .
1111 "'M'r wtw't'l. rrui'il' t·unt am fu 1 "h'rt.,.,.

I\IN'tlu11 , rrr1meta llk . V·fl en11 ..f1c1 . 1lr ettnd ..
:tut n 1ron 11 nwrdrlvt•. P stetr .. p. dill(: hrake~~ .
p wiml ' ' !11':11 . p ltrwW' lock11 . dlll .dotk . In ·
••·n ·nl 11 tpf'rli . tint llla \K. Ill! "h-er v.·het&gt;l
rr ui~ · ,·on• . am ·f11 1 slcrt'~• · WI'A radial tire~~
t'i(ll\'1•:1!11 \\ hl'l•lli. \IOht'el I'UVet'll. fl'ln llO""'I'f
•·•ml udrrnr!'. r1•ar wmuv. dt'f . llllhl Mrnup
""•ttk \11. IW

People in the news---LOS ANGELES (AP) Actress Joan Collins topped
designer Richard Blackwell's
24th annual list of the 10
worst-dressed women - which
included male rock singer Boy
George, he of the plucked
eyebrows and Salvation Army
garb.
Miss Collins, star of television's "Dynasty," drew Blackwell's scorn for being "barely,
· bizarrely Hollywood" In elaborate outfits that seem to change

llnrk Wnlttul. V·ll {'Oil fact air t•oml . lux

Scouts working
for their badges

---Senior citizen activities--Meigs. County Senior Qtizens well as other games: Uno, Euchre,
Center, Mulberry Heights, Pome- Pitt, checkers and puzzles. Quilting,
roy, Invites aU senior citizens of the . lap robes, bed pads and various
county to take part In actMtles at other volunteer assignments are
the center. The center Is open available each day to be worked on.
Monday through Friday from 8: 30 Physical Fitness Is at 11: :Jl a.m.
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Schedule of dally.
activities for Jan. 12 and 13 Is as
The center will be open dally, but
follows:
bus routes will pot be run If road
· Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m.- conditions pose a safety factor. If
noon; Physical Fitness, 11: 30 a.m.
the center Is to be closed, WMPO
Friday - Physical Fitness, 11: 30 Radio Station wUI make that
a.m.
announcement by 8: 30 a.m.
.The Senior Nutrition Program
The pool table Is open dally, as

interval wii)('MI. l'Orm•rirUl lamps. r•xt llct·ent
~troup . li~tht Aroup hratf'r . autu . tron ~ . P
s iM'r .. p. r1hw hralw ~ . p "lnd p sraL dill.
r lork . linted R,la!!!'&gt;. t1 lt siE.'er wht'el. t·rulst'
c·nnt . am -fm radio "" 'fNI. ~ I v ied road "het•ls.
rrlllflll'&gt; ronl. mirrnr ... . r•·ar wind del eu rPt'l

mas, Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Will have another

Members worked on some of the
requirements for their first aid
merit badges when Pomeroy Boy
Scout Troop 249 met at Drew
Webster Pos( 39, American Legion,
Home In Pomeroy.
There were patrol corner discussions and two new members, Mike
Mulford and Ron Capehart were
Introduced. Dennis Harris prepared
the meeting program and a winter
hike for next Saturday was planned.
Troop leaders met following the
regular meeting to discuss February and the observance of Scopt
Month at that time. Senior Patrol
Leader Anthony WUson presided
over the meeting.
Boys 11 and older or who have
completed the fifth grade are Invited
to join the troop. Anyone wishing
more Information may call Tom
Reed, scoutmaster, at 992-2370.

New officers were elected al tlle
annual New Year's Day dinner
party of the Past Officers Club of
Racine Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, held at a Ravenswood
restraurant.
Elected were Mrs. Louise Ste·
wart, president; Mrs. Chlorus
Grimm, vice president; Mrs.Gretta
Simpson, secretary; and Mrs.
Maxine Phllwn, treasurer.
A spring covered dish dinner was
planned with the date and place to be
announced . Members signed a card

J~hua Keith Lynch and his
parents, Mr. ai1d Mrs. Keith Lynch,
:m Ash ~t.,;ldd,leport, are the
winners of
Dally Sentinel's
annual first by of the new year

\

Mr. and Mrs. Dante! T. Will.
-Texas Road, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of their second
child, Jonathan Andrew, born Jan.!
at Holzer Meclcal Center.
Maternal grandparent are Mr.
and Mrs. DavldP. Holter, Pomeroy,
and the mat ernal g reat grandparents are Mrs. Elma Epple,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Elma Holter,
Minersville. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. William L. WIU.
Pomeroy, and the paternal greatgrandmother Is Mrs. Eurana Tho-

Past officers -have election

First Meigs baby
bo~ wins prizes

Calendar
1HURSDAY

The

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Elliott!s

Rlclne. Ohio

Seethe~
and other

70 PINE &amp; SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
STORE HRS.: '10-9 MON.-FRI.; 10-7 SAT.; SUN .-CLOSED

�•

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
;

Finding help when you need it
By I,OULSE COOK
Associated Press Writer
A consumer who cries "Help!"
may get a lot of answers Ulese days,
but finding sor;neone who can
actually do something about Ole
problem may be another story, and
the government Is trying to make
Ullngs easier.
There are company consumer
representatives. Industry-wide associations whose job Involves Ole
consumer. State and local licensing
boards to protect Ole consumer.
Courts. Agencies. Organizations.
Institutions.
Now, Ole U.S. Office of Consumer
Alfairs has a 116-page guide to Ole
maze. It covers people and places,
names and numbers, In business
and In government, at different
levels. all watching over some
aspect of your rights.

The "Consumer Resource Handbook" Is avaUable, at no charge,
from Ole Consumer Information
Center, Pueblo, Colo., 8100!.
The guide says there are some
basic steps for almost all
complaints.
First, complain to the seller. U
Ulat doesn:_t work, contact Ole
company that made Ole product.
Alter that, try an Industry dispute
program, the Better Business
Bureau or a state or local office. Still
no luck? Try a federal agency or use
a trade association dispute program. Finally, you can consider
going to court.
Here are some of the organizations and Institutions you can go to
for aid or Information along the road
to successful problem-solving:
-Third-party dispute-resolution
programs set up by Industry.

Association staff P£'9ple act as
Informal mediators to try to settle
complaints between consumers and
businessmen or companies. If they
can't workout an agreement. Uley'U
refer you to an Independent panel or
person for a rullng. Before you get
Involved, find out whether the rullng
Is binding.
-Betler Business Bureaus. The
BBBs are non-profit organizations
sponsored by local businesses.
There are about 150, across Ole
country. Services vary with location, but Include Information on
products, on company reliability
and on past complaint-handling
performances. Some bureaus handle Individual complaints; others do
not.
-Occupational and professional
licensing boards. There are about
1,500 state boards which license or

- .I

•

I .

-

' .
: . Help - ·

Village funds total $521,869

''·

,/1 · ~""

I

The Daily

.

register more Ulan 500 professions
and occupations. They set · the
standardsforllcenslng,prepareand
give the exams and lake disciplinary actions.
-Federal Information Centers.
You can call the number of Ole
Federt(InfonnationCenternearest
you to get Information about any
federal service or agency. The call
wlll usually be tree or wlll Involve
only a minimum long-distance
charge.
-Small claims courts. These
courts are designed to solve
problems that don't Involve lots of
money or legal expertise. Court
procedures are usually easy and
Informal and fees are small. You
probably won't need a lawyer and,
In some places, lawyers are actually
prohibited.

HELP! - CoMumer crlell for help doa't 10 ~d. The U~ Oftloe
of Conaumer Affalr!llw written a 116-pap lJoolllet to h e l p ftnd their way lhroup the maze of board IUid acendet de 'creel to hear
their pleas.

Even with last year's 3 percent
limit. you could deduct at least half
your medical Insurance premium
up to a total of $150.
Now. the medical Insurance
premium must be Included with
medical expenses subject to Ole 5
percent floor. After 1983, the 1
percent floor on drugs will be
dropped altogether. Only prescription drugs and Insulin will be
permitted as a medical expense
deduction.
Casualty or theft lo&amp;!es: Starting
In 1983, personal casualty and theft
losses will be deductible to Ole
extent that total losses exceed 10
percent of adjusted gross Income.
But you must still reduce each
casualty or theft loss by $100. ThllS,
as with the medical deduction, It
will be harder to take an Itemized
deduction for a personal casualty or
Ulett loss.
.
The marriage penalty: This Is a·
tax problem that Congress has
grappled with for years and Is
finally beginning to resolve. WorkIng spouses usually pay more tax
than they would It Uley simply lived
together without being married.
This Is commonly called the
"marriage penalty" or "marriage
tax." The higher Ole two Incomes
and the more nearly equal they are,
the greater the penalty.
Although two single people would
be able to drop from Ulelr gross
Incomes a zero bracket amount of
$2,300 each for a total of $&lt;1,600, a

married couple only gets a $3,400
zero bracket amount.
So a married couple Is at an
Immediate $1,200 disadvantage. In
addition, two-Income couples pay
taxes basedcouples.
on the same rates as
one-Income
To reduce (but not eliminate) Ole
penalty on two-Income married
couples, the tax law gave them an
extra deduction.
In l982, this deduction was worth
5 percent of whichever spouse's
Income was lower (up to a $I,500
maximum) . This year, It's been
doubled. Two-earner married coupies can deduct 10 percent with a

Incomes for a total of $54,000.
Assuming no Itemized deductions,
before the two-earner deduction
went Into effect, they would owe
$15,561 1n tax.
But for 1983, two things happen.
J ohn and. Mary can ded uct 10
percent of Mary's salary, or $1,900,
from their tlll'able Income, whether
or not they Itemize. That would
make their taxable Income $52,100.
In addition to marriage tax relief,
the 1983 tax rates are lower. That
change further reduces the Jones'
tax bill to $12,004. The size of Ole
ded 11 1 based
,k
uc on s
pure1y on uoe
smaller of the two salaries. But the
value of the deduction, In terms of

breast cancer are as follows,
Michael said: Remember Ulat
breast cancer Is a curable disease if
It Is caught In time; Remember that
your most valuable weapon Is your
own hands - approximately 95
percent of breast cancers are
discovered by women themselves.
Make lt a point to visit your
physician at annual Intervals.
Remember that lumps, pain, discharge and otller harmless breast
conditions are common, but you
owe It to yourself to Inform your
physician of any problem or ,
change, for .only he can ~ke the
proper differential diagnosis.
Help protect yourself against
breast cancer and follow the
guidelines. For free pamphlets on
BSE (breast self-examination)
breast cancer or you want a
program on BSE or a fUm, call
992-2104 and ask for Teresa Collins
untll the cancer office reopens.

r;:=========:;
Your "E•tro Touch"
Florlot Since 11117

~
FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
362 E M I P
· • n, omeroy
Your FTD Floriet

HOTR 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

ON ZIMMER - Joe Williams Jr. (left), vice
. president In charge ol the Zimmer nuclear facWty for
.cincinnati Gu and Electric, conle1'8 with George

·Jones of the Bechtel Power Corp., durlng a hearing
held by the Nuclear Regulatory · Commission
Wednesday altemoon. (AP La8erphoW) •

r---------------------------ENT-IRE STOCK

•Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx Suits
-.Johnny Carson Suits
•Palm Beach Suits
•Sewell Suits

'165.00 SUITS ............................... NOW '132.00
'175.00 SUITS ............................... NOW '140.00
1'.185.00 SUITS ............................... NOW '157.00
1 '210.00 SUITS ............................... NOW '178.00
I'345.00 SUITS .............................. NOW '276.00

CALL 992-6851

~

~G&amp;E

program to verify the quality of
Zlmmer construction as part of a
three-step process required before
the NRC wUI allow safety-rela\ed
construction to resume. The work
was halted In November 1982.

t CINCINNATI (AP)- Documen-

+tlon of work on the Zimmer
rwclear power plant Is more
4ePendable Ulan first Ulought , a
utUlty executlve.says.
.Joe WUI!a(ns Jr., senior vice
!dent for nuclear operations of
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co .•
the Nuclear Regulatory Comlsslon on Wednesday that Ole
«&gt;cumentation wUI be one of Ole
Is used to make sure that the
clear plant Is buUt properly.
: Although there have been quesabout the validity and comeness of the work documentaWilltams saki, "I personally
more conlldence can be put In
;~ Ulan I tlrst thought when I got

r- ~ . . . . ,. ,

The NRC already has approved
the first plan, which Included a
management reorganization giving
the Bechtel Power Corp. an expanded role In completing the
long-delayed plant along the Ohio
River. 28 mUes east of Cincinnati.
The NRC Is expected to ruleon Ole
second phase, the quality verification plan discussed Wednesday, In
several weeks. It also will' hold a
hearing before ruling on the ftnai
phase, a plan for completing the
plant.
CG&amp;E, the Dayton Power &amp; Light
Co. and the Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co. have been meeting
for several weeks to determine
whethertogoaheadwlthZirnmeras
a nuclear facUlty, convert to a
non-nuclear generating stallon or
abandon It . The plant Is expected to
cost a total of $3.1 billion -

i~

WEIRTON, W.Va. (APl - Op- the hundreds who crowded Into the
:11m1sm Is overflowing In Weirton, MUlsop Community Center, which
•U.Iieresteelworkersg!ven Ole choice was decorated with green balloons
;zsetween pay cuts and unemploy- and a 20)-pound cake that carried
'
t have created the nation's Ulemessage"We'reonourown" ln
green Icing.
gest employee-owned company.
• Several hundred residents or the
"The pay cuts were part of not
I town boisterously turned out making this town a ghost town. It we
ednesday night to toast the hew didn't gowitllESOPUlerewouldn't
lure of the Weirton Steel Corp.. . be much left," he said.
l!ihlch was cast off by National
Television lights. speeches by U.S
~tergroup Inc. becaul!e lt was "just .• senators and congressmen, and
~glnally profitable."
' promises of a better future ushered
&gt;~ The employee purchase, 20 In Weirton's new year of
lQonths In the works, was made final steelmaking.
fiednesday when officials of NaWeirton Steel vice president Carl
~~nal Intergroup and Weirton Steel
Valdlserrt said he hOpes Ole
'tgned Ole purchase agreement 1n a enthusiasm and excitement carries
COom filled with reporters.
on for atleast l'h years, after which
\ • "I definitely think it was a right
the steel workers are supposed to
•'
orwewewouldn'thavemuch
receive their first profit-sharing
a town lett," said Robert Pulice,
check.
accountant with 25 years
"It's not Important how big the
checks are. They are tangible

·-8 ...·--

compared to an original cost
est lma te of $240 million- if lt starts
generating electricity In 1986.
Wllllams tried to__assure NRC
members Wednesday that Bechtel
will direct a wide-ranging verification program.
Welding at the plant has come
under question by Zlmmer critics,
and Wllliams Indicated special
efforts would be made to check the
qualifications of welders, Ole material used In Ole weld, and completeness of documentation for each
weld.
Documentation for all of Ole
approximately 463,000weldsdoneat
Zimmer Is being fed Into a computer
for further checking. About 417,000
or the welds have been catalogued to
date; WUllams said.
"We'll have a computerized weld
Information system that reflects our
\&lt;now ledge about aU wrweldson Ole
~lie, and our welders and the·
rr\aterlals." Williams said.
•)IIRC members asked prtrnarUy
tel:hnical questions of Wllllams.
CO{tcernlng exactly how the plant
win be Inspected and tested.

Nasal Spray

12 HOUR RELIEF
10 TABLETS

-' DRIXO!W:

explains Zimmer plan

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$46 9

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NPHU-1 00 - ULLY CP-31 0
REGULAR U-1 00 - LILLY CP:21 0
LENTE U:100- LILLY CP-410

~ptimism overflowing in steel to~

CLEARANCE SALE

e

II 'fill

DR IX ORAL

t year as part of a Zimmer
agement reorganization. He
told NRC members at a public
1 · arlng that there wlll be visual
!IQspecttons, mater;lal testing and
iiOCumentatlon reviews for work
done at the MOSCO'!f, Ohio, plant.
- 'The utility has proposed Ole

SEMI-ANNUAL

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MONDAY

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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.

[!)(](](B(](!JOO(!(TI§£
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DISPOSABLE RAZORS
PKG. OF 8
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TYLENOL
$347
4 oz.
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CHILDREN S ELIXIR .................. .

evidence that It's working," he said.
Steel worker Rusty Delanta said
Ole work force seems to have
adjusted to the pay cuts needed to
helppurchasethe75-year-oldmiU.
"It wasn't as bad as we thought It
was golngtobe," Delanta said. "It's
worth It If lt works."
U.S. Sen. Jennings Randolph,
D-W.Va., told the steelworkers Ulat
they were unique In ge tlng a second
chance.
"There's much work ahead of us,
but I am confident that Weirton
workers and Ulelr families are
ready to continue their cooperative
efforts," Randolph said. "Many
communities never get a second
chance, but In Weirton. Instead of
creating the tremendous hardships
associated with massive layoffs,
Weirton Steel wUI survive and
prosper."

I

TOOTHBRUSHES
"Your Choice"

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QUARTZ

E. T. CHILDREN'S

VIT ~MINS
Regular or
$ 4J
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WATCHES
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Kenneth McCullou9h, R.Ph .

Ct..rles R•llle. R .Ph

Ron1fd Han•ng, R Ph .

Mon lhru5ai . I :OOa .m . to•pm

Sundly i0:30 to 12:30 ond 4 to 8 p.m.

