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Page- 14- The Daily Sentinel

7, 1983 '

160 people die when
.planes collide

Area deaths
Harley Grate

December

Ohio

the Tuppers Plains Chris tian
Chu rch Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funera l hom e from 7 to 9
tonight and Thursday from 2 to 4
p.m . and 7 to 9 p.m .

Harley E. Grate. 53. Langsville.
died unexpectedly early Wednesday morning a t his residence.
Arrangements are being completed
by the Bigony-Jordan Funera l
o Hom e at Albany. The Rutland · Helen M. Wilson
· em ergency squad was called to the
residence a t 4:58a.m . but Gratewas
Helen M. Wilson .~- Mason, died
dead on arrival.
Tuesday at her home.
Born Sept: 17. 1\lOO in Cliflon. she
was the daughter of the late
Estella McGill
Sherman and Sue lla Domick
Cunningham.
E te Ua McGill , 82· of Tuppers
P lains, died at Arcadia Nursing
She was !hemm er and oi;&gt;cratoro!
Helen· s Place in Mason.
Home Tuesday following an ex·
Surviving are one son, Woodrow
te nded illness.
Wilson. Mia mi. F la .; one sister,
Born in Dodgeridge County, W.
Edn a Erhardt. Sacramento. Calif.;
Va .. she was the daughterof the lat~
three granddaug hters . Shet)'l LauGeorge and F rana Costellow Goldsdermilt,
F ive Point s, Ohio, Linda
boroug h. She was a mem ber of the
Davis.
Mason
and E laine Parker,
St. Paul United Methodist Church.
Melbourne,
F
la.;
three grandsons,
and the United Met hodist Women
Tuppers P la ins..
·
'
Lowell S. Wilson, Miami , Fla., •
Jimmy Dell Marsha ll , stationed a(
· She is s1.1rvived by a da ughter .
Bost.on, Mass. wiih the U.S. Navy,
Emma Diragh of Lawton, Okla.; ·a
and 1\'ick Wa-lburn, Fort Myers, F la.
sister, Nellie Lewis, Southfield ,
She was preceded in death by two
Mich.; a brother, Glen Golds bo·
daughters. Betty J ane Marshall in
rough, Reedsville, W.Va.; and two
1967. a nd Margar et J ean Marshall
grandda ughters.
in 1982.
She was preceded in death by her
Funeral services will be at 1 p.m .
parents, her husband. Leonard in
Thursday in F oglesong Funeral
19~. a s ister and a brother.
Home. Mason. with the Rev. Bennie
Fluneral services will be conStevens officiating. Burial will
ducted Friday at 11 a.m. at the St.
follow in Kirkland Memorial
P a ul United Methodist Church.
Gardens.
Tuppers P lains. Officia ting wtll be
Friends may call at the funeral
· the Rev. Don Archer and the Rev.
home from 7-9 p.m . Wednesday.
Richard Thom as. Burial will be in

MADRID, Spain (AP) - Two
Spanish a irlinerS collided in heavy
fog today while preparing to take of!
from Madrid's airport . Qvll defense
offlclals said about 100 of the 134 ·
people aboard the planes were killed
in the crash and a fiery explosion
that followed.
Involved in the collision were an
Iberia A1r Lines Boeing 'm on its
waytoRomewith84passengersand
nine crew members aboard and a
DC-9 o! Avlaco, a Spanish domestic
airline, with 37 passengers and six
crew aboard, on its way to
Santander in northern Spain.
Initial reports said the only
surviors abOard the Boeing were
believed to be eight crew members.
It was not lrnmedlately known how
many passengers on the DC-9

Jetliners
Collide
SPAIN

JETLINERS COLLIDE Two Spanish airliners coU!ded in
heavy fog Wednesday while
preparing to take off in heavy
fog. First reports said about 100
of the 134 people aboard were
·
killed. (AP Laserphoto).

Middleport
native fired
first shot of
·World War II
A day to remember ...

Dec. 7, 1941

The U.S. Ward was out in Pearl
Harbor under the command of
William W. Outerbrtdge, a native of
Middleport, when the Japanese
surprise alr attack occurred.
It was Cmdr. Outerbridge, who
fired the first shcit of World War II.
A graduate of Middleport High
School and the Annapolis Navy
Academy, Outerbridge was reared
on Fisher Street in Middleport, the
home now occupied by Mrs. Marlon
French. He is related to the
descendants of the Weeds and
Meigs County residents will be .increase," she added.
Calderwoods of Meigs County.
receiving increasedsta teassista nce
Emergency HEAP will provide
His mother was Jessie Woodard
with this winter's heating bills,
up to $~ to any qualifying .low
Outerbridge, a World War I nurse,
according to State Representative
income household that Is discon·
and his father was an English sea
J olynn Boster .
nected. has a !ina! notice of
captain who is burled In China.
The allocation for E m ergency . &lt;lisconnection or uses bulk fuel and
Outerbridge's grandfather oper·
HEAP tHorne E nergy Ass istance ' has !Odaysor less supply. Because
a ted a store in Middleport for many
Program ) paymets inMeigsCounty
of large demand and limited
has been increased by$35.000. "This
resou rcess, applicants may receive . years.
Ret. Admiral Outerbrldge now
assistance from Emergency HEAP
makes a total of$95,000 that has been
resides in Florida.
provided by HEAP to Meigs County
only one time this winter .
to prevent wint er emergencies over
As of today, Meigs County has had
the next fe" ' months ," Boster said.
1,349 applicants declared eliglble for
" This program helped nearly regular HEAP, but Boster expects
2,000 households in Meigs County more t9!ollow. Regular HEAP pays
John Pierce, Route 124, Pomeroy
last winter. and I am vety pleased 1340 percent of an appicant's billed
was
lined $375 and costs on a charge
tha t such a worthwhle program can usage for the months of December,
o!
driving
while intoxicated and put
t;ontinue wtth ttlis trem endous January and February.
on six month's probation for a
charge o! leaving the scene of an
accident on East Main near Nye
Ave. when he appeared in the court
a! Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An·
drews Tuesday night.
Seeks divorce
In other court action, Charles
Whittington, Pomeroy, forfelted$43
Tammy Lynri_ Daniels, MiddleSix calls for assistance were
on a charge of Dinning a stop sign;
port,
has ftled lor a divorce from
answered by the Meigs County
Robert Roush, Syracuse, forfeited
J effery Earl Daniels, Canton. The
Emergency Medical Service units
$63 on a chargeof!ailingto register a
plaintiff charges gross neglect of motor vehicle; Charles Ohlinger,
Tuesday and early Wednesday
duty and extreme cruelty and asks
.
morning.
Rutland, forfeited $63 on failure to
for custody of the couple's two register a vehicle; and Michael
At !0: 39 a .m . the Racine unit went
children.
to Southern High School lor Eric
Schloss, Pomeroy, $63 on turning
Taylor who was taken to Veterans
left on a red light.
Memorial Hospital; at 2:32a.m . the
Tuppers Pla ins unit went to Eastern
Three persOns were fined .;,d
Square dance set
High School for Mike Douglas who
A square dance will be held at the another forfeited a bond in the court
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital, Long Bottom Community Building of Middleport Mayor Fred Hotlman
Parkersburg; at 7:25 p.m . the
Friday !rom 8 to 11: ll p.m . Tuesday night.
Racine unit went to Vine Street lor
Robert Mulford, Cheshire, forfeRefreshments will be served .
Della Roseberry, taken to Vete·
Ited a $450 bond on DWI . Fined were
ra ns; at 7: 25 p.m . the Syracuse
David Tyree, Middleport, $50 and
squad responded to the Mary Martin
costs. disorderly manner; George
Holiday bazaare set
resident where a poslble gas leak
McDaniel, Middleport, 10 days in
was checked out; at 9:21 p.m . the
jail for disorderly manner; Dee
The annual holiday bazaar o! the Barber, Reedsville, $50 and costs,
Syracuse unit went to Lemja
Meigs County Humane Society will
Hubbard's residence on Fifth St.
open container; and Lance Herand transported her to Veterans be held at the Thrift Shop in
mann, Middleport, costs on a
Memorial Hospital. At 2: 09 a.m . Middleport F riday and Saturday.
contempt charge and $100 and costs
Wednesday, the Syracuse unit unit
for criminal trespass.
treated but did not transport Nancy
Burley sale results
P a tterson, Church Street.

HEAP··assistance is increased

Mayor's Court

Meigs County happenings ..
Emergency runs

Four calls were answered by units
RIPLEY. Ohio (AP) -Growers
Weather forecast
of the Meigs County Emergency
sold IBS. 778 pounds o! tobacco tor
Medical Service Monday.
$336,311.48 at Ohio's only burley
Mostly cloudy with scattered
At10:07 a .m . the Pomeroy squad
tobacco market Tuesday for an flurries Wednesday. Highs near 35.
went to ,Laurel Cliff for Charles
average of $17.81 per hUl)dred Clearing Wednesday night. Lows
Ohlinger who was transported to the
pounds.
near 20. Partly cloudy Thul'Sday.
Holzer Medical Center; at 1: 48a .m .
After regular sales Thursday the. Highs between 40and45. The chance
the Tuppers Plains uni\ took James
market will have additional sales by ofsnowls40percentWednesdayand
Kelly from Alfred to the St. Joseph
4-H members, officials said.
10 percent W.lldnesday night.
Hospital in Parkersburg; · at 2:53
Exleoded Ohio Forecast
p.m . the P omeroy unit went to 2()1
Friday through Sunda.vi
Mulberry for Earl Rottgln who was Lottery winner
Rain Friday, probably changing
transported to the Holzer Medical ·
CLEVELAND (AP) The
to snow and lumlng Colde~ SaluJ'..
Center, andat 5: 15p.m . the Tuppers
day. Fair and tumlng colder
Plains squad went to Reedsville lor winning number drawn Tuesday
Swula~\ lllghs from the 40t1 Friday
Jennie Burke who was transported night in the Ohio Lottery·~ dally
game, "'The Number," was048.
and the lDI Salurday to aroond *l
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
In the "Pick 4" game, played Sunclaf. Lows from aroond *l
Monday through Friday, the win·
Friday and the IIIII Salurda.v to
Meat furnished
ning number was 1000.
around 211 Sunday.
Themeatwlllbefurnishedforthe
hOliday dinner of the Rock Springs
Grange to be held Thursday at 6:30
p.m . atthegrangehall. There will be
a whiteetephantgtfi exchange, and
FRIED CHICKEN, CHOICE OF POTATO
members are to take gifts for the
AND VEGETABLE
AthensMenta!HealthCenter.
Try Our Daily

n

survived.

There was no ot!lclal word on the
cause of the accident, but Iberia and
airport sources said the collision
occurred as one or both airliners
. were acceleratlnginpf~!paratlon for
takeoff. Sources said they believed
was traveling about
the Boeing
100mph.
The DC-9 was said to be

m

completeley destroyed and Its
wreckage scattered over more than
amlle.
Qvil defense SOIIJ'CeS said the
DC-9 was hit near Its fuel tanks and
that a fire followed the collision.
" All we can see is a mass of
wi'eckage, seats and screams
coming from all sides, " said one
radio reporter at thE&gt; scene.
Transport Minister Enrique
Baron, who controls commercial '
aviation in Spain, left a sesslono!the
Cabinet and hurried to the airport.
The accldent occurred 10 days
after a Colombian Boeing 747 jumbo
jet crashed near Madrid, ldlllng 181
of the 192 people aboard.
The worst air disaster in history
occurred in Spain at the Tenerlfe
airport in the Canary Islands in
March o! 1917. A KLM Boeing 747
taking off in fog crashed into a Pan
Amerlcan747thatwastaxlingonthe
runway, leaving 582 people dead.
Barajas Airport had been closed
to all incoming traffic early today
because of the fog, and a number of
flights were diverted w other
Spanish airports, but some outgoing
traffic was permitted to take of!.

Rape victim•• ______
(Continued from page 11
robber on the run from Ohio. After
heleft,shesald,sheandherhusband
freed themselves aild contacted
authorities.
Carr's lawyer, in his opening
statement, said the state had
nothing but circumstantial evl·
dence. AttomeyJohnAndersonsald
the state couldn't produce a single ·
fingerprint and added. "Who knows
what kind of sex these people have
been having behind closed doorS?"
Carr was arrested several days
after the alleged assauli. Pollee said
he was traced through his car, ,a
Cadillac.
·
He later was released on bond but
he was jailed after being arrested in
Aug\lst on ·a second, unrelated rape
charge. In the second case, which

has yet tocometotrlal,helsaccused
a! raping a Charleston hitchhiker.
The woman toldpolicethatamanin
a Cadillac El Dorado picked her up,
pulled a gun and !)len drove her to a
remote area where he assaulted her
llefore returning her to the location
where he had found her.
Carr, whose Cadillac ElDorado
'\'as impounded, has been held in the

Reds sign Parker
Redmen rip Pikeville
tfl

Opal Mlller has been granted a
divorce from Wllllam Mlller, according to a ctecree filed in the Meigs
County Coi)U11on Pleas Court. file
plaintiff was given custody of two
minor children.

Bulletin
'

Portions of two diaries owned by the defendant,
Pamela Spencer, were ' admitted as evidence Ibis
momlng In 1\felgs County Common Pleas Court. 'lbe
entries read by Investigator Paul Gerard revealed the
foiiowmg:
'The defendant writes In an entry dated Sept. 211,
lB8'l, 1'1 think I'm prtgilaat and that UI am, I think It's
Scott's. u 1 am, I think 1 wm abort. I want SteveR.".
ht l!IIOther pall8lll(e dated Jan. 25, 1983, the
defead&amp;nt aDegedly wrote, "I am pregn¥t, I Jnll8t
start on a big diet. I am showing, more and more.''
An el1try wr1tt.ea Feb. 4, l983 said, "Haven't heard
from Steve. He rea11J has changed, maybe I've
changed.• It's the baby-Scott's baby,".
An AprO 13 entry says,"' wetp 13.'5 pounds, It wiD be
efgbt II1GI1tlls the 1"1111, just one month to go, hope I can
hancDe the detivery,".

poM £·ROY
fLOW£ R
SHO

.!)
,_,,

"

I ol

'

By KATIE CROW
Pamela Spencer's baby moved after being placed
In a plastic bag.
That was an important revelation presented
Wednesday In one of two signed satements made

Now's the time
to start a
•
family tradition
during the .
Howard Miller
Christmas
Sale.
-!

.'

WINFIELD, W.Va. (AP) J
Items found in the Cadlllac of Dr.
Davkl Carr have becomeakeyissue
In the sexual assault trlalo!the Point
Pleasant osteopath, who is accused
~raping a woman after drugging
hiif Iiusbaild.
.
A state trooper testl1'led Wednes·
day that Items found In Carr's
vehicle matched those spotted by a
nelghborinacaroutsldethehomeof
the rape victim.
Trooper W.H. Phillips said he
obtalnedawarranttosearchCarr's
Cadillac because of its resemblance
to one reported near the Putnam
County house on Jan. 8, the day the
rape occurred.
Spaulding said the neighbor

Now, you don't '1ave ro setcle for
less than Howard Miller'heirl oum
quality. Because many of their
grandfathers are on !iale in our
store. Yo~'il find their prices
mighty inviting. So inviting that
your only problem will be choosing
from such variety.
.
And the clock oi your choice will
be personalized wirh your name en·
graved in brass free. The beuer to
Start a family tradition ,
. All cases are painstakingly made
from carefully selected woods.
It will p~y you to buy your grand·
father durmg the Howard Miller
Christmas Sale. But , aet 1pow while
the ~argains last.
',

Scott Wolfe and Carroll Teaford
were elected to serve as the 1984
members of the Firemen's Depen·
dency Board at this week's meeting
of Racine VIllage Council.
The fire department will now
select two members and the fifth
wlll be elected by the those four.
During the session presided over
by Mayor Charles Pyles, the second
reading to the water system
ordinance was given . A third
reading will be given at the
December meeting.
Council authorized Its clerk to

Making application for marriage
licenses in Meigs County Probate
COurt were Jerry Thomas Martin,
44, Route 1, Cheshire, and Linda Lou
Freeman, 41, Pomeroy.
Mark Alan Harrison, 18, Route 1,
Cheshire, and Linda Jaye Roberts,
16, Route 4, Pomeroy.

third day of the tr1al, Q1.1estlons were presented by
Gerard and answers were given by Spencer.
The defendant said the scissors in her car belonged
to Cheryl Wilson and had been used to cut flowers: She
maintained they had been put in her car the day
before Cheryl Wilson left tor Florida. Spencer said she
wore a whlte gown when she left her mother's trailer
enroute to her car the night her water broke .
Her statement noted she thought she would go to the
hospital, but the pains were so severe, she cou,ldn't.
In her second statment, Spencer told Gerard she
picked up the baby, cut the rord, but did not tie it ,
before placing the infant in the bag with other stuff .
The entry descr!beO how the defendant returned to ·
ber mother's trailer home. tD get clothes when she
became dlzzy and laid down to rest, then went to
sleep. It aiso showed that the defendant lied about the
blood and she knew she would have to take the baby to
a hospital. She did not bave any clothes lor the baby,
and she did not tell anyone about her pregnancy.
According to that statement she wanted the baby,
but knew she couldn't keep it. In the statement, she
told of considering abortion and had up to four months
to decide.
Gerard then asked, "Did you kill your baby?"
Spencer answered," Guess I did, its obvious that I
did,''.

Gerard told the court both' sta tements were signed •
by the defendant after bein g advised a! her rights, the··
r ight to having an attorney and the !act that she cou)d
remain silent .
Describes invebtigation
Gerard outlined his investigation of the case
including the search a! the trailer. A consent form was
signed by Mr s. Spencer, mot her o! the defendant .
regarding the trailer search.
It was during that search Gerard fou nd a diary . and
soiled linen.
Wolfe testifies
Gary Wolfe. investigator for the · Meigs County
Sheriff's Department, ,l,was tht" next state witness
.;ailed .
Woife rev iewed his investigation and visits to tlle
hospital to talk with the defendant a nd visits to
Syracuse including the trailer search.
Wolfe said he was notifi('d concerning the case after
the s her iff's office received a call from Ga llia County
on May 31.
Wolfe reported the defendant was read the miranda
rights severa l times and she told him she had gotten
in her car to go to the hospital when the pains became
severe then the baby came.
(Continued on pa ge 101

.

looked in ~ car's front seat and
trunk and saw a box of disposable
diapers, ·a box ot .J!kallbershells, a
camouflage hunting jacket and a
package of beer. The trooper said
diapers and .38 caliber shells were
among the items he touoct later in
the doctor's car.
Carrlschargedwithftrst-degree
sexual assault and anned robbery
in-the case. He is accusedo!raplng
the woman after knOcking out her
husbandwlthadruginjectlon,and
with robbing the couple of~ in
cash.
Carr aiso has been charged in a
second, unrelalell rape case in
Kanawha County \hat has yet to go
to trial.

Defense lawyer Jolm Anderson
maintains that the neighbor's statementis unreliable and that Putnam
County ProsecutorO.C.Spauldlng's
case rests only on circumstantial
evidence.
The woman testlfted earlier this
weekthatsheandherhusbandwere
awakened by a masked intruder
whO held agunon them, drugged her
husband and bound him with
medical tape, and then raped ber.
The woman said the man per·
formed oral sex on her in the
kitchen, torced her to per!onn oral
sexonhlm,andthentookherbackto
the bedroom where he raped her.
Carr, whose wife's tamlly owns
the house and who had met the

woman earlier, was arrested several days after the alleged assault.
Pollee said he was traced through
his car.
Helaterwasreteasedonbondbut
was jailed after being arrested in
August on a second , unrelated rape
charge. In the second case, which
ha'snotgonetotrial,heisaccusedof
raping a Charleston hitchhiker. The
woman told pollee that a man in a
Cadillac plcked her up, pulled a gun
andthendrovehertoaremotearea
whereheassaultedher.
Carr, whose Cadillac was im·
pounded, has been held in the
Putnam County Jan since his
second arrest.

send' a letter to County Auditor
Wllllam WlcklinerequestingrertW· .
cation ofavallabU!ty o!turm so that
council can make additional appmprtatlons to the cUJTent budget to
bring the books into the black at the
end of the fiscal year.
Council also passed a resolutllon
authorizing the clerk to transfer
funds between the vartous accounts
to balance the books tor the end o!
1983 once receipt of certWcatlon
!rom the county auditor has been
received.

Cutting three dead trees In the
village was authorized.
Glenn Rizer, street commls·
stoner, was authorlzedtopurchasea
dusk-to-dawn light for the Third
Street side of the vlllage hall as well
astopurchasetwotlrestorthedump
truck. The clerk was authorized to
make the final payment to the
Southeastern Equipment for the
back hoe repair bill.
Council commended the firemen
.tor decorating the tree in front of
village hall and discussed the need
tor additional Christmas decora- .
tlons for next year.
The mayor asked the insurance
cmunlttee to recommend action to
be taken on medical insurance for

'

employes.
Councilman Frank Cleland,
chalrman o! the finance committee,
was conunended for his work on the
financial statement.
Report from Pollee Chief Alfred
Lyons noted that he had Investigated two accidents, answered 19
calls, invesllgated six complaints,
and traveled489mUes. He collected
$646in bonds.
Mayor Pyles reported that arran·
gements are being made to swear in
the new otficlais at the Dec. 19
meeting noting that Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight may be
present to do that.
Councll recessed until? p .m., Dec.
19.

INTERNATIONALTHEME - The !Utnttalhboory day prograinofthr
Chester Elementary school took on lUI international theme Wednesday
with live graduate students of Ohio University and th••ir families Visiting
the school. The students- fromGhana!Utd Ug,mda- visited each grade
and talked aboutthelrnatlon ,!ifestyle !Utd culture. Here, Lord Asamoah
of Ghana, a graduate student in EngHsh, talks about his counll'J•'s music
and their Instruments !Utdwaslater joined by hiswilefornatiwdru•cing.
Other students at the school were J:unes Emuge, a graduate stud em in
Mrlcan studies, !Utd AbduDai of Ghana, a m aster o! arts in intern ational
affairs. Programs such as the one at Chester are made possible through
the OWo Valley International CoWlcll, Center lor lntcmational Studies,
Ohio University, and are supported hy the Martha Holden .Jennings
Foundation. The students and their familie' ..-ere accomp,Uli('{l to
01ester by Mary Anne Fournoy, direowrol the Ohio Valley International
CouncU.

Lee's mother, father testify. in Gallia trial
By 'lbe OVP Staff

Ji!11

I Ball IE miJk Bt8calti

went Into Tat's, a nightclub near
Point Pleasant, and was accosted at
The !ather o! 17-year-old Charles the bar by Furst. Furst indicated tD
Lee II testified Wednesday in Lee's Lee Sr. she wanted to talk to him .
murder trial in Gallla County
Lee Sr. said he directed Furst to
Common Pleas Court that Shirley anemptytableandtheysatdown.At
Furst - a key prosecution witness that ttme, Furst told him, ·"I know
- was the first to discuss get11ng your son's tr1a1 comes up, and I have
money to leave Ohlo and stay away a sister llvtng in Florida. Give me
during the coune ot Lee's trial.
$1.000 tor a plane ticket."
But under cjuestlooing by ProsecLee Sr., his voice cracking when
utor Joseph Cain, Charles Lee Sr. he testlfled.' told the jury his
said he Interpreted Furst's state- response was, "Shirley, I despise
ment as me8ning she wanted the you, and I wouldn't give you a red
mmey just to leave.
cent...and to this day, I wwldn 't."
Lee Sr. was one of the tlrst
Furst then suggested that Lee Sr.
wttneues defense ai1Dmey Hamlin contact her later, he testified. "I
King called In bls etrorta to attack don't want to talk to you ever," was
the Furst's credibility. Funt,41, Rt. 1 his response, Lee Sr. said.
1. ('.aDtpolls, had testllled em-ller In
Furst ~ted "three or tour''
the trial that Lee D •coafeued the times that Lee Sr. call her about the
murder of Barbara Twyman to her Idea, he said.

..,~ _

$115

r'ua

;•1

-

4 Batte nplk ~ 8 Bldl a mtlk _ _ ....._
-~-

---.u~~~

1529

NEW FAU HOURS

5:30 a.m.· 7:00 p.m. Weekdays
8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Sunday

8IM\I'8I times,

'·

Lee D, Point Pleaaant.ls char&amp;ed

with murder In thesiMlollqdeeth ot
Twyman, 17, Rt.l, Ewlnifm, on or
aboutlastMarcb20.
.
1

QOW'S FAMIY RESTAURANT ·_
221 W. MAIN ST.

