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                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 14, 1983..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths j Happen~gs in and around Meigs County
Court act tOn$ jtled

Lester H. Knapp
Lester H. Kriapp, 72, of TI South
College St., Sabina, formerly of
Middleport, died Wedl)esdaYmornIng In Wllmlngton.
He is survived by his wife, Delete
Wheaton Knapp, Sabina; a !;On.
Herschel Knapp. Sabina; two
daughters, Mrs. Martha Beach .
Leescreek, and Mrs. Marlene
Yeauger.' · Columbus, six grandchildren, and two sisters.
Graveside ser;ices will be held at
1:30 p.m. Saturday at the Sat&gt;ina
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Littleton Funeral Home In Sabina
Friday from 7 to8:3l p.m .

Carrie E. Swartz ,
Carrie E. Swartz. 94. formerly of
Alfred. died Wednesday morning at
the Fairview Manor Nursing Home
in Beverly . .

A housewife. Mrs. Swartz was
born a t Alfred on Dec. 25. 1888. a
daughter of the late Elizabeth
MOtTls a~d Aaron Worthen. Besides
her parents. she was preceded in
death by her husband, Clarence
Valentine Swartz, a stepmother.
four · sisters, a brother and a
step-brother. She was a member of
the Alfred Methodist Church where
she taught Sunday school for a
number of years.
Surviving are · a son. Harry
Swanz, Coolville; a daughter, Mary
O'Brien, Stewat1; a stepson, Oves
Swartz, Athens; five grandchildren,
seven great-grandchildren; a greatgreat- grandson; a ste psister,
Gamet :UOrnes. Welch. W.Va .. and
severa l nieces a nd nephews .
Setv ices will be held at 1 p.m .
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call anytime
alter 1 p.m.on Thursday. Burial will
be In the Bentz Cemetety.

Mayors finish cases ·
Four defendants forfeited bonds
and two 'others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fmieitlng were John E lliott, New
Haven, W. va :, $1,0CKJ posted on a
charge of unauthorized use of a
motor vehicle: Ayward Jones,
Racine, $39. speeding: Dreama
Harmon, Ravenswood, W.Va .. $25,
improper parking, and Lawrence
Hysell, Middleport , $100, disorderly
manner.

Fined $50 and costs each were
Tammy Bush, disorderly man ner,
and Ricky Ables, Racine, open
container.

Forfeiting bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Ma yor Clarence Andrews
Thesday night were Mark A. Casto,
Pomeroy, and Charles Johnson,
Route 3, Pomeroy, $375each, posted
on charges of driving while Intoxicated; Michael Schloss, Pomeroy,
$63, traffic li~ ht violation, and
Douglas Williamson, Smyrna, Ga.,
$45, speeding.
Fined In the court were Dwayne
Quails. Pomeroy,$213and costs and
six months probation, failure to pay
for food at a restaurant, and Floyd
B. McClellan, Middleport , $6.1 and
costs, failure to register a motor
vehicle.

A decree of foreclosure and order
for sale of real estate in the action of
the State Teachers Retirement
Board of Ohio aga inst Eddie Moody
Turle&gt;·· et at. has been filed In the
Meigs CountY Common Pleas
Court . The amount due is $25,631.57
plus Interest.
Filed by thP Racine HomP
National Bank. now the Home
National Bank. was a foreclosure
action against_ Met,·i n Freem an,
Cheshire, for $2,423.5.J.
In . other action in . the cou11,
Rebecca McCutcheon. Parkers·
burg, has filed an action for partition
for r eal estate against Ronald
Miller, Ocalo, Fla. et a!.
•An entry has been filed In the court
designating Paul Gerard a secret
ser;ice officer for 1983 with pay of
$7.86 per hour or not less than $125 a
month.

Veterans Memorial
Ad mi tt.ed -, Donna Se ll ers,
Athens; Donald Jc~nhoWer, Pomeroy; Geori:e Collins, Reedsville;
Charles Beegle. Racine; Nellie
Price, Middleport; Ma rtin Mollohan, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Larry Eakins, Luretta Lockhart, Dorothy Jenkins,
Barbara Smith, Clarence Wickline,
Della O'Brien, . Ada Starcher,
George Greene. Sr., Elza Larkins,
Dwight SpraiDJe.

Emergency runs

Line officers chosen·
Officers have been named by the
Middleport Fire Department lor

RCA

1984-85.
Line officers for the period will

Christmas .Specials

In dude Jeff Darst , !lie chief; Kenny
Byer. assistant fire chlef; WU!Jam
Fink, captain; John Byer, first it.;
David Hoffman , second it., and Joe
McCarty, third it. Donald Stivers
will serve as assistant EMS chlef;
Gary ·Ellis as EMS captain, and
Marc French as EMS lieutenant.
Administrative officers will lle
Donald Stivers, president; Marc
French, vice president; Bob Byer,
treasurer, and James Daniels,
secretary.
Serving as training
officer will be Robert Fisher.

•19" COLOR TABLE

Wrestling preview

SOAPS are healthy

See photos, story P. 3

Preview on Page 9

Stobart must decide .

Livestock ·reports

· UC-Utah story P.5

MODEL

See Page 11

•CHANNELOCK
KEVBOARQ TUNING
•AUTOMATIC

•

COLOR CONTROL
· •AUTO. FLESHTONE

at y en tine
UMW backs Mondale ~

CORRECTION
•AUTO. CONTRAST I

COLOR TRACKING .

'

. RO{I . '419 .00

Thursday meeting

Vof .32 ,No. 173

SPECIAL

The Meigs County Democrat.
executive committee wilt meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Car penters hall on Main St.,
P omeroy, Henry Hunter, chair·
mart, announced today. He urged all
intere;ted democrats to attend.

Features: Aotomatit color
control, automatic fleslt1one

correction, solid state

.

VHS/UHF tuner~,
walnut finish.

XL-100
19"

·· ~·

...

~mulltld

•

PITTSBURGH (AP)- Shouts of
"Mondale! Mondale! "at the United ·
Mine Workers convention Will be
transformed into coal area votes for
Walter Mondale's presidential campaign next year, UMW President
Richard L. Trumka vowed.
More than 1,400 delegates attending the UMW's 49th constitutional
convention endorsed Mondale by
acclamation Wednesday after Mon- ·
dale promised the miners, "I will
fight on your $Ide."
Trumka, who had been silent
about supporting Mandate but
served as a cheerleader during his
appearance, said aftezwards the
endorsement was not UMW "Up-

Rq. 1399.00
Special

Christmas program set

$34900'

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

TheannuaiChristmasprograrnof
the Morning Star United Methodist
Church will be held Tuesday at 7: 3l
p.m . at the church. The public is
invited to attend.

MECHANIC ST.-992·3671

Village funds total $551,349

service.''

"All of our membership Is going to
be out there working for Mr.
Mondale," Trumka said. The .delegates who endorsed Mandate represent about 240,0CKJ working,
lald-ot! and retired miners in the
United States and Canada.
The former vice president received several standing ovations
during a half·hour speech ln ,whlch
he attacked President Reagan's
policies on economics, labor unions
and mine safety Issues.
"This administration has conducted an assault on mine safety
and health costing your lives and
~ostlngyourhealth ," Mondalesald.
"You have had to fight this
adnnlnlstra lion every step of the

All Middleport Village fund s
totaled $551,349.06 as of Nov. 10,
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck reports.
Receipts, expenditures In each
fu nd during the month and the end
of the mont h bala nce fo llow:
genera l, $12,904 .17 , $17.o53.45.
· $42,757.25; .. street maint enance,
$4,043.73. $6,329.6R, $7,470.23, de·
licit : HUD, $153,001, $137,08.1.73.
·$37.803.95: federal revenue sharing,
no receipts. S566.96, $2,629.76; street
· ti g ht , no receip ts. $1. 367.31.
$9,026.i9: street' levy. no receipts,
$577.2!1 , $11.178.17: fire equipment,
$895.93.$898.48.$1,867.59 deficit; fire

Hospital News

. I

way."

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES DEC . 13
Leonard Beverly, Gerald Collins,

CLEVELAND lAP~ The
winning number drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's daily
game~ "The Number," was 536. In
the ·•Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Frid.ay, the winning
number was 3638.
The lottery reported earnings of
$630,411.50 from the wagering on
"The Number."

WATERMELON
PATCH
500 lincoln Hill
Pomeroy

25%· OFF
All MERCHANDISE
THRU DEC. 24
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT

992-7582

ALL

SCOPES

25

30

%
OFF

%

December 25.

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP

106 Butternut

Pomeroy, Oh.

PH. 992-2039
or. 992-5721

lows

Your

$9995

OFF

ACCESSORIES
DARTON SL·50 RIGHT HAND

COMPOUND BOW

,&amp;Pair Only

$15•

EA.

5 LEATHER QUICK DRAW

HOLSTER SETS

I

ll

ALL FISHING TACKLE

72 PRICE

30!F

HIP WADERS

25~F

HANDGUNS
25~
REG. OR CAMO FINISH I"G~·U·N··-,·-'""w'"'•••,..,.,,,...............,....,...
80
95 CASES
Special s
~~
BEAR MAGNUM

ARROWS
MUlZI.E LOADING

BOOTS

&amp; TACKLE BOXES

PAI~20.

ALL

..

CAM BOW

Bouquet

for Christmas:

Grluly
Compound

AMMUNITION
ACCESSORIES

30%0H

AND

~-·--··-··----··-··-···-··-··--;
ALL

any where in the co un t ry

OF OH 10, INC.

•.
H0URS

RELOADING
SUPPLIES

ALL ARCHERY

FRUTH PHARMACY
86 N. 2ND AVE.

Bear
Polar LTD

IN STOCK ONLYl

filled with a huliday bou ·
quet. OnC' quick: call or visi c w our sho p sends it

Hunting Hom

CLOSEOUT ON

ALL LONG GUNS

staincd wooden base - ·

Send the

RODS '
AND REELS .
.

30% ·0ff

Tallyho!

119

1
/3

25

Off

Unlled

Two adults and a juvenile were
apprehended early Thursday mornIng by the Meigs County Sheriff's
department after being sighted
removlngbatterlesandaradlofrom
two trucks parked at the Crossroads
shortly before midnight.
The sheriff reported that Stoney
Johnson, a&gt;, Route 1, Langsville,
andJohnnleBrown,20,alsoofRoute
1, Langsville, along with a 17-year
old Route 1, Vinton youth are being
held In the Meigs County lall. .
Two counts of petty theft and one
count of contributing to the delinquency of a mtnorwill be filed today
in Meigs County Court against the
two adults. The juvenile will be
charged with delinquency and a

~~NNINGS COMPOUND CAM BOW · Lt~ ~~~d •••
JENNINGS COMPOUND BOWS .......3 only ••••• .'7000 11•
JENNINGS CHILDREN$ BOWS ...~:1.~ 1~~,'!1.d•••• !6500 II.
ALL KNIVES .•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 30% OPP

ECONOMY BOAT SEATS............. &amp; Oply ••••••~ 1
''·
BOAT SEAT COVERS ................. &amp; Only ••••••~ 1000
DEWXE BOAT SEATS ••••••• 1 Set Only~lrow11. •• ~~ 5000
SEAT PEDESTALS ............LONG !.1000•.SHOIT.!IOO
BEAR ARCHERY TARGETS .......... 2 Only••••••••••25oo 11• LEATHER PRESERVING KITS .....................•7oo
'BAKER TREE STANDS ••••••••••••• 2 Onlr •••••••• .'5800 u. GUN. CLEANING KITS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~700

304-675·2911

•

Snow flumes likely tonight wltlibriskwinds. Low22-27. Westerly to
SIJIJthwesterly winds 1().20mph. Friday, cloudy with a chance of sn'lW ·
flurries. High 2!&gt;-29. Chance of precipitation 60 percent tonight and 50.
percent Friday.
·

MONEY - From aotump In the bacllyard ol
Teua Ll. Gov. BID JIObbY, Sea. Jolm G._ opoke to a hot dog lwteheon
crowd Wednesdll,v. Glena told lbe crowd that the Ragan Admlnlotrallon
was cuttlng110 deeply lato fwldafor bulc scleace research that America
Ill In claoger of beconiiDg a "copycat nalloo." Glenn Is on a fund-raising
swiDg illroulh TeXIIII. (AP Luerphoto).

.

Poln~. P... Hnt

said about 60,0CKJ miners, about
one-thlrd of the UMW's active
membership, were laid off alter
Reagan took office.
Mond ale roused the miners once
again when he declared, "It was our
country tha\ rebuilt Western Europe. It was our country that rebuilt
Japan. The time hascometorebuild
the United States."

- WINS ENDORSEMENT .- Fonner vtre-presldenllUid Democratic
presldentlal hopeful, Walter Mondale, was given a big tift Wednesday
When more than 1,400'd elegates attending the UMW' s 49th constitutional
convention mdorsed his ClUidldacy. ( AP La.serpholo).

Glerin wants
revised role
in Lebanon
AUSTIN (AP) - Presidential
contender John Glenn ,says the
conflict In Lebanon has deteriorated
from an International peacekeeping
effort Into a United States vs. Syrta
battle.
He said Wednesday that Initial
U.S. mllltary efforts in the region
were wort11whl)e but "our purpose
there then became very unclear. "
Glenn started the day in Houston
and, with Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby as his
host, moved to Austin for a news
conference, reception at the Gover·
nor's Mansion and a $l,OCKJ.a·plate
.fundraiser.
At the Capitol news conference he
said American troops are a target In
the Middle East.
"We're the great Satan to some of
the Islamic nations. We are the ones
they like to target, '' he said.
The Democratic senator from
Ohio said the U.S. should serve only
as a part of an International force.
It's ridiculous to think the U.S.
forces can "restore the terrttortal
Integrity of Lebanon," he said.
"'Th think that 1,1XXl Marines
sitting there by the airport can
somehow provide an atmosphere
where the Lebanese government
can gain control of all of Its own
territory, and with 50,0CKJ Syrtans

already In the country and several
hundred thousand massed across
th~ border, It's just not something
that's going to haQpen," sa id Glenn.
" rt's becoming gradually a
Syrian-U.S confrontation. We've
already had combat with them.
We're so far oumumbered there it's
only fraught with the greatest kind of
hazard if we keep that thing going,"
he added .
Glenn said he is the candidate
most interested in peace.
· . "I don 't need to turn on late night
television to find out what it' s like to
be In combat. I've been there
through two wars," the 23-year
Marine said . "No one is going to
work any harder for peace in this
"t
country than 1 am out of
background."
The Glenn campaign hoped to
raise about ~.(XX) a t the Austin
fundraiser.
Meanwhile, despite Walter Mandale's endorsement Wednesday by
the United Mine Workers, Gov.
Richard Celeste says he thinks .the
presidential campaign of Sen. John
Glenn has In the past few weeks
shown "a greater sense ol how to
focus resources and bring experienced people Into play."

New coal contract now possible without strike-- Tmmka
Pl!TSBURGH (AP) - The United Mine Workers may be able to
· negctlate a new contract next year without a tun-scale strike for the tlrst
time In 20 years, precllct! UMW President Rlchanl L. Trurnka.
Trumka made the clalm Wednesday after delegates to the union's 49th
ronstltutlonal convention raUfled a selective strike package.
"We can an1ve at a contract now'Wtthout a iollg strike," Tnunka said at
a news cooterence following the close ot COIIYI!IItion business. ''The stage Is

set.''

"Special Christmas Hours"

He said Mondale was endorsed
early In the presidential campaign
because union leadership "wanted
to be sure the endorsed candidate
had the support of the mine workers
rank-and-file."
Mondale was the only presidential
candidate scheduled to speak at the
·quadrennial meeting, whlch Is
hearing a half-dozen labor speakers
to foster "solidarity" with other
major U.S. unions.
Mondale, who has the endorsement of the 14 million-member
AFL-CIO, said the independent

Weather forecast

mJd..teens to mld-208.

UMW has helped "every American
who holds a decent job, works
decent hoursandearnsdecent pay. "
He attacked the Reagan administration for relaxing regulations on
mine safety and for allowing
American industry , Including the
coal industry, to fall prey to foreign
imports.
Using UMW estimates, Mondale

get.''

trafftc charge of operating a motor
vehlcle with fictitious tags.
Deputies Robert Beegle and
Randy Forbes apprehended the
three suspects after being ad:vl.sed
by the owner of one of the trucks of
the license plate number on the car
driven by the trto.
It was reported that whUe the theft
was In progress, the owner · and
another person surprtsed the trio
when they pulled in to pickup one of
the vehicles. The three jumped Into
the car, andwhl!(pulllngout,struck
a concrete foundation, whlch blew a
rear tire but the trlokeptgolng. They
were spotted shortly aftezwards
while changtng the tire on Hysell
Run Road.

Saturday through Montl!tY:
.
Chaooti of 8DOW DurrteaSaturclay and Moatla.v aodachanceofsnow
Saturday nJcht lllld Sunday. Early momlaglowsfrom 5-15.1Upln

ALL CLOTHIN

tract ser;es as a model In mines
producing about 40 percent of the
nation's coal.
To delegates' cheers , Mondale
praised Trumka and promised the
UMWpresidienthewon'tcometothe
White House next year "just for a
handshake. "
"He's going to come as a friend
who will sit down- and won' t have
to ~e 'backward st..Ps' Into that
White House," Mondale said.
Trumka, a34-year-oldPennsylvania miner-turned-lawyer in his first
year as UMW president, termed
Mondale "a working man ... a work
horse, not a show horse."
The endorsement did not com e In
a formal resol\lllon, but rather as
loud crtes of "Mandate! " alter
Trumka shouted: "'This Is the most
representative group the mine
workers will ever have assembled. I
say light now ... thls delegation tell
the mine workers in the country who
they endorse. "
Trumka, speaking to reporters
later, said, "That'saboutacomplete
endorsement as you're going to

Trio face petty
larceny charges

Extended Ohio Forec:J.t

MIDDLEPORT, OH

Mon.·Sat. 9:00 to 10:00
Sunday 11:00 to 8:00
PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

. Mondale picked up the convention's theme of "No Backward
Steps, No Takeaway Contracts" in
next year's contract negotiations
with the Bltunninous Coal Operators' Association. The BCOA con·

Mine Workers PreSident Rich
Tnunka. applauds what Walter Mondale had to say at the UMW
convention Ill Pittsburgh on Wednesday. The delegates there shouted
their support to Mondale. (AP Laserphoto).
WELCOME WORDS -

Wilma Cooper, Mruy Dalton, Mar- rr,;;~;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;i
garet Deck, Helen Dennison, Lewis 1
Faudree, Mrs. Robel1 Franklin and
daughter, Jei'fr.ey Geswein, Mrs.
Joseph Gladden and son. Harold
Grate, David Gullett. Emma Hall.
Jody Hall, Shirley Jones, Paula
Kiser , Paul Knotts. Elson Leport,
Austin Maloney, Mrs. Donald
Martin and son: Dorothy McCarty,
Mrs. Marlin Mooney and daughter,
Anna Nease, Anna Patrick, Eve
Smeltzer, Chad Spurlock, Laverne
Stewart, Donna Summers, DoriS
TUley, Mary Tucker,AliceWise.
BffiTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Steven 13&lt;¥ker, son,
Letart; Mr.andMrs. RobertBissell,
da ughter, Racine; Mr. and Mrs .
William Dummitt, daughter. Patriot; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kinder,
son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Jackie
Smith, son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
The new H unung
Ri chard Stratton. daughter ,
H o rn Bouquet. A real,
Coalton.
so lid bnss English huming ho rn on a [eokOhio lottery winner

2 Sections, 16 Pages
20 Cents
A Mu ltimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 15, 1983

0opy•ighlod t983

RCA

,.

The proposals adopted by the miners Wednesday increase Trwnka's
control aver the negotiation process, establlsbes the union's tlrst sti1ke
fUnd and albvB the UDion president to fll'der a elective strike against
specific CliJIIIIIIIIIIe.
. '
Altlloulb the millen rejected the Initial piopcoul n-s&amp;y, In part
~~ee- 10111e IBid It aave Tnunka too rnudl power, t11e un1on pretddeal ·
IBid be "cooldll't be more pleased" with the packa&amp;e adopted.Wfd!!Miay.
·&lt;

'

·

1be changes in the union's constitution also may mean an end to the,
lon&amp;·held eoattlekl tradition ol "no contract, no work," Trumka said. The
package "gives us flexibility we need tbat we haven't had In the past."
1be unJoa haS had to strike for each new contract since 1964, and the last
two strt1ra have been particularly long and brutal - one lasting 74 days In
l.98l. and another tbat lasted 111 days In 19'77·78.
1be unloa'a contract with the BituminOuS Coal Operators Association
expires Sept. 30, 191M. and Trwnka said Wednesday that he has talked with
the chief lnc!!•t'tly Jll!&amp;OIIator, Conlolldatlon Coal Co. chalrmllfl B.R.
Brown, about tbe start of negotiations.
,
''We're Jooldua at a period of time In March," he said.
Tnunlta IBid he bopes tle'e wiB be no strike.
''We H'-..e w can do It without a strike, although they should be
prepued tar oae,"lie tlllllld.
·
UMW members \'lebllted for seYe!'Bl hours before rejecting the first
I

'

package 1,307-00J, but they adopted the second set of proposals, introduced
lndlviduaUy, on voice votes with virtually no debate.
The two sticking points in theortglnal package appeared to be a propoSed
maximum 5 percent assessment to !tnance the strike fund, and a plan ·to
revise from a stmpte majortty to two-thirds the vote of the union's
governing board needed to overturn a presldiential rullllg. It was that .
provision that prompted one delegate to say In floOr debate that the
proposal would make the union president "a dlclator."
In the compromise package, the assessment was reduced to 2.5 percent ,
and the two-thirds rule for overriding presidential policy enforcement was
limited to situations In which a selective strike is called.
Joe Phipps, chalnnan of the constitutional revision committee, said the
assessment on miners' gross wages will take effect Jan. 1. It will allow the
UMW to buUd up a "war chest" of $70 mllllon by the time the union's
contract expires.

•

�..
..
Thursday, December 15, 1983

Comment

•

Ill Court Street
P9meroy, Ohio
DEVIJI'ED TO TI!E INTEREST OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

~lb ,......._...._'"'T'"I ,.........,.o:::~, =

~S~m~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLIOH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edltor

1

lf you are Interested In victimoi ·
ogy and want to take a day oft from

the theme~of how President Reagan
has victimized women, blacks,
Hispanics, old people, Invalids and
students, give a thought for a
moment to the dlfltcuitles minority
scl)Olars have who, pursuing their
researches, reac h conclusions dif·
ferent from those peddled by
Ideological orthodoxy. They have a
hard time. Inevitably they are
likened to Uncle Tom. They are

often treated· with the tacit disdain you an example.
On Oct. 12, 1983, a . Mr. George
meted out In many liberal arts
Jordan,
a black journalist, pubfaculties toward bellevi~g Chrislished
a
column In the Cleveland
"tians and people suspected of being ·
Plain
Dealer.
It was entitled,
secretly pro-Reagan -(explicit pro"W
illiams
speaks
for the
Reaganftes are led quietly away to
oppressors."
rest homes).
Now I have In my hands, as Joe
In fact the anxiety by many
McCarthy
used to say, a photostatic
blacks to deror:ate conservative
copy
of
another
column, one that
black scholars Is so pronounced
appeared almost exactly two years
that assembly-line techniques are
earlier (Sept. 29, 1982) In The
being Invented. Call this, !f"you !Ike,
Washington Post, by Carl Rowan,
supply-side denunciation. Iwillglve

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Pres~ Association and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcomed . ThC)' should he less than 300 words
. lon1. All letter s are subject to e,dltlnK and must be s igned with name. address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI he published. Letters should be in
sood la.'ll e, addres~lng Issues, not penonaiUies.

\t\ey,

cap.

I

:_Democratic
loophole
His timing is terrible and his motive is selfish, but Jesse L. Jackson has
performed a valuable service In challengi ng the rules under which
delegates to next year's Democratic convention are to be selected.
A declared candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination and
a shameless self-promoter, Jackson has candidly admitted that he objects
to the rules not because they are Inherently unfair and undemocratic but
because "they threaten my quest for the nomination."
Morecver, Jackson was nowhere In sight In late 1981 and early 1982
when a party ·rules commission held a lengthy series of public hearings and
engaged in protracted debate before recommending the procedures to
which he now objects.
'
Nevertheless, Jackson has offered a valid critique of the delegate
selection rules. These rules have been approved by the Democratic
National Committee even though they violate the spirit- if not the letterof the party's charter .
. That charter specifically requires that delegate selection procedures
lfl each state must "assure that delegations fairly reflect the division of
preferences expressed by those who participate in the presidential
nominating process."
In practice, that means, for example, that if three candidates
respectively receive 50. 35 and 15 percent of the votes cast In a state's
Democratic presidential primary, their supporters should be represented
In similar proportions on that state's delegation to the Democratic
convention.

That's fundamentally fair and equitable, but the principle wasn't
always embraced by the party. As recently as 1973, the Democrats
reluctantly accepted the winner-take-all primary in which the candidate
who received a plurality (but not necessarily a majority) of the votes cast
was awarded all of a state's convention delegates.
Although that Is now prohibited. the party has carved out an
exemption which allows perpetuation of the winner-take-all effect In states
where convention delegates are directly elected In jurisdictions no larger
than congressional districts.
In 1976, 13 states relied upon what has become known as the "loophole"
primary," producing Inherently flawed results. In New Hampshire, for
example, Jimmy Carter received only 28 percent of the votes cast In the
primary but was awarded 88 percent of the state's convention delegates.
Similarly, In 1976, Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., received fewer
than 50 percent of the primary votes cast In four New York congressional
districts but was awarded ail of the convention delegates from those
districts.
"
The party was well on its way to eliminating those distortions when it
allowed only two states (Illinois and West Virginia ) to conduct loophole
primaries In 1980 - but it took an unwarranted step backward last year
when it approved a rules change encouraging the practice In 1984.
Jackson is thoroughly justified In seeking the restoration of the 1980
reform measure as well as companion reform dealing with the minimum
proportion of primary or caucus votes a candidate must receive to be
assured of representation on a state's convention delegation.
It's unreasonable to seek to guarantee representation to a candidate
w.ho receives, for example, three percent or five percent of all primary
votes, but almost 10 years ago the party established threshold ofl5 percent.
Last year, however, that figure was arbitrarily Increased to 20 percent,
wtth 25 percent required In some Instances.
Jackson wants the rule changed because theN&gt; are very few
congressional districts where black voters constitute 20 percent of the
voting age population, but the compelling case for reform transcends
racial consideratons.
Because Jackson has raised his objections so late (the delegate
selection process begins only a few months from now in Iowa and New
Hampshire), rule changes wouJd be virtually impossible to implement for
19&amp;1 even if the party leadership was in favor of them - which It Isn't.
Those procedural and P?liticai impediments should not detract,
however, from the correctness of Jackson's position.

Berry's World

fZ•C..