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PRESCRIPTIONS

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Fnendl'f' Serv•ce
Open Noghts "II'

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'------·--- -- --- --- ------

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

:Appeal for victims' aid
An appeal Is being made for
clothing and household Items for
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Carr whose
!lOme at Darwin was destroyed by
tire Tuesday night. Carr wears a
size large In shirts, 42 In coats, 34
waist, J3Ienglh In pants, and a size
11¥., shoe. Htswltewearsaslze~14

established petore Dec. 31. This
means you can take your IRA or
Keogh contribution Into account
when computing your tax liability
on your form 4868.
Next: Choolln1 a lonn

other[;~~:~~~~~~~;;~~~=======~~==~~~~~=~~;

"adjustments
to Income,"
$3,000
maximum.
As wlthcouples
niay use this tax break wnetner
not they Itemize their other
deductions.
The deduction applies only to
earned Income which Includes
salaries, wages or fees received as
compensation for personal services. That Is, money earned as an
employee or a self-employed per'
son. It does not Include Interest,
dividends, and royalties. Also, Ole
earned Income must be reduced by
certain business deductions and
contributions to IRAs and Keogh
plans.
I.et's say John and Mary Jones
both work. John earns $35,000 a
year and Mary, $19,000. Under the
old law, if they had no adjustments
to Income (such as payments Into
IRAs), they would add Ulelr

Breast cancer detection
.starts by self-examination
Breast cancer Is the major
cancer klller of women. An estimated number of new breast
cancer cases last year In the United
States was 855,000 and 6,100 estimated In Ohio according to S.
Michael, public Information chair. man for Ole Meigs County Unit.
In tlfe U.S., one out of every 11
women will develop breast cancer
at some time during her Ufe. Every
15 minutes, three women develop
breast cancer and one woman dies
from It, adds MichaeL
Advancing age and a previous
history of breast cancer are Ole
greatest risk iactors, but there are
others also - a family history of
breast cancer; never having had
children or having had the first
child after age 30. Some women are
at higher risk for breast cancer
than others and may need checkups
and mammograms more
frequently.
Ways to protect yourself against

tax savings, depends on the tax
bracket the couple's joint Income
puts them ln.
Late llllllg: As of 1983, taxpayers
were allowed an automatic time
extension for tlllng Income tax
returns. Under It, tax returns are In
time It flied by Aug.15as-Iong as Ole
taxpayer !Des form 4868 by Aprll15.
TAX TIP: Although you must
pay virtually aU of your tax liability
by April 15 when flUng for an
extension. you can defer making
your IRA contribution until you
flnallyflleyourform1040beforetlle
end of the extension period. The
same Is true for your Keogh
account assuming that Keogh Is

LORI'S PIZZA

~~ ....lAilY~

Changes in the tax laws will affect your return
(Flrst of 14 articles)
Last year brought Income tax
changes that will affect what you
pay In April - changes found In a
series of recent tax measures.
When Income tax Wtthholdlng
was reduced on July 1, 1983, most
Individuals on whom taxes are
withheld noticed an Increase In
their lake-ho!l'.e pay. That 10
percent tax reduction, the last In
President Reagan's three-step taxcut program, affects Ulose witll
taxes withheld and those who
earned money from sources not
subject to withholding.
Taxpayers with the highest Incomes will save Ole most, but the
cut will help keep everyone's tax
bill lower than It would have been.
What will the cut In Individual
rates mean In hard dollars? That
depends on your Income and how
many deductions you have. But if
you're a member of a family offour
with one wage-earner making
$35,000. you paid about $5,060 for
1981. In 1982, Ulat tax liability
dropped to $&lt;1,545. Again, assuming
no salary Increase, 1983's tax bill
will drop to $&lt;1,110, and Ole tax bill in
1984 will be $3,900.
Here are some or the other
changes:
Medical expense deduction: .
Starting In 1983, fewer taxpayers
qualify for the medical deduction as
the Door rises from 3 percent of
adjusted gross Income to 5 percent.

house Improvement, $3,376.41,
$7,196.70, $7,974.01; water tank, no
receipts . no disbursements,
$180,977.58; water, $9547 .09.
$7,282.45. $22,570.35; sanitary sewer,
$7,005.9'7, $5,645.76,$31,016.42; swimming pool, $3,950, S1.296.!ll, $104.76;
cemetery . $2001.75, $1,394.58,
$151.60; water meter trusts, ~.
$&lt;110, $9,936.61; economic devel. ,
$2,000, no expenditures, $2,000.
Receipts for the month totaled
$86,945.55 while expenditures totaled $116,424.99.

All Middleport VIllage funds as of
Dec. 31 totaled $521,869.62, VU!age
Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
Receipts, expenditures for .the
month and the balance In each fund
as of Dec. 31, respectively, Includes:
general, $28,167.58, $&lt;10,749.58,
$3),175.25; street maintenance.
$18,953.72, $10,124.18, $1359.31;. HUD.
no receipts, $3),882.71, $6,921 .24;
federal revenue sharing. no receipts, no disbursements, $2,659.76;
street light , $2,002.36, $1,432.12.
$10,097.03; street levy, $2,00\!.li,
$59.00, $13,621.51; fire equipment ,
$&lt;1,000, $1,512.03, $6al.38; fire truck,
$1,668.24, $3,189.35, $49,503.00; general bond retirement, $834.12,
$5224.67, $15,463.47; planning commission, $15.95, $5.04, no balance;
sanitary sewer escrow. no receipts,
no disbursements, $136,717.29; fire

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SPORT SHIRTS !~~.~~~ ............................ ~.~!.'!!~.~:':?.~~......... 20% OFF
ROBES .'.~~!~~!.~.~1 ................................ ~.~!!~.~~~-~........ lSo/o :OFF
WOOL SHIRTS '~~~.~~:. ~-~~-~-~~-~~! ..... II ... I..•~!!!'!~.~. ~!C?.~~.... II.. 120% OFF
SWEATERS t~~-~~~~11 ..
~!'m~. ~~~~ ........ 20% OFF
D~ESS SHIRTS !~~-~~~ ............................~~~-~-~?~~.15o/cr20% ,Off
GLOVES. Jtt~~~}........
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LEATHER COATS t~~.~Rg_~f.~~~....................~!'ffi~.~-~!9.&lt;:~ ........ 20% OFF ·
DRESS SLACKS.~~~~~-~!!! •..•.........•....•.•.... -~~~-~ .~:':9~~....•.... 20% OFF
CORDUROY SLACKSJ~.~!L ....................•...•~~~-~-~~?~~ ........ 20% OFF
FASHION JEANS .t~1!..............................~~~-~-~:':9~!L ...... 20% OFF
DOWN VESTS ........................................~~.~~.~~~~~ ........ 25% OFF
COATS &amp; JACKETS !~~~~?.~.~?.~!. .. ~ ........... ~~~~-~-~~......... 20% OFF
ALL WEATHER COATS ~~~~~9-~.f.C?~L ........... ~~-~~-~~~......... 20% OFF

In pants, 34 to 36 In shirts, 84 or 9 In
shoes, and a size 14ln coats.
On Saturday night a benefit dance
wlll be held at Uncle Bob's Chicken
House at Darwin. Residents with
Items to contribute to the couple
may contact Teresa:Carr Courtney
at Clarks Jewelry Store or Eloise
Pickett, 992-3888. ·

I

I I I I •••••• I •••••••••••• I •••••

I ••••••••••••• I •••••••••••••••••

ALL CORDUROY JEANS
ALL LADIES' TOPS
ALL LADIES' SWEATERS

ONE

BLANKETS

LAPIES' &amp; JUNIOilS'
,DR!SSES

REDUCED

I •••••

SHOES ..'~.~9.~~~.~~~,.....•........................... ~~.~~-~~~..... 1~ 15%·OFF
.· WGGAGE ~ ••t!~~~C?.'!'~,.......·.................... ~~.~~.!f~~..·25o/cr40% OFF
LADIES' WEAR -~-~J.!.~.~....~.!.~.~-~ ...~.~-~-~.':".~!!~.~~~~J~L ... 25% OFF

· 2-0°/o

OFF

F.UR JACKETS

QUILT -LINED COVERALL

$3498

SllZE$ 2, 3, 4

$128 8

••

2 %OFF
BY DEE CEE, CHIC, 'EE AND
KATE COLLINS

"In the latter days you
will understand this. 'At
that time, · declares the
Lord. 'I will be the Ood of
all the families of Israel.
and they shall be My
people ... IJehold, I am
bringing them from the
IYORTH country,,' ~
UODUS II documents the

MEN'S CARHART

LITTLE GIRLS'

ONLY

The taskmasters of
f:gypt Increased their
persecution of God's .
chosen Jews under a
cruel Pharaoh until
God sent Moses to
rescue theml

!JOYS' ROBES
' 51••• 4:20

present d11y fuinllment of
this Old Testament
prophecy portrayed by
current events In the
Soviet Union.

ALL REDUCED

York Clothing

Nal1l8 Brand Clothing ....

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

House

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT
Use Our
Convenient
Lay-A-Way

MIDDLEPORT

83 MILL ST.
PH. 992·2641
.... ·-

---·-

\

\
•

• ..,! ':",

• •• '*"• ... · ···- ••

. '

'"

~

~--·

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

.. . .. ,,. .

STORE HOURS

Mon.-Fri. 9:»6:00
Saturday'9:()(H;:00

•
.,. (..

"

. .

�''

Page-l 0-- The

,..

Sentinel

Ohio

'

FBI investigates Army General's
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP)- A
note pinned to the body of a two-star the Army abOut what's happening.
down there (at Fort Sam Houston)
Army Reserve general found danand
In security" in general.
gling from a noose at Fort Sam
Houston said he had been stain, but
Ownby, 48, the commander ofthe
there were no signs of struggle and
no one claimed responslblllty, the 90th U.S. Army Reserve Command,
FBI said.
was found about 6:40 a.m. by an
employao
coming to work, FBI
Federal authorities would not
reveal the note's contents, but The Agent Pat Cowley said.
Cowley Indicated he had read the
Washington Post reported today
note and said he knew of no reason to
that It read: "Captured, tried,
convicted of crimes by the U.S. suspect the killing was the act of a
Army against the people of the terrorist.
world. SentenCed and executed.''
''There was no apparent sign of a
The newspaper quoted an unldenti·
struggle," he said.
fled source for its report.
The body of Maj. Gen. Robert G.
Military pollee took no special
Ownby, his arms bound behind him security precautions after discoverwith a belt, was found Wednesday Ing the body, said Col. Robert
hanging from the second-story McDonald, a base spokesman.
stairwell of an Army headquarters
building, the FBI said.
Leo Soto, executive assistant to
The Post said Pentagon sources the U.S. Immigration and Naturaliwarned the note may have been zation Service region commissioner
planted by a killer to hide another In Dallas, said the service initially
motive, but one official added, warned border stations of the
"There's an awfUl lot of Interest in possibility of a terrorist slaying, but

owned by Anaie No·
((l 11
"' hn
p. . . ~) I formerly
I
,,
bllll: thonco Soutn 8&amp;1;, feet:
= · = lltl!llburf !hence Welt 244 'h feet; tnenco
North 6 deg. Welt
feet to
~
..
~Chi- Jnolouth
stdoolatonlootrtght I·
, . H, hni~UIY. Luov I . ol'way;
thenco along the South
RADIATOR
Orellem, · '"''' Gr1h1m1 tide of saod roght of way North
IJ . ~ C.H. ~. eo deg East 100 loot: thence
SERVICE
~ GnNm Dlnllli. J,'
North
77
deg.
East
136
feettoa
W
1 d
,.,., CM!tll Holl. Gttt stake: thence North 20 dog
• can repa ran re~. llld 1111 ....,_, East 20 foet to the place of
COre radlatprS and
• UIUOII. ........, ....... beg&lt;nnong. contaonong one·hOil
heater cores. We can
~- naat,... Md ootlfa**'· tt i'h) acre. more or less
also acid boll and rod
,1B5.
Reforonce
ook
Page 19.Deed
DeedDeed
Book B
192.
out radiators. We also
Unltld Metllodlet Church.
~age
46
t
and
Doed
Book
245.
repair Gas Tanks.
..... Ch!nh of Rudlnd,
ILL fORD
Olllo .... lludlnd ..... Wilt R!.gc"or4ds5 1. Meogs County Deed

tater backed off.

3~'h

The Post reported that Own~y
appeared to have been beaten and
that a second note, Its contents not
disclosed, was found at the scene.
Cowley would say only that the
typewritten note pinned to the
general'sclvillan clothes "indicated
he had met with foul play.''

:v~.:::.

Bexar County Medical Examiner
Vincent DlMlao ruled asphyxiation
as the cause of death, but refused
further cdmment.

. '

"A Ll'lTLE TO THE RIGHT'' - Workers straighten one ollhe
pieces of art hung Wednesday at lhe Hyatl holelln downlown Columbus
just a week before the scheduled opening of the holel. The 2Z-story,
401-room holel Is across the street from the Statehouse. (AP
Laserpholo ).

Hostile fire kills
U.S. Army pilot
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras
(AP) -A U.S. Armypilotwaskilled
by "hOstile fire" from Nicaragua
when his helicopter made a forced
landing in Honduras near the border
region where CIA-backed antiSandlnlsta rebels are active, U.S.
officials say.
It was the first reported shooting
episode to cause a U.S. casualty
since joint U.S.Honduran military
maneuvers began last August.
· In Nicaragua, the leftist govern·
ment's Defense Ministry said its
forces along the border fired
Wednesday on an "unidentified
military helicopter" violating Nicaraguan airspace. The ministry's
_ communique said the aircraft made
a forced landing about 200 yards
inside Honduras but It did not
mention the pilot's death.
. The Pentagon Identified the pilot
.as Chief Warrant Officer II Jeffery
C. Schwab, of Joliet Ill., who had
·served in the 10lst Aviation Group
229th Aviatlon Battalion at Ft.
Campbell, Ky. His age was not
given.
It said two Army engineers
aboard the OH-58 observation
helicopter were not injured and
were released after being examined ·
at the U.S. military hospital at
Palrnerola Air Base north of
Tegucigalpa, the Honduran capital.
U.S. Embassy spokesman Chris
- Arcos said the pilot was kllled about
155 miles southeast of Tegucigalpa
on the Las Trojes-Cituentes road,
the same road where two American

journaUsts died June 21 when a land
mine exploded. Horlduran author!·
ties accused the Sandinistas of
mining the road.
''The pilot was mortally wounded
after the helicopter was obliged to
land . The hostile fire came from
Nicaragua," Arcos said.
One source in Washington said the
helicopter was fired on near
Cifuentes, a town near the Nicaraguan border and in an area where
antl-Sandlnlsta rebels have
launched attacks against Nicaragua to the south.
Neither Arcos nor Pentagon
spokesmen specified what had
forced the planetolandorthenature
of the "hostile fire."
In Washington, government sources said one of the helicopter
passengers told a U.S. Embassy
official in Tegucigalpa the helicopter was involved in exercises to
enlarge airstrips in eastern Honduras and was "blown off course" in a
wind storm that pushed the aircraft
near the Nicaraguan border.
Arcos said the helicopter was on a
routine flight from San Lorenzo, on
the Gulf of Fonseca in southwestern
Honduras, to the eastern province of
Olancho as part of Its activities ln,lhe
Big Pine II military exercises.
Nearly 3,000 U.S. troops and
trainers remain in Honduras. The
Big Pine II exercises are scheduled
to end in February, but U.S. and
Honduran officials are discussing
new maneuvers that could begin as
early as June.

,. .. d I dill Church of lludlnd.

~·

i

Researcher says acid rain
problem needs attention now

.

/

t

....-:=.."::!'::::

• r'

. . . ateDI.OI'I. llllignl lnd

FOUND HANGED
'l'he&lt;
body of Maj.-Gen. Robei't

o.•

Ownby, commander of iJI!, lOth":
U.S. Army Reterve Conun8nclr
was found bound 111141 hancell '
early Wednesday.
' '
~:

Miry N. R....,., II II..

