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                  <text>Page-1 4 -

I

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths

Mary J ant&gt; Triplt'tt

Mary Jane TripiNt. 69. Portland.
died this morning at her residence.
She was the daught0r of th0 late
Johnny Pickens and Minnie W0lls.
Survived are fiv0 sons. E rnest of
East Liverpool , awrencc of Pomeroy, John of Gibsonburg . and
Clarence. Lan-:.· and David. IJoth of
Portland .
Funera l arrang0ments will b&lt;'
announced bv the Ewing Funeral
Home.

Sherman I. Rohc•rti'i
Sherman I. Robert s. 7:!. Rt. ~ .

'

Pomeroy, dlro Thesday night at his
residence from self-inflicted gunshot wounds.
Born Jan. 15. 1009. son of the late
G.W. and Rosie Belle Riggs, he was
a retired farmer and miner.
Surviving Is his wife. Dorothy
Moore Robert s of Pomeroy; three
sons, Darrell of Henderson. Sher·
man of Olkahoma City, Okla .. and
Hetman of Pomeroy; a daughter.
Shirley Fillinger of Dayton; five
brothers, Harley of Little Butch,
W.Va .; Pearl of Pomero,·, George
of Bashan. Hubet1 of Ashley, and
Victor of Peach Tree, Mo.; and two
sisters. Esta Robet1s of Pomeroy.
and Faye Powell of Racine.

No one hurt in accidents
Moderal&lt;' damagp wa s incuJTcd
to the vehicles in two accidents
investigated bv the Pomeroy Police
Depanment. with neithN involving
injuries.
The depanment !'!'ports that latt'
Monday night . Martin E. Seelig,
Rutland drove his vehicle onto West
Main headed east and st111ck the

_Property
Transfers
Roy W. Brown, Hilda F. Brown to
Thomas A. Gaspers. Debra A.
Gaspers. Pt . Lot 25. Thppers
Plains.
Patricia A. Wyatt to Mae First.
Donald First, Parcel, Ru tl and.
Paul R. Torrence. Naomi E .
Torrence to Charles Shatto. Pea rl
Shatto. Parcel. Orange.
Anna Howard nka Anna Howard
Oyler. Frederick ·Oyler to Craig
Howard, Debra Jean Howard.
Parcel, Scipio.
James C. Birchfield to Howard C.
Birchfield. Marie L. Birchfield.
Parcels, Rutland .
Willard L. Moore. Karen S.
Moore to Bobby Joe Miller. Debbie
Ann Miller, Lot 3, Chester.
William N. Burris, Sylvia Burris
to Charles Hamlin . Lyda Hamli n.
Parcel. Columbia.

rear of a vchicle driven by John R.
Ty ree. Jr. , Mlddlepot1 . No injuries
WPre incurred by the occupants.
Seeling was cited n a charge of
failure to .v1°1d the right of way and
in Mayor Clarence Andrew' s court
Thf'sday
night accident
forfeited occurred
a $43 bond.
The second
at
I 1: 43 Thesda y night when Danny
Zirkle, Pomeroy, backed out of a
parking space and struck a parked
vehicleowend by James Ash. There
were no injuries nor citations.
Besides Seelig, six others forfeited bonds in the cout1 of Mayor
Andrews. They were Ronald Hall,
New Marshfield. $.51, speeding;
Richard W. Vaughan, Middleport.
$.'j() speed ing; Dixie A nn Proffitt.
Rae in&lt;'. $43, assured clear distance;
Pa ul W. Sturgeon, MiddlepOI1, $43,
speed ing; Wayne Williams. Pome,.o, ·. $'213, tresppass ing; and Henry
G. Price. Wooster, $43, loud
exhaust.

To install offi.. t'rs
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM
will have an open insta llation of
officers Thursda.v, Dec. 9, at 7:30
p.m . at the lodge hall in Chester .
lk freshments will be served .

Admitted -- LJ Lonn)· VanMeler.
Middlepo11 ; Nellie Croce. Long
Bottom ; GladysCrov. Pomero.'·.
Discharged -- Ralph Steinmet z.
Ethel Johnson. Mildrro Fisher,
Wendell Barret t. Helen ShuiPr.

8, 19~2

Billions borrowed for December checks
WASHINGTON tAPI - Social
Secur ity 's old-age pension fund is
borrowing $3.4 billion to cover Its
December checks while members
of the National Commission on
Social Security Reform try to devise
a last-ditch comprom ise.
But time appeared to be running
out for the !!&gt;-member bipartisan
panel, which will hold its last
scheduled meeting F riday. Under
its official mandate. the commlsslon must wind up its business by
Dec. 31.
Severa i panelmembersanda ides

system . Without that signal, the
politicians on the panel may be
unwlllingtostick theirnecksouton a
compromise.
The staff, however, canvassed
members Thesday to see If they
were free to meet againfortwodays
at the end of next week.
The comm ission's executive dl·
rec tor, Robert J. Myers, has sent
the members a memo outlining
ways to build a "fall-safe" mechanism into the Social Securlty system
so the trust funds could ride out
fisca l emergencies, either by bar-

agreed in interviews that there will
be no point to a meeting unless
President Reagan and House

rowing from the Treasury. by
automatically lowering benefits or
by raising taxes.

Speakcr Thomas P. O'Neill can
agree on the pat1iculars of a rescue

The disability fund loaned the
old-age reserve$3.4 billion Thesday

plan.
Butthere is nosignthat isgoing to
happen. Neither thc White House
nor O'Neill has given any signal of
howfareachiswllllngtocomprom ise on the key issues of raising the
payroll tax or cutting the cost-of·
living increases to help ba il out the

tocoverthechecks thatwentoutlast
Friday to 36 million, retirees,
disabledworkersandthelrfamllles.
The old-age fund eventually will
have to repay the loan at 10.75
percent interest.
The Treasury Department said
the old-age fund will have to borrow

again on Dec. 31 In order to pay
benefits on time through next June.
Congress voted last' December to
allow interfund borrowing during
1982 as a stopgap measure.
Last month the old-age fund
borrowed $581 million. Treasury
officials estimated earlier this year
that the total borrowing would run
between ~ billion and $11 billion.
Treasury spokesm an Marlin Fltz·
water said Thesday. "It looks like it
will beat least that high and perhaps

a little higher."
The commission agreed last
month that the system needs to '
generate enough new revenues or
reduce Its benefits by $150 billion 'to
$200 billion over the next .seven
years.
Five liberal Democrats on the
panel have backed a plan fashioned
by former Social Security Commts-.
stoner Rober! M. Ball to speed up
payroll tax hikes, delay next July's
cost-of-living increase

a-····c·H·R·I·s·rM··A·s·r·R·E-ES........

1I

!

Fresh

111 (T
I
I
I

BRADFORD
- 'S

1

Cut Trees Available, or CutYour Own.
Located on Cherry Ridge

urn East at Darwin onto Rt. 681, go 4 miles to Mile
Post 13, turn south on Gravel Road, 1% miles to
grove.)

II

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noticed, held police at bay, trapped
nine people in the monument for
several hours and for ced the
evacuation of thousands of capital
workers in a reckless bluff Wednesday. He claimed to have dynamite in his white van, and he
demanded that the newspapers and
broadcasters devote 51 percent of
their space and time to discussing

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

ister for a S20 Gift Certificate g ' ven away each Saluray &amp; a SSO Certificate on
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WE WILL GIVE YOU TICKET ENTITLING YOU TO A S3 .00
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entinel

I

2 Sec11on \. 16 Pag es

15 Cents

A Mvll1me dia Inc . Newspape r

Death protester's final gesture

_ j ODD OO[Washington,·

&amp; permanent!
lt' Door Wreaths
lt Swags
It Candles ·&amp; Candle Rings
lt Poinsel1ias
Jt Potted Plants
lt' Terrariums

Country singer
Marty Robbins
dies Wednesday

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio , Thursday, December 9, 1982

r-----------~~~--=-:~-"'='---~.,

&gt;t Yards &amp; Yards of New Garland
&gt;t Christmas Arrangements (live

PURCHASE ANY OF THE 3

Vol.31 ,No.153

Copyrighted 1982

WASHINGTON !API - Consumed by a conviction that mankind
Is drifting toward nuclear exline·
lion, a protester who held the
Washington Monument hostage
died in a final gesture for "a national
dialogue on the nuclear weapons
question."
Norman D. Mayer, a White House
protester whom no one had much

Jl 'Basket
of \olicrag cheer

w

The Daily

II
I
ll

Vocational subject
crossover minimQI
at Meigs schools

3-1 vote ratifies
new NFL agreement

HARD TO BUY FOR PERSON

AND

Vt'tt'rans Mt'morial

Wednesday, December

BOMB THREAT - This map located the Washington Monument
In Washington, D.C. where a Florida man threatened to detonate a
device which would blow up a van parked at the base of the monument
Wednesday. Nine people Inside the historical site were permitted to
leave. The ordeal ended Wednesday evening with the death of a&amp;&amp;year
old man. (AP Laserphoto)

the fear that obsessed him.
After night fell, the siege ended
and Mayer was dead . ·
The 66-year-old Miami Beach
handyman, stUI dressed in a blue
jumpsuit, was shot In the head in a
barrage of police gunfire after he
starled driv ing his van from the
monument. He got only a few yards.
" If the truck had become mobile.
we would have had a moving time
bomb in the city of Washington,"
said Chief Lynn Herring of the U.S.
ParkPouce.explainingthedecision
to open fire. The Whit e House wa s
sixblocksaway.
Mayer, wounded, iook down a
flagpole. The van flipped onto its
side. When police got to him. Mayer
wasstlllallve.stillwarningthatthe
vehicle was loaded with TNT.
Police handcuffed him to hLs

~:~~;dwheel:

mtnutes tater he

" ! said to htm that it took a lot of
guts to do what he was doing,"
reca lled the Associatro Press
reponer who acted as a day-long
.middleman between Mayer and
police. "And he said : 'If you know
you're going to die tomorrow it
doesn't take guts."'

As it llirned out , Mayer's threa t
had been empty - the van wa s
loadro with nothing but routi ne
personal effects and detonators
with nothing to detonate.
Police thought Mayer might have
had an accomplice, and they hurlro
tear gas lnto the555-foot monument .
then made a cautious. fruitless
sea rch that ended after midnight.
Mayer had acted alone. officials

sa id .
Aubrey Mayer said his brot)ter
wasn't a leftist. " He's more for 'hey ,
give the little guy a break and get off
m y back."
Mayer had given Wa shington a
scare; forced the city to take not ice
of his message. emblazoned on his
truck: "No. 1 Priority, BAN
Nuclear Weapons...
President Reagan shifted a
luncheon to avoid the side of the
White House that would be most
likely to receive shrapnel ifthet111ck
had exploded. F irst Lady Nancy
Reagan stayed awa y from that side
of the executive mansion. too.
Seven tourists and two Park
Servie0 workers, trapped in the
monument until mid-aft ernoon.
were allowed to leave.
T housa nds of gove rnm ent
workers at the Departments of
Agriculture and Commerce and the
Bureau of Printing and E ngraving
were sent home.
Two Smithsonian museums
closed. Subway trains pulled
through the Smithsonian station
wit hout stopping. Air traffic veerro
away from the monument area.
Constitut ion and Independence
Avenues, wide Wa shington thoroughfar0s. were shut . immobiliz·
ing traffic.
Authorities tried to get a dialogue
going. But Mayer orderro negotia tors from the FBI and the Park
Police off the grounds.
However, he receivm William
Thoma s. a b0ardm fellow anti·
nuclear prot ester who had be·
friendm him during their vigils on
the sidewalk in fron t of the White
House.

WAVES AT POUCE- A man later identified as Norman Mayer,

66. of Miami, Fla .• held Washington pollee at bay lor 11 hours
Wednesday as he threatened to blow up the Washington Monument.
Mayor, who was killed Wednesday evening in a shootout with police.
held some type of radio device which was linked to a truck he parked at
the base of the monument. ( AP Laserphoto)

Southern Coal officials decline meeting offer

Main suspect was in Indiana

Cross Your Hearf
Support can
be Beautiful"

Pia

VAN WERT. Ohio- Postal Inves tigators have determinro that a
man they want to Interview in the slaying of an Ohio postmistress
was in Indiana around the time of the killing, but they are unable to
find him .
Investiga tors probing the August slaying of Betty Jane Mottinger
said Wronesday they are looking for an itinerant Florida painter
who bear s a resemblance to a composite sketch of a man seen near
the E lgin post office about the time she disappeared.
The man authorities are seeking was bellevro to have been based
In Jacksonville, Fla . But Tom Stra usbaugh, a postal inspector in
charge of the probe. said the man hasn't been seen in Florida since
Dec~ember 1981.

•'

J2gdy Language

Youths face murder charges

50°/0oFF

CLEVELAND - A 10-year-old boy who had bragged of killing a
man has been arrestro in last month's shooting dea th of a
70-year-old beverage store clerk who was robbed of$12, police sa id .
·The boy, who was believed to have been working with a 14-year-old
accomplice. was being held In the Cuyahoga County Juvenile
Detention Center today. The pair was arrested as they watched
·
television in their homes just before midnight Thesday.
Patrolmen Richard Kranlske and James Kurka said they
stumblro onto the development In the case several hours earlier
')'uesday. They said neighbors told them of th: boy as police were
investigating an unrelated robbery on the city s east side.

18HOUR
"Thank
Goodness
1.t F.ts,
1 ..·

·Winning Ohio lottery number ..

SELECTED STYLES ONLY
SANTA WILL BE IN
THE STORE
FRIDAY 6-7
SATURDAY 6-7

,,'.
,...

..
·'

CLEVELAND - The winningg number drawn Wednesday night
In the Ohio Lottery's dally game, "The Number," was 320.
The lottery reponed earnings of $584.523.50 from the wagering on
Its dally gam e. The earnings came on sales of $1,038.446, while
holders of winning tickets were entitled to share $453,922.50, officials
sa lei.

Weather forecast

~

urry gals, it's time to savei

Clear and cold tonight. Low 20-2.'i-. Winds light and southerly .
Friday, mostly sunny. High 45-50.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
Fair Saturday and ~ with a chance of snow llurries in the
norih. Good chance of rain 01' 8IIOW Sunday.lllghs ~.Lows 15-25.

Feeling no purpose would be
served by att ending a public
meeting, Sout hern Ohio Coa l Co.
officials have declined to meet with
Wilkesville area residents th Ls
Sunday to discuss longwall mining
techniques at Meigs Mine No.2.
The company has indicatro a
willingness to discuss the problem
privately with propeny owners
whose land is being affected by
subsidence - sinking of ground
after a longwall device has mined
out a coal pocket.
In a lett er to Mary Lou Mullins. a
member of the citizens committee
trying to stop the longwall proce·
dure. American Elect ric Power has
reiter ated the coal company's

position in paying "r0asonable
amounts" for proper ty damage
causro by Southern Ohio Coa l 's
mining operation.
Wan·en Widenhof0r. clir0e tor of
special projec ts for AEP. said the
company is presmtly trying to
sett le with several property owners
in the Columbia Township sec t ion of
M eigs County.
Settlement offers have been
m ade, he said.
" It has been our experience.
however. that public meetings
similar to the one which you have
schedulro do not resu lt in a free
exchange of accurate facts and
informa tion," Widenhof&lt;'r said in

his lett er.
"For example. an appropriate
responS&lt;' to questions regarding a
given fact situation for one ian·
downer may be enti re!\· inappropr iate ror a similar question from
another landowner due to onl)'
minor differrnces in the factual
situations.·· h(' con ti nu&lt;xi .
Widenhofer said there is "a n
undcrsta ndabl0 reluctance" for
property owners to discu ss thrir
land in an open meeting. Thu,,
rr lrvant infonnation is not m;tdt&gt;
known.
Widenhofer urged rPsidenh to
discuss 1heir pro bi C' m ~ wi 1h a
compa ny rC'presC'nlat i\"t'.
Complaints ha vt' been filed with

Southern Ohio Coal b.'· n•, idents
claiming that subsidence has
causC'd structural cbmagP to lhrir
hom05 and personal property and
has led to the disappearance of
spring-fed ponds and cn 'Cks. whieh
the) depend upon as their loca l
watrr s uppl ~ ·.
Thr citizens rom m itl f:(' said if
docs not wa nt to stop mining. j ust
stop longwal ling from PI'PV&lt;'nting
further damagr.
··we don. , want H)uto t tli nk wr 'rr
somr r~ tdira l grou p fighti ng for an
um\·orlh.\ _ raus&lt;'.·· comm illt'f'
JTil'mber 0 ;1\·r !\1 ull ins said at a
m t '('ling I:J \ 1Su nda _
\ '. " 10/p'n• tr:,'ing
to savr ou r· homes.··

Joint chiefs opposed MX missile plans
WASHINGTON lAP! - The
majority of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
advised President Reagan against
his MX missile basing plan, fearing
the president was being " pushed"
into a decision before " technica l
uncet1alnties" were resolvro. according to the nation's top military
offie0r.
Thrre of the five chiefs opposed
the plan to bunch the missiles on a
Wyoming plain, Gen. George Ves·
. sey Jr.. chairman of the Joint
Chiefs, told a · Senate Armed
Services Committee hearing on
Wednesday.
"I don't think you rea lize the
degree of trouble the MX basing
mode Is in .. .. "Sen. Sam Nunn told
Defense Secretary Caspar Weln·
berger at the same hearing.
'Vessey disclosed his colleagues'
opposition as resistance to the
so-called "dense pack" basing plan
stiffened. ,
The House voted Thesday to
delete produetloo money for the
first MX rnlssllesand theSenatewill
~&lt;ike up the question next week.
There were predictions that the MX
would fare better in the Republicancontrolled Senate, but Vessey's
testimony was damaging.
The general told the committee
tha.t the joint chlels unanimously .
suppor!ed fielding the MX, but

presented " differing views on the
basing scheme" to Weinberger and
Reagan.
"Some of the chiefs w0re concerned that the president wa s being
pushed into a final basing decision
before all the technica l unceJ1a in·
ties on the basing system were
resolved," Vessey told the
committee.
Pressed by Nunn, D-Ga., Vessey
said threeofthe fivemembersofthe
Joint Chiefs "recommended not
proceeding with it at this time." One
of the three said he would recom ·
m end going ahead. '.'If It would help
support th e arms control
negotiations."
AI' the hearing. some strong
Pentagon supporters expressed
unusually harsh criticism of the
"dense pack" plan.
· " The public Is getting the Idea the
whole thing Is a boondoggle.'' Sen.
Henry M . Jackson. D-Wash .• told
Weinberger.
Jackson told Weinberger the
House vote stemmed from frustra·
Uon with the many changes in
basing plans. House Speaker Thomas P . O'Neill Jr.. D -Mass .•
however, said the setback for the
MX resulted from "a poor product
and a poor salesmanship job.··
Weinberger, asked why he recommended "dense pack" to Rea-

ga n despite th0 opposit ion of a
majority of the chiefs. said it was
" th0 overriding necessity of having
a response in the ground as quickl.v
as possible" to a growing Soviet
military threa t.
" Dmse pack" is the latest ofmor!'
than 30 basing modes considerro

sinCf' lht' MX program origi natC'd in
1971 Forml'r President Ca rter
wanted to hicle 201 missil&lt;'s in -l .fffi
connC'C'IC'd unclrrgrouncl slwl trrs in
lltah and NC'\·ad;t. but his pbn cln'w
hravy fin • from t'm ·i ronm&lt;&gt;nlalists
and others in the \Vest.

MX PROS- Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger, right, and
Gen. John W. Ve1!18ey Jr., chairman of the Joints Chiefs of Staff, talk
prior to their appearance Wednesday before the Senate Armed
Services Conunlltee. 'The two were among those teslllylng before the
committee on the MX mlsslle system . ( AP Laserphoto)

I . .

-·

•

�4&gt;- ·~

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
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6 14- ~9! - ! l ati

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nuljlt'r ..,•nal•lw'

The push for a
jobs program
!'\ow co nw~ t ht · push lor &lt;..1 jobs program, to h&lt;JW' t hP goH 'rnmrnt crf'atc
and financr ,~- hat thf' pri,·a tr ('("O nom~· can ' t dC'li\'f'l" . It is a familiar ca ll.
and Prpsidrnt Hf"&lt;tgan ~J _, · s hP \\'i ll not lu~ it.
ThP pn'sidPnt b thrPaf{'ning to \'Pto thP k ind of public works
empl u~·mpn t pl;t n Dt ·moc1 ·at~ df'manc l - and ~rnf' Hrpu blica ns \\·ant. too.
RC'aga n ra lb t ht ·rn m: 1kt ·,~·ork. dP.:Icl f'nd jobs. and sa_\'S t hP spc·nding thaI
would n t\ tlt · tll t'lll '" mon • liiH•I\ to prolong thf' C'&lt; 'Onomic slump than to
sol\·(· an _
, ·thing.
En'n t ht · mo..,, .t m hit t ou~ of Dt·m ocra I ir proJX.lsa Is woul d IX' unl.\ · tokrns
toward ('TT'ating work lnr t h&lt;' ~um _, . of 1:! m il lion unf' mp l o~T'&lt;I :\mf'rira ns. If
Sc-na tl' D••m()(Tcl 1..., t.:ot \\'hat t ht "\ want i n thf' ru rn ·nt. po~tscri pt ~-~s ian of
Con grl' ... ~. 1ht ., ~a~ iTwuuld tTP&lt;~ tf' I{{J ,/0 I jobs. ThP_
, . arr n o t likl'l~ · to gC't it:
thcrP isn., t imt , 1-:u ·n if t ht '_
, . did. thr work woulcln 't P:Xi.'-. 1 for man_
, . months.
The ;tdmin i....t r: ltillll o~rhrurs that such programs an · inrllPctin• b&lt;'( '&lt;I U ~&lt;·
b_,. tht ' timt · Cong n ·~ . . t·n~u·lS tht •m . thC' J'P('Pssion tht·~ · an• sup !XJ~('(] to
countl'!".ICI i..., m·.tr ''-" t·nd :\s a rf'~ult, thf' Wbor ()('partmPnt contl'ncls.
pri\·; 111 · 1•m pl u_,., ·r" an · . . r:1rt ing to hin ·agai n. at IX'IIf'r p~t ~·. and with bf&gt;tt(•J'
pruspt ·ch. th an tht· go\'t·rnnwn t fin;.~n r C'd jobs.
But tht · admini str; tt iun h : 1 ~ tX"i -·n cla iming for m onth.o. , tha t rpcu\'P I)' wa s
at h&lt;..~ncl. ;uld it wa ... n't.
L'nt·mplo., ·mpnt ha ~ ri~('n to 10.K pPrrP nt . So tht• prC'~!-. urr ha!-. moun tC'd .
hra \'i l_
, . - but not t·nt ird _
, . - from thf' DPm ocrat ~ .
In th r lamf'·du&lt;"k ..,,._
. ., _
...,ion of Co n gn ·~~ lk&lt;1gan want['(.!, thr 0t'moc rat s
arP :-.c'&lt;'king jut&gt; mt ·t~:-.u n ·:-. ht· dopsn't w;tnl. Sf'natf' ()(•moc r;tt s pm·ision a
S9Ji bi Ilion prugr;rm !1'r I ht · rr~t of this .n ·ar. Tlwi r proposi.l I wouldcincludf'
S.l.:l bi ll ion in highway and tra nsit n ·pairs to !)( • financc'fl wi th a
:l·Cf'nl ·a-gallon inC"n ·; t.. ,i ' in thP ff'flt 'ral g~r so l inr tax .
ThP gas 1ax bi II p. ~.. . ~, '&lt; It hf' !!1JUSt' f'C.I rl_
, . Tuc·sda _
, .. Ncm· !l ou~£' Dt•mocra ts
J re prt1pa ring to ... n ·k &lt;1 ~i •pa r.t!t ·. .)~1 bill ion jobs program. Thf'\ wa ntt o I ir
it to a rrso lut ion pn ,,·iding &lt;t ppru1-, i;t! icm . . tu fina ncP t ht • gm·t ·rnmrn I ;t ft Pr
[).('( ·. 11. ...C&gt; a..., It Jm.lkt • a H('aga n \"Pt o mort&gt; difficult . Dr .ocralir lPadPrs ~'-1.' .
gm·f·rnmf'nt job~ dl"t ' nocurr. hut insist IIH · g:m·£'rnm&lt;•nt must J&lt;"l quick !~·
with um·mpluunt·nr at a -ll · ~ · l · ar high.
H&lt;'agan pro po~f'(lltlt ' high''"" ·' tran ... ir im pro\'f'm&lt;'nl plan. sa~· ing hPdid
~(J bt.'&lt; 't tu ~t · thf • n 'pairs ;~n• ,·i t;tl . not prim&lt;J rii.Y for thP jobs it \vould CTt. ·ate.
I t i~ suppos('(l to gpnrr;Jtc · work lor 1/ tl .IMMI IX'&lt;liJI&lt;' in thP constru clion
in du ~ tt ;.· . ;nul lor atXJUI J :~t .( MU in ot hPr fi £·1ds.
\\' ith that f•x planation . tht' pn 'sidPnl \\'il ~ ablP to stand on hi ~ argumPnt
that traditional publ ic works job~ bills arf' sdf-df' lf&gt;a ting.
But the jotHTPa tion iiSI)( '&lt; 'I of thC' ;.~rlmini ~ tration m(•asu n· i ~ not lost on
RC'publ iC'LI n ~ who want tu It ·nd ol f mon · c1 J!-.t I_
\ Of'mCXTa 1ir proposal s whik•
o!fPring somt•thi ng ol tht ·ir own .

