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Photo, story on Page 12

at y en tine
•
Pr0meroy council levies Income tax

-By NANCY YOACHAM
year."
_
Sentinel Stall Writer
.
The Income tax levy wlll affect anyone living or
Pomeroy residents, who atthe Nov. 6electl0 n t11rned
working in Pomeroy village, and Pomeroy businesses.
Ohly Pomeroy residents who work In other
down a four mUI )ax levy for operating the town,
apparently are now going to face a personal Income
commurutles where Income tax levies already exist
tax, accordmg to plans made at Monday's Pomeroywould. be exempt from the tax, unless a reciprocal
·
agreement would be reached allowing payment to
V!llage Councl.l session. ·
Pending approval after three readings, a resolution
Pomeroy. hicllviduals.servingln the a rmed forces will
by Pomeroy VIllage Council declaring a one percent . ·also be exempt .
·~1 wish this could have ~n avoided," stated Mayor
Income tax Ieavy will become effective beginning ·
Jan. 1, 1985.
Richard Seyler. "But it won't amount to much m oney
The first readln~ passed unanimously at Monday
.from anyone person and It can dq a lot of good. It 's
night's regular Pomeroy VIllage Council meeting.
- either.this or the elimination of some services." the
mayor continued . ·
As presented by councilman Bruce Reed, the
resolution states In part; "Be· It resoived that the
According to state law , residents have no
Village of Pomeroy, due to. the fact that a financial
referendum In the matter of an lncometaxlevyfora
period of one year. If &lt;1! that time, they feel that the
neceSsity exists, must declare a one percent Income
taxlevytoavoida fiscal emergency aftertileflrstofthe
money generated by the lricome tax has not been

....u , ....

BATTERY POWERED
SMOKE DETECTOR

HAPPY THANKSGIVING

managed properly, a petition to revoke the tax can be
filed . The issue can then be put on the ballot and voted in
or out.
Tax administrator needed
The a ppointment of a taxadministraiOrwill be made
by council following the approva l of the levy. This
person will be bonded and operate under strict
confidentiality. Council wiii·\Jpgln taking applications
for thi s position when the levy. is passed.
. The tax adm inistrator wiU then send forms to
Pomeroy businsses and individuals after compiling a
list of names from water depan ment r!'\'onls.
-Pomeroy businesses will be required 10 withhold the
incom e tax from the checks of employees .
Both council and the mayor blamed the high costs of
everyd ay expenses as the reason for the Je\'y. "The
village has been opera ting on approximately the same
income since 1970 while expenses have quadrupled."

sa id Seyler.
"We' ve been lucky not to ha ve had a ny maj or
equipmen t failures." noted councilman Bill Young.
According t.o figures released in October, the v!llage
had a total income of $254,991.29 in nine months . Tota l
expenses during that same time frame were
$279,816.99, creating a deficit of $24 ,822.70.
The proposed tax levy which was voied down in
Novem ber would have only provided $59,305.60. Had
this levy passed. it would have only had "a band-aid
effec t" according to the m ayor_
No estimate was given as to the amount of revenue
I hat would be genera led by the tax.
"In three months time, we should sec a difference
and perhaps we' ll eventually reach a poinl where we
can cu i the levy down or elininate it allogether,' '
op inioned Seyler.

~

f

. ~·

OVP Staff Wriler
Response to a food pantry
cslablished by the Gallia -Mcigs
Community Action Agency has
been good , according !0 CAA
Executive Direc tor Sid Edwru-ds.
Edwards said $2,0CKJ worth of
canned meats, vegetables. soup5,
juices and peanu1 buller have been
donated.
"We tried to get differ&lt;'nt foods so
we could group m ea ls togelher."
Edwards sa id . He said lhe food
would be availableon·a nemergeocy
basis only.
"The amou nt of food distributed
will be based on family siw."
Edwards added _" We •l'ill try to gin•
ihe m three or four da.v·s wonh of
food. based on the time of month ."
· Qualifications for th&lt;' program

OVP Stall Writer
A large "spiralling down" of federal dollars and revenues are leading to
difficult times for the Gallia-Jackson-Melgs mental health district,
according to the G-J-M &amp;l8 Mental Health Board's acting executive
·
director.
rir. Richard E. Hunter told the board Monday that it may have to ·
consider, both a levy and an appeal tO the state to continue operating the
programs dependent on the board for funding.
"It Is tough," Hunter said. "When you looK at these figures, you get
depressed ...
Hunter Informed the board that the local mental health district Is
especially hard-hit for two reasons. It is losing out on both federal mental
health block grant funds and Title XX monies, both of which have been cut
slgnltlcantly since 191!1,
Also, a high number of the clientele serviced by the board-funded
programs are poor and unable to pay for -the services through insurance or
are not necessarily based on
other third-party arrangements.
'incom e, Edwards said. " \\'e' re not
In 1~. the board lost $600,00J in federal cutbacks, Hunter said, which is
stricti)- limited to low income
A TOUGH THING -That's the way Dr. Richard funding problems Monday. Ustenlng at tight is Board
expected to Increase to $6T7,1DJ next year_ Although the cuts may taper off
famili es." Edwards sa id. " but they
Hunter, left, acting director of the Gallia~Jackson· Chairman Roherta Holzer.
in the coming years, Hunter said the "federal presence" In funding mental
musl show a proofofnff'd _lt must be
Meigs 648Menta1Health Board, described the board's
health programs Is becoming nonexistent . State bailouts at this time are
an €'mergency D-'P£' of situation.
"relatively insignificant," he added.
Food s1amps are intended only as a
"This is what the community faces," hE' E'Xplained.,' 'There is literally no
s upplement tow ards a person's
place In the state facing this. It 's the wors t set of variables coming together
needs. " hf' said . ''They u'ere m•\if&gt;f
at the same time."
intPnded to provide a sufficient
The G-J-M district 's problem is unique, Hunter said, because of the
diet. ..
An ordinance giving permission Pomem y \"IUage regarding the damaged building is lorn down . Th&lt;'
dependence local programs have on federal funds. OthE'r boards in the
In a ~I'O- wN'k p&lt;-riod since the
to theOhioDepartmE'ntofTra nspor- Union Avenue project has a lso been mone~· would lhen be released.
state survivE' on local revenues and state moriey, he added.
program started on Oct. 15. Edtatlon to redeck thE' Pomeroy- signed by Seyler. The contract
Poomeroy lnsw·ance rcpresenta The situation could deteriorate to the point where upkeep of board
ward s said the CAA has distributed
Mason
Bridge was signed by Mayor verifies the funding arran gemen l
live Don Mull en suggested 1he
facilities would be affected; Hunter said. He told the board he's discussed
m ore than .M50 w.orth of food to 80
Richa rd Seyler a t In Monday nig ht's for the project which will repai r the . measure.
the situation with the Ohio Department of Mental Health.
pcopl&lt;' in 22 households.
meeting of the Pomeroy Village slippage in the hillside along lhe
A req ues 1 from Pomeroy mer·
"I think they do see a responsibility here that they can't let an entire
The food is distributro through the
Council.
chants for frE'&lt;' parking m('ll•rs
system go down," Hunter said.
·
road. Union Avenue is considered an
CAA as well as other social service
ODOT will assume and bear the eme rgency access roule .
during lhc Christmas season was
HE' recommE"nded that the board approach the department and present
agencies lhrou g hou l the two
total cost of the project.
information that will show the "distress area" the district is heading
countiC's.
Council is now attempting to also discusSPd by counciL Although
Council called the upcoming
toward. He said the department has a line item in its budget for special
Thcpantry . E dwards said . is not a
obtain authoriza tion to adYertisC' the merChant s' associat ion has
redecking "general m a int·ainance bids for theconstructionof the sewer offered 10 pav $350 for a two-w!'('k
•
cases.
gi\'€'away. but is 10 be used only in
work" while therequesl fromODOT line extension to the Pizza Hut. Once
The board "really needs" to consider a IE"vy, Hunter continued,
period. council decided this would
emergpnc)· situ a tions. A log of
noted it was "an emergency authorized , council can begin laki ng
not!)(' necessary since free parking
acknowledging that asking people to vote for more taxes is a "tough thing."
individuals receivig food will be
measure by reason of need for
is a trad ition and wasgrantf'd a t last
But before the board can ask the statE' for money, the state will ask the
kl'pl . Anyone abusing the pantcv·bids on the project as soon as EPA
expediting highway improvem E'nts approval is given the plans. Follow - nighi's m('('ting.
board what its capability is In getting a levy approved, he said.
t:dw~ rds added , will be referred to
to promote highway safety."
The resignation of Willi am
' "I would say that if you .were inclined to do that , there's not a lot of timE'
anol her agency. such as the welfare
ing published nolice tha t bids arc
Seyler expects the redecking being taken, a period of three weeks
Snouffe r . c lprk -trf'as urf'r. was ac ·
left to puU It together," Hunter said. "But that is what thecommunltyfaces
dcpat1 ment.
procedure
will begin next summer. will pass before the bids are opened . cepted al Mondav-'s m&lt;''ting .
In the coming years."
Monetary contributions have
The effect to t~affic flow has yet to be EPA approval is expected in ih"
Snouffer dccidf'd to r.-sign afler - . been used to buy food in bulk from
The board took no action on the levy proposal, although Meigs County
detenrilned.
aecPpling a chan ge of e mplovmenl
representativE' James Mourning recommended the board do some "real
lhc Neb;onv-ille food bank al t&lt;'n
very ncar future.
A contract between ODOT and
which
will require &lt;!riv ing some
planning" for its 1985 operation.
cen ls ]J('r pound . If food from the
Council discussed a proposed
bank is not available. Edwa rds said
ordina nce whereby th e village dis tance from Pomero~·- thus no1
food will be boug ht locall)·.
would retain a percent age of allow1ng ;J dequatc tim&lt;' for per The gm l of the pantcv· Is to S€1'1'&lt;'
insurance m oney coveting build · forming his dutt&lt;'S for lhc l'illa gc.
approximal&lt;'il' 200 families from
ings that have been destroyed by Snouffer's resigna tion will b&lt;&gt;come
each count)·. pc·cot-ding 10 Edwards .
fire. The money, approximate ly 5 effecti v&lt;' 0t'c. 1.
All council m embers except John
He said, howc\·er. thC' amount of
percent of the entire insurance
Anderson att ended last nighI 's
fami lies se1·ved depends on lhe
coverage, would be retained in
meeting.
amount of he lp h&lt;' receives fro m the
esctow until ·Such time that a
communi!)' lhrough donations_

r

Meigs man given one year sentence

faat, fun, HIY to IIH,
fdd tM ClfMd look
tQhomeenttrtllnln{J

Provides M/ety and Heurlty
In •"Y room o[rhe hou..

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MODEL SABOFC
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N~NCAR·ROW', S ·PHARMACY.

Public
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By JOliN FRIEDMAN

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Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio, Tuesday; November 20, 1984

Mayor inks redecking order

Girl

PHOTOELECTRIC

Explosion massacre

By KEVIN KELLY

dolt~l

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TH. CHIPMUNKS..•

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Federal cuts
pose problem

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• Pope with tlr,not o{l, lor •lo'!ercalorilllrttt
, · • Handy butt.,,Jftllltr for hoi, bulltrtd popcorn

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Vol.34, No.1 55
Copyrighted 1984

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Veterans Memorial Hospital In memory of her
IUiband, lhe late Harold Sauer wbo served on lhe
hotlplteJ'8 Mini of ,truatees for some 211 ye81'8. 'lbe

dullr-bed .. tile
alld Is to be
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hospital with ·patients who are crltlcaiiJI ill. The
equipment folds _, a bed. With Mrs. Sauer Is &amp;'Ott
Lucas, ho8pltal~.

James Russell Peck, Pine Grove
Road, Racine, was given a one-year
prison sent ence when he a ppeared
before J udge Charles H. Knlghl in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Tuesday morning on a Bill of
Information alleging the theft of a
LP gas tank belonging to Larry
Rapp.
The Bjll of Information also
alleged that Peck has previously
been convicted on a theft offense.
Peck was on probation a t the time
of the latest offense, his prior
conviction, according to Paul Gerard, special investlga tor for the
prosecutor's office, being in August.
1982, when Peck entered pleas of
guUty to two counts of receiving
stolen property. one count of
breaking a nd entering and one count
of trafficking in drugs.
Tuesday Peck entered a volunteer

plea of guilty to the charge and was
given by one year sent ence.
In othe r court action, Dary l K.
Miller , 26. Massillon, appeared
before J udge Knight Monday on a cha rge of passing bad c hecks . He
had been indicted by the grand jury
last Feb1·uary. Miller had been
chru·ged with a co-defendant . Mary
Yourkoski , who had earlier a ppeared a nd ente red a pleas 'or gull t~· .
She was placed on probation for one
year and ordered to pay her sha re in
making restitution.
Monday, Judge Knight gave
Mille r a determinate sentence of six
months and order restitution.
Meantime, Gerard reports that
lhree adults and a juvenile have
been c harged in connection with a
breaking and entering and theft a t
lhe Marshall Sla ter resldencr&gt; In
Snowville on Nov . 14.
The adults include Frank G. King ,

22, Rouie 3. Pomerov; Rick R('('l"&lt;'s,
20, Route 4, Pomrroy. and J os&lt;'ph
Edwa rd King. Route I , Alhanv_
Frank King i&gt; chargf'd \\'i ih
receiving slol&lt;•n property: R('('I'PS is
charged with brcakmg and m1P1ing
a nd J oseph E . King is charged wilh
complic ily in t he breaking and
entering. Thf' 1hrt'e aJ'(' iX'ing
c harged in compiainls filed b;• the
office of Frl'dcrick \\' . Crow IIJ,
Meigs Counl ;- ProsR'utor.
The thr"" are schedulf'd for an
initial appea r a nce in the Meigs
County Court on Monda;'. Nov. 26.
They are curren tly free on r&lt;'eognizancebonds.
Receiving s toiPn property, breal&lt;
ing and enter ing and complicity are
each a felonv of the fourth degree
carrying a poss ible penalty of six . 12
or 18monlh s in pdsonand a fine of up
to $2500, Gerard reports_

�Tuesday, November 20. 1984

Commerita
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

A~
~m~ ·I"T"'--''-_,..,....,..do=

'qlv
ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publis her
. BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB , JR.
News Editor

1\ MEMBER of The .~ssoclated Press, Inland DaUy Press Assocla·
Uon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are wel&lt;:omt'. They should be less than aoo words
long. Alllettt•rs are sullj1't:l to editing and must llt&gt; signed with namt&gt;, address and
telephon&lt;' numher. No unsigned Jettus will he published. Letters should he in
good taste, addressing issues, not pers ooalltles.

. state' s
Paytng
bills on time
A tried and true method for fudging state budget figures to suit one
purpose or another soon may disappear.
Sen. Steven Maurer, D-Botkins, has won Senate and House approval of a
measure requiring each state agency to pay for the goods and services it
buys on ·time or be hit with an interest charge for the amount due.
The goal is to make sure companies which do business with the state
don't have to wait months at a time to collect the money due them.
Payment of such bills has been delayed on occasion In the past, a tactic
tha t proves useful if the state is In a financial bind or want s to hold a large
chunk of it s mon~y to make a litUe more investment income.
Under Maurer's legislation, the bills have to be paid by their due date or
the agencies pay an interest penalty- which, for 1985, would be 9 percent.
In addition, an agency would have to use its administrative money t~cover
any inters! payment because the bill prohibits an extra approprat10n for
that purpose.
WiUiam Shkurti, director of the Office of Budget and Management ,
acknowledged the measure would likely discourage use of the bills for
budget gyrnnasitics.
"That it does. There is now a price when you withhold payments. On the
other ha nd, the governor's m ade it very clear he wants prompt payment to.
be a fact in 'Ohio." Shkurti said.
No one knows for sure whether the new law, which is expected to go to
Celeste's desk this week. will w ind up saving the state money or increasing
expense. But Maurer believes it may lower costs in the long run.
.
"Becuase of the history that Ohio has had in the past \\1th payment of
bills a nd holding money back a nd all lhese kinds of things, it has probably
meant tha t many bids are submitted to the s tate higher than they normaUy
would be in order to cover that increased cost that might be there," Maurer
said .
" With this it has the pote ntial of lowering costs to state government by
the state getting better bids because people know ... that (they're) not going
to be playi ng bank for the state of Ohio." he said.

Berry's World

..

Florida's status ·clouds football bowl picture

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuaaday. November 20. 1984

By The ASIIOCiated PreM
Who will be college footbaU 's national champion
this season? The answer may come more than a week
before the big New Year's Day games.
The bowl picture remains scrambled pending a
decision today by the Southeastern Conference
executive committee on champion Florida.
One thing did appear certain. Army a nd VIrginia,
the only so-caUed ma]or-coUege teams never to have
gone to a bowl, seemed on their way this year. So did
1983 national champion Miami, Fla., now ranked 12th,
No. 9 South Carolina and unranked Notre Dame.
No. 1 Brigham Young, the Western Athletic
Conference champion,ls already locked Into the Dec ,
21 Holid.a y Bowl in Sa n Diego and their opponent-may

Need for access___--:---_______W_il_lia_m_A_.R_u_s_her

-

petition would receive a sympa·
Ed Meese, counselor to the presl·
dent. The fourth post - national · thettc hearing. More Important
st!U, they could be sure that, If
security adviser- was held first by
appropriate, It would be taken up
Richard Allen, then by WilHam
with the president himself. ·
Clark, and finally (when Clark went
Even · tnnuentlal conservatives
to the Department of the Interior)
with
their own personal "1;&gt;ack
by Robert McFarlane.
channel"
to Mr. Reagan - I.e.,
Conservatives slept soundly at
people In direct and regular
night, knowing that Ed Meese and
communication with him, by phone
Dick AUeit (or later BIU !Clarki
or letter - realized the Importance
were on duty at the White House.
of having conservative representa·
Rightly or wrongly, Baker and
tion high on the presidential staff.
Deaver are not considered "moveBack channels must not be over·
ment conservatives, " but pragma·
uSed; Meese and Clark were there
lists, lhnlted by their own non·
a ll the time.
Ideological notions of how the
There was, therefore, a distinct
country ought to be run. In a crisis,
sense
of unease In conservative
or when some key conservative
circles
when Clark reslgJied as
project needed White House. back·
national ~urlty adviser to succeed
lng, conservatives could turn to
James Watt as interior secretary.
Meese or Clark, confident that their

and Meese was nominated to
replace William French Smith as
a ttorney g~ neral. McFarlane,
Clark's replacement, was a career
official with no ties to the conserva·
ttve movement. Meese's departure
for the Justice Department was
delayed pending the report of a
special Investigator - that he had
not cominltted varioUs offenses
alleged by the Democrats and the
media - but the Senate now seems
likely to ratify his nomination early
In the new term, and Indications are
that his job as counselor wUI not~
filled at aU but ·that Its dulles wUJ
simply be distributed among other
White House officials.
That would leave just three wiute
House staff m embers with unres·
trlcted access to the president none of them in grace and
communion with the conservative
movement.
Mr. Reagan himself Is not greatly
disturbed by this prospective state
of affairs, no doubt feeling that
movement conservatives are more
than adequately represented at the
White House as long as he Is there.
But he Is aware of conservatives'
concern over the.s taffsltuation,.and
the hope In conservative circles Is
that he will take steps to alleviate It
early In his new term.
There is likely to be enough
chair-shuffling to give him the
necessary opportunity. Chief of
stalt Baker Is rumored to want too
move on to a Cabinet post before too
ma11y moons have passed. That
would open up the top staff job Jor
Clark I for example), who Is
reportedly willing to leave the
Interior Departmel)t for It If It Is
offered.
One way or another, conservative
pressure to fill at least one high staff
position with someone they trust Is
likely to continue. It Is am
important request, and not an
unreasonable one.

Diplomatic

incompetence.--,-----~--J_a_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n

WASHINGTON - PreSidents
have been rewarding political allie"'
with ambassadorships practically
since the birth of the republic- to
the occasional embanassment of
thE' United States, but only rarely
with a:ny serious harm to the
nation's foreign policy .
A political appointee's ignorance·
of his dutirs is usually outweighed
by the diplomatic skill of his
professional underlings, and his
easy access to (he president can
compensa te for a wealth of IrritatIng incompetence.
But som ething went wrong with
the traditional safeguards when
JosE'ph \'lferner Reed set out on the
road to Morocco In 1981.
The result was a strategic
disaster for the Reagan adminlstra·
lion: the astounding union of a
supposed ly staunch U.S. ally, Morocco, with the virulently llnti·
American dictatorship of Lihya.
It would be unfair to Jay the
Morocco-Libyan rapprochem e nt
solely at Reed's door. The CIA Is

still trying to figure out what
happened, and the agency will have
some hard questions to answer
before outraged congresslol)al
committees.
But Reed can certainly bear a
large share of the blame for the
White House's faUure to learn what
was In the_ works until it was too late
for anything !lut hand-wringing.
Though the Libyans had been
courting King Hassan of Morocco
for over a year, Reed was so
blithely confident of his close
friendship with Hassan that he
discounted evidence that thE' klng
might not be completely Joyal to the
United States.
It was a measure of Reed's
detachment that he was vacation·
in_g In Maine when Morocco's
"frie ndship treaty" with Libya was
announced. Old hands in Foggy
Bottom and on Capitol Hill weren't
surprised I hat Reed was, literally,
so far out If it.
Reed has admitted, in conversa- .

lions with Irate members of
Congress, that his old buddy
Hassan informed him of the treaty
with Libya only an hour before the
monarch announced it to the rest of
the world. For years the ambassador had assured anyone within
earshot that he had "unprecedented" access to Hassan and his
inner circle.
·
•
Reed's behavior as ambassador
was baSed on his sublime confi·
dence that his close relationship to
Hassan ensured continuing U.S.·
Moroccan solidarity, Reed once
had the sentry boxes outside his
Rabat residence painted red, whitE'
and blue, and named the house VIlla
America . When the Moroccan
prime mlnlsier had tea with the
Senate Foreign Relations Commit·
tee In Washington, Reed unfurled a
large banner to welcome him .
In fact, Reed suffered from a
severe case of "clientitis" - a
malady not unknown In the Foreign
Service. He sang Hassan's praises
to Congres and the White House. lle

..

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, Nov. ~. the 325th day of 1984. There are 41 days left in
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Nov. ~ . 1975, after nearly four decades of absolute rule, Spain's
Genera lissimo Francisco Franco died In Madrid, two weeks before his
83rd birthday.
On this date:
Jn 1671l, Peregrine White was born aboard the Mayflower ' In
Massachusetts Bay. She was the first child to be born of English parents In
the New England colonies.
In ]789, New Jersey became the first state to ratify the Bill of Rights.
In 1910, revolution broke out In Mexico, led by Francisco I. Madero.
In 1925, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was born In Brookline, MaS!j.
In 1943. during World War Il, American forces landed on Tarawa a nd
Makln Atoll In the Gilbert Islands.
In 1945, 24 Nazi leaders were put on tria l before an International war
crimes tribunal at Nuremberg, Germany.
In 1947, Britain's Princess Elizabeth married Lt. Philip Mount batten In
Westminster Abbey.
In 1967, just a few minutes after 11 a.m., the Census Clock at the U.S.
Department of Commerce ticked past 200 mUllan.
Ten years ago: The Justice Department flied an antitrust suit against
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co., seeklng to. force the
communications giant to divest Itself of Its manufacturing subsidiary,
Western Electric.
Five years ago: Iran released 10more of the hostages- four women and
siX black men - under the order of Ayatollah Khomelnl. Two women and
one black Marine remamed In captivity.
One year ago: An esthnated 100 million people tuned In to watch the
controversial ABC television movie "The Day After," which depleted the
outbreak of nuclear war.
.
Today' s birthdays: Author and TV personality AUstalr Cooke Is 76. Sen.
Robert Byrd, I&gt;- W.Va .. Is 67.ActressGeneTierney ls64.Actress-comedlan
Kaye BaUard Is 58. Actress Estelle Parsons Is 57. TV personallty Richard
Dawson Is 52. ABC newsman Richard Threlkeld is 47. Comedian Dick
Smothers ts 45. Sen. Joseph Elden; 0-Del., Is 42. Actress Bo Derek Is 28.
Thought for today: " Modesty Is the only sure bait when you angle for ·
praise." - The Fourth Earl of Chesterfield, EngUsh author (1694-lT/3),

This year's fiercely contested
race for a U.S. Senate seat here til
Iowa presented speeial problem s
for the political action committee
operated by the American Crystal
Sugar Co.
Like many corporations, trade
associations a nd other special
interest groups, the sugar company
uses Its PAC to make campaign
contributions to friendly members
of Congress assigned to committees
relevant to Its business interests.
"You had two guys running. (In
Iowa I a,nd both of them had been
helpful to -us in the past." explains
. an American Crystal Sugar Co.
executive. "It really puts us In a
bind."
Both the Republican incumbent,
Sen. Roger W. Jepsen, and the
Democratic challenger, Rep. Tho·
mas Harkin, have served . as
members of the Agriculture Com·
mtttee in their respective houses of
Congress.
Because the sugar company
didn't want to antagonize either
legislator, It resolved the ~
by making Identical PAC tontrlb6:
tions to both candidates - $1,(0) to
Jepsen and $1,(0) to Harkin.
Scores of other PACs engaged In
the same practice this year contributing to opposing contenders
In House and Senate raees and thus
undermining their claimed status
as legitimate participants In the
democratic process.
PACs are often accused of
methodically attempting to coiTIIpt
the electoral process 'by, In effect,
purchasing the support of leglsla·
tors to advance their lobbYing
agendas. Providing financial support to multiple candidates in the
same political contest Is not Ulegal,
but It hardly comports with the
elaborate ratiopale PACs offer for
their existence .