Mtllhoclllt Church
:f:~· Olllo. lb Rudlnd
.
~IChurch.et
.....,. ....... Thle ICIIon hoe

BETHLEHEM, Pa. !AP) - A
researcher says there's no doubt the
.acid rain problem in the Pocono
Mountains needs to be resolved soon
or serious problems will result in
some lakes unable to withstand the
rains.
"Development In this region Is
expected to Increase substantially,''
holed Dr. Heinz G. Pfeiffer,
manager of technology and energy
assessment for Pennsylvania
Power &amp; Light Co. "If a number of
Pocono lakes are at risk from acid
rain, corrective measures should be
considered at this time.': ....
• Pfeiffer was · reacting to the
results of a three-year study done by
Lehigh University for PP&amp;L. The
results said many Pocono lakes
were unable to neutralize the acid
rain If 1¢1 alone.
The Lehigh study, which Pfeiffer
said cost $162,000, showed that
Northeast Pennsylvania receives
"some of the most acidic r!llnfall in
the C®J~try" and Is "cause for
Immediate roncern."
Acid rain is formed when 1rulfur
dioxide emitted by Industries and
power plants mixes With water In
the atmosphere to form sulfuric
acid, which returns to the earth ·m
rain.
Pfeiffer said the next step, now
that the Lehigh research Is done, wlll
be to concentrate on solutioris.
· He suggested ac!dlng an acldneutrallzlng agent, such as agriculturalulnestone, iosotneofthelakes.-

•

A second study wUI be aimed at
finding out how much limestone
might be needed and If enough can
be put in to do any long,range good.
Such efforts are already In use In
Sweden and New York.
Dr. Patricia T. Bradt, adjunct
associate professor of biology at
Lehigh, said many Pocono lakes are
sensitive to acid rain because they
have "thin" soli layers and rocky
areas around them that do not have
acid-neutralizing ability.
Also, she said, the underlying
bedrock consists of lnsoluable
sandStone and' shale whicl\ dO not
neutralize acids.
· Beginning ln. September of 1!8!,
Ms. Brillldt and her research team
surveyed 10 lakes In the Poconos. Of
the 10, twohadnoabUitytoconteract
acidity, six had llmited ability and .
two had moderate ability.
Three lakes - Long Pond and
Lake Lacawac In Wayne CoUnty
and Deep Lake inMonroeCoimcy:...
were chosen for Intensive study.
Deep Lake bad no neutralizing
ability, Lake Lacawac limited
ability and Long Pond C9nslderable
abUity.

lawyers said that In prevlois
son, Myca Dlnh Le. His father said
All four. parents said they were
testimOny before the Natio~l
outside court .that he and his wife unaware the children should have
Transportation Safety Board, 1,.ee
have recel)tly been naturalized and had permits to work on the film,
bad not attributed the comment to
changed their name from Le tci Lee. were not told helicopters and
Landis.
His testimony came at a hearing ~explosives would be used and were
But Lee said Wednesday that he
to decide whether Landis and four assured there was no danger.
Lee described the scene in the was distraught at that time and
others should stand trial on involun·
tary manslaughter charges iii the rnake-tJelleve VlelnamesevUlage In · remembers the incident more
'
deaths of the Le child, 6-year-old northern Los Angeles County, a clearly now.
Mrs. Lee testified she bid her son
Renee Chen and actor Vic Morrow. scene he said was as frightening as
goodbye when ha.and his father lett
They were killed on July 23, 1982,
real war.
when the helicopter fell on them
"I saw a nash and a big for the movie set. "I just got home~
after a special-effects explosion.
explosion," he said. "After the first few minutes before and I gave him a
Outside court, Landis called It a blast, I bf&gt;came so horrified. All the hug," she said, bursting into tears:.
Mrs. Chen testified that Re~
"terrible, terrible accident," ad- : .memuries of the war came to my
began -crying after special-effects
ding, "The Idea that this could have mind. I was so horrified I was
been anything but an unforeseeable screaming. I fell down on the explosions went off, and that Landis
accident Is not only wrong, it's ground. Iknewltwasdanger-real bad picked the child up.
The mother, who was watc~g
bewildering."
danger, but It was too late to do
from
across a river, said she asked
Lee, a·psycholloglst, and his wife, anything."
associate
producer George Folsey,
Kirnyca, a social worker, who
Moments later, after watching
emigrated from Vletnam· in 1975, the helicopter crash, he said, "I saw "'Is that dangerous?' ... He said, 'It
Is not dangerous, only noise.'"
testified emotionally about their my son's body."
After she left the courtroom,
voice."
child's death. Shyan Huel Chen,
During cross-examination, deMoments later, he said, explo- mother of Renee, also told her story tense attorneys disputed Lee's Landis, fighting back tears, told
sions went off and the helicopter in tears. The gtrl's father, Mark te:;timony that It was Landis who reporters: "I can think of nothing
shouted, "Lower, _lower!" The worse than losingyourchUd, and out
crashed, decapitating his 7-year-old Chen, testified Tuesday.
hearts go out tothefamillesofRenee
Chen, Myca Le and Vic Morrow." .
The other defendants are Folsey,
production manager Dan AI·
!Ingham, special effects coordinator
Meigs County Commissioners transfers, $8,000; total general fund,
service subsidy grant lund, Paul Stewart and helicopter pUot
have approved a budget for 1984 $1,488,167. 70.
$56,316.19; special levy tunds, Dorcey Wingo.
totaling $59al,438.47.
Special revenue funds, dog and
$449,564.81; children services lund,
Landis, Wingo and Stewart each
Recapitulation of funds Is as kennel fund, $3,459.~; county board
$28,465; marrlage license special are charged With three counts .oi
follows:
of Mental Retardation al)d developlund, $5, 790; federal revenue shar· Involuntary manslaughter and face
General exeeutlve, board of mental dlsabllltles, $452,998; public
lng lund, $101,925.13; federal tuRds, maximum six-year prison terms If
county commissioners, $116,193.42; assistance lund, $1,m,:Di; real
$14,645.32; state funds, $17,al4.79.
convicted. Folsey and Alllngtuml
county auditor, $95.~.34; county estate assessment lund, $66,917.71;
Bond retirement funds,
are charged only In the two
treasurer, $76,018.49; prosecuting motorvehicleandgasolinetaxtund,
$52,733.ffi; sanitary revenue funds, children's deaths and face maxi·
attorney, $103,939.71; bureau of $1,400,000; soU and water conserva'
$52,685.46; agency funds, $3.001.87; mum five-year terms . .
inspection, $22,446.49; county plan- tion special fund, $15,409.85; youth
grand total aU funds, $5,9'll,438.47.
ning commission, $4,498.27; judi·
clal, conunon plea court, $66,295.25;
domestic relations and juvenile
court, $40,213.26; probate court,
$22,391.84; clerk of courts,
Or Wrno Dolly S•tlool ClouWIH o.,t.
$81, 773.85; coroner office,
Ill Com St.. ........ otlio 45711
$16,2.ll.ffi; county and municipal
courts, $54,892.42; elections, board
of elections, $84,492.66; buildings
and grounds, maintenance and
operation, $101,592; protection to
~
.t:l"""'"'~ ,..,.... ......... .
property and persons, sheriff,
11-CI.fV ...........
/ttllflfflfff- ,.,,.,,.,..,. ..........,.... ...
$246,!Y.?5.16; recorder, $47,195.(17.
Agriculture, $61,275; health and
..,
welfare, registration of vital stalls·
,,._
,....._
_
tics, $100; charities and correction,
,._.,_.,..
county home, $76,8TI.56; children
,,
_
,.,_
services board, $22,950; soldier's
.,_
.,...
u .. .. . .
relief, $3(),484.64; veteran's servl·
~==·t~r-------~---------------i
,. __
_____
~
ces, $26,500.48; public assistance,
.........
._
, ......... tva ct . .
u,.u .............. _ _ ···-···'-•
U,lltl . . .... . . . . . . . . . -·· --···.,. .
$26,873; highways, engineer, plat
map, $34;413. 91; education, law
·~----~~--------~------~--~--------~
libraries, $1,385. 74; insurance pensions and taxes, Insurance on
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
Public Notice
property, $18,600; contingencies,
IN THE
TwAnty-S1x ! 26). Town
thP. Com pl a1nt
COMMON PLEAS COURT NumbP.r
NumbP. r ThrAe !31. 10 RanqA
l arry E S~ncP. r .
OF MEIGS COUNTY.
NumbAr EIAvP.n! 1 11 olthAOh1o
CIP.rk ol Cou rts
OHIO
Company's PurchaP. and desMelflS Cou nty
JAMES W. SlffTLE, et ol ..
cnbed as follows. to-w1t 8P.1ng
Ohio Volley Uv-k C&lt;J.
Common PI P.as Court
Plllin1itfa.
the northwAst quarter of the
Markelllepoft
(121 15. 22. 29. (1) 5. 12. 19.
VI.
.
~.Jan.tHMM
southe_ast quarter of sa1d sec6tc
MANNING
0.
WEBSTER.
et
Trends: Veal calves steady; feeder cattle
tion number twenty -SIX (26).
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
parents of two children killed In the .
fUming of the movie "Twilight
Zone" testified tearfully and angrily
about the accident, and one said he
heard the director shouting,
"Lower, lower!" to a helicopter that
crashed Into the victims.
But director John Landis,
charged with involuntary manslaughter, Insisted outside the courtroom Wednesday that the crash
was "an unforeseeable accident."
And his lawyers disputed Dr.
Daniel Lee's recollection that Landis was shouting lnstructioll8 tt. me
helicopter pilot through a megaphone during the fatal filming of a
VIetnam War sequence.
Lee remained steadfast In his.
recoUection. "I heard someone
saying, 'Lower, lower!"' he testi·
fled. " ... It was Mr. John Landis'

'84 Mei~ budget br~akdown ·

PHONE 992-2156

mm

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

····:............

·........
··-·

-

______
..................
....,........,.....

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

............
.··.............

.._ ::r.::...f. ..-==·
-··
·
..
...
__., =_ ,,
,.
_
_
::=
.
.......
••-a-...
..,._,._..,_.........._....... . -..,
_
-....... . .....
... .... ....,..... ....
................

Market report

steady; cows $3 to S51ower.

'

Feedey Heifers: Good and Choice 250 to J!¥1
Ills. 4!&gt;54.:10; llO to 400 Ills. 4J.54; 400 to 500 Ills.
44-53.:10; 500 to 600 Ills. 45-$1.50; 600 to 100 Ills.
42·$1; 100 to 600 Ills. 43-49: 600 and over
42::1().54.
Feedel' Steers: Good and Choice 250 to llO
Ills .~: ll0to40011ls.52.:1C).GI; 400to50011ls.
.51·58.:10; 500 to 600 Ills. 57.5()6).25: 600 to 100
Ills. 49.!50-56.50: 100 to 600 lbs. 48-116: 600 and
over 48-fJO.

•

Feedel' Bulls: Good and Choice 250 to llO
Ills. 5Hil.50; llO to 400 Ills. :1().57.50: 400 to 500
Ills. !50-56; 500to60011ls.47·M.!IO; 600to11Xlllls.
48.00.53; ·;oo to ID:iills. 47-110; 600 and OYel'
42.11()48.50.
Holstein Steers and Bulls llO to 600 lbs.

!i.ill).39.75.

Bulls I,OONils. and up 38~.25.

Slaughter Cows utUttles
and cutters 27.50..11.50.

32-38.00: canners

Veal Calves choice and prime 1!10 to :m lbo.
82·91.
Baby Calves

00-M.
Sprlnilel' Cattle J25.31Kl. .

Cows and Calves ComblnaUon 510 clown.
Top Hop 210 to 2.1lllls. CJIB).50.
Boars 400 Ills. and up ~.25.
Sows 400 Ills. and up '-1.:1C).M."
Pip by the head 17-35.

Keensm~ll

SEEWIESEN, West Germany
(AP) -Itbaslongbeenestablished
Closed Monday
. that homln~ pigeons use 1M sun aJid
The Ohio State Liquor Store, . the earth's magnetic field to guide
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, .will be their fllgllt. But a West German
closed all day Monllay In obser· research team says that smell is the
vance of Martin Luther King Day, a·. primary tool . these birds use for
navigation.
legal ,hQIIday for state employes. . '

....Defendantl.

c- No. 83-CV-93
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

TO·
LELIA CLARK. d liv1ng. whose
address IS unknown: thA unknown spouse. 1l any. whose
name and address ara un known: 11 decAasP.d, the unknown hfms. dev1sees. legatees. adm1n1strators. executors
and/ or ass1gns of Leha Clark;
dec.

HAROLD E. , McGREGOR. if

livmg. whoSe address IS un known: the unknown sp.ouse, if
any. whose name and ac.idress
are unknown ~ 1f deceased. the
unknown hf!irs. devisees. lega·
tees. administrators. executors
and / or assigns of Harold E.

McGregor. dec.

You are 11ereby notified that

you have been named defendants in a legal actlon entitled
James W.' Suttle. et at.. Plain·
tiffs,.vs. Manmng D. Webster.:et
al., Defendants. This action has

conta1n1ng forty (40) acres~ be
Public Notice
th e sa me more Or lAss
PARCE L NO II Also tho
IN T)iE
loll owi(IQ desc nbed propFHty.
COMMON PLEAS
tO-Wit Bf!IOQ 1n sec t10n number
COURT OF
twenty (20) .' town number three
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
(3). ran gA number AI even ( 1 1)..
Mary M. Romine lb MIIY M.
of thA Oh10 Co mpany's Pur Rorna. lb Miry N. RomchasP.. and bound Ad as follOws.
lnea. etll..
to·wll' BeQ1nn1ng e 1g~ty rods
Pllintlllo,
north of thA southwAst corner
of sa1d Sect1 on: thencP. north
·v•
rods; thencA east
rod$: then ce south
rods: thence west
rods to the place of
boo11nnono. cot;'1tclm1ng twenty. more or less

REFER!~NC: E DEED: Volume

. Me1gs County.

Deed Hec:orcls.
·-the prayer of

Sa1d compla1nt
1s that the a6ove described 011
and gas nghts bA partitioned.
that the interests be set off or
ordered sold if 11 cannot be
partitioned. and for · allowance
of attorney fees and costs
herein.
.You are rAQu1red to answer
the corilpla1nt with1n twenty-

been assigned Case No. 83CV-93 and Is pending on the eoght days after the l~st publicaCommon Pleas Court of Metgs
tiOn of thtS notice which will be
County. Ohoo.
•
published
once each w~ek for
The object of the Complaint .
1S a partitton act1on concerning
oil and gaS rights and to quiet
t1tle to oil' and gas rights

underlying the following des·

cribed real estate:

Sotuated in the Towrtship of
Lebanon. County of Meigs and
State of Ohio. bounded, and
described as follows:
··PARCEL NO: 1: Being SeCtion

s1x consecutive weeks . T~e Ja.st
publication will be made on ·

January 19. t 9B4. and the

twentV·AIQht days for anSwer
.w111 commen ce· on that 'dat8. ·
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise reSpond

as requored by the Ohio Ru)es of
Civol Procedurq. tudgment .by
default will be rendered·against
YQu· for the relief demanded in

'

.I

' '

---

........ VI.

...... lllllltlld

c...

Number
·13-CV-321 llld II ~ fn
thl eo..t of Common Plloeof
'MIIgl County, Pomoooy. Ohio
1

4711.

The ObJfiCI of the Compla1 nt
1s a part1t10n act1on concern1ng
011. gas and other mmerals.
·except coal. underlymg the
Jollawtng descnbed real es tate
S1tuated 1n the Townsh1p of

FIRE DEPT.
B 1 h B lldi
an II ng
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

992-2196

PH .

Middleport, Ohio

992-3383
12-29-lmo

1 - 13-tfc

CHIMN

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Now Open

nght·OI·way along the north
s1dA of the sa1d ten -acrA lot to
thA county road Also. the use at
a l1v1ng spr1ng near the nor ·
theast corner of the above·
descr1bed tr act
Also. the follow1ng •rP.al est·
ate. situated 1n the County of

Jerry's Custom
SLAUGHTER

For all your wirin1
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Bttf and Hoes
"From the Farm
to the Freezer"
Cut 1nd wr1pped to your
specifications. Fut. De·
pendable Service.
CALL: 742-2789
or 742-266
1·11·1 mo ·pd

12

;oio::2.h3o2~~

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Rt. 124,Pomtroy Ohio

corner of tract of land deAded
fr om John Romone to Bonnoe

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

·

Rutland. Meogs County. Ohoo. M11ler by deed dated and
the north half of the loltowmg
rocorded on Doed BookVolume
Also Transmission
-8eg1n010g at lhfl SOuthAaSI t 33. page 492. thenco north
cornw of the McGu1re Farm., 38'1• deg east 51 fAet thence
or
.lormerly known as the N o b~s north 6 p;. deg east 46 feet
Farm. be1ng 100 acres more or thencP. nort h 84lf4 deg east 1
lft!s conveyed to N1 al McGu1 re 19 7 5 IP.P.t. thAnce north 92
3_·_24_·_tf....JC
and Mai-Qarm McGu1re. h1s IP.P.t. more or less. to a po1nt 8
.wtfe. by E Stevens exec utor of feP.t southAast of John Rom· ,th'e estate of Ang1e Nobles. TnP~S nonh l1n1;1. thence north
1
24ll• 'deq east B feet fr om and
deceasAd and Mrs Lulu M
-t.tumphrey. by deed dated Aprol parallel !&lt;!! John Remme's nor1h
Public No1ice
t 5. t 924 . recorded on Book lme 175 feet. more or less. to
t 25 page 552 Deed RACords. the county road. the abovA
bemg a descnpt1on of the answer or otherw,se respond
~etgs County. Oh1o. wh1ch
·corner tS 64 rods east of the center hne of a Sixteen loot 116 as requored by the Ohio Rullo
west liM and 70 rods north. of It 1 nght·ol -way for egress and Of CMI Procedure. Judgment
the south hne of Sect1on 1 1ngress from the M 1ller lot to the by default Will bf! rendered
Town 6 Range 14 of the Ohoo County Road. reserv1 ng to the aga1nst you lor the relief
Company1S Rurchase. runn1ng Grant or the ngh t to use the demanded m thP- Compla,nt
thttnce north 128 feet to the above descnbP.d nght-ol -way
·south hne of the Nfl'W York lor eg rP.ss and 1ngress to a DATE 12 /301 83
Larry E Spencer
"Central Ratlroad nght of way. l,v,ng spnng. or any land he
Clerk of Court s
.thence north 6 2 1h deg west may havP. along or near th1s
MAIQS County
'400 fMt along the south hne of r~ght - O f · way . th1s pr1v1IAgA 10
Common Pleas
4ild fight of way. thence nor th extend to h1s he ~r s or ass1gns
Court
50'h deg west 200 foet along forever. conta1n1ng 00 2 acres.
I l l 5. 12 19 26 121 2. 9. 6t c
sa1d south l1ne of sa1d nght of morA or less
Referf!nce Deed VotumP.
way, thttnce north 40 deg west
300 feet along sa1d south hne 223. Page 27 t and Volume
of sa1d · nght of way th e nce ~ 276. Pago 275. Meogs County
64 Mi,c. Merchandise
north 21 1.12 degrees west 6 5 Deed Records
teet along sa1d south hne of sa1d
nght of
thence south 23ll4 and the pr aye r 1S that the above
degrees west 230 feet. thence descnbed estate be pan 1110ned.
'south 77'h deg. west t96 feet. that the 1nterests be set off or
lhence south 75 deg. west 182 ordered sold 1f 11 cannot be
leet. thence south 433 foet to part 1t10ned. for an allowance of
McGutre's south ltne. thence attorney fees hereto and costs
You are reQuued to answer
east 1t 80 feet along McGuoros
'SOuth ltne to the pl ace of the Compla1nt w1 th1n twenty.begmn1ng . co nta~nmg ten eig ht 1281 days afteJ the last
publication of thts not1ce wh1ch
8Cies. more or less
Reference to deed of C N w1 ll be publiShed once each
Clark et al to John L Rommes week for S I J~ 16 1 . successMl
992-2181
weeks The last pubhca t1on w1ll
dated Jan. 24. 1931
Also the follow1ng descnbed bP. made on the 9th day of
ON ALL
real estate Situated 1n Townsh1 p February. 198 4 . and the
Hotpoint Appliances
of Rutland. Meogs County. twenty·eJght 128) days lor
General
Electric TV's
an
swer
w1
ll
commencP.
on
that
Oh10. bfung the south half of the
date
followmg. tO·WII:
Hoover Sweepers
In case of your fa1lure to
Beg1nnmg at the southeast
corner of the McGUire farm.
. ....
formerly known as the Nobl es
farm. be10g 100 acres. more or
less. conveyed to N1al McGulfe
and Margaret McGUire. h1s
w1fe. by E Stevens. Exec utor of
the estate of Ang1e Nobles.
deceasAd. and Mr s. lulu N