"No two are exactly a/Ike. They each have
names and adoption papers. This here's Linda
Mae....
I

I

another black journaliSt.
Here are the first two sentences
of what George E. Jordan, !denll·
fled at the end of the column as "a
Plain Dealer reporter," wrote: "At
times I wish the Lord would deliver
me back to the days of Stepln
Fetchlt, Aunt Jemima and Uncle
Tom. The old-style black, illiterate
'handkerchief heads' were an
embarrassment, but they were
harmless In comparison to 'educated' blacks like economist Walter
E. Wl!llams, a darling of the far
right."
Here are the first two sentences
of what Carl Rowan wrote two
years earlier. "There are times
when I want to ask the Lord to
deliver us back to the days of Stepln
Fetchlt, Aunt Jemima and Uncle
· Tom. The old-style black, illiterate,
' obsequious 'handkerchief heads'
were an embarrassment, but they
were harmless compared wtth tbe
'educated' blacks who are now the
darlings of the far right.''
The only contribution made by
the Plain Dealer's Mr. Jordan was
to Insert "like economist Walter E.
WUliams ...· This tte needed to do for
so simple a reason as that Mr.
Rowan, In his column, was denouncing not Walter Williams, but
his brother, the distinguished black
economist and sociologist, Thomas
Sowell.
Now we must..not conclude that
Mr. Jordan is entirely incapable of
originality, that he relies exclu·
sively on plagiarizing the work of
others. Listen to how the two
gentlemen ended their columns:
"Rowan on Sowell, 1981: "I could
never get really angry at the old
Stepln Fetchits and Aunt Jemlmas.

Boost up the Iadder_______Ja__;_ck_A_n_de_rs_on
·pension, the brass hats appear to
Ali that remained was to work out
have wanted 11 even more, perhaps the ·grand strategy. This required
as ·a. means of buttering up an some quiet finesse. They had to find
Influential White House oHic!al.
an assignment that wouldn't InterIn tact, one Army saurce says · !ere wtth Meese's White House
that Meese's powerful Pentagon duiles and an excuse to relieve him
friends are already plotting to from mandatory attendance at the
grease the skids for his promotion Command and General Staff Colto general. If this works out, lege, which he wouldn't have time
Meese's military reserve career for.
would be distinguished hy the ·kind
The Pentagon strategists came
of rapid promotion that Is usually up wtth an arttltl Solution: Meese
achieved only by active-duty oHic· would he assigned as the Selective
ers In wartime.
Service System's liaison with the
Here's the chronology of Meese's Defense Department. Ffomotion
risk In rank:
requirements In that branch, It
- June 1981: Meese spoke seems, are less stringent than In
man.
privately to Col. Joe Sullivan, a other outfits.
The stili-secret IG report exoner·
- July 1, 1981: Meese was
friend who'd served wtth him In a
ales Meese himself of "any !nap- . California reserve unit. . Meese assigned to the Ready Reserve at
propriate actions." But the IG's
Indicated he's like to be In the. Selective Service headquarters, In
Investigators did concede that
Ready Reserves, which would give the specially created liaison job.
hallowed Army Reserve procehim a better shot at a promotion. The position called for a full colonel.
dures were " misapplied, violated
But he stressed that no rules should Meese's mandatory retirement
or Ignored."
be stretched In his behalf.
date, incidentally, was less than a
This has been confirmed by my
Sullivan relayed these tiding!\ to week away. With unaccustomed
associates Dale VanAtta and John
his boss, Maj. Gen. WUllam R. speed, the Pentagon paper work
Dillon who have just completed ·Berkman, who commands the processors beat the mandatory
their own Investigation. They found
Army Reseive and, coincidentally, retirement deadline.
that Meese got a boost up the
- October 1981: Yet another
also served wtth Meese In the
military !added by pals in the
Callfornls reserve unit. Together Meese friend from the California
Pentagon.
wtth other Pentagon brass. they reserve, Thomas K. Turnage, was
Though Meese wanted tbe proagreed that the president's closest appointed head of Selective Sermotion, which assures. him a fatter
adv!ser deserved · to be a full vice, assuring that Meese's status
colonel.
- and his pending promotion -

WASHINGTON - A year ago,
White House counselor Edwin
Meese III was quietly promoted to
the rank of bird colonel in the Army
Reserve. This sudden Improvement In Meese's military fortunes ,
given Its political overtones, outraged another reserve colonen who
raised a squawk.
The Pentagon brass, always
cautious In their derelictions,
passed this hot potato to the Army's
Inspector general. He conducted a
delicate investigation to determine
whether "undue Influence" had
been Involved In the promotion of
President Reagan's right·ha~d

'

.

would not be disrupted.
- November 1982: Meese was
recommended lor promotion to
colonel. The supposedly Ironclad
requirement of staff co!lege ' graduation was waived by giving
Meese "constructive credit" for his
White House experience. Gen.
Berkman and others notified the
Army promotion board of this
unusual dispensation while it was
considering the promotion - an
action that some military officials
equate to tampering with a jury
during Its deliberatlons.
- At about this time, a technical
problem was solved bY backdating
one document bY more than a year,
according to an Army source. This
practice Is not illegal, but it is
unusual.
The IG investigation was supposed to bury the Meese affair, but
Rep. Patricia Schroeder, D-Colo.,
learned of it and began making
Inquiries last August. The Army
tefused to turn over the IG report to
her.
Meanwhile, my source says the
move to make Meese a generalis
already afoot. A colonel who has
been elevated to generalis about t,p
retire. When he does, there wtll be a
·geneial's job waiting for Meese.

"Quick," I said to Hogsgood at
the State Department. "I'm in a
hurry. What's our position on
human rights? "

'We're lor them, but against
certifying them."

"Which means?"
"The president just 'vetoed a bill,
which linked El Salvador military
aid to human rights and land
"Do you want the ·policy line or
the truth?"
''Both.''
"The policy line Is the military
aid-certification link plays Into the
hands of the leftists and under·
mines the president's authority to
conduct foreign affairs. The truth Is
there hasn 'I been any progress lfl
human rights and land reform since
the new government was elecied."
"Where do we stand on right·
wing death squads In El Salvador?''
"What right-wing death squads?
The policy line is the right -wing
death squads are really left-wing
death squads. trying to give the
right wing a bad name."
"You believe it?''
"The president believes It and
that's good enough for us.''
"Then the people In El Salvador
have notli!ng to fear from .right·
wing death squads?"
"The policy line Is that we don't
condone death squads from the
extreme left or the extreme right.
The major priority Is to bring
stabU!ty to the area bY strengthenIng E! Salvador's anny."
"The army Is supposed to be
running the death squads."
"That's media propaganda." The
elected o!tlcials are pledged to
democracy and political lreedom.
But they can't do anything about it

until the leftists are wiped out."
"What about land reform?"
"We're for it."
. "But you're not In any position to
certify there Is any lri E!
Salvador?''
"Our policy Is military aid to El
Salvador should not be contingent
upon )and reform. Why give the
peasants land If the leftists are
gOing to take It away from them?
"That's the policy. What's the
truth?
"We can't get the • present El
salvador government to budge on
land reform so what good is it to
certifY they have?''
"Congress linked mJI!tary aid to
human rights progress and land
reform In their bill which the
president vetoed when they were

out of session. What happens when
they come back In January and
pass another bill asking far the
same thing?" -..,
"Our policy is 'to stonewa!l them
until we can wipe out the Marxist
rebels."
"Suppose the president has to
request more money for military
aid for El Salvador?"
"Then we'!! certify that there has
been progress made in human
rights and land reform."
"How?"
•
."Our ambassador down tbere
will provide us with the evldenee."
··suppose he can't?"
· ""Then he'll replace him wtth one
who can."

"Will Congress buy the
evidence?''

"They will If we can prove the
Soviets are behind the human
rights and land reform policies In El
Salvador.''
HHow can you prove that?"
"By saying it. It's ·our word
against the ~miin.''
"Is it safe to say we're powerless
to do anything to pressure the right
In El Salvador to ease up on the
people?"
.
"Our policy Is that we have
tremendous power to brtng about
the needed reforms and we
prepared to use it If they don't see
how counterproductive their me.thods are."
"And the truth?"
"I can't tell you the truth. It's
against State Department policy.''

are

Stain, David Acree, and Sean JeHel"ll. Back row, Danny Davis, Denny

. DEFENDING CHAMPS- Meigs Is the defending sectional champ
lfl wrestling. Team members preparing for a new season Include front

Welsh, Butch Stiles, Larry Romine, Mike WIIUonl and Craig Sinclair.
Absent, Tony Shoemaker and Paul Dalley.

row, left to right are llohert Sisson, Artie Leark, James Snyder, Butch

Defending champs ·o pen Saturday·
Coach Larry Grimes' defending
sectional champion Meigs wrestling team wtll open Its season at
home Saturday·at 5 p.m. against
Ironton and Sheridan.
·
In his fourth year at the helm,
Coach Grimes says this is his lowest
him out in numbers, but is looking
forward to Working wtth four boys,
who began their careers four years
ago.
"These boys started as freshmen
and are now very capable of being
In the "big tournament" (state
tournament) at the end ol- the
season," Coach Grimes says.
These four boys are Craig
Sinclair, Mike WUlford, Larry
Romine, and Danny Davis. Willford
was a sectional champion. Willford
leads the pack with a phenomenal
34-2 record last year and has a
career markof69-28. Larry Romine
Is coming oH a season riddled with
Injuries and was 19-8 last year with
a career· mark of 46-27.
Sinclair a:nd Davis are listed as
the most Improved wrestlers on the
team. Both work continuously
during practice. Sinclair has
'
worked hard all summer staying In
shape running track and liftlngwtth
the results obvious.
Of the other 11 grapplers on the
team there are two returning
lettermen, James Snyder and
Robert Sisson. Newcomers Include

Sean J effers, David Acree, Ruth
Stein, Artie Leark, Tony Shoemaker, Denny Welsh, Butch Stiles
and Paul Dailey. (Dalley is out for
the season however wtth a broken
leg) . Snyder was also a sectional
champ.
Coach Grimes . is also working
With a junior high wrestling team,
the first-ever In the Meigs school
system. Nine seventh and eighth
graders are participating. They
have five matches scheduled along
wtth a tournament at Nelsonville.
Junior high wrestlers are Mike
Roush, Darrln Warth, Steve Tracey, John Slss&lt;in, Tim Jeffers, Mike
Southern, Don Nickles, Eddie Baer,
and Scott Hanning.

Eddie Bacr .................................... l55
Scott Hanning ............................. Hwt.
Schedule

8
8

Dec. 17, Ironton-Sheridan, Home

Dec. 21, South Point Scrimmage, Away
Dec. TT and 28, M~ Round Robin
Tourney, Home
Jan. 5. Meigs Scrimmage, Federal HockIng, HomE'

Jan.·7, Gallipolis. Tourney, Away
Jan. 11. Athens Scrimmage, Away
Jan. H, Warren Quad ·- M"rietta and
Williamstown, Away

.

Jan. 18, Meigs Tri.IVlnton and Nonh

GalliS, Horrie
Jan. 25, Waterford Dual, Away
Jan. 28, Belpre/Chesapeake. Ho~
Feb. 1, Pt . Pleasanl/Spencer, Awa y
Feb. 4. Washington Court HousetHUl&lt;ibomGreenfleld McClain, Away
Feb. 10. South Point. Home

Feb. 11, Nonh GaWa. Away
Feb. 18, TVC Toumey, Away
Feb. 25, Sectlonals, Belpre, Away
March· 3, Washington Counhouse/ Dlstrlct,
Away
.
March 8, 9, 10 . Ohio State Championships·
/Columbus, Awa y

Wt. Yr.
9
David Acree ................... .. ............. Uti 9
Butch Steln .................... ............... .i12 9
James Snyder ... .. ................... ....... .119 11
Raben Sisson ........................... , ... .126 10
Ante Leark .................. ............... 126 9
Craig Sinclair ................ ....... , ...... 132 12

Sean Jeffers .............. ...... ............... 98

Tony Shoemaker ......................... ... 138
Mike WU\ford .................. , ............. 14~
Larry Romine .................... :.. ........ 155
Butch S!Df'S ....... ................ .. ..........167
IJenny Welsh ...... ......... , ................. 175
Paul Dailey (injured! ............. ........ 1~
Danny Davis ............................ .. Hwt.

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LICENSE

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We offer tfie accredited pro·
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Enroll now! Classes will begin
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contact...

CERTIFICATES
NOW AVAILABLE!

SPRING VALLEY PlAZA

.u
12
11

STARTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16.

Reg. No . 75-02-0472-B

"D.C. CAE" Star"r'i

MR .T..-:1"

9

9
12

.........
.....'.
..••..• •..
.••••.....''' .
••

........-----.....-------:::~::----·

8
8
8

''

8
8
8
7
8

1

•

'

·•

'

PRI"'tl;~

~\

GOOD

THRU
MONDAY

I

Whitman's Miniature

. MEIGS VETERANS - Two Meigs wrestling veterans, Danny
Davis and Craig Sinclair are preparing for their opener thiS Saturday at
·Meigs with Ironton and powerful Sheridan.

CORDIAL
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PRAcnCE SESSION - Pradlclng for the upcoming wreatllnc
ae~n are veterans, Larry Romine and Mike Wllllord.

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

446-4367

J

luntor HighJ
Mike Roush .... ... ................. , ........... !ll
Darrln Warth ... .... ............ ............ ... 90
John Sisson .................................ll5
Ttm Jeffers .............. , .................... 1~
Steve Tracey .......................... ... ..lal
Mike Jones ...... ................ .............. 126
Mike Southern ............................. .. 1:11
l&gt;on Nickles .......................... ......... loJ5

"Improved every outing and. was •
superb against a good Trimble :
team. Meigs won 54-39. Shown'•
Baker and Chris Shank have led the :
little Marauders In scoring while :
Chris Kennedy has played well In :
the backcourt .
On the varsity side, front- ,
courters Jay Carpen ter and Mike
Chancey played good. Guard Nick i
Riggs has rounded Into last year's 1
form with 4li points In ·his last two ;
minutes .
;
In other TVC match-ups, Alex-·
ander travels to Nelsonville-York, :
Wellston goes to Federai'Hocklng,:
Warren travels to Miller, and :
Trimble is at Vinton County.

The hard-luck Meigs Marauders
welcome back the confines of the
Larry Morrison Gymnasium Friday night when tbey battle their
second straight undefeated opponent, this time Belpre.
Meigs comes off a heartbreaking
7().69 overtime loss to undefeated
.T rimble. It marked the third
straight loss by the Marauders, ail
bY a total of 11 points. They lost to
Nelsonviiie,York 54-48, Vinton
County 55-51, and to Trimble.
All three games the Marauders
have lost, they were in contention to
the final minute. Vast improvement was shown In the Trimble
game.
The reserve match,up with Bel·
pre promises to be a memorable
one as both teams come In with 5-0
TVC records. The winner will take
over sole possession of first place.
Coach Mlck Childs' team has

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS
COLLEGE

W....tlng liMier .
Name

"eto~·------------------------~--~A~r~tB~uc~h~-~~w

reform."'
I'Why'?'''

·~
C l113tJyNEA, Int:.~
.

•

Meigs (aces another
tough opponent Friday_

Pag 1 2-The Dally Sentinel
l'om«&lt;Y- Midcleport, Ohio
Thullday. December 15, 19831

SoJidarity?____~---=~---W_il_lia_m_F_._Buc_kl...:..ey_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel

--

The Daily Sentinel f'aae:=3
'

•.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Anlstant Publisher/ Controller

•

•

�Thu.,my, Dacember 15, 1983

4 The Doily Sentinel

Page

Eagles eye
big upset
at Southern

By SCOTI' WOLFE
This week marks the first round
of play between arch rivals among
all members of the SVAC, Including
the long-running cross-country rivalry between the Southern Tornadoes a nd Eastern's Eagles. Other
league battles include Hannan
Trace vs. Southwestern and Kyger
Creek vs. North Gallia, all of which
take place this Friday even lng.
Going into the third week of SVAC
action, Southern and Hannan Trace
remain on top ln. league standlngs
with Identical 2-0 ledg-ers. Southern
owns the best overall mark of 3-0,
while Hannan Trace Is 3-1 overall..
suffering a one-point loss to South
. Point ln. the final seconds.
Meanwhile, Eastern has yet to
win a game despite battline each of
Its first three opponents down to the
wire. Eastern dropped to· 48-52 k)ss
to Federal Hocking, then was
nlpped a t the buzzer 44-42 by Kyger
Creek and led much of the game
last week at Hannan Trace before
running out of steam 3949 in 'the
finale.
Frtday nlght · at Raclne, the
Eagles of Coach Dennis Eichinger
invade Charles W. Hayman gymnasium and hope to give the
Tornadoes a scare with additional
hopes of ending Southern's 48 game
home winning streak. The homewin streak which goes .on the
chopping block Frtday, began one
week after Eastern knocked off the
Tornadoes on Dan Spencer's des·
peratlon jumper from mid-court ln
Ja nuary of 1979.
As In the past , Southern again has
provem to be one of the area'sflnest
teams, however, it has been Its
aggressive defensive play, not Its
usually strong offensive output that
has gained the Tornadoes Its status
this season.
Southern's defe nse, masterminded in a hustling manner by
Coach Carl Wdlfe. has given up just
120 points in three outings for a 40
polnt average. Offensively, the
Tornadoes have co!lected 151 points
for a 50 point average, somewhat
smaller than its near-70 mark of the
past several seasons.
Eas tern, as Southern, has

Missy Dupler of Trimble has
been chosen as the TVC's Most
Valuable Player in vo!leyball
according to selections an-

Meigs players on Pioneers.

TVC standings

BASEBALL
New Vork·Pt!M 1..4!1!(\le

0NE.ON1'A Y ANKEES--'Rffi.tred Bill
Uvcsey, mMagcr. and Russ Meyer.
pllchlng coach. Named J .P . R.lretard.l
oonch .

BASKEI'IIALL
NaUooalBMketball AModaUon
DEN\'F:R NUGGETS-Piared Dave
Rob!~ h. Cf:'nter. on watwn.

I'OO'IlL\LL
Nadonal Football Leasut&gt;

lnjurt&gt;d noserve list.

Canadian F ootba11 U!que
EDMOI'&lt;'TON ESKJMOS-Extmded the
oontract of Jackk&gt; Parker , heod roach,

fDI' t¥.-·o )-'f'imi
United States Football Le~
, HbliSTON GAMBLERS-NamE'd June
.looPS an a.-.sistaot ooach.
M1CHJGAN PAN"niERS-Signf.d Ted
Jotl(os and Gerlt' c ues. wi!I' l't'Cetvers.
Kl'll Runganta. otfenslve tack](', Max CUI,
Jay Hayes and J.D. Johnson, dfoferud~
ends, BUJ Kane, tl,itht end-punter, Von
Mansfield and WarT£"n MI::Gee, deJenslvc

and

Dr~n

Rio posts
8th .win
•
mrow

FlntTeam
Player-&amp;:lnol-a-011.
Yr.
Missy Dupler, Trtmble, Hitter ............ ..Sr.

Sports World
By Will Grimlle)'
AP Corr8poadeat

1be handsome, dark-hatred young man fidgeted In the witness chair,
squirming uncomfortably under the bombardment of thecross-examlning

l

I

attorney.

,.

"Did you take the $60,000?"
"No, sir."
;'Did anyone else accept any money for you?"

"I can't say, sir."
"Where were you on the night of March 15?',.
1be scene was right out of Perry Mason. Lawyers kept rising to make
objections. 1be tables were loaded with transcripts, some an Inch or two
tltlck. The questions were often harsh and penetratlng.
· 1be young man, sweating, loosened his collar.
What had he done? Robbed a bank? Mugged an old ladyonFifthAvenue?
Trled to smuggle ln a batch of cocaine from South America?
None o! that. -It was simply GuU!ermo Vilas of Argentina, one of the
world's best tennis players, attempting to convince.a tmee.man panel that
he shouldn't be fined $W,OOO and suspended for a year on the charge of
accepting $60,000 appearance money to compete in a Grand Prix
tournmament last March In Rotterdam; Holland.
It p_rom!ses to be a landmark case, affecting the basi~ structure of
professional.tennis throughout the world.
For years- even before the game went professional- top tennis players
have been accepting money under the table for merely showing up. They
have felt, as gate attractions, they shOUld get what the market could bear.
This has created considerable problems for the Grand Prix circuit, which
this year carrled a total of $18 million ln prize money for events throughout
the world. Lesser players have complained It Is unfair, charging that the
best players pocket the most money legally anyhow and the bonuses they
surreptitiously demand takes It out of the pockets of others.
Some promoters also have cried that the double squeeze threatens to run
them out of the business. So the governlng Tennis Council, headed by
attorney Marshall HapperofRalelgh, N.C., has moved intoendtheabuse.
Rapper Is a tough &amp;UY, He has vowed to rid the game of skullduggery and
bear down hard on offenders. Already some tournaments have lost their
l!censes. Now he Is zerolng In on the players and wit)! VIlas, a recognized
court aristocrat who has been llnked romantically.with Princess Caroline of
.Monaco, hiS first big target.
Vilas reportedly was lured by a slush fund to play at Rotterdam after such
stars as Bjorn Borg and Jimmy Connors had withdrawn.
Hav[ng appealed the fine and suspension, Vilas' case Is l1QW being heard at
the New York Bar Association building ln a masslve'room with a worn
Oriental rug and portraits of renowned lawyers and jurists decoratlng the
walls. Happer sits at the elbow of his attorney, Roy Reardon, whlle Vilas'
• legal battery, headed by Martin London, occupies an adjacent table.
VUas' appeal Is belng heard by a panel of two former U. S. tennis
champions Btu Talbert, and Vic Selxas, and.FoiTest Hainline, a Detroit
attorney who is rules chairman of the U. S. Tennls Association.
The hearings have produced instances of taped phone convrrsations,
missing tapes, sponsor arm·twistlng, secret bargalnJng rendezvous and
hints of rakeoffs.
The only thing missing Is the smoking gun. In this case, It's $00,000.
Rotterdam promot.-rs swear they gave it. VIlas said he didn't see lt. So did
·
Vilas' agent-manager, Ian Tfriac.
VIlas, whose record50stralght match victories ln1977 included the French
and U.S. Opens, was on the stand Tuesday. He admitted that often, when
entered In a tournament, he accepts extra money from sponsors and even
promoters when he gives clinics and makes special appearances.
This is routine with top players, a practice which would be hard to enforce
,as illegal.

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Sunday 11:00 to 8:00
PH. 992-6491 or 992-31 06

McGee said earlier he had not
SALT LAKE CITY tAP)- The
boss wants an answer - and he i!Sked Ferrin for his permission lor
wants it today - from Utah Coach the lntervlew because "Coach
Chuck Stobart on whether he wUI Stobart Initiated the negotiations, so
leave to take the vacant head I !elt tj_e had clearance to be
foot ball coaching job at the Univer- lnterv!ewed." The job reportedly
could pay Stobart around $100,000
sity of Clncinnati.
Utah Atltletic Director Arnie per year.
Ferrin, howeve:·, 11d he did not
Ferrin said he had no objections to
Stobart's !rlterest in the job, but feel slighted.
'
wantel! an answer from Stobart
"ll he says 'I want to come back to
today on whether he would remain Utah,' then we'll be happy," Ferrin
at Utah or go to C!nclnna tl.
said.
"It won't drag OlJt," Ferrin said.
"We don't have contracts with out
" In the event Chuck feels he needs coaches," Ferrin said. ''Both
more time to weigh the Cincinnati Wayne Howard and Chuck Stobart
position, we'll just say, 'The agreed a handshake was binding
unJvers!ty won't walt for you. Good
enough, since If a coach wants to
luck.'''
!eave we wouldn't wanttob!ndhlm,
Stobart, 49, said he was asked by and if we wanted to get ridofacoach,
Cincinnati Atltletic Director M!·
he wouldn't want to ,insist upon
chael McGee to fly back for an
staying.''
interview. Stobart was among
Stobart, who is 10-12 ln two
Several candidates interested ln
seasons at Utah, was head coach at
replaclng Watson Brown, who
Toledo for five seasons before
resigned to accept a five-year
comlng to Utah ln 1982. He also was
contract with Rice.
an assistant at Clnclnnati ln the
Stobart, who has a 10-12 record In . eartY 1960s, and at Miami of Ohio
two seasons at Utah, said before he
and Michigan.
departed that he "had no Indication
"Cpach Stobart has many friends
how Interested they are ln me.''
ln the area and he is respected as a

COLUMBUS - Rio Grande
College ran Its basketball winning
streak to eight games Wednesday
ni¢1t with a 98-71 victory over
Franklin University.
The win moved the Redmen to 12·1
on the' season. Franklin dropped to

Meigs ......... ........................ 5
Warren Local ......................... ~
Alexander .......................... , ... 3
Vinton County ......................... J
Trlmble ................................. 3

4 275111
5 2411 36l
5 2fil 356
o :~W m
U 22S 1ll4

1 237 lB7
2' 241 aJ9
2 198 1B8
2 243192
Nel.·York ...... ......................... 2 3 1n 1.87

Fed.·Hocklng .... ... ...... ............. 0 5 222 239
MUier ................................... 0 5 172 243
WelLston ..................... ........ .... 0 5 157 289
Dec. 13 Resub
Trimble 70 Meigs 93 lot)
Alexander 70 Miller 48
Belpre 64 NelsonvUJe-York 44
Warren Local 72 Fe:leral-Hocking 59
VInton County 64 Wellston 62.
Dec. 16
Belpre at Meigs
Alexander at Nelsonville-York
Wellston at Federal·Hocldng
Warren Local at MWer
Trimble at VInton County

2-11.
RIO GRANDE (911) - Mowery &amp;{).16:
Penrod J.-0.6; Fumier 1.()..2; Curry 7-G-20;
Shaw &amp;.2-14; Malsch 1.()..2; WoUe J.8.H.; Smith
~; Verhoff 2-4-8; Morrtson 2.Q.4; McNI·
FRANKLIN (711- Rl'ed 11-t:b.1: Zimmer
5-1·11: Coleman 1.0.2; Jutras 1.0.2; O'Brien
2-0-4; Katz 2.{).4; Jeter 6-1-13: ·Wocdford 8-0-16.

To&lt;als 34-3-1·71.

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winning coach, which 1s why we
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Meigs ............. ,................... l 3 Zl9 264

Fed.·Hocklng ., ... , ........ ...........1
MUier ................ ................. 0
WeUston ..................... ........... 0
(RESERVES)
Belpre .............................. , .... 5

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TVC AU CONFERENCE
198.'1 VolleybaO

NEW ORLEANS (AP) - "We
were in a bit of a rush earlier. When
wes~edtoplayourtempo, wedld
better," sald Coach Eldon Mlller
after his Ohio State basketball team
came from behind to 5mack Tulane
80-57 Wednesday njght.'
"We dldn't do anything different
offensively," Mille&lt; said. "We really
just executed betler.
The Green Wave led In the first
halt.until the Buckeyes took the lead
for the first time at 33-32 on a 32-foot
jumper by Troy Taylor as the
·halftime buzl.er sounded.
In the flrst 12 minutes of the
second half, Tulane hltjustfourof17
attempts from the field, while Ohio
State hit 13 of 21.
Tulane Coach Ned Fowler
blamed the difference In the second
halt on the Green Wave's failure to
play well.
"We started the same people ln
the second half, but they didn't play
like the same people," he said.
Fowler said John Williams, who
led Tulane with 25 points, was just
recovering from an illness and "got
tired, and when wedon'thavehlm ln
the rnlddlewe don't play very well.' '
"We didn't have anybody to take
ch~." he added. "When It got
tough, we 'didn't have a blood-andguts man to take con.mand."
Ohio State shot about 60 percent in
each half, but were much more
effectlveduringthef!nal20mlnutes.
Tony Campbell led the Buckeyes
with 29 points.
Miller said Campbell's galne
dldn't surprise him.
"Good games for Tony Campbell
are about as conunon as games," he
said. "He just doesn't have any bad
ones.''
Ohio State was playing Its second
straight game without starters Joe

eoncheck and Alan Kort.okrax. Both ·
flunked off the team before Sunday's loss to Missouri that dropped
the Buckeyes out of the Top 20.
It was the worst tor Tulane slnce
Fowler took over as coach In 1981.
· The previous worst was an ~1loss
to KentuckY last year,

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

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CRIMPER AND
'
~~CONNECTOR KIT

Monica Bacick, Warren. Spiker ............. Sr.
Laura Burke, Belpre, Passer ..... ......... ... Sr.
Tonja Kurhe, Alexander ..... ..... .............. Sr.
Lisa Horner, War., Set.-Sptker ............... Jr.
Sandy Stout, War., Setter ...................... Sr.

