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                  <text>Pall•

12 The Dllily Sentil'lll

Spencer trial
The attorney explained Ms.
Spencer's mother had a nervoos
breakdown and had been on
medication. He also stated that the
mother had attempted suicide on
numerous occasions. .
It Is Story's contention this
affected the defendant throughout
her life and to deal with the situation
the defendant has always trted to
please her mother.
He added the defendant Uied Ia
hide things from her mother and
tbat another sister had a pregancy
before marriage - this had an
affect on the defendant -due to the
way it was handled by the mother.
It was not his ptirpose to blame the
mother, Story said, but the relationship between the defendend and her
mother was an odd one.
In dealing with the unwanted,
unwed pregancy of the defendant, it
was concealed with relative success, Story said. He went on to say
hiding her pregnancy did not make
her guilty.
Story stated Ms. Spencer planned
all along to take care of the childby placing it up for adoption . During
the early stages of pregnancy, the
defendant considered abonlon, but
"this wasn't her way of doing .
things."
Ms. Spencer feared her mother
and is socially Immature Story said.

.

..

I Area death I
Curtis Ohlinger
Cunis E dward Ohlinger, age 13
months, Mt. Alto, died Saturday 1!1
Chlldren's.Hospita l in Columbus.
Born Oct. 30, 1982 in Gallipolis, he
was the son of Ralph E. and
Christina A. Lieving Ohlinge'r, Mt.
Alto.
Surviving in addition to his
parents are paternal grandparents.
"straw thard and Orilla Ohlinger. Mt.
Alto; maternal grandparents,
Bobby and Pauline Lieving, Letan;
paternal great-grandmother, Mrs
Bessie Ohlinger, New Haven;
maternal great-grandmother. Letha Lieving, Letan; maternal
great-grandfather and step greatgrandmother, Paul and Edith
. Roush, Point Pleasant and several
aunts and uncles.
F uneral services will be Tuesday
at 1 p.m. a t Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. George Weirick
officiating. Burtal will be in the
Roanoke Cemetery, Mt. Alto.
Frtends may call at the funeral
home today from 6-9 p.m.

(continued from page 11

He went on to explain the defendant
was on her way to the hospital when
she reallzed the baby was gong to be
born and she got In the back seat.
Many women miscalculate the
delivery date of their children.
Story stated that not only did'she
have the child alone but It was worse
than the average blnh - Ms.
Spencer lost 25 pere&lt;&gt;nt of her blood
volume - lapsed In and out of
consciousness and was in shock.
Ms. Spencer's attorney stated at
the final contraction, the c hild was
forced out of the mother and hit the
floor of the car.
The defendant was under the
· impression that the child was
probably dead , Story contended,
adding the mother was under
tremendous stain and was not in a
tl aJ fr
1 · d.
raStoonry exampla~ll1oed.rrunthat .folloll'ing the
bil,h, Ms. Spencer wrapped the
child in a nightgown and hid It while
th h
t
· t
s he wen I m o e ouse o get
dressed. Once there, he said she was
unconscious for eight to 10 hours.
The J·u
t ti t
full t
ry mus s en care Y o
the medical evidence ani] analy-...e
the autopsy report, Story told them .
He .added the autopsy report does
not give ca use nor time of death.
.
Story sated that the Prosecutwn
f
th t
has the burden of
proo a
because the umbilical cord was not
cut, therewasachancethat thechtld
. h
t d
\vasnotbo rn a lie
v · Th IS econ en s
is an essential element.
•ed h d f •
He a!so contenu t e e enuant
was unmature and hasn't been
away from the influence of her

Sprinkler system would have saved lives
CINCINNATI (AP) - Several
residents of a home for mentally
retarded men panicked and refused
to budge when a fire broke out, a
counselor says, and the city fire
chief says a sprinkler system would
have saved the Uves of the six
resident s who perished.
• "I 'll stick my neck out: This was a
totally unnecessary Joss of life. If the
people in this state and country

The counselor, Robert Younger,

ll, said he awakened the residents
when the smoke alarm went oft. · ·
But he~ the residents, who had
gone through quarterly fire drills,
would not move.

J-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

•

+ilwo...l .

~page:::_l:!_)- - - -

two vehicles parkedon.thepremises
and one Is leaving, it must back out
on 10 a busy road.; tha t there have
been complaints regarding liter,
din and filth emanating from the
pmpsed premises."·
·v

d The letter also stated that the
epanrnent found that the objections of Pomerov Council were well
founded .
·
Goett has the privilege, under the
la w, to appeal to the Liquor Control
Com m issio n concer nin g the
decision.
flill Young reponed carpenter
work on the second floor had been
completed and that electrtcal work
which should be completed by
Wednesday.
Young said council should petition
the Meigs Local Board of Education
to use the area behind the former
junior high building as parking
space
Young also added that carpet will

be laid on the second floor when

weatherpermlts.TheMeigsCounty

in on the second floor by the end of
the month.
Reed reported that by the next
meeting, he will have the bids fqr
tearing down the Amy Klngsland
J0
bulldln 1
~
gs ocated on Court
Street.
Taxlcabservlce
Debra Francis of Gallipolis met
with council concerning a taxi cab.
"
license lor Pomeroy.
·
She Is presently operating under
the Rawlins Cab Service In GalllpoUs. She has serviced Gallipolis for
the past two years.
Council Informed her tbat she
may obtain a license by the first of
the year at a cost of $50 a year. .
Sbe said she Will begin with one
cab and eventually add another.
Young said he would like to see a
cab service in the area.
Franclssaidshewouldcheckwith
Mlddlepon Village officials regard·
ing picking up customers In Middlepon Village.
Shesaldasfarassheknows,atthe

per mtle.

It was reported that.Je!f Htlllary
willpresentaCbrlstmasshowa'tthe
city building on Dec. 16 and 17.
A ~uest made by Gallla· County
""
Christian School to put a trailer on
the parking lot Frtday and Satur-

present IInne, she would charge $1

children was approved.

Hallmark Holiday
Asonments help
you s.end beaurfiul
cards at a modest
price. Each includes
36 cards at
$3.88-less than I I •
per card!

Pollee Chief George Stitt In hls
report stated that the department
made 37 arrests durtng November.
He asked that council purchase two
tires for the front of car 10. Coundl
agreed.
Steve Hartenbach, metennan
reported that he Issued 850 parking
tickets In November.

Story on Page 3

See FarDiy JKedlclne oa P~p 8

•••••••
•••••••

•••••••
•••••••

~o

•

at y

•

enttne
2 Secllons, 14 Pages

Voi.J2,No .167
Copynghted 1983

Pomeroy

Middleport , Ohio, Wednesday, December 7, 1983

requests exceeded anticipated receipts by I!OIJle
1310,000. Commissioners agreed lbat "the cuts wDI
have to be shared equally by an deparlments."
Jones ~;l!d unless the philosophy of the· Boai'd of
County Commissioners changes, -and the other two
commissioners, David KOblentz and Manning Roush,
lndictated as far as they are concerned It won't- then
expenditures will be kept within the income and the
county will operate in the black.
As for local govenunent funds, It was-reported
Meigs County's gener~l lund, township and villages
will receive a total of $405,000 an Increase over 1983 of

By Charlme IIDefllclJ
Sentinel staff
A bleak financial piCture for 1984 In Meigs County

was painted at Tuesday afternoon's meeting of Meigs

•

County Commissioners.
Conunlssloner Richard Jones called for caution on
all expenditures In 1984, noting that "probably it will
be the won;t year for county finances in the past 10

years."

'

He said the la:ck of any significant Increase In new
construction leaves the financial status the same as in
the past few years, Insofar as receipts are concerned
while utility and other costs are going up. ·
Jones urged fellow ' comrnlsslonen; to take a long
bard look toward keeping the budget In line. He said
anticipated receipts should be completed by the
Budget Commission In a week or so, and that the
budget will be completed and acted upon oo later than
Dec. 27.
.
It was noted that earller departmmtal budget

$11,000.
Jones explained that of the $405,000, a total . of
$162,00) will go Into the county general fund, the
amount representing a $4,400 Increase over the 1983
figures of $157,600.
It was pointed out, however, that in 1~, the county
lost $18,000 In local government funds, so the Increase
thls year stlll sbows the county with a net loss over the
past two years at $7,00J.

As lor the new ~latlve ruling on power plants,
Jones noted that the loss to Meigs County Is "not
signlflcant."
Bid awarded
The Hackett Roofing Co. of Middleport was
awarded the contract for the new roof on the Meigs
CoUll1ty Inf!rnnary building. The Hackett bid of $21,500,
it was noted, was the only one which met
speclflcations In every respect.
Phil Roberts, engineer, was authortzed to prepare
advertising for a new front end loader for use at the
gravel pit. Ted Warner, county highway supertntendent, dtscussed some equipment problems with
commissioners.
Roberts and Warner noted that some work has been
done on old Route 33 at the Ohio Pallet Co. and tbat
pennanent correction of lhil problem there will be
made In the sprtng.
Both admitted that there will probably be a
problem there all winter, but noted that until things
dry out there's little possibility of getting a permanent

victim
testifies in
doctor's trial
'

I

A

woman teStifying In the rape trial of

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ET-120 by Radio Shack

.

on the bed while instructing her
husband to kneel on the floor.
In his opening argument, assist·
a Point Pleasant doctor says she
ant prosecutor Ocle Spaulding said
was assaulted by an overweight
the Intruder bound the husband's
masked man who drugged her
husband and then laughed as he told · hands· and covered his eyes with
medical tape before Injecting him
the couple the attack would be
with a Vallunn solution.
"something you can tell your
Spaulding said the masked man
grandchildren about"
The testbnony came Tuesday then robbed thecoup,e,of$30and told
durtng the first day of Dr. David them, "Thls will be a nightmare lor
Carr's tr1al on charges of seX:ual you _when you wake up In the
morning, something you can ·tell
assault and amned robbery.
gralidchlldren about."
The Point Pleasant osteopath Is
She said the man then laughed and
accused ol raping a Putnam County
woman last sprtng after Injecting took her Into the kitchen where he
her husband with a sleep-Inducing made her lie on a table and
drug. Authorttles said the attack performed oral sex on her as her
took place at the couple's farm husband groaned groggily In the
borne, owned by the family o!Carr' s bedroom.
She said the man then comwife.
manded
her to perform oral sex on
The victim said she and her
him.
The
woman, a diabetic, said
husband were awakened In their bed
when a masked Intruder attempted she complied but began feeling
to Inject a drug into her husband as light-headed and asked the masked
man to give her some butter
be lay sleeping beside her.
She told an eight-man, four- rum-flavored Lifesavers.
She said ~gave her thee andy and
woman Putnam CoUll1ty Circuit
Court jury tbat she turned on a light then took her Into the bedroom and
raped her.
and saw a masked man holding a
She said the Intruder took the keys
pistol. She said the man, whom she
her car alter telling her he was a
to
described as being large and
(Continued on page 14)
overweight, told her to Ue lace down
WINFIELD, W.Va. (AP) -

Chronolone~

Cut 33°/o

your

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• Auto-Redia! of Last Number Called
Priced ri_g ht for. stocking stuffing! Electronic
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Three gifts in one: an all-in-&lt;Jne cordless phone
with Auto-Redial, mute button and on/off ringer
switch, plus a digital alarm clock and AM/FM
radio. Battery Backup if AC fails. Battery
Sentinel'" warns of weak battery. 1143-274

Give the Convenience of a
as
Cordless Phone

Pomeroy Lodge164, F. and A.M.,
will have a stated meeting at 7:30
p.m . Wednesday evening at the
Masonic Temple. There will be
installation of officers. Refresh·
ments will be served. All master
masons are invited to attend .

ET-320 by Radio Shack

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Marriage license

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BY 1.be OVP Staff

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a recorded greeting and records up to 120 calls. Remote umt for calling in to hear messages from any
phone. #.4J..247 Banery ror remote elCtra

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cords-even works outdoors.
Auto-Redial, privacy button.
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Battery protected, 1-button dialing up to-32 emergency or f~~uentiy called numbers. Switchable tone
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tance S8MC8S.

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touch of "Old World" charm.
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Fair on1.bunday. Chance of rain
or Friday. Snow Ukely
Sa&amp;urday. Wglls lllOIIIb' In the 308.
Lowslnlbe28&amp;

'
l

ON GUARD- 'J'wo U.S. Marines stand guard ld the main gate ol
tbe Marine HQ at Beirut airport Tuesday as a Marine CH-46 heUcopter
tak"" off from parking lot behind them. The Marines have heen using
the airport parking lot, located Inside their perimeter and cl08ed to
but Marine vehleles, as a landing zone for helicopters. ( AP Wirephoto).

an

Prosecution rests in Lee case

9995

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Meigs' financial picture ,look~ bleak

Hurry-in Today for
Super Holiday Savings!.

One-Piece Pulse-Dialing
Mini-Phone Now s10 Off!

radiation danger

See leak !Aory 011 P.ltl

e

••

~ Rape

The annual Christmas dinner of
Chester Fire Depanment will be
held Sunday at 5 p.m. at the
firehouse. All persons working at the
flremen' sbooth a t the Meigs County
Fair are invited to attend.

Snow likely tonight. Low 25-30.
Westerly winds 15-25 mph. Wednes·
day, cloudy with widely scattered
flumes. High 29-34. Chance of
precipitation 70 percent tonight and
30 percent Wednesday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
'l1nlnday through Saturday:

Scaly scalps ·

'I St;ory on Page 5

(

Mayor Clarance Andrews report
showed receipts In the amount of
$1,8l! for the month of November
which council approved.
A resolution was passed (4 to1) to
borrow$ll!,OOJatlOpercent from the
Fanners Bank and Savings for five
years topayforwagesandmaterlal
for the upstairs of the city hall. Reed
abstained.

Meigs loses first tilt
Eaglettes.beaten

Christmas
Card Value

..:,:(C=ont=::inu:::::ed.::_:lro:::_rn

10

Christmas party set

A suit for declaratory judgment
was filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun by Ray R Pickens,
Mlddlepon , against St. Paul Fire
and Marine Ins. Co., Youngstown,
Buckey Union Ins., Reynoldsburg
and Cincinnati Insurance, Newark.
The suit Is to declareresponsibUty
of insurance companies to pay
professionalliabtllty insurance .

extinguishers, smoke alarms, a lire
escape and a !lreev..acuat!on plan. It
met all lire and safety regulations of
the city and state, he said.
The cause of the fire Monday,
which caused an estlnnated $100,000
damage, rem a I ned under
Investigation.
There were 10 residents and a
counselor In the thrre-story horne
when the fire broke out about 7 a.m.

r~m;;ot;h;er;·~~~~~~~~:::::~::r==~======~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~d~ay~,~Dec~~-~16~,~and~~17~to~se:u~ite:~~:to~~~~~~~~;;~~~~

Two divorce actions and two
dissolutions have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Filing for divorce were Jill
Lawrence, Portland, against Clarence M. LaWrence, Portland. and
Domild Guthrie, Coolville, against
Pamela Guthrie. Coolville.
Filing for disoolution of rnarrtage
were Harold Jones, Pomeroy, and
Sheila Jones, Rt. 3, Albany, and
Ruth A. Roush , Penland, and
Dennie L. Roush, Penland.

Judgment sought

would require sprinkler systems
with quiCk action heads in this type
of building, no one would have died
in thls fire," Fire Chief Notrnan
Wells said Monday.
Wells said he has recommended
that au Institutional buDdlngs In
Cincinnati be required to have
sprinkler systems. "We will recom·
mend It again," he said.
Wells said the home had fire

pomeroy council.__

d of Eduction should be moved

To end marriages

A marrtage litense was issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to Sann
J. Terropplous,27, Rt.2,Racine,and
Narsa Lee Moodlspaugh,24, Mason.

TUIIday, Ducember 6, 1983

l'o!Mroy Middleport, Ohio

With the except!on of some
exhibits that were to be Introduced
today, the)ll05ecut!oninthernurder
tr1al of 17-year-cld Charles Lee II
rested Its case Tuesday afternoon In
Gallla County Common Pleas
Court.
.
Prosecutor Joseph Cain wrapped
up examination of hls major
witness, Shirley Fun;t, 41, Rt. 1,
Gall1polls, to whom Lee reportedly
confessed the March 20 murder of
Barllara Twyman, 17, Rt. 1,
Ewington.
In response to a serlesofq\lestlons
by Cain, Fun;t told the eight·
woman, lour-man jury that at no
tbne were her statements lnflu.
encedbylhesherltf'sdepartmentor
the prosecutor's office.
She added she made recordings of
telep!Dne conversations between
herself and Lee for protection
puJllOS€S and revealed that Lee had
a violent side of his penonallty she
called "Chuck" wheru!Yer It was
aroused.
Furst also denied allegations she
killed Twyman becallle Twyman
reportedly threatened to polson
Furst's 18-year-old son, John.
"Did you have any knowledge or
partlclpatkln In the death of
Barbara Twyman?" Cain asked.
••No,'' lhereplted.
"DklyouklllBarbaraTwyman?"

beask!d.

·

"I did not kill Barbara Twyman,"
was F'ufst'sreply.
en-examination
In hls cross-examination, defense
attorney Hamlin King forced Furst
·to admit tbat two statements she
wrote for King relevant to the case
were Ull1true. ·
·
The statements were made JIIJI€
23 and June 26. testimony revealed.
In those statements, Fun;t said that
she didn't believe It was Lee who
called her on April 5 with complete
details of Twyman's murder and
diSposal In the well.
The statement, which King had
Furst read aloud, said Furst had
overheard the voice of David
Blankenship, one of Lee's !rlends
from Point Pleasant, In the hallway
at the May grand jury session that
Indicted Lee.
Furst said In the statement she·
believed It may have been Blankenship's voice on the phone slfe heard
that day.
Under King's questionl,ng, Furst
said she had DD rnemocy o! writing
that statement on June 23. King said
that Furst had written the statement
on that date and gave It to Marsha
Lee, Lee's mother.
King also produced Mrs. Lee's
telephOne bll1 for June, which
sOOWed she' made three long·
distance calls to Chlcqo that night.
Klngwaa In Chicago at thetlmeand ·
beard the statement.
•

"Arrf

the contents of the first
statement a lie?" King asked.
"I don't even remember making
It," Furst replied.
Furst' later admitted that the
statement was untrue, but not a lie.
"I wanted to believe that Charlie
didn't do this," she said.
The second statement was made
three days later at Mrs. Lee's. Furst
said tbat statement- withsubstan·
tlally the same ln!onnation - was
almost dictated to her by Mrs. Lee
and King.
'"The second IInne you made a
statement, was that also a tie?"
King asked.
Furst replied, "It was an untrue
statement."
"So your testimonY then, Is tbat
you made two untrue statements,"
King continued. "Can you give this
jury a guideline for when you are
telling the truth?"
Furst protestedlbewas telling the
truth.
"But I wanted to believe, so bad,
that he (Lee) dkm'tdolt, I made the
statement," she said.
During the wrltln&amp; of the second
statement, Furtlt comiilalned that
she was "mlxedupandcontused" at
the IInne and that King and Mrs. Lee
told her what to write.
Dllpulil ciUn
King also diSputed Furst's claim
to the "Oiuck" side of Lee's
personaUty.

-

I

•

"In the houn; and hours of tape
that we beard, how do you explain
that there'snot one solitary place in
them where he calls himself
Chuck•" King asked.
Fun;t testlfled earller that Lee
never liked being called Chuck, and
explained tbat she saw Charlie as
the good Lee and Chuck as the bad

one.
"He would act differently," Furst
said. "In a sense, ornery. He'd say
nasty words, act in awayhedoesn't
when he's Charlle ... he would get
upset with me when he couldn't be
with me, and tear up things."
Furst also dented that she used
sexasameansofmanipulatlngLee.
Referring to the arranged meet·
lng between Lee and Furst In late
August at the BlueFountalnMotelln
Gallipolis - which was taped by the
sherltf' s department - King noted
tbat Furst drove Lee to the motel
without his mother's pennlsslon;
and, out of West Vlrglnla when he
was prohibited from leaving the
state.
"The assumptton was that there
would be sex?" KJhg asked.
"No," she replied.
"I didn't promise him sex when I
asked him to answer three questions,'' Furst continued.
King said that in one of the taped
cc.nversations, Lee accused Furst of
ldlllng TWyman. King asked her if
(Continued on page 10)

solution to the water problem. Owners of the Ohlo
Pallet Co. have been cooperative, It was reported.
Roberts reported that some county road signs will
be arrtvlng soon. The goal, he said, Is to have all
county roads marked with reflectortzed signs, name
and number, to rorrespond with the mailing address .
EPA IDspedors pleased
It was reported by Clerk Mary Hobstetter tbat John
Jacom of the Meigs County Health Department had
advt.sed her that the Environmental Protection
Agency inspectors were ''exceptionally well pleased"
with the condition of both landfills.
A letter from the Ohio Department of Natural
Resources was read advising that Southern Ohio Coal
Company has filed three applications for coal mlnlng
and reclamation permits on plots of 64, 288 and 101
acres in Columbia and Salem Townships. he permit
requests are on file In the Meigs County Recorder's
office.
,
Several fund transfer requests were approved.

·.·

Baby breathed
before death
' The physician noted Spencer had
By KATIE CROW
lost a considerable amount of blood,
Senttnelltalf
Dr. Margaret Harnish, a spedal· and was given !our units at HMC.
After the operation, Harnish said
1st In obstretrlcs and gynecology at
she went to the emergency room
Ho~r Medical Center, testified
Tuesday that a child born to Pamela where ~e examined the baby and
Spencer of Syracuse had breathed · pronouced It dead.
Harnish testified that the baby
before death.
Spencer Is charged In Meigs was cold and rigid but had been
cleaned, since was not not too much
County Common Pleas Court with
blood on the body.
Involuntary manslaughter and en·
The baby was pink, Harnish said,
dangerlng children as a result other
meaning
the Infant had breathed.
newborn child's death on or about
told the court the cord
She
further
lastMay29.
was
loosely
draped around the
· Harnish was one of flvewi~
Infant's
neck,
tbat the baby had
testl!ylng Tuesday. Others . were
at
the
rectum and there
expelled
Nancy Gauldin and Mary K. Lucas,
nurses at HMC; Gallla County was a small air bubble at the nose.
Harnish said that meant the infant
sheriff's deputy Archie Meadows;
had breathed at one time.
agent Herman Henry of the Bureau
"There were no marks on the
of Crtmlnal Investigation; and
Mickey Cundiff, the defendant's child, It was a healthy fulltbne baby,
with a nonnalskull," sheconcluded.
sister'.
When asked if the baby could have
Perfonns~
Harnish, who attended and later died If It had been dropped from the
operated on Spencer at HMC, said seat of a car to the floor, Harnish said
It's "far worse" wbat a baby goes
the defendant had an "explosive
through when being born than being
delivery," reveallngshehadnumer·
dropped
two feet. She added there
ous lacerations. Hamish said sbe
were
no
bruises
and nopeellngo!the
"sewed-up" the lacerations and
skin.
I:elliOVed the placenta.
Harnish noted that ~pencer was
Under questioning by Prosecut·
frightened
and contused and the
!ng Attorney Fredertck Crow Ill,
onty
conversation
she Juid with her
Harnish said the mother's cord had
been cut and a plastic twist tie, found was of a medical tone.
According to testimony , Spencer
on ~ad or garbage bags, had been
(Continued on page 10)
used to tie off the cord.

Beautification project
topic at chamber meet
Tree plantings to beautifY down·
towri Pomeroy were discussed at
Tuesday's meeting of the Pomeroy
Chambero!CommerceattheMelgs
Inn.
George Kotallc, landscape designer, Gallipolis, outlined tree
selection, approprtate placement,
excavation I:t!Quirernents, and cost
with chamber members.
Kotallc said it would be difficult to
place the trees along thestoresldeof
Main Street because of the many
awnings, but did suggest slender
type trees if that Is the selected
location.
Pat O'Brien proposed that if the
proJect Is to be carrlecl out the trees
be placed on the rtver side between
Main Street and the parking lot.
Actual planting of the trees,
cutting throogh the concrete, rem·
ovlng the old soU and putting In
topsoil, along with maintenance ol
the new trees was ~ by
Kotallc. He said the cost pel' tree
wouldtrom$375to$frodepelldlngon
the kind and size, with a one year
guarantee If the tree dies !rom a
natural cause, not vandalism.
As for financing, Kotallc noted
some cmununltles his !Inn has
worked In get grants while otbl!rs
solidi from the merchanta.
state tllldllor'I viii&amp;
Tom Reed, Vice president, con·

dueled the meeting and noted that
arrangements have been rnaqe for
Thomas Ferguson, state auditor , to
come to Pomeroy for a dinner
meeting on either Jan . 3 or Feb. 7.
!twas noted that duesarepayabl~
durtng January .
James Hll1 of Burger Chef
reported tbat 150funmeals had been
dlstrtbuted In the chamber's halloween promotion.
Bivce Reed, Pomeroy council·
man, said the village will be using
the remainder of HUD monies to
replace water lines. The posslblllty
of water treatment and new water
wells were "cost prohib!t!ve", Reed
said. He also noted that beginning
Jan. 1, the village will have cab
service.
The possibility of organizing a
Pooleroy Merchants Association
was discussed, with Shirley Misner
toworkwiththechambersecretary,
Shen'i.e Hart, on contacting merchants to determine Interest.
Anlwer8 CGmplalnts
GaryBatesofGeneraiTelephone
responded to some complaintS
about telephone service at last
month's meeting and advt.sed that ·
the tiCI.'eSScharges will go lnlnetfect
011 April 3. He asked that local
caurlstent problems be re!eJTed to
him and be assured attent!on.

·- - - -- - --,. --..·--------~/-..

�Wednesday, December 7, 1983

'Commentary
·.

.

111 Court Strtoet
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREsT Ot' THE MEIGs-MASON i\RK\

...
''·..
'
...
.'' ...

~~
.
Bm~ .. ~L--r·~=·~
~

.

PAT WHITEHEAD

..

'

ROBERT L. WISGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Pu,bllsher/ ('ontroller

. Pomeroy-Middleport, _Ohio
Wednesday, o.c.mber 7, 1983

Gf&gt;nl'ral Manai;er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

Concernlng the Martin Feldstein
affair , a few observations:
1. If Larry Speakes does not know
how to pronounce the name of the
chairman of the Council of Eco·
nomic Advisers. he should take an
afternoon off and practice. It Is
never absolutely safe to be on the
STEEN/ STINE business inasmuch
as different people have different
preferences 1the conductor is Leonard BernSTEEN ). and to pronounce Feldstein FeldSTEEN

when he uses FeldSTINE Is not
going to get you Into trouble with the
Anti -Defamation League. But
watch this - a point the principal
spokesman for the president ought
to know - namely, that to wander
from FeldSTEEN to FeldSTINE In
the course of a lew ·minutes'
meeting with reporters, moreover,
to do so in the context of criticizing
Mr. Feldstein, Is to go past the
frontiers of raUJery. He might as
well have "spoken of Mr .

Whatshlsname.
Another thlllg. It Is a perfectly
reasonable question to ask whether
Mr. Feldstein should continue on as
chief economist for the president.
Although he Is .confirmed by the
Senate, he Is and continues to be a
presidential applntee, serving only
at the pleasure of tbe president. But
It Is not a reasonable question
whether he should be treated With
the elementary courtesy due him
not merely as chairman of the

A MEMBER of The Associated Prt&gt;ss, Inland Daily Press Assocla~
tlon and the American Newspaper Puhll~her !\s!IDciatlon.
LE'M'ERS OF OPJ:""ION are wel conu&gt;d . Thl'y s hould tw less than :WO words
Ions. All letters artc&gt; subject io edltln1 and mu!it ht• siKned with name, addrt&gt;!!ll' and

lelephone number. No un!!ol(ne(i l ettt'rs wUI hll" puhll:o~hed . Letteno sho11ld he In

JOod &amp;aste, address ing Issues, not personalities.

;feuding
tDe,nocrats
&gt;: Never \mderestlmate the ability of Democrats to fight bitterly among
. .themselves over one Issue or another - or to eventually bury the hatchet
when the battle Is over.
Perhaps more important than, their struggle over an extra appropriation
of nearly $1 mUllan for the Ohio Supreme Court Is the signal that despite
talk to the contrary, the Ud may be off state spendlngfollow!ng the defeat of
. a tax repeal ballot Issue.
.
.
Democratic Gov. Rlchard Celeste, the Democrat-controlled Supreme
:Court and majority House Democrats all asree&lt;~ to spend $994,&lt;00 In
-emergency tunds thrOugh the State Controlling Board so the court coul!i set
branch clerk's offices In Cleveland and Cincinnati.
·
: Majority Senate Democrats earlier had opposed a move to Insert the
proposal In the state budget. Senate President Harry Meshel,
. D-Youngstown, was outraged when his party colleagues successfully tried
· an end run to capture what they were denied In the budget process.
At stake was a court request to more than double the size of the current
clerk's staff by hiring ten additional employees - five In each satellite
."office - to supplement the existing staff of seven persons.
·
· 'The question arose after a successful Democrat-led campaign todefeata
· Nov. 8 ballot Issue that would have repealed a 90 percent Income tax boost.
: Celeste had called the vote In support of the higher tax "not a license to
; spend but a mandate to be prudent. "
·; Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura, discounted that post-election statement
;tram Celeste about the need to control state spendlng. ·
· "It's obvious he was just talking when he saill that after the election that
• -he was going to watch carefully the finances of the state of Ohio. He's
· obviously not doing_that and I don't think there's any question that from
: now on It's going to be spending money," Netzley said.
• Sen. Eugene Branstool, 0-Utica, who had supported Celeste In the
·'suc-cessful battle against tax repeal, said the court's increased spending
xequest was not justified.
· "When I was out averaging two or three speeches a week on the
;..,ferendum I said ... we're trying to keep our fabric of state government
':'together. And if there Is a surplus, which I don't think there will he, I'm
to do those things that are real and necessary. (This) Is not. It Is
rio~" he said.
Although the court bad originally filed Its request last August, it was not
placed on the controllers' agenda until last week. L. Lee Walker, the board '
president who was appointed by Celeste, said the delay was not connected
to the campaign over tax repeal.
"I set the agenda and OEM (Office of Budget and Management) was
reviewing the request and we were talking about the dollar amounts of the
request with the Supreme Court. I didn't keep It off until after the election
on puJ:llOS". We were working on the request," Ms. Walker said.

.:up

romnutted

Baseball fans who store away such nuggets of lnfonnation as the reconl
for most home runs in the first game of a World Series have nothing on
Congress-watchers.
How about "most measures reported out of corrun!ttee In a first session
of Congress since 1979?"
For what It's worth, the Democratic Study Group, an organization Of
Uberal House Democrats, says the recently completed first session of the
· 98th Congress achieved that distinction.
As a matter offact, the lawmakers also passed more bUis and resolutions
than they had In any odd-numbered year since 1!119.
Both records have been eclipsed In the Intervening even-numbered
years, when Congress holds Its second sessions and customarily Jl3¥e5
more measures than In the first sessions.
So If history Is a guide, the 6U that were passed by the House and the 500
by the Senate In the session that ended Nov. lB will be nothing to what the
lawmakers accomplish, In quantity anyway, after they return Jan. 23.
'The Democratic group says .the House's reconl for this year ·was 17B
more than were passed In the first session of the last Congress, but 55 shy Of
the 652 passed in the first session of the 96th Congress In 1!119.
The Senate's output exceeded its 1981 mark by 103 measures but was 62
fewer than the 652 that the Senate cleared In 1!119.
Fewer measures were approved by the corrun!ttees than by the lull
House and Senate, because some minor resolutions such as those declaring
national doughnut day and the Uke do not require committee action.

