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Page- 14 - The Da il y Se nt ine l
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Wedn esday, December 22, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Oh io

Local briefs---- Citizens Bank merger announced today

Village offi('es will d ose Friday
All Middleport village offi('('S wi ll rlos~a l noon Frida;•, Dec. 24 and
w111 r emain r loSt'&lt;i on Monday, Dec. '!i in order tha t employees m ay
enjoy the Christmas holiday . Normal bu siness hours wi ll rpsume on
Tuesdav, Dec. 28.

Large blue purse lost
Betty Kraw sczyn lost a \arg(' na \:. bluf' pursr in down town
Middlepor1 . The purse cont;ti nt'&lt;i imiXll'lanl pap&lt;•r s and Mrs.
Krawsc-lyn is hopi ng th&lt;' purst' will be fou nd .
If anyone found thr purse tiH '' ;~ rr ask«l tu call ~'19· 2:J0.1 and a
reward will be givm.

Christmas program planned
A Chr istma s progr;~m will br held at the Rwdsville United
M ethodist Church Dec . 2i . at 7 p.m . Th&lt;' public is im·i t('(l to attend .

Marriage Ii('ense issued
A marriagf' liCP !l Sl' was issurd in M1•ig~ C ou n ~ · Prubatr Court to
David Roscoe 1\'rlls. RPe&lt;l sville. and B&lt;'rth" HPIPn Braden ..11,
Middleport.

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Area deaths

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Nina T ht'iss

Kt•nnt'th Bin·hfield

N ina Theiss. 72. Rt. :1. Ra r i n ~ .
died Tuesda y at St. .J us. ·ph Hospita I.
Parkersburg .
Mrs. Theiss was born Feb. 1~ . 1910
at New Haven the daughter of th~
late Elza and Nora Lewis Tripp.
Mrs. The iss was a houscwiff' a
m ember of the New Haven Unil&lt;'&lt;i
Method ist Church. Racim• O.F. .S..
Racine Grange and Anw ri can
Legion Aux iliary. She was a former
mem ber of the D of A .
She is survived b;· her husband .
Blythe J . Theiss: two daughters.
Avis H arrison. Tampa. F la. and
Arlene Wa llace. Columbus: four
sister s. Nellie BumgardnPr. Letart .
W. Va .: Ina Tea ford . Middleport:
Nedra Shinn. Columbus. and M ar
tha Huffma n. Pomerov: two broth·
ers . Fred T r ipp and Ccorg&lt;' Tripp.
Mason: four grandchildren and
S€'Veral n i ('('~S and nephPws.
Funeral services will be h~ld
Friday at 1 p.m . at Ewing FunPral
Home with the RP\'. Mark Fl\'Tln
officiating. Buria l will be inCraham
Sta tion C~m~t rrv. New Hmn1.
Friends m ay ca ll at the funeral
home a ft er Ill a.m . Thursda,·.

Kmneth Birchfield. H4. 7:J6 First
,\ n• .. Galltpolis. died a t 1 p. m .
Tucsda\· in Vetera ns Memorial
Hospital. Pomrro.\ ·. ha\i ng bern in
fail ing healt h for the past six
months.
Born .Jul;· 21. 1H!JR. in Mason. son
of the late William and Ginnie
Birrhfi&lt;'ld . he was a World War I
Army ,·etero n and re tired em ·
plovw of U nion Barge Co. A
member of the First Church of the
Nazarene in Gallipolis. he received
the W&lt;'St Virginia Dist inguished
St·rYirP medal for ra pturing a
GPrman machinE' gu n nrst singlehanded!; · in World War I.
He married Vema McDaniel.
who SUJYives , on .Ju J ~· 17. 1934. in
Mason.
Su!Yiving arc two daughters.
Mrs. Josephine M il ler of Mason.
and Mrs. Sue Bays of Gallipolis: two
sons. Car l M cDaniel of Point
Pleasant. and James McDa niel of
Columbus: and 16 grandchildren
and 2i great-gra ndchildren.
He was also pr ec("&lt;ied in dea th by
rwo daught ers. two brother s and a
sister.
Funeral sef'\icrs will be held at 1
p.m . Friday in Waugh-Halley-Wood
FunPral Home. with the Rev. Bob
Madison officiating . Burial will be in
Ohio Va lley M emory Gardens.
F ri ends may call at the funera l
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m .
Thursda;·.
:vlilital')· gra ,·esidr services will
be conducted b;· VFW Post 441i4 and
America n L egion L afa ye tt e Post 27.
Pallbearers will be Gerald Wa l·
tcrs. Gene M cDaniel . Luke McDa·
niel. Dave M cDaniel. Ronnie Miller
and Charles Ba ys.

Blancht' V. Gihhs
Bla nch~ Veronica C ibbs. Hli
Svrar use. died Tuesda;· evening at
Veterans M emorial Hospital.
Mrs. Gibbs wa s born Feb. 21i. l!l94i
at Montgomery . VI' . \ 'a. the
da ughter of the late l·:dward and
Vena Mulligan Sou lsb;·. She wa s
also preceded in death IJ\· hPr
husband. Samuel Gibbs. Sr .. in 19!\0.
Two brothers and one sun a Iso
preceded her in dea th . Sh&lt; · wa s a
hoUStewife and a member of the
Syracuse Church of the 1\aza~n r
She is survived by one daughter.
Virginia Oiler. Racine: two sons.
Charles Gibbs. Sewell . "\r\1· .Jrrsr;·.
and Paul Gibbs. North Charleston.
s. C.: two sisters. CIPnna Soulsby.
Pomeroy and Thelma Crouse.
Col umb~ s: thrw brothers. William
Soulsby, Bay· City. M ich.: .J am es
Soulsby, Pomeroy and Lawrence
Soulsby. Columbu s: 11 grandchild·
r en and eight great gra ndchildren
and severa I nieces and nephew s.
F uneral services will be held
F rid ay at :l p.m. at Ewing Funera l
Home wit h the Rev. George Oiler
officiating. Burial will be in Letart
Fa lls Cemetery . Friends ma;· ca ll
at the funeral home Thursda,· from
2 to4 and 7 to9.

POINT PL EASANT - An agreement mergr r ing Citizens National
Bank of Point P leasant with T he
First Huntington Nat ional Bank
wa s announced today by Bartow
Jones. chairman of the CNB board
of directors. and CNB President
Charles La nham. They say the
m erger will offer expanded sef'\dces to Mason County, including a
lend ing capability of up to $2 1,
m illion.
The proposed mer ger . first of its
ki nd in West Virginia, is made
possible as a result of recent
legislati,·e changes in sta te banking
laws.
Cit izens National Bank . wit h
assrsts of $R') m il lion. is the largest
bank in M ason County and the
m erger into Firs t Hunt ington National. w ith assets of $232 million.
\.\ill make it a part of the third
largest banking inst itut ion in the
State of West VIrginia. Jones says.
" T he most import ant benefit to our
present customers v.i ll be expa nded
customer service through the same
staff members w ho have served
them over the years. More ex ten sivr trust services will be ava ilable
in the near fu turp and increased
resources will extend our lending
capability," he adds.
"First Hunt ington's knowledge
and banking exper ience in industria l development could very well
lead to bett er opportunities to br ing
abou t economic industria l development in M ason County, c~a tin g
m a r~ jobs and increasing the tax
ba se to the benefit of all ci tizens,"
Jane's says.
The proposed merger. whereby

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Ern e.~tin e

Brorm

Ernest ine Brown.li9. M ason, died
Tuesd a;· evening in Pleasant Va lley
Hospital.
Born March 22. 1913. at New
Haven . she was the daughter of the
late Ernest and Mary Ricka rd
Roush.
Surv iving arc a sistN, Letha
L;•ons. Hart ford: and two brothers,
James F . Roush. New Haven. and
Lewis W. Roush, E lyria, Ohio.
F'unPral st'l\ .:iccs will be conducted at 1 p.m. T hursda y in
Foglesong Fu neral Home. Mason.
\.\ith the Rev. Bennie Stevens
officiati ng. Buria l will follow in
F'rye Cemetery, Le tart.
TherP will be no calling hours.

INSULATED WORK BOOTS
BY CHIPPEWA, SHEBOYGAN and REDWING

Citizens Na tional Bank would be
merged Into F irst H unt ington, Is
subjec t to approval of shareholders
of both banks and of governmental
regu latory authorities. It has been
approved by both boa rds of
directors.
Lanham says, "We view the
m erger as an opportunity for our
staff, officers and director s to better
serve the people of M ason County
and the Trl-County area . The
merger proposes to leave in plac;:e
the present staff, officers and board
m embers of Citizens National.
" We anticipa te this affiliation wi ll
give us even greater tools with
w hich to serve the banking public.
Our lending limits w ill increase
from $700.&lt;XXJ to$2 Y, million, we wi ll
be able to ca ll upon specialists In the
fie ld in industrial development
financing. commercial lending and
personal investments. P robably
the biggest area of help w ill be in the
T rust Department expertise. F irst
Huntington has an outstanding
T rust Departm ent wit h trust assets
of over $70 million.''
Accord ing to A. M ichael Perry,
cha irm an of the board of F irst
Huntington. " The F irst Huntington
Na tional Bank has aligned itself
wi th excellent teamma tes in Citizens National Bapk of Point
Pleasant . Their historyofsuccess in
Mason County is indica live of their
fine staff and m anagem ent.
Together our pooled resources will
m ean financia l product development and delivery tha t w ill m eet the
needs of all our customers and will
be ava ilable on a much broader
basis. Together we will set a new

precedent for service and strengt h
to the communities we work for ."
Citizens National Bank was
founded In l&amp;'i2 - before West
Virginia even became a state- as a
branch of the M erchants and
M echanics Bank of Wheeling. It
then became the Merchants National Bank and In 1928, Citizens
National. The CNB Mini-Bank on
Viand Street was opened in 1979.
The bank will reta in the name
Citizens National Bank, a division of

First Huntington National.
i

SPECIAL THIS WEEK
PEANUT BUTTER
FLAVORED CHOCOLATE
Sl,75LB.

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

•MEN'S FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS
•MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS
•BOY'S DENIM JEANS
.CARHARIT BROWN DUCK WORK CLOTHES
•MEN'S DENIM JEANS
•MEN'S QUILT LINED FlANNEL SHIRTS
•BOYS' WINTER JACKETS &amp; VESTS
•BOYS' CORDUROY JEANS
•BOYS SHIRTS-Velours-Knits-Flannels
•MEN'S PAJAMAS
•MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
•MEN'S WINTER JACKETS &amp;VESTS
•MEN'S DRESS COATS- ALL WEATHER COATS
•MEN'S VELOUR SHIRTS
•WEMBLEY TIES
•MEN'S SWEATERS
•MEN'S DENIM &amp; CORDUROY JEANS
•MEN'S DRESS TROUSERS
•MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS

ICTU••&lt; GIFTS FOR THAT
HARD TO BUY FOR PERSON

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

·" The Wav America Sends love"
Phoni 992-20lf
106 Butltrnlll Avt.
We accept ell m•lor crtdlt cards and WI wlrt flowen
IVtrywhere.

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Christmas Sale Prices
Furniture Dept.
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All CHAIRS
LIVING ROOM SUITES
CEDAR CHESTS
BEAN BAG CHAIRS
CARD TABLE SETS
GUN CABINETS
GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
DESKS

Christmas Sale Prices
lingerie Dept.
-LONG GOWNS AND ROBES
-BABYDOLL PAJAMAS
- WALTZ LENGTH. GOWNS &amp; ROBES
-PLAYTEX 18 HR. SALE
- FlANNEL PAJAMAS

-DRESSES
-SPORTSWEAR
- SWEATERS
- SLACKS
-COATS &amp; JACKETS
-JOGGING WEAR
-HANG TEN

Christmas Sale Prices
CHILDREN'S DEPT.
GIRLS' TOPS
GIRLS' COATS
LITTLE BOYS' PANTS &amp; JEANS
LITTLE BOYS' SPORTSWEAR
GIRLS' SLAC,KS &amp; PAJAMAS
LITTLE BOYS' TOPS
GIRLS' SPORTSWEAR
GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR
CHILDREN'S GLOVES &amp; TOBOGGANS

Christmas Sale

Christmas Sale Prices

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1

From the Staff of the

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- services for you and your family throughout the year

IWCOMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER

II -CALL OR VISITI Multipurpose Health Facility

!• lulbenY Heiglrts

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'~-Misses

&amp;
extra size Sportswear
-Sweaters
-Skirts
-Wrangler Sportswear
-Dresses

CRISISLINE 1
24 hours a day 1
7 days a week 1
•992-5554• I

I pomeroy
I "992-2191"
1 Th e Mental H ealth Center is partially fun ded by the
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Me ntal Health Board
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I!CII~-~~~~~-~~~~--I!CII-1

SHOP UNTIL
8:0() ON WEDNESDAY
AND THURSDAY

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Eastern holds
National Honor
Society induction

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Pagt' 8

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The Daily

entinel
1 Sec t ions , 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohhio, Thursda , December 23 1982

-Purses
-Knit Accessories
-Revlon &amp; Coty
Fragrances
-All Luggage
-Timex Watches
-Christmas AlbulJIS
and Tapes

•All Bed Blankets
•Wintuk Knitting Yam
•Fitted Mattress Pads
.Close Out lot Cannon Towels "''"'/7'7
•Eureka Vacuum Sweepers

FREE
PARKING
IN

POMEROY

WASHINGTON tAP I - The Senate's ordeal over
increasing the federal gasoline tax is ending, and so is
the 97th Congress - finally.
Republican leaders predict they have the votes to
brea k the last in a string of conserva tive filibusters
against the proposed nickel-a-ga llon boost in the
gasoline tax, and pass it today.
That would clear the way for the Senate to adjourn
nearly two days aft er the House.
U the Senate passes the m easure. it will go to
President Reagan, who supports i t.
Vice President George Bush, ac ting in his role as
presid ing officer of the Senate, was to be on hand for
today's votes.
Baker, who tried throughout the lame-duck session
of Congress to enact the bill, has been bedeviled by
conservative mem bers of his party w ho ar gue the tax
hi ke is bad policy.
The latest problem cropped up Tuesday night after
thE House passed a comprom ise version of the
leglslauon and adjourned . Sena tors thought they also

would be able to vote and go home.
But Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C.. mounted
last-m inute filibuster, standing at his desk and
objecting to requests that would allow a quick vote.
H elms and Baker eventually agreed to the showdown
votes today.
' While Baker and Heims were at odds over the
gasoline tax , they and other senators agreed that the
post-election session Reagan req uested to get act ion
on m oney bills was not a good idea .
Supporters of the tax m easure say It wi ll raise $.1.5
billion annually to finance 170,&lt;XXJ jobs for 1\tghway.
bridge and mass tra nsit repair. They also claim
another 150,&lt;XXJ jobs would be created in related
industries. T he adm inistra tion estimates the tax hike
would cost the average motorist $30 a yea r .
However, Heims and other opponents said the
m easure would cost j obs, not crea te them. by ra ising
taxes dur ing a recession. Others oppose the bill
because of heavy excise taxes it would impose on the
biggest trucks on the road .

a

The conserva tives also argued that the gas tax
com promised Republica n principles.
" ! j ust simply say that the Republican Party's got
no future if it doesn't give the people a choice," Helms
sa id. " The worst way to survive, let alone succeed. is
to cam paign on specific Issues and principles and
then see them watered down or washed away."
Sena tors rrom both parties said the Heims and his
fellow North Carolina GOP senator. John East, wen t
too far in blocking the tax hike.
Helm s not only organized a filibuster, but for two
weeks he and a sm all group of conservatives used
every twist and turn w ithin the Senate rules to delay
or block the Inevitable a t a time when exhausted
senators and House :nembers were eager to get home
for Christmas.
Baker. however. was just as determined to crush
the challenge to his authority.
" ! suppose I have more frustra tion on this than
alm ost anybody in the Senate because it's my job to
try to move the business of thPsCnateand we're being

m

living room ncar a fi replace.
T he house was a total loss.
Four pumper trucks and 22
fi remen were sent to the Stoney
residence, loca ted one-quarter mile
west of Buhl M orton Road .
F irefighter s stayed at the scene
until ?: 30 a.m .
According to the Ga llia-Meigs
post of the State Highway Patro l,
Pers inger was lying in the roadway
when he was run ovPr by a
westbound vehicle dr iven by Bar ·
bar a J. Brown, l'i. Rt. 4. Gallipolis.
T he accident occurred on
Georges Creek Road about one mile
west of Ohio 7. the pat rol repor ts.
T roopers say they are unsure why
Per singer was lying in the roadwa y.
Investigation of the accident is
continuing.
A second w reck occurred when a
m otorist swerved to miss Persinger's body shortly after he was
struck .
Troopers r eport H arold Coughenour. 33, R t. 1, Ga llipolis was
westbound on Georges Creek Road
at 6: .'l6 p.m . when he swerved to
miss the body. went off the road and
landed In a ditch.
His vehicle report edly received
light dam age. He was not in,iured.

UMW stamp big
goal for Trumka
CHARLESTON, W.Va. ! API Just-Inaugurated President RIchard Trumka of the United Mine
Workers union says his goal Is to put
the UMW stamp on every ton of coa I
mined In the United Sta tes.
The 33-year -&lt;lld Trumka, sworn in
Wednesday as the union's 14th
president , said he is determined to
return the far -flung union to the
pinnacle of the labor movement.
After taking his oa th of office, he
immediately served notice to the
coal Industry that there would be no
union give-backs In the upcoming
contract negotiations.
Trumka , who succeeded Sam
Church, added that his administration would launch a vigorous,
sophisticated organizing drive
aimed at carefully selected coal
companies.
M ore than 3,&lt;XXJ miners, politicians and Trumka supporters
attended the UMW Inauguration at
the Charleston Civic Center Coli·
seum. Memb!:rs of Trumka 's home
UMW loca l in Nem acolin, Pa., gave
him a coon dog after the inauguratiOn. Truinka laughed heartily i4Jd
the croWd roared In approval as the
!lop-eared hound snuggled In his

anns.
· The crowd• gave Its loudest
ovation when T 1.1mka vowed that
union organi21ers "will not rest until
every ton of coal that comes out of
ibe.ground is stamped 'l1MW.'"
At one time, $hortiy after World

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War II, nearly two-thirds of all the
coa l produced in the nation came
from UMW mines. Now, the union
controls less than half the coa l
produced In this country each year .
Trumka also noted that m ore
than 40,&lt;XXJ UMW miners ar e out of
work around the country.
"Meanwhile, " he said. "some
utilities report coal stockpiles In
excess of 100 days, nearly twice
their nonnal Inventories. A t the
sam e time, the plight of our brothers
and sisters In the steel and auto
industries continues to wreak havoc
on our mem bers who work in the
m etallurgica l coal fields. And , there
are few Indications that this sever e,
government-created recession will
end anytime soon."
.
He added that the UMW's
problems are exacerbated by a
growing trend toward non-union
coal.
" These non·lJlllon operations sap
the strength of our union and steal
the jobs of our mem~rs~ " he said.
" We also have had substantial
problems with contract negotiations. Tile last two national contract
strikes have cost members thousands It qollars mlost wages and
have hurt our organizing efforts."
Trumka promised to hold the line
on rni1Je safety. H e observed thatll8
U .S. coal miners have been killed ·
during the-firsts 11 ~ months of this
year and called the figure

uatroclous."

u

frustr ated ," Baker said WN.inr, da,·. "Bu t we'n'
going to make it, we're going to fin bh ...
Under the legislation. the gasoline ta x would rise
from 4 cent s to 9 cent s. Procrrds of i rm ts of the
increase will go to highwa;· co nstruction . The
remaining penny wou ld go into m ass tr ansit. The
gasoline-alcohol mixture gasohol would be subject to
a 4 cent tax instead of the full 9 rent s.
The bill also includes a " buy Amer ica" provision
giving m anufacturers of Ameri can-made steel.
cement and other products prefrrr nt ia l trea tment in
bidding on highway contracts.
Also include&lt;! is a steep increaS&lt;' in the hea\'y usc
ta xes trucks pay . The IP\')' on rigs of Fll.IXII pounds or
more wi ll r ise gradually from $1,6(XI beginning in .Ju lY
1984 to $1,900 in J uly 19l'll. The current maximum tax
is $240.
Another provi sion would ex tmcl unrmplo,ment
benefit s for all eligible workers b;· a minimum of two
weeks, and up to six WE'f'ks in stai PS whrrr
joblessness is highes t.

Accidents kill
two in Gallia
GALLLI POLIS - A house f ire
and a car-pedestrian acc ident each
claimed the life of a Gallia County
resident Wednesday and early
Thursday morning, according to
loca l law enfor cem ent agencies.
Sarah L. Stoney. 52. 610 Sun
Valley Drive, died of asphyxiation
as the result of a fire at her house at
3:57a.m. Thursday.
Arthur C. Persinger. 72, R t . 1,
Gallipolis, was pronounced dead at
the scene aft er he was st ruck by a
car on Georges Creek Road at 6:35
p.m . Wednesday.
The Ga llipolis Fire Drpa11m ent
reports Stoney wa s found lying
outside of her house when fi refighters arrived at 4: a. m .
Accord ing to Gallia County Coroner Donald Warehime. Stoney was
asphyxiated due to sm oke and fi re
inhalation. /
She alsO""received a fractured
skull hu m j umping out of a second
floor window, but Warehim£' said
this was not the ca use of dea th .
Sarah Stoney's husband, Ted.
was the only other person in the
house at the time of the fire. He
escaped unharmed.
The ca use or the fire has not been
determined, but firefighters say the
blaze apparently start ed In the

1SCents

A Multimedia Inc Newspaper

Senate's federal gas tax ordeal nears end

Women's Wear JEWELRY DEPT Home Furnish·

II SEASON'S GREETINGS

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Voi .31 ,No .164
Copyrighted 198'2

Christmas Sale Prices
JUNIOR WEAR

Christmas Sale Prices

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Pagt' 3

PH. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd
Middleport

CHRISTMAS SALE PRICES ON QUALITY NAME BRANDS
CHRISTMAS SALE PRICES
MEN'S AND BOYS WEAR

Southern bombs
W ahama, 90-56

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Wi\SIDNGTOI\ !AI'J T ht•
Senatf' vott"tl today to in('rt•a."it' thP
fedt.•m.l ga"iilim• L.Lx hy a nir kt•l,
fi na lly ending il"' urdt•;.ll O\'t&gt;r llw
legi'!'lation, and lht.· H7th ( 'ungrcss.
AftPr an Xl-5 vot(• t·hoking off tht•
latest in a strin g nf t·onservativt•-led
filihuster&gt;&lt; - mun· tha n the 611
affinnatiV(' voh•s rH't'PS.•··ar;t - tht•
Sena h• pa"i.."if:'d tlu• ll H'&lt;L..,ur t• :,.a-:tJ

648 report
presented
to director

WOMAN DIES, HOME DESmOYED - Mrs.
S arah Stoney, 52, a r esident of Buehl Morton Rd .,
Gallipolis, died in an early morning fire Thursday.

Tite blaze was discovered around 3: il'7 a.m . In K eith
WOson's photo above, Gallipolis firefighters are using
water to extinguish the blaze, but It was all in vain.

Mason board accepts
Miller's resignation
By LEE KAMPMEYER
POINT PL EASANT - Wednesday night , the M ason County Board
of E duca tion accepted the resignatlon of school board Pres ident
Howard Lee Miller, w ho announced
hewas leavlng forper sonal reasons.
When Miller step-down, T om
Sauer, who is vice president , took
charge of future board m eet ings. At
the board's next m eeting.on Jan.10.
1983, a day before the school excess
levy, m em bers m ay elect a new
president, according to Interim
Superintendent Bill Barker. They
also can appoint a new school board
m em ber to complete the fiveperson team . If a new m em ber is
not selected within 30 days, sta te
Superintendent Roy Truby has the
authority to appoint one.
Miller re; d his written reslgna ·
lion and thanked the school board
and M ason County citizens . for
working with him. "I will continue
to work for quality education," he
said.
Speaking on beha!fof theadmlnlstrators, interim Superintendent
Barker thanked Miller. " We'll m iss
his support," he said. Jack P ark ,
president of the M ason · County
Teachers Association also· voiced
appreclatlon aswellasother school
board members. " I think he's done
an excellent job as school board
president," Don Waldie said.

''I'm sorry this had 10 happen,"
Bill Wi thers said. " Howard Lee is
not the only one involved in this."
Withers also said M iller's reslgnal ion would not be the only one to
confront the school board . He did not
expand further on his comment.
Miller served on the school board
for 3y, years after elected in 1978.
He was voted in as pres ident by the
school board statutory reorganlzationa! and special session on July 6.
"Notlting was done Illegal,"
M iller said during an interview this
m orning . He added theschool board
acted In good faith. " I could fight It ,"
he said in commenting on his
reslgnatlon,buthesaidhe wanted to

Weather forecast
' M ostly cloudy and continued
wann With a chance of r ain tonight
and Friday . Lows tonight around 50.
Highs F)'lday near62. Thechanceof
rain Is 50 percent tonight and 40
percent Friday.
Extended Ohio Forecast
Saturday through Monday:
A chance of rain Saturday and
Sunday. Mostly falrMonday.lllgm
from the mid 40s to tJMi mid fMB
Saturday; in the 40s Sunday IIIIJI
from the' mid 30s to the mid 40s
Monday. Lows In the 40s Saturday,

the301!Sundayandthemldtotlpper
00s Monday.,

avoid " the hassle."
Miller would not com m ent on the
circumstances which led up to his
decision to resign.
Miller's resignation may have
partially resulted from an appeal
between the Wes t Virginia Educa·
tlon Assoc iation and Preston
County Board of Educa tion brought
before the West Virginia Suprem e
Court. The result of the Preston
County case defines who can be an
employee of a school board and the
problem of conflict of Interest of a
spouse serving on a school board .
Miller is a former Instructor and
taught history anddrlver educa tion.
Combined withthis, healsocoached
for approximately seven years.
Miller said he decided to join the
school board having concern for the
educational system and wanting to
see new buildings and facilities.
Miller, a graduate of M arshall
University where he starred on I he
ThunderlngHerd 's footballteam as
a quarterback prior to Injuring a
knee, once servt:ct sever al years as
head football roach at Kyger Creek,
High Sehool.
Just recently, the M ason County
· Board of Education lost superin·
tendent Jeny Brewster who took an
assistant superintendent's job in
Cabell County.
Bill Bar ker was then appointed
Interim sliperintendent.

The stat£'-appoint&lt;'&lt;l rP\'iP\1' group
inves tiga ting dl'li,·el')· of mrntal
heal! h SCI'\' ices in Ca Ilia .. Jackson
and Meigs counties present('(! its
final report to the stal e din'&lt;' tor of
mental hea lth 1'\edm'sda,·.
M em bers of !hr rommifl("f' mrt
for abou t thrPP hou rs with director
of mental health Su111nne M .
Hocklev to discuss the r&lt;'port.
commilt('(' m (•mtx•r T om Hairston
sa id .
ThP ll 'port . wh ich is abou t .10
pages long. includes " qu ite a few
rf'C'ommr nda!ions'· ns to how to
improvP mrnlal IH•a lth srrvirC's in
the commun ity. according to Hair·
ston. \.rho is (;aiJia Count.v ·s
representative on the panel.
Hockley indica It'd she would nf'cd
severa l days to study the report and
would make the contPnts public
nC'xt wPf'k, Hairston said.
He said hf' r·ould not rliscuss
specific findings oft hr report unl il it
is released publirlv .
'' ThrrC''s no IT'&lt;.lson not to rt:IC'ase
the report," Hairston said . " I think
the public is w"iting to hear."
He sa id all sen·n m embers of the
committee sigm·d the rrp:wt and
agrrcd with its fi nrlings .
"Of course no two of us irJOked at
things exac t I; · lh£' sa mP wa v ...
Ha irston sa id. "But differ·ences .we
had wr rf' usuall.y a m att er of

degrw."
He sa id thf'committpp thonJOghl;•
investigated the operations of !he
Gallia ·.l ackson·M&lt;' igs Comm unitv
Mental Healt h Cen ter and t h~
tri -county &amp;.1 ~ bo;IJ'(l.
Conflict bctwt'f'll 1hP twoag(·nri('s
prompted fon nc·r m ental hralth
director Mvers J-;um to appoi nt the
review commit!('(' in Ortolx&gt;r.
Each of lhP thr&lt;'l' count ies
im·ul\ t '(} had onf' rPprC'SC'nta ti V(' on
the review IXInr•l. Stat e mental
hea lth official s c hose four
m em bers.
The commirt w has met St·vrra l
times in Gallipolis since Oc tober to
examine records and interview
persons associated with the li4tl
board and the crntN.
The ,·ommittec's final repo rt
indudes findings concerning the
relationship between the li48 boa rd
and the center. fiscal opera tions.
service delivery and administra tive
functions.
"Natura lly , we made quite a few
r ecommendations ... Hairston said.
Copies of the fi nal report w ill be
sent to the county commissioners in
the three counties and m em bers of
the 648 board and the m enta l health
center board , accordin g to
Hairston.

�Commentary
Ill Cnurl!'lln·O'\
Pumo·ru\ . llhtu

614-992-ll.)fi
l W TilE MFU:S.MASll" ,\HF. ,\

l ~n: HEST

ROBERT 1.. WINGETr
l'uhlt,lwr

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

The holiday lights blinked on and
off, throwing bJilllant reflections
off the tinsel on the tree as Dick and
Jane huddled behind the couch,
their eyes fastened eagerly on the
fireplace 'neath the chimney.
" I hear something, I hear
something!" Jane exclaimed.
"He's coming!"
"It's the wind, you nerd," Dick
rejoined . "He can't be coming,
because there's no such thing as

,, ,, ., u_,ut l 'uhl•'lwrft untrul lo-r

DALE ROTIIGEB. JR.