/H. 992-5682
_
992 7121

t,___________

New Homes-Extensive
Remodel inc
lnsur~nce Work
Cuslo.m Pole Bides.
l Garaces
Roofinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidincs
16 Yeara Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282
11·1-tlc

CARPENTER
-SERVICE
- Addont 1nd remodeling
- Roofing 1nd gutter work

- Conetlte work
- Plumbing end electric1l
wort&lt;

(free Eatlmll..)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314

Pomeroy, Ohio

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
. SIDING

Year-End
Clearance Sale
AT

~

--

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

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Cla•lfleds and
Savell
Imall
· wrt"'
awn- itd
older

Town 6 Range 14 of the Ohoo

rour

br
wllll lllls
coupon. cancel your 1111 by phone when you get
, results. MoneY not refundable.

Company's Purchase. runn1ng
thence north 128 feet to the
south hne of the New York

AND

fomlly .
PH. 949-2739

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

end

BISSELL

• SIDING CO.

"BeaU1iful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimatesA 949-2801 or

949-28D0

No Sunday Calla
3·11-tfc

Discover Enw•A·Car. the
modem answer to soaring
new car prices! Drive ~ vehicle of your choice ... any
male end model. No down
peyment. Lower monthly
PIYII1fllls. Read all about ~.
Sti1d fol Free Booklet L-16.
Bob Blacllston, an authorized incltpandant EnpaeA-Car Brobr. Box 326, Pomeroy, Ohio 457~9.
W1nl Fister Information?
Call 614-992-6737

11 / 2/ll n

Nam•--------------------

so•;, deg. west 200 feet along
satd south hne at sa1d nght of

r

Addq'~-------------­

Ph. 986-4269
(f No Answer. C.ll 985-4382

way. thence north 40 deg. west
300 foot alorg the south line of
.s~ud rt9ht of way. thence south

Phon•------------------

\13'1• deg. west 230 feet.
thence south 77 1h deg, west

.196 feet. thence south 75 deg

~st 182 feet. thence south
433 feet to McGutre·s south
line. thence east 1180 feet
along McGuirAs south line to
the place of bflgmning, contain·
tng ten acres. more or less.
, Reference:
Aff1dav1t of
- ~ransfer

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

dated June 29. 1982

from John M. Romtn es to John
t-. Rom1nes .

· From both ab011e

Route 1
Shade, OH . 45776

All llakes and Models
Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
"'1Jr.ice AvaUable

mo

PH. 992-7844
pd

GRAND OPENING
SPECIAL
Jerry and Ellen's
Coin-0-Matic
Formerly Duds and Suds
Attendant on duty.
Clothes Washed &amp;
Dryed $2.00 a Load
One Day Service
Phone: 992-5937
1-5-1 mo.

8; Downing's Coal Co. also an ;
the tONer strata' of coal under

I )ForSIIIe

said descrobed land. also three
fourths ol·all·the grantor's share

( )Announcement

lor coal. oil and gas

·am:t ":"other ·minerals with' th8

5.
_ _ _ __
~-------

23, , ..
. -----

.ftVtld to Clartinc:e Stewart

12.-----

',,

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

2~. 25.
___
_
_26. _ _ _ __

I

30------31.------

13. ·- - . . - - - -

32.
33.

1~.

115.
I ~
I

l

,._

. ·

' Thli DallY lllltlntl
• . 111 CoUrt St.
Pomii'OY, 011. 41769

...

- --~~·-·----

'

I
I

I·

·
u.
·.
· .·
.
Mll111'.hll Coupon with Rt.mltmnct
.

MINE RUN

I
I
I

.

I
I.

•· ~~-~-~~--

STRIP
COAL
$3QOO
PH. 992-22$0
2-23-llc 1

home. Loti of referencee .

Men or womon . Coil 814·
887-3402.

Houae cleenlng any type
Point Pleaunt and vicinity .
Reasonable rates . Referen -

ceo. Calf 304-676·3908.

Harper' s Adult Care Home
has a vacancy tor another
resident, elderly person . Call

all

13

Insurance

6 Lost and Found
FOUND on Rt . 141 big
brown dog . Looks like Pit
Bul . For information call

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
- Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

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

(Formerly Lawrence
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)
ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH. 992-3194 or

992-2388
. Business or Re&lt;idonti•l
L__ _ _ _...!;12·21·1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
'Parts &amp; Service
J.J.flc

.GRAVEL
HAULED
AL TROMM

742-2328
I 0/20/t.f.n.

.,,_....

-==-

FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN,.S
APPLIANCE
. SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes ·

•Washara •Dishwashers

•li•ng••
•RelrlgtriiOrl
•Dryer~ •F,..IIII
PARTS and SERVICE
· 4·5-tfc

loat in the Maaon Pomeroy
area. 1 -16 foot log chain .

18 Wanted to Do
Babysitting in my home.

$26 weelc per child . Coil
446-7402.

Fi nanwl

Found Male German SJ'Ie-

phard. Sand Hill Road. 304676·6493.

7

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

NOW IN

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh.
PARCEL SERVICE

······c;aiilpoils·········
&amp; Vicinity
Second Ave . Behind 76
Station. Furniture. T)l. toya,
household itama. Everything

"'

PARCEL PRIORITY SHIPMENTS
FOR LESS THAN U. S. MAIL
SAVE 10% 10 50% ANO lORE

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
618 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
.I
..-~~located in H&amp;R 1-0 Y'&lt;o
~,..o Block Buildinc 'i&gt;

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction every Tuesday

nignt. Pt. Pleasant. WVa.

that you do busine11 with

people you know. ond NOT

to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the•'offaring .

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12'h% purchooe 0&lt;
refinance. 11 1A% adjultllble
rate . leader Mortgage .

Atnano. 1·800-341-8654

23

Professional
Services

Center Bldg .. Camden St.
614-367-7101 .
PIANO TUNING Lower

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, Antique &amp;. liquidation aalea.

prices - regular tuning•·
discounts to Senior Citizens.

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conaigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds

season prices on furniture
re- upholstering. Mowreya

Churcnea 8o Schoolo. W1rd'o
Ucenoed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp; Keyboard. 304-676-3824.
WVa . 304-773-5786 or
304-773-9186.
TWO MONTH SPECIAL.
Jon. and Feb. 1984 oil

Auctioneer. 304 · 2.763069.

9

Wanted To Buy

446·3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;.
wood heaters. Swain Furniture. 446-3169. 3rd. &amp;

Olivo St .. Gallipolis. On.

Announcements

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommondo

Auct. Lonnie Neal . Youth

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed cara .
Jim Mink Chev.-Oida Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson

r~
~

Business
Opportunity

muot go . 9:30· Dork.

DEPOSITORY
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
"U.P.S. - PUROLATOR ~
7
~000R TO DOOR f
oot DELIVERY ~~

21

Yard Sale

Moving Solo Wed .·Sat. 447

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

Upnolatery. 304-676-4164.

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR.
full b1aement. with garage,
wood burner included. city
achoola. 2 miles from town.

Coli 446-0276.

Ranch on 5 acres, beautiful
setting with tall pines
around the house. Spacioue
livingroom which overfooka

tne pond. 4 bedrooma. utility room and' kitchen haa a
built· in range. Auume paymenta with e amall doWn

payment. $68.900. Coli
oak. Calf 614-388-9906 446-3176.

3 Announcements

after 6,
weekends .

or

anytime
6 room house, bath, 3 acrn
ground. near Porter on Old

We need tobacco poundage. Rt. 160. Calf 446-2867 or
Will pay top price. Call 446-4202.
SWEEPER and sewing ma- 1-614·379-2166.

chine repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up end
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georgeo Cr.. k Rd.
614-446-0294.

Pay top dollar for used
mobile homes end truck

Balloons for Christmas, Get
Wall. Anniversarys, Birthdays parties. Call Balloons&amp;

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
Vacancy: Julia's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 18 years experience.

Clifton, W.V . 304-7736873 .

Riverview Pa1sonal Care
Home now has e vacancy for

a elderly person. 304· 7736882.

Syracusa. January 12,1310am till 8pm. January
14-9am till 12 noon.
S.Sayra and C. McCoy. Coli
..992-6082.

antique furniture . Will buv, 1
piece or complete households. ·Also complete Auctioneering service. Call Rodn e y
H o w e r y

We have buyers for homea in

BEDS·IRON. BRASS old

equal value . 3 bdr. houae.
Sanders Hill, city schools,
garage. kit-dining area, cen ·

Realtor. Call 676-6104 or
kelt Barber Snop. 2nd. Ave. 676-63B6 .
Middleport. Oh. 614-9923476.
Sell or trade for farm of

Furniture, gold. silver dollars. wood ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques. etc;:. Complete
households. Write M .D.

Millar. Rt. 4. Pomaroy. Oh
45769 or 614-992-7760.

Want to buy Indian artifacts.

Pnono 814-446·4298.

Employment
Serv1ces
11

1984 ot 6:30 PM . Rutland
Church of tne Nazarene.
Deboron J . Gilmore, diraC-

Office clerk lor a mine·

Puppies 'h Doberman 'h
Collie. Call alter 8PM. 4463797.
Free to good home .male
Beagle dog. Call 446-9660.
7 wk. old llforw&lt;&gt;gjan Elk·
·hound puppy, female. Coli
814-317·0184 •Iter 3.
Men a large ahlrta. C1ll 61 4!388-8769.

tho 840.000 to &amp;66.000
range. List with us. A-One
Real Estate, Carol Yeager

Nazarene Youth . Sunday
evening , January 15th,

Giveaway

3 bedroom. Superior loca tion , 10% down , 10%
financing

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins, large currency . Top prices. Ed. Bur·

prooentad by tho Rutland

tor. The public ia invited to
attend.

5:30.

1------------------

614·698-7231 .

Kld'a Praise I 3 .. .a musical

4

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

campers. Call 614-446- port. Coif 614-992-6941.
Call 0176.
3 bedroom ranch styled
Wanted to buy. New. used &amp; home. Calf 446-0109 olter

VFW Post-Mason W.Va. Ray
Von Motor 8o The Country
Connactlon. Friday &amp; Satur·
day from 9 till 1. Oonce.

."cur our

614-949-2907.

~ ~·-·lUI .

742-2328 4-21-tlc

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport

LOST-Female golden retriever . Pomeroy Middleport area . Childs pet.

Pnone 614·446-1427.

Calf 992·6919 .

I DUPONT

12 12·1 mo ·pd

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

Grove Rd . Rutland. Call
614·742·3046.

suran ce Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallit County
for almost a century . Farm,·
home and personal property
coverageS are available to
meet individual needs. Contact Harry Pitchford, agent .

. .

~ AUIU,... ~

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

'11. - - - - - - .

ANDr·

'

Kitchen Cabinals - Roof·
Inc - Sidinc - Concrete
Petios - · Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modelinc - Custom Pole
Berns.

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

'·-----1.----e'·----.------ 21-----29.-----

.n ~ Excepting .!)0 acre_s con-

I,

20.

2
-_
- -_ 22. 1
_ ._ - _

10.----11. ;__...;..._ __

. BUtlind 1nd · tibuiided and
dllicribed ·as follows:
. »•l!eginnlng II'IStlke 21 0 feet .
lOuth· 24 1h deal Weal from a
. alike II'the norihnlt corner.of
•'T•~ ii'OI•creirfeft, p~rchaaed
· llv•John .Romine and John ~. ·
Romine _from t;. w, And .E~er
Clerk.. being fen ~res off the
I-·~t~tl~i ~f 1 ,1OOac.ro ~fr~.

19,

-----1

-------1
-----1

3. _ _ _ __

righHo·mine. !For reference to
HJ!Ieryation· sea VqJume 125
ll'~ .~~~ Meigs County Deed
·Rt!Cords.t ·
·
.-.JReference Deed: Volume
!87.- Page 57. Meigs County
-Deed Records.,
.•,excepting :20 acres conllityed·to Bonnie Miller.
.•,excepting .5'1 · acres con·
veyed to Bonnie Millet.
-• The loUowing real •estate.
eil~ate in the &lt;;9unty of Meigs,
Slate of' Ohio. and Towns~lp of

18.

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

reserving unto grantors the
llCCiusive right to lease satd

-...':

17.

I )For Rent

of oil and minerals under sa id
ebov.e described premises and
~roperty

I
I
I

1 )Wanted

IIXHIW

Pink aale. Open house. Cosmetics 60-70 percent off.
McCoy home, 6th street in

Thelecaslrrates
Include discount

tho Maynard Coal Co. and John '

r

Rt. 681 West·at Darwin

"t ---------.

d~scrobed

parcels there is excepted and .
reservAd all coal unde'r lease to .

WELL'S GARAGE

Dewayne Williams
· &amp; Scottie Smith

Co .. 446-4313 .
ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Do1 Houses

Will ooro lor the olderly In my

c

Found-Red and black male
beagle. Found on Beech

Central Raolroad roght ol way. I

thence north 62 1h deg west
400 foot along the south l1ne of
said nght of Way. thence north

mole

448·2708 .

BRING YOUR PACKAGE=
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

wwv

Pomeroy
Landmark

S&amp;W TV

NO'jj

YOUNG'S

Sltuetlons
Wanted

SANDY AND BEAVER In•Wire
for creo ·
aoJe removal .
•15% Discount Months
of January and February .
•Call now to protect your

1

GARAGE

1n the Townsh1p of Rutland. and
bounded and descr1 t}ftd as
follows Be1ng 1n Sect1on No .. 1.
begonnong 2 t feet north 4'h
deg east ot the southeast

v.tl1ch corner ts 6 5 rods east of
the west hne and 70 rods north
of the south lme of Soc!lon 1

'II Huaky l1m1l1 dOfl 1 yr.
old, gentle, good w1tcn dog.
C11i
18311 or 4411·
22_0_3·441·
_ _ _ ___
2 coli to glvo ow1y. Adult
molo lnd !emile. 814-742·
2238 .
Klttono ond coli to give
away. Female and mole.
Good peto. Call 814-986·
3884 ·

Gauge Shotguns
Only

11·9 I

Roger Hyse II

Moogs. on thAState of Ohoo. and

Humphrey by deed dated Aprol
15. 1924 recorded on Book
t 25 deed records of Meogs
County. Ohoo at pege 552

1:!

GlvNWIY

11

g~~m~~~~h:~~.::;op".!~p~,~~ 304·676 ·1293.

6:30 p.M.

Factory Choke

Be1 ng 1n Sect1on 1. Town 6.
des cnbed as follows. tO·WII
Beg 1nn1ng at the northwest
cornftr of John l R om~ne·s ten
ac re lot. th AncP. sou th 219 feet
to a stake. thencA Nort h 4 5deg
05' east 192 feel. more or lf!SS.
to a l 0 -1nch syca more. thencl=!
nort h 5 deg oo· west 124 feet
to a stake. thence south 7 5 deo

SWEEP

°

104 c'o' URT ST

.
POMEROY, OH.

Kl NG

RACINE

DEC 30th

PAT H

..,._, II ~tty. of JOhn M.
llooNne 1111 John M. IIOI'Nnll
llld Jol!n L Romlnllb John
L llonilnoe. you . . hlrlby
nolllled you ' - ...... oo· west 135 feet to the place ol
fllmiCI dlr.tdowlta fn I legli bBQIOnlnQ, COntaining 0 51
IOIIon IOIIhlld M.-y M. Rom- ac res. more or tess Also. thA ,
Ine lb MIIY M. ROI'Nnll 1b !roo and unobstr ucted usA ol a

' '

....
...........
..-...............
-·-:a:-

Church.

