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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

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Hospital moratorium

-575 file HEAP applications

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

· Middleport
Council ...

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•

Voi.32,Nc. 162
Copyrighted 1983

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

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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

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•

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."
)

•

�~roy

Wednesday, Nowmber 30, 1983

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

....

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Au18tant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manarer

••-

Page

The death sentence_____,_J_ame_.___:s
WASffiNGTON -Few questions
of public policy arouse stronger
emotions than the difficult question
of the death sentence. In our
presumably civilized society,
should capital punishment ever be
imposed?
I have problems with the Issue
when It is viewed in the large. There
Is little evidence to support the

proposition that the possibility of a
death sentence deters anyone !rom
rape, kidnaping or murder.
Granted that our 18th-century
Constitution specifically ~anctlons
capital puntstunent, It seems to me
arguable that in the 20th century the
deliberate execution of a human
bE.ing could well be regarded as
both cruel and unusual. Justice.

William Brennan and Thurgood
Marshall make persuasive arguments in this regard.
But I have no problem with
accepting capital punishment In
one specific area: If Thomas
Silverstein, 30, and Clayton Fountain, 28, should be tndlcted this week
tor murder and later found guilty,
they should be put to death. The

•
A MEMBER ot The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Auocla·
.tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be las than300 words
IOIIJ. AllleUers are subject to edltlnJ&amp;nd must be signed wllh name, address and
•elephone number. No unslgaed letters wUI be published. Letten 8hould be .In
10od taste, addreulnJ Issues, not personalities.

A new president

..

.
f

Berry's World
•
-l

By 1be Aslloclated l'mul
.
Two freslunen unaccustomed.to losing mad!: sure
.Indiana got back to·its winning ways.
Marty Simmons scored eight points durtng a 28-4
streak early in thesecondhalfandSteveAlfordadded
some key free throws as the Hoosiers overcame a
nine-point deficit Tuesday night and stormed past
visiting Notre Dame 00.7'2.
Simmons, a &amp;-foot -5 f01ward whose Illinois .blgh
school team won 68 straight games, finished wlth 22
points while Alford, who was Indiana's top high school
scorer last season, had 14. ·
Indiana had been upset by Miami of Ohio in Its
season opener, and Hoosier Coach Bobby Knight was
upset when hls team fell behind Notre Dame.
"The coach talked to us at halftime and said it
would be the sarrie as.last Saturday if we didn't come
out the first five minutes and put things together,"
Alford said. ''We've l~ real light. In the second half,
we were reaUy relaxed and for the first time, I think,
•

_K,....:...'lp_at_ric_k

!____:·

News Editor ·

In all the spate of tears and nostalgia about John F. Kennedy during the
20th anniversary of his murder, one figure was forgotten, just as he almost
was forgotten at the time.
He,was the president of the United States - the new president.
Looking back, one can sympathize wlth Lyndcin B. Johnson. He a.sSumed
ihe presidency under shattering circumstances. He was bound to be met
wlth hostility: he was the only person in America whose station in Ufe
clearly benefitted from the assassination of John F . Kennedy.
.. 'Fate was cruel, too, !n another way. It was in Lyndon Johnson's Texas
that Kennedy was killed. He'd gone to Texas on a political fence-mending
IJllssion ai Johnson's behest.
' Somehow, to many, Johnson almost became the villain. Those who loved
Kennedy and mourned him were not so generous to concede that Johnson
bail to take over quickly. Wasn't it unseemly for Johnson to insist that the
()alb of office be administered on Texas soil a mere hour and a half after
Kennedy's death? That the oath be given on the presidential airliner with
the curtains drawn? That the new president insist that Kennedy's widow,
still wearing her bloodstained clothes, be a wltness to the transfer of
power?
·
No, it wasn't unseemly. Johnson had every reason to be cautious and
frightened that afternoon. No one knew the killer or hls motive; no one
kl¢w If the assassination were an act of madness or of war.
Suspicion between a vice president and hls coterie and a president and
hls associates is nothing new, but suspicion had ~Ira reason to exist in the
Kennedy·Johnson camps - Johnson had been Kennedy's rival for the
presidential nomination three years earlier.
JohnSOn, a master of the Senate- truly king of the Hill- held Kennedy
ill mlnlmum high regard. He saw Kennedy as a weU-born, rich, cui~
and ambitious dilettante who had no Senate accomplishments .
Despite the obvious ot&gt;itacle posed by Kennedy 111-wlll and n;ltional
misgivings, Johnson assumed office wlth skill and professionalism.
Sure-handedly, he established the continuity of government, conveyed
the impression of a man up to the job and corrunitted himself to two
Kennedy proposals mired in Congress - to "get this country moving
again" through a big tax cut (heresy in those days) and to assure black
people-of their rightful place in Amertca.
At a time of grief and paralysis, Johnson set aside provinclallsm and
internal division to become president of all the people.

2-The Daily Senlinel

Pom110y-Middleport, Ohio ·
'ednesday, No11e.,ber 30, 1983..

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

T

trouble is, they won't be put ·to
death: They are Ufe-termers at the
federal penitentiary in Marton, ill.,
and they are charged with the
murder of two prison guards. But
federal law now provides no more
than another life sentence for such
crimes.
There were two separate Incidents about 10 hours' apart on Oct.
22. The Marton prison, It should be
noted, is the tlghlest of all federal
institutions; opened in 1963, it now
functions as the Alcatraz of the
1980s. Here are confined more than
300 of the most dangerous convicts
in the nation. Within the prison itself
Is a separate small prison known as
the control unit in H cell block. The
most incorrigible · prisoners are
kept in the control unit under
conditions, mandated by the Supreme Court, that ordinarily keep
them confined to thelr cells for 23 of
every 24 hours. Silverstein and
Fountain were thus imprlsoned),ast
month.
~
A little after 10 a.m., Corrections
Officer Eugene Clutts, 51, was ·
escorting Silverstein back to hls cell ·
from a shOw~r room. In some
!asbian no.t altogether clear, Silver· ·
stein managed to pause at another·
prlsoner'.s ceil. He slipped ltlS
handcuffs, suddenly produced a ·
10-inch knife made from a piece of
steel bed frame, and stabbed Clutts
an estimated 40 'iirnes. The officer
left a wife, two sons and a daughter.
About 8: :.&gt; that evening, Officer
Robert L. Hoffman, 53, in the
company of three other officers,
was escorting Fountain back to his
cell from a reCreation period.

WASHINGTON- Warning: .The
industrial world could be devastated by another energy crtsis just
as It is recovering from the oil price
plague of the 1970s. Worried
analysts tell me that the next oil
shock could double the price of
crude and throw the economy into

reverse.
Yet the Reagan administration
has taken no effective precautins to
avert the calamity, as If the
authorttles have lost the capab\lity
to learn from past debacles. Here
are the disturbing developments:
- Iran and Iraq are threatening
to escalate their three-year-aid war
and ignite the Persian Gulf oil
fields. Iraq ha,s ordered French
superjets for the declared purpose
of blasting Iran's oil works. The
Iranians have threatened to retaliate by attacking the other all
skelkdoms and choking off oil
shipments through the narrow
entrance to the Persian Gulf. This
could block the flow of eight million
barrels a day.
- President Reagan is unprepared to cope wlth a sudden
interruption in oil supplies. Because

surprising discipline. · They are accomplished to reseue coal from
of his anti·regulation i(jeology, he
painfully limiting production and the doldrums or to subsidize
opposes most of the steps needed
holding prices in the $30 range. This conservation programs.
for damage control during an
demonstrates that OPEC still has
emergency.
- The United States is danger·
'- A sudden on crisis would catch the ability to rig the oil market.
ously vulnerable to an overseas oil
- Other pressure groups, wlth a cutoff. Thirty percent of the oil we
the oil companies and consuming
vested Interest iJ) high oil prices. consume Is Imported, and the
industries with their reserves down.
They have cut their stocks of stored have grown up around the oil- consumption Is rtsing again. Big
oil dramatlcaUy in order to reduce producing countries. These power- car sales are up; conversation is
storage charges. Inventories have ful interests include the major oil lagging; domestic oil production is
dropped at the rate of three mJJllon ,companies, international banks sagging.
and multinational corporations The oil glut, meanwhile, has
or four million barrels a day. This is
all afraid · of the impact on raised the hope that the industrial
a reprise of the error that the same
themselves of either falling oil democracies might regain some
,oil companies made just before the
prtces
or sliding credit ratings measure of control of their energy
1979 price 01(plosion .
- Prices soared into orbit in 1979 among oil producers. Together, supplies - not through their own
they are mobilized to keep oil prices · perlormance but through the In·
because the United States tiuned a
limited oil shortage into a crisis, out high.
credible profligacy of their exploit- They have succeeded In ers. Yet the Reagan administration
of fear. Today, the OPEC governments are looking for another immobilizing the Reagan admlnis· has no oU policy; It has faDed to
panicked response to a crtsis, which !ration. President Reagan wants to exploit· the opportunity to force a ·
would set the stage for the next , cut back the pumping of oil into the decline in oil prices.
price gouge.
Strategic Petroleum Reserve by
Footnote: The western world has
The oil potentates are sitting on 20 more than 50 percent, though the been staggered by a decade of
prtce is probably lower now than It runaway oil prtces. Watergate was
mllllon barrels a day that could be
will ever be again. The Alaskan a penny ante scandal compared to
produced but are held back from
Natural Gas ·Pipeline project Is Ollgate. Both of them were the
the market so as to maintain the
foundertng badly. He has emas· responsibility of one man - .
price at 120 times the cost of
called the program to develop Richard Nixon. Yet he has escaped
production. Despite an oil overflow,
synthetic fuels. And little has been
the OPEC countries have shown
judgment of Oilgate. I'll try to
remedy·this in future columns.

Some men like to Uve danger- to see that the minortlies, women,
Women are no longer a novelty
ously and it seems that Oblo blacks, Hispanics and Jews, intend
either in the board rooms or on the
Congressmen are no exception. Six to make their votes count at the
picket lines. They are corning into
Ohio Representa lives voted against polis. Each of the six gentlemen
their own regardless of the ~yllls
the Equal Rights Amendment named above will be up for
Schafflys or the Right to .Ufers.
when It came up for a vote last· reelection next year and must · They are demanding the light of
week. Strangely enough, that was depend in large measure on the
choice as concerns their bodies,
exactly the number of votes which minorities to reelect them. Some of
equal pay for equal work and
the amendment needed for the
em are in for a sad awakening!
partnership with the men in the
necessary two-thirds majority for
More and more women are
rights guaranteed by the Constitupassage. Will women voters in Ohio
king themselves, "Why should
tion. For the life of me, I can't see
remember this when these men we be considered a minority when
anything outrageous in their
come up for reelection next !aU?
we outnumber the men?" They
demands!
Our own Congressmen !rom the answer their own question, "BeWith one of the world's greatest
Ohio Tenth District, Clarence cause we do not have equal rights
male
chauvinists silting in the Oval
"You 're not alone. I haven 't slept a wink since
Miller of Lancaster, was one of the with the men in the United States
'
Office
and enjoying a wave of
seeing 'The Day After' either!"
six Republicans who voted against Constitution, because we do not
self-produced popularity, perhaps
the measure. Others were Michael receive equal pay for equal work,
the six Ohio Congressmen felt safe
DeWine, Sprtngfleld, John Kasich, and because for 60 years we have
in casting their vote against the new
Columbus, Robert McEwen, Hills· been content wlth our minortty
ERA. They joined 103 other Repubbora, Michael Oxley, Lima, and status. But no longer! " In the last
licans and 38 Democrats in defeat·
Chalmers Wylie, Columbus. These few years the role of women in
men were possibly voting thelr Amertcan life has undergone a
conscience belleving in their hearts drastic change. Much or their
. Today is Wednesday, Nov. 30, the334thdayof1983. Thereare31daysleft
that they are superior to women in new-found independence has been
tn the year.
every way except the ability to give forced on them by economic
• Today's highlight in history:
birth wblch no doubt they feel they conditions the last three years 88 ·
: On Nov. 30,1782, America and Britain signed prellmlnary peace articles
could do better If they had the right they have been forced into the labor
Iii Parts, ending the Revolutionary War.
equipment. This was the attitude of market in artier that they and their
. On this date:
the legislators in the states not tarnllles could survive. To many
: In 1874, British statesman Sir Winston Churchill was born inOxfordshlre,
ratifying the amendment the last who have been forced to work to
Eflllland.
time around when it lacked three
protect the farnJJy home frQm
· in lllll7, the first game of softball, invented by George W. Hancock, was
state-s for the necessary number foreclosure or to feet their children,
played at the Farragut Boat Club in Chicago.
voting for ratlflcation. What the six their new independence has proven
In 1954, an SY,i·poond meteorite crashed through the roof of a house in
representatives failed to consider is . a heady thing. They like theSense of
Sylacauga, Ala., bitting Elizabeth Hodges.
aCCQmplishment tltey find in their
that times have changed since the
. In 1962, U Thant of Burma was elected secretary general of the United · Equal Rights Amendment was first
jobs, of contribUting to the farnlly
Nations.
Income and the feelings that their
proposed for the consideration of
And In 1915, President Gerald Ford Oew to China on a state visit.
the American legislators.
lives have beim changed so com·
:Ten years ago: Watergate figure Egll Krogh pleaded gullty to a civil
plelely they will 00 longer be
The wording of the amendment
rflbts charge growing out of the 1971 burglary at the of1lce of Daniel
remains the
but that Is .all.
content with the role of housewlvee.
EJioberg'S psychlattist.
Women are now In the polltlcal
The only l1y in the ointment Ill their
Five years ago: Fonner President Richard Nixon told students at
catl&gt;lrd's seat and they intend to
minority status!
OXford Un1verSity In England that be woold continue to speak on world
In the United States, females
make the most of lt. For one thing,
atratrs "as lollg as I have a breath In my body."
women outnumber men. Thai Ia a
outnumber males by roughly three
One year ago: President Reagan arrived in Brazn In anellort to Improve 'statistical !act and all signs point pez cent. In a nation of :lSI million,
l'lllatbla between the United States and Latin America's targatcountry.
tbll adds up to a COIIIIderable
toward them tiling their numerical
Today' a blrtbdayl: Actor Etrem Zlrnballst Junior Is 00. Actqr Richard
advantage to elect CoDgreumen
vottna ed&amp;e tor the women and tor
Cl'elllla II 56. Rldlo and 1V host Dick Clark Is 54.
next year sympatheUc to women's ,the flrat time in the Uvet ciiiiOII of
'lboullrt tar 1Dtlay; "Uberty Is the me thing yw can't have unleas you · Issues. One has only to study the them, they Jecopize the lmpor·
~~Wit tooOien."- William Allen White, Amerlcanjournalllt (181Sl9M).
lance of pursuing their advantage.
results of the 1982 and 1983 elections

!

ing the amendment, votes that wUl
not be taken lightly at next year's
election by women whose political
clout is on the rise. If you thought
the women's vote in the two most
recent elections was impressive,
then, to quote a well-known television personallty, "You ain't seen
nothing yet! " Next year the
women's vote will dominate the
presidential election and on down
the line. Women, being more
intuitive than men, have always
had their fingers crossed about
Ronald Reagan. Perhaps they have
always recognized the distinctly
Hollywood nature of his public
appearance and sensed hls Presld·
ency has been more shawmanslp
than anything else.
·

1foday in history

J

'

'

wee

Haw they Jared
Top Twenty Fared
By~..,_

HO'N t.re Top Twenty teams In thf&gt; Asso.
dated Press' 198l-&amp;1 colleit' basketball
poll fared TUesday:

v

1. Kentucky 1l.C1 did nat play.
2. Nlrlh Carolina ~2~1 did not play.
3. t.ror~town 12-(ll did not piny.
t ·Memphi s State i2.{lJ did not play.
:;, Iowa (l-Ot did oot play.

531 JACKSON PIKE·RT.35 WEST
Phone 446 - 4524

SUN

6.· Ma ryland rHh did no1 play,
7. North CaroUnjl Stat&lt;" ( &lt;1.-{J J did oot
play.
8. Houstoo t\!11 did not play.
9. OCU. t2{1J .dld not play .
10. Oregon State 10-01 did not pla~·11. Michigan Sl.iltP 1'l.01 did nnt play.

12. LOJtslana Stal E'

CINCINNATI (AP) - Ken Ku - think Bob Howsarn may be able to
·resman figures that when Cincin·
realize this is something that's in the
nail Reds fans get around .to
public interest as weD as in the best
reminiscing years from now, the interests of the club," he said.
name of Fete Rose will play a
The petitions have been passed
prominent role in the memories.
around to businesse~ and other
But Kuresman, a 36-year-oidfood individuals across the city. Wearing ·
broker, isn't ready to consign Rose a basebalicapthatsays, "Keep Pete
to the status .of former Reds star. Rose In Cincinnati," the bearded
Kuresman L• trying to rally fans of Kuresman has splicited signatures
the switch-hitter in an effort to get on downtown streets.
. "Let me say this. I think It's a
the Reds to sign him for the 1984
longshot," Kuresmansaid. "!would
season.
Kuresman has distributed peti· consider it a iongshot until anything
lions around the city to try to changes, until he's signed. Nobody
persuade Reds President Bob expects this to really work.
flowsarn to bring Rose back to his
"However, Bob Howsam ic "
hometown, where he spent his first
very, very good businessman. In
16 major-league seasons.
many ways, I think that's in our best
"If you were to ask most people
interests. I think Bob Howsam Is a
around the country when they think
man whO can llsten."
of Cincinnati, Ohio, what do they Meanwhile, the Cincinnati Reds
think of, I believe a majority of . have appointed four managers for
TAKEAWAY - ·Indiana's Tracy Fosler bats the basketbalf away
people would say the Cincinnati their minor league clubs, Vice
Notre Dwne's Donald Royal during first haH action in
from
Reds." Kuresman said. "And If you
President for Player Personnel
Bloomington, Ind., Tuesday. (AP Laserpholo).
ask them when they think of the Sheldon Bender announced
Reds, who do they think of, I believe Tuesday.
they'd say either Pete Rose or
Minor league managers
Jim Lett, Marc Bombard an\1 r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
.JohnnyBench." ·
Rose, a sparkplug for the "Big SarnMejiaswlllcontinuetomanage
Red Machine" that won work!
minor-league teams for the Reds,
championShips in 1975 and l876,left Bender said.
theRedsasafreeagentinacontract
Lett, 32, will manage the Cedar
disputefqUowingthe1978season. He Rapids, Iowa, club in the Midwest
signed with Philadelphia, which League. He haS managed in the
released him after the Phlllles lost Reds' farm system for seven years,
the World Series to Baltimore this and directed the Waterbury, Conn.,
club in the Eastern League last
fa.
ll
The42-year-old Roseistreetosign season. Lett previously managed at
with any major-league team, and Cedar Rapids in 1!Sl.
Kuresman thinks there's only one
Bombard, 34, wlll direct the
Tampa team In the. Florida State
appropriate arrangement.
"It's obvious to me that Pete Rose League. He has managed the Reds'
is going to be considered one of the Billings, Mont., teatn for the past
two seasons, and won· the Pioneer
greatest ballplayers of aU time,"
Kuresman said. "And we have an Leaguetltlethisyear.
~pportunity to get Wm back."
Mejias, :.&gt;, directed the Reds'
Kuresman estimates that he's Eugene. Ore., team in the Northwgotten as many as 10,000 signa lures est League this year, hls first as a
on his petitions from fans yearning man~er. He will take over the
to see Rose do his trademark Sarasota, Fla., club in theGulfC::oast
head-flrst stides in Riverfront
League next season. Mejias was an
'eallurJing Ca.iurt/(;re·ole Cuisine, fresh oy~;te1rs
Stadium.
outfielder for the Reds from 1979 to
the
and a complete assortment
"I've never gotten involved in 1981. HealsoscoutsforCincinnatlin
lbllef, chicken and seafood selections.
anything like this," Kuresman said.
the Dominican Republic. ·
Dinner
"It's just something that I believe is
Larry Barton Jr., 44, was named
Specialties
important. It's important beCause · manager of the Billings team. It's
Served
·open For
Pete Rose is a natural resource for
his first managerial jbb In profesHAPPY
5:00-10:00
Lunch at
our.corrununity."
sional baseball. Barton Is the Reds'
HOUR
Mon.-Thurs.
11:00 A.M.
Howsarn has said he's interested scoutingcoordlnatorforthewestem
4-6
P.M.
5:00-11:00
Mon.-Sat.
in talking toRose, but can't promise ·united States. He was a catcher in
Fri.
&amp; Sat.
him a full-time position. Kuresman the Los Angeles Dodgers' organlza·
said he hopes the petitions convince lion for four years before becoming

13.
14.
15.
16.

(2.{))
no1

s2.oo

TtfuRSOAY~ .!J

~ov 25 thru DEC
:RIOAY thru

did not play.

Georgia 12-01 did

play.
ArkanSaS t2·lt did not play.
Boston Coli~ 11-01 did not play.
DePau l tHI! d id not play.
l'i. Fresno Stat&lt;' (2-lt tx&gt;at A b~l'nl'

Christian 7&lt;1-~
18. Wichita Stalf' ('Hh !rat Colol'lldo
Stall' fA-54 .
•
19. St. John 's 12..01 dlri nm pla_l'.
20. Vlrglrlla Commonll'f'allh lfl..OI d id
no1 play .

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

Ba. U

)
'

:J
c7t,. "n
. Oo

m

at the French Quarter
State Route 7, Kanauga, Ohio
(614) 446-9174

Howsam that signing Rose makes
business sense.
"If our campaign shows the
intense admiration and love for Pete
Rose from the entire community, I

r~a~Reds~~sco~u~t~in~1~968.~-----l~!:::::::===============~~~~~~

Marshall wins
YPSILANTI, Mich. (AP)
LaVerne Evans, a G-foot4 senior
guard, scored a game-high 22 points
Tuesday night to lead Marshall to an
easy 71-65 nonconference basketball
victory over Eastern Michigan.
It was the season-opener for the
Thundering Herd while Eastern
Michigan's record slipped to H .
Marshall, employing a full-court
press most of the game, forced the
· Hurons into 21 turnovers.
Still, !lie H'.'rons hung tough in the
early going and the game was tied
14-14 with 12: 15 to play in the first
half .
Eastern· Michigan got 19 points
from Percy Cooper in a losing effort
while Phil Blevins added 18.

Introducing the
bathroom tissue
roller that's ·an
air freshener.
~

2 254

Georgianna T. Burns

M.D. ·

With Offices At
Pleasant Valley Hospital
' in Point Pleasant
Is Now Acceptin&amp; Patients ·

same

.,

points leading Syracuse over CorneD 84-55.
,· 7
j~y Foster had 18 poln!s and 7·foot center Mike
Brittain added 16, pacing South Carolina over
Mlssruri-St. Louis 85-62.
·
• •
Quentin Anderson's 16 pain!$ and a tough defense
helped Texas Tech beat Nebraska 5945.
Keith ThomaS tallled 23 points and five other Oid .
. Dominion players scored in double figures as the ;
Monarchs trounced Delaware State 1~.
.
Jerome Mincy scored 20 points as Alabama· :
Btrmlngham took the lead for good early in the second ·
half and beat Mississippi Valley 87·73.
Todd Holloway's 23 points led .Texas A&amp;M past :
Prarle VIew A&amp;:M 89-58.
:
Guard Jim Hader scored 20 points, 141n the second ·
half, to lead Kansas State over Oral Roberts 82-74. :
Junior forward Clyde Eads hit five straight si)Ots :
from the Door, helping Tulane over Rice 69-56, and :
junior guard James Stem hit for 35 points as Baylor :
routed Presbyterian 74-54~

FOrward Beman! 'l'ltompson !ICOI'ed l8 points and
Fresno State's other starting forward, Ron Anderson,
added 16 for the Bullmgs, the National Invllatlon
Tournament champions last ~· Fresno State,
2-1, sCored 16 straight points to
control of the
game midway through the first half and led by 36
points in the second half.
Xavier McDaniel scored 20 points and Aubrey
Sherrod.added 14 to lead Wichita State, which took Its
first lead of the game wlth2: 40left in the first half. The
Shockers led by just 4544 with 10:44 remaining before
a McDaniel basket sent them to victory.
Freshnian forward Tom Sheehey scored 18 points
to lead five VIrginia players In double figures as the
Cavaliers rouled Division II R!mdoJph-Macon 83-5p.
Vlrgl.nia, 3-{), raced to a lW lead and breezed to
victory.
Reserve WendeD Alexis tallied 19 points and highly
touted · freshman Dwayne Washington added 16

we really had fun playing the game:"
Alford, the nation's high school career free throw
percentage record holder, hit eight straight foul shots
in the second half.
Notre Dame led by as many 12 points in the first 20
minutes and was &lt;ihead 32-25 at halftime. Then, after
scoring the first two points of the sero!l'l half, the roof
feD in on the Irish.
"I thought we played two completely different
halves of basketball." said Notre Dame Coach Digger
Phelps. "I think we're both struggling for consistency,
and we have to learn to. play 40 minutes of
basketball."
Notre Dame, 2-1, started IPUf sophomores and a
treshman. Tom Sluby ied. the Irish with 18 points,
while Uwe Blab .had 15 for Indiana.
Only two Top Twenty teams played Tuesday- No.
17 Fresno State coasted past Abilene Chrlstlan-74-55
· and 18th-ranked Wichita State beat Colorado State
64-54.

Petition drive
underway for
Rose return

In energy danger ________________J_oc_k_An~d_er_so_n

The ERA vote__________:....._L_owe_ll_W_in...:::...ge_tt

.

3

Indiaria · rallies to defeat Notre Dame,. 80-72.:..

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Senlinei-Page

Middleport, Ohio

eveniltJ hours tor wortinc
ltiOihiB. SpKialtZiRc in llllllin&amp; and
school probllllltS for pediltrics.

