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                  <text>Po,e- 14"""" The

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, Dee~mber 15, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Clark undergoes additional surgery ·
SALT LAKE CITY I AP I Barney Clark , in critical but stable
condition today after surgery to
replace the left side of his m echanl·
cal heart , has pneumonia and faces
"awfully tough slugging" to recover
from his third operation In two
weeks, doctor s say.
" He was ln crltical beforeandhe's
more critica l now," said Dr. Chase

In many cases improved since his
hear t implant Dec. 2, said Peterson.
adding that the patient also had
rega ined strength from s~vera l
days on a high-calorie liquid diet.
It was the first m alfunction In
Clark 's. air-driven Jarvlk-7 hea 11
since the implant . On Dec. 4. Clark
undeJWent surgery to correc t air
leaks in his lungs, a complica llon

\

upper heart cham ber - to his
artificial left ventricle. The housing,
which holds the disk In place, broke
where It joins a m etal ring
surrounding the valve, Jarv!k said.
Surgeons also replaced one of two
6-foot air hoses that connect the
heart toan extem al aircompressor.

.. . . ,,
-

Seaver trade
almost history

NEW HOLIDAY
HOURS

Peterson, University of U tah vice
doctors termed m inor.
president for health sciences, fol·
ln the surgery Tuesday . theentl re
ld t ventricle of Clark's heart was
lowing an em er gency oper ation
Tuesday after a valve broke In
rep laced after a broken housing on a
Clark 's polyurethane heart.
valve caused his blood pressu r~ to
Two hours after surgery was
drop sharply.
finished, Clark . the first human to
" This is the mit ra l va lve which is
MONDAY -FRinAY 9-fi
1
receive a permanent m echanical
the most serious of any ! failure I
heart, was fully conscious and
there could be," sa id Dr . Robert
responding to doctors· questions by
Jarvtk. the device·s inventor.
nodding his head, university M edi·
The va lve has a tilting disk whi ch
cal Center spokesman John Dwan
allows blood to now one way from
sa id
Clark 's natura l left atrium - or
RT 7
TUPPERS PLAINS
The 61-year-old retired dentist _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
from the Sea ttle area was resting .quietly tod ay. a hospita l spokeswoman said .
A social worker, Margaret Miller .
sa id late Tuesday that she had
visited the intensive care unit and
found Clark 's wife. Una Loy, "very
Fresh Cut Trees Available, or Cut Your Own.
encouraged about his condition."
Located on Cherry Ridge
M s. Miller said those caring for
Clark felt he was " more alert than
(Tum East at Darwin onto Rt. 681, go 4 miles to Mile
he had been in some time."
Post 13, turn south on Gmvel Road, 1Y2 miles to
But doctors said they were
grove.)
worried about pneumonia in Clark 's
left lung and possible effects of
HOURS: 10:00 TO DARK
anesthesia from the frequent
surgery.

Page 3

BEGINNING DEC. 6

Meigs matmen
capture meet

Livestock report

Pagt&gt; 4

Pagt&gt; II

AN NS

Cake Decorating
SupplieS

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EXPLAINS HEART PROBLEM - Dr. Robert
K . Jarvlk, Inventor of the artHiclal heart in Barney B.
Clark and Dr. Chase Peterson, vice president for
health sciences at the University of Utah explain and

diagram the problem that caused Clark to be
operated on for four hours Tuesday in Salt Lake City
to replace the left half of his heart. ( AP Laserphoto ).

Village mayors end 15 cases
ThrC'C' dPf0ndant.'

H'l' rt'

fin0CI and

"double y~ llow line and $63 running
a red light ; Tcny L. Wining,
Norfolk . Va .. $.'i0. speed ing. Fined
wcr&lt;· Dwayne Quails, Pomeroy.
$100 and costs. des tructio n of
property; Willi am Whittington,
Pom eroy, $88 and costs, open nask.
and Jimmy .JoeAm old. Ocala. F la ..
S-19 and costs, speeding.

five ot hers fmirilt'&lt;l IJOnds 111 the
court of Po m e ro~ · May(lr Clarcnrr
Andrews Tucsda.1· night.
Forfeiting WPI'f' C;~ ru l Cline.
Reedsville, $47, posl&lt;'lun sjX'('ding
charges; Stanlc)· Ou!'kt' ll . Pomeroy, $46. sjX'('ding; l; rr gorv .John·
son. Pomeroy. $4o. sj:&gt;&lt;«ling; :\irk
Talliouris. Campb&lt;' ll. $1i:l jx JSsing on

Middleport village data given
T he M iddleport F i rP D~partmcnt
answered a total of 40 calls during
the month of No,·em iX'r, accordi ng
to the report of Fi re Chief .Jeff
Darst. Of the total call s. :15 were
emergency runs and rour \\'err fire
calls. Ail vehicles of the department wrre dri\'("n 97:~ .4 mi!C'S
during the month . Meanwhile. the

Middlepor t Police Depar tment
made 43 arrests during November,
Ch ief J. J . Crem eans reports.
The depart m ent investiga ted 11
accidents, drove Its vehicles a total
of 2.871 miles during the month,
issued 243 parking meter tickets
and collected $669 In parking meter
fees and $42 In mer chant police
collections.

Meigs squads have busy day
unit s 'l'uP~a~ . th(· \li' ig.., Cou nt.\
Emcrgcnc.\ · \1t ·dl&lt;'; ll St·n ll' t '
reJX&gt;rf ~ .

At 2: '.!1 ~ 1.m .. rht · f&gt;nmt·nt\ l 'n il
wok Bf&gt;rlha Du t lt lll ! r 1Jnl f 1tJ T!\!'I .tl _\'
Health Can · ( 't·n tt·r 111 \·t· tt·ran s
Memuria l ll u:-.pi t.t;. ILw int· .11 1: '.!1
a .m \\'t•nt '' ' t ilt ' n·-.rd t·nt·t· of
Florf' rH't ' \\ 'i /.-.or'

11 11, , H·: tsdt·;td upon
,t!: H. H'inr · ~ ~~ K: :'{)

thf' unit\

~I! Tl \

a .m . wr nt

H1 n r, 1ddw: 1.\

St. !rJ]' E(·n

Richard son \\ h1• \\'i l " t.d.;t·n 1r1 thf'
officP of Dr .l .t nw~o, Conde· ..md then
to HoiJ.t•r :'\.11'&lt;.1 1! ;ll( 'pnll ·r : PomPI'O\
atll : :Jli a.mi&lt; &gt;Jk l 'lm,lirH· Pullins

A M idd lf' pt.!Jl m &lt;.~ n was cittd lor
left of &lt;"f'ntr ·r I(,: lmnng .1 tv..·o-w •hic iP
acc idf' nt attht·lntt ·rspe.:·tion ol Ohio7
and 14:1 n• -.11· :\1idclkport TU&lt;·sda\·
m orni ng.
Will iJm .1 r ·n·nw;.m . . . . 21. wa s
northbound u J! '7 d t X &lt;..~ . m . whf'n h(l
r eportc'l:il' turm&lt;llefl onto 14:1 and
struck a stopp" l I 'Ph ielr dri1·cn IJv
Keit h A. f' int.t·l. lli. Pomrro1·.
1111 , (;; tl li ;t :\ld gs post of thP stair
highl.\'a\' rJtrol said modt· r&lt;.~ t r
d am &lt;.~g t · ,_~-~~ ~ done

to IXJth \ 'Phiclt·s.

A christmas pari\ forthcc hi ldn·n
of Pom eroy Eagles Cluh m('mhers
will be held Sunda1·. Dec 1~ . at I
p.m .

DR. GEORGIANA
BURNS

2
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I WATCH FOR SIGNS

J.

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SPECIAl OF THE WEEK!

PIZZA BURGER
$109

With Fries ............ $1.49 .
We

Will Close for the Season Sun., Dec. 19th '

Adolph's Dairy Valley
PH. 992-2556
570 n. Main

Pom01oy, OH.
"Located at the End otthe
Pom01oy-Mason Bri1ge."

AND

The Meigs-Gailla·M ason Lif~
UndeJwriters Association w ill meet
Thursday at the Tim ber Room of
The E ntert ainer. T he social hour
will be at 6: 3ll p.m . and dinner at 7.
Ladies night will be observed. All
arm life insurance agents are
invi ted.

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

HOMEMADE

A SUPER

GIFT!

HAM SALAD ...............LP .... $1.59
PACKAGED WIENERS ..... ~~~·... $1.79
KAHN'S
BULK BOLOGNA ...........LP •••• $2.09
SUPERIOR CUDAHAY CHOPPED
HAM LUNCH MEAT ......L~ •••• $1.69

Pediatrics-Adolescent
is accepting new patients.
Office at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
9 A .M . to 5 P.M.
Monday-Friday
Eveni"l{ hours for
worl&lt;ing moms on
Thursday 6 to 9 P.M .
CALL 675·1 095
For A
·ntment

Humidifiers
low cost comfort for home or office. Adds
up to 13 gallons water per day to the air

OHIO COLBY LONGHORN

CHEESE ...........t.B, •• 11.99
KRAFT 11 OZ. SHARP
16 SLICE PROCESED

CHEESE ........ rM ... 12.10
I LB . BLUE BONNET

MARGARINE ..~u.A.R.T.E~L 79'

CABBAGE

3 LB. BAG YELLOW

ONIONS .... ~~~-- 6~

I LB. TASTY BIRD

D 3-Speed
Fan
0 Automati c
Shut-off
0 Water
Level
Indicator
o Refill
Light
0 Autom atic
Humidistat
o Wood grain
finish .

"sweet".

FRYING CHICKEN LIVERS

u

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•b
h
h
n

'J.oo

ALSO A FREE

' 3 .00 POINSETTIA WITH THE PURCHASE
oF ANY CHRISTMAS

mee

LARGE saECTION OF CHRLSTMAS TREES

I

TRESS SOLD UNTIL

1

1~~_.l.~~

Starting At $795 ,..,._,.

~ sv!~~~~RD'S GREENHq~~9~-~n6

It

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•

Reg.

PER~T ;::YLS~= ~FT ~
1
Now 4 for S1QOO

Open DaMy

•(

9 to &amp;-

Sunday

1 to 6

!a

II
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79¢·

TURKEY NOODLE SOUP ... 2~ 69¢
32 OZ. DEL MONTE

PRUNE JUICE .........B.TL •• Sl.09
30 OZ. DEL MONTE

FRUIT COCKTAIL ......c.A~ ••• Sl.09

1 Se&lt;ti on . 14 Page\

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP 1-Pollee
and judges must be str ict if Ohio's
new drunken driving law, one of the
'
toughest in the nation, is to have any
impact, officials say.
Even though it won't take effect
until M arch 16, the chief sponsor of
the m easure signed in to Ia w by Gov.
J am es A. Rhodes on Wednesday
said it may already be saving lives.
"I think that publicity about the
bill is very, very im portant. I think
you're going to see a change in
attitude among m any people," said
former Sen. Michael DeWine,
R -Cedarville.
Earl Reich. direc tor of the Ohio
Department of Highway Safety ,
sa id the success of the law depends
on its use by police and judges.
" I think now It hall the prov isions
are there it's going to take a strong
and firm commitment on the
c riminal justice system for ac ti ve
enforcement . aggressive prosec u·
tion and stern ajudicat ion, " Reich
said. " It depends on how the three
components in the criminal justice
system reect to it. "
DeWine sa id som e holiday reveller s who intend to drink will
arrange for someone sober to drive
them hom e and that he expec ts
party hosts to be m ore likely to look
after guests w ho dr ink too much.
" I think it probably al ready has
saved lives," said DeWine. who was
elec ted to the U.S. House in the Nov.
2 election. " ! think now what we
have to do is tum our attention tot he
enforcement of the bill and to back
up the loca l prosecutors and
judges. "
The new law es tablishes as

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. tAPI
- A route proposed for Appalachian
Corridor D would include a bridge
passing over-Biennerhasset I sland.
where Aaron Burr once plotted a
military excursion to the American
Southwest, local officials say.
The state Department of High·
ways has agreed to the plan to route
Corridor D. car rying U.S. 50, over
the historic island. sa id Ter ry
Tamburini, executive direc tor of
the Mid-Ohio Valley Regional
Council.
T ambur ini said the br idge would
car ry the highway across the Ohio
Rl ver over the west end of the island
and would connect Wood County
with Washington County, Ohio.
The DOH originally opposed
construction of the route, but the
federal Department of the Interior
determined the bridge would not

Deputies
checking
reports

conclusive proof of drunken driving
a blood-a lcohol content level of 0.1
percent. Currently that amount
reflec ts only a presumption of
dru nken driving. which must be
proven in court .
The new law allows police to
confisca te the driver 's license of
anyone caught driving with blood
alcohol that tests at that level or
higher.
It requires that a three-day jail
sentence for fi rst offenders. already
m andatory, be served consecutively to prohibit the practice of
allowing some offenders to serve
time on three Sa turdays.
Rhodes urged police "to go all
out " in enforcing it. "This new law
places Ohio in the forefront of the
national bat tle against those per sons who dr ink and drive." Rhodes
sa id.
Dennis Whalen, highway safety
spokesm an, said 26 other sta tes
have the 0.1 percent blood -alcohol
conclusive proof prov ision. but that
the m andatory j ail sentences of
three days for first offenders. 10
days for second offenders and 3ll
days for subsequent offenses arc
unusual.
" I don't know of too m any other
states which have specifically
spelled out minimum j ail time for
r epea t offenders," Whalen said.
Whalen also cited the m andalory
license suspensions of at least 00
days for f irst offender s. 120 days for
second offenders and 180 days for
subsequent offenses.
"A lot of laws permit the
suspensions but they don 'I m andate
them ." he sa id .

harm the environment.
The plan was support ed by the
Wood County Commission and the
Wood -Washington-Wir t Inter state
Planning Commission.
T amburlni said the next step is to
obtain funds for design work on the
route.
The island was the hom e in the
early 1800s of Harman Bienner·
hasset, where he and Burr plotted
their ill-fated military expedition to
the Southwes t.
Blennerhasset's lavish es tate was
r ansacked by local militia after
Burr was charged with treason, and
the island was transformed Into a
popular amusem ent park in I he late
19th Cen'tucy before falling into
ruins.
Archaeological excavations un·
deJWay on the island have uncovered rem ains uptol2,000yearsold.

c~~ •. s1.09

5 OZ. ARMOUR

9 Gal. Capacity
11 Gal. Capacity
13 Gal. Capacity

ONLY Sl29.00
ONLY Sl45.00
ONLY s15900

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE

VIENNA SAUSAGE

••••••••••

IS OZ. ARMOUR

CORN BEEF HASH

CAN
••••••••••

1.09

4 ROLL PACK WHITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE ........ .P.K~, •• Sl.39
12 OZ. 12 ENVELOPES CARNATION RICH

HOT CHOCOLATE ••....B.oJ••• $1.49

CARING - 'lbe "carln&amp;" attitude of Melp Counllans was
rellected again WedneedJ!Y when an American Red Cross BloodmobUe
visit wu held attheSenlorCitlzl!naCenter in Pomeroy.Severalappeals
for blood UBed by re81denta were made before the vt.ll and the tumout of
donon reflected an answer to tlae appeals. Some 30 pinta were pven
by rrdtW• reJIIaclal UDIIa Ulled by the late Lee lloulb ol Pomeroy. Pldured Ia Melp JuvenUe and Probate Court Judp Robert Puck who
wu- ol u-~~v~n~ to replace blood .... by the late Mr. Roull!. See
.Ory on Page 11.
-

1

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in tbe coUapse. 'This picture was taken from the Ohio
side of the river. Two y ears later , a new bridge from
Kanauga to Henderson was dedicated. See story and
picture on Page 12. ( AP Laserphoto).

•

Bridge survivor
still celebrates
KANAUGA. Ohio ! API - There is nothing along
the Ohio River now to r emind area residents of 5: OJ
p.m . on Dec. 1\ 1967. but Paul Scott still remem ber s
the night he survived the Silver Bridge disaster that
killed 46 people.
Scott. of M iddleport, holds a small party every Dec.
15 to celebra te his being alive. Scott and two fellow
ra ilroad m en were am ong the m any driving across
the span j ammed w ith Christm as holiday tra ffic
when the br idge plun ged into the ri ver.
The span was known as the Silver Bridge beca use
of its aluminum paint. it was replaced two years
later .
" E verything's the sam e as it has been." Scott sa id
Wednesday. " M v wife's m aking potato salad and
slicing ha;, t fo ~ the party I. We don't tell anybody
about it. we just haw a parry and all m y friends know
they're welcom e. They' ll drop in, have a drink. a ham
sandwich. like it's always been."
Scott, now 01 and retired from Conrail. was pulled
from the ri ver that night and hospitalized at Point
Pleasant.
Scott and his fellow workers were driving from a
Conrail yard nea r Charleston. W.Va.
He was in the back sea t of lhc rwo-door sedan
owned and driven by J . 0 . Pullen of Middleport. a
Conrail brakem an. In the front passenger sea t was
Frederick Miller of Ga llipolis. a flagman. Pullen and
Miller were am ong the victims.
Moments before the collapse. Scott reca lled. he
commented about three dump trucks loaded with
stone pa ssing in opposite lanes headed eas t for West
Virginia. Then. the br idge began to shake and the

roadbed rolled over as the north side turned
downwa rd .
Ca rs and trucks bega n pluning toward the wa iN.
Scott said Miller flung open the car door. " I must
ha~ · e just flew b)' him getting oul .of the car," the
survivor reca lled, adding that he grabbed a hand ra il
on I he bridge.
Miller closed the ca r door as the vehicle slid towa rd
the bridge rail. Scott said he just hPid onto th e ra iling
as the superstru cture tu rned over and dropped into
the wa ter .
" II was about 32 d0grccs. cold. and about dusk ,..
Scott sa id .
" When I came up. well , there had been a truck
loaded with bales of m ateri al they make car bod ies
out of and the)· were shaped like a barrel ... I grabbed
onP of those !Ooa ting J bales and held on.
" There was another man holding on to another
hall'. but he said he couldn't swim . There was just the
two of us in thP area so I swam ov~r to his ba le." A
boa t picked them up qu ick ly . Tendons on the back of
Scott' s hand were severed.
Mos t of the people w ho drop b)' for Scott' s parties
were in th ~ area when the bridge fell .
" We always hav~ ham for this beca use of
something else that happened that night. M)' two
daughters were here with my wife and some
neighbors came in and aft er awhile they all started
looking for som ething to ca t and couldn't find
any thing.
" My wife forgot she had a fresh baked ham in the
stove oven and nobody found it . So ever since then we
have served ham ."

Client placement, job layoffs
at GDC concern legislators

O~F

10 OZ: TROPICANA

FRUIT DRINKS

BRIDGE COLLAPSE SCENE IN 1967 Emergency vehicles and rescue workers are seen on
the bank of the Ohio River alter the SUver Bridge,
which linked Kanauga, Ohio with Point Pleasant, W.
Va., ooUapsed on Dec. 15, I967. Forty-six people died

By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP news staff

... ' ..

w/ 5'

15 Ce nts

A. Multim edi a Inc. Ne w l poper

ToughDWI
law in hands
of authorities

oz.

ROYAL PRINCE YAMS

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.. +lll H§tl [. ti

CTN.

•••

10'1• OZ. CAMPBELL'S

24

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entinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 16, 19B2

·Bridge included in plans

NEW

FROZEN

We have Christmas cookies ready. You can see
samples in special ordering your holiday season
cookies and cakes.
Take a break from your shopping and stop by
our new facility and enjoy a soft drink or coffee and a

Voi.31 ,No .159
Copyrighted 1982

Furniture styled

White-Westinghouse

CHRISTMAS SEASON COOKIES

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BRADFORD'S

DOWNING-CHILDS

Secr etary of State Anthony J.
Celcbrezze reported today articles
of incorpora tion have been filed
wi th his office In Columbus by
Tuppers Plains Keebaugh, Inc.
In corpora tor s are M arvin Kee·
baugh and Marjorte K eebaugh.

Sunda~ pa rt~

,I

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Form corporation .

Patrol cit es d rit ·er

CHRISTMAS TREES

a

Five defendants were fined and
two olhers forfeited bonds in the
court of Middleport M ayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
" There is no reason why it can't
Forfeiting were David T . Givens.
Cheshire. $.175, driving w hile intoxi- succeed, but at the sam e time it will
ca ted. and Annie Gellert, Rutland , be awfully tough slugging for Dr.
$375. reckless operation. and $200. Clark. " Peter son said . " He'sa very,
very sick m an who's gone through
disorderly manner.
multiple
surgeries. "
F ined were Derry Dale Brya n,
He sa id the pneumonia, discoNew E llington, $250and costs, three
vered M onday after Clark showed a
days in jail. driving w hile intoxi·
fever. was thought to be
slight
ca ted; Roy .J . Neff . Middleport. 20
limited
to the lower portion of the left
days in jail. driving w hile intoxilung.
It
was "a serious complica·
ca ted, and five days in jail for
lion" - especially since Clark
driving on an expired license;
suffers from mild emphysem a M elinda Venoy, Middiezport, $10
but
Peter son said it was being
and costs. failure to y ield the right of
trea
ted
w ith antibiotics.
way; R1chard M . Warnecke. Pom eClark
's vi tal signs and functions
roy. $.'i0 and cos ts, illega l tags, and
of his other organs were normal and
TcrPsa Radatz, M iddleport . $50 and
cos ts. disorderly conduct. and live ~------------1
days in jail. obstru ction of official
businf'ss .

Mc•et Thursday

from the unc'mploym cnl office to
\'t'l!'rans Mem orial; Rutland at
12: 21i p.m . took Bonita Ingels from
!'\e11· Llma Road to Holzer Medical
C'&lt;'ntcr; Racine at 4:14 p.m . took
,\ nna RaSP. A ntiquity, to Holzer
M&lt;'&lt;l ical Center; Pomeroy at 4: 2!l
p.m . took Clifford Morris. E. Main
Sl .. to \ 'r terans Memoria l; Pomero' at H: 2.1 p.m. took Maxine
l'hillips. South Second Av~ .. to
\'rterans Mem orial. and Middle·
port at~: 22 p.m. took M ary Braley.
PParl St.. to VPtcrans Memorial.

\' inf' ca lis wf •n · , 111 " \\ 't •t'(Y\ h~ \u('a I

The Daily

:::::::::::::=:====-=

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/

Questions' concerning client
placem ent and job abolishmenls at
the Gallipolis Developmental Center will "require som e lengthy
answers from the adminlstra lion."
according to Rep. Ronald James,
D-Proctorvllle.
James Is one of six m embers of a
special Ohio legislative committee
Investigating allegations against
the GDC administration. Four
committee members met for the
first time In Gallipolis Wednesday.
James said problems at GDC
" m ay have an impact far beyond
this Institution."
One current and two former
· employees of GDC met with the
James and senators Oakley Collins,
· R-Ironton, and Paul Pfeifer, R·
Bucyrus; and Rep. Tom ~ohnson,
R•NewConcord.

Former employee .Johnnie Russell said the " m ajor problem at
GDC" Is that clients are being
placed dut of the center too quickly.
"There's no time to plan for the
movements of clients." Russell
charged.
In a ~ilion, he said there is not
enougt• .follow-up care for clients
thai hav e been placed in the
community.
"This Is the type of thing you
should look at," Russell told the
committee.
Sever al committee members
agreed -w ith his assesment.
Collins said GDC officials are
"trying to ge~ them (the clients) out
any way whatsoever."
James said he agreed " wholeheartedly" thatthe state does not
provide adequate follow-up care.
But he cautioned that this should not
be seen as a reason to stop moving
clients out of the center .

" I don't agree with m any of the
prac tices at GDC," Jam es said.
"But I do believe the reduc tions
over all have been done as the result
of a legislative m andate. "
James said he wants to focus the
Investigation on the per sonnel
practices of the GDC adminlstra·
lion and how officials have carrted
out job abollshments.
Russell said he reaiizes jobs will
be lost as clients are moved out of
the center and Into group homes In
the community.
"That's a fact of life. Some jobs
are going to be lost," he said. "But
you have to look at the jobs that are
being abolished and those that are
being maintained."
Clients are being moved out so
quickly that group homes do not
have time to properly train staff,
according to Russell.
He said GDC employees have
(Continued on page 12)

v

An act of vandalism and several
theft s are under inves tiga tion by the
M e i gs Co un ty Sh er iff 's
Department.
Charles 1Red 1 Carr . Rt. 1,
Coolville. r eported Wednesday
morn ing that s0metime during the
night a ba ttery. spare tire. a six ton
hydraulic jack . antifr eeze and a
bonom rad iator hose wer!' taken
from his pickup l l11Ck that was
pa rked in his drivPway nea r his
homP.
Wed nesday mom ing. the sheriff s office was notified by La r ry
Va nce. owner of Vance's Service
Station. Harri sonviiiP, Iha t som etime during the night a sm all
wooden building IX'hind his sta tion
was pushed over. Damages were
estim ated at $300.
Wed n~sday
evening. Rober t
Her shman. Rt. l. La ngsville, noli·
fit-d th ed~pa rtmcn t th a t he had a410
shotgu n stolen from his res idence.
Mike Warner. McCum ber Hill.
Rut land. repo rt ed T uesday that two
of his dogs were m issing. A lso, on
Tuesday T allbott Drilling Co.,
reported the theft of a $1.200 m otor
from a pumping unit at an oil well on
the G rueS{'r projl('rty in Rut land
Township. The theft is belie1·ro to
have occurred within the last rwoor
three days.

Uncertainty
surrounds
UMW election
WASHI NGTON tAP 1 - The
refu sa l of two of four United Min&lt;•
Workers union tellers to certify
Ri chard T rumka's r lrction victOI)'
over Sam Churc h casts new
uncertainty over T rumka 's abili ty
to assume the union presidency.
T r um ka. however. claimed
through a spokesman late Wednesday that he considered the validating vo tes of two lellcrs as certifica tion of his election.
Trumka spokesman .Joe Corcora n sa id the presidcnt -Plect can be
installed as scheduled Dec. 22
because the two UMW tellers
refusing to cert ify him also did not
claim that Church had won the Nov.
9 election.
Neither Church nor his aides
could immediately be reached for
comment on whether the lam e-duck
UMW leader plans to challenge
Trumka 's eligibility to succeed him
as h~ad of the 240.f00-m ember
union.
But Jonathan Williams, one of the
tellers voting carliN Wednesday to
certi fy Trumka 's betl er than 2 ·to 1
vic tory over Church, sa id : "Richard T rumka was crrt ifif'd as a
winner and hP will take office."
If the fa ilu re of the two !Pliers
prevents T r umka from taking
office - and that could not be
confirmed late 'M'I:inrsda.v - the
union's 18-m ember lntem ational
Executive Board apparently would
have to settle l h&lt;' issue.
The action of lhe two tellers
apparently gives Church a basis for
appealing the election's r esults to
the board . rvrn though union
sources sa id neither of the rwo
tellers claimed that ther e were anv
election irregularities.
·
These soum' s. agreeing to discuss the developments only on the
condition they not be · named
publicly, said that Anthony Testa
and Fred Marion, two Incumbent
teller s who r an on Church's slate
Nov. 9- and also lost - w ithheld
their signatures from a letter
certifying Trumka's victory.
, The two took the position that
Trumka Is ineligible to hold union
office because he fails to m eet the
UMW's constitutional requirement
offive years· service " in and around
mines," the sources sa id.

�---4·Thursday, December 16, 1982
•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
lliCnurt~lrtT I

l'unwrn\ , llhw
614-99t-2 1li
IIV\ liT Ell Til Til t: 1~1'1-:HF.... T I IF fill· MI-:I(;S. \1,\.' -ll\ \HE ,\

ROBERT 1.. WfNGETr
PubtJ ~ ho · r

PAT WHITEHEAD

ROB HOEfi.ICH

O!ILE ROTHGEfl. JH .
\o · ~o~~

Ed1111r

,\ :\IL\1111-:H ul T ho· ·hwo ·J;tt e&lt;t l'rt""· Inland [);llh l'r•·" ' '"'" 'la llnll ;u ul tb t·
•\ llW f!t &lt;Ill

'\o·\o\

'IJ•IJIO'f J 'uiJJJ,]ll'r~ , \ " " I 1;1[ IIIII

I FTIF.HS OF OPI~IO\ an· '.lt·lnuno·•l Thn ,Jwu ld lw It·" tha n :100 ~o~unl-. Inn ~. AI!
h•tkr ' aro · ~ Uh]t' d lu t•ciJIIII I! and mu&gt;.t lw ' ' J! iu•d ~o~ith ll;iltlt '. ; 11hln·'~ and tdrp hnnt'
numi M" r '" un~ • J! rh'd lt'lh•r , ~o~ tlllw puhli _,h,·d . Ll'llt·n, ~ huuhl hr lll J!•"od ta,lt•. a dd ro·~~ inJ.
I .,~Ut·~- II"( pt'Ptu ii ;I IIIW~ .