Letter to the editor
Input welcomed

I

'I

Council of Economic Advisers, or
professor at }larvard University,
but as a human being.
When surprise was registered
that Mr. Feldstein was indeed at
lunch With another of the president's advisers, It was cracked that
he might not last " until dessert."
And then rucruinl Darman, presi·
dential adviser, sent down a
message to Mr. Speakes the entire
substance Of which was not read
out but the wonls heard by
,,
reporters were "the last supper.
Someone should Inform Mr.
·speakes that whatever Mr. Feld·
stein's occupation, he Is not a
sophomore undergoing a fraternity
ln!tlationt!o

following Issues:
1.) The quality of services in
protective services, foster care, anil
adoption.
2.) Useotstateandlocalfundsfor
the provision of services.
3.) Training and continuing edu·
cation of ChUdren's Services staff.
4.) Department responslbillty
and efforts for public education.
5.) Coordination of legal services.
(i.e. Unkage with Juvenile Court,
the prosecutor's office, etc.)
We welcome Input and sugges·
lions of concerned citizens and urge
the people of Meigs County to voice
their concerns and support to the
county cornmlsaloners. Through
public support,.we can look forward
to the Improvement of services with
conftclence.
'!be address of the Alliance for
children is P .O. Box 5Z7, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45'769. You can wrtte your
CommtssloM's at the County
Courthouse or call 992·211!15. - The
Meigs County AlllancetorCblldren,
Sr. Janet Rectenwald.

,.
I'

President Reagan· s adminlstra lion
since 198J. He possesses the promi·
nant Washington status which
would fit the current llroflle for the
job being discussed by the search
committee, according_ to two

said "I saw him at the White House
six weeks ago and he didn't say
anything a bout It to me then. I've
never heard his name mentoned in
connection with baseball.
" With the state of affairs of the
sources.
country right now, I think maye we
But White House press aide Kim need him more in the White House
Hoggard Issued a sta!emey~tsaylng;
than we do In baseball, so I'd Uke to
"In the past three years, there have see him stay where he is."
been several press reports of job
Meanwhile, New York Ynkee
changes for Mr. Baker and we didn't owner George Steinbrenner
choose to comment on them then checked In Tuesday night but
and we don't intend to start now."
refused to clarifY his team's
Eddie Chiles, ovmer of the Texas . managerial s ifUation.
Rangers and a mer;d of Baker's,
"Fellas, I'm n.ot going to have
anything to say·, " he told newsmen
whohadwaltedsomethreehoursfor
his arrival.
Only one trade was announced
Tuesday as Pittsburgh came away
with one of the most sought-after
players at the meetings, acquiring
left·hander John Tuddr from Boston
In exchange for outfielder Mike
Easler.

.

more billions than they had ever
dreamed of.
As the cost Of energy skyrocketed, consumers had less and less
disposable Income to· buy other
goods, which cost more and more to
produce. Hence, there- was a
progressive shrinkage of economic
activity that had togo on until theoU
price bulge was flattened.
This has left" the Western world
somewhat In the predicament of a
stricken person In the pre-scientific
age: The victim must simply suffer
the full ravages of the disease, his
recovery depending on how much
punishment his system can endure
and how · durable Is the disease
Itself.
For a painful decade, we have
endured the illness while the OPEC
governments have digested a trll·
lion dollars cit Western wealth and
have become so addicted to spending our money that It hurts them to
cut their production further.
Now at last, OPEC's resolve Is
beginning to crack. Half of the
oil-producing countries, anxious for
more revenues to keep up with their

spending, are secretly selling oil
below the OPEC level. Even Saudi
Arabia, the bulwark of OPEC, has
formed a mysterious marketing
company in Switzerland. 'The company, Norbee Ltd., reportedly is
selling Saud! crude on the free
market.
This has weakened the price Of oil
on the "spot market" where oU Is
sold for immediate delivery.
Grudgingly, OPEC has already
rolled back Its prices to around $00 a
barrel. Now the gush Of bootleg
OPEC oil and non-OPEC oil may
cause prices to slide another $4 or
$5 . .
Today, the OPEC ministers are
gathering In Geneva to discuss the
problem. 'The radical oU states, led
bY Iran, are calling for tighter
production and higher prices. They
are supported behind the scenes llY
the big oil companies and International banks, which bave a vested
Interest In high prices. The oil
companies share In the extortion,
and the banks want to prevent any
withdrawal of OPEC's
petrodollars.

While Walter Mondale and John Khomelni as his vice president,
Glenn are taking blistering potshots although considering his vote on the
at each other as they seek the nerve gas, Grorge Bush will do. It
Democratic presidential nomina· would be terribly unfair to expect
lion, both seem oblivious to the fact some Innocent Democrat to clean
that they are neglecting the one up the Nllblsh left by the Reagan
· man who stands between them and administration; - $200 billon ye.
the presidency, Ronald Reagan. If arly deficit, a trillion and a half
either Is. worthy of the Democratic federal debt and the most sertous
nomination he wUI receive his just cold war we have bad with the
due at the Democratic convention
Soviet Union In a 'generation.
and washing dirty llnen In public Whoever gets elected president
only provides ammunition for the next )(ear Is not walking Into a
Reagan team next faD . Instead of garden of roses but a jungle of
engaging In a bitter personal duel prtckly pears arid cactus!
with each other, they should spend
their time, energy and money on
the failures of the Reagan admlnls·
Seriously, Monda!e and Glenn
!ration. God knows there are plenty could be better occupying their
to go around!
time by proposing some concrete
Will Rogers once said he was not plans to get the country out of the
a member of an organized political economic and m!Utary mess we are
party - he was a Democrat. 'The in. I can't see any great political
fact that there are now eight danger In proposing new taxes ami
contenders for the Democratic spending cuts as long as the
nomination shows just how dlsor· country's citizens feel they are
ganlzed the Democratic party Is. beneficial. As an example, Ohio
Perhaps some entered the race voted to keep the Income tax when
hoping to pick enough of a folloWing the issue was explained to them and
to entitle them to a vice-presidential I believe the citizens of the other 49
bid. Some, like George McGovern states are just as understanding.
and Jesse Jackson, know they have Everyone knows that the nation's
no chance at the nomination but are infrastructure has gone to hell tl)e
using their candidacy as a forum last 30 years while we have been on
for getting their particular message the cold war kick, a condition our
to the American voters. As it stands politicians Of both partley have
now, eight months hefore the serenely Ignored. We need new
Democratic convention In San ' bridges more than we need new
Francisco, Mandate is easily In the mlssUes, new sewer$ and water·
lead With Gl'enn a combative works more than battleships, clean
second. Mondale should have the air and water more than nerve gas.
nomination sewed up early In 1984 I can't see any political danger In
but I worry that a personal duel curbing the enormous waste In the
between the two men could cripple Pentagon, In taJdD&amp; our Defense
the Democratic nominee In the fall. and State Departments away from
Always remember It was the the Bechtel Corporation and acvicious fight between Jimmy Car· cepting Communism as a fact of Ute
ter and Edward ~ that let and learning to Uve on the same
Reagan slide Into the presidency In Earth with it. But, being a ~. I
1!81.
don't expect any poUtldan Ill have
To be frank, I heUeve that either the guts to say 10!
Edward Kennedy or Ronald Rea·
Mondale and Gleim ml8hl regao deserves to he sentenced to mind the voters that there are still
spend the rest four years In the Oval almoat 10 mWion people out of work
Office. They are the two men most and 34 mUJ1on Uvlne below the
responsible for the chaos created by poverty leveL HUJIII!I' lltl11 stalks
this admlnlalratlon. Whichever Is the land and It doesn't take a
elected should have Ayatollah presidential ~ to verify

'

lt. Read any newspaper and they
ten of hunger and soup lines In
practically every city in America.

BAGSDEER-DaleTeatord,Jr.,sonofMr.andMrs.DaleTeator!l,Sr.,
Route I, Racine, ldBed an 11 point buck Friday altemoon on theOarmce
Comell ~, Portland. It fteld dressed at 1.811 po11nds and was eight
feet, four inches Ioiii.

Cold first half
spells defeat for:
Meigs· Marauders

j

By KEmt WISECUP
· from the field ' for the game, a 36
ROCK SPRINGS - Kirk Granpercent average and canned a very
dy's 21 points and an ice-cold Meigs
poor six of16from thefoullinefor 38
Marauder first half enabled the ,percent. N·Y made 23 of 53 from the
NelsonvUie-York Buckeyes an ex·
field, 43 percent, and oniyelght0f18
citing 54-48 win here Tuesday.
foul shots for 44 percent.
Meigs had taken a 46-451ead with
After leading~ aftj!r one period,
a little over three minutes left, but
Me;gs connected on only two of 11
Grandy took c,Ontrol, scoring all
second quarter shots to fall behind
seven of the next B~ckeye points.
bY eight at the hal!.
'The Marauders crept back Into
Meigs had a chance to go ahead
With 20 seconds left when Mike
the game and tlnally tied It up to
Chancey's 10 foot jumper rolled off 39-au wheri Chancey ·and sopho·
the rim and N·Y clinging to a 4948
more Rick Wise drilled buckets at
lead .
the outset Qf the !ourth period.
N·Y goes to 3-0 in TVC play, good
Riggs' 17 footer gave Meigs.thelr
for a four-way tie for first . 'The
first lead since the second quarter
at 41-40. After trailing 45-41, Meigs
Bucks are 3-1 overall. Meigs falls
scored five straight to take their
out of a first place tie to fifth place at
2·1 both overall and in TVC play.
final lead at 46-45.
"We had more than a few
Chancey was outstanding despite
the loss as the sophomore forwanl
opportunities to'win but you have to
make foul shOts in order to win. We
scored 17 i&gt;olnts and grabbed 16
rebounds, both career highs. 'Jay
brought the bail upcourt four
straight times late In the game and
Carpenter added eight points and 15
came away Without scoring. I
rebounds while Nick Riggs had
eight points.
thOught Chancey played a good ball
game, , especially In the second
N·Y's T. L. Bentley, a~ center,
had 13 points and 10 rebounds while
half," added Drummer.
6·2 Brian Bullock had 12 points and
Resenoes Remain In First
10 rebounds. Both fouled out late in
'The Meigs Marauder reserves
scored their thlnl straight win and
the game.
.
were impressive in a 42-Zl pasting
Meigs managed only six of 27
of the NelsonvUie-York reserves.
shots from the field and 10 rebounds
while 6-2 Brian Bullock had 12
Coach Mlck Childs' crew goes to
points and 10 rebounds. Both fouled
3-0 In TVC play an(!, are In a
three-way deadlock with Trimble
out late In the game.
Meigs managed only six of 27 and Belpre for first.
Chris Shank led a balanced Meigs
shots from the .field in the first half,
enabling N·Y to a 21-13 halftime
attack with 11 points. He was
lead.
complimented by Brad Robinson's
nine and eight each by Shawn
" You can't shoot six of 27 and
expect to win very many games. I · Baker and Chris Kennedy. Chuck
Walters led N-Y With 5·
was happy with the way we came
'The little Marauders, a team
back, but we should not have been
comprised of all sophomores, out·
in a position to have to comeback.
We have yet to play anywhere near
scored N·Y lll·9 In the final six
a good first half," commented
minutes to win going away.
"Meigs travels to VInton County
Meigs Coach Greg Drummer.
'The Marauders made 21 of 59
Friday to battle the Vikings In 'PVC

I

ridiCulous when they have been told
bY their president that hunger Is a
media myth and that the_ hungry
have spent their meager Incomes
unWisely.

Churches and charitable lnstltu·
tions are attempting to !Ill the gap
'They might remind the voters
left by cutS In federal programs that
that the president talks like a .
provide school lunches, food
ferocious
bulldog and jiCts llke a
stamps and supplements for preg.
poodle. He promiSed
toothless
nant mothers and babies but the
punishment
for the bombing In
task is beyond their 11mited faciliBeirut
which
killed 239 U. S.
ties. President Reagan has named ·
marines
but
that
Is all. France and
another of his Innumerable comIsrael
punished
ShUte
Moslems for
missions to study the depth of
but
we
have done
similar
bombings
hunger In Amertca. I would like to
nothing.
know the financial status of the
I am sure Mondale and Glenn can
members. To appoint a well·fed
think
of much more'
bureaucrat to Investigate hunger Is

Berry's World
'
•

I

Standings
T T/c
Y
c c
Slandln
~c (f" 0...::
Team
(
~ W L P
1

Trimble ......

I

OP
. ....... ......... ....... 3 0 229 144
p

p

l gml~

NeI .York ...· ... .........................3 0 !81156
Meigs ........ ~ .................. .........2 12 1~ ~~

Warren Local ........ ........ .. ...... .l
V!ntonCounty .........................O
0
Federat-HackiAA ........ ,.. ........ .
Muter ......, ............. ............ ....o
WellSton .. ............. ........ .........o
illeoen'..l
3
Belpre ......... ....... ... .... ............ 3
Trimble
................................
Meigs ..........
.....,; ................. .J
WaJT€'1\ Local ......................... 2

play. N-Y hosts league-lea&lt;jlng
Trimble.
By qulllien:

N·Y IM) - Grandy 8-5-21: Bentley 6-1-13:
Bullock S.0-12: McDonald 2.().4: Kline l.Q-2:
Bohver 0-2-2. 1'olalll ~Melp itt! I - Chancey 7-J-17: Riggs 4-0-8:
Evans 3.().6; Wl.si! 2-1-5: Carpenter 3·2-8:
Welker 2.().4. Total!l 21448. ,

BeAIIPre
;~r·· ··..... ...... ................ ,
exa.nuot·

N:~y~

Mel1&lt;5 .

;,.,
3154169
3 156 ID1
3 100 221 •
.3 149 225
·
0 168 !19
0 127 ll&gt;a
01 161
ItS 144
116

p

.....

N·V (ill) -

Nei.-York ................... ........... lO

Federal-Hocklna .................... .

3

"Who knows how he hand/tiS such 11 rigorous
sch«Ju/6? Maybe thflf'e's something about
jfll/ybaiJns... "

Belpre at Miller

-·-

Me-Igs at Vinton County
Trimble at NelsQ!'Yllle-York
Warr8 Local al Wellston

iYMdri
Trl,_ Ill Mtllel' 57

Ne18o1Mlle-York 54 Meigs 48
Worren Local !Ill VInton Coonty 27.
11e1p1e 6'1 Federat·-klag 61
Alexander t6 Wellstoo 26

•
;rl l

,

.

~

Walters 3-9-15·, Martin 4-1-9; -

Tolalll 8-ll·Zl.
Melp (til - Kennedy 4--0-8: Baker 2-4-8&gt;
• - · 1-1-J: Shanl&lt; 5-1·11: Rollloson 1·7-9:
Ho~ashelt ()..()..(); Warth 0.2-2: Duff 1~2;
Harrison 604&gt; Pullins 604. Tololt lf-14-42.

1Ji

115

I

r~·,· Thery•~go~t~hlm~!re~a~d~y~f~or~u~s~.'c'~~

5.1 JACKSON PIKE· RT. 35 WEST
Phone 448· 4524
BARClAIN lriATIHEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS J1.00
ADWI!fSION EVERY TUESD.4Y $2.00

lE£CEMBER 2 thru
FRlDAY thru THURSDAY:

[~Jti [i1 [f] i

!_j

HOURS:

POWER TOOLS
&amp; HAND TOOLS

FOR HER:

'

..

.'
-·

.

..

SMALL
APPLIANCES

.

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

MIDDLEPORT, OH
"Special Christmas Hours"

Mon.-Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
Sunday 11:00 to 8:00

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

,'

FOR HIM:

BOWLING GREEN; Ohio (AP)
_An appeals heartngprobablywUI
take place late this week for Darryl
Story, a running back on the
Bowllng Green State University
football team, who has been
Indefinitely suspended from school.
Story, who averaged 4.4 yards a
carry as a starting tailback for the
Falcons this season, was suspended
for conduct code violations stem·
mlng from an assault case, a school
spokesman said Tuesday.
Stoiy has left the university,
spokesman CUff Boutelle said.
Mary Edmonds, the school's vice
president for student affairs, releasedastatementsaylngthatStory
had been suspended, effective last
Friday.
Boutelle said Story, 20, ofDayton,
was charged In November in the
assault of a young woman believed
to be his girlfriend. The charges
were dropped In Bowling Green
Municipal Court.
"'That doesn't absolve him of the
lncidentasfarasthestudentcodels
concerned,.. Boutelle said. "'The
incident stUI happened."
Boutelle was not specific about a
second incident which contrtbuted
to Story's suspension.
The University Appeals Board
can reinstate Story If it finds that he
was wrongly suspended, BouteUe
said. 'Thepanelalsosetstheamount
of time for suspensions.

OF OHIO, INC.
86 N. 2ND AVE,

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suspended

FRUTH PHARMACY

Det. I

AJe-xand~ at Federal-f-locking

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people off the line of scrimmage and the memories aside. I realized I had
CINCINNATI (AP) - Rookie
to move on, do other things.''
a nice job of everything else.
center Dave Rimington has over·
"If I were a Lions coach wa tchlng
Rimlngton says he has a long way
come his early difficulties With the
the Miami tum and this (Pitts·
to go before he begins to play as well
Cincinnati Bengals and Bob John- as he's capable of playing. But these
burgh) tum, I'd be'worrled."
son, the retired Cincinnati center,
'The Bengals host the Detroit days, he is winning his weekly
brands him the best ever at the
battles wltll.opponents and becomLions on Sunday.
position.
Rimington missed five games lng more a part of the team.
"I think the guy Is sensational,"
"'Things are working out real
said Johnson after Sunday'sC!ricin· · early In the season because of a foot
Injury. '!ben he rel\!med home to smoothly. I can't complain. 'The
natl victory over the Pittsburgh
Nebraska when hlsfathersuffereda situation Is getting better and better
Steelers.
.
"'That guy Is reaDy something. He
"I got a chance to go nome ... and I
looks like a refrigerator on legs,"
heartattack.
kind
of sat back there and looked at
Johnson said of the 290-pound
things.
It was a turning point,"
lineman from Nebraska after
Rlmlngton
said of his 'larly
Rlmlngton handled Steeler nose
problems .
tackle Gary Dunn.
"I put Nebraska all aside.l put all
"I'm not saying he doesn't make
technical mistakes, but for sheer . - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
pure pewer, he has the potential to
be a pressure point for an offense
like few centers can."
. Johnson believes Rimlngton may
he the equal of Hall of Farner Jim
Otto, who gained his fame with the
Oakland Raiders. He said the
Steelers' Mike Webster Is currently
considered the National Footbiill
League's top center.
"Rimingion can he better than
Webster and can be as good as Otto,'
Johnson said.
"I think he might be the best
center ever at blowing people off the
line of scrlnunage. The thing with
Otto, be did a great job blowing

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Mmer ... .. .............................. o 3' 951~
wellSton .................... ............ o 3 98
G~Ullfi'

6 155 22
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Breeze 1·1·3: Johmon ()..().(): Andrews OM.

VInton County ........ : ...... .......... 2 1 104 112
Alexarxler ......................... l ~ 1~ ~

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as

batted
In last
season.
. 54 runs
.:'IJT with
10 home
runs and
Tudor was 1J..l2 with a 4.00earned
run average In 34 games for the Red
Sox.
"He's a valuable addition," said
Pittsburgh Manager Chuck Tanner,
who has seen his pitching staff
struggle In the last year with the loss
of Jim Bibby, Enrlque Ramo, and,
potentially, free agent Kent Tekulve, and thequestlonablephys!cal
status of Don Robinson. "I don't
think you can get enough left·
handed pitching.''
.
'Ibis marks the third time the
Pirates and Red Sox have swapped
Easler, who has a career batting
average of .296. Pittsburgh sold him
to Boston In Octoher, 1978 but he was
traded back to the Pirates -the next
March before ever_playing a game
for the Red Sox.
"We had him farmed outfor a few
years over there," needled Houk.

~~ev~e~ry~g~am~e~,~ev~.e~ry~y~ear~:;·h~e~M~id~-~;;~;;~~~~~~;;~~

An end tO oil gougin.iiig............,_____J._ac_kA--'-nd_e_rs_on
WASHINGTON - President consumption Is increasmg. There
Reagan has a dramatic opportunity has never been a year, not even
to heal the economy and Inaugurate during the era of cheap oil, tbat oil
a new era of prosperity. All he bas men didn't find more crude than
they pumped.
to do is to drive down the price of oU.
In an earlier column, I warned
011 remained cheap as long as the
that the cost of crude could soar to United States controlled the oilnew altitudes. A flare-up In the gates. If the OPEC powers tried to
volatile Persian Gulf region could . create a shortage In an attempt to
create another oil panic, which Is all
jack up prices, the United States
the OPEC extortionists need to merely raised the ollgates enough
inflict the next price gouge upon the to keep the storage tanks fllled.
'Then !Uchard Nixon' became
world.
Yet Reagan can force the price of president. Through a jumble of
oU down by the skUiful use of U.S.
blunders, negllgences and timldi·
power. 'The timing Is right to break ties, he lost control of the oilgates.
the OPEC dam, which has been 'Thereafter, the United States not
holding back ou from the consum· only paid whatever OPEC chose to
lng nations. He merely needs to lift charge but also worked out the
the oilgates and flood the West's credit arrangements by which the
more Impoverished nations could
storage tanks with oU. 'Ibis would
expand the oil glut, and the price also pay their oil bllls.
would sink as the surplus rises.
Every time the consuming world
'There is an ocean of oil behind the cut consumption or raises Its own
dam- enough to supply the world's
oil production, OPEC simply
anticipated needs well into the 21st slowed dOwn its pumps to cancel out
century. 'This is oil that has already
the Increase and preserve a light
been discovered, measured and
mark~!. 'The Pikes Peak prices
cataloged. It doesn't Include the made It possible for the oil sheiks to
new oil that will be .found. The lower production and stUI collect
reserves are expanding faster than

'The Red Sox, equipped with a
surplus of left-handed pitchers,
came here prepared to trade Tudor
to the highest J&gt;ldder. And Pitts·
burgh won the auction by supplying
the Red Sox with the left-handed
hitter theywtn af:er.
uWe think \.'P • ~lped OUT Club,'"
said Haywood Sl•llivan, Boston's
general manager. "We think this
was the ~t deal we could make at
this point In time. We were looking
a
for a bat and we envision hin)
hitter."
'The retirement of Carl Yast·
rzernskl sent the Sox on the search
for another long ball threat, with
Tudor the bait.
"We were looking for .a left·
handedpowerhltterandwethlnkwe
got one,'' said Boston Manager
Ralph Houk. "With Yaz gone, it
helps."
Easler, who platooned In left field
forPittsburghwlthLeeLacy, batted

Rimington conquers _early problems

2. Wh/ls Feldstein In trouble•
Because he says that taxes should
be IncreasEd, somewhere alongthe
way. Because he likes high taxes?
No, beCause he dlsllkes high deficits
more than he dislikes higher taxes.
Now It Is not questioned ;hat the
president has tile right to demand
that his subordinates In their public
statements say either nothing at all
or else say things that are
congruent With the policies set by
the president. A presidential staff Is
not designed to be a hotbed of
academic freedom.

Mondale vs. Glenn___"-~___L_aw_e_ll_W.. :. _;in.!:!..:ge.. .:. . :. _tt

Congress watchers

'The Meigs County Alliance for
Children wishes to thank the
citizens of Meigs County for the
concern and support tbey have
shown for the county's abused,
neglected, and dependent children.
We support the efforts of the
commissioners to Improve services
to these children and welcome the
progress that has thus far been
made.
We regret that our motives have
been politically sUspected and
assure the commissioners and the
citizens of Meigs County that our
concern Is for the chUdren In need of
services.
We plan to continue our ertorts to
educate and mobillze the citizens of
011r county. As part of our effort, we
will continue to monitor the use of
.publlc hmds and the provl.slon of
services within the Welfare Department. We anxiously awalt the
receipt d. the state evaluation of the
adldrell's Services program and
hope that along with the provl.slon 0t
-,. \ mandated services, It addresses the

NASHVU.LE, Tenn. (AP) Major league owners at the winter
meetings find the election of a
conunlssioner and new president
for the American League the chief
Items on their agenda.
Dr, Bobby Brown, the noted
Dallas heart surgeon and ex-New
York Yankee infielder, remained
the leading candidate for the AL job
With a decision expected Thursday.
A new name -White House chief
of staff James Baker-was mentioned as a possiblity for the
commissioner's post. Baker, a
53-year-old Texan .has servtid In

Feldstein affair____...:..___W_il_lia_m_F_.B-..,-uc_k_ley.:__J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

'·

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Baker's name added to commissioner's list :.

Page-2· The Daily Sentinel
~

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.....

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the options and it looks great So step on 1t. Dnve.
Because SANK ONE has the rnooey to put you behind the

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4-The

I)Qily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 7, 1983

Hayes, Broyles,
Butkus, Simpson,
in Hall of Fame

I

TVC Results •••

VINTON WVNTY (!Ill ~ Radeldn 4-8-16;
HamQil ~ M. Bollender 6-2-14; Womendorl ~ Dodderlll 4-().8; L . B o - 2~;
ADman ~- 'l'oiU IS--.
WARREN LOCAL (..) - Butcher 1-0-2;
Frye J.I.J; Ingram 6-3-15; Knight 6-2-14;

McClain 2~ . 'l'oiU tl-6.!8.
By_....,
Wellston .........•.............. .... 12 .13 14 28--87
...,..,_ ..................... .... 16 2!1 2!1 ~
Relrfnra - Alexander f6. Wellston l6.

Mitchum 0.2-2; Phitllps lf)..J.23: Skagland

0-6-6. 'l'oiU 14-11-&lt;15.

NEW YORK (AP) -

Of all the
men 411 the College Football Hall of
Fame,lt isdoublfu.lanyonetraveled
a stranger road than AI Sparlls.
From an orphanage - although
not an orphan - to a Nevada •
refolli'Ultory for 6 ~ years to top
studept In his high school class to a
star on. the gridiron for UCLA to a
heavily decorated hero In three
wars to assciclate vice president of
Coldwell Banker, the nation's largest lll'okerage house.
There were more famous names
among the inductees Tuesday night
at the National Football Foundation's annual awards banquet _
Woody Hayes, Darrell Royal and
Frank Broyles as coaches, and 10
fonner college stars.

Maryland quarterback, 1950-52.
But Sparlls' story wa~ something
special.
" My parents were divorced when
I was 4, " Spar lis, now63, recalled. " I
had two brothers, 2 and . 6. My
mother took my little brother
because he neroed a mother's
companionship and my fa !her l&lt;jlOk
my older brother because he could ·
put him in school. I ended up ·in
several homes and finally wound up
In a Carson City orphanage at the
ageof8.
·
" My father, whowasln the mining
business, finally came and got me,
but hetookoffforEuropewheniwas
9~. WewerellvingjustoutsideEiy ,
10 POINTER- WallaceL. Reuter k1Uedthls10 polntbuckMOIIC!lQion .
Nev., and I hung around with a gang
the Richard M . Reuter farm, Ball Run Road, Pomeroy.
that robbed the company store and
other plact's.l neverwent Inside, but
The players, In addition to Sparlis, · stayed outside and made noise If
were Dick B~tkus, ID!nols lineanyone came along.
baclter, 1962-&amp;1; Bill "Moose"
',, "When I was 10 I was sent to a
In Meigs Junior High action while Todd Powell and Howard
FisCher, Notre Dame guard, 1945- · refonnatory, My sentence was
· Monday, the eighth grade boys lost · each had lour rebounds. Danny
48; Lee Roy Jordan, Alabama
supposed to run unlli 1 was 21 or at
54-50 to a tall Albany team, the Jarvis led Albany with 12 and Jeff
center, 1!19&gt;-62; Charlie Krueger
the disposition of the court. Four
seventh graders defeated Albany Grindstaff had 10.
Texall A&amp;M tackle, 1%5-57; Floyd
years later, the warden told me that
48-45, and the girls defeated Albany,
By quariers:
Little, Syracuse halfback, 1964-66;
as far as the state was concerned I
31J.l1.
Meigs
... .. ........... ... 9 14 14 11-48
Lewis "Bud" McFadin, Texas
was free to go, but no one wanted
Eighth Grade
Albany
.. ..... .... ....... 61117 11-45
guard, 1948-50; George Owen Jr ..
me."
The Albany eighth graders reJunior High Girls
Harvard halfback, 1920-22; O.J .
Sparlls' mother had remarried
mained undefeated In two games as
Coach
Rick Ash's little Marau·
1
Simpson, Southern Cal running
and was living In Phoenix. Eventu
they topped Meigs . Bill Brothers led derettes made It two wins against
bac~. 1967-lil! and Jack Scarbath
ally she came for him .
•
Meigs with 15 while Michael one loss with their. lopsided 38-11
·
Ba1trum added 12. Other scorers win.
Included Don Dorst with nine points
Leading the Meigs was Julie
and U rebounds, Paul Melton and Batey with eight. Other scorers
Joey Snyder with six points each, : were Shelly Stobart six, Tammy
and Scott Williams, two. Doug Wright five, Missy Woods four, and
Keiter led Albany with-26 and Mike Audra Houdashelt, Dee Harrison,
Chapman with 15.
· Stephanie English, Leslie Carr, and
Coach Rusty Bookman's five Sue Fry with two each. Chancey led
goes to 2-1 on the year. Names the Albany with four.
" Defensive Player of the Week"
By quarters:
was Don Dorst.
Albany ..... .... ... ..... 0 3 4 4-11
By quarters:
Meigs ........ .... .. .. ... .4 13 8 8-38
Meigs .......... .. ..... 12 11 14 13-50
The boys ' seventh and eighth
Host South Point edged Hannan
Albany ....... ...... .... l5 10 19 10--54 graders travel to Belpre next
Trace, 46--44, In a non-conference winners with 16. Doug ZOrnes added
11.
Seventh Grade
Monday against the Baby Eagles
basketball game Tuesday evening.
In
the
reserve
game,
South
Point
Led
by
Wes Howard's 17 points, with the seventh grade game at 5
Mark Carey picked off an
won, 33-22. .
Coach Ron Drexler's Meigs team p.m . and the eighth grade game at 6
offensive rebound and converted It
Terry
Cline
and
Gary
Kirk
had
upped Its record to 2-1 with the p.m. The Meigs girls play at home
Into the game'.s winning goal with
five
points
each
for
the
Little
victory
over Albany. Kevin Oiler aga~st Nelsonville the same night
three seconds left.
Wildcats.
Bob
Zlmmennan
had
added
14
points and nlne rebounds at 5 p.m.
The defeat left Coach Mike
.
nine
for
the
Little
Pointers.
Jenkins' Wildcats with a 2-1 season
The Wildcats return to league
mark. CoachJohnEaton'sPolnters
Friday with a home contest
play
Improved their mark to 2- L
against
Eastern. South Point wUI
South Point jumped off to a lHO
host
Oak
Hlll In an Ohio Valley
first period lead. The Pointers led
Conference
game Friday.
26-24 during the halftime intennls·
Box score:
stan. Hannan Trace forged ahead
HANNAN
TRACE (44) - Jeff
36-34 after three periods of action.
Barnes
8--4-~;
Rick Randolph 2-04;
The Galilans were 18of58from the
BUly
Swain
1-()c2;
Rob Brumfield
field for 31 percent. South Point hlt21
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DEC. 10_. 1983
3-0-6:
Deke
Barnes
2-04; Allen
of 47 from the field for 47 percent.
JUMBO
The Wlld,c ats were eight of 11 at the. B8.Uey 2-2-6; Steve Stitt Q.2-2. Totals
11!-3-44.
foul line. The Pointers were four of
SOUTI{ POINT (46) - 'Todd
12, missing several charity shots in
Cyrus
4-()c8; Doug ZOrnes 5-J.ll;
the final seconds of play.
1-Lb. KAHN'S PACKAGED
Mark
Carey
1\-0.16: Dan Thompson
Jeff Barnes, with~ points. paced
the Wildcats attack. Carey led the 2-J.5: Robert Kretzenberg 2·2-6.
Totals 21~.
By quarters:
HOMEMADE
Local bowling
Hannan Trace .. .. .. 10 14 12 8-44
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
South Point. ....... .. 17 9 8 12-46
Tuesday Trlpllcales
November 29, 1983
Reserve score - South Point 33
Hannan Trace 22.
SMITHFIELD

VInton Coun&lt;y .................... 16 ll If 6-!16
Wam!ll Local .................... 16 18 15 1~

R.ervea Coon&lt;y 'IT.