•

prior tD the trial by the mother, Pamela Spencer.
Both signed statments were entered as evidence
Wednesday.
Spencer Is charged with involuntary manslaughter ·
and endangering children as the result ot her son's
death on or about last May 29.
In a statement given to Meigs County ProsecUtor's
investigator, Paul Gerard, Spencer aclawwledged
her baby moved after being placed in a plastic bag.
The first statement was made on June 1 while
Spencer was a patient at Holzer Medical Center, and
another stater.tent was given June 2, at the home of
the defendant's sister, Cheryl Frankp. ·
In the first signed statement read by Gerard, .the
defendant said she gave birth to a boy child somettm('
after midnight after her water broke as she was
making ber way to her car. At birth, the Wby fell to
the fioor of thE&gt; car and she wrapped lt In a nightgown
she was Wearing and cut the coni. She dldn 't have
anything to tie the coni, but, she (Spencer) noticed the
baby moved after being pll:.c-t'Cl in a pastlc bag.
According to the signed statement, the defendant
aclawwledged she did not want the child and would be
glad when It was gone. She also said she did not call
anyone.
Second statement
In a second statement entered into evidence on the

Wolfe, Teafor~ get board appointments

DINING ROOM ClOSES AT 7 MONDAY·SATUIIDAY
DINING ROOM ClOSES AT 3 ON SUNDAY

•

2 s"e&lt;tions , 16 Page~
20 Cents
A Mu!tim@tl ia In c. Ne wspap er

It.e ms big .issue ·in Ca•'l·'s trial

•

' Wayne, Llttle, 35, Northup and
Delra A. Ph!Wps, 26, Puneroy,
have applied tor a marrJage license
In Meigs Probate Court.

19~3

Statements reveal baby moved ill plastic bag

Marriage licenses

LUNCHEON &amp;DINNER SPECIALS •.........• $2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS ......................... $1.99

Seeks license

•

enttne

I:.Pomero -Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 8,

Copyrighted 1983

Send the
Crystal Caddy
Bouquet for
Chrisbnas,
Sunday, Dec. 25.

106 Butternut
Pomeroy, Oh.
PH. 992·2039

at y

I

Voi.32 ,No.168

new Crystal
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II Pilla 11 afCJbict) e . ....'l'.bftaBa: · J&amp;ltleae n..-:. tk

Divorce granted

•

e

Seutluel start

LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Dale
Johnston. charged with aggravated
murder in the mutilation slayings of
his 18-year-&lt;Jldstepdaughter and her
finance, has waived his right to a
jury trial and requested that his case
be heard by a three- judge panel.
Johnston, 50, is charged with two
counts of aggravated murder In the
slayings of Annette Cooper Johnston
and Todd Scl)ultz, 19, whose torsos
were found last ·year along the
Hocking River. Other body parts
were discovered later in a nearby
field. ·
Johnston on Monday waived Ws
right to a jury after consulting with
his lawyer, Thomas Tyack.
Prosecutor Chris Veldt said the
three-judge panel will be romJ)OS:ed
of Hocking County COmmon Pleas
Judge james Stillwell and twootber
jurists to be named by the Ohio
Supreme Court.

Scrooge, what else

5

r~Pu=tnam~~;:Co~u;_n_ty,.;_J_Ijll
__
sin_ce-=--hls_J~o~r~9~9~2~-5~7~21~~~~~~~
second arrest.
-

Waives jury trial

Making granola

......

PH. "2·5432 . ·

POMiitov, OH.
that

..
.. •

\

AIC a I I o\t'JIIli' ., ;!j'r,;j '
.,otMaul, W.Va.,lt!Btltled
the latter part ot AlJIIIIl he

Henry offered to record the conversatlo~ and serve as a witness.
The meeting was never arranged,
Lee Sr. said.
During cross-examination, Cain
asked Lee Sr. if he told Ws son about
the conversation. Lee Sr. saldhetold
Lee II that "Shirley wanted money
to leave."
"So there really wasn't any bribe,
she just wanted money to go to
Florida?" Cain asked . "Howdid you
Interpret her statement -was she
trying to extort money from you?''
"No, I just figured she wanted
money to leave," Lee Sr. replied .
lnstaD•Tape~r

Lee · Sr. aiso revealed under
questioning that after his son's
aiTest, Lee Sr. installed a plug-in
recording device on the telephone
owned by Marsha Lee, his ex-wife.
and Lee's mother.
P I al&amp; lJtc+lent To Sberitf
Lee Sr. added that he installed
Lee Sr. IBid he went to the Mason
"one of those better things" to
County Shetltf's Department a lew
record conversations after being
days later and told Deputy ~
advised
to do so by King.
ijeney ,allflt the conversa
Ht!my ~ to help Lee Sr.. .
Cain asked Lee Sr. what he
thought of his son after reading
having the elder Lee !el up a
transcripts of the taped telephone
ITMllllgbetweenhJmsel!andF'urst.

•

recordings madC' h~- FUrst in late
August.
"All kidd ing and stuff, I'd never
heard the profanitv from him
before, " Lee Sr. said.
Asked by King what he meant by
kidding , Le&lt;&gt; Sr. remarked. " He's
done that all his life. joking and
everything. A lot of times when we'd
be swim ming, he'd gPt JO(l feet out
and then say, 'I got a cramp, daddy.'
The n I'd get out there and he'd sw im
away. He was always pulling stunts
like that."
Mot her Takes Stand
Cain then called lo !hestand Lee's
mother, Mar sha. Mrs. Lee test ified
primarily about tlle occasions she
met Fursl face-to-face.
Mrs . Lee met Fut-st in the fi rst
week o!December 1982, when Lee II
introduced them a t his house. Mrs.
·Leesa ld Fut-st was giggling, holding
onto Lee ond wearing a T-shirt with
a suggestive m essage. '
was appalled, I didn 't know
wha t to do," Mrs. tee test ified. "He
told m e she was older, and I figured
20, which iSold forCharlie. But thenl
(Continued on page 10)

\"I

- ,

�December

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Cou-1 Street
Pome roy , Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE ~lEIGS.MASOS ..\REA

~'h

-Bm~

...-n....~ ......
-r,~c:::t,~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AJ;.sisl:ml Puhlisher/ Controllcr

BOB HOEFLICH
, General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
New!S EdiLor

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pameroy Middleport, Ohio
Thllltday, o-mber 8, 1983

Sex and the court_______Ja_m_es_J_.K_i....:...lpa_t_ric_k
I

WASHINGTON - The U.S.
Supreme Court is now sitting - a
bit uncomfortably. I suspect - on
two cases invoMng discrimination
by reason of sex. the first of them ts
of slight nallopal significance, 'but It
has some lively elem&lt;&gt;nts of human
Interest. The second Is s hort on
human int er~st, but it poses a
question of immense importance to
hundreds of ins.tltutions that .In
some way receive financial aid. .

-

The first case dates back to 1972,
when Elizabeth Anderson Hlshon,
27. fresh out of Columbia Law
School, was hired as an associate at
King &amp; Spalding of Atlanta. The law
firm was founded in 1885. No Kings
or Spaldlngs remain, but the firm
has 50 associates and 50 partners,
among them such' prestlgtous
figures as former Attorney General
Griffin Bell and Charles Klrbo,
adviser to former President Carter.

-

i\ 1\1 EMBE R of 1'he Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Associa·
tiou and the American Nt-"'spapcr PUblisher Association.

At King &amp; Spaulding, the established policy Is to consider an
associate lawyer for partnership
status after a slx·year period of
apprenticeship. The rule is "up or
out." If partnership Is denied, the
disappointed associate Is expected
to remain only long enough to find
another job, In 1978 Mrs. Hlshon's
name came up. She was voted
down. At the end of 1979 she left for

LE'M'ERS OF OPINION ltrt• ~· t!'ko med . They should tw less than 300 worM
Ion,;. ,\II letters are suhjt"cl to t" d l lln~~: and must he §ignt'd with name, addr@!!l!i and
ltolcphone number. No unslgn.-d Idl er~ wUI bt&gt; p~bllshed . LPUfflli should bt' In
good la!dt• , addressing issue,s , not personalities.

WHsecurity
When it comes to new security procedures in Washington, it 's getting
tough on everyone.
Concrete barriers make a quick drive up to the White. House gates on the
south grounds impossible. Briefcases carried illto White House offices are
examined in spot checks for weapons and explosives: The ·limousines of
visiting Ca binet members and other dignitaries are often given a once-over
to see if bombs have been hidden underneath.
At a White House party the other day. Sen. Charles Percy, R-lll.,
chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said that he, too, Is
taking some steps to make himself less conspicuous in~urity-consclou s
Washingion.
"l'm' taking off my license plate lllgs on !llY car. That's Ute first time In 17
years that I've done that . I like to drive around with llllnols license pla tes
on. We're. all more security conscious, at the Capitol. It 's a lot more
complicated than it's ever been before."
l;le said that he was planning to give up his Illinois VIP license plate and
hide his foreign -made luxury car behind a more anonymous set of

numbPrs.
Meanwhile, at the party, a reception sa luting five American artists being
honored by the John F_ Kennedy Center for the Peliorming Arts, President
Reagan had a chance to deal with some familiar material.
First. he talked about choreographer Katherine Dunham, working from
note cards. Then, it was Virgi l Thomson. the composer. Then, he talked
about Ella Kazan, the dirt&gt;ctor.
But then, the president turned to the other honorees, Francis Albert
Sinat ra and James Stewart. It was not difficult for the president to carry
out his emcee chores.
Sinatra. he sa id. developed "a distinctive song style -long phrases a nd
'
·
glissade- that's technical talk for crooning."
Old Blue Eyes won an Oscar for his peliormance in "From Here to .
Eternity.'. Reagan noted. and he appeared in "On the Town" and sang with
,
Bing Crosb)' in "High Society."
" You know. Frank, if they'd only given me roles like that, I never'would
hav&lt;&gt; left Hollywood," Reagan said, adding that had he taken over
Sinatra· s roles In the musicals, "They'd have had to get you to dub the voice
in ."

As for Jimmy Stewart, a long-lime Reagan friend, the president recalled

this tale from hi,&gt; California political days:
•· when Jack Warner, head of Warner Brothers, first heard that I was
running for governor of California. he said, 'No, no. Jimmy Stewart for
governor; Reagan for best friend."'

WH .ridicule

she flied a complaint with the Equal
Employment.Opportunity Commission. She charged that sbe had been
denied an Invitation to partnership
because of her sex.
The U.S. District Court rejected
her complaint, remarking that It
would amount to a "shotgun
wedding" to compel. partners In a
voluntary association to accept an
unwanted partner. The 11th U.S.
Ctrcult affirmed. On Oct. 31 the
Supreme Court heard argument in
the matter. Counsel for the law firm
contended that lawyers were dltfer·
ent from other employers - an
argument that according to U.S.
Law Week "appeared to anger"
Justice Marshall and O'Connor.
Counsel ~r the government con·
tended that as an employee, Mrs.
Hlshon was entitled to be consl·
dered for promotion regardless of
sex. It looks as though we may
expect a sharply divided court
when the opinion comes down.
By siding with Mrs. Hlshon, the
government took a broad view of
civil rights statutes. In the second
case, involving Grove City College
in Pennsylvania, the government
took a narrower view.
This is the picture at Grove City:
The Presbyterian college was
founded In 1876. ri never has
discriminated against anyone by
reason' of sex; today, 1,009 of Its
2,1BG students are women. The
college Is proud of this undisputed
fact also: It never has accepted a
penny In direct federal ald.

'Q

'Invincible' armada _______J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON- The U.S. Navy
has put on an awesome show of
force recently, with -Its dozens of
gray ships arrayed in ba I tle lines off
the shores of Grenada and Lebanon. VIewed from afar, the fleet
has been Impressive. But viewed up
close, In It s particulars, the Navy is
less Inspiring.
Some of its ships a re simply unfit
for service. Others are plagued by
equipment shortages and failures .
Only four or five of the Navy's 13
aircraft carriers can be deployed on
a sustainable basis. The combat
planes they carry are short of vital
spare parts.
Over the last four yea rs, the
money squeezed out of the taxpay·
ers for new ships and planes has
.Increased 99 • perceni. Yet the
money allocated to keep our
existing naval forces combat ready
has gone up oniy 17 percent. .
Worse, the admirals have vastly
infl ated the " mission capability"

\

rates, which measure the Navy's
combat teadiness. The figures
make the Navy far more formidable on paper than it is on the high
seas.
If an F -14 jet fighter can simply
fly, for example, it's likely' to be
rated "mission capable." Yet It
may not be able to launch Its
alr·to-alr missiles, or Its radar may
be missing. And planes awaiting
repairs are regarded as If they
didn't extst. That way, they don't
bring down the percentage of
planes that are listed as "mission
capable."
The dismal truth Is told In the
Navy's own classified reports,
which confirm the low combat
readiness. Situation reports follow·
lng recent naval exercises, for
example, stressed the seriousness
of the problem . .
, Investigators for the General
Accounting Office have reached the
sa me conclusion after conducting

The Reagan administration had a fuiUiy way of dealing with Martin
Feldstein when he strayed from White l ·ouse orthodoxy. It tried to ridicule
him Into oblivion.
Feldstein wasn't a bureaucrat who was in place when the administration
took office. Rather, President Reagan himself chose Feldstein to serve ~
and the government.
This treatment has happened twice so far. Feldstein, the current victim,
Can't. -you just imagine some me on Senior Citizens trips.
is chainnan of Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers and a conventional
young girl saying, "Look at that
Three miles from our home Is
conservative economist. His offense is that he expressed thoroughly
poor old Senior Citizen bowed down
Manatee Springs State Park on the
conventional conservative dictums.
by years and pain shuffling along Suwannee River . Amonglts attrac·
Deficits do count , says Feldstein. Taxes must be raised , otheiWise, he
wtth his eyes downcast in shame for
lions Is a boat ramp where
says. high deficits produce high interest rates , and high inte~st rates will
his condition?" Shucks, sonny, Ilsherman and water skiers launch
produce another recession. Ronald Reagan doesn't believe in deficits,
that's not shame or pain. That 's
their boats for an outing on the
either, but he believes even less in raising taxes.
bifoca ls!
Suwannee.
My half-brother lives a
A previous incident involvert Barbara Honegger, the J ustice
Everyone, if they live long half·mile from us and hasta boat. It
Department official who said the Reagan administration program to
enough, wtll come to that sorrowful
has been our custom since we have
banish sex discrimination from the nation's statutes was a sham. The
slate. It usually comes in the 40s or
lived
In Florida to spend quiet
White House response put her prom inently in the news.
50s when everything below the
afternoons
fishing, launching the
When Ms. Honegger said her piece last August and then resigned, the
knees or farther away than your
at
Manatee
Springs and
boat
ridicule started. White House spokesman Larry Speakes let loose with a
fingertips becomes a grey haze as
following
the
short
wateJWay
to the
sarcastic barrage. "The las t time I saw her she was the Easter bunny at
the lower part of your glasses are
Suwannee.
Manatee
Spring~ is not
the While House Easter egg roll. "
made stronger so you can see to
the ordinary little spring like you
-. Tom DeCair, chief spokesman for the Justice Department, where Ms. read. Then you eit her bow your
are
accustomed to at home but
Honegger had held a $37,®a·year job, piped in. She wa•. he said, only a
head and look through the top lens
seething
cauldron from which bolls
"low~ll?vel munchkin."
to see the ground or run the risk of 80,(XX) or so gallons of pure water a
11tal did the trick. It got the Honegger story onto the front page. It called
brea king your neck . If you want to
minute! There are springs like this
new attention to her charges against the sex dlscrtminatlon program. It
hold up your head and look the
all
along its course which provides
ca used women·s leaders to rally around Ms. Honegger. It made
world In the eye you better shume.
the
Suwannee with its main source
newsworthy whatever she had lo say then and henceforth. .
If you don't the Lord only knows
of
water
and makes it one of the few
The same routine was dusted off last week. Speakes announced that what you will step in. When I first
unh
a
rnesse
d and unspoiled
FeldstPin had been excluded from a presidential luncheon Ia discuss
was fitted with bifocals the oplome·
stream
s
In
the
nation. 1'1\e watereconomic matters. When he was told Feldstein managed to get on the guest · trist blandly assured me I would
!rom
the
sprlng
totheSuwanee
way
list, Speakes said, "Maybe he won't make it to dessert. "
soon gel accustomed 1o them.
has
a
boardwalk
leading
to the river
Had Feldstein been asked to resign?
That's more than 30 years ago and
from
which
the
bottom
is clearly
" I do not really think they actually asked him to resign ," Speakes said. "I I'm not used to them yet. I am still
and
looks
about
kneedeep.
visible
don't really think they will ask him face to face.''
climbing up or down stairs I hat are
Actually, It Is nearer 10 feet deep
For the -record, Feldstein says he does not Intend to leave until next not there and stepping over imagibut the water Is so clear and pure It
September, to return to the Harvard economics faculty. !twill take a direct nary barriers that don't exist,
is
deceptive.
presidential order to get him to leave, he says.
hitting nails where they a in 't and
We
had launched the bOat and
And, for the record, White House aides, speaking anonymously , say the otherwise making a fool of myself. 1
tied
it
to the bOardwalk. I confi.
pu!p)se of sending but Speakes to ridicule Feldstein was to silence him, not have developed a chronic creak in
dently
stepped
from the walk Into
to send him packing.
my neck by peering at the ground to
the
boat
I
thought. [ had
The day· after Speakes' peliormance, the White House leaked word, see if It's really there. Tbeonlytime
my bifocal
momentarily
forgotten
through an a nonymous presidential aide, that Reagan found the episode I feel really comfortable Is when I
problem
and
Instead
of
stepping
tawdry. Reagan was reported to have slammed a newspaper on his desk sit and let my fingers do the
'
into
the
boat,
I
was
over
my
head in
and to have said he didn't like the way Speakes had s];ioken.
·
walking.
amazingly swift water. By
time
But there has been no public apology from an administ ,tlon that says It
A few years ago a frie nd and I
surfaced
I
was
well
on
my
way
I
has trouble recruiting good people for high government jobs:·-·
accompanied our wives on a Senior
down the watercourse at ·a speed I
Citizens' trip. He was having more
would never have Imagined. I was a
troutile with his blflcals than I, so
fairly good swimmer when Flana·
we bowed our heads and followed
gan's Beach was In Its heyday in
the ladles as they seemed to cope
Syracuse but that was a long time
By The Assoclaled Press
wtth the pesky things much better
ago, before the Eureka Dam was
Today is Thursday, Dec. 8, the 342nd day of19&amp;'l. There are23days left in
than we did. That worked fine until
built and raised theOhlo River high
the year.
we followed them into what we
over the beach: ·since then my
Today' s highlight in history:
thought was an elevator which
occasional swimming has been
On Dec. 8, 1980, former Beatie John Lenmn was shot to death outside his
turned out to be the Ladles' Rest
done tn nothing more dangerous
New York City apartment building.
Room. Our wtves thought It was a
!han a pubUc pool. My first thought
On this date:
great joke but the other ladles in the
after I missed the boatandcameup
In 1941, the United States and Britain declared war on Japan.
room dtdn't think It was so funny
for air was that I was a prime
In 1948, NBC showed John Cameron Swayze in New York Interviewing a
and neither did we. Although we
candidate for aUlgator food. Just
congressman in Washington In the first demonstration of spll!~screen
didn't see anything we hadn't seen
when I was ready to yell, "Suwanbefore,thaternbarrassrnentsourect
television.
nee, here I come.:· the current

.classlfled studies of the Navy's
readiness. Some of the findings
have been shared with my associate Donald Goldberg.
·
Reviewing 23 types of munitions,
for example, the investigators
found that the Navy was under·
supplied In every category Including such indispensable wea·
pons as Harpoon anti-ship missiles,
Walleye warheads, torpedoes and
mines.
The Navy is also woefully short of
spare parts to keep Its ships on the
seas .and Its planes in the air. Not
only canier planes but the ground
support equipment lack sufficient
parts.
Meanwhile, Navy Secretary John
F. Lehman Jr. Is clamoring for
more money to build a 600-shlp
Navy when there aren't enough
supplies to outfit the ships we now
have and not enough spare parts to
keep them repaired.
Subordinates who want to tell the

truth are afraid to contradict
Lehman. Witnesses heard VIce
Adm. Robert Schoultz tell Rep.
Jack Brooks, I).Tex. , after a
closed-door hearing, that he'd be
!Ired If h~ disagreed with the Navy
secretary. Afterward, an .aide
denied that Scboultz said tt.
Classlf!ed reports provide examples or the kind of ships Lehman
wants to buy with big bucks that
might be better spend on essential
weaposn and supplies. Here are
three:
- The billion dollar, Aegis- ·
equipped cruiser: A secret report
by the GAO reveals that the
cruiSer's radar defenses have yet to
be tasted in a realistic situation.
- The LHD-1, a gulded·mlsslle
destroyer that Lehman wants as
the backbone of his 600-ship fleet: A
secret GAO assessment concluded
that this floating fortress Is way
over·pricect. Yet there are 60 of
them on the secretary's wish list.

Bifocal troubles________________L_~_e_u_w_i~~e-tt

a

pushed me against a plling holding injury was to my pride. When I
up the boardwalk: I grabbed and make a fool of myself, there always
held on' for dear life until I was · seems to be plenty of people as
pulled out.
witnesses. Manatee Springs Is a
[ had my fishing cap and those popular attraction an&lt;) at least a
damn glasses on when l missed the hundred visitors saw my lgnomln·
boat. I had them on when they lous misstep and my rescue. I was
just a momentary extra attraction
pulled me out. I still had my wallet
In my pocket which was safe though and had no Intention of taking any
bows . I oqiy wanted 'to grind those
slightly damp. The only loss from
the entire adventure was to a pack cussed bifocals under my heel and
of cigarettes I had in my shirt crawl in a hole and hide.
Instead, I went fishing but my
pocket. Even my lighter Still
worked and I had another pack of
heart wasn't in it. [ concluded that
cigarettes in my tackle box so, still
anyone who could miss anything as
dripping, we went fishing after all. big as a boat had no businesS
It doesn't take long for wet clothing
around the water.
to dry In the Florida sun. The only
The next sucker caught might be
·
me!

1

Berry s World

it\E VOOR. \S
. A$A.ft..~P vou~ AAu~.

lS A

M&amp;.~S.

Parker joins Reds; Indians
The Assoc.lated Press
Pirates, with whom he ·began his
Dave Parker ts. returning borne. career In lR 1973, created mixed
The free agent outfielder and feelings .
two-time National League batting
"I was close to Chuck Tanner
champion was signed by the · (Pirates manager) and the players,
Cincinnati Reds on Wednesday.
but the time came to move on,"
Parker, the National League's Parker said. "They had plans for
most valuable player in 1978 when young players In my position."
he batted .334 for Pittsburgh, is the
second veteran slugger the Reds
Parker said Pittsburgh had made
have acquired at baseball's winter an of!er that was " not acceptable"
meetings In Nashville. Cincinnati and had not revised it.
obtained 4l·year-old Tony Perez
Reds Manager Vern Rapp called
from Philadelphi a on Monday.
this a "month of surprises, and this Is
Parker won his first battingiltle In a great one," although thesigntng of
1977 wl\en he hit .338 with 21 homers Parker came as Utile surprlse.
and B8runs batted ln. Ayeatlater, he
Parker and his agent, Tom Reich,
enjoyed his finest major league had been negotiating aljnost steadseason, drilling 30 homers and ily with the Reds since\the Winter
delving in 117 runs to go with his Meetings began on Monday, followsecond hitting tllle.
Ing up meetings held last month.
"He's my man," Rapp said of
He signed a five-year contract,
Parker. ''He's strong and he has the
averaging $925,00J a year and then
batted .310 the next season as the
Pirates won the world championship. It marked fifth straight .300
year.
Injuries then cut Into his produc·
tlvity for the next three years. He
returned as a fulltlme player last
season when he batted .279 with 12
home runs and 69 RBI for the
Pirates.
·Parker, 32, has often been the
subject of controversy in Pittsburgh
and the signing with Cincinnati
returns him to his hometown.
Parker will receive an estimated
.WXJ.OOJforeach of thereporied two
years In hls contract with the Reds

Today in Jiistory

Bernazard hit .262 with the White
Sox and .267 with the Mariners. He
wound upwith23stolen bases on the
season and 56 RBI.
The Indians had been dangling
Thomas in a possible trade since he
demanded to be traded.
Perconte spllt time between the
Indians and their Charleston farm
club last year. In Charleston, he .346·
In 94 games, and he hit .269 In 14
games with the Indians.
Mariners Manager Del Crandall
said he expected to use Thomas at
one of the three outfield positions,
"and if he DH's, it'll only .b e to give

capabilities to make us the con·
tend~r we're looking for."
The Indians on Wednesday sent
slugging outitelder Gonnan Thomas and Infielder Jack Perconte to
the !)eattle Mariners for second
baseman Tony Bemazard.
The trade was negotiated at this
week's winter baseball meeting in
Nashville, Tenn.
Thomas was With Milwaukee last
season before .being traded to the
Indians for center fielder Rick
Manning. He hit .183 with five
homers before going to the Indians,
with whom he hlt.221 with17homers
and 51 RBI. He finished the season
with69RBI.
Bernazard, likewise, was traded
during the 1983 season, from the
Chicago While Sox to the Mariners
for Julio Cruz, who became a free
agent after the season.