~ thl "'*'-',..,.,-of

4

1

WILL OPEN

fotmeofy ..._, .. Range 14 . and boundAd and

....... C9mmunfty

He became one of the youngest
two-star generals ill the Army upon
his February 1982 promotion and
had taken command of the 90th
ARCOM in August 1981, supervising
about 4,500 reservists in 63 combat
units throughout Texas and In
Bossler City, La."

•..

"

ThA lollowo~~~.scrobed real
estato sotuato on thA County ol
·
ChNtiln
Church
of
...- . . Olllo .... Rutllnd Me1gs. 1n the State of Ohto. and
~of Cliotlt. fno., . . . m thfl Townsh1p of Rutland

Ownby, who was married and bad
three children, was the vice
president and corporate'director of
Delaware Punch Co.

The Daily Sentinel

MEIGs
CAB co •

='=

..... Ch!nh .... Goldin
......... Wlllllplllt Confer·

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Ohio ·

~=======:-7rr:========i1-;::========~r=::;:;;;~~~:::;n
GUN SHOO.T .cH•MNEY
_

"*.

Parents testify m "'Twilight Zone" accident cas~,,

~';~~ ·' '

8 USiness
•
services
•·
Pomeroy-Middleport,

Pu!lllo Notlot .

•

'/_''\"

'

12, 1984

Help Wanted

tral AC. gas neat. Coil
446-2151 4PM to BAM.

located in Syracus8-Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. Price reduced
$23.500 . or will rent for

S240 mo. 304·866-3934.
HOUSE FOR SALE·&amp;
rooms. basement, double
garage. 1 and one third acre
lot. Rose Hill. Pomeroy.
Excellent condition .

$32.90(). 1-614 · 6782513 .
House

partially furnished.

121 7th Ave. Middleport,

Ohio. 'Owner will finance .

industrial sales Co. Some
experience preferred involving: inventory, cardex system , typing, general office
reports, and telephone salea
duties. Send resume to Box

7 room house. 11h acre lot.
barn, basement. carport. on
Rose Hill in Pomer.oy. Good

and taka over clothing busi·
nest. Include• inventory,

Addition, all brick. aaaume·
8 .5 loan, moderate down

Contact Ralph Pratt. 227 S.
5tn. Ave. Middleport. on.

102 in cora ol Gallipolis condition. 826.000. plua·
Daily Tribune. 826 Third furniture -82.000. Toto!:
Ava:. Galllpolio. Oh 46631. $28.000. Coif Edison Hobstatler at 992-2464 or
Shari ride to O.U. lor 8:00 George S. Hobatetter •I
cion, M-F. Coli 446-8680. 992· 7763. Will conoider
fin.anclng part of it.
Busineas opportunity look- 1-...:_--~--------­
lng lor oomeono to buy out BY OWNER. Meadowbrook
fixtures, supplies. 304-676- payment. 3 bedroom. 2
1317 or 676-3217.
baths. dining room. built in
AVON MEANS MONEY.
Straight parcentoge oleorn,
lnga. aponaorahlp and good
routtuvolllble.Coll1-304·
676-231 B.

kitchen , garage with auto

opener. Control oir-cond ..
Iorge lot, priced mid liltlea.
Shown by appointment'
only . NO REALTORS .
Phone 304-875-3446. ·

�..........., .,.,

"·.

•

Page 12 The
31

1984

Sentinel

..
They'll Do It Every Time

Homes for Sale

46 Furnished Rooms

Gallipolis Ferry, three bed·
room . brick, four car garege,

pluo &amp; yoaro old. Phone
304-876-8B&amp;1 .
By owner, Golllpolio Ferry.
three bodroomo, two botho.
100x200 lot. 9 .B per cent
11oumoblo loon. 304-876·
21B3.

Portable NICIChl-lne m•·
ohlne all ettachrnento, Hko
now. s.. It 131 3rd. Ave.
After 3 :00PM.

SIMplng room *125, utili·
tloo paid. Moloo only, range
• rofrlg. Call 448-4411
after 7 p.m.

64 MiiC. Merchendlee ·

46 Space for Rent

Knouff Firewood Plokup or
Dollvorod. 12"·22" o1ockod
In yard . HEAP vendor,
prompt delivery. 111&lt;t-2&amp;1·
11245.

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Lorge loto. Call
614-992-7479.

Umootcine, Sand, Grovel.
Delivered In Mooon, Molga.
Golllo or pick up ot Richardt
• Son. Call 441-7785.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
614-448· 7672 .

-- ·--=~--EVENING
81

-

For Ieese. Chevron Stetlon.
Meson area. Good locatkm.

304-676-2982 after 8pm.

Merchancl; se

peto. Coli 448-4344.
Priced to Hll, 1979 Starling
14x70. 2 bdr .. CA. vinyl
oklrting. French City Broker·
ago Service. Coll448·9.340.
1972 mobile homo. noodo
some repairt, with 1 Vz acres
very rea1onable . Cell 448-

0083.

Two bedroom all electric
mobile home, Athton Upton

Rood. $125 . per mo. 850.
dopooit. 304-676-40BB.

3 bdr. house on Chatham
Avo., Gollipolio for oolo
11B,OOO, 10% down and

Two bedroom mobile home.

10% interest or for rent

ono milo out Send Hill Rd.
8176 mo. Coli Jock Neal • 304-876-4046 .
446-0167.
2 bdr. houH. 2 blocka from
city pork, $200 month pluo

44

Apartment
for Rent

utilities, reference, available

197B Shultz 14x70 contrrol
air, all new furniture. ex.

cond. on rented lot. Coli
oveningo 448-2076.
1979 12x66 Uberty, unfur. ,
gas heat. gaa stove, exc.
cond. $8,400. 614-38B·
9326 or 814-245-6176.
1979 Bayview 12x80 w"h
12x8 oxpondo, AC. axe.
cond. Coli 448-9418 or
448-2217.
1972 Mobile homo 12x86.
unfurniohed. 2 bdr.. good
cond. Coli 448· 7171 after
6. 448~B28B .
19BO 14x70 Fairmont Boy·
view 2 bdr .. largolR, 1 both,
den, alec. range, 911 heat,
waaher-dryer ,

CA . fur·

nlohod. In Rodney rented lot,
pold water, troth pick-up.
Aaaumable

7

yr .

loen

13.29%, $2,000 down. Coli
448-1018 after 6 .
1970 Vindelo oxpondo
12x63. 2 bdr .. control air.
deck, awning, underpen-

ning. Call 614-246-9222.
ATIENTION· Do you noodto
move into a nice mobile
home without the h111le of

Ht· up. Wo hove 1 1979
Freedom 14x70 deluxe
model on a lot in the Country

Mobile Homo .Park. This
home has a front dining
room with wooden bow
window, a circular kitchen

now. Coli 448-2419 .
Country setting. 3 bedroom
remodeled home , new
forcecf air furnece, nice
kitchen , city water. near

Small furn . house 1 or 2
adutts only, no pets. Call

Tuppero Plolno Ohio. $226.
without utilltiea. 614-6673974.

1 bdr. opt. Coli 446-0390 .
2

House with bath and large

Utilities partially furnished .••··· •· 3 bdr. house for sale

446-033B .

yord. Near Racine. 814·
992· 6B6B.

whh gordon 1ub. Price of
•12.1&gt;00. lncludea motel

For rent in the Eastern
District. Neat modern

bedroom houoe. Full bOlO·
mont. 8200. month · plua

1972 Skyline, 1 bedroom
fumiohod. Ideal for couple.
Roady to move ln. $4760.
814-992-7479.
1978 14x70 Kirkwood mobile home. 911 heat, 3 br, 2

l&gt;atho. Iorge k"chen • living
room, underpenning, out
bldgo. Muot Soli. $9000.
304-773-6023.
12x86 Mobile homolocotod
Hartford. W. Vo. 304·B822794.
'69 Schultz mobile homo,
two bedroom. new carpet.

central air-cond ., needs
oome wo•k .. $3,400 .0.0 .
304-676-4B19 or 304-B963472.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
36 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner finencing available. Coll446-8221
after ~ weekdays.

lot on Rt. 776 near Leete,
hal septic tank, level
ground, $3,000 . Cell 814643-016B.
For Hlo City lot in Bidwell,
$800. Coli 446· 4113 or
446-8609.

mo.

Eveningo-614-949-2660.

8 room house. Baaement.
natural gea. rural water, 1
kid accepted. Large yard ,
garden, no pets. drunks or

dope. John Shoau. 3'11
miloa South Middleport. R·
7. 367-0611 .

Extra nice two bedroom
Five room house, 2324Y:r

Uncoln Avo. $136.00 per
month. 304-676-3669.

Garden apace. $250 per
month plus deposit. Call

Three bedroom house Camp

446-4477 or 446-3BBB.

Conley, 304-676-6016 oftar 3pm .

Nice 2 bdr. carpeted apt. in
Kanauga with washer · 8t

dryer hookup, $176 pluo
utlli!ioo. Coli 1-304-273·
9746 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 bdr. apt. newly' decorated
completely furniohod, 46B
2nd. AVe. $190 mo. plua
depooit. Coli 446-2236 or
446 -26B1 .

location. Upper River Rd.
depoait roq. Coli 614-446B65B.

1 bedroom Apt. $196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
Housing Opportunity. Con tact Village Manor Apts .

Nicely furnished modern
mobile home. in city. 1 ,or 2

odulta only. Call 446-033B.

614-992-77B7 .

2 bdr. mobile homo partially
fumiahod . Coli 446-4292 .

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior

2 bdr. trailer 2 mi., from
hospital at Evergreen private

piece dinene aet *99. used
bedroom suitea, refrlgeretors. ranges, cheat. dressers,
wringer washers, TV's, dry-

11W1 TM"'e U IIt.. I TM Oit

r'----------..,.-----!""---~
!1 o111 1 111111.111''1'

lot. Coli 446-0167.
furn .,

12x60. 2 bdr .. nice • clean .
No peto, dep. raq.. ref.
proforrod . Coli 614-2661636 before noon.

House trailer at 322 Third

Ava .. odulto only, 446-374B
or 614-266-1903.
12x60 2 bdr. unfumiahodon
Rt. 36. Dop. • ref. required.
Call 446-4369.
2 bdr. furnished . adults only,
no inside pets, private lot.
Also furnished apartment.

men only. Coli 446-391B.
2 bdr. mobile homo fully
fumiahed , odulto only. Call
446-4110.

3 bedroom furniahad Apt. in
Syracuse. 614-992· 7689
after 6 p.m.

with mattresses. *260. and

up to $396. Baby bedo.
$110. Mottroueo or box
springs, full or twin.

• &amp;a ..

firm. $6B. and $78. Queen
oota, s 196. 4 dr. chooto.
842 . 6 dr. cheoto. $64. Bod
!romeo, UO.and $26., 10
gun · Gun cobinoto, t360.
Gas or electric ranges *376.

Boby mottreuoo. $26 •
$36, bed fromoa $20, $26,
• $30, king fromo 160.
Good selection of bedroom
suitea, cedar cheats ,
rockers. metal cabineta ,
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture -· bookcase,
rengea, chain , dryers, re·
frigerators and TV' a. 3 mile a

out Buloville Rd. Open 9om
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am

to 6pm, Sot.
614-448-0322
TV • Applionceo, 627 Third

Avo .. Gollipolio, 614-4461899. Spin wuhero, goo •
electric dryers, auto
waahers, gas 8t . electric
rangea, refrigerators , TV
aets.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahers. dryers. refrigera-

inghouae electric range. llv·
ingroom suite. familyroom

auite, table • 6 cholro.
Corbin 8t Siiydir Furniture,
956 Second Ave. 448-.
1171 .
Baby crib &amp; mattre11. like

now . Call 446· 2837.
Whirlpool convertible

2 bedroom Apt. in Middle·
port . $176 . month pluo
utilitloo . Dayo-614-992 ·
6646 . Evaninga-814-949·
2216.
Semi-furnished. 1 bedroom

Apt. on 2nd. floor. Cooteo
building In Middleport.
N.2nd. Avo. Coli at Apt.1B
or coli 614-992-7347 or
614-992-2610.

•so.

Will cut and deliver fire·
wood. Call 814-268-1528.
largo oizo buck otovo, 1 yr.
old, oxc. cond., 11175. Call
448-B221 .
Equipment trai ..r tandem.

18ft, •1.000. Aloo Gravely
backhoe. •1 .200. Coll814268-1427.
Freezer for ule, like new.

Coli 446-4428.

Dozer with end loader Cooe
310. •4.600. Coll814-268·
1427.

UHd GE refrigerator, Woot·

1- - - - - - -- - -

Call 446-63211.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto·

3 room Apt. fumiahed. No
pall. 614-949-2263 .

Apt. for rent. 614-9926908.

7 pc. wood group, *800. 16
KW electric furnance

1"0'x20' gorogo. Will move
to your lot. Call 448-1102.

tora, rongao. Skeggo Ap·
pliancoo, Upper River Rd.
boolde Stone Croat Motel.
614-446-739B.

Furniahed Apt. 614-992·
6434.

old. ox. cond.. *426. Call
446-B221 .

era. • ahooo. Coli 614-4463169.

Citizeno. $130. Equal Houa·
ing Opportunitiea . 814992-7721 .

waaher-dryer will eell pair or
separate. A· 1 condition,

$36 each. Call 448-9626.
401n. White Hotpolnt otovooven. wamier drawer and
two storage drawers. can

304-676-1394.
Nino piece oot of family
room furniture , includea

lompa and tobleo, 1300.00.
only two yeoro old. Wooden
child ' s highchair, *30.00.

Coli 304-676-3831 .

Matching vanity • bad, 860
motorcycle.

old

Houses for Rent

Furniohod 3 bedroom mobile
home with w11hor end
dryer. No poto. 614·9492263.

- D.I!JIIex, $260 plua utllitito.
Avoll:-now. 2 bdr .. LR, new 2 bedroom fumlohed. *166.
romod. kit .. • both. lorll" · month plua 'utHitloe and
fenced yard, now . corpot, dopoolt. No pate: Country
IIIIB 3rd. Avo.. Go[llpollo.
Call 448·2457 or 448· :;:!~ ~~me .Pork. 8140332.
.2 bedroom lftObllo home.
Very nice hou11 In city, Now carpet, utHitloa pold, no
rudy by end of mont~. · poll, drunka, dope.· 1' kid
unfurniohod, all cerpotld. 3 accepted. John Sheeto, 3'11
bdr.. yard, plenty perking, mil~ South Middleport. R·
quiet ntlghborhood. Call 7. 317-01111 .
Earl Tope or call 448-0332 1 - - - - - - - - -.:.
doyo, or 448 · 0181 2 bedroom In Middleport.
- I n go.
Furnlohed·U211 monthly.
Utllitieo paid. Depoolt and
I room (two oto,Y) houH 56 reforencoo required. Call
Garfield Avo .. no peto and 892·7841.
. .
mull give Nferenceo. Will
telie two or thr... email . Two -ba!lroom furnlahld or .
children, Inquire in rear after unfumilhod · at Southaldo.
10:00AM.
304-8711-11181.

47

··'

WE HAVE~

(]) R"'-

e

modele refrllertere, :
Mn!lll. •
-pa01011, dlthwMharl, :.
mlotowev••· "••""' • •
Coollllg. IIIMt Metal Worll. ' ;
Oollle Refrigeration· Co. • ·
114·""·40H.

TOP CASH paid for lete
model ullod care. Smith
J~dy Taylor Grooming. Call
Bulck-Pontlec, 1811 Eaot·
614-3117· 7220.
em Ave., Gelllpollo. Cell
Brlorpotch Konnolo Prof••· 1114-448·2212.
olonol All-brMd grooming.
lndbor-outdoor boarding fa- 2· 1871 Volbwegon lupot
cllltleo. Englloh Cocker Spa· -tiH, excellent running
nlol pupploa. Call 814-38B· condition, pr1ca very - noble. CoU 448·0141 alter
9790.
II PM.
Drogonwynd Cottory · I, ----C-h-r~-,-lo_r_C_o-rd_o_b-e •
Konnelo. AKC Chow pup·
ploo, CFA Hlmoloyon, Par- 1874 Cedi lc Coupe Doalan and SlomoH klnono. ville both In very uood oond.
Coll814·4411· 3844 altar 11 . • now point. R-neble
priced or will trodl for 4WD
2 AKC Reglltttod malo pickup. Col 814-378· 2314
Cocker oponlolo- blonde 5 ,_or
_ l_1_4_·_37_8_·_2_1_81_._ _ _
yro. old, rod 3 yro., good, .
blood Uno, good tempore- 1880 Ford LTO Pl. PB,
mont. Excellent for brood· AM· FM I trick, cruloo, low
1
C 11 4411 937 2
miiMge, oxo. cond. Cell
•
ng . 1
after 1114· 218-1333.
6 :30PM .

8 71

liON'S Televlllioil Servtce.
IIIIOillla~ In Zenith and
~otorol, , ..Quuor. and -:
houM oelll:
.104·1171· .
2381'or 114·44e·2~84.

ca.

7:00

w- w.... c - w
• -....304-181·3102.
- - - - - - - - -IEAMLUI OUni!III,One
place cu~ fit your ho-.
Ouerent8lid. Advei'Ood Cllll·
ter, (Dey 114-,. .Z·t40fl,)
!nltht 4114·•H· I201.)