Today

•

Ill

history

Toda.\ · is Thu ro..,(b _
, .. ()('(· ~~. th(&lt;l,.nn l cia_
, of 1 ~»-&lt;~ . ThPn · arr22da~· s left in
fh{' _\"('iJJ" .
Toda\·'s Highlight in llistorY :
On !)&lt;~ · ~. 1!'111. lilt· British Eighth ,\ nm · opt•nt' l its \orth Afri can
o ff~ n si w· during World War II.
On this doli':
In 1/~U. t'o'oah \\'d l~t t · r (·....ta tJ lbht'&lt;.l .'\ t•w YfJI'k C it ~ · \ first nPwspa(X'r.
In 1 ~H4 . F.thiopian and ltdlian troops cla sh&lt;'d on thC' t.xJrdPr hC'IW('('Il
·I talian Somoliland and J·: thiopia .
In 1941. .Japan&lt;'S.:· rn.10p!-. la ndf'&lt;l on l.u1.on l slii nd in thf· Philippinf's
during World \Yar II
In 19ti.1. f'\iknlai rodgorn_\"n·p l ~ t&lt; Hl ;\na si a~ M ik(J_
\ ·an a ~ prt' ~ idrnt of lhP
So\·ict Union
T en y·c·ors ;1go : :\orrll \ 'it·tnJm ;..~nd 1h1• So\" if•t Lnion conc ludf'd i.ln
agrff'mc·nt for m il it ~u;.· .t nd ('f'Onomic aid to H &lt;.~n oi .
Fi\·f' .vPe~rs ago: Sf'(Tf·t t~l-;.· of State· (\Ju s V&lt;JilCf" mPr wi th officials in
Cairo prior to l sral'l i 1&lt;~'\ VIian pt•an · talks.
One vcar ago: PrPs idrnt RC'agan rc•scind r'&lt;l hi." ba n on ff'deral
employ;,cnt for st riking a ir·t raffic controllrrs. but scllcl 1hP\. st ill could not
be hired for th• ·ir old jul"
Today's birthda\Y ,\ri ot Rroclm ck Crawford is 71 wars old . Spc'akr·rof
tht' HouS&lt;' Thomas P. r r \t·ill is 70. Actor Kirk Douglas is 06.
Thought for todaY: ··Th&lt;' common cau s~ for mankind : folly and
·Ignorance···- William ShakPsJX'art'. English plavwright riO!&gt;I-HiHit.

Ot-1 IHe PLU§J
~iDe, a &amp;Mat!-eR
Hou&amp;e Wi~ Be
MoRe eFFicieNT

To HeaT. .t

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, c)hio
Thursday, December 9, 1982

The averted
A coll eague tells the story of the
lieutenant and captain waiting In
the hotel lobby for their companions to rome down .
Two women are spotted descending the staircase. The lieutenant
lea ns over and whispers: "That' s
got to be the ugliest woman I' ve
ever seen
" That' s m, · wifP. " thP captain
hisses.
"Oh. Well. I didn 't mean her.
meant the wom an nex t to her."
"That' s my mother."
The lieutenant pauses. and then:
" I didn't say it."
OnP Is reminded of the Thanksgiving flurry involving the Reagan
adm inistration and the proposal
th at at some point. at some level,
unemployment benefits be taxed. It
is rumored that the president first
heard th at this had been listed
among the hypothetical options to
diminish disincentives to working.
wht&gt;reupon he pushed every execu ti ve butt on simultaneously. ca using
55 administration spokesmen to
pronounce that the proposal in
ques ti on a 1 would not be adopted.
b i was not being considered, c ) was
invisible the whole time. and d I
probably never existed in the fi rs t
piact'. In politics you simply don't
say cert ain things.
it doesn't matt er if they'r e truestill you're not supposed to say
th em . Martin Feldstein. the administroti on's principal economist.
noted a few yea rs ago that at a
certain sa lary level. a Massachusetts taxpayer who lost his j ob
would . during the first year. bring
in 93 percent of his post-tax income
made while working. This by
adding federal. state and city
benefit s. tax free . There are people,
rich and poor, who would consider
trading seven percen t of their net
income for 40 free hours per week.
You ca n ca tch up on your reading,
for one thing.
Among the unemployed in Amer ica there is a division. There are
th ose who cannot find work. And
th ere ar e those who cannot find
work th ey are willing to do. Nobody
disputes that there are eight million

g._.:.__az_e_ _ _ _ _ _ _
w_ill_iam-:-:---F-:-.B_u--:ck-::-ley_Jr..

(or more) Ulegals In America. And
nobody disputes that they are
working. Where did they find the
jobs 7 Stili, one does not say "it. "
And. of course, in some cases. "It"
does not apply.
Here is an interesting figure.
Suppose you were to tax everyone
in America 44 percent of his salary
- this In addition to the taxes he is
already paying. What do you say to
that proposal ? I agree. I mean. talk
about disincentives.
But that Is exactly how much tax
Americans would need to pay by
the year 2035 if current arrangements concerning Social Security
prevail. The Kennedys and Moynihans and Peppers and O'Nellis
treat any suggestion about modifying Social Security benefits as if
President Reagan. paintbrush in

hand, was setting out to touch up
the Mona Lisa. Well, just what is it
that they propose to do about 11 7
Once again, speaking of Social
Security, a division is in order. I.e.,
to distinguish between those who
need every penny of their Social
Security check and those who do
not. It transpires that lJ percent of
Social Security benefits go to the
wealthiest 20 percent of the elderly,
here defined as families with an
income in excess of $30,(XX) per
year.
Robert Lekachman is a witty
socialist and economist in New
York. His idea of a truly pertect
society is one In which 100 percent
of ali the money above whatever his
salary is at City University would
go to the government. Professor
Lekachman writes, "Even today

Social Security and Medicate owe
their relative invulnerabillty from
David Stockman's budget bleeders
not to the non-voting poor but to
politically alert, middle-class Grey
Panthers and members of the
American Association of Retired
Persons."
Abraham Lincoln once asked a
question which. in our smugness,
we have always taken to be
rhetorical. We are here. he said at
Gettysburg, to test the proposition
whether a government of the
people, by the people and for the
people can long endure. But the
question is very serious. And the
Averted Political Gaze, when unpleasant questions are asked, is a
hideously eloquent means of answertng Mr. Lincoln : No.

WASHINGTON I API -National
Football League players have
overwhelmingly approved a new
$1 .6-biliion collective bargaining
agreement with only the initialing of
a separate document by management standing in the way of
apparent labor peace in pratessional football for the nexl fi ve
years.
With 26 of 28 teams reporting.
union officials reported Wednesday
night! hat the league's 1,500 players
had approved the new agreement
by a 3-1 margin.
"We are delighted by the r atifica lion," sa id c d Garvey, executive
director of the National Football
League Players Association.
Union officials refused to disclose
the exact vote Wednesday or give a
team -by-team breakdown.
Among the teams responding to
an Associated Press survey. the
Minnesota Vikings, San franciscO
49ers. Washington Redskins. New
York Giants. Dallas Cowboys,
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Houston
Oilers, Atlanta Falcons and Ballimore Colts ali voted to approve the
new contract . The Detroit Lions and
Chicago Bears both voted to reject
it . Two other teams. the Phiiadeiphia Eagles and Miami Dolphins
had not voted by Wednesday night.
Results of other clubs were nol
immediately available.
The ratification vote comes three
weeks after negotiators reached a
ten tative settiC'ment and the players
returned to work ending a 57-day
strike that interrupted the NFL's
regular season for the first time in
history.

- Ask to check the plumbing.
Then pull out your tape measure. If
the bathroom Is 45 square feet and
includes toilet. washbowl, vanity
and shower. you're dealing with the
top of the pecking order. If It's only
25 square feet and has nothing more
than a toilet and washbowl. you
may be was ting your time on a
nebbish.
- If you can manage it. try
pacing off the brass hat'sofflce: 750
square feet is top drawer. especially if there's a 500-square-foot
conference room next door; 400
square feet denotes a definitely
lower level of power.
-Bring the conversation around
to gourmet cooking. The really
top-grade potentate will have a
50-square-foot kitchen, with fourburner. double-oven electric range.

refrigerator, dishwasher. sink and
built -in cabinets, and probably a
300-square-foot dining area to boot.
With newcomer s arriving every
four years or so. steps have
naturally been taken to see that
government officials don't stray
beyond the bounds of elegance
appropriate to their rank. The
General Services Administration,
which provides the office furnishings, has codified the whole thing
according to the levels of official
position.
T he uncertain appointee wlli first
want to check the "use standards"
listed in the GSA's Federal Property Management Regulations, to
avoid the embarrassment of ordering the wrong kind of desk or
perhaps a valet rack when he's
entitled to nothing more than a

Bishops and the bomb
NEW YORK !NEA l - Ameriobjectionable: "support for immeca's Roman Catholic bishops are
diate, bilateral ver ifi able
being edged into unfamiliar and
agreements to hail the testing,
dangerous territory by the draft
production, and deployment of new
strategic systems"; "support for
pastoral letter on nuclear weapons
that is now being circulated among
negotiated bilateral deep cuts in the
them and which they may formally
arsenals of both superpowers";
approve next May. Liberals who
"support for a Comprehensive Test
have lately been concerned that the
Ban Treaty" ; and "removal by all
parties of nuclear weapons from
Moral Majority is endangering the
constitutional separation of church
border areas and the strengthening
and state have fallen unaccountaof command and control over
bly silent before this proposed . tactical nuclear weapons."
massive intervention in defense
The chief problem with these
affairs on the part of the bishopsproposals is getting the Soviet
Union to agree with them . Presifor the good if not terribly logical
reason that they agree with the
dent Reagan must be sorely
draft letter.
tempted to appoint Archbishop
M y own position Is the reverse,
Bernardin as a special envoy to go
and rather like Voltaire's: I
to Moscow and negotiate the
disagree profoundly with the letter,
removal by the Soviets of the 200
but see no constitutional problem
nuclear-equipped intermediatewith it whatever. Both the bishops
range SS-20s they have deployed in
and .Jerry Falwell have a pertect
the border areas of their satellite
right. perhaps even an obligation. , states. (The Western response to speak out on public issues that
the Pershing rntssiles - won't be
are of moral concern to them as
deployed for another year.) There
Christians. What perturbs me
is also the dlfficuity that one of the
about the letter is what it says bishops' proposals - "verifiable
and, far worse, what it leaves
agreements to hail the ... producunsaid .
tion- of new strategic systems"The letter's four specific recomis beyond the capacity of modern
mendations are comparatively unman to achieve, unless the bishops

know something about verification
procedures that Washington
doesn't know.
More disturbing, however, are
some of the hints tossed out In other
sections of the letter. The United
States. for example, is called on "to
take some independent initiatives,
beyond those already taken," to get
mutual arms reductions rolling. As
the last four words quoted concede,
the United States has already
repeatedly made unilateral gestures in the direction of arms
reduction, and the only Soviet
response has been an immense
build-up of their warmakingpower.
Again, the draft letter sharply
condemns "a form of antiSovietism which falls to grasp the
central danger of a super-power
rivalry ... and the common interest
both states have in never using
nuclear weapons." This seems to
be saying that any interpretation of
Soviet motives which concludes
that the Soviet Union will, if
necessary, use nuclear war, or the
threat of such a war, to achieve
Soviet objectives Is "a form of
anti-Sovietism" and an unacceptable form at that.
But what if such an interpreta-

coathook.
The r egs state that Level A
(executive) may have "executive"
wood furniture; Level B (middle
management) are allowed " unitized" wood furniture, and Level C
(ail the rest) must make do with
contemporary steel. general steel
or general wood furniture.
Once he has found his proper
niche, the official turns to the GSI
supply ca talog or the Federal
Supp ly Schedule . They list
hundreds of Items that the GSA
either has in stock or can order
from suppliers.
Included in the bureaucrats' wish
book are such necessities as
drapes, bedspreads, shower curtains, artificial plants, planters,
urns and wail art.

William A. Rusher
tlon is the correct one? here we are
very close to the heart of the
problem. Although the draft letter
expressly eschews unilateral disarmament I "we do not advocate a
policy of unilateral disarmament" 1, it buries that assertion in a
dependent clause of a sentence
about something else, while the
unstated implications of certain
parts of the letter seem to point
inescapably in that direction.
For example, directly addressIng workers in defense industries,
the bishops acknowledge the possibility that they may some day
conclude (although they haven't
done so yet) "that even the
temporary possession of nuclear
weapons may no longer be morally
tolerated." What would such a
conclusion amount to, if not a call
for unilateral disarmament?
If that is what is on the blsbops'
minds, they have an obligation to
say so frankly. And if they are not
prepared to go that . far, then it
seems to me that they are equally
obliged to acknowledge that free
peoples have a right to defend
themselves with the weapons that
freedom's enemies are preparing
to use against them.

DOONESBURY.·

By KEITH WISF.CUP
Aft er losing twice on their home
floor, the Meigs Marauder basketballers try their luck on opposing
Ooors this weekend with a Southeastern Ohio Athletic League
contest Friday night at Jackson
and a non-league battle Saturday
against Federal Hocking.
The Ironmen won their first
game of the year two weeks ago
against Minford 68-61, but have
dropped two SEOAL tilts since.
Jackson lost at Waveiry 58-53 then
at Ironton 45-41 . The Ironmen were
picked third in a pre-season poll.
"They're pretty quick and are
good outside shooters. They have
three 6-2 kids so they have decent
size.' That's how Meigs coach Greg
Drummer summed up the
Ironmen.
The status of sharp-shooter AI
Collins is yet to be known. Collins,
one who coach Drummer says may
be the finest shooter In the league,
was suspended last week for
dlsripiinary reasons. Collins played
in Jackson's opener, their only win.
"If we ). can improve on our
shooting and play defense as well
as we have, we should be OK,"
added Drummer.
Saturday night the Marauders
will play a Lancer five that is 1-3
overall and 0-3 in Tri-Valley
Conference play.
Federal Hocking defeated Eastern 52·50 in their opener, but have
since dropped tilts to league foes
Alexander. 65-59, Nelsonville York, so.il2, and last Tuesday to
Belpre 83-62.
"We match up real close in size
and speed with Federal Hocking.
The team that commits the fewer
turnovers should win," surmised
Drummer on scouting reports of
the Lancers.
According to Drummer, the
Marauders will try to incorporate
more people into a game action this
week. Meigs has used basically six
players while utilizing a full court
press.

The Marauders will start 6-3 Bill
Holcomb at center, 6-0 Greg Taylor
and 5-11 Rick Chancey at forwards,
and 5-9 Rick Edwards and 5-11 Nick
Riggs at guards.
Chancey comes off his finest
pertormance as a Marauder with
14 points last Friday, 10 of which
came in the final quarter to keep
the Marauders within striking
distance. Meigs lost 4942 to Logan.
Holcomb and Taylor have been
the dominant rebounders in each of
the Marauder two games. Taylor
has 20 while Holcomb has added i7.
Riggs, also with 14 last week,
leads Meigs In scoring with a 11.5
per game total while his running
mate, Edwards, has averaged nine
in a game. Both are capable of
filling the hoop from outside.
Jay Evans, 6-0 junior, has filled
the Meigs sixth man role admirably. Evans, whose forte is strong
defensive play, averages two and a
half per game.
Coach Mlck Childs' reserve are
also looking for their first win of the
year. A pair of freshmen, Rick Wise
and Mike Chancey, have hit for
double figures in each of their
games and appear to brighten the
Marauder basketball future
fortunes.
MEIGS CAGE SCORING
PlAYER
FG Ff 11' AVG
Nick Rlgj&lt;S
Rick Chancey
Rick Edwards
Greg Taylor
J ay Evans

6
9
8
5
2

ll
2
2
2
1

Bill Holcomb

2

o

4

2.0

Mike Kennedy
Dan Thomas
Scott Pickens
George Hobson

1
0
0
0

0
1
0
0

2
1
0
0

1.0
0.5
0.0
0.0

23 11.5
20 10.0
18 9.0
15 7.5
5 2.5

32

24

88 4G.O

(Reserves)
RJck W!Sf'
Mike Chancey

Dan Thomas

Jackie Welker
Scott GIK&gt;en

12
10

7
4

31
24

3

2

8

2

Page

3

As usual, Steinbrenner gets
control of meeting

" We're happy that the players
have ratified. but we have to ~ake
sure that the agreement the owners
ratified (on Nov. 17) is the same
agreement that the players rati lied," said management's chief
negotiator, Jack Donlan.
"As far as we are concerned it is
over ... Garvey said.
Union and league attorneys failed
again on Wednesday to agree to the
language of a separate "memo of
understanding" calling tor a withdrawal of unfair labor practice
charges pending before the Nationa I Labor Relations Board and at
the same time prohibit both sides
from engaging in similar activi ties
in the future. The owners also are
pressing the union to drop an action
before the National Labor Relations
Board in which they have charged
the league with unfair labor
practices.
Without the separate agreement
the overall contract will not be
signed. Donlan insisted late
Wednesday.
Thelmmediateaftershocksofthe
new contract not 30ing into effect
would be the failure of the player s to
receive $00 million in cash bonuses.
the possible cancellation of one
weekend of games originally wiped
ou t by the strike and later
rescheduledfortheweekendofJan.
2-3. and a return to the 10-team
playoff format as opposed t~ the
16-team tournament now scheduled
for the strike-shortened season.
Garvey, who along with the
player reps, who votf'd 19-9 to
recommend ratification on Manday, said the union had gone as far
as it could in pressing its demands.

TOTALS

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

NFL players
approve pact

Marauders prepare
for busy weekend

D.C. honcho statu'-..Ls_______J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - A visitor to
Washington . wandering through
the corridors of bureaucratic
power, may be understandably
confused trying to figure out an
offici al' s tru e import ance just from
the job title. Who has more clout. a
deput y or an assistant. a deputy
assistant or an assistant deputy?
Takt&gt; hea rt. There Is a surefire
way of telling the big shots from the
mer ely pushy peasant ry:
- Check the official's wastebasket. If it 's made of wood. he or
she is a V.I.P . of impeccable
credentia ls. If it's made of steel.
forget it.
- Is there a water carafe 7 A
dictionary stand 7 A hai tree7 A rug
on the noor 7 Ail these items are
marks of distinction in the federal
bureaucracy.

Pomeroy

I

5

15.5
12.0

4.0

2.5

1
0
2 t .0
Dave Fisher
0
1
1 0.5
Nick Bush
o
0
o o.o
Bobby Foster
0
0
o 0.0
Trey Cassell
0
0
0 0.0
Mlke Cline
0
0
o 0.0
TOTALS
28 15 71 35.5
Von~~} Sooring by Qua11e,.:
Opponenets
'll 16 l3 34-UO
Meigs
16 14 22 36- 88

FEElS IT'S OVER -

Ed

Garvey, players' director lor the
National Football League Players' Association, ~s the ratlflcaUon of a new Dve year
agreement ends Ute long, drawn
out football strike of 1982. ( AP
Laserphoto)

Children more
important than
winning award
HOUSTON iAPl - Arkansas
defensive end Billy Ra y Smith
would like to win the Lombardi
Award tonight . then return to the
city New Year's Eve to help the
Razorba cks win the Bluebonnet
Bowl against Florida .
But the first -team Associated
Press Ali-American has an even
higher goo I.
Smith says he'd like to have as
much heart as a group of kids he's
visited her e the past two years as a
finalist for the Lombardi Award.
The award names the nation's
outstanding collegiate lineman atid
benefits cancer resea rch of the
American Cancer Society.
''I'd like to win the award. but
that' s not the real reason we are
here:· said Smith. "Most people
nevpr get to see what these kids
have to go through with chemotherapy and dialysis. They show more
heart than anyone I've ever come
across .
" It is amazing to me their attitude
and thP wav they face facts... he
sa id.
Nebraska centt'r Dave Rimington. a two-time Outland Trophy
winner. Arizona State linehacker
Vernon Maxwell and Southern
Ca lifornia nose guard Georg&lt;'
Achica are the other finalist s for the
award.

HONOLULU (AP)- If you want
to know what the New York
Yankees are doing, ask General
Manager Hank Peters of the
Baltimore Orioles.
If you want to know what the
Baltimore Orioles are up to. ask
Yank ees' own e r Geo rg e
Steinbrenner.
That's how confusing baseball's
81st annual meeting has become.
Their maneuvering involves free
agent Steve Kemp. The former
Chicago White Sox outfielder and
his agent. Dick Moss. have been
leaning toward signing with the
Orioles.
Peter s walked out of an American
League meeting Wednesday and
said. "Dick Moss has informed
Edward Bennett Williams 1Baltimore owner! that Steve Kemp is
going to accept the Yankees offer."
Steinbrenner. informed of Peters·
statement. said."! don't know what
you're talking about. As far as I
know the Orioles are not out of it."
According to one source. Kemp
will sign a $5.5 million. 5-year
contract with the Yankees.
Adding to this comedy of statements. Clyde King, who is the
manager of record of the Yankees.
said he knew nothing about the
Ke'Ylp situation.
He said. "wait a minute. boys.
I've got to go find out what's
happening, .. and he headed for the
hotel escalator.
Of course. King is supposed to be
on his way out as soon as
Steinbrenner gets through restruc turing his team .
Other th an th P Peter s-

Steinbrenner-King act, it was
another day of inaction at the
week-long meetings. In three days.
just one trade has been completed.
While the trading was nonexistent . major league owners met
jointly and in league sessions. For
the most part it was talk.
There was still another unusual
situation.
It was reportccl thot the Chica go
Cubs were going to hold a news
conference in Chicago and announce they had signed free agent
Steve Garvey.
That was news to Dallas Green.
the Cubs' executive vice president .
who wa s here try ing to make some
trades.
" I didn't order any conference in
Chicago... sa id Green. "I don· t know
anything about it . I don't know
where that camp from .
" But that doesn't mea n wp 've
given up on Garvey ...
The Cubs reported I)' have offPred
$7.5 miilion to Garvey, the formN
Los Angeles Dodger first baseman .

ANNOUNCING
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Reimond Jr. returned $7.40.$3.60
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The 7-9 daUy double combination,
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Pome roy- Middle port , Ohio

Today's

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Thursday, December. 9, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Iowa dumps Marquette, Virginia romps Duke

Southern-Eastern renews rivalry Friday

Sports World
By WW Grimlley
AP Correspoodeol

The' r haractC'rs c h~ngt • butt he S&lt;'C'nf' is the samP. a nd so are thC'wordsa nd
1he dr&lt;'ams.

