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                  <text>12-The Daily Sen~nel

~

Tunday, ~~~Kember 27, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.Citrus growers
brace for another
arctic winter blast
LAKElAND, Fla. (AP) -Citrus
growers fought another arctic blast
today, ready to flood their groves
with warm water to . save their
crops, and estimated losses were set
at up to $60 mlllion from frozen fruit
and vegetables.
"We're In what we would call a
borderline situation," said Earl
Wells, a spokesman tor Florida
Citrus Mutual, a growers' coopera·
tlve in Lakeland, as farmers
watched the mercury and worried
that the second freeze In two days
wollld badly harm fruit groves.
Damage to non-citrus produce in
southwest Florida alone could top
$.ll million, an agriculture official
said, and a grower's association in
Texas put citrus losses there ·at
another $.ll million from Sunday's
killer cold.

"There's ice inside the tomatoes,"
said Ralph Bates, supervisor of
Triple N Farms in Immokalee.
"We've got a world of damage over
here. It's pretty bad."
In central Florida, the hear! of the
state's S2.5 billion citrus industry,
the temperature at 2 a.m. today
hovered around 30 degrees.
If the cold should dip below .26
degrees for more than tour hours,
citrus tllat survived Sunday night's
freeze - which left Icicles on the
golden fruit - could be lost, Wells
said.
The chilly temperatures posed the
greatest threat to crops in central

and northern Florida.
In Texas, hit by a freeze Sunday,
growers hoped the cold would l!n,.."er
long enough to protect fruit already
damaged until it could be processed
for juice. In Louisiana, most of the
citrus crop had already been
harvested, but growers feared
winter vegetable crops were
destroyed.
'
Florida growers were encour·
aged by forecasts that called for
lows slightly warmer than the
20-degree readings of Sunday night.
The National Weather Service
said it would drop to the mid·20s
today, whichmlghtbewarmenough
to save crops. But growers weren't
taking any chances.
Low-volume Irrigation systems
were being used to flood the groves
with warm water, Wells said. Only
about 5 percent of growers still use
burning smudge pots, he said.
Groves in the northern portions of
Marlon, Lake, Orange, Volusla,
Sumter, Hernandez, Seminole and
Pasco counties were In the most
danger, Wells said.
Florida's third freeze In as many
years came just before the citrus
crop was to have been harvested. It
may take weeks to finish salvage
and determine the lull loss, Wells
said.
Losses might be comparable to
the freeze In January 1981, when the
crop dropped. from an amount that
would have filled WI mtlllon
lQO.pound boxes to172mllllonboxes.

Area deaths
Ada E. Bays
Ada E. Bays, 92 , of Sixth Street,
died Sunday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Bays. a homemaker, was
born October 16, 1891 In Meigs
County, the daughter of the late
Columbus Jackson and Mary Eliza·
beth (Holte) Darst. She is survived
by five cousins and numerous
friends.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, her first husband, Emmett
Covvy; second husband, Dan Rees ;
and third husband, Omar Bays; one
son, and one sis ter.
Mrs. Bays was a m ember of the
Racine Methodist Church.
Calling hours are scheduled for
·after . 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home. Services will
be held at 10 a .m . Thursday at the
funeral home, with the Reverend
Carl Hicks officiating. Bur!alwlll be
in the Rockland Cemetery ,BElpre.
Syracu~.

Charles E. Peeples
Charles Edgar Peeples, 74, of
Hartford, died Sunday in the
P leasant Valley Hospital.
He was born on Dec. 25, 1909. at
Pomeroy, son of the Ia te George and
Mary Sauer Peeples.
He was a road·sign maker for the
Ohio Departmento!Highway.sanda
veteran of World War II serving In
the U.S. Army.
He was a member of the First
Church of God at New Haven and a
member of the American Legion
Drew-Webster Post No. 39 at
Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Dorothy
Fields Peeples, a t Ha rtford; one
nephew , William C. Peeples, Lex·
lngton, Ohio; three nieces, Evelyn
M. McMillin, Nancy A. Anderson
and Carolyn June Maxey, all of
Hartford, and several other nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held on
Wednesday at 1: :!0 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home In Mason
with the Rev. Dave Fields Jr.,
officiating. Burtal will follow in the
Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home tonight from 6-9 p.m.

Goegleln Brothers Coal Company,
V.N. HaldermanandSonsConstruc·
tion Company of Columbus, and
Pullins Excavating Company of
Pomeroy. He was a member of the
International Union of Operating
Engineers of Ohio, Amer!&lt;;an Le·
gion Post 39 of Pomeroy, and Shade
River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM of Chester,
and served In the U.S. Army during
the Korean Contllct.
He was born on February 7, 19'!7 a
son of the late Everett 0 . and
Glennie S. (Chamber) Mlthoan .
Mtlhoan is survived by his wile,
Clara Smith Milhoan, a daughter,
Elaine Congo, Portland; two sons,
Tony S. MilhOan and Mikel P .
M.llhoan, both of Route 1, Long
Bottom; three granddal!llhters,
Tara C9ngo. Portland; Holly MD·
hoan and Aprtl Milhoan, Long
Bottom; a grandson, Matthew
Milhoan, Long Bottom; a sister,
Hazel Rose, Columbus; three broth·
ers, Bernard Milhoan, Long Bot.
tom; Wayne Milhoan and Dwight
Milhoan, Pomeroy.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, two brothers, and a sister In
Infancy.
Calling hours at the Ewing
Funeral Home will be Tuesday 7 to 9
p.m. Funeral serviCes will be
conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m.at
the funeral home with the Rev . Carl
Hicks officiating. Burial will be at
the Meigs Memory Gardens.

Money sought
Marjorie A. Snider, Randall D.
Snider, Terry Snider, and Morris D.
Snider, all of 105 Lasley, Pomeroy,
have filed a suit for Sl,:llO against
Linda Crites, 265 Union Avenue,
Pomeroy. Thesuit,flledintheMeigs
County Common Pleas Court, Is for
foreclosure on a land Installment
contract

Massacre
top story

/

'·

·'

'

HELP - Sorrie 200 Meigs County underprlvUeged
families were helped through the annual Christmas
program of the Salvation Anny, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. The familles received sacks of groceries
.

'

Pope John Paul II visits terrorist
ROME (AP)- Pope John Paul IT
visited a Rome prison today to give
Inmates " the comfort of hope" and
to meet face-to-face with the
Turkish terroriSt who tried to kill
him.
Prison officials said the pontitf
planned to meet privately with
Mehmet All Agca, who is serving a
life sentence for sbootlng John Paul
on May 13, 1981, In his cell at the end
of the visit to Reblbbla prison.
After arriving to applause from
Italian government and prison
officials, the popewentto the chapel,
where 500 prisoners wearing clv·
lllan clothes were waiting.
More than 100 unarmed guards
lined the Inside wall of the circular
red briCk and cemeni block chapel.
He greet~ each prisoner indivldu·
ally, and son'~~! kissed him on the

Blain S. Milhoan

Lottery winners

Blain S. Milhoan, 56, died unex·
pectedly Saturday afternoon at his
home on State Route 248, Long
Bottom.
Milhoan was an operating engl.
neer of heavy equipment and a
farmer, and was employed by

CLEVElAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "The Number," was 248. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was 1267.

prisoner spent se\leral minutes
taildng with the pope and was eased
away by chaplains.
The pontiff was given a cross, a
banjo and a saUboat - all made
from matchsticks and toothpicks.
Pollee took extraordinary secur·
ity precautions, with guards posted
along the outside walls of the prlson
Joves us."
and roadblocks erected on access
The pope read from the Bible
roads to the prison.
during a prayer service and
N~spaper reporiS said the pope
delivered a ~minute speech. He ·
to meet Agca to pardon him
asked
said he had come " within these
personally
for the assassination
walls In which you cannot help but
·
attempt.
feel cut off t&gt;nd cold to bring you the
Five
days
after
he
was
shot,
while
warmth of a friendly word together
In
his
hospital
bed,
John
Paul
still
with the comfort of hope."
"sincerely
pardoned"
Agca
.
said
he
After the Inmates presented gifts
25-year~ld
Turk
told
repor·
The
to the pope, one prisoner rushed out
ters earlier this year that he was
of the crowd and handed him a
sorry
for the attack. "I admire the
typewritten statement, the contents
pope,"
he said.
of ~hich were not disclosed. The
cheek and hand.
In a welcoming speech, Luca
Onesti, a right-wing terroriSt,
thanked the pope for coming
"because It makes us feel that we
are not abandoned, not alone
against the worid, that there Is
someone who thinks of us and who

Happenings around Meigs County....
Velerans Memorial
Saturday admissions-none.
Saturday discharges .. Keith
Aelker, Jr., Sherry Grady, Katrina
Turner, Valerie Jean Jeffers, Eva
Barrett, Charles Riggs, Mary
Qualls.
Sunday admissions·-Kenneth
Lawson, Syracuse; Charles Russell
Sr., Pomeroy; Floyd Cleland,
Dexter ; Lawrence Ritchie,
Portland.
Sunday dlschar~ .. none.
Monday admlssions ..Steven Dunfey, Middleport;
John Motley,

Middleport; Deborah White, New
Haven, W. Va.; Ithmer Neil,
Middleport.
Monday dlscharges·-Evelyn
Millns, Julia Barton, Horton Arnold,
Dorothy Jenkins.

To end marriages
Gregory Charles Sheets, Hem·
lock Grove, has filed In the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court for an
annullrnent of marriage to Mary
Ellen Sheets, NeW Cutnberland, W.
Va . Grounds are gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

. Emergency squads kept busy
Despite the holiday weekend ,
local emergency units were hit
heavy with calls the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports.
Tuesday morning at 12: 11 a.m.,
the Racine Unit took Christine
Tucker from Jennie Watt Hollow to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Tuppers Plains at 3: 53 a.m. took
Mlna Walker from Tuppers Plains
to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg.
Monday calls included: 9:55 a.m.,
Pomeroy, Laddie Wood from Wolf
Pen Road to Veterans Memorial
and Rutland at 6:03p.m . to County
Road 17 for an overturned car
driven by Sarah McGrew.
Calls on Christmas Day included:
Pomeroy atl: 48 p.m. to Texas Road
for Charles Russell, taken to
Veterans Memorial; Pomoy at 2: 56
to 5% Liberty Ave. for Albert
Keeton, to Holzer Medical Center'
Pomeroy, 5:15p.m. to E. Main St.
for Floyd Cleland, to Veterans

Memorial; 4:29 a.m., Racine to
Blind Hollow for Judy McNeely, to
Holzer Medical Center; 4: 56 a.m.,
Syracuse for Marvin Teaford, to
Veterans Memorial; Syracuse, 5: 46
a.m. for Kenneth Lawson to
Veterans Memorial, and Syracuse
at 11: 37 a .m . to MorningStar for Ada
Bayes, to Veterans Memorial.
Saturday calls Included Pome·
roy, 9:58a.m., Bill Hysell, Pomeroy
Health Care Center, to Veterans
Memorial; Pomeroy at 12:Tl p.m.,
Route 143, Cletus Arnott, to Veterans Memorial; Pomeroy, 9: &lt;Yi'p.m .
to Pine Grove lor Margaret Blaet·
tnar, to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport, 1:31 p.m. to Riverside
Apartments to treat David Kemp;
Middleport at 4: 42 p.m. to 644 N.
Second to treat Nellie Price; Racine
at 9:46 p.m. to Portland for
Lawrence Ritchie, to Veterans
Memorial and Tuppers Plalns to
Reedsville at 4:46 p.m. to Allison
Caut!K&gt;rne, to Veterans Memorial.

·Replacements needed
Meigs Count!ans are asked to give
replaeement blood for Ann Barrett
when they visit a bloodmobile at the
Meigs County Senior Citizens Cen·
ter Wednesday from 1 to5 p.m. Mrs.
Barrett who has been quite ill and
was hospitalized for treatment has
used 48 pints of blood. Those giving
In her name
are asked
to advise
clerical
help
of that
fact the
on
Wednesday. ·

T

ax

book

s open

Realestatetaxbooksfornowopen
for the paymenl of the first hall of
1983 taxes, Meigs Treasurer George
Collins said this morning.
T axes may be pald a t the 0fflce
untO 4: 30 p.m. all of this week
through Friday. Statements have
not yet been malled. Deadline for
paying the taxes will be about Jan.
W, Collins reporiS.

rr:::;~~~~ ;mr:ffiF==i
R JOY"

9

Aerobics· Dance Class

)oy Compton-Instructor
8 Week Winter Session
16 Classes for 130.00
BeK.inninK Jan. 9th
Mon.-Wed.-4:15 to 5:15
Mon.-Wed.-6:15 to 7:15.
Tues.-Thurs.-5:30 to 6:30
At The Senior Citizens Build inc
Mulberry Heichts, Pomeroy
For More Information
and Registration

Call 992-7773 or 949-2648
•

~

YOU ARE

Bu~J~er

Chef

INVITED

TO THE 1984 BURGER CHEF

Happy

New Year! .
Hallmark cards are
the perfec1 way to start
the year off rightwish someone weU or
offer a special "thank
your ·

'

partyware and coordi.

nating accessories
are just what you need
for festive New Year
entertaining with quick
and easy dean-up.

LOST
PIT BULL

WHITE AND BRINDLE WITH
BRINDLE PATCH ON RIGHT EYE
HE ALSO HAS WHITE ON CHEST

LOST AROUND VINEGAR ST. OR EAGLE RIDGE

698 W. MAIN
POMEROY

CALL 992·5066 OR 949-2366

PH. 992·2057
I

'

at y

,, 2 Sections, 16 Pages 20 Cenh

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday , December 28, 1983

Voi.32,Nb.11t
Cof&gt;yritht.d 1983

A Multimedia Inc. Ne wspaper

Scipio Trustees sponsor industrial park grant
to the trustees.
Kennedy polnted"out that the first mortgalie would
have to go to the bank
collateral for operating
expenses, so he offered only a second mortgage to the
trustees.
However, at Tuesday's meeting, Crow agreed to
the original proposal of a second mortgage and the
trustees agreed to proceed with action to administer ·
the loan; In fac t, it was reported by one of the
commissioners that the trustees said they would
"never release the grant" It was proposed last weeK
that the commissioners act administrating agency If
the loan was to be jeopardized.
'

By Charlene HoeOlch
Sentinel stall

as

•
Scipio Township's · Trustees will serve as the
sponsoring agency lor the S255,&lt;XX&gt; grant from the
Ohio Department ol Development for an industrial
park development. ThatwasannouncedatTuesday's
regular meeting ol Meigs County Commissioners.
The controversy over handling the money for the
lnduStr1al park aired at last week's commission
meeting was settled Tuesday morning when the
trustees, Raylhond Cotterill, Eugene Phlillps and
Don Weaver, along with BUI Kennedy of Scipio
Energy Association, Inc., developers of the park, his
attorney, Frank W. Porter, Jr., and Rick Crow,
prosecuting attorney met with county
conunlssloners.
It was reported at last week's meeting that the
Scipio Township Trustees were oot In accord on
·handling the $255,&lt;XX&gt; grant on advice from Crow.
Crow contended that a first mortgage should be given

Development grant
The development grant of $255,&lt;XX&gt; will come to the
administrative agency and then be loaned to Kennedy
at five percent Interest. Repayment wouid be over a
nine year period to the trustees, who in turn, would be
obligated to return It In loans to other development
projects In Scipio Township. With the Scipio trustees

handling the grant money, It Is restricted to a
revolving loan to Industrial development In that
township, cornmlsslo'ler Richard Jones reported.
The grant agreement Is expected to be finalized
within the next few days.
Completion of the grant agreem ent will make
possible an lndustr!l\1 development loan to the Scipio
Energy Association, Inc . which will enable the
corporation to complete the needed Improvements
.and purchase machinery at the industial development site.
Kerutedy happy·
Kennedy indicated that he was delighted with the
arrangement with the Scipio Township Trustees and
to resolve differences concerning the project loan. He
said he is ready to proceed with the Initial phase of a
comprehensive Industrial complex In Scipio ToWn·
ship. a project which should provide much needed
jobs In Meigs County.
Kennedy said the next step w1li be to conduc t an
environmental review. Once the trustees apply for a

specWc phase of.the Industrial development project, ·
then the money for that designated development wlll
. come down from the ~par!ment of Development
· within 30 days and must be loaned within three days to
the Scipio Energy Association, Inc.
Kennedy said he expects to begin construction on
the building to house the aluminum recycling facility
by March 1.
Other business
In other action, a memorandum concerning the
operation of .the tuberc ulosis office was read. The
letter indicated that t he TB' s Board of Trustees do not
have the right to fix salaries u!lless the board of
county commissioners give them that right.
'The communication to the commissioners confirmed the control of the tubercUlosis clinic, but ,
indicated that If the comm!ssioners desire, that power
can be turned over to the control of the Board of
Trustees who can then "fix the compensation of its
employees."
(Continued oli page 16)

New law
regulates
usuage ·

Freezing rain .
makes driving
conditions·bad
·Old Man Winter continued his deluge of bad weather on Meigs County
Wednesday.
Overnlgbt rain and freezing temperatures created Icy roads which made
driving extremely hazardous. Sidewalks were like skating rinks and even
· ·WaiJaiigwas-treacberous.
.
·
"'
'
I
Buslnesseswereoperatlngwlthskeletonforcesslncemanyworkerscould
not manage to !unction on the Icy roadways. However, with the weather so
bad, buslnesseswerenotexpectedtobe!loodedwithcustomers.Afewstores
had not opened by 10 a.m. Most everyone was running'Iate and stores and
other businesses opened late as a result. Offices In the county courthouse
were operating with partial staffs. People who lived closed to their
employment "skidded" on foot to work. Both Pomeroy and Middleport
VIllage Halls reported that they were operating with part;at staffs.
'l1lere were a lew tender bender accidents about the county and a state
hlghwaydepartmenttruckt!ghtingthelceonRoute7overturnednearFive
Points early Wedpesday morning. Workers In towns were putting out salt
and cinders. The Pomeroy VUlage spreader was damaged when the vWage
truck ditched on Mulberry Heights and workers were trying to repair. the
spreader Wednesday morning so that It could be put back Into operation.
Veterans Memorial Hospital reported three persons had been brought to
the hospital :for treatment of Injuries received bt Ice falls. However, more
coul(l have been Injured but road conditions were not conducive tO getting to
the hospital.
Schools are closed for the holiday period so there were no problems in that
direction.
·
Even emergency vehicles were having trouble coping with the Icy roads
and late this morning the Meigs Emergency Medical Services was being
• •.
called frequently to dispatch help to various areas of the county where
people were falling.
BLAST - Buffalo firemen carry the body of on~
The Gallla·Melgs Post State Highway Patrol was busy today .
of their fallen romrades out of the rubble of the North
Investigating a rash of traffic accidents In both counties.

Buckeye highways
like sheets of ice

, etTIE'l getcles.

BURGER CHEF

•

e

Traffic was at a standstill at the
. Intersection of Interstates 71 and 270
•

. STOP IN AND PICK UP
COUPONS VALUED OVER $6oo

.•
enttne
Story on Page 12

Smry, photos Page 4

Sleet and freezing rain turned
highways and streets Into sheets of
. Ice across much ol Ohio today,
milking driving treacherous and
postponing the openings of many
business and state government
agencies.
In notthwestern Ohio, a 26-year·
oldmanwaskilledwllenhisautoslld
, otfasnow~redhigbway.
• Gov. Richard Celeste delayed
: opening of state agencies untO 10
• a.m. Many .Columbus businesses
: followed slllt as thou8811ds of
employees found traveling to work
1
1 exceedlngly dll!lcult.
, Nwnerous ·minor traffic accl·
: dents were reported asautosslldoff
, roadways glazed with Ice. Pollee
~ sald they were onlY responding to

HaUmarl&lt; holiday

Pope visits assailant

Lancers whip Eagles

•

Weicome
1984!

Family Medicine CoL Page 9

story, photo Page 3 ·

By 'lbe Alaociated Preis

-11""-&gt;l

IJngering coughs

Press meets Parker

NEW YEAR.'S
PARTY OF SAVINGS

...

Marriage license
The Meigs County Probate Court
has awarded a marriage license to
Tonuny Nolan Lane, 36, Route 1,
Middleport, and Barbara Ellen
Sarson, 31, Route 2, Racine.

and lheri were some 200toys CGIIected to help with the
program• .Shown are some of the Salvation Anny
workerswhohelpedpreparetheltemslordlsirlbutlon
00 Friday and Saturday.

NEW YORK (AP) The
terrorist massacre of peacekeeping U.S. Marines In Lebanon
was the top story ol1983 by vote or
Associated Press newspaper and
broadcast member editors.
rtte top 10storles of the year had a
heavy foreign flavor, reflecting U.S.
concerns and actlonsove~as . No.2
In thepoUwasthedownlngofaSouth
Korean airliner by Soviet jets. No.3
was the U.S.-led Invasion of Gren·
ada as part of a tougher Reagan
policy In Central America and the
Caribbean.
The U.S. economy, which was the
top story In the 1982 poll, ranked
fourth In 1983 as Inflation abated,
unemployment dropped and delle·
its rose.
Editors turned overseas agaln for
their fifth choice - the deployment
of U.S. miss lies In Europe and the
breakup of talks with the Soviets.
Sixth was the antinuclear protest In
Europe and the concomitant freeze
movement In the United States.
Three stories in the top 10 were
solely domestic: 'fit~ economy. the
weather (9) and the resignation of
Interior Secretary James Watt (10).
The list:
1. Marines massacred In Beirut
terror bombing.
2. Sovteis down South Korean
alrliner.
3. U .S.·backed invasion of
Grenada.
4. American economy: Inflation
down , unemployment drops, deficit
rises.
5. Mlssll~ deployed In Europe,
Russians break off talks.
6. Antinuclear movement In
Europe, nuclear freeze drive In the
United States.
7. Lech Walesa wins the Nobel
Peace prize.
8. Menachem Begin resigns In
Israel.
9. Weather; Winter storms,
spring flooding, drought and hurrt·
cane plagne the nation.
10. James Watt resigns as
secretary of the Interior.
Runners·up Included: ''The .Day
After" and Its Impact; the split lit the
Palestine Liberation Organization;
the march commemorating Martin
Luther King Jr.; the assassination
of Philippine political leader Benigno Aquino; the disappearance
from public view ofSovletPresldent
Yurt Andropov, and the Australian
victory In the America •s Cup.

•

011 Columbu.s' north

sldli.

The State Highway Patrol said the
lntei'II!Ctkm was c~ lor several
:. 11ours atter 1wr 1arge trucks
; Jackknlted oo the Icy roads and
blocked all Janes ll(ll'lh and swth.
Travelers advisories were posted
lor much or the state as weather
forecasts called lor snow and colder
ll!illj)tiaturel tonliht.
The bad wealherwasn'tconllned

to ColumbuS.
"It's bad all over the state right

1 - - + - - -;.._ _ _

'·

.
..

Syracuse Village Council meeting
In Tuesday night passed at a 4·1 vote
an ordinance regulating the use of
mobile homes In the community.
Council gave the second and third
reading to the ordinance which
sta tes that no mobile home, trailer
or similar portable residential
structure shall be permitted except
in mobile home parks. However ,
such homes which are now located ,
In other spots in the communitywUI ,.
be permitted to remain in their
present locations. The ord inance
does require, however , tha t these
mobile homes be underpinned ,
Modular and double wide home will
be permitted any place in the town
but they must be occupied by
owners. Persons may also make
additions and enlarge their present
mobile homes. If a house is
destroyed by fire or some other
cause it can be replaced wi(h a
doublewideormoduiarhomewithin
180 days after it is destroyed and an
additiona l 90 days can be granled
·
theowner.
Casting t he dissenting · vole
against the ordinance was Council·
man Willie Guinther. Voting fo~ the
't

measure were council members,

·-

• ••

Division Street fire In BuHalo, N.Y. Tuesday night.
(AP Laserpholo) .

Mlck Ash, John Philson. John
(Continued on page 16)

Six people die in propane gas explosion

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - A .
propane gas explosion leveled seven
now. The temperature is right at the
buildings in an old residential area
point where we get a mixture of downtown Tuesday night, killing at
fl'reLingrain and snow and all roads
least six people and Injuring scores
are either snow covered or lc¥ and of others, officials said.
slushy. Traveling everywhere Is
A spokesman at .tile Erie County
very bad," saidHighwayPatrolSgt.
Medical Examiner's office who
Harold Nease.
refused to give his name originally
In Columbus, street department ~!d seven people were dead, but
shift supervisOr Phlillp Holmes se.ld later said only six had died. "We had
ill trucks were salting the streets, a report of seven bodies but we only
but even tlie 240 tons used between
have six accounted lor," he said.
2:ooa.m. andlla.m. hadn't cured the
At least four of the dead were
problem~
l!reflghters, he added. Earlier, Fire
"Thesaltmeltsthesnowasweput CommissloiH'r Fred Langdon had
ltdown,butduetothet:emperaturelt . saki five firefighters had been killed .
freezes. We are going to have this
Offlciais at three hospjtals rethroughout the day untll the
temperature riSes or we get traffic
to miX the sale with rain and keep It
from refreezing," Holmes said.
A spokeSman lor Trallways and .
By Alaoclated Preis
Greyhound bus canpanles said bus
A ''topsy·turvy'' storm backed up
runs were delayed or canceled all
by a neN blast of cold surged out of
over the Midwest.
A spokesman for Greyhound saki Colomdo today, threatening Mis·
all buses out of Columbus; LouJs.. sour! and Illinois with 8 Inches of
ville; Ky.; Lexington, Ky.; Indiana· snow and promising more of the
polls; and Cincinnati had been frigid air that caused havoc lor
drivers and munlctpalltles as far
postponed untn at least 9 a.m.
south as Texas.
~ Haml,lton. the Butler County
Allead of the last-moving system
cordher's office Is Investigating to
sheets
of freezing drizzle coated
determine whether a ~year-old
highways
and poWer lines late
woman found dead at her home
Thesday
from
northern Texas to
Monday nlgbt died of the cold or of
Georgia.
natural causes.
At least live people in Tennessee
Pulice sald Pauline McDaniel, of
Hamilton, was found dead on a a1ld six In Oklahoma died In
accidents TUesdliy, raising the
couch In her borne

ported more than 50 'njured people
were brought In ; with Injuries
including cuts, burns and fractures.
The blast .occurred about 8:30
p.m. about three minutes after
firefighters arrived at the scene
following the report of a liquid
propane gas leak. The explosion
shattered windows and sent debris
flying Into the street, crushing a fire
truck and blocking the area, which
contained many old, wood-frame
homes .
More than three dozen houses
were damaged, and residents In
North Buffalo, up to four miles
away, felt the blast.
A thick cloud of gray smoke rose

from the scene and drifted across
the eastern part of the city.
Rubble covered at least one fire
pumper.
Sarah Hampton said she was in
kitchen of her home across the street
from the blast site washing dishes
when the lights went off and there
was "a big noise."
She said Lizzie Preston, who lives
with her, was under some rubble. "I
tried to pull the stuff off of her . but I
just couldn' t pull it off. Then I went
out and screamed, 'Getherout! Get
her out! '"
"There was an explosion, our
windows blew out, (and) the whole
house just shook," said Marshall

Hunt, a neighbor. Another resident
said his "ceiling kept falling down. I
thought our house exploded."
"The lights went out, and I was on
the floor," another unidentified
woman said. "I thought il was 'The
Day After'- that
picture, that movie. I thdught it
was the rea l thing."
At least 50 people were being
treated at Sheehan Memorial
Emergency Hospital. said Richard
Hummert, public r eiat!onsdlrector.
"They have explosion-type injuries - laceratipns, burns , !rae·
tures ," Hummer! said.
The condition of the . injured
ranged from critical to fair .

New blast brings ice to ·South; snow to Midwest

- - - - - -- - - - - r- .. ·-- ---- -~

nationwide toll frOm cold and violent
weather since Dec. 17 to at least353.
Power lines snapped In northern
Georgia under the weight of the Ice
early today, cutting power to an
est!matedOO,&lt;XX&gt;GeorglaPowerCo.
customers around Atlanta. 1,&lt;XX&gt; In
Rome, and 500 In Athens.
Citrus growers In southern Flor·
ida got a bit of a break , as the
temperaturewannedlntothe70sby
3 a.m. today. That was about 30
degrees higher than at the same
hour TuesdaY - and 50 degrees
higher than the kUling cold that hit
early Sunday and Monday.
Officials of Florida's $2.5 billlon·a·

\

day citrus Industry said It's too early
to tell what effect the two-day freeze
will have on the future prlce of
orange juice, but Francis Home,
manager of a farmers market In
Immokalee In southern Florida,
said winter prices of tomatoes,
cucumbers and bell peppers "are
going to skyrocket."
The threat of flash floods arose In
Alabama, Mississippi and Louis!·
ana early today as warm Gulf air
erupted In heavy thunderstorms.
Forecasters had hoped for tern·
porary warming across the South as
the Icy precursor of today's storm
passed through. But themaln storm

r~ced

out of the Colorado moun·
talns, where it dropped about 8
Inches of snow, then left 61nches in
Kansas by late Tuesday before
moving Into Missouri. There was
little time for ice on roads in
Kentucky, Tennessee, Arkansas
and the western Carolinas to melt.
"It's a topsy-turvy kind of thing, "
said Bill Sarnmler , a forecaster at
the Severe Storms Forecast Center
In Kansas City, Mo. "Right now It's
below freezing In a good part of
northern T~xas; It wlll gradually
decrease ilgaln- as the storm
Intensifies somewhat"

•

�•

Wednesday, December 28, 1983

Comment

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Close Fiesta game foreseen

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomelor Mlddlepolt, Ohio
Wednetday, Dec.mber 28, 1983.

tense. He had a team·leadlng 13
sacks and eight tackles for loss
among his 96 hits this season.

