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Inside today:

F AC yule party...Page· 6
By 1116 Bend ............Pages ~ 7
Classllleds ............ Pages 8-9-10
Deaths ...... ................. Page 12
Editorial ..................... Page 2
'n'-contJ.(Ji •••..••••. ,.•. ,,•Page 11
Sports ...................... Pages 34

Weather
Partly cloud.'· tonight. Low

28·33. Wednesday, mostly cloud~·
with a slight chance of rainorwet
snow. High 4045. Chance of
precipitation 10 percent tonight
a nd 30 percent Wednesday.

Miami humbles Bengals...Page 4

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e
Voi.32,No . l61
C.,rrithtod 19&amp;3

at y

days until
Christmas·

•

enttne
2 Sections, 12 Page•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 29, t983

· 20 Cent 1

A Muh imedie~ Inc. New1paper

Middleport seeks emergency funds for slip
By BOB HOEFlJCH .
Sentinel Staff Writer
Middleport Village will seek
emergency HUD funds to make
repairs to a road slip on
Middleport Hlll.
Thls was among the actions taken
when Middleport Vlllage Council
met In regular session Monday
night.
Middleport Hlll has been blocked
to traf!lc since a landslide took place
. on Nov. 16 from thl! Brownell Ave., .
side of the hill.
Howver, during last night's meeting, Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
several ""gineertng ftrms have
surveyed the damages and have
decided that part of the road Is
satisfactory for traffic. Council
agreed to rent portable traf!lc
signals for the site so that one way
!raffle can he maintained on the hill
and signs warning that one way
traf!ic Is in effect will be posted . The
one way traffic wlll be tor automobiles only with no trucks or ;chool

necessary

.~

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mayor said. However, the use of
buses being permitted to use the hill
road.
such funds requires that 25 percent
Cost of the traffic signals will be of the costs be absorbed locally and
the vlllage does not have the local
$lX) lor the first month; $250 for the
second and $:Dl for the third month
share needed, officials said.
and additional months they are used
Mayor Hoffman reported there
at the location.
are emergency HUD funds availaMayor Hoffman reported two
ble through the Ohio Department of
approaches have been recomDevelopment • for such projects.
mended for the necessary repair
There would be no local funds
work at the slip location . One is to
necessary lf the project were
drive pillng from the top, the second approved, the mayor s!;jted and the
being building of 13 three foot steps work could be done sooner.
from the bottomofBrownellAve., to / Mayor Hoffman said that Kim
the slip location.
Shields, vlllage consultant, has the
The mayor said that Meigs paper work required for such funds
County Engineer Phil Roberts and
almost completed and the village
the Meigs County cOmmissioners W001d know within 30 days if the
have been helpful with the problem
project is approved. Councilmen
and he has met with them as well as voted to authOrize Mayor Hoffman
highway representatives. Cost esti- to make application for those HUD
funds.
mates on the repair work run from
SOO,(KX) to$170,(0) and thecountywm
It was stated the loss of the use of
have federal highway funds, some the Middleport Hill water tower, the
$153,(KX) in the spring, at least a part
need for Middleport Hlll In a flood
of which would be given to situation as well as the safety factors
Middleport for the repairs, the for traffic at the slip will be stressed

in the application. At the best,
MayorHoffmansaid,itwillbetwota
three months before the repairs can
he made.
Council gave a third reading and
approved an ordinance providing
Christmas bonuses of $125 for full
time workers and $62.50 for regular
part time workers of the village and
gave a second reading to an
ordinance providing an approximate 30 cents an hour wage increase
in 1984.
It, was reported that the Mills
Insurance Agency is interested in
the Insurance of all butldings a nd
will have lis figures with council by
the next meeting. Mayor Hoffman
reported that for the secOnd
consecutive year Blue Cross costs
for employes are going to Increase
about 21 percent. CQ!lt per year
under the new rate for the employes
will be $33,435. Mayor Hoftman'will
check other companies on their
charges for similar coverage.
Council, at the request of the

Board of Public A!falrs, es!E.blished
that he felt such concessions h4rt
the position of em ergency clerk for
people who are in the fX&gt;d business.
water and sewage so thai there will
Organizations selling food have
be a person to step In and work in
none of the problems or the costs
case of illness or other emergency
that are. carried by restaurants
s ituations. Ann Bailey is presently ill
which are in the business full-time,
and the ordinance will cover a
Gilmorecommented. Jtwasagreed
replacement for her.
tha t Bob Gilmore or Councilman
New Ohio law provides that a
Carl Horky will serve as a jduge of
viliage clerk's term does not explre
the annua l Ctu·istmas parade Saturuntil April 1 and the term of Jon
day. Councilmen Horky and Dewey
Buck, present clerk-treasurer, ex·
Horton were named to serve on the
pires on Dec. 31. Council approved
firemen· s dependency board for the
the appolniment o!Buck to continue
next year.
as clerk through the end of March .
Council President Carl Horky
The new Jaw is designed to keep the
proposed that the village start
responsibility of preparing annua 1 collecting a $5 ·permissive auto
reports due by April 1, with any - license fee. which, he said, would
outgoing clerk-treasurer, it was
br ing in some $10,1XXJ a year to the
reported.
street maintenance fu nd. It was
A request by the Middleport PTO
pointed out that had the permissive
for permission to sell hot drinks and
auto license fee been In effect, the
hot dogs from a trailer on the street
village might have local funds now
on the day of the Christmas parade
to apply to the repair of the
was approved by a 3-1 vote with
Middleport Hill slip.
Councilman Bob Gilmore cas lingHorky and Mayor Hoffman
the dissenting vote. Gilmore said
(Continued on page 12)

New storm may dump
more ice in ·Midwest
By Cl'N'l1fiA GREEN
another day. Although Interstate Ill
Awriated PreSs Writer
was cleared of 8-foot drifts and
While Midwesterners dug out reopened Monday afternoon,
· from a record blizzard and a trtckle · "we're telling everybody that It's
of travel reswned, forecasters " still Ice-and snow-packed, that there .
warned that a new sister storm is still snow and blowing snow, and
thai travel is not recommended,"
threatened todumpmorelcy inches
on the Great Plains today as the - .said a patrol spokesman in Lincoln .
!lerceweather'sdeathtollroseto68. - -"rcan see drifts from the office
Snow from the new storm began here, and it looks Uke they're six or
falling in Utah early today and the seven feet deep," said ·Greeley
National WeatherServicesaldupto County. Neb., Deputy Bill Callister.
4moreinchescouldtopthelto2feet
"There's nothing moving here In
that paralyzed the nation 's midsec·
town. "
"You're justaskingfor!tbybelng
lion Monday. Travelers' advisortes
were In effect today for much of out," said Bill Brennan of Grand
Island, Neb. "There's cars strewn
Wyoming, northem Utah and eastern Colorado.
all over the place."
As the western Plains braced for
Ranchers In western Nebraska
another, !bough milder, onslaught,
labored to get food to llvestock berds
that were caught on the range
the storm thai left 9-foot drifts In
some areas and brought the during the storm . The Nebraska
Midwest to a halt was still packing a
Livestock Feeders Association canceled its convention, which was to
wallop further east.
Snow continued to ·fall today In
have run Monday thr\)ugh WednesMinnesota , Wisconsin and Michi- day in Kearney, because so many
cattlemen would be tied up trying to
gan, with up to 6 new inches
save their animals, spokesman Rex ·
expected before 1t ended. Freezing
rain and sleet left a slippery sheen
Messersmith saki.
over northern New England.
Monday's dig-out brought tales of
The Nebraska State Patrol adtrtumph as well as tragedy.
vised the hundreds of stranded ·
A phys ician hitched a ride on a
snowplow to deliver a healthy baby
travelers - many of whom bunked
on church pews and armory floors
boyatahOmelnLirnon,Colo., whlch
Sunday nlgh,t - to stay off the roads
was isolated. by the storm. Danny.

•

·,

Ray Brown and his mother. Mrs.
Ll.eonard Brown, were both in good
condition Monday after Dr. 'Thomas
Jeffers ' house call .
A seriously ill Colorado "toddler
was Tescued from his family 's
snowbound farm after a radioed ·
plea for help was heard 1,(KX) miles
away in Oregon. Two-year""ld
Bryan Kester was taken to the
hospital through 18 miles of swirling
snow.
Newlyweds Dwayne and Paul
Simmons of Oklahoma City returned to their snowbound car
Monday after spending the first
night of their hOneymoon on the floor
or a National Guard armory in
Garden City, Kan. But symPIIthet!c
emergency workers helped the
couple salvage some romance they were the only stranded
travelers given a prtvate room, a
makeshift bridal suite In an armory
office.
Lingering showers or snow flu rries were expected to clear up over
eastern New York state and New
England today, while widely scattered showers were expected to dot
southern Florida.
Freezing rain, with dangerous
highways resulting, was expected in
parts of Maine, New Hampshire and
(Continued on page

m

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"''

EnclolledwiiJtltoaysooe.lhfloarwlllo•necttheold .lndepellclente.
bulklllll to the
will belmitaiJotl to

-.lltdu•••lti

\

\

'

I

Timi DRIVER DIDN'T FORGET THE METER
- This driver braved lhe snowbanks in downtown
Minneapolis Monday to p.,g his parking meter. He

I

i(J.

I )¥

~

. .,. ·~I

was one of lbe few to venture out as the second maJor
snowstorm within a week hit l'llinnesota and much of
the Midwest. (AI' Laserphoto).

By KEVIN KElLY
Arother witness will state ThyOVP Staff Writer
ma n said she was laking a brief trip
GALLIPOLIS - Jealou sy was · with Lee on March 20. Meanwhile, a
the motive behind Charles Lee II 's gun recovered by investigators
alleged slaying of . a 17 "year~ld believed to be the murder weapon
Gallla County teenager, said Pro- will be introduced as evidence, ·
secutor Joseph Cain this morning In although Cain said his witness won 't
an opening statement to an eight· say positively It was the weapon
woman , tour-man jury In Gallla used .
The gun, Ca in explained, is
County Common Pleai Court.
Lee, 17, Point Pleasant, is charged defective, and repeated tests with
in connection with the death of the . gun have not s)Jown similar
Barbara Twyman, 17, Rt. 1, patterns.
Recordings of telephone converEwington, on or aboutlastMarch20.
sations between Lee and Furst will
Cain said he will try to prove
through testimony or a witness, be introduced as evidence. Some of
the recordings contain alleged
Shirley Furst, that a relationship
confeiiions to Twyman's death,
between herself and Lee existed.
Ca in said.
Cain said the intensity of the
relationship will be detailed .
Following Cain's statement, de"We belleve It.'s this relationship fense attorney Barbara Wallen, who
that provided the motive in thls
Is undertaking the case with Hamlin
case," Cain said. "We believe the
King, said Cain's use of Furst as a
motive was jealousy that existed 1h
m ajor witness must be examined
this relationship between both
carefully because Furst, in the
parties. This jealousy was not on
defense' opinion. is responsible for
Barbara's part ."
Lee's arrest and subsequent indict ·
· Cain said additional testimony · menton tbe charge.
will refute an alibi that Lee was at
"We ·feel it's Important to look at
two other locations at the time of
the relationship between Lee and
Twyman'sdeath. He will produce a
Furst," Wallen said. "There are
witnesS that claims Lee's car ·was
some things that will shock and
seen in the vicinity of the scene near surprtse you , and we ask you to
listen very carefully, because one or
Ewington on the day of the crime.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
open on a ll three floors. Six of the units in the new
, bullding will he specifically equipped lor the
Sentinel Staff Wrll&lt;!r
Closing on a SL792,00) housing loan for the .. handicapped.
A large corilmunlty room with an outdoor patio will
construction of a senior citizens and handicapped
housing complex on Mulberry Helghtswasrompleted be on the first floor of the new structure along with a
Monday with HUD, Richard Jones, president of the laundry and special activity room. '
Meigs County Elderly Housing Corpora lion, anOn each floor there wlll be small areas for gathering
or sitting along the halls.
nounced this morning.
Jones said that formal groundbreaklng ceremonies - While the century old, county owned, children's
and actual contructlon on the46housingunits wU! take home will be renovated, the basic architectural
place within the next two weeks.
ct.:stgn will be retained. The building has been
Successful bidder on the proJect was the Northland registered with the National Register of Histortcal
HomecOrporatlonofColwnbuswithabldot$1,489,(0). · Places.
TheamountoftbeloanfromHUDincludesnotonly
The parking area wm be on the south side of the
the actual construction, but also the engineering, complex with the road to be constructed to It between
design work and fumtshlngs.
the Meigs Medical Building and the front qf the old
The housing project, spon!IOred by the Meigs County children's borne.
Councl on Aging, has been named "The Maples.'' ·
. The new subsidized housing tor the low Income
The 46 units for the elderly and handicapped eiderb' 81111 handicapped Is adjacent to the Senior
residents wW incorporate the Old 'children's heme Cltla!ns Center In the M1qa Multipurpose Building,
whiCh for the past several years bas housed the Melp rnaklna the eMces of tbat ,faclUty easily accessible
County ·Board of Education and the Meigs County . ID the resldenta.
Cancer otllce. Both have been advl8ed to vacate the
AI expl•lned bY Eleanor Thomas, Center director,
facility and the Board of Education bas alreedy the hot meala, '-lth, transportation, recreational,
annoonced their IDtaltloll to move into the new IIOClal and therapeutic PI\lllranls wU! help the elderly
PomeroY VIllage Hall.
· and handicapped maintain an independent lifestYle.
SJxtem of the IUIIta In the new complex Including a · Mr. 'Iblmal l8ld that many of the elderly need
two bedl oorn ~for themBnaaerwU! be In tl)e dea!nt affordable llousiD8 within a concept ofUSisted
dllldrell'• hllmt hi 111c!q wblle 30 IUIIta wiD be In the resldelltlal IMna which comlllnes shelter and
attachednewiJrlckllldllllnt!tluw-lllllryltriiCIUI'e.
II!I'YIIB 10 that they can maintain their

. . · ~··

'., t i Ll . I W't!

Prosecutor says jealousy
motive, trial in second day

Deal completed
on
elderly
.
.
housing complex in Pomeroy

'

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the other is guilty ."
Describing Furst as ··an unscrup"
ulous woman w,tm did everyt hing to
possess and ruin Char lie Lee.''
Wallen said the relation ship be·
tween Furst and Lee created subtle
changes In 1-e&lt;''s personality, caus·
ing "oneuf 1h ~ most extreme rases
of contrib uting to the delinquency of
a minor 1 and my associate have
ever seen.''

Wallen said defense will attack
the cred ibility of Fm·st, her friends
and 18-year-old son John. whom
defense claims had pla nned to
travel to Ewing1on the day of the
murder with Shirley F urst.
The sheriff's departmPnt investigation, whic h Wallen labelled "inept," will a lso be exam ined by
defense, she said .
Recordings played by prosecution w!U contain alleged confessions
by Lee. Wallen said . but !bose
confessions were only done to shock
Furst.
"He's a young man who had Uttle
or no time to commit the crtrne,'r
Wallen concluded. "He's a physically weak person . You'll hear
evidence that he Is a peaceful
person ... he was u nder the spell of
Shirley Furst."

�•

November 29, 1983

Comment
This year Is the 20th anniversary
of something other than the awful
business in Dallas, and somethlng
much more than a mere anecdotal
success story.
I use the word "anecdote" havtng
reflected on a movtng essay
published in The New York Times

A~
~m~ ~t....-"'T"I~Q~~
~v

R(lBERT L. WINGETI'
..
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

last August by Mr. Charles A.
Murray. He was chief scientist for
the American Institute for Research, described as "a oon·protit
company that evaluates programs
for the government." Mr. Murray
said that the decades otthe '60s and
'70s are distinguished primarily by

!allures: Failures to cope with
problems of unemployment, pov ·
erty; Ulegltlmacy, crime, delin·
quency, alcoholism. Yes, he says,
you can point bere or there to a
success. But these are mere

.. anecdotes."

BOBHOEFUCH

I went to one of these facUlties In
central New York state with
Monsignor William B. O'Brien,
co-founder wtth the late Dr. Daniel
H. Casriel, of Daytop. There were
150 young people there - aged 17 to
25, the majority of them. As one
would expect, . they subltantlaly .
look after t:hermeiYes, do tbelr awn
cooking and houseclealllng.' The
facility has nothing of an u.tllutiooal flavnr Ia It, It!! alone aa)llllhlc
resembling guards, turrets and
pollee dogs. Driving by it you would
think It a rather loose-jointed motel.
It houses boys and girls, young men
and young women, who came, most
of them from the miserable streets
of the dope world. ·Many of them
were thieves and muggers and
prostitutes. They were anything
one needed to he In order to get the
money In order to sustabi the llllblt
that is the nearest thlng to
self·tortuie devised In our hedools·
tic world. And they are perfectly
free to leave the facility at Daytop.
But It isn't easy to come back. Not
at all easy.
·

GeQeru.l Manager

News Editor

A 1\IEMBER of The Associated Press 1 Inland Dally Press Association and the .1\.merlcan Newspaper Publisher Association.
LE'M'EitS OF OPINION are welcomed . Thes sh•1uJd be less than D words
, long. All letters are subjed to editing and must be signed with name. address and
• tel ephone numbe r . No unsigned leilers wUI be published. Letters should be In
: good taste, addre~~ s lng Issues, not personulUies.

Approval by inaction
Congress apparently has approved the Jinuny Carter Library in Atlanta
in the same way it has approved similar presidential libraries in the past-'by doing nothing.
_
· There is one difference, howeyer. This time the Senate at least held a
IJE,aring on the subject.
The Presidential Libraries Act, passed in 1955, requires the General
Services Administration to submit all propOsals for presidential libraries to
Congress.
The law says GSA is free to enter into an agreement for such a library if
Congress does not act withln the 6o days.
As Sen. Lawton Chiles, DFla., sees it. however, there Is one problem "'ith
,
the way the law Is written.
"The act is silent on what Congress is to do to cause a proposal to he
modified or rejected," he told the Senate Governmental Affairs Committee
at a hearing Nov. 9.
: The hearing was held on the 50th day after GSA had submitted its
proposal, which means the 60 days was about to expire.
Gary Brooks, chief counsel of the Na tiona! Archives, said he did not think
that would foreclose the lawmakers from acting later to veto or rr&gt;odify
plans for the library If they chose.
Chiles, however, said the expiration of the 60 days seemed to him "to
Imply congressional approv·a l" of the library agreement.
.
; Chiles, a longtime critic of the rising cost of libraries and other expenses
of past presidents, asked for the hearing.
"This is the first time Congress has chosen to hold a hearing on a specific
library proposal, " he said .
Chiles told the committee that the cost of presidential libraries has
increased astronomically.
; When the act was passed, it was estimated !hat if 15libraries were built
wlthln 100 years it would cost about $1.5 million a year to maintain and
operate all of them.
As it turned out, there are now seven libraries and their annual cost to the
gQVernment averages more than $1.5 million apiece.
.'Chile said he was not singling out the Carter library for criticism . In fact,
'(Ccordlng to GSA, it will he more modest in size and cost than any of the
Ills! four presidential libraries.
: The hearing ended with no action and with no agreement on what action
Congress could take.

..

Berry's W-arld

~

a Catholic prlesi met In an old hOuse
In Westport, Conn. Twenty yeani
later, over 38,&lt;XXJ young peopie had,'
under their counseling, In six
residential cente111 and five day·
lime centers. learned to live withOut
drugs. That was - Is - Daylop.

· In 1963, a Jewish psychiatrist and

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

~

Pressure through cooperation_J_ac_k_An_de_rso_n
wA~l1lNLiTON - · President
Reagan and his top advisers are
meeting behind closed doors with
Israeli Prime Minister Yltzhak
Shamlr and Defense Minister
Moshe Arens. Here's what they're
talking about:
The most important topic - the
principal reason lor Sharnlr's visit
- Is how to Implement the Reagan
administration's decision·to cooper·
ate more closely with Israel in
Lebanon. As I reported earlier, on
Oct. 29 the president ~lgned a ~ecret
National Security Decision Dlrec·
live calling for closer strategic
coordination with Israel In tbe
Middle East.
The decision was intended to
strengthen Reagan's hand at tbe
diplomatic poker table. By the
implicit threat to unleash the Israeli
army with support from U.S. naval
and air forces off Lebanon, the
president hopes to wring concessions out of Syrian President Hafez
Assad without the use of U.S.
ground troops.
For tbelr part, sources told my

associate Lucette Lagnado, the
Israelis are suspicious of the
Reagan administration's motives.
They question Reagan's sincerity
·and fear that hls support for Israel
Is just an election·year tactic aimed
at the Jewish vote.
The second point under discus·
slon Is the lsraeli·Lebanese agree·
ment on the withdrawal of Israeli
troops from Lebanon. Though It
was largely the handiwork of
Secretary of State George Shultz,
there Is some evidence that the
administration now wants Israel to
let the agreement lapse.
The reason Is that Assad regards
the troop withdrawal agreement as
the equivalent- or at least the first
step- in Lebanon's recognition of
Israel. To the Syrian president, any
move by an Arab state that
legitimizes Israel's existence Is bad
news. Dissolution of the agreement
would be a sop to Assad, In hopes of
moderating his opposition to Rea·
gan' s overall Middle East peace
plan.

