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                  <text>bv Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
NOr CNLY THAI, I3Ur N:MI

15 YOUR MOll-IE!&lt;.
STILL ON THAT

Eye injury treatment

DePaul, in big victory

FBI's sex sleuth

ANY WEIGHT~

FAMIL-Y ON A DIET.

jJ

basketball, Page 4

•

Copyn.hood 1983

5HE: L05T ISS
POUNDS~!

3 S&amp;cfions, 16 Poges
20 Cents
A Multimedia In(. New•poper

Mondale given
key endorsements

UH-HUH ... A,._Y FATHER. HE'S ~1:
TO LIVE: IN A t.J,Oi t:L... UNTIL

.

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 12, 1983

Voi.32,No.170

.,

••

at y

e
YEAH ... I'65
POUNDS.

5

HA5 oi-IE LOST

"5HE9 qoT 7H E 'NHOLE

DIET~

Redskins scalp l)allas

SHE COME5 TO HER 5EN5E6.

\

~

MR. MEN and LITTLE MISS

by Ha·... reaves and Sellers

---·

NOT TODAY......
I'M WORN OUT
MR.L...AZY,

oo you

FEEL t.,IKE
CL.EARING

RF.CEI\'D! ENDORSEMEN'I:- The Alabama
Democratic Conference gave Its support lo a slate of
candidates during a stormy meeting Saturday In

Mobile. Fonner VIce ~~t Walter Mondale

WHEN
. WILL. YOU
FEEL LIKE
IT?
•

Four charged in B&amp;E
Four people are being held in the
Meigs County Jail on a charge of
breaking and entering John C.
~lc!i's residence . in Salem

ToWIIsli!P.
According to the report from the
Meigs County Sheriff's Depart·
men!, David Mound, 28, fonnerlyof
Meigs County, and Kevin E. Sick,
both of Fort Myers, Fla., are being
held In the Meigs County J aU on the
B&amp;E charge. A 17-year old Benita
Springs, Fla. girl is being held in
juvenile clent.ention in connection
with the Incident, and David Carper
of Wilkesville is in custody on a
charge of receiving stolen property.
The arrests were made within 24
hours of the Incident.
The sheriff's department reported two·cleputles, Robert Beegle
and Jim Souisby, I:eSponded to the
call at the Welch home and found

..
® 1982 Hargreaves and Sellers
Dlllrlbuted by NEA,Ine.

IM TIRED WeLl. INTO
NEXT MONTH!

TO t.;;AY ....

vice-president. Both candidateS addressed the
conference along with Sen. Ernest Fritz Hollings,
D-S.C. (AP Laserpholo).
•

received the presidential nomination from the block

THE~NoW?
•

IT'S HARD

cauCus. Rev. Jeue Jockson, rtgbt. was supported lor

that whomever had been In the
house had eaten !&lt;XXI, slept In a bed,
ransacked the drawers, and taken
several Items.
During the Investigation, It was
learned that a fanner neighbor to
the Welches had hitch·hlked from
Florida with a friend and that they
had :been joined by a female
companion from Florida. Thus, the
trio became suspects.
The deputies were joined by a
Vinton County deputy sheriff who
had received a call from the girl's
mother in Florida. On Saturday
morning, the suspects were taken
Into custody at a diner at Wilkesville.
Paul Gerard, procsecutor'sinvestlgator, assisted In questioning the
suspects who gave written and oral
confessions on the breaking and
entering, and gaveofficerslnforma·
lion on the location of a stolen color

television, rifle and binoculars.
Also under investigation Is van·
dallsm at the Meigs County landfill.
According to the sheriff's report,
landfill employes found two win·
dows in the office shanty broken out
&lt;U~d eggs thrown inside when they
went to work Saturday morning.
They also discovered that the dump
truck which was parked some
distance away from the shanty had
Its sldeglass and windshield broken
out. The incident Is under
investigation.
On Sunday afternoon a vehicle
driven by Delmar Davis, Route 1,
Langsville backed into the gas
pump at the station at Salem Center.
The pump caught lire and the Salem
Center Fire Department responded
to the caU. No injuries were
reported, but the pump was
'
destroyed.