The PACs reject that argument,
claiming that they represent lndi·
vidual donors who have voluntarily
agreed upon a program of joint
contributions to candidates for
political office.
Thus, the PACs argue, they are
entitled to the same constitutional
rights that provide legal protection
to Individual financial supporters of
political candidates.
But no rational Individual would
make contributions to opposing
candidates vying for the same
position - a practice apparently
reserved for special interest groups
determined to ensure that the
winning candidate Is Indebted to
them regardless of the outcome of
the election.
But no national Individual would
make contributions to opposing
candidates vying for · the same
position - a practice apparently
reser-Ved for special Interest groups
determined to ensure that the
winning candidate Is lridebted to
them regardless of the outcome of
the election.
When Common Cause examined
the public financial reports of
candidates In four of this year's
Senate races - In Iowa, Illinois ,
North Carolina and Tennessee - It
found 00 examples of PAC donations to opposing candidates.
Corporate PACs engaged In the
practice Included those operated by
Chrysler. Coca-Cola, General
Electric, Rockwell International,
Federal Express, Burlington
Northern, R. J . Reynolds and
Weyerhaeuser.
Trade association PACs Included
those representing dentists, nurses,
truckers, home -buUders, lawyers,
bankers, restaurateurs, realtors
and broadcasters.
Because Common Cause limited
.Its research to four Senate contests,

It missed countless other cases. In
Connecticut's 3rd Congressional
District, for example, the Jnterna·
tiona! Brotherhood of Teamsters'
gave $5,(0) - the maximum
allowed In a single election - to
both candidates for a House seat.
Even some PAC managers are
critical of the practice. "A lot of
PACs do lt, but we normally don't
play both sides of the fence," says
an official of the ,a.merlcan Meat
Institute. "It's not the light thing to
do."
Other PACs refuse to discuss the

not even be ranked In the Top Ten.
Bowl bids cannot o!flclally' be otlered until
Saturday, although speculation haS It that BYU's
opposition -may be No. 13 Auburn or unranked

Michigan, which just completed a &amp;-5 season,ltsworst
In Coach Bo Schembechler's 16 years.
Wbere Auburn goes may depend on the decision by
the SEC executive committee, whfch was to decide
Florida's fate.
Florida won the SEC title even as It was found guilty
of 59 rules violations by the NCAA. The NCAA
recommended a three-year probation , which would
· be reduced to two years with good behavior.
The probation would ban any bowl appea rances,
even though the SEC winner gets a n a utomatic bid to

INDIANAPOLIS lAP) - The
scoreboard told one story . Art
Schlichter 's heat1 told another.
"!don't think anybody can realize
where I've been and ;vhat I've been
through. It's really hard td des·
cripe," saidSchl lchteraftertheNew
E ngland Patriots spoiled his first
Nat ional Football League start with
a 50-17 pounding of the Indianapolis
Colt s Sunday.
A year ago Schlich ter was sitting
out' a league suspens ion afte r·
admitting he was gambling heavily
and betting on NFL g11mes including those involving his team.
''I've had a lot of pressure on m e,
and on my family," he said .
''There's been a lot ofhaid times a nci
a lot of heartaches In the course of .
the iast twoyears."
·
The lai.ry tale story mlglit have
had Schlichter Jeadingt~~fo';'.\J!:ring
Colts to victory, produc ing a
performance tha t wouid end lhe
almost weekly question over who
Coach Fra nk Kush will start .
The record will show that Schlic h·
ter ra n 13 yards to score his first pro
touchdown. And it will show that
long aft er theoutcome was decided,
the 1982 first-rouna draft choice
from Ohio State threw his first
pmfessional touchdown pass to
Bernard Hen ry_ ·
" It 's taken a Jot of perseverance,"
Schlichter said alter thel(am e . " I've
had m y advisers, my paf'en) s end ..
my family_ Without them , I couldn't
have m ade i 1.

helped engineer an Intelligencesharing agreement with Morocco
that gave Hassan information that
U.S. spy satellites ha d picked up on
the Polisarlo rebels In the disputed
western Sah~ra war. This agreem ent a nd several others are now
under reviE:W; the White House Is
understandably leery of sharing
Intelligence with Qaddaft.
For all his claimed Intimacy with.
the Moroccans, Reed is often
ridiculed by them , State Depart.
meni sources told my associate
Lucette Lagnado. And this opinion
was shared by Sen. Thomas
Eagleton, D-Mo., Who refened to
Reed after a 1982vlslt to Morocco as
"a 14-karat nitwit ."
An ambassador is suppoSed to be
the president's eyes and ears, ad
well as the mouthpiece for an
administration's views_ Once
again, a n Ainertcan president has
been hamstrung by having an
unprofessional ambassador In a
sensitive foreign embassy.

.

CINCINNATI lAP) - Althoug h
the Cincinnati Bengals were penal·
!zed unusually ofte n Sunday .. Head
Coach Sam Wychetnsiststheyhave
only themselvestoblameforthe26-6'
d ru bbing by Seattle.
The Bengais were penalized 12
times for103 yards Sunday, twice as
often as their previous one-game
mark for infract ions th is season. .
Meanwhile, theSeahawksdrew just
3penalt ies for 30 yards .
However, Wyche sa id the Bengals
simply shou ld have been more

"To think where I was at this time
last year during the season , to be
able to start a game and do some
things well a nd maybe have a future
(in pro football }. You can't believe
the fee[lng that I have. It's
something I'll treasure for a long
time."
Schlichter completed 16 of 32 passes for 188 yards and was the
Colts' leadlngrusherwlth59yardsln
four carries. Prior to Sunday, he had
been uSed sparingly and thrown
only 22 passes this season.
"! felt pretty good out there." he
said. "! m ade some good plays m ade some big plays. But I made
some mistakes. I expected that. I
haven't played in a competitive
sense In over·two years. I knew the
mistakes would be there. I just had.
to minimize them.
" I thought I played well at times .
but there were two series there in the
third quarte r when I might have lost
m y concentration. That' s going to
happen. I'm just going to have to
build on it and concentrate on a
60-minu te game."
Kush said Schlichter ·would get
a not her chance to establish himself
as the starting quarterback while
the Colts try to Improve on their 4·8
record.
" 1 tpought he was accura te,"
Kush sa id. "It's difficult to assess
him, princlpaUy• because of the
protection breakdown on a number
of occasions. But I felt considering
the circum'stan~s he did a cr~lita·
blc )ob." ·

careful , knowing they were being
flagged so often.
Thf&gt; Bengals, 4-8, found a variety
of ways to draw fouls. They ·were
penalized three times for holding
and once each for offsldes. false
start, personal foul , unsportsman ·
like conduct, illegal formation ,
unnecessary roughness, delay of
game. illegal block and an out-of·
bounds kickoff. .
Combined with three lost fumbles
and a pair of inte rceptions, the

Clark's Jewelry

Nebraska's loSs , coupled with then-No. 2 South
Carolina's upset loss at Navy, wiped out the Orange
Bowl's hope for a nationai championship game.
Now, No. 2 Oklahoma and No. 3 Oklahoma State
play this weekend for the trip to Miami on New Year's
Day. Should they tie, Nebraska would back into the
Orange Bowl slot.
·
Fifth-ranked Washington, the runnerup in the
Pacific-10 Confere nce, reportedly has already
accepted a bid to be the Orange Bowl visitor.
The only bowl that was certain was the Rose Bowl,
in which Big 10 winner Ohio State will meet Pac-10
champion Southern California ow New Year's Da y in
Pasadena , Ca lif.

Gooden captures
NL rookie honors

._,,

·&gt;;'

NEW YORK IAP I - Dwight
Gooden has a formula for avoiding
the sophomore jinx.
"On Day One next year. I'll forget
everything that happened this
year." Gooden says.
For now, though, he will rem ember with relish the season that
broug ht him the National League
Rookie of the Year award. which
was announced Monday night.
He will take his plaqute home to
Tam pa, Fla., ''I'll hang it on the
wa U, and I'll look at it every night
before I fall asleep."
Gooden's list of aceomplishment s
in was a long one in his firs t year.
wh ic h happened to coincide with hi s
fi nal yea r as a teen-ager as hp
became the youngest pl ayer ever to 1
win the rookie award.
Gooden. the l\ew Yor k Met s
right -hander. did not turn 20 until
last Friday. Before tha t day ca me.
however, he had set a rookie record
with 276 strikeouts to lead the
league. And. he set a maj or-league
mark by averaging 11.39 s trikeout s
(X'r nine innings.

He set another major -league
record with 43 stri keouts in three
consecut ive

nine-inn ing

gam es.

with a single-game high of 16. three
shm1 of the maj or-league standard .

HArPY ROOKlE - New York Mets pitcher Dwight Gooden Is aD
smUes at at news conference at New York's Shea Stadium Monday after
he was named ther ookle of the year by the Ba...,.,hall Writers Association
of America. ( AP Laserphoto).

Wyche puts loss on . nll~erous Bengal mistakes
Bengals were their own worst
enemy on a day they rolled up more
total yards than their opponent to 224 - but failed to score a
touchdown.
''Thepenaltieskilledus,"quarter·
backTurkSchonertsaid. "Penalties
and turnovers - that' s the game
right there. "
Schonert Indicated the Bengals
got discouraged as the game went on
and their attempts to get back in the
game came up empty.
" It just sort' of accumulated the

m

whole game," Schonert sa id. "We'd
have a big play and then a penalty, a
big play and a penalty."
Schonert completed 14 of 26
passes for 141 yards des pite a
first-hal f snow and a second-ha lf
rain. The Bengals enjoyed a good
gam e on the ground, rushing for 162
yardson32attemptsfor anaverage
of more than five yards per carry.
Most of that was by fullback Lany
Kinnebrew, who rolled up a careerhigh 119 yards on 22 rushes .

He set a club record by s trik ing out
10 or m ore barters in 15 of his 31
sta rt s, and he became the youngest
player ever SPiec led to the All-Star
Gam e.
It was another happ;• coincidence
that thr announctement oft hteawa rd
cam e on the birthday of Gooden 's
father , Dan.
"You only have one chance to'win
this awa rd. and to win it is a great
honor." Gooden sa id, "and to win it
especially on m"'father' s birthday.'·
The a ward i sdetcrmj ned by a vote

of 24 members of the Baseba II
\Vriters' Association of Amf'rica.
Two panelists ar!' picked from each
!\a ti ona) League cit \·. a nd they each
vote tor three players.
------------

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issue. "We don't comment on that,"
Is the terse reply when the
Commerce Union Corp. Is asked to
explain, why it gave $5,(0) to both
candidates In Tennessee's Senate
this year.
That approach Is a-logical one for
PACs because the practice is
Indefensible. It provides fresh
evidence that they cynically view
elections as little more than an
opportunity to buy friendship
among prospective members of
Congress.

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Be-rry's World

"Good news/ That CIA manual is nothing more
than a book of ETIQUETTE. "

the Sugar BowL
Reportedly, a compromise had been worked out to
let Florida keep its SEC championship- the first for
the Gators in their 52 years In the confere nce - but
deny the team a trip to any bowl.
U Florida does not go to the Sugar Bowl , Auburn
could earn a trip to the New Year's Day game ln New
Orleans by beating Alabama In Its season finale. An
Alabama victory would send Loulslana State to the
Sugar BowL
.
Nebraska a lso seemed headed to the Sugar BowL
The Cornhuskers were ranked No. 1 a nd were ready
to go to the Orange Bowl as the Big Eight
rep resentative until losing 17-7 to Okla homa last
Saturday.

Schlichter's heart
told another story

Playing both sides.__,..--______·_:.....Ro_b_er_t_Wt_al_te_rs

"To paraphrase a capitalist commercial WHERE 'S THE GRAIN?"

.

•

Page 2- The Daily Sentinel

High on the agenda of conserva·
lives for the early days of the
second Reagan administration Is
the problem of ml!-lntalnlng of
beachhead In the top presidential
staff.
Ordinarily - and n~sarl ly anyone who wants to talk to the
president must apply for an
appointment. That goes for Cabinet
officers as well as lesser mortals.
Only a handful oftopstaffmembers
have "unrestricted access" meaning that they can walk Into the
Oval Office m ore or less at will.
In the first Reagan admtnlstra·
lion', three individuals held three of
the four such posts from one end of
the term to the other. They were
James Baker, the president's chief
of staff in charge of scheduling; and

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

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�Tuesday, November 20, 1984

Saints dump Steelers, 27-24
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - A
half-hour after the game, Derland
Moore was still in full unifo rm,
sitting at his locker in the clamorous
New Orleans Saints dressing room
savoring his learn 's fi rst Monday
\ictory ever.
'Tm afrai d to take it ott," said the
12-yPa r Na tional Football League
wtf'ra n. "I'm afraid I'll wake up
a nd find out It's a ll a dream.
" I've ix'E'n through more of them
that a nybody. It was a long time
coming .

N('w Orleans bea t the Pittsburgh
Stec lc rs 27-24 for the first Monday
\'ictory in the 18-yea r history of the
fr·a nchise. The;.c were 0-7 in prime
tim e goin!,l into the game.
Moore sa id he knew the Saints
wcrr going to win - no question
alx&gt;ul it .

·'It was the darndest feeling I've

We

just
ever had on the sidelines.
knew we weregolngtowln,"saldt)le
veteran nose tackle.
"As the game went on, we just got
better and better."
Quarterback Richard Todd, who
provided most of the Saints· offense.
credited the defense for the vlctorv.
"We had good field good position
most or the game," he said. "They
kept getting us the baD in good
position. We didn't always do
anything with It, bul they just kept
getting us the ball."
Todd threw for 223 yards and two
touchdowns, hitting 18of 31 a !tempts
and getting two picked off by Steeler
cornerback Dwayne Woodruff. He
was also sacked six times.
The Steelers scored on a 76-yard
punt return by Louis Lipps and a
14-yard pass from Mark Malone to
John Stallworth in the second

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

quarter, a 21-yard field goal by Gary
Anderson early In the fourth quarter
and a 25-yard pass from · Scott
Campbell to Lipps with 1: 17 left In
the game.
But the Saints kept comtngupwith
big defensive plays. Linebacker
Rickey Jackson forced two fumbles
and constantly haJTied Steeler
quarterbacks Into throwing early
and off balance.
Defensive end Bruce Clark reco·
vered two fumbles and intercepted a
pass when Malone tried a screen
over the middle·.

"I was just in the right place a t the
right time," said Clark.
"The interception was pure luck,"
he said. " It was a bad pass rush. I
opened my eyes, a nd the ball was
there."

. . ..
. '- .. '.

......... ~- .. -. ·-~-

;

i
INCOMPLEI'E PASS - New Orleans Saints wide
receiver leU Groth (86) can't quite make teh catch
over Pittsburgh Steelers' safety Chris Brown (23)
during first quarter .wtton .Mond~ night In New

RAClNE - "Against All Odds"
would ser·ve as the appropriate
theme for this year's Southern
Tornadoette basketball team as
they enter the 1984-85 cageseason in
qu€'S t of their fifth straight SVAC
Championship. But if tradition a nd
ha rd work preva il. then Southern
could he competitive going down
the stretch .
Las t season Southern earned the
Sec tional Championship and Dis·
trict runner-up honors with a 15-6
overa ll n&gt;cord. however, five key
start ers are gone from that team.
Graduated from last year's squad
were four seniors, including second

tea m a ll-state selec tion and SVAC
Most Va luable Player. Amy Littlefield : a nd four-year letterman and
first team SVAC selection Laren
Wolfe. Two ot her league honorees,
Jl.'nn~· Bentl~y a nd Debbie Michael.
are also gone. along with key
rebou nder Alana Lyons. Sout hern
was 10.0 in the SVAC last season.
O n!~· two players wtt h much
Yarsity cxperiPnce return , 5-7 se-

nior .Juli&lt;' Houdashelt and 5-2 junior
Lori Ad ams. Experience will defi ntt cly be a nega tive factor in
Southei·n's season as Adams is the
on l ~·

parr'- time sta rter returning.

Up fro m last year's 5-4 reserve
squ ad are sophomores Rachel
Reii&gt;Pr. Tammy Theiss. Dia na
Sim pson. Joyce

Foreman,· and

Ka rla Smith. J uniors Tanya Cummins and Ma ndy Hill who sat out
la st season round out thf' varsity
ro~ tcr .

Last .v,.:- ar's team had severa l

talented, seasoned vetera ns, while a 40 game winning streak inside the
this year's players are a ll young SVAC. Southwestern was the last
By HERSCHEL NlSSENSON
with little or no varsity expelience. team to defeat Southern, 68-64 on
~Sports Wri!A!r
Something this year's team lacks Feb. 2, 19&amp;1. Southern is coached by
Brigham
Young University has
head
varsity
Coach
Hilton
Wolfe,
that Southern teams have had in the
hecoJ:lle
the
first Western Athletic
Jr.
and
assistant
){jm
Grueser.
past is someone who can consistCo~i'ence
team
to ever he ranked
Southem Varslb' Ro8tcr
ently come up with the big scaling
No.
1
In
The
Associated
Press
Ht. \ 'r.
play as Mel Weese, Littlefield, and P,layer
college
football
,
as
well
as
the
fifth
x-JuiiP Houadshelf . . ... ... .. ...... .... . 5-7 12
Wolfe have done in the past.
team
to
hold
down
the
top
spot
this
As far as strength and wea- x-Lor l Adams ......................... .. ... 5-~ 11
season
.
knesses go, experience and youth is Tonya Cummins .......................... 5-:i 11
J'he Cougars, the nation·~ only
. ........ 5-7 11
the overlaying factor. According to Mandy Hill .... ... ....
iuibeaten
major-college team,
Coach Hilton Wolfe, Jr., Southern's Rachel Reiber .... .. .. . .. .... .. ......... S.G to
physical strengih, rebOunding, de· TammyThE:&gt;Iss ..... .... .... . ....... , ...... 5-5 10 boosted their record toll-OSaturday
bydefeatlngUtah24-14. Today, they
tense, a nd shooting are all weak at 013na Simpson ..... ..
.. ......... 5·4 to
this point, but. improving. Overall Joyce Fort-m an ... ...... . .. .... ..........5-7 10 vaulted from third place to No. lin
this week'$ AP poll, recelvlng40of58
Ka r l&lt;J Sml1h .............................. 5-5 10
SHS is very small, but also slow.
first-place votes and 1,124 of a
x - DenotE'S letter mPn.
Seven players, a ll of which are
possible 1,160 points from a nation·
"abOut equal," will see much
&amp;serve Roster
wide
panel of sports writers and
Player
playing time.
Ht. Yr.
sportscasters.
Southern's team attitude is a plus Jill Ne&lt;~se
.... ............ .. .. .. .. .... 5-4 JO
Oklahoma and Oklahoma State,
and has been good according to M.'iry Fl ag~ ......... ..
.. .. !H to
which
meet Saturday for the right to
Coach Wolfe who said. "VIctories JennUrr Amold ..
.. ........ ......... &gt;-6 9
represent
the Big El!iht In the
will be hard to come 'by, but with Donf"tt(' Talbolt ...... ......... ...........'&gt;-5 9
Orange
Bowl,
are second and third
.. .. ~S 9
hard work, and a good attitude, we Wtmdy Fry ... ..... .. ....... .....
this
week
after
being sixth and
.. ...... !&gt;- 7 9
equid be competitive In the league A ngil' Bos tlck .. ..
fourth, respectively, last week.
............... 5-{) 9
by the last halfoftheseason. We are Angie Gru('S{'r
The rankings underwentI• some
about a year away."
Scht.-dult&gt;
wholesale shuffling after Oklahoma
Lori Adams and Ma ndy Hill are IA"C' . .1- Trlmb](' .......... ................ Away
knocked off No: 1 Nebraska '17-7,
exPe&lt;"ted to produce much of the [)(:&gt;c _ ti- Nort h Ca lHa ..... .. . .. ....... Away
offensive a ttack, while Joyce Fore· [)e{&gt;_ ll - Gallipolis ....... .. . ... ....... Away
man s hows promise as a good l)(&gt;c. 13- SouthwestPrn
.. Hom e
rebounder. Rachel Reiher, a sopho- [)(&gt;(·. m- Kyger Crf.l(&gt;k
.. ..... Away
more, is a steady ball handler, while J&lt;m . i - Athens ........... ..
. ..... Away
•
Julie Houdashelt s hould steady the .Ja n. 111 - East('rn ................ ......... Home
team with her experience.
.Jan. 14 - Trimble.. .......
.. .. .. Home
Southern's schedule is jus t as .Jan. 17 - Hannan T ract&gt; ........ ........... Away
•
tough as in the past several seasons Ja n. '!1- Ga llipolis .... .. ................. Home
with non-league battles with Trim· Ja n. :?8 - Athens ............ ..... ........... Hom('
ble, Ga llipolis and .Athens.
Jan ..11 - SouthwPstC'm .
. .... .. .Away
GLOUSTER - ' Meigs' girls
The Southern Tornadoettes have Feb. 7- Ky~er Creek ................... Hom£&gt;
basketball tea m got things off on
won four straight SVAC league
Feb. ll- Eastern ............
.. .. Away
the right trac k here Saturday
champi onships and currently have
Feb. t.J - Hannan Tracf' ..... ...... .. .. .. Home
with a 20-19 two-quarter scrim·
mage win over Vinton County in
the TVC girls Preview.
In other scores, Belpre edged
Miller 17)6, Alexander r a n by
Bartkowski will be lost to the Wellston 34-23, Federal Hocking
Schottenheimer said. "\Ve were
Falcons
for the rest of the season.
tripped Nelsonville-York 22-18,
able to get pressure from a number
"The
coordination
that
we
had
a
nd last year's champion Warof differen t places. (Linebackers)
defensively
between
our
coverage
ren
was defeated by Trimble 30·
Chip Banks and- Clay Matt hews 16.
those two guys are just outstanding and our rush was the best we've had
Julie Miller' s six point s led
in that phase of it. and we got good all this season," Schottenheimer
said.
"When
you
talk
about
sacks,
Coach
Ron Logan's · Marauder·
pressure out of our four-man line
you
really
have
to
look
to
coverage
et
tes
while
twin sister Jenny Mil·
when we had Elvis (Franks l and
and
the
rush
.
le
r
ad
ded
five
a nd Rhonda Had Carl (Hairston) in there."
"Sometimes,
if
you
get
the
real
dox
four.
Jill
Booth led VInton
Bartkowski had missed the Falcons' previous game because of a quick rush but you don't have the County with six.
bad knee and was wearing a knee coverage, you don't get to the . According to Logan, v.Inton
should field one of the tou brace during Sunday's 23-7 National quarterback. Conversely. if you County
ghest teams In the TVC this y·e ar.
Football League loss to the Browns. have the good coverage but not. the
Even with the win, however, LoHe had to be carted off the field after rush, you stU! don't get the sack."
gan did not feel his Marauder·
suffering his lOth sack. and the
Matthews led the Browns' defen· ~tt es played impress ively.
Cleveland defense then got to slve charge, getting credit for three
The Meigs lasses will conclude
reserve quarterback Mike Moraski Individual sacks and halfofanother. 1heir pre-season scrimmage with
once.
"Blitzing is easily the most a bout with Athens at home Wedenjoyable part of the game to me,"
nesday at 6 p.m. Meigs has bat·
Matthews said. "It's a mental
tied Gallipolis and Logan on even
attitude that !like. When you blitz,
terms while defeating Southern In
you attack - and a sack. to me.
previous scrimmages this year.
means the
thing as a
The Marauderettes, who retouchdown for a back or receiver."
turn four starters from last
l'htl :•di •Jphlil HI S!. j.ouis
The Browns suffered a number of year's tea m, open their season
S:Jn DIP~O 11 1 Pl! t s btlr~h
injuries In the game. the most
Nov. 27 at home with Eastern.
C'hil';1go a t Mlnnr.sola
l ntltnnapolb ttl IAfi A11J..&gt;t' h~ Rairk•r.,;
MEIGS t201 - Rhonda Haddox 2-0-4.
serious being a shoulder injury
Jenny MIIIC'r 0-5-5, B. J . Gordon 0~2 - 2 , Ju11c
Sim F rallC'I'il'fl a1 !\'1•V: OriP,Ins
endured by tight end Ricky Bolden
Miller 2·2·6..lenni Sw'arl7. 1·0·2. Sandie
~;111l t&gt; a l !'. lmt'!:'r
~londay. NO\', 'll
and a pulled calf muscle suffered by
Mall ox fl.1 · t. TOTALS ~-19-20.
~ t'\1' York .lrts &lt;~ I Miam i
VINTON COUNTY ti9)-Jlt1Boolh3·0·
II
kl
BobG
startlngnosetac e
0 C.
6. Teresa BorinR IJ.1-1, ChrlsChesser1 -1-3,
Bolden wUI likely miss three to
Debbie Derwlt!er 1-0·2, Gina Dodrtll1 ·0·2.
NBA results
·•·Ill
Tra ct&gt;y FrPnch 1-0-2, TE&gt;resa Splres 1-1-3.
fourweeks of ac ll.on,whUe Goll Cw
TOTALSII-3·19.
National 1\aookl'thMJ.I i\._,.__ildlon
probably be listed as doubtful for
By quarter.:
FA"'-rERN CONFF.KENt'E
Atlanrk· D\1!ilon
~~1,~~-i:'~~~i),""""' ...... · · · ·; l~ i~
next weekend's game against the
" ' ·L P'l.1. GR
Houston Oilers, Schottenheimer
ll.~ lon
R 1 .~
Phtlod.·l phla
2 :m 1
W;•~ hlni:'l on
;, .:-61 :l l&lt;j
said.
Also injured were Reggie Camp
Nr•w J1 1'!'t'.t
tl ti
.'10'1 ;l it~
(bruised thigh) , Willis Adams,
ro.;~'" Ynrk
I 9
:ffJ
6 1~
fmtrW Dt\'Won
0 lltt
(sprained knee) and Hanford Dixon
''
' I'
Ml lw:wkt&gt;('
II 4 .ffi7 (leg cramps), but aU three are
Chi('Hga
;, .rf!.1 I
nr-troir
ti
."1'15 I 4J
expected to he able to play next
Ali&lt;mta
.j
~
;p~
Sunday, the coach said.
Indiana
1 1\ ..n:t &lt;1