This great state
will not tolerate...
,\ bill sponsors sa\· will gi,·r Oh io one of thr nation's toughest drunken
driving stat uPS wa s signr'&lt;l into law WrdnPsday by Gov . .lamPSA. Rhodes.
" This nrw law places Ohio in thP forefront of thr national battle aga inst
thOS&lt;' p&lt;'rsons who drink and driw·.'· Rhodes sa id .
ThP nPw lav.: tak l's cff('{'t ~ar&lt;'h lll.
" Lf&gt;l thP Ohio mPssagt· bt• cll'ar: thb gn•a t s t~ 11 0 will not to\C'ratC' those'
rx~ rsons \\:hu l'hOOSt ' to drink and driH' ." Rhod rs said .
SponsorC'fl h\ St'n . :vlicha&lt;'i UrWin&lt; •. R .('rd;liYilh ·. the billrHJuirrs three
day·s- 7'2 eonsPcut i\'l' hours- in jail for firs t-timf' DffC'ndf'rS. It IX'rmit s
sl'izurP of a dri ,·t ·r · ~ lin· n~f' at thP limP of ;uTPS I IJ('nding &lt;.1 s uspt:nsion
hC'aring within fin' cld~ · s .
The bill savs th;ll if a s u s p&lt;~·t is trstr&gt;d and found to ha\·r· 0.1 percent or
mon: alcohol ('Ullh'nl in his or hl'l' blood. brf'ath or urim\ this is " pt:r Sf'"
r•,·idr nC't' that thl' pt ·r~lm is h.ru ilt~ · of dmnkf'n driving.
The mf'asure also srh tou gh Ill'\\' jJ('naltirs for rC'JX'&lt;.tl offC'ndPrs and
thuSf' c; 1ug ht dri\·ing wllilt · tht ·ir lict•n sf.&gt;S ilrf' unclrr suspPn sion.
Duri ng clc•ball' on tilt· bill. ....ornr lq:!i...., Jar or s arguPd agains t thr
mandaiiH~ · thrPt'·da.\ · jail h•rrn ftJr first offt •nd(•r s lx'&lt;' au sP nf thr impact

it

would h.:J\"f' on loc a l gu\"ernmrnt.. . .
ThP.\ " sa icl t hL · 72-hour pro,·isiun would t ·nrl rht · pracriC&lt;' of aII owing
con, ·ictPd driH' r s to \\"urk off tht •ir ~r ntt·nn · s on \\T't •kf' nrl .... pc&gt;rhaps on
th t"f'f ' rvnSL"'&lt;'Uii \·t· Saturda.\ ·s.
Dt' Wim • has sa id ht ' lx' liP\"f's j uclgt ·s \\·i II conr inut' to gt ·t a round I hP
m a nd&lt;Jt O t ~ · st ~ nt r nct' b_
\ · diH•rt ing first -tinwrs int o tn ·atmPnt prog-ram s.
Ht' sa id many judgt's do this now althoug h rhr rhn•c• - da ~ · spntr nrP in
pn•Si'nt law is suppos('d to be m andar m:.·.

In his formal stat emcnl. Rhodr·s pr;ris.&gt;d th&lt;· Mothers ,\gainst Drunk
Drin' rs. a group wh ich lobhi&lt;&gt;d hard fo r its pa ssage.
I ts " diligent cffons and rlc\·otron llt'lprd incrra Si' public awareness of
this ~P ri ous prnblt•m on our roa c l\, · a~ ·s ." RhodC's SJicl .

O.,Grady believes
Glenn must move
CO I.l '~1BL ; S,

Ohio ,,\!' r Formt' r s t&lt;.~lf' Dt ·m&lt;xTat ic P&lt;.~rt ~·
ch&lt;.~irman 1-:ugrnr " Pt •lt ·" ()"Crad_
,.
sa _
, ·s St ·n .. John (; l&lt;'nn had IX'IIl'l" ,L:I't
mo,·ing H ht · ,,·ants ; 1 shot at the
parr \· s
l ~' :W: -l
pn•s idc' ntial
no mination .
O'(;r;Jd.\ · ~a _\"s that f'\"t•n thou g h
thr :'\ :1tional Dc·mcxTaric C(Jn\"Pil ·
ti on is 20 m o nth ..., J\\·a~· . Clpnn mu st
makf• ;~ total ro mmitmrnt to thf'
I'&lt;.J C'P \\'ithin thr nPXI ff'W \\"('('k_&lt;..,

O'Cra&lt;h. a sl'lf·r mp!OH&lt;I politi
cal anrl mC'dia consult.tnl . said thP
dPpartun· from lh&lt;·l!li'l racl'ofSrn .
Edward\'!. J.;l'nnrd\·. D·:'&lt;lass. pu ts
p t'f'ssut·f' on (;lpnn .
"TeddY r;, ·nnrd.-· ha s harrkon'
supportf'r!'i a II O\"t'J" 1hisrount ~ ~· . &lt;.Jnd
the~· an · going to turn tosumf ·onP."

O'Gra&lt;h· said .
Hr sa id furmt ' r \'k·p Pn •si dPnt
Waltf'r Monclah · nu\\· is th&lt;· likPI~·

})(&gt;npficiar:c of !hal support. But
O'Grad\· insistr&lt;l lhal Mondalr.
C'\'f'n if hf' g &lt;·l s thP DPmocratic
nominat ion. t '&lt;.~n not win thr prPsicl r ncv . Hf' sa id I&lt;XJ m&lt;.~ny- , ·otc•r s still
link. him with drsposN.J formPr
Prf'~idPnt . Jimm ~ · Cartf'r.
··.John C!rnn will IX' lh&lt;· m·xt
president of lhP United S!ilt&lt;'s if he
wins thf' nomination." he said .
He sa id that Mandai•'·' C 11kr
ronnf'(' tion will lx' inPscapa hh ·.
while Glenn . with his ' pan· hero

i magt · ;111d unthalh·ngf'd rf'put&lt;.Jtion
fo r i nl('grit~· . wou ld tx• a natural
{'hok't· of \"O!Prs uniPss rhrrP is a
quic k turn around in thP national
r·&lt;'("l ·ssitm .
\\.irh (..,:l'llm'CJ.\ · uut. ()"Cr&lt;.Jd _
, . sa~ ·s
ht • hdit '\"Ps thC' rJ.cP for thC'
nom ina t ion I:Joils clown to Cit •nn Jnd
Mtmclal&lt;'

""&lt;!

Hr ·
oth•·r putl'nlial ca ndi·
datl'S, such a s Sens. ,\Jan Crans ton
of Cal ifornia and C;.u:.· !-I;Jrt of
Colur; 1do. du not ha\"C' thr potPntial

to

rnuunt

an PffC'C' th·t'

n&lt;1tion&lt;.~l

t ·t~mpai )..! n .

Cit·nn h&lt;.~ s st't up a fund-r&lt;.~is ing
cornmith'( ' which is pror('('(jing on
rht · a ssum ption lhi.l l thf' former
;.~ ....,t m naut will nm. Bur hP still ha sn ·r
pur ou r thP official w or d. \\·h ich is
what ()"Cra d_
, . " ·ants h im to d o.

o·craril · l'Oncrdr'CI !hat C!rnn.
who i ·x('t'l s in t('('hnical mJ ttrrs and
is strong on nati onal drfPns( ·. i s not &lt;J
sparkli ng o rator who ca n turn on
audi&lt;·ncc·.....

·But IH ' ' working on thai." hr
said. a&lt;lding I hat Glenn rs dr,·eJopin g i.l ntw im;Jg( • as J SJ:X' akf'r.

State I &gt;r m.wratic Chai 1man P;rul
Tipps is ;rnothr•r boostrrofC!rnn for
prPsidrnl. !-lr r'('{'cntl.-· told a
m&lt;'&lt;'ting of thP Ohio DrmO&lt;'ratic
F:X&lt;'&lt;'Uti,·r Comm itt rr lhat hr
thinks Ohio " is goi ng tu gi\·c th• ·
nati on it s nf'x l prPsidPnt. "

Berry's World

for years I have made myself
unpopular by insisting, whenever
the subjec t came up, that much
more Interesting than the behavior
of Sen. Joe McCarthy was the
behavior of his critics. It is one
thing for an unknown senator from
Wisconsin to exaggerate charges
about communist infiltration of
govemmenl. Something else for
the foremost living philosopher
I Bertrand Russell ) to report that in
America McCarthy had made II so
dangerous to read Th omas Jefferson that anyone caught doing so
would likely end up behind bars; or
for A merica's leading educa tor
I Robert Hutchins) to report that
McCarthy had m ade II dangerous
for any American to give money to
Harvard Universit y. And it was
McCarthy, rather than his crttics,
who was held to be hystertcal! One
is reminded of the old saw: The
man advising his psychlatrtsl that
he suffers from the illusion that he
has grasshoppers on his lap, which
he brushes off as he speaks. "Well,
don't brush those grasshoppers on
me! " the doctor exclaims.
At Dartmouth College for almost
a year now, there has been much
groaning about the excesses of a
right -wing st udent publication
called The Dartmouth Review. The
charge Is tha 1 the Review is
ill-m annered. bigoted. th at It
breeds disharmony on campus, etc.
Now listen to the following: II is a
letter addressed to the alumni
publica tion of Dartmouth by one of
its graduates, Mr. Steve Pennypacker of Phoenixville, Pa ., Class
of 1963 - back when the Dartmouth
ca mpus was uncontaminated by a
right-wing studen t newspaper so
that everyone was safely taught his
polemical m anners. Here Is a lett er
the editor of the Dartmouth Alumni
chose to lead off the lett ers column
in the current issue:
"Throw those Review bums out
before I ta ke m y Illy -while fist and
burn a big black hole in their pointy
little head! How absolutely embarra ssing' Free speech? I suppose
that's how Hitler got his start. Well,
it ain't going to work in m y house.

NEW YORK lAP) - He epitoroized the youth and sense of destiny
that characterized those Amazln'
NewYorkMetsof1969andthe"You
Cotta Believe" team ofl973.
And, in 1977, he epitomized the
frustration andsenseofbetrayal!elt
by M ets fans as the team plunged
from splendor to squalor.
· Today, with his r eturn to New

William F. Buckley Jr.

----~
· --------------------------------------

because I learned long ago to
exterminate rats whenever and
wherever I find them. Filth and
vermin breeds more of the same.
Dartmouth, for God's sake, clean
up your act!"
It was not possible to ascertain
from the editor of the Alumni what
went through his mind when he
decided to publish, In defense of
genteel civil discourse, a letter
Joseph Goebbels would be proud to
have written because the
gentleman In question has been
dismissed I though oot for publishing this letter). Accordingly, the
question was asked of the acting
editor, Mr. Peter Smith: "If you
had been in charge of the m agazine, would you have published the
Pennypacker letter?"
Well, Mr. Smith, II transpires,
inhabits Evaslonvllle. All very
complicated, you know : " II made
me think of- the time I was at the
·Alcazar In Toledo. It struck me how
brave the defenders must have

been. Then I discovered to my
surprtse that they were the fascists?" The moral? "Ther e Is no
monopoly on any of life's virtues or
vices. The editors of The Dartmouth Review don't have a monopoly on outrageous statement s."
Well, but would Mr. Smith have
published this letter? The magazine has always "prtded Itself on
shartng an extraordinary variety of
points of view. In printing such a
letter, or indeed any lett er, II
doesn't endorse or comment. " I s II
"simply Informing the Dartmouth
community that such a point of
view exists. That somebody could
feel thoughts so extrem e Is perhaps
something that should be m ade
known to the community."
Really? I can Imagine forwarding Mr. Pennypacker's letter to a
psychiatric clinic, perhaps taking
up a collection from the class ofl!l63
for help for Its helpless members. I
ca n't see any point in publishing a

hystertcal letter urging violence.
Dartmouth has got Itself some
Interesting problems, catalyzed by·
The Dartmouth Review, but hardly ,
the Review's r esponslblllly. L ast
spring, an official of the alumni
organiza tion physically attacked
and bit an editor of the Review: ·
Prompting his dismissal? Suspension? Rebuke? No, what happened
was a denunciation of the student
newspaper by the facu)ty at
Dartmouth. The Idea, presumably,
is that no paper should be published
that has the effec t on Dartmouth
officials of causing them to bite
student editors. And now, no doubt,
the Review will once again be
censured, this time on the grounds
that it causes certain alumni of
Dartmouth to act like the Ku Klux
Klan, and alumni magazine editors
to publish m aterial- norm ally
unpublishable.
Thus Versailles Is said to have
begot Hitler.

- A provision prohibiting Social
Security Administra tion from payIng lawyer s' fees was proposed by
the agency, but was not -repea t,
not - Included In the appropriations bilL
A House Appropria tions Committee aide told m y associate Vicki
Warren. "Our subcommittee didn't
even r&amp;. &gt;mmend that it be put In
the appropriations bill, because II is
not in our jurisdiction - and the
Social Security Adm inistration
knows that." Any changes In the
·SSA act would be handled by the
Ways and Means Committee, he
explained.
Asked about the m em o. an SSA

Deadly obsessions
Norman M ayer. 66. is dead, the
victim of his ow n obsession.
He made national news for about
12 hours last week by threatening to
blow up the Washington Monument
with a thousand pounds of explosives which he claimed were in his
van parked neart-he entrance to the
monument. When he att empted to
drive the va n away th at evening he
was shot and killed by Washington
pollee. There were no explosives
but he had convinced the pollee
they were real and was shot rather
than let him drive the Washington
stree ts with such a lethal car go.
No doubt Norman M ayer was
mentally confused. He had let his
excessive fear of a nuclear war
drtve him into what he must have
kn6wn was his fln al demonstration
against this country's Involvem ent
with nuclear weapons. On the side
of the van was a sign reading, "No.
I Prlortty - Ba n Nuclear Weapons." Before Mayer made his
dramatic televised appearance In
front of the m onument he had been
one of the group of nuclear freeze
proponents who gather dally to
demonstrate In front of the White
House again~! nuclear weapons.
Apparently he had concluded that
peaceful nuclear protests were
ineffectl\le and chose his own way
of making certain his last protest

Seaver, a three-time Cy Young
winner, began his career with the
M ets ln1967,whenhewon16 gam es
and lost I 3 with a team thatlost101
gam es. Twoyearslater,Seaverwas
at the forefront of one of team
sport 's most "Amazln"' stortes. He
lost 7; the M ets won 100, lost
62. Seaver won his first Cy Young
Award, and the Mets won their only
World Sertes.
In 1973, as the Mets won the
National League pennant and
rel_iever Tug McGraw coined the
phrase "You Cotta Believe,"
Seaver again was named Cy Young
winner with a record ofl9-!0. Seaver
won his third CyYoungin 1975with a
22-9 mark.
l3ut, after compiling a 14-11 mark
in 1976 as the Mets continued their
slide into oblivion, New York m ade
The Trade. II has been characterIzed as the worst deal the M ets ever
have made. They sent Seaver to the
Cincinna li Reds on June 15, 1977 for
pitcher Pal Zachry, Infielder Doug
F lynn and outfielders Steve Henderson and Dan Norman. Only Zachry,
who was 6-9 with a 4.ffi ERA last
year. remains with the club.
Seaver compiled a 21-6 record in
the season during which he was
traded . and he went on to post
n&gt;eords of 16-14, H&gt;-6. I0-8 and 14-2
with the Reds until his horrendous
o-13 campaign of 1982, durtng which
he complained of arm trouble for
the f irst time in his career.
New York General Manager
fra nk Cashen and Reds President
Dick Wagner announced that they
had agreed in principal to the trade
during baseball's winter m eetings
las t week in Honolulu. It r emained
only for the M ets to OK Seaver's
m edica l report and to make a
contract with the38-year-old pitcher
before the dea l was consummated.
Earlier this week , the M ets asked
the commissioner's office for per mission to speak with Seaver , and
. they apparently came to terms with
the pitcher on Tuesday or Wednesday morning.
Contacted at his home last week in
Greenwich, Conn., Seaver had said :
"I hope we can reach an agreement
and I can finish m y career in New
York."
In addition to money and duralion. Seav~r apparently alsowanted

spokesm an said it was Issued "by
som eone who was overanxious."
Ordinarily, he said, mem os are not
sent out telling agency employees
how to implement changes In the
law until the law Is ac tually passed.
Indeed, the agency acknowledged as much by sending out a
second memo 18 days after the
first. The Oc t. 8 mem o simple
countermanded the Sept. 20 m emo's Instructions.
The wasted effort and paperwork
involved in the two sets of orders
would be bad enough. But the
results were more serious than
that.

•h

.'

·\ .I
TOM SEAVER

a

UC drops action
CINCINNATI tAPl -The University of Cincinnati hasdlsmlsssed
Its suit against the National Collegiate Athletic Association. thu,s
clearing the way for the NCM to
consider reclassifying ·the school's
football program.
The university flied suit last
August when the NCMdropped the
classification of Cincinnati's pro!(l'am from Division I -A to Division
1-M. UC sa1d tile lower class!flcallon would hurt its recruiting,
scheduling and attendance.
The NCM said avera_se attendance at Clnclrinatl's ·home games
did not meet the Division 1-A
minimum of 20,o:xJ fans. 'The
university was ·granted a temporary restraining order In Hamilton
County Common Pleas Court t!lat
stopped the NCM from lmpol;ing
the lower classification. •
But the NCM reCently Informed
the athletic department tharlt coul!l
not take action regarding reclassification UIIID the court c.ase was
disposed of.

."

'"

.,
'•

.•
••

-

-

.

~

.~

-

- --

~-signed

.

R

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I
1
11
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I
II!

•STEP STOOLS
.CARD TABLES
•DOOR MIRRORS
•AND A WHOLE
STOCK OF GIR
IDEAS FROM '''

:

I(
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I
I

~R
I

1

I
Ingels Jewe ry
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport Oh.
Peart .
inLoY&lt;IIY
atine settinQ
_____..,...

LAST
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IDEAS

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With
diamonds
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r~Yna~~~~~n~~~~~~~~~------~ ·
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1
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a_f_le_r_p_la~yln~-g-l_a_s270t_se_aso_
n_wi-th_t_he-l !I
.

CULTURED prARLS
.:;;,

won~.

dent Ronald Reagan who seems to was constantly courted by the
have the greatest obsession of them
Pentagon officials, the munitions
alL In his campaign he showed no makers, airplane manufacturer s,
signs of his obsession other than the
ship builders and dozens of other
usual political bluster but not even outfits that make their living
ln the early days In the Oval Office
manufacturtng and selling the
did he make any attempt toward
goods of war. Perhaps he acquired
conciliation with our greatest ad- his Communist obsession by osmoversary. Hew as the new boy on the
sis from close assocla tion with
block. President Leonid Brezhnev
those to whom war Is only a
had headed the Soviets for 18 years
business or a chance for promotion.
and deserved the opportunity to
M aybe the MX Missile publicity
make any cone lila tory gestures he
triggered Norman M ayer' s suicicould to end the Cold War which has
dal gesture at the Washington
been lmpovertshlng both nations.
M onument. If so, It was in vain. The
Former Secretary of State Halg
House of Representatives voted
opened the hostilities by c~ ncelllng
down funds for production of the
the Soviet ambassador's parking
giant weapon but Included money
privilege in the State Department
for It in the 1984 $230 billion defense
basement. II was a churlish act and
budget. What the House taketh
In the world of protocol so
away in a blaze of publicity, I\
Important In diplomatic relations
giveth back lost In a m aze of budget
was equivalent to a slap In the face. - figures. Such is the working of the
Relations between the two nations Congressional mind, especially In
have gone down hill ever since. The
lame duck session.
final discourtesy by the pres ident
President Reagan has been
was refusing to attend the Brezh- pulling all the political strtngs to get
nev funeraL
the MX through the Senate. Lately
If Ronald Reagan did have this he has shown signs of changing the
obsession with Communism, It
basing plan if the Senate wUI only
would have been only natural that
pass the production legislation.
he would have shown It during the
Kind of like buying a horse before
campaign_ Ther efore, one must
you build the barn.
assume that he acquired It between
No honest to goodness cowboy
the time he was elected and when
·'
would do that!
he took office. Duling that time he

" Give me a JQB - THEN /'II worry about a
possible $200-bi//ion deficit next year. "

left-hander Bob Shirley, who spent
last season with the Cincinnati
Reds. He was S.13 with a3.60ERAin
1982. At thesam e tlme, the Yankees
said they had
left-handed
pitchers Dave ·Righetti and Shane
Rawley, each 11-10 last season.
Cleveland announced the signing
of center fielder Rick Manning, who
went through the re-entry draft

a~
.~!''a
aW
Ofl PAE~JOU~ JEWEll~

Lowell Wingett

would be given the widest possible
media allenlion. He never lived to
know that his demonstration succeeded beyond his wildest drea m s.
As his van was driven Into a hail of
bullets, the short trip was recorded
by all the television networks and
hundreds of newspaper cameras.
Norman M ayer was never heard
of before and, after the first blaze of
publicity, will doubtless be soon
forgotten. But all over the world
there will be more and more people
who share his obsession. Already In
Europe there have been threats of
public .suicides In protest to the plan
to Install Pershing II Intermediate
Range Missiles In NATO countries.
Perhaps the next Norm an M ayer to
suriace will not be so harmless as
the confused man last week. He
may have explosives that are real
or may even have his own
home-made nuclear bomb. In his
madness, he m ay choose to exi t In a
fiery explosion that could take
thousands of other lives with him. It
could happen as easily In this
country as any other.
In the United Stales we have a
group of officials In the White
House and the Pentagon who are
obsessed, or profess to be, with an
inordinate fear of Communism .
They take their cues from Pres!-

Seaver's troubles were attributed to
a llngertng virus.
Puleo, 27, was 9-9 with a 4.47 ERA
last year for the M ets. One of the
minor leaguers Involved In the deal
Is catcher Lloyd M cClendon, who
spent last season with Lynchburg of
the Carolina League where he hit
.273 with 18 homers.
In som eotherwheellnganddealing

UT.tQM CZ'ZJNtPZJ'CZ' DZJO'

' KIL~!'

22-page m emo to Its dll!irlct offices.
The m emo states - fruse!y - that
"the Appropriations Bill for Fiscal
Year 1983 contains a Lllnitatlon on
Administrative ExpenSes (LAE)
which prohibits SSA from setting
individual fees for at torneys and
other representative&lt;;, and from
paying authorized fees to attorneys
out of past-due benefits even if the
fee was allowed by a federal
court ."
The fact of the m aller is that the
22-page m em o was based on
nothing more than wishful thinking
by officials determined to keep
handicapped persons from having
their appeals effectively argued.

some post-playing assurances from
the Mets In any new contract.
Seaver has done som e televi sion
workandwouldliketomovelntothe
broadcast booth when his playing
career Is over .
Seaver' s medical report becam e
an Issue in these negotiations after
his 1982 periormance. He had a 5.:.l
ERAafterflnishlngsecondlnvoting

York
er 5'hmyears
In Cincinnati,
u_rt_h_
Cy_Y_o_ung
aw_a_rd_ln_1_98l
esd_a_y,-th_
k_Y_
ank_
_ ees
_ _Indians, ttlng .
T
om Seaftaver
ay again
herald a r-fo_r_a_
with f o_
an
ERA
of__
2.55.
Part _
of _w_ed_n_
announced
the e_N_e_w_Y_o_r_
signing of free-agent
transition pertod for the New York
Mets. A I least, that' s what his
faithful following of fans hopes.
The Mets scheduled a news
conference for today to m ake. the
announcement. The trade, m ade
I\
a ' a .1!' D '
subjec t to approval at last week's
Winter Meetings, sends young
right -hander Charlie Puleo and two
a ~
minor leaguers to Cincinnati for
THE MAGNIFICENCE OF
Sea ver.

SSA stops ap_p_e__.'\..__Js
. _ _ _ _ _ _ _Ia_ck_A_n_derso_n
_
WASHINGTON - The Social
Secur i ty Ad ministration has just
pulled the wheelchair out from
under som e cripples. Here's the
dism al story:
The agency discovered that
disab!llty pensioners who have
been cut off the rolls have a better
chance of reinstatement if they
hired la wyers. So officials leaped
Into action - and illega l action at
that.
The penny-pinching officials set
out to discourage attorneys from
representing disability claimants
before the administrative law
judges who review their appeal s.
On Sept. 20 the agency issued a

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3 _

Reds obtain three players for Seaver

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinei ;
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio .;
. Thursday, December 16, 1982

Fever-swamp time

Pomeroy- Middlo!porl, Ohio

111111111110n~ t nllllltd
to YJow detarl
""Styles m•y ury""

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Thursday, December 16, 1982

Redmen blast Thoinas More
Jerry Mowery exploded for 33
points to help Rio Grande to an 88-70
win over visiting Thomas More
Col lege of Covington, Ky., at Lyne
Center Wednesday night .
The victory put theRedmenat9-4
OVl'rall and gave the team its fifth
straight Win.
The game got off to a sluggish
start for the Redmen with Thomas
More's defense slowly '¥or king
away at Rio's offense.
Defensively, It was not one of the
Redrnen's better nights, as Thomas
More sank 22 of 30 tries at the bucket
in the first half, allowing them to
achieve a 38-36 margin behind Rio
Grande at closing buzzer.
The Redrnen cam e back in the
second half with Mowery's entrance into the game. Fueled by his

double-digit scoring, plus 14 points
from Rick Penrod and 10esch from
John Maisch and Dan Cuny, Rio
Grande began making strides
ahead of the visitors and held them
at bay for the remainder of the
t;:ame.

Thomas More, a well-roached
team which had defea ted Georgetown College earlier in Its season,
had high scoring from Jeff Fisher
with 18 points and Bill Mel€!' with 16.
The Redmen did well from the
field, scoring on 36 ol61 attempts at
the bas~! for 58 percent Thomas
More was 49 percent, based on 27 of
55 tries. From the foul line, both
teams were nearly equal: Rio
Grandehad84percent (16of19) and
Thomas More !ll percent (16 of 20) .
Rio Grande had 25 total reboundS,

With Rick Shaw snatching six and
Maisch five. There were 18 turnovers on the Redmen side of the floor
and 24 assists, nine supplied by
M owery.
The Redmen play Dyke College of
Cleveland Sunday.
THOMAS MORE ('lO) - Homes
4-1-9; Sullivan 2-0-4; Lentham 2-3-7;
Fisher 6-6-18; Meier 7-2-16; KrusUng 2-2-6; Smith 3-2-8; Kuhi1-0-2.
TOTALS 2'7·16-70.
RIO GRANDE (88) - Mowery
15-3-33; Penrod 5-4-14; Maisch
4-2-10; Curry 5-().10; Shaw 2-0-4;
Wolfe 3-2-8; McNichols 1-().2; Fritz
0-2-2; Fumier 1-2-4; Jeffers ().1-1.
Totals 36-16-88.
HaHUrne score: Rio Grande 38,
Thom as More 36.

TWO-ON-ONE - Rio Grande guard Kent Wolfe

More defenders Don Sullivan (22) and Bill Meier t31i
look on. Rio won its ninth gam e of the year, 88-70. Keith Wil son photo.

(right) bounces pass to teammate while Thomas

Bear officially retires
TUSC\ i.OOS,\. ,\Ia. rAP1 Paul "B&lt;•ar" Br:-ant.admitshp') l !x-

a hard act

t o fo ll owaf trr2~yT•arsils

head footiJall coach at the Uni \'C r sity of r\l&lt;.Jhama .
BI)'Unt. who picked up fiH•
nJtional ti i!Ps and a H'C'ord for
cart'f'r \'irtorirs tx&gt;foJT' calling it
quits. said thP climate of college
football ha s changed. and it mav no
long Prix- possible for anot her coach

to mat ch his sun·pss.
And. hl ' said, his SUCC'1'SS0f
shouldn't lx- PX(X'&lt;'IC&lt;ito.
" I don 't think an_
, ·onP will IX' that
fortunall • to dominate collc-gp
football again," said Br:ca nt Wt'd nPsda.\ · in annou ncing hf' would
ret in· aflf'r I he Dec. 29 Libert)· Bowl
game " There an · too man_
, . good

pla.n •rs ."
Thf' h~l - _\'f' J r -old coach will remain
as a 1hil'l ic director at the Southe-aste-m ConfPrPnCP school ind('[in itc t) ·

-"s ix months. sL"\ ~ ·rars. 10:-r'ears."
but his depanurrfmm the-coaching
post is 1hC' (' llcl of a rich Pra in col lf'gr
foot ba II historY .
F.-it •nrls .1nd foes in the football

fruternit)• praised Bryant as newsof
the roach's planned retirement

sprC'ad.
.. Paul Bryant had more effec t on
the gam!' of football than anv man
r\·r•r to coach or pia)' the ga me."
said Miami Coach Howard Schneilenberger. w ho played for Bryan t
and coac hed both under and against
him . "The American footba ll scene
will not be the same wit hout him on
1he sidelines."
Added Bum Phill ips. coach of the
New Orleans Sa ints. "There 's a lot
of good football coac hes. but ani)'
one Bear Bryant."
Ray Perkins. coach of the
Nati onal Footba ll League's New
York Giants and another of Bry-

ant's former s ta rs. was chosen as
his successor. a role the old coac h
sa id wo uld be difficult .
" I think he'll have some problems
following me," Bryan t sa id. "But
he's a capable person. And the first
thing is. he's one of us."
Perkins. an Al i -American wide
receiver on the undefeated 1966
Alabama team that is usually

regarded as Bryant's best. sa id he is
not afra id of the task.
" I realize that( it won 't be easy)."
Perkins said in a telephone interview from East Ruthertord, N.J.
"But I didn't have any hesitation to
follow Coach Bryant . Nobody is
going to replace the man. Nobody
ca n fill his shoes. · Thai's just
something that can ' t be done.
"But I have confidence in myself
and in m y ability, and l have
confidence in the tradition of the
univers it)• itself. I just look at it as a
grea t cha llenge."
Perkins. 41, who w ill rem ain with
the Giants until the end of the
season, wa s given a fi ve-year
contract at $100.1XXJa year. the sam e
as Bryant had.
Bryant leaves the top coaching
spot as the winningest college
football coach of all tim e. Neverlheless, the man who compiled a
322-&amp;5-17 record in 38 years of
coaching sa id he no longer could
provide the Crimson Tide the
leadership it deserves.