ThutSday

Phone 675-6797
For Appointments

••

,,

·

..·

.' '

-

·-

-·'
••

'

•

•

�1983

No....,._

Ohio

Meigs ·~arauderettes post -34-27 victory;
add@d 11 points fOr the winner~ .
· start of the ~eason, outrebounded Conference 'play Thursday at~
Kelll Whitlatch led the Eaglettes
the Marauderettes 43-36. Stegall Federal-Hocking with the reserve ~
added nlne ·carofllll behlnc! Mea- . gamebeglnnlngat6p.rn,Saturday, ~
with nine points while Angle
•
Spencer follow@d with eight.
dows' ~- Eastern rebounding slats Meigs hosts Miller at 6 p.m.
In
the
preliminary
reserve
game,
~.
Meigs made 12 of 38 shots from were not available.
the
little
Marauderettes
Pulled
out
a
~
the field for 32 percent while
Meigs had twice as many
19-10
win.
Maria
Musser
led
Meigs
~
Eastern made good on 10 of 48 for 21
turnovers as 'it had 26 miscues to
with
eight
and
Jenny
Miller
added
'
percent . The Marauderettes
Eastern's 13. Meigs
Whistled
seven. Tonya Savoy and Erica ~
dropped 10 of 19 from the charity
for 19 fouls and Eastern 16.
.
Coach Ron Logan's crew, now HI Kessinger had five and four ~
stripe for 53 percent compared to
seven of 23 (31 percent) for Eastern.
on the year, open Trt-Valley respectively to lead the Eastern .
reserves.
j
E~stern, also making its iniHal

ROCK -8f&gt;RINGS - The Meigs
Marauderettes opened their season
by defeating cross-county rival
Eastet·n. 34-27 here Tuesday before
a large crowd at the Larry
Morrison Gymnasium.
Jenny Meadvws started where
she left off lest vear In leading
Meigs In bott ., &lt;·,g and rebound·
ing. The

~enior

game-high 1i points and 12 rebounds. Junior Denise Stegall

f-

Hannan Trace was the only SVAC

The game remained tight
throughoutthethlrdquarter,endlng victoryTuesdayqight. The Wildcats with a one-point lead by Oak Hill at
defeated Synunes Valley, 6!-18 the ~losing. liiizzer. Penick contrlbwhile Chesapeake dumped Southw· utoollrebounds tothePlrateeffort,
estern, 64-42 and Oak Hill downed with Jack Glassburn catching
North Gallla, 64-52.
seven.
Three players hit double figures
For the Oaks, Harrison's high
Thesday night as Hannan Trace scoring was complimented by 14·
opened Its 1983-84 basketball season points from Jeff Hale and 12 by
on a highnotewltha61-18rcmpover Craig Green.
Symmes Valley.
The Oaks put distance between
Jeff Barnes led the way with 14 themselves and NG In the fourth
points, Rob Brumfield had 11 and quarter, primarlly through free.
Billy Swain, 10.
throw shots. Oak Hill sank 14 of 19
Coach Mlke Jenkins' W)ldcats tries from the charity line for 73
jumped into an 8-4 first period lead percent, and was'46 percent (24 of
and extenqed it to 3HO at the half.. 59) from the Ooor.
Brumfield led the 23 point second
The Pirates netted 26 of 52
quarter with seven points. Barnes attempts on Held goals for 50
paced the third period attack with (?ercent, while they were only 20
eight points a nd Rick Randolph led percent (two of 10) on free. throws.
the fourth quarter scoring.
In the reserve game, NG handed
Tile VIkings' offense could not get the junior Oaks a 40-36loss, )ed by
untrack@d. Scott Bowling l@d the Todd Dee! with 14 polnts. Mike
visitors with eight points while Chris Kemper added eight points toward
_Smith canned six.
the win, while B. Gaines and C.
Hannan Trace connected on 24 of Walls had seven polnts each for the
56 floor attempts for 45 percent and visitors. The Pirate reserve's top
13of 24trlesatthe foulllne.Symrnes rebounder for the evenlng was
Valley hit just eight of 33 field goal David Hammons.
attempts.
NG returns to acllon at home
The Wildcats collected 42 reFrldaynightagainstHannanTrace.
IDghlanders beaten
bounds with Swain and Steve Stitt
grabbing eight each.
At Otesapeake, a tall Panther
Hannan Trace also won the teameruptedfor12polntslntheflrst
preliminary contest, 34·27. Terry four minutes of the third quarter
Cline led the way with nine points which carried Chesapeake to a
whil~ Phil Balley chipped 1n with
lopsided 64-42 victory over
eight.
Southwestern.
Ccach Lloyd Myers' Highlanders
The Wildcats travel to North
Gallia Friday in an SVAC contest.
controlled the game's tempo In the
Oaks tOp Pirates
first two quarters which endedJO.JJ.
Oak Hill 's Johnny Harrison However, the Panthers carne out
scored 26 points and lead his team to smoking In the third canto and 1
a 62-54 defeat of host North Gallia quickly assumed control of the
Tuesday.
game.
In the season opener, Pirate Eric
Several key turnovers and missed
Penick l@d his team In scoring with · shots helped the Panthers In getting
20 points, with 16 provided by Larry theupperhand.RickMcMasterwho
Lee.
finished the game with 24 points for
The horne squad began the game the Panthers canned 12 during the
by keeping the Oaks at close
third quarter uprising. In the ftrst
quarters, ending the canto with an · · half, senior forward Randy Layton,
J.8.15lead.Efforts tostopHarr!Son,a
junior center Steve Pelfrey and
key man on new Oak Hill coach torwardRogerWellskeptthepaced
Qoug Hale's lineup, were unsucess- the Highlander attack.
ful and the Visitors caught up with
According to the charts, Chesa.
NG by tlle half with a 27-'J:I reading peake copnnected on 27 of 44 floor
on the scoreboard.
attempts for a hot 61 percent. The

team to post a non-conferenCe

•

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DISCUSSES STRATEGY - Ron Logan, Meigs Marauderette
coach, discusses a game situation during a Hll)~ut in Tuesday's
non-conleJ:"ence .opener against Eastern. Players include Jenny ·
Meadows (52 ), Rhonda Haddox, (12) and Cathy Dean (30).

GOES UP FOR SHOT - Meigs' Caihy Dean jumps up for a shot
over the, outstretched hands of Dee Dalley (40) of Eastern during
Tuesday s gam e at Lan-y R. Morrison Gym. Mei~ won the co"'est
34-27.•
e""
• Jon " t

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

November means the closing of the football season for most
hi&amp;h schools. It also indicates the coming of the Thanks&amp;lvlna
season for all schools. These two ideas lll8llt this year in a par·
ticujar nianner because this is the fiftieth annivetsary for those
who played football at Middleport Hi&amp;h School in 1933.
Yes, haH a century 810 this very month, MHS ended undefeated, untied football season to win the southeastern Ohio
championship and make claim to the state title for small schools
by winni111 ten pmes and scoring263 pointS while allowing only
28 points. (MHS won 28 consecutive games durinal933, 1934
and 1935.)
It was my privilege to play center on that 1933 team, and 1
want to thank those living or deceased who were on our 1933
football squad and express appreciation to the administration,
faculty and coaching staff at MHS, especially Coach Clyde R.
Battyn.

Office Hours by Appointment Only

.

Edward "Punk" Lewis

Tolalo , ..7-rt

Panthers sank 10 of 14 free throws
and outrebounded the Highlanders,
35-19.
Southwestemhlt17of56Heldgoal
tries for acold31percentandelghtof
16 foul Shots.
The Little Panthers took the
resetve game, ~1. Shawn Colley'
hadl3polntsforSouthwestemwhUe
Chris Mays led the Little Panthers
with 12.
Southw&lt;:&amp;tef!ll!osts Southern Fii·
day night ln an SVAC contest.

.

.

W{l,

Tolalo

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Published every afternoon, Monday
lhrou~h Friday, 111 Court Street, by the

1·

~~H:,11Ie:c~'P~!:r~ :o::;~et's9~: ~

Bo,.; 1100re:
s,....n- V.o.y (Ill)- FulkS W{): Waugh
1.().2; Smith 2-2-'; 1bompson t.().2i Bloom·
field 0-0-0: Bowling 4-0-8; Pack 0-0-0 and
Shephenl ~- Told 8-2-18.
Hunan Tnc:e &lt;•u - J. Barnes 7-0-14;
Swain 5-0-10:

meroy, Ohio.

•

Member: The Associated Press, In·
la nd Dally Press Assoclaton and the

,
,·

sentatlve, Branham Newspaper Sa les,
733 T hir d Avenue, New York, New
York 10017 .

J,

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::J~~~\~~~ J!Uo~'::~Jv:r~~~:e~!p~ ~:

Bru.mfield

J.fi.11: D. Barnes 3-2-8: Baileyl--().2; Stl« 1-l.J;
P. Bailey 142 and Davts0-2-2. Totals zt.-13-61.

i

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Symmes Valley ................ ... 4 6 2 6-18
Hannan Trace .................. .. 8 23 16 14-61

',...•·

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SUBSCRIPTION RATES

One ::ef~~~~~- ~-~ -~~:~.~~-~~~~~--$1-.00 ~~

North GaWa (54)- BlackbumJ.0.6: Diddle
2~:

OnE' Monlh ......... , ...................... $4 .40

Lee 8-0-16; Penick lO.O.Jl: Glassburn

2H: Hawks 1-l-3. Toioloo 21-2-M.
Oak 11m (61) - Potter 0-1-1; Harrison
lD-5-26: Green r.-2-12: Hale 5-4-14 ; Yates 2-0-4:
Fisher 2-2.fi. Totall zt...lt-e.
Soo... byqu.v&lt;en&lt;

One Year .......... : .. .......... ........ . $52.80

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rler may remit in adva nce direct to
The Dally Sentin el on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Crl"d lt wlll be
carrier each

North Gall Ia ...................... 18 9 15 12-54
Oak Hill ..
. ................ 15 12 16 19-62

month .

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Cttmapeake «M) -

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No su bscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service Is
ava il a ble.

Southwt!li&amp;em (42) - Meek 1-1-3; ' Wells
44 -12: R. _Layton J-0..6; Elllo!l 0-0-0; Pelfrey
6-1 -13; Baney 1-0-2; Baker 2-2-6 and HalSiop

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MAlb SUBSCRIPTIO NS

Fulks 3-0-6: Kincaid

IM~de Ohio
13 Weeks .......................... ....... $14.04
26 Weeks ......... ......... ......... ..... . $27.30
52 Weeks .................. ....... .... .... $51.48

2-1-5: McMaster 11-2-24; Napier 2-2-6; Wells
4-2-10: MaMlng 3-1·7: Sutter .1-&amp;2; Eary
1_1.0.2: Randolph 0-1-1. and Batl 0-1-1. TolaJs
n -tO.IM.

Chesapea ke ..........._.. ........... 14 16 18 16--64

52

W
eeks

Ji'n!mont StJoseph 7'2, Glbsonturg 64

1
.1
~

..................,...... .. $56.21

~lyrta Chr. .:11
Grove C11Y 5&amp; Hilliard 50
. Hannan 'J'race il, Symmes Val. l8
. Hubbard 74, Struttwn 62
Hudson 68, Akron Ellet ~
Indlen HUls Chr. at, C&amp;ntoo Htrttage 46
Jackson Cenh!r 51, Russia 35
Jackson-Milton 82, Farrnlrlgton f5

Griswold 48,

-----------...;J..__. :__________ :
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•DEPARTMENT STORE •
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8 to 10 LB. AVG.

CALLA HAMS ........... ~~~ $1.15

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YES

There is still time to

•Busines Administration
•Executive Secretary
•Computer Science
•Accounting

SELECT GROUP OF

MEN'S SPORT SHOES

ELIGIBLE FOR THE TRAINING OF VETERANS
FINANCIAL AID IS STILL AVAILABLE

Gallipolis Business College

Comlort •owllyle.

' Pvmatuning
·.z·
'
~ --fii" -

CAULIFLOWER .......... ~~~~- 79¢

••

USDA CHOICE

$} 99

.

Round Steak...... !~·..

$}S 9

Chuck Roast ...... ~•..

Val. 55. Falrpor1 Harding

: • Rlivenna !9, Roo!s!own 52
~' R.ilvt'Dna SE fil. Marlington t6
, ' ~ 79. Rklgemonl t8
• Salem Real UJe IJ), AShtabula Chrisllllll

Bananas .......... ;a~ 29¢

.

: • Sebrlnfil McKJnify :11, Lorclstown ll
Sharon. Pa ., tt, Young. SOuth 43
~•
••
•'
•
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:
••

Solon 4.1, c~. Brush 41
Sprlllg. Sooth !M, Day. Wbl!e fil
Stanton Loca! 56. Malvern 51
Stow 81. Copley !1'7
Strasburp: SJ. Rtnman 46
Stryker 52, FIPMlwlllt" 44
Teays Val. 00. Madlsln Ptalru; ~

.
• Tol. Cmtral Calh. 76. 0r?coo Strttcl'l 68
~ ; Tol. Llbbe:v -;,), Tot. Bowsher ~

'". Tal. Macomber :E. TaL Dt&gt;Vllblss 41
"" , Tol. SU'rands 86, Tol. Start 51
~ . Tot StJohn a&gt;, Tol. Rol'erl57, O'I'
• • Tol. Scoft 110, Tal. Woodward 49
.. • 1\n1c~rawas Val 72, Newro~n 49
'· Twtllllmil: 42, NonlonJa :B

oz.

~ Utb Tl, E. 'Krxlx IB

.e..

Van Burfn 87, Elmwood M
'•• Vf!fTTillPn.it. Norwalk 47
,. t War~6larJ1llco .fl6. VBlna Maltlt'WS ,

..

.. \ Warrensvtue at. Beect!wcod 44
T

.

CORN.~ •.. ~ .....~~~.

"

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; • w. Brandl 53.

!Pa.J Cari"lck

Unltt'd Local t3
w. Cbestl:'l" Lakota n, Ctn. Colerain 8)
Westervlne N. 6.1, GIVIIeport liO. OT
1
"" WesterVIBe S. :16, Col. Walnut Ridet" 52
Whitehall 62. Reynolchbu!'R ~
WL1rnin8foo 62. MlamiTrW'f' 54
.-.: Xenia Wlboo 73, Ohio Deaf ll

N

A

BROUGHTON'S

•

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2/$1.19

$} 09

aun.w
_..._
BOSTON RED SOX--Si«rwd

E1m:l Hen·

• drleka J r., catch«. to 1 frw q;wnt con~ tract wll~ their Elmira f&amp;rm Clul) In
' • CJusA .
T
SEAT'M.E MARINERS-Sent JarNeo Al·
• Bl, third llurrmarl: Jamie Nellr:ll, catclt,- ..... arrd GJea waucer. outlltkl!r. co Salt

.- w. aty pt ... :

"'"" ..._

TEXAS RANGEJIS...Sim -

Joooo.

., rtrs1 bM(!ITUII-CUIDitdf'r, 10 thP c::.wmm.
City lllft'l ~ lhP Amertcan .u.oetal1on.
•
TORONTO BlUE JAYg.....sow tht con·.. 1ne1 11 Daw ~ plldwr. to Syrlaale'
.. of lhe lnWmatlmal ~-

.

__

_._

:
CINCINNATI IUDl-AIItlned Bitt!
.., wtw. pltda, aad AIM Klllldy,
"' ID lbetr 0.. AM. fan'n drib IIYeL

$1.29

•••w.._

I
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CT

-.Transactions

Next to Elberfelds In Pomeroy

)'

oz

Kidney Bea'I1S.C.A:.3f$} Cottage Cheese.N~ ..

-.

e.--.

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

CHUNK TUNA

·69¢

GOLD MEDAL

.FLOUR
5 LB. BAG

79¢

.

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11a; I
SAN

........

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MAXWELL HOUSE

COTTONELLE

COFFEE

BATHROOM TISSUE

3 LB. CAN

6

$ 49

Limit One Per Customer
At Powell's

+• BAL1'D!tORE COI..'I'S·-IIped A.Uhh

•••

24

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E•..•..•

1 Waynesville 67. 'l't'I-CGunty N. 47

WellSville 13. Pln.sburah

MIXED FRUITS ..•.~~~~ 2/$1.69

St. Re1. # 75·02·04721

Chuck Roast.. .... ~~~J19 Pork Sausage........

•11

10 OZ. BIRDSEYE

17 OZ. DEL MONTE CHUNK

429 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, 446-4367

$ }19

Norwaynr i!, Loudonville 56
• o.k HaTOOr Sl, Pon Cltntoo 46
• Palnesvllle Harvey 61, MadiSOn 00
. Paint Val. fil. HuntlnKTM 43
' Panctra-GUboa 64, Blutrton 59
• • ~ 57, Eastwood 44
Piqua !13. Versailles 47
• ' Poland Sfomlnary 64, Pf&gt;tt"n&gt;~ Spring.

PINK SALMON .... }~t .. Sl.89

CHAPMAN SHOES

ta

1

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15'tl OZ. WHITNEY

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

HOMEMADE

Ewrareen 47

Norton 61, Medina C

•

CHEESE ......... J~, $1.89 .CABBAGE ........... \-~!:. 25~
TOKO
KRAfl 12 OZ. 16 SLICE PROC.
AMER. CHEESE.~~-'1.97 RED GRAPES ......~~ •. 99'

WK

Ia\ Hush Pu~ies"
M.
81&lt;~~o:

.

MIUb.Jry Lake 94. Tol. Northwood 61
Minerva 51. Lwis8llk.&gt; 50

• · N. Central 1M.

17 OZ. DEL MONTE

.30°/o OFF

USDA CHOICE

•

NEW GREEN

CORN FLAKES ·········~·J9t 97¢
4 PACK 5 OZ. LAVA-WITH 15~ OFF .
HAND SOAP ...............~~~; 69¢
3 OZ. ARMOUR
P'OTTED MEAT .......c.~~~. 2/67¢

Hu,ler

s. 49

OHIO COLBY LONGHORN

MARGAlU NE........... 89~ LETIUCE ............~~:.59~

12 OZ. KELLOGG'S

ASSOCIATE DEGREES AND DIPLOMAS IN

WtliWRh~

Mohawk ~. Kansas Lakota 4.1
; Montpelie-r ro, Edgerton 50
Nll8 McKtnP.I,y 9.1, NN'Ion Falls 6fi
, N. Adams~. Whltt'Oak 52

C'RISCO 01 L........... ~n~. ~2.19

TRAIN IN FIELDS THAT PAY WELL...

Spare R1bs ..........l!~ 99

¢

~

32

Prepare now for YOUR future!

.

¢

Miami Val . 40. C1n. Cou ntry Day ·36 .
Mlddl~own !M, Day. Dunbar (I)

HEAD

PRUNE JUICE........ !!~: . $1.19

ENROLL IN THE WINTER CLASSES

Mentor 74.

I-LB. KRAFT PARKAY QTRS.