Meigs gals

post VICtory

•
mprev1ew

Browns had easy target in Atlanta
BEREA. Ohio ! API - Clay
Ma tt hews can he justifiably proud of
lcadmg t hi.' Clrveland Browns to a
club-record 11 sacks against the
Atlanta Falcons, but it should he
remm1bercd hr had an easy target ,
Brow ns· Coach Marty Schottenhei·
mer sa id .
" You're able. with a quarterback
where mobili ty is a problem, to ta ke
somr c hances when you rush that
vou might not otherwise be able to
do ... S&lt;" hottenheimer sa id Monday.
r·rfi.'ITin g to the knee injUJy that was
hobbling Fa lcons' quarterback
St!'\'P Bart kowski on Sunday.
"\\'(' did a couple of things
differently ton defense!, but not
a n;.·thing of real consequence,"

Scoreboard ...
NFL results
~ :UJrm:ll

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Tb.tr!iday, Nov. Z!
r;nv--n U; t\ at Ol&gt;trOil
~£'\\' En,l!lnnd al Dalla!i

Sunday, Nov. 2S
,\! lanli:l .tl Cindnnatl
Ruff;r lo ill Witshin gton
Hu1s1on

lit CIM~' I:111d

K&lt;m ....'IS l'tr~· ar N(~- Yor k (;fant,~:

J.os An!"k-s Rams at T&lt;lmJW Bay

..

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LSU, TCU, Maryland, UCLA a nd
Georgia.
. Last week. itwasOhioState, TCU,
Boston College, Miami, Georgia ,
SMU, Florida State, Auburn, Virgi·
.Va and Clemson.
Virginia 's Top Twenty appear·
aace last week was its first In 32
years but the Cavaljers fell out of the
ranklngs after playing a 24-24 tie
against North Carolina. Clem son
dropped out by losing to Maryland
41-23.
•
Mary!and 's decisive vic tory
pushed t~e Terrapins into the Top
Twenty for the firsttimethisseason.
UCLA, which had been as high as
No. 4 early In the year. returned
after a six -week absence.
Auburn was No. lin the preseason
poll but lost to Miami lri the Kickoff
Classic and the defending national
champions took over the top s pot for
one week.
Then It was Nebraska for three
weeks, Texas for two, Washington
for four and Nebraska again for one
week. The Cornhuskers are not the
flrstteam tohe bumpedfromthetop
spot twice during a season.
Edwards said BYU's No. 1
ranking "is almost hard to even
comprehend, to think about. because It's Uke coming a lmost from
nowhere to the top. ReaUsticaUy,
you wouldn't think tha t something
like this could happen, but tha t's
what college athletics is all about. 1
know that's a trite statement , but it's
· true. Anything is possible."

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r;:::========::;
The Oally Sentinel
(USPS 14 5·960 )

1\ 01\lb&lt;lon ol Multimedia, lnl! .

College's Top 20
'111&lt;-- Top
arC'd

~-mfy

?rt&gt;s.~ col i~

lt'alns in tlr

A ~ocl ·

foot ball p:lll. wllh

first -plan• ml(~. tn Jlilll'lll~. 1!1iU
I"N''O"d.o;, rota ! JX)tnts basOO 011 ~ 19-JJt-17 -

1 6-1 ~ 1 -1 - J :J.\:2- Il - UI--9-M-&lt;+:H -.1-2- 1 &lt;~ nd
I'U nklng.-; ln thr prro.•ious p:lll:
Rf!ltord Ptl! 1"\'lt
lBrlfdlm YnJ!: J4(h 1HHl
1.12~
:1
2.0klul1oma t71
R- 1-1
l .ffi.\ fi
:1.01/.lall omu su 1l1 9- 141
1,012 4
4.F"lor1da t71
R- 1-1
1 .m~
:i
HI- HI
5. Washln.l!1 on 111
6.Texas
HI
"" 10
~UI
&amp;!ti 1
7.Nf'hraska

"" "

~2.0

8.0hl0 Sial&lt;'

!I-HI
7-UI
7-:.!41
R- 3-11
R-3-11
!t-2-0
i -2-l

9.South Carolina
lO.Boslon Coi!~C'
ll. So. Mt't llxll~t
12.Mtamt . f1a .
IJ.Autl.lm
14.SCllltwrn Cal
15.F1orida Slalr

lfi.LCiU
17.Tc&gt;xas

i -2-1
Chrl ~i an

R-2-0

lfi.Mmy land

j-:\-l l

19.UCI.A

'·"'

:Jt.Gml'j:{1:~

" ' 112

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EUGENE, Ore. (API _Oregon
will meetSouthernCallntheannual
Mirage .Bow·! 'ootball
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*NOV.*

WANT ADS

(.'1('\'l'land
1 10 .ffil
\\'FFI'ERN fONFERENCE

SPECIAL

s·~

10" U.P. Superior Mesh Dish
with Uniden Receiver

Mhtwl'!lll DtvWoo

~!l

:!.16

Second Ten consists of
Southern Methodist, Miami, Auburn. Southern Cal. Florida State,

(,

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

:..'1 1 :n-•
](\'.,!

same

1~14.
The

"

·-

Orteans. Groth tried to make the catch from Saints
quarterback Richard Todd but the ball sUpped away.
(AP lrserphoto).
.

dropping the Cornhuskers to sev·
enth place, and Navy upset second·
ranked South Carolina J8.2t
BYU Coach LaVell Edwards
called theCougars' rlsetothetop "a
once-ln-a·llfetlme thing." He said
Monday was a " horrible" day
because his telephone rang tnces·
santly, but added, "It was nice,
though ."
Oklahoma received seven first·
place votes and 1,003 points while
Oklahoma State, a 16-lOwlnnerover
Iowa State, had three first -place
ballots and 1,042 points.
Florida, No. 5last week, clinched
Its first Southeastern Conference
tltlebydefeatlngKentucky25-17and
moved up to fourth with seven
first -place votes and 1,015 points.
The other first-place ballot went to
Washington, which heat Washing·
ton State 38-29 ani) received 874 .
points In jumping from eighth place
to fifth.
Tell'lls shot from lOth to sixth "1th
&amp;10 polnis by trouncing Texas
Christian 44·23 while Nebraska was
seventh with 826 points. Southern
Cal, which had been seventh, lost to
UCLA 29-10 and skidded to 14th.
Ohio State climbed from 11th to
eighth with 768 points by downing
Michigan 21-6, . South Caroli113
plt.lmmeted from second to ninth
with 706' potnts and Boston College
rose'from 13th to lOth with 611 points
by defeating Syracuse 24-16. I.SU,
whictihadbeen ninth, slipped to 16th
after losing to Mississippi State

'

i.. ' ·. :

Tornadoettes rebuilding after
four straight champio~ships BYU latest team -- to hit top ranking
By SCOTT WOLFE

.
~

Utah
San ,\nrmio
Dalla~
K&lt;m:~.- s

Clr_,.

P~j,l(

LA . Lakc&gt;r.t

9
8
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6
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Indla1a 137, ChlCQRO m
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Washin,litton at PhUadP_,hla
Mllwauket&gt; af DaUas
OctroU ar Hooslon
Utah at Kansas Citr

1312 Eastern Avenue (David Adams) . .. . ..... 446-4113

A world

or in a low ta&amp;

Sytems From '1696 Installed

NEW SHOWROOM OPEN
ON Rl.7
TUPPER PLAINS. OHIO
IY THE POST OFnCE

Gol~&gt;n Sta lt' at Nt&gt;W Ya-k

l'tu'fllx al LA LakE-~

* Excellent Picture! *

Are you collecting payments on a real estate mortgage,
but would prefer to have a lump sum?

1

7
8

~· JE'f1l'Y a1 Portland
Df'fll't'r at ~a ltlr

COMPLETELY INSTALLE.O

HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 2-7
Sat. 10-6

SILVERBIRD
SA'I'I!I.I.ID:

..

· smEllS

378-6158

Warning ,The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
8 mg " tar;' 0.6 mg nicotine av. per cig arelte . byFTC method.

•

C Philip Mo rris Inc . 1984

�The Daily Sentinel

·By The Bend

Tuesday,Novernber20. 1984
P~~7

Area organizations meet
PomeroyUMW

KODAK a~sc
1100 Camera

9

PORTAILE

MINI·CoiiPO
ITIUO

CASSETTE WITH

97

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47.95

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• llttlll or Eltctrlc

Value!

4'6
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89
Reg. 79.99

MUSICAL CHRISTMAS

BIG· H'a POUND
BROCK
MEMORY ASSORTED

MAGNAVOX

PERSONAL PM
STEREO

CARDS

\CHOC4:»LATES

• Llghtwllg~l • Cushioned Earphones

39

299.

Reg. 2.29

fiHAMILTON
15u SANTA STOCKING

AMIPM
• A.Cie.ttery OpltaiM

BEACH

25 CHRISTMAS
BOWS

POATABLIAADIO

754AL

229 .

• Solid St1t1

ONLYI

STEAM IRON

Reg. 2.99
13111-B

HANDMIXER

2 POOT ICOTCH
PINI CHRISTMAS TRill

3 SPEED WITH BEATER CLIPS
. OUR EVER'f'OAY LOW PRICE

1999

ORNAMENT

FS.JC!

ONLY!

389
Reg. 4.79

ONLYI

ONLY!

~LW24013

CLEO
WHITE POLDINQ BOXEI
.

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35 LIGHT
FLOWER SET

"'"""'119

2'9

Reg. 1.49'

Reg. 3.29

850-4441

~1852

RONSON.

cSiiiiliimn

MIST OR DAY CURLER
ITYLER
OUR EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

7··-

OUR SALE PRICE
LESSMFRS. REIIATE

AFTER

o"'-"'2 4 98

Reg. 27.99

our 'Family
VICK • .

FORMULA 44D
DECONGESTANT COUGH MIXTURE
30Z.

• ELECTRIC RAZORS
• RADIOS
• STEREOS
•IRONS
• CHRISTMAS BOWS
• GREETING CARDS
• COFFEEMAKERS

• CHRISTMAS LIGHTS
• LARGE SELECTION OF FILM
• CANDY &amp; TOBACCO
• CROCK POTS
• TELEPHONES AND ACCESSORIES
• CURLING IRONS
• CHRISTMAS TREES

"

••

NYQUIL
6 oz.

GM'&lt;'34~V~E!
VAPORUB
RELIEVES DISTRESS OF COLDS
1~

oz.

..... 159

12.99

10.99
-3.00

MAGNA VOX
AM/FM CASSETTE
RECORDER

ROTARY CORD RAZOR r:;:;.,..

• HAIRDRYERS
• CAMERAS
• CLOCKS
• WATCHES
• MEN'S COLOGNE$
• WOMEN'S COLOGNES
• CHRISTMAS WRAP

Reg. 21

SCENTED ANGEL

OUR SALE PRICE .
LESSMFAS. REBATE

o"'""'

ONLY!

SIN EX
NAIALIPRAY

"" oz.

2,~.~"

• CLOCK RADIOS
• BAJ1lRIES
• BLENDERS
' .
• GIFT TRIM
• CHRISTMAS GARLAND
• COOKWARE SETS
•
&amp; ELECTRIC BLANKETS

Installa!lon of lhe 1985 officers
highlighted the recent meeting of
the United Methodist Women of the
Pomeroy Chu~!J.
The Rev. James Corbitt conducted the Installation ceremony.
Installed were Martha Hoover,
president; Evelyn Lucke, . vice
president; Ruth Moore, secretary;
Mrytls Parker, treasurer; Gertrude
Mitchell, secretary of program
rosources; Dorothy Downie, Chris·
tlan personhood; Kathy Corbitt,
supportive communltyi, Evelyn
Clark, Christian social Involvement; Ada Wamer, Christian global
concern; Polly Eichinger. Maxine
Goeglein, and Evelyn Clark, committee on nominations; Pauline
Roush, Allee Wamsley, Faye Wll·
dermuth, and VIrginia Edwards,
membership.
Grace ·,Campbell had devotions
using scripture from 1st Cor. and a
meditation on spiritual. She stressed
that Christ be praised and glorified
for the gifts bestowed upon his
children, and commented on the
body of Christ, thechurch,wltheach
part complimenting the other.
It was ' announced thai the
WllkesvUie unit had received the
award for having read the most
books this past year. The award was
given by Enrichment Day held at
Water1ord. It was noted that the
· offering for African natives were
Zaire, $274.53; Nigeria, $227 .88;
Zlmbave, $52.15; Sierre Leone,
$226.19; Angola $32.15; Zambia,
$67.15; Liberia, $60.66 and an
undeslgnated offering, $309.11 for a
total of $1,248.82. The Racine unit
took home the membership banner
with 24 percent gain.
Plans were made to donate to the
local food bank, the Jaycees, the
Pomeroy Health Care Center. and to
send money to the Methodist Church
Children's Home at Worthington for
Christmas. The annual dinner and
party was planned for Dec. ll at 6
p.m. at the church.
A total of 73 sick and s hu tin visits
were reported during the past
month. Marge Reuter and Betty
Baronick seJVed a dessert course.

Health Club
Plans to prepare Christmas treals
for the sick and shutln of the
community were made when the
Rock Springs Better Health Club
mel recently at the home of Mrs.
Phyllis Skinner.
The treats will be prepared
following the annual holiday dinner
party of the group which was set for
Dec. 18 at the Rock Springs United
Methodist Church.
A donation of $5 was made lo the
American Lung Association.
Leonra Leifheit gave devotions
using meditations entitled "The Art
of Thanksgiving" a nd "The Surest
Way." A report was given on the
community halloween party. Hospital equipment for loan by the club
was discussed and Helen Blackston
and Beuna G rueser were named to
thecornmitteeforremembrancesof
the sick.
Nancy Morris had the' program
with readings being "Warning on
Sullltes" by !Yirs. Blackston; "High
Blood Pressure" by Louise Bearhs;
"How to Stop a Nose Bleed the Right
Way" by Frances Goeglein: "Kids
and Food" by Lenora Leifheit;
•'Hernia Surgery" by Mrs. Grueser;
"TMJ Syndrome," Tresa Abbott;
and "Meningitis" by Ann Mash.
Mrs. Mash conducted the contest
won by Mrs. Grueser and Mrs.
Leifheit. A dessert course was
seiVed to those named and Michael

Calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Drew Webs1er
Post 39 of the American Legion
will hold their annual World War
.r night and oyster supper
Tuesday evening at 8 p.m. Any
World War I member needing
transportation Is asked to can
Leonard Jewell or Commander
Mlck Williams.

Happenings ·
.Tables available
NEW HAVEN - Display
tables arestlll available for New
Hawn's annual Christmas baz·
.aartobeheld Dec.l, lOa.m to4
p.m.at the fire . department
building by the New Haven Fire
·Department Auxlllary. Crafts,
, decorations, food and glftswlll be
available. Anyone interested In a
table Is asked to calllll'.!·2814 or

882-2231

Leifheit. Next meeting will be in
March with Mrs. Leifheit with Mrs.
Skinner to have the program, and
Mrs. Morris, the contest.

Barbara Fry, Chairman of
Women's actlvilles.

Shade Valley council

· PartiCiatlon in the Meigs County
Clubs · annual Christmas
ut«~eport
nower show was planned during a
Bill Blower of Rawling·Coats·
meetlngo!theShadeVaUeyCouncll
Blower Funeral Home talked on
of Floral Arts held at the home of
Joanne Francis.
children and death at Thursday
night's meeting of the MiddlepOrt
The club will be responsible for
exhibits in seven classes of the
Child Conservation League held at
"Christmas Storybook" ·shaw to be
the Ohio Power Co. office.
Blower showed a fUm on the
held In the Meigs Multipurpose
Building on Dec. 1 and 2. Photosubject. He stressed the importance
ofteachingdeathasanaturalwayof
graphy will be handled by Debbie
Osborne. Debbie Weber reported on
life, the need lot being absolutely
the county planning session for the
truthful 5o as to retain the child's
trust. As for. taking children. to the · show attended by Mrs. Pat Holter,
funeral home, Blower said ' 11 Is . Mrs. Curtis, JaneandAIJceThomp- .
Important to explain what IS going to
son. The four also participated In the
.county civic beautlflcalloil planting
happen and to take the children
at the Carleton School recently.
there when only a few people are
around.
Activities of the junior garden
He said that children's reaction to
club were reported by Sheila Curtis
death differ, some feel guilt, some
who noted that members are
hostility, some panic. He noted thai
making miniature arrangements
death education classes will begin
and Chrlstams tree ornaments of
soon In schools and said that a
natural materials.
library of books and fllms Is
Connie Hill, Denise Mora and
available at the funeral home and
Jane Thompson were welcomed
can be borrowed.
into the club: Marty Baum reported
Mrs. Harris presided at the
on the Chester Mill Park noting that
meeting opening with the Mother's
the·bulbs recently planted have been
Prayer and pledg~ to the flag. She
covered With peal moss. A report ws
also gave devotions reading, "We
given on lhe regional meeting he ld
Thank Thee." An Invitation was
at McArthur at whl~h Betty Dean
read from Molly Plymale inviting
did an arranging program. Others
club members to a get·together to
attending were Jane and Allee
heldonNov.27at7p.m.attheGallla
Thopson, Mrs. Holter and Mrs .
County Senior Citizens Center.The
Curtis.
An accredited judge, Mrs. Curtis
annual Christmas party was an nounced for Dec. 20 at 7:30p.m. at
gave the first in a series of floral
Shoney's Restaurant. Members are
design demonstrations on the tradi·
to meet on the village parking Jot
tiona! triangle. She suggested havacross from Elberfelds at 7 p.m.
ing a. mental image before starting
There will be a secret sister gi ft
so that appropriate line materials
and flowers can be secured. She
exchange along with an ornament
stressed the Importance of knowing
exchange. The traveling prize was
won by Mrs. Harris.
about mechanics and she noted that
Susie Abbott was hostess and
components for successful arrangeseiVed refreshments.
men! line are form, texture, pattern,
and color, using rhythm, balance.
proportion, scale, dominance, and
contrast. She listed the three basic
Golden sheaf certificates for 50 designs as line,linemass and mass.
For her demonsIra lion she made
years membership, and 25 year
a
n
equilaterlal or mass arraangecertificates were presented by
ment
using drled materials, a right
WUllam Radford, master, and
angle
design with firethorn and
officers of the Rock Springs Grange
orange
mums, another with ever·
at Thursday night's meeting held at
green and red carnations on a red
the grange hall.
board with red satin baubles and
Receiving the golden sheaf certlf·
candles, and an lsoseleus triangle
!cates were Dorothy Johnston and
using sword plant with yellow spoon
Robert Burdette. The 25·year certlf·
mums.
!cates went to Dorothy Sheets and
The educational exhibit was by
Roger Leifheit .
Sheila
Taylor who displayed "do· it·
Plans were made to send gifts to
yoursell" containers made from
the Athens Mental Health Center
ca ns. bottles, discarded machinery
and members are asked to take
Items to the Dec. 13 meeting or to parts. and pieces of wood.
Jackie Frost displayed the arranleave them \\1th Barbara Fry or
gement
of the month featuring the
Frances Goeglein.
color,
orange.
The annual Christmas potluck
The Christmas dinner was an·
dinner will also be held on Dec.l3 at
nounced
for Dec. 18 at 6: 30 p.m. at
6:30p.m. and there will be a white
the home of Debbie Weber with
elephant gift exchange. The county
Sheila Taylor, assisting hostess. A
officers meeting was announced for
mini-home flower show will be held
Tuesday night at 7: 30 at the Rock
and there will be a gift exchange.
Springs grange hall.
Louise Radford, lecturer, had
charge of the program with
Holiday party plans were made at
members responding to roll call by .
Thursday night's meeting of the
telling what they are thankful for.
Magnolia Club held at the home of
Linda Broderick gave a meditation,
Edna Slusher.
Beuna Grueser, "A Reason for
The dinner will be held at the
Thanksgiving" and Lo~lse Radford
Holiday Inn on Dec. 20 wit h a pa rty
had a Thanksgiving table quiz.
to follow. Devotions were given by
Other readings were "Once More
Ella Smith wbo used "Seek God's
It is Thanksgiving" by Bunny Kuhl,
Kingdom" andclosedwlthaprayer.
and "A Couple of Gems" by
Thanksgiving readings were given
Genevieve Burdette.
by J;:Uen Couch, Mary Pugh,
It was reported that Roy and Pat
Margaret
Rose, Doris Grueser,
Holter had attended the conference
Katie
Miller,
Edna Slusher. Cora
on agriculture held In Columbus.
Beegle,
Ella
Smith,
BW'ton Smith,
Mrs. Holter gave highlights of the
and Bernice Darst. Games were
conference.
played and refreshments served.
Refreshments were served bv

M ;J J 1

Garde~~

Grange ·

Magnolia dub

Birthdays noted ·.
Circle, and Tim Speneer.
Sending gifts were Marilyn WozSam and Narsa Terzopplous of nlak, Ralph and Wilma Ballard,
Brenda and Dave,.Myrtle Flanders.
Mlddleport. are announcing the
Sandra
Massar, Joe, Lawie, and
birth of a son, Ryan H~mer, born on
Matt
aoyle, h er great·
Oct. 22 at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital. The infant weighed seven , grandmother. Eleanor Boyles. a nd
Phil and Sharon Boyles. ,
pounds, eight ounces and was 22
Inches long ..
Maternal grandparents are Homer Moodlspaugh, Middleport, and
the late Mildred Ferrell, and the
maternal . great-grandmother Is
Lovena Neal, Middleport. Ollie
Hawk of Columbus Is the paternal
grandmother.