SCO'ITSDALE, Ariz. {AP) -

Alan Wengllkowskl's dream of

The Daily Sentinel

Who killed Ma Bell?_ _ __:__:.........::Jei.:.._1G_re~enfi:........ield_

Ill Coutl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA
~~~

~m~ r"T""L-'t.-.....,...,~c:::~.~
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

General Manager

ANlslanl Publisher/ Controller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne"·s Editor

Back In the 1950s. when many
Amefican conservatives were con·
vinced that a group of State
Depanment pantywaists had dell·
vered the most populous nation into
the hands o! the communists, they
kept asking one question again and
again: Who lost Chin.a•
I suspect that we are about to
witness the bir1h of a new rhetolical
question that may well come to
dominate the political debate all
through 19Sl: Who killed Ma Bell?

I know that AT&amp;T has hired good
old Andy Griffith to lie hack in his
easy chair and reassure us that
everything is going to be just like It
was after AT&amp;T breaks up.
Well, it won't be. And my
semieducated guess is that six
months from now, the Amelican
people are going to be In a state ot
harely contained rage.
Let me give you one small
example. After I read til&lt;&gt; ad with
good old Andy Griffith telling me

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Assocla·

there was nothing to be conceml!d
about over the breakup ot the phone
company, I called the toll·free
number AT&amp;T has set up and
talked with a friendly, well·
Informed consume~'&lt;' Information
specialist. How, I asked, do I get a
phone repaired?
Well, she answered, you call the
regular telephone repair service
number. If the problem is In the
line, the local phone company wUI
fix It If the problem Is in your

...

LEITERS ot~ OPINION art wel comed . The)' shou ld be less than 300 words
IHJ. AllleUers are subject to ediCing and must he signed with name, address and
~ephone number. No unslrned leiter!! will be published. Letters 10hould be In
1ood tute, ad.drestlng b:o;;ues, not personalities.

Some economic ideas
are not holding up
Some notlons almost taken for granted. such as the idea that economic
recovery would automatically be accompanied by rapidly rising prices.
have had the contents knocked out of them in the l!ms.
The U.S. output of goods and services soared to a 6.5 percent gain In 19&amp;1.
and to a rate higher than that at different times within the year, but the
lnllat!on smoke alarm just didn 't go off.
The rise in consumer prices continued to slow- !rem 13.5 percent in
198), to 10.3 percent in 1~1. to 6.1 percent in 1982, to less than 4 percent in
1983, an astonishing perfonnanct&gt; after what happened in the 1970s. ·
In the 1970s Americans really learned what inflation could do, and in that
decade the Idea was spawned of prices being on a pe1manently straight
line to the sl!Y.
But Americans seem to have broken the line over their knee, and a new
attitude has developed about prices- the notion of stability.
A similar notion about wages, that increases were automatic, was swept
away by events. Labor not only gave up the idea of automatic wage-benefit
increases but accepted management' s demand that it give hack earlier
gains.
Compare that to the conditions through much of the 1970s. when some
companies felt it was better to give in to demands tllan face strikes.
Hard times changed all that. Even while the economy was recovering
this year, management asked labor to accept less than before, and labor
did, because of layofrs. bankruptcies. and plant closings.
And managements, still mindful of excesses and sloppy business
behavior that nearly did them In a few years ago, say they are resolved to
hold the line. How long? Too early to tell. Lines do get broken.
Plenty of other notions have been dispelled, especially in energy.
That, for Instance, tlle presence of oil automatically means wealth for a
nation. That oil prict&gt;s would continue rising. That Americans wouldn 't be
able to cut energy usage substantially without causing domestic economic
havoc.
The notion that bountiful amounts of credit could hoist the developing
world into a new era of prospelity now seems naive, based on events in
Latin America. Eastern Europe. Africa and parts of the Far East.

Letters to editor
Jaycees very thankful
been early as sucCessfuL

Thanks also to the Farmers
Ba nk, which after it was found that
a good portion of the food and toys
had been stolen', replaced those
stolen items.
Once again. for the Jaycees. a
heartfelt thank you to all of the
fantastic people who helped to
make a lot of people's Christmas a
whole lot better. - Brian Conde,
President, Meigs County Jaycees.

River romance
Anyone who has lived along the
river, watched the big steamers
chug by or run a trot line has had a
romance with the Ohio River.
During the summer of 1894
Reuben Thwaries, a noted author
historian, with his wife, 10 year old
son and a man named the Doctor
outfitted a skiff In which they made
a pleasure trip down the Ohio
River. They camped along the
shores for six weeks and later wrote
a boOk about their adventures .
They titled their boOk the "Sto·
rled Ohio." This boOk is good
reading, especially for the com·
ments It contains with reference to
Jive In our area.
The party met "dozens of shanty
boaters." All manner of people
were inhabiting these craft At that
time no tax was being levied
against shanty boats but legislation
was in the wind to put on a tax. The
boaters were up in arms.
One boater Thwartes called the
"Hermit Fisher."_For 40 years he
had followed the river for a ltving.
The party purchased a three pound
perch from him for which he
demanded 15 cents. Evidently he
had had dealings with a dishonest
world for he asked that the money
be handed over before he gave
them the fish.
Log cabins were stUI common
along the rtver. Near Letart, In a
search for rnllk and eggs they came
to a Uttie log house with a porch
shingled with "shakes" and shaded
by a grapevine. A l2 year old gtrl
that Thwartes called "little Cracker
Queen" scampered off to fetch the
cow so she could supply them with
some lresh milk.
Some shanty boaters kept
chickens. They kept them in a coop
on op ot their boats. The coops were
connected to the shore by a special
gang plank for the fowl. One thrllty
boater had a hive of bees on tops ot
his boat.

People along the river drank
chiefly cistern water. A group of
people were observed1o come down
from a field , lay down on their
stomachs and drink from the roily
river water. Slang names were
painted on some of the ltttle
" knock-about" boats. Good examples were U-Bet, Git·Thair, Two
Doves. Game Chicken and Go·lt·
Eli.
At Long Bottom mention was
made of a dozen or so cottages bullt
close to a "bald rock." Thwartes
wrote. ·"The doctor and I made our
wa y up from the water's edge Into
country raod at the foot of this row
of modern cliff dwellers." (Note: It
seems the a uthor was desclibing
what we know now as the Devil's
Hole area.) He continued, "Most·of
the houses had little gardens, with
neat wooden fences running down
to the road. One log house was
covered with vines and was back·
grounded with a sheer wall or rock
extending up 30 feet above its back
door. I took a kodak shot of this and
a group of tousle-headed children
standing in the door of another
shanty bullt entirely in the crevice
of a rock." The mother of these
children cried out shrtlly to a
neighbor: "Miss McCarty! Miss
McCarty! Come quick. There's a
feller here a photergraphln' all the
people In Long Bottom."
At Antiquity Thwartes descrtbed
an ancient rock which bore curious
Indian carvings. At one time he said
there was a picture of a man In a
sitting posture making a pipe
carved there.
Pomeroy was described as a
"shoe-string" town two miles long
and two blocks wide.
When · the trip ended the JO.year
old boy, half choked with tears
asked, "Mother, is It really ended?
Why can't we go back and do It over .
again?;'- Gayle Price.

"Whadyaknow! They're serious!"

phone, you take It hack to the pEople
from whom you bought or leased II.
How do I do that? My phone has
two lines, a "hold" button and an
Intercom.
Oh, she said. In that c~. we'll
send a repairman, but It won't be
free.
How much wtlllt be? I asked.
Well, she said, it wtll be$40forthe
first 15 minutes, and SW lor each
additional 15 minutes.
The last time the fellow !rem Ma
Bell came by,lt took him an hour to
fix my phone. In this brave new
world, this will come to a nice,
round $100. And even If you have a
simpler phone system at home,
anyone with so .much as a wall·
-mounted ldtche.!l.Jlnlt wtll have to
choose between paying those repair
rates or becoming adept with a
chisel and screwdrtver If the phone
ever breaks down.
The real issue, however, Is not
how much you wtll be paying for
repairs. The overrtdlng point is that
divestiture of AT&amp;T wtll force
millions upon milllons of us to think
about something we never had to
think about before. Once upon a
time, there was just "the phone
company," "Ma Bell," ~·the com·
pany you loved to hate," "the
world's most efficient utility." They
even made a movie, "The Pres!·
dent's Analyst,"' ' In whiCh the
all-powerful villain was the phone
company.

-- ~

tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

Pn behalf of the Meigs County
Jaycees I wish to thank the many
people and organizations who
contributed in any way to our
annual Chlistmas Food Basket and
Toys for Tots program. To name
the many people who helped us this
year would be impossible. Once
again Meigs Countians showed how
generous they can be for without
the help of the many people this
year's program would not have

playing football at Ohio State never
materlaUzed.
The call from Ohio State never "
came so Wengllkowsld chose Pitts·
burgh and, Ironically, wlll play his
last college football game against
the B(1ckeyes In the Fiesta Bowl
Monday.
"It w115 Woody .Hayes' last
recruiting year. Nooneevercameto
see me. Instead, I visited Michigan
State, Indiana, Miami, Ball State
.and Pitt," he said.
Foge Fazio, now the Panthers'
head man, was an assistant coach
and was assigned to recruiting
southwestern Ohio In Wengllkowskt's senior prep season. "He showed
me a lot of ablllty. He was a
runninghack In foothall and a
wrestler. He was simply a leader,"
Fazio remembered.
"We were looking for him to be a
strong safety," the Pittsburgh
coach. "But he came back 15 pounds
heaVIer and lasted about a week
there. Weputhlmatdefenslveend."
At end, the 6-foot·l\S, 2:D-pound
Wengllkowskt has blossomed Into
one of the standouts ot the Panthers'
nationally eighth-ranked total de;.

•

Fan reaction doesn't worry Parker
CINCINNATI (AP) - Dave consecutive last-place seasons,.
Parker, the Cincinnati Reds' .big have also served notict&gt; they expect
catch in this year's free-agent him to provide field leadership for
baseball sweepstakes, says he Isn't what wtll be a young lineup, Parker
wonied about the reception Reds said.
fans will give him In 1984.
Asked what his salary is, he
"I was well received as an quipped, ''Somewhere from S:D to a
opposing player," Parker, whO mllllon dollars."
played 11 years for the Pittsburgh
Parker signed a contract report·
Pirates, said Tuesday. "I think I'll edly worth $1.6 million for its two
be even belterreceivednowthatl'm years. But he played down the
a Red."
money, saylngheishappytobeback
Parker, 32, wbo w!ll be returning In his .old hometown and to be
to play 1h the city where he was playing for the Reds.
reared, saldheexpectstohlt .300and
He donned his Reds uniform,
drive In 100 runs for Cincinnati In · bearing the No. 39 he will wear In
1984. Manager Vern Rapp has 1984, to meet reporters Tuesday for
already told Parker he wtll play clubhouse interviews at Rlver!rcnt
right field and bat fourth in the Stadium. He was clean shaven,
lineup.
minus the beard and earring he
The Reds, rebuilding after two sported while playing for the

Now It wffi all be In pieces. Now
the local telephone companies have
been reduced to foolishness; the
system that will serve New York,
tne Information and communlca·
lions hub of the world, is to be called
"Nynex," which Is something I give
my daughter for a runny .nose.

Fatal SOUVenirs.____--.-----~---=---Ja~ck_A_nd_e_rs_o_n
WASffiNGTON - This season Is
an appropriate time to give yourself
and your loved ones the greatest
gift of all - life.itself - by asking
your police department or nearest
military base to check out any war
souvenirs you may have in your
home.
An astonishing number of supposed "duds" or practice rounds
are actually explosive enough to kill
you, your children and your
.neighbors.
This warning comes from the
heart. My associate Dale VanAtta,
his wife and two chlldrim lived In
mortal danger for several months
without knowing it. A cluster
bomblet he brought back from
Lebanon last year and stashed on a
shelf in his garage turned out not to
have been defused as he had
thought.
If a fir,e .Qr careless handling had
detonated the live shell , It would
have demolished his house and
anyone in it. .The 13-lnch-Iong,
bell-shaped Rockeye bomblet was

armed with a "shape charge"
designed to penetrate a foot of tank
armor, allowing the main charge to
explode inside the tank.
The little bomb was given to mY
associate by Palestine Liberation
Organization leader Yasir Arafat
as evidence that the Israelis were
us ing American-made cluster
bombs. Arafat obviously thought
the bomb had been defused. and
Israeli mUitary officers later gave
It a cursory check and let It pass .
Months later, at the urging of a
thoughtful Pentagon officer, Lt.
Col. Mark Foutch, my associate
belatedly called the 57th Ordnance
Detachment at Fort Belvior, Va., to
have the device checked out: The
two Army experts who took the
bomb away to detonate on a firing
range said: "You're luclcy to be
alive." ·
Others have not been so lucky .
Unexploded ordnance from World
War II, Korean and Vietnam even from World War I and the Civil

War- is still capable of detonating
with tragic results. Consider these
examples from Army lUes:
- Earlter this J110nth, two
eight-year-old boys In San Diego
were killed by the explosion of a
World War II Mortar rourid they
had found on an old marine firing
range.
- FOur boys in Plt!5burgh were
killed when a missile they were
playing with ex1&gt;loded. The parents
had thought It was a practice round
(which is no guarantee that something is harmless ).
- In Beach Grove, Ind ., two
10-year·old boys were kllled and
five playmates wounded when one
of them dropped a rtfle grenade.
- In Col6rado Springs an
11-year-old boy staggered Into his
home, his hands blown off and his
body torn apart by grenade !rag· ·
ments. He crted, "Mommy, I'm
dead! '' - and died minutes later.
He had pulled the pin on a grenade
he thought was a toy.

- In Manitou Springs, Colo. 1and
eight-year-old boy, his sister and
two playmates were using a 37mm
tank shell to punch a hole In a
cardboard box. The shell exploded
and killed !he boy.
- In Great FaDs, Mont., a
four-year-old girl was rummaging
through a box In her home and
dropped a supposedly empty mor·
tar round on the floor. She was
killed In·the explosidn.
An Army poster headline says It
all: "Wanted for Murder- Explo·
slve War Trophies that Kill and
Injure our Children."
There are more than 800 Army
explosive' experts who will check
out potentially deadly explosive
devices In your home. Safe Items
will be returned to you.
All you have to do to make sure
that the souvenir is safe is to call
your local pollee department.
They'll call in the Army experts.
The service is free- but it could be
the most precious gift you could
ever receive.

.,

Anti-nuke fanatics----'--'------w_i_llia_m_A_·._R....:..!fS_h_er
NEW YORK (NEA ) - I am
indebted to my colleague Blll
Buckley for suggesting the plague
analogy as a means of llluminating
one of our time's most strikingly
political paradoxes.
Let us suppose that some new
virus disease were suddenly to
develop in West Africa, with a very
high mortaltty rate. Let us assume
that It thwarted all efforts to control
It , moved Inexorably northward to
Europe, and was now threatening
to cross the Atlantic. Let us furyher
imagine that. just at that point,
researchers at the Tropical Disease
Center in New York managed to
develop a vaccine that was, say, 90
percent effective against this man·
strous plague. Is there any doubt In
your mind that the government and
people of the United States would
move heaven and earth, and spend
any amou nt necessary, to vaccl·
nate every man, woman and child
In-the country, and for that matter
the world?
Certainly you wouldn't expect the
massed battertes of liberal opinion
to siart complaining loudly that the
vaccine was "too expensive," that
for unspecified reasons it "wouldn't
work," that It would take a long
time to manufacture, what the
virus would merely develop a
resistance to It, etc., etc. If, in fact,
there were residual problems of
any such kind involving the vac·
cine, you can bet your bottom dollar
that massive efforts would be
undertaken to eliminate them as
promptly as humanly poss)ble.
Yet, consider the closely analogous behavior of those who are
most vehement aboUt the lmpor·
tance of avoiding nuclear· war.
They are out every warm and
sunny weekend, forming human

chains to prevent the insta llation of
nuclear defenses against Soviet
weaponS already aimed at every
major city in the free world. They
demand an Instant freeze on alt
further production or deployment
of such weapons, lead In important
categories and would, In any case,
be Impossibly to vecify. They are
forever encouraging impresslona·
ble youngsters to contemplate the
possibility that they may be
vaporized at any moment. In short,
whether we agree or disagree with
their particular methods ot reducing the likelihood of a nuclear .
holocaust, there seems no doubt
whatever about the sincerity of
their aversion to one.

Yet, there is now before the
nation a sertous proposal for a
brand·new system of defense
against ' nuclear weapons. Instead
of relying (as we presently do, and
for the time being must ) on the
doctrtne of "mutual assured des·
!ruction" ~ making sure that the
Soviets know that any nuclear
attack on this country wlll inev!ta·
bly be followed by a devastating
counterattack on Russia- tills new
proposal envisions a system of
non-nuclear defenses based In the
space around the earth, which
would knock out a large proportion
of any nuclear missiles launched
against the United States. In one
step, we would go from MAD to
SANE: from Mutual Assured Des·
!ruction to Securtty Against NU·
clear Extinction.

missal. It would be " too expen·
sive"; it "won't work"; It would be
"destabilizing"; It wouldn't knock
out cruise missiles; it's just a "Star
Wars" fantasy; It would violate the
ABM treaty; the Soviets would soon
have It, too (So what?); the Soviets
would find ways to get around lt.
Etc., etc.
The point Is not that all of these
criticisms are Invalid. Some of
them are Pf?bably valid, up to ~
point; but none of them Involves
insuperable problems. The point is
that the"antl'nuclear" crowd- the
very people who are supposedly the
most vehemently opposed to the use

Pirates.
The muscular outfielder flexed
his bicep muscle as hedescrtbed his
preseason efforts to stay In shapeUftlng weights, working out on
exercise equipment and riding a
bicycle :D miles a day.
"I feel like I'm In goodshaperlght
now. I could open up spring training
right now," he said.
Reds president Bob Howsam
signed Parker to put a veteran's
presence Into a young lineup
featuring hitters llkethird haseman
Nick Esaslcy and outfielder Gary
Redus. The Reds also traded with
the Philadelphia Phlllies to obtain
Tony Perez, 41, a veteran of
Cincinnati's mld·1970s Big Red
Machine teams .
"I think we have the talent to be a .
bona fide contender," Parker said.

Tournament starts Thursday
Southwestern and North Gallta
wtll battle In the opening round of
the third annual renewal . of the
Gallta County Holiday Tournament
slated to begin Thursday night on
the Pirates' home fioor. Action wlll
begin at 7 p.m. H$nnan Trace wtll
meet the defending champion
Kyger Creek Bobcats In the
tournament's second game at 8: 30
p.m.
Admission wUI be $2 for adults
and $1 for students. Because of the
lack of parking space, North Gallla
principal James Page, urges fans
to car pooL
Slnct&gt; the event was reinstated
three years ago, Kyger Creek's
Bobc$ts have won the past two
seasons In the final minute of action
against North Gallla.
In Thursday's opening game,
Southwestern has a 2·5 record whUe
North Gallla is 1·5. That victory
came over the Highlanders. 57·51.
The evenln.g' s second contest
features two schools who have not
met thus far this season. Coach

of such dreadful weapons under any
circumstances ~ shows not the
slightest inclination to work on
eliminating any problems that may
exist. Instead, they dwell lovingly
on them, and bitterly resist the
basic proposal to shift to a passive,
non-nuclear system of defense.

Mike Jenkins' Hannan Trace Wild·
cats are 5-1 overall and 3.0 In the
SVAC. HT's only loss was a 46-44
~ision to South Point.
Kyger Creek has a 4·2 record and
2·1league mark. The Bobcats own
non-league vlctolies over Mid·
American and 'l"inton County.
Losses were suffered to South Point
and Southern.
The consolation and championship games are scheduled Friday
evening. Following the tourna·
ment, a Most Valuable Player and
six all tournament players wtll be
announced.
KC BOIICATS

Player

HI. Yr.

John Ranegar

s.-9
Kevin Napier.. ............................... 5-8
Robert Myers .. ...................... : ....... 5-11
Brent Love .... .............. ....... .. ......... 6-3
David Martin .. ...... ....... _, ......... ..... .. S4
J . D. Bradbury .... .,..................

12
11

12

12
U

6-112

Anthony Kitchen ... .. ....................... 5-10
Chuck Vogel ........ ... ..... ........ ........ .. IXJ
Steve Waugh ....... .. ............... ......... 6-0
Brtan Wamsley ............ ......... ......... 5-11
Larry Edge .. .. .............. .............. ... 5-10

11
11
11

11
ll

Roderick to join Hall of Fame

In heaven's name, why? As
President Reagan has said:
"Wouldn't It be better to save lives
than avenge them?" What is 'the
hidden motive, deep in the psyches
of these supposedly "antl·nuclear"
• fanatics, that Impels-them to cling
so stubbornly to the thing they
profess to dread?

"

OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Six
fanner Miami University stars
from four different sports have been
chosen lor induction into the school's
athletlc Hall of Fame.
Chosen were:
-Stan Lewis, a football and
baseball plliyer who graduated In
1935 and went on to teach and coach
in the Middletown school system;
-Ernie Plank, a 1950 graduate
a11d football player who was an
assistant college coach for 21 years
and currently scouts lor the San
Francisco 49ers;
-the late Cllve Rush, one of
Miami's all-time top pass receivers
before graduating In 1953 and going
on to serve as head football coach at
Toledo and !or the Boston Patriots;
-Jerry Peirson, a 1966 graduate
Who was captain ol the l.9tf&gt;66
Mid-American Conference cham·
plonshlp basketball team and has
served as assistant basketball coach

for 15 years;
-Chris Rodertck, '71, formerly or
GalllpoUs, the first golfer inducted
Into the school's athletic hall of fame
and now head pro at the Olympic
Club in San Francisco;
-and Scott Wallick, a 1973
graduate and two-time NCAA
Indoor pole vault champion.
The six men wtll be honored at a
banquet Feb. 3. They will bring to 81.
the number ot athlf!!eS Inducted Illto
the hall in the past 16 years.

SW WGHLANDERS
~

Player

'Ht. Yr.
Jeff Meeks .................... .. .............. 5-8 12
Roger Wells .... .. ..... ........ ........ .... ... . fi-{) 12
Randy Layton ........ .. ....... ...... .. ..... .. 5--10 12
Rob Ellloti .... .......... ... ... ... ,..... ...... . 5-10 12
Steve Peltrey ... ............... ... ...... .... .. 6-1 11
&amp;4 II
Mike BaUey .... .. ...... . .... .. . ...... .. .
Joo Baker ..... ... ..... .... ,......... ..... ..... 6-0 11
wm Ha~Jop ..... .............................. 5-8 u
John Woolum .. ... .... ......... ..... .. .. ...... 5-9 10
Jim Jeffers ............ ....................... . 5-11 10
Coaches: Lloyd Myers and Ted Bailey.
Athletic dlredor: William P. Sheets.
NGPIRA~

Playet'

HI. Yr.

Anthony Blackburn ...... .. .................. 5-6
Erick Penick .. ....... ....... ........ ....... .. 6-0
Larry Lee ................... .. ...... .. .. ...... 11-9
Brlan Hawks .. .. ............................. 5-9
John Diddle ............................... .... 5-11

Coll~

scores

Sl . Jotl\'156, Fordham 52
JacloaiVIDe 67, VlllJnova 6.1
Ulimis St. 411. Baylor 36 '
Mlam~ Ohto 70, Davtdllon 52
s. FIOI1da 7l Texas A&amp;M 47
North C'.aroUna 14, Iona 81
Varukrbtlt 00. Air Force. 52
Qoeaon St. In, Bollr St. 6
P I - 61. lJuqueone Ol

Mar'(Jiene 68, McNeeR St. 56

Texu-EI Pao 72, Mld11pn n
Tf'll~

?&amp;, Na'w')' 61
AJ'IzoM n Tl'lW Ted! I\ OT

MIDDLEPORT, OH
"Special Christmas Houn"

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

PH. 992-6491 or 992-3106

12
12
12
11
11

Thurman Ko!Uday .......................... iS-U U
Tim Smtih ...... :............. ............. ... . 5-10 l1
Jackie Glassbw'n ........................... 5-U 11

Wayne Diddle ............... ................. 5-7 10
Head coach, Bruce WLiion ; Assistant
coach, Ron Twyman, Principal, James Page.

SEASON RElCORDS
HANNo\N mACI!
(1&gt;1)

Hannan Trace
Hannan Trace
Hannan n-ace
Hannan Trace

61 Symmes Valley 18
64 North GaiDa 50
49 Eastern :S

47 Southwestern 45
Hannan Trace 81 Hannan, W .Va. :rr

South Point 46 Hannan Trace M
KYGI!R CRI!EK
(f-2)

South Point G4 Kyger Creek 58
Kyger Creek 44 Eastern 42
Kyger Creek t3 Mld·Americatt 42
Southern 58 Kyger Creek 47
Kyger Creek Th North Gallla 52
Kyger Creek 58 VInton County 56
SOUTIIWI!STI!RN
(H)

Chesapeake 64 Southwestern 42
Southern 49 Sout!Mrestern 36
Oak HW 57 Southwestern 47
Southwestern 46 Symfll(!S Valley 39
North GaUia 57 Southwestern 51
Hannan Trace 47 Southwestern 45
Southwestern 58 Symmes Valley 53
NORTRGAWA
(I&lt;!)

OF OHIO, INC.

HOURS:

Head roach: Keith Carter. Assistant coach:

Malic Hartman.

Oak HW 64 North GaWa 54

FRUTH PHARMACY ·
6 N. 2ND AVE.

Rodney Morgan ....... .. ..... .. ....... ...... t'N 11
Gary,Pennington ...... ........ ...... .. .. .... G-1 11

·

Hannan Trace 61 NCI"th Gallla 50

North GaUla 57 SOuthwestern 51
Waterford 66 North Gallla 46
Kyger Creek 75 North GaUJa 52
l.eoort" 62 North GalUa 42

~

"i'
•. •

"Some teams want me as an Inside
linebacker, others as an outside ~
linebacker," he said. "I don't have-···:
any preference, just so I play."
\
The Pittsburgh Maulen; have the
draft rights to Wengllkowski in the j
United States Football League. '
"They look at me as a third round •
selection," he said.
'
He has no preference between the
leagues. "The money spends the ··
same. I have a family so It depends ~
on who offers me what, " he said.
·

I'
'

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':

Phone 445-4524

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IIARGAlN MATIN£ES TODAY I
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SEATS SZ.OO

AOAIISSION EVERY rUESDAY $2.00

Auto theft charge
filed against Wills

stadlmn Tuesday. Parker, a fonner l'lllsbur«h
Pirate, Is expected to bat cleanup for the Reds. {AP
Laserpholo ).

NEEDED MUSCLE - Newly acquired Clncln·
nat! Reds' outfielder Dave Parker jokingly Oexes a
muscle as he talks with reporters at Riverfront

Fazio on Wengllkowski: "He's a
throwback to the oldtimers. They
didn 't tape theirwrlsts, their jerseys
were always out and their helmets
twisted because of hard hlts. He's
!Ike that. He just loves to play
football ."
Still, Wengllkowski has found
difficult to build respect as .a
two-year regular. One Pittsburgh
wrttercalledhlm "dumpy looking." ·
wengllkowski, 23, married, and
the father of 2'f.i·year-old Alan
Mattllew, takes it au In stride.
"I guess they're going to call you
dumpy and everything else when
you take over Hugh Green's spot,"
he said.
Wengllkowski concedes·his adrEr'
nalln wtll be flowing In the Fiesta
Bowl against Ohio State. "Oh, .
yeah," he said, "Thewayllookatlt .
is It's topping off my college career
since I never went there. I've always
wanted to play them. "
·
Despite his short stature, Wengli·
kowski is projected for a fourth to
slxtth round draft choice by the
National Football League scouts.

-~

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Maury
Wllls, former base-stealing king and
Most Valuable Player of the
National League in 1962, .Is free on
$1,500
ball after pollee
him
for Investigation
of car arrested
theft, officers

was traded to the Dodgers, where he
played through the 1972 season.

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

sa~;..hltesub;tance

found in a glass
vial beside Wills field-tested positive
as cocaine, but further tests were
needed to be sure, poucecapt.John
Sparkenhach said Tuesday. Wills
was booked only In the car-theft

case.
The former Los Angeles Dodger
was arrested at about 5 a.m .
Tuesday after two pollee officers
pulled hlmovetonHarborFreeway

whenthe
they spotted
a broken
on
passenger
side,window
said
Sparkenbach.
Wills, 51, who briefly managed the
Seattle Mariners, was freed after
posting ball.
A Dodger executive confirmed
that Wills was admitted to an
Orange County rehabiilatlon unit for
an unspecified problem last August.
Fred Claire, executive vice pres!·
dent of the Dodgers, said the club
had urged that Wills go and Wills
agreed. Claire said he took Wills to
the center.
"A broken window In a newer·
model car might indicate It was
stolen," Sparkenbach said In ex·
plalningwhyWtllswasstopped. "So
th~ officers ran the llcense plate and
our computer system said it was
stolen from (nearby) Lakewood."
It was listed stolen in April,
Sparkenbach said.
Sparkenbach said Wills, who told
officers he llves In nearby Playa del
Rey and Is self-employed, was free
on $1,500 ball and is scheduled to
appear for arraignment In the
Compton court on Jan. 6.
The swltch·hittlng Wills played
fortheDodgersfrcm1959-66.Hewas
traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates,
where he played for two years. He
then went to the Montreal Expos In
the expansion draft after the 1968
season.
Early in the 1969 campaign, he

SVAC STANDINGS
W L P OP

Southern , .......... ......... ....... .. ...6 0 J60 279

Hannan Trace ..... .. .... ........ .....5 I 349 234
Kyger Creek ........... .. .... ...... ... .4
Southwestern .... ......... ............. 2
Nonh Gallla .............. ..... ........ 1
Eastern ........... .. ...... ........... ...0
SVACONLY
Southern .. ......... .........
.... 3

2 325 ~
5 337 364
s lJ1 :m
5 200 247

0 l7t
Hannan Trace ........... ....... .. ... 3 0 160
Kyger Creek ........ ...... ............ 2 1 166
Southwestern .........................0 J L12
Eastern .................................0 J m

120
134
152
153

1ss

SVAC IIE'II!RVES
Southern .... ........ ....... .. .. ..... .... 3 0 136 91