In his most productive season,
Thomas led the American League
with 39 homers and drove In 112runs
in 1982. Crandall suspected the trade
that sent htm to Cleveland had
affected his statistics last season.

I

president Bob Howsam (left) after it was announced
Wednesday at the winter meetings that Parker had
signed with the Reds. (AP Laserphoto ).
1

CHECK THE

MAlJMl:E, Olllo (AP~ - Cal

Enner wi\1 return for a seventh
seasonasmanagerottheCiass~
Toledo Mud Hens, the Intematl(/llal
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·"We are looking forward io
WOl'ldlll with Cal again In )!liM. He
kept ui In contention tor the playotls
rfgbt up to the end of the season last
year," Mud HensGeneralMBnaget'
Gene Cook said. "We hope to win It

ClA55Ifi[D5
For All

all In 1ll84. ..
Under Enner, the Hens have
reached the Governor's Cup playoff
series twice in six seasons.
.
Enner, !58, managed the Amert·
can League Minnesota Twins for
partofthe.l9678M1Cmandallof1!a,
canpiiiiie a 16129 record.
' 'I1Ie Mud lJeDs are atflllated wtth

the Twills.

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the search committee. "We'll have sontoChicago.TheExposandCubs
somecopunent'aftermyremarksto
were
happy
to oblige.
"We
couldn't
have done this
the owners tomoiTOW."
Baker, In Washington, offered no without Jack," said Dallas Green,
help when asked by reporters, "Are general manager of the Cubs, who
had been stalemated in talks with
you going to play ball?" His oniy
Montreal's
John McHale untll
response was an underhand sweep
McKeon
came
along. "I'm not sure
o{hls pitching arm. ·
John
and
I
could
have worked it out.
President Reagan's chief spokes·
man, Larry Speakes, was just as We were mt cornpatable."
McKeon solved that, routing
elusive.
The Rangers came to th€\l€ Sanderson (6-7witha4.65ERAlast
year) to Chicago·to give Green the
meetings determined to add sonle
offense and they had the pitching · starter the Cubs wanted, and Lucas
(5-8, 2.87, 17 saves) to Montreal for
necessary to get Ward, who
the left·hander they were after.
celebrated hts 30th birthday
For his efforts, McKeen came
Tuesday.
.
Ward batted .278 with 19 home away with three young prospects.
runs and 88 runs batted last season· Martinez hit .251 with 31 hom ers and
and has a career .285 batting 94 runs batted In at Iowa and finished
the season at Chicago, ba tting .258
average. The price for him, how·
with
six homers and 16 RBis in 29
ever, was high. Smithson was 10-H
games.
CannaDy hit .288 with 22
with a 3.91 earned run average as a
homers
and 85 RBis at Iowa and
fO!&gt;kie last season and Is considered
Lefferts
was34
with a3.13 ERA as a
a top prospect.
·
rookie
with
the
Cubs.
Smithson moves into the Twins'
The Los Angeles Dodgers comstarting rotation and Butcher, 6-6
pleted a trade with the Oakland A's
with a 3.51 ERA and six saves last
Involving veteran slugger Dusty
season, joins Ron Davis In the
Baker at baseball' swtnter m eetings
Minnesota bullpen. "We need peolate Wednesday night, but were
ple to get us (through the early and
attempting to get the veteran
middle Innings) to Davis," saidBllly
outfielder's a pproval of the
Gardner, manager of the Twins.
· The Twins also obtained minor
trlUlsaction.
The Dodgers asked permission
league catcher Sam Sorce In the
from
Baker's agent, Jerry Kapdeal and completed busy day by
stetn,
to
deal theoutflelderwhohasa
re-Slgntng Infielder JohnQjsttnotoa
no-trade
clause In his contract.
tour·year contract.
Earller reports concerning ~
San Diego's McKeon was deter·
trade had Oakland sending severa l
mined to put together the deal that
minor league players to Los
sent Lucas to Montreal and sanderAngeles.

NORTII RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
- Rick Markham guided Back
Window to a two-length vlctnry over

WOMEN and CHILDREN

~

"

Thistledown results

ME~ .

GIFT
WRAP!

Pitching still sought;
Baker will tum down offer
NASHVILLE, TMn. (AP) Pltclllng remains the top shopping
priori\y at the winter baseball
meetings, and James A. Baker's
status as a candidate for the
conunlssloner' s job remains a
leading topic of conversation.
The White House chief of staff had
emerged as the No. 1 choice to
succeed Bowie Kuhn, while no one
was saying so for the record. Some
cold water was tossed on the
conjecture, however, by a published
report.
I
The Washington Post said In
today' seditions that Baker isalmost
certain to tum down the Job If It Is
of!en!&lt;l. An unidentified source close
to Baker was quoted as saytnglt was
"99 percent sure" Baker would not
take the job, even though he was
interested In lt when he was
approached by major league team
owners several weeks ago.
On the trading front, teams
apparently were more than a Uttle
w111tng to pay whatever price
needed to get pitching.
The Minnesota Twins surren·
dered their t\nly 1983 AU-Star
rep~tative" Wednesday, swapping outftelder Gary Ward to Texas
for three players including a pair of
highly-regarded arms - Mike
Smithson and John Butcher.
Montreal and the Chicago Cubs
both came up with important new
hurlers In a three-way deal con·
structed by San Diego General
Manager Jack McKeon. The Padres' payoff was three young
players tncludi:Jg a pitcher.
The Expos bolstered their bullpen
with the addition of Gary Lucas
from San Diego and dellvered
starlet" Scott Sanderson to Chicago.
In exchange, the Cubs sent, two ·
young sluggers, 11rst baseman
Carmela Martinez and third baseman Frttz Connally, and rellever
Craig Lefferts to the Padres.
.

FOR

FREE

WELCOME TO THE REDS Fonner
Pittsburgh Pirate Dave Parker Is congratulated by
Reds' roolde manager Vern Rapp (right) and Reds'

,,.,

Bernazard, Zl, started his major
league career with Montreal in 1979,
and he was traded to Chicago in
December198J. Despite being on the
disabled list the final three weeks of
the season In 1982, he drove in 56 tuns
and hit 11 homers with a .256
average.
"We needed a second baseman,
and Gorman wanted to be traded,"
Indians Manager Pat Corrales said.
Corrales said he hopes Bemazard
will be a good infield match for
young shortstop Jullo Franco, a
certain starter for ·t he Indian s in
1984.

him a rest. ' 1

me," Parker said. "You see a
dlfferent Dave Parker standing
before you, and a dlfferent Dave
Parker with the Cincinnati Reds."
. Parker said his parting with the

Ermer wiU return as Mud Hen pilot

,,

acquir~· second sacker

It was a spruced-up Parker who
greeted the press at the signing sans·beard and sans earring.
"If you mean, I shaved my beard,
yes," Parker said In answer to a
question about his new Cincinnati
Image.
.
"I guess I've gone through k
mellowing-out stage. Coming to
Cincinnati is like a traru;tuslon for

Executive Council meetings
started the major league portion of
the convention today and a nwnber
of owners were dlscusslng Baker,
whose name has surfaced as a
successor for Kuhn.
"No canment on this one or any
other name involved," saldMllwau·
kee owner Bud Selig, crulirman of

tire

Ohio

1983

·•

i

�•
Page

4

'!he Daily Sentinel

Thunday, O.C.mber a. 1983
4

Louisville upsets .
fifth ranked Iowa
By DICK JOYCE
AP Sports Writer
Louisville Coach Dennny Crum
says hls pressing defense is finally
wqrking, and that wa5 bad news for
Iowa, the fifth-ranked college basketball team.
Wednesday night marked the
second straight victory for Crum's
unranked Cardinals, who had lost to
their first two games after being
rated No. 6 nationally In the
preseason.
"Our press was more impressive
than I thought it would be because
they tried to handle the ball with the
big people," said Crum. who is
trying to rebuild his NCAA Fina l
Four team after losing the McCray
brothers to the pros. " It made a
difference for the first time."
It was the visiting Hawkeyes' first
loss after three wins.
Louisville, which ·led a t ha lftime
30-29, outscored Iowa 17-6at the start
of the second half with the Cards'
Pf!'SS forcing the Hawkeyes !!)to 10

turnovers.

·

"We didn't know where wewere,' I
said Iowa's 6-foot-10 Greg Stokes.
Guard Lancaster Gordon, who
played a key role in the press. led the
balanced Louisville scoring attack
with 20 points. Steve Carlino topped
Iowa with 17 points and Stokes .
added 16.
George Raveling, the new Iowa
coach, said, "At the half I thought
we'd made the needed adjustment

to their press. But they came out and
hopped on us so quick In the second
half, it didn't make any difference."
North Carolina State, ranked No.
8, downed Western Carolina 82-61
and unbeaten and 12th-ranked
Boston College romped to ~59
home victory over Brown in the only
other games involving the Top
Twenty. ·
Top Twenty
A crowd of 12,400 watched N.C.
State, 6-1, postits flrsthometrtumph
··this season. Lorenzo Charles scored
a career-high 27 points and grabbed
14 rebounds against Western Carolina , 1-2. Terry Gannon added 16
points and Cozell McQueen took 13
rebounds for the defending NCAA
champion Wo!fpack.
Jay MulllhY scored 17 points and
Michael Adams 16 in limited action
as Boston College ran off its fifth
straight win. It was the fourth
straight setb3ck for Brown, 1-4, .
minus ·iiijured scoring leader Ira
. James.
Uru-.wked Teams
At Columbia, Mo... Delle!
Sctu·empf. a native of West Germany, scored 17polntsand hauled in
11 rebounds as Washington, 2-2,
dumped Missouri, 3-2.
Sophomore guard Johnny Dawkins continued to havE', a hot hand,
pouring in 21 points for 128 in
undefea(ed Duke's five vlctortesthe latest an 82-63 romp over Ohio
University at Durham, N.C.

Today's

Sports World
By WW Grlmlley
AP Corretp&lt;llldeat
NASHVILLE , Tenn. (AP) -It 's not hard torecognlzeWtllleStargell at a
baseball convention -a hulking figure at 6feet, 3 inches tall and 240pounds
-nor easy to restrain an impulse to revive old memortes.
" Willie," a man saJd, "could you spare a few moments for a talk?" ,
"About what? " he. replied gruffly.
•
"Well , about hoW you're doing since your retirement. What you think of
baseball . Some of. the problems. Your opinion of some of the present

players.''
'Willie trowned.
"That's what everybody wants to talk to me about," replied the onetime
inspirational " Pops" of the Pittsburgh Pirates. " I go to Los Angeles.
Baseball. Washington. How about the drug problem? Atlanta. What about
ihe high salaries? Same old stu!!.
"Never changes. Nobody ever wants to talk tome about the things I want
to talk about."
Draw up a chair, Willie. There's nothing happening at these winter
baseball meetings that would be more exciting than what you have to say.
·
A year after retirement, what is Willie Stargell really into?
"Soul-bound stuff, new challenges, new ventures," replied the big man in
the turtle-neck sweater and leather jacket, "like my classes at the
Carnegie-Mellon Drama School.
"Two and a half hours a day reading scripts, articulating, learning poise,
proper mannerisms and speech techniques.I'm still a novice but I'm proud
of what I'm doing."
The 42-year-old former Pirate slugger said the lessons are Intended to
further his career as a concert narrator, lecturer, broadcaster and TV host.
How did a man born of modest means in the small town of Earlsboro,
Okla ., who spent more than half his life playing professional ball, wind up
with such unique Interests ?
"I had no musical background," he said. "I had never been on stage. I
don't play an instrument . I sing only when I'm ln the shower.
" But when I retired at the end of last season, I decided I wanted to do
something different. I didn't want to be a one dimension man. I wanted to
·put some more limbs on my tree of !He.
. "I never saw a tree with just one limb.
"People said I was crazy. There were people in this field who had been
there all their life. But they told me once I ought never to play basebaD.
"I was determined to try. One thing, even If you're lousy and stink up the
place, people still stand up and clap. They don't boo you the way they do in
baseball."
Stargell drew national attention last Jan. 15 when he appeaned at
Kennedy Center in Washington .. D. C., to peliorm a Martin Luther King
narration .
"The text was by Joseph Schwautner, Ben Shaktman was the dinector,"
Willie said. "It was done in concert with the Eastman School of Music
P hilharmon!a .
"My hands got clammy, my knees shook. I was more nervous than lever
was in a World Series but I survived."
An imposing man with a deep, resonant voice, he was a sensation. The
narration, "New Morning for the World" and "Daybreak of Freedom,"
was repeated to huge crowds in Phildelphia, N£N; York, Pittsburgh and
Rochester, N. Y.
On July 4 he 'did a "Lincoln Portrait" on the capitol gmunds In
Washington- another hit repeated with the Pittsburgh Symphony In hls
hometown and in Butler, Pa.
"I lecture at colleges and universities," he said, "some :Kl a year. I spe;lk
on motlva tiona! topics, preparation for life and things like that.
"I host a segment of a Pittsburgh TV show called 'Pittsburgh Heroes,'
honoring people who have periormed exceptional deeds. I did 12 this year."
A baseball hero himself, who was a mainstay for the Pirates for 21 years,
winner of MVP honors In both the National League (shared with Keith
Hernandez then of the Cards) and World Series in 1979, he has managed to
stay In touch with baseball amid his busy schedule.
He serves as an assistant to Pirate Vice-President Pete· Petersori',
'broadcasts Pirate games and works with the Pittsburgh minor league
clubs In sprtng training at Bradenton, Fla.
There, he manages to keep alive a popular tradition of awarding
"Stargell Stars" for outstanding performances.
"Those kids really fight for them," he said. "I must have handed out a
bushel.! was afraid I might run out of them. But I had enough to give out to
the cr£N;s at my concerts. They love 'em,"

Bengals: fullback
excells despite
outside pro~lems

MOVING AROUND - Duke's Jay Bllas (21) makes a move around
Ohio University's John Devereaux (41) during first half action
Wednesday night In Durham's Cwneron Indoor Stadium. (AP ·
Laserpholo ),

Browns' Sipe shines
despite his problems
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Veteran Mlaml, leading throughout the
Cleveland Browns quarterback game until the Dolphins Went ahead
Brtan S!pe has had hls fair share of .. with less than.four minutes to play.
"I've been here six years, and I've
problems this National Football
League season.
never been involved in a game with
The 34-year-old Sipe has suffered the Ollers that wasn't a very, very
22 pass interceptions, including tough game, and we expect the
three last Sunday ina 27-6loss to the same thing on Sunday,'' Rutigliano
Denver Broncos. He also has said.
endured a sore passing arm.
The coach said he looked on the
But he also has tossed 22
touchdown passes and led the team
to an 8-11 mark. The Browns have a
good shot at a playol! berth with two
regular season games left.
"He's been hurt as much as
anybody on thls football team since
I've been here, and he has never
once backed away from it," said
Coach Sam Rutigliano Wednesday
at the team's training facility at
Baldwin-Wallace College.
Rutigliano said Slpe got up during
a team meeting earlier Wednesday
and made a lot of positive comments
looking ahead to this Sunday's
meettn~ with the Houston Oilers.
"He just got up and said what we
needed to do, thathewasn't goingto
lay down because they're 1-13,"
Rutigliano said. "He said a lot of the
thingS I wanted to say."
Although the Ollers have only one
victory, they forced the Browns lnto
overtime before losing 25-19 earlier
this season. And last weekend, they
made a good showing against

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H0URS Sunday lJ:OO to 8:00
'

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Rutigllano said Slpe's sore ann
was not' to blame for the three
interceptions he yielded in the loss to
Denver.
"The interceptions were poor
judgmentandhadnothingtodowith
his arm," thecoachsald. "And he hit
six or eight other guys that clearly
dnopped the ball, so that had nothing
to do with hls arm.
"If hls arm were In a position
where heactuallycouldn'tthrow the
football, Brtan Slpe wouldn't plJ\y,"
Rutigllano said. "We felt that after
the Cincinnati game. But he's at a
point right now where be can play
well enough to win for us."
Rutigliano said S!pe has a quality
that he's seen in nootherplayerhe's
worked with since Joe Namath, the
fonner New York Jets star.

Woodland Centers

e

Pomeroy
992-2192

he can do the thingS that he cando, as
allot us are when WE' look at himand
see him walk - if you can call It
walklni," Gregg joked. "But somehow or another, when the whlstle
blows; he's there, and be's there
every pl&amp;y."
· Gregg said there's no reason to
divulge Johnson's weight, and he
told reporters he doesn't consider It
a problem.
''It'snoprobtemformerightnow,
and evidently it's no problem for
Pete tight now. You guys worry.
about It a lot more than Pete and I
do," Gregg saki.
"He carried the ball 38 times last
week, and he was pus§hard
the last play as he was
·
Ill!.
Sowhatareyougoingtodo?Wha o
you say? Can a guy play at th t
weight? Yes, he can play at that
wE'ight. We'll just get him bigger
unlfonns." .
However, Gregg said it's In
Johnson' s best interests to lose some
weight for next season.

!;::==========:.

r--:::==========::1

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS 145-81!0)
A Dlvllloa of Mulllmeclla, Inc.
Published e-very afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 11~ Court S~reet, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Gompany - Mul timedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohlo45769, 99~ -

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PORTRAITS

favorite fixm s. V S.A
ln til• . .

Friday evening, Eastern and
Southern open second week play of
SVAC basketball as Eastern travto Hannan Trace and Southern
hosts Kyger Creek.
, Eastern played a great game last
week on the road at Kyger Creek,
drOPping the last second deCision
4442 on a Steve Waugh jumper.
Troy Guthrie and Mike Collins had
good outings for Coach Derulls
Eichinger's Eagles along with
consistent shooting from Jim
Newell.
Eastern, 0-2, will meet Coach
M1ke Jenkins' Wildcats (2-1) . Hannan Trace lost Its first game
Tuesday · night against a tough
·
South Point club, 46-44.
Meanwhile, defending SVAC
champion of the past seven years,

els

n ·a

--

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IIJ De .•

7 rr.;

'NlM.Ip!&amp;:
lnl ArceB

II'A8TEIIH ~
•
PlllladelpNa
8Jston

WLPd.GB
l'! 4 .789 1!5 6 .714 2
13' 1 .&amp;10 2'h

New York
New Jeney

9

Washillgloo·

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Detroit

13

Atlallta
Cleveland
Otk:lliO
Ind1ana

10 10

DaUao

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""'"""
........

1&lt;aMu Cily

San Antonio

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.....-rr4

•

9 10
7 lJ
7 15

13
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Portt.nd
Golderl State

5
8

lD 10
9 11
1

SeattJe
Diego

t•

s.n

!00

4
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7\ool

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18 9 2 !I 127 102
17 9 • :II 125 107
15 9 J l1 ll'7 !17
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6 19 3 :li tr7 119 •

5 21

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1772!131Z81
16 10 3 ~ 114 IIJ7
16 11 3 ~ ltl lrJS

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CI..E'VEU.ND INDIANS-AcQuired Tony

--·

Seettle MMtJMn m. exdl.,ll' for Gorman

nan.,

CA16klt-r,

and Jack Perconte,

M11'!NES()rA TWJN5-Aa{uJnod M!,_
SI1'Ua- and Johl Bllk'bet-, pt.tchen, and
Sam Sorce. catcher, from Ole TelW
Ranem M ~ for Gary want, out-

""'""'·

5qp1a1 Johl C.tlno. Lnfl8:1or, to a
Jour·)'HI' cmtract
NEW YatK YANKEES-S!WM!d Mike
O'Beny, catcber. and U:Ugned him to
Collmtus d dV!' lnternatblal
TORONTO BLUE JAY8-Stgned AI·

r...ecue.

_._,..

a

•

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~ • · .t.

MIDDLEPORT
SAT.

__

MIIU\(K.

balemlll, ad Frtt:z Camally, tJUd t...
m1n fnlm tt. CNc810 OD ., achanae
Martmer.
and Q:mally
to th! ....
San .
.lerta.
. """'
-· 1'roded

Dk!IO Pldrel

._

tlr Gary Lucu, pUchrl!'.

FOOIIWJ.

1
2

27
11.

uo
t2

111
9!t

15 10
12 14

3
2

33 L'li 128
26 101 W

11 l3

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25 U1 12.1
22 91 103

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10 14

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CHICAGO BEARS--C\11 Bob Paraons,
part~!~'. Slped !by~ punter.
DALLAS COWBOYS-SI,ned Don
Smen!t&amp;. defeniiYt tackle,
1e11e1 ot one- .

TUES., WED., SAT. 10·1, 2-6
THURS. &amp; FRI. 10·1. 2·5:30, 6-8 - LUNCH 1·2

;·

t

·~--LL\

EAST MEIGS- In girls' reserve
basketball action visiting Fort Frye
defeated host Eastern 31·29 despite
a fourth quatter comeback by the
young Eaglettes. Eastern Is now 0-3
and Fort Frye Is 2-1.
Fort Frye played a surprise

man-to-man defense. however,
Eastern handled it well and was
down just 15-9 at the half. The teams
battled even In the third quarter tor
a 25-19 standing, before Eastern
came on strong, but fell to defeat
31-29.
Tonya Savoy led Eastern with
nine points, Beverly Wigal added
eight, Amy Young six, Krist! Hawk
tour, and Erica Kessinger two.
For Fort Frye Gilland had 15,
Hughes 10, and Keffer six.
Eastern collected 44 rebounds led
by Krlstl Hawkwlthl7, Amy Young
with 15, and Beverly Wigal with 11.
Eastern stlot 28 percent from the
field and 45 percent from the line.
Eastern's next reserve tilt Is
'
December 16 with Southern
before
the varsity .tilt. The EHS varsity
played Hannan Trace at home
tonight

Nitz, Whittington
post boxing wins
The Meigs Boxing Club traveled
to Zanesville last Saiurctay for a
regional tune up for the 1984 Golden
Glove Tournament. Three Meigs
fighter competed with all three
winning victories. Nine-year-old
Mark Haley defeated Randy Ryan
of Costlocton.
Brian Nltz defeated Jeff Eing of
Glouster, and Charles Whlttlnfil(on
defeated Mark (Mad Dog) McCoy
of CoshOcton. Brtan Willis and
David Durst also went along, but
there was no one In thetr weight
class and they were unable to
compete.

convention at Caesars Palace.
Holmes is upset about WBC
pressure to meet the Page commit·
ment, noting that he has until March
to fu1ftll that contract.

day he said !hat because of media
criticism hewoukl now fight Coetzee
only In the UDlted States.
Holmes also talked about possible
fights with John Tate, the fanner
WBA ctlamplon, and unbeaten
Plnklon Thomas.
He mentioned a $4-mtlllon purse
for a fight against Tate and $100
mtlllon for a Coetzee ffght. Many
boxing observers consider both
!lgures to be vastly inflated.

.

The champion, 4!Hl with 32
knockouts, said early In the n£N;s
conferencelhatMuradMubammad
would be his exclusive promoter.
But later tie said Muhammad would
serVe as his agent. "If you deal with
me. you have to deal with Murad,"
the'champion said.
He added, "I'm promoting my
own fights. I'm Don King with a
haircut."

Promoter Don King and Holmes
have an . agreement for a $2.55mtlllon purse for a Page fight.
Holmes has a contract with King
to make a mandatory defense
agalnstPagelnFebruaryorMarch.
Ithecloesn't, theWBCisexpectedto
strip him of hls title recognition.
But while challenging the WBC
and K)ng, Holmesalsosaldbewould
go to Las Vegas, Nev., loday to
confer with Jose Sulalman, WBC
president, and King at the WBC

Holmes was introduced at the
news conference as "the heavyweight champion of the world and
also a businessman.'' Thechamp!on
then emphasized !hat boxing was,
for him, strictly business fom now
on.

MAGIC
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MEIGS JR. HIGH
AUDITORIUM

Holmes decides· not to retire

H 0 US T 0 N OlLERS-Stgnl"d
KMn
~ker.

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
..~

l
O
JH
DEC .

••

DEC. 6 - DEC. 10
TUESDAY-SATURDAY
PHOTOGRAPHER HOURS

A

t!V@-}'ftl'

cheerleadlnl: squads. Among
those participating were three
squads from Athens, Feder:al
Hocking, Meigs, Trimble, Southern, and Eastern. Members of
the championship cheerleadlng
squad are, bottom, 1-r, Samantha Bailey, Jayne Ritchie, Amy
Shrivers. Top row - Amy
Berkhlmer, CD-&lt;!aptain; Ruth
Nutter, and Larissa Long, captain. The cheerleaders are advised llY Maida Long.