Se&lt;ondl'eam

LOO ANGEL£!5 RAMS-RPacUvaled
A..l .Jones. ruMinil back. and placed
Rotxon Alexander, ronnlng back, on the

bMk.~ .

nounced today. Warren Local's
Kelly Arnold was chosen as
coach of the year. Meigs' Cathy
Dean and Jenny Meadows were
chosen second team, all TVC.
Members of the TVC all-league

team are:

Transactions

Buckeyes rip
Tulane~ 80-5 7

struggled offensively scoring 129
points In three games for a 43 point
average. Defensively Eastern llas
again provided a h~stllng squad
that has given up 145 polnts for a
48.3 average per outlng.
Southern has been shootlng relatively well overa!l, hitting 57 of 133
field goal attempts for 43 percent,
getting a strong boost from Rod
Llttlel!e!d's accurate shooting
average.
L!ttlef!eld, Southern's p!aymaker ,
and greatest offensive threat, Is
aver.aging 23.3 points per game
which provides nearly half of
Southern's total offensive output.
Southern's other agile guard Tony
Deem has been notching nlne points
per game, 6-6 Dennis Teaford seven
points per outing from the pivot,
Kevin Curfman six points, Wade
Connolly 4.6 and junior Darin
Roush a three point rverage.
Meanwhile, Eastern, much Improved from last season, has
forwarq Troy Guthrie leading Its
ranks with a 15 polnt per game
DRIVING - Ohio state guard Troy Tayfor drives lor ttie basket
shootlng clip. As a team Eastern
against Tulane's Howard Jenkins (32} during the first half of OSU's
has canned 57 of 144 for 39.5 percent
80-57 rout of Tulane Wednesday night. (AP L&amp;Berphoto).
from the . field . Besides Guthrie's
clip,' four other seniors have
provided some strong backing. Jim
Newell .o wns a 10.6 average, Mike
Co!Uns a nine point mark, Bob
MARIE'ITA - Marietta College Matt Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Malson fo1,1r points, and point guard
Daniel Littlefield, Route 1, Racine.
jurtlor
Matt Littlefield of Raclne
Tim Probert a 3.3 mark. Mark
"Cole brings good quickness to
and
Gene
Cole
of
Tuppers
Plains
Shrlvers and Paul Colllns provide
the
post position and Is working
are
members
of
the
1984
Pioneer
most of Eastern's strength off the
every
day at becoming a stronger
basketball
squad,
according
to
bench.
player,"
said Roach. "He has
Inside
With much of the stlng taken head coacll Phll Roach. "Matt
more
than any other
improved
from Southern·~ offensive threat became a starter at Christmas time
player
since
comlng
to Marietta.
and Eastern's notoriety for a last year after sitting out his
Gene's
ability
to
compete
at the
slow-dOwn game against Southern, freshman year at West VIrginia
agalilst
our
opponents
post
position
a great game could develop ln Tech," said Roach. "EasUythe best
Is an important key to our success.''
Racine. One underlying factor In rebounder and jumper on tbe team,
A 1~1 graduate of Eastern High ·
the game's outcome, however, Is he is a crowd pleaser because of his
Schoo!,
Gene Is the son of Mr. and
whO .can handle tile pressure better. shot blocking and dramatic slam
Mrs. H. E. Cole, Tuppers Plains.
Despite the offset In the team's dunks. Matt's anticipation makes
him
a
key
player
in
our
full
court
records at this point and further
considering that the season Is still press." A 1981 graduate of Oela·
young, one can bet that Friday's ware Valley Regional High School,
attraction will fill tbe gymnasium
and keep Its rafters shaking.
TVC STANDINGS
TVCONLV
The preliminary "battle of Meigs
Tum
W. L. P OP
County" featuring the two schools'
Trimble ................................ 5 o 3311 261
Belpre ................................... 5 o 326 235
reserve clubs wlll begin at 6:30p.m.
Alexander .............................. 4 1 325 276
while the varsity battle begins at 8
Warren l..oca1 ......................... 3 2 295 275
p.m.
Nel.-York ............................... 3 2 279 279

Dupler leads TVC
volleyball selections

Thunday, December 15, 1983

Gathy Dean, Meigs ... ... : ....................... .Sr.
Jan Downs, Trimble, Hitter ...... :............Jr.
Teresa Boring, Vinton Co., Hitter .......... So.
Jenny Meadovr-s, Meigs ......................... Sr.
Glna Monk. Nei.-York, llltter ......... , ....... Sr.
Audra NickeLs, VintOll Co.. H!Hf!T ...........Jr.

HT107C

•aaa

-..,leM-

Lort Pyatt, Belpre, Set.·Hlt. .................. So.
Shelly Hawk, Alex..... ..... ........ .............. Sr.
Cheryl Whlli'd, Fed.·Hocldng
Karla McCloud, Wellston, Setter ............ So.
Christl Williams, Belpre, Hlt. -Set. ... ... ..... So
Most Valuable Player - Missy Dupler,
Trimble.
Coach ofthcYear-Kelly Arnold, Warren.

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Meigs freshmen post victory
The Meigs freshmen basketball
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Meigs took control early as they
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· Donnle Becker led tbe Meigs

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followed by Huey Eason with eight
and J. R. Kitchen with six.
Mark Elliott came off the bench
to lead all rebounders with seven
followed by Jesse Howard with six.
Dennis Howe was the high polnt
man. for Nelsonville-York with six .

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�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Cillo

Bengal defense slighted in AC selection~
NEW YORK (AP) -Dan Marino
of the Miami Dolphins has been
chosen to start for the American
Football Conference Pro Eowl
team, making him the first rookie
quarterback to start since the game
began in 1900.
The team was announced today ·
by AFC President Lamar Hunt and
the NFL Players Association.
Manno, the rookie out or Pitts·
burgh, is the top-rated passer in the
AFC with 173 completions in 296
attempts for 2,210yards.
The game wW be played Jan. 29,
191W in Honolulu, HawaU (4 p.m.
EST, ABC·TV). Joe Theismann of
the Washington Redskins was
named Wednesday to start at
quarterback for the NFC.
The Los Angeles Raiders placed
the most players on the squad,
seven. The Dolphins had six.
Raiders picked to start were tight
end Todd Christensen. defensive

end Howle Long, outside Unebacker
Rod Martin and comerback Lester
Hayes.
Another rookie, Seattle's Curt
Wamer, was chosen to start
alongside Marino in · the ·AFC' s
backfield. Earl Campbell of Hous·
ton will be the other AFC rwmlng
back.
The NFC running backs were
rookie Elic Dickerson of the Los
Angeles Rams and William An·
drews or the Atlanta falcons.
D!ckerscn was one of two. rooldes
named to the starting NFC team.
The other was New York Giants
placekicker Ali Haj!·Shelkh.
Selec!!on was on the basis of
balloting by the conference coaches
and team player representatives,
with no voter allowed to vote for a
player on his own team.
One spot remained open on the
NFC squad, the third defensive end

position. Voting for the spot produced a !!e. The tiebreaker is the
overall record of the player's team,
but because the two teams could tie
In the standings with one game left In
the season, that spot will not be
announced until next week.

--

Earl Campbell, Hcwtcn OOen: CW1
Warner, Seattle Selthaw~ x-Tor'O' Collins,
New E:ngland Pattlotll; ::~~.JoeCrllb:.Buffaio

0out1 Betten.

Mlaml Oolphlnl; Jb\,1,¥
Long, Las Angeles Ral&lt;bs; x-M.ark GasU·
r&amp;u. NI.W York Jets.

Bob BaumhOWer, Miami Dolphins: FrEd
Sml2rlas, Buf!'ak&gt; Bills: x.Joe Klecko, Jo;ew
York.lf'ts .

OfTEI'.SE
\\tile Reot'!Yer
CarJoi&gt; Carson, KanS&lt;Is Cily C'hlefs': Crts
Colllns'ol-·arth. Qnclnnall Bmgals; x·We-s
ChaJidler, San Diego Chargers: K-Mark

Chip BankS, Cleveland Brown!: Rod
Mmln, IDi ARJf"les Raiders; Jt-Ted Hen·
d.rklu, l...al Ani@les Ra~
Middle Uw? !wor

n,..End

o.wde't ......

Jack l.ambl'rt, Pl.ttibw"gh Stell~: X·
RandyGradlshar, DmverBroocos.

......

TOdd Ou1slm9f'n, Los Angele5 .Raldecl;

...

x-KeiJe:'l Wlns!o\.1•, San DI~CIIargers.

.....,

Anthon.'!' Murcz. Clndnllllli Bertgats;
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~·In

J&gt;ol.t,·pU, Nf'W YorK JliiS: x -Brlan
H ol~'il~-. I'I'N' Enflland Patmlll

G....
.John Hannah , New England Patriots:
Chris Hln:oo. Baltirmre Colts: x-Ed Nt&gt;Wman . M iami Dolphim.
C4'fller
I:M1ght Srephmson. Miami Dolpl\lru:~

q,..n.,-•

x-Mikf&gt;WI't:8ter . Plnst.•rghStf'f'lers .

Dan Martno, Miami

Dol~ ;

X· ~n

..

....

DEF£Nll!:

NEW YORK !API - 1lit&gt; American
ConfenJ'I('(' Pro ser.o.·r learn !ICI«'Ird IJr the
Jan. 29 National F'ooTball l.eaR!Jl''s aU-star
game l~ Horolulu !Hl'St'tvel'

{)Jpl'l', Mlaml Dolphins.

By The Bend

,_san oo.aoawoen. ·

"""·

"'"""' Chony.
"'"'McElroy,
CIUefo; """"'
Eask)',
~~tJ~; """"'
x.Yann
Los
Angt'les Raldrn.

.

Co: A bid:
Gal)' Cl'ft'll, l&lt;anSilll City ·OUeCs:: Lester
Hoyf!S,Los AntrelesRalden; x-I.LlubWrljhl,
Dower 8roi'K.'05.
'

..

NEW sTANDARD FoorBALL COACH - Jack ,Elway smiles
during a p...,. conference at stanford University Wednesday morning
announcing Elway as the new football oolUlh who 111cceeds Paul WIgilD.
l!lway eoa.:hed for Jan Jooe State University last year and Is the lather
of Denver Brone08' quarterback John Elway. (AP Laserphoto).

......._

----

SPEaAUS1S
Ga~· AndE'r.IOO,PittsbwP Strelm.

Rich Camarillo, Ne'o\' EngiMd Patmts.

Grt&gt;R Pruln, LosAn&amp;eles Ratclri.

Philadelphia dumps Bucks; Celtics top Cavs, Spurs win
By Associatro Press
we played a very creditable game.
When the Philadelphia 76ers play Unfortunately, you've got to play 48
well for 48 minutes and their minutes.•·
opponent plays well for just 42, it's
In other NBA games, it was
virtually certain that the National Eoston 110, Cleveland 100; Washing·
Basketball Association champions ton 99, Atlanta 96; San Antonio 129,
wlll come out on top.
San Diego 114; Dallas 117, Indiana
That's exac!!Y what happened 109; and Kansas City 105, Seattle99.
Wednesday night when the 76ers
Julius Erving played a tremend·
scored 20 of the last 24 points of the ousgameforPhiladelphia,hltting13
game in the f!nal3: 21 en route to a . of 15 shots ana scoring 29 points,
11:&gt;-93 victory over the Milwaukee lncluding several soaring dunks.
Bucks.
·
"When you make these kind of
Moses Malone was especially field goals, they create excitemetit
effective down the stretch, scaling and they have a market value about
10 of his 23 points In the final2: 52.
them," Erving said. "I sometimes
"We played an excellent ball dream of floating out In space and
game for 48 minutes and our fourth sometimes the dreams seem so
quarter was especially outstand· real.''
ing," 76ers Coach Billy Cunningham
"Doc was outstanding - he is
said. " Moses Malone finally broke playing like a 21-year-old recently,"
out from the two guys who'd been Cunningham said.
guarding him."
Andrew .Toney added 21 points for
Despite34 points from Milwaukee the 76ers, while ail-star guardS!dney
forward Marques Johnson, exceed· Moncrief had 11 for the Bucks.
ing his previous season high of 28,
The Bucks led after each of the
Bucks Coach Don Nelson was
first three periods and entered the
disappointed in his team.
fourth quarter with a 79-77 edge .
"We ran out of gas in the last six
The Sixers finally regained the
minutes and our turnovers created
lead with 8: 22 left on a dunk by
scoring opportunities," Nelson said.
EIVing, putting them in tront 84-83.
'"Take away the last six minutes and
Philadelphia never trailed thereat·

ter but the game was still close with
3:21 to go, with Milwaukee trailing
oruy9~.
•
But from there, the 76ers out·
scored the Bucks 204.
" Maybe we g9t ilred," Johnson
said. "We've been this way before
where we've led for 3)2 quarters,
only ·to see otherteanis draw away.
It's hard to pinpoint what happened .
You have to give credit to their
defense. They put on a spurt lliat we
couldn't turn off." .,
Bullets 99, Hawks 96 ·
Washington, which lost at home to
Atlanta Tuesday night, turned the
tables on the Hawks' court as Jell
Ruland scored 24 points and Rick
Mahorn20.
The Bullets never trailed after
taking a 12·1llead midway through
the first quarter. Dominique Wllldns
scored 25 points for Atlanta.
Celtics 110, Cavaliers 108
At Eoston, Larry Bird, who

· missed two full games with a from Ralph Sampson, fought back
sprained knee, played 14minutesolf from a 16-polnt deficit to trall 1()3.101
the bench and scored 13 points, with4:44rema!nlng,butDallasheld
Including the game-winning basket on to Its margin down the stretch.
with four seconds rema!nlng.
Spurs l28, Cllpper!j 114
The Celtlcs, who won their sixth
San D!egoalsostayedwinlesson
straight, also got 30 points and 16 the road this season as George
rebounds from Robert Parish. Gervln scored 25 points and Mike
World E. Free had 30 points fqr Mitchell hit 11 of 15 field goal
Clevelarid, who tied the score at attempts for 23 points:
100.111! on a basket by, roolde Paul
The Spurs led by at least eight
Thompson with 28 seconds. points at the end of each peliod to
remaining.
hand t1'te Clippers, who got 26 points
Mavericks ll7, Pacers 109
· from Terry Cummings, their 27th
Mark AguiJTe scored 30points, his straight road loss dating back to last
eighth straight game at or above season.
that plateau, as Dallas handed
,
Klnp 10$, Simlcs 99
Indiana its lOth consecutive loss on
Eddie Johnson srored 33 points
and played a key role down the
the road this season.
The Midwest Division-leading stretch as Kansas City won at
Mavelicks also got 22 points from
Seattle.
Jay Vincent, 21 from Rolando
The SuperSonics traUedonly94-93
Blackman
20 bywho
Pat got
Cum·
mlngs.
Theand
Pacers,
25
points from Clark Kellogg and 20

with 2: 51 to go, but after Bllly Knight
sank two tree throws for the Kings,

Johnson grabbed a reboqnd and
scored and then added a steaf that
led to a basket by Knight, giving
KansasC!tyal00.93advantagewith
two minutes left.
Tom Chambers scored 28 points

ran~d=Al=W=ood=:24~~=or=Se=attl=e·====­
· '

Professional Counseling
·
and
·
Family Services

A total of$2llwas C(Jllected for the
church bianket project, it was
reported by Nan Moore at the Heath
United Methodist Church Women's
meeting Monday night at the
church.
Plans were made durtng the
meeting to give a holiday donation to
the Meigs County Infinnary to be
d!stlibuted to the residents there.
Emma K. Clatworthy presided at
the meeting held In the social room
which was decorated lvith a tree and
candles. Plano prelude was by
Donna Byer. A report was given on
the bazaar and a Christmas
meditation and prayer were given
by the president.
Mrs. Byerpresented the program
using "Christmas is a Special Day"
displaying costumed dolls as she
related customs of the valious
countrtes. Herdisplayandcommen·
tary included dolls from France,
Egypt, Greece, Hawail, Holland,
Japan, Mexico, Sweden, Spain and
the United States.
Mrs. Byer also displayed a
natlvlty scene which her Sunday
school class had made. A carol sing
with Mrs. Byer at the plano closed
the program.
Hostesses were Betty Fultz, Jean
Ann Bradbury, Vicki Houchins,
Maxine Philson, and Emily

Pomeroy

There is still time to

ENROLL IN THE WINTER CLASSES
Prepare .n ow for YOUR future!

TRAIN IN FIELD$ THAT PAY WELL...

HoWe Griffith

Griffith birth

ASSOCIATE DEGREES AND DIPLOMAS IN
•Busines Administration
•Executive $ecretary
•Computer Science
•Accounting
ELIGIBLE FOR THE TRAINING OF VETERANS ·
FINANCIAL AID IS STILL AVAILABLE

Mr . . and Mrs. Troy Grtfflth,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of their first child, a daughter, Hollie
Elizabeth. The infant was born on
Sept. 27 at the Holzer Medical Center
and weighed seven pounds, 14
ounces and was 20 inches long.
Paternal grandparents-are Mr. and
Mrs. Danny M. Gri!fil\1. Pomeroy,
and the maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Kennedy,
Rutland.

Gallipolis Business College

Carmel personalr

429 Jackson. Pike, Gallipolis, 446·4367

Elsie Circle, Florence Circle, and
Linda Patterson were recent vis·
!tors of Mr. and Mrs. Brent
Patterson, Chlllicothe.

St Rea. # 75-02·04721

19 POINrER - Robert Lawrence of Long Bottom recently bagged a 19
point buck deer during deer gun season In LebaDon Township.

Arthur Earl Johnson, Sheryl and
Patrtck spent Saturday evening
visiting Mr. and Mrs. W!lllam
Carleton and farnlly of Racine.
Elsie Circle and Sue Hager visited
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle at the
Pleasant Valley Nursing Home
recently.

Daniel Green Slip
Wellco Slippers
Lined Slippers
Purses ·
Shoe Shine ·Kits
Lined Boots For Men &amp; women
Children's Smurf Slippers
. Dingo Boots .
Converse Socks
Hose
Ladies' Dress Shoes

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REG. 1399.95

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Night Till

8:00 P.M.

,

·'

'

==='1

MAKING MOVIFS - A mo\'le with an original
script written by Steve Musser was made at the Meigs
IDgh School Wednesday aftemoon as a project by
members of the ooUege preparatory EnpJsh class of
Mrs. Jeanne Taylor. On practtcally one day's notlee
Musser wrote the script and recndted the acl&lt;&gt;rs for

the movie, "Can Cbristma&amp; Be

Sav~?" Mt~Mer,

second from left, Instructs acl&lt;&gt;rs for a scene In which
they lddllap Santa. The group from the left lnclu~es
Jay Buskirk, Musser, Jesse Howard, Srott PoweU as
Santa and JeUrey Basham. At the camera and also
serylt&gt;g as dlrecl&lt;&gt;r Is 11m c~u.

The Area Agency on Aging
D!strtct 7, Inc.. and the Nursing
Home Training Center wlll co·
sponsor several workshops In the
month of January 1984.
On Jan. 16, a seminar entitled,
"Principles of Charting In Long·
Term Care," will be conducted at
Scioto Memolial Hospital, Ports·
mouth, from 9 a.m. to noon. This
workshop will be ·conducted by
Ruth A. Weaver, RN, ESN, Train·
lng CoOrdinator for the Area
Agency on Aging and the Ohio
Department of "H ealth, Division of
Nursing Home Area Training
Centers. Ms. Weaver has presented
this workshop throughout the state,
and has received positive evalua·
tions upon completion.
Dr. William Ly\)n, Entomologist
for Ohio State University, will
conduct a ' three· hour program
entitled · "Pest Control In LongTerm Care" from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
on Thursday, Jan. 19, at .Scioto
Memolial Hospital, Portsmouth.
Lyon has been associated lvith the
Ohio Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice for the past 21 years as an
"Economic Entomologist" .con·
cerned with the identification and
control of h~rmful Insect and mite
pests.
Lyon has taufSht throughout the
state and has prepared radio
programs in order to better educate
the health professionals and gen·

Memolial Hospital, Portsmouth,
era! public about pest Identification
and control. This workshop is Ohio, from 10 a.m. to 2:30p.m. This
targeted toward people working In · training is endorsed by A.D.A.
For further Information concern·
long-term care or hospitals . .,
!ng these workshops, please contact
On Jan. 23, Chrtstine Goodall,
Ruth A. Weaver, Area Agency on
DietiCian for the Ohio Department
of Health, w!ll present a three-hour Aging District 7, Inc., P.O. Eox 978, .
Rio Grande College, Rio Grande,
seminar entitled, "Nutrttlonal Care
Ohio or telephone (614) 24:&gt;-5306.
of the Cancer Patient," at Scioto

On A Hide-A-Bed ®By Simmons
Or Sofa Sleeper By Stearns &amp; Foster
TRANSITIONAL FUll SIZE .
MODEL WITH UPHOLSTERED
BASE AND BOLSTERS.
REG. 1999 .

SALE $599

CONTEMPORARY EXTRA LONG
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BOLSTERS.
SALE $699
REG. '1099

Lifestyle
FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

Hospitalized
Darrell .Young is confined to
Unlversty Hospital. Cards may be
sent to him atRoom3100, Dodd Hall,
472 West Eighth Ave., University
Hospital, Columbus, 43210.

If In Doubt, Give A GUt Certificate

'Name Brand Clothing at Discount Prices

MARGUERITE SHOES

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

"Give A
STORE M~n.·Fri. 9:30 to 8:00
Gift .
. Fn. &amp; St.. 9:00 to 8:00
Certificate" HOURS · Sun. 12:00 to 5:00

,,

GUESTS COMING
FOR THE HOLIDAYS?
WHERE WILL THEY SLEEP?
CHOOSE FROM OUR' BEST SELECTION EVER!

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•

Luke. The Lord's Prayer and pledge r-;Wh::i:te:,C:h:e:st:e:rCo=u=nc:i:l.
to the Amelican flag was given in .
Your "E~~otre Touch"
unison. Members responded to roll
Florist Since 1957
call by naming their favorite
Chlistmas song. Favors for the
decorated tables were made by
Elizabeth Hayes.· Members ex·
changed gifts, and Helen Wolf was
FLORIST
pianist for the carol sing. Mrs.
PH. 992-2644
Ritchie, Erma Cleland, Mrs. Hayes,
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Mrs. Wolfe read Chlistmas poems,
Your FTD Florist
Cora Beegle won the door prize.

,~~

''FREE''
POINSETTIA

"The Mlcldle Sl'" Stere In Tt.. Middle llock"

!'HONE 446-7116

A carol sing, holiday readings,
The district rally was announced
and gift exchange were features of for May 12, 1984, at Perry Council,
the aimual Christmas party of the New Lexington. The next club
Distrtct Deputies and Past Counc!· meeting and dinner w!ll be April29 .
iorsClubofDistlictl3, Daughters.of at Chester.
America, held at the hall.
Others attending were WI !rna
The dinner was prepared and Haycraft, Gallta Council; Janice
seiVed by theconventlon C(JmmJttee Lawson, Pauline Morality, Mar·
with proceeds going into the garet Eichinger, Donna Simms, ·
convention fund. Fifty attended with Guiding Star; Jessie Ryan. Martha
the officers being seated at a special Hudnall, Hazel Butler, Golden
table. They were Esther Smith, Gleam, Tom McCord , Ruth Abram ,
deputy of Distrtct 13, Mary Moose, Alberta Hartshorn, Kathryne Mar·
New lexington, na!onalrepresenta· low , Betty Wolle, Vera Houselive; Dorothy Ritchie, state conduc· holder, Perry.
tor; rielen Bauer, deputy, Perry
Ethel Orr, Barbara Sargent,
Council 283; Eileen Clark, deputy, Zelda Weber, Shirley Beegle, Opal
Guiding Star Council 124; Mary Hollon, Dorts Grueser. Mary Sho·
Austin Garwood, deputy, Gallia walter, Fern Morris, Lora DameCouncil 114; Beulah Moyers .- dep· . wood, Faye Kirkhart, Sadie Trus·
uty, Golden Gleam, 251; Betty sell. Mary K. Holter, Charlotte ·
Roush, deputy, Chester 323; MMar· Grant. Margaret Tuttle, Letha
cia Keller, state publicity Wood,AdaMorris,lhlaFaeKimes,
committee.
Thelma McMannis, Nina Windle,
Pauline Ridenour. Betty Chlisto·
Mrs. Smith presided at the
meeting using sclipture from St.
pherson, Nettie Hayes, and Thelma

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 8:00
SUNDAYS 12:00 TO 5:00

Drew - Morgan Quinn ·
Weyenberg Dress Boots &amp; Shoes For Men
Converse
Keds
Smurfs
Santa Rosa &amp; Hlt'man Survivor
Work Shoes

15, 1983

Chester council meets

10 SHOP~ING DAYS TILL CHRISTMAS

by: Audition - Jarman
Miller - Charm Step

Decem!Mtr

Page-7

Long term care workshop topic

992·2192

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

19"
COLOR TV
83 Ch11nels

Thursday,

Blanket project
begins at church

"Woodland Centers

e
YES

Miller likes new rule
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Unlike some of his fellow coaches, Eldon
Miller of Ohio ~tate likes the new college basketball rule that calls for an
automatic two shots on any personal foul called in agame'slast two minutes.
"Anything that removes a chance of error by an official is a good rule,"
said Miller.
In previous seasons, if a team was b&lt;:!hirid !ate in the gameanddidn'thave
the basketball, it fouled on purpose to stop theclockandregaln possession . If
the opposing player missed the first of his one-and-one situation, It cost the
violators no poL~ts.
·
North Carolina State used that late-fouling strategy to rally in several
NCAA Tournament games last spring before winning the national
championship . The Wolfpack's strategy helped prompt the new regulation.
The rules always had said a deliberate foul, at any part of the game, was a
two shot foul. However. officials were hesitant to assess a player a two shot .
foul. especially in the final minutes of a close game.
"We ·ve given those people (theo!l!clals) the toughest game in the world to
officiate and this rule takes some of the judgment away," Miller said.
"Before, we told our players to try to make It look as if they were trying to
steal the ball on deliberate fouls. Now we can tackle them to make sure the
foul is called because it is a twoshot foul anyway."
The Ohio State coach believes officials have too much to do.
"They have to count five seconds on an In-bounds play.10 seconds to get th
e ball across the time line, five seconds to get lid of the ball when the drlbbleis
stopped, five seconds to penetrate the hash marks, three seconds in the lane.
"Wit h all that counting, no official in the world, no matter how good he is,
can o!l!ciate a good game. The less we ask them to do, tbe better they will
be."
Miller likes a 40-second shot clock, saying, '!'All that counting could be
eliminated."
Why not eliminate all counts and not use a shot clock?
"I can live lvith that. Of course, with no counts and no clocks, you'd have
some 9·7 games with teams holding the ball. I can live with 9-7 games. the
fans can't and we have to remember the fans. Fans are important. But to
me, basketball is a lot more than the bail going through the hoop."