Phone 742-2100

.:Pk

0-i-t; Laruililg
4-4-12: Van.awayO.O.O; Westervelt4-3-U; Rose

0-1-1: ES9elstein 2-6-4; Toth 5-Q.lO; Campbell
1-0-2; Jenks 0-1-J; Roberts 5-0-10; .Thompson
1·2-4. 'l'oiU IS-I H1.
l'IIIMIILE (Ill) - Gatchel 3-4-10; Hooper
5-0-10; Sayers 0-H; Morris 24-8; Morrison
2~; Jones 1-0-2; Dupler&lt;-74!!; Faires 5-4-14;
Leach 1.0.2; Koons ~16; Lemp 5410. Totall
JS.IJI.ft.
•• quarien:
MUJer ............................... 12 8 17 aJ--57
Trimble ....... -. .....................•12 aJ 21 19- 92
Reeervee - Trimble 62, MOler 35.
FEDERAL-HOCKING {56} - Koker 2-4-8;
~7-19; Mallack 7..0.14: Deeter 4-l-9;
RusseU 1.0.2; Watson 1.0.2; Butcher I-0-2 ;
'l'oiU 12-IJ.II.

Sinnett

'BELPRE (7!) .-

HoldH 64-16; WULsman

9-J..21: Miller 5-2-12; Lockhart 24-8; McDer1~2:

mett

Logue 4-3-11; Ruble 1-1-J. Total!!

18-11-'13.
Byquarien:
Fed. -Hocktng .. .. .. .: ............. 15 1J 8 20-56
Belpre .. ....... ..................... 21 12 18 22- 73
RaM!rvta- Belpre 62, Federal-Hocldng61.
WEUHI'ON (6'1) - Sprig!!' 8-0-22; Un9-2-aJ; Newman (..2-10; Henry 3-H;
Jenkins 1-2-t; McCloud 2.().4. Total!!. 2'1'-tS-6'7.
ALEXANDER (81.- Hobo 11-J -23; Jerfers
1-0-2; Guthrle 11-0-22; Bennett J-6.6; Fen1s
do~

5-3-13:

(USI'S 10.. . )

Warren Local 58, . VInton

(~1)

MILLER

Wocxtgerd 3-{)-ti; Carsey 5-2-12:

A Dlvlelon of M•ltlmedla, lac.
PubliShed every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publl!lbing Company . Mul.
tlmedla, Inc. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, 992·

2156. 5ecoi1d class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: ThP Associated Press , In·
land Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Newspapet Publishers Association, National Advertistng Repre-sentative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
7-33 Third Avenue, NeW York, New

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: ~nd address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St ., Pomeroy,
Ohi o 45769.
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By Carrier or MOler Boule
One Week ... ............ .. ......... ..... ... $1.00
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Subscribers not desiring to pay thecar·
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No subsCriptions by mall permitted In
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OOU'
PEBBLE BEACH, Ca!H. (AP)Dean Lind of Denver was the
leading pro, matching par with a 72
on the Spyglass Hill course In the·
first round of the Wilson World
Pro-Am golf tournament.

_South Point nips
'Cats, 46-44; Oaks
defeat Southwestern

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

The Daily Sentinel

By quorten:

Meigs Junior high results•...

Ohio

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Week• ...... ...... .. ................... $1!!.21
52 :ecks ..·....... ... ... .... .............. $29.64
..~ ..... ........ ....... ... .. ........ $56.21

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By DICK JOYCE
AP Sporis Writer
Michael Young, an unsung
member of Hwston's Phi Slama
Jama fraternity last season despite.
being the Cougars' leading scorer,
came to the rescue against ninthranked Louisiana State.
With Hoot Akeem Olajuwon
hampered by foul trouble, Young, a
6-foot-6 senior, took control and
SCOred 25 points Tuesday night In ·
giving_No. 6 Houston a hard-fought
100-91 college basketball triumph at
Baton Rouge, La.
"We're not a one-man ball club ·'
said Houston coach Guy Lewis. '
In the only other games Involving
the Top Twenty. No. 3 Georgetown
romped past St. Leo 82-50 at
Landover, Md.; No. 11 Maryland
topped Penn State 67·58 at Hershey,
Pa., and No. 13 DePaul posted an
8460 home victory over Western
Michigan.
·
Houstcm Is 5-1 after suffering an
opening loss to defending NCAA
champion North Carolina State, and
Lewis called LSU the one of the best
team the Cougars will play this
season~ adding, "I think they're a
very, very strong ball club. I'd 'hate
to play them every night."
·
The second half was six minutes
old when Olajuwori picked up his
fow1h foul. He fouled out with 6:31
rerrialnlng, finishing with 14 points,
10 reiJounds and one block In · 30
minutes.
John Tudor, LSU senior, said the
Tigers at first we intimidated by
Olajuwon.
"I say intimidated because we
didn't take It to him and make him
prove he can put it back down our .
throats," said Tudor. The Tigers
decided totakelt Inside but "It didn't
develop," according to Tudor. "It
didn't work out."
· LSUreducedHouston'smarglnto
52-50, but Young poured In 13 of his
points after that. y oong and Reid
Gettys made 10 straight free throws
to hold off the Tigers, who dropped
their first-game in six starts.
Alvin Franklin added 21 points
and Gettys 14 for Houston, while
I.SU got 22. points, from Derrick
Taylor and 21 from Tudor.
Top Twenty
Georgetown, tuning up for Its first
stiff test of the season, against
DePaul Saturday, ran Its record to
5-0 as freshman Michael Graham
scored 16 points and Patrick Ewing
15 against St. Leo, 1·3, which got 23
points from Brad McDonald.
Ewing, playing with four personal
fouls much of the second half, alsbl
contributed nine rebounds and four
blocks. Bill Martin scored 14 poilits
and grabbed 12 rebounds as the
Hoyas controlled the boards .

DePaul. meanwhile . led by 26
points In the first 10minutesenroute
to Its fourth victory in as many
gfllT!es. Tony Jackson· s 14 points I~
the balanced Blue Demons' anack
against Western Michigan, 1·3,
which started four freshmen .
Maryland, upset by Penn State
last season, slowed down the tempo
and held the ball after the Nittany
Lions pulled to within 4ii-47 with
12: 02 to go. The Terrapins led only
57-51 with 1: 27 remaining, but Jeff
Adkins' seven free throws clinched
the victory , their thifd against one
loss.
Adkins finished with 15 points a nd
Adrian Branch added 14. Penn
State,1·1, wastedbyDickMumma's
17polnts.
. UitrankedTeams
At Bloomington, Ind., freshman
Steve Alford scored 26 points and
Uwe Blab and freshman Marty
Simmons added 13 apiece as
Indiana, · 2·2, downed Tennessee
Tech 81-66. Steve Kite scored 14
points forTech , 1-2.
_
Virginia, with Ricky Stokes' 15
points leading four Cavaliers In
double 'figures, boosted its record to
5-0 against host George Washington
65-55. It was the first loss in four
' games for the Colonials, who got 24
points from Mike Brown.
·
At NashvUle, Tenn. , George
Montgomery scored 17 points In
powering illinois, 5-0, over Vanderbilt 69-55; at Richmond, Va.,
unbeaten Vlrguua Commonwealth
was forced to rally in posting Its third
victory, 41-38 over William &amp; Mary;
host San Diego State got 29 points
from Michael Cage In thumping
Long Beach State 91-76, and Bob
Lojewski scored 10of his 27 points in
the last four minutes asSt. Joseph's
edged Philadelphia rival La Salle

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B~ckeyes

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book Holiday tournaments

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Coach
Eldon Miller, an unofficial tour
director for Ohio State's basketball
program, has followed one of his
theories by announcing the Buckeyes will play In Florida and Texas
holiday tournaments in the next two
seasons.
Miller schedules non-conference
games so his players can see
different parts of the country.
Ohio State will appear with
Tennessee-ChattanQOga, Stetston
and Florida A&amp;M in theCitrusBowl
Classic In Orlando, Fla. , In December 1984. The Buckeyes will join
Texas-Ef Paso, Nebraska and
Alabama In the Sun Bowlin El Paso,
Texas, in December 1985.
Both tournaments are stagE:&lt;! In
conjunction with college football
bowl games.
Meanwhile, a proposed Notre
Dame-Ohio State basketball series
will not start next season because
the schools could not agree on a
mutual playing date for the 1984-85
campaign.
The Buckeyes also are playing In a
holiday tourilament this year,
appearing in the Cable Car Classic
Dec. 29-30atSanta Clara , Calif.,with
St.Joseph's (Pa.) , Santa Clara and
Alaska-Anchorage.
"We schedule these things In such
a way that we can play in as many
different areas of the country as

possible," Miller said of his team's
far·fiung non-league games. "We
like to give our players a chance to
see different parts of the country."
As part of his theory, Miller says
he has been In contact with several
schools, Including 10-time fonner
national champion UCLA, · about
scheduling home-and-home series .
The roach says the Buckeyes will
entertain Missouri and play at
Cmmecticut during the 1984-8.~
season as the second part of their
home-and-home dates with those
teams. Ohio State plays at Missouri
Sunday after defeating Connecticut·
74-67in Columbus Saturday night.
Miller also said his coaching staff
had discussed the Idea of meeting
the University of Cincinnati In
Rlvertront Coliseum, but ·said

nothing has been settled wlth the
Bearcats, a fonner national champion like the Buckeyes.
"If somebody said we're going to
play, theyknowmoreabout it than I
do right now," Miller said of the
possible game in Cincinnati.
The coach said the problem with
the proposed Notre Dame series
was that the Irish wanted to play the
game in January or February after
the Big Ten Conference season has
begun. Ohio State prefers to play
such a game in December as part of
its tune-up schedule for the league.
"1 don't like to play 'nonconference games after the Big Ten
season starts," Miller said. Ohio
State has not met a non-league foe
after Jan. 1 since facing Virginia In
19M.

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-PIZZABURGER

99¢

ADOLPH'S

.DAIRY VALLEY

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The Meigs Marauder freshmen
defeated visiting Southern Tornado
freshmen 58-27 Monday evening at
the Lany R. Morrison gymnasium.
Leading the Meigs scoring was
Huey Eason with 14, followed by
Steve Musser with 10, and Donnie
Becker with eight.
J . R. Kitchen led rebounding with
eight caroms followed by Musser
with six.
For Southern, Todd Kimes, Eric
Milliron, and Jamie Hensler led the
scoring with eight, seven and five
points respectively.
Hensler and Brian Warden
shared Southern's reboundin-g flo.
nors with four each.
The victory was an overall effort
by the young Marauders as all 16
players saw considerable playing
time.
The Marauders' next game Is
Thursday , at Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium as they play host to
Nelsonville-York. Game time Is
5:55p.m.

SPECIAL OF THE .WEEK

"

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Young Marauders
score 58-27 victory

.
Eastern's reserve gb:ls' basket· had 10, and Wigal four. EHS was six
ball team dropped Its opening two of 27 from the field and three of 3 at
games recently against Fort Frye the line.
and Meigs. Eastern Is now 0-2.
Eastern lost to Meigs 19-10
despite Krist! Hawk controlling the
~with 9rebounds. Offensively
Tanya Savoy had five points, Erica
Kesslllger four and Hawk one. Amy
Young had 10 rebounds for EHS,
Savoy six, and Beverly Wigal five.
EHS hit four of 28 from the field for
14 percent and hit just two of 10 at
the line.
Marla Musser led Meigs with .
With Fries: ... S1.49
eight points, Jenny Miller had
seven, and Julie Miller added fwr.
At Fort Frye Eastern drooped a
23-15' decision as Cadette Jenny
Cucltler poured tn 1.2 potilts, Kim
Chaprrum zipped nine, and TaJMiy
~lrhart two. For EHS Amy
~
"At Tho End al the Pamo...,..Masan Briclp"
Y01111g bad six, EriCa Kessinger
four, Savoy three, tllld Hawk two.
' . . . . .Y.OH
. ... . . . . . ..- . . . . . .......
Hawk bad 12 rebountls. Young

I

•

3~00. Cao• ltl , Sll2.755,46000 INWITNE SS'WHEFIEOF: ' t /
I hiiYI here untosvDScr•l)ed myn a_me 11'10 CIILJs&amp;cl my teat
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to be till•~ I t Co•um cus. OM•o. 111 15 d~V and date.' • '•e
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1Rooert H Kt! z. Supt ott ns.urence.tOI'I~ 1~7~
Sttteot 01'11o, Departml!f1toi iii$Jrance CGrt licllll!eol
'\v
Compliance -' Tl'le undersigne-d . Supenr/tendent olin • , • ,.f
suranceol the Stlleol Oh10. heretJy certllio!!s thtl AETNA
•• •
LIFE INSURANCE AND ANNUITY CO of Ht rtford. Sl-'1!1 ' ,, .J
ol C&lt;lnnect•cutrhu compli!Kl wun th l' tews olthll Sta te
a pp lo~:~ble to ll'llfld 1~ auti'IOrlzeO our1ng tl'l e cu•rent t iiCir • •· \
to tn1ns.c1 1n I I'll$ 5111&amp; It&amp; appropnate b u~oneu ol n'ISurance Ill t•nanc•tl cond•t•on Is sf1_
0 wn by Its ann1,1.1l
k..o
st atement IOhave been eslollow ~ 01'1 December 31 . 1962 ·
Adm• tled ISS815, $2.594,751 \ 9600. Lo a oihll~ . $2,377.•
423.339 00, Su•l)lvt. 5216.227.!157 00 tnoome. $630,678.·
395 00 E~~&gt;eno•tu1es $4 41 ~J!Hl92 oo _Neussets 52-17 ...
327 857 00 Cap11111. St . 100.000 00 IN WITNESS W.H ERE:•
OF . I have hereu nto IUI:!ICflr&gt;ecl my name ll'ld caused my
. , ._.
Slllll 10 ~ all••ed at Columbus. Oh•o. th•&amp; da~ and oa te
Rooeft H Katz Sup! of lnsu•ance of 01'110 (•8J
State Ol OhtO Oep1rtment ot l nsura~e CerllfiCIIe of •
,,1
Compl1al'\ce - The unoe•s•gnea Suoennten&lt;:IE!f11 or to· ·
•
w rance of tne State of OhiO he•eby Ci!HIIIu:n 111a t
DAIRYLAND INSUAANCf: CO ot Mao•son St ate ot '
'
Wl~")n5,n has compt•eO wnn 111e laws ot tn•s Stil l
•
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ance n o l.nancoat cond•t on 1S sho wn by •Is ennusl
statemel'+l tottavebeen as folio ...,~ on DI!Cember 31. 19e2
Adm1tted assets, $3 40 636 654 00 L• ab•litoes s~~-.11 730 -:
855 00. Su1plu'. S1 00 . ~07 . 349 00 Ill cOme $210,843_492 .
· ,, ,
00. E~pend llul e~ 52 13 7f~ 942 00 Nel ~sse1 s 5340 •
6:l6 654 00 t:~pillll $1 398 450 00 IN WIT NE SSW H E R ~- •• •
OF I have n.ereun\osubscrlboo my na m ~ a ndc a (.l~ed my •·- ·~_, t
SI!Hi l O 111.! alll•eo_ll! Columbus Ohoo, lhts Oav and dat&lt;JI • ,, •• ..:
Roben H l(alz, Suot ol lnsunancc or Oh 10 1 ~ 185).
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Stale 01 On1o. Depa•tm.ent ot lnsura~e . Certil•cate
Compl•al'lce - Tne under$•!lned Superi ntendent ollr'l·
surance of the State of Oh•o hereby ~ert1f.es th at OLD , ·' ,
LINE liFE INS CO OF AMERICA or M 1lwau11ee. Stat e 01
:_.
W•SCOilSIIl hil5 compl11!d wllh me ta ws o t thiS Statf _ • . ••:
~ppliCi!bl!! IO IT an{l 15 3UIM fl l@0 CIUIIr'lQ \ ~ e Curr ent year
10 transact •n th •S SIIIE •ts approp11 a1e busn'less of insur· ' . . ••••,,'
ance lt5 1onanc1•1 cond•llon os sho Wn by 11s annual
;tatementto have been as touo...,s on Dttcember 31 . t962
, -•
Adm itted assets $315.299 367 00 L• ab• l•!les. S2&lt;48 355,
gj31 00. Surl)h.ll. $66.215 379 00 Income $11 2 203 · ~ - • ' • . ~
00 E-pen(lotures S6a 717 57'1 00 N!!l ~ §'iBI S $67.9-l3 . • J •
37900 Cao•tal $1 721l(XX)00 IN WITNESS WHERE of ~ 1 ,' ,
t r~ave lle~eunto suoscnt&gt;eO my r~ame and caused my see! , , , ....to oe 81fr• eo at Cotumb.us Oh10 th1s day and d8te
·-~
Robert H Kat! Sul)t oltnsurance of Qh 1o (115(16)
State of Ohro Oeptl!ment of Insurance. Cert• lica1 t o f ' ' '_ ...:
Comphance - rhe unde1~rgneo Superrntenden t ot tn$urance of the Sl~le ol Qn,o hl:lrt&gt;hy cen 1t 1u m at
PROVIDIENT 'MUTUAL LIFE INS CO Of PHIL.A ot
Ph1ladelp111 ~ StH t(! Ol PeMS~Ivar'liS nts COmp hed With
• ·~
1ne ta wt ot tr'!IS State appheabte to'' and IS aut ~•O"led
Clur•r~g the curren t yMr to transact on thiS stat e 1ts eppro·
~·
pr.a te bus1neu of Insurance o~ the mutual plar1 ttl'.,- _
lrnanc•a! cond1 l10n •s sho"'n by •Is an nual stataiTH'!nt ttf '
·
ha ~e been ils follo ws 011 (}ecember J t "t982 ACim illeCI
'" ;
nsets S ~. t~3 . 775,Z06 00 LlaD•hties .. s 1.!ip0.73 6..283 oo
Swtllu~ . $1 !iJ.OJ/1.. 923 00, Income. $~3Q ,6&gt;1 9. J 90 00: E ~ .:.,
~
peMI!ures SJ82 l aH , 6~4 00 IN Wl fN ESS WH EREOF 1 '"JI, ·'•
naVI!I n&amp;r!!unto subscr1bed my r~ame and c aused my se~l •.,- ..,).
to be a 11 1~eo at Columbus Oh1o , th1s d ~v ilnd !late -_~ • •
. •
Rober t H Klll l Sup! ol !n,urance of Ohoo (1563)
St~te of OhiO , Oell8 11nlt.'nt or ln~llf ll llCI:' , Cerni •CIIU!
Cornl)hilllCe - The under~g11ed Sul)er~nlenttent ot In·
sur a r~ce o t the Sial!! ol On,o nenHly Clft• l•es tn at TIME i
INSURANCE CO ol Milw auk ee Slate of WISCOf1t; 1n. nu ~
compl•eO wotn 1ne lawsol Ihis State appl,cable to'' and 11 } • ...
aut no,zed durong the cu.,enl rea• to tr an$i1Ct m tnr- ;,. .,..
slate •Is ~ pprol)roate b\.ISineu ot •nsu•~nce Its hn anc 1at t• • lltf
cond1 110n •! snow n by •Is ar~nual 5la tement to nave oeen
-"'
as lollows on December 31 1982 Aomuteo assets
$251 122 60t 00 Loab.hlles S1Q~ . J67, 33" 00 Surplus
•
556 9~Vi76 00 Income $209 J70.157 00. hpend• t_.,es· - ' .
$181 .95561100 Net usets 558 75!1'.26200_ Capnal' ~ • ,
$1 80~68-600 IN WIT NESS WH EREOF tnavehereunl~ '' ~j
sul)SC!Obect my name 81'10 C8u5ed m~ seal to be atfl~ e p a1
'Columbus Oh•O th•sdily ilM date Rober I H Ka!I Supt
of Insurance ol Oh1o t¥64tl
•
State ol Ot110 Department ol lnsur~nct&gt; Cern t•cate of
Co mp 11 ~ nce - The unCierSIQ')l!O Supenntender~t ol ll'l . , , ,
s1.1 r4nce ol In!! Sl ate o t On•o he1eby cert1h.es that
,
WESTERN SURETl CO ol S•ou~ Fall5 Sta i~O f Scutt\_
•
Da~ota nas com plrcd w•th tile ta ws ot thts S1 te aop t•c·
,
able l o •I and '' authoriZed du11ng the cun 1 ~e&gt;r r to ... , 1
trannct "' l h•s s t ~ t C 1!5 ~ ppropro a te bu &gt;mess ol H1Sur~
llllCe II ~ lillllll C•al CO!nl •toon 1s shown tly •Is annua r , .
s lat e~ nlt o nnw11 been liS lo llo w s on Decemne• 31 1002
Admnted asst~t s, ~5g , 252 ~611 00. llllblll t&lt; es . s3ii,739,- -., -1
996 00, Su•plus , 5 1\1, 5 t ~. 470 00 trn:ome, 532 .389.429 00
E~ pend1lu 1 es . $27 ,515.75300 f':icl assets. $23.5t2.470 - '
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hn ve he reui'+IO sub5c11bed m1 name and cau~ my S€BI
.,, . , ,
to oe a 1! 1~ed 111 Columbu5. Oh10. llns oay a11o elate
Robert H Kau Supt of ln,.u r ~ n ceofDil•O 1• 717)
'•
Stati'! ol Ot1 •o O~:~p~ rlmen t ol Insurance . Certoi!Cilte ot
Compl•ancP. - Tne ui\di!IS•gneCI . Supenntendent olin· •
j
su' ance o t l11fl State or Oh10 l'lereby ccrtihes that
TAUMAN NIHIONAL LIFE INSURANCE CO ol Norlh'
• 'H
Kt n~;as C• ty . Stale ot M 1~SOu11 . has complleo w 1th thl!!
ta.,.5 o t th•s State appliceble to •I &amp;nO I! •uthor;l ed dutmg
' • '
lhl' curr Cf\ t vear to llansact, th •s $la te •Is approproBte
• ,
bus1ness ot,nsurance !I s hnanc,~ t COI!Cl• tH)IliS showlll:!y •
·~
1! 5 annual statement to ha•e tleelliU lollow s on Ooeem- •. ·•
bef3\ 1982 A dm•lli&lt;dilss"ts 56.1123.24\100 l.• atl thll~
•
UII03,00900 Stu;ptus , S1 ,020.24000. 11'1COII"IE 511256
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63100, E~ peMIIuros . $81)23 19100 Neta5setS S2.020'·
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240 00, Cap• tal . $1 OOlJ OOlJ 00 IN WITNESS WHEREOF • ·• '
I na~e hereunto s... bscnbed my n.amc and cauJecl my 5eai
to be af h~ed at Col\.lmbus, Oh•o. !IllS day ana da te •
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Rober t H K1111 Supl ot rnsu · ~r~ce ol Ohro !•904)

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pll.ll ,,$1.023.666,694 00, Income, $6.593.069 453 00: E~·:
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pelldilurea, 5e , tll1 ,931." 2500. Net uselli. St 0&amp;6,432,· • ,• ,

Senior Dee Dally, utilizing her
aggressive drive to the bucket,
scored 21 points, followed by Angle
Spencer with 10, Margaret Homer
with 10, Krls Wilson lour, Kelly
Whitlatch two, and Mary Hibbs

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S28,55t 097,61• 00 Lllb•lll iii!S . $27. ~. 665 , 261 00, Sur-

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AUTHORIZED
SONY SERVICE

sta te llli apprapr.ate butmeu ol •n~;uuwcll! Us til'1anc1al ' I
com1111on ' ' snown !!Y \~t an null slatement to I) ave tl&amp;l!n .'

I

For Fort Frye Cathy Clark
g;IIned top-scoring honors with 27
points, Jandy King added 13, Gloria
Brooker 10, Debbie Polk two, and
Donna Scaleppl and Anita Stoler
one each.
Eastern had a whopping 68
rebounds, led by Horner's 25 and
Daily's 18. EHS Hit 17 of 30from the
line and canned 16 of 57 from the
field for 28 percent.
Eastern hosts Hannan Trace on
Thursday, then hosts defending
league champion Southern ti)e
following Thursday.
By quarters:
EHS ... :.. .. ........ ... 11 15 8 15-49
FF ...... .. ...... .. .. ... .. 7 9 20 lG-54

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luthor,zeo durong tha current ya• r to tran511ct .n tnoa

Eaglettes lose, 54-49
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagtettes girls' basketbBII team
played three tough quarters, but
serious foul IQlllble and a spirited
comeback effort from the Fort
Frye Cadettes enabled the visitors
to claim the 54-49' triumph.
Eastern Is now 1·3 overall and 1-0
in the SVAC, while Fort Frye raises
its mark to 3·1.
The Eaglettes of Coach Susan
Arnold boasted an 11-7 first period
lead, then hustled to a 26-18 halftime
advantage.
Eight costly turnovers by the
hosts, coupled with three starters
being plagued with foul trouble In
the third period allowed Fort Frye
to outscore tbe hosts 20-8 In that
stint.
· Fort Frye continuously attacked
the Eagle defense inside, thus
drawing the foul. As a result the
momentum soon swayed towards
the Cadette camp and the visitors
tiptoed In for a silent victory, 54-49.

'

phed with 111e la wt ot th ol State appl•catlte to H t nd ia

Delaney Rudd and Kenny Green
each scored 16 points as wake
Forest,4-0, tripp€dDavidson62-5lat
Winston Salem, N.C.; Steve Mitchell's 23 points and 12 assists
earned host Alaba.ma·Birmlngham
an 83-73 Sun Belt Conference victory
over Old Dominion; DavldAllen's22
points led Northern Arizona to a
71-70 upset over visiting Arizona
State 71-70, marking the first time
since the 19ffi-60 season that the
Lumberjacks beat the Sun Devils.
Wayman Tisdale's 29 points led
Oklahoma past ArkansasState83-61
at Nonnan, Okla.; host Southern
Methodist hit' 64 percent from the
field In crushing Penn~; James
WIIIJams scored ~ points and
grabbed 11 rebounds as Southern
Mississippi tripped Mississippi
State .55-48 in Hattiesburg, and
Texas ~;ot by Visiting Biscayne 51-50.

EHS gals lose two contests
.,,

Stall! of 01'110 . O.par11ntllt of lllii.Jfii'ICI , ClftiliC IIIOI

Compiiii'I CI- Tne unoertogned, So.i pellnten.dent ol in- •
t urtnetot tna Sta t,ol ()tuQ , hereby cerhl~ trill AETNA .~ •·
LIPliNICO oi Har1 1oi'd, Stateol CoMectl~\ . h atcom- ~ • ·

74-72.

.

DAIRY

WASHINGTON (Special ) -

More t han 150,000 U.S. federal , stale
and localjob openings, both skilled and
unskilled , are current1y available. All

"

BOILED HAM ......... J~ ... $1.97

$8,342 To $57,500 ·a Year .
It's true.

••
w,

Includes Dolby
C1ssett Ded ..

HAM SALAD ............ ~~·.. $1.59

W. L
Ebersbach Hardware .............. .. ...... 64' 32

,.

.

WI ENERS•..•..•....•. .'. !.k~~ . $1. 99

...

"

I

BOLOGNA .: ............ 'J~·.. $1.79

-

.
.n

know it, it will be time again for Christmas Gifting. Come on in
Center today for the Best Selection on Sony Stereos.
.
matched Rach systems are available lor your seleciior• at
IPriCe that may surprise you ... and it's a Sony.
: ;

....,..,..

Team

•

.~

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~

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

~

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~-

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~
~

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2.~.5.~~..... .
-

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~

tt's time. You're ready. You've tinkered and toyed but
you've finally de&lt;;ided. Decided on the perfect home
computer. But wail it's a byte out of your budget? Well.
call BANK ONE. We've got.money to lend. We'll help you
bring your home computer home. So call the Slore. Tell
thef!l you'll be in lo pick i! up. Just come see us first.

'

'

'

ONE•.

,
•

~

BANK ONE .
-FOIC

•
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-=
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�~:.;~~~~~:em~be:r~7~· -1~9~8~3~;:::::::~~~~~;:~~~~;-~~~~~~~~~~0h~~io~--------~~------------------_:·__~Th~e~Da~ily~~~==~~:!~'

High School
cage re8ults

-·-

\

Aia'on N. fA Akron ~ Ill
Aiex&amp;nder • ~tlllklt

m

Aahtab.lla 72. ~ S. M
All'ltat:wa Edgltwood 48. Wam!n Howl·
uHO

.

P)'maturl.lni

• Ashtab.tla Hart. 57,

WeR-.veThe
Umlt Quantitieo. .

Val.

AustmiCJWn.nlch 61, YOUI!iif. Cblllt'y J6
A'VOI'I 71, M~ Buckeye 6t
Barbl!rtm 83, Akron Buchtel 72

z.