103f• OZ. DEL MONTE

The&lt;. shoes ore mode for walking all over !he
place. That's b«avse they're so cvshiony comfort.
able. From morning to •-ing the looli is right.
Troot yourself to the fit and loshion of Hush
Puppies"' shoe5. 'bl de~rve ill

~~~e52n~r: Pa .. ~

Massillon Jadoon :n. Akron North :fi
McClain 42, Washlng1on C.H. :rl
- M«&lt;lna BLl'k~ til, McdiAa HJgltland

,

NOODLE SOUP ....•.• P~.~ 2/99¢ ·

A!.&gt;U A I~

Steak/Roast.. .......99

COUNTRY STY.LE

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

• , Maplf:o Hts. ~. EucUd 52
• Marion Harding &amp;.'l, Ke-nton li

CAMPBELL'S 103f• OZ.
!'IRANi){

, Lancu1er 68, Cot. MUllin 67

:~

HAM LOAF ............... ~~~ $1.99

SMITHFI~LD

PainesvWe Riverside

La&gt;toola ~-E. Patesthle 47
• U~rty Bl&gt;nton 61, Riverdale 00
• : Uberty Union f?, John.stCM'n 45, OT
· • IJdtlna Vat. 65, PhlJo 58
• . Lodl:tand 91 , WUI.IamsWra: ~
: Logan w. Marietta 53
• Lorain Brookakle 71, A\/Cft 68
• • Lorain Cath. IE, Mldv!E'w 65
r: Lorain Kklg 78, Ck&gt;. Hay 67

J
I

SUPERIOR BREAKFAST

m.

•• I..edi&amp;nont 49. Ptny e

)

BOLOGNA .................. ~~·.. 89¢

56

• • KeystOI¥ Sl, W. SaJ.!m Northwfttem 51

l

BIG RED

• Kalida

• ~ l...akc .catrouc

~

PHICfS IHEr.TIVf: THRU OtC. 3. I~B3

~ewwd

~.

Llncolnvlew 49
• Ke&lt;ttfd-lg Alter 71. Spring. North 49
' Keltentg Falnmnt S8, LmuJon 42

•••

Phone 742-2100
SUPE~IOR

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ENGLISH MUFF I NS .•.. ~~!\.69¢
HUSH PUPPIES"ARE
WALKING WONDERS.

Jonn GJt"nn Btl

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5 COUNT NERICO

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

Gam!l1llvWe 64, Southlngton 50
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Grand Val 51. Jert't"r.;oo 44
Gff!f!mn .S, Sping. Cattmlk 4]

1

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RUTLAND

LB

Fon Loramie- 59, Botkins 39
Fostoria St.Wende))l 73, Arcadia 54
Franklin 72. Sprtngtxiro 61

,&lt;

Outside Ohio
13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
26 Weeks
........ ..... .......... ...... $29.64

By quanen:
Southwestern ..................... 13 17 6 6---42

•

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Day. OakwooCI 00:-'Pf't!1Je Shawnet W
Day. Partf'I'Sm so, Beaveft.'I'E!ek 48
Dt&gt;l.aware 76, MarysvWe fiT
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E. Central, Ind. !!19, H.an1son U
Eastllllke N. !10, Bt&gt;dford 63
[lyrta 76, Lorain Southview S3
Elyria Open Door 51, Lulb!ran E . M
Elyrta W. ~1 , laabt Clean'lew 34
flrst Baptist l'i. Cle. Spring Val .U, OT
. Falrbom 72. Day. Cham.Jul55
Farrell. Pa.. fl. Ywfli. Raye-n oN
Fayette n. Mwmee Val. 67

I

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FRESH PORK BUTI

r1

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•\

g1ven

298' SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE 1HKU SAT., DEC. 3, 1983

Col. Ready 61, Canal WincheSter 51
Col. SC.Chark.'s M, Col. Sooth t6
Col. Watten&lt;WI W, Dublin 56
;
Col. Wehrk&gt; 66, Col. l.ndepender1ce u
Cot. West 63, Col. Westland 61
0:11. ~tone 64., Col. Eastrnxr 63
Conneaut 47, Falrvltow, Pa., 46
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CUy~ Hb. 00. 63
Dey. Meaoowdale &amp;5, Trotwood-MadbM

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East~ ............... ... ... .........3 3 13 8-r-27 i:

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AUIIII!town-F1tch

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The Daily Sentinel

We ReiMV8 The Right
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Akron Sprins- !:1:2, GreenlbUrg Green 4J

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'
Akron CoveltTY ~. Doo;Jeetown ~2
Akron IY!nrmre 18. Mananetd Madison

Anna &amp;1., Fairlawn 31
A!htatl.lla Harbor '72, Kirtland 411
AW'IX'l 72. Stn!t'tsbaro 62

1
I

tH~.

......

zane Trace 56

Amttenf Ste.lt' '75, Wl"Btlake 73, OT

,

' Me1p (34) - Rhonda Haddox 0-2·2: Catlly
Dean 1.{).2; Jenny Meadows &amp;5-l? ; Denise
Stegall 5-1-U; B. J. Gordon 0.2-2; Trtna
R&lt;eves W{): Jodi Harrison ~ Ruth Fry

~

Adena 79.

Eu&amp;ent (2'71 -Angie Spencer J.U; KeUI ~
Whitlatch f-1-9 : Kr1s Wllsoo J..0-6; Margaret •
Horne: Q.0-0; Dec DaUey 044; Mary Hibbs j
().().0; Melinda MankinO-O-O; AnnDiddleD-0-0. ~

Wildcats post easy victory

n..:ll ..

High school
cage scores

was

center had a

The

Wednesday, Novemb.t

wldll'flli!BlYW.

Expit-f~

ntA.NC!900 t9EftS-.Cut Bob

'

Dec. 3, 1983

• •••••

• Family Size

6 Roll Pkg.

$14 g

One Per Customer
Only At Powell's
ExDitres Dec. 3, 1983

'•

�•

, 'The Dail~ Sentinel

By The Bend
.

- --·-

::~ y'eterans Memorial Hospital has

a physician In the emergency room
a!O\Jnd·the-clock to treat emer·
gency Illnesses and Injuries. How·
ever, In many emergency sltua·
tlons there Is a great deal that can
be done for the victim's health and
safety before he reaches profes·
slonal medical assistance. One such
condition Is a third-degree burn.
A ·burn that destroys all layers of
the skin Is a third-degree burn. In a
third-degree burn the Injured area
appears white or charred and little
pain Is present beause nerve
endings have been destroyed.
Do not remove clothes that are
stuck to the burn, put Ice or Ice
water on the . burns or apply
ointments, sprays, antiseptics or
home remedies.
If the victim has been burned
around the fact, neck and mouth,
check to be ,sure that the victim Is
breath~. · If not , place the victim

Pllg•

Plans were made for a parish
potluck Christmas party to be held
on Sunday. Plarts were made to get
the children more !HVolved In

.

on his back on a firm surfac~ and
clear the mouth and airway of
foreign material.
Gently tilt the victim's head
backward and pinch the nostrils
together using thumb and lorelln·
ger. Open your mouth widely and
take a deep breath, placing your
mouth tightly around the victim's
mouth and giving lour quick
breaths.
These should be followed by
approximately 12 breaths per
minute. Twenty breaths per minute
should be administered to Infants
and small chUdren.
Continue this practice until assist·
ance arrives. Place cold cloths or
cool water (not Ice water) on
burned areas of the face, hands, or
feet to cool the burned areas.
Cover the Injured area with a
thick sterile dressing such as a
clean sheet, pillow case or dtsposa-

church activities. They will t'ecreat
the Nativity 'and sing carols at the
7: 30 Christmas Eve Mas·s.
It was noted that the Rev. Father
Anthony Giannamore will offer the
"Ashes to Easter" program to the
parishioners for Lent. The program
offers various ways to participate
both In the church and in the home.
Phyills Hackett presided at the
meeting and others attending were
Mark Grueser, WUma Mansfield,
Diane Jewell, Anna Blackwood,
Dennis Saelens, Leonard Gwlzdowsky, Henry Wells, Fred Col·
burn, and Barbara Mullen . Reports
were given by the various
committees.

Sauters, Meigs FHA, president;
Kelly Clark, Meigs HERO, vice
president; Pam Davis, Eastern,
secretary; Cheryl Sellers, Southern,
treasurer; Cheri Sauters, Meigs
rnA, chaplain andpartlmentarian;
Angle Pratt, Meigs HERO, competl·
tlve chairperson; Valerie Woods,
Eastern, news reporter, historian;
and Eva Richards, Southern, song
leader.
For the opening, Meigs FHA
presented the colors, Eastern had
roll call, and Southern the relaxer
for the session.

Golden Rule
class gathers
for meeting
Annual Thariksglving dinner of
the Golden Rule aass was held
recently at the Middleport First
Baptist Church.
General preparations for the
dinner Including the turkey and
decorations, were made by Martha
Klein, president; June Kloes, vice
president; Marjorie Walburn, treasurer; and Nadine Barton,
secretary.
The table decorations Included a.
ceramic turkey and pilgrims,
candles and fall foliage. Mrs.
Walburn had devotions using
Psalms 25 and a poem from Ideals,
"Perfect Thanksgiving," with each
member giving a treasured thought
of Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Klein presided at a brief
business meeting with plarts being
made for the annual Christmas
party to be held Dec. 15 at the home
of June and Manning Kloes.
Attending the dinner party "!ere
the Rev. and Mrs.· Mark McClung
and daughter, Anna Marie, Mrs.
Lou Burton, Mr. and Mrs. Kloes, Mr.
and Mrs. Walburn, Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Klein and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Imboden.

tncreases
death rate

burn's .treatment can begin immediately

FHA-HERO meeting held
Nancy Jeffers of Planned Parenthood was the speaker at the recent
dlstrlctmeetingofFHA-HEROheld
at Meigs Htgh School.
Other features of the program
Included a workshop on crafls by
Lois Pauley, a talk on runaways by
Carl Hysell, juvenile officer, and
material on parliamentary procedure by the Meigs FFA.
..
The Meigs FHA was the name tag
winner and Southern FHA the
display winner at the district
meeting. Several door prlzs were
awarded.
Presiding at themeetingwereJoy

Smoking.

6

•

ble diaper . Ca ll an ambulance
iml'(ledlately. It is very Important
tt)at a victim wit h even small
third·degree burn consult a doctor.
If possible, the burned area
should be elevated higher than the
,1ctlm's heart. Treat the victim for
shock by elevating his feet eight to
12 inches unless the victim Is
unconscious, has neck, spine, head, ·
chest or severe lower face or jaw
Injuries. These victims should be
placed on their sides to prevent

Mell9saLehew

Miller birthday
Dave and Pam Miller, Middleport, recently entertained with a
parry In observance of the first
birthday of their son, Christopher.
A Smurf theme was carried out
with cake and ice cream being
served to the guests. Attending the
party were Candace Miller, Jane
a nd Brady Huffman, Reva
Vaughan, George Miller, Middleport; Mary, Ryan and Christopher
Jeffers, Pat Vaughan, Frank
Vaughan, Nancy and Karen Bums,
Jodi Gum, Pomeroy; Mike, Kathy
Wendy and Stacey Fry, Syracuse;
Mike, Vicki and Angela Wtillams,
Athens.
. M'IJ
Se din gifts
J
n
g
were
uamta
er,
Htida Harris, Dorothy Jenkins,1and
JulieandA . J . Vaughan.

Seek medical attention.
If there Is any doubt as to
treatment, contact the Veterans
Memorial Hospital emergency department at 992·2101.

Mr. and Mrs. Ivan E. Loftis,
Shawn, Katie and Kelly, St. Peters,
Mo. visited over the Thanksgiving
holiday with her patents, Mr. and
Mrs. WalterR.Kennedy,Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Betty Nelson, Columbus.
They also visited Friday evening
with James L. Spencer, Holzer
Medical Center, recupj'!ratlng from
a broken hlp.

·

·
Mrs. Horace Karr, Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Karr, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Karr
and Wesley, Mr. and Mrs. William
Buckley, Jeremy, Ryan and Bran·
don, Miss Jane Ann Karr, Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Mora, Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Frost, Michael and Debbie,
Mr. and Mrs. George Mora and
Heather, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Mora, JennUer and Jason, Mr. and
Mrs. Greg Eblin, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Grate, Larry Hill.

The American Cancer Society reflect the fact ·that In the past,
estimates that cigarette smoking Is more men than women smokes,
respnslble for 83 percent of lung and smoked more heavily. In
cancer cases among men and 43 recent years, however, the gap
percent among women - more between male and female smoking
than 75 percent overall.
has been narrowing.
The cancer death rate for male
Smoking also has been lmpli·
smokers is double that of nonsmok· cated In cancers of the mouth,
pharyru&lt;, larnyx, esophagus, pan·
ers, and the rate for female
smokers Is 38 percent higher than creas and bladder. Smoking acfor nonsmokers, says S. Michael, counts for about 25 percent of all
public Information chairman of the cancers, Is a major cause of heart
Meigs Cancer Unit.
- disease, and Is linked to conditions
ranging ·from colds' and gastric
The higher cancer rates for men

Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Locbary,
Pomeroy, spent Thanksgiving In
Athens with her brother, Harry
Henry, 92.
Mr. and Mrs. VernE. Story and
son, Jolm, entertained with a
Thanksgiving dinner for her par·
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman E.
Schaefer, Mr. and Mr.- WUUam T.
PNerry ofWAthettnsSch'aefMre.r ·anandd MrsMr.
orrnan ya
•
·
EstherROOinsonofMt. Vernon.
Sunday guests of the Vern Story
famUy were Mrs. Richard Rich·
mond, Krlstl and P.J., Middleport,

wy Pickett has been a patient at
G~t H !tal Trauma Center for
the
to::ionth as the result of a
pas
He was trans·
1
~ :~~- Memorlal
~ !tal : the ure Suwort ·
osp
and has ·
helicopter team ~Gr:nt
skull
had five surger
or r::onth at
:ctu~- ~ i::!~ hospital
m!urthe
e
rei tlon Cards may
fpr
er eva ua
.
be sent to hlm at his horntl· 39:liO St.
.CiaJr Road, Pomeroy. VIsiting .
Sunday evening with the Storys ·
were Jeff Moore of Cheshire and
Barb Will, Middleport.

OF OHIO; INC.
786 .ft. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

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

PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING

to bt readily available for sale In each ·.
Kroger Store , except asspeclflcGlly nottd
In this ad . If we do run out of an . Everything you buy at .
Kroger It guaranteed for
advertised item. 'we will oHer yov your
your total aatlifactlon
choke of. o comparable Item, when
revardleu of manufacturer.
available, reflecting the some sawing• or
If you ore not satisfied.
a roin&lt;:heck which will entitle you to
purchase the adverilsed Item at the 1 Kroger will replace your
Item with the same brand or
advertised price within 30 days. Only one
a comparabl• brand . or
vendor coupon will be occ•pted per Item
refund your purchaSe price.
purchased.

•'

Route
7
•

i

Giles and Beatrice Smith, Ru·
tland, joined their daughter, Char·
lotte and her family 1n Eleanor, w.
Va. for the holiday observance.
Others there were Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Edwards, son, Rick, Ru· ~Mr~.~an~d~Mrs::_::·_:J:ane:._PI:_:cke=tt~,_:P:::om:::::e-.J..=:==========
!land; Michael Edwards, New .Concord; and Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Edwards, Rutland. The November
btrlhdays of Michael Edwards,
David Hesch!, Danny and Angie
Edwards were observed.

Old VFW Hall

I

Tuppers Plains

'

667-6485

tng up smoking is not easy, the best
way to proteci yourseU against the
devastation of lung cancer Is never
to start. says Michael.

and
Mrs. Bruce
Buck and
Natalie,
Canal Wallace,
Winchester
for
Thanksgiving.
·

All Meat ·
Wieners

.

.

WE RESERVE THE liGHT TO LIMIT QUANlniiS. NONI SOU) TO DIAUI$ .

To the Voters of Sutton Township
for their support in my recent election to Trustee.
Pd . po1·. Ad . bY can d.

KROGER
REGULAR OR JUMBO

COPVIIOHT 1913 THE KIOGEI CO. ITEM$ AND P'IICI$ GOOD SUNDAY.
NOV . 'H . THROUGH SATUIItOAY , DIC . S, ,II!. IN POMEROY AND GALUPOLIS.

THANK YOU

. Mr. and Mrs. Mike (Nancy)
Wollard of Wa~hlngton, N. C. spent
the Thanksglvlng weekend here
vtsjting her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dwight Wallace. The famly was
joined by Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Wallace, Alison and Keith, and Mr.

TOTAl
SATISFACTiON
GUARANTEE

Each of these advertised Items Is r•qulred

90 SHEETS PER ROLl

Viva
Towels

DELBERT SMIT'H

KROGER

t~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;~

Hamburger or
Hot Dog Buns

Single
Rolls
LIMIT 2 WITH ·ADDITIONAL PURCHASE

and Mrs. Steven Grimm, Michael
and Brian, Michael Pearle, all of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Grimm, David Grimm, Mr. and
Mrs. Matthew Norman, Jeffery and
Gregory, all of Bridgeport.

·Springdale

PINT RETURNABLE IOnlES,
TAl, SPRITE,

Mr. and Mrs. C.O. Newland
entertained with a Thanksgiving .
gathering. Their guests were Mr.
and Mrs. Fritz Goebel, Suzy, Jeff
and Sarah Jane Goebel, Mrs.
Marlene Kihn, Joe, Tim and Chris
Kuhn, Dennis, Michael and Patrick
Newlartd, aU of the 1\lppers Plains
community; and Bernice Vercoe,
Pomeroy Health Care Center.

2% Milk .......... ~;!·

Diet Coke
or ·coca Cola

2

SJ58

8-Ct.
Pkgs.

U.S.D.A. GRADE A
HOLY FARMS

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ,
FULL CUT BONE IN

Chicken
Leg Quarters

38

8Pak

Mrs. Purley Karr of near Chester
traditionally entertains with a
famUy dinner on Thanksgiving.
Attending were Mr. and Ml's. Paul
Karr and David, Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Spencer, Trlsha and Donnie, Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick Morrissey, Tom
and Carrie, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Karr, Jessica and Valeria, Mr. and

Beef
Round Steak

c

PlUS
DEPOSIT

18
lb.

CAMPBELL'S

Chicken Noodle
Soup

to-----10.75·01.

IWidoy Gijt
CerdqiuW
From holld!ly turkeys and homo to
fruit cakes, gift certificates In any
dollar amount ... Kroger holldoy gift
certlflcales make a great holiday glf\.

Cans

LIMIT 4 WITH ADDITIONAL PURCHASES

'

CONTACT YOUR STORE MANAGER OR
CAIOL lUSCH

Shelled . ·
·English Walnuts .......

HUNTERS

BAKED STEAK, MASHED POTATO
CHOICE OF VEGETABLE
Try 'Our Daily

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS .•..•..•... sz.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS·•.••..••.•••...•..••.•••. s1.99

Ruby Red
Grapefruit .

DINING lOOM CLOSES AT 7 MOND/tY·SATURDAY

DINING ROOM ctOSIS AT 3 ON SUNDAY

NEW .FALL HOURS

5:30 a.m.·7:00 p.m. Weekdays
8:00 a.m.·3:00 p.m. Sunday

Hartley Sh- Located In The

STORE HOURS:
lon.·Thurs., Sit. 9·5
Frldlvl-1

18

...
-lb.

POlE ROY, OHIO

912·52n
•

••

lb.

Baking
Potatoes

••

Upper Block In Pomeroy

HARTLEY SHOES

SJ88

U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET
FROM WISCONSIN

TEXAS

j
I

ulcers to chronic bronchitis and possibly reversed. As the lungs of
emphysema.
an ex-smoker are cleared of
Smoking-related disorders are accumulated poisons, the odds of
estimated to cause some 325,000 .developing lung cancet go down.
premature deaths each year, and
Since everyone agrees that glv·
cost the nation about $27 bllllon In
medical care.
If you want to stop smoking call
992·7531 or stop at the of!lce on
Mulberry Heights for free self-quit
kits and more Information.
The damage done to lungs, even
after several years of regular
smoking, may be stopped or

7

-,da"•s
best!
the
hO
.
y '
for

r.:=====:::;

Wolf Pen Area

FRUTH PHARMACY

The Daily Sentinel-Page

Ohio

J:e

Powers completes Mr.Thanksglvln;
dinner guests or
and Mrs. Bert Grimm, Letart
basic training
Falls, were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Grimm, Christy Lee Grimm, Mr.
Airman James L. Powe!rs, son of
Carolyn S. Freeman and stepson of
Dennis B. Freeman of Pliny, W.
Va., has been assigned to Sheppard
Air Force Base, Texas. after
completing Air Force basic
tralrdr.g.
During the six weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special training In human
relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward
an associate degree in applied
science through the Community
College of the Alr Force.
The airman wtil now receive
specialized Instruction in the civil
engineering field .
His wife, Teresa, Is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. John Casey of
Apple Grove, W. Va.
He Is a 1983 graduate of Hannan
High School, Ashton, W. Va.

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Thanksgiving happenings around county

ChrWopher MiDer

Lehew birthday

Melissa Ann Lehew celebrated
her second birth&lt;jay recently with a
party at the home of her parents,
Larry and Kathy Lehew, Pomeroy.
She was honored with two parties
with Pac Man and Walt Disney
themes. Attending and sending
cards and gifts were Mr. and Mr.
Terry Deem, Richard and Jenny,
Mr. and Mrs. . Marton Rizer,
grandparents, Mrs. Zelma Hawley,
a great-grandmother, Mr. andMn;.
Edward Hayes, Denise, Allen, and
James, Mrs. Gertrude Lehew,
grandmother, and Elaine Lehew.
Matthew Evans, Ada Van meter,
Lois Clelland, VIcky Imboden and
Chris, Veronica Imboden and Chad,
Mrs. J . R. Murphy and Peggy Mr. and' Mrs Bill RatUff, Anita
were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. RatUff, Becky Depoy, Margie
John Downs and family of Trimble . . Skidmore, LOis SI)Yller, Katherine
Mrs. Larry Barr of Rutland was Wildermuth, Bonnie Warner, Jennifer Harrison, Wtima Mans!leld,
'J\tesday evening visitor of Mr. and
Jim
Witherell, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Howard Thoma and Mrs. Iva
Rizer, Marty Struble, and
Ftanklln
JohnSOn, and also visited Mrs.
Clara
Humphreys.
Charley Smith.

tertzed by redness. swelling and
blisters. They, also, should be held
under cool water untU the pain
subsides, and patted dry. Do not
break blisterS or apply medication.

choking on secretions. These burns
should be held under cold water
until pain decreases and then
covered with a stertie bandage.
Second degree burns are charac·

Mr. and Mrs. Roger E. Hill,
chUdren, Scotty and Heather, Ra·
cine, entertained · with a tU1"key
dinner on Thanksgiving. Their
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Jerry A.
Powell, Oval Diddle, Mrs. Mayme
Manning, Mr. and Mrs. Austin
Wolfe, Jerry and Aimee, Mr .. and
Mrs. Bernard Diddle, all of the
Racine area. Also visiting were
George Diddle, Columbus; Tom
Diddle, Pennsylvania, and Bobby
.Diddle, New Matamoras.

Toy, food drive planned_
Plans lor a Christmas food and toy
drive lor the needy will be carried
out by the Sacred Heart Parish,
acc6rdlng to plarts announced at a ·
reCent meeting of the Council held In
the activities building of the church.
Sister Janet, chairman of the
social cominlttee, repoted on a food
drive for Thanksgiving and an·
nounced the Christmas remem·
brance project. The food will be
taken to the food pantry at Heath
United Methodist In Middleport.

Wednesday, November 30, 1983

·•

Wednesday, NDwmb.r 30, 1983

.,

~Much of

•

I

r

'

'·

"

••

�'

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Wednesday, November 30, 1983

'ag1

WEDNESDAY
MrnDDLEPORT - Ev.rng~
line Chapter 172, Middleport will
hold a practice for Installation.
All new o!llcers and _lnstalllng
oflloers are urged to attend.

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
First Church of God will hold a
Christmas . bazaar Monday at
l&lt;rofwrs. Homemade candy and
gift Items will be for sale.

1HURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evan~
fine Chapter 172, Middleport will
hold Initiation for three candl·
dates Thursday at 7: :lJ p.m.
There will be potluck refresh·
ments and a $3 to $5 gUt
exchange.
POMEROY - The Hobson
Gospel Four led by Paul McKln·
· ney will appear at the Salvation
Anny, 115 Butternut Ave ..
Thursday, 1 p.m . The public Is
Invited to attend.
MrnDDLEPORT - A revival
will be held at the Middleport
Independent Holiness Church
Thursday through Dec. 4, at 7: :JJ
p.m. nightly. Speaker will be the
Rev. Ben Watts of Danville
Church. The Rev. O'Dell Manley
Invites the public tO attend.
POMEROY - The Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
dturches of Christ will meet at
.tJie Bradbury Church at 7: :JJ
p. m . Thursday. New officers
will be Installed.

,.
..

SA1URDAY

HOBSON The Hobson
Church of Christ In Christian
Union wll be having a hymn sing .
Saturday at 7::JJ p.m . Singers
~ be Dan Hayman and the
Country Hymntlmers.

.POMEROY -

Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorortty will have an ornament
and bakesale Saturdaylnfront of
E'tberfelds, beginning at 9 a .m.
Asbury United Methodist
Cburch, Syracuse, will have a
bazaar Saturday, 10 a.m . to 5
p.m. Craft items, homemade
soup and baked goods will be for

iale.
,.
•

.• POMEROY -Trlnity Church,
'

Pomeroy, will have a Christmas
Fade soup luncheon, Saturday.
:p. a.m. to 2 p.m. Beansoup and
oiombread, turkey noodle soup,
desserts, and beverages will be
Ote menu. Soup will be available
4&gt;r carryout to those who bring
ooptalners.

Happenings
Dinner set
LONG BCYITOM - A potluck
dinner will be held at the Long
Bottom community building
Wednesday, 6 p.m. Members are
to take a covered dish. 'fhe
regular meeting of the Long
Bottom Community Associa tion
will be held at 7: :lJ p.m.

Installation set
RACINE - Installation of the
1984 officers for Racine Chapter
134, Ord&lt;ir of the Eastern Star,
will be held Monday at 7:30p.m .
at the Masonic Temple. Oeanup
will be held at the temple
Saturday and the worthy matron
has asked that many m~mbers
come out to help at 9 a.m or after.
A practice has been set for
Sunday afternoon.

Party set
Tile annual f811lilY Christmas
party of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club has been setfor Dec. 16
at the Masonic Temple.
This was announced Frtday
evening when the club met at Heath
United Methodist Church. Jerry
Coleman was guest speaker and
outlined procedures for mounting
ttsh and animals as carried out by
his taxlderemy shop In Rutland.
Election of officers for the next year
was announced for the Dec. 9
meeting. Dinner was served by
· women of the church.

Reedsville personals
Dorothy Cashdollar and Dorsel
MWer have returned from a tour of
the Smokey Mountains.

Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith spent
.everai days Wilting with Mrs. Inez
Young at Paden Oty, W.Va.

...;

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. .. Roger Chaney and Angle,

Tlljliien Plains, spent the day with

Mr..andMrs. WWlamCongrove. '

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

8 The Daily Sentinel

Calendar

,

Wednesday, NcY,.ulber 30, 1983

Senate approves moratorium
on new hospital construction

What's Cookin'?

0

Potatoes are tasty, thrifty meal addition
By Dale M. SloB
Meigs County Exlenslon
Home Economist

Mashed, chunked or shredded,
boUed, baked or fried, potatoes are
thrtfty additions to holiday menus . ·
The humble potato has risen
grea tly In popularity recently.P eople seem to be discovering the
versatlltty of this vegetable. Res·
taura nts that fe ature potatoes as
their main focus are springing up
all over . Potato skins, formerly
disdainfully discarded as food
suited mainly for pigs, are being
rediscovered and served In fast
food restaura nts as well as gourmet
establishments.
Baked potatoes, topped with
everything from broccoli and
cheese to sprouts and mushrooms,
are big busiriess.
Potatoes come In especially
handy during flnandally demand·
lng seasons like Christmas. A
potato costs very little, Is low In
calories and is filling. Almost
anything can be served over a
baked potato, from leftovers to a
quick sauce.
Combined with milk and onions,
potatoes make a fllllng and nutri·
tlous soup.
Pota t oes are gre at meal
stretcher. too. Add chunked pota·
toes to a casserole or stew to extend
the servings. Just boiled and served
along with a small portion of meat
makes a meal seem heartier.
One pound of fresh ·potatoes

0

For a quick snack, lunch. or side or reheat well. However, .If you
(about three medium potatoes ) wlli
tubers. This increased sugar wlll
want a potato dtsh, try this recipe.
yield three cups peeled and sliced or
cause the potato to darken when dish, try tl)ls recipe:
It Is excellent and it can be made
Easy Cheesy Potatoes
two and one-half cups peeled and cooked.
ahead,
cooked or reheated beaut!· '
In
a
microwave
oven,
bake
Cooking 'l1ps '
diced or two cups mashed or two
fuUy.
This recipe may not appear,
until
nearly
done.
Spilt
pota
toes
Potatoes retain nutrients better If
cups french-flied or three servings
potato salad. A medium baked cooked whole. However, they may potatoes lengthwise and sprtnkle very appeallng but I can assure you
potato has about 90 calories.
be halved, sliced or diced before liberally with cheese. Put halves that they are excellent. This was
cooking it shorter cooking time Is together again, wrap in aluminum one dish that was a part ofthelunch
On~ half cup of potato mashed with
foil and let stand for a minute or at the Extension Chrtstmas meetmilk and one pat of butter has 93 desired.
Peeled potatoes tum dark It not two. To serve, spl1nkle with crisp, Ing. It was a big hit.
calories.
Kathryn Mora's Green
To prepare pota toes, scrub gently cooked light away. To protect their crumbled bacon a nd serve with
Mashed
PoWo Ca.erole
with a brush or vegetable cleaner. whiteness, toss them with ascorbic sour cream and onions, If desired.
6
to
8
large
potatoes
For another s pecial treat, preStews and frted potatoes as well as acid mixture or a little lemon juice.
3
,4
cup
sour
cream with chives
other recipes can be prepared with Prolonged soaking potatoes in cold pare a cheese sauce and serve It
2
ts
.
salt
unpeeled potatoes. Thlshelpsretaln water Is not i'econunended as It can over baked potatoes that have been