" My aim is lo bt.' lh&lt;• IX'sl woman lx1Skclball pia)·er in the wor ld and
compete in the 191'1Olympics... said Anne Donovan. t he6·fO&lt;JI·Hccnter ofOld
· Dominion U ni w•rs it~· . one of thC' &lt;I ITa~· ofpPrsonalities who pourro in toNe\v

York Wednesda,· to givp the women' s coill'giate game a push.
ThC' occa sion wa s an announrf'mPnt b~· Koctak. sponsor of thf' women's

A ll -America team selt'C iion. I halt he teams would be expa nded this S&lt;'ason
to four di\t.., ions from thf' prP\·ious om" - uni\·rrsity. largr ro llegf'. small
coli!'ge and j unior ·communi tY colleg&lt;'. with coaches doing the picking .
. This. il was announced . resulted from the rapid growth and popular ity of
• thf' womrn 's ga mC'.
DonO\·an t'l'pri'St'nl s the cream of the 19!\2-RJ crop. fa von'() for the Wade
Troph.v . S)mbol nf Pla yr·r of the Year. which in the past ha s gone to such
stars as Carul Bl;.tl.t •jowski. Kane\' Lieberman. Lvnelte Woodard and Pam
Kellv .
In wumen 's basketball. thcsr' would be the equi,·aient of foo tball 's
Ht'i sman Troph.\· w innPrs C'X fX'C'IPd to go on to famf' and fortune in the
merc£'natT world of sport s. !'\ol so. ThP\' bt.&lt;·amc ha ve been gia nt s of their
ga mC'. aUdresS&lt;"'d up \Vith nowhPrC' to go.
ThP ' ·Blazr. ·· as Rlazejow ski was ca ll('(! whf'n she was awing ga ller ies as
th e shooting ll'iz&lt;lrd of I he Mont clair. r-1 .•J.. Stale College, fi,·c )'ca l'S ago
st()(Xj on thf' ~a me• (X)dium as Dono\ ·an ancltolcl of her primal;.' aims. " M.v
goal is to go 10 the Olympics and be the best ... she sa id .
She mel only disappoinlm!'nl .
She qualifim for the Ohmpic lmm bul nc\W got closer than the Grorge
Wa shington Bridge to Ihe 19RO Moscow Games. boycotted by Uncle Sam.
Shc took a flingaltheWomPn's Professional Basketball Leagueonl, . !OS('(' it
founciN a fiN thrCP struggling , ·m r s. She finall)• landed a promotional job
v,:ifh a shOC' manufar turrr
:\a nc)' Lirhr' rman. lwiC'(' winner of the Wade Trophy, became Girl
Frida.\· for trnni s c hampion Martina NmTatilova, serving as tra iner,
motivator and lrcl\'cling sPC t'Ciary . She is reported arra nging a pro
basket balltour of Europ&lt;•. where women lxt skctballrrs a rr wcll·rC&lt;'cived .

By SCOTT WOLFE
Tuesday night game against Fort
Friday evening at Eastern High Frye, Southern has had four days
School the always exci ting Eastern
of practice to prepare for Its
· Southern r ivalry will be r enewed
Eastern Meigs county r ival.
as second round SV AC cage action
Eastern, also In a rebuilding
resumes. Both teams are facing
year, is still fighting Injuries.
r ebuilding years, although South·
Currently just eight men are active
em hasn't suffered with Its latest
on Its roster.
assortment of basketball offspring.
In most games EHSisgivlng upa
so far this season. Currently the
district height disadvantage but
Tornadoes are 2·0 overa ll , while
Eastern is 0-3.
hopes
make
up for the deficit
In I
hustle to
and
determination.
Accord·
In two ou tings Southern guard
Zane Beegle has canned 24 and 31
points in ou tstanding periorman· ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
ces, while point man Rod Littlefield I
and Nick Bostick haven't been
cutting their opponents any slack
from the offensive point of view.
Both have hit double figures In bot h

Although EHS shooting percen·
tages have been below par, Its
defensive unit has been coming
along with Its aggressive style of
play.
The reserves start play at 6: 30
with the varsity tilt slated forB p.m.

lng to size this Friday night the two
Meigs county schools should match
up quite evenly.
Lone returnee Roger Bissell has
picked up most of the slack In the
EHS shooting game, scoring 23 and
12 points In his two outings.

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previous contes ts.

Last week Coach Carl Wolfe's
Tornadoes spotted t he Kyger Creek
Bobca ts seven points, before un·
leashing a hot . handed 56 percent
field goal average on the Bobcats.
for a &amp;'l-66 triumph. SHS also sank
19 of 22 from the line.
Unlike the Eagles, who played a

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gels two as he dunks the ball over Duke's Chip EngeUand; 14, Dan
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Cameron Indoor Stadium at Durham, N.C. (i\P Laserphoto)

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NEW YORK (API -StanBlinka
says his one-game suspension for a
flagrant personal foul would not
have been assessed If television
cameras had not focused on the New
York Jets linebacker on that
particular play.
; Bllnka said he thought the
punishment was severe because "it
lfas so well displayed on television.
People make shots like that all the
tllne and nothing Is made of lt. I'm
not embarrassed by all this because
I wasn't trYing to hurt anyone."
: :National Football League Com·
rhlssloner Pete Rozelle suspended
~llnka )Vithout pay and fined
i:konard Thompson of the Detroit
L.lons$l,lXXIWednesdayforcommlt·
tlng flagrant fouls.
• Rozelle said Bllnka's hit " r anks
with the worst Infractions I have
witnessed In an NFL game." The
s'uspenslon will keep Bllnka out of
the Jets' game Sunday against
visiting Tampa Bay and will cost
lilrn about $4,500 In pay.

WE'RE
IN THE
YELLOW
PAGES

119 W. SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PHOf4E 992·2139 .

The Ohio State coach would
prefer
take
lmesatoyea
l'. his sq uad to F lorida,
New York City and the West Coast
rather than the hills of Wes t
Virginia . " We want our players to
have an opportunity to travel and
we already have a lot of games in the
Midwest," he said.
Ca tlett believes the Mountai·
neers' back-to-back 20-victory sea·
sons may have something to do with
Miller's decision. The Mountal·
neers are already 4·0 this season,
compared to a 2·0 start by Ohio
State.
"Yes, I wanted to continue the
series. I think it's ashame. There'sa
lot of obvious reasons why we should
keep playing. We recruit the same
players. We're so close by, the
expenses aren 't much. Ohio State
sells its place out and we sell our
place ou t." Ca tlett said via
telephone.

with a forearm during the Jets' 15·13
victory at Shea Stadium Nov. 28.
Thompson, on Detroit's punt ·
coverage special tl'am , leveled
Leon Bright of the New York Giants
with a forearm to the throat while
Bright was waiting for a punt late in
the Giants' 13·6 Thanksgiving Day
victory at the Pontiac Silverdome.
Jeffer son and Bright each left the
game - Bright on a stretcher following the respective incidents.
Neither was seriously injured and
neither Bllnka nor Thompson was
ejected from the game.

" r llllll II ONI

Pressley
10 points
and its
10
rebounds added
as Villanova
upped
record to 2-1.
St. John's Coach Lou Carnesecca
was a winner for the lXlth time in 15
seasons. Kevin Williams led the
way with 21 points and David
Russell had 20 for the 6-0 Redmen.
Michael Payne was FDU's high
scorer with 20.
Louisville, 5-1, used 14 points by
both Rod McCray and Milt Wagner
to roll over Eastern Kentucky. Dan
Federmann scored 20 points and
Tyrone Beaman added 17 for
Tennessee, 3-0. Federman, a
junior center who aaverages under
five points per game, also had eight
rebounds. Arizona 's Frank Smith
was top scorer with 23.

