<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13967" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13967?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-10T18:30:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45067">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c5c6905b57d5d59ced83c5c4a99fc698.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f7a7fa07ffd0b764b791b9d5a73085d4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="43680">
                  <text>Weclnas~y,;o-mber

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page--14- The Daily Sentinel

21, 1983

Scottown man shot to death; Arctic weather glazes roads.;
Ohio gets storm blast tonight
Point woman dies in wreck
Severe Storms Forecast Center in
Kansas City. Mo., said today. He
said the new cold wave would push
Arctic weathet already blamed across the Plains Into the Ohio
for · 36 deaths relented just long . Valley and hang on "_through the
enough today to glaze highways weekend."
from Texas to Indiana with freezing
. In Oregon, a small' but
rain that cauSed ''wrecks every·
storm
stalled qozens ~f vehicles
where," while a new blast of cold
Tuesday
night ·In the WlllamE:tte
sent the mercury In Montana down
Valley.
dropptnil
only about 2 Inches
to·33 below 2l'ro.
of
snow
but
prompting
"many,
Tile eastern reaches of a.' snow·
many
calls
tram
people
concerned
storm that rumbled down from the
Rockies · today spread through about their kids on Ulelr way home
Nebraska, where 10 Inches fell by from rollege" for Christmas, said
late Tuesday, and South Dakota, state pollee Maj. Tom Phllllps.
Kansas, Indiana and Missouri. Schools In Polk County were closed
Forecasters predicted the snow today.
would probably hit Ohio full strength
tonight as II took aim on the Great
Where snow wasn't a problem
Lakes region.
today, motorists In states along the
"It doesn't look too bright for the Rocky Mountains storm's southern
central United States," Hugh edge faced treacherous conditions
Crowther of the government's as warm air turned precipitation to

JJrDANAf1EUlS
Assoolated l'resB Writer

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP) -Ail.Ohio man was
shot to death behind a bowling alley where he worked,
and a Huntington police detective said today that he
had no suspects In the case.
Rick sandman, 31, ot Scottown, Ohio, was shot at
least twice with a .25-c~llber handgun about 9:30p.m.
Tuesday, said city pollee detective Steve Zicketoose.
Sandman's hody was found about an hour later by
co- worker at the back door of Colonial Lanes 1n
downtown Huntington, Zickefoose said.
Zickefoose ·said Sandman had been sent to repair
some broken eqUipment at the bowling alley but did
rot return, and a co-worker was sent to find him.
Sandman was pronounced dead at. Huntington
.Hospital.
Meanwhile, a Point Pleasant woman has died as

a.

the result of Injuries she sustain~.'(] this morning in a
tw~car accident on Route '2 near South Fork,
according to a report s~ed by Mason CoUnty
Coroner John Grubb.
'
Elva Mae FuJk;;, 53, Route 2. was transported to
Pleasant Valley Hospital by Point Pleasant EMS and
was pronounced dead at 7:40 a.m. by Dr. Sam
McNeil, Ule report stated.
The other driver involved irt the accident ." Carl R.
Birchfield, 40, Route 2 1\pple Grove, was also
transported to tl1e hospital, but he was treated and
released, an emergency room spokesperson said.
Fulks· 1!1!1 Dodge and Birchfield •s 1976 OldsmobUe
were totaled In the accident, the sneriffs spokesper·
son said. A description of the accident is not available
at this time, the spokesperson added.

Scipio Township _ __:_
(Continued tram page 1) .
Jones questioned possible environmental concertls by the trustees
and Kennedy said he felt that was
not a concern. He did say that he felt
the trustees were for same reason
"afraid", and suggested It might be
a political concern since he admitted
thereweretwoorthreefamilleswho
were opposed to the development
project.
Road allocation
County Engineer Phil Roberts
reported the federal and state
allocation In rural and secondary
road funds for 1984 Is " $72,775
bringing the total amount availabl~
to the county to $l56,&lt;m after Jan. 1.
This amount Includes committed
1983!unds.
Tile money is avallable for
upgrading designated road irn·
provements on the basis of 25
percent matching funds . Roberts
said that he plans to get going on the
required engineering work for a
program of resurfacing and replac·
Jng guard ralls on the designated
road so that the county can take good
advantageofthe allocation In 1984.
Mental Health Board
Richard Hunter, Marton County
administrator of the Mental Health
Board, currently on "loan" to the
Melgs-Gailla-Jackson Board, ex·
plained the board is in Ule process of
drawing up budgets, is acting in a
cost conscious manner, is seeking
new ways to operate more effec·
lively, and is In the process of
recruiting a new director.

I

Area death

Frank Cheesebrew

I

He asked commissioners about
their feelings about the program
noting that the board is open to
changing course of direction arid to
input about a new administrator. He
said about 50 applicants for the
position have been received and that
two are currently being
Interviewed.
Hunter said the board is unsure as
to whal the status is with the
commissioners of all~ counties,
that lis wants more contact, and it is
reluctant to hire someone. It In the
end, there Is a concensus that
commissioners do not want to
participate.
He said the board Is interested In
knowing If the Meigs Commission·
ers are Interested In It, to which
Jones said his primary concern Is
whether mental health Is Interested
In Meigs County. citing the withdra·
w al of mental health money from
Meigs County asanexampleofthelr
lack of concern at a time when Meigs
had the only levy.
Hunter emphasized the mental
health board is "open to do whatever
is necessary" t\) get support from
the Commissioners. In reply to a
question from Jones, he said there is
no talk about a levy'at this tllJie.
Joiles said the commission's
position was one of wanting an
effective opera lion, cost conscious
and one Interested In serving the
needs of the people of this county. He .
said under those conditions, they
would look forward to working with
the board, and besupportatlveofthe
program.
Joan Tewksbary, R. N. of the
Meigs County Tuberculosis Office
met with the Commissioners to
discuss her budget for 1984. She
asked that hospitalization be added
for the three employees at a cost of
$3,656.88, despite the fact that the
office Is operating $12,00) over levy
receipts.
TIIesuggestlonofOrionRoush,a
board member, · was that some
services be cut so that the
employees could be provided hospl·
tallza tlon. Non-contracted county
employees are not provided Jnsu·
ranee, the Commissioners pointed
out, and providing that agency with
thecoveragecouldcausedissentlon
they said.
Roush suggested that It could be a
decision for the board and not the
Commissioners. and that he and
Tewksbary will confer with their
legal counsel for a ruling. Tile
proposed 1984 budget for that office
operation is $68,383 for 1984.
Anticipated levy receipts for the
year are $61.327. Additionally, Mrs.
Tewksbary is seeking $2,00l from
the Meigs County Health Department for food service expenses to
supplement funding.

rain -which froze up again as It hit'

'

peskY

Mayor's court

Five defendants forfeited bonds In
the court ot Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
They are Daniel E. Rairden,
Hartford, W. Va., $450, posted on a (Continued from page 1)
Wllts will be In an attached new brick
driving while intoxicated charge;
and
stone three-story structure. ·
driving while under suspen·
Enclosed walkways on each floor
sfon; $50, following too closely, and
will
connect the old bullding to the
$50, failure to appear In courl;
new
and anelevatorwill be installed
Brenda L. Quillen, Mason, W. Va.,
open
on all three floors. Six of the
to
$450, driving while Intoxicated;
will
be specially equipped for
Wllts
Larry E. Clevenger, Michigan, $50,
handicapPed.
the
left of center; Iris E. Thomas,
Dexter, $450, driving while Jntoxl·
cated, and$50, nooperator'sllcense,
and Von S. Stewart, Jr.~ New Haven, Weather forecasl
. $450 driving while Intoxicated.
Tonight, rain, possibly heavy at
George McDaniel, Middleport,•
was given a lOday jail sentence on a times. with steady or slowly rising
disorderly charge and Dennis W. temperatures.. Thursday. rain
Harris, Pomeroy, was fined $425 likely. High 45 to 50 then tempera· ·
and costs and was given a three day tures falling In the afternoon. The
jail sentence on a charge of driving outlook for Christmas is fair and
· cold with high In the upper teens.
whlle Intoxicated.
Chance of precipitation: near 100
Two defendants were fined and percent tonight and 60 percent
five others forfeited bonds in the Thursday.
Pomeroy Mayor's Court Tuesday
night.
Fined were Susan Jetter, Racine,
$63 and costs, traffic light violation,
Five calls were answered by local
and Richard 0. DeMoss, Pomeroy,
units
Tuesday, the Meigs County
$263 and costs, leaving the scene of
Emergency
Medical Services
an accident.
reports.
Forfeiting bonds were Joan
At 10:51 a.m., Middleport went to
Bangia, Youngstown, $46, posted on
Hamilton
and Front Sts., for John
a speeding charge; James Hudson,
Motley,
taken
to Veterans Memor·
Middleport, $49, speeding; Victor
Ia!;
Ractnea\10:
33a.m .. took Grace
Young, Jr., Pomeroy, ~. speed·
Welker
from
county
road 28 to
ing; Elvis W. Peck, Pomeroy. $63,
Veterans
Memorial;
Racine at
disorderly manner, and Dale Peck,
12:
49
p.m.
treated
Carrie
Waters at
Pomeroy, $113 intoxication.
the head start school, ro transporta·
lion; Racine's Fire Department at
2: 56 p.m. went to the Russell
Cummins home for a chimney fire,
damage being contained to one
Mayor Fred Hoffman reminds room with some water damage
Middleport business owners all resulting; at 6:11p.m. Racine went
amusement machine licenses ex- to Bald Knob for Steven Lush, taken
pire Dec. 31, 1983. All coin operated to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
game machines and juke boxes are
required to be licensed through the
village with these fees being used Veterans Memorial
for support of recreation In the
Admltled..Lowell McNickle, Ra·
COIJlmUnity.
cine;
Grace Welker, Racine; John
License fees are $50 per year for
Motley,
Middleport; Charles Riggs,
each juke box and $50 each for the
New
Haven;
WaldSmlth,Pomeroy.
first three amusement machines
Dlscharged
..Nellle Price, Mark
and $25 each for each machine after
Mollohan.
the first three. TIIese Ucer~es are

sm.

Emergency runs

Tilere will be a parking area on the
south side of the complex with the
road to be constructed to It between
the Meigs Medical Building and·the
front of the children's horne.
The hot meals, health, trans porta·
lion, recreational , social and
therapeutic programs to be offered
wiU help the elderly and the
handicapped to matn'taln an Independent lite style.
Following · the groundbreaking
refrestunents and a luncheon were
served. Invocation was by the Rev.
Father Anthony Glannamore of
Sacred Heart Church.

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND (AP) Tile
winning number drawn Tuesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "Tile Number," was 154. In
the ''Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was sm.

·
new Crystal
Caddy Bouquet. Fresh
~s, holly and flowers
11' an elegant sculpted-in·
France cryslal cad'dy.
Great for ice, candy or ,
snacks. Call us today.
We'll send it anywhere in
the country.

I
1

I

I

Brought Back
By Popular Demand .

Sunday, Dee. 25.

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHO
106 Butternut

Pomeroy, Oh.
PH. 992-2039
or 992-5721

Racine Village ·and the Racine
Gas and Service Co. have been
namE,'(! defendants in a $150,00)
lawsuit filed In the United States
District Court of Southerii Ohio.
Tile suit is the result of a May 14,
1981 accident In which an employeof
a company consiructlng the sewer
system was burned when natural
gas reportedly Ignited In a manhole
on Sixth and Vine Sts. One of the
aUegatlons In the complaint is that
Racine Vlllage Is owner and
successor In part or whole of the
Racine Gas and Service Co. Council
in 1981 rejected a g!ft of the gas
company.
Tile summons todistrtctcour:twlll
be given to ~·village solicitor for
filing an answer in federal court.

GIFT
ERTIFICA

1

iI "TEXAS SCRATCH
PA~S"- I
Sl.OO
I
20 BOUND NEW

ANN'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Route 7

Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
667-6485

•1
I
I
I

BILLS

Perfect as a Stocking Stuffer
or a Last Minute Gift

iI

i1he

j

1

I
~B· Fa1 mers I
Bank II
·

'

.

.

'

.

Member FDIC

Com•priity · Owned B•nk

II

'----------------------~

Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Charles Knight was
present for council's recessed
session conducted conducted earlier
this week. He administered the oath
ot office of Mayor Charles Pyles,
' who is to beginning his 21st year as
head of the town and to Margie
WoHe, clerk-treasurer; LarryWoHe
and Dan Sayre, council members /
and Ben Petrel and Bobby Roy who
have · been named to the Racine
Boaid of Public Affairs as of Jan. 1.
1984.
.

Acc~dents

4 Shopping Days Till Christmas

at y

"revenues attributable to Zimmer wlll be offset"
against the rate Increase. the PUCO said.
Tile PUCO ruled that C&amp;SOE collects $13:7 mlllion
from Its customers for building Zimmer.
Til at will result in the company getting a net Increase
of $16,998,000 from Its customers, the PUCO.sald.
Laura Yeomans of AOPJC, the Athens-based utility
consumer advocacy group, considers the PUCO's
decision to grant to C&amp;SOE what it did a plus for her
group and consumers In the region. Tile group
sponsored a public hearing in Athens in November In
which consumers testified before the PUCO about
their concerns over the rate hike proposal.
"I'm concerned that we:re going to an increase.

•

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

which would be a hardship on some people," she said.
Yeomans said C&amp;SOE had requested , according to·
her group' s figures, a $99.6 million Increase.
"We have some problems with those figures," she
said. '-'Those that 1 heard on the radio this morning
were wrong. "

Tile reason ~million was allowed as a net Increase
was partly because her group fought four Increase
'proposals that were part of the rate hike.TI!reeofthose
proposals were denied by the PUCO. she said.
C&amp;SOE originally sought to Jncre..e the customer
charge from $4 to $5.25, Yeomans said. as well )IS
Increase the rate of return because of the risk
Zimmer's construction presented to the utillty. TIIose
twoproposals were shot down by the PUCO, In addition

to a request to increase r.he rural line extension cost to
consumers from 1 percent to 2 percent .
The company did win a req uest to increase its low
use rate. TI!at rate, Yeomans explained, is a 12 ~
percen t year· round discount lO consumers if they keep
their usage level below 700 kilowatts during the
summer months. Yeomans called it a "great
incentive'' for conservation.

Despite that setback, Yeomans said the denial of the
other three proposals "s hows that the PUCO Is
definitely listening to consumers.
"I think it's a sign that If consumers come out and
speak out again st increases. it makes a difference,..
she added.

50°/o

waterline on the south end of street commissioner was approved
Johnstown Road, a community and the marshal was Instructed to
block grant project, and approved report on the status of his health
the third readltig of an ordinance Insurance at the next meeting.
It was announced that. trash
amending chapter 15 of the codified
ordlnilnces of the village pertaining pickup In the vlllage will be delayed
to water system'rules. Rules were . onedayforthenexttwoweeksdueto
suspended and an ordinance was the holiday season. Trash will be
approved to appropriate additional picked up on Tuesday and Wednes·
moneys for 1!«3 so that books of the day the weeks following Christmas
town will be In the black at the end of and New Years since the landfill will
be closed on Dec. 26 and Jan. 2.
the year.
Tile finance committee reported
Council agreed to pay for one- half
that
the committee, the mayor and
of the costs on a new battery for the
clerk
will meet at 6 p.m. Monday,
bac)dloe with the board of public
Dec.
26, to work on the 1984
affairs to pay the other half. The
purchase of health Insurance for the appropriations.

Police investigate three minor wrecks
Tile Pomeroy Police Department . occurred In the Sears parking lot. A
reports that three minor accidents 1976 Plymouth- owned by. Dorothy
bender accidents since Tuesday McGiffin was .s truck In the Jell rear
afternoon.
fender. Damage to the carwa:s over
The first was Tuesday at2: 24p.m. $150, and the ' Incident Is under
on East Main Street in the Kroger investigation.
parking lot. A car driven by David
Huddleston, Racine, was west· · The third accident took place
bound on Main and was turning Into Wednesday evening at 9:25 at the
the lot, when !twas struck by a 1980 traffic light by the Pomeroy-Mason
Dodge driven by Dwayne Stanley, bridge. A . car driven by Thomas
Route 4, Pomeroy, which was Collier of Racine, stopped for a red
turning out of the lot to travel east on light and was strilck from behind by
Main. Moderate damage was done car driven by Dale May of
to both vehicles, and no citations Franklinvllle. New Jersey. Light
damages were incurred to both
were Issued.
Wednesdayat5:34p.m .. aWt·sklP automobiles.

blamed on icy conditions

An A!.hens woman was cited for
(allure to control her car following
an 8:40a.m. accident Wednesday on
Ohio 7 In Sallsbury Towll\lhip.
Charged by theGallla-Melgs Post
of th!! Ohio Highway Patrol was Usa
W.Flower,25.
F1ower, according to trQOpers,
lost control of her vehicle on an Icy
Ohio 7 and struck another car In the
side driven by by Jerry L. Wade
Sr.,47, Galllpolls.
Flower's vehicle was not dam·
aged and Wade's received light
damage.

OPEN THURS. &amp; FRI. 9:00-8:00
SATURDAY 9:00-6:'00

To

•

Racine villag~, · gas company
defendants in $150,000 action

Co~ncll tabled bids for laying a

25°/o

Stories on Page 8 .

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 22, 1983

Conunission of Ohio to grant only part of a rate
increase request bY Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. translates into another $2 per month on
consumers' bills.
TIIat figure is based on an average family using 650
kilowatts per month, said a spokesperson for the
Appalachian Ohio Public Interest Campaign
(AOPJC).
Tile ·PUCO Tuesday granted a net rate Jncrease of
~.8 million for the utility, which serves 23 central and
southern Ohio counties, including Gallla and Meigs.
But because C&amp;SOE continues to charge consumers
for Its part of the construction of the controversial
Zimmer nuclear po~er plant near Cincinnati,

Chris.tmas,

•

II

Christmas potpourri

Jl!lls week's decision by the Public Utilities

Send the
Crystal Caddy
Bou9uet for

.

Last Minute
1 Shoppers

Tornadoes top Logan

Decision means higher electric hills

r---------------.--""'·---.,,I
I

FamHy Medicine Page 7

Voi.32, No. 17B
CoPyrighted 1983

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.~,

ATTENTION

See letters oo Page 2

e

FORTilAT
'HARD TO SHOP FOR
PERSON

Business awners'
license reminder

Gum diseases

Story on Page 3

Pomeroy housing_ _

Rev. Frank A. Cheesebrew, 67, a
resident of Vinton, died at 3 p.m.
Monday in Holzer Medical Center.
He was born Jan. 16, 1916 In Point
Pleasant, W.Va., son dt tbe late
Claude and Madeline McDaniel
Cheesebrew. He was reared by his
maternal grandmother, Mayme
McDaniel.
Mr. Cheesebrew was present
chaplain with the rank of lieutenant
for the State Naval Mllltia serylng
Its headquarters at Belghtler Armary In Columbus. He was past
available
at the Friday
mayor'sfrom
office8
Monday through
district commander of District
a.m. to 4 p.m.
Eight, American Legion, where he
served two terms as state chaplain.
He was a life member ot VFW Post
Free clothing day
4464 ot GaUlpolls.
Mr. Cbeesebrew was presently
The Meigs County United Methoserving as minister of the North
dist Church Cooperative Parish wlll
Gallla Charge, United Methodist
sponsor a tree clothing day at Heath
Church. Prior to that, he had served
United Methodist Church In Middle·
as minister of the Shawneeport tomorrow tram 9 a.m.io 7 p.m.
Straitsville Charge nine years and
Free
clothing will be avallable for au
the Racine, Chesl\_ire and Patriot
members
of a famlly.
Charges for several years. He was a
member of Middleport Lodge 363 ,------------------------~
F&amp;AM of Middleport and the
Evangeline Chapter 172 of the
Eastern Star.
Survivors Include his wtie, Fern;
two brothers, John, of Point
Pleasant and Arthur of Columbus;
a sister. Mrs. Louzetta Dunlap of
Columbus ; several nieces and
'
nephews.
Funeral services wUl be conducted at 1 p.m. Friday at the
United Method! Church at Middle·
port. Rev. Ben Edwards, district
superintendent of the United Meth·
odlst Church, will officiate. Burial
will be In Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Humph·
rey Funeral Home at Shawnee
after 7 p.m. Wednesday and any
time Thursday. Tile hody wllllle in
state at the church beginning at 11
a.m. Friday. 'Milltary graveside ·
services will be conducted by Drew
Webster Post, American Legion.

I

.

Public speaks out

HELP - 1bere were 100 underprivileged Meigs boxes of food being distributed to the families who
COWJty families helped with food and toys by the .picked them up Wednesday are Jaycees, kneeling, I to
arutUal Christmas program of the Meigs Jaycees with r, Bruce Reed aud Brian Conde; hack, I to r, Mitch
distribution made Wednesday night in the auditorium Meadows, Dick Owen, Robert First aud Larry
of Pomeroy ViDage Hall. Shown with some of the Grimes.

A tractor-traller was slightly on Ice. Another car, driven by Ricky
damaged after It skidded on Ohio 7 L. Cremeans, 20, Rt.1, Rutland, then
yesterday and sideswiped a pickup struck Maleslc's vehicle In the side.
The vehicles sustained light
in Orange Township.
The sem! driven by Arthur damage.
A pickup truck driven by Steve A.
Batten, 48, Rt. 1, Newport, Ohio,
headed south struck a vehicle driven Blackburn, 20, Prosperity, W.Va.,
overturned on Ohio 124 In Salem
by Brian Duffy, 20, Syracuse.
Duffy's truck received moderate Township due to icy conditions.
. The patrol reported Blackburn
damage In the 6: JJ a.m. accident.
Icy road conditions were blamed was traveling west on the road and
for another two-vehicle aceldent at · lost control of his truck, which
9:30a.m. in Salisbury Township.
received light damage In the 6: 45
The patrol said a car driven by a.m. accident.
Kathy S. Maleslc, 27. Athens, spun

•

OFF
ORIGINAL PRICE
ON ALL MERCHANDISE
IN THE STORE.

STARTS TOMORROW
Tl,ursday, December 22nd

Name Brand Clothing at Dl1count Prlce1

Post

ON rHE "T" IN MIDDLII'ORT

"Give A
Gift Certificate"

STORE
HOURS

Mon.-Thuro. 9:30 To 6:00
Fric!aY 9:00 To I:QO
· Soturdaj 9:00 Te 6:00

'

,....... . , llllrlbullalll'nin tile left Cadtf
Flnt, Dehhle Mr . MW, Marla~ lllldS.Weaver wlllt hl!r-. JCI8bua.
I

•

TREATS-Members of Feeney-Bennett
128,
American Legion, Middleport, Joined by auxlHary
members, were busy Wedn~ night preparing
some 500 bags of CIUidy to be given with apples by

Santa to youngstesrs of the community from 5 to 7
p.m. Christmas Eve at the post home. Saturday
afternoon Santa and post members wDJ visit the
candy lnllnnary with treats. Colli of the project, an .
annual event, was more than 1600.

�Comment
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVI1I'EIJ TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

Alb

f!l! m~

·

~'-"'T'" II"T"''!!!! c:::::lu=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publisher
"

PAT WHITEHEAD
A88lstant Publisher/Controller

Thursday, December 22, 1983

2-The Dally Sentinel
' Pomeror M1dll1port, Ohio
Thunday, D1~111 b1r 22, 1983
Pagl

words are to the new class." By the
new class she means to designate
the people Who run the media, and
who, at levels as separated as
university faculties and radio DJs,
'
tend to set the public mood.
Mrs. Kirkpatrick, In a recent
extended Interview ·published In

Encounter magazine, confesses
that possibly her primary frustra·
tlon, as a woman trained In the
academy, Is the repeated taUure of
the word-men by whom sbe Is
surrounded to Inquire Into the
emplrtcal results of their precon·
celved Ideas. She gives two exam·

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
,News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and &amp;he American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than310 word.
lonJ. Allletten are &amp;ubject to edltlna and mu•t be•lgned with name, addrn• and
lelepboae amber. No unatrned letteNJ wUI he publiAhed. Letters should be lD

rood

&amp;~e, ~res&amp;lnJls&amp;a~.

not personalities.

A nnoral in bad news
To those of philosophical bent there is always a moral in bad news, such

. as recessions.

• It Is claimed, for example, ihat In bad tlnnes people draw closer, mend
· their materialistic ways, and rediscover old vtrtues . .
"I didn't realize how I had been Indulging myself," people say. "I've
&lt; l~arned my les!!Qn" is a typical refrain.
In business, Companies seek to become lean and efliclent. They cut aw~y
··. the overpaid bureaucracy, eliminate sloppy practices, Insist on a day s
iwrk for a day's pay, close outdated plants and seek to raise the quality of
; products.
•
As earnings fall, the chairman assures shareholders In the ann11a1 report
• :that the company is really stronger than It looks because "we have used
: this opportunity to position your company for the future. "
·: · It takes only a glance at the newspapers of mld·1982 to recall the grim
· mood of the time and the resolutions that were made. And It takes but a
:: glance at the latest news to get the feeling some of the fervor has already
• .worn off.
. ·
.'
· That conclusion may be reached by viewing some of these temptations:
- A box of chocolate golf balls for close to $200. Timepieces, whose chief
- function is to tell the time of day - a free service of the church steeple or
~ bank window- for$12 ,00l. And men' sdress shirts. $95 off·the-rack rather
• than custom made.
.
· "'The consumer is basically tired of holding back," explains a retail
.afullyst at the investment finn of Baer, Stearns &amp; Co.
WASIDNGTON - In August
Evidence of the analyst's verdict began appearing months ago - in 1978, Nguyen Cao Ky, the dapper
;i\1\v-ca r sales, for example.
ex·premler and air force chief of
An analysis of 1983-model domestic sa les showed buyers order~ luxury South Vietnam, led a delegation .of
. Items ...,. adjustable steering columns. power door locks and wmdows, • Vietnamese ref~gees protesting
· reclining seats and more- at a rate never ,seen before.
welfare cuts in Orange County,
In contrast. the analysis, by Ward 's Automotive Reports, showed the Calif.
basic AM radio was installed In just 14.6 percent'of new domestic cars,
Ky made an emotional appeal to
lowest ever recorded.' Buyers wanted stereo sets; 43.3 ·percent specified county officials. "We come to .thls
them , a new high.
country with a big zero," he said.
The latest report of the University of Michigan's Survey Research "and we really have to do our best
Center adds its confirmation. "Consumer sentlnnent," it said, "was more to start a new life."
favorable In the third quarter 1983 survey than at aoyother tlnnedurlngthe
Ky was then running a liquor
prior decade."
.
store In the county but, according to
The record levels of optim ism, It said. "point toward a robust recovery m law enforcement officials, he was
sales of vehicles, houses and large household durables through mld·l9St" no struggling businessman. He fled
"The pace of recovery," It expla in s. "will not depend on further gams m Saigon in 1975, they say, with a lot
the WILLINGNESS of consumers to make large discretionary purchases more than "a big zero." Informants
.... "The willingness is there, tlle researchers found.
have told Investigators that Ky
· The problem ahead, they suggest , is not at all one of willi ngn~ss , but of brought at . least $8 to $10 million
the ability to finance the big purchases without a resurgence m Interest worth of gold, diamonds and
rates, which you may recall w'a s a big reason for grim moods in the recent currency with him when he escaped
past.
the fall of South Vietnam.
•
Though he is iniscast as a poor
refugee, there is evidence that he
has · started "a new life" in this
country. A confidential report by an
organized crime task force, dated
October 1979, identified Ky as the
'head of "The Association." the

&gt;·

By SCOTr WOLFE
RACINE - An entire team effort
led by Dennis Teaford's best career
perlormance, 2~ points, and a 20
point el!ort from Rod Littlefield,
lifted the Southern's Tornadoes to a
convincing 68-55 triumph over the
Class "AAA" Logan Chieftains
here Wednesday evening at Charles
W. Hayman gymnasium. In claimIng the victory, Southern Increased
its record to 6.{) and raised Its home
winning streak to 49 games.
The loss dropped Logan to 4-3
overalJ. Southern reached another
milestone, It now owns a 2.() record
against SEOAL teams. Earlier the
team defeated Gallipolis In its
season opener.
Key Ingredients to the Southern
win was consistent team play,
however, an additional spark came
from outstanding tndlvldual efforts
froin Teaford and Littlefield. South·
ern's pivot man , Teaford, poured In
24 points In an awesome offensive
effort from the low post, hitting 11 of
12 field goals for a 92 percent
shooting cl!p. In addition, he
grabbed 11 rebounds. Meanwhile,
Littlefield passed for as many
points as he scored, canning 20
points overall and contrtbutlng nine
assists.

pies, one of them from recent
history, one of them from ClllTellt
history. Consider Pol Pol.
"A good many of tbe symbol·
specialists In the U.S. and Western
Europe ... believed that the applecheeked guerrillas following Pol
Pot, with their pretty morallsUc
statements of intention, would offer
a better deal to the people of
Cambodia than they received under
Lon Nol's more or less conventional
muttary dictatorship."
She. can understand tbelr believIng this at the outset. "What I
cannot understand Is the absence of
any genuine anguish, or any
soul-searching, mind-searching
and hlstory·searchlng, when these
people became aware that two or
three million Cambodians were
slaughtered or starved to death by
Pol Pot's men."
So It has gone In this, the bloodiest
century. Jean-Paul Sartre, Mrs.
Kirkpatrick reminds us, the domi·
nant Intellectual figure In post-war
France, In a famous arUcle In 1952,
that loyalty to the Soviet U1o.lon and
to the Stanllnist French Communlst
Party. was the first priority of
"moral man." Until the day he
died, Sartre was thought by many
to be a political sage. Whydowenot
team?
Is It that easy? Precisely the point
is that It is not, because Ideological
predispoSitions get ·In our way. That
Is why more space was devoted to
our "criminal" venture In South
Vietnam (Jimmy Carter's words)
than to the crtmes of the men who
conquered South VIetnam. It Is so
with Nicaragua.