The Daily 'Sentinel

•FREE PARKING
•FREE DELIVERY
INCL. DEC. 24th
•FINANCING AVAILABLE

OPEN EVERY NIGHT
Ill 8 P.M.
MON. THRU SAT. ·

�•

,,

•

. '

Sentinel

December 1

Thunday, O.C.mber 15, 1983

Calendar
FRIDAY

SANTA'S
FAVORITE
CARS I

,

~

sn.VER

RUN ..:. The annual
Christmas program of the Silver
Run Baptist Church will be held
Friday at 7:00 p.m .

0 --

r-· #
~~~u~"Ow PAY LATER!
~l\~

THAT'S RIGHT! STOP IN TODAY AND PICK OUT
YOUR NEW FORD-V.W.·AMC-JEEP OR . RENAULT.
AND MAKE YOUR ' FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY
1984. OFFER APPLY'S TO. ANY NEW CAR IN STOCK!
.

.

With On The Spot
Financing To Qualified
Applicants.

Diaper
GREENVU.LE, Texas (AP I - It
certainly seemed like a good idea
when Butch Clausen took over the
twins' diaper-changing duties from
his wife for a few days.
And he only made one little
m ista-ke: He· changed the boys'
clothes,
andthat
in doing
name tags
wereso
themL,edupthc
only way to
tell 2-month-old Brian and Ryan
apart.
Before Cla usen could correct the
goof, both his wife, Gwyen, and her
sister changed the boys. And the two
women differed on w·hich twin ~vas
which.
E nter Hunt County a uthorities to
help son out the twins. who are
precisely lhe same height aAd
weight, have identical blrlhmarks
on thei r foreheads and sligr ily
s maller than nmmal middle toes ' ''t
their right feet.
Alter compm·ing hospi ta l foot ·
prints with dozens of impt-essions
made Friday, District Attorney's
· Investigator G.W. Wafford and
private investigato r David E liassen
reached

a verdict:

Ryan

was

WINl'IIER - David Bollinger, manager of The Jones Boys in
Pomeroy, presents Mrs. Lucy Baninger, Reedsvllle, wllh asackoffree
groceries valued at about $30. 1bls sack was one of 12 given away at the
store Wednesday as a good will gesture. The free groceries were given
away at vaned periods throughout the day to the customer who
happened who happened to be at a particular checkout counter at the
time of the day selected for that presentation.
·

r - -- - : - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - : - - 1

GENUINE
SUEDE

1980 CHEVROLET
MALIBU
4 door, 6 cyl., air c:ond., heater.
auto. trans., PS, PB. body side
mouldings, tinted glass, AM
radio, WSW radial tires, wheel
covers.

Youth . Kids, Men's
and Ladies'

6 cyl., air c:ond., heater, 5 speed
trans.. PS, PB. tinted gloss,
cruise c:ontrol, AM·FM radio,
stereo flpe, styled wheels,
remote control mirrors, console,
bucket seats.

1979 FORD LID
TWO IN STOCK
2 door, va, heater, auto·. tr11ns.,
PS, PB, floor mah, AM' radio,
WSW radial tires, wheel covers,
remote control mirror$, bumper.

l!w~A,2s~~~ID!'~~~N~ow~1 L~VzA~·9s~9~~!JII~~;·~~t9N!o~~w~· J!!!~~~!~!~~~~
6 cyl., heater, auto. trans.. PS.
PB, floor mats, body side
mouldings, tinted glass. AM-FM
radio, WSW radial tires, styled
road wheels.
WAS

H~KERS

1979 DA!SUN 280 ZX

6 cyl., air cond., heater, auto.
trans., PS, PB, tinted glass, AMFMadio, remote control mirrors.

NOW

4 door, 4 cyl., air cond., auto.
trans., PS, bodyside mouldings,
tinted glass, AM radio, WSW
radial tires, wheel coven.
WAS
NOW

'5295

cyl., heater. 4 speed
tra,ns., tinted glass, AM
WSW radial tires,
covers, bucket

2 door, 6 cyl., air cond.,
heater, auto. trans .. PS,
PB, tinted glass, AM
radio, WSW radial tires,

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR

4 door, 4 cyl., heater,
auto. tnms., body side
mouldings, AM radio,

2 door, 4 cyl .. 4 speed,
body side mouldings, AM
radio, wheel covers.

NOW

WAS

~~l"Ril"Rill:ll&gt;=il--llllliR19ll9liHJIIIJIIfilllllliHJ11$11JIIfllliHliHliHl"RilOiilllliiMIIOilllOHI:OfilOB':B!
WEEKEND SPECIAL"
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NOW

Regularly '595

11

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1 CARAT
SOLITAIRE

•

$2195.00

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DEC. 10 DRAWING WINNER: Lorena Loudermilt

1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
1984
. 1984
,; 1984
1984

113 COURT ST.

POMEROY, OH.
992·2054
Where Sanla
Shops

Abelman and Kimberly Neuendorf, another professor in the
department, said thelr research
shows no evidence that soap operas
have any lasting effect on viewers,
except for the most susceptible.
The professors are studying both

SATURDAY
HARTFORD - Santa will be
at the Union · Hall, Hartford,
Saturday, noon untU 6 p.m. for
all members and famllles of
Local 55171, United Steel
Workers.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - The Izaak
Walton League will have a
muzzletoading shoot at the club
grounds Sunday at 1 p.m. Scoj:Jes
and open sights will be shot
separately.
CHESTER -A special meetIng of the Chester Bowhunters
Qub will be held Sunday at 4
p.m. at the Brown's Taxidermy
'on County Brown's Taxidermy,
County Road 25. '
POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society will meet
at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Meigs
County Museum. The program
will be "Discussion of InterestIng Findings or Problems" by
members.

the lifestyles depleted in the soaps
and the effects watching tbe shows

have on people. One focus is on how
the television characters attack
their problems and If regular

viewers Imitate those solutions.
It Is estimated that 5 mllilon to 10
mllllon Americans watch the
programs.

Soap characters generally are
vlrtle young men and beautiful
young women playing doctors,
lawyers and professional people.
They are prone to indulging in
pleasures of the flesh and tend to
develop exotic fonns of mental and
physical distress.
Every hour, about two sex acts
are shown, tmplled or talked about
on afternoon soap operas, said Ms.
Neuendorf. The sexual partners
usually are not married, at least to
one ' another, and never are homosexual, she said.
Some people believe that avid
soap opera fans tend to pick
dramatic solutions to their problems, like those displayed on
afternoon television - schemes
such as faking a sulc!deordrugging
another person.

effect," which means fantasies are
so alluling for some that reality
never is as satlsfylng.
•
Most viewers who are idfected by
soap operas are Individuals without
much interaction with others. They
then have little real-life experience
to compare with what they see on
television, and sometimes make
soap characters their role models,
the researchers said.
However, most people have little
trouble separating television fantasy from real life, the professors
5ald.
•
Abelman said viewers may
become addicted to the shows partly
because of the format.

However, " there's no evidence·

CABBAGE PATCJiKJDS ON111E BLOCK -Jolm
DeKok of tbe Coleco Inc., toy company, points to a
buyer of the this Cabbage Patch Kid Tuesday dut1ng

an auction at Holiday Warehouse In Fridley, Minn.
Auctions ol 50 other dolls that day raised over $8,1100
lor Minneapolis Children's MedlcaJ Center. •

that people actually copy the
characters ," Ms . Neuendorf said.
But viewers may compare their
lives with -the TV characters and
come up short, Abelmansaid. Social
scientists call It the "PlaYboy

RACINE The Racine
Church of the Nazarene will hold
Its junior program Sunday at
10:00 a. m . with the adult play to
be held on Dec. 21 at 7:00 p.ni.
entitled "The Gate of the Inn."
POMEROY - A play, "The
King Who Abolished Christ·
mas," will be presented during ·
the annual Christmas program
at tl)e Mt. Hermon United
Brethren in Christ Church,
Trxas Community, Sunday at
7:00p.m . The public is invited to
attend.

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"These viewers look at the
characters and the exciting lives
they lead, and they think, 'Boy, am I
dull,' " said Robert I. Abelman, a
professor In the school's conununlcatlon departnient.

Happenings

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CLEVELAND (AP)- Watching
soap operas Is hannless, but the
television programs do affect the
thinking of some people, say
Cleveland State University
researchers.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Church of Christ will have a
Christmas play, "Come Ye
Faithful Wlsemen" Sunday at 7
p .m.

wheel covers

3/ 4 CARAT
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Researchers say soap operas are OK

POMEROY- Cluistmas program at the Mt. Union Church
off Route 143 will be held Sunday
at 7:OOp.m. The public is Invited.

IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

wearing Ryan's shirt and Btian was
wearing Btian' s.

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Third Wednesday Homemakers
Qub will have a Christmas
party Friday at 6 p.m. at the
Syracuse Presbyterian Church
annex. There will be a gift
exchange.

The Daily Sentinei- Pagtt-9

Pomeloy-Middleport, Ohio

•

,.

RlTI'LAND - Plano students
of Donna Jenkins, Vera Holliday
and Sharon Hawley will be held
at the Rutland United Methodist
Church Sunday at 2 p.m.
The program Is a collecl!on of
tradition! and religious Christmas music and the public Is
Invited to attend. Children who
will play are Atmee Rupe,Sharla
Cooper, Michelle Young, Kelly
Stewat, Beth Clark, Holly Williams, Heather Hovatter, Jody
Uvlngston. Tara Qark, Leighanne Redov!an, Tricia Baer,
Renee· Young, John Evans,
Dee-a Johnson, Susanne Cassell.
Misl!Y Longstreth, Kim Stewart,
Jeff Arnold, Carl Williams, Pam
Walburn, Christy Haynes, Susan
Jones, and Lesley Carr.

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MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Heath United Methodist
Church wlll celelirate-Cht1stmas
with two special Christmas
ml!Sicais Sunday. Duling tbe
10: 00 worship .bour, the adult
choir under the direction of Joan
Robinson will present a musical
trlbute to Jesus, titled "Joseph,
The Carpenter" written by Joe
E. Parks' Organist Is Donna
Jenkins.
The ~enlng musical wll be
under the direction ·of Joan
Robinson and Julie Byer. The
youth choir will present
"Stranger In' the Straw" wrttten
by Vern Neff at 7 p.m .

Church of God
plans program
RUTLAND - Christmas-programs at the Rutland Church of
God will be presented Sunday,
tbe Rev. JohnS. Evans,' pastor,

announced today.
At the 10 a .m. morning service
tbe gospel singing group, ''The
Holloways" of Detroit will be
featured. At tbe evening service
at 7 p.m. 1W! Youth Department
will pre!!Eill tbe Christmas clas·
sic "CitrlslmasCmlestoDetrolt
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�Thursday, December 15, 1983

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

1!&gt;-- The Daily Sentinel

Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local salon represented
at state 8 &amp; 40 meeting
Mary Martin and Pearl' Knapp of
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, attended the Ohio Departemental Pouvlor held recently at the
Hilton Inn, Columbus.
.Chapeau passes including Mrs.
Martin were recognized, partnership was noted with one goal salon
being reported, and members were
asked to send in prayers and
puhllcity for the books to he
comp!led. ·
A report was given on the lund for
scholarships for the advancement of
nurses in the fields of respiratory

INSTAJJ.ED - John S. Harrison, center front, was installed as
worshlplul master of the Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, In ceremonies
Tuesday night at the Middleport Masonic Temple. Others installed were
(front from left) Harry Roush, secretary; Steve Houchins, senior
warden; Harrison, JohnS. 'Thomas,juniorwarden; andDarreUBechtel,
ll'easurer; (serond row) JarnesS. Buchanan,chaplatn; RalphF.Moore,
· senior deac&lt;m; .Paul Thomas, junior deacon; and Eber Lewis, lodge

education ofllce; (third row) Lloyd L.Sayre, rettrtqgworshlpfullllllliter;
Gordon B. Teulord,senlorsteward,andJameslfaJHW,junlorsteward.
JamesCrlsweU. Tyler, was oot present fortheiJ&gt;stalatloo. 'ThelnstaDing
officers were James Clatworthy, past district deputy grnnd master,
Roscoe Wise, lnstulllngmarshall, Paul Darnell, lnstalllngsecretary; and
Robert v. King, Installing chaplain.

CX)LUMBUS, Ohio tAP) Mother Nature has unwrapped a
Christmas presentlorOhlo'sChrtstmas tree growers and buyers - a
newly discovered tree that forestry
professor James H. Brown says
grows well in Ohio's wet clay soU.
The tree Is a variety of balsam Hr
that growsonsoutllernAppalachian .
mountain tops at from 3,.DI to 4,00J
feet, Brown said Wedriesday.
"It'sgoingtoheapremlumtreeat
a premium price, butit'sgoingto l:le
of less cost than If we had to import it
from North Carolina,'' he said,
Brown began studying the tree in
1971 at the Ohio Agricultural
Research and ~lopment Center
in Wooster and at plots in Coshocton
and Brown counties.· He compared
seedlings from West VIrginia, New
York and Pennsylvania in an effort

diseases with 25 being given last
year, four in Ohio, and lund raising
activities for the lund were carrled
out at the convention.
Information on the work of the
National Jewish Hospital was
discussed. The Eight and :Forty
annually endows a bed at the
hospital.
It was noted that the Eight and
Forty annualconventionwilll:leheld
In Columbus atSIAuffer'slnn, Aug.4
imd 5, 1984, three weeks later !han
the American Legion Auxlllary.
.

.

Twlla Childs and 'James Clat·
wonhy were Installed as worthy
matron and worthy patron of
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
the Eastern Star, in ceremonies held
Thursday evening at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Other officers instaUed were
Virginia Buchanan, associate rna·
tron; James Buchanan. associate
patron; Bessie King. secretary;
Jean Null. treasurer; Lorena Ault,
conductress; Elizabeth Milam. asssoc!ate conductress; Bob Kuhn,
chaplain; Karen Roush, marshal;
Emma K. Oalworthy, organist;
Debbie Moore, Adall; Sue Star,
Ruth; Patty Hoffman, Esther;
Betty Van Matre, Martha; Teresa
Canterbury, Electa; Farie
Kennedy, warder; and Ralph
Moore, sentinel. The trustees are
Mrs. VanMatre, Maxine Kesterson,
and Bob Kuhn, with the prompters,
I;lea Kuhn, Rcsemary Lyons, and

Bob King.
Doris Preston, past grand rna·
tron, installed the new officers and
was assisted by the installing grand
marshaU, Noami King; Beatrice
Spaulding, grand conductress; Paul
M. Darnell, grand chaplain; Kathy
Johnson, grand organist; Rosemary Lyons, grand warder; Lee
McComas, grand sentinel; Bea
Kuhn, grand marshal; Bill King,
escort; Bea Kuhn, soloist, Bob King
and Reuben Co!lins, chairs; and
Adria Wilcox and Doris Lewis,
sunshine pages,
After the installation, the worthy
matron thanked her installing
officers, her parents for the gavel,
and her husband and foster son for
her corsage. The newly Installed
worthy patron thanked the chapter
for allowing him to serve with hJs
daughter. Mrs. Childs gave her
theme, "Faith, Fidelity and Love."

Dick LeGra¢ of Rio Grande,
roy,andMrs.PrestonofLeesville.
trustee of the Eastern Star Home
was introduced, as was Ruby
Vaughan, president of District 25.
The sunshine collection was in the
amount of $42.92 to be sent to
ESTARL.
Kuhn had thanks he{oren&gt;fresh·
ments were served in the dining
room. Decorations were in blue and
silver in the holiday motif handled
by the decorating committee,
Jenevee Chesher, Kdthryn Knight,
Clara Criswell, Esther Hayes, Lee
McComas, Doris Lewis, Jean Null,
Emma and James Oatworthy.
Refreshments were handled by na
Darnell, Betty VanMatre, Jennifer
Hamson, Karen Rcush, Mary Wise,
Linda Mayer, and Patty Hoffman.
Adrta Wilcox and Emma Clatworthy handled the pinons.

CY

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INTRODUCING

Edith Reed Lamb .

SPENCER'S
SNA·CK SHACK
5th &amp; Pearl St.

Racine, OH.

· PHONE: 949-3011

HOURS:

MON.-FRI. 11 AM. TO 10 P.M.
SAT. 12 NOON TO 11 P.M.
SUN. 5 P.M. TO 10 P.M.

'

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AL YSA ASHLEY MUSK

Dusting Powder
&amp;
Spray Mist

Set
REG. 110.00

SALE

$7 9 9

' ·· :

CHANTILLY

Charlie Delights

SALE

SALE

You couldn 't please her
more! Two pampe.r ing

luxuries for all her Chantilly-soft moods. Super-silky Dusting
Powder , 3 oz . and a sparkling Spray Mist . 1 oz . $12.00

SALE

REG. SJ2.00

REG. SJ2.00

'Double Luxury'
Gift Set

fi.Jindgon£ ..stays on his mind

$95 9

As individual as you are.

Welcome Home
Gift Set

TABU
OR
AMBUSH
DUSTING POWER
OR
COLOGNE SPRAY
SET

CACHET

JOVAN
MUSK OIL

..
..

...
••'· .
~

'.
...· .

':
'

SALE

$919
.,

Mr. and Mrs. WIIUs Anthony and
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Anthooy have
returned from Colwnbus where
they were caRed .by the death of .
WIIUs Anthony's sister, Cl8ra Faye
Shafer, 82, Columbus. Mrs. Shaler
died Dec. 8 and her funeral services
were held Monday at the Jerry
Spears Funeral Home. Besides
WIIUs Anthony, she Is also survived
by another brother, Charles An·
thony, Hillsboro. She was burled at
Creola.

Squad openings

Party set Tuesday

The Tuppers Plains Emergency .
Squad, part of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services, has.
openings available for persons ·
wishing to become certified emer·
gency medical technicians.
Training Is provided by the county
emergency medical services and
persons Interested in helping others
serve on a volunteer basis.
Resklents of the Tuppers Plains
area wishing to serve as volunteer
squad members are asked to
coniJlctCharles Weber at 667-6235or
Bob and Carolyn Tripp at 66'7·3941.
Further lnfonnatlon can l:le

brew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, will hold Its annual Christ·
masturkeydlnnerat7p.m.Tuesday
with a business meeting to follow at
8. AU post members and prospectlve new members are invited.

obtained by conlactlng Rcl:lert E.
Byer, administrator of the county
systemm, at 992~17 or 992-2482.

Fultz appointed

F

'HALL*
TREE

d di trib ted

UD 8

8

*WITH

U

•
Slate Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson reported that December d!stri·
butlon of $9,900,515.45 in .local
governmentlundmoneyto0hio's88
counties and to454 villages and cities
levying local income taxes. Meigs
County's portion was $18,700, '

CULTURED
MARBLE TOP
• DECORATIVE if
MIRROR
• ANTIQUED COAT
HOOKS
• 79"H X 27"W
• DARK BROWN
FINISH

Bernard Fultz, Pomeroy attor-

Five caDs were answered by local
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
At 10:19 a.m., the Tuppers Platns
Unit took Isaac Jackson, Tuppers
Platns, to St. Joseph HospiiAI,
Parkersburg; 111 2:52 p.m., PomeroytookVelmaSidersfromW.Main
St.. to Veterans Memortal Hospital
and at treated Eva Bumem at 5: 34
p.m. Middleport at 6:47 p.m. took
Jennie Wllllamson from Middleport
to Veterans Meniortal andRacine at
10:27 p.m. took James Sutton from
Perry Run Road to Ve!Erans

presklent of the Ohio VaHey Health
Services Foundation, Inc., Athens,
for the upcoming year at the
agency's December meeting. Dr.
WIIUam H, Allen, Jr., Athens, was
reelected presklent.

NO. 10522

Vete'ran.s Memorial
Admitted-Mark Michael, Pomeroy; John Dean, POmeroy; Horton
Arnold, Pomeroy,
·
Discharged--Harold Triplett,
Linda Cozart, Donald Icenhower.

Ouistrnas play set
The Rutland Church of the
Nazarene will present a Chrlstni8s
program foUawed by a play Sunday

Memorial.

NOW

* $2'3.9

Zenith

Starting Friday
(,, December 16th

We Will Be

.... .,.,

lOUCH-UP SPRAY COLOGNI: AND
· OUSTING PONDER SET

$849

SALE

$10.50

•w

'Alit-'~

MATCHABEW

· FREE PARKING

,Open .Evenings
'Til 8:00 p.m.

OUSTING POWDER AND
DRAM PERF.UME DUO

EX

.._

0' /o

__

A $12.50 valUe

WATCHES
0

$649

SALE

mPRINCE MATCHAOELU
DEC. STORE HOURS

OFF

9 A.M. Till 10 P.M. Mon.-Sat.
11 A.M. Till 8 P.ll. Sun.
•

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95

Reg. $269.95

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REG. sn.SO

Clara Faye Shafer

MeigS .County happenings..

Emergency runs

Two reasons 10 tee! beautiful:
Cologne Spray, 1 oz.,
Fragrant Body Powder, 1 oz.

Two Charlie favoriles,
Concentrated Cologne Spray, 1 oz. ,
Perfumed Dusting Powder, 1 oz.

Edith Reed Lamb, Columbus, a
native of Middleport, died Tuesday
at Riverside HospliAL
She Is slll'Vived by a daughter,
Lorraine Lee, two grandsons and
nine granddaughters; a stepson,
Russell Brooks Lamb, Texas, and a
sister, Maude Betz, Middleport.
She was prec!E:ded in death by her
parents, several brothers and
sisters, and her husband, Dr.
Russell Brooks Lamb. .
Funeral services will he held at 1
p.m. Friday . at the Deyo-Dav!s
Funeral Home, 1578 West First
Street, Columbus. Friends may can

at the funeral home !rom 2 to 4 p.m
and 7 to9 p.m. Thursday.

ney, was reappointed as a .vice

Jontue Scent and Silk

by Houbigant

HOLIDAY SEASON BLOSSOMS - Chaaies Ackennan, a park
district hortlwlturlst, admires Wednesday lhe Polnllelllas on display at
the 71sl· AnnUli Christmas Flower Sbow at Chicago's Uilcoln Pari&lt;
Coll8ervatory. (AP Lalierphoto ).

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;t

O.lllpon"s,l:Jhta

716 N. 2nd StrMI
Middleport, Ollie

Squads answer 173 alarms

Sixth grade - Kevtn aurgess, Jon Van

'

~~;;;:;;;;;;;! !

"! don't know that It will he of
lower cost, but it should offer a tree
that growers can plant in many
areas where they can't plant trees
Meigs Co!'"ty Emergency Medi· eight. Of these patients transported now," he said, That c6uld stabilize
cal Services squads made a total of to hospitals, 95.9 percent went to prices by lowering transportation
173 runs - 119 emergency runs and Veterans Memorial; 21.6 to Holzer . costs.
54 transfers - during the month of Medical Center and .12.5 to other
It wUI be some time, however,
November, Administrator Bob ·hospitals. Average response time before the tree will appear !or
Byer reports.
per call was 3.65 minutes.
Christmas. Brown said he Is just
CaUs answered by the units .
Miles driven by aU unitS during beginning to develop seed for
include: Pomeroy, 39; Middleport, , the month totaled 5,063.8, an commercial sales, and It takes a fir
24; Racine, 22; . Rutland, 16;
average of 29.3 miles per can.
about 10 years to grow to the normal
Tuppers Plains, 10, and Syracuse,
height of 6Y, feet to 7feet.

Meter, OlliS Stewart, Susie Sprouse.

364 JadlloD Pill•

.'•~ ! .;

consumers.

The!J;s.

----~----~--.p----~-----~--------~----------~------------·
._
COSMETIC GifT .IDEAS FOR CHRISTMASI
·-.FRUTH .·.··
71~~~~;~ .~~

Pennsyulvanla trees are not shaped
as well and are more likely tosuller
late frost inJury because they start
growing earlier in the season.
Brown said that finding a tree that
grows well in Ohio should help the
state's estimated 500Chrtstrnas tree
growers, and might help

Fltth grade - Jamie Andd'son. Cheryl
Pape. Joetta Pizzino, Robyn Stout. Andrea

MIDDLEPORT

.

~ • •

Ohio's late frosts, wouidgrowwellln
the clay soil and would produce a
good shape and height.
He said the vartety of !!r called
phanerolepis from West Vlrglnia
had some of the least frost inJury
and, therefore, had fewer branching
trunks. That produced trees with

relatively dense growih and the
highest appearance and form
ratings among those tested.
Brown said that out of about 1.25
million Christmas trees sold in OhJo
during the hOliday season, an
estimated 75 percent are imported
from Michigan and Pennsylvania.
Hls studies shOwed that the

RusselL

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

dleport; Edna Schoenleb of Pome-

Kathenne Mitchell, junior past
matron, and James Buchanan,
junior past patron. were presented
and commended for their year's
accompUshments. and Mrs. Clat·
worthy and Mrs. Buchanan pres·
ented gifts from the chapter. Bea
Kuhn sang ''Walk On."
Special guests wee Mrs. Preston,
past grand matron; Betty Bout,
grand Adall; Genevieve Kincaid,
deputy grand matron of District 25;
Barbara McKibben, grand representative of Alberta; 10 worthy
matrons and five worthy patrons
from visiting chapters. Honored
masons presented were David Fox,
Racine; Bob Reed, Harrisonville;
and Oiff Edwards, Proctorville.
Past matrons and past patrons of
Evangeline Chapter were given
recognition, as were 50-year
members present, Ruby Diehl of
Harrisonville, Adrta Wilcox, Mid·

Th1rd grade - Valerle connony, John
Bentley, Rober1a caldwell, Tamara Hay·
man, JennUer Cross, Angle Mllbi, "Kevin
Amott, Klmberly Jenkins.
Fowth grade - Jason Arnott, Mlchea
BentZ, Amber CumJngs, Cin'leton Drummer,
Stacey Fry, Laura Fryar. Marcy Hill, R,enee

to find a tree lhat would survive

Your Christmas
Gift Headquarters

·Eastern Star installation conducted in Middleport

11

Ohio's wet clay soil' good for Christmds trees

I Honor Rolls in Meigs

The second six weeks grading period honor
roll of the Syracuse EJemeiuary, SchOol has
been announced. Making a grade ~ "B" or
above in aU their subjects to be named to lhe
roll wen&gt;:
. First grade- Jamie Ord, Ryan Williams,
Amy Weaver. Andrea Moore, Adam Krawsc·
zyn, Mason Fisher, Randy Bing.
Second grade ~ Shannon Codner, Aaron
·'Drummer, Andrew Fields. Chris Guinther.
Crystal Harmon, Jodi Hobbs, David Justis.
Michael McKelvey, Aimee MlllS, Amber
OhJlnger, Joe Roush, Stephanie Sayre, Jared
Stewart.

The Doily Sentinel . Page

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�•

Page- I 2-The

Sentinel

Ohio

December 1

O'Brien ends 90 court cases
Ninety cases were wrapped up in
the Meigs County Coun of Judge
Patrick O'Brien Wednesday.

and costs; Richard Helton, Dexter,
$24 and costs, both on speeding
c harges, Bruce Holiman, PomeThe numerous cases were a roy, )10 and costs, stop sign
compilation of two weeks since
vtolation; Joseph Wilson, Columhearings were not he ld last w eek
bus: Norman Williams, Columbus,
becau.se the Spencet trial was , and Tim Williams, Columbus, $25
taking place in tire common pleas
arrd costs each , transponmg loaded
court.
firearms in a motor vehic le; Chuck
Fined Wednesday were: Daniel
Barrows, Albany, $150 and costs,
Cole man, Catlettsburg, Ky., $22and
attempting to take more than one
costs, speeding, Thomas Isaacs,
deer, and $25 and costs. untagged
Nttro, W. Va., $21 and costs.
deer, Charles Holman. Jr , Coolspeedmg, JamesBentz, Jr.. Mtddleville, $1.50 a nd cost s. a ttemptmg to
port, $5 and costs. unsafe vehic le,
take more than one deer. $25 a nd
John McKnight , Bowling Green,
costs, untagged deer
$100 a nd costs, untagged deer ,
Davtd Sanders, Albany, $150 and
Geroge Vandersyde, Louisvtlle ,
costs , a tt emptmg to take more than
Ky $22andcosts,speedmg, James
one deer: Charles McGhee, Jr ..
Pnddy, Rutland, $1lll an d costs ,
Toledo, $23 and costs, speeding ,
overload: Da!Ulle Jacks , Chester.
Henry Short , Defta nce, $22 a nd
$23 and costs, speeding, Steven
costs, s peedmg; Angela Proffitt.
Peckham. M tddleport, vehtcular
Mason. IV Va , $10 a ndcosts, traffic
homtctde, SIX months m Ja tl
light vtola tton, Connie Brown,
suspended, two years proba tton,
Middleport . 10 days m jail w ith six
$1(0) and costs, and ltcense sussuspended, six months probation
pended for 90 days, Randall
and costs. obstructing official juslm boden , Columbus, $21 and costs,
tice; David Carper, Wilkesville, s ix
speedmg, Mark Casto, Middlepon,
months in jail wtth a ll but two days
$10 a nd costs, s top s tgn vtolatlon:
suspended, costs and one year
Wilsey Master s, Coo!vU!e. $25 a nd
proba tton. recetvlng stolen propcosts, possessmg a loaded w eapon
e ny; James Hayes, Pomeroy , $10
w hile r e tl,tming from deer huntmg,
and costs, stop s ign v iolation, Eric
Leonard Frye, Galhpolis, $18 and
Hill, Racine, $25 and costs, speedcosts s peedlhg, Stephe n Adams.
Ing; Henry Stem beck, Galllpolls,$10
Beaver . $~ and costs, Jute Campand costs, left of center; Eric
hell, Palm Pleasant, $22 a nd costs,
Bumgardner, Dexter, $10and costs,
Ted Lawhorn Btdwell, $22 a nd
fail ure to yield right of way
cost,. a ll o n speedmg c harges,
DenniS Boothe, Pomeroy, $10 and
Deer cases
costs, failure tocomply withat epatr
Don Roush, London, $50 and costs,
order. Charles Barley, Rutland,
atdtng and assiSting in the unlawful
$180 and costs, spotlighting; Mike
possession of more than one deer;
Kukolech, Valley Vtew, $50 and
Terry Smith, Racine, $10 and costs,
costs, possessiOn of a n antlerless
failure to yield; Matthew Weaver ,
deer w tthout a spectal anttlerless
Rutland, $50 and costs, possesstonof
deerpermtt
an antlerless deer wtthout spectal
.- Also Herbet1 Rosebu ry, Ketterperrrut; Carl Hubbard, Syracuse,
ing, $100 and costs, possession of a
$22 and costs, speeding, Ayward
gun killed deer without a proper
Jones, Racine, $25 and costs. failure·
taggmg, Walter Thomas , Proctorto control motor vehicle; Steve
ville, $25 and costs: Roben McCarBass, Racine, $20 and costs,
ley, Vmton. $24 a nd costs, George
speeding; John Rlchard, Poll'\eroy,
Hackett lll, Pome10y , $~ a nd
$250 and costs, three days m jail,
costs. Wtlliam D)er, Btdwell, $27
license suspended 60 days, drivbg
and costs, all on s peeding charges;
while mtoxicated, and costs only for
Jam es Woodyard . Pom eroy. $300
failu re to control; Roger McPher
a nd costs. licen se s uspended tor SIX
son, Gallipolis, $.Jl and c osts ,
m onths, 10 day )ail sente nce, dnvtng
assured clear distance; James
w hile mtoxtcated. a nd $40and ·osts ,
He bner, Pomeroy, costs only,
failure toyie ld one-halfof roadway,
ta kmg more than one dear dunng
Reta Hill. Racme, restttution and
the 1983 gun season, Ronald
costs. $100 !me sus pended, six
Johnson, Sheffield Lake, $150 and
m o nths probauon , passmg bad - costs, $125 of fine suspended,
checks, R tc hard Shaw, Oregon,
spolllghtmg: Dwaine McDaniels,
$150 and costs, a ttemptmg to take
Rutland, $50 and costs, hunting on
more than one dee1 durmg the 1983
lands of another without va lid deer
deer gun season , Rodney Pullins,
perrntt, Steven Cremeans, Thppers
Pomeroy. $10 a nd cos ts. failure to
Platns, $12J a nd costs, $100 susdts play valid regtstt atton, Timothy
pended, possess ton of parts of a deer
White , London , $150 and costs,
that was not tagged or having
possession of m ore than one deer:
statement attached s howing time
Harvey VanVra nKen , Pome roy, $20
and place tt was legally taken;

The Daily Sentinel

Bruce Hayes, Little Hockmg, $75
and costs, 60 day jail sentence
suspended, one year probation, no
operator's license; Phillip Montgo.
mery, Bre m en , ~ and costs,
failure to control motor vehicle:
Danny McLane, Jr., Kilbume, $25
a nd costs, transporting a loaded
firearm in a motor vehicle; Troy
Nelson, New StraltsvU!e, $22 a nd
costs. s peeding.

Others forfeiting bonds were
Harlan Plummer. Peebles, $50,
Wesley Braden, Belpre, $40; JeromeHoward , Pomeroy ,$50, Larry
Cordrey, Milton, W. Va .. $45: John
Packinger,Huntington, W. Va ,$41,
Julie Htll, Gallipolis. $40: R a ndall
Roll, Zanesville, $50, and William
Myers, Galllpolls, $40, all posted on
s peedmg c harges; Truman Hall ,
Mtddle port, $45, stop Stgll vtolatlon,
Stanley Hunt, Charleston, W. Va.,
$.Jl, failure to display valid
registration.

A Louisiana man, Robert Wayne
Williams, was executed shortly
after 2 a .m. Wednesday lor the
slaying of an elderly supermarke(
guard.
The Georgia Pardon and Paroles
Board rejected clemency for Smith
on Tuesday. Georgia Gov. Joe
Frank Harris has no power to
commute a death sentence under
state law.
Siler, public lntonnatlon olftcer
for the Department of Offender
RehabU!tatlon, said the condemned
ll'\an got "a restleaacoupleofbaurs"
of sleep Wednesday night and had a
breakfast of baco~ esgs. and

btscutts early today. He described
Smith as "quiet, caim.lfyou want to
call it acceptance, you can call It
that "
Three corrections officers who
volunteered for the assignment
carried out the execution by pushing
separatebuttons One button-they
dtd not know which - activated a
two-minute cycle sending a first jolt
of 2,00 volts Utrough Smith's body,
followed by two smaller jolts
A federal judge, a federal appeals
coun tn Atlanta and US. Supreme
Coun Justice Lewis F Powell all
refused to block the execution.
Smith's lawyers had appealed to
Powell at 11 p .m. Wednesday,
asking time for action on a sult
challenging Georgia's procedures
for handling c lemency pleas from
condemned inmates
"It's the end, " said Patsy Morris
of the Amertcan Civil Llbentes
Umon, which filed the suit on
Smith's behalf, after Powell's
decision. " There's nothing more we

love~

Public Notice

Sealed proposals Will
received by the Board

of

Ech.Jca!IOn of the Me1gs Local

sm1lter cloth 10 No 30 cotton

School Drstnct o! rvMdleport
Ohto at thP. Trea surer s Office
until 1 2 00 noon on Tue)&gt;dav

$2.50 lor each pattern Add
501 each pattern for posta~t

J anuary 3 1984 and at that

Alict ...... Cnfts ,, ,. .

and

11me Opf!ned by the Treasurer of

tabulat ed and a
report thereof made to sa1d
Board at 11s neAt sc hPduled
rliP.f'!lnrJ as prov,df'd by law for
thrPA [3 ) 65 passenger school
buses acco rding to spec rfrca
110ns of s ard boa rd of
t=tducatr on
Separate and 1ndependflfll
brds wrll be rP.cerved w1th
respect to the chass sand body
typr and will state that th~ bus
when assP.mbled and pnor to
det rvery comply w1th all school
dtst rrct specrlrcatrons all salety
regulatrons and current Ohro
Mrnrmu m Standards for School
Bu s Constructron ol the Depanment of Ed uca tror pursuant 10
Sectron 451176 of the Ohra
Revtsed Codr. and all other
pertrnent orovrsrans of la w
Specrfrcatrons ar d rnstruc
trans to btddPrs may be
obtamed at the office of the
Treasu rer Mtdd leport Ohro
A certli red chPck payabiP to
the Treasurer at th e above
boa rd of educatr on or a
satrs tactory btd bond e)(Acuted
by thP btdd er and the s urety
company tn an amoun t equal
to ftve perc Ant (5 perc en() ol the
brd shall be subm1 1ted With
each b1d
Sa1d board ol educatiOn
rP.ser...es the nght to watve
1nfo1 mal1t P.S to accept or retf!Ct
any and all or parts of any and
all btds
No brds can br wtthdrawn for
at lr.astthlf!V (301 days altAI' thP.
sc hr. duled ctas tng t1me fo r
rPCfll pt ot btdS
Me1gs Local
Boa rd of Educ&lt;Jtron
Jane WagnP.r
TreasurP.r
621 South
Th trd Avenue
Mtdd iP. port Oh1o
45 760
I 16 141 992 5650
I I 21 I 8 I 5 22 4!c

The Daily

~atterns Send $1 50
• U CRAFT BOOIIS.•$1.00 Ndl
All IIGaks ami Cataitt-adcl 51M

uch for

121·~11tuM

7589

lxt A6ce 13~~~.
Add a look of elegance to you1
table with thiS lovely cloth
It's so-o-o easy to crochet m
lovely lacy PIPeapples and shell
stttch patterns Pattern 7589
Crochet dtrecttons, cloth about
68" Use bedsp read coUon

Oct.l6, 1964
On Wednesday, Willtamsbecame
the tenth man to be executed s ince
the U.S. Suprem e Court reinstaled
capital punlshment In 1976. A
F1orlda man, Robert Sullivan, was
executed Nov 30 for the fatal
shooting of a restaurant manager.

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
TWO SCHOOL BUSES
FOR THE
EASTERN lOCAL
BOARD Of
EDUCATION
SP.aled orooosats wri t be
1P.ce. rvect Qy the Board of
Educa t1 on of t~f! Eastern local
School Dtstn ct of ReedsVIlle
Oh10 by 12 00 o'clock noon. on
January 5 I 9B4 and at that

Phone: 446-0552
Reai .Estate a.nd
Auctton Servtce
M. l. "Bud"McGhee, Broker

742-3171

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds' and
Savell I
vour own

~ad and otaer by mail with this
coupon. cancel your ad by phone when you get
Wnte

, results Maney not refundable.

Nama'----------------~----

Addrau..-------Phone----------~----~

SOUJ'l'eS

tOtaled $2.92 bllllon, $49.23

mllllon below estimates.

The sales tax generated $911.6
mllllon, $41.6 mllllon below estimates, and excluding tbe$38mllllon·
not processed last month.

'

Mrs. Sale noted that retailers
predict a "robust" Chrtsbnas sales
season, which wiilshowupmostlyin
January sales receipts.
The personal income tax, which
was raised 90 percent last spring,
brought In $968 mUllan

26 emergency calls
Mlddlepon Fireflghers answered
35 calls during November including
nine fire calls and 26 emergency
runs, Fire Chief Jeff Darst reports
AU department vehicles were
drtven604.6milesdurtngthemonth.

&lt; )Wanted
&lt; )For Sale
( )Announcemen1

( )For Rent

awests

The Middleport Pollee Department made 31 arrests and lnvestl·
gated seven accidents during November. Merchant pollee

collectlons totaled $56 and parklna
rnetel' collections totaled S649.50.1n
all,llll parking tickets were written
and crulsel:s

rnnes.

were

driven 5,074

17.-----18. - - - - - 19,------

1

20.

2.

21.

3. _ _ _ __

s. _ _ _ _ __
··-----

67.-...,----.------8. _..;__ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __

tO.

11. _ _ _ _ __

Record 31

Public Notice

12. _ _ _ _ __

2'1.
23.

2•.
25. - - ' - - - - 26: - - . . . . . . , . - - -

211.----29.------30.-----77. - - - - - - . . ,

3L _ _ _....;.__ _

13.' _._ _ _ __
1•. _ _ _ _ ___;

32. -_
-..
33.
_-_
_
_ ,

t5. _ _ _ _ __

34.----35.-----

16. __.;....;._,_,...,_ _

Mllll Tills Coup a11 wHIIRemlttlnce
Tile Dally s.t1n11
111 Court St.

Pomeroy, 011. 457.,

descrrbed as follows '
PARCEL NO I Bemg Sectron
Number Twenty S•x 1261 Town
NumbAr Three (3) rn Range
Number Eleven (11 ) of the Oh1o
Company s Purchae and deserr bed as follows tO·Wit Berng
the northwest quarter of the
southeast quar!f!r of sard sec
\lOA number twenty Stx {26)
contatntng forty (40) acres be
the same more or less
PARCEL NO fl Also the
fol lowing; descrrbed oropeny
to-wrt Berng rn sect10n number
twenty ~20) town number three
13) range numbP.r eiAven ( 11 )
of the Ohto Company s Purchase and bounded as follows
to-wtt Begtnnulg erghty rods
north of the southwest' corner
of satd Sectton thence nort h
fltty 150) rods thence east
e1ghty 1801 rods thP.ncfi south
frfty {50) rods thence wes t
e1ghty (80~ rods to the place of
begrnnrng conta1nrng twenry
frve 125) ar.ras rnore or less
RE FERENCE DEED Volume.
286 Page 809 Mf!1gs County
Dr.ed Record s
Th~ prayer oil satd complamt
•s th at the abOvf! descrrbed 01 1
and qas r1qhts be partrt1 0nr.d
that the rnterests be sr. t off or
ordf'rPd sold 1f rt cannot be
part1110ned and lor allowance
ol attorney fees and costs
here1n
You are rf!Ql{HP.d tO answer
thP. co mplarnt wrthrn twenty
etgh t days aftet the last publ1ca
li On at thts nott CP. whtch wdl be
publishP.d once ea ch week for
s1x consec uttve weeks The last
publtcat1on will be made on
Ja nuary 19 1'984 and the
twr.nty AIQht aavs tor answer
Will comrn~ncP. on !hill date
In case of your fa ilure to
answPr or otherwrse mspond
as requued by the Ohro Rules of
Crvll Procedure rudgment by
default writ be renderftd agamst
vou for thP. reltef demandP.d tn
the Complat nt
Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Me1gs County
Common PIP.as Court
11211 5 22 29 1115 12 19
61c

1121 I 8 I 5 3Ic
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
JAMES W SUTTLE, et al.,

• MEN

' .. ~,_.' ... off WITH THAT

'"""

!~

~l~IFE~ll@KE~~TOA~~~~~~::J
~
I
I •:Biiiriii IT TO .
EACH MOUNT ts Q'JEN THE PER- ~
-.;:;1
SOHAl ATTENTION IT DESERVB TO
••
n• .. ·y
GIVE YOU A PRIZE TltOPHY THAT
f\A
lM
l.AST fOO YEARS ""' YEARS

54 Miec. Merchendlae

HOTPOINT

MICROWAVE
OVENS
STARTING AT

$28995
~

POMEROY

LANDMARK
614·992-2181

GLASS
OUR SPECIAL TYI"

RUTlAND OH
PH 742-22:25 l·f.g.t m~

CARPENTER
. SERVICE

STRIP

- Addons and

C()AL ·

remodeling

- Roofing and gutter

wor~

- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

S3QOO

(free Esttmatea)

REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-2280

992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohi1~ .• •u,

2-23 lfc

oll.

t&amp;ester'
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Nttes
7'30 to 10·00
Avatlable too private parties Mon . Tues.. Thurs.
Nttes, Sat or Sun. Afternoon.
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI., NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI .. DEC. 16
PH. 985-3929
Of 985-9996
11-14 -1 mo

•Dryen •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport Ohio
1 · 13·tfc

4 5 tic

CONTRACTING

•WATER GAS and

SEWER LINES
•PONDS , RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

Route I
long Bottom, OH 45743
985-4193 or 992-3D67
12-20-tfc
L....__ _
__j

.

GUN

GARAGE

EVERY

6:30 P.M.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only 1?-'i-tfr.

992·5682
992-7121
3-24-tfc

L__ _ _ _ _ J

B A BEAUTY SHOP

Call 949-2320

Ask tor Tina Pierce

WELL'S GARAGE

Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.

SJ.OO

Tri-County
General Welding

~- =:&amp; ]

Salem Twp. Rd. 18D
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew

~ ~~~,. r

PH.

?"'-

~- =--

*Body &amp; Fender Repatrs
*Expert Refm1shing
*Insurance Claims
Welcome
*Free Estimates
12/1511 mo.

J~~l NOW IN

PARCEL SERVICE

DEPOSITORY
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE
BY
PUROLATOR _.

~DOOR TO DOOR~

\DELIVERY

I

PARCEL Pitt DRilY SltiPiliiS
FOR LUS THAI U S IAIL
SAVE tn. TO !Ill AIO lORE

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
618 llain St.
Pomeroy, Oh.

.,,.~ Loe1ted in HU ~.f,'ao
~r:r- Block Buildin1 "\.

Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks

"Your Ploce ot M;ne"

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

.

M.L.
CONTRACTING RECAMATION
• Excavating
•Ponds
•septic Tanks
•Hauling

No Sunday Calls
3·11 -tfc

-Dozers

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
Hill

Road
Rutl1nd, OH.
( lst Rd. ltft up
N• Lillll)

742-2789 or
742-2515
1219/1

CUT

-Trenr:her

mo.

pd.

BOGGS

&amp; WRAPPED

FOR SKINNING
PH. 949-2734

Maplew~~~m~o

12 12 I mo.·od

Bring This Coupon In

For 10% Off
Any -Service

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

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

&amp; Service
1-3-tlc

CHRISTMAS
TREES
FOR SALE
1 Mile Off Rt. 7
On St. Rt. 143
12/111 mo. pd.
.

Six months old part collie
and sheperd dog Brmg own

leash

123 Ltncoln Htll

Poodle Terriers, 3 boys. 1
g1rl, 8 weeks old. 304-895 ·
3512.
,;,
15 month old black med1um
srze dog Has all shots. good
watch dog 304-675-1136.
•

ltit

3 pupp1es B weeks old,
Phone 304 676 -6642 after
5.

6

Lost and Found

Lost in the Long HollowBunker Hill area : a medrum
build , sandy brown hair male
collie dog Responds to the
nama Samboo Small boys
pet Has tan collar and tags
on Any mformation call
992-5533 or 992-7782

860 00 REWARD lost dog
black, brown brmdle curr
1 a mtle creek Phone 304 576 2101 John Dalton .
LOST ~eagle dog , bad left
eye. Owl Hollow Road, leo
Roush 304·676-4478.

7

Yard Sale

.......Giiilfi)oifs....... ·
8t

Vicinity

Moving Sale 83 Locust St
Da~ly 9-5 until sold out ,

.. --P-iimeri:iv· 1

...

Middleport

Card of Thanks

&amp;

Vicinity

$5.00 EXTRA

-W•ter
-Sewer
-Gas Lones
-SeptiC Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992·2478

Parts

6510 or 614·992 -7841 .

$2500

-B•ckhoes
- Dump Trucks
- Lo-Boy

8·l ll c

White's

DEER
PROCESSED

Farm Equipment

Racine, OH.

New Homes - Extenstve
Remodeling
Insurance Work
CustQm Pole Btdgs
&amp; Garages
Rooftng Work
Alumtnum &amp; Vtnyl Stdtngs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282
11· 1-tfc

949-28o0

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Authonzed John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

949-2293

""

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimates~ 949-2801 or

I ?-~-1 mn

10/ 12/2 mo pd

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh.

~ U.P.S. -

I

742·2456

House tn Middleport to 1ear
down for lumber 614-992 -

LOST, light brown and white
Copper Nose Beagle , needs
med1catton to live 304675-7690

SERVICE CALLS

SIDING

PH. 992-7844
Rt 681 West at Darwtn

Small female puppy. Call
992-8583.
.

LOST- diaper bag between
Happy Hollow Rd. on Au ·
tland and Mrddlaport Bag rs
blue with 2 bottles and
outf1ts Call 992-6306

'

Thurs.-F ri.-Sat.

11-15· 1 mo. pd .

742-2450.

Washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO 00

Vinyl &amp; Alummum

"Holiday Special"

All Work Guaranteed

Route 1
Shade, OH. 45776

Call

Lost Small red vinyl clutch
purse at the Maddleport
f1rehouse Contents desper·
atly needed Call &amp; reverse
charges· 698-6324.

742-2352

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Puppies to give away Half

Atrdale, half P1tbull

USED
APPLIANCES

Route 4 , Pomeroy

10/ 1912 mo pd

........

nd

:»HUUI

SAT. NIGHT

Also Transmission

II