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Freshman E rnie Myers had 15
scoring blitz in the second half after
Missouri-Kansas City 50; Okla·
Alabama State, which is 3-1 in Its
points and eight rebounds but it was
homa85, Westmont 62; AlrForce79,
first season of Division I play,
Thurl Bailey's bucket In the second
Adams State 60; Arizona State &amp;1,
bottled up Hoyas center Pahick
half that put North Carolina State,
Northern Arizona 66; Colorado 57,
Ewing with fHi Lewis Jackson, who
3-0. In front to stay.
Colorado State 55; Utah State B6,
also scored 30 points.
In other action, It was Army 59,
Utah ffi, and Alderson·Broaddus88,
Missouri, 4-0, used Steve StipanoKings Point 51; Boston College 102,
Davis &amp; Elkins 87.
vlch's 24 points and the long-range
Brown 75; Holy Cross 61, Harvard . - - - - - - - - - - - marksmanship of Jon Sundvoid to
59; Manhattan 52, Seton Hall 51 In
down Jackson State. Sundvold, a
overtime; Penn 73, Southern Methoguardwhoscored 16points, hitthree
dist 61; Rhodeisland84, LaSalle82;
bombs to lead a 15-2 Missourl spurt.
St. Bonaventure 86, Can lsi us 73; St.
Housron·rallled In the second half
Peter's ffi, UNC-Charlotte 57; East
No~~:;"·~rHThe
belllnd Michael Young, who scored
Tennessee State 80, South Carolina
Christmas
16 of his game-high 22 points after
75; Louisiana State 88, Texas A&amp;M
Holiday Season
Intermission. Auburn's tenacious
70; St. Joseph's, Pa. 64, Maryland
~~e ~:~~n °~:=:ew~~~~=
zone defense kept things close In the
56; Virginia Commonwea lth 54,
Cactuo, Violets, Foliage Planto &amp;
first half.
.. Richmond 48; Ball State 76,
Hanging Baskets. Candle arrange·
menta, door wreathes. and cut
J oh n P lnone scored 21 points for Wisconsin 66; Dayton 69, Mlaml67;
Chrislmao T11181 . Now Taking Orden
Villanova, which ended matters
Dllnols 59, Kansas State 55; Iowa
for Grave Blankets.
earlybyscorlng25stralghtpolnts ln
State 52, Drake 47; Michigan 95,
Open Doily 9 to 5
the first half. Freshman Harold
Cleveland State 72; Nebraska 69.
~~~';T ~ ~~

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' COLUMBUS, Ohio tAPt \yha!'s the rea l reason behind Ohio
State basketball Coach E ldon
Miller 's decision toenda41 -year-old
sertes with 'West Virginia?
Miller says he wants to give his
Buckeyes opportunities to play
outside the Midwest, but West
Virginia Coach Gale Ca tlett believes it's because the Mountaineers
have consecutive 20-v i ctory
seasons.
. The neighboring state schools will
play for the lOth time Saturday night
In Columbus in the series that goes
back to 1911. Ohio State's onlv loss In
the nine games aga lnsi West
Virginia cam e a year ago, 73-68 in
Morgantown, W.Va.
· , Miller has played West Virginia
every year beginning in 1979,
winning two of three decisions.
"They wanted to continue it ,"
MUier said, "but when we play
non-league road games we like to
travel to different areas of the

By Associated Press
The Iowa Hawkeyes don't care If
they have to beat you from the inside
or from the outside. as long as they
bea t you.
Seventh-ranked lowa did the j ob
from both areas Wednesday night,
taking an early lead and staying
safely In front the rest of the way
against No. 16 Marquette. All five
Iowa starters scored In double
figures In the 87-66 victory, with
6-foot ·10 Greg Stokes contr ibuting 19
points and 6-11 Michael Payne
get\lng 12 and 16 rebounds.
That was Iowa's inside game.
Outside, Steve Carilno put In 17
points and assisted on 10 other
baskets as the Hawkeyes showed
the kind of balance Coach Lute
Olson is looking for.
"We've had our moments this
year when we've played better than
any team we 've had," noted Olson
about his 5-0 team. "We've never
before had two big guys inside with
the potential of Stokes and Payne.
The Warriors are now 2·1.
Dwayne Johnson had 20 points for
Marquette.
Top-ranked Virginia and No. 3
Georgetown tuned up for their big
meeting on Saturday, with the
Cavaliers taking Duke lOl-91 in an
Atlantic Coast Conference opener,
and the Hoyas beating Alabama
State 99-76.
Missouri, ranked eighth, mauled
Jackson State 86-51, ninth-ranked
lhouston defeated Auburn 77-ffi, No.
10 Villanova routed Martst 97-69,
12th-ranked St. Johns, N .Y., beat
Fairleigh Dickinson 87-ffi, No. 13
Louisville belted Eastern Kentucky
82-5.1, No. 14 Tennessee had an easy
time with Arizona in a ~-73 victory,
and 18th-rated North Carolina Sta te
beat East Carolina 5749.
Ralph Sampson poured in 36
points and RickCarlisleadded24 for
Virginia, 5-0, which fell behind by 12
poin ts in the first half. Freshman
guard Johnny Dawkins hit 21 points
in the first ACC game played with a
three-poi nt basket and a JO.second
shot clock.
Bill Martin scored 30 points as
Georgetown. 6· . went on a
·

Jets' Blinka blames tv camera

99

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y

KtnnethMcCyllov.... IJI .P'h.
CNriH IJIIUit, IJI .flh.
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Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

..
I

.'

Rio Grande defeats Bears,
faces Alice Lloyd tonight

..'
•

.

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Pa.,.-7

goals. The Bears had an edge at
Rio Grande College's Redmen Wolle each scored buckets down
foulllne, hitting 19 ol 29 compared
built up an early 19-polnt lead
the stretch as the Redmen locked
to Rio's 16 to 24.
Wednesday night, then held off a
up the victory.
Mowery paced the winners with
Box score:
late Pikeville College rally to defeat
PIKEVIlLE (iS) - May. 8-9-25; Smith,
the Bear s by 90-83, at Lyne Center. 21 points. Curry added 18, Penrod
6-1-IJ; LIOO.ay. &gt;HI; RDwe. 8-2-18; NewThe win left the Redmen with a 15 and Bob Shaw 12.
some. 3-6-12; Crall . 2-04. TOT.uil !:1-11H3.
6-4 season mark heading Into
May had 25 for the visitors. Rowe
RIO GRANDI! (90) - Mowery, 9-3-21;
Penrod, 5-&gt;15; Curry, 9.{).18; Shaw, IHl-12;
tonight's ga me at Allee Lloyd
added 18, Smith 13, Newsome 12
Wolfe, 1·2-4; Richards, 11-3; McNicholas.
College in Kentucky.
and Lindsay 11.
1-24; Arnold , 2-J-7. TOT.uil :1-1&amp;-90.
With Dan Curry and Rick Penrod
Rio held a 37-32 edge In field
scoring slx polnts each and Jerry
Mowery adding four, the Redmen
got a quick 18-9 lead last night. It
was 40-21 with just over three
and AI Carrino of Leavittsburg
CANTON, Ohio (AlP) - Tom
minutes left In the first half when
La
brae.
Mazdy
of
Berea
and
Dick
Cromwell
Curry zipped in a five-footer .
Ben Hubbard of F airfield will
of
Toledo
St.
Francis,
who
led
their
Rio held a 44-31 halftime lead.
teams into the 1~ state playoffs, direct the coaching staff of theSouth
The Redmen m aintained a comwith his assistants being Dave
will serve as coaches In the Ohio
fort able advantage with 10 minutes
Lucas
of Coal Grove, Dan Evans of
North-South
All
-Star
football
game
left in the contest.
Millersburg West Holmes and Steve
next
surnrner
.
Greg Newsome and Rodney
Magoteaux of West M ilton MiltonMazdy will work as the head
Rowe n e tt ed back - to -hack
Union.
coach of the North with Cromwell as
jumpers . Reggie Lindsey had a
The game will be played July221n
one of his assistants. The other
drive and Mike May a hook,
coaches
for
Mazdy
will
be
Masslllon's
Paul Brown Tiger
assistant
followed by a foul shot by Newsome
Stadium
.
Dave
Hartman
of
Austintown
Fitch
that made it 72-65.
The teams traded baskets the , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - next three minutes before Pikeville
cut the lead to three, 80-77, on a
'-ive by May and one at the line by
Ervin Smith.
Rick Penrod , Mowery and Kent

Coaches chosen for North-South tilt

RODNE Y LOWE (~), Pikeville, attempts to
deflec t Kent Wolle's pass (left) ln Wednesday's
non-league game with PikeviUe at Lyne Cenwr. The

Redmen won, 00-83, for their sixth win in I0 starts.
Wolle had four polnts ln the victory. - Keith Wilson
photo.

'Ill/R'A/lfli{."&amp;

WE HAVE A
LARGE SELECTION

--·-IFT5

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MIDDLEPORT .

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___;;,;,..;,..........,_......,;....

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~

C Philip Mo rris Inc. 1982

,

�..•
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"•'

Thursday, December 9, 1982
Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Quick and easy recipes to use during this busy time of the year

Woman fears being on her own

•

CHRISTMAS CONCERT PRACHCE - A
public no-charge Christmas concert will be presented

by the vocal music students of T. Edwin Harkless,
Meigs High Sebool, at Pomeroy United Methodist
Church at 3'p,m. Sunday.

Meigs vocal department will give
annual Christmas concert Sunday
The annual Christmas choral
concert of Me igs High School Vocal
Music Department will be held
Sunday a t 3 p.m. at Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
Special guest for the concert will
be former Meigs High School
Principal James Diehl, who will
narrate "Adeste Fideles" with the
Collegium Musicum .

'.

What's cookin'?

Helen help us

'•'

The accompanist for Sunday's
performance wlll be Klm Jones, a
gradua te of the Cincinnati Conserva tOI'Y of Music and currently a
music teacher in the Meigs Local
District.
The program will include works
by Bach, Beethoven, and SaintSaens as well as arra ngement of
well-known Christmas songs. All

three ensembles in the department,
the concert choir, the Collegium
Musicum, and the Chorallers, will
be periorming. T Edwin Harkless
is director of the vocal msulc and
will be conducting the concert.
There will be no charge and the
public is in vited to attend the
concer1.

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTrEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
In five years of living together
(not married) my guy hasn't once
cleaned out the gutters. He doesn't
help with the baby, the garbage,
feed the dog or do anything else
around the house. We go out about
once a year, as he likes stylng
home, or worklng on cars with his
friends. Mostly that!
I enjoy skating, swimming,
dancing, but he's an old-fashioned
stick-In-the-mud and he Isn't even
25!
I'm 22 and have never been
atone. It's scary starting over by
yourself, especially with a twe&gt;year-oid, but I'm going crazy with
nothing to do but housework. We
don't even talk any more, or think
alike about anything.
When I threaten to leave him
unless he gets more human, he says
I'll never find another guy who does
for me like he has. And that makes
me even more scared.
Do you think he could change,
being the only and youngest boy in a
family of six sisters, and plenty
spoiled? - VERY CONFUSED
DEAR CON:
This fellow not only ignores your
wants and needs, but he's forgotten
one other little detail: a marriage
license.
I'd say you're a hored, undelllald
housekeeper who r~ uld be fired

without notice, and you'd do better
on your own, no matter how scary
"being alone" seems right now.
Find a job first, then an
apartment for you and your
daughter. It beats stagnation.
HELEN
CONFUSED:
Possibly your declaration of
Independence might change this
selfish man, but more likely he'll
look for a replacement who continues the spoiling his family
started. - SUE
RAP:
This Is for "Stinky, 15." I had the
same problem with underarm
odor. Some of It came from
"build-up" on my clothes. Washing
doesn't always remove deodorant
and anti-perspirant residue, and It
seems to attract more body odor.
I used a potash spray on trouble
spots before clothes went Into the
washer. (A strong baklng soda
solution helps too.)
Then I applied a good deodorant
four or five times a day, and
worked on calming my nerves so I
wouldn't sweat as much. Drinks
with caffeine In them aren't good
for nervous people, you know,
Now I can stand myself and get
near other people. -EX-STINKY25
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:

The first birthday of Aja Lynn
McGlothin was observed recently
with a party at the home of her
mother, Beverly McGlothin, Osborne St., Pomeroy. Her grandparents are Gerald and Hattie Sellers,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy.

GETI'ING READY- Kim
Jones, graduate of Cincinnati
Conservatory of Music and
now a teacher with Meigs
Local District, will be accompanist for the Christmas
concert. With her during a
final rehearsal are T, Edwin
Harkless, director, and
James Diehl, narrator, left.

Dena Sayre who were unable to
attend.

Kyle Norris, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Norris, Racine, celebrated
his first birthday recently with a
party at his home.

The second birthday of Kasey
Michelle Wlll!ams was observed
recently with a party at the home of
her parents, Mark and Trudy
Williams, Hysell Run Road ,
Pomeroy.
An E.T. theme was carried out in
the decorations and an E.T. cake
was served with ice cream and
drinks. The children were presented with E.T. balloons, party hats

:. .. ." .:t.wers.

Alfred
During the Thanksgiving weekend guests qf Genevieve Guthrie
were Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost,
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yost,
Lancaster Route; Martha and Ann
Yost and John Cavanee, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost,
locaL
Janice Kestner, Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Ewing, Beth, Kim and Benny
and Reina Lind, all local; Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Caldwell, Carrie and
Crlssy, Columbus, were ThanksgivIng guests of Mr. and Mrs. Garland
CaldwelL
Alfred Sunday School attendance
Nov. 21 was 44; church attendance
was ?:7. On Nov , 28 Sunday school
attendance was 33, church attendance, 15.
Mr. and Mrs. John Shafer,
Parkersburg, W. Va. called on Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Poole.
Nina Robinson visited Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Robinson, Tamml,
Juli, and Brian, Belpre, during the
Thanksgiving holidays.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton were Jean
and Paul Vineyard, Belpre; Chris
Nicholson, Samuel, Cory and Stephen, Columbus; Larry and Debbie
Atherton and Fannie Barnhill, all
local.
Alfred Church took up a collection for Mr. and Mrs. Lee Washburn whose house burned.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Henderson were Mr:
and Mrs. Bill Woods, Zanesville;
Mr. and Mrs. David Williams and
Aaron, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Lee
Henderson and Edith Harper,
locaL
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Griffin,
Tuppers Plains, called on Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Atherton.

and Marie Francis, Raymond and
Jennie Roach, Terri White, Darin
Roach, Pennee and Courtney
Knap, and Rock, Terri, Roxane and
Zachary W!lllams.
Skip, Connee and Clay Enslen
sent a gift.

Williams

Light and Life
Richard and Shirley Friend
hosted a recmt mectingo!Lightand
Lif~ Men's Fellowship of Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church. For
th~ Thanksgiving dinner at Duffs
sponsored by the Fellowship, 46
memtx&gt;rs and guests attended. The
Thursday night meeting w!ll be held
at 7:30p.m. in the church fellowship

Dinner followed b; -' Big Bird
Attending in addition · to her
cake being served to his sister,
parents were her grandparents,
Kendra, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cross, Carl and Dorothy Roach and Ray
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Norris, Mrs. and Iris Williams, her greatroom .
grandmothers, Gertrude Miller
Deborah Harris, C. J . and Hillery,
Diana Cross, Denise Mamone and . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . : .
Lori , Mrs. Lena Holter, Della
Cross, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Mugrage, Tryson and Travis.
He received gifts from Mr. and
Mrs. George Norris and Danny and

1 cup margarine
Combine dry mllk, flour and salt
in large bowL Cut In butter Wtth
knives or pastry blender until
mixture resembles tiny peas. Store
tightly covered In refrtgerator. Use
for any recipe that calls for a white
sauce or cheese sauce.
Thin White Sauce - Combine 1
cup mllk or water and one-third cup
mix. Cook over medium heat until
bubbly. Cook one minute more.
Medium White Sauce- Combine
1 cup mllk or water and Y, cup mix.
Cook over medium heat until
bubbly. Cook one minute more.
Thick White Sauce - Combine 1
cup milk or water and one cup
sauce mix. Cook over medium heat
until bubbly, Cook one minute

more.
Microwave oven directions :
Combine mllk and mix. Microwave
on medium until bubbly, stirring
after 1 minute. Add shredded
cheese and cook until bubbly.
Cheese Sauce: Add Y, cup- 1 cup
shredded American or other yellow
cheese to the hot sauce. Stir until
melted.
For sodium restricted diets, cut
down or eliminate salt in the mix.
You cc an use low sodium
margarine or unsalted butter.

USES FOR WIDTE SAUCES:
-Combine 2 cups hot cooked
vegetables such as broccoli, asparagus or peas with 1 cup or less of
thin white sauce or thin white sauce
with cheese. Serve the vegetable as
a side dish or bake In a casserole
topped with buttered bread
crumbs. Try a combination of
brocoll and cauliflower. Yum!
-Combine 2 cups medium white
sauce with 1 Y, cups shredded
cheese. Pour over 3 cups cooked
macaroni for easy macaroni and
cheese.
-For an easy soup, add 1 cup
chopped cooked broccoli or other
well-drained, cooked green vegetable to 2 cup of thin cream sauce or
cheesey cream sauce. Season with
salt and pepper to taste and a little
parsley.
-Use 2 cups medium cream
sauce as a base for casseroles,
adding 1 cup chopped, cooked
chicken or turkey, Y, cup cooked,
drained peas or broccoli, and 1 cup
cooked, drained noodles. Vary the
ingredients to suit your family's
tastes. Cheese sprinkled on top or
added to the white sauce Is good,
too.

Meigs County correspondence

Williams

Norris

THURSDAY : Hot dogs with
sauce, baked beans, fruit, cookle,
milk.
FRIDAY : Cook's Choice.

(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a
subject for discussion, twogeneration style? Direct your
questions to either Sue or Helen
Bottel - or both, If you want a
combination mother-daughter
answer In care of this
newspaper.)

Norris

McGlothin

Meigs Local School District releases lunch menu

By Dale M. Stoll
Meigs County Extension
Home Economist
Between crocheting Santas for
the church bazaar, making~ Iced
cookies for the third grade Christmas party, shopping for at least 10
Impossible - to buy - for relatives
and trying to find which light on the
tree made the others go out, there is
little time to prepare a good meal
for the famlly!
At this time of year when
schedules are disrupted and time Is
short, It's nice to have on hand
some foods that are easy to fix and
good to eat.
Set aside a few minutes to fix
some basic master mixes and
you'll have the basis for quick and
easy meals throughout the
holidays.
The following white sauce mix Is
a great base for casseroles, soups,
or sauces. It's very convenient to
have on hand throughout the
holidays as It ellmlnates the tedious
measuring that Is necessary each
time you make a sauce.
WlUTE SAUCE MIX
(keep handy In the refrigerator)
2 cups non-fat dry milk
1 cup sifted flour
3 teaspoons salt

I read about the people who had
problems with sucking their
thumbs after they fell asleep. Boy,
do I know how hard the habit Is to
break! I was 10 before I stopped,
and I owe It to a three-year-old girl!
I stayed over at friends', and this
little girl wanted to sleep with me.
She confided, ''The reason why
Brother (five months old) sucks his
thumb Is because he's a baby." I
resolved I'd stay awake all night,
but just in case, I also wrapped my
thumb In a fat bandage, saytng I'd
hurt II. (Had done this before but It
hadn't worked.)
Getting sleepy In spite of mysell,
I lay 0n my back, put both hands ·
under my pUlow and Imagined I
was floating away on a big white
cloud. Next morning the bandage
was still on! I wasn't a baby!
It took three nights of my "cloud
therapy" to break me of thumb
sucking. I've read since that 11 you
really want to stop a bad habit,
three days of determined trying
will usually do lt. - SAVED BY A
THREE-YEAR-OLD

County residents record birthdays
McGlothin

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Carmel
Angela Dawn and Jennifer Lynn
Carelton of Racine spent Wednesday evening with the Arthur
Johnson family and Betty
VanMeter.
Mr. and Mrs. Royle Mutt! and
family of Mansfield, Dixie Circle of

Bright
Gift Ideas

Cleveland visited with Verna Circle
and Lula Circle for Thanksgiving.
All of those and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Circle and family had thelrThanksgiving dinner at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Harden and
family on Frklay.
Mrs. Ethel Orr of Chester was at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lee and family on Friday.
Eunle Brinker had Thanksgiving
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Johnson and samily and Betty
VanMeter.
Lawrence Scarbrough from
Grand Rapids, Ohio called on Mr.
and Mrs. Douglas Circle on
Thursday .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Martin
from Kent, Ohio are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Edson Roush during
Thanksgiving holiday.

holiday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Summerfield, Candl, Wend!
and Crystal of Medina.
Mr. and Mrs. George Draper of
St. Louis, Mo. were last week's
guests from Sunday until Thursday
of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kall,
Kevin and Charles of Langsville.
Mr. and Mrs. Less Frank and
Sara Beth were Thanksgiving Day
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Haning and Ronald .
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Thanksgiving Day dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Doyle
Knapp and family of Langsville.

-Saute one 4-ounce can mushrooms (drained) In a small amount
of butter or margarine. Add cream
sauce mixture and proceed as
above. This makes a mixture
similar to cream of mushroom
soup, through much lower In
sodium than canned cream of
mushroom soup. Add a dash of
pepper and 1 teaspoon chopped
diced parsley If desired.
Notice that this mix contains
non-fat dry milk. Many people
dislike non-fat dry milk because It
does not taste like fluid milk when
reconstituted . You can't tell that
there Is dried milk In the cream
sauce mix, though. The flavor of
the sauce Is good using the dry
mllk. Other Ingredients add flavor
and the cooking of the sauce
eliminates any undesirable flavors.
I use non-fat dry milk a lot at
home. When a bread recipe calls
for 1 cup hot mllk, I use one-third
cup of non-fat dry milk added to the
dry Ingredients plus a scant 1 cup of
hot tap water. There Is no need to
scald non-fat dry mllk. One-third
cup of non-fat dry mllk plus a scant

1 cup of water equals a cup of fluid
mllk.
I always keep non-fat dry milk on
hand as It's handy for making
breads, soups and sauces. Property
reconstituted, non-fat drymllk is
acceptable to drink, too. Add the
dry mllk slowly to water, mixing
thoroughly to eliminate lumps. Try
com bin bing 1 quart of reconstituted
non-fat dry milk with Y, teaspoon
vanilla extract and 1 Y, teaspoons
sugar or honey. Chll the mixture
welL It's good to drink!
Store non-fat drymllk in an
airtight container In a dry place. If
you don't use a lot of the dry milk,
then buy it In small amounts.
Did you know that you can buy
dry buttermilk? It's powdered and
comes In a can and is usually
located near the non-fat drymllk in
the grocery s tore. Health food and
bulk food stores often carry iL
Here's a recipe that uses buttermilk and is a convenient mix to
have on hand during the holidays.
SIX WEEKS BRAN MUF'FlNS
2 cups all bran cereal
2 cups boiling water

Members of Troop 1254 visit
Meigs County EMS headquarters
A visit to the Emergency Medical
Service headquarters on Mulberry
Heights was a highlight of a recent
meeting of the Middleport Brownie
Trop125l.
Prior to their visit the troop made
first aid boxes and discussed
emergency care. Bob Byer. EMS
coordinator. conducted the girls on
a tour of the !ac Uit y.

Laurel Cliff

Thanksgiving Day dinner guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson,
Tammy and Terry, were Mrs. Iva
Johnson and Mrs. J. R Murphy
and Peggy,
Carl Russell and friend of
Columbus were Thanksgiving Day
guests of Bertha Russell and Earl
RusselL
Mr. and Mrs. Bailey, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Bailey and Mrs.
Christine Johnson were ThanksgivIng Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bailey.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Columbus and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy, Jeff, Joey and Jessica,
enjoyed Thanksgiving on Saturday
with Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
Sr.
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy and
Daniel, of Daniel, W. Va., Mr. and
Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kall, Charles of
Langsville were recent Sunday
dinner · guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith.
Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman and
Mrs. Jackie Elam were Tuesday
afternoon visitors of Mrs. Iva
Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell, Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Russell and Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Haggy, Stephanie
and Brad, were Thanksgiving

.....'

IDDIE SHOPPE
111 W. 2nd

Pomeroy, Oh,-

ON NIKES
THIS WEEKEND!
OPEN TILL 8 P.M.
BEGINNING FRI., DEC. 10

I

REGISTER FOR
WEEKLY PRIZES

:;,

·::
,•;

Dec. li-Men's Hiking Boots
Dec. 18-Leather Purse
Dec. 24-Leather Athletic Shoes

:/·

Nih or Converse

CHAINS, CHAR..,S, BRACELETS

HOURS :
Mon.-Sat 9:30 - 5 :00
Thurs. 9:30 - 12:00

$500 OFF

..,," •''

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Price

MIOOllPDH I OH

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1
/2

BAILEY'S SHOES

.~

_30o/o OFF

EVERYTHING
ELSE

Wolf Pen

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NOW

-~

TOYS
40% Off

field .
He Is a 1982 grad uate of Waltama
High School, Mason .
His wife, Paula, Is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Sherodun Russell
of Mason.

.,.,

.. ....
NEW SELECTION OF
14K
- - GOLD
-

·::·;~

Airman completes basic training,
assigned to Lowry Air Force Base

Now you can wrap up karat
gold jewelry for Christmas
giving at very special
prices. We have a wide
r
''
selection of neckchalns.
brocelets. rings, pins.
!:
watches and earrings on sale.
',
Come in today and let us show
:,
you just how beautiful savings
•·
can bel ,
.~ :
~===-....~==~... ,,
,."
~ ~==~----.--,. ~====
!I&lt;:'

..

clOSilit 0011
DOORS
..

Another highlight of the past
month was a pizza a nd bowling
party. On Nov. 20 thetroopga thered
a t the Middleport Fire Station and
cooked their own Thanksgivi ng
dinner. They had songs a nd ga m ~s .
The mothers donated food fo rth ~
dinner and the troop gave Sp&lt;'('iai
appreciation to the firemm for usc
of the kitchen.

At Beautiful

Savings

1 cup melted s hortening
4 cups raisin bran cereal
y, cup raisins
3 cups sugar
4 eggs, beaten
1 quart, buttermilk
5 cups flour
5 teaspoons soda
2 teaspoons salt
Pour boiling water over all bran
and let stand . Mix melted fat with
sugar. Beat In eggs and buttermilk.
Add wet a ll bran. Combine flour,
raisin bran , raisins soda, salt . Stir
in liquid combination. (The mixture thickens as it stands. 1 Bake in
muffin tins, 400 degrees F . for 20
minutes. The remainder will keep
in the refrigerator up to 6 weeks
covered . Stir well before using.
For your free copy of recipes for
master mixes, contact me at the
Meigs County Extension Office,
Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or call
992-6696. Included Is a cocoa mix, a
recipe for a quick mix with many
recipes using the quick mix, a
whole wheat baking mix, and lots
more! These mixes make great
gifts.

't

GRAND PRIZE

I

BLACK &amp; WHITE
· 12 INCH

'

DEC. 24th

n3 cou~'sr.
POMlROY,,OHIO
992-2054
.

NOTHING TO BUY

\

- ·-

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'I

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TV

AND

heritage house
OF SHOES
MIDDLEPORT

�IIIII

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Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Th

Singer Marty Robbins dies
•
following massive
surgery
NASHVli.I. F.. Tcnn &lt;API Singcr Mart~· Hobbins. a two-tim&lt;'
Grammy v.:mnC'r whosr b.lllads
about gunfigh&lt;c&lt;·s llcl r~'&lt;l shapP II"'
western styiP of country music in a
:lO-.\·ear rmwr. eli('(! sL'\ da ys aftf'r
surgC'ry for a n1&lt;JSsin-' hPart a !tack
St Thomas Hospital spokesman
Lamar .Jackson sa iclt h(•'il \ l'&lt; l r old
r nll'rtainPr d ied of t\lrdJac arrest
laiC' VVedm•sda\ .~... his WlfP.
:'v1arizona . and son ;111d d.tughtrr
\\ 'alhxim .J lll'&lt;Hb\ room .

Hobbms. ll'ho had a t npli ··b) pa ss
orx.·ra tJon m l !l70and ;1 hPart attack

last \'l'ar. undt·nn•nt an }-( 1 !· hour
quad.rupiP-b\ p.t"" OJ)('J\ ttion .J w('('k
ago aft t•r lx•mg huspllalLZ('(] wilh
rhPst pains

The smgcr, \\'ho won tllf'flrst of his
two Crammv award s in 1960 for "F. I
Paso," had becn listed in extrPmely
criti ca l condition with a heart pump
ancl respirator aiding hlsrirculation
and brmthing.
Dr. L&lt;m y Thomas, a cardiac
sur gron at St Thomas, had sa id it
was "a miraclc" that Hobbins
sw v 1vcd last Wl'&lt;'k' s opera tion
ix'cause he \\'as ha ving a major
heart atta ck in the middle of it.
Hobbins, thc 1982 inductee into the
Count I')' Music Associa tion Hall of
Famc. "as a guitarist. pianist and
so ngwrit(• r He was a frequent
pcrformN on the Gra nd Ole Opry
si ncc 19:il

~·ea r s

probatton.

forfrll

two

spotlights
.Jack PierCt'. MiamiSburg and
Charles Maust. lkedS\' illc, 1\\0
chargcs of spotligh&lt; &lt;·arh. $2:J() and
cos ts C'ach , two .w•ars probation:
Pcnm Blackburn. f{,.'CIS\'ille. spotiJghling, $2.'i0 and cos t.s. two )'&lt;'ars
prubalion; Hobert Kcll\. Columbu s. .spot light 1ng. $2'111 ancl ros ts. onc
da.\ s ronfinrmPnt. two \ Pars proba ·
t10n. sho&lt;gun forf,.llt'Cl . suspend&lt;'d
dCPr hunting nght s for thrCP ,·mrs
and suspcnd&lt;'Cl small ga mc huntmg
right s for rmf' \f'.Jr. ,liiC'mpt to takf'
dCPr from a puhll(' mad. $100 and
costs. unP d.t ~ · ~ ('onfuwmrnt. two
\ (' iJ rs proba 111m . posSt'sS and t ro ns

port a loadcd firea&lt;m in a motor
vehiclc. $200 and cos ts, onc days
confinement. two ,·cars proba tion,
hunt deer b~' the usc of a motor
clri\·('n conveya nce. $100 and costs.
onf' days confl nrment. two years
probation, attempt to tak&lt;' a deer at
a 11mc ot her than lega l hunting
hours, $100 and costs, one days
confinement. two years probation,
rrcklcss opera ti on, $50 and costs;
Doug Clark , Whe&lt;'lcrsburg, hunt
dCPr b.v the aid of a motor vehicle.
S2'&gt; and costs; Clifford HoS&lt;'berry,
Hacinc. speed, $21 and cost s; Willic
Clark. Franklin Fumacc. hunt deer
bv thcaid of a motor vehiclc,$25and
costs: !\den Munc)', Hamilton , hunt
d!'&lt;•r b~ · th&lt;' aid of a motor vchicle,
$2.'i and rosts; John Homine 1!1.
Parkcrsburg, Spel'&lt;l. $24 and costs:
CNogc Hart. Shadc. leaving the
sr('nC' of an accident. tht 'N' da.\'s
cunftnC'mcnt. $200 and ros ts. six
month s probation , rcstllut ion;
Brian Fricnd. Middleport. spl'&lt;'&lt;l,

to leaH• I hf' ktds

whtlf' \OU ftnt ~ tl up thl' Chnslmas
shopping
If so ..H1u t',Jil l.ikl' lhf'm In thC'
:vlt'tgs Mu.. ,4·urn. Hul t(•rn ut /\\'f'.
PomPro~ ·

tx'l\\t '(· n lJ and II am on

Sa tu rda \·, Dt&lt;· IX. for a snack
I COOk iPs .tnd mt lk t with S&lt;:1nla
Cost" 111 bt ·S l fo1 &lt;'ach child ll'ft al

•
'

I

Area deaths

Sht'rman I. Roherts

Funeral se&lt;v ices for Sherman l.
Hoberts. who died Tuesda)' at hiS
resid ence. will be held at 1 p.m .
Friday at th e Ewing Funeral
Home.
The Hev Clyde V. Henderson
will officiate. Burial will be in the
Hock Springs Cemetery. F1iends
may ca ll a&lt; the fu neral home at
any time.
Besides his wife, three sons and a
daughter , Mr. Hoberts is survived
by nine grandchildren and six great
. grandchildren. He atlended the
Pomer oy Nazaren e Church and
was a member of the Hock Springs
Gra nge.

Mary Jant· Triplt'tt
Sf' IYiccs for Mrs Mar\ .lanr
Tripl&lt;'ll. h9, who dim Wcdnesday at

Hospital News
VETERANS MEMORL'\L
Admlltcd Kath&lt;y n Logan,
PomNoy; r-:-·., Shaffer. Hacmc;
Am' Warth. Pom~rov; Henry
Tu rncr, Middlf'llOJt. SadicTru ssell.
Long Bottom
Discharged - .J!'rcm,· Watson.
Eula WelkN. C'&lt;J ITJ&lt;'Osbome, Paul
Schulf'l'. LonnJI' \ 'anMc·tcr.

HOlZER MEDI('AL CEI'."I'ER
DISCIIARGE'i DEC. H
Carolyn !\dams, Andy Akcrs,
Dorothy Barrctt, V1cky Bicklc.
Shane Bucks. Sherrv Bumheuner.
Gil bert Bush, Myr a Combs, Sharon
Cooper, Stella Davis, Terry Ed
ward s, Tammy F.mmcrt, William
Gill .Jr .. Emma Grimm, Sandra
Handley, Murl Harris, Vivia n
Jollev. Wanda Malone, Penny
Marchi. Dingus Martm .Jr. Georgc
Metzler. Carla Miller , Dorothy
Mitchell, Mary M yers, Glen Nelson,
Kay Rutherford, Clara Shamblin,
Shirley Smith, Lionel Triplett,
Gertrude Vance, Mrs. Mitchell
Weber and son, Andrew West,
Harlan Warner, Wallace Ziegler.

BIRTHS

J'

•...

tlt C' museum for a \'isll with Santa
The cos t is.'iOccnt s forth osc whojust
\\'i sh to bring a r hild to thc muS&lt;'um
lor a snack wtth Santa. and possibly
a ptcturr. wit hout s ta~' in g
Thr snack w1th Sa nta program is
being sponsored by thc Mcigs
Count \ Gra nge Youth Groupand all
proceeds will be usecl 10 smd the

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hatfield.
daughter, Delbarton, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Jones, son. Wellston;
Mr. and Mrs Jerry Laudermelt ,
daughtcr, Jacks~n ; M r and Mrs.
Michael Miller. daughter. Hutland;
Mr. and Mrs. William Mosslander.
5on, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Jackie
,Simpkins, son, Point Pleasant,
W.Va.

I

hcr Port land home, will be hcld at
10 .10 a.m Frida _
, . at thC' Ewing
FunNell Home with thc He,·. Fred
Lo"w~· officwting.
Mrs Triplcrt is su&lt;vivcd by sLx
suns. Emcst, East Liverpool ;
Clarrncc. Lar0· and David. all of
Pon land : Lawrence, Pomero.v.
and .John or Gibsonburg; fi ve
daugh&lt;crs, Glad,·s M iller. Califorma : Mmn ic Harris, Gibsonburg:
Syl,·ia Hayhurst. Mildred Elkins
and Huth Brown, all or F.ast
Livcrpool; 22 gra ndchildren, fi ve
grua t-gra ndchildrcn and severa l
ni('('CSand nephews
Buria l will be in thc Bald Knob
Cemctery, Port land Friends may
ca ll at thc funera l home anytime

Lillie M. Hauck
L&lt;ll ic M Hauck, 90, 7 Oak St ..
Pomcroy d&lt;ecl Wednesda y night .
Mrs. Hauck was born Aug. 22,1892
m Pomeroy the daughter of the late
Harvey and Amanda Ba ile~' Woodard She was also pr('('eded in
death by two sons. Donald Hauck
and Charles Hauck. two brothers
and onr sister.
She was a mem ber of t hc Trinity
Church and was a Gold Star Mother.
She is sun'ivecl by one daughter,
Mrs Hoy tPauline t Mayer. Pomeroy: two daughter s-in-law, Mrs
Donald &lt;Marie! Hauck, Pomeroy
and Mrs. Marie Pickens, Cheshire;
fi ve grandchildren and nine grea t
gr andchildren; one sister. Mrs.
Bertha Hussell , Wolfc Pcn; severa l
nieces and nephews includmg Mrs
C. .J Strauss.
Funera l servic&lt;'S w1 11 be held
Sat urday at 1 p.m . at Ewing Chapel.
Buria l will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after2 p.m. on Friday.

Presented set
Gam et Roush of Racine has been
presented a Nativity set awarded
recently by the Racine Volunteer
Emergency Squad.

·-..,,.... .. __
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In an accident Friday on Route
143, a car driven by Robert L. Hall,
38, Route 1, Rutland, wast he vehicle
that backecl into a driveway into the
path of a second northbound car
driven by Alva Holsinger, Jr., 46,
Heedsvllle, An earlier report hact
reversed the order of the accident

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Prince and Pnncess 10 the Ohio
Grange Convcntion in October.
Those havmg anyques ti onson the
flee. l Ract1vity may call Opal Dvcr.
7i 2·2Rffi aftcr .'i .10 p.m to l&lt;ci th
Ashlc~' at !192-7874 after.'i p.m
The museum w&lt;ll feature a train
&lt;'xh ibit and ot her holida y displays
as a part of thc acti vities .

Organizational
meeting planned
An orga nizational meeting to
orga nizc elcmentary baskctball. in
tht• Meigs Loca l School District , 4,:;
and fi, grades. will be held Mondav,
Ocr 13. at 7:30 p m John Arnott
announced today.
Thc m('('ting will be held m room
216 a&lt; Meigs High School. All people
intPrested in coaching and interestcd parcnts arc urged to attend

Emergency runs
Four ca lls were answerecl by loca I
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Em er ge ncy Medical Serv ice

re~rt s
At 9: .'i6 p.m .. the Tuppers Plains
U it took Sad 1e Trusscll from
Township Hoad 112 to Vet erans
Memorial Hospital; at .'i· 21 p m ,
Middl eport , trea ted Dow ney
Kennedy at his residence on S.
Second Ave.; at 7:48 ·p.m .. the
Hacine Unit took Dennis Hart from
Vine St .. to Veterans Memorial , and
Hacinea t 6:20a.m. went to Portland
for Mary Jane Triplett who was
dmd upon the unit 's arriva l.

(ourt actions filed
Dclla Stahl. Pomcroy, filed a suit
m Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Charles D. Jeffers
and BrPnda K Jeffers, Pomeroy,
for ca ncellation or a deed.
Filing for dissolution of marriage
wcrc Barbara l&lt;ennedy, Rutland
and PefD• Kenncdy, Pomeroy;
Hobert Thomas Stewart. Rt. 1,
Hutland , and Tina Stewart, Ht. 1,
Rutland.

Marriage license
A marriage license was issuecl in
Meigs County Probate Court to
Franklin Andrew Martin, 19, Mid·
dleport, and Bonnie Jolene Moodlspaugh, 16, Middleport.

A car driven by Vernon W.
Mitchell, 51, Cheshire, was severely
damagecl after It struck and kiUecl
two deer on Ohio 71n Meigs County
Weclnesday afternoon.
The Gallla-Melgs post or the state
highway patrol said Mitchell was
southbound at 5: 45 p.m. when the
deer entered the road and were
struck.

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Wnte your own ad and order oy mail with thi s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you ge t
r es ults. Money not refundabl e.

""· 4 - " · - ... ,

I
I
I

'

Business Senices
YOUNG'S

SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALLAL
Ph. 742-2328

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona and remodeling

- Roofing and gutter wort&lt;
- Concrete wort&lt;
- Plumbing and
alactrical wort&lt;

(free Estimates!

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6216 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, O~io••.•
11 ·&lt;o-ne

11 -J.l mo

BOERGER IN COURT - Elizabeth Jane
Boerger listens to her attorney Wednesday In court in
Columbus during a hearing to judge her competency
to stand trial on charges of embezzling $1.15 miiUon

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

while a cashier In the state's treasurer's omce. The
judge ruled her competent to stand trial on the
charges. ( AP Laserphoto)
'

Embezzling suspect can't remember
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP!
Tcstifying that "cverybody's a
stranger to me. " Elizabeth Jane
Boerger said Wcdnesda.v she cannot remember hcr life prior to 1980,
dunng which llmc si{. is accused of
cmbezzling $l.l:i milll·on from the
stale treasury .
Miss Boerger\ co mcnts came
in a Fmnk lin Count\ Common
Picas Court heal'ing to determine if
shc IScompctcnt to stand trial. They
marked the first time she has
spoken publicly about thc case.
Miss Boerger, who was head
cashier in tile trea surer's office
ll'hilc thc th0 moncy wa s removed,
left the job in .January 1980
Hcr altorney, James Doughty of
Spr ingfield. sa id she wa s found to
IKJ\'(' suffPrC'd hysterica l amnesia
and is umthle to assist in her o•..vn
dl'fensc
Miss Boerger, 49, is chargecl with
theft 111 officc and tampcring with
public r('('ord s between Apri l 18,
1977. and Jan 2, 1980, while work ing
as head cashicr tor State Treasurer
C.errrude Donahcy .
Miss Boc•rger, who is receiving
disability pa y mcnts as a rcsulr of
hcr illness, r('('a lled part of her
hospital stay. She said she did not
r('('ognizc members of her family
afte1 rm('rging from a com a.
" I don't kn ow if they wcrc m y
brot hers or siS ters or not except that
the\ told me they were," she sa id .
Doctors a&lt; the Southwest Forensic Cen tPr w ho E'xamined Miss
Eioergcr following her indictment
last summer told the court in a
rcportt hat shl' iscomP' 2nttostand
trial. But Dought y maintains she
cannot participate in her defense
because of the memory loss.
"Do you understand the proceed·
ing going on herc today? " Doughty

asked.
"No, not really. You told me I was
supposed to be here." Miss Boerger
sa id .
"Do you know what you' rP
chargecl with ?" heaskecl.
" I couldn't explain it , no," she
replied.
Doughty asked Ms. Boerger if she
had ever seen a public document.
"Not that I know of," she said.
Under cross-examination from
prosecutor David Johnson, M iss
Boerger said she had made trips to
Alabama, Oklahoma, South Dakota
a nd Florid a s ince her
hospitalization
She said she did not initially
recognize Hobe&lt;1 W. Yeazel!, a

. Meigs residents participating in
the WIC program are to pck up
their coupons for January at the
Meigs County Health Department
on the following schedule: Last
names starting with A through G,
Weclnesday, Dec. 15; H through N,
Dec. 17 and 0 through Z, Dec, 20.
Those who cannot make their
appolntecl day are to report on Jan.
5. Pickup tlme In all Instances is 9
a.m. to 11 a.m.

Emergency statistics
Meigs County's emergency units
chalked up m any miles during
November in answering numerous
calls, the Meigs County Emergency Mecllcal Servlce reports.
Runs by units and the total mlles
drive(\ Include: Pomeroy, 45 runs,
834 mUes; Middleport, 33 runs, 854
mUes; Racine, 15 runs, 418 miles;
Syracuse, six runs, 134 miles;
Rutland, 13 runs, 531 miles;
Tuppers Plains, 14 runs, 641 mUes;
transfer unit, 30 runs, 1,224 miles.

needs;
furnaces '
repair service and I
installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195

IN MEMORY OF
MARTIN E. ABBOTT
The Holiday Season IS here

once mOfe,
, And we keep askmg o'er and

oer

iir1Jy did yoo leave us here

alone,

To suffer through them on our
own?
They can never be the same for

me.
We miss you. dear. more and

more,
SnJCe December Ninth, NIIJe·
teen Se..nty-Four.
Sa~IY. missed tJx Wife. Mi!!g~.
and Clliklren Viv~n and Gino
and Gr.~ndchi 1dreJt

Public Notice
NOnCE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF THREE
SCHOOl BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD

OF EDUCATION

Public Notice
regulatr ons and curren t Ohro
Mln1mum Standards br School
Bu s Conwuctron of the De panment of Educatron adopted
by and wrth the ronsent of the
D~re ct o r of H•ghway Safety
pursuant to Sect•on 4511 76
of the Ohro Revrsed Code and
all oth er pertrnent provrsron of

law

Spec 1fr catrons and rnstructl ons to b1dder s may be
obtarned at the offr ce of th e
Tr easurer . Mrexlleport. Ohro
A cenrf1ed check payable to
1he Tr easurer of the above
board of educatron or a
satrsfaclory brd bond executed
by lh e brdder and th e surety
company. rn an amount equal
to frve perce nt 15 per cent) oft he