1 t. sugar
stuffed with tender-crisp cooked
nutrtents. Most of the potatoes' result In some vitamin loss.
'4 t. pepper
broccoli, crispy bacon and chopped
Baking PoCa&amp;oes In
nutrtents are found close to the skin.
'4 t. dDl (opttona1)
onion.
storing Potatoes
The Mlcrowav!l
1 stick rnargartne
.,
Beef stroganoff, chill, sloppy joes,
Many people prepare baked
Store potatoes in a cool, humid
110
oz.
package
chopped
spinach,,,
_
spaghetti
sauce,
bam,
mushrooms
potatoes In the microwave and
(but not wet) , dark place that's well
ventilated. The Ideal temperatures either overcook them so they are a and cheese a re all good toppings, coo~
1 cup cheddar cheese, grated
are 45 to 50 degrees F . At 45 to 50 hollow shell or undercook them . It's too.
Cook and mash potatoes. Add .
Mashed
Potatoes
degrees F . potatoes will keep well easy to cook them properly. Here's
sour
cream, salt, pepper and·
Everyone
has
their
own
formula
for several weeks. At temperatures now: Use uniformly sized, regu·
margarine.
Beat till fiuffy. Add an.
for
mashed
potatoes
and
most
·much over that, potatoes should not ·. larly shaped potatoes.
otlli!r
Ingredients
except cheese.
things
about
everyone
knows
two
SCrub, pat dry and prick in
be stored for more than one week.
In
evenly.
Pour
Into buttered
Fold
First,
you
can't
mashed
potatoes.
Warmer temperatures encourage several places with a fork. On
casserole
and
sprtnkle
with grated:
make mashed potatoes In the
sproullng and shrtveling. (Sprout· double layer of paper toweling,
20
minutes
at 400:
cheese.
Bake
place one potato In oven center or blender (they turn to llquld) and
lng potatoes can still be used but
degrees.
Serves
eight.
there will be some waste. Just for two or more, place In spoke second, mashed potatoes don't hold
break o!! sprouts and you may want fashion with smaller ends toward , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -·
to peel them before cooking.)
center.
Cooking time varies with oven
Avoid prolonged exposure to light
model,
potato size and variety;
which causes potatoes to turn
usually
four
minutes for a medium
green. This green area should be
pared off before the potato Is used: potato (six ounte) plus one to two
Don.'t re!rtgerate potatoes. Below minutes for each additlonal .potato.
40 degrees F . potatoes will develop Turn potatoes over and rotate
halfway through baking. Allow five
a sweet taste, the result of an
accumulation of sugars In the minutes "standing time."

COLUMBUS, Ohl(l (AP) - A substantial part of every hospital
group !hat backed a six-month bill lsforthe costofunoccupiedbeds
moratoriUm on hospital construe· and other under-utilized medical
tlonsaysthebanwillsavemoileyfor facillties."
employers.
·
The bill's sponsor, Sen. Martgene
:The moratorium was approved Valiquette, D-Toledo, said the
. Tuesday by the Senate, which is moratorium &gt;VOUid give several
working to meet a Thursday task forces time to develap guide'
deadllneforadjournment.Senators lines · for approving capital
also OK'd a series of amendments expenditures.
"Therelsnot enoughgoodcriterla
that would raise from 14 to 16 the
minimum age for obtaining a in Ohio to determine what Is truly
moped license.
necessary and what Is not," Ms.
Each. measure was OK'd 28-2 and Valiquette said. ShesaldOhiowould
now goes to the House.
join 11 other states that have
The bill blocking hospital capital imposed similar moratoriums and
expenditures prohibits the state six others that are considertng
Health Department from consider · them.
lng any application for a certllicate
The bill would not affect emer·
of need from Jan. 1 to July 1, 1984. gency projects needed to meet
The Health Department must safety standards, most energy
approve certificates of need before . . ·conservation projects or proposals
health care Institutions can under- "critically necessary to meet a
region's health care needs,"
take capitiiiexpenditures.
The Ohio Manufacturers' Associ·
The Ohio Hospital Association
. ation, which backed passage of the took no formal position on the bill.
bill, said it would help the state's
Drawing more debate among
businesses.
senators was the moped measure,
"The cost of medical care ... Is the sponsored by Sen. Neal F. Zimmers
most rapidly escalilting and the Jr. , D-Dayton.
least controllable major business
The bill raises the minimum age
!!Xpense affecting industry today," for obtaining a moped license from
the OMA said in a letter to 14to16,butprovidesforthelssuance
lawmakers. The organization of probationary moped permits to
i&gt;otnted out that Ohio hospitals 14-and 15-year-olds who pass an
¢\lrrently are operating at only 70to operators' test. Probationary per·
75 percent of capacity, and "a mit holders who violate any laws

displayed a vartety of wreathes.

port Amateur Gardeners and had a
display and demonstration at the
Mrs. Norman Baum was ac· ' Christmas boutique held at St. Paul
ceptedasanewmemberoftheclub.
Lutheran Church.
Arrangements were made for the
A l'IOte of thanks was read from
Denzil Cleland for a fruit basket.
Christmas meeting to be held at
Mrs. Ada Morrts, a charter
Sabastians in Parkersburg.
member, was honored on her
Members are to meet at the Chester
birthday with a plant.
Methodist Church at 5: :JJ p.m. and
Duling the business meeting
travel In a group there. During the
plans forexhlbitlng at theChrtstmas
dinner hour. a designer from
!lower show to be held Saturday and
Dudley's will do a demonstration
Sunday at the Senior Citizens Center
and then give two arrangements for
were made. The club will furnish
door prizes. There will be private
tour of Stahl's Christmas Shop, and
sandwiches and cookies, and will be
co-hosts for the coffee hour.
a gift exchange with gift wrappings
It was noted that Betty Dean
to be judged. Jennifer Machlr and
Mrs. Dean made arrangements for
rcently gave a program on Christ·
mas arran~ts for the Middlethe dinner and the tour.

thing you didn't accept on delivery,
or a charge for something not
delivered according to agreement.
Billing eiTOrs also Include mls·
takes, and transactions where
you've asked for an explanation or
need more Information to identify
the purchase.
"Fair Credit Billing" also tells
you what to do about defective
merchandise or services purchased
with your credit card.
U you think your bill Is wrong,
here's what to do: Write to the
creditor within 60 days after the bill
was mailed. Be sure to include your
name and accou. • number, say
that you think the&gt;e's an eiTOr,
what the eiTOr Is, and why you
believe it's Incorrect.
Whlle you are walllng for so
answer, you don't have to pay the
amount In question or finance
charges that apply to lt. But you are
obllgated to pay all parts of the bill
that are not In dispute.
The creditor Is required to
acknowledge your letter within 30.
days, unless your account is
corrected sooner. Within two billing
pertods - but never more than 90
_.

By JERRY BUCK
5. MovJe." Strtpes," ABC, 24.0 or
13. "AtterMASH," CBS, 19.5 or
APTelevislon Writer
~.1 milllon.
16.3 mllllon.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - NBC's
6. Mlnlsertes-"Kennedy,' Part ll,
14. Movie-"Fort Apache, Tile
Bronx/' NBC, 19.3 or 16.2 m!Uion.
"The A-Team," the thlrd·place NBC, 22.3or 18.7 mllllon.
network'sonlyhlt, rano!fwithQrst
7. "Dynasty," ABC, 21.3 or 17.8
15. "Three's Company," ABC,
place In the Nielsen ratings for the mllllon.
19.2 or 16.1 mUllan.
8.
NFL Football, CBS, 21.2 or
16. "Knots Landing," CBS, 18.9 or
week ended Nov. 27 whlle CBS and
ABC were locked In battle for the 17.7 milllon.
15.8mllllon.
·
network standings.
9. "FalconCrest,"CBS,21.1or17.6
17. "Dukes of Hazzard," CBS,18.7
or 15.7 mllllon.
Here are the week's top 20 mllllon.
programs:
10. "Simon&amp;Simon,"Cffi,~.8or
18. "Newhart,'' CBS, 18.6 or 15.6
1. "The A-Team, " NBC, a rating 17.4 mllllon.
mllllon.
of.27.1or22.7m!Wonhouseholds.
11. "Hotel," ABC, 19.9 or 16.7
19. "Magnum, P.I.," CBS,l8.2or
2. "60 Minutes," CBS, 26.4 or 22.1 mllllon.
15.2 mllllon.
·12. "The Love Boat," ABC,l9.6or
~- "That's Incredible," ABC,17.9
mUllon.
3. "Dallas," CBS, 25.3 or 21.2 ,_;;=~milllo;;;;;.~n;;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;o.;..r;;;;15;;.;.0;.;mllllo==n'. million.
4. Mlnlserles·"Kennedy," Part
m, NBC, 24.3 or 20.4 mUllon.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - In a that there was nothing there. There
$1.2 milllon U.S. District Court was some hearsay. There were
lawsuit, eight state highway people who would not make
workers are accusing their s)lpervi· statements when we asked for .
S&lt;)rs of. demanding political 'kick· statements.
·J&gt;acks in exchange for choice jobs In
"There was nothing we could
the Ohio Department of moveon .Wedlscussedthatwiththe
unlon.Andthatwastheendofit."
Transportation.
ButdepartmentDirectorWarren
Specific allegations made 'tn the
J. · Smith said Tuesday that their court action, Involving Incidents
allegations already have been from February through August, are
brought to the attention of State that:
HighwayPatrolinvestigatorsbythe
-Grooms told highway worker
· ~partment . itself. He said the Kenneth Buckler" he could become
department's own investigation ... a membe~ of defendant Jerry L.
found nothing wrong.
Perry's 'A team' with the payment
' The lawsuit asks $500,!XX) in of$150," forwhichhewouldgalnjob
~ompensatory damages and security.
$71XJ,!XX) In punitive damages from
-Gillespie told worker David
Smith; his deputy director for Hulse that "unl.e ss he contributed
administration, Morrts Tipton; and $100 to the Democratic Party · · ·
four supervisors in the depart· Hulse would not receive overtime
ment'sFranklln County division.
work."
In their suit, the workers allege
-Worker James Tuff was told by
thai $100 and $150 donations are Perry and Gillespie that he "could

High Mileage

RECAPS ·

'

Y2 Price

~

.

at 1 ilew tire, with a

tire wan_anty.

Whitewlll

Sale
Price

A78x1 3 ............... 13.96
B78x13 ........... :... 1&amp;.95
C78x14 ............... 1&amp;.95
D78x14 .. ............. 17.95
E78x14;....... :....... \8.95
F78x14 ................ 18.95
G78x14 ............... 20.9&amp;.
Jl78x14 ............... 21.811
57Bx16 ............... 18.811

days- either your account must be
corrected or you must be told why
the creditor believes the bill Is
correct.
It the creditor made a mistake,
you don't pay any finance charges,
just pay the correct amount you
owe. U no eiTOr is found, the
creditor mus1 promptly send you a
statement of what you owe. In that
case, the creditor may Include any
finance charges that have accumu·
lated and any minimum payments
you missed while you were questlonlng the bDl.
Fair Credit Billing also tells you
what to do about defective 111er·
chandise or 'services purchased
with your credit card.
To learn more, send for a copy of
"Fair Credit Billing." At the same
time you will also receive a tree
copy of the "Consumer Information ·
Catalog."
Publlshed quarterly by the Con·
sumer Information Center of the
U.S. General Services Admlnlstra·
lion, for free catalog llsts over ~
selected free and mOderately
priced federal consumer booklets
on a variety of subjects.'
,

tA-Team' top show, CBS, NBC battle

chance.''
In other action, senators:
-Approved 19-11 and sent to the
House a bUI that would allow the
state to Issue pre-kindergarten
teaching certificates.
-Approved ~ a change in the
method, but not the rate, at which
cigarettes are taxed. The change,
already approved by the House,
paves the way for introduction of
pack sizes other than the standard
:ZO.Cigarette pack.

'

Help in getting fair credit billing
.You are checking your credit
card bill carefully, and discover a .
charge on your bill that you know
you didn 't make. Maybe It's a gas
purchase from a service station
you've never even been to, or a
meal from a restaurant you've
gazed at from afar, but never
actually entered.
When you find that mistake on
your bill, it's important to know
what your legal protection Is, and
what steps you need to take to
remedy the situation.
Ta help you learn what you should
do, and what your rtgllts are, thP
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has published a booklet
called "Fair Credit Billlng." For
your copy, send 50 cents to the
Consumer Information Center,Department 400L, Pueblo, Colorado
81009.
According to the Information In
the booklet. you can challenge
anything you believe to be a billing
eiTOr on your credit card statement. The Fair Credit Billing
Amendment to the Truth In ~nd·
!ng Law defines a billing eiTOr as.
any charge made by an unauthorized person, a charge for some-

would have their permits revoked
until they turn 16.
Zimmers' bill also sets a maxi·
mum speed of 20 mph for mopeds,
requires mopeds to be registered
and requires moped.operators and
passengers to wear helmets when
rtdlng on a highway.
Zimmers said the bill was needed
because of the large ·number of
Injuries and some deaths to moped
drtvers and passengers - most of
them the fault of younger drtvers.
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, R·Defiance,
said he 'objected to . the ~}ill' s
stipulation that one accident by a
probationary permit holder would
result in revocation of the permit.
"I think the adults have the
prerogative of making one mistake
and still living to tell about it," he
said. "Iwouldfeeihetteraboutitand
might even support the amendment
if we give them more than one

Suit says ODOT supervisors
sought kickbacks ·for jobs

Chester club displays holiday wreaths
Wreathes of all kinds, from
grapevine to evergreen, were
displayed at the recent Chester
Garden Club meeting held at the
home of Mae and Maidie Mora.
Holiday wreathes was the theme
of the meeting with each of the
members displaying wreaths in
response to roll call. A variety of
accessories including colorful ribbons, birds and bells, accented the
wreathes. In conjunction with the
display, Rosemary Young showed
tools and accessories for making
wreathes, while Clarice Krautter
and Virginia Chadwell had a
demonstra t ion on making
wrea thes. Karla Chevaller as a
special feature for the meeting,

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

G78x16 ............... 20.86
J78x16 ................ 22.86
l78x16 ................ 22.96

Plus Federal Excise
Tax &amp; Cui111
FREE MOUNTING
Free Static Balancing

'RECAPS
Sale
Whitewall
Price
PI65/80RI3 ............ 20.00
PI85/80R13 ............ 22.00
PI85/75RI4.. .......... 24,00
PI95/75RI4 ............ 26.00
P205/75R14 ............ 28.00
PI95/75RI5 ............ 26.00
P205/75RI5 ............ 28.00
P215/75R15 ............ 30.00
· P225/75RI5.. .......... 32.00
Quantities Limited

Drivers Education
Classes

NCE
LE

I
~

L .

Plus Fecr.al Excise Tu
&amp; Ita. . Clslna.

Volleyball for
summertime

v~c~eo....-111;

PCIII paced pin·

tun all year.

bell action.

And The

UNROE FAMILY
RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER

Rutland, Ohio
THURS., DEC. 15-8:00 P.M.

TICKETS $5.00

On S.le Now At llddlef:rt Book
Store 1nd Doxol BoH 1 Gas in
{

.'
-

•

-

0

·•

RETREADS .

l

.. ' '1

.,

••

l

'

\

; ... (.

ta entw 1M
ll•nlad Houeel¥

lpaaQI

Iaiiie 1011emteo,
savor victory
with Wallonia.""

Human Cannon·
ball•lor faot,
high-flying oc:llon.

Roll your bell
game Wtth the
Atart&lt;' lowflng.

.

-....
..,...

., ' ' l

,

::-

.. .

~

. ,.. ..

BICYCLES
TRICYCLES .
WAGONS
TRACTORS &amp;
FIRE ENGINES

THE HENSONS

...

Gall cartr1c:lge
'brtngo the llnko
home. Fore! ·

LAYAWAY FOR CH,ISTMAS:

IN CONCERT

.

•

-------1

ATTENTION!

.

·•·

ATARI§

Ught Truck, R.V. &amp; Van
Custom Xtra Grip &amp; Hi Miler

em

...

'\

DUBLIN , Ohio (AP ) - .P ork the Boston area supported by House. showing \hat650 qridges will have to .:
' be replaced soon at a cost of $2 ::
barrel politics has gotten in the way Speaker Thomas O'Neill.
milllon each. He said that more than ::
of nationa l legislation to help build
5,000
bridges must be replaced In the ..
"If you're going to pass all
Interstate highways, a Republican
' ,.
next
seven
years.
.,
Senator from Idaho has told Ohio highway bills like that, you're not
"We
do
have
a
big
cost
Item
ana
,
going to have a national highway
contractors.
one
that
over
the
next
few
years
Is
'
"We haven't had a water project program ," he said.
going
to
be
an
expensive
project
as
:
passed In Congress since 1976,"
far as the state of Ohio Is :
Steven Symms said at a news
Without the ICE, there can be no .concerned," he said.
· ·· ,.
conference before an appearance at. Interstate lettings in about 22 states,
Maintaining
the
more
than
1,7W
·
the Ohio Contractors Association's
the American Road &amp; Transporia · miles of interstate in Ohio would cost' :·
flrst wlntermeeting Tuesday. "And
tlon Builders Assoc iation says. The $t:3 billion, a 1981 study concluded, ·:
ifwe'renot carefu!we' re golngtoget
the same way on highway projects , association says that the total Hinig said. Federal money will take' :
federal a id-funding for Interstate care of $70:1 million of that, and $94 •
becauseweget so boggeddownwith
construc tion is iess than $1 billion .
mlilion In state money Is avaUable. ':
everybody wanting their pet project
"Tha t means we need an addl-' ~
plit lnthe bill."
.
Since Congress adjourned this tiona! $400 to $500 million to do the :
Symms is cha irman of the
Transportation Subcommittee ·of month \\1thout ICE, Ohio was type of job that was determined that: '
the Environment and Public Works without a SOO million federal was needed at the time," he said. · '
... .
Committee in the u .S. Senate. His highway apportionment for Oct. 1,
subcommittee worked on the 1982 .1983. The associ a lion says the r;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'~&lt;
· '·
Surface Transportation Assistance money could be freed early next
~
:
Act, which provided more federal year , when Congress reconvenes.
money for the rea pair of federa l
~
,.
State Rep. William E . Hinig,
highways.
Chailm
an
of
the
Finance
and
The contractors were studying
Appropria iions Committee, said the
probiemswiththe"infrastructure,"
costs
for repa iring and replacing
the complex of public works such as
highways
and bridges in 'Ohio will
highways, bridges. danis, a irports,
run
in
the
b!U!ons
of dollars.
utilities and sewage plants.
In Middleport, Ohio
,,.
''We're trying to pass a simple
Beginning Monday, Dec. 5~ 1
extension of ICE (theinterstateCost
He said that replacing bridges
Estimate), but everybody wants to alone should exceed $1.2 billion ·
Phone 446-0699
.,. '·
put a pet project 1n that," he said. He "very soon."
For Pre-Registration
::

c

All SEASON RADIAL

BLACKWALL

He said the OCSEA negotiated a
settlement last summer ina similar
caseintheOevelandarealnvolving
workers under former Gov. James
A. Rhodes' administration.
The current case is pending
before U.S. DlstrictJudgeJosephP.
Klnneary. It has not been assigned

Guess what? pork barrel
politics hinders legislation

:

~. '
',. ·'
"
• • •, ·I

0'

STEEL BaTED

Tread Desip
$)995 155180R13

Union executive dir~tor James
Monroe said that periodically, the
OCSEA has pursued suc11 cases
when poUtically appointed admlnis·
trators become heavy·handed with
civil service workers.
"It's not just the Democrats that
do it or the Republicans. It happens
In both administrations," Monroe
said.

welcomed members. and guest and Gene Rtgp; :
secretary, John Hanoock Insurance,. gave a brle• ' · ;
account of membership. VIce President Ron Toler of · ·
Toler Insurance explained tile purpose and benefit of' : :
the Ufe Underwriters Assn. Shown with Mrs. Boster :
are Gene Riggs, left, secretary, and Ron Toler, vice ·· ;
president.

demanded
lnexchangeforovertlme
his emplayment with (the ,..~fo~r~a~he~arln~g=·~-------~m~
en~t~io:n~ed~a~$~1.=2~b~U~iio~n~pro~jec=:,t~fo~r-~H:e~b~a~s:ed~t~h:a~te~s~tim:a~tt?~o~n~a~s~tu~d~yj~~~~~~~~~~~~
assignments,
preferential treat· continue
department
) by contrtbutlng$150to ·
ment and guaranteed job security.
the Democratic Party.''
Other defendants In the suit,
-Gillespie ~·personailyrequested
which was filed this month by the .. . employee Oarence Norwood to
. '
Ohio Civil Service Employees contribute $150 in exchange for
Association, are the transportation overilme work. "
We Honor
Daily 9 to 9
department's Franklin County su·
-WorkerRonaldKoetzrefusedto
Fri. &amp;Sat.
perintendent, Jerry Lee Perry, pay $150 requested by Perry "and
'
9 to ID
~sslstant Superintendent WUllam
was a ssigned to mental tasks and
.' , :II
suit . 9·8
Grooms, and two supervisors, charged with Insubordination In
'
I
,., -~ I\
William Lane and Jtm GUlespie.
retaliation."
: Smith said Tuesday that the
- Gillespleaskedforandreceived
' I
' .,_
- II
••
lawsuit caught him by surprise, a $50 payment from employee
I
although he had known of the Nathaniel Washington In exchange
'
anegatlons since the summer. for overtime work at the Ohio State
Smith said his department had Fair.
lhvestigated the allegations, given
-Lane requested $150 from
the results to the State Highway employee CarlL. Champa, and that .~
While
,.
"' · -· I
Patrol, · then heard nothing more when Chanopa paid only $00, he was ·
Quantities
' '
about the matter untU the lawsuit denied a requested job transfer and
Last.
"' I ''
was Hied.
Perry "threatened to reduce or
•
abolish Champa's job."
r, • ''
-Employee Harold Osborne re· "The next thing !.know, we get a
I'
iawsult months later, without any fused Lane's request that he buy
...
t
eomrnent from the union," Smith $150worthoftlcketstoaDernocratic
..... !
18.id. ''So I don't know where they're party dinner and "was derded
~from.
overtime work and given another
' ' ''
. "All I can go on Is what our job assignment In retallatlon."
'
Investigator turned up and the fact

H78x16 ............... 21.9&amp;

Goodyear "Arriva like"

Perry declined to comment on the
case when contacted by The
Columbus Dispatch. "I don't know
anything about It," he told the
newspaper.

EXPLAINS PROCEDURES - State Representa·
"live Jolynn Boster spoke on procedures from the
·mtrocluctlon of a bill In the legl.slalure to its reality as a
taw at the November meeting of ihe Meigs.Gallla·
Mason IJ!e Underwriters Assn. Bill Quickel,
Pomeroy, Davls-Quickel Agency, new president,

Plus fld1r11 Excin Tu
1nd RICIIIPibll Cuin&amp;

'

..

. . ., ~~
· ~--a....
Demon• To
DlaiJiorida""lor
hlgl\tachtun~

PICKENS· HARDWARE
w. VA.

CM="'

Thill of
Video
Save

now.

, "
. ''

..

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD GALLIPOLIS

A::IIUR,

"t

.

'·

·I

,.

·.

v,-·

" · - ~:

•

�.,

' '
•

Page

10-The

Wednetday, NGw.nber 30, 1983

Sentinel

Special ~xh1bits on display
at Gallipolis' (.Our House'
Special collections from the Otu:
House Museum's third floor will be
on display at the museum's second
annual Chr!slmas open house,
"Chrlslmas with the Cushings,"
Dec. 9. and 10, from 1 to 9 p.m.
Of particular interest to those of
all ages who are young of heart will
be a display of antique dons, doll
furniture and accessories. The dolls
Include several V!torian china dolls
In original costume, a very rare
beeswax dol!, and dolls from many
countries, including France, Italy,
Me&gt;dco, England and Russia.
Complimenting the dons will be a
· co!!ection of children's toys and dol!
furniture. Featured are a child's

high chair dating from the early
1800s, a Victorian doll carriage
crafted by an early Galllpolls
carriage maker for hls daughter;
two doll cradles; a set of pewter
dishes which belonged to the first
child born in the Galllpol!s colony;
other pieces of doll furniture; and a
19th century sled.
. For those guests interested In the
founders of Gallipolis, a collection
of portraits and miniatures of early
settlers will be presented, including
a couple who were designated by
the townspeople to greet General
Lafayette when he visited Galllpolls
in 1'825.

Business Services

r-===~~~;;:==il;:========;-r;::========T.=::======::;Tr========:::;~

DEER
PROCESSED
$250 0

Wassatl and holiday confections .
will be served each night In the
common dlnlng roorn, i!Ild musical
entertainment will be featured In
the ballroom.
On Friday, Dec. 9, Susan Sprow
and Tom Brandeberry will enter·
taln with traditional yuletide carols,
while on Saturday, Dec. 10, the
GARS Madrigl!ls- will present a
more contemporary show.
Tickets are $2.50 for adults and
$1.50 for children. over six. They
may be purchased at the Ga!!ipolls
Area Chamber of Commerce, or at
the museum the nights of the event .
The Our House Museum is located
at 434 First Ave, Gallipolis.

CUT &amp; WRAPPED
,
$5.00 EXTRA
FOR SKINNING

PH. 949-2734
Map IIWOOd lake

Howard L: Bissell, Magdalena
Bissell to Don F. Pooler, Karen J .
Pooler.
Russell Mills, Alice Mills to
Harold Munns, Adrienne Munns,
Lot 83, Middleport Village.
Bernard R. Pennington, de·
ceased, to Joan Armstrong Pen·
nlngton, Cert. of trans., Orange.
Ocle L. Foutty, deceased, Ches·
terR. Foutty, Affidavit, Olive.
Chester R. Foutty to Leonard E.
Dalley, Helen Dailey, Lot, Olive.
Robert A. Mattox, Betty R.
Mattox to Jackson Production
Credit Assoc., Parcels, Columbia.
Marvin G. Little, Juanita M.
Little to Jeffery D. English, Lot,
Salisbury.
· Daniel P . Talbott to Barbara R.
Talbott, 1 acre. Lebanon.
Robert W. Lewis, rsabelle Lewis
to Gary R. Cooper, Larry J . Cooper,
Theresa A. Cooper, Parcels, Letart. ·
Wa rren Rose, Pauline Rose to
Guy A. Rose, 1 acre, Sutton.
John F. Adams, Christine C.
Adams , Ha rry W. Adams III,
Candace Adams, Jane Adams, Rita
R Stotts, Marjorie T. Shamblin to
Adrian L. McCoy. Linda E. McCoy,
Parcel, Lebanon.
Thomas J. Marcinko, Patricia F .
Marcinko to James E . Diddle,
Right of Way, Olive.
Richard F. Fick Jr., Annclle K
Flck to James E. Diddle, Right of
Way, Chester.
Paul Ervin, Wilma Ervin to
James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Sutton.
Alba Yost to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Sutton.
. Leonard Conrad Lyons; Carol :
Lynn Lyons to George D. MUler,
Pamela Jean Miller, Lots 4 and 5,
Chester.
Farmers Bank and Sav. Co. to
frances Hewetson, ·J udy A. Dixon.
Joan E. Anderson, 215 acre,
Pomeroy VUlage.
Charles M. Witheoi, Mildred E.
Withee to Herald OU &amp; Gas Co.,'
Right of Way, Salisbury.

&lt;

Trustees of Syracuse Evang.,
United Syracuse Evang. United
Methodist Church Southern Clus·

I

ter, Lot 4, Pomeroy.
, Harry W. Adams Jr., deceased,
John F. Adams, affidavit.

Livestock reports
Ohio Valley Uvefitock Co.

Market ll.eport
Saturday, Nov. 26, 1983
Trends: Veal calves steady: feeder cattle
steady: cows $1to $1.50 higher.
Feeder Steers: Good and Choice 250 to 300
lbs. 52-58Jil; XO to400 lbs. 51~1 ; 400 to5001bs.
-14-00; 500 to 600 lbs. 48-57.25; 600 to 700 Jbs.
-17-54; 700 to~ lbs. 46-52; 8:XI lbs. and over·
45-52.50.
Feeder Hc!Iers: Good and Cholce250to:m
lbs. 4146.50; 300 to400 lbs. 38-46; 400 to5001bs.
38.50-45; 500 to im lbs. 3744; 600 to 700 lbs.
39---43.50; 100 to EOJlbs. 37.5044.25; BOO and over
3945.
Feeder Bulls: Good and Choice~ to :m
ltli. 50-56.50; lXtto4001bs. 48-58; 400to5001bs.
47-58; 500 to 9Xl lbs. oi6-55.Z5; ftXl to 700 lh'i.
4-"i-52: 100 to &amp;D lh'i. 44·50: 8JJ and over
4.1-50.50.
Holstein Steers and BullsDltofO'llbs. 32-Jfi.
BuUs l ,OOJ lbs. and up 3743. ·
Slaughter Cows utilities 33-36.75; canners
and. cutters 32.~ down.
Vea1 Calves choice and pr lmel90 tolll1bs.

68-:,~Calves J0-60.

Springer Catt le 285-380.
Cows and Ca lves Com bination ~- 500.
Top Hogs 210 to 230 lbs. 37.50-38.50.
Boars 22-25.

Sows~ l bs. andup 22.50-34.50.
Pigs by the Head 13-21.

The Daily Sentinel

AtheM Livestock Sa1es
Saturday, Nov. lll, 198.'1
Slaughter Steers 55.56.25.
CATTLE PRICES:
Feeder Steers: (Good and Choice) 300-500

lbs. 50-59.50; 500-700 lbs . 42.5048.2.5.
Feeder Heifers: (Good and Choice ) :Dl-500

Its. 40-52.50; ~700 lbs. 37.50-44.25.
Feeder BuUs: (Good and Chotcet ;n}500
lbs. 47_57 .'75; 500-700 lbs. 39 .50-48.?5•
Slaughter Bulls: (Over 1,00) lbs.) J6.504MO.
Slaughter Cows: UtWUes 34-39.25; Canners
and Cuners Z7.JJ.
Spt1nger Cows: (By the Head m-.317.
Veals: {Cho~ and Prtme) 52-56..50:
Baby Ca lves (By the Head) 1644.
Baby Ca lves (By tl)e Pound) 36-51.
··'!'I HOG PRICES:
1

Hogs'

(No.

I , Barrows

bsBJ:~~37~s 23-32.50~

and GUts)

201).2Jl

Butcher Boars 26-26.50.
Feeder Pigs: (By the H ead) 10-16.
SHEEP PRICES·.

Fcederl.ambo44-46.50.

1

C'&lt;~

Gl

r ~on ll

I PI&lt;&lt;!

I~ ~~~lr&gt;el l

71 9uto&lt;1UI 0DIJC"IInl"

IPO&lt;d

tn ld&gt;'I OOO I

l2 '-' """ LC LDI~

I At~nm""'""''""
' G~&gt;~A .. &gt;y

~ H'&lt;'pyAdo
6 toounof•un~
I • • • d iolo lp •..t '" '"''"'" I
t Pu~o&lt;: !&gt;ol&amp; .. uc loool
9 w.,.,odooSu,

~-

_.'J5iE?------::\ 1
ll

1J Ponl.,.,onal So,.....:ot