Eastern ....... .... .......... , ...... .... .2 1 148 Ill
North GaUia ..... .......... ........ .... 2 1 129 111
Hannan 1'race ... .... ..... ........ .... 2 1 126 124

Kyrer ere.~................. .......... o 3 U4 143
Southwestern ..... .......... .. .... .... 0 390134
'lbunday's Games:
Southwestern vs. North Callla and Hannan

Trace vs. Kygl'l' Creek in GaUia County
Holiday Tournament.

Eastern at Wahama -

Tournament.

AND

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113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 99.2~3381
992-2342
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Wednesday, December 28, 198:1

Middleport. Ohio

w.dnetday, December 28, 1983

---Sec;;nd half comeback defeats Eagles
I

unan~wered

points In the final
fr am(' to post a ··stunning .. come-

from·behind 57-:17 \"ictmy over
Eastern here Tuesday evening.
Federal Hocking made up the
difference in the second half,
outscoring Eastern ~8·6 after the
Eagles hustled to a 31·28 halftime
lead . Eastern drops to 0.£ on the
season. while Federal Hocking
Pnjo:~-·.s· one of itS, better r~'ords ' in

FIRES !&lt;' ROM CORNER- Eastern's Paul CoWns ( 14) lets go with
. a jumper from the comer during Tuesday's non--conference game
against Federal Hocking. 'The Lancers came O'! strong in the second
hall to post a 5647 victory. Scott Wolfe photo.

,

Today's

Sports World
By wm Grtmaley
AP Correopoadeal
They called it "a game for the ages.·' It Was one of the most electrifying
college football games ever played. The principals were two of the nation's
most celebrated teams, Notre Dame and Alabama, led by a pairofcoaching
geniuses, Ara Parseghian and Bear Bryant. The national championship
hung on the outcome.
But for a small knor of men fu the dank, open preSs box of Tulane Stailium
that chill. drippy New Year's Eve. 1973. the40th SugarBowlclassicwitt not
be remembered for Bob Thomas ' late field goal and Parseghlan's
go·for·broke strategy in the fading seconds but for the story tha t was never
written of Notre Dame's 24·23 victory.
· It will always be the poignant tnle of Herby Kirby, a bubbly little man
whose lifelong dream turned to tragedy.
·
The game was brought to our attention this w€€k with the arrival of a slick,
coffee·table book ent itled. "The First Fifty Years of the Sugar Bowl
Classic," authored by Marty Mule of the New Orleans Times·Picayune.
. The well-written. nicely illustra tedvolumeresurrectsthegridlron heroics
of half a century bur there's no mentiono!Herby Kirby. His story is reserved
for a few peers who will forever wonder if they could have done more.
Kirby, a man in his early 50s, had bt'en a last minute fill·in to cover the
· _·game a ft er his sports editor, Bill Lumpkin of the Birmlnhgam Post-Herald.
became suddenly ill and had to undergo an emergency operation.
"This is the· first big college game I've ever covered," He rby said as he
;.,alked down the press row, introducing himself. "I usually cover high
school games. I've got to tell you- I'm pretty nervous ar.d worried c"
For many years Herby had bt'en 's tringing high sehool sports for the
:'E'ost·Herald while working at a local dairy.
·
•. " He loved football," Lumpkin was to recall later. "Hewouldcome intothe
&lt;Jffice before he went to work, at the lupch break and after his day at the
dairy. He's the only person I know who would go to a high school banquet on
his own time."
. Herby had driven toN ew Orleans with his wife and some friends. He said it
·was rhe first big tri p for hlmseif andhlswife and they were looking forward to
the Sugar Bowl party after the game.
· Despite the raw weather, there was a n electrically charged atmosphere
-as the two top-rated teams came to grips.
Alter a period of sparring, Notre Dame quarterback Tom Clements led a
62·yard drive, climaxed by a 3-yard plunge by 23().pound fullback Wayne
Bullock. Missing the conversion, the Irish led tJ..O.
· The first quarter ended wit h the Irishhavingonly sixpointstoshowfor flve
first downs and 144 yards. Alabama hadn't moved the ball an inch.
· "I've got a terrible headache," Herby said. "Anybody got an aspirin? "
Nobody did.
. Alabama got roll ing in the second period under the quarterbacking of
Gary Rutledge a nd scored to go ahead 7·6. On the ensuing kickoff, Notre
Dame freshman AI Hunter took the ball on his own 7 and rambled 93yards
and, with a r.vo-point conversion, a 14·7 1ead.

season.
:: "My mind has not been with the
New Jersey Generals," Sipe said at
a new" conference on Tuesday. The
Generals announced Monday that
Slpe signed a three-year contract.
' reportedly worth about $2 million.
: · "I was interested only in the
:£ 1eve!and Browns and making this
' ~son as succesful as possible,"
:Said Slpe. He sa id the agreement he
;5igned with the Generals on Nov. 2'2
·was finalized last week.
: • Sipe, 34, said he decided to leave
;!he Browns because he felt It was
for a "fresh start."
·~ "Twelve years Is a long time to be
: ln any one city playing for any one
: ~anchlse," Sipe said. "I thlpk I'm
;suprised as anybody that coming in
·as a 13th round draft pick, I've
:survived 12 NFL seasons."
: The veteran quarterback said he
:felt he was in a "competetlve rut"
·with the Browns.

:time

...

"! f€€1 I can go over to a new
league that I feel Is gaining
credibility by leaps and bounds and
in the very near future will . be
comparable to the NFL," Sii&gt;esald.

"! .think I'm going to have fun
doing it. And at this stage in my
career I'm not going to do many
things I don't have fun doing."
Sipe said the Browns hadn't
talked
tohlmaboutaboutrenewtng
his contract
until after his fulttal
contact from the Generals.
" I think that should teU you
something," Slpe said. "(The
Browns) gave me an offer. They
stood by it. They d not change it."
Slpe said the Browns didn't make
their offer comparable to that of the
Generals. The Browns reportedly
offered Sipe a four·year package
worth a totalof$2.2m!Wonbut !twas
only partially guaranteed, probably
only the first year and part of the

GET IN mERE - Jim Newell (20) of Eastern fires a jumper
· during second quarter action of Tuesday's non-league game a,:alnst
Federal Hooking. Eastern had a good second quarter but the LaDCers
.came on strong in I he second half for a 56-37 victory. AI left Is Eastern's
Mike Collins ( 42). NeweU finished the &lt;'Onlest with seven points.
·'

never came for the hosts as their
Probert enjoyed one of the best final offensive spark faded with the
nights of his car€€r to pace. the third quarter buzzer.
Eagles to an 18-10 lead. Eastern
Federal Hocking roared from its
later went up 23-12 on goals by Mike huddle into a stingy and lnttmldat·
Coll!ns and Newell, but several lng full coutt press that proved to be
untimely fouls and costly turnovers psychologically effective as well as
narrowed the gap to 31·28 at the physically deterrent to Eastern's
buzzer.
offensive progress. In the first three
The great team effort. enthusi - minutes the Lancers ripped the nets
asm, and sha rp-shooting that East- for seven points, promoting an
em displayed In the first half Eastern time out.
quickly diminished in the third
Eastern seemingly settled down,
quarter as a determined Lancer but still could not find the bucket
defense put intense pressure on the while the v isitors would notlet upon
Eagle five .
Its defensive pressure and raced on
Eastern held it s lead at J6.32, but for 18 unanswered fourth quarter
six unanswered points gave FH Its points for a 56-37 wiri.
first lead since the opening bucket
The winners hit 16 of 19 from the
at 38·36, shilling the momentum to charity stripe for 55 percent, had 36
the Lancer side of the court.
'rebounds led by Sinnett's nine,
Mike Collins sank a free throw In Watson' s five and Koker's five, and
the closing minute to pull Eastern had seven steals. FH also commitclose for what seemed to be the ted 16 turnovers, 29 personal fouls,
setting for an exciting finish, 38-37. and had four assists from top
The exciting finish, however, passer Randy Matlack.
Eastern hit 13. of 27 at the foul
circles for 51 percent and collected
15 ·rebounds, nine by Jim Newell
and eight by Troy Guthrie. EHS had
four steals, 33 turnovers, two
assists, and 27 personal fouls.

An.~a 75, Bradford ffl
AsJitaWia Halt!Or 53, Jf'ffenoo 4.1
Bedford ~. WlllOUflhby S. :oil
BeUirook !lol. Carllsko 52, OT
BeftJamln t.opn 73. Delph:v&gt; JPlfl.'nOn

We Rei8Ne The Right To
Umit Quantities.

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Berkshirfo 00, Strwlsboro ·II
lk&gt;Xlfy 93, N. UrOOn ~
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Co&amp;dwaTer 7t, Elida M
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Columbiana ~. l..£ooE'Ioola ~
Col. Unden·McKlnley &amp;f. Findlay h1
Col. Wbetstone 79, Gahanna 64
Corlrraut 117, Pymarunlng Va lley ll

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., DEC. 31, 1983

:e.

Covl~ n
&amp;&gt;the! .14
Cl.lyatqa Falls lit, Akroo N. 49:
Dayton Pane-rson 54, Da~on Carroll 5:!,

OT

Etyria i'O. Fremont ROiiS 6l
Fatrtleld Union &amp;7, New U&gt;xlngtoo ~
Fenwick~. VaJJcy VJtw 5.1
Fn!derlcl;town a&gt;, CrKtUne '11

Garfteld Hts . n . Orange 54
GeorJ..-e(t:M"n til, Ripley 52

~ville ~ Troy :i6
HamUtoo Ross 58. Harrisot~ ~1. OT

Heath '19, Uberty L1n1Qn .&amp;....
Hickory, Pa., 62, Hubbard 57
HUand 51. w. _..otmes as
Hllhboro. !il, i...e(.stx.ars ~
Hwston 58, LeiBnan 49 .

~

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Richmond His. 'rrl.

Lake 51, RJvt&gt;rsldE' 36

Jetrencn uruon 16, BE'rcolz

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Jorulttu.i Alder &amp;l, MarySVIlle ~
Klr1land 42, Peny 3.'1
Lorain st. Marbn Hardin~ 42
Lorain CathOlic 91, Oe~ 46
Localn SW!trvk&gt;w 61, Amherst &amp;I
Lo..llsvWI' Aquinas fit, W. &amp;anch 35
Mmtor TI. Mayfield 56
Miami E. 60, Ntwtoo 9!
Mkiik1own 70, BNVl'rCI'l!ek 59
Mlllenport 'lti, c;t'n~rg !f7

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(USPS UHIIIII
A Dlvj!llon of Multimedia, Inc.
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through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Com pany - Mul llmed la, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769, 9922156. Second class postage p8.td at P o-

meroy, O,hlo. '

_........

Akron St V.-Sf, M. 48. Akron .Flm!OJM.&gt;

w.

Hams 1.rJ.2: Bu!Cher «h'!; McPhe!:900 ~­
Totalo .. ti-M.
qurien:
..".... 12 19 6 0-37
F.
...................... ..10 18 10 18-!!6

.
$}09
Ground Beef. ...L~

m

•••••

Newark n. Col:. EUIII'I)Ol" M
N. Royalton 62, Medina Highland 52
Oberlin 88, D)'lia Catklllc 57
OlEntangy 75. New Albany ·57
Or'ttKon Strttch 7'l, Cle. Fair-llew 57

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

PalnesvWe Harvey 71, FairpOrt Harding

Member: The Associated Press. Inla nd Dally Press Assoclaton and the
Amerlca,n Newspaper Publishers Association, Nationa l Advertlsln~ Representatl v(&gt;, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue. New York . Ne-w
York 10017.

Parma 11. Biooktyn 62
Piqua Sf., Te&lt;.'\UNeh 51

Portmu.lth 71., Col. Wanerson 70
fUdumnd Dale SE ill. Canal WJnclll's~le

'57. fUver Valley 46
IW, MCf!tdore ~
Russi• &amp;l, Mls!ds.\lrulwa Vall. ol8
RJttnw~

$}19

Se1:Jme 61. Sollthlftrton 56

!hrlanOla.h t&amp;, Bucteye Trail

8) Catrler or Motor Route
One We-ek ...... ...................... ..... .$1 .00
One Month ... ..................... .. ...... $4 .40
OnE&gt; Year ............. ...... ............. $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICES ·
Dally .... ...... , ....... ............ : ... 20 Cents

BALLARD S-Lb. Roll" 12 O•.ll•k•

$} 29 Chuck
. Roast ...~•....

WI LSONIS SAVORY

.

. ·

.Sausage........... ~~G····

Woa&amp;ter 52, Wadsworth !I
:Kalla rr. Day. Belmot']t 6.1

Subscribers not desiring to pay lhf!"c~r­
rler may re mit in advance direct to
The Detily Sentine-l on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit will bt&gt; given carrier each
month.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

4.')

SkWy 50, Vandalht-BuUer ol8, OT
Spckcftt,old S. 81, Gl'f'f!non 58
SteubeftVWe fil, WlnfersvlUe 59
Stow 1(1), AkrOn Ellef M
TaJirnadge 115, WalslJ Jesuit 88
Toronto m. Bl!avt'l" ~..en 1 :ii
WamJI$V11k:&gt; ~. Cle-. Adams 56, OT
. Yi. Carrolhon Ill, Cernl'YWe 59

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

NHL results
..-.....yaGamm

Qutbe-c 7, Hartforrl 3

Bl.d'lato 7, Montreal 4
S:t Louls 5, New Jersey 4, 01'

No s ut&gt;scr tpl\on s by mall permitted In
seM.~ tc-e

$ .} 9 9

LB.

Jor"IO

POSTMASTER : Send address to The
Dally Se-ntin el, 111 Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

towns where home carrier
avail a ble.

·

Round Steak.........

.

1'

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

Is

Ohio sool'e!l

-·""""'_,_

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ............ .... ................. 114.04 ,
26 Weeks ........ _. ...... ~ .. .............. . 127.30
52 Weeks ............... .. ............... 151.48
Outside Ohio
13 Weeks .................. ............... $15.21
26 Weeks ... .............................. 129.64
52 Weeks .... ...: .... .... ......... :....... $5il.21

ONo o.lrp a.kecW

·.6 9¢

•••

By'l'lrle,. 1 W ed Pfta
Miami Ohio ,10, Davktlon 52
NatinwAPm 61. Cleveland St . !11
OtUo U. ~. BrooklYTJ tl

Bellarmine !II. Ashland M
WfWbt Stale 82. lftdlana TPch. 54

SUPJRIOR'S FRANKl ES

Bob~ats,

·

69¢

W1eners.................

.

·

12 Oz. Pkg.

Redskins
post wins
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) -

John

Devereaux scored 14 points to lead
We wish to thank you

all for your patronage.

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
cmc cana MOr 01

-

•

•

,; ' it;·
rr:::::::::;;;;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;l

CAL~ (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244

.

$}59

BROUGHTO~'S~

20Yo MII k..................
Plastic Gallon

BROUGHTON'S -.

.

$} 09

$'}·29 C.ottage .Cheese.~~~~ ..
R. C. Co Ia...........

ALL RC -PRODUCTS

s Pk,

16 Oz. Btls .

~.

.

Lunch

VETERANS 'MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

"I think It was a business decision
Office Hours by Appointment Only .
on their part," said Slpe. "I can Hve
by it and I suspect they are going to
have to Hve by it."
Sipe saki too much was made of
his sore elbow this past season and
he'll be ready to play In the USFL's . , ..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,,
upoomingseason.
I'

49¢
Tomatoes........ !~-•• ••
FRESH .

~t!:=~mlstlldcaake-ts.Ini)J'()OEthe~+·l ARMOUR TREEMT ,
tlrsthalt.Davldsonhltonlyflveot23
~:e~~!~:!u~t=
.
front34-U. .

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

.Ohio University to a 5548 nonconference college basketball vic·
tory over Brooklyn College Tuesday
night.,
Ohio U. jumped to an J&amp;.151ead in ·
the ftrsl half and never trailed. Ohio
U. Jed 24-20 at halftime.
Brooklyn was led by Riehle
Mlcalles, with a game-high 20
points, followed by Kel!h WIUtams,
with 8 points.
Following Devereaux for Ohio U.
was VIc Alexander, with 12 points.
Ohio U. hit from the field at a 50
percent cllp, while Brooklyn l)it 54
JIPN!PDI.
On free throws, Ohio hit 11 of 18
and Brooklyn hit Six out of nine. . .
Ohio U. ts..:3; Brooklyn is 1-10.
· , In · Ohio actlon Involving Ohio
cdleges, guard Chuck Stahl scored
17 points and runnJngmate Eric
Newsome added 13, leading Miami
ot Ohio to a 7M2 victory Tuesday
ntiht wer Davidson in the first
round of the Milwaukee Classic
collego! basketball tournament.
Host Marquette played Mcl~eesei
State In the other nrst-round game
jaterTuesday night.
• Mlaml, 6-2, took control of the

A NEW GENERAL- Cleveland BroWIIS' quarterback Brtan Slpe
talks during a P"""' conference Tuesday at the GlanlsStadium In East
Rutherford whe~ he was Introduced 118 a new New Jersey General.
Slpe wiU be Jea.vlng the National Football League after 10 years to play
for the United States Football League. (AP Laserphoto) .

second.

'

..

srnnen 9.J.21; Tabler o H; Watson 1-U:

.·

CLEVELAND (AP\ - Quarter·
:back Brian Sipe said his decision in
November to s"1tch to the United
States Football Leaguedidn'tallect
ius pertormance for the Cleveland
Browns of the National Football
. League during the flna Igames of the

16

448; Newell 3-1-7; Probert 1-7-9; Malson
1-2-4; P . Collins 0.0.0; CowderyOO.O; Bowen
Q.O.O; Weber ().0..{1; 'I'rus!ell I).(}.(J_ Tota11
R-13-2'1.
'
FEDERAL HOCKING (II) - Koker OH:

Mallack :J.3.9; Deeter 24-8; RusseU

8COJ'e8

ow.n.s.ao,.~

Box eeon!:
EASTERN (:II)- M. Colllns:J.3.9; Gutllrte

:~Sipe

says switch
:d idn.,t affect him

Prep

enure

r(I(.'C'nt , ·ears a\ :i--L

The Lancers' Scali Si nnet t found
the inside scori ng lane to his l!kin~
a nd emerged as the game's leading
scorer with 21 points. Sinnett also
became the main Eagle slayer
during rhe Lancers' last qua'rter
bombardment. scori ng 12 of his
team's 18 points.
Besides Sinnett's fine effort
a nother Ingredient to the Lancer
\1ctory was its balanced scoring
attack.
Things weren't all bad at the
Eastern camp as the Eagles
enjoyed an outstanding first half,
which · included a torrid shooting
spr€€ in the second period. The
Eagles produced. a balanced attack
that had senior guard Tim Probert
alrd center Mike Collins on top With
nine points each. eight markers by
Troy Guthrie, and seven by Jim
Newell. Most of that scoring came
In the first half as Coll!ns and Bob
Maison were the only Eagles to can
field goals in the second half.
· The statistics reflect the outcome
of the game as Eastern hit just 12 of
58 for a frigid 19 percent, while a
frosty first ' half dropped the
Lanc~rs to a cool29 percent on 20 of
68 attempts.
Eastern enjoyed a strong first
half and was "red· hot" the second
quarier hitting on 10 of~ attempts
for 40 percent. however. that
perce nt age dropped like the
temperature outside as the Eagles
hit just two of 33 attempts for an icy
six percent.
Federal Hocking grabbed the
early lead of 2.() on a Barry Deeter
field goal, but two free throws frQm
Bob Malson evened the score at 2·2.
Jim Newell put the Eagles on top at
4·2, then EHS continued on to a 10.5
lead before dropping Its pace and
holding a 12-10 edge at the initial
buzzer.
The second quarter was all
Eastern's as Senior guard Tim

Scoreboard

Reurves wiD
One bright spot for Eagle tans
came In tlbe reserve game where
Coach Don Eichinger's husWng
Eagles scored a 4845 triumph over
the young Lancers. Eastern set a
torrid pace and controlled the
tempo of the game tlbe
distance and at one point led by 13
points, but the Lancers didn't give
up and made it close at the 1Jnlsh.
Kevin Barber had a fine night to
lead the Eagles with 17 pbints, Greg
Leachman had . 13, and Eddie
Collins 10. Terry Deeter led all
scorers with 20 poln~s. while Lancer
teammate Keith Barnhart added
12.
The Eastern varsity next plays In
the Wahama Holiday Tow-nament
In Mason on Thursday and Friday
at 7 p.m.. while tlbe reserves
resume action next Friday against
Southwestern at home. Eastern's
reserves are now 4-2.

,1~· S(O'J'l' WOLFE
EAS"t ' ~n : ;c;s - Trnil ing by 11
point &lt; in rh0 st'Cond quart~1· . rhe
Fed~ral Hocking L" nccrs scored 18

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

' Pomeroy - ·Middlep()rt, Ohio

eat

.

59¢
TV D1nners...... n~;·.

$} 09

,
·
.l~~z•~!"••••

BANQUET. . .

• Miami, which controlled the

jpune lhroughoul, broke the game

open bt the

llnal5~

minutes of the

lint hAH by 9C01'111i the last 12 points

•

before lntennlsslon. Stahl had three

1Jaske1s durlni the outburst.
•
~ Davidson, 3-li, CO!Jid get no close~

IMNrtng WICIE't JACIC O'SH.EA

ONLYI50
.
::.:;;;:-.;:. ,_:= .

pwr ~on GerTy Born's two free

All For

I

~-~'t..

'

.'

I

'

~,
.

::uw

tbrowa with 4: 481eft In tbe game.
: GIWd John Wlllougbby ICOred 12
iolnta lllld Cllllter John Marx added
lo tbe Redaldns, who llave won
Par rl.tbelr last five pmes.
: FllnvlrciKamyWIIIon led David. . with 14 polntl.
•

rar

••

:

'

CHARMIN

CHUNK TUNA

&amp;Y:oz.59¢

46

Umit Thrllll Per Customer.
Good Only At Pawell's
Offer Expire• Dec. 31, 1983

'

"

TOMATO JUICE

oz.

TOILET TISSUE

2/$1

4 ROLL PKG.

Limit Two Per Customer
Good Only At Powell' s
• Offer Expire• Dec. 31, 1983

99¢,

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Pawell's
Ofter Expires Dec . ~1 . 1983

I

CLOROX BLEACH
GAL

69¢

•

Limit One Per Custome~
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Dec . 31. 1983

•

'

••

•

•

••

�Wedne!doy, December 28, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1-!J-;.\' r"-JI..l.. •

Pameray Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 2B, 1983
•
,•

•

••

•

•

•
I

••

'

•
•

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE
WILL .BE ·

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES,
SPRITE, TAB,

'

Open 1O:OOam·7:OOpm
Re-Open 9:00am Jan. 2, 1984

lb.

· And Resume Nonnal Hours

Boneless ·Boston $
Roll Roast.. ........ lb.
Cubed
$
Beef Steaks ... ... -.b.
Luncheon
Meats .... ... ..... .....~~~:

USDA

CHOICE

Lipton
Tea Bags

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE .
lw• rythinv you buy at Kr over l1 euaronte.d for your totql
•oti•fa ctlon regordleu of manufacturer. If you ore not
1oti•fied . ICrov•r w ill r•pla ce your Item with the same brand

or a .comparable bro~d or refund you r purc ho1e price .

COP YRIGHT 1983 . THE KROGER CO . ITlMS AND PRICES GOOD
MONDAY , DEC. 26 , THROUGH SATURDAY , DEC. 31. 198l ,,JN

Boston Butt
Pork Roast

.'

Glllipolis and PollllfCY.
WE RESERVE TH£ RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO

100-Ct.
Pkg.

DEALERS .

C·

.,.,

•••

,

99

SERVE 'N' SAVE SLICED

w ill oHer you your cho ice of a comparable item . when

owoilable refle cting the tome sovl ngt or o rolnchKk which
will entitle you to purdtote the odvertlsttd Item at the
odvertl ted price with in 30 dayt . Only o ne vendor coupon will
be oc:c.apted per Item pwrctlatecl .

.99

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

28

$

NEW YEARS DAY

ADVE~TISEO ITEM POLICY
Eod't of theta od var1ited itemt Is req~o~ i red to be readily
a ... a iloble fo r sole in each IC ro~e r Store ex cept at tp.clficolly
noted in th is ad . If we do run O\lt of on od.,ertlsed item . we

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE .

Boneless Top
Sirloin Steak

NEW YEARS .EVE

28

Mixed
Fryer Parts

U.S . GOV'T GRADED ·CHOICE

Open Til 9:00pm

Diet Coke
or Coca Cola

8

HOLLY FARMS

•

lb •.
SLICED FREE INTO ONE CONVENIENT

..

..

·

Gal.
Jug

·~·

HOT OR MILD

Ole Carolina
Sliced Bacon

..'

·~

1::-;
I ·'·~
.:::
1....
.. '"
1.. ...

Jimmy Dean
Sausage.

1 .~

28·

13
'I :·:

l -Ib.

$ 49

· l(roger . .
White Bread

1.

Roll

1-lb.
Pkg.

I

LIMIT 5 ROLLS WITH COUPON

1

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

........................
I

I

20·01.

lvs.

12

•..

I ::

CDIPD! GOOD MD!. DEC . 26-511. DEC. 31. 1113
SUI/ICT TO APrliCIIII SlATE &amp; LOCAL TAliS

OF

-·

:~ ·

1

• ·•
_:

LARGE

Hellmann's
$
• ......
Mayonna1se
32-oz
Jar ·

Kroger
Cream Cheese .. ~:;:

Whole
$
Fresh Hams .... .. .

Slicing Size .
Tomatoes .. ... .. ...

KROGER HOT DOG OR

IN THE PRODUCE DEPT.,

lb.

c

C:.-_.......,

.. ....
·'...'
.
·-...

lb .

~ .

FROZEN

Cirtus Hill·
Orange Juice .... ~.:r~·

Hamburger
Buns .. ... .. ..... ..

8-Ct.
. Pkgs.

c

63 SIZE

Florida
Limes .................

c

i;;;~~~;~OR
$ 59~~.
.·· .
Orange Juice .. \~~1. ·
..... ...
~

Dozen

4 • ••

,·
~·

.·· .

LARGE SHRIMP
PARTY TRAYS
I
"
I Of

:
1

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY

:

CIIII'IIIII:IOI .... III'C. ZS.Ioii. III'C. ll , 1113
SIIJICTTD II'PUCJIU STATU LIUL lUIS

II

·------------·········

$3 995

LARGE SHRIMP

Large Shrimp
Party Trays Each

Ctn.

••

AMERICAN OR MUSTARD STYLE POTATO
SALAD , CREAMY OR SWEET COLE SLAW,
MACARONI SALAD

. "·ggc
,,

Dia

$

10-oz.
Pkg.

s ·

88

~

"

Kroger
. $
Sherbet .. .. .... ... .
Hunt's
$
Ketchup ...............~~i~· ·

09

FROZEN BANQUET DRUMSTICKS,
NUGGETS OR

Chicken
• .... ..... ......
Pa 1es
"

$

12·oz
Pk,:

'

'

EVEREADY 2·CT. "C" OR "D" OR
1-CT. 9-VOL T SIZE

29 !

Energizer
$
Batteries ...........
Pak

.,

59 . Natural Flavor $ .·a9

·'

49 Cottonelle
•

LAUNDRY

Cold Power
$
D8 t ergent.... .'.....

'lt·Gal.

crn.

.e9·oz.
Box

'

,,;.,.
,.
,.,.
,
"'

'·

.,

$
69
6·Roll

Ba th TISSUe ....... Pak

.C·CT. "AA" SIZE • • • $2.19

KROGER

Ice Cream ... .. .. ..

.eoo SHEETS PER ROLL
FAMILY SIZE

LIMIT I PLEASE

•

White
Cabbage

PaRmiieRr's

•

'

'!.·Gal.
Ctn.

WITH COUPON ABOVE

tl:~

V2-Gal.

.eB-CT. SUPER PLUS ABSORBENT,
.eO·CT. MAXI ABSORBENT,
90-CT. NEWBORN W/STAY ·DRY GATHERS,
60-CT. EXTRA ABSORBENT W/STAY

Chicken Of
The Sea Tuna

Totino)s
Party Pizzas

6% Butte......
EggNog

$10100 0FF ...

WATER OR OIL PACKED

FROZEN ·

KROGER

59

119 SHEETS PER ROLL

ScotTowels
Arts &amp;Flowers ·s~"a,:·

c

GREEN TOP

Red
.Radishes ... ....... .
ALPENGLOW

Sparkling
C1•der. ....... ... .....

•

$
Bunches

........ .

$ 99 :3......,,..
'•'

25 ..e-oz
Btl.

......
·~

•

�•·
Sentinel

'

By The Bend

.UNCLI SAM'S LOSS II

SUPER

-

YOUR GAiN AS WI .

13th

- ··-

INVINTORY TO SAY' US
': XIS -AND .TO PASS
t . DO S SAVINGS

MONTH

79- GMC
rickup. ' Inn . 6 nrl :(\1.n I ran ~.; PS , PB .
~hort wiri1· ~,.\~~diu . ur£1t'n . ~5 .959
m llr ~ Slock ~\flt'

""
'n" '""·
••. •. •••••••••••••••$4295
.
79 JEEP

Aoslet'Uit Profeuor of

Family Medlc!ne
Olllo Ualverwlty College
of ~pathlc Medicine
QUESTION: ldon'tseemtohave
a -cold, but I've had a cough lor the
last two weeks and It won't go away.
Should I be worrie,p!.
ANSWER: The '
cough Is normally a protec- ~
tive mechanism
for the body. It !
helps to clear tor- ..
etgn material and _
mucus from the wtnd~&gt;IPE
· passages In the lungs. Usualy a
cough lasts only a short time, but
occasionally coughing persists tor
several days or even weeks. A

r.rv. r. ,._,.I . 1 sf&gt;('('d . PS . m(•1al lop. ~auJ;tcs.
hrown-whil,-. Stnt k no ~ 0212

~::: ~~·;: .......... :..... $4295

76 CHEVROLET
\"Nm . 2 cl r

r. r;.: l..

~ SPCt'd . burket seat s.

WSW radial !ir~ Stock no ~520 1

"',11\l" '""'
••••• ••••••• •• •••• • ' Sl 091::
""

75 PLYMOUTH

\"nli.1nt. ~ rlr . 4 • ~·I. a-t· . \"in.\11 roof , ~3.90 1
~1~ 11"~. h1 •alf'~ . :Ju!"~!\_l rf\ PS. PB , tinlffi
~: I .Jss. Mt1 F\1 . !Uf.5.\\l rad1&lt;1l 1ircs.
whr-cl crwl'r ); 511
n ~:0761

""
'" . •• •••••• ••• S2295
•' 'rt\1, "
•••••••••
74 CHEVROLET
C:m•.1ro. ~ rh h.1rdtup . \' -!1 . &lt;H" ,a utn tr&lt;tns
Stor k no ·llitn1

\\'"
'""" ""'
..................... .S759
"

77 CHEVROLET
'

lmon ln. -.:t a tionwa~trm . V-8. H·c-. PS . PR .
li l'lrl'l ~!la s ::: . ,\ M-F'\·1 ra din. WSW radia l
o ·o,r r ~ Stock nn 1r!o'I02
tir r&gt;S .

"h"•·l

~.~:- ~~·~:: .. ............. $2995
:'

~

First Come First Served Basis!
• NO DEALERS PLEASE •

6.9%

. "if)lclpr. {'On \' , l'OUPI'. ~ O l . ~3 .. 901 m i)f;!S . 4
~ pN· r1 Pit AM -F'M radio . buc·kel seats
Stn&lt;:k tHl . 40.141

"'" "'"

• • • • • • • • • • • • •,;, • • • • •

APR • .

$1595
.

Thun,krhirc1 . :! dr .. \' -11 . a-t'. dn .~· l roof.
hr:UN &lt;tUi p lrnn ~ . PS. Pn . power windows .
fl(lwr r s r:tt~ . hody ~i ct t' muu ldinas . lintcd
ll1&lt;l!l-!l-. Tilt ~ tcr rim:!. t•ru i&lt;;t• &lt;"on t ml. AM -F'M
r ;~ rtin . WS W radial l\n•s. whc('l l'fl\"f'fS Stock

"'"
'"" ""''
................... .$1095
82 OLDSMOBILE
Tnmn,1tin RrnuJZham . ~ dr hardtop. V-8. tH',
1 'i nvl roof. autn t rans .. PS . PB . power
wi nctn w ~ pu\\('f s('at powl'r dnnr loeb . noor
rn;ll ~. hnriv ~ irl{' m nulrlinll." - di"i tal dock .
tint ('•I ~ I n~ ~- I ill .~tf'e r inu . rru isr control . AM .
I'M ractin . ~ I&lt;'T&lt;"' 18Pl' . WSW radial tires .

cnvrr s. r(' mnll' control

humr'!('T u w1 rd~ .

- roof. s pl it hench. li llht l!roup . h eater. aulo .
Iran,._,. nd PS. PB . power wi"ndnw~ &amp; door
locks. noor mat s. hody side mouldinll!-!.
diAiltll d(l('k . !l nl ed llllm. lill slef'ri nlil wheel.
r ruis&lt;' c·ont rnl. AM ·FM radi(). s t&lt;'ren tape,
WSW radial rires. . whee l cover -:. remote
1 · nntr~l mi rror s. hu mpe r 11 uard s. rear
wrruirm 11 C' ffl~ller Stock no 4541

mirrors

rear window defnuer .

St n1'k 4fl191

,

\\'\ 'm1••••••••••
"' '"··" ••• •••••· $12
··
1495

81 PONTIAC

l•'irrohirri. 2 dr hardtop . li t· ~ l .. :1-1'. h&lt;'alrr.
a urn trao .~ .. PS . PB. power "eat. hod~· s ide
mo ulrl i nlf ~_l, nll•d r.~las s . fi ll s trerimz whe&lt;&gt;J.
r-r u i.~ro o·ontrnl. ,\M ·F'M radio. !&lt;lereo t ap(' .
\\"f:W radial t irpo,. remnt,-. mntrnl mirrors.
r onl'\0){' , hUI· krt !&lt;eat:r; . rea rw inrtow rltofoRiill'r
Sl(l('k n r\ 30!'&gt;41

·~·,. .""'''·
'lOll
.................... .

rrown Vir tnr ia . mid[Jillhl ua n)IOil rt&gt;d. 4 dr
\'-!\. a-1-. \"iny l roo f.l ol luxury l!rnup
l"rnl winclnll"!l. ru.._l prevention . aul n. lraos
oct .. f'S . r'B . DOW{'t windows. s eal &amp; door
IOI'kl' . floor m:u~ . hod~ sidr mo uldinlils.
11 i ~ ita\ dock. tin lrd ill:m. 1ill s iC'f'rina.
rrui!U' !'Ontrnl. AM -F'M radio ste reu lal)(' .
WSW r.1dial tIre~ . -...·it (' ~·ovt'-I'S. remote
l' nn t ro i mirror s . hu mp('r auard ~. rea r
wimlnw d&lt;'f!!ltJolf'r . power :ml&lt;'nna . Stock no
4fi:!4 .
~ rrt.1n .

-

li["-;t JE71·

·-w-:---

"'""
:"'ow '"·'''··
• • • • • •' • • • '• • • • • ·SAVE
•
·
84 FORD
('r nwn \ 'icllnrh•. n:durd "';hil e. ~ dr. sedan .
\' -R. :1-1 . \'inyl roof. ru ~ t prrveolinn , autn .
Irons . nd . PS. PR . powe-r windnw~ . 1'('81 "
door lrwks. fl oor mats. hodv ~ idf. mouldin11s .
door rda r Qiuard!i. d illilal t:lork. ti nterllZiass .
!ill s tf'C'tinll c·rui!;e c·onlrol . AM -FM radio.
s tf'r('fl tape. WSW r adial Iires . wirr- wheel
••m•f'r.c; . r&lt;'mntr •·on1 rnl m irrol'll . humper
ll.u;:~rd !&lt;. rf' a r windo\1. def0$tll:er . int . IU)(Url'
.
}!roup. Stork no. .Jfi2.1 .

Stock No . 45301

~1irnllo

2 clr hardlnp. auto I r an ~ .. PS. P ll.

OOrl v ' irl1• nuoulcling.c; , tinl•·d !! lass.

lil t

~ I N'rinJ!
r rll i!'l' mnlrt~l. .".!\1 -FI\1 radu 1•
~ tr-rr-o laJlf' . WSiW r adia l t i re~ . wheci L" Il\'('f S.

r rnH1 Ir• •·on1rnl m irrors . r()ar w 1ndow
rldOliH' r S11K k no 15~31

"''''"'..
" ""'''
....................$5295.

80 FORD

1'hunc1&lt;'rhirl1 . :: rlr h&amp;Sup . V-R. &lt;~ ·• , i1H·l
!\a' s P S. PB. bnd\ s idrroot. h1"111N , ~:1111
llllltJII'IInafi . li
l.\itl .. M f' l\1 rdc1io. WSW
1'11\'('r!O Stnd Ill) r r;otll-1
rHrlin l !l rl' ~ . \l"

"'
" .....-.
$4995
\"o\1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
80 FORD
Pinw . 2 dr h;lfrl lnll 4 &lt;·~· I hr-:n t•r. 4 ~ D('{'d .
r'S rn rin iPrl 1 !1as~ . AM 1"'1 rall i&gt;l. WSW
ratli:~l ll rrs . u·hr•f' l t'•W&lt;'f!' Stnrk nn ·,:uwr

"''
" •"'"·
'\ 1n•
o • '• o • o • o o o o • • • • • • • • $2295

80 CHEVROLET

!\1a lihu . 4 tlr srol'lan . r; I'\' I . a -1·. hr.11!'1 . 11urn
1r11ns , PS. Pn. lintrd l!la!'s . \ I'll FM •·arlw .
\\'S\1' r:1 cl ial l l rl".~ . wh ro&lt;'l ('1 1\ ' N ~ Stock nu
, ~&gt;1\:ll

~.::.':~:·........ ... ..... $3995

78 FORD

1\ ror!"ll . 4 whl'r•l 1iri vP. \ ' -ft . :1uln lrmr ~ . I'S.
Pll. l!&lt;HIIlr'S. rrill' S1 &lt;'J) humPf•r . ':1 · 1". linlf'll
L! l ii~S . tiM FM r:~d l o . blac k. ~0.44~' m ik !i
S tock nn 4r.r1 1

................... $5495

SAVE

84 FORD