Meigs faces Ironton, Buckeye team
lly K eith \\'L"'''"P
1\nl ga mPs arr on tap at the"
!.an~ :vtorrison C~,rmnas ium this
\\'f'('k,·nd as the Meigs Maraud{' rs
face thP challe-nge of SEOAL fOC'
Ironton on Frida)' night and the-n
host the- undefeated Neisonvilif'York Buckeyes Sa turda _v night.
i\ rml dogfight cou ld b&lt;• unro-''Pred Frida-'· night as thP H Tige-rs
pa)' a \' isit to MaraudHiand .
Ironton. 1-1 in SEOAL play, com es
off a 66-0:I Ioss to the As hland,K _
v.
Tomcat s last Tuesda)· night . ThcTigprs pia\· Russeii.Kv. tonight .
Playing the Tigers in thPir third
road game in four days 'shou ld
benefit the Marauders. But Meigs
must ha\·ea goodgamPagainstthe
T igers. w ho despite thrir losing
record. poSS('SS plentY of firepower.
'They 're- rea l good msidc-. Wcha ,·e to k('('p them from plugging up
the middle-.' rommrntrd Meigs
coach Crrg Drummf'r
Drummer went on. 'Thrv'll pia)·

us man to man and wr havpn't ran
our offC'nse well against man to man
defenses. We'll havr to improve
Friday night.'
Ironton's lone- win came at home
aga inst the AI Collins-less .Jackson
lronmen. 45---41 La st Frlda _v. theTigers los t to Wa vert:-· at I ronto n,
57-52.
Local fans will b&lt;• treated in
wit ness ing one of thr arc-a's fines t
teams and pla ye-r Saturd ay night in
the Neisonvilii'-York Buckeyes
and their tremrndous poin tproducer. Tom Taggart .
The B uc keyes have compiled six
victories with no losses which
inc ludes wins over Belpre. Vinton
Co .. Logan, and Federal- Hocking.
ca Taggart.
ndida te. has
overall-sta
.10 points
thescored
Buckeyes
te

in four olthesix N-Y vict ories. His
lowest output for the yea r has been
211. Hr 'cored 2R against Logan last
Saturday.
'The)·' re not l aney but ra n score
a lot of points and wi ll giw us troubleon the boards. We-' ll havr to be
patient on offense. work the bali .
and lake timr off thr c lock .' sa id
Orummf'r.
With that first wi n sti li e-luding the
local li\'e, attitude remains on the

positive side as Drummer pointed
out his Marauders had possibly
their best practice of the year
Wednesday.
Starting l or Meigs will be senior
Rick Edwards and junior Nick
Riggs at guards. seniors Greg
Taylor and Rick Chancey at
forward s. and senior B ill Holcomb
at center. Junior Jay Evans will see
plenty of ac tion coming off thebench.

Varsity cage stats
i\t(&gt;lgs Cage ~ ring
Play••r

G FG
4 15
-1 19
4 14
~ 9
4 4

Rlg~ s

I H• '"'n•••l

Fr TP A v.

46 ll .S
45 11 .3
.l2 8.0
Z'l 6.3
J U 2.8
451U2.8

F:dward s
ChanCf'v
Tay lor ·
Uolcomb
Evans
Plckl:'ns
Kf'nn{&gt;dy
Thomas
Hobson

16
7
4
7

4 .1 0
" 1
20
3 0
t 70

Total~

6 1.5

Chant:ey
Wl"it'
Gheen
Thoma.'!
Welker

124 1 M 118
• 19 9 41 11.8
I M 0 16 4.0
• 6 2 14 3.5

• s

••

. Ftsher

Bush
Fotlter

0 2 0.5
C!WieU
1 1 0.5CUne
I
1 0.3
lorn/.• I

• 0
•

hll _::, / .'.~

0

• 0
z 0

.11.1. 1

By SCOTT WOLFE
Southern's Tornadoes and Eastern's Eagles, Meigs County's delegation to the Sout hern Valley
Athletic Conference, return to
lellgue action Friday evening.
Southern returns home to Charles W. Haym an gymnasium
where they host the North Gallla
Pirates, while Eastern m akes its
second straight road trip by
traveling to Southwestern.
Southern rem ains unbeaten at 3-0
overall, and 2-0 within loop play.
Eastern rests at ().5 overall,
recording an ().2 ledger wi thin the
leacue.
Coach Carl Wolfe's Tomadoes
are again a prime candidate to
capture this year's SVAC crown,
however, a much stronger league
poses a threat to the Southerner's
domination In the league. This
week the North Gallla Pirates of
Coach Bruce Wilson will sail Into
Tornado territory for the uprising
with the Whirlwinds.
Last week, the Pirates dropped a
56-38 tilt to the red -hot Kyger Creek
Bobcats, after falling behind ea rly
in the fi rst half. Matt Kemper, a
toweling Pirate center, powered In
12 lllarkers while Paul Hollingshead zipped 10 for the Galllans.
The Pirates, now 0-4, had a cold
night from the floor .and an even
cooler night from the charity stripe,
hitting on just eight of 25 attempts.
M eanwhile, Southern has continued its role through opposition.
The Tornadoes dumped Eastern
last week 73-55 behind a strong
fourth period attack. Earlier Southern had Its struggles against a
stingy Eastern defense, but the
"one-two ,punch" of guards Zane
Beegle and Rod Littlefield nailed
down a win going down th e stretch.
Begle had 17 and Littlefield 19.
Nick Bostick. the third cog In the
Southern line-up; pitched in eight.
Southern hit 32 of 65 from the field
or 49.2 percent and netted nine of 12
at the line lor 75 percent.
M eanwhile, the oncoming Eastern Eagles have been m oving
several strides clo•er to victory
with each game, playing two fine
games against Southem and the
tough Miller Falcons. Eastern,

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CLEVEI.AND I AP 1 -Cleveland
Indians President Gabe Paul will
m eet this weekend with the agent
for newly acquired second baseman
Manny Trillo.
Trillo, who cam~ to the Indians
from Philadelphia with Jay Bailer,
Julio Franco, George Vukovich and
Gerry Willard In the trade last week
tor Cleveland's Yon Hayes, will be a
tree agent at the end of 1983.
Paul said he would meet with
Trillo's agent, Dave Lan!leld , in
CleaiWater, Fla., this weekend.
Trillo, 32, three-time Gold Glove
winner, now has a contract that
pays him $450,00) a season.

Mcmbt.•r : The Assonalt'l.l Pres..;. lnhmd Dally Press A ssod~ttlon and the Anlt'rit•ttn
Nt·wspMpcr Publishers Assonu llun, Natiunul
Adverlisinj( Rcprcscnlul ivt•, Branhum
Nt'WSJ)MJkr Salt's, 733 Thtrd Awnut·. Nt•w
York , New Yurk 10017 .

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The Fabric Shop in Pomeroy - New Singer Sewing Machine
lhgels Furniture in Middleport - i'i'' Portable
Black &amp; White Zenith T.V.
Jo-Jo's Foctory Outlet in Gollipolis -

$50 Worth of Merchandise

Rutland Furniture Company in Rutland - Eletant Brass Hall Tree
Shoe Cafe in Gallipolis &amp; Athens - $50 Gift Certificate
Simon's Pick-A-Pair in Pemeroy - $50 Gift C.rtific•te
Top of the Stairs Fitness &amp; Beauty Shop in PomeroyOne Body Wrap anti a Month's Free Exercise
Waid Cross Sons Grocery In Racine - $50 Gift Certificate
•

KEEP LISTENING TO
RADIO 14
FQR DRAWINGS
ON DECEMBER 20-23

a

••

21
ll4
21

With A KNIFE

3 13 3.3
I 9 2.3
3 3 0.8
0 0 0.0
0 0 0.0
0 0 0.0

r~r~~~~~~g~::ii~~~~=~~~~~~~

Nt'gotiations begin

Pm ncroy. Ohio 45769. 992·21:&gt;6 . Scl"ontl l'hts.s
poshtl!t' pa1tl HI POIIlt'roy . Oh1o.

SlUFF ASfOCKING

College scores
·., ( ull&lt;·~:• · .... .,..., ...
H.\ Tiw• \ ,•,ud.;llt11 J'n...,~

Pubhshl'll t'Vt·ry ilfll'rn~ltlll . Monday l hruu ~-: h
F'mlay , 111 Cuurt Slrt•t•l, by the Oh1u Valky
Pubhshm.: Cotn!)&lt;iny · Multimct11u , lnr ..

rl""

I
I
I
I

40 IKO 43.0

\\t ~ hw...da.\

f USPS JU-960 I
A Dl vi~tion of Mulllmt'dl11, lnr .

after fighting to gain the lead In tlw
third pertod narrowly missed vic·
tory in the finale, 52-48, against
Miller.
An even scoring attack agal11$1
Southern saw Jim Newell led the
way with 12 markers. At Miller
Roger Bissell rolled up 22 markers,
while Troy Guthrie ended the
evening with 12.
Eastern will face the Southwestern Highlanders this Frldi:Y In !Ill
quest for an SYAC triumph.
Southwestern defea ted Hannan
Trace last week 73-59 as Rilger
Wells ripped the nets for 30 poln13.
Rpger Carr tossed In 12. while
Senior pivot man Paul McNeal
netted 11.
Southwestern Is now 3-1 overall
and 2-0 Inside league play. Each 8
p.m. varsity tilt Is preceded by a
reserve contest at 6: 30 p.m.

Christmas

.. ~FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY

COLOR

~I(PH,
:UALITY CLOCK

AM-FM· RADIOS
RICK MANNING

Indians
retain
Manning
CLLVELAND (API Rick
Manning says signing a five-year
contract with the Cleveland Indians
does not necessarily m ean he has
abandoned his goal of playing for a
contending team.
"Hopefully we can becom e a
contender· in a lew years," the
Indians' veteran center fielder said
Wednesday. "R ight now, if you're
an athlete. it's sort of tough to play in
this town. Fans have been waiting a
long time for a winner . But I've
spent eight yea rs playing in
Cleveland. so I've been waiting
myself. "
Manning, 2R, had entered the free
agent market saying he wanted to
join a contender. He was selected in
October's free-agent drali by Pittsburgh, Milwaukee, Houston, Texas
and the Chicago Whit e Sox.
" I wasn't in the m ood to wail until
February lor the other clubs to son
things out ," he-sa id . "If I had to pick
a club, I'd go to the Milwaukee
Brewers. because they're a contending ballrlub. ··
Terms of Manning's contract,
negotiated by agent Ed Keating of
Cleveland. were not disclosed,
although some reports said it was
worth about $.500,1XXJ a year.
"We felt we had to to m eet the
competition, and we did," said
Indians' President Gabe Paul. "He
is a fixture here and is an
outstanding player. In these days of
free agency ... it is most unusualfor
a player to stay in one city for his

CLOSE

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wi th select1ons up lo 80 m1nules 0 4 Ventmg
opti ons [] Separa te start con trol

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The Daily Sent in el

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career. "

Manning was a No. 1 dr;~fl pick of'
the Indians in June of 1972.
He hit .270 in ·152 games during
1982, scoring71 runs whlle drlvingin
44. H e had eight hom e runs.
Manning first m ade the Indians
during the 1975 season, when he hit
.28.'; in 120 games. His best season at
the plate came the following ye~ r.
when he batted .292 in 138games. He
has a .263 career average.
Indians' _General M anager Phil
Seghi said the retention of Manning,
coupled with the trade of Von Hayes
to Philadelphia in exchange lor five
players last week. should strengthen Cleveland's defense. Manning
is regarded as one of the better
defensive outfielders in the league.
The Hayes trade brought National Leage All -Star second basem an Manny Trillo and highly
regarded shortstop prospect .julio
Franco to Cleveland, along with
outfielder George Vukovich and two
others.
The last-place Indians experim ented with a number of double
play combinations in 1982, with little
success.
"We've got a new second basem an. a new shortstop, and our
cent~&gt;r fielder back ," Seghl said.
"That which everybody was worr ied about is solidified now."
M anning said the loss of the
24-year -old Hayes was unfortunate,
but he ad&lt;,led. "Any time you're In
sixth place, you've got to make
som e moves to Improve yourself.
We needed to strengthen ourselves
up the middle. That's what they
went out and did."
The hiring of former New York
Yankee Coach Mike F erraro to
replace Dave Garcia as manager
could also help. Manning said.
"Fundamentally, we were just
not sound last year," he said.
"We've got to move runners over,
hit the cutoff man, that sort of thing.
Mike Ferraro Is supposed to be very
good at that."

Southpaw traded
CLEVELAND (APl
The
Cleveland Indians have traded
minor ' league left-handed pitcher
Ray Searage to the San Diego
-Pa&lt;,lres for a player to be named
later, the Indians saki Wednesday.
Searage, '!1, was 2-7 with a 4.89
earned run average last season for
the Indians' Class AAA affiliate, the
: : , Charleston Charlles.
He carne to the Jndlans' orga~­
tlon from the New York Mets In a
trade tor Infielder Tom Veryrer last
January. Searagewas 1-0wltha3.1ii
ERA In 26 relief appearru\cesforthe
Mets In 1981 .

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OPEN EVENINGS
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�December 16, 1982

idd

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

'optimistic~)

Meigs coach is
By KEITH WISECUP
. Third -year Meigs wres tlin g
coach Larry Giimes Is ve1y
optimistic about his Marauder
grapplers becoming one of the
finest rna t teams in 1he a rea 1~Is
year.
The Marauders, already with one
quad match win thus far . return 10
lettermen from last yea r' s fine
squad, three of which ar e senior s.
Six members att ended th e
Greater Colu mbus Wres llin g
Camp wher e Coach Grimes is a
counselor and coa ch while the
majority of the team wrestled mos t
of the summer.
Senior captains Troy Bauer and
Brill King won some tournament s
In their summer wrestling.
Sophomore Doug Pliddy com·
peted in the AAU national lourna-

175 Dav£&gt; Barr
11
2·3
m en! In Columbus and placed
tR; Ja ml'S Johnston
9
2-3
second qualifying him lor a chance
Hwl. Danny 0 ;1\'IS-x
II
3-2
In lhe Junior Olympics . Pliddy
Hwt. Harry Rous h
Ill
().2
x - Returnln~ JettPnnC'n
finished second because a sudden ,
xx - Captains.
bout with pneumonia kept him
WRESTLING SCHEDULE
J)er(- . 21, South P oi nt 1:30 p.m.
from wres tling In the llnals.
[')c(&gt; _ 29, at Belprt&gt; Toumamf'nt , 10 a.m .
Bright spots among the newco{)(&gt;(- . 30. at Washington Court House
mers are freshmen Eric Johnson,
IJ'f'S(&gt;rve toumum(&gt;n!\ , 10 a.m.
Jan. 3, Athens and V inton County, 7 p.m .
Da ve Aver ion , Rober! Sisson,
Jan. R. at Gallipol is Tour namenl. U a.m .
sophom ore Mark Hammonds, and
Jan. 15. Ga lll poll'i a nd Pt . Pk&gt;a.sa nl, 5 p.m .
Jan . 2;1, Lo~ a n . I: :JJ p.m .
junior Dave Barr.
Mt&gt;ll(s WresUhlK Host~·r

1(.(&gt;-mrd
\ ' r. Thl.; \ ' r.
9
1-1-1
Ill
4-1
0-:l
lUI
;.()
10
II
lUI
II
:\-:l
l:l
1-2
12
·1·1
11
1-:l
II
HI
IJ
4I
J.J
10

Wt.-&lt;'hL.._"i f[h .) Na.nw
9l-l Eric .Johnson
Hli E r ic Jotmson
Hli Davf' AvC'rlon
112 Robl:•rt Sisson
11 9 Doug Priddy -."
119 F'rf'(l Colburn
126 Craig Slnclair-x
l:lfi KC'n McC'ullog h-x."
132 Brlll Klng-xx
1.18 Troy BauN -xx
14.5 M ikt&gt; Wolford-X
15.') La r ry Rominf'- .'1(
167 M ark Hammonds

""

Feb. 2, at Pt. Plf'a sant , 1 p.m .
F'('b. 5, at Wanerson wllh l)('Sal('s and New
L('xlngton. 10 a .m .
Feb. 8. Norlh Ga llla , 1:30 p.m .
F'f'b. 11 , at Fa ir land , 2 p.m.
F'&lt;'b. 19, SEGAL Tournamem at Ga lllpolis,
10 a.m.
F't&gt;b. 26, Sectional Toumam Pnt at Bclprt'. 9
a.m.
March 5. Distric t Tourna tn('nt at Washington C.U .. 9 a.m.
March 10. II , 11, O hio Sta t!' Championships
at Columbus
Uead Coach - L ar rv Grl mt&gt;s. Volunt('t&gt;r
assistants - Br ian Kl~ and Ray Willford .
M anager -Tony Welch.

MARAUDER WRESTLERS - The Meigs
Marauder ( 1982-83) wresUing team pictured are,
front row left to right, Doug Priddy, Dave Averion,
Eric Johnson, &amp;bert Sisson, James Snyder and Fred
Colburn. Middle row ,left to right, Larry Romine, Ken

Shirley takes
George's$$$

GALLIPOUS' Jeff Saunders and Meigs' ll&lt;&gt;ber1
Sisson square off In Wednesday's triangular
wrestUng match in the Washington School gym in
Galllpoli&lt;i. Saunders won this ll~pound match, but

the Marauders won the meet with 87 points. Galllpoli&lt;i
was second with 83 whtle Coal Grove placed third
with 36. North Gallla was scheduled to participate,
but did not make the meet. - Keith WUson photo.

Marauder matmen post
GALLIPOLI S - M eigs jumped
to an early lead here last night 10
win a triangular mee t by fou r
points over Gallipolis and Coal
Grove. The score afl er completi on
of three rounds was Meigs 87,
Gallipolis 83, Coal Grow 36.
After having a slow start in
Round One the Blue Devils came
back to within four . "We needed
one more victory to win ," com·
m ented Coach Howell .
Ken Holley , Freshman, had an
Impressive night by defeating
Johnson of Meigs, as did Lahman,
Bennen and Korab.
The Blue Devils travel next
Wednesday 10 Point Pleasant for "
dual meet to begin at 7 p.m .
Winners By ll&lt;&gt;unds
ll&lt;&gt;und I
98 Johnson, M, over CG.
105 Snyder. M, over Spurlock . G.

11 2 Blankenship, CG, over Val·
lee. G.
119 Sisson, M , over CG.
126 Priddy , M, over Sa under s. G.
IJ2 Pennington , CG . over Bloo·
.mer, G.
138 Bawer , M , over Smith . G.
145 Wilford, M, over Smith , G.
15o L ahman. G. over Holmes .
CG.
162 Hammonds, M. over CG .
175 Korab, G, over Barr, M .
18.1 Ross, CG, over Sheets, G .
Hwl. Davis, M, over Carey. CG
Round 2
98 Holley , G, over Johnson. M .
105 Fields, CG, over Spurlock, G.
112 Blankenship, CG. over Aver·
ion, M .
119 Saunders, G. over Sisson, M .
126 Saunders, G, over Allen. CG.
132 King. M, -over Pennington.
CG.

Local bowl ";ng
Ponwroy Bowling Larw!&gt;
Tuesday Trtplicatt'

November 30, 19K2
StlUldl nltS

PL.. .

Team

,,,

BIIX' Tartan
Larry 's Gr()('('ry

Meigs lnn
cl ti
Sugar Run Ashland
-l :!
waid Cross &amp; Sons
'ltl
JBL Cons! ruct ion
:lli
High lndlv klual ga me- C'arolv n Bachnf'r
193: Diana Ash 177: Bf'lly Wh itlatch 170
Hl!i!h series- Caroly n Bac hn N 501: Af&gt;ll \
Whitlatch 494 ; Diana Ash 49'l.
T eam high ga tnl' - MPlgs Inn 4Hi
TPam high Sf' ri('S - Mrl gs In n \l t-12
TueHday TripUc att•
Df'('f'mher 7. 19K2
Stantting!'l

Team
BIUf' Ta rtan

La rry 's Groct'l)'
Meigs Inn
Sugar Run Ashland
aid Cross &amp; Sons

w

" · 1..

i ~ .tl
6.'1 49
f){)

:,2

.If; fiti
.l(l

7~

•
Bearcats wtn

CINCINNA'n !API - Dwight
"Jelly Jones" hit 27poinls 10 lead the
University of Cincinnati m a
come-from -behind 8!!-8.1 v1r 1ory
over Indiana Sla le in a nonconfer ·
ence college basketball ga me
Wednesday night.
Indiana State. 3-3, had " i .l-:19
halftime lead and all five stariPrs
pl ocPd In double ligures.
'cincinnati. 5-1. drove the middle
in the second half to retake the lead
and Indiana State's 6-looi ·R fresh·
man center James Smith, who had
18 points, fouled out trying to sl op
them.
Reserve guard Marty Campbell
cameoH the Cincinnati bench when
Indiana State switched from the
?.one to the man-to-man defense and
scored 12 second half points.
Ctnctnnatl shOt 65 percent in the
second ha lf and 53 percent ..for the
d
game and dominated re\JOWI s

41·35.

John Williams, a 6-foot-5 fresh·
man forward , led IndianaStatew!th

19 points.

.IHL
('onst
mcrion
:1:!hn£'r
8t'l
High
indlv
kJua l ~a mP - Carn ly n Bac
Ij ti: f1P tt ~· Wh i!lat r h l."J!i: .1\'ora Rif'f' l :iti
Hi gh "4' fif'.., - C a ro J ~· n Bar hn£'r 4112: lletty
\\' hillat r h 44/ t: Fra nki1· Uunnf•l -tl 2.
T1•&lt;t m high ga m P - :\-11'lgs Inn -I.Ti
TP.rm hig h '&gt;f •rir-. - ./ BL Construction 1\Hl .

Tt&gt;1un

•

WID

138 Bower, M, over Swisher , G.
145 Smilh , G, over CG.
155 Romine, M , over Holmes,
CG .

167 Bennett. G, over Hammonds,
M.

175 Korab, G. over Blankenship,
CG.

185 Ross, CG, over Johnston, M.
Hwl. Davis, M , over Jerrall, G.
Round 3
98 Holley, G, over CG .
105 F ields, CG, over Snyder, M.
112 Averlon, M, over Va llee, G .
119 Saunders, G . over CG.
126 Pridd y , M, over Allen, CG.
132 King, M, over Bloomer, G.
138 Swisher. G. over Mullins, CG
145 Wilford, M , over CG.
155 Lahman, G, ovet Romine, M .
167 Bennett, G, over CG.
175 Barr, M, over Blankenship,
CG.
18.1 Sheets, G, over Johnston, M.
CGH.wt. Jerrall. G. over Wheeler,

CINCINNATI i AP l - T he Cin·
cinnat i Red s have lost left ·hander
Bob Shirley and will trade away
Tom S..' aver to the New York M ets
tocta, ·.
Terms of Shirley's contract with
the New York Yankees were
reponed " ' $1.7 million guaranteed
for three years. wilh a fourth ·year
option.
Reds Presiden t Dick Wagner said
hP was assured by Shirley's agent
thai Shirley would contact the Reds
aga in before signing with any other
team .
"We madp an interesting proposal to the fellow -two , ·ea rs. three
years. four years." said Wagner.
"H&lt;' decided to go across the
street" and sign w ith the Yankees.
h&lt;' added.
Wagner did not n!'goliale w ith
Sh irley aft!'r last week' s Wint er
Meelings.
" Our staff proplr were stronger
about il !han I wa s. They fell !hal
way primarily beca use we do nol
hm ·e a lot of lefl -hand pitching in I he
organization." Wagner said . " I slill
fell he was a good enough pitcher lo
make an offer lo.
"There arm'! thai many lefl ·
hand pitchers of qua li tv available.
We will continue to work on a deal
!hal might produce one. But the
numbers ar!' pretty thin. I would
r ather havp a Jighl ·hand pitcher
who can rio a good job !han a
lefl ·hand!'r ll'ho's jus! a left -handN.
ll's imporlanl I hat we gel a quiJiilv
pitcher."
. Shirley, 2R, finished H-13 with an
earned run aV!'ragr of .lliO alter
replacing St&gt;avPr in lhe pitching
rotation .

McCollough, Troy Bauer and Brill King. Back row,
left to right, Dave Barr, Mike WUHord, Danny Davis,
Harry Roush, Mark Hammonds, Craig Sinclair, and
James Johmton.

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�Page

8

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December

Middleport, Ohio

16, 1982

December 1

OVP employees hold party

PERFORMER.&lt;.; - '11re&lt;e six vocalisl,, a&lt;companied hy 1\rrnand Turley, seated at the organ, presented
the rmL•ical proh'Tanl at the Ohio VaUey PuhlishingCo.

''"&gt; ~theMeigslnn.Lefl

Christmas party .
to right, they are &amp;A 11 Deb! Buck, Linda Mayer,
Jayne Hoeflich, SheUa Horky, and Jim Soulsby.

Releases area honor rolls
Fry, Christina GallaghN, Stacey GlbD:&gt;,
Hhonda Gomez, Stacy ll yseU. Salrina
Wilson.
Prim. D.H. - Jason Blair, Alanna Ol'la nd ,
JaJTl('s Harmon. Shaun Lamlx'rt. Joshua
!AI rUde
L.D . Class John ComweU, Bobby
l.amlx'n. Tammy Starcher .

. Thl• Sf'ronct sLI\ W('('ks ).,'radlnK period honer
roll o f ttx&gt; RuUand Elmlmt,tr~· Set-Dol has
/X'(&gt;O announct'd Making ,, gra d(' of ·•B" o r

a bwe tn all tlv'ir .-.u bjoct.-.to tx&gt; nam a1 to th£'
roll WPI"f''

Grade one - Lorri 11urnf•m. F.mmanuel
Cundi ff, Amif' F:'llion x . Kristc•n F'rC'&lt;.hkk.
Chrl"i ty llawkin !&gt;. Ho nmP H.\ " dl. Sonyn
John son. Blll v . km t~. Alll"• ·t' i_.romJf'y
x,

Cl rdv Mrr.uh·l'
Mco1lsP&lt;Jugh ,
Thornton.

Jo~

x. .lrtson :\li!Jcor. Oobby
A'Ut it·n
,

;.;,

The second slx weeks grading periOd honor
roll of ti'F Pomeroy Ele!"U'ntar v Schod ha s
tw n announet'd . Making a grade of " 8 " or
at:Q\·£' in all 1hrir subj ert s lo 1x&gt; n run a:1 to the
roll w('rp:
Crack&gt; qnf' - Tr('nton Ol~and · x. Tracy
Fiff' x. Deanna Boall:&gt;. Bradl&lt;'y Din~~.
Lt'i.'iiP ,\ l'aS('. Eric Qualls. Daniel if' Crow . x.
.J I' Davis · x,Jrr(' my Grimm ·x.Stf'phani ('
Sl·1• x. Brad AndC'rg)n, Andrra Dillard .
Sandy Morris . Emanuel Cundiff.
Cradf' '1.- Husty Trlpleii · X. Vicki Warnf'r ·
\ , .lumiP Biggs, IJfoni'ie Hysell. Ctlr\s Knl~ht ,
l~th Roush . Angela Abtou, Df'ltli(' A!k:if(',
Candv And6'so n, JennlfN Bar nhart. [)('nnl s
Bovd: Serena Davis, lJ&gt;e llendC'rson. h:C'vln
Laintrr1 . Melissa May nard. LynN!&lt;' N('('Cf',
S!Pphani£&gt; Prlcr&gt;. Tammy Qu~n. Buddy
Hou.~h. Elsie Buffington, Kelly Dold~ .
Grade ttlrw - BarbiC' And&lt;&gt;rson
x.
Stl'phanlC' H ae~v. John Harrison, Tamm v

Tony a

Crtldr two- ( ;dr. ,\rl.tnh. Hwha• Carc;on,
Kim( 'onlin . D&lt;tvicl D.ttll'~·. J tl(i ~ l·'ov.·lcr .Sco rt

Cardn&lt;•r. Mattht •w ll -1 ~~- l&lt;: . mdi H ~·sdi.. J odi
lmOOdf'n
x. ~Pith .IPnr"- . ,\nw Hf'vnold'i.
.\htrda Hobm ~n :&gt;. • .\1L..,..,\ St.., -.on .x. Shf'ryl
Thoma. Donn~ Tillb. HuHr \\' ill. J-lollv
\\'illlarn!. . Sh :m n.1 \\'olfr·
x. .lirnrn.\
Laml:x'r1
Gradf' 1tu·n · - D.tllll\ :&lt;.1 d)o r\tld. Tammv
.\'ltl lf'r . 1\l iran tL.r 1'\irholson . .\klt..,!..l Holh rt&lt;

PhJillp Smith . .\1.ttiontd h orrun
f'CradP l ow - .lnhn Evan.~. J;mw~- h:ln gPr~·.
!"X&gt;rf'k :&lt;.1Uif'r. l·:rrc P.rttN ...on. Stf'phanif'
\\'alkl't

Cradf' fiw• - l.t" a f)ar~t. llrll\ Doczi. 1-\ im
Fhlln. TPrLt SchotJilO\'f'r ..\, tt ;tlif' Tromm
(;r.tcif' "Lx - Mi ehl'ilf' ,\clam&lt;,, Chad
,·,u... rn . Sh.tw n Fr •ll\ . Harbar;t F'owl£!'. Abby

Astrograph
D•~ · ••mber

17, 1982

This co rni ng ~ ~ •.t · -.. tlnu td prO\'C' to be an excif ing one. For 1he first
timC' in a long tim~ · .\ 1)\l.ll b e ahlf' t o bring your ideas t o market. The
morr \·ou t:J' co m e Jn \ 'oln'd, the more opportuniti es come your way.

s,\Grri'.-\RIUS (~O\'. 23-Dc&lt;·. 21) Do not wait on others to make
things happc·n for ,·ou toda y where your financia l Interests are
concerned. You'rC' rhr one who's needed to get the bal l rollin g.
Ci\PRIC ' OR~ ( l)ef'. 22-Jan. 19) Your keen insights and speedy
dC'ductior" mC~kr \'Ou the· IPader of the pack today. This becomes even
mon' eYidt' nt whL·n clralln g in financial rea lms.
,\QL',\JULS (.J:uL 20-Feh. 19) Thereason you ' re 9J effective today
is b&lt;'cauSC' you influrncC' others subtly. Before people realize where the
d r as are comin g from. they're already carrying them out.
PL~CES (Fl'h. :!11 - ~lardr 20) When mingling with friendly groups
toda,· ,·ou rna,· pick up hits and pieces of information which cou ld put
\ 'O U

on to so mr thin g L:t i(Jd.

·
ARIES ( Marf'h 2t -.\prill9) Keep on the best of terms with persons
who can hel p you adva nce your present ambitions. They could play key
roles in your affairs now .

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) An opportunit y potentially helpful to
vou carC&gt;f'rHi o;r mig h1ch'H'lop in a sudden and unrxpected way today. A
~alr frit ·ntl rnc~~· t ri .L: ~ .•- thf' llappr·ning.