~~~1~?

;.,, __ _

FIRE DEPT.
Boshan Building

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
or

273

RACINE

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

PH.

1 m1le below 2nd Ka1ser
Entrance at 102 Carney
Dr .. Corner of St. Rt. 2
and Carney

10 6 tic

Roger Hysell

Co.

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS

Ractne. Oh
Ph 614-843-5191

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

BUYING

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

BONDED &amp; WliRX GUARANTIED

Kttchen Cabmets - Roofing - Stdtnl - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construc~ion - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

&amp; Siding

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start from 12'xl6'
UTI LilY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

•LIMESTONE

3-l·tf

Roofing

All STEEL &amp;

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS

10/20 / t f n

1f2 Sheep dog and Y2 Bird dog
puppies Call 614 -446 1148.

Pomeroy.

J&amp;F

742-2328

Call 61 4 - 266·

kittens
6587

992-3408 1 t 26 Eaot Mam
S1reet in Pomeroy .

•Refrigerator&amp;

•Ranges

I 1-9-1 mo .

BISSELL FLOORS
PROFESSIONAL

We Wish to express our
stncere a_nd heart:felt thankl
to . relat1ves, fnends and
Hftlghbors. for your manv
ways of ktndness shown at
the loaa of our father We are
so grateful for each of ~ou.
Spec1al th~nks to the ne1ghbors on Batly Run Road. the
Bradford Churc:h of Chnst
end Rev. Mark Seevers.
Tha Clyde Stowert
Fam1ly.

2

REFINISHING

In loving memory of our
Mother and fnend , Mrs.
Florence C. Wilson who
pes•ed •way Dec 16th,
1982 Time hal Plll&amp;d, tt'a
been a veer. since you lef u1
to travel on Down a road
without your face , that no
one here could replace The
flowers we place on your
•we, may wither and decay, But theloveyougava u1
and we to you. Will never
fade away Sadly ml11ed by
Sons, R.y end Rob, Daughter Christina, Mother- Pearl,
Friends and Rel•tivea .
3

Announcements

Keep Thet Natural
Look In Your Home .

CALL
.

378-6349
11-17 1 mo.

8 family yard-bake sale, 3
doors from the Rutland Post
Offtce New handmade
I ~ems. 1ean 1 , t~rea. heaters.
motorcycle, crossbow, cartop carrier, refrigerator, pop
machma, ant•qua s~hool
desk. clothing 614-7422087 or 614-742-2460-·
8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

In Memoriam

FLOOR SANDING

and

mobile homes and
truck campers Call 4460176

SWEEPER and ••wing ma·
chine repetr, perta, · and
IUppU...
Pick up and
delivery, Davia Vacuum
CIHner. one half · mUe up
Oeorgea Creek Rd. Call
4411-0294. .

Auc:tlon every Tue1day
night, Pt Pleasant, WVa
Auct Lonnie Neal . Youth
Center Bldg .. Camden St
814-367· 7101 .

Used bath tub in nice c:ond ,
built in type. Call Earl Tope
at 446 -0332 Days, or 446
Ot61 ova.
Wanted to buy a male Beagle
Rabbit dog Call 614-245 5808 .
Wanted to buy New. used &amp;
ant1qua furmture. Wtll buy 1
p1ece or complete house holds Also complete Auctr oneermg serv1ce Call Osby
A. Martin 614 ' 992-6370.
Buying daily gold. stlvor
coma. rtngs. Jewelry, sterl1ng
ware , old coms. large cur·
rency Top prices Ed Bur·
keH Barber Shop, 2nd Av!.
Moddteport, oh. 814 -992 3478
Raw Fur Buyer Beef &amp; Deer
H1des -Gmseng. Trapping
Suppliei George Buckley,
Rt 2, Athens, Oh Phone
614 664-4761 . 1-9 Daoty
BEDS-IRON, BRASS old
Furmture. gold , sliver dolIars, wood 1ce boxes, stone
j~n. antiques, etc. Complete
households Write M. D .
Miller. At 4 , Pomeroy, Oh
46769 or 614 -992-7760.
Turn your guns into Christ ·
mas money Call 614 9492485
lndtan antfacts , A1r -impac:t
wrenches, Fiberglass bass
boat 1 6 · 1 6 ft . Submersible
pump Call 614-446 -4298 .