~~~~ ~~~~ .....•....•.•... $6395
""'"~-......... we 5i!M ¥

80 DODGE

.~«-;··.
1..~:&gt;. FORD
.
.AND
. ,,
, MERCURY
84 FO~D
84 FORD
('rnwn Virtnria . 2 dr . hardtnp . \' -8. :l·c
"l n~l

79 CHEVROLET
Suht •rh.&lt;n . -1 rlr ~ ta t ionwa11on. \' ·It 11 -t·. 2 1onE"
na 1r11 hr.1 trr . autu trans. PS . PB . body sidr
nmulrli nus . rinrr-d l! iaJ.;.c;, tilt ~ lecr i n j;l \\'hecl.•-ruiSI' rnntrol. A\1-F'\t radi(l. wh&lt;'el CflV€'t S
Stnck no ~·4 1).') 1

'"'' '"
"'
SAVE
ooooooooo••••••••••••
84 FORD
~llW

~-:~ :~':: ..........•.....$6495

Thunrlrrh 1r d, mrod rtes&lt;'rt tan. 2 dr. mul)t.
~ .: t OHC-F:Fl turho ••nlt!ln&lt;' . ~ SP«rl overrlrlvf' . prrmium sound ~ys l . hiRh l)erf. Tir e~.
hra tN , PS . Pit , pow&lt;'f window~ &amp; door lo..:ks.
fl onr nu1 1~ . rliRital dock . tinlf'cl. ulass. 1111
slro&lt;'r inr:l . l-ruiM• con trol. AM -F M radiu .
~ l ro r&lt;'oola[lf' . remnf(' n mt rnl mirrors. t•onSI'IIC.
hu mJ)f'r 1111.1nb . hudet Sl.'fl! ". rt•ar window
rtr-follU.r-r Stnl"k nn "Mil

79 FORO

LTD :! dr hnrflt on V-R. : 1 - ~·. vinyl roof.
lwatrr . ;1uto. t rnn ~ .. PS . I' ll . ·hod_\" s id£&gt;
111PIIIrlinJtf\. rint&lt;'ll ula ~!&gt;. WSW ra dii! I fire s.
II hpp) 1"0\'('r!' SIOI'k no ~~291

~.~·~ .......
.
$3995
79·
OR ............•.

,,.,.......................
.$AVE
""
'"·'"'·
84 FORD

F ni rmnnl ~·u1 ur11 . 2 ctr hardroo. n t·~l.. ,...,,_.
' m ~ l rr~nf. aulri Ira n!' . PS . Pll. t in! eflll lass :
,\J\1 F'\1 rncl1o. \\'.'\ W r adial l it'('!';. 'A' hf'C I
r•wrors Stncl1 rH&gt; 51770

.Thunrl1•rhirl1 . ml'd rl('!o:('rlran , 2 rlr ~·ouOf' . ll
· · ~·I . \'.r.. a-t'. li~ h t RrnUtL rust pn•vr-ntion .
;mi n Iran!! .. PS . PB . hud;.• sidc mcJu l d i nR~.
rlh:!l!al dO(•k. lintefl Rhls~. t ill s ttf'rin;
1·ruis.-. n•ntml..\M -F~t radio . WSW radiai
l irr-" . Ju, un whee l l'OVf'f''- . remotr l'Onlrol
mirrors . f "00~11 lro . hUI·kt•l S{':l t ~. t"flar l'indow
rll'fnllR&lt;"r ~lllC' k " " 4fifl!l

""'
'""
' ~'~" ...................
.S3495
78 DODGE

As l)('n . 4 rl r .~ &lt;"dan fi o •l . :H. a ut" trans ..
PS Str~t• k nn. :!fX',f\1

"" '"·'"·

~.~~ :~~~: ................ $2195

79 FORD
II"' SJ&gt;"

"A l l • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

A4 r:o·riif ········ ······
1

r.ran.1rl.1 flhi;1 , ~ rlr hardlflp , f, ,- ~ I .. a-c .
aut" I r an ~. PS. P R . hud,, sidt• mould i n~ts
! i ni NI~tlnS.~. WSW rartial .rircs. ""he(•] c nvers '
·
Slr&gt;C' k nro -4.1111

$3695

CHOOSE FROM OUR FULL LINE .
OF V.W. PRODUCTS
''25 IN STOCK"

$AVE

LTJ I W:liWn . nxrnrrl whill'! 4 &lt;lr ~tlllion wo eOfl . r. o ·l il - t ·. int lu11 . lilrnup, ru~ l
t'lri'I'&lt;'OIIntl . souir P np1ion . hea t{'r. PS, PA .
powr-r wt nrlnw~
.-. .
. onr locks , noor
lllll l~. rii&amp;:: ilnlc·l · I
la ss. rill slt'f•rinll .
Iapt:•. WSW rad ialt irl·~ A!lf F\1 radh !'I
h l:tLit\' Wh&lt;'el l' fi\'N !' . rtm ol r cnnl ro l
m i rrnr ~. humi)Cr uua rd:;. rear Mindrr.r
rl4'roruwr Slnl' k nu -1fl2~

84 "FO"Rii .••..•••.•••••

Wasl1!,848.78

$AVE

·

I

I.Tn nrnunham . hlue. 4 dr •wdan . ll cyl.. a ·c.
1"\n~·l roof. ~ pl i l h&lt;'m·h ~l'al s. r ust prC\'t'ntion.
o ut u lrnns. nd .. PS. PTI . power windnw:&lt;~. &amp;
rlnor lrH · k ~. floor ma l s. hnd~ s idto mnuldinJ(I.
rliRilol dlll·k. linter! ;la~s. t ill :'!l eerlnll .
r·ruir;(' c·ontrl. tiM FM radio . s tereo tape
WSW rndial lir N• . wheel covers. remol&lt;'
r o ntrn l mt rrnr s. h u mp~r auard s, rear
winrlow ctc roiUt('f Stock no ~ ~ -

'1"'
'·
$AVE
~h\\ "'·"
•••••••••••••••••••••

84 MERCURY

Mnroui .c;, nt·acif.m !; hlue. 4 dr. ~an . &amp;cyl..
tl-1"'. r uf\1 pr~ vcntilnn . aut I) trans nd .. PS.
PF'l . linred glo ~~ - AM ·FM radio STock no,
4504 •

DISCOUNTS, LARGE SELECTION AND
0/_
NO- PAYMENT
/0 A.P.R.
UNTIL FEB. 25th
•

69

ThunrlerhirtL m idniJth l r ed. 2 dr. hardlop. VII. n-r. iMI. wiJ)I'r,'&gt; rusl prl' vcnliori. li;~t
l!rnup , nul n. trans . od . PS . PB. power
winrlnw!l- &amp; ~rol. diRilal clock . linlerllliilss.
till s!rcrinJ! . ~ · ruis{' nmitOI. AM·FM r adin
~ ,,.,,.. lll('(lt Wht'cl . remot&lt;' t·onlrol mirmrs:
c · on~o lro . hu•·kr-1Sf'a ts . rear window ck&gt;foii:IZC't ,
·
SitlCk nn 4!i!U

"'"
'"'-""$AVE
~ow •••••••••••••••~ • •••
84 FORD
Tl1undc.rhirrl . h ri to~ hl rl'd . 2 dr . h11rdtnp. V-B.
a·•·. rus! nrrvt&gt;nlinn. l i~ht l! rnup. h e&lt;~ ler .
llll!n t rnn ~ nO .. PS. PH . DOWt'r windows .
"l'n1 &amp; rloor loc:kf;. flnor mats. hnd\' ~i d e
II IOUiclinMs. &amp;lor t•dQ.fl ~uard!', tin! ect' ll.I!I S!l.
till , tc-.,•rinJI:. r·r uic I'OO irol. AM t' M radio.
~ t ,· l&lt;' .c;rl'cl whC('I ~. retnntc• control mirrors.
l'llnSIIIl" . reotr 11 indnw rlefnll!l('r . Stock no .

"'" "'·'"·
84 MERCURY

'\01\ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

~ •••••••••••••••••••

---

I

VEt

84 COUGAR

~11 7- ~"i . 0\[ld . rrrlln !.. ~ d r ..coup.·, V-A. a -c

1n1 W11)l'r r.. pol ~· !"a!il ~.~· h ed ~. ru ~ t orevcn·
t i~ n . 1 .l(rnup. •1uln, trans .. PS. P B. oow er
ll' lnrlilw ro~ . hod ,v .; ide m r, uld i n g .~ . rlonr ~dAc
I! Uiltrl.~ . di11i1a l clnd . till s tet!tinp:. C[ Uisc;o
c·on trol. AM -FM radiP . sler ('(l tape . WSW
r,1rtia t tit(•s . whrel cm•('r~ l wcur ~·- rem otr
•·nnlroi m ir rnrs . roo ~ol l' . but:kt• l -~c at s. r('a r
wintlm1 rlcfOJtJZ('r ~lock no tnoo

"''
"••""·""
Nnw
, . , . , ••••• , . . . . . .. .$12 r 367

~~an'i~.~c~.H.~!

.

'\

R :~hhi t

("l'n l l!r:c.\ . ~ d r ~ed!ln . ~ cyl..
s lirlinl! sun roof . rust prl'vention . hea te r . 4
~ P&lt;'f'd . AM FM rarlio . WSW radial tires .
~lor k nn 404 :1

I.

~~:~~~:~~.............. ... $7376

84 RENAULT
1\ llinnc r· L . e h.1 rfna_l , nwt . ~ dr ..~erlan ~ 4
n ·l. . .1 :1·. liahllfi'OUP. !i ~ IX't'd hd .. I'S. linted
tt l ll );.~. M•l -FI\1 r a.clin. \loht•el c;over~. humper
~ll&lt;1 rd s. r&lt;'ilr winrl,ow •te rollller . Sl or k no.
4:12:'\
\\":1 ~

l llll'i I

:\"0\\ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

84

v.w.

.lr-tt a . :! rlr ~rlan . 4 t·yl . ru~ l prt'llenlion . 5
l'- Pf'{'cl . AM FM radio. o•as&lt;.;e lle sh'tl'll tape.
S11w· k nn 4!ll ~ .

~~ = .~~:~ ..... ~ ..........$8715

1

$8672

II'

n

li o l . :min t r:ms .. PS. PB . rust
on·\·Polinn . IW 1 1~Ps . rrar step hum JK•t.
11 nrlNcnalinu . t iniPd u. lit~li . h!a(•k . WC!Of('fO
mirrors STock no 4fiHi

$AV£

\'. !\ . I SJ)(&gt;(&gt;rl . nrl .. ru~l Pr l'Yf'nlion . JHlW!.CS ,
l•wkiruuliff••r••ntial . midnillhl hlut. SlrK'k no.
4:'otl2

$AVE

;;· .•~J~·
'--'"' ..,. liaj.,.

I

-

~tfp tmmJ)f"r . rust pre11ention . stock no. 4612. WaR lt»&gt; .IIIM.Jii

84 FORD

•

84.FORD .

l'ril·an r:t iO !'S. nip-nnen rt•ar window , 4
\ I hl"r-1 rtrh ·c· . r; t'' 'l . i! UI(t lrll n.~ .. I'S , PR .
1.!: 1 11 1!(1.~ . r&lt;'ar ~ I I' ll hutn Pf •r
h(';ov,\ dul \ '
h;lll ron . iH . li M FM r&lt;Jdiu . nlL'd. h l u~
mMa llw . •·nnv str~'UP Sln&lt;· k nn ~~~:!~

Thunrll'thirrl . rla r k 11ainu! . ru ~l prt'\ 't•nt ion. 2
11 r ha rdtop, \'-R.; 1·1. hc•at •·r . Huln rrans. nd..
I'S. I'll . powl" r ~ &lt;'o"\1 &amp; rlonr lrll"ks.. fl nor lOlllS ,
hr&gt;fl ' "ld r- nwulrtimt~ rli11ilal drtt·k . lini ecl
1! 1 :1~ ~- li lt ~ ll"('rim!. r·ruis r I'On t rol. 1\ M-F'M
rild1n. ~ t l"r("' • In[}('. WSW n rdial lin·~ - ~·het• l
l'l'l\'&lt;'r F:. r•nnsnlr-. hUmJ)('t ~tuard~ . h~~t· kl'l
~ rm~ . rrm winc1ow df' fOQIIt·r Slock ,, 4~1:1 .

~~ 1:04 .

tnn pic·kup. fl (',VI .. ~ speed (l•l .. P S.
I' U. lonR 11 111&lt;' II('(! , ~;xp pkJ~ . It XLT trim .
J!llln:Jt'~ , s licllnu rNll ' l! ltls~ . n·ar slep hum per.
h,.nvv dut ~· 1 ~&lt;111r&gt;r y. a -1·. !in!Pd sz las.._, AM·
F'\1 rn rliu. WS\\' lire~. hlack &amp; charcoal.
I.

~'~""~~~"~' '"' ''"''"' p,;,,..,~~~~ srFoRD

,.,,.
""·"''·
·$AVE
'\o\1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
84 FORD
Thu ndl'rhtrcl. c hart:(tal A ~ i l v ror . 2 dr. hardlop. li ·· ~· 1.. 11-1 . flip -fr pen l"fl!lf. ru ~ t prevl'n·
tlon , hr•r-ttl"r. :1 u1o lra ns ntl . PS. Pn, power
1\ inrlnwF: . sr-.11 &amp; dom IIK'ks. fl rw1r mill s. hodv
s1 rlro nmulrl lnJ;t', digit al c ll){'k . tini er! ~~:las.~.
I ill ' ' f'('rinR. c · rui .~ro nmlrnl. i\M -t'M radio.
~t r- rf'l' la p••. WSW radial tir ('~ . rcmolr, l'ltfl!rnl m 1rrnr~ . hUI ·kc;ol 'C tll ~ . n~a r window
drfOIIIH"r P rr-rnium S11unrl. Srnck nn . 4[;1l7.

$AVE

\\ hN'Irl rt \ 1' li t \ I :~ utro tr;m" .. P S. PH . ru!\1
or_r,ront i11n . lli1 Uito•s . r~ ; 1r ~1rp IIUm p('t .
hroan (Jut \ h:ll t(' r ~ &lt;t ·t·. lio t('(i 11lass. tilt
~ tN'rim.! ldlt't·l. AM Y.' M rnd i11 . • · a ~ l al um .
\\hrr-ls. 11 ll'ltror lirro~ . hiH l•rs ,.'t'f'l &amp; whil e.

ltitt11!Pr . I •·yl.. :lUlu . Ir an" .. PS . PH . XL
P ku . L!iHJJI&lt;'~. rr&gt;ar .~ r ep humper. rust
Jlf('\r'n l ion . lti'I"St rorn mirrnrs. a-t' , AM-FM
r a1lin . wnlnur 11 nd whllro !oilock no. 1&amp;10.

84~"~f0'Rirrt ~t nl·k ~~~

84 FORD

41i11 .

$~VE

J ~~o h f'r l

r1ri1'C'. il ••\L auln trans .. P S. Pll.
ru"l 11tl•u •nl inn . Uil Ull('s. w t'. mirrors. iH '.
linlr&gt;rl r:t ltN . N\1 - fo'~ l raclln . WSW tires.
ltWI. . hlufl .&amp; whih· . t'nnv . ur11up S!nck no.

84 FORD'

$AVE

F _1 ~4 . ' " I on 11io ·kup . 4 SJX'I'd nd , I'S . PB . Inn a
W!rlt• hf'rt . fl t!'t tJn• venl ion. ~aURcs. r ear s ten
hHOlr~Cr . h c•av~ (!uty halt er y, :H" , tinted
u t M~. AM · F!\1 rarl in . WSW li re!!, white
t•:'l:pl~~tf'r nkr.t II S!nt ·k no. ~592.

"''*"" .......•...•.........•
'"·"'·
SAVE
84 FORD

$AVE

$AVE

1 14 '' ~.. 4 whl"t&gt;l tlrivr . fi t"~· I . au!J t. l rans ..
I'S . ruf\1 nrt&gt;vrnlinn . aa ua &lt;'~ . lnt:kinll dif·
rr rrnti o l r co r s lc n hump&lt;'r . we);fcrn
mlrrnrs. tlntr-d ~!lo s!'. wa lnut &amp; li11ht lan .

W~t!ii l!l:i:ti ,.,. •,.,.,,, ••• • ••

"'"' ""·' "·

44110$AV[

Sutton township
SUITON 1WP - The Sutton
Township Trustees w1ll meet
Satunlay at 1 p.m. In the
Syracuse Municipal BuUdlng.
In addition, an organizational
meeting for 1911!1 wiD be held
January 1 at 9 a.m. at the horne .
of Sutton trustee clerk Paul S.
Moore, Racine.

Pomeroy Council
POMEORY - Pomeroy Vll·
lage Council will meet Tuesday,
January 3, at 7:30 p.m., rather
than Monday, January 2, due to
the New Year's holiday.

Lebanon township
LEBANON 1WP - The J..e.
banon Township Trustees will
meet Satunlay at 9:30 a .m . at
the township garage.

Chris.tmas program given
at Rock Springs church
A nattvlty scene by the nursery
claSs was a feature of the annual
Christmas program 'of the Rock
SpringS Unl~ Methodist Church
held Chr1stmas Eve.
Taking roles In the nativity were
Carissa Ash, Dorothy Leifheit,
Michael Leifheit, Jesse Little,
AmherBiackston,J.T.Humphreys,
Jared and David Van lnwagen;
Tamara Odell, John Jeffers. Nancy
Radlonl was narrator for the
natMty.
Alter congregational singing of
"Away In the Manger," the nursery
chlldren did a finger play, and
presented "Jingle Bells" with
rhythm Instruments.
The primary class had recitations
Including "Christmas Candles" by
Dorothy Leifheit and "What the ·
Candles Tell" by John Jeffers. The
middler class had "Happy Hearts"
by Dale Eblin, "The First Forever

Gift" by Danny Folmer, "God's
Presence" by Chris 'stoan, '"You
Cannot Ask for More" by Ryan
:Footer, "A Thankful TUne" by
Mandy Eblin, "Thanks to God" by
Tara Humphreys and " Night Dl·
vine" by Tracy Eblin.
'There was a duet. "Star of the
East" by Karen Sloan and Connie
Little, and a play "Chrlsonas
Comes to the Careys" by Helen
Blackston. Taking the parts were
BID Radfonl, Martha and Arland
King, Tim and Angle Sloan, Tim
Jeffers, Michele Folmer, and Sally
Radfonl. The choir sang "Redeem·
lng Love" and "Ring the Bells" and
the congregation concluded with
"Silent Night."
The benediction followed by a
solo. "0 Holy Night" by Sally
Radfonl closed the program and
Santa arrived with treats for the
children.

UMW installation held
Officers for 1984 were Installed at
a Christmas dinner held last week
by the Pomeroy United Methodist
Women.
The Rev. and Mrs. James Corbitt
and daughter Shelly performed the

Grace Campbell, chairperson of
legislation; Pauline Roush and
VIrginia Edwards, chairpersons of
membership; Thelma om, Polly
Eichinger, and Maxine Goegleln,
nominating committee.
Following the meal, Dorothy
Downie read the Christmas story,
accompanied by Martha Hoover
playing "Silent Night" In , the .
background.
Dues and the Least Coin o!ferlng
were collected, and the gro11p
decided to aid a needyfarntlydurtng
the holidays.
·
Birthdays were acknowledged,
and It was announced that 57 sick
calls were made by members
during the month of December.

Local residents visit VA hospital

~

LT &amp;ALLI

$AVE

"10 IN STOCK"
ALSO .GOOD SELECTION OF JEEP

INCLUDING GRAND WAGONEER

rndtn . liilere.1 laDt'. turblnf' whe-!1 COllet'S,
•·OO!Itlk&gt;. huck"t ~a t !ll . Slock oo. m$$

•••••••••JAVE

RACINE - A New Year's
dance will be held at the Racine
American Legion Post 602 from
9 p.m. unttl1 a .m . Music wiD he
. provided by the Circle D
Wranglers. The dance Is for
adults only and the rost Is $10 a
couple. Refreshments w1ll be
served.

president; Martha Hoover, vice
president; Ruth Moore, secretary;
Myrtis Kay Parker, treasurer;
Gertrude Mitchell, secretary of
programs; Dorothy~· Chris·
ttan personhood; Kathy Corbitt,
supportive corrununlty;
Bernice Carpenter, Christian
sehool Involvement; Ada Warner,
Christian global concern; Martha
HPover, chairperSOn of music;

SAVE-

Mu11rnnA . whtte . 2 dr . Gl. sed 1 n, O·t·.

"'•"' 111.'17.
Sow •••••••••• ••

Dance set

l'2f, J. '' • ton pi1•kup ~ wlu•e l dri\:ro. li t·vl .. 4
· pt'l·rl . Jl!ii. J'll . lnnu ~· idl' llcd .. ru ~l
fltl'\'&lt;'nio~ . 111\Uill '~. lodcinu &lt;liff{'n•nri n l.
l~ tlt'rc · nnltnu . Yt',c mirr11r~ . rnud &amp; .~ n nw
tlr&lt;'~. 1·har·c-n.1l m1•1 Stuck nn .

1\lU!'illlnA . hlat:k. l dr LX r.edan. Ac yl.. IH.
liAhl arnup . rust prl'venlion. heatf'r. a uto.
t rn n ~ .. ~- Pn. p.ower duor lm: k~ . noor mat s.
hocl 1· s lOe nwuldinlll! . tinted g:l as..~ .. llh
~IN'rlnR . ctu\sl"cnnlml. AM· Ii'M radi n ~ lere-. 1
I11Pf', ronl\rlll" . ~ DOrt ~ tnrckel 1:;eat !I . Stock no.

Sn" • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

noon.

InstallatJonceremonyforthelollowIng new otflcers: Evelyn Lucke,

84 FORD

4~ ~~

'

POMEOIW - Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast Ohio has
announced Its hours for the week
through Friday, Dec. 30. The
off!ce, located In the Meigs
Medical Bulldlng across from
Veterans Memorial Hospital on
Mulberry Heights, will be open
Tuesday I to 5 p.m ., Wednesday
10:30 a .m. to 5 p.m ., Thursday 9
to 5 p.m. and Friday 9 a.m. to

. $AVE

''""' "" ""
84 FORD

L~nJI , charcoal met , 5 dr. hatc hback . sedan .
4 eyl. . a -r. rull pre11cntion. lilhl~trou p. auto.
tnt~" -- PS P B. tinted Rlass. till !ileerinp .
cru1se oontrGt. AM ·FM r adio. whi!el covers.
r emote control mirrors. console. bumper
11unrd ~ . hucktoll!eats. tear window defou,er

Slo&lt;k "" 45019

$8 405

Discounts, Low Prices &amp; Large Selection
l!&gt;!£q6R.1~~· .. hill'(', Explnrer pkil 84 FORD

'

$AVE
\:n"·· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
84 FORD
w.. , ""·''"·

"". ...."""·
................. .$7070
. 84 v.w.

FORD TRUCI&lt;S

. -..

COUil&lt;Tr. mr-cl rr-rl.. 2 dr . \ '-8. :t-1·. pol~· t'85 t
\\ hl'f'l!l, ru ~l Jlf&lt;' l"l'nlinn . &lt;~Uio . !tan!'. 11d .. PS.
r_n:DOW&lt;'r winrlnw~ &amp;· dnur ln•·k ~. noor mat 5.
rl11Wnl dl)('k . tinted l!h! ~s. lilt ~1cerl n 11 .
&lt;'~llif\1" •·n~lt11l .. A\I ·Po1 rad iu . sl&lt;'ren rape.
\\SW rarlml 111·rs. Whfi' l m vcrs. rem11!c•
' '"nl rnl mirror ... bucke t S&lt;'i'll ~ . rl'a r window
rlo&gt;fou:uwr . Slrwk no l!lflfl ,.