A 1\lt- \!HEll ul Th1· "-''""'ah·d' l'n·''· l nh111tl ll;uh l'r•·"
;\own• au '\n~ ~ p.tpi ' f l'uhf•,lh·" A~MII ' IHitun

' "'" ' tal lull and lh1·

I Frrt-:IISflF lll'l\'111'\ Mt' ~&lt;~• · ln•mt•t l Thn ,hnuld tw I•·~, than :100 ""rth In n)! . All

lt'l\1'1' an· .. uhjt'l'l In o·t1111n )! ami rnu~ l l14· , l)!iwd \\llh narn••. adtln·'~ ami h'lt•phunt•
numtwr '\u Ulllll)!llt'tlll'!\t'r, 'o11tllw puhlis ht •d . l ,dh·n. ~hu uhl ht· 111 )!nnd la.&lt;. tt•. adtln· ~s in~
l ~' Ut'' . nul JJt'r-.otJI;IIIill'lo.

A sense of when
•
to compromise
• In thf' word s of om• of his Sf'nior aidrs. PresidC'nt Reagan " hi.ls an
uncanny abilit\ to know whC'n to makP n?finC'mrnt s."
That 's anotht·r wa.' of s&lt;J .\ 'ing hf' has a gOO(\ SC'nSC' of whrn to
compromise.
In thC' appro&lt;..IChing s('ssion of Con grf'ss. Rea gan is likel.v to grt c hanrrs

to

d emon s tr;~t e

thai _
, kill. after some Republican allies did the

compromising for him in thf' &lt;'OntC'ntious lamC'-duck SC'ssi on .

But there is alsu a frding at thr \l'hite House that the Democra ts' good
fortunf' in picking up ~ I) st•at.-; in thl' H CJU Sf' \Jst month m a~' mask thrir need
to comp rumisP
Thrrf' is P\'f'n sumr PXpC'Ciatiun. pcorhaps just wi shful thinking, that in
(('('ling his oat s. 1-l uusr Sprak&lt; •r Thomas P. O'Neill .Jr may overlook the
suppo rt hf' nt'f'ds from mcx::lf'raiPand conSC'IY&lt;.tlivC' [)('mocrat s and rnd up
pro\'oking intt'rnal strift' on th&lt;' Drmoc ratir sidt · that wou ld o n !~ · brnrfit
thf' Whilr HousP.
In addition to the budgrt h&lt;llllt•s. CongrPSS will continue to wrC'stlewit h
the prrsident\ pruJXJSa l to build th&lt; ' VIX missile and place it in a r loselv
sp&lt;Jr('(l formation nrar Ch(•.\ 'Pnnt'. 'v\\o. RPagan's com mission on Social

SecuritY will rrport. ami til&lt;' first fpw months of the eongrrssional session
will be Wken up with proposals un funding.
:\ncl. if thPrc• is timr. thf' admini stration hoprs to SC'nd to Congrrss a
propoS&lt;Jl on cont ;1ining ht'alth costs.

,\dd to 1hat a df'ficit thaI could reach $200 billion anrl " I hrrr' s going to be
a lot of squitming" on Ca pitol Hill. said onr White Housr staff member.
rrquC'Sting

anon .\ · mit~ ·.

Thr choice will IX' iJ&lt;'tW&lt;·rn acrrpting u hugr dcfici t or making further
n'&lt;iuctions in domPstic .-. J)(•nding. partic ular!.' · in thr PntitiC'mcnt programs
wltere long-ra nge spending is onlr rwl b1 Congress, because thr presidrnt
is not interrstPd in ' lowing down the gmwth in thr Prntagon budget. his
aidf'S SCI,\ '.

Therr is Iiiii&lt;' '' -'JX~' I ation Rmgan will get thr same kind of mileage out
uf thr coalition uf minorit .\ ' f1ppublic&lt;:~ns and co nspn·ati vr Democrats that
pro\'NI so ust'lul in t hr J-l uUSt:' in 19X1 and 1.,·pn carl if•r this .v car whrn hr wa s

fighting his pari)' budgrt and ta.x cut battlt•s.
,\t thr heart of the problr m . said an aide. is the fa ct that Reagan, in
s('('king budgrt cut s in 19R1 and 1 ~~2. optr&lt;l for the areas in which he was
likt•l\' to f'ncountcr th(' least r f'Sis tancf'.

.. •j·hr budget cuts wrrr the easier ones." thi s aidl' sa id. adding:
" Thr public serms to be com·inc«l hr's already cu t a great deal more
out of the· social program than hr alrrady has. It 's going to be hard
slugging. Wr.- r&lt;' going to ha,·r to lx• mon • rrsourccful in how we goat it. "

Transfer of power:
lender to borrower
As intf'n•st ratr~ fall thf' tran sf(·r of rPIJti\·t· J)0\\'('1' from IPndrr to
borrower gains mum(•nrum . w hich pru bahi~· accounts for th£' smilr on

Unclr Sam \ fan ·
Sam is th&lt;' al\ -timf' big IXJrrG\\'(•r. u! cuurs(', no ma ttc•r how big a flourish
is m adf' b~ · upstart s lik£' Mt•xiro and nrazi!. Unlik(• them. hOWf'\'('1', his
debt is all inh ·mal. I3ut dPbt n('\'P rth(·)ps~.

Interest must tx · paid on debt. and in t.;nde Sa m's case that debt was
~1.17 trilli on un D«·f'mber lli. or something likr $J.f('il a person. and wi th
th r intPrf'st cost. ttlrnugh Ck::tolx·r an.\ ·wa.v. amounting to $R.~ billion .
That rnunnqu .-. &lt;.~mount is a c·onsPquPnrP not on ly of continued
go\·crnmc•nt lxwrowi n.(! hut of ri sing int r rl·st ra trs ovC'r the past four .vrars.

tnt errst paid b\ t.; nclt · Sam morr than doubltd bel\n'Cn 197R and 19R2.
But with intt'n ·st rail 's f&lt;JIIing now. UnciP Sam's burdPn wi ll be
Jighwnrd . ;\t tlw l'nd uf Sl.'ptemlx·r. for t·.xamplr. $2M billion in 'l)·easur:c
bills \Va s oul standing at an avPr&lt;Jgf' cost of 12 prrC'rnt.
·ourin.(! thP nPxt .\ ·Par. Morgan Guarant~· Pstimatrs. these bills will br
n~fina ncNi a 1an avPragc· rJ IP of ;)bout X (X'tT'C'Ill. for J rPduct ion in interrst

ex penS!' of $11 billion. ,\bout $11XI billion uf nott·s and bonds that pay 12.2
per-cent will maturr during l!lR.l and the.\· also wi ll be resold at lower rates.
When \'OU Jr£' dl'J lin.(! with gm·prnmpnt finances. hO\\'f'Vf'r, .vou must not

rejoice ~bout good news befor&lt;' )OU find if there 's a ca tch. And thr rr is, as
the Morgan PConomists point out
"This saving in interf'SI rx pensr·. howevrr. will be offset by enlarged
borrowing to cO\'f'r the· budgr·t clrficit." they observe. As a result . they
estimatt· that nrt int&lt; •t'l'st r·.x pensr ·s will change VPJ&gt;' little at all.

Today

•

Ill

history

Todav is Thursdav. [)('C . ll, the .1o7th clay of 19R2. There are eigh t days
left in the vear.
Today's highlight in histOJ')"
On Dec. ll. 194R. .Japan's forrnrr Premier' Hidekl Tojo and six other
Japanese World War II leaders wrre rxecu ted in Tokyo.
On this date:
In 1783. George Washington rrsignPd as commander in chief of the U.S.
Armv and retired to his home in Mount Vernon, Virg-inia.
In ·1788, Maryland ceded a 10-square-mile area for use as the national
capital - the area that becam!' the District of Columbia.
In 1941, U.S. forces on Wake Island surrendered to the Japanese during
World War ll.
In 1975. the CIA chief in Athens, Greece. Richard Welch, was killed by
gunmen outside his residence.
·
Ten years ago: Nicaraguan officials reported IO,!XXlllves were lost In an
earthquake that hit Managua .
Five year s ago: A procession of tractors was dJiven into then-Preslqent
Jimmy Carter's hometown of Plains, Ge, in a demonstration for higher
prlce supports for farmers.
One year ago: President Reagan announced several economic
sanctions against the Polish government for its imposition of martial law.
Today's birthday: Major league pitcher Jerry Koosman Is 39 years old.
'IllOUght for today: "The world is a comedy to those who think, a tragedy ·
to thoSe who feel. " - Horace Walpole, English statesman (1678-1757).

Just then Dick was Interrupted
by the noise of a body thumping Into
the fireplace, accompanied by a
booming "Well, now, ho, ho, ho!"
"It's him! It 's him! St. Glpp is
here'" Jane exulted.
A tall , klndly looklng fellow with
shiny black hair, a huge grin and a
twinkle In his eye picked himself up
and walked to the tree, a large bag
swung over his shoulder.
"Golly, gee," St. Gipp said, " I fell
down that chimney faster than the
decline In Industrial production ."
"See?" Jane said to brother
Dick . "I toldyouSt.Gippwasreal."
"Real ?" St. Gtpp said, the
twinkle In his eye growing bJigher.
"Why, I'm as rea l as the balanced
budget I promised for fiscal 1983;
I'm as real as the economic
recovery I promised the second
half of 1982; I'm as real as the
dense-pack basing mode for the
MX missile."
'See?" Dick said. " I told you he
didn't exist."
"Now, none of that, little leila, or
you' ll find some greetings from
your Uncle Sam In the mall," St.
Glpp chuckled. "Why, just take a
look at this marvelous toy I brought
you." He reached into his bag and
pulled out a huge contraption of
gears, pulleys and levers.
"What is it ?" Dick inquired.
"Why, It's my 'New Beginning'
game," St. Gipp chortled .

"How does It work?" Jane asked.
"Childishly simple," St. Glpp
exclaimed , getting down on all
fours. "First, you take this little
knife and you cut into thi s Tax Base
here- see? There goes$750bllllon,
and you just put that aside."
"Then what does the thing stand
on?" Dick asked.
"One step at a time, sonny," St.
Gipp replied, the twinkle In his eye
dimming just a bit. "Now next, we
take all this hardware and put it
into the Pentagon sack , and hang
that on top of the countraption ."
The frame began to sway from side
to side.
" How can the gizmo suppoli all
that Pentagon hardware when
you've thrown away that Tax
Base?" Dick queried.

"Say, kid," St. Gipp snapped,
"how'd you like to find yourself
protecting freedom In El Salvador?" Now," he went on, "you take
these peanuts - that' s the money
for the Poverty Trap - and you
throw them away."
"What abou t all that pork?" Jane
said, reaching for an enormous
bag.
"No, no," St. Gipp said nastily .
"That's the Middle Class Inflatable
Entitlement Package- we never.
never touch that or else we don't get
to play this game any more."
St. Gipp stepped back to admire
his work.
"See?" the red-cheeked fellow
beamed. "Any minute now, all that
Tax Base we cut away will turn into

jobs and revenues, and the whole
machine will just take off and -"
With a clatter and a crash, the
entire contraption collapsed at St.
Gipp's feet.
"Ha!" Dick said. "I knew It
wouldn't work!"
"You must be a commentator for
a TV network," St. Glpp said.

By SCOTT WOLFE

RACINE - An explosive offensive performance that peaked
early In the first period boosted the
Southern Tornadoes to an Impressive 00-56 triumph over cross-liver
rtval Wahama here Wednesday
evening in Charles W. Hayman
gymnasium.
Senior guard Zane Beegle and
Rod Littlefield paced the hothanded Southern attack with 28and
20 points respectively, while five
other Tornadoes pitched In 6 points
apiece.
The non-league triumph leaves
the Tornadoes with a perfect 5-0
slate and 3-0 slate Inside the SVAC.
Wahama drops to 0-2_
.Early In the first period southern
shifted Into high gear, opening up
an elusive inside running game that
stunned hath the hometown crowd
and the Wahama defense.
The visiting White Falcons of
Coach Lewis Hill played a sticky
defensive game the entire contest,
however, Southern's offensive strategy enabled the winners to slip
past Its defenders consistently for

"Well, I've got to get back home
and deliver the rest of my goodies
to Cap Weinberger. Merry Christmas!" St. Gipp chuckled and
disappeared up the chimney.
"Well," Dick said. "I guess you
are right, Jane. He's real, all
right."
"No," Jane said, looking at the
ness. "He's unreal."

lack· Anderson

more serious than the one I am now
plan, but he has once again begun
ble" with this role and hesitan to sit
posing."
blowing kisses at the Kremlin.
down at the bargaining table. He
Last year, Hussein raised hackHussein fi red off an equally blunt
would like the military aid without
letter to President Ford. If the les when he visited Moscow and
the strategic honor.
United States didn't provide Jordan
The last four presidents have
heaped praise on the Soviets. At a
with $350 million worth of anti- May 26, 1981 dinner In the Kremlin,
learned that Hussein Is an erratic
but wily ruler. who knows how to . aircraft missiles, he told the . the King repeatedly referred to the
president, Jordan would buy them
late Leonid Brezhnev as a "dear
play diplomatic hard ball. His
public Image is polished, meticu- from the Soviet Union. And he friend" and expressed "profound
pointedly noted that the Soviets had sa tisfaction ... in developing and
lously polite and controlled. But a
offered him a complete air defense consolidating the relations between
turbulent personality seethes besystem, which he event ually our count lies."
hind this disciplined royal Image.
Even more distressing to the
According to Intelligence sour- bought.
Sources told my reporters Reagan administration was Husces, he has severe mood swings and
Lucette Lagnado and Andrea sein's praise of the Soviet peace
may even be a manic-depressive.
plan for the Middle .East. The King
Siegle that Hussein has continued
He likes to vent his spleen in
to write blistering, at times offen- told the Russians that Jordan
personal letters that would quiver
sive, letters to President Reagan.
welcomed their "proposal to conthe stlipes on a diplomat's trousers.
Administrat ion irritation reached a vene an international conference
He once wrote a secret letter to
new high last year when the King on the Near East with the PLO
President Nixon threa tening to go
released the contents of one letter to taking part on an equal basis with
on a "ghazou" unless he got U. S.
the Jordanian press before Reagan the other sides." Hussein then
aid. A ghazou Is a Bedouin raid on a
had even received it.
neighboring tribe. " We might have
proceeded to issue a Joint CommuBut Reagan and his aides are not nique with the Soviets that made
to go on a ghazou, an old ArabtJibal
likely to reveal their pique to the repeated favorable references to
custom, and get It, Sir, from some
King this week. Not only is Hussein the "international conference."
quarter or other in this neighborcrucial to the success of the
hood," he wrote, "possibly causing
U. S. officials remain confident
president's Middle East peace that Hussein will not switch
you a problem which may be even
allegiances.

The White Falcons committed 36
turnovers and 23 personal fouls.
Coach Howle Caldell 's young
Tornadoes rolled to a 46-27 win as
Scott Schultz and Todd Adams
zipped 2 points, Greg Nease 10, and
Darin Rush 8. Blll Clendenin led
Wahama with 12. Southern's reseves are now 4-1.
Southern plays at Trimble next
Tuesday, then hosts Ross - Southeastern next Thursday at home.
Scores by quarters:
Southern
26 22 21 21-90
Wahama
14 12 9 21-56

11;\ND CHECK -

Littlefield of Coach Cart WoHe's Southern Tornadoes.

Pirates
complete
transaction

l:

inner?"

I assured her the missile would
not go off unless someone In the
White House pushed a bu~t·m .
"I'll feel uncomfortable uvlng a
stranger In the attic," she
protested.
" It may be a stranger when It
first arrives, but before long It will
be part of the famlly. You'lllearn to
love it. Besides, how can you enjoy
your Christmas when you know
there Is an MX mlxxlle with tiny
nuclear warheads to feed somewhere out there in the cold?"
The klds were very excited when

n-ace.

I
2
3
4
6

450
376
3117
259
2ffi

315

3 0
3 jO
2 1
1 2

223
182
216
147

172
159
161
200

3 132
3 1461

165
193

0
0

Tuesday -

Southern at Trimble and

Eastern at Ff'dera1 Hocking .

Dec. :11- Southeastern at Southern.

Xavier wins again
CINCINNATI ti\Pt - Guard
i\nthonv Hicks sa nk a pa ir of fr('('
throws and center Eddie .Johnson
tipped in a field goa l with Jpss than a
minute to plav. sparking Xavier
Uni vf'rsity to a 54·:.l non·ronfPrf'nrP

FIRES AWAY -

Wahama's Ron Bradley lets Oy with a long
jumper during action from Wednesday's Wahama-8outhern basketball
game. Southern remained unbeaten In live games with a resounding,
90-56 victory. Tornado players shown In foregroWld are Trevor Cardone
(42) and Chris Bostick (34). Tim Tucker photo.

basketball victol)' WP&lt;i nesday
night over Miami 1Ohio I Univesit.v.
freshman forward Ron Harp&lt;•r
had a ga me-high 2o points for
Miami, including a jump shot that
cu t Xavier' s lead to 49-47 with OR
seconds to play.
But Hicks hit the free throws and
Johnson's tip-in made the score ol
47. secu ring the victory.

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w
w
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w

M&lt;~y tll c joyous 1nusic ot
Chr istma s fill you \\'itll
i nncr peace ... lo\'c.

~

MOTOR PARTS CO., Inc.

W

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In

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W

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tl!

MIDDLEPORT , OH .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~f&lt;::&lt;~l!j::{~f;::(~~~"""

YULETIDE WISHES

• o.

0

o o:""
0

Thanksfor your support.
Raymond Roach

Charles Bush
Richard Wdliams
Laurence Bush
Dallas Sayre
RogerAikira
Williatn Sellers
Rhonda Wood
DeBord

Janice

Earl Shuler
Bob Hunnel
Jim Foramen

Rick PhiNps
Terry McNickle
TomMusaer
Doug 'Bell

Jilek Carsey
Ronnie Robinson

POMEROY
LANDMARK
. JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.

,

'

'I

\

w

So that our employees can enjoy the holidays, we
will be dosed from Noon Dec . 24th until 10:00
A.M. Jan . 3rd. During this period, call992-3533 for
appointments .

..
"

\

rE'&lt;'Pntl.v tx.&gt;came a

A Happy New Year.
W e also want to thank you for your
business in 1982. According to our hcst sources,
we erected more single family dwellings in the
$35,000 to $45,000 range than any other huildcr
in the Meigs-Athens area.
We were also honored with the contract,
along with F1ck Construction Co., to provide the
classrooms at Salem Center Elementary. Wl•
are proud of this accomplishment and hopP to
continue to provide affordable housing for this
market area.

• Ernest Bush

. •••

,,.:...

~aso n s,

free agent and signed a $.lo million 1 - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - contract with the Houston Astros. r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~,
Moreno hit only .2i2 last srn son and
w
struck out 121 times.

~~::;;rv1Hom e Sales, Inc. wanl~ to takl'
to wish our cusotmcrs A Men-y

Diana Lawia

'

for six

ot

"

'

OP

Games next week - Dec. 27·28 Gallla
County Holiday Tournament at Hannan

DOONESBURY

•

P
311)

2!15
345
345
439
3.ll

5
•
4
0
0

Eastern
North Ga llla

holidays," the colonel sald, "as we
still haven't tested it. If you know
anyone else that wants one for
Christmas just give us a call."
I assured him I would.
After they were gone we all went '
up into the at tic.
My daughter put a qullt on It•
because she was afraid It would get .
cold. My other daughter petted Its
nose. My son put warm milk next to ·
It "in case the 10 nuclear warheads ·
got hungry." My wife got into the ·
spirit of things and decorated Its'
fins with holly leaves.
The MX didn't respond In any ·
way and seemed to be contentedly .
sleeping.
My daughter asked me, "Do MX '
missiles dream?"
"I'm sure they do," I told her. "I
wouldn't be surprised at this very moment that It was dreaming or · :
blowing up Leningrad,''
We all tiptoed quietly downstairs ·
filled wl th the spirt t of peace and ·
good cheer. By taking In a homeless ·
MX missile during this holiday
season we all had learned the true ·
lesson of what ChJistmas Is really
all about.

..

somewherC' where you'rC' wanted .

This will be thdirst time l've pla ved
with a contender, and that's nice,
'-'
too."
" He is a quality , premicr type of
player," sa id Pirates General M.
the Pirates· regular center fielder

SVAC ONLY

Art Buchwald

I told them we were taking in an
MX for Christmas.
"Can we play with it ?" my son
wanted to know.
"No, it's not a toy. It's the real
thing."
"Does it have a joy stick on it?"
my daughter asked.
"I'm not sure," I told her. "But
even if it does, I don't think you
should fool with it until I r ead the
instructions."
" How do we get one?"
"I'm going to call the U. S. Air
Force now," I said .
I placed a call to the Pentagon
and told a colonel, "We'd like to
take in an MX missile for Christmas, as we understand you have
many who have no homes."
.o;Biess you," the colonel said.
"We've had a hard time placing
them during the holidays. We were
afraid we'd have to keep them on
the base. We'll have one delivered
to your house tomorrow morning."
The next morning a two-ton Alr
Force truck arrived and the service
personnel gingerly carried our MX
guest to the attic and positioned It so
It would be aimed toward .Europe.
"We'll come back for It after the

W L
5 0

Southern
Southwestern
Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace

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

much should show the MX missile
family that they are not alone
during the happiest season of the
year. How can anyone In this
country enjoy the Christmas holidays when they are aware that
there are hundreds of missiles who
have no place to celebrate and no
one to turn to on what should be a
festive occasion?
We took an MX into our home last
week. At first there was apprehension In the family. My wife asked
nervously, "Suppose It goes off
hile we're having Christmas

PnlSBURGH !API - The
Pittsburgh Pirates, S&lt;'eking a
replacement for departed center
fielder Omar Moreno, acquired
vetera n outfielder L&lt;'e Mazzilli
from thr New York Yankees
Wednesday in a tradeforfourminor
leaguers.
The Yank('('s obtained outfielder
Don Aubin, right -handPd pitcher
Tim Burke, catcher John llolland
and infielder Jose Rivera .
Mazzilli, 27, began his major
league career with the New York
Mets in 1971i, but lost his starting
outfield job in spring training last
season and was traded to the Texa s
Rangers. The Rangers then dealt
him to the Yank&lt;'€'i on Aug. R for
shortstop Bucky Dent.
"This is my fourth club in the last
year," Mazzilli said at a Thr('('
Rivers Stadium press conference
Wednesda y night. "It's nice to be

SVAC ST.\NDINGS
ALL GAMES

TEAM
Southern
Kyger Creek
Southwestern
Ha nnan Trace
North Ga llla
Eastern

Littlefield canned 20 points
over the White Falcons. The loss left Wah am a with an
0-2 slate.

Wahama's Don VanMeter

( 11) provides a hand check on the hot - shooting Rod

I SV AC standings I

r.'laeon and

,I
,)

caroms.