(I) MOVIE: ' Quell for Fire'
(I) MOVIE: 'Wild Horll
Hank'
(J) Curtain of T oars
I])
NCAA llaoketball:
North Carolina It Marylend
(() MOVIE: ' Centonnill'

41110. """'

remarrying.

~~O:.Ic·,::".=:

·

GOAAY, Mit RUNE FUNHY. TH' TRICH6
YOUfl f!l!NCI C'N PLAY
ON YOU ! l COULD 0'
~WORN 1 lfEAilCI-

,
GET your c1rpat I HIP · .
IHAPE WITH CAI'TIAN ·
ITEAMI!R. W- ,__., · :
1um......
..__ cn1n~
1 In •••
,_
..,lit~ • .

'Part 5
(J)
NCAA Baoketbell:
Purdue lrt Ohio State
II (J) ()II Magnum P .I.
(J) Sneak Prevlewo Co·
hosts Neal Gobler and Jof·
fray -lyons take a look at
what' a happening at the
movies.

(B) Stanley Kremer on Film

IR) (60 min.)
()I A""""'" Waiter and

a

Automan battle with a computer expert who is using his
expertise to disrupt the c i ~
ty·s automated systems .

AI;L E Y OOP'

YEAH! BUDDY AN'
HIS MOTHER,ZAAA !
TH EY HAVE A HOUSE
DOWN lH ROAD A FEW
MII.ES FROM HERE

... AN' BE CAREFUL

(60min.)
NCAA Baokotball:
•
Welt Virginia It Rhode
lolend
B:30 e (I) Cll Family Tleo
(J) Good Nolghborl
(B) N- Tech.Timoo
9 :00 D (]) (l) Choero Sam do·

OF THAT "BUDDY.'.' .
HE'S BIG AND
MEANER'N DiRT!

cides to hire Norm t o do
Cheers tax returns.
(J) 700 Club
1J (I) CiJ Simon • Simon
(I) ® Stanloy Kremer on
Film Jane Fonda narrates
this look at filmmaker Stan·
ley Kramer's remarkable
career. (R) (60 min.I

8 1D Maaquorodo laven-

1877 Dodge von fully car.'
poted • cuotomlzod. 311, ~
barrel!, auto .. aun·roof, wr\1
oharp. Call 814-812· 311'7.
1878 J11p CJ·II, I cyl .. 3
opd.t loedod with, oxtreo, ••·
oono.. U,300. Cal 4441·
011111.

•=

'OII)I'OY· 814·1g2·2214'.

~ener'al Heullng
7~------ :

811 ·

.•

•·

and Golllpolia. 614-446·
8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartmonto now ovoiloblo to
elderly • dlllblod with on
income

of1 leas

than

•12,300. Ranting for 30
percent of odjuotod Income·
.Phone 304-87&amp;-1679.
Nice 1 bedroom oportment,
utllltloo furnlohod, 304-87&amp;·
7112.

The officers at Hill Street are
up in arms over a series of

better

cop slayings apd Joyce tells

to·

frank a secret that may re-

define their relationship. 160
min.)

(]) Inside Tho NFL
I]) FIS World Cup Skiing:
Men's Downhill Coverage
of this skiing event is pre~
.sented
from
Morzine,

France. (60 min .)
(() TBS Evening News
(I) • (jJ 20/20
1!1 (I) (jJ Knots landing
(I) Aveneoro
®News
.INN News
10:30 (I) Blondie
(B) Tony Brown' a Journal
• Comedy Time
11 :00 • (]) (I) Clll!l (I) (jJ •
()I Newo
(]) MOVIE: 'Boot Friends'
(J) Another Ufo
I]) SportsConter
(() All In the Family
(I) Dr. Who
Ill Benny Hill Show
11 :15@ NCAA Baakotball:
Villanova at G-uotown
11:30 U (]) (l) Tonight Show
(]) MOVIE: 'Joaepha'
(Dubbed)'
(I) Boot of Groucho
(()Collins

,. &amp;ILLY AND RUSSELL LEFT ...
FOR THE COAST • • •.WENDY TO

HER SHOW ON THE !WAD ••
&amp;ILL TO HIS OFFICE... •

BARNEY

JUST PUT MY
·BUT'TER AN' EGG
MONEV UP ON TH'
MANTELPIECE
WHAR I CAN
KEEP AN EVE
ON. IT
I'LL

(I) Soap .
1!1 (I) Troppor John. M.D.
(I) Latenight America
(jJ All In tho Family

Gl 1D Nigh11ine

•

In . Middleport two room
efficiency oportmont. Call
1 -304-882·25118.
Two bedroom · aportrent
portly fumithod. Yard and
booement. •1 ~11 ; 00 month .
304·175-22114 l)lonlng• or
11
_ 4-448-3703 dlya. .

2 cow• for sale or trade. Call

84

Hay •

8 (]) (l) Buffalo Bill

(]) MOVIE: ' If You Could
See What I Hur'
10:00 D (]) (l) Hill Street Blueo

814· 992-7888.
POLLED ' HEREFORD
BUUS - From A. I. brllodlng
to tho top bulla In · tho
country. Agn - 8 monthe
to 3 yuro. Price 711 centopot
pound. Con- ARROW
FARMS, Athena, Ohio.
Phone 1-814-183.8274.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Preventing a throw-in
NORTH

PEANUT.S

•

.KJ6
tQ75 2

+QB 6 2
WEST

EAST

~10862

+K973
1"'75 3 2
.1098
t6
tKJ
j.i. 75 43
+AKJ9
SOUTH

+HI
.AQI
tAI09843
+10
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West Nortil East
t+
Pass
Pass 3t
Pass
Pass It
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soutb
It
3•
St

Opening lead: +3
By Oswald Jecoby
and James Jacoby
We have to thank North
for toda y's article. He didn 't
bid three no-trump as he
should ha ve. so South wound
· up at five diamonds.
We also have to thank
West. He elected to open his

Grain

•

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE-ASSN .)

•

Twilight Zone
12:00 (J) Bums &amp; Allen
(() MOVIE : '.O peration
Secret'
11) Nigh11ino
(jJ MOVIE: 'A Sl'j\OII Town
in Texas'
Ill Thlcke of the Night
12:30 II (]) (l)Lote Night with
David Lettermen
(I) Jack Bonny Show
Ill (I) MOVIE: ' Tiie Billion
Dollar Throa1'
• (jJINa12:46 (f) MOVIE: 'Charlota of
Fire'
1 :00 till Merrl~ ~n
(J) Entartalnment Tonight
()I CNI\j Hlldllne News '
1:1&amp; @ NFL'o .0-elt Mo·
menta NFL'a Greatest Mo'!18nts pre1ents hi{lhlighta of
Super Bowl 'VI' featuring
tho Dallas Cowboys vs.
Miami DOlphins.
1 :30 (f) MOVIE: 'Diner'
Cll Love That Bob
CD NIWI/Sign Off
1 :46 I]) Fithln' Hole
2:00 (]) Bachelor Fether

by THOMAS JOSEI'H
Z English

ACROSS

J Stitch

river
&amp; Jewish
3 Dispatch
philosopher 4 "Very good,"
l1 All
in Paris
12 Com meal 5 Orb
mush
6 Bundle
13 Inheritor
7 Western
14 Grow
state
Iowan! dark 8 Plant
15 Purposes
expert

1&amp; Comport

oneself
17 Office 19 No (sl.)
ZO Father
Z1 Donizetti

opera

Yesterday's Auswer 1·12
•
9 Raise
22 Burnt sugar 33 Counter10 New start
23 Of love
tenor
1&amp; Secondary Z4 Exclude
· 34 Synunetrical
18 Hockey great za Distaff G.!.
35 English
ZO Hurry!
30 Considerable
river
Z1 Certain
31 That of yours 37 Health
gannent
(Lat.)
resort

· 22 Sernce
party needs
Z4 Swiss
city

Z5 So be it!

za Hold on

Z7 Criminal
charge (sl.)
Z8 Alder tree

Z9 One kind .
&lt;X energy
3Z French
city

Mlns
37 Unravel
38 Dislodge
39 Eucharist
plate
40 River
in Hades

n Expiate
DOWN

1 "Ad!Vn - "

j· j

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

'

Here's

h~w

to work

'l i:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
lpottrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are ail ·
. hlnta. ·Each day the code letten are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

.G A

JSTVV

QADJA

JDU

NAOTBTBY;

QVXPUJ
JZTBTBY .

SZA
Z.

JPB
F .

ZADNS

DBU

G AZTBU
TJ

SZA

JSTVV

VXBYLAVVXF .

Ye.ter*y'a Cryptliqaote: DO NOT AUpW G.l.WS TO GROW ·~
ONmEROAD.OFFRlENDSHIP.-GOEFFRIN
_
)

..

and was down one when the

spade finesse lost.

~f)~,,~

e

Medium olzo rOund balM of
hoy for oalo. Flrot cunlltg.
Evenlngo: 1114-9811-3848 or
882·7302.

I

1·12-14

+AQ

three of clubs instead of the
superior lead of the deuce of
spades.
•·
East won the club lead
with his faek. He knew that
West would have led high
from three. so that club lead
bad to be fourth best and
South's 10 had to be a singleton. Still there seemed to be
no harm in leading a second
club, but East saw a danger.
Had he led a second club,
declarer would ruff, cash his
ace of trumps. lead a heart
to dummy's Jack, ruff another club, lead to dummy's
king of hearts, ruff the last
club, cash his ace of hearts
a nd throw East in with the
diamond king. A complete
strip play would have been
completed and East would
have had to lead from his
king of spades up t o
durruily's A·Q.
·
All this seemed like a
good possibility to East and
he came up wit h an unusual
play to prevent it. He led his
10 of hearls right up to
dummy's K-J. He reasoned
that if his partner held the
queen, declarer had no way
to go wrong.
That heart lead spoiled
the strip pla y since decla rer
could not ruff the last club

stand trial. (60 min.l

9 :30

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes. houaea. Pt. Ple11ant

BRIDGE

der and his team go on a
mission to bring back the
top traitor in NIA history to

Get to
bed,
Mother!
You'l l
feel

~A~M~-F~M~UI~fll~·~~~~~~~xcel~·l ; ·~;:~·~

Livestock

I I I I l X]

Jumbles SKIMP COWER BARREL 'DEN'! Al
Answer What the bart ender who pour ed those exira
big dri nks was known asTHE " PLASTERER "

I

look at filmmaker Stanley

&lt;

63

Yesterday·s

Kramer's remarkable career.

--·

1

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
goaled by lho above cartoon

(AnSW8f'1 tomorrow)

Jane Fonda narrates this

..

::t. 0~1 . = 0

t

UNDE~G~U.N D.

IRETORR
III J

a

PIM·.:&lt;·

Van• • 4 W.O.

AeOUT GO I N~ · ON

1

•

IIINGLE'I IEIIVICE lllfll'
rilnold rocrllna. lnaludlng
hot ter ~Pt~~~oetlo!t. c"'*'·
tar, 11101rlcllln, muon. Ctll
304·171·2011 or 171·

';:;::.:::;;-=::;:=·;::::;::::

A i{E
HOTHEAD '
L.ET5 YOU I&lt; NOW

(jJ Newo

K T- Trlmmlna, llump
remove! . Cell 304-171·
1331.

· J04.171· 22111
•
lhoH Apoo puppiea AKC 1978 Plymouth Chemf. •·
Reglotered will ba ready Jon. ~8 . 000, lir cond., eunroo •
4
opd.
with
2
opel
axle.
Coil
R.
0
.
M
-·end
lon,
DIIMI
~:
2111, UOO. Coll4411·0708.
after 4PM, ""·7414.
8ervtce end ....,.. - · :·
Kodak film 79 conto 1 roll. Roglotered Englloh Pointer - - -- -- - - - ......._ E-illoced In all ·.:
Call 448·4718 .
pupo, champion blood line. 87 Ford LTD good body, tyPII, dleeel Mel gooolne" .;
•100 01 , Call 814·2411· extra porto. runo perfect. ~· lnduetrfel or-.;;..
98 ploco Norltoko China, 5027 or 448-2107.
..oo. 70 Ford neodo tran..
lie Mel Ill all lei 111; ••.:
million. *250. Col 814·
Locllld It a.- Co.-.
gold trim. newer uHd for
ln«...e.l. Pert!. Point 1
Hlo or trade for good uood Groot Dono II mo. old, U&amp; 2511-1318.
...... 304-171·7422.
plano. Coii814· 3B8-87&amp;1 . coot of ohoto. Call 4411·
92BO before 5 or 614-3BB· .1 !1711 Dotoun truck, 1111
Chavllle Wetl"''· 71 Dodge lulldlnt Nmoldlng. ell car· · :
Woodburner-Uood Homoo- 9783 after 5.
Colt. Cell ~.1 · 7132.
pantry, niOftng, plumbing
teeder wood end coal burn·
lng. May be-n at Rutland If Flah 'opeclolo oro whet you
- " '· 304•·•
·
end Bottle Goo office. 814· 742- ~ re looking for7 We've got ·17 fclrd LTD, good body, 117&amp;·2440.
parfect
extra
porta,
runo
2&amp;11.
them 1111loro. Zebra 2 for
•1.00; Ghoot Shrimp 2 for ..00. 74 Buick neoda uen• Locktmlth llrvlol. lhar·
New water bed. King size •1 :oo; Block Mollloo 2 for million '2110. CoU 114·
Pllllntl ....,Ice, 01- •croiin Wire lnoi•llod .
w"h hood board. •soo. *1 .00; Small Noono 2 for 2118-13111.
lubllen llrvlol Co.. 304814-992-7201 .
•1.00; Rod Fin Shorka 1971 Volklwegen for Mil. 171·3184.
.,
$1 .60 · each. Flah Tonk,
Shotgun.over and under, 2413 Jeffooon .Ave .. Point Cell of1er I PM; 882· 3881 . ::;;;::~:::=:;::==:;:
point 4 f 0 -22. •1 00 or trade • PleoHnt.
Plumbing
1888 Chevy 1 ton , rebuHt 82
for aluminum boat. For ule.
motor, now radiator end
plgoono. domeotlc fancy
• Hlltlng
heeter core. new tlrea.
breeda. 992-618B.
57
Musical
Mach. A-1. Call AI at
Instruments
1114-742-232B.
Mobile home aupplloa: nonCARTER'S PLUMIINO '
toxic antlfrMZI· U .&amp;O per
, AND HEATING
•
gallon. Water heating ele· For Nle·Spinet-Conaole Pi- 1974 Okla Cutleoa. low
Cor. , _ , Mel ......
•
ano
Bargain
.
Wonted
·
mileage.
Rune
good.Cell
menta. weter heater. atepa.
G1llp all. Ohio
;•
windows. doora, fauceta. Rooponolblo party to toke 882-2707.
Phone "4-441·3111 or
breokora, etc . HoiPoln1 over low monthly p"oymonto
814·. . .·4477
heavy-duty olootrlc dryora, on Spinet Pleno. Con ba 1887 Muatene. lill cylinder.
thio month only U79 . -ri locelly. Write Credit auto, good condition ,
Kingabury Homoa Porto and Monoger:P.O.Box 637 I hal· 11,2110 . 00 . 304 -4118 ·
111611.
Acceuory Store. 900 Eoot byvillo, ln. 481711.
Moln St.. old Bookmobile
building in Pomeroy or call 1 HI of ludwig druma. Aok 1870 Plymouth felr condl·
for Brion. 814· 379·2700.
tlon. reeaoneble prlco . 83
992-66B7.
ExC8vatlng
;lePhone 304-773·1100.
W
anted
old
plonoa.
Paying
Refrigoroter-Sooro ColdS·
po1. 18 cubic feet . Coli UO. and •40. each. Firat 1881 Olclo Cutteoa. 304· DOZI!II WORK By Ted
floor only. Write giving 8:?11· 7478 after 1:00.
992-6174.
H1nna. · pond•. dltchoo,
diroctlona. Written Plonoa·
..._,._ etc. Coil 114·
New wood burning atove . Box · 1BB Sordlo, Ohio
448-'4807. Corter • Eveno
w"h firebrick t326. each. 43941. Phone 814-4B3·
TrMtpOI'tatlon.
3(!4· 676- 167B or 676· 1806.
72 Truck• for Sale
7B96.
Cat 211 hoe, .,_.,crone,
1813 c~~ev. 1·10 ext. oeb loodlro, . . mp trucll. Cell
f 11111 SrqqJ111~,
Used wether, dryer. stoves,
pickup, Tehoe equip. pkg., 814·441·11142 batween
rofrlgarotor. 30 day war1\
l1Vr~slr11.k
V-8. llr, po- otMrlng, 7:00AM • '1:00PM,
ranty. One Baldwin organ,
AM·FM caoa. tape, llldlng
double keyboard. J•s Pawn
reer windo\IV, 2 tone paint, 4 Good· 1 Exoeyetlna: baMShop. 314 Main St. P1.
WD. 4 opel., 17,000 mi., """"· footero, dr!Wwoyo. .
61 Farm Equipment exc. cond. Coil 448·13414. llfltlo ...... len"-lllnt.
PleoH_nt.
Call enytlme 114·44•·· ·
Firewood. 304-678-26B4.
Forman Cub tractor with 1877 Ford 1 ton, V-8 eng .. 4 41137. ~emeel. Devlton, J , . :
apd. 1rona. low mlleqe, like
Fence 300 oq. ft. with pooto. cuhivators turning plowa new. Cell 114·317-01184.
and old mowing machine.
$100.00. 304-676-4374.
J .A.R . · Conotructlon Co. · :
All wheel wolghto In good
W..tlr Llneo, Footoro, ;.
1973
GMC
lupot
cullOm,
condition,
U,OOO.
firm
.
Coal and wood furnace,
runt
good,
dorin't
u11
oil.
Drelno. All klndt of Ditching . • •
Call
448-4120
after
5
.
phone 304· 678-278&amp;.
Pl. PI, 3110 iluto .. · UOO. Rutlend, Oh. 114·742· -:
.
.
••
Call 1114-21$1·1818 :J103.
ECONOLINE HOME INSU· 1-Ford 3 pt. hitch diok. oxc. ony11me.
LATION. UconHd In OJ!io cond.. 1400. 3 pt. hitch
and Welt Vlrglnlo ....etv'ena· plowo. 2 bottom• • 3 1!74 botaun PU. C1ll 114· -=a:-::4-.---=e=-=Ject~
- --=,leal-;-Corning Flbargll•· Froe olti· bottoma pluo drag typo dlok. 2D8-8808.
.
Randy
Evono,
Ruoa
Rd.
Call
• Refrigeration
mateo. 304.-87&amp;-39112.
814-2811-1608.
18B1 Toyota long bod, elt,
55 Building Supplies
1
Electric co. 11 :
00
62 Wanted to Buy
1-l•nt r:'d· Col
phi•• of electric worll, ""' ·
Dodle ~ck. ·half ton, .woril guorentoocl. Aerl1i . •
whael drive, 4li,OOO truck ·rentel . 11·4-441·
Buildin'g materials
block, brick, oewer plpoo, WANTED TO LEASE to- octuel mlleo. he. Cond. 4081 · .
.
windowa, lintela. etc .
becco allotment• in Maaon 304 11711 11424
Cloudo Wlntero, Rio Grande, County, Phone 304-468·
lEWlNG Mechlne -Ire,
_1078.
I·
oervlce. AuthOtiMd linter
0 . Coll814-2411-&amp;121 .