I~
11

Cigarette Distributorship .
Instant cash flow! We are a
Bonded nattonal ftrm ex ·
pending Into the area If you
are seek&amp;ng a secure buSI ness "opportuinty We pro vide all retail locations and
all necessary training Full or
Part time. Investment from
$2,000 00 Wlns tonSalem-Kools 1 -800- 241 2268
Strlpprng Furniture &amp; Metail.
Instant cash flow I F1rst t1me
in th1s area Our expen staff
has many years of eJtpenence and has set up restoratton centers throughout
the U S and Europe We
furmshed equipment. chemICals, supplies. and an e~~:ten ·
sive tra1ntng course at one of
our successful centers nearest you
Total cost :
$32,500 00 'Bonded ' Call
Toll Free (800! 241 -2269
or wnte for more mfo U S .
Stnpp1ng, 1775 The Exchange, Surte 600 , Atlanta,
GA 30339 .
Cigarette or VIDEO Distributorships Routes avarlable
We prov1de money for expansion, all locattons, trarnmg &amp;. a BONDED staff to
ass1st you m sett10g up your
own part or full t1me business From $3 960 to
S50 00 Wmston · SalemKools . 1-800-241-2268 .
laundrymat and Bu siness
bUilding for sale Apaproved
sewage system In Tuppersploons. Oh . 614 -667 -3551
Looking for someone to take
over clothmg busrness, Includes mventory , fixtures
and supplres 304 - 6751317 or 675 · 3217.
22 Money to Loan
HOME lOANS FIXED
RATES 12 %% purchase or
refrnance, 11 11•% adJustable
rate Leader Mortgage ,
Athens, 1-800-341 -6554
23

Services
PIANO TUNING Lower
prices -regular tun1ngs ·
discounts to Sanror Citizens,
Churches &amp; schools Ward's
Keyboerd 304 6 76 -3824

Aea! l&amp;lQCQ
Good rehable baby s1tter
needed SAM to 4PM week days. Ref req Call 446 ·
3087 after 6PM .
EJIC babysitter'" my home 4
to 6 days a week , Addrs10n
area Must have Call 614 367 -0506
... ;,
1••
Ltbrary Assistant Mason
County Pubhc Library Crea t1ve person to continueupand children's program·
mlng , provtde reader
serv•ce. support general IIbrary polictes Work full ttme
wtth one 'evenmg and rotati.ng Saturdays Undergraduatedegreepreferabla Exper1ance with chrldren
required ArtiStic abthty re qutred Salary negotiable .
Sand letter of application to
Mason County Publ1c L1brary. Sharon M Stone 6th
and V1and Streets, Pomt
Piea$8nl, WV 25550 Apphcatmn deadline December
17, 19B3
Texas Oil Company urge_n_t-ly
needs mature person for
Point Pleasant area business
sales rap . Sales experrence
'not necessary We tra1n
Write N 0
Dickerson ,
Southwestern Petroleum ,
Box 789, Ft Worth TJt
761 01
•
House cteamng. any type ,
reasonable rates. call 304·
676-3908 .
12

Situations
Wanted

Pr1vate rest home for elderly .
handicapped, DA. Crown
City area Call 014-256 6509
Will care for the elderly in my
home Lots of references
Men or women Call 667·
3402 .

31

13

32 Mobile Homes
far Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED · CARS .
TRUCKS GAlLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446-7672 .
·•
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 Mt WEST, GAlLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 446-7274 .
1976 12•70. totol alectrlc.
3 BA . 2 baths. ex cond
&amp;6900 . Call 448-0175 .
1977 Tra1ler with lot for
sale. Catt 614-256-6618 .
197 2 mobile home with 1 %
acres and outbuilding Call
446 -0063
4 bdr ' s 14x65 , plus 12x20 .
room, central au, storage
butldmg, pore~ &amp; awning,
corner lot. Quail Creek
French Ctty Brokerage Ser·
VICe, 446 · 9340
1971 Uberty 12x60, needs
some reparr $2,000 or best
offer . Call 614 379 2303 .
1980 14x5 4 Liberty mobile
home gas heat, gas stove. 2
bdr , wmdow 81r $8 900
C•ll 446 -322 7 after 7PM
73 Kmswo od 2 bdr , 1 %
bath 12•70. 56 .500 Call
614 256 ·6652 .
ATIENTION-Would you like
to rnvest your money rn a
new Holly Park for the prtce
of a used hom e Th 1s home•s
not new but you can 't tell by
lookmg All ready set up m a
mce park at Gat hpolrs A
12x65 Holly Park with 5x 1 0
tip out m hvmg roo m Has a
50 ft pauo cover 2 sets of
steps, nice furOishlftgs , cen tral a c . washer and dry er
sk~rted , ready to occupy All
of thrs' for $12 ,900 Flnanc rn g available. low down
paym en t low monthly pay
ment. For rnforma11on call
614 992 -7034or614 992
62B4
1977 Schult 14x70 .
48x 1 00 lot, underprnned
porch with awn1ng, 3
bedrms 1 Y2 bath , new
carpet. storage build Call
992 7467 or 742-3154
For Sale · 1973 Mobile
Home ' Can on ' 2 bedroom ,
add-on room Good cond1
tton 742 2261 .
1982 Buddy 2 bedroom
14)(60 furnrshed. washer &amp;
dryer like new Fmancrng
available . Call 992-7479
1976 14x70 trailer . 3 bad ·
room 2 baths. large k1t chen ,
$10,000 . 304-773-502 3 .

Professional

Help Wanted

Homes for Sale

4 bdr ranch home . large lR,
full basement. weth garage.
wood burner mcluded , c1ty
schools, 2 miles from town
Call 446-0276.

1981 14J~C70 . Shultz limited
mobrla home microwave,
dishwasher, central atr. underpennrng , three bed rooms, 1 % baths ucellent
cond1t1on , $15 ,500 Call
304-675-6049 after 5 p .m .
Mob•la Home Moving , Li censed and Insu red. Free
Esttmate s $100 per hook up m1n1mum Phone 304 ·
576 -2 711 or 576 -2866
USED MOBILE HOME
PHONE 304-576-2711 .
14JIC70 Schultz twa bed
rooms, bath and 3/ • • ready to
move Into K&amp;K Mobile
Home Park

The former Wesley Chapel
Umted MethOdist Church
bUildmg located on County 1970 Holly Park, 12Jt65
Road 10m Cheshtre Town- $6 500 or best reas onable
ship, Galha County 1s for offer Must sell 304·675 ·
sale . This IS a frame bu1ldrng 3628 .
in sound condition w1th 1 - - - - - - - - - apprOJumately one th1rd of
an acre of land . contents
included Please submltt
Farms for Sale
bids by January 1 , 1984 to 33
Athans 0 1strict Unrted
Methodist Unron, P 0 . Box 68 acres on Bulaville -Porter
67. The Pla 1ns, Ohto 46780: Co Ad 3 Old farm house
The Athens Dtstnct Unrted for sale by owner askmg
MethodiSt Umon reserves $55.000 Interested pany
the rrght to r&amp;J&amp;et any and all please call 446-7247 or
bd
513-293·7270 .
l- '-s· -- - -- - - Owner Must Sell Home! 77 acre farm and 83 acre
Unbelievable puce I Low util - farm Will sell separate or
Ities! buy 1t now! Middleport. together 1 250 lb tobacco
base, drtlled wall, 2 car
l-c _01_1_6_1_4_·9_9_2_._6 _9 _4 _1 _· -..,:-: garage, some t1mber &amp;
Ranch on 5 ac:ras, beautiful mmerals Mercerv ille area,
setung wtth tall p1nes Nrdav Rd Call 614 -659 around the house Spactous 2450
IMngroom wh1ch o11erlooks
the pond 4 bedrooms, utll·
ity room and kttchen has a
burlt-ln range Assume pay ments wath a small down 35 Lots 8t Acreage
payment $58 ,900 . Call
446 3175
1- --·__"_
· _____
35 acres at Rodn ey on W T
3 BR new bnck home. land Watson Rd Owner fm~nc
rng available Call446 l 2 1
contract 446-0722
after 6 weekdays
Located in Syracuse-Near
school &amp; sw1mm1ng pool 3 35 Acres. V• m11e from
bedroom srtuated on one- hosp1tal Farm land or devel third acre lot Price reduced opment , level. $37 .500 .
$23,500 or will rent for
$240 mo. 304-855-3934
House for rent or sale 6
rooms 11nd 1 bath Fenced
yard Call 742-2435 after 6
PM

1- -- - - - -- - -

Trt-level. excellent conditiOn , $66.000. 8 "112 assumeFraming, remodeling, roof· ble loan, S11.000 down
tng. sidmg, concrete work, Phone 304·675 -1629 after
etc Cell Bud. 304-468· 5 p.m .
1 688 ·
l-8-y_o_w_n_e_r_,_1_2_1_1 -M
--:-,,n-.--=s~
..

Rick Pearson Au~tioneer
Service Estate, Farm , An- 13
Insurance
tique &amp; liquidation ui•!·I--- - - - - - - Licenoed &amp; bonded In Ohio &amp;
WVo . 304-773 -6785 or SANDY AND BEAVER tn304-773-9185
auranc:e Co. has offered
services for fire insurance
Auction avery Fri . ntght at coverage In Galhe County
the Hartford Commun1ty for almost a ce;ntury Farm,
Center Truckloads of new home and personal property
marchendtae avery weak. cover•u•• are ava•lable to
Conaigmants of new and meat individual needs. Con·
used merchandise always tact Harry Pitchford. agent.
welcome. Richard Reynolda Phone 446-1427.
Auctioneer 304 - 276 - l - - - - - - - - - 3089 .
18 Wanted to Do
Mt Alto auction every Sat. - - - - - - - - - n•ght, 8 p.m. Starting
Chrlatmaa aeason. No more
con1ignmanta will be taken General Hauling and Trash
untllafterChrlatmaa Emma removel Service Reliable
Bell Auctioneer 304~428- end dependable. Call 4411·
8177. WVo lie. No. 428-84. 3t69 between !hnd &amp;. ,,

' - - - - - - -'1

t NOTICE t
THE OHIO VAlLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO recommends
that you do bus1neaa with
people you know, and NOT
to sand monev through the
ma1l untrl you have mvestigated the offering

Used

Snow white mother cat and

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

tWashers •D•shwashers

We pay caah for late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.·Oidslnc
Bill Gene Johnson
446-3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters Swain Furniture, 448· 3159 , 3rd . &amp;
Oltve St., Gallipolis, Oh.

Bundles of newspapers Call

.

AL TROMM

h11 trash collection route m
Mtddlaport For pickup call
992· 3194 or 992-7786

Wanted To Buy

lndtan Artifacts all ktnds. Air
To good home one Austrlal 1' impact wrenches. Fiberglass
ian Blue Heeler pup. Clal bass boat &amp; motor. 15 - 16~:
446 -2946 .
Submersible pump . Call
446-4298 .

RADIATOR

985-3561
AU Makes

or 992-r~!1s4 _ 11r

Due to the death of my
father Lawrence (Doblnl
Manley Sr.l will be assuming

tor 6, 614-266-6349.

742-2328 4·21 tic

APPLIANCE
.
SERVICE

Call 742-3195

9

2 mo. old pups, 2 Beagle-

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

KEN'S

"O.K Try ll now "

Racine Gun Club dues are
due 826 00 Must be patd

Bassett hounds, 6 German
Shapherd·Besaetts_ Cell af·

" CUT OUT

Residential
&amp; Commercial

Personal

Giveaway

• Lowest Rates
Around
•Dump Truck
Service

FOR FUTURE USE"

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
serv1ce and mstallation.

GRAVEL
HAULED

Mason, WV

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

1U2111fl

Julia's

by Jan 1,1984.

Radio Dispatched

(304) 773-5710 . 773-St tB

Discover Encage-A-Car, the
modem amwer to soanng
- car prtcesl Drive the vehtde of your chotce ... any
make aDd model. No down
payment lower monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Seild for Free Booklet l-16.
Bob Blackston, an authorized Independent Engail"A-Car Broker. Box 326, Po·
meroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614-992-6737

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

SKATE-A-WAY

'-..;:;:&gt;

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
Rt. 3~

Every Sunday starting 1
p m. Factory choked guns
Vacancy

Your Business"

Ho~::'t:;•0;n

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.

Care Home Formerly
Mercer Cenvalesence
Homi. 18 years ltxperience.
Clifton , W V 304- 773 6873 .

Every Glass Need'

"We Want And

Lilli~ I~. .

Shampoo • Haircut
Blow Dry

--..;

Ught dozer work &amp; landa·caping Kotelic Landaceplng. Celt 446-3100 .

only .

1 .,,~, You Need Glass You Need Us . We Can Handle

f Your

1 Free

YOUNG'S

MINE RUN

Defendants

HAROLD E McGREGOR 11
l1 v1nq whose address rs un
known the unknown spouse rf
any whose namA and address
are unknown tf deceased the
unknown hetrs devtsees lega
tees ad mtntst rators P.)(ecutors
and/ or ass1gns of Haro ld E
McG regor dec
You are hereby nollf tAd that
you have been named dP.fE'!nd
ants rn a IP.gal act 1on en tttled
James W Suttle et at Plarn
tiffs vs Ma nnmg D Webster et
al DP.Iendants Th 1S ac tron has
been assrgned Casf! No 83CV-93 and IS pen~mg rn the
Common Pleas Court of Merqs
County Ohto
The ob,ect of the Co mplarnt
rs a partrllon act1on co ncernmg
o•l and gas nghts and to &lt;;:~wet
trtle to 011 and gas nghts
underlying the tollow•ng descrrbed real P.S tate
Srtuated '" the Townshr p of
Lebanon.. County of M(l rgs and
State of Oh10 bounded and

sH 0 p

RESIDENTIAL-New
and re-wtring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL

MANNING D. WEBSTER. et
al ..

•

- ' --

CAll TODAY FOR CURRENT PRICES IMEW
ON OEIER AND OTHER ~£

PH.

L ~"AUTO

I

TROPHY ONLY

• &gt;IOtJl.ilh'

Top Prices Paid
for All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
1¥. II. East of Paaoville
On Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Atummum Only

VI.

TO
LELIA CLARK , 1f ltvrnq whose
addr ess rs unknown "thl'1 un
known spouse 11 any whose
namf' and address are un
1
known rf deceasf'd thf! un
known hr.rrs devrsF.P.S IP.gi'l
tees adm1n rstrator s AxAcutors
and/o r ass rgns of I ella c•ark

I'

f

l!li~YOUR EF

PH. 992-3466

Case No. 83-CV-93
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION

HUNT

SCIPIO RECYCLING

Plaintiffs,

LAFF-A -DAY

Balloon• for Chrlatm ... Get

;' ~- M~son- \
7 Auto Glass ~\

Business
Services

ElOISE BOSTON
TREASURER OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900- SR 7
REEDSVILlE OHIO
45772
•

18 Wanted to Do

Announcement•

deya partie1. Call Balloon• &amp;
Well , Annnrerury•. Birth ·

ltmP ooened by the treasure r ot
sa1d Board as provtdP.d by law
for two {2~ 66 passengf!r
school busr.s acco rdr ng to
spec1frcatrons of sa1d board of
P.du catr on
Spectft cattons and tnslfucPublic Notice
ttons to brddf!rs may be
obtarnf!d at the offrce of the
Treasurer Eastern H1gh Schf'Jol
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Burldtng
A r::Rrltl lP.d check payabiP. to ESTATE OF WILUAM MORthP. Treasurer of thP. above RIS, DECEASED
Board of Educat10n or a Case No 24303 Docket 12
sat1slactorv btd bond f!xecu tRd Page 396
by the brdder aniJ th e sureTY
NOTICE OF
company 1n an amount r,Qual to
APPOII'IIMENT
l1vf! pP.r cent of the brd shall b~
OF FIDUCIARY
S~J bmtttf'd Wtth f'aCh btd
On November 22 1983 1n
Satd Boat cl of Educat1or 1 th e Mergs County Probate
resf!rves the nqht to wa1ve Court CasA No 24303 Wrl ·
rnformal1t1eS to accept or reJFICt !tarn N Mo1115 39 4 5 1 Sumner
any and a!l or parts of any and Road Pomer oy Oh10 45769
atl b1ds
was appornt Ad adm1nrstra1or of
No brr1s may be withdrawn the estatA of Wil liam Moms
for at IRast th rrty (30) days after deceased latA of At 1 Box
the sched uled closrng ttme. for 1 f 6 Racme Ohro
recetpt of b1ds
Lena K Nesselroad
Probat e Judge /
BOARD OF
Clerk
1121 I 8 15 3tc
EDUCATION OF
EASTERN LOCAL
SC HOO L DISTRICT

dflC

Tax collections
on schedule
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Tax
collections by the state government
we re almos t exactly as predlcled for
the first five months of the fiscal
year, but spending was sllghtly
higher than expected, the governor's budget o!!lce says.
TheOiflceofBudgetandManagement said Wednesday that tax
collections tltrough November totaled $2.26 billion, about $46.94
million below estimates made last
summer when the t'lllo-year general
fund budget was adopted.
However,morethan$38milllonof
that shortage was Iii sales tax
collected but not processed In
November by the state treasurer,
Budget Director Cristina Sale said
In her morrthly report to Gov.
Richard Celeste.
· General lund revenues from all

'n' Dtilios
126-TltriiiJ C11ftJ Floweos
115-Petal 'l!rilts
l24·Easy Gtfts 'n' Ornaments
113-SIItch 'n' Patch Quilts
122-Stuft 'n' Pull Quills
IZO.Crachtt Y111r Wardnlllt
119-Easy Art of Flower Coothtl
116-NiiiJ fiiiJ QuHb
I IS-Easy Art of lippte Crochet
113-Contplete Gtft iloolt
109-Sew+Knil Ulalc tissue tnctl
lOS-Instant Crachel
I01-QuiH Boal C411tctiao I

Public Notice

IL____....;..;,;,;;;.;.;~...::-;.;;.~~;,_----..1

insurance money

postaae ana tmtdltn,

IU·Dalts &amp; Cloh On Palllle
134-14 qtlici llldtine Quilts
133-FIShlllt Homo Quiltin1
l31·Qum Orltinlb
130-fwlllll fllhiooi-Si10S.J8.56
121-Eovo!opt Plkborl Qu1lts

FOR SERVICE IN MEIGS COUNTY

Machetti, was sentenced to death
Jan 30. 1975, for the slaymgs a year
earlier of Rona ld Akins and his wife,
Jua ruta Akins Akins had been
marned to Smtih's wife, Rebecca
Mache tti, and prosecutors clatmed
the murders were part of plot by
Smith and Mrs Machettl to collect

Sentinel

YOUR NEXT CRAFT IS 10 our NEW
1984 NEEOLECRAFT CATALOG
Over 170 ""'d des1gns. 3 free

Announcements

PHONE:

to:

S. 163, Old Clttbel Sll., New
Yllll, NY 10113. Print llartte,
Adflf11S, lip, Pllllm Num...

~ud·
M~GHEE
'R a'**
ll

Send

Rlldtrllail

sa rd Board

3

handlina .

The Daily

Ohio

::::::::::J===-=======-rr=========::::::!t::=========~ Co. 448·4313

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF
THREE SCHOOL
BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAl
BOARD Of
EDUCATION

REAL ESTATE ASSQCIATE

Mrs. Machettl and another man,
John M aree, both convtcted of
ftrst -degree murder but were sent ·
enced to life In prison , MrS Machettl
after winning a new trial and Maree
after agreeing to testlfy for the
prosecution
Georgia's last execution occurred

3

Business Services·

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wille Dlllr ...... Cllllilil4 Dttt

Tablecloth

CHERYL LEMLEY,

c ando "
Smith, also known as Anthony

. ' ..

15, 1983

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

Appeal denied: Smith executed
JACKSON , Ga (AP) - Johit
E ldon Snuth was executed today for
the 1974 slaymgs of two newlyweds,
becommg the second man put to
death m the U nited States in two
days
" The order of the coun has been
carried out," said pnsonspokesman
J o hn Siler Correcltons Depanment
spokesman Dav td Jordan satd the
e lectrocutiOn began at 8.&lt;ll a .m,
was completed a t 8.10 a. m. a nd a
team of three doctors dec lared
Smtth dead at 8: 15 a m after 2,0CO
volts of e lectncity passed through
his body
The 53-year-&lt;Jid former msurance
sa lesm an was sentenced to the
c lectnc chatr after being convicted
of fa tally shooting hts wife's former
husband and t hat man's wife
"He was cairn, he walked to the
cell on hiS own power He m ade no
move m e nt after he was in th e c hair.
He made no statement ," Jordan
said.
Outstde the prtson , 15 to~ people
demonstrated in fa vor of captta l
punishment, w hlle40 to50gathered
to oppose It
After an autopsy, the body was to
be taken by the Rev. Murphy Davis,
a Presby1erian mmister active in
oppostng the death penalty. on
behalf of the famtly
Smith declined to ord~r a special
last m eal and refused to ptck hi sown
witnesses for his execution at the
Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Center In Jackson, about 60
miles southeast of Atlanta ..
He became the 11 tlt man executed
in the United States s ince 1976, the
fifth this year and the third in the last
16 days. It was the ftrstexecutlon in
Georgia in 19 y~ars.

Decimber

111 eo-tiL........,. Dlli0,4S1"

Bonds forfeited
Numerous bonds were forfeited m
the court o n wildlife law \oolations
Forfetttng were Gary Ross, E ly na ,
$170, attemptmg to take more than
one deer, $45, afte r kUling a deer,
failure to de tach temporary tag
from specia l deer pemut and attach
to dee1 where deer fell. J e rry Allen ,
Hamtlton. $170, attemptmg to take
more than one deer; R oger Butner,
Hamilton , $170, a tte mpting to take
more than one deer; Wayne DuM,
Hanulton, $120, frulure to properly
tag deer; T erry Hodges, Fairileld,
$170, a !tempting to take more than
one deer, Thomas Holmes, Plain
Ctty, $45, transporting a loaded
firearm In a motor vehicle; Jack
Williams, Dayton, $12J, failure to
properly tag deer , Mtchael Atkins,
Ashtabula, $170, attemptmg to take
more than one deer; VIc Williams,
Dayton, $45, possession of a loaded
firearm in field after 5 p m , Billy
Williams, Dayton , $45, loaded
firearm in field after 5 p m ; Ray
Powers, Xenia, $50, possession of an
Illegally tagged deer, Johit Stout ,
Elyria, $45, failure to properly tag a
deer kUI; $170, attempting to take
more than one deer; Larry Curtis,
Long Bottom, $70, hunting deer on
another's land without a loo:lspectal
deer permit; John J Rose, Long
Bottom, $70, hunting deer on
another's land without 1983 special
deer permit; Leo Van Nest, Albany,
$70, loaded firearm in a motor
vehicle,· Terry Brewe r, Long Bottom, $45, hunting without vistble
wearmg a hat, cap, vest or jacket in
hunters' orange; Mark Pallard,
Portsmouth, $50, possesston of a
loaded firearm in the field after 5
p.m

1983

room brtck, basement, firplace new furnace . Reduced to $46,000 304·
676-2381 .
3 mtlea from Chiefland, Fla ,
on good road ·- 'I• acre fenced
lot, 12.c60 mobile home
w1th 1 2x24 edditton large
screened back porch , pat1o,
and adjorning laundry bu1ld·
ing Metal utility buildmg
with cement floor . lnaxheuateble water supply. Livlngroom. drnnmgroom , two
bedrooms, kitchen and bath
All completely furn1shed
Gu furnece and a1r conditioning . Priced for quick
ule. •20.000 . Write or coli.
will finance part lowell
Wingett, Rt. 2 -Bo• 48&amp;.
Chleltend, flo 32628. 1804-493 -4076 .

AQ~
41

Houses for Rent

Two story house. 4 bdr ,
62 50 per ma S250 dap
req Call 446-4222 , 9 30
s ,oo .
Duplex, $250 plus utilities
Avat I now, 2 bdr , lR , new
remod ktt . &amp; beth large
fenced yard , new carpet,
568 3rd Ave , Gallrpohs
Call 446 - 2457 or 446 0332 .
Cabm on Raccoon Creek 2
bdr . stove &amp; refrigerator,
large ftreplaca $235 mo
lease requ1red Call 4460093 o r 446-0795
2 bdr house on St Rt. 7
Call 614-256-6520 .
New , unfurn .. 2 bedroom
twm -singla Includes equ1pt .
kttchen . utthty . carpor(
storage room , large lot wtth
gardsn space, c:•ntra! atr
8260 plus depoatt &amp; utilrtieo Call 446-4477 or 446·
388, .
.

�Thursday,

Page-14- The
41

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rent

House for rent garagQ. basement. suitable for 1 or 2

'
77{/i t.AI?IES

TH INK
COSMO IS

persona, adults only deposit
&amp; ret . required . Call 446 3384 .

J/,1$7

UX&gt;KA

~OVGF'

Fit ew ood deli \lered . S35
pickup load , 10 loads S300
Call 614-256-1427.

SQ'f! ~&amp;'SHOT
S7UFF WJ.j&amp;fo/ ~IS
F~AU iSN'T

f'EF'FeCT· ··

,AIZOUN/7...

ADD -ON WoodburniPg fur ·
nace. auto. controls. water
heater included. Nev8r used ,
S590 . Ph . 6 14 -256-1216 .

Riverv iew Dr ., very nice, no
pets . Inquire at Shephards
Sales &amp; Services, First &amp;

Olive St ., Gallipolis.

Used , J --c Ditch Witch
trenct-- ·r r re dericktown ,
Oh1 o C ,1· 1 - 614 · 694 ·
7842 .

3 bdr . home. 2 baths in
Gallipolis. $350 mo .. deposit required . Call after 5 .
446-0186.
8U7LcT

Y-'I'OU FLIRT!

HtiBB'J'
EG(;M:)G

~ SAW \t&gt;ll COM IN'

ON

AC1l.IKE

61~

W17J.i1!-IAT

FAT, TWO·TIMIO

COSMO-·-

WIC&gt;oW! V·'J'OIA
OLOWORM!

WAR

2 bedroom house. unfurnished, close to General
Hartinger Park in Middlepan. 614-992 -345-7.

Firewood S35 PU load, 5
loads $150 . 10 loads $250.
Hardwood, delivered . Call
. 614 -256 -6636 illte' 5PM .
House coal fOr sale . Pickup
or delivered . Call446-9200,
af1er 4 call 446-7650 .

House for rent with stove

and r8hig , 3 bedrooms.
$100. month . 247-4601 or
614-992 -2314.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 2x60 2 bdr . modern fC:.u nished trailer. convenient
loc ation , Upper Rtver Rd ,
d eposit req . Call 614-4468558 .
Nicly furnished modern mobile home . in city. 1 or 2
adults on,l y . Call 446 -0338 .
3 Bedroom trailer for rent .
446 -3371 0' 446 -0722 .

For rent trailer 12~e60 . 2
bedroom trailer. furnished.
gas &amp; water paid . $250 mo .
$1 00 deposit . Call 4466583.
2 bdr. 1 bath . kitchen range.
refrigertor, wahser &amp; dryer
furnished . Located at Centenary. $200 per mo . Includes
water &amp; garbage. Call 446 0254 .
2 bdr . mobile home. adults,
no pets. Call446 -1158.
2 bdr . 12x60 Hol!y Pa.rk
mobile home on Rt . 35 .
Deposit &amp; ref . Call 446 4369 0' 675-9760 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Adults only . 614 -992 2598 .
Furnished , nice mobile
home . 3 bedrooms. All
electric- central air . Good
location. across from pool in
Syracuse . S250 per month
plus utilities . Deposit rs·
quired. Call 992: 2659 .
2 bedroom. furnished . $166
per month plus utilities and
deposit . No pets . County
Mobile Home Park . Call
992 -7479 .
Nice 14x70 3 bedroom,
unfurnished. convienent location, large yard, $165 .
month plus utilities . Deposit
and references required .
614 -985-4367 .
44

Apartml!nt
for Rent

Small furn . house 1 or 2
adults only . no pets. Call
446-0338 .
Furnished apts . 1-4 rm . &amp;
bath up. Clean, no pets,
adults only . Ref . req . Call
446 -1519.
3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.
utilitiea paid, adults only, no
pets. Call 446-3437 .
JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at $157 for one
bedroom and 8193 per
month for two bedroom,
with 8200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza, pool and TV
ant . Call 446-2746 or lea\le
message.