The trouble, of course, Is that the Israel.
agreement Is also considered lm·
As_sad has pretty well succeeded
portant by Israel, and for the same
In destrying Yasslr Arafat's power
reason. Lebanon would be the first
and bringing the PLO under Syrian
Arab state after Egypt to recognize
authority. He has already made a
Israel. So Shamtr will refuse to
start on phase one by undermining
abrogate the agreement and, for
the Lebanese Christian regime of
the time being, the administration
Amln Gemayel.
will continue to support lt.
And there are reporis that he has
A third, almost as sticky, point at
even begun phase three by arrang.
Issue Is the U.S. plan to create a
tng car bombs in Amman and
Jordanian rapid deployment force
assassination of Jordanian dlplo·
with close American mUltary suP'
mats abroad. King Hussein has
port. Here, my sources suggest that
Issued bold dem,mclatlons of Syria,
Shamlr and Arens wtll he more
but privately the Jordanians are
likely to go along with Reagan. The
worrted sick.
principal reason,. again, Is Assad.
Under the circumstances, Israeli•
U.S. intelligence agencies - and
leaders have far less to fear trom a
presumably the Israelis as well strengthened Hussein, so they will
are Increasingly concerned about
probably concede on the Jordanian
evidence of a Syrian "master plan"
rapid deployment force the Reagan
for expansion. Assad, who has
administration has Its heart set on.
never been faulted for lack of
Ironically, the Kremlin Is as
ambition, Is suspected of trying to · concerned about Assad's ambitions
implement the following timetabl~
as the Americans and Israelis are.
of conquest: first, the Palestine
Intelligence sources have reported
·Liberation Organization, then J..e.
evidence that the Soviets have been
hanon, then Jordan and ultimately
trying to rein In tbe Syrians- but so
far without success.

Is anybody there ?____~ __Ar_tB_uc_h_wa_ld
·-

,

"/ used to have 'the right stuff,' ambition, determination and guts, but I gave it up lor peer
acceptance. "

Today in history
' Today is Tuesday, Nov. 29, the 333rd day ofl983. Thereare32daysleftln
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
pn Nov. 29, 1963, President Lyndon Johnson named a commission,
headed by Chief Justice Earl Warren, to Investigate the assassination of
President John Kennedy.
.On thls date:
·
In !Bro, the flrstArmY·Navy football game was played. Navy torpedoed
Army 2W at West Point .
. In 1922, archaeologists announced that they had found fabulous treasures
wjlen they opened King Tut's tomb in Egypt.
.-ln'I929, Navy Lt. Richard Byrd radioed that he'd made the flrsta!Jplane
· (\Jght over the South Pole.
1n .1948, "Kukla, Fran and Ollie" - and the rest of the Kuklapolitan
Pl;lyers- premiered, live, on NBC·TV.
; And In 1961, Enos the chimp was launched in the Mercury·Atlas V
S{l!elllte from Cape Canaveral, orbiting the earth twice and landing off
Buerto Rico.
' 'fen years ago: The While House charged that the staff of the special
Watergate prosecutor had displayed an "ingralnecl susptclon and visceral
diSlike" for President Richard NiXon and h1S administration.
. five years ago: President Jimmy Carter placed a ceDing of $8.5 bllllon
oo ·the amount of anns that could be sold in llscal 1979 to nations not aWed
with the United States.
;One year ago: President Reagan Iefton a five-day trip loLa tin America
tO, ;among other things, repair relations strained by U.S. support for Brttatn
In .the Falkl•nds conDJct.
·
·Today's birthdays: Sportscaster Vln Scu1ly Is 56. Musician Chuck
Mangione is '43. Skier Suzy Chaffee is :rr.
·

'

By The Associated Press
Sam Perkllts and Kenny Smith,
ey operatives for No. 2 North
:arollna's attack, were late for the
earn's pre-game meal and. conse:juently, were not in the starting
lineup for their game against
Tennessee-Chattanooga.
But Michael Jordan had a.strong
game with 28 points and Perkins
came o!f the bench to add 16 as the
Tar Heels broke open a close game
early in the second half and· ate up
their visitors 85-63 Monday night .
North Carolina Coach . Dean
Smith, who won his 498th career
game, disciplined Perkins and
Smith for being five minutes late to
the meal as Dave Papson started
ahead of P erkins and Steve Hale
replaced Jordan.
The Tar Heels, 2.0. led J3.30 a l
halftime before Tennessee·
Chattanooga, the Southern Confer·
ence champions. surged . ahead
early in the second half. That's when
North Carolina used a 14-2 streak to
get out of trouble.
Brad Daugherty ·added 16 points
lor the Tar Heels, who had dropped
from No. 1 'to second behind
Kentucky In the Associated Press
poll released earlier in the day.
Only two other Top Twenty teams
played Monday - 121h·ranked
Lou.islana State beat North
Carolina·Wilinlngton 94-59 and No.
15 Boston College routed Stonehill
97-63.
. Jordan said be felt slightly miffed
that Moccassin d~fenders were
talking to him during the game In an
attempt to distract hlm.
" It got me angry and it gave me
extra Lncentive," Jordan said. "1
concentrated on executing the
defense a lot harder.''

Daytop'S 20th ______~W_i_llia_m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_J_r.

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

My last column dealt with
subliminal voices. This one deals
with liminal ones. We are now
entering the age of recorded
messages. I dldn 't realize how
pervasive it was until I had to fly to
Atlanta the other day. After I
deplaned I took a long walk and
then a long escalator into the bowels
of the earth, and waited for a
tw&lt;&gt;&lt;ar train to take me several
stops to another long escalator
which would bring me back up to
the ernst to claim my baggage.
The train pulled In and a voice
said. "This is the B station. Please
enter and go to tl,te center of the
train."
This was a reasonable request,
but as I followed the mob trying to
board, my carry·on tiag got caught
and I held the door so J wouldn't be
dragged along the train. The voice
said, and I swear I am not making
thiS ·up, "Someone Is holatng the
door and preventing the rest of you
from moving. "

out on the train. I quickly fastened
the safety belt. The voice r~ated
Itself, "Your safety belt Is not
fastened." I undid It and fastened It
again.
The voice repealed, :•your safety
belt Is not fastened."
After helng told two more times I
called over the rental attendant.
"This car keeps telling me my
safety belt Isn't fastened."
"Don't pay any attention to It," he
said. "It's been telling our custo·
mers that lor three days."
I drove to my hotel. By the time I
got there I was smashlng my fist
against the dasl)board.
.
I checked Into one or those huge
glass greenhouses with the eleva·
tors on the 'outside of the building.
As soon as I got In the voice said,

"There Is no smoking on the
elevator. Press the button just once.
This elevator does not go to the roof
garden. U you wish to go to the roof
garden take the elevators on the
other side of the lobby."
, "I don't want to go to the roof
garden, and I'm not smoking," I
yelled. A couple took one look at me
and got off.
I finally got to my room and
locked the door. The first thing I did
was search It for loudspeakers. U
they were there they were carefully .
hidden. Then I called down for room
service. A recorded voice ans·
wered. "All lines for room service
are busy now. Please hold on until
someone Is available to take your
order." I slammed the phone down.
Then I turned on the TV set. It

was the same voice. "In case of fire
follow these Instructions carefully. "
I turned ort the set.
There was nothing left but to go to
sleep. I left a wakeup call for 7 ;l.m.
The phone woke me up. "It is 7
a.m."
"Thank you," I said. "What's the
. weather Uke outstde•"
"The voice said, "It Is 7 a .m."
"Look, Is It cold or raining or
snowing or what?"
"It is 7 a.m."'
"Hello. This Is a guest In room
1209. Is anybody there? This Is a
guest In room 1209. Is anybody

there?"
The Voice said once more, "It Is 7
a.m.," and then there was a click
and deadsllence. Therewa.• nobody
there.

Despite the loss, TennesseeChattanooga Coach Murray Arnold
saw some bright spots lor his 1·1
team.
" I saw some prett) · nice things 1
feel we can build on," Arnold said.
"Before we came in here, l fell
North Carolina was No. 1 in the ·
country and I stU! feel that way.
" U we leave here tonight as a
better team , then our time was
well· invested," he said.
Jerry Reynolds scored 14 points
and four other Louisiana State
players were in double figures for
the Tigers. Derrick Taylor and
reserve Nikita Wilson .each had 12
points as I..SU, 2.0. scored the first
eight points of the game and was
ahead 39·21 at halftime.
Senior forward Jay Murphy, who
underwent a rthoscopic kn ~e
surgery three weeks ago, scored 17
of his 22 ;x&gt;ints in the first half to help
Boston College win Its season opener. Junior guard Michael
Adams scored 17 of his 19 points in
theflrsthalf as the Eagles raced to a
~7·30 lead at intermission.

Charles Barkley. an all·
Southeastern Conference junior
recovering from back Injuries,
played only 2'h minutes early In the
second hall but helped rally Auburn
past Columbus College 58-54. Bark·
ley scored just two point~ but
blocked two shots during a streak in
which Auburn scored 10 straight
points to overcome a one·point .
halftime deficit .
Buck Johnson hit 'l7 points as
Alabama downed Cincinnati s:J.64.
Senior forward Art Aaron's 21
points .. paced Northwestern past
Bradley 6342. The game was the
first · for Northwestern ' in the
Welsh·Ryan Arima at newly remO.
deled McGraw Hall.
Ron Tarpley scored 17 points and
Leslie Rockymore had 16 as
Michigan raced to a 15-3 lead and
cruised to a 71-55 triumph over
North Carolina A&amp;T.
Reserve guard J.J. Crawl tallied
14 points to help West VIrginia past
Indiana, Pa., 73461n a sloppy game.
Fred Lee hit 10 of 13 shots from the
floor and finished with 'l7 points,
leading Rider over James Madison

· Kenneth Perkins had 17 points and
Tom Sewelll3 as Lamar extended
the nation's. longest homecourt
winning streak to 69 games with a
78-57 triumph over St. Mary's of
Texas.
Robert Morris College, whiCh has
reached the NCAA tournament the
past two seasons, opened Its season
with an 81Hi3 victory over Lock
Haven as Forest Grant scored 20
points. It w;&gt;s the Colonials' 22nd
straight victory game at home. ·
Delaney Rudd hltfor a gami!-hlgh
18 points as Wake Forest started Its
season by breezing to a 74-59 victory
over Furman.

71&gt;-68.
John Dixon and AI Young keyed a'
15-potnt spree tn the first half that
carried VIrginia Tech over Towson
State 93·53. The winning Hokies hit
'5I of 52 shots from the floor.
Freshman Bruce Dalrymple
made hls college debut by scoring21
points and grabbing 17 rebounds as
Georgia Tech downed Alabama
A&amp;M9!).75.
Junior guard VernonMoorehltan
elght·foot jump shot · over three
defenders with two seconds left to Uft
Creighton past Southern 57·55.

WHEN 'YOU SHOP THESE FOOD VAWES

By The Assoctaied Press
. Kentuckycllmbedpastpreseason
choice North Carolina in the firs!
weekly Associated Press college
basketball ranklngs of the 1983-84
campaign.
The Wildcats had a scant two
point-edge for the No. 1 spot in the
reSults announced Monday as both
schools attracted 24 flrst·placevotes
from the nationwide panel of 51
sports writers and broadcasters.
. Kentucky, a 6544 winner In Its
opening game over previously
sbcth·ranked Louisville, received
9118 points. North Carolina, which
drew 9a6 points, opened the season
with ah unimpressive 64-57 opening
win over unranked Missouri, and
defeated Tennessee-Chattanooga

'

~

Monday night after the
ranklngs had been announced .
Both teams played their season·
openers Saturday. Kentucky routed
No. 6 Louisville 6544, whlle North
Carolina , downed unranked Mls·
sour! 64-57.
The setback dropped Louisville
from the Top Twenty .
Georgetown, fourth In the presea·
son, drew the only other three No. 1
votes for868potnts, good for the third
spot. The- Hoyas opened with two
victories over Hawali·HUo over the
weekend.
MemphiS State, 2.0, advanced one
place to fourth with819 points. Iowa,
1.0 and No. 7 in the preseason, took
over the No. 5 spot with 706 points.
Maryland, 1.0, advanced two spots
to sixth with 612 points.
,Defending NCAA champion
North Carolina State, unranked in

Three S VA C tearns ,
.h
see actwn tontg t

Paris sold to

Ch

isox

Three SVAC schools, Southwest·
em, Hannan TraceandNorthGallla
CINCINNATI (AP) - Utlllty
open their 1983-84 basketball season Infielder Kelly Paris been sold
tonight.
Coach Lloyd Myers' outright to the Chicago White Sox by
Southwestern Highlanders travel to the Cincinnati Reds.
Paris,26, batled.250whlleplaytng
Chesapeake, Hannan Trace hosts
Symmes Valley and North GaUia
tn 56 games for Cincinnati and hit
goes to Oak Hill.
.314 in eight games for the Reds '
The other three league teams former Class AAA farm team, the
opened their non-conference scheIndianapolis Indians of the Ameri·
dules last'week.
can Associatlon,durtng a brief stint
in May. The Reds have since
Southern, the defending SVAC
champ, defeated Gallla Academy , swllcbed thelrCiassAAAafflliatlon
5047; Eastern
to the Wichita, Kan., team In the
High · School,
dropped a 56-48 decision to Federal
same league.
Hocking and South Point downed
Kyger Creek, 64-58.
The loop schedule hegins Friday
night when Southern visits Southw·
estern; Eastern plays at Kyger
Creek and Hannan Trace visits
North Gallla.
On Saturday, Southwestern giles
to Symmes Valley and Kyger Creek
, plays at Mid America High School In
Huntington.

r;~~~~~~~~~~~

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TOTINOPJZZA •••••••••••• ~OJ.P~·~ •••• ~9

Simmons Beautyrest
Stearns &amp; Foster

the181118
rs
covet age needs. State
. Auto recogniZellllia and

·

the preseason, is back among the
elite- No.7- with 602 points after
winning Its first four games. After
upsetting Houston, No. 3 in the
preseason, In the Hall of F'lll1e
Game Nov. 19, the Wolfpack swept
past Alaska·Anchorage, Santa
Clara and Arlmnsas, rdted No. 14ln
the preseason, to wtn the Great
Alaska Shootout title over the
weekend.
Houston, which heat Kansas
Saturday, fell to the No.8 spot with
589 points. No. 9 UCLA and No. 10
Oregon State remained tn the same ·
place.
UCLA, 2.0, received 562 polnts.O·
regan State, whlch opei!s its season
Friday, collected 454 points.
Michigan State, 2.0, advanced a
notch to rank 11th. Then, in order,
came Louisiana State, Georgia,
Arkansas, Boston College, DePaul,
Fresno State, Wichita State, St.
J, ohn's and Virginia
Commonwealth.
In addition to N.C. State, other
newcomers In the TopTwenty, were
Wichita State, St. John's and
VIrginia Commonwealth.
Besides Louisville, other losers
dropped from the Top Twenty were
Kansas, Indiana and Oklahoma.

•BEDDING
Every~ ave

"I can't help It," I shouted. "My
strap Is caught."
The voice sounded angrier.
"Someone Is holding the door. The
train cnanot start."
I finally broke tbe strap and
squeezed on the train. Everyone
was staring at me. I tried to srnlle.
"It wasn't my fault," I said
defensively. A dozen hostile eyes
were on me. The voice said,
"Please do not stand near the door
as we approach station A."
"I'm not standing near the door,"
I shouted at the loudspeaker. "Does
anyone see me standing near the
door?" The other passengers
looked away In disgust.
By the time I got to station A I was
In a cold sweat trying to figure out
how to get ott the train by not
standing near the door. I made It to
the plalform just as the doors closed
hehlnd me.
Then I went to rent a car.It was a
new sedan and when I started It up a
vnlce came out of the dashboard
and said, "Your safety belt Is not
fastened." I could have sworn It
was the same voice who bawled me

.,

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PICNIC

Kentucky heads AP ratings

providn many, m1111y

••

Daily

far Heels make it two in row

-flag• 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Miclclleport, Ohio
Tueclay, Nollelllblr 29, 1983 ·

The Daily Sentinel

The

SUP.ER
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�Page

4 1he Daily Sentinel

Tuetday, No..mber 29, 1983

ight and
arty Salon
meeting held

Scoreboard ...
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By FRED GOODAU.
AP Sports Writer
MIAMI tAP) - The redhot
passing combination of Dan Malina
to Mark Duper is setting the
Nat19nal Football League on flre
and blazing the trail the Miami
Dolphins are traveling toward the
playoffs.
The Cincinnati Bengals are but
the latest victims of the dynamic
duo's destruction, yielding a pair of
touchdowns to the tandem Monday
night durtng a 38-14 IQss to the
defendihg American Conference
champions.
" They've got my vote for the Pro
Bowl," Bengals wlde ·recetver Crts

played against," sale! Duper. a
Collinsworth said of Marino and
second-year pro who moved into the
Duper. "We've been around the
sta1tlng lineup eight weeks ago.
teague now, and those guys are In a
"They really punish you after you
special class at their positions."
catch
ttie ball. Half of my body was
Marino, the AFC's passing effi·
numb.''
clency leader, threw for 217 yards
Marino, meanwhile, boosted his
and three IDs as the 9-4 Dolphins
as a starter to 6-2 and a
record
took a two-game lead over Buffalo In
vlctocy
over Houston next Sunday
the Eastern Division and moved to
will
clinch
the division crown and
within a game of wrapping up the
send the Dolphins into the playoffs.
title.
Duper, whocaughtscor!ngpasses
"You have to say Marino really
of7 and 15yards, had five catches for
kept his cool. He was able to move
84yards, allowing him to maintain a . around and find his recelvers,".said
pace that would give him a
Miami Coach Don Shula, who
l,OOJ.yard receiving season - the earller in the day signed a new,
first In Dolphin histocy.
multi-year contract to remain with
"They're the best defense I ever the team he's guided to four Super

Waterfowl migrating through Ohio
ffiLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An
unusually large number of water·
fowl are leaving severe cold
weather behind and · migrating
through Ohio this autumn, the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
says.
Wildlife biologists making an
aerial survey recently counted an
estimated 175,00J ducks, geese and
swans around Lake Erie and
selected inland water areas, the

departpl€nt said Monday.
The blrds are making their annual
migration to winter grounds in the
southern United States and Mexico.
They probably will stay in Ohio for
three to four weeks.
"This is the largest concentration
of waterfowl I have ever seen in Ohio
durtng my more than :lJ years as a
. biologist," said Karl Bednarik, head
waterfowl btolo!iist for the depart·
ment 's wildllfe division.

Bednarik attributed the presence
of the large number of birds to the
severe cold weather ancl snow which
. has
thanhit
In Canaclaand
past years. Mlchgan earlier

Dcrwrr 79.

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-.;y 1'&lt;11"1
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,·y n.angl-'111~
s ~ :r.l ll.l! 92
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Third Pllil'r
\ 'alrbsta St. i7. St. Lro 61

Nebraska still number one
By The Associated Press
Nebraska finished its regular
sea,on just where it started- as the
No. 1 college football team In the
nat ion - \Vhile runnerup Texas
m~nagcd to in ch a llttleclosertothe
top-ranked Cornhuskers in the
Associa ted Press poll.
Nebraska, bidding to become the
first team to be ranked No. 1 in the
preseason· poll · a nd to hold that
ra nking through the end of the
postseason, received 52 of 55
flrst ~ p lace ballots Monday.
T h&lt;' l2·0Comhuskerswrapped up
the ir regular season by beating
Oklahoma 28-21 Saturday and got
1,007 of a possible 1,l00polnts from a
nationwide panel of sports writers ·
and s port scaste rs in the next· IO·Iast
regular·season poll.
Texas, 1H and the only other
unbea ten·untied major college
team in the country, remained
second for the 11th consecutive
week. · The Longhorns crushed
Texas A&amp;M 45-13 and got three
first· place votes and 1,048 points.
Last week, Nebraska led Texas
58·1 in first ·place ballots and
l ,l79-1,l18tn points.
The rest of the Top Ten remained

the same as last week wit h Auburn,
lllinois and Miami holding onto the
3-4-5 positions with 973, 910 and 885
points, respectively. Auburn, 9·1,
winds up Saturday against No. 19
Alabama. while Tilinols and Miami
have completed 11J.l regular
seasons.
Southern Methodist. Georgia,
Michigan, Brigham Young and
Iowa complete the Top Ten.
SMU beat Houston 32-14, Georgia
edged Georgia Tech 27·24, while the
others finished the season earlier.
The points were824 forSMU, 732for
·Georgia, 694 for Michigan, 649 for
BYU and 586 for Iowa. ·
The 10 teams that were in the
Second Ten remained there, all hough there was some shuffling.
This week's · Second Ten are:
Clemson. Florida, Boston College,
Ohio State, Pittsburgh, Maryland,
Air Force, West VIrginia, Alabama
'and East Carolina.
Last week it was Florida, Clem·
son, Alabama, Ohio State, Boston
College, Pitt, Marylancl, Air Force,
West Vlrglnla and East Carolina.
In the only game Involving
members of the' Second Ten, Boston
College defeated Alabama 20:13.

FRUTH PHARMACY
OF OHIO, INC.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

HOURS . MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00 ,
• SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

PH. 992-2049

126 E. MAIN

Bowl appearances.
"It's been a good day," Shula
aclcled. "First the announcement,
and to have that precede an effort
like this would'have tomal&lt;eyou.feel
pretty proud."
The loss all but ~limlnated the 5-8
Bengals from the playoff picture,
and Coach Forrest Gregg and
players agreed they were their own
worst enemy Monday night.
Cincinnati, which tra iled 17·14 at
halftime, lost two fumbles and
quarterback Ken Anderson threw
two interceptions , one that led to
Marino's 3-yard, fourth·quarter
touchdown toss to tight end Dan
Johnson.
Gregg said errors were the key to
the contest, played before an
Orange Bowl sellout of 74,51);.
"It gets down to this: you can't
turn the ball over four times against
a team as good a~ the Dolphins and
expect to win," the Cincinnati coach
sa1'cl .
,

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· ,The Daily Sentinel

742-2211

I USPS 1&lt;5-!HIO)
.\ Dlvi51on of Multimedia., Inc,

Rutland

SEE THE GRATE BOYS FOR GREAT BUYS

Published t!-VI"ry afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street. by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Compan y. Mul-

CHAPMAN SHOES

VILLAGEPH. PHARMACY
992-6669
271 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH .

POMEROY, OH.

ti media. Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 457fi!l, 992-

Ray Knight captures Hutch Award
'

68

CLOTHING HOUSE

The clepartment' s aertal surveys
are taken twice monthly in the fall to
help biologists monltor waterfowl
-mlgratloQ and to determine the
number of birds flying over the
state.

'

2156. Sc&lt;-ond class postage paid at Po--

n

ldnho Sr. !1.1. S. Uta!'( II'
Lon~ Bi'a&lt;'h St 73, San DIC'I-:0 R:r, OT
l ..()l; AllRP IP!i ~ ~ - 8l. Ca i. ·Davls TO, OT
r-.'kJnr:ma !ll. St 'tvl;tr!ln 's ~1
~1 n Dh"RCJ St 'i'l. _
:.it _ M ary'~. r 11ll.f. fi7 .
0'1'
Sta nford !){ Bemrdj l !-ot. !'J!l
TOU k"'IA.'tt .•:'\-r.i
c.~k' Flt'nfii.o;; 11p-Off Tournament

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Miami destroys Cincinnati Bengals

roloraOO ~- Ar·gh -t2

MlnnPSO!a :11 [)(&gt;troll. ITH

786 N. 2ND AVE.

SOU111ERN TORNADOES -'The 11183-84 Soutbent Tornadoes opened
!hell' season Satunlay with a 110-47 victory over the Gallipolis Blue
Devils. Members of thfi year's squiid Include, front row, left to right,

l'!l. Ok.liilroma Sl. 6."1

TMmS- Arlin.I(!On 69. Texas A&amp; I 61

Da ll,"'-\ &lt;JI ~atth~
T: 1mp.:1 [lay at Sl"o n Francisco
n ('\.·rlantl &lt;ll O.•nvC'r
;\f",,' York Jf'IS rn BalrlmQrl'
;\-tond:t.)', Ot-c. 3

~

Ta rle• on St .

Lamar ill. St Mar:v 's. Tf'xa ~. m
Oklahoma CHy 71., SW Kansas 71l. OT

All .una :11 Wa..~hllrwon
J,m.. AnW:I!'!&gt; Ram~ Ul Phllal!Plphr,t
St l.lu h- ar 7"('" \"urk Gii1111S

2

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Ho.1s1oo

Cincmna ll nt P!tl ~ bunlh

A

r-; _ Iowa

sounnt»J

Orh·uns nt Nf'Yo t:ngtand

1.l

.,

Drakf' 62. El;Jll St. 60
flllnois Tech 81. Oakland 76. OT
K&lt;'nl !'I .'jl}, l'&gt;lt1enbrr~o: -l'r
~Uch!J:an 71. North Carollnil A&amp;T ~
~1lnrwsot.a 96. Indi ana Sr. 70
Mo. SouttFm i2. School of 1he Ol.arb

Ba)•lur

M i ami. al UI1JJ&gt;t0n

Pltll ,!drlphi;t

Indiana, P:a . •16

Mli)WD;T
Dr&gt;~ mit 70. Grand \ "aUt•:'• !\! 6.~ . OT

:n

Bulfalo a t Kan':'&lt;t' f'i ~
C'hrr.t$!0 ill r.rl'f'n Bay

Dustbusterr•
Cordless, rec hargeable vacuu m cleaner IS 1dea l lm
har d·lo·reac h corne1s, shelves. sta~rs. anywhe1e. In·
eludes recharger. 7/9330
111281131

•
Wade CoiGIOily, Kevin Curfman, Tony Deem, Rod Uttlefleld, Tom
Greathouse and Steve Teaford. Standing, 'left to right, Jason Hill,
Trevor Cardone, Dermis Teafonl, Kevin Teaford and Darin Roush.

~t. ~

W lllinols 74. WI!&lt; ·Parksldc 62
Wis.-GrN' n BaY R ButlM' !:!. err
Wayne St .. MICh . lrl, Mlch .-Drarborn 42
XaYiC'I" 75, K('n~·on

Thursda).·, Occ. 1

Walt'S

93. Towson

Vir~ia jJ,

Valparaiso~

!.01- 1\ llF!('It:'S Ralrter.; :IT san O i~o . I til
Sunda)' , DI-e . 4

"'l!lliunu.l H•• ·kl')

Wesr

:m
:no

M i ami ,01, Cinc\nn&lt;JH H

.'-'('\~'

\' h),&lt;ini~ T~ h

\ 11'1J ~- Emory &amp; H ~n ry ~
W. C'arollnu ffi. Mlll~ an 61
Wakr F'Orf'!!t 7•1. F'urman ~

,j.'ll( ~

2 11 n
\\IN
II :'1 fl
I IJ 0
1 1J
0
6 7 0

Tamp.• 1"-t'

1\".C.-Ashe\·111&lt;' 57, K&lt;;. Cllarloft (' ~
J\"E l.nJLslarm 9fi, NW Loo lsl ana 66
Nort h Ca roliJ1a R"o. 1'n.·Ctr at1al"lt.l0g&lt;! f.1
Pt-n!b;.l.,.anla69. Da v idson ~
Ride-r -;6, James Mad lscrl ffi
s. F'lortcla ro, Bet hune-Cookman 6.1
S. Ml~l~lp p11 CE. Rollin s 79
St~u;u n til, M l.'i.Slssippi Coli 67

~rjg

Oe-r m ir

Grwn

="
Moreh"ad 89, Lifrcoln MMWI"ial 57

.m -m .391
- ~ t!Wi ~
~9 w :fl9
. ;,.~ m 2-n

( \'t!!ral

ClliC,I,i::O

Alabama Sr. 93, Bapt lsL S.C. ~
Auburn 51':, Columrus M
&amp;ptl~r 7'6. Toccoo Falls &amp;l
Cmtrnal) 6.1 CffiL Florida 62
Cl tadrl 105, P iedmont ~
Crei¢rton 57. Southern C. :r;
E . Kf'n ltK'k\' 9~. WUmlnwon 5.~
E. Thn~ Sr. 64 , !\'. G«Jr¢a 5-I
F"lorida St 1\l, Tampa 70
Ga. Soutt.iom fll. F:r-km;l ~
Grorgla T{'{'h 95. A.Jaoama A&amp;M 7S
Grambllng St . fa. WUey Coii!'Rl' ~
l.(l!islanr~ St. !W. N.C. -Wilmil.lgtoo ~
Loolslana TN"h 73. \\'. l&lt;mtucky 71. 20T
Mis;lsslppl St. -H. Blrmlnmam Sou th

o 84ti -m m

1
2

G~ts"

.\looday '~ Colll'tl"t' ~kl'lt'»ll St'tll't'!!

n.

Blaclr &amp; Dec/ret'
You'll never run out of l1ght if you keep a Spotli fler"
handy Re chargeable light stores 1n 1ls own case. Du ·
rable plasluc 7/ 9360
14117661

. College scores
Ilosron Coil !17, Sll)rll'hill t\3
Cror)!l' Washingroo 110 Md - E:it~rern
Shon:o i5
H of~rra !{), lL'hlgh :'iM
luna 92, Moq:~ an Sr. 46
t.&lt;l Salk• 7S. Monmourh 00
l.afa_rNtf' ill. M ora~- I&lt;UJ i8
Maln&lt;' tR Si. Mich ael'~ In
t'\'av~·
California. Pa. 1~1
r-!ta,::ar3 100, St. J ohn Pl~ho.'l' 73
PnJI:la.&gt;n('(' Kl, B rown~
Rot.•11 Monts 86, LOCk Ha ~· m St, !i'!
Tt"'llplt' 61. OreJWI 00

'

Spotlifterr~

Good Selection of S~les
&amp; Colors

M'tdn~-.v·s G NTl~'ll

' 'anroo\·l'r &lt;tl Hartford. 7: .'l.'i p.m
ChiC!lji!O &lt;II 1\' Y Rar1J!f'N , i :li p m
Toronto 111 Df&gt;J r-oil . 7:35 ~ , m
Phil ; lctrlphl ~l a1 Edmonron, ~ ::1!"1 p.m

SOU'Ill

. ' ootbaiJ

For Men &amp; Boys
"Great Christmas

Pl tt sbuq~ h

Alabapla Iii. Cinc innati Sl

~UIIonal

long &amp; Short Sleeve

~ay '~ Gamf'

N. \" lslUTldcrs a l St

'"!

J l~

'

Brinker, Ia concierge, leadJni In the the pecans have been 110ld and that '
pledae. Theaalonvoted toilveSS&gt;to fund raising for the year Is nearly
the local tuberculollls nurse, Joan completed.
Tewksbary, for her work with
Several partners will attend the
tubercular !amUies.
pouvlor to be held IJec, 3and 4 at the
Adonatlonsof$l2wasmadetothe
• Hilton Inn East. It was noted that
nurses scholarship fund . Dues were
Pearl Knapp has been appointed
collected and It was noted that four
third member of children and youth
more are needed for the salon to
state
committee.
make goal. Itwasreportedthatallof

e

DRESS SHIRTS

91 JLi

Washing~on

p.m.

Thanksgiving baskets were pre-'
p!ll'ed for famWes with children who
have respiratory diseases. Plans
were also made to remember the
famWes at Christmas time. Toys
and clothing will. be purchased lor
the children of both famWes .
Betty Van Meter, chapeau, presided at the meeting with Eunle

2

BuffiJin Dt Munln.•al . 7.• 1'"1 p.m
at Qtwt«--. ~ .1~ p.m
ChicB,J:o at 1\'M.' J~·- i·.l'. p m

'\

5 11 J 1.1 i)L ,1
~Ond ll)· 's Gume
Ka~:u; Clry l\J, Poniand 1!'1
T'ue!idl\l''!l Gl¥lle;
~ In Antonio 111 Nt"" Y[)fk. 7: 'ti p.m.
/1.1Jl.,.·tJ ukre ar Wa.."ttinl(lun. 7:.l.'l p.m.
Clf"•~·lanrl at Df&gt;r rolt. 7::15 run
[)(•tH'('r a r Atlanta. 7: 40p.m .
Chic ago ar Houston, -;:40 p.m .
· Philadt&gt;lphla ar tndlann, !l: :ri p.m.
Phoo'Olx vs_ tJtah, aT 1...1s \'~:L~. lV lJ
p.m
!-&gt;&lt;In Olewu a t ~an lr · !Ill'! p m.
I.D!&gt; •\n~ I&lt;'S ar Golden StalL'. 10 .' l'l p.m.
M-'t.'ilnc$11U'' " fOIAITil'!i
:-.:Pw York ar r-.:c-w Jrr'SE'J'. 7: li p.m.
All airla ar P hlladl•lphla . '7 :l'l p.m
f\Jrtland .rr (1p,·clarrd. &gt;: 'l.'i p.m .
Si.r n AnloolO a ! Roston. B p.m. ·
•··
[)('IW('I' rlt Milwaukt'f', !l: ll pm
Housron ar Dalla-t. !1: l".o p.m.

Mrs. Tiemeyer noted that two

ARROW

2.1 100 Uti
'11 ~ !I'J

fi
J l.l
Sllnd!!,y '... -~aiii i'"

San 111()l:o

Kansas Cll) al PtKx'fl~. 9::~~
L'rah ar S.:u'! Dl~'(l, 10 ·~ p.m

91
It!

\ "an('QIJ\'i'l' l :&lt;- .Y R.:-tn ~ 1. rif
Tue!;da,y 's GIUllf'!'i

7.~1

·'*
.~

'

H.'i

9ti

Chapler of the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation. It was also noted that
Osby, Mary and Adam Martin
bowled for the " Breath of LUe"
collecting $55 for the lund. Loretta
Tiemeyer, children and youth
chairman, thanked the partners for
their work in the fund drive along
with others in the county who
contributed .

2l

~

4
9

7

\\'lnn 1 p. ~

-

K:lns.l'l Clr;.·

!If!
7fi

70

Srnytbt Dl\·i!•ilotl
19
J(l

~

as

A total of $2,161 wu collected In ·
the annual MeigS County Cystic
Fibrosis fund clrlve, It was reported
at the Monday night . meeting of
Meigs Salon 710, Eight and Forty ,
held at the home of Rhoda Hackett.
Mary Martin and Ruby Marshall
were co-chairman for the fund drive
which has now been completed and
the proceeds sent to tlie Central

1\urrb. hkl!olon

.1
:.

Cl&lt;"'f'land
lndlana

:!l

I

Ml ntlf'!'Oia

.:B5
.'5il

fl
11

79

~ 10
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('ampi~U ( ..nk." '''lt•

1m. 21.1

..m

6 9
Otvl!;lon
9 &amp;
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7 9

f'.oiC.•n

Qurbf'('
Montn'al
HJ t'lfonl

ll~!Nll

Boston
Nrw York
1\'cw JC'I'St'\

21

14 f i l l 3 ) 107
13 E! :t ~ 9'.!
12 11 J 'l1 liD

RuflaJu

Dh·Won

AU.Ic

1

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Adan• DI\'IJJion

Bustnn

CONFERENCE

12

1)1~3~739i

Plllsbuflh

Na&amp;loul S.keUwJI .t_,...-~atn...
B)' 'lbe i\MO&lt;.:liled Pr6iiH
EA.'I~rt.'RN

·n

Wuhlngron

Basketball

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pon lflr'Oy-Middleport, Ohio

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Ray
Knight, a Houston Astros' Infielder
whose last two seasons have ended
with operations, has been voted as
the winner of baseball's Hutch
Award.
The annual award honors the
memory of Fred Hutchinson, who
was managing the cliiclnnatl Reds
when he died of cancer in 1964.

Knight, an Albany, Ga., native,'
has earned a reputation for playing
in pain since he replaced Pete Rose
In the Reds' lineup in 1979.
A shoulder ailment, originally
diagnosed as tendonlt l;l, bothered
him through the 1981 and 1982
seasons after he was traded to the
Astros. However, surgery showed
an acute lnflamma lion ofthe rotator

I

Sports briefs...

'

HOCKEY

NEW YORK (AP) -Right wing
Mike Bossy of the New York
Islanders, who scored fourgoalsand
collected four assl'ts while stretching his consecutive-game pointscoring streak to 14, was named the
Na tiona! Hoc~ey League's Player of
the Week.
CHICAGO (AP)- Chicago Black
HawkscenterTomLyslakagreedto
drop his federal court suit against
the National Hockey League since
the NHL.s ald it would let him appeal
his 20:game suspension for tripping
a game official.
TENNIS
MELBOURNE, Australia (i\P)
- Zina Garrison defeated Yvonne
Vennaak of Suuth Africa 7-6, 6·3 in
the first round of the Australlan
Open, while Lele Forood beat
Elizabeth Minter of Australia6-3. 7·5
In the opening match.

BASEBALL
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)- Infielder
Ray Knight of the Houston Astros
whose last two seasons have en~ed
with opera lions, was voted the
winner of bltseball's Hutch Award
which honors the memory o!fonne;
Cincinna II Reds Manager Fred
'Hutchinson. who died of cancer In
1964.

meroy, Ohio.

HOTPOINT MICROWAVE!

Member : The As soc:t ated Press, In·
land Daily Press Assoclaton and th e
American Newspaper Publishers As~
soclatlon, National Adver!lsln!!; Repre-

sentative, Branham Newspaper Sales.
Third AVenue, New York. New

cuff.

7~

York 10017 .

On the opening day of 1983 spring
training, Knight lnjufed his left
ankle,leadlng tocorrectivesurgecy
to repair the protective shield
around his achilles tenclon.
Despite the season-long problem,
he contended for the National
League batting championship, fin.
lshing fifth with a .004 average.
Basis of the voting by major
league sports writers and broadcasters Is overcoming some form of
adversity while displaying the
character and competitive instincts
of Hutchinson, who was a major
league pitcher before manlng the
Detroit Tigers,' St.Louis Cardinals
and Reds.
Annwncement of the aware! was
made by Ritter Collett, sports editor
of the Dayton (OhiO') Journal Herald
and secretary-treasurer of the
s(ionsortng group, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Fund Inc.

POSTMASTER : Send addrpss to The
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l
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\

�The Daily

Tuesday, November 29, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs Christmas parades set

Faculty Exhibit on display .in Gallipolis
The French Art Colony Galleries
will closetheyearwlth works by the
visual arts Instructors of 1983.
A variety of work from stained
glass to oil palntngs will represent
the interests ol tbe French Art
Colony's classes and workShops of
tilt;' past year.
Included In the exhibit will be

p.m. at Ule French Art Colony. The
public Is Invited to attend.
The exhibit will continue through
Dec. 22. Gallery hours are TuesdaY.
andThursday,10a.m. to3 p.m. and
Satuiday and Sunday, 1 p.m. to 5_
p.m. The French Art Colony Is
located at 5:ll First Ave. in
Gallipolis. The exhibit is SJ?Onsored
by Frencb City Florist In Gallipolis.

Elwanda Blake and Cathy Pleska
of Point Pleasant; Bradly B.
Johnson of Pomeroy; Margaret
Brim, Susan K. Clarke, Mary
Henry and Brad Painter of Gallipolis; and William R. Wright of
Bidwell . .
Opening reception for the artists
Is Sunday, Dec. 4, between 3 and 5

Entries for Saturday's Christmas
parade to welcome the holiday
season Into the Big Bend Area are
still bemg accepted.
Entries may be made by contact·
lng the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce office at 992·5005 or by
stoppllnglntheofflcebetween9a.m.
and 4 p.m. this week.
Members of both the Pomeroy
and Middleport Chambers of Com·
merce, sponsors of the psrade for
the two .towns, met at the LaSalle
Hotel and completed plans for the

Decide on
Merillat
cabinets

FAC Christmas party planned
RESPONDING - Meigs C(luntlans are responding to David Clem's
program lor sending remembrances to servicemen In Lebanon. 1hls
group from thll Pentecostal Church In Racme Is shown with packages
prepared lor mailing as a part of the program.
'

Servicemen .to get area packages

..

Meigs Countians are responding
to a program for providing holiday
remembrances for members of the
armed forces serving In Lebanon.
The program was Initiated last
week by Dave Clem of the Portland
area and already some pacakages
have been sent.
Clem urges residents to sh0\&lt;1
their love and concern by baking
cookies, cupcakes, bread. brownies,
sending canned lnners and reading
material to the service personneL
Clem says that he once received
such a package while serving \'J

Vietnam and offers ass01;ance that
such remembrances are a boost to
servicemen serving far away in
foreign lands.
Residents should act a t once In
responding to tht program and
anyone wishing Are Information
may contact Clem at 843·5147.
Packages are sent to one address
and then are passed down to a
marine or a sailor. The address for
the packages is A Marine; A Sailor,
22 MAV Headquarters. Detachment
M, F.P.O. New York, 09502.

Every year. the holiday season
means something special to child·
ages. The magical
ren of
Christmas images of decorations,
Santa and the wonder of expecta·
tlons brightens children's eyes and
leaves them with a lasting memory
of these years of imaginations.
The Freoch Art Colony will·add to

all

their magical images of Christmas
with the annual Children's Christ·
mas Party on Sunday, Dec. 4,
betw!'l'n the hourso f2 and3: 30p.m.
Storyteller Chab ·Guthrie, from
the Bossard Memorial Ubrary in
GaU!pol!s, will present a program

Coll1pletes basic ·
Army Pvt. Larry W, Hendershot,
son of Tina Hendershot of 1113
Evergreen Drive, Point Pleasant ,
W. Va .. has completed one Station
unit training (OSliT) at the U.S.
Army Infantry School. ·

to the chlldren on traditional
American and Appalachian tales of
this season. .
Traditional Christmas carols will
be led by Pam Mathews of
Gallipolis, accompanied by Ginny
Thaler on plano. Refreshments of
the season will be served, and Santa
will join the children on his retur)l to

the North Pole from gather!J!g .
letters all over Ule world.
The Chlldren's Christmas Party
is free and open to all children and
their parents.
'
If ·Santa's letter has not been
mailed, now Is a good time to let
Santa know what expectations
await him this Christmas.

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REWARD
LOST BLACK LABRADOR
RETRIEVER
WEIGHT 75-80 LB.
LOST AROUND UNION AVE.
ANSWERS TO THE NAME OF EBONY

CALL 992-3374

OR

and reaDy
UVEwlth ·
your decision

Toys for the children confined to
Veterans Memorial Hospital wlll be
presented and Chrlsirnas boxes for
shutlns prepared at the annual
Christmas party of the Asbury

,.,

RACINE
PLANING
MILL

books are stored and classes are held, and tbe second
provides entrance and e&gt;dt into tbe main library
through too chlldren's room. The ramps were bulit
through a IRJD grant provided to Middleport VUlage
and complY with a law to make public buUdlngs
accessible to the handicapped.

HANDICAPPED - Some progress Is being made
In providing lor the handicapped in Middleport, as
th1s photo at the vllla!:e Public Ubrary Indicates. Two
entran~ ramps have been completed at the
library. One goes into Ule basement aFea, where

992-3978

992-3471

United
Methodist Women to be held
at theSyracuseChurchonDec.6at6
p.m.
Meeting recently at the home of
Beulah Ward the group voted to
retain the same officers for another
year. Letters were read from
missionaries, Judy Cabbage In
Sierra Leone, Africa, and Douglas
Ruffle, Laprtda Rosario, Argentina.
"Have a Good Day" pamphlets
were distributed.
In the absence of Opal Kloes who
was ill, ~arole Cundiff presided at
the meeting using as her devotions,
Psalm 91, and a meditation,
"Footpril!ls" and "November'' by
Fae Sauer from The Contact.
Officers' reports were given and 45
shutin calls were reported. An
offering was taken and members
turned In their thank offering boxes.