GE:\11 :\1 1 ~Ia.\' ~I ·''""' 20) You're noted for being a fast thinker.
Toda y, th is "bility is likC'Iy to be put to good use in business matters,
where you may have to make some quick decisions.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Circumstances may place you in an
opportune position today where you ca n function as the middle person
in bringing two parties together for a profitable purpose.
LEO (.July z:k\u~. 2!) If you want co -workers to be more
indus! riou ' and product he today, first set the exam ple . When they see
vou in action, they' ll pick up your pace.
·
VJRGO (i\ug. 2.'1-Sept. 2!) Much can be accomplished today if you
take time to organize ycur methods. First determine how you want to
oo things - then proceed in an orderly fashion .
LD!Ri\ (Sept. 2.1-0ct. 2~) Try not to leave things until the last
minutr t ocla~·. bu! "hf,\lld t..1 sks pilr up, you' ll Jx&gt; very resourcefu l in
coping.
SCORP IO (Oct. 2-1 - ~ov . 2'ZJ Don 't treat lightly any bright ideas you
get toda y for way s to turn a quick profit . Chances are, your thought sfor
making the cas h regi ster ring are on the mark.

Calendar
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evange·
line Chap:er. Middleport, will
have installation of officers
Thursday at 7:30 p.m . Worthy
grand matron, Mar ily n Rowley
will be the installin g officer.
Members are to bring desserts.
i\ cleaning session will be held at
1oa.m . Wednesday . Setup com·
mittee is to arrive• at f) p.m .

Wednesda y·.
POMEROY - E leanor Cir·
cle. 7:30p.m. Thursday, homeof
Mrs. Charles Bradbury. $3 gift
exchange. Wrappin gs to be
judged. .
POMEROY Middleport
Child Conservation L eague, an·
nual Christmas parry Thursday,
7 p.m. at Meigs Inn. Gift
exchange with wrappings to be
judged. Homemade ornament
exchange. Susie Sou isby to have
devotions .
MIDDLEPORT - Busy Bee
Class, Middleport First Baptist
Church, 6 p.m. Thursday at the
church ChristmaS party and gUt
exchange.

'

POMEROY - Meigs County
Democrat Central Committee
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thursday
at Carpenters' Union Hall, East
Ma'n Street, Pomeroy. The
public Is invited to attend.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - i\ Christmas
program will be presented by
Wesleyan Holiness Academy
Sc hool, SR 143, Pomeroy, on
Friday at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Earl
Fields invites the public to
attend.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,..

KJeln. Joey McElray. Rachel Roush. Jul! P
Buck. M elind a Dailey, Jf'femy Heck. KP1th
Smith.
Gradr (our- Sco!l Blinker. Kim Ewin~ .
Shawn Upscomb, Mike Van Meter. Eric
Heck, Amanda Roush, Stacey Shank.
Grade fi ve - Na ncy Baker · x, Becky
Pearson · x. Chris Alld.re. Dennis Boothe,
Hank Ocland . Joey Roug, . Todd Smith, Tara
Wolfe. Cary Betzlng · x. Jennifer Newman · x,
Greta RlfflC' . x. John Anderoon. Jennlfer
Buck. Karen Lambert. Shclly Tr1plett .
Grade six- Beth Ew1ng · x, Todd Powell ·
x. Nikki Bunch. Steve Foulkrod, Missy
Woods. Les ley Carr . x. Jeff McE \r~ · x,
Monica Tur!'l'r · x, Laurie Way land, Angel
Odom, P£&gt;nnl Jeffers.
L.D . - BruCi' McCloud, Loretta Reitm l11',
Scali Whobrey. Jlrrmy Williams.
EMR - Primary - Susan GoodC'. Todd
Kenll(&gt;dy .

ThC' Sl'Cond six wreks grad I n~ period honor
roll of thC' Mlddl('po11 Elf'mrntary School ha s
bf'Pn announcf'd . Making a grade o( "B" or
abov(' i n all thei r subj('('t s to lx&gt; named to the
roll wer(':
Firsr grad£&gt; - Jill Blake, Tercla Cogar.
Tony Davi s, JC'nnlfer Fink, Emlly Heighton .
F:l isha Meadows. Ann R!Ule. Mall Stewart ,
MC'~an Evans, l.Pslle Qualls, Heather Da vis.
Amity Dixon. Erin Harper. Todd McDad(',
Jf'sc;lca MltchC'Il. Daniell£' Scon. Cora &amp;&gt;&lt;&gt;.
Anglf' Sddf'nable, Mandy Slaven. Crlssy
Ta \·tor. Kevin Whobrl'y, Micah Malden .
~ond grade - Linda Chapman, Wendy
Clark. Jay Crf' means. Brian Hoffm an, Pc&gt;rmy
LC'wls. Adam U!tlC'. l.i;of' Luckeydoo, Teresa
.\1a~· . Crant Re:-.•nolds. Abby Blake. P . .J .
Chadw£&gt;11. Mlcha£&gt;1 Cr1'meanc; , Joy Cundiff.
Chuck Curmtngham. Terri Currence, Mathew
Fa lls, ShPrry Johnson, Scan Moof(', Jerm!fcr
Pffk . Tessll' Bradshaw , Brooke Coatl'S. Matt
Cradock . HeathN Franckowiak, MargarC't
Grorge, Jamie Ha r ri s, Sron Hudson. Bobby
.Johnson. Lori KeU y. J. R. Roush . K yls
S£- llers, Kyle Simpson
Third grade- Trlcia BaC'r, Frankie Blak£' ,
Ryan Cowa n. Heather Davenpor1 . Angle
Goode. Nikki Meier. Lisa Poulin, Mary Stein .
Mik£&gt; Thomas, Chrissy Weaver. Dod! Cleland.
.Stacey Ducan, Sharla Cooper , Tara Gerlach,
Kim Hanni~ . Darin Logan. Robby Wyan .
Founh grade&gt;- Tf'f('Sa 0€f'm , Lorte Falls.
Susan Houchlnc;, Maurlsa Nelson. Joseph
Smith. Ken VanMatre, Darcl Wolfe. Valerlf'
Bakf'r, Erica El!as. Kr1sta Chadwell . Jamey
Lillie . Kenny Reynolds. Jason Smith . Catina
Wolfe. Shelly Pullins , Van Klein. Ange la
Larkins
The second weeks grad! n~ period honer rol l
of ttx&gt; H arrisonville&gt; Eie!Tf'ntary Schod has
been announced. Making a grade of " B" or
a l:oVC' In all their sul&gt;j&lt;&gt;et s 10 lx&gt; namOO to thC'
roll wer£&gt;:
Flrst grade - Megan Carm£'n, Crystal
Donohue, MC'i£&gt;ah Durham, Mcron Grueser.
Dona ld Hall. Ronda Raymond. Shawn ln ~e;.
Janie Kennedy. Jonathan Vapc('and Timm y
Va ncr&gt;.
St&gt;oond grade - Becky Snowden. Mlk&lt;&gt;
Va n('{', Sonja Stanley, Shan£&gt; Hysell, Court ·
ney Riggs, Christopher Neel and Melissa
Durham.
Third grade - Anttl'lny Six, Mark Stanley
arr:l Botby Vance.
Fourth grack&gt; - ,Jf'nnlfer Ban·ett, Diana
Mark, StevC' Martin. Amanda Molden. Brian
Lamtl:'rt and AarCil Sheels.
Fift h grad£&gt; - Rebecca Napper, Hoberta
NapfX'r, Stev£' Bass. Rodney Butcher, Marc
Howard. Kenny Kennedy and Wendy
Phl!tl~

Sixth grade - Christina Bass, Jason
Dodson, Wl'Siey Howard and Jared Sheets .

Thl' SC'&lt;'Ond six W(&gt;(&gt;ks grading jX'ricx:l honor
roll of th£&gt; Bradbury Elementary Sd1ool ha s
bern announced. Making a grade of "B" or
above In all their subjects to be named to the
roll werf' :
Fifth grade- Mary Byer. Eddie Crooks,
James Durst, P. J. GibD&gt;, Jennifer McKinley,
Sha nnon Newsome. Heath Richmond, James
Broome. Susanne Cassell, Leah Daniels.
Amy Epple, Ryan Harper. Cheryle Stevens.
Charle-nE' Cadle, Tammy
Six th grade
Hawley. Stephanie P('('k, Matt Lyons, Randy
Bunce. Sean Gibbs. Amy Luckeydoo. Elise
Meier, Sron Netgler. Kathy Thomas .

Lee Jeans ..... SI995
Coveralls ...... SI795
Bib Overalls .. s1595
CHILDREN'S

Tammy Plantz, both of Gallipolis;
Some 70 employees and guests of
Robert Wingett, and assistant
Don Wr ight Sr., Evelyn Wright,
the Ohio Vaiiey Publishing Co.
publisher, Pat Whitehead, were
Cherri Wright, John Wright, Don
enjoyed a Christmas dinner and
each presented a gUt from the
Wright Jr. and Brenda Wright, all of
employees of the Dally Sentinel, the
party Wednesday evening at lhe
GaUipolis; Pat and Kitty White-Meigs Inn in Pomeroy.
Point Pleasant Register and the
head, Poinl Pleasant; Hobart and
The annual event was hosted this
Gallipolis Da lly Tribune.
Beverly
Wilson, Gallipolis.
year by The Daily Sentinel.
Brian and Shirley Billings, Point
Thirty-eight door prizes were
During the meal, background
Pleasant; Judy Owen and Danon
awarded to people attending the
music was provided by Armand
party. Those attending were:
Morgan, both of Point Pleasant;
Turley at the organ, including
Fred and Pauline Hoffman,
Phyllis and Tom Roach, Henderpopular songs of the 193ls and 1940s
Middleport;
Gayiand
and
Helen
son,
W.Va.; Blanche and Harry
and Christmas music. He also acted
Bush, GaUipolis; Dian Calahan,
Siders, Gallipolis Ferry; Steve and
as accompanist for the musical
Jackson; Tammy Broyles, Jack· Cozy Halstead, New Haven; Tom
program which foiiowed.
son; Vernon and E llen Deweese,
Withrope, Point Pleasant ; Lee
The program was presented by
Point Pleasa nt ; Margaret and Bill
Kampmeyer, Point Pleasant;
performers from the Big Bend
Lehew, Pomeroy; Helen and
Larry and Pat Boyer, Gailipolis.
Minstrel Association, and included '
Emma Lou Davis, Pomeroy;
Tim and Kathy Halstead, New
two sing-along numbers. A trio
Haven; Bill and Peggy Doerfer,
composed of Linda Mayer, Shetia Trhonda and Tim Casto, Vinton;
Dale and Patty Rothgeb, Gallipolis. West Columbia; Katie Crow, SyraHorky, and Jayne Lee Hoeflich
Tom and Debbie Skinner, Bid· cuse; Goldie, Harold and Jeff
opened the program with "Silver
well;
Paul and Terra Barker, Ca rson, Rutland; Bob, Charlene
Beiis, " foiiowed by Jim Soulsby
singing "Santa Claus is Coming to Gallipolis; Sarah and Dick Owen, and Jayne Hoeflich, Pomeroy;
Middleport ; Robert Wingett, Syra· Keith and Teresa Wisecup, PomeTown."
Mayer, in a solo number, pres· cuse; Otho and Libby Mattox, Point roy; Dave Harris and Donna
ented "Have Yourself a Merry Pleasant; Jim and Jean Davidson, Meade, Pomeroy; Scott Wolfe,
Little Christma s," and Hoeflich in a Gaiiipolis; Jeff Grabmeier and Racine.
solo number presented "Blue , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Christmas."
Bob and Debi Buck delivered a
comical rendition of "I'm Gettin'
Nut tin' for Christmas."' The trio did
a second number, "M ister Santa,"
and Souisby sang "White Christ·
mas." He was joined by the entire
group in the singing of "Silent
Night " and "We Wish You a Merry
Christma s."
After the program, the publisher,
•

Personals
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Ebersbach and sons,
David and Chris, Syracuse, were
Mrs. Edna Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin C. Roush, Bethany and
Bridgett, New Haven; Mrs. Joyce
Carson, Ed Carson, Dick and
Jennifer Carson, Mason; Mr. and
Mrs. George Knap, Letart. W. Va .;
Mrs. Carol Carson, Middleport;
and Bob Roush, Apollo Beach, Fla.

Rutland Furniture
will be open starting
Thursday, Dec. 16th
till 8:00 P.M. each
evenmg till · Christmas
(Except
Sunday).

r=======================~-

Mr. and Mrs. James M. Milliron,
ReedsviUe, celebrated Thanksgiv·
ing Day at their home on Joppa
Road. Joining them for the day
were several fam ily members
including Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Milliron, Mrs . Bertha Rife, Bonnie
Rife, Diane and Tam! Milliron, ail
of Middleport; Mrs. Lenora Bly
and Tom Raton, Marietta; Mrs.
Melva Wingrove, Walker, W. Va.;
Mrs. Jaretta Wingrove and grand·
son, Eric Wells, Tampa, Fla., and
the Millirons' sons, Matthew and
Justin.

Thanksgiving holiday visitors at
the home of Mrs. Allen Brewer ancl
David, Sti versville, were Mrs.
Marilyn Beall, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Brewer and Jane
Fitch, Long Bott om; Mrs. Joann
Dobbins, Columbus; Mrs. Emma
Lee Simeral, Rey nold sburg;
Mr.and Mrs. Kerry Dobbins, Par·
tland; Edgar Brewer , Stiversvilie;
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Close and Roy,
Waterford, Larry Close and son,
Jerry, Watertown; Leland Close,
Little Hocking; Mark Garrett ,
Columbus.

By The Associated Press
Reta il business this Christmas
appears to be a better than
year, although high unemploy·
and the recession are con, Ohio merchants say.
"Good, but not great," said Tim
spokesman for Feder·
Department Stores in Cincin" It's a little bit better than last
. But it's far from ~ensa tional
far."
McEnroe . noted that a lot of
lshclppers waited until the last few
before Christmas last year,
he expects many to wait again
year.
"People in recent years have
tended to put off Christmas shopping until later and later in season.
This year Christmas is on a
Saturday, which means there's
another day to put it off. I would
expect the last week and couple
days are really going to be the key to
how well the season develops," he
said.
In Delaware, downtown mer·
chants are staying open until9 p.m.
and are opening on Sunday after ·
noons, according to Billy Cannon,
executive manager of the chamber
of commerce.
"I'd say the business outlook is ·
mixed. It is not good , excellent or
poor. I do not see any huge crowds,
but business does not seem to be
down, " he said.
Stephen Thorpe, senior vice
president of the May Co .. which has
10 stores in northern Ohio, said
business is up.
"So far thi s season, we're
experiencing very good gains over
last yea r . The shoppers are buying
more practical; they're not buying
pet rocks. But we seem to be
experiencing good sales in almost
every department." Thorpe said .
He acknowledged that retailers
are affected by the unemployment
problem, "But on the other side of

the coin, 87 percent of the people are
working," he said.
" I don't want to mislead you into
thinking this is a boom town," said
Larry Krukewitt , director of the
Springfield Chamber of Commerce.
"Our larger retailers are ail
reporting sales in excess of 1981.
People are buying more on ~red it
and large purchases are ahead of a
yea r ago."
The improved business may be
caused by improved consumer
psychology ra ther than an im·
proved economy, Krukewitt said,
referring to optimism generated by
international Harvester's decision
to keep open its Springfield truck
plant.
in Licking County, sales tax
coiiections doubled from $600,1XXJ in
October 1981 to $1.2 million this
October, said Joseph D. Kennedy,
executive vice president of the
Newark Area Chamber of
Commerce.
But in rural areas, business hasn't
picked up at the same pace.
Merchants are trying to determine
whether it has gotten worse, one
official said .
In Fayette County, farmers

Junior Miss
attends
sesston

-~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~~s ia ~~~~~~~~~~

Russell Stover Candies wrap s up the finest chocolates and
butter bons in colorful New gift wraps. Let us help you
say it sweetly this holiday season with a gift of good taste .

ASSORTED CHOCOLATES, 1 LB., 2 LB., 3 LB. &amp; 5 LB.
THE GIFT BOX 1112 LB., 2Vc LB.
ASSORTED CREAMS 1 LB.
HOME FASHIONED FAVORITES 1 LB., 2 LB.
I

I

--·--- ------ ---------·-,I

L..---1

iI

1

ltrnnell'l McCull ough. R . Ph.

I

' ' ~ ESC A I ~~~~,..~~I O

I

E M&lt;1on

I

ChriU R olll f , R.Ph

Ronald Han ing , A. Ph
MonllmJSat . IOOam . lotpm
JO IO lllOan d ,tot .mPH tt1ltSI

F r u~n dly

Open

Strvoc o·

Pomtrov , 0
N ogh h 1111 t

·-------------------

I1_ ___.
I
I
j

I

J

Meigs County Junior Miss Cincjy
Crooks, Middleport, attended the
one-day orientation for the Ohio
Junior Miss Scholarship Program
Saturday in Mount Vernon.
Betty Winand, mayor ·or Mount
Vernon, presented Crooks with the
key to the city upon her arriva l.
One of 28 outstanding senior high
school girls, Crooks attended the
orientation session in prepara tion
for her week -long stay for the Ohio
Junior Miss SCholarship Program.
More that $10,1XXJ in cash awards
and $90,1XXJ in schola rshipsare being
offered by program organizers.
Sponsor c0ntests are underwritten·
by Simplicity, Kraft, Coca -Cola and
Revion. Each provide additional
scholarship opportunities for the
girls.
The junior misses will participate
in numerous program activitiC'sand
rehearsals during the week prior to
the finals on the stage of the Mount
Vernon Memorial Building, Feb. 4
and o.
Five fina lists wiii be selected
from the 28 contestants, with the
1983 Ohio Junior Miss chosen from
that group. The winner will represent the state of Ohio in theAmerican
Junior Miss program which wiii be
held in Mobtie, Ala., in the summer.
Tickets for the Ohio Junior Miss
finals are now available from Ohio
Junior Miss, Inc., and may be
obtained by wri ting to Ohio Junior
Miss, Inc.; Attention: H. Ray
McCann, 210 Vernedaie Dr., Mount
Vernon, Ohio 43050.
State the county in which you
reside, with a check or money order
for tickets, $1o per set, main floor
and mezzanine; $12 per set,
balcony.
Ail tickets wiii be held for pick-up
on Saturday, Jan. 29, or Friday
evening, Feb. 4.

provide 48 percent of the gross
income for businesses. With !ann
prices low. som e m erchan!s aren't

looking forward to a boom ye&lt;;~ r .
" It is not as bad as we imagined-it
would be," sa id Bart E. Mahoney of.
the Chamber of Commerce in
Washington Court House.
"I think we have hit our high spot
on unemployment . i\ month ago, I
attended a personnel managers
meeting. They have liquidated a lot
of inventory and some businesses
will be calling back workers after
the first of the year," he said .
"Last year, the big splurge came
the last three days before Chr istmas. We won' t really know how
we're doing until then," Mahoney
sa id.
G. Roderick Henry, executive
director of the Lancaster Chamber
of Commerce, said business didn 't
pick up until the first of this month.
"One merchant sa id it wa s as if all
the consumers got a phone ca ll to
stay away until Dec. !.It was really
dead down her e," Henry said . But
business has picked up and "it
appears that there Is going to be a
better December than last year." he
sa id.

New 5
WOOD DINETTE

$19995

ABed and a Bed1oom In One
With 1-o lMI! OriWm Undmnuth IMd

MIO OLII'IIIII llli

WILLIAM E. PARK, D.D.S.
Announce• thot he ho1 o11umed
The Oenerol Dentl1try Practice
of the late Nel1on A. Parle, D.D.S.
ond that oil record• will continue
to be ovolloble In thl1 .oHice.

Office Hou11 By Appt.

629 Main Street

Telephone 675-6001

·Poln.t Pleaiitt

Sht'rman L RobertswhodiedDec. 7,
were Master Sgt. and Mrs. Sherman L Roberts, Oklahoma City,
Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fillinger
and son of Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Gray and Miss Karen
Fillinger of Rapid City, S. D. ; Mr.
a!lll Mrs. Hubert Roberts and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Cackler of Ashley,
Ohio; Carl Starcher of Uniontown;
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Perrine of·
SomersviUe, W. Va.; Albert Harpold and Robert Easter of Liverpool, W. Va. ; Calhy Vergilio and
daughters of New Jersey, and Kern
Roberts of Columbus.
Services were held at Ewing
Funeral Home With the Rev. Clyde
Henderson otflclatlng. ·
' •f·

By HELEN AND SUE BOOTEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Every time I'm around this
woman at the office, she offers mea
breath mint. Is she trying to tell me
something 7 - INSECURE
DEAR INSECURE:
Don't ask us: ask a friend you're
sure won't lie. - HELEN
INSECURE:
Could be the woman worried
about her own heallh, and, being
polite, can't pop a mint into her
breath without offering one to the
person nearby.
(Which brings up a tricky
etiquette question: Is it generous or
gauche to pass around the breath
mints 7 - SUE
DEAR HELEN:
ChUdren often complain to you
that their parents don't praise them
for accomplishments, but are quick
to blame.
I wonder how many of those kids
praise their mothers for ali the
things they do. I produce a great
meal - each chlld pushes aside
something he or she doesn't Uke. I
bake five dozen cookies for a school
fund raiser. Where's the thanks 7 I
do a hurry-up job of washing and
Ironing a special outfit- It's taken
for gran ted.
I received a great promotion at
work. The family thought of it In
terms of how much less time I could
spend "doing for" them .
They never ask about my
interesting job, but if I didn't listen
to their trials and triumphs, I'd be
"unmotherly."
They don't see their father and I
as humans- just parents, there to
make life easier for them .
They do love us - they're good
kids, but thoughtless. I keep
thinking how wonderful it would be
if they'd say once in a while, " Hey,
you're terrific! " as we do to them.
- ACHING FOR RECOGNITION

Adjustmt&gt;nl

DEARAFR:
I'll bet your letter appears taped
to many refrigerators this evening.
Let's hope it jars "Thank yous"
from a few self-centered, thought·
less kids, Including yours! - SUE

Should I tell them both how i feel
before I move7 - TORN
DEAR TORN:
That would be the honest way. HELEN

DEAR ACHING'S CHILDREN :
Everyone thrives on praise parents most of ail. How about
presenting yours with a bouquet
and a card reading: "From now on,
you'D hear it from us!" And don't
backslide. - HELEN

TORN:
But perhaps a more sensible way
should be to cool it with Miss 16 but
tell Miss 15 nothing until you return
heme for a visit next year. If you
stU! feel the same about her then,
well, I'll be very much surprised.SUE

RAP:
I'm 18 and will leave for the West
Coast soon on a baseball scholarship. The girl I'm dating Is 16 and
cares a lot for me. But my romantic
feelings have died since I met her
15-year-oid sister. She's the one I
could love!

(GCYf i\ PROBLEM 7 Or a
subj ec t for discussion, two·
genera tlon style7 Direct your
questions to either Sue or Helen
Bottel - or both, If you want a
combination mother -daLghter
answer In care of this
newspaper. 1

prohlt·m~

years.

That's the philosophy ix'h ind the
Priman· Mental Health ProjC'Ct
based at thC' Uniwrsit\' of
Roches ter.

HUBBARD'
GREENHOUSE

NEW ADULT SIZE

Syracuse. OH .
Now Open For The

SAVE
$70

WOODEN ROCK

$3995

Chris1mas
Holiday Season
Large selection of Poinsettias in Pots

and

Hanging

Baskets. Christmas

Cactus, Violets, Foliage Plants &amp;
Hanging Baskets. Candle arrange-

ments, door wreathes. and cut

TO

Christmas Trees. Now Taking Orders
for Grave Blankets.

Open Daily 9 to 5
Sunday 1 to 5

PH . 992-5776

SAVE UP
TO $40

•l ew padded

ANNOUNCEMENT

cedar chest by Lane.

1/2

Price

·1·
~Lamp

Sale

SO THAT OUR EMPLOYEES MAY HAVE 1 DAY OFF AWEEK THE
FOLlOWING HOURS WIU BE OBSERVED AT THE RAONE AND
SYRACUSE OFFICES OF THE HOME NATIONAL BANK
BEGINNING JANUARY 1 1983.
I

RAONE OFACE

FREE LOVESEAT
When you buy this
2 pc. Living Rm.
Suite.

$39995

LOBBY HOURS:
MON., TUES., WED., FRI.
SATURDAY
CLOSED THURSDAYS
DRIVE THRU:
MON., TUES., WED., T~URS.
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

8:00 TO 3:00
8:00 to 12:00
8:00 TO 3:00
8:00 TO 6:00
8:00 TO 3:00

SYRACUSE OFACE

New 2 pc. Couch &amp; Chair

Rm. Suite with wood trim arm
100% nvlnn/a•rlrnn

Attends service

' Attending the funeral services for

Is she being generous ...
or telling her something?

ROCHE~IER . !'&lt;.Y tAPr- The•
best WO)' to dea l with school
odjustmmt problems is to det('(·t
and prevent thcm m rl,· in t hC'school

· .s995
Jeans ............
BAILEY 'S SHOES

Sentinel

Helen Help Us

(Far from sensational'
1982's Christmas buying

REG.
1269.95

TheDa

, Ohio

•

~

The daughters and their families
of Edgar Brewer spent T hanksgiv·
ing Day with their father. They are.
Mrs. Joann Dobbins, Mrs. Emma
Simerai, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Beegle, Crista ancl Rodney , Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Dobbins, Mr.
and Mrs. Kerry Dobbins, Portland.

Po me

New Sealy, Quilted
Top, Innerspring

LOBBY HOURS:
MON., WED., THURS., FRI.
SATURDAY
CLOSED TUESDAY
DRIVE THRU:
MON., WED., THURS., FRI., SAT.
CLOSED TUESDAYS

9:00 TO 3:00
9:00 TO 12:00
9:00 TO 5:00

FIRM,

MATTRESSES
TWIN

FULL

WE URGE YOU TO USE THE ALTERNATE OFFICE ON
TUESDAYS AND THURSDAYS FOR RJLl SERVICE BANKING.

$89.95 Reg. $109.

$2995

$4995

'

RACINE
OFFICE

949-2210

SYRACUSE
OFFICE
992-6333

�Page - l 0 - The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Thursday, December 16, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 16, 1982

Pome~oy-Middleport,

Meigs meeting notes _ _ _ __
Alpha Omicron

A'ITRACI1VELY DECORATED- The sta!Riy
home of Mr. and Mrs. ~ohert F1sher, North Third St.,
Middleport, Is one of many attractively decorated

homes In Meigs County. Nestled In the shrubbery are
hundreds of clear miniature Ughls.

Miniature maker spends hours
on authentic doll house creations
PORT CLJ I\1D!\ . Ohio ,,\P I L.\ ·nda Stidel is so dedicated to
a uth e nti cit~ · in m aking miniaturf'
fumilu r'f• that to makr J lin\.

wor king loom . shf' SJX'nl

\~' l'ek s

learning to Wf'aW' .

Mrs . Stidel's makf's miniaturP
furniture for doll hou., es. and th&lt;'
work requires thr delir a lr touc hof a
s urgron a nd a lot of patirnrf'.
I t took ht •r fi\ '! ' hours j ust tu
" hand ·ca n&lt;'" thP bac k ol a nJ&lt;'king
chai r \Vittl si lk Sf'\\'i ng thn·arl. Tht&gt;
tin~ · loom shf' madl ' h&lt;J s morp than
100 pijrt s. hu t is on l_\' il fpw in('hr s
w ide' and lo ng.
Mrs. StidP I sa id shl' quit ht •r job
as a nur..,f' with thf' Ottawa Co un~·
Ht'a llh lJtopa.-tment 12 vmrs ago
whPn hf'r first child was born . Sincf'
till'n . shp's bf'en kf'f'ping bu s\ ·.
" I got into m aking miniaturC's
whPn I was maki ng a doll housr for
th&lt;• k ids." said Mrs. Stit'frl. nOll' til&lt; '
mot hrr of I hrf'f' childrm .
H1·r fi rst commf'f't'ia l unrlr rt ak·

ing wa s to build 10 to 12 cli.ffrr&lt;'nl
stv lr s of firl'pla rt's.
"What made m y firr plar&lt;'s
uniqu&lt;' ll'as lh&lt;' fire." Mrs. Stit'ft'l
said. " I t looks vrrv rm list ir. Peopl&lt;'
wantt'd the fires. so I sold them on!.' ·
as part of 1he fir&lt;' place. I have tosPII
miniaturt's to support my hobb; ·.
but I do trad e m \· work for things I
want for m .v own collection."
Mrs. St ieft'l said the intt'rest in
minia tu rrs has grown in thr last ff'w
.\ 'C'&lt;Jrs . On0 JX)tlrr makrs minia·
turrs for a li \'i ng and a maslf'r
~ la ss bl owt' r supports his famil\'
making hand-blown miniatures of
winC' Si'IS and stf'mware.
" It 's unbelie\·able. and lht' prir&lt;'
of som &lt;' of these things is uniX'lie,·a·
hie. too." sht' sa id .
Mrs. S!iC' fPI sa.vs hC'r fa\·ori tr
miniaturrs arr pi('('PS of co lonial
furniture' "bfocausr it gives warmth
to a hom&lt;'. 1\·p studied a lot of tht'
building t('('hniqurs lilt' old fumi ·
lure makNs uS&lt;'&lt;l . I like the join tel'\·.

The.v worked with the simplest tools
possible. butt hey were very c lever
in tar kiing their problem s."
Most of her furniture is m ade of
hardll'oods like cherry and maple.
"I kerp the pieces authentic,"
Mrs. Stiefel sa id. displaying a
cu rtained. crane-top folding bed .
made of cherry wood and including
tiny rop&lt;' springs.
Mrs. Sti efel showf'd a tiny dt'sk
and taking hold of the minute knobs.
pulled the drawers on thedesk opPn.
"EvNythi n~ work s and looks
Oligi nal." Mrs. Stiefel sa id , pointing
to tht' dovt'ta il joints of lh&lt;' drawer s.
The hardest piece she sa.vs she's
f'\'C'f madf' was a stpa m -formed
bentwood rocker.
"To mv knowledge, l'm thr onl.v
one w ho ac tually stea m -bend s the
ll'ood to make th&lt;' wood look like the
original rockers arc made. Man.'
miniaturists makr bf'ntwood
rockt'rs. but thr \· cut the wood to
mak&lt;' it look like it's bf'en bent ." sh(·
S&lt;Jid .