In the Initial round southern's
ouslde shooting game was as
effective as Its Inside game as the
Tornadoes shot over 50 percent
from the field. The hot-handed
whirlwinds raced to a 26-14 first
period lead, then followed the same
route to gain a healthy 48-26
advantage at the half.
Although Offensive stood out as
the highlight of the game, the SHS
defense forced Its cross-river coun·
terparts Into 36 turnovers. On the
other hand Southern's ball control
was very sharp as the hosts
commlted just 13 turnovers.
Southern unleased a speedy
running gam In the third period,
and hit several long jumpers early
In the framne to lead 67-33 with
th ree . minutes remaining In the
frame. The SHS shooting game
went sour, however, and scored
just one more bucket tt. ~ remainder of the frame, the score
69-36.
In the fourth quarter both clubs
battled evenly with 21 points each,
but Southern held on for the
Impressive 90-56 victory.
Besides Beegle and Ltttlefleld's
combined effoJi, Nick Bostick,
Tony Deem, 'J)trone Brinager,
Chris Bostick and Wade Connolly
each canned six pints. Eric Embleton and Mark Roush led the

~~~,_~~

I 00 neediest families
Under the title "100 Neediest
Families," we are asking everyone
who can possibly do It, to take in one
MX missile this ChJistmas. A cruel
and unyielding House of Represen~
tatives has made MX missiles
homeless during the holiday season. Originally they were supposed
to be sheltered In a dense pack 20
miles long and a mile wide near
Cheyenne, Wyoming, in concrete
silos. But the plan was vetoed and
now the MX missile has no place to
go.
The MX missile will not give you
any trouble If you take It In your
home. You can put It In your attic
and just visit It once a day to see If It
needs any fuel or water. It has 10
nuclear warheads on It, but you
don't have to touch them, because
they'~e already been targeted for
someplace In the Soviet Union.
You might ask, "Why should I
take an MX missile into my
home?''
The reason Is that the MX is a
deterrent against flrst-stJike aggression, and President Reagan
says we need It as a chip in the
nuclear arms talks In Geneva.
Those of us who are blessed with so

West Virginians with 13 points
each, while Darr!n Gilland added
12, and Ron Bradley 10.
Southern hit 36 of 91 from the
floor for 39.5 percent and canned 18
of :lJ from the foul line for 60
percent. Meanwhile, Wahama
canned 22 of 58 field goal tries for
37.6 percent and hit six of 14 free
throws.
The winners had 17 steals, 13
turnovers, 8 assists, and 17 fouls,
while winning the battle of the
boards 47-43. Nick Bostick, Kevin
Curfman, and Rod Littlefield led
the pack with seven caroms each,
while Embleton led WHS with 11

scores.

Playing cat-and-mouse
WASHINGTON- Jordan's King
Hussein is playing a cat-and-mouse
game with President Reagan,
except Hussein is the mouse - or
more precisely, the "Mouse That
Roared."
The doughty little monarch, as
usual, has worked his way Into
position to have a U.S. president
eating out of his hand . This is all the
more astonishing, since the king
has bombarded Reagan with bizarre, lengthy, personal letters.
One was so rude that no response
was made.
Yet Hussein is now the president's pampered guest in Washington. For his stark little Bedouin
klngdom Is situated strategically
right at the center of Reagan's
Middle East peace plan. Without
Hussein, Reagan would have a
peace table, with no one sitting at it.
Reagan sees the· klng as a
possible strategic partner and Is
r eady to offer him a generous gift of
arrns. But intelligence reports
descrtbe Hussein as "uncomforta-

· Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Southern rips Wahama

Visit from St. Gip.L_p_____----::Je_iff_G_ree~nf:-ie:-:-ld

The Daily Sentinel
IW\'liTE[) Tll HIE

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 23, 1982

I•

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
11 DO EAST

MAIN

OY

�•

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Patriots still team in turmoil
FOXBORO. Mass. iAPi - The
New England Patriots, upset wi th
the methods of first -year Coach Ron
Me_
ver. rema in a team In turmoil
even though they have gone from
ineptitude last season to playoff
contention this season.
Playprs havp expressed unhappiness with recent fines, the coaching
staff' s alleged lack of interest in
lheir strategy suggestions and
stricter rul es than those of Ron
Erhardt, Meyer 's pr'('decessor.
"Hall the players wa nt to get out
of her e." one Patriot. w~oprefr rred
anonymity, sa id Wednesday.
In thl' past two wl'l'ks, Meyer has
levird three publiciz«l finl's against
ve tera n fullback Sam Cunningham,
nmning back Vagas Ferguson and
an unidentified rooki('.
Cunningham 's father died rp.
cently, and the player was fine&lt;) for
rrturning two d a~·s late aftrr
all ending tu fam ily business. Meyer
sa id Ferguson was fined for
"conduct detrimental to th&lt;• prog-r"!'ss of th is football program."
lx&gt;licved to be a lack of effol'l in

practice. The rookie reportedly was
fined for missing a practice.
Asked Wednesday who decided
what constitutes conduct detrimental to the team's progress, M eyer
sa id , " I do."

OOf' -li mC' OCC' UITE'nC'f' .

" I don't th ink if Cinci nnati and
Sa n Diego playrd aga in , th e sam&lt;'
thing would ha ppen, " Infant&lt;' sa id
Wr~lnesda y. "You just ca n't do that
P\ 'f'l). ga ml' . "

The game turned into an aerial

rx trJ\'aganza.

~vith

thr two te&lt;Jms

trving to match each other scorf'for

srorf'.
" \Vhen you g£'1 two

tea ms vdth a

hoi ha nd like that, it can happen,"
Infante sa id. " Last _
l'ear, we had a
poor game against New Orleans,
then we got hot the next week
aga inst Houston and stayed hot for
fi ve weeks.
" if I knew what makes a team hot,
I could lx&gt; a millionaire. It 's like
when a hitter in baseball goes on a
hitting strea k_ If you askl'd him
what made him go on the streak, he
probably couldn't tell you."
Infante said the Bengals went into
th e game intending to pass about 45
times, which would be a little more
than normal. TheBengalscam e out
throwing and scored twice, so
Infante thought it best to stick with
thr passing attack .
"There was no reason tochange,"

he said. "We kept thinking about the
run , but when we threw the ball, we
were having success."
The problem was that the
Chargers, too, were having success.
"You can't get conservative
against a team like that, because
they're so explosive," Infante said .
" I think you feel a little more sense
of urgency in a game like that. You
feel you have to match them on
every score_"
When the Chargers pulled ahead
for good in the third quarter, it
forced the Bengals to stick with their
passing gam e. The result: Cincinnati put the ball in the air 56 times.
" It didn't have to be an aerial
show," Infante sa id. " It just
developed that way."
Coach Forrest Gregg said Wednesday that sloppy defensive play
aided the Chargers' outburst.
" We did not play very well
defensively," Gregg said . "We
busted some covera ge. We made
some mental errors ... San Diego
doesn 't know anything that nobody
else knows."

Today 's

Sports World
By WW Grluuley

weather during the night ," he said .
" The wind was blowing at 250
kilometers an hour. lttooka tent two
meters away from me and blew it
3,11XJ meter s down the hill. Then a
porter was taken by the wind and
fei1 3,11Xl meters. Threeofusspent36
hours on rocks with no food, frozen
feet and frozen fingers before we got
back to the base camp."
So this is not child 's play and
Saudan knows it. " It requires a lot of
concentration, " he sa id . "If you
have to think about family or
anything else, you don't do it. If you
don't like it, you can't do it ."
Twice on the wa y down Hidden
Peak, Saudan felt the footing give
way under hlsskis, thebeginnlngsof
life-threatening avalanches.
"You can do nothing in that
situation," he said . "You can only
stop and wait."
Wait and pray.
" The ava lanches are dangerous,
of course, but the most dangerous
part is skiing," sa id Saudan. "You
are not in good shapeafter 25daysof
climbing. The descent is hard."
This is no new pastime for hlnn.
Hidden Pea k was his 15th mountain
and the highest, longest vertical
drop ever attempted wi th slopes
that often fell at 55-degree angles. It
is cha llenges like that which have
led others to call Saudan, "Skier of
the Impossible."
It will be awhile before Saudan
star1s up another mountain . But he
will climb again.

Atlitntk· Olvklon
\\" I. P1·1 .
Philuck-lphla
21 'i
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Bo~ton
11
7111
Wash lrn~:t oo
1-1 11
~ll
Nf"A• .ll'~·
1.1 1:1 'dl
N,..,.,. York
9 17
JJii
fmln&amp;l Uh1sion
Mllwuukf'l'
17 1U
fill
Dl&gt;trolt
IIi 1:!
'&gt;TI
Atlanlll
1:! J:l
l!fl
Chk'a,.::o
w 1i .Tl11
Indiana
!I 17
:~"'
C'JN.Tia nd
~ '!'J
l'&gt;l
WES'I'ERS ( "ONFEiti-::"'( 'f :
1\tldw•oo;t Olvlo.lcM1
K&lt;art&lt;.~Js ruv
J:l 'l
•i"!i
S:J n Antonio
111 II ti~ J
Dalla~o
1:! 1.1
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ll uu~ton

Put on prohatiion

Pubhshnl I'Vrr y aflcmoun, Mumlil y thruu~h
F'nda) . Il l Court Strct'l, by the Ohw V~tlh•y
Publ1shmg Cumpuny - Multunct.lia, Inc ..
PU~J wruy. Ohio 4!'1769, 99~-2 1:Mi . Scl'ond dtt!i.!i
posl&lt;il!l' pa1d HI Pumt&gt;ruy. Ohio.

CLEVELAND fAPI - Boxer
Eamie Shaver s is on proba tion after
pleading guilty toflllngfalse claims
on his 19'n income tax return .

Member : The As.sot:iall'\1 Prcss, lnhux.l Oai-.
ly Press AssodHtion and the Amcril'1tn
Nc wspa~r Publishers Association, National
Ad vcr lis in w Rcprcscnllllivc, Br anham
Nt' wspa~ r Sctlcs , 733 Third Avenue. New

U.S. District Judge Ann Aldrich,
who sentenced Shavers, said the
probation department found no
reason to impose any prison
sentence or fine. Shavers had faced
two counts of income tax violations,
each carzylng a maximum penalty
of $5,roJ, three years In prison, or
both.
The two-count Indictment
char ged Shavers with falsifying his
Form 1()1() In 19'n and 1978.
The government alleged the 1977
return claimed Sbavers paid $7,500
to a Keogh retirement plan when he
bad paid nothing and that he also
clalnned $7,800 In business deductions that were unjustified.

York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER : Send 1:1ddrcss to The Daily
Sent inel. Ill Court Sl. , Pomeroy , Ohio45789.

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IM\"l-Jon
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Transactions
\\"•-dnl'!lday '" Spom ~1kln.-.

BA.•u:&amp;U.J..
,\JtM•rk•JUI ~M'
i'\EW YORK Y,\ NKF:F:S-Tradt.&gt;d ]..('('
M.vllll. oolfll'ldl"r. to thfo Pl1tsbu 1~h PI
rah-s for Don 1\ubin. ou tlh •kk&gt;r. Tim
Burk•·. pll• ·hPr . .John Hoilancl. t"&lt;llrhl·r .
.md .lrJSf' lllvr·111. lnfldrlc•r.
Nlltlona.l Lea~w
,\ TLAN T ,\
llH t\ \' t: S- I H·,I~natl• d
Tom 1
ll aus m ;m . plwhl•r . lor l'l'il!iS!j!mn('nt
IWU\.E11lAU.
f\"uUonal 8!&amp;.-.lu&gt;thu.ll r\.'NII.·latkln
nr.morr PISTONS-A nnourx,-o th;1t
Sl'Utl Ma.v . lurwa rrl . l'if&gt;arNI wah"t'r- ancl

~Ti

1+1
1'»

" "tdn.'!'Oday'" Gnrrw"'
Dosron 140. Chlt-a,~:o J:H
Clfoo.'t'land lffi, Indhma !*\
KaMaS Cit~· Wi. l:lt&gt;n\"f'f" 1fr2
1.m An~ IPs m. t; tah 1m
.
Ttmi"Siluy', Gwt"ll.,;
Dl'tt\w al [)('trul l
Washlf\Rion a t l'l'f'w .lPN '\"
1\tlilnta at M l lwu u kt ~ ·
Dallas al PhOl'llh
l.fl'o An ~k's at San n lf'l!u
Bou ~t on at Pm1 l;~nd
Cokk'n Stall' a t Sl'a tth·
l''richay', (;an..,..,
No ~afll("i; 'i&lt;'hN"Iulr'l"l

)(I .'

lti

lJf,\H .IAZZ-Annoul'l('('d t ho~t An11Kl n.\
Rutx&gt;rts. lorwam. failt&gt;d lo pa ....~ a physi
t". t l l'll;,mln:tilon 11nd ~·as not siJ!O('d b_o.·
tht · h•am·.

CHEERLEADERS - Pictured above are the
members of the 1982-83 Meigs Marauder Junior IUgh
Cheerleaders. Kneeling In front Is Diana Wllllamson.
Standing are left to right Amy Radekln, Cindy RlfOe,

and RaChel Steele. On top Is Tammy Cremeans.
Absent was Ruth Porter. 'Their advisor Is Mrs. Marla.
Grimes.

l "nl~&gt;d

BOSTO :--:

Slalt'" Foothlll.ll.f'a~ ·
RRE ,\KF:R S-S IJ: Of'tl

H.1\·mOnc1. guanl. and Bill Clmpl!rk and·
Mlkt·

M rL1u~ hlln .

Unt'l ~lt " kPr.

('t•ntf'rs: Ru v Phillips.

ChariPs

Phll ~·a\.1 .

Dt:r&gt;.'VF.Il 1.01.0-SlJ.!Tlf'rl Thoma -. Bt&gt;nnl'tt. IUO n in~&lt; h:IC'k. RotJ:-11 r&gt;umtut m.
ll~ h T o•ml. Ha rok l Norflt'f't. ollt·rt-.1\'f' lltlf'man. Vlrtor SlnlO!l. liol'b&lt;lt'kt•r. .Ja m f"l
lllm•k Ill. clf'frrt~ lw• llno.•mHn
(ii:..~I-.:HAL

AS:SOCIAllON -

Nlllional llodwy Lf•wN·

C'OU.ECoE
II'I'DF: P r:--: m : Nr t: m MM lf.\' ITY COL

(ian ......

OH.

df'~· nslvr

hnt•man

Announc-«t ll'Sif!na llon ol Ruho •11 R~·an .
\if"l ' ptvslrlml for ('()mmun !~atlon.-..

W•'lln.-.da.v·~

FABRIC SHOP

(jj •rn

Hockey Results
UufMu :1. Nl'w York Ran ~:t · r~ \
Phllarlf'lphla .1. Nf'\\· .lf'I"S('\ 1
lhlra~.:o t Tf!I'Onlo .1

ENjoy This spEciAl
holidAy SEASON,

f't)(YI'Rt\U.

~F:W YOR K RACING

u:c;F:-Namt'l"l .Jim f'oc hm n hc&gt;ad foul
ba ll I"Oal' h.

Does my Bank or Money Fund

a\\ON me to w\thdraw Anywhere?

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

e~tmas
; i!JOY.r

Keep streak intact
BELLVILLE, Ohio (API
Willard High School's boys basketball team bea t BellviliP-Cieariork
5742 Wednesday night to tie a state
record of 68 consecu ti ve regular

season victories.
The victory tied Willard with a
streak set by Ayersville in 1959-62.
The Crimson Flashes have not
lost in regular-season action since
Feb. 16, 1979, when Galion beat
them 5148.
The Huron County team is
coached by Bob Hass, its coach of 12
year s.

1

WJEH &amp; WYPC
Proudly Presents For Your
Listening Pleasure ....
This Christmas Eve and Christmas
Day a musical Christmas Card
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~reeting '&lt;Irqe

~n~~~ensnn

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:t(s we remember that first Christmas night, so iong ago,
we are moved by its wonder and hope that His eternal life
and presence will continue to enrrch tiur lives.

DIAMOND INVESTMENT FUND
gives yo u th at co nvenie nce

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Punlond
Cokk&gt;n Stair
San Dll'f!o

1

IUSPS u~,..,
A Dlvl!dun of Mullimt'dlw , fnt' .

Thlll'!tduy'!l G~

BMkrihd .bn·Lv.tloo
By '""" AwM·IMed Pnow.
EA.'«EKN CO!'I.'FERF.NC"t:

.--------------i 1
T he Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Edmomon 8. MIMl'SOta 2

Nlll~

AP Correspondeut
Ask s,-J,·ain Saudan what he does
for fun and hr responds quite
malt~r-o f- fact ly in his thick accent ,
" I climb the mountain and then I ski
down."
\othing to it, rea lly. All you need
is a mountain to climb and a
mountain of courage to ski down it.
Why would you do such a thing, he
was askrd.
" It's adventure. I think it is the
lasI adventure we ca n have. Men
climb mountains. but few ski
down ."
Fewrr still ski the kind of
mounta ins that Saudan climbs. T he
latesl conquest for the 45-year-old
Swissad\'enturerwas HiddenPeak.
a 26,600-foot challenge located in
Pakista n's Himalayas. It took 10
days to reach the base lodge and 25
more to climb the mountain _ An
hour after he arrived. Sa udan bega n
a ninP-hour descent down the slope.
" I would ha \·~ started sooner, but
I had to change from my climbing
boots to m y ski boots, " he said,
sounding somewhat apologetic.
Sa udan has been at this rather
peculiar a\·ocation for 15 years. The
preparation for aclimb,assembling
the equipment and staff to go along
takes time. The Hidden Pea k
exped ition wa s planned for four
vears. Sa udan smi led when he was
~sked about the investment of time
involved in each climb.
" It is all right_ " he said . "You do
not wa nt to rls k yourlifeevery day."
Th is is no simple operation. A
corps of 240 porters lugged six tons
of equipment for the climb up the
mountain in a trip wrought with
~~ In 1979 at Nepal, three persons
were killed in avalanches on one of
Sauda n's climbs. " We had bad

-

Thursday, December 23, 1982

NBA Standings

Offensive display hard to repeat
CINCINNATI !.\P i-Cincinnati
Benga ls offensive coordin ator
Lind y Infante doubts that the
Cincinnati Benga ls and San Diego
Chargers could duplicate their
Monday night offensive explosion.
infantr• sa id offensive fireworks
in the Chargers' 50-.14 vic tory over
the Benga ls were probabJ,- ~

•

Scoreboard ...

-season which were not publicized
and added that he-does a player "a
grea t service" when he disciplines
him.
The Patriots, 2-141ast season. are
4-3 this year - one victozy away
from clinching a playoff berth. But
Meyer, head coach at Southern
Methodist last season, said he
doesn't knowllhehasahappy team .
" I don't take a vote. I have no
idea," he said. But he added. "You
think things are bad now, you ought
to try to envision an 0-7 situation."
Players, saying there was widespread discontent, complained that,
unlike in past seasons, they and
their families were not Invited tot he
club's Christmas party. Pat Sullivan, assistant general manager,
said that was done to save money.
They also said they and their
teammates are intelligent enough
to make strategy suggestions to the
coaches but that such input Is
discouraged. " We're told not to ask
questions and just play," one player
sa id .

Is there a chance to appea l?
"None whatsoever." he said .
" I wish both incidents would
never have occurred, but, unfortunately, they have," Meyer sa id of
the actions that prompted fines
against Cunningham and Ferguson. " The consequences have to be
paid. It' s as simple as that. !don 't go
around looking to play gestapo at
all. I'm here to coach football.
" I don 't envision mysell a heavy
at all. I thinkonceyoudo som ething,
you do it absolutely right. There's no
shaving com ers on it. There's no
'what ifs' when you regard principles," he added. "There's no
emot ion involved with discipline.
'llwre's no emotion involved with
doing what's right. "
Meyer sa id the club has had a
" bunch" of disciplinarv actions th is

~c"o'"L

- -

I

of an old fashioned Christmas tkcorak every
moment ofyour Yuletide.
..,

NEW YORK CLOTHING

I
I

1126 E. MAIN

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--

HOUSE·

KIIIM

a STA,

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POMEROY, OHIO 1

·--1!&gt;:1·------------------~

MARK ·y GROCERY

..
POMROY, OHIO
(

DIAMOND

What a Perfect
time of the )lear to send best
wishes to all our friends!

SAVINGS AND LOAN COMPANY
216 WEST MAIN ST.

POMEROY. OHIO
Debit Card requires cred it approval .

992-6655
A S ubS1d1ary o '

�Thursday, December 23 , 1982 .

'
Thursday, December 23, 1982

Pom eroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 6- The Daily Sent inel

Christmas Eve at Sacred Heart

. Indiana durnps Ken lucky; Tennessee, Georgetown ·.,.i.i ¥'i :i" s=n~s" '~ =~ s: &lt; 'IQI !I I qi
In other

By As:ot()(•iah•d Prt•s.'
L f'U\'P it tu HohtJ~ · Knight 's
df'fr nsf'-m inritlfl I ndia n ;~ lt 'dlll ltJ
sl op l\Pnlut · k~ ··s twt "htHilint..:

Wilrtrat s.
Kl' ntuck\·. rankt'fl :'\o

~- h&lt;~d

t.&gt;t &gt;t.·n

shooting t-i l !Jt 'll'&lt;' nt !rum tht· fidd
with a 7-0 rPcurrl hdun ·run ning into
t tlr fifth -r: tnkt'fl Hoosit't ·c;; \\.t'fl!lt '"
, l.1~ ' nigh t J t Blwrn i ng-ton. 1nd
Ind iana . whi ch lt•d .l.~ :!1 :11
halft inw. rallir'&lt;l from "t'\'t ' !l puinh

bark in tht · St'&lt;'uml h.J!f to -.t·un· ,~
112 - ~1~ roiiPgt · b; , ~ kt · lh .tll \ 'it·tor:.
~ h i n d Rand ~ \\.illrn;m':-. 11 p11inb
and Trd Kitcht ·l·.., Hi Thi' !l tll l...,it·r...,,
with &lt;1 man - tu - m;~n ddt ·n.. ,t·. hPld
\ · to ·~ o p.: •rc·t•nt ;Jgt· puinr s
K rnturk_
t&gt;e lmv it s a \·rragt ', 1rHI hit 1St'' ~ : Hn •t ·
thr ows - al l tilt ' '-'t'&lt;'oml h,il ! - in

11J nning it s I"C'&lt; 'C HTltp X-i l.

Kni.c ht. in hi .. ., l~th "' '~t.. . on ,t t
I nd iana . sairl . ··[!'..., tht· 114: ·... t 1-\t ·n
turk,\· tram I \ -,. :-.t ·t ·n ...,i n&lt;.'t · I \ ·t•ht ·t·n
hf'I'P."
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best dt •lt·n.-..( • nt·\·,.
pla_
\ "f'&lt;i ;1g ain st al! .n ·;tr .. _
...,; tid
Kenturk.\" ('O&lt;.H'h .lot • n. 11.11!. \rtlt&gt;St'
\Vildc;tt...., had bt •a It ·n I nd i.tna in 1ht ·ir
thr('{' pn ·\"iou:-. nwt•ting:-.. "' lndi&lt;..~n&lt;~
wa s pn•:-.suring u.-.. ttl! {I\., ·1 t ht ·t ·1 tUrf .
till'

Tht'.\" bn•ak .\"UU d O\\ ·n ...

'"1\, · r rH~ ·

~a m es

in\'OI\'ing Top

trams. No. ~l TPnnrss('&lt;'

1&lt;lUll -d Okla1
10m a StaIt' ~~ 1 - Ciii:

No. 11

( ;vurgrtown snapp(Jf'd a two-gamf'
lvsing strrak wit h an X0- 1-i~ romp
CJ\'t' l·South&lt;.•rnof Ba ton RougrHO-n:l:
:\u. 17 Nr\·ada -L.t s Vf'gascaptu r{'(l

oht· l!t'IJt'l Roundup ll'it h a Ti
,.i('to 1 ~ ·

h~

DH'r Baylor ,·and tR-r anked

l'illan"'." do1111f'CI &amp;&gt;ton Hall R7-fiH.
'1\'p plal'f'&lt;l with hard with a gent
I&lt;.,.,.1 of intensitY." sa id !&lt; night . who
'"" g-uiflt'(l Indiana to two NCC'i\
t·hampionship' &lt;197fi. I ~1 1 . .. and
l..:&lt;·nt u('k\ d id . lt10. I t w as a ga mf' of
.c&gt; tn•aks.'"
\Vi ltman . a tl-fuo t -1) senior and 1hf'
llt H.J.'-'i&lt;'r&lt; IPading scor C'r. sro n--d
!our ot l nrl ia na 's six fir ld goal s in t hP
S('{"Ufld ll;llf. aml ·tlln'f' clutch fn'f'
throw s. Ht• alsu gra bbrd a ga mC'high 12 rdx)und s.
1\: i tchrl. a h-XsPnior. rolh'('tf'd six
of lncli ; lll ~t·s frf'f' throw.-. !at(' in thP
l!i lnl4 ' . including two that gmT· thr
l luosi t ·r.-. a 60-:l:ilrad \\"i th -lll sc'C'onds
If'! I. 1-\t • nturk~, rPdu c0CI it... , drfiri t tu
tm' pt lint s wit h four S('{'tlllds It •ft . but
Kil('hl •ll adfh'&lt;i anothPr !rPc throw
\\'ith t\\"0 St'('OildS IU gu.
.I im Thomas added lli points for
I nd iana. whilf' Mrl\'in Turp in

scoowl 17 points and Charles Hu rt 1o
for Kl'nlucky.
Da le Ellis' :!9 point s poWl'l'f'Ci
Trn nf'SSf'{'. J.fl. u\'E'r visit ing Okl ;..~ ­
homa Statf'. 'l-5. 'I)TonP Brama n
added 11 points apiecP for tile
l'oluntccrs who lt-d by as muchas26
points in the first half.
'' It 's not like wr \VPI'C' pressing or
l r\'ing to run up the scor e, " said

T&lt;•nness" ' coach Dan DeV()(•, " I hey
j ust WPrC'n't

playing the inside•

def&lt;·nsP ...
Sophomore Pal Ewing scored a
car&lt;'&lt;'r-high :l'i points and grabbed
15 rPbounds as Grorgetuwn made
its n'&lt;'ord 7-2 over Sout hf'r n. --1 -;.,, at
LandovPr. Mct . The game also
marke-d the first extended action of
lht• season for point gua rd F ow l
BI'Own. ll'ho had been sid&lt;•lined .
ilflf' r kllrf' surger_\·.
" II wa s good to have Fred back ...
said G&lt;'Orgei0\111 Coach .John
Thompson. " He didn 't scor&lt;' much
osevpn poin ts! but he had an rfff'C·t
on what was going on."
Sid ney Green's 27 points and 10
rebou nds earned him lhr mos t
,·aluable player award in U:\ I.V\
triumph . its seventh withou t a loss.
ovrr Ba y lor. J -.l Danny T ar ka nia n.
son of Jerry. the Runnin' Rebels'

coach. contributed 20 assists for the
winner s. who also got 15 points
apiece from Eric Booker and Larry

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· · · or a

season that'S
rich in love and

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May you and your loved I(
oo"a be happy and safe 11
during
this
Christmas 11
Season and the comlnt W
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ElliS &amp; SONS
'6 SQHIQ SERVICE
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992-6685

s. Third st.
Middleport. 0.
149

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Middleport. OH.

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Florida State. and Vanderbilt .
behind 14 jX&gt;ints each from Phil Cox
and Ted Young, downed Middle
Tennessee 64-5.1.
Southern Ca lifornia. with Wayne
Ca rlander scoring 20 point s. topped
. Color ado Sta te 72-6.'i: .John Toms' l 8
points led Wake Forest over Robert
Mor ris 100-69; Georgia edged Georgia Southern 57-oo on Terry Fair's
lair basket: Mark Wes t's 19 points
paced Old Dominion past Nor! h
Carolina-Charlott e 78-58: Minnesota defea ted Jacksonvile 62-48 as
fres hman Marc Wilson hi121points.
and Xavier of Ohio got clutch
shooting from An thony Hicks and
Eddie Johnson in bea ting Miami of
Ohio 54-50.
Howard Carter's 21 points and
Leonard Mitchell 's clu tch free
throws ea rned Louisia na State a
5149 victory over Texas-EI Paso
and Wyoming cru shed Southern
Color ado 100-67 behind Mike Jack-

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·pB:i!s::&lt; B:IIB:II B:i!l&lt;OI B:IIB:III&lt;IUIIII

i\nderson.
Long Island University, led by
Robert Cole's 25 points. won the
Rebel Roundup consolation game
with an 81-79victoryover Morehead
Stale.
Villanova.pacedby reserveMike
Mulquin's l o point s. boosted it s
record to 4-2 with a Big East.
Confer ence triumph over Seton
Hall. John Plnone and Stewart
Granger each added 14 in the
nightcap of a Philadelphia Palestra
doubleheader.
LaSalle won the the opener. 82-65.
bPhind Steve Black 's 19 points.
Notre Dame's John Paxson
scon&gt;d a career-high 30 points and
Ken Ba rlow added 21 in powering
thelrish past Va lparaiso 1!ll-78,and
Russell Cr oss erupted from a
scoreless firs t half to hit 13 points.
including the go-ahead basket. in
Purdue's 6.1-6.1 win over DePaul.
In other ga mes, Marquette got 19
points from Dwayne Johnson and 16
from Glenn Rivers in a 61-51victory
O\'er Kansas State: Keit h i\rmstrong's only point of the night.
coming wi th 20 seconds left, earned
Pittsburgh a 75-74 victory over

Cluistrnas Eve at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church this year will
Include both a Chlklren's Mass at
7: 30 p.m. and the traditional
Midnight Mass with music to begin
atll: 30 p.m.

!

son's 28 points.

. - - - - - - - - - - ---!

I11

Sta t e Farm i s There .

11

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s tate Fa rm
~Insura nce Compames
f1
Home Offices
~ Bloominglon. Illinoi s

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1--- - - -- -- - --_.L- - - - - -- - ---

Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ballard were
surprised upon their return from
Florida recently with a 40th
wedding anniver sary party hosted
by their children, Brenda and
David.
Streamers and wedding bells
were featured in the decorations.
The tiered cake was decorated with
blue rosebuds and topped with a
bridal couple. Ice cream, coffee and
tea wer e served to Mr. and Mrs.
Grover White, Jr., Synthla and
· Serena, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolle
and Patty, Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery
Circle and Nikki, Mr. and Mrs. Dan
Spencer, Kirt annd DanleUe.

IT'S MI NE -

Indiana's Randy Wittman (24)

grabs a r ebound in front of Melvin Turpin of

in Bloomington. Indiana beat the second rated
Kentucky WUdcats 62-59. ( AP Laserphoto)

Kentucky in Wednesday's Indiana · Kentucky game

Group may form cage loop
CHAfU.F:STOr\. W.\· ,, r,\ 1' '-,\
local

w~nt s

1!1 ftwm ;1
se mi - p rcJ f r~sion; tl
ha skPtba ll
Jeaguf' with tlc•adquarli 'l' in ('h;t
rleston and franC"hi ...P !-. in ni ·ighh01
ing stairs. a :-.pok1·sma n ...,; tid.
Keit h Prill. a \'iCt ' pJ-r•.-..idl'nt~tl 1ht ·
group

proposed Unilf'CI 11a skr·l ba II '' '-" K i
ation. sa id thr ):._r rrJUp w;tn !s to ~·ll
$10,((X) fra nchisPs in C'i tir~ ~ uch a .~

Pit! :.,hurgh: Akron. Ci ncinna ti a nd
c r,lumiJu.s. Ohio: Richmond and
l {o.~ nnkc·.
Va .: Lrx ingto n and
l.oui'-\"illt ·. !{_\" .: Knox\·illc'. TPnn .:

a net l'harlollf' and Winston -Salem .

Prill sa id West Vir ginia's tra m
would be ca lled the "Cardinals."
add ing thai he hoped to recru it
players graduat ing from West
V irgi nia and Marsha ll univC'r sities.

'\ .!' .

l'tlsitiw• rf'sponsC's alrr&lt;.~ d.Y haV('
ht ·c·n l"f'CPivrd from Pittsburgh and
\·\"in stun -Sa \Pm. hP sai d WPd nrsda.v
at ; t ll{'WS confcrenc0.

r - - -- -- - - - - - ' - - - -- - - - - - - - t

Thinking
of dear friends, old
and new, and wishing
them all a season of unending,

old faahloned delight•!

RAWLINGS-COAJS.BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME
MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO
•

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Children's M ass will begin
with a processional around the
church and will feature the oldest
member of the congregation, Vic