:Letters to editor
ERA preview

It is a good thing some of us have
other Information besides what we
get in our daily newspaper. Regard·
lng the ERA vote, in an editorial
entitled "Who . killed the ERA?"
they said the feminists blamed the
Republicans. but that they directed
their ire at the wrong target.
The Democrats are responsible
for llmiting debate on the ERA and
, blocking any attempt to amend the
measure. It should have had a
thorough airing in Congress. but the
House Democratic leadership took
the proposed amendment s to the
' floor under a rule usually reserved
fer non-controversial bills. Debate
was limited· to 40 minutes. Not a
single a mendment was permitted.
.I t was one of the first bills
·. · Introduced In Congress.

Some of t~e members wanted
some a mendments to the bill. ERA
opponents cited three major reasons for their opposition. If passed,
it would have been used as a
•jpro-aOOrtion device."
It would have prohibited such

organizations as the Boy or Girl
Scouts or even single sex schools.
II would require ·American
women, in the event of a draft, to be
conscripted into the m!litary and to
be ordered to serve in combat.
Hon. Sam Ervin, Jr. says ERA Is
dead. He said: " If ratified the ERA
would crucify America. woman·
hood on the cross of a dubious legal
equality lmd a specious legal
uniformity." - Edna Edwards,
Minersville, Ohio 45771.

Sharing yourself, good gift

'

Give yourself the gift this Christ: mas of sharing your time to a little
· ·: bo)o· who is very deserving. Little
· . ; A,ndy Lambert spent last week In
. : . Philadelphia so that the doctors
: .. there could see If he had Improved
· . : · any at all. The 'report was good and
· the news was encouraging. He' has
• come a long way in three months
..

but stU! needs a lot of therapy.

&lt;.

Won't you please call them and
~ donate just two hours a week to
; • !Jt,)plng him become a normal child
·: . like our own children and grand·
~ •· cJ!Ildren are? Some volunteers help
. · •oul every day and I am sure they
::. ·lift rewarded lor their kindness and
-; ·:compasSion. It takes 18 people
: :: ev'ery day to minister to his

. ..
...... ' .
.... . .

beautiful little boy ·and !I really
touches your heart. Not only do we
owe olir tithe• to God's workbutour
time also. Lots of days they are so
short·handed for help that it works
them far beyond the 12 hours
therapy that he needs each day. The
scriptures say In Malachl3 verse 10
that God will open the windows of
heaven and pour us out a blessing
that we can't contain ifwewlllonly
repay our tenth of tithes to Him. So
won't you prove Him true and call
for an appointment to help o~t•
Make yourself and someone else
happy. It Is very reviardlng. That
phone number Is 742·2545. - Dolly
Woods.

~

..

-

-

"

·Don't knaw any better

Gayle Price's views on child
: :~ abuse In Meigs County (Abused
Taxpayer Dec. 4) bear an alarming
:·. resemblance to statements made
·: by Edwin Meese ill concerning
~~ • ungry children In Amertca. I

t :;·'

t

would have to agree with Senator
John Glenn's statement, that the
tragedy Is that people, who make
such statements, really don't know
any better. -Mrs. D. M: Dobbins:
Portland.

wealthiest, craftiest and most
powerful Individuals In Southeast
Asia.
They did not arrive empty·
handed; they were able to salvage .
an astonishing amount Of loot !tom
the wreckage of their country. One
government official said that U.S.
banking facilities at the reception
center in Camp Pendleton, Calif.,
processed as much as $300,00l a day
In gold transactions alone.
"Some of the Vietnamese refu ·
gees ... brought, literally, suitcases
full of gold teals," the task force
report states. One witness to the
Camp Pendleton scene recalled
seeing not just suitcases but lrunks
full of valuables lugged · into th~
United States by the Vietnamese
big shots.
Yet the gold processed through
the banks was "probably trivial,"
the r eport suggests, compared to .
the hidden wealth that wasy
smuggled into this country from
Vietnam or stashed In other
countries, notably France.
Some of the more ruthless
members of the South Vietnamese

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Marshall University's basketball
team wll! try to get back on a
winning track tonight when Clncln·
nat! Invades the Henderson Center.
Coach Rick Huckabay's Herd
hasn't played since dropping an
81-78 decision iast Thursday at
Morehead State. The loss left
Marshall with a 5-1 record going Into
tonight's game.
Cincinnati, meanwhile, has lost
seven straight games after winning
Its season opener. The Bearcats
latest defeat came TuesdaY night
when they lost 2&lt;1-11 to Kentucky.
· Cincinnati held the ball against
the powerful Wildcats and !railed
11·7 at the half. Coach Tony Yates
wouldn't say whether he planned to
try slowdown tactics against Mar·
shall, which dropped an SS-81
overtime decision at Cincinnati last

hierarchy - the taste of power still
In their mouths - were not content
to retire to a suburban life,
Amertcan style. They allegedly
formed a subterranean network
and continued the plundertng that
they had learned In tbelr oHiclal
capacities In Saigon.
Declares the ta,sk force report:
"Ky's organization, which Is Inter·
national In scope, is Involved In
extortion, drugs, loan-sharking,
gambling, prostltulon, smuggling,
welfare fraud, assault and
murder."
Almost all of this crlnnlnal
activity Is contained within the
Vietnamese refugee communities
across the country. And though tbe
vast mal.ority of the refugees are
law-abiding, they are reluctant to
lalk to police about The Association.
"As In any tight-knit ethnic
community," one report com·
ments, "the people refuse to talk to
law enforcement personnel because of fear, friendship or tbe
threat of some type of personal loss
which could result !toni opposl!lon
to 'The Association.' "

season.
Huckabay, who said he didn't
expect Cincinnati to hold the ball
against Marshall's pressure. manto-man defense, said he was eager to
get back Into action.
"We should be rested and ready to
play," he said .. "I know that I am
. ready to get that losing taste out of
my mouth."
Huckabay said he had watched
the !ape of last year's Cincinnati
ganoe so many times he had nearly
worn it out.
"I am very concerned that we
come back !tom our loss at
Morehead and play our game
intelligently, " he said.
Sam Ervin, the number two
scorer on the Marshall team with a
12.5 point average, may miss the

Hunger test __;._____._,;______;__A_rt_B_uc_hwa_._ld
Assuming Ed Meese Is right and
some people in soup lines are only
there because the food is free. and
assuming President Reagan was
correct when he told the New York
DaUy News it's only logical that if
there were people who cheated on
welfare, there would also be those
who cheat on cadging meals, the
question arises, do you feed the
hungry and stonewall the ones who
can afford to pay for their food?
·
Unfortunately up until recently
there has been no way of checking
up on those standing In front of soup
· kitchens to certify If they truly
needed food or could pay for it.
But Professor Heinrich Apple·
baum, head of the Mother Hubbard
Institute · of Nutrition Has just
developed a foolproof hunger test.
ThP tests would be monitored by
a government Hunger Strike Force.
As each person lined up in front of a
church, the Salvation Army or
volunteer food kitchen he would be
asked to respond to the following
,questions on a printed form :
"Name, Social Security number,
present address (If you have one. If
you don't, address where you slept
on previous night) .
"List three references (not In·
eluding members of . Immediate
family ) certlfyhing your good
character and willingness to pay for
a meal If ypu could afford one.
"Plea~ answer the following
questions:
"1. Circle the last Iinne you had a
decent . meal: a) 24 hours, b) 48
hours, c) one week. (Note: II YOu
have had a decent meal within less
than 24 hours, please leave the line
as you wlll not be permitted to enter
the soup kitchen.) .
"2. ChOOse on of the following to
describe your hunger pangs: a)
rumbling In the stomach, 6)
dlzzlness, c) depression, d) nausea,
e) anger.
"3. Do you have any coins In your
pocket at the present time?

''4. List all members of your
family who have been to a soup
kitchen In the last 12 months.
"5. If you are under 3 years old,
did you come here of your own free
will or were you forced to a parent
or guardian?
"6. Are you a chronic freeloader?
"The following is "t math quiz.
You have 10 minutes to finish It.
"1. If an American dairy farmer
is paid $35,00l a year not to produce
milk, how many dairy farmers w!ll
it take for the government to pay $1
billion in agricultural subsidies?
"2. If an agrl·business receives
$200 million a year for not planting
wheat. corn or ' soy beans, how
much money can It shelter In taxes
under present IRS rules?
"3. If the government cuts out
five mlll!on children from Its free

lunch program at a cost of 50 cents
per child, how much money would It
save by cutting off seven million
children?
"This Is the essay part of tbe test.
In 200 words describe why you feel
you should get a free meal. Please
Include anecdotes of people you
have stood In l!ne with who
shouldn't have been there because
they could afford to pay for one.
These anecdotes will be forwarded
to the White House for future
presidential speeches on the hunger
problem In America."
Once the test is completed It
would be' handed to a member of the
Hunger Strike Force w~to would
feed It Into a computer and decide
whether the person waiting for a
plate of spaghetti.and two-day-old
bread would be pem)ltted to enter

·?~

....

...

r-d=e=fe=n=sl=v~e_.T~=he=y-al~~so~~ha~d-1_l_s_te_a_ls_,__R_Ic_.h_m_o_n_da_l_e_.-_ _ __

soBo~~;, ..,

giime because .of the Ou. If the 6-5
EiV!n cannot play, he will be
replaced by 6-8 Don Turney,
Huckabay said:
La Verne Evans continues to lead
Marshall scoring with a 22.7
average. Other Herd slaHers are.
expected to be 6-7 center Roberi
Eppes, 6-5forward David Wade and
6-foot guard Sam Henry.
Last night, Georgetown defeated
Western Kentucky, top-ranked
North Carolina crushed Dartmouth
1()3.58, No. 3 Houston stopped
Cal·Santa Barbara 89·79, No. 11
Louisiana State downed PanAmeri·
can 81-70, No. 16 Memphis State
defeated Texas Tech 53-41, No. 17
Wake Forest edged Marquette 71.65
In overtime, and No. 20 Michigan
rolled over Rutgers 97·69.
At Milwaukee, guard Lee Garber
scored eight of his career·high 18
points ln . overtlnne to lead Wake
Forest, 6-0, over Marquette. It was
Wake Forest· s first road game of the
seasOn aod tbe third time this year
Marquette, 5-3, has lost In overtime.
In East Rutherlord, N.J., junior
Leslie Rockymore had a career·
high 26 points and sophomore
Richard Reliford added 20 as
Michigan, 8-0, jumped out to a
31-polnt lead, ll)en coasted to
victory. .
.
After a three-minute stall, guand
Chuck Franz scored a three-point
pl!J,Y with three Seconds left In
overtlnne as lndlaoa edged Kansas
State 56-53 at Bloomington, Ind. The
winning basket by the fifth-year
senior, who was benched for a week
because of academic problems,
the 14th tie of the game

_~·-man . '·. Roush

2 2~
• ·~· 111111
~~ ·
1.0.2: D. Teaford 11·2·24: Deem ~2-8:
Littlefield ~10-J); Schultz 1-0-2; Connolly
1.0.2: K. Teaford ()M: Hm 1.24: Cardone
Q.O.(); Greathouse ().{).(); S. Teaford 0-0-0.
Totalo l:&gt;JB-418.
LOGAN f ll.'ll _
&amp;&lt;1- , D. Concad
12

1

4-0-8:
Farrar 6-0-U; D. J . Conrad tJJ.:.!; Hood
()M: \llrtght 3&lt;1-6: Stu111 ebeam 3~: Myers
8-J.Jg: Yock O&lt;w.

... I ....

Rodgers OM. Totalo

!6-HS.
Scol'(! by quarten:
So"thern
........................... .14 ~ 18 16---£8
t.ogan ..................... .- ......... 14 14 IJ 14- 55

.::::::::::..:.::;:::::::::::::::::::::::=========1--··
REAL ESTATE
Three acres with a nicely constructed
concrete block home · 26x60, 3 bedrooms, one bath, 12xl5 living room
and 24x24 family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel oil furnace with facilities for woodburner. 12xl5 block
storage building, 20x30 block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, country setting, J/2
mile east of Chester. Ohio.

•

Home National Bank

949-2210
-::-=:=-:~~==---::::=~::;==----::.:~~:;;;;;:--:~:;Mj~;:,;;M~

"f-+n

for the Do-it-yourselfer! .
AUTOMATIC WIPER .
INTERVAL REGULATOR ·.

2999

Ends bothersome
dry-wipe squeak!

ORQUE WRENCH

•

-

0

·~·-~-~--:!.

• Settings of 10·150 ft.!lbs.
• Precision accuracy to ± 4%
• Also for metric settings

AUTO

REPAIR

Upto1 1/ 2
of suppor t.
justs from
to 1 ..

MANUAL

Installs on any·ve·
hicle to · prov ide , __
intermittent delayl
wiper aclion . Ad ·
justable from 2·20

CREEPER
,
Hardwood body.
padded h ead
rest. ny l o
wheels . ·

rry

MECHANICS
ROLLER SEAT

gee
CRIMPER AND
~~CONNECTOR KIT

•see

• WILL LIGHT MORE
THAN 30,000
BEFORE IGNITOR
NEEDS
REPLACING
• BURNS
HOTTER
THAN OTHER
PROPANE
TORCHES
• USES REGULAR
PROPANE

'

'

•
E~fERT

Southern !'a li .t"•
foo' r,·,,e unans25 turnovers, 15 assists and nine
cu
wered.points. then wen! on to break fouls. Deem had four steals. Logan
the camel's back for a !i(J.J/ lead.
had 19 rebounds, seven bY Keith
including se\'eral points bv, Tony
Myers, 11 steals, 25 turnovers, three,
,.
i)ej&gt;m and Kevin Curfman. Finally
assists, and 18 fouls The Chieftains
a t the buzzer, Littlefield canned one
Larry Conrad""'. D. J . Conrad had
last bucket as SHS led 52-41 .
three steals eac...
Southern was consistent the
Besides the dual ·!fort of Littlefourth .quarter, substituting freely,
field and Teaford, Tony Deem
a nd slowing down its offense In the
played well and added eight points.
later going. Logan's Keith Myers
Keith Myers and Jack Mlllerled
and Jack Miller continued a
Logan with 19 and 12 points
desperate attack for the Chieftains.
respectively.
but their effm1 fell short.
Coach Howle Caldweil's Whirl·
' southern shot a sizzling 25 of ~0 winds pulled away from an 18-15
from the field for 63 percent.
halftime lead to bounce the little
canning 11 of 21 the first half. From . Warriors 35-29 · In another close
battle. Kelly Grueser paced the
the line the Tornadoes managed a
hot 18 of2lfor86percent. including
winners with 11, Mark Jarrell
a perfect 10 for 10 night by
added 10 and Todd Adams five.
Littlefield. Logan shot a warm 26 of
Leading Coach Klrk Lehman's
57 clip for 45.6 percent, while
team was Mike Hood with 11 and
cas)!ing in on three of four attempts
Jim Ward with nine.
Coach Carl Wolfe's undefeated
from the foul circles.
· SHS collected 25 r ebounds. 11 by Tornadoes lock horns .next with
Teaford, nine of which were
Ross·Southeastern next Friday at

. Landstrom's Original Black Hills Gold Creations®

WHO'LL. ~I.L. ME WHAT
:t WANi TO HEAR

.

'•

• IGNITES
PRESSING
BUTTON!

.

No. 22F·50

/

Available In

0

... ..

the
Intermission
16
markers,
IncludingTeaford
seven ofhad
seven
irom the floor, while Rod notched 10
points.
Second half
During- the opening two minutes
of the second half Logan pulled
within three points, 38-35, but

MAKE IT A
LANDSTROM'S

the free food fac!l!ty.
Those who perjured themselves
or failed to give complete answers
would be turned over to the Justice
Department for prosecution under
the ".Truth In Hunger" Act.
Applebaum claims the test will
have a chilling effect on hunger
cheaters, and he hopes to have It
distributed to every volunteer food
kitchen before they serve Christmas dinner.
.
[n the meantime If you know of
any famlly who Is planning to cadge
a free Christmas dinner this year,
and can afford to buy their own,
please call your nearest FBI o!llce
Immediately. You will help the
Reagan administration In the war
on hunger cheaters, a war we all
have to win before the next election.

I'P BETTER $1"A~ LOOKING -FOR
ANOTHER ECONOMIC AI)'I\StR

?ERSOHNEI.? F\~tl Me A STRON't;,
Kff'UTABLE, ~LL-iNfOli:MEV, CLE~­
TI-\INI&lt;ING, A~TICULA-re ECONOMIC.

An exciting game deve Io,...u
"""
early In the contest as both clubs
took turns on the scoring merry-go·
round. Southern scored the first two
points, but Logan quickly retaliated
for the first several ties and lead
changes. When the smoke finally
settled on the first period shootout,
the score was tied at 14·14 .
Most of the second period was
just as close, but the muc~ smaller .
Tornadoes utilized their quickness
to overcome the distinct · height
advantage.
Logan's lineup flaunted three
men over the 6·1 but the comblnalion of Teaford and Littlefield
picked away at the Chieftain
strength. Littlefield threaded sev·
era! passes to Teaford, who then
di-opped it off the glass and through
the hoop.
Fine ballhandling and shooting
from Littlefield also provided the
necessary boost as the hosts pulled
away for a 34-28 halftime lead . At

Marshall faces UC

Vietnamese 'godfather_'_____.:_Ja_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
name given to a Mafia·llke underworld organization whose tentacles
reach Into Vietnamese communi·
ties across the country.
My associates Donald Goldberg
and Corky Johnson have spent
several months Investigating the
Vietnamese Mafia. From pollee
reports throughout the United
States, they have pieced together
the story of an ethnic crime
organization that Is growing In
power and terror.
Ky looks the part o( a Vietnamese
godlather, with s teel·cold eyes and
a penc!l·line mouth tha t give an
intimation of menace. He Is known
among the Vietnamese to be skilled
at intrigue. Ky refused to talk to my
reporters, but a family member
vociferously denied' all the allegations. There Is simply " no truth" to
the charges, the relative said.
Ironically, the U.S. government
brought the nucleus of The Assocla·
lion to this country when it alrl!fled
virtually the entire superstructure
of the Saigon government here.
This first wave of Vietnamese
refugees Included some of the

The Daily Sentinei-Poge-3 •

Middleport, Ohio

Teaford, Littlefield lead Southern victOry

St. Jeane of the U.N.-ll ___w_illia_m_F_..:...B_uc_kley_J._r.
Jeane Kirkpatrick, our ambassa·
dor to the United Nations, serving
now what is generallx accepted as
her ·last session there, wrote a few
years ago, "What wealth is to a
capitalist, what organization Is .to
the old-style political boss, what
manpower Is to the trade·unlonlst,

Pomeroy

.)¥8}
~

•Pendants
•Pierced
Earrings
*Rings

ALL LANDSTROM'S 20°/o

• RUGGEOL Y BIJtLT FOR
LONG LASTING SERVICE

· No. 24·50
No. 24F·50
No. 70·50
No. 73·50
No. 74·50

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

A RfAl FUfL SAVfR

POMEROY, OH.

MASON

THIRD AVE.

1704 EASTERN AVE.

119·W. SECOND AVE.

ROUTE 33

. MON.·SAT. BA.M·.-5:30 'P .M.
PHONE 446·1813

MON.·SAT. 8 A.M.·7 P.M .
PHONE 446-4204

MON.-SAT 8 A.M.-5;30 P.M.
PHONE 992·2139

MON.-SAT 8 A.M.-5:30
PHONE 773·5511

POl NT PLEASANT AUTO PARTS
515 MAIN ST.
PHONE 675-1520

MON.·SAT.

8 A.M. 'til 5:30P.M.

2

2~~~~C~~~N :~E : .
-

1.

�f'lage

Daily Sentinel

4

Pomero -Middleport, Ohio

Thunclay, December 22, 1983 ·

r······--------------Die erson, Maxwell named top rookies 1
CHRISTMAS LAYAWAYS
Calif.
II
MUST BE PICKED UP
game for the 6-foot.:J, IDpound apiece) and Raiders nose tackle BUI .
speedster out of SMU. The biggest Pickel. New York Giants safety
adjusbnent was necessary tor · Terry Kinard, Cincinnati comeropposing defenses, trying to flgllre back Ray Horton and San Diego
linebacker Mike Green (l apiece).
Rookle of the Year by The outawaytostophlm.
While controversy swirled around
Associated Press.
Linebacker Vernon Maxwell, who
But the fast and powerful Los helped lead the Baltimore Colts Baltimore's No. 1 draft selection,
quarterback John Elway (who
Angeles Rams ru.nner may h~ back to th~rtm of respectabllity In
had even more Impact Inhls first pro~amed today the National refuSed to sigl\ and was dealt to
season than any of the others on the Football League's Defensive .Roo- Denver), Maxwell came In quietly
and . went about the business of
rookie award list that Includes Jtm Ide of the Year by The Associl!ted
validating Kush's decision to make
Brown, Mike Dltka, Franco Harrls, Press.
him
an Instant starter at right
Tony Dorsett, Earl Campbell and
Maxwell, Ba.ltlmol'!''.~ secondoutside
linebackeP.
George Rogers.
round draft choice out 'Of Arizona
"Vernon probably enjoys the.
Dickerson, named Wednesday as State, where Frank Kush had
the winner of the annual award, coached before taking the Colts' game more than most players I've
carried more this season than any reins, received39ofthe&amp;lvotescast
other back 1n NFL history, ~ by a nationwide panel of sports
times. He also led the league In writers the sports broadcasters.
rushing with l,llffi yards, most ever
Darrell Green, the Washington
for a rookie.
Redsklns' kick-returner and comer·
And, more Importantly, he led the back, was a distant second with 14
way as the Rams Improved from a votes, cornerback Danny Walters of
2-7 record 1n 1982 to 9-7 this year, San Diego had six and cornerback
good enough for a wild-card playoff Lionel Washington of St. Louis had
date with the Cowboys In Dallas next five.
Monday.
The rest of the votes went to San
There seemed to be almost no Diego cornerback G!ll Byrd (4),
period of adjustment to the pro New England cornerback Ronnie
Lippett and defensive end Greg
Townsend of the Los Angeles
Raiders (3 apiece), Philadelphia
sa(ety Wes Hopkins; San Diego
TVC STANDINGS
linebacker Billy Ray Smlth and
&lt;TVC Game~ Only)
Atlanta defensive end Mike Pitts (2

ANAHEIM,

(AP) _ Eric

~ckersonhasjolnedastar·studded
gtoup of National Football League
players who were named Offensive

seen," Kush said early in the season.
"He wants to make every tackle.
That 's the epitome ot' a defensive
player."
"Not being a No. 1 draft choice
made mewani to succeed that much
more, mademethatmuch hungrier
'cause l thought I was a pretty
decent linebacker In college. I
· thought I deserved to be a No.1.
"I expect a lot from myself. When
I get on the field, !expect torilakethe
big plays, to be a deciding factor In
the game. II I'm not, I get down on
myself and that makes me work
even harder.''

I
I

'
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thunday,DeaNnber22, 1983

The Dally Sentinal

r a•

5 _
•
•

.

t'

.

•
;
~

OPEN TILL 5 CHRISTMAS EVE

I

I

.••

'

•'

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

I

I'

•:

I

'

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

I

'I

·-----------------------·

•

.

"
'

•'

Most Store
Late Nights

us

De!

Til Christmas

I

•
T Vc standtngs
Teun .....................................
, .............. ................ W.
P. OP
1'rimblE'
7 0L 487
373
Belpre ...................................6 1 &lt;L'&gt;2

:rro

Alexander ... ;......................... .6
Warren Loca l .........................5
Ne~ . -York ............................ , .. 3
Fed.·Hucking ................. .... ,... 3
Meigs ............ ......................2
Vinton County .......... ...... ·. :.. .. .2
Well&lt;oton ..................... , ....... 1

406
372
412
438
397
396
469

1 470
2 414
4 389
4 &lt;100
5 406
5 311)
6 375

Miller .. .. . . . . . . ............. ....... .0 7 l34 491
(ReN!nr~)

Meigs ..... .......................... ... .. 6 1 :128 283
Belpre ... ..................... . .. ........ 6 1

Warren Local ................. ........ 6
Trimble ......................... ........ ,
Alexander ...................... ....... A
Vinton County ................. ........ 3
Nel.-York .................. ............. 3

:m l38

1 329
3 343
3 324
4 283
4 243

246
293
295
287
266

Fed. ·Hocklng ..................... , .... 3 4 317 315
MUlo&gt;"
.... .. ............... .l 6 234 321

Wellston . ........ .. . ........... .. .. 0 7 222 368
Gante~~ Dec. 2'7
Federal-Hocking at Eastern
Miller at Crooksville
WeUston at Jackson
Game Dec. 2:8
Logan at Alexander
Games Dec. av
Alexander- at Trimble
Belpre at Vinton County
Federal-Hocking at Mlller
WPilston at Nelsonville-York
Warrt'n Local a t Meigs

r;:::=========::::;i
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 115-!NO)
" Dlvb;lon of Multimedia., Inc.

cancelled
The weekly gunshoot sponsored
by the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department at their Bashan buildIng wUI be cancelled December 24
and December 31 due to the conflict
with the holidays, The next match
will be Saturday evening, January

7.

16K Standard BASIC

Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Va Hey Publishing Company · Mul"
II media, Inc, Pomer oy, Ohlo45769, 9922156. Second class poslagf" paid at Pomeroy, Ohto.
MPmber: The Associated Press In·
land Dally Press AssOciaton and the
American· Newspaper Publishers A.s·
soclatton, National Advertising Repre·
se nt ative . Branham Newspaper SaleS.
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send addrt-ss to The
Dally Senllnf"J. 111 Court St .. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION R.~TES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Wee k ............ .... .... ..... ......... $1 .00
One Month .................. .............. $4.40
One Year ........................... .... . $52.80

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Da ll y ............ ..................... 20 Cen ts
Subscrlb&lt;&gt;rs not desiring to pay the car·
rl€'r may remit In advancf' dir ect to
The Dall y Se ntl np) on 3, 6 or 12 m onth
basis. Credi t will hf' glvpn carrier each
month .

Guns hoot

..

Save
$80

•

• Typewrlter.Style Keyboerd
• 8-Color Graphics • Sound Effects
• Attachee Easily to Any Color TV

~m

Programs in BASIC or with our ready-to-run Program Paks to play
gamljs, manage finances, more. Expand anytime wnh disk drives, a
printer or·telephone communications. 1126-3026 TV and ~rogram ~aka olllra
BUY WITH CONFIDENCE! TRS.SO Color Computers meet rigid quality-control
standards, and they're IN STOCK NOW.• along with the top-quality software,
'prtnters and eccesaortn you need to complete your holiday 'l hopplngl
Oisney characters and software © 1983 Walt Otsney Productions

Micro Color Computer Cut 58%
TR&amp;-80 MC-10 by Radio Shack

Save•7o
4.915 ~~~:~:;:

No subscripti ons by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service is
available.

i MArL SUBSCRIPTIONS
·
Inside Ohio
13 WPe ks ...... ............... .. ........ $14.04
26 Wee ks .............................. ,. $27.30
52 W('Cks ............... ....... :.. ....... $51.48
Outside Ohio
13 W('e ks .".................. .. , ....... ,. .. $15 .21
26 WPe ks ............ .................... $29 .64
52 Weeks ............ ....... ....... ... .... S56.21
1

•.,"

Catalog

.
•
•

.