.'

Bemazard. leC.'md buanan, from lhe

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• Beauti1ul b8 ckgrounds available
• Poses our selection

Tl"llll8aclions

torlnK-1-

Hockey

"""""'phi'
Wuhlnrton

•:&gt;,

lredO Grtmn, lbortStqt, 10

~~ at Portlaad, 10: .1i p.m.
New York at Sin IMeao, 10:.15 p.m.
~- at Seattle, 11 p.m.

NY Rani"»

wtnn1peg at Harltlrd. 7: :J5 p.m.
Calpry at Toronto. 8:111 p.m.
Eanonton at VIIIICOUW'r, 8:!11 p.m •
Detrott at St. LoWs. 8:35 p,m.
N.Y. lsl&amp;nclers at MlDnelr;U. I! 35 p.m ,
• Quebec at Lcl!i Angefi, 10: l'i p.m.

7%

Atainta at ltdana, 7: l5 p.m.
Mltwaukef.&gt; at Cleveland. 8:115 p.m
H&lt;mtc.~ at C'hkago. 8: .1i p.m.
San AntollO va. Utall at LU Vegaa,

NY-

Morltr'M.I at Washln.(ltal. 7: .b p.m.
~~at New Jeney, 7:35p.m.

~~

Indl••

--·-

Buttakl at Bolton. 7:35 p.m.

•

W«*a~U:t"ll

p.m.
New Jerw;oy at Ptliladf'IPhla.

,.,...,..oMI'W

No""""'8
.... o.na

2

6 14 31.1 8
Garnee
Phllal:lelphia :m, Denver- 128
Cleveland lr.i, Allanta 92
lbrton liD,
~
M1twaum 103, Houston 101
Waa111ngta~ 114. Dallas 112
Utah 116. Pnrt1and 111
San Dleco 1~ San Antonio llll
Gtma
New" Ycrlat PID!nbt. 9:~ p.m.
Kans&amp;a Clly at U. Anae'es, :Jb::llp.m. ·
Detrott at Gddm State, 1):35 p.m.

Pklallx

-·-

Trronto at Harttord. 7:li p.m.
Chlcaco at PtdlallelpNa, 7:~ p.m.
c.Jaary at Wu.tiqlm, 7:35 p.m.

.?'l2 .&lt;flO

:z

Montreal at btbn, 7!1'1 p.m.

-

l'h

3
6

EdmMton 5, VMCilUW'r 4
N.Y. blandon &lt;. Loo " " - 4, fJc

7
1
9

.619

9 15
7 16

M1nnelotl. 7, Detrol;t
QUeago •• Buffalo 2

.., 6\\

....,.,..,_

Lm An~

·- .

3%

.3l8

1l 15

t5 171 116
2fi !II 11l
~ - t» 127
71 113 1.36
Zl 118 140

New- Jem!)' 6. W!.nn1PEw: 3
St. l..a.1l! t ThrarotD 3

3

7 14
5 l2
4 15 m
WES'IERN OONFRRENO!:

3

t
3

........ a..

6%

.526
.500
.333
.2!H '

5

u

tton at ·Athens High School

•

Fort Frye
defeats
Eaglettes

N.Y. R.aJ¥n 7, WlllliJlC!on 5

.lilt -

6
9

w

5%

.m
.«10

9 11
Ctlltnl Dlwllbl

-21
11

Edrnontm
C&amp;Jply
V&amp;I'IC.'OU\Iet'

==

::~~OliO~. a~:!;":!!':.!

•

PHILLIPSBURG, N.J. (AP) Larry Holmes, the World Boxing
CouncU's lllldefea(ed heavyweight
champion, is talking about promotinghls own fights, addlngthathehas
no lmmediate plans to meet No. 1 ·
challenger Greg Page.
Southern hosts Kyger Creek in the
Haimes, 34, who hadsaldhemight
SVAC headliner. Last year, Kyger
announce his retirement at WednesCreek gave the Tornadoes a score,
day's n£N;s conference at his hotel
but faltered In the fourth quarter.
here, instead said, "I'm not going to
Southern's senior polnt guard
quit and I'm not going to be forced to
ROO Llttlefteld has carried the
quit by any organization or by any
Tornadoes through Its first two
promoter. I will not honor my .
victories with 21 and 25 point efforts. ' contract for Greg Page unless they
The much smaller Tornadoes, 2~.
increase the purse."
of Coach Carl Wolfe will have to
The ffght Holmes seems to want
uttllze thelr speed against the taller
most is one with South Afrtcan
Bobcats.
Gerrie Coetzee, tile World Boxing
Coach Keith Carter's men In·
Association champion. ButWednes·
elude 6-7 J. D. Bradbury .and
teammates Chuck Vogel, Steve
Waugh; and 6-4 David Martin and
G-2 Brent Love. KC is 2-1 on the
'
year.
Both varsity contests begin at 8
p.m. following the . 6: 30 reserve
bouts.

Basketball

Derive- vs. 8oltdn 81 HartltYd, 7:.rl

2·8X1 O'S, 3·5X7'S, 15 wallets

·

Scoreboard ...

~::!~:erl~'!::g

Eastem Junior High School

Southern, .Eastern
face SVAC foes

'lba..., .•

COLOR PORTRAIT PACKAGE

·

RIO GRANDE - Guard Jerry · points. It was also the 29th win In 32
Mowery accoonted for 14 of16polnts decisions at Lyne Center over the
on either baskets or assists In the
past three seasons.
first eight minutes Wednesday night
Rio Grande is now 9-1 on the
as Rio Grande College coasted to a • season.
big early lead and up-ended
M1ke Smith and Rick Penrod
Pikevllle College by a 105-66 score.
. paced the Redrnen with 16 points
Mowery had four baskets and each, while Mowery and Dan Curry
three assists in the early going as the
each added 13.
R.ednlm built a 16-4 lead. They
Mowery had ffve assists and
stretched it to 22-7 three minutes
Cuny eight rebounds.
later on back-to-back buckets by
Hoskins Carroll and Jeff Simon
Mowery:
each had 14 for Plkevtlle.
"J~ again created thetempoof
RloGrandehelda41-23advantage
the game early," salud Rio Grande
In Deldgoals and went 23of29atthe
Coach John Lawhorn. "When you
foul fine. The Bears went 20of28 at
get a big lead early ,it enables you to
the line.
create additional opportuinltes on
Rio Grande will be back In action
offennse and defense. Jerry created Friday night at the Bevo Francis
the opportunities."
Clas$lc.
PIKEVILLE (Ill) - Lindsey 4-1~ 9; Lowe
The Redmen stretched their lead
~: Simon :&gt;HI: Ca:To!l4-G-14: Cra!t 1-2-4:
to as bl,g as 43 points midway
Rutllerfonl 2-H: Andersoo 142: WU!lams
through the $Ianza. They cracked
3-5-ll T.u . . . .
J110 GIIANDE (106) - MC&gt;W&lt;!!'Y ~1.1:
the 100-polnt banier with Just over
Penrod 7-2-16; !\Iatsch 2-1-11: Cu:Ty 4-5-1.1:
three minutes showing.
Shaw 3-2-8; Fumier 4.().8; Wolfe 1..0.2; Smith
7·2-16: Vert:of! 3-3-9: Moomon 142: Mel'!!·
It was the ruth time In 10 gameS
cho!s 2.()-4: Fritz 1-3-5; Rivers 142; Pappas
that the Redmen have scored 100
0-2-2. T.u 41-Z!eHL

No subscriptions by mail permUted In
towns where home carrier service Is
available.

13 Weeks ............. ... .. ............... $15.21

Included with ever5yO{i f
of salad with over o
OnlJ at tile Biggest

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month.

Now We Give ,You
The Worlds
•

R10 Red.men b, omb .
Pikeville, l 05~66
8

Subscribers not d~lrlng to pay thec4
rler may remit In advance direct to
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basis . Credit will be gtven carrier each

1------------J------------

Professional Studio

MIDDLEPORT, .OH

1786 N. 2ND AVE.

Gregg saki Johnson was fined for
being overweight when he returned,
but isn't being fined anymore. He
said Johnson was given weekly;
reduced weight llmlts as he works
back Into shape, and he is within the
l!mlts.
Gregg said he, too, is amazed that
Johnson can run so well, given the
circumstances.
,
"Every Sunday, Pete's going to
suit up, and you're going to see him
out there, and you're going to lle
amazed at how big he looks and how

loss to Denver, which kept the
Browns from moving into a first 1
place tie with the · Pittsburgh
Steelers, as a learning device for the
players.

Ask about our 1OX13
(11 X14 mattetj) Decorator Portrait

FRUTH PHARMACY

CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati
Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg says
he doesn't know of another National
Football League player who could
accomplish what fullback Pete
Johnson has this season, gtven ,the
same circumstances.
Johnson, who missed training
camp and the flrst four regularseason games because of a suspension for admitted cocaine purchases, has rolled off three 100-yard
games this season despite the
setback.
In hls latest etfort, Johnson
carried the ball a club-record 38
times for 126 yards in a 23-10
pounding of the Pittsburgh Steelers
last Sunday.
"There are very f£N; Pete
Johnsons In this world," Gregg saki
Wednesday. ''I dQn't know of any
other football player, and have
never known of any other football
player, who can operate under the
handicap that he's operated under
and do so well.
"He's llmlted in what he can do.
You have to understand that. But
even with that, we try to do thingS
with him that he does best."
Johnson still weighs more than
the 249-pound figure 'tliat's listed In
game programs, but neither the
fullback nor Gregg will say what
Johnson's weight is. A newspaper
report pegged Johnson's weight at
272 pourids when he returned from
·
hls suspepslon.

181
TTh~~~~~~~~·~!:·~D~·1~c~~~......_~
-.!_!1~_2l~!,_-----"="-----::--------_1P~m~
~ro~;::!Midcl~'~le9-port=~·~alio;!!:!'~.,;_~-----=-----:-.====--TheWINS
DailyCOMPE"l'
Sentinel-Page--S
1r J
f flON - The

':

Fr'-"dly Sarvlce

E . Main

PH . "HUS

Pomeroy , 0 .
Otwn Nivht• mt9

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

It

II
j

------- ---

�)

Calerular
1HURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Installa·
tlon of otflcers will be held by
Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of the Eastern Star, at 7:~ p.m .
Thursday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. The past
grand matron, Doris Preston,
will be the Installing officer.
Preceptor
POMEROY Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, will meet
Thursday at 7: ~ p.m. at the
Diamond Savings and Loan Co.
Riverboat Room.

Harrisonville happenings _ _ _~Dinner guests of Mrs. Pauline
Atklns recently were Mr. and Mrs.
Norman WUi and Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Jewell and Cheryl.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball,
Columbus, and Bill Sieple of North
Carol!ns were Thanksgiving guests
of Francis Young.
Mrs. George Hoffman, Cleve·
land, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hill,
Paflru! Heights, and Ralph Ander·
son, Akron, spent the weekend with
Pauline Atklns.
Mr. arid Mrs. Roy Wiseman have
sold their home here to Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Kennedy and moved to

Albany.
and Mrs. Bud Douglas and }'Ms.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and Lana Gibson.
Robin and Ray Alkire of Columbus
Mrs. Lola Clark, Mrs. Bessie
wereThursdaydlnnerguestsofMr. Graham were dlriner guests of Mrs.
and Mrs: Bob Alkire.
Peg Douglas recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath had
Mr. and Mrs. Dwane Stanley
as Thanksgiving guests Mr. and spent Thanksgiving with their son,
Mrs. Otis McGrath &lt;!lid daughter, · Mr. and !'Ms. Steve. Stanley in
Charles McGrath and son, The Columbus.
Plains, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Mr. and !'Ms. Harold Graham
McGrath and family, Guysville, and family spent few days with her
Henry Hart, Pomeroy, Mrs. mother, Mrs. Vermillion in
Rhonda Jones and family, Rutland. Maryland.
Dr. and · Mrs. Don Gibson,
Mrs. Stella Atkins and }'Ms. Ruby
Maryland, Miss Gay Lynn, Colum- Diehl were dinner guests recentlY.
bus, visited over weekend·with Mr .. of Mrs. Gloria Riggs and famlly.

LAUREL CLIFF - The
Laurel CUff Better Health Club
.vt1 have Its annual Christmas
:&gt;arty Thursday at the home of
:.tarjorle Fetty, 6: ~p.m. There
will be a $3 gift exchange.

ELLI
.

.

L

Red Ribbon'·Christmas Specials

POMEROY Pomeroy
Chapter, Women's Aglow Fe!·
lowshlp, will meet Thursday at
6: :.1 p.m. for a dinner and
meeting at the Holiday Inn.
Karen Jackson of Ravenna will
be the speaker.

~~II'H

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FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Shrine
39, White Shrine of Jerusalem
will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
. Ceremonial will be held · and
·. potluck refreshments will be
served.

~

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Gre.Jr for lamiJy IOewing!
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POMEROY - The Southern
Band Boosters will meet Thurs·
!lay at 8 p.m. in the band room at
.,he h.gh school.

LONG BO'ITOM- There will
be a square dance at the Long
. Bottom Cummunity building
Friday, 8 to 11: :.1 p.m. Refresh·
: ments will be served.

Amual holldaydlnnerparty!ttlE valentme dinner at the home of
past matrms of Han1sonvtlle Stella Atldns. Members attending
O!apter 255, Ordel' of tiE Eastern were Mrs. Nelson, Allegra Will,
Star, was held at tiE Meigs Inn Bernice Winn, Gracie Wilson,
Tuesday.
.J anice DeBonl, Betty Bishop, Lois
Donna Nelson presided at tiE ··Pauley, Mrs. RICe, Joan Kaldore,
dinner meeting which Included a gift Avanelle George, Stella Atldns,
Ruth Erlewlne, Pauline Atkins,
exc~~an&amp;e. The tables were deCOrated.for tiE holiday ~nand a Pearle Canaday. GuestswereGolda
decorated tree adorned ooe end of Reed and. Robert Reed, worthy
the 1'0001. Members sang HapPy matron and worthy patron of
Blrtllday to Marjorle Rice. Pin-ons . Harrtaonv!Ue Chapter, Jim Nelson,
for the occasiOn were made by the Nonnan ·wm, Don WUson, ·D allas
presideD!.
DeBord, Doug Bislx&gt;p, Paul Pauley,
Arrangements were made for a llarold Rice, and Harvey Erlewlne.

'

ROCK SPRINGS- The Rock
Springs Grange will have its
annual holiday potluck at Thu,rs-,
day, 6: :.1 p.m., at the hall. There
will lie a white ·elephant gift
exchange. Members are reminded to take gifts for the
Athens Mental Health Center.

POMEROY - The Willing
WorkertClass of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
have its annual Christmas mee.t·
_ing Friday at 7::.1 p.m. at the
-home of Marjorie Bowen. There
will be a gilt exchange.

Pqst matrons holiday
·dtnner conducted .

S499
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.STAR;ING AT

$298

Red Ribbon
Special

RCA
19"
.......

MONDAY

:Happenings
Library project
planned in Meigs
POMEROY - The Meigs
.County Public Library is plan;rung a children.'s project to
explore family histories and
create album and journal records of local people.
The albumns will include
photographs, rubbings, wrttlngs, clippings, stories and
songs. Children are encouraged
to choose someone from their
family or an elderly friend to
interview on a cassette tape.
Those planning to participate
are asked to advise the Pomeroy
Library no later than Friday,
Dec. 30, or call 992-5813. The
•participant's nanne, address,
telephone number and age are to
included in the entry form.

Center gifts
. POMEROY - Resldents ,are
· reminded that boxes for Christ·
mas gifts for the Meigs County
folks at the Athens Mental
Health Center are still at the
Davis Insurance Office, corner
of Second and Court In Pomeroy.
Saturday is the last day for
residents to take In their un·
wrapped gifts for tlle men and

POMEROY- On Dec.l6and
17 at 8 p.m. at tlle Pomeroy
Village HaD auditorium, the
Meigs Community Players will
be performing a show called
"Not your Average Christmas
Show" written by Jeffrey Hilleary and Clinton Turner.
Directed and produCEd by
Hllieary, proceeds of the show
will go ID the Meigs County
In!1nnary and Salvation Anny.
The cost Is $2 for adults and $1.50
. for teenagers.

COLOR TELEVISION

MICROWAVE OVEN

$

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29

PRICE INCLUDES .56 FREE
RENTALS - THIS ALONE
WOULD COST $288

Open
.Evenings
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S'rART(NG AT

995

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·AUDIO SYSTEMS

SYMPHONIC AM-FM
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AND 2 SPEAKERS

13 Cu. Ia.

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women.

Commuity players
plan holiday show

RCA

LITTON'S "GO-ANYWHERE"

Til"
9:00
P.M.

Ohio

1983

What's Cookin'?

Homemade goodies make nutritious gifts
By Dale M. SloB
Melp County Extension

Home Economist
You bave a Christma$ gift
factory in your kitchen! Food can
)le a welcome gift during the
holidays If you tailor the gift to the
~lpient an!! plan delicious as well
as nutritious food.
Wholesome desserts, snacks, or
breads provide additions to holiday
meals that are hearty, interesting,
and good .l or you. The recipes I have
chosen feature oatmeal. Oatmeal' is.
a food that has a distinctive nutty
flavor and texture, Is low In cost and
cai[!rles, provides fiber. and Is
nutritious. It's so versatile that it
can he used In all types of food.
Granola bars are popular now for
lunch box and after-school treats.
These granola bars are moist and
delicious.
Granola Ban!
~ cup quick-cooking oatmeal
'h cup granola cereal
¥.! cup coconut
¥.! cup packed brown sugar
Y, cup melted margarine
1 egg
% teaspoon vanilla
1 tablespoon honey
Y, teaspoon salt
%cup Dour
Measure first tou.r ingredients in
a deep bowl and mix well. Pour
melted margarine over all and
blend. Beat egg, vanma, honey and
salt. Pour over dry ingredients and
stir to blend. Add flour and stir until
mixed. The mixture will be stiff.
Press mixture . onto greased,
floured 11" x 7" shallow baking pan
or cookie sheet. Bake at 325 degrees
for 25-35 minutes. Cool slightly and
cut Into bars. Remove while stlll
warin. Makes 18 bars, 3" x 6". 60
calories per bar.
Packaging Foods For Giving
Package the granola bars in a
Christmas tin or make a decorative
container from a coffee can, potato

'
chtp can or other can with a lid. To slve g-lass container or recycled
make your own food gJtt container. mayonnaise or other glass con- ··
wash the can and dry completely. tainer. Decorate the lid with bits of
Wrap the can with wrapping paper ribbon. fabric or paper. Jf you
or fabric. Secure with tape or fabric would like a recipe for granola plus
glue. Decorate with felt cut-out Ideas tor Inexpensive containers for
designs. A bow may be glued 10 th(' food gifts . contact the Extension
lid or a fabric circle "bonnet " ean Office at 992-&lt;i696, or write Box 32,
be tied over the top.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .
When packaging cookies . candy
Gift Gift• With Apples
or granola bars, separate each
Two recipes using apples are
layer with a piece of waxed paper Apple Goodie and Chunky Applecut to fit. If a group of cookies or sauce. Both make super gilts. Both
candy contains different kinds and are inexpensive, wholesome and
fl~vors, you may need to. separate
will blend in with meals throughout
out the stronger-flavored ones . the holidays. The topping for the
Wrap stiong-flavored cookies or Apple Goodie is excellent on other
candies with plastic wrap and 'tie fruits, too. Try it on cranberries and
with a bit of ribbon or yarn. This apples or peaches. This topping is
makes the gilt look more festive.
like the apple crisp toppings that
Another excellent cookie for a gift you remember from your child·
is Tangy Jam Squares. This cookie hood. It's brown and crunchy and
keeps well an(l treezes .ntcely, too.
delicious:
Tangy Jam Squares
1% cup flour (use all-purpose or a
My Mom's Apple Goodie
combination of whole-wheat and
Combine In greased baking dish
aU-purpose;
'
.or 8 x 8 deep pan:
2 cups oatmeal (quick or old;
3 cups peeled, sliced apple~
·
·
'
fashioned i
Y., cup sugar (or less, depending
1 cup butter or margarine
·
on apples)
1 cup brown sugar, packed
I tablespoon flour
'h cup chopped nuts
lit teaspoon salt
34 t. salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 t. cinnamon
Over the apples spread the
'h t. soda
% cup apricot or raspberry
preserves
Cream sugar and margarine.
Add flour, oatmeal,' nuts, sa!t,
cinnamon and soda. Mix well. Set
aside two cups of this mixture:
Press the remaining amount Into a
greased 9. x 13 pap. Spread
preserves evenly over the crust.
Crumble reserved mixture evenly
on top. Bake at 400 degrees for 25 to
30 minutes or until brown. Let cool
and cut Into small bars. These bars
would also be good travelers.
Granola is a popular food now
and It can easily be made at home.
Package the granola In an inexpen-

following crumbled topping.
Mix together:
'A cup oatmeal
'h cup flour
V. teaspoot• s lda
3_4 cup browJ1 s1 :ar
V. teaspoon baiong powder
l/3 cup butter 01 margarine (2/ 3
cube)
Spread the topping over apples,
then bake for 40 minutes at 350
degrees to 375 degrees.
Chunky Cinnamon Applesiwre
Select etther Northern Spy or
Golden Delicious apples, as these
apples hold their shape well. Mix
one-haid cup water and one cup
sugar. Add several 'sticks of
cinnamon and a few drops red food
coloring. Heat untU bubbly and
sugar ·ts dissolved. Peel, core, and
chunk six apples into eight pieces
each. Add apples and cool&lt; slowly,
turning frequently and gently with
wooden spoon. When tender they
are done. Chill or sen'e warm .
Note: You can save sticks of
cinnamon and use over again.
Whenever giving food gifts durIng the holidays, remember to think
about the recipient's food habits
and preferences. A weight-watcher
may appreciate marinated fresh
vegetables or a low cal dip.

MJ •np W11H " - MWOfiC MIDCJfiA'If. CMN

S498

-

19"
REM01I CONTROL

$488

Kenneth R. Theiss, Bernice L.
Theiss to James E. Diddle. Right of
Way. Sutton.
J .E.D. .Hartinger, deceased,
Freda Hartinger, deceased, Edward Baer, Affidavit, Chester.
· Freda R . Hartinger, deceased, to
Edwanl Baer, Cert. of Trans.,
Chester.
Hertha Jesse Compton, deceased, Erna Eltzabeth Jesse,
deceased, Ramona J. Compton.
AH!d. of Death, Meigs .
Erna Elizabeth Jesse, deceased
to Adm. deed, Thomas G. McClung,
Madeline McClung. by adm.,
Pomeroy ·village.
James J. Proffitt, Sheriff, to
Racine Home National Bank, Parcels, Sheriff's Deed, Chester.
James E. Bartley. Beatrice L.
Bartley to Marvin G. Little, Juanita
M. Uttle. 12/100 acre, Syracuse
Village.
Theodore R. VanCooney, Sharon
L. VanCooney to Steven H. Eblin.
· Wanda L. Ebltn, .56 acre, Rutland.
Louise R. Johnson, Vance John·
son io Carl Platter, Lot 130,
Middleport Village.
MUo B. Hutchison, Betty Ann
Hutchison to Charles H. Bartels,
Joyce L. Bartels, 1.01acre, Chester.
The Home National Bank to
Maurice W. Carnahan, Betty M.
Carnahan, 20 acres, Chester.
Vernon L. Weber, deceased,
Margaret B. Weber, Affidavit,
Middleport/ Rutland.
Vernon L. Weber, deceased,
Margaret B. Weber. affidavit,
Middleport V!Uage/Rutland.
Jaymar Coal Co. to County of
Meigs, Parcel. Pomeroy V,illage.
Tommy M· Pennington vs. Pamela K. Pennington. Decree, Meigs.
Tommy M. Pennington, Marvelea L. Pennington to Tommy M.
Pennington, Mavelea L. Penning·
ton. Lot 36, Rutland Village.
Sidney T. Russell. deceased by
exee. to Lester W. Wise, Shirley A.
Wise, Lots, Middleport vmage.
Carl Richardson, Betty J . Richardson toLarryN. Moore,LoisL.
Moore. lOY, acres, Lebanon.
Geoe C. Oller. Patsy L. Oller to
The VInton Co. l'jatlonal Bank,
Middleport.
· Equitable Fed. Saav. and Loan
Allloc;.. successor to ·Mansfield
Bldg. &amp; Loan Assoc. tO W!Diam E.
Morris, Sandra K. Mattis. parcels, '
Sall.lbury. '
•
Mildred L Gaul, Jacob' M. Gaul
to CllarleS P. Bailey I Doris M.
BaDey, 1.~ acres, Chli,m!r.
J8YIIW' Coal Co. to. Columbus
and SOuthern Ohio .E lectric Co.,
Euement. Sallsbmy. '
Frank N. Dorst; Mae Dorst ID
James E. Diddle. RJ,gl1! of Way,

70 PINE STREET- GAWPOUS -SILVER BRIDGE PlAZA

analyzewhatthecameraseesandto
direct the robot's movements.
Halliday said the claw sensors will
tell the computer the position of an
object In therobot'sgrtp. "!twill be
able to detect surface features and
identify the object by feel," he said.
Without a touch system, a tobot •s
computer has to be programmed to
open and close tbe claws in an exact
~r. he said, but an· accurate
toUfh wouldenablearobottoplck up
objects of various sizes with tlle
propergrlppingpressure.
'Halliday said he has built much of
the control system for his project
and will soon begin assembling tlle
hardware.