WASHINGTON (AP) - After one of the most
successful weekends in Walter Mondale's long
pursuit of the presidency , the former vice president
hall major new support from women and blacks two key parts of the Democratic Party's coalition.
He also b.as up (o $1.5 million more in his campaign
war CheSt.
Mondale has the official stamp ot approval of the
National Organization for Women, having won on
Saturday the first presidential endorsement ever
given by the nation's largest feminiSt group.
That endorsement could be particularly valuable in
1984, wb.en women are expected to be major swing
voters in the elections.
The fanner vice president also demonstrated his
appeal to blacks -who often contribute 20 percent of
the Democratic vote and more - by winning the
presidential endorsement of the Alabama Democratic Conference.
The conference, claiming 200,00l black members
across the state, voted a "compromise" Saturday I~
the face of the conflicting demands from tb.e
front-runner and from black presidential candidate
Jesse Jackson. But it was a compromise that fell far
short of what Jackson had hoped.
The conference's delegate assembly endorsed a
presidential slate - with Mondale in the No. 1 ~pot
and Jackson in the vice presidential position.
To top b.ls day Saturday, Mondale raised between
$1.4 million and $1.5 million with more than lO,lMXJ
fund-raising parties across the country timed to
coincide with his first national television campaign
~
'
adv~rtisement.

PRINTED IN CANADA

Cris Hammond
ffEY .ff!'E~ WH/1/){)Y/1
Tf{!NK OF "CRAZ'I
LEGS* IN THE
Tlll~{)?

II¥LEIIAI!N'

"G!MP'!.!P'i5
. CIIRKY!N' A I.OT
OFlv'£/(;I(T.

TNA!({) ''(;fHP

LIP!' HYSCLF.

Nine people killed on Ohio htghways
tlf'AY.1IItKe'S ffN

By 'lbe Allloclatelll'l"MI
TWo pedestrians were among the
nine people ldlled In traffic acci· .
dents In Ohlo over the weekend. the
. Highway Patrol said.
.
. Tile J!llti'Ol counts weekend traffic
deaths from 6 p.m. Friday until
inldnliht Sunday.

BUCKS CW"cRRIzr I.E&amp;S."

The Dead:
.
SUNDAY
DA'YTON-DannyFrazler,25,of
Dayton, a pedestrian atruckby a car
on GermaDtown Pike lri Dayton.
CLEVELAND -Elaine McGee,
•:U, ci Cle\'l!land. In a twG-Car
cdllslon on Quincy Avenue in

Clm!JaDd,
.
CHJLLJOO'lliE - Robert H.
Twa!d, 38, Cbllllcothe, In a motorcy·

.;

!

I

.I

'

cle accident on a Ross Cou~ty road.
MANSFIELD - Helena Shinn,
53, Massillon, In a one-car accident
on a Stark County road.
JACKSON - Charles T. Roach,
23, Oak Hill, In a one-car accident on
Ohlo931n Jackson County.

Jefferson County.
' FAIRVIEW PMK- Leonidas
Papathakos, 54, Fairview Park, a
pedestrian ln.a hlt-sklp accident on a
Faiivlew Park street.

SATURDAY

Ooudy · and cooler tonight. Low
near 32. Westerly winds about 10
mph. Tuesday, partly cloudy. High
4(}.45, Chance of precipitation 20
percen~ !Dnight and 10. percent
Tuesday.
ExBided Ohio Forecast
Wedr__,q llrouah Friday:

LEBANON - Patsy A. Buck·
Ingham, 24, MoiTOW, In a two-car
collision on U.S. 22 in Warren
County.
MANSFIElD- Marsha Hal:'nly,
29, Plymouth, in a one-car accident
on a Richland County road .

Weather forecast

FRD&gt;AYNIGHf.
. IIMIIIIII!I711 t 'q.a.aceof
STEUBENVILLE - Julia P. ralnar-'l'llantlar tllld a~

Martello, 56, Wintersville, in a
twG-Car collisiOn o~ u.s. 22 in
t

·'

ot

lmrtel

ll'rldaJ.

Mondale and Jackson, meanwhile, received
·'goo:!" ratings Sunday by Environmental Action, a
lobbying group that assessed all the candida tes'
records on environmental issues. Sens. Gary Hart,
D-Colo., and Alan Cr anston , D-Calif., and former Sen.
George McGovern, D·S.D ., aU received top ratings by
the group. while former Florida Gov. Reubin Askew
and Sens. Ernest Hollings D-S.C., and John Glenn ,
D-Ohio, were ranked "fair." President Reagan got a
··poor"· rating by the group.