••

Gift-Priced Stereo
Music System

NoW:ar0 rid's Biggest,
The "
ffi ,.
Best Salad Bu e_
&amp;diet Coke ~~
y, •re gon11a
,:.,'
! •em,)ust for
the taste
of'ena1

Clarinette®-112 by Realistic

Lightweight!

Reg.
199.95

Comfortable!'

Save on lour gilts in one! AM/FM stereo radio, 2-speed record changer,
stereo cassette recorder/player and 18"-hiQh speakers. 'I•" headphone
jack. Removable dust cover. 1113-1216

2-for-1 Price! 2-Way Speaker System

For the active music lover on your list! Earcushions seal out noise and seal in rich
dtJal.speaker sound. Adjustable headband.
'1112-186 Bottery .,...

40% Off! 6-Band Portable Radio

Nova"-4 by Realistic

Patrolman• SW-60 by RealiStic

Save•4o

Half Price

39~

--T--.
.
-··--·--T[l~a/lyouca.neat -Wl

~-r.

::cr~ ' Port~:. I
and diet Coke® I
IJ 99
'
'J.OO Off

'

EC-402

A:r'o!m
14.99
'

I

lrn;iudeS all-you-can-eat
Includes all-you-can-eat ' Salad Bu~et, baked
- •
Salad Butte\ , baked
potato , roll wtlh butler
'
11AM·41'M 1111011 .-Sot.
potato . roll with butler. ' and anv dessert. cannot
used with
' Cannot be used wtth
be usell with other diS·
cannot.be aunts . Ta"' not
otner discounts. ~ax n~t
counts. Tax Aot included .
othtd~c At participattno ' included . At parllclpa\100 ' At participatinG stea~mc u nouses caupen
steakhouses . Coupoll
nouses .
lorlft'l ·polly s\zt.
pd toronY p~rty sltl · ' tor any portY silt·

eeupoo.,...

:!

........
-

-

---

I
................
.,. . ..........

sciThOC&lt;Jc&gt;·COIO~·
.

- - - - : : :..
-:"""" "d\111 COCI.col&amp;" are tr

·dlol C&lt;*•

one~ ·

Upper River Road
-(Across From The Air(:ort)
Gallipolis. OH.

...

Shack .

Cut

5!J95

79.95
Each

Wrap up a pair for someone and save $80. The 8" woofer
and ported enclosure combine lor solid bass. 21 12"
tweeter delivers soaring highs. 19 x 103/• x 7 1 /2~ 1140-4031

Solar-Powered Calculator

T-Hone o31"""

Tile World's

Reg.

• Reel Walnut Veneer-Not
VInyl or Pleetlc
• Decorator Molded Grille

Poltcf4!1r:!!~!!';;;stealr/aoUH In the u.s.A.!

'

17!~4.95

14915

..r-~iiiii

.

28o/o0ff

Save . •so~

od! Help yourself to
Dieting n~verJaf~da~fet with everythmg f~m ms'
an incred•ble a a
fresh melon to mus roo ' .
macaroni salad to soupth free refills on diet Coke®- - • • •

·.

Reg. 99.95

One man can't build a football stadium.
But one man can supply the energy and the
drive~and inspire the teamwork-to make it ·happev
That's why in just a few short years, West
Virginia watched as Mountaine~r Field went from a
questionable dream to a 50,000. seat reality.
.
As people who helped Mountaineer Field
take shape, we know just how much Jay Rockefeller
contributed-as Governor, as. a West Virginian, as a
sports fan.
.
Through his office, Jay coordinated an effort
that cut through construction bottlenecks and worked
with local authorities to speed the stadium's progress.
:..:.1 At the same time, he personally committed himself to
raising much of die necessary fund~ privately-Jay's dinner raised more than one million dollars which -helped
build a _first class Facilities Building.
Now that our modern 50,000 seat stadium is a reality, we want the people of West Virginia to recognize
how invaluable Jay was in the whole process.
.
.
We were there. We saw it. And we know how his commitment continues-including his successful effort
to raise more than $600,000 for a special endowment fund for football and basketball.coaches at WVU . .
That's why so many people who are grateful for Mountaineer-Stadium are grateful to Jay Rockefeller.

VHF·Air/HI • VHF-Lo • UHF
6-11 MHz ShortwJYe • FM • AM
Give a world of listening excitement! Tunes·potice, aircraft,
weather and more. All-band fine-tuning and dial light pushbutton. AC/battery operation. 1112·779 aonortn .,...

Save '13-AM/FM Clock
Radio With 0.9" LED

•

CB With Channel 9 Switch
TR~27 by Reaflst~~

Chronomattce-230 by Realistic ·

40%

1077

7!JI5

Reg. 17.95
• 4-KeyMemory

----.:::.:..:_:...~ • Billfold CU.

. • Save $7.18 on this stocking stulferl
Never needs batterlee, 8VIIn runs on
indoor light. N65-689

I!!Mtery Backup • Battery Sentinel'"
An ~nlng gift! Baltely Backup
runs
and 118rm If AC lalla, .
Battery Sentinel LED vrarne of week
battery. SnooD control. 1112-1537
lleckup~-

Reg. 131.95
Fun and road security In one package!
Instant ICC Ill to Emetgency Ch. 9.
B1a 40odlannel LED dlaplay. lighted
S/RF power meter. 121·1534
-

..

'•

·~
H

RAY E. BLAKE, JR.

JOSEPH R. ELLIOTT

JAMES H. HARLESS

ROBERT L KOSNOSKI

GASTON CAPERTON

BERNARD FOLIO

ELMO J. HURST

JOHN MANCHIN

.

•,

•

JOHN D. CATALANO

CARL GAINER

TRACY W. HYLTON

MAX C. MESSENGER

SAM CHICO, JR.

FRED HADDAD

RUSSELL ISAACS

WILLIAM E. MORTON

ALLEN D. COPPINGER, JR.

JOHN HARDESTY

CHARLES T. JONES

SAMUEL D'ANNUNZIO

--.

..
..
•
'

.•••
.

•

•

VAUGHN L. KIGER

•

......... r.d ,.,.

. 'I

Pai~ for by

Friends of Jay Rockefeller
Russ Wehrle, Treasurer
.

.

... '

~· -

,.

\

. ----· ··- ·- ·- - ---··

-·

-~ . -

··-

I
~

... .

�The

December

Ohio

Sentinel

1983

December 22, 1983

Tornadoettes lose first game

ANOTII.ER BASKET - Southern's i\my Uttlefield cans one of 10
baskets against the Athens Lady Bulldogs In Wednesday'schamplonshlp
game of the Athens Invilational Tournament. Deosplte here 24 pobtts,
Southern suffered its first loss this season, 4641. Providing defense for
.Athens Is Ann Stemeckert (35 ). Scott Wolfe photo.

HT Wildcats post
5th victory~ 81-37 .
Hannan Trace overcame an early
-and had 11 rumovers.
5-2 Hannan lead in the fir st qua rter
For Hannan, Billy Holley took
and never looked back Wednesday
high man honnrs with 15, while
as the Wildcats postedan81-37win in
Jinny Adkins added eight. Statistia non -league game at Hannan .
cally, they were 15 of 48 from the
Wildcat mentor Mike J enkins
floor (31 percent) and sank seven of
later inserted his subs intotheganne.
18 tries in free-throw shooting (38
who contributed a total of 31 points . percent). Hannan had 20 rebounds
for the winning effort . Several
and 27 rumovers.
members of the Wildcat squad
The win brings HT' s overall
scored more than 10 poin ts in the
record to 5-1 on lhe season.The
game by playing less thana full ha lf.
Wildcats return to action Dec. 29 in
.fiT went on from a 1J -101ead at the
the Gatlia County Holiday Tournaend of the first stanza to a 33-19
ment a t North Gallla.
advantage at- the 'half. Hannai;l
Pirates lose
broke int o the double-figure column
North Gallia's varsity basketball
in scoring once again in the third ' squad lost to Lenore, W.Va .. 6242, in
quarter. but were only held to six
an away game Wednesday.
points in the final period due to HT's
The reserve team won, 44-33.
aggressive defense.
Further details of the game were
Jeff Barnes led the scoring for tiT
not available at presstime today.
with 14 points, while Robbie
HANNAN TRACE (81)- Brumfleld!}..Q.JO;
Brumfield and Deke Barnes had 10 J . Barnes 4~ - 14 : Ra ndolph 2-l -5; A. Bailey
&amp;n-12: Swain 2-a-4 : Stit t 2-3-7; D. Barnt&gt;S
each. The Wildcats sank :J5 of 66 5-{)-10: Sheets 2.{)4: P . Batley J-1-7: Davts
attempts from the floor for 53 4.().8. Totals 35-U-81.
HANNAN (:n) - Farrl'i2-2-6: Wilson l ·l-3:
percent , and weresuccessfulon llof Holley
6-3-15; Johnson 2-1 -5: Adkins 4-Cl-8.
18 lries at the free-throw line for 61 Totals 15-7-31.
St'Ore hJ quarters:
percent.
Hannan TracP .~ .... ..... ... ...... 13 ~ 28 :D-81
HT also compiled 41 rebounds H cnnan .......... .. ,. .. .... .. ..... 10 9 12 6-37
seven of them gro bbcd by Steve SIitt

By SCO'f'l' WOLFE
TilE PLAINS - The Southern
Tornadoenes jumped to a 4-0 lead
and led e\'ery minute of the game
except the last four. when Athens
took a slight :&gt;1-33 ad,·antage. then
continued to come on strong at the
conclusion or the game for a 46-41
victory in the annual Bulldog
Ho.liday Tournament here Wf'llnesday night . The win marked tht:&gt; third
con~utlve championship victory
for the lady Bulldogs. no.w 5-2. 11
also marked the first loss for the
previouslY unbeaten Tornadoettes.
who own a respectable 5.1 record.
Southern looked Impressive from
the floor during .the first period
despite effort s by the Athens
defense to seal oft talented Amy
Littlefield. Senior forward Debbie
Michae l picked up the stack and
sank two consecutive 18 foot
jumpers over the Athens zone
defense for a 4-0 SHS lead. Ann
Sternecket1 broke the Ice for
Athens. but after working the ball
around the horn .Littlefield hit
Laren Wolfewhobrokelntothelane
for another Southern score, 6-2.
Another Wolfe bucket put Southern further ahead, but Janice Huwe
found the in~ide lane for anB-j)score
which stood at the buzzer.
During the first half Southern
played outstanding defense against
the much taller Lady Bulldogs. who
flaunted a line-up of 6-2 ·Lisa
Wllloughcy, 6-0 Amy Sterneckert,
and 5-11 Janice Huwe. The Tornadoettes, dwarfed by its opposition,
forced several turnovers and made
several steals. while also taking
away. Athens Inside game.

points and_ five steals in a 13 point
Tornadoette drive that ended the
half 21-15.
Southern had several opportunlties taken away In the stint with
forced passes and travelling violations that could have been a definite
factor going down the stretch.
Second baH
Opening second half play Athens
swit ched to a man·to-man defense,
but Southern 's playbook unfolded
the rtght combination as the
Southerners consistently hit the
· open girl. Despite its icorlng
problems, SHS led 31-29 at the third
1
period b1112er.
Southern held the lead until

In thebroke
secondloose,
quarter,
Littlefield
finally
notching
nine

feet
at the buzzer.
Southern
hit 17 of 48 from the field

midwaythroughthefow1hquart~.

· when It missed three consecutive
scoring chances, allowing Ann
Sternecker:t to put !lie hosts on top,
34-33. A Littlefield drive followed
and SHS again regained the lead,
but from ttien on the shooting
plague overcame the visitors and
Athens gained all the momentum.
· Two errant SHS passes and four
of Beth Carlson's 14 ·second half
points put Athens on top 42-37, but
Southern fought back 42-39 with one
minute to go.
tn an attempt to get the ball the
tiring Tornadoettes drew tbe foul,
however, Carlson sank both ends of
the bonus and AHS went up 44-39Littlefield scored a quick bucket
with ·20 seconds left, the score 44-41.,
t
and Southern aga in fouled a imos
completing the steal.
Athens went to the line, missed,
.a!id a scramble for the loose ball
ended up in Wllloughcy's hands,
who sank a desperation shot from 17

for35percent, hittlngjustelghtof28
the second half for 28 percent. The
Tornadoes were seven of 14 at the
line for 50 percent. The winners hit
20of56fleldgoalsfor37percent,led
by Beth Carbon who was' stx of
seven the last half and two for two
from the line. As a team Athens was
six of nine from the line.
Southern had 22 rebounds, eight
tzy Littlefield, six by Michael and
five by Wolfe, while Athens col·
leered 37 rebounds. Sterneckert led
with 14 caroms and Carlson ljad
nine.
SHS committed 19 costly turnovers, had 15 steals, anel 11 fouls.
Littlefield was Impressive as her
quickness netted her nine steals.
Athens had 11 turnovers, 13asslsts,
and three steals.
Athens Coach Tim Smith said
after the game, "It was Important
for us to win against a team the·
caliber of Southern. They are very
well coached and well disciplined.
They executed their plays well. but
several missed shots put us back In
the ~anne."
Southern was led by Littlefield's
24 points and nine steals. Athens'
balanced attack ws led by Carlson
with 14, Huwe added 13.
Southern Is Idle over the Christ·
mas break and resumes teague
play against i'&lt;orth Gallla, Jan. 5.

an outstanding defensive and board
game, and Weaver with two each.

By quarters:
Southern

scorers
Stephanie
English
six,
Teresa
Audra were
Houdashelt
five,
Johnson two, and Dee Henderson
one.
SOuthern scorers were Jennifer
Arnold with 16, Donnet Talbert five,
D. Johnson 10, and L. Dudding.
Angle Grueser, and Windy Fry with
two each.
Woods scored 11 of her 15 points In
the fourth quarter tn leading Meigs
to Its fourth win in six outings.
SOuthern Is 3-1.

14 6 10 4-34
-·- 12 18 l&lt;J 6-50

.• •..

Meigs- -·-··

Seventh Grade
The Meigs seventh grade upped
its record to 5-1 with a 33-23 win over
the Southern seve n graders
Monday.
Meigs scorers were Matt Baker
with nine. Kevin Oiler six points and
16 rebounds, and J erod Sheets. Wes
Howard. and Todd Powell, all six
apiece.
For SOuthern, Stout had seven.
Diddle six, E vans four , and Lisle,
McMUllan, Who was credited with

seven-point halftime deficit to
defeat southern 47-37.
TammyWMght!edMelgswlth1B
while Missy Woods had 15. Other

Mt&gt;lgs .. ...... ...

'I

INDUCTED INTO HONORARY- Ten persons were lnltlaied Into
the Phi Alpha Thela International history honomry at Rio Grande Col·
lege and Community CoUege rooently. Pictured are (front !rom left):
Donna Pasquale, Lori Meadows, Lynn Bees, al) of GaiDa County; and
Saundra TDIIs and Joan Manuel, both of Meigs Cowdy. Standln&amp; advisers Ivan Tribe and MarceUa Barton, James Kesslllger of Jackson

NOW AVAILABLE!
BARGAIN MATINEES
.
TODAY! ·

13 oo ·JU--41
Athens ...... .......... .. ..... ..... .... 6 911 17;-4fl

Family Medicine

flji;';;;i;;i;;i;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1.
(EdUor's Note: Because Ibis
week's question deals with a dental
problem, Dr. Schreck has asked
Robert Paradis, D.D.S., of Nelsonville, Ohio, to write today's column.
Dr. Schreck will return next week.)

'6.

Register For A Free
Christmas Stocking.

SCh ffil"dt, Gehng
• award
- OXFORD,Ohio(AP)-Philadelphiabeen
Phlllles'
slugger
Mike
has
selected
as the
29thSclunldt
winner
of the Lou Gehrig Memorial Award,
given by the Phi Delta Theta
national collegiate fraternity_
The award goes annually to a
majorJeaguebaseballplayerwhols
voted to best fit the Image and
character of the Hall of Fame first
baseman of the New Yark Yankees,
who was a member of the fraternity
at Columbia University.
The 34-year-()ld Schmidt hit 40
home runs in 1983, enabling him to
capture his sixth NatiOnl\1 League
home n.tn championship. His 109

9- 37

. ..G 4 12 25-47

200/o Off~

Florist Since 1967

,

~/4..
... .

FLORIST

PH. 992·2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

.------------------------L----------------------""""'1

THANKS!
To·All Meigs Countains,
Thank you for your support during
our 29 years in the grocery business and
the 16 years during which time we served
an automotive deputy registrars.
Our lives have been a joy - thanks to
you. We wish you a delightful holiday sea·
son.
Our Love
Willwm A. (Dude) and Sarah Gibbs

runsdrlvenlnputhimpastthel,OOO

i
i

ALL

I

~2~9~~n~s
1QOIO 0f.f PR~~rr~Ts
Q O'-o Off
4

f(

iKj!i

lC

VILLAGE PHA' RMACY
•

.

PH.

992-6669

N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT,

HI

1ll
I
1

'
OJ.

rp~l~at~ea_u
inc_aree_
·---r~p~rod~u=c=ti=on~wt~thj~~~~~~C~l~O~S~E~D~M~O~N~D~A~Y==,~D~E~C~E~M~B~E~R-~26~t~h~~~~~
1,070. ___

YoUr "Extra Touch"

Plaza, Alex Grannmas and Ted
Kluszewski; trainer Larry Starr;
equipment manager Bernie Stowe
and broadcaster Joe Nuxhall, who
also pitches batting practice.
Judge Carl B. Rubin said the jury
would begin deliberations today.
Attorneys for both sides rested their
cases Wednesday.

•

Winner

i

~--~-~-

STUFFED ANIMALS

Nixon testifies in IRS case
CINCINNATI (API - Former
Cincinnati Reds Manager Russ
Ntxon has testified that Pete Rose
was "one of a kind" as a ballplayer but that he never expected to be
rewarded for helpinginRose'sextra
workouts.
Rose gave Reds coaches and
off!clals.Jeepsln1978and issuingthe
Internal Revenue Service to get
back $36,303 in business expenses
that the IRS disallowed for the
vehicles.
NtXon, now a coach with the
Montreal Expos after being fired as
Reds manager folloWing the 1!m
season, testified Wednesday In U .S.
District Court.
Nixon was on the Reds' coaching
staff when Rose played for Cincinnati. He said Rose was constantly
working out on off-days and during
the off-season to Improve.
. Rose, 42, contends the Jeeps were
' given to the nine men as rompensa' tlon for years of extra services they
put In bY helping him during their
tree time. Rose said the extra help
made him a better ballplayer.
JeepsalsowmttocoachesGeorge
• Scherger, Larry Shepard, Ron

'·

I

Stemeckert (35) aqd Usa WUJoughby (43). Athens defeated the
Tomadoettes, 4641 to capture Its lnvltallonalloumamenl.

.. ..... s

~::9.95

WATCHES .
25°/o i
i
OFF ·Ii

The Meigs girls' seventh and
eighth graders roared from ~

Southern .. ......

NEW PADDED
CHEST

TIMEX

Girls Junior High

9 11

(Over '300; und~~ 1300-3 months with approved credit)

ALL

GOING FOR REBOUND- Debbie Michael (15) collects ooe cil ber six
rebounds duillng third quarter action of Wednesday's Southern-athens
game. Athens players sbown bt this Scott Wolfe photo are Ann

QuESTION: What's pyorrhea?
My wife thinks I have It because my
gums bleed a lot.
·
ANSWER: Pyorrhea (pypor·ree·
a,) Is an old-fashioned term for a
· . gum disease patients now call
· periodontitis (pear-e-o-don·ty·tls).
Many dental patients know thai
pyorrbea or perlod&lt;intltis Is a gum
disease, but they do not understand
that the disease can be treated.
Some people mistakenly believe
that om'"-you have the disease It's
just a matter of tlme before all your
teeth fall out Tbat erroneous belief

WILL BE CLOSED
AT NOON ON SAT., DEC. 24TH
AND ALL DAY ON SUN., DEC. 25TH
MON., DEC. 26TH &amp; TUES., DEC. 27TH
SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY ENJOY
THE CHRISTMAS HOLIDAYS.

The second six weeks grading period honor ·
roll of the 'Meigs High School has been

announced. Making a grade of "B" or above
In aU thelr subjects to be named to the roll
were:
Ninth grade - Randy Birchfield, Jeffrey
Arnold, Erin Ander.;on, April Clark. Jennifer
Couch, Marty Cline. Kim Deem, Hubert
Eason. Lots Eblin, Krlsli Haynes, Shannon
Hlndy, Jull HyseU, Michael Kloss, Eddie
Kitchen, Susan King, Phllltp King, Darla
King, Dawn keesee, Judi Moss. Jenny MUier.
WUJ Molden, Detorah Murphy, Steven
MuSSE'I', Michelle Peterson, Tracy SCholderer, Robert Searle-s, Kristina Sexton,
Deanna Slek, Brenda Sinclalr, Mark Smith,
Melinda Smith, Rachel Steel. Jennifer
Swartz, Jodi Wells, Rhonda Zirkle.
Tenth grade - Carole Bailey, Becky
Birchfield, Polite Chadwell, Lola Cleland,
Held! Cobb, Gary Coleman , Mary Cunningham, Daphene Dillard, Todd Docz.l,
Kenda Donahue, Gina Follrod, Charles
Gilkerson, Tammy Gilkey, Jodi Han1SOn,
Rcidd Harrison. Darren Hayes. Franklin
Jarvis. Tahn'ee Johnson . Chris topher
Kennedy, Mary King, Bl')'an Korn, Rodney
Klein, Ryan Mahr, Christina McGhee,
Charles Ohlinger, Angela Patterson, Edward
Patterson, Judith Mowery, Melissa
Prlmmer, SHeila Pullins, Cherry Sauters,
Sherry Wilson, Law-a Smith, Carol Smlth.
Eleventh grade - PauUne Amodio, Usa
Ashley, Michael CUne, Melissa ColUns, Peggy
Cremeans, Michael Davidson, Cathy ))e.
Long, Sandy Oee.n, David Fisher, Kelly
Guinther, Glenda Gum, Lisa Hotfmafl,
Dennis Hysell, Randy Jewell. Larry Klein,
Cathertne Jones, ElWlbeth Lewis, Rhonda
Little. Gayla Owens, Anna Patrick. Anita
Reed. Joseph Retnnlrc, Sherry Ritchie,
Robert Spires, Marvtn Stiles, Alison Tromm,

Sherry Arnold, IWger
·Balser, Tamara Black, Vicki Bowers,
"Edward Burdette, Megan Cale, Robin
:campbeU, Barbara Chappelear. Monte ChaP'
man, Carolyn Casto, BUI Carswell, Kelly
Clark, WIIUam Elam. Catherine Dean, Oann.y
Davis, Jay Evans, John Follrod, Tim Frazier,
Tracy Herman, George Hobson, Andrew
' IannareW, Mary Jacot~~, Jennifer Jones,
Michael ~. Keith Kinzel, CharlES
Knaw. KeY1il Knapp. Donald Unte, Rhonda
Jerten BaU. Christina Estep, Lawrence
. PoweU, Angel.a Pra~. Tom Perrin, Kimberly

Skate-A-Way
CHESTER. OH . .

Open Christmas Eve.
7:30-10:00

7:30-12:30
Free Hats, Horns
.Middleport, OH.

(W. Va. 773-9577

Admission •3.00 ·
Skate Rental 50'
985-3929
985-9996

~)

•

County; Ron Hammond and John Saunders, both of Gallia County: Jeff
Saunders of Lawrence County; and Dr. Clod11s R. Smith, President of
Rio Grande CoDege and Community College. Not pictured: Patrick
Stout of Gallla County. The memberShip of Phi Alpha Theta Is composed of students and professors who have been elected to membership
upon the basis of excellence In the study of the writing of History.

often keeps them from seeking help good dental treatment, but after the both preventable · and treatable.
for the problem until damage bone begins to break down, the ·Good oral hygiene, like brushing
indeed has been 'done.
damage done Is not repairable and properly and flossing each day, will
Periodontitis starts out as an many teeth may be needlessly lost. prevent the begl_nning . of the
Inflammation to the gums caused
QUESTION: What are the symp- disease, and routine dental visitS
will keep any bony destruction
toms
of this disease?
by the constant formation of
buildup (plaque) on the teeth. In
ANSWER: The earltest sign of already present from progressing_
this early stage the disease doesn't
periodontitis ts usually bleeding of r-;::::::;;;;;;;;:~;::;;::::=11
hurt, so It's very bard for the person
the gums when yow're brushing
"DANCE FOR JOY "
to detect. As the disease advances It , your teeth. Other signs that may
goes deeper into the gums and
indicate a more severe stage of the
Aerobics Dance Class
begins to destroy the surrounding
disease Include shiny, discolored or
Joy Compton-Instructor
puffy gums; teeth that feel loose;
8 Week Winter Session
bone that supports the teeth. The
pain or a feeling of pressure on the
16 Classes for 130.00
plaque !bat's forming on the teeth
Beginning Jan . 9th
then gets down deep lntg these new
gums aI ter eatIng; a ba d taste that
Mon.-Wed.- 4:1 5 to 5: 15
bony defects and continues to
persists; food tbat regularly sticks
Mon.-Wed .-6:15 to 7:15 .
damage the bone.
Tues.-Thurs.- 5:JO to 6: 30
between the teeth; teeth sensitive to
Pertodontltls Is a slowly progres.
hot and cold; or a toothache not
At The Senior Citizens Building
slve disease that can start out when
caused by a cavity_
Mulberry Heights , Pomeroy
we're children and continue
Again, it's Important to emphas-.
for More lnlormation
throughout our adulthood, In the
1ze that pertodontitls (pyorrhea) Is
and Registration
early stages It's reversible with
Call 992· 7773 or 949-2648

New

6 Gun
ROCKERS
(All chairs adultsize)

Gun
Cabinet :

$J995

Reg.

$19995

I

Save
Up To

Save
180

~Open

ul! to

L 9.95

'70

Nights Til 8 P.M.

I
CE'S
FURNIT~RE
'
R
~i~~OH

(EXCEPT
SATURDAY)
STORE HOURS
9:30-8:00

. .. 446-9523

·

Pauley, Tammy Parson. Mae Nakamoto,
kenda Mohler, Jeffrey MWer, Rhett MilhOan,

Jennl!er Meadows, Vaughan Spencer, ChriStine Riggs, Joy Sauters. RuSs SIUelckS. Amy
Sisson, Paula Swindell, Tamml Taylor,
Kenny S~ 1llomas, Terri Thomas, Laura
VanMeter, Rebecca Ward, Michael Wwtord,
Constance Witt, Kyit; Woods.

Tile second slx weeks grading period holl91'

roll of the Pomeroy Elementary School has
been announced. Making a grade or "8" or
above in aU thelr subjects to be named to the
roll were:
Flrst grade - Sarah Anderson, Tony
BrOIIID, Davkl Carmichael, J emxl Cook,
Rebecca DileS, Michelle Dorsey, Alan Durst,
Amy Durst, Frank ElHott, Tara Erwin.
Benny Ewing, David Fetty, Brandy Grover,
Denise Hayes, James Hensley, Jered Hill. ·

EmUy JohnSon, Serena Non1s, Jamie Oak.s.
Amy Ohlinger, Reggie Pratt, Ralph Rose.
Eddena Russell, Stacy Staats, Darrell Stone,
Jaclyn Swartz, Lisa Tatterson, Jason Taylor,
Opal WhiUatch, Usa Yeaugt"r JuUe Young.

Second grade - Brad Ander$0n, Deanna
Boothe, Trenton Oeland, DanieUe Crow,
Michae-l Crump, J.P. Davis, Andrea DWard,
Jeremy Grimm, Christy Hawkins, Sandy
Morris, Cassie Nease, Shawn Petrie, Susan
Rose, Jell Tracy, Sandy Wbln, Tracy File,
Stephanie See.
ThJrd grade - Debbie Alkire, Leanna
Cundiff, Serena Dav1S, Kelly Doidge, Katrtna
Turner, Chr1s J(nlght, Kevin lamben, Teresa
May. Lynette Neece, Stephanie Price. Bety
Roush, Buddy Roush, Kelly 8anertteld, Rusty
Triplett, Viclde Warner.