News of the Reedsville area
Th&lt;' Rt'rd s,·ille Commu ni !.\'
Builders Club met recrntlv at the
hom&lt;' of Mr. and Mrs. Harli ss
F ra nk . Allending were Mr . and
Mrs. Ronald Osbome. Mr . and
M r s. Ro;· Hannum . Mr. and M rs.
Donald M yers. Mr . and M rs.
Wall er Brown, Mr . and Mrs.
Warren Pickens and Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead . Plans were
made to ea t out in January.
M embers enjoyed a socialtimeand
refreshments were servf'd buffet
style by the hostesses .
The annual Christma s Tree
Lighting for the Reedsville com·
munll y was held Wednesda;· pven·
ing at the Belleville Dam Park . It
was sponsored by the Ri verview
Garden Club. Richard Rober-ts,
executive head of Eastern School
District. was M .C. for the event. He
also turned the light s on th e tree.
Rev. Eldon Blake gave a spiritual

invocation to those allending.
Music wa s provided by a group
from the Eastern band . directed y
Mrs. Wilhelm. Group singing of
Christmas songs was led by Mrs.
Maxine Whit ehead. Santa arri ved
on the Olive Town ship fire tru ck
and trea ted approximately 150
c hildren . Refreshments were
se1v ed in the church basement for
the band members following the
treelighting. Thanks were ex·
tended to all who helped m ake the
event a success.
Mrs. Helen Archer spent Thanksgiving with the Don Coleman
family of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Ga r1h Smith and
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Smith recently
visited Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith
of Akron .
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith and
son. Steve. visited Mr . and Mrs.

Deaf to talk to Santa Claus

Alpha Omicron Chapter , Delta
Kappa Gamma. met Sunday at the
Ohio University Inn . A thens. for a
Christma s br unch. T ables were
tr immed in the Christmas motif.
and a lighted tree completed the
decorations. Favors were supplied
by loca l businesses and the hostess
commill!'!', which consisted of
Chery l Nisley, chairman; E l izabe th Lantz. Fern Felton. Edith
Hoffman, Myrtle Fri. Maud£' Esm ont, and Oarbara Liller.
President Viola Gellles conducted the business m eeting before
the mea l, beginning with a reading,
"Christmas is Happiness. " Lori .J .
Houser. resea rch c hairma n. an·
nounced that the updaled chapter
history book will be ready in the
spring. Histories of new m embers
and changes in other histories
should be given to M s. Houser by
February . Jean Ward. member·
ship chairma n, announced that
m embership applicalions are now
ava ilable and that m embership
includes anyo ne in the educa tion
fi eld.
Grilles announrf'd th at Delta
Kappa Gamma's stat e convention
is slated for April 28-May 1. at the
Rrgrnr;· in Columbus. Therhapler
signed Christma s ca rd s for ill
members E thel Chapman. Olive
Page, and Lucile Smith . Flowers
will be sent to Mary E llr n Smi th w ho
rerenll;• entered the hospi tal.
Roberta Wilson read a Christmas
story . " The V.I.P." and "Christmas
Treasures." a poem by a DKG
member. EsthN Daulx•r. Paulin&lt;'
Burson lf'd tht' singing of Christmas
carols and songs inc luding " Whit t'
Christ mas,'' "Deck the Halls...
"Si lent Nig ht " and "Adrs tl·
Fideles."
Thosepresmt from Meigs County
wt'r&lt;' Fern Grimm. Donna RoiX'rta
Wil son.

Heath UMW
United Mt'thodist Women of
Ht'al h Churc h. Middleport , met
rf'f'entl.v atlh&lt;' hom&lt;' of F:mma K av
Cla two rthv for their Christma s

on Christma s au thors and litera ture, including Charles Dickens and
'A Christma s Carol,' Henry Van
Dyke and 'The Other Wise Men,'
and Clement Moore and 'The Night
Before Christmas.' She finished the
progr am with a read ing entitled
'Chr istmas All Over the World.·
I vy Slea ts recited several Christ·
mas poem s. and Euvella &amp;rhtel
joined in with a story ca lled . 'Th&lt;'
Donkey Who Did Her Best.·

St. Paul's ALCW
St. Paul's Lutheran Church
ALCW met Sunday in the church
social room for a Christmas party.
A Christma s story was read b;•
Wilma Mees. Jea nne Braun conducted ga mes. with prizes going to
Thelma L y tle. Pastor Middlcswa rth . Jean Coa tes. and Rachel
Downie.
Trays of fresh fruit. homt'made
cookies. and randy were prt'pared
for shut ·ins.
Wilma M ees served ra ke. eofft'e .
and punch to those allending.

·Sets office hours
Meigs County office of Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio will
be open with modified office hours
for the last two weeks In December.

The temporary schedule Is as
follows: Monday, Dec. 20 and '1:7
from 12 noon to 3: 30 p.m .;
Wednesday, Dec. 22 from 9:30a.m.
to 4 p.m .; Thursday, Dec. 23 and 30
from 8: 30 a. m . lo noon. Clinics wiU
be held Monday evenings, Dee. 20
and 7 from 4 p.m . lo 8 p.m. at the
Meigs County Health Departmenl.
Appointment s may he made by
ca lling 992 -5912 during office hours.

The uniform menu for lunc h·
rooms in the Meigs Local School
Distr lcl for Monday through Thursday next week has been announced.
Sc hools will he closed Friday for
the Christmas holiday season. Next
week's menu includes:
. -, I''
Monday - Fish sandwlch-larta( :
sauce, onion chips, fruit cup;
brownie. milk.
·
Tuesday Macaroni with
cheese, cole slaw, apple crisp,
bread . buller. milk.
Wednesday - Crea med turkey.'
m ashed pota toes. green beans, Ice
cream, hot rolls. buller. mUk.
Thursday - Chili-crackers. onehalf buller or one-half peanut
buller sa ndwich. cheese slice, fruit ,
milk .
Friday - No school.

W

W

~

~

OPEN TILL 8 IN THE EVENING FOR YOUR
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE"

~
~

Hartley Shoes Located in the Upper Block
In Pomeroy

I

HARTLEY SHOES

l:OMEROY

PH.

~

~

992-5272~

-~--~s:o:s:o:•--~ti:ll------ti:llti:IIB:o:~ll!! .

Durst joins
One hundred and eigh!Ren units of
blood were received Wednesday at
the Meigs Unit of the American Red
Cross Bloodmobile held at the
senior citizens center In Pomeroy .
In all, J.al people attended. Of the
118 units, !llwere replacements and
there were 14 first time donors.
Slx gallon donor was Edward
Durst; lour gaUon donor, Mary
Slarcher; three gaUon donor, Clarence Mcintyre; two gallon donor,
Patricia Logan and one gallon
donors were Donna Evans and
JospehHaU.
Doctors assisting at the bloodmobile were Dr. Wilma Mansfield and
Dr. James Witherell. Nurses were
F emdora Story, Lenora Leifheit,
Jackle Frosl and Beulah Ward. In
charge of the canteen were Mrs. J.
M . Gaul and Chester United
Methodist Church.
The chairs and tables were placed
by R.S.V.P . employes. Clerical
workers were Mary Nease. Jean
Nease. Virginia Buchanan, Erma
Roush, Peggy Harris, Jeanie
Braun, Alice Wolfe, April Parker,
Mace! Barton, Vernon Nease, Lula
Hampton and Donna Williamson.
R.S.V. P . senior citizens assisting
were Marion Ebersbach, Thelma

Meigs lunch menu

I~--~-~-----~~~~~~~--~~-~
SANTA WILL BE IN OUR STORE
w
I
FROM 4 TO 8 ON FRIDAY AND
I
I '. SATURDAY NIGHT
i
=

.

LEARNING AT AN EARLY AGE - Jon Rice holds his
live-month-old son Jon Paul as Susan SmaD gives a hepatitis shot
Wednesday at the Christ United Methodl!lt Church In Newark. City
health olllclals ~llshed the shot program alter recent Increases
In reported hepatitis cases. (AP Laserphoto).

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

•
SIX

gallon blood donor club

Testimony decisive
in teamsters' trial 59 needy children
on shopping spree

CHICAGO (API - Teamslers
Presidenl Roy L. Williams, convicled with lour others of lrying to
bribe Sen. Howard Cannon. should
"step down immediately," says a
dissident leader of the nation's
largest union .
Williams, 67. and his codefendants. whose conversations
were !aped by !he FBI. were found
guilty WedneSday of conspiring to
bribe the Nevada Democrat with a
lucra tive Las Vegas land dea l in
return for his help lo del eal a
!rocking deregulalion bill in
Congress.
Cannon was not charged and
testified for the defense. while !he
blli' eventually passed with his
support. But the prosecutor in the
rase sa id the verdict came because
of a " lar k of credibility" by
Williams and the senator.
Williams, who becomes !he third
Teamslers president convicted of a
federal crime In the past 25 years,
and who ca lled thechargesa "damn
lie," sa id he will appeal. Under
federal law. he can keep hls jobuntll
appeals are exhausted.
Allorneys tor the other defendants, Including a reputed organized
crime figure. also vowed to appeal
the convictions. which carry maxi·
mum sentences of up lo 55 years In
prison and $29,00) in fines.
U.S. District Judge Prentice H.
Marshall set sentencing for Feb. 10.
The defendanls were each convicted of one count of conspiracy

and interslate travel to further
bribery, and nine counts of wire
fraud.
Gary Shapiro, prosecutor lor a
Justice Department strike force set
up In the Chicago area, said he
believed the government had convinced jurors of a conspiracy, " but if
we didn't, their !Cannon's and
Williams' I lack of credibility was
decisive. "
"!think the jury concluded if they
were lying, the only reason !hey
could he lying was because of their
guilt," Shapiro said.
Under federal law. a union official
convicted of a crime may hold office
until appeals are'exhausled.
However, Ken Pat!, national
organizer in Detroit of an 8,00lm emher dissldenl faction, T eam sters for a Democratic Union. said
the verdlcl shows "WIIiiams is not
worthy of the poslllon of presidenl of
our union. We believe Williams
should step down immediately ... "
Officials at Teamsters Interna tional headquarters In Washington
all declined to comment on the
convictions. Cannon, who last
month said publicity about the case
contributed to his failure to win
re-e!eclion, also declined to
comment.
The other defendant s were Thomas O'Malley, 46, a pension fund
lrustee; Andrew Massa, 65, a
former trustee; and Joseph "Joey
the Clown" Lombardo, 53, a reputed
Chic.ago crime syndicale figure.

Village funds total $490,495
All Middleport Village funds as of
Nov. 30, totaled $480,495.12, accord:
ing to the monthly report of Village
Clerk-Treasurer Jon Buck.
REceipts and expenditures from
the various funds, respectively, and
the balance In each at the end of the
month Include: general, $18,925.37,
$24,922.61, $29,756.80; street maintenance, $7,670.04, $6,721.39, $4,273.36
deficit; HUD, $228,lXXl, $207,995.54,
$31,000.78; revenue sharing, no
receipts. no disbursements,
$6,()18.ffi; street light, no receipts, ·

Market reports
Otuo Valley Ltvemock Company
Mark&lt;~ Reptrl
Saturday, Dec. II, 19fl2

Trends : Veal calv&lt;'s Sl&lt;'ady, feeder cattl('

steady, cows steady.
FN'd6' Steers: Good and Cl¥&gt;ict' 250 to 300
ltli. 4.S-56; :m to 400 lbs. ~-58; «10 to~ lb!i.

$1,291.84, $8,918.77; street levy, no
receipts, no disbursements,
$10,740.72; tire equipment, $2,531,
$1.152.64. $1,110.74 deficit; !ire
truck, no receipts, no disbursements, $38,012.53; general bond
retirement, no receipts, no disbursements, $18,924.70; planning commission, no receipts, $5.04, $73.90;
sanitary sewer escrow. no receipts,
$2,030, $l'l8,747.29; water tank,
$5,919. 71, no disbursements,
$173,560.05; water, $9,365.61,
$10,861.88, $24,858.02; sanitary
sewer, $7,097.12, $3,734.36, $6,136.66;
swimming pool, $2,900, $111.34,
$66.88 deficit; cemetery, $2,633.16,
$1,00.36, $102.55; water meter
trusts, $332.20, $2(6, $8,974.65.
REceipts for the month totaled
$285,374.21 whUe disbursements
totaled $260,114.

MARGUERITE
SHOES

jackets. dainty party dresses and
squeaky new shoes.
"Do we really get to keep
everyt hing?" young Lucy asked in
disbelief. her shopping bag bulging

wi~nm;y~::~~dlse~y

named Brian

broke lntoarunatthe bottomolthe
escalators a! the Sears store a!
University Towne Center. His mind
was made up. Within minules, his
Christmas wishes had all come
true: In his bag were live clothing

~~:~~:;;

Babv Calves Zi-55.
Spn'nger Cows 250-300.
CoWs and Ca lvl"S Combl natloo ~l10.
ToP Hogs 210 to 2ll lbs. 53 -~ Boars J5.42.
Sows 400 Jbs. and up 42.5045.
Pl~s by !ht&gt; Head n37.50.
Alhens UvCIIlook Sales
So&amp;uida3'. Dec. 11, 11182

CAT'ILE PRICES:
ree.:ser Steers: tGoOO and Chotce) ,m.5(J)
Ills. 51.5().61: 500-100 IIJI. t;.l!J.SJ.
Fefder' Heifers: (Good and Choice) D&gt;-500
lbs. 38·50.50: 500-100 lbs. Jl.52.50.
Fe(der Bulls: I Good and Cootcel lXJ.500
lbs. 48·57.50: 500-1001111. 42·57.
Slaoghler Bulls: 10ver l ,OOO!bs.) Jt\.41.60.
Slaughter ·cow~ UIUI!tes 36.5042.50:
Canners and OJtters 21·:W.Sl.
Sp:1nger C'""~ !BY lhe Head! lXJ.J60.
CfN/ and caJI palrc tBy !he Unllill0440.
Veals: (Ciroi:e and Prlmel 48-61.
Baljy Calves&lt; !BY the Head) ~.
Baby Calves (By lhe Poundi ·:ll-57.

HOG PRICES:
H0110: (No. I, Ban'"" and Gllllll Dl-2:11
Ills. 113!AI-51.50.
Butcher Sows 39-CI.
Butcher Boon l!B)41.Si .
Feeder Pip; (By the llead)!Ul.

SHEEP PRICES:
Slaughter Lambs 17.~.SJ.
·I

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SALEs
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992 2635

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New corporation
fonned in Meigs

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•Sofa •2 End Tables
•Party Ottoman
•Chair •Ro,ker

l i' (o miJI IJIP 'f' uu •

Rc- L• •'' &lt;;e ' '"' Y

•Antrun Nylon Fabrlu
Lamps h .ra SJ9.9:i Ea.

3 pc. Bar Set

$199
Buy

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MEMORABLE

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Secrelary of Slate Anthony J.
Celebrezze, Jr. reported today
articles of Incorporation have been
ltied with his office In Columbus by
Equinox Botanicals, Inc. of Rutland. Incorporator are Paul
Strauss, Valerie Hobbs. Valerie
Hobbs is the agent.

STARS

~~,q! _

1.~-~...,
.....~---...:-r •!,J&gt;
, . ,_ ., . / .' •
.
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.

BIRTHSTONES

~

i'

K"~=· -=~-~-.'~ \;~~ ·· J ~~?(
..·.' ~ ·;1~.~~~·-,-.-

participate in her kindergarten
ChrlslmasprogramonFriday, she

to 300

Slaughter Cows utUIU e; J4.39.fi&gt;: canners
and cutters 25.!"i&gt;-l1.
Veal Calves cOO let' and prim e 65-74.

.a/'\

INGELS .FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

FREE
DELIERY

tbs. 47·53.50: :m to 400 lbs. 4~~250 : 41llro 500
lbs. 48-53: 5001 o600 lbs. 46 ·~1: I!Xllo 100 45-50:

700 10 800 lbs. 43.00-48.5(}. 800 and over 39-46. ~.
Holstein Steers and BuDs 300 to Ul lbs.
ll-42.75.
Bulls 1.000 lbs. and up 4046.50.

I
I

kn~~1 e:~~~~~~at~~~~~~~~

FeedE!' Heifers: Good and Cholce200 to300
lbs. JJ-47; :ro to 400 lbs. «l-49; «10 to 500 11:"6.
42-~2: 500 to 600 lbs. 43 .~050.50; I!Xllo 71lllb6.
41-47 .75 ; 700 to 800 Ills. :IJ4i; fW and OV(&gt;r
2~

II

for parents lo remain behind lest
they influence !he rhildrens'
decisions.

48-55.

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BOOTS

20%
Off

49·00: 500 to IIXl lbs. 48·56.5Q IDO lo 100 lbs.
700 to ROO I!:xi. 42-51 ; 100 and over

Feeder Bulls: Good and Choke

'Christmas Special!

LA JOLLA. Calif. I API - For
needed a red and white dress.
MEN'S
once in their young lives. 59 needy
After unsuccessfully scouring
WOMEN'S
children got enough of everything:
four racks. she reluctantly decided
CHILDREN'S
toys, time wlthSanlaanda two-hour
to lake an oversized dress. Then
dash through a shopping cenler to · someone discovered what she
pick out gifts of their own.
wanted.
For S.year-old Lucy, unaccusEmerging from the dressing
tomed losuch riches, "This is better
room. stie skipped with joy, ina rush
than Christmas. I never go! this
to modellhe outfit for her aunt.
m any things before."
To qualify for the spree. the
The youngsters. ranging in age
childrens' parenls had to earn Jess
from three to 14, were chosen from
than $536 a month. according to
the files of San Diego's neediest
Richard Carlson, direclor of the
welfare families.
Salvation Army'scommunity serviThe shopping spree Wednesday
ces in San Diego County.
began with a chauffered ride to a
More than 5.lXXl families that
shopping center in a bus driven by
qualified sen\ in applications for the
Santa Claus. and it ended with a
spree drawing, about I.OOl more
"The Middle Shoe Store in the
Christmas party of cookies. punch
than a year ago, Carlson said .
Middle Block"
and brightly-wrapped presenls.
In ils fourth yea r . the spree is
EROY, OH.
In between, the youngslers went
sponsored by San Diego-based
ori the binge of their yo11ng lives.
Jnlperial Sa vings at 16 locations in
There were squeals of delight as
California.
the children dashed through the r-;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;_;;;;
showroom. trying on winter -ti:IIYIIB:II£&lt;:&lt;ti:ll1811~fj01ti:llti:IIB¥BIIrs:¥-Wti:ll-ti:lllS:I.IOIIBIIB:o:ti:ll

48. ~-52.50:

:JJ.43.50.

Groggel, Portland; Hazilee Riebel
and Everett J. Michael. Syracuse;
Tom Spencer, Long Bottom.
Janet BoUn, Fred George, Bea
Wood, Mary E. Davidson, Donna M .
Davidson, and Robert Hannon,
Rutland; Naree A. Hale, Dexter;
John C. Rice, Richard S. Barton,
Marcel Barton. Reedsvtue; Effie
Pickens. Janel M. Radford, WUIlam H. Hoback, Dorothy M . Sayre,
Fonda G. Rapp, John Costanzo,
Billy Parsons, Aaron Wolfe, Cora
M arr. Paul Marr, Racine; Ellis E .
M yers, Langsvtue; Darlene Kimes,
Rose Kimes. New Haven; Charles
Searles, Cheshire; Jack Weiker.
Hemlock Grove; Henry E. Bahr
and Howard E. Parker. Long
Bottom; Clarence C. WQlfe, Jr..
Chester; Clarence D. Mcintyre,
Debra Brown. Mary L. Voss,
Minersville; Franklin Blankenship,
Leon, W.Va.; Michael A. Wilfong,
Vinton.

Janealel Johnson, Virgtl K. Windon,
Brenda J. Davis, Virginia Davis,
Dale Harrison, Patty Barton, John
R. Thomas, Kelii L. Clelland.
Robert L. Mash, Robert W. Mtuer.
Carolyn A. Jeffers, Jacqueline D.
Brlckles. Lawrence Leonard,
George Nash, M arvin E . Taylor,
Sheila J . Taylor, Carolyn Collins,
and Rick Collins.
Middleport donors were Kenneth
W. Madden, Roger K. Stewart,
Linda Haley, Donna Powell, Sarah
Fowler, Russ Carson. Donald
Stivers, Patricia K. Logan, Leafy
Chasteen. Joyce V. Bartrum, John
A. Elias, Selby A . Manley, Edward
Dursl, Stephanie Houcklns. Marta
H. Blackwood, Jam es M . Gerlach.
Ricky Schaefer. Faye Wallace.
Judith K. Hunter, Debra J . Carder,
Denzil Welsh, Barbara Welsh.
Robert Daniels, George Harris, .Jr ..
and John Hood.
Other donors were La renee R.

DIJI, Florence Richards, Jesse
Curtis, Bonnie Conde, Pete Shields.
Bernadine M eier, Betsy Harold,
Faith Perin and Beth Perin.
Ponatlons were made by Quality
Prlnt Shop, The Dally Sentinel, The
Athens Messenger, W.M .P.O. Radio. The Valley Shopper, Senior
Citizens program and Veterans
M emorial Hospllal.
Donors from Pomeroy were
Brenda Neutzling, FrankUn H.
Casto, Russell H . Moore. Albert
Parker. Harry L. Bailey. Erma
Smith, Pamela J . McDougal. Denise Mora: Janet Nelson, Clarence
A . King, Brenda Fry, Gerald
Rought, Helen E. Blackston. Phylls
Bearhs. Dennis J. Gilmore, Donna
L . Evans, .Joseph C. Hall. Maxine
Heizer, Gibria K. Riggs, Dante! L.
Riggs, Mark S. Riggs, Carrie Beth
Bearhs, Leo L. Vaughan, William
W. Radford, Homer Baxter, Mary
L. Slarcher, Howard P . Logan.
Virgil E . Taylor, Debra D. Buck,
Robert Buck, Barbara Kennedy,
Paul Rice. John Wilson, Jr..
William Quickel, Mary K. Spencer,
Billy Joe Spencer, Ronald W.
Hanning, Kenneth Harris, John E.
Blake, David Blake. Coy Nltz.
Dorothy Oliver. Raymond Jewell, .

:F ·IW~.-·
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~~~ .

And Sou I

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~·r}·~~~r~~7,4.:'-~. F"'-~ ...,·
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and the pnce 1s most heartwarming, too!

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INGELS RJRNITURE &amp; JEWELRY .
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•••
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�Page -

12-

Thursday, December 16, 1982

The Daily Sentinel

Victimized steelworkers seek
surcharges, or other relief
By 111!' Assoclalt&gt;d Prc•ss
Th~ na tion's s t~lmakrrs . a l
read y battrrf'd b;· the =rssion. say
they ha \'f' bwn vJctimiZf'd by a

S('('ff'l

JapanPsf'~ Europc•a n

cartC'l

and wi ll dsk the US gO\ernm cnt to
Impose quotas. surrhdrges and

m r nts betw ~n Japan and the
E uropean Coa l and Steel Communlly for the last !Oyea rs " have had the
df('('t of prot('(' f ing foreign produc tion and Pmplo.vment and have
vict imized the Am enca n steel
mdustry and its cmplovees."

other n "' iiC'f

StPf'l com pani&lt;'s v.:pn• Jmong thr
more th,I n 1,200 Issues tha t los t
ground 1\t'ClnPsd&lt;l\ " ' the stock
markPt took Its St'Cund -st rai ght
bPat mg. wh ic h followed the Ff'deral
Rl's~n·•· El!Jdrd 's rt' port of " 0 4
pe rc~nt ctrup In mdustnal pl'Odue
lion la st month that pushed th ~

output lf'\'l •I tu It s lowl·St JX)in t m fi\' C'
~Pars

On the :\ew York Stock Ex c hang~. fuur ISSues fell for each one

that ros~. and •lhe Dow Jonrs
aver age of :10 md ustnals tumbled
16 74 pomts to ~2 IH afte1 losing
14 90potnt s Tuesda; · ltwas the first
lime in thrrc w~ ks that the Dow
c losed bPi ow l.llXl
Da v id Rodenck. chaum an on
U.S StC&lt;'I Corp ., told a nPws
conferC'ncr· Wrdnesdav that mdr k r t

shan ng a nd pnce-scltmg Jn LtngC&gt;-

--w~

need thP trade ~ li e f that
rvrr v ot her industna l ized country
tn th ~ world has obtatned from Its
government ," h~ sa td " .. We have
to qull this onp-s Jded nonsense "
Th ~ industrv peliiion. to be filed
Thursday w ith U S Trade RPp r~­
sentat Jve William Br ock b; the
A merica n I ron and S t ~ l ln s tJtut ~
dml e1gh1 major domPstic produr f'rs. accuses thC' Japanese govern ment of \'IOiating U.S trade laws
a nd tt l'at tr s It asks thrgovernment
to cu i .Japa nese stPPI-miii ship-

mf'nt s hcrf' b\' nParl\' a lhtrd
The 0\Wa II dPC line Ill U S_
produc tion was II"' 14th m onth!\
drop in the last Hi months

current recesston now
matches the 1973-75 r ecession as th ~
ThC'

longest downturn since th~ G reat
De pr~ss 10n . and many PConomists

oth er

eco nomic

FRYE'S

I'li\1
Bobb\· ()(&gt;an Stan al~acl\ has
bwn rom ·1cted of the slaving, a nd
prosf'C'utors c la rm the two Columbus r f'SidC' nts \H'rf' IOgf'ther w hpn
!he k illing OCC'UIT('(( StaC\' IS
Sf'!Ying .J liff' SC'nt r nC(' at lhr Sl~ll t •
pn son tn M ouncls,·i iJ e
Cabell Cou n" Clrcu il Judg'l'
A lfred Fergu son had sa id hl'" anted
to fm!Sh t ht' defense's case Wednesda \ niglll. but hi ' "as forced to

rPCPsS the tr ia l at 10: 30 p m w hen it
became clear tes t Imonywould ha ve
to continue todav .
May le reiterated the story told
ca rliN by defense witnesses that he
was not m Hunt ington the night
Harmon was kill ed .
Whe n shown the officer's seiYICP
r~vo l ve r . used m the slay ing. May le
sa id he had never seen th ~ weapon
lx•for e
He also disputed tes timony bv
l{enova police offic~ r Lero\ Campbell. who said he sa w M av le drivmg
Stacy's car shortly after Hatm on
was killed
"Would you agrCP wllh me that iJ
you were th ~ man Leroy Ca mpbell
sa w dn vmg the C'&lt; ll in Kf' nova, then
vou'd ha,·e to bt' the person standing
on theromerof l ~th StrCP t Wes t and
.Jeffer son Aven u~ w ho ki lled Pa ul
Hannon''" assiS tant Cabell Countv
Prosecutor Charles H atcher asked
May le.
"No. becausc L~royCa mpbPIIdid
not SPC' me becausf' I was not dO\A/Tl

To t&gt;nd marria!!""
Ar llons for d i\OIC'f' c~ n d a dissolutron ot m.un.Jg&lt;' hm t · ):x'{&gt;n f1k•d tn
MPigs &lt;·ount' n ~ mm o n Plf'a..,
Court
Filing fur cl l\ lHt 't wr re Pamt' ld
Guthnt • ak.1 HuiJrn Cu thri• ·. Coolvi llf'. agam:-.t Don,l]d CuthnP.
Cool\'llll '. .1 nfi B.Jt·IJa ra F: llen
Forbes . Pomer&lt;JI .. tg, Jinst \ lifford
D anm F01 bPs. Porn • roy
Kcnn G B&lt;•tz mg 110m f'ro\ and
[)(&gt;borah A nn &amp;&gt;!;mg. Pomt •ru\
filed for d! SSO IUI Wn OJ! man Id g t• .