Whipple, 91, placing the Baby Jesus
in the crib.

There will be songs and scriptures
by the children around the crib. The
children will also take the offering
and participate in presenting the
communion elements.

�Page-S- The Dai ly Sentin el

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 23, 1982

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Meigs County regional group members gather for area meetings
Pomeroy UMW
hoslt'(l ;1

&lt; ' llri ~tmil" pt~rt .\ ·

PonH 'rn~ ·

for ttlt •
\\'onwn

t ' nih&gt;&lt;! ;\1 ·: thudi ~ t
at thPir hornt · rt'('t' nth·.
For tht· lX'l'asiun tht· p.1rsun agt'

was rx tf•nsi\'l'l \ c l t•CtJr; tlt~! . '1\n•nty
ninv nlembt ·r-. :tlld .L: Ut "' h . ttlPlldt'l:!

the dinner aftt•r ll'hich llomth,l'

l xmniP pr~st' n t ed the program .
Earh om• f'Xpresscd sl~ ntimen t s on
famil.v trad itions.

Till' n0w off ir~rs wrrP installed
and inrludr Evelyn Lucke, preslriPnt: BPtty Baronick. vir~ prrsid~nt:
Ru th Moor('. srrretary;
M.\Tti s Parkrr, trea surer; Grrtt·udt• Mitchell. serretmy of program : Dorothy Downie, Christia n

personhood, Virginia Edwards,
supportive romP'luni ty; Bernice
Carpenter, Christian social Involvement; 1\da Warner, Chnstian
globa l concern ; and Nellie Wright ,
Thelma Dill and Polly E ichinger,
nom inating commi tt ee.
Gifts were exchanged and the
party was rlosro with carol singing
accompanied bv Martha Hoover at

the plano.

Group II
A special Christmas project of
helping others through money
donations was canied out at the
Tuesday night meeting of Group II
of the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs. Carl
Horky with Mrs. Edward Burkett as
co-hostess, the group voted to use
the thank offering for a needy
fa mily, toglve$10toanotherfamlly,
and to contr ibute $50 to the
Ministerial Association for their
program of assisting needy
families.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall presided at
the meeting with the Rev. Wanda
.Johnson, pastor , giving the prayer .
Mr s. Myron Miller read an article
written by Hildegard Fuhr of
Germany for the least coin roller·
lion, and the pastor had the study
fmm the book. "Praise God." Also
read was "The Best Christmas
Pageant Ever" by Barbara
Robinson.
Mrs. David Cumings had a
poem, "Christmas Spiders." Appreciation was extended to Mrs.
Haptonstall for her leadership for
, ,e past two years. ,;. gift exchange
was held and the pastor had the
closing prayer .
Refreshments of salad, fruit cake
and coffee were served .

corned members, wives and guests
with "The Professionals VIew of
Fly-by-Night Life Insurance Sales
People" as th e subj ect of
discussion. ,
Bill Hussell, Mason, Nationwide
representative, said many people
enter the life Insurance business,
sell a few friend and neighbors and
then disappear when It comes to
having to start work In selling and
service. Usually the unsuspecting
customer Is then left with no one to
service his Insurance, Russell said.
Bill Quickel, of Davts-Qulckel
Agency, stated health Insurance
also comes under the same problem since there Is generally no
agent to discuss coverage aspects
with.
The Life UndeiWI'Iters Assn.,
Don Thomas, Indianapolis Life,
said Is comprised of professional
life and health Insurance agents

who must adhere to a code of ethics
as well as maintain continual
education requirements to remain
In the association.

r-----------

&amp;31 JACKSON AKE • RT. 35 WEST
Phone 448· 4524

Chr istmas Dance Revue of '82
was the theme of a dance recital by
Ba rbara's Sehool of Dance at
Southern Junior High School Monday evening.
The program consisted of dance
numbers students have learned
since September and was well
received by a large crowd. Dancers
were ages three and up with each
group performing two numbers.
Included In the program were
Michelle McCoy and Holly WJ JJJ.
ams, two tap numbers, "Aint She
Sweet" and "Santa Claus is
Coming to Town"; Leigh Anne
Redovian and Shelly Winebrenner,
a jazz dance to " Eye of the Tiger"
and a tap, "Suzy Snowflake" ; Kelly
Rizer , a tap, "Cuddle Up a Little
Closer" and a jazz dance, "You
Should Hear How She Talks About
You"; two song and tap numbers

I HAVE A HAPPY I
I
AND SAFE 1
II CHRISTMAS ~
~

CARTER'S

~ Plumbing

w

~

&amp;Heating w

I
POMERY. OH.
11
k~IEOIIIEOIIIEOIIIEOII~IEOIIIEOIIIEOIIIEOIISII:

Friendly N eighbors
EASTERN INDUCTEES - New Inductees to
the Eastern High School National Honor Society were
front row, Tim Roher!.,, Melissa Thomas, Paula
F recker, Shelly Bearhs. Middle - Lori RUehle,
Melissa Scarhrough, Ann Diddle, Pam Riebel, and
Randy Bahr. Back row - Aaron Parker, Renee

Buckley, Jennifer Grover and Angle Spencer .
honorees were Inducted Into the EllS Natlnal Honor
Society during tapping ceremonies Wednesday
afternoon at a combined Christmas assembly at the
hlgh school.

H onor Society members inducted
New inductees to Eastern High
School Na tiona I Honor Society
were seiertcci Wedn esday after·
noon during annual tapping rc rem-

onies and combined the Chtistma s
assembly in the sc h ool

•

gymnasium .
Special guests speaking at the
assembly were school principal

David Janson, Superintendent Ri·
chard Roberts, and Board Presi·
dent Dorsel La rkins. Among those
in attendance, were parents and
the enti re Eastern High ·School
student body.
Severa I num bers were performed by Eastern High School
concert band under the direction of

James Wilhelm , and a chorus
consisting of students and teachers
sang Christmas carols.
Rev. Carl Hicks, guest speaker at
the ceremony, spoke of both the
honor of the students sleeted to the
honor sclety and also made a
Christmas presentation for the
holiday season.

Friendly Neighbors Club holiday
met&lt;ting was held at the home of
Mrs. Linda Vaughan recently.
A potluck luncheon was served
and members had Christmas
read ings and poems In response to
roll call. Crystal Vaughan sang
"Rudolph, the Red nosed Reindeer"
and other songs. Decorations of the
Vaughan home fea tured a decora ted tree. Mem bers exchanged
gifts and signed cards for friends
and neighbors who are hospitalized.
Attending were Linda, Crystal
and Bridget Vaughan, Clara Shenefie ld , Anna Ogdin , Meri um Hof·
fm an. Grace Colwell , Catherine
Colwell , Nina Macomber, Beatrice
Reinhart. Bernice Midkiff, Char·
lotte Erlc•wine, Martha Chapman,
Ruby Lambert. Evelyn Deva ult,
H~l en Miller, L u~Shen efield , Catheri ne Shenefi eld , Mary Nelson,Hazel
Fra ncis, Dorothy Bolen. Linda
Montgomeroy, Melissa Erlewine,
Pam Colwell, Beulah Be ll~ Wright ,
and 1\nn Halliday.

Underwriters
Association
Ladles night was observed at the
Christmas meeting of the Meigs ·
Gallla · Mason Life Underwriters
Association held at the Timber
Room of the E nteriainer, Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va.
Walter Grueser , president, associated with Midland Mutual, wei·

Bookmobile schedule for the
week of Dec. 27-31in Meigs County
is provided by the Meigs County
Public Library under contract with
the Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
· Monday, Dec. 27 - Burlingham
(store) 2:55-3: 25; Pagevllle (old
store! 3:554: 25; Harrisonville
(Rigg's House on S.R. 684 l 4:355: 00; New Lima Rd. (1 mile south
of Ft. Meigs) 5: 20-6, shari film
shown 15 minutes after bookmobile

T~nn .

Th0 int;.~n t \~ . !! ~ Jl indlt·..., lrmg and
WPig ht d C'ighl pt1Ulld~ . Ollt' tJUIH'P .

Mat f' rnal ~ r.tndpa n· nt s Llrt ' :.iilr
Ki tzmi ll~r . Bristol. T&lt;·nn .. and Carol

by fi ve-year-olds, Jesslka Codner ,
Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer L awrence, Kendra Norris, Jeni Ste·
wart, "Tomorrow" and "Chrlsmas
Cookies and Holiday Hearts". A
jazz dance, "Disco Magic" and a
tap, " Win ter Wonderland" by
Roberta Caldell, K imberly Jenkins, Stephanie Sayre and E mily
Shain . Two song and ·tap numbers,
"Do, Re, Ml " and "Rudolph, the
Red Nose Reindeer" by Christina
Cum mins, Tassi Cummins, Deana
Good, Heather Harris, Brandl
Mallory, Jennifer Neigler, Nicole
Nelson, Jamie Ord, Amy Beth
Redovlan, Mandy Stewart with
Tassi Cummins as Rudolph and
Jennifer Nelgler as Santa.
Angle Davis, Rachelle Davis,
L egl na Hart, Donlta Manuel ,
Marty Maynard, Marc! Merrifield,
Kristen Pape, Sarah Philson, Alicia

Va n Meter performed two j azz
nu mbers, "Abracada bra" and
"Sleigh Ride" . Car issa Ash, Cyn·
thla Caldwell, Kerl Caldwell, Jac- ·
quellne Jewell, Stacie Reed and
Ca milla Yoacham tapped to
"Guess Wha t" and sang "Jingle
Bells". The instructor, Barbara
Lawrence presented a tap routine
to " It's the Most Wonderful Time of
the Year."
The program concluded with all
dancers singing " We Wish You a
Merry Chris tmas" and with Santa
arriving to talk to the children and
distribu te candy canes.
Barbara's School of Dance is
located In Syracuse. Enrollment Is
open for new members during
January. Students unable to take
part In the Christmas program
were Jennifer Johnson and Kenda
Rizer .

arrives; Rutland (Depot St.) 6: 408: 10, shor t film shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile anives.
Wednesday, Dec. 29 - Chester
( fire station) 2: 15-2: 45; Keno
(North side of Keno Bridge) 3-3; 30;
Success Rd. (near 39000) 3: 4:&gt;4: 15;
Long Bottom (Post Office! 4:255: 10, short film shown 15 minutes
after bookmobile arrives.
Reedsville (Reed's store) 5:206: 10, short film shown 15 minutes

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

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

RACINE
OFFICE

949-2210
Columbia Township Board of
Trustees wUI hold its regular end of
the year meeting on Friday, Dec.
31, at the townshlp building.

8:00 TO 3:00
8:00 TO 6:00
8:00 TO 3:00

SYRACUSE OFRCE

after bookmobile arrives; Tupper 's
Plains (L odwick's) 7:10-7:50;
Baum Addition 8:20-8: 50.

Meeting notice

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

SYRACUSE-RACINE
MEMBER FDIC

SYRACUSE
OFFICE
992-6333

WE WILL CLOSE AT NOON CHRISTMAS EVE
I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!1111!!!1!!!
1II::I ~~ ~ IEOII~~II::III::I=~~~::~~~II::I~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,

~

r !EOII~~IEOIIIEOIIIIII~~ ~ ~~~~II::I=~~~II::I~~~~~~~ ~~~~ II::I IEOII ~~II::I ~~~,

~
~

THE RENEWABLE RESOURCE

his holy Christmas, may
you expenence mner peace, JOY m
your soul and love in your heart.
A sincere thanks to all our patrons!
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
•

•

0

•

Tina Spencer . Back row - Mark Rice, David Gaul,
Ed Werry, and Brian Collins.

1-:tlwards. l':rwin, Tenn . Mat~rnal
gn'a t-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Zl'il Ll'fJford and Mrs. Nedra
Tiplon. Erwin. TC'nn.

Patl'rnal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs.Dale Walburn, Middleport. and great-gra ndparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Ra ymond Walburn,
also of Mi:ld leport.
·

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W

A
tree
~
is
~
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God's
~
W
creation
W
everywhere
W
W
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on earth · in W
W
eluding Brooklyn.
W
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It 's said man once
W
lived in trees. When he
W
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climbed down, life never
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I!
again was to be quite so
W
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simple . . . yet only then did the
W
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tree get truly appreciated. For
~
W
here was food and fuel and shelter.
~
W
Then a weapon , a tool, a wheel · and
W
transportation. And now it's floors, doors,
11
veneers , piers, baskets, caskets . .. rubber for
W
gaskets. It' s a handle for brooms, shovels, rakes
... syrup on pancakes. It's paper and paints ...
i
tars, spars, boxes and boxcars . .. storage bins and
11
blowing pins. It 's toothpicks and matchsticks ... even
plastics . .. material for distillation, lamination, insulation
... windows for ventilation. and a thousand and one other
we-can 't·do-withouts. Yet few people look at a tree in the same
way . To lhe sma ll boy it's a favorite and strategic place ...
where you build a treehouse, spot a woodpecker,
cut sling shots and fishpoles, hang old tires and
climb for fun . To the naturalist it's probing a fascinating world of buds,
blossoms, bark, needles, cones and leaves ... spectacles of color ...
and some 1,035 domestic species. (Yet to a baseball player it's as simple as a
stick of second-growth ash, sized and shaped to "feel like a million.") To the artist
it's inspiration ... alone on a windswept hill, timberline patchwork on a mountainside,
thick and verdant in a valley . To the homeowner it's beauty and shade and property
,... ,u., ... also digging, planting, pruning, edging, feeding and a lot of other weekend
To the hobbyist and craftsman it's a new bookcase, picnic table, panelled den, plywclod~
shelves .... a chance to become downright "immortal" . To the tim berman it's a bust II
big business, measured by cords and board feet. But most of all, a t. .:e remains what
It was in the first place ... man's ever-lasting friend . For we'd sure be "stumped"
·
for a mighty
lot of things
in a world
without trees!
~

Daughter born to Walburns
Mr. and \'lr . . . Stt ·n·n \\'alburn.
Kno:(Yi lk. Tt ·nn .~n · ;1nnounring
the hirth 11! .1 d.Ju ;. .: ttlt ·J. o.. ; um mPr
A stllr •\ . IJt " l l o~t l i H ·. h , lm :-.unC'it .\ '
:Ylt"Ciir ,d c·,·n!t 1 111 .111hn...,,,n Cit _\·,

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

OVAL releases Meigs County bookmobile

Christmas
and
Happy
·New Year!!
EASTEH?'i HONORS -Senior members of the
Eastern High S..·huol National Honor Society are,
front, Lisa Collins, Pam Murphy, Julie Elberfeld, and

RAONE OFRCE

Southern hosts Christmas Dance Revue of 1982

••wiiiiiiii!JIIIIIIJIIIIIIEOIIYUI

~ II::IIEOIIIEOII!!IIIIIIIIEOIIIIIIIEOII

SO THAT OUR EMPLOYEES MAY HAVE 1 DAY OFF AWEEK THE
FOLLOWING HOURS WILL BE OBSERVED AT THE RAONE AND
SYRACUSE OFRCES OF THE HOME NATIONAL BANK
BEGINNING JANUARY 1, 1983.

Christmas Greetings To You From
CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
312 Sixth Street

675~1160

Spirit of Christmas is
vl'rvwhere touching all
'l'llrthly creatures w1th its
magic and wannth. We
share thi s Spirit with our
friends and wish you a
wonderful holiday season.
Our gratitude to all.

FROM
AU OF
US!

Point Pleasanf
'·

"

•

,,

..

•

'

�Thursday, December 23, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Helen help us

I Meigs County correspondence Meigs County School District releases honor roll
Reedsville

Carmel

Mrs. Roy F lck, Beth Layton, and
son Zack of Columbus visited with
Mrs. Lyle Balderson a nd family
recently.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Garth Smi th spent
Thanksgiving with Mr. a nd Mrs.
Howard Young of Paden City.
Kay Balderson was a n overnight
guest of her grandmother, Mrs.
Hazel Balderson, Vie nna, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens,
Mr. a nd Mrs. Denver Weber a nd
Mark, a nd Mr. a nd Mrs. Ernes t
White head were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of Mr . a nd Mrs. BtU
Meredlty of Beverly .
- Mrs. L. Balderson

Mrs. Edison Johnson a nd Mrs.
Mabel Brace of Racine called atthe
home of Arthur Johnson a nd
Sheryl, Patrlck a nd Betty Va nMeter on Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Arnold Thordson of Cedar·
vi lle. Mr. a nd Mrs. Russell Harris
of Xenla, Ohio were a t the home of
Lula Circ le a nd attended the
funeral of F lorence Wilson .
Mr. a nd Mrs. Douglas Circle
visited Mr . a nd Mrs. Gle n Abies of
Bald Knobs on Sunday.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert Lee called
a t the home of Mrs. Ethel Orr of
Chester on Sunday.

Wolf Pen

Harrisonville

Everett Ray Johnson of Orla ndo,
Fla . was Tuesday to Wednesday
visitor of Helen Jo hnson. Ot hers
vis iting were Mr. a nd Mrs. James
Johnson, Teresa a nd Jamie Sue
Davis, Mr. a nd Mrs. Larry J ohn·
son, Tahn!l' J o and Brady of
Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. Kenne th
J ohnso n, Anne tte and Dua ne, local,
and Mrs. Beverley Roush, Rodney,
Cheryl, Joey and E lizabeth Ann of
Pomeroy.
Everett Ray Johnson of Orlando,
Fla . was visitor of Mr. a nd Mrs.
J ames J ohnson and famlly.
Mr. and Mrs. E lme r Bailey were
recent Sunday vis! tors of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy Sargent and famil y.
Mrs. Robert Russell and Mrs.
E thel Oark spent a weekend In
Sprlngfteld with relatives.

The Lend -A- Ha nd held Its a nnual
Christmas potluck supper a t the
c hurch Sunday night. Mr. a nd Mrs .
Larry Clark a nd da ughters Tamra,
Penney a nd We ndy of Middleport
sa ng several songs .
Luella Ha ning, Glenn a Colburn
of Lancaste r, Minnie Foil, Colum·
bus a nd Viola PIUot, Sarasota, Fla.
visited Mike E pple recently.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Bob Alklre a t·
tended Cam pers Oub potluck
Sunday a t Mr. a nd Mrs. Billy Gene
Eva ns' home In Galllpolls.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Robert E pple,
Eva ns City, Pa. called on his
parents, Mr. a nd Mrs. Mike Epple.

Grttt'llh, Donna Hall, Teresa Harden, Anita
Harmon, Scott Harrtson, Michael Hawk,
Priscilla Hardman. WUUam Holcomb, Paula
Horton, Usa Jarv1s, Assem K abesh , Nata11e
Lambert, Tina Leark, M ary Lee, Suzan
Lightfoot, J ohn Lyons, Shirley Mc0ona1d,
Rod M anley, Mark Mattox. Kim Maynard,

Those photocopy greetings can depress one's holiday spirits

Lori Mayna rd , Rhonda Mltc~ll. Kathertne
Molden, Lort Pickett, Geraldtne Reynolds,
John Rideoour, Henry Rider, K1m Roosh,
Krts Snowden, Ta nya Stobart. Paula
Swisher, Joan Tanner, Greg Tayk&gt;r, Wendy
Tillis, Michael Tromm, Penny Wandling,
Brian WU\, Renee WWls , Susanna Wlse.

By HELEN AND SUE BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Every Christmas season we get a
dozen or so photocopied letters
describing how Johnny made the
soccer team; a nd Geraldine won a
4-H prlzeforbestplg; a ndDadgot a
promotion a nd Mom broke her
a rm, or vice versa ; ·a nd on and on,
ad nauseum.
You can divide these yearly
reports Into five categories:
Sob stories: Our house burned, I
had three oepratlons, John Joss his
job, our dog died, but other tha n
that, we're fine.
Brag s heets: Newton was top of
his class a nd wUI be going on to
Harvard; Mary Is earning straight
As and was homecoming queen;
we trled Europe again this year.
And how are things with you•
Just the facts: Our da ughter had

4-H news notes
. and two advisors In attendance.
Officers were elected for 1983. They an:&gt;:

Calendar

presklent. Becky RUe; v1ce presk:lent . Betty
Ann Loftis; secretary, Kevin Napier; treas·
urer , Lisa Vll1anueva; news reporter, April
Clark ; health chalnnan, Kim Calvert ; safety
chairman , Tara Clark; and recreation
leader. Beth Clark.
Amount of dues was set at 7S Ct'flts. Ideas

For refreshments a Christmas potluck was

TIIURSDAY

rlr;~~;~;~;~~~;~;~~~~~~~~;~;~~;~~;ir1

RACINE Pos t 602 will meet In
special session Thursday at 6
p.m . at the hall. Government
cheese will be dlstrlbuted to all
needy Legionnaires of the Post.
SYRACUSE - First Churc h
of God of Syrac use will have Its
annual Christmas program
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
church. The public Is Invited to
attend.

w
w
w

w
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FRIDAY

w

POMEROY -Christmas Eve
services at Grace Episcopa l
Church will be he ld a t 7 p.m. by
Rev. AI Mc Kenzie. The public Is
Invited.

w
w

II ~"'~
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1
fi

REEDSVILLE - Christmas
program at Reedsville United
Methodist Church Friday a t 7
p.m . Public Invited.
POMEROY - A Christmas
program will be presented a t
Pom eroy Wesleya n Holiness
Church on Christmas Eve a t 7: 30
p.m . The church Is loca ted on
Route 143, Harrisonville Road .
Rev. Earl Fields, pastor, invites
the public .

TUESDAY
POMEROY- Drew We bs ter
Post 39, America n Legion Aux il·
iary, will meet Tuesday a t 7:30
p.m a t the ha ll. Mrs. Ches ter
Wells will have the progra m on
ve t e r a n s
a ff a ir s a nd
rehabilitation.

Astrograph

us

I

~

POMEROY -Christmas program at Pomeroy Wesleyan
Holiness Church, Harrisonville
Rd., 7: 30p.m : Friday. The Rev.
Earl Fields, pastor, Invites the
public.

for

letting
serve
you!

MERRY
CHRISTMAS

~

DR. JAMES
SCHMOU

llall:'ll:'ll:'~~--""'ll:'

Here's h oping Christmas holds
many happy surprises in
store for you. Enjoy it to the fullest!

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

.,

Gravely Tractor
Sales &amp; Service
Manning Roush-Owner
Pomeroy, OH .

It's the little traditions of the Christmas
season that make it so special. The sights.
the sounds, fun and festivities ... all fill
the air with a spirit of warmth as we open
our hearts and homes with gladness.
What better time than the holidays to thank
all of you who have been so kind and
thoughtful to us throughout the year? It's been
our sincere pleasure to serve you.

DEAR R.C. :
We like reader Jo's solution to the
Christmas card rush:
Hele n a nd Sue: This year, finally,
. I did It! I ruthlessly c ut down on
ca rds last Christm as, but tacked a
list of senders a nd other friends to
m y office bulletin boa rd, together
wi th their addresses.
Each week I wrote two or three
persona l le tters expla lnlng tha t my
Christ m as wishes weren't confined

Community Action
Agency holiday hours
Ga llla · Meigs Community Action
Agency offices will be closed
Friday, Dec. 24 for the holidays.
Norm a l agency hours wlll be
resumed Monday, Dec. 27.
The agency will also be closed
Friday, Dec. 31, with normal hours
to be resumed Mond ay, J a n. 3,1983.

to Decem ber. They were friendly
notes which expressed joy In old
friendships a nd shared pertinent
(usua lly funny) things about our
lives.
When the holidays arrived,
Christmas card drugery didn't. I'd
"chatted" all through tbe year.
From the responses received, It's
evident m y friends liked these
unexpected · type c ha ts, too. EASY WRITER JO
And here's a nother Christmas
card a lternative:
Hele n a nd Sue: Instead of cards
to local frie nds, I telephone brief
greetings. Also I've pared my
out-of-town list to the bone. Total
savings for Chrismtas cards and
sta mps: around $60.
So I send a chec k for $60 to
CARE . - FEELING WORTHY

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
both, If you wa nt a combination
An old saying goes, " There are mothe or da ughter a nswer - In
two ways of spreading light: To be r-ca_r_e_o_fth
_ ls_n_e_w_spa_pe_r._l_ __
the candle, or the mirror tha t
~ll:'~-----~ll:'~
reflects it. " A good wtlereflects her
tlf
l
husband's successes. -OWNER
W
OF ONE (MANUEL)
It
~

g

D~~/i:rur:;~:so

long as the

husband also reflects his good
wife's successes. - HELEN
P .S. from Sue: And doesn't
describe himself as her "owner"!

~

~
11
tlf
11

-SUE

w

A PROBLEM? Or a
subject for discussion, two genera·
tion style? Direct your questions to
either Sue or He len Batte! - or

W

(GOT

~

HAPPY
HOLIDAYS
TO ALL

:::ll""ll:'~j;a;...,.. .. ~l""$1

BE

December 24, 1982
Bonds will be greatly strengthened this coming year with several
friends of long standing. Collectively, you'll develop a larger circ le of
new acquaintances.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Old friends wOI be very pleased If
you make arrangements to share some time with them today . Keep this
In mind when you are compiling your agenda.
AQUARIUS ( JWJ. 26-Feb. 19) Today your mind wUl be on wha t you
can do tor others, and this Is a m ble outlook. More Importantly, you 'II do
your good deeds without seeking credit.
PISCE'! (Feb. 26-March 20) You are very lmjl)rtant to a lot of
peq&gt;le and they care for you because you always give of yourself. They
cherish this above any material gift you could present.
ARIES (March 21·Aprtll9) Major matters can be handled In s tride
talay, but trivial sltuatlonscouldcauseyou frustrations . Don't £t small
factors get you uptight.
TAURUS (Aprll26-M'&gt; .I' !l) Try to schedule things properly so that
no1hlng Is left till the last minute. With adequate time you'll function
well. Under pressure, you might not.
GEMINI (May21..June20) You'd bettergooveryourglftllst agaln.
There's a posslblllty you might have forgotten someone you wanted to
Include.
CANCER (JUDe21· JII\v 22) Even though you may feelyourwayot
doing things Is better today, be democratr and let everyone have their
say. Let the major'ty ru£.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) It may prove unwise today to Involve
outsiders or business associates In a family function which Is cl.lnterest
only to your clan. Entertain them elsewhere.
VIRGO (Aug. 2:1-Sept. 22) Enjoy yourself today, but be sensible
about what you eat or drink. Recall: Tomorrow Is going to be a busy day
aDd you'll want to be bright and chipper.
LIBRA (Sept. ~cl. 23) General conditions look very encouraging
for you today. Tbe one exception: If you and your mate have any
differences, discuss them privately.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nov. 22) You'll make a welcome addition to any
gathering today. This could cause you slight problems. Demands on
your time might come from too many sources.
SAGflTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Persons you've been kind to wiD
be eager to reciprocate today. Some of the good things coming to you
might not be Immediately evident.

RACINE, OH .

letting
us

Sesame douhlt&gt;
LONDON !API - When "Se·
same Street," the fun -educa tion
television s how for c hildren seen In
som e :;()countries around the world,
ma kes its debut on the Thames TV
sta tion here thi s winter, it will mark
the first time a ny imported program will be playing two London
te levis ion outle ts s imultaneously.
British children have been seeing
Big Bird, E rnie, Bert. the Muppets
a nd the rest of the Sesam e Street
ga ng since 1974 when the Children's
Te levision Works hop 's series
opened on London Weekend TV.

serve
you!

Ruth &amp; Bill

DAVIS-QUICKB.
INSURANCE
AGENCY
POMEROY. OH.

!bat glorious night that He entered the world,
a bright new discovery of love and
hope was born. This Christmas season,
relive the miracle!

·---~----~ll:'-

1 CHRISTMAS I
I
1
I

GREETINGS
TO ALL!

&lt; ll:'$1BIIMIBIIJI"'BII~I$

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1

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1MErGs couNTY I
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AUTO
PARTS
POMEROY, OH.

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llllltli:II$1BIItrMWIM. ....,..BIIIMI

Q ver the river and through the
woods ... bringing with us
tidings 6f true Christmas spirit.
It's been our pleasure to serve you.
Emma J. Paugh
Stefanie Arnatt

Nan Davis
Norma Wilcox
Bonnie Thomas
Eart McKinley

MEMBER FDIC

Lois McElhinny
Mary Hinely
Taml Buck

Dorothy Anthony
Sarah Fowler
Juanita French

Ed Durst
Manning Kloes
Harold E. Hubbard
Leland Brown

The days ahead look
bright and sunny as we
ring in the season I

Tony Fowler

THE
CENTRAL TRUST
COMPANY
Middlaport. 0.

-

D SAVINGS &amp; LOAN

MEIGS TIRE CENTER,

JOHN F. FULTZ

~nc.

MARILYN K. FULTZ

J. MARCUS FULTZ

216 W. MAIN
~

POMBOY, OH.

LARRY L. SIGLER

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i.ll:'B¥1l:'I""I'&lt;::&lt;I'&lt;::&lt;B¥B¥1l:'ll:'tl!

for

NEW YORK I API - Publis he r
Alfred A. Knopf has come out with
th0 fi rs t four volumes. in wha t wi ll
be a series of a t least 10, or
collectors' gu ides to America n
a ntiques.
The IPXI is comprehe ns ive - a
price guide is included- and there
are plentiful illus tra tions, clea r
color photographs a nd nea t line
drawings.
The first four volumes deal with
c hairs , tables. sofas a nd beds;
ches ts, cupboards, desks a nd other
pieces; quilts. coverle ts, tugs a nd
sa mplers; glass tableware, bowls
a nd vases.
Othe r volumes now in preparation include pottery and porcela in.
folk art. dolls a nd a second book on
glass.

tl!

BA
g11
AUTY SHOP W

ET2 Robert R. Tobin, son of Bess