Family Medicine

Why do people get hiccups?
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
ragm itself or of the phrenic nerve .
A!!!Sislont Professor
which controls the diaphragm.
of FamUy Medicine
The phrenic nerve runs from .the
Ohio University College
neck region of the spinal cord to the
of Osteopathic Medicine
underside of the diaphragm and is
QUESTION: I just had a bout of also connected with the · hiccup
the hiccups that took much longer center In the brain 'stem. When it Is
than usual to stop. Can you tell
stimulated, It causes the dtaph·
what causes ·
ragm to contract spasmodically.
hiccups?
This · in turn causes . the glottis,
ANSWER:
which covers the windpipe during
Nearly aU of us
swallowing, to contract, making the
are bothered .
characteristic "hlc" sound.
from time to time
Most people get hiccups after
with hiccups . '
'"'-, ',
they have eaten or drunk too fast or
Even fetuses In the womb hiccup. too• much. Sometimes Indigestion
Fortunately, most hiccups end leads to hiccups. In both cases, the
within :Jl minutes. Occasionally, diaphragm is Irritated by a stom·
however, hiccups go on for hours, or ach that Is bloated.
even days.
QUESTION: Are hiccups ever
A hiccup Is a brief, uncontrollable really·dangerous?
Intake of breath ended by sudden
ANSWER: Usually hiccups are
closure of the vocal cords. The lltUe more than a nuisance. Somedrawing of air Into the lungs Is times, though, persistent hiccups
caused by the downward motion of can Ill' a symptom of a serious
the disphfagm; the large sheet·llke disorder. Strokes and Infections or
muscle which separates the chest . trauma to the brain can result In
cavity from the abdomen. Most hiccups. A heart attack affecting
doctors believe hiccups are caused the underside of the heart, which
by irrttatlon of either the dlaph· jles against the diaphragm, could

•

STEARNS &amp; FOSTER Sale of the Ce~tury
Stearns &amp; Foster
· Retail Prices

Save An Honest50°/o OFF
HURRY

DOnations for the Chrlsirnas
party at Ule Ohio Veterans Child·
ren's Home at Xenia and for the
December birthday party at the
Chillicothe Veterans Hospital by the
American Legion Auxll!ary of
Racine Post 602 at a recent meeting.
The unit also voted to contribute to

REGAL SPLENDOR
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FAMOUS CORRECT COMFORT
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SALE ENDS DEC. 1Oth
2 pc.
2 pc.
2 pc.
3 pc.

Twin
Full
Queen
King

(set)
(set)
(set)
(set)

2 pc. Twin
2 pc. Full

(set)
(set)
(set)
(set)

2 pc. Queen
J. pc. King

REG.

SALE

$480
580
800

$240

1199

599

Reynolds birth
A rose was placed on Ule altar of
UleClifton United Methodist Church
Sunday to celebrate the birth of
Carrie EllzajJeth Reynolds on
ThanksglvlngmomlngattheHolzer
Medical Center. Carrie is the first
child of Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Reynolds. Maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Hudson,
Rutland, and Ule paternal grand·
parents are Mrs. Landon (CattJe.
rlne) Smith and Buddy Reynolds of
Mason, W.Va.

290

400

REG.

SALE

$560
600
860
1360

$280
300
430
680

cause the heart to irritate the
disphragm and bring on hiccups.
Pneumonia In tbe part of the lung
that Ues against the diaphragm can
also cause hiccups.
There's at least one instance
when the hiccups themselves are a
serious matter. Some common
drugs used as anesthetics, lnclud·
lng sodium pentathol, seem to
stimulate hiccups. This Is a poten·
tlal problem because a surgical
patleilt can eject the contents of the
stomach up into hls airways when
he hiccups.
The time period between when
the patient is put to sleep and when
the anesthesiologist is able to place
a breathing tube Into his windpipe Is
a brief moment. If the patient
hiccups and brings gastric contents
up to his windpipe or lungs the
results can be very serious. Doctors
always watch very carefully for
S!ll1fS of hiccups as they prepare
patients for surgery.
QUESTION: Do you have any
sure cures for hiccups?
ANSWER: Forlunately, most
hiccups end on their own In a few
minutes. Many home remedies are
succedssful for different people.
One which has been studied
,recently showed that 10 out of 20
chronic hlccuppers found relief by
the .Raclne Firemen's Auxiliary for
swallowing a spoonful of granu·
the children's community Chrtst·
lated sugar. It appears that the
mas treat. It was also noted that a
rough
texture of the sugar Irritates
member had made 24 ditty bags to
the
esophagus
and somehow.s eis up
be taken to the Chillicothe Veterans
reflex
which
triggers the termina.
a
Hospital and it decided that the
tion.
of
the
hiccups.
Auxiliary will provide several items
Other folks stop their hiccups by
for the bags.
breathing
Into a small paper bag for
The Chrlsirnas meeting was sel
10
minutes,
by holding their
about
for Dec. 19 at the hall with a 6 p.m.
breath
or
by
drinking
water. In the
potluck dinner. Therewlllbea$3glft
rare
Insta
nee
that
these
measures
exchange.
don't
stop
the
hiccupping
episode,
a
Mrs. Julia Norris presided at the ·
may
try
one
of
a
couple
of
doctor
m.~tlng which opened In rlruallstlc
drugs which have shown to be fairly
form. Officers' reports were given.
effective
in terminating hiccups.
The traveling prize was donated by
ln
the
very
rare Instance where
Betty Van Meter and won by Leora
none of these measures helps
Young. Potluck refreshments were
chronic
hiccups, surgery can be
served.
done to block the nerve going to one
side of the diaphragm muscle. 1

Calendar
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, Middleport will
hold a ·practice for installation.
All new officers and Installing
officers are urged to attend .

MfiJ

POMEROY - The Hobson
Gospel Four led by Paul McKin·
ney will appear at Ule Salvation
Army, 115 Butternut Ave ..
Thursday, 7 p.m. The public is
Invited to attend.

Happenings
CB Club sale
POMEROY - A bake and
candy sale will be held Sarurday
at Krogers by the Ladies
Auxiliary of the Big Bend CB
Club starting at 10 a.m. Proceeds will be used In the annual
Chrisirnas projects for needy
families.

MASON - There will be a
Christmas Bazaar Sarurday
Dec. 3, from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m.
at the Mason Ftre Station
sponsored by the West Columbia·
United Methodist Church.
Homemade soup, sandwiches,
candy, and craft Items will be
available. Items will be availa·
bte for carryou t.

~!=~~!!~

COMFORT CLOUD

DYNASTY

Twin

Full
Queen
King

(set)
(set)
(set)
(set)

$640
740
1000
1500

$320 '
370

THE
SHOP
will again be processing

750

•OUR VERY BEST
•1 S YR. QUALITY

•

Cut· Wrapped· Frozen

FURNITURE

SHOWCA.SE

OF THIRD AND OLIVE - GAtLIPOLIS,

446-3045

•FREE DELIVERY
•FREE PARKING
•FINANCING AVAI~BLE

.

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AMANA

MICROWAVE
OVENS ...

0

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Only$1
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1G-touc:h c:ooklng lu"ctions.

Digital reedoul

STEREO RECEIVER
Two-tape monitors with dubbing. High
sensitivit~ FM front end . A/ B speaker
switch, 20·watts per ch. min . RMS, both
ch. driven into 8 ohms from 40-Hz-20Khz
with no more than 0.07% THO .

PILOT STEREO
Only $10 A Week
ZENITH
COLOR TV's
Only$975
A Week

ALL NEW APPLIANCES
NO CREDIT ·cHECK
FREE SERVICE
NO INTEREST CHARGE
WHY BUY WHEN YOU CAN RENT?

ELECTRIC
DRYER
0 A~EEK

r-:
·

$8°
All Coupons Must Be Turned
In By Dec. lsi

18 LB.

AUTOMATIC
WASHER
$1Q00

AWEEK

r-;;;;~~~;~;;0~;~~;;;~~;-1

deer this season.
PHONE

OPEN DAILY TO 6 P.M.
MON. 8o FRI. TO 8 P.M.

I~~--------.,
AMANA

18 LB. NEW

WED. &amp; THUR. JIM PAYNE
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
THE LONE WOLF BAND '~thn:~~

5QO

Refrigerators, Gas or Electric Ranges ,
Washer and Dryers and Freezers

TELEPHONE 992-7028

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
2 pc.
2 pc.
2 pc.
3 pc.

WE RENT EVERYTHING

Bazaar set

WE WELCOME YOU
TO TRY OUR NEW
SPECIALTIES
ENJOY THE GREAT
FOOD AND FINE
NEW DINNER HOURS
TUESDAY· THURSDAY ·
5-9·
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
5-10

SALE

r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiii

II '1111

ATTENTION
DEER
HUNTERS!

REG.

Mrs. Lisle assisting. Members sang
the doxology, and the spiritual life
closing was by Mrs. Cundiff. Others
attending were Marcia Karr, Nora
Houdashelt and Nora Houdasooit.

lHURSDAY

CAw

----------·

•HEAVY FOAM TOP
•15 YR. QUALITY
OR

The birthday of Mary Lisle was
noted.
The program on Thanksgiving
was given by Helen Teaford with
Ann Sauvage. Irene Parker and

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, Middleport will
hold initiation for three candl·
dates Thursday at 7: 30 p.m.
There will be potluck refresh·
ments' and a $3 to $5 gift
exchange.

Legion Auxiliary meets

Year End &amp; Discontinued Covers On Our 4 Best Selling Premium Sets of Bedding!

-

band. The theme will be "Home for
ihe Holidays".
Alter moving through tbe Pome·
roy business district, theparadewUI
disband at the Dale Hill Ford
Tractor Co., and will reassemble
under the Pomeroy.Mason Bridge
for moving through Middleport.
Winners will be announced In
Middleport .
Treats of candy will be distributed
to youngsters following the parade
through the two towns.
·

Asbury UMW making holiday packages

A. Merillat kitchen Is a
decision you can really
INe with. Fumltlre quail·
ty finish; "wtpe.Ciean
Lelsw'e-11me" lnteobs;
slide-out trays and ad·
juslllble shelves. AI Jn.
cklded.ln the low afford·
able price. See us today!

Rt. 124, Syracuse

event at a meeting held Monday at
the LaSalle In Middleport.
The parade will form at 9: 30a.m .
Saturday behind the former Pomeroy Junior High School, moving out
at 10 a.m. for Middleport.
There are five categories of
judging for entries In the parade
which Is headed by Dr. ' Craig
Mathews and Brian Conde. They
are outstanding automoblle entry;
best overall float , best religious
float, most outstanding band and the
best marching unit, other than a

1
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FOR THE HOUDA Y SEASON
CALL NOW TO ASSURE A RESERVATION
BEFORE IT'S TOO LATE

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992-3629

I

·-----------------------J
UNDE@ NEW MANAGEMENT

ONLY

$1500
A WEEK

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN

CALL TODAY!!!
••'

'

,,.

)

�•
Tuesday, November 29, 1983

Ohio

Tuesday, November 29, 1983

First profit-sharing checks
range from $250 to $600

•

I

Lynchburg, Va., Monday, stripplngtheshelves ofl38

.

...

·S cientists
plants, one crewman dizzy

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time-lapse pictures , what happens
when there is none.
Merbold and Parker continued
the Spacelab mission of subjecting
orbit ing humans to tests to see what
causes space sickness, at one point
placing their heads into a rotating
dome painted inside with dots of

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- The scientists aboard Spacelab.
not content with testing their own
bodies to learn how humans adapt to
space, turned today to a relat ed
question: How doylants knowwhicl]
var ious sjzes and colors.
way Is up when there is no up 7
The sfowly whirling dome was
Except for the usual minor
designed
to induce a sensation of left
hitches. the shuttle Columbia and
right
rota tion while a camera
to
the $1 billion European-built labora·
the
subject's eye move·
records
tocy in ltscargohold weredoingwell
ments.
The
pictures
will be analyzed
after their Monday launch. And so
when 1he shunle returns home.
were the six men aboard the orbiting
ThiS first use of Space lab, with 73
spacecraft, with one fleeting
experiments scheduled before Co· exceptiGn.·
Byron Lichtenberg, a biomedical lumbia lands in California on Dec. 7,
engineer from the Massachusetts monopolized air-to-ground conver·
Institute of Technology, was unable · sa lions. Little was heard from
to complete a "hop and drop" test in spacecraft comri1ander John Young
which he jumped. then let elastic and pilot Brewster Shaw, who had to
bands pull him to theSpacelabfloor. guide the spacecraft through a
Lichtenberg complained of "a little series of changes in position to
dizziness and disorientation" and satisfy requirements in five major
Mission Control assured him that scientific disciplines.
Lichtenberg and astronaut Owen
"you did the right thingtostop when
Garriott
spent two houri on the
youdid.''
complex
job of turning on equip·
The astronauts split into two
ment
in
the
23-foot-long Spacelab,
teams for their round-the-clock,
reached
from
Columbia's middeck
round· the-world experiments and
by
a
tunneL
Astronauts
and scient ·
about midnight EST - dawn in
ists
worked
in
jumpsuits.
Europe - the red shift took over
Garriott and Parker are mission
with West German scientist Ulf
specialists,
able· both to work on
Merbold in the la boratory along
shuttle systems and in Space lab.
with Robert Parker.
Merbold, a physicist wit h the
OneofMerbold' s first tasks was to
Max-Planck
Institute in Stuttgart,
photograph some dwarf sunflower
WE'St
G€rmany,
Is the first non·
seedlings, in various stages of
American
aboard
a
U. S. spacecraft.
growth, to observe the growth
He
and
Lichtenberg,
a researcher
movements of the plants In weigh·
from
the
Massachusetts
Institute of
tlessness. On Earth. growing plant
Technology,
are
the
first
payload
parts move in tiny spiral patterns,
specialistsnon-astronautsto be
but scient ists dont know why. The
on
a
U.S.
spacecraft.
They
began
the
movement, called nutat ion, is
mission
with
electrodes
glued
to
affected by gravity and scientists
their
heads
and
chest,
planning
to
want to see, through a series of

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wear them through landing.
Lichtenberg started the mission's
first experiment, a study of the '
effect of space .on human lymphocytes, the blood cells that are a key
element in ihe body' s protection
against disease.
He injected an activating chemi·
cal into an incubator holding
lymphocyte samples. The·samples
will be a llowed to incubate for 70
hours and th~n will be froren and
preserved for study on the ground.
In this way, scienlists hope to
discover how weightlessness affects
human immunity.
Garriott as well as Lichtenberg
tested their sense of balance in
weightlessness using a harness that
anchored each in turn to the
Spacelab deck with elastic cords.
They did a series of hops and then
grasped a handle to raise them ·
selves. A computer then randomly
released the handle, causing ihe
astronauts to be slingshot toward
the floor, simulating a fall. Instru·
ments on their heads and legs
recorded how they regained·
balance.

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By HARRY F . ROSENTHAL
Assoclared Press Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston tAP)

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1400

Upoo i&amp;W &lt;&gt;&lt;d o

S.oiiiOotln-.IG"

11 00

~ · -~·•11'1• -·~~·

-·

.... .""'

fort at al l times Both ·are begin·

Printed Pattern 4635 Women's
Wars! Sizes 33 . 35. 37, 39, 41 \\,
44 mches. Yardages in pattern.

$2.50 lor eoth pattern. Add SOC .
lor each paHorn lor posllge
and handliog. Send to:
Anne Adams PaHerns.
Reader Mail ·
1 '' l
The Daily Sentinel
241 West 17 St., New Yo&lt;l, NY
10011. Print NAME, AOORESS,
ZIP, SIZE, and STYLE NUMBER.
. THE RIGHT CLOTHES at the

•,

11ght price are yours when you

'

sew' Send now lor NEW FA~L·
WINTER PAnERN CATALOG with
free paltern coupon i$2.50
value). Calalog, $1.50.
AU CRAfT IOOtiS .. $2.00 each
13l·Add a Bloch. Qoilts
126-Tlrrilt! CraflJ Flowers
IZ!i-Pelal Qoilts
121-Pillow 'Silow-olls
Books and Catalog - add 501

..·.

each lor postaRe and handling.

Three acres with a nicely constructed concrete block home 26x60. 3 bedrooms, one
bath, 12x15 living room and 24x24 family
room. Partially carpeted, fuel oil furnace
with facilities for woodbumer. 12xl5
block sto~age building, 20x30 block garage. Right off Rt. 248, country setting,
1/2 mile east of Chester, Ohio.
LOT in Racine Village, 75x150.
ties, Yellow Bush Road.