~
Caktwe-11 5.1
Be.a~Wood ~. Ktrtllnd
Be~reei: t6. Day. W'NR

H

&amp;orbhlre • Perry :rr
Bel"ltl Ctr. W. Relerveo

Recelvbtg the degree of the order
were Teresa and Mark Davis and
Peggy Kirby. J&lt;JI&lt; Klrby walked
throug~ the degre~:: with llis wife.
Katherbte Mltchell, worthy matron,
alld James Buchanan, worthy
patron, presided. Karen Roush
rollec'led the sunslllne fund.
lnstallatlon btvitatlons were read
frpm Albany, ~ J,O,;'Matamoras,
Dec. 16.. Also~
a reception
inlntatlon to lh\IJ!lelpre Chapter on
J4n. 3 honor!nl""e choir director
al)d organist Ll!t~rs were also read
from Grand Ch;lpter.
lt was noted;that the chapter will
be serving il!ll Rotary family
Chrls(rnas dinl)er on Dec. 16. Twlla
Childs announced final plans for her
installation on Thursday night. Past
GJand Matron Darts Preston will be •
the Installing officer.
:Mrs. Mitchell gave her farewell
address and thanked the officers,
commttteesandmembers.Asaglft,
Mr. Mltchell gave each officer the
candle Ughts carried In the closing
march. Emma Kay Clatworthy
complimented the worthy matron
on her work.
The pless!ng was given by Robert
Kuhn before the potluck supper and
a gift exchange was held In the
decorated dining room.

298 SECOND ST.

&amp;.\ UnJII!d

~d 51 stwm (Pa.)
~ N. ~Toronto 53

POMEROY, OH.

l.ocal

Kennedy "7

PRICES EFFECTIVE THKU SAT., DEC. 10, l983

lkkeyf fuU 51, CadiZ 48. 20T

adu!yl' W. 63, Sl&amp;rttoo Local :16
Cantlelcl 81, Hubbard 74
Canton GlmOalt 81. Un6ontown 1...ake S1
Clnton. Hert!Bge 62, Kidron Ou-. 55
carUs~ 66, Day. BeUtrook 51
Chesapeake 64. Poru. West 53

Cln.
an.
Cln.
CJn.
Cln.

Flag~!

14, Plket:CI\ :10

Ander3011 68, FOI"e§t Park 63
Greenhills 66, N. Co11£ve Hill~
Oak Hills fl, Cki. Northwe~t 45, OT
PI\YS. Ed . 11);.
C'brtstian lfo

an.

Sl.Bernan:l ~ Ctn . seven HWs 51
Cln . Taft 67, Cln. Aiken~
Ctn. Withrow 67, Cln. Weslern Hills !i1
an. Wyoming 61. Nonroood 5I!
Orclev1lle G'l, Madboo Plains 43
Claymont 51, RJ~ ~

Oe. Baptist 1J. at. Hawken 6'1
CJc. East n. Cle. Hayes 42
ae. Glltnour 53. Chardon :15
Cle. Heritage 5:1, Etyrta Ftrsl Bapt. 38
CLE!. Lincoln-West ili, Cle. Ken.nedy 9:1
Cle. PJo:teos 84. Cit&gt;. Hay 75
Ckoveland Hts. 87, Sha1tt&gt;r Hts. 66

BALLARD

·
LB.
ROLL
$}
29
Sausage ...~~~!~~!~~~... . ·
or

Qo\•eriea! 58. Norwa~ ~
Cool Grove t3. Frankltl f'urnacto G~

"

,.,

Col. East !Mi. Col. Briggs 46
Col. Unden ~\t c KinleY 63, Col. EMtm:lOr

'
.

.

Coklmbla 56, lndepe!ldenCI' 55, err
Col.~ 74, Cot. In~ 59
Col. Brooh)uwhen t'8, Col. Walnut ~

"

..

Col. Mttrun T1. Col.. South 71
Col. West 711. Col. Centmnlal

m

1/4 Pork

.

Col. Westland ~. Cdl. Franklin Hts. 00
Col. Whetstone T7, Col. Marlor1-f'ranldlll

.

Conneaut 67. North\wostf'rn. Pa. ~
Conotton Val. 70, L.akeland ~
CO'o'tngton fi1, Bradford 58
Crestwood 78. Waterloo 71, DT
Day, Dunbar 92, Ctn. , Hughes 81
Day. Palter'5oo 63. Day. Stebbins 55
Day. T«nplr &amp;1, Mlltnn:l Cltr. 54
Delaware Chr. 46. Col. 1'rft. of Llff' Zi
Dixie IR MUICII·UrUon 45 '
[)clylf'stcmn 58, On'vt.tlc 57
E . CIE'veland Shaw 85, Parma 51
E . Pabstlne 82, Usbcn :S
Elyrlll Cath. 82, Lc:.-aln Clealvlew 56
Elyria King's m. Cle. Griswold 56
Elyria W. 49. MJcMew 41
Fan Jt'l'lnlne'i QJ, Kalida 52

..,

St.W~Un

FO!l1011a

FRESH PORK BUTT
U.S.D.A. CHOI

Round Steak...~~-.~.199

70, Kansas Lakota

f'ranldln '10, Trelton-Edglwood 66
Ga!Tt'ttsvillto 51, Roolstown 50
Gibioot;ug 63. Tol. Northwood 57
Girard 73. Niles McKinlf'y 50
Go!ihen 43. Clcrmont NE 40
Grand VaL Iii, FaiTI'Ilngtm 40
Grovepa-t 62. P1ckertn!lfCI'I 50
Hamilton Badin n. Nl'l!l Mlam! 37

Harrison 66, F1..nneytCM'n 33
HopeweU·l..ooOOn 7G, Ar("fld!a

19
loin.~~-11

Jackson-MIItOI'I 8&amp;, VIenna Mathews C
Jamest"-''11, PB., 67, Bb:Jm1leld 48
Jetrenon 54, Ashtabula St .John M
John Gleftn 87. Ptlllc Iii
Kettering Fl\lnmnt lil, Day. Belmont
OI, OT
We Catholic 61, .Genl'Ya 55

/
•

Mans. Madtsm 84, New Ph11acJelphla 6.2
Maple HIS. 57, Rocky Rive!" 49
Maplt&gt;wood &amp;3. Badgl'r .'i"i
Mayflcld ?.1, Wkk1ltre 51
MayMlle 54. Ne¥-· Lexlngtoo 42
McClain 63, IWlsboro :l2
McDonald 62, LordstoWn 49
Miami Trace 63, Tt&gt;ay1 Val. 57
Miami Val. 49, Xenia Wllsal 43

of Meigs High School,
PQmeroy, h~ been decorated with
the U. S. Air Force Commendation
Medal at Sembaeh Air Base, Wst
Germany. · •
The Air Force Commendation
Medal is awatded to those lndlvldu·
ali wbo demonstrate outstanding
adlievement- for merl"'rluous service in the · performance of their
duties on hehalf of the Air F.orce.
Eskew is a security specialist with
~ 60lst Securtty Pollee Squadron.
He Is th~ son of Joe and Joyce
Murnaban of 1079 Reid Ave., Xenia:
His wife, Rose. is the daughter of
Rpbert: and Joan Snowden of 123
Main St. Rutland.

N . Royalton 50, Brooklyn 45
CJreROn Slrltch 00, SylVania Norti'Nic'W

Pa\nesVIllP Harvey &amp;1, Twtnsburi 49
Paint Val. 54, Westtall 43
Panna Valley Forge 47, P8J1'TUI Nor·

man~"'

PettisVtllf&gt; 67. Onawa Hills 49

Pons. East 59, Lucasv\Jie Val. t5

$
49
Potatoes....!~~~}.~~..

Ravenna 60, Akron Spring. S2

U. S. No. 1

Ravenna SE 78, Stn.&gt;etsboro 35
Reyooi~WI'R 11.

HWlard 50

Richmond Oak! SE 76. Adma 51

..

Ru55el1, Ky . ~ . lrontoo 52
Sebring McKJnley '19, Ledgf'mOflt 67
Sllarpsvllle. Po . 61. Cortland Lakeview

ShenanOO&amp;h 78, Indian Valll'Y N. 52
SOO!hlngton !'16, Mlnt'ral RJ~e 51
51~· 82. Kent ftoc&amp;oolt'll 8l

Scor~ard

2%

,.Nadaul 1 Mtdbt9 A"''"dMP

"'"'"""' OONFI!IU!J&lt;CE

w

PhUadelphia

""'""
Nfw York

L Pet. GB

144
14
6

L1 7
9 9
New J"""'
8 u
Washington
C«&lt;lnd DfvWJn
Mtlwau)te.!
12 G
Atlanta
10 9
Detmlt
lO 9

a('Yt'land

s

011eaao

~

14

12
4 · 14

Indiana

.'1111.'IOJ 1
~

2
5

.4Zl

6~

.f.W

Drink?~.~~-B 9¢

.t£r .5.26 21f.l
~
211.!
..lll 1
.294 6lh
.222 8

HS::_oo~a:
Dallas
Denver

13

5

Utalt
Kansas Cl!Y
Hcuston

ll 9
9 10
7 12

n a

·1

San Anlmlo .

7 111
P.:l.kDtv...-.
l..a! An~
13 5

Portland

Goklm State
Sea~

Phomlx

San 1&gt;11¥&gt;

.'7'1l .579 2Y.t
!NI 3
,474 tlh

.3611

~

.l'l3

7'1

.5lll

6 14

.D)

6 14
'I\IMdq•Gan..
New Jerle'J
Cleveland Hli
Denver U7, New York U2
AUIIIII 95, Plantx (I

.CIO

.:m

4
5
8

8

m.

KanNo
Cit&gt;"""'"'
U2, ......
Ill.
""' 1IX1

W-113, -

111&gt;
Goldon Stall! m SNtUe 100
~
Sin AntciUo ll8
W
1'1"•0...
Dstvtr •• ~ 7::6 p.m.
AUintl 111 CJewland, 7: !I p.m.
a;.ton Ill ........ 7:!1 p.m.
Roumn •t MDw•ukll!, 8 ; ~ p.m.

w.

HI-DRI

., n.u., ltZ p.m.

Ptlrlllnd • utalt, 9:.11 p.m.
Sin AllriiZ •t Bill DliiiO.

10:. p.m.
._...... a...

Ntw Y&lt;ft •t l'tallll:, t: Jl p.m.
KIIMM CIC)t 111 l.ol Anaele&amp;. lO: XI p.m.
~ •t Goldm Sill~. 10:.!1 p.m.

I

J

A layette shqwer honortng Cherie
Lightfoot Williamson was held
J:!lCently ·at the Bradford Churclt of

9
Milk.~~~~f.~~~L.~~~J5

Christ.

'

FLAVORITE

SUGAR

PUREX BLEACH

5 LB. BAG

$}49

Limit Ooe
Good Only
Offer hpires

GAL.

69¢

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powtll's
Offer Expires Dtc. 10. 1983

f

KRAFT

99
Velveeta ..... .2.~~~~~!.~2

DoiUI8 WIDiarnson, Mrs. Bob WUII·
anuion, Janet and Darla WUiamson,
Mju'tha Struble, Allee Struble, TUlle
ROwley, Frances Hysell, · Nanna

RIIBseU, Rena Longstreth, Gerry
Lfihttoot,and Cberl Seevers.
Se001ng

CHEER DETERGENT
171

oz.

s599 .

limit One Ptr Customtr
Good Only At Powtll's
Off11 £xplm Dec. 10, 1913

Margaret

c.o.

Chapman, Ann Webster, Ruth

CAKE MIXES

oz.

atns

werer

Weber, Donna Jenkins, Mrs.

BETTY CROCKER

18.5

1

A Care Bear theme was carried
out bt green and yellow. Refresh·
ments of lime punch, green a'nd
yellowmlntsmadebyBettyBiggs,a
cake decorated In the the theme by
Madeline Painter, and pitlato chips
were served.
Prl2es were.won by Jackie Reed
and Dreama Pickens with Kathy
1 ~ler winning the door prlzt.
Hosting the shower were Suzie and
Bonnie Lightfoot, Nancy Moms,
Carol Anderson, Becky Amberger,
D\ane Blng, and Mrs. Painter.
Attendng were Vicki Halfman,
Marty Ferguson and Chad, Edith
Williamson, Marcia Denison,

DINNER TREAT

JUMBO ROLL

2

w~

lAyette shower

Paper Towels.. 2f$l Pot Pies....... ~.~~--~f$1

.712 .650 1

13 7
10 10
9 11

I

BROUGHTON'S

Basketball

--

second

3/$2

'

~. Pat and Unda Noel, Emily

'

Sprague, Tretl8le Hendricks. Fran·
eli Shrlmplln. VIcki Smith, Bet1y
Pooler,~. Carolynand1belma

.W.••(I Brenda
Weber, Sllarm Rl8ell, Dodle ww. ·
~ GOkey, Lillian Burt, Edith
Fam!llt." Gladys Feye, OJarlotte
B--'DoiiiiiWtt

Umlt Th111 Ptr Custom~r
Good Only At PO!NII's
on. Expires Dec. 10, 1983

I
..
I ;

U'•n•u
.,._~

I

WU1fDrd. MarpretEdWardi,Joyooe
81111 Jeet Lambert, and Helell
Miller.
.

I
ll
.J

...

or aboVE' In all thelr
t

Charles BLssell. J immy

graoo -

Jenny Cleek. Rachael

Hensler, Brandl Mallory, Marcy MatheWs.
Jeremy Northup, Rasche! Rowe, Robert

Reiber , Beth Clark, Jaime Counts. Jenn1 Hill, .
Aimee Manuel, Freddie Watson, Tabllha
Willford .
Third grade - Julie Hill, Heather Hill.
Cluistl Maidens, Kelly Phelps, Eddie Sawy. er s, MichellE' stobart, NlkkJ 11\le.

Fowth grade- Kellle Ervin, Chad Granen,
Todd Harrison , Andy Hill, Jamey Holter,
Oavtd lhle, Trevor Petn&gt;l, Jenny Varney.
Flf1h grade- Jarrod Clrde, Ja50n Orcle.
Shannon CoWlts, John Hoback, Colin Maid·
ens, Jennl!er Smith, Jan WUUams. M ayla
'ioacham.
Sixth grade- Amy Hani.soo, Kathy ltlle,
Aimee Wolfe, Tr1cta Wolfe, Brenda Zirkle.

gril~uate

Mt.Healthy 7'2, Cln. 1'urpAn J9
NeiSOnVUJe. York 54, Meigs 48
New Rlctuoond 53. Bethel-Tate 51
Nl'W Rk'KPl fll, Vanlue 47
N. Bf'lld Tayk&gt;r 11. Reading 40

ot B

Counts.

Staff Sgi. Carl A. Eskew, a 1971

Morgan 75, Croolcsvllie 56

"'

First grade -

Eskew decorated

Mhklk&gt;t~· n Fmwldt 61 , M iamisburg~
Mldd1e1:0Wil Madison 61, Eaton 46
Mllk'I'Ya Dl. W. Branch !15

been announced. Making a grade of B . or
:!r::e~ their su bjects to be named to the

The women Ptanned a Chrlstmas
party to be held on Dec. 22 at Duffs
with caroling on Dec . 24. The

·

Mlchael Evans , Matthew Groggel, Corey
Hattleki, VirginJa Pickens, Kenny Rizer,

Chrlsdmas bazaar Was teported a
success. Next meeting will be Jan.

'

Fourth grade - Joshua Codner, Mlch~.t('\

Filth grade - Melanie Adam&gt;. Junle
Beagle, Jayson Codner, Chris Harmon,

Stxth gradeNancyTanya
Hunl,
Tommy
Stobart,Shert
ZeliaRoush,
Lawson,
Meadows, Jason Quillen, Becky Roush, Greg
Weddle, Diana WUibarger . J . J . Laurence.
E.M.R. -

wu11s·.

ers

31 at the home of Lois Wolfe, 7: 30
p.m . The Christmas program at the

HUI, Betty Munson .

Jeremy Rose.

r=an~d~f:m:a:n:c:la:l:al:d~co=u:nse::io~rs:·_ _j_::O:P:EN::::9=to=5=D=a=ily:;:l:l:o::S=Su:n:.~

~hairman.

Third g.-ade- Nick Adams. Sherry Cooper,

Barbie Roush, Shawn Wolfe.

settias. hanging Potnsettia bas- ,
kets, Christmas Cactus. Holly ,
Trees . Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees. ·•
African Violets and Foliage Plants.
ALSO: Candie arrangements, candle
nngs. door wreaths, grave blankets.
and cemetery vases and wreaths.

treasurer; Wbna PoWell, teporter;

Christie CooP"'. Tonya

Cremeans.

Now Open For The
Christmas Season
•
large selection of potted Poin· •

.Margaret Powell, flower chair·
man;
Anna Wofe, secret pal

f'lrst grade - Scott Carsey, Tara Congo.
Michelle Harris,
Serond - g.-ade -

Syracuse, OH . 992-5776

New officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Ladles
AuxllJary of the Mount Mortah
Church of God held at the home of
Shirley Simpson.
Elected were Hedl Laudermilt,
president; Tessie Wolfe, vlcepresident; Alisa Findley, ~rtary·

11

announced.

services offices.
CPS will handle the major
components of the program, with
assistance from personel from
admission and adultlearning services. Counseling sessions also may
be arranged with other resource
people, such as faculty memhers

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE "

Church of God
lAdies Auxiliary
elects officers

fQ S

The second six weekS grading period honor
roll of the Portland Elementary School has

subJects to be named to the roll were:

NE;W NUIISE
~gela
Houchins, flaulh'er of Mr. and
Mrs. Siephen Houchins, Mlddlepoti, received her B!IIOCiate
degree In nunlnglrom Jlocldng
Technical Ceil(lge In September.
A 1981 graduate of Melp High
-School, she wiD lake her registered nune otate board examl·
nation In February.

Bacon.................L.B~

Macon Eastern 78, FeiJd!Y 57
MadiSOn 56, Mentor 49

h 1 honor

SC ()(}

The second stx wee~r.&amp;,.gradlng period honor
roll of the Racine Elementary Scl'Dol has been

Making a grade

I

KAHN'S CRISPY SERVE

Wewcod 71. Gai~d Hts. 53
l..t'banon 1112, Lemon-Monroe 59
Uma 74. Celina f7
Lorain Southview .iJ. Olm5ted f'aUs 53

Ten persons will be Initiated Into excellence in the study of the
the Ph( Alpha Theta International wrtting of History . It Is highly
history honorary at Rio Grande democratic, however, In the fact
Cpllege and Community College that any student of History may
today.
become a member simply by
Ronald Hammond, Lort Mea·
maintaining a high standard of
dows, Donna Pasquale, Lynn Rees,
work in his studies, as well as In the
John Saunders, and Patrick D.
fact that all the .members partie!·
Stout, all of Gallia County; James
pa te in the work and in the direction
Kessinger of Jackson County; Joan
of the society.
Manuel and SaUildra Tillis, both of
At the same time, Phi Alpha
Meigs County; and Jeffrey Saund- Theta Is a professional society ers of Lawrence County wUI be
the objective of which is the'
Inducted into the elite group. Over
promotion of the study of Hlstocy by
50 members have been Inducted
the encouragement of research,
Into the group since Its inception at
good teaching, publication, and the
Rio Grande College on Feb.18,1982. exchange of ·learning and thought
Clodus R. Smith, president of Rto · among historians. It seeks to brtng
Grande College and Community
students, teachers and writers of
College, will speak to the gathertng.
History together both intellectually
The membership of Phi Alpha
and socially, and It encourages and
Theta is composed of students and
assists, In a variety of ways,
professors who have been elected to
histortcai research and publication
membership upon the basis of
by Its members.

•
M~tgs

r------------------1!

Persons Interested In the program should contact Dr. Michael
Hanek by stoppbtg In at 314 Hudson
Health Center or by calling (614)
5!»-trol. The office Is open from 8
a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through
Frtday.
Many older prospective students
are uncertain about educational
and career plans, according to
Hanek, director of the university's
Counseling and Psychologlcllf Services (CPS). Thewlnterprogramls
Intended to help those students, .on
an btdlvidual basis , to explore
specific talents and Interests and
Identify approprtate educational
and career dlrectons.
- The only cost to participants Is a
$3 fee for those who take the Strong
Vocational Interest Inventory .
The ad11lt counseling effort Is a
joint project of CPS and the
admissions, career planning and
placement, and adult learning

Local residents enter
honorary at RGC-CC

·

Wieners...... J~.~z, .P.K.~. 89¢

llooston 56, Ansonia :E
HcPNiand C'tlr. Sl, Stwnn 1Pa.1 Chr. :fi
MadisOn fii, Mentor 49

LEARNING CONFERENCE - Woodland Centers recently hosted
the Mountain Association lor PartlaJ Hosp1tallzation Conlerence.ln this
photograph, participants learn "New Games" techniques lor therapy of
mentally Ill. There were representatives from mental health agencies,
colleges and unlversltles, nursing homes and social services from Ohio,
West VIrginia and Kentucky .Lygta Williams, Transitional Services at
Woodland, was elected Correspondent for the MAPH organization. The
group which works to enhance understanding of the mentally m, and
· JH"""''lls Innovative treatment stmregies.

'
99¢
Steak/Roast.-.....L~.
·-

have been out of school for some
time and who are now consldertng
enrolling at Ohio University to
begin or resume studies or to seek
an additional degree.

•

~

,

SUPERIOR FRANKIE

m

11
f
career counse ng or
prospective adult students is being
offered . by Ohio University now
through Dec. 20. ·
Individual counseling sessions,
which are avatlaWe by appobtt·
ment, are designed for non·
. traditional students - adults who

was

canton Trtnlt)' 7'l. Malw'm 49
cardinal 9!. Newbury 55
Oill!Jcol:lr

spee1a1

Star.

m

BE!UIIre St.Jom 75, Mln&amp;O 68
Bel'" 13, Fecll!'ral Hocklnll !56
'I

STORE HOURS
Mon.:Sat. B.AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Atwater Chr. 72. Akron Cllt. 32
Auron 18. Rldlmond Hts. n

Adult career counseling ·
scheduled by Ohio Univ.

._jl)ltlatocy work lor thref' candl·
dates was exemplified' at the'
Thursday night meet big of Evangeline Chapter, Order of the Eastern

AmeUa8l,~M

,

OES chapter
has meeting

church

WUI

be held on

-

DeC. 21 at 7

Pomeroy

r-P~·=m~-~---..:.----,----L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-!

MicheUe M cDaniel s, Edgar

,.

L.D. - Billy Martin.

P•-••••-•••••-•••••---~~

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CHRISTMAS TREES

I

CUT YOUR OWN AT

•

BRADFORD'S .GROVE

II

PRE-CUT TREES AvAILABLE
GIFT SHOP ITEMS

Ii

WATCH FOR stGNs
Hours: 1 0 Til Dark

a
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111 Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin onto Rt. 681. go 4 miles to Mile· 11
II post 13. turn south on cravel road I Yz miles to grove.
M

1
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THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

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k's ne•er too late to learn. Sigo on the dotted line. Enroll. 11

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SALE ENDS DEC. 1Oth

I,ifeshrle

THE LOAN
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AT BANK ONE.

•
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BANK ONE .

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

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ofREE DEliVERNIICL DEC. 24th
oFIIAIICIIG AVAIIAILE

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'&lt;

�Pc;lge-8- T~ Daily Sentinel

J:amily Medicine

Shampoos don t stop all itching and dandruff

Wolf Pen

1

L

By Edward Schrech, D.O.

-"""'slant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: Theshampooslbuy
ln the store don't get rid of my
dandruff or help the Itching. What
do you suggest?
·
A N S W E R :,
0 l ten what
seems to he dan·
druff Is found on
- ~
examination to ·
be a common
skIn a i I men t
called seborrheic (sel&gt;-or-re-Jc 1der-

Calendar

matitls. Seborrheic dermatitis is a
chronic lnllammatorydiSeasewith·
out a known cause. Because it
causes Itching and the release of a
white, flaky material from the
scalp as dandruff does , it Is
sometimes passed off as sjmple
dandruff and n o t tr eated
appropriately.
Unlike dandruff, seborrheic der·
matitis is characterized by marked
redness and sometimes swelling of
the skin underlying the areas of
flaking materia l. Treatment be·

hond dandruff control may ·be
needed to rorrect the condltien.
Seborrheic dermatitis usually
occurs in the hairline of the
forehead, behindtheearsandlnthe
eyebrows: Frequently it Is seen In
the outer part of the ears, and
sometimes it is even found away
from the head on the abdomen near
the navel.
Alth0ugh the condition Is most
likely to appear tn body areas with a
high concentration of oll glands, a
,·clationship with the over activity of .
'

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a

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Thomas W.
Karr, distrtct . deputy grand
master of the Twelfth Masonic
Dlstlict will be present for . the
installa lion of"bfficers of Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, Wednesday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.

l

I

THURSDAY
MIDQLEPORT - lnstalla·
tlon of officers will be held by
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order.
of the Eastern Star, at 7:30p.m.
• Thursday at the Middleport
· Masonic Temple. The past
: grand matron; Doris Preston,
will be the lnstalllng officer.
POMEROY - .Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Plil Sorority, will meet
. Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
Riverboat Room.
LAUREL CLIFF - The
Laurel Cliff Better Health Club
wil have its annual Christmas
party Thursday at the home of
Marjorie Fetty, 6:30p.m. There
will be a $3 gift exchange.
ROCK SPRINGS- The Rock
Springs Grange will have Its
annual holiday potluck at Thursday, 6:30p.m., at the hall . There
will be a white elephant gtlt
exchange: Members are re!
minded to take gifts for the
Athens Mental Health Center.

.

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter. Women's Aglow Fellowship, will meet Thursday at
6:30 p.m. for a dinner and
meeting at the Holiday Inn.
Karen Jackson of Ravenna will
be the speaker.
POMEROY - The Southern
Band Boosters will meet Thursday at8 p.m. in the band room at
the high school.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Shrine
39, White Shrine of Jerusalem
will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Ceremonial wlll be held and
potluck refreshments wlll he
served.

Happenings

APPEARING AT FUND RAISER - The Amazing Conkllns wlll
appear In the Magic HoBday Fantasy, Dec. 10, at Meigs Jwtior High
School Auditorium. The program is a fund raiser for the Middleport
Volnnteer Ftre Department.

Houdashelt enlists with USAF
Robert 13. Houdashelt. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Paul R Houdashelt of 102
Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy, enlisted
in the U.S. Air Force's Delayed
Enlisted Program, according to S.
Sgt. Michael Stormer, Air Force
recruiter in Athens.
Houdashelt , a 1982 graduate of
Meigs High School, is scheduled for
enlistment In the Regular Air Force
in February. Upon graduation from

the Air Force's six-week basic
training course, he is scheduled to
receive technical training in the
Electronic Computer System
specialty.
Houdashelt will be earning cred·
Its toward an associate degree
through
the Community
College
of
the Air Force
while attending
basic
and other Air Force technical
training schools.

the oil glands has not heeri ttnnly
established. We do know that
seborrheic dermatltl,s Is not caused
by Infection from a bacteria or by a
virus, aJ)d that Dare-ups are
frequently associated with pertods
of stress.
QUESTION: Are some people
more likely uian 'Others to get
seborrheic dermatitis?
·
ANSWER: Thls condition ts
frequently seen In older patients
with such disorders as Parkinson's
disease, which often Increases
secretions from the skin's oll
glands. Babies also frequently get
seborrheic dermatitis- most of us
call the condition In Infants "cradle
cap." But seborrheic dermatitis ls a
fairly common disorder tn people of

Magic fantasy ·
fund raiser
for Middleport
fire department
Final arrangements have been
completed for at\ exhibition of the
Magic Holiday Fantasy, a national
touring production to appear !I)
Middleport on Saturday, Dec. 10,
according to a spokesman of the
Middleport F ire Department.
"In our efforts to bring clean,
wholesdme, family entertainment
.to our area, the department Is
sponsortng Magic Holiday Fantasy, a 90-mlnute indoor presentation, at the Meigs Junior High
Audltortu m, the spokesman said.
Proceeds from this' annual fundraising event will be used for the
group's civic activities and communlty betterment.
Magic Holiday Fantasy, featurIng some of America's finest
musicians, with magic Illusions
that will give a fantastic and
incredible evening of 4.hrills, au·
dlence parttclpa tlon and pure fun
that will astound and delight.young
and old alike, the spokesman said.
An advance sale of reduced-rate
tickets lw now In progress throughout the area by telephone. The price
In advance ls $3 each for adult or
child.
The Middleport Fire Department
Invites everyone to attend and join
In the fun .

all ages.
QUESTION: , How is seborrheic
dermatitis treated?
ANSWER: Generally doctors try~
tD remove the scaling, reduce the
oiliness of the skin, ellmlnate the
lnflammat!Dn and control the Itchlng. Treatment preparations often
Include simple, over-the-counter
anti-dandruff and anti-seborrheic
-shampoos or ointments. If these
don't work, then a number of
different prescrtpttnn medlcat!Dns
can be used, Including topical
sierold ointments.
To stop excess flaking, a medica·
t!on contalnlng an agent which
helps remove dead skin cells faster
than usual, such as a sallcycllc acid
or coal tar,ls suggested. MUd soaps
with a vegetable otl base are bes for
bathing and shampoolJ!g because·
they do not Irritate the Inflamed
skin.
To treat cradle cap, a parent can ·
oil or mtneral oil to the

crusty lesions on the baby's bead.
The mineral oil softens the crust
and makes It easter to re~e with
shampooing.
Anlmportantpartoltrea\mentls
edudatlng the patient that sebor·rhelc dermatitis Is a continuing,
non-curable disease that may tlare
up throughout life but which can be
mlnlmlzed with the proper care.

personal
happenings

I

Personal note
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bacon and
tamtly, Westerville, spent Thanks·
giving with his mother, Mary
Bacon, Mtddleport, and hls .father,
Judge John C. Bacon, Racine.

'

Mr. and Mrs. George Drapper of
Missouri are here visiting Mr, and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, KaU, Kevin and
Charles of Langsville. They are
comblnlng their visit here with deer
hunting.
Caroand Kimberly Sprouse of St.
Louis, Mo., were Thanksgiving
holiday guestrsof Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Sargent and family, and Mr. and
Mrs. Rol!ert Reed.
Mr. and Mrs. Poyle Knapp, Kail,

Kevin and Charles and Mrs. Iva
Johnson were Thanksgiving Day
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Charley
Smith.

Mrs. Iva Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Holly and son, Calvin Lee,
were Thanksgiving Day dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson, Tammy and Terry.

9

Airman Robert L. Adkins, son of .
Robert L. Adkins of 5519 Howland
. Road, Ripley; and Gloria J . Adkins
of Chesapeake, has -C\)mpleted AJr
Force basic training at Lackiand
Air Force Base, Texas.
r
During tl\e six weeks at Lack(Qffi
land, the airman studied the Air
•
•
Force mission, organization and
customs and received special trainlng In hum~n relations.
The airman will now begin
on-the-Job training In the services
' - - - - - - - , . . . . - - - - field at Mac Dill Air Force Base,
Fla.

R.L. Adkins
.leles
P
bnst"c
tratntng
a.
,

DECORATING
Route 7
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains

'.

667-6485

Best

••

BE A.N EA.RLY CHRISTMAS SHOPPER

,,., '"'

noon co . tnMs ANO
PIICU GOOD SUNDAY OIC
4 JHIOUGH SA fUlDA 'I OlC

10 1H-' IN

Gallipolis and Pomeroy.