He ndricks of Middleport has been
na m ed a n honor gradua te upon
completion of electronics technical
class "C" School a t the Service
School Comma nd, Naval Training
Center, Great Lakes, Ill.
Less tha n 10 percent of the
graduates In the training schools at
the command are na med honor
students. Robert a nd his wtle, the
former Sherrt Kauff, are p resently
sta tioned In California.

Antique guidt&gt;s

~

I!!

Honor graduate

Thanks

I
W

Poetry: Nothing startling, but a t
least It rhym es.
Humor: These are the only
le tters I read clear to the end.
May I present some tips to
Christmas torrn-Jetter writers?
1. If you must pass on the fa mily
history, do It In Fe brua ry or
October when people have time to
read.
2. Keep It wry, humorous, ruetW
or off-beat. And short!
3. Don't send family run-downs to
casual acquaintances.
4. If your lives are essentially
dull, a Otrlstmas card wlll do,
be lieve me! READER'S
CRAMP

The HUlblllles 4-H Oub m et on Dec. 12 at
home of Ruby RUe with seven memtx&gt;rs

POMEROY - A play, "ThP
P rice of a Calf·. will ix'
presented Thu rsday night at7: 30
p.m . a t Freedom &lt;'.ospel Mission
loca ted on Bashan a nd Stivers·
ville Road. The public is invited
to a ttend .

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a boy In January; we had a big
snow In February; we h~d com pany from Cleveland In March.
Hope you are the same.

th(&gt;

held . The next meetlngoft~clubwUibeJan .
16
the heme of
Ruby
Rife. - Aprt.l Clark,
forattund·ralsers
were
dJscussed.
reporter.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

WILLIAM E. WILIAMS

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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Terminal facing bad times
CINCINNATI (API - Union
Terminal. a former train sta tion
converted to a shopping mail. could
be facing its toughest survival l est.
retailers say.
ll was turned into a mail by
Columbus developer Steven
Skiiken. The number of tenants has
dwindled instead of Increased and
with Christma s sa les down as much
as 10 percent, some merchants at
the terminal expect a further
exodus early next year.
"Everything about Union Termminai depends on Christmas and
shortly afterwanls," said Bernie
Gorman. owner of a store called
"Wood You Remember.''
Gmman said many of the
remaining tenants are opera ting
without leases. leaving the door
open for an exodus.
''I'm sureSkiiken will tell you he'll
stay open forever and ever."
Gorman said. "Bull wonder. if they
lose halflheir tenants, how long that
would remain practical."
Terry Gratwohl, manager of a

custom framing and print shop, is
considering a move.
"We're looking at several sites
downtown. If we find one, I think
we'll go by April," Gratwohl said.
The city hoped to revitalize the
terminal by leasing it to Skllken for
$1 ayearin1978. IniliaUy,therewere
70 businesses in the terminal. with
plans to expand. Today, just about
three dozen remain. The terminal's
main restaurant, "Les Palmlers:·
folded.
Peggy Paiange, who runs a
"Ceiesllal Threads" store. had

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terminal's future as a mail.
" It depends on the economy. ll 's
Impossible to say," he said.
Skilken declines to disclose the
terminal's financial situation. He
spent $10 million of hisown money to
get the project off the ground and at
one point admitted losing up to
$100.CXXJ a month .
Although he remains optimistic.
Skilken said there are problems to
be worked out with the tetminal.
" ll needs some good restaurants~
and more ready -to-wear women's
and men's clothing," Skilken said.

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MERRY I
CHRISTMAS ~

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SIMON'S
&amp;
PICK-A-PAIR ~

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planned to be m aking money by this r;;;;;;~~!i~~~!!;;;f11(
time. Instead. sales are down 10 1
W
percent from last year.
''I'm living," she said . "But
terribly...
Merchants point out that the
recession hasn't helped matters.
"We're doing less business than a
year ago. but there is less loy
business there was a year ago, .. said
II!
Linda Laub. manager of an FAO
I(
Schwartz toy store.
ll
Skiiken agreed that the economy
1
will be a major factor in the
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Ohio Bell given
another rate hike
NAME WINNER - Tracy Lynn CanlweU, center, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Orman HaD, 536 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, was named Gallia
County winner of Name the Big Brothers-Big Sisters organization for
GaiDa, Jackson, Meigs and Mason counties. Tracy's name for the
organi1.ation was Quad-County Big Brothers-Big Sisters. She received
"' a prize a hicycle donated by atiomeys Mark Kiesling, left, and
William Eachus. i\ name will be chosen for the organization In early
1983 from finaiL'i! entries in each of the counties the group serves.

Chinatown shooting
incident leaves dead
NEW YORK ii\P i - Gunmen
raked the inside or a crowded
Chinatown restaurant with automalic weapons fire toda _
1·. killing
two men and wounding nine ot hers
in an apparently gang-rela ted
shooting. polic&lt;• sa id .
The shooting occurred at about
2:3.1 a.m . at the Golden Star
restaurant. located in the Chinatown section of lower Manhallan.
police repot1ed .
Police sa id there have ix'en
several shootings at the restaurant.
including one inc ident last year in
which the owner was wounded.
The men shot. thought to be
mosllv members or the Fn'&lt;'

Masons and the White Tigers street
gangs. were taken to four city
hospitals, authorities said. At least
one man was reponed in critical
condition at St. Vincent's Hospital.
No weapons were recovered, but
police said the floor was lillered with
shells from a Browning automatic
rifle. a U.S. Army weapon that was
used in the Korean war.
The restaurant was doing a brisk
business at the time the shooting
began. police sa id .
It was not immediately determined whether any of the shooting
victims were innocent bystanders
uninvolved in gang activity .

Christmas eve electrocution still on
ATLANTA !API - A federal
judge today blocked the execution of
con\'icled killer Freddie Davis. who
had ix'en placed in a specia l prison
cell to await his scheduled Christ mas Eve electrocution.
Davis' law:-•ers had asked U.S.
District .Judge G. Ernes t Tidwell
here to reconsider his refusal earlier
this week to stop the execution.
Tidwell g-ranted a stay of execution
a lillie more than 24 hours before
Da1·is. 2.1. was scheduled to die.
The execution. which would be
Georgia's first in 18years. had been

scheduled between 10 a. m. and 2
p.m. Friday. A:l6-hourdeath watch
began late Wednesday at the
Jackson prison.
Superior Coun Judge Joseph
.Jackson said Wednesday night that
"Chtistmas wasn 't even on my
mind" when he set Davis' execution
date for the Jan. 30. 19TI. rape and
butcher-knife slaying of 56-year-old
Frances Coe.
There have ix'en no executions in
Georgia since 1964. Officia ls have
said 41S people were executed in the
state between 1926 and 1964.

COLUMBUS. Ohio !API - Ohio
Bell Telephone Co. has ix'en
granted rate increases totaling
$103.6 million, including a S-cent
jump for pay phone calls.
The Public Utilities Commission
ofOhiorulingWednesdaywasabout
$83.8 million less than Ohio Bell
sought for 1983 and represent s a 6.9
percent increase over the utility's
present income. PUCO officials
sa id .
According to Tom Lindeman.
Ohio Bell spokesman. the phone
company doesn't yet know how
much individual residential customers will be paying monthly. The
charge should fail between $11 and
$18 monthly. he said .
He said the exact rates have not
ix'en calculated under the new
formulas approved by the PUCO.
Ohio Bell will have to revise its
tariffs and submit them to the
commission for approval before
raising telephone bills.
A change. Lindeman said. is that
the PUCO onlercaiis for Ohio Bell to
charge the same rates to each class
of customers throughout the state.
Under the order. residential customers in Cleveland will pay the same
as res idential customers in

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Our message is

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-Charge
25 cents for local ca lls
Bell
to:
from pay telephones. Such calls now

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message and budget services.
-Ra ise the rates of in-slate calls
so they are equal to out-of-statecaii
rates.
The Office of Consumers Counsel
said the PUCO ruling was a victory
for residential customers since
residential rates will go up only
about half as much as the utility had
sought.
In other action. the PUCOgranted
Dayton Power and Light Co. about
half of a $62.5 million rate increase it
had sought.
The PUCO allowed DP&amp;L to raise
ra tes by $33.9 million . None of the
money the company wanted was to
go to construction of the Zimmer
Nuclear Power Plant. the PUCO
said.
The rate Increase amounts toa 5.7
percent hike over DP&amp;L's current

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Columbus.
ThePUCO orderalsoaiiowsOhio

cos t20cents.
- Increase ail classes of residential rates thesamepercentage.Ohio
Bell had sought a higher increase
for flat -rate service than for

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simple bur sincere.

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"Hove a glorious
Christmas. friends! "

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RACINE
PLANING
MIll

il11!3rd

Syracuse,

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funher and don't let your friends
drive drunk," Walsh said. "Take
them home or call a taxi- do what
you have to to save their lives and
the innocent victims they m ay
involve In a fatal accident."
The colonel asked motorists to
pay particular atlenlion to the
aclions of other drivers.
"If they are weaving. running off
the road, wanderingleflofcenter.or
behaving In any dangerous manner.
go lo a telephone or use your CB
radio to contact the nearest highway patrol post:• he said .
In support of the Ohio Department of Highway Safety-Nalional
Highway Traffic Safely Admlnislralion's Project REDDI (Repon
Every Dangerous Driver Immedlatelyl. the patrol is dtstributing
r.amphlels which list patrol teie-

CYITAWA. Ohio(API - The Ohio
Farmers Union, with 10,000
members. is considering how active
ll wants to become in the movement
to stop foreclosures of farm
propeny.
A decision could be made in a few
weeks. officials said .
"We suppon the concept ail the
way through. Wewanttostudyhow
radical our group is going to
become, .. said Charlie Nash, executive director of the Farmers Union.
Farmers in nearly a dozen Ohio
counties have held meelings to
genera te support for the Family
Farm Movement. an organi1.ation
pallemed afier farmers' groups of
the Depression.
One tactic the movem ent's leaders have discussed is possibly
disrupting public auctions and sales
of farm properly due to mortgage
foreclosures.
During the Depression. such
disruptions were dubbed "penny
auctions.. because the protesting
farmers would bid a penny for the
propeny.

By Associated Press
The figures of Mary and theChrist
child in front of City Hall in West
Miami, Fla., are unconstitulional
even if they're balanced by a
Hanukkah display, because there's
no . reference to Hare Krishna or
Scientology, a lawsuit says.
The suil flied by the Miami branch
of the American Civil Libenies
Union Is one of four currenliy
pending before federal courts on the
legality of placing Nalivtly scenes in
front of municipal buildings. ACLU
lawyers claim the displays violate
the constitutional separation of
church and slate.
An ACLU lawyer in Houston filed
the latest suit Wednesday, seeking
to force Hanis County to remove
two Christmas na tlvtty scenes from
county buildings. Earlier it the day,
county commissioners announced

ALL 1 HE FOLKS AT

HARTLEY'S SHOES
POMEROY

revenue.

be rust on it, he said. but when the
substance was touched it flaked
rather than chipped, indicating it
could have been blood.

phone

numbers

for

all

Ohio

counties.
"We urge you to pick up one of

these lists and keep il available for
_use In your vehicle." Walsh said.
"The more alcohol-impaired drivers we can remove from the
highways. the safer il is for
everyone to travel. ..
Walsh reminded motorists that
even the most careful. most aware
drivers are occasionally involved in
accidents.
"Your best defense in a crash
situation is to be wearing your
safety bell_-· he said. "Our fatality
rate could be immediately cut in
half if all vehicle occupants always
wore sa fely belts.
"We urge you to think of your
safely bell as your life preserver on
land ." he continued. "In almost all

accident situations. a safety bell
saves a life or lessens the severity of
an injury. In eithercase.you benefit
by using il .''

Farm foreclosure issue under study
Organizers of the F amily Farm
Movement say such a tactic would
be usect as a last resort. only if
allempts to negotiate with lenders
failed.
The National Farmers U nion. of
which the 80-year-old Ohio union is a
member. already Is calling for a
moratorium on farm mortgage
foreclosures.
Nash said the condition of the
nalion's farmers Is "as bad as, if not
worse than during the Great
Depression."
During the 1930s. farm prices
dropped. But so did operating costs.
Today, prices are low. but operating
costs have conlinued to rise. Nash
sa id.
"In the 1930s. farmers could
survive. They had their food on the
farm and were more self-sufficient.
Today. wllhoul income they cannot
survive. They are no more self·
sufficient than the man on Main
Street:· Nash said.
Nash sa id he will ask the Farmers
Union executive commillee to
consider futu re acti on to stop

Nativity scenes
·unconstitutional??

Inspectors await lab reports
VANWERT, Ohio (API -Postal
inspectors Investigating the Aug. 9
abduction and slaying of Elgin
Postmistress Betty Jane Mallinger
are awaiting laboratory reponsona
knife found near Spencerville last
week.
Inspector Tom Strausbaugh.
head of the 4Y,-month-oid task
force. said ·the dagger-type knife
was found in a ditch on a rural
Spencerville road.
He said a man was hunting and
kicked the knife out of a clump of
weeds.
Strausbaugh said the knife was
not badly weathered, leading investigators to believe ilhad not been in
the ditch for more than six months.
The blade had what appeared lo

Ohio's highway patrol superintendent Is asking drivers to make a
commitment to safe driving during
Christmas and New Year holiday
seasons.
"The most effeclive way to
reduce traffic accidents and fa talllies Is for every driver to drive in a
safe and responsible manner ." Col.
Jack Walsh said.
"This means the driver must
control his own aclions and be
aware of the aclions of others to
safeguard himself and those In his
vehicle," he added.
As nearly one-half of all traffic
fatalilles can be attributed to
alcohol or drug usage, the obvious
solulion Is not to drive if your
abilities are impaired by these
substances.
"Carry this commitment a bil

they would not take down the
displays.
"It has nothing to do with church
and slate," West Miami City
Council member Pedro Reboredo
said Wednesday of the display in his
city. "It has to do with the people
who Uve in the town." West Miami
has about 6.500 people. of whom 20
percent have Jewish heritage.
officials say.
The m enorah that stood in front of
the West Miami City Hail during
Hanukkah also violates theconsl ilulional separation of church and
state, according to the lawsuit CUed
last week against the city in Miami
federal court.

foreclosUres and make recommen dations to members at a January
meeting.
Nash is critica l of the governm0nl's past encouragement for
farmers to borrow large sums of
money to expand their opera tions.
incurring debts that now threaten to
put some out of business.
" They were told you had to get
bigger and bigger; bigger was best.
They got overextended." he said.
Nash said 5 percenlto8 percent of
Ohio's !tl.CXXJ farmers are in danger
of foreclosure.
"And that will get higher and
higher pretty soon." he sa id .

all our customers,
a big 'Thanks'!

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Motor vehicle tax
receipts doown
Even with the Increase tax.
sales lax receipts on motor vehicles
during the month of November
were down 36.62 percent under
receipts for November. 1981, according to the monthly report of
Mrs. Gertrude Dona hey, state
treasurer.
1n November. 1981. motor vehi·
cles sales tax receipts totaled
$94,952.23 while In November, this
year receipts totaled $60,178.98, a
decrease of $34.773.25.
Retail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for November this year.
however. were up considerably
over November, 1981. Retail receipts for this November amounted
to $171,0l5.95 compared to receipts
of $93,697.11 for November, 1981. an
increase of 82.55 percent.

The suit says public propeny was
used for the menorah and for the
creche that nowstandsinfrontofthe
building.

Market reports
''I'""

\lflrkf' f H
...... fun/fl, . nl'r. 18. 1982

Prices are taken from the sale of Saturday,
Dec. 18. Trends: Veal calves l&amp;eady; Ieeder
cattle 12 to 14 hlgller; Cowllll-$2.50 hl(her.
Feeder steers: Good and Choice IIIII to 300
lho.iiG-62; 3110tol0011o.5S.-; .,toiiOIIIho.
s.'H2.110; 1100 to 1110 lbs. 53.54fil; 1110 to 100 tho.
52-5'UO; 700 to 800 lb8. 50-56; 800 and over
47-,14.?.1.
Feeder Hellen: Good and Choice SSO to 300
tho. ~110; 3110 to 100 .... 43.!10-56; . , to 1100 tho.
~; 1100 to 1110 tho. 41.!10-47; - to 100 tho.
41-48; 700 to 800 lbs. ~.50; 801 and O\'er
31.-46.?.1.
Feeder Bulls: Good and Choice 250 to 3110
tho. SUO; 3110 to 400 tho. 5IHII; 41111 to 1100 lbo.
52.!10-57; 1100 to 1110 lbo. 51-58.?.!; 1110 to 100 tho.
47-55; 700 to 800 lbs. 46.50-51; 800 and over

42-48.
Holllleln Steers and BuDs 3110 to lllO tho.
3&amp;-43.50.
Bulls t,llllllho. and up 40-47.
SlauJIWer Cows utUUies 34-40; canners and
culift-oll8-.13.50.
Veal Calves choice and prime 63-79.
Baby Calves 31H!41.
Sprllll"• CoW!I ~- .
Cows and Calves Combination 311).430.
Top Hop 210 to 2:111bo. 53.'1.H5.
8oan 39-43;
Sows 4181ho. and up 43.5&amp;47.
Pip by the Heod ~-

Aothe tllr of wonder
sulded three klnp on
1 wondrous

nlsht 10

lons•so ... m•nythe

Due to Chrt8tmal we will be closed on
Saturday. We wW have a regular sale on
Wednesday, Dec. 22. Sale tlmewUJ be 12 noon.
'There will he a Saturday sale on Jan. I, 1983.

•11111'11.&lt; l . il-·.~ fl /&gt;('k .'\ali·-·
." iafltrllllv.
18. 19ft!

nf'l',

CAT!1.E PIUCES:
Feed..- steers: !Good and Cholc•l :ro-500
tho. 44-46.50; 500-100 tho. 46-53.25.
Feeder HeUm~ : (Good and Choice) :J)I)..50(I
tho. !17-48; 500-100 lbo. 3&amp;-MI.?.I.
Feed..- Bullll: IGood and Choice I :110-500
tho. 42-M; 500-100 lbo. 42-54.
Slaughter Bulls: (Over 1,000 lbs. ) 39.~
U.IO.
Slaup&amp;ef Cows: UtlUttes 34-39. '15; Cannen.·
Cutten 26-35.50.
Sprlnp!r Cows: (By the Head) 300-355.
Cow and CaH Pllirs: (By the Unit) 200-435.
veato: (Choice and Prime) -.50.
Baby Calves: (By the Head) 15-44.
.
Baby Calves: (By the Pound) SHI.
HOG PRICES:
Hop: (No.I Barrowsand{llll!l):axl-2:11lho.
55-511.1111.
Butdlel- llow!l 43.75-17.10.
Feeder Pip: (By tile Head) 19-45.
SHEEP PRICES:
Feeder Larnho 4H7.

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ACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL

IMinlns of thlt

holy dll)' leild you to •

ALL MEN AS THE SERENITY OF

renewed sense of ·
peoc:e,lo•• ond loy

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IS NOEL ENRICHES OUR SOUL~ .
ANY THANKS TO OUR LOY~L

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TRONS WOO HAVE BEEN::=-- SO-VERY KIND!

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~ningSonto

~

In ourwtst.s

for a holiday full goy spirits.and
happy surptsesllhonks.

·RUTlAND DEPARTMENT STORE
RUTlAND, 0.

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"',.,,
,,

~ f'LORteT-~
E. Main St.

Meigs County's Old"! Florist
Ph. "2·2644

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Pomeroy, OH.

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'OFTEN IMITATED- NEVER DUPLICATED."

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SHAKE SHOPPE -

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

J'

�Thursday, December 23, 1982

Page-1 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 15

Area deaths
&lt; ;t'Ur)..! t' D. Maswr. 60, a wrll kll O\\·n ( 'olumbus insurance exrcut i\'t •. l~m ~ ·pr and

LOS ANGELES !APt - Jack
Webb. who starred as the stonefared detecl i, .., of tele\'ision 's
"Dragncl " S&lt;'ries. died toda y in his
wesl Hollywood home of an ap;:&gt;arenl heart attack. police sa id. Hew as

community leader.

fonnr rl\· of Ponwm,·. died of a
ht'aJ'I .allack WPdnrsda,· as he
joggc'd al lh!' Alhlt'lir Club of
('ulumbus.

62.

\\'hl·n firdightrrs arriw'fl &lt;Jt tht'
sn ·nt'. Ma ssar' s ht&gt;art had stop!X'(I
bt"ating.
,\ttPmpt s to rP\'i\'f' him faill'd,

and Massar. prrsidf'nt of tht&gt; Sta ll·
..\uto lnsuranrr Comp&lt;-lniPs. wa s

pronounce-d dC'ad at 12: .Jfl p.m. o~ t
Cram Hospital. shorll_
\ · aftC'r fin•figh!t · r ~

took him from tht • club's

sixth-noor 111nning tr ~1 c k .
\1a ssar had jogg&lt;~lrl'gularl\ ' fur
a I It •ast 10 ~ - pars. said Cha riPs
t.lliot t. \ 'i{·p presicknt and ~t''C'I'Pidl~ ­

of tht • insuranrf' compa n~:.
Fra _
\ ·shrr FC'r.(...ru s, athlf'tic dirc'C
tor to tht •tlub. said M&lt;..t ssar. who h;1cl
_, ufft ' J'(~J two p!l'\'ious hf'a rt Ll t tacks.
ran lht' l'f' four or fi\'f' limps a \\'f'f'k .
!--: irk William son. a ssistant at ·

hiPlit· rlirrclor of lh&lt;' dub. txogan
admini stt ·ring cardiopulmonar:.· rr
suscitation immrd iat&lt;'l.\ · aftf'r Ma s
sar cullaps('(l ju st tx&gt;fon· noon .
F'Prguson said .
Massar. drrssrd in short s and a
T shirt. wa s rrmo\'1 '(1 from thr
builrling on a fi.J ·erll'partmf'nt al'rial

pla1f01m ix'cauSf' lh&lt;' club's spiro I
sta i.rcaSt' wa s too risk\ to tr:.·. and a
strC'tr hC'r \\'hon't fit into thf' club 's
r lf'\ 'i.ltor. said l·'in ' Dh·ision Capt.
. Jamf'~

TPal.

:\ " ttl ump4. ·r" . or a milrhin!' thJt
f'X If' m all\ ma . . . ... .Jgt·s tht · hf'art. had
lx't ·n att.tc tlrtl to Ma s~a r 's rtlf' ~t.
Tt •al sa id .
:\ nati\·p of Pumrro.\'. :'v1assarwa s
asscx·iatPd wittl St ~t!(•:\ut o ( ·umpan ·
iC's for:J.:l _\'Pa rs in \ ':t ri oust ·a par it irs.

H,. " '" ' rl &lt;'&lt;'l&lt;d 10 lh&lt;' b&lt;x1rd of
of thC' parC'nl r ompan~ · .
S!all ' ,\ul um,bill' ~1u!Ual. in 1%'1
and \\ · a ~ t·lt·ch'fl \ ' i('( • prrs idrnt and
S ('(Tf'tar~ uf tht ' tru stl'PS in 197fl.
At tht · ti mf' of his df'&lt;Jth . Ma ss&lt;.~r
W.:t -" prPsidf'nt ~ tnd r hif'f OJX'rating
offict ·r 11 ! St a!t ' :\utomobilf' Mutual
lnsun.tnc1 · Co.. Southf'm Homf'
ln . . . urarH'l •C·o. and Columbus Secur·
tr1J .... tl't'"

it\ l .! ft· ln ~ ur a nn • Co.

Massar
llr l\'a s a g-raduate of Pomeroy
High School and ea rned his bachelor' s flf'gr('(' in business ildministralion from Ohio Sia l e Univrt·sily in
l~l.B . and sLx W'a rs laler r('('('ived his
lal\' dPgrN' 1hN1'.
From 1%:1 lhrough 1977, Massar
wa s a memlx'roflheColumbus law
firm uf Ginghrr and Christensen.
HP lefl !he finn when he becam
president pf thP insurance
compan~ ·.

Massar wa s im·oived in many
ci\'iC activi ties and wa s rPCently
named hr ad of the Opera lion Feed
dri,·e fOI"Ih&lt;' Columbus area .

He ser\'ed as 1981 campaign
chairman for !he Uniled Wov of
Franklin Count\· ond had ~ n a
mrmlx'r of Gran! Hospi!al's board
of ll'USI&lt;'&lt;'Ssince 1!n5.
He is sur\'i\'ed b,· his wile.
Margar-rl; a claughler. Melissa
Walk of Endicoll. N. Y .; a son.
Gro rge S. ofWarwn and his mol her.
Rulh Massar of Pomeroy .
Pri\·atP burial seniCC'S wil l bf'
held Frida\· al Union Crmrtrry
Columbus. In charge of !he Sl'r&gt;irPS
is lhr Schcn linger Funcrol Ser-vice.
17i0 Zollinger Road .
,\ memoria l set-vier wi ll txo held
Monda\·, Dcr. 27. al lO: .'\Oa .m.allhe
CO\·ma nl Prrsb.v leria n Church.
2()70 Redding Road. Columbus.
F1·icnds wi ll lx' ,-crcived a! chu rch
following thf' memorial Sf'rViC'f'.

..\dah A. Root ______________
Ont · o! :vlPigs Count _\·'s uldPst
i\ . Root. Wl
\1icld l&lt;'purl . di&lt;xl \\' ~ln rsrla\ · al
n ·~ idt·n h . \1r..... i\dah

Hol.'.l'!' :\'lr"&lt;1ital ( 'pnlt'r.
\1 r . . . r ~oo t \ ~ - ~ ~ lxwn . Jan . 1.1, ]K;'qjn
C all ia &lt; 'ounty. J d.: JugirtC'r of thf' lat r
Pl·rT\ ' ;tnd M ~ uY Ellrn .Johnson. Stlt·
wa ~ ;l] _..;rJ pn'&lt;'t'&lt;kd in df'a th b\· tlpr
hush;1nd . HPzzif · Ruot : a son .
Richard : a daughh ·r . H&lt;J zPI h:unzt ',
two t) ro thf'rs and thrf'(• sislf'rs.
Mrs. RcXJt wa s il mC'mbPr of thr
M idrii&lt;'IXlrl FirS! fla pi is! Church
and of 1-:.'·angelin&lt;· Chaplcr 172.
Ordf' r ol 1-:J. . . tf'rn S tt.~r . &lt;Jncl WhitP

Shrim'. Mary Shrine of Jerusalem .
Survi,·ing ar·r a daugh!Pr. Mrs.
Fave Richards. Columbus; a
daughler-in-law . Mrs . .Jalonda
Roo!. Middh•porl. and f ive
grandchi ld ren .
Services will lx' held al 2 p.m.
Friday al lh!' Rawlings- CoalSBlower Funeral Home with the Rev.
:vlark McClung officiating. Burial
will be in Middlcpon Hill Crmrlrry.
PriPnds ma\' call a! !he funeral
home anvlimP afler ~ : :ul a.m.
Frida\' .

Long range planning discussed
1'ha rlr ·s Rlakrsl&lt;'&lt;'. ThPr&lt;'On .Johnson. Orion Roush and Pr lrShields
ol lhP :vl!'igs Cuunl\' Pla nn ing Commission mPI wilh !he board of
ctJmm issionc·rs Tuesd~.\' to di s, · u ~s future long rangP plans for thf'
count\·
S.: •\ :f·ral idc·a s Wt'f'f ' C' XprC'SSf ~l Jnd it wa s agrf'£&gt;d thal a mePiing
\..\'CJU id t)(• h(•Jd with tht · two groups in rarl~· .Januar:.·.
:\ ls(, mf't''ling with tht · rommisionrrs wa s P hil Robert s. count .\ ·
('nginf't ·r. wtlo di ~ u ssc'&lt;l progrrs,._ on thf' new road being built to th£'
n0w i,~ndfill.
M1kr· Swtsher . w&lt;•lfan· dirl'clor also mrl wilh lh!' board and
di sl'u s ~ tl \·ariou s aspt•ch of 1ht· wf'lfarr program .
In uthc •r busim ·ss . thr board mad(• "' '\'f'ra l ~·t'ar t·nd df'partmC'nlal
translt'rs .

Real estate books open Dec.27
1{1-;~ ! 1 ., ,a 11• t. J.'\ tx)ok s will tx• npPn Dc·c . 27. 1~IH:l for coil('('! ion of thP
first tl ;llf ol I ~IK:! n ·al pa stat r ta xf's CrorgP Cull ins. trra surC'r
ann(lun('!'(] tocla \·.
fh&gt;k.s willrr·main open unlil .Jan . 211, 1 ~1 . Offir r hours are from
X: : ~1 a m 1o i: :UI p.m . ThP office will be clos('(l Frida\'. D~· . 31.

Los Angeles Counn· Fire Depanment para medics who were summoned lo !he house pronounced
Webb dead a! :t: 23 a.m .. sa id Los
Angeles Sheriff's Deputy Clyde
French.
Webb's wile. Opal. was with him
when he died. said French .
Webb. head of a produclion
company thaI made such TV shows
as "Adam ·12" and "Emergency ,"
was best known for his portrayal of
Sg1. Joe Friday on "Dragnet."
He began !he show on radio in
1949. and it moved to television on
NBC in 1!!51. The show ran unlil1959.
and aga in from 1967 to 1970.
Wrbb Sla rred as !he stone-fared
dell'&lt;'livr of lelevision's " Dragne!' '
serirs. died !odav in his West
Holl.\ wood home of an apparenl
hear! allack. police said . He was 62.
Los Angeles County Fire Deparl ment para mediC's who were summoned lo the hJusr pronounce&lt;l
Webb dead ·a! 3: 2:l a.m .. ""C: Los
Angeles Sheriff' s Deputy Clydv
French.
Webb. head of lh&lt;' Mark VII Lid .
production rompan)' that madP
such TV shows as "Emergency!"
and "Adam-12. " was best known for
his portraval of Sgt . Joe Frida,· on
.. Dragnet." a S&lt;'rirs baSI'd on aclual
policr files. The show popularized
!he phraS&lt;', "Jus! the facls.
ma'am." "Dragnrl" had an eSii·
maled .'ll&lt; million vi!'\\'crs a! heigh !
of iiS populariiY.

LAZY DAY
CAFE
Middleport, OH.

Webb's wile. Opal. was with him
when he died. sa id French.
" Mr. Webb had b!'encomplaining
of indigestion in the past three or
four days and aboul .1 a.m . this
morning he started experiencing
the sa me pains in his chest. and
!hal's when his wile summoned lh&lt;'
paramedics." French sa id .

wish you n il

~oorlwi

n et ah idin ~ fricnclsh