I

ll rthhll 1... 2 dr ~('dlln , 4 r;&lt; l.. ~r nt windows.
r u ~ t prrl'entinn . I "P&lt;'ed· r\M ·FM radio
r·a~;~f'll f' ~t&lt;'n'" taP&lt;' . WSW rA di al li res Stock
no . 4027

n-c.

'\n"' . . . . . . . ..... .

$7 175

vw

84

4 rlr sedan . 4 cyl.
hN'IIcr. PS . i\M -FM radio. WSW radial I ires .
Whf'CI • ovr-rs . buck&lt;'! seals. r{'a r window

'•'"''"·
\\"ns mun ~'"'' ""· ""'

v.w.

'

li.ahhit 1•. 2 d r . ~crlan . 4 ry l., vent window ~.
ru~ t nrcvrmtlnn . heal~ . ~ · :; peed . AM ·FM
~n rl i n . rr-ar windoW wa :&lt;;hcr . Stock n_n , ~o:KI \\' m~ UM2fl
~0\\' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

~;": .·:::~; ...... ..... ..$11 ,372

SAVE

prn~c cllnn ArntlP. -1 :r;DHd. PS. PB . AM-FM

$A

Thu11drrhir rl . 1lark •·harm.1 1. 2 dr . hardlop. ~
" ~' 1. , a ·l" ru~t pr{'vention . ht'al e r . a uto
r ~a ~~ -· T'S . PB . DOwer windows &amp; s ea l.
ciHuta l •·hw k. linll·tl ~lass. till stce rina: .
1 '.rLII~l' •·nnlrol . i\M rM radio. WSW rad ial
l! r&lt;'s . rt':nnt&lt;' contro l no ir rors . console .
hurkN ~&lt;'al s. renr windrlw defilJIIZer. Srock
nil 4.'1 H1