WI IISIItYI fHI ' liGHT 10
liMIT QUAN11TIU
NONI

1-4·17· LB . AVG . FRESH

SOlD tO DIAUIS

864-4001
Action footwear. for
active people! Our new
collection ot WAHOOS teature
.
.
oil-tanne&lt;lteathers. temovabte·.
h•
contoored insoles. and supet. non-sliPHoltite outsotes destgned tor t e
01
ultimate in sute·footed traction. Come '" totlay and trY on a pair
WAHOOS .. Made in the u.S.A. by Northwoods Cra!tsmen.

in thl1 ad . If we do run out of an
advertised Item we will oHer you JIOUt
choice of a comparable Item . when
DII'Diloble refletllnt the same 1avlngs or ,
a raincheck which will entitle you lo 1
purcha1e the odvertl1ed Item at the J
advertl1ed pri ce within 30 days . Only one ,
ll'endor coupon will be accepted ~·r Item
pt.trchased .

FREE!
A st.Jper hi -impact outdoor
eQuipment case when you
purcnase a pair ot
WAHOOS by Wt!inbrenner.

.Whole ·Trimmed
Pork Loin

- JOTAL
SA Tli§FACTION
GUARANTEE

loch of '"'•n odv•rtl1ed ltemt l1 required
to be readily available for sale In each
Kroger Store ••cept 01 specifically noted

Everyth ing
Kroger

11

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b~o~J

guarantee

c

al
for

your total uthfactlon '
reeardleu of manufacturer .
If you ore n•ot satisfied , 1
Kroger will replace yowr '
lte~ with the same brand or
a comparable brand or ,
refund your purchase price .

lb.
SliCED FREE INTO ONE CONVENIENT
TAKE HOME PACKAGE

Hartley Shoes Located In The
PLAIN OR SElf·RISING

Upper Block in Pomeroy

Gold Medal
·Flour

HARTLEY SHOES

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

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

'

AU PURPOSE

5
-lb.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED. CHOICE BEEF

c

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Center Cut
Chuck Roast

18

Kroger 0•.5%
Lowfat Milk
Gal.

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C:lorox Liquid
Bleach

Office Hours by Appointment Only

Kroger
Cream
Cheese ..

Jug

USDA

lb.

$ 49

•

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GENERAL ALLERGIST

CHOICE
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SPOTliGHT

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

Bean
Coffee ..

Gal.
Jug

THURS. 4:00 to 9:00
SUN. 11:00 to 5:00

Mr. and Mr. Tom Summerfield,
Candle, Wendy and . Crystal of
Medina were Thanksgiving h91lday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell and Bertha Russell.

Page

CAKE

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., -INC.

WILL BE AT
THE POMEROY BURGER CHEF

guests of Gladys Tuckerman.

Mrs. Dorothy Reeves, Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald, Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill and
Carolyn, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell,
Jeff and Missy, Mr. and Mrs. Les
Frank, SarahBethandMr. and Mrs.
Robert Reeves, Bryan, Robbie, and
Brandy were Thanksgiving Day

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

SANTA CLAUS

The Daily Sentinel

ANNiS

EIRICHEO RDUR

Modern WOodmen
holiday party
: COOLVILLE ~ The Modern
Woodmen of • America, Camp
' 10!ro, will have a family Christmas party Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
at the Coolville Elemetnary
School cafeteria in Coolville.
Recognition will be given to the
25- and 5().year members. There
will be carol singing, door prtzes
awarded and entertainment
. along with the collection of items
for Christmas baskets for the
l)eedy. New officers will be
elected. Santa will be there to
give treat bags to the children.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

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

Film presented
RUTLAND - The Church of
God. Rutland will be presenting
the film. "A Thief in the Night,"
Wednesday night at 7 p.m.
Theme of the film will be on the
return of Jesus Christ when
there will be no place to hide.
Other Bible prophecy films to
be presented durtng the month
are "A Distant Thunder," Wednesday, Dec. 14, and "Image of.
the Beast," Wednesday, Dec. 21.
The public is Invited to attend the
showing of all three films.

. '

Wednesday, December 7, 1983

Wednesday, December 7, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PWS,ASA MEMBER,
. · GET:
-

SPOTLIGHT DECAFFEINATED COFFEE
HI. lAG ... $2 .69

REGULAR OR WITH
MORE PULP . FROZEN

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Minute Maid
Orange Juice ·

Fresh
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JOIN BEFORE DEC. 31, 1983 AND GET THIS 52.49 CAT BOWL

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This dishwaaher-eaf'e bowl has sturdy
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Pretty high-i!oes finish, tool

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P!NT RETURNABLE IOTTLES ,
TAl . SPRITE,

WILL .BE TAKEN WITH THE KIDS
PLUS ~'TREATS FOR THE KIDS"

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698 W. Main St.

sr-w•
A~t~UUJ o~
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Page

Pomeroy

10-- The Dd ily Sentin el

Weclned •y, December 7, 1983

M1ddleper1, Oh io

Baby breathed before death

Pike ·officials slow in reporting leak

(Continued from page 1)
did tell Hamish that she had had the
flu the previous night and hadn't felt
the baby move for over a week.
Hamish noted It was abnonnal for a
baby not to move.
When asked by Crow the affect of
cutting the umbilical cord, the
doctor said the baby's blood Is
controlled by the cord. When the
cord Is cutci&amp;;est to thetXldytherels
no danger. If It is clamped away
from the body, the blocd _supply will
trickle out of the baby causing it to
eventua lly bleed to death.
Cross-examination
Under cross-examinallon by defense attorney Steven Stol)', HarnL•h said she has delivered at least
120 ba b!es a year.
In answer te Story's question as
wha t Is the worst time of delivery,
Hamish answered that it.was two
minutes before and at delivery. She
also said labor pains were similar to
having a kidney stone.
The defendant had four sutures
and usually one is all that Is needed,
Hamish continued. The defendant
was in the operating room 25
minutes, when It normally only
takes five minutes, she added.
Harnish noted the defendant's
blood pressure was normal, plus
hlgh which could be expected al_o ng
-.1th a low blocd count. All otJih
signs were normal she stated.
When asked if the defendant could
have lost consciousness the doctor
said that it was "very hard"
question to answer. She fma lly said
It was possible since she did Jose a
great deal of blocd.
Upon questioning by Story, Dr.
Hamish said the baby's body
contained 500 CC or a IItle more than
16 ounces of blocd and said It would
take about five minutes for a baby to
bleed to death lfthecord wascutand
not tied .
It was determined that thedateon
the death certificate was Incorrect
and the date, time of death and
cause of death were n.ot on the
certi ficate of death.
The gynecologist when asked the
cause of death, replied she was not a
trained pathologist and could not
give an answer."Any guess Is as
good as any other physician, " Dr.
Harnish said
She again repeated her earlier
answer that the baby had breathed.
but. could not have breathed very
long.
Continuing further, Dr. Harnish
said an infant sometimes holds its
breath and this could cause death.
When that hapl'Eils, a baby needs to
be stimulated,(such as shaking it or
rubbing its back) basically It needs
care, she stated. She also said had
the cord not been cut the baby would
not have bled to death
'
Nunes testlfy
.,
Nurses Lucas and Gou!dln were
the next witnesses called.
Lucas said she was a charge nurse
In the emergency room and Is
res ponsi bl e for the en t ire
department.
On May 30, Lucas said an unusual
incident happened. She told the
courtroom that a lady came to the
night clinic with an alleged dead
baby which was In the backseat of a
car parked outside the hospital.
Lucas said she and nurseGouldin
went to the car where they found a
large plastic bag on the floor boards
of the vehicle behind the driver's
seat. Also on the floor boards on the
passenger side was a pair of blood
sta ined shears.
The back seat had red stams
Lucas sta ted .
· Nurse Lucas then described the
bag's contents whlch Included a pink
gown , a cup from McDonalds ,
french fries, and a sanitary napkin.
The baby was In a brown paper sack
that was inside the plastic sack,
according to nurse Lucas.
The witness testified that peellng
from the baby was also 'In the sack
and french fries were around the

PIKETON, Ohio (AP) -Offlclals
of a Pike County uranium enrichment plant were too slow In
reporting a radloactlVe gas Leak , a
federal Energy Department spokesman says.
The Energy, Department and the
Goodyear Atomlc Corp.saytheyare
continuing their Investigation Into
the Incident. However, Goodyear
Atomic spokesman Thn Matchett
said there appears to be nodangerof
radiation and that Goodyear and the
DOE will . continue monitoring
~adlatlon levels.
Matchett saki the release about
6: 45 p.m. Sunday came !rom about
60 pounds of a uranium compound.
Plant employees were not affected.
hesaid.
·
The Incident occulTed as gaseous
diffusion plant operators were
activating equipment that had been
taken out of service last week.
Results of a series of environmental tests completed by Goodyear,
which operates the plant for the

baby's head and had to be brushed
She was asked if there was any
from it.
other discussion with Pamela
She said they weighed the bab) 's concerning pregnancy.
body and measured its head. chest
Cundiff said she and her husband,
and length. She also noted the way Sberm, were planting some bushes
the umbilical cord was wrapped and She told Pam that she was
arou nd the baby. There was mucus worried about her statlng,"Tf your
from its nose and its arms were not pregnant you sure look like It, to
drawn up at the elbows. The legs which Pam just grinned,".
were drawn up and its hands
De;cri bes cookout
clenched.
Under questioning by Crow,
Lucas noted !he baby's cord Cundiff said on May 00, the family
measured 23 Inches and was layed had a cookoul at her mother's home
up on its chest over right shoulder, · .which later led to finding the baby's
around its neck and under left arm body.
and was blunt on the en4.
Go to hospital
She said they wrapped the baby
After notifying the hospital, they
and she along with nurse Gouldln were told to come to the hospital as
and Deputy Archie Meadows took soon as possible."Shermandldrove
the baby to the hospital morgue.
Pam's car to the hospital and Terry,
Pam, Mom and Chery l went In
Deputy testifies
Next to take the stand was Deputy mom's car" Cundiff testified .
The sister then described her
Meadows who said hewentto the car
VJsits
with Pam following her
that was locked and two men. a
surgery,
particularly with investibrother and brother-in-Law of
gator Gary Wolfe.
Spencer's were there.
Wolfe told her he needed to discuss
Meadows said there was a brown
plastic trash bag on the floor behind what happened the day before.
Pam mostly answered questlons
thedriver'sside. The bagwas folded
down on top not tied. He said he posed by Wolfe.
Cundiff then gave the jury the
unfolded the bag and found the
brown paper bag in the plastlc bag. follow ing account described by her
He acknowledged the bag was wet sister to Wolfe.
and he proceeded to tear the bag t· "Pam said on Sunday evening she
apart. When he did, he saw a cloth was at a girl friend's home In West
object Laying In the bag a nd he Virginia and she started having
moved the cloth and could see a baby pains. She returned home where
lying on its right side. He stated he mom was up and Pam waited untll
she was asleep. She then went out
closed the bag and locked the car.
He also said he saw a pair of and entered her car to go the
scissors on the passenger side that hospital. She managed to get the car
in gear, but couldn't make it. She
had a Lot of blocd on them.
Meadows then called the county thought if she laid down on the bilck
coroner , went back to the car and seat the pain would ease up, but they
brought the bag into the emergency didn't."
"She had no clock or wattch and
room .
the
baby came out all at once.
He stated he opened the bag and
took out a cloth garment a sanitary According to Cundiff's statement,
napkin and a cloth the size o! a the baby never moved ,or made a
washcloth which he stated was sound. Pam picked the baby up and
saturated with blocd Hesaldhesaw rubbed hlm on the chest , but he stlll
french fries on the baby's face and did not make a sound. She would not
tell who !he father was nor discuss
salt on Its forehead.
It,"
Cundiff testified.
After notifying the coroner' s
"Pam
said she wrapped the baby
office, the body was sent to
in
a
nightgown
she had on and went
Columbus for an autopsy.
into
the
house
to
change clothes togo
Deputy Meadows said he turned
the
hospital,".
,
the evidence over to the Gallla
Cundiff
testified
that
at
the time,
County Investigator the next'mornshe
thought
the
baby
was
born
dead .
Ing. It-was Later picked up by Gary
Under
cross
examination
by
Wolfe, mvestiga tor for the Meigs
Story,
Cundiff
testified
that
her
County Sheriff's office
All items placed mevidencewere mother confronted Pam, and Pam
•
identified by Dr. Harnish, the nurses broke down crying.
Cundiff
testified
that
Wolfe
and Deputy Meadows as those taken
wanted to search her mother's
from the car.
'
trailer to whlch Mrs. Spencer said
Agent Kennan Henry
Agent Herman Henry of the BCI he would not have to get and order to
was the next prosecution witness do so.
Story asked about the conversacalled.
Henry testified he was called tion Wolfe had with Columbus.
Thursday, June 2. by Gary Wolfe Cundiff said Wolfe looked "so
and proceeded to processed the car down" after he talked to Columbus.
Mickey Iaterfoundoutfrom Wolfe
for evidence and photograph the
that
the baby had oxygen down In Its
car.
lungs.
He said he took three plastic bags
She also testified under question·
from the trunk whlch appeared to be
ing
that Wolfe was a friend of the
items produced in evidence.
family.
but not a close friend .
Sister testifies
At
thls
point . Judge Knight
Mickey Cundiff, Syracuse, sister
dismissed
court
which resumed at 9
of the defendant, said she noticed
a.m.
today.
her sister was gaining weight about
March 1 and that she and her older
sister had talked to Pamela and
urged her to see i' doctor.
Cundiff said she had an appointment to see Dr. Craig Strafford at
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Holzer Cllnlc Ltd. April 4, but slje
Discharges Dec. 6
gave the appointment to her sister ,
Morris
Blazer Sr., Victoria Bush,
Pamela.
Bartoe
Durst,
Lort Elsnaegle, Mille
Cundiff asked Pam If she was
Fox,
Madge
Frazier,
Edna French,
pregnant and Pam sa1d no.
Luther
Herdman,
Wllllam
Holt,
According to Cundiff's testimony
Amanda
Keels,
Betty
McCarley,
she checked with Silencer on the
evening o! April 4 or 5 concerning Carla Meadows, Beth Mooney,
her appointment with the doctor. Stanley Payne, Salathiel QuesenThe sister said she was told by the berry, Mabel Saunders, Don Siders
cte!endant that the doctor said she Jr. , Mrs. Sammy Smith and son,
had lnfectlon In her female organs Sonia Swain, Hubert Yost.
Bbths
and that he had given her medicine.
Mr.and
Mrs.
Charles Coker,
She called It," toxic shock
daughter,
Oak
Hill;
Mr. and Mrs.
syndrome."
Don
Denney,
daughter,
Jackson;
Mrs. Cundiff later fourid out,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alan
Meadows,
son,
according· to her testinnony, that
Pllney,
W.Va.;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clyde
Pam had not kept the doctor's
Pierce, daughter, Wellston.
appointment.

concentration.
EarlY Monday Goodyear notified
the DOE, whlch has procedUres to
be followed in such clrcwnStallces.
After Initial testing to ctetenn!nelf
there had been any contamination
outside the plant area, Goodyear
notified the Ohlo Envfronmelltal
Protection Agency. DOE notlfted
federal agencies as Is cvstomary.
"We are disappointed that the
Initial Lnfonnatlon associated with
this btcldent was not provided to the
publlc and press more quickly,"
said Jim Alexander of the DOE's
Qak Ridge (Tenn.) Operations
public Information office.
"We recogrll2e natural delay to
bring together necessary lnforma·
tion, but still believe there could
have been quicker release. We. wW
be discussing with GAT the lrilix&gt;r-

uyes," shesatd.
Final witness

After Furst left the stand, Cain
called his final witness, Sgt. Ray
Pope of the sheriff's departrilent.
Pope testified that he did not
pursue a !ollowup investigation on
the derringer owned by Furst.
Pope said he made that decisiOn
because the bullet extracted from
Twyman bad lines and grooves bt It,
while a derringer has a smooth
bal'rel. The determination was
madtilrom lnfonnatlon provided by
the Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Pope's own personal
knowledge of weapons.
Pope also testified that It was he
called. ''
who set up recording equipment in
During the three •hour·sesslon In the room at the Blue Fountain when
the Blue Fountain, King asked Furst ' Lee and Furst met, and that he
If she was defenseless.
followed Furst into Point Pleasant to
"As far as ! know, that's why I did pick up Lee and travel back to the
whatl did," she said.
motel.
"At that moment, could It have
KJng called hls first defense
been easy for Charlie to k1ll you?" witness prior to the day's recess.
KJngasked.
Paul Rollins. owner of the South
"Yes."

"hard time."

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843.5191
L0-6 tfc

SCIPIO RECYCLING
. Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
DolivoJed to Plant
ty, II . East of Pageville
On Township Rd. 141
We SP._ecialize
in Alumlnum Only
PH. 992-3466

._

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.

--..--.......

PAT HILL FORD

'" .........

........
......
•n-

992-2196

;:::.-

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

.f'

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
· PARCEL SERVICE

618 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
~~-~~located in H&amp;R

.,..o Block Building

BISSELL

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages" ·
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or
3-11 -tlc

NOnCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 24 1983 m the
Me1gs County Probate Court
Case No 24242 James P
Lambert, 39041 Hllman Road .
Pomeroy Oh10 45769 wl:ls
appomted Executor of the
estat e ol Walter A He11man
deceased latP. of 3881 1 HP.IIman Road Pomeroy Oh10
45769
s/ Roben E Buck
Pro bat!'! Judge /
Clerk
111123 30 (121 7 31c

for less than 2 / 3rds of the

JUSt south ol the mtersectton of

appra tsed pnce
JAMES J PROFFITT
SHERIFF
MEIGS COUNTY
!1 11).30, 11217 14 31c

County

64 Mise:. Merchandise

l.r--------,
11

A "young boy" who said Furst
was hls mother - , Furst testlfled
earHer In the trial that John had
accompanied her' to South Fork on
the night of this Incident - asked
Lee Sr. to fight him "for 11001e

Public Notice
ADDENDUM TO
PART I,
ITEM E16!
Southom Ohio
Cool ComponyMeigl Mine

UntlnPIIIV,Id Or laid Off?
Men
I
Wollin
Learn to Drive A

TRACTOR TRAILER
Train on the flood

FULL OR PART-TilE
Toit!H Alllltwl A..llnll

reason,''

NT
MICROWAVE
OVENS
STARTING AT

S28995
~"-

~

I

by So uthern Ohto Coal Company, P 0 Box 4 90. Athens
Ohto 4570 1 Thest letslocated

Townsh•P Road T180
Property ~ppra t sed at
SB 050 00 and cannot be sold

Train To Drive
Trac:tor Traiiers ,

Cain asked Rollins If Furst had
ever been observed carrying a gun
into the tavern.
''Not in my place, I l'lllldf! sure of
that," Ro!Uns saki.
"Was she ever seen there with a
derringer?" Cain asked.
"She wouldn 'I have stayed long If
she had," Rollins remarked.
Rollins admitted under Cain's
questioning that he was ~ble to
determine who had. started the
incident.

Public Notice

Public Notice

POMEROY
LANDMARK
· 614-992-2181

=

.loll
" " · · - Alllllllce
..............
,llillq

...,
roof
~willie
,.. 111111...
fir 1111
tnlll. . . . . . . ..

AnEID FlEE SEIIUI
Tllul'ldaydltc. I, IIIJ
f::tv P.l.
tlllllpoHI llolf4ar Ill

lt. 7. tllllt,alll, 01110
IIA lcllool '1 I I '1 OIILCIII
114 Cliwctllt.
hila. 01111 41140
ITA Sclloll I. T. IITI
445·111111 ......
lhlt ~• .,.., 43112
1(111-03-0117-T

Roads

27

and

uan) to Statfl Rou te 124 1n
Me1gs Coun ty Oh10. and exlends to the area known as
Me1gs Mme No 2 located JUSt _
south of the mtersec!IOn of
county roads · 2 7 and 9.
appro x1 ma1ely 1 1 m1les southeast of Pomt Rock 1n Me1gs
County Oh10 More speci fically the s1te occup1P.S port1ons
of Sec110ns 19 and 25 1n.
Co l umb1a Tow nshi p T 9 N,
R 15W, and Sect1ons 16 17.
23 . 24 and Fract1ons 2 and 6 tn
Salem Twosnh1p T 7 -BN .
4 15W The descnbed area 1S
contamed 1n the Vales Mills and
Wilkesv1lle US Geolog1cal Survey 7 5 mmute quadrangle
maps A copy ot the appllcaliOn
Is ava1l able lor public InspectiOn at the off1ce of the Me1gs
County Recorder ; M e1gs
County Court House Seconq_
Street Pomeroy. Ohto 45769
Wntten correspondence con cernln~ the applicatiOn may be
submllted to the 01V1S10n of
Reclamation. Fountain Sq uare.
8UIId1ng 8-3. Colu mbus. Oh10
43224.

9.

appro}(Jmately 1 1 mt les sou-

theast of Potnt Rock tn Metgs
County Ohto M ore soectft
cally the stte occuptes port tons
of Secttons 25 26 and 3 1 tn
Columbta Townsh tp. T 9N
A 1 5W The descnbed a rea ts
contatned tn the Vales M tlts and
Wtlkesvtlle u S Geologteal
Survey 7 5 mmute quadrangle
maps A copy of the appltcatton
15 aVa tlable lor public •nspecMn at the offtce of the Metgs
Cqunty Recorder
Me •gs
Countv Coun House. Second
Street. Pomeroy Oh1o 45769
Wntten correspondence concermng the applicatiOn may be
submmed to the DIVISIOn of
Reclamation , Fountam
Bu1ld1ng B-3 Columbus.
43224

(121 7 14 21 26 41c

Public Notice
ADDENDUM TO '
PART I,
ITEM Ei5)

USED
APPLIANCES
Washers, DJYers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

B A BEAUTY

SHOP

"Holiday Special"
Shampoo - Haircut
Blow Dry

7.00

1

742-2352

12/1/1 mo. pd.

Route 4. Pomeroy

""
MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

S3QOO

M.L

Ask for' Tina Pierce

9.49-2293
Racine. OH.

PH . 992-2280
-2-23-tlc

Southern Ohio
Coal Compony -

lntermil•

Conveyor System
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Oh 1o Rev1sed
Code Secl&lt;on 1513 07( 6)(21111.
not1ce IS hereby g1ven ot
apphcat1on for a perm1t tO
~ conduct coa l m1nmg and recla matiOn operat1ons at the Site of
the lntermme Conveyor System. ODNR ApplicatiOn No
0535. owned by So uthern
Oh10 Coal Co mpany P 0 Box
490. Alhens Oh&lt;o 4570 1 The
area 1s appro,.;ima tely frve !5)
m•les east of Salem Center
ad1a~ent (in a northerly dlrec-

Phone
H6141·992-332S
NEW LISTING - 6 rm.
Sy!llcuse home on 2 level ~
BAth, nat gas heat. imulated
and near scoots. $25,000.

POMEROY - large 1111ld.
veneer 3 BR home. l.i. masler
bedroom w~h bath, beautiful
family rm. with fireplace and 2
car gar•i!!· 2\\ baths,' central

Real Eatete General

aw and heat

TRAILER LOTS - 4 in
Middleport. Some w~h furnished tralets in town, 1n tile
coutl!Jy, Pomeroy, and on the
river. We have one lor you.

E . ~lloWilll

POMEROY,O_
992-2259

SYRACUSE - Nice modem
insulated home 111 Rustic Hills.
3 bedrooms, one ft&amp;!r. Pll&amp;e.
and nice lg lot. Alsa an older 7
nn home on 124 with al
utilities and 245 by 115 lot

RIITI.AIID Free Gas!
County iving ~ easy with no
gas bil!&gt; in this 3 bedroom
home. 2 beautiful baths, family
room, dm111g room. buitt in
ltEI!en. hUJP! iving room.
Covered j)ltlO and carport

0

IIIDDUPOIT - We have 5
homes he!e lor you to see.
Brick or lrame. Starting at
$16,000

Garage, ~ outbuikllll~
approxnnatety I ac:re tot.

$41,900.00.

IIDDlEPOIT - II+ silly
~ on a J10d stJeet Plus a
mce garage on a level Itt
$14,000.

· POMEROY - N1ce 3 bedroom
central heated home. Above all
floods. Carpetinz bath. blsement. 100 garage. May assume. One other 3 bedroomer
with ~ acres. All utilities.

NEAR POIIEIIOV - 3 bedroom house, bath. ref. and

;::;=r- lot.~00~s ret~Mr.

MODERN - 525 acres and a
3 yr. old 7 rm. 2 baths 40x32
great room home. Cook and
baM ut'Ots, dshwashe!, refrit

SYRACUSE - 3 bedroom
homewithnew1001vil1)1
sidin&amp; mce ililchen cibinets,
famlti room on 31ots. $25,000.

erator, Swim
court.

pool and tenniS

SIIAI.J. FARMS - 2 -2\\ -4 •
9 · 12 aaes. In Southern
llngsvlle, R""nd and Eastaffi

HYSEll lUll RD. - 20 1C1eS
plus I linch Sl)le home. Llrge
~.

-.

:.'~11111'-18

FARMS - 76 aaes. Farm
house, woodbumer, mi""*.
'heir UnilMie. - 96 ICfli'
,_ ~nd. flee gas and
minerlls - 58 ICnS Nelle
Settleonent !lith " 3 bednlom
home, blnlt !1Im ....., lftd INti

3 bed111Q111S, , .
11111 WGOdbumer. 24xl4 flmiy
room needs linilhi11 touch.

lUI.lOIS

IIIIIIY L Cllltild, Jr.
Glltl2-1111
,_ '11111111 . . . .
Dattll T...- t12-!82
JoH11•1•

300 -

. . Rldne wlh
flee .. 11111 2 111111 home.

1M tiiTEilSI f~l ',!l);jl,,,tfl

GUN SHOOT

.DEER HIDES, BEEF
:HIDES, RAW FUR,
: ~INSENG &amp; OTHER

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

·Entrance at 102 Carney
·Dr .. Corner of St. Rt. 2
:and Carney

. 273-3407

GRAVEL
HAULED

n;n

S!Aobert E Buck
Probate JudgP. /
Clerk
23 30 1121 7. 3&lt;

~~lW li MA liD

RUTlAND . OH .
PH . 742 -2226 I

., ___.
. Point - Mason
7 Auto Glass

When Y ou Need Glass You Need Us ... We Can Handl e
Your Every Glass Need!
Your Bus iness"
"We Want And

1304) 773-5710 .773-5118

GARAGE

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

CONTRACTING
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMEST-ONE
•WATER , GAS end
SEWEij LINES

Yard Sale

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.,

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

•PONDS RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK
BONDED &amp; WOR~ GUARAN TEED

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
long Bottom . OH . 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201 3-7-tf

11-10-tfc

DEER
PROCESSED

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Custo.m Pole Bldgs
&amp; Gar~ges
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583
or 9!12- 2282
ll -1-ttc

$2500
CUT &amp; WRAPPED

$5.00 EXTRA

FOR SKINNING
PH. 949-2734
Maplewood Lake

BACKHOE
SERVICE

'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.
-11-15- 1 mo. pd.

"CUT OUT

Bring This Coupon In

FOR FUTURE USE"

For 10% Off
Any Service

985-3561

Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Rangea
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH . 992-2725

Basement Sale-U sed Christmas decorations. alltn exceltent condition. re asonab ly
price d Hou rs 9 t o 1. Thursday , Friday and Saturday.
Opal Kloas, corner of Col lag e St . and May Ave ..
Syracuse.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Au c ti o n every Tu esday
night , Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie N eal. Youth
Center Bldg . Camden St .
614-367-7101
Ri ck Pearson Aucti oneer
Service. Estate, Farm, An tique &amp;., l iqui dation sales.
Licensed &amp; bonded i n Ohto &amp;
WVa 304-77 3- 578 5 o r
304-77 3- 9185
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center . Truckloa ds of n ew
merchandise every week .
Con stgm ents of new and
used merchandise always
wel come. Richard Reynolds
Au c ti o neer . 304 - 276 ·
3069 .
Mt.Aito euct1on ev ery Sat
night. 6 p m
St arting
Christmas season No more
consignments will be taken
untll after Christmas Emma
Bell Auctioneer. 304-428 8177 WVa. 1ic1 No. 429-84

AL TROMM'S

or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

All Makes

Mason,

,_
K1tchen Cabinets - Roof·
ing - Siding - Concrete
Pal10s - Sidewalk s New Con struction - Remodelmg - Custo m Pole
Barns.

J&amp;F

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Courthouse. Pt. Pleasant
Register, 200 Mai n St.

I

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

c-

•

··--··riiimero;;--·------

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
Rt . 33

T he M eigs Local School
District is currently seekmg
applications from certified
applica nts for a Freshman
Besketball Coach at M eigs
High School f or t he 198384 school year . Applicants
Lost and Found
must hold a valid Oh1o
ST - B ro w n co u r d o r y t eac hin g cert i f icat e and
purse taken f ro m ca r at the 3 must meet certification rein 1. Anyone f inding purse quir ements of Ohio for
w ith Important papers, t here sports medicine and CPR .
io e reward. 614-992 -3988 Persons interested should
co ntact Dan E. Morris, Suor 614-992-5490 .
perintentent of M etgs Local
Scho ols. at 62 1 South Third
Fou nd-Female blac k and ta n
Doberman. Back of D anville Avenue in M iddleport, in
i n Galllp Co . close t o belt Ohio
lin e. H as been tnjurod . 3 67 Local Company lookin g for
752B alte r 6 p .m .
new distributors. Ca ll 30 4Fou nd set of k eys near 57 5-5689. T &amp; G Enter-

4
male, 2 fe male. 3 04-882pu ppies to good home.
32 10.

7

Radio

a DOlo 5:00

9

In lov1ng memory of Sherman 1 Roberts who pa ssed
away on e ye ar ago today
Dec.7 1982. He is gone but
not forgotten . Sadly missed
by wife D orothy, children
end grandchildren .

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing ma chine repair , parts. and
suppl1es.
Ptck up and
delivery , Dav 1s Vacuum
Cleaner, on e half m ile up
Call
Georges Creek ~d .
446-0294.
Sandlin ' s Pool Room. 92
Olive St , Gallipolis, Ohio
Open daily 2 ' 00PM til
Midnight.
Gun shoot Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunday starting 1
p m Fact ory choked guns
o nly.
·

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
cl ean u sed cars.
J i m Mink Ch ev.- Oids In c.
Bill Gene J ohnson
446-3672 .
Wanted to buy used co al &amp;
w ood heaters. Swain Furn iture, 446-3159. 3rd. &amp;
Olive St .. Gallipolis, Oh
Use d mob ile homes and
truck campers. Call 4460175.
Wanted t o l ease tob acco
pounda ge for 1 983 Ca ll
446 -7838 after 5PM
Wanted t o buy . N ew , used &amp;
antique furniture . Will buy 1
pteca or complete households Also co mplete Aucti oneering 5erv ice. Call Osby
A. Martin 614 -992 -6370
Buying daily gold, silver
coin s, rings, jewelry, sterlmg
ware, old coins. large currency Top pri ces Ed Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. A v~
Middleport, oh 614-992347 6 .

Vacancy: J ulia's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canv a lesence
Home 18 years experience
Clifton , W .V . 304 -7735873.

.