Vt&gt;lt'rans Mt&gt;morial
Admitted -- Wall er Leifhril.
Pomeroy; Zelia Taylor. Middle·
pori; Gladys Moore. Pomeroy;
Milly Price, Middleporl.
Discharged--Opie Cobb. Arnold
Priddy.

Emt&gt;rgenry runs
Five ralls were answered Wed·
nesday by local units. lhr Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service rrporls.
Middleport at 9: 11 a.m. look
Shirlr.v .Jones from Bailey Run
Road 10 Veterans Memorial Hospilal; Pomeroy at .1:11 p.m. look
Karen Grimm from Lincoln
Heigh!S to Velcrans Memorial;
Pomrroy at 4: 18p.m . took Gladys
Moore from Wright St. to Veterans
Memorial; Middleport at 9: 15p.m .
look Milly Price fmm Second Ave ..
lo Vetrrans Memorial, and Tuppers
Plains a! 10: 13 p.m. took .Jane
Ralcliff from Route 681 to CamdenClark Hospital in Porkersburg.

Veterans Memorial
Admilted --Dcwayne Dill. Ra Pine; Bernard Milhoan, Long Bol ·
1om ; Carol Wines. Middleporl ;
Brian Houdashrll . Pomem\; Marion F rancis, Middleporl ; Violet
.Jarrell. Langsville.
Discharged--Alice Clark .. Joseph
Vadish. Dewayne Dill.

•

May the radiance of
Christmas lead you to joy
and peace everlasting.
Qra te{ully, we extend
our season's greetings.

MBGS. I

EWING FUNERAL HOME
POMEROY OHIO

--

�Page-

The

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

16- The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Business Services

Americans show Christmas spirit again
By 1\.'&amp;Jeial('(l P...,.;
Northeast fatmers sent onions to
PE'nnsylvania . Wi sconsin f&lt;..~rmPrs
offered applPS to laid -off miners in
Minnesota and mo,·ie star s bagged
food in Los Ang('l0s as AmC'I i cans
.•!lowro thPir Chri s tmas s pirit b!'
helping to fL&gt;ed 1ht • legions of
unl'mplo~ T'&lt;.l .

" A lot of people an · j ust knocking
on our door and sa,·ing. 'Thi s is what
WP want to do for .\ ·ou."' said Mikr
Can tril!. coordinat or of a food
gi\'eaway program in Minnesota 's

lron Range, a mining area where
unemployment is near 45 percent .
The spirit was evident from
coast-to-coast Wednesday as people
sllll working lent a helping hand to
those out of work in a nation where
unemployment has hit10.8percent,
the highes t Christmas jobless rate
since the Great Depression.
A truckload of 40,000 potatoes
donated by farmers in Minnesota
and Not1h Dakota was expected to
an·ivP in Iron Range towns today.
with another due Jan . 5. Some 100

FRUITS OF THEIR LABOR - Mary Murphy,
center, and Alice Watson unload a truck filled with
carrots Wednesday as volunteers, working in a
downpour, bagged nearly 750 tons of groceries for

"The optimism in the middle of
this pouting rain is teJTiflc," said
actor Jack Lemmon, who was
helped b y pertormers Dennis

30,000 needy people In what organizers at Los Angeles
Collsewn called the largest private dlstrthutlon of
food ever attempted in the United States. ( AP
Laserphoto)

Local briefs
Several couples seek licenses
,\ ma rri agr licrnS&lt;' was issued in Mr igs CountY Probalc' Court to
Da,·id Lt'&lt;' Co le. :24 . Pomero,. and Tammi .Jo Stobart. 19. PomNO)'.
Other&gt; gelling licenses were RoiX'rt Hughes Brallon. :n.
Middl&lt;'port. and Sa ra Marie Diddi(•. 20. Middleport ; Lawrence
Ba n Y Tabor. Io. Ca ll ipolis. and Riw Lea h Welch. 2o. Rut land ;
Danm· [);n·;t. ~:\. Rt .I. Rutl,md. and Sharon Marie Oat-s!. Pompror:
Ga n·· U·tm ~l rd P ridd\. '21. RL-1. Poml·l'o\·, ;mrl ,\ raka RPnE'f' Crair.
20. RtJ. Pomt'J'\1\. ;inrl l..tri' Tri pplt·ll·. : ~1. Ponla nd . and Chet)' l
L.\·nn !.oscar. 21 1. Ht 1. Pnrtl; Jnd

Foreclosu re~

bushels of apples from Wisconsin
grower s are expected soon.
In Los Angeles, movie stars and
volunteers, wearing brighlly colored slickers or piasllc garbage
bags to protect them from a
rainstmm, bagged 750 tons of food
on Wednesday for 30,000 people and
said they hoped to feed 100,000more
people.

money ac·tions filed

'I\ \'O fon 'C\osun• ~uih ;1nd two .... uit s for rnonc·\ Wf'rf' filed in Mf'igs
Coun t\· Common Pleas Court.
Did ~o nd ~1 \'ings and Loan. PnmPro.\·, fi h ·d two forrdosurf' suits
onr aga ins t Ric hard A. Young. HI. :\. Po nw ro ~·. f' l a !. and the othr r
against RonniP r.: . Hubbard. Musc atint &gt;, Iowa, r t a\.
PomPrm· Ct ·m r nt J1lock Co .. Pomr ro\' fi\r'(\ suit in thf' amount of
$.'\.9.r2 .72 again.&gt;t .Jacob W. .Juhnsun "nd Murie!Juhnson. dba . .Johnson
MasonrY. Hut la nd . and thP Parkprsburg Na tional Bank fil('(l suit in
the amount of S:l.l l 4 .~&gt;1 against Paul:\ . Aikman. RD . Ocxt!'r.

Squads haw husy day
Fi\"(' ca l! ~ \\ '£' !'! · ••n.&lt;., \\'('IHI T uf•sda.\ and unP r Jr!.v W('(!nPsday
morning b_
\ · loc al un its, thf • Mr ·igs County EmrrgPnc.v Mrdiral

Scr;irp rP(Xwts.
Tuesda.1·'s call' incl uded: Pomcrov. H: :12 a.m .. .James Wc_
I 'Pr' miller from Spring ,\,·e .. to 1-!olzl'r Med ica l Center; 11 : J l a.m ..
Pomero_
v L:nit. Kt·n net h Flin ·hfi(•Jd from Pomeroy l-leall h Car('
Center tu \ 'i ·lcra n&gt; MC'mut·ial l-lospilal ; 1:47 p.m ., M idd leport Unit.
Roval Crown Plant for Mat·k f'.:ort un , treated on thescenr; 6: :lli p.m ..
Midrll&lt;'porl Unit to Loc·ust St for Marion Francis, taken to Veterans
Memorial: f{utland at ~ : :11-1 p.m . to S;ilem Ct ·nter for Violet .Jarrell.
ta ken to \ '1·1t·ra ns Mt ·morial. Mirlrl lt·JXJrl at 12: !fi a.m. Wed nesdm·
took Charb Smtih . S. Si'Cond ;\ ,., ... to liolzt•r Mf'dical C'·nter .

Trio place on prohation
Thr('(' ddcnrla nts "'' ·rc fi nf'd in I h1·court of M iddlpporl Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuc•,da.v night. They ;n·c ,Jpffn 'y L. Di lcher, Alba ny, and
Ronnie L. Flarb('f. R•'ed sville. !'ach $2:11and costs and three days in
jail , both on charges of dri,·ing whi le intox ica ted . Roger L.lioschar,
Middleport . was fined $.'ill and msts. dri\·ing while under suspension
and $2'i and costs_ expired tags.
Meanwhile, thrc'&lt;' defendants were placed on probation and
numerous other s forfeited bonds in lh&lt;' court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
Placed on six months pt·obation wrre Rick Taylor, Pomeroy,
charged with disturbing the [X'ace; Mark E. Johnson, Pomeroy ,
disturbing the j)('ace. and Dennis Boyd, Pomeroy , destruction of
property.
Forfeiting bonds were Joseph Wall ers, Point Pleasant. $44; David
Laridaker , Pomeroy. $46; Edna Greene, Racine. $49; Shtrley R
Mills, Pomeroy , $4o; Lenora Leifheit . Pomerdy ,$44; RandyWhecl~r.
Racine. $47; .Joy Morari ty, Racine, $49; Kevin BPtzing, Pomeroy,$56,
all of speeding charges; Lonnie Blac k, Shade, $6.'1, driving while under
suspension, and $46, speeding: Arthur Petri e, Pomeroy, $1:i5 for
non-payment of old fines and Rona ld Wi&gt;son, Racine, $43, failure to
yield the right of way.

Landfill closed Christmas !}ay
The M eigs County Landfill will be closed Christmas Day the Meigs
County Commissioners announced today.

Courthouse will close Friday
The Meigs County Court House will be closed Friday, Dec. 23, In
observ'ance of the Christmas Holiday.

. Christmas program changed
The Christmas program at the Syracuse Flrst Church of God has
been changed to Sunday at 7:30p.m. due to a death of Mrs. Oller's
mother.
1

Weaver and Valerie Harper In the
parking lot of the Los Angeles
Coliseum.
" This is the toughest Christmas
I've ever seen," said Wilma Smith
of the First Evergreen Missionary
Baptist Church In Compton, which
will distribute food to 90 famUies.
In Pittsburgh, laid-off steel
workers lined up last Saturday for
90,000 pounds of spuds donated by
Maine farmers. On Wednesday,
40,000poundsofonlonsanivedfrom
New York.
"All we've got todoisget a load of
carrots in here and a sldeofbeef and
we've got the makings for a good
stew," said United Steelworkers
union spokesman Mlke Drapkln.
About 34,000 steelworkers are laid
off in the Pittsburgh area.
The Mellon- Bank has given
$103,000 to help feed the unemployed
in southwest Pennsylvania, the
largest donation It has ever made to
help the needy. About $5,000 was
used to buy 1,000 turkeys, handed
out last week at a party for
unemployed steelworkers In Homestead, near Pittsburgh.
"Even some kids help us," said
Linda Ezerosky, coordlator for a
food bank serving _ 1,000 people
through a Pittsburgh USW local. " A
Boy Scout working on his Eagle pin
donated 623 cans of food. And a girl
came down and donated canned
goods and potatoes out of her
baby-sitting money."
In Centerville, TIL, foqd retailers
donated enough to fill about 2,000
bags of groceries, each containing
milk, chicken, cheese, potatoes,
onions, canned vegetables, fresh
fruit, butter, eggs and a loaf of
bread. Despite temperatures in the
30s, people stood in long ilnes to
receive the food.

Winter storm knocks out
By Associated P...,.;
Amust'ment rides at Disneyland
stopped in their tracks and San
Francisco commuters were robbed
as they left stalled electtir trolleys
when the first big stoiTn of winter
knocked out power to 2 million
customers in thrf't' sta tes.
Heavy snow blocked highways
Wednesda y in Ca lifornia and
Oregon , including the main not1hsouth rout e serving the Pacific
states. and gale- force winds flipped
cars and closed the Golden Gate
bridge as it swayed up to five feet.
The blackouts be~?a n Wednesday

when a transmission tower at
Altamont Pass, 50 miles northeast
of San Fra ncisco, blew over at4 : 30
p.m ., downing six lines carrying a
total of nearly 2 million volts.
The Rancho Seco nuclear power
plant and two units at a Pacific Gas
&amp; E lectric Co. oil-fired plant near
M onterey shut down automatically
to protect themselves from over·
load , sa id ut ility spokesm an Greg
Pruell.
The interrupt ions lasted up to 2Y,
hours as utilities intentionally shut
off power to prevent further
blackouts, with outages repon ed In
sea tiered but oft en densely populated locations from San Francisco

to San Diego, ra nging as far east as
Las Vegas, Nev ., and Yuma, Ariz.
A 38-year-old m an in Contra Costa
County died when he picked up a
fallen 20,000-volt power line. Four
men were killed and six injured in
the SieJTa Nevada when a rocket
blew up inside a launcher used to
control avalanches. Two women in
Washington state were killed Tuesday night by storm-toppled trees.
In the San Francisco area, winds
up to 92 mph tore boats from their
moorings, and the Coast Guard said
a pier was still floa ting free late
Wednesday In the city's stoJTRtossed bay, carrying as m any as 30
boats with it.
The Golden Gate bridge was
closed for two hours after 70 mph
winds pushed cars together, overturning one vehicle. It was believed
to be the first wlnd -causedclosureof
the landmark structure since 1951.
Although the worst of the stoJTR
rolled through northern California
by late Wednesday, Colorado residents were bracing for it today.
" It looks like the whole state will
get the possibility of heavy snow,"
said National Wea ther Service
forecaster Dough Baugh.
In San Francisco, commuter s
stranded by the city's stalled

VMH emergency
physicians still
improving skills
For the last nine months, Vete- comprenslve speclaly board examra ns Memorial Hospital has pro- Ination. "The training of an emervided around the clock coverage In gency room physician Is never
its emergency room . " Often, the allowed to stop," added Dr. Brizenpublic Is unaware of the training_ dine. " The American College of
and dedication of the emergency Emergency Phyhslclans requires
physicians that staff our emer- that to maintain membership a
gency room," says Scott Lucas, phyhslclan must complete one
administrator of Veterans Memor- hundred and fifty hours of continuIal Hospital.
Ing medical education during each
According to Dr. Paul T. Brizen- three year period."
dine, Director of the emergency
Certain continuing medical eduphysician group, emergency medi- ca tion courses are required of the
cine Is a rapidly changing field . emergency physicians at Veterans
Emergency physicians attend conMemorlal Hospital. Advanced Carferences freq4ently to keep up with diac Life Support (ACLS) Is one
the advancement in the field .
such course. ACLS Is a comprehen"The physicians who are asso- sive training course which covers
ciates of our group are required to the proper treatment of heart
complete a minimum of fifty (50)
attack patients. Another contihours of contihulng medical educa- nulhng medical education course Is
tion each yea r," sa id Dr.
Acute Trauma Ute Support
Brizendine.
(A'ILS' A'ILS demonstrates corThe continuing medical educa- rect trt .nnent of seriously Injured
tion courses are presented by patients.
unlversllles and medical schools
By employing emergency physl·
across the country. The Instructors clans who are contlnualiy working
are recognlzeil professors and
to Improve their skills, we are
researchers In the field of
atlemptlng to provide high quality,
medicine.
up to date emergency medlcai care
"Continuing medical education tor the residents of the area," said
classes Involve long hours of Mr. Lucas. · "Much of the same
training Is also required .ot and
Intensive study," explained Dr.
provided for the emergency room
Brizendine. "Some courses even
support staff."
Involve working with patients and
Veterans Memorial Hospital conparticipating In mock disasters."
tracts with Medical Emergency
A physician can become Board
Associates, a regional emergency
Certified In emergency medicine
physician group, to provide physiby completing a minimum of two
cians for Its emergency
(2) years In an emergency medicine residency and passing a V department.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u .s. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authoriled John Deere,

proposal s will

be

Oh•o at the Treasurers

Ql hr~&gt;

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

c6rd• ng to spec•hcat•ons of

TOOTH CARE TECHNIQUES were given to the

care, what foods are good to eat and what foods to

sixth grade class of Darlene Amott at Pomeroy
Elementary Wednesday by Dr. Margie Lawson,
Racine dentist. Dr. Lawsonlnstructedthestudentson
the technique of brushing, and howtousedentalfloss.
Dr. Lawson also lnfonned them about good dental

avoid. Alililstlng Dr. Lawrence were Becky Teaford
and Cathy Coates. Pictured Is Dr. Lawson Instructing
Lesley Carr, student, sealed, on how to use dental
Doss. The students have been studying dental health
and Importance of dental care.

passenger
hool buses. ac ·
sa•d board osc
f educatiOn

Sepa,ate and •ndependent
b•ds wdl be 'eceved w&lt; "
'espectdto the
and liodv
11 chasSis
1hat! he bus
type
w' ~ ate and
wh enanassembled
P" O' to
del ,ve 'Y comply w'th all schoo l
d•st" ct spec•f,cat,on s. all salety

=======================================~ Mm,mum
'egulaJ•onsS1and"'ds
and cu "ben' School
l Oh•o

..

Bus Construc tion o f the De-

The Daily Sentinel

pan men! ol Educauon adopted
by and wnh !he consent ol the
Dtrecwr of Htghwav Sa retv
pu,suanl to Secuon 4511 76

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified
Dept

- -

)
4
I
1
7
I

cities blackened

electric trolleys were set upon by
robbers.
··w e've had repon sofa t leas t 20to
30 strong-aiTned robberies in the
Westem Addition," sa id Sgt . Dennis
Schardt, referring to a low-income
area near the civic center.
A billboard along U.S. 101 blew
apart near Belmont, scattering
debris in front of a car which spun
out of control, injuring its two
occupants. Acar nipped overon the
San Mateo Bridge south of San
Francisco, where trees blew down
on rooftops and roadways. M any
traffic lights failed in San Francisco, where meter maids used
flares to guide commuter ' although some motorists took advantage of special discounts offered by
hotels.
Holiday trave lers aboard Amtrak' s San Francisco Zephyr, headIng from Chicago to Oakland, were
halted by high water on tracks 15
miles northeast of Sa n Francisco,
eventually completing their trip by
bus.
(14ore than a foot of ra in fell in the
coastal mountains where many
hillside homes slid off their founda tions In January and a mudslide
killed 10 people at Ben Lomond last
winter , but there were no immediate reports of slides.
ln Las Vegas, most residents had
to break out candles, but gambling
continued on the gllttery Strip after
emergency generators kicked In at
major casinos.
At Disneyland, 30 miles southeast
of Los Angeles, roller coasters

o........

l&lt;oppy Ad o
Loo1an d f oynrt
Vo•dhiOIPO&lt;d &lt;nan"' nco l
Pub•&lt; l oro

-

Most of San Diego had no power
for some time and major pans of
Redding, Sacramento and San Jose
were darkened . In Los Angeles,
most of the city escaped with little
more than a momentary dip in
power, although sca ttered outages
were rC'ported and darkened traffic•
lights snarled rush-hour traffi c.
NoiTnan Nichols, chief engineer~
for the Los Angeles Department ot:
Water and Power, said the outage .
was complica ted when, simultane- ,
ously, a link to coal -fired power ,
plants in Arizona and New Mexico
also went out.
'
" At our syst em~n Los Angeles, we ;
were suddenly deficient about 1,000 ,
megawatts," roughly the equlval- '
ent of a major nuclear power plant, :
Nichols said . "So It was necessary to :
immediately disconnect a similar '
amount of load."

l l '"'"'''" ' Soro
U lu10n0oo Buold'"ll'

5 9' '" Solo m loo&lt;io

·-

9 Wont od rn a,.,

ground to a halt and about 7,700
people were escorted from the
darkened amusement park by
flashlight in the first evacuation in
its 27-year history.
" In a lot of cases, we had people
stranded . We had to walk people off
Space Mountain, the Matterhorn,
Big Thunder Mountain Railroad,"
sa id D isney land spokesman AI
Flores.
In Riverside, 55 miles east of Los
Angeles, a Superior Court hearing
wa s conducted by flashlight . Cars
were backed up for miles trying to
get onto a darkened freeway near
Rivers ide with visibility also reduced because of rain and fog.

] I ~ ""'"' '"' S.lo
)1 M ob~o l&lt; omoo l ot Solo

~ 1 toou ..,.&lt;&gt;l&lt;l Ooo -•
!ol C l I V .. Ihdocd q wrp monr
' ] AnhQYU
!o f Mooc Mo •&lt; ho n ~ ou
&amp;5 I Y~ d o nt J y Pllh..
51 Pou ' " ' l olo
&amp;1 Mu .. c ollno~ Y mtnoo

l I l woonooo Oppo " """ '
l2 Mo no, oo loon
J l '• o looooonol s. ... ....

1 Co•&lt;lo tl ha n-o tpood "• • d• • "" " '
! po o ~ on o&lt;lvan&lt;o l
An"""nc ""'" " "

1 In -......,

lines~

__

,,w•••.,

•e

UWonrod f ~Oo

41l "M"""
' '" '"""'
O
o b• • ~&lt; o,., oo tor li on!
4) , ...... . ' "' ~ ... .

40 Apoolm t&lt;O I to&lt; lio n!
O l l un~oohnd ~ 0""''

01 S!&gt;OCO to• lion !
O ! Won ro d t o ll ono
fl l ~ooo p mon! In• lio n &lt;
f9 I n o Loooo

County.

.,

In pursuance o f an Order o f
Sale dated 198 2. 1n th e above
en!lll ed ac t1on. I will offer for
sal e at the doo r o f th e Co urt
Ho use 1n Pomer o y. Oh10. 1n the
above na med Cou nty. on Satur d ay. the 8 th day ot January.

I 983. at I 0 00 o'clock A M
the follow1ng desC/I bed real
estate. sttuate 1n the County o f
M e1gs and State of Oh 1o and 111
th e TownshipS o f Ches ter and
Olive to-w 1t

Go!ho C oYn "'
Aroo Cod o 114
ffl

Golhp o ~o

lll
3 18
24!.

Cl&gt;ooMo
Vm1 nn
ll ooG • on do
G Y, . .. o ...
A•oboo Ooor
Wolnwl

2M
10

8I ~ ""'" '"'P'"'" "''""

179

1 2 Plumb on9 .. H. . .,.,~
11 f• •••" '"q
It fltt&lt;hot or •ll • h •w• • • """
es o........ """''"~
86 M 10 ll op oot

'4 ~ .. .. o.....

I S S. od lo ' "" ' ''""'

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I
Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . Cance l your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable .

Name ___________________

Address--------

rods to the center o f sa•d
sec11on and PLACE OF BEGIN NIN G r:onta1ntng 83 acres.
more or less
EXCEPTIN G 1 acre sold to A
G Sma lley by deed dated
Ja nua ry 28 . 1909 . and recorded 1n Volume 11 4 . Page
300. o f the Deed Reco rd s o f
Me1gs County. Oh10. descr1 bed
as follows Berng 1n Section 7
Town 4 . Range 12. m the Oh•o
Company·s Pur chase. b ounded
and descr •bed as follo'NS
BE GI NNING abou t 40 rods west
o f the cen ter of Sect 1on 7.
th ence west about 16 rods to
the northwest co rner o f William
W eber's 83 acre 1r ac t. thence
sou th abou t 20 rods . thenc e m
a north easter ly d11 eCt10 n on an
ag reed line to the PLACE OF
BE GINNING. conta1n1ng one
acre. more or less
Parcel No. 2: The followmg
real estate Si tuated 1n the
County 'o f Me1gs. 1n th e State o f
Ohr o. and ,, the Townsh1p o f
Chester. and bounded and
desc nbed as follo w s Be1ng m
Sect1o n 7. Tow n 4 . Ran ge 12m
th e Oh+O Company's Purchase.
bounded and descn bed as
follows v11 BEGINNING 1n the
cen ter o f sa1d sect1on No 7
then ce west about 4 0 rodS
thence north l 1/1 rods. thence
east pa raile I With the f1 rst line
about 40 rods to the ce nter o f
sa1d Sect1on No 7. thenC'e
south on sa 1d ce nt er sec t1o n
ltne 1'h rods to the PLACE OF
BE GINN ING. con ta1n1ng 60
square rods. more or less

Parcel No. 3; The lollow•ng

real
estate
s1tuated
m
County
o f Metgs
. 1n the Stale
of
Oh10. and 1n the To w ns h1p o f
Ch ester. be1ng 1n SectiO n 7
Town 4. Ran ge 12 o f the Oh1 0
Co mp any's Purc ha se. and
bo und ed and descn bed as
fo!lows BEGINNIN G at th e
sou thwest co rner o f a tract o f
land deeded to John H
A1denour and Dav1d R1denour
by Anthony H Jenk1ns and w 1fe.
then ce east 50 rods. thence
north 82 rods. th ence west 50
rods. thence so uth 82 rods to

the PLACE Of BEGINNING.
conta1n1ng 25 acres. more o r
less. but exceptin g th erefrom 7
ac res conveyed to Leonard
Koen1g and Dons Koen1g. by
deed dated Oc10ber 30. 19 45.
and recorded 1n Vol 155. Page
42 3. o f the Deed Records of
Mergs Co untv. Oh 10. wh 1ch 7
acres exce pt1on 1s c orrectly
descrrbed as follows.

These cash rates
include discount

C

)Announcement

( )For Rent
!. _ _ _ _ __

2. _ _ _ _ __
3. _ _ _ _ __
4, _ _ _ _ __

5_ _ _ _ _ _ _
6, _ _ _ _ __

7. - ' - - - - - - - 8. _ __ __ _

17. _ _ _ _ __
18. - - - - --

19, - - - - - 20.
21.
22 .
23.
24.
25.
26. - - - --

27.
9, _ _ _ _ __
- 28.
10.
29.
. 11 .
30.
31.
12. - - - - - 32.
13. - - - 33.
14.
15. - - - - - - 34.
35.
16.

..
TREE l)ll;STROYS BEDROOM - feU Fender looks at hiS
demolished bedroom after a ll'eefelionit.durlngastonn In Menlo Park, · ;
Calif., Wedneaday aflemoon. No one wulnjured. Shrieking windll and 'I
pounding rains Jlm)unelled Nolihern,Callfonda Wednesday, knocking
out power, ahuUing down lhe Golden date Bridge ~ toppling t~
(AP Lllllerphotci) ,
.

Sttuate

rn

Sectton

7.

Town 4 . Range 12. of the
Oh1o Company's Purchase.
tn

Chester Townshtp. Mergs

County_ Oh1o. and BEGINNING at a stone corner at
the former Mon t Osborn
line and State Route No.
248: thence westerly along
said State Route 248. 35

-

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

rod s to a stone corn er on an

agr~ ed

line: thence north
35 rod s: th ence southeas-

t'e rly 35 rods to the Mont

Osborn line. to a point on

--

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

911
91ft

Moddlop""

' ""'"""'
c..... ..

JU h•rton d
lU

L••onloll o

149 "·~ ...
742
Ill

ll w11and

Mooon C o WY

"'''" c.. ~. 100
I 15

Pi P+oooont

4S8

'"""

57'
71l

IU

Apt&gt;lo Ooooo
Mooo n
Nowl&lt; o .. n

195
9]1

'"""
l u ltolo

Cooto~ln

"00

u oo

" 00

underlymg satd Parcel No 1

aod 2 and Parcel No 3

above descnbed . bemg al l
th e real estate conveyed by
th1s deed together wtth the
rt ght 10 enter u pon sa td
premt ses fo r th e purpose of
mtntn g. drdl1n g and removtn g th e sa me wtthout unn ecessary damage 10 th e
surf ace
Sat d Prem tses Located 1n
O l tve and Cheste r

by th e b•dder and the surety
company_ tn an amoun t equal
to ft ve per re nt ~ 5 p erce nt) of th e
b td sh alt be su bmttted w•th

each b• d
Satd board of educa t•on
reserves the r•ght to wa•ve
tnlormaltt •es. to ac cept or re1ect
any and all or part s ot any and
all b1ds
No b1ds can be w thdrawn lo r
at least th 1rty !30) days alt er th e
sch ed uled clos 1ng t1me tor
rece 1p t o f b1d s
Me1gs Local Boa rd
o f Educa ton
Jane W agner Treasurer
62 1 South Th11d AV€nue
Mtddlepof!. Oh10 45760 •

I !61 4!992 -5650
11219. 16. 23. 30. 4tc

54 Misc . Merchandise

f Ownsh1ps. Me•gs Coun ty

OhiO - .

-

BY

Satd Prem tses Ap pra tsed
at Forty-two Th o usa nd F1ve
Hundred Do llar s and ca n·
not be so ld for less th an
two- th1rds that amo unt

THI S SHERIFF'S SALE
OPERATE S UNDER TH E
DOCTRINE OF CAVEAT
EMPTOR THE ME IGS
COUNTY SHERIFF MAKE S
NO GUARANTEE AS TO
STATUS OF TITC.E PRIORTO
SALE
TERM S OF SALE Ten per
cen t ( 10 per ce nt) cash tn
han d o n day of sal e w1th
balance to be pa td upon
deltvery o f deed

JAME S PROFFITI
She rolf
M e1 0 5 Co unt v. Oh•o

OTH S FO LI'Y. HEISt R
&amp; COLE

FoR SALE

SEALED BIDS
1979 Chevy 4 dr. Formerly
Highway Patrol Car. Good
condition all over. Can be
inspected by contacting
Rutland Police Dept., or
Jerry Black, Rutland. OH.
Sealed bids will be received
by the Clerk's Office until
Jan . 4, 1983 al 7:00 p.m.,
when they will be opened.
Rutland Village Council
reserves the right to reject
any or all bids. Mail or or
hand sealed bids to Vernon
Weber, Clerk, Rutland Vii age, Rutland, OH.
Very Nice - Must see to
appreciate. Reason lor selling: Village has purchased
a newer model cruiser.

A Legal Pr o fes s1ona l
Assoc ratton
Ano rneys fo r Defendant

OHIO
VAL
LEY
ROOFING

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
"Roofing of all types
' Residential
&amp;
Commercial
oRemodeling
•stonn Windows &amp; Doo1&gt;
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Y•rs Experience

TOM HOSKINS

Real Estate - General

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

said Mont Osborn line 35
rods fr om th e PLAC~ OF
BEGINNING; thence south
along the said Mont Osborn
' line 35 rods to the PLACE
OF BEGINNING, containing
7 acres. more or less.

EXC!;.PTING and reserving unto th e former grantors. Oscar Weber and
Zelda Weber, their heirs and
assigns forever. an undl·

vided one-half il\terest in
and to all of the coal. oil. gas
and all other min_eral s in and

~~------~-------------- : •

KAY'S169
BEAUTY
N. 2ndSALON

Or 949-2160 10i 25/ttc

ROOFING

FRONT ST. -MIDDlEPORT- Abeautiful view ol river from yout
own front porch. Remodeled 4 bedroom home, fireplace, sliding
doo~&gt; to large dec~ Basement, carpeting, rice level lol
$45,000.00.
POMEROY - Convenient to schools, stnres, churches! 4-5
. bedroom, 11! sloJY house, with new carpeting, nice ~!chen wilh
· dishwasher, range. Utility room, porches. NICe home, goo:! pnce.
$27,500.00.
RIGGSCREST - Ahouse to be proud of! 3 bedroom ranch on
approximatly 2 acres situated at end of street lm privacy. Large
famiy room, 2 baths, separate dinette area, plus lonna! dtmng
room. Includes 24 foot above ground pool. $.~5.000.00.
FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION - 3 bedroom doubte wide situated on
approximately 1 acre ~t Full basemenl 2 balh~ shin~ roof, .
range, dishwasher, wood burner, and Franklin fireplace. Pretty!
$36,900.00.
IIINIFARII - Great lor hooes! Aproximately 10 acres of rolling
land wilh ranch type 3 bedroom horne. Basement, pond. Secluded.
$53,000.00.
REALTORS

Henry E. Clellnd, Jr., GRI ................................. 992-6191
Dottle Turner ................................................. 992-5692
.lean Trussell ............................. .. ................_.. 949-2660
Office ...... .. .... .................. ............................. 992-2259

We Honor Golden Buckeye

ca,ds Except on Perm.
Specials.

•Gutters
•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 949-2182
or 949-3055

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

12-13- 1 mo

7-14-ttc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs;
furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742-3195
3-7-ttc.

SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALL AL
Ph. 742-2328

II 3- 1mo

-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- Lo-Boy
- Trencher
- Water
-Sewer
~Ga s Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478
12- 10-1 mo. d

obacl&lt;hoe
-excavating
oseptic systems
edump truck service
eseeding and reclaiming
•Racine and Syracuse

sewer hookup

Worit Insured and

Guaranteed
PH . JIM CUFFORD

10-7-rtc

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