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa. cha.ir, rocker, ottoNewly decorated semi - man, 3 tables, (extra heavy
furnished 1 bedroom apart- by Frontier). $685 . Sofa
ment . Second floor of Coats chair and loveseat, $275 :
Building. Suitable for 1 or 2 Sofas and chairs priced from
adults. Inquire at apartment $285. to 5895 . Tables. 145 Winnie the Pooh fully
padded playpen $35 . port -a18 . 992 -7347 0' 992 · and up to $125 . Hide· &amp;· crib witl'l mattress S25. only
beds.$440 . and up to
2610 .
$625 .. Recliners , $176. to used for one child. misc.
baby clothes. Call 466·
In Middlsport - 2 . 3 ,and4 $375., Lamps from $28 . to 1997.
room Apt's. Call 1-304- $75.5 pc. dinettes from
$99 .• to 435. 7 pc . $189
882 -2566 .
and up . Wood table with siiC Antiques, oak furniture re6 room basement garden chairs S425 to $745 . Cask production. misc. items . Use
our Chri5tmas layaway plan .
Apt . No · pets. drunks or S110 up to $226 . Hutches. Conkels, Tuppers Plains,
S550.
and
up,
maple
or
pine
dope. 1 kid accepted . Also 2
bedroom mobile home. New finish. Bunk bed complete For sale grave blankets . Call
carpet. utilities paid . John with mattresses. $250 . end 614-949-3037.
Sheets. 3% miles South up to $395. Baby beds,
$110 . Mattresses or box
Middleport . R-7 . Call 367 ~
spi'ii')gs . . full ot twin. $68 ., 1 aet of gaS logs for fire
0611 .
firm. $68 . and S78 . Queen place. 1 year old. $99 .95 .
Less than half price. 614Two one Bedroom apts .. sets, $195 . 4 dr . chests,
742·2211 or after 5 pm
four bedroom house. fur- $42 . 5 dr. chests, $54. Bed 514-992-5320 .
nished or unfurnished. 614 - frames, $20.and $25., 10
992 -2381 day o' 614-992 · gun · Gun cabinets, $350 . Afghans, extra large and
Gas or elec~ric ranges $375 .
2509 nights .
smaller ones. Different co Baby mattresses. 825 &amp;
lors. Make nice Christmas
S35,
tied
frames
$20.
$26
.
Apartments . 304 · 675 &amp;: S3Q . , king frame $50 . gifts. Phone 985- 3915 .
5548 .
Good selection of bedroom
Zenith Color Console. A-1
APARTMENTS , mobile suites , cedar chests
condition.
$150. 614-949 homes, houses. Pt . Pleasant rockers , metal cabinets : 2994.
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 - swi\lel rockers.
Used Furniture ·· bookcase,
8221 .
ranges, chairs, dryers, re· 14 inch Homelite chain
friQerators and TV ' s. 3 miles saws . Runs good . Two
TWIN RIVERS TOWER
out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am Chevy transmissions. Call
Apartments now a\/ ail able to
985-4346 .
81derly &amp; disabled with an to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri. . 9am
income of less than to Spm. Sat .
Autumn Hazel Mink Stole.
$12,300 . Renting for 30 446-0322
$300. Call 614-992 -5070 .
percent of adjusted incomeTV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
.Phone 304-f-75- 6679 .
New wood burning stove
1------- - - - Ave .• Gallipolis. 446-1699 . with
firebrick $326 . each
Spin washers, gas S. electric
Small furnished and 2
304-675-1578 0' 675dryers. auto w ..hers, gas &amp;
bedroom unfurnished
electric ranges, refrigera - 7896 .
apartments . Point Pleasant
tors, TV sets .
araa. 304·675· 1355 .
U.S.A . Mads denim surplus,
1-:-'---:------jackets, bibs, coveralls. insuWedge Apartments. no kids, For sale 30 in . gas range lated coveralls $27 . 60 ,
green, 2-12 cu .ft . ref., varno pets, 304-675-2072 .
ious makes of washers &amp; army clothing boots. all sizes
rubber boou . regular dryers $70 &amp; up. All nice &amp;
insulated.
Sam Some guranteed
.
·Fiupp's
Applian
45 Furnished Rooms
ces &amp; Glassware. Corner At. rville's, East Aa..,enswood.
Open 1:00-7 :00pm', Fri.
For rent Sleeping Rooms 141 &amp; Rt. 7 . 446-8033 , Sat, Sun. Other days after
after 5·446-8181 .
and light house keeping
3 :00pm until ChriStmas.
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
304-675-3334 .
Used
Dryer
&amp;
Washer
SurCall 446-0756 .
vice &amp; guaranteed 30 days .
Used washe'r. dryer. sto\les,
We specialize in waal'lers &amp;
refrigerator, 30 day war d'Y"'
·
Call614-256
·
1207.
46 Space for Rent
ranty. One Baldwin organ,
Used electric range. used double keyboard . J&amp;S Pawn
refrigerator. used RCA color Sl'lop . 314 Main St . Pt.
Furnished office for rent. TV. Corbin &amp; Snyder Furni - Pleasant.
Close to city building and ture. 446-1171 .
court house . Call 446-0856
Will haul coal. gravel. sand,
days, $125 . mo.
Pre-Christmas Sale. Bar- anything. Call Bud, 304·
gains throughout the store. 458-t566.
Larga private mobile home 20-50% off on our recondl·
lot in Centenary . Call 446 - tion name brand appliances . Ruger shotgun, 16ft. Bass
4053 .
3 frost free refrigerators, boat . Baby rockers . Phone
2-30" gas ranges , 1 eye 304-675-6521.
Large trailer lot on Bula\lille- level elect. range. 1- 30"
Addison Ad. Call 446-4736 electric range, 15 cu.ft. 20in. gitls White Prarie bike.
or 614-367-0232 .
chest type freezer, 4 auto- 30in. Tappan range, 40
matic washen. 6 chest of channel base Realestic CB .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home drawers. Each sold with 304-675-3379.
Par~. Route 33, North of
guarantee. Call Skaggs Ap Pomeroy. Large lots. Call pliances, Upper River Rd, Atari. 14 cartridges 8120.
Two girls winter coats like
992-7479 .
Gallipolis. 446-7398 .
new S10.00 each. 304Office space for rent. 2nd
Portable Maytag dryer $75 . 675-2217 0' 675-1106.
floor, Court &amp; Second
Call 446-1196 .
~hlte gold wedding set, 7
Streets in Pomeroy, Ohio. 4
d1emonds
. Alto Sax and
rooma. 2 waiting arellls,
One 8ft. formica counter toP
storage room , bathroom, with G.E. drop in range; one music stand . 304 - 675utilities provided . Some of- 9ft. formica counter top 7690.
fice furnatura available. Will
with 17in. cut out for sink ;
remodel to 1uit tenant. Rant
one G .E. wall oven with Computer. Commodore PET
is negotiable. Call Bank One rotineri ; one G .E. dia · 2001 -BK. built-in monitor
at 1-614-593-6681 .
hwasher. Pl'lone 304· 675· and cassette 5360.00. Tape
deck, stereo. real type, auto
4155 .
RVS $100 .00. Sofa bed,
full,
good condi1ion brown
Glass shower door. new
48 Equipment
plaid $90.00 . 304- 675850 .00. 304-882-2216 .
3163 afto' 5.
for Rent

1 room 860 week for 1
person. $70 week for 2
persons . 1 room with water bed $30 a night. Call 446 2501 .

20 tt. flat bed trailer. Can
pull wltl'l own pick or car.
Haul anything on it. 425 par
dsy. Call 614-446-0175 .

1 bdr. unfurnished apt., no
pets. call 61-f-446· 3617.

49

For Lease

1 b·d ,. apt . Call 446-0390.
2 BR Apt ., $129 mo .
Utilities paniallv furnished .
kitchen furnished . 676 6104.
Attic Apartment. furnished ,
$176 utilitiu pd. Men only.
Share bath . 919 2nd Ave .•
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 1
_p.m.
Furnlohad Apt., 1 BR, $236.
utilities pd . Adults. 243
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis .
, 446-441 6 after 7 p.m .
3 room upstairs apt. adult&amp;.
- Call 446· 1 232.
1 bad room Apt. $196. mo.
including utilities . Equal
housing opportunity. Con·
tact Village Mtnor Apts.
614-992-7787.
Fumished apt. Middleport.
adults, no pats, month rent
plus 8100 security 992·
3874 .
Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rataa for Senior
Cltlzeno. $130. Equal Hou ...
lng Opportunltieo. 614'
992-7721.
2 bedroom furnished Apt.
I 180. month plus utHttlaa
end dapoait. · Overlooking
Ohio r i - In Ml-ovllle.
814-992-3324.

For lease, Chevron Station.
MBJon area. Good location.
304-675-2982 altar 6pm.

54 Misc . Merchandise

KIT

'N' CARLYLE ' "

by Larry Wright

76

1----------

30-06 rifle automatic Remington Woodmestar. 304675-6809.

Hoosier cupboard ell. cond .
Call448-3946, eve's.

TWA pet carrier used once,
$20.00. 304-882-2216 .

Antique two piece diah. lift
top base, double door top
whh '1. pigeon hole'a. Good
condition. Reasonable price
or trade for 9Uf'. 324 Palmer
Street in Middleport .

Walter Hager golf clubs, 4
woods and 9 irons, matcl'led
..t . 304-875-1572.

53

Antiques

Antique . gasoline pump, 4
oak cha~rs and table, oak
wa1hatand, rope bed, bookcaa8, also 17ft. aide by aide
!' e fr i g era tor · fre eza r
t125.00. Phone 614-2459448.
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 54 Misc. Merchandise
62 Olive St .. Gollipollo. Now
&amp; uaed wood &amp; coal stovea
6 piece wood living roo~ ·
suite with 8 Inch flat erma Knauff Firewood Pickup or
$399, bunk beds complate Delivered . 12'' -22'' atockad
with bunkies 1199, 2 piece in yard . HEAP vender,
antron livingroom suitea prompt delivery. 814-266·
8245.
*199, antron recliner~ $99
other reclinen $80, map.e
dinette aets 1179, box ~~U::m::":~lt~o:n~e, Sand. Gravel.
aprlnga • manre11 twin or
in Maaon, Meigs,
full •100 Ht regular-firm ·
pick up at 'Ricl'larda
*120, maple dinette chairs
Call 446· 7785 .
*35, waal'l ltenda *34
maple rockers $&amp;9. 7 pia~ Oek tables &amp; chairs. corner
c"roma dinette set *149, 6 cupbo•rds. buffets • etc.
piece dinette aet *99, u1ad Wood World, 2508 Grand
bedroom iultes, refrigera - Central A.ve., Vienna, WV.
tors, ranges, chelt, drenere.
Pickup or deli·
wringer w11here, TV's. drytruck. Cell814oro, • ohooo. Coli 446-'
3159.

1

Texaa Oil Company urgently
needs mature person for
Point Pleeaent area business
sales rep. Sales experience
not necetsary. We train .
Write N . 0 . Dickerson
Southwestern Petroleum:
Box 789, Ft . Wonh TX.
76101 .
'

1 - - - - - -- -

Hand made log cabin doll
houses with ·furniture,
priced S50 .00. 614~4464630 .
1983 Bass boat 16ft. 4in.
witl'l trailer. 40hp . Mere.
motor and other accessorie s. 304-676-1916 after
5pm .

"NOT WHERE 50ME OF US ARE
CONCE.RNED, AT 1-E'AST •••. "

Billy Leei'1 Tire. and Battery
Sales. New 1nd used tires,
also, tire repaire. 1103 Jef·
ferson Ave. Point Pleaunt.
304-675-5405.

I ~ollt . I
Ju&gt;\ fii004HT
1'1&gt; Off ouT

s:oo o

II2l

CAPTAIN EASY

'

Pets for Sale

For Sale or Trade

1976 Harley Davidson
Sportster; 1976 c ·a maro dirt
track race car, new motor for
seta or trade. 304·676·
7-346.

HillCREST KENNELS
Barding aU breads. Selling
Happy Jacts: Dog Food.
Doberman Puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446· 7795 .
Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367· 7220.

Drllgonwynd CatteryKennels . AKC Chow puppies, CFA Himalayan, Per·
sian and Siamese kittens.
Call 446-3844 eftar 6.
AKC Registered Poodle puppie~. Dep . will hold for
Chrtstmas. Call446·0857.
AKC Registered Collie pup·
pies. Call 614-286-4621.
2 black &amp; tan Oobs m11ie &amp;
female, clipped and s.hots,
Very good nature, female
spayad. 875. Call614-3889969.
Male Siamese kitten 11 wks.
old 150. Call 614-4464230 .
Re.gistered male Cocker
Spaniel, male Schnauzer,
and poodle puppies. Poodles
ready for Christmas. 614·
992-2607.
Female long- 1'\air. blue &amp;
white Benji.type dog. Milled
breed. Also mixed breed
puppy . Call 992-6505.

7 -1

· Autos for S~le

1976 Ford Pinto station
wagon. good condition.
304-875-6930.
1977 Camero 305. 67,000
miles, air, •utomatic, PS,
PB. AM-FM. c.aette. ralley
whoels. $2,100. 304-6764181.
1978 Grand Prix. good
shape, new tires, 01 .900.
304· 676· 38'28.

Ju~y

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614-3889790 .

THE RE'$ THE i'&gt;O LDE't-i cL AM A
RA FAEL DREAMED ABOUT!

Maasey·Fergu1on 66 diesel
tractor with Ford industrial
end-loader $3,000 or
82,200 without loader. Cal
949-2127.
John Deere model 70 tractor with 3 pt. power lte•rlng
&amp; good rubber. Call 814·
379-2424.
Gooseneck 16 ft . dump
trailer, grain and livestock
bad, axe. cond., $3,800.
Call 304-458-1962.
1974 Ford tractor 3000
power .-tearing, looks like
new. pricitd t6.800. with
disk plows &amp; brush hog in
working condition. for more
information call 614-245·
9105.
Goose neck, 16ft. dump
trailer, grain and livestock
bed exc. cond. $3.800.
1- 304-468-1 962.
62 Wanted to Buy

OLD QUilTS. good condi·
tion, before 1940, any
amount. Phone 614-246·
9448 or write Box S·C. Rt.
3, Rodnoy. Ohio 46831 .

Home
Improvements

PlASTERING - New and
repair commercial and residential. free e1timates. Call
614-256· 1 182.

/1 ·15

59

56

MEANWHILE-. ~MY HA~
TO nlc ~P O T
II'HEI&lt;E- JOEY AND I?AFAEL
WERE: AMBU,;Ht:D ...

R~TURN~D

B1

'73 Elcamino SS, 454 engina, runs good, $1,600.
Phona 304-468·1932 .

.'

1975 Monte Carlo 360, PS,
PB, auto. AM-FM stereo,
some ruot, $980.00. After
6pm weekdeys 304-676·
1723.
1980 maroon Pontaic Grand
Prix. AM·FM stereo
canette, tir(ied window1,
chrome sp~e wheal•. 304676-9782.
'76 Ford s·uper Cab pickup.
Exc. body. runs good.
$1.700.00. 304-773 ·
6177.
'75 Monte Carlo. 304-6752714 0' 676-1677.
'75 Chovv Monza $750.00
call Friday or after 304-676·
2573.
1973 four door Buick LaSebra. Good running condi·
tion. New tires. $600 .00.
Call 304-675-5883 after
6 :00.
1976 Mercury Monarch,
good condition, AM-FM ra dio, PS, PB. 304· 773-9509 .

Appliance Service all makes
&amp; models rafrigertora,
washers. dryers, ranges.
compactors, diahwashers,
microwaves . Heating &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gallia R•frigeration Co.
814-446-4066.

. BO~N

LOSER

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quezar . and
house calls. Call 576-2398
0' 446-2454.

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. _inCI.,dl.,g
hot tar application. car~~­
ter, electrician. mason, llll
304-675-2088 or B
4560 . '
.

p-

ANNIE

HI, 'Di\DDY' I TH15
O«? A~E
15 NICHOLAS DEEioiG! YOU FROM
!1E'5 5TUDYIN' WITH
TOWN,

Water Walls. Commarc"l
and Domenic. Teat hol.-a.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-896-3802.

M~. ~UNE TOO

f

YES, 51R- M A5 THERE flRE NO
Pf10qf'!f1MG FO~ E~CEPTIONAL
CHILDREN IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOL
THERE, MFI. RUNE HAS OFFEREii
TO TEACH ME PRIVATELY.

NICHOLAG?

SEAMLESS GUTIERS. One
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut1
ta,. (Day 614-592-4068,,
lnight 614-698-8·205.1

Houaea moved .or raised,
basements dug ber,ath
houses. free estima'''·
Houae Movers, Inc. ~~·
576 -2711 .

I HOPE YOO
DON'T PIS-

APPROVE,
SiFI ••

NO, NO- I'M GLfiO
ANNIE 'NILL HAVE A

SCHOOLMATE! IT'S
RUNE 50MEHOW HEQLECTEO TO TELL
ME THERE'D 6E ANOTHER
PUPIL,.
JUST THAT

I
\
,I

'ALtEY

OOP'
\'OU MUST BE THE':

OR.SETTERICH! I'M
AL.:LEY.•. A FRIEND OF
82

DOC WONMUG'SI

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth •nd Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 4464477

72
Trucks for Sale
63
Livestock
SANTAS COMING. F i a h - 1 - - : - ' - - - - - - - 1974 Chevy pickup Y2 ton,
tank and Pet Shop. 2413
350 3 apd., good cond. Call JIM•s PLUMBING So HEATJacklon Ave., Point Plee- 4 yr. old Reg. Quarter horSe 614-446-7619.
ING. Fomerly Dewitt's
•ant. 304-676-2063. Mon. mare, 1 Billy Cook show
thru . Sat. 11 -6 Sun. 1- 5. saddle, 1 Tax tan show 73 Dodge Club Cab 3A ton Plumbing. Coli 614-367Santa and his helper will be halter. 2 horse trailers. other pickup, needs angina put in. 0576.
here Sat. and Sun. 1-3 . lllddlet. Call 814-246· 8ft. truck topper insulated
Bring your camera and take 5286 elk for Pam.
sliding front window like l - -- - - - - - - free pictures. Green Swords
new. Call 814·246-6286 83
Excavating
two 11 .00 . Red Velvet Belgian colt. Foaled 8-28~ aak for Pam.
Swords 89 cents. Platys two 82 . Registered, blonde with 1 - - - - - - - - - $1 .25. One tank of Tetras white ·mane and tail. Will 1974 F 250 3 quarter ton
two $1.60. Stop in and mak• big l'lorn. 614-742- flat bedtruck. Extra good . OOZER WORK By Te~
check our terrific tank pri- 2131 or 1114-949-2331 of- condition. Has cattle racks. Hanna, ponds, ditches,
basements, etc. Call 448·
ces. Bird specials on while tar 8 p.m.
882-3242.
4907. Carter 8. Evana·
supplies last. Don't forget
your pet on Chri1tmaa. SPECIAL for 1ale butchering Beat Uncle Sam. Stock Transportation.
Register for free Christmas hogs 200 to 400 lbs. 890.· trailer available for immeEva drawing .
$140. Phone · 304-675- diate delivery. Montgomery Cat 216 hoe. dozers. crane,
5081.
Trailer Sales. 27320 Mont· loadara. dump truck. Call
Bleck and ten Dashunds,
gomery Rd .. langsville, 01'1. 614-446·1142 between
pups and adults, males
46741. 614-669-4245 7:00AM So 6:00PM .
$100.00, female• $126.00. 64 Hay &amp; Grain
evenings.
Good·1 Excavating. ban~
Phone 304-895-3958.
1979 one ton Ford truck menta, footers, driveways,
Very nice Timothy hay for with dump. Low mileage. septic tankl, landscaping.
Call anytime 446·4537,
57
Musical
nla. Ltrge l'leavy bales. Atao Call 992-2201 .
Jame1 L. Davison. Jr.
Instruments
mixed gra11 legume 1'\ay.
'75 Jeep excellent condi· ,o_w_n_er_._ _ _ _ _ __
Storage at both Coolville
and Autand: Gobel Angus tlon. '78 Luv truck, VB con· •·
1 smell electric soUd body Farm. Coalville. 814-687· veralon. blarar wheels. roll J .A.R. Conatruction Co.
bar, auto. transmiulon. Water linea, Footers,
Dr• ina. All kinda of Ditching.
guitar
with
caaa
&amp;
amplifier
304-675-3388.
just right tor beginner ee&amp;.
Rutland, Oh . 814-742Harmony aletric hollow
'62 Chevrolet pickup, '73 2903.
body guitar like new $150.
Honda II flat top $66. Call
Nova SS, '89 Volkeowegen ~~::;:=:::;:======
446-1420.
bug, '76 ~otlun pickup. 84
Electrical
Phona 304-678-2919.
&amp; Refrigeration
Magnus cl'lord organ very
1 97.7 Chevy pickup Scotto- 1 - - - ' - - - - - - good condition. Has bench
plus music books. Call 614- TOP CASH paid for lato dale Plcg, PS, Radio, Step
model uaed cars.
Smith bumper, good tlrea, body Quaily Service on all major
245· 5076.
Buick-Pontiac, 191 1 East· rusty, mechanical teal good, brand ilppliancas. Also ta•
$1.000.00 firm. 304-875- lect used eppUancn on pl8,
Suzuki violin with hard shell orn Ave., Galllpollo, 4462902 after 8:00.
case and brand n"e w bow. 2282.
Call Elliot Appllonceo, 70
Alvarez mandolin with hard
Pine St .. 448-3733.
1977
Ford
Granda
AM-FM
ceoe. Phone 304·676-8843
air, PS, PB, 302. very good 73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
before 8pm.
Peaquale Electric Co. all
cond.. •1 ,500 firm. Call
ph81ea of electric work, all
after 6:00, 448-4938.
t 979 Jeap CJ&amp; 6 cyl .• 3 work guaranteed. Aerial
58
Fruit
1pd .. loaded with ektraa, ex. truck rental. 814·446·
1970 VW van, neade engine. cond. e3.300. Call 448- 4066.
&amp; Vegetables
1970 VW Faitbeck runs 0515 .
good 8326. Call448-1 808.
SEWING Machine repairs,
Hrvtce. Authorized Singer
Apples from German Ridge 1980 Plymouth Horizon 76 Dodge v1n. One owner.
Saleo • Service Sharpen
hand picked and drapa. •xc: cond.,low mllnge. rul Same •• new, new tlret. Scie1ora. Fabric Shop.
golden Delicious, Red Doli- oharp, t3,198. Cell 814- 57,000 act. mllu. 304· Pomeroy. 992-2284.
cious, Rome Beauties, and 388-9901 or 814·388· 578-2372.
Wina Sapo. Cell 448·8698 9323.
or 614-379-2303.
1--:----~-,.----86 General Hauling
1974 Ford LTD
Coli 74 Motorcycles

a.

~-~3~8~3~8;.~~~~~~~

I~::~~::::~:::-.J------~~~~-----1~4~4~6~-8~1~5~8~-~~~~~:
78 Chevy Monzo 4 cyl.,
o800. Call 814-2118-811112.
1973 Ford F 2110 811tke bed.
81 4-742-21111.

1873 Chevrolet Caprice.
O n e - · P8-PB-AC. low
mil..ge. Cell 992·31 18.
19711 2 door Monte Certo.
e&amp;BII. Aloo 1 873 Old, Cudall Supreme. te95. 114·
985-3838 or 114-1853931.

1980 MX-80 Yamaha good
cond.. UOO. Call 4468108.
4 horsepower Saara
ac111pper mini bike. •xtq
good cond.. UOO. Call
1114-388-99119. -

977 Honda Oddaooey, n tlreo, good cond. U75.
304-175-31134.

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Cell Jim lanllr. 304-1175·
7397.

715

haUl coal, aand, atone.
wood. ate. 304·1711-3190.

Motor•
. 1181 Oltlun 210. 34 mlllo
per gallon. B"'""" metolllc.
U1 110. 4 oPMtf. Call 882·

7238.

d-.

I'Mugot,
mull
t11100. Plno-c AM·
CB rldlo. 8 t 4-742-

40 horupower M•rcurv
outboard motO&lt;. l - ohaft.
Electric otart w1t11 aontrvlo.
Uald 2 ,..,. on .... Boot.

50 YOUR HU56AN0'5
NEW-FOUND SUCCESS
HA5 GONE TO Hl5
HEAD, EH?

Unscrambte then four Jum~es .
one letter tO each square, 10 form
four ordinary words.
·

Number one that·'s me!

0

I

News
Cl) Ca\lett Behind the
Scenes Olivia Newton·
John and John Travolta
are interviewed .
(2) MOVIE: 'II You Could
S.e What I Hear'
(]) New Treasure Hunt
Cil Little House on the
Prairie
Cll Spaces
[i]) Spaces
@» Battlestar Galactice
6:30 0 (2) CD NBC News
(2) MOVIE: 'Biindad by tho
Light'
CIJ Rifleman
(!) ESPN'a Sidelines
1Illllil2l ABC News
0 Cl) @I CBS News
(I) Business Report
llll Over Easy
7:00 0 /]) PM Magazine
CIJ Alias Smith and Jones
@ SportsCente'
(J) Cerol Burnett
([) Entertainment Tonigl'lt
CD Charlie's Angels
0 Cl) Wheel of Fortune
([) tiil MacNeil/lehrer .
News hour
@News
lEI II2l People's Coun
Jeffarsons
7:30 0 /])Tic Tac Dough
C!l ESPN's SportoWeek
(5) Hogan's Heroes
(]] Family Feud
0 (])Mountaineer Basket·
ball'83
® Wl'leel of Fortune
Cll Gll
Entertainment
Tonight
Ill One Day at a Time
8:00 0
(2)
Ch,istmos
in
Washington Julis Igles ias
and Andy Williams join
other headliners in a special Yuletide performance
at the National Building
Museum. Washington, D.C.
/60 min .)
&lt;I)
MOVIE:
'Sha,ky's
Machine'
(2) MOVIE: ohe Gathering,
Part II'
(J) America's Horn of
Plenty
.
@ NFL's . Greatest Moments: 'Big Game America'
C[J MOVIE: 'The Balls of St.
Mary's'
f.IJ Automa n
Cil Billy Graham Special
0 (])@I Magnum, P.l.
&lt;II Good Neighbors
CllJ Sneak Previews Co·
hosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a lqok at
what's happening at the
movies.
lEI ii2J NCAA Basketball:
Marshall at Morehead St:
Ill Children Running Out of
Time
8:30 (}) Larry Jones Special
(]J Wild America 'Backyard Wildlife." Tonight's
program looks at the var·
iety of animals adapting to
a world they share \\lith humans. [Closed Captioned]
Cfil Fell &amp; Rise of A. Perrin
. 9:00 0 (2) CZJ Cheers
CIJ 700 Club
@ Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ
0 ill Billy Graham
Crusade
(I) Roundtable
@ Simon &amp; Simon
tiil Healthier Babies 'Tho
Genetic Era.' Some of tl'la
recent advances made in
the area of human genetics
are examined
[Closed
Captioned]
9:30 0 /])CD Buffalo Bill
I]) lEI (J]J Masquerade
[I) New Tech Times
10:00 0 /])CD Hill St,oet Blues
Visiting Soviet citizens decide to . defect at the HHI
Street station house and
LaRue believes he' ll recei\le a new car from his
brother-in-law. (60 min .)
/]) Inside The NFL
/]) SCTV #2 The Emmy
Award-winning
comedy
series returns \l'{ith all new
editions set at a slightly
seedy television station 'in
mythical Melonvilie . Starring Joe Flaheny, Andrea
Martin. Martin Sl'lort, Eugene Levy.