REAL ESTATE
. Three acres with a nicely constructed con-

.crete block home 26x60, 3 bedrooms, one
:bath. 12xl5 livi~ room and ~4x24 family
.room; POlly carpeted, fuel oil fllnace
:with facilities for woodbumer. 12x15
;block storage building. 20x30 block gar:•· Rigtit off Rt. 248, country setting.

·1/2 mile east of Chester, Ohio.

LOT In Racine Villa&amp;e, 75x150, M.H. facilities, Yellow Bush load.
,APPROXIMATELY 2'12 ACRES and house
needs extensive repairs. Racine Villap.

949-2210
•

KING

BISSELL FLOORS
and REFINISHING.

~anufacturers

Keep That Natural
Look In Your Home.

PLAQUES
ENGRAVING
320 JEfiiCHO RD.

PT. PLIASANT W.
1

SKAT~-A-WAY
C~ei\er. 011.

Open Wed., Fti .. Sst. Mites

. 7:30 to 10:00
Avllllble for private Jllr·
tin Mon.. Tues.. Thu1s.
Niles, Sit. or Sun. After-

noon.

THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI. NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC. 16

PH. 985-3929
or 915-9996
.

U -14-1 mo.

11

Help Wanted

FLOOR SANDING

Trophy

CALL

Racine Gun Club dues are
due. $2q .OO . Muot be paid
by Jan . I . 1984.

lady wants ride from Eureka
to end of bridge in Pt .
Pleasant every Friday morning. Call614-266-1198.

4

AVON There are 2 way s to
make money with AVON.
Call for information. Call
448 · 3358 .

Giveaway

378-6349
11-17 I mo.

MILLER

ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs ; furnaces repair
service and installation.

R•sidel!tial
&amp; Commercial

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

7 Weeko old pupo . Holt
t..bredor. half $hapherd.
Aher 4 tJ.m . 266 -1212.
3 pan Collie puppies. 6 wka.
old. Coli 81 4·245·9526.

3 PART Collie puppiao. 6
wko . old. 241-9525.
Oerm1n Shephard mixed
brNn puppies, 9 wkl. old.
Colll14-379- 2207 .

l ibrary A ssistant . M ason
Coun ty Publi c Libr ary . Cree t ive person t o cont mu e-.
e»c pand children's programming , provide reade r
service; support general library pol icies. Work fu ll time
With one evenin g and rotating Saturdays . Un detgrad uate deg ree preferable. E»cper ie n ce w 1t h c h il dr e n
requ 1red . Artistic ability re qui red Salar y n egotiab le
Send len er of appli cation t o.
Mason Count y Public Library . Sh aro n M . Stone. 6th
and V1a nd Streets, Pomt
Pleasant, WV 25550 A ppli ca ti on dead line: D ecember
17, 19 8 3.

I • • __.,

I

1------'----The Gallipolis Parks It Recreation Oepanment is now
taking applications for Recre1tion Leaders for the
Holldoy Gym program. Wo•k
hours will be 1-5 p.m .
Decombat 26 thru 30.
1983. Muot be ot loaot lB.
Apply immediately at the
Gallipolis Parka and Re crea tion Oept.. 618 Second
Ave., Gaftipolis, Ohio .

To give 1w1y one year old NOW HIRING -Oflohore oil
Golden color Collie pup . drilling overseas and domestic. Wilt train, 835,000Phone 304-171-7337 .
160,000 pluo pooo. Coli
frH pupplea. half Boxer, Petroleum Servicea at 312hoH CoHio. 7 woeko old, Coli 920-9875 o.t.- 1965. Atao
open evenlnga.
304·882-2449.

22 Money to Loan
HO M E LOA N S F I XE D
RATES 12 %% p urch ase or
refina nce, 11
adj ultab l e
rete. lea der Mortgag e,
At hens. 1-800-341 -6554

v.%

23

Profe s sio nal
Se rv ices

PI AN O TUNING Lo w e r ·'·.
pr ices - re gu lar tun i n g• ·
discoun ts to Senior C1ti z:en 1.
Chu r c h es ~&amp; sc hool1. Wa rd 's
Keyboard, 304-676-3824 .

31

f

Homes or

4 bd r . ra nch hom e, la rge LR,
f ull basem ent, w ith garag e,
w oo d b urner includ ed. ct t y
schools. 2 mileS' from to wn
Call ~46 - 0276 .
own er Must Sell Home l
Unbelievable price! Low ut ilities! buy 1t now! Middleport .
Call 6 14-992-6941 .
3 bed rooms, one floor plan,
eat in kitchen and din i ng
roo m , 1 "car garage , gas
heat. centra l e1r , fenced m
backyard. st orage build1 ngl
l ocated on George Creek
Ad Call 446-0109 ohor 5 .

Excellent opportun ity Looklng for som eone to t ake over
clothmg b usin ess Incl udes
Inventory, fi ~~:tu r esa n dsu pp lies. 304-675 -13 17 or 304676 32 17 .

1----------

W1ll do c lea nmg o f eny k1nd
by day or w eek . B o~~: P5. Pt
Pit Regi ster, Point Pleasant

Locat ed , In Syracuse-N ear
school &amp; swimm 1ng poo l. 3
bedroom sit uated on one thir d acre lot Pnce reduced
S23.5 00 or w ill rerit f or
$240 mo.' 304-855-39 3 4 .

12

Situation s
Want ed

Res ponstble f amil y m an. 38 .
see ks employment. Precision metal w orking back ·
ground, superv isory ca pabi l·
ities. Call 614 -246-9157.
Will care for th e elderly in my
home Lo ts, of references
M en or women . Call ' 667 3402.
Wi ll care for eld erl y person m
our hom e. LPN care g1ven
15 yea rs ex pe r~ e n ce . Call
614-992-7 3 14
Will do h ou sec l ean mg .
Rea sonable ra tes. Call 304
675-3908 .

13

Insu ranc e

3 bdr. all brick ranch . Full
basement atta ched 2 car
garage, .8 acres, close t o
hosp1tal ~a ll 446-783 8 a1 te1 5PM .
'

1 m 1le above Chester on
SR.7 . Brick home on 1 ac re
lot 6 vear old qual1ty b u ilt
hom e. la rge liv1ng roo m
with firepiBce 4 bedrooms ,
dining room, 2 baths . Price- ·
S56 .000 . 20 minutes from
Belpre. 304 -773 -5421 or
30 4 -77 3- 5319

3 bedroom , large lot, 2605
linco ln Avenue, 7 yea rs old ,
$5 6 .000. 30 4 -675 -6047.
Tn -level, excell ent co nd1 ·
ti on. $66,000 , BVl assuma ble loan , $ 11 ,000 down .
Ph one 304-676 -1529 after
5 p .m .
By own er, 1 21 11 Main . S1x
room br1ck . basement. firpla ce, new furna ce. Reduced to $45 ,000. 304675 -2 381 .

SANOY AND BEAVER Insuran ce Co. has offered 3 miles from Chiefland. fla ,
1
sorv1ces f or fire tn surance an goo d ro ad -- !. acre fenc ed
coverag e in Galli a County lot, 1 2x60 mobile home
for almost a ce nt ury . Farm . with 1 21124 addition Large
hom e and personal property screened ba ck porch, patio,
covera ges are available to an d adjoining l aundry build meet individual needs. Con- mg M et al ut ility bu1lding
ta ct Harry Pitchford , agent . w 1th cement flo or lnex haustable w at er supply . Ltv ·
Ph one 446- 1427 .
ingroom. di nningroom , two
bedrooms, kit chen and bath .
All compl et ely furn ished
17 Miscellaneous
Gas furnac e and air condi·
t1o ning . Pn ced fo r quick
sal e. $20 ,000. Wrtte or c all ,
4 HP SCRAPP ER Sears min i will fi nan ce pa rt Lo we ll
b1ke hke new. $200 . Banj o, Wingett, At 2 - Bo ~~: 465,
good cond. $ 40 3 88-99 69. C h&lt;efland, Fla . 32626 . 1804-493 -40 76 .

18 Wanted to Do
General Haulin g an d Tra sh
remove! Serv ice. Rel iable
and dependab le. Ca ll 446
3159 between 9 and 5. ·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TR I- STATE MOBILE
HO MES . USED - CARS ,
TRUCKS
GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446 -7572 .

E;.;perien ce d mech ani c desires any kind of mec hani cal
w ork on aut os. Has own
tool s and buil ding, work NEW AND USED MOBILE
guarantee d Call f or esta- l!i~~l'!'!'!'_ KESSEL'S QUALmates 446-6252 or 446 ILE HOME SALES.
2491.
4 MI. WEST. G ALUPOLIS,
AT 35 PHON E 446-7274
Carpent ry work remodeling,
pa mtmg &amp; roofi ng . Can
Nice 2 bdr. tra iler, Call
furnished referen ces, el!pe61 4 -256-6251 , alta• 5 :30 .
ri enced Call 446 -2787
For these tittle p ersonal jobs
you 're char ged t oo much fo r
ca ll th e Specialists &amp; We'll
do 1t for minimum plus
cost s Call 446 -6585 .

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU S\
LISHING CO. recommends
t hat you do busin ess With
people yo u know. and NOT
to send m oney through the
mail until you have inve stigated the offering.

No hunting or trespassing
day or night on Charles Yost
Farms

PROFESSIONAL

' L

Opper- ,!~~~~~~~~~~

21

· 4· 5-tlc

.. ,THE
TROPHY

H

5 p.m
prises
t unitieslifter
are unlimited

1- - - - - - - - - -

I

Real Estate General

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

Hel p Wanted

8

Lost Red mal e. Irish Setter.
New Hav en area answer s to
name Shannon, wearing red
coll ar. 304-88 2 2787 .

"AUTOGLASS
OUR SPECIALTY! "

11

SiJC cute German Sheph erd

lost, billfold, Fruth Drug
Stor e. Friday. please return
con tents. 304-67 5 - 1475.

~

'--_..

Gi veaw ay

Lo st male wire haired Ter rier, white, brown &amp;. black
spot s 1rom Salt Creek Nov
27th. Rew ard 304-6752025.

GLASS - GLASS - GLASS

742-2328 4-21-ttc

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
No. 24283 Docket 12
Page 392
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF AOUCIARY
On NovembP.r 18. 1983 1n
the Me1gs County Probate
Court Case No 24283. James
ShAets Route No 1 Box 2 11 .
Rutland Oh10 45 775 was
appomled Adm1n1stra tor of the
Estate of Eliza E Powell.
doc:ea!:od. rate of 126 Mulberry
nue Pomeroy. Oh10
45769
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Clerk
tl l l 23 30 1121 7 'ltc

TAX IDERMY
SHOP

L-'STFOR YEARS AND,.. . .

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only

PROBATE COURT OF
: MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
No. 24244 Docket M
Page 341
NOnCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 24 1983 1n the
M~1g s County Probate .C ourt.
C3se No 24244 . James P
Lambert 39041 He1 1man
ROad Pomeroy Oh10 ,45769
WfiS appo1nted EKelCutor of the
estate of Lelia M HP.•Iman
deceased . late of 388 11 Heilmj3n Road
PomRrov. Oh1o
~ 5769 .

I 0/20/t.l.n .

Roger Hysell

Public Notice

c-

742-2328

!=VERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Public Notice

I '•

.,

1112 f11rl

Bashan Building

Home National Bank ·

f(t)/J'I;)
'I

BUYING
.. .
ROOTS
:1 mile below 2nd Kaiser

YII'GIL a. SR .
216 r . 2nd s1.

rized independent EngageA-Car Broke!. Box 326. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster !nfoimation7
Call 614-992-6737

AL TROMM

1121 7 14 21 28. 4tc

l HE

EM:H MOUNT IS GIVEN THE PER·
SON.AL ATIENTION lT DESERVES TO
" ' " YOU • PRIZE TROf'HY THAT

hi):le

make and model. No down
payment lower monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Send for Free Booklet L-16.
Bob Blackston. an autho·

.

'

fl~;~~~~~"'~-~-~

•BACKHO~

Call 949-2320

CONTRACT! NG
RECAMATION
•Excavating
·Ponds
•septic Tanks
•Hauling

.

•DOZER

CHRISTMAS
TREES.
Djscover Engag&amp;-A·CaJ, the
mOdem answer to soanng
car prices' Drive the veFOR SALE +
of your chOice ... any
1 Mile Off Rt 7
On St Rt 143

FORTS WITHMOUNT
A QUALITY
SHOULDER
AT OURUfE-LIKE
STUDIO

Free E st imates

Thurs_ -Fri. -Sat.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

CaseNo. 2~242

Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Dexte1. Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew
PH. 742-2456
ladde1s for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks

No Sunday Calls

1- 13-tfc

'·
Public Notice

Tri-County
General Welding

949-28110

Middleport, Ohio

WI-lEN THE MANY HOURS Of HUNTINC FINALLY PAY OfF WITH THAT
SPfCIAL DEER, REWARD YOUR EF

CALL TODAY FOR CURRENT PRICES
ON DEER AND OTHER GAME

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

~

Public Notice

I 3-th

10112/2 mo pd

~

,...

\DELIVERY

John Deere.
New Holl an d. Bush Hog
farm Equ1pment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Servi ce

Aut~ o med

" Your Place or Mine "

PHONE
992-2156
Or Writt Oil S.UMI CltJ1Iil. 0.,.

............
··-.,............
................
...........
.........

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
.,. U.P.S. - PUROLATOR
..~DOOR TO DOOR
PARCEL PRIORITY SHIPMENIS
FOR LES S! HAN U S MAIL
SAVE 10% 10 50~ AND MORE

illy

was

alerted to
"problems" at the room and
observed Furst giving Lee Sr. a

Sizes from 6'x6 ' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Hou ses

111 Colltt se.. ,_.,.,,l*kl •sJ"

No. I
LEGAL NOnCe
Pursuant to Oh10 Rev1se d
Code
Sect• on 1513 07 (B) 121
Public Notice
(f) not1ce IS hereby giVen of
appi1Cat1on for a perm1t to
LEGAL NOnCE
conduct coal m1n1ng and recl aSHERIFF'S SALE
ma tiOn operations at the sne of
MEIGS COUNTY COURT
the Me1gs No 1 M1ne ODNA
OF COMMON PLEAS
Apollcat1o n No 0257 O'M'led
CASE # 83-CV-236
by Southern Oh10 Coal ComMABEL G PAULEY
pany P 0 Box 490 Athens.
Oh10 45702 The s1te 1S located
- vs1 6 miles east of Salem Center
SHEilA A JONES et al
adJacent (1n ,..a northerly d1recDefendants
110nl to State Route 124 1n
Pursuant to an ORDER OF
Me1gs County Oh1o More
SALE ISSUed by the Court of
spec1f1cally thP. s11e occup1es
Common Pleas on 1udg ment
port1ons o f Sect1ons 8 and 16
rendered m the above styled
and Fract1ons. I . 2. 6, and 23
case. I w1ll expose far salE'! at
(SectiOns 9 and 15) m Sa lem
public auction on the front
Townsh 1p T 8N R 15W . 1n the
steps ol the Me1gs County
hol low of Parker Run and 1ts
Court House Pomeroy Oh10 at unnamed t n b u t ar~es Th!! des1000 oclock A M on Saturcnbed area 1S contamed 1n the
day thP. 31st day at December
Wilkesville and Ru tland U S
1983 the foii0\1\IIn g descr1 bed
Gealog1cal Survey 7.5 m1nute
lands and ten ements tO-V"It
quadrangle maps A copy of the
Located 1n SectiOn 5. Town 8
apph_cat1on IS ava1 lable fpr
Range 14 of the Oh10 Com - pubhb 1nspecton at the off1ce of
pany s Purchse . commenc 1ng the Me1gs County Recorder,
on th e road leadmg from Me1gs Cou nty Court Hauss.
Rutlar'ld to what was ·formerly Second Street Pomeroy Oh10
G1ld Old M1ilon the north l1ne of 45769 Wr111en correspon sa1d lot No 3 on a bndge dence concern1ng the appl 1cawhere an elm 8 1nches 1J \10n may be submH!ed to thA
d1ameter leans north 46 de
DIVISIOn of Rec lamat1on Faungrees west 4 cha1ns and 501 tam SquarP. Bu1ld1 ng B-3.
l1nks thence south 19 degrees Columbus. Oh1o 4 322 4
west 1 cha1n 34 l1nks to the
south line of sa1d lm No 3 1121 7 t 4. 2 1 28. 41c
w he.re a Buckeye 10 mches 1n
Public Notice
d1ameter leans south 33 dP.grees eas1 50 l1nks thence east
ADDENDUM TO
on the south line of sa1d lot to
tM southwest corner of a 15
PART I.
acre lot formerly owned by
ITEM E 151
Thomas Amos. then ce north 14
Southom Ohio
Cool Componycha1ns 7 5 links thence east to
Moig!l Mino
the east l1ne of sa1d Sec!lan No
No. 2
5 thence nort h 25 hnks thP.nce
lEGAL NOnCE
wesl on the north li ne of sa 1d
lot No 3 tq the place of
Pursuanl to Oh10 Rev1sed
begmmng. contam1ng 33 1/3 Code Secl!On 15 13 07 IBI 121
(fl. not1ce IS hereby g1ven of
ac«'.S. more. or less .
Save and e~ecept the land 40 apphcat1on lor a permlf' to
rods long and 1 rod w1de conduct coal m1n1ng and recla(Contlnuedfrompage 1)
runn1ng from the northeast matiOn opera t1ons at the s1 1e of
corner of sa1d 33 1/3 acre lot the Me1gs Mine No. 2. ODN A
to Mam Road. sa1d lane ru nn1ng Appl1 cauon No 0262. owned
Fork tavern nero: Point Pleasant, between the land of what was
Schools
testified that on May 5 Charles Lee formerly John Sm1th and Tho- 16
mas Amos
I
natruction
Sr. came to the tavern and
Reference Vol 13 1 page
conversed with another man bt a 597 Me1gs Coun ty Mortgage
Records
back room.
Property located an Salem
Rollins, who said he was tending

bar, testified he

.

10/ 19/2 mo pd

The Daily Sentinel

4

~~li:::::::::;~~~~::::::lliiiiijijiiiiiiijijiij!i~iiiiiii~
rc::========ilr~~~~~::~·
NOW IN SAVEl
BOGGS .
1 t&lt;u~ 1 ruurc:'tt ~
f\LL STEEL &amp;
Pomeroy,
Oh.
·
SALES
&amp;
SERVICE
PQLE BUILDINGS
TROPHY TO A~- ~
PARCEL SERVICE I
u. s. RT. 50 EAST
Sizes Start From 12'x16'
DEPOSITORY
GUYSVILLE . OHIO
UTILITY BUILDINGS
PROFESSIONAL ! ·_.,..
·. r . . \

"We have fQUnd nothing ott site,"
Matchett said. "Tests for radioactivity were nm and no dan~
levels ol ~ were recorded.
None ol the perlmeteer tence
monito r s show e d an y
contamination."
"A wipe test on one company
vehicle In thevlclnltyoftheventplpe
where the release was detected
showed a deposit slightly abOve the
normal allowable Umlt, but not high
enough to pose any hazard to
employees," Match.ett said.
"Our response was Immediate
Sunday and It was determined
qulckly that there were no environ·
mental problems."

a

Hospital news

"The point Is, he spent all that time
with you, and he didn't harm a hair
on your head?" King asked .

said.

1

The

Oh io

·Business Services.

tance of a quick and orderly
notification of the publlc and
Interested organizationS on lncldentsofthis type." ·
All tests were conducted In
cooperation with DOE officials •
under conditions meeting all federal
and state requirements, Matchett

DOE, Indicated no concentration of
the materlal outside the plant.
Matchett said results of Goodyear's tests show the material
dispersed and there was no

Prosecution .rests case
hls accusation angered her and her
response to Lee was a "tacit threat"
to deny hlrn sex.
"No, that 's not what tt meant."
Furst said.
Furst also noted she didn't
provide "big, long descriptions " of
Twyman's murder to get Lee to talk
about lt whlletheywere belng taped.
"We'd talk, and he'd tell me,"
Furst said. "Sometimes, he'd talk,
normally , and he'd respond when I
brought it up," she said.
KJng noted there were no tapes of
conversations for Aug. 27 and Aug.
00. In a ronversation recorded Aug.
31, he pointed out that Furst
reminded Lee of a statement he'd
made the night before.
u"l don't remember that," Furst
sald. "I recorded every time he

December 7, 1983

C 1g ar ette Distribu t orship .
Instant cash fl o w I W e are a
Bonded national f irm upanding into t he area. 11 y ou
are seeking a secure business opportuinty. We provtd e all retail locations and
all necessary training. Full or
Part tim e. Investm ent from
$ 2 , 000 . 00 . Winst o n Salem- Kools. 1 · 800-24 12268 .

1976, 1 2~~:70. total elec tric,
3 BA . 2 baths. ex cond.
$6900. Call 446 -0175 .
1977 Trail er With lot f or
sate. Call 614 -25 6-661 B.
19 7 2 trailer, 2 bdr , unfurnished , good co nd. Call
614 -446- 7171 or 446 8288 after 5 .
1 972 mo b de home with 1 V:z
ac r es and out bu il di ng Call
446-0063 .
1972 12x60 Kirkwood Mobil e hom e has a W arm
M o rn ing w ood burn er,
$ 4 ,0 00 . Ce ll 614 - 388 - ·
8169.
2 bdr . tr ailer. part1ally furni shed , tot s of closet and
kitchen cabinet space. good
cond. Sho wn by appointment O'nly S2,100. Call
614 -446 - 3 007 betw een
10AM -7PM
4 bdr.'s 14 ~~:65. plu s 121120
room , ce nt ral Bir, st o rag e
buildin g, po rch · &amp;. awning • .
co rn er lot , Oua11 Creek.
Fren ch Ci t y Brokerage Service. 446-9340 .

Stripping Furn1ture &amp; Metal
ATTENTION l is there such a
Instant cash flow! First time 'thing as a Clauiclln mobile
in this area . Our expert staff
home? When you vtew thia
has many years of expe- H olly Park we t hink you will
rience and has Ht up resto- agr'e there is. A 1969
ration canters throughout 12x65 Holly Park with wnh •
the U.S. and Europe. We 2 bdr .• 5d 0 tip out in living furnished equipment, chemicals. t upplies, and an exten- room. completely aet up in
nic e park. It 1ncludn 40 f1
sive training course at one of
patio cover, 2 sets of steps
our succeuful centers near- with railings, central1ir, nice ·
est you . Total co s t
fu r nishings , even a waaher
$32 .500 00 'Bonded' Coil
Toll Free: 1800) 24 I ·2269 and dryer . completely ,
skirted and ready to occupy . .
or write for more info : U .S,
There
isn't a cleaner or well ·
Stripping, 1775 The e.kept home in the area. Juat
change. Suite 600, Atlanta ,
like brand new. You muat •
GA 30 3 39.
see to appreciate all of this
t..undrymat and Bualnesa 812 ,900 Financing evaila· ,
buildi ng for aale. Apaproved ble. low down payment, and
low monthly payments. For \
aewage syatem, In Tuppers informotion colt 814- 992ploino. Oh . 614-887· 3&amp;61 .
.7034 or 614-992-8284 .

�Page

12

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

They'll Do It Every Time

32 Mobile Homes ·
for Sale

8ACJ&lt; ~'!laM A TRIP-- · TIME
~NVt'J.-4 '1'0

1976 14x70 trailer, 3 , bed·
room. 2 baths. large kitchen.

BtUYAC#E --- -

$10.000. 304-773-5023.
IT'S

1981 14x70, Sh-ultz limited
mobile home, microwave,
dithwesher, cen1ra1 air, underpenning, three bed -

tl&gt;OOPTOBC

Ha\4!0--.\&lt;MM-..

rooms, 1 Vi baths. excellent

f!OUSE NI'I'PS
PAINTING···

condition, $15.500. Call
304-675-6049 after 5 p.m.

MISSING ..·RAIN
PIPE IS

KIT 'N' CARLYLE••
54 Misc. Merchandise

Limestone. Sand. Gravel .
Delivered in Mason. Meig1. 8ft . snow blade ~ith hydrauGallia or pick up at Richards lic lltt and hitch. ExceUent

condtlon. 304-895-381 1-

Oak tables 8t chairt. corner
cupboard•. buffets • etc .
Wood World, 2508 Grand
Central Ave., Vienna, WV.

138

FAI.L.IN~

Mobile Home Moving, U -

ceraed and Insured, Free
Estimates $100. per. h9ok -

~Gil-~ - - -

•.

up minimum . Phone 304 -

576-271 1 Qr !j76-2866 .

5804.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-676-2711 .

Barbie &amp; Ken clothes, home-

made. Call 814-246-9328-

33

One 221n .x481n. ttlplo dome
trenaperent Pyllght, new in

box. Ton railroad brld11• !lao,
91nx1 21nx12ft. 304-0753717 .
Pets for Sale

66

coli 614 -992 -5589 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

Furnis~ed

apts. 1 -4 rm &amp;
bath up . Clean, np pets,
adults only . Ref.· req . Call

43 acres, barn. 15 minutes
from town. rural water,
blacktop . road, beautiful
house site. 304-675 -6766 .

ing 1igns. 2 colors, rent
$100 mo. for 4 mo. Then
buy sign for $46 . Call

Nice 2 bdr. apt . 1or rent . , 6
min. from Gallipolis on Rt. 7 .

Call 614-256 -1198.

3159 .

$690. Ph. 614-256-1216 .

446 -1519 .
2 bdr. apt .. utilities partially
paid . 3 room apts . utilties
paid. Cpll 304 -675 -5 ,04 or
3 or 4 room un1urnished apt.
utilities paid, adults o.nly, no

pets. Call 446-3437 .
Co mplet ely furnished ,
newly decorated , 3 rooms
and bath . 458 Second Ave.,
adults, $190 mo . plus deposit . Call 614-446 -2236 or

614-446-2561.

Phunal&amp;
41

Houses for Rent

Two sto ry house, 4 bdr.,
$250 per mo . $250 dep.

1 Big furnished room . eff.
apt. with bath in Rio Grande.
All utilities paid. 446-0 157.

req . Call 446-4222. 9:305:00 .

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS [Equal

S275 plus utilities . Avail .
now. 2 bdr ., LA , new kit. , &amp;
bath . Large fe nced yard.
new carpet, 556 or 558 3rd .
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 446-

Housing Opportunity) has
two bedroom , rent starting
at $ 193 per mont h with
S200 deposit located near
Foodland and Spring Valley
Plaza. Call 446-2745· or
leave messeg" .

2457 or 446 -0332 .

Modern 3 bdr . home seC . 843 2nd . Ave .• Gallipolis. 5
dep . req . References. n o , rooms. yard. off street park pets. prefer middl eaged . ing, no pets . dep . &amp; ref. Call

Csl 1614-379-2 196.
New home for r~nt or Sal-e . 3
8 R, 1 mile 1r0m North Gallia

HS . S325 mo . Call 614388-9323 or 388-9905.
HOUSE FOR RENT to married couple. No pets , one
child acceptable . 6, 4-245 -

9162 .
3 bdr . house Centenary area,
total electric . Call 446 -

2188 .
3 bedroom hom e, modern
kitchen , 1 Y1 ba tHs, i nsulated, in Middleport. $,250 .

month . 614-992-2676 .
Two bedroom house, base ment, clean condition, park ing off st reet , bi g yard.

304 - 675 - 1 30 1 . good
neighborhood .
SiJt: room house, family
room , all electric . Four miles
nort h Poi nt Pleasant, Ripl ey

Rosd . 304-458-1 B66 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Nice 2 bdr. trailer. Hannan
Trace School area. At. 218 .
S100 dep .. S174 mo. Call

KENNELS
a HILLCREST
Bording all breeds. Selling

62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; use4 Wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood ' ~ vlng room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
S399, bunk beds complete
with bunkies 8199, 2 piece
antron livingroom suites
S 199, antron recliners &amp;99,
other recliners $80, maple
dinette sets $179 , bo x
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full $100 sat regular-firm
$ 120, maple dinette chairs
&amp;36 , wash stands $34.
maple rOckers $69 , 7 piece
chrome dinette set 8149, 6
pieCe dinette set $99 , used
bedroom suites. refrigera·
·tors, ra nges. chest, dresaers,
wringer waahers. TV's , dryers, &amp; shoas. Call 446-

304-675-7386 .
35 acres at Rodney on W.T .
Watson Rd . Owner financ ing available. Call446 -8221
after 6 weekdays .

SWAIN
_
AUCTION S. FURNITURE

614-25 6· 1529.
2 BR apt . 1 mile north of
bridge. Call 446 -9386 or
446 -4154 .
1 bdr furnished apt .• carpeted. located in town.
S200 mo . plus utilties . wa ter paid. Cal1446 -1788.
1 bed room Apt . $196. mo.
including utilities. Equal
housin g opportunity . Co.ntact Village Manor Apts,

614 -992·7797 . .
Furnished apt . M iddleRort,
adults. no pets. month rent
plus $1 Q() security 992-

3874 .
New one and two bedroom
apartments, furnished or
unfurnished in Middleport.

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa , chair, rocker. otto·
manL 3 tables, (ex tra heavy
by 1-rontierJ , $686 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat, $276.
Sofas and chairs priced from

$285. to &amp;895. Tables, $46
and up to 8125 . Hide-abeds,$440. and up to
$626 .. Recliners, 8176. to
S375 .. lamps from 828. to
$75 .5 p_
c . dinettes from

S99 .. to 435 . 7 pc. "1 1 B9
and up . Wood table with six
c hairs $425 to $746. Desk
$110 up to $226. Hutches,
$560 . and up, maple or pine
·finish . Bunk bed . complete
with mattresses, $250 . and
up to $395. Baby beds ,
EO 11 0. Mattresses or box
springs. full or twin. $58.,
firm , $68 . and S7S. Queen
sets. $195. 4 dr. cheats,
$42 . 5 dr. chests , $54. Bed
frames, S20 .and $26 ., 10
gun - Gun cabinets. $360.
Gas or electric ranges $375.
Baby mattresses, 126 &amp;.
S35, bed frame• S20. S25,
&amp; $30, king frame $50.
Good selection of bedroom
suites, ce dar chests.
rockers , metal cabinets.
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture -- bookcase.
ranges , chairs. dryers, refrigerators and TV 's , 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri .• 9am
to 6pm, Sat ,

446-0322

Call 992 -5304.

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Furnished apt. for rent in

Syracuse . 614-992-7689
attar 6PM .

3 room furnished Apt . 614992 -5434 .

Ave., Gallipolis, 446-1699.
Spin washers. gas &amp; electric
dryers. auto washers. gas &amp;.
electric ranges. refrigera tors. TV sets .

GOODUSED APPLIANCES
River si de Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens.
30. Equal Housing Opportunities . 614 -

Washers, dryers, refrigera tors, ranges . Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.