Fourth grade - Barbie Anderson, JuUanna
Buck. Michael Bunch, Melinda Dailey,
Jeremy Dean, Mindy FoUlkrod, Stephanie
Haggy, John Hanison, Jeremy Heck, Candy
Hensley, Joey McElroy , Melissa Neutzllng,
Rachaei Roush, Jonathon Sargent, Keith
Smith.
Fifth grade- Chase Cleland, Kim Ewtng,
Lorie Falls, Eric Heck, Amanda Roush.
Stacey Shank, JeMie Werry.
Sixth grade - John Anderson. Nancy
Baker. Cary Betztng, Jennifer Buck, Hank
Cleland, JcnnUer Newman, RebeCca Pearson, Greta Riffle, Shelly Triplett, Tara Wolle.
Special - Susan Goode; Masy Morton,
Roger PanlOVt", Jimmy Powell, Kewana
Singer, Sally Watson.

Chester area
happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Buel Ridenour
visited Sunday In Columbus with
Miss Thelma Ridenour.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ridenour.
TUppers Plains, called on Denzel
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton
Allen and Mr _and Mrs. Roy Christy
and Robert Wood recently .
- Miss Laura Eichinger, student at
Ohio State, is spending her vacation
with her mother, Opal Eichinger.

.--------------------------------------------------1

DIAMOND EARRINGS
1/4 CARAT WEIGHT

$29500
Regular '395.00

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

DIAMOND NECKLACES
1110 CARAT WEIGHT

$17995
qegular '229.95

7DIAMOND
. CLUSTER

NEW DINNER HOURS
TUESDAY-THURSDAY .
5-9
FRIDAY ·SATURDAY
5-10

$)4995 $34995
1

.

Reeular 189.95

Regular '429. 95

BRIDAL PAIR

DIAMOND
8o RUBY

•

FLOYD FANSEE

Eve

PH. (Ohio) 992-2178

·-"'.f*"
·•. •:·

' .•

----~--~-·

New Year's

N. 2nd Ave.

SAVE
180

Peridontitis .often mistaken

.

"Wishing You A Happy Holiday Season."

~1'

CEDAR

5 9 95

...;!\5n+e..,. ..

•

\

-

"THANK YOU FOR .SHOPPING LOCALLY:"
.

$1

TOP

Meigs County school honor rolls

ftayTry~.
TWelfth grade

OF MIDDLEPORT

I

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

1-YEAR FREE
FINANCING

Score I&gt;!' qutll'lers:
Southern .....:........................ 8

ALL RUSS

"Spe&lt;iol Christmas Hours"

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

ft Ideas

By quart.enl:
Southern ........................... ll 6 4 2-23
Meigs .. ............................. 10 10 1 12-33

By quarten'

•.
H0URS

SOU'111ERN C41) - Ltttte!teld 104-24:
Wolfe 2-1-5; Mkhael 3·2-8; Bentley 1.0.2; ·
Adams Hl-2: Hoodashett 1140. Totals n-7-41.
ATHENS C46) - Sudntck tJ.M: Huwe
~1 -13; Carlson 6-2-14: Sterneckm 5-1-9;
Willoughby 4.()..8; Reesf' 0-().(); Barr 0.2-2.
Totalo 2M-4f,

•

MIDDLEPORT, OH

86 N. 2ND AVE.

ALL

Eighth Grade
Michael Bartrum's 14 points,
eight rebounds, a nd a new school
record eight assists to lead the
Meigs eighth graders to a 50-34 win
over Southern at Meigs Monday.
Other Meigs scorers were Billy
Brothers wit h 14, .Joey Snyder a nd
Don Dorst six, and Paul Melton a nd
Jasoh Rupe two each. Turley led
Southern with 14. Meigs goes to 4-2
on the year,
.. , • •

OF OHIO, INC.

Box"""'"'

Meigs Jr. high results given

.L

FRUTH PHARMACY

••

WITH AN ALL NEW StiOW
FROM 10-2 FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

$27995

---~--~---~-~----------,
The Meigs Inn will close Saturday, Dec ..24 1
1 at 2:00 p.m. so our employHs may enJOY 1
I the Christmas holiday. We will reopen at 11 1
a.m ..Tuesday, Dec. 27.
1

f
I

R11ul1r '349.95

FREE RING SIZING
ONN TILL 8 _p.M.

'
.
·-----~-----------------J
-

~

'

ST~RTING

..

1JEC. 17 'SARA COLLUMS WINNER,
lJIAMOND EARRINGS
•
•
STOP IN AND RIOISTIR NOW 1'01 OTHER

GIIAT PRIZIS. NO I'URCHASI NI(\IS. GRIAT
AND YOU OON'T HA\11 TOM JPIIZIS

DEC. 12
113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OH .

992·2054

Where S.'lta

. Slaopo

�Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

ThuMIIy, o.-mber 22, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thurtday, "'cember 22, 1983

Meigs County property transfers._ _ _ _ __

Memories of Christmas ·past recounted in article
T1]e hollday season has a way of
stlr~ng up some very pleasant
memories of Christmas past for
maiJY residents.
Slfch is the case wit h Allan
Elberteld who authored the following article, " Remember When," as
he recalls how the holiday season
was a generation ago. He is a son of
Bob Elberfeld of Pomeroy. He is
employed with the U.S. Corps of
Eng!Deers in Huntington and lives
at Barboursville.
Many readers may remember
·th&lt;' writing of the late Allan Keller
who wrote a nostalgic newspaper
piece some years ago. The story
told of theobservanceofChristmas
by the Elberfeld Family in Pomeroy. Al lan Elberfeld is a nephew of
the late Allan Keller.
Elberteld's article reads:
"Remember when you were a
child and -the entire family

squeezed Into the old Nash. Ford. the ancien! gum 1ree behind the
Chevy or whatever you had and rott ing sills of the old barn.
drove to the old home place to cUI
We would take the tree home and
your Christmas tree? Our family somehow a stand would be fashiwent a lmost every year in my oned from odds and endsoflumber
Uncle Charles' car and he drov~ us and 1he pungency of the pine would
to the fam ily farm near Lubeck, mingll• with the other fragrances of
Ohio. We always took the double Christmas. It ;,,as a delight-. even If
bitted axe - power saws were the tree leaned a bit. in spite of the
unheard of- as well as the old shut number of Colliers and Saturday
gun. The gun and axe wen! in the Evening Posts which we used to
llunk and 1 got to hold Tiny. our counterbalance it. Its nonsymmetbeagle, In my lap.
rica! shape was of no concern for.
It was ·always cold and ·the you could always tie a branch
hillside would be rimed ";ith frost. · against the trunk to hide the "hole."
The blue jays would scold us aqd the
Today 11 is somewhat different.
titmice and chickadees would flit w e drive to a lot , filled not with the
ahout as the tree was felled. music of jays and titmice but with
Occasionally we would bring home Bing Crosby and others singing
some bittersweet for a __.o;plash of through the loud speakers. The tree
orange to set off the wreath we is purchased for an outrageous sum
made from our neighbors ' holly and it is always symmetrical for 1t
tree. If we were lucky, Granddad was raised on a Christmas Tree
would shoot some mistletoe out of Farm. They are cut early in

November and ·shipped to the
Tri-State area so as to be available
for th~ Christmas trade. Pungency
Is possible If you purchase an
aerosol can of Essence of
Evergreen.
Remember when you took your
allowance or whatever change you
had and either walked, bicycled or
rode the bus downtown to shop?.
You knew It was December for the
sting of the wind In your eyes and
the numbness In your toes told you
so: If you -were lucky, .you could
catch a snowflake on your tongue,
the moist damp water mingling
"1th the piece of peppermint cane
that was liberated from the Christmas tree. After getting dellclously
warm in the bustling store, you soon
had to leave It and enter the cold to
walk do~ the street to the next
establishment looking for that
special gift for Mom. It was always

a relief as you entered the house
and ·stripped the layers o1 outer
garments and backed up against
the old hot water tank in the kitchen
andshowedGrandmotherwhatyou
had purchased.
Today we do It differently. We all
load Into a warm comfortable car
and drlve to an all-enclosed mall.
Your dress 1S but little changed
from summer attlre as the climate
within is thermostatically and
computer controlled. What chance
is thereto catch a snowflake In such
an envlrorunent?
Remember when you cracked
walnuts and hickory nuts in the
fall? They, together with raisins,
· citron, dates, and figs, were mixed
In a special almost mystical way
with contents of cans stored at the
very top of the pantry shelf. The
cakes were wrapped In musllri that
had been moistened with the wine
Granddad made and always

•

A vlslt from Santa was the Ed Bealr arid Dixie Lee, Mr. and
highlight of the annual Chester Mrs. William Krackomberger, Mr.
Christmas dinner and party held at and Mrs. Clayton Allen, Mr. and
the firehouse Sunday evening for Mrs. Erroll Conroy, Mr. and Mrs.
the firemen, auxiliary and their Marvin Taylor, Mr. and !\Irs.
families.
. Alfred Frank, Mr. and Mrs. John
Baked ham and a covered dish Wickham, . Mr. and !\Irs. Hobart
dinner was served buffet style by Newell, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
the Good of the Order committee. Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
The tables were decorated In Newell and Jim, Mr. and Mrs.
keeping with the season. After the Pearl Edwards, David, John and
dinner Santa delivered presents Mary, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lee,
and candy treats that had been Jenny, Tony and Todd, Dorothy
piled under a lighted tree.
·
Cashdollar, Dorsel Miller, Erma
Door prizes were won by Laura Cleland, Opal Hollon, Marcia and
Eichinger. Clara and Erroll Con- Russell Keller, Mary and Melissa
roy , Inzy Newell and Susan Dempsey, Frances and Robyn
Cleland.
Hunt, Betty Hawk, Opal and Laura
Attending the dinner were Mr. Eichinger, VIctor Bahr, Greg Hibbs
and Mrs. Roy Christy, Mr. and Mrs. and Ray Werry.

,J
•

'' "

'"

Eliza Marie Hayman to WOllam

needed to check at least twice a day
in the old stone crock in the utlllty
room.
Today you can buy a fruit cake in
a hermetically sealed tin. Oh, It
tastes all .right but after the
company leaves, there 1S always a
piece or two left on the plate. It was
never that waY wIth
Grandmother's.
Remember the delight of the
youngsters as they enacted · the
Christmas pageant? Remember
the candles at Christmas Eve
services? Remember caroling In
the snow and the hot chocolate
afterward? Some things never
changebutalltoomanythlngshave
slipped by us as technology 8Jld the
organizational skills of trained
counselors have a slow but steady
impact upon our lives.
Y&lt;!~i, l remember Christmas as it
was, as It is, and maybe even how it
will be. Maybe It Is better now, but
occasionally I do have a twinge of
remorse and a tliickenlng of the
throat as a long forgotten fragrance
or sound gentlwy reminds me of
what I remembered. I know that I
am not alone In expetiepcing these
reminders of Christmases past, and ·
It Is the unspoken unity of these
recollections among us aU that Is
truly the spirit of Christmas.

Chester Christmas dinner

R. Hayman Jr., lO.Illacres, Letart.

Carol G. Mowery, Dolly F.
Mowery to Herald ou and Gas Co..
Right of Way, Salisbury.
Kenneth A. Johnson, Anna JohnsontoHeraldOUandGasCo.,Right
o1 Way, Salisbury. ·
Kenneth A. Johnson, Anna Johnson to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right
o1 Way, Salisbury.

Moms
Capt. Mark A. Morris ofthe U.S.
Air Force has been transferred
from the Williams Air Force Base In
Phoenix, ·Ariz. to the McChord Air
Force Base near Seattle, Wash. The
new address of Capt. Morris and hls
wife, the former Lisa Thomas, Is P.
0. Box 500J, McChord Air Force
Base, Washington, 98438.

Welch

Staff Sgt. Samuel J. Welch,
son &lt;&gt;f Samuel L. and Thelma M.
Welch of Rural Route 1, Point
Pleasant, W. va., has been
decorated with . the Army
Achievement Medal at Fort
Bragg, N.C.
'
The Achievement Medal is
awarded to soldiers for accomplishment Medal at Fort Bragg,
N.C .
The Achievement Medal is
awarded to soldiers for accomplishment, meritorious service or

HOLIDAY DONATION ·ro HOLZER - Chef
dcGare Roger Carter of the Forty et Eight Voiture
1216. Gallipolis plays with Kathym Diles, 20-month
old daughter of 1\lr. and !\Irs. Ronald DUes, Pomeroy,
at Holzer Medical Center. The oganlzation recently

-

"

made a donation to the hospital Toy Fund, insuring
that children there over the holidays will receive a gift
at Christmas. The fund also provides toys year round
for those on the Pediatric Unit. This is the voiture's
liM;! donation to the lund.

Calendar·

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Roy and
son Rex of Racine spent Thanksgiving With Mrs. Etha Warner.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Miller and
children Amy and Jason of Bellvue,
Ohio, Mr. and · Mrs. Edward
Lawson and Eric of Syracuse, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Lawson . were
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Lawson and Wilda.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
attended jhe funeral of Harley
Grate at Blgony-Jordan Funeral
Home at R"utland. Mr. and Mrs.
·Donald Barnhart wer:e Sunday
guests of the Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs..Cameron Sands
and son Danny o1 Gallipolis visited
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Sands and
son Joey recently at Dorcas.

FRIDAY
~ POMEROY - Annual Christ-

SATIJRDAY

POMEROY -Annual Chrisltj'tas party of Royal Oak Balmas
Eve candlelight service, 8
lcr&gt;om Dance Club Friday, 9 to 1,
p.m.
Saturday al Trinity
at! Royal Oak Recreation BuildChurch.
Poeroy; choir to sing;
ii{g with The Gentlemen Three
Ralph
Werry.
organist, and
pfoviding the music. The New .
message
by
the
Rev. W. H.
"&gt;tear's Eve party will be at the
Penin,
pastor.
same location on Dec. 31 from 9
1\l.l a.m.
•

Happenings

,.

..

Heath church
plans worship

bU Med center

;:MIDDELPORT ~Heath United Methodist Church in Middle~rt wiU cclcbra te Christmas
-ftti1 a special Christmas Eve
c.'llndlelighl worship at 7:30p.m.
5eturda)C'ffileme of the service
~ll be "God With Us; Christ In
Jls." The adult choir will sing
..nd the Rev. Robert Robinson
conduct a devotional period.
!he public is invited.
·~ On Sunday a special worship
E&gt;v ent is planned for 10:30 a.m.
rtlllowing Sunday school at 9: 30.

ATHENS - The Ohio Universit y Osteopathic Medical Center
will be closed Friday, Dec. 23,
and Monday. Dec. 26, in observance or Christmas. It will also
be closed Friday, Dec. 30, and
Monday, Jan. 2, for the New
Year Holiday. A small staff will
be present on both Friday
mornings to provide urgent care
tor established patients only.
The 24-hour answering service
can be reached at 594-2416.
The medical center will
reopen for business and appointments at its regular hour on
Tuesday, Dec. Tr. and Tuesday,
Jan . 3.

'•

will

rinal meeting
~

•;COLUMBIA TWP - The
Eioard of Trustees of Columbia
'ti;&gt;wnship will hold its end of the
~ar meeting on Dec. 31 at 7 p.m.
tR the township building.

.

Dance
set
'I'
~RUTLAND

- A dance will be
~ld from 8 to midnight Friday
al the Rutland Civic. Center with
~usic provided by the Itomlc
Sounds and Music Unlimited.
~ere will be prtzes given away
!ltririg the evening. Admission Is
~ per couple and $2 a single.

.•

closes for holiday ·

•
Tijli

MARTIN
THE
COBBLER"

cautious} health department warns

The Meigs County Health Department would like to share a lew
safety reminders. This time of the
year usually means celebrations,
reunions, gifts and happy times.
Some accidents are unique to the
Christmas seasons, such as those
resulting from carelessness in
selecting, decorating and safely
maintaining Christmas trees.
To reduce the fire hazard from
Christmas trees. select a fresh tree.
.To help the tree absorb moisture.
make a slanted cut across the base,
then stand the tree In water !rom
the time you buy It until you dispose
of ti. Water dally. Keep the tree
away from registers or open
fireplaces.
Perhaps the most likely source of
fire for a tree is the electric lights.
Check all Christmas tree lights for
broken sockets, frayed wires and
loose connections. When buying
new sets, look for the Underwriter's

Laboratory label. Be sure ornaments and tinsel cannot come Into
contact with the lights. This could
cause short circuits. Always be sure
to turn off the tree lighting before
retiring or leaving the house.
Children are attracted to the
colortul holiday plants. Holly and
mistletoe herrles that are Ingested
can cause vomiting and diarrhea.
Angel hair Is spun glass which can
cause severe skin Irritations.
Christmas a time for giving, but
let's gtve safety. When buying toys
this holiday season, keep In mind
the youngster's age, Interests and
skill level. Look lor quality design
and construction in all toys. Make
sure that all directions or lnstruc-

1

!Ions are clear to you aod to the
child.
Be a label reader. Watch out for
toys that have sharp edges, small
parts or sharp poJnts. Avoid toys
that produce extremely loud noises
that may damage hearing and also
those that propel objects that could
Injure eyes. Remember, for your
child's safety, examine your toy
purchases.
When the excitement of unwrapping the glft is over, never burn the
wrap, hoxes or other paper products in the fireplace. Rather, have
a big ,box .handy and put all
discarded Strings. bows, and other
325 E. Main St.
wrapping Into It and discard
Pomeroy
appropriately.
------------....&lt;.::..::..:..:.::.:..:.:._::::::_:.._______...J;.._..;:========~-

GRAC E

cHuRcH

SYRACUSE - -BeCause of
Christmas Day, the First
Church of God,_ Syracuse, Is
announcing a change in service
scheduling. Worship will be at
9:30 a .m. Sunday. one-half hour
earlier than usual, and there will
be no Sunday school or Sunday
evening service.

Russell
Marine Capt. Karl R Russell. son
of Kenneth N. and Pearl L. Russell
of Route 2, Racine, recently

,.

364 Jac~son Pike
Gallipolis, OH. 45631

.."'

786 N. Second St.
Middleport, OH. 45760

.•

·

.,.
·•
""

..

.

'"
•

SPENCER'S SNACK SHACK

"'

"'•
,_

..

~

:::

364 JACKSON PIKE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

ALL JEWELRY 1/2 PRICE

LARGE PIZZA
WITH 3 TOPPINGS

$} 00 WITH COUPON
OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY n A.M.-10 P.M.
SATURDAY 12 P.M.-11 P.M.

I

SUNDAY 5 P.M.-10 P.M.
. CLOSED CHRISTMAS EVE AT 6
CLOSED CHR ISTMAS DAY

1

SPENCER'S SN.ACK SHACK
5th &amp; Pearl

Racine

949-3301

II
I'
I .
I .

-FREE PARKINGREGISTER FOR 150 GIFT CERT.
. TO BE GIVEN AWAY SAl

CHRISTMAS COOKIE
CUTIER SET
•

3 PACK

Cologne

REV LON

Gift

Sets

..,.
..

""

•

..

·-.
•

w

.-.

Cologne
Gift Sets
20°/o

GIFT SETS ·

WPRINCE MATCHABELLI

by Houbigant

'

Limited Quantities

USK

HANTILLY

•

••

CHRISTMAS CARDS

ALYSSA ASHLEY

COCHET.

OFF

"•

¥2 PRICE OF ¥2

Gift Sets

20%oFF

,."•

,...

"Your lyerytltlng Store"

.••
•

(

r

i

325 E. Main St.
.. Pomeroy

_Last Minute Christmas
Savi
in our Cosmetic Department -

OFF

•

·

.
.

I!

GRACE
CHURCH

L~------~••r:=~••••-•r:=~•-•r:=~•

-~

.
•

~

i

20°/o

•

i
i

"Merry Christmas" from
all of us to all of you!

z::0...
•'••.
....

"

The fourth birthday of Matthew
Sellers was observed recently with a
party at hls home. A Smurl theme
was carried out for the party and
gifts were presen)ed to Matthew.
Attending were his parents,
Angela and Edward Sellers, Ida
Mae Martin and Frank Martin
grandparents, Frances Martui, ~
great-grandmother. Steve Martin,
Jolene Martin, and Wendy Moodlspaugh, Emma Moodlspaugh,
Charla and Ashley Roach.

CHRISTMAS DAY
10:30 A.M.Holy Eucharist

COUPON GOOD THRU DEC. 24

4_LL

Sellers birthday

7:00P.M.Special Children's
Service and
Academy Award
Winning Film
"Martin, The
Cobbler"
10:30 P.M.Family Worship
Service
Holy Eucharist
&amp; Carols

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

.'-'U..

~

opment, Sheriff's deed, Syracuse.
June Opal Johnson, Henry Leo
Johnson to Ernest Ray Will, Opal
Leah Wlll, Robert Edward WW,
Barbara Ellen Will. Roland Eugene
Wlll, Margaref Anna Will, Daniel
Allen Wlll, Joyce Anita Will,
Parcels, Rutland/Scipio.

CHRISTMAS
SERVICES
CHRISTMAS EVE

NOW OPEN IN RACINE

Revlon
Grooming
Fashion Kits
20°/o OFF

,.....

Boston, Brenda Nichols, · John
Nichols, Delmer Larkins, Deana
Larkins, Diane Wingler. Harry
Wingler to x - Gary Lee Warner, X
- Bonnie Sue Warner, 1 acre,
Chester.
Elizabeth J . Canode to Southern
Ohio Coal Co., 42 acres, Meigs.
Re.ymond C. Cassady, Nora D.
Cassady to Gordon Caldwell, Lots,
Tuppers Plains.
Robert W. Hayman, Shirley A.
Hayman to· Sally Ann Hutton,
James Rankin Hutton, Parcel,
Salisbury.
Ronald E. Osborne, Ella L.
Osborne to James E. Diddle, Right
of Way, Olive.
Richard A. Flnlaw, Gertrude
Flnlaw to James E . Diddle. Right of ·
Way, Sutton.
Manning A. Marcinko, Gloria
Marcinko to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Olive.
Roger Bailey, Sharon A. Bailey to
Franklin Real Estate Co., Lot 3.
f:hester.
James A. Riffle, eta!., to Secretary of Housing and Urban Devel-

::

p
y
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 22 --. 8 P.M. TIL 11 P.M.

Matthew SeDers

participated in exercise "Valiant
Usher 84-2."
He is an officer assigned to
Battalion Landing Team 31~. ~1st
Marine Amphibious Unit, Marine
Corps Air Sta tlon, Keneone Bay,
Hawaii.
Approxlma tely 1',~ Marines and
Sailors of the 31st Marine Amphlb·
lous Onit were Involved In the
unilateral amphibious exercise that
was conducted Nov. 4-8, 1983, In the
Lancelin Army training Area of
Western Australia.

Agreement, Bedford.
Faye Powell, deceased, Jasper
Powell, Eula Hensler, Affidavit,
Sutton.
Robert M. Blackston, Brenda L.
Blackston to Charles H. Faulk, Sr.,
Betty L. Faulk, .16 acre, Chester.
Marry Hinman, Nancy S. Hinman to Steven J. Schloss, Sandra K
Schloss, Lot 38, Pomeroy Village.
Stephen J . Schloss by atty. In fact,
Sandra K. SChloss to Charles Ellis,
Sandra Ellis, Lot ;!8, Pomeroy
VIllage.
Doris Marke, Elza Larkins, Sadie
E: Larkins, FredE. Larkins, Carrie
Ev~ns, Eileen Robinson, Dale
Robinson, Betty Wallace, WOllam
Wallace, Orville D. Larkins, Avalee
Larkins, Ada Ralph, Loren E.
Ralph, Harold E. Smith, Jeane
Smith, Roy Edward Smith, Debbie
Smith, Tessie Stethem, Roland
Stethem. Josephine Oshorne, Herald Osborne, Ruby Dunn, Berdell
Dunn, Leota Johnson, Emerson
JohnSon, Dorset Larkins, Phyllis
Larkins, Robert Larkins, Freda
Larkins, Linda Boston, William

••
!!:;.B¥B¥1311!~~~~~~~~:r."':~~~~:!:!:!:!~~lilllll!&lt;:l!r;;:!IIIWIIIO&lt;!~!r.:::.:!r.:::o:lii:JI;!l:llfS::&lt;r:=I-!111:Jjli:Jjli•l'fOI:~:~;;;~, ·~~-

786 N. SECOND ST. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

annual home Christmas are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fisher,
North Third Avenue, best overall,
lighltng contest sponsored by the
Mid.lieport Garden Club and the secular theme; Mrs. Brownwyn
Mldi!Jeport Amateur Garden dub , WUllams, Dew Street, best religious
theme, and best door or window,
was• held Tuesday evenilig In
Mrs.
Dorothy Young, Front Street.
Middleport.
M&amp;s. Bob Bishop and Mrs. Joe Each winner will recelvea$10prlze.
Bali# of the Rutland Friendly · Following the judging, the judges Hospitalized
Gan!en Club served as judges and and commlttee members from both
wer; driven through the vlllage to clubs met at i he LaSalle Restaurant
Faye Wallace of Middleport is a
for dessert and cotfee and at that surgical patient at the Holzer
vi~ the decorations by Miss Judy
time appreciation gifts· were pres- · Medical Center. Cards may be sent
Amt)ld and Mrs. James Arnold.
Wtnners in the three categories ented to the judges.
to her there at ROom 202.

.

Film

Services change
for Christmas

Ughting contest held
.~

~Be

The Academy
Award
Winning

7:00 P.M.
Cl'tRISTMAS
EVE

acts of courage.
Welch ls a supply specialist
With the XVIII Airborne Corps.
His sister, Betty L. McLawhorn, resides on Rural Route 1
McKenney, Va.
'
He Is a 1969 graduate of
Dinwiddie County High School,
Va.

Fairview news ·

ESPECIALLY
FOR THE
TERS!

Card money was turned In and the
bllls were paid.
. Door prizes were won by Evelyn
Gaul, Marcia Keller and· Opal
Eichinger. A gift exchange was
held. Mrs. Krackomberger, assisted by Opal Hollon, served
refreshments to those named and
Margaret Christy, Dixie Bealr,
Inzy Newell, Cleo Smith, Ethel Orr.
Betty Newell, Opal Wickham,
Clarice Allen and guests, Eva
Hollon, Mary and Melissa
Dempsey.

,Robert V. King, Lilllan B. King to Ratliff to Thomas G. McClung,
Herald OU and Gas Co., Right of Madeline McClung, Parcels, PomeWay, Salisbury.
roy V,lllag&lt;'. ·
Edward G. Moore, Kathryn L.
Westvaco Corp. to Eagle Moun~
Moore to Herald Oil and Gas Co., taln Energy Corp., Easements.
Right of Way, Salisbury.
Olive.
Eva E. Moodlspaugh, deceased.
Ronald J: Browning, deceased ,
Carl w. Moodispaugh, deceased. affidavit, Ronald K. Browning,
Connie K. Scholderer, Affidavit, . Mlddlepon Vlllage.
·
Middleport VIllage.
Robert F. Hawk to George H.
William T. Ratliff, Juanita E. Warner. Right .of Way/ Meter Site

---'--In the service----

Auxiliary holiday party conducted
The annual Christmas party of
the Chester Auxiliary of the. fire
department was held Wednesday
evening at the home of Goldia
Krackomberger.
The meeting opened with "The
Lord's Prayer." The Christmas
story from Luke was read by Erma
Cleland. Roll call was answered
with each naming something they
liked about Christmas. Several
Christmas poems and readings
were given. The secretary's report
was read by Clara Conroy and the
treasurer's report by Opal Hollon.