~~~h s~1 ~1 be

submrlted wrth

Sard board of educa ti on
reserves the rrght to warve
rnformalrtres. to accept or re1ect
any and all or pan s of any and

all bods

Sealed proposals Will be
No brds can be wthdrawn lor
receNed by the Board of at least thrrty (30) days after the
Educatron of the Me1g s Loca l scheduled closrng trme for
Sc hool Drstfl ct of Middleport . rece1pt of b•ds
Me1gs Local Board
Ohro at th e Tr easu rer's Offrr.P
of Educat()n
untrl 12 .00 noon on January 4.·
t!:ISJ, and at th at trme opened
Jane Wagner. Treasurer
by the Treasurer of sa rd Board.
621 South Thrrd Avenu e
tabulated. and a report thereof
Mrddleport, Oh10 45760

male 10 saod Board a1 otsne&gt;l
1(6141992-5650 .
scheduled mee&lt;ong as provoded 1121 9. t 6. 23, 30. 4tc
by law for three 131 65 1-'--'--=-:-::-'~-'-::;;:,..__
passenger school buses. acPublic Notice
cordrng to spectfi catrons of r-~-====---

sald board ol educaton.
Separa&lt;e and ondependeni

PUBUSHED
POUCY STATEMENT

brds · w1ll be received wll.h
respect to the chass ts and body
type and Will state that the bu s
when assembled and pr~or to
delivery comply w1th all school
d•stnct specr f1catrons. aU sa fety

The Oh1o Bureau of Employment Services. Off1ce of Man·
power Development CETA Program rs comm itted to equal
employment opportunities for
all handtcapped applicants,

Rose Mary Patllson. Man ager of the Off1ce Q1 Manpower
Development. w•ll have the
overall responsrbthtv of admin IStenng the program. If a
program partrcipant or apph cant feels he-she has been drscrrmmated aga1nst rn employment. seekrng employment
and -or trainmg with this
agency, h e·s~e. shoul.d imme· .
d1ately contact EEO-Cqme!aint

3·11-tfc

BIRCHFIELD
TAXIDERMY

Officer. Hank Evans at t -800282· 1050 or (6t 4) 466-8806

to' pUrsue the proper discnmi~
natron complaint procedure.

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

1121 9: 1tc

Probate Judge·

(121 2. 9. 16. 3&lt;c

Clerk

.,

-"""'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.

Insulated Dog Houses

'Remodelina

'Slorm Windows &amp; Doors

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

FREE ESTIMATES
20 y,.. Experience

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591

iOM HOSKifft

10·6·1fc

10iisittc

s&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
Chester,

CONTRACT! NG
DOZER
BACKHOE
LOWBOY
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
CALL 992-2903
AFTER 5 P.M.

Ohio

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382
Dewayne \NIIIerrw
It Scottie Smith
All moll• and model&amp;
Antenna lrwtallation

Hou&amp;e colla and shop
aorvlce available
I 2·3· 1 mo pd

12·2·1 mo.

w.......

li

if you describe futly ,

iI
--+-+--+--+--1
classify, edit or reject To25
l$7.00~tt.OO
any ad. Your ad wilt be --+-+--+--+--!
put in the proper To35
tn.oct$t
• ••
give price. The Sentinel To 15
reserves the right to

I ) For Rent
t.

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

t4.
t5.
t6.

33 . . - - - - - 34. - - - - - - - 35.

6

7
B. - - - - - -

9. - - - - - 10. - - - -- -

)l

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Core to the Largest Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

Quality
Exceltent Service

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

PH. 742-2225

1

2-26-tlc

extensive

Real Estate- General

II II He

GARAGE

Rt. I, Box 2n
RAVENSWOOD, WV
304-273-3660
"We Are Now Open"
WIt's Made Of Wood
We Can Make~
•Toys •Furmture
•Building Produets
•Custom or Specialized
Orders Welcome
Come &amp; See Whll We Have To
Offer. Cn•s the RMn•ood
Ill,. lo St Rt 56. (l Block
From City Umns- Across From
Double Ni '*ell
11/~/ 1 1110 •

Bring This Ad
Good For
15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS

ROOFING

H. L WRITESEL
I

'ltGutters

•Downspouts

st. Rt. !24 Pomeroy, OH

•New or Repair
•Painting

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

:r~~~~ission:

FREE ESTIMATES

'Also
\
pH. 992· 5682
or 992-7121
3·24-tfc

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
7-14-tte

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

:

can rep8lr end ... '
core redletora · end

h.t.r

119~2198

'·

Mlddlepolt. Ohio

11-8-1 mo.

r·

kitchin' arid
blthrooms. ~emodeling,
add-ons
new homes, .
plumbing, elec:llic, $iding. '

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
·-.

"
'

"

.

Price reduced drastically from $6,000.00 .to
$3,600.00, Trailer can also be purchased ~ith
land at an additional cost of $6,000.00, Trader
located on two lots on West Main Street.
Pomeroy, Ohio, and was fom:'er1y the t;~rope~
of the late Zuelelia Smith, Tr8fler bargatn at th1s
price. Trailer can be purchased separately or
with land. For information call Lula Belle
Hampton, telephone 992-2021 or Fred W.
Crow 992-2692.

We Honor Goklan Buckeye

cards E&gt;capt on Perm.

Specials.

11-8-1

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

../

We Honor Golden Buckeye
Cards Except on Perm.
Special a.

12 -9· t mo

CHECK

~ ' 20· Ifc

4

RAW FUR. Highest prices
paid. lake Jackson Fin &amp;

Giveaway

- -- - - - - - -

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may place an ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

Puppies. Call 676-7771 .

Ham pater to giveaway. Call

446-3732 .

1 mala &amp; female full full
grown hampster &amp; babies.

MIDDLEPORT - 1\7 story frame home with 3-4 bedrooms, level
I!X, part basement. hardwood lloors, and new lumace. $18,900.00

RUSTIC HILLS - Ranch with 3 bedrooms, faiTtl~ room, chain link
fence, front and rear porch, and n&lt;ce l&lt;i $34,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Business building - has 2 businesses
downstairs and 4 apartments upstairs. New roof, separate utilmes.
$710.00 month~ rental potential. As~ng $45,000.00.
NEAR RACINE- Three acres of nice ~~ng land, a 14x70deluxe
mobile home w~h ~dewalks. front and rear porche~ and a big
yard. $26.700.00.
POMEROY - Two story, thee bedroom, storm~ electric baseboard
heat bath. $13,900.00.
MIDDUPORT- 1\7 story frame home.has insulation, storms and
some remQdeing. Level lot new addition, great neighborhood.
Does need some worlt. $19,900.00.
RUTlAND - 7 year old ranch w~h 3 bedrooms, full basement.
famiy room, util~y room, wood burner, back porch, two smW~
build&lt;ngs on 2.29 aces. Now $35,000.00.
REALTORS