Terzopplous

Spence~

•
c.
AUCTION PREPARATIONS- Connie CampbellEaton displays two items on the block at the
Colledor's Auction to benefit the French Art Colony

Collector's Auction scheduled
French Art Colony fund raiser
The French Art Colony, located
at 530 First Ave .. will be holding a
public auc1ion, conducted by Bud
McGee of Gallipolis, and will
include fine art and collector's
items on Saturday. Nov. 24 beginning at 8 p.m.
The auction preview will be held
at the French Art Colony betwee n 7
and 8 p.m. during that evening.
Wine and cheese will be seiVed
during the preview.
The auction list includes !lne art
works of watercolors . paintings,
drawings, and photographs by
some of tlie finest artists from Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky. Other
items being auctioned are fine
collectables of crystal, historic
.memorabUia, cultural objects and
..\

.

ilems of interest.
Among the artists Included are
Joy Thompson. Margo Adams. and
Sandy Stephens of Russell, Ky.,
Polly Trumbore of Ashland, Ky. ,
Maxine Kinnaird of Gallipolis
Ferry. W.Va .. Marilyn Mauck of
Proc1orvUie, Ohio, Marjorie Rine·
hart of . Waverly, Ohio, Phoeby
Carey and Karen Wonn of Crown
City, Ohio. Paul Bradford. and
Chris Eaton of Athens, Ohio; and
Lee Sprinkle, Katherine Sobal.
Vilma Plkkoja , Brad Painter. Earl
Tope, Saundra Koby, and Connie
CampbeU.Eaton of Gallipolis.
All proceeds generated from this
fund-raising auction will go directly
towa rd operating expenses of the
French Art Colony. This event is

••

open to the public and provides a
unique opportunit y for collectors
and holiday gift givers.
All auction item s have been
donated as a benPfit to this fine art
and cultural organization. Walk In
panlclpants are welcomed . For
more information. call 16H1 446.
3834.

ECONOMICAL
WINTER
TIRES

Computer topic at library
If computers and robots do more
and more of the work humans are
now doing. what will people do?
WUI computers alter the meaning
of being human? What will compu·
ters do to our ability and willingness
to relate to one another? How wUI
your community be changed by the
computer revolution?
,These are some of the questions
that will be discussed a t a program
on "Human Values and the Compuler Revolution" to be held from 7 to
9 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 26. at the

A rea woman takes
part in music program

Middleport Public Library.
Dr. Warren Ruchti, Cha irman of
the Ohio University Department of
Philosophy , will lead the discussion
on the impact the computer is
having on our lives now and what It
will likely mean to us in the future :
This program, which is free and
open to the public , is made possible
in part by the Ohio Humanities
Council, a state-based agency of the
National Endowment for the Humanities. which makes grants to
non-profit organizations lor the
public programs in the humani ties.
Further information may be
obtained by calling 992-5713 or
5~-6851.

RETREADS
GENERAL
TIRE
SALES
.. rr
It (' T ('
\'lt•t' h

1u&gt; R u ltlwr
thf• Rona :·
I

N. 2ND AVE .

MIDDLEPORT, OH.
PH. 992·7161

Rita Rhodes of Langsville, a . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - student at Marshall University, will
perform tonight at 8 p.m . with the
Marshall University J azz Ensem ble conducted by J .D. Folsom. A
graduate of Meigs High School, Rita
plays the saxophone.
UP TO l QTl. OF G.M. Oil
The concert which 'ts open to the
&amp; ~ G.M. FILTER FOR All
4'
public free of charge will Include
G.M. (ARl ONLY.
Special
big-band -style jazz tunes with
(OFFER ENDS DEC . 1, 1984)
featured vocalist Hollis Dobreff and
guest artist, Dr. DonaldA. Williams.
Miss Rhodes as a Symphonic
Band member performed al a
SOO £.MAIN
.
PH. 9112 -2174
POMEROY, OH.
concert with that group las t week.

ATTENTION G.M. CAR OWNERS
OIL &amp; FILTER CHANGE ·
$ 1 95

SMITH-NELSON . MOTORS, INC.

,------------l------------------------

WHAT SHOULD THE DECEASED WEAR?
;~.:~

j

.,

I

--~'- Clothing helps to upress the unique chatateristics of an in·
dividual. hen in death. clothing can convey the special per ·
sonality of lhe deceased . in the plann ing of funeral details
the matter of clothing for the deceased should not be over:
looked.
Has there been a reques1 in the past from the deceased con cerning his or her own feelings? Sometimes a uniform of office or volunteer leadersh ip has been requested. because ol
the significance to the deceased . Medals. tewelry or other
items of special significance may be considered to complete
the uniform or dress.

_

Danlelle Marie Spencer, daugh·
ter of Dim and ,Sheila Spencer,
Tuppers Plains, celebrated her
second birthday recerttly. Attending
were her parents, brother and
sister. Klrt and Tiffany. grandpar·
ents, Mr. and ' Mrs. Richard
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Grover
White, great-grandparents, Mr. and .
Mrs. Woodrow Fortney, Serena
White, sOnia, Jeff, Nikki and Jeffrey

Saturday. There will be Items of all sorts, and here she
looks 0\'er a pair of crystal candlesticks and a
watercolor. both donated.

Is clothing worn by the deceased during lifetime appropriate?
By all means. An outfit which was a particular favorite ol the
deceased - or the sur11ivor - may be the prime consideration .

Pl~~- ~oau-gg~,.

:#a,_d .ifome
(610) !192·51.1

DanleDe Marie Spencer

' MICDLEPORT, OHIO

We invite your questions and will answer them privately or
publicly through this colu mn .

.

JAMES SIMPSON

BILL BLOWER

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, November 20, 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, November 20, 1984

Think out personal computer uses before making the buying list
ATHENS- For Shuppers with a
personal computer on their yearend "wish lists," carefully identifying the computer's intended uses
may mean the difference between a
gOOd and bad investment
"People are most often disappointed with their computers be·
cause they didn't ftgure out ahead
of time exactly what they expected
the computer to do," says Duane
Starkey, manager of the mforma
tlon center m computer and
learning services a t Ohio
University
"The most important step is to

make a list of the types of things the
computer wlll be expected to do,"
says Starkey, who advises and
trams umverslty petsonnel on the
selection a nd use of computers.
"The list should include intended
uses such as playing games,
keeping business records, wordprocessmg or connecting to national information seiV!ces," he
explains
The list also should include who
will be using the computer, since
· models intended primarily for
game playing may not meet more
sophisticated needs such as word-

processing
Once the list Is made, Starkey
advises buying locally.
"Although prices may be a little
higher than those at mail-order
outlets, the local retailer can
provide Introductory information
and help match equipment and
programs to the buyer's needs," he
says
Repairs, installation and even
training also are offered by many
local relatives, but not often by
mail·order concerns, he adds
For people new to computers,
there are some very good sources of

information.
"Users' clubs, which now exist In
almost every area, and many
magazines and books are available
to help computer users from
beginners to experienced profes·
sionals," he says, noting that an
advantage of the clubs Is being abl(\
to see and use equipment and get
opinions from owners of different
brands and models.
"It's usually best to select a
computer made by a company with
a larger numbetofusers," Starkey
says, since new programs and uses

for these computers wUI continue to
be developed.
"There are some small computer
companies whose products may be
considered bad risks. If the companies go under, new programs and
uses tor that equipment won't be
developed, reducing the equip·
ment's usable life "
_!demory capability Is another
Important consldera lion.
"It's best to plan on equipment
that is ca pable of providing memory expansion as use of the
computer grows," Starkey says,
noting that most buyers should

begin with either 64K or 128K or
memory, expandable to 256K
Finally, Starkey advises against
putting off buying a computer to
walt for lower prices or more
advanced technology
"Those reasons for delaying a
computer purchase have become
myths," he says. "Prices have
pretty much stabilized and although equipment Is always being
improved, today's technology ,
which Is very good, Is not going to
change stgnlflcantly m the near
future."

Groups have meetings_ _ __ Carpenter community happenings
Pomeroy PTO
Seventeen Pomeroy Elementary
students took part in a talent show
Fnday evenmg at the school. The
shov. was sponsored by the Pomeroy Elementary P .T 0
Students performed m three
different classes, piano, miscellaneous, and dance.
First place winner m the ptano
category was Barbie Anderson,
playing three selections, lncludmg
" Ice Castles· Melissa Neutzling
took second place and Debbte
Alkire, third
In the miscellaneous category,
first place wmners were Sarah
Anderson and Damelle Crow who
performed a dance duet Wllh the
accompamment of Mrs Vera
Holltday Mtcah Bunch Patrtck
Gryszka , and Josh Bartels won
second place fOI p1 esent ing ~
combmat1on of break dance exer
ctses Tht rd place wmners were
Steve Martm. who sang a solo, a nd
Amy Durst and Candy Bachtel who
dtd a ponpom rounne
Megan Bartels won first place m
the dance ca tegory bydancmgto the
theme "I'm F1 ee " Second place
dance wmners was Katie Sanders
Jodt Smith Lmdy Williams. and
Julie Buck flmshed theevenmg wtth
third place
Best of show wlnners were Mtcah
Bunch. Patrtck Grvszka. and Josh
Bartels who were awarded a $Spnze
and a rosette These students
donated their rosette award to the
school to be dtsplayed with other
school t roph1es
P T 0 officers. Jane Thompson.
Desiree Taylor. and Sandi Sargent
JUdged the talent show and awarded
prizf'S accord mg to a ten poml sca le
Mrs Thompson also acted as
mistress of ceremomes Suste
Sanders operated the ta pe m achme
for the chtldren s mus•c

Forest Run UMW
A "Kentucky style · dmner of
soup be~ns and ham was served In
lieu of the traditiOnal ThanksgiVIng
tllnner menu at this Wl'&lt;'k 's m eetmg
of the Forest Run Uruted Mcthod tsr~
Church women held m the socta i
rooms of the church Emphasts was
on apprec1a11on for the food we
e u]OY
Place mats and napkins m arked
wtlh II adiltonai expressions of the
Kentucky Highland Region wen•
used for the dmner Htlda Yeaugcr
had grace
The world thank offenng was
obsetved with Edtth Stsson present mg the program. Her topic was 'A
Place Called Home " gtvmg a
numbe1 of lttles relatmg to home
The scripture was take n from
MaMhew. and she read a prayer of
Thanksg.vmg by Peter Marshall to
close the obseJvance
:
Evelyn Hollon . pres tdent. opened
the meetmgw1th poems.· You' and
"But D1dn ·t " Officers· reports were
giVen w1th 20 stck calls reported It
was noted that evaluation papers to
be filled out have been received
fromthedtstrtct Ncwdatebookslor
1985 will be !tiled out Nov 26 at a
meetmg to be held a t the home of
Mrs Yeauger
Plans were m ade to p1 £&gt;pa!lf'
Christmas frutt bask£&gt;ts lor shutms
at the next meetmg Btrthdays of
Ca roly n Sa isc1 a nd Rose Ann
Jenkins were obset&gt; cd Names
were drawn for a gift exchange at
the December meet mg to be held at
the home of Evelyn Hollon
For the evenmg program, mtscelianeous readmgs were gtve n by the
m embers The group sa ng "Count
Your Blessmgs' to close the
meetmg Others attendmg besides
those named were Ma ry Nease,
Faye Wtgglns. Mary K. Roush.
Betty Blackwood. Shirley Sopher.

Kathleen Scott, Mary Holter, and ' call those attendmg told why they
E rma Roush
were thankful for another person
there
Bible puzzles were worked in
teams
during the social hours
The law and chtldren was the
Others attendmg beside those
thtme of a recent meetmg of
na med were Whttney Watson, Cecil
Pomeroy G1rl Scout Troop 1276
and Virgima Heilman, Zib and
Thomas Werry talked on laws to
Sylvia Midkiff, Hilber and Helen
protect children, and then assisted
Qutvcy, Wallace Bradford, Helen
by Randy Forbes flngerprlnted the
Smciatr Carolyn Smclatr, Geroge
scouts Carl Hysell showed a movie
Ziegler, Robert Roush, Goldte Reed,
ca lled 'Missing Children" and
Ruth Francis, and Naomi Reed
talked on the subject and thmgs
bemg done to protect children . Plans
were made durmg the meeting to
enter the day camo patch contest

Troop 1276

Past GJuncilors

Eight and Forty
Severa l members of Meigs
County Salon TIO, Eight and F orty,
were in Columbus to attend a
reception hononng Lmda Edmundson, chapeau departementai, held
at the Bexley American Legion hall.
Shirley DaVIS was mtstress of
ceremomes for the dmner which
preceded the program Introduced
wei e Rtchard Yeater, grand chef de
gare, Joel Davts,grandcorrespond
ent , Mrs. Warren Griggs, AUJal!ary
prestdent , Grace Green, depa1te
mental le screta1re.
All brought greetmgs and many
presented gtfts to Mrs Edmundson
A gavel and red rose were preserrted
to her from her home unit, along
with a silver tray from the olftcersof
the American Legion Auxiliary
A butterfly theme was carried out
m the table decorations Represent
lng 1he Metgs Countv salon were Iva
Powell, Mary Martm. P earl Knapp,
a nd Ruby Marshall

Literary club
James Michener's book "Po
la nd" was revtewed by Mrs George
Hackett a t Wednesday's meeung of
the Mtddleport Literary Club held at
the home of Mrs Richard Owen
The 1evieWei noted that the novel
combmes fact and flc!lon agamst
the historica l background of the
country It covered eight Important
periods of Polish history from the
13th centurv to the present time ,and
IS a story of the succession of hermc
e fforts some victorious, often
tragic, to repeal mvadors of the
countrv
Mrs Hackett noted that the
people m the story are the author's
mvenllon, but that the novel
represents the pnnctpal layers of
the ngid society of Poland and 1s the
storv of thP Polish people who enJOY
dancing, feastmg and mustc, rom
a nce and intngue It portrays a
people always stflvmg to 'achteve
freedom
For roll call members answered
with a comment on the review
Ca ndy and snacks were served by
the hostess

Faithful followers
The annual Thanksgtvmg dmner
of the Fatthful Followers class of the
Hemlock Grove Church of Christ
was held Thursday mght at the
church RogPrWatson, pastor, gave
the mvocatiOn
The group extended thanks to
Sara Cullums. Jessie White. Leota
Smtih a nd Margaret and Harley
Hamng for the decorations and
dmner arrngements
Munei Bradford presided at the
busmess meetmgduringwhtch tune
thl' group voted to send a Christmas
gift of $.'i0 to the Grundy Mountam
MISSIOn 1D VIrgima, to be used In
their holiday acllvtttes there
Mildred Z1egler. Mrs Cuiiums,
and Ann Lambert were named to
the Chnstmas commttteewhlchwill
have charge of plannmg a potluck
dmne1 at the Harley Haning home
onDec. 20.
Roger Watson had the devotions
with comments on Paul, disciple of
Christ, and his thankfulness For roll

New offtcers were named at the
recent meetmg of the Past Counci)ors Club of Chester Council 323,
Da ughters of America, held at the
hall .
Elected were Charlotte Grant,
president, Goldie Fredenck, VIce
prestdent; Lora Damewood, secretary ; Pauline Ridenour, treasurer:
Opal Hollon, flower comm!ltee
member, Mary Hayes, sentmel,
and Mary K. Holter, news reporter
Laura Mae Ntce conducted the
meetmg which she opened w1th the
23rd Psalm, the Lord's Prayer, and
the pledge to the flag For roll call
members noted somethmg for
which they are thankful Sadie
Trussell and Mrs. Holter were
appomted to make out hostess
comrru tteeslor 1985. Ethel Ord gave
the treasurer's report The Chnstmas supper will be held at Crew's
Steak House, Dec 12, 6 30 p.m. with
a meetmg and program to be at the
home of Mrs Rtdenour Lora
Damewood will be co hostess
Members arc to take three pteces of
lru1t lor baskets to be prepared for
shu tms There will be a $2 gtlt
exchange
Games were conducted by Erma
Cleland and Cora Beegle. Refreshments were served by hostesses,
Charlotte Grant and Margaret
Tuttle Sadtc Trussell won the door
prize Others attendmg were Mary
Showalter, lnzy Newell, Ada Mor
ris, and Fern Morris, a guest .

Zion Circle
New off1cers were elected and
holiday proJects planned when the
Zion C1rcie of Helpmg Hands met
recently at thp home of Helen
J ohnson
Elected were Ida Murphy, prest
dent. Suzanne Warner. v1ce president Margp Purtell, secretay, and
Kathryn Jolmson, treasurer
Plans were made to prepare
Thanksgivmg baskets on Nov 20
Cookies candy and money to
purchase penshable items are
needed Mrs Murphy and Mrs.
Wa rner wtll purchase the frutt
Chnstmas treats Wlll be prepared
on Dec lOatlOa m and cookies and
candy are also needed for that
project
It was announced that the Men's
Fellowship famlly dlnnerwU be held
at the Poll')eroy Church of Christ,
b 30 p m on Nov 19 Hoyt Allen,
Jackson, v.lll speak following the
dmner. The Zion Christmas dinner
and secret sister gift exchange was
announced for Dec 7 at 6 30 p .m .
VIrginia Wyatt presided at the
meetingwitheachmemberpresenting a scripture contam!ng the word
"lime " Mrs Warner had devotions
using "Blessmgs of Thanksgiving"
by Sarah Hale.
Next metmg of the group will be
held on Jan . 3 at the Murphy home
Mrs Jolmson will have devotions
and the word for the month wlli be
"elect "Others attending the meet
mg were Carrie Wears and Evelyn
Thoma A prayer circle led by Mrs.
Thoma closed the meeting. Refresh
ments were seiVeil'by the hostess.

Meigs County land transactions
Ray L. ~arshner, Cora A
Karshner to teo G King Erma J
King, 2 5 acres, Orange
Alvin L. Barnett, Mildred H
Barnett to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. Right of Way,
Salisbury.
Harold W Bnnker, Penny
Brinker to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co , Right of Way,
Salisbury.
Floyd Ridenour, deceased, to
Bernice Ride nour, affidavit.
Chester.
Carrie M. Wears to Tiger Oil Inc.

Right of Way, Rutland
Glisple Howard. Edithe Howard
to Tiger Oil Inc , Right of Way,
Rutland
Donald ,Eblin, deceased, to Juanita M. Uttle fka Juanita M. Moore,
Affidavit, Racine Village.
Charles C. Cassell Jr., KittY M.
Cassell to Franklin Real Estate Co.,
L()t 4, Middleport
Henrietta Jenkins, deceased, to
Helen Lyons, Affidavit, Pomeroy
VIllage.
Helen
Lyons to Big Bend

z.

z

Properties, Lots, Pomeroy VIllage.
Ronald K Browning to Paul F.
Marr, Cora M Marr, Parcel,
Salisbury
Edward A Young, Eva M. Young
to Eva M. Young to Fred M.
Hortman, Vicki L. Hoffman, 22 67
acres, Bedford
Charles lhle, Donna Ihle to
James E. Diddle, Rlgot of Way,
Sutton.
Richard L Dean, Carmel Dean to
Thomas Ray Tobin, Carol B. Tobin,
Parcels, Rutland
'

Mr and Mrs Gordon Perry were
in Cabln Creek, W. Va. where they
visited hls mother. Dorothy Perry.
a~d other relatives The Perrys
were accompamed by Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Whittington and they
stopped enroutl) home to vslt Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Reedy, Southside,
W Va , and her mother, 'Mrs.
Walter Swett, who has been there
since the death of her husband.
Mrs Swett expects to return to her
horne in Florida soon
Mrs. Donald Wooten and her
mother, Ethel Rife, were in Lancaster to vlsll with Joan Wooten and
also in Columbus to see Mrs Rife's
brother-In-law and sister. Mr. and
Mrs Harold Vorys
Ida Denison spent a Sunday with
Edith Talbert near Salem Center.
Dale Dye, who recently underwent major surgery at O'Bleness
Memorial Hospital, Is convalescing
at his home here. His daughter,
Dawn Walker, Thurman, Mary
Dye Kepnar, Hartford, Cella Irwin,
Ma rysville, a nd Luc y Baum·
gardner, Coshocton, have been
here caring for htm
Among tho&amp;e attending the wedding from this area of Janet Hooper
and William King In Athens were
Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Fraley, Jr
and Roger, RU!a Lowery and
Lester, Louise Myers, Bertha

Crippen, Murl Galaway and Elizabeth Jordan. Janet is the daughter
of Rose Greenlees Barrows and is a
member of Columbia Grange
Mrs Reece Prather and Theron,
Kettering, were overnight guests of
her mother, Freda Smith.
Guests of Golden Stansbury were
Mr and Mrs Larry Stansbury and

Laurel Cliff community news
I

Attendance at the Free Methodist
Church Nov 11 was 83 Choir
members present were 12.
The Messenger Smgers from
Groveport were at the local church
a recent Sunday evemng. A large
crowd attended. Their singing: was
well received
Pastor and Mrs Miller and son
Scott spent a weekend with Mrs

I

Mr and Mrs Dallas Hill were In
Clncinna ti a recent weekend to see
and hear Rev. Jtmmle Swaggart
preach
Mr and Mrs Dorsa Parsons
visited Mr and Mrs Lester Little at
Hockingport recently and Mr and
Mrs Gerald Wells at Gallipolis

Business Services
POLE BUILDINGS
WIEN lHE IIWlY HOIMI(If H1.WT
lHG FNU.Y PAY Off Wl1ll THAT

Sf'£CW. IJ([R IIIEWMO 'tOUft t:f
FORTS WITH A 0UM.1TY l.WE-L..:IE

SliOOUlf:R IIOIM AT OUR STIIliO

EACH triOUNf IS GIVEN htf: PI:R
SOHAl AnENTION IT DESERVES TO
GIV£ 'fOU A PRtzt: TROfiH'r THAT
LAST FOR YEARS AND YEARS.

e

Perfect Family Gift
•Affordable
•Portable
•Theropeudic
•Relalung
•Indoor-Outdoor Ust
•y ear Rounti Pleasure
''S p Pnul I r11 ro du ('lorv
Pr1 ct&gt;~"

BLACKWOOD
HOME SPAS
Pomeroy, OH.
Call 915-3805

12/ 1 mo

Mr. and Mrs Jolm Williams
visited his sister and brother-in-law,
Mr and Mrs Herman Whitehead of
Decatur. Ill for two weeks
Mrs Juamta Richards of Dayton
spent a week with her sister, Mrs
Virginia Gtbson
Mr. and Mrs Richard Ma nsey
VIsited Tuesday evemng with Mr
and Mrs. John Williams
Velma Long of Columbus was the

Hl~h

SrhOol has been announced Making a wadt'
of 8 or abC)\t'ln all thelrsubjf'Cts to be named
to the roll wen_&gt;
SPvPnth grad(' --! BPth Arbaulil:h Ernie

weekend guest of Mr and Mrs.
Millard Christ in
Mr and Mrs. Chuck Ball and son,
Columbus, spent the weekend here
with Mrs Frances Young
Recent VISitors of Mrs Bessie
Graham were Mr. and Mrs Darold
Graham and family and Mrs June
Newhouse, Greenville, S C and
Mrs Billie Newhouse, Fort Wayne ,
ind

REMEMBER BACK \\HEN

Monday 3 p m -5p m
Tuedsay 6 30 p m 8 p m
Wednesday 3 p m 5 p m
Thursday 3 p m 5 p m
Frtday 1 p m -2 p m
Saturday 10 a m -11 30 a m
- LARGE ANIMAL AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT
10 18 I me