~~~~'"

I 7 M"ul.,ncouo
•• won ,.~luOc

P~,.

l'

Ma yor Eber Pickens and old ordinance on traDers that was
mcmi'J&lt;'r' of Syracuse VUlage passed in '1913 rather than ban
Council met with five residents of , yauers completely.
·
the village Tuesday night regarding
Amendments were made to the
the ordinance banning traUersln the ordinance and councll at Its next
vUJage or Syracuse.
meetlllg, Thursday night, will
Council and members o( the ·present the ordinance for approval.
committee agreed to amended the
\

11·1 5-1 mo pd.

a~ .. nuo ll ~·ld"'"'

l&lt;&gt;t

~ · Boolo • M~l ~l
71 ..... ., P.• tt •llo .. c ......... .
17 Auto f\ec&gt;•"
11 C om~rl~f~u op ,.no

~~~o&lt;SoloO&lt; hO&lt;So

On October 24. 1983. 1n the
M etgs County Probate Court.
Case No 24242, James P
Lambert. 39041 Htlman Road.
Pomeroy. Oh10 45 769 was
apootmed Executor of the
esta t P. of Walter A Heilman.
deo~ased . late of 38811 Hellman Road. Porneroy. Oh10

45769

s/Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Cler'&lt;

111 1 23. 30 (I 21 7. 31C

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
SHERIFF'S SALE
MEIGS COUNTY COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
CASE # B3-CV-236
MABEL G PAULEY
Pla1nhff

6lloi&lt;ut&amp;e ~

-~

915 - Ct.ut•
J43 - l"or!lot""

... a.....-

t U • IA&lt;-'1Follo "
, . , Ao ciN
JU A - M

Guyon 0&lt;11

u., a G••n

G~ · Sud&amp;

'"'"I''"

J7'J- ........ .

H..... o ""l&gt;tt&gt;u..,.ftt&lt;
Plum l&gt;'nt • HUh"9
h u .. oln g
l fttuo ol l. A., "ll"'""on
Q.,.., olHouhng
M H Ro ,o"

&amp;11 - C"'*"....
o~oa..,.,

ln-~, l nM•­

Uptoi~WooM

UphDI ..eoy

• .,.,.,

Up to l ll•to&lt;~

Up to l 'li_,..

S.o,.wo•-'"'"

---

·~Pl.~-·
4Y
L-

t

111 AjlpleC-

&lt;

.,.,,

BU - N _ H _

"Your Place or Mine"

. , . Ut.-1

tl1' - W -

10/ 12/2 mo pd .

.""'.,
nob

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses
BUilDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10·6-ifc

t•-··-~~•-UOI

Public .Notice

Public Notice

appratsed pnce

JAMES J PROFFITT
SHERIF!'&gt;
MEIGS COUNTY
•1111-30. (1217. 14. 31C
Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Case No. 24244 Docket M
Page 341

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On October 24. 1983. 1n the
Me tgs Coun ty Proba tP- Court,
Case No 24244 Jamf!s P
Lambet t. 39041 Hedman
Road. Po meroy, 01:1to 45769
was apoomted Exexutor of the
estate of Lelta M HP.tlman.
dec:easP.d. lat'e of 3881 1 Heil man Road. Pomeroy. Ohto

45769

s/Robert E Buck
Probate Judg?./
Clerk

(11123. 30 (1217. 31

LEGAL NOTICE
Request For Proposal iRFPi

v1duals need apply
The Req ues t For Pro posal
(AfP) package includes tnstru ctiOns and·torms lor applyi ng lvr
Title Ill funds. RFPs wtll be availabl e as of November 23. 1983.
and may be obt atned b,y wr•~mg
to OBES. JTP Oh10 Oivtsion .
145 Soulh Front Street, Columbus. Oh10 43 21 6. Attn : Daniel Marschall.
Pr oposals mus t be rece1ved
by the JTP O hio D1vi s10 n no later than the close of the workday Fnday. Jan uary 6, 1984.
Proposals must be sent to
OBES, JTP Ohto DIVIS.IOn. 145
South Fron t Street. Col umbu$.
Oh1o 43 2 16. Ann
Oan ter
M arschall . M ark all proposals.
1n the lower left hand co rner:

The Ohto Bureau of Employm ent Serv1ces. JTP Oh1o Dtvt s•on. ts requesttng proposals
lrom organtzatiOns that w1sh to
operate program s under Ttt!e
Ill. Ot sloca ted Workers funds al lotted to the State of Oh1o by
the Job Tratntng Partnershtp
Act (JTPA). Funds wt l be avatlabl e lo r train1rlg · related actiVI·
lieS. admtntstrat1ve cos ts and
sUpport serv1ces lor proJects to
be operated 1n 1 984 Program
ope rato rs wtll be requtred to
provtde a 40% match. etther tn
cash or in-k1nd servtces. fo1 the
total fede ral dollars requesled.
Ohto's Otslocat ed WOrkers
Program provt9es funds for
proJP,cts to p la ce d1slocated
wo1 kers mto unsubsldtzP.d employmen t Apphca!IOns far
Phas e Ill of thts Program will be
accepted from orgaruzaltOns
au thomed to do busmess 1n
th e State ' of Oh1o N&lt;'· mch -

SEALED PROPOSAL NOT OPEN

Keep That Natural
Look In Your Home.

P&amp;S

CALL

10/20/tJn.

378-6349

11·17 I mo.

Jt~l

NOW IN

SAVE

I

Kitchen Cabinet~ - Roof·
ing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Sidint-Co.
Route I
long Bottom, OH. 45743
• 985-4193 or 992-3067
12-20-tfe

DEPOSITORY.
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
"U .P.S. - PUROLATOR ~
7
~DOOR TO DOOR ·f
-:,
I'
~DELIVERY ~
PARCIL PRIORIIT SHIPIIIITS
FOR LESS tHU U. S. MAIL
SAVE 10%TO SO% AND lORI

ll

.

MINE RUN

ufact

$

,..an
urers
· PLA"UES
'(
ENGRAVING
'320 JERICHO RD .
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

u 1 ad

3ooo

F.....
4

PH. 992 -2280

2_23 _11,

1_

mobile homes and

p
.m . Factory
gun1
0176 . campen . Call 448·
Every
Sundaychoked
atarting
1 truck
onlv .
~ ~---------

SupptiooinTupperoPioins.
hunting or treapeooing
or night on Charlo• Yoot

COAL

Trophy

Gun 1hoot Recine Gun Club.

Wanted To Buy ·

4· 2 month klt1en· and

mother eat. One all black , 3
·y ellow &amp; white. Real cute.

Roger Hysell

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
279 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

ol'

~~~Located in H&amp;R '~-0"';.

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

.,_

GOOD SELECTION
SHOTGUNS &amp;
" HANDGUNS
We buy, sell or trade.
Good prices.

Frank's

DO

faoas'!!o~d.
~a~i~~
448-0840

(111 30 1IC

10.26·1 mo.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Page 392

HOTPOINT

On November 18. 1983. tn
the M e1gs County Probate

Court. Case No 24283. James
ShAeis. Rou te No. 1, Box 211.
Rutland. Ohto 4 57 7 5 was
appo1nt ed Adm1ntstrator at the
Estate of El1za E. Powell.
d eceased,la te ol 126 Mulberry
Aven ue. Pomorov. Ohto

ONLY

Different Sizes
and Prices
CALL

ROOFING

For

All t~pes of roof work.

Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH. '
PH. 992-2725

Call 949-2263
or 949-3091

992-6173
' .'

..."

'

LOT in Racine Villaae, 75x150, M.H. facm.::.
•

&lt;

'

•

2¥1 ACRES and hOuse
needs extensive repairs. Racine Villll*.

APPROXIMAJELY

SEND RESUME TO :

Home National
Bank,.,
.
949-2210

'

'

'

VIRGIL B. SR .
r . 2ne1 sr .
Phone

Authorized John Deere,
New HoUand. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment ·
Deater
Farm Equipment
·Parts &amp; Service
J.3.Jic

I·C6141·992·332S
POMEROY LOT - Near
Sears. View of River. Asking
$1,500.

~29.900.00.

MIDDLEPORT- large bus·
iness bldg., or for storage.
$20,000.

.

Three acres with a nicely constructed con- ~!
crete block·home 261160, 3 bedrOomS; one J 1
bath, 12xl~ living room and 24x,24 family&gt;,: ;
room. Partially carpeted, fuel 011 furnace ;, ,
with. facilities for woodbumer. · 12xl5 ,:.
block storage buildill&amp; 2000 block ,.. -,
age. Right off Rt. 248, country setting, ~.
l/2 mile east of Cbester, Ohio,
~.:

ties, Yellow BusJJ Road. .

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

216

~EW liSTING- Rutland- 6

'

Real Estate ·General

ONE OF THE AREA'S LEADING
DEALERS IS NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR THE POSITION
OF SALES PERSONS.
.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.

11·1-tlc

BOGGS

•
RACINE
AUA - 2 bedroom home with I~ baths
and futt basement. $23,000.

room, 3 beO'oom remodeled
~ with 2 bat~ utility,
insuialed, garae and storage.

Business Route 7, Middleport, Oh,io .

REAL ESTATE ·

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS
1 mile below 2nd'kaiser
Entra.nc, at 102 Carney
Dr., Corner of St. Rt. 2
and Carney

992·2259

~i,900.00.

ODDS &amp; ENDS CARPET SHOP

.,

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
CustQm Pole Bldgs.
I Garages
Roolinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years E•perience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

601
M1in

:NEW LISTING - Free Gas!
Country living is easy w~h no
)as bills in this 3 bedroom
home, 2 beautiful baths, lamily
:room, dining room, bui ~-in
·kitcherJ, huge INJng room.
1:overed patio and carport
Garag~ other outbuildings,
,approximatley 1 acre lot.

CALL TODAY FOR FREE ESTIMATES
lT COULD SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS.

627 3rd Ave., Gaiii.~OII' s

.\II Makes

•Washera •DishWashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-tlc

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Ca II for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or

•WATER. GAS and
SEWER UNES
,
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

949-28o0

No Sundav Calls
3-ll -tfc

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201

3-7-11

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

M.L.
CONTRACTING
RECAMATION

Wantodtobuy. New. usedtl&lt; Mature babyalner av•llable
days , nighu. over wee- piece or comptoto hou ..1- kendl, your home . Hal own
holds. Alao complete Aucti- tran1portation . Call 446oneering sorvlce. Call Ooby 2439 .
A. Martin 614·992-6370.

:~i~;.~in:::\~w~~~·..:;:r:~
ware, old coino, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·

kett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave.
oh. 614 -992-

Middleport.

HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

&lt;

SKATE-A-WAY
Chester, OH.
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Niles
7;30 to 10:00
Available lor private parties Mon., Tues .. Thurs.
Niles, Sat. or Sun. Afternoon .
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI., NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC . 16
PH. 985-3929
or 985-9996
11 -14·1 mo.

3100.
- - - - - - - - · l c-

ing . Catl 614-256-1198.

White Persian cat With 5
kittens , 4 White and 1 black

AVON There are 2 ways to
make money With AVON.
Ca'l for information. Call

II&lt; white. 8 weeks old. 706

South 2nd
Middleport.

Lovable 6 month old calico
cat. Has all shots. litter
trained. Meigs Humane So·

dety . 614-992-2692.

3 cute Christmas puppies,

304-675-3118 ,

Two small breed puppies.
male, 8 wks. old. wormed.

304-675-2320.

Tappan electric range . 304-

675-6730.

Route 4, Pomeroy

lflll.

LINCOLN HTS. - 2 homes
with vinyl ~ding and tots of
.remodeling. $20's.

ELBOW ROOM - Approxin\a'1tey 33 acres with nice 3
bedroom ranch, 2 balltS, lui
basement with summer kit·
~ chen, !amity room with fire
• place, patio. large metal bam
I $47,500.00.

SHOPPING CENTER SITE

: FlATWOODS - Ranch home
l with 4 bed rooms, 2 baths,
, family room with fireplace,
~ utility, prage. Nice Ieveii 'acre
,IIi. $53,500.00.
: 12165 MOBILE HOllE - 3"

:bedrooms, both, filly fur·
•nished. AI underpinning arxt

:steps. Only $6.500.00.

'IIITEIEST RATES ME COMNG
:11011111 STAIIT LOOtliNG NOW!
REAlTORS
Hny E. Ctlilnd, Jr.
llllllt2-6191
.IIIII TmttH 949-26i0
lloltie Tunw 992-5692
Jo Hill 985 4466 ~.

4.[9
,.

•

'lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC T.\NKS
A SPECIALTY

742-232B

10·24-t mo

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

614-446-8095.

FOUND 2 hunting bows on
Rt . 160. For more information call after 6 :00PM.' 448-

9264.

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

LOST White female lonQ
hair8d cat. One blue eye and
one yellow . 12 yr. pet. lest
seen at home near Addison.

,/ Point • Mason
'

.

·-·-· ·aaiili&gt;oils·... ···..
&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sale Centenary Townhouse . Thurs . Dec. 1st.
Home Interior, high chair.
dishes , ·;ewelry , knick
knacks, guitar.

Yard Sale 3 Family Cent&amp; ·

~~,_----~----~

L...--

-4· le11el acres near Pom-

t

Ph. 985-4269
tf No Answlf, C.tt 985·4382

"AUTOGLASS
OUR SPECIAL TYI"

' Oawayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith

w"-" you Need Grfoss You Need us ... We Can Handle
Your Every Glau Needt
"Wo Wont And
F,. Eotimotls

5 RIVER LOTS - Miners·
ville. With all utilities availa·
ble. Only $7,000.

Yo~r

Arrtenna Instillation

House Catts ood Shop

Sit. 1:00 to 12:00 1001

Sen~ice A~ailable

IH \mo l)d

i

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt . Pleasant. WVa.
Auct. lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St .

61 4-367· 7101

&lt;

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
COnsigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 276-3069 .
Mt.~lto aucti.o n e_
very _Sat.
night , 6 p . m . Starting
Christmas seson. No more
consignments will be taken
until after Christmas. Emma
Bell Auctioneer. 428·8177.
WVa. tic . No. ·429·B4.

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean u1ed cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids Inc .
Bill Gene Johnson
Wanted to buy uaed coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furni-

13041 m-5710. 773-5118

ture. 446-3169, 3rd. II&lt;

POMEROY- 2 houses. Real
cheap. Level lots and garages. $21.000, or good offer.

Blue grass or rock band for
·christmas Dance at GDC.
Dec . 14. $100 . Call 4461642 , ext. 279. 8 -5.
Mature individual living in or
near Pomeroy area to represent established life and
Health Insurance Co. Excellent potential for increased
earnings and advancement .
Applicant must have initiatiVe mature. judgement in
sales ability, however no
experience necessary. We
offer completl!' training pto·
gram. Guaranteed salary .
Bonus and commission.
fringe benefits include group
life and hospitalization and
excellent retirement benefits. We are an E.O .P. For
more information contact
Darrell VOrhees , District

manager. 614·687·0066 .

Between 8:30 end
p.m. weekdays.

4 :30

Boat club manager caretaker, live on premises .
Housing , utilities, hospital
ins . furnished . Paid vaca tion. perfect for responsible
couPle who enjoy working
with people. Mpchanical appitude. river eKperlence
helpful. not necessary . Base
salary $600 month, extra
i ncome aboVe salary possi ble doing boat meintenca .
Write giving work experience, family, health status
and character reference .
P.O. Sox 4221, Charleston .

wv 25304

Help Wanted -Women , man
to assist manager with cus tomer service. Earn up to
$7.00 or more per hour.
Opponunity for advance -

mont. 304-576-2618 .

Part time secretary, recep tionist. Reply to P,0 . Box
177, Point Pleasant .

12

Situations
Wanted

Tree trimming and removal.
Free estimates. 61"4-992-

Raw Fur Buyer . BHf a Deer

RACINE - Modern looking
one floor, one bedroom
home. Only $12,500.

Goorgoo Crook Rd.
4411-0294.
- l l l l - 110111$00 ......
IG FM.LY MY 0FP wmt TMAT
ftQM. . . . . a£WMD

No Hunting. Tre1pt1saJng or
Splotllghting on Rogers
prop.rty, Fairview Ad .• Htrrison Twp.

w:ut !f.

lllrrl WitH A _.,.,. UFE-I.H&lt;£

ltiCM.DOt MOUNI ATotltiTUOK),
UCH -.wr tl aWN THE PER·
lllfW. A11tNTION rJ UEkiMS TO
OM YOU A ~ TROPHY llMT
LAII fiOIIt \'IMI AND Y!Mil.

Ht'"'""l

THI

TAXIDERMY
SHOP IUJLAID, 014.
lilA ID.
PH. 742·2221

HI'./( lcflldf t I.,;;

,.,

Cotl BEDS-IRON, BRASS old
Furnlture, gold, silver dollara. wood ice boxe1. stone
jera. antiques~ etc . Complete
households. Write M .D .
Miller, At. 4 . Pomeroy, Oh

4&amp;789 or 992-7760.

Julia 's Personal
Can Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvele1ence
Home. 18 years.••pertence'.

675-1498.

Will do house cleaning .
Reasonable rates. Call 304·

676·3908 .

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm.
home and personal property
coverages arq &amp;Jailab!a 1:0
n.ttet individu::al ndttds. Contttct Harry P:tchf -.rJ , agent.
Pn co ne 446 -1427

15

Schools
Instruction

BIG RIGS. We can train you
to drive the " 18 wheelers ..
at Charlotte Diesel Driving
School. The industry today
is looking for well -trained.
professional driven . We
have both full and part-time
training . Aher completing
the training you will receive :
Federal Certification , FREE
job placement a11istance. If
you are reedy to STEP-UP,
call toll free Charlotte. N.C .
704- 697·9560 or toll free

1·800-438-7714.

Clifton. W.V. 304-773&amp;873.
••

304-17&amp;-4280.

At~ons,

1-800-341 -65&amp;4

23 Professional
Services
PIANO TUNING Low•• ·
prices-regular tuning• · ·
discount• to Senior Cltizena,
Churches &amp; schoola . Ward's·

Keyboard . 304-875 ·3824.

31

Homes for Sale

4 bdr . ranch home, large LR.
full basement , wrth garage,
wood burner included. city
schools. 2 miles from town.
Call 446 ~ 0276 .
$2600 down take over •316
mo . payment (taxes Br)d
insurance included .) 3BR ,
rlnch style, full basement.
carport . wood burner, insu lated vinyl siding , city
schools and subdivision .

·Call614·446·8002.

owner MUst Sell Homel
Unbelievable price I Low utilIties I buy It now! Middleport.

Call614-992-6941 .

3 bedrooms, one floor plan.
eat in kitchen and dining
room. 1 car garage, gas
heat. central air, fenced in
backyard, storage buildi ng .
Located on George Creek
Rd . Call 446-0109 after 6 .
Located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; swimming pool . 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot. $24,600. or
will rent for $275 mo .

304-856-3934 .

3 bedroom ranch ltyle
home. carpeted. full size
basement. 1 car garage. in
ground pool 16x32 .

$45,000 . 614-992·6858 :

Baum addition . 3 bedrooms.
2% baths. A .C .. family room
with fireplace. 2 acres.'
$67.500 . · No down pay·
ment , owner will carry at no
inlerest for no interest for 6
years. Loan assumption pos-

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED - CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7672 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALtTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPDLii,
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274.
Trailer on 2 acre lot $1 9,00((
and trailer on 1 acr• lbf
$11,000 on Kerr· Bethel Ref.

Call 614-388-9360.

Nice 2 bdr . trailer . Qtfi,
614-266 ·6251 , ahet 5 :30,
1972 Castle with 82 Vemoo
roometts , air cond ., fireplace. Call 446-I 217 . __
1972 trailer. 2 bdr ., unfur·
niahad , good cond. Call

614· 4·46 -7171 or 448 -

8288

aft~n

5.

1976, 12x70, total electric,
3 BR . 2 baths. ax . cond.

$6900. Coli 44&amp;-0176.

1977 Trailer with 3 lots for
sale . Call 614-256 · 6618.
1981 14x52 Fairmont 2
more years of wa.-ranty . low
heating bill , 2 bdr .. $8,900 .

Call 614-245-9283.

17 Miscellaneous
Deer heads mounted . Ste·

18 Wantad to Do

1---------G8narel Hauling and Tra1h
removal Service . Reliable

ond dopend•bto. Colt 44831 &amp;9 IMltwean 9 and 6.

U.-.112 inch Plonor in good .wood. Colt 814·251-1628.
condition. 304·11&amp;·4004 .
Wanted to buy left over yard
s•l• item1. Mo1tly clothing .

RATES 12 V2% purchase or
refinance , 1 1 V•% adjustable
rate . leader Mortgage,

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Will cut and deliver fire·

Va(:en~;y :

HOME LOANS FIXED

Dears skinned, cut and
wrapped. Call Cisco 304-

At . 2, Athens, 0". Phc;me

814-864-4781 . 1-9 Dally.

1::::::::::;::;::=======
22 Money to Loan.

sible. 614-985-4387.

Taxidermy, Rutland ,
SWEEPER and I!IWing m•- Hidoo· Ginoong , Trapping wart's
Ohio.
Colt
614-742·3008 .
chine repair. parts. and Supplies. George Buckley,

auppllas.
Pick up 1nd
delivery. D•vis VaCuum
Cle1ner, one helf mile up

LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know. •nd NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investi·
gated the oHering.

dents. 614-986-3928 .

Olive St .• Gallipolis, Oh.

POMEROY - Edge of town.
2 bedroom rame lor
$12,000.

MIDDLEPOIIT - Lovely
Swiss type 3 bedroom home
in A· I shape. Nice carpet·
ing, full basement and hot
w1ter heat Askinl $45,000.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

· t NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY P\Ja.

35, Rodney, Oh. Apply in 1- - - - - - - - - -

Wanted someone to tear
down barn for the lumber.
No responsible for acci-

8

Business
Opportunil'(

person 1PM to 3PM .

6040 or 514·949· 2129.

448·3672

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
Rt. 33

Excepting applications Dec.
1 t1&lt; 2. J's Mini Mart, St. Rt.

Dec. 2nd S. 3rd. Baby
furniture, wardrobe. toys ,
strawberry shortcake
tricycle.

9

Att Makes and Modols

Buslnosa"

M.,.., loo.·frl . 1:00 lo 7,00.

4-21-tl c

446 -335B.

nary Townhouse At . 141 .

304-773-9186.

APPLIANC1
SERVICE
· Chester, Ohio

' · Auto Glais

Yard Sale

wva . 304-773 -6785 or

AND

-

Cell 446-2805 .

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate . farm, Antique &amp; liquidation sales.
Licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

S&amp;W TV '

,

eroy.
RACINE - 3 bedroom
frame home on State Rt
Bath and all utilities.

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

NOW

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS
I

JtARRISOIIVILLE - Traier or
biJiding lot! Nice level lot with
1111 utilities. On~ $4,000.00.

•

Lost and Found

949 - 2293
Racine, OH .