,..-------------------------1
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
ONLY!
NELSON IMPERIAL
REFERENCE

Books
pesk Pads
Bibles • Bible Cases
;)Desk Accessories ~Attache Cases - Billfolds - Mone~
- Clips - Study Reference Books """Dictionaries - ,anicure Sets
·
Shoe Horns · Day-At-A-Glance
Appointment Books - Cr~ss &amp;
Papermate Pen &amp; Pencil Sets

Syracuse. OH . 992-5776

Now Open For The
,Christmas Season

Large 'selection of potted Poin·
settias. hanging' Pomsett ia baskets. Christmas Cactus, Holly
Trees. Live &amp; Cut -Christmas Trees.
African Violets and Foliage Plants .
ALSO: Candle arrangements. candle
rings .. door wreaths. grave blankets ,
and cemetery vases and wreaths .
OPEN : 9 to 5 Daily; 1 to 5

:i~~=~~

STARTS FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9.
"SCARFACE " l ·
"TERH S OF ENDEARMENT "

ALL DANIEL GREEN

SLIPPERS
MEN'S &amp; WOMEN'S

GIFT
WRAP

MARGUERITE SHOES
i

"The Middle Shoe Store In The Middle Block "
POMEROY, OH.

P.M.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MI LL ST.

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deep clean.
minute to

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OPEN liON DAY THRU. SATURDA'TTJU 8:00

I·

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114.95

Diddle, Rilbt of Way. Salisbury.
JIICk Ginther, F1or1ne GlntbeT to

GIFT CERTIFICATES
NOW AVAILABLE!

V•lut

.

Mon1IOII to James E. Diddle, Right

fRIDAY thru THURSDAY !

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

OFFlCIAL DELEGATES - Delegates from Meigs County Fann
Bureau jollied the nearly 000 olilclal delegates at the Ohio Fann Burei\U
Federation (OFBF) annual meeting In Columbus Nov. 2S-30 to .
detennlne state and naUooal poUcies for the coming year. Tbe P!lllcies
wUI guide the orgaghaHon which ownbers over 90,000 lamlly members
In the state. During the meeting, the delegates from M~ County heard
varlouupeaken addre8ll the state of agriculture's economy. Members
of the Meigs Cowdy delegation included: NonJIIIII WUl, Boote 1,
Rulland, left, and Rex E. Shenefield, F.oute 1, Langsville.

James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
. George F . Mo!Tison Sr,. Lois M.

~EMBER 2 thru !_]

$5° 0 Off

Smarter ·robot in works
from Athens professor
t,.THENS, Ohio (AP) - All
Kenneth Halliday wants is a robot
with a little more sensitivity.
The associate professor of mechanical engineering at Ohio Univerlsty said he thinks he is getting
closer to his goal of improving the
sensitivity of a robot's grip and the
coordination between the machine's
grip and "eyes."
Ha!Uday' s new touch system uses
a piece of flat spring metal with
sensors between It and thesurfaceof
the robot's claw. He said this will ·
permit a tight or gentle grip and
make robots more versatUe.
Robots now use computers con·
nected to their television cameras to

sz.oo

UFREE"

OUve.
Frank N. Dorst, Mae Dorst to

Olive.

TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

James E . Diddle, Right of Way, ·
Chester.
,
·
Frankie Neigler, deceased, to
George Neigler, Affidavit,
Pomeroy.
Jo Ann HetZer, deceased, to '
Wayne A. Hetzer, Kenneth P.
Hetzer, Diana K. Hetzer, Kerry
Hetzer, Kevin Hetzer. Cert . of
·Trans., Olive.

031 JACKSON PIKE· Rt35 WEST
Phone 446~ 4524 .

Someone Uving alone may prefer
foods package~! In small amounts,
or foods that keep well; such as the
granola.
A family with children may
prefer recipes such as the ones
above because they are not as sweet
as candy and can be used lor
lunches and treats throughout the
holidays.
A busy working woman or man
may like foods that they can serve
easily when guests arrive. Y-ou
might also want to include the
recipe with the food so that people
cap check to see If a food that they
are allergic to is on the Ust.
Have fun

Meigs property transfers

13' ~

MIDDLEPORT · - Annual
holiday baazar of the Meigs
County Humane Society will be
held Friday and Saturday at the
Thrift Shop in Middleport.
SALISBURY - The annual
Christmas program of the Salisbury Elementary School wUI be
presented Monday at 7 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.

...

December

lhuitday. o..mber 8, 1983.,

Pomet oy Mi ddlepcirt, Ohio

Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

•

�.

. -·

8, 1983 .

'Scrooge'
on stage
at Meigs
Cllnton 1\Jmer, Jr. will play the
title role In "Scrooge," a musical
based upon Charles Dickens' "A
Christmas Carol" at Meigs High
School Friday night. 8 p.m .
•
The musical Is dlrecied by T.
Edwin Harkless with Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets as the accompanist Besides
Thrner roles are being taken by
Kevin Criner, Tim Sloan and Pa11l
Brickles as Scro6ge's stooges;
Melvin Van Meter, Morley's Ghost,
and Zandra Vaughan, the Spirit of
Christmas Past. Paul Riggs wUI
play Fred, and Paula Swindell will
be the Spirit of C~istmas Present.
Tiny Tim wil be porrayed by Rex
Haggy with Vaughn Spencer In the
roll of Bob Cratchit. Other parts are
being taken by Michl King, Debbie
Wyatt, Christy Haynes, paphne
Dillard, Anita Smith, Jeff Gilkey,
Brian Gibbs, William Molden,

PRESENT - Paula Swlndell as the Splrti of Christmas Present n!Yeals
to Scrooge (Cllnton Turner) the error 01 his ways-at work and how all
think of him.

' .,

, LA-Z-Boy

ZENITH

Donohu~e·~~~~~~~;;;;:~~;s;:~;:~~;;:=;:;;~~l-

Tarnmy Black, Sally Radford and
Jenny
Meadows, Kencta·
Darin Hysell.
Admission Is $1.50 for children
and under, and$2forevery•lneeolse.~

RUG

YOU!.

PRICES GOOD THRU DECEMBER 24

CLOSE TO WHOLESALE
PRICES AT
RUTLAND FURNITURE

THESE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES OF THE MORE THAN 25
CURIOS AND GUN CABINETS IN
STOCK
.

.

SELECTIONS STARTING TO
THIN OUT
. COME OUT AND BUY BEFORE
IT'S TOO LATE!
CUSHION FLOORING
SHINYL VINYL, CONGOLEUM

SAVE $100 TO $150 ON
GUN CABINETS
CURIOS

Starting At

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to Luxury

. RUTLAND FURNITURE HAS
20 SETS OF COFFEE AND END TABLES
THAT MUST
GO BEFORE THE FIRST OF JANUA.RY
.
.

REDU CI!!JR30- l%60
'

50 °/o

T

ON SEAtY POSTURE PEDIC
BEDDING

$177

/2

A Lockable
Display

AlllfpL~RII~ ~TOCK

fit€
I
I
I .

rrpfl""'

TWIN , FULL AND
QUEEN SIZE

'~

We Will Be Selling Carpet
By Special Order ·
Stop In -and Look Thru Our 500 Selttcli~'"":
Mf~~9RN!I.t.LIII!lh!&gt;Y

742-2211
REIECI'ED - A flash bock to an earlier Christmas
Is seen here, where yoiDig Scrooge, played by \Wile

Molden, Is rejected by his Dnacee, played by Sonya
Wise.

TWIN

Sf!

1499.95

RUTLAND.

·

SI99 95

y, PRICE

UlLAND FURNITURE
CO.
•

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&gt;3'1'190 &gt;ET

$249 95

'lz PRICE

W

" See The Grote Boys for Some Gredl Buys"

fr&lt;::&lt;Il:I:~~Bils::l~tsai.Sa2QiS:I.EAa ts:a~~ ,.,__..~~r:&gt;4-,..~z-~s-.--..-.--:---- - - ;:&lt;f:C:t~

SET

'"

QUEEN

'5'1 9 9' SET

People in the news

RUTLAND FURNITURE'S BIG (
STOREWIDE

Carol King seeking privacy by court
SEATTLE (AP) - Singer-composer Carole King, who showed up
at a federal appeals court to fight a decision concerning a dirt road
that runs through her Idaho ranch, says the dispute is spoiling her
dream to have privacy.
'
The 42-year-old Miss King, dressed In a black velvet dress and
cowboy bOots, voiced her ire to reporters after her hearing
Wednesday before the 9th U.S Circuit Court of Appeals.
She explained that she left Hollywood in 1981 to escape traffic and
find a new lifestyle in the Idaho wilderness on her 117-acre Robinson
Bar Ranch along the Salmon River.
"!wanted to cut down on wheel·splnning," she said. "! wanted to
bake bread, raise a garden, have a greenhouse, look at the
mountains- and have privacy."
Instead, some of the time she might have spent composing music
has been spent In court or at the typewriter, wrttlng letters about the
disputed ranch road, which Is less than a rnUe long.
She roiltends her rights were violated when Custer County, Idaho,
officials declared the road public and Is asking that the appeals court
reverse the lower court dismissal of her case.

Hope may entertain troops again

.7

~

to your tine gun dlspiaV.
A real trcphy. Offc.Wobly priced!

.

Elegant, with the
Look of
Leaded Qlass

·1

.

For the Hunter

BUY QUALITY. FURNITURE
AT LOW, LQW PRICES
'

WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY SPECIALLY MARKED BEDROOM
SUITE FOR THIS SALE SAVE $200 TO $500 OFF AND RECEIVE
YOUR CHOICE FREE
Your. Christmas
13 INCH
SEALY

ZENITH.
COLOR

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AND

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GiftFrpm
Rutland
Furn

Vet procticdy d8signed to blend
with 'fQI decor. This beOU!if\11 pine c uriO
feoTur.. 0 rl1rrOf8d IXJCk. lighTed
rrt.rior O'ld lk:h dentl ~
l.k'el¢lecfed e6eganCe at tuCtl o
~ • datalll1tet truly ca •.,... 11&amp;1 ''

A speck:ft cablret )ust for you.
The fiOht ol the dJck is orllstlcollv
CQ:)tured on glesa 01 well as the
doof pooe~t of INS urQJe

$JQO ON
All DESKS .
IN STOCK

l"ont·Q0~cc"'~; The ~ted interior qc
c:tcmo to the display • truly
hOnciiOme and procfleol.

VOl coiiJc1IOt\ yo.x heme.

AND RECEIVE A

COFFEE TABLE AND END TABLES

Valued 1400 tO 1600

IS STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

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HALL
TREES

.30" RAG. DOLL
WITH PIECEWORK C.LOTHES ,.

$499 .

ZENITH 25" O!J.'P5 TV

IDEAL FOR CHRISTMAS
GIFT GIVING

AG-BROYHILL-LA-Z-BOY

DAN'S BOOT SHOP
MIDDLEPORT

'"

e"ect on giOl.l wlile l&amp;rdrQ a worm

CHRISTMAS SALE

WASHINGTON ( AP) - Again, Bob Hope, who has entertained the
troops during the holidays starting back in World War II, may not be
home for Christmas.
A United &amp;rvlces Organization spokesman says the Ill-year-old
comedian may be entertaining U.S. Martnes and sailors stationed in ,
Lebanon.
·
Details have yet to be worked out, USOspokesman Paul RRegaskl
said Wednesday.
Pentagon sources, who spoke only on the condition they not be
named, said if Hope makes the llipthisyear heprobablywlllnot land
in Lebanon but will give his shows aboard Navy ships offshore, wlth
Marines being ferried out to the U.S. fleet.
"It is too hot in the Beirut area for him to go there," one source
said.

ONLY

1299 95

'lz PRICE

211

'

RUTLAND FURNIT'URE CO.
"See The Grate

For Some Great

$2~'5

I

I
I

II

I

II
·•

I

•

'

'

'.

�-'
Page

10-The Daily Sentinel

Harley E. Gtate, . Route 1,
Langsville, 53, died at his residence
early Wednesday morning.
He was the son of Hazel Gardener
Grate, Route 1, Langsville, and the .
late Gerald Grate.
Grate was a Salem Township
trustee.
Besides his mother, he is survived
.by Ws wife, GladysL. SayreGrate, a
son, Jeffrey, address unlmowrt, a
sister and brother-In-law, Mary and
Ray Birchfield, Middleport; a
brother, Harold Grate, Langsville,
an uncle, two aunts, several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. on Saturday at the Bigony·
Jordan Funeral Home with the Rev.

met her and he told meshewas39that must be what she told hlnn."
Following a Christmas Eve party
at the Gallipolis Ferry home of Mrs.
Lee' smother, E rma Price, Lee and
Furst returned to Mrs. Lee's house.
Mrs. Lee anived shortly afterward
and during a discussion in the
kitchen with Fun;t, Furst asked
Mrs. Lee if she could take Lee to
Florida with her.
"I said no," Mrs. Lee said. "She
said she loved him more than
anyone else. 1 said no, and threw her
out of the house."
Seeks Legal Ad\1ce
After that exchange, wonied that
Furst would take Lee away, stie
called the Mason County prosecu·
tor's office for advice. Mrs. Lee said
she was informed that the prosecutor's office could do nothing untll
something happened.
" I was afraid she'd take hlnn to
Florida and he'd end up dead," Mrs.
Lee said in cross-examination by
Cain.
When asked by Cain why she
feared Lee would be killed if he went
wit h Furst, Mrs. Lee responded,
"Somebody' sdead already."
A statement written by Furst and
given by Mrs. Lee to King on June23
was made without suggested con,
tent, Mrs. Lee testified. The same
was true of a June 26 statement
signed by Furst, she added.
'
In both statements, Furst said she
doubted it was Lee who called her
with complete details of Twyman's
murder. Furst testified Tuesday she
had no memory of the first
statement and said King and Mrs.
'Lee influenced her writing of the
second slatement.
'F'lmst Statements Untrue'
Furst Inter admitted both state·
ments were untrue because at the
tlnne, she wanted tobelieve"sobad"
in Lee 's innocence.

Joseph Sismondo
Joseph Slsmondo, 72, Lewll.ton,
N. Y., formei'fy of New Haven, W.
Va. died Wednesday at his home. He

had retired several years 'ago from
the Foote Mineral Plant.
He is survived by his wife, two
chldren, Mrs. Mike (Adel!') Shafer,
Dearborn, Mich., a 5on, Joseph
Slsmondo, Pittsburgh, Pa. and four
grandchldren.
Funeral services will he held
Satunday at 9:30a.m. at the Stallino
Funeral Home at Niagara Falls.

On

cross-exam ination ,

Cain

asked if she had at any tlnne taken
those ~tat eme nt s to the sheriff's
department or the prosecutor's
office .
"No," Mrs. L"" responded, "you
wouldn 't have listened.
She added that Furst had tried to
recant her testimony concerning
Charles Lee' s Involvement in the
homicide, but had been threatened
by law enforcement officials.
"She said she told them it wasn't
Charlie... " Mrs. Lee testified,
" ... and they told her she couldn't

Deputi~

_

change her statement. ..that she
would be charged with perjury·
... charged with murder."
Cainsubpoene(l
asked Mrs.before
Leelfshe
not
been
thehad
grand

ju~Yes," she replied, later admitling she did not appear.

oot state other than the baby
alive and swallowed air. He
estimated oo {!lOre than two hOUrS or
Jess than two minutes.
He alsO said the chlld was nonnal .
and the cord was not tied and there
was oo way of telllni the tbne of
death.Heaisosaldtherewasooway
to determine hoW many breaths, but
there was air In the stomach and
oxygen in the IW'SS·
Dr. Fargal was positive the cblld
was born alive and It did have a
subarachnoid hemorrage, which in
.Ills opiniOn_would not cause death.

Wolte said she stated the baby fell
and that she (Spencer) would swear an Infant Is slapped to Induce crying
unto the floor of the car and did not
to lt.
·
and a !aU would also Induce crying.
move. She told hlnn she shook the
Mlstrlal rr.otlon denied
Wbenaskedaboutcrlbdeaths,Dr.
'baby then remembered the cord
Steven Story, attorney for Fardal said a crib death occurs
must.he cut and tied.
Spencer asked 'that Wolte's lestlrn· · when a baby from one month to a
She stated, according to Wolte, onyhestrlckentromtherecordora year just stops breat)ling. Resaid as
there was a pair of scissors In the misllial be declared. Story made many as high as 34 such deaths
glove compai'tment and she got the the request because, In his opinion, occur each year In Columbus. But
scissOrs out. She also said the baby
the state failed to provide proper added, the term "crlbdeath''would
did not ,move that something had WJitten sununarys of the defend· not apply in this situation.
Dr. Fargal 'said the Spencer baby
gone wrong.
ant's statements to the pollee. Stocy
According to her statement to also noted the defendant, by law, Is was nine months and 22 InChes in
Wolle, Spencer placed her night· entltiled to copies of written length. When asked how long the
gown around the baby before statementsshemadeandswnmar- child lived, Dr. Fargal said he could
placing it in the plastic bag.
les of oral statements.
Wolte testified the defendant had
Judge Charles Knight dented the
become pregnant the latter part of motion made by Story.
September or first of October. The
baby was not due untll June. Wolte
Others testifying Wednesday
said he asked the defendant why she were Dr. Donald Warehlme, Gallia . A breakingande?lerlngattjleBill
had not told her famlly to whleh s!Je County Coroner and Dr. Patrlck Arnold trailer on Laurel Cliff Road
Wednesdaynlghtisunderlnvestlgareplied, she didn't want anyone to Fardal, a Columbus pathologist.
know.
1t was brought out that Dr. lion by the Meigs County Sheriff's
The investigator reported after Warehlnne had signed the death department.
finding out the baby was born alive, certlflcate at 8: lJ p.m. on May ll,
The department report~ that
he again talked to the defendant 19&amp;3wlthoutlistingacauseofdeath. Amolad return€&lt;!' to his trailer
advising her of information reProsecuting Attorney Fredrick residence about 4:00 p.m. and
celved that the baby was born alive. Crow asked Dr, Fardal's QplnJon discovered that someone had enWolte told the courtroom Spencer that if a child dropped two feet to the lered by a rear window. A Marlin
read the last page of her statement floor could the child cry. He rifle wi!Jl scope, a sh&lt;itgun single
then acknowledged it was correct, · answered, yes. Fardal added that shot and lJ ..Inch
barrel for a
'

Lloyd Grimm otllclatlng. Burlal will
be In the Salem Center Cemetery.
Frtends may call at the funeral
home from to 4 p.m. and from 7 to 9
p.m. Friday. ·

Lee'S mother_ _ _:. :&lt;C=on:.:. :tln:.:. :u.: : ed:_.: fro~m: .:. .!: pa~ge: _:l:!_l

Thursday, December 8, 1983

Statements reveal ---------'(~Con:::::tln:_;:Ued::._:!ro:.::.m::..!:pa::!:ge;..::l)~----was

Area deaths
Harley E. Grate

Thullday, December 8, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

check theft reports
Remingtonl1001ongwlthabout$Ero
In cash had been taken. The Incident

remains under lnvesll8atlon.,
The department alsO investigated
thetheftotaMcCuiioughchalnsaw.
According to the report tiled
Tuesday, Darrell Johnson, Route 1, .
Racine, had been cuttJngwoodnear
Morning Star. He left the saw In the
woods, was gone approximately ro
minutes to get a sharpening tool and
when he returned It was gone.

if-~;;;;~:=;;;;;;;;;;;;;::~~===:;:~:=:;~:===:====::;;pr;===wiJ::::==::;•r;;:::::::::::.,

1

'Rin

arts -

t.·

~

THAT'S RIGHT! STOP IN
TODAY AND PICK OUT
YOUR Ni!W
FORD·V.W.·AMC-JEEP OR
.,.......,.._ = = = = = = RENAULT AND MAKE YOUR
FIRST PAYMENT IN FEBRUARY 1984
.OFFE~ APPLY'S TO ANY NEW CA.R IN STOCK!

11.9%APR.
RECOGNIZED- Paul Donald, president of the
Nationwide Insurance Com(I!Uiy, left, and C. WUilam
Swank, ~utlve VIce PreSident of Ohio Fann
:::~F~:ederatlon (OFBF), presented awards to
Insurance agents and managers for their
contributions to the 1983 OFBF membe.-.

f

ship campaign and for their sales accomptlstunents.
The awards were presented at the OFBF annual
meeting In Columbus Nov. 29. NeacU Carsey,
Pomeroy agent, was recognized as a winner In the "50
Memher Plus Club." NeacU Carsey signed over 50
new members In 1983 to quauty.

· "1 kllew he didn't kill anyone,"

Mrs. Lee responded, "but, you
wouldn't have listened."
Furst VIsits Lee
On Aprtl 5 - the day before
Twyman's body was discovered Mrs. Lee testified that Furst had
visited her home " ... came in and
laid down on Charlie's bed."
"So, this woman who you had
thrown out of your house was asleep
in your son's bed?" Cain asked.
''She was drunk, " Mrs. Lee
replied, "I didin 't want her to go out
on the road and kill somebody."
On Aprtl 6 - the day of the
discovery of the body and the nlght ·
of her son's arrest - Mrs. Lee
testified Charles had told her he
"was morally responsible for
Barbara."
"He, said it wouldn't have happened if he hadn't told Shirley they
(Charles Lee and Barbara Twyman) had a romantic relatlonshlp ... lf he hadin't been trying to
make Shirley jealous."
'You Could can u A Fl'ame'
"He was crying," Mrs, Lee added,
"he said he felt like It was his fault."
"Is it your theory then," Cain
asked, "that Shirley Furst is
attempting to !rame your son?"
''1guess you could call it a frame,"
she responded, " ...she couldin't
quit...!! Charlie hadn't been arrested, she would have ... "
Mrs. Lee answered in the negative
when asked by Cain if her son had
been jealous of Furst.
"He believed her. .. she told hlm
when she went to bars and went
home with men that she would just
go to sleep on the couch ... ," Mrs. Lee
said, " ... she told him there was
never any sex ... and he believed
her ... Charlie isn't a murderer, but
he is stupid ... he's just a love-sick
child."
When asked a bout her son's
statements durtng phone conversa·
lions taped by Furst and played to
the jury on Monday, Furst said her
son had been playing at being
"Macho."
"He never used language Ilk~ that
around me." she added.

DR.

-IEI.CO
TOBOGGAN
STOCKING CAP
-~

No. 22F·50
No.
No.
No.
EXCH. No.
No.

•42••

.

24·50
24F·50
70-50
73-50
74-50

II

!
I
I
I
w

iI
I

Name Brand Clothing at Discount Prices
Use Our
Convenient
Lay-A-Way

STORf HOURS
Friday 9 a.m.·8 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m.·8 p.m.

'3495

V-8 eng., fact . air cond ., heater,
auto. trans ., p. steering &amp; p. disc
brakes, tinted glass. am rad io,
wsw radial tires, wheel covers .

WAS

$4995.

1974 FORD T·BIRD

roof, heater , auto. trans., p.
steering &amp; p. disc brakes, tinted
glass, tilt steering wheel, cruise
control, am -fm radio, wsw radial
tires, Wheel covers, remote

~egular '49.99 ~g~v

•31''

•311&amp;

'3895

SAVE-SAVE

~--~~~~~~

BOBCAT

cond., heater ,
auto. trans .• p. steering &amp; p. disc
brakes, floor mats, body side

mouldings, llnled

~ l ass,

4 cyl. engine, _heater, auto. trans .,
body side mould i ngs., 1inted
gl~ss, am radio, ,wsw radial tires,
wheel covers.
·
WAS

am.fm

radio, wsw radial tires. styled
road wheels .

$1995

6 cyl. engine, fact . air conCt .,
heater, auto. tran s., p. steering &amp;
p . disc brakes, tinted glass, amfm radio, remote control mirrors.

COLD CRANKI·N'
POWER
12312

seals.

4 wheel drive, fact. air Cond.,
heater, auto. trans., p. steering &amp;

EXCHANGE
DELIVERS 650 AMPS

WAS

$7995.