Thlnkln,e: JoH• uould fi ll all of 100sC' w•ars

Th(' hean skips a lx&gt;a! now and Thf'n
But mrmotl~ still plnv a pan In a m lnd

And !hough
f'\erythln£

Thai likes to rt'mf'mber back whC'n

Sorm•Hm~ It

ahPad
Rut faiP plavs a hand that we nf'Vf"r kno"
Fm with~ thPif' has 10 bP bad

llk£'!\ to l('ffiC'mlx&gt;r whPn ); OOih wa s ag lov.
And excltf&gt;m Pnt wa s in PvPry d.w
Whm bt&gt;aut y S(l('m(I(J to txaaboulf'vC'rywhrrf'
And kwe "iJ S ha ving li s v. a;,
When each day was Ilk£' tht• ffl'ShnC'Ss of
spring
No task S('('ffi&lt;'d too small 01 too Jrr('al
Evf'n ea rn lng hf'r book"! a s vou walkfld hand

Bc&gt;rkhlm('r Ren('(' Bucki£&gt;V AngiP Colllns
Jr nnifPr (imwr U sa Hawk Melinda Man
kin D J Ranolph, [)e(&gt; Simmon.&lt;.; Trac!

m hand

tr 1l'd

to sol\C'

hard

"a"' mothf'l or dad

Somronf' to gtl to whr n th(' gomg got mu~h
Artd h£&gt;1p wH s r11nlt'd ru carrv you through
And -us voo gr('w oldf'r v.'lth t-hrldrm of;, our
oo n

ThosC' pr oblf'm... 1 a m £' right back to you
So rJO!N !hal vou V(' agf'd and takf'n;, our place
And a "r lnklf's hows up nov. and thf&gt;n
Rf'mrmbt'r ltlt mmd .... m sta). ~ harp and
k(l(•n

..__

Making pl ans for ~ ITK' futur f' clair

Sc hul Angle SJX'nCf'r

vou

lr you US&lt;' II To RE&gt;m&lt;'mlx'r Ba r~ Whf'n
Bv Olen D Har'J lson l1mt C.otd Rld~P Rd
PomC'! OY Ohio .fl769

Llkf' whPn vou grPV. up illld askl'd hl:'r to w(&gt;(l
And how lhC' loo k m hC't C'Yf.'S was through

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wute 01111, S.nt•nel Ctusihtd Dept
Ill Court St PomaTIIJ Otno .5769

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Public Notice

dha Benr.f1Cral Mor! gtJ ge Co of
Qh o Inc
Pomeroy Ohro
pla1nt rff aga1nst Raymond Ju5
tts et al dRfendants upon a
judgment there1n rendereri
berng case No 84 CV 252 1n
sard Cour t I wrll offer for sale at
the front door ol the Court
H o use Po m e roy
Metgs
County Oh1o on the 8th day of
December 1984 at 1 1 0 0 am
th e fallowmg lands and tene
ments to-w t
Sr tua ted m the Vtll;;tge of
Mrddleport Coun ty of Me1gs
and Sta te trf Oht o beg nnmg at

the sa urheast corner of Lot No
5 1 rn Lower Pomeroy now a
pa n of rhe Vrllage ol Mddle
port Ohto thence north along
the west s1de of Pea rl Street 33
feet to a curb on t he south s1de
of a dnveway thence west 69
feet fallowrng the rns1de of sa1d
curb to wtthm 3 feet of a
bUJid1ng known as a storage
bu1ld1ng thence south 7 feet
thence west 51 feel to the west

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1 1 a uto\lo S.lt!
7l fmc ~• lnt Soln

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By vrrt ue of an O rdP.r of Sale
1Ssued out of the Common
PleLJ s Co urt of MfHgs Coun ty
Oh o n the cnsf! o f Ca r1t al
F111ancrul SPrvr cAs Inc No 2

pmtn1

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11M '&lt;.,ll'on~o

NOTICE OF SALE

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Public Notice

Public Notice

l1nt&gt; of Lot No 5 1 thence SOI Jt h

sa1 (1 rlr1vP.way or rn any m.1nner
prr~ ve nt thP. ! rf!C and unoll
st1uctf'd use o f th P. same by a ll
of the pm t es ent1tlfld to use th e
same
The ma l estatP.was apprilrsed

26 !Pet to the soui h ltne at Lot
No 5 1 thence M 'lt 120 feBt 10
th e place of bet1rnn1nf1 Al so :l 1
loot strr p olo nn the north s1rlRof
Lot No 50 1n smd lowf!r
Pomer oy now M d d lepo r1
Ohro
Th s conveyance mnrle sub
]eel to a nght of way o f J A
Young and Dul c1e Younq to use
a drrveway al:w ut 12 te e t 1n
w rdlh runntng fr om Pearl StreP.!
along !he northerly S1de of JhH
above desc rr bed reul ast at f! a
drstance of 69 feet NeJther J A
Young and DulctA J Young nor
the grantees here1n shall 1n any
manner obstruct any portr on of

11$1933333

c~nd ca nno t be

sold !or !ess thJn tw o thrrd s of
sard appratsed val ue
TPr ms of sale Cash 1n hand
on rl ay of sa le

54 Mise Merchandise

Co

•

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

YOUNG'S

The lzaak Walton Club wrll
have 2 more nfle slug
shoots, atart1ng at 1 00 pm
on Sunday. November 18th
and 25th Locat1on 1s 3 %
m•lea south of Cheater at
their farm em Shade R1ver

Road

2 large kettles fresh apple
butter Quarts, $3 50 and
p1nts. 62.00 Also many
house plants and polnlen1a1

now reedy HU88AROS
GREEN HOUSE Syracuse
Call614 992 6776

Vinyl &amp; Alummum

SIDING

No hunting or trespassmg on
Robart G Edwards prop·
erty , Pme Tree Dnve . Reed3
v1lle . Ohto

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages "

Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or
949-28110
No Sunday Calls
! II ltc

- Addons and remodehng

- Roofing and gun•r work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing end electncal
work

rt

Ohio

l 111 1' Fnlt&gt;r l ~lll rn(RI

f'r (' f' H R 0

24 Hcuf !&gt;w •lchbDtlrd

AAA

304-675-6276
1151mo
Public Notice

ROUSH

CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-ExtenSIVe
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu5tQ.m Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garares
Rooftng Work
Alumtnum &amp; Vtnyl Stdtngs
16 Years Expenence
GREG ROUSH
PH 992-7583 ,
or 992-2282

Case No 84 1064-GA-AIR
NOTICE TO
CUSTOMERS
Syracuse Home
Ut1ht1es Co Inc
\ (\\1( ,-. •s hr::&gt;reby gtvf!n !hat
Svr rr •1"&gt;1 Ho me Uttl1 tr11s Co
tn c
I ted Wl! h the Public
U!rlrth'"i Comm15510n ol Oh10 on
$r&gt;ptPrnbPr ~ 0 1984 an aoplr
, , rl tQf) rP(JtJf'St nq dP lllCIPJSe Ill
r,l !0 &lt;; 1nr ! ~.:harqes fo r SP fVICPS

rrrH !Ned W1th1n 115 tu rr 5dtCt•on
1hp r. t"P m mlwr br&gt;fo t' t hn
p II It Ut+IIIICS Comrnr'lSron a t
Ohr11--; 8&lt;1 106tl (iA AIR
,\ 1 npy ot the app!rcr~ t ron 15
!V lil lh lr'
10 lll'&gt;[l ~·C li Oil by

r111 rr&gt;";ff'cl pan " ( .1t the ofl rccs
!l f Syr t ClJ&lt;iP Hotnf! Utrl rt e~ Co

I H.: P 0 Bo~ 11 76 M arn Str eet
111LII1R Oh o :~ 57 71 Arld tt 1on
:JIIy c1 cn pl' 1!&gt; available fo r
11'\Spf'Ctton ell 1he offrc:es o! the
Pulllrc Ut drtlf!S Cotnmi)Sron o f
Oh rn 11 180 East Broarl Street
C 'hunt1us Oh10 432 15
In IS nnni•CJIJOil Syra cuse
H\&gt;•np Utll1t es Co Inc allj:HJP,S
t11.1 t h. ISf'd on curren 1 expense
I ve!s !he exrstrng rates do not
nrov•d(' &lt;.1 IC tsonable level o f
mque st s thP
Plrbll( Utlll tres Com miSSIOn o t
Qt'lu) hp d ami &lt;JU tho r1ze the
App l ',1n1 to r:har(le tl1 e rates
:-~ n d r:hi! rq ~s SPl fo nh below as
Pr(lpO~f!d Rd tes
lhp Appi1Cd ii t I~ ru r)p Os nq
u1t rt l 5t'S
n thP cus to mer
s ~' v•c" ~ h;~rgr. 0 1 60 perce nt
mrl H1 thl cus tomer co nsump
t on ch 1rqe at 60 3 perce nt
Any pen;on. firm corporation or assoetation may file,
pursuant to Section 4909 19
of the Revrsed Code. an
objection to such 1ncrease
wh1ch may allege that such
pubbcat1on conta1ns proposals
that are unJust and diacnml08to!'y or unreasonable
Re commenda tr o ns w hrch
d !fr.r fro m the 8fJPIICJt iOil may
lP lll&lt;:'ldr by th e Sintl nf !he
Puhli1 Lh 1l1trrs CommrSSIOn o!
Oh10 or t1y rnter ven 1ng pa rt1es
ond rn nv be ado pt ed by the
Cornnuss•on
ApplrCJil t

PROPOSED RATES

CustQ rrl P. r Serv 1c e Char o e

98 00

rer mo nth

Cus t omer Consump ! ron
Charge s 1 70 per MCF

ORDEHED l hal the appl,ca

ORDE RED

rr atf• - malhod for makmg any
changes to the date certa1n or
tes t penod shall be the rll rng of a
new ao olrcatlon for an tncrease
rn unes and Withdrawal ol the
pe nd tng appl1catton It IS
!unher

I I I) 13 20 21c
;

Deer heeds mounted qual
rty and sat1sfact1on guaran teed Call Stewan s Taxt

RADIATOR
SERVICE

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

PAT HILL FORD

71 80 Dodge Tr
Fenders

4

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

pherd &amp; Collre Call 446
9301

79-80 Mustang
Car Fenders
81-84 Escort Cyn•

60

Female Celrco house cat
spayed &amp; declawed Twp
puts1de cats 1 male
1
female spayed Movmg Cell

49

Fenders
Omn1 Hortzon 2 dr or

75

4 dr Fenders
Chevy &amp; Ford

PU Bumpers
79 82 Chevette Grtlls
Ford Ranger Gnlls

446-4361 or 446-4305

69 95
38
75

5 Doberman pupp1es to grve

awoy Call 614-992 7562

Ford and Chevy Tatf Gates

Authomed John Deere,
New Holland Bush Ho1
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equl~111ent
Parfl &amp; Service

*BackhM

Truck

*Septic Systems
•coal &amp; Limestone
*Bonded &amp; licensed
Phone: 742-2225
or 742-2167
ll / 12/ l mo

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

"CONCRETE WORK
"CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
"WATER GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

JIM CLIFFORD
PH.

1 I He

A.M.
(ONSTRUCTION

•
----------------------~

•ouMP TRUCK SERVICE

992-7201

J IS If

SKATE-A-WAY

675 -2254

Free trees. some are to cut,
not responsible for acc1
dents also free cats 304

6

lost and Found

614 - 992 5594

J ohn

Sm11h
Beagle dog lost 8 months
old Last seen on County

Rood 82
7165

7

Phone 985-9966
or 985-3929

Call 614 -992 -

Yard Sale

Yard And Garage Sale· frl •

6

I.

20

3

21
22

2•------

'

a.

Phone
446-2062

6

2•
25

7

26

•-------

9
10
11 . _ _ _ _ __

12. _ _ _ _ __

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

-

Geme

Computerized Hearina Aid Selection
Dependable Heanna Ard Servtce

13
t4.

Rodney Road 1n B1dwell.
Oh1o

16

I
I
I

1

Top

of the Stairs Beauty Salon,
Pomeroy
Unwanted fac1al or body
hatr7 Permanent, patnle11
remova l by European Elec tromc Dep1la1or Mary 11
cert1f1ed 1n th1s new compu ·
tertz6d d1gt1al system Call

today 614 992 -6720 Top

of the Statrs. full service
salon

PIANO TUNING AND RE
PAIR Reduced rates hmtted
t1me o nly Ward s Keyboard .

304 675 -5500 or 675 3824

Rea I Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

Owner Must sell M1ddleport
home Now !! F1reptace, gas
furnance storm wrndows

Call 614 992 694t
3 bdr large ltvmgroom,
pool , 1 ac • storage bu1ld
mgs assume 9 % % loan W1ll
help f1nan ce balance Call

446 -7535
- - - - - - - - -lc-

1 Y, bath, large k rtchen ,
fam1fy room , basement car
port 1
acres Call 614 -

ov,

Sell AVON make 45% Call
FREE Chnstmas toys &amp; g1fts
by book1ng a Merrr · Mac Toy
Show Now ecce pttng book·
1ngs durmg Dec 1 0 Call lor
more 1nformetron Judv

446 -3043

6000. ext R 4562

949 2967

Jo1n the West V1rg1n1a Na
t1ona l Guard
Rece1ve a
monthly paycheck , S35 000
lrfe Insurance educetronal
opportunities retrrement
pav other outstandmg be
nef1ts Call 304 675 3950

698 8501 after 6 00 pm

Owner movtng Must sell
m odf1e d A frame 5 acres
fully carpeted w1th ftreplace
arn d wood burner Corntng
to p oven and Side by s1de ref

$38 000

Call 614 843

5384 evenmgs for Sunday
arppt
Four bedr oo m s k1t chen
famtly room w1th fireplac e,
f1mshed basement
Pomt
Pleasan t
Shown by ap

porntment 304 675 3079
Prrced red uced total alec
central au
new wood
burn er smell e lec brll wall
to wal l ca rpet 3 br bnck
large garage , wood shed
Galhpohs Fefry 304 675

6851

SJtuattons
Wanted

1 1n story house Ma son 4
b edmorns hv1ng room wrth
fneplace d1nmg room , k1t
chen s1tt1ng room All car
peted full bath lui! base
ment totalelectrrc farge l o t
100x 186 1f) 2 ourbutld1ng s
Wil l sacrlfrce for
S36 500 00 Movmg out of
sta te See anyt1me bes1d e
les s Carryout Mason

Wan ted mce lady to lrve rn
and help share expenses

to buy 1n B ell mea d e
2
bedrooms (w e ll tnsulated )

or 1 BOO 642 3619
TRUCK DRIVERS needed
Mmrmum expenence

Call

6t3 563 9647

Call 446-4922
Wtll do babyst tlmg have
references 8t exper1ence

Coli 6t4-256 1770

W1ll

cu t and del1ver frr e

FOR SALE OR RENT option
304 675 4174
4072

304 675

Two bedroom recently rem odeled, forced a~r heat . 102
H1gh Street Ph one 304 -

675 2515 after 5 00 PM

32 Mobtle Homes
for Sale

G1vmg Begmner Gu1tar les
sons and do1ng mrnor repa1 r
on mus1 c al co rds m1kes
speakers Gu1tars and Guitar
Harmon1 c's
304 675

NEW AND USED MOBIL E
HOMES KESSE L S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS
AT 36 PHONE 614 4467274

W1ll d o babysmmg m my

1 acre wtth furl'\tShed mobtl e
home Extra mobtle home
pad Green School d1St •
near Cen ten ary Call 446·

5004

home 304 675-4219

3918

Financial

1971 Torch 12JC65 2 bdr •
unfurn1shed
Call 446 -

Bustness
Opportuntty

that you do bus1ness w1th
people you know . and NOT
10 send money through the
mad unt1l vou have 1nvest1
gated the offer~ng

I-5- N
_ 1_ w
_ O_O_O
_W
_ O_R
_K
_ IN-G

8

27 . _ _ _ _ __

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auet1on every Fr~dayn1gh1at
the Hartford Communtty
Center Truckloads of new
marchand••• evarv week
Con1lgments of new &amp;. used
merchandile always wei

31.-----32
33

corned

Richard Reynolds

;~~~oneor

35'-----~

Mall This Coupon wHh Remittance
The Dally Stntlnel

'

111 Court St.
Pomeroy, 011.45769

1

Cell 304 276 -

I

ley 9.00 to 6 00 ••capt

Thursday
We buy uaed
furntture and appliances,
111lso sell latge 1t1m1 on
conatgnment Stop rn or call

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

304-468-1572

dow 81r cond

drapes some

furnrture

outstde burldmg ,
lot 97 Quail Creeek Call

446 6592 or 245 -9592
1973 Granville 1 2I60 2 bdr
mob1le hom e Inclu d es
wehser &amp; dryer and large
Window a•r condtttoner ex
cellent condrhon Call 446·

614 -446-0175

Tavern m Middleport for
sale D-1.0 2,0 -3 license

Prrced red uced 14 x 70
M o bile hom e Three bed·
rooms 2 full baths garden
tub . central a1r underpm·
nmg end blo cks tncluded

Call 614 985-4497

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS

FIXED

RATES Below market rates
F1xed conventional FHA
VA Leader Mortgage

Athens, collect 614 -692
3061

'-=:::;=:::::=======
1·23
Professional
Services

leon Flee Market open dai· 1- - - - -- -- - -

1
1

1972 12X60 Vtntage good
cond , 2 bdr . 1 1/t bath new
furnace
fireplace wtth
blower. good carpet stove
refrrg washer. drye r wm

8429

28.

29 _ _ _ _ __
30.

7132

MULTI TOOL New fran
ch1sed dealer pre -opemng
436 t or 446 4305 or 446
sale Accessorres for Shops
1 171
m1th available Chrrstmas
orders due November 28 1 -:--~------Call Bob collect at the
14K65 2 bdr frt den ex:c
Woodworkers Shed even
cond • gas heat w1ll acce p t
any reasonable offe r Call
rng •• nd Sund.y. 614 •886

Csll 614 992 9976 or 992
2873

15. - - - - - - :u

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Lrcensed Clinical Audioloaist
(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohto 45631

of St Rt 554 end 8'dwell

23

4
5

ll 8 tic

i
~
:z:
z

17

IB
19,

•complete Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chimney Relining
Repair
•Experienced end Insured

z

Teen1e

hght, S1nger sawmg machme. electrrc typewnter .
dryer. oak kitchen cabmet
with bin. dolls, end and
coffee tables , chatrs toys,
stove ptpe, hand tools , nuts ,
bolts lots of mlsc collectl·
bias and nice Chr~stmas
g1ft1 Paul Denney' s corner

&lt; )Wanted
( )For Sate

446-2062

c:l

Lowrey

orgon with bench books .

)Announcement

today 614-992-6720

Close to mtnes 3 bedroom

Help Wanted

• NOTICE'
THE OHIO VAllEY PUS
LISHING CO recommends

Sot . Nov 23rd 24th 9 trl

Roy Bickle

11

21

Gallipolis
8t Vicinity

&lt;

REMOVE UNWANTED
HAIR No patn! No needle !
Approved depalator me
thad Removes unwanted
h&amp;H permanently
Call

erne Call 614 949 -2672

10 16 1 mo

( IFot 1\&lt;"1

after 5PM

7 % acres
rural water
14x70 all electric home
Two rooms added buck
stove f1re place central a1
r and carpeted Good burld tngs Three m1les from Aa

Employmenl
Serv1ces

sant Phone 304 675 7120

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
You Were Going To Coli Us?

1Certlf1ed Chtmnev Sweap

CASH PAID, Anttque tum1
ture . washstand s . c up
boards beds and dressers
etc FOR SALE Sea rs wood
burner 304 675 4444

Found wh1te cat Red co llar,
513 Parnsh Ave Potnt Plea -

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

Chimney
Care

special $15 95 The Sewtng
Bee 446 4172 or 446-7742

wood Call 256 1528
Strayed Blue T1ck female
from Laurel Cl1ff area Has
no collar on If found . call

Addrelu.--------

WED., FRI. &amp; SAT.
7:30-10:00

BUYING RAW FURS Beef
and Deer H1dec Gmseng and
yellow root
Selltng
trappmg suppl1es
Wheat
hghts, n1ght hghts George
Buckley phone 614 664
4761 ,hours 12 9PM da1ley

12

Pups, adorable, mtellrge nt,
female , med1um s1ze 304-

Repatrs on any m1ke me ·
chtne In home tune -up

M1ddlepon , Oh 614-992
3476

18 Wanted to Do

Wrtte vour own a~d and order by ma1l w1th this

AYcilable for Birthdays
&amp; PriYate Parties
Skates &amp; A'cessories
Public Skating

Bu.,.mg da1ly gold
sr lver
corns rmgs jewelry sterlmg
ware . old cotns large cur
rency Top pnces Ed Bur
ket1 Barber Shop 2nd Ave

882 3590

coupon Cancel your ad by phOne When you gel
resui1S Money
not refundable
Name
__________________
_

CHESTER, OHIO

9~2

3 months old pups 304 -

882 3380

9 Jl lln

CONTRACTING
•otl FIELD SERVICES

45769 or call 614
7760

Trmber cutter wanted . must
be experrenced Call 614

PARTS

•oOZER BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WORK

wood. cupboards , chatrs,
chests buketl d1shes .
stone Jan antrquea, gold
and 11lver Wrtte · M D
M1ller . Rt 2 Pomeroy. Oh10

Black labrador Retrrever 1 1/ 2
yr old to good home 10
country Cell 446-1444

60

1 13 ttc

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Beda. ~ron

For Faster Servtce

614 367-0243 after 4PM

J&amp;F

SALES &amp; SERVICE

*Dump

Gtveaway

t!O

tl5

Call

614 388 9331

446 -3358

M1xed pupp1es German She

9B

Tr Fenders

992·21 96
Middleport, Ohio

ll ! tit

BOGGS

Ford Ranger

on Howard H1ckle Farm
Hartford WV

62

110

Fenders

Top for CJ -6 Jeep

Post1vely no trespassmg on
the Pantasote Property , vao lators will be pros1cuted

170

59

448-4298

1 ----~---­

Government JObs $1 6 559550,553 veer Now htrmg
Your area Call 805 687·

Call 614-992-6737

80

1 H 1 'h horn 11ngle phaae
alectnc motor. 270 Wm·
cheSter, bolt act1on XL T Call

Freel German Shepherd
pupptes Call 446 7516

Monday thru Friday

We can repau and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks

Hrll , Oh 614 882 7448

1- - - - - - - - - -

Pupp1es % Doberman &amp; %
Shepherd, 6 wh11es one Call

Box 326
Pomeroy OH 45769

Fenders
S-10-515 Chevy Tn
Fendm
73-79 Ford Tr
hnders
80-84 Ford Tr

&amp;

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEAS! NG

PH. 667-671 S
8:00 to 5:30

81 -84 Chevy Tr

turt, 448-3t59, 3rd
Ol1ve St Golhpol11 . Oh

dermy at 614 -742-3006

drtve lhe veh1cle of your
chotce

II I I ma

Tha i !he lest

ben rn Ja nuary I I 983 and end
Df!cernbe r 3 1 19 83 and th.at
the date certam 9hall be
December 31
1983 It ts
lurthM

ATTENTION HUNTERS

to

MOTEL
Sl NGLE $24 95
304 675 6276

Wanted to buy used coal S.
wood heaters Swain Furnt·

No Huntrng No Trespasstng

We'd hke to tntroduce you to
Eneage-A-Car the modern way

Tuppers Plains, OH.

992-6215 er 992-7514
Po~rerof,

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

WANTED
RAW
PINE POSTS
C. V. POSTS

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PARTS and SERVICE

ORDERED Thai the approp

Now

Mortrn 814-992-7022

No Hunttng on the Raymond
Sm1th property

I o llll' roy Mas on Brrdge

per ad of the App lr can t shall

Phone 742·3171

Some hfe tnsurence pohcu~s
allow the msurance com paniel to keep vour savtnga,
upon deeth We offer e wide
variety of 1naurance, IRA 1
and tax sheltered annu1ty
products Contact Oaby

L---'"----- IIIli 110

8 m11e s from

IIll 6 13 20 3!c

M L "Bud" lleG~£E
Broker Auetton Semce
Cheryl Lemley,
lleoJS County ASSOCII!e

10/4/tfc

992-2903

Ruth Ann Taylor
992·3566

HAVE YOUR UFE INSU RANCE POLICIES RE
VIEWEO ANO UPDATED

J 24 lie

Any business or patrons who would
like to plate an ad,
(ontad Donnie Dudding at 949-2600.