742-2352

CALL
Have 1 Carpet
In Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
. Completely "FREE"
limited Olfe r
Call 986-4225
Ask for Guy Shea
independent Kirby Dealer

A.wenue in

112
Be~gle male pup . 4Yt
months old . 949-2644.

7

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

~~~~;~~~~~~ ~iiiii~iiii
Lady wants ride from Eureka

LOST Diamonds earrings in
marble container , Reward
offered. No questions asked .
Call 992· 7342 after 2PM .

USED
APPLIANCES .

McDaniel Custom Butchttring. Open six daya a week .

7:30 to 6,oo p.m. 304-8823224.

to end of bridge in Pt.
6 black mixed pups. 992- ·Pleasant every Friday morn-

992·3374.

8-lllc

Carpentry wor~ remodeling ,
painting S. roofing . Can
furnished refarancea. expe rienced. Call 446-2787.

Will keep til Christmas. Call

LOST Black Labrador Retriever 80 lb. Reward . Lost in
vicinity of Union Ave. Call

•Excavating
•ponds
·septic Tanks
"Hauling

PAT

EJCperlenced mach•nlc desire• any kind of mechanical
work on autos. H.. own
tools and building, work
guerentHd. Call for Htlmatea 446-8252 or 441·

antique furnitwe. Will buy

614-245-9326 .
- - - - - - - - - t c-

mO.·c

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

•DOZER

18 Wanted to Do

Small block spayed lomalo, 1·1 Help Wanted
21
mixed. Good with children. 1- - - - - - - - - -

Real Estate General

:

WE ALSO HAVE EXPERT INSTAllAtiON AND ONE OF THE
LARGEST SELECTIONS OF CARPET IN THE AIEA

627 3rd Ave.-Ph. 446·1699
Spin Wnltln:, Gls llld (lee.
Dryers, Auto. W11Hn, GIS &amp; elec.
Rlntes. Relritera t on, 1V seta.

BUYING

• POMEROY,O.

DIRECT MILL BUYING AND LOW OVERHEAD
COMBINE TO GIVE LOW PRICES

10% Off

Any Service

new or repatr, gutters
and dowqspouf$, gutter cleanm1 and
painting, storm doors
and windows.
All W01l Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

273-3407
~ E.

CARPET FOR LESS

TV &amp; APPLIANCES

.SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
H• II. Ent of Pl&amp;lville
On Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only
PH. 992-3466
10/ 19/2 mo pd

985-3843: \

10 A.M. - 5 P.M.

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTTAGE
317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and
Candlewick Supplies
Giving lessons
Take Crafts on Consignments. at so . have craft
ci!ts.
·
HOURS: 9-3 Mon . thru Sat.
·
9-6 Friday

BONDED &amp; WORK GUARANtEED

Bring This Coupon In

H. L. Writesel

'•

•

HOURS:

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
98S-3S61

femalr.
3 mo
. old.color,
Call
Angora kitten
orange

446p2467 after 6:30PM .

Rewar~.

'

For More Information

614-992-2181 ' ..

23. 30. 1121 7. 3Jc
Public Notice

/Robert E. Buck
Nov 30. Dec. 2. 9

FOR CHRISTMAS

Pomeroy
Landmark

Clark

45710

aEAUTIFUL
GRAVE BLANKETS

$525°0

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/

On November B. 1983. 1n the ·
M etgs County Probate Court.
Case No. 24293, LOIS G. Bailey.
Box 211. RD 3. Albany. Ohto
45 7 1 0 was appotnted admlntstratn)( of the estate of Dana H.
Ba tley, deceased. late of Box
21 1. RD 3. Albany. Oh10

.~

17.2 cu. ft.
Model CTFI7-AC
REG. '624.95

45769

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS .COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF DANA H. BAILEY
Case No. 24293 Docket 12
Page 393
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

FOR SALE

Refrigerator

ll /2111~

GUNS

3- 10-Uc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY.

Discover Enpge-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. Reali all about ~.
Send for Free Booklet l-16.
Bob Blackston, an authorized independent Enga&amp;eA-Car Broke!. Box 326, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want hster Information?
Call 614-992-6737

6

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO;

.,..o Bloek Building

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Dozers
-Backhoes
-Oump Trucks
- lo-Boy
- Trencher
- Water
- Sewer
-Gas Lines
- Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALtJOBS
PH. 992-2478

11

Cane Chair Buyloig only
SALEI20·30-40percontoff those that neod cone ro·
cake decorating ouppti... ploced. Co11614·246-9326. 2491 .
Anns Cake Decorating &amp;.

STRIP

10-3 1·1

3-24-tft

Tech ntcal assis tance w tll be
provtded only tn rega rd to procedural queslians

PROBATE COURT OF
54 Misc . Merchandise
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Case No. 24283 Docket 1 2

11 1)

FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING

AL

Public Notice

JONES . e1ol

· Reforen ce Vol 131 page
59 7 Me1gs Coun ty Mortgage
Records
Property located on SalAm
r ownsh1p
Road T 180
p

64

Public Notice

-v ~-

Df'!fP.ndrtnts
Pur suant to an ORDER OF
SALE 1ssued by the Court of
Common PIP.us on judgment
IP.ndF&gt;t P.d m the above srv!ed
.case, I wilt P.)(pose fo1 sale at
oubl1c auctton on the front
steps o f the M e1gs County
Court House. Pomeroy. Ohto. at
10.00 o'clbck A.M on Saturday. the 31st day ol Decem ber
1983. the lnllowm g descnbed
lands and tenements . to -w1 t
Located 1n Section 5. TownS,
Range 14 of th e Oh1o Compan~'s Purchse. commencmg
on the road lead1ng from
Rutland to what was formerly
Gtld Old Mtllon the north l1ne of
satd Lot No 3 on a bndge
where an elm 8 1nches 111
d1amP.ter lp.ans nort h 46 degreP.s west 4 cha1ns and 50
ltnks, thence south 19 deg1ees
west 1 cha1n 34 links to the
south l1nP. of sat d Lot No 3
where a BuckeyP. 10 1nches 1n
dtameter leans south 33 de grees east 50 links. thence east
on thF sou th I me of satd lot to
the southwPst co• nP.r of a 1 5
ac 1e lot formerly owned by
Thomas Amos . thence north 14
chams 75 li nks. thence east to
the east lm e of sa 1d Sect 1on No.
5. thence north 25 links: th ence
west on the nonh line ol satd
L
N
h
l
1
at
o . 3 to 1 e pace
o
beg1nn1ng. contatnmg 33 1/3
acres. mor!l or less.
Save and nxcept the' land 40
rods lang and 1 rod w1de
runn, ng flam the northeast
cornfH of sa1d 33 1/3 acre lot
to M ain Road. sa1d lan F! runnmg
between the land of what was
lormerly John Sm1 th and Thomas Amos

8t
81
ll
14
8&amp;
86
87

II h om Equopmonl

44 .. """"'-"' fo , Ro nt
45 Fu •n •oh •d A&lt;&gt;o&gt;&lt;no
46 Spoce lo•Ron1
4 7 w ..ol&lt;dto "'nn o
4B hu••moo1 too Ron&lt;
4 9 foo lo..o

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
·Case No. 24242
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY

tu- M.-.,....

4 4&amp; ~ Golip &lt;llo o

7 •~ - ~~

62 w ... ,.., , .,~,.

ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
. And Drip Tanks

co-c~ol\ 4

eu- ...... ooot

r,,,, ,., Ft ... o

PH. 742-2456

o.. ioc""""'
,., • •

.. ~:!: ~;".~~..,

TROMM
742-2328

PROFESSIONAL

Salem Jwp. Rd . 180
· Dexter. Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew

7

~ 7 M ~o •c• • lnol!uonMI~

GRAVEL
HAULED

BISSELL FLOORS

PARCEL SERVICE

J.. IIo o.-l n p lo ·l••t•lwn•• f'.l'o'hfl"II''·• ...

2§1 -

S8.050.00 and cannot be so ld

Council agrees to amend ordiance

All Work Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
Aft
pM
er 5 · ·

THE
TROPHY
KING

9

Needs home dMpartly .

.General Welding

M &lt;&gt;O~•Cttloo

-~:- ~:~, ~.~;;:~:... ~d

rope• IV appca •sed al

to assist Racine Elementary PTO In
purchasing blinds for Racine
Elementary.
The board will meet In special
session on Dec. 12, at 1 p.m.
Attending were Sue Grueser,
Denny Evans, Charles Pyles, David
HUl and Don Smith, board
members, Hlll and Bobby Ord,
superintendent.

Residential- New and rewiring: Commercial and In dustrial.
BONDED
All Work Guaranteed
Call614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.
11-1-1 mo. pd

Pomeroy, Oh.

,-. ,..,., lf..-

C/n .uiJio••IIKllfo '~

71 ... ,.,. fQ • S • "'
72 l ouo;~o l~ Sole
73YonJ IIo4WO
H

S ol~

~ll&lt; uo .. ~ II"'JJIU~I@•

Public Notice

SHE;ILA A

'

!12 '-! ~b .. flom~, ' "' h ie
l.l Foomo loo Sole

t I HouHI l o• Jl ... l
42 Mob~o HomH io&lt; li on&lt;

1 &amp; Aodo u TY &amp; Cll

~l Anloq~u

M&gt;

4l

' l ' "'"'"""

Cl. TV llo Ft ....... EquopmMI

ll HQ"'"''"' Sole

Sotuo,.~ Wonto~

' • aSc~oo•o
.... ,..., '"'""'II

Hyu-ai6Q.,.,do

~2

5 4 M ou M ~ r cho&lt;!dou
55 Bu l~r ng SU.wl•n

H oi~WMood

1S

~~

Board f i n i s h e s m i n o r b u s i n e s s for less 1han 2'~~3~~:d·~~~~~;::·wtan=t=ed~Ph:·:44!!s:.!-1.!!lsg~~-_J
At a recent meeting of the
Southern Local Board of Education
It named Rose Ann Jenkins to the
substitute teachers' list for the
19s:Hl4 school year and Deborah
Rizer to the subsitute bus drivers list
for the 1983-84 school year.
They board approved a request of
the treasuer, DeiUlle Hill, to transfer
lunds within the budget and agreed

Tri-County

I 11 Court St:, Pomeroy, Oftio 457&amp;9

I

Due 10 Christmas and New Year's we wUI
lx' havlng our Saturday sales on these dates:
Wednesday, Dec. 21; Wed~y . Dec. 18;
Sale time W1U be 1 p.m . No sale Saturday,
December 24 and Saturday, December 31 .

PHONE 992~2156o, Write D1i!ty Sentinel Cln,Jitied Dept

l '" -~...

Meigs County property transfers •••

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

Pewter and other Items from eaJty settlers In INl
GaDia County area. The display Is Dec. 9 aild 10 a&amp; the
museum. There will also be enterialnnMim In the
ballroom each evenlng.

. VICI'ORIAN CHINA DOI.J.S - On display at the
Our House Museum In Gallipolls for "Christmas with
the Cushlngs," Is. a special collection of dolls,

I

He described the resulting pattern
on the bullets as an "erratic
skipping."
Nibert said he had iired 22 test
bullets from the gun; and, that he
had been unable to match any of the
22 test shots with each other.
He testified, however, that the two
evidence bullets displayed the same
"erratic skipping" as the test
bullets.
On cross-examination, the fir&amp;
arms examiner answered in the
negative when asked, "You cannot
positively state that's the gun?"
The testimony and a written
statement of one prosecution wit·
ness, Harold "Rusty" Johnson, of
Pt. Pleasant, was barred from the
jury Tuesday afternoon.
Johnson, who said he was Lee's
second cousin, testified - with the
jury absent from the courtroomthat he had made a statement to
police concerning a telephone call be
had received from someone who
identified himself as Charles Lee.
That phone call, according to
testimony, contained information
"concerning the incident."
Johnson told the court Tuesday
afternoon he did not believe the
caller was Charles Lee.
"The voice · was older and
deeper," he testified.
The court ruled that since the
caller could not be positively
identified, bothJohnson'sstatement
and testimony would be excluded
from the trial.
Tuesday's trial recessed at
shortly after 4 p.m .: and, was set to
reconvene at 9a.m., today.

RESIDENTIAL- New
and re -wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTR!Al

MILLER

Including some VlciAirian China ones, along with

gun and the "evidence bullets"
remoVed from Twyman's body.
According io the BCI examiner, a
defect' in the gun made it Impossible
to positively trace the evidence
bullets back to the gun.
"My best guess Is," he said, "that
the gun's chamber is mlsalllgned·
... (with the barrell."

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

'
MILLS
·
ELECTRIC

3 Announcements

Calt 446-8176 aftor 6PM . 3476.

Mother, brother testify...
(Cont inued from page 1)
presence of sperm.
mashed potatoes and corn- prior to
Addil ion ally, the pathologist testi·
his noon departure that day from the
lied that neither of ihe two entry
Twyman home.
wounds revealed powder burns.
He testified he had eaten: but,.
Investiga tor Lamar Gossard, of
said that - as of his time of
the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
departuu-e - his sister had not.
Identification and Investigation,
Franklin County pathologist Dr. testified he had gathered evidence
Patrick Fardal - one of four
at. the site where the body had been
prosecution "expert witnesses" who
found on the night of the discovery.
who appeared Tuesday afternoon He said by the time he did his
testified that during an April 1 investigation the body had been
autopsy, slightly " .. .less than a
removed, but tha t he had checked
quart . of food matter (including
the area for ''trace evidence.··
undigested corn) ... " was removed
On cross-examination, Gossard
from 'I'wyrllan's stomach.
said he was "... not completely able
Dr. Fardal said, based upon his
to do a forensic search of the area. "
medical analysis, that death had
"There had been quite a few
occurred "two- to-three hours after
people around," he said, "and it had
she had eaten her last meal."
rained recently."
On cross-examination, the Frank·
"The scene had not been sealed
lin County Coroner testified that if for a forensic search," defense
the victim were emotionally upset
attorney King stated during crossthe process of digestion would take examination. "There were all kinds
longer.
.
of people around ... and, that might
Dr. Fardal said two .22 calliber have ruined evidence at the scene?"
bullets had been removed from the
he asked.
deceased - one from the right
Gossard answered affirmatively.
portion of the bra in, the other from
Gossard testified he had received
the left back.
a box containing a .22 calliber
He testified the bullet to the head
revolver, a box of shelis and some
had traveled hack to front in a
loose shells from the Gallla·County
downward direction. The bullet to · Sheriff's Deparlment during the
the trunk of the body, he said,
investigation.
entered at the front - just left of the
He said the box and its contents
midline pen etrat ed both
had been tr~.nsporte&lt;;l to the BCI
cham1)\'rs of the heart and the left
laboratories in London, Ohio, for
lung and lodged in the left back.
examination .
"They were both fatal wounds ,"
BCI fingerprint specialist David
Fardal testified.
Nibert testified he had been unable
On cross-examination, the pathol · to lift a readable print from the gun
agist said Tw)mlan would have been
supplied by the sheriff's depart" ... Incapable of voluntary move·
ment. He said, however, one p3.rtial
ment after the shot to the head."
print from the shell box was
Dr. Fard!ll testified that Twy· obtained.
man's body had been in a "water
Nibert testified that partial latent
environment" for approximately
print ma tched the fingerprint of an
two weeks. He said toxicological
ink print card, also supplied by the
tests for drugs were negative.
sheriff's deparlment.
· He further stated that both visual
"The name on the card was
and microscropic examination for Charles Lee," he said.
pregnancy proved negative. He said
BCJ firearms exam iner Ronald
the a utopsy had not tested for the
Dye lest ified he had examined the

The Daily

Ohio

.

Cere Director

otlltlng In my
Mon .- Fri. C•lt 4411-

ATTENTION ! Is there such e
thing as a Classici In mobile
home? When you view thl1
Holly Park we think you wRI
agree there is . A 1989
1 2~t66 Holly Park with with
2 bdr ., 5M101ip aut in living
room , completely aet up in
nice parte It includes 40 ft .
patio cover. 2 Hts of steps
with railings, central air, nige
furnishings , ev•n a w..har
and dryer. completely
skirted and ready to occupy,'
There ian' t a cleaner or well,
kept home In the area . Just
like brand new .• You mu11.
see to appracie.te ell of thi1

*12,900. Flnonolng

.,.11•-

ble. tow down payment. and
lnw mo"thty payments. For'
idnrmatlon cell 814·H270 ~ 4

or 814·982-8284:--•

,,

�.,•
12-The Daily

5 i House hold Goods

They'll Do It Every Time

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

S&lt;:-AAM'?

Washers, dryers , •eirigera tors, ranges . Skaggs Ap- New CC Honda Motorcycle,
pliances. Upper River Rd. like new Sl&gt;lgar sewing
beside Stone Crest Mo1 at machine in case, fiber gle11
truck topper. 1978 Monte
446-7 398 .
Must sell 83 Model Singer
s ewing ma c h ines . Un claimed by school S95 . Call
446·9301 .

2 small refrigerators. 2 gas
ranges, 1 Ma ytag wringer
washer, a utomatic washers
&amp; dryer. All guaranteed .
Glassware S. what nota fo r
Chri stmas . Hupp ' s Ap pliance &amp; Gl11sware, Corner

Mobile Home Moving , licensed and lnaured, Free
Estimate• •1 00. per hookup minimum. Phone 304. 576-2711 or 576· 2866.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-876-2711 .

Rt. 7 &amp; Rt. 141 . 446·8033 .

~,.wlS. P.L .PQWH$,

~~~~:~=~~~~!~~12~,5~19~'"~5~1~1&amp;§~~T~
UE"VeFl,CDLO·, ~J

6639 .

home, penial bufn. out,
atove, refrigerator, 3 ton.
central air, t~.OOO .OQ na gotiable, 304-896-3987 or
304-895-3472 after 8 :00 .
33

44

·for Rent
2 bdr . trailers. Apartments 1
bdr. Beau1iful river view in
Kanauga . Fosters Trailer
Park. 446 . 1602 .

New one and two bedroom
apartments, fu rnished or
unfurnished in Middleport.
Call 992-6304 .

Nicly furniahed modern mo·
bile home, in city . 1 or 2

Apartments . 304 -675 -

for ule by owner, asking

*65 .000. Interested party
please call 446-7247 or
513-293-7270.
34

adults only. Call446 -0338 .

2 bdr. mobile home. Call
446-0608 .
Nice 2 bdr ., Upper Rt . 7.

furnished , S$C . dep ., no
inaide pets . Call 614-245-

Business
Buildings

5818 .

14x70 total electric 3 bdr ..
f~mi a hed , trailer on private
lot. 10 min . from to.w n .
$200 mo. plus dep . &amp; ref.

For Sale or Laaae- Country
Store with 3BR Apt. $260
mo. Call 614-246-9315.

Call 614 -266· 1393.

35 Lots 8t Acreage

1 mobile home for rent . 2
mobile homes for ule. Call
448-1052 . .

36 acral at Rodney on W . T.
Watson Rd . Ownei financing available. Call448-8221
after 6 weekdays.

Recreational lot for sale, 12
milea aouth Ravenswood,
1OOft. water frontllge on
Millcreek 82 ,500.00 . 304273·9901 .

43 acres, bern, 16 minuteS
from town. rural water,
blacktop road, beautiful
house site. 304-875 -6766 .

41

2 bdr. mobile home, adults.
no pets. Call 446· 1 1 58 .
2 bdr. trailer, panlally furniahed. water furnished.
8120 mo . dap . required . Cal
446-4002.

1 4x 70 Penthouae high riae.
for rent in Pomeroy-Athena
area . fu·ll furnished ,
equipped kitchen, washerdryer, woodburnar, $2215
plut utilities. Or will sell for
•16,000 . Call

992-8034

after 4:30.
1 2~~.eo ft . 2 bedroom mobile
home . Apjnox . 5 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport. Cell

Houses for Rent

992· 6B68.

raq. Call 446-4222, 9 :305:00.

Equipped kitchen , newly
remodeled , central air, S300
per mo. Call 446 -2168.

1276 plus utilities. AvaiL
. ·now, 2 bdr., LR, new kit., &amp;.
,bath . Large fenced yard,
new carp.t, 656 or 668 3rd.
•A,... Gallipolis. Clal 446·
;2457 or 448-0332 .

·3 bedroom house for rent,
.,M iddlepon with kitchen ap.pliances. Deposit required .
Cell 992-2606 after 5PM .
'3 bdr. 1 112 baths, close to
hoapital &amp; shopping plaza .
No pats, dep. &amp; ref. required . Call 814·245-51 38.

•

Modern 3 bdr. home sec.
dep. req . Referencea. no
pets, prefer middleaged .
Call 614-379-2196 .
- -- - -- -- -lc-

.5 rooms. bath. full basement, garage, glasaed in
breezeway, gas forced air
heat, central air conditioning . Call 614-949-2734.

2 bdr. unfurn. house with
garage . Salem St . in Ru·
ttand. $'186 per mo. 742 ·
2378 .

3 bedroom house-large
yard. Double car garage.
Alternative heat aource .
Small depoait and referen ces . Pomeroy· area . &amp;14992-8639 .

• For uta or rent 3 bdr. ranch.
.... full baaamant, 1 car gal'llge,
: ·in ground pool 1 8x32, ule
, 'J)rlco e4&amp;.000, ron! *300.
; Call 992-18&amp;8.

·:: 3 bdr. 2 baths, h.aat pump,•2
• car garage, nice location .
Coli 304-675-6&amp;4&amp; or 875 : 2371 .

• SiJt room house wi1h full size
~ dry b.. ement. Exc. cond .,
• good neighborhood. 304·
' 676-1962.
~

"3 bedroom hOuM. 2 miles

.. out Sand HOI Rood. e2&amp;0
• month pluo dopook , 304: 875-7868.

House for rlnt or lliate
located In New Haven, with
option to buy. large lot, 3
bedroom•. built-In kitchen.
family room. 2 car garage.
Aaferencea and dapoalt required. 304-882-2888 or
304-424-8108 after 1 :00.
42 Mobile Home•
for Rent

Nice 2 bdr. trailer. Hennen
Troco SchoolorH. At. 218.
•100 dop .. •114 mo. Coli
251-8251 oftor 8:30.
12x80 2 bdr. modern fur.
trollor, • con-lont
loc8tlon. Uppor AI- lid,
dopooll no;q. Coli 114·4-48·
~lohod

ene.

Tvvo bedroom furnished
trailer on Crab Creek Road.
$160 . month, deposit required. 304-676 · 1206.

APARTMENTS , mobile

RIVERS- TOWER.

Apanments now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
in c ome of less than
S 12, 300 . Ronti~g for 30

. Phone 304-676-8879 .

1-814-448-0239.

Two bedroom apt. in Mason,
adults only, no pets, 304·
676· 1462 after 6pm .

Furnished apartment in
Point Plaa11nt, utilities paid,

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houae keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 446 -0768 .
46 Space for Rent

large trailer space on on
Bulaville-Additon Rd. Call
446-4265 or 446-4736 .

Park. Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lo't s. Call
992 -7479 .

Equipment
for Rent

panly paid. 304-676 -2049 .
44

20 ft . flat bed trailer. Can
pull with own pick or car .
Haul anything on it . 125 per

Apartment
for R'e nt

doy . Coli 814-446-0176.

Furnished apts .. 1 · 2 rm . &amp;
bath down &amp; 1 up. Also 1 -4
rm. &amp; bath up. Clean, no
pets. adults only. Ref. req.
Call448·1519 .

1---------SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE

62 Olive St. , Gallipolis. 6
2 bdr. ept. , utilities partially piece wood living room auite
paid: 3 room apta. utllties with 6 Inch flat erma 8399,
paid. Call304-676 -6104 or bunk beds complete with
bunkie• 1199. 2 piece an304·675· 7388 .
tron llvingroom sultaa8199,
3 or 4 room unfurnlahad apt . antron recliners 899, other
utilitiea paid. adults only. no recliner• 880. maple dinette
aeta 1179, love seats 870,
pata. Call 448-3437.

hido·o·bod *260 , box
aprings &amp; manresa twin or

Completely furniahad ,
newly decorated. all electric. full • 100 aet regular-firm
centrally located, at I 200 e120. maple dinette chairs
mo . plus deposit . Call 61 4· 136, wash ttands S34,
446 -2236 or 614-446 - maple rockera $59, 7 place
chrome dinette let 8149, 5
2681 .
piece dinette aet: 189, uHd
Nice 2 bdr. apt . for rent . 15 bedroom auit... rafirgeramin. from G111ipoliaon Rt. 7. tora, rengea. cheat, drttters,
wrlng'er w11hen. TV' s,
Coli 614-266· 11 9B .
dryoroo. &amp; ohoeo. Coli 446·

8200 .00. coli
6866 .

304-875 ·

54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12"-22 " stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614 -266-

Houaing Opportunity! haa
two bedroom, r•nt atarting

beda . l440 . and up to
11525., Recllnera, *171. to
13711., Lampo from US . to

at *193 por month wkh
UOO dopooll locoted noor
Foodlond ond Spring Volley

•78 .11 pc. dinonao from
*99 .. to 435. 7 pc. 11 B9

Plaza. CaH 448·27415 or and up. Wood table with six
leave meuage.
chein •425 to •741. De*
1110 up to 1228. Hutchoo.

'2 bdr .• unfurnlahed apta.. *110. and up. maple or pine
central air. diahwaahera, flniah . Bunk bed complete
a'ove· a. refrig.. tully carmettre11e1. 12150. and
potod.

Carport•

•

lorg&lt;o

yard . 1275 plus utilttl11.

to 139&amp;.

Boby bedo,

10. MettreiHI or box

Deposit &amp; rof. roqulrod. Coli ~~~"ln'g!:c!••ll or twin. US ..
448.3881 or448-4477. No
. and 07B. Ouoen
polo.
*196. 4 'dr. chaoto,
II dr. chooto, 184. led
1 bed room Apt. *198. mo. lfroi""Hc UO.end 125 .. 10

including utilitlea. Equal
houelng opportunity. Contact Vlll~~ga M1nor Apts.
814·992-7787.

cablnat:a, t350.
or ~Metric rangea t37S.
m.n......a, *25 •
bed fromeo UO. e21.

Efflcleny opt. Cell 992-

IO.ii.H:fic'i:n of bedroom

!434 or 304-182-2&amp;&amp;&amp;.

fromo UO.

ceder cheat a,
metal cabinets . .
rockars.
Furnlahed apt. 6 rooma end
Furritture -- bookca...
beth. no palo. dop. required .
l'llngea. chllfa., dryera, re· .
992-2937.

frlgerototnnd TV'o. 3 mlloo
Furnlohod opt . Middleport, out lulovlllo lid. Opon 1om
acluhe, no pete, month rent ID lpm. Mon. thru Fri .. 9om
·
pluo •100 security 812· ID lpm . . .t .
441-0322
317ol.

&lt;&lt;

Coll814·388 -9857.

Appliance Service All makai "'
&amp;: models refrigerator1f ;
waahera. dryers, ranges~·
compactors, dlshwashera,
microwaves . Heating &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Metal Wc:rrk:.

f-200.00 or beot offer, 304·
937-2390.

Gallio Refrigeration Co. Call •
614-446 -4 66 .
~

Will oelloll or pons of. Good
tires. 8 cylinder engine.

Runs good. Call 304-882-

3592

·
1978

Her loy Davidson

1 :00· 7 :00pm,

Fri..

Set :.

Sun. , other dava after

RON 'S Televiaion ServiCe.·
Specializing in Zenith arid ·
Motorola , Quazar, and :

AD 1974 Ford tractor 3000
power eteering, looks Uke '81 Mercury Lyrix, 4 apaad,

304-896·3802.

-

1973 Pontloc, loaded with
oxtroo, runo good. good
tlroo, good body. 8300.00.
304-676-1326 .

lor. !Day 61 4-692-4066.l •
!night 614-698-B206 .1

Cabbogo Potch typo dolls
droned. 136.00 . 304-675 ·
3665.