NOW

'6995

YEAR

p.

disc . brakes,

body side

mauldlng!l, tinted glass, am
radio, wsw radial tires, wheel
covers.
WAS
NOW

$5295.

MALIBU 4

V-8 engi ne, fact .
cand .,
heater. auto. trans .. p. steering &amp;
p . d isc brakes , body si de
moulding s, tint ed glass, am
radio, wsw radial . !ires , wheel
covers.
WAS
NOW

$4295

'4695

WAS
NOW
19?9 GMC C-15 PICKUP ........ , ___ _,, ___ ,_,, 4995. ·--- ........... '3995.

GUARANTEED 60 MONTHS

21 Pc. %"Dr. SOCKET SET

NOW

6 cyl. eng.,

SEE THIS RUGGED
SELF-IGNITING PROPANE

MODEL

1

Remanufactured

• WILL LIGHT MORE
THAN 30,000 TIMES
BEFORE IGNITOR
NEEDS
REPLACING
• BURNS
HOTTER
THAN OTHt;R
PROPANE
TORCHES
• USES REGULAR
PROPANE
• RUGGEDLY lUlLT FOR
LONG LASTING SERVICE
I
· A IlEAL FUfL SAVEll

1979 CHEVROLET C-10 W/TOPPER .......... 15395 ................ '4495.

BLOWER MOTORS
GMC CARS
Q6Q
AND LIGHT TRUCKS
AMC-FORD AND
CHRYSLER CARS
&amp; LIGHT TRUCKS

$1 iltxch.

S2

1977 FORD F-150 4X4 PICKUP..... ,, __ ....... 14295 ............. _.. '3795.
1976 CHEVROLET C-20 PICKUP................ '2995 ... ............. '2 495.
1975 DODGE D-100 PICKUP .................... '1595 ... ................ '895.
· 1969 FORD F-1 00 PICKUP...................... :._ .. '895,. ........ Special '395.

--··•

1977 DODGE D·100 VAN ..... , .................... 14295 ... .............. '3795.
1978 FORD BRONtO .............. : .................. '5995 ..... ............ '4995.

Ideal lor soldering, brazing,
I nuts,
laying tile. sweating and
pipes, melal sculptures and
many other applications.

1984 FORD RANGER PICKUP
RADIATORS
RECORED

For lhe plumber, mechanic, home

owner, repairman, craftsman.

Featuring:

e/eclriclan 1nd shop owner.

16 Pc. %'' DRIVE SOCKET SET
~2504A

microwave power level with nine different

• Till Ytlr Umltld WlmMy-This Frigidaire

$3995

Countertop Microwave Oven is coyered

with a one-year in-home lull wananty.
and a tO yeai limited wananty on the
Magnetron assembly. Come In and see us
illr lull details.
• t.6 ca. h. ovm capacity-big enough to
cook a lamlty-sized turkey. two t41b.

KIT

PART #K-100

Regular '79.99

• Poww Stilt:tor-lets you vary the

RADIATORS

CARS-

roasts. or several differBflt items at once.
Vou won't lind a bigget oven anywhere.
• Full Circle CGiklng-provides laster,
more even cooking andvinualty eliminates
lhe need to rotate and stir most toods.

TESTED FREE
LET US TEST YOUR .
OLD STARI'ER OR
ALTERNATOR

BEFORE YOU BUY

power settings ·cook slow , last. or any
way you want!
• Tlmar-provides up to 45 mmutes ol
microwave cooking time. The first 10
minutes are marked in »-second intervals. and the remaining 35 minutes in
1-minute inter¥als.

REGULAR $449

SALE PRICE
' ONLY $349 95

THE NEW FRIGIDAIRE MICROWAVE OVENS ARE HERE.

For Mott Cart I Llthl TNoka

Wilh all the featurea you've been looking for' From a bitll!eroven capacity to lhe Full
CircleCookineSyslem for better, moreevencookin11.
Best of all, they're from one of lhe best names mhorr;e appliances-Frigidaire. Stop
iA and see lhem today.

e 1oa WHEEL BASE
e DARK CANYON RED
e V-6 ENGINE .
e GUAGE PKG .
. e POWER BRAKES

Price includes
Freight &amp; Prep.

e
e
e
e

BRIGHT LOW MOUNT MIRRORS
REAR STE P BUMPER
HEADLINER PKG ,
AM RADIO

Delivered
PLUS ANY APPLICABLE TAXES

OFFER EXPIRES THURS., DEC . .15, 1983

IIIZO

NOW

6 cyl. eng., fact. air con d., heater ,
5-speed trans., p . steering &amp; p.
disc brakes. tinted glass, cruise
control, am -f m radio, stereo
tape, sty led wheels, remote
confrol mirror s, conso.le, bucket

V-B eng., facr . air cond .. vinyl

* Limit of 3 Initials Per Sweater

•

NOW

. WAS

PURCHASE OF ANY.

CRAZY HORSE .
SWEATER

steering, p. disc brakes, body
side mouldings, tin te d glass, amfm rad io, wsw radial tires, wheel
covers, r emote control mirrors .

covers..

control mirrors.

WITH THE

I

fm radio, wsw radial tires, wheel

$3995.

Powerful Delco·
Freedom

SUNDAYS 12:00-5:00

MONOGRAMING*

wsw radial tires, wheel covers,
bucket seats .

WAS

'

OPEN EVERY NIGHT TILL 8:00

I
i

side mouldings, tinted glass, am -

ne,
air cond.,
heater, au . trans., p. steering &amp;
p. disc brakes, ti nted glass, amfm rad io, wsw radial tires, wheel
covers.

removing paint. I

"FREE''

trans .• flnled glass. am radio,

MIRADA

V-8 engine, fact . air cond .• viny l
roof , heater, auto. trans., p.

DR.

W2127H

II

4 cyl. engi ne, heater, 4 speed

V-8 engine, fact . air cond., vinyl
roof, heater, 4 speed trans., p.
steering , p. disc brakes, body

NOW

~egular '49.99 ~~["y

i
i

With On The Spot
Financing To Qualified
Applicants.

GALLIPOLIS, OH.
240 THIRD AVE . .·
1704 EASTERN AVE.
MON.-SAT. 8 A.M.-5:30P.M. . MON.-SAT. 8 A.M.-7 P.M.
PHONE 446-1813
PHONE 446·4204

PartS Plus

autosto...

POMEROY I OH.
119 W. SECOND AVE.

'

MASON
ROUTE 33

ModiiMC-G)M

MON.-SAT 8 A.M.·5:30 P.M.

PHONE 992-2139

FEATURES INCLUDE:

.. 't
'

. POINT PLEASANT AUTO PARTS
P~~~E~~~ Hio
MON.·S4T.
2&amp;11 JACKSON AVE. ;
•
8 A.M. 'til 5:30P.M.
PHONE 675·2731 •
"SAMI OWNIISHIP"

'

I

'

• Auto Defrollt
• Toucb-N-Cook Controls
• Dilltll Clock and Timer

ModoiMC.IOIJio4

FEATURES INCLUDE:

• Meal Minder Probe
• Heat &amp; Hold Cycle
• 2 Speed, 60 minute timer

-MC-lOtll

FEATURES INCLUDE:
• 45 Minute Timer
• llefroat Setti"'

• Vuilble Cooklna Power

��Page--14- The
33

Daily Sefllinel

They'll Do It Every Time
IIEPPA

langsville near Meigs

WAN7S/_ ~;j;T~lJ:I~.~~:J".

~ .. 7'/(E
/!EST I'OP

Mines . 'For more information

call 814-992-6589 .

~~;~ NO

1

Ali.t#G

CUBe~:~~ .'&gt;.....
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

..

~ ~ 1Ji...L

"'" -~Jy_

Watson Ad. Owner finan cing avallilble. Call446-8221
after 6 weekdays .
town.

rural

~

BtU- -·.

·

house site. 304-675-6766 .

I~.,"'..;.';;:. ·

(

~ '-:.&lt;
!If.,

I.-; ~c-l l~ ·
t; t~~

r.s

Houses for Rent

Two story house, 4 ·bdr .,

--- - - - - - - - - 6275 plus utilities. Avail.
now • 2 bdr .. LR . ne w k.t
• .. a•
bath . large fenced yard.
new carpet, 666 or 658 3rd .

r.

New ho"m e for rent or sale. 3
BR, 1·milefromNorthGallia
HS. S326 mo. Call 6,4-

388·9323 or 388·9905 .

.:;;!I"JPUC .o

NoT· i7 PA.fiN(;!} ~/
~-;
'-'.."S
~ :': ,:~
iiJ;.,--,c._ ~; -

.

;...""'~:
,

\

!f!-

;;;?j~~~.~~

~~;;;;~;~~;T~~~;~~~-~···~~.~-~~~
44

A partment
for Rent

51 H ouse h old Goods
. .•

_,

LAYNE "S FURNITURE

,.,.,
843 2nd . ~e . , Gallipolis. 5
rooms , yard , off street park ing, no pets. dep. &amp;ref. Call
614-256- 152 9 .

lease required , Call 446 -

0093 or 446-0795 ..
2 bdr. house on St. Rt. 7 .

Coli 614-256-6520 .
3 bedroom homtt. modern
kitchen, 1 V2 baths, insu-

lated, in Middleport. $25,0 .

month. 614-992-2676 .
Two bedroom house, basement, clean condition, park·
ing off street. big yard .

304 - 675 - 1301 . good
neighborhood .
Six r9om house , family
room . all electric. Four miles
north Point Pleasant. Ripley

Road . 304-458-1866:
Two bedroom house exc .
co~d., new paint and carpet.
2614 LincoJn Ave. Inquire at
2620 Mt. Vernon Ave.,
Point PleaSant.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Nice 2 bdr. trailer. Hannan
Trace School area. At. 218 .
$100 dep ., $174 mo. Call

266-6251 alter 5 ,30.
12x60 2 bdr. modern furnished trailer, conveni.ent
location . Upper River Rd.
deposit req . Call 614-446 -

8558 .
2 bdr . trailers. Apartments 1
bdr. Beautiful river view in
Kanauga. Fosters Trailer

Parle 446-1602.
Nicly fumished modern mobile home, in city. 1 or 2
adults only. Call 446-0338 .
2 bdr . mobile . home. Call

446-0390.
12x65 two bedroom trailer,
fumishect. all utilities paid,
&amp;326 mo .. $100 deposit .

Call 446 -6583 .
House trailer adults only. no
pets, 322 Third Ave,, Gillipolis. Call 446-3748 or

614 -992-7787 .

frames. S20 .and $25., 10
gun - Gun cabinets. $360 .
Gas or electric ranges $376.
3874.
Bab~ mattresses, $25 A
New one and two bedroom $35. bed frames $20, $26,
apartments, furnished or· &amp; ·$30, king frame $60 .
unfurnished in Middlepon. Good selection of bedroom
suites , cedar chests .
Call 992-5304.
rockers, metal cabineJs.
Furnished apt . for rent in swivel rockers .
Syracuse. 614 -992 · 7689 Used Furniture -- bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dryers. reaher 5PM .
~
frigerators and TV ' s. 3 miles
3 room furnished Apt. 614- out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri. , 9am
992 -6434.
to 5pm, Sat.
Riverside Apts. Middleport. 446-0322
Special rates for ·senior
Citizens. S130 . Equal Hous- TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
ing Opportunities, 614- Ave., Gallipolis. 446-1699 .
Spin washers, gas &amp; electric
992-7721 .
dryers, auto washers. g.. 8t
2 bedroom furnished Apt . electric ranges, refrigera$160. month plus utilities tors, TV sets.
and deposit. Overlooking
Ohio river in Minersville. GOODUSED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers . refrigera 614 -992-3324.
tors. ranges. Skaggs ApApartments . 304-675 - pliances. Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
5548.

446-7398 .
AltARTMENTS , m o b i l o l - - - - - - - - - -

homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -4468221 .

•hopping . Cell 614-388 9760 .
2 bdr . furnished trailer. Call

875-34.75 .
i2x60 h . 2 bedroom mobile
Wome. Approx. 5 'miles from
p'omero~ or Middleport. Call

992-6858.
Nice 14x70, 3 bedrooms,
unfurnished, convienent lo·
cation, large yard, $166 .
~· plus utilities. Deposit and
references required . 614·

985-4367.
44

Apartment
for Rent

Ray 's Used Furniture, GE
dry.er $60, bedroom suite
S150. refrigerator $125 .
Maytag wringer washer

TWIN RIVERS TOWER . $85, coal stove $200,
Apartments now available to
elderly S. disabled with an
income of less than
912,300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income-

laundry stove $65, 6 chest
of drawers S35 each, 2 pc .
bedroomsuiteS60, playpen
&amp;20, stroller $12, highchair
810 . Call614-367-0637.

.Phone 304-675-6679 .

Wooden frame sofa &amp;
Small furnished and 2 bed· rocker, brown plaid . $100or
room unfurnished apart- best offer. Call 614-379ments. Point Pleasant area . 1_2_20_7_._ _ _ _ _ _ __

304-675-1365,

I

For sale 30 in . gas range
green, 2-12 cu.ft. ref., var45 Furnished Rooms io us mak'es of washers &amp;
dryers $70 8t up. All nice &amp;
guranteed. Hupp'a Applian For rent Sleeping RQo.m s ces &amp; Glassware. Corner At.
and light house keeping 141 &amp; fit . 7 , 446-8033.
rooms . Park Central Hotel. al1er 5-446 -8181.

Call 446-0756 .

46 Space for Rant

614-256-1903 .
3 bdr . 1Y2 baths. newly
remodeled . Close to town 8t

$42. 6 dr. cheoto. $64. Bed

Furnished apt . Middleport.
adults, no pets. month rent
plus S100 security 992-

Kenmore heavy duty auto
washer and rocker recliner .

Call 446-7230 .

Two twin beds, box springs,
Furnished office for rant. mattress. frame. headboard
Close to city building and optional. Call 304- 675 court house. Call 446-0866 1913.

days. $126 . mo.

Roll top desk. flat top d~tsk
Large private mobile home with chair. hand made gun
lot in Centenary. Call 466- cabjnet. end tablas, coffee
4053.
table, chest and night stand .

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

992-7479.

48

Equipment
for Rent

20 h . flat bed trailer. Can
pull with own "'ick or car.
Haul anything on it. 825 per

304-675-3717.

1---- - - - - 63

Antiques

Hand crank crellim separa·.
tor . Also large cedar lined
steamer trunk. Both in excel-

lent cond . Coli 446-3934.
54 Misc. Merchendise

day. Call 814-446 -0176.
Knauff FirewQod Pickup or
Delivered . 12''- 22'' itocked
in yard . HEAP vender.
prompt delivery. 814-266-

Small turn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets. Call

446-0338.
Furni1hed apts. 1 -4 rm . &amp;.
bath up. Clean. no pets.
adults only. Ref. \ req. Call

446-1519 .
2 bdr. apt., utilities partially
Plld. 3 room apts. utilties

paid. Call 304-675-5104 or
304-876-7386.
3 or 4 room unfurnished apt.
utilities paid, Mlults only, no

poll. Call 446·3437.
Completely furnished,
newly decorated, 3 roomt

and both. 468 Second Avo .•
odulto. 1180 mo. pluo dopooH. Coli 614-446-2238 or
614· 446·2681.
1 Big furnished room, eff.
apt. with bath In Rio Gr1nde.

All utllllloo paid. 448-0157.
JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS IEquol
Houolna OpportunHyl h•
two bedroom, rent .tartlng

61 Household Goods

875-7322.

---------1972
Mountaineer, 19'h

56

Ave . God bless you.

----------

Pets for Sale

6245 .
Umestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gellia or pick up at Richardt

.

SS

after &amp;PM .
--'---------~
40 gallon water pressure
tank. Call614- 266-1768.

~~~~~~~~~~==;::~====·===~~i
.N...._u........

: Stud

1399, bunk bodo complete
with bunkleo •199. 2 pioco
antron livingroom suite•
8199. antron reclinen 899,
other recliners 180, maple
dinette tetl t179, box
apringi • manreas twin or

Firewood. Pickup or delivered dump truck. Call814-

268-8889.

1 - - - - - - -- - Firewood 1l1b1 for sale. t16

lull •100 sot rogullr·flrm pickup load. Call 814-246·
•120. maple dinette chaire 6804.
135, wooh lllndo 1 3 4 . 1 - - - - - - - - - moplo rockora 159. 7 pleco Barbie a. Ken clothn, homechromo dinona o.c n 49. 6 modo. Call 814-246·9328.
ploco dinette oel t99, uaed
bedroom 1uites, refrlger8- Uoed hid-a-bod. 30 ln. -•
~
tora, rang••~ chest, dr•n••·
wardrobe.
RCA
ronge.TV.
cedar
wringer Wlthett, TV't, dry- color
Corbin
• Snyder
oro, &amp; ohooo. Cal 448- Furniture, 966 2nd . Ave.
Coll 44&amp;· 1 171.
3119.

New handmade cherry
Grandfath!Br clock, moving
moon dial, lyre pendulum.

Call614-388-8738 .

Coli 446·3844 alter 8.

Queen size waterbed with
set of sheets. Call446 -3298

AKC Rogloterod Poodlepuppleo. Dop. will hold tor
Chriotmoo. Call 448-0857.

or 446-0116 .

Ol· • 193 per mon!h wllh
UOO dopoolt locolod noor
Foodland ond Spring Valley , manre••• whh box aprlnge.
Plozo. Coli 446-2746 or Originally •429 .,1175 .
304·876·6554 oftor 4pm.
l•aw meaage.

Umootono dollvorod. 110 o
ton. Colll14-218-1427.
Firewood dollvorod . 135
pickup lood, 1 0 loodo 1300.
Coli 814·218-1427.

I

A

71

f

utos or

S I

I e

~=~·

0429 .

Firewood $36 PU load. 6
loads $160. 1 0 loada 8260.
HardwoOd, delivered . Call

auto.,

814-448-4058 .

top guitar.

2 1 000
miles, ell.
•
=~~73:~·:~~••~;;5:.14"

1

1978 Harley Davidaon
Sportater. *1900. Excellent
condition . Price negotiabl8).

Coli 304-882-2904 or 304882·3411 .
1978 Oldo Dollo 88 Royolo.
exclllent cond. , new tires.
A-C. pluah interior, all ex-

Hondo 1 1 Acounlc. model
No. H 160A, wllh caoe. axe.

lrao. J2BOO . 814· 74226B1 .

con d. $100.00or beat offer.

304·875·3379.

Now 1983 VW GTI, 4,000
miloo. Warron!y, AM-FM
caooene 5 opood. Muot ooll.
17600. 614-982-31112.

59 For Sale or Trade

1986 Chevy, Auto .. P.S .•

Spec. 'a Common Guppy'•

AM -FM receiver Pioneer
780-160 watt. Technic di·
rect turntable . Advent

8-.99, Foncy Guppy'sl1 .99
poir, Comn goldlloh 6-.99.
Reg . labra Danio'o 2-1.1 o.

invested will take tt550.
1938 Plymouth truck

P.B..

Spoakoro 125 won. 11. 200 .

• 1. 500. nogotiobla noodo

restored. excellent conditon. See on Thoma a Ridge.
McCormlcks Farm. ask for

~:~:.me• gift. 614·949·

1---------1974 Olds Cutla11 Supreme

tor porto. $100. 814-9863688.
1978 LoSabro. low mileego.
t 874 Rivore. Phone 304676-6162.

1---:----:

hams1ers .99. Guinea pigs

1982 Muotong ILI -AM,FM

16.99·9 .99. baby Para·

19" Zenith black and white

keet'a 9 .99, adutt P~rakeet•
t7. 99. female Canary'•
8.99. 44 gel combo _aqua-

61

rium 1139.95 (only 2). 45

AD 1974 Ford tractor 3000

ga~

power ltMrlng, looks Uke

combo

aquarium

$126 . Also

1120.95 (only 2). 16'11i ott

Hobby Horse asking 126.

other aquar. 's (limited
supplyJ. Many more ape·
cials. Hrs. 1 O : OOAM·

Call 614-949-2141 .
Sears Freestanding fireplsce
with 8 ft. of pipe. Brown,
used 3 montha . $360. 882-

2391 .

BN Ford ' tractor, pJow1.
utility trailer. John Deere

taed. It low priceo &amp; quafiiY

tractor. 304-896 -3471.

2714.

JACK"S TROPICAL .FISH.

Master-oil fired space heater

UKC Rag. Treeing Walker
female, 10 months old, $7&amp;,

150,000 BTU with thormootat 8150. 614-992 -7312.

boot otter. Phone 304·11764419 evoningo 304-882·
2071 .
1973 Dodge Monaco,
1800.00, PS, PB, Aulo.
trans •• Crulte control. 4 new

dreo. good condhlon. 304882-2053.
72

curler trail•. 2 axle. hydra-

duloc brakao. 8.00 lb. woigflt
capocHy, t2,496. Only ol

Liveatock

Rd, Oollpollo,
446-4782.

1---------UKC Reg . Eskimo Spitz

446-4630.

EXLINE SADDLE SHOP 2
mi. Nonh of Jackaon on St.

mole puppy, 7 mo. old. Hod
ohoto &amp;wormed. Cell 446Seara lawn Criding) tractor. 1 _7_2_30_.- - - - - - $600 . 304-882 -3402 ahor ,.
Blue' Tick -te1 A--laterad
5 pm.
-•

Chriattn .. Sale. Youth ahow
saddle uve tt
heedatalls nve • t
leather show hatter with

Firewood. 304-882·2637. ' malo Coondog. Call 614·
256· 1415.

aU grOOming Item MVt $$

Rl 93 booldo 93 Auto Soloo.

male, 1 Walker female, 1

6ft. snow blade with hydrau-

oliver 147.10

lic lil1 and hi1ch. Excollon1
condtlon. 304-896-3611 .

For

Block ond Ruot. rudy tor

brea11
6522.

1160 ooch. Bluoo-1176.
Black ond red-176. Wormed
and oholo. 863-8378.

Nursery Inspected. You dig.
New Cabbage Patch doll,
blonde hair, haa pacifier In

FREE delive.rv call orders,
surplus. demm, army clothing, boots. Sam Some-

8378.

rville, 304· 875•3334 or
304·676-6480 ol1or Bpm .
8 bleck cock-a -poo poOdles.
6 wooko old. •so. eoch. 5
~ . S.A . Made denim surplus, moleo. 1 tomole. 887-8648

Big

ltrap , 814-2811·

yooro old . 1.000 lbo. Vory
gentle. Halter broken. Olla-

plo Howord rooldonco. 814·
992-7418.

t;;=;=;::;=:===

Parrotl, Slue Head Pionue,
also Meyers . Phone 304-

Hay &amp; Grein

bot•.

1 :00· 7:00pm, Fri. Sn, Sun. AKC roglnorod Doberman.
Othor dayo oher 3:00pm femele. 4 yrs. old, good
until Chrlnmao. 304-875- brooder. UO.OO or beot
otter. 304-468-1513.
3334.

IF....,_

11'1~

·~; 1
'"

~:.
,.;

() MY ia:;;; iA

~D

Yllu"R
~~~~:l!.IJ"~
:..-r.;.:·::;-=;.:~ ..... -

Ifl'

)k

~

'~
'*~ ''
'fl

Jl'lo ;::;;;
•&lt;fl' ..,.

1

71

II:

"..., "

-

.'

~

~~ ~
I : ~-

',/:

\

~~ i~~

?~.,_,

If~

•

'•"

!:i.._-

=-

-~(
~~!J
.

America

SCI100UN' 111\51fT
SEEM 100-ER ...

()) NFL'o Greatest Mo·
menta: 'Super Seventies'
11) MOVIE: "A . Chriotmas

Without Snow'
Announced

(I)

__________________
,.' •
mateo. 304-676-2296.

ing, aiding, concrete work.,

GET OVI"R THERIO
WITH HER, M15TER,
AN' NO MORE

1!11 MOVIE : 'An American

J

Christmas Carol'

••'
•

Plumbing
9 :00

"

•
'

Plumbing, Call 614-3f70676.

Oh . 814-742·

•·:· ·

1174 luaukl TCL100L
•uo.
Coli 441·1142, oxt.
380 B 4 30

~~. Nr.l':,t,*t2~a'r.i:

1171Pon1FUIUN,4opd!,4

______

Auto Peru
• ACC811orlll

...., .......... Mil.._.,

ayl., olr, 12.0H. Only 8t ...... New tlroo.
John'o Aulo Boloo, lulovlllo .... - _.... tiOJ Jot.
fiNon
Aw.
Point
Phuant
::.. ~~io. Oh. Coli J04.171-1401.
.

4

'

.

SEEING THESE
DAYS?

PROVIDED ME AND
MY NEIV 6EAU
ARE ON THE
6UE5T LIST/

F.RANI( Gl/.t.Y....
POCroR FRANK
GILLY.'