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

20%

PRINCE
ACCESSORIES

'

25°/o OFF
OF OUR

.Complete Stock

�·- Page-.-1 0-The

Dcnly Senttnel

Thullday, December 22, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohto

Govemor'_s first year
has been very bumpy
EDfi'OR'S NOTE Democratic
Gov W chard Celeste h as had a
bumpy polltlcal year, b ut he
attributes m uch ollt lo his candor
He says his administratiOn Is on
course and that Ohio's economic

recovery remains his lop goal
Celeste reOected on his first year in
otnce in an m terv lew wtth The
Associated Press

COLUMBUS Ohio tAP ) - Whe n
Gov Rich ard Celeste looks back on
his first year in offtce he clicks off a
list of accomplishme n ts and s hrug s
oH cnttcs acc usahons of c r ony 1sm
shakedowns and eve n nepotism
The 46-year old Dem oc1a t shi rt
s leeved a nd t1e loosened appeared
re laxed and confide n t as he ta lked
a bout the bumpy year o f 19&amp;3 m a n
mte rv1ew w 1th The Associated
Press
Celes te acknoo !edged c r Jhc1s m s
h ave d o g g e d
h 1s
w hi c h
a dmlnistrahon
B ut h e mststed t hat they resul ted
from t he nu ance o f a n admm1s tra
tlon w hich IS open to pub lic sc ru tm y
- as opposed to those of the p a s t
which h e said have wheeled a nd
dealed m p nvate
The governor reeled off a lis t of
what he sees as a ccompllshmen ts of
his ftrst year inc ludmg a pohtlcally
r is ky Ia)( mcreasewhich sta b!Uzed a
flounde ring state g overnme n t
H e also pomted to beefed up
sch ool funding soc1a l programs
wh ic h h ave cau g ht national a tten
lion a nd the for gmg of new effo rts to
diversify Ohio s econom y and
c rea te JObs
In respon se to qu es llons Ce leste
disc u ssed the mc 1de n ts w hic h
a lmos t s ince h is lna u gurallo n have r a ised publlc eye b rows
H e said the r eques t that non CIVIl
service state e m ploy ees make
fi nancial con tnbutions - som e as
much as $1 000 a year - to his
political comm1ttee 1s ne1ther a ne w
tach e no r a n 1rnproper on e Desp1 te
that this mont h 1t w as presented m

ftl'li

re lics p re! ty hea,~l; on that partner
we tal k a bout VIrtu ally e verything
t hat occup1es m y attenhon
He sa1d Mrs Ce leste h a s h eroon
5e! IOUS
mte t ests stemmlng fromher p rofes
I d o n t belle , e m strongarmmg I s1ona l experte nce s uc h a s a lcohol
trea tme nt programs w orkfa re and
do n t beheve m m t umdat mgpeople
Tdo be he ve 1l1 political te amwo rk I da) cBJe cenlei s He r w ork he lps
ex te nd the inle l est a nd1rnpac tofthe
go out a n d sell l!ck e ts fot the speaker
Celeste admm JSt r ahon and Its
{of t he Ho use o f Representat tvesl
w hen t he speaker has a dinne r I go lead ers hip the governor sa1d
Asked about the s tze of his office
ou t a nd suppoi1 the Dem ocra tic
Party when rt has an e \ e n t
s taff a t more than 40 and abou t
tw1ce t h e stze of the staff of forme r
A nd I t hmk tha t people w ho are
Repu b lican Gov James A Rhodes
holdm g t heu pos itiOns - a m o n g
Celes te said
his predecessor
ot he r reasons because I ha p pen to be
governor - have a n mtetest rn brou gh t m peop le fro m state
age nc1es w ho were n ot lls ted on his
ens u rmg th at I contmue to be
pay roll
governo1
We g l\ e a n hones t count
He
As ked whethei the pledge cards
said for m sta nce t ha t J ames A
gn;e n the s tat e e mployees are mor e
Due rk before he becam e develo p
sohc1tous than church tythe cards
m e n t d irector w as on the Developthe go' e m or s a 1d That d e pend s on
m en t Departme nt s staff and was
w h tc h chu rch ~ ou go to
d
oing m ost o f the P R for the
Celeste a lso discussed an arran
admln1s
t ra tion
gem e n t under wh1c h Lt Gov M; r l
On
o
ther
m a tters
H Sh oemake r "ho SJrnu ltaneo us ly
Legis
Ia
ture
- Celeste sa1d he h a s
serves as Na tu ra l Re sou rces d1rec
no
m
a
jor
p
roposals
for t he u pcom
tor recetves a $15 000-a yearsupple
lng
sess1on
of
t h e Gen e r al
me nt
fro m
the
governor s
Assembly
commlltee
H e w 1ll have
a sm'lple a nd
Whe n I asked My r l S hoemake r
m odest package of bills m ostly
to be m y runnm g m a te , he agreed to
take two JObs - a cabme t JOb a nd de partmenta l and d e a llng wit h nuts
m y d esrre IS to focus on
t hat o f lieute nant go\ e rnor The a nd bolts
he ute n an t gO\ e rn o r IS pa1d less than the econorruc d evelopment of th1s
any other s tatew1de offi c1a l Ce- s ta te
Buy O h1o I think the program
les te s a 1d
has s hown conside r a b le s uccess
H e's not paid a t a ll for bemg a
He s a id tha t a year a go thestate was
ca bme t person and for the first time
domg 40 percent to 45 percen t of its
In 70yearsof his life he s got to llve m
business wtth Oh1o companies and
Columbus a s w ell as m Bourne v ille
tha
t n ow the total IS 90percent to 95
He s got to travel all ove r the state
pei
cent
a nd " o rk on m y beha lf and I d1 dn t
The fa c t Is, that s ge nera ted $30
wa nt fin ances to be a c on cern I
million
$35 million worth of bus iness
thlnk w hat we did was s tra 1ghtfor
with
t
hose
Ohto f1rms
ward a nd falf
Utili
ty
r
egula!Jon I think It
The go' e rnor was asked a bout the
(recent reor gantza t10n o f the Publlc
role p layed by his w ife , Dagmar
U tilities CommJSs Jo n ) 1s a giant step
w ho has a patd s taff s om e thing
forward It won t satisfy every
unpr ece d e nted In O hio sta te
Utility c ustomer a ny m ore than It
governme nt
will completely sallsfy m e But I
H e acknowledged he r influe nce
thlnk In te rms of t he p rocess tt's
Any o ne who h as been a husba nd
been as different a s rught and day
for 21 y ears a n d sh are s s ix childre n

$33
Cases heard mcluded Des s1e
Borlng Albany three cou nts of
passing bad c hecks restltuhon and
costs to be paid 60 days m jail on
each count with 50 da ys on each
suspended and three yea r s proba
!ton Johnnie B rown Lang sville

jail With 50 sus pended J effery
Russell Coolv ille speeding S100
a nd costs reckless operat1on , $100
a nd costs !a llure to obey directions
of a pollee off1cer $100 and costs ,
Hansen B uckley Pom eroy, s top
s1gn VIola tion $10 a nd costs Dallas
Say re, G a llipolis assu red clear
d is ta nce $10 and costs
Als o David Wolf Chesh ier oper
a ting withou t headlights o n $5 and
c osts Carey Scott Athens speed
mg $24 and costs Robert K L ute
P om e roy speedmg $20 and co sts
Stoney J ohnson Langsville two
counts of petty theft costs only a nd
oneyear p roballon 60 days mj rul on
each wtth 50 d ays on each
s uspended Mark Rutledge Iron
ton speeding $20 a nd rosts, R obert
Shaffe r Pomeroy fa ilure to d isplay
valid regist ration $10 and costs

Kathe rn Davls Pomeroy speeding,
Frankie Varian
M iddleport left o f center $10 a nd
costs , Wesley W tse Middleport ,
u nsafe vehicle, $5and cos ts, Darrell
Cunningham Waterford assured
clear distance, $10 and cos ts, Kev m
Milam Middleport speeding, $27
and costs M a rtinBroderic k , Pome
roy s peeding $20 and c osts John
N lc lnsky Rutland, reckless oper a
tJOn $100 a nd cos t s James Smith
Racine trepassm g $100 and costs
fme su spended, SIX months proba
tJon Grover Arnold Pomeroy, and
Ke ith H e ndricks Pomeroy, $100
and costs each for disorde rly
conduc t, 10 days Ja il sentences a nd
one year probation for eac h,
Richard Herman, Middle port, as
sault 13 days in jail, Keith Musser,
P om eroy res1s tlng a rrest and
c limina I mischief, 30days In jail and
costs

$22 and costs

Happenings around Meigs County.•.
$77,299 sought
in damage action
A s uit for $77 299 has been filed m
M e igs County Common Pleas Court
by the H arleysville M utua l Insu
ranee Compa n y
Wes te r ville
against Amy Kingsland Jones
Jackson
The msurance comp a ny Is seek
!ng r ecov ery of ~ payment made to
Mts Jones for rw alf of p roperty on
Main and Court Streets in P omeroy
damaged m a January 28, 1976 ftre
Allegedly, t he burned real estate
endanger s the public as well as
neighboring property, a nd severa l
attempts to get the owner to take
action to r e medy the s ituation have
been Ignored

Veterans Memorial
Admissions Sybil Green e Hart
ford, W Va , Anna McHaffie
Portland, Mary Qualls, Pom e roy,
Stephen Lush, P ortland, E va Bar
rett, Langsville, Katrina Turner
Pcmeroy
Discharges-Anna M c Hatne

Seeks divorce

Winners announced
Four daily wume rs of gift certifi
cates a holiday prom otional pro
gram a t the Middleport Dep a rtme nt
Store have been a nnounced They
are Judy Stewart, E mogene Crooks
Callie Richmond and P earl Cole
man No purchase is required for
partic ipation

I

cnJelfy
1

Emergency run
Accordmg to the M e igs County
E m e rge n cy Medical Service, Wed
nesday ' s sing le emerg e ncy call w as
reported a t 3 41 p m for the Racine
squad to transport Steve Lus h to
Vete r ans Me morial Hospital

Livestock report

Ohio VaDey U vestoek Co
MarkeC Report
Saturday Dec 17 1983
Trends Veal calws !&gt;1eady feeder cattle
steady cows $1 to $1 50 higher
Feeder Steers GoOO and Choice 250 to :m
lbs 55-61 ~ :m to 400 lbs 52 5().61 400 to 5I))
lbs 51-60 :.00to6001bs ~59 50 600to7001bs
48-56 50: 'iW to fW lbs 47 56: fDJ and over
4a.55

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

Baby Calves a:J-45
Springer Can le 310 down
Cows a nd Calves Combina tion 525 down
Top HoRS 210 to 2l:l lbs 4&gt;18 25
Boars 400 tbs and up 23-26
Sows 400 Jbs and u p ~ 5-41

HAROLD E MeGRE GOR

Pubhc Not1ce
PUBUC NOTICE
REVENUE SHARING
HANDICAPPED
REGULATIONS
Th s not ce s pu blis hed
pursuant to thP. equ tremems of
SP.ct on 5 1 55 of the Revenue
Sha ng RegulatiOns as pub
I shed n the Federal Reg1ster
on October 1 7 1983 Sect on
5 1 55 pro h b1ts d1scr m natton
aga1nst oua 1f1ed nd v duals
bec ause of the r handtcapped

I

2

In Memor1am

by the Head 9-26
Due to holiday we will be- having our
Saturday sales on Wedflf'Sday Drec 28 No
Pi ~

salcSa turday Dec 31 Sale time wUibel p m

5157..50: :n:Jto400 1bs 50-57 40 to&amp;Xl lbs
48-58 50: m to &amp;XI lbs 47 ~5 600 to 700 lbs
43-52.50 700 to fiX1 lbs 424 7 liD and over

40-46 50

Holstein Steers and Bulls XO to IBJ lbs
3Hl 50
Bulls - IIXXl lbo and up 37 50-42
Slaughter Cows utWUes 33-37 canners and
cutters l1 down
Vea1 Calves choice and prime l!K&gt; to Dl !be
76-87

Tonight, partly cloudy and cold
Low around 10 a bove Friday partly
c loudy and continued cold High
around 25 C hanceofprecipltation20
percent tonight and Friday Clu1st
masweekendoutlook latrandcold,
highs around 20 Saturday and
autstmas day

Oblo Extended

Snow 1Junies northeast Satur-

day, otlterwhe fair and cold
through the holiday period Highs
CLEVELAND (AP) The In the teens Saturday and
winning number drawn W ednesday Chrhtmas day and !rom the upper

nigh t In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game , 'The Number, was (&amp;1 In
the "Pick 4" game played Monday
through Friday, the w1nnlng
number was 3854

teens to mid 288 Mooday Lows
from ~ below to 5 above zero
Salunlay IIIII ClillotiiiM day and S

to lJ on Mooday.

.. _.

stat us ~ ~ also prov des that all
serv ces prov ded by the VII age
of M ddlepo t must be access1
be to al c t 2ens
The V llage of M dd leport
adv sP.S the pu bl c that 11 does
not d sc nm•natf! on th e bass of
Hand capped Sta tu&lt;: n thP.
areas of Emotoyment or P a
gram Access b 1ry
The V11lage of M Odleport has
des gnated thP. follow1ng off ce
as the con)act for all nqu r As
concP.rntng the hand capped
Mayor s QH,ce
237 Race Strf!et
M ddlepo" Oh o 45760
Phone 992 3 145
Hours 8 A M to 4 P M
Mo nday th ru Fr day
112122 ltc

f

I\ ng wh ose address s un
known the unknown spouse f
any whose na me and add ess
are unknown I deceased the
unk now n he rs dev sees leg a
fffiS adm n strators executors
a nd / or ass gns of Harold E
McGrego r d P.c
YOL are hereby not f ed that
you havP. bePn nam€'.d dP.fend
an ts n a legal ac on ent t f!d
Jaml?s W Suttle et al Pian
I fls vs Mann ng 0 Webster et
a DP.fenda nt s Th s act10 n has
beP.n ass gned Case No 83
CV 93 and s pflnd ng n the
Commo n P P.as Cou t of Me gs
Cou nty Oh o
The ObJP.Ct o f the Com pla nt
s a pa t t on act or conce rn ng
o I and gas r gh ts anO to qu et
t tiP. to o I and gas ghts
und e ly ng the fo ll ow ng des
cr bP.d rPal estatP.
S tuated n the Townsh p of
l ebano n County of MF! g~ and
St il le of Oh o bounded a d
desc bed as follows
PARCE L NO I Be•ng Sect on
Number Twenty S x (26) Town
Num be r Three (3) n AangP.
Number ElPvP. n ( 1 I) ol the Oh10
Company s Pur chae and des
en bed as fol ows to w t Be ng
the no rt hwost quarter of th e
sou theast quart er of sa d sec
t on number twen ty s • (2 6 )
ca n t ~ n ng forty (4 0) fl C es be
th P. sa mF. morP o less
PARCEL NO I Also he
lot ow ng df!SC b!ii!d pro perty
to w 1 Be nq n Sf!Ct on num ber
twe n y (20) town num ber three
(3 ) an ge numbFJr eleve n ( 11)
a t the Oh o Company s Pur
chase a nd bounded as follows
to w ll Beq1 nn ng e ghty rods
north of thf' southWP.s t corner
of sa d Sect o 1 thP.nCP. no rth
hlty (50) rod s the nce east
e gh ty (80) ods thence sou th
ftfrv (50) 10ds thence west
etghty (80 ) rods to th e place of
beg nn ng contat n na twenty
l vP. (251 acres more or IP.ss
REF ERENCE DE ED Volu me
286 Pag f! 809 M e gs County
DeP.d Records
Th e prayp.r of sa d corn pia nt
s I hat the above desc bed o I
and gas nghts be pant o ned
that the ntf! rests be set oft or
orde P.d sold I 11 cannot be
part 1 oned and for allowance
ol att or ney fees and costs
here n
You a e requ red to a nswer
the co mpla nt w th•n twenty
e1ght days aft er the las t pu bh ca
t on of th s not ce wh ch wtll be
publ shed oncf! each wef! k Ia
s &gt;c co nse cut ve wP.eks The last
pu bl cat on w I be made on
J a nuary 19 1984 and thP.
twF. nty e ght days fo answer
w I commence on hat date
In casP. of you fa ure to
answer or otherw se respond
as P.Qu red by th e Oh o Rules of
Ctv ProcedurP. tudgmem by
dP.fau lt w II bP. rende ed aga1nst
you fa r the rf!l ef dr.ma ndP.d n
the Com pla nt
Larry E SpP. ncP.r
CIP.rlc ol Cou ts
Me gs County
Common Pleas Cou rt
112) 15 22 29 1115 12 19
6Jc

Weather forecast

I~

Pu bhc Not1ce

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
JAMES W SUTTLE ol81
Platntiffs
vs
MANNING D WEBSTER at
al
Defendants
c... No B3 CV93
NOTICE BY
PUBUCATION
TO
LE LIA ClARK f hv ng whose
address s unk 10 wn the un
known spo use i any whose
name and addr ess are un
known f deceas r.d the n
known he s dr.v sees P.ga
tflP. S adm n :Waters P.xecuto s
an d/ o ass gns of LF!I a C ar k
doc

ers Good
and Choice
250 toXO
ltliFeeder
4751 HeU
D:l to400
1'os 4550-51
400to500
1bs · - - - - - - - - - - - - 45-50 500 to roo lbs 42 5()49 15 600 to 700 lbs
4148 700 to fO&gt; lbs 40-48 50 tU:l and over
3Sol7
Feeder Bulls Good and Oloice 250 to 300

Lottery winners

Tamara Lynn Derenberger Ra
Cine , has filed action in the Meigs
Cowity Common P leas Cou rt for
divorce from Al1red Eugene Deren
berger, Jr , Albany, on grounds or
VOSS neglect of duly and extreme

-_

Pubhc Not1ce

Pubhc Nottce
ORDINANCE
NO 644
F1x1ng and regulatmq _the
pnce that may bo chofliild by
Columbia Goo of Ohio Inc ots
succeuors or ~a~gna for g81
to the Village of Pomeroy
Ohto and to Its inhabitants for
the period of Ave 151 Yeoro
from and after billa rendered
January 1 0 1984
BE IT OR DAIN ED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY OHIO

SECTION
That for th P.
per. od of One ( 1) Yf!.a r from and
alte r he effec t ve date of th s
ordn ance th e ma)C mum pr ce
whrch Colum b a Gas nf Oh o
Inc ts s JCCf!SSO s or ass gns
shal be perm tt ed to cha rge lor
and the m n mum pr CP. at
wh ch 1 or hP.y shall be
requ eel to lurn sh gas to thP.
Vtllage of PomP.roy Oh o
(Mumc pa t tV ) and to tis tn hab
tams shall be and the sa me ts
hereby f xed tor eac h nd v dua l
co nsumer as follows
A
Cus tomP.r Cha ge of
54 7 5 per meter per month
regardless ol gas consume r
and 13 462o per 100 cub c
feet per mm er pe r mont h for all
~as consumed
A Cus10me r Cha gP. lor
eac h custo mer eac h mom h of
Four Dollars and Seventy I ve
Cents (5 4 7 5) sha I be made If
serv CP. under th s ate schedule
s d sea 1t nued at he requ est of
c ustornP.r thf! Company shall
not be undAr any obi gat on to
resume se rvt ce to thfl same
customer on the same pre
miSf&gt;..S un t I the customer has
ma dP. paymP. nt of a n amount
equa l to the CustomP.r Charge
for each month of the nt ervP.fl
ng pe od but not to exceed s x
(6 mon ths) B A Jan 1
From and after the ex p1rat on
of the aforesa d OnP. 11) Yea
per od a nd for a fu rther pe od
of One (1) Year ther eat Ar as
foll ows
A
Custo mer Charg e of
5 4 75 per meter per month
rP.ga dless of gas consu mer
a nd 160 13c pP.r 100 cub e
fee t pflr mete r pe r mom h for all
g as consu med
A Customer Charge for
each customer each month of
Four Dollars and Seventy I ve
CP.nls ~5 4 7 5) shall be made 1f
serv1ce under th s rate schedule
s d1scont nued at the req uest of
c ustomer th e Company shall
not be undP.r any obi gat on to
rf!su me serv oo to the same
c usto mer o n the samP. pre
m ses unttl thP. customer has
made payme nt of an amount
equ al o the Customer Charge
for each mont h of I he nt erven
ng pP.r ad but not to eKceect s x
(6) nonths B A Jan 1
From and af ter the exptrat on
of the aforesa d One ~ 1 ) Yea r
penod and to r a fu rther per ad
of On e [11 Yea r ther eafter as
follows
A
Customer Charge of
S4 75 per mete r per mon th
rega d less of gas consumed
a nd 18483c per 10 0 cubtc
fP.et pe r mete r per month for all
gas consumed
A Customer Charg e for
each customer P.ach mont h of
Fou Dolla rs and Seventy hve
Cents (5 4 75) shall be made If
serv ce unde r th s rate schedule
1s d1scont1 nued at the req ues t of
c us10mer th e Co mp any shall
not be under an y obl tgahon to
resu me se rv ce to th e same
c ustomer on the same pre
m1ses un t f the customer has
made payme nt of an amount
equa l to the Custome r Charge
fo r each month of the tmerven
ng pe od but not to exceed s )C
161 months 8 A J an I
From and after th e exptrat on
of the aforesatd One ( 1) Yea r
per od and for a further per od
of One ( 1) Year thereafter as
follows
A Customer Charge of
S 4 7 5 per meter per mo nth
egardles'S of gas consum-,d
a nd 2 1 0 40c per t 0 0 cub c
feet per meter PAr mo nth for all
gas consumed
A Customer Charge for
each custo mer each month of
Four Dol ars and Seventy F1vd
Cents ($4 75) shall be made If
serv1ce under th•s rate schedule
s dtscont nu ed at the request of

64

--·-·

1ottod.butIJoll
- . . ..
ldH!
dollll
loll a- loooll-

- U.lltllld can -~~~ Lift
pt1 on 111111 11111J chln111

FJtindl nldlid llldllod Is But • '-lin ll1f ..,lonoly
fortht ..... -

.. door Vwy

Smllll ...

lory

HOTPOINT

MICROWAVEW
OVENS
STARTING .AT

S28995

lldly minld~~ IIIII, llullllf

...,......... _.,
11cCar1J

~

Silll1lo IIIIo

Slllllh, llonJaly hbbils, 111111

Gllllllllllfldlr
l dci!Ma ••n•••
NDU t 3 •
01

Mlac. Merchandlae

........

1\7,._
~

-

POMEROY
LANDMARK
· 614-992·2181

-------~ l...!!2.:~----..J l L - - - - - - '

Notice

Pubhc Not1ce

Publte Not1ce

customer the Company shall
not be under a ny o b •gat10n to

ty should hereaft er mpose a
tax upon t he Compa ny that s
not now mposed or should
hereaft er nc ease the rate of
any tax now mposed upon the
Compa ny a bo~Je the tax rate
now e~ • sM g othe r tha n the
rate on property l1sted tn the
real estate tax list and duplicate
then the rates presc nbed n
Sect on 1 shalt be nc reased to
the e•tent necessary to com
pensate the Co mp any for the
ncrease 1n cost due to such
nev.t tax or h1gher ta)C rate Th ts
shall be done m th e follow ng
manne r
(a) f the new tax or h g her tax
rate s com puted n d rect
P.lat on to gas sold o r revenues
rece ved for the sale of gas th e
rates set fort h he e1n sha t be
adtusted to the exte nt neces
sarv 10 reco mpense the Com
pa ny lor the a mou nt the reof
~b) If th e new tax or h ghe1 tax
rat e s not related dtrectly to gas
sold or to revenues recetved for
th e sale of gas th e n th e total
do tar effect thP.reof upon the
cost of serv ng gas by the
Company 1n the Mun c1pa 1ty
shall be determ1ned based
upon ope rat ons of the Co m
pany n the Mumc1pallty durtng
the most recently ava table
twe VP. ( 12) month pP.rt Od
end ng on the last day of the
Dece mbe r precedmg th P. effec
t w. datP: of the new tax or
h gher tax rate the total dol ars
so computed shalf then be
d v ded by thR total sales made
to the types of customers
covered by th s ord na nce
durtng th P. samp, t....velve (12 )
month per ad and the rates
prescrt bed herf!m sha I be
corre o; pond ng y adtusted
The adjustme nt o l lht rates
presc r bed 1n th s ordi n ance as
prov ded 1n subparagraphs (a)
a nd (b) above sha ll be made by
round ng the ma themattcal re
suit of the comp utat o ns so
p P.sc r bed to th P. nearest one"
Quarter cen t i /~c l per one
thousdnd GtJtl c feet
The ad usted rate s hal be
placed n eff ec t and s ha ll apply
10 all metr.r readtngs oc curn ng
on and after th e effecttve date of
the statute ord nancP. or resolu
I on pur sui3 nt to wh ch the new
tax or ncreasOO tax ra e s
mposed
Wr tt en not heat on of the
adt ust ment shall be s ent to th e
C erk of Coun c I of the Mun1c1
oalty as Qutckly as pass bly
a ft er thP. Aff ect of thP. new tax or
h gh P:r tax rate c an be "'
dP.tP.rm ned
SECTIO N 6 That any ord •
nance or resolutr on or part of
an ord na ncH or resolutiOn
nco ns ste nt hP.rew th s to the
ex ent of suc h 1ncons1stency
hP.rP.by repealed
SECTION 7 That s hould any
SP.ct on or part of a sect Ofl or
prov s on of a sec t1 0n of th s
ord hance be dec a ed votd the ~
re rn a nder of th1s ordt nance
shall not be affected th e re by
SECTION 8 That th1s ordt '
nance shall bP.Come effect ve
w th bUs rendered Ja nuary 10
1984 prov1ded hCM.rever that
lht s ordmance shal l have no
force or elfect whatsoever
unless w tte n acce pta nce of
th s ordmance ts ftled by the
Company Wit h the Cle rk at
Counci l of the V1 llagP. of
Pomeroy Oh to pnor to the ~
exptraiiOn of th rty (30) days
from thP. date th s ordtn ance ts
passed

rF!surne serv ce to the same

customer on the same p e
m sAs unt I the c ustomer has
made payment of an amaount
eq ual to th e CustomAr Char ge
for each month of the nterven
1ng penod but not to exceed s•x
16) months B S Ja 1 1
From an d after the exp • atto n

of the atoresa1d One ( 1) Year

per od and for a fu n her per ad
of One ( 1) Year lhAreafler as
follows
A Customer Charge of
S4 75 per meter per mon lh
regard less of gas consllmAd
and 236 11 c PAr 100cubte
feet per mewr pe mon th lor al l
gas consu med
A Custome r Charge ta r
eac h c ustomer each month of
Four Dolla rs and Sewm ty fve
Ce nts (S4 75 ) shal be made If
Serv ce unde th s rare sc hedul e
s d1scon1 nuP.d at the request of
c ustomer the Co mpa ny sha I
not be under any obi gal on to
res ume serv Cf~ to the same
customer on the same pre
m ses unt I the customer has
made pavment of an amount
equal to the Custo mer Charge
for each month of the ntervtm
ng pP.nod but not to ekceed s x
(6) months 8 A Jan 1
The abovl'!' ales exclude gas
casts and thP. Oh o G ass
Aece pt s Tax AI bt Is n'lndered
pursua nt to this ordtnance shalt
be adjusted to reflect the effec t
of the Oh o Gross Aece pts Tax
and arl'! su bJP.C to decrease o
ncrease n accQ dan ce w th he
Gas Cost Recove y P ov sons
of the Co mpany s Au es and
Regu at10ns on f le wnh th e
Publ c UtI es Co mmtssto n of
Ohta ThP. Company shall f le
w th th e Clerk of Co unc I of the
mun c pal ty computat a ns 1n
su poort of the above Gas Cost
Recovery ad ustments n the
sa me for m as s It ed by the
Company w th the Publ c Ut h
t es Co mmtss on of Oh o
SECTION 2 That t IS P.x
pmss v cond t OMd the serv ce
to bP. re ndP.red by sad Cd'm
pany ts successors or ass gns
pursuan t to th s ordnance shat
b e pr ma nly for domes he and
co mme cal purp oses a nd that
SP. rv ce shall not be extended 10
other consumf!rs of d fferent
classes unt aft er all rE'!aso nable
requtrements for domP.st c and
commerctal purposes arl'! fu ly
met and th s prov son shall be
btnd ng upon sad Company ts
successo s or ass gns duung
Aac h month of each year but
du r ng any month or year
subJP.Ct to the forego ng ltm ta
\to ns and after campi ancfl w th
th e tomgo•ng prov s tons gas
may be del vered to any othe r
co ns u mer !ln d a dd t ana l
classes of consumers at such
tt mes a nd under such ca nd
1 ons and lo r such rates as may
bP. ag eed upon betwe en the
Co mpany and such co nsumer
or consu mers
SECTION 3 The terms and
co nd tons of the serv ce to be
re ndered shall confor m wtt h
and be su btect to the Rules and
Regulations for furn•sh ng gas
serv ce of th e CompaflY on f le
w th and approved by the
Publtc Ut1httes Co mmtss on of
Ohto
SECTION 4 Thar the gas
furnts hP.d or dP.Ivered pursu ant
to the tP.rms a t th s ordmancfl
by t h.e sa d Company shall
have an ave age heat ng value
of 1 000 Br ush the rmal umts
per c ub c foot for any consecu
t M~ twelve (12) month pFmod
subJACt to a va rtence of not
more th an ltve pe cent ~ 5
percent) upward or d ownwa d
SECT ON 5 In the event the
State of Oh •o or the Mu n c pal

PASSED Novem bet 2 t 1 983 ,
Bruce Reed
ACTING MAYOR
ATIEST

Pomeroy, Oh.