275

66

gal.

full

oil

tank .

Building Supplies

John Deere grein hemmer
mill. V2 ton feed mixer with
motor. 30 HPAIIisChalmers 1976 Chevrolet Caprice Est3 phaae electric motor all ate Station Wagon, all the
good condition. Call 614· extraa, only 40,000 miles,
992· 7015 ofler 6PM.
fully equipped to pull
For Sale or Trade- Gravely
tractor with mower, run1
good. engine rebuilt. t425 .
304-576-2670.

1960 John Deere trector.
304-B82-3307 .

campor. Only 81,600.00 .
Phone 304-882 -2910.

'76 Buick lesabre. 4 door

hard top, southern car,

e~tc .

cond. 304· 8'16-1769.

1976 Ford Pinto station
wagen, good cond ., 304678-8930 .

62 Wanted to Buy

.

1970 Plymouth. fair condition, reasonable price .
Will pey top price for tobecco poundage. Call 614379· 2166.

Building material•
block. brick, •war pipea,
Livestock
windowa, lintels, etc . 63
Claude Winters, Rio Grande, - - -- - -- - -0 . Call 814-248·8121.
Reg . 2 yr. old Quarter horae
gelding. excellent diapoal56
tion. very raaaonable price .
Coll448-7495 altar 6PM .

Phono 304· 773-6800.

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, Ono

875-265B.
72

Trucks for Sale

1974 Chevy. clean and in
great shape. Call 614-2466243.

Housea moved or raised, ,:
basements dug beneth
houses. free estimatea,·
House Movers, Inc. 3P4-.

386-4636. Free Delivery.

Twin-size white proventlal
bad with mattr111 and box
aprings. Alao ·full aize bad .
446-9B67 after 1 p.m. ,

slaba for nle. •11
pickup lood . Call 614-246·
5804.

Barbie &amp; Ken clothet, homemade. Coli 614-24&amp;-9326.

Baby bataenette. Call 44&amp;·
6688 .
Und hld·o·bed, 30 in. goo

111nge. cedarwerdrobe, RCA
color TV. Corbin a. Snyder
Furniture, 9155 2nd. Ave .
Co11446-1171 .

814-218-8638 oftor 8PM .

Antiquea, oak fUI;nltura reproduction, miac . items. Uae
our Chriatmaalay1way plan .
Conkels, Tuppers Plalna.
For •Ia grave blankets. Call
949-3037.

Iaiii Call 446·0B44.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614· 387·7220. -.

84

Hay

l!o

Grain

Briarpatch Kennell Profaaaional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilltlaa. Engliah Cocker Spa-

large round bales of hay.
$15 each . Call446·1052.

Call 614-388-8201 or 614·
38B·8349.

niel puppies. Coli 614-38B·
9790.

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

'76 Jeep excellent condi·
tion. '76 Luv truck,\18 con·
version, bl11er whe&amp;la, roll
bar. auto. trenamiaaion .

Dragonwynd Cattery ·
Kennel a. AKC · Chow pup·

' '

'

71

Autos for Sale
ploo, CFA Himoloyan. Per- - - - - - - - - -

lien and SlemeH kittena.

Coli 446-3844 oiter 6 .

TOP CASH poid lor late

modal used cars. Smith
CFA REg. Siamese klttana. 8uick-Pontiac, 191 1 East·
8 to chOOII from complete er" Ave., Gallipolit, 446with pedigree. Cell 814· 2282 .
246·5036 after 6PM for

614·387·

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

appointment .

1976 Triumph TR-6 COn·
vertibla, 49,000 actuel mi .,

AKC c;how Chow puppies.
Coli 814-256-1271.

J3,700 . Coli
5288 otter 5.

AKC Reglatered Poodle pup-

1979 Thunderbird Town

ploo. Dop. will hold for
.Chriotmoo. Coli 446-0867.
Ono Douschund. Call 441·

814-246 ·

302 v 8 ~ ..r.
nuy.
. thorp.
~:~BI . Call 81&lt;1 · 446 ·
La d

n ou,
;...
.I,C,
tt.lf!IIMI(;fll

1-:-::=--=--:-----

0622.
Bo rudy for Chrlotmao·AKC
Pontiac flrablrd V-8.
PB, AC. 82.000 mi.
Rogo
I t orod block I obrodoro
448· 1198 after !PM.
pupo. C.ll 992· 7285.
1-:-:::::-:--.-~::.:.:::.:.:_:.:.::_
1980 Ponlloc Sunblrd 4 op ..
Blue Tick reglatered female, woo 13185 now f3186
ono yaor old. llortod, e1110. 1979 Storfiro Oldsmobile

Love Blrda, Canarlea, a..-to., was e3191 now
Flnchs. Aquarium. 304- U891. 1978 v w Rabbit
882-3890.
auto.. wea t31915 now

llon. 1600.00. Phone 304aa2-3307.

l!o 4

W . O.

4 WD blezer. 49,000 ectual
miles, priced reduced to

old, e11. 304-418-1113.

Captioned~

(I) ill MOVIE: 'An
Uncommon Love'
(I) liD High Schoola The
world of the high school

II

classroom is analyzed . (60
min.)

9:30
9:46
10:00

Jr.

TftE BEST
RfSTO~ER IN

TOWN?

(]) Hitchhikers: Morning

Comes A woman changes
the weekend plans of a plaYboy producer.
(I) MOVIE: 'Silent Rage·

Drolno. All kin do of Ditching . •

Rutland. Oh . 614 · 742,·
'

(I)

l!o

low milaalila. Good rubber,

Electrical
Refrigeration

cloon . Pricod to Hll. Coli
614·218-8771 after
5:30PM .

Pasquale Elactrlc · Co. ~H •
phal81 of electric: work. ··at! •
work guaranteed . Ael:ie •

·lc-

truck rental. Call 614-440· •
2718.
••
CJ

&amp;.

e1350. Coli 949-2508 . ·

SEWING Machine repairs: '
service. Authori;r:a,d Singer
Salat &amp;. Service Sharperi :

'74 lntornotlonol Trovol All.

Scluoro . Fabric Shop. :
Pomeroy. 992-22B4.
. .

good runnlnliJ cond .. •800 .

DRChovyChevotte.
13191. Aoel Buy.
-'"'••' • Auto Soles. 8uloville

85

General Hauling ..
•,

74 ·

ume aa new. 304-&amp;71-

be~waan 9 end 6.
~ ... ·'
~-~-__.:.:. ··
Water heuling. Feat Service,, ::
low ratoo. Call 614 · 2~8- .'
1743.
• :

3031 .

Boats anll

SOUP·PRI$E!!

t ) lEARD I(QU
WAS FEELIN'
PORELV,
LOWEEZV,

finesse was always wrong

U2

• 75

.Q63
+AK9ti

.98 74

+Q 9 52

If South is a finessing
type, he will try heart and
club finesses. II both work,
he has an overtrick. If both
fail, he complains to the
card gods · that the heart

• Q8 3 2

+8 7 3
SOUTH
+AQi094

.AKJ
t10 7
+KJ 6

and that since West had
already produced the A·K ol
diamonds and queen of
hearts, it was logical to play
East for the club queen and
that he, South, had been born
under the wrong star, or that
it was a bad day for
biorhythms - or some other
balderdash.
It would neve r occ ur to

South tha t he had finessed
not wisely, but too often.
Vulnerable: East-West
A nonfinessing South
Dealer: South
would give up the play for
West
North East
Sooth
tbe overtrick and take his
game with a sure-thing play.
Pass 2+
Pass 4+
After drawing trumps, he
Pass
Pass
Pass
would simply play out ace,
king and jack of hearts. He
would lose a heart trick, but
Opening lead: • K
it wouldn't make any differ ence who won that trick.
Whoever won it · would be
caught in an end play.
By Oswald Jacoby
A club lead would take
South's club finesse for him.
and James Jacoby
A heart or diamond lead
The defense starts out would allow South to discard
wi1h th ree rounds of a club from either hand, ruff
diamonds: South ruffs the in the other one and claim
third lead and draws trumps his contract.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRlSE ASSN.)
with two leads.

••

AN'-- '

(]) Oule •~d Harriet
®
An
Evenl~g
of
Chomplonohlp Skating No-

tional and world champion
skaters ere featured in an
exciting pre-Olympic per·

1811 z-21 Comaro. 44 ,000
Motors for Sale
JIMS WATER SERVIOE.· .
mloo. T·ICip. AC. P8, Pl. · --------~ Coli Jim Lanier. 304-676AM·FM·Coonn•. 4 , _
7397.
II,.., ex. oond. tatoo or Aluminum Booo boot, 40HP
.... ofhr. Cell 114-171- Men:. ou-rd, thruotor.
2721 or 114·742·2411.
dopthflndor.troller. rudyto 87
Upholstery
f2.300. Coli 441-8408 I~-----_.:.._ _
1112
200 IX. ox.
1 :00.
I
cond .. 10,000 mi .. e7,000.
TAl STATE
C.ll441-1011 ofter IPM.
UPHOLSTERY
SHOP
. Auto Parts
1183 .... Ava .. Gallipolis
&amp;
ACC81.1Drlel
t876 Ford Ellto oxc. cond ..
448-7833 or 448·1B33. ·
loeded. C.lll14·357· 7224.
'
We do quality reupholatar!
1172 Oofte D•mon. I
LM'o Tire ond Bonory ing. make new cuatom mede
ayl .. ~~· runo ~.
1101Jwffwew~IMI .. Nupholotered furnhuro. R
.1100: .... 4, 4-48·
Pll•rt. 304-171· M Menufectu•ing, Crown
1021 .
City. 81ol · 218-1470.
· ••

formance . 160 min.l

eiNNNeWI
11 :00 e

.'

..
..

. PEANUTS
-

VOU WERE, 't'OU'D
I-lAVE TO HUNT FOR
YOUR SUPPER
IF

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

YOU'D I-IA'fE TO ATIACK
YOUR PREV.. DO 'IOU T~INK
't'OU
DO

NO, KICKING A CAN OF
1:'06 FOOD ISN ' T
QUITE THE SAME

Cll (I)(!)

e

(I)

Cll Nowa
(I) Another Lifol
(J) All In the Family
(J) Dr. Who
elleMvHAIS- .
11:30 e (I) (!)Tonight Show
Gueat holt Joen Rivers is
joined by Rna Morano end
Joan Collina. (60 min .)
(J) MOVIE: 'Right of W~t&gt;~ '
(J) Doble' OHIIo
())c-.
(J) Soop
•

a. .

--Uied-.

.. '

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
' I Badger-

6 Astral
7 Cascade

like
(Scot. )
animal
8 Roman
6 Splash·
emperor
11 Love (Ita!. I 9 Defame
12 Appel10 Present
lation
14 Radar
13 Heston
screen sign
film role
18 Lead-tin
15 Nigerian
alloy
16 Wholly
19 Belgian city
17 Mining find 20 Written
18 Warble
letter
'20 Or - !
21 Hawaiian
23 Rossellini
symbol
film classic 22 Droop
21 Parches
24 Health
%9 Retaliation
resort
30 Semaphore 25 Lofty
32 Stare
·spot
33 Wed on the
35 1946Aian
Laddfilm
38 Singing
syllable
39 Lacuna
42 Famous
scene from

Yesterday's Answer
26 Louis of
comedy
28 Cracker
31 Them
(!tal. )
34 Eye covering
35 N.Y. Times
founder
36 "Jaws" star

37 Econo~
39 Equine
movement
40 Skin
;·
problem ·.:
41 Rind
43 Incarnadine
44 Greek
letter

''Ben-Hur' '

DOWN

llndian V.I.P.
2 Asian river
3 Stir
4 Epoch
5 "The Merry

Widow"
composer

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how tu work tt!-

!liD

Cll~r

.

6'£N'M~~,.(

45 Port
(]) International- VIolin
46 Backbone
Compotltio~ of Indiana·
47 "The
polio Tonight's program
Killers"
presents highlights of this
violin competition that atcharacter
tracted 44 performers from . 48 Arthur
over 20 countries. (60 min .)
Hailey novel
• &lt;fil Nowa
taction of comedy sketches,
songs and sexy dancers is
pretented .

We'll do lt. Coli 446·31-68 · .

•

Arthur H~ley's

10:30 (]) AI·Now U~expurgatod
Be~ny Hill An all-new col·

..

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

1;;::=:;======
I·

BA1iNEY

JONES 80YSWATER SER· · ~
VICE . Coli 814·367· 747,1 .,
or 614-387-0191 .
. • '•

Need something haute~ ·•
away or aomethlng moved1 ::

1813 Hondo , XRBO. es71i .

g rD1

Hotel A honel executive
falls victim ~0: bJackl'!lail,
Mrs . Cabot sparks a new re·
lattonship between a re·si-.
dem and her children and
Billy discovers a stowaway
in the hotel.

304

engine, no top. mu1t aell.

U (]) (!) Family Ties
IIl TBS Evening Newo
U (]) (!) St. Eloewhere
Two boys are injured during
a fight about the c.onflict in
Northern Ireland and steroid
drugs. and an overbearing
father threatens . a young
tennis player. (60 'min .)

1978 OMC 4x4. One own'er.

1978 Horloy; Oovldoon
Sporllter. e1.900 . Exc .
Cond. 304·882·2904 or
,812·3411.

1878 Morcury Colony l'lllil

her foot. (60 mi~ .l [Closed

J.A ,R. Conatruction Co.
Water Lines, Footen ,

84

4x4. Call 448-8132.

1----------

Wagon, folded with extrea.
new-· no ruot. 11281.
CoR 114-311·1891 ottw 1 .

continues to entwine Steven
in her web and an infamous
playboy sweeps Fallon off

Call onytlmo 446 -4637 ,

1 97' Chevrolet Scotdele

now e2791. John'o Auto
Soleo . Bulovllle Rd. Golllpollo. Coli 814·448;ol782.

Oh~ . C~l

Cll Top Renk Boxing from
Atlo~tic City. NJ
(I) D (jJ Dynasty Alexis

614 -446 - 1142 botweon .
7:GOAM &amp; 6:00PM .

Jamea L. Davison.
owner.

H·SII-B

EAST

WEST

girts resort to espionage to
save Edna's Edibles from
financial ruin. (Closed Captioned]
·
(I) 700 Club'

Cat 216 hoe, dozera, crehe,
loadera. dump truck. Call

2903.

1973 JHp

G (]) (!)Facts of Ufe The

Hanna. ponds, ditchea.
batamenta, etc. Call 448 •
4907. Carter &amp; Evana . .
Transportation .

et .995. Call 448-4672.

"I :~30~4=·=8i8i2-~3~6~9~0;.;;.;;;::==

AKC reglttered Doberman, op..
U881.
197B ford
Futuro
f2281.
1979
Ford
red end ruat, female, 4 yeare C.rrler Pickup WOO '29111

Don't be nervous,
Mr. Skinner!
Just relax!

Scissors?

.Good-1 Excavating. bate1964 Dodge pick-up VB menta. footers. driveways,
motor, 4 speed transmis- septic tanka. landscaping: ,

Vans

9:00

II ll'MII II

304-876 -3388 .

73

8 :30

DOZER WORK By Ted

1977 Ford Club Cab pickup
with camper top. 81,600 .

Certainty is better

menta

lNG. Fomerly Dewitt'-•

Rhoade leland Red, 12.60

New 1983 Drenmakers
Sawing Machinea. Free arm.
6 stretch atltchea. 1 0 design
st:itchea, blind hem, mending stitch. monograms, dial·
a-matic button haler. Sew a
on denim material. Regular
price 1636.96 . Now only
8229 . Over stocked. Must
sell by Jen. 31, 26 year
f1ctory warranty. Call 814-

(Closed Captioned!

lill MOVIE : 'Brass Target'
C11 NFL's Greatast Mo·

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT.. '

1981 Toyoto long bed, 6 _0;6;7:8:.
opd.. factory air. AM -FM -;

(jj) Survival Special

'The Amazing World of Spiders.' The fascina.ting end
mysterious world of the spi-·
der is e~Camined . (60 min .)

_____

tape, sliding ·rear window, 83
Excavating
deluxe mirror, atep bumper, - - -- - - - - - excellent condition. Mutt -

ooch, 304-875-8477.

())

446-3888 ·or 440· :
·. -.
_:·:..:·.

Fotlombo for butchering &amp;

Sorvlco. Coll448-7795.

deal. 160 min .l

.

ram lamba. Call441-1118.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

+KJ8 3
.10. 2
• J 54
+A 104

•

HILLCREST KENNELS

BRIDGE

NORTH

0 (I) llD Whiz Kids

CAR1~~· ~:;~~~ziNG ::;

Call

Join thl Jumble LO'Itl'l Fan Club and ~I.-I I• algttt-~ Super Jumo... evtrY month.
For hw um•• wrila to: Jumbtt Lovtrt F1n Club, cJo this new.p.per, Bor. 5241,
Of'lnd Central Stallon., Ntw Yott, N.'t. 101 S3 .1nc luc» yournamt. addrNI and dpcode.

tiona

•

tomorrow!

Jumbles: LIMBO CRUSH DETACH BAKING
Answer: Where those old-time warriors went on their •
ovenlng s off - TO A "KNIGHT CLUB "

Cll Wand Sportsman This

Plumbing

Plumbing.

I

.

of Colt's stunt buddies help
Colt round up a cop involved
in a $7 million dollar cocaine

House raising. leveling, reail ·
ling. concrete work, bad· .
ment water proofing, foon-· ..
dation work, free estimate.. ~

&amp; Heating

Yeslerday's

Tac Dough
(]) HBO Coming Attrac·

(60 min.!
(]) MOVIE: 'The Chose~·
(]) MOVIE: ' Split Image'
(]) I Spy
(I) 01 (jJ Fall Guy A bunch

676·271 1.

304-676-3908.

lA~....,.

Jofforso~•

,group- of female skydivers,
Mark Russell's profile of a
female auto racer and a deaf
girl who taught a deaf dog to
respond to sign language.

fu.m iture cleaning~ . free el ti·

Pho~o

HAif i~ 6THIS.

Now arrange the clr'dld fell:era lo
lorm the surprise anMMr, aa IUQ·
gested by ttte above certoon.

II (]) Tic

Diana Nyad . (60 min.!
IIl
NDA
•O.oketbell:
Atlanta at Philadelpl-ola
(I) 0 (I) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortuna
81 tlJ Entertainment
Tonight
@II One Day at a Time
II (]) (!) Real People To·
night's program features a

mote•. 614-446 -2107.

4477

1\J IGiHT WHI LEJU~ I OR

Court

a~d

your carpet SHIP

Bording all bruda. Selling
Firewood. Pickup or deli· . Happy
Jack Dog Food.
verad dump truck . Call 614- Doberman puppies: Stud
256·6689.

YOUR ROOM IG READY
HAS .
fiND l HAVE li'RAWN A AHNIE 'G
HOT 6fiTH FOR YOU.
tUTOR
ARRIVEii''?

E WITH CAPTIAN.
STEAMER. Wotar removal,

Cor. Fourth and Pine

MOM ANI:' I:'AD WE~E
KEPT AWAKE AW..

WA$

show features k:e Climbing,
Whaling and Marlin Fishing
with guests Larry Hagman

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

82

' 77 Monte Carlo, one
owner. 52,000 miles, good
cond., new engine, 304-

7 :30

NO NAPPI Efl 'N
I j:)M T'5EE
YOU. PUNJAB!

Information coli 614-246·
9106.

eKC.

@II

•

Water Wells. Commercial
&amp;ncr Domaatic. Test holaa.
Pump• Salea and Service.

Red Jacket shellow well
PJWIII.JII(IIh'looldi!og tank~
fltlot';' '"150 . .. 304- dll2 3690.

mileage,

Newahour

304 -676 · 2088 or 676 ·
4580. '

piece cuatom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut- ~

goa

(!) Charile'o Angelo
0 (I) Wheal of Fortune
()) liD MacNeii/Lel-orer

•

good

6715-6458 between 6:30pm
to 11:00pm.

Phone 992-2770.

304-675-4650 .

e

Ill Newo
Gl (jJ People' s

RINGLE' S SERVICE expe- •

cond., 304-676-2623.
worlcing condition. For mor•l------,.----'--

or cool. 8690. Call 614·
268-1216.

446-1675 .

1978 Mercury Cougar, good
condition. loaded with ex·
tras. 13,1500. call after &amp;PM.

I DRIVEr j

()) Entertainment Tonight

rienctd roof!ng, including
hot tar application, carpen - :
tar, electrician, m11on. Call

now. priced e5,600. With
disk plows &amp; buah hog in

Firewood. Ragiatared Red
Tick Coon dog. Call 304·

fqte1tanding, fireplace inserts, mobile home approved. &amp; furnance ad -ona.
Jh1idans Farm Equipment,

1980 Pontiac Su"nbird,
phone 304· 773-9143.

Skid .'
Utile · House on the
Prairie
()) ®3·2· 1. Contact
Duck Rogero
6 :30 D (}) (!) NBC Newa
(]) Rifleman
Cll ESPN ' s Horwe Raci~g
Wkly.
-(1)-81 (jJ ABC News
Ill (I) ® CBS News .
(I) Duolneos Report
&lt;fil Over Easy
7:00 U (]) PM Magazine
(]) Alias Smith a~d Joneo
Cll Sport8Center
IIl Carol Burnett •

.

.

8 :00pm. FREE delivery
orders after 8pm. 304-875 ·
6480 or 875-3334.

New Protection fuel oil
heating stove like new and •

WOODSURNING STOVES,

villa. Coli 814 -742-2734.

manta atoc'k.Army dothing.
Boots-Leather-Insulated. ln aulated coverella *27 .&amp;0, all
aizea. Sem Somerville'•·
East Ravenawood. open

Fireplace insert-still in factory carton - eutomatlc
controls -2 blowers-glaaa
door-ash pan-fits 30 in . to
48 in. fireplace· burnt wood

Oak tables &amp; chairs, corner
cupboards. buffet• &amp; etc.
Wood World, 21506 Grend
Central Ave .. Vienna. WV.

value. 304· 882·3220.

BUT EfA5Y DOESt.I'T
K~OW THERE AI".!:
20 MOI&lt;.E OF THt:M
C0MIN6 ...

specializing In btlilt up roof. ·

1973 Plymouth Satellite,
Flat top guitar with caae. runS good. 8200. Call 814·
Uka new. Call 992-2698.
256-6682 .
- -- - - - - - - l cBrand New Armltrongflute. Wrecktd ~1976 Chevy Nova.

Surpluo Oonim 10.000 gar·

or 876-3696.

Hardwood, delivered. Call

1285. to 1888. Tobloo. 145
ond up to .125 . Hldo·o·

Autos for Sale

Instruments

59 For Sale or Trade

&amp; Son. Coli 448-7786.

Sofe, cheir• . rocker. ono1 Big furnl1hed room. eff. man. 3 tablet, (extra haao,ty
apt . with beth in Rio Grande. by Frontier!,· 188&amp;. Sofa
All utilltle1 paid. 446-01157. chair and loveMat, •27&amp;:
Sofas end chaira priced from
J A C K S 0 N E S TATE
APARTMENTS (Equol

71

304-678 -1578 or 8767 B98.

Limeatone. Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Maaon, Meigs, Firewood, •315.00 pickup
Gallia or pick up at Richerd• · lood. Phone 304-875· 7883

Firewood f35 PU lood. 8
loodo f150. 10 loodo e28o .

por mo. Call 446· 21118.

Musical

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spo1.1t· :
ing. 30 yeoro oxperlen.ee; .

e250; '78 Chevy Loguna .
304-773-5183.

Equipped kitchen, newly 31 19.
remodeled, central air, 12&amp;0

1--------LAYNE'S FURNITURE

HCh .

u.• . .._, 1M011

67

I I I

Barbara

IIl

Bedroom suite 160. Call

Suburban Coalmaster .
Burns Wood and coal . S200 .

48

nr

.

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump ~
removal. Call 676-1 331.
:

6246 .
45

textured ceilings commar·
cial . and reaidentlal. free
Htlmates. Call 614-266-

IJ-:;;;::~;~====1~;::==~~=~~~~
·

LIMPE

show illustrates traveling around the mountains and in·
troduces the turn wi1h a
'Christie' or 'Controlled

PLASTERING

882· 3151 .
1978 Harley Devldaon _ _ :..__ __ _ · ICSponaer. lots e~ttrea . $300. Foremana--for less ••penor kade for car of equal sive care and trucka . Langs·

304·896-3460.

3771 .

32 6

wN-IIh~aobordickbu.r n 1n g. otovo

Home
Improvements

Gas range 8100; fireplace
inaert fiberglus ; werm
morning heating stove

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

Apt. for rent, front apt.,
ground floor . 304-675 ·

oll\I;OU&lt;;?

1182.

singer

Tennessee Performing Arts

288· 1207.

Walnut cabinet style Sylvania stereo with AM and FM
radio, 8 track tape player and
BSR record changer ,

.

Dryer firewood delivered.
Cell304-676-7771 .

try/Pop

Mandrell performs at the

Centor In NashVille.
(I) MOVIE: 'The Secret
Life of Woltor Mitty'
(]) New Tnoesuro Hunt
Cll Alpine Ski School 'Up
and Down the Slopes .' This

448-4830 .

Llkei new matching swiyel
rockers. brown velveteen,
304-675-7463 .

OupleJt 6 rooms, bath, basement, water furnished, Lock
26 Road. Point Ple11ant.

1- -- -- - -- --

8 :00 • (}) (I) (!) 0 (I) Ill •
(jJ Nowo
(}) Borbaro Mandrell • •
The Lady loa Champ Coun·

1Qo

houoo coils. Call 678-2398' •
or 448-2464.

986-4264 aftor &amp;PM .

percent of adjusted Income-

W•fHooT

se·,~~~er

EVENING

Sportllter. 81900. Excellan.t
1962 Ford F1 Pickup. Call . condition . Price negotiable.
742-3168 .
Coli 304-882-2904 o• 304·

Used· dryera &amp; waaher all
serviced &amp; guarenteed ;JO
deya. Some matched pairs.
0811very available. Call814-

osit . Call304-676 -6612 .

Fu l- nished mobile home.
$200 . per month , utilities

a. light

Couch brown, beige

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo

2 bedroom mobile home.
completely furnished , $185 .
plus utilitiu , 850.00 dep-

and StrattOn log splitter.
$11500. Call 814·992-3233
or 814-992-81548.