Mim Nelson

V. C. YOUNG Ill

t1 on o l Syracuse Home Ut ri!I!CS
Co Inc rs accepted for l 1lrng
JS of Oc tober 24 1984 It IS
h uthP. t

Reel Estate General
--- - ---....:.::.:::::...:;::::=.::::....::=!:=:.=
______

2 Mlltt out Flatwoods Rd.
Off St. Rt. 7

hove previously plcxed
an ad in the Southern
High School Yew book.

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrtgerators
•Dryers •Freezers

I?T 62NDRTH
r01 NT PLEASANT
WES T VIRGINIA

Jam es J Prall 111
Sherrfl of
Metgs Co unty
0 Br1en &amp; 0 Brten
Att orneys for Plarnhfl

..

Countf'g C"Ft

THANKS
to the busiuanes who

(Free Estimates)

thfl

ll "'__,.
......
J • •nu~rc.,t nu

Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotguns
Only

only

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

7111 / i!n

Sat. 9-5: Sun. 1·5

Professional
Servtces

Sewmg mach1n1 repaera
Authonzod Srnger New
Home and Bern1n1 dealer

Raw Fur Top pnc;;ea petd
Lake Jackson Fin &amp; Fur Oak

Gun shoot at Rac1ne Gun
Club every Sund1'1' 1 00
p.m Factory chocked guns

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trantllllstlon

St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 erth

Mon.-Frt. 9·9

814 448-0294 .

Rt 124 Pomeroy Oh10

AUTO

Nov. 5-Dec. 8

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

446-4522

GARAGE

U-SA~E

$bow

EVERY

Roger Hysell

"We Rut F~t L"'"

"lfMII In

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

RENT ACAR

clean used cars
Jtm Mtnk Ctlev -Oida Inc
B1ll Gene Johnaon

448 3872
SWEEPER and sewmg me
chine repa1r, parts and
auppltea
Ptck up and
delivery, Dav1s Vacuum
Cleaner. one helf mile up
Georg•• CrHk Rd
Call

108tlc

G1lllpolle, hlo

All M• .. •

1 ornJ)f'II S l tro n tor u tllrty se rvt ·
( es Bc~ s ed on !hrs allegalron

1 Cml,tl T~•'*• "'tid ~ """"""'

CHESTER-985-3307

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

985-3561

1rars,
And hov. both mad~;• vou r plan-. fur Tht&gt; rutur p

What s left of thf' hail Is nov. w~v
'IlK&gt; lf!Wi ar&lt;' un~Tablf' , lhf' body Is be-nt
Th(IIOOk on th!' rae£' not Too gay
The eyes klnda d1m lht• mouth kinda drawn

....,,

Wt Nm Ahll TIMt
Sht Tn..lelt•

Bothun Building

SMALL ANIMAL HOURS

949-2969- 949-221&gt;3
10 19-1 mo

CALL

For all your wmng
needs: furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp;Commerctal

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY. DVM

3305 JACKSON AVE

614·143-5191

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
*ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
*SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

GUN SHOOT

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE . 6·8
PT.PLEASANT OFFICE

Storm Doors
Windows
Free Estimates

IIJ 61ft

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARY
CLINIC

---Poet's corner--As Wllnkll'S show dwp on an agf'd fa&lt;t

Ph

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
or
843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

Pai11ting

Ractnt, 011.

TAXIDERMY
SHOP

3 Announcements

Guttn - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

THE

23

Wanted To Buy

We pay Cllf'l for late model

Haw ·Repair

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

Sizes

9

AflllllliiiC t: IIIV Jib

Howard L Writtsel
Roofing Co.

ALL STEEL &amp;

Harrisonville community events

I

Baker Eilzabeth Bryant Sha\ol.'ll Bus h Krnnv
Caldwf'll Klm Mclntyn&gt; MPlissa Mlll(lf
Grera Rlfflf' Dan Tripp JarM'ni'IE' Wilson
El~hth grade - Sama ntha Ballev Lisa
Driggs Heath€'r Finlaw Amv Hager Laura
H a~A1horne, JOf' H&lt;'nrv, Tammy KeMC'dy,
T ammy LC'achman Lisa Poole1, Bobbie
Price, l..Ranna Rt'l'd JaynP Ann Ritchie
M y kal Schmidt
Chris Spc&gt;nC'(&gt;r Trlsha
Spenc(&gt;r Kendi Utt , Krls Heines Mlcha£'1
Martin David Rll'f'
Ninth graciC'- Ca ra lyn Barton Lon BurkC',
Abigail Cauthorn Brvan Durst, T1m Lawson
Larissa Long Jam£'S M)t&gt;rs Jodi SchaE'kE'I
fr£'nl Upton Mar1 vn Barton R.f:&gt;ll£'£' Tavlor
Kf'lly Thompson
TE-nth gradE' - Robyn Barnt&gt;11 , DariE'f!('
Baum Melissa Ca lawa;,. Gr~ Leachman
Amy Louks TraVl.'i Newlun Kirk Rt"t"d Lesa
Rucker
E11:'VPnth wadf'- Lmda Bart1mus RoyCf'
BL"&gt;SPII Bob Epling, Dawna Gru('S("r Joshua
Hmrv Aleshla Holsinger f'Jt&gt;nt&gt; Jarobs [.(1(&gt;
Kf'nPy Ang~f' Pool(&gt;r. Trlcla Same; Kim
Sc hul Michell{' Wilson, Valerie Woods Am)
Youn~. A.n2"\r- Young
Lisa HNKierson
V£'ron lca Pm\o John RIC'(&gt; TE'rrt Starchpr
l'wf'lfth grade&gt; - BI'E'nda Bentz, BrthD

Monday
Mr and Mrs Russell Roush
visited Mr and Mrs Dana LewiS at
Clifton a recent Sunday evening
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Curry, Mr .
and Mrs Milo Richardson of Port
Huron, Mtch spent two weeks at
the Richards on res idence at
FaiiView

By Mrs. Herhert Roush

Thr first nirlC' weeks grading PE'l iod !Door

roll at the Easlr&gt;m Junlrn High and

Miller's parents, Mr and Mrs
David Wamsley, Stiversville
Mr and Mrs. Paul Jacobs ,
Kentucky, spent a weekend with
Mr. Jacobs' mother, Mrs Tina
Jacobs
Mr and Mrs Clifford Jacobs left
Tuesday to spent the winter In
Florida.

Apple. Grove area happenings

I

Honor roll

sons, Reynoldsburg, Mr' and Mrs.
Clair Stansbury a nd Bobby Joe,
Grove por t, a nd Carl Caster,
Dayton
Mr and Mrs . Boyd Oliver and
Steve, Ashville, visited a recent
Sunday with Mr and Mrs Walter
Jordan, Joshua , Jeremy and
Jessica

The Dally

P1ano Tuntng and Repetr
Brunicard1 Mu11c Co 448 -

0687

Twen11oth year of

qualrty nrvtee

lane Oa ~

n10l1, 6t4 742-2961

12x60 N ew Moon Mobile
H ome 2 bedrooms 1976
Chevett e 4 speed B oth tn
good co nd1t1on Call 61 4 ·

986 3839

1966 L1berty Mobtl Home
New ca rpet
Clean

S 1800 00 Unfurnrshed
Coli 992-2380
Owner must 18:11 14Jtt70,
1979 Shannon , 3 bedroom.
ell electuc , 12•28 bu1l1 on
fem1ly room . wood burner.
good cond acre land. atorege butldtng, good roed.

ukmg $17,600 00 Jo...,l
Run Road,

Apple Grove.

304-675-2356

'

�10 The
33,

Ohio

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Farms for Sale

51

U -Build it or we will! Beautiful. spaciotJa 5 BR home

Couch 3 cushion. floral
deaign, good cond. phone

S6995 1up . See now model!
.:all 614-BBB-7311 .

304-676 ·3987 .
King size bed. firm rubber
mattress, axe cond, very

200 acre farm for sale. Will
su bdl11ide. Rutland To~n ­
ship. Call 614 -373-0456.

Reduced, 250 Acre fa rm 80
level, Mason County. 3
bedroom house, 2 car gart~ ge, barn, equipment shed.
590.000 .00 . Partiality fi nanced te n percent interest .
304-937-2297 .

34

54

baby thlngo . e.cellant con dition. Call614·949-2809,

2 Early American chairs, 1
large wtlnut roll top desk.
pine tresele end tabla. 614-

446-7152.

ble. Call614-843-5129.

King coal and wood stove

.Firewood. $:jl0.00 pick up

Somerville's · Eaat Ravenswood ~ Only Fri. Set, Sun

Demeo Satellite, 3-pc. base
staion extra channela , 0 -

lot for sa le i n M ercerville, 3
tra iler hookups, electric, r~r~ ­

104, now tubes, $200.00
firm. Call 446-3340.

44

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

- -- - -

Small 1 bdr . trailer $186

APARTMENTS . mobile
home•. houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221 .

Rd . 65x150 . 55.000. Call
446 ·3844 after 7PM .

mo. in Kanauga. utilities
paid . Call 446-7406.

One bedroom unfurnished

Building lot N eighborhood

Lot in Clearview Estates, 6
m i. below Gallipolis, under-

ground utilities, restricted.

Trailers for rent, 3 bdr. 8t 2

bdo . Call 446 -3371 .

furnished

2

bdr..

clean.

view. Kanauga . Foster Mo·
bile Home Park . Call 446 -

1 ac·r e of land 1972 12x60.
2 bdr . mobile home. newly
carpet ed, has been well
c ared for. fro nt &amp; bac k
porch , out building , King
wood burner, AC, rural
wa ter. close to Rio Grande &amp;

Two bedroom mobile home
in Syracuse. $170.00 per
month plu s utilities and
deposit. Call 614-992 -

Robert Mullins .

Two. 100 ft • 170 ft. level
lots . one tenths mile off Rt. 2
on Greer Road . 304-675-

5689 .
4 acres off Kerr Harrison bu rg, Vi nOv Road near Galli -

polis. 57,000 .00 . Call 304895 -339B after 7 :00PM .

Phone

45

Furnished Rooms

1602.

7680 .
12x60 mobile
larg_e added -on
and bedroom .
porch and 1 car

home with
living room
Nice front
garage. Call

614-949-2734 .
2 bedroom, 314 mile out Sand
Hill Road . 304-676-3834 .
Two bedroom trailer, you
pay utilities. deposit required . Phone 304-875 -

2535.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel.

Call 61'4 -446-0756 .

44

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of

2nd. floor office space for
rent . Court St., Pomeroy.

Call 614-373-0456.
SPACES FOR RENT. trailer
lots sewer and water furnished, small children ac·

Rentals
JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS ( Equal
41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr ., 2 bat h, basement
with
stall
Dep .
Call

woodburner, double
garage . $325 month .
&amp; ref ., optio n to buy .
446-7044 after 5,

446 ~ 8080 .

675 -726 3 675 -5104 or
675 -53B6
House for rent in Mercerville
area. Ca ll Kenneth Swain
614 -256- 155 2 evenings.

7 room farmhouse with
turn an ce. woodburner. car peting . rural water. five
buildings, t en miles from
Gallipolis . $250 mo ., 175
acre, farm , barns, tobacco
base available . Call 614 ·
685 ·6105 .
Furn .. ' 3 room cottage, 1
bdr.. in t own, 5155 mo .
wate r fu rn , ref .. no pet s.

adults . Call 446 · 2543 .
2 bedroo m house low utilitie s. new siding. storm w indows. downtown . Call4460544
Cheshire. 3 bdr .. 2 baths,
FR . stove, ref .• OW, EH, CA .
Oep . &amp;. ref . req . Call 803 -

7B1 · 7895
75 67

or

614 ~ 367 ~

4 bedroo m co lonial brick
hous e for rent or sale in
Pomeroy. Call 1 -373-0456 .
Newly remodeled house . 2
bdr. 1 full bath , lg . turn .
kitchen. located in Middleport . Send resu m e to Daily
Sentin el. P .O . Box 729 -V,
Pomeroy. Oh 45769 .

2 bedroOm duplex house.
downtown Pomeroy . Furn .
or unfurn . $225 .00 pll.fS
utilities . Call 614 -992 -2 381

day or 614- 992 6723 night .
House for rent in Middleport . New kit chen , 3 bed;
rooms. Security deposit and
references requir ed . Call 13 0 4 ~ 882- 2811 .

SiK rooms and bath .Furn ished or unfur nished ,$150 .00 plus utilities. Loca ted in Clifton. West

Va . Ca ll614 -992 ·7404
Fou r rooms and bath . unfurnished hou se Point Lane,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy .

Call 614-992-3874.
Five room brick home. close
to Point Pleasant. heat and
air, city water, 14 acres,
pond, small barn, 1 year
lease $475.00 month, 304-

675-6276.
Four bedroom , 2215 Jaffer·
so n . $250 . rent, plus
S1 00 .00 deposit and refer enc es . Phone 303 -675 -

5548 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Fully furnished , 2 bdr., air
cond., adults only. Call

446-4110 .
Two bdr ., new wall to wa_ll
carpel , ga~ turnar:tce. atr
cond.. in Gallipolis. Call

446-1409.

Housing Opportunity) has
Merchandi se
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $163 for one
bedroom and $198 per
month for two bedroom,
with S200 deposit located . 51 Household Goods
near Foodland and Spring - - - - - - -- - Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ant . Call 446 · 2745 or leave
SWAIN
mess~ge .

House for rent . Call 304·

coptod . 304-675: 1076 .

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

513 Third AVe. two -1 bdr .
apts. Starting $135 to $166
mo . Water included. dep req .

Call446-4n2 borweon 9 &amp;
5.
Downstairs, 2 rooms &amp;
bath. furnished . clean , no
pets, adults only . Dep &amp; Ref .
required . Ca11446-1519 .
Gallipolis: 2 bdr. lg . clean
rooms . central heat -air.
water -trash pd .. $235 plus

dop . Call 446 -0116 .
Nicely furnished modern
mobile home in city .. 1 or 2

adults only. Call 446-0338 .

1 bdr apt ., 2 bdr apt. ,
S150-S250 . Call 304-6757263 675-5104 or 6755386 .
Mercerville, 1 &amp;: 2 bdr. apts.,
from $175 &amp; up . Call

446 ·1157 or 367-7218 .
Furnished apt ., next door to
Library, one professional

62 Olive St .. Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood -coat stoves, 6
pc wood LA suite $399,
bunk beds S199, entron
recliners $99, used bedroom
suites , ranges . wringer
washer•. &amp; shoes. Call614-

446-3159 .
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker. ottoman." 3 tables, textra heavy},
$685 . Sofa , chair and love·
seat, $276 . Sofas and chairs
priced from $285. to ' $895.
Tables, $50 and up to $125 .

Hido-a -bodo,$390 . and up
to $550 ., sofa beds $145,
Recliners, $286 . to $376 ..
Lamps from $28. to $126.
pc. dinettes from $109 ;, to

435. 7 pc . 8189 and up.
Wood table with six: chairs

$285 to $746 . Oeok 8110
up to 8225 . Hutches. $660.
BUnk bed .c omplete with
mattresses, $275 . end up to

$395 .

Baby bods, 8110.

Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, $58 ., firm , $68 .

and $78 . Ouoon sots, $195 .

adult only . Call 446-033B .

4 dr. chests, $42. 6 dr.
chests, $64. Bad frames,

Furnished efficiency, 607
Second Ave . Gallipolis .
S160 mo .• utilities pd . Call
446 -4416 after 7pm .

cabinets. $350. Gas or
electric ranges $375 . Baby
mattresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed

3 room furnished or un1ur·
nished . 1 or 2 adults. Call

king frame $60 . Good selec tion of bedroom 1uites,
rockers , metal cabinets,
headboards $38 &amp; up to

446 -7572 or 446 -1980.
4 rooms &amp; bath. carpet,
stove . refrigerator , fur ·
nance. adults only . no pets,

ref . &amp; dop . Call446 -1163.

2 room apt .. utilities paid. no
children or pets, ref. Call
446-4063 .
Very nice 2 bdr. duplex apt .,
furnished. Main St .• Cheshire . No inside pets. Call

614-245 -6B1B .
1 bdr. completely furnished ,
carpeted, an· electric. 468
2nd . Ave., adults, ref. &amp; sec.

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Deliverad in Mason, Meigs.
Gellia or pick up at Richards

Marvel and DC comics all in
mint cond, all in bags, call

&amp; Son. Call 446-7786 .
Plastic cisterns state approved. plastic septic tanks-,
plastic culvert. metal cul -

verts, RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jackson, Oh 614286-6930.
Firewood cut up stabs. $15
PU load. Larger loads delivered . Call for pricea. 614·

Firewood tor sale 100%
hardwood seasoned or
green . split and delivered .

Call 614-379-2552 .
8 ft . x 4 ft . wooden utility
trailer new light plus trailer
hitch for car $125 or take
gun or color TV on trade. K &amp;
K Mobile Home off Rt . 7 .
Gallipolis. anytime.

Top Soil end fill dirt and
landscaping . Call 614-2661427.
Gold trash masher $150,
doublewide trailer air condition $190 , antique love seat
8. chair frame $75 . Call

614 -245-9645 .
Now available: Nice selec ~
tion of diamond clusters far
below regular retail prices.

10 &amp; 14 K gold . Prices t60
&amp; up. Frank's Pawn Shop,

4.30 2nd . Avo.. Gallipolis,
446-0B40 .
Guns: model 12 Winchester.
12 ga., model11 Remington

12 go .. model 37 Ithaca 12

1973 Honda 360 •2oo.oo.
Queen

size

water bed

304 -675-5888.
Large ceramic Christmas
tree $46 .00 . Pinecone,
grapevine, ribbon wreaths.
All sizes, prices. On display.

Call 304-675-5416 or 6751316.
AKC Beagle $76 .00. Sound
"Design Stereo $75 .00: b:c

cond . 304-675-7677 .
'New woodburning stove,
bricklined, water heating
coil. 9400 .0.0 . Electric water heater 52 gallon

Call 614-266·6208.
1 shallow well pump, com-

Ladies coat, Mens shoes,
stairway carpet and pad·
ding, other odd's and ends.
126 English Road . Phone

304-675 -2954 .
B Ft.

Size 9 · 10 weddinbg dress.
Victorian style. low scope
neckline, long train, excel ·
lent condition, 8100. Also
wedding bouquet and 2

bouteneors. t15 . Call 446 4361 or 446-4306 or 4461171 .

$66 .
Coleman
Used Furniture -- head
boards. and 2 bedroom
suites. 3 miles out Bulavitle
Rd . Open 9am to 5pm. Mon.
thru Sat.

614-446-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigera·
tors, ranges . . Skaggs Ap·
pliances. Upper River Rd.
beside Stone . Creat Motel.

614-446-7398 .

gas

furnance.

84,000 BTU, 1966 Olda
metal office desk. Coli 44601B1 or 446-3243 ovos. ·
Gas cook stove, 20 gallon
fish aquarium . Call 446 -

3732 .
---------lcOak furniture, tables.chairs,
cupboards , pie safe, telephones. desk. also antiques
and gla11wara . Open Sundays. Conkel's Tuppers-

plains, Rt.7 .

Two Peavey Column Speakers and Peavey 8 channel
mixing board. $1 ,000. or
best offer. Call Debbie 3047uuuuuuuu
White frost-free refrigerator

5240 . 00 . Quad otero ·
record - tapes $160 . 00 .
Wood cou~h black plastic
cushions 925 . 00 . Two.
alumn stormdoors32K80 112.

Autos for Sale

model and newer used cars.

Smith

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301 '

1979 Malibu Cloulc PS, PB,
air. low · miles. Call 446 -

1980 Ma&lt;da GLC wagon

cond. throughout. New Mi chelin's top. never raced .

Sacrifice $3.900. Call 614 669-6311'

guitar with

1980 Renault LeCar, very

caoo S950.
Like New.
304-773-5667 '

good cond. Cell 614-266 1911.

Rep OSIGS sion - Kim ball
Swinger Organ, like new.

Carlo. Call 446-3709 .

1977 Cougar, 1976 Monte

Den

Ferguson Music, Ceredo, W .

1977 Chevrolet lmpela 4
dr., very goodcond ., no rust,

sell or tredo $1 ,1 00 . Call
614·-245-9516 . .

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables ·
Apples

600

busholo,

19BO Chevette, AC . AMFM, 4 opeed, $2,600. Call
446-9758.
all

Ply . Reliant 1983 2 dr.. PS ,

fruits, vegetables. candy and
nuts . Jacks Fruit Market,
Route 35, Henderson, W.

PB, air. cruise. AM-FM. rear

win. dot.. must oell $5,900 .
Call446-1604 .
84 VW Rabbit

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor- outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:

Stud Service. Call614·4467795 .
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call

614-367-7220.
Briarpatch Kennels Professional All -breed grooming.
Indoor -outdoor boarding facilities . English Cocker Spa-

niol puppies. Call 614-38a9790.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel . CFA Himalayan, P8rsian
and Siamese kittens. New
litter AKC Chow puppies.

Call614-446-3844 after 7.
AKC Registered Pekingese

'

GTI oxc .

cond . Take over payment.

Call 446-4680
446 -4610.

Farm Suppl:r. s
&amp; l.IVl:stock

0. Call614:245-5121.

Pets for Sale

Chevy Nova good

B14-669-7722.

Va .

56

meg wheals.

body, runt greet. $600 . Call

6 string banjo. almost new .
Uoed only 3 times. &amp;75 .00.
Call 814-742 -2171 .

58

Phone day 304-8B2-2222,
evening 882-3239.

cond.,

tinted windows. Call 446 3100 or 446-7122.

Musical
Instruments

304-463-1 1 53,

after

5,

1977 Chevy No.va. E•collant
running condition . NeV~f

Farm Equipment

Famall Tractor with cultiva~ors, mowing machine. Call

' 81 Cutluo Oldo Supreme,
-air cond, AM-FM cassette.
.cruise, 50,000 miles,

256-6701 after 6pm.
1976-135-Massie Ferguson
diesel farm tractor. extra

86,30o . op . 304 - 576 2485 .

good ohape, new dlok, bush
hog &amp; plow. Priced $5800.
Call 246-9105.

1970 Cheveilo SS 327, PB.
PS, good cond, $1,600.00 .
Call after 6 :00 PM 304675-2099.

Ferguson 30 tractor with
plows end grader blade. Cell

'74 Chevy Impala, 304615-3190.

614-2B6-6522 .
2 box tobacco baler with air

cylinder. Call 446 ·7B3B after 5 .
71 foot John Daero 360 gao
dozer with winch in excel·

lant condition. '8000.00 ..
72 foot M.F. 136 dlaHI
tractor in excellent condition

$4800 .00. Call 614-9927401 .
64.1;

John

Ford trector
Deere corn planter; B·row

sprayer; hog feeder; lnternltionel cultivators; livestock

$1 , 100 . 00 . 304-67531B4.

now radlol tireo, $7,300.00.
304-773-5944.
1979 Fairmont $1 ,BOO .
1976 Chevy truck 4X4, 'A .
1973 Oodge Monaco e800 .
Phone 304-876· 7690.

72

1972 Oliver Tractor 110 hp,
ready to work, •6.600.00.
Sidars Equipmant, Hender~
son, 304-876-7421.

1983 5-10 Chevrolet long
bed, V-6, 4 opd., 26,000
actual miles, $6,600. Call
614-38B-9616 alter 6PM,
814·388-9921 .

Trucks for Sale

own utilities . No more than

2 children . Call 614-949·
2887 .
In Middleport . 2 bedroom
furnished

apartme"nt .

1

after 4pm .

U,250.00. Sidero Equip mont, 304•876-7421.

1976 Chevy Luv Pickup
truck. $1600.00 or boot
offer. Call 614-992 -2607.
Dodge

child . Call 1 - 304-882 2566 .

19 inch B.&amp; W. TV. Very
good shape. Aoklng •76.00.
Call 814-992-8732.

One bedroom. unfurniahed.

Pickena uMd furniture. 304·

total elocrric apt. Coli 614992-2094 .
Furnished 2 bedroom apt. in
Middleport. Adults. no pets.

security depoo~. Call 814992-3874.

motorcycle

Uvestock

truck.

atepside.