Henry ET,ucmerltllnct. Jr
.. ..'
Dottfe
'""
1

~~~,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~m
9-2660

=-T~.~ . :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::'~·2259

m.
pllll·.

f

I
I
I

I

to

buy

tobacco

as this home ISonamce corner

Gold , silver, starting. je welry , rings, old coins &amp;
cui'Tency. Ed Burkett Barber

WANTED PTO driven
hammer mill 304-676 ·

2373 .

ImplY 1111111

Black Chihuahua, very
small. house broken . Will

spay. 614-992-5644 after 6
p.m
One kiln suitable for gold

firing . 614-992-3630.
2 ptece living room Sl ite.
Free for the hauling . 614-

Poodle, 304-676-

6

Lost and Found

ing cottar. Cat! 446-2692 .
LOST string of pearls, senti m-ental value . $10.00 re -

ward. Cat! 446 -1791 .
3 year old white &amp; brown
beegle . lost in Forest Run
area. long chain . 614 -949 2693 after 6 p.m .
Found: Black long haired
female cat . Wearing. pink
collar with bells. On Sumner

Rd. 614-9B6-4137.
LOST DOG: Plott Hound,
male,

brindle

&amp;

white .

"Zack" . Phone 614-9923812 . Reward .
Found -Airdale type dog .
Black and tan . In the Pome-

roy vicinity . 614-992-3213.
Lost-Keys in brown zipper
case . Near or in Elberfelds.
Retum to Sentmm Office or

ca tt

614 - 992-7604 .

Reward .
lost - Female Samoyed (white Husky) in the Flatwoods Rd . area . Answers to
Shane. Black collar -With

rabie tag . 614-992-6720 or
614-992-2622.
Lost small white Brittany
Spaniel with orange and
brown spots, Ambrosia or
Greer Road areas , 304 -675 -

620B . Reward . 304-45B ·
1727.

Announcements

7

Yard Sale

Garage Sale 186 Greenb SWEEPER and sewing ma - rier . Clothing. miscellane chine repair, parts, and ous items. 1 mi. from
aupphea.
Pick up and Gallipolis, Rt . 160. Watch
delivery, Davis Vacuum for signa. Dec . 11 .
Cleaner, one half mile up

Cat!

Di's Craft Shop, Spring
Valley Plaza, Gallipolis -448-2134. Entire 11ock re·

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champton Aucti -

duced 26% texcept candy! . oneer Rick Pearson . Estates.
Dec . 6-11.
antiques. farm, hou•holds.
liceneed Ohio-WVa . 304 Gun shoot, Racine Gun 773 - 6786 oi 304 -773Ciub. Every Sunday starting 9186.
1 p .m . Factory choked guns - - - - - - - - only.
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
DEER HEADS mounted. Center. Truckloads of new
Brow's Taxidermy, Terry merchandise every week .
Brown. 814-9B6-3B33 or Consigments of new and
614-9B6-3364.
ueed merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Deer Heads mounted by en Auctioneer. 276-3069.
experienced taxidermist .
Bob Cline, Rt. 2, Point Profenional Auctioneer
Pleasant, 304-676·1448.
Service . Over 30yearsexpe·
rience in new, used and
Wetherell Concrete, Hand- antique furlture. Ucensed to
eraoo, has shut down fort he auction Real Eatlte, autos,
winter , Re-open March, farm equ lp., household, bus·

1983. Hoppy Holldoyo.
CHRISTMAS Auction SOt·
urdoy December 11 , 12:00
Auction

House. At. 2. Lut auction
unttl 19B3. Join us for tho
lui btg 18le of the Year.
Chrlatmoa glftofor eveJYone
Including toys, lamps;
wttcha tools It jeweltJY of
oil kinds. Rofreahmento

11

Help Wanted

Make money for Christmas.

Sell AVON . Call 446-336B.
Insurance adjuster wanted .
Staff position with well
established company . Gallipolis S. Proctorville area .
Experience desirable but not
necessary . Company car furnished. Hospitalization &amp;
other benef1ts. salary open.
Send resume to : Insurance
Claims , P. O. box 59 , Ports-

mou11&gt; , Oh 45662 .
Bookkeeper w / payroll &amp;
sales tax experience. Send
resume to: Box 5000, c-o
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 826

3rd Ava, Gallipolis 46631.
Lady to stay with elderty

lady. Cat! 446-27B1 .
Help fight inflation working
part time 4 days a week , 4
hours a day. Ideal for working mothers with children .
Transportation neceuary .
Call Econb Travel Motel
Sat. , Dec 11th between 10
and 4 . ask for Mrs Skidmore,

446-7071..

1- - - - - - - - - EARN EXTRA Money for

Christmas . Sen Avon . Earn
good S$$, set your own
hours . Call 614 -69B-7111

(collect! .

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

&amp; RHQQAiilftllfl\1

Georges Creak Rd .
446-0294 ..

BEDS -IRON , BRASS, old
fumiture , gold, silver dol lars, w ood ice boxes, stone
jars, antiques. etc .. Com·
plete households . Write :
M .D . Miller. Rt . 4 , Pomeroy ,

992·6370 .

FOUND large white short
hatred, Bob taile4 dog wear-

let wrth country setting
Call Day or Evening
Cheryl Lemley,
Sales Assoe.
742-3171
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
742-3092

lerYed .

Wanted

poundage. Call 614-379·
2340.

man . Catt 614-379-2435 .

GOOD BUY -Doublew1de
partially fimshed on 1 acre lot
w1th sepuc system Ubl~1es
available. Sells lor only
$8,000 00
ST. ROUTE 143 - 1977
8arnngton home 3 bedrooms,
2 lull baths, extra mce k1tchen
with iSland range Add-on
fam~y room w/ woodburner.
S~uated on 188 acres. Terms
are ava&lt;lable Sells lor
$36,900.00
POMEROY - Lovely 4 bed·
room home wrth aluminum
~ ding, Modern kitchen, electnc
lire~ce in living room Exira
low utilities. Some furniture
Included 1n sa~ pnce of only
$27,000 00. Call todaym
RUTLAND - New l&lt;ma Rd. 3
bedroom ranch on 2 acres 21ull
baths, alum1num Siding, Relngerator and 1sland range Owner
willing to negotiate on sale
pnce of $45,000 00 Call now

Alto

Late model bass boat. Call

446-429B.

3 shepherd Collie pups. To

4 wk old puppies mother
Basset hound, father Dober-

lltoker
Office· 992-5739

Mt.

Scrap gold jewerly at
Frank 's Pawn Shop , 406
2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis .

No Item to Large or to Small .
Will buy one piece or com plete household. New, used,
or antique furniture . 614 -

George S Hobs1et1er, Jr.

noon.

Fur Call 614 -6B2 -744B .

Catt between 6 It 6PM,
446-4634 .
good home Ca tt 614-2466671 .

HOBSTETIER REALTY

3

4637.

Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476.

""''iiiill.

I r1 Fl N I
RAJY

1110.•

Bri!W This Ad
Good For
15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS
Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
Now thru Dec. 31
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-2n5

Wanted to buy Square Danc ing outfits All sizes. men 's
and women's . Call 446 -

---:---:--:-1
Real Estate-General
Snoodle
- - - - - - - - - 1224B .

.-_a

t~~~.tom

coreo, We Clln·'
..10 .ckl boll end rod '
·' · out l'lldlllton. We alto .
Npe1r 0. Tenkr
. . 1'
PAT HILL FORD ,

1968 NEW MOON TRAILER

Mon,-Tues,·Wed.

,~~~~=======4

: we R:r:

FOR SALE

446-0069

Racine Gun Club dues are
due. $26 .00. Must be paid
before Jan . 1, 19B3.

Catt 446-4129 .

Real Estate-General

Now thru Dec. 31
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N, 2nd
Middleport, OH,
PH. 992-2n5

Announcements

9B6-4 114.

EXECUTIVE HOllE
(Rental)
This contemporary 4 bed·
room, 2 bath, home with
finished family room. att·
ached garage located near
Pomeroy is available for
immediate occupancy. A
montlt to month lease can be
ananged with security dep·
osit and reference.
Call:
RCS REALTORS
1-614-593-5571 or 992·6312

remodeling
o£1ectnc "'"
.Custom Pote Bldgs.
&amp; Gal3ges
olloofing Work
oAtuminum &amp; Vinyl SidinJ,S
15 Y11rs Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

MOUNTAINEER
I\OODMIRKS

3

--------

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Homes -

re-e

Oh Or 992 -7760 .

~----------------------··

54 Misc. Merchandise

Vatlay Trading Co .. Spring
Vattay Plaza, 446-8025 or

1 small dog . black cu rty hair.

II 18-1 mo

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174

"

B43-3443.

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Fish-Game Head Life Size Mounts
Plus Hide Tanning

446-3159 or 256-1967 In
the evenings .

Pups. Half Beegle. 6 female .
Good Christmas pets 614 -

-

r

WANTED TO BUY Oldfurnltute and Antiques of 111
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,

num, old coins, scrap rings
&amp; silverware. Daily quotn
1~ ·.. available . Also coins &amp; coin
~,. ') supplies for sate. Spring

Sat!Br. Cett 614-667-6494
or 614 -266-1322.

17. - - - - - 18.
t9,

1! . - - - - - t2. - - - - - t3 .

5.

Wanted To Buy

Male Dalmatian about 1 yr.

20. - - - - - - - - 21.
22 .
23 .
24.
25
26.
27 .
28.
29
30.
3t
32

2.
3.

13

~.

6 puppies , part black Irish

( ) Announcement

Page

· ~~~' I·B-u-y-in_g_G_o_ld-.-S-itv-a-r. -P-Io-11-

old . Call 446· 2B06 after
2:00PM .

I )Wanted
I ) For Sale

4.

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only.
11-26-1 mo.

These cash rates
include discount

below .

12 8-1 mo pd

6:30P.M.

IS4 .00!s 7.0(

classification If you'll
check the proper box

RUTLAND- Just off Happy Hollow Road -We have 31ots, each
approximately 1 acre lot Ask&lt;ng $3,500W

Roger Hysell

port. Oh1o.

,

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

Commert~l

Public Notice

Robert E. Suck

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
'Roofin' of 111 types
Jltsidentill &amp;

:

Reyno lds. deceased. late 0 1
County Road Nb. 5, Middle'

NEW &amp; USED
HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
CHROIE PRIIIARYS
Rtl. '107.50
NOW 187,50
Complete Kleker Assembly
Rec. 1 189.95
NOW 1147.50
luther Vests
Roc. 1 149.95
NOW 179,95- 189,95
Harley Jewelry-Harley Pins
Roc. '3.95· 16.95
NOW 2115.00
leather Hats, T-Shirts, Acces·
sories &amp; much more.
Hrs.: 9-5
Closed Sun. &amp; Mon.
BHehcrove Rd.
Rutland, Ohio

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1121 2. 9 16 3Jc

rles H. Kntght. Pomeroy, Ohto.
1was appo.nted Administrator of
th e estate of ll;enneth E

Ph. 985-3929 or 985-9996
12·1·1 mo.

11191 mo

Robert E Buck
Probate Judge Clerk

Court. Case No. 2395 t. Cha -

Available for Private Parties

614-742-2178

Moddl eport. Ohoo 45760

County Probate

SCHEDULE
Mon.-Weds.-Sat. Nights
7:30 to 10:00
Sunday 2:00 1o 4:30
Open Christmas Eve
Closed Christmas
Open New Year's Eve
7:30-12:30
Open New Year's

LOCATED ON
STATE ROUTE 124 EAST
OF RUTLAND

th e Merg s County Probate
Cou rt . Case No 2 3950. Ja ck
Warn er. 420 Carr Stree1. Ja ckson Ohro 4 5640 wa s ap.
pornted Executor of the state of
Eleanor Welch Zerher de·
ceased. fate of Second Street

Mergs

SKATE-A-WAY

WE SPECIALIZE
IN DEER HEADS
SMALL ANIMALS
BIRDS-FISH

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF ELEANOR
WELCH ZEIHER. DECEASED
Case No. 23980
NOnCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November A4 . 1982. tn

-the

TRUCK &amp; AUTO

;~I · ~\~

I

Print one word in e a c h i " " "
space below. Each Intitial or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
name and address or
10
6
phone number if used nuou; I .. ~ .. 1....·...
d 111.i
li You'll get better resultS
I .... " ~~~ days ay~~

'

'

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF KENNETH E.
REYNOLDS, DECEASED
C.Oe No, 23981
NOnce OF
APPOINTMENT
OFFIDIQARY
On November 24. 1982. on

"Beautiful, Custom
j
Built Garages"
Ca II for free siding ·
estimates, 949-2801 or
949· 2860.
No Sunday Calls

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
t ·3·1fc

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wute D1llly Stfttn"l Clusifitd O.,t.

IV-YETP. IV-SYEP anH VII

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Farm Equipment
Dealer

Or 949-2160

partrcrpant s and employees 1n
all facets of •ts operatrons. and
where delrc•enc1es are noled to
take allrrmal!ve actron to cor rec t such defrc•enc•es In addr tron rt rs our pohcy to recrurt.
hrre and promote Quahf red
rndrvrdu als rn all JOb classtf rca tr ons wr th out regard to han drcap (provrded physrca[ lrmlta t•on does not prevent tob
pe rformance and ca n be rea sonably accommoda ted)
It •s our polrcy to take
affrrmatrve acuon to ensure that
all trarnrng programs and all
personnel actrons such as rate
of compe nsauon. benefrl s.
transfers. promot1ons. layoffs
and termrnatron s are admrnrstered wr thou t regard to han dr cap Add•!IOnally, Jhe Off1ce
of Manpower Development wrll
continue tiS affrrma trve actron
efforts to a ll ev~a t e varrances •n
enrollmen t and placement
rates by age. race and sex
throug hout the Balance of
State rn CETA T1t1es 11-B.

PH . JIM CUFFORD
992-7201
107-tlc

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

I

U,S, Rt, 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

William B. Downie of near
Racine has been namecl new
president of the Meigs County Fair
Board.
Others selectecl as officers lor the
next fair year are Hugh Custer,
vice president, and Wallace Bradford, treasurer. Muriel Bradford
has been reappointed secretary,
William Radford has been
named delegate and Bradford as
alternate to the annual Ohio State
Fair Managers Convention to be
held at the Hyatt-Regency In
Columbus, Jan. 5-7.
Dates for the 1983 county fair
have been confirmed and the event
will be held from Aug, 16 through
Aug. 20.

Public Notice

Wort&lt; Insured and
Guaranteed

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

PARTS.and SERVICE
4-5-H c

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Downie chosen as
fairboard president

Public Notice

osapticsy1t8ms
'Clump true!&lt; oervice
osaeding and reclaiming
oAaclna and Syracuse
sewer hookup

GUN SHOOT

•Washers •Oesttwaahen •Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •FreezeJS

J

BOGGS

" TherP'.s this man you didn't
know prior to late January or
February and by April you werP
taking your inheritance and giving
it to this new friend?" the prosecutor
askecl.
" If you cam e to me and said you
W21'!' m y friend I'd help you," she
replied.
Yeazell, 52 , ischargedwlthlalllng
to file state Income tax rPturns for
1977 through 1981 and receiving
state money .
Both he and Miss Boerger
pleaded innocent when arralgnecl
Aug. T1 and arP frPe on their own
recognizance.

Ill Court St., Po•ror. Oluo 45769

In Memoriam

eexcavating

FRYE'S

9

~~

'

Sentinel

· When I have a d1fference "1th 446 -8026 .
fred I alwa ys sugges t see1ng a 1- -----:--:----:l ~",.~ :,lage counselor He th 1nks We pay cash for late model
and gel s back rn clean used cars.
l"vvu• the
line
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

Address--------Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

- ------'-1

Pit 742-2834

2

obackhoe

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

All Makes

3-7·1fc '

$56,(XXJ.

The Daily Sentinel

I

For all your wiring :

former business associate charged
in the same case, after her Illness.
"But there were flowers (in the
hospital room) with his name on
them ," she said.
Miss Boerger also indicated that
since 1980, she had loaned Yeazell

WIC coupon pickup
dates are announced

I

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
odozer

Name-----------11

.

.,

LAFF-A-DAY

'l

Curb Inflation
I ~
Pay Cash for
I
I
d Classifieds and II
I
Savell I
II

........ co wv

,_,.,.

lhoGr.,&lt;N
1M Gu~ ... OoOI
143 ,., • ..._o,.J
111 Wol...,t

/1 1 Homo l&lt;rop"'•'"'"n"
81

~·

The Dail

.

I
I
I
I
I
I

,,. ,,.,.h..... ,.,, '"'"!!' '

...,... c-"

16MHM-o
II Vphoht.,..

47W.,•dool1""'

U ·W..tHI1•0o

Hobbins wa s a devoted stock ca r
fan and began racing the cars
part-timc in 196.'i.

$2ti and costs; Anthony Boll, Peclro,
speed , s;.J and cos ts; ArthurTackett,
Vint on. left of center, $25 and costs;
Lcna Sampson Hifne, Heedsville,
speed , $2.'i and costs; Janet Oiler,
Middleport. left of center, $10 and
cos ts; Fay Stemmerz. Pomeroy, no
opcra tors licens&lt;'. $50 and costs. six
months probat ion; Donald Bush.
Hacinc, non-support, to pay support
and an·carage. costs. two Y'E'ars
probation
F01iciting bonds wei'(' Michacl
Barker, Charleston, hunting deer
whild huntmg JicenS&lt;' wa s revoked.
$l,fXXl and costs, aiding another in
the hunting of deer on the land of
another without first obtaining
wnt10n {X'rmtssion from thf' ownr r.
SJ'&gt; and costs; Anthony Falks,
Proc&lt;O&lt;Yille. and Max inc K innaird,
Ga llipolis Feny, speed,S'iO.:J()each.
Honald Hichards. Wa shington. W
\ 'a . and Jack W()(lti)·, ,\kron,
Spc!'&lt;l. $-10 .')()each

-

12 T•uchto......,
11 Vanolo4 11111'1&gt;

ll••"""'""d

41 "M...,;lo
"""' Homoo
' " " . .lor
'
42

__________ ,,______ .,. ____

.. ,_._.,,port, Ohio

=

t.l., .. t/tr ·rl l"'~''''" '' ' r r/t r·

11 Auooolo•l•

)I lllolo Ac•~•
Jtll..

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

' "~·

uc• ,.. , .,""'"'£""'"""..'
&amp;l .......... .

U Mo,.yoo l o.,

Ml

I l•IM4,_.,.

•1 MDU-DidGOOd o

1970.

Two deer killed
Correction

o•

I

,. ......_ ..................,.. ,, ......._...,.... ..
c ..................... ....,••

J •

Many or Hobbins' songs and
albums wcre about gunfighters.
Cowbo~· ballads like "EI Paso," his
bigg&lt;'St hit. influenced the western
st\ I£' or countr:v music.
Hobbms wa s bom in Clendalc.
:\nz .. and go t invol ved in music in
the carl)'l900s
El&lt;'sidPs "EI Paso," his other hits
includcd "White Sp011 Coa t,"
"Dcvil Woman," "Don't Worry,"
"F. I Pa so City," and "My Woman.
M' 1-\'oman . M y Wife, "forwhichhe
recei\'C'CI his second Grammy in

Grange sponsors ~snack with Santa program'
';\('('d som f' \A'hf 'tl'

December 9, 1982
IT

t

O.,Brien ends 24 court cases
1'\inet['(•n dC'ff'nclant s wriT' finf'd
and fi\'P othcrs fo1i0llcd bonds 111
Mcigs CountY Court I-I'&lt;'Cincsda)
Fined b,· .J udge Patnrk O'BnPn
w('r£' Mic hac·l Sm tih . S~Ta cusc.
speed , $27 and cos ts. Mllchell
Hallum , Da~ ' I O n , spotlighting, 1wo
cha rges. $2.')() and costs Parh. two

-'

HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn good SSS, meet nice

peopl e. Call 61 4 -B43 29B2, 614-3BB-9046, 614992 -3690.
NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help with colleg e expenses?
The West Virginia National
Guard can help . If you are a
Junior or Sentor in High
School or a Graduate. you
may qualify for a $1,600
bonus or up to $4,000
college tuition assistance,
plus you will have a secure
part time job after training .
learn skills in Maintenance,
Supply, Clericap. Electronics . Good Pay - Good
Training -Good Benefits. The
West Virginia National
Guard is no ordinhy part
time JObl Call Sergeant

Lutton

304-675-3960 or

toll free in WV 1 -800-642-

3619 .
-ut
RECEPTIONIST WANTED
IMMEDIATELY, futt time,
long hours, good pay. Serious applicants only . Apply
at 1244 4th Ave ., Huntington . WV or call 304-622 -

7722

1- - - - - - - - - 12

Situations
Wanted

Tree trimming &amp; removal .

614 -949 -2129 or 614992 -6040.
Carpenter work . Repair &amp;
remodeHng, wall paneling ,

ceiling tile . 614-992-2769 .
Charliea Roof repairs, trailer

porches and decks. 7736921 .

WILL do babysitting in tny
neu. CO)tle. · ttquilotiona It home, any ages. 304· 773antiques of ott types. Oaby 5396, Mason .
A.M~rtln It Rodney Howery.
6
_1_4_·_9_9_2_·6_3_7_0_._ _ __
1
•MURRAYS Auction held
avaJV Sunday at 2:00p.m. l -1-:3- - :1-n_s_u-ra_n_c_e_ __
at Hartford Community
Buildlng. On December

I- - - - - - - - -

12th. there will be o lot of
old, ontlque dlahoa It other
merchandiae . Auctioneer

Are you paying tQ,o much for
your hospital-health insurance . Call Carroll

Bill Ohlinger.

Snowden, 446-4290 .

�• •
•J

Page - 14-

.' '
••

.

~

13

Th e Daily Se ntine l

Insu ra nce

Pom e roy-

5 1 Household Good s

They'll Do It Every Time

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURN ITUR E
STOR E 62 Olivo St .. Galli-

SAND Y AN D BE AVE R ln-

•

'•'

su ranee Co . has offer ed
services f or fire insu ran ce

AT THE R«MMA6E

SAL£ .. ·CAtV THAT 813 ..

po li s. King coa l &amp; wood
heaters with fan $459, set
bo x sprin g &amp; am attress
$ 100, firm $1 2 0 . so fa·
lovesea t &amp; c hair $ 19 9. love
seat s $70 . new coa l &amp; wood
heaters as low as $399 w ith
blo w ers. u sed coa l &amp; w ood
heate rs. new d in et set s S7 5
&amp; up, refri ger at ors, ranges.
b unk· bed s co mpl ete s 170 ,
bunki es m attresses S4 0 .
c hests. dr essers. TV's . Ca ll

coverage in Ga ll ia Co un ty

"••

for alm ost a century . Farm ,
hom e and per sona l p ro perty
cover ages are ava il able t o
meet individ u al needs. Co n·
tact Eugene Holley, age nt .

•

•

Phone 388-B690 .
15

Sc h ool s
I nstruction

44 6-3169 .

Ka r ate t he ul tima te in se lf
defence all pr iva te l esso n s.
Men . wo m en. &amp; c hildren .
Instruc t io n th ru bl ack belt .

GOOD USED AP PLIAN CES
· w asher s. dry ers. ref rige rat o rs, ran ges. Skaggs A p plia nces . Uppe r River Rd .,
besid e Sto ne Crest M ot el.

Also avail able Karat e un ifor m s puchin g and kicki ng

bags. a nd p rotective equip-

44 6-739B .

men t . J erry Lowery &amp; Associa tes Karate Stud io , 143
Burlington Rd ., J ackson .

Oh . Call 6 14 ·286 -3074 or
6 14-384 -6160 .
18 W anted t o Do
----------

l~C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!J

General Hauling and Trash

Rvnta!&amp;

remove\ Service . Reliab le
and dependab le. Call 446 ·

44

3159 afte&lt; 6PM 256 -1967 .

41

N ursi ng in priva t e home .
Daytime only in Gallipo li s or
Pt. Pl easant . Will g ive ref . 1f
requi red . Ca ll 458 - 18 18

Small fu rnishe d house . 1 or
2 adu lts on ly . Call 44 6 -

Wi ll babysi t your tiny infant
wit h ten der loving care in my

homo . Call 6 15-367 -0462

0338 .
2 bd r. modern ho u se w ith
lar ge util it y r oom 3Jh mi .
f r om Holze r. o ff 1 6 0 . Call
Fo r rent 3 bd r . ho u se furni shed. S175 plu s $ 100

22 M o ne y t o l oa n

dap. Ca 11 446 -0459 .
MODERN

HOM E LOA N S 12 % fixed
rate. leade r M ortgage , Ohio

only 1 - 800 - 341 - 6554 .
WVa . 6 14 -592 -305 1

3 bdr. ho mo.

ca rpet, electri c r an ge, disp o sa l , utilit y rm .
R ea dy t o
move in t o . Good loca t ion .
1 1 3 Bas ti an i Or .
Re nt
S275 . plu s deposit , $2 00.

Ca ll 446·2573
11 71 .
23

C&amp;l Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; t 1uc service
f or all ty pes of busin esses .
Ca ro l N eal 4 4 6 -3862

PIA NO TUNIN G B. REPAIR
Ca ll Bi ll Wa rd t or appo int ment . W ard's Keyboa r d.

44 6·4372 .
PIA N O TUNIN G-lane Da ·
nje l s, assoc . of Brunica rdi
M usic Co . -Cunni nghan's of
At hen s. 6 1 4 -7 4 2 -2951 or

6 14-992 -20B2 .
PE RM ANE NT

H A IR

RE M OVAL - Pr ofessiona l
Elec t ro lys is Cente r. Inc ..
A .M . A. Approved , D r . Referral s. Grt t Ce r tificates . new
hours
B y appointment.

304 -675 ·6234

Rval ! slate

•
..

446 -

Professi o n a l
Se rv ices

•
•

or

Pomeroy - 2 bd . roo m unfurnished hou se . S1 95 . m o .
Security depos it . S100 . p lu s
uti l it ies. After 6 -ca ll 6 14·

992 -22B8 .
4 room ho use . Pref era bly
ad ult s. no pet s. 6 14-992 ·

398 1
3 bd .r oom down st air s A pt .
R e fer e n ces. d e p os i t re q uired. No pe t s. Sy rac u se .

614 -992 -5511 .
5 roo m s an bat h n ear
R ac in e. 61 4 -992 -5 8 5 8 .
3 bd .rooms . n ew p aint .
Ca rp et in liv ing room . 2
bd .r oo m s, bath and h all .
Deposit req uir ed . 6 14 -992 ·

3090 .
FIVE bed roo m . 2 1h baths.
bea uti fu ll y deco rated V ict o·
rian. ca rpets . dr apes. fo rm al
di nin g room . gas h eat .

S550 mont h
6804 .

304 -675 -

3 1 Ho m es fo r Sal e
3 bdr home in tow n , base ment. large l ot. ma ny tr ees.
woodburner , quiet neig hborhood . S32 . 500 . Ca ll

446 -4999 .

Eureka 2 bdr., f ur ni sh ed,
rive rfro nt lot. ref . &amp; dep . Ca ll

6 14-388 -8276
6 room ho use. vacant, sepa r ate two ca r garage. 1 .3
ac r e lot , Rose Hil l. Pome r oy .

Cal l

6 14-678 -

2 bd r . unfurni she d m obile
ho m e. 1 211 60 . na tural gas
hea t o n At . 3 5 . depos rt
requ ired . Call 4 4 6 : 4 229 .
1 2x60 2 bedroo m all e lect ric. 6 miles south o f G alli po lis o n R accoon Creek Ad . no
pet s o r w ill sell o n land
co ntrac t , $1 65 p er mo . Ca ll

446 ·08 22 .

H O USE Meadowbrook A d dition. 3 bed roo m s. f amil y
room w ith firepa lce. ce nt ral
air, basement, ph o ne 304-

675 -1542.
32 M o b i l e H o m es
f or S ale
T RI - STATE MOBILE
H OM ES . USED · CARS.
TRU CKS . GAL LI POLIS .
C HECK OUR PRICES .
C ALL4 46 -7572
CLE AN USED MOB I LE
HOM ES KESS EL'S DUALITY MOBILE HOME SA LES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPO LI S.
RT 35 . PH ONE 446 -7274
12x60 2 bdr . Buddy m obile
f,om e. Set up with 2 or 4
k&gt;ts, g as heat. ru ra l wa t er,
Plantz Su b d ivisio n . Ca ll

,t46-1240.
1979 141170 3 bed room
f(irkwood M o b ile Hm e. Ce ntral air. $10 .500 614 -992 6206 after 5 p m . 614 992 -617 3 after 10 am

USED M O BIL E
576 -2711 .

HOM E.

1963 Sky ~ ne m obi le home.
1 Ox 60 . two b e dr oo m s;

1969 Shultz, 12x60, two

2 bd r. mobile ho m e bel ow
Eur eka . Refer en ce &amp; dep -

osit. Ca11614-256 -19 22 .

Sm all furni sh ed eHi enc y ,
professio nal typ e m ale o nly.
Cent er air &amp; hea t . Ca ll

446 ·0 338 .
Hou ses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr .
ap artm ents for r ent. HUD
pro gram avail able. A-One
Rea l Estat es. Carol Yeager.
Realt o r . C all 304 -67 5 -

5 104 or 675 -6386 .
Ni cely furnished mobil e
ho m e, cent r al air , 1 mile
below city ov8rlo oking riv er.
adults o nly. Call 446 -0338 .
Furn ished e ffi ency . Utilities
pd. $13 5 . 7 % Neil Ave ..
Gallipo li s. 446 -4416 after 7
p .m .
2 bdr. unfurni sh ed ap t. in
Crown Cit y . Ca ll 614 -25 6 -

6520.
JA C KSON ES TAT ES
APARTMENT S ( Equ al
Housing Opportunity ) ha s 1
bedroo m apartment s. re nt
sta rting at $ 162 pe r m onth .
Call 44 6 -2 745 o r leave
m essage .

446-0322
GE refri ge r at or do uble door.
h arves t gold. S250 . Whi rl p oo l w as her, avocado gree n ,
$110 . Bo th guaran teed . Ca ll
446 -818 1. 441 N eig h bo r h ood Rd .

2 room effi ency and bath .

S125 mo. 500 block of Third
Ave .. Gallipo li s. Ca ll 446 4 222 betw ee n 9 an d 5 .

Wh ir lpoo l w hite 1 7 tt . no
frost refrige rator. under 1
yea r o ld . 5350 . Call 367 -

Downt own apartme nt two
b e dr oo m , unfurni s h e d ,
S175 , adul ts. prefe rred . pay
own utilties . Call446 - 175 8 .

78 14.
Used sofa &amp; love seat . S75 .
Ca ll 4 46 -4 1 73 between

2 n d floo r furni shed effi ency
apt . Comfo rt abl e
f or 1
per son . Ca ll 446 -0 957 .

5PM B. 9PM .
USE D

Ca ll 44 6-258 3.
D ownt o wn u p st a ir s, 1
bedr., furni shed apt . Ca r peted. air cond .. adult s o nly,
dep . req . $2 25 &amp; utiliHes .

11 7 1.

Nice 3 bdr . apt . on Co urt St .,
Gallipo li s. S230 pe r m o. in c .
wat er bi ll. $100 dep . R ef .

Colo r TV S95 . bedroo m
su it e 5 195 , di nette set S75 ,
side by side refrige rat or
roq. Call 446 -2572 .
$ 1 50 , Ke n more electr ic
Ab ove Dudl ey ' s Fl o ri st rang e S 125 . apartm ent size
$120 mo. r ent plu s $ 100 like new ref ri ge r ator S1 50 .
liv ing roo m sui te S 125 . bed
sac . dap. Call 446 -1777.
$35 . apa rt men t ref ri gerat o r
POMEROY -2 bedr oom un- S7 5 . Skaggs · A pp lia nces.
furni shed apt .. S 160. 2 Upper Ri ve r Ad , Ga lli po li s.
bedr oom ho use S185 . D ep- 44 6-7 398 .

osit S100. Call 614 -9 92 - 1- - - - -- - - - Kenm or e auto m at ic was her
22 88.
S9 0 , Whirl poo l was h e r,