~~:12

F.~n L.. white. 2 dr. halehbac-k . 4 c )'l..
~~~l e 111ee1 wheels. rus1 pre~ention . heater.

New ••

I·

84 rotio··············

SAVE

84 FORD

w.. - .

,}

Thund&lt;'rh ird . Yt"hil c. ~ dr Elan hardlop . fi
ryl.. :H'. T\I SI Prrvc ntinn . aut". Ira n ~ . od ..
P~ . PB . J)O\\W ~cat &amp; donr lotk,~ ti "'·a:v. nonr
rn;~ls . Dod,,. Ri d!' mouldinRll. door ed!lt'
llllfln!.~. cliniral dock . linl ed nla!is. rill
f\ t{'('rinfil. eruist' cnnr rol. AM-FM radio
~t rrf'll rape. WSW' radial tires. wheel road :
rrmnll' r onlrnl mirrors. console. buek ~l
f\!'OI~ . ren r wiodnw de f{)!l;M{'r. Stock no. 4a56

"'"''"·""·
\"nwo••••••••••••••••••••• $AVE
84 FORD
auto. lran111 .. PB . bucket teats . Stotk no. 4&amp;20

84 FORD

·

"'" '"·'"·

84

""
"·'~' '" ••••• , . . . $11 , 697
:\"nw "•••••••

WITH 57,000 .00 MAXIMUM AND 25 PCT . DOWN ON APPROVED
CREDIT THROUGH DEC. 31st.. THIS MEANS A MONTHLY
PAYMENT OF SJO.SJ PER 51,000.00 BORROWED.

:·

DEMO'S

LTI) Rrnullham . 4 dr . f\e rl.a n. GcYI .. fH '. v in~· l
roof. hentcr. nut o . Iran!'. od .. PS. PB . POwe r
window~ &amp; donr· lo&lt;'kf\. noor mat ~. hod\· s id(•
tn~&gt;ulrlir11ls . cllni tal dnt·k . t int ed alasS. ti lt
M&lt;'l"rinl:! . •'rl!i"" contrnl. AM-FM radio .
~ ll'rf'fll.lPf' . W~W radia l tlrr;os. whe€'1 cnvcr~.
r cmot ro contrnl m ir rnrs. bumpe1· p:uards.
r&lt;'nr window fldnlllll'r Srock no . ~004 .

6.9 PCT . APR FINANCING ISON NEW»YEHIO..ES FOR 36 MOi-ITHS

"" 4~fl! l1

.

84 FORO

"With No Paymen t Until Feb, 25th "

74 FORD

whl'el

cough which hangs on, especially
one that does not respond to
over-the-counter medications or Is
not associated with sputum or lung
congestion, should be Investigated
by a doctor.
Q~STION: Is smoking a major
cause of continuing coughs?
ANSWER: Most cl)ronlc coughs
are caused by something Irritating
the throat or air passages to the
. lungs. Cigarette smoke If one such Irritant and a lpBjOr cause of
chronic coughs. Especially In a
smoker, a lingering cough can be a
signal of lung cancer and should be
Investigated thoroughly. Other air
pollutants such as sulfur dioxide
and
dust particles also brlng on
1
many coughs.
Another prime cause &lt;JI many

PPSEO hours
announced

FINANCING
ON ALL NEW
CARS IN STOCK!

.

..

'

Lingering cough might signal trouble

Happenings

SALE BEGINS DEC. 26th, AT 9:00 A.M. ENDS DEC. 31th, 12 NOON.

.

Wednesday, December 28, 1983

.,

By Edward Schreck, D.O.

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

76 FIAT
\ "n\0

•

Family Medicine

SALE I
OVER
200 NEW
AND
PRE-OWNED
TO CHOOSE
FROM

The Daily Sentinel

Ellen Jane Rought, Catherine
Welsh, Iva Powell, Rhoda Hackett,
and Mary Martin were In Chllllcothe
Thur&amp;day for the December birth·
day party at the Veterans Admlnls·
tratton Hospital there.
Decorated sheet cakes, one donated by Powell, veterans atratrs
cochairman for the Amerlcan
Legion Auxlllary of Drew Webster
JUt 39, Pomeroy, were taken by the
unit.
Unit 39 also provided $15 to the
district president toward the purcbue ol canteen hooks, and the
julllOn ol the local unit sent 100
Clu1stmal cards with gum tnsJde,
and paper stock1np with candy
lnalcle for each veteran. The
Junior unit also sent n bills forthoee

having .birthdays the day of the
party, along with gifts of money for
the youngest and the oldest.
Other units contributing {or the
party were Nelsonville, Lancaster,
Junction City, GaJllpolls, and
Mlddleport.

weal birthdays
Norman E. -Schaefer celebrated
87th birthday recently, along
with Albert "Jack" HoHner. Both'
men, Ufelong friends, were boi'Jlln
his

1896.
WWjam Perry and Mildred
Schaete!' Perry, son-In-law and
da\lllller of Schaefer, both ceJe.
brated birthdays recently also.

persistent coughs tsalrthat lslowln
moisture content. The lack of
humidity drtes the lining of the
body's air · passages, causing an
Irritation which Sets off the cough
reflex. One of the purposes of the
lining In the air passages Is to
humidify the air breathed Into the
body. When thetnhaledalrcontalns
little moisture - under 30 percent

- an excessive amount of water is
taken from the respiratory linings,
causing them to dry out a nd
become Irritated .
Problems with the upper resplra·
tory tract sucl\ as sinus disease or
Infection In the nose and throat can
alsp lead to a lingering cough .
These dtsorpers cause a drainage
which Irritates the alrwayss and
sets up the cough reflex. Chronic

Irritation of other parts of the
breathing system, ln~ludlng dLs·
eases like asthma, can also trigger
a lasting cough. · ·
QUESTION: · What does a doctor
do In evaluating a cough?
ANSWER: Your physician wiD
ask If you have any Idea what
provokes or relieves the cough. He
or she wlll check any sputum
produced by·the cough. A yellowish
or greenish sputum suggests an
Infection. Blood In the sputum may
signify a range of problems, from
chronic Irritation of the throat and
nose and caused by a cold to cancer
of the lung. Wheezing which
accompanies the coughing spells
suggests an asthma-like condition
or, In children, cronp.

.

Local girl
graduates

Your doctor may also take way to treat your persistent cough
sputum cultures and order certain Is to drink generous amounts -of
blood tests. It you've had possible 'water and other fluids - from three
contacts with peoplesu!fertng.from .. to · four full glasses a day. Still
1\Iberculosls, your doctor may take dnother Important element of
a TB skin test. A chest X-ray may treatment Is avoiding Irritants,
also be helpful In d iagnosis.
especially cigarette smoke.
QUESTION: How can I best treat
II your persistent cough Is due to
my persistent cough?
other underlying medical prob·
ANSWER: If the cough Ls not lems, then the treatment is directed
caused by underlying disease, all towards that disease process. For
that may be necessary Is making Instance, lor a bacterial lnfecti 1,
sure you have a well-humldUled your doctor would prescribe an
environment. This may mean using antibiotic. As part of therapy, your
a vaporizer or humidifier In your doctor might also give you a cough
room at night. (Be sure the water Is suppressant to alleviate your dischanged dally because bacteria
comfort. Two preparations com ·
and other organisms can grow · monty used to suppress the cough·
rapidly In the warm water.)
lng r efl ex are codeine and
Another excellent and Inexpensive
dextromethorphan.

Local graduate
on varsity squad

~··- ·'

Ms. Sandra Mulford Is a recent
graduate of the Adult Office
Specialist program at Buckeye
Hllls Career Center.
Ms. Mulfonl completed the 540hour course wlilch Included: Typ·
lng, Accounting Principles I and n,'
Office Machines, Office Proce·
dures, FUJng, Word Processing and
Data Entry from a computer
terminal. Throughout the prowam
emphasis was placed on job-related
skllis and the training needed for
success In the clerical profession .
Registration Ls currently In pro·
gress' and will continue untll Jan. 6.
For more Information about the
Offtce Specialist p~gram. contact
the Buckeye Hllls Adult Education
Department at (614) 245-5336, from
2 p.m . untti!Op.m . Monday through
Thursday, and 8 a. m.-4 p.m . on.
F~day.
·

"'~

Leila Blake, a 1981 graduate of
Eastern High School, is a varsity
cheerleader for the 198.&gt;-84lntercollegiate athletic teams at Urbana
College.
Leila is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Elden C. Blake Jr. , 67001 State
Route 124, Reedsville. She is a junior
business adminls~ralion major al
Urbana .

..

;

GRADUATES COURSE -Sandy Mullonl of Meigs County recently
completed the Office Specialist Colm!e al Buckeye lfills Career Ceuter.

Urbana College Ls a coeducational
private liberal arts institution
affUJated with the General Convention oftheSwedenborglan Church.lt
has three off-campus programs in
Bellefontaine, Columbus, and Dayton, In addition to its Champaign
County campus .
Callers on Dec. 18 a l the Vern
Story residence were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Richmond, Krlsti, and
p .J .; and Sherrt Hysell, Middleport .

Youth salvaged from street home with dad
HOVLAND, Minn. (AP) -Once a
fllthy derelict scrambling for food
.f rom garbage cans In Chicago,
Jimmy Korf now savors a new life
on the wooded shores of Lake
Superior playing
gultar,
tinkering with gadgets, hunting and
flsblng with his long-lost father.
A gaunt ~ pounds last sprjng
when found on city. streets, the
21-year-old Korf now weighs 160. His
hair Is tree of lice and he talks of a
future.
Korf's transformation and his
reunion with his father, 20 years
after their family split up, began
with a Chicago Sun-Times article
about that city's street people.
One of the wanderers reporter
Dirk Johnson Interviewed last
December was Korf, who grubbed
through garbage 'tor chicken parts,
hamburgers, moldy buns or lettuce
scraps. He wrapped his hands In
cloth to ward off the bees that
swarmed around the · discarded
food.
Korf "w!lS really lost, " Johnson
recalled. "He asked If this was
Chicago and wondered If Chrison as
had gone by."
The reporter learned that Korf
had been hospitalized for halluclna·
tlons before being released to a

a

halfway house In February 1981.
After a fight there, Korf left for the
street life.
·
The young man had used a lot of
drugs, Johnson said, "and when I
found him he was coated with black
grtmeas If you hadpatntedhimwith
it, and his hair was full of bugs." His
clothes were lipped by dogs who
fought him for scraps of fOOd, and he
was beaten and assau'tted by other
street people.
Korf told Johnson he went for
weeks without washing, occasionally splashing his face with water
from Lake Michigan. He lived In
vacant houses, elevator shafts and
subway tunnels; using a makeshift
string and hook, he caught fish from
the lake which he sometimes ate

raw.
Johnson arranged for Kort to get
clea ned up at a hospital, then took
him to Cass Hotel, an emergency
shelter for psychlatrlc patients.
On Jan. 31, Johnson's story about
Kort was published. A picture
showed the haunted young man
peering from behind a metal fence.
At about the same time, James
Korf Sr. was searching for Jimmy .
The elder Korf decided to look for his
son while on his way to Florida from

Chicago Bay , Minn., near the
Canadian border.
The 46-year-old Korf admits he
had itved "kind of like a gypsy" In
the 20 years s ince his marriage to
Jimmy's mother broke up. In fact,
he arrived In Minnesota I5 yearsago
with horses and gypsy wagon.
Jimmy was the couple's third child.
An artist who has m ade a living ·
. selling oil paintings, he was heading
for Florida "to sit In the sun and
paint" when he stopped in Chicago
and learned that J immy had left
home and could not be found . A
two-monlh search through family.
friends , pollee and doctors yielded
no trace:
Then one day a relative called and
told Kort he'd better find a copy of
the Sun-Times. He opened the pages

Omitted
Due to Incomplete Information, the Sunday Times-Sentinel
omitted a name from the listing
of children of Mr.and Mrs .
George Folmer Sr .. who wlll
mark their 50th wedding anniversary on Dec. 29. The name was
that of a son, Donald, who died In

1965.

to find Jimmy's picture.
"It was pretty difficull to recognize him ," Kort said. "I felt guilty
and all that. I was floored."
Finally able to contacl his son,
Korf took him to Minnesota.
"AI first I was a little apprehensive to bring Jimmy home." he said.

Voss birthday
Andrea Marie Voss. daughler of
Paul and Beverly Voss, P eebles,
Ohio, celebrated her first birthday
recently with a party at her par~nts'
home.
A Strawberry Shortcake theme
was carried oul , and refreshments
of ice creain, cake, and fruit punch
were served.
Attending, sending cards and gifts
were grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Voss; Mrs. Margaret
Eskew, KeM y, Tina and Tony
Brown, Crystal Richmond. Helen
Lyons, John and Elizabeth Mitchell ,
Mr. and Mrs. Gail Thompson, Susie
Brewer, P .J . Reed, Betll Euton ,
Jennifer Johnsen , Brianna Brown ,
Cynthia and Christina Mitchell,
Joshua Griffith, and Timolhy
Fannin .

.------People in the news _______
Hopes it won't be necessary

NYC deputy mayor ·goinr to college

LOS ANGELES (AP) -Fresh from a holiday tour for U.S. troops
In Lebanon, Bob Hope says he's \lfllllng to do It again next Christmas
-but hopes It won't be necessary .
·
The 8)-year-old comedian was greeted Tuesday by cheering
mffitary perscMel and friends as he stepped off an All: Force plane
at a California Air National Guard base In Van Nuys,
"It seems like we just left here a few minutes ago," quipped Hope,
who was accompanied by actresses Ann JIDlan , Cathy Lee Crosby
and Brooke Shields, Miss USA Julie Hayek; singer Vic Damone and
comedian George Kirby.
Getting serious, Hope told the crowd, "Of all the tours I've taken
over the years, this was the most exciting." The seven-day tour was
his first vtslt to troops overseas In 11 years, and the 31st of his career.
Asked If he would take a show to Lebanon next year. he replied, "I
hope we don't have to go again, but If they're there, we'll go."

NEW YORK (AP)- After 10 years In city governmenl. Deputy
Mayor Robert F . Wagner Jr. wlll be leaving New York and going to
college.
The 39-year-&lt;&gt;ld Wagner, whose father was m ayor of the city, has
taken a teaching post at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of
Government.
·
Earlier this year Wagner had been Mayor Edward Koch's choice
to become city schools chancellor, but was turned down by the state
education commissioner - who said he lacked professional
education experience.
Koch said Wagner stlll wiD head a committee that will study whal
life In New York City should be like by the year 200l.
Wagner takes the Harvard position at the end of January.

Loretta Swit weds actor in LA.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Hitched: a Houlihan and a Holahan.
Actress Loretta Swit, who played chief nurse Margaret "Hot Lips"

Houlihan In the long-running television series " M-A-s-H, " has been
married to actor Dennis Holahan, and they are honeymooning In

Egypt.
It was the first rnarrtage for the 46-year-old Miss Swtt, who met her
husband-to-be while he was working on an episode of the program
about a year ago, said Miss Swtt's publicist, Dawn Davis, on
Tuesday.
The wedding last Wednesday In suburban Studio City was the
second for Holahan, who has a 15-year-old son and 14-year-old
daughter from a previous marriage.
He Is In the movie "Scarface" and has appeared In television's
"Fall Guy" and "Blue Thunder."

..-~

~~ -

lt

•

�10-lhe Daily ~ntinel

'aaa

Pomeroy

By Associated Pr..,_,
It was an easy night for North
Carolina and a tough on&lt;· for
Texas-£! Paso although the results
were exactly the same: a berth In
the finals of a holiday basketball
tournament.
North Carollna. a perennial
power and the nation's top-ranked
team, breezed by lana 74-61 Tuesday night in the opening of the
.....__ _ _ _ _ _ Holiday Festival Tournament at

Tar Heels
·advance

Wednesday, Dllcember 28, 1983

Middleport, Ohio ·

~·!alli son Square Garden In Kew
York . The high-flying Tar Heels
gunned into T)lut'S(]ay night 's finals
against eighth-ranked St . John's, a
56-52 winner o'·er Fordham In the
oth er half of the opening
doubleheader.
·
Meanwhile, up-and -coming
Texas-£! Paso. ranked No . 16,
squeezed by No.l5Michigan 7'2-71111
the Sun Bowl toumey In £1 Paso and
headed into tonight's final ag~inst

Arizo!la. a 51-49 winner In overtime
over Texas Tech.
In other action Involving . the
nation's ranked college basketball
teams, No. lOWake Forest walloped
Auburn 76-69 in the Gator Bowl
tourney ll1 Jacksonville, Fla., and
19th-ranked Oregon State rolled
past Boise State 6142ln the openlitg
of the Far West Classic In Portland.
Top Twenty
With AU-Americans Michael Jor-

dan and Sam Perkins, ' North
Carolina's top two scorers, having
off-days, sophomore Brad Daugherty scored 22 points to lead the rar
Heels over the·outmanned Gaels.
Daugherty, a 6-foot-11 center,
scored 13 of Ills points In the first haU
as the Tar Heels raced to a 38-:?il
advantage at Intermission. The
haUtlme lead was the Tar Heels •
largest of the game and wasequaled
several times, Including 70.52 with

less than two minutes to'playon two
foulshOtsbytorwardMattDoherty,
who scored 15 points.
Jordan hit only two of 12 Shots and
scored elghi politts whlle Perkins
wasoneofllforstx.
Chris Mullln and Jeff Allen
comblited for15ofSt. John'slast:?il
politts to give the Redmen a
hard-fought victory over Fordham.
The RedQ1en made 24 of 28 tree
throws. ,

:
::
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'!.

AFTER CHRISTMAS

!'

~

.;
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..,.
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SALE

....

....

--------------~------------------------------------------~----------------------------~- S

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AT YOUR

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MIDDLEPORT

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WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

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122 NORTH SECOND AV[

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

(FORMER LOCATION OF
DUTTON DRUG)

I

HouRs ·.

I

12:00 to 5:00 Sunday
9:00 to 9:00 Mon.-Sat,

�Page- · 1 '-The Daily Sentinel

..

Wednetday, Dn1n bu 28, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

. Wednetday, Dacernber 28, 1983

·Authorities hold
armed .r obbers

'"

Public Notice

8outhuctt Ohio
Cool~-

...

Soviet-backed
leaders celebrate

I
MEETING Lascrphoto).

Pope John Paul n meets his would-be assas.•in, Melunet Ali Agca, in a cell in Rome's Reblbbla Prison Tu!!Sdaf. (AP

Would-be assassin makes 'confession'
By SAMUEL KOO
A~cia.ted

Press Writer
ROME 1APl - Prison officials
suggest that MehmetAliAgca, in his
'private meeting wi;h Pope John
Paul II. may have clarified some of
the mysteries behind his attempted
assassination of the pope.
The 25-year-old Turkish terrorist
and the pont iff met for 21-minutes
Tuesday at Agca' s cell in Rome's
Rebibbia Prison.
A Rome radio quoted unidentified
prison officials as saying Agca h'ad
wanted to " tell the whole story" to
the pope personally and seek his
intervention to get his sentence
commuted.
The stale (Un RA1 television
reported that prison chaplains
considered the meeting " a viit~al

confession.''

shooting - for whlch Agca is
"Of course, Agca is a Moslem and serving a life sentence - is still
it couldn't have been a confession in .being investigated, prompted by
the sacramental sense. but it was allegations that Bulgarian agents
closest thing he (Agca) could have might have helped or paid Agca.
gotten," the radloreport said.
During hls threehour visit to
Rebibbia - the first by a pope to a
Asked what they discussed, John prison In nearly 20 years ·- John
Paul told reporters: " That is" a Paul led a prayer meeting lor the
secret that must remain between · inmates and gave them rosaries as
him and me. I spoke to a brother Chris!mas presents.
whom l have pardoned and whO has
Age a, unshaven and wearing blue
my complete trust.·'
jeans and a blue sweater, and the
"They spoke to each other In whiterobed pontiff huddled in a
whispers, almost as if they were In a corner of Agca's cell on plasti~
confessional," Vatican spokesman chairs, lace-tr&gt;-!ace and almost
the Rev. Pierfraneo Pastore said.
touching knees .
The meeting came 2Y, years after
At least twice, the pope grabbed
Agca shot the Polish-born pontiff In Agca's right hand and before
St Peter's Square, infllcting severe leaving gave the Turk a small flat
injuries in the abdomen. The box wrapped in white paper.

Pastore said he did not know what
the box contained, " maybe a medal

or a rosary.''
The pope, who has said several
times that he pardoned Agca lor the
May 1981 shooting, added that the
Turk had repented his deed.

Ill Ce1r1 St., Polltrey, 'Olio 457it

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--------------------

I

Curb Inflation lI
.. Pay Cash for ·!
Classlfleds and II
1
Savelll
.. .
I
I

peryeat'.
The housing shortage developed
because of a lack of wood, cement
and other building materials, and
because of the post·revolution
collapse of the private construction
Industry.

_
,_
..........
-..........

I 1-'JI••rl ,_,.. fttl'f'l' llilfl

71 -a..e. ... ....

I)

It has reshaped Cuban life. .
Newlywed ·couples rarely lind
their own apartments·and must live
with parents. Wm'kers sent to other
parts of Cuba must crowd into
spartan hostels.

PHONE 992-2156
o.,t.
Or Wrilt Dlllly Senliltlf CtasiUH

Cuba 25 years later: 'Now
we are all . poor together
By CHARLES J . HANlEY
cated as Marxist-Leninists.
Associated Press Writer
Cuba's youth- half theisland's 10
million people were born after 1958
HAVANA l AP ) -The Havana
- ,may be a source of political
city museum features a " rubbish
bin of history," a junk pile of
strength lor Castro, but creating
Coca-Cola bottles. a Shell gasoline
jobs for this revolutionary "baby
stgn, the busts of old Cuban
boom" generation is one of his
dictators. This, the guide el'plains,
economic headaches.
is the debris of yesterday's
The biggest headache, however,
· is Cuba's heavy dependenCe on
:'Western imper ialism."
A glance out the window finds the expo[llng sugar to pay itsway in the
debris of today : - crumbling World. ·
tenements of Old Ha vana, collapsWorld sugar prices swing wildly
ing from years of neglect as Cuban -from an average29centsa pound
communism struggles through eco- in 1980, for example, to below 10
nomic crises.
cents in 19&amp;'l- and dry up the Cuban .
A quartPr-century after Fide~ treasury, forcing ever-new austeriCastro's rebels seized power on Jan. ties and requiring massive Soviet
1, 1959 and ended generations of aid packages, now totaling an
corrupt dictator ships and U.S. estimated $4 billion a year
domination, Cuba is an island of
For the common citizen, this
shortage and revolutionary spirit . of
translates into shortages of food,
fear and economic uncertainty. ·
other consumer goods and housing.
It is a place where a decent
The ra tion system assures each
·education is guaranteed but decent Cuban he can buy thre.!-quarters of
housing is scarce, where food is a pound of beef every ninedays,at81
ra tioned but good hea lth care is cents a pound.
widely available, where national
Aurelio Miro, 69, standing In line
pride is powetiul but Soviet aid with a dozen other people outside a
indispensa ble, where political life Is . butcher shop, said he eats meat only
minutely organized, but political
two or three times a week.
debate is dead.
"Of course I'd like more, but at
· Above all, perhaps, Cuba is a least this much is guaranteed," he
place where the individual feels said.
economically secure. even as the
Rationing also covers such other
economy as a whole. teeters on a staples as rice, sugar and milk,
narrow base.
clothing and shoes, appliances and
This was a common denominator gasoline.
among ordinary Cubans questioned
Mira's pension, equivalent to $106
by a visiting American journalist. a month, is not enough. to buy
Retired mechanic Roberto Gon- additional, ration-free pork or
. zalez' put it this way:
chicken at a staterun "parallel
"The revolution ·is marvelous.
market," at a pr!ceof$2.38a pound,
Now we are aU poor together. "
or at a "peasant market," where
Work, food, school and medicine Cuba 's few remaining private
are not the only guarantees. Also
farmers sell limited produce at still
· guaranteed: a tightly controlled
higher prices- 58 cents for a single
one-party · state under President
banana, lor example.
Cas tro's unchallengeable
But even those with more money
Communists.
- Cuban wages range from ·about
• During ~ recent eight-day stay, $100 a month to about $500- often
the journalist found a few Cubans must hunt for quality goods.
who nervously whispered about
In Havana's Cathedral Plaza one
political repression. But Castro's recent Saturday, scores of women
staunchest opponents left long ago,
pushed and sboved to reach a
joining the 1-mllllon-strong Cuban
makeshift stand for a chance to buy
exj)e community, and support lor one of a few pairs of "homemade"
the regime appears strong, espe shoes for $40. In the ration stores,.
.claUy among young Cubans, edu·
they can buy only one pair of shoes

strators. They ' chanted slogans
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP)The Soviet-installed government of · against the American Involvement
In Grenada and Central America.
Afghanistan marked its fourth
The Afghan Foreign Mlnlstry also
anniversary two days early by
a news conference the same
held
staging an anti·Amerlcan rally In
afteril&lt;ion
to "protest against the
Kabul, Western diplomats said here
United
States·aggresslon
In Afghan·
today.
Is
tan,''
the
sources
said.
The demonstration in Afghanis·
They said securtty was tight in
tan's capital was arranged by the
Kabul
with major intersections
Babrak Karmel government on
by Sovl!)l soldiers, and a
guarded
Dec. 25, Said the diplomats, who
resistance
"spectacle" did riOt- lake
insisted on anonymity,
place
as
insurgents
had promised
Soviet troops entered Afghanistan
!or~.27.
to back up Its faltering communist
The sources said there have beet
regime on Dec. 27, 1979. There are
several
recent incidents of fighting .
now an estimated 105,!XXl Soviet
between
the Soviets and the
troops fighting a stalemated war
insurgents, Including a rebel attack
with anti-government Moslem
· that left five Soviet soldlers dead
Insurgents.
Dec. 231n the Khalrkhana section Or
Kabul, and a raid on a military
The diplomatic sources said an
convoy the next night that killed
estimated 20,!XXl people marched
three Soviet troops at Sailing
past the U.S. Embassy on Christ·
Tumel. the main · overland route
mas day. The government media
!rom Afghanistan to the Soviet
claimed there were lOO,!XXl demon·
Union.

The Daily Sentinel

.._.............-········11.·
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Public Notice

LAFF·A·DAY

rw

Rr.gtslmed

corded •n Plat Book 3 at pages

4 3 and 44, as Lot No. 7, and
be1nq more pan• cul3rly descn bed as fo llow,s Begtnning at
a oomt m the north 1tne of
L•nco ln Roa d at the co rner

with the train set I got you
Christmas'?"

~ublic Notice

Phone--------------~-

,IIOVERTlSEMENT
No t1 ce ts hereby gtven that
b1ds arc bEMil acceptr.d for the
dP. rnolit 10n o i two b utl d 1ngs

own Ad by Amy Kmgsland Jones
on Court Str eet 1n Pomeroy.
Oh10. wh1~h were severelY
damaged bv f1re. Please·contact
thP. taw oft1 CP. of.. JP.nniler L.
ShP.ets. 2 11 East Second

Stn:'! P.I. Pomeroy, OhtO ·45 769,
ohone:

6 14-992-2 15 1,

for

deta 1ls. B1ds must be recetved
on o r before Det:em ber 30.

1983 at 1200 Noon.

These caSh rates
include discount

( IWanted
( I For Sale
(

~Announcement

1. _ _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ _ __

18.
19,

I
1

20.

I
'
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-

4. _ _ _ _ __

22.
23.

·6e.------_ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ __
10· ----~-

11 . '-_
-12.
__
_-_
_
13. - - - - - - 14.
15. -- - - - -

These advances are spearheaded
by a highly centralized and often
oppressive bureaucracy. .
It a pregnant woman Ignores a
checkup appointment, or a child is
truant from school, the famlly wlll
hear from the local Committee for ,
tbeDefenseoftheRevolution,aklnd
of revolutionary bloCk association. ··

II

21.

5. _ _ _ __

1,, ------

It 21 1B. 20. 23. 28. 4tc

11.

3. _ _ _ _ __

11. _ _ __....__,

-

Common ThoFennnBri&amp;

Court

· Cue No. B3·CV·271
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale rn the above ent1tled
actron. I w1ll offer for sale at
publrc auc'tton, at the door of
the Court House in Pomeroy, 1n
the above named County, on
Saturday, thP. 21st day of

29. _ _ _ __

30.------.
31. _ _ __,;._
32. _ _ _ _ __

25. - - - - : - - -

Tho SUite of Melgo C&lt;tunty.

Dolonclont

:ze. _ _ _ __

33. =~

SHERIFF'S S!ILE
OF RE!IL EST!ITE

va.
.lotMI Noutzttng ond
Jonlco !IIIUilttng

26. _ _ _ __

J.l.

Public Notice

Savlngo Campony

24.
25. ..:':...__ _ _ __

Mall This Coupon with Remlttlnce
Tile D•lly Sentinel
.
111 Court St.
.

January. 1984, at I 0.15 o·c-

I·

I

II
I

~-----~~~~::~~~------_j
'

EngmP.ers.

HUnttngton. We st V•rgm ta.
dated . October 17. 1942. a
copy of wht ch map was ltled 1n
the otftce of the Recorder of
Me•gs COunty. Qh10, on De ~
cem bP.r 17. 1942. and re-

tl

Addre·~---------------­

( )For Rent

C•vtl

lock A.M.. the IOilowmg descnbP.d re al estate. situate 1n th e
County of Meigs and State of
Oh10, and n the Village of
Pomeroy. IO·Wit ' .
Situated 1n the Village of
Pomeroy. County of Me1gs. and
State of Oh1q:
BAtng known and dfts1gnatecl
an a map of L1n..:oln Herghts.
madf:J by Breece S. Carper.

shown on sa•d map. thence
w 1th the satd ltnA of L•ncoln.
Ro ad. North 79 degrP.es 51
mrnutAs west. 50 leet; th~nce
wrth th !'! lrne betw!'!en lots 6
and 7. north 10 degrees 09
mmutf!S west 324.34 feet to a
pomt 1n the sou th lme of North
Str AP.t: thAnCA with sa id line of
North Street. Norlh 54 degrees
40 mmuws east. 35 .35 1eet
then cf! co ntinUing wnh sa1d
· str fletiiM. North 80 degrefl s 42
mm utes Aast. 26 .71 •feet
thencA w1th lhA trne b'etween
sa 1d Lots 7 and B. South 10
dA fW~es 09 mrnutes west
358.45 fRet to' the POint of
beg rnnr n ~. re serv1ng, howfNer.
the coat and all other m1nerals
rn and undfHiytng thf! above
desc1rbP.d property. togAther
w1th thA rrqht to mrne the same
w1thout encumbrance to the
su rface. rf'\Sf! rv1 ng also . as an
easP.men t for the loca tron and
marntenoncr. lor thP. wtltAr prpe
hn P. ilnd storage tank as now
const ructP.d that part of the
abovA dAscrr bP.d tot as follows:
Begmnmg at th fl aforesaid
cornP.r between Lots 7 and 81n
sard lrnf! of •Li hco ln ReaCt:
the no'! wrth sard road lma,
wAstP.rly 5 feet: thence north·
erly parall.el to and 5 fl'!et
westerly from the linP. betwAAn
said ~ots 7 and B. 65 feet
thencA westArly at rrght angles •
to sard lrne 25 feet: thence 1
northerly and parallel io sa1d 1
line. 30 loot: thence Aasterly at
fiQht angiP.s to sa 1d trne be·
tween lots 7 and 8. 30 IP.P.t to a '
pOint thflr etn. th~ncP. wtth sa1d '
ltnP.. southerly ·95 leflt to the
beg1nnrng
AetP.rAnCP. D~ ed Vol Ume ~
170. PanF 65 3 and Volume '
250, Pa!'le 3 41 , MerQS County
Deed AACO rds.
Pr op erty appra1sP.d at
$15.800.00 an d ca nnoi be 1
sold for lass than two-th1rds of
that amount
Cash rn t)and before s1gning

deed.
LCCATION

,
1679 L1ncoln

Hh1ghts. Pomeroy. OH .
JamAS J . Proffitt
Sheriff

Motgs County
II C) 21. 2R 1114 Jto

I

... ..

'

'

.

LEOALNOTICE

Pursu~nt

tO Oh1o Rev1sed

Code Section 1513.07 IBI 121

lntonnino

(f). notice IS hereby g•ven 'o f
Convoyor SVStom
.. apphcatio.n for a l)ermrt to
LEGAL NOTICE
Pursuant to Oh•o .Aii!vrSf!d
cond uct coal m1ning and rec la·
Code Sec110n 1513 0718)(2)(1)
.matron· oper.atiOns at the s1te of
notr ce rs hereby grven of
the Meigs No. J Mine, OONR
appltcatron for a Of'rmrt to
· Application No. 0257 . Owned
conduct CoJf m1n1ng and rpcfa ·
by Southern Oh•o Coal Com . pany, P.· 0 . Box 490. Athens. 11'lcltron operatrons at rhe srtr ol
the lhtermrne Conveyor Sys·
Ohro 45 702. The site rs located
1.6 miles east of Salem Center tem, ODNR Applrcatron No.
0535. ownf!d by Southf'm
1 adJacent (rn a northerly dn ec Oh10 Coal ~on ' p&lt;lny, P 0 Bo~
;_ t ron~ to State Route 124 1n
:- Me•gs. County. Ohio. More 490, Ath ens. .Ohio 4 5 70 1 The
, specifically. the srte occup1es area IS appro~x_1mately live (5)
' portions of Sect1on s 8 and 15' miiP.s east of Salem Crmwr
adta cent lrn a n01theuv dlrl'!q
arrd Fractions. 1, 2. 6. and 23
i (Section s 9 and 15) 10 Salem ·liOn) 10 Stat P. Routfl 1 24 rn
To.vnShip, T.SN. R. 15W .. rn the. Me1gs County Ohro. dnd t"K·
• hollow of Parker Ru, and 1ts tends to the area l., nown as
= unnamed tnbutar1 es. The dP.s- Mcrgs Mrne No 2 located 1ust
cribed ar~a IS conta1ned tn the
south of th e rnter-sectron of
: Wilkesv11te and Rutland U.S. county roads 2 7 and 9.
~ Geol ogical Survey 7.5 mrn ute
approxrmately 1 1 rnrlp,s sou·~ quadrangle maps, A copy of the
theast of Pornt Rock 1n Me1gs
~ application IS avarlable f or County. Ohro . Mo re specifi• publib 1nspecton at the bflrce of cally, th e S1te occupres POrt10ns
the M eigs County Recorder.
of Se.c::trons 19 an d 2 5 1!"1
, Meigs County Court House.
CoiU m bta Township , T.9 N.
~ Second Street, Pomeroy, Oh10 · R 1 5W, and Sewons 16.,17.
; 4576 9 . \t\,'rilten ·correspon - 23. 24 and Fractron s 2 and 6 1n
• Pence. concerning the aoplrca Salem Twos nhrp, T. 7 -BN .
. : tron- may be subrn1tted to the
4.15W. The descrrbed area rs
• Division of Reclamatron. Faun·
co ntarned 1n the Va les M1ll-s anrl
" tain Square. 9l,lllding B-3.
Wilkesv1lle U.S Geo logrca l Surt Columbus. Ohio 4 3224.
vey 7.5 m 1nute quadrangle
maps. A copy o f th e appl1ca1t0n
: 1121 7. 14. 21. 28. 4tc
rs availabl e l0r pubhc rnspec·
110n at the oH1ce of the Mergs
Public ·Notice
Coun t y Recorder. Mer gs
County Court House. Second
:• ----~~~~--~--!IDDENDUMTO
Street. Pom~roy. Ohto 4 57l).9,
P!IRTI.
W r1tten correspondence con ·
ITEM E 161
cern1ng the applr catron may be
8oulllemOhio
Submitted to ·th e Orv1sfort of
Cool ComponyReclamati on. Fou ntain Square.
MolgoMino
Build1ng B-3. Columbus. Ohro

!

No.2
LEGAL NOTICE

43224.

~(f) , notice rs hereby given of

!--- - - -------

application for a· permit to
Public Notice
conduct coal m1nrng and recla·mation operat1ons at the Sit A of 1-------~-­
the Meigs Mrne No. 2. OONR
SHERIFF'S SALE
Application Nn . O?fi? nwnPrl
OF REAL EST!ITE
by Southern Ohio Coal Company. P. 0. Box 490. Athens. Tho SUite of Moigo County.
Common Pleas Court
Ohio 45701 . The site is located .
Guy Howord Shulet-, o1 al
Just south of the interse ction of

...

County Roads 27 and .9.

Plaintiff

appro)(imately 1.1 m•les sou- .
John L. Douglas, ot ol
•theast of Po1nt Rock 1n Meigs
Defendant
· cou nty. Oh1o. More spe cifr- ·
Caae No. 83-CV -68
Cally. the srte occupies portrons •
In pursuancfl o f an Order of
of Sectrbns 25.- 26 , and 3 1 in
Sale rn the above entitled
Columbia Townshtp, T.9N.
action. l Will offer · for sa le at
R. 15W. ThE! described area is publi C auctr qn. at the door of
contained in the Vales Mills and ·
th e Cou rt HousP.rn Pomeroy. 1n
Wilkesville U. S. Geolog ical
the ,above namAd Coun,ty. on
Survey 7.5 minute quadrangle
Saturday. th e 21st day of
maps . A copy of the applicati on
January. 1984. at 10 00 o·cis available for public inspeclock AM .. the followtng destion at the off1ce of the Meigs ·
cr·lbed real estate. sttuate rn thf!
· County Re co rder. Me1g s
of Mergs and State of
·· -. coo·ntv Court Hol,lse. Second County
Ohro, and rn the Vrllage of
Street. Po meroy, Oh1o 4576 9
Pomeroy tO·Wit:
Written corre$pondence conBem;'Jin 100 acre lots 308
cerning the appiication may be
and 3'07. 1n the Vrllage ' 'o f
submitted to the Drvrsion of
Pomeroy. Mergs County. Oh10.
Reclamation, Fountain Square.
Commencrng at a po1nt at th 8
ijuilding 8-3, Columbus, Ohio
nort hvvest corner of th e south
43224.
16 feet of Lot No. 203. rn
Horton and · DabneY's Add1t1on
1121 7. 14. 21. 28. 4tc
to tt'ie V1llage of Pomeroy.
thAn ce 66 feet west 6 dr.g
Public Notice
north to the base of the clrll of
rocks: thence north followrn g
SHERIFF'S 'SALE
the base Of cl rff of rock s: to a
OF RE!IL ESTATE
point, 45 feet mo re or lAss 1n
Tho
01 MeiQI C&lt;tuntv.
100 acre lot 307, th ence rn a
Convnon C&lt;tun sout heasterly d1ractron to a
Fomly Morlgogo
pOint approximately 5 feet
Carp. of Florida
south of the northwest corner
of lot No. 206 : thence lollowmg
the west line of lots No. 206.
Sondy Chriodan.....
205. 204 and the n.orth 19 feet
· Sondra L. Hoi
of lot 203. tp thn northwest
Defwnc..nl
No. 17,913 corner o f the south 16 feet · of
-In pursuance Of an Order of lot 203 to the place of
begtnnrng Th rs g ran t shall
Sale in the above entitled
action . I will offer for sale at Cons1st of 75/100 acres. more
public auction, at the door of or less,
Thr s d eed is to correct errors
·the Court House in Pomeroy. in
appearing rn th P. descrrptron rn
the above named County. on
the . charn of t1tl e of property
Saturday, the 21st day ol
lyrng 1n 100 acre lot 308 and rn
'January .. 198 4. at 10 :30 o·c·
lot 20 3 in Horton and Dabney's
lock A.M.. the folloWi ng des·
cribed real estate. s1tuate in the Additron to th e V 1llage of
County of Meigs and State of Pomeroy
REFERENCE DEEDcVol 237.
Ohio, and in the Townshi p of
Page 851 . -Merg s County Deed
Salisbury, to- wit.
Situated in the County ol RP.cords.
The fol lowrng d AscrrbAd preMeigs, State of Oh1o. in the
'Township of Sal1sbury and mises. Situate rn thA Vrllag P. of
Fraction No. 2 and berng more Pomeroy. County of Mergs and
particularly d 8scri b ed as State of Ohro:
1

a

s-

-

....

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVI.CE

(Formerly Lawren ce
(Dobbin) Manley's Route)

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces repair
service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial

ROGER MANLEY
Owner
PH. 992-3194 or
. 992-2388

lots Nos. 207. 206 .· 205.
204 and 19 feet o ff the norlh

follows :
Beginning at the Northwest

s1de of lot No. 203 1n Horton
i:lnd Dabney's Add1t1o n to the
V1ll age of Pomeroy, Oh10. Also,