279 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh .
J'

~~~~Located in H&amp;R 1o0"~

.-o Block Building .,._
Lt .J.2 mo. od.

FIIID IT

~nr:
3 Announcements

_/

4635

WAIST

control tor even

33"-44 "

bum lng.

61-/A.-. -/1.1..-~

I

snell, UltraSOniCIII't'

tested tor teaks.

• Five Year Limited

warrantv.

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland . Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm_EC!uipment
Parts &amp; Service

Amokt Greene

ENGRAVING
320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA .!
1·304·675· 1353 :

1-3-tf,

Name'----------1I

1!111

counts as 1 word. Count

You'll

ge1

~;

be1ter results

vou describe fuUy,
give price. The Sentinel Ta J5

II

--:•

0

· ·: ;

classification if you'll check the ,._,. boK
below.
C !Wanted
C )For Sale

c )Announcement

( )For Rent

II 1I 22. 29. 1121 6. 3tc

FOR SALE

LAST CHANCE
TO SAVE ON OUR
PRE-SEASON SALE

SAVE
TO

45°/o

. BEAUTIFUL
GRAVE BLANKETS
FOR CHRISTMAS

Different Sizes
and Prices
For Mort lnforllllflon

CALL 985-3843

I

1.-----.2
3.. -----_ _ _ _ __

5.====

··----6.

7. _ _ _ _ __

8. _...:,_ _ __

9. _ _ _ __

t8.
19, - - - - -

20.----21.-----

22.
-_
-_-_-_23. _
_
2•. - - - - - ' - -

25. _ _ _ __

26. _ _ _ _ __

27.====

28. _ _ _ __
29,

12- - - - - - -

31.

13. - - - - ' - - - -

'32.

t6. - - - - - -

..

___._ _ __

30. _ _ _ __

lA. - - - - - -

Crae.k Bridge. Follow ligna.

17 . _

10-_
-_
-_
-_11 . __

15. - - - - - -

DIRECTIONS: Southam Ohio Rt. 7,
&amp; milea below Galllpolia to Raccoon

'·-

The!e caslt rates
include discount

-

38900 SR7

ReedsviiiA, Oh10
45772

RESIDENTIAL-New
and re-wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL
All Work Guaranteed

Keep That Natural
Look ~n Your Home .

Call 614-742·2214'

CALL

PH . 992·3466

PROFESSIONAL
FLOOR SANDING
and REFfNISHING

1011 9/2 mo

378-6349

After 5 P.M . '

11 ·17 I mo.

11 ·15·1 mo. pd.

SKATE-A-WAY
Chester, OH .
Open Wed., Fri .. Sat. Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available lor private par·
ties Mon.. Tues., Thurs.
Niles. Sat. or Sun. Alter·

noon.

THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI. , NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI .. DEC .'I6
PH. 985·3929
or 985-9996
IJ.l4· 1 mo.

pd

:llliQWIUitiilliill

2

In Memoriam

CALL NOW

Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"
· limited Offer
Call 985·4225
_. Ask for Guy Shea ·
Independent Kirby Dealer
10 24-l

MINE RUN

IT'~

STRIP
COAL

$3QOO
PH. 992-2280
2-23-tfc

Discover Engage-A·Car, the
modem answer to soaring
new car prices! Drive the vehicle of your choice ... any
make and model. No down
payment. lower monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Send for Free Booklet L· 16.
Bob Blackston, an autho·
rized independent EngageA-Car Broker. Box 326, Po·
meroy. Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614·992·6737
l l f2111~

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free sidinges·
timates, 949·280 1 or

949-2860
No

Sunday Calls
3·ll·IIC

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTTAGE
317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport , Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and
. Candlewick Supplies
Giving Lessons
Take Crafts on Consign·
ments. also have craft
gilts.
HOURS: 9·3 Mon. thru Sat.
9· 6 friday
10·31·1 mo -c

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

RECAMATION

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

'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling
949-2293
Racine. OH.

nrl

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·tfC

742-2328 4-21 · 11 &lt;

R l -tk

USED
APPLIANCES

S&amp;W

selroad Sr . who passed
away 14 years· ago today.
November 29. 1969 . Sadly
missed by family .

3 Announcements
SWE.EPER and sewing ma·
chine repair, p8rts , and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery . Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half miltt up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call
No Hunting , Trespassing or
Splotlighting on Rogers
property . Fairview Ad ., Harrison Twp .
Gun shoot Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory choke.d guns
only.
Vacancy : Julia ' s Perso_nal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesenca
Home, 18 years experience.
Clifton . W .V . 304 - 773 -

5873.

cake decorating supplies.
Anns Cake Decorating &amp;
Supplies in Tuppers Plains .

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester, Ohio
Ph . 9B5·4269
If No Answer, Call 985·4381

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

Oewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makes and Mode!s

Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop

742-2352

Route 4, Pomeroy

SeNice Awailable
II

TFN.

~

I

mo pr!

No hunting on Letart Nature
Preserve , behing Letart
Comi'J1unitv Builtling .

Giveaway

4

Five puppies 6 Week s old to
good home . Call 614 -446 -

0B61 .

33.
34.
J5.

. Mall This Coupon with Remittance
Thi Dally Sl!lflnel
111 Court St.

~-----~~~~~~~~~~-------J

3041.

4 mo . old kitten, gray
striped, has had shots. Call

614-379-2196.

/2 Beagle male pup . 4 %
months old. 949-2644 .
1

3 cute Christmas puppies ;

304-675-3118.

6 black mixed pups . 992 -

3100.
- - - -- -- - ·lc -

White Persian cat with 5
kittens, 4 white and 1 black
&amp; white . 8 weeks old . 705
South 2nd Avenue in
Middleport .

6

Lost and Found

LOST Reward for return of
or information leading to
return of " 3 mo . old
Australian Blue Heerer . male
puppy . Vicintiy of St. Rt.

554-Eno. Cart 614·38B·
9357 avo ., 446·9786 days.

LOST- White German Shephard in Addison area .
Answers to Prince . Call

614-446·8095.

9~64 .

•DOZER
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•UMESTONE .
•WATER. GAS and
1

~

SEWER LINES
•PONDS. RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARfNG
•CONCA ETE WORK

FORTS WITH
LIFE·LIK.E
·- • =
SPECIAL
DEER.A QUALITY,
REWARD YOUR
EF · ..~~~ON;~LY!!~!1~'
• ~-~
SHOULOE:R MOUNTATOURSTUDIO
. BR1NG II
. , ....

'BONDED &amp; WORX GU!RANIEID

EACH M~T IS GIVEN THE: P£R·

T11E

SOHAl AITENfiON IT DESERVES TO
Gl~ 'YOU A PRIZE TROPHY THAT
""'""" Y£AR. .ND YEARS.

TAXIDERMY
sHOP

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992·7201 H ·tf

WHEN THE MANY HOURS Of HUNT·
lNG FINALLY PAY OFF WITH THAT

SERVICE
We can repair and re·
core · radiators and
·heater cor•s. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

HILL

PAT
FORD
992·2198
Middleport, Ohio
1·13·1fC

.

.:

~

r~\~i:''t

FOR CURRENT PRICES

~AND OTHER GAME

RADIATOR .

REMEMBER .

iT~RUS,;TY~OUR

l,lj~• m1ARD .

1•·· :·

RUHAND , OH
PH . 742 ·2225 II 'I 11110

Auto Glass
{~-~ "AUTOGLASS .
1

'

lAnd,

f,. I~

HOOfs: 5~ I to
1:00tz·OO
to 7,00
IIOOfl Radio .

POINT•MACi
'.,.,.

Rt. 33

AUTO GLASS

(~) m -5710 . 773-5118

Mason. wv

clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev .· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

wood. Call 614·256· 1528.

Wanted To Bu_y

446-3672

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furni tu re, 446- 3159, 3rd . &amp;
Olive St .. Gallipolis, Oh .
Used mobile homes and
truck campers . Call 446 -

0175 .

Wt.nted to buy . New. used &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or . complj)te households. Al so complete Auctioneering service. Call Osby

A. Martin 614-992-6370.

Buying daily gold, silver
coins , rings , jewelry , sterling
ware, old coins, large currency. Top prices . Ed . Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave .
Middleport, oh . 614 -992-

3476.

Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer
Hides-Ginseng , Trapping
Suppli~s . George Bu ckley.
At, 2. Athens, Oh . Phone

614-664-4761 1-9 Daily .

BEDS-IRON. BRASS old
Furniture. gold. silver dol·
Iars, wood ice boxes, stone
jan. antiques. etc . Complete
households . Write M D .
Miller, Rt . 4 , Pomeroy , Oh

45769 or 992-7760.

Used 12 inch Planer in good
condition. 304-675-4004.

Will cut and deliver firePreVious Dav Care Director
will do baby stiiting in rhV
home Mon .-Fri. Call 446 --

71 24.

.~

.

McDaniel Custom Butchering. Open six days a week.

7:30 to 6:00p.m. 304-882·
3224.
Fhia11Gial

21

Business
Opportunity

t NOTICE !
THE OHIO VAllEY PUB·
USHING CO . recommends
that you do busineSJ with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
meil until you have investigated the o-Hering.
Bu s iness Opportunity looking for someone to take
over clothing business. in cludes inventory , fixtures
and supplies. Phone 304-

675-1317 or 675-3217 .

22 Money to Loan
HOME lOANS FIXED
RATES 121!2% purchase or •
refin ance. 11 If~% adjustable
rat e. Leader Mortgage ,

Athens, t ·800·341 ·6554

11

Help Wanted

Lady wants ride from Eureka
to end of bridge in Pt.
Pleasant every Friday morn-

Ing. Call 614·256·1198.

AVON There are 2 ways to
make money with AVON .
Call for information. Call

23

Professional.
. Services ·

PIANO TUNING low er
p_r ic es - r e gular tuning sdl scounts to Senior Citizens
Church es &amp; schools . Ward ' ~

Keyboard, 304-675·3824.

446·3358.

EMcepting application s Dec.
1 &amp; 2 . J 's Mini Mart. St. Rt.
35 . Rodney, Oh . Apply in
person 1 PM to 3PM .
Must be able to hire and fire.
handle money, run the
whole show. Portland -ba sed
company looking for a local
penon to run a distributor·
ship handling Kodak pro ducts. Only $800 in working
capital will bring $1 ,000
profit every week. Call 503 ·

230-0590 between 10·12

Oregon lime for details. Dial
direct : all calls reimbursed .
Boat club manager caretaker , live on premises .
Housing. utilities . hospital
ins . furn ished . Paid vaca·
1ion, perfect for responsible
couple who enjoy working
with people . Mechariical ap pitude, river experience
helpful, not necessary . Base
salary $600 month. eMtra
income above salary possi·
ble doing boat maintence.
Write giving work expe rience . family . health status
and character reference .
P.O. Box 4221 , Charleston ,

wv 25304.
1- - - -- -- - - -

Help wanted -Women. men
to assist manager with cus ~
tomar service. Earn up t o
$7.00 or more per hour.
Opportunity for advance·
Part time secretary. recep·
tionitt. Reply to P.O . Box
177. Point Pleasant .

~Bill ltililil

31

Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ran ch ho me, large LA,
full basement. with ga rage,
wood burner inc luded, city
schools , 2 miles from town. ·

Cart 446·0276 .

House for sale by owner. In
Pomeroy. Must see to appre ciate. 6 rroms an~ bath
large attic and basement:
large entranceway, pantry.
open stairway . finished ~
floors , old fash ioned wood ·
vvork . firepl aces , large
porch , new roof and partially
in sulat ed. Will sacrafice .
Make an offer. C all 992 -

5354 or 992-7887 .

$2500 down take over $315
mo. payment (taxes and
insurance included. ) JBR .
ranch style . full basement
carport, wood burner, insu :
lated vinyl siding , city :
schools and subdivision . .

Call 614-446·8002 .

owner Must Sell Homer ,
Unbelievable pricellow util :
ities! buy it now ! Middl9port.

Cell 614·992·6941 .
3

'

be~roo!'ls, one floor plan,

eat m kitchen . and dining
room . 1 car garage, gaa
heat, central air, fenced in·
bac~y_ard . storage buil,d i ng_
.
LoQated on Geo rge Creek
Rd . Call 446 -0109 after 5.

992·3374 .

b edroorn ranch s tyle
home. carpeted, full size
ba sem ent . 1 c ar garage. in
gr o und p o ol 1 6x32 .

LOST Diamonds &amp;Bjrrings in
marble container. Reward ·
offered . No quettions atked .

Tree trimming and removal.
Free estimates . 614-992 6040 or 614 -949·2129 .

3

--·-··--··-·· ··-· ·--------·---

Yol'r Business"

.

We pay cash for lat e model

9

High School student would
like to do o dd jobs in Eureka,
Crown City. Swan Creek
area. Call 614-266- 1157.

'-::7'
'

·'

General Hauling and Trath ~. .,_
remov e! Service . Reliable
and dependable. Call 446315 9 between 9 and 5 ,

LOST Black labrador Re t~i8Ver 80 lb . Reward . Lost in
vicinity of Union Ave . Call

_~\

wnen You Need G1itss You Need Us ... We Can Handle
Yaur E_..ry Gtass Neeclf

BIG RIGS_. We can train you
to , dri ve the " 18 wheelen "
at Charlone Dieael Driving
School. The industry today
is looki ~g f or well_-trained,
pr o f essi o na l drlvera , We
ha ve both full and part-time
training . Afte r completing
the train ing you w~l receive;
F!3 deral Certification, FREE
job placement assis~ance. If
you a re ready to STEP- UP'.
call t oll free Charlotte. N .C .

Situations
Wanted

..... ·"Giiiifpoifs··-......

OUA SPECIALTY!"

School•
l nstruction

Locat ed in Syracuse- Near
sch ool &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on one.t.,ird acre lot . $24 .500. or
will rent for $275 mo .

LOST White female long
haired cat. One blue eye and
one yellow . 12 yr. pet. Last
seen at home near Addison.
Reward . Call 446-2806 .

1.------------!...----------..1 Co11992-7342 after 2PM .
GLASS • GLASS • GLASS 7
Yard Sale

,/~·Mason\

~-

- - - ---.....·.

ment. 304 ·5.76·2518 .

FOUND White cat at Silver
Bridge Shopping Plara. Sat.
Call 446-4662 and identify.

•BACKHbE

•

Au ction every Fri. night at 704-597-9550 or toll free
the Hartford Community 1-B00-438-7714.
Center. Truc kloads of new ----~----' •.
merc handise every week . -::-:::-:-:-:--''-----~
¥· ·~
Consigments of new and· 17 Mr'scel laneous
··
used merchandise always
-.
wel come. Richard Reynolds
Au ctioneer. 275 -3089 .
D eer head s mounted . Ste·'
Mt .Aito au ction eve ry Sat. wart ' s Taxid ermy, R-utland,
night , 6 p . m . Star t ing Ohio. Call 614· 742·3006 . .
Christmas seson . No more
consignments will ·be taken
until aft er Christmas. Emma
Bell Auctioneer . 428 -8177 . 1 8 Wanted to Do
WVa. li e. No. 429 -84 .

No hunting trespassing~ ~!~!~~~;~~

Rt . 160. For more informa-

CONTRACTING

16

•'

Farms.

tion call after 6 :00PM. 446 -

J&amp;F

every Tu,tday

~

or Charles Yost
day or night on

- - - -- - - - ·tc -

TV

Auc'tion

night. Pt. Pleasant. wva .
Auct. lonnie Neat. Youth
c. .... Bldg ., Camden St.
614-367-7101 .
.
Rick Pearson Au ctioneer
Service. Estate. Form, An·
tiquo &amp; liquidation sa les.
licansod&amp;bondedinOhio&amp;
wva . 304 ·773-5785 or
3Q4·773-9185.

In Memory of George Nes·

FOUND 2 hunting bows on

• '·-

any ad. Vour ad win be
"· ~ ·•• _
_
put in , the proper 1T~o~3S~~~~~~·M~··~··~-

ttre brick.

..
SCIPIO RECY,CliNG
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
J¥, M. East ol Pageville
Dn Township Rd . 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only

•• 1-" 1-•• 1-••
•• _
_ .~_

To25
to~~~~~~~~~~~

• FirebOx bOttOm
lined wtth 1'141nC:h

10/20/ t.f.n.

BISSELL FLOORS

CONTRACTING -

" CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561
All Makes

·
1·-~- 1-;..

classify,
reject
reserves edit
t1te or
right

Board of

742-2328

1011.212 mo. od

. M.L.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers
- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas Lines
-Septic S~stems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS

PH . 992 i.~1?.' mo

I

name and address or
phone number If U!ed.

• Laroe. alrttont.
removable asnpan
for easy cleaning.

Trophy .

i PLAQUES

Phone----------Print one
wardEach
in eachi
space
below.
in-

TeUinglab.

reserves thF. nght to acce pt
and/or rP.IeCt any and al l o r
parts of any and all b1ds

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7.683
or 992-2282
ll·l·tiC

Manufacturers

Addreu...
· --------

~ducat1o n

of

1.5 Years Experience

.

· Write vour own ad and order bV mall wit_tl this I
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get 1
. results. Monev nat refundable.
1

1983

Board

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cust~m Pol• oldgs.
1
&amp; Garages
.
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings

THE
TROPHY
KING

Curb Inflation
· Pay Cash for
Classlfieds and
Savell I

;auoe steel outer

Educat1on
Easter n Local
School D1stn ct
Elo1se Bos10n.
Treasurer

.

J-24-tlc

.

l hA TreasurP,(S Otf 1ce by 12
o'clock noon on December 1 5 .

·

'

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

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

In ordP.r to be cons1 dE!red all
sealed b1ds shall be mcP.tved 1n

Satd

AL TROMM

Irish Setter 8 -10 months
old . male . CaU 614-446 ·

2 - T1res and Tubes

exporlnent known as hop and clnJp, wlddlllllleelfect
of space on hmnan balance. (AP I "erphoto).

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission·

10% Off

614·992·2181

titial or group of figure

.

lO-G-ti c

·

I

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

Landmark

Thfl Board of Educa 110n ol
EastP. m Local School Ots tnc t
des1i'P.S to •ece•ve sealed b1ds
on th e follow,ng
I GasoltnP. and 011
3 Fufll Oil
4 Flee! lnsuraoce

Residential- New and re·
wiring: Commerc ial and In ·
dustrial.
BONDED
All Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742 ·2214
After 5 P.M.
ll.J. l mo . pd

BOGGS

Pomeroy

NOTICE TO
· BIDDERS

•

GRAVEL.
HA'ULE.D

w

G I ld'
POLE BUILDINGS
enera
e 1ng
S1z es Stari Fro m 12 x16'
Sa lem Twp . Rd . 180
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Outer. Oh .. 45726
· Bill Eskew
Stzes from G'x G' Up 1
to 24'x36 '
PH . 742-2456
In sulated Dog Ho_.uses
L dd
f
P&amp;S BUILDI'rGS
a ers or
11
100 Barrel Tanks
Ract ne. Oh.
And Drip Tanks
Ph. 6!4-843- 5! 9!
."
M ' ..
1
Your Pace
or rne

SAlE! 20-30-40 percent off

ONLY $5·25° 0

nouscoal bV

.Public Notice

MILLS'
·ELECTRIC

GARAGE
Rt. 124.Pomeroy Ohio

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
. Middleport, OH.
PH . 992-2725
11·9·1 mo.

Refrigerator
17.2 cu. II.
Model CTF 17-AC
REG. 1624.95

wall constructton
features 114 tnch
!)ollerpltte steel
fire cnamoer and
sturdy, heiVY

• Automatic draft

&amp;

STEEL

MilLS'
ELECTRIC

Roger Hysell

Monday thru Friday

HOTPOINT

Approved for
burning bltuml·

Shuttle Columbia payload
spedallsl Byroo Uchtenberg, right, helps mlslllon
speclallsl Owen Ganiott with a hanless for an

i i -14 -tfr

Any Service
Expires Dec. 30th

54 Misc. Merchandise

• Heavy autv dOUble

Smart new ski1ts gtve you a
dtlferent look eve ~ day of the
week! One's a wrap, the other 1s

JIARN]lS'! HELP -

For

Open 12 to 8 p.m. every day
through deer gun season.

Home National Bank·

992·5875

Bring This Coupon In

Aulhorized dealer for Gol·
den Eagle Archery. Stop in
and see the Firebird Cam
Bow. Federal I oz. and Jlh
oz. slugs. Also Winchester
and Remington slugs.

The same model can be installed
free-standing or as a fi
· insert.

\

Tri'-County

446·0294.

&amp; Huntin! Supplies

I

'

Or

DEER HUNTS
Arbaugh's Archery

APPROXIMATELY 2112. ACRES and house
needs extensive repairs. Racine Village.

before utility 1ates go·up again.

SAN DIEGO (AP) - Instead of
referrin g to a group of crows as "a
bunch" of crows, why not call them
by their correct name- a murder.
Oiher seldom used but specific
words to describe a "a bunch" of
animals include: a knot of toads, a
leap of leopards, a leash of
greyhounds, a mob of kangaroos, a
muster of peacocks, a drift of swine ,
a brace of ducks, and a clutter , or
clowder, of cats.

.

Call 742-3195

Kitchen Cab inets - Roof.
ing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modeling - Custom Pole
Barns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
long Bottom . OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992·3067
12 ·20-tlc

L

M.H. facili~

cet a Klndlewood stove

ALL

l - IO.., tfc

949-2210

Name game

I

Call 949·2263
or 949 . 3091

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
for all your wiring
needs;· furna~es repair
service and insta :lalion.
. Residential
&amp; Commercial

YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT T~;
POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE

REAL ESTATE

ner·easy. Choose no-1ron blend .

I

ROOFING
All types of ro of work
new or repair. gutters
and.downspou{s . gut·
ter cleanrng and
painting , storm dool's
and windows.
.
All w kG
or uaranteed
"Free Est imates"

!O lf.! .. 1

BRI~G

a gentle flare . elasticized for com-

In Larger Sizes

rttese

I

FbR l fSS THAN U. S. MAIL
SAVE 10~ TO50~'1'1 ANO MORE

' " l e10&lt;1
131'
.........

Onoa.., ....... _

,

430 Second . Gallipo is
446 -0840

IU _,..,..,

u,ro l&amp;"'''"''

Frank •s·
Pawn· ShooIT,

.,
::.."q,_... DELIVERY .-r
~

I .' ln uiji r•r/ tlfflf&lt;'~ o ·u ~ ·, . ,. I hr•
j ..u.... inll , .,,.,,,,,,,.. o• u · l•!'••,r•'~ ..

11 • ~"" lu• S.lt
7l hiiC~I '"'Sole
7 J You A •wo

1
.

... u.P.S. -PUROLATOR.r.I·
..-ioDOOR TO DOOR f 1

·=

·##I

· ·

'

I

• . .ttl.Cour1 St. Pomeror. Ohkl •s769

.
experiment on

GIFT GRABBIN' - A crowd of approximately 300
pushed Wid shoved Into lfiUs' Department Store In

H L W.

GOOD SELECTION
SHOTGUNS &amp;'
.
HANDGUNS
DEPOSITORY
DAILY p C
· We buy. sell or trade .
I K UP SERVICE I · Good prices.
BY
i

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writ! Oaillr Stntintl Classified o.,t.

&lt;.ll
Cabbage Patch Dolls In a matter of seconds. 11te dolls
cost $19.38. (AP Laserphoto}.
'

i

P omeroy, Oh .
PARCEL SERVICE

0

~~~~... -

GUNS

NOW IN sAvE '

t&lt;OW

Public Sala
&amp; Auction

8

=s=r.A~V~'E::~::::·~:;;~~~ Tr~~~~~~~~=;Tr~::::::::::::::::::::::;-r;:::::::::::::=::::::;-r;:-::::~~~~~~=·=~;::::::::::::::::::::::::;~

one year if ihey had retained the
industry's traditional 3 percent
A-w'e1ed Preas Writer
annual wage boost In ihelr cWTe!lt
DETROIT (AP) - Hlstortc
contract.
proftt·sharlng plans at General
But the UAW early last y~ar
Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. problem."
agreed
t o profit sharing Instead of
that should pay workers up to $600
But be added: "We don't think the
apiece Could he "tinkel1!d with" in U AW membership is misled and ihe 3 percent boost as 1982 U.S. car
next year's contract tallks to contused. They understand we need sales slumped to tbeir Jowest in 21
equalize ihe companies' paYments, to tinker wlih i hese formulas to get years.
GM's profit sharing is based on
a union spokesman and analysts · parity."
U.S.proftts,
while Ford's formula
say.
.
Maryann
Keller,
manager
at
·
takes
Into
account
U.S. vehicle
Sorne 4llJ,{XXl hourly and salaried
VUas·Fis
cher
Associates
Ltd.
in
sales.
wor kers at GM will ' each get
Ms. Keller noted that Ford's
between $400 and $600 in the New York, said the discrepancy
could
be
"a
two-told
pr
oblem"
at
formula
may need changing since It
· company's first profit·sharlllg plan,
does
not
reflect
thefactihatmuchof
Ford.
with the checks expected out by the
"The
!act
that
ihe
Ford
worker
Ford's
earnings
come from overend of March, GM spokesman
comp
ares
himself
with
the
GM
·
seas
sales.
GM's
profits come
William Winters said Monday.
worker
is
bad
enough,"
but
he
also
United
States.
mainly
from
the
About 160,{XXlworkers at Ford wUI
will
look
at
What
he
could
have
Chrysler
Corp.
offered
. profit
get between $250 and $3:Xlln that
sharing
received
from
a
regular
wage
to
workers,
but
It
was
automaker's first profit-sharing
rejected last jlear in a ratification
program , spokesman Edward .Increase, she said.
GM a,nd Ford workers would have vote. ThecurrentChryslerpactdoes
Snyder said.
received approximately $625 over not contain profit sharing.
The difference in thetwocompan·

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily

Ohio

Business Services

ies payouts results from dlfferent
profit-sharing !onnulas, and UAW
spokesman Peter Laarrpan said the
union "understands that's a

• By ANN JOB WOOUEl'

~-

&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sale Centenary Townhouse . Thurs. Dec . 1st .
Home Interior. high chair
di1he1 , jewelry, knick
knacks. guitar .

Street

Sele Green Terrace

N~~·30~Dec.

2. furniture
Clothoo.
Itoys.-'ciieap pric-es .
.

,
14

Oeera skinned , cut and
wrapped . Call Cisco 304·

675-149B.