I· KD 0
t;EYGESl

·

I KJ

MAW!! DO 50METHIN'
THAT DADBURN
RACKET!! '

ABOUT

•
PEANUTS

6\JESS WIIAT.. I'VE BEEN
ASKED TO BE IN ~E
CI-IRISTMAS PLAY'!

I'M 601N6 TO BE
AN ANGEL

lsan7r"lijjiii0iilt;;~-­

2318 til 4 PM Mid 892-

I

1

1M 6LAD TIIE'r' DIDN'T
ASK 'ME .. I WOULD
HAVE SAID, ''BARK!"

/])MOVIE: ohe Challenge'
® Album Flash
CIJ Another life
([)Dr. Who
(fl) I Hear Your Hand
Ill Benny Hill Show
11:30 ~; (J) CD Tonight Show
(2) MOVIE: 'Fast Compony'
CIJ Dobie Gillis
(!) SportsCenter
III Soap
0 (]) T'opper John, M .D.
Trapper and . Gonzo are
stunned ~hen ' they. learn
that their 1 1-year-old pa tient is actually 17-vearsold. IRI (60 min .)
([l Latenight America
(10 M•A•s•H
lEI II2l Nightline
Ill Twilight Zone
11 :46@ NFL's Greatest Moments
N FL's
Greatest
Momenta presents highlights of Super Bowl ·v·
featuring the BaltimOre
Colts .\IS. Dallas Cowboys.
CIJ Catllna
12:00 CIJ Burna 8o Allen
(]) Nlghtllne
@I MOVIE: 'Two for tho
Seesaw'
1i1l Thlcke of the Night
12:16@ Auto
Racing
'83:
Formula One
ell MOVIE: 'Bettie Hymn'
12:30 D (2) ffi Lete Night wl1h
·
David Letterman
CIJ Jock Bonny Show

TH IS WA5 THE Gfi:AfJt7
'WAY lfJ WHICH SHe
Pfi:OCI.A IMEDTHA'T 5H!:
WA&amp; A TOP MODEL.

II

fGENJAL I

Now arrange the circled leners to
form lhe surprise answer. as suggesred by the above cartoon.

I KJ

Answerh8re:"D'D-r
.

Yeslerda~ · s

I

I I I I I

r

(Answers lomorrow~
Jumbles : AIDED JUDGE BEETLE KIMONO
Answer: What people who eat too much of that " diet
food " might be advised to do- DIET

Now bed!. in llock, Jumble Book' Not. 1, 2 lnd 3 .... nllllb~ for 51 .95 IICh piUI
SSe pc»l-u- and hlndHng hom Jum~. clottus Of'Wip8~1 . Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648.
Include your nsme, 1cldrut, tip codt 1M m1ke checks PI'Jible lo N-apapertKdcs.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

An alternative plan
one

who

wants

to

be

winner.
NORTH
+AK754

12-15-83

• K 10 2
K 10 6 2

+

+K

WEST
• J 982

EAST
• Q 10 3

•7ss

•s

+AJ62

+Q10954

+J5

tQ974
SOUTH

+s

.AQJ984
+A 8 3
• 873
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

Wesl

Norlb

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

East
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

•7

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
South wasn 't proud of his
one -heart opening bid and
less proud of his two-heart
rebid, although II high,card
· points including two aces
· with a good six-card major
suit are an opener for any·

a

Then North took off for
stratosphere in his
Blackwood 747 and South
found himself in a slam. lt
wasn't a bad one. North had
his values, and wi th any lead
but a trump South would
have been able to ·rufl two
clubs in dummy and breeze
home.
As we have noted, defenders have a penchant for finding the best lead and West
opened a trump. South saw
.that his chance t o ruff two
clubs had flown away, but
there were lots of other
possibilities. In any event .
the best play was to start o~
spades.
At trick two South cashed
dummy's spade ace and
ruffed a spade. Then he led a
club. West rose with the ace
and led a second trump.
South noted the 3· 1 trump
bre~k as he won in dummy.
He l ed another low spade
and ruffed . Both opponents
followed, and South had
found a 4-3 spade break
which was all he needed .
',
He ruffed a club, came to
his hand With the di amond
ace, drew trumps and eventually discarded a low dia·
mond and his last club on th e

the

king and seven- of spades.
(J'o/EW SPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~M1·"~!1
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Spanish
river
5 Actuality

9 Cancel,
as a flight
11 Suffered
pain
13 Stratwn
14 Succinct
15 Baseball

great
16 Beverage
18 Citizen of

44 "Naughty
Marietta"

star

·45 Impala
DOWN

1 Claw
2 Subside
3 Yule song
t Pay dirt
5 Destined
6 Expert
7 T&amp;Menbawn

8 Leaving a
valid will
10 Post office

(suffix)
enquiry
19 New (prefix) 1% Go further
20 B ounder
21 F all guy
22 Abound
24 Feminine

down
17 Thrash

Yesterday's Answer
23 Poet's

29 Obese

"even"
24 Lamprey
25 Scrape off
26'Nautical

31 Wee

33 Throw
34 Wheat
variety
39 Minced oath

distance

%7 Bully
r:--r::-r....-T,....;

41 " El - "

suffix
25 Jacob's son
27 Macho
guys
. 28l've-

thinking

11:oo o(]}) m
IIl rn o m ® m
News

BARNEY

0

C2:J ill m om® 111

0 Cil ®J Knots Landing
(]J Avengers
(j]) News
Ill INN News
10:30 CIJ Blondie
(fl) Tony Brown's Journal
fJ) Comedy Time
10:45 C[J TBS Evening News

Good aondhlon. CIH 8927133 after II PM.

outthere?

'

bet-••

1974 XL 2110, good cond.
Callll14-379-21 21 after 4.

and
Sale

S_lim! Are 4ou dll riqht

WINNIE

Need something hauled
away or someth~ng moved?
We'll do it. Call 4411-31119
9 and 5.

Excel· · ~:~==j;;i;;;;~== 1--:-----'--Dump truck for hire, will

1978 Ford OrMIIdo.
lint aondlllon. Low miiNge.
.' 2500. 888-4051.

You and your qood
wife must be the
kindest people
in this worldr

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE. Call 1114-387-7471
or 614-387-0891.

W1ter hauling. Fast Servk:•.
low rateo. Cell 81 4-258·
1743.

j'ja THATSCRAII8LEDWORDGAIIE
~~~
byHonriArnoldandBobLoe

\.!;!}

m

F S. I&lt; Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Cell 675-1331.

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Watar removal,
fUrniture Cleaning, free eatimatea. 304-675-2296.

~

EVENING

~--~

Building materials
block, brick. sewer pipes,
windows . lirltels, etc.
Claude Winter&amp;. Rio Grande,
0 . Call614-246-5121.

1}i}~1..\.fi )1;)1}

Television
Viewing
12/15/83

... .." .... ..

55 Building Supplies

The Daily Sentinel-Page-IS

Ohio

THURSDAY

Goodyear Suburbanite E7814 winter tread tire . UHd
only 2 months, exc. cond.
'25.00. E78-14 KM200
fiberglu belt tiro •1 0 .00.
304-676-2637.

1itt: r.liOOf.eM~~

Model No . 700 ADL, 30:06
with 3x9 Weaver scope see
thru mount . Fifteen B&amp;L
traps, 5 streachers. 304576 -2020.
•

Pomeroy-Middlepllrt,
.. ..

198)

Auto Parts
Accessories

·&amp;

In town 3 or 4 bdr. hou se on

3 bdr. house. 1 % bath. Rt. 7 .
Cheshire . S200 mo. Call
614-446-9786 8AM -4PM .

54 Misc . Merchandise

December 1

December 15, 1983

29 Song refrain
30 Unseasoned
31 Mariner

32 Andress film
35 !love
(Lat.)

36Greek
letter
37 Egyptian
deity

I38

Lament
140 Gf!t lost!
' 42 Actress

'

Burstyn

143 Screen

DAILY CRYPT9QUOTE - Here's
lo

how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFJ!LI.OW

to work it :

One letter limply otands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code lellen are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

B

DWQBU

UYBU

CPDR

OBRN

FQJFIQ

FJINCNIIBEIQC
JZ

UYPRT
- BWQ

B

PRUQIIPDQRKQ

EBWEBWB

GBIUQWC
Ye~-.drq'l ~···•: GREAT OA'mS FROM
ACHINGOO
~GROW.-WRITERUNKNOWN

lJTI'LE

�'

Inside today:
Pagt!--16--The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-c41~ --4Jib-~~ -c4JII• -c4J\D -~~ --c4Jil~

~o4llt -oof)~

Thursday, December 15, 1983

-"'4~ -"'4~ --4Jb --41~ --4D
. MEN'S

Features : Auto·
ftlatic color con·
1rol, &amp; automatic

SHIRT SALE

fleshton e correc tion, solid state

RCA

XL-100

All of our men's shirts including Van Heusen dress shi rts- flannel shirts and sport
shirts - kn its - velours. Sizes 1411 to 17
plus S, M, L, XL, XXL, tails. Beautiful selection for Christmas giving.

VHS / uhf tuners,

19"

By the Bend .......... Pages 5-6-7
Classilleds ., ....... Pages 16-11-12
Church news .......... .. .... Page 5
Deaths ......... : ............. Page 14
Editorial .... .. ............... Page 2
TV-comJcs ............ ..... Page 13

simulated walnut
finish .

Sports .................... . Pages 3-4

. Mostly cloudy tonight with a
slight chance of evening flurries.
Low 16-21. Southwesterly winds
diminishing to tess than 10 mph.
Saturday, mostly cloudy. High
28-32. Chance of prec!piiation 30
percent tonight and 10 percent

Sale Prices
Ch"istmas Sale!

Thi s
Christmas
~~~
give him
his
favorite

Dress Sale
Holiday sale prices on fashio na·
ble winter dresses.
Jacket dresses. 2 piece SUits
dress es,long and sha ri
t\lo11eeves and frtted styles
1isses S1zes 6 to 20
Ha lf Sizes 12 1h to 2617
1

Reg. 20.00 ..... Sale '15.99
Reg. 136.00 ..... Sale 128.79
Reg. 145.00 ..... Sale 135.
Reg. 152.00 ..... Sale '41.59

Our entire selection gift sale priced. S, M,
L and XL sizes. Some tails in cardigans,
slipover and vests. Let us help you with ·
your selection.

kn1t s h~rts, velours, sport shirts, flannels in regu la r and western styles. Dress shirt sizes 14\1
to 17. Sleeve lengths 32 to 35, other shirts S,
M, L, XL, XXL and tails in M. L XL sizes.
Stop in - See th e Big Selection - Buy what
you need and save.

'16;95
'19.95
'22.95
'24.95
'29.95

Men's 19.95-sfiiits .. ...... Sale 17.95
Men's 112.95 Shirts .....Sale '10.85
~MMMen's 115.95 Shirts ..... Sale 112.75
~
Men's 122.95 Shirts ..... Sale '18.35

LADIES '

1

Warm winter coats, lined jackets.
snows uits: Bunting an d dress
coats. Most are machine washa ble.
Co mplete range of children's sizes..

125.00 ...

Sale '19.99
137.00 ... Sale '29.59
145.00 ... Sale '35.99

A

A

$2 39

TO

JUNIOR
SWEATERS
Necks, Turtle Necks, Vests
V-Necks in Solids and Design s.
Jr. Sizes: S, M, L

REG ... 110.00 .SALE 17.99
REG. 116.00 .... SALE 112.79
REG. 124.00 .... SALE '1~.19
REG. 131.00 .... SALE 124.79

Boys
17_95 Shirts ..... ... 16.36
Boys
19.95 Shirts ........ 17.96
Boys
1 12.95 Shirts .... ll0.36
Boys
114.95 Shirts .... lll .95

S1zes 12 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6•.
7 to 14

Reg. 15.00 ...... Sale 13.99
Reg. 18.00 ...... Sale 16.39
Reg. 112.00 .... Sale 19.59
Reg. 118.00 .. .Sale 114.39

Zipper Front lined Jac~et.. .... Only '29.91
Button Front lined Coat.. ...... Only 131.67
Insulated Coveralls ............. .. Only '57.19

SALE PRICES ON All
CARHARTT CLOTHING

Use of school bulldlngs in the
Meigs Local School District for
commercial events wlll cost firms
or Individuals $100 a night.
. This was one of the decisions
reached Thursday night when the
district's board of education met In
regular sessionattheCentralOff!ce
in Middleport.
At the request of this year's junior
class spolll!Or. Jeanie Taylor, the
lunior class was given permission to
stage its annual junior-senior prom
this year on a boat, ."The Belle of
Louisvj]le" OI!APrillOtatherthanin
the high school auditorium. Mrs.
Taylor pointed out that decorating
costs alone at the high school exceed
the cost of renting the boat for the
evening prom.
·
The board hired five substitute
custodians, Robert Couch, John
Elias, Jeny Fields, Jeff Miller and
Charles Wllllarnson, II, and a
substitute bus driver, Kathryn
Deskins. The re;;Jgnation of Opal M.
Grueser·as a substitute teacher was

~
~

,A.

$63

MEN'S QUILTED

Flannel Shirts
Colorful plaids with warm nylon
Quilt lining. Sizes S, M, L, XL and
XXL Frne for Christmas giving.

Men's 119.95 Shirts .... 115.50
Men's 123.95 Shirts .... '18.60
Men's 125.95 Shirts .... 120.00 ·
Men's 126.95 Shirts .... 121.00 1
HOWARD MILLER

lection lor Christmas giving!
-Men's Regular and Extra
Large Sizes
-Boy's Sizes 8 to 20
REG . 122.95 to 179.95
·
SAtE

$}8

~·

$6 39 to $2959

WORK CLOTHES

WINTER
JACKET
SALE
Exc'ettent style and color se-

35 TO

A:.

· Sale Priced

Comp lete selection of insulated coveralls
bi b overalls, 1ackets and coats, dun :
garees, vests and hoods. Regular and
extra large sizes. Regulars, Shorts and
Talis.

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
Warm one p1e ce su1ts an d 2 p1er,e
warm up s for littl e g11l s and boys.
Some w1th coordina ting s k~rt s .

I

Reg. 18.00 to 137.00

95

QUALITY

Grandfather

Clocks

- Cherry, Pine and Oak
Cabinets
-Cable or Chain Wound
- Assorted Chimes
·
-Moon Dials

A Quality Piece

Of Furniture!
SAVE UP TO $200

days until

•

enttne
2 Sections, 14 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedio Inc:. Newspaper

government said it would not attack the evacuation
vessels, the new shelllng showed Israel was
determined to keep hitting at Arafatand his Palestine
. Liberation Organization loyalists until they leave the
besieged city.

satd.
The lull in Beirut followed an upsurge of violence
Thursday that involved the U.S., British and French
contingents serving with. the multinational peacekeeping force along with Lebanese troops, Christian,
Druse and Shiite Moslem rtlllitlamen phis· the USS
New Jersey, the world's only battleship.
The battleship's barrage of about 40 rounds of
five-Inch shells shortly after nightfall silenced Druse
gunners who shelled the vulnerable U.S. Marine base
at Beirut's airport for about two hours.
"Everything quieted down very rapidly" after the
naval bombardment, said Marine spokesman Capt.
Wayne Jones, 40, of Cape Girardeau, Mo. He said it
remained quiet throughout the night.
The 1,350 Marines and , the 100-man neighboring
British contingent sutfered no casualties in Thurs(lay's hostilities. But the 2,®man French force
suffered two fatai!ties, one from rocket shrapnel and
one by unknown assassins.
Since the multinational force began their duties In

September 1982, there have been &amp;'J French soldiers
killed along with '1:57 U.S. swervicemen.
Meanwhile, the Syrian foreign minister is to be
joined by his Lebanese and Saudi Arabian
counterparts Sunday in Damascus for talks to set a
date and location for resuming a reconciliation
dialogue with Lebanon 's warring leaders.
The nine main leaders held a five-day conference
under President Amin Gemayel in Geneva last month
In an attempt to work out a new power-sharing
formula that would ensure P.,aceful coexistence
among Moslems and Christians.
The talks ad journed to give Gemayel time to
consult with the United States, France, Italy and
Britain on ways to ensure the withdrawal of Israeli,
Palestinian and Syrian forces from Lebanon.
In another development , Donald Rumsfeld , U.S.
Middle East eiiYOY, arrived in T~l Aviv Thursday
night !or meetings today with Shamir and Defense
Minister Moshe Arens of Israel. Rumsfeld talked
Thursday in Damascus with President Hafez Assad
of Syria.

Board ·approves sum for
commercial use . of buildings

CAR HARTT
BROWN DUCK

BOYS SHIRTS
collection sale priced

..A.
..,

~14 39 A.

A .great Christmas gift! Fancy blouses,
. ta1lored blouses, oxford cloth, prints
and llorals.
Misses Sizes 6 to 20
Extra Sizes 38 ·to 46

a1 y

State and privately owned radio stations in Beirut
said the 1¥..-hour Israeli assault began at 11: 30 p.m.
(4: 30 p.m. EST) Thursday.
·
The radios said tbe entire harbor area where the
departing guerrillas would mass for evacuation was
shelled by gunboats.
Arafat's men lowered their anti-aircraft guns and
The Israeli naval shelling came as arrangements
fire at the gunboats, which had sUpped with
returned
entered their final phase to evacuate Arafat and his
lights
out
Into firing positions near Tripoli's Rabbit
4,1XXJ JoyaUsts from the northern Lebanese port city of .
"
Island,
about
one-half mile from the harbor,
half a million Inhabitants on Greek ships flying the
according
to
the
radios. They said two guerrilla posts
United Nations flag.
sustained damage.
.
The five ships, which were to leave Greece to take
In Tel Avlv, the Israeli mllitary command said its
Arafat and his fighters from their last Middle East
gunboats shelled guerrilla positions and roadblocks
redoubt Monday, are to be escorted by U.S. and
and scored accurate hits.. Palestinian fire caused no
French warships,'the Greek government satd.
.
casualties
among Israeli crews, the communique
Although Prime Minister Y!tzhak Shamlr' s Israeli

,6

BLOUSE SALE

SALE

knits. velours, westerns. Our entire

its fourth naval attack in a week against PLO
chalnnan Yasser Arafat'sloyalists in TrlpoU while a
new cease-fire agreement stilled the fighting In this
war-tom capitaL
.
The cease-fire was proclaimed Thursday night
after representatives of the Lebanese army, IslamJc
Druse and Shiite anti-goverrunent militias met In
Damascus with Foreign Minister Abdul-Hallm
Khaddam of Syria.

.
Emeraude, . Wild Musk, Nuance, '
Muguet, Jontue, Charlie. Intimate, Sophia, Stetson, Musk For"='
Men and Chaz.
.
.'
REG. 12.95 to 118.00
SALE PRICED
•W

LADIES'

Sizes 8 to 20. This Christmas sale
includes sport shirt s, flannel shirts,

By FAROUK NASSAR

COLOGNES,
PERFUMES,A
POWDERS, LOTIONS. GIFT~
SETS &amp; INDIVIDUAL BOXES.

wear Includes Jackets, Blazers
Slacks and Skirts in woOl
Blends. Corduroy Jackets.
.REG . '21.00 ... SALE '16.79
REG . 130.00 ... SALE '23.99
REG. 140.00 ... SALE 131.99
REG. 160.00 ... SALE 147.99 .

116.00 ... Sale 1 12.79
120.00 ... Sale 1 15.99

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 16, 1983

Associated Press Writer
BEIRUT, Lebanon lAP) -Israel today mounted

•

Sportswear
Sale
Famous Boston Traveler Sports-

Meigs, Southern· girls win...Page 3 ·

Israeli gunboats shell PLO positions

A

Sweaters ....... '13.20
Sweaters....... '15.60 '="
Sweaters....... '17.90
Sweaters ....... '19.40 A
Sweaters ....... '23.30 ~

A:.
. REVLON &amp; COTY
A
Fragrance Sale ·y

LADIES'
BOSTON TRAVELER

Winter Coats
&amp; Snowsuits

SALE

Voi.32,No .174
C..pyoighled 1983

I

CHILDREN'S

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

e

Men's Sweaters

MEN'S SHIRTS
In cluded in this sale: Van Heusen dress shirts,

How to cook a Meese.~.Page 2

Weather

accepted.
Ph1lllp R Harrison was given a
supplemental contract as boys'
freshman basketball coach for the
current school year. Donald Ray
Richmond "'as hired as a custodian
for the current year. A resolution
was amended extending full time
benefites to substitute non-rectified
employes working 60 consecutive
days In the same position and
Shirley Wilson was given the benefit.
of the amendment as a substitute
bus driver.
professional leave was given
John W. Blaettnar to attend the Ohio
DECA ·Executive Council meeting
!li Columbus, Jan. 9-10.
The board agreed to delete
ceramic tlle in the girls and boys
shower rooms in the renovation
project at the junior high building in
Middleport and agreed to add stair
treads to the - mustc room stairs. ·
Sprinkler system work to be done
depends upon a written variance
being approved by the appropriate

state agency.
James Miller, Meigs High School
superintendent, presented a report
on the recent North Central evaluation giving areas of commendations
and areas of recommenda lions
suggested by the evaluation.
Assistant Supt. James Carpenter
presented a financial statement on
the bus rerou ling which went into
effect in the fall. According to the
· report, the district ts realizing a
savings of$7.19 per day as a result of
the rerouting. State Department of
Transportation representings In
presenting the rerouting plan last
fall had stated that savings would
run Into thousands of dollars.
However, CaJ1lenter reports that
the recommendations and figures
used by those representatives did
not take into consideration kindergarten andspec!aleducationroutes.
The board established its organizational ·and ~Jar meeting for 7
p.m. on Jan. 12 before concluding
(Continued on page 14)
CLEANING UP SPENT SHELU&gt; - U.S.
Marines carry empty 105mm tank sheD casings
Friday morning as they clean up their poslllon. The

SALE BOYS'

'Lee

Marines fired their M-oo tanks at Druse militia
positions after they fired on·the marines at the edge of
Beirut airport. (AP Laserphoto),

Spencer retrial set Jan. 23
A retrial for Pamela Spencer, was improbable that continued
Syracuse, charged with Involuntary • deilberat!on would result in ~
manslaughter and endangering unanimous verdict.
Judge'Knight had given Prosecuchildren, has been set for 9 a.m. on
Jan. 23, Common Pleas Court Judge tor Rick Crow and Defense Attorney
Steven Story two days to discuss the
Charles Knight said this morning.
results of the first trial and to work
Spencer's first trial on the charges out plans they Intended to follow.
Monday night, when the rtllstr!al
ended Monday evening with a hung
jury resulting in a declaration of a was declared, Prosecutor Crow
reported that it was his intention to
mistriaL
The jury trial had gone on for a seek a new triaL He filed a motion for
week and jurors det!bera ted more that new trial Thursday afternoon
than four hours before declaring it and on Friday morning Judge

JEANS .A:.

Prewashed, blue den imstraight leg . ~
style. Ooys slim and regular sizes 8 i
to 12. Student sizes 26 to 30 .=:.
lengths 30 to 36.
' ¥

A.

S19.95 LEE
JEANS ......... s14.88 w
$21.95 LEE
JEANS.-........ '15.88 '111:1'

A
A,'

Knighl set the date.
It has been indicated that a
change of venue might be required
for the retrial since the first trial did
receive extensive media coverage
and securing jurors to hear the
testimony might be a problem
tocat!y.
Judge Kn!ghl indicated lhis
morning that he, of course, will have
to make decisions on any motions
flied in the future on the case by
Story, the defense attorney.
·

'111:1'

Heavy snow blows into Texas,
Midwest stays in deep freeze
By DANA FIELIJI'&gt;
... Associated Press Writer

DRESSING UP THE CAPri'OL.:.. \Wiliiiii,OOO
1IJI* u• 1,010 omiiiiMIIIII, &amp;he .ti.S. Capitol
CilrlltmM Tr8e Iii framed by lbe- .....,nil'• dome

llholily lifter Up!lng ceremonies 'l'bunda~i evening.
Iii a U-loat ,White Spruce, II'OWD In the
Cheqamepll Na&amp;lonal Fore.! In Wlilconaln. (AP
Luerpholo).

'lbe

tr:ee

After dumping snow on Colorado
for 34 straight days, the stormy
autumn of '83 turned its fury on
Texas and Oklahoma today with a
half-foot of highway-sUcking snow
and clutched the Midwest with
wind-chilled temperatures down to
43 below zero.
A stubborn storm in the Great
Lakes, meanwhile, turned into a
snow machine, with a foot of snow
that fell Thursday at Marquette,
Mich., topped by 4 more Inches
today.
From Utah to Minnesota, records
were lalllng as fast as the snow.
The 3.9 Inches that hit Minneapolis
and St. Paul on Thursday brought
the year's total to a record 95.1
inches; In Omaha, Neb., the total
stood at a record 64.1 Inches; and 21
inches of new snow at the Alta ski
resort near Salt Lake City set a new

record for November and December of 284 inches.
The death toll from the1J8SI few
days' weather rose to lO, includlng a
woman found apparently frozen to
death less than 20 feet from a mobile
home In Mandan, N.D. , and two
people who drowned In central
Pennsylvania In flood-cau sing raiv
that finally subsided Thursday.
Travelers' advisories warning of
icy roads went up today for nearly
all of northern Texas and Oklahom;;
as tile southern storm lumbered
across the region. Wichita, Texas,
got 6 Inches In six hours by early
morning, whlle Amarillo had 4
Inches and Waurika, Okla., was
quickly blanketed by 5 inches with
more falling.
To then9rth,!t snowed today In au
or parts of Michigan, Wisconsin,
Michigan, Illlnois, Indiana, Kentucky, West Vlrglnla, western
Pennsylvania and western New

I

I

York.
Even light.snow was treacherous
in wind thai swept across the P ta Iris
and whipped il Into "a good
old-fashioned ground blizzard "
said Mike Bender, a Nation~)
Weather Service for&lt;X:asler tn
Fargo, N.D.
This morning's official tow was 23
below zero al Bismarck, N.D. But
the wind chill made it feel like minus
43 at Mason City, Iowa, and
Fairmont , Minn ., minus 35 at Des
Moines and minus 20 in the Twin
Cities, while piling the snow in to
6-foot drifts that forced road crews
off · highways In southwestern
Minnesota.
"We're going into the kind of
pattern where you struggle to reach
zero during the day, " said forecas ter Rich Naistat in Minneapolis,
adding that another cold blast was
"coming straight out of the Yukon."
(Continued on page 14)

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