all land in 100 acre Lot No. 307
and 100 acre Lot No . 308 now
owned by th e Grantor here 1n
wh iCh lays between the clrft of
rocks and the western boun·
dary l1nes ot Lots No$. 207.

corn'P.r of 1.93 acre tract and
,the Southwest corner of a 1.38
acre tract described in Volume

154. Page 659. Deed Records
of Meigs County, Ohio: thenc e

N 7 I degrees 45' 22" E 119.43
_.f eet thence N. 13 degree 51'
~ 11 " W 1 1 8.45 feet to the creek ;
' thence with said creek S 67

206. 205. 204 Md 203 of

degrees 24· .oa·· w 79.89 feet
thence S 5 degrees 1a· 36. W

·122.21 feet along the west line
"of sa1d 1.38 acre tract to the
'point of beg1nnjng conta1n ing
0 . 2609 acres
Excepting therefrom all m ineral rights. the same havrng
been reserved by former gran·
·tors. Also conveyed herein is a
~right of way 16 feet wide from
·the afore·descr1bed .2 7 ac re
"traer of land. trl ·a Northeasterly
~direction along the Southerly
i:STde of a small stream of State
Route #33. said right of way
{being along th(l roadway now 1n
ex1stence and in use. whi ch '
~oadway lays within the balance
,of 1.38 acre tract of land now

Horton and Dabney's Additron
to the Villag e of Pomeroy. Oh1o.

REFERENCE DEED: Vot
, Page
, Mergs County
Deed Records.
Pro pert y appra1sed a t

$32.000.00 and cannot be
sold for less than 2/ 3rds of the
apprarsed price
Cash 1n hand before srgn1n g

deed.
James J. Proft1tt
Sherrft
Mer gs Coun ~

11 2121. 28: (1)4 3tc

I;::========:::::;.

pyvned by the sard Grantor. said
wight of way to be usf!d for ~~
jngress and egress. and an
.additional easement is hereby
;'granted to the said Grantee ~o
Jay, construct, ~se and marnta1n
~as and water lmes and a sewer
jine from the said .27 acre tract
"'f land in an easterjy direction
~croSs the lands presently
.owned by tha said Grantor to
jhe said State _ Route #33.
;However. any p1pe or s&amp;Ner
'lines 5o lai!:l shall be buned at
sufficient depth that the same
shall not interfere 'Nith the use
of the surface bv the Grantors. j
their heirs. executors o r

nsigns .
' PREMISES COMMONLY'
KNOWN AS 33389 o;xon
Hollow. Pomeroy, Oh10 45769.
Property

appraised

at

822.668.00 end cannot be
sold for IOSI than two-th;rds of '
that

amount.

JAMES J. PROFFtn
SIERIFF

.
MEIGS COUNTY
(12) 21 . 28: (tl4 3tc

I

.

'

84 Misc. Merchandise

&amp; APPLIANCES

lrd A¥0.-Ph. 446--lltt
. . . . . lite.
&amp;lite.

HOT POl

MICROWAVE
OVENS
STARTING AT
9

'289 ~

POMEROY
LANDMARK
- ·· 614-992-2111

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

Call 742-3195

Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
!¥, M. East of Pageville
On Township Rd . 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only
PH. 992~3466 .
10!1 9/2 mo pd

s2500 ,

CUT

&amp; WRAPPED

$5.00 EXTRA

FOR SKINNING
PH. 949-2734
I

Real Estate General

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
ln~uiated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine; Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10·6-tfc

NEW LISTING - Leading
Creek.Road - Aneat ranch
home w1th 3 bedrooms, din ing room, large living room
with fireplace. Full base·
ment. deck. $37,900.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEW LISTING - 1980 2
bedroom mobi le home on
approK. ~ acre Jot. Range,
regrigerator. $16.000.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

NEW LISTING - M1ddle·
port - Nice 2 story home
on a good street. Close to
· schools and shopping May
have assumable loan . Basement, many features. Want
. $29,900.
NEW . LISTING' - Five
Points Area - Split entry
home with 3-4 bedrooms,
iamily· room, full basement.
Hookup lor wood burner.
central air, approx. 1 acre
ground with deck, nice stor·
age building and a swim·
ming pool. $46,900.

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

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Farm Eq1.1ipment
Parts &amp; Service
1. J .'tf ~

CHRISTMAS
TREES
FOR SALE
1 Mile Off Rt 7
On St. Rt. 143
· 12/1/1

mo. pd.

Roger ·Hysell

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

. AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

6:30 P.M.

Also Transmission

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns
Only ·

PH. 992-5682

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

-Backhoes
-Dump llucks
-lo·Boy
•
-Trencher
-Water

or

992~7121

-Septic Systems
L!IRGE or SM!ILL JOBS '
PH. 992·2478

Bring This Coupon In

For 10% Off
Any Service
Expires Oec. 30th
KAY'S B~AUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
Ptl. 992·2725

12 12·1 mo .· pd,

Vinyl &amp; Aiu'minum
Discover Eneage-A-Car, the
modem answer to soaring
new car prices! Drive the vehicle of your choice .. ,.any
make and model. No down
payment. . Lower monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Send for .Frae Booklet L-16.
Bob BlackSton, an authorized independent EnpgeA-Car Broker. Box 326, Po·
meroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614-992·6737
·

B A BEAUTY SHOP

SIDING

"Holiday Special"

BISSELL

Shampoo • Haircut
Blow Dry

SJ.OO
Call 949·2320 .

Ask for Tina Pierce
Thurs.-Fr'i.~Sat.

SIDING CO.

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free sidinges·
timates~ 949-2801 or

949·28o0

·

No Sunday Calls
l i l ·tfC

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

273-3407
12-

$1,350.00 DOWN - Will
buy this one floor 2 bedroom
home with furnace~ bath,
carpeting and 1.8 acres in
the country at $18,000.

S&amp;W TV

MIDDLEPORT- 3 Trailers
and small house. All turnished on a level lot tor only
$20,000.
POMEROY - 6 rm . bungalow, gas FA furnace, 3 bedrooms. bath with shower,
some insulat1 on and vinyl
siding. Only $1.875.00
down.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester. Ohio
Ph. 986·4269
If No Answer, Colt 985-4382
Dewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith

All Makes and Models

Sf:OOO.OO DOWN - 6 rm.
one floor on the edge of
town. Carport, chimney and
one acre. $137.38 per
month just like rent.
HEAT SAVER - This compact one bedroom should be
for you. Oak floors, lurnace,
bath and storms on a level
lot in Racine. $1,000 down
and $143.63 per month.
WAIII - Steam heat, nice
carpeting, 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths, small yard. Walk
to the stores. Only $3,500
down. Price negotiable.
7Witi Doww Will ,
Buy You A Holllt.

CALL 992·3171

Hol!';inq

Headquartt•f:.

742..-2 328

t2·9·1 mo.

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing machine repair , parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner., one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

446 -0294.

Gun shoot Ra cine Gun Club .
Every Sunday starting 1
p .m , Factory choked guns
Only .
Vacancy : Julia 's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvalesenc e
Home. 18 years eKperience.

Clifton . W.V. 304 -7735873 .

4·2l ·llc

, Riverview · Personal Care
Home nOw ha s a vacancy f or
a elderly ·person. 304· 773-

5662 .

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addans end remodeling

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

Rutland A erob ics will be on
vacation until Jan·. 4th. One
of your New Years resdlu tions should be to get in
shape next year and help
fight a hazarad waist . Merry
Xmas from Ann &amp; Carolyn.

-. Plumbing and electrical

work '
(Free Estimates)

REDUCED WINTER RATES

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy , Ohio
' 12· .If

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

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

Harper 's Adult Care Home
has a vacancy for another
resident . elderly pe:rsan, call

304-675-1293.

Bauer Barber Shop will be
open all day Thursday, Dec .
29th. H"p py New Year,
C.hris and John .

4

Giveaway

lf2 Beagle &amp; % Hound, 5
weeks . o ld. Celt 614 · 256 -

1690.

6 mo . old female Colli e·
LabradOr mi)(, good with
children, gr.eat watchdog ,
must -give, m o vi ng . Call

446-9465 .

17 ducks to give away. 614-

985 -3816 .

Pups to give away. Black
mixed breed . 10 w eeks ol d .

New Homes-Extensive
. Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu~tQm Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Gar~ges
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vin!ll Sidings

FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING
Keep That Natural
look In Your Home.

CALL

378-6349

11-1 7 I mo.

15 Years Experience

.USED
APPLIANCES

STRIP
COAL

$3000

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE "

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers ~!!Freezers

2616 .

Washers, Dryers
Ranges. Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

8 puppies, part Collie; 8
wks ., Second house ori right
out Three Mile Road, Henderson, W . Va ..

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

Half Beagla and Registered
Bassett hound , male. 18
months old . 304-773 · 5540
after 4 :30 .

742-2352
Route 4. Pomeroy
TF/'1 .

GREG ROUSH

PH . 992·7583
or 992·22B2
ll+lfc

Puppies· 'lh l abr.,% Irish
Settler. Tw o bla ck femal e
and o ne red male. 614-992-

GRAVEL
HAULED
Al TROMM

742-2328
10/20/ t.f.n.

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-ttc

6

lost and Found

LOST 6 yr . old brown, wl'lite
Collie. Clay Chapel Ad,
childrens pet . Call 614-256-

9393 or 614 -256·1317.

Lost-Space Heater, between
Chester and Tuppers Plains.

Reward. 614-985-3988.
Lost beegle dog in Chester

area. ~14 , 985-3988 .

LOST red •and white Beagle
with red nose. Answers to
name of Red . Call304-675-

2867.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auctinn

PH. 992-2280

Antenna Installation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

Au ct ion every Tuesda y
night , Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct . Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg ., Camd en St.

,2-23-tlc ·
I'd

614-367-7101 .

SKATE-A-WAY
CheSler. O'H.

RACINE - Large 4 bed·
room frame with furna~e.
carpeting, bath, baSeme~t
and Ig. Jot. $3,000 down will
h~ndle .

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

MINE RUN

AND

MIDDLEPORT - 8 rm. 2
story near · Cardinal. Bath,
furnace, 5 bedrooms, full
baoement and storm doors
and window~. Living 24xl6,
vinyl siding, $2,850.00
down.

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

--~-~~ -

•Body &amp; fender Repairs
•Expert Refinishing
•Insurance Claims
Welcome
•Free Estimates
'
12/ 15/ 1 mo.

614 -992 -6749

PROFESSIONAL

Phone
H614)·992·3325

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE

11 12/lln

BISSELL FLOORS

VI~Gil ,8 . SR.
216 L 2nd Sl .

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
long Bottom. OH. 45743
98Hl93 or 992·3067
12-2 0-tfc

3-24-tfc

Monday thru Friday

-Sewer
-Gas lines

12/9/1 mo. pd.

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

8·1 lie

PH. 992-7844
Rt. 681 West· al Darwin

742-2789 or
742-2515

•Excavating
•Ponds
·septic Tanks
•Hauling
Racine, OH.

· Route 1
Shade, OH. 45776

White's Hill Road
Rutland, OH.
(1st Rd. left up
· New Lima)

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
ing - Siding - Concrete
Palios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns. ·
.

949-2293

WELL'S GARAGE

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

M.L.
CONTRACTING
RECAMATION

GUN SHOOT

-Dozers

Authorized John Deere.
New Hoiland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
,
Dealer

NEW LISTINr.
.... Jdleport - A· ,4K70 mobile
home with 3 bedrooms, 117
baths; beautiful carpeting,
nice kitchen with refnge rator, range , hood , disposal.
48KIOO' lot with fencing and
large concrete
porch.
$19,000.

•PONDS , ·RECLAM-"TION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

Maplewood Lake

E . 6oa
Main'I..Jllif:;)lr.I.L..I
POMEROY,O.

$EWER LINES:

. PHONE JIM CLIFFORD
992· 7201
3-7-tf

DEER
PROCESSED

S.CIPIO REGYCLING

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and

BONDED &amp; WORK GUARANII£0

Or 992·5875

Business or Residential

992-2259

11217.1 4. 21. 28. 4tc

Pursuant to Ohio Aev1sed

Code Section 1513.07 181 121

MANlEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
In Middleport

c-

"Jun 1·orl. Have you been '10iilll!l br. tweP. n l ots 7 and 8. as

1 Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

The 1981·85 economic plan calls
lor building . 200,{XX) "ell' housing
units. But Cuban officials report
gloomlly that only 60,(XX) have been
constructed in the plan's first three
years.
Despite Its economic shortcomIngs, Cuba's successes are obvious .
Drab Havana no longer has the
life or flair of a Rio de Janeiro or
Buenos Aires. But neither does It
have the squalid shantytowns.
Swarms of ragged children do not
beg in Havana's streets,- as In
Mexico City. And altbough the
poorest Cuban eats meat only half
the time, untold millions of other
Latin Americans never taste it ataU.
Cuba today claims - and few
dlspute It - thai It has nine times as
many teachers as before the
revolution. It also claims It has no
major drug·addlction or alcoholism
problems. Average life expectancy
has reached 72years of age, on a par
with the United States, according to
government figures.

... ··-

~::=:.-

··~•s.•

coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get

In historic Havana's teeming
central streets, thousands of city
residents still live in 18th-century
buildings that, mildewed and crackIng, lean against support scaffolds.
Some have already collapsed.

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

,,._
r--------------1
...
.... ,,,_,.
........~..---..... -·. . .....
·---

· Write your own ad and order by mail with this

. results. Monev not refundable.

,..

::-:.=::
,,. ..........

. . . . . . . Dill.

ADDENDUM TO
PART I,
ITEM E(ISI
.Southern Ollio
Cool Company -

~.~

DECATIJR, Ill. (AP)' - Three pollee Lt. Joseph Meyers.
At the pollee statiOn, officers •
men were charged with murder ahd
'
recognlzedtltemenasmatchlngthe
armed robbery 'J'uesday afte~ two
attack
suspects
,
description
of
the
carloads of travelers were attacked
'
on an interstate highway, pollee and arrested them, he said
said. Two of the ' suspects were
A thlrd man was charged after~­
· arrested when they sought shelter was spotted in Decaturdrlvtng a car ,
matching the description (If that ·
from the cold at a pollee station.
·The violence began late Monday involved in the two attaclis, Meyers ·
night when three or possibly four said. A passenger also was taken ·
armed robbers forced a car off into custody but apparE!Itly had only
Interstate 55 In central Illinois and caught a ride with the driver and
robbed the car's occupants, killing a was expected to be released,
12-year-old Laotian boy. The meri Meyers added. Autliorltles were
then chased a second auto and shOt · trying to determine wbether a
out its tires, Illinois State Pollee in fourth suspect existed.
Illtnols State Trooper Bob Scott
.
·.
..
Springfield said.
.Two suspects were arrested when Identified the three men, charged
they went to. the Decatur Police with murder, armed robbery ll!ld
Department seeking shelter after burglary, as Anthony D. Ivery, 20;
being turned away from a Salvation Dlreck D. Jones, 18; and Claude
Army facility early Tuesday, said Kllbert,17, all of St. Louis.

Business Services·

Public Notice

ADDENDUM TO
'AliT L
IT!M IE(ts)

The Daily Sentinel-Page- ; 1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NOW IN

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh.
· PARCEL SERVICE

DEPOSITORY
DAILY PICK UP SERVICE

Open Wed., Fri., Sot. Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available for private par·
ties Mon .. Tues., Thurs.
Nites, Sat. or Sun. Alternoon.
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI NOV. 18

Rick

Pearspn Au ctioneer
Service .. Estete . Fl!lrm, An tique &amp;t liquidation sales.
licensed &amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

WHt:N THE MANY HOURS Of Ht.JlrtT.
lNG FINALLY PAY OFF WITH THAT
SP£CIAL OE.:ER, REWMD YOUR Ef•

FORTS WITH A QUALITY, UfE .LII&lt;E r~~~
SHOULDER MoUNT AT OOR Sntt&gt;O.
~=:.!!.~;;,;;;.;...j

u.cH MOUNT IS GillEN THE PER ·
SOHAl ATTENTION IT DESERVES TO
GIVE YOU A PRIZE TROPHY TH,t,T
LAST FOR YEARS AND YEARS.
CALL TOD.\V FOR CURRENT PRfCES
ON OUR AND OTHER GAME

THE

TAXIDERMY
SHOP RUTLAND.
.
liMA RD.
PH . 7 42 ·2225

BY
"'U.P.S. - PUROLATOR

~DOOR TO DOOR.,
P~ICII

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVIC£

618 Main St.
Pomeroy, 0~.

--

GLASS • GLASS ··GLASS

DE.LIVERY ]

PRIDRITY SHIPMETHS
fOil!SS THAN U. S. MAll
Y! a% 10 50% .1110 IIIli '

Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every wa:ek .
Consigments o1 new and
used merchandise alway s
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer . 304 ·2 75 -

3069.

7

.\

wva. 304-773- 5785 or
304-773·9185.

•'

Tri-County

General Welding
Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Dexter, j)h .. 45726
Bill Eskew

PH. 742-2456
· Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
''Your Place or Mine"
lD/12/2 mo. pd.

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oidt.lnc.
Bill Gene Johnson

. ' Point • Mason
7 Auto Glass

446 -3672

ltu"h''" You Need Glass You Need Us .. , We Can Handle
Your Every Glass Need!

Your Business"
Radio Dispatched

UTO GLASS
(Jtw) nJ.5710 . 773·51 18

9

Mason,

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swai n Furni ·
ture, 446 -3159, Jrd . &amp;
' Olive St .• Gallipolis , Oh .
Wanted to buy . Naw, used&amp;

l!"tique fu.rniture. Will buy 1
place or complete hous•holda . Also complete Aucti:.·
oneering service. C•ll Oaby

A. Monin 614 -992-6370 .

'

�Page- · •~- The Daily Sentinel
9

They'll Do It Every Time

Wanted To Buy

Buying

daily gold,

Pomeroy

silver

colna. ringa.jewelry. sterling
ware, old colna, large cur·
ken Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave .
Middleport , oh . 614-992 ·
3478.

Hidea-Ginung. Trapping
Supplies . George Buckley,

BRASS

old

Furniture. gold, silver dol ·

,h ouseholds . Write M . D .
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Oh
45769 or 614-992 -7760 .

Nicly furn ished modern mo·
bile home, in city. 1 .or 2
adults onlv .. Call 446 -0338 .

·cash for guns .

S~otguns .

rifles and pistols . All makes.

614-949-24B5 .

C•sh tor old books:. No texts
books. Also old letters,dia ries, Ohio River &amp; old Histori cal materi•ls, Hock- Hocking
books. Box 1 14 Athen·s.Ohio 45701 or phone 614593-B915 .
Used mobile homes and
truck campers. Call 4460175 .

1111plu, nnnn
11

Help Wanted

! NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ~
U S HING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and N-O T
·t o send money through the
mail until you have investigated t he offering.
·Cigarette Distributorship .
Instant cash flow ! We are a
Bonded national firm expanding into the area . If you
are seeking a secure business opportuinty . We provide all retail locations and
all necessary training. Full or
Part time . lnvestmeiit from
$2 . 000 . 00 . Winston ·
Salem -Kools . 1 -800-241 2268.

3 or 4 room unfurnished apt .
utilities paid . adults only, no
pets . Cal.l 446-3 437 .

---'-- - - --= e

1981 14x70. Shultz limited
mobile home, microwave,
dishwasher, central air, un derpenning , three bed rooms. 1 V:.l baths. excellent
condition. $15.500 . Call
304-675 -6049 after 6 p .m.

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) _has
one and two bedrooms , rent
starting at &amp;157 for one
btt droom and $193 per
month for two bedroom .
w ith $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant . Call 446-2745 or leave
message.

Mobile Home Movin'g, Li censed and Insured. Free
Estimates $100. p~r hoo~ ­
up minimum . Phone 304·
576-2711 or 576-2866 .

1 room S60 week for 1
person. $70 week for 2
persons. 1 room with waterbed $30 -a night. Call 4462501 .

1976 14Jt70 trailer, 3 bed·
room. 2 baths, large kitchen.
$10 .000 . 304 -773 -5023 .

Stripping Furniture &amp; Metal.
Instant cash flow l First time
in this area. Our expert staff
has many years of expe - USED MOBILE HOME .
Challenging Position - rience and hat&gt; set up resto - PHONE 304-576-2711 .
Diverse Responsibilities .
ration centers threughout
Assistant Director for Proth e U.S. and Europe. We 1970 ELCONA . 6Sx12 . two
gram . Private . non -profit.
furnished equipm·ent, chem - bedroom furn i shed ,
comprehensive family plan - icals. supplies. and an exten - S6.495 .00 . 1969 CHAM ·
ning agency serving 8 Sou - sive training course at one of PION . 60x12 two bedroom,
theast Ohio counties . B.S. , our successful centers near- .$5,995.00 . 1973 DOU degree and health back·
est vou . Total cost : GLAS. 65x14 three bed ground; minimum 2 years
S32 ,500 .00 'Bonded' Call rooms. $7,295 .00 . 1972
supervisory experience .
Toll Free : (800) 241 -2269 ELCONA double wide .
Demonstrated management
or write for more info : U.S. SHARP. three bedrooms,
ability in services delivery .
Stripping. 1775 The Ex- two baths only 812 ,900 .00
Energeti c ,person with
change, Suite 600. Atlanta. delivered . Other used homes
proven initiative. communi on display . Must sell over
GA 30339 .
ca tion skills . abtlity to
Stecked . D . and W . Homes.
analyze -utilize data as manCigarette or VIDEO Distrib· at foot of Shadle Bridge.
agement tool. Close coOper utorships. Reutes available . Pho.ne 304-675-4424 .
ative work with Director.
We provide money for exDemonstrated personnel
pansion , all locations. train- 1976. 12x70. total electric,
skills. Supervise 7 sites. paid
ing &amp; a BONDED staff te 3 BR . 2 baths . ex. cond .
and volunteer staff serving
assist you in setting up vour
5 .000 clients . Athens - own part er full time busi - $6900. Call 446-0175 .
based . Car required . Some
ness. From $3 , 960 to
evenings and weekend
$50 . 00 . W i nston - Salem~
work . $15 ,000 plus benef- Kools. 1-800-241 -226B.
its . Send resume. name two
professional reference5. Kay
35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Atkins, Executive Director ..
22 Money to Loan
Watson Rd . Owner finan·c·
ptanned Parenthood of Souing available . Call446 -8221
theast Ohio. 8 North Court
after 6 weekdays .
Street , Athens , _Ohio
HOME LOANS FIXED
45701 . Deadline: 1 -20-84 .
RATES 12 %% purchase or 35 Acres; v, mile from
EOE -AA.
refinance , 11 WYG adjustable hospital. Farm land or develrate . leader Mortgage , opment. level. $37 ,500 .
Athen s, 1-800-341 ·6554
Call 446 -0603 .
Development Y2.- time'; Work
load fluctuates . Work with
% acra lot on Mitchell Ad . 1
· volunteers in 8 southeast
23 Professional
mi . from hosp., rural water,
Ohio counties . Developcity school . Call 446-3933 .
Services
ment experience_. excellent
communication skills re quired . Team memb~t capabilities . Car necessary . PIANO TUNING lower
$8,000 to $10 .000 to start . pri ces - regular tunings Send resume. portfolio se - discounts to Senior Citizens.
41 Houses for Rent
lections : Planned Parent ·
Churches &amp; schools. Ward 's
hood of Southeast Ohio. 8
Keyboard . 304-675 -3824 .
North Court Street . Athens.
Two story house , 4 bdr.,
Ohio 46701 . Deadline : 1Ava! l&amp;llle
8250 per mo . $250 dep .
20 -84 . EOE · AA .
req . Call 446 ~ 4222 , 9 :3031 Homes for Sale
5 :00 .
Reliable person to care for 2
small children in our home .
4 bdr . ran ch home, large LA, Duplex , $250 plus utilities.
Start Jan . 3rd . Call 446iull basement, with garage. Avail. now, 2 bdr., LR , new
3896.
wood burner included. city remod . kit ., &amp; bath . l&amp;rge
schools. 2 miles from town . fenced yard, new carpet.
AVON Pay your Christmas
558 3rd . Ave ., Gallipolis.
Call 446-0276.
bills, make money 2 ways.
Call 446 -2457 or 446Coll446· 3358 .
Rench on 5 acres. beautiful 0332 .
setting with tall pines
Babysinlng in my home.
around t he house. Spacious Cabin on Raccoon Creek 2
$26 week, per child . Call
livingroom which overlooks bdr., stove &amp; refrigerat or.
446-7402.
the pond . 4 bedrooms, util- large fireplace $235 mo ..
ity room and kitchen has a lease required . Call 446E~~:ceUent opportunity look ing for someone to take over built-in range . A11ume pay - 0093 or 446 -0795 .
clothing business . Includes ments with a small down
inventory, fixtures and supp - payment . $68,900 . Call 3bdr. house,1V!bath, At. 7;
Cheshire. $200 mo. Call
446-3 175.
lies. 304-676-1317 or 675 614 -446-9786 8AM -4PM .
3217 .
3 BR , new brick home, land
Very nice 2 bdr . mobile
contract. 446 ~ 0722 .
home good location near
Situations
12
Owner Must Sell Hon,el Green School . Kitchen ,
Wanted
Your Gainl Our lossl One range, refrigerator, washer
floor plan , Middleport. Call S. dryer, gas heat, cent . air,
5200 mo. Call eve's 446Will care for the elde·rly in my 614-992-6941 .
0254 .
heme. lots of references.
3 bedroom ranch styled
Men or women . Call 667home. Call 446 -0109 aher 6 br, 3 tulll batht, mutt have
3402 .
ax . references . Call 6145:30 .
294 -8837 . In Gallipolis
Anvil band is now booking
located in Syracuse-Near area .
pfrtiu and dances. 304school &amp; swimming pool. 3
676 -&amp;370 .
bedroom situated on one- 3 bdr. houM $185 mo ..
third acre lot. Price reduced t100 dep. Call 446 -3617.
HPuse cleaning any type
523,500 . or will rent fer
Puint Ple11ent and vicinity.
Four bedroom home in East·
$240 mo . 304-865-3934.
Reaaonable rates. Referen ern District. Full basementc~o . Call 304-675-390B .
House and lot tor sale . Feur ,gas heat. $200.00 month
rooms and bath. encloeed plus deposit . Reference re·
porch , S11 ,000.00. 2602
Insurance
. 614-949 - 2 860
evenings.
Lincoln Avenue. 304-676- quired
5034 or 675-43B9.

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. hll offered
services tor fire insurance
cQver•ge in Gallia County
tor almost 1 century. Farm,
home and peraonal propeny
cdv•r•ges are available to
meet individual needs. Cen tact Harry Pitchford. agent.
Phone 448-1427.

18, I!Vaanted to Do
General H.aullng and Traah
removal Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 4463151 be1-n 9 and 5.
Ught dozer work &amp; landscaping. Kotalic Landscap~
lng. Call 448-3100.
Cleaning houset, offic81,
etc. Fee negotiable. Call
onY\Imo, 814-258-1134 .

'

Apartment
for Rent

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USEO - C·ARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7572 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36 . PHONE 448 -7274.
1977 Trailer whh lot for
ule. Call614-266-8818 .
Fully carpeted, air cond.,
di1hwasher, woodburner,
drapes, ltero. retrlg ., •
ltove, other extra1. Close to
town On rented lot. Call
448-3933.

1 bdr. apt . Call 446 -0390 .
2 8R Apt., $129 mo .
Utilities partially furnished .-- ~---- 3 bdr. house for sale
on land contract. 676- 5104
or 675 -5 386, Carol Yeager
Realtor .
Attic Aparti-nent, furnished,
$175 utilities pd . Men only .
Share bath . 91 9 2nd Ave ..
Gallipolis . 446-4416 after 7
p.m .
Furnished Apt.. 1 BR . $~36 ,
utilities pd. Adu"lts. 243
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis.
446 -4416 after 7 p .m .
Furnished 3 rooms. with
private bath . Ref. preffered .
Call 446-2215 .
1 bed room Apt. S196. mo.
including utilities . Equal
housing opportunity. Con tact Village Manor Apts.
614-992-7787.
Riverside Ap1s . Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens . &amp;130 ~ EquaiHousing Opportunities . 614 ~dZ - 7721 .

Apartments . 304-675 5548 .
APARTMENTS . mobile
homes. houses. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221.

TWIN RIVERS T
ER .
Apartments now available to
elderly &amp;. disabled with an
income of less than
$12 ,300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income.Phone 304-675-6679.

1- -- - - - - --

0ne bedroom partially furnished. all utilities paid .
304-675 -7112.
-

1---------...,.-45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
room s. Park Central Hotel.
Call 446 -0756 ,

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479 .

48

Equipment
for Rent

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

For Lease

For lease, Chevron Station,
Ma 1on area . Good location .
304-676-2982 after 6pm .

77

Wednasday, December 28, 1983

Television
Viewing

S110 . up
S2:~2~5fj.,!H~~~~~=~
$650
andtoup,
I
finish. Bunk
with mattresses.
. and
up to $396 . Babv beds ,
S110. Mattresses or box
springs. ful) or twin , $68 ..
firm , S68. and $78. Queen
sets. S195 . 4 dr. chests.
$42 . 5 dr . chests. $54. Bed
frames. S20 .and S25 .• 10
gun - Gun cabinets. $360.
Gas or electric ranges $375 .
Baby mattresses. $25 &amp;
$35, bed ·trames $20. $25,
&amp; 830 , king frame 850 ,
Good selection of bedroom
suites, c edar chests,
rockers. metal cabinets.
swivel rockers .
Used Furniture -- bookcase.
ranges, chairs, dryers, r&amp;·
frigerators and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri. , Sam
to 5pm. Sat.
446-0322

54 Misc. Merchandise
Antiques, oak furniture re production, misc . items . Use
our Christmas layaway plan.
Conkels, Tuppers Plains.
Carpet Special 25 rolls of
heavy commerical fOr $3 .95
sq .yd . 992 -6206 .
Carpet Special 25 rolls of
heavy commerical for $3.95
sq .yd . 992-6206 . 614-9925173.
For Sale-1 cabbage patch
doll with papers. Still in box.
looking fer goed home . Call
614~446 - 1012 anytime. If
no answer. keep calling.
Full size mattres&amp; .&amp; box
springs. 620 . 00 for both.
Also baby furniture . 614992:2420 .
New wood burning stove
with firebrick $326 . each .
304.-675-1578 or 675 7896.
Used washer, dryer, stoves.
refrigerator. 30 day warranty. One B~ldwin organ,
double keyboard . J&amp;S Pawn
Shop. 314 Main St. Pt.
Pleasant .
Hay $1 . 60 bale . feed
grinder. pulley wheels to fit a
PTO, 1974 Ford camper
special , good condition .
Phone 304-576-2108.

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

Taking orders for Cabbage
Patch type dolls . Wall made,
Large and small; different
styles. 304-675-6135 .

Wood or coal burning
stoves. Werm Moming stove
with fire brick $300 .00,
Heatrola small size
$100 .00 . 304-875-3763
after 5:00 or weekends.

'----------l'---------~
T
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

42 Mobile Homes

12x60 2 bdr. modern furnithed trailer. conventent
location. Upper River Rd.
deposit roq. Cell 614-446855B .

81

54 Ml' sc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Plckup.or
Deliverad . 12"· 22" ttocked
in yard . HEAP vender.
prompt delivery. 614-256·
6245 .
Umestone.
Delivered in Sand,
Mason, Gravel.
M8igs,
Gallla or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call 446-77B5.

Umestone delivered . $10 a
ton . Call614-266-1427 .
Firewood delivered . $35
pickup load, 10 loads $300.
Call 614-266 -1427.
ADD ~ ON

Woodburnlng furnace, auto. controls, water
heater inciuded . Never use~.
$590. Ph. 614-258-.1218.
Repossessed eewing machines by White free -arm,
zig -zag. etc:. balance 896 or
$8 per week. Call 446·
9301 .

55 Building Supplies
Building materials
block. brick. sewer pipes,
windows, lintels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
0. Call 814-245-6121 .

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Bording ell breeds. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Dpberman puppies : Stud
Service. Call 446 -7796 .
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
61 .4 -367-7220 .
Briarpatch Kennels Profeasional All-breed grooming,
Indoor-outdoor boarding ta~
cilities. English Cocker Spa ~
niel puppies. Call 614~38B9790.
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennels. AKC Chow puppies. CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens .
Call 446-3844 after 8.
AKC Reg . Collo~ puppies,
tri-color, 8160. Contact
Myrl Knowlten, Albany, Oh .
614-698-4841 or 6983263.
2 AKC Registered male
Cocker spaniels~ blonde 6
yra. old, red 3 yn .. good
bloed line, good tempera·
ment. Excellent for breed·
ing. Cell 446-9372 after
5:30PM.

57

Musical
Instruments

Magnua chord orgen .,ery
geod condition. Hes hench
plus music books. Call 614246-5067.

'68 C811lero for Mle or tf'lda.
Will trade tor tour whHI
drive truck. 304-8711-3248.

... ·,.. .
-.'.--_... ...
. ..
--'

Furnished. nice mobile
home. 3 bedrooms. All
electric-centfll air. Good
location. ecr011 from peolln
SyrtcuM. •210 per month
plu1 utllhles. Depoalt re·
qulrod. Coll992-2119.

for lale gentale denkey,
exc811entChriltmaspreaent.
42 in. vanity &amp; drapes. Call
446·7339.
..

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Ground ear corn $6.60 per
1·0 0. Bring own container .
304-675-3308 . No Sundoy
sales.

71

Autos

for

Sa, le

TOP CASH paid for late
model used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eaet~
ern Ave.. Gallipolis, 4462282.

1 9BO PLYMOUTH HORIZON : 4 dr. 4 cyl. front
wheel drive, auto. trans .• air
ca:nd . 68.460 miles, one
owner. $2950. 11 interested,
contact Harold George at
the Holzer Medical Center.
between 8:30 a.m. and 6
p.m . weekdays. 446-6345 .
1967 Chysler convertible
new paint, runs perfect. Cell
614-245-927B.

1981 2 dr .. black Chevy
Chevatte. 4 spd .• AC, luggage rack. · wire rims
$3,196. 1980 blue Renault
leCar 2 dr .• 4 spd. , full
sunroof. AC. AM -FM spafe
tire, $2,495. 1979 4 dr.
brown VW Rabbitt, auto,
auto., AC, AM, aunroof,
new battery. new tires,
$2,795 . 1978 4 dr. white
Chevy Nov• auto, AM· FM
82,295. John's Aute Salas,
Bulaville Rd. Gallipolis, Oh
45631 . 446-47B2.
1983 Honda .prelude, 1 98 1
Honda prelude, both cera
loaded . Wilt consider trade.
_c_o_n_6_1_4_·_3_8_7_-7_4_8_6_
. _ __

72

Trucks for Sale

1980 SR-5 Toyota PU. 5
spd ., with topper. Call 446 ·
8623.
1979 black Ford Courier
pickup, 4 spd .. radio , epara
tire. new battery. 82,69.5 .
John's Auto Salas, Bulaville
Rd, Gallipelis, Oh 46631,
446-4782.

1 - - - - - - - -- - 1980 F 160, 302, 4x4 shOrt
bec:i. 49,000 miles. Good
running condition. $4400.
773-6167.
1972 chev. C60 Tri·Axle
Dump 16' St Bed, 34 rears.
427 gao. 614-992-3881
after 6 PM .
1976 Ford Vz ton truck
$1200. 1972-318 Dodge
engine $100 . 304- 676 4090.
.

1963 Ford truck whh 36ft.
trailer, new engine,
u.5oo.oo. 304-&amp;78-2321
or 304-676-3763 after 6 :00
or on weeke11d1.
'83 Ferd Renger. only 4,000
miles. must sell. 304-8751036 or 876-4668.

73

Vans 8r. 4 W.O.

1977 dodge van. FuMy carpted &amp; cuatomad . 318 ,two
barr all, auto,sun· roof, very
aharp. Coli 814-992-3187.

76

resi~

dential,commercial
tree eltimates.
repair
and Call
614~ 266·1182 .
..:....-------:--Marcum Rooting &amp; Spouting. 30 years exparlence.
tpecializing in built up roef.
Call614-388-9867.
Appliance Service all makes
&amp; models refrigertors 1
washers. dryers. raliges. '"":
compactors. dishWashers,
microwaves. Heating &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gallia Refrigeration Co .
61 4-448-4066 .

BORN LOSER

/&gt;/£:, Cf
Pf&gt;.R~I-IT7

IF LII/I!Jb'?

RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quaur. and
house cello. Coli 678-2398
or 446·2464.

LH'? ";€E... tNJM I
A HIJN~ 0111"
~D M.'/ FATllffi ...
IJH,()I£ HVHDREV

... BUT 'THE'/ W?IA-D
Be IF ?TILL LI\111-Jf::&gt;.

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Salas and Service.
304-896-3B02 .

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Dna
piece custom fit your home.
Guiranteed. Advanced Gutlor, IDoy 614-692-4086,)
(night 614-698-8206.)
GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Water removal.
fumiture cleaning, tree ettimoles. 304-676-2295.

.,

82

ALtEYOOP'
THANH;S, MR.PE'TERS! WE'LL GET
IT BACK T''IOU FlRST THING IN

TH' MORNING!

Confp Nit t•ndem 34 Eaton. Two speed 8 axte C85

c.,..,.. two 'opel a .... ceo

chev., t3 ap h'lna. Funer
113. 11 opd Tr..a. cllev. 4
epct trent. chav .• comp. •ir

lift .... 427 0 ...... _ ....
18' lt.dump bod • holst.
814-882-3181 lftor I:PM.

tl-.

327 truall """"" w-outo.
trena .. runo IIOOd. 12110. or
boot
304-458-1513.

NOW MAYBE WECI!I.N
BEI!I.T DRI&gt;.CULINA "'NO
P0C TEPES BACK 10
1H 1 LAB!

Plumbing

8r. Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446 ~ 38BB or 446~
4477

t
.I

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEAT- •
lNG . Femerly Dewitt's
Plumbing . Call 614-3670576 .

83

EKcavating

Rover has
made us
famous!

While we're
the dump weCdn rop
off Joel's present!

.•,

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna. ponds. ditches, . ,,
basements, etc. Call 446- ,.
4907. Carter S. Evans
Tranaportation.
Cat 216 hoe. dozers, crena.
loaders, dump truck. Call
814 - 448-1142 between
7:00AM. 6:00PM.

'·

Good-1 Excavating. bue~
ments, footers. driveways,
septic tanka, landscaping.
Cell anytime 446- 4&amp;37,
Jamea l. Davison. Jr.
owner.

WINNIE

J . A .R . Conttruction Co.
Water Lines, Footers.
Drain1 . All kinds of Ditching.
Rutland, Oh. 814-7422903.

84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
.J

',.
••

•.

Pasquale Etectrlc Co. all
phaae• of electric work. all
work guaranteed. Aerial
truck rental. 814-448 4068 .
Home appliance or electrical
repeir. Call 446-7402 after
8PM.

:·
BARNEY

••

PAW·· I'M

::

GOIN' DOWN TO
TH' CREEK AN'
FETCH A
BUCKET
OF
WATER

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen ,.
Scl1aora. Fabric: Shop, , u
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

'

General Hauling

.••
}

HOW COME
VOU GOT TWO
BUCKETS?

(]) New Treasura Hunt
@ Alpine Ski School 'The
Mountain Awakens.' Th is
show highlights the sport,
selection and use of equipment and apparel and be. gins with the basics of
starting, steering and stop· ·
ping on skis. ·
I]) Little llouaa on tho
Prairie