.· 1.1/30183

clean. Call 614-246·6243 .

Coli 814

ranges. desks and cheat of
drawers. Skaggs Applian ces, Upper River Rd . Call
614 -446-7398 . Open 9-6.

WEDNESDAY

1974 Kountrv-· Air camper. ..
27 ft . and in ex. cond .. Vf!KV

STUCCO

Now 16 horoo po-r Briggo

yollow. good cond .. 836 .
Call 446-9696 .

TWi'N

foR Tile.

Good uHd Fuel Chief Fuel
oil furneca and 276 gallon

dryors , rot ..

6548 .

Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and
court house. Call 44&amp;-0866
days. $126 . mo.
"
Two story house. 4· bdr ..
8250 par mo. $250 dep.

60% off

25% to

l'M GOI'-16

ALoUE!"

· ••

81

cloty. 814· 992· 2582.

11 NO ·

. •

evea.

RooT

7 ft. pdol toble •;, in. oolld
olote. UOO firm . Coli 448·
0808 , .
- - - - - - - -lc-

- - -- - - -- - -

ohapo . Coli 448· 3487.

8221.

[)o

~ ~ C&gt;e

$25 pick-up lood. Call otter
4 :00PM . Coll742-3046.

Lovable
old Celico
cat.
Has8 month
all ahota.
Litter
trained. Malga Humane SO·

Sofa bad 175, swivel rocker
S125 , stero , 40 , eJlcallent

homes. housea. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 61 4 ~ 446 -

I

Mixed. nasoned firewood.

10x12 brown
vanity
&amp; bad carpet
140. t40,
Call
446-8263 .
washers .

for Rent

Farms for Sale

68 acres on Ruleville-Porter
Co. Rd. 3. Old form house

Apartment ·

Hdt&lt;l

Corlo-2 door. Coli 985·
3839.

tonk. 1300.00.
992-7!89.

..,-, CA~L IN LIZ% AND

LEI!·''-

B ft . slide in camper witb ..
jacks. 8800 . Call446·207&amp; :

Oak China cabinet S125, l- -- - - -- - - -

Sale·.

42 Mobile Homes

Tl~

;

79 Motors Homes
l!o Campers

GOODUSEO APPLIANCES

dlshw11her. central air. un-

Television
Viewing

"eL[!'..PEAR • tt:r LI!AST TAKE
p i&lt;:~ -

13

The

Ohio

1983

DICK TRACY

Auto Parts
Accessories

$,3 50. 304-676-7322 .

derpinning , three bed rooms, 1 'h baths. excellent
condition, $16,600. Call
304-878-8049 after 5 p.m .

Shulu 14x65 mobile

November

up. $100 . 8ft. Coleman .
utility trailer, with cover:, ·

19B1 14x70. Shult&lt;limitod
mobile home, microwave.

19~

l!o

Topper for short bed

'10.000. 304-773-5023 .

14'x70 ', exc.
central
air. under·
penned,
condition,
on
ranted lot. Cell 304-675 -

78

by Larry Wright

T"'I&lt;E '!HEM
3611\INWTES
TO WASH liP'
ANPI?ef
fli&lt;APV' TO

1978 14x7_
0 trailer, 3 bedroom, 2 bathl, large kitchen.

1979Sterlingmobilehome,

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

roes IT

1974 3 bedroom total elect ric 14x87 Concord treiler,
eeaoo . Call 814 - 992 ·
2810 . No Sunday collo.

1989 ·

November

Ohio

Sentinel

A X Y D L B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

Is

,,·
',

One le tte r simply stands for another . In t his sample A ~
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter»
a~oatrophes, the length and form ation of t he words are ati
hmts. Each day the code lett era are dift'eren t.
CRYPTOQUOTI!S

URII8D

G

BF

NBROF ' L

DAGL

AR

LB

ZRRT

HBL

AGO

IG0 L

..

I B F ij

N BF R .

N RIC S R Y C F H '

G 1,)

(I) Pollee Stoty Cloee to

retirement, Arch T etum i•
teamed with a rookie who'
plana to make it ell the way

AR

to the top .. IRI (60 min.!
(I) Lotonlaht Amerloa

L~N

HBRO GIBFH . - JGYI
AMEERI!
Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: IN TilE BRIGHT LEXICON OF:
YOUTH' THERE IS NO SUCH WORD AS FAIL.- BtJL...,.n'

.,

'"~ ·

�Pap•

,.
14-1M Daily Sentinel

Wednetday, November 30, 1983

Pamenty-Middleport, Ohio

•

Work underway on sewer proJect
•

Area deaths
Roger C. Tumer
Roger Cllnton Turner, 41, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died early
this morning in the emergency room
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland Emergency Squad was
called to Meigs Mine No. 1, shortly
after midnight al)d transported
Turner to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he died a short time
later.
An autopsy Is being performed by
the Franklin County Coroner's
office. Funeral arrangements will
be announced by Ewing Funeral
Home.

William H. Wilson Sr.
WUUam Hobart Wilson Sr., 87, 101
Second Ave., Gallipolis, died around
3 p;m. Tuesday at his residence.
Born Oct. 6, 1896, at Waterloo, son
of the late WUUamB. and Ella Baker
WUson. he was employed at the Ohio
Hospital lor Epileptics In Gallipolis
in 1914-18, was a two-year World
War I veteran and a 35-year U.S.
Postal Service employee, retlrlng
Nov. 30, 1963.

A sports enthusiast and baseball
player In the 19IDs and 19.1ls, known
as "Colt," he was an honorary
lifetime member of American
Legion Lafayette Post '!1, lifetime
member of Knights of Pythlas
Lodge 55. and attended First Baptist
Church.
He married Pribble Nell Wilson,
who survives, on June 4, 1918.
AlsO surviving are four sons, Bill
of Stuart, Fla., Johnny of Columbus,
GeorgeofGroveCityandHobartJr.
of Gallipolis; five grandsons, a
granddaughter and two greatgranddaughters; a brother, John of
E vergreen and a sister, Josle
Wiseman of Colorado?"
He was also preceded In death by
six sisters.
Funeral services will be held
Frlday, 2 p.m. at the WU!Is Funeral
Home. Burlal will be at Reynolds
Cemetery in Addison . Friends may
call the funeral home Thursday
from 7-9 p.m.
Keith Wilson, grandson of the
deceased, will be pallbearer.
Military graveside rites will be
conducted by American Legion
. Lafayette Post '!1 .

·Emergency squads
kept busy.
.
Six calls were answered Tuesday
and on Wednesday momlng by local
units, the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports .
On Wednesday at 12: 1S a.m .. the
Rutland Unit went to Meigs Mine 1
for Roger Turner who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
6:49a.m., the Tuppers Plains Unit
went tD Reedsville for Tina Wilder
and Ulysls WUder, who were injured
In anautDaccident. They were taken
to Camden-Clark Hospital at
Parkersburg.

Tuesday calls Included 10: 30
a.m ., the Rutland Unit to an auto
accident on Depot St., but no
treatment required; 2:16p.m., the
Pomeroy Unit toHemlockGrovefor
Don Cullums, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; the Middleport
Unit at 9:41 p.m. to Hartinger
Parkway for Paullne Taylor, taken
to Veterans Memorlal; the Tuppers
Plains Unit at 12:16 p.m. to
Reedsville for Lottie Lawson, to
Veterans Memorial.

M;iddleport resident faces B&amp;E charges
Mark A. Johnson, 22, South
Fourth St .. Middleport was arrested
by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department In connection with the
Nov. 28, breaking andenterlngo!the
Glenn Werry residence, Cook Road.
AU of the items taken were
recovered. Johnson Is expected to be
taken before Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Charles Knight
l!!ter today on a bill of information.
Also, Terry Walker was lodged In
Meigs County JaU on charges of
criminal damaging and will be

taken before County Court Judge
Patrick O'Brien today.
According to the report Walker
went to the Ronda Jones residence
on Beechgrove Road and attempted
to start a fight with Michael Pierce
who was visiting Jones. When a fight
did not develop Pierce allegedly
drove a vehicle owned by Richard
Bailey into the Pierce vehicle.

Velerans Memorial
Admitted--Jimmy Dyer, Syracuse; Bettie Barnette, Pomeroy;
Joseph Bailey, Middleport; Ralph
Kern. Shade.
Discharged--Shelly Proffitt,
Gladys Zeigler.

Weather forecasl
Partly cloudy tonight. Low 22-27.
Sunny Thursday. High 33-38.
Chance of precipitation 10 percent
tonight and near zero percent
Thursday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Friday through Sunday:
FairweatherFridayandSunday,
but a chance of Ourries onSatur~~a.v.
lllgt.s :tl-42. Lows mostly In the 211!1.

(Continued from page 1)
used by Abundent Life to get to Its
coal mine.
Abundent Life agreed to maintain
the road after commissioners
Insisted the agreetT.ent be kept.
According to Hunt, the road Is
being maintained and gravel placed
on the road. He stated that four loads
of gravel had been placed on the
road and necessary repair on the
road has been made.
, Huntalsoagreedtogradetheroad
following usage.
Night hauling was also discussed .
It was pointed out by commissioner,
Richard· Johes, that during the
winter, If the company hauls at
night, the road would be In poor
cond!ton for use by trucks and cars
the next momlng.
Hunt said he would get a road
grader and work on the road and
"keep It In good shape."'
Hunt further stated that approxlmately 39,001 ton of coal had been
removed.
When the firm gets In full
operation, It will haul from 1,00! to
2,00! ton of coal a day.
The coal Is taken to Waterloo for
. cleaning. Commtssloners are paid
mUeageon the clean coal, at the rate
of 10 cents per ton.
Discuss bids
bids opened last week to place anew
Commissioners
discussed Only
the
roof
on the County Infirmary.
one of three bids received contained
provisions for metal flashing. That
was the bid from Hackett Roofing.
The bids will be referred to
Frederick Crow, prosecuting attorney for his opinion.
Named to the County Board of
Mental Retardation, 1ffi Board,
were Denver Rice, Middleport, and
Thomas Weaver, Syracuse. The two
will serve a three-year term from
Jan. 1. 1984 to Dec. 31, 19136. They
replace Nora Rice and Jeanette
Thomas whose terms expire Dec.
31. this year.

Meets Thursday
The Women's Association of the
Middleport Presbyterian Church
will meet Thursday night at 7: :xJ at
the church. The program will be
given by Group 2 and will Include a
play, "The Lord's Messengers."
Group I wlll have the refreshments.
The Rev. WandaJohnsonwUllnstall
the new officers.

A request from Emmogene
Holstein, countyrecordertoattenda
reeorders conference In ColumbuS,
Dec. 5, thro~h Dec. 8, was
approved.
A request fr&lt;im Phil Roberts,
county engineer, to transfer funds
within the county highway depart·
men! was tabled.
A request to transfer funds made
by from Sheriff James J . Proffitt
from advertising to Health and
Welfare was approved.

Attending were David Koblentz,
and Manning Roush, com-

MEN'S INSULA TED

COVERALLS
SALE

IAII

Charges bring
jiMs of $526
Keith Musser, Pomeroy, was
fined $313 and costs on a charge of
resisting arrestand$2l3ande&lt;J!;tson
assault charges when he appeared
In the court &lt;if Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrew_s Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds In the court
Tuesday were Loretta L. Pauley,
Mason, $45; Gall L. Turner, Albany,
$49; Peggy S. Smith, Portland. $45,
and Steven T. Hawk, Pomeroy, $56,
all posted on speeding charges;
.John A. Evans, Cheshlre,andBrlan
W. Spencer, Pomeroy, $43 each on
charges of Improper backing;
Wilbur C. Hood, Pomeroy, $43;
Improper backing, and Rex L. Roy,

mtsslohers, Maiy Hobstetter, clerk ·
and Martha Chambers.

Speaks tonighl

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursdoy, December I, 1983

•

Meigs will benefit from . Senate compromise
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) -County officials across
Ohio who were worried about their county's finances
could breathe a bit easier today, thanks to a change In
a s.t ate law that had many of them on edge.
In a late-night session Wednesday, .the Senate
passed a bill designed to change the formula by which
the state's local government fund is distributed.
Without the change, 50 Ohio counties would have
received less from the fund next year than In 1983,
whJ]e a handful of others would have received
dramatic Increases.
The bill. OK 'd :l!W, now goes to the House, where It
ls expected to meet little or no opposition.
Problems In the fund resulted from an oversight In
the state budget bill, which repealed the state deposits
tax that had fed the local government fund. Although
a portion of the corporate franchise tax was
earmarked to replace the lost deposits tax money, the

•
give $1.5 mUllan of lis $26.2 million to Columblls.
The local government fund compromise was
among a number of actions taken by the' Senate as it
moved toward a scheduled adjoununent today.
Earlier Wednesday, senators approved 264 a bill
that would llmlt the liability of retailers In some
lawsuits stemming from defective products.
Debate on the measure produced a lengthy '
exchange between the bill's sponsor, Sen. Michael
Schwai-zwalder, D-Columbus, and Sen. Stanley
Aronoff, R-Cinclnnati
WhUe Schwarzwalder said the bill is needed to keep
retailers from paying unnecessary legal fees, Aronoff
called it "anti-consumer" and predicted it would
make It more difficult for conswners who buy
!lefective products to recover damages.
"Should you have redress?" Aronoff asked. "This
bill says. 'Maybe.' "

met]Jod of distribution meant that counties such as
Holmes and Meigs experienced drart~atic cuts while
Lorain and Lake counties, among others, were
rewarded with substantial Increases.
The compromise ensures that no county receives
less from the fund next year than it dld this year, while
the counties that received big Increases will retain
.most of the boost.
The local government fund is distributed to county
budget commissions, which thim redistribute some of
it among eUgtble local subdivisions. Under the
compromise approved Wednesday night, the state's
largest county, Cuyahoga, will get $53.8 million from
the fund next year - about $2.4 million of It going to
Cleveland.
Cincinnati wUl get about $1.7 million of Hamilton
County's $24.3 million total, and Franklin County will

The blll relieves retailers of liability in lawsuits
brought as a resull of products they sell so long as
sellers meet certain conditions. For example,
retailers must show that they did not alter or fall to
maintain the products and that they were unaware
the products were defective.
However, retailers would be considered liable in
cases where the product manufacturer could not be
sued.
In other action, senators:
-Voted 31M to transfer state-owned land In Seneca
County to a private citizen In return for an equal
amount of land needed by Tiffin State Hospital for
right of way purposes. The bill now,, goesto the House .
-Approved 30-D a House measure that allows cities
to collect service charges paid In lieu of taxes by a
community urban redevelopment corporation.

Prosecution witnesses testify
•
:Jfi Gallia County murder trial
GALLIPOLIS (Special) - The
mother of a woman who led police to
the body of 17-year old Barbara
Twyman testified Wednesday In the
Charles Lee II murder trial In Galli a
County Common Pleas Court she
and a relative were "looking for an
abandoned place" where Twyman's body was allegedly hidden
after the murder.
Betty Hunt, Rt. 1, Ewington, told
the court that she and Thomas Hunt,
Ew!ngton, drove around the area
last April 5looklng for the place her
daughter, 'Kathy Bias, had told the
Gallla County Sherlfi's oepartment
-a body could be found .
Mrs. Hunt said she "worried
about it" until the next day when she
called her cousin , Tbomas Hunt,
and drove around the area.
After the pair traveled about 2 \-)
miles from the Twyman home, they
spoiled an abandoned well. Mrs.
Hunt said she "didn't get out of the
car," and they returned to the Hunt
home.
Twyman' J body was discovered
April6ln an'C!bandoned well off Alice
Road near Ewlngton, after being
shot In the head and chest . Lee, 17,

Point Pleasant, is charged In
connection with Twyman'sdeatl:t
Mrs. Hunt said her daughter
called her after anonymously tipping off the sheriff's department
about the location of Twyman's
body. Mrs. Bias testified that
throughout the previous day- Aprll
5 - she had received lnfoimation
concerning the death and subsequent disposal of the body.
Mrs. Bias told her mother and
Investigators the body could be
found In an abandone&lt;;l well approximately three miles from the
Twyman borne.
Under prosecution questioning,
Mrs. Bias said she received information concerning the alleged
murder several times during the
afternoon of April 5, from Shirley
Furst, 42, Rt. 1. Gallipolis, who was
romantically linked with Lee at the
time.
Alleged altercation
On March 20, the day of
Twyman· s disappearance, Mrs.
Bias called Lee about an alleged
altercation between himself anct
Mrs. Furst the night beforeataiocal
night spot, the French Quarter.

The call was at approximately 10
a.m., she said.
Sbe said' that Lee had followed .
Mrs. Bias and Mrs. Furst to the
night club after leaving Skatesville
In Gallipolis, where~ birthday party
lor 18-year-old John Furst, Shirley
F,urst's son. was In progress.
At the club, Mrs. Btas said she
witnessed an argument between
Mrs. Furst and Lee, addlngshewas
not able to hear what It was about.
The argumept dealt with Mrs. Furst
going with Mrs. Bias to the club, she
said.
Defense attorney Hamiin King
pointed out that Lee, due to his age,
was unable to accompany the pair
into the club.
King also contended there was a
rivalry between Lee and Mrs. Bias
"for Shirley's affection," asking if
Mrs. Bias didn't Uke Lee.
"He'd (Lee) get upset if she (Mrs.
Furst ) even talked to me on the
phone," Mrs. Bias replied.
Mrs. Bias said she met Lee in
December 1982 or January 1983,
when he was In a .vehicle with Mrs.
Furst.
The only time Lee had been to the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
House Republican leader says an ·
. agr&lt;;&gt;ement In which Gov. Richard
Celeste's campaign committee
channels $60,000 over lour years to
Lt. Gov. Myrl Shoemaker is
unlawful and that the payments
should be halted.
In add!tlon, Assistant House
Minority Leader Waldo Bennett
Rose, R-Llma, said Celeste ought to
fire Joel Teaford, the treasurer of his
campaign committee; fire those on
the gubernatorlal staff who reviewed the matter and failed to
· research the ethics law; and
publicly apologize to Ohioans and to
Shoemaker "for allowing this situation to take place."
Celeste would not comment on the
statements Wednesday, said Paid
Costello, the governor's press
secretary.
At Issue Is a nearly year-old
written agreement between Celeste
and Shoemaker In which the
· lieutenant governor Is paid $15,000
annuaUy for four years for services
to the campaign as a consultant.
Both officials have denied that the
payments were a supplement for
Shoemaker's salary. He earns a
state salary of $.'m,oo:l annuaUy as
lieutenant governor but also serves
- without pay - as natura!
resources director. That cabinetlevel post normally carries a salary
of about S50.oo:l.
Rose dJsm!ssed explanations offered by Celeste and Shoemaker
that the payments were for campaign services and~ nota salary

supplement.
Such a supplement would violate a
section of state ethics law which
bars elected officials from receiving
compensation for public duties In
addition to their state wages.
"I think it's stU! unlawful," Rose
said. "You can't turn this Into ~
consultant transaction simply by
calling it one. The test Is what was it
in terms of the facts and its flavor
anjj the Intent of the parties." .
Rose, an attorney, cited the
governor's comments on the matier
to support his contention thaf the
payment was actually a· salary
supplement.
Celeste, In his only public comment on the matter. said Tuesday
the payments were not a supplement. But then he added:- "I think
It's wrong to have anybody In public
life (who) has to create a second
home, has to go through the process
of handling those respons!billties to
be concerned about their ability to
meet their fWnuy's needs."
"The Issue is and It's a fact
necessary by law the man Is doing
two jobs and being paid by the
taxpayers for the lower of two
salaries," Celeste said.
Rose said that amounted to a
description of a supplement .
"'Ibe governor did not say one
word about services that Myrl
Sboemaker rendered to the campaign committee either before or
after tbe election. Now If that Is nota
description out of the governor's
own mouth of a supplement I don't'
know what Is,'' Rose saki.

Bias home on Jackson Pike was
March 20: at approximately 5: :xJ
p.m., with Shirley Furst.
That day, Mrs. Bias said, she and
Mrs. Furst told Lee they were going
to Mrs. Hunt's horne to do laundry,
when they actually planned to go to
Huntington, W.Va.
She added that she returned to
Gallipolis from Huntington the next
momlng at approximately 4 a.m ..
without Mrs. Furst, who arrived in ·
town the evening of March 21.
Didn't see gun
In oth~r testimony, Mrs. Bias
revealed she had not seen the state's
second exhibit, a handgun, supposedly in Mrs. Furst's possession
at the French Quarter on thenightof
March20.
This was a point she made several
times under questioning from Kin~­
" If she did (have the weapon) I did
not see it," she said.
Mrs. Bias further testified to
having threatened Marsha Lee,
SWORN IN - WIWam (Bill I Snouffer, left, was sworn in Wednesday
mother of the accused, on the
as Pomeroy's clerk-treasurer by Mliyor Clarence Andrews. Snouffer,
telephone following his arrest.
who was elected to the post In November, asswned his duties early due
Mrs. Lee was questioning resi to the resignation of Bernadette Anderson. Her resignation became
dents of the area surroundlngwhere
effective Wednesday. Under Ohio Law Snouffer would not take over his
1Continued on page 12)
duties until April, 1984.

I .

/

•

Union· leaders may soften demands

Republicans claim
payments unlawful

DAIRY VALLEY

WE WELCOME YOU
TO TRY OUR NEW
SPECIALTIES
ENJOY THE GREAT
FOOD AND FINE
_ ATMOSPHERE

story on Page 8

Voi.32,No.163
CopyriAhted 1983

The Rev. 0 . H. Cart will be
speaking at the Hobson Church of
Christ In Christian Union at 7: 30
p.m . Wednesday night.

Syracuse.

Story on Page 3

e

charge.

save

Ultrasound, pregnancy

•Zips from top and bottom -concealed mftll snaps

T~Ra~c~ln~e~,;$43;. as;su;red;~c;le;ar~d;ts;ta;n;ce~~~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

r------

Meigs seeks 2nd win

WASHINGTON lAP) - Representatives of striking Greyhound
workers seem poised tD soften their
bargaining demands In an attempt
to revive negotiations toendanearly
month-long walkout .
'Although members of the Amal·
gamated CouncU of Greyhound
Local Unions remain secluded at a
downtown hotel In strategy sessions
that began Wednesday, a source
close to the Greyhound situation
indicated union negotiators were
weighing a compromise contract
· . counterproposal to Greyhound
management .
Some 12,700 union bus drivers.
mechanics and Greyhound terminal workers struck the company
Nov. 2 after refusing to accept pay
cuts averaging 9.5 percent a year.
Last week, the rank-and-file voted
overwhelmingly to reject a ·modifled company proposal for pay cuts
In the range of 7.8 percent.

But John W. Teets, Greyhound's
chairman, vowed Tuesday that the
bus line would step up its hiring of
replacements for the strikers, and
that Greyhound wou ld seek to
Increase its service, which has been
cut back to about 10 percent of its
pre-strike level.
The 31 members of the union
bargaining council · traveled here
from Phoenix, Greyhound's home
base, to reassess the union's stand
with the help of federal mediators.
The source, who agreed to discuss
the bargaining strategy only on the
condition he not be identified, said
that Kay McMurray, chairman of
the Federal Mediation and Concilia tion Service, told union negotiators
Wednesday that any resumption of
negotiations to ~ttle the strike
would likely require a new union
contract proposal.
McMurray , emerging from the
private talks with the union leaders,

refused to diScuss what went on
behind closed doors. But he did tell
repon ers. "There's a lways room
for optimism."
It was not clear what sort of wage

or other contract concessions the
union bargaining team might be
willing to offer the company.

Weather forecast
Increasing clouds tonight. Low

30-35. Friday . partly cloudy with a
chance of rain la te in the day. High
43-48. Chance of precipita lion 20
percent toniglll and 40 percent
Fliday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Satunlay through Monday:
Fair oo Saturday with a chance of
snow Ounies in the northeast. Fair
on Sunday. Chance of rain or snow
Monday. Highs mostly In th•• 30s.
Lo\)'s mostly in the 20s.

Seniors oppose 45 percent rate hike
.&gt;I

CENTER OF OONTROVERSY
- Ll. Governor Myrt Shoemaker, aoove, has become lhe
cealer of coalroversy between
leading Mate Republlcam and
Qovemor Rkllard Celeste since
the dlllclo8ure lhal !lhoemaker
has bem pald$JS,0001waervlces
rendered lo tile Blecl Celellte
campaign. Jttlp•NbN claim
lhe money II aa lllepl contrtbulloll which . . . . up tile dHierence In pa.y betw- lhe Job of
Nalurallleloans
and
Ids poMM Jleo+nert ..,.._r,

•ector

CLEVELAND (AP) - Senior
citizens packed a Public UtUitles
Commission hearing to speak out
against a proposed 45 percent rate
Increase for the Ohio Bell Telephone
C&lt;i.
. Most of the speakers at yesterday's hearing said they feared the
elderly could no longer afford phone
servic&lt;i If Ohio Bell was granted the
requested $179 mUllan rate hike.
A PUCO prqlOS!ll for a low-cost
_lifeline service also drew criticism.
The S:O.S. service would cost about
$5 a month and only allow outgOing
calls tosafetyforcesand emergency
services.
"Loneliness iS one of the major

causes of illness among elderly and
often a call to a friend can be just as
important as an emergency call to
police," said Gus Joiner, speaking
for the local chapter of theCouncliof
Older Persons.
'
''Do people live because of their
phone or must they die for lack of
one?" Joiner asked.
Rose Schneider, representing the
Jewish Community Center. said she
didn't understand why Ohio Bell
wants a rate hike when its future
parent company, American Information Technologies Corp., is
projecting big profits next year.
The divestiture of American

Telephone &amp; Telegra ph Co. is 10
blame for the ra1e hike requesl , one
man sa id.
"AT&amp;T and Ohio Bell aregettinga .
divorce and the c4stomers have to
pay the alimony," the man said.
Alan R. Schriber, the only PUCO
member to attend the hearing, said
he hoped the commission would
reach a decision by the enct of the
year, but that may not be possible
because of the large amount of
testimony In the case.
Ohio Bell_could impose the new
rates after Jan. 1 according to state
law but would have to make refunds .
If the PUCO doesn't grant the
requested Increase.

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