L

••

Print answer here: A (

()I People' • Court
Jefferoona
7 :30 8 (I) Tic Tac Dough
(() Hogen' a Horoea
(J) Pre-Gime Show
D (J) Fomlly Feud
(jJ Wheel of Fortune
ID Entertainment
Tonight
• One Doy It • Time
B:OO e (I) Cll Glmmo • Broek
Addy and Angie take Nell on
o girls night out to help her
forgot that her ox-husband is

F.

r I
IPANUCKf
rJ r J
I I

a

BORN LOSE H

lanterna,

73

(J)
ID ABC Na• (J) ()II CBS Newo
(J) BuiiiiHI Report
(B) Why In tho World
8 (I) PM Meglzlne

(]) Alia Smith and Jones
(J) Carol Burnett
(I) Entartalnment Tonlght
Cll C'-iie'o Angela ·
II (J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) (B) MecNoll/lohrer
N-lhour

Iampo, 4 cholro, chllda pi·
ono, dook. Call 448-B253.

LUMBER - Rough cut, oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2x8, 2x8, 1x4,
1xll. 1x8, 1ongth ovolloblo, a
foot through 14 foot. Hogg
• Zuopen, 304· 773·51154
doy1ime.

,.

For aale rent. Two atory
houH. 4 bdr .. $260 per mo.
1250 dop . roq . Buy
129.600. Coli 448-4222.
9:30-6:00.

chrome dinette oot •149, 6

chair and loveaeat, *276.
Sofas and chairs priced from

Renl~ls

41

maple ro cker~ * 69, 7 piece

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS (Equal

Brand new 2 bedroom duplex apt.. on one floor.
equip. kitchen , utility room.
carport 8t storage room.
large lot in country setting.
but city school system.

homo. 304-676-379B.

614-246-9170.

$199. ontron recllnaro *99.
other rocllnora $BO, maple
dinette aota $179. box
springs 8t mattre11 twin or
full $100 oot regular-firm
$120. maple dinette choiro
•35. wuh atando $34,

man. 3 tabloa, (extra heavy
by Frontier). UB6. Sofa.

mo.. referoncea. Call 4483919 .

niohod. Coil 992-3090.

2 'bc:tr. trailer comp. fur·
nished. 3 miles from Holzer
in Evergreen, ex. cond . Call

livingroom suites

Carol Yeager Realtor.

remodeled . gas heat. park
front view, water paid, $176

Houae for rent . 4 rooms and
bath. Fully carpeted , storm
windows and doors. Unfur-

or without

antron

$2B6. to $B96 . Tobloo, '46
and up to $126. Hldo-oatartlng at •167 for one bedo , $440. and up to
bedroom and $193 per $626 .. Recliners. •176. to
month for two bedroom, 1376 .. lompa from $28. to
with UOO deposit located $76.6 pc. dinottoa from
naer Foodland and Spring . f99 .. to 435 . 7 pc. $1B9
Volley Plaza. pool and TV and up. Wood table with six
ant. Coli 446-2746 or loovo choira $426 to $746. Dook
f 110 up to $226. Hutchoo,
message.
8660. and up, maple or pi no
2 bdr .. part. turn .. newly finioh . Bunk bed complete

deposit. References re quired . Jean Trussell.

With

8129

$399. bunk bodo complete
with bunkioa $199. 2 piece

Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent

building , patio cover, ate pt.
waaher and dryer. Everything in tip-top condition. ,......... ··- 2 bdr. modern furReady to live in. For inform•· nished trailer. convenient

tion call 614-992-7034 or
814-992-8284.

Apt..

on land contract. 304-6766104 or 304-676-63B6,

with loti of cobineto, 2
bedroom•. large luxury bath

BR

6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms

e

CHOI CS PO

Wllharl, 'dry!No,

For aalo S6.000 BTU Warm
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gollipolia. Now
8t used wood 8t coel stoves,

W E~~. GINA.
W~ATOTH6R

•

Firewood delivered . 136
pickup load, 10 loodo t300.
Coli 814·258-1427.

Morning gaa heeter. 1 yr.
2 bdr. houH on Bulavllle Rd.
Ref. &amp; dep. required . no

PL.AITI!IIINQ , New end •' ·•
repalt ~"*-181 oncl ,..,, •
dentill, fNI 'IIIIIn.-. Celt ·
114· 211·1112.

.
'.
~pllenoellrvlol ... ~ ~·

Limootono dollvorod. •1 0 e
ton. Call 814-251-1427.

Firewood
cut
up olobo •16
pickup
lood
. Collll14-2455B04.

Home
Improvement•

M-m llooflnt • Spout·
lng. JO ,..,. •patlonce. • .
•tnalell:cl 'I In llvlt uti roof•• •
Celt 114·AI·III7.
•:

hooter Included. Never uoed.
t590. Ph. 1114-2511-12111.

For Lease

1 :00 ernCIJCllD CIJcm e
()INa(1) MOVIE: ' Yet. Giorgio'
(I) MOVIE: 'Thore'o No
Buol11111
Uke
Show
BuliiiiSI'
(]) N- Tr110ure Hunt
I])
NCAA llaoketball :
Vlllenova 1rt G-uetown
(J) Little Hou11 on tho
Priirie
(J) (B) 3-2· 1. Contact
llattletW Oelactlca
8 :30 e (I) Cll NBC Na-

•
=--~.....__;__; :.

nece, auto. controla. water

49

Sentinei- Paae- 13

·THURSDAY
1/12184

ADD -ON Woodburnlng fur·

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 36. PHONE 814-446·
7274.

The

Television
Viewing

KIT 'N' OARL¥LE"'

For rent SIMplng Roomo
and light hou11 kooplng
roomo. Pork Control Hotel.
Co[l814-448-07&amp;11 .

..

Pomerirr MiddleDOtt. Ohio

.

�/

•
Page- 14-The Daily Sentinel

I

Racine. council okays .
$116,949 1984 budge(.

Area deaths

James F. Edmonds

Thullday, January 12, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mary Deeler of Florida; a half
brother, Bill Smith of New Brighton,
Pa. , and two grandsons, Gregory
Gene Wells and Christopher Earl
Wells, both ofOsseo.
Services were held at the Van
Horn-Eagle Funeral Home at
Hillsdale with Charles Van Eaton
officiating. Burial was in the Allen
Cemetery.

A $116,949 appropriation resolu- hearings on revenue sharing. Coun:·
tion for 1984 has been approved by ell noted that senior citizens are
Racine VIllage Council.
especially Invited to attend.
Breakdown of the budget Is as
follows: general fund, $50,814; fire
Council instructed Its clerk tD
fund, $8,1XXl; water board, $32,835;
write a letter to the countY
state highway, $4,1XXl; street fund, commissioners reQ\!estlng that vO$16,m. cemetery fund, $2,100;
Iages be Included In the list to obtain
revenue sharing, $3,1XXJ.
material at the county price when
In other business, council re- the county bids for ltlghway
elected.Frank Cleland president of materials such as gravel.
council and appointed Glen Rizer as
Monlhly~rt
street commissioner.
Pollee Chief Alfred Lyons reThe resignation of Betty Sayre as
ported that during December he
a member of the Board of Public drove 345 miles, made 7 arrests,
Affairs was accepted effective Jan.
answered seven cans, and collected
14. Named to flU the post vacated by
$634.70. During 1983 Lyons drove
Sayre was Hen!l' (Hank) Moore.
5,412 miles answered319calls, made
Moore wiD begin his term onJan.15.
101 arrests and collected $5,949 In .
George Mara, engineer with
bonds and fines.
EMH&amp;T reported on the recent 'IV
Mayor Charles Pyles and council
Inspection of wen number two. The
members commended and thanked
company recommended that ImLyons for his dedicated 5erv!ce.
mediate action be taken to have the
. The street commissioner was
well screens cleaned. A price of
authorized to obtain cold mix for
$3,500 per wen was quoted.
street repairs and Larry Wolfe and
Mara also reported that he had Robert Beegle were named to a
responded to the FMHA letter In
special committee In regard to trash
which they (FMHA) cr!tlzed the
and water b!lling and collection.
village for not having meters and
David Spencer, owner of the
having more than average per
Snack Shack, requested that the
capita water comsumptlon for a
street light at the Intersection of
village the size of Racine.
Pearl and Fifth Streets be moved In
Mara pointed out that the village
order that It would light the front of
has some high consumers naming
hls establishment and the sidewalk
the three schools and laundramat.
going to the junior high.
Mara also noted that installation
Council Informally agreed preof meters would cause a financial
hardship because the village would viously not to set a precedent of
have to borrow all the money needed moving street lights, but agreed to
vt€w the area foUaw!ng the meeting
for the system.
Council set Monday, Jan. 23 at 7 Monday night and make a decision
p.m. and Monday, Feb. 6, for public at the Jan . 23 meeting.

James Fenton (Jamie) Edmonds, 32, Rt. 3, Bidwell, died this
morning in a traffic accident.
Born Nov. 4, 1951, in Ashton,
W.Va.. son of the late Sanford
Edmonds and Kathleen Meadows
Edmonds, who survives at Ashton,
he was an employee of Southern
Ohio Coal Co.' s Meigs Mine 2 and a
member of Palestine Methodist Malcolm Hartley
Church, Glenwood, W.Va.
Malcolm Hartley, 75, a former
He married Mary Riedel, who
Pomeroy mayor and newspapersurvives. on July 4, 1975.
Also surviving are a daughter, man, died Monday in Tampa, Fla.
Mr. Hartley was part of a three
Elizabeth Jam!; four brothers,
Frank and Woodrow, both of genera lion family which had been
Glenwood, Charles of Ashton and involved with some 20 Meigs County
Paul of Mount Alto, w. Va.; and six newspapers over the years. The
sisters. Mrs: Phyllis Parsons, Mrs. start of the newspaper involvement
Jean Cornell and Mrs. Lucille began with Mr. Hartley's grandCornell, all of Ashton, Mrs. Mabel father, Charles A. Hartley whose
Bennett and Mrs. Margaret Strait, son, Oliver A. Hartley was closely
both of Ravenswood, W.Va., and Identified with the newspaper
Mrs. Bonnie Floyd of Charleston, profession as publisher, editor and
commercial printing and as part
W.Va .
Funeral services will be held at 1 owner of the weekly Tribune
p.m . Saturday in Vinton Baptist Telegraph and The Dally Tribune In
Church, with the Rev. William Pomeroy and later The Democrat
CUrfman officiating. Burial will be which later became today's Dally .
in Vinton Memorial Park. Friends Sentinel.
Hartley, a son of Oliver A.
may call at McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home, Vinton. from 2-4 and 7-9p.m. · Hartley, was a graduate of Ohio
State Universlty'SSchoolofJournalFriday.
lsm and was a staff writer for The
EarlL Wells
Athens Messenger In Pomeroy and
served as mayor of Pomeroy
EarlL. Wells, 74, a retired captain starting in 1938. He resigned near the
FOOD FOR THE NEEDY - Sun Sua Paarnao sits In her East
for the Ohio River Sand and Gravel end of his third term to volunteer for
Dallas apartment an.d feeds her son some of the food she was given
Co., Parkersburg, and a former mWtary service in VVorld War II.
Tuesday. Dozens of people responded to a story In Tuesday's Dallas
resident of Meigs County, died Dec. Mr. Hartley returned to newspaper
Morning News and deUvered food and shoes to the city's hidden hungry.
ll at the Hillsdale Community work after the war, first locating In
(AP I.:aserphoto).
Health Center Hospita.
Mansfield. In 1950 he became editor
Mr. Wells was born at Porlland, of The Lorain Journal. ·Mr. Hartley
Jan. 29, 1909, a son of the late Lestesr was preceded in death by hls first r--------------~-------------------------------and Elizabeth Roush Wells. He had wife, Mae.
resided in St. Marys, W.Va., before
Surviving are hls wife, Betty; two
moving to Hillsdale, Mich., where sons, Joel of Lorain and Lee of
he resided at 81 Hillsdale St. He was Columbia, S. C.; three .stepsons,
a member of the Baw Beese Church David Shannon of Tampa, and Eric
of Christ in Hillsdale.
and Richard Fullerton, both of
He was mamed Nov. 10, 1933 to Lorain; a brother, Earl of Fort
the former Clara E. Wells who Myers, Fla., and 15 grandchildren.
survives. Other survivors are a
The Reidy-Scanlan Funeral
daughter, Wilma, at home; a son, Home in Lorain Is In charge of
Gene of Osseo, Mich.; a half sister, arrangements.

..

Weather forecast
· Increasing cloudiness tonight.
Low 25-00. . Winds easterly to
$0Utheasterly 10-l.li mph.- Friday,
cloudy with a chance of raill. High
near 40. Chance of precipitation
near zero percent today tonight and
40 percent Friday.
.
Extended Ohio Forecaat

SaturdaY lhroup MondaY:
Fair SaturdaY except for a few

fJurriM acrih~MIIt. Fair apia Suaday. Cbanceol- Moada,y.JIIIhs

Ill lhe mld-201 to low 80illalurdaylll
lhe 201 Sunday and In the mld-1111 to
mld-80tl Moaday. Ovemf&amp;bl lowll
1N1 ell'l)' s.aanlay1 IH5 Sunday
111111 JJ.aell'l)' ~.

'

,.

Pete Rose, an Expo?

Cholesterol levels
Story, photo on Page 12

aily enttne
BCI agent's testimony

..

Voi.32,No.192

C.,rithtocl t 914

2 Set:tions, 12 Pages
20 &lt;Ants
A Multimedia Inc . New5paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, January 13, 1984

criticizes Logan police
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Logan
pollee Investigating the mutilation
slaylngs of two teen-age lovers
possibly damaged evidence In the
case, a state crime Investigator
test!tled In one of the victim's
stepfather's aggravated murder
tt1al.

Dale Johnston, 50, Is charged with
two counts of aggravated murder

CRmCIZES POUCE - Kennan Henry of the 111ate Bureau of
Crlmlnalldenllftcatton and lnvellllcadon, who testified ~ In the
IIIIJ'IIVated munler llial of Dale Johalton, criticized the way Lopn
poUce handled an lnvellllcailon of lhe cue. In lhe backp-oond Ill a
manikin lllled to de8crlhe wounds of lhe two victims. (AP LMerphoto) .

By BOB HOEFLICH

Ottls Taylor, Thornville, speed, $23
and costs; Kevin Thornton, GalllpoUs, speed, $21 and costs; W!IUam
Uhl, Lucasville, speed, $23 and
costs; Carron Orem, Wlll\llmStown.
W, Va., speed, $20 and costs; Caryl
Canterbury, Gallipolis Ferry,
speed, $20 and costs; W!IUam
Sorden, Pomeroy, speed, $29 and
costs; Frederick Reed, New Haven,
passing bad checks, restitution,
costs, one-year probation; Michael
Smith, Pomeroy, speed. $24 and
costs; Daniel Norman, Pomeroy,
stop sign, $10 and costs.
Forfeiting bonds were Mark
Beegle, Racine, Randy Stevens,
Portsmouth, Timothy Chapri'lim,
Pomeroy, and George Kovach, New
Haven, speed, $50 each; Derek
McKelvey, Springfield, speed, $47;
Donald Wels, Logan, speed, $40;
James Holbrook, South Point,
speed, $46; Frank Antoun, Clnclnnat!, speed, $70; Jerrel McKenzie,
Blatrsv!lle, Pa., speed, $45.

labeled "structurally deficient,"
,
Claypool said.
No plans or decisions have been
made about the buildlng's·future at
this stage.
"I think they're looklilg at
different alternatives on the admin-istration building," Claypool
remarked.
Claypool and GDC administrators who have run the center since
Dr. Robert K. Zlmmerman'sdeparture as superintendent In November
1983 Indicated the move Is an
economy measure on the state's
part because an existing building Is
being ut!l!zed.