304 -855-3934.

a

$45 .000. 614·992 ·5858 .

t o 5 bedroom ho use.
Alum i num si ding. st o rm
window s. ga s furna c e ,
warm morning woodburner ,
range, refrigerator , kitchen
aid e dishwasher. Call 992·

7285 .

Will do house cleaning .
Reasonable rates . Call 304-

676·3908 .

13

lnsuranca

32 Mobile Home-;-for Sale

TRI - STATE MOBilE
SANDY AND BEAVER In· HOMES . USED . CARS
surance Co . has oHered TRUCKS . GAlLIPOLIS '
services for fire insurance CliECK OUR PAtCES . CAll
coverage in Gallia County 446 ,7572.
for almost a century. Farm ,
home and personal property
coverages are avall1ble to
meat lndtvidu•l needs . Contact Hany Pitchford, agent .

Phone 446·1-427.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAl·
tTY MOBilE HOME SALES
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 446-7274.' '

•

�•

•
Page- 10-- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

They'll Do It Every Time

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

51 Household Goods
TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Th.ird
Ave , Gallipolis, 446-1699.
Spin washers, gas &amp; electric
dryers. 'auto washers. gu &amp;
electric ranges; refrigerators, TV SBts.

Trailer on 2 acre lotS 19,000
and trailer on 1 acre lot
$11 ,000 on Kerr -Bethel Rd.

Call614 -388-9360.
Ni ce

2

bdr. trailer . Call

GOODUSED APPLIANCi'S
Washers, dryers , refrigerator&amp;, ran.,es. Ska.ggs Appliances U,-,!1Sr River Ad
beSide Stc.. tP Crest Motel
446 -7:1 ;

614-256-6251 . alter 5 :30 .
1974 Holley Park mobile
horne, 3 bdr. w ith underPin ning, verv nice .. shown by
appointment only . Call 446 ·

----- -- - - -

1764 or 446-3148 .

Must St.i t Ei J Model Singer
Iewing machines . Un claimed by school $95 . Call
446 -9301 .

1972 'C aatle with 82 Vemco

roOmatts,

air cond ., fire -

place. Coll445 -1217 .

2 ·small refrigerators , 2 gas
ranges, 1 Mavtag wringer
was her. automatic wa'sher15
S. dryer. All guafanteed.
Glassware &amp; what nots for
Christmas . Hupp ' s Ap pliance &amp;·Glassware, Corner
At . 7 &amp; At . 141 , 446 -8033 .

1972 trailer, 2 bdr., un'fur·
nlshed . g Ood cond . Call
614 - 446 ~ 7171
or 446 ·

8288 after 5 .
1976 , 1 2x70. total electric,
3 BR , 2 baths, ex . cond .
$6900 . Call446-0175 .

1977 Trailer with 3 lots for
sala. Call 614-256-6618.

1976 1 4x70 trailer, 3 ' bed -

1981 14x70; Shultz limited

mobile home , microw&amp;\18,
dishwasher. central air·. un d e rpenning . three bed -

rooms , 1 V2 baths, excellent

cond ition. $16 ,500. Call
304-675 -6049 aft~r 5 p.m .
Mobile Home Moving, li censed and Insured, Free
Estimatos S100 .. per hook up minimum . Phone 304 576 -2711 or 576-2866.

Ohio

~=====~::::;:~::::::::~ vanity
&amp; . bed
446 -8253
Houses for Rent

5 rooms. bath . full basement, garage , glassed in
breezeway, gas forced . air
heat, central air condition ·
ing . Call 614-949-2734 .

44

54 Misc . Merchandise

79 Motors Homes
lk Campers

by Larry Wrlghl

KIT 'N' CARLYLE !"

Twin-size white provential
bed with mattress and box
spring1 . Also 1ull size bed .
446-9867 afaer 1 p.m.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr .. unfurnished apts ..
central air , dishwashers,
stove &amp; refrig .. fully car·
peted . Carports &amp; large
yard . $275 plus utilities .
Deposit &amp; ref . required . Call
446 -3888 or 446-4477. No
pets .

Nice 2 bdr . trailer. Hannan
Trace School area. At . 218 .
$100 dep ., $174 mo . Call
255 -6251 after 5 30 . ..

1 bed room Apt . S196 . mo.
including utilities . Equal
housing opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apts.
614-992-7787 .

Sofa bed $75, swivel rocker
$125 . stero $40. excellent
shape . Call 446 -3467 .
Mavtag wringer washer
$125, Maytag electric dryer
$45. Kenmore washer and
dryer $125, GE heavy duty
washer $85 . Frigidaire jet'
action $65 . Call 614-7422352 .
Bedroom suite S60 . Call
985-4264 after 5PM .

Antiques. oak .furftiture re·
production. misc. items. Use
our Christmas layaway plan .
Conkels. Tuppers Plains .

1974 Kountry Air camper,

For sale grave blan-k ets. Cell
949 -3037 .
Color portable t .V. like new,
S150 . Coll614-949-2994.
Locust posts $1 .25 . corner
posts S3 .00. Have 1everel
hundred . Call 814· 742 3010 .

B1

seasoried firewood ,
$26 pick -up load . Call after
4:00PM .

D

New CC Honda Motorcycle,
like ,t new Singer sewing
machine ir\ cas6, fiber glass
truck topper, 197~ Monte
Carlo-2 door . Call 985·
3839 .
Mixed, seasoned firewood,
$26 pick-up load. Call after
4 :00PM. Call 742-3046 .
7 ft . pool table V2 in. solid
slate. $300 firm . Call 446...0608 .
Dryer firewood delivered.
Coli 304-675-7771 .

Blue Tick registered female.
one year old, started, $160.
love Birds. Canaries,
Fincl'ls. Aquarium. 304882·3690.
AKC regis1ered Doberman.
red and rust, female, 4 years
old, $75.304-468-1513.
57

Musical
Instruments

Upright piano $200. Call
675-3515 between 5 &amp;
7PM.

Wrecked 1976 Chevy Nova .
Will sell all or parts of. Good
tires, 6 cylinder engine.
Runs good . Call 304-882·
3692 .
1978 Harley Davidson
Sportster. S1900. Excellent
condition. Price negotiable.
Call 304-882-2904 or 304882-3451 '
.
- - - - - - - - - l cForemans· -for less expensive can and truck • . langsville. Call 614-742-2734.
----------lc1980 Pontiac Sunbird.

~~o: ~::~P !:.~ 1::;,;g.

6

e

c-.

"'

;

HE'S .JUJ;T
UP HERE~

IT LOOK, LIKE A HUMAiol
FOOTPRit.IT, "UT... IT ~Ei:MI&gt;
LIKE IT WAG MADE BY

...

AN AN/MAt!

Appliance Service All makea ~-·
&amp; models refrigerators, -~t
washers . dryers. ranges. ,.,..
compactors. dishwashers,
microwaves. 'Heating S.
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work .
Gallia Refrigeration Co. Call
•
614-446-4066 .

lw

~~!~h;,:~;.~s::~ .~6op~o~d ·~'c"'!&lt;·"'"..\~;;,,.··~~,. :~·'~)"e~;,,:~f~~~: ~~.'rEi ~"

•

CAPTAIN EASY

Home
Improvements

'
STUCCO PLASTERING , textured ceilings eommar·
cial and residential. ' free
ostim"eo. Call 614-256 1182. '

1

'

BORN

' •'

'•,•

RON ' S Television Service .
Speciali;ring in Zenith and
Motorola, Quezar, and
house cAlls. ·Call 576 -2398
or 446 -2454.

'

'

Randy Webster'
ill MOVIE! 'Quanet•
()) New Treasu're Hunt
([) Uttle House on the
Prairie
(j) ® 3 -2-1 , Contatt
1!11 Buck Rogero
6 :30 1J 1Il11J NBC Newo
(I) Rifleman
I]) Thia Week In the NBA
([) Ill (lJ ABC News
liJ ([) ® CBS News
(I) Business Report
®Over Easy
7:00 IJ Ill PM Magozine
(l) Alias Smith and Jones
I]) SportaCenter
·
(I) Carol Burnett
([)Entertainment Tonight
I1J Charlie's Angels
0 ([) Wheel of Fortune
(j) ®
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
®News
Ill (jJ People's Coun
1!11 Jeffersons
7:30 U (l) Tic Tac DoUgh
I])
NCAA
Basketball:
Notre Dame at Indiana
(I) Hogan's Heroes
(J) 0 (J) Fami)y Feud
(j) Marshall Basketball
., Season Opener/LIVE!

removal . can 675-1 331 .

Water W!!tiiS . Commercial
arid Domestic . Te•t holes .
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895-3802 .

HOME, GANDY! IT DOESN'T
MEAN 9-CHOOL T' YOU !