'
:

,,..,'
~

-~

••

Hrvk:e. Authorized Sin..;
Salea &amp; Service Sharpen
Scialort. Fabric Shop,

t

MAW!!

1
I

Pomeroy. 892·2284.

'

HERE COMES
ELVINEY

I

HOPE SHE'S

BRINGIN' BACK MY
FRVIN' PAN

4

11 :00 . . (]) (J) (I) . . (I) ® Ill
(jJ News
ClJ MOVIE : 'Tho Boac'

•

CoR 441-3118

Crislo
Benny Hill Show
11:30 II(]) (I) Tonight Show
CIJ Doble Ollila
I]) SportsContor
(J) Cnllno
(I) Soop
G CIJ T - r John, M.D.

e

,
I

Water hauling, Felt Service

low rotoo. Coli 11 4-2se:
1743.

PEANUTS

JIMS WATER SERVICE . ....
Cell Jim lonler. 304-1757397.
WIH houl -1. grOVol. oond,
anything. Coli Bud 304411-1118.
-;:;:--;:--;-":----

Upholatery

I

·•I

1 1 83 .... ........ Clolllpollo

441·7833 or 441· 1833. · ·

J.

Children's

(f) Eroe Ame~;ica
(I) Anothllr Ule
(J) Women Walch
&lt;ID Art ond the Prison

between 9 and &amp;,

TRISTATE
i,JPHOLITEIIY SHOP

Chrlotian

Fund

Nee.d something hauled ·~ '
aw1y or 10methlng moVed? • ~ :

a7

ffi) Tony Brown's Journal

e

General Hauling

~-

+K4
EAST

+833
• A Q 10 8 4 2
• 6 5'
• 98

+QJ 9
• 9 6 53

.

1

VES. MAAM' I \.1.11\l.KEO
ALL THE WA'( TO
SGilOOL IN lliE ~IN

YES, I ~EALIZE 1M
DRIPPING ALL OVER
1

NO, MA'AM,
PROBLEM .. ·

+4
+JI0 762

SOUTH

+K 7 2
---

West between spades and

the ace of hearts was not
going to work . Instead he
went after a dummy reversal to be followed by a black
suit squeeze against East.
He ruffed a Second heart
hi~h . entered dummy with a
thtrd trump , ruffed dummy's
last heart with his own last
trump, entered dummy with
the kong of clubs and played ..1
dummy' s last t rump to discard a spade.
East. who had already
chucked a club on the second
trump lead and a heart on

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West
Norcb Ease
South
I+ .
t•
,.
2'J
3.
Pass

.4+

Pass

o+

Pass
Pass

7t

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: +6

the third trump, was hope-

Morrie Elis, one of the
great players of the '30s and
'40s, hasn't played tourna ·
men! bridge for many years.
Hill daughter, Judy Tucker ,
is one of the nicest of our
leading women players. She
should be pleal&gt;&lt;!d with this
hand played by her father in

lessly squeezed. He knew he
could nol afford to ung uard ·
the Q-J of spades so he let
another club go. Morrie had
four club tricks and the
grand slam.
Lucky, bu t Morrie had
made the luck by his line of
play.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

EXCEPT MY DESK
WARPING!

~V&gt;td
by THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN
1 Walked
War World II pilot clear his
%Hitit off
5 Lorre
name after be ing unjustly .
film
role
3
W.W.l
court-manialed. (60 min .)
9 Indian city • combat style
liD Making of Matinee/
10 Ward off
4 Follows hee
Bijou
9 :30 D ClJ (I) Cheers Dick Cav12Workgang 5 Serviceman
ett suggests that Sam write
13 Orderless
6 Egg-shaped
his memoirs and Norm's
7 Half a score
15
Poetical
wife becomes the 'prize' in a
8
Military
adverb
wrestling match.
arrangement
I&amp;
Somewhat
Cll) New Tech Times
17 Taro root 11 As of now
10:00 0 ClJ CD Hill Streal Blues
14 Engine
18 Say no
Capt Furill o makes Chief
20 Bad guy
16 Whirring
Daniels ha ppy when he discovers thar a judge is on th e
sound
21 Take on
take and Balker tak es to a
22 Dorothy's 19 Uortgage
·1
wheel chair to nab a robber .
22
dog
(60 min.l
23
Show
fear
(]) lnoide The NFL
Z5 Less
(J) Ill (jJ 20/20
hazardous
0 CIJ ® Knots landing
Chip dies in an accident and
26 Sultanate
Karen's dependence on pills
%7 Utter
increases . (60 min .)
failure (sl.)
(J) War Story A daughter
28
Sea
(Fr.)
presentS the story of her
World War II. 190 min .)
&lt;ID News
.INN News
1 0:15 (I) TBS Evening Newo
1 o:3o ClJ Album Flash
(f) 81ondie

lruck nontol. Coli 814-4462716.

we·n do

elderly

father's heroism in a Japanese war camp during

Paequale Electric Co. all •· ~
phetH ot electric work, all ::: .
work guaranteed. Aerial

SEWING Mochlno ropairo _ ,.,

Motorcycles

8Y THE WAY1
WHO ARE YOU

CAN PO IT•.,

Rutland,
2903.

an

plodes. 160 min.) (Closed
Captioned I
g Cll ® Simon &amp; Simon
Rick and A.J . help an old

WHO
IT'S
IMP0551E'&gt;LE? I

Jr.

and

woman is hurt when a gas
heater in her building ex ·

'

1979 Toyota 4 whool drive,
long bod truck. 304·458·
1562.

78

hillside

-~·--.. handsl_10~:-

Excavating

seven diamonds after Morrie had donesome bidding of ..·
his. own .
Morrie won the trump in ·
dummy and ruffed a heart ·
high. Then he led a second ·
trump to dummy and noted
that We st held lwo
diamonds . Now Morrie
decided that the simple play
of ruffing out a club and
playing trumps to squeeze

Some students are injured
when their bUs falls over a

a bar of soap I

let's wash these

::;:;:::::::;==.=== ''

J.A.R." Conatruction Co . ... .
Weter Lines. Footers, --~
Drains. All kinda of Ditching. · ,

74

0 (]) lil We Got It Made

Nashville, TN
(J) Ill (jJ Trau.,a Canter

Don't friqhten h'1m! I doL&lt;bt
if he's ever seen

Before you hove
a cookie, Hooqy,

J

his partner 1 who put hUn in

12-8-18

WEST

and James Jacoby

(!) Top Rank Boxing from

lNG . Fomerly Dewitt' s

JONES BOYSWATERSER·
VIC~. Coli 814-387-7471
or 814-387-0591.

NORTH
+A 10 6 4
.KJ7
• Q10 8 2

By Oswald Jacoby

(1)700 Club

304-876-3388.

.

the 1938 National Championships .
Morrie liked to bid as di.;

ClJ Mama's Femily

Jay becomes unbearable after he wins a 'New York 's
Most Elgible Bachelor ' contest .

Cor. Fourth and Pine

86

.Masterly slam play

Vint's ego e11.plodes after he
wins an 'Amateur Night'
contest .

® Fall &amp; Rise of R. Perrin

&amp; Heating

Coli anytime 448-4637.

Vena &amp; 4 W.O.

Ad1J

frey lyons take a look at
'Venti' and ·Amityville 30.'

'TRICKS!

Jacoby and James Jacoby

+AQ&gt;a

hosts Neal Gabler and Jel- ,

8 :30 D

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

The patients didn 't lik'e that nu rse because :
she w~s always trying to do this .

+AKJ97 3

ffi) Sneak Previews Co-

"

etc. Coli Bud, 304-468 ·
1688.
.

Davlaon,

Oswald

(J) Billy Graham

Cll Rise and Fall of the
Third Reich
. ® Magnum , P:l.

ALLEYOOP'

----- ·
Framing, remodeling. roof·

BEHWE DEAFEN

BRIDGE

Be

WPB'I'

678-2711.

L.

To

• THE RISE AND FAU
OF THE THIRD REICH

STEAMER. Water removal. ' .,
fumhure cleaning. free asti- ,

83

8

&lt;lJ

Cll Gripping Documonlary :

SHIP

HouMa moved or reised,
baaements dug beneth
houses. free estimatea,
House Movers, Inc. · 304 -

I Answer:

EMPTY

NEEDLE THEM

Crusade

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN

82

Ill

(J)

tar. IDoy 614-692-4086.)
(nigM 81 4· 898-8206.)

James
owner.

Jeep exc,llent condi-

•

AM-PM,

Flron,.., V·l, auto, - · 12,781. ,171 Vollollobbllt, 4 dr•• outo..
AC. &amp;unroof. 1:1,781. t878

·-1i';n ,

1'17

e.Emf! TELL YOU
AIQ!iT OFF! •• r-.Y

SEAMLESS Gi,JTTERS. Ono

'7~

11980. llt4-192·501S.

•-o.
iuNO'c:i. U,HI .
1878 Oldomobllo ltortlre

M'

OH, SURE - SUT

piece custom flt your home. "
Gueranleed. Advanced Gut-

carpet

Yesterday's

Jumbles : ANKLE

Jetfaraono

(]) MOVIE : 'Absence of
Malice'
(]) MOVIE : 'MacArthur'
(I) Emergency: Cenlral

lfe~,. 60-

Gooct- 1 ExCiveting. bate·
men~a. footers. drivewaya,
septtc tanks, landscaping .

Autoe for Sale

- - 4 opt~·

-

~.

'100. M169
AHtiiE'?

304-896-3802.

dreo, 318 molor. runo good.
•1 ,200. Coli 614-3888387.

.. • 2.11 1 . tiiO ...... ~~ • ~---------

[ ~;- S;;
~';,I17rA

'!'

~

814-448· 1142 botweon ·•
7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM .

~opd=,_
CI._,,::~a~ ..!~: ~~~=:-·1210. Coll

:,;;:'-'!.._ 11.11.11

r~ fJ:

Water Weill. CommerCial
and Domeltic . Test holea.
Pumpa Sales and Servite.

1977 Dodge Yo ton pickup

2-1880 Yomohllo MX-BO'o.
goodaond .• •300oocll. Coli
44111 8 10 1
1878 Muotong turbo 1-_ _-_ _ _ _·- - - - - choagd. 4 opd. lrono. 1811 Triumph 110 Sportoez. . Cell 441· 7214.
11r trome••....._ t.om- - whool, tom o1ow11
8

!

;;;;

r:;:s;:::m--.'v
-

~6-:r
·;..;, 1:.

EIOIOH Llal1T

Cet 216 hoe, doiers, crane, -:
loadera, dump truck. Call •

1978 Joop 4•4. ox. conde, or
t r - tor pickup truck.
814-4411-4063.

I~
~·~· ~~

-

YIILL Tl115 DE5H

LA!t!P PROVIDE

1867 Chevy truck. Call
614-38B·8370.

73

8:00. 304-675-2902.

~"· :~~

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo· . •

304-1175-2088 or 876 4680 .

r

(Answers tomorrow)

tries to play the diplomat
when the Chief asks his
father to come and live with
the family .

ri8)nced roofing. ·i ncluding
hot tllr epplicatio.n. carpenter. f!ilectrician. meson. Call

your

J II
NMr. "D. D .. DTIJr I I I

D (]) Tic Tee

Dough
()) ESPN'o SportoWeek
(I) Hogen's Horoea
(J) Family Feud
g
Cll
Mountaineer
Baokotball'83
® Wheel of Fortuna
Ill &lt;lJ Entertainment
Tonight
· - · ~ -~-~·
8i) One Day et a Time
8 :00 D (]) Gimmo a Break Nell

l

Henne, ponds, dltchea.'
baeementl, ate. Cell 446· 1 •
4907. Carter &amp; Evant ,.,;
Tranaponation.
I

tr••·

&gt;1_1!!_

•

7 :30

romovol. Coll676 -1331.

GET

n

Now arrange lhe CirCled letters 10
form the surprtse answer, as suggeslocl by ttoo ~ve cartoon.

II &lt;lJ People's Coun

'li

1974 Chovy pickup V. ton.
310 3 apd., good cond. Call
614-446-7619 .

Hey, large bal11, flr.t cut- .
ting, orchard
never ·1 869 Joopotor, ,_honl·
WM, f1 .50 bela. Cell ofllr cally oxcallonl, oound body.

IAAVI
H~~~

W~

~

F &amp; K Tree Trimming. stump

IDOBOLYj

Newshour
(jJ Nowo

'SA.TISFI8D WITH PE.t.l~i~!

'

houoe callo. Call 676·2398
or 448-2464.

KJ K I

8 CIJ Wheel of Fortune
(J) ® MacNoii/Lahrar

I Wl&gt;6 /&gt;.. BO'I, I

RON'S Televi1ion Service.
Specialiring in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazer. and

---

(I) Entertainment Tonight
(I) Chorlio' a Angelo

DOZER WORK By Te.

188&gt;J F160, 4•4 cuotom
302. 48,000 mlloo. t4,700.
304-77.3·5167 or 773.
5978.

Vary nlco Timothy l1oy tor
Nlo. Lorge heovy
Alao
mlx•d griN logumo hoy.
Storge 01 bolh Coolvtlo
ondli!'tond. Gobel Anauo
Form, Coolville. 8W·e87·
3838.

875· 2535.

®Over Eeoy
•
7:00 D (]) PM M-Ine
(f) Allaa Smith and Jones
()) SportoCenter
(I) Carol Bumetl

•

Uaed lrucko, 1 8&amp;7 Dodge . 84
Electricar·
200 to 221 Hybrid l.oghorn D200, &gt;,4 lon, tlot bocl. V·B.
&amp; Refrigeration
hent. In production. 843· dual whMII. cattle rackt.
.304-876· 3717.
6185 otter 8 p.m.
-------------------64

iews 'Pac 10' Basketball.

(J) • (jJ ABC N G (I) &lt;lD CBS Nowa
(J) Bualneoa Report

Coli

bar. 1uto. transmluion.

1fter 4 p.m.

JICkett, bibs, coveralls. insulated coverall• 127. &amp;0,
army clothing boob, allsi1ea
rubber boots, regular ·
insulated. Sam Soverille's,
East Ravenswood. Open

Oh.

tion . '78 Lw truck, VI convweion, bla1• wheelt, roll

Registered Holstein Bull. 2

Registered AKC minature
Datchund, black and ruSt.
Born Nov.9 . Ready for
Chrittmes. Alto Fawn Doberman pupplea. 304·863-

mouth. $76 .00 firm. 304·
676-6654 alter 4pm.

Chonnut

ings, white bini face.
Simca ehow Mddle with

Regiatered AKC Dobermen
puppies. · Fawn and rutt-

ors. Call 614-446-2908.

Rog.

horH m1re.

Sorrel gelding 4 whlto otock-

9 . 304·8113-8378. 1160.

138 TIIUtS, 10 C8anarti
Junipers, 10 Obellia Aran·
daflora. 6 Creeping Junip·

ule

Quarter

Chrlatmes. Born November

()) 1983-84 Poe 10
Highllghta This show prev-

••• POOR KID.

•

I TUBOA
10
·-·--...._....... tl

Unicorn'

a.

power wagon, 4x4, wide

614-286-11522.

AKC Mlnleture Daschund.

I

-a•.

(f) Rifleman

ME. I AI.REAPV HAVE A
SIR I., SO SHE: TOOK OFF

GUESS.

John's Auto Sales. Bulaville

Coli 814·388·99119.

Hand made doll housea with
furniture, $65 .· Phone 614-

THIN&lt;;~,

UNREQUITED I.OV!:, RAFAEL.
.JOEY FE-I.. IN ~OVE Wlnl

•

Trucks for Sale

Chriotmoo Spoclalo· 1979
Ford Courier Pl,l, 4 opel., 4
cyl.. 12,896. 1982 cor

379·2156.
63

MAKES YOU
DO STRANEoE

• Botlleotar Galoctlca ·
6:30 . • (]) (I) NBC Niowo
(]) MOVIE: 'The Loot

Phone 446-38B8 or 446·
4477

Will pay top price for tobacco poundage. Call 614-

femele. ell shots &amp; trimmed.
~oth gOod natured. Female
apayed. Your choice •76.

THE' JUN61.5

I.II&lt;E THAT!

.JU!'T TAI!;ir OFF

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

2 block &amp; con Dobo mole •

304 -676-15 78 or 676·
7896 .

PB,

tirea. runa good. 't800.00 or

62 Wanted to 81,1y

Coli 814-245·!1878.

New wood burning atove
with firebrick ,$326 . each .

PS,

'76 Chry- Cordobo. good

wortcing condition. For more
information call 114·246-

water Shipment Just Ar·
rived . All fish ere quaren-

sunroof,

4op.,low mile.ogo, 14,800.
304-882-3402 otter 5pm.

now. priced 16.800. With
dill&lt; plowo • buoh hog In
9105.

it ·your Xm11 with then get
your peta &amp; supplies at

r1dio,

Farm Equipment

8:00PM , Mon .- Sat.. Sun
2:00-B:OOPM. Now Soli·

Riding mower, used 2
summers. 8400 . 614·247-

1100.

·•

Jim.

baby 839.99 ea., Fancy

614-949-3037.

good.

ro!··m:!e: l~kr:-::'w~=.t

Purchase. Pearl Cockatiala

For ule grave blankets . Call

run1

814·9B6-4348 .
197
4 Comoro, outo., P.S .•

wator) 112.00 ea. FREE
Myotery Snail With Each

Antiquea. oak furniture reproduction. misc . items. Uae
our Christmas layaway plan.
Conkels, Tuppers Plains.

WHY WOUL.P SHe

1182.
_M_a_r_c-um--R-oofi-_n_g_•_s_po_u_t-- ,.'.

1980 Ford Pinlo runabout.

Upright plono, 304-11752451 .

Freshwater Stingray 44.00,
Snoflake Moray eel's tfreah·

Spirit $75. Call 446-1642.
ext. 380, 8 -4:30.

CAnAIN' EASY

textured ceilinga commer·
cial and relidential, frH
estimates. Call, 614-266· :,

""P"!._~~orb omp.

:!:.

caae and brand new bow.
Alvarez mandolin with hard
shell c ..a . Phone 30•-a---s.
61;143 before 8pm.

448-0198. Xmoo

Prairie
(I) &lt;ID 3-2 -1, ContaCt

...

..

Appliance: Service All makes
model• rafrigeruora.
weahen, dryers. ranges .
compactora, dlahwashert,
microwaves . Heating &amp;
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work,
Oellia Refrigeration Co. Call

---~-·-··----

oo.. blk . Molly'o 2·.99.

27' mens1 0 speed bike Free

(I) Utile HouM on the

•

model uted cars.
Smith
.B uick-Pontiac, 1911 Ea•t·
ern Ave., Gallipolis, 4462282.

814

Neon Tetra'• .96 ea .• Green
Swordtetl' s 2-.99, Red Wag
Platy' a .69 ea .• Betta's1.90

614-256-6636 alter 5PM.

()) ESPN' o SldeU,...

"' '

apecializing in built up roof. ·• ·
Call 814-388-9867.

TOP CASH paid lor lale

~'!aj_ -~:~~~~;l::!l;!it

Rt. 1 60 Evergreen Pet Shop.

Call

...

lng . 30 yo·aro ox-rionco.
~

_1_Zj8183

(jJN(1) MOVIE : ' Blue Lagoon'
(f) Now Treuure Hurrt

••
.,

drum &lt;let
symcaae.

: 0(
....~ '
.....,

JACK"S TROPICAL FISH

large upholstered chair like
new, Hoover upright
sweeper, electric broom,
pictures &amp; lamp. Call 446·

1!1.

S.c of twin bedo·. Booro
whlto French Provlnclool,
Including Sturno ond Footer

".,.o..

Suzuki violin with hord oholl , - - - - - - - - - -

Dragonwynd Cattery·
Kennels. AKC Chow puppies, CFA Himalayan, Per·
aien and Sieme•e kittens.

a.

Oak tables
chairs. corner
cupboards. buffets &amp; etc.
Wood World, 2606 Grand
Central Ava .• Vienna. WV.

usice

~~~
· t

SWAIN
'
AUC!ION &amp; Fi,JRNITURE &amp; Son . Coli 446-7785.

62 Oliva St .• Gallipolis . New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal stows.
6 piece wood living room
auhe with 8 inch flat arms

M

57

Briarpatch Kennels Professional All -breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities. Engllah Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 814-3889790.

Cabbage Patch type dolls,
$25 undressed , 830
dresSed. Ca,JI .446-2847 .

TV. A•klng

12.

four ordlnory

EVENING

- - - - - ··
STUCCO PLASTERING - •'

"\

rr "I

,

·-;;_.,•

n

byHonnAmoldandBobloo

Unacromblo lhooo lour Jumbloo,
ona lotterlo toch aquare, to lomo

8:00 .(I)(I)IIJ.(I)CJD.

~§

""'-

~

H 1 L_~C REsT KENNELS
all breeds. Selling
Jack Dog Food.

1 , .,~
1111800v

'\

n.eoo. 304-773-6167 or

Home
Improvements

'ftfti}Nl fi;),-1 ~THAT ICAAII8LED WORO QAIIIE .

~ ~ ~~·

THURSDAY

foot , seH contained. ahow81r.

81

Sentinei-Page-15

Television
Viewing

.......

Instruments

fromHighwayOilonEulern

· Ohio

Six foot Coleman trailerwltn \ ~
CO¥er t300 . Topper for ., 1.l
ohort bod pickup t76. 304- ....t

3717.

614-387-7220.

S75 .5 pc. dinettes from
$99 .. to 435 . 7 pc. 9189
and up . Wood table with six
chairs S4 26 to 8746 . Desk
$ 11 0 up to $225 . Hutcl'les,
$660. and up, maple or pine
finish. Bunk bad complete
with mattresses , S250. and
up to S395 . Baby beds.
S1 10. Mattresse1: or box
springs, full or twin, $68. ,
firm , $68 . and $78 . Queen
sets, $196. 4 dr. chests,

1 bed room Apt. $196 . mo .
in c luding utilities . Equal
hou.s ing opponunity. Contact · Village Ma'nor Apts.

tronoparont
·okyllght,
now
In
box
. Ten railroad
bridge
tiel,
81nx12inx12ft. 304-676-

own . Call 614-246· 51 52

S375 .. L.omp• from $28 . to

large fireplace $236 mo ..

0 ne 22 in .x48in. triple dome

. .... ,14411-//llb .
'
. -~:.
Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

tor paid . Call 446-1788.

bdr .• stove &amp; refrigerator.•

-· ·

614 245 9225
TV. exc. cond ., $250. Call
Delben a. Bob Lawson 'a
Christmas trees. 5' to 12'
trees . Largo blue opruca &amp;
large scotch pine. All area
churches discount. Acroas

Christmas trees. All sizes &amp;
shapes.
each. Cut your

$525.,

Cabin on Raccoon Creelr 2

daytime.

7842 .

child occaptable. 614-245-

2188 .

25" Quazar co lor console

$285 . to $895 . Tables. $45
and up to $125 . Hide-abeds . $440 . and up to
Recliners, S175. to

3 bdr. house Centenary area.
total electric . Call 446-

fool through 14 toot. Hogg
• Zuopon, 304· 773·6664

Used J~ 20 Ditch whc;h
trencher Frederi~ ... :\..,~ .
Ohio . Call 1 - 614 _.....,

1 bdr furn ished apt ., ca rpeted . locate d in town ,
$200 mo . plus utilties, wa 1 room $60 week for 1
person. S70 week for 2
persons. 1 room with water bed $30 a night. Call 4462501 .

1x6. h:S.Iength avtilable. 8

385-4535. Free Dolivory.

Sofa, chair. rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, (e:ctra heavy
by Frontier) , $685. Sofa,
chair and loveseat. $275.
Sofasandchairspricedfrom

HOUSE FOR RENT to married couple. No pets, one
9162 .

factory warranty. Call 614·

Auto Parts
&amp; Acces.Ories

a, 1983

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
··~
~
-------~ ·-

price $636.95. ,Now only .
,
_/_ £. I 62••
$229 . Over &amp;locked . Mull LUMBER - Rough cut, oak.
_.-, ~~ ~
sell by Jon . 31 . 25 year poplar. 2x4. 2x8, 2x8.1x4.

·"'-

76

Dmmber

1983

'f&amp;

Building materiels
block. brick. sewer pipes,
windowa, lintels . etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,
on denim motorial. Regular 1 _o_._c_o_ll_6_1_4_·2_4_5_·_6_1_2_1_
.~

'

December

ln. 5 lug whoolo. Coli 448·
393"4.

Ma~hi.,u . Free arm. 6
stretch stitches. 10 design
stitches. blind hem, mend·
ing stitch, monqgramS, diala-matlc buttori haler. Sews

. • A.Nv

a,

•

2·H·16 snow A mud tires l r
Chevy truck. Mounted on

4 HP •cropper. Seoro mini 304-675-6081 onytimo.
bike like new $200, banjo
good cond, $40 . Call 614_3_88_-9_9_69_._ _ _ _ , 5_5_ a _ui_ld_ln_ g_"_:_ _

~a':': -~"1

..~

delivered.

New 1983 Nalco Sewing, -

~

·Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 4462457 or 446-0332 .

0590 . Ph. 614-256-1216.

~
~~~ •I

.

firewood

Patch, home made fully
drHMd," several to chooH
from end cen be ord. .d,
U&amp; .OO. Four piocoo of uch
piece of the Cepe Cod Avon
collection t1. 76 , Phone

ADO -ON Woodburning furnace, auto. controls, water
heater included. Never uaad .