DEPOSITORY

U

I

GUYSVILL E OHIO

\

DOOR~

t.

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
Pomeroy,

Oh

tllllln/AIFIIIATIYE ACTttiiiiiPlOYil

Ph 614 843 5191

Serv1ce
1-3·11&lt;

I0 6 ti c

M.L.
CONTRACTING ·
RECAMATION

-~"AUTOGLASS
._.~

OUR SPECIALTY!"

We Can Handle
When You Need Glass You Need Us
Your Every Glass Need'
Your Business"
"We Want And

273

1;~1~?

B I lie

USED
APPLIANCES

For 10% Off
Any Service

nrl

Atr ConditiOners

KAY S BlAUTY SALON
169 N 2nd
Mtddleport OH
PH 992 2725

11 ·9·1

.

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

742-2352
Route

mn

SPECIAlWITH
DEERA QUALITY
REWARD YOUR
EF
FORTS
LIFE lll&lt;£
SHOULDER MOUNTATOUR STUOIO

RE~EMBER

4.

Pomeroy " '

SERVICE
We can repa11 and re·
core radiators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out rad 1ators We also
repa1r Gas Tanks

985-3561
All Makes
•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PAT HILL

FORD

992-2196

PARTS and SERVICE

Middleport Oh1o
1 13 tfc

4 5 tfc
1

•-~;~~~·u:;~~~~~~J
;~-. ,:-..;,;~;:;:. ~~-,: w
IT To
1. o"trtti

T11E

TOYS

DJ's Trading Post

PH.

South Thtrd
Middleport

B A BEAUTY SHOP

CONTRACTING

Top Pnces Patd
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Alummum

"Holiday

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE

II

992-3466

IMEW li M ~ AD

Blow Dry

SEWER LINES
•PONDS RECLAMATION
WORK

$7.00

•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK
BONDEO &amp; WORK GUARANTEED
PHONE JIM CLIFFORD

.

Ph 992-7301
..
Hrs.: 9 to 5 Mon. thru Sat

SpeCial"

Shampoo • Haircut

•WATER GAS and

1011912 mo pd

992.7201

I 0/20/t f n

D1scover Engag&amp;-A Car the
modem answer to soarmg
new car pncest Dnve the v&amp;hlcle of your ch01ce
any
make and model No down
payment lower monlh)y
payments Read all about h
Send for Free Booklet ll6
Bob Blackston an autho·
r~ed mdependent Engage
A Car Broker Box 326 Po
meroy Ohto 45769
Want Faster Information?
Call 614 992 6737
I 1/2/ttn

In-County
PULLINS
EXCAVATING . General Weldmg
Salem Twp Rd 180
Dexter Oh 45726
BtU Eskew

- Dozers

- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo Boy
-Trencher
- Water

PH. 742-2456
Ladders lor
Barrel Tanks
And Dnp Tanks
Your Place or Mme
10/ 12! 2 mo. pd.

100

- Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH 992-2478

Call

949

2320

Ask for Tma Pierce

Thurs.-Frr.-Sat.

J.7.11

11 . ~.1 mft

,___ _ _
MILLS'
ELECTRIC

CHRISTMAS
TREES
FOR SALE

RESIDENTIAL-New
and re-w1r1ng
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL

1 M1le Off Rt 7

All Work Guaranteed

On St. Rt. 143

614-742-2214
After 5 PM

Call

,

K1tchen Cabtnets - Roof·
mg - Stdmg - Concrete
Paltos Sidewalks New Construction - Re·
modeltng - Custom Pole
Barns

AND

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester Ohto

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Ph 986·4269
If No Answer Call 985 4382
Oeweyne Williams
Sconla Smith
All Makes 1nd Models
Antenna Installation
House Colts and Shop
Strv1ct .bailable

Roofmg &amp; S1d10g Co .
Route I
long Bottom OH 45743
985 4193 or 992 3067
12 20 lfc

a.

Savell I

end order by mall with 11'1is

coupon Cancel your lid by phone when you get
, results Monev not refundable

12 - ~

l mo jMI

Nam•'------------------BISSELL FLOORS

SIDING

BISSELL

FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING

I•

SIDING CO.
"Beautiful. Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free sulmg es·
t1mates,~ 949-2801 or

~eep That Natural
Look In Your Ho111e.

CALL

949 28o0

378-6349

No Sunday Calls

3 ll tf c

11·17 1 mo

FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Butldmg

- Addon l and remodeling

- Roofing 1nd gutter work
- Concrete w ork
- Plumb ng and elactrlcml

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

work

6:30PM.

(Free Est1mates)
REDUCED WINTER RATES

Factory Choke

V. C. YOUNG Ill

12 Gauge

Shotguns
c

L

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
Wh1te s Hill Road
Rutland, OH
(lsi Rd left up
New ltmal

742-2789 or
742-2515
mo

pd

These"""' rate

I JForSale
( )Announcement

17
1B
19, - - - - - 20
21

( lFarRent
.

1

'I
I
I

I
I
I
I

I

2

3

22

•

5··- -----

26
77
21

110

29

J ::

E

I t•
II 15

·

M811

.

Th~ coupon .... · - · -

992-3194
992-2388

FR~~·:i:PJ8UY
j&gt;o~:~\\~AA9~ mn

or

MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL
S3QOO
PH 992-2280

.I

Bustness or Resldenttal

2 23 " '

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

.

33
35

ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH.

:u.

I"
1

1·

6

7
I
9

Chester, Oil
Open Wed Fn Sat N1tes
7 30 to 10 00
Available for pnvate par·
tJes Mon Tues Thurs.
N1tes Sat or Sun Alter·
noon
THANKSGIVING PARTY

(Formerly
lawrence
(Dobbtn) Manley's Routel

.

2l

SKATE-A-WAY

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport

-;-

I·

For Ill your Wlrln&amp;
needs, furnaces repa1r

•

semce and InStillation.

I

&amp; ComMercial

L__?~_J '

Roger Hysell
GARAGE
At

1

"""

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al10

Residential

Ca11Jn~2~~t5
Or -,:u.· ii: i'A ...

•

124 Pomeroy Ohio

I~

Transmin1on -

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3 24·tk

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pom•••v Oh•r?.R.Jk

~~~~~~~~~~
I'RRYW!!QVII!ji!CI

12/ 9/ l

()Wanted

CARPENTER
SERVICE

RACINE

Vmyl &amp; Alumtnum

PROFESSIONAL

Include dlliCOUOf

mo pd.

YOUNG'S

GUN SHOOT

Only '"

Addq,~··--------------

121111

ll 15 I mo. pd.

S&amp;W TV

I Curb Inflation
1I Pay Cash for
Classlflecls and

sHOP

RUl lAI'ID OH
PH 7 4 2 222,5 ll ·9 l mo

12 12 l mo Dd

•DOZER

Dehvered to Plant
East of Pacevlile
On Township Rd 141
We Spec1ahze
m Afummum Only

TAXIDERMY

- Sewer
- Gas lmes

J&amp;F

J¥, M

GRAVEL
HAULED

RADIATOR

SERVICE

I

" " FOR YEARS AND YEARS

CAll TO~Y FOR CURRENT PRICES
~~~~R AND OTHER GAME

f•

TRUST YOUR

SONAL ATTENTION IT DfSERVES TO
GIVE YOU A PRIZE TROPHY THAT

AL TROMM
742-2328

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Il

wv

I

Ranges, Refngerators

Monday thru Fnday

New Homes-Extenstve
Remodehnc
Insurance Work
CustQm Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garages
•
Rooftng Work
Alummum &amp; Vmyl Stdmcs
16 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH 992-7583
or 992-2282

INTERNATIONAl

own ad

M ason,

Washers, Dryers

Exp1res Dec. 30th

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

.

I

Radio Ol s pa «n•u

(304) 77~·5110 . 773-5118

Rt. JJ

WHEN THE M~Y HOURS Of HUNT
I~ FINALLY PAY OFF WITH THAT

Racme OH

Bnng Th1s Coupon In

1 .

good mouser
304 -675 2264

"\..~
~

EACH MOUNT IS GIVEN THE PER

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS
1 mtle below 2nd Ka1ser
Entrance at 102 Carney
Dr , Corner of St Rt 2
and Carney

Barn catl

4 beaut iful kittens 6 mont hs
o ld 304675 21 35 be ·
t w een 6 and 6 p.m .
3 fe male puppies pert Beagle . 3 04 6 75 4 0 9 0 .

Mal e

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Rates
Around
•oump Truck
Servtce
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328 '·" ·"·

3

Ge rm an

Shepar d ,

small S pttz a nd half Poodle .

304 6 7 5 5 4 92
Pup py one half registered
Beag le Phone 304 88 2 ·
328 1.

6

949 -2293

Maplewf1o1~memo

BUYING

6 mo nt h old fe male PURPY
Ca ll 992 6 5 8 3

* Excavatmg
*Ponds
•septic Tanks
* Hauling

FOR SKINNING
PH. 949-2734

,.'&lt;-

:· Point. M;son- \
7 Auto Glass ~\

!

away

mon th o old . Colt 949 25 27.

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

Mise Merchandise

Wrifte your

12

G IVIIWIY

2 odoroblo fomolo C olllo

Ho::=.:~"ori'ri.

&amp; WRAPPED

SCIPIO RECYCLING

CLINICAL CHIEF/OUTPATIENT DEPUTY DIRECTOR- Ex
penenced professtonal soctal worker wtlh mtensrve and d1
versrf1ed knowledge ol admmrstrat1on and soctal casework
pnnc1ples and practices m broad areas of ass1gnment and
related fields Typically th1s level of d1ff1culty arJSes from the
complextty of the program Supervrses staff of soc1al work
ers counselors, ctencal personnel asSigns duties and coor
drnates aci!VIIres of staff through tndiVIdual and group con
terence tn analySis of case problems and a1dmgteam memb
ers m 1mp1ovmg their dtagnosttc and helpmg sk11ls eva
luates perlom!ance and Indicates action develops and Implements policy In collaboration wrth Drrectorof Outpatient Ser
VICeS

TIOI AlfD M EQUAl

&amp;

$5.00 EXTRA

of
~..-~~located '" H&amp;R 1-0
~0 Block Bmldmg ~
t 1.7.? mo od

SOCIAL WORKERS - PIOVIde general outpatient therapy
and consultatiVe serVIces to Head Start Programs schools
nursmg homes and othe1 servtce proVIders as necessary
Must be creatiVe and self paced Masters degree 1n clmtcal
psych1atnc soc1al work With at least one yyr of tradttionally
supervised expenence m climcal evatuat1on and
psychotherapy preferred

PI••

Ra cme Oh

CUT

'----- .,.........::..:ll..:·ll..:·lf..:cJ

CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGIST - Must have PhD w1th mten
stve experience m psychologtcal assessment chmcal
evaluatton consyltat10n and psychotherapy Must b~ able to
work wrth children adulls and lam1lles Musl hold or be
ellg1be for current Ohro license ResponSib le for chnrcal sup
erv1ston of non licensed slaff

Positive worijn&amp;envlronment with ,excellent trine• btnl
comprehensln communitr mentel hlllth ctnt11
1111d rtsumesto Ptrsonne AdmlDilllllor Wood
lad Ctnltll, Inc , 412 VInton Pika, Galllpolli Olllo
45631, or call lor 1110r1 lllol'llllllon (&amp;14) 446-SSoo.
•aiD'..MD CEITO ~II A l'ltVAU 11011 PltllTQI.E COIPOIA

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Farm Equtpmenl

DEER
PROCESSED
$2500

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO

St.

S1zes Sta rt From 12 x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
S1zes fr!lm 6 x6 Up
to 24 x36
Insulated Dog Hous es

Dealer

Parts

PARCH PRIORirl SHIPMENTS
FOR lESS THAN U S MAIL
SAVE LD% TO 50% AND MORE

Mam

EAST

Farm Fr:u1pm ent

DELIVERY ..

618

50

Auth onzed Jo hn Deere .
New Helfand Bush Hog

BY
.,. U P S - PUROLATOR ~
TO

s RT

I

DAILY PICK UP SERVICE

"~DOOR

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PARCEL SERVICE

~

CLERK

1111 In •

4

g i~Ja

SAVI

II til

t 121 22 l tc

CERTIFIED OCCUPATIONAL THERAPY ASSISTANT - Pro
VIde supportiVe occupational therapy actlv1tles both 1nd1
Vidual and grou~ As~st 1n coordmatlng occupational ther
apy activ~1es wttll other health care programs Must have
current State of Ohto IJcense for OccupatiOnal Therapy As
sisllnt Pnnctples and pract1ces of occupational therapy
knowledge requtred, as well as knowledge and understand·
'"I ollhe needs of the chromcally mentally 11land ab 1Uty to
relate to same

The Daily S.ntinei- Page-11

Ohio

2489828
. old Colt
~;;.':;:::==~;;~r,O::::====::::::=~ir~=======~ir=========:t:=========rl 814·
pu pploo
7 w ko
1 k,ltten to
~· NOW IN
BOGGS
rGLASS • GLASS • GLASS Female yellow App ro}(. 2

4irO

BernadAt!P. Anderson

RECREATION/ACTIVITIES SPECIALIST- ProVIde a thera
peuttc recreat1on/acbV1ties servrce component to the lnpa
tient/Transitional Servrce Area Part1c1pant w1th other team
member to develop both group and IndiVIdualized treatment
plans/strategtes Bachelors degree tn creation or related
area preferred EducatiOn tn the l1eld of mental heaHh or
equtvalent would be helpful Knowledge and understandmg
of the needs of the chromcally mentally 111 and abtlity tore
late to same

..

II

BOARD OF
EDUCATION
Sealed proposa s w•l be
rece ved by thP. Board of
Educat on of the Me gs Local
School D st nct of Middleport
Oh o at the Treasurers Off ce
untl 12 00 noon on Tuesday:
J anuary 3 198 4 and at tha~
ttme opened by the Treasurer of
sa d BoJ rd tabulated and a
report the reat mad e o sad
Board at ts nAJ~:t sci ed uled
meet ng as prov d ed by aw 101
th ree (3) 65 passenger schoo
buses accord mg to spec t ca
to n s of s a1d boa1d o f
ed ucat to n
Separate and ndf!Pe ndP.nt'
b ds w II be recervf!d w th
res pect to the chass sand body
type and w II stat e that the bus
when assembled a nd pnor to
de livery campy wn h all school
dts trtct spec1ftcauons a I safety
regulattons an d cur ent Oh o
M1n1mum Standards lor School
Bus Construct on of th e DP.pa rt
me nt of Educat on pursuan t to
Seet on 4 5 11 76 of the Oh1o
Rev sed Code a 1d all ot he
pert nent p ov sons of law
Sp ec flcattons af)d tnstwctiOns to b dde rs may be
Obtatned at the offtce of the
Treas ur er Mtddle port Oh o
A cert tfted c hec k payabl e to
the TreasurP.r of the a bove
board of educat on or a
sat sfactory bid bond executed
by the b1dder a nd the sur ety
compa ny tn an a moun t equal
to f1ve percent (5 percenl) ol the
btd shall be s ubmttted w th
eac h b•d
Satd board of educat on
resef\leS the r ght to wave
mformaht es to accept or retect
a ny a nd all or parts of any an d
al b1ds
No btds can be w thdrawn tor
at least tht rty (30) days alte r the
sc heduled clostng t mP. for
reCP.IPI of b ds
Me gs Local
Board of Educat on
Jane Wagner
Treasurer
62 t South
Th1 d Avenue
Middleport Oh o
45760
1 16 141992 5650
1121 t 8 15 22 4Jc

54

'

8 usiness Services

PUIICHAII OF
THIIIIICHOOL
IUIII FOil
MIIGI LOCAL

Itt-~

.

Dmmber 22, 1983

NOT1CI TO
11001111

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

t he news medta as a r evela tio n he
satd
S tunning n ght 1 he asked With
a smt le But he q u tc kly be&lt; orne

1:\\ o counts of petty theft costs only
and o n e year probatlon 60 d ays m

'

Publla

O'Brien ends 28 court cases
Twen ty-etgh t cases w e re pro
cessed Wedne sday m t he Me tg s
County Cou rt of Judge P a trick
O Bne n
Forfe 1tmg bonds w ei e J 1mmy
Deem Racme $45 posted on a
charge of know mg ly transportmg a
loaded ftrearnn m a m otor ve hicle
Ke nne th Deem and P ea r l Deem
both of Lancaste r $45 each both on
the same tr a nsportmg a loa ded
fire arm c h a r ge G ar; Me lmme
Zanesville speedm g $42 Ca rroll
Van ce J r Cheshire fail u reto y1eld
the right o f way $45 Thomas
Romans ki Lancaster, speedmg,

ill

-

Los t a nd Fo und

Anvil ba nd is now booki ng
part1es a nd dances 3 04
67 5 53 70

13

Insura nce

S AN DY AND B E AV ~ R In
suran ce Co has o~ ered
servtces for ftre msuran ce
cove rag e 1n Galh a Counw
fo r al most a cent ury Farm
home a nd pe rsonal property
cove rages are ava1lable to
meet md tvtdu al n eeds Con
tact Harry Pt tchfo rd agent
Phone 4 4 6 1 4 2 7

21

Public S a l e
&amp; Auct 1on

Auct 1on every Tuesday
mg ht Pt Pleasa nt WVa .
Au c t Lonme Nea l Youth
Center Bld g Camden St .
6 14 367 7101
Rick Pearso n Auctioneer
Serv1ce Estate Farm An tique &amp; hqu1dat1o n sal es.
Ltce nsed &amp; bo nd ed m Oh1o &amp;
WVa 3 04 77 3 578 5 or
304 773 9185
Auctio n every Fri night at
the Hartford Commumty
Center Truc klo ads of ne w
me rcha nd1se eve ry week.
Constgme nt s of new a nd
used mercha nd ise al ways
w elcome R1 chard Re yn olds
Au c t oneer 304 276 3069

9

Wanted T o Buy

We pay cas h for ta te mode l
clean used cars
J1m Mmk Chev Olds Inc
Btll Gene John so n
.
446 3672
Wante d to buy used co al &amp;
w ood hea ters Swam Furniture 446 3 15 9 3 rd &amp;
Ohve St .. Galhp ohs. Oh .

~

Bus tness
9pportuntty

f NOTICE f
TH E OHIO VALL EY PUB
LI S HING CO recommends
th at you do bus mess w 1th
peo ple yo u kn ow and NOT
to send mon e y through th ~
ma1l untn you hav e mvestt
gated the otf enng.

Cig ar ett e Distnbutors htp
In stant cash flow' We are a
Bonde d nattonal f1rm ex
pan dm g mt o th e area If you
a re seekmg a secure bu111
ness opportumty We pro
vt de all reta tl locations and
al l necessary tramtng Full or
Part ttm e Investme nt from
$2 00 0 00 Wtnston
Sa le m Kool s 1 8 0 0 2 41
225B .
Stripping Furn iture &amp; Metal
Insta nt ca sh flow\ Ftrst ttme
m thts are a Our expe rt staff
has many years of e•pe ,
rtence and has set up resto
rat1on ce nt e rs througho ut
the US a nd Europe We
furms hed eq Uipment chem
te als supphes and an ex ten
s1ve t ra1n mg course at o ne of
o ur succe ssful centers near
es t y o u
To tal c ost
$32 500 00 Bonded Call
Toll Free IBOO) 2 41 2269
or wrne fo r more mfo u S
Strtppmg 1775 The Ex
ch ange S utte 600 Atla nta

Use~ mob 11e homes a nd
truck camp e rs Call 446- _G_A_3_
0_
3_3_9--~---

75

01
Indian Art 1fac ts all kmds Air
1mpact wrench es F1be rgiass
bass boat&amp; motor 16 16ft
Submers ibl e pump Call
446 4298

Cigarette or VIDEO Oistrib
utors htps Routes ave•labte
We provtde money for e•
I r,a nSton all\ocattons tram
mg &amp; a BONDED staff to
assist you m sett1ng up your
own part or full t1me bus1
2 used bassinetts Ca ll 614- ness From S3 9 60 to
256 6823
$6 0 00 Wmston Salem
Kools . 1 BOO 241 2268 .
Wa nted to buy New used &amp;
a nt1que furmture Writ buy 1
22 Money to Loan
p~ece or comple te hous eholds Also complete Aucti- ---------~
o nee rtng se rv1c e Cal l Os by
A Martm 614 992 6370 .
HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12 %% purc hase or
Buying daily gold silver refman ce 11 1h % adJustable
coms nng s J&amp;welry sterhng rat e l ea d er Mo rtgage
ware old cams large c ur- Athe ns . 1 BOO 341 6554 .
r1mcy Top prtces Ed Burkett Barber Shop 2 nd Av e
23 Professtonal
Mtddtepon oh 614 99 2
3476 .
Serv1ces
Raw Fur Buye r Beef &amp; Dee r
H1des G1n se ng Trap ptng
S upphes Geo rge Buckl ey
At 2 Athens Oh Phone
614 664 4761. 1 9 Dally.
BEDS IRON BRASS old
Furmture gold Sliver do t
Iars wood tee boxes st on e
I j~rs ant1ques e tc Co mple te
hou
s ehAt
o ld s4 Po
Wnt
e M Oh
D
M11\er
m&amp;roy
45769 or 614 992 7760

j

' Giveaway

Frami ng remodeling roo f
tn g s1d1ng concrete w o rk
etc Call Bud 304 45B
15 66

8

~.

4

home Lots of reference•
Men or women Call 687
3402 .

;;;:
iiiiii~~ii
!!J!Iilltil~

Vacanc y Julia 11 Per~onal 1======-==
Care Home
Formerly~~;~~
~iii
Mercer Canvaleaence
;;;;
Home 18 years expenence
Chfton W V 304 773 11 Hei ~Wanted
6873.

Harpe r's Adult Care Home
has 1 vacancy for another
reatdent. eldarly person call
304 675 1293.

Will care for th e elderly In m y

old
fe male
Golden
LOST
Ractne
area Retnve!
1 yea r.
Ch•lds pet 614 949 2907 .

Wilt pay $160 00 and up for
Me1gs County stone Jars and
JUgs Good condltton Coa t
SWEEPER and suwmg ma- R1dg e Salt Co Pomeroy W
chme repatr pa rts and R Dye Harnsonvtle John
supplies
P1ck up end Ge yer Pom e roy TM Hoi
delivery Dav1 s Vac uum me s Syrac use H W Sayre
Cleaner one half mtle up l e tart Falls Henry Seyfried
Georges Creek Ad
Call Middleport M1cheels Mid
446 0294.
disport
Any JUQ or J&amp;r
ma rked Portland DeKter
Balloons for Ch--;iatmes Get Langsv.lle Pegetown An
Welt Anmvere:arys Birth- t1qu1ty or Reedsvtlle Oh1 o
days parttes Cell Balloons &amp; All oth er Metgs County Jars
Co., 446 4313
and Jugs wanted 614 992
2592 .
Gun shoot Racine Gun Club. I- - - - - - - -- Every Sunday start.ng 1 Cash for guns Shotguns.
p m Factory c hoked guns nfl es and p tstols AU makes
only .
614 949 24B5 .

Riverview Peraonal Cere
Home now has a vacanc y for
1 elderly person 304 7736B82

Prlvoto root homo lo r oldlfiY
ho ndi CIPPtd DA C rown
City e ru can 814 288
86 09 .

FOUND long h·aired ye llo w
cat Vj c1mt y of Fre nc h C1ty 18 Wanted to Do
Mobile Homes Has been
InJured Call446 1422 aft e r Gene ral Hau ling a nd Tras h
4PM .
re move! Servtce Rehablq
;,
an d depen dabl e Call 446
Lost fema le Caltoo ca t m 3169 between 9 an d 5 .
Mm e rs v1lle Po mer oy a rea
-·
Re w a rd Beloved pet Call light doze r w ork &amp; lands
9_9_2_
2 _4_20
.u;._. _ __ _ _ 1 ca pmg Kotal1c Landsca p
I ing Ca ll 446 3 100

Announcements

Will the lady that bought the
haze mtnk stol e fro m Esthe r,
ple81a call her a bout the
otole. 614 992 5070.

Situation&amp;
Wanted

===

=

Need so meone to w ork o n
farm w1th farm experience
background '" exchange for
free rant wnh all ut 1ht 1e 1
pa1d Only quehfied persons
need apply Prefer a fam 11y
person reference• needed.
Call 446 1052 alter &amp;PM .,
Beyourownbossbyown1ng
your own bua1neas Look 1ng
for someone to take over
clothing bus1ness tncludes
rnventory fixtures supphet.
304 676 1317 or 676
3217.

K1ttans to good home Ca ll
446 0658 .

In hom e and over night baby
11tter needed starting 1n
Jonua,.Y. 304 876 227!1.

Refrigerator freezer, dafrostar unh nHds replaced , ..
ot 1 1 1 Klneon Dr oftor
I.
l

Pan time In home help
needed for craft work Some
..wing knowledge required
304 676 2270.

-

PIANO TUNING Low e &lt;
prt ces r e gul ar tun1ng"
disco unts to Semor C1t 1zens
Chu rc hes &amp; schools Ward s
Ke yboard . 304 575 3B24 .

31

Homes for Sele

4 bdr railch ho me large LR
full basement With garage
wood burner Included City
sc hools 2 mil es from to wn
Call 446 0 276 .
_.:.
The former Wesle y Chapel
Un1ted Met ho dts t Church
buddmg loca te d on County
Road 10 1n Chas h1re Town
s htp Galha Count-; 11 for
sat e Th1s IS a fra me bulld1ng
1n sound cond1llon w1t~
apprOK imately one thnd of
an ac re of lan d contenta
inclu de d Please s ubm 1tt
b1ds by J a nuary 1 1 9 84 to
Ath e ns Dtstnct Un1 t ed
Methodtst Un1on P 0 Bo•
67 The Plaons Oh•o457BO
The Ath e ns D1stnct Unned
MethOdist Un1on reserves
the rl ghttor&amp;Jectanyandal\
bids.

1-::--:--------

Ran ch o n 6 acres baaut1fui
s e ttong w•th tall pone•
around the ho use Spac1ou s
hving roo m wh1c h overlooks
I :~e po nd 4 bedrooms uttl
tty roo m a nd kitchen h81 1
bu1lt tn ra ng e Assume pay
ments wtth a s mall down
payme nt $58 900 Call
446 3176 .
3 BR new bric k home lond
contract . 446 0722.

1- -- - - -- - - Brtck 2068 sq ft 3 bdr 2
bath s hm1lyr o om w
f1replace dlmngroom kit
chen complete breakfast
room full basement w·
fireplace beth 2 Yz car gar
age use of clubhouse 8r.
pool Kyger Craek School
Cell for appomtment 614
367 7464.