St . Rt . 124 Pomeroy , OH

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

MOUNTAINEER
IWODWORKS
Rl. I. Bo x 277
RAVENSWOOD. WV
304-273-3660
" We Are Now Open"
~ It's Made Ot Wood

We Can Make h
•Toy s •Furniture
•Building Produc ts
•Custom or Specialized
Orders Welco me
Come &amp; SO! Wh~ We Hm To
Offer. Cross tiE Ravenswood
Brill!e to Sl Rt. 56_ (I Block
Fr001 City limits- Across From
Double Nidtel

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
· -c::tozer

11-8-1 mo

12-20-rtc

•BLOWN
INSULATION
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•NEW
CONSTRUCTION

H. L WRITESEL

992-7201

Middleport, OH.
PH . 992-2725

985-4193 or 992-3067

11/29/ 1 mo.

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

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
" Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Ca ll

for

sidin~

free

estim ates, 949 -2801
949·2860.
No Sunda y Calls

or

FRYE'S

TRUCK &amp; AUTO
NEW &amp; USED
HARlEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
CHROME PRJ MARYS
Reg_1 1D7.50
NOW 187.50

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Co mplete Kicker Assembly

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174

Reg. 1 149.95
NOW 179 95-189.95

2-26-rtc

PRICE REDUCED - Sl Rt. 33.'approximatety 1\l acre level ~~
wilh 3 bedroom house, chain link lence, garden spaced, range, ref.,
goo:! condition. Now only $26,000.00.

GREGROuSH
PH. 992-7583
01992-2282

'CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

lnng Bottom. OH . 45743

Ph. 742-2834

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

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

New Homes - extensive
remedehng
•Electric wori
.Custom Pole Bldgs.
&amp; Garages
-Roofing Work
-Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience

Bring This Ad
Good For
15o/co OFF
ON PERMANENTS
Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
Now thru Dec. 31

Route 1

GARAGE

,, 21 :3

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

K~chen Cabinets- Roofing - Siding - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole
Barns.

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

Roger Hysell

the: ~~;::==================

Phone---------

I !Wanted
1 1For Sale

fill'

Public Notice

Public Notice

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

Moo g o C&lt;&gt;~n o,

..... c...... ,.

Upto !S.,o •d o O~• d• f'"'"''""'
Up '" I ~ " "'a'
!~ . .. d oo •n ooo toon
Up &lt;cr I!&gt; W Q&lt;do $ .. d oooMo•hon
IAo oooq• • - •d o poo hn ol

11 UP""I "~''

TRACT NO. 2 : S1 tua ted 1n
Chester Towns h 1p. M etgs
County. Oh10. bounded and
rl"&lt;&gt;w bed as foll ows
Parcel No. 1: Be1nq 1n
Sect1on 7 Town 4 . Range 12 of
the Oh10 Co mpany's Purchase
and de sc nbed as follow s. v1z
BEGINNIN G 1n the cen ter of
sa1d Sect1on 7. th ence west 56
rods. thence sou th 16 4 rods to
the sou th l1ne o f sa1d sect1on.
thence east 106 rods to a stone
corner and agreed hne. thence
north on sa1d agreed l1ne 82
rods to a stone corne r. thence
west 50 rods. thence north 82

•·r

l oau• Mo rn•o

17 A .. r o llopo o~
78 C omp ., Q[Qwpnoon r

-

f q""'"'""'

" '

74 Mu !OtC f &lt;I OO
7~

Public Notice

Public Notice
SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
The State af Ohio, Meigs

II , .. ...

l l w... tur o a .. ,
l lto .... ~~

/ u .. r ju ·riJ"'J:' ' ' ,

,.. u.... '" ~ ,,.,,.,,,, .. ,...•." '""' J: ' ' '

wo

7J .lo YOO Po&lt;OO lo ACU OO Oo"' o

l &amp; lou 1o " ' ""'"
11 lloolf01 or o Wa n rod

~

11 ...
I l S otyot•a Wont od
I ] On ou• o"" •
14 I YOonoooT""""G
l l Sr: h oolo
llodoo Tv • Cl Aooo"
I 1 Moo ul lo noo~o

51'"""" ~·a~••b ' ~ •

I

I I Au o&amp;oloo Solo

n ,,...,.,,..,. ,,,.
1] ....... . .

o bta•ned at the office ot the
Treasu rer . M•&lt;X11epon. Oh•o
A cerl!fted check payable to
the Tr easurer of the above
board o f educahon or a
sat •sfaciOry btd bond executed

PARTS .and SERVICE
4-5-tt c

~=========j~===~===~~~~========;

all oth e' pen ,nent pmv•s •on ol

,

•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezer1

12- 10-1 mo. pd

10 6 t!c

Sp ec th cattons and tnstr uc L--=~~:::===========:::::::::::::::==-------------J Ilaw
ttons to b•dd ers may be

CHRISTMAS ONIONS - Unemployed steelworkers unload some
of the 40,000 pounds of onions, donated by a New York grower, that will
be delivered by the United Steelworkers to Its jobless members for the
holidays. The onions anived Wednesday at the United Steelworkers
headquarters in downtown Pittsburgh. (AP Laserphoto)

DELIVER'

PH. 985-3892
or 985-3837

Ph. 614-843-2591

of the Ohto Aevtsed Code and

111 Court St .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769

oQRANGE GAS PIPE
•BLACK GAS PIPE
•REGULATORS

At. 3. Box 54
Racine. Oh.

made to sa•d Board at •ts next
sc h eduled meetmg as prov •d ed
by law for thr ee (3 1 65

PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY

to 24'x36'.
Insulated Dog Hou ses

by the Tr easurer o f sa 1d Board .
tabulated . and a report th ereof

G&amp;W

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

1983. an d at th at li me opened

washers •Ranges

savice available
1 2·3 · 1 mo pd

UTILITY BUILDINGS

until 12 00 noon on January 4,

•Washers •Dish-

All makes and models

Antenna Installation

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

985·3561
All Makes

Dewayne WiUiams
&amp; Scottie Smith
House calls and shop

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

recerved by th e Board o f
Ed ucat• on o f th e Me•gs Local
School D•sH• d o f M•ddlepon

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

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

pro- I New Holland, Bush Hog
contains commercials
Farm Equipment
may not be suitable for
Dealer
lanJIOnt' on a diet."
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
t -3-tt c
Public Notice
NOnCE TO
BIDDERS
PURCHASE OF THREE
SCHOOL BUSES FOR
MEIGS LOCAL BOARD
OF EDUCATK&gt;N

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

s&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BOGGS

Se al ed

17

Se

Reg. '189.95
NOW 1 147.50
leather Vests

Harley Jewelry-Harley Pins

Reg. 13.95-16.95
NOW 2/1 5.00

54 Miac . Merchandise

ALUM . ROOFING
SPtC IAL

SCHEDULE
Wed.-Fri .-Sat . Nights
7:30 to IO:OD
Sunday 2:00 to .UO
Open Christmas Eve
Closed Christmas
Open New Year's Eve
7:30-12:30
Open New Year's

C.l\h ~ CJrrV
iII Wlllf
R It
I 0 It

'8 95
\11 10

17 H

\13 45
\1\ 70

14 It
Iii I:
IX It

SKATE-A-WAY

'II 90
'19 90

leather Hats. T·Shirts. Acces sori es &amp; much more .
Hrs .: 9-5
Closed Sun. &amp; Mon _
Bee chgrove Rd.

Rutland. Ohio
l ~S! mo

od

(\Jiii9Qfl $101 Iii,,

3 Announcements

Avai lable for Private Parties

Ph . 985-3929 or 985-9996
12-1·1 mo.

f'OMf ROY
lANDMARK
I,J4 99? 1181

SWEEPER and sewng me-chine repair , parts, ana:

~=========~supplies.

up arui

Pick Vacuum
delivery , Davis
Cktaner, one half mile ~·

YOUNG'S

Real Estate-General

CARPENTER

OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKING ....
Wttlt this 149 acre Rutland
farm. Anxious to sell has
priced accordingly. Includes rural home, bam,
praee. minerals, and
much more. If you have
. interest in a good country
farm or minerals, don't
pass up your opportunity.
Call R. C. S. Realtors,
1~14·593-5571 or 992·
6312.
_,

SERVICE

- Addonsand remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and

etectrlcatworl&lt;

(Free El1imatesJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Georges Creek Rd .
446-0294 ..

Cittj

Thanks for being one of mYtt:
Customers. Have a very •
Merry Christmas-K &amp; K'a. •

Body Shop, 39 2 Pike St '
' '
Galllpo lis.
Gun

shoot,

Racine

Gun

Club. Evary Sunday ot'artlng ·
1 p .m . Factory choked guna

only .

Racine Gun Club dues are :
due. $25.00. Must be paid before Jan . 1, 1983.
'

1 1 -26-tlc .

REWARD OF 100.00 to
anyone who knowa who
ohot 2 gooto on the Jim
Lucas farm Saturday •

Doc: .11 . 614-742-2763.

..

;

.'

�•
18
3

The Da

Sentinel

Pomeroy

Announce ments

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Middleport, Ohio

42 Mobile Homos
for Rent

St,:Joting matches ca ncell ed

45

Furnished Rooms

Weekly rates. one pereon

Dec .26 a nd Jan .1 Raci ne
Volunteer Fire Dept . Will
res um e Jan .B th .

Eureka 2 bdr .. furnished ,
riverfront lot , ref . &amp; dep. Call

"

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

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

S80, 2 people 170. Clrcfo'o
Motel. Call 448·2501 .

2 bdr . trailer completely
furnished ex . con d., porch &amp;
carport, 3 % mi . past Holzer

C hristmas .

4

off 160.
9170.

Giveaway

Call

614·245·

12x60 2 bdr. $200 mo ..
$1 00 dep., gas &amp; water
ANY

PERSON

who

furnished. no pet s. Call after

has

5, 448·4745 .

a nythin g to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any ot he r thing fo r sa le
may place a:1 ad in thi s

1 4x60 2 bedroom mobile
home '12 acre, fenced lot,

S200 mo . S2200 sec. dep·

column . There w ill be no
c harge t o the advert iser

osit . Unfurnished. kids &amp;
pets welcome. Call 614 -

245·6291 after 5.

'12 year o ld male dog . Part
Lab . &amp; part Retriever . Good

wAtc h dog 6 14 -992 -7811 .

3 bedroom trailer for rent .

Bluish gray and wh ite tom

$150 a month plus utilities.
Vz mile off At. 7 on BulavilleAddison Ad . in Addison, Oh .

ca t . make nice C hristm as

I (b(J(J)N T
leu... WAS !HAT
A !HANK You ~
A ~ReAM OF

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of

le~R

LOST - Border Co lli e Ge rm an Shepha rd milt .
Black

with

white

992·7479.

new tlroo, 1850. 304·8763514 .

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

Phone 304· 773·5440 after
5 p.m.

11

at 614·992 ·55 19 o' 614·
992·3652

HAVE FUN paying your
Holi cEy bills. Sell Avon and
oo m good SSS, me et nice

LOST-larg e navy blue purse
i n downtown Middleport .
R e ward - ca ll 614 - 949 -

peo ple . Call 61 4 · 843 ·
2982 , 614· 388· 9045 , 614·
992 ·3690 .

2503 .

The West Virginia
Guard ca n help . If you
Junior or Senior in
School or a Graduate, you
may qualify for a $1,500
bonus or up to $4,000
co llege tuition assistance,
plus you will have a secure
part time job a h er training .
Learn skills in Maintenance.
Supply, Ctericap, Electronic s. Good Pay - Good
Training -Good Benefits. The
W est Virgini a National
Gua rd i s no ordinhy part
time job! Call Sergeant
Lutt on 304 -675 -3950 or
toll fr ee in WV 1 -800 -642 -

Call Ga&lt;y Gibbs . 614 · 949·
2246 .
Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champion Aucti o neer Ri ck Pearson . Estates.
antiques , farm . hou seh old s.
Licensed Ohio-WV a. 304 -

773 · 5785
9185.

304 · 773 ·

0'

36 19.
·ul

Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Com munit y
Center . Truckload s of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcom e. Ri chard Rey nolds
Auction eer . 275 -3069 .

Bartenders. Costume re quired. Anchors Club, 320

Main St . 304· 675· 9759 .
12

Pr o f ess i ona l Auctioneer
Service . Over 30 years expe rien ce in new. used and
antique furitur e. licensed to
auction Rea l Esta te. aut os.
farm equip ., hou se hold. bus ness. ca tt le . liquihtions &amp;
antiques of all types . Osby
A .Martil &amp; Rod ney Howery

Situations
Wanted

Will do babysitting New
Years night . Call 614 -992 5327 m orning s.
Will ca re for elderly in my
home or yo ur s. 614 -843 -

4831

614·992 ·6370 .
No sales at t he Hartford
Community Buildin g on the
Friday night sa les till Jan .7.
198 3. Hope everyone ha s a
Merrr Chr istmas and a
Happy New Year . Richard
Reyn olds . 275 -3069 .

9

13

Insurance

SANOY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co . has offered
serv ices for fir e in suran ce
cove r age in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm.
hom e and personal property
cove r ages are available to
m eet indiv idual need s. Con tact Eugene Holley, age nt .

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Oldfumi ·
tulft an d Antiques of all
kind s. ca ll Kenneth Swain,

Phon e 388·8690 .

446· 3159 o' 256 · 1967 in

Are yt~u paying too mu c h for
your hospital-health insu rance
Call Carroll
Snowden. 446 -4 290 .

the even ing s
Buying Go ld, Silver. Plat i num . old coins, sc rap ring s
&amp; silverware. Da ily quotes
availabl e. Also co in s &amp; coin
supplies for sa le Spring
Valley Trading Co ., Spring
Valley Plaza . 446 -8025 or

15

1978 Dodge power wogon,
4-WD, rough body, mochon·
icofly oound, 318 with 2

47 Wanted to Rent
Wanted to rent . Tobacco
allotment in Meigs Co. for

1971 Ford •;. ton. 57,000
actual miloo. $400. 814·
992 -6316.

We pay cas h for late mode l
clean used cars .
Fren cht own Ca r Co .
Bill Gene Johnson

446 ·0069
Want ed to buy Sq uare Dan e·
ing ou tfits Al l sizes. men's
an d wom en's Call 446 -

Oh CAll 61 4· 286· 3074 or
614 38 4·6160 .

4537
fumitu re, gold. Sti ver dol lars. wood ice boxes. stone
jars, antiques . etc ., Co m plete hou se holds . Writ e:
M .D . Miller. At . 4 , Pomeroy,

No Item to Latge or to Small
Will bu y one piece o r com plete household New. used .
or antique furni ture 614

Furnished apt .. $185, water

pd .. 3 bdr., 131 4th Ave.
Gallipoli s. 446 -4416 after7
p .m.
2 bdr . unfurnished apt. in

Crown City. Call 614·256·
6520.

675 ·1542.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal

5 bedroom. 2'12 baths. elec tricity , restored victorian.
wall to wall carpet. ac gas

Housing OpporbJnity) has 1
bedroom apartments, rent
starting at $152 per month .
Call 446 -2745 or leave
message .

heat . 304 ·675· 6804.
32 Mobile Homos
for Sale

1st floor furnished etfiency
apt . Apt . no. 6 , comfortable
for 1 person. Rent, deposit,
utilties paid . 729 2nd. Ave .

TRI · STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED · CARS,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 ·7572 .

Call 446·0957.
For rent furnished 3 rm . apt.,
upstairs , utilities paid,
adults only , 94 Locust St .,

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 35 . PHONE 446·7274.
For sale or rent 1 2x60
mobile home, gas heat, rural
water, close to town. availa -

ble Jan . ht. Call446· 1240 .

Guns -Turn unwanted guns
into instant cash for Chri st mas. Call Capco 614 -949 2485 . Ra cine, Oh .

USED MOBILE
576 ·271 1.

or 304·

992·7772 8 a.m. to 3 p.m.

22 Money to Loan

Help Wanted

HOME LOANS 12% fixed
rate. leader Mortgage, Ohio

only 1 · 800 · 341 · 8554 ,
WVa 614· 592· 30,51

Need babysitt er for 2 yr . o ld
Muat hav e re ferences . Call

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.

446·7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, (extra heavy

by Frontier!. S886 . Solo,
chair and loveseat, $276.
Sofas and chairs priced from

8285 . to S895 . Tobloo, 845
and up to $126. Hide-abeds, $440 . and up to
$526 .. Recliners, $175. to

king frame $60. Good selection of bedroom suites,
cedar chests , rockers, metal
cabin3tl, swivel rockers. '
Used Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges, chairs, end tables,
washers, dryers, refrigerators and TV's. 3 mile• out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am to
5pm, Sat.

448·0322
USED

FURNITURE.

Like

new cannonball bad, queen
mattress and box springs,
complete twin size outfit,
sofa bed, living rm. tables
and refrigerator. Corbin and
Snyder Furniture, 446-

1171.

448·3649 .

Canaries

•eo.

949·2180 or 814· 742·
2834.
For Solo-CHRISTMAS
TREES. One mila off Rt. 7 by
pall on St.Rt. 143, Pomeroy. Reasonably priced .

23

Contract driv er for handi capped studen t . N eed
chauffeur lic e n se, in su rance , safety in spected car .
For information contact Dan
Morris, Superintendent

don Walburn.

Bookkeepilg &amp; tax J&amp;rvtce
for all types of businesses .

Carol Neof 446 -3882

Local . 814 -992 ·

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR

Individual needed 24 hours Call Bill W~ud for appointper week to provide health ment , Ward's Keyboard,
education -health related 446 -4372 .
1ervices for public •gency. 1 -----~-----

in

PIANO TUNING·Lono Do·
niafs. aoooc. of Brunicordl
Music Co.-Cunningllln'a of
Athen s. 814·742· 2961 or
614· 992·2082.

hoo~h related field and-or

ravalant experience . Send
reoumo to Bo x 722, Pomo·
roy , Ohio 4~7Rq by De·
.11

,.· C f-1 lol I N EN T H A I A
RE.MOVAL - Professional
Electrolysis Center, Inc.,

WANTED: Someone to livo
in, shere expeneea. light A.M.A. Approved, Dr. Rofhouoowork. Men In wlwel 11'1'111. QHt Certitclloo, n choir . Equol opportunity. hou,. . . By appointment,
304-876-8234.
814-992-2845 .

Fitzpatrick Orchards. Plenty
of nice app~l for your
Christmas baskets, several
varieties for all your uses.
Visit our orchards on S.R.

889. 814·889-3785.

Now oot plano blade a. tJOO.
614·992-2013.
30 in. white gas cook stove,

good cond. 876. Aloo Zigler
fuel oil lrtova with 275 gol.
tonk. 814-985-3839.
G.E. no froat Fridg. 2 chairs,
kitchen table and chairs,
dreaaer and end tables.

614·992-8881 3:30 to 8
p.m.

ARMY fialdjockoto S36. up,
14 oz. demim jeena $1 0.,

jockoto

-

I

....

-~""'"'" I
• u~ •

• • • • - .._ '

II Ll
61

IIIQQk

Farm Equipment

$13.

814·949·2069 Eveningoof·
tar 7 p.m .
Whole shell corn for Dec.
$6. pre sacked. Morgan's
Woodlawn Farm, Pliny Rt.

35. 304-675-2276.
NEW

Ideal

No. 7 corn

66

Building Supplies

OWNER is seeking small
quiet family or single for 4
room apartment. Carpeted,
newly painted, excellent
condition &amp;. neighborhood,
rent reduced . Priced on

For sale lump coal &amp; fire~
wood . linn Coal Co. , Inc.

Building moteriola block,
brick. oewer plpeo, win·
dowa, llntelo, etc. Claude
Wlntoro, Rio Orondo. 0. Coli
814-245·5121.

For a ale ReateurantCarryout equipment, uaed,

Build your own gar1ge or
bern, 24x24. •e9&amp;. Lumber
furnished. Can deliver.

inapoction. Phone 304-876·
1982.

lowaot prlcoo.
304-623· 1378.

Other oizoo. Coli 1-814888-7311.

Call446~1408.

RADCO,

1
I"-::::::::::::::::::.E::::::::::::::::::;::,j ---------NEW SHIPMENT Metol
ohHII for oil building pur·

coltod. 4x8 thru ·4 • 12.
Prtcoo. n.oo to •9.80.
Odell olzn for t,.ller under·
pinning. 814·887-308&amp;.

68

4 room houae. Preferably
odulto, no pall. 814-992·
3981.

"'Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boordlng Ill brwedo. AKC
Reg. Dobermona pupa o~d
Doblrmon Stud Service.
Coli 448· 778&amp;.

5 rooms an bath near
Racine. 614·992-5858 .

1----------3 bedrooms, new paint .
Carpet In living room, 2

bldroomo, both ond hell.
Dopooit "'qufrod. 814 -992·
3090.
3 bedroom, family room,
near schools and ho spital,
deposit and reference re-

qui'ad, eJOO month . Coll1
304·876-4338.
.
Furnlohld 4 room con.ge,
odulto, no poto. 304-8711- ·
1463.

•.ANO

WHEN YOU
HEARD ME COIIIIH(i
YOU ~CAAE R.I/5TEREO
AT BEINI.'l f()(JH{) HERE,
~-"'-50 YOU HID..,

21 mo. old Rag. Quarter
horae gelding aired by Super

Chlx. Call 446-3413 .
3 calves ready for butcher-

ing. Between 400·600 lb.
·Call 814-258-8639.

PAINTING · interior and
eJCterior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling. 20 yrs .

oxp. Call

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

Rodney Howery. 814·992·
6370.

®

'

~

'

-

~

~

~

'

•·

'

·•. ' '

•

•

a

..

. ' . ,,.

•····o

•

Whales that Wou ldn't

(i]) Fawlty Towers
9:00 U (l) CD Cheers Diane ac·
cepts a job as a wa itres s at -

Cheers . IR)
Cll 700 Club
® Gl ~ Too Close Fo'

CASOI.II'\ F. AI.I.F.Y

Comfort Henry is sent into
shock
when
Muriel's
mother comes to visit his
new son. (A)

He qot i:' come back! He
owe me a new wheel!

814-992 -8370.

®

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and

(11) Sneak Previews Cohosts Nea l Gabler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what's happening at the
movies.
t~

'love in temporari ly with
Louie. (R)

® Gl (ill

It Takes Two
® Wodohouse Playhouse
(i]) James Cagney: That
Yankee Doodle Dandy
10:00 U (l) CD Hill S1root Blues

304-676 · 2088 or 8764680.

Capt. Furillo 9a lls a conference of gang chiefs and
Ba l ker is aided by 'CapJ.ain

WI NNIF.
THERE,
THERE,
ORVILLE,
THERE'5 STILL

ORVILLE, WHEN YOU I?&gt;URY THE
· HATCHET, YOU DO A GREAT

Joe.

Freedom· (Ril60 min.);
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Las Ve~s

w

I]) Gl
0 (!)

TIME. FOR
82

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

YOU.

Phone 448-3888 or 448·
4477

~ecial

tide season. (R) (60 min .)
10:30 (l) Henry Fonda: Tho Man
and His Movies This retro~­
pective look spans Fonda' s
acting career.

United Croft Plumbing and
heating aervice. No job to · .
large or to small. Oaby ·
A.Martin, Rodney Howery.

84

&amp;

Electrical
Refrigeration

SEWING Machine rapolro,

RARNF.Y

-- BUT WE LOST TH'

I THOUGHT VOU AN'
LUKEY WAS PITCHIN'

HORSESHOES

HORSESHOES

service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Shirpenn

Scluoro. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
General Hauling

79· Trono Am, 43,000 mi.,
PS. PB, tilt wheel, AC, PW,
new tlreo. Good cond. Call
814·387 · 7203 boforo
11PM.

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Call 814-367·7471
or 814-387-0591.

HARTB Ulld Coro. Now
Hoven Well Vlrglnlo. Over

aw~y

oomothlng

houlod

Wti'll do it. Coli 448·3169 or
814·268·1987 olter e.

JEEPS, CARS. TRUCKS
under •1 00 ovolloble at
POODLE GROOMING. Coli locol gov't illeoln yqur lr81.
.Judy Toylor 11 814-387· Coli (refundoblel 1· 714·
7220.
1108~0241 ext. 1855 1or
·cllractory on how to purDRAGDNWYND CATTERY .chooe. 24 hro.
• KENNEL. AKC Chow pupploe, CF A Hlmoloyon, Per· 79 CHEVROLET, 4 door,
lion lnd 81omeoe klttono. n - tlr11, cloen, A·1 condl·
Coli 448-3844 otter 4PM.
tlon, 40,000 milia. phone
304·8711-34411 otter ~ p.m.
AKC ·Reg. Ch- Chow
puppllo for llle, UIIO. Coli 1874 Flrobtrd. •1110. 304·2118-1211 .
8711·1117.

JIMS Water Service. Con·
Jim Lenior, 304-075-7397.
Upholstery

(l) MOVIE: 'Serial'
Cll Star Time
10:45 Cil TBS Evening News
11:00 U ® Nowscontor
I]) 0 ® Glilll News
(1) Nows/Sports/Woatho'
® Dave Allen at Largo
[0) Eyewitness News
(i]) Sign Off
11 ,3 U (l) CD Tonight Show
(l) MOVIE: 'On Golden
Pond'
CIJ Another Lifo
I]) Bonny Hill Show
O®Ouincy
CIJ PBS Lata Night
®I All In the Family
Gl (ill Nlghtlino
11:46 Cil MOVIE: 'Shalako'
12:00 til MOVIE: 'Cattle King'
(I) Burns &amp; Allen
00 Nlghtllna
®I MOVIE: 'Investigation
Of
a
Citizen
Above
Suspicion'
.
-·m~Hi iaat Word
12:3l! II til CZl Late Night wl1h
David Letterman
(I) Jack Benny Show
I]) ESPN SportaContar
00 Loot Weird
0 ® MOVIE: 'McCloud:,
Tho
Concreto
Jungle ·
Caper'
® Captioned ABC News
1:00 (I) I Married Joan
I])
NCAA
Basketball:
UCLA at Maryland
®Sign Off
Ill (ill Newo
1:16 til MOVIE: 'final Aaolgn·
mant'

o

·

or aomethlng movad1

ca,. in

20/20

®l CBS News

(l) Christmas at Pops Mel
Torme heads an al l-star
ca st in a tribute to the Yule-

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 814·992·8370.

Xmas

9:30 U CllCD TaxiJ 1misforced

rienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpenter, electrician, mason. Call

304-895-3802.

Neigh.

~ecial

houoo calla. Call 578·2398
or 448-2464.

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holea.
Pumps Sales and Service.

Good

PEANUTS

'

WE'LL SELL CHRISTMAS
~EATfl510 EVERY' IIOME
IN TilE NE161180RHOOP

THIS IS A 6REAT
8051NESS WE IIAIJE 601N6
HERE
.
I 616 6ROTHER ...

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sac. Ave., Golllpollo.
448-7833 o; 448-1833.
::
MOWRE.Y8 Upholatory Rt
1 . Box 124, Pt. Pfllunt'
304·87:5·41&amp;4.
•/

trump over East's fivespade interference, he was
showin g two aces
Of course, se ven hea rts
made easily. Declarer had
tr icks to spare 1f he needed
th em.
Now let's see what might
have happened if East had

to

s ix spades.

" DOPI " wo uldn't be avail ·

able. In orde r to show two
aces. South would have to
bid beyond six hearts. There-

Vulnerable North·South
Dealer : South

I.

West

North

East

South

I+
Pa ss
Pa ss

1•

5+
Pa ss

5 NT
I';J\S

4 NT

and if it ever happens that
you hold three yo u ca n bid
one step higher than the low·
est bid. Thus with today's
hand when South bid five no·

jumped

+K o

Die Jack Lord narrates this
story of the Pacific gray
wha le.

United Craft . Complete Car·
pantry Service. No job to
large or too t:nall. Osby A .
Martin, Rodney Howery.

87

EAST
+J 10853

+ 2
.A Q8765
t AJ 74

Buddy conjures up the
'horrors' awaiting" Jennie
Lee in shoW business. (R)

United Crafts. Roofing,
spouting, siding and storm
windows. No job too large or
too small. Oaby A . Martin,

Need

WEST

+KQ 970
• 10 4

t 10 B 3
+9 7 3 2
+QJ \08 54
SOUTH

Christmas

Atlanta at Milwaukee

Carpet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.

. 85

12·23·82

+A 4
.KJ 932
tKQ 952
+A

.....

by

I]) Gl (ill Stor of tho Family

...
~

Entertainment

8:30 (l) MOVIE: 'Tho Border'
I]J
NBA
Basketball:

Call 614·388·9857.

RIDING horooa &amp; .ooddlao.
304-678-2263, 578-2610,
578·2821.

llock.

NORTH
&lt;

Previews Cohosts Neal Gabler and
Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what's happening at th e
movies.

BUT WE WERE GETTING
ALONG JUST FINE! WE
DON'T NEED SURVIVAL
IRAINING!

~14·388-9852 .

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

20 lese expenelve

One step past 'DOPI'

fore, if the interference is
really strong we play double
as suggesting that seven is
out of the quest 1on and that

pass suggests a se ven bid .
Therefore, if Eas t had bid
stx spad es. South wou ld have

passed to invite a seve n bid

Ci) Sneak

orn bootl. 814-898-3290.

78 Dodge Omnl 4 dr., 4
opd.. olr, PS, PB, raor
window dllfroat &amp; wlpor,
AM·FM 8-trock. Call 4480499, elk for .Phil.

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

l!"" · (2 h&lt;S .)

Aloo grodo. Soddloo, bridfao,

1976 Muotong 8 cyl. and a
1976 Yamaha RO 200
4,302 mi. Will oall both
•1.200. Coll448-4213, elk
for Rick.

(!) ESPN SportsCon1or
ffi MOVIE: 'Mr. Magoo's

Magnum, jolted by old memories, sees a girl he is
convinced is his wife that
was reported dead in Sai-

6 Holstein Springer Heifers.
860·950 lbo. Will Sell raaoonoblo. Call 448-4063.

BRIDGE

0 lU ®l Magnum, P.l.

11B2.

SAVAGE

" BUG " US

Chachi Fonzie visits Chi cago and becomes th e
trombonist for the band
duri'!S_ a TV audition .

textured ceilings commercial and residential, free
estimates. Call 61 4 -266·

GULL Y JOBBER

Answer : What those ants at the picnic do -

(!)
NCAA
Basketball:
UCLA at Maryland
I]) Gl (ill Joanio Loves

STUCCO PLASTERING ·

SKULK

Dawson and Nick Buon iconti ana lyze this week's
NFL action and look ahead
to next week's games.

Northwest'
(]) Houston
Pageant

Homo
Improvements

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

Livestock

fur~

nance fits-gas, oil, electric ,

Call

63

winter horae blankets. Weat-

54 Misc. Merchandise

offer .

lvr, Ivee
81

(,;nswets tomorrow )

I Jumbles
Yes ter d ay s
.

Jumble Book No. 20, containing 110 puules, ls available lor $1 .95 postpaid
trom Jumble, cJo thi s newspaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
name, address, zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooks.

8:00 U til CD Fame
(l) MOVIE: 'North

removal. Coli 875·1331 .

ONE greanhouoe, 8 foot by
16 feat, 8 loet high. wood
frodmo, 304-895-3879.

Sunday). Call in orders 304-

make

Now arrange the circled tenors to
lorm the surprise answer. as suggested by the above c&amp; rtoon

® ~ewitness News
Ill (l2J People's Court
U til ®I You Asked For It
til Inside tho NFL Len

min .)
(I)
(]})
Ton!_ght

bike, 2,900 mifao. Call 468·
1997.
.

458· 1997.

TH15 I&lt; INC/ OF

HOMEMADE f'I':EAC/.

Answer:[IXIIIIIIII]

treal. Quebec, Canada . 160

1976 Suzuki 550 hoe been

f'E.TTE.R' NOT MAKE

1

Luciano Pavarotti Luciano
Pavaroni hosts this performance of Christmas favorites from the Notre
Dame Cathedral in Mon -

1974 Yamaha Enduro dirt

reeked,

rJ r J
rONTEMj
J r rJ

I]) 0 ® Family Feud
® Business Report
(i]) Christmas Special with

Motorcycles

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump

Sam

Somerville's Army Surplus,
New Era, East Ravenswood,
old Rt. 21. Open evenings