992-7721

446-7398 .

s,

2 bedroom furn ished Apt . Must sell 83 Model Singer
$160 . month plus utilities sewing machines . Un 12x60 2 bdr. modern fur- and deposit . Overlooking claimed by school $95. Call
nished tra iler , co nvenient Ohio river in Minersville. 446-9301 .
location , Upper River' Rd, 1-6-14
_-_9_9_2_-3_3_2_4_._ _ __
Sole. 25% to SO% off
deposit req . Call 614-446 Apartments
. 304 - 675 - washers, dryers. ref.,
8558 .
ranges . de11ks lind chest of
5548 .
drawers. Skaggs Applian2 bdr. trailers. Apartment s 1
bdr. Beautiful river view in APARTMENTS • . mobile :ces. Upper River Rd . Call
Kanauga . Fo sters Trailer homes, houses. Pt . Pleasant 614-446-7398. Open 9-6.
and Gallipolis . 614 -448 Park . 446 - 1602.
Ray 's Used Furniture, GE
822 1.
dryer
$60, bedroom suite
Niclv furnished modern mobile home. in city. 1 or 2 TWIN RIVERS TOWER . $150, refrigerator 8126,
adu lts only . Call 446-0338 . ApBrtments now available to Maytag wringer wa1her
elderly &amp; disabled with an $85. coal stove $200 ,
1 mobile home for rent . 2 income o f le is than laundry 1tove $65, 8 che1t
mobil'e homes for sale. Cell $12,300 . Renting for 30 of drawers 836 each, 2 pc .
percent of adjusted income- bedroom suite 860, playpen
446-1062.
$20, stroller $12.-highchair
. Phone 304-675-6679 .
$10 . Call 614-367-0637.
2 bdr. mobile home. Call
Furnished Apanments. 304446-0390.
675 -2050 or 304 -675 - Wooden frame sofa &amp;
rocker. brown plaid. $100or
1 2x66 two bedroom trailer, 3491 .
best
offer. Call 614 -379fu rnished , all utilities paid.
2207.
.
S325 mo ., $100 deposit . Small furni1hed end 2" bed room unfurnished apartCall 446 -65B3 .
ments. Point Pleasant area.
Housa trailer adulta only, no 304-675 ·1365.
pets. 322 Third Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 446-3748 or
45 Furn.ished Rooms
614-256-1903.

256 -6251 sitar 5:30.

Limestone delivered. $10

ton. Call 614-256.- 1427.

Happy

Doberman

Firewood delivered . 636
pickup load, 10 loads 1300.

Stud

614-367-7220.

Christmas Special New 4

Brierpatch Kennel• Profe•aional All·breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spa·

614-446-4782.

niot puppieo. Coli 814-3999790 .

Washer, lawn mower. stero,
re1rigerator S. train lay-out.

Dragonwynd CatteryKennels . AKC Chow puppies, CFA Himalayan, . Pertian , and Siamese kittens.

Call 614-246-5267 after 5 .
ADD -ON Woodburnlng fur nace. aUto. controls, water
heater included. Neverusad .

Coli 446-3844 altar B.

New 1983 Nelco Sewing
Machines . Free arm. 5
stretch stitches, 10 de1ign
stitches, blind hem, mend·
ing stitch. monograms. diala-matic button holer. Sew•
on denim material. Regular
price $635 .96 . Now only
$229. Over stocked . Must
sell by Jan . 31. 26 year
fac;tory warranty. Call 814-

71

Upright piano. 304-6762451.

1982 Buddy two b•droom
1 4x16 furnished,washerl.dryer, like new. Finlncing available. 814·992

25 " Ouazar color conaole
T\1, exc. cond., $250. Call
614-245-9225.

$6 .99-9 .99 . baby Para keet's 9.99, adult Parakeets
$7 . 99, female Canary's

Delbert &amp; Bob Lawson's
Chriltmas trees. 6' to 12'
trees. large blue spruce &amp;.
large scotch pine. All area
churches discount . Across
from Highway Oil on Eastern
Ave. God bless you.

9 .99. 44 gol combo aquarium $139.95 [only 2), 45
gal

combo

aquarium

$120.95 [only 2). 15% off

W~ch

trencher Fredericktown ,

Ohio . Call 1- 614 -694 7942 .
Christmas trees. All sizes &amp;
shap,es. 86 each . Cut your

own. Call 614-245-5152

For sale grave blankets. Call

614-949-3037.
85 BTU fuel furnace with
tank. Coal wood burning
.atove. 1969 International
truck for parts or will sell

outright. Call 742-2416.
19" Zenith black and white
TV. Asking $126 . Also
Hobby Horse asking $26 .
Cell614-949-2141 .
Sears Freestanding fireplace
with 8 ft. of pipe. Brown.
used 3. months. 8360 . 882-

receiver

Pioneer

780-1 60 wan. Technic direct turntable . Advent
Speakert 126 watt. e1.200.
inV&amp;Ited will take e660.
1938 Plymouth truck
$1,500, negotiable needs
reitored , excellent condlton.
on Thome• Ridge,
McCormick• Farm, Ilk for

S••

Jim .

63

Livestock

EXLINE SADDLE SHOP 2

oeddle uvo u
head1talla uwe 88
leather show halter with
silver ,847.60
all grooming item save 8$
814-28~·8522 .

r_:___:__:__ _ _ _ _ __

9. 304-883-837B. 8150.

6522.

814- 742 -

New 19B3 VW GTI. 4,000

sale

Reg.

ChestnU1

$300. 300 gallon tank-UO.
' 898-8531.

1979 LaSabra. low mileage,
1974 Rivera . Phone 304876-6182.

Four'
(I) MOVIE : 'Crisis at
Central High'
'ffi l Spy
C!l ESPN's
Ringside

ALLEY OOP'

Bud, 304-458·

Plumbing
&amp; H•ating

Cll Q)

72

cyl.,

Hay

&amp; Grain

lNG. Fomerly Dewitt's

$2,896.

1882 &lt;:ar

$16 eech . Coll448-1062.
Very nice Timothy hay for

oale. Large heavy baloo. Aloo
mixed gra11 legume hay.
Storaoa at both Coolville
and Rutend. Gobel Angu•

Form .. Coolville. 814-887·
3838 .

John't Auto Sales, BulaviHe

Coli

Hay, large bales. flr.l t cutting. orchard gr111, never

1-::::====~==:::=
Vena 8o. 4 W.O.

-.. ............
.. . . -· . ......
Autos for Sal•

1978 Chevrolet 4x4 black
with ohort bed, V-8. 4 opd ..
With lock out hubbs IIi roll
ber. Cllll Ron Sheets. 814218-1484.

Ph••••
work

will trllda for pickup tnAck.
Coli 81 4·448-4013.

10:00

HONEY,

EVERYTHING

Oh . 814-742.

Electrical
Refrigeration

Motorcycles

Large private mobile home

COUNTR'I' MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. large lott. Call

992-7479.
48

2-1118aYamah.. MX-80'•·
good, cond .. I 300 uch. Call
..a.8101.
.

1I 7 I
M u 1 to" g tu r b Q
oh•rged, 4 spd. trano.
12.1100. Cll11441·7214.

304-875· 3717.

!==========

I:;;::=:;:=::;;:-===
78 , _ Auto Pertl
1. ACCIIIICirlea

Hand crank cream Hpara·
tor. Also large cedar lh;utd
steamer trunk. Both In excel·
lent cond. Call 446· 3934.

J-.

Equipment
for Rent

20ft. flo! bed troller. Con Delivered. 12"-22"1tooked
pull . with own pk:k or car. in y1rd. HEAP vender,
Haulanythln' on lt. t21 per prompt delivery. ·814-258doy. Call 814' 448-0171.
·8241.

ayt.. .....
lltt,

tli':!.......
9niY

ca.......

Jahn'a'AutD

It

011. Call

with Dr. Halloran . j60 min. I

IF YOU'VE GOT
THE MONEY
TO SPEND/

ill

in Concert
MOVIE:

~

.

' Friendly

Persuasion'

CIJ Iii GZ

Arthur Hailey's

Hotel Peter is co urted by
Mrs . Cabot" s bu~iness rival
and a journalist
side scoop on
rock singer. (60
Cl) Return of

gets an inan elusive
min .)
the Great

Wluiles
(j]) News
1 0 ; 1 5 (I) liBS Evening News
10:30 ill Blondia

••rvlce. Authorized Singer
Salol &amp; Sorvico Sharpen
Febrlc Shop,

BARNEY

Pomaroy. 982-2284.

SEE VOU
IN CHURCH,
LOWEEZV

G!lneral Hauling

I'LL

JONES BOYSWATERSER :
VICE. Call 814-387-7471
or 814-387-0591 .

CiiJ• International Violin
Competition of Indianapolis Tonight's program
presents highlights of this
violin competition th at attracted 44 performers from
over 20 cou.nJries. (60 m in.)

•

I'M GLAD VOU
DROPPED BY,
PARSON

AN' TATER 5AV5 THANKV
FER ASKIN' TH' BLESSIN'

41111NN Nawa

11 :00

II CD CIJ rn 0 CIJ ®
GZ News
ill Another Ufe

Ill

(!) SportaCentar
C1J Dr. Who
4111 Benoy Hill Show
11 :15(!) Auto Racing '83 :
NASCAR
lnternationel
Sedans from Rockingham,
NC
1 1 :30 U CD (I) Tonight Show

Wa'll do it. Call 446-31511
bet-an 9 ond 6.
low raiN. Call 814-2181743.

CD Hitchhlkor:Shlrttered

JIMB WATER SERVICE .
. CIIH Jim lanlor, 304-8717317.

Vows A young fonune hunter falls in love with his
w ife's stepdaughter.

•••vol,

(Answers tomorrow)

I

Yesterday's

''NINE TIMES TWELVE''
DOES IT AGAIN •..

TOO HARD..• I
61\IE

UP.. I'M

UND~

SLIDING

TilE TABLE ...

CIJ Soep
0 CIJ Pollee Story

OFTEN POCKET NOODLE
you want to buy a good wig, you sure have
lhos - TOUPEE FOR IT
-

Answer: II

Join U. Jumbte Loven F1n Club 1nd .-.celwltlx tiatlt·word StJJ:'r Jumbleae-..ry month.
. For lrN 11~1 write to; Jumble LOV'Irs F1n Club, CIO 1h I MWIJ)Iper, 80.11. 52~1,
dt1ndCentr1i &amp;t1tlon, Ntw Vorti,N.Y. 10183.1nclude your name,eddr111 1ndzlp coM.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Visualize the hands
NORTH

12-7-81

+K63
,. J 10 4
tAQJ 64
+K4
WEST
EAST
+A Q 10 9;
• 74
,. 7; 3

"K 6

t K 9; 3
+Q 612

t87
J 10 9 7

+

SOUTH
• J 82
,.AQ982
• 10 2
+A 8 3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

Nortb

Easl

It

South

I+

2,.

Pass 1,.
Pass ' 4•

P.ass .

Pass

Pa!jS

Opening lead: +J

There have been countless
articles to illustrate how an
astute declarer will make a
doubtful contract by placing
his opponents' cards as he
wants them to be.
Every declarer who has
progressed to even an inter-

....,,.a(

~

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
&amp;laughing
I Highlanders
sound
6 Rental.;ign
7 Loren's
"goJd..
11 Patois
12 Wear away 8 " Daum
13 UnbelievYankees"
able (sl.)
temptress
15 English
9 British
river
statesman
16 TV actress, 10 Trial run
Yesterday's Answer
Charlotte- 14 Cab rider
18 Passe
26 Ending lor 37 Cause
17 Emmet
18 Took
19 Begrimed
ban or run
pain
20 Wee drink
28 Ca.rriage
38 Gaelic
the risk
20 Untamed
21 Man's name 311 Valley
E
39 qual
22 large
32 Habituate
23 Mideast
33 Voice
41 Island in
container
country
24 Cheering
34 Yearn
the Adriati~
27 Angry
28 Jalopy
word
35 Was
42 Cargo
29 Head
;,2!_5~C~ons~um~ed~,....,~~~
weight
30 Amass
31 Pip
II
33 Exclude
36 Born
(Fr .)

37 Wise
about

40 Pointed
medical
practice
43 Cut off
44 Gelding
45 Marsh plant b-+-f-+46 Get in
DOWN
I Secure
2 Basic point
3 Make
eyes at
4 Sanskrit
school
5 Accumulation

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the length and formation of Ihe words are all
hints. Each day the code lett~rs are different .

IW

J CE S

YWIJZYX

Vice Squad to make a deal

BZI J

e

•

CRYPTOQUOTES

ies of prostitute murders
enables a · member of the

(JGM•A•S•H
• ~ Nlghtllne
Twilight Zone
,12:00 I]) Hltchhlten: Morning
· Comee A woman changes
the weekend plana of a play·
boy pro.-.car.

"

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
u sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Si ngle letters.

KSWKTS

l60 min .!

•

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

WY TL

(1) Latanfght A1t1erlca

r
I

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

mediate stage does this in
some measure . On the other
hand, a defender who is able
to do this is almost surely an
expert or near-expert.
·
Dummy's king of clubs
wins the first ttick, and t!Je
jack of · hearts is led and
allowed to ride to We•t's
king. Most West players will
simply lead the club I 0,
whereupon declarer will
win, ruff his last club, draw
trumps and make his contract with no trouble at all.
Nqw let's watch a West
player with ·a thinking caP.
on his head. He will see 1f
there is any way to beat that
heart game. A little hand
reconstruction will show
him that there is a distinct
possibility that East holds
the king of diamonds. After
·all, if South held that card
along with the club ace and
that good trump suit, he
might well have made some
mild slam try.
Then West will see that if
South also ho lds three
spades, there is a chance to
salvage a plus. How does he
go about this•
He simply leads his queen
of spades and poor South is
going to lose hts nice game .
Dummy's king of spades will
win that trick but when East
- gets in with the diamond
king, he will give his partner
two beautiful spade tricks .

IJS

'Requiemfor C.Z. Smith.' A ser-

on a department transf~r. (R)

•

I

Jumbles USURP

I]) Dobia Gillie
(I) Clltllna

PEANUTS

144t-4711.

' ----------~"·------------

(I) St. Elsewhere
The conflict in Northern Ireland continues as one of ttle
boys involved in a fight dies
and Or. Westfa ll clashes

CD Daryl Hell &amp; John Oates

. SEWING Machina repalro,

Will hauloo.l,
und.
· anythlftg. Coli Bud 304Chrtltmas Speciale- 1111
. 481-1188 .
Chwy Chewtle 2 ... 4
opel .. U,IH. 1110 , _ 2·H 11•now• mudlhefor
lunblnl 4 lfllll;, AM·FM. CM¥y ftUCIIt. Mounted on 1 I
cat ••· aunroet. t:l,lll. ln. 8 lug wh 111. Cell 441- 17
l,lpholetery
1171 Ol-lila ._,.,. 1134.
Flrenu. V-1, auto, . _
tiM 12.711. 1171 Yollq. 4whlteo110bwhoele, 11xB,
TRISTATE
Ford or
we110n llabbltt. 4 dr., .. . 8 lug, fit
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
AC, lunroof. 12,711. 1171 8oout. ..0. 304-481·
1183 loc: Ave.. CliiUpollo
Chwy Nova. 4 dr., I 0¥1., 1117.
441·7111
or 441·1113. ·
auto., IIM·FM U,UI.
1171 Forti Future, 4 IIIII.. 4

II CD

15
POSSIBLE •••

Electric Co . all
of electric work, all
gu•ranteed. Aerial

Scl1aors.

Twain
(!) FIS World Cup Skiing:

Men's
Slalom
from
Kran}ska Gora. Yugoslavia

truck rontol. Coli 814-448 2718 . '

85
1978JMp4•4.••· cond., or

9 :30

"'Pasquale
1

Ar1v

(1) Survival Specie(·
(j]) An Evening with Mark

J .A .R . Construction Co .
Water lines , Footeu ,
Drain1. All kind• of Ditching.

304-875·371 7.

MOVIE:

WPBV

Call anytime 446-4637,
L Daviaon. Jr.

&amp;

®

Cll

'Prototype'
"' The Per1ect Predators

Jame1
owner.

84

MOVIE: 'To Hall and
Back'
ill 700 Club
CIJ tD ~ Dynasty Blake

C1J ALL NEW: SHARKS

Good-1 Excavating, batemenu. footers, driveways,
aeptic tanka. landscaping.

UMd tnack1, 19157 Dodge
D200, '4 ton. llot bod, V-8.
dual wheel•. Cllttle rack1.

1!11

Ill

a

Rutlond ,
2903.

® Snow White

and Krystle's romantic evening leads to a marriage
proposal aod Peter uses his
charm ro coun Fallon. {60 ,
min.) (Closed Captioned)

Hooq4 don'
know i:~lot .
o' words!

61 4-448-1 1 42 between
7:00AM
6:00PM.
-

1979 Toyoto 4 wheel drlvo,
long bed truck. 304-4181662.

wet. 11.10 belo. Cllll after 173
8:00, 304-671-2802.

WORK By Ted

Cat 21&amp; hoe, dozers, crane, ·
loader1. dump truck. Call

'76 Jeep excellent condi tion . '78 Luv truck, VB conversion. blazer wheels. roll
bar. auto . tran1mluion.

1 980 F110, 4x4 CUitQm
302. 48,000 mlleo. 14.700.
304-773 , 6167 or 7735978.

Pleased to meet 40u!

Hanna, pond•. ditches,
ba1ement1, etc. Call 4484907. Carter &amp;. Evana
Trentponetion.

capacity, 12,495. Only ot
Oh.
•

9 :00

Excavating

DOZER

carrier trailer. 2 axle. hydradulic brakea. 8,00 lb. weight

Rd. Golllpolio,
446-4782.

8 :30

· GASOLINE ALLEY
83

t XI XI XJt XXI )

Answarhere:

Fall Guy Some-

Christmas
A
second~
generation Snow White
•creates a new legend based
on the adventures of the original princess . lA) (60 min .)
fi) Man Who Loved Baars
(]I) Forum
.fl) Prime Time Magazine

I

814-3.6 7-

Trucks for Sale

304-676·3388 .

Large round bales of hay,

Ill Cll

JIM'S PLUMBING IIi HEAT·
Coli

GZ

body tries to keep Colt and a
friend out of a national car
race. (60 min.)

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Plumbing.
0678.

Now arrange the Circled !eners to
fonn the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon .•

MOVIE: 'Sands of lwo

Jima·

Phrne 448-3888 or 44644·. 7

beat otter. Phone 304-6754419 . ovaninga 304-8822071.

PO iH16.

Review

ilJ

WELL'i' DID YOU
TAKE CARE OF OLIR
VISITOR, BUDDY?

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

tire1, runa good. $800.:00 or

64

Knauff Firewood Pickup or

448-0338.

82

'76 Chryoler Cordoba, good

8378.

Roll top deok, flat tQp daok

lot in Centenary. Call 488 - 53
Antiques
4053 .
1 ---~-----

Small furn . houae 1 or 2
eduhl only, no pet1. Call

in The Peoples· Republic of
Chino . 12 hrs. l
CD MOVIE: 'The Sign of

W•ter hauling, Faat Service.

Call 992 -7479 .

Apartment
for Rent

Hou••• m.o ved or raised , .
basements dug berteth
houtes, free ettimatet,
House Movers. Inc. 304· .

etc. Coli
1668.

t
I ·J

XJ

Heart of China Tom Bro kaw presents this special
look at what life is really like

LIKE THAT NUR5E BE·
CAUSE SHE! WAS A!.WAYS TRYII\!6 TO .

tNEAFED

Tonight ·
lit One Dav at a Time
8 :00 U CD (I) Journey to the

mateo . 304-876 -2296 .

Framing, · remode:ling. roofing. 1iding. concrete work.,

$4099 . 304-876-1311.

200 to 225 Hybrid Leghorn
.hen1. In production. 8436195 altar 8 p.m.

with chair, hand made gUn
cabinet, end tables, coffee
table, chest and night ltand.

ments
(]) Hogan' s Heroes
C1J Q CIJ Family Feud
® Wheel ol Fortune
tD ~ Entertainment

676 -2711 .

auto, 8ir; 29,000 miles.
86,699. '81 E1c0rt. air.

46 Space for Rent
Furnished office for rent.
Clo1e to city building and

(1) Entertainment Tonight
(I) Charlie's Angels
Ill CIJ Wheel ol Fortune
(1) (j]) MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour
®News
tD ~ People's Court
1!11 Jeffersons
7:30 11 CD Tic Tac Dough
(!) NFL's Grelrlest Mo-

fun:Ml.re cleaning, frH ntl-

Nood oomothlng haulod

court houoe . Cell 448 -08515
dayo. •121 . mo.

44

Jwf"ur carpet SHIP
WITH CAPTIAN
· ~ER. Water removal,

away or something moved?

2 bedrooms , furnished.
$166 per month plus utili·
ties •nd deposit. No pets.
Country Mobile Home Park.

986-4387.

ter. [Day 614-692-4068.1
!night 614-888-8206.1

running condition .
1600. Large fuel oil furnace-

74

Nice 141170. 3 bedrooma',
unfurniahed, conviiment lo·
cation, large yard. t166.
plus utllitiea . Oepoait and
references requi,ed . 81 4 ·

Mfl. fiUNE? COME iN, Ml!iG ANNIE.
IT'5 ME,
1 HOPE YOU DON'T
I'INNIE I
MIND MY KEEPINq IT
f\M LEfl OIWI IN
.,. EIIRLY?

SEAMLESS ClUTTERS. One

1970 Chryolar 300. Very

Reglst8red AKC minature
Daechund, black and rust.
Born Nov .9 . Ready for
Chrittmas. Also Fawn Dob·
erman puppies. 304-883-

9760 .

992-5858 .

Commercial

piece c:u ..om fit You·r home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut-

good

3 bdr . 1Y2 baths, newly
remodeled. Close to town &amp;
s hopping . Call 614 -388·
12x60 ft . 2 bedroom mobile
hor'ne. Approx . 5 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport. Call

Welle.

304·895·3B02.

1974 Oldo Cutlass Suprema
for porto. •100. 614-9853688.

1987 Chevy truck. Call
614-388-8370.

$400. Coli 448-2838.

(!) SportsCenter
(]) Carol Burnett

Pump• 8al1111 and Service.

Chriotmu gift. 814·9492668.

992-7458.

"t

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

and DQmaltlc. Tel! holaa.

1965 Chevy, Auto .. P.s ,,
P.B.. runs good. $100:
614-995-4346.

and ohotl. B63-837B.

4 pc. Slingerland drum
and 181 of roto-tom1, lymbal•. hardware &amp; ca~e .

ill Alias Smith and Jones

THE PAiiENT5 l'IC7N'T

IVEEBAHI

Christmas Dinner Red
Skelton portrays the trials
and tribulations of planning
a holiday dinner.

romovol. Call876-1331 .

Water

17500. 614-992-3.812 .

1974 Chevy pickup V. ton,
360 3 opel.. good cond. Coli
814-446-7619 .

1----------

BORN LOSER

304-875·2088 or 8754680 .

miles. Warranty. AM - FM
casutte 6 1peed. Muat aell.

Registered AKC Doberman 'Reglltored Hollteln Bull. 2
puppies . Fawn and ruat- . yoaro old. 1.000 lbo .. Vary
$160 ' asch. BluUI-$176. gentle. Halter broken. Gli•Black and red-$76 . Wormed pie Howard residence . 614·

304 · 675· 1678 or 8767896 .

.

rienced roofing. Including
hot tar application. cerpen- .
tar, electrician, mason. Cell

Christmas Speci•l•- 1979
Ford Courier PU, 4 apd., 4

AKC Miniature Datchund.
Black and Rust. raady for
Christmas. Born November

Musical
Instruments

.

F &amp; K TrH Trimming. 1tump

304-882-3402 otter 6pm.

Sorrel gelding 4 whiteltockingt , white blaze~ face .
Simca show saddle with
breast 1tr8p. 814- 288 ·

57

(!) ESPN's Horoa Racing
Wkly.
CIJ Ill ~ ABC News
Q C1J ® CBS News
CIJ Business Report
1
· (j]) Over Easy
7:00 U CD PM Magazine
CD Freddy the Freeloader's

1982 Multang (LI AM .FM

Quarter horoo mare. Big

New wood burning stove
with firebrick $326 . each.

446-4630.

tr01. $2800 .
2181 .

J

I K)

ill Rifleman

house callo. Call 578-2398
.or 446·2464.

radio, tunroof, PS, PB,
41p.,low mileage, $4,&amp;00.

For

1-'-- - - - -- -- -

eea.

Call 304--882-2904 or 304882-3451 .

Sugar Ray Leonard hosts
this show where kids get a
·Chance to work. out with
spans superstars .

Specializing jn Zenith and .
Motorola , Quazar. and

379-2166.

Coli 614-245-9578.

Call 304-875-7771 .

Hand made doll house• with
furniture,
Phone 814-

Will pay top price for tobacco poundage. Call 614-

female, 10 months old, $76.

breeder. $50.00 or belt
offer. 304-468-1613.

delivered .

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

Chrlstmaa Sakt. Youth show

AKC regi1tered Doberman,
female, 4 yrs. old, good

1- - - - - - - - - -

62 Wanted to Buy

water Shipment Just Arrived . All fi1h are guaranteed. If low pricet S. quality
is your Xma1 wiah then get
your pet1 &amp; 1upplie1 at

876-2636 . .

(j]) 3 -2-1, Contact
4111 Buck Rogers
6:30 II CD (I) NBC News
CD Sugar Ray's AII·Stars

RON'S Talevlolon Sarvice.

'81 Old• Omega, p1, pb,

Rt 93 beolda 93 Auto Soles.

Riding mower, used 2
summers. $400 . 614-247-

2714.

troctor . 304-995-3471 .

mi . North of Jack1on on St.

Par!lOtl, Blue Head Pionus.
also Meyera. Phone 304·

814-448-4088 .

1974 Camero. auto .• P.S ..
P.S., A.C .• am-fm stereo,
low milage. like nnw. Greet

Now Solt·

2391 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

condition. Price negotiable.

AM -FM

2:00-B:OOPM.

UKC Reg. Treeing Walker

Antiques, oak furniture reproduction. misc. items . Use
our Christmas layaway plan .
Conkels. Tuppers Plains.

CIJ

Gallia Refrigarlition Co. Call .

alking $3,196. Cal! 448- .
8626.

1978 Old1 Delta B8 Royale,

other aquar . 'a (limited
supply}. Many more spill·
ciels. Hrs . 1 O: OOAM ·
8 :00PM , Mon .- Sat.. Sun

JACK'S TROPICAL FISH .

after 6PM .

Prairie

Cooling. Sheet Metal Wolil.

cloth interior. rultprooflng.

excellent cond., new tire1.
A-C. plu1h Interior. all ex·

8N Ford tractor, plows.
utility trailer. John Deere

baby $39.99 ea.. Fancy
hamstert .99. Guinea pigs

residential , free

a.

1980 Da11un ;11 0 OX. AM FM radio, tach, quartz clock,

7479.

ae .,

water) $12.00 ea.- FREE
Myltery Snail With Each
Purchaoe. Pearl Cockatiels

cl1l ' and

HERE, DR INK A
A LiTTLE MOREOF THIS WATE"-.
'IOU'[.L FEfL A
LOT !!fTTER.

Appliance Service All make• ·
models refrigerators.
w11hers. dryers, ranges,
compactors. dishwashers,
microwevu . Heating &amp;

Autos for Sale

1978 Harlay Dovldoon
Sportltor. 11900. Excellent

di1k plows 8t bush hog in
working condition . For more
information call -614 -2469105.
·

blk. Molly's 2 -. 99 ,

PLASTERING -

Coli 814-388-9867.

59 For Sale or Trade

pair. Comet goldfi1h 8-. 99,
Reg. lebra Denio'a 2-1.10,
Neon Tetra't .96 ea .. Green
Sworcttail'• 2 -. 99, Red Wag
Platy' s .69 ea .• Betta's 1.90
Freahwater Stingray 44.00,
Snoflake Moray eel' a (fresh-

395-4535 . Free Delivery.

Dried firewood

Musical
Instruments

JACK' S TROPICAL FISH 61
Farm Equipment
Rt. 160 Evergreen Pat Shop. - - - - - - - - - Coli 448-0198 . Xmos AD 1974 Ford tractor 3000
Spec. '1 Common Guppy' I power tteering, lookl like
8- .99, FoncyGuppy'o$1 .99 now, priced $6,800. With

388-9969 .

STUCCO

Marcuin Roofing • Spouting. 30 yeers experience,
specializing in built up roo.1.

AKC Raglltored Poodle puppies. Dep. will hold for
Chriltmao. Call 446-0B57.

4 HP scrapper, Sears mini
bike like new $200, banjo
good cond. $40 . Call 614·

Ditch

puppiea:

Ci-eati.ve
Christie.'
This
show demonstrates reflned
'Christie' techniques which
allows more flexibility with
varying terrain and snow
conditions.
ffi Utile House on the

CAPTAIN EASY

altlmates . Call 614-2681182.

Food.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

ft.x8ft. electric arrow flash -

J -20

Dog

Service. Call 44&amp; -7795.

Cell 614-25 6-1427.

Used

Jack

(!) Alpine Ski School 'The

ta~tured ceilings commar- ·

57

...