5 rm apt. . with 3 bdr . in M ayt ag was her . All a-1
Middl epo rt , S 15 0 per m o . shape. Ca ll 44 6-8 1 B1.

1-===========-

2 bedr oo m m obile ho m e f o r
rent in ci ty. private p arking ,
S2 1 5 mo. plu s util it ies.
adu lt s o nl y . referen ces r equired . Ca ll 4 46 -379 1 after

plu s dop. 992 -569 2.
5 r oo m Ap t. w i t h 3
bd .roo m s in Mi d dl ep o rt .
S150 . m onth , plu s d epos rt .

54 M isc. M e rch a ndi se

5PM .

Ca ll 614-992-569 2 .

Wood burni ng add on f ur nance . Still in f act ory crate,

2 bed room tr ail er. Ca ll 614 -

Efficie ncy

379-2435.

5434 .

S4 50 . Ca ll
12 16.

2 and 3 bedr oom furn ish ed .
At N ew Haven . 304 -88 2 -

In Middl eport . 2 roo m eff eciency Apt . Call1 · 3 04 -8 82 -

Fo r sale lum p coa l &amp; firewoo d. Zinn Coa l Co ., Inc.

2466

256 6 or 614 -99 2-720 6 .

Call 446 -1408 .

2 bd . roo m furn is hed . Adult s
pr ef err ed . No p et s. D eposit
required. 6 14-9 92 - 2 749 .
1 2x50 2 bedroo m t ra il er . 1
effici en cy apt . Rou sh lane.

Cheshire. 304 -773 -5882 .
larg e 3 bedr oom trail er . Gas
heat . $200. plu s d ep osit &amp;
utilrt ies. Ava il abl e imm ediat ely . Sy racu se, 6 14-99 2 -

55 11.

.

ap t .

614 -992 -

pats . 614 -99 2-2676 .

304 -523 -1378 .

1 bedroom unfurni shed apt .
All electri c . Ca n see at
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto .

M o t o X bicy cles. mf g. by
Id ea l. $ 125 . Bet z Ho nda

554B.
hom es, hou ses . Pt . Pl easant
and Gallipoli s . 614 · 446 ·

8221 .
Unfurni shed apartm ent s for
r e nt . Call Aut o motiv e

Supply. 8 till 6, 304 -675-

Rd .. Gallipolis. OH .

2218 , 304 -676 -6753 .

VERY nics 3 bedroom apartpaid, 304-675 -6294.

304 -676 - 1371
3B1 2.

non Ave .• 2 bedroom apart·
ment. Excellent condition .

or

675 -

ment,

central

air,

water

Call

614 -266 ·

Two acre l ota- 160 h . road
frontage, city water, behind

84 Lumber. Coli 304 -6756873 or 675 -3618.

_____
_
......
. ..

•.
::-.,.

.

•
•

.

36

Real Estate

Wanted

bedroo m

m ob il e

homo, 304 -676 -4045 .
46 Space for Rent
43 Farms for Rent
large trailer lot on BullavilleSecluded, mini farm , all
fenced , remodel farn1 home,

wrth 4 bedr .. $300 per mo.
Cleland Realty 992 -2259 .

Warm morning wood burner,

$275. Call 614 -246 -618 3.
Case Poc ket Knife Sale, 3
bladed , c omposion handles,
li st pric e $24 . sale price
S1 5 . · Rea l Nice gih for
Chri stm as. Spring Valley
Trading Co ., Spring Valley

\

Addiaon Rd. Call 446-4736
or 446-4265.

76

Apartment
for Rent

1979 Ball Tracker 111 . Uke

76

now

$4 00 fo r quic k sale will
sac rif ice fo r 9100, o nly 3
m ac hin e availabl e. Call6143 8 5 -8 9 18 . Out of town call
co llect also free delivery
wi th in 9 0 miles of our Logan

door.

54 Misc . Merchandise

Bar &amp; 2 st ools. $ 125 . Call

Ody ssey compute r T . V .
game system like new. Leas
than one year old, with 13
tapes, over 8540 . invested,
will take 8296 . Call 614 -

Wanted: Farm of 100to 160
Acraa, rolling land. Reply to Furnished 3 r . privet' bath.
Box 11000, In c -o Galllpolla 846 2nd. Ave.. GJIIIpoNa.
Dolly Tribune, 825 3rd Avo., Ref. preferred. Call 446·
. 2215.
Galllpolla 45831 .

Good season ed hicko rey &amp;
oa k firew o od . $20 pickup

LIVING room suite &amp;: extra
occasional chairs, phone

304 -676 -693B .
SCOTCH Pine c'hriatmas
trees , 87 .00 each . Phone

or for evening appc:Mntment

Phone 304-773-5440 after '
6 p.m.

Ford

tractor

Ity bod end wagon $460.00.
also plowa. discs, blades.
buah hogs end loft poles .

304 -678 -2606 or 676 2328 .
WANTED PTD driven
hemmer milt, 304 -676 2373.

Fi r ewoo d del ivered $ 60 . a
co rd . Coa l delive red 845 .
to n . Call To m Hoskin s 614 ·

LOOKING for some unusual
Christmas Gifts? Try shopping at the Farm Museum '•

63

COUNTRY STORE . Open

Registered Quarter Horse .
Also grade. Saddles, bridlea,
winter horae blankets . Wel t ·

10:00

a.m .

to

6:00p.m. Sunday 1:00 p.m .
Grav e b lanket s. 614 -99 2 -

7320 .
For So l o - CHRISTMAS
TREES . Dn a mila off Rt .7 by

to 4 :00p.m . Other times by
appointment .

~

• a

1-614 -694 -7842 .
G .E. refriger at or . No frost .
Hot po int micr owave oven .

Phone 614-99 2- 6881 .

614 -246 -6121 .
Build you r own garage or

barn ,

Whirl po ol washer &amp; dry er
S1 00 . Maytag automatic
was h er &amp; dryer $ 125. Ke n·
mo re natural gas dryer 885 .
4 0 inc h electric range $ 85 .

Hand woven rugs. appro11i ·
m at ely 27x 54 in. Mak e nice
C hristmas g ift s. 614 -992 -

77 82 .
O dy sse y co mput e r T .V .
ga m e sy st em like new. Less
th an o n e year old , with 13
ta pes, o v er $ 540 . invested ,

will t aka $295. Call 614 9 92 -6 2 06 or 614 -992 6 173.
For sal e- Colt .32 Automatic
o ld model lik e n ew $ 300 .
Rem . nylon 66 . 2~ cat .
Auto m atic rifle wii h scope .

like now $100. 614 -742 3010 .
Oak f urniture. lot s of mi sc .
ite m s, i deal f o r Christmas,
reaso nably pric ed , o pen
Sund ays . Co nk els Furniture ,
Tuppe rsplain s.
Firewoo d , $ 30 .00 lo ad spl it ,
$2 5 .. un split , d elivered,

304 -67 5- 1206.
HORSE manure, S10 .00
loa d. d eliv ered , 895 -3903 .

FRANKLIN stov e.
304 -576 -2026 .

71
Building materials block.
bric k , sewer pipes. windows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call

S90.

UPRIGHT piano. $ 175 . call
1 966 Harl ey Davidso n gas
golf ca rt. extra motor and
p art s, $ 450 . Call after 6 .

304 -372 -83B2.
D o ubl e pane 60 "x 60 '" pic ·
t ure window , $100. 304-

675 -1 211 .
LIK E new r efrig erator $225 .
Al so electri c st o ve $ 176 .

304-675 -14B2.
THREE piece living room

suits, 614 -446 -9604 .
ARMY war surplus, East
Aav es nwood, (New Era}.

Open 1:00 -7:00 p.m. Frid ay , Saturday &amp; Sunday.
(Oth er days until Christmas

4 :30 p.m.) All sizes U.S.A .
m ad e d enim jackets , jeans,
army fi eld j ack et comabat
g o ver nm ent specification
b oo t s, rubber boots ·
in s ul a ted · plain . (Added
Service -Auto minor repair.
Spec ial di scount prices. by

24x24 ,

&amp;6 , 950 .

Lumber furnished . Can deliver. Other sizes . Call 1 ·

614 -BB6-7311 .
SHIPMENT Metal

NEW

sheet s for all building pur·
poses . Flat porcelian enamel
coated . 4x8 thru 4 x 12 .

Prices.

&amp;7.00

to

&amp;9.60.

Odds sizes for trailer under-

pinning.
56

61~ · 667 - 30B5 .

'

••• • a • • • o a

1974 VW bug. $1 ,600. Call
446-1062 .
1977 Vega good running

cond . Call 614 -379-2J27
or 614 -379 -2232 .
1980 Chevrolet Monza 2

dr., auto. V-6. 21 ,000 ac tual miloa, $3.200. Call
614 -246 -9182 .
19B1 Chrysler Cordoba LS .

KENNEL

Call

·

Boarding all breeds . AKC
Reg . Oobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service.

Call 446 -7796 .

74 Gremlin standard , needs
some repairs, good work

car, $300. Call 614 -2455496 .

Would you like 1 cute Cocker
Spaniel puppy for Christ·
mas? AKC Blonde Cocker
Spaniel puppies $160 . Have
been wormed and had all

ahota. Call 614-3B8-9766
after 6PM .
7 wk . old Beagle pups, out of
good hunting stock . Call

446 -1393.

THE MATTER?!

YOU'VE GONE

THI\r MOVIE ! IT

ALL

8 :00

Young Cannibals '

strike continues, this pro gram w ill be pre-em pt ed

and 'NFL Film s· will be
aired .

ALLEY OOP

Cll

0 Cll ® Magnum , P.l .
Cll MOVIE: ' Miracle on
34th Street'

8 :30

304 - 468 - 1854

black
2036

1980 Turbo Trans Am,
T -top, low mileage, loaded,

POINTER puppies, whelped
October 19th .. 1982 ElhowRed Water Tax and Riggins
White Knight bloodlinea. 1
Male, 4 females. 8100 each

304-676-2392 .

JEEPS.

Call (refundable) 1-714 569-0241 ut. 1B66 for
directory on how to purchase . 24 hra.

1972

CHEVROLET

Corvette, t -top, priced to

AKC Regiitered Sliver Minmas. $50. deposit helda pup
for you . Hat had shots,
wormed &amp;: tails cut. veterinary record accompanies

pup. 304 -BB2-3672 .

72

Trucks for Sale

Uke new. 814 -992-5523.

with Major Hoople
Fruit

4

spd .,

air

cond .•

Pickup truck beda, Chov.
late model long, Datsun ,
flatbed ateel. Millar'• Auto
Parta. Colt 814 -246·9102.
1968 International 1'1 ton
pickup, good cond. 814949-2595.

&amp; Vegetables
Ground corn, $6 .00 per
cwt . Will mix minerals,

molenea, If deaired . 304675 -3308.
Fitzpatrick Drchorda. Plenty
of nlca opplea for your

3110
John
cloaer'
11,000 with wlnoh ;
11,1100. 4x4 tiM. 17·~.
11· 31. Colt 114·311·1101.

([) 111 1121 20/ 20
0 Cll @ Knots Landing

WI NN IE

Cll Good Neighbors
Cffl Newswatch
10:15 CIJ TBS Evening News
10:30

1:;;=;=::;::=;;:;::::;;=:
&amp; 4 W.O.
73

von, olr, outo, l""d 111'11,
12,1150. Coli 44 ' 4114.
11178 Chovrolot4·WO ~ton
truck. PI, Pl1 lutO, lock
outo, lollfl bod, oliver end
blook, 14,181. Call 4411·
1724.
1171 OMC ohort bod, 310
4x4, p.o .. p.b .. I~ IIOOd oond.
et~ ·••z-12011 of·
tor I p.ni .. 114·112·11173
oflor 10 o.m .

u ,eoo.

little' s

·A

(I) Star Time
(l) Hitch Hikers Guido/

Galaxy

Gll Coping with Kids
11 :00 0 (2) Newscenter
1IJ ESPN SportsCenter
Cll 0 Cll lll WI News

Cll Dave Allen at large
® Eyewitness News
11 :15 CIJ All In the Family
11 :30 0 (2) CD Tonight Show
CI1 MOVIE: ' All That

BARNEY

OH,STOP
THAT, TATER !!

a.

Pomeroy. 992 -22B4.

I

YOU AIN'T
BEEN INTHAR
All THAT
LONG

Jazz'

(I) Another life
Cll Benny Hill Show
0 (I) Quincy Sam insis l s
that Quincy no t perfo rm a
autopsy on a d ead friend

Gentiral Hauling

ol his. (R) (60 min .)
JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE . Coli 1114-367-7471
or 814-367-0691.'
Need

aomathlng

hauled

@ All In the Family
Ill WI Nightline
11 :45 Cll MOVIE: ' The Ouill er

..

12:00 (I) Burns &amp; Allen
IIJ Auto Racing

• 43
t A Q96

+ A7
Vulner abl e: Neither
Dea ler: South
Wes t

Pa ss
Pass
Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Pass

North

East

1•

Pa ss
Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Pass

2•

s•
4t

7t

South
I+
1+

3t
54
6t
Pa ss

Opening lead: +4
By Oswald Jacob y
and James Jacoby
Har old S. " Mike " Va nder bilt in ve nted contrac t brid ge
in 1925. He also in vented th e
Vanderbill Club convention
al the sa me tim e. His club

I'
I

I

PEANUTS

THIS IS M'f LIFE •••
RIDING ON THE SACK
OF MOM'S 61CVCLE

Uphol1tery

LOOK OUTFOR THE CAR!
"
II
II TREE I
" " " " .ROCK!
•• II '' " FENCE!
II
Jl D06!

.

GOOD 6R!EF!LOOK OUT
FOR THE TRUCK !

'
,.

MOWREY&amp; Ullhotltlry Rt.
1 lox 124, l&gt;t. PINoont,
304-11711·4154.

I_

~
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
40 Belgian r ive r
I F loa t
DOWN
5 Night haun ts I Jericho's
10 Vaca tioning
loss
II New Orleans 2 Expect
univer sity
3 Montalban
12 Kent's c&lt;&gt;TV show
worker
4 Nautica l
chain
13 Show up
14 Kindled
5 Spi ce
6 Cakes and 15 Cuckoo
16 Dexterity
7 Cr osby hi\
17 Begin
ofl949
19 Panda
8 Etch
20 Hit a new
9 Raged
high
II Nature
21 Undulate
15 Rose extract
22 Fior ello,
for one
24 Trifled
25 Mine
entrance
26 Biddy's place
27 Legal matter
28 Gourmet's

I

I

Yes terday 's Answer

26 Gam e of skill
28 F issile rock
29 Speechify

18 Cheer
21 Lanolin
source

30 Turki c lan-

22 Connubial

guage

23 "'Sweet - "

35 Tatter
36 Asian sauce

24 E xactly

onion
. 31 Indisposed
32 All - up
33 Brazilian
parrot

34 Regal adorn·
ments

36 Vam oose !
37 Chronicles
38 Gr eek
m ountai n

39 Window

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

' 82:

Syracuse Super Nationals

Now Hauling house coal ,
lump or ltoker up to 8 ton.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11113 Sec. Avo., Oolllpotta.
4411·783;1 or 4411·1!133 .

+

SOUT H
+ A K 10 52

Memorandum'

·"

'We'll dolt. Coll441113159 or
1114-258-19117 ofter 8.

87

• 743

+ Q t0932

• 763
• QJ 9 6
t 52
J 865

convention was a good one.
So good that it was undoubtedly the best bidding method
in the first year s of contract .
Like all club conventions,
it suffer ed from the difficulty of handling normal club
and diamond hands. By 1930 ,
the younger experts had
developed the base of what
is now Standard America n.
Standard American is still
by far the best syst em for
ordinar y players and with
expert modifica tions may
still be the best for experts.
They used quick tricks.
The club opening showed at
least three-and-a-half. Th e
po sitive hea r t r es ponse
showed at least two and was
a game force, so ther e was
no need t o jump as M:ke and
his favorite partner Waldemar von Zedtwi t z bid t o a
gr and slam .
Mike's ~l ay was simple,
bu t effecttve. He won the
trump in dummy, pl ayed a
spade to his ace an d rufled a
spade. Then he ca me to his
hand with the ace of clubs.
r uffed another spade, dre w
trumps and claimed.
Note that if spades had
bro k en 5·2 . Mik e had
retained the option of try ing
for a 3-2 heart break .

fea ture

Cll PBS Late Night

away or aomething 'l l"oved?

1974 Jeep CJ5, 6 cyl., good
body with top, excotlont
wide track tlrea. U ,200.
614-742-3010.

Rich

Christmas Carol' Ric h pe rforms a d ifferent version of
this Christmas classic .

service . Authorized Singer
Sales
Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

86

CIJ

CD News/ Sports/Weather

JIM&amp; Woter llervlee. Coli
Jim Lenior, 304· 676-7397.

Farm Equipment

CII MOVIE : ' Quo Vadis '

Electrical

1--- -------B.A. \978 Ford 12 pouongor

"

Blues Renko learn s that
Coffey is dating his ex girlfriend and J oyce and
Fay Furillo m eet out stde
coun. (60 min .)

Phone 814-992·8370.

Umeatono, top aoll, fill dirt.
Collll14-387-7101 .

....· .
.-..... ---......

0 CII CD Taxi
Cll lll 1121 1t Takes Two
® Last Chance Garage
10 :00 0 Cil CD Hill Street

United Craft Plumbing and
heating service . No job to
large or to ameli . Oaby
A .Martin, Rodney Howery.

Vane

Chrlltmas b11k1t1, Mveral
varieties for all your uHS.

lock~?

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 448 4477

SEWING Machine repalra,

NORTH
12-9-82
+9
• AK10871
t K J 10 8
+ K4
EAST

Close For

Karen hold s Gary and
resp o nsi ble
fo r
A bby
Diana's illness . (60 mm .)

78 Dodge PU 83.600. 79
Dodge 4x4 lih kit. Coli
446-1758 .

AM · FM- 8-trock, 84.400.
Call 614-388-8319.

1 Premier snare drum kit.

What do LJOU do
with afour-LJearold kid who pic~~

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

B4

Club conventions

CII CD Cheers D&gt;ane

Comfort Henry is !rapped
instde an eleva to r with
M onroe .
0 Cil Simon and Simon
@) Billy Gr aham Crusade
® Sneak Previews Cohos t s Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what's happeni ng at the
movtes .

675 -

&amp; Refrigeration

4x4,

Paul McKinney . I

or

Two company owned trucks

79 Ford F-160 auper cab.

Musical
Instruments

You'll have to find
another hide4-hole!

Water Wells . Commercial
end Oomeltic . Test holea.
Pumps Sales end Service .

CARS. TRUCKS

under *100 available at
local gov' t sales in your area .

sell, 304 -676 -4444 after
5:00.

ature Poodkla. $126 . each .
Reedy 1 week aher Christ-

0

ill 700 Club
([) Ill 1121 Too

GASOLINE ALLEY

F &amp; K Tree Trimming , stump

82

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

becomes the roman tic object of a wou ld -be pries t .

304-B95 -3B02 .
after 6 , 304-676 -2906 .

304 -676 - 4873 or 614 446 -1736.

9 :00

1- - - - - -- -- -

1976 FORD 4 door aeden,

fro m

kids at h1gh sc hool fig ht to
keep a v1deo arcad e open .
(ffJ Fawlty Towers

United Craft . Complete Carpentry Service. No job to
lerge or too amall . Osby A .
Martin, Rodney Howery.

304 -676-2088
4660.

Cil MOVIE : ' Taps'
ffi T op Rank Box ing

Atlantic City, NJ
([) Star of the Family The

too amoll. Oaby A. Mortln.
Rodney Howery. 614 -992 6370.

rtenced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpen ter. electrician, meaon. Call

ps, pb . eir conditioning,
cheap , good condition .

BRIDGE

1121 Billy Graham

9 :30

evenings .,

AKC register ed Red Doberman, 6 months old . Ears
clipped , shots, must sell .

MOVIE : ' Deep Si x'

CD Ill

United Crafta . Roofing ,
apouting, siding and storm
windows. No job too large or

Haven West Virginia . Over
20 leas expensive cars in
stock .

BALKY AVE NU E SLEIGH

Jumbte Book No. t9, containing 110 puzzles, Is available lor $1.95 poetPIIkt
lrom Jumbte, cJo this news l)lper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07643. tncrude your
name, address, zip code and make checks payable to N tw s pa~perbookl.

(J) Joanie loves Chachi

HMMM! FlUSHING 0~ H02AY, TH ' GORMAY,OUTA
THIS PLACE MAY NOT BE A S EASY AS 1 FIGURED!

Call446-2107.

RINGLE'S SERVICE upe-

AKC Chow-Chow puppies.
fuzzy little bears, shots.

304 -762 -

~
Entertainment
Tonight
0 (I) Fame Rea rdon 's favorit e student challenges
his abilities as a teacher
and Jul ie is visited by
some former classma tes

(I) I Spy
1IJ NFL Story: line By
line If the NFL Pl ayers

Carpet Cleaning featured by
Heffelt Broathera Cuatom
Carpets. Free eatimatea.

HARTS Uaad Cera, Now

rXXXI I ) ..

road- GASOLINE

Crusade

removal . Call876 -1331 .

"

Ans"Ner: LIQuid unfortunately much consumed on the

.2

(60 min.)
CIJ MOVIE: ' All The Fine

Call614 -388 -9857.

614-992-6575.

I Jumbles· GOUGE

s

WEST

CD

REilL 60011...

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout ing. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer . as sug gested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
y 8518 ,day

. QJ84

(l) Business Report
Gll Bean Sprouts

LOOK.G LIKE ~
LIKE ...

BUT IF I'M

814-992 -637Q.

p.a .• p .b . , a.c ., e.t ., cruise,
t .w .• am · fm tape . e1,360 .

$796 .

o-·

LIBBY?

I'IHAT'5

up. Call 614 -388 -9652.

1976 Cougar, XR7 361 .

61

.• 17QE5N'T ~UR OO.SURE.1 16ET TO
MOTHER LET
SEE LOTS OF
YOU WATCH j.DOCUME:NTAI~IES, !iCIENCE
MUCH TV,
LIKE T11i1T!...

PAINTING . interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yrs .

houaa calls. Call 578 -2398
or 446 -2464.

Call 446-3844 aher 4PM .

Print answer here:

Inside the NFL Len

1IJ ESPN SportsCenter
Cll Andy Griffith
Cll 0 Cll Family Feud

ANN I F.

1182.

614-742 -2362 .

'

CIJ

textured ceilings commercial and residential. free
estimates . Call 614-2156-

pies, CFA Himalayan, Persian end Siamese kittens .

614 -992 -

I I

Dawson and Nick Buo ni·
cont i analyze this week· s
NFL actio n and look ahead
to nex t w eek 's gam es .
(I) Screening Room

Home
Improvements

RON ' S Televiaion Serv.,ce.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Ouazar. and

VIalt our orchorda on
889. 1114-11119·3785.

It

446-1299.

1976 Ford Granada . 6 cylinder, good cond . $760 .

Call

YARFIL
I CJ

Report

® Eyewitness News
Ill WI People"s Court
7:30 0 CII ® You Asked For

1978 Champion mini motor
home low mileage. Cell

DRAGONWYND CATIERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup-

58

IJ6Ri

78 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

81600 .
5350.

1976 Cordova . Good shape .

[J

0 Cll Tic Tac Dough
Cll Gll MacNeil-l ehrer

control , S125. Call 614387 -7412 or 614 -367 7242 .

POODLE GROOMING. Call
Judy Taylor at 614-36772 20 .

57

CD Charlie ' s Angels

r«t1h'1--~ c- f'I~S A~
Reese weight, diatrlbuting
hitch with welded ball
mount &amp; dual cam sway

INDOAJ
[J I

(]) Entertainment Tonight

Call 614 -379-2726.
1973 Dodge Dart .
614 -379 -2436.

tongue ,

MATIOIJ ,~~

STUCCO PLASTERING
74 Chevy Caprice. &amp;600.
Call after 4PM. 446 -7231 .

rxJ

IIJ ESPN' s Sportsforum

CIJ Gomer Pyle

Autos for Sale

Low mileage, PS , PB, AC .
good cond . Ownermusuell .

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST

Camping
Equipment

81

••

CD NBC

FOR '/CX!R INFOR-

Livestock

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

(2)

vacuum cleaners, turkeys ,
cake mixes and other product s.

BORN LOSF.R

ern boota. 614-698 -3290.

55 Building Supplies

pass o n St .Rt . 143, Pom eroy . R easonably priced .
Used 1 9 75 Case ba ckhoe &amp;
23 00 Ditc h Witch trencher .

HERE'S A LIST
OF EVERYTHIN C'i
WE'VE iSOT TO COVER ,
MR. M&lt;I&lt;EE .

8100. 304·

pickup $800 .00, used grav-

304 -B95 -3974 .

Saturday

78

$1 ,275 .00, 136 MF tractor
$4.000 .00. Chevy '.4 ton

delivered. 614 -843 -3603.

9 4 9 -2 160 or 6 14 -742 2834 .

SHORT bed truck topper.

good ahape.

Whole ahell corn for Dec . - - -- -- - - - $6 . per 100 lbs. with aacks Two H78-14 studded anow
$6 . pre seck8d . Morgan ' s tires, like new, 830 .00eech .
Woodlawn Farm, Pliny At . Call 304-676-6689 .
36 . 304-676 · 2276.
8 · N

LADIES black winter coat
with black fur collar! Good

992 -7479.

Phone 30-J-773· 5554 dally

Farm Equipment

or 614 -992 -

446 -9778 .

Firewood. $35 . truck load .
$65. a cord . Split and

Auto Parts

676-6476 .

quality. size 12. $35.00 .
Phone 304-675-3906 .

load. Call 446 -7432 .

61

0

News
(I)
MOVIE:
'Ride
a
Violent Mile"
CIJ Bob Newhart Show
Cll lll WI ABC News
0 Cll ® CBS News
Cll Dr. Who
Gll Over Easy
7 :00 0 (2) P.M . M agazine
Cil Consumer Reports
'The Do llars and Sense
Show .' This show looks a t

N(.O. ' '""

992 -6206
6173.

For sa le 6 f oot 6 in ch Myers
snow pl ow . Call 446 -9686 .

® Eyewitness News

6 :30

&amp; Accessories

r~~~;~~~;:~;=:;:~~~;:;:;:~;:;:~1

over

BUT HE'S SUPPOSeD

TO BE IMPOSSIBLE!
ME'S NEYER ON TIME .
HE'S BE Et.J i&lt;NOWt.J
TO TIP A FEW. WHAT
IF HE BOTCHE ? TH'
WHOLE-JOIH

p .m .

44 6-0 235 .

Cost

TV ?PECTACULAR t

pair. 814-985-4339 altar 5

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perk, Route 33, North of

Mobile home spaces in
Mason &amp; ,Hartford, W .Va.
Inquire at 1Hogg &amp;: Zuspan.

HMM... ADD rHE NAME HAfi,R:IIJON
TO 'IOUIt LIST, WA'&gt; H. HE'5
601 N6 TO BE THE ? TAR OF OUR

new, big motor, needs re·

H o nd a 2 base guitar with
d im ag ic pi ck ups . Fury amp ,
18 ' w olfer. Call after 3,

Troppo·
(I) Tic Tac Dough
CIJ Carol Burnett
Cll 0 Cll lll WI News
CD News/Sports/Weather
Cll ® 3· 2-1. Contact

CAPTAN EASY
~

Low rey Genie 44 deluxe
o rga n and standard 7ft. pool

VAIST

Band Christmas Emmet
and his mother compete
against a band of to ughs in
a local talent contest .

Boats and
Motc rs for Sale

I

ID•••--··-.,.
·--

6:00 0 (2) Newscenter
(2) Emmet Otter' s Jug

(2) MOVIE: 'Allegro non

B025 .

classes .

I MODEN
I KJ

12/9/82

1978 Suzuki 650 hea bean
racked , make offer. Coli
468-1997.

QV;CJ1e.

Pomeroy . Large Iota. Call

44

CAfS
oo~·-r

1oz .. 999 silver Christmas
bars , $1 2 .50 eac h . Reel
Nice gift fo r Christ mas.
Sp rin g Va lley Trading Co .,
Sp ring Valley Plaza. 446-

Motorcycles

1974 Yamaha Enduro dirt
bike. 2.900 miloa. Call 45B·
1997.

eAT

(. IN~ D•

lour O&lt;dlfliiY - . ls .

EVENING

REA~

Pl aza. 446-8026 .

O·c1hine
9 8 3 . NFreeecc hi arm
sewingdiai·
ma
m at i c. u se d in sewing

Unocremblo 1hel8 lour Jumbles,
one leHer to each square, to form

THURSDAY
74

S.

~tJ)}!MIDM~T~~v.:=-:!

Television
Viewing

W.O.

1975 Dodge Van. $1,260.
Phone 304-876 -4437.

WON'T '/OJ eAT
'{ooR l.ef'rOIJ~ ~

I ==========jl::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

r OUR BOA RDING HOUSE

Vans &amp; 4

73

WWit'5 W~~~'
CAIW/1-e~ WilY

RENT REDUCED . Mt. VerPhone 304-675 -1962.

TW O

WOOD AND CO AL stoves
by Blue Rid ge and l illy . Free
sta nding stov es and fi replace in se rt s. S w isher Im pl ement , Upper River Rd ..
Gallipo li s.
TROYBILT TILL ER S. now a
spec ial price o n 19 8 2 m o dels. Whil e th ey last . Swi sher
Impl em ent , Upp er Ri ve r

304-67 5-6277 .
TWO b e dr oo m mobile
h o m e. co mpl et e ly fur ·
ni sh ed. $185 . pe r month
plus electric &amp; gas. 860 .

Solos, 446 -2240 .

Phoo 614 -99 2-2094.

APARTMENTS , m ob il e
TWO m obil e ho m es fo r re nt
on At. 2 abo ut 5 minutes
hom t ow n . Call afte r 6 .

1 -6 14 -256 -

F or sa l e R estau r a nt Ca rryo ut equipme nt, u sed.
low es t pri ces . RA DCO.

Apartm en ts . 304 - 675 ·

All good cond . Call 6766848 .

304 -882 -2636 .

In Middl eport . 4 roo m furni shed upstairs apt . Utilities
in cluded. No children , no

TWO b e droom m o bil e
hom e, furni shed or unfurni shed in camp co nl ey . Call

f i nance .
1216.

..

1207 .

773 -621 6.

lot i n area's bes t
subdivision . approv ed f or
FHA &amp;: VA lo an . o wn er

like

Whirlpoo l was h er n ea rl y
new co nd . S1 30 , GE elec tric
Ca ll 44 6-1788.
w as her 011 . nice $ 12 0 , GE
1st. fl oo r unfurni sh ed apt .. w as h er S 1 1 0. Whi rl poo l
downtow n Gallipolis. Utili - w as her $9 0 , Whirl poo l d ryer
ties paid . Call at 631 4th . $9 0 . m any othe rs. 30 day
g uar anteed . Ca ll 6 14 -256 A ve .. Gallipoli s.

dopo srt . 304-675 -6512 .

Nl ~

FURNI TUR E.

by Larry Wright

KIT 'N' C ARLYLE ' "

The Daily Sentinei - P~~ge- 1

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

ladi es boot s. shoes sii e 12,
dresses, pants size 16 &amp;: 18.

6 14 -74 2-2352 .

new ca nn o nba ll bed . queen
m aH ress and box sp rings.
co mplete tw in size o utfit .
sof a b ed, li v ing rm . tab les
and re f rigerat or . Corbi n and
Snyd er Fu rn iture , 446 -

3 rm s. &amp; bath . stove &amp;
refi ger at or. all utilities in clud ed, adult s only. no p et s.

bedroom s. both ai r co ndi t ion, goo d conditio n . 304-

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

So
fa s and
c hai rs
price d f $45
rom
$2 85.
to S895
. Tobias,
and u p t o $ 1 25 . Hide -ab ed s. S440 . and up t o
$525 .. Rec li ners , S175 . to
$35 0 .·, l am ps f ro m S28 . to
S7 5 . 5 pc . dinett es from
and up . W ood tab le wit h si11
ch airs S4 25 . t o $74 5 . Desk
$1 10 up t o S225 . Hutc hes .
S55 0 . and up. map le or pine
fi ni sh . Bunk bed co m plete
w i th mattresses, $250 . and
up t o S395 . Baby beds ,
$110 . M attresses or box
spr ings, f ull o r twin , S58 .,
firm , $68 . and S78 . Quee n
set s. $1 95 . 4 dr. chest s.
$4 2 . 5 d r . c hest s. S54 . Bed
fram es. S20 .an d S25 .. 10
g un - Gun ca bin ets, S350 ..
din ett e chairs S20. and S25 .
Gas o r electric r anges, $325
up t o $375 . 8aby m a·
tresses. S25 &amp; $35. bed
fram es S20. S25 . &amp; $30.
ki ng frame SSO . Good selec tio n of bed r oo m suit es.
ceda r c hest s. rocker s, m etal
cabin ets. sw ivel rocke rs.
Use d Furn iture . . bookcase .
ra nges. chai r s. end tab les .
was hers . dryers . refrige r ato rs and TV 's . 3 mi les out
Bul avi ll e Rd . Open 9am to
6pm . M on . th ru Fri .. 9am to
5 pm , Sat .

614-643-26 44 .

Ho u se for sa l e o n land
co n t rac t. Cheshi re. Oh . 7
rm s. . ba se ment . ga r age .
workshop , gas turnance .

S45 .000
25 13

42 Mo bil e Homes
for R e n t

Sofa. c hai r, rocke r. otto ·
m an . 3 tab les, (e11 t ra heavy
by Fro nti er ). $685 . So fa.
ch air an d loveseat . S275 .

$99 .. to $435 . 7 pc .. 8189 .

H ou ses f o r R e nt

614-245-9 170 .

f lnanslal

Apartm e nt
f o r Rent

54 Misc . Merchandise

tabl a. Call 446 -2706 .

LAYN E'S FURNITUR E

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Thursday, December 9, 1982

M i ddl e port , Ohio

Cll Nlghtline
@ MOVIE: ' They Call Me
Mr. Tibbsl'
Ill ~ loat Word
12:30 0 (2) CD Late Night with
David letterman
(]) Jack Benny Show
(I) Loot Word
0 (f) MOVIE: 'McCloud:
The
Great
Taxicab
Stampede'
(f) Captioned ABC News
1 :00 (I) MOVIE: 'Serial'
(I) I Married Joan
~~~~ Nowe
1 :30 0
(2)
NBC
News
Overnight
(2) MOVIE: 'Falling In
Love Again'
(I) My Uttto Margie