-· .
CHILDREN'S

CLEARANCE! -

BOSTON TRAVELER

COORDINATE .
COATS &amp;
SNOWSUITS "SPORTSWEAR
~

selection of styles and Blazers, Skirts, Pants and
Most are machine wash· Jackets. Misses Sizes.

SAVE

40o/o

1
/2 PRICE
CHILDREN'S

JUNIOR

MEN'S SHIRTSKnits, velours, flannels, and sport shirts. Sizes S, M,
l, XL Good selection. Save 40%.

S12.95
S15.95
S19.95
S24.95

Admltted··Dlxle McDaniel, Racine; Shirley Rousll, Pomeroy; Carl
Rairden, Hartford. ·
Discharged--Charles Frazier, Jr.,
Neva Nicholson, Mary Pickens.

~e~cyruns
Local units answered two calls
Wednesday evening, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports. At 4:34p.m., the Racine
Unit took Klm Lawson from the
Yellow Bush Road to 'Pie&amp;sant
Valley Hospital and Racine at 11:57
p.m. took Gary JohnSon from
township road . 100 to- Veterans
Memorial.

. Ohio lottery winriers

SHIRTS .................. :.. S7J7
SHIRTS ....................·. S9.57
SHIRTS ................... su.95
SHIRTS ................... Sl4.97

MEN'S AND BOYS'

MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR
I

WINTER
SPORTSWEAR

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

Special rack of blouses,
jeans, slacks, sweaters, velour shirts, vests and skirts.

Warm winter weight gowns,
robes, and pajamas.

REDUCED

·MEN'S BIG BEN -

30%

WINTER
JACKETS

CLEARANCE SALE
PRICES CONTINUE

Good selection. Boys sizes 8
to 20. Men's S, M, L, XL, XXL

•MEN'S FLANNEL WORK
SHIRTS
*BOYS' DRESS AND
SPORT SHIRTS
*MEN'S CORDUROY
JEANS
•MEN'S DRESS SLACKS&gt;

INSULATED
COVERALLS

ON

40o/o

REDUCED

CLEARANCE!

CLEARANCE!

Veterans Memorial

-VAN HEUSEN

MEN'S SWEATERS DRESS SHIRTS

Slipovers, Coat Styles and Vests. S,
S, M, L and XL Sizes. Olivewood, M, Land XL
Navy Blue, Brown Duck. Warm nylon
•
quilt lining. Not all sizes.
'16.95 SWEATERS ..... ~ALE S10.17
'21.95 SWEATERS ..... SALE '13.17
REGULAR S49.95 ....... SALE S29.99 124.95 SWEATERS
..... SALE '14.97
.
1
REGULAR *54.95 ....... SALE s32.99 29.95 SWEATERS ..... SALE. '17.97
.
.

Men's Sizes Wh to 17 Neck. Sleeve '
teftgths ·32 to 35 inches. Solid colors arid
patterns. E_!ltire selection. Save 40%.

s11.00 SHIRTS .......... SALE s10.20
Sl9.00 SHIRTS .......... SALE Sll.40
s21.00 SHIRTS .......... SALE S12.60
'2t00 SHIRTS'
.......... SALE '13.20
'

I

ClEVELAND (AP) The
wlnn1ng nwnber'drawn Wednesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally

game, "The Number," wu 3:f7. In
the "Pick 4" pme, played Moaday
tJuwib Friday, the wlniiiDg .
numberwu29IMI.

c

SeePageS

with death penalty specifications in
the October 1982 k!lllngs of his
stepdaughter, Annette Cooper Johnston, 18, and her fiance, Todd
Schultz, 19.
In the second day of the trial, on
Thursday, Herman Henry, an
Investigator for the state Bureau of
Cr!m1nal Indentlflcation and Investigation, criticized Logan pollee'
handling of the case.

Part of the prosecution 's case
rests on the claim that a boot print
found on the bank of the Hocking
River matches the print from a boot
found In Johnston's mobile home.
The couple's torsos were found in
the river 10 days after the couple
disappeared. Two days after than,
other body parts were found buried
in shallow holes in a nearby
cornfield.
Henry said the cornfield had been
walked over by the time he arrived
the day the body parts were found .
"It had been damaged. People
had walked all over the area," he
testified.
Defense attorney Thomas Tyack
asked Henry whether this could
have made footprints that didn 't

belong or "obliterated evidence."
"It's possible," Henry said. He
said he saw no point in staying at the
scene that day and left almost
Immediately.
Henry, who originally was called
as a prosecution witness, also
criticized a Logan pollee interview
with Johnston.
Hesaidhewasp~tpartofthe

time that Logan Detective James
Thomp50n questioned Johnston
about five days after the body parts
were found.
Henry said Thomp50n told Johnston that he saw blood stains on his
boots and healing cuts on Johnston's
hands.
Henry said he saw neither.
"The manner of interrogation

was different from what I was used
to. It depends on whether you use an
easy type of interview or the hard
type. I use the easy type," he said.
Henry said Thompson also either
"Ignored or rejected" information
that might have led to someone
other than Johnston.
Hocking County Sheriff Jim Jones
testified that it had been about 15
days between the time the footprint
near the river bank was supposedly
made and when authorities took a
plaster cast of it .
Columbus meteorologist Jym
Ganahl testified that because of
weather conditions, the current of
the river and type of soU, it was
possible for a footprint to be there
after that length of time.

No more Sunday practice for Meigs teams

(Continued from page 1)

The bullalng houses offices for the
superintendent and administrators,
as well as a regional advocacy
agency for the mentally retarded.
Claypool said planning, covering
a number of stages, Is still being
prepared and contingent on the
controlling board's approval, It
could be a year before the project Is
complete.
The move Into the dining hall has
been mandated because meals are
now being served to clients in their
cottages to achieve the state's goal
of a normalized existence, leaving
approximately half of the building
empty.
The administration bul!ding- an
example of turn-of-the-century architecture that was then deemed
functional for state structures was bullt 'when GDC was originally
the Ohio Hospital for Epileptics. In
~nt years, the building has been

Story, PhototJ !Ill Pap 4

•

30co~cases

GDC offices

Property transfers

Story on Page 6

O'Brien finishes
Twenty-two defendants were
fined and eight others forfeited
bonds in Meigs County Court
Wednesday.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
· were Daniel Horvath, Crown City,
speed, $20 and costs; Timothy Hill,
Raclne,speed,$21andcosts; Randy
Hysell, Rutland, hunt rabbit during
closed season, $25 and costs; Brian
Simcox, Youngstown, hit-skip, $300
and costs, three days confinement;
JohnMitchell,Langsville,stopsign,
$10 and costs.
Also Howard Barr, Rutland,
speed, $23 and costs; Michael
Dalley, Long Bottom, stop sign, $10
and costs; James Story, Pomeroy,
speed, $22 and costs; Michael Trent,
Pomeroy, speed, $21 and costs;
James Coleman, Vienna, speed, $25
and costs; David Case, Loulsv!lle,
Ky., Improper right turn, $10 and
costs; Ferl!n Baisden, Chesapeake,
attempt to take more than one deer
duringthegunseason,_$75andcosts;

Marauderettes lose

Sentinel !lalf
Practice for athletic groups will
not be scheduled for Sunday
altl1iii00ns iii' the future, a&lt;;cordlng
to an lnfonnal decision reached by
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education Thursday night.
Board President Bob Barton sald
that he had received complaints
from several ministers against the
practice sessions held for athletic
teams at the high school on Sunday
afternoons.
While the ensuing discussion
brooght out that the practice
sessions have been held because
competltlvecontestsaresomet!mes

held on Monday and the Sunday
practices are the final ones which
can be held, the board agreed
Informally that It rpust be sensitive
to .the ronce~ of theiCOlllJllunlty
a boot Sunday activities. The discussion also touched upon the fact that
sometimes athletic events are held
on the evenings when schools have
been closed due to Inclement
weather and Asst. Supt. James
Carpenter expressed concern about
this. Also entering discussion was
practice sessions held by vocal and
lnstl'lll)lental groups on Sunday
afternoon or pertollTI'Inces held on
Sunday.
Rather than pass a hard line

Wholesale prices
show big decline

policy on the problem, the board
decided that Supt. Dan E. Monis
will issue an administrative request
to coaches asking that they retrain
tronrscchedullng practice sessions
on Sunday afternoon. If coaches do
not honor the request, It was
Indicated that the board will take
action forcing the Issue.
Purchase three buses
The board last night agreed that
the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
Board can use the Meigs High
School fac!l!t!es for a Class A
sectional basketball tournament
Feb. 20-24 and the board will receive
$100 a night from the athletic board.
It was agreed to purchase three new
school buses and accepte&lt;j were the
bids of Gibson Ford, Athens, on the
chassis at $19,319.49 each and the bid
of Edwin Davis and Son for the
bodies at $9,901 each. The State
Department of Education has

approved the purchase.
A request from the VIllage of
Pomeroy foruseoftheparklng area
behind the former junior ltlgh
structure In Pomeroy was reviewed
and It wasagrero to allow the village
to use the area providing It provides
no confilct with thetransferofschool
students from one bus to another
near the junior high. It was pointed
out that lfthes!tuationdoesnotwork
out, the permission can be revoked.
Sylvia Neece. a cook, was granted
a 90 day leave of absence.
Supt. Morris asked members of
the board to study the recent North
Central evalua tlon of Meigs High
School for a discussion later.
Resignations accepted included
-those of Coty CUrtis, substitute
secretary-aide, and Gregory
Drummer as reserve boys' baseball
coach.
Granted professional leave were

Drummer, varsity basketball
coach, to attend the state tournament In Columbus, March 23;
Gordon Winebrenner, athletic director, to attend that tpurnament at a
5-1 vote with Board Member Robert
Snowden casting the dissenting
ballot; Marilyn Goodn!te, band
director, to attend the Ohio Music
Educators Convention in Dayton on
Feb. 3; Martha Vennari and John
Redovlan, guidance counselors, to·
accompany high school principal, ,
James M!ller, to an Ohio Career
Information Service meeting at
Nelsonville on Jan. 17, and Dale
Harrison, electronic Instructor. to
accompany M!ller to a vocational
trade and industry education workshop in Columbus on Jan. 26 and 27.
A service contract with E. C.
Babbert for the Me!s High School
waste treatment system was renewed. Supt. Morris presented a

WASHINGTON (AP) - Whole- Jysts have said consumers wiD face
sale prices rose a minuscule 0.6 substanttally higher meat prices
percent last year, the smallest gain throughmostof1~asaresultofthe
In two decades, the governmer!hjld smaU herd sizes.
today.
As for energy, those prices overall
Gasoline prices fell a record 10 tumbled 9 percent In 1983 after
percent; home 1\eating oU costs showing almost no change In the
were off 15.8 percent.
previous year. The drop was the
The overall lncreasewaslessthan sharpest full-year fall since such
one-fl,tth the 3. 7 percent ga!.n in 1982. . records were ftrst kept In 1974.
As 'for last month's report, prices
The department offered these
rose just 0.2 percent, the Labor other specifics of price activity:
·Department said, as a 1.0 percent
-Food prices last monthrose0.7
decline In energy prices offset sharp percent after a sharp 1.0 percent
meat prices gains.
drop In November. Fresh fruit
before today' s Producer prices tumbled 6.3 percent and
Price Index for finished goods was prices for vegetables were off 0.4
Issued, · analysts were hailing the ~nt. Poultry prices jumped 4.5
economy's performance last year.
percent while dairy product prices
Allen Sinal, chief economist for were down 0.8 percent.
the New York Investment firm of • -Natural gas prices rose 0.7
Lelunan Brothers Kuhn Loeb Inc., percent as gasoline prices tumbled a
predl~ted the new report would be
sharp 1.6 percent. Prices for home . '
' "~ capstone of a year of rather
heating oil feU 1.1 percent.
~tlonal statistics on Inflation."
The energy price calculations
' Added Thomas Th0111110n, chief reported today were for November.
econorrilst for San Francisco's That component of the wholesale
Crocker National Bank, "The news price measure Jags a month behind
II ~t tor 1983."
·
because energy companies report
Not alnee 1964 -when prices rose their prices too late for inClusion In
~~~Jy~ave wholesaJe the most recent Index.
-Automo'blle prices rose 0.6
They were up 7.1 percent In 1981 percent, up fron1 0.4 percent In
and 3,7 percent In lllll2.
November. ~to.; smaJ1 trucks
The eood news aboot prices last feU 0.3 percent.
•year wu JaraeJy 'attributed to the
~ttalequlpmentcostsrose0.2
moderate 2.2 percent lJicreue In percent last month.Thotlepr!Cesare
bid pr1ce1, aboot the Arne as In for the machinery and transporta· ,
19112. MI!Ch of the food . price don equipment used by bUsiness and
NJ:W Qlh\R'lERS .:... 'lbe aew quafterll for lhe
vt11a1e of Pomeroy spent $28,000 remodeiiDg lhe 10
lmpi'ovl!rnlllt came u a l'eiUlt or
lncluatiY.
.
'
.._&lt;lou~~&amp;)'._.. of'f\ll.,..lfl are now located on
rooms
uplltaln uslnc SIO,OOO from lhe sale of lhe
.
W1lolesa1e
pnees
rose
0.2
percent
pr;lctdeoiiMI palll!d throulh1111 I8Ciiad floor .. lhe r-oy Vlllap lid, lhe ... fonner city halandS18,000thl&amp;they bomlweil. 'The 10
OUt the fall u procb:el'l tnuulled InSeptember,cllmbed0.3percentln
..._. Pw1a.. 8ea1or 11111i B"'ldlnl· '11mlday roomsarei'I!JittngforSIIOOa~. 'lbeeouiltylio!lnlls
their hl!rdlln the face of ak\YI'OCket· October and fell 0.2 · ~t In
November• .
..aw.....;lhe......,Jiolpidor, WDamDeecoawas
pre1 e~·lllllnc council chunben Uid lhe rooms are
lllateed lft'el.
llilldq Ml •. 5 ... Gillie 11 1'001118 thM wll be
llppi'O\'ed. 'Die electrlcal~~J~tem has beEuapproved by
I · But Jlel:anber'l report, lhDWIDI
Wboleele prices actually fell In
percct lllrbllfud tlua llllliiUII last year. The oo ItlbJ tile Ollliii&amp;J '-rd. Utbe rema« hi oftbe WIII'MI C4WIIb' of Reedlvllle. ShOwn Ill one of lhe
. . ..... JDcaW.tlle'**llllleCJIIIIehr'' , . . . 1'001118 thM luotilfl'b' boUied tbe oflce of lhe IICbool
\lllllllld'UJ&amp;OIIdbpadc, . . . . lhlrpalt moatbly drop was the 1.1
I 'I . . 1'001118 wll be....., lar OC*'IJ
........,.,... are .Jolm Ander-, left, .. esldeu&amp; of
flab evldlace that tllat tNDd may perceat ct Jlllllll'Y·
.
"
~_...,to
y_,, ~. 'lbe couadllliid Bll y 011111·
be rewnbli· IDdeed. 1111111Y 1111·

Even

•
•

•

.

"*'

0

OPEN FRIDAY
EVENING TIL 8:00

Sl6.,1•1~. ·

·-=-

--~~

I,

•

Incre••• au.a

e

I

v.,

...

J

j

'

detailed report on planning and
goals for the district over the next
four years. All members of the
board were present for the meet!,ng
as well clerk-treasurer Jane
Wagner, Morris and Carpenter.

Board okays
$1,902,369
appropnallon
I

0

Temporary appropriations totaling $1,!m,369.04 were approved by
the Meigs Local School District
Board of Education which met in
Middleport Thursday night for Its
annual organizational session.
The temporary action was approved by the board pending the
completion of the permanent appropriations for the entire year which
Mrs. Jane Wagner. treasurer, plans
to have ready for the board's
consideration at the regular meeting in February.
Breakdown of the temporary
appropriations includes general
fund, $1,332,100; bond retirement,
$157,1XXl; permanent Improvement
fund, $110,'700; food services,
$115,400, and' other which includes
student activity accounts, state and
federal funds and principals' funds,
$187,] o9.04.
The board reelected Bob Barton
as president for 1984 with Arland
King being elected vice president for
this year. Regular meetings were
set for7 p.m. on the third Tuesday of
each month and payment for board
members Is $40 each for regular
sessions.
The board agreed to review at the
same time It reviewsadjustmentsof
admln!stratlvesa!aries the compensation for the treasurer with the
amount to remain -at $20,931 annual
for the time being. Treasurer
Wagner was authorized to pay all
accounts as they are presented
provided funds are available and to
report monthly to the board that
those b!lls are paid. Membership In
the Ohio School Boards Association
was renewed.
Authorization was given for the
purchase of bonds for board
president, treasurer. superintendent and assf$lajlt superintenden~as
was Uabil!ty Insurance for board
members, the treasurer and
.•
administration.
The treasurer was autbor!zed to ·
seture advances from the couniy
auditor when funds are available
and payable to the district and was
authorized to invest Inactive funds
at the most production rates when
Inactive funds are available. Supt.
Dan C. Morris was designated as Ute
agentoftheboardtorecelve,expend
ahd account for federal funds.
'

..

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