74

I RICCAT±

· Christmas Carol'

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

875·3024.

:Registered Quarter Horse.

hot water, e476. Call 814258 -1218.

Call

picker. good condition, 304 -

tor, 304-875·1044.

Supply, 8· 8 . 304· 675·
2 bdr. 8t bath, 1 mile below 2218. 875 -6753.
Eu,eka on St Rt7. 8150per 1 - - - - -- - - - -

cond.

$6. per 1 00 lbo. with oocko

like new. A·1 shape. Call

New solid fuel add-on

axe.

Now Holland 488 Hoybino,
268 rake, both like new.

by side refrig., 8260. All 3

for rent. 1 bedroom,
$180.00 Call Automotive

options,

Call 448 ·2107.

- - - - - - - - ·IC-

Saara 12 in. Radial arm saw .

lined

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Mason. 304-676· 1452 af·

Professional
Services
C&amp;L Bookkeeping

58

Baas boat 2 yra. old . Must
see to appreciate . Clipper
Masonry sew. Over 2,000
good clean used antique

brick. 814·992-2805. El·

$26. pair . 304-

895·3972.

Firewood delivered
a
cord. Coal delivered $46.
ton. Call Tom Hoskins 61 4·

po••· Flat porcellan enamel

814-245· 9464 .

pup. 304 -882·3872 .

TWO bedroom apartment in

446·8181.

t978 Jeep CJ·5 Ronogodo
6 cyl .. 3 opd .• now top, all

oarvlco, call 304· 773·5184.

SELF defrosting refrigera-

614-446-

UNFURNISHED apartment

Ave .• Gallipolia. Phone446·
3946 after 6 p.m .

Smith &amp; we11on 44 magnum revolver in wooden
case . Also 2· 1 6 in., heavy
duty Ford wheels. All items
in excellent condition . Call

Couch end recliner chair,

TWO bedroom apartment in

6 Room house, 928 First

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

delivered. 814·84;!·3803.

up to 8376. Baby mo·
tresses, $25 &amp; $35, bad
framoo S20, $25, &amp; $30,

and Buff. Malee. S150. No
chocko. 614·992· 7102 .

AKC Registered Silver Mini ature poodles, $126, each,
ready in week after Christmas, $60 deposit holds pup
for you . Has had shots,
wormed and tails cut. veterinary record accompanies

S99., to 8435 . 7 pc., f189.

Baby bade,

Cocker Spaiel puppies. Registered black &amp; white, Parti;

axe. cond. Coli 814· 388·
9364.

and up. Wood table with six
$560. and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, 8260 . and

Elkhound pupa, 6 waoko old.
Call 614·258·1117.

AKC Registered white German Shephard for stud

Firewood, $36. truck load.
$66. a cord. Split and

chairs 8425. to $746. Daok
S11 0 up to $226. Hutchoo,

82,860. Call 446·4564.

AKC Registered Norweigian

Minolta camera SRT-200.
C11e &amp; atrap, 50 mm lena,
set of close up lens, 2x
converter. Flesh. $200.,

S350 .. Lamps from $28. to
$76. 6 pc . dinettes from

puppy. Phone 446· 0867.

Kenmore auto washer
$110, white 22 cu.ft. side

Gallipolis.

tar 6 p.m .

mo. plus Oep. Call 1 -614643-2916.

1876.

Poodle

good condhion. Phone 304·
875·1714.

8221 .

0338 .

Free standing fireplaces lnaerta. mobile home and
fumance ad-ona. Jividen's
Farm Equipment. Call 446-

Registered

GE horvoot gold aida by olda
rafrig., 19 cu.ft. $226,

and

adults only . Call 446-

WODDBURNING STOVES

AKC

875·3334.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant

Small furnished house, 1 or

Furniohod 3 bdr. houoo
$150 mo. pluo dopoalt. Call
448-0459 after 6.

446· 3169.

Slobo cut·up e15 full length
$10 PU load, round wood,
largo truck food . Call 814·
246-5804.

dryer S90. 30 doyo guarantee. Call814·268·1207.

Hendo&lt;aon, 304·875-1972.
2

bunkies mattresses $40,
chests. dressers, TV's. Call

7:30

Call 448 -4880 . Dopooit 446·0616 .
·1 - - - - - - - - - TROYBILT TILLERS, ~ow o hofdo.
78 Ford F·250, 4·WD, auto,
opeclol price on 1982 mod·
elo. Whlfo thoy loot. Swllhar Would you like a cute Cocker PS, PB, 46,000 mi., topper.
Implement, Upper River Spaniel puppy for Christ· Coli 814·379·2419, after
mea? AKC blonde Cocker 8:30 814·268·8881 .
Rd., Golllpolio, OH.
Spaniel puppiao e150. Have 1 - - - - - - - - - 7ft. locust post and cuatom been wormed end had all 4 Wheel Drive , 1 978 Ford
cut firewood . Call 446· ohoto. Call 814·388·9756 loaded. $6,000. 304·875oftar 6PM .
3478 .
1203 or 448·3818.

Whirlpool washer 1 white &amp;
1 coppartone $90 ea. Hotpoint dryer $76, apartment

Equal Opportunity Housing.

Houses for Rent

bunk bode complete $170,

place inserts.

Great Christmas gift. AKC
Miniature Schnauzer pup-

till Chrfotmoo, 11 :00-7:00
p.m. Friday, Saturday &amp;

Apartments . 304 - 675 -

41

oofo-

gun · Gun cabinets, $360.,
dinette chairs 820 . and $25.
Gas or electric ranges, $326

Pomeroy Cliffs . 1 bedroom
apartment for handicapped
or elderly . Carpet, laundry
facilities. air conditioning,
garbage disposal, appliances . 245 Union Ave. 614 -

"'"''''

$120,

Unfurnished no children. no
pets, $150 per . mo. plus
utilities. sec. dep . req . Call

992 ·3190.

Real Estate
Wanted

firm

S42. 5 dr. chelle. S64. Bod
frames, S20.and . S26., 10

New 1 bd .room Apt. in
Middleport. F\Jrnished with
util ities paid. Deposit and
references required . 614-

84 Lumber. Call 304·675·
6873 or 875 ·3618.

$100,

loveseat &amp; chair $1 99, love
seats $70. new coal &amp; wood
heaters as low as $399 with
blowers, used coal &amp; wood
heaters, new dinet sets $75
8t up, refrigerators, ranges.

Call 446·4416 afte' 7PM .

614 · 992 · 5434
882 ·2666.

Two acre lots- 150 h. road
frontage, city water, behind

polis. King coal &amp; wood
heaters with fen $469, set
box spring &amp; amattreas

Furnished apt ., S2 25 utili ties paid, 1 bdr .. 243 Jack son Pike. Gallipolis, adults.

1 bd .room furnished Apt.

35 Ac . at Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd . Owner financing available. 446 -8221 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 82 Oliva St., Galli·

$110. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin. $68.,
firm, $68. and $78. Queen
sets, $196. 4 dr. chests,

osit 8100 . Call 614·992·
2288 .

HOME .

Gallipolis 45631 .

letplv. rnvrn
lvr,luve

wHks old. Priced reduced to
$125, excellent childs pat .

up to S396.

POMEROY-2 bedroom unfurnished apt ., $160. 2
bedroom Pause $185. Dep-

9378 .

3159 after 6PM 256· 1967.

jJ!Inaeslal

pill. Only 2 mofao left, 7

'

u.

$190 mo .. S60 dop . Call
446·1 340 or 446· 3870 .

446 ·2129 .

1 2x60 at Quail Creek . Many
nice extras, playground,
pool. low down payment,
assume loan. Call614-245 -

Wanted : Farm of 100to 150
Acres. rolling land. Reply to
Box 6000. in c -o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 3rd Ave .,

Special Window Tinting .
Auto. res id ential , commer cia l &amp; R.V . windows. Free
es timates, 446 - 3100 or
446 - 7122,
Kot a li c
Landsca pin g.

992 ·6370

camb er 2fl
opportu nity omplotor.

Reolto, . Call 304·675·
6104 0' 675 · 5386.

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad dition . 3 bedrooms , family
room with firepalce . central
air, basement, phone 304-

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service Reliable
and d ep endable. Call 446 Nursing in private home.
Daytime ooly in Gallipolis or
Pt . Pleasant. Will give ref . if
req ui red . Ca ll458- 1818 .

3476 .

degree

Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr.
apartments for rent . HUO
program available . A -One
Real Estates. Carol Yeager,

6548.

Gold, silv er, ste rlin g, Je·
welry , rings , old co ins &amp;
currency . Ed Burk ett Barber
Shop , Middl epor t . 992 -

hove

2215 .

2133 .

18 Wanted to Do

Oh . o, 992 ·7760

Should

Furnished 3 r . private bath ,
845 2nd. Ave ., Gallipolis.
Ref . preferred . Call 446-

For s ale - Repossess8d
house, 3 bd .rooms, all refinished , 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 -

36

BEDS·IR ON . BRA SS. old

Moigo
2153 .

2 bedroom frame house
with basement in the Village
of Vinton . Priced in mid
20 's. Call614-388· 8419 .

Schools
Instruction

Karate the uiUmate in self
defence all pdvate lessons,
Men, women, &amp; c hildren.
Instruction thru black belt .
Al so available Karate uniform s puching and kicking
bags, and protec tive equipment . J erry Lowery &amp; A ss ociates Karate Studio, 143
Burlington Rd ., Jac kson ,

Swisher Im-

plement, Upper River Rd.,
Golllpolio.

··~

Cleland Realty 992 ·2259 .
Apartment
for Rent

van, air, auto, good tires,

51 Household Goods

'

.......

~ewitness News

(1) Charlie's Angels
0 I]) Tic Tac Dough
(ll)
MacNoii·Lohror
®
Report

Pots for Sale

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

'

44

56

I K)

(]) Entertainment Tonight

1978 Ford 12 pouongar
··~

House for sale on land
contract, Cheshire, Oh . 7
rms. , basement. garage,
workshop , gas furnance .

FOR TH I5!

to 11 ,200 firm . Calf 448·
7697 anytime.

sL-·1-?

WOOD AND COAL IIOVOI
by Blue Ridge and Ully. Free
standing stoves and fire-

31 Homos for Sale
Secluded, mini farm , all
fenced. remodel farm home.
with 4 bedr ., $300 per mo.

I 5WE'AR o I 'I.L HAVE THEM
IN THE: PUBLIC STOCK?

barrell, auto trans, $~.000

43 Farms for Rent

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

446·8026 .

11

lma•a

NE ED EXTRA MONEY m 614 ·388·8278.
help with college ex l&gt;eroses? I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

LOST: Bird dog . Eng li sh
Setter. Whit e &amp; black. some
brown . Mi ss ing from home
3 miles East of Racine , Oh .
o n At . 124 . S10 0 . reward .

8

l!val

H elp Wanted

Trucks for Sale

Dough

6:30 U til CD NBC News
CIJ MOVIE: 'Spoilers of tho
Forest'
(!) ESPN's Sportsforum
Cil Bob Newhart Show
(!) Gl (ill ABC News
0 I]) ®I CBS News
®Dr. Who
(i]) Over Easy
7:00 U til P.M. Magazine
(!) NFL Story: Line By Line
Cil Gomer Pyle

CAfYI'AN EASY
72

til Nawacantor

®

_

.......
DINEK

C&gt;-.!!&lt;_........,,.,_, .....

(1) News/Sports/Weather
I]) (ll) Powerhouse

or for evening appointment

HOVYfb
r
1

Cil Carol Burnett
I]) 0 I]) Gl (ill News

74 NOVA, good clean condl·
lion, 1826. 304·875·2295
or 875 -1304.

Phone 304· 773·5564 doily

I

EVENING

Cil Tic T ac

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one lener to each square, to form
lour ordinary words .

12/23/82
6:00 U

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

j])'ft

~ ~ ~~ ®

THURSDAY

76 PONTIAC Alrtro, 4 cyl.
30 mpg, no ruat, runs good,

54 Misc. Merchandise

Bald Run Rd . area . Answers
to Rex . Ca ll Doris Woodyard

PATTON

CASE, EITHER.

7

Pomeroy . Large Iota. Call

304·675· 6277.

breast .

Sulek Regel,

'ifft~Nl

Television
Viewing

AND I'M NOT
WITHOUT PL.ANS
FOR THE

1978 NOVA, good wort&lt;
cor, 1800. call after 6 p.m.
304·875-1186.

TWO mobile homes for rent
on At. 2 about 5 minutes
from town. Call after 6.

Lost and Found

1977 RED

The Daily Sentinei-Page-19

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

D ICK TRACY

875-1799.

p.m .

6

Autos for Sale

2 new tires, body
excellent condition, 304-

Call 614 ·388· 9755 alto' 6 1983. 814·992· 7684.

present . 304 -675 -50 1 9 .

71

T-top.
1

61 4·843· 2644.
Bauer 's Barber Shop will be
ope n Thursday the 23rd, and
c losed the 25t h
Merry

by Larry Wright

Thursday, December 23, 1982

and North would probabl y

Opentng lead +Q

have accepted the invitatio n.
Freak hands lead to fresh
h1dd1n g Probab ly West

should h&lt;1ve saved at seven

By Oswald Jacoby
and James J acoby

srades. wh 1ch would only be

down three tri cks.

Every ex pe rt ha s ht s
favorite way of handlmg
interfe ren ce with Bl ack wood. We use th e acronym
"DOPI," which stands for
" Double with zero. pa ss w1th
one
Going one step furthr•r , t1
bid shows at leas t tWIJ ; w~&gt; s

F1n all y. 1f North were a

despera do he might have
passl'd West 's seve n-s pad e
I'Jll Jround to So ut h. Th en
StJ uth m1ght actu&lt;Ji ly hi..i ve
h1d a llf1 -trump gr ;wd slam .
whwh 1.. , dlsf1 \h('rl' for the
lmld111 g

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Listen
40 Deserter
I Cairene
41 Unite
Christian
DOWN
5 An Italian
I "Common man"
cheese
director
8 Seaport
2 Grecian thea ter
of Arabia
9 Fluster
3 Seasonal
t§Qtill~
sentilnent
13 Soil
Yesterday's Answer
14 Stamen part 4 Explosive
5 Smart
15 Actress,
19 Tiny bit
27 Songbird
6 Earshot
Patricia 22
Portion
"Bar"
person
29 Moon goddess
7
16 Overeater
23
Excoriate
30
Wreck
I
abbr.)
17 Bard's word
completely
18 Windflower 10 Popular caro l 24 Notwithstanding
31 Corundum
20 Monk
11 Smirked
12 Offset ga ffes 25 Hawaiian 36 Spoil
21 Unctuous
37 Tea va riety
16 Negri
22 Caloric
intake
guide
23 Seasonal
sky traveler
25 British
film director
26 Hills of
Shropshire
27 Privation
28 Arab cloak
29 Kitchen area
32 Three times
(Lat.)
33 Girl's name
34 - de guerre
35 Hired gun
37 'Sheep
shelter
38 Gas used
as fuel

12 23

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work
Ia

It~

AXYDLBAAXIl
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 length and formation of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CllYPTOQUOTES

zv
UVTN

VUE
CVQ

EYZK
EDU

DUPTQ

uvs

EPCBSQZSK :

BSEEZVB

E YS

EYSPS

DYCE

UEYSP

UVS
ZK

Z K ··

DCVEK

BSEEZVB

ZE.
UKACP
DZTQS
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: WE MAKE WAY FOR THE MAN ~
WHO BOLDLY PUSHES PAST US.- CHRISTIAN NESTELL ~
BOVEE
J

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~ "'- &lt; ~

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\

Page-20- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 23, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

-·~----~~----~--------------~~~==~~----------------~~~--------

Ohio's new lieutenant governor very common person

COL UMBUS. Ohio !API Democrat My rl H. Shoemaker.
Ohio's new lieutenant governor. is
as comfort able as your favorite old
shoes.
Whether talking about the time he
and his bride-to-be eloped in an
A-Model F ord. her cooking. or
recalling how Republican Gov.
.l ames/\ . Rhodes tried to shove him
over a cliff, the veteran state
lawmaker can warm up a room .
Shoem aker. a veteran of almost a
quat1er of a centuty in the Ohio
House. was tapped as a nmning
mate early this year by govemorelect Richard Celeste.
But the 69-year-old. seasoned
chairman of the House Finance
Committee - liked and respected
by many members of both political
partiPS- named his terms.
" I told him I wa s not going to
carry any water for him . ltold him!
was not going to sit around wa iting
on him tosneezco." he said of Celeste.
who obviousI; · got the message.
The govem or-elect announced
last week that Shoemaker. in
addition to being lieutenant gover"~parunent of
nor ·•" II head thn
,~·
Na tural Resources.
That agone;· is politically important to any govemor. because it
builds and maintains parks and
numerous other recrea tion facili ·
ties. 1\s Celeste put it. the department "touches the lives of all of us."
Shoemaker is gettlng a refur-

.. .

bished office across the hall from
Celeste, and he also will be in on top
decision-making as a full-fledged
member of the cabinet.
"He will preside in my absence,"
Celes te sa id.
Celeste may have won the
governor's office at any ra te. but
many politica l observers say his
selec tion of Shoemaker as running
mate wa s a ke;• factor in the
Democra tic sweep of state offices
on Nov. 2.
Although on ly one of 99 members
oftheHousc, fromnJrai Bourneville
in Ross County near Chillicothe,
Shoemaker had a sophisticated,
statewide constituency as finance
chairman .
Things didn 't get done or built
without his approval. but Shoemaker will be the first to tell you
that he yielded to the call of House
Speaker Vema I G. Riffe Jr .. D-New
Boston. a fe llow " down -homer" and
close friend .
They ca me to the House as
freshmen in 1959. and currently are
co-dea ns of the chamber.
Shoemaker and the 45-year-old
governor-elect offer an interestmg
·
contrast.
Celeste: Son of a former Lakewood mayor. 6-foot-4, Yale- and
Oxford-educated. former lieu tenant governor and director of the
Peace Corps under Jimmy Carter;
one-lime unsuccessful candidate
tl978i for~:overnor.

Shoemaker: Son of a v illage
blacksmith who shooed flies off the
horses as his fa therworked, 5-foot -9,
business school studies after high
school followed by work In a paper

mill and the construction business.
In an Interview, Shoemaker
recalled the days In the blacksmith
shop.
"It wasn't only the flies - they

•

I1 Thanks to eachGREETINGS
of you for the wonderful
I

THE

I~

:
11

Pomeroy

111

111

I(

~

aft

W

W

If

If

I(

1.(

w

w

W

miles of smiles this

ELBERFELD'S

ft

bright Christmas time ...
and accept our special
appreciation for your

w

W

a
W

w
W

aw
aW
w
w
w

a
a
a

a

w

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RAVENSWOOD, W.V a. (APIUnion and Kaiser Aluminum officials said a concession agreem ent
they reached will make the plant
more competitl'e and give Its
employees better job security.
Paul Rusen, director of United
Steelworkers district 23, said Thursday that the contract concessions
worked out well for both sloes.
The accord allows Kaiser to be
"much more competitive In the
very tight aluminum market and
affords the union members an
opportunity for continued long-time

w
Hoping you all enjoy

w

~1n tl\ &lt;' l ta ditiOA'L

o/ tl;c l;m'irl&lt;llf season. IIIGiflfO-tl
'

'

'

'

I

&lt;

('((eli C11f01,1 INc tf'({tllllli and u •o.m/1'1 tlwt owf:.es
' fNuslma s s&amp;sf2Rc ia f.

.&lt;JI.rul /a-aU 0-llt /t irnds and

fmtai m s lo.mets lfO-t'S
'

SIMMON'S OLDS.-CAD•.CHEV., INC. I
Pomeroy, OH.
a

0-111

si lt('('tC .. tl;anh lfO-tt."

I
•

'

'

HERB &amp; SHEILA

CLAY'S SHAKE HAVEN

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·

'I

!(
I
I .

employment ," Rusen said.
Kaiser spokesman Bob Irelan
echoed Rusen 's comment.
"We are pleased an agreement
has been reached. It addresses
those issues that are key to the
effective utilization of our people at
Ravenswood," Ire lan said
Thursday.
Irelan said 2,&lt;XXJ workers at the
plant have lost their jobs - I .5.'i0
hourly and 420 salaried. At one time.
the plant employed 4,&lt;XXJ workers,
he said.
Still. Irelan sa id, "the prospect is

Warm Christmas likely
By Tire Associated Press
The National Wea ther Service says the warmest Christmas in
severa l years appears likely.
The morning weather map showed a low just east of Lake
Superior with a nearly sta ti onar~y front from the low across Lake
Michigan, northern Illinois, Iowa and Kansas to a stronger low
pressure center in southeast Colorado.
Southerly winds to the east of these low pressure systems were
bringing warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico north across the
Ohio Valley and Great Lakes this morning.
Around Ohio, the weathf'r is expected to remain continued warm
with showers likely and thunderstorms possiblE' tonight and
Saturday. Lows tonight between 'iO and 5:\. Highs Saturday in the
mid 60s. The chance of rain Is 60 percent tonight and 70 percent
Saturday.
The extended Ohio forecast sees a chance of rain Sunday and
Monday. Fair Tuesday. Highs in the 50s Sunday and the40s Monday
and from the mid .'lOs to the low40s Tuesday. Lows in the40sSunday.
the mid to upper 30s Monday and the mid to upper 20s Thesday.

'

limited" for rehiring any of the I, 700
workers.
The coneessions call for the
plant's workforce to be trimmed
through an early retirement plan.
The union also agreed to changes In
contract seniority provisions.and to
the consolidation of some jobs at the
plant, Rusen said.
In exchange, Kaiser agreed to
change the pension pian to provide
500 USW members with an early
retirement option. The company
also agreed not to lay off any more
employees In 1983 "as long as
production volume of 30 million
pounds per month is maintained, "
Rusensaid.
Dallas Elswick, a union staff
official, said the plant has been
producing 30 million pounds of
aluminum for some time.
The concessions won' I have to be
ratified by the rank and file, Rusen
said . Irelan said details of the plan
will be presented to Kaiser workers
"after the first of the year."
The current contract between the
USW and Kaiser expires May .11.
Irelan said.
Although the job security provision Is limited to 1983, employment
will be relatively stable through
198.'\. Rusen said.
"A formula was agreed upon to
provide steady employment in 1984
and 1985, thereby eliminating any
large layoff during those years." he
said .
An aluminum reduction facility
at the Jackson County factory was
closed Jan. I. 1982. idling four
potllnes. In addition, a fabrica tion
facility has been operating at 60
percent capacity.
The accord comes after 16 months
of negotiations. Kaiser had told the
USW that unless work rules were
changed, sections of the fabricating
plant would close, further cutting
the workforce.
The agreement contains a pledge
from Kaiser that if it reopens a
potltne In the United States,
Ravenswood would be the first
considered.
The union said the pact brings the
plant's operations in line with other
Kaiser plants and the rest of the
depressed aluminum industry.

Syracuse driver
cited by patr.ol

Ann Miller
Linda Mayer
Bruce Reed
Paul Reed
Donna Schmoll
Deena Kennedy
Christopher Yeauger

Joyce Lambert
Delta Braun
Iris Payne
Charlene Thomas
Sharon ~ichael
George Hicks
Stanley Bass

SALVATION ARMY BRINGS aiBIBTMAs.TO TilE NEEDYFamllleiiiiJ!ed the Salvlllloa Army Pomeroy belidquarten 'lbunday
momlllg ilathe dlll!rlbtdlon of'lood t.p UMI &amp;o,. IIepa. More lbul180
food bap were dlltrlbuted
Whh Delf UMI UMd &amp;a,B. eevenl of
each, lor about 250 cldldren. In adllllion, llle Salvlllloa-Anny peuoan.el
dellvered lreala to ~ Ia lhe couRty JaB, lhe f!IID'' private 11
homes, Yeterana Memorial HOipltal,the Miilp eo.aty 111f1nn11ry and
the Pomeroy UMI PlllecreM lleaKh Care Cet!ten. wo..-Uidnc'put
Wedaellday were Elolle Adanw, lecoad row, Mia. W.....,
Turley, and back row, Mrs. Robert~~--. Delma Kllrr, _. Vlclld

Fo Farmers

Bank

CHRISTMAS IS SHARING - The students of
Pomeroy and Middleport Elementary Schools reaDy
have had the Christmas spirit and through their
efforts made many people happy. The children
donated toys and food Items that they gave to the
Meigs County Jaycees who in turn distributed the

goods to the needy. The children's efforts show what
Christmas is all about. Pictured under the tree with
the many goodies are 1-r, Keith Smith, third grade
student, and Beth Roush, second grade student at
Pomeroy Elementary.

Pomeroy couple likes weird things
POMEROY. Ohio t/\Pi - 1\
rouple of yea rs ago shegaw him an
old bottle of embalming fluid for
Christma s. On 'her birthda v. he
gavf' her an ani iquPcasket designed
for a child .
This Christmas. Belli' and
Dwight Milhoan want a suit of
arTnor.

" We'vp got kind of a weird sense
of humor." sa id Mrs. Milhoan. 'iO.
" If we find something on the morbid
side. like bones. or even something
like a bleeder. that' s the kind of gift
we want for each other." She
explained that a bleeder is a type of
instrument that once was used to cut
major arteries in a corpsr in
preparation for embalming .
This year they haven't found any
unusual funeral paraphemalia so
they se ttled on the armor.
Other items in the Milhoan
collf'&lt;'tion are an embalming tablf'.
a horse-drawn hearse and funeral
garb of the 18th and 19th centut il'.,
" The /\dams Family was our
favorite TV show. " Mrs. Mil~oa n
said. The program of a decade or so
ago made fun of macabre
situations.

"We've got onf' of these rubber

hands that pop up out of a box lik•·
the one used on that show ... shf' sairl.
She sa id a fraternal group uS&lt;'Ci a
caskPI wit h a skrlf'lun in it in a
program th is yea r.
" I trim to bu.v it from them when
the progr am endPd but the-'·
wouldn't sell it." shf' said. "r\ow
wP'vf' found this suit of ill'mor in a
junk starr· and \\'t · \Ya nt i! for
Christma s.
" It's notlh ~ n •a lthing. II 's j usllin.
I think it wa s made in Mexico. but
we'vr n 'searchC'fl m.v hu sband' s
family and onf' of hi s ancC's tor s was

a knight back in !england. I think in
the 1400s some time. We make jokes
about his suit of armor and what
would happen if he put it on and I
dropped a cigarett f' down inside it."
she said .
Mrs. Milhoan sa id shf' bough t hPr
husband a minialurfl sui t of armor
and that this prompted thedesi refor
a full -size metal suit.
Displayed in thf' ir .v ard along the
Ohio River are the horse-drawn
hearse and a family r oach once used
by a funeral parlor to carry
mournf'rs.
Milhoan said lhf' hPar.&lt;;f' was
brought to 1his region bni vpr ba rgc

from Cincinnati in 19tR It has
bP\·eled glass windows decorated
with \'el,·et drapes and tassels,
brass rollers and hooks to hold the
ca sket S('('urc.

The funeral coach S&lt;'a ts fi ve
people. has a black satin interior
leather sea ts and blinds on thcdoo.,;
and windows for mourners who
waniC'd to travel in SLX'lusion.
They have two famit;· memmial
plaques. each about four feet high
and thrc'&lt;' fee t wide. prepared fort he
deaths of family members in the
late 19th cen twy .
Milhoan sa id his grandfather.
Will Chambers. had a casket
company in this arm.
Whf' n his gra ndmother died.
Milhoan sa id. Chambers cut one of
hN fa vorite trees and made a her
ca sk1•1of the wood.

Ohio lottt&gt;ry winrwr
CLEVE LAND t/\Pi The
winning number drawn in the Ohio
Lottery 's dai lv game " The

Numbf: ·r" was :l72.
In thf' "Pick 4" gam&lt;&gt;. played
thrPP tim es a Wf'f•k. thr winning
number wa s ~:)2 .

The Gallia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol cited a Syracuse
man following a two-car collision on
Ohio 7 Thursday.
The patrol cited George M .
Freeland, 74 , for failure to keep
assured clear distance.
Freeland was southbound on Ohio
7 at 6:10 p.m . when he reportedly
struck the rear of another south·
bound car driven by Roland B.
Radford, 52, Pomeroy.
' Freeland's vehicle received moderate damage and Radford's vehicle was not damaged.
A car driven by Charles W.
Gloeckner, Jl, Pomeroy, received
heavy' damage when it caught fire at
5: J7 p.m ., the patrol reports.
Troopers say he was southbound
on Ohio 7 when his engine began
hissing. He pulled to the berm and
notlre his engine was on fire.
There were no Injuries.

EMPLOYEES
JoAnn Crisp
Dottie Musser
Lois Burt
Sharon Smith
Sue Lightfoot
Richard Stettler
Dorothy Amberger
Andee Cremeens

15 Cenh

A Multimedia Inc Newspaper

Kaiser, steelworkers
make concessions

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5 Sec tion,, 28 Pag es

Copyrighted 1981

I(

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I

entinel

Voi .31 ,No . 165

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Katie's Korner

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~HRI~lMA~liMf

Boh's Beat of Bend

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SHOP TONIGHT
TIL 8 P.M.

perso- W

·Ca\'aliers upset

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Happy New year!

1

AN

CERTIFICATE

~

1 nal and business support you've given us in ~
1 1982.
i
~ We want to wish you a very Merry Christmas and a i

w

GIFT

Chrii'ilrna~

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

--------------------------~~w
HOW ABOUT

but reared with three brothers and
three sis ters In Bourneville, said his
father eventually got a construction
job and he went to work In
Chillicothe for the Mead Corp ..

had to be kept away to keep the
horses from jumping - but I also
used to step on pieces of hot iron," he
said.
Shoemaker, born in Chillicothe

Iii-.

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Mcrnbcr FUIC

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'iflf/.'lll't.'illt.'«.'ifN:.'Ifi~/~I'!.'IH:.'iff!:.~~~J!:.~J!:.~~'IH:.'IH:.'IH:.~~~~~~
1- - - -

Wile.

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I

Tile Swlday Ttme!i-Seallael

wU1110t He publl8hed this week Ia
order to pennlt employeee .to
obaerve the CluUtmu deillday.
Today's Sentinel lacludes the
weekly TV guide, Suaclay comlea and several 'lbnes-&amp;atlaeJ

features.

DISTRIIIUI'E TO THE NEEDY - Tile Melp needy. Pictured are a lew
who• 1 led
Coont)'JayceesWedJwdaye\oenlagdlatrlbutedlrom with the program. Front, Robby Baggy· ~ J.r
to to 100 ChrllrtJM's food bulu!ca along with toys to the Bruce Reed, DaDDY Dodaoo, Mark Rlgp.
mtleary and Mitch Meadows.

Jeft

'I

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