1 Reg. AppaiOH mare11 00
lbo., 7 yra. old, rHI gentle a.
good riding mara U60. 1 18
mo. old AppaloH coh good
color with blanker U&amp;O.
Coll448-8812.
Reg. Querter colt grandmn

of Sugar 8aro. Call 61 4288·81122.
trained

with

64

Hay

Phono 304-773-5430.

\

ALLF.Y OOP

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Quazar, and

Y'l&lt;NOW,ACE, IF THOSE TWO GUYS
ON TH' SUPPl-Y WAGON .t.AE S ELLING
OPIUM,WE GOTTA. STOP 'EM!

house calls . Call 304-576 2398 or 614-446-2454 .

ONCE WE GET
TH ERE , I'LL l&gt;,SII.

UNCLE CHUNG 'TO
EYEBA.LL .'EM,1

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump

removal . Call 304 -675 1331 .
RINGLES'S SERVIC E. experienced carpenter. electrician, mason, painter. roofing (including hot tar

applicatlonl 304-675 -2088
or 675-736B .
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump sales and servi-

GASOLINE ALLEY

If you're very

ces. 304-B95-3B02.

· careful and

Building -Remodeling. Concrete, drywall. electrical.
kitchen - bathroom installa tion . door-window framing .

drive slow/~ ...

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis . Ohio

Phone 61'\· 446-3BBB
614-446-4477

or

WINNIE
STILL SMARTING BECAUSE
I WENT HOME WITH YOUR
AIOTHEP.'S FRIEND NATALIE?

JIM ' S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1, Bo• 355 , Gallipolis. Call614 -367 -0576 .

83

Cell enytimo 614 -446 -

•.

Dozer- Work by Ted Hanna .
Ditches. ponds. roads. land
clearing, etc . Call Motor Car

Brokers, 446-6692 .

RARNEY

J .A .R. Construction Co.Ru-

CHAWKLET
CAKE!!

Basemente, Footers, Con crete work , Ba ckh oe's.
Dozer &amp; Oitcher. Dump
trucks , &amp; water -gas-sewerelectrical lines.

84

Electrical

..''.

SEWING Machine repairs,
service . Authorized 'Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop.

'.

Pomeroy. 614 -992-2284 .

85

SNAKE'!

WE.L.i..,A1'

General Hauling
;:&gt; _ _ ___.__

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O .

1978 Ford F260 4•4
pickup. PS, PB, AM ·FM,
V-8. Extraa. Runs good.
uaoo.oo Phone 614-7422877 .

&amp;

Larga round balal of hay.
UO NCh , Call 448·1062
altar &amp;pm.

Now VESPA MOPEDS
•&amp;911 at Batz Hondo Saleo .
Call 448-2240.
'78 Harley Sporoter 1000
CC, electric otart, 7,000
octuol mlleo. U.IIOO.OO or
beot offer. 304-6711-5421, ·

L-EAST~EY

COUL.DN'T
James Boys Water Service.

50Y,IH1515

Also pools tilled. Call 614 256 - 1141 or 614-446 ·
1175 or 614 -446-7911 .

HUMIL-IATING~!

Ken's Water Service. Wells.
cisterns, pools 1illed . Phone

614-367-0623 or 614-367 7741 night or day.
Ken's Water Service. Wells,
cisterns, pools filled . Phone

PEANUTS

614 -367-0623 or 614-367 7741 night or day .

It was a crowded

87

room.He was lonely.
Then he saw her...

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Soc . Avo., Gallipolis .
814-448-7833 or 614-4481833.
\

,.

Their eyes met ...
Five minutes later
they were married.

THAT'S THE
DUMBEST
THING I'VE

E\IER READ

IAI&lt;E MY 6EL.1'
OR5HOE·
L.ACESII

I·::-..;...-.....::::I I- J

u rn rn m o rn ® a

±
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Cil Best of Groucho
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Cl) WKRP In Cincinnati
0 (l) Fall Cluy Colt and
Howie set out for what
seems to be a lovely
Hawaiian v aca tion with the
simple task of picking up
two boil jumpers. IRI 160
min.)
Cl) Latenlght America
(l) Bamow Miller
18 (!) Nightline
• Twilight Zone
12:00 Cil Bum• • Allen
(]) Muda Sportalook
(J) Nightllne
® MOVIE: 'Clash of the
Titans '
Gl ClZ News

YETID

CHINLE

MUCH OF

I I I

TH E AU[;&gt; I E. NC:E

AT THAT OPERA
HOUSE WA5TH IS,
Now arrenge the circled le"ers 10
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
g&amp;sled by the above canoon

J I I J
Printsnswerhere :

[I]"[ l

I Jumbles

DEMON

I I Xr

(Answers tomorrow ,

Yesterdays

MAO LV

Answer

SUNDAE

FUMBLE

What !t"tat l iny milliOnaire wa sAN " ELF·MA DE" MAN

Jut I oli tr.t pl'lll , J u'l'\011 Boot No. 25 It tu lltblelor $2.25 plu1 ~!I. 1;11"111 potltge
ln4 n1n1111ng lrom Jumb~ . clo ltllllltwt plper, P.O Bo• 531 , Petmyrt . N.J CII065.
lnc;I!Xie your n1m.. likirlll , zip code lnd m lkl Cl'l~k PIW ID11 I (I NIW ipl~rboOI&lt;I

BIIDGE

James Jacoby

Win now,
pay later

NORTH
• 108

11 ·!0·1&lt;

• A J72

+ K J 10 8

• QJ 9

By James Jacoby

trick one .

+ K Q7 2

+ J6543

••

• 10 9 5 '

t A3

+ 7642

+ 10 8 4

+ A 53

SOUTH
+ A9
• K Q8 3
• Q9 5

+K762

·

South won the ace of spades. played .
a heart to the ace and another to the
queen. When East showed out . South
played a diamond to the king, which
held. Next he played the club queen.
West won the ace of clubs, cashed the
ace of diamonds, and played a low
spade to his partner's jack. It
required no great brilliance for East
now to give West a diamond ruff.
Declarer played too hastily on the
opening lead . If he allows the king to
win the trick, the defenders will be

EAST

WEST

Ti!e latest offering to cross my desk
for review is by the fine Briti sh writer Victor Mollo . " Wi nning Br~dge "
(Beaufort Books) teaches expert
bridge with a lighthearted approach
that should appeal to all . The first
section of the book deals with various
problems that confront decl arer at

·vu ln erable Both
O.aler. South .
West

Nort h

East

Soulh

Pass
Pass
Pass

Jt
4•

Pass
Pass

1•
Pa ss

I+

Openin g lead

•K

unable to maintain their communicaMind you, it may not always be
tions to set the contract. Playing low
at trick one is sound techmque. It righ t to duck the first trick. What is
often costs nothing, and it may. as always wrong is to play to the first
here, sever the tran sportation trick without planning ahead for the
remainder of the deal.
between Eas1 and West.

~.~~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ern

ACROSS
42 Spelling
I Have debts
match
4 Nauti cal
DOWN
fastener
I Speeclufy
8 K eeley
2 UngrudgSmith's
ingly
late mate
3 Uncle I dial. l l8;f;l,:;r.:~~
10 Son of Jacob 4 Estatr
12 Conswned
lis hed
Yesterday 'sAnswer " ' 0
13 Cubic meter 5 Adherent
14 Anglo-Saxon
(suff.l
16 Lamprey 25 George C.
letter
6 Gour19 Scott fi hn
15 Haw and rnand's
and
27 Parson bi rd
17 Husbands
delight
crafts
29 Baseball 's
18 Gratified
7 Roman
22 Brewery
George
20 Errunet
playneed
:10 ConfedZl Russian
wright
23 Of a
erate
city
8 E qua l
nomadic 31 Hardy
22 I singlass
9 Schemes
people
heroine
23 Jogs
11 Certain 24 New
36 Ump
revenue
25 Jury list
effort
38 Johnny 26 Warren
Beatty fi lm
27 Soft
mineral
28 Participle
ending
29 Don't
in terfere
(sl. )
32 Juj ube
33 Slower
( mus . )
34 One (Fr. I

u m mo

37 Gold bra id
39 Shoelace

m

Excavating

show r·

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. UHd otovas
and ref igeratorp. Comp1re
our prices. uve today .

73

Motorcycles
74
Quarter horH, 3 yro. old, ·-~--------­

neck

horte f400. CoR 246-9483 .
876-8483 or 876-14110.

304-773 -5131 .

•eoo.oo. Phone

304-676 -2372.

Kelv.inator r1o frolt refrlg.,

1126. Call 446-4117 or
448-2983.

D.and M . Contractors. Re modeling. vinyl siding, pain ·
tingtindoor and 'outdoor),
replacement windows . Call

&amp; Refrigeration

appreciate. '79 Honda 400

$50.00 deposit. You pay

256 -1182.

New Idea 323 corn picker

1970 Ford truck must see to

6 pc . White Provencial bdr.
suit f200. Coli 448 -2741

Plastering &amp; Plaster repair ,
free estimates. Call 614 -

tland. Oh ,614-742 ·2903 ;

shortbed,

Call 446-9427 .

Rogers Ba se ment
Waterproofing .

4537, James L. Davison , Jr .
owner.

992 -7721 .

Furnished 2 bedroom apartment in Racine for rent,
$125 .00 per month plus

THE ALLEY AlON(iGIIIE THE

Call collect 1-614-2370488, 9 a.m . t9 5 p.m.

PB. AC, tilt wheel, reclining
seats, Power antena. all
gauges. rear defroster, 4

trailer. Call614-742-2877.

63

I (;AI'! THAT GUY
GNEA~INCi 1701'11'1

Unconditional lifetime guarantee . local references
furnished . Free estimates.

19B2 Chevy Cornaro, PS .

t3 , 000 . 00 . 304 - 676 4072.

7689 .

~ASEMENT

Good-1 E~e:cavating . base·
ments. footers, driveways.
septic tanks , landscaping .

1978

1 0 pc. white French Provincial bedroom suite. with
canopy. 5 pc. dlneene set.

ANNI E

' 71 Super Beetle, no rust,

Riverside Apts . Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens. $130 . Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities . 614 Apartment for rent in Syracuse . Phone 614-992 -

Coii614-367 -0409 or 614 367 -7244 . .

304-676-2440.

pelnt job. $1 BOO.OO. Call
814-37B -6349 .
61

H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl &amp; aluminum siding,
roofing. seamleu gu.ners,
storm windows. overhang .

WATERPROOFING

1974 Triumph T·R 6 exc .

call

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof .

5PM, 446-0137.

19'1:0

D-36

Serv1ces

good condition. Call after

old. 304-8B2-3236.

Weight loss breakthrough!
The Grapefruit Diet Plan
with Diadu.. Medically
proven results available at
Hockehberry Pharmacy.

dayti_m e ..

1911

614· 446-2282.

Two AKC female ·Garman

Va .

Rough Cut Lumber, oak.
poplar, and pine. 2K4' s,
2x8's, 1 x6 's. 1 x8's. As sorted lengths . Call Hogg
and Zuspan Materials

Bulc~-Pontiac,

Eastern Ave .• Gallipolis. Call

304-675-2063.

Wood bed frame . 304-6756645 .

Building Supplies

304-BB2-3590 . ·

TOP CASH paid for '80

Fish Tank. 2413 JackSon
Avenue, Point Pleasant.

Martin

camper 14 ft. self
contained. aleeps 6 . $700 .

Call 614-38B ·9857.

10 gallono HI up, $24.00;
10 gallons tank, $7.99;
medium angel tioh, 13.99;
20 gallon long tank, $17.00.

304-675-3089 .

puppy. Ca11614-266-9391.

dop., S195 mo . Call 4462·2 36 or 446 -26B1 .

71

675-5030 after 6:00 PM
and week ends.

Pool Table, good

Now open for business.
Mountain State Block, At.
33, New Haven. Complete
masonry supplies, 4 " , 8 ",
12" block. Delivery service.

1959 gas 420 John Deer
do&lt;or . Call 256-9362 after
5:30pm .

Parakeets and cages, 304-

57

'69

Transportation

condition. Call after 15 P.M.

Baker forklift for concrete or
blacktop, 3 ,000 lb. capac-

446 -

614-992 -

axe.

pooll $200. 304-675-1390 .

Co .. lnc . 773 - 5554 ,

18 ft . tri -axle trailer. like

Call

registered Black and Tan
Coon hounds, 6 mo and 16
mo old . One part Red tick
part Blue tick hound, 16 mo

{bumper

plato with lank. Call 44637B5 .

ity, S2 ,000. Call446-8038 .

Red· and rust with papers.

Card - pool table

Building Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes.
windows , lintels, etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,

Firewood for sale . $25
pickup load. $35 delivered .

AKC ta·male Doberman
Pinscher, 11 month• old.

3044 .

ton 30.06, model 700 bol
Shop, 430 2nd . Ave., Galli·
polis, 446-0B40.

_c_._

$66 .00 .
3677 . .

21ft. camper. self contained
with tub and shower. large
ref.. awning. sleeps six,
clean . excellant condition.
Would have to sea to eppreciate. Call 614-742--2770.

hay,$15.00 a bale. Call
8714-742 -2160 Monday
thurFridayBAM to 4:30PM . ! - - -- - - - - - 81
Home
Improvements

Shepherd pups, H5.00.
14
11 _6 _
9_8 _5 ·_3_8_49
_-_
_ ·_ _

FOR SALE OR TRADE two

55

new, $1,050. Call
0175 .

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

For sale, round bales of

AKC registered German

1

&amp; Grain

Hay

$100.00 . 304·675 -4039 ,

ga., light twelve Browning
12 ga ., Frarchi 3' magnum
12 ga .• modal 7-60 Reming Remingtom 234. othera to
choose from . Frank's Pawn

64

Pets for Sale

Shepherd puppies, 16 wko,
boot offer, both good warch
dogs. 304-676•4863.