NOW,
~~~NO'i'f ...

-·
_.....

'

' '

:~

. .....

House raising, leveling, resilling. cOncrete work, base- •
ment water proofing, foundation work, free estimatea .
304-675 -3908. '

~

;

0

''
'
•.

Plumbing

82

AL~EYOOP'

lk Heating

. •.•

CARTER'S PLUMBING
•
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-388B or 4464477

•

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. fomerly Dewitt ' s
Plumbing. Call 614-3670576.

HUrrJ.j,

Rover!

Excavating

83

The

'' '

judqe

DOZER WORK By ·Ted
Hanna, ponds. ditches,
basements, etc. Call 4464907. Carter &amp; .E vans
Tran1portation .

is
w~:~it­

inq!

Cat 215 l'loe, dozers. crane,
loaders, dump truck. Call
814-448-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 5:00PM .
Good-1 Excavating, baiements. footen, driveways,
septic tanks, landscapiny.
Call anytime 446 -4637.
James L. Davison, Jr .
owner.

WINNIE

~

HAS &amp;ILL LEARNED
WHAT HAPPENED TO

J.A .R. Construction Co . ni
Water Lines, Footer•;
Drains. All kinds of'Oitching.
Autlond. Oh. 614· 742-

HIS MOTHER'S
PORTRAIT?

NOT YET. WE SLEPT
IN ONE OF THE
GUEST ~OOM5
LAST NIGHT.

~903 .

~8;4;==;E~Ie:c:t:r:ic:a:l= = · '
8o

Refrigeration

Pasquale Electric Co. all ~
phases of. electric work. •all ,.:
work guaranteed. A.ial ~
truck rental. Call 614-448- 2716.
~·
.....

...

'

SEWING Machine repairs, ...,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Se~ice , Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

BARNEY

IT'S MV
MOVE, LOKEY·-

1

--;;:=:;=::=:=:;:=====
"
•'1. .:
B5

General Hauling

JONES BOYS.WATEA SEAVICE . Coli 614-367-7471
or 814 : 387-0591.
Need 1omething hauled
away or tomething ·moved?
We'll do it . Coli 446-316,9
bfttween 'and 6.
Water hauling. Fast Service ,
low rates. Call 614-2681743.

. •'
I

,,
'· •

..

.'

PEANUTS
'' FLA5fj6EAGLE "!
·',.
•

TRISTATE
,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP ·
''
11113 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis. · · '
::
4411·7833 or 441-1833.

-

CAUGHT HIM
CHEAT IN'·

'

Upholstery

Wt do quality reupl'lolsterlng, maka n.-w custom made
reupholotoiwd furniture. R &amp;
M M•nufacturing. Crown
c.. -·. 1114-211-1470.

OHOH·· LUKEV

I

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier, 304-8767397.
•
87

Ill I1J Remington
Steele
ill MOVIE: 'The Seduction'
Cil Gl (j}) Han to Hart An
excursion to the Scottish
Highland Games 1s laced
with danger as her rival in a
world-famous clan makes
Jennifer his target .
®News
!!Iii INN News
10:15 CD TBS Evening News
10:30 I]) Ozzlo and Harriet
(I) Vietnam : A Television
Hi'story 'Peace Is at Hand
11968- 1973).' While Amori,cans and Vietnamese con·
tinued to clash in battle, the
diplomats in Paris finally
reach an accord for peace
after four long years. (60
min .I IClosed Captioned]
®All New This Old House
til Comedy Timo
· 1 1 :oo II Ill Cili1J 0 Cll ® Gl
(jJ News
(I) Another Ute
ill SportoCenter
CD All lri the Family
(jj) Is Anyone Home on the
Aan9e1
Iii Benny Hill Show
11 :15 I]) The ·Cae1111r's Tahoe
Billiards Classic Co11erage
of Semifinal112 is sponsored
by Corner Pockets of America. (60 min .)
11 :30 II Ill 11J Tonight Show
Guest host Joan Rivers is
joined by Linda Gray al)d Neil
Simon. (60 min .J
CD MOVIE: 'Still of the
Night'
Cil Dobie Gillis
(I) c.ittlns
,([)Soap
II ([) Magnum . Mag·
num accepts an · .-tgnment
to uncover the source of
some extortion threats. (R)
(60 min.)
([) Firing Une
1 0:00

'
•

·
1
-,•!)

0

(!IM•A•S•H

a
e

(jJ Nlghtllne

11:46 (I)
Thing'
12:00 Cil lurM • Allen ·
(]) MOVIE: 'Gomeo'

I

([) lliiahlllne

(lD MOVIE: 'Tell' Me That

You Love Me. Joolo Moon'

~..

T IME WARil:IOil:S

t
I KJ X]
I

Now arrange the circled letters to

fc:Jrm the surprise answer , as sug·

gested by the above cartoon .

I XXI I ] r I I Xr

' Answer: TO A .. [
Yesterday 's

WENT ON THEII'It.
EVEN INGS OFF.

· (Answers tomorrow)
J umbles TABOO GA VEL BOUNTY DAMAGE
Aos·wer : The farm e r became angry when s omeone
managed to do this - GET HIS GOAT

Jus! olfhptwn.Jumbla Booll No. 2J, cont1lnlng' 110 puzzles, ls IY&amp;IIablelorS 1.115piUI
SS&amp;potlllgt 11nd handling !rom Jumble ,c/o thiJ ntwsptper. Bo• Sot. NOIWOOd, N.J. 071WB.
Include your 1111me, ldd ... n, 2lp code 1nd milk&amp;cl'lftckl pllylltllll to N.Wiplll*'boc*l.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Find the thirteenth
could always rind number i 3
somewhere.
NORTH

II·"·'

+9 7

.AKL063

• 7 54

+8 6 3
WEST

while discarding two hearts,

EAST

+8 5

+6 4

.QJ95

.. 8 4 2

• Q9 3 2

+Q J 10 9

t

A quick look at dummy
showed that' the 13th wou ld
be hard to find . He tried a
simple pseudo-squeeze by
running off all his spades

KJ6

+ 7 54 2

SOUTH

+AKQJIOI2

..7

two diamonds and a club
from dummy . East wisely
discarded his queen of
hearts and then continued
with three clubs. so West
had a perfect count on th e
hand and knew that he ha d

to hang on to diam onds.

t A LO 8
+AK

West did. and the grand
slam was a th ing of the past

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

while the rubber continu ed.
South had overlooked the

Wt-st

North

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

3Y
s•
6•
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
2+
4NT
5NT
7+

chance to make the contract
by finding the right EastWest holdings. The play

required risking a two-trick
set, but would have worked.
South starts by playing

ace-king and a small heart
and ruffing high . He finds
that hearts have broken 4·3.

Opening lead: +Q

Then he

takes a finesse

agains t

West's eight of
trumps. The finesse works.

By Oswald Jacoby
aod James Jacoby -

He ruffs another heart

South could count 12 top
tric'ks once his Blackwood
bids had discovered an ace
and a king in the North hand.
He bid seven on the theory
· that with 12 top winners, he

high and leads a trump to
dummr's nine of trumps.

One d1amond al ready went
on the king of hearts; his
other goes on that last hea rt.

The slam comes home.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN

ACROSS

I Celt

I Spartan
2 Long pqem

5 Backbones

II Kenya river
12 Woman's
name
13 Wise abput
14 Appear
15 Resident
(suffix I
16 Shelter
17 Zip
18 Have to
do with
20 United
21 Minuscule

22 Wooed
23 Apportion
24 Czech
h!igious

-.7

division
3 Anxious
4 Philippme
peasant
5 Like Mary
Poppins
6 Rugged
fellows
Yesterday's Answer ' ·
7 - du D1abl e 19 Quo te
26 Card game
8 Worrier
22 Chanted
28 Cubic meter
9 Power
23 Mechanical 29 Princely
sources
dev1 ce
30 Fabric
10 Had all
24 Famous
35 Vietnam
the aspects
trumpeter
to vetera~s
1_6ic,o_nsTo,n_a'Tin,t_ 25 Lose
36 Blunder

reformer
25 Moon
feature
26 Huckleberry
27 I (Ger.)
28 American
painter

31 - nul£
32 Explosive
letters
33 Base
34 Cub
36 European

river
37 Turkish
city
36 Exasperate
39 Sycophants
40 College
in Oregon

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how
l1

to work

it:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands fo r another. In this sample A is
used for th e three L's, X for the two o ·s . t•tr . Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
hJDts. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTI:S
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MOVIE:
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WI-\.ERE THOSE OLD·

IGINKAB

Adv

NCAA
Basketball :
Marshall
vs.
Eastern
Michigan
® Wheel of Fortune
G)
tD EntertainfT')ent
Tonight
fJ) One Day ·at a Time
B:OO 0 ill I1J A Tpam The A
T earn is hired to prevent the
sabotage of a . skyscraper
project. (60 min .)
Cil Men's Gymnastics: '83
Caesar's Palace Invite ~
tiona! USA National Team
members Bart Conner, Jim
Hartung and Phil Canoy
compete.
(l) MOVIE: 'Whose Ufe Is
It Anyway?'
I]) I Spy
Cil MOVIE: 'To••• Across
the River'
Cil Rodney Oangerfiold
D ([) ® Mississippi
CID Nova 'Captives of Care.'
Patients at an institution for
the severely hand icapped
rebel against an administration . bent on controlling
them . (60 m1n .) [Closed Cap·
tioned]
·
1D (j}) Just Our Luck
l!il MOVIE: 'Or. Zhivago'
Pan 2
8 :30 Ill (j}) Happy Oays
9:00 U Ill (I) A Team
ill MOVIE : 'The Boat'
Cil 700 Club
(J)
Ill · (j}) Throe's
Company
0
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®
MOVIE:
'Gambler II' Pan 2
® Vietnam: A Television
History 'Peace Is at Hand ·
11968 -19731 .' While Americans and Vietnamese continued to clash in battle, the
diPlomats in Paris finally
reach .an accord for peace
after four long years. (60
min .) IClosed Captioned)
9 :30 (!)
ESPN's
Ringside
Review
Cil ID (j}) Oh Madeline
Madeline thinks Johnny
Mathis is an impersonator
Robert h'ired to sing at her
high school reunion.
(I) Nova 'Captives of· Care.'
Patients at an ins titution for
the severely handicapped
rebel against an adnlinistra·
tion bent on controlling
them . (60 min.) (Closed Cap·
tionedJ

ARF.1 OH, GUflE! IT'S 11LL RloHT
ARF! FOR YOU T'BE GLAD T'BE

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece custom fit your home .
Guaranteed. Advanced Guttor, !Day 614-592-4086.1
(night 614-698-B206 .1

Houses mo11ed or raised,
basements dug beneth
housu. free estimates,
Hous.tt Movers, Inc. 304576-2711'

ICHATEDb
. I K) _

Cil

RINGLE ' S SERVICE OKperienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpenter, electrician. mason. Call
304-675- 20BB or 6754560 . '

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal.
furniture cleaning, free esti·
mates. 614-446-2107.

WPB Y

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~H
I I K . KJ

IJ Ill (J)(Il 0 ([) ® Ol

F S. K Tree Triril,ming. stump

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byHenriArnoldandBoblee

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ill MOVIE: 'The Killing of

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~THAT SCAAIIII.EO WORD GAME

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BIMOL

(jJ News

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Mi~ted,

I

EVENING
6 :00

\!d}

Unscramble the·se lour Jumbles ,
one letter lo e~ch square, to fOfm
four ordinary words:

11/29/83

--'

1979 Bonan:za camper
trailer , 37x8 with two tip
outs . Furnished, carpeted,
$6,500 . Negc;&gt;tieble, 304675-3104.

1}\flfNl ~"·

~

TUESDAY

"

cloon . Cell 614-246-6243.

The

Television
Viewing

'

27 ft . end in eX . cond .. very

12x60 2 bdr. modern fur·
New wood burning stove Bundy Flute. good .cond.,
USED MOBILE HOME . · nished trailer; convenient
SWAIN
With firebrick $325. each. $110. Coli 44~·1937.
Phone 304-576.-2711 .
AUCTION
&amp;
FURNITURE
location. Upper River Rd .
304 -675-.1578 or 675·
deposit req , Call 614-446- Furnished apt . 5 rooms and 62 · Olive St., Gallipolis . 6 7896 .
Flat top guitar with caae.
bath.
no
pets.
dep
.
required.
1979 Sterling mobile home, 1!558 .
piece wood living room suite
992 -2937.
llke new. Call gg_r-:2598 .
14 'x70 ', central air. under with 6 inch flat arms S 399.
penned , exc. condition , on 2 bdr . trailers. Apartments 1
bunk beds complete with Hospital bed, mattress, rails, Brand New Armstrong flute, ' I_Ph_o_ne
__
3_0_4_-7_7_3_·_9_1_4_3_._ _
Furnished
apt
.
Middleport.
bunkies $199. 2 piece an- manual controls. Manuel
rented lot . Call 304 -675 - bdr , Beautiful river view in
Burroughs
adding
machine.
adults,
no
pets,
month
rent
$200.00 or best offer, 304-' 1978 Mercury Cougar, good
5539 .
Kanauga. Fosters Trailer plus S100 security 992 - tron livingroom suites S 1 99. 304-675 -4671.
937-2390.
condition,. loaded with exantron recliners $99, other
Park . 446-1602.
3874 .
1974 Shultz 14x65 mobile
recliner&amp; $80. maple dinette
troa, $3,500. callafter6PM.
home . partial burn out. Nicly furnished modern mosets S179, love seats S70, Aigner, 100 per ceht ge304-675-4560.
nuine
leather
sports
coat,
59
For
Sale
or
Trade
stove, refrigerator, 3 ton , bile home, in city. 1 or 2 1-;,-----.,----,-- hide -a-bed S250. box
central air, $3 ,000 .00 ne - adults only. Call 446-0338 . New one and two bedroom springs S. · mattress twin or size 16, exc. cond. $176 . - - - -- - - - -- '81 Mercury Lyn•. 4 speed.
apartments. furnished or full $100 set regular-firm Diamond ring, size 6%, 1952 Ford F1 Pickup. Call good gas milea_g e, axe.
gotiable, 304-895-3967 or
304-895 -3472 after 6 :00 .
2 bdr . mobile home. Call unfurnished in Middleport . $120, maple dinette chairs $250 . 304-675-6193.
742-3156 .
cone .• 304-576-2623 .
..
446-0508 .
Call 992 -5304 .
S35 . wash stands $34,
- - -- - ---lc- 1--=-------m_a ple rockers $69, 7 piece Hand made doll houses with 1978 Harley Davidson' 1966 DeSota, axe. cond.
$65. Phone 61433
Farms for Sale
Trailer for rent . Call 446- Apar1ments . 304 ., 675 - chrome dinette set 8149. 5 furniture.
Sportser. lots extras, $300. S1,000.00 or best offer.
446-4630 .
piece
dinette
set
$89,
used
1052 .
5548.
or trade for car of equal Excellent Christmas presbedroom suites, refirgera ent. Phone 304-895'3686.
68 acres on Bulaville - ~orter
Gas range $100; fireplace value. 304-882-3220 .
Co . Rd . 3. Old farm house Nice 2 bdr .. Upper Rt. 7 , APARTMENTS . mobile tors, ranges. chest, dressers,
1981 Escor1, loaded. mUst
tor sal e by owner. asking furnished , see . dep ., no homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant wringer washers, TV's,
morning1iberglus;
heating stove
~ sell, no reasonable offer
warm
$55 .000 . Interested party inside pets. Call 614-245- end Gallipolis . 614· 446- dryeres, &amp; shoa&amp;. Call 446 - in·sert
S250:
'76
Chevy
Laguna
.
3159 .
8221.
refused. 304-675-1311 .
5818 .
pl~ase call 446-7247 or
304-773-5163.
513-293-7270 .
1973 Pontiac. loaded with
14x70 total electric 3 bd1., TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Surplus Denim 10.000 ger- 61 Farm Equipment
extras, runs good, good
furnish.ed, trailer on private Apartments now available to 54 Misc . Merchandise ments stock .Army clothing .
good body, $300.00.
lot. 10 min . from town . elderly &amp; disabled with an
34
Business
Boots-leather-Insulated. In- John 'oeere portable tires,
304-676-1326.
S200 mo . plus dep . &amp; ref. income of less than
Buildings
sulated
coveralls
$27.50,
all
$12.300 . Renting 1or 30 Knauff Firewood Pickup or
hammer mill with power
Call 614-256-1393.
percent of adjusted income- Oelivered . 12" -22"atocked sizes. Sam Somerville's, take off, 8300. Call 446- 1976 Chevrolet Caprice Estin yard . HEAP vender. East Ravenswood. open 8038.
ate Station Wagon. all the
3 BR mobile home, 1 1h bath. . Phone 304-675-6679 .
For Sale or Lease- Country close to hospital. Call 614prompt delivery. 614-256- 1:00-7 :00pm, Fri .. Sat ..
axtras. only 40,000 miles.
Sun.,
other
day•
after
Store with 3BR Apt . S250 388-9760.
John Deere grliin hammer fully equipped Jo pull
Duplex 6 rooms, bath. base· 6245.
5 :00pm, FREE delivery mill. 'h ton feed mixer with camper. Only $1,600.00.
mo. Call 614-245-9315 .
ment, water furnished, Lock
2 bedroom trailer . A eat nice. 25 Road. Point Pleasant, Limestone, Sand. Gravel. orders after 8pm. 304-676· motor. 30 HPAIIIsChalmers Phone 304-a82-2910.
3 phaae electric motor all
Delivered in Muon. Meigs, 6460 or 675-3334.
Brown's Trailer Park . 614· 1-614-446-0239 .
35 lots &amp; Acreage
good condition. Call 614- '76 Buick Lesebre, 4 door
Gallia or pick up at Richards
992 -3324.
Red J.acket shallow well 992-7015 after 6PM.
Two bedroom apt. in Mason, &amp; Son . Coli 446:7785 .
hard top. southern car, e~ec.
pump, with holding tank and
adults
only.
no
pets.
304cond. 304-876-1789.
14x70 ~enthouse high rise,
35 acres at Rodney on W.T. for rent in Pomerov· A1hens 675-1462 after 5pm .
Fireplace insert-still in fac - filter . S150 . 304 - 882 - For Sale Of Trade - Gravely
Watson Rd . Owner financ - area . Fu~l fu.rnished ,
tractor with mower, runs 1976 Ford Pinto statkln
tory carton - automatic 3590 .
ing -available. Call446 -8221 equipped kitchen, washer- Furnished apartment in controls -2 blowers·glau
good. engine rebuilt, 8426 . wagen, good cond .. 304after 6 weekdays,
304-576-2670 .
875-6930.
dryer, woodburner, $225 Point Pl~asar\1, utilities paid, door-ash pan-tits 30 in . to 55 Building Supplies
48 in . fireplace-burns wood
plus utilities. Or will sell for 304-895-3450 .
One half acre with old 5 s 1 5 .ooo. Call 992-6034 I:;:;::::;;:::==;:::;:;:== or coal. $590. Call 61463'
livestock
room house. good well. after4 ;30 .
266-1216.
72
Trucks for Sale
I·
Building materials
septic tank In Southsi45 Furnished Rooms
do ,WV . $9 ,700 .00, 304 · 12:te60 ft . 2 bedroom mobile 1- - - - - - - - - - - House. Coal pickup or deli- block. brick, sewer pipes,
1974 Chevy, clean and in
linte ls , etc. 2-40 in. pony mares and great shape. Call 614·-245937 -26B6.
home. Approx . 5 miles from For rent Sleeping Rooms vered. Call before 3 :00PM windows,
Claude Winters, Rio Grande, horses for sal&amp;. Will hold 1or 5243.
Pomeroy or Middleport. Call and light house keeping 446-9200, after 4 call 446- 0 . Coli 614-245-5121.
Cl'lristmas. Call 446; 2222
rooms. Park Central Hotel. 7650.
992 -5858 .
or 446-3368 .
Call 446-0766 .
1981 Toyota long bed, 6
Oak tables 8t chairs, corner
spd., factory air, AM-FM
2 bedroom mobile home.
58
Pets for Sale
cupboards, buffets &amp; etc.
41
Houses for Rent
Large sow. 10 pigs. Call tape. sliding rear window.
Single or couple wwith ona
Wood World, 2506 Grand
446-4241 '
deluxe mirror, step bumper.
child . Deposit required . Util- 46 Space for Rent
Central Aile .. Vienna, WV.
excellent condition . Must
ities paid . $200 per month .
HILLCREST KENNELS Rhoade Island Red, S2.60 soli I Coli 446-0844.
1 bdr ., newly decorated, Call 992 -6285 or 992 unfurnished . 142 4th Ave .. 5732 .
Furnished office for rent. WOOOBURNING STOVES. Bordlng all breeds. Selling ooch , 304·675-6477.
fireplace in- Happy Jack Dog Food.
dep. req . S160 per mo . Call
1981 Chevrolet PU 4x4,
Close to city building and freestanding,
terts, mobile home ap- Doberman puppies: Stud
446 -3667 after 5.
Serial No. 1GCEK·
court
house.
Call
446-0856
Two bedroom 1u rnished
proved,
&amp;
furnance
ad-ons.
Serviee. Cell 446-7795 .
14HBEF324386. will ~~
trailer for rent. Gallipolis days. $1 25 . mo.
Jiv idens, Farm Equipment,
Two story house. 4 bdr., Ferry, below Hitching Post
sold for c...,h at public sale
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
$250 per mo . $250 dep. ·on state Road 2, convient Large trailer space on on 446-1675.
Oocomber 12, 1983 at
71
Autos for Sale
' 814-367-7220.
1 O:OOAM at Jim Mink Chov.
roq . Call 446-4222. 9 :30- location for · school bus, Bulaville-Addison . Rd . Call
Suburban Coalmaster .
5:00 .
Olds., Gallipolis, Oh GMAC
$150 . month, plus $100. 446-4265 or 446-4736 .
Burns wood arld coal. $200. Sriarpatch Kennels Profesraserves
the right to withrequired . Includes
Phone 992-2770.
sional All-breed grooming. TOP .CASH paid for late dtlw the nl'llckt form the
Equipped kitchen , newly deposit
water and garbage. Phone COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa- model used cars.
Smith ule. General Motors Accepremodeled . central air. $300 304-578-2132 ofto~ 5pm .
Park, Route 33. North of
pe1 mo . Call 446 -2158 .
Pomeroy. Large lots . Call Beautiful wooden baby bed cilities. English Cocker Spa- Buick-Pontiac. 1911 East· tance Corporation .
with canopy and matress, niel puppies . Call 614-388- ern Ave.. Gallipolis, 446- 1 - - - - - - - - - - also used bed. Call 614- 9790 .
Furnished one bedroom cot- ~,---~------ - 992 -7479 .
2282.
'7&amp; Jeep excellent condi·
tage . $150 per mo., water 44
tion. '78 Luv truck, VB conApartment
~;:::======= 388-9767 .
Dragonwynd Cattery- 1976 Triumph TR-6 con- version. blazer wheels, roll
furnished , adults only, no
for Rent
4B
Equipment
Magnavox deluxe stereo ca- Kennels. AKC ChoW pup- venlble, 48,000 octual mi .. bar, auto. transmission .
pets. Call 446-2543 .
for Rent
binet model-$200, pies. CFA Himalayan, Par- 13.700. Cell 814-246· 304-876-3388.
1
am / fm / 8 hack included, 1 sian and Siameae kittens.
$275 plus utilities. Avail. Small turn . house 1 or 2
5256 oftor 6.
! ::;;~====;:====
now . 2 bdr .. LJL new kit .. S. adults only, no pets. Call 20 ft . flat bed trailer. Can cabinet model sewing ma- Call 446-3844 after 6.
chine
with
all
attachmentsbath . Large fenced yard, 446-0338 .
Vans 8o 4 W . O.
pull with own pick or car. a 175, 200 h. underground CFA REg . Siamese kittens. 1979 For~ Mustang sun- 73
new carpet, 566 or 558 3rd.
Haul anything on it. $26 per electrical cable- S150 . Alto 6 to choose ·from complete roof, air, power l t e e r i n g , l - - - - - - - - - - Ave ., Gallipolis. Clal 446- Furnished apts., 1-2 rm . &amp; doy. Coli 614-446-0176.
transmission. 4 WD blaar. 49.000 actual
Saxaphone $160. Call 446- with pedigree. Call 614- automatic
2457 or 446 -0332 .
Call 814·246-.62&amp;9.
miiH. priced reduced to
bath down &amp; 1 up . Also 1-4
7109 or 446-0929 .
245-5036 after 6PM for
rm . &amp; bath up. Clean, no
9 _9 _6 _·ea_114
48_ 7_ 2_·_
appointment.
1976 . Chevrolot lmpolo 1-•1_·_
_ _4_8_-_
3 bedroom house for rent. pets, adults only . Ref. req.
ruh11
dlep
·
.
Firewood.
Pickup
or
deliMiddleport with kitchen ap- Coli 446-1519.
miles, good cond., 1978 Chevrolet ScotdaJe
vered dump ti--uck . Call 614- AKC Chow Chow puppies. 69;000
pliances . Deposit required.
1896. 1973 Ford pickup 4&lt;4. con 448-8132.
256-6889
.
51 Household Goods
Call 614-266--1271 .
Cell 992-2606 after 5PM .
runs good. $396. Coli 814- ' - - - - - - - - - 2 bdr. apt., utilities partially ' - - - - - - - - - - 387-0164.
I
paid. 3 room apts. utilties ~1973 JHp CJ 6 . 304
New
1
983
Nelco
Sewing
9 mo . old. 4 lb .. male toy
Newly remodeled 2BR cot- paid. Call 304-675 ~ 5104, or ,.
Machin ... ' Free arm. 6 poodle ShiTzu 836. Only to 1979 Thunderbird Town engine, no top, must sell.
tage. Pt. Pfeasant ar'-a~ For.. 304-676-7386 .
' LAYNE'S FURNITURE
stretch stitches. 10 design responsible person . Call londou, 302 V-8. burgandy, 11350. Coll949-2506.
information call 614-446Soia,
chair,
rocker,
otto.·~~itches, blind hem. mend- 448-4472.
.
AC, full power, radio, sharp,
4602 .
3 or 4 rciom unfumished apt . man, 3 table~. (extra h8avy -1-tf:lv stitch, monograms, dialutilities paid, adults only. no by Frontier). 4$885. Sofa, a'~matic buttonholer. Sews A_KCRegisteredPoodlepup- 16,39&amp;. Coli 814-448- '74 International Travel All,
3 bdr. 1 V2 baths, close to pata. Call 446-3437.
0677.
good running cond .. $800.
chair and loveaeat, $276. on denim m81eriel. Regular p 1es. Oep. will l'lold for
hospital &amp; shopping plaza .
304-882-3690.
Sofas
and
chairs
priced
from
price
•635.95.
Now
only
Ch
'st
c
11446
0867
1979
No pets, dep . &amp; ref. re- Completely furnished , •$285. to $895. Tobleo, $46 $229. Ovor stocked. Must
" moo. •
.
.
Pontioc firoblrd V-8,
quired . Call 614-245-5136 . newly daeorated, all electric, and up to 8125 . Hide-a- sell by Jon.
31 , .26 yoor BereadyforChristmaa-AKC AT,PS.PB.AC,82,000mi.
C•ll448-1196 after 5PM .
centrally located, at $200 beds.$440 . and up to
74 Motorcycles
factory warranty. Call 814- Registered black labrador&amp;
Available soon, 6 room mo . plus deposit . Call 614pups . Coli 992-72B&amp;.
1980 p
I S
house . basement On At . 7 . 2 446-22 36 or 614-446 - S525., Aecllnors, $176 . to 386-4635. Free Delivery.
$376 .. Lamps
ftom 128.
to ~::::::::::::;:;;;:;;;:;;:,.1,:;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;·;;;;;;;;;:;~ was •3596
ont ac now
unblrd•3196
4 ap.,
bed . mobine home utilities 2681 .
176.5
pc . dinettes
from
pllid, new carpet, 1 kid
$99 ., to 436 . 7 pc . 11 8 9
1979 Sllrflro Oldsmobile 1978 Harter Davidson
Sportltar. •1.900. Exc .
excepted. no pets drunks or
Nice 2 bdr . apt. for rent. 16 and up . Wood table with 11x OUR BOARDING HOURF
. .._. .. 1...~
auto.. Wll t 3 185 now Cond. . 304·882·2904 or
dope. 3Y, mi . South Middle- min. from Gallipolis on Rt. 7 ; choirs 1425 to 1745. Desk
with !•~•-· Hoople
$2996. 1979 V W Rabbit
882-3451.
port Rt. 7 . John Shuts Coli 614-258-1198.
1110 up to .226. Hutcl'les.
r ll YOU l., '\inti t"..UY~ wr 'l '
auto .• wae .3196 now
614-367-0611 . .
a650. and up, maple or pine
?Q'""
"~p \1'\fG_~T !~.!! ,~i'iMA.i&lt;,:!!~ f2995. 1978 Ford Futuro 41:;;=::::;=====
2
Equipped kitchen, newly
9
2 bdr . unfurn . house with remodeled, central air. $250
76
Boats and
f39"
Bo
&amp;'ouo · ._ l::,w.
• .~::'
~-w
now t2795. John'a Auto
Motorrfor Sale
Oarage. Salem St. in Ru - per mo. Call 446-2168 .
tland. 8185 per mo. 742 ·
~~ ~ M.;;;01111 byorbet!'~ ~~~;-.; ~~
&lt; "'".!.~ , MElli
Saln. Bulovtlle Rd. Oolllpo2378 .
1 Big furnished room. eff. opringa, full or twin, 168.,
,.,~• O.i7"•
~~J~&lt;'
!:~
Ill. Collll14-441-4782.
apt .· with bath in Rio Grande. firm, 188. and $78. Qu"n Ill~':
) ,';':;:";; '"
·'
.. ,.
Aluminum Boll boot. 40HP
3 bdr. 2 baths, l'leat pump, 2 All utmtlos poid. 446-0167. ""· $195. 4 dr. choats, ,-_
: '\
·~
:
"
1981 2 DR Chovy Chovette. 'Mere. oudloord, thruster,
car garage, nice location .
142. 5 dr. choall, 164. Bod
/• ~
'
4 apd. f31911. Rool Buy. dopthflnder,traller.reodyto
Call 304-676-5545 or 676- 1 bdr. apt., no pets. Call framoo, f2D .ond 125., 10
:.A
John's Auto 8oloo, 8ulovtlle go. 12,300. Coli 4411·9408
2371 '
448-3617.
gun . O~n cobi"ota. f360.
~ ~c!:! ~