C_u t warning

j ,~ ue1l

COLUMBUS. Oht" I API -

The

state' s school distrw ts arP bc&gt;mg

wa rned to prepa rr lor cuts m sta tC'
aid next yea r
The Ohio Sch()(ll lioards AsStX·Ia tton is a!Prting II&lt;., rn pmber board s
tha t the state g••u •rnment could
face a budg~t def" II of between $.100
million a nd $600 m rll 1on for the fi sc a I
biennium endmg .ru ne 30
Ann M oria rt1 OSBA assoc1a t ~
dirPC tor. sa td th .~ r 1f ther ear PSf'Vf'rP
cuts to help 11ffset the expected
def1 ci t. edura t ir.n .1 nd welfare likely
Wlll bP the two h.11dest -h1t area s

strP!'t \'a lue of S6 million dunng
sJmul tanE'Ous ra ids m Morga ntown
and Wh eeling.
William l{ol!ba sh. U.S att ornev
for th e nort hern distnr t of Wes t
V irgi nia. called a press conf~rence
in Parkersbu rg Wednesda\ to
announce tht' arrests of .John
P&lt;~ n kulics. 2'l. of M or ga ntown and
Michael John Stav 1ch. 4.1. of
1\'hPPimg.
K olibash said bot h w ere charged
w ith possession of a controlled
substance with mtrnt to dcliw•r and
wer~ lodged m the Wa shmglon
Count:-. Ohio. Ja il , the nea rt&gt;st
fa c ili " where federal p'n soner sca n
be held Bond for Pankulics was set
at ~'i(ll,lKXl. whil e Stavich was bemg
held m lieu of $12-'&gt;.00) bond .
K ol iba sh said
l{olibash sa id Pankulics "as
arTest ed Wednesday m ornmg b; ·
statr· troopers. assisted by officials

Loth'n winnt&gt;r
CL F:VEl.Al'\D 1AP 1 Tht·
\\'Inning numlx&gt;rdrawn WC'dn rsd&lt;J ~
mght m the Ohio Lott en-' s dai i; ga me. " The Nu mber," was 219
The l o tt ~ry r eported earnmgs of
$121.7.1.1.:10 from wagenng on it s
dail vgame Ea rningscam eon sa les
of $1.007, 17950, w hile holders of
\\l nnmg tickets were entitled to
sha re SR&amp;\444. officials said

Area deaths
Ill Crea l Bend CPmetcrv Fnends

Flore nc~ Chnstma Wilson, 48. Rt

m ay call at the funeral hom e toda v
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

I, Port la nd. died Wed nesday aft er-

noon at hf"r 1rs ldf' nce
Mrs Wil son. a housewife, was
born No,· 29. 19.'!4 in Lebanon
Township Sh~ was preceded in
dea th bv hPr father, John Proffitt
and onn brother . ShP attendf'd the
nror ga nizo;'d Chu~h of Jesus Christ
of Later Day Saints, Portland .
She is survived by her m other .
Pearl Proffitt . Rt. 1, Portland; one
daughter, Christina Wilson at
home; three sons, Ry Wilson ,
Portland; Rick Proffitt, Parker sburg, and Robert WUson. Irronda le.
Ohio; six brother s, Harold Proffitt
and Raymond Proffitt, Portla nd ;
Homer Proffitt, Rac ine; Jim Proffitt, Milton, Fla.; Chester Proffitt .
Lisbon and Roy Proffitt, Lewisville;
three grandchildren.
Funera l services will be held
Friday at 1: 30 p.m . at Ewing
Funeral Home with Elder John
Anderson officiating. Burial will be

I

Mary A. Kihhlt&gt;
Miss Mary A . l{ibble, 9.1. formerly
of M eigs Coun ty. died Dec. II at
A ptos. Calif . following a two year
illness.
Miss i{ibble was a daughter of the
late George and Ida Kibble. She
resided in Reedsville untlll963when
she moved to California.
Surviving are a sister, M rs. Glen
I Edith r Milhoa n, Parkersburg, W .
Va .; two nieces. Violet Smith,
Reedsvil'e. and Donna Jean Best,
F airfax, Va ., and a number of other
nieces and nephew s.
Miss Kibble taught school at
Cleveland and Tbiedo and was
r etired from service with the
America n Red Cross In the Eastern
Distric t.
M emorial services were held at
A ptos.
t

Pomeroy

- The delinquency r ate on loans
m ade by the ff'dera l governm enl
JUmped by 41 per cent In the last
fisca l yea r. according to Joseph R.
Wtight, depu ty director of the Office
of Managem ent and Budget.
-The UCLA Business ForPCas ting Proj ect said lower interest r a tes
w ill be needed if the economy has
not rPCovered by early 1983, and
sa id a loosening ofthe m oneysupply
w ill not spur inflation because
unemployment wi ll rema m high
and industry will be opera ting at
only abou t 70pe~ent ca pacity .

her e... May le ~plied.
M ayle sa id he spent Dec. 13. 1981.
wtth his family, took his two
children Christmas shoppmg and
then helped decorate the Chr istma s
tree.
That evening. he said. his
bro th~r - i n - law's family ca me by
and they talked briefly before he
went upsta irs w ith his children and
fell asiCPp watching television.
In ear lier testimony Wednt&gt;sday,
Ma vle's wife. l{athy , tes tified tha t
her husband was home the night of
the killing .
Ferguson sa id St'vera l other
defense w itnesses gave testunony
Wednesday placmg May le in Columbus the da y of the killing and the
day after .
FPrguson said Brad Faug ht ,
May le's boss at a · Columbus
construction labor union office.
tes tified that the defenda nt picked
up his Christmas c heck about 10
a m last Dec. 14 - abou t eight
hours after the killing.

from the U .S. attorney's office. the

criminal investigation division of
the Internal Revenue Sl'rvice. and
lh&lt;' Pennsylvania st ate police and
attorney general' s office.
Officers found nearly 10 pound s of
coca me w hen they sea r c hed Pankulics' house Ill a fashionable
S('(' tion of Morgantown overlooking
Ch~a t Lake. l{olibash sa id .
Stav ich was chargf'd after officer s found coca ine. marijuana.
hashish, m ethaqualonea ndapproxImatel;• $30.000 in -rash in his
Wheeling home. l{olibash sa id

Client ..
1Continued from page 11

Harley Jewelry-Harley Prn s
Roc. 13.95-16 95
NOW 21 15.00
Leather Hats. T-Shnts. Acces sones &amp; much more
Hrs · 9-5
Closed Sun . &amp; Mon
Beochcrove Rd
Rutland . Ohio
l28lmopd

•.

people. She waa seven at the time and saw the ftnal
stages of the disaster from her back yard, at left In the
photograph she Is holding. (AP Laserphoto) .

CHILDHOOD MEMORIES- Terri Ralke, 22,
has few memories of the afternoon 15 years ago when
the SUver Bridge collapsed In the Ohio River ldiDng 46

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP

Silver Bridge tragedy remembered
KANAUGA. Ohio tAP! - It's
been 15 years smce the mght the
bridge fpll but Lena Ra1ke r~­
members details as though it was
last night.
On Dec. 15.1967. she broke her leg
some nine hours after t)le Sil ver
Btid~te shudder f'd and heaved and
fell'i'Ofeet in to the OhioRiver. k illing
46people
Nine otht'r people in bumper -tobumper holiday traff ic on the
50-year -old spa n wer e injured but
survived .
" 1 rPm ember there w as so much
screammg and goingson.allaround
here," sa id M rs Raike. !\1, whose
va rd abut s the old bridge approach.
" It wa s just heart r endmg."
Her la t ~ husband. John. was m
their kitchen about 5 p m wh il ~
Mrs. R a1k e helpf'd an upholsterer
unload some chairs.
" 1 heard John say, 'Lena. run
quick. The bndge is going down.·
and I ran throu gh the house and out
back to SC&lt;' 11 go into the wa ter." she
said .
Next door. h!'r daug hter -in-law,
Artie Ra ike. wa s so accustomed to
seeing the bridge she didn 't miss it
at first.
Mrs. Raike. 47. was preparing
suPJII'r. "when I hea rd this noise and
felt the house shake and I thought
som ething happened in thP bas&lt;'
m ent. that ei ther the \\'a shine
machine or wa ter hea ter had
broken."
She went to c hPCk. then walked
out a ground-level ba sem ent door
and saw part of the bridge structure
at a cr azy ang iP. but still didn' t
r ealize wha t happened .
" I thought it was a demck barge
sinking but it w as part of the
bridge." sa id Mrs. Raike She ca lled
her daug hter , T erri. thPn 7, to see 11
and didn ' t r ea lize the bndge wa s
gone until she began walking to the
. river' s edge across her ba ck ya rd
"It took awhile for it to sink in, "
she sa id . " It JUSt didn't dawn on me.
All the bndge supports colllapsed.
right up to the approaches. It was
JUSt down all the wav up to th~

highway ."
Both the wom en spent hours
m aking and serving coff~ and
sandwiches to worker s searchlnt:
the murky waters for survivors.
About midnig ht the elder woman
went to sleep in a liv ing room cha ir.
"I woke up a couple of hours later
and m y leg w as asleep and tingling
and when I stood up I fell against the
TV and broke it 1her leg I," she said.
The next morning her son took h&lt;'r to
a hospital to have her leg set.
Artie Ra lke said it wa s a mirac le
she and T erri weren't on the bridge.
They made a lmost da ily trips
across it to Christm as shop In Point

oGutters
•Downspouts
• N - or Repair
•Painting

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
7 t4-Uc

RA~E~S~~~WV

304-273-3660
" We Are Now Open"
"~·s llado 01 Wood
We c.n Make H
•Toys •Furmture
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•Custom or Specialized
Orders Welcome
Come &amp; See Whll We Have To
Offer CrllSs the Raven.. ood
B&lt;qo to St Rt 56. It Block
from Crty Umrts-Across from

&amp; Scottie Smith
All mak• and models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
service available

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - utens1ve
remodelt"
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&amp; Gm&amp;es
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PH 992-1583
or 992-2282

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CONSTRUCTION

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kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeltng,
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plumbing, electric, Siding.

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PH. 992-6011

PH. 949-2182
or 949-3055

~c

12 Ill mo

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GARAGE

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EXCAVATING

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Fish -Game Head life Size Mounts
Plus Hide Tanning

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Ru sse ll
t ook
co mmitt ee
m embers on a tour of several CDC'
facilites. including one building
planned for demolition
A lthough the buildings arc not
fancy. " they bea t sleeping under a
bndge, .. Russell sa id
A t other developmenta l centersm
th ~ state, state and federal requirem ents have been Naived so they
could be used to house c lients, he
said .
However. Jam es said he does not
fC&lt;'I it is right to waive these housing
req uirem ents.
" 1have toagree that inmos t cases
thP proper decision was made when
they 've dem olishf'd buildings.
Sl'ver al committee m embers
suggested the buildings be used for
som e other purpose, such as a
detention center for DWT offenders
or a temporary home for the poor.
Before leaving Wednesday the
legtslators voted Collins chairman
and James vice-cha irman of the
committee.
They said they will m eet a I least
two more times, once in Gallipolis
and once in Columbus.

PH . 742-2225

Also Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
3 24-ti c

DELIVERY
PH. 985-3892
or 985-3837

LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH 992-2478

12 10-1 mo pd

12·10-1 mo d

Public Notice

Emergency runs
F ive calls were answ ered Wednesday by local emergency units.
At 12: 54, Middleport took Francis
Luikhart to Veterans M emorial;
Rutland at 2: (l; a.m. took Jack
Ward , Route 143, to Veterans
M emorial; Racine at 9: 26a.m. took
Richard Smith, Bald Knob, to
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
10: 18 took Christy Baer, Condor St.,
to Veterans Memorial and Racine
at · 11: ffl a.m. took Ora Bacon,
Bowman's Run to Holzer Medical
Center.

.· ~. ~.........

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Public Notice

SUCCESSF-UL
.BUSINESS.
IS A_ CI N.CH.
1F YOU.USE
JJiE JNCH!

pur •,,.rnt l 'l Sectron 4 51 1 76
ot thf' Oh 10 Af"'vrsPd C.nd" and
Jll Ojh P.r pPOtllP.nl nr()v tS101l of

law

Sealed . proposak writ be
recerved by th e Board ol
Educa11on of th e Metg s Local
School Drstrr ct of ~vM dlep o n
Ohro at the Tr eas urer s Olf'r"'
untrl 12 00 noon on January 4,
HIBJ. and at that nme opened
by the Treasurer ofsa rd Board.
tabulated. end a repon th ereof
m~ e to se1d Board at rt s next
scheduled meetrng as provrded

by

Jaw lor

Jhree 131

65

passenger school ~ uses . M ·
cordrng to spec lfrcatron s of
saru OOard of ed uCatiOn
Separ ate an d rndependent
bids w1ll be recaved w ~h
respect to the chalil&amp;t$ and body
type an d Will state that the bus
wh en assembled and prror to
delivery COI'I'Oiy wtth all sc hoo l
diSiflct spa tcatron s. all safety
regulations and curr en t Ohro
M1ntmum Standards br Schoo l
Bu s Constructron of the De panm ent ~Educ atiOn adopt ed
by and wrth the co nsent of the
Orrector of Htghway Safety

right! When you use a ' colum"''
Inch nr mor e 10 newspaper advertising
b e 11 diSJ&gt;I•'Y or clas s ifted you reach
thous.1nds ot potential buyer s that are
eager to r e ceive your money-saving
. no c un~ e .

The Daily Sentinel

4

c.,,,

BEDS -IRON. BRASS , old

6 puppies-2 male s. 3 fe males 7 week s old Mo stly
Collie . BB2 -236B

Oh Or 992 -7760.

7 cu t e puppies. 614 -985·

Gold, si lver . starting , Je·
welry , rmgs. old coms &amp;
curr enc y Ed Burkett Barber
Shop , Mtddleport 992 -

3 year old Beegl e and pups

614
-992-5256
mll
Puppies
to g1ve after
away6 pCa
6 weeks old
ElectriC
t 5t 1

GOOD homes needed for 5
adorable. 6 w ee k old fuzzy ,
Chrtstmas pupp 18s. All co lors . pleas e call 304 -675 31 B8 bolo•• 4 ·00 p m
daily

45B -1 743

6

PR OBATli COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF ELEANOR
WELCH ZEIHER, DECEASED
Case No. 23960
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 24 1982 111
the M e1gs Coun ty Probate
Cou rt Case No 2 3950 Jack
Wamer 420 Carr Srr eer Ja ck
son Oh10 4 5640 was ap
oornted fxecu!or of thf' slate of
Eleanor Wel ch b•rher de
ceasOO latP- of Secon rl Street
Mu1dlooon Ohoo 4 5 760
Rohf&gt;11 E Buck
Probare Judge
Clerk

11212 91631C

SJ)P.c.lfrr arrnns ;rNI on&lt;;tr ue:
lions to l hdrlnrs mnv 1Je
oh1a1nf"'rl .11 rh" o f1 u·:,.. o f !he
TreaswPr M1r'idiP.Port Oh1o
A CN!IfrP.&lt;I chPck p:lyd tJIP to
lh P. TreasruP.r of th" trhovP
boarr l of P.du catron or a
sa !lsi aunrv b•d bonrl P.xecurf)(!
by thP huJdP.r and !hP SI Hflly
compdny. on .m amount +"!Qual
to f1vP. pP.ro:nrl5perc,..no olt he
br rl shall be s ubm111~1 wrth
each b•d
,
~ar c! boarcl of flrlucatr on
resP.rvns th e rrghr to Wtllve
rnformnltl rf!S 10 accnpr or retec t
any and all or pan s ot any and
all brds
No brd s Ci'ln be wrhdrawn for
atleastth•rty 130) days alter rhe
scheduled clos rng trmfl tor.
recerpt of b1ds
Mergs l ocal Board
of Educaton
Jane Wagn er Treasu rer
62 I Sou th Thrrd Avenu e

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF KENNETH E.
REYNOlDS,· DECEASED
Cau No . 2396t
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDICIARY
011 November 24 . 1982 rn
!h~&lt; Me1gs Coun ty Probate
Court Case No 2395 1 Cha rles H Knrght Pomarov . Oh10
was appq1nted Adm rnrstrator of
the estate of Kenn eth E
Reynolds deceetsed tare of
County Road No 5. Mrddle·
POri Qhro
Robe rt E Buck
Probate Judge Clerk

I I 21 2 9. I B 3I c

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sirn from 6'11' Up
to 24'136'
tnsultited Doc Houses

61 4-742 -22B9 altar 5 p m
$ 100 REWARD! !! For the
return of lad te s whrte gold
dmner rmg wtth small dta m onds lo st Dec 14th at
City ltmtts or The Blu e
Tartan Call Bar ba ra Ab els at

446 -4249
LOST or stolen-female Bea ·
gle tn Madt so n A ve area .

Reword . 304 -675 -3t 33 .
NEW LISTING - Mrm farm over 12 acres. barn. minerals and a 3
year old log home all m gteal cond1bon Thrs ooe you must see
$33.500 00

Rt 3. 8o1 54
Racine. Oh
P~. 614-843 -%591
10 6 tic

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Found Black. tan , whtte
m ale co on hound Collar
Found De c 1 1, At 62 .

B-Mtle 304 -675 -1344

eseptic systems
odump trucl&lt; soovice
eseeding and reclaiming
oflacine and SyrOC\Ise

Prrnt one word in each
space below Each in·
titial or group of figures
counts as a word . Count
name and address or
phone number if used .

sewer hookup

Work Insured and
Guaranteed

PH . JIM CUFFORD
992-7201
10-7-rtc

---+--.+..:..:..:j..__:-4--i

grve pr1ce. The Sentinel
reserves the right to

---+--+--+--lf---i

classify, edit or reject :.::..::+-+~-:f~:.:.f--!

cotiPLm

IIADIATOI
SfRVICf
flom the Smalllst Heater
Core to tbt urpst Radiator.
NATHAN BIGGS
Yrt. EJiplrience

35

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Poateroy, Glt.
Pit. 992-2174

2-26-tlc

any ad Your ad will be put
•n the proper
ctassificatton if you'll _ __!,__ _!.._..J__.-J'--1
check the proper box
These cash rates
below
tnclude discount

SKATE-A-WAY
SCHEDULE
Wed. -Fri.-Sat. Nights
7:30 to 10:00
Sunday 2:00 to 4:30
Open Christmas Eve
Closed Christmas
Open New Year's Eve
7:30-12:30
Open New Year's
Available lor Pnvate Parties
.Ph. 985-3929 oi 985-9996
12-1 -1 mo

I Wanted
) For Sale
) Announcement

) For Rent

'

mo.

304 -773 -

Aucti on every Fn mght at
th e Hartford Commumty
Center T.ruckloads of new
m erchandise every week
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome Rtchard Reynold s
AucttonetH 275 -3069

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewtng ma ·
chine repair , parts. and
supplies
Pick up and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mtle up
Call
Georges Creek Rd

446-0294.
Di 's Craft Shop, Spring
Valley Plaza , Gallipolis -·
446 -2134 Entire stock re duced 25 % (except candy)

Professional Auction eer
Service Over 30yea rse xperience m new, used and
antique furiture Ucensed to
auction Real Estate. autos.
farm equip .. household, bus·
ness. cattle. liquidattons &amp;
antiques of all type s Osby
A .Marttn &amp; Rodney Howery

614 -992 -6370

Inner county pass enger
buses and outer counties
bu!IOS will bnng store pnces
downl

AUCTION . Murrays Au c tion , Hartford Community
Building, Sunday December
19th. Will be cancelled
Dec ember 26th . January
2nd We will have auctton
January 9th

Gun shoot. Racme Gun
Club. Every Sunday start1ng
1 p m Factory choked guns

----------

9

VVanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old lumt -

Rec1ne Gun Club dues are
due $25 00. Must be patd

ture and Antiqu es of all
kinds , call Kenn eth Swatn ,

446 -3159 oo 256 -1967 in
the evenings

before Jan . 1, t983

RENT A SANTA.614 -992 - Buying Gold, Stiver. Plati num. old coins, scrap rtng s
6B29 o• 6t4 -949 -2633
&amp; silverware. Datly quote s
Final Clearance. final two
days. Friday Dec 16 and
Saturday Dec . 17. Final
markdowns. Kiddie Shoppe.
Pomeroy , Ohio.

avai lable. Also coms &amp; coin
supplies for sale Spring
Valley Trading Co, Sprtng
Valley Plaza . 446 -8025 or

REWARD OF

446 -8026

17
18

anyone who knows who
shot 2 goats on the Jim
lucas farm Saturday

We pay cash for ~te model
clean used cars
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

19. - - - - - -

Dec . II . 614 -742 -2763.

446 -0069

4

No Item to largeortoSmall .
Will buy one piece or com plete household New, used.
or antique fumtture 614 -

2.

11

3

11.

4.

23 .
14.
25
16
27.

6

DOZER
BACKHOE
LOWBOY ·
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
CALL 992-2903
AFTER 5 P.M.

or

tOO.OO to

10

s.

CONTRACTING

773 -57B5
9t85

only

You ' ll get beJtenesults
if vou describ• tully ,

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champion Au cti o nee r Rick Pearson Estat es .
anttques, farm . household s
lt ce n se d Ohto·WVa . 304 -

.......... ' . 992-6191
. ... .... 992-5692
-- 949-2660
........ 992-2259

ARRYQOGHIIIHttl$

3

7.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

8.
9.

Giveaway

992 -6370.
ANY

PERSON

who

has

anything to give away and
doe• not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for sale
may place an ad in thi1
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiJer.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

10.
tl.
12.

18. - - - - - 29.
30.
3t .

"Beautiful, Custom

13.

32 .

4999.

Buill Garages"
'tor free siding
estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2160.
No Sunday Calls

14.
15.

33.
34.

t6.

35. - -~----

Upholllorod wing back
choir, good ootid cond. Call
448-4044.

C~tl

':