CIJ Spoc:ea of
'lj]) Spoces \
1!1!1 Buck Rogers
8:30 II III CZl NBC News
[lJ lnoldo Boxing
Cll Rifleman
@ ESPN'a Horse Racing
Wkl}'.
CIJ UIII2i ABC Nowo
0 I]) ID CBS News
CIJ Bualnou Report
lj]) Over Easy
7:00 II III PM Magazine
[lJ Konny Logglno In
Concert
[lJ Pop Spoto: Boat of '83
Cll Alias Smith ond Jonas
(!) SportsCenter .
CD Carol Burnett
Cil Entertainment Tonight
ffi Charlla'a Angela
0 (() Wheel of Fortune
CIJ lj]) MacNeil/Lehrer
Newahour
®News
CIIII2i People's Court
fB Jefferson&amp;
7:30 II III Tic Toe Dough
III Album Flash
(!)To Be Announced
(]) Hogen's Heroes
I]) 0 (() Family Feud
® Wheal of Fortuna
II)
ff11 Entenalnmant
Tonight
1!1!1 One Doy 11 a Tlmo
8 :00, .II [lJ NCAA Basketball:
Kentucky vs. Purdue
III MOVIE: 'Rollover'
[lJ MOVIE: 'A Boy Nomad
Charlie Brown'
(lJ I Spy
(]) MOVIE: 'Tho Shakiest
Gun In the West'
Cil Ul II2I Fall Guy Ter~i
sends Colt. Howie and
Jody to retrieve a bail jumper who has used a computer to tie up her ex-lover's
money. (A) (80 min.)

~los'

Cll Ano1hlr Lifo
@
NCAA
Boaketboll:
Brigham Young at UCLA
(J) All In tho Fem_l!y

••

JONES BOYS WATER SER- ,.•'
VICE . Coli 114-387-7471 ' ;
or 814-387-0191.
e

CllC!JIIJCil®lUIIIIID

..
heuled :;.!

Newa

Nead aomethlng
away ar 10methlng moved? - .
Wo'll do h. Call 448-3 I 69
between 9 and II.

CIJ Dr.

Who
Ill Benny Hill Show
I 1:30 (Ii
MOVIE:
'Goodbye,
Emmanuelle'
Cll Dobie Glllla
(J) Cotllno

.
PEANUTS

Water hauling. F•st Service,
low rataa. Cell 814·268·
1743.

....

Cilloop

/Z-28

SOMETIMES LOI/E
LETTERS 6ET STUCK
WAV IN lJ.tE BACK ..

JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Call Jim Lanier, 304-87&amp;:
7397.

87

II Cii I]) CZJIIJ I]) ID Ill

II2I News

Cl) Real ' People Tonight"s
program features a group
of dogs that help heeringimpaired kids. a club tor
people who enjov being overweight and a woman
who is a kung fu champion .
(R)(60 min .)
U Cil ® Whiz Kids The
kids unwittingly help a
convict escape · and run
afoul of a bookie in the process. (A) (6(,1 min)
(I) Mark Russell Comedy
Spec. The King of Capital
Comedy takes a special
look at the notion's most
pressing problems.
lj]) Blake Edwards
1!1!1 MOVIE: 'Clarence, the
Cross-Eyed Lion'
8:30 (l)lj]) Great Performances:
Live From Lincoln Center
'Marily'n Horne's Great
American
Songbook.'
Mezzo-soprano
Marilyn
Horne returns fOr a live
solo concert of American
songs. (2 hrs.J
9:00 Cll 700 Club
@
NCAA
Basko1ball:
Gator Bowl Tournament Championship Game from
Jacksonville, FL
I]) Ill II2I Dynasty B Ia ke
weds Krystie and Fallon ignores Alexis's warnings to
beware of Peter de Vilbis
(60 min .) [Closed Captioned]
(!) Facts of lite
0
(() ID MOVIE:
'Continental Divide'
9:30 C1J George Stevana 'Great
Moments
In
American
Film.·
CIJ Family Ties Alex sets
out to tame the ·wildest girl
i n sc:hoor.· (R)
10:00 II III News
(I) Comedy Store's 11th
Anniversary Show This c elebration features Richard
Pryor, Robin Williams, Ji mmie Walker and 'Sandra
Bernh'ard .
III MOVIE: 'I Nevor
Promised You a Rose
Garden'
Cil Cl)(j]) Arthur Holley's
Ho1al
CZl NBC News Spocial:
Beyond the Miuila Crisis
Marvin Kalb reports on the
controversy surrounding
the deployment of the
Persh Lng 2 and Cruise missiles in Western Europe.
(60 min .)
'
fJJINN News
J 10: 15 (]) TBS Evening Newa
1 10:30 8 III NCAA Bookotboll:
· ·
Mar•hall va. Georgetown
Cll Blondle
(I) Wagner In Vonlce
fill Comedy Time
1 1:00 III MOVIE: 'Endengorad

.'

..
•·

R. G. Mayes and Son, Diesel
SerVice and major overhauls. Experienced in all
types. dletel and gasoline
engines. lndustri•l or auto,
hydraulic and electrial service. located at Mason Co.
Industrial Park, Point Plea·
oanl . 304-67&amp;-7422.

86

Chevy Muncie 4 spd. trana,
1973 • up Chevy truck
pane, 4x4 Chevy Luv wtth
Joop front ulo • 16-38.516 mudder on 10 ln. rima.
neoda aoumbly. Call 814388·9884.

0-.

RINGLE'S SERVICE 8Kparlenced rooting, including
hot tar •Pplication, carpenter. electrician, mason. Call
304 -876 -2088 or 8764560.

••

For aalo-partlv - o rlcllnt
horu. 814-848-2674.

83

PLASTERING • New and

..

Auto Parte
8r. Accuaories

Uveatoclt

- .. . ..

'

Home
Improvements

F 8a K Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call 676·1331 .

lilly loo'o nraa ond Battery
8oloo. Now and uood
oloo, tiro ropolra. 1803 Jotferoon Avo. Point Piuaant,
304-875-11401.

~

,
-:-:--.,.,----:----'

I

63

Why wait? Build your own
24ftx32h. garage or work·
shop, $1,595. Call 1-614- 1
1971 VW Super Beetle. Exc.
886-7311 .
condition, $1,660.00. 614LUMBER - Rough cut, oak, 446-B064 or 446-1387.
poplar, 2x4, 2x6, 2x8. h4,
1 x6, 1 x8 . 1ength available, 8 1975' Olds Delta 88.
foot through 14 foot. Hogg 8760.00. PB, PS, AM-FM 8
S. Zuspan, 304-773·5564 track. 8750.00. 304-6754092 .
daytime .

59 For Sale or Trade

2 bedroom mobile 1 home.
Adulta only . 814-992 2698.

6:00

CAPTAIN EASY

Hondo II banjo great for
beginners, •~c . cond. *71.
304-676-3249.

2 bdr . 12x80 mobile home.
furnished, 1250 mo .. gas&amp;:
water paid, *100 dep .. Call
448-8a83.

12/28/83

1972 Mountain camping
trailer. 19Vz ft. Self con·
teined, shower, good condition. 81700. 773-6t.6 7.

1986 Fender Muatang alec.
guitar with 3 Dimarzio pickups, priced to Mil. *260.
Coli 814246-9378.

for Rent

ME: , I'LL •••

Homes
&amp; Campers

TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third 8un'k beds $60, sofa bed
Ave ., Gallipolis, 446-1699. $50, infant car seat. Call
Spin washers , gas&amp;. electric 446-7643 .
dryers. auto washers. gas &amp; 1 - - - - - - - - - - electric ranges . refrigera - Solid pine twin- bed com tors. TV sets.
plete, exc . cond ., $60. Musi·
cal potty chair $6 , Call
GOOOUSED APPLIANCES 446-0065 eftar 5.
Washers, dryers, retrigera·
tors, ranges; . Skaggs Ap- Marble top coffee table, 3
plianceS. Upper River Rd . table lamps,' $100. Call
beside Stone Crest Motel. 614-256-6244 .
446-7398 .
Very nice livingroom furni ture. Pecan tables with
marble, sofa, 2 chairs, lamp.
Call446-9627 .

WHEN 1 ICE"lt:H THE
VARMIT WWAT LUBI&lt;ICATEO

EVENING

heavy~~~~~~~~~~~~~!:~~~~~~~~

by
man,Frontier).
3 tables, S686.
l&amp;Jltra Sofa,
chair and loveseat. $275 .
Sefas and chairs priced from
$285 . to $895 . Tablet. $46
and up to $125. Hide-ab«ds , $440 . and up to
$526 ., Rer.liners. $175 . to
S375 .. lamps from S28 . to
$75.6 pc . dinettes from
$99., to 435 . 7 pc . $189
and up. Wood table with siX
chairs $425 to $746 . Oeak

The Dclily Sentinei-Pag&amp;-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Auto Repair

Peraona Body Shop,Chester
11 offering paint job• one
color only f184.00 .Body
work •10.00 par hour.
Jen.and Feb. only. 20 years
a•p. 614 -986-4174,

Mans brown leather coat.
london ~og, liner, 44 reg.,
cost $200.00 sell for
20 ' ft . flat bed trailer. Can S65 .00. like new. Polaroid
pull with own pick or car .. camera with bag 810 .00.
Haul anything on it . $26 per Baby playpen $10 .00. 304day. Call614-446-0175.
675-3485 .
. 2 registered Coon dogs. Sale
or trade. 814-742-2304 .

49

by Larry Wright

51 Household Goods

44

furntsh ~' d

jars, antiques, etc. Complete

CARLYLE'"

....

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto-

3 bec1ror m all electric . un$200 m.onthlv,
plus electricity . Glenwood
304-576 -244, .

lau. wood ice boxes. stone

A.LI.

2 bdr . mobile home pertially
furnished . Call 446 · 4292.

Tw o bedr oom mobile hom e
12Jt60,ntt 1r Pr, meroy and
M iddlepvrt area . 614-992 5B58 .

Rt . 2. Athens. Oh. Phone
614-664-4761 . 1-9 Doily .

.. ··"" ...

~- .....
·····~~··

~ ...

KIT ' N'

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood &amp; coa l stovet.
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms
S399. bunk beds complete
w ith bunkies $199. 2 piece
anhon livingroom 1uitas
S199, antron recliners $99.
other recliners 880, maple
dinette se ts $179, box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full $100 set regular- firm
$120. maple dinette chairs
$35, wash stand• $34,
maple rockers $59. 7_ piece
chrome dinette set 8149, 5
pieCe dinette set $99, used
bedroom suites. refrig.era tors, ranQes, che1t, dressers',
Wringer washers. TV' s, dryers, &amp; shees. Call 446·
3159 .

Two bedroom mobil.e home
12~~:60 , near Pomeroy and
M id dleport area , 614 -992 ·
5858 .

Raw Fur Buyer. Beef &amp; Deer

BEDS-I RON.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished 3 bdr .. all electric
m obl le home . Washer &amp;
dryer no pets .. 949- 22.53 .

rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·

December 28, 1983

M iddleport . Ohio

Upholatary

' '·t\

!

'·
,..,.'.

.

Ill illl Nlghtllne
8 Twilight Zono

•

'•••,,

--

0

· Unocremblo 1hoao faur Jumbles,
one letter Ia each square, te form
lour ordinary words.

b
I I r

0

O

0

I STOUJ

I HEANN

r)

1

ITALMED
I
.
[) I tJ
tTONTUB I

J I I

t]

THAi' 15LC,I-Jv'e
5UR:E HA$ 'SOME'THINe THAT'LL KNOCK
YOU~ EYe OUT-•-

Now arrange the ci rded lanera to
tonn tho surprise answer, as suggested by lhe above cartoon.

Prlntanswerhere: A

rI

I I I I I l.
(Answers tomorrow)

Yestarday·s

Jumbles: BEGUN VOCAL EMPI~E MAYHEM
Could this beer be large?-"LAGER"

I Answer:

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A sure-tire end .play
easy road to at least nine
tricks, but, as usual, the
defense refused to help
NORTH
12-28-8!
declarer .
•Qt
As South you d'uck for two
•QJ3
reasons. Sometimes the
t A K Q 10 8
leader will shift to another
+9 6 4
suit. Maybe West started
with K-Q-J-x and when be
WEST
EAST
+K97
• 10 8 53 2
continues wilh the queen, he
• 107650
will drop his partner's 10.
•Ka
H52
Nothing good happens .
+KQJ 103
+s
The queen of clubs is Led and
Easl shows out. Offhand, it
SOUTH
Looks as if you will have to
+AJ6
guess between a spade and a
.
.A9
tJ74 3
's l ' ,
heart finesse, but there l
fairly simple way to av
. •
+As 12
any guess at all.
Vulnerable: Both
You take your ace of clubs
1.
Dealer: North
and start on diamonds.
Three diamond leads are
We111
Nortb East
Soatb
it
Pass
2 NT . necessary to get rid of
Pass
31'(T
Pass
PaSl:i
West's diamonds and you
Pass
now have him on the toasting fork.
Just throw him in with a
Opening lead: •K
club. He can and does take
three club tricks. You chuck
a spade and a heart from

••

dummy and the six of spades

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby

West attacked with the
king of clubs. Any other lead
would have given South an

from your own hand.
Then you can show West
your hand since either a
heart or Spade lead will give
you the rest of the tricks.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

~~,,.. "til"'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
43 " Victory"
1 Shock of hair heroine
5 Dramatize
DOWN
10 European
1 Prototype
river
2 Worship
11 Scottish
3 Fresh sensation
· lake
4 Sea eagle
13 Crossword
5 Less prompt
direction
6 Drunkard
14 Narcotic
7 Friend (Fr. 1
IZ'll1
15 Before
8 Have your
Yesterday's Answer
16 Lambkin's
way!
mom
9 Rhapsodize 23 And not
30 Silly beings
17 Andress film 12 Become
24 Modify
32 Famous
18 Law (Lat. )
profound
25 Trustworthy violinist
19 Apiece
16 Fencing foil 26 Ukraine
33 Diadem
. 20 Cowpoke's 22 French
legislature 38 Smear·
"yes"
season
28 Attic
39 "Diamond-·:
21 Equal
23 Proboscis
24 Greek island
%6 French city
27 Present
28 Robin
Williams
film
29 Muslim
man's name

30 Mild oath
31llire
34 Never (Ger.) """-+--+_,f-35 Memorable
years
36 Samuel's
mentor
37 Stroll
39 Tibetan ffiOIU&lt;b,.,....f~-.jl-t--+­
fO Sheathe
U Bavarian
river
~ Jewish rnunuo

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: ·
AXYDLBAAXR
Ill

LONGFELLOW

One lettert simply stands for another. In this sample A

CZl 'Ton•gnt Show
• (() Polloe Story 'Wolf.'
When ' Wolf' Bozeman is
retired from the force , he
tricks hi's partner into helping him col"!''mit suicide. (R)
(80 min.)
Clllahlnlght Amorlco

CID M•A•s•H

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 1 U 8ec. Aft .. Galllpolla.
448·7833 or 441-1833.

flj'}j}f.\hlfj)if ~THATSCRAMBLEDWORDOAME
~ ~ ~~e
by Henri Arnold llldBobL"

) 12:00 ()) Bumo • Allen
(J) MOYIE: 'For Whom tho
Boll Tallo'
Cil Nlgh111ne

ti

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apoetrophes, the length and formation of the words are all

hints, l!ach dny 1he code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

DG ' F
SYQLF

R

M QQJ
LUWY

I!YFLWN
GQ

GURG

FGQH.

DGRODRY
HNQKWNT
,
Yesler'dlly'1 Ceyploqllole: WE IJSTEN TOO MUCH TO THE .. .

TELEPHONE AND WE IJSTEN
NATURE.-ANDRE KOSTELANETZ

TOO

'

UTILE.

TO ·

�·Paa•

.·
16--The Daily Sentinel

Wednetday, D1CM'Iber 28, 1~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

U.S. Steel closes plant
By Tbe ABMllated l'ml8
As a report showed American steel production is up
by 17.2 percent tbls year, U.S. Steel Co11&gt;. announced
it Is cutting back operations and dismissing 15,400
employees due to "global economic and market
conditions."
U.S. Steel said Tuesday it will close six steel plants
and reduce operations at24othersby June. More than
4,500 active employees and nearly 10,900 already
laldofl workers will be affected.
In New York, the American Iron and Steel institute
said domestic steel production last week- shortened
by !he Christmas holiday - was 6.8 percent lower ·
than the week before. Production for the year to date
Is 17'2 percent ahead of 1982, It said.
Although domestic steel production has been !ising
as the U.S. economy has revived, American steel
executives complaln they are hurt by high levels of
Imports and burdensome labor contracts.
David M. Roderick, chairman of U.S. Steel, said
that "whlle the decision to suspend operations at the
affected units are difficult for tbe employees and
communities involved, !hey were unavoidable In Ught
. of global economic and market conditions in steel."
He said non-competitive labor cost was "an
Important factor" in the company's decisions.
U.S. Steel. which lost $497 mUI!on the tlrst three
quarters of this year, said the closings would result In
a fourth-quarter after-tax · charge of $650 . mllllon.

ROderick said the moves would generate an
additional $00 million to WJ mllllon 1n revenues next
year.
In other economic developments Tuesday:
-A forecast by Standard &amp; Poor's Com. predicted
that the economic recovery wUI broaden ·"
Its base next
year to encompass "most major industry groops." In
!ts aJlllual survey of eight key industries, s&amp;Psaid the
economic recovery wUI grow in l!lW, with "surging '
profit growth" in the airline, auto, chemical and steel
industries, and "substantial !hough less dramatic
gains" 1n other industries such as coal. industrial
electronics and oU.
-The Nat!onal Association of Realtors said resales
of single-famlly homes rose 0.8 percent last month,
due partly to a decline 1n mortgage rates. Home sales
were at a seasonaUy adjusted annual rate of 2.63
mUI!on units in November, compared with 2.61
mUI!on the previous month, when sales had faUen
sllghtly, the group said. The latest rate was 22.3
percent above November last year.
-Citrus processors in Florida and Texas began
working around the clock to squeeze juice from Icy
fruit after two days of freezing weather. Despite
losses, growers said prices for orange juice probably
would not go up. Flortda·v egetable growers, however,
were predicting losses of 75 percent, expected to
reach at least $30 mUI!on. In Texas, citrus growers
said they feared losses of $30 rn!Uion or more.

~------~--------------~

Area deaths

twocouslnsonhls father's side, Ted
Reed, Jr., of Pomeroy; and Ann
Kaser of Freeport, Ullnois.
Reed was a grandson of the late
W.F. Reed, founderoflheFarmer's
Bank In Pomeroy.
Funeral services wUI be held at
the Holy Family of Nazareth
Church, with burial In Calvary
Cemetary, Dallas.

Golden B. Hazelett
Golden B. Hazelett, 86, New
Haven, died Tuesday In Holzer
Medical Center.
Born Dec. 1, 1897 in Branchland,
he was the son of !he late Robert B.
and Harriett VIrginia Diehl
Hazelett.
He was a C8ll&gt;Cnter.
Surviving are his wife, Virginia
Spencer Hazelett; two daughters,
Bernice M. Kunkel, VanNuys,
Calli.. and Rosalie Wingren, Scotls·
dale. Ariz.; one son, Evan B..
Hartford, Mich.; one sister, Dilla
Taylor, West Palm Beach, Fla.; one
brother, Roscoe, Lake Worth, Fla.;
five grandchUdren and three great·
. grandchUdren.
Funeral services wlil be atlla .m .
FrldayinFoglesongFuneraiHome,
Mason, with the Rev. Manford Cass
Hutchinson ofliclating, Burtal will
foUow · in Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 24 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.
Thursday.

Althea H. Bryan

Robert E. Reed
Robert Elliott Reed, formerly of
Pomeroy and recently a resident of
lrv!ng, Texas. died Monday in the
Irving Community Hospital.
Reed was a native of Pomeroy,
but moved with his parents to
Columbus, where he graduated
from high school and atlended Ohio
State University
He was an engineer. and worked
as a consultant with the Fire
Protection Service Company In
Dallas, Texas.
Reed was preceded indeathbyhlS
parents, D. Curtis and Mary
(Elliott) Reed, and a sister, Mary
Catherine, who died In Infancy.
He Is survived by his wtle,
Martha, eight chUdren, thirt""!'
grandchildren, an uncle, Frederick
Reed. Okemus, Michigan; William
Curtis Reed, Saratog!l, Callfornia;

Althea Hyseil Bryan, 87, Clncin·
nat!, formerly of Pomeroy, died
Tuesday In Cincinnati.
Mrs. Bryan wasaformerteacher
In the Pomeroy Schools and resided
In Pomeroy for a number of years.
Sh~ Is survived by a daughter,
Bonita L. Bryan. at home; a sister,
Tacy Wilson; a brother, Homer
Hysell of Pomeroy. She was
preceded in death by her husband,
Leo J . Bryan.
Graveside services wtll be held at
3 p.m . Friday at Beech Grove
Cemetery In Pomeroy. Friends
may call at the Andrewson Funeral
Home In Cincinnati from 5 to 7 p.m.
on Thursday. Services wUI be held
at 10 a.m. Friday at Andrewson
Funeral Home.

Clarificatiof! made
on HEAP funding

A clarification on the avallablllty
of additional HEAP (Home Emergy
Assistance Program) Funds an·
nounced by State Representative
Jolynn Boster Friday l"as made
Tuesday.
Boster's ofllce now reports that
the addltonal $15,txXl . funding in
Meigs County appUes only to PUCO
regulllted utility· companies where
an actual disconnect of service has
taken place, ornon·PUCOregulated
companies, such as Buckeye Royal,
where a final notice before dlscon·
nect has been received. On bulk fuel ,
· a 10 days or less supply, Is required
for participation.
For !his additional HEAP emer·
Weather forecast
gency assislance, application must.
be made In person at the CommunSnow and colder tonight. Lows Ity Action Agency at Cheshire, Rep.
between 20 and 25. Cloudy and cold Boster reports.
with a chance of flurries Thursday.
Temperatures falling to the teens by
evening. Thechanceofpreclpltatlon Meets Saturday
Is 8J percent tonight and 50 percent
The Sutton Township Trustees
Thursday.
will
meet Saturday at 1 p.m . In the
Extended Ohio Forecast
Syracuse
Municipal Building.
Friday lhrough Sunday:
addition,
an organizational
In
Cold Friday with a chance of
flurries in the northeast. Fair and meeting for 1984 will be held
DOt as cold Satunla.v and Sunday. January 1 at 9 a.m. at tl\e home of
Sutton trustee clerk Paul S. Moore,
mgt.~ 1n the teens Friday and In the
'
:.Ill ~ and Sunda.v. Lows Racine.
between5belowand5aboveFrlday,
The Lebanon Township Trustees
between 5 and io ~ and
will
meet Saturday at 9: lJ a.m. at
betweenl5 and 25 Sunday.
the township garage.

AFTER CHRISTMAS

·1

Emergency runs

.

ALL SALES FINAL

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Noxt to Elborfelds In Pomeroy

Story on Page 4

See court story Page 12

e

•

at y

•

enttne

•
'(
upheld

.

2 Sections, 12 Pcge5
20 C.nh
A Multimed ia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Decell)ber 29, 1983

Emergency Food and Shelter
National Board Program. The
aUocatlon requires a voluntary
organization to administer the
program and Blakeslee indicated
that Sidney Edwards of the Com'
munity Action Agency Is a candl··
date for doing that. Blakeslee said
Edwards will be In touch with them
and Alwllda Werner, Red Cross
treasurer, who received the data
from the National Board Program.
Jones reported that work on the
budget Is progressing and !hat final
figures should be available from the

Themattercameupatlastweek's
meeting when Joan Tewksbary.
tuberculosis nurse, met with com·
missioners to request hospltallza·
tlon Insurance (not now offered to
other non-contract · county employees) at a cost of $3,656:88; for
three employees.
However, a commissioner reports since !hat earlier meeting,
Mrs. Tewksbary has Indicates the
other two employes would not be
asking for the Insurance.
The office Is currently operating
$12,iXXl over levy receipts and It was
suggested by Orion Roush, a
trustee, at last week's meeting that
services of the ofllce be cut to
provide the hospitalization.

night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number," was 766. In
the "Pick 4" game, played Monday
through Friday, the winning
number was 4006.

IIF;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::;
WATERMELON PATCH

Union Avenue, from Osborne
Street to Prospect Hill, will be closed
beginning at noon today, possibly
through Thursday, and a detour wUI
be set up around the blocked area.
The closing is due to test drilling In
preparation for repair of slippage
along the road.

Veterans Memorial

One call was answered Tuesday
by the Pomeroy squad, at 4:30p.m.,
when Kelly Chapman was taken r-----;_-----~
from Meigs High School to Holzer
Medical Center In Gallipolis. The
tlrst of Wednesday's runs was made
by Middleport at 7:50a.m., transporting Tim J;:bersbach from the
CA~&lt;E.
Imperial Electric parking lot to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

ANN'S

M~license

paled receipts by about $.lXI,iXXl.

CLEVELAND (AP)
The
winning number drawn Tuesday

Traffic rerouted

Admltted·-Clarence Sargent, Ra·
cine; James Richman, Rutland;
Troy Ohlinger, Pomeroy; Patricia
Cleland, Langsville; Donna An·
dress, Guysville; Julia Haynes,
Vienna, W.Va.
Discharged-Nom Smith, De!ores Wickline, Steven Dunfee.

County Budget Commission by Jan.

3. Original requestsexceededanticl·

Lottery winners

Extends mvltatlon
At yesteroay's meeting the commissioners decided to lilvite the
trustees to attend next Tuesday's
meeting to further discuss the
matter of !he Insurance as well as
the overall budget of the tuberculosis office which is asking for about
$10,iXXl over . levy receipts for
operation in l!lW.
As It was pointed out by
commissioner David Koblentz, It
doesn'tseemfairtoglvetoonewhat
you can't give to everybody else In
!he county.
C. E. Blakeslee presented a letter
to the commissioners a ietter
advising that Meigs County Is
eligible to receive $10,8J'i !rom the

. COUNTED CROSS STITCH
600 LINCOLN HILL

·

POMEROY

COAL MEETING - Gov. Richard Celeste, left,
listens Wednesday ·as Sen. Eugene Branstool,
D-Utica, addresses a group of New Lexington civic

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -State and local officials
hope to save the jobs of 520 Perry County miners, but
they see an uphiil battle in an environmental dispute
over Ohio's high sulfur coal with a Michigan
regulatory agency.
Gov. Richard Celeste, Republican U.S. Rep.
Clarence MUier of Lancaster, state Sen. Eugene
Branstool, D-Utlca, and state Rep. Paul Mechling,
DThornvllle. discussed ideas with New Lexlng!.on and
Perry County leaders at the Statehouse on
Wednesday.
Representatives of the Peabody Coal Co., which
owns the SunnyhUI mine where the jobs are In
jeopardy, and the United Mine Workers also sat in on
the hour-long session.
The consensus seemed to be· that the fight with
Michigan Is not yet over- there's stUI "a crack in that
door," as MUier put it - that new markets may be
found for Sunnyhill coal, and that steps must be taken
to diversify the economy of southeast Ohio.
Sunnyhill Is the largest employer In Perry County.
the second-largest having .a payroll of 125. 1t faces a
shutdown due to refusal by the Michigan Air Pollution

20%To 50%
STOREWIDE

Lifestyle
THIRD &amp; OLIVE
446-3045

GALLIPOLIS

DECORATING

A marrlke license has been
issued to Danny Joe Hood. 31,
Pomeroy, 3.nd Rachel Johnson. 28,
also of Pomeroy. by the Meigs
County Probate Court.

Route 7
Old VFW Hall
Tuppers Plains
667-6485

Control Commission to aUow a utility In that state to
continue burning the higher-sulfur coal !hat Sunny hill
produces.
Consumers Power Co.'s J.H. Campbell Units 1 and
2 burn 5,iXXl tons of SunnyhiU coal daUy under a
contract with Peabody which runs through the end of .
19&amp;1.
Sunnyhlll coal has a sulfur content of 2.6 percent,
compared to 1 percent permitted by Michigan. That
state's control commlsslo~ refused to aUO)I! a
five-year moratorium while Peabody seeks ways to
clean SunnyhUI coal.
Although neither !he governor nor MUier predicted
success In the effort to keep the mine open, they said
t.)1ere are avenues to be explored. Mliler mentioned
intervention by the federal Environmental Protection
Agency.
Celeste said he Is taking steps for at least a
short-range solution. He said he has directed state
Development Director Alfred Dietzel and other state
officials to begin a search for new markets for
Sunnyhill coal.

Natural gas explosion
levels Fairborn home

ELBERFELDS

Famous Hanes 2 layer construction for extra warmth.
Men's and boys' sizes plus Bigs and Talis. Men's
and Boys' Department 1st
floor ..

and

le.,.;m
Perry county officials ahOut the expected .
closing of lbe Sunnyhlli coal mine near New
Le~lngton. ( AP Laserphoto).

Icy roads forced an emergency squad. to deliver a
baby in a parking lot and Ohio's weather-related death
toll reached eight as the state was pounded by almost
every kind of precipitation in !he book In the latest
weather onslaught.
The GaU!a·Melgs Post State Highway Patrol Post
Wednesday investigated 25 traffic accidents In which
three people were injured.
Much colder air returned to Ohio today on the heels of
a holiday weekend winter storm.
Snow that began early Wednesday changed to
freezing rain and freezing drizzle. That mixed with
sleet and as temperatures rose above freezing it
became just rain. The rain changed back to snow as the
storm pulled northeast of Ohio during the afternoon
hours.
The National Weather service predicted cold
weather through Friday as the northwest to north flow
from Canada continues, with highs in the lower half of
the lOs. Flurries were predicted Into Thursday night
and temperatures were expected to rise for !he New
Year's weekend.
Baby arrives
In ClrclevUie, Casandra Renee Ammon weighed 7
pounds,l5ounceswhenshewasborn Wednesday in the
parking lot of Renick's Family Market on U.S. 23.
Medics from the Harrison Township Fire Depart·
men! answered a call to take her mother. Diana
Ammon, 20, to Berger Hospital, but Icy roads slowed
the trip and after a hall hour on the road, theywereonly
a few rrtUes along on their 15-rnlle journey.
Her husband, Dwaynee, 23, had returned home
because ·glilzed roads prevented him from going to
work and they called the medics rather than try to
drive to the hospital.
The medics pulled into the parking lot, where
Casandra was born, and !hey later made it to the
hospital.
"They were scared too, but theydld a good job. She's
perfect," said Ms. Ammon. "Itwasscarybecausethey
said they had practiced, but had never had io do a
delivery before."
In Wood County, WIUiam Vanvoorhis, 26. of Grand

Celeste, Miller.continue
fight to save coal jobs South hit

OPEN FRI. 8o. SAT. 10-6
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
CALL 992-7682

SECOND &amp; GRAPE
446-0332

Winter storm's death
toll reaches 8 in Ohio
By The Associated Press

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OF SHOES

.

Local

'

CLEARANCE

PRICE

ruling

Meigs meets Warriors

operations at the huge faclllty. Company olflclah said
a IAital of six U.S. Steel plants will be ~ and
operations will be reduced at U other plants,
eUmlnatlng 15,400 Jobs. (AP Laserphoto).

1&gt;_ _ _ _ __
S c i p i o Trustees._(eo_n_tin_ued_fro_m...:....pa..::...ge_

(Continued from page 1)
Bentley and Kathryn Crow.
, Fire Chtef Gene Imboden met
with council and discussed making
application for a federal grant for
the fire department and was given
permission to proceed with that
application.

Story on Page 8

•

An appeal has been made for
clothing and furniture for a famlly
whose home and all Its contents
were destroyed by fire Christmas
Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Cooper and
daughter, Sherrte, ·were guests of
th~ Gary Cooper famlly at Portland
when the fire, believed to be caused
by an electrical problem. struck the
five room frame structure.
There was Insurance on the house,
but none on the furniture.
The famlly, now staying at the
Gary Cooper hOme, need clothing,
furniture and other household
Items. These can be left at !he Gary
Cooper home, or Items will be
picked up If !hat Is more convenient
for the donor.
Cooper wears a size 1~ 16 shirt,
pants--36 waJst, 30 length, and a sizeS
shoe. His wife, Terri, wearsaslze30
waist, 32 length pants, small or
medium tops, and a size six shoe.
Their daughter, Sherrte, nine,
wears a size 12 pants, medium
shirts, and a size 4 shoe:

New law

Story, photo Page 3

' Voi.32,No. 182
Copyrighted l 983

STEEL PLANT OPERATIONS CURTAILEDWorkers leave U.S. Steel Corp.'sSouth Works plant on
Chicago's South Side Tuesday. The · company
announced earlier that It will close "most of' the

An appeal was issued today for
Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Mollohan
whose home and clolhing were
destroyed by flreTuesdaymqrn!ng.
Mrs. Molloban wears a medium
(34) top. 7-8 jeans and size 7 shoes.
Mr. Mollohan wears 34-34 trousers,
16-16\lJ shirts; size 12 shoes.
Anyone who ·can help with
furniture or clothing Is asked to
contact Mrs. Mollohan's sisters at
~or 992-7429 or Items can be
left at the Robert Manley home, ~
Park St .. Middleport.

Insurance required

•

Items sought
forfamily ·

Help appeal made .

Bengals' new coach

MaY the harmfmY
and peace ()f the
seas()n abide with Y()U
thr()UQh()Ut the year.
'

FAIRI30RN, Ohio (AP) -The
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. received
dozens of calls Wednesday from
residents concerned abo\lt the smell
of gas In an area where one house
was damaged and ·another des·
troyed by explosions.
A natural gas leak was blamed for
an explosion and tire that sent one ·
couple fleeing for safety and a later
explosion on the same Fairborn
street that destroyed an 'unoccupied
house.
The DP&amp;L office .In Xenia
reported about 150 cails- mostly
. from southern Fairborn· from
residents complaining of natural
gas odors around their homes
Wednesday. While most reports
probably can be traced to the gas
main leak, crews are checking each
canplalnt, said DP&amp;L supervisor
Thomas Blrt. No other leaks have
been found.
Tbe leek, wblch was described as
not being weather-related, was .

traced to a main line buried under
the street between 212 and 213 Cozad
Drive, thetwodarnagedhomes.Birt
said earlier excavation damaged a
section of pipe, and natural gas
leaking from the \leterlorated pipe
became trapped beneath !he frozen
ground and seeped into the homes
along water and sewer pipes.
The section of pipe was replaced
and service was to t:.e restored
Wednesday nlght and today.
Repair crews had to dig up the
street, which remained closed
Wednesday evening. ·
DP&amp;L was first alerted T\lesday
afternoon when a mall carrier
reported a naturalgasodoroutsldea
vacant house at 205 Comd Drive. A
crew found no gas leaks at the
residence but shut of! the gas to !he
house, Blrt said.
Shortly before midnight Tuesday,
John and Norlene Frazier of lll4
Cozad Drive saJd they smeUed ·
natural gas in their home, but fire
J

officials at first believed a defective
ful'nace motor caused the smoke,
Frazier said.
About an hour later. across !he
street, Drexel and VIrginia Brock of
213 Cozad Drive were shaken by an
explosion that blew out their home's
front window and started afire in the
basement. They escaped lnj~ry .
Damage was estimated at $5,000.
Drexel Brock, 64, said he was
sitting In his Uvingroom and his wife
had just gone to bed when !he
explosion occurred.
About three hours later, Norlene
Frazier heard an explosion and saw
flames in the basement next door at
the Charles Richards residence at
212 Cozad Drive.
The Richards house was "a tolal
loss," saJd Fairborn fire Capt. Geoff
Billows. He estimated damage at
$60,0ll to the structure and $30,iXXlto
the contents. The famlly was out of
town on vacation.

By DANA FIELDS
Associated l'ress Writer
The mercury took another dive
across the Deep South today,
spa\IJnlng a snowstorm In Alabama
and at least one tornado in Florida,
plunging Texas Into subzero
weather and raising the death toll
from 12 days of violent weather to
nearly400.
From west Te.;as to snowy
northern Maine. winter tlld more of
its worst: Icy sleet in Louisiana that
closed a major bridge over the
Mississippi River; gusty snow
squalls off the Great Lakes in Ohio,
Michigan, New York and Pennsyl·
vanla; freezing rain that laid a fresh
glaze over roads from Washington.
D.C. to southern New England.
A new mass of cold air settled Into
the upper Mississippi Valley and the
Great Plains, with Worland, Wyo.,
down to 25 below zero by midnight

Rapids, died Wednesday when his car slid off
snow-covered U.S. 6 about three miles from Weston.
State troopers said Vanvoorhis' a utospunandcrashed
into a tree.
Youth killed
And a South Websierl7-year-old , Shane Phipps. died
Wednesday in Grant Hospital In Columbus from
injurjes suffered Tuesday when his car hit therea r of a
tractor-trailer rig on icy U.S. 52 near Sciotoville in
Scioto County.
In Hamilton, the Butler Countycoroner'soffice was
investigating the death of a 70-ycar-old woman,
Pauline McDaniel, who was found in her home
Monday night.
Police said the woman was found on her sofa after a
neighbor saw that the front door of her housewas open.
The thermostat was set at 00 degrees, but the furnace
wasn't operating, officers said, and water was frozen
In a sink and the toilet.
Five other Ohioans already had died in the severe
cold weather which feU over the state just before
Christmas.
Many roads were v(ltuaily Impassable Wednesday
in central, southern ""d sowt heasternOhio,postponing
the opening of state government offices and some
businesses.
Snow parking bans were in effect in Cleveland and
the suburbs of East Cleveland and South Euclid.
Interstates In the Cleveland area were slippery, Police
said.
Bill Fair, operations engineer for District 8 of the
Ohio Department of Transpo11ation in Lebanon, In
southwestern Ohio .. said It was difficult to keep roads
in good condition.
"Roads were cleared se\'eral times. but dropping
temperatures are refreezing roads and icing them, a
general problem throughout the eight -county area, "
Fair said Wednesday.
Residents of Addyston in western Hamilton County
enjoyed running water for the first times inceSaturday
after a damaged pump at the village waterworks was
repaired Wednesday. Many of the viUage's 'higherlying homes went for three days withOUt water after
sub-zero tempera tures caused two water pumps to
malfunction .

by violent storms
MST, and a new Pacific storm slid
into Idaho, bringing rain and snow.
Since Dec. 17. when an arctic cold
wave blasted northern states. the
weather has been blamed for 398
deaths nationwide, and the toU rose
steadily Wednesday as snow and Icy
storms blanketed the South and
East. Florida citrus growers issued
a prellmlnary estimate saying 25
percent of the $1 billion orange crop
had been lost.
Paramedics in Circleville, Ohio,
delivered 7-pcund, 15-ounce Casan·
dra Renee Ammon while parked
outside a supermarket Wednesday
because roads to a hospital were too
dangerous. In Maryland, where
there were so many accidents that
pollee told some motorists "to
handle It between them selves,"
jockeys refused to run on the icy
Bowie Race Course near Washington, D.C.
Utahns had something to cele·

NATURAL
LEAK- A aalural gas leak on
Cozad Drtve In Fairborn, Oblo, touched oil an
explo8loa and a lire at the Cllaries Richards residence
al Zl2 Cozad Drive early Wednesday momlng. 'lbe

•
·.

brate - the sun. Wednesday's 467
minutes of sunshine were more than
half as much as the 713 minutes in
the previous 27 days of December,
the weather service said. ,
"But it's not just Utah. Pretly
much across the sou t11ern states, the
Plains and lots of other places, they
haven't had a whole heck of a lot of
sun in the past threeor fourweeks,"
Bill Sammle r. a forecaster at !he
Severe Storms Forecast Center in
Kansas City, Mo .. said this m orning.
"There's a lot of snow that needs ro
be melted out there, and the only
thing that can do that is !he sun."
Waves of thunderstorms raced
ahead of the cold front across !he
Gulf Coast late Wednesday and Into
South Carolina, Georgia and north
Florida by early today, dropping
hailstones as big as baseball' near
Bainbridge. Ga .. a nd prompting
tornado watches in much of the
region.

Richards were not at home and were on vacation. The
diUJlall' to the home was estimated at SOO,OOO. Shown
In Ibis photograph Is part of the Interior damage. (AP
I a erpboto).

I

,,

..

...

_,\

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