s20 .and 826 ., 10 gun - Gun

frames 620, $25, &amp; 830.

~~~~"~~--~~=~=::;:~~~~~~~~=~1
66

$125.00 . 304-675 -5996. ·

46 Space for Rent

367-7438 .

0 ,.. ~ ..... ~

304-675· 1247.

266-6245.

split &amp; delivered $30 piCkUP
load or 3 loads $75. Call
446-7524 altar 6 :00.

rent . Call

c

delivery, 304-676-4216.

Firewood 100% hardwood

lot for

d)
d 1
I Dei .
house
coal
1
to
1
ton.
call
1 oa
overo goo ump
Jim Lanier 675 -7397 or

Knauff Firewood Split· 95% .
hardwoods. Seasoned or
green . You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender . 614-

lis. 446·4416 after 8 p .m.

Trailer

1:00 - 700 P.M.

100 p ~r cent !18asoned Oak
firewood, big loads. q!Jick

246 ·6B04.

Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

Apartment
for Rent

Mise, Merchandise

Furnished room . $125 . Utilities. range , ,,f. Share bath.
Men onlY. 919 St~c .• Gallipo-

614-992-7479.

Bldg . lot with frontage on
At. 588 . in Rodney . 614-

245- 9448 .

garage apartment.
304-675-3752.

quiet, cable, beautiful river

for sale or t rade , owner
financing . Call 446 -3485 .

Vinton . Call 614 -388 -9327,

79

sable jackets e27.60. Sam

42
ral water. se pti c tank.
58,000 . Ca ll 614 -256 66 18 .

lido, W. Va .

827 .50 ,

1300 square ft;~et of floor
space. Tenant has exclusive
use of 33x85 f t. parking lot
behind building . Rent It

54

8 :oo

clothing, packs. boote.ln•u·

latod coverallo

orange • camouflage rever-

Lots &amp; Acreage

; 1/20/84

12 It fiberglau V shape
bottom boat . 12 hp Sea King
motor. 3 life j ackets and
oars. $300 ,00 . Gordon Gillispie. Little Shcteen , South-

load , $30.00 delivered.
304-675 · 2991 or 8756762.

located at 220 E. Main,
Pomeroy. Building has over

S21 0.00 per month. Call
614. 9 9 2 -6 2 3 2 .
IU~.!::!.!:!:!::l!:=:::...:::..=:.::!::!.:i::=:

I.IW-

Boats and
Motors for Sale

$21 .00. Camouflage army

CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

Television
Viewin'g

~UST THI!
VtSUAL.
SIO.M-THI'.T
VOICE IS

EVENING

Surplus • . Denim Jackets

52

35

75

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Ohio

Motorcycies

1981 Yamaha YZ 250, good
cond . $B80 . 304 - 676 288B .

chair, baby clothe1. other

Firewood for sale. all hard ~
wood. •1 00.00 per one ton
truckload . Delivery availa~

Business
B uildi n gs

74

Muoio bo•. baby swlnp, high

21 ft. • 16 ft. insulated stool
building. Must sell. Call
614-742-2225 .

With blower . 304·67545B1.

November 20, 1984

KIT 'N' CAlli.VU ®br Larry Wright

MIIC. Merchandise

clean, 304·675-1514 after
3 :30 .

For rent : business building

'•

Household Goods

November 20. 1984

m

~ Cognizant

~Breeding
place~

41 Uberal
facti on
DAILY CRVPTOQUOTES- Her e's how to work it :

ern

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the word' are all
hints. Each day the code letters ar e different.
CRVPTOQUOTES

TER SXRXKT
FWXNTWN:
VKH

XF

XR

W O TTKR

RNNTOBN SF

RVSXJN

KT

OT

11 -20

XTNGOWR
NGUAOXT

ZOTOBN

VOZCESBNSF

RK
OTY

WKAO . FKESWN
ETLTKHT
Ve11tenlay's Cryploquote: 'mE ONLY ARGUMENT
AVAILABLE WI'Ill AN EAST WIND IS tO PUT ON
VOURGREATCQAT. - J.R. LOWELL

�.

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Tu~y. No~ber20,

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1984

Death toll hits 264 in Mexico gas explosion
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Authortties predicted the
, death toll would rise today as rescue teams searched
through the rubble of a working-class district
devastated by one of the worst natural gas explosions
on record. By early today 264 bodies had been
-recovPred.
Officials said thP toll did not Include prople taken to
hospitals who may have died later or workeni at the
Uqulfied natural gas storage site where the
earthshatterlng explosions occurred early Monday.
Red Cross and police officials said at least 500
prople were seriously injured by the explosions and
flames that turned the adjpoinlng Tialnepantla
neighborhood into an inferno. An estimated 100,1Ul
prople were evacuated, Federal Pollee deputy
spokesman Hector Garcia Vasquez said .
Homes on about 20 square blocks were destroyed or
badly damaged and Mexico state officials said more

than half.a square mile was evacuated.
MexlcoCityPollceChlefRainonMotaSanchezsald
the blaze was under control at mid-day Monday, but
flames from orie tank stU! lit the night sky as the fire
burned itself out.
Witnesses and residents said one tremendous blast
shook the crowded suburb at 5:42 a.m. (6: 42 a .m .
EST), followed by perhaps a dozen more explosions.
Balls of fire shot into the air and ralnedflerydebrts on
homes and businesses. Plumes of dark smoke rose a
mile Into the sky as the fire raged out of control for
more than seven hours.
A spokesman for the government-run petroleum
monopoly Pemex said · a gas truck apparently
exploded, touching off subsequent blasts, first at
Unigas Co. natural gas holding tanks and then at the
adjoining Pemex natural gas storage and distribution
center, constructed In 1961.
•
Mota Sanchez said four storage tanks holding more

Pay
raise
tempo
.
gains momentum
.

.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -'Led
by a proposal that would give a hetty
pay increase to Ohio's 88 county
. treasurers, the drumbeat is beginning to build in behalf ot a raise tor
members of the General Assembly.
Rep. Edward Orlett, D-Dayton, a
lieutenant of House Speaker Vernal
C . Riffe Jr. and an early public
advocate ot a legislative pay boost,
has introduced a bill that would
grant pay raises of $5,00l to $7,00l .
Jan.l to treasurers, depending on a
county's population.
Orlett predicted there would be a
series of similar salary increase
measures tor other county office·
holders. One ot. those eventually
could yield a legislative pay boost.
"You'll probably see ... other pay
raise bills forothercounty officials,"
Orlett said. "I understand the
recorders have a bill , the coroners
have a bill, in all probability there
will be some kind ot a, perhaps a
county commissioners bill. that
might prove to be the vehiclP. I'm
not sure."
Within hours oft he blll's Introduction Monday, the County Commissioners' Association of Ohio issued a
statement saying its 32-member
board of trustees had reiterated Its
support lor "a substantial salary
adjustment" for legislators.
Clinton . County Commissione r
D.M . Fife. the group's president,
said state representatives and
senators last received a raise Jan. 1,
1979. He pointed out they are not
reimbursed by the state for expenses while in Columbus .
"Obviously a salary adjustment is

.

.

His blll for treasurers realigns
most of the population ranges
.contained .In current law to which
salary levels are attached. It also
provides for subsequent 7 percent
pay raises on J an.1 ofl986, 1987, and
1988.
Under his proposal, a treasurer in
a county with population 15,001 to
25,00l would be paid $24,500 annually. A treasurer in a county of just
over aJ,IlXJ population now makes
$19,500.
County population ranges and a
treasurer's -salary proposed by the
bill:
1-15,00l ($23,00l); 15,001-25,00l
\$24,500); 25,001-35,(lXJ ($26,00l);
35.001-50,0C0 ($27,500); 50,001-65.00l
t$28,500); 65,001-00,(lXJ ($31,500);
00,001-~,!Ul ($32,500);
~.001-120,0CO ($33,500); 120,001170,00l ($35,250); 170,001-Z70,(lXJ
($36,500); 270,001-400,(lXJ ($39,750);
400,001-550,&lt;XXJ ($41,00l); 550,001],(lXJ,(lXJ ($42,25()); 1,00l,OOI and
over ($43,500).

$1,500,000 sought Emergency squads
answer five calls
by Meigs couple

Fairboard dicusses
'85 entertainment

'•

. There was 100percent attendance
of Meigs Fair Board members at a special meeting held at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds Monday night .
Entertainment tor the 19851\telgs
County Fair was· the topic of the
meeting and a representative from
Variety Attractions out ofZanesvllle
m et with the board.
The board booked the demolition
derby for Tuesday, Aug.13; a vocal
group, Dave a nd Sugar, whlch has
toured with the late Elvis Presley
and Charlie Pride, for Wednesday,
Aug. 14, and The Bandana Crou(l. an
upcoming five member musical
organlatlon for Thursday, Aug. 15.
The annual horse pulling contest
and the horse show wlll also be
scheduled tor Thursday night.
Attractions lor FrldayandSaturday
nights have no association with the
booking agency and wUI be made up
of the tractor and truck pulls.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Elizabeth Lane,
Pomeroy; Shirley Guinther, Pomeroy; WUI!am Fink, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Kathy _Robinson,
Clara Mtller, Arthur Carver, Jr.

iss:!.

MEXICO

Five calls were answered by local
units on Monday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 9:23a.m. Rutland took Eugene
Fink to Pleasant Valley Hospital; at
10: 00 a.m., Tuppers Plains went to
Rice Run Road where the mobile
home of Wayne Benn~ttt was
completely destroyed by !Ire. The
Chester Fire Department assisted
and TupPers Plains !liter returned to
the same location due to a garage
fire on the Bennett property. At 8:34
p.m ., SyracusetookWinnleWaldnlg
from Route 124 to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy at 10:50 p.m.
took Dora Roush from the Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Service planned
A special thanks missionary
service will be held at 7: 30 p .m .
Wednesday at the Middleport
Independent Holiness Church,
Pearl St.. with "Strangers from
Over the Sea" as the theme for the
meeting.

No paper ThU1'8day

GAS EXPLOSION - This graphic locates the area on the outskirts of
Medco City where a strin' of eaniHihaklng explosions at a liquefied
gas slorage facUlty tumed a wor)dng-class district Into an inferno of
blazing homes Monday, kllllng 264 people. (AP Laserphoto).

~urdertrialhegins

Weather forecast
1

No paper wW be prtnted Thursday, Thanksgiving Day, In order
that employes may enjoy the
holiday with thelrfarnllles. Publication resume as usual Friday.

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In the Meigs County Probate
Court to Richard Alan Shuler, Jr.,
al, and Linda Lou Marr, 17, both of
West Columbia, and ,Jeffrey Trey
Gilkey, 19, and Carole June Bailey,
16, Middleport.

Tonight, mostly clear. Low .15-20.
Wednesday, sunny. High 35-40. The
chance of precipitation Is near zero
percent tonight and Wednesday.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday:
Fair 1111 'lblll'8day and Friday and
a chance of sho!vers or snow flurries
Saturday. Highs bt the tOs and low
50s Thursday, In the mld-188 to
mld-508 Friday and In the 40s
Saturday. Lows In the 201!1 Thursday
and Friday and In the mld-201!1 to
mld-308 Saturday.

said he had called all of the
prosecution witnesses Monday. Detense testimony was io begin today.
If convicted, Mrs. Thompson
could be sentenced to 15 years to life
on each of the two counts.

Burley prices up ·
RIPLEY, Ohio (AP) - Prices
were up over a year ago in the first
day of Ohio's only burley tobacco
a uction.
There were 545,312 pounds of
tobacco sold at the four Ripley
auction markets Monday, bringing
In $1.03 million. That was flrstcday
average of $).89 per pound, an
Increase over last season's overall
average of$1.78 per pound.
"They were buying mostly the
better type of tobaCco," said Bill
Whisner, statistician for the
auctions.
Tobacco will be sold three days
this week In Ripley, then four days a
week beginning next week. Auction
officials hope to sell 13 m1lllon
pounds of tobacco by the time sales
end In February.

a

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (AP ) The
winning number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 144. In
the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 3237.
The Lottery reported earnings
Monday of $462,405 from wagertng
on "The Number." The earnings
carne on sales of $1,151,103.50, whlle
holders of wtnntng tickets are
entitled to share$688,ffi8.50.
lntheparimutuei"Pick4"game,
sales totaled $164,426. Holders of

Board names
frosh coach .

PH. 992·5432

Pomeroy, OH.

WEST

Phone 4411-4524

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN
All SEATS 12.25
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1 .15
EXCEPT "THE PRODIGAL "

at y

Vol .34, No.1 56

Pomeroy~ Middleport,

Copyrighted 1.984

.
enttne
'

Ohio, Wednesday, November 21, 1984

Counttg I. WBifBM
Mutle
Featuring:

KENNY HUDNALL

THANKSGIVING DAY
&amp; SAT. NOV. 24th

8:30-12:30

rr:;;;;;;;:~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

EVERYTHING. YOU NEED TO
PREPARE YOUR

THANKSGIVING
DINNER

I·

I

*Corning Ware
*Roasters
*Microwave Cookware
*Dishes &amp;Glasses
*Bakeware
.
*Hallmark Plates, Cups
Napkins and Table Center
Pieces
·
*Silverware

2 Sec tions. 28 Pages

25 Cenl s

A Multimedia In c. Newspaper

Cannibalism
•
occurring at
Dog Pound
By NANCY YOAOIAM
scheduled when the pound can be
Sentinel Staff Writer
open and someone on duty to take
A picture of a half eaten pup was dogs, adopt dogs out, and sell. tags.
presented a t Tuespay's meeting of Fisher noted that humane society
the Meigs Cou nty Commissioners as wqrkers would be willing to.statf the
. evidence that cannibalism Is occur- pound during those scheduled
ring at the Meigs County Dog Pound.
times.
The pup had been chewed In half by a
Fisher said the humane society
larger dog in the same run .
would be wllling to rejllace the
Dorothy Fisher -and other Meigs "lUthy" pallets on wlJ!ch the dogs lie
County Humane Society members If commissioners agreed to put glass
met at IengthTuesdaywithcommls- In the screened window attherearoc
s ioners David Koblentz and Man - the pound. It was agreed that a glass
ning Roush for over two hours to window and beavy canvas over the
discuss severa l problems that exist gates between the runs and the
building would belp keep out wind
at thP facility. Veterinarian Carol
OsbornP was also present for the and weather until a more suitable
meeting.
means of heating can be lnstaUed.
Fis her pointed out that she was . The society is also willing to
not blaming the commissioners or
purchase new feeders and water
I he county dog wa rden (Clarence
containers.
Taylor) for conditions at the pound
Funded by license lees
because, she said, "we'reallgolngto
At thls time, the county dog pound
have to work togethe r to a llevia te is funded by dog license tees .
the·problems." ·
However, because these fees are
GOOD AND PLENTIF1JL - The traditional Thanksgiving feast
Uncleanliness, · lack of heat a nd also used to pay dog claims to
Includes turkey and the trlnunlngs. Cooks at the Meigs County Senior
hot wa ter, p&lt;ll&gt;r,fenclng, improper Individuals who have lost "farm ·
Citizen's Center, left to right in front, Dortba Handley, Virginia Kidder,
dis infecting, a nd lack ot sanitary animals to wil&lt;! dog packs, very little
and Mattie Lawrence lake turkeys from the oven while Ramona Hawk,
(mea ns by which to dispose of mpney is left for the CafE' of the dogs
In hack, grinds cranberries for the crmb en-y sal!(~ . Thanksgiving is a
wastes) were among the problems In the pound .. Meigs County now has
st res!;C(J by Fisher and Osborne.
one ot the lowest dog license rates in
the state. ·•But," Fisher replied,
According to the two women, It
appears that solid wa ste is now
"don't raise the fees, enforce them."
being shoveled out and buried near
The possibility of a house to house
By BOB HOEFLICH
the building while liquid waste Is check throughout the · county to
lion of Adeline Snowde n as a n a idr
Sentinel Staff Write•
being allowed to drain over the hill.
effective Dec. 24 a nd accept('{] th r
verify that dogs are llcet:tsed was
Meeting in regular session TuPS·
Fisher said she had been in contact
resignation of Danie l Norman wa s a
discussed. This method has been
day night, the Meigs Local School
substitute custodian .Jack Mowety
with John Jacotis a t the Meigs
carried out In other areas and found
District Board of Education purCounty Health Department, who
and P a tty Wilt were e mployed as
to be effective.
substitute bu.s drivers. The boa rd
"Ultimately, what we need Is a chased $56,0CO worth of cl assrr•, m
told her that this situation could
employed Mrs. Yonicce MiUer.
become a public health problem if
new dog pound and we need to get It · furnishings ..
Payment for the furniture wi /('
allowed tocontin·u e.
Pomeroy . to ser..-e as ,-earbook
offthefairgrounds.Itdoesn'tbelong
made from bond issue monies. '1 he
adviser for the curre nt school year
Sheep dip is !lOw being used to
there. But we have to be reasonable,
disinfect the facility. Osborne ex- so let's take care of the problems district, a. couple of years ago,
and Barbara Sommer was em approved
a
$1
m
illion
dollar
tax
fJW
pl oyed as a subs titut e teac her in the
plained to , commissioners that
that we feasibly can. The humane
field of home f'&lt;"Onom ics.
sheep dip is not a disin fectant. She
soc iety is willing to spend money as Issue a nd a t the Nov. 6 election
Ed Bm1els was authot·iz.ed to
suggested that a n inexpensive
long as we know we're getting approved a nother $:lOO.IXXJ no tax
a f! end a confPrPnCC' on computer
solulion to this pt'oble m wou ld be to cooperation in return," Fisher increase bond issue.
The board voted to purchase the
instruc tion at Athens on Dec. tl. ancl
use a mixture of clomx a nd wa ter as
noted.
the a tte ndance of Ma rge !Jan· and
The humane society operates equipment from the Fat:nha m Co. a t
a disinfectant. The comm issioners
Cr~nville, Ohio, upon the recomConnie Gilkey to a child a buse
were in agreement .
entirely on donations, members'
m endation of Asst. District Superin- workshop this month was ap proved .
Mixing causes problem
dues, and proceeds !rom the
tendent James Carpenter .
April Smitll, sccret&lt;IIY a t til('
The problem of ca nnibalism
Humane Society Thrift Shop In
Carpmter
said
the
purc
hase
w
ill
Pom0roy
Elem('ntat)' Sr htXJI. ~vas
stems from the j art tha t pups a re
Middleport.
Include new desks or new desk-cha ir
a pproved for &lt;:~ tll'nd i n ~ an C'IC' men "Of course," Fisher added, "even
being put in the sa me runs with
larger dogs. This is occurring
with these improvements, we would combinations for g rades kinder- tmy school secrrtary conlerence on
gart en through eighth . He sai d
.Ja n. 30 and Jl in Columbus.
beca use individuals are depositing
only be treating the symptoms and
about
1200
K-8
desks
and
some
450
Maternity leaH' was gr an lt?d t_o
not the disease." In her opinion, the
unwanted dogs in the dog chute a t
the pound without rega rd for the
disease is " overbreedlng and Irres- desks for the seventh and eighth
G lori a Va n Reet a nd apprm·" J """'
grades are included in the purchase
gtven for thC' attendance of "
safety of the anima ls.
ponsible pet owners."
Southeast TradP a nd Indus trial
Another meeting between hu- along wit h some caleeria tables.
It was decidect that this problem
Educa tion Sup&lt;'rvisors 'meeting by
mane society members and the Some five bids wpre received and
might be eliminated if the drop
the Farnham Co. was the lowest of Linda Yonker and Ron Logan
commissioners has been scheduled
the five, Carpenter said.
chute were closed and daily hours
C'arlier this month .
(Coni lnued on page 24)
The board accepted the resignaThe board agreed to participat e· in

time when families should))(' h'l'ateful _just to ht• tdgNIII'r. 1\'nriH"I'-o an~
friend• who gather each y ear at the annua l Th•Ul k.'b~'· ing llinm•r at the
Senior Citizen' s Center, consider tht"ms.•lv• ·~ a fmnil ~· .too &lt;.UJd ~hart• tlw
sentlmt'lll whole heartedly.

cla~sroom

furnishings

the Regional Schola rs P rogra m
sponsored b)' SEOVEC. Two ~ tu ­
de nts will be representing Md~s
Local in the progra m .
The boord ent e red into an
agreeme nt with Veterans Memorial
Hospit al concerning the usc of thr
Pom eroy P.iement ary School in thr
C'n :•nt of a maj or disaster for thf'
purpoS(' of recei ving. trea ting and
ho using pat ient s on a short trrm
bas i ~ onl~--

T r0us urer Jan0 \AlagTi('r

having

WATERLOO. Ohio (APl- Wild
turkey. is occurring thl'Oughout the
turkeys, a scrappy breed that knows
Midwest. Regional population, esti how to· scratc h for a living, are
mated at 14,00l birds In 1958, Is now
continuing their come ba ck in Ohio.
put at 265,1Ul to 342,1Ul.
''We estimate there are. between
"The birds were here In greater
5,500 and 18,&lt;KXI wild birds in the
numbers, of course, In pioneer
state, " said state turkey biologist
days," he said. "But due to the
Robet1 W. Donohoe. "lt's hard to
cutting down of most of the large
count them, as you might guess."
forested areas, and due to unresThe wild turkey has become a tricted hunting, · the bird was
·wary, hearty breed which has
repOrted extinct here In 1911.
adapted to some 3,300 square miles
"From what I can tell from theold
of range across 36 counties, includ·
history records, therewerenollmlts
ing mixed tleld and forest terrain,
during the late 19th century on the
Donohoe said.
·
numb!!r of birds hunters could take,
"They're not so dumb," he added.
and the seasons were quite long.''
"Just talk tosomeoflhehunterswho
Wild turkey hunting seasons
try and hunt them."
ended in 19m In Ohio and did not to
Wild turkeys have less meat than
resume until 1966.
freezer turkeys, Donohoe said. The
Beginning In 1922, attempts were
breast meat is good, but the made to revive the state turkey
drumsticks are tough and stringy,
populatiOn using domestic birds.
bef!ttJiJg a birdwhlchscratchesfor a
Theseeltorts, bytheOhloDivlslonof
living . .
Wildlife and Its predecessor, the
"They eat a variety ot berries, Division of Fish and Game, Instead
Insects and salamanders and that's made the turkeys vulnerable to
why they do so well," he said.
·predators and poachers.
Donohoe, who works at the Ohio
Between 1956 and 1963, the state
Department of Natural Resources had better luck releasing wild birds
WUdllfe Experiment Station at obtained from other states.
Waterloo, said the return of the

•

l\f t a(·fion tak(_•n

."\o n&lt;·tion \vr~s tc~kC' n b,· thf' t)()an1
l'ollmvin g il disC'us..;,;ion 0~1 C'hanging
higt1 school .(!r~d ing lmes. Discuss-·

ing the mattf'r with th0 hoard wprp _
1-l igh Schon! f'ri nc ipal Janlf'&gt;Miller
;,nd Ri ta Sl;l\·in, pn•sident ol th0
~1&lt;-igs Local Tr•.•chN~ ,\ssoc-iation .
Th0 CO ni)C'l1SU!' was that m orp imput
int o the grading guiclrl im-s is ~lf\d

l'vl or r is is com pi li ne- th0ir q uPstions
w :)~

"u tilorizcd to ad\'ertisc for bi cl' o n
thn .'l' nf'\\"school busPs wi th the iclf'tl
of

for tllC' t&gt;Ond trJn sac tiun.

b)· board mcmb&lt;'t·s and Supt. Dan 1::.

Buying nf'w hus('!ii

the

bids

r ead y

for

conside ra tion by the board In cari, .Jan ua r,-. Tile district has i)f'{•n
approved for th r new buses b;· the
sta te . but it was poi nt ed out that
enrly action shou ld be takcn on thP
pu rchasr beforrstate funds for such
purc has!.'S ere depleted.
I t H'&lt;-l S 2gn'C'd to authorizt' ltlP

issuance or S:lOO.OOO worth of school
imprn\'f'mrnt bonds in conjunction
with the· paSsage of thf' no tax
increasCl OOnd iss ue a pproved b~'

voters or thr distr ict in 1\o\'ember.
CPnt ral Trust will serve as registru ,.

so th~tl lht'.\' can bf'an:-wf'JT'Cl fort he
boanJ nt :t lrt lf'r tim~·.
·
;\II f'nLiill .l ! tlu' fTil\ •1 ing \\"('J'f' OOa rd
llll ' m~x ·rs . ltob&lt;•rt Sn o\~·den. Robert

Ba rt on. ,\rland Ei ng and

Ld !T\'

I 1owdl

Christmas
season begins
on Saturday
The C'hristm n' sea~on of the Big
Bend ;~n'J hPg in" Saturday wi th a

paradt• tht·ougll

~1idcllepon

and

POm f'ru~·-

Wild turkeys making
comeback at Waterloo

Middleport

·Dining R-m Only

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

JAC~SON PI~E · RT. 3&amp;

B&amp;G BAR

Animal bazaar set

$335

531

r------------l

w1nn1ng uckets. are entitled to 45
percent, or $73,911. A winning $1
straight ticket earns $4,164. A
winning $1 boxed ticket earns $374.

Served with
Ma1hed Potatoe1,
Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink

•

Meigs board buys

Wllllam Hensler was employed as
the 1~-85 freslunan basketball
coach when the Southern Local
School District Board of Educa tlon
met Monday night at the high
school.
The board revised the school
calendar to make . Oct. 19 a
parent-teacher conference day
rather than an instructional day.
The board extended thanks to the
Racine Home-National Bank for the
gift of a calculator.
Taking part in the regiona I
scl)olars program through Ohio
University was approved and David
Powell, a senior, was named to
represent Southern High School.
Supt. Bobbie J . Ord was Instructed
to form a committee of parents,
students, board and staff members
kto review the current policy of the
district to insure its relevancy and
accuracy, a requirement by the
state. Insurance on the high school
boiler was renewed with the
Downing- Childs-Mullen Agency.
All boardmemberswerepresent for
the meeting.

WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

The Racine United Methodist
women wiD have their . annual ·
holiday bazaar, Sat\!l'day, 2 to 7 ·
p.m., at the Racine Methodist
Church. Craft Items, rag rugs,
baked Items, andhoinemadecandy
will be available. Dinners will also ·
be served.

the state of Ohio,'' Finan said.
The bill goes back to the House for
consideration of Senate changes.
Appro.v al of that measure i! nd a
handful of others came as the House
a nd Senate entered the seCond week
of a lame-duck session expected to
continue off and on through midDecember.
The Sena te gave a new lease on
life to a temporary state law, due to
expire Jan. 1, allowingretajlersand
.financial institutions to charge up to
25 percent interest for loans and
credit cards.
Extension of the Interest celllng
from Jan.1, 1985, toJan.1, 1988, was
Included as part of a lengthy
House-passed measure updating
state banking laws.
Senate approval 3HI sent the bUI
back to the House for consideration
of changes.
Existing law dealing with Interest
charges contains a sunset clause
providing for the measure ,t o expire
Jan. 1, a situation In which the
ceiling automatically would have
fallen back to the old level of 18
percent.
Merchants and others who
backed the extension ot the 25
percent cap said it was needed
because of uncertainty over the
effect that the growing federal
deficit might have on Interest rates
in the future.
"Given the uncertainty over
Interest rates ... !twas tell important
to retain the flexiblllty provided by
the previous sunset and extend this
for an additional three years," said
Sen. Neal Zimmers, D-Dayton.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It's
soon going to cost more to get copies
of birth certltica tes and death
certlfica tes and to file a divorce
decree or dlssolu lion . .
The Senate virtually h~s completed passage of a House bill
increasing the fees charged for such
items in a plan to raise $2.5mllllon to
fund programs around the state for
prevention of child abuse and
neglect.
The measure also would increase
by 1;1 the amount ot the _marriage
license fee collected for shelters of
domestic violence victims. The
boost Is expected to generate about
$700,00l.
Sen. Marlgene Valiquette,
D'l'oledo, the hill's Senate floor
manager, won 26-5 approval Monday of the emergency measure.
She said the nur:nber of reported
cases of child abuse In Ohio rose
from 10,&lt;KXI in 1978 to 25,00l in 1983.
She maintained that federal funding
for shelter programs had
decreased.
"The fact of the matter Is that
shelters are crowded ... and shelter
funding has decreased," Ms. Valiquette said.
Sen. Richard
Finan , R Clnclnnatl, said he had no quarrel
with the need to help victims a nd
find solutions to the problems. But
he opposed tax Increases to do so.
"You can call it what you want,
but In effect this is a tax increase in

Gas Farm
Explodes

NEW LEXINGTON, Ohio (API
- A Somerset woman said she was
concerned for the safety of her
family and worried tha t water a nd
food In the family's home was
contaminated in the months before
she allegedly shot her children to
death and turned a gun on herself,
relatives have testltled.
The testimony came Monday In
the murder trial of Rachel Thompson, 31, accused In the May 15
shooting deaths of her son, Jason, 7,
and daughter, Holly, 5. Pollee said
Mrs. Thompson was found with a
self-lnfilcted gunshot wound to the
stomach.
Carrofl Thompson testified Monday that his wife told him she had
dreamed that relatives were being
burned on a cross. She also said she
was worried that food and water in
the house was poisoned.
Mrs. Thompson's father, Phil
Taylor, and sister, June Wyner, said
Mrs. Thompson relayed the same
fears to them.
Mrs. Thompson has pleaded
L'lnocent and Innocent by rPason of
Insanity. She Is being tried without a
jury before Perry County Cotnplon
Pleas .Judge Robert Tague.
Assistant Prosecutor John Allen

raced in and out of the area, carrying the Injured to
seven nearby hospitals and seVeral emergency
centers set up around the area.
At the nearby Bastllca or Our Lady of Guadalupe,
thousands of evacuated residents walled throughout
the day for word that they could return home.
Hundreds attended a special Mass.
The area outside was converted Into a refugee
center and an adjoining older baslllca was used as a
clinic where proplewere treated on makeshift beds on
the marble floor.
Many waited for word on the fate of their loved
ones. Others ha!l already learned a family member or
frtend was dead and were trying to cope with the loss.
Asked" If he was walling tor Information on his .
family, one man, with his few belongings wrapped In
a sheet slung over his back, said softly, "Not now.
Now I know. There Is nobody."

Fees raised to fund
child abuse programs

the most logtcal .~pproach at this
time Inasmuch .as Ohio's constitution prohibits expense payments for
legislators," Fife said.
Orlett has been on record since at
leasfmld·October as favoring what
he contends is a long-overdue pay
boost for state lliwmakers. Representatives and senators earn a base
of $22,500 annually, although com11]lttee chairmanships and leadership posts pay more . .
Orletihas said he would like to see
the· leglslatJve pay scale raised to
$29,500.

Meigs County happenings
A suit asking
$1,500,1Ul In
damages hilS been filed in the Meigs
County Common PlPas Court by
Hubet1 Clower and his wife.
Amanda Clower, Middleport,
against Denver Cunis, Eugene
Long, and Elson R. Dalley, Lebanon
Townshlp Trustees, in care of
township clerk Shirley A. Johnson.
. Clower charges that about Nov.
18-19, 1~2, he Was performing work
for the board of trustees, in order to
retain and continue receiving general rPlief. He charges that he was
engaged in cutting trees and
clearing brush under the supervision of Curtis. He alleges that hewas
hlt on the head and neck by a falling
tree. He charges neglience and asks
$1,000,00l for injuries. emotional
distress, pain a nd suffering, medica I expenses and hospita Iiza lion and
· loss of earning capacity. His wife
seeks $500,1Ul on his behalf also.

thari 3 inuuon gallons of llqulfied gas each exploded,
and two others burned. Authorities had teared the fire
would trtgger more explosions at nearby tanks, but
none occurred.
PEMEX teclutlclans burned off OO,OOl barrels of
gas to avoid new explosiOns, the company said.
Officials said the operation and main pipeline were
closed to prevent further explosions.
The death toll exceeded the 135 ktlled on Oct. 21,
1944, when a gas storage tank exploded In Cleveland,
Ohio- the worst such disaster on record In the United
States. More than 1,0CO prople are believed to have
died when a gasoline tanker exploded Inside Slanmg
Tunnel in Afghanistan In November
President Miguel !le Ia Ma!lrld Issued a statement
Monday night expressing sorrow for those ktlled and
urg!hg the public to join in helping the victims.
Throughout the day, ambulances and rescue trucks

r\ lh&lt;'rn~ . "( lid 1-"it,hioned f'hrist
ma.-.." will bf• carrit---d out in thP
parad(l which i!' joint I\' ~ponsorl."d bv

the Midcllrpot1 and Po mC'ro~
Chamber.; of Co mmerce Th~
parade will frntu n • tile M0igs a nd
EastPm High School Bands fl long
with Participr:llrnn of locul cluh~ .
organi za tion" and hu...,incssf'"-··and
of roursC'. Sanlil Cl.tu..,

Participal!on trophi&lt;'' will be
presentee! r ach llaod . tn 11ddition.
parad e f'ntriC'.-.. \\·il l IX' ,iudgf 1d und
tmphics &lt;JW;Ht lvd for thr IX'~t
ovC'ra llt hromP unit : !Jk' IX':-.ll'f'ligious

thf'm C' ~md the t){~st f'omrnC'rical

entr i0s . .Judging \\'ill tx- clone in
Middleport with the winn&lt;'r' to be
announced a nd t rop!11 0' prt•,r ntN.l
at the ba lcon&gt;· of thr M0ig' Inn .
Pete Sp&lt;'nc-er of \\"MPO ~&lt;"ill
emcee the pa ra de at thC' Inn .
All local clubs, groups. organi~a ­
tions, bu sinPS~f'S and inclh·idu&lt;l ls art•
invi ted to take pa11 . Anyo nf' who

,.

'

• r•
''

TACKLING THANKSGIVING DINNER- Guerre
Fabacher U chases Thllllksglvlng dinner on his
famDy's farm In River Ridge, La., wlth'lbtulksgiving

Day one day away mMy famUicsaresearchlngforthe
right turkey, but perhaps a Ultle less actively. (1\P
Lascrphoto ).

wishes to entC't " the parade is asked
to cont act the Pomrmy f' hamberof
Comm&lt;-'r(·r immf'&gt;diatf'ly at 992-50)5
or Paul C.:r ~trd at \192-tiO:i9So that the
line up worli can tx• completed. L:-1 t&lt;'
entri0s "' ill be a ccrpted Saturdav
morn ing in Middkport.
'
ThP pa rade w ill move ln Middleport a t 10 u.m. a nd line up""" begin
a t 9 a.m. on Sou th Second Ave.,
whic h will bt' rloS!'d to traffic a t that
(Cant inuro on page 241

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