3· 11 -ttc . ·

---------~-----------~
'•

~~~~~~~~~~~
11

Help Wanted

SUBSTITUTE

DIRECT

C ARE STAFF to work on an
as nee ded basiS with men tally retarded adults with
be havorial disorders Inter·
ested applicants must be
energeti c. pattent, and be
abl e to work flexible hours.
Future permanent employ ment a possibility $4.06 an
ho ur for day and afternoon
shift , S3 60 for midnight
sh 1ft
If interested send
resum e to Ohto Residential
ServiCes Inc , Rt . 1 Box 7
Mtll Creek Rd . Gallipolis. Oh

45631
WANTED . Part -time li ce nsed Pratical Nur se (29
hotH S) t o dispense medtca tton to residents of an
tnt er medtate care facility for
th e ment ally retarded Hour s
vary, depending on when
medtcation needs to be
di spensed 66 ,76 hr Con t act J ohn Lehew at 446 1642. ex t 332 Bu cke ye
Commumty Serv ices •s an
equ al opportumty employer
HAVE FUN paymg your
Hohday btlls Sell Avon and
ea rn good SS$, meet nice

people Coli 61 4 -B43 29B2 . 6t4 -3BB -9045 . 614 992 -3690
Want ed - Baby sitter 3 or 4
days '" my home near
Referenc es reC hest er
quired 614 -985 -3565
help with colleg e expenses?
The West Vtrgima National
Guard can help If you are a
Junior or Senior in High
School or a Graduat e, you
may qualify for a $ 1, 500
bo nu s or up to $4 ,000
co llege tu1t1on aSSIStance .
plus you w1ll have a sec ure
part t1me JOb after tratnmg
l earn skills m Maintenance,
Supply. Ctencap, Electron rcs . Good Pay - Good
Trammg -Good Benefits The
W est Vtrginia Natrona!
Guard •s no ordinhy part
ttm e JOb1 Call Sergeant
Lutt on 304 -675-3950 or
toll free m WV 1 -800-642 -

3619
C OVER

GIRL

MODEL

TYPES (over 18) No ex penenc e neces sary , free tram mg Call Otana Hansen at
219 -345 · 2000 or write ·
Cover Girls, Naked City, Box

2000. Roselawn, IN 46372 .
TEXAS

OIL COMPANY

needs mature person for
short tnp s surrounding Pt.
Pleasant
Contact customers We train Write K. X.
Dickerson. Pres Southw·
estern Petroleum , Box 789 ,

Ft Worth . TX 76t01 .
EXPERIENCED
only Apply at
tamer between
day &amp; Friday
Calls

bartenders
The Enter1 -5 ThursNo Phone

S15500 WEEKLEY , 2 sa lesm en &amp; 1 installer. 10 to
12 hou rs per week Must be
marrted &amp; presently em ployed m the area 2 Mana gemnt posttions available

304 -273 -5675

12

Situations
Wanted

Secretanat or clencal post·
tton . 15 years expenence,
typ•ng speed 85 WPM Call

446 -975B

13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER lnsu ranee Co. has offered
se rvt ces for fire msurance
cover age in Galli&amp; County
for almost a century Farm,
hom e and personal property
coverages are available to
m eet individual needs. Contact Eugene Holley. agent .

Phone 38B -B690 .

Will pay cash tor Gravely .
Atari
games , air compressor,and I have for
trade or sale your choice of
fine guns, B&amp;W or color
T .V .1, stereos. tools, etc

Are you payingtoomuchfor
your hospital -health Insu ranc e
Call Carroll
Snowden. 446 -4290

FIFE 'S, 3rd. St . Middleport .
Cali614-992 -7494

15

Chri.tmaJ kitten . Call 446 -

Schools
Instruction

4 uaed kitchen chairs. Used

Puppleo port Garmon She·
phord. Coll8t4-3B8-9777.

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 court st.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

3476

NEED EXTRA MONEY or

8

Dec . 6 -11

Address---------

edol8f
obackhoe
-excavating

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

12·H

,,
.. _ •• 1

Sizes start from 12'x16'

Radiator Specialist

Moddleport. Oh10 45 760
I 16 14) 992 -5650
11 21 9. I 6. 23. 30. 4tc

'I

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Lost and Found

l os t-2 dog s Rutland area
M cC umber Htll area M edtum stz e dogs 1 part
Germ an Shepard Oth er
whtt e wtth l o ng ha tr
An sw ers t o M ax and Sugar

NEW LISTING - Th rs spaCious lot contarns a remooeled 2 ~OJ)'
home. 2-3 bedrooms. basement. all storms. fire~ace. many other
leatures. needs so me repa rrs but a bargarn $21.000 00

Wrrfe your own ad and order by mail w•th thrs
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
r esults Money not refundable

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

304 -458 ·

676 -3B65
- - - - - - - - - lc -

NEW LISTING - Small town home. 2-3 bedrooms. 6 rooms tn all
with full bath. level lot. several ~orage burldlllgs many leatures
Prrced to sell at $18.000 00

Curb Inflation
P~y Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I
Public Notice

stove

FOUR f e mal e puppt es .
3100 Parnsh Ave 304 -

NEW LISTING - Counll)' settlllg and a ranch type home rn good
condrtJoo I 'h acres ol grou nd. lull basement. central arr carpeted
and cozy Bargarn pnced at $34.900 00

Deer hides and grnteng and
traping supplies
At
2
A then

fumtture. gold. silver dol lars. wood ice bcaes. stone
Jar s. a nt~ques , etc. Com·
plete households Write
M 0 Mil~r . At 4 , Pom eroy ,

6t4-9B5-3870

NEW LISTING - So you want to be a landlord' Here rs a 3 umt
rental wrth monthly gross Income of $485.00. Owner may help
frnance. let us ligure your lllcome on lhrs propert y Want
$23,50000

Buy raw fur and beef hides .

Geo'9e Buckly 6t 4-664 4761 Week days 6 to 9,
weekends 12 noon to 9PM

give

Six puppte s, 4 male. 2
female, 5 week s old Gtve
away to good home 304 -

REAlTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Jt. GRI .......
Dottie Turner ...
Jean Trussell
Office ..................... ..

16 ltr

Giveaway

4t 20 .

We have tanns. lots. rentals . and ovet 100 properties. Call

n 21

HI-ell Four lR-78 - 16 radial tires .
Call 446 -02t 2.

Chnstmas Tree s to
away. Call 446 -2375

This one sljould be sold' Handymar."s speaal plus an old mob1le
home oo approXImately 4'h acres Steal at $5.400 00 .

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
•oDERS
PURCHASE OF THR~E
SCHOOl BUSES FOR
MEIGS lOCAL IOARD
OF EDUCATION

Th~ti·S

'

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnle Darlly Sentinel Class•fled Dept

Ja88UJ
.!~ --11 Jl ..a_.
. . . .lUw.

' r ... , , ' '" "" ' ,,, "'' '" "'' "",

fam i y room w/ woodburner
Situated on 188 acres Term s
ate available Sells for
$36,90000.

PH.992-2259

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
t 3-lfc

..,__,,,( J~ II A ~~ ~

. bother Mother wh1 le

POMEROY, OHIO

Guysv111e, Oh1o
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equ1pment
Dealer

Fur . Call 614 -6B2 -744B

ba lancmg her checkbook ·

608 E. MAIN

u .s. Rt. so East

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

L_::::::-=--""'--''-'-'"--"=--~--"'~ 1
4 IS 36 Now run

Real Estate-General

SALES &amp; SERVICE

SATURDA Y TI-IROUGH MONDAY ·
Fair Saturday. A chance of rain or snow Sunday. F a ir M onday.
Highs In the 40s Sa turday and from the upper 30s to the middle 40s
Sunday and Monday Lows from nea r 20 Saturday to the middle.'lOs
Sunday and Monday.

--

$8,&lt;XXJ.OO.

ST. ROUTt 143 - 1977
Barnngton home 3 bedrooms.
2 full baths. extra mce krtchen
witl1 Island range Add-on

.. .....

BOGGS

Extended Ohio forecast

........

C.l\11

Vet erans M em oria l H ospital
Admitted--Roland M orris. Rutland ; Shirley AbiPs. Racine;
Christy Baer. Pomer oy; Opir Cobb.
Middleport
Di scharged -- Rick y .J ohnso n.
CPCil Warct. Goldie Wolfe . .Joyce
Dill.

:'l~?.f~
......___..,.

Office: 992-5739
GOOD BUY -OoublewKie
partially fimshed on I acre lot
witl1 septic system. Ublllies available. Sells lot only

POMEROY
lovely
4 bed
room home- wrth
alumrnum
~dmg Mooern krtchen electnc
flte~ce rn lrvmg room Extra
54 Misc . Merchandise low utilities. Some lumiture
mcluded 1n sale pnce of only
~ I,IJ\AI ~ Call lodaylll
ALUM . ROOFING
New lrma Rd 3
l[be,drOllmfilnch on 2 acres 21ull
SPECIAL
baths, alumrnum sKirng Relng
~
erator and Island range Owner
3 f 1 WI Of
W1llrng to negotrate on sale
'8 (~1
8 fI
pnce of $45.000 00 Call now
10 f t
'II 20
as thts home ts on amcecorner
'I J 4)
11 fl
Iii w1th count!)' settmg
. , ) 70
14 fi
Call Day ot Evenmg
Chel)'llemley.
16 f I
'il90
Sales Assoc .
18 f I
'19 90
742 -3171
POMEROY
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
lANDMARK
[
742-3092
, .,
614 992 218 1

Veterans Memor.ial

~~
~

4537

today.

The Daily Sentinel

:~'-'-

STATE ROUTE 124 EAST
Of RUTLAND
614 -742-2178

- Trencher
- Water
-Sewer
- Gas Lines
-Sepbc Systems

week, but the tota l was still well
under the record 4.84 million for the
week ending Nov. 13.
The Insured unemployment rate
- the proportion of the labor force
drawing jobless benefi ts - rose to
5.-l percent for the w eek ending Nov.
Tl from 5.2 percent the previous
week .
The peak for the current recession - 5.5 percent - Is still well
below the topof7 percent reached In
the 1975 recession.

r-----------.:_------------------------------,

sta ff som e pri vately-own"'! group
hom rs.

LOCATED ON

Georae S. Hobstotter • .if_
Broker

- Lo-lley

oORANGE GAS PIPE
•BLACK GAS PIPE
•REGULATORS

, ·

bPen sent at state expense to hel ~

WE SPECIALIZE
IN DEER HEADS
SMALL ANIMALS
BIRDS- FISH

VVanted To Buy

Wanted to buy Square Dane·
ing outfits All size1. men 's
and wom en' s. Call 446·

'

- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks

Jobless claims drop last week
WASHINGTON t AP ! The
number of A m erica ns fihng fi rst - ·
time claims for unemployment
compensation droppf'd to 500,&lt;XXlln
the week ending Dec. 4. the lowest
total in more than four m onths, the
L abor Department reported today.
The new tota l. which is adjusted
for normal seasonal va riations In
employment . is still high by
non-r ecession standa rds.
But 11 marked the third week in
the last four that Initial claims have
-6tayed below the ml,OOO mark. And
it was the lowest since the566.&lt;XXlfor
the week ending A ug. 7, giving at
least a hint that the unemployment
situation m ay improve slightly
befor e too long_
The new r eport also said tha t in
tile w eek ending Nov. Tl about 4.71
million Americans were claiming
unemployment benefits under regular state program s. That was an
increase of 123,&lt;XXJ over the previous

81 RCHFIELD
TAX IDE RMY

13
9

iJ

HOBSTETTER REALTY

-Dozers

PlASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

LAFF-A-DAY

Real Estate - General

~========~~===:':2:3::! :m:o::od~!_!~Do=u:b:le=N=Icb=l==1=1/~29~/~1:mo:.:~=======":':':'~=~I

1~

Finest Quality
Excellent Service

II 18 1 mo

V«lODWORKS

Dewayne Wiliame

The Daily

Middleport, .Ohio

MOLiiTAINEER

Chester. Ohio
Ph. 985-4269 or 985-4382

II 11

Pleasant , W .Va.
"But it was Frid ay and 1 always
c lea n house on Friday and I told
Terri when she cam e in from school
we couldn't go tha t day. 1 wasn't
through cleaning," she said.
" It dawned on m e it was about
time for m y twin brother , Arthur, to
be on the brldgP and suddenly I got
hysterica l. " she said .
Arthur Rupe, her brother. had
r etu r ned from a business trip to the
Wes t Virginia side of the river a
ha lf-hour earlier than expected. He
went to the scene to help and it was
hours before Mrs. Raik e teamed he
was safe.

S&amp;W TV
AND •
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

H. L WRITESEL

NEW &amp; USED
HARLEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
CHROME PRJ MARYS
Rec 1 t07.50
NOW 187.50
Complete KICket Assembly
Rec. 1 t89 95
NOW 1147.50
Leathet Vests
Re&amp;-'149 95
NOW 179.95-189.95

Wednesday:
-U.S. Steel suspended pl ans to
moderniz&lt;' its Edgar Thomson plant
as a high-volume producer of slab
steel because of a depressed
m arket , high labor cos ts and low
productivity.

Raids net $6 million in drugs
P -\HKFH SBVRC. W \'a &lt;APr
- Fedcrd l a u t horill ~s sa\· th&lt;·\
con!Iscal!-d Illegal dnJgs- mc lud
mgcO&lt;. arnf' and manJUdna- with d

1982

ROOFING

TRUCK &amp; AUTO

nPws

Defendant offers testimony
HUr'&gt;:TINGTON. W \ 'a 1AP 1 Wilbert Ma;·te. takmg the stand on
his own behalf dur mg an unusual
late nig ht cow ·t session. said hP wa s
a t home' pullmg up h1 s fam iJ \··s
Chnstmas t r~ at thf•lln1C prOSt'CU
tors sav hr Wds m Huntmg ton,
participd ting m tht' sla\lng of cll'
poliCP officer Paul H&lt;umon
M ay le 32. "as on !he stand 2' 2
hours Wednesda;· lllght and ncve1
va nrd fro m his stOI) ' that hcw&lt;1sa t
home Ill Columbus. Ohio, wh~ n
Harmon wa s shot and bPatPn to
dealh 111 !he m rl\ houJ s of Dec 14,

December 1

Business Senices

believe it will continue through
Decem ber and into 1983.
In r eporting the dPCiine in ou tput.
th~ Feder al Reserve Board cited
low production of autos. metals and
the heavy machmery.

In

Th

2 mole klttono 8 wkl. old, 1
hoo long g,.y fur with white
morltlngo, other block with
medium length fur. Colt
1114-245-84114.

.,

coffee table 6t4 -949 2846 or 614-949-2246.
Old Postcards wanted . Pos-

oibly 860. and up. Shoebox
lull. Atoo t26. and up for
large album• of old poat·

cords . Phone 6t4 · 992 2B10. '
TOBACCO poundage. Will
do general truck hauling.

304·676-1824.

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private lessons.
Men, women , &amp; children .
Instruction thru black belt.
Also available Kirate uniform• puching end kicking
begs , and protective equip..
ment. Jerry lowery &amp; Aaaociat~J Karate Studio, 143

Burlington Rd.. Jackson.
Oh. Coli 614-286-3074 or
6t4 -384-6t60.

�14

The Dail

Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

18 Wanted to Do

r--- - -

VGNDiiTTA ALWAYS
PRAISES SQMI;BOP'f
WHO CAN U6.AP. U"'- ···
8UT WAIT TIU. JAPA IS
OUT OF EAI&lt;SUOT···

General Hauling and Trash
remov~ Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 446·
3169 altar 6PM 266-1967.

Nursing in private home .

I'ENt&gt;ETTA'S

Daytime only in Gallipolit or

MOTTO IS/'IF

Pt . Pleaaant. Will give ref . if

'IOU CAN'T SAY
SOMGTHIN@ NICE.
ABOUT A PEI&lt;SON·· ·
.,U~,!!)+ SUG

required . Call 468-1818.

Will babysit your tiny infant
with tender loving care in my
homo . Call616-367 -0462 .

'BY&amp;,

I ..

23

Professional
_ _ __
s _e _
rv ic
_ e_s_ _ _

),.,

"""""•
,.

&amp;-&lt;

I

Apartment
for Rent

51 Household Goods

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221 .
Unfurnished apartments for
rent . Call Automotive
Supply, 8 lill 6, 304-676·
2218. 304 -675 -6763 .

by Larry Wright

K IT 'N' CARLYLE ••

r-----------------------~

GE harvest gold side by side
refri. 19 cu .ft . $226. Kenmore auto washer $110,
White 22 cu .ft . side by side
refrig . 8260 . All 3 like now,
A · 1 shape. Call 446-B181 .
ZENITH 26" color console ,
8200. 304-676 -3628 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

72

I

·· \~~~

---10

~

' N01llANXI'LfASO;

12/16/82
EVENING

0 CII New.center
(]) Tic T ac Dough
(I) Carol Bumett
(I) 0 (I) Gl (l) News
C!l News/Sports/Weather
Cll ® Powerhouse
® Eyewitness News
6 :30 0 CI1 C!J NBC News
CII Yesteryear... 1927
Dick Cavett hosts this look
at the events of 1927.
(]) MOVIE: 'Accused of
Murder'
(I) Bob Newhart Show
(I) Gl Ci2l ABC News
0 (I)
CBS News
Cll Dr. Who
®Over Easy
7:00 0 (II P.M . Magazine
(!) ESPN's Sportaforum
(I) Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
C!l Charlie's Angels
0 (I) Tic T ac Dough
Cll ®
MacNeil-lehrer
Report
® Eyewitness News
Gl (l) People' s Court
7 :30 0 (II ® You Asked For
It
CII Inside the NFL len
Dawson and Nick Buoni conti ana lyze this week's
NFL action and look ahead
to next week 's games .
(!) ESPN SportsCenter
(I) Andy Griffith
(I) 0 (I) family Feud
Cll Business Report
® Sun Dagger The dis covery and implications of
a solar calendar designed
by Pueblo Indians are ex amined. IR) (60 min.l
Gl
(l)
Entertainment
Tonight
8 :00 0 (II C!l Fame Reardon 's
favorite student challenges
his teaching abilities and
Julie is visited by former
classmates. (60 min .)
(II MOVIE: 'Improper
Channels'
(]) I Spy
(!) NFL Story: Une By
Line
(I) MOVIE: ' Silent Night,
lonely Night'
(I)
NCAA
Basketball:
Youngstown
State
at
Ohio State
0 (I)® Magnum, P.l.
()) Sneak Previews Co host s Neal Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons look at what' s
happening at the movi es .
Gl Ci2l X-mas Comes To
Pac -Land Pac-Man . Ms .
Pac and Pac- Baby celebrat e the Yuletide season .
8 :30 (II MOVIE: 'Ohl Heavenly

6 :00

Vans

73

&amp;

4 W . O.

For sale lump coal S. firewood. Zinn Coal Co .. Inc .
Call 446 -1408 .

I 'VE DRUNK
KING$ AND SHAH.?
UNDER THEIR RO YA L
TASLE$. PIFF LE. DEAN
MARTIN . PIFFLE . ED
McMAHON . PIFF LE.

... HE WANT? ANOTHER

ONE ...THAT'LL SE SIX ...
AFTER TWOt HEWAS SLOTTO .. .

em

DUPLEX, 3 bedroom, Mt.
Vernon Ave . 304 -676 -

45

Furnished Rooms

33 Farms for Sale

C&amp;l Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types of businesses .
Carol Neal 446-3862

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appo int ment , Ward's Keyboard .
446 -4372 .
PIANO TUNING -lane Da niels, assoc . of Brunica rdi
Musk: Co .-Cunninghan ' s of
Athens . 614 -742-2951 or
614 -992 -208:&lt; .
PERMANENT HAIR
REMOVAL - Professional

Electrolysis Center. In c .,
A .M . A. Approved . Dr . Ref errals. Gift Certificates . new
hours . By appointment .
304 -676 -6234

"''' '"'''

31 Homes for Sale

House for sale on land
contract . Cheshire. Oh . 7
rms .. basement. garage .
workshop . gas furnan ce .
614 -388 -8276 .
Rome . Oh . New home. 6
rms . with 1 Y2 baths. larg e
f amity room &amp; enc losed
patio. double garage. well
landscaped. BeauHful de cor ., $69,900 firm . Call
614-886 -6817
1971 MOBILE HOME e.cel ·
lent condition . owner will
finance . Call 614 246 .5830

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Weekly rates . one person
Opportunity knocking with •- - -- - - - - - &amp;60. 2 people $70 . Circle ' s
thi s 149 ac re Rutland farm . I
Motel. Call 446 -2501 .
2 bdr. gas
water
fur- I = = = = = = == = =
Anxious sell has priced nished.
$200&amp; mo
.. $100
acc ordingly. Includes rural dep .. no pets . Call after 5 . 46 Space for Rent
hom e. barn . garage. miner- 446 _4745 _
als , &amp; Much mor e. If you
u-nf_u_r_ni_s_he_d_ m
_o
_ b_i-le
have intere st in a good _2_ b_d-r. country farm or minerals. home. Located on Rt . 35 Mobile home space Cross·
don't pass up your oppor - West. Call 446 -4229 or roads Pard on Bob McCor·
mick Rd . Call 446 -3617 .
tunity! Call R.C.S. Realtors. 675 _9760 _
1-614 -59 3-5571 or 992·
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
6312 .
2 bd .room furnished . Adults Park. Route 33. North of
ADJACENT POMEROY. 27 preferred . No pets. Deposit Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
acres with old road to former required . 614 -992 -2749 .
992 -7479 .
home site with excellent 2 bd .room fumished Mobile
view of Pomeroy, dug welL home. We pay your utilities. Mobile home spaces in
crop land. pasture &amp; woods . Adult s only or family with Mason &amp; Hartford. W.Va .
Possibl e not down payment . one child . No pets, deposit Inquire at Hogg &amp; Zuspan .
38 acre farm with good 2 required . 2 miles out on Phone 304-773-5554 daily
or for evening appointment
story Dut ch style barn . Rt .143. 614 -992 -3641.
Phone 304 -773-5440 after
house w ood s. padture. Ex - l - - - - - - - - - -c ellent h o rse f a rm . 3 bd .rooms , 2 baths. unfur- 5 p.m .
$39 .000 . Pos sible no down nished. 1 mile from Harripayment. 3 ac re bui lding sonville . S235 . per month TRAILER space. in Mason.
site $3 ,500. Thelma Mont - in cluding heat. Two child· located Horton. St. Call
gomery Rea lty, Inc. 614 - ran . no pets. deposit re- 304 -773 -5160 .
385 -7419 .
quired . 614· 742 -3033 .
49
For Lease
14 x 70 total el ectri c, 1 V2
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
baths. central air. large
country lot behind New
2 bdr. unfurnished apt .. for
Two ac re lo ts-150ft. road Haven . S225 . per month
frontag e. ci ty water . behind plu s deposrt and references . lease overlooking the city
park. $175 per mo . Call
84 lumber. Call 304 -675· (304)882 -2895 evenings .
446 -1819.
6873 or 675 -3618 .
1- - -- - -- - - - TWO mobile homes for rent
Mershaedl&amp;e
on At . 2 about 5 minutes
36
Real Estate
from town . Call after 6 .
Wanted
51 Household Goods
304 -675 -6277.
Wanted : Farm of 100to 150
Acre s. rolling land . Reply to
Bo x 6000. in c-o Gallipo li s
Daily Tribune. 825 3rd Ave ..
Gallipoli s 456 3 1.

TWO b e droom mobile
home. furnished or unfurnished in camp conley . Call
304 - 675 -1371 or 675 3812 .
43 Farms for Rent

Price reduced . ov e r
A VII Iiiii
$10.000 . Now offered by
owner. benefits thats must
41
Houses for Rent
be seen to appreciate. 1/ • mi.
from town . large stone
fireplace. 3 bdr .. nice quiet
neighborhood. beautifut· ·small furni shed house. 1 or
backyard . Will consider rent - 2 adult s only . Call 446 ing. Now in low 40 ' s. Call 0338 .
446 -2048 after 5PM .
3 bdr . home in Gallipo lis or
willing to trade for home in
country . Call 446 -7943 .

Secluded. mini farm . all
fenced . remodel farm home .
wrth 4 bedr .. $300 per mo .
Cl eland Realty 992 -2259 .
For rent-New 3 bd .room
cedar home wrth 2 car
garage . S300. month. Call
592 -4471 days or 592·
4524 night s.
44

1981 Governor 14x60, 2
bedroom with root -out . In cludes air cond .. underpin ning and 2 buildings ,
814,000 . Call 446 -2062 .
For sale or trade -2 acres
good home and rental in
Mason . Call 367-0611 . 4
bd .room mobile home.
For sale - Repossessed
house. 3 bd .rooms , all refin ished . new carpeting
through out . Sits on 3 acres .
Located on Bashan Rd .
Excellent terms to right
party . Price reduced to
$30,000 . 30 year financing
available. Contact Bank One
of Pomeroy
614 -992 2133 .'
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad dition, 3 bedrooms , family
room with firepalca . central
air, basement. phone 304676 -1642.
THREE room cottage with
beth. ful basement. utra
larg8 lot. out buildings.
Located in Pt. Pleasant.
112.000 phone 304 -676·
7771 .
Gallipolis Ferry. Westerry
Subdivision. 2,000 sq . ft .•
brick 3 bedrooms, 2 full
baths. all electric. large
family room . fireplace with
buck stove. dining room .
large kitchen. Cathedral ceil ing, wall to wall carpet, large
lot 200x126 outbuilding ,
S66,000, 304 -676 -3378 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED- CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446· 7672.

...
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
AT 36. PHONE 446-7274.
For ule or rent 12x60
mobile home: gas heat. rural
wa~ter, close to town, ft'allebloJon . 1st. Co11448-1240.
12x80 ot Quoil Creek. Mony
nice extras. playground.
pool, low down poyment,
esoume loon. Cal 814·246·
937B.

Modern 2 bdr house with
large utility room that cou ld
be used as a 3rd. bedroom .
3 V2 mi. past hospital off
160. Ca11614 -245 -9170 .
9 rm , farm house. Oil or
wood -coal heat . Cistern wa ter . Outbuildings. So . dep .
req . Rental price neg . 1 mi.
south of Vinton on Rt 160.
Open Sat. on ly. Call 614 388 -9098 or call Akron
216 -724 -6185 .
3 bdr. house electric heat. 6
mi. from Gallipo4is, $150
mo ., water bill paid. Ca ll
446 -0974 .
Pomeroy -2 bd.room unfur nished house. $195 . mo.
Security deposit . $100 . plus
utilities . After 6-ca\1 614 992 -2288 .
4 room hou se . Preferably
adults. no pets . 614 -9923981
5 rooms an bath near
Racine . 614 -992 -5858 .
House for rent in Pomeroy.
Ohio . Call 614-992-3458
anytime or 614-992-6144
between 12 noonand5p .m .
In Middleport -2 bd .room
home with laundry room ,
newly remodled . partially
furnished . Call 614-9926754 after 7 p.m . or 614 992 -7258 anytime .
6 room s and bath . unfurnished. deposit required .
New pain t and carpeting .
614-992 -3090.
3 bedroom. family room.
near school s and hospital.
deposit ond reforen ce roquired, $300 month . Call

:::i:::~4:.~:om

cottage .
Adults_. No Pets. 304-6761463
TWO bedroom furnished ,
New Haven . 304 - 882 2466 .
1306 Viand St . Pt. Pleasant ,
call 30 4 ·676 -322 4 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1983 2 bd.room . 10x80
furnlohed . U960. Browns 1 - - - -- - - - - Trallar Pork . 814-992Eureka 2 bdr., furnished ,
3324.
riverfront lot , ref . &amp; dep. Call
USED MOBILE HOME . 814-1143-2644.
1178·271 1.

U,ooo·.

SKYLINE 10xll0.
71· Dodge 1 ton truck . WIN
t,.... for 4 wheel drive.
304-1178-21197.

Trail« for rant . Call 446 10112.
2 bdr. fuly furnllhed, adults
only. Call4411-41 10.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. King coal &amp; wood
heaters with fan $459, set
box spring &amp; amattress
$100. firm S120. sofa loveseat &amp; chair &amp;199. love
seats &amp;70, new coa l &amp; wood
heaters as low as $399 with
blowers. used coal &amp; wood
heaters. new din at sets $75
&amp; up, refrigerators. ranges ,
bunk _beds complete $170 ,
bunk1es mattresses $40,
chests. dressers. TV's. Call
446 -3159 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers . dryers. refrigera ·
tors . ranges . Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel .
446 -7398 .

1983 Necchi sewing ma chine . Free - arm dial -omatic . used in sewing
classes . Cost new over
$400 for quick sale will
sacrifice for $1 00, only 3
machine available. Call614·
386 -8918 . Out of town call
collect also free delivery
with in 90 miles of our Logan
door.

Bunk beds. complete, axe.
cond . Ca ll446 -4179 .
1 baby bed complete, axe.
cond .• good Christmas gift
$25 . 1 stroller axe. cond
$10. Can be seen at Texas
Rd . box 26 .
FOR SALE Sears Heatalator
w -2 speed blower and set of
glass fireplace doors, $1 00 .
Sears electric Scholar ty-..
pewriter $175. Pioneer_!6600 reel to reel $250.
ladies hitop rollerskates
white size 6 S40. Call
614 -256-1644.
Wicker House open now
10AM to 4PM . Everything
below cost . Close doors
Dec . 23 for good .

Good seasoned hickorey &amp;
oak firewood. $20 pickup
load . Call 446 -7432 .
Christmas Trees for sale.
Richard Fischer. RodneyBidwell Rd . Call 614 -246 6246 .

7ft . locust post and custom
cut firewood . Call 446·
1203 or 446 -3816 .
Slabs cut -up 815 full length
$1 0 PU load. round wood.
large truck load. Call 614246 -5804 .
Pistols S &amp; W model 10 38
cal. and a model27 357 cal.
Coli 614 -367 -0482 after 5 .
WOODBURNING STOVES
Free standing fireplaces in·
serts, mobile home and
furnance ad -ons. Jividen's
Farm Equipment . Call 446 1676.
Firewood. 835. truck load .
865 . a ~ord . Split and
delivered . 614 -843-3603 .
Firewood delivered &amp;60 . a
cord . Coa l delivered $45.
ton . Call Tom Hoskins 614 949 -2160 or 614 - 742 2834 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa
, chair , rocker. ottoFurnished 3 r . private bath.
man. 3 tables. (utra heavy Oak furniture , k&gt;ts of misc.
845 2nd . Ave ., Gallipolis .
by _Frontier). S685. Sofa, items, ideal for Christmas,
Ref . preferred . Call 446 chatr and loveseat, S275 . reasonably priced, open
2215 .
Sofas and chairs priced from Sundays. Conkels Furniture.
5285 . to $896 . Tables . $45 Tuppersplains .
Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr.
and up to 8125 . Hide-a apartments for rent . HUO
program availabl e. A-One beds . $440 . and up to SEE OUR AD IN THE
$525 .. Recliners , $176 . to WANTED COLUMN .
Real Estates. Carol Yeager .
$350 .. Lamps from $28 . to FIFE'S .
Realtor . Call 304 -675 $75 . 5 pc . dinettes from
5104 or 675 -5386 .
$99 .. to 8436 . 7 pc., 5189 . TRADING POST. Use the
Furnished apt .. $186. water and up . Wood table with six barter system . Trade unchairs $425 . to S745 . Desk wanted items for something
pd .. 3 bdr .. 131 4th Avo.
$110 up to &amp;226 . Hutches, you can use. Brouse through
Gallipolis. 446 -441 6 after 7
$550 . and up, maple or pine hundreds of items from a
p.m .
finish . Bunk bed complete hair pin to a steam boat. tv's,
with mattresses, $260. and stereos, what-nots, dolls,
2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in
Crown City . Ca ll 614 -256 - up to $395 . Baby beds, tools, 500 fine guns. Trad$110. Mattresses or box ing days-Fri. and Sat. every
6520 .
springs. full or twin, $58 .. week . FIFE'S ot S. 3rd . St.
JACKSON ESTATES firm . $68 . and &amp;78 . Queen Middleport . Ca ll 614-992 APARTMENTS (Equal sets. $195 . 4 dr. chests. 7494 .
Housing Opportunity) has 1 $42 . 5 dr. chests , 854. Bed
bedroom apartments, rent frames, &amp;20 .and 825 .. 10 17 cubic ft . frost free
starting at 8152 per month . gun - Gun cab inets, 8350., Frigidaire refrigerator .
Call 446 -2745 or leave dinette chairs &amp;20 . and $25 . Green . New cond . $350.
Gas or electric ranges. $325 Zenith conso le stereo -with
message .
up to $375 . Baby rna- am -fm 8 track , record
2nd floor furnished effiency tresses . $25 &amp; $35 , bed player. New cond . S360 .
apt . Comfortable for 1 per - frames $20. 825, &amp; $30, Call614-992 -5606 .
king frame $50. Good selecson . Ca ll 446 -0957 .
tion of bedroom suite1. Portable dishwasher $36 .
1st. floor unfurnished apt.. cedar chests , rockers, metal Used 10 speed bike-820 .
Tempory elecric set-up, fuse
downtown Gallipolis . Utili · cabinets. swivel rockers .
ties paid. Call at 631 4th . Used Furniture -- bookcase, box, outlets. wire $20.
Ave .. Gallipolis .
ranges. chairs. end tables.. 614-992 -6810.
I - - - - - - - - -- -·· washers , dryers, refrigera Furnished effiency apt . in tors and TV's. 3 miles out Bass boat 2 yrs . old. Must
Rio Grande all utilities Pd . Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to see to appreciate. Clipper
Call 446 -0157 .
6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am to Masonry saw. Over 2,000
good clean used antique
6pm, Sat .
brick . 614-992 -2806. ElPOMERQY. 2 bedroom un- 446-0322
don Walburn .
furnished apt .. $160 . 2 - - - - - - - -- bedroom house s 185 _Dep - USED FURNITURE . Like
osit $ 100 _ Call 614 _992 _ new cannonball bed, queen 30 in. gas harvest gold
228 8 .
mattress and box springs. range. Sears best. like new,
complete twin size outfit, $200. Used Lennex
5 rm apt .. with 3 bd r. in sofa bed , living rm . tables 126,000 BTU gas furnace
Middleport, $150 per mo . and refrigerator . Corbin and $200. Antique walnut war:
Snyder Furniture. 446 · drobe, poor condition, e5o.
plus dep. 992-6692.
614-992 -2704.
1171 .
5 room Apt . with 3
bd .rooms in Middleport . 1...----------L----------~
8150 _ month, plus deposit. I
Coli 61 4 _9 92 -6 692 .
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
1

I- - -- -- - - -- -

~~~~Y,:~~~i~~;;)®&lt;o;;iEJ0iii:wit~hiM~a~jo~riH~o~o~p:ule

2nd . floor furnished Apt. 2
bd .room . Adults only, no
pets . Pay own electric. dep·
osit required. 2 miles out on
Rt .143. 614 -992-3647.
For rent- 3 room Apt . fur·
nished, utilities paid, no
pets. drunks, dope. 3'h mi.
South Mlddloport. R -7.
John Sheats. •

li

6

: :~ :::

furnllhed Apt.

BE."O"E

r;:),~A,lM' ~''/

~

~

1 bd .room A/rt. Ground
floor. Very nice. Call 6149

""'wHO
W"'lf&gt;

'

If

)li

i';,

~ j ~ }~

17\
'/
'C.

~

1

:~:.-::628 6434 or 304- ~·,~S-d·-~ ~~
Aportmanu . ~04-875- ((.5((_:}-l:r.llftr}~-_;~
6648 ·

l!!!;j:W
· -:·~~~'',.

~~
,,.,

~~:

,/t

-

1...
=.&gt;."

' ·

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rs

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.f~ IITCAKE ~-

VE.TTI~IT_~I::~~C:t;.N~ · "iOR~OF i:~.-;;,

&amp;

Grain

Fescue clover hay. $1 .00
bale . 843-3311 .

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win dows. lintels. etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call
614 -246 -6121 .
Build your own garage or
barn . 24x24 , 86 , 960 .
Lumber furnished . Can deliver. Other sizes. Call 1614 -886 -7311 .
NEW SHIPMENT Metal
sheets for all building pur·
poses . Flat porcelian enamel
coated . 4x8 thru 4 x 12.
Prices, $7 .00 to 89 .60 .
Odds sizes for trailer underpinning . 614 -667-3085 .
56

Pets for Sale

POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor at 614-3677220.
DRAGONWYND CATIERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow puppies, CF A Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens .
Call 446-3844 aher 4PM .
English Setter, $60. Call
446 -4672 evenings.
AKC Reg . Chow Chow
puppies for sale. 8260. Call
266 -1271 .
Pitbull puppies, 3 females .
Reduced price . UKC Registered , wormed &amp; shots. Call
614 -367-7409.

260 CC Yamaha dirt bike,
11 horsepower riding
mower, utility trailer, air &amp;.
electric power tools. 77
Chevrolet Blazer 4-WD. Call
446 -2821 .

76 Granada Chia ex. nice.
mid size car. $2,600 . Call
446 -9380 .
1974 Corvette T-top, V-8,
automatic, AC. PS. PB.
AM -FM stero, leather interior, new tires and exhaust,
immaculate condition . Call
446 -8687 after 6PM .
75 Corvette cream colored
(off white) with brown into·
rior, auto, with air; (make
nice Christmas gift.)
86,600. Cell446-2491 .

1980 Chevette. Cell 4464179 .
82 Mercury LN -7, sharp car,
axe. gas mileage. $6,700.
Call 446-0604.
1977 Camero ralley sport,
new paint. pioneer stero,
axe . cond .• books $3,500
sell for 82,600 . Must sell.
Call 614-388 -8486.
1978 Pinto 4 cyl., 4 spd .,
low miles, $1,660. Call
614 -367-0482 after 6.
1974 Pinto wagon.
446 -0749 .

Call

Ford Granada 76 4 dr., 6
cyl ., AT, PS, AC, 80,000
miles. good cond .. 8900.
Call 446-4668.
77 Honda CBCC 81 ,200.
Coll614-388-8667.

For sale black &amp; tan Coon
hound. $1 00 or trade . Call
614 -246 -9678 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Upright piano, 8200. Call
446 -4999 .
58

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Fitzpatrick Orchards. Plenty
of nice apples for your
Christmas baskets, soveral
varieties
all your uses.

fo~

61

S.R.

!

19B 1 Hondo, 400 CME.
863 actual miles. Extras.
real sharp, *1.000. firm .
614-992-6163 anytime.

LEAP!N' liZ/IIlPS.' LOOI&lt;.IT
TH' MONEY! 1'0 8ETTER
STUFF IT

flACK

.• IF

DAN LYON CATCHES

ME HERE HE'LL THINK 1

51/00P/11' AROUIIa

IN TH '

OR ...

51JITCA5E AN' GET OUT .
0' HERE ! lli'!l"l!l!!'1!"11~

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars in
stock .
1976 FORD 4 door sedan,
ps, pb, air conditioning,
cheap, good condition.
8796 . 304 - 468 - 1864
evenings.
JEEPS, CARS. TRUCKS
under $100 available at
local gov't sa les in yourarea.
Call !refundable) 1-714669 -0241 ext. 1866 for
directory on how to purchase . 24 hra.
74 MERCURY Comet, 6
cyl., automa~ic , 2 door, HT.
PS. PB. new paint 8t brakes,
304-676 -6743.
1976 Dodge Aspon, factory
a-c and weather proofed.
Sharp. 304-882-2806.
1979 VW Rabbit, 304-7736296 .

~~4-i~2~~~~6LET,

$300.

PAINTING
interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
up. Coll614-388 -9662 .

79 'Chovy luv, new tl,.s,
AC. '\ wheel drive, AM-FM
radio, good oond. Call 4411·
4292.
1979 Chevrolet Stap Van,
3110, auto., PS-PB, with 15'
all aluminum body. Excellent' cond. 387· 7182.
1978 Dodge PU with
topper, 8 cyl., atandard,
good cond. Call 814-3870457.

AI.I .EY OOP

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof. Call 614-388 -9867.

.•. BUT THE ARTEEST
EEN ME CRIES OUT ID
ASSEEST YOU AND
KEENGGUZ ...

Carpet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets . Free estimates.
Call 446 -2107 .
United Crafts . Roofing,
spouting. siding and stonn
windows. No job too large or
too small. Osby A . Martin,
Rodney Howery. 814-9926370.
United Craft. Complete Car·
pantry Service . No job to
large or too small. Osby A.
Martin, Rodney Howery.
614-992-6370 .