IOwner- Mu1t

Sell
,f.~~i' 2~~nl Our lossi-O;~
~~~~,.!'.!'!."~Middleport . Call
'I.

•

•

f

�Page-12
31

....

The Daily Sentinel

Homes for Sale

RUSTIC LOG CABIN in the
~46·388B .

3 bedroom

ranch

styled

home . Call 446· 0109 after

5 :30.
Located

in

Syracuse-Near

school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethir d acre lot. Price reduced
$23,500. or will rent for

· $240 mo . 304·855-3934.
House for rent or sale;. 6
rooms an~ 1 bath . Fenced
yard . Call 742 -2435 after 6

PM .
4 room house with Utility
roo m . ~ack yard. 6 foot
fence. s·malt aluminum outbuild i ng . 342 Hartinger
St .Contact Ronny or Sue
Hawley at' 771 South 2nd
Street in Middl(lport

-

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
C HECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446·7572 .
NEW AND USED ' MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .
1976. 12x70. lotal electric.
3 BR , 2 baths', ex. cond.

S6900. Call 446-0175 .
1977 Trailer o.vith lot for

sale. Call 614-256-6618 .
ATIENTION · Do you need to
moves into a nice mobile
home without the hassle of
set-up. We have a 1979
Freedom

1 4 x7 0

deluxe

model on a lot in the Country
Mobile Home Park . This
home has a front dining·

room with wooden bow
window, a circular kitchen
with lots of cabinets. 2
bedrooms. large luMury bath
with a gerdden tub . Price of

$ 12 ,500 . Includes meta.l
bui lding, patio cover, steps .

3 bdr . house, 1112 bath, Rt. 7,
Cheshire. $200 mo . Call
614-446 ·9786 8AM ·4PM .
3 bdr . familyroom, central
heat and air. fireplace, carpeted . No pets. Call Charles
K;osl;ng. 614-379-2196.
2 BR TRAILER , furnished ,
with water paid . $160
month plus depos it . 446 ~
3888 .
House in Rio Grande area ,
no pets. 1 child. Call 614245-9162.
3 bdr. house, city limits. Call
446-0321 .
Very nice 2 bdr. mobile
home good location near
Green School . Kitchen ,
range. refrigerator. washer
&amp; dryer, gas heat. cent . air,
$200 mo . Call eve' s 4460254.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

61 4 -992 -6284.
ATTENTION -Is there such a
t hing as a classic t In mobile

hOmes? When you view this
Holly Park 'we think you will

agree there is. .A 1969
1 2x65 Holly Park with 2
bedroom . 6 x 1 0 tip-out in
living ro'om . Compp ou letely set up in nice park .

lnclude!!i 40ft. patio furni!!ihings, even a washer and
dryer , completely skirted
and ready to occupy. There
isn't a cleaner or well kept
home in the area . Just like
brand new . You must see to
appreciate .AII _of this for
$12,900 . Financing available. low down payment and
low monthly payments. For
information call 614-9927034 or 614 -992 -6284.
1976 14x70 trailer, 3 bed room. 2 baths , large kitchen,
$10 .000 . 304-773-6023 .
1981 14x70, Shultz limited
mobile home. microwave.
dishwasher, central air. underpenning . three bedrooms. 1 '12 baths, excellent
condition, $16,500 . Call
304-675-6049 aher 5 p.m.
Mobile Home Moving, li Censed and InSured. Free
Estimates $100 . per hookup minimum . PhQne 304576 · 271 1 or 576-2866 .
USED MOBILE HOME .
PHONE 304-576-2711 .

12x60 2 bdr. modern furnished trailer. Convenient
location. Upper River Rd.
deposit req. Call 614-446·
8558.
Nicty tumished modern mobile home, in city. 1 or 2
adults only, Call · 446 ~ 0338 .
2 bdr. mobile home partially
furnished . Call 446-4292.
2 BR MOBILE HOME . Also 1
small MH suitable for one
adult. 446-1158 .
2 bedroom mobile horne.
Adults only . 614 -992 ·
2698 .
Furnished , nice !nobile
home . 3 bedrooms. All
electric-central ·air. Good
location, across from pool in
Syracuse . &amp;250 per month
plus utilities. Deposit required. Call 992 -2659 .
Furnished 3 bdr.:all electric
mobile home . Washer &amp;
dryer no pets. 949-2253.
Two bedroom mobile home
12x60,near Pomeroy and
Middleport area . 614-9925858 .
Two bedroom mobile home
12x60.near Pomeroy and
Middleport area . 614 ·9925858 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

1970 Holly Park. 12x65.
~
bl
Small lurn . house 1 cr 2
$6 ,50 0 · or be~, reasons e
offer . Must sell . 304-676- adults only, no pets. Call
3628.
446·0338 .
1970 ELCONA, 65Jt12 , two Furnished apts. 1-4 rm . &amp;
bedroom furnished , bath up . Clean, no pats,
$6,495 .00 . 1969 CHAM · adults only. Ref . req . Call
PION. 60x12 two bedroom . 446-1519.
•55,995 .00 . 1973 D~~0 lU -, 1-- - - - -- - - ~GLAS . 65.1114 three
3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.
•rooms. $7,295.00. 1
utilities paid , adults only, no
"ELCONA double wide , pets. Call446 -3437.
:sHARP. three bedrooms,
·two baths only $12,900.00 JACKS 0 N ESTATE
delivered . Other used homes APARTMENTS (Equal
:on display . Must sell over Housing Opportunity} has
stocked. 0 . and W. Homes. one and two bedrooms, rent
at foot of Shadle Bridge, starting at 8157 for one
Phone 304-675·4424.
bedroom and $193 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
- - - - - - - - - --1ant. Call 446·2745 or leave
message.
36 acres at Rodney on W.T. 1--_.:;
_______
Watson Rd . Owner financ- 1 room $60 week for 1
ing available . Call446-8221 person . $70 week for 2
after 6 weekdays.
persons . 1 room with waterbod $30 a night. Call 44635 Acres, % mile from 2501 .
hospital . Farm land or devel-·
opment . level. "$37, 600 . 1 bdr. opt. Call 446-0390.
Call 446-0603.
•
2 BR Apt. , 8129 mo.
14% acres on Roush Hollow Utillti111s Pttrtially furnished. ·
Ad off At. 554 . Owner -----·· 3 bdr. house for sale
financing available . Call on
land contract. 676·6104
614 -388 -9718 after 6, or 875 ~ 6388 , Carol Yeager
weekdays.
Realtor .

8

41

2

Houses for Rent

Anic Apartment·, furnished.
S175 utilities pd. Man only.
Share bath. 919 2nd 'Ave ..
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 7
p.m.

Two I tory house, 4 bdr .,
f260 per mo. &amp;260 dep.
req . Call 446-4222. 9:30·
6 :00.

Furnished Apt .. 1 BR, 1235,
utilltleo pd . Adults. 243
Jackson Plko. Gallipolis.
446-4416 after 7 p.m.

Duplex. $260 plus utilities .
Avail. now, 2 bdr. , lR , new
remod. kit., 8. bath. large
fenced yard, new carpet,
668 3rd. Ave.. GolllpoHo.
Coli 446·24&amp;7 or 4480332.

15 room1, yard, off street
parking. 843 Second Ava ..
Gallipolis . Call 81 4-256·
1529.

/

~~.!'!!tmento .

304 - 675•

830, king frame $60 . 1 _8_P_M_._
·· - - - - - - -

Good selection of bedroom •·
suites , c8dar chests . King wood and coal burning
rockers . metal cabinets . stove. good cond., 8260.
swivel rockera.
Call 614-256-6307.
Used Furniture -· bookcase.
ranges. chairs. dryers, re- Zenith color TV, floor model,
frigerators and TV's. 3 miles good cond., 1160. Coli
NEW Uhfurn . 2 BR 1win ~ out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am 446-8246 .
single. Includes equipped to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri., 9am
Antique•. oak furniture re·
kitchen, utility, carport, . to 5pm, Sat .
production, misc. items. Use
storage room , large lot with 446-0322
our: Chri1tmaslayaway plan.
garden space. central air,
$250 plus deposit and utili· TV 8o Appliances, 627 Third Conkals, Tuppers Plains.
tie!!i. Call 446-4477 or 446· Avo., Gallipolis. 446-1699.
Spin washers. gas&amp;. electric Carp•t Special 26 rolls of
3888
dryers. auto washers, gas &amp; heavy commerical for 83.96
Furnished apt .. men only, - ~!~~ric rangea, refrigera- sq.yd . 992-6206.
reference . Also furniahed ........ TV sets.
Carpet Special 26 rolls of
mobile home available Jan.
commerical for 83.95
1, adults only . Call 446- GOODUSED APPLIANCES heavy
Washers. dryers, refrigera- sq .yd . 992·6206.
3918.
tors, ranges. Skiggs Ap1 bed room Apt . S196. mo. pliances, Upper River Rd. Seers baby bathinane with
including utilities . . Equal beside Stone Crest Motel. shelves, 82500. New born
sleepers and carrier. Like
housing opportunity. Con- _
4_
4_6_·7_3_9_8_·--~--­ new. Coli 992-2420.
tact Village Manor Apts. 1·1
Used electric range, used
614-992 ·7787 .
refrigerator. used RCA color Maytag wringer washerRiverside Apts. Middleport. TV. Corbin &amp; Snyder Furni- S 126. Kenmore washer and
dryer- $126 . Self defrost,
Special rates for Senior ture, 446-1 1 71 .
2 door refrig With ice
Citizens. $130 . Equal Hous- 1------- - - - gold
GO. Maytag
ing Opportunities . 614- Pre-Christm.a s Sale. Bar · maker-$1
washer·green , 1100. 614·
992· 7721 .
gains throughout the store . 7 42·2362 .
20 -60% off on our recondi- 1----- - - - - 2 bedroom furnished Apt. tion name brand appliances. 1'7 cubic toot Frigidaire
S 160. month plus utilities 3 frost free refrigerators, froatless with ice maker.
and deposit. Overlooking 2·30" gas ranges, 1 eye E.~tcellent condition . 8150.
Ohio river in Minersville. level elect. range, 1· 30" firm . 614 -992·6776.
614-992 ·3324.
electric range, 15 cu.ft . I - - - - - - - - - h t t
f ea
es ype r zer. 4 au t o- 2snowtireawithrims.E78.
In Middleport- 2.3 ,and4 cmatic
·washers, 6 chest of 614 -949 - 2688. Vernon
room Apt's. Call 1-304- drawers . Each sold with Nease. 46360 Forest Run
882·2566 .
guarantee. Call Skagga Ap- Rd R . 0
pliences. Upper River ~d .
. ICine. h.
Two apts. in Middleport. Gallipolis. 446-7398.
One furnished , one unfur- 1 - - - - - - - - - - Magic Chef micro·wave,
nished . Deposit required and Hupp' s Appliance &amp; Glass- cooks, heats, defrosts, meat
reference. No pets. 614- ware. White 12 cu.ft. refrig - probe, 2 years old. Uke new.
992 -3190.
erator $125 . Copper 12 Aher 5 p.m. call 614-992cu. ft . refrigerator 890. Gas 5089 . .
APARTMENTS, mo.bile 30 i~. range with 880.
homes. houses . Pt. Pleasant Double oven electric ·r•nge New wood burning stove
and Gallipolis , 614-446 - copper S90. Tabletop Magic with firebrick 8326. each.
8221 . .
Chef gu range with oven 304 -675-1578 or 675880. Franklin woodburner 7896.
TWIN RIVERS 'TOWER . $80. Portoble Wh;rtpool
Apartments now available to washer $90. Maytag wrin- Used washer. dryer, stovea,
elderly &amp; di!!iabled with an gar washer $90. 8 track refrigerator. 30 day warincome of less than &amp;terowithspeakarl&amp;record ranty. One Baldwin organ.
$12.300 . Renting for 30 1Pi8Y9f $60. Portable S&amp;W double keyboard. J&amp;S Pawn
percent of adjusted income- ITV 3 mo. old 860. Also Shop. 314 Main St. Pt.
.Phone 304-875-6679 .
&amp;. dryers guaranteed Pla81ant.
, &amp;. ~;.:· ble . location Will haul co,l, gravel. send.
Small furnished and 2 bed--~·L 7 &amp; Rt. 141 . Call
anyth;ng . Call Bud, 304room unfurnished apart- 446-8033.
458· 1 566 .
ments . Point Pleasant area. f - - - - - - -- - 304-675-1365 .
GE Washer&amp; Dryer matched
Home Insulation. Attic or
pair. clean and serviced.
Apartm11mt For lease or Rent
30 dRys, other whole house with OwensCorning Fiberglas. Blown in.
- in town for details, call 1;.. -_;··.;; :~&amp;.~dryer also. Call
Free Eatimates. 304~675304.675-5968 evenings or 1., 1
207.
3962.
weekends.
Sears frostfree refrig., ice
maker. Nice. Call 446- Ten antique church pews, in
good condition. Phone 30445 Furnished Rooms 7268 .
676-2931 after 6:30.
For rent Sleeping Rooms
= ===A:n:t:iq=u:e:s===Yellow gold T;ger Eva ring.
and light house keeping 5 3
304-676-7690.
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 446 -0756 .
Antique brass bed, full size.
304-675-3431 or 676 - Girls 16in. bike ••c. cond .,
836 .00. Phone 304-8823030.
:1549.
46 Space for Rent

&lt;

' I.
I"

-~

t'=

General office spaces. res ~
taurant. storagespeca, Eastern Ave . and 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipoli!!i . Greatest
location-modern. Price.upon
your inspection . See them at
450 2nd. Ave ., Gallipolis.
NEW UNFURN . 2 BR tw;n.
single. Includes equipped
kitchen. utility. carort. storage room, large lot with
garden space. central air.
$ 260 plus deosit and utilit;os. Coli 446-4477 or 4463888.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park. Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992 . 7479 .
I=~========
48

Equipment
for Rent

20 ft . flat bed trailer. Can
pull with own pick or car.
Haul anything on it . $26 per
day. Coli 614 '446-0175 .

49

For Lease

For lease, Chevron Station,
Mason area . Good location.
304-676-2982 after 6pm.

54 Misc . Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"-22" stocked
in yard. HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614·2566246 .
limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
8o Son. Call 446· 7786.
Oak tables &amp; chairs. corner
cupboards, buffets &amp; etc.
Wood World. 2506 Grand
Central Ave ., Vienna, WV.

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolis. New
&amp;. used wood &amp; coal stoves,
6 piece wood living room
auite with 6 i11ch flat arms
$399, bunk beds complete
with bunkie• •199. 2 piece
antron llvingroom suite 11
$199. antron reclinera 199,
other recliners SBO. maple
dinette seta $179, bo.11
aprings It mattreas twin or
full $100 sat regular-firm
t120, maple dinette chair ..
136. waah stands 134,
maple rockers 169, 7 piece
chrome dinette set 8149, S
piece dinette sat 199, uurt
bedroom auites, refrigera
tara, rangea, chelt, dre...ra.
·
w ..hera. TV's. dryl!ero, -, shoeo. Coli 4461 31159.

71

Oragonwvnd CatteryKennels. AKC Chow pup.
piae, CFA Himalayan, Peralan and Siame~e kittens.
Clilll 446·3844 after 8.

1---------AKC Registered Poodle puppiea. Dep. will hold for
Christmas . Call 446-0857.

AKC Reg. Colloe puppies.
tri-color. $160 . Contact
Myrl Knowlton, Albany, Oh .
614-69B · 4841, or 69B ·
3263.
2 AKC Regiatered male
Cocker epanlels- blonde 6
vro. old, red 3 yrs .. good
blood line. good temperament. Excellent for breeding. Call 446-9372 after
5:30PM.
AKC Reg. Dobermans black
8o ruot, 875 . Call 614 -266·
1656.
2 registered Coon dogs. Sale
or trade. 814-742-2304.

Regiatered poodle puppi..
and cocker spaniel pup.
Cocker spaniel $160. No
checks . Call 614 -992 _
2607

1- - - - - - - - - . Oaschund puppies. Red female. 6 weeks old. Male 9
weeks old . 860. 'each . 614·
992·2302.
.

4 pc. Slingerland drum set
with set of rota-toms. hardware. symbOls · &amp; cases,
$400. Call 446-2836.
Suzuki violin with hard shell
case and brand new bow.
Alverez mandolin with hard
case. 304-676-6843 before
8 p.m .

58

Fiuit

&amp; Vegetables
Apples from German Ridge
hand picked and drops.
golden Delicious. Red Delicious, Rome Beauties, •nd
Wine Sapo. Coli 446-8698
or 614-379-2303 .

59

For Sale or Trade

1--------Snow blower and sled. Call
992-5282.

Why wait? Build yol(r own
24ftJt32h. garage or WOfkohop, $1,596 . Coli 1-614886 -7311 .

Firewood delivered . S36
pickup load, 10 loads 8300.
Coli 614-266· 1427.

58

2 yr. old mar8 unbroken 'A
Tennesae Walker, 114 Quarter
hor~o. Coli 814-266·6779.

ADD-ON Woodburning fur·
nace. auto. controls, water
heater included. Never used.
$690. Ph. 614-256 ·1216.

HILLCREST KENNELS
Barding all breeds. Selling
Happy Jock Dog Food.
Doberman puppies: Stud
Service. Call 446-7796.

Pizza oven for sale. ges
kitchen range, pop cooler,
deep fryer. See th.e m at 450
2nd. Ava .. Gallipolii. _

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
61 4-367· 7220.
Briarpatch Kennel• Professional All-brnd groomlng.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facllltieo. Englloh Cocker Spaniel puppies. Coli 614-3BB·
9790.

1976 Grand Prik, good
shape, new tires. 11,800.
304-675-362B .

'65 DeSote, goQd cond.,
$850.00. Coli 304-895·
3686 after 5:00.
'76 Ford Pinto, 4 cyl. 4
ap,ad, body eJCc. Must sell.
Taki over payments. 304 ~
882-2428.
1976 Monza, rebuilt'engine.
new tires. Cragers, new
paint. no rust, ~ - apeed. 4
Mustang GT wheals, complete. $100. 304 -676 ·
4038 .
Trucks for Sale

73 Dodge Club Cab 'A ton
pickup, needa engine put in .
8ft . truck topper insulated&amp;.
sliding front window like
new. Call 614-246-6286
ask for Pam.
1980 SR -6 Toyota PU, 5
spd .. With topper . Csll446~
8523 .

Wanted . 3 weaned
dellvered .992-691 8 .

4 Y,r. old Reg. Quarter horae
mare. 1 Billy Cook show
nddle, 1 Tax tan 1how
halter, 2 horse trailers. other
ooddleo. Coli 614-2456286 ask for Pam .

Repoasessed Iewing rna·
chines by White free -arm,
zig-zag. etc. balance 896 or
88 per week. Call 446·
9301 .

1981 2 dr., block Chevy
Chevette, 4 spd .. AC. lug·
gage rack. wire rima
$3,195. 1980 blue Renault
LeCar 2 dr ., 4 spd.. full
sunroof, AC, AM~FM spare
tire, $2,496. 1979 4 dr.
jlrown VW Rabbitt. auto.
auto.. AC, AM. sunroof.
new battery. new tires,
82 ,795 . 197B 4 dr. white
Chevy Nova auto, AM· FM
82,296. John's Auto Sales,
Bulaville Rd. Gallipolis, Oh
45631. 446-4782.

1979 black Ford Courier
pickup, 4 .Pd., radio, spare
tire, new battery, $2,8115.
John's Auto Sales. Bulavllle
Rd. Gallipolis. Oh 46631.
446-4782.

LUMBER - Rough cut, oak,
poplar, 2x4, 2•6. 2x8, 1.~~:4,
1x6. 1x8.1ength available, 8
Firewood. Pickup or deli· foot through 1 4 foot . Hogg
verect dump truck . Call614- 8o Zuspon, 304· 773 · 5564
daytime.
256-6589.
Pets for Sale

Fa. K Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Coll676· 1331.

cond. Call 614-379•2726.

Livestock

3 .Ows •nd 1 boor hog. '73
Dodge van. good ohape.
304-676-5081.
64

Must sell before Chriatman
'74 Chevy pickup, V-8, 3
spd .• ex. cond., 81,200 or
bast offer. Call ~48·7619.
1977 Dodge pick-up. 6 cyl.,
lowmilaoge. $1200.orbost
offer. 186 N. 2nd. Ave.,
Middleport, Qh .

1---.:.__.:._____

1969 Datsun pick~up. Aun1
good, good tires, . •400.
1963 Corvolr'Von 9!-moter
runs good. $400. 247-4292
or 949-2029.
1 976 Ford 1h ton truck
$1200. 1972-318 Dodge
engine $100: 304-6764090.

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay for Ale, square bales.
Call 448·26!~

'77 Ford Ranger. new tires
and bettertn. Goa;d running
condition. 11,696. Phone
304-67!1-2372.
1976 Chevrolet pick-up,
runo good, body rough,
S&amp;OO. 0 firm. 304-8751393.

Autos for ~ale

TOP CASH p,old for ·tate
modal used c•rs. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eaatern Ave.. Gallipolis, 4462282 .
Chrlotmoo Spocltlo 1981
block 2 dr.. Cllovy Cho4 apd .. AC. luggage rock,
wire rimo, U, till. 1980
beige 2 dr. Chevy Cllovette 4
spd., tilt whMI, AM·FM
topo, 12,495. John'o Auto
Boles, Bulovllle Rd, Oolllpollo. CaH 441-4782.
1971 Thundorblrd Town
Londou. 302 V-8, burgoncly,
AC. lull po-r. rodlo, ohorp,
14,8811. Coli 114·44101177.

73

Vans

a. 4 W.O.

1966 GMC 30 PIIMnger
bus. good cond., new
brakes, •1.600. Call 446·
2B36.
48 WheeU.o J"p completoly rebulh angina ond
drive, lots of OKtrll. Coli
448-t759.
1978 Jeep CJ-5 ••· cond.,
rusonable priced on ln~pec ­
tlon. Coli 448·40113.

78

a.

Auto Parts
Acce110rle•

Chriotmoo 8poclo11980 Ronouh LoCor 2 dr., 4 elld.. full Two mud ond onow tlr8o
sunroof, AC. AM·FM.
with whMio. 14". One
' , t2.481. Jolin' I UIO I Fai"l
~- •. •"~·17•
14".
S.lee, lut.vllo Rd, 4 .... I :.:Oi'.a"
mn ~
,..
4712,. Olilllpollo.
' ~~~-----

..

'T:,.

/

'

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout~
lng. 30 yeara experience.
speciali1ing in built up roof.
Coli 614-388-9867.

1967 Chysler convertible
new paint, fUns perfect. Call
614-245-9278.

62 Wanted to Buy

63

rBpair commercial
and resi~
dential,
free estimates.
Call
614-266-1182.

RON'S Television Service,
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola. Quazar. and
house colla. Coli 676-2398·
or 446-2464.

1978 Chevrolet PU good
pigs

PLASTERING • New and

1979 Ford Pinto Runabout
39.000 miles, good cond. , 4
cyl., sharp, priced 12, 375.
Call614-388-9323 or 614·
388-9905.

72

HANG TIGHT, &amp;L
JIGUNPO. LH Uj;
FINI,H OUR 8U,INE5-"
ANP GE'T OUT .. . THEN
~OU CAN BLOW AU.
'{0U LIKE.

Improvements

Appliance Service all makea
Ba models ra:trlgertors.
waahen. dryers. ranges.
compactors, dishwlshare.
microwaves. Heating &amp;t
Cooling. Sheet Metal Work.
Gallia Refrigeration Co .
614-448-4086.

~=~;.:-~"""

....

.

RINGLE'S SERVICE eKparienced roofing. including
hot" tar ajtplicatton, carp,ntar. eUtctrician, meson. Call
304-676-2088 or 676·
4660.
.

I'M NOT A6iXIT
T'I'/1\GTE MY
TIME IIR®IH'

Water Weill. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumpa SaiH and Service.
304-896-3802.

ABOUT IT.
LOOfiiT UP.

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece cuatom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gl.ft·
1er, (Day 614-1192-4066,)
(night 814-698-8205.1
GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal. ,
furniture cleaning, free eati·.
mateo .. 304-676-22$6.
R. G. Moyet and Son. Dieoel_
Service and major overhauls. Experienced in aU
types, dieael and gasoHne
81.'1ginea. lnduatrilll or auto •. •
hydraulic and ae.&lt;::trtll ser". •
vice. Located at Mason Co. ·lndu1trlal Park, Point Plea:. •
oont. 304-675-7422.

C'MON! WE'VE GOTTA FIND

A PHONE AN' WARN DOC
WONMUG AN' OSCAR!

'

82

Plumbing
Heating

a.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND IJEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448-3888 or 4464477
JIM'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT·
lNG . Fomerly Dewitt'•
Plumbing. Call 61 4-367·
0676 .

83

Excavating

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna. ponds. ditchee.
basements, etc. Call 448 ..
4907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation.
Cat 216 hoe, dozera, crane.
loodera, dump truck. Call
614-446-1142 batwoen
7:00AM 8o 5:00PM.
Good-1 Excavating. beaement•. footers, drivewaya.
aeptic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 446-46n.
J1mes L. Davison. Jr .•
owner.

MUST ADMIT SHE
FINE .,108 ON THE
HOMESTEAD.

J .A.R. ConstruCtion Co.
Water lines, Footers,
Drains. All kinds of Dhchlng:
Rutland, Oh. 614· 742·
2903.
•~

•
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Paaquela Electric . Co. all
ph•••• of electric work. all
Work guaranteed. Aerial
truck rents I. 814 - 4464088 .
SEWING Machine repeira.
eervice. Authorized Sing•
Salas a Service Sharpen
Sciaaors . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

86

HIDE THAT
JOG QUICI(,
PAW!!

HERE COMES
TH' PARSON AN'
HIS WIFE

.AN' WHILE
THE'I'RE HERE··
KEEP \fORE

MOUTH SHUT

Doe'
'8 :30 G (1) Mama's Family Ma· ·
rna's back goes out at a dinner party.
()) Larry Jones Special
()) Wild America
® Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin
9:00 II (1) Cheers A man who
learns he has only si•
months to live decides to
leave his fonune to the bar.
()) 700 Clu,b
(!) Top Rank Bo•ing from
Las Vegas, NV · Top Rank
Boxing presents a 10-round
Jr. Middleweight bout fea turing Mardo Roybale vs.
Humberto Delosrios.
Ill ID M Simon &amp; Simon
An amusement park hires
A.J . and Rick to recover a
trained dolphin that has
bean k;dnapped. IAI (60
min.)
(l) Roundtable
® Promises 'Ponrait of an
Alcoholic.· A successful
theatrical producer struggles to admit that he has an
alcohol problem .
· 9:30 D (1) Buffalo Bill When
Bill's show is canceled. he
goes to work as a used~car
salesman.
(jJ) New Tech TlmH
10:00 0 (1) Hill Street Blues
Bobby Hill's father shows up
for the holidays and Fay is
reluctant to let Frank and
Joyce take Frank Jr. on a ski
trip. (R) (60 min.)
(I) Inside The NFL
(1)20/20
1!1 ()) ® Knots Landing
(I) Avengers
®Newo
1!1) INN Nawo
·10:30 (1) Album Flash
()) Blondie
CID Tony Brown's Journal
'Jim Crow's Graveyard.'
1!1) Christian Children'•
Fund o
·11 :oo om Cll rn mIll ® 111 .
(!!News
(1) Eighth Annuel Young
Comedians Show
(I) MOV.IE: 'The Long
Riders'
()) Another Ufe
([) TBS Evening Newa
(I) Dr. Who
(jJ) Community Chriotmae
811 Banny Hill ShoW
'11 :30 D (1) CD Tonight Show
_ ()) Doble Ollila
(I) Soep

Ill()) Trapper John. M.D.
Ill Lotenlght America
&lt;1J M•A•S•H
Ill (!! Nightline

JONES BOYS WATER SEll·
VICE . Cell 814-387-7471
or 614-367-0591.
•

e

Need something hauled
away or something moved1
We'll do h. Coli 448-31159
betwaen 8 and &amp;.
Water hauling. Fostlervloe,
low rates. Call 114·2111·
t743 .
.
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lonler 304-11711·
7317.
.

187

(jJ) Specee
Ill llattleotor Galactlca
6:30 II (1) CD NBC Newe
(I) Rifleman
. 00 ESPN'a SideUnes
Clllll (l) ABC Newa
D Cll ® CBS Newa
(I) Buoinon Report
(jJ) Over Eaey
7:00 II (1) PM M-Ine
()) Alias Smith and Jones
00 SPOmCenter
Ill Carol Bumett
(I) Entertainment Tonight
CD Charlie'• Angela
II (I) Wheel of Fortune "
Ill (jJ) Mac:Neil/lehrer
Newehour
®Newe
Ill (]J People's Court
til J-'!eroono
7:3D D (1) Tic Tac Oough
(1) Inside Boxing
(!) ESPN's SportsWeek
Ill Hogan's Heroes
(I) Family Feud
II
(]) Mountaineer
Basketball'83
® Wheel of Fortune
Ql (D Entertainment
Tonight
1!1) One Day at a Time
'8 :00 II (1) .Gimme a Break ·
Since Joey has not had a
real Christmas, Nell decides
to make it a real family affair.
(1)
MOVIE:
'Breaker
Morant'
(1)
MOVIE:
' Friendly
Persuasion·
,
()) Too Late for Africa's .
Children
(!) NFL's Greatest Mo· ·
menta: 'More Than a
Game'
Ill Ill ID Hall of Fame
Bowl: West Virginia vs.
Kentucky
(I)
NCAA Baoketball:
Kansa~ at Ohio State
CD Hell Of Fame Bowl
Football
Ill ()) lllli Magnum, P .1.
(l)
Good
Neighbors
Christmas
(jJ) Sneak Previews Co·
hosts Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons lake a look at .
~h8t' s happening at the
movies .
liJII MOVIE: 'Meet John

OOS~Centar

General Hauling

Dump truck for hira, will
hiut coal, aend. 110n1.
wood, etc. 304-17!-3110.

I

I ROGUD
· I I I· 0

I

Prai~e

81

1980 PLYMOUTH HO ·
RIZON; 4 dr. 4 cyl. front
Wheel drive, auto. trans .. air
cond. 68,460 milea. one
owner. $2960.1f ir;~t!fl'elted ,
contact Herold George at
the Holzer Medical Canter,
between 8:30 a.m. and 5
p.m. weekdays. 446-6346.

Ill CD Ill ()) ® Ill

Ill Spacee

-.._

Autos for Sale

(1)

(!!News
(1) MOVIE: 'Evil Under the
([) Uttle ·Houoo on tho

SIDE: OF THE:
LAKE ...

1977 Chevrolet PU 350
auto, new snow tires,
35,000 miles, AC. Call
61 4-379-2726 .

55 Building Supplies
Building materials .
bloc". brick. sewer pipes,
windows. llntals. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
0 . Call614-245·6121 .

""-

G

Sun'
(])New Treasure Hunt

0 0

'76 Monte Carlo, tilt, cruise,
air. new tires. Good cond .
$2,500.00 . 304-6?5-6438
or 676-1431.

Musical
Instruments

~:oo
1

M.EANWHJI.E:•

1

./

'Pets for Sale

71
51 Household Goods

1

Television
Viewing
EVENING

ON THE: OTHE:~

\'

Senfinei-Paga--1 ~

12/22/83