IIIIIIJ'IIl · R
.
4 d .• Ooll21polla, Oliio. Coli oltor 5:00.
11
Goa or electric rangoa f375 . f,:.
41-478 ·
1-:~=========
11
Six room houM with full size 2 bdr. partially furn;ahad loby mott-Hs. 126 &amp; ~~i,'r-1~~~
-1-:-8-:-7-B_F_o_rd_l_T_0_--2-.-.-100-. 1dry basement . Exc. cond .. apt., gas heat. hot water 135, bed fromool20, 125.
.,
Calll 14_
_
.
78
Auto Partl
241 8112
good neighborhood. 304· paid, park front view, •1715 • f30. kino frame no.
"'"
,~
8o
Accaesoriae
875-1982 . ~
mo. Call4411-3919.
Good Mlection of bedroom
· ~
t~---------~
aultu, c.edar choau.
' {:
1878 Mercury Colony Porft ,.
Attractive 3 ~room home JACKSON ESTATE rockers. metal ctblnau.
Wqon • .to.ded wtth atm.
on Park Drive . 1276. APARTMENTS !Equal -lwl rockora.
new drn. no rull. 11298. Billy lee's Tiro and lottery
1803 Jon.roon llvd;,
monthly. Phone 304-876- Houalng Opportunity) has Uoed Furniture •• bookcon,
"' rl-~0:::
• ~~·,·
Call814·:188-1181oltor II. &amp;olea.
Polnl PleOAnl. 304-1754340 11k lor Mr. Clork.
two bedroom. rent stertlng rengu, chalrw, dryera. rt·
'1'""
14011, N-·Uoed tlrH.
at t193 per month whh frlgerltoroond TV' a. 3 mllea
~
1982 Dattaun 200 IX. ••·
3 bedroom house, 2 miles •200 deposit located near out Bulovlllo Rd. Open tom
cond., 10,000 mi., f7.000.
Tappor . for lhon bed plait._ M
~ F~
"'I- •~
Coll441·1081 oltor IPM.
out Sand Hill Rood, f260 Foodland ond Spring Volley
lo
....,
..
,
on.
mru
""
om
~~
,.,..,
,... UOO. Itt. Cole-n
month plus deposh. 304- Pine. Coli 441-2748 or
to lpm. Bot.
1 u ,, L ,___.,. · -;-; - · ~ 1~.&amp;"""
~
1171 Ford IIIII oxc. cond .• ullllly trohr. with
875-7866.
11
leave mluage.
448-0322
'.'.::.'w •n- ~""'"'' I
~-~
loodod.CoU14-:It7-7224. UIO. :104-171· 7322.

1

..

8 ft . slide in 'c amper with
jocks. 1800. Coli 446 -2075
eVBI .

Efficieny apt . Cell 992 5434 or 304· 882-2566 .

lil\aJ\11.

DICK TRACY

$40 . Call

Sale . 25% to 50% off
washers , dryers ~ r.ef .,
ranges. desks anD chest of
drawers . Skaggs Applian ces, Upper River Rd . Call
614-446-7398 . Opon 9-5 .

Apartment
for Rent

Ohio

Tuesda , November 29, 1983

Oak .China cebine1 $i 25 .
1 O:t~12 brown carpet ·$40,

"'

'"
4 mobile J-!omeS. 10' and, 2 ' 1
ft . wide . 2 bedroom fu rnished . Low priced .
Brown ' s Trailer Park . 614- 41
992-3324 .
room. 2 baths, large kitchen ,
$10,000 . 304-773-5023 .

j

HNJOZ

OZASA

VQ

IN

NK

Q J·M Z

BNSX
TQ
KTVY . - PJYBAS·YHOONI
Yeslerday's CryptGquote: THE UGHT THAT UES IN
WOMEN'S
EYES, HAS
BEEN
MY
HEART'S

UNDOING.-THOMAS MOORE

�•

Tuelday, November 29, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

12-The Daily Sentinel

·Recovery could be bad for some

Marriage licenses
Three marriage licenses were
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court.
Issued licenses were David Lee
Vance, 20, Rt. 1, Middleport, and
Etta Noel Kelly , 16. Racine:
Theodore Carl Flsher,27, Pomeroy,
and Deanna C)Jristlne Baker, 24, Rt.
1, Long Bottom: Theron David
Workman, 27, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and
Donna Marie Floyd, 30, Pomeroy.

NEW ORLEANS (AP~ - The
economic n'COVery has.n't trickled
down to many of the nation's clUes,
according to municipal leaders who
worry that the focus on the country's
improved fiscal health could take
the spotlight off urban woes.
''I don't think it's just Congress
and the admlnlstratlon that's a long
way from responding to the pecul-

I

Area deaths
'

Oswell Durham

Mr. Bradford was a member of
the Worthington Church of Christ
and was a life member of the
~attonal and State Auctioneer
Associations .
ServiceS will be held at 2 p.m.
Wednesday at the RutherfordCorbin Funeral Home 515 High St.,
Worthington, with Dale Pennock
officiating. Friends may call at the
funeral h!&gt;me from 7to9thlsevenlng
andonehourprlortotheWednesday
services. Memorial contributionS
may be made to the Meigs County
Chapter of the American Heart
Association.

Oswell E. (Odd) Durham, 70,
Route 1, Mlddieport.died Monday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
HewasbornAug.27,1913atQulck,
W. Va. , a son of the late Fred H. and
Virgie Mullins Durham. He was also
preceded In death by his stepmother, Ethel Durham; a daughter,
Barbara Jean Durham-in infancy,
and two brothers, Osburn and
Warren Durham.
Mr. Durham was a retired coal
miner, a veteran of the u.S. N'avyln
World War II and had worked as a
riverman for the T. G. Kenny
Dredging Co. at Charleston, W.Va.
SuJVtv!ng are his wife, Freda M. Clyde Stewart
Bailey Durham; daughters and
Clyde Dayton Stewart, 69, Balley
sons-in-law, Daisy M. and Larry
Hanson, Port Lavac, Tex.; Char- Run Road, Pomeroy, died Monday
lotte J. and Noble lrnoi, San Veigia, at Mount Cannel East Hospital in
Calif.: Sandra Kay and Jerry Columbus.
He was a son of the late John and
Holfrn'!JI, Corpus Christl, Tex.;
Jodee Jay and Harry Atkinson, Jennie Goble. Hewasalsoprecedj'd
Buford, Ga.; a son and daughter-In- in death by two brothers, William
law, Edward E. and Beatrtce and Donald Stewart, and .a son in
Durham, HarriSburg, Pa.; a son, infancy.
A retired coal miner, Mr. Stewart
Troy M. Durham, Route 1, MiddleIs
survived
by a sonanddaughter-inport; eight grandchlldren; one
law,
Haroid
and Joan Stewart,
greal-grandchild; sisters and
a
daughter
and son-in-law,
Obetz;
brothers-in-lawElolse and Leslle
Judy
and
Richard
Thompson,
Siders, New Haven, W.Va.; Helen
HaColumbus;
four
grandchlldren,
and Bill Hunter, Vinton; Katie and
rold,
Jr.,
and
Timothy
Stewart,
HaroW Tucker, Tampa, Fla.; Leta
and Ernest Jones, Dexter; Loretta Richard Thompson, and Tammie
and Ronald Taylor, Mt. Holly, N.J.; Shroyer, all of Columbus, and three
a sister, Bernice Mullins, Tucson, great-grandchildren.
ServiceS will be held at 2 p.m.
Ariz.; a brother and sister-in-law,
Jack and Ruth Durham, Boise, Thursday at the Rawlings- CoatsIdaho. A number of aunts, uncles, Blower Funeral Home with Rev.
cousins, nephews and nieces also Mark Seevers offlctating. Bllflal
will be in the Bradford Cemetery.
survive.
Services will be held at 2 p.m. ' Friends may call at the funeral
Friday at the Rawlings- Coats- home from 2 to ~ and 7 to 9 p.m.
BiowerFuneralHomewlththeRev. Wednesday.
Theron Durham officiating. Buriai
will be In Meigs Memory Gardens.

NEW OWNER - Carl Platter Is the new ownerolthe Mark V Store in
Middleport. Platter purehased the business 1rom Vance Johnson of
Jomsoo Super Markets Inc., GaDipolis. The new ~ess. now known
as the C.K. Super Market, is located at the corner of North Second and
MDI Street. 1be store will undergo extensive remodeling after the first
of &amp;he year. Bucky Walters wiD serve as store manager and Jolm
Russell, a recent graduate of National School Meat CUtting, Toledo Is
the butcher and Ruth Farmer is head clerk. 1be b!Jsiness will ofler the
same services as in the past. The market has been in the same location
for the past 43 years. Pictured 1-r are Carl Platter and William (Buclly)

Walters.

Local briefs:
Woman hurt in mishap
A Pomeroy woman is in stable condition at Holzer Medical Center
Monday after being injured when her car smashed into two cement
sidings on the Ravenswood Bridge.
Transported to HMC by Meigs EMS was Joann Weyersmiller. 48,
409 Spring Ave.
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol reported the
woman was heading north on Ohio 338 to. the bridge when she lost
control of her vehicle on the roadway. Thevehlclewent into the otHer
lane and hit the concrete siding. It then croSS€il into the other lane
and struck another siding.
The car sustained heavy damage in the 1: 10 p.m.. accident.

Money suit fded in court
. A suit in theamountof$1,XO,oo:JwasfiledlnMeigsCountyCommon
Pleas Court by Paris R. Hess.and Robin R. Hess, Rt. I, Middleport,
against James King, Minersvillo:&gt;- and Jeffers Coal and Excavating,
Pomeroy.
The suit alleges on Dec.18, 1981 about 4 p.m. the defendant, James
King, negligently operated his construction vehicle and otherwise
'iolated his duty to exercise ordinary care by causing an oil rig to
violently jerk off base causing Paris Hess, plaintiff to !all about 15feet.
The plaintiff alleges that he suffered injuries to his hlp, back, legs
and other parts of his body, permanent and dlsabillng ln nature,
severe Pain and mental anguish since that time and will suffer In the
future. King was an employe of Jeffers Coal and Excavation,
Pomeroy, The plaintiff further charges that he is unable to transact
his usual earning capacity and the earning capacityoltheplaintlffhas
been diminished.

may
call9 p.m.
at the
funeral
Friends
home from
3: ~to
Thursday.

Final pickup this week

iar!ty of this recovery," saldSt.Paul
Mayor George Latimer on Monday
at the opening of the 60th annual
National League of aues convention. "Ith!nkit'ssharedby a lot of us
who haven't really come up with an
aUernat!ve program."
The league has pollcy positions on
economic recovery and national
budget deficits, which members are
expected to reaffirtn In the closing
business session on Wednesday,
They want the costly federal
entitlements - principally Social
Security and federal pensiOns brought under control. They want
defense spending to grow more
slowly. They want federal tax bikes
If necessary,ln Ught of widespread
city_tax increases.

•

But the resolutions committee,
which Latimer heads, recognJzes
that theSe remedies look at the big
picture and only ask the federal
government to look more closely at
local impact of natlonai policies.
Seattle Mayor CharleS Royer,
president of the league, said, "While
there are signs of an economic
recovery, it is Impossible to be
certain about .Its Impact on the
nation's ctties In light of the .a dded
responsibit!es .that have been
passed to the cities by state and
federal goverhments ... and the
spector of long term fo:&gt;-derai deficits
continuing to chill both private and
publlc investment ....

'

WARMERS
Warm ~nit leg warmers in
solids, stripes and
prints. Sizes for Little Girls, PreTeens, Juniors and
Misses.

More than 575 appllcatlons have
been taken In Gallia and Meigs
Counties In the first three weeks of
the Home · Energy Emergency
Assistance Program, according to
the GaDia-Me!gs Community ActionAgency.
Gallia-Meigs CAA is the administering agencyforthefederallyfunds
program designed to heip eligible
low-Income households meet the
hlgh cost of winter heating. The
emergency program provides assistance to eligible applicants facing
utility shut -off or those w1th a
ten-day or less fuel supply.

favor of the tax at a later time.
Favoring the measure were
GouncUrnenJackSatterfieid,Horky
&amp;ndGUrnore. Sincefourafflrmative
are required on a first reading
and onlyfourcouncU members were
present, the measure failed .

Maximum one-time benefit is ~
per household.
·Eligible applicants for both programs must fall below the 150
percent Federal Poverty Income
Guidelines of $7 .~for a one person
household plus $2,520 for each
additional member in the
household.
Applications for the regular
HEAP program are available at
Community Action Agency Offices,
County Welfare Departments, Senior Citizens Centers, Post Offices,
Banks and other Social_ Service
Agencies In both counties.

Hemlock Pipeline, Inc., Racine, has begun work on a
$239,119.50 HUD project on about
flve acres of land owned by
Middleport Village, situated
along Hartinger Parkway in
Iower Middleport.
Hemlock, Inc., was the low
bidder among seven ~~~ bidding on the project and the
company's bid was accepted by

--

Middleport Village Council on
Nov.' 14. However, the bid was
subject to review and recommendation by Village Solicitor
Bernard Fultz. Mayor Hoffman
said Monday night that Fultz
had recolfl11lended that the
Hemlock Co. bid be accepted.
Floyd G. Browne Associates, the
village's engineering firm, had
also recommended acceptance

•.

Gallipolis Business CollP.ae
"'0
Gallipolis, OH.

Admitted Shelly Proffitt,
Nancy Neulzling, Syracuse; Ellen Couch, Pomeroy;
K!mberlee Mayle, Long Bottom.
DisCharged - WUUarn Snouffer,
Rose Brown, Merle Douglas.

f0111and;

Hunters get 588
Meigs Game Protector Keith
WoodS reports that the deer kill in
the county on Monday, the firSt day
of the gun season. totaled at least588
with !bat number being registered ,
tluW&amp;h cheek points.

446-4367

~

ATTENTION
Kmart SHOPPERS
In our--"November 30, 1983
"Good Gift ld• at" aclverlllemenlt on page I. we have In·
COI'I'eCIIy d••c•lb•d the quan1111•• of the 111 pie ornamentL
Correct clelcrlptlon 1houkl
read:
"12 APPLE ORNAMENTS"
We regret any Inconvenience
thll may have ce~~~••d our
Cll.-omerL

Gallla-Melgs CM Outreach and
HEAP staff are avaUable to assist
people file applications at the
central office in Cheshire, theGallia
County · Outreach Office at 417
Second Ave., Gallipolis, and the
Meigs County Outreach Office on
the ground floor of the courthouse in
Pomeroy.
Application deadline for the
regul_ar HEAP program is Jan. 31,

1984.
For more information, residents
are to call446-0611, 367-7341 in Gall!a
County and 992-5605 or 992-6629 in
Meigs County.

of tbe Hemlock Co. bid.
The company has begun work
near the site and are preparing
for the installation of water lines
as the first step. Other phases of
the job tnclude installation of
storm and sanitary sewers,
sidewalks, streets and curbings.
The approxirrulte five acres is
earmarked !or housing units.

Eastern Avenue.
Next door to Pizza Hut
.448-4113

I ~~S~t-~R~•a.=W~75~-0~2~-04~7~28=================~

ve&amp;erans Memorial Hospital

Improvements.
Meigs County received a grant
from the U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency to upgrade
falling sewage disposal systems In
Tuppers Plains in the amount of
$281,010 whUe the county's share Is
$49,500. The engineer's estimated
cost of the project is $336,660.
The grant will cover &amp;'i percent of
the construction costs and the
residents will payl5percentofthelr .
individual construction cost. Cost to
property owners will range from
$100 to $1,oo:J each, depending on the
seventy of each problem.
U the cost ofthetotalproject is less
the cost to residents would be less.
The grant funds will cover
approxlmate)y 25 percent of the cost
of the design and 85 percent of the
cost to construct sewage disposal
Improvements.
Landfill road discussion
Meeting with the commissioners
Tuesday were Larry Hunt and .
Stanley Hunt of Abundent Life Caol
Co. concerning the maintenance of
the road to the Iandfill which is being
(Continued on page 14)

~

.

•

Friday, December 2

.

. '

Now that we're settled in our new offica, it's
high time we celebrated. You're invited. Just
pop in any time on our special OPEN HOUSE
DAY. Share our treats. Take home our giveaways. And register for our door prize. You
could win, but you won't if you don't stop in.
See you therel

~150,999

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Mother, brother testify
in Gallia ·01urder ·trial
GALLll'OLIS- Betty Twyman, rnately 10 minutes, she testified.
"What we know is that Barbara
mother of the victim, was the first
person to testify in the trial of · Twyman was at home, alive that
day at 12:ll p.m. Is that correct?."
Charles Lee II, 17, Point Pleasant,
who stands before Gallla County King asked. "Yes," Mrs. Twyman
Common Pleas Court charged w1th replied.
During testimony, Mrs. Twyman
murder in connection with the
·said
she returned home at 2: lOp.m.
shooting death of 17-year-old Barsaid she found her daughter's
She
bara 1\vyman, Rt.1, Ewington.
Buckeye
Hills school jacket - and
Mrs. Twyman, began to cry when
-her
purse
beside It- on Barbara's
asked by Prosecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain to Identify a 'bed. She added her daughter would
have needed the jacket due to the
photographed portrait of herdat,!ghter entered by the state as its first cold weather and that she always
· piece of evidence. "That's my wore it.
Mrs. Twyman told King she gave
daughter," Mrs. Twyman said.
her daughter permission to stay out
The teen-ager's body was found
untU6p.m.
April 6 in a well off Alice Road on an
A phone bill listed to Mr. and Mrs.
abandoned rural mobile-home site.
Twyman,
presented as evidence by
She had been shot twice, according
the
state,
was identified by the
to coroner's reports - once in the
mother.
chest and once in the head. She had
The prosecution witness told the
been misslng since March 20.
Testimony by Mrs. Twyman · court she phoned Johnson, who she
said told her he had not seen
lasted for nearly an hour.
During questioning by Cain, the Barbara. She also called Lee's home
woman toW the court she and her In Point Pleasant.
In cross-examination, King asked
.husband had attended church the
Sunday that her- daughter disap- If Lee told her that he had not seen
peared. Her son and Barbara Barbara. Mrs. Twyman answered
"yes."
remained home.
When asked by Cain what she did
At 12:20 p.m. that day, Barbara,
said Mrs. TwymaJl, had-contacted after gaining no information about
her at the church asking permission her daughter's whereabouts, she
said, :'I walked the floor."
to go with Lee to visit the mother of a
Judge Richard C. Roderick acRusty Johnson .
cepted
four exhibits from the
Johnson and Barbara were good
as
evidence. One was an
defense
friends, she said. Mrs. Twyman
aerial
map
of the Twyman resiconfirmed the time of the call again
dence
and
·
surrounding area;
when asked about It by defense
another,
a
phone
bill belonging to
atiorney Hamlin King. The teieMarsha
Lee,
Point
Pleasant phone conversation lasted approxl-

mother of the accused. Also entered
by the defense was , a March 24
"missing person" article printed in
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune and a
March 28 advertisement asking the
teen-ager to return home, a lso
published in the newspaper.·
Asked about her daughter, Mrs.
Twyman said she liked to take walks
ln the Alice Road area and near the
Twyman home. Her daughter was
to renew her driving permit the
following day. She said the daughter
had been "grounded by her
parents."
Mrs. Twyman testified she had
concluded her daughter had eaten
prior to her disappearance after
fmdlng leftover food in the
refrigerator.
Asked about Lee, Mrs. Twyman
said he had been at her home three
times and she first met him in the fall
of 1982. She testified she had no
opinion about his character; but ,
answered yes to defense attorney
King when asked if her first
Impressions of Lee were that he was
polite, respectful and nonviolent .
When asked by the ,prosecuting
attorney if she knew Shirley Furst,
Mrs. Twyman said she did not,
adding Furst was never at her home
and did not know Barbara.
Brother testifies
Tuesday afternoon, the victim's
brother - Robert E. 1'w)&lt; man ,
Ewington - testified he had last
seen his sister at noon on March 20.
He said the victim had prepared
lunch - consisting of cube steak,
(Continued on page 10)

Drinking drivers program objective

Large Homeowner Loans

To

S.dion , 14 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.......

.,

FINANCIAL AID STILL AVAILABLE

Hospital news

.

conduct surveying for aerial control
points during the week of Dec. 12.
In order for residents to know the
people who will be going house to
house, and what is being done, a
Jetter wlll be malted to each resident
during the week o.fDec. 5, explaining
the purpose and requesting residents' cooperation.
The engineers recommend an
advisory committee of no more than
five local residents be appointed by
commissioners. John David Jones
and Associates, · will bnef the
advisory committee on the project,
assist
the commissioners in
defining their role and responsibilities and consult the committee on
key issues to be resolved.
The firm stressed that commissiOners, until a management structure Is legally formalized, must
serve as the final decision making
authority.
Aerial views were taken on Nov.
22. The photographs will be converted to 40-scale plan sheets of the
projecl area and wlll be used to map
existing horne sewage disposal
systems and lay out proposed

-·

TUPPERS · PLAINS

Racine firm begins village project .

BANG!

TRAIN IN FIELDS THAT PAY WEL~, .•
ASSOCIATE DEGREES AND DIP~QMA-S
•Bu~iness Administration •Executive Secretary
•Computer Science •Accounting

wtes

deer on opening .;lay
-

with a

~·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 30, 1983

-

· By KATIE CHOW
'
Sentlnelslaff
Jolm David Jones and Associates,
- Inc., have begun work on the
Tuppers Piains design portion of the
sewage project. This information
. was disclosed at Tuesday's Meigs
County commission meeting.
According to a letier the firm's
Immediate efforts will focus on
several tasks.
The tasks lnclude, developmental
a management system beginnlng
with the Dec. 1, meeting with Ohio
· EPA and the Ohio Department of
Heaith to discuss issues and options;
providing assistance, at the commissioners direction, in forming an
advisory committee of local residents; conducting· house-to house
system evatutions to determine the
specific home sewage disposal
systems to be upgraded; aerial_
photOgraphy of the project area to
provide base maps at an appropriate scale; percolation tests (l0tol5
sites) to supplement available soils
data.
The firm proposes to undertake
. the house-to house evaiuatlon and

LEG

I

529 Jackson Pike

enttne

on sewer proJect

WINTER TERM OPENS
MONDAY JANUARY 2

lndlcated that the people they have
talked to were in favor of the village
collo:&gt;-eting the permissive auto
ttcense tax. A first reading of an
ordinanceprovidingforthetaxwent
down to defeat 3-1 since four votes
were required for the first reading.
Councilman Horton cast the dissenting vote but indicated he might be in

•

at
e
Work underway
.

:

We're opening

NOW!

(Continued from page 1)

story oil Page 9

•

'

.

Hospital moratorium

-575 file HEAP applications

STOP Wishing For that Good Job
STOP Wishing For Security
DO Something About It

· Middleport
Council ...

-

•

Voi.32,Nc. 162
Copyrighted 1983

r-;:==========:;i

'

Vermont.
Temperatures at 3 a.m. EST
ranged from llat Devils Lake, N:D.,
and Miles City, Mont., to 76 in Key
West, Fla.

What's Cooking? PageS

.

•

Three calls were answered Monday by local units, the Meigs County
·
Emergency Medical Services reporis.
Pomeroy at 1: 59 p.m. took Rhea Roush from Locust St. to Holzer
Medical Center: Racine at 10:45 a.m. took Bill McNeely, Jr., from
Blind Hollow Road to Veterans Memorial, and Racine at 1: 31 p.m.
went to Great Bend for Joan Weyersmlller, taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

· (Continued from page 1)

Story, Photos on Pagt' I

Stories on Page-l

Squads answer thr~ calls

New storm ...

Thrifty poiato ideas

SVAC cage roundup

Cloyce Bradford

The final pick up of leaves in Middleport is being conducted this
week. Residents are asked to rake their leaves into the street .along
the curb and they will be picked up by the street department crew.

Marauderettes post win

hiktl"'lllllwerM!c!c!lopft.n-deepdltd'elu-e

belalllltlde tor Wider tllllllewer . . .to beiBtld II&amp; the
ile wltldl .. e8I'IIW'W lor

I

GALLIPOLIS -Lt. Dan Henderson, Post Commander of the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol, has announCed the
"STEP 84 Program" is underway.
STEP (Acronym for Selective
Traffic I;;n!orcement Program)
was formulated to attack those
causative factors most likely to
contribute to rural fatal accidents.
Troopers, working overtime, will
be scb.."duued to patrol areas where
a high incidents of hazardous
mov!hg violations has led to fatal
accidents. Emphasis will be on
taking the drinking driver ott the
road and other unsafe driving acts

such as divlitg left of center a•.d
driving too last for road conditions.
•Two problem locations Identified
for "STEP 84" Include SR 7 from
US 351n Gallta County to Chester In
Meigs County and US 35 In Gallta
County from SR 7 to Rio Grande.
Three people were kllled in those
locations in 1982. So far this year,
two persons have died in those
locations. Many other accidents
that have occurred in the surroundIng areas can be attributed to the
DWI drivers who have come trom
these two problem locations.
Seventy-five percent of all DWI
arrests made in these locations -

.

473 in 1982 and 334 so far this year.
Funiling lor the "STEP 84"
Program was obtained by securing
Federal Grants for the National
Highway Safety _ Adt11inlst_ration .
through the office ~f the Governor's
Highway Safety Representative in
the Ohio Department of Highway
Safety.
"Reducing fatal accidents Is the
primary goal of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol," Lt. Henderson
said, "the public can help by driving
defensively, wearing their seat
belts and child restraints, obeying
the traffic laws and not drinking If
they are going to be driving."
)

•

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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43618">
              <text>November 29, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1366">
      <name>bradford</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2345">
      <name>durham</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