CASOLI NF. AI.I.F.Y

..---_.J r can't

RON ' S Television Service .
Specializing in · Zenith and
Motorola, Ouazar, and
house calls. Call 676-2398
or 446 -2464.

qet this blamed file
open!

Now it's stuck shut
with lollipop juice I

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Coll676-1331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE oxperienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpen·
tar, electrician, mason . Call
304 - 676-2088 or 6764660.
Water Wells . Commercial
and Domestic. Test holea.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-896 -3802 .
82

WINNIE

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3B88 or 446
4477
United Craft Plumbing anc
heating service. No job t&lt;
large or to small. Osb\
A .Martin, Rodney Howery
Phone 614-992-8370.

84

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

BARN EY

THAR AIN'T NO WAY
TO TELL WHAT SORT
OF CARDS
SNUFFY'S
HOLDIN'

SE~ING Machine repairs,
serv1ce. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp;: Service Sharpen
Sci11on. Fabric Shop,
Pomoroy. 992-2284.

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Call 814 -387-7471
or 614-367-0691 .

Now Hauling houu coal,
lump or stoker up to 8 ton .
Umeatono, top soli, fill dirt.
Coli 814-387-7101.

Whole shall corn for D~ .
U . per 100 lbo. with aedes
U . pre aacked. Morgan'a
Woodlawn Farm, Pliny Rt.
35. 304-8711-2275.
.

A NI' IF

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential , free
estimates. Call 614-2661182.

1978 Dodge P.,wor wagon,
4 -WD , rough body, mochonlcally sound, 318 whh 2
borrell, outo troni, U,OOO
or best offer. Call448-7897
anytime.

New Holland 48B Hoyblno,
25B rako, both like new.
814-949-2059 .

!0'

Home
Improvements

Need somathlng houlod
awaY or something moved?
We'll do it. Call448 -3169or
814-268-1987 after 8.

Ford 8N tractor . Double
.plan, byshhog scrapers, new
tires and-battery. Cash only,
*2,200 or bast offer. 1 mi.
south on Vlntdn on At 160.
Sat. only. Call 614-388~
9098 or call Akron 218724-81B6 .

;

KAWASAKI 400, very good
condition, low mileage, call
304-B82 -2636 .

p11111 lgppllw~ ..,-;:;::::========
I L! IIIIRk
72
Trucks for Sale
Farm Equipment

;
1

1974 VW bug. 11 .600. Call
446 -1062.

For sale· 1976 Olda. Cutlass
Supreme . High mileage.
Runs good, body fair to
good. 614-992-6817 after
6 p.m.

Cocker Spaniel puppies.
R8gistared blacks and buffs .
Ready the week of Christmas. $160. No checks .
614 -992 -7102 .

I

Autos for Sale

1978 Z-28 Camero, low
miles. $6,600. 614 -9492880. Robert Ritchie.

Cockateal bird with cage .
Call 446-4192 .

10 l\1{;: QUARH~RS '100
US(;:D TO M()()Ql - -.-::&gt;'.

lvt"IAII

AKC Registered German
Shepherd puppies, 7 weeks
old . Ready to go. More
information call 614 -3677712 .

UKC American Eskimo Spits
puppies, fury white coats,
shots. Call614 -446-7230.

A~~'4~~;! WHAT~V~I&lt;:HA~~E'D

C.AIJ '/'SPARE. A
"FI%R,11 AC.'i 1:

Tranapqrcallvn

81 Chevette 28,000 mi.,
83 ,600 . Call 614 -3670614 .

HILLCREST KENNEL
Bp~r!ljpJI. all breeds . AKC
Reg .· 'Oobllt..,_up! and
Doberman Sl\Jr SJrviCt,
Call 446 -7796 . ·

BORN LOSER

1976 Suzuki 660 has been
reeked, make offer. Call
468-1997 .

81

:

c'l:./r----"'
~

Hay

3,500 bales of mixed hay.
Good price for large lots.
Stored at lasher Farm in
~!land • . Ohio. Call Cool viO'Ii.' - Ohio . 1-614-667 3838 .

71

I

·•:!':: 1
ibf.n
WKNOW
""" c;::~IN_;&gt;:

'll

64

1974 Yamaha Enduro dirt
bike, 2 .900 miles. Caii46B1997.

55 Building Supplies

~~~:.~~~:~ :~::~i:~~- ~ )i:-~I&lt;OW~UI:Ir~•,il_t/:~ ~ .1~r~~
~~t··~·pii,~
.·~Nif~j?-~l,T~KE·~~UiFL~~~~~;.~~~~ ~:~t. S~~-&amp;~~~l~~~n=

pots . 614-,992-2676.

TWO butchering hogs, 8160
each. Fresh brown eggs.
Deliver every tuesday . Larry
R. Sayre. 304 -896-3319 .

1- - -- - - - -- -

Firewood, dry wood, split ,
stacked and delivered for
S30.00 a large load . Call
anytime 446 -7993.

For Sale - CHRISTMAS
TREES. One mile off Rt .7 by
pass on St.Rt . 143, Pomeroy . Reasonably priced .

2 pc . living room suite.
console stero. Call 614 379-2119 .

Registered Quarter Horse.
Also grade. Saddles. bridles.
winter herse blankets. West·
ern boots. 614 -698 -3290.

15

THURSDAY

I ~~
~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~;sc.an;A;"';~~-=L=&amp;.~,~~:=30=3=0=.=6=7=5=·=34=3=1=.===
~

Pa e -

Viewi~g

1979 Dodge 4X4, 360,
auto .• short bed, roll bar,
AM - FM - stereo
tape ,
bucket seats, white spoke
wheels; 1979 2 whool drive,
318, auto .. P.S., P.B., crulso ·
control. black &amp; allver. sun-·
roof. radial tires. chrome
wheels , AM - FM radio, ·
bucket seats. Call 2661484.
1976 Datsun pick up
62 ,000 miles, good cond.,
81 ,760. Coll446-2062 .

Wood burning add on fur nance. Still in factory crat&amp;.
8460 . Ca ll 1- 614 - 256 1216.

Sentinei -

Television

Trucks for Sale

54 Misc. Merchandise
ONE bedroom apartment. 2
bedroom apartment. Water .
gas furnished . air conditi oned . 304 -676 -5294

The Dail

December 16, 1982

TWO bedroom apartment in
Mason, 304 -675 -1452 af ·
ter 5 p.m .

d~:

p

44

UNFURNISHED 2 bedroom
garage apartment . adults
on ly, no pets. 304·6751055.

.

~f

22 Money to Loan

HOME LOANS 12 % l i• ed
rate . leader Moftgage, Ohio
only 1 - 800 - 341 - 6554 .
WVa . 614 -692 -3051

Thursd~!r,

u: ...uo.~port, Ohio

Jlfl1 Lanier, 304-1115-7397. .
87

Upholatery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 183 S.C. Ave .. Odlpollo
448-7833 pr 448.: 1 833. '
_MOWREY8 Ullltoistory i Rt
1 lox 124, Pt. Plett
·
304-8711-4154. •
.oant.

from

PEANUTS

1---------JIMS Wator Sorvlco. Call

5EE? YOUR WAY
'

Dog'
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City, NJ
Cll Wild America Wild
Babies.' Tonight 'S program
look s at the childhood of
se veral animal s.
® Fawlty Towers
m ~ JOanie Loves
Chachi
9 :00 0 CV CD Cheers A man
with a British accent tries
to convince the crowd at
Cheers that he is a spy .
(]) 700 Club
0 (I) ® Simon and
Simon
Cll Good Neighbors
® Sneak Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and Jef·
frey Lyons look at what's
happening at the movies .
Gl WI Too Close for
Comfort
9 :30 0 CII CD Taxi Ale• discovers his ex-wife is at
Latka and Simka's Chnstmas party.
(II MOVIE: 'A Christmas
Carol'
Cll Wodehouse Playhouse
® last Chanco Garage
Gl Wilt Takes Two
1 0 :00 0
CI1 CD Hill Street
Blues Bobby Hill' s falher
show up for the holidays
and Fay Furino is reluctant
to let Frank Jr. go on a trip
with Frank and Joyce . (60
min .)
(I) TBS Evening News
Cll Gl WI 20120
0 (I) ® Knots landing
Abby faces a tough decision when she is asked to
donate a kidney to give a
Diana a normal life. (60
min .)
()) International Stars on
leo
® Newswatch
10:15 (II MOVIE: 'On Golden
Pond'
10:30 (]) Star Time
® One for the Road
1 1 :00 0 (II Newscenter
(II MOVIE: 'Stripes'
(!) ESPN SportsCenter
(I) Woman Watch
(I) 0 (I) Gl (l) News
C!J News/Sports/Weather
Cll Dave Allen at largo
Gal Eyewitness News
®Sign Off
11 :30 0 (II C!l T onlght Show
(]) Another Ufe
(I) Christmas Gold
(I) Benny Hill Show
0 (I) Quincy
(I) PBS late Night
® All In the Family
Gl (l) Nightllne
12:00 CI1 SRO: Country Rock
'82 The Oakridge Boys,
the Charlie Daniels Sand
and Rosanne Cash perform
some of their big hits .
(]) Burna &amp; Allen
(!) Auto Racing '82 :
International Sedans
Atlanta, GA
(I) Nlghtllne
MOVIE: 'Tom Jonea'
(l) last Word
1 2 :30 II (II C!J Late Night with
David Lanerman
(]) Jack Benny Show
(I) MOVIE: 'They Shoot
Horaea, Don't They?'
(I) Last Word
Ill (I) MOVIE: 'McCloud:
Somabocly' a Out To Get
Jenny'
(I) c.ptloned ABC NeW11
12:46 (II MOVIE: 'Gamea Girla
Plev'

DOESN'i WORK, EITfiER!

em
e

rJ r

r

I I

WHAT THE COOK
C'IC' AFT~ HE
C R.AC.KeC' AN e6e&gt;.

I FLARTEj

rJ r

Now arrange the circled leners to
torm the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here:

rI

I I ] (I]
(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles· SOLAR

Yosle•day·s

QUASH ECZEMA GUZZLE
Answer. Too many ol these can make a per so n look
round -" SQUARE " MEALS

Jumb.. Book No. 20, containing 110 purz1es, Is available lor $1 .95 postpaid
trom Jumble, cJo lhls newspaper, Bo• 34, Norwood. N.J. 07648. Include your
name, sddtetl, zl code and make checks payable to Newa a

rboolts .

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

How to bid a void
portant void . If you think

your void is in a suit where
NORTH

12-16·82

+K 9 53

•····

respond as if you were void-

tAQJ6 2
t A7 6 4

WEST
+QB 2
.QI09H3

EAST

+7

.AK864 2
• 754
• J 92

t tO 8 3

+to

.J

SOUTH
tAJ 1064

t K9
tKQ8 53

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: North
East

4.

North
It
4t

1•

South
It
4 NT

Pass
Pass

s•
Pass

Pass
Pass

7+

West

Pass

Opening lead:

you expect your partner to
have th e ace, you simply
less. If you think it i s located
in a suit wher e your opponents hold the ace, simply
jump to six in the suit wh ere
you otherw ise would bi d just
li ve .
In today 's hand North
would undoubtedly have cue
bid to show his heart void if
he could have done so below
game. It is appar ent to him
that either E ast or West
holds the hea rt ace and he
know s his heart void will be
of valu e. Hence. he r es ponds
with six hear ts to show two

aces and a void. It turns out
that the void is in hea rts , but
the six heart bid is mad e to
show two aces. With just one
ace, North would have bid

six diamonds.

•7

By Oswald Jaeoby
and James Jacoby
Another Blackwood problem i s what to do when your
partner bids Blackwood and

yOu are void of some suit
Our way to handle this is to
decide if you think you hav e

South 's se ven-spade bid is
a gamble, but he has no way
to lind out if North holds
both king and qu ee n of
spades.
It should t ake South some
tim e to play the hand since
he will hav e to decide on
how to pla y the spades. H e
ma y guess wron g. but that i s
his problem . We will leav e
him with it.

a valuable void or an unim·

~w4
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

39 Weather
word
I London
40 Remove from
district
copy
5 Message
mediwn
DOWN
10 Algerian city !Inflamed
2 Spoken
11 U.F.O. pas3 Trusting
sengers?
4 Unit
13 One kind of
5 Nut
Yesterday's Answer
critique
6 Athena's
19 Tilting
Used 21 Dowii
14 Staid
title
20 Italian
32 Dance
15 Hebrew for
7 Auctioneer's
feeling
33 " Rule Britan•
Lord
term
21 Sky
nia"
·
16 Exclamation
8 Assure
systems
composer
17 Slur
9 Called
23 Rouse
35 Black
18 Part of
12 Followed
24 R egretted
cuckoo
the neck
16
Footless
26
Like
1var.)
20 Aleutian
animal
Pollyana
36 Turf
island
21 Ardent

:ro

22 Skin problem
23 Cleft in two
24 Arrayed
25 Colorful
times
26 Like a ham

h,--+-----1"--1---

27 Cut
28 Blackguard

(sl.)
29Nag
Nourished
31 Author, Levin
34 !1reathe in
36 Prophet
37 Conductor,
Fritz 38 Roasting
place

:ro

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Ia

how to work

it: ·

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

.

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Ia ·
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters . •.
apostrophes, the leneth and formation of the words are · ali ·
hinta. Each day the code letters are different
"'

CRYPTOQUOTES
'
BXOBZG
BZV

BOXJ

WSJOBV

SJBQ
BZVH

FXV

'
T S G.-·:.
•

·\1.

AOBVT . - ESCIVXB
U. RZVGBVX-BQJ _::
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SMALL ROOMS OR DWELUNG$!.0
SET TilE MIND IN THE RIGHT PATH, LARGE ONES CAUSE: "-

TIIEMTOGOASTRAY.-LEONAROODA VINCI

. '~
-~ ~

.

�'

HOLIDAY SALE

W aha rna opens
('age season
this t•vening

....

Four FBI

Bucks fa(•e BYU
in Holiday Bowl

killc ·d in
/ ' , .. 1

al!•·nl~
na~h

/:

SPECIAL VALUES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
ON EVERY FLOOR- GOOD SELECTIONS ON QUALITY MERCHANDISEWE'll GLADLY HELP YOU WITH YOUR SHOPPING.
~

~

OPEN NIGHTS 'TIL 8:00
LADIES'

MEN'S

SWEATER
SALE

WEMBLEY
TIES

Sweater Vests. Velours. Turtle
Necks. Cardigans. Sweater Capes

Four~ ln~ Hand and Ready Tied
Styles - Christmas Sale Prices
now on Entire Selection.

Mrsses and Extra Slzes

SAlE PRICED
FROM ONlY

CHILDREN'S

Men's $9.00 Ties . $6.99
Men's $10.00 Ties $7.79
Men's $11.50 Ties $9.89

$1Q39

\

I

Highest quality London Fog brand.
100% Nylon Shell, 100% Polyester
Polyfill. Pants are zipper front wrth
adjustable suspenders. Jackets are
zipper front witll detachable hood£
Little Boys Sizes 2 to 4 in Navy.
Little Girls Sizes 2 to 4 in Lt. Blue.
REG. $62.00

SLIPPER SALE

•
Voi. J l .No .160
Copyrighted 1982

Reg $5.50 and $6.50 scuffs and
ballerina styles. Blue, Beige and
Pink. Sizes S~MHL

GIFT
SPECIAl

CHRISTMAS
SPECIAl!

I

The Daily

SNOWSUITS

WASHINGTON 1AP 1 - A weary Republican~
controlled Senate worked as the sun rose over the
Capitol early today to complete work on a stopgap
spending bill that includes a $1.2 billion jobs package
President Reagan doesn't want.
Unless the ca tchall appropriations measure clears
both the House and Senate and is signed by the
president by midnight tonight, most federal agencies
would legally run out of money and might have to
shut down.
Winding slowly Ioward the end of a lame-duck
session, the Senate, in an a ll ~night session, voted on a
mixed bag of Issues ranging from the MX missile to
abortion, foreign aid and the Clinch Ri ver breeder
reactor. The votes followed the apparent defeat of the
proposed $5.5 billion gas tax increase--highway repair
program .

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PANTS AND
TOPS

Exce llent selectiOn rn srze s 29 to
42 wa rs! plu s ex tr a SIZes 44 to 50 Solid colors and patterns. We wrll gladly
help you lrnd your corr ec t war st srze
and length

Men's $15.95
Men's $19~95
Men's $21.95
Men's $29.95

CHRISTMAS SALE!

LITTLE GIRLS'

Christmas Sale prices on our entire
stock of little girls' jeans. corduroys,
slacks. blouses. sweaters and knit tops

Slacks .. $11.16
Slacks .. $13.96
Slacks .. $15.36
Slacks .~$20.96

Reg. $5.00 .......... Sale $3.99
Reg. $7.00 .......... Sale $5.59
Reg. $12.00 ........ Sale $9.59
Reg. $19.00 ...... Sale $15.19

MEN'S

WINTER
JACKETS

MEN'S
PAJAMAS

Srzes 36 to 50 rn a fine selectron ol
styles for everyone on your rst
Included rn thrs sale are our men's
dress coats, all weather coats and
wrnter vests.

Srze Small. Medrum, Large and Extra
Large - Flannels or Poly~Cotton Blend
fabrics - Coat style top, adjustable
gripper bottoms - Van Heusen and
Ely quality

Men's
Men's
Men's
Men's

$29.95 Jackets .$23.36
$39.95 Jackets $31.10
$49.95 Jackets $38.90
$69.95 Jackets $54.50

MEN'S $39.95

INSULATED
COVERALLS
Sizes S. M. Land XL- Olivewood.
Navy Blue and Brown Duck.
Pre~shrunk - Red nylon quilted
lining

$12.95 Pajamas .. Sale $10.35
$15.00 Pajamas .. Sale $11.95
$16.00 Pajamas .. Sale $12.95
-

$3488--

~-

BOYS' SHIRTS
Our entire stock including Flannel
Shrrts - Westerns -Velours - Kmt
Shirts and Sweat Shirt looks- Sizes 8

to 20.

Boys'
Boys'
Boys'
Boys'

$8.95 Shirts ..... $7.20
$10.95 Shirts .... $8.80
$12.95 Shirts ... $10.50
$14.95 Shirts ... $12.10

CHRISTMAS
SALE PRICES!

MEN'S and BOYS'
DEPT. 1st FLOOR
•Men's Western Shirts
•Men's Flannel Shirts
•Men's Denim Jeans
•Men's Velour Shirts
•Boys' Denim Jeans
•Boys' Corduroy Jeans
•Men's Sport Shirts
•Men :s Corduroy Jeans

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December

2 Sectiom, 12 Pagel
1 S C.nh
A Multimedia Inc . Newlpoper

17, 1982

Weary Senate works hard on spending bill

$349

MEN'S

DRESS
SLACKS

entinel

Sen ~ Mark Hatfield, R~Ore .. chairman of the Senate
Appropriations Committee, said he hoped for a final
vote on the spending measure by noon today.
By shortly after dawn, however , there were more
than :JJ amendments still awaiting disposition, and no
end was In sight.
When the Senate does pass the appropriations bitl.
It will ~ to a conference committee, where
dllferences between the House and Senate versions
will be worked out.
Both chambers would then have to approve the
resulting measure before sending It to the president,
who has Indicated he will reject the legislation If a
jobs provision Is kept In the bUl.
On the MX question, the Senate agreed early this
morning to Reagan's proposal to start buying 100
missiles, but only If Congress approves a basing plan

within 45 days after he submits it.
By a vote of 56-42, the Sena te approved $988 million
in production funds for the nuclear weapon Reagan
wants to deploy in a controversial "dense pack"
formation In Wyoming . The House last week rejected
money for producing the missile.
On Clinch River, the Senate voted 49-48 to keep the
controversial fast breeder nuclear program alive by
approving $194 million for continued development.
The House voted earlier this week to kltl the
program in which uranium would be turned into
plutonium in the power plant to be built in Tennessee.
Critics say fast breeder plants cost too much. don't
necessa rily work and are a potential source of raw
material for terrorists planning to build small
nuclear bombs.
Reagan called the Congress back into the post

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

election lame-duck session to handle appropriations
measures. but most of the time has been spent on jobs
bills the president either doesn't want or has
reluctantly accepted.
The version of the spending bit! approved by the
Democraticalty ~cont rolled House includes a jobs
program totaling $.'\.4 bittion. five times thP total in the
Senate measure.
The Senate's $1.2 btllion jobs propocal includes
mittion for the pay of workers at water and waste
treatment plants. Indian housing and school
construction. weatheriza tion of schools and hospitals,
job training and mass transit employees.
There Is also$250 mittion for construction of famitv
housing on military bases. and another $26 million for
construction work on the Alaskan railroad .

m

Fuel funds
go unused.,
says Miller

CHRISTMAS
BLANKET
SALE

Final UAW results due tonight

All of our bed blankets and
electric blankets in a fine
assortment of solid colors and
patterns - Twin - Full Queen and King Bed Sizes.

SAVE 20°/o
;
;

DETROIT - United Aut o Workers in 17 states should know
tonight whether they 'll be gett ing a $2.270~a ~yea r raise from Chrysler
Corp.
Union officials predicted that U.S. Chtyslerworkers would ratify a
tentative contract with the No. .1 automaker when they go to the polls
today.
Results from the day long voting were expected aft er 8 p.m. EST,
UAW spokPsman Bnb Barbee said Thursday. Workers at about 50
lacilltes in 17 states were participating.
The vote comes at !Out five days after IO,IXXJ Chrysler Canada Ltd.
autoworkers voted overwhelmingly to approve their tentative
contract with Chrys ler. ending a .17~day strike at six plants.

Liver receipient returns home

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BOSTON -As her family applauded and Santa Claus delivered a
gift, a smiling l ~year ·old Jamie Fiske returned home Thursday
evening from a life~savi ng liver transplant.
Jamie was the youngest person ever to receive a liver transplant.
She had been expected to die by Thanksgiving without it.
" If Jamie could talk, she woutd probably say, 'Thank you' to
everyone for their prayers and love," said Fiske. "She really has
been adopted by the while world."
Jamie, Fiske and his wife, Marilyn, landed In Boston at 6p.m.and
were greeted by family and friends at Logan International Airport.

Sheriff's son among indictees
FREMONT. Ohio - A Sandusky County grand jury has indlctecl17
people for drug trafficking, including a son of the county sheriff.
.Joseph Kindred Ill . 28. son of Sheriff Joseph Kindred Jr.. pleaded
innocent to a charge of aggravated trafficking in cocaine and was
released on his own rrcogn i7Alnce.
Prosecutor Ronald Mayle said 14 of the 17 arecharged with multiple
counts.
The indictments Thursday are the result of an investigation by
Fremont police that lasted severa l months.
Drugs involved include marijuana, cocaine. LSD and quaaludes.

Jenkins released from prison
COLUMBUS, Ohio - The Rev. Leroy Jenkins, an evangelist
formerly of Delaware. Ohio. was release&lt;! from a South Carolina
prison Dec~ 1 and says he feels itwasGod'splanforhim to be in prison.
Jenkins now lives near Columbia, S. C., and saki in a telephone
Interview that he hopes to return to his church In Delaware and may
resume his television minist ry.
Jenkins founded his ministry at Delaware 17 years ago~nd nurtured
It into a multlmillion~dollar operation before being convicted ln197!1in
South Carolina on charges of conspiracy traelng to efforts to bum the
homes of a South Carolina highway patrolman and a businessman.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Thursday night In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game. " The Number," was 3&amp;1
In the "Pick 4" game. played three times a week, the winning
number was 2076.
Lottery officials reported earnings of $543,ffi1 from wagering on the
daily game. The earnings came on sales of$1,008,115, while holders of
winning tickets were entitled to share $525,0.'14.

fiVeatherforecast
Cleartng and cold Ionight. Lows between 20 and 25. Sunny and
warmer in the morning and increasing cloudiness and warmer
during the afternoon Saturday. Highs between 43 and 48. The chance
of precipitation Is near zero tonight and
Extended Ohio Forecast ·
Sunday through Tueslay:
A chance o1 rai!1 SUnday. Flurries Monday. Fall Tuellday. 1111111

•to

lbe rnld 4011Sunday, IIICliiQ Iaiiie 311M ' r
andfromlbemld3011olbemldtesTuellday. LowafNm lbe I I . .
lo lbe mid • SUnday and M,onday and JIIOI!tly bllbe . . ......,..
from lbe upper

,

Millions of dollars generated by
barge traffic and placed In a
waterways trust fund for major
river construction projects re-mains idle and ·unused, according
to U.S. Representative Clarence
MUler. Miller contends that the
funds ooUected from the barge
industry could "go a tong way In
helping projects like Gallipolis."
According to the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers, nearly $55
million has been collected from a
barge fuel tax since October, 1980.
The fuel tax, which began at four
cents a gallon, has jumped to six
cents currently and will go to eight
cents beginning October I, 1983.
After October, 1985, the tax will be
10 cents a gallon.

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..
QUEEN- A Christmas queen of Southern High
· School w1ll bemmed Saturday night at the school's
annual Christmas dance. Candidates, selected by
senior class members, are I tor, Cindy Evans, Angle

'

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•

'·

wiD be selected by popular vote of all classes at the
hlgh school. Attendants wiD be Mandy IHU,
freshman; Julie Houdashelt, sophomore, and Debbie
Michael, junior. The dance wiD be from 8 to II p.m.

GleM, Becky Lee and MlcheUe Johnson. The queen

•

Early retirements offered·
in order to avoid layoffs
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Company has announced
It Is offering eligible employees an
early retirement program In an
effort to avoid possible layoffs. The
company said It is also taking steps
to further reduce costs.
The early retirement option Is
being offered to those employees
who will reach the age of 59 on or
before November 1, 1983. The
effective retirement date under the
one~tlme program will be February
1, 1983.
In another major move, the
company announced in late November it was discontinuing the
employee Christmas gift. The gift
amountecl to one percent of an
employee's annual base wage or
salary.
Ben T.' Ray, president of
C&amp;SOE, said these steps are a
continuation of the cost-reduction
measures announced In October by
C&amp;SOE and other American Elect~
r1c Power System . companies
because of rapidly dE:Cllning earn~
lngs due to the depressed economy.

Cost-cutting measures already
announced Include a five percent
salary reduction for top manage-ment; a wage and salary freeze In
1983 for all employees, a freeze on
hiring; a reduction In employment
through attrition and a study of
power ptant needs.
The company has told affected
employees that manpower studies
are underway at the Picway
generation station south of Colum~
bus and the Poston generating
station near Athens for possible
employee reduction. .Employee
reductions are also being studied In
the transmission and distribution
areas across the company. C&amp;SOE
would not release the number of
reductions being considered.
Ray said the company Is
hopeful that the various cost~
cutting steps will preclude the need
for layoffs. He added that If
employee reductions are neces~
sary, they will not occur until early
in 1983 after the results of the early
retirement option and transfer
possibilities are determined.

Expressing concern that some
of the cutbacks may eventually
affect customer service, Ray said
the cost reductions are necessary
for the company to survive finan~
clally during these depressed
times. He pointed out that a
reduction In personnel may place
the company In a position where It
will be operating below standard
and desirable levels to provide
proper service.
Ray said the company's future
financial condition was worsened
recently when the PUCO granted a
rate Increase amounting to a seven
percent Increas e In annual
revenues.
"We just feel that a seven
percent Increase over the three
years since our last rate case is
totaUy inadequate to cover the
Increased costs of doing business
since then," he said.
C&amp;SOE had requested a $100
million Increase and received $41
million ~ Of that amount, $14 million
involves finance charges for the
Zimmer nuclear plant.

Jury returns guilty verdict
deliberated a little more than 2'h
hours Thursday night before finding
Mayle, 32, guilty of first-degree
murder. With the jwy'srecommen~
dation of mercy in the case, Mayle
will be eligible for parole In 10years.
Last summer, Bobby Dean Stacy
was convicted of first -degree
murder without mercy in the

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP) Wilbert Mayle has become the
second man convicted of murder ing
Huntington pollee officer Paul
Hai'molt, wbo was beaten and shot
live times with his own pistol last
December.
A Cabell County Circuit Court
jwy Imported from Fayette County

y

•

slaying. He is serving his sentence
at the state Penitentiary In Mounds~ :
ville and Is ineligible for parole.
~

~

Prosecutors had claimed Stacy
and Mayle, both of Columbus, had
just robbed a Chesapeake fast food
restaurant when the slaying
occurred.

The fuel tax funds are to be used
for construction and waterways
rehabilitation projects whlch have
been authorized by Congress .
Under the tax formula, about $35
million will be added to the trust
fund annually. Gallipolis remains
unauthorized, but engineering and
design work for the massive
replacement project Is underway.
"We have made the case for
Gallipolis time and time again,"
MUler remarked. "The money
being sent to the trust lund could be
used for Gallipolis. I can't thlnk of a
better first investment. "
Miller said that the lund Is
intended to rebultd and construct
navigation projects without expect ~
ing the taxpayer to foot the tot al
bilL
"It's a barge fuel tax to benefit
the barge industry, " he said . "But
until Congress authorizes actual
construction of a new Galilpolls
complex, and permits the fuel tax
to be Invested In the prjoect, the
trust fund will go untapped while
this costly and inefficient bottle-neck slows commerce on 1he Ohio
River. I find thi s situ ation
unacceptable."

Racine re!-wue
equipment found
The Ra cinP Fir&lt;' Dfopar1mPnt
rescue boat. traiiPr and equipment
used in rescur ('ndeavors insidr the
boat werp found floating down the
Ohio River Frida;· morning.
A resident spoiled the boat and
equipment moving downri vPr and
notified PomNoy Polic£' Depart ~
ment which rctrievro the boa t and
equipment and tied it up along the
river bank nea r West Main St.. until
It could be moved to the lev('(' where
It can be taken out of the water and
returned to Ra cine.
It was reported that vandals
appare91iy brok&lt;' into the room
which the boat and trailer are kept
at the Racine Fit'C' Sta tion overnight
and took the boat to the river whel'('
they set it afloat. The water
department building was atso
broken into and several rolls of
copper wire were stolen.

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