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands· for another . In this sample A It
used for the lhree L's, X for th e two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code l etters are different
CRYPTOQUOTES

G
AZ

ozz

AJW

Y E Z 1 N.

RSZ

N JEZ

I p

G

GV

WR
SRW

. ' ..... . .
....
-

' • '1 . ..

I{

;

' ....

·'

' ~.

zo

•

'

I E

.

Yesterday's Cryptoguote: OUR DUTY IS TO BE USEFUL NO'r · ·
ACOORDING TO OUR DESIRES, BUT ACCORDING TO' OUR ·.
POWERS.-FREDERIC AMIEL

I

�.. ..
•

J •

•' •'

••
' .

.
..'' ..
..
•

Page-

16-

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 9, 1982

Gas, oil costs push wholesale prices up 0.6

,.

J

SALE PRICES THROUGHOUT THE STORE ON QUALITY CHRISTMAS GIFTS
OPEN 'TIL 8:00P.M. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
TIMEX
WATCH SALE

GOWN AND ROBE SALE
Christmas Gift Sale Prices on
Lorraine, PhiiMaid, Katz and
Wildcrest.

~· '

'\ ·,.

LONG &amp; WALTZ LENGTHS

MEN'S

CORDUROY
JEANS
SALE
28 42.

Special group of men's and
ladies' Timex Watches.
Digitals, Automatic Winding and Self-Winding
Styles.

Waist Sizes
to
Quality Wrangler and
lee Brands. Solid colors in basic and fashion
looks.

. By SALLY JACOBSEN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) ~Skyrocketing natural ga$
and home heating oil costs pushed wholesale prices
up 0.6 percent In November, the government said
today. The gain was up slightly from October's
Increase and meant that, for the year, Inflation at the
wholesale level Is running at an annual rate of 3.7
percent.
U the 11-month figure holds through December, the
nation would have It smallest lull-year wholesale
price rise since 1976. Last year, wholesale prices rose
7 percent.
In November, the beginning of the winter heating
season In many parts of the country, the wholesale
price Index recorded · the sharpest rises In home
hea tlng costs since the summer.
Fuel oil costs rose 6.4 percent at wholesale, up from
a rise of 1 percent in October and a decline of 1.6
percent the previous month.
Natural gas prices were up 5 percent last month, a
dramatic turnaround from a drop of 0.9 percent In

October and a moderate gain of 2.7 percent in
September.
Not since February 198) have natural gas prices
risen so sharply In a single month.
Indeed, the General Accounting Office said in a
report released Thursday that retail natural gas
customers are now paying more than twice what they
did in 1978, when Congress began removing price
controls. The report also said that In the last decade
the producers' share of Industry revenues has more
than doubled, whlle the pipelines' share has fallen.
Gasoline costs also climbed in November, rtsing 1.1
percent after falling 1.3 percent In October and 0.9
percent in September.
For the third straight month, food prices were
down, falling 0.2 percent, the same as in October.
Food prices had fallen 0.5 percent In September.
Those declines reflect the bountiful harvests.
Besides the plentlful crops, economists have
attributed the general slowing of prices this year to
the persistent recession and a world oil surplus.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

FROM ONLY

SI9.95
S21.95
S24.95
S29.95

................. SALE
................. SALE
................. SALE
................. SALE

SI5.60
SI7.10
SI9.50
s23.40
Voi.31 ,No.l54

The Daily

LADIES' HANDBAGS
New winter styles in leather, vinyl, corduroy
and sweat sacks.

Rei!. s5.00 ................... SALE s3.99
Reg. ss.OO .................... SALE s6.39
Reg. s12.00 .................. SALE s9.59
Reg. s1s.oo ................. SALE s14.39

~~
I .

\' ",..

....... SALE SlJ.59
....... SALE S15.99
....... SALE s20.79
....... SALE s27.19

1\--.

COAT
SALE
JUNIOR-MISSES
&amp; HALF SIZES

'/

Dress Coats and Uned
Jackets. Quilted styles,
Wool blends, Leather, Fur
looks .... Many to choose
from.
SALE PRICED$
FROM ONLY

3 2 00
·

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

$}7900

CHRISTMAS GIFT
SALE PRICES
ON MANY OTHER GIFT IDEAS!
-MEN'S WEAR
-WOMEN'S WEAR
-FURNITURE
-CHILDREN'S WEAR
-HOUSEWARES
-HOME FURNISHINGS

$8.00 .............. SALE 16.39
........... SALE 19.59
......... SALE 114.39
......... SALE 118.39
......... SALE 127.19

112.00
118.00
123.00
134.00

Denim and Corduroy

JEANS
Basic and Fashion Jeans for
boys in regular and slim. Sizas
8 to 16. Student Sizas 26 to
30 and Husky sizas 8 to 20.

Wrangler and Lee Quality in boot flare
or straight leg styles. Pre-washed in
sizes 27 to 38 waists. Lengths 30 to

Boys' 114.95-

JEANS .......... SALE 111.21
Boys' 116.95JEANS .......... SALE'12. 71
Boys' 119.95JEANS .......... SALE 114.96
Boys' 121.95JEANS .......... SALE 116.46

36.

.......... SALE s14.80
.......... SALE '17.90
.......... SALE s18.70
.......... SALE '25.70

MEN'S

SWEATER
SALE

SHIRT SALE

VAN WERT- For the second time this year, authorities say they
have a strong suspect in the abduction and murder of Elgin
postmistress Betty Jane Mot linger but say they can't find the man.
The man, who postal Inspectors won't Identify, Is described as
being In his late 30s and from Jacksonvllle, Fla. Postal inspector
Donald Bonda said authorities went to the man's home on Dec. 3 to
question him, but he was not there and has not been located since.
Inspectors say the man is "one of the strongest" suspects in the
case, but Bonda said the man did not know he was to have been
interviewed on Dec. 3.
Investigators say lhe suspect resembles a composite sketch of a
man seen near the Elgin post office just before the postmistress,
Mrs. Betty Jane Mottinger, 48, of Ohio City, disappeared shortly
after opening the office.
Mrs. Mottinger was abducted on Aug. 9 and her body was found In
a soybean field near Findlay on Sept. 19. She had been stabbed 13
times and was wrapped In a theater curtain that had recently been
used as a painter's drop cloth.

Crash kills 7 5 children
MANAGUA, Nicaragua - An air force helicopter evacuating
children from a rain -flooded area In northern Nicaragua crashed
Thursday, killing 75 of them, the Defense Ministry said.
A statement by the ministry said three more children and the
helicopter's crew of four survived the crash. It said the helicopter
crashed near San Andres de Bocay, 219 miles north of the capital.
Culture Minister Emesto Cardenal, In a statement Issued almost
simultaneously with the Defense Ministry announcement, said the
helicopter clashed in a mountainous area In Jinotega province and
caught fire.

HUNTINGTON - In the second day of Wilbert Mayle's murder
trial, defense lawyers chipped away at the credibility of witnesses
the government hoped would put Mayle at the scene of the death of a
Huntington pollee officer,
The defense maintains that the 32-year-old Mayle was In his
hometown of Columbus, Ohio, the night policeman Paul Harmon
was killed as he answered another officer's call for assistance.

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

$1596

Lottery wmners

..,

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's daily game, "The Number," was 519.
In the "Pick 4" game, played three times a week, the winning
number was 2823.

Rain~

The Forecast For 7 a.m. EST
Saturday, December 11

Our entire stock of quality
Kroehler and Berkline
chairs is reduced. Wall-AWay. Recliners, Rock-0Loungers. Heater / Vibrators, Standard Recliners.

Flannels - Dress Shirts Knit Shirts - Work Flannels
- Velours - Sport Shirts.
Regular and Extra Large
Sizes.

•
Florida man is suspect

Stacy appears at trial

Christmas Sale Prices
on our entire selection of
men's sweaters and
sweater vests.

HOLIDAY
CHAIR SALE

MEN'S

Reg. 111.95
Reg. 115.95
Reg. 119.95
Reg. 122.95

AS LOW AS

Velvet dresses. corduroy skirts and
blazers. denim and corduroy jumpers,
peasant skirts, poly/ cotton dresses.
Complete range of little girls' sizes

DENIM
JEANS SALE

'

Pine, Oak, Maple or Cheny Finishes. A Cherished
Gift!

DRESSES and
SPORTSWEAR
SALE

MEN'S

SI8.95
s22.95
'23.95
'32.95

LANE CEDAR CHESTS

LITTLE GIRLS'

SALE- BOYS'

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

SALE

Snow

f·::·.;l

•Low

OUR WOOD
ROCKERS ARE ON
SALE, TOO!!

_Sale 19.28
_Sale 112.48
_Sale '15.48
_ Sale 117.99

FREE DELIVERY!

By R. GREGORY NOKES _
Associated Press Writer _
BRUSSELS, Belgium (API The United States and Its NATO
allies reaffirmed thelrcommitment
to deploy U.S. intermediate range
missiles In Europe next year, but
the allies fear European public
opinion could still sabotage the plan.
"Everybody recognizes that we
have got an important public
information-battle ahead of us ... we
need to tell our story better,'' a
senior U .S. official told reporters
Thursday.
French Foreign Minister Claude
Cheysson echoed that concern.
While France endorses the mis~ile
plan, he said, 1983 may be the most
dlfflcult year yet for the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization alliance because of It.
The reafflrrna tlon of support
cam e Thursday, the first day of a
tw&lt;Hlay NATO foreign ministers
meeting attended by Secretary of
State George P. Shultz. The
minister s are expected to issue a
communique at the close of today's
final session.
Flfteen of the 16 NATO countries
endorsed the 1979 decision to deploy
572 U.S. cruise and Pershing 2
nuclear missiles in five European
countries, beginning next year, to
counter Soviet 88-20 missiles already aimed at Europe. Spain
abstained.
The allies also reaffirmed support
for President Reagan's proposal for
eliminating all nuclear missiles
from Europe the so-called
"zero-zero" plan - as the best
negotiating position for the United
States in the year-old arms control
talks with the Soviets currently
underway in Geneva.
"We are hopeful that the moment
wlll come when the Soviet Union
realizes that It can no longer
disregard Western security concerns, and that It Is in the Soviet
Interest to reach a negotiated
solution," the allies said in a
statement.
The votes were seen as a clear
signal to the new Kremlin leadership that there will be no changes In
NATO defense plans unless and
untll the Soviets agree to a concrete
arms control plan In Geneva.
While neither action came as a
surprise, they reflected alliance
resolve not to alter the European
defense strategy despite Monday's
vote in the House of Representatives Tuesday against President
Reagan's MX missile basing plan.

SANTA
LITTLE BOYS'
PANTS and~ TOPS

Will Be In

CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE

JUNIOR
SWEATERS
•
'

Cardigens, Boat Necks, Turtle
Necks, Crew Necks, end Cowt
Necks. Stripes, Printaand Solids
in Junior Sil81 S, M, L. XL. ,

•

Reg. •u.oo
Reg. '17.00
Reg. '23.00
Reg. '31.00

J

•
••
·,•

.

•

_sale •8.79
_Sale '13.59
_Sale '18.39
_ Sale '24.79

Our ·store
FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY
.6:00 to
P.

SALE
Dress Sh!rts - Sweaters
Knit Shirts - Flannel
Shirts.
-

FI!OM
ONLY

$J99

Poly/Gab Dre11 Panta ,Denim Jeans. Corduroy

Jeans.

entinel

WEATHER FORECAST - The ' Natlonal Weather Service
forecasts preclpiWion Saturda); .!!t a wide b,and lrom Ulah and
Artzona slreatcblng acroM to Geo~ Telmeasee, Kenluc~ aud
Ohio. Showers are allo predicted for paa1a ollbeSoulbealt coUt,lbe
Norihealt, 1~, Wyoming and Montana: (AP Luerphoto).

Ohio forecasts
Eighty percent chanCE! of occasional

snoW tonlght.

I 5 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

NATO
allies
reaffirm
pact

Suspender Pants, Denims, Cordu·
roys, Wool blends, Poly/ Cotton
blends.

\

WOMEN'S

seasonal varia tions.

I Section , 12 Pages

JUNIOR
SLACKS SALE
Reg. s11.00
Reg. s20.00
Reg. s26.00
Reg. SJ4.00

-Capital equipment costs rose 0.3 percent, slightly
ahead of the 0.2 percent ga in of October. Those costs
are for machinery and lmnsportalion equipment
used by business and induslry.
Wholesale prices fell Iasl month for gold jewelry
and home electronic equipment. Prices soa red for
cosmetics. costume jewelry, book s and detergents.
All the increases. excepl f01 the November-toNovember comparison, are Jdjusled for normal

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 10, 1982

Copyrighted 1982

I i/~~
n\ -~

price changes had been excluded from the overall
report, wholesale prices would have risen only 0.3
percent.
-The overall 0.2 percenl fall in food prices was
paced by sharp declines in prices for pork, eggs and
rice. Wholesale costs also fell for fish and poultry.
Increases were posted for fresh flllit, ca ndy and
bakery products.
-Automobile prices 'rose a small 0.2 percent after a
sharp 4.1 percent rise in October. Light truck prices
stayed the same, after surging 6.7 percent in October.

'

SALE PRICED

SALE

Today's report said that for the 12 months ending in
November, wholesale prices rose a11. unadjusted 3.7
percent.
In November alone, prices overall rose a
seasonally adjusted 0.6 percent, compared with a 0.5
percent lise in October and a 0.1 percent drop in
September.
U prices rose for 12 consecutive months at
November's rate, the yearly rise would be 7.9
percent. In reporting Its Inflation figures, the Labor
Department bases Its compounded annual rate on a
more precise calculation of monthly changes than the
figure the department makes public for the
one-month change.
In all, the unadjusted Producer Price Index for
finished goods, the official name for the wholesale
price calculation, stood at 284.9 in November,
meaning that goods costing $10 at wholesale in 1967
would have cost $28.49 last month.
The department gave this detailed breakdown of
November wholesale price fluctuations:
-Energy prices overall rose 2.9 percent. If energy

Low

1&amp;22.

Winds light and westerly. Sixty percent chance of snow Saturday.
fHgh 28-32,

Extended Ohio forecast
Extended Ohio Forecaat - Sun(Jay ~Tuesday: Chance of
snow nurrles Sunday. Fair Monday \Yit11 nurrtes tn the northeast.
Fair Tuesday. Very cold. Highs :IS-28. Lows 5-tfj.

GI)ING UP - Metal sides of an addition IAl
Middleport Fire Station ·are going IniAl place.
Contractor on the addition Is Van Loveren and Son,
Fairfield, which was awarded the contract over five
other finns In September. Cost of the project Is

approved a two mill, five year tax measure to supply
funds for the addition which will provide space for all
the Middleport Fire Department's equipment along
with the present structure.

•

Chillicothe paper wtns case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
newspaper barred from publishing
the names of jurors ina murder trial
has been given the right to do so by
the Ohio Supreme Court .
The court's unanimous ruling
Thursday affirmed an earlier
decision by the Ross County Court of
Appeals in a case involving the
Chillicothe Gazette.
Affected is the pending case of
Drewey F . Kiser of Wllliamsport.
who was convicted Friday of
aggrava ted murder, aggravated
robbery and abuse of a corpse in the
March 30 shooting dea th of Don
Wrltsel, 19, of New Holland.
Kiser could get the death penalty.
The jury of five men and seven
women Is expected to begin
deliberating his sentence in Ross
County Common Pleas Court on
Monday.
Court records showed that the

'newspaper was prohibiled from
publishing ju~: names by Judge
Nicholas H.•Holines .Jr. ina pre-trial
order Nov. 2.
The Gazette appealed to the
county appeals court, which prohibiled enforcement of lhe judge's
order. The newspaper did not
publish the names.
The Ohio Public Defenders Counsel appealed the appeals coun
ruling to the high court.
" It was never our intent to publish
I he names of the jurors. We felt we
had a right to publish if we wanted
to, " said Marvin Jones, managing
editor of the newspaper. "We felt
circumstances might arise in the
trial where the name of a juror
would be Important to the story."
"We might want to talk to some of
the jurors when the trial is over," he
said.
Five other Ohio newspapers

joined the Gazette in the caS&lt;·.
The Supreme Court held that the
lrial judge did not adhere to
precedent s upheld by the U.S.
Supreme Court .
Cited was a case. Nebraska Press
Association \'C'rsus Stuart , in which
the U.S. courl said there must be
justification for rC'st raint s on prPss
coverage of trials.
In that case•, the court sa id
justification musl be evidenced by
" the nature and exl~ nt of pre-I rial
news coverage, whel hPr 01 her
measures would be likel.v to
mitigate the effects of unres trained,
pre-trial publicit y and how effectively a restraining order would
operate to prev~ nl lhrea lened
danger."
ThP Ohio Supreme Court said, in
the Ross Counly case, thai "none of
these criteria was given adequate
consideration by th~ tri JI court .··

Leon Jaworski, 77, dies of
heart attack on Texas ranch
WIMBERLEY, Texas (API Leon Jaworksi, who began his
career as the youngest lawyer in
Texas and capped it by obtaining
the Watergate tapes that forced
President Richard M. Nixon to
resign, Is dead at age 77.
Jaworski died Thursday of a
heart attack on his 440-acre Circle J
ranch " doing what he liked to do
best" -chopping wood, said ranch
foreman John Clayton, who was
with Jaworski when he collapsed in
a grove of Spanish oak trees in the
rolling Texas hlll country.
Jaworski had not been In a
courtroom since his drama tic
argument before the U.S. Supreme
Court In 1974 when, as Watergate
special prosecutor, he successfully
secured tape recordings linking
Nixon to the Watergate scandal.
"You just don't argue another
caseafteryou'veargued 'the United
States versus Nixon' before the
Supreme Court," he once said.
Jaworski lived and worked in
Houstoon, but came to the ranch
several tlr\1es a month. It was here
that he wrote three books, Including
the Watergate bestseller ''The
Right and the Power."
. · Jaworski was about two miles
from the ranch house when he
collapsed about 3: ill p.m. He was
pronounced dead at 5p.m. by Peace
JIJstice Sonny ;Gold, after Clayton
$pellt about an bour trying to revive

him.

uOON JAWORSKI

$79,500. Middleport residents at the ,June election

When Jaworski accepted the job
as Watergate special prosecutor,
replacing Archibald Cox, who was

fired In November1973, "my friends
thought that my mental hea lth had
failed m e. that my head should be
examined," he once said.
Cox said Jaworski'sdealh "was a
shame. Leon was a great warrior
and leader of the bar and he
pertormed grea t service as special
prosecutor."
Jaworski sa id he voled for Nixon
and "shuddered" when he heard the
White House tapes and realized
Nixon "was right in the middle" of a
coverup of the break-in at Democratic National Committee headquarters at Washington's Watergate apartment complex in 1972.
"For a moment, I wished I'd
never been asked to take the job,'' he
said.
Jaworski called his successful
battle for the Nixon tapes the
pinnacle of his varied legal career.
but said he never considered fully
retiring afterward.
He maintained an office at
Fulbright &amp; Jaworski - a Houston
law firm hewatchedgrowfrom10to
300 lawyers - and accepted many
speaking engagements.
Jaworski served as U.S. Army
prosecutor during the Nuremburg
war crimes trial alter World War II,
and as special prosecutor in the
federal government's contempt
case against Mississippi Gov. Ross
Barnett, who was.trying to bar the
first black student from the University of Mississippi in 1962.
Jaworski was born in Waco,

Texas. in 1905. He became at age20
the youngesllawyer evcr licensed in
the stale. In 1929, he became a full
partner in a Houston law firm .
Jaworski wa s Lyndon B. Johnson's lawyer in 1960 when several
Republicans filed an unsuccessful
lawsuit trying 10 keep the Texas
senator from 11Jnning for n?-f'lection
a t the samf' tim£" h~:was running for
vice presidenl as.John F . Kenned y's

running ma tt'.
After Johnson beca me president
when KPnnrd~· was slain in 1 ~:i.3.
Jaworski ser\'ed as counSPI to I he

Warren Commission invPstiga ting
the assassin aI ion.
He served on the Presidenl's
Commission on l.aw Enforcement
and other nat iona I and international
comissions and pn nr ls. and was
prcsidL•nt of fill' Am0rica n Bar
Association .
ln 1977, he accrpted an offer from
House SiJI?aker 111omas P. O'Neill
to head an investigation into
allegations of Korea n influencebuying in Congress.
Doctors discovered in February
that the "Colonel." as he was known
to family and assoclales. had
cancer of the pancreas. He was
given "a clean bill of health" after
completing a series of radiation
treatments In May, he said. ·
Jaworski's survivors included his
wlfe, Jeannette; two daughters,
Joanle Moncrief and Cl aire
Draper; and a son, Joseph, all of
Houston.
Funeral arrangements were
pending .

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