:__.........~

-I\

Dail

·' THURSDAY

"'V

--

57

S-'M -SOME 'THINGS 'IOU .JUST

327 truck engine w-euto.
trans., run• good. e2&amp;0. 01
beat offer. 304--468· 1613.

~.;:::::;;;;::••:""::":":·:·:·•:":
' ::;:=========~
56

Auto Pam
&amp; Acces•orias

Billy L.. 's Tlr• and Battery
Sales. New and uaed tirea.
olso. tire repolro. 1603 Jef·
farson Ava . Point PlaaNnt.
304-676-5406.

___·--------L-:::::~==:::::::::::-J~)~~:::::::::l
""'- - ----.::::'

II ~

78

HAVE 'ro'TAKE ON MITH . ..

G

washer and dryer . Every -

thing in tip ~ top condition .
Ready to live in. For information call 614 - 992 ~ 7034 or

byLarryWrlght

• The

"' .J

Chevy Muncie 4 apd. tr.ns,
1973 8o up Chevy tn1ck
ports, 4•4 Chevy Luv w~h
Jeep front nle 6 111-38.1·
16 mudde·r on 10 in. rima.
naada asnmbly. Call 814·
388-9884.

1---- - - - - - -

Cabin on Raccoon Creek 2
bdr .. stove &amp; refrigera~or ,
large fireplace $236 mo.,
l&amp;ase required . Call 446009~ or 446-0795 .

for Sale

KIT'N'CARLYLE !•

' ~· December 22, 1983

,.-----------------,

&amp;

32 Mobile .Homes

54 Misc . Merchandise

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto, Lime1tone delivered. 810 a
man, 3 t1ble1, jeKtra hn~ ton . Coli 614-268-1427.
by Frontier), $686. Sofa.
chair and loveseat. t275 . 400 M motor &amp; tranemiaSofas and chairs priced from aion 41 OG shotgun. 1 Y.l"
$285, to $895. Tableo, '45 galv. pipe. couch S. chair,
and u~ to s 125. Hide-a RCA 25 " color TV. Call
beds.,.o,.,-:40 . and up tc; 614-256-1629.
8526., Recliners, $176 . to 24 INCH 6-spd. Spider
S375., Lanips from $28. to bicycle. $40. Callevenlnga7
S75 .6 pc. dinette• from to 9 . 448 _3638 _
$99 .. to 435 . 7 pc. $189
and up. Wood table with aix PEAVEY PA SYSTEM with
chairs $426 to $746 . Desk XR800 s channel mixer
$110 up to $225. Hutches. amp; 2-TlOO speaker co$560. and up, maple or pine lumns; and 4-PE 660
finish . Bunk bed complete Shure Microphones comwith mattreJaes, 8260. and plate witH covers. 3 years
up to $395 . Baby beds,
f
$ 1 10 _ Mattresse&amp; or bo.1t old . Used only ~;~r gospel
springs, full Qr twin. $58.. ~~o6~~5~:~ing 81200. Clill
firm. $68 . and 878 . Queen
sets, $195 . 4 dr. chests, Playpen like new. Call 44.6 o
$42. 5 dr. chests. $64. Bad
4 66 9
frames. $20 .and S25 ., 10 1__
gun - Gun cabinets, S360. 40 ft . wooden extension
, __-:
Gas or electric ranges S375. ladder It Water Bug water ll~~i
Baby mattresses, $26 &amp;
·
!..-:,':.
$35, bed frameo $20, $26, pump. Call 446-0159 after .
-

country -with 1leeping toft.
kitchen and bath. $125 plu1

dopooit.

51 Household Goods

They'll Do It Every Time

"'

Ohio

11

~OCI(EV STICK"?!?

·.

'r

TRIITATI

UI'HOI.ITIIIY IHOI'
11U leo. A.... O..lpallt.
...., . 71U ot 441-11JJ.
•

'•

Twilight Zone
11 :46 (!) NCAA Basketball:
Purdue at DaPoul
1 i:oo (1) Kenny logglno In
Concert
m!llllllt &amp; A!leJI_ · . ()) MOVIE: 'Mr. Smith
Goea to Woohlngton'
(I) Nlghtllne
® MOVIE: 'The lluoolano
Ara Coming. The lluooleno
Are Coming'
Thlcke of the Night
t 2;30 II (1) CD Late Night whh
David Lettennen
(I) Jeck Benny Show
II (I) MOVIE: 'Father
Knowa Beot: Home for
·Christmoo'
' Ill &lt;lJ News
12:45 (1) MOVIE: 'Frances'
1 :00 (1) MOVIE: 'Rallover'
()) I Metried Joan
•
(I) Entertainment Tonight .,
lllllJ CNN Heedllne Newt1 ·

IBOMERYI

I (J

ll

IAPEARDI

WHAT YOU SOMETIMES eE.T WHEN
YOU HAVE FUIIl
IN THE SUN.
Now arrange the circled ienars to
fonn the surprise answer, as suggested by the above canoon.

I KJ

Print answer here:

"(X XI XI

r

(Anowora tomorrow}

.Yesterday's'

I Jumbles•
RANCH AGILE CLOUDY
Anhrer: What goes up the stairs on
A NAIL IN A SHOE

SINGLE
Its head?-

Jlnblt look No.11, COI'IIIInlng t tO pum.a, II avall•bl• ·fOf .1.15 pi !II 5!iol poat•ge
•nd lwlndllng from Jumbltl, do thla n41Wipepw, Bo• 34, NorwoOd, N.J. 07148,
lneludlyour~lfle,lelrhN,ItpcodelndmlkiCMcktpeVIbllloNIWipli~l.

BRIDGE
Oswal : Jacoby and James Jacoby

J

·when not to hold up

NORTH

l2-22-83

• 73
.AQ2
•to 6;
+A J 10 75

WEST

J+ K 10 8 6 &gt;
1\'10843

:~J3

EAST
+Q92
• 976
• K98 2
+Q82

and rubber out the window.
He let East's queen of
spades hold the first trick
and ducked tije se.cond spade
also. If West' had led a third .
spade, South's play would
have worked because there·
would be no entry for West's
last two spades, assumlns
South handled clubs safely.
West, with that nastiness
so common to expert
defenders, knew that spades .
had become hopeless so !ttl
shifted to the queen '

SOUTH

diamonds.

+AH
.KJ&gt;
.A 74
+K94 3

South took his ace and
played his king of clubs ami
a low club. West sbowed out
and South wound ur, losmg
two spades, tl)ree d amonds
and a club lor down two.
South had no need of a
hold-up play at trlc~ one . He
could win the first spade ,
then 'lead a club to dummy's .
ace and a club back to his K9 . This club finesse would
insure .. ;s contract even if
West produced the club
queen, since West's spade
suil would be stopped by
South's J -4.'
The s ucces sful club
finesse would have given
South a least l 0 tricks: but
that would have been just
icing on the cake. When he
won the fi rs t trick, he would
have been sure of his game.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

North

Pass
Pass

3NT

South
I NT
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

•6

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

A little learning is a dan. gerous thing. South had just
. learned about hold-up plays.
He hadn't learned much
about them - as evidenced
1
by the way he threw game

(NEWSPAPER ENTERP!liSE ASSN.)

~-~tit'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Mother

ACROSS
I In the center
5 Bank's
concern
1 (abbr.)
9 Hero's reward
II Woo
13 Olfactory
sensation
U Seasons
goddesses
15 Egg supplier
16 Distaff
bunny
18 11 - Dreamer"
19 Ridicules
21 Saturn's wife
22 - shooting

(Fr.)
3 God only
knows!
4 Weir
5 Arthritic
indications
6 Bird
sound
7 Extremely
Yesterday's Answer
inquisitive
8 Overrides 20 Laclu)'Tilate 29 Floral
10 Speaker's
22 Gluts
arrangement
opening
23 Wrest from 33 Redecorate
word
24 Circwn34 Detail
12 Chinaware
sl&lt;l.nce
36 Greek
pieces
25 Package
letter
17 Baseball
27 Philippine 38 Polynesian
23 Maxim
great
peasant
beverage
: 24 Heads of bair r;--T,--,;,--,:;:; 25 Assail
260n
27 Albacore
and bonito
28 Teutonic god
· Z9 Hour-glass
contents
30 Playing
marble
31 Foot
(suffix)
32 Biblical
lion
35 Anesthetic
37 Shoelace
,.39 Lasso
· 40 Circwnvent
41 Tarry
42 Whit
DOWN
1 Oriental
nunemald

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter simply stands ror anQiher. In I his samp\1! A 11
used for the three L's, X ror the two O's, etc. Single lette.rs,
apostrophes, th.e length and formati on or the words are all
hints. Each day the code lellr rs are different.

e

CRVPTOQUOTES
OSVGSRS
VGRGZK
MSVE

WMXW

XZQ

VGTS

JBPU

HUSXWS

NGVVGXD

GL

OSVGST

WMS

NBUWM
NGVV

TXHW.

AXDSL

Yestenlay'e CryptGquole: I BEUEVE IN THE DISCIPUNE
OF SilENCE AND COULD TALK FOR HOURS ABOUT
lT.-GEORGE BERNARD SHAW
\

�•
14-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Reapportionment arguments under ~dvisement
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - A vlola!es various guidelines of the
court challenge that could lnvali- U.S. Supreme Court.
. date Ohio's 21 congressional disThe suit names Sen. Paul Gillmor,
trtcts has been taken under advise- R-Port Clinton, and H()use Speaker
ment by the same three-judge panel Vernal G. Riffe Jr .. D-New Boston,
which refused a year ago to disturb along with former Gov. James A.
the district boundaries.
. Rhodes and oth(ersas defendants.
Judge Nathania! R. Jones of the
John C. McDonald, a Columbus
6th U.S. Circuit Court, Cfuclnnati,
attorney
representing the plaintiffs.
along with judges Joseph P .
the
court
that the Legislature
told
Klnneary and Robert Duncan, both
failed
to
achieve
equality in drawing
of U.S. District Court, Columbus,
a
new
district
plan
foliowing the 19!ll
heard arguments In the case
Census.
W~esday .
While the pian may comply with
Attorneys on both sides said they
court
edicts requiring dlstrtcts of
do not expect the issue to be resolved
In time to affect the 1984 elections. near equal population, he said the
The primary elect ion filing deadline Legislature has not demonstrated,
as required by one recent decision .
is Feb. 23.
Various groups and individuals that thepopulationvariancesthatdo
are asking that the couri draw new exist were unavoidable, or that they
election districts or send the plan were justified.

Columbus attorney Robert McAlister, speaking for the defendants,
said earlier decisions permitted
·state legislatures to consider factors
other than population as secondary
goals in making up redistricting
plans. HesaidOhiodidsobutstayed
within court guidelines.
Although the three j udges refused
to act a year ago, they retained
jurisdiction pending the resolution
of redistricting challenges then
pending before the U.S. Supreme
Court. The current proceedings
amount to a re-opening of the 1982
case, lawyers said.
McDonald's clients fnclude suburban Clevelanders who claim that the
redistticting plan was gerrymandered to protect the distrtct of U.S.
Rep. Louis Stokes, the Communications Workers of America and some

Franklin County residents who
assert that It caused the defeat of a
Columbus congressman, Democrat
Robert Shamansky.
The judges did not Indicate when
they Will hanel down a decision but
attorneys said they expect It will be
several weeks.

Marauderettes triumph

Recover decoration
R&lt;:CQVery of an eight foot snowman decoration stolen from the
John Fisher residence last week has
been reported by the Meigs County
Sheriffs Department.· The snowman was found around midnight on
County Road 25 near the Pomeroy
Gun Club and returned to the

officials may register voters.
For example, previously, a state
representative could register voters
only in the county of residence.
Under the new law. the representative may register voters throughout
the district.
"By making it easier for public
officials to help register voters. this
taw increases the number of citizens
participating in the democratic
process here in Ohio," Boster
concluded.

IArea deaths \
Dan L. Farmer
Dan L. Farmer, formerly of
Middleport, died Wednesday a t his
home in Vandalia.
The son of ·the late Mr. a nd Mrs.
Dave S. Farmer of Middleport , Mr.
Farmer was a graduate of Midd leport -High School and following his
formal education In the field of

instrumental music returned to
Middleport where he was band
director in the schools for two years.
He was the second band director
employed in the Middleport schools.
He left Middleport, and over the
years, served in numerous positions
in his field . Hewasaneideremeritus
of the Dayton Hillcrest Christian
Church and was c hoir director at
that church for many years. He was
a member of the Riverview Masonic
Lodge 717 at Dayton.
Surviving are his wife, Mary
Carpenter Farmer, also a former
resident of Meigs County; two
daughters, Mrs. Kevin (Lynn)
Brandenburg and grandsons, Scott
and Matt Brandenburg, Englewood, and Mrs. Philip (Cindy )
DeVeney a nd granddaughters,
Amy &amp;Dd Molly De Veney, Gahanna,
and a sister and brother-In-law,
Mary Farmer Skinner and Art
Skinner of Middleport.
Friends htay call at tlte Morton
Whetstone Funeral Home, 139 S.
Dixon Drive, Vandalia, from 6 to 8
p.m. Friday a nd burtai will be In
Vandalla. Services will be held at 11
a .m. Saturday at the Hillcrest
Christian Church In Dayton.

Mlln'in V. Price
Marvin Vernon Price, 66, Pomeroy ,. died Thesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
He was born March 24, 1917. He
was a son of the late Wllllam Henry
and Cora Frances Ervin.
Surviving are two sisters, Doris
Jones and Marie Ervin, both or
Columbus.
Services wiD be hekl at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Hunter Funeral Home
In Rutland. There are no calling
hours.

Story on· Page 16

•·

•

enttne

at

e

Voi.32,No. t 79
Copyrighted 1983

2 Se&lt;tions, 20 Page•
20 Ce nts
A Multim..dia In c. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 23, 1983

Winter stornts
cause delays

BosteriJs
elections ·
law inked

of sta te and various other state

Good samaritans

Story on Page 8 ·

•

owners.

See Page 15

Christmas fruit baskets

days until
Christmas

back to the Legislatureformodifications. They claim the existing plan

A bill designed to save money for
local governments during elections
was signed Into law Monday by Gov.
Richard F . Celeste. Rep. Jolynn
Boster, D-Gallipojis, was the ·primary sponsor of the legislation.
The new law reduces the number
of ballots required for a n election to
one (l ) percent more than the total
voter registration. Until now, the
law required each precinct to have
10 percent morre ballots on hand
t han the pre ci nct's tota l
registratidn.
"In order to comply with the old
law, local governments wasted
$20.00J to $JJ,OOJ each year in
statewide elections alone, " Boster
said.
The purpose of n:,quiring additional ballots is to a llow for voter
error. Boster explained that very
few districts ever have a voter
turnout close to 100 percent. "The
new taw provides for 100 percent
v0ter turnout, plus sufficient ballots
to allow for voter error," Boster
sa id.
In addition. the new law increases
the territory in which the secretar-Y

Weekly sermonette

Story on Page 3

CHRISTMAS
SALE

COAT
SALE
MEN'S, BOYS'
CHILDREN'S
JUNIORS' and
LADIES' COATS

CHRISTMAS
SALE

CHILDREN'S

SHIRTS
&amp;TOPS
CHRISTMAS
SALE
LlnLE BOYS
AND GIRLS

Many Different
Styles
For Dress-Up

or Everyday
Wear

FlANNEL SHIRTS

BLOUSES
DRESS SHIRTS
and
KNIT TOPS

MEN'S
PULLOVERS
&amp; CARDIGAN
SWEATERS
lADIES'
CARDIGANS
PULl·ONS
and CAPES
JUNIOR
SWEATERS

,..

SHIRT
SALE

, _/

••

-FLANNEL SHIRTS

-VElOUR SHIRTS
-DRESS SHIRTS .
-WESTERN SHIRTS
-KNIT SHIRTS
-SPORT SHIRTS

Hope entertains U.S. Marines
ABOARD THE USSGUAM (AP)

NEAR THE CHURCH- AJioopof Aralls, 101meofwhom wear the
jyplcal heacklrae, lltand agablllt a pollee barrier In froot of too Church
of llle Nallvlty (llllcqround) In Bethlehem. An Israeli soldle~ atands
""llrby part of lhe annual oecurtty which · Is seen In the area. (AP
Wirephoto). '

BETHLEHEM,

Occupied West

Bank (AP) -As honking motorists

All Winter!

Jockey tor parking space!l In
tinsel on a tree and a choir of nuns
rehearses for the celebration Or
-Ouistmas In the town where Christ

wubolu.

.. r

---

More HEAP funds
Slate Representative Jolynn Bosler announced today that tltE
Home Energy Assistance Program (HEAP! allocation fm
emergency HEAP In Meigs Connty has been increased by $15,000.
This makes a total of $110,00J that has Jeen provided by HEAP to
Meigs County to prevent winter emergencies lor the winter of 19&amp;3-84.
"Emergency HEAP will provide up to$:))) to any qualifying low
income household that Is disconnected, has final notice of
disconnection or uses bulk fu el and lias 10days or less supply," Boster
explained. " However, because of large demand and llmited
resources, applicants may received assjstance from Emergency
HEAP only one time this winter," she reported.
As of today, Meigs County has had 1,445applicantsdeciaredeliglble
for HEAP. Last year there were 1,998 eligible households in Meigs
County. Regular HEAP pays 13 to4D percent of an applicant 's billed
usage for the monlbs of December, J a nua ry and February.
"Applications are readily available for regular HEAP assista nce as
well as the emergency one-time aid, " Bost~r said . "The county
welfare department, senior citizens groups, the Community Action
Agency and the Commission on Aging are among those who provide
application fornns," Boster concluded.

'

'

She'll Stay
Warm &amp; Cozy

!

The lights of Beirut could be seen
just a few miles ott the flight deck of
this amphibious assault ship as the
!M).year-old entertainer sprayed the
hooting, cheerlng Marines and
sailors with a rapid fire opening

Advisers.
week's total is 5.4 percentlower than
In other economic developments
last week because no Saturday
overtlme could be scheduled for Thursday:
- British Airways, Pan American
Chrisimas Eve.
• In its economic forecast, the World Aitways and Trans World
Airlines said they would reduce
Reagan administration said it
fares to London from 11 U.S. cities
expects Ute economlc . recovery to
by between 14 and 31 percent
hold to a steady pace next year,
starting In January . Also, United
producing a decline in unemployment- to an averageof7.8 percent said it would lower discount fares on
compared with Novem ber's 8.4 some routes from Denver and
Houston.
percent - and a slight boos t in
-The Energy Information AdInflation, to about 5percent from the
. mlnstrafion, an independent arm of
current 3.8 percent.
Martin Feldstein, tlte president 's the Energy Department, predicted
U.S. oil imports will jump 26percent
chief economist, said the forecast
In
1984 while overall U.S. consumppointed to "six good, solid years"
tion
of energy will rtse 4 percent through 1989. But he emphasized It
increase in energy use since
the
first
asswnes congressional action to
reduce .budget deficits now running 1979. The price of oil was expected to
hold steady, while gasoline prices
at nearly $:))) billion a year.
Increase I cent a gallon, to an
F eldstein is chairman of the
average of$1.24 a gallon in 1984.
president's Council of Economic

Bethlehem: workers put final touches on town

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

Manger SQuare, workers strtng

SHOP THURSDAY 'TIL 8:00
FRIDAY 'TILL 8:00
SATURDAY 'TIL 5:00

monologue.
Hope arrived aboard the Guam
only hours before the Thursday
night show and madeasurprisevisit
to the sick bay. He was to hopscotch
t6 the battleship USS New Jersey
and the carriers USS Independence
and USS John F. Kennedy for a
sertes of shows.
Durlngtheday,a largesegrnentof
the audlenre was shuttled by
helicopter aboard the Guam from
duty at . Beirut airport; where they
frEquently have been the target of
ariillery shelling.
Hope evoked a torrent of howls
aod whistles with the line: "Beirut
- that's an Arable word meaning
'Let's get the hell out of here.' "
Then he gave his definition of
"semper fide Us," the Marine Corps
motto: " That means Mr. T is a
sissy.''

-"If you thinkyouguysarellghtlng
over here," Bob Hope told . an
audience of U.S. Marines just
anived from Beirut airport, "you
should see them battling for
Cabbage Patch dolls back home."
Hope, giving his first Christmas
show to U.S.' troops since VIetnam,
delighted the audience aboard this
Navy ship with a patter of jibes
aimed at President Reagan, Democratic presidential candidate Jesse
Jackson, former Yankees baseball
manager Billy Martin and the
cease-fire In Lebanon.

BOYS' SIZES 8 to 18
MEN'S SIZES S to. XL

CHAIR
SALE
FREE DELIVERY

No paper Monday
The Daily Sentinel will not be published Monday to allow its
employees to enjoy the Christmas holiday.
Regular pubUcatlon and business hours resume 1\Jesday.

CHRISTMAS
SALE

-WOOD ROCKERS
-RECLINERS
-SWIVEL ROCKERS
-ROCKER-0LOUNGERS

Larry Wolle, Carroll Tealord, Glenn Rizer, street Commissioner;
Pollee Chiel Alfred Lyons; Bob Roy, water hoard president;
Councilmen Frank Cleland and Ben Petrel. It Is reported that
management of the village was successful during 1983 and that the
Dnanclal outlook for 1984 is much brighter as a result. Photo by Missy
Wolle.

Econo01ists see bright future

CHRISTMAS
SALE

SWEATER
SALE

By CHRISTOPHER SULIJVAN
Associated Press Writer
As Arnerlcahs started for Christmas hollday destinations today, a
week-long siege of winter storms delayed hundreds of travelers with icy
roads and the bitter cold slowing passenger trains or causing cancellations
and delays at many airports.
"Bring $01Tlethlng to read," passengers were advised by United Airlines
spokesman Joe ·Hopkins at Chicago's O'Hare Airport, where several
airlines' !Ughts were delayed today as many service vehicles froze up and
.
refused to budge.
Fltghts were moving, he said, but "they come in late, sotheygooutlate."
Meanwhlle the National Safety Council estimated that between :nl and
400 people may die In traffic accidents over tlte holi\iay weekend. The
counting period begins at 6 p.m. this evening and extends unW midnight
Monday.
.
Motorists faced hazardous and slow journeys in many places, with
travelers' advisories for snowy weather posted from northern Nevada to
Michigan aod Vermont.
A Greyhound bus ran· off Icy Mlssouri72 and toppled onto its right side
ntursday, !njurlng l2 passengers, state police.said. The accident occurred
near Patton, 90 miles south of St. Louis.
·
The extreme mid - more than 30 below In some places - prompted
Amtrak otflclals &gt;to order passenger trains to slow down, lor fear of
snapping or breaking super-chilled tracks under the weight of racing
trains, rallroad officials said.
·
SWORN IN - Racine Mayor Charles Pyles, village clerk Margie
The result was' delays of up to SPVeral hours from the Midwest to
Wolle, eouncllrnen Larry Wolle and Dan Sayre were swom In during the
California.
last meeting of the Racine Vlllqe councU. Shown with these officials
In San Francisco, Amtrak spokesman Art Lloyd ,said there were
are cuJTent city of!lclals. Pictured, 1-r, front row: CouncUmen Bob
two-hour delays on trains from Chicago. He added that most routes were
Beegle, Dan Sayre, Mayor Charlie Pyles, Margie Wolle, Clerksold out.
treasurer; and Sco« Wolle, Councilman. Back row - CouncUman
A chain reaction of delays blamed on sub-zero cold centered in the
nation's mldsectlon left traveJers walling in other airports, Including those
at Wichita, Kan., Detroit, Denver and Oklahoma City.
"I've seen ant hllls more organlze!l," said Oklahoma airport police Sgt. ·
Jarpes Thomas, referring to an estimated 1,o:xJ people inUUng in the Will
Rogers World Airport teimlnal, waiting for fllghts or relatives. Only one
. fllght tlt~ was canceled late Thursday, Thomas said.
to fac tories for " blg-tlcket" items
By ROBERT BURNS
With the mercury at 18 below zero at O'Hare today, delays stretched to
such as machinery parts rose 4
AP Business Writer
·
several hours for some fllghts.
percent in November; It was the
The Reagan administration sees
Meanwhlle, In Miami, where temjleratures reached the 8Js 11tursday,
"six good, solid years" ahead for the lar!(!!St increase since June.
Eastern Alrl' tes spokesman James Ashlock noted a "surge oflast-mlnute
Also, the Labor Department said
economy, highllghted by lower
l:ooklngs."
new claims for unemployment
rates of unemployment and only
compensation fell by 4D,!XXJ in tlte
sllghtly higher inflation.
The forecast, released Thursday, week endea}lec. 10, to 365,000 - a
asswnes a continuation of the good sign for the job market.
I
healthy economic signs that have
The auto Industry, meanwhile,
made conswners Including
holiday shoppers - generally more continues to exhibit strenglh. The
Industry journal Automotive News
confident In the economy's future.
said U.S. manufacturers planned to
The
latest
positive
economic
/
' '
assemble 68.5 percent more cars
signal was the Commerce Depari:
this week tltan a year ago. This
ment's report Thw'sday tltatorders

'

'

Scme shopkeepers are muttering
aboot low sales, but despite Middle
Eut ll!llllons ~r Elias Frelj
l8ld be expecta as many u 7,00)
pil&amp;rlms to COICIEPte Clu1stmas
Eve In ttcnt of the Church of the

l

Nativity - 2,!XXJ more than last
year. .
,
The hlghllght of.the festivities will
be the midnight Mass on Christmas
Eve at · St. Catherine's Roman
, Catholic Church, adjacent to the
Church of the Nativity.
"We wish to have peace In the
Holy Land," said Frelj, a Palestinian Christian, "and to bring an end
to the ll1llferlng of the Palestinian
people, ~ that Arm. and Israelis
can movetrpm a cycleIt hatred and ·

I

Jerusalem.
Frelj said in a recent interview

violence and fighting to one where
they can live In peaceful
............_1 ..........
''
'
"''"'"'...,,ce,
Evidence of Arab-Israeli hostWty
was nearby, mixing with the festive
atmosphere almost like an
afterthought.
As the nuns practiced their carols
Inside the Church of the Nativity,
about 15 Israeli soldiers stood guard
with autunatlc rUles In the courtyard rlutslde. On the roac1 from
Bellllehem "other Israeli soldiers
checked motorists heading north to

:t:u~=~:20~~~~:e~~~
getting ready for Chrlstfnas. He
sugested this was not enough and
complained about a lack of donations !rom International
organizations.
"I saw on television where
someone In Texas put50,o:xlbulbson
a single tree. This Is the Chrlstn•as
capital. I'm not sattsned with what
we do."

•

He gestured toward the 30-foot

tree with Its meager strlngs of linsel
and multi-colored lights on Manger
SQuare. ''But we can't afford to do
better," he said.
Frelj said he expects tourism this
year to be 20percenthlgherthan last
year because of Israel's lessening
involvement In the war ln Lebanon,
where Israel has pulled Its 6oops to
more secure positions In the south .
But on Manger SQuare, merchants complained that business so
far has not been good.

•

"!can tell you now, it'sgo!ngtobe
a bad Christmas," said Nadia
Youse!, manager of Abu Alta and
Sons souvenir shop. "There'! almost no tourism at all.'' Nevertheless, You set's shop is stocking upon
camelwood rosary beads a nd Jo.
seph and Mary broaches.
"So far this year it's very quiet ,"
said Susan Howard of Frelj's ~I
Works, which is owned by the
mayor. " We still have a few days,
but I think It will be very special
because It Is so quiet."

.,
•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="217">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2807">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43682">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43681">
              <text>December 22, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2155">
      <name>farmer</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="260">
      <name>price</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