(]) New Treasure Hunt •

Home
lmprovem!lntl

~~~==:;~~~====~~~·;*"~-~--~-~-~~~~'~...~.~~~~~-~

~--

Ill

Wlrtarfront'

0 . Coli 814-246-5 121 .

Farms for Sale

72 AGR E Farm, located in
Langsville n ear M eigs
Mines . For more information

&amp;:00 U CD CIJ rn Q CIJ ®

CD Consumer Reports
CD !IIIOVIE: 'On the

Used hid-a-bed, 30 in. gas LUMBER- Rough cut, oak.
r-ange, cedar wardrobe. RCA poplar. 2x4. 2x8. 2x8. 1x4.
color TV . Corbin &amp; Snyder 1 x8, 1 x8.1ongth ovollable. B
Furniture. 96&amp; 2nd . Ave . fOot through 14 foot . Hogg
Call 446-1171 .
&amp; Zuopon, 304-773-5564
daytime.

' 69 Schultz mobile home.

central air, $3,800.00·as is .
304-675-6448 or 304-8953472 .

"-·-~.,._,

~ News

Building m•teriall
block, brick, ..war pipet.
windows , lintels , etc .
Claude Wlnten, ·Rio Grande,

Ju-•·

lour ordinary wordo.

EVENING

.1.BOO. 304-.7 73-6187 or
773-1597B.

56 Building Supplies

Firewood slabs for sale . *16
pickup load. Call 814 ~ 245 ·

Unocramble thou lour

one letter to •ICh square, to torm

12/7/83

FirewoQd. Pickup or delivered dump truck. Call614-

256-6689 .

DOWN ---

ffi'il

~j1&gt;~i.\.ft
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME
~ ~ ~~ '" . · by Henri Arnold and8obLae

WEDNESDAY

1972 Mountaineer, 19Yz
foot Mlf conteined. lhower.

10 .Calnarti

Ser•tin&lt;ei--Pacle- 13

The

Television
Viewing

ohort bod pickup f75. 304875·7322.
..

Junlpero, 10 Obellla Aron·
daftora. 8 Croeplng Junlp·trs. ' con 814-448-2808.
Nursitry Inspected. You dig.

SUII'IGLE-5 Afll'

DICK TRACY

Sl~ 1oot Coleman trailer with
cover $300. Topper for

Firewood . 304-882·21537.

1!. Son . Csll448-7785.

Ohi~

December 7, 1983

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

by Lany Wright

54 Misc. M!lrchandisl

Ta~as.

December 7, 1983

Wednesday,

Middleport, Ohio

IJS

GJZTMASY

BJW

SMOG C I ZWY
CAS

IJs

USSP

IW

MW

wv

I JS

K CAS Y I U·.

- X. F . GJSUISAIWY

Y_..y'1 Cryploq~: PRAISE HAS DIFFERENT EF· . FECTS ACCORDING TO THE MIND IT ~TS Wll1i: IT MAKES A WISE MAN MODF.Sr BUT A JI'QOL ~!fORE
ARROGANT.-OWENFELTHAM

.,

-'

�;

Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

7, 1983 '

160 people die when
.planes collide

Area deaths
Harley Grate

December

Ohio

the Tuppers Plains Chris tian
Chu rch Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funera l hom e from 7 to 9
tonight and Thursday from 2 to 4
p.m . and 7 to 9 p.m .

Harley E. Grate. 53. Langsville.
died unexpectedly early Wednesday morning a t his residence.
Arrangements are being completed
by the Bigony-Jordan Funera l
o Hom e at Albany. The Rutland · Helen M. Wilson
· em ergency squad was called to the
residence a t 4:58a.m . but Gratewas
Helen M. Wilson .~- Mason, died
dead on arrival.
Tuesday at her home.
Born Sept: 17. 1\lOO in Cliflon. she
was the daughter of the late
Estella McGill
Sherman and Sue lla Domick
Cunningham.
E te Ua McGill , 82· of Tuppers
P lains, died at Arcadia Nursing
She was !hemm er and oi;&gt;cratoro!
Helen· s Place in Mason.
Home Tuesday following an ex·
Surviving are one son, Woodrow
te nded illness.
Wilson. Mia mi. F la .; one sister,
Born in Dodgeridge County, W.
Edn a Erhardt. Sacramento. Calif.;
Va .. she was the daughterof the lat~
three granddaug hters . Shet)'l LauGeorge and F rana Costellow Goldsdermilt,
F ive Point s, Ohio, Linda
boroug h. She was a mem ber of the
Davis.
Mason
and E laine Parker,
St. Paul United Methodist Church.
Melbourne,
F
la.;
three grandsons,
and the United Met hodist Women
Tuppers P la ins..
·
'
Lowell S. Wilson, Miami , Fla., •
Jimmy Dell Marsha ll , stationed a(
· She is s1.1rvived by a da ughter .
Bost.on, Mass. wiih the U.S. Navy,
Emma Diragh of Lawton, Okla.; ·a
and 1\'ick Wa-lburn, Fort Myers, F la.
sister, Nellie Lewis, Southfield ,
She was preceded in death by two
Mich.; a brother, Glen Golds bo·
daughters. Betty J ane Marshall in
rough, Reedsville, W.Va.; and two
1967. a nd Margar et J ean Marshall
grandda ughters.
in 1982.
She was preceded in death by her
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m .
parents, her husband. Leonard in
Thursday in F oglesong Funeral
19~. a s ister and a brother.
Home. Mason. with the Rev. Bennie
Fluneral services will be conStevens officiating. Burial will
ducted Friday at 11 a.m. at the St.
follow in Kirkland Memorial
P a ul United Methodist Church.
Gardens.
Tuppers P lains. Officia ting wtll be
Friends may call at the funeral
· the Rev. Don Archer and the Rev.
home from 7-9 p.m . Wednesday.
Richard Thom as. Burial will be in

MADRID, Spain (AP) - Two
Spanish a irlinerS collided in heavy
fog today while preparing to take of!
from Madrid's airport . Qvll defense
offlclals said about 100 of the 134 ·
people aboard the planes were killed
in the crash and a fiery explosion
that followed.
Involved in the collision were an
Iberia A1r Lines Boeing 'm on its
waytoRomewith84passengersand
nine crew members aboard and a
DC-9 o! Avlaco, a Spanish domestic
airline, with 37 passengers and six
crew aboard, on its way to
Santander in northern Spain.
Initial reports said the only
surviors abOard the Boeing were
believed to be eight crew members.
It was not lrnmedlately known how
many passengers on the DC-9

Jetliners
Collide
SPAIN

JETLINERS COLLIDE Two Spanish airliners coU!ded in
heavy fog Wednesday while
preparing to take off in heavy
fog. First reports said about 100
of the 134 people aboard were
·
killed. (AP Laserphoto).

Middleport
native fired
first shot of
·World War II
A day to remember ...

Dec. 7, 1941

The U.S. Ward was out in Pearl
Harbor under the command of
William W. Outerbrtdge, a native of
Middleport, when the Japanese
surprise alr attack occurred.
It was Cmdr. Outerbridge, who
fired the first shcit of World War II.
A graduate of Middleport High
School and the Annapolis Navy
Academy, Outerbridge was reared
on Fisher Street in Middleport, the
home now occupied by Mrs. Marlon
French. He is related to the
descendants of the Weeds and
Meigs County residents will be .increase," she added.
Calderwoods of Meigs County.
receiving increasedsta teassista nce
Emergency HEAP will provide
His mother was Jessie Woodard
with this winter's heating bills,
up to $~ to any qualifying .low
Outerbridge, a World War I nurse,
according to State Representative
income household that Is discon·
and his father was an English sea
J olynn Boster .
nected. has a !ina! notice of
captain who is burled In China.
The allocation for E m ergency . &lt;lisconnection or uses bulk fuel and
Outerbridge's grandfather oper·
HEAP tHorne E nergy Ass istance ' has !Odaysor less supply. Because
a ted a store in Middleport for many
Program ) paymets inMeigsCounty
of large demand and limited
has been increased by$35.000. "This
resou rcess, applicants may receive . years.
Ret. Admiral Outerbrldge now
assistance from Emergency HEAP
makes a total of$95,000 that has been
resides in Florida.
provided by HEAP to Meigs County
only one time this winter .
to prevent wint er emergencies over
As of today, Meigs County has had
the next fe" ' months ," Boster said.
1,349 applicants declared eliglble for
" This program helped nearly regular HEAP, but Boster expects
2,000 households in Meigs County more t9!ollow. Regular HEAP pays
John Pierce, Route 124, Pomeroy
last winter. and I am vety pleased 1340 percent of an appicant's billed
was
lined $375 and costs on a charge
tha t such a worthwhle program can usage for the months of December,
o!
driving
while intoxicated and put
t;ontinue wtth ttlis trem endous January and February.
on six month's probation for a
charge o! leaving the scene of an
accident on East Main near Nye
Ave. when he appeared in the court
a! Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An·
drews Tuesday night.
Seeks divorce
In other court action, Charles
Whittington, Pomeroy, forfelted$43
Tammy Lynri_ Daniels, MiddleSix calls for assistance were
on a charge of Dinning a stop sign;
port,
has ftled lor a divorce from
answered by the Meigs County
Robert Roush, Syracuse, forfeited
J effery Earl Daniels, Canton. The
Emergency Medical Service units
$63 on a chargeof!ailingto register a
plaintiff charges gross neglect of motor vehicle; Charles Ohlinger,
Tuesday and early Wednesday
duty and extreme cruelty and asks
.
morning.
Rutland, forfeited $63 on failure to
for custody of the couple's two register a vehicle; and Michael
At !0: 39 a .m . the Racine unit went
children.
to Southern High School lor Eric
Schloss, Pomeroy, $63 on turning
Taylor who was taken to Veterans
left on a red light.
Memorial Hospital; at 2:32a.m . the
Tuppers Pla ins unit went to Eastern
Three persOns were fined .;,d
Square dance set
High School for Mike Douglas who
A square dance will be held at the another forfeited a bond in the court
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital, Long Bottom Community Building of Middleport Mayor Fred Hotlman
Parkersburg; at 7:25 p.m . the
Friday !rom 8 to 11: ll p.m . Tuesday night.
Racine unit went to Vine Street lor
Robert Mulford, Cheshire, forfeRefreshments will be served .
Della Roseberry, taken to Vete·
Ited a $450 bond on DWI . Fined were
ra ns; at 7: 25 p.m . the Syracuse
David Tyree, Middleport, $50 and
squad responded to the Mary Martin
costs. disorderly manner; George
Holiday bazaare set
resident where a poslble gas leak
McDaniel, Middleport, 10 days in
was checked out; at 9:21 p.m . the
jail for disorderly manner; Dee
The annual holiday bazaar o! the Barber, Reedsville, $50 and costs,
Syracuse unit went to Lemja
Meigs County Humane Society will
Hubbard's residence on Fifth St.
open container; and Lance Herand transported her to Veterans be held at the Thrift Shop in
mann, Middleport, costs on a
Memorial Hospital. At 2: 09 a.m . Middleport F riday and Saturday.
contempt charge and $100 and costs
Wednesday, the Syracuse unit unit
for criminal trespass.
treated but did not transport Nancy
Burley sale results
P a tterson, Church Street.

HEAP··assistance is increased

Mayor's Court

Meigs County happenings ..
Emergency runs

Four calls were answered by units
RIPLEY. Ohio (AP) -Growers
Weather forecast
of the Meigs County Emergency
sold IBS. 778 pounds o! tobacco tor
Medical Service Monday.
$336,311.48 at Ohio's only burley
Mostly cloudy with scattered
At10:07 a .m . the Pomeroy squad
tobacco market Tuesday for an flurries Wednesday. Highs near 35.
went to ,Laurel Cliff for Charles
average of $17.81 per hUl)dred Clearing Wednesday night. Lows
Ohlinger who was transported to the
pounds.
near 20. Partly cloudy Thul'Sday.
Holzer Medical Center; at 1: 48a .m .
After regular sales Thursday the. Highs between 40and45. The chance
the Tuppers Plains uni\ took James
market will have additional sales by ofsnowls40percentWednesdayand
Kelly from Alfred to the St. Joseph
4-H members, officials said.
10 percent W.lldnesday night.
Hospital in Parkersburg; · at 2:53
Exleoded Ohio Forecast
p.m . the P omeroy unit went to 2()1
Friday through Sunda.vi
Mulberry for Earl Rottgln who was Lottery winner
Rain Friday, probably changing
transported to the Holzer Medical ·
CLEVELAND (AP) The
to snow and lumlng Colde~ SaluJ'..
Center, andat 5: 15p.m . the Tuppers
day. Fair and tumlng colder
Plains squad went to Reedsville lor winning number drawn Tuesday
Swula~\ lllghs from the 40t1 Friday
Jennie Burke who was transported night in the Ohio Lottery·~ dally
game, "'The Number," was048.
and the lDI Salurday to aroond *l
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
In the "Pick 4" game, played Sunclaf. Lows from aroond *l
Monday through Friday, the win·
Friday and the IIIII Salurda.v to
Meat furnished
ning number was 1000.
around 211 Sunday.
Themeatwlllbefurnishedforthe
hOliday dinner of the Rock Springs
Grange to be held Thursday at 6:30
p.m . atthegrangehall. There will be
a whiteetephantgtfi exchange, and
FRIED CHICKEN, CHOICE OF POTATO
members are to take gifts for the
AND VEGETABLE
AthensMenta!HealthCenter.
Try Our Daily

n

survived.

There was no ot!lclal word on the
cause of the accident, but Iberia and
airport sources said the collision
occurred as one or both airliners
. were acceleratlnginpf~!paratlon for
takeoff. Sources said they believed
was traveling about
the Boeing
100mph.
The DC-9 was said to be

m

completeley destroyed and Its
wreckage scattered over more than
amlle.
Qvil defense SOIIJ'CeS said the
DC-9 was hit near Its fuel tanks and
that a fire followed the collision.
" All we can see is a mass of
wi'eckage, seats and screams
coming from all sides, " said one
radio reporter at thE&gt; scene.
Transport Minister Enrique
Baron, who controls commercial '
aviation in Spain, left a sesslono!the
Cabinet and hurried to the airport.
The accldent occurred 10 days
after a Colombian Boeing 747 jumbo
jet crashed near Madrid, ldlllng 181
of the 192 people aboard.
The worst air disaster in history
occurred in Spain at the Tenerlfe
airport in the Canary Islands in
March o! 1917. A KLM Boeing 747
taking off in fog crashed into a Pan
Amerlcan747thatwastaxlingonthe
runway, leaving 582 people dead.
Barajas Airport had been closed
to all incoming traffic early today
because of the fog, and a number of
flights were diverted w other
Spanish airports, but some outgoing
traffic was permitted to take of!.

Rape victim•• ______
(Continued from page 11
robber on the run from Ohio. After
heleft,shesald,sheandherhusband
freed themselves aild contacted
authorities.
Carr's lawyer, in his opening
statement, said the state had
nothing but circumstantial evl·
dence. AttomeyJohnAndersonsald
the state couldn't produce a single ·
fingerprint and added. "Who knows
what kind of sex these people have
been having behind closed doorS?"
Carr was arrested several days
after the alleged assauli. Pollee said
he was traced through his car, ,a
Cadillac.
·
He later was released on bond but
he was jailed after being arrested in
Aug\lst on ·a second, unrelated rape
charge. In the second case, which

has yet tocometotrlal,helsaccused
a! raping a Charleston hitchhiker.
The woman toldpolicethatamanin
a Cadillac El Dorado picked her up,
pulled a gun and !)len drove her to a
remote area where he assaulted her
llefore returning her to the location
where he had found her.
Carr, whose Cadillac ElDorado
'\'as impounded, has been held in the

Reds sign Parker
Redmen rip Pikeville
tfl

Opal Mlller has been granted a
divorce from Wllllam Mlller, according to a ctecree filed in the Meigs
County Coi)U11on Pleas Court. file
plaintiff was given custody of two
minor children.

Bulletin
'

Portions of two diaries owned by the defendant,
Pamela Spencer, were ' admitted as evidence Ibis
momlng In 1\felgs County Common Pleas Court. 'lbe
entries read by Investigator Paul Gerard revealed the
foiiowmg:
'The defendant writes In an entry dated Sept. 211,
lB8'l, 1'1 think I'm prtgilaat and that UI am, I think It's
Scott's. u 1 am, I think 1 wm abort. I want SteveR.".
ht l!IIOther pall8lll(e dated Jan. 25, 1983, the
defead&amp;nt aDegedly wrote, "I am pregn¥t, I Jnll8t
start on a big diet. I am showing, more and more.''
An el1try wr1tt.ea Feb. 4, l983 said, "Haven't heard
from Steve. He rea11J has changed, maybe I've
changed.• It's the baby-Scott's baby,".
An AprO 13 entry says,"' wetp 13.'5 pounds, It wiD be
efgbt II1GI1tlls the 1"1111, just one month to go, hope I can
hancDe the detivery,".

poM £·ROY
fLOW£ R
SHO

.!)
,_,,

"

I ol

'

By KATIE CROW
Pamela Spencer's baby moved after being placed
In a plastic bag.
That was an important revelation presented
Wednesday In one of two signed satements made

Now's the time
to start a
•
family tradition
during the .
Howard Miller
Christmas
Sale.
-!

.'

WINFIELD, W.Va. (AP) J
Items found in the Cadlllac of Dr.
Davkl Carr have becomeakeyissue
In the sexual assault trlalo!the Point
Pleasant osteopath, who is accused
~raping a woman after drugging
hiif Iiusbaild.
.
A state trooper testl1'led Wednes·
day that Items found In Carr's
vehicle matched those spotted by a
nelghborinacaroutsldethehomeof
the rape victim.
Trooper W.H. Phillips said he
obtalnedawarranttosearchCarr's
Cadillac because of its resemblance
to one reported near the Putnam
County house on Jan. 8, the day the
rape occurred.
Spaulding said the neighbor

Now, you don't '1ave ro setcle for
less than Howard Miller'heirl oum
quality. Because many of their
grandfathers are on !iale in our
store. Yo~'il find their prices
mighty inviting. So inviting that
your only problem will be choosing
from such variety.
.
And the clock oi your choice will
be personalized wirh your name en·
graved in brass free. The beuer to
Start a family tradition ,
. All cases are painstakingly made
from carefully selected woods.
It will p~y you to buy your grand·
father durmg the Howard Miller
Christmas Sale. But , aet 1pow while
the ~argains last.
',

Scott Wolfe and Carroll Teaford
were elected to serve as the 1984
members of the Firemen's Depen·
dency Board at this week's meeting
of Racine VIllage Council.
The fire department will now
select two members and the fifth
wlll be elected by the those four.
During the session presided over
by Mayor Charles Pyles, the second
reading to the water system
ordinance was given . A third
reading will be given at the
December meeting.
Council authorized Its clerk to

Making application for marriage
licenses in Meigs County Probate
COurt were Jerry Thomas Martin,
44, Route 1, Cheshire, and Linda Lou
Freeman, 41, Pomeroy.
Mark Alan Harrison, 18, Route 1,
Cheshire, and Linda Jaye Roberts,
16, Route 4, Pomeroy.

third day of the tr1al, Q1.1estlons were presented by
Gerard and answers were given by Spencer.
The defendant said the scissors in her car belonged
to Cheryl Wilson and had been used to cut flowers: She
maintained they had been put in her car the day
before Cheryl Wilson left tor Florida. Spencer said she
wore a whlte gown when she left her mother's trailer
enroute to her car the night her water broke .
Her statement noted she thought she would go to the
hospital, but the pains were so severe, she cou,ldn't.
In her second statment, Spencer told Gerard she
picked up the baby, cut the rord, but did not tie it ,
before placing the infant in the bag with other stuff .
The entry descr!beO how the defendant returned to ·
ber mother's trailer home. tD get clothes when she
became dlzzy and laid down to rest, then went to
sleep. It aiso showed that the defendant lied about the
blood and she knew she would have to take the baby to
a hospital. She did not bave any clothes lor the baby,
and she did not tell anyone about her pregnancy.
According to that statement she wanted the baby,
but knew she couldn't keep it. In the statement, she
told of considering abortion and had up to four months
to decide.
Gerard then asked, "Did you kill your baby?"
Spencer answered," Guess I did, its obvious that I
did,''.

Gerard told the court both' sta tements were signed •
by the defendant after bein g advised a! her rights, the··
r ight to having an attorney and the !act that she cou)d
remain silent .
Describes invebtigation
Gerard outlined his investigation of the case
including the search a! the trailer. A consent form was
signed by Mr s. Spencer, mot her o! the defendant .
regarding the trailer search.
It was during that search Gerard fou nd a diary . and
soiled linen.
Wolfe testifies
Gary Wolfe. investigator for the · Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, ,l,was tht" next state witness
.;ailed .
Woife rev iewed his investigation and visits to tlle
hospital to talk with the defendant a nd visits to
Syracuse including the trailer search.
Wolfe said he was notifi('d concerning the case after
the s her iff's office received a call from Ga llia County
on May 31.
Wolfe reported the defendant was read the miranda
rights severa l times and she told him she had gotten
in her car to go to the hospital when the pains became
severe then the baby came.
(Continued on pa ge 101

.

looked in ~ car's front seat and
trunk and saw a box of disposable
diapers, ·a box ot .J!kallbershells, a
camouflage hunting jacket and a
package of beer. The trooper said
diapers and .38 caliber shells were
among the items he touoct later in
the doctor's car.
Carrlschargedwithftrst-degree
sexual assault and anned robbery
in-the case. He is accusedo!raplng
the woman after knOcking out her
husbandwlthadruginjectlon,and
with robbing the couple of~ in
cash.
Carr aiso has been charged in a
second, unrelalell rape case in
Kanawha County \hat has yet to go
to trial.

Defense lawyer Jolm Anderson
maintains that the neighbor's statementis unreliable and that Putnam
County ProsecutorO.C.Spauldlng's
case rests only on circumstantial
evidence.
The woman testlfted earlier this
weekthatsheandherhusbandwere
awakened by a masked intruder
whO held agunon them, drugged her
husband and bound him with
medical tape, and then raped ber.
The woman said the man per·
formed oral sex on her in the
kitchen, torced her to per!onn oral
sexonhlm,andthentookherbackto
the bedroom where he raped her.
Carr, whose wife's tamlly owns
the house and who had met the

woman earlier, was arrested several days after the alleged assault.
Pollee said he was traced through
his car.
Helaterwasreteasedonbondbut
was jailed after being arrested in
August on a second , unrelated rape
charge. In the second case, which
ha'snotgonetotrial,heisaccusedof
raping a Charleston hitchhiker. The
woman told pollee that a man in a
Cadillac plcked her up, pulled a gun
andthendrovehertoaremotearea
whereheassaultedher.
Carr, whose Cadillac was im·
pounded, has been held in the
Putnam County Jan since his
second arrest.

send' a letter to County Auditor
Wllllam WlcklinerequestingrertW· .
cation ofavallabU!ty o!turm so that
council can make additional appmprtatlons to the cUJTent budget to
bring the books into the black at the
end of the fiscal year.
Council also passed a resolutllon
authorizing the clerk to transfer
funds between the vartous accounts
to balance the books tor the end o!
1983 once receipt of certWcatlon
!rom the county auditor has been
received.

Cutting three dead trees In the
village was authorized.
Glenn Rizer, street commls·
stoner, was authorlzedtopurchasea
dusk-to-dawn light for the Third
Street side of the vlllage hall as well
astopurchasetwotlrestorthedump
truck. The clerk was authorized to
make the final payment to the
Southeastern Equipment for the
back hoe repair bill.
Council commended the firemen
.tor decorating the tree in front of
village hall and discussed the need
tor additional Christmas decora- .
tlons for next year.
The mayor asked the insurance
cmunlttee to recommend action to
be taken on medical insurance for

'

employes.
Councilman Frank Cleland,
chalrman o! the finance committee,
was conunended for his work on the
financial statement.
Report from Pollee Chief Alfred
Lyons noted that he had Investigated two accidents, answered 19
calls, invesllgated six complaints,
and traveled489mUes. He collected
$646in bonds.
Mayor Pyles reported that arran·
gements are being made to swear in
the new otficlais at the Dec. 19
meeting noting that Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight may be
present to do that.
Councll recessed until? p .m., Dec.
19.

INTERNATIONALTHEME - The !Utnttalhboory day prograinofthr
Chester Elementary school took on lUI international theme Wednesday
with live graduate students of Ohio University and th••ir families Visiting
the school. The students- fromGhana!Utd Ug,mda- visited each grade
and talked aboutthelrnatlon ,!ifestyle !Utd culture. Here, Lord Asamoah
of Ghana, a graduate student in EngHsh, talks about his counll'J•'s music
and their Instruments !Utdwaslater joined by hiswilefornatiwdru•cing.
Other students at the school were J:unes Emuge, a graduate stud em in
Mrlcan studies, !Utd AbduDai of Ghana, a m aster o! arts in intern ational
affairs. Programs such as the one at Chester are made possible through
the OWo Valley International CoWlcll, Center lor lntcmational Studies,
Ohio University, and are supported hy the Martha Holden .Jennings
Foundation. The students and their familie' ..-ere accomp,Uli('{l to
01ester by Mary Anne Fournoy, direowrol the Ohio Valley International
CouncU.

Lee's mother, father testify. in Gallia trial
By 'lbe OVP Staff

Ji!11

I Ball IE miJk Bt8calti

went Into Tat's, a nightclub near
Point Pleasant, and was accosted at
The !ather o! 17-year-old Charles the bar by Furst. Furst indicated tD
Lee II testified Wednesday in Lee's Lee Sr. she wanted to talk to him .
murder trial in Gallla County
Lee Sr. said he directed Furst to
Common Pleas Court that Shirley anemptytableandtheysatdown.At
Furst - a key prosecution witness that ttme, Furst told him, ·"I know
- was the first to discuss get11ng your son's tr1a1 comes up, and I have
money to leave Ohlo and stay away a sister llvtng in Florida. Give me
during the coune ot Lee's trial.
$1.000 tor a plane ticket."
But under cjuestlooing by ProsecLee Sr., his voice cracking when
utor Joseph Cain, Charles Lee Sr. he testlfled.' told the jury his
said he Interpreted Furst's state- response was, "Shirley, I despise
ment as me8ning she wanted the you, and I wouldn't give you a red
mmey just to leave.
cent...and to this day, I wwldn 't."
Lee Sr. was one of the tlrst
Furst then suggested that Lee Sr.
wttneues defense ai1Dmey Hamlin contact her later, he testified. "I
King called In bls etrorta to attack don't want to talk to you ever," was
the Furst's credibility. Funt,41, Rt. 1 his response, Lee Sr. said.
1. ('.aDtpolls, had testllled em-ller In
Furst ~ted "three or tour''
the trial that Lee D •coafeued the times that Lee Sr. call her about the
murder of Barbara Twyman to her Idea, he said.

..,~ _

$115

r'ua

;•1

-

4 Batte nplk ~ 8 Bldl a mtlk _ _ ....._
-~-

---.u~~~

1529

NEW FAU HOURS

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

8IM\I'8I times,

'·

Lee D, Point Pleaaant.ls char&amp;ed

with murder In thesiMlollqdeeth ot
Twyman, 17, Rt.l, Ewlnifm, on or
aboutlastMarcb20.
.
1

QOW'S FAMIY RESTAURANT ·_
221 W. MAIN ST.

•

prior tD the trial by the mother, Pamela Spencer.
Both signed statments were entered as evidence
Wednesday.
Spencer Is charged with involuntary manslaughter ·
and endangering children as the result ot her son's
death on or about last May 29.
In a statement given to Meigs County ProsecUtor's
investigator, Paul Gerard, Spencer aclawwledged
her baby moved after being placed in a plastic bag.
The first statement was made on June 1 while
Spencer was a patient at Holzer Medical Center, and
another stater.tent was given June 2, at the home of
the defendant's sister, Cheryl Frankp. ·
In the first signed statement read by Gerard, .the
defendant said she gave birth to a boy child somettm('
after midnight after her water broke as she was
making ber way to her car. At birth, the Wby fell to
the fioor of thE&gt; car and she wrapped lt In a nightgown
she was Wearing and cut the coni. She dldn 't have
anything to tie the coni, but, she (Spencer) noticed the
baby moved after being pll:.c-t'Cl in a pastlc bag.
According to the signed statement, the defendant
aclawwledged she did not want the child and would be
glad when It was gone. She also said she did not call
anyone.
Second statement
In a second statement entered into evidence on the

Wolfe, Teafor~ get board appointments

DINING ROOM ClOSES AT 7 MONDAY·SATUIIDAY
DINING ROOM ClOSES AT 3 ON SUNDAY

•

2 s"e&lt;tions , 16 Page~
20 Cents
A Mu!tim@tl ia In c. Ne wspap er

It.e ms big .issue ·in Ca•'l·'s trial

•

' Wayne, Llttle, 35, Northup and
Delra A. Ph!Wps, 26, Puneroy,
have applied tor a marrJage license
In Meigs Probate Court.

19~3

Statements reveal baby moved ill plastic bag

Marriage licenses

LUNCHEON &amp;DINNER SPECIALS •.........• $2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... $1.99

Seeks license

•

enttne

I:.Pomero -Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 8,

Copyrighted 1983

Send the
Crystal Caddy
Bouquet for
Chrisbnas,
Sunday, Dec. 25.

106 Butternut
Pomeroy, Oh.
PH. 992·2039

at y

I

Voi.32 ,No.168

new Crystal
Caddy Bouquet. Fresh
ll""'ns, holly and flowers
m an elegant sculpted-inFrance crystal caddy.
Great for -ice, candy or
snacks. Call us today.
We'U send it anywhere in
the country. \

r-~----------------------~::::::::::;:::::::::::j r-~~~--~··~~~~~n.••v-,••••••~~n.~n.~;;;;~;;_;,_;_;;_;~;~;:;;::::::::::~;
II Pilla 11 afCJbict) e . ....'l'.bftaBa: · J&amp;ltleae n..-:. tk

Divorce granted

•

e

Seutluel start

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Dale
Johnston. charged with aggravated
murder in the mutilation slayings of
his 18-year-&lt;Jldstepdaughter and her
finance, has waived his right to a
jury trial and requested that his case
be heard by a three- judge panel.
Johnston, 50, is charged with two
counts of aggravated murder In the
slayings of Annette Cooper Johnston
and Todd Scl)ultz, 19, whose torsos
were found last ·year along the
Hocking River. Other body parts
were discovered later in a nearby
field. ·
Johnston on Monday waived Ws
right to a jury after consulting with
his lawyer, Thomas Tyack.
Prosecutor Chris Veldt said the
three-judge panel will be romJ)OS:ed
of Hocking County COmmon Pleas
Judge james Stillwell and twootber
jurists to be named by the Ohio
Supreme Court.

Scrooge, what else

5

r~Pu=tnam~~;:Co~u;_n_ty,.;_J_Ijll
__
sin_ce-=--hls_J~o~r~9~9~2~-5~7~21~~~~~~~
second arrest.
-

Waives jury trial

Making granola

......

PH. "2·5432 . ·

POMiitov, OH.
that

..
.. •

\

AIC a I I o\t'JIIli' ., ;!j'r,;j '
.,otMaul, W.Va.,lt!Btltled
the latter part ot AlJIIIIl he

Henry offered to record the conversatlo~ and serve as a witness.
The meeting was never arranged,
Lee Sr. said.
During cross-examination, Cain
asked Lee Sr. if he told Ws son about
the conversation. Lee Sr. saldhetold
Lee II that "Shirley wanted money
to leave."
"So there really wasn't any bribe,
she just wanted money to go to
Florida?" Cain asked . "Howdid you
Interpret her statement -was she
trying to extort money from you?''
"No, I just figured she wanted
money to leave," Lee Sr. replied .
lnstaD•Tape~r

Lee · Sr. aiso revealed under
questioning that after his son's
aiTest, Lee Sr. installed a plug-in
recording device on the telephone
owned by Marsha Lee, his ex-wife.
and Lee's mother.
P I al&amp; lJtc+lent To Sberitf
Lee Sr. added that he installed
Lee Sr. IBid he went to the Mason
"one of those better things" to
County Shetltf's Department a lew
record conversations after being
days later and told Deputy ~
advised
to do so by King.
ijeney ,allflt the conversa
Ht!my ~ to help Lee Sr.. .
Cain asked Lee Sr. what he
thought of his son after reading
having the elder Lee !el up a
transcripts of the taped telephone
ITMllllgbetweenhJmsel!andF'urst.

•

recordings madC' h~- FUrst in late
August.
"All kidd ing and stuff, I'd never
heard the profanitv from him
before, " Lee Sr. said.
Asked by King what he meant by
kidding , Le&lt;&gt; Sr. remarked. " He's
done that all his life. joking and
everything. A lot of times when we'd
be swim ming, he'd gPt JO(l feet out
and then say, 'I got a cramp, daddy.'
The n I'd get out there and he'd sw im
away. He was always pulling stunts
like that."
Mot her Takes Stand
Cain then called lo !hestand Lee's
mother, Mar sha. Mrs. Lee test ified
primarily about tlle occasions she
met Fursl face-to-face.
Mrs . Lee met Fut-st in the fi rst
week o!December 1982, when Lee II
introduced them a t his house. Mrs.
·Leesa ld Fut-st was giggling, holding
onto Lee ond wearing a T-shirt with
a suggestive m essage. '
was appalled, I didn 't know
wha t to do," Mrs. tee test ified. "He
told m e she was older, and I figured
20, which iSold forCharlie. But thenl
(Continued on page 10)

\"I

- ,

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