'~
', J \

c •.;
l~

n~

i~'-'1i

$250 per mo. $250 .dep.
req . Call 446-4222 . 9 :305 :00.

'&gt;-

'TH~..

~·v

Dried

Coli 304· 675 · 7771 .

Call614-246·5267 a11or 6 . Dolls like the Cabbage

""::

~!

1'-' ex;,
!f'~SN
q-j~{'~'l/11
. ~~;
,rrc;;;

water,

blac ktoPc . r.o ad, btU!Iu'tiful

41

, ,_

~'~

~r A'I p,; '-' vlfg'

43 acres. barn, 15 minutes

from

~ii"j)_

; !-:... o f

'A ;r. ~~- . :-.. ·,v

35 acres at Rodney on W .T.

~-:'-

"

64 Misc. MerchandiaeK
ri_T_'N_'_C;;.;AR.;;,;;L;.;Y.:L;;E_,._ _ _ _ _ _ _::!.,;byrL:::.:arty!.l.::.:.:
Wrlghl=:;-

Washer, l.wn mower, stero ,
refrigerator &amp; train lay-out .

' ·' -

t SCM

#1188¥

54 Misc . Merchandise

'I

TL

Ohio

"''

Farms for Sale

72 ACRE Farm, locate'd in

&lt;

ft

After a social worker is .h ospitalized.
Trapper
and
Gonzo find themselves in-

ACROSS

1 Passage

Caesar

37 Loser

the works

29 -

to DDE

(Forster)
32 Santa's .
helper
33 Japanese'
·statesman
3t "The piper's

son"
35 Shower gift
31 Particle
38Moment
39 Different

to German

river
U Crystal-gazer

Dl\ILY CRYPTOQUOTE-:- Here's how to work it :·
AXYDLB~AXR

II

LONGFELLOW

One l etter simp1y stands for another. I n thjs sampl e A is
used for the t hree L 's, X for the two O's, etc . Sin gle letter~ ...

apostrophes. the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each day the rode letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

e

EZWC

Loncelol'
(I) Nlghtllne

27 Cake in

India"

Y F LX · X Z R NY B ~

Twilight Zone
1 1 :46 C1J MOVIE : 'Splh lmogo'
()) NFL'o Orootool MoJ mento: 'Baat Ever Ouertorbocko'
12:00 (f) Bumo • Allen
(J) MOVIE : 'Sword ot '

23 Heavenly sight 30 Silly one
24 Egg dish
31 Wheat
Z5 Middling
36 Modem

29 "A - to

volved in the world of teen~ prostitute$ . (Rl (60 min .l
C1J Lotonlght America
(JDM•A•S•H

.. flrDl Nlghtll~o

Yesterday's Answer

EZW

ER

JW

XZI\NYB . JW
VWRVYW

Y AS W

PYRE Z W X. ..

KFBW

EZWC

FHW

XWHQW . - PYFHWDPW

..

ER · UAE '-

KWFD.E .

BFHHR4·-

Yeslenlaf'• Cryplaquot..: TilE ONLY PEOPLE WHO

SEE:loe·

·. TOHAVENO'I'HINGTODOWITIITHE EDUCATION OF
, CHilDREN ARETHEPARENTS.-G .K.CHESTERTON

Till; :.
~

.. -o(

�'

Marauderettes beaten

Record deer kill

Story on Page 7

story on Page 3

Chair

Sale ·

Twin, full, king and queen '
bed sizes in sol1ds and
patterns. Sheet blankets
inccluded.

For-that extra special
person'
Sale prices on all of
our cha1rs.
-Wall-Away Recliners

S8.99
S14.49
S16.99
S18.99

-Wood Rockers
-Swivel Rockers
-Rocker/Recliners
- Super Chairs

UTILE BOYS'

Sweater Sale

SALE BOYS'

'Lee

Men's &amp;
Boys' Wear

-Sizes for Teens and Ladies
. -100% Acrylic: Knits
-Solids and Patterns
-Danskin and Springfoot quality

•Van Heusen Dress Shirts
•Flannel Sport Shirts
oKnit Shirts and Velours
•Boys' Wrancler Jeans
•Boys' Winter Jackets
•lien's Corduroy Jaans
•lien's Winter Jackets
oCarhartt Work Clothes
•Tube Socks
oBic Ben lsulated Coveralls
•Men's Dress Sicks
·•Boys Shirts
oMen's Qui~ lined Flannel Shirts

$359

SALE PRICED
F~OM ONLY

200/o Save 2oPA&gt; ·

•,
$

CLOCKS

LEE
JEANS ......... S14.88
121.95 LEE
JEANS ......... '15.88

.

Sa;e

The quality yarn

f

Hallmark Stationery
Boxed stationery Regularly 12.00 to

note paper- thank-you
14.50 - sale priced.

~rds.

Wintuk Yarn

LITILE Gl RLS'

Sleepwear Sale
Pajamas, gowns and nitesh1rts
in knits and bruhed nylon.
Co'mplete range of little girls'
sizes.
Reg. 18.00 to 122.00

Sale Priced
$6 3 ~ to $}7 59

~ H~t'l"

WINFIELD, W.Va. (AP)- The Putnam County Circuit Court jucy In
the rape and robbery trial of a Point Pleasant physician took today off and
,will return SatUrday, when the defense ts ·scheduled to begin Its case.
The state rested Its case against Dr. David L. Carr, 40, on Thursday with
temlffioily·lhar semen found l!ftl\evictlm's home matched blood and saliVa
samples taken from the defendant.
Carr Is accused of raping a Putnam County woman Jan. 8 af!er injecting
her husband with a sleep-Inducing drug. The doctor also Is charged with
two COIHits of armed robbery In the theft of $30 from the couple's home.
Following Thursday's testimony, Judge James 0. Holliday recessed the
trlal until Saturday, Defense lawyer John Anderson, who maintains that
the prosecution's case re(lts soley on circumstantial evidence, said Carr
will take the stand in his own defense.
. State pollee Sgt. Fred Zaln testified Thursday that semen found on
bedsheets, panties and tissues In the woman's home, and saliva found on a .
cigarette nearby, were consistent with the defendant's blood and saliva.
Zaln saki that Carr's blood and saliva 'ylelded "blood grouping
characteristics that are consistent with the evidence found at the victim's
hOme." He said 8.6 percent of the population would have the same "genetic
markers" as those in the evidence.
Under cross-examination Zain agreed that the semen deposits were also
consistent .with the blood ol the victim's husband.
"As far as who deposited the semen on the sheets, I have no Idea." Zain
said. "The husband could have."
Assistant Prosecutor O.C. Spaulding satd the couple had told pollee that
they had not had Intercourse for a week prior to the incident.
· The woman testified earlier this week that she and her husband were
awakened by a masked intruder who held a gun .on them, drugged her
husband and bound him with medical tape, and then raped her.
The woman said the man performed oral sex on her In the kitchen, forced
her to Perform oral sex on him, and then took her back to the bedroom
where he raped her.
Carr, whose wife's family owns the house and who had met the woman ·
earlier, was arrested several days later. POllee said he was traced through
his car.
He later was released on bond but was jalled after being arrested in
August on second, unrelated rape charge. In the second case, which has
not go'ne to trial, he Is accused of raping a Charleston hitchhiker. The
woman told pollee that a man In a Cadillac picked her up, pulled a gun and
then drove her to a remote area where he assaulted her.
Cart has been held In the Putnam County Jall since his secoJld arrest.

. .

· "

tt uli•l·"' H.•Pt"

Hu~ll.l\•

H.•ppl HlllirlJI''

••~PP'

Huliol.l)' H.1pp1

Hulid.!)~

H.1 11P, Hllidlli

~

Pre-Teen Coordinates
Blouses - Knit Tops - Skirts- BlazersSlacks - Cords - Lee Jeans.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

39 Skein
Sale

Junior Blouses

514.00 ............. SALE 511.19
'19.00 ............. SALE 515.19

'25.00 ............. SALE '19.99
'30.00 ............. SALE '23.99

Sale

Holiday savings on Jr. blouses
by Third Generation, Under·
ground Shirts and Stuffed
Shirts.
, Dress blouses, casual and
. ') sporty styles.
. · Jr. sizes S, M, L and 5 to' 15.
Reg. 112.00·...... Sale 19.59
Reg. '17.00 ..... Sale 113.59
Reg. 124.00 ..... Sale '19.19
Reg. 129.00 ..... Sale '23.19

Girls' Tops
Sweaters, knit tops, blouses,
flannel shirts and turtle
needs. little girls' sizes 6 to
24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7to

14.

Reg.
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

16.00 ........ Sale '4.79
'9.00 ........ Sale 17.19
113.00 .....Sale '10.39
117.00 ..... Sale '13.59,

w

~.

Tree Ornaments .
Collectible Keepsake ornaments. Come in and

' se~::~ul2o%

'

2 Sections, 16 Pages
20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

May25: "Stayedhome,justdon'tfeelllkego!ng.Just
can't walt till this kid is gone."
May 28: "Couldn't sleep, cramps, do really have
infection as well as being pregnant."
~xam!natm

After reading .those entries, Story cross-examined
Gerard.
Story asked Gerard if he took notes. Gerard said yes.
He was asked if he had read the notes since. Gerard
said no.
Story bad Gerard re-read portions of statements
made by Spencer ptior to the trtal.
--story asked if all the statements given by the
defendant were v2rbatlm or if part of It was
·paraphrased.
Gerard said that some was verbatim and some was
paraphrased. Story asked him if the jury wlllbeableto
determine what was verbatim or paraphrased.
Gerard answered no. .
· Gerard said he wrote the first stater/tent at the
hospital In front of the defendant, but added that he left
the room for a few minutes.
Story asked if Gerard offered to let the defendant
write her own statement and Gerard answered no. He

Prosecution rests
in doctor's trial

Sale

Solids and variegated colors. 3\'z ounce
skeins. Genuine Red Heart hand knitting
yarn .

$1

Diary contents

In the diary, read aloud by Gerard, Spencernotedon

'

Women's sizes 6 to 20 and 30to
42. Lee and Wrangler quality!
Baggtes, stra1ght legs and wide
wale styles.

11.69 COATS AND CLARK

1

Your Choice $}988

Corduroy Jeans j
Sale!

~.

Select a genuine
cowhide calculator ·
clutch in burgundy
or macintosh
or
Choose a suede checkbook clutch with
your personal monogram in assorted
colors.

. :..
I

Feb. 9, 19&amp;3, "Went to unemployment office. Weighed
myself and weighed 130 pounds. Wonder what Cheryl
Is doing?"
It was pointed out that the defendant had a frlend
named Cheryl as well as a sister. However, the Sister
spelled her name Sheryl.
,
On March 26, "Cheryl called and Steve R. was In
Tartan with Julie Gibbs. Who cares. I'll get revenge."
On March 28, "Everyone knows I am pregnant,wish
Cheryl would keep her mouth shut."
Aprll4: "Neverreallywent:Othedoctor,Illedabout
infection."
Aprll13: "IwasgoingtorunwithJudyjustd!dn'tfeel
llkelt. All I weigh Is 135pounds.Beelghtmonthsthe17,
just another month. Hope I can handle the delivery."
May 17: "Today !s'9UJ month, any day now."
May 18: "Took Mon to doctor. later Judy and I went
shopping atK-Mart. Told monaboutourMyrtleBeach
trip, can't walt."
May22: "WenttoJudy'stoshopforbeachtrip.Can't
walt to go It will be great."
May 23: "Stayed home. Later Mom and I went to see
Mickey, Sherman and Benjie. Want baby to come
getting very tired of it."

The prosecution rested Thursday in the case of
Pamela Spencer In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court after prosecutor's investigator Paul Gerard
concluded readings of Spencer's diary.
Spencer, ·23, Syracuse, ts charged with !nvoluntaJy
manslaughter In the .death of her newborn son on or
about last May 29.
All portions of Spencer's diary that were read were
allowed as evidence except one 5ect!o~ written on
''
March26.
Defense attorney Steven Stocy objected to all
portions of the diary. Story felt the diaries had no
bearing on the case .
Story claimed in his opening statements that the
defendant was natve. Prosecutor Frederick Crow III
said In his opener that he was going to show that
Spencer was not naive.
Judge Charles Knight overruled Story's motion and
allowed for all entries, save the March 26 section.

-~~-;:.;:·; -,.~~.: i·· i· ,ji"·~i·'l"·i"·i~·~ · ·;·"~"~·~ ~i i~,.i~., ;.~ i" - ---T J
ii

LADIES'

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff Writer

·

LeatherClutches

with color tops ..... sug
11.89 Grey
with color tops ..... '1.49

P\ed Heart

~

125.00 ROLF'S

For that extra gilt - Springfoot
q.uality. Boys sizes 7 to 14, men's
s1zes 9 to 15. Plenty of school
colors.
11.59 White
.

SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SALE
PRICES ON QUALITY
Howard Miller Clocks
Start A Family Tradition!

119.95 Sweaters .... '15.60 .
124.95 Sweaters .... '19.40
126.95 Sweaters .... 121.00
· 129.95 Sweaters .... 123.30

e

ellttne

aty

State rests following diary readings

119.95

TUBE SOCKS

GRANDFATHER

S, M, L and' XL sizes 1n s l i po~ers .
coat styles and ~ests. You'll please
him with a sweater gift and you'll
·save during this Christmas sa le.

.

Prewashed blue denim straight leg
style. Boys' slim d regular sizes 8
to 12. Student sizes 26 to 30,
lengths 30 to 36.

MEN'S &amp;BOYS'

SALE

SWEATERS

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 9, 1983

Copy•ighlocl 1983

JEANS

(o
MEN'S

Voi.32,No.I09

•

••

e

All the popular sizes and
colors. Entire sefection Hallmark candles included.

Sale Continues

Leg Warmers

-Little Boys' Shirts &amp; Tops
-Children's Coats &amp; Snowsuits
-Ladies' Dresses
-Girls' Dresses
-Little Pbys' Coordinates
~Ju'nior Lee Coordinates
-Ladies' Blouses
-Ladies' Jeans

Reg. s10.00 .... Sale, s7.99
Reg. s12.00 .... Sale s9.59
" Reg. s1s.oo .. Sa.le s11.99

Save

Sale

Continue on:
-Women's &amp; Jr.'s Coats

V-necks, cardigans and crew neek
styles by Tom Sawyer and .
Wrangler.
Sizes: 12 to 24 mos., 2 to 7.

·h

S9.49 Blankets ........... S7.19
&amp;, .S15.99 Blankets ..... S11.59
Bl~nkels ..................... S13.59
&amp; S19.99 Blankels ..... S15.19

Christmas Sale Prices

Hallmark
Candles

Our entire stock Christmas
sale priced. Ovals - roonds
· oblongs. Big selection of
sizes in solids and patterns.

Story on Page 8

Page5

Christmas Sale!

· TABLE
COVERS

Blanket Sale!

Child support

Weekly sermonette

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BUlLETIN
A Wood County, W.Va. circuit
coun judge ruled this morning that

Undsey Taylor, 34, Mlnersvllle, wW
undergo fun her psyschlatrlc lesllng
at Weston District Guidance Center
In Parkersburg.
Judge Donald Bla.ck granted a
prosecutor's request lor additional
evaluation.
No tbne Hmit was set on Taylor's
testing, Black said.

Extradition

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proceedin~

underway

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was asked If he recorded the statement and Gerard
enswered no.
He was asked if Sheryl asked If Pam should have an
attorney. Gerard said he didn't recall.
Story asked if sheriff's investigator Gmy Wolfe was
c,ordial when he went to the hospital with Gerard to talk
to Pam. He also asked if Wolfe put his finger In
Spencer's face and accused heroftyingtohim. Gerard
said Wolfe was only being firm.
Story asked Gerard if the defendant said the baby
cried and Gerard answered no. Story also asked if
Spencer described the sound. Gerard said yes, but
added that Gerard didn't put it in the statement.
Gerard also identified pictures he took of the car in
which 11\e baby .,vas allegedly_born. Thecar!sowned by
Spe!lL'E'r.
The pictures showed the !nslde of the car, the back
seat, the door on the driver's side and the exterior of
Geraldine Spencer's trailer. Gerard said that there
was no blood in thefrontofthecarnoronpapers that
were In the open glove compartment.
Story asked Gerard if he tape-recorded any of the
statements and Gerard'answered that he did not have
one to take.
(Continued on page 12)

MIXED GROUP - Supporlers of Reagan mix

wtth protestors as they wlllt for the President's
arrlv.al outside the Indiana Convention Center In

0~

W~Ar .

Indianapolis. More than 250 people waited peacefuUy
for a glimpse of the President, who came to town to
speak to the National Fonun on Excellence In
Education. (AP Laserphoto).

PARKERSBURG, W.Va. - A
hearingwasunderwaythls morning
in Wood County Circuit Court for a
Meigs County man charged with
aggravated murder.
Thirty-four year old Lindsey
Taylor of Minersvllle ts charged
with the October shooting death of
Danny . Wayne Melton of Canton.
Melton's body was found In an
unoccupied mobile home in Sutton
Township last Oct. 10.
Authorities say the deceased had
been shot in the head and that the
body had been there several days.
Taylor was arrested by Meigs
County officials Oct. 14 outside of
Parkersburg.
Since that time, he has been
detained in the Wood County Jail.
Upon the request of his courtappointed counsel, James Bradley.
Jr. of Parkersburg, Taylor underwent a psychological examination
at Weston State Hospital. The
examination was ordered by Wood
County Judge Donald Black.
Bradley contends Ta)I.I&lt;J_r is not

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LADIES'

Sweater Sale
Cardigans, pullovers and vests. Soli~s
and prints.
Misses sizes: S thru XL
Extra sizes: 40 thru 46
to 135.00

Reg. '15.00
Sale Priced

$1199 To S2J99

-

SALE MEN'S

SALE! LADIES'

Winter Pajamas
Brushed tricot, flannel, knit, thermal knit, brushed nylon.
Sizes S thru

~~~~ed
From

XXL

and

32

thru

48.

$879

GALLIPOLIS - While both the body, the prosecution charges, by 'I\Yyman?"
Addressing fue credib!llty of his
prosecution and defense agreed the placing it In a 4().foot deep well
star
witness; Cain continued, "Shirmurder of Barbara Twyman re- ·located on an abandoned 111ral
ley
Furst
has been very frank and
presented a great "Who-Done-It?," mobile-home lot near Allee Road.
sincere... she has spent hours on the
Points to links
their answers to that question - as
stand, baring her soul.''
.witness
Throughout
his
closing
argurevealed In their closing argillllents .
"The defense has tried to establish
- were in direct opposition as the ments, Cain pointed to "links" that,
\\
that
Shirley Furst dominated,
he
said,
connected
Lee
to
the
March
nine-day murder trial of Charles
possessed
and turned Lee Into an
20
incident.
Lee ll, 17, Point Pleasant, ended
agent
of
some
sort ...when the truth
Cain
charged
that
throughout
the
Thursday afternoon.
was,
the
domination
was the other
trtal,
the
defense
had
tried
to
''cloud
The eight-woman, four man jury
way
around,"
argued Cain, · "the
.
the
Issue"
by
using
a
"shotgun
was given the case at 4 p.m., after
hearing closing arguments and approach to establish reasonable defense Ms tried to Imply that she
commltted the crime.''
being charged by Common Pleas doubt" In the case.
"But It was Shirley Furst who
"The defense has portrayed
Judge Richard c. Roderick. The
came
forward with the Information,
jury studied thecaseuntU 9:00p.m. , Shirley Furst .. (!hi! key prosecution
who
volunteered the gun, who
when they adJourned and were witness) ... throoghout the tl1al,"
cooperated
with the sheriff's of·
sequestered by the court In an area Cain said, "as an ImmOral womanflee,"
said
Cain
.
motel for the night. The jury was ... nmning around with all these
Offering
jealouSy
as a motive for
scheduled to continue deliberations guys.'''
the
crime,
Cain
referred
to a
. "They have charged her with
at9a.m., today.
segment
of
several
hours
of
taped
Ca11!ng the shooting delith of the contributing to the delinquency of a
conve!'Satlons betWeen Lee and
17-&gt;:N"-old 'l'wyiJ\IUI a "ifiii!SOliM! minor," Cain added, "and clouded Furst played to the Jury earlier this
crtme," GaUia County Plosecutor the · case with testimony
week.
Joaepb L. Cain . said In hls tlnaJ ' about ...sucker-bltes... by listing the
"Remember when he told her, 'If
names
of
men
she
may
have
statement to the Jury that the real
you
had taken me seriouSly It never
seen
...
and
whether
or
not
she
Issue of the case Is " ...who done It?"
would
have happeiled' ," the GaWa
rubbed
Olarlle'
s
leg
at
a
party."
·
1belltateaDeges that on March~,
Prosecutor said. "Re took his
"None
of
that
1s
the
Issue,"
cain
Tw:yman wu ~ twice- once In
jealous frustration's and anger out
the bead, once In the chest- by LEe, asserted, ''Tile BOle Issue lr. did.
on
Barbara Tw:yman."
wbo, subsequently dlspoled of the Charles Lee kill Barbara

Flannel Work Shirts
Plenty of colorful plaids in all sizes: long
tailes, two pockets. Excellentqudlity S, M, .
L and XL sizes plus tails in M, L and XL
sizes and bigs and tails in 2X, 3X and 4X
sizes.

Men's •11;95 Flannels ...'14.36
Men's '18.95 Flannels ...•15.16
. Men's '19.95 Flamels .. '15.96 .
Men's 521.95 Flalllels .. $!7.56

I

'I

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•

"Marsha Lee (Charles Lee's
mother) testified that on the night of
his arrest her son told her he felt
•morally responsible' for the death
of Barbara. Twyman," Cain concluded. "I ask you to hold him legally
responsible for the death of Barbara
Twyman."
Arguing for the defense, attorney
Barbara Wallen called the .case a
"'Who-Done-It' that would baffle
Agatha Cluistie."
"But, unfortunately," she added,
"we are not dealing with fiction."
"Charles Lee n Is on trial simply
because of what Shirley Furst told
the sheriff's office," Wallen continued. "And,' we learn at a very
early age that the best way to get
something off. yourself Is to blame

someone else."
Referring to the LEe- Furst taped
coversatlons, Wallen said, "I hope
you listened beyon\l the words ... the
majortty of what you ·heard was
Shirley Furst covering her rearend ... she knew she was being
taped ... knew those tapes would be
played before a jury."
·'Macho acts''
Wallen called the alleged conies-

slons Lee made on the tapes the act
of a "tittle boy" acting "Macho." .
"Charlie was trying to say what
Shirleywantedhertohear."
The defense · attorney argued
Furst had "conditioned" Lee to
respond to her as she pleased by
"rewarding that behavior."
"And, she threw in a little sex on
the side," Wallen said.
Later In her closing argument,
Wallen charged that the prosecution's own case " ... proves Charles
Lee is Innocent."
Detail statements
The defense detailed prosecution
witness·· statements that Indicated
the earliest Twyman could have
died was 2:10p.m., on March 20.
"But, accordingtoShirleyFurst,"
Wallen added, "Lee arrived at her
home at 2:15 p.m." Wallen estimated the traveling time between
Ewtngton, where the homicide .
allegedly took place, and Georges
,.Creek Road, where Furst resides, at
' between one-half hour to 4~
minutes."
She then pt&gt;lnted to "lapses" of
"three-to-four" hours thatdayln the
(Continued on page 16)

Celeste's office the first week of
November. Taylor will be returned
to Meigs County when Gov. Jay
R1lckefeller's office issues a West
Virginia governor's warrant.

New building
program eyed
GALLIPOLIS- Tentative steps
toward establishing a building
program in the Gall!a County Local
School District took shape Thursday
night when the board of education
autharlzed Superintendent Gacy
Toothaker to assist in getting a bond
rating.
Toothaker wUI accompany the
board's bonding attorney - H.C.
"Buck" Niehoff of Peck, Shaffer &amp;
Wllllams, Cincinnati- to Moody's
rating service in New York,
somettm&lt;' in January.
The meeting between themselves
and Moody's Is still being set up 'Qy
Nleboff, Toothaker told the board.
He also recommended that BOOFd
President Fred Dee! join the
(Continued on page 16)

.

•

•• •

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