concludes Meigs trial

At lla.m. this morning, the trial of
Pam Spencer, charged with Involuntary manslaughter and endan·
gering children was wrapped up
following the defendant 's testim·
ony. Jud~e Charles Knight dis·
missed the jury until ' 12: 30 p.m.
pointing out that closing arguments
and the charge to the jury were yet to
be heard. He said remaining
arguments and jury charge were
testified that hls father came home
important then he warned them
against forming any opinions until
for dinner about 6 p.m. and then left
at 7 p.m. to work at the office.
the trial ts completed.
Ms. Spencer was the final witness
He testified that his father usually
drove the family's brown Cadillac . this morning undergoing cross
ElDorado, and not the blue Cadillac
examination by Prosecuting Attar·
that was seen near the home of the
neyCrow, who questioned her about
attack victims In Fraziers Bottom.
activities at the time of the birth. She
told the court she had tried to get
The couple, who have since
herself and the baby to the b.ospltal
moved, testified earner this week
that a masked, armed intruder
the next day following the birth.. Sb.e
bound and blindfolded them with
told of rela lives and friends wb.o
medical tape, injected the husband
came into her room the next day
severat' times with Valium, and
after the birth and the questioning
by her mother about "the red stuff in
raped the woman. The attacker also
took $:ll from them.
the back of her car''.. She said she
Prosecution witnesses have
returned to her home after giving
linked Carr's blue Cadillac and tb.e
birth wearing only a bra. After a
bench conference and
snort
contents In It to the vehicle seen near
the home of the attack victims.
meeting in the chambers of Judge
Carr also faces chargeS In
Knight, articles of clothing worn by
Spencer the next day and at the time
Kanawha County of kidnapping and
of the birth were admitted as state's
raping an :JS.year-old Charleston
evidence.
woman. He has been in the Putnam
County jail sinCe his bond was

revokedlnA~st.

Ms. Goldsmith emphasized that NOW's first
priority is to defeat Reagan.
"Four .more years of Ronald Reagan in the White
House would be devastating for women,'' sb.e said.
On the much-discussed issue of a woman for vice
president, the NOW leader said Mondale has
committed himself to considering a woman for the
No. 2 spot, adding that sb.e guesses the chances are
"5().50" that Mondale would acrually name a woman
as his running mate.

Defendant~s testi01ony

Son testifies at father's rape trial
home from his office at 10: 30p.m. on
WINFIELD, W.Va . (AP) -The
Jan. 7, and that the elder Carr
trial of an osteopath charged with
watched television and made poprape and robbery was scheduled to
corn with the children unttl about
resume today with closing argu·
midnight.
ments by the prosecutor and
Robert Carr said he went ·to bed
defense lawyers.
about
12: 30 a.m. and awoke at 8
'The 16-year-oldson of the accused
a.m.;
and
that hls father was asleep
man testified Saturday that his
at
that
time.
father was home untU at least 12: 30
He said his mother had left earlier
a.m. the morning of the alleged
that
evening with two of his uncles to
attack and that he was asleep In bed
visit relatives in Canton. Ohio.
at8a.m. tbesameday.
Robert Dennis Carr, the eldest of
The younger Carr said he pid not
Dr.. David Carr, took the stand In hear any cries from his 2-year-old
Putnam County Circuit Court in the sister, who sleptinhisfather'sroom,
first day of ~tense testimony at his and was not awakened that morning
by the noisy storm door on the front
father's trial.
Carr, 40, a Point Pleasant of tb.e house.
He said his father had never left
osteopath, is charged with first·
degree sexual assault and robbery his yoong daughter unattended
·in a Jan. 8 attack on a Fraziers without asking his eldest son to take
Bottom.couple. Carr took the stand . charge and that Carr did not
on his on behalf and denied having mention that he was going out that
morning.
any connection with the attack.
Under questioning by defense
Carr'sson said his father returned
lawyer John Anderson, the son

Mondale had worked hard to win the NOW
endorsement and b.e won it easily when tb.e board of
directors of the 250,f.XXI.member group met Sarurday
in Washington.
"The endorsement of NOW will send a message to
the majority of the women of this nation that Walter
Mondale is the candidate who will be best for women
and who can defeat Ronald Reagan," said NOW
president Judy Goldsmith at a ne\\•s conference
announcing the decision. "We are determined to help
Mondale mobilize the gender gap."

Prosecutor Frederick Crow III
primarily questioned Spencer about
events of the night the child was born
and her social life In the year leading
up to the pregnancy and birth.
Spencer told the jury she wasn't
familiar with birth procedures,
although she had taken a famlly
Jiving class in her senior year In hlgb.
school. Under Crow' s questioning,
Spencer revealed that after the baby
had been born and she returned to
her mother's mobile home and
passed out, she late awoke and
placed the baby on top of a sack.
"Why?" asked Crow.
.
"I thought I needed. to hide him
until I could get back to the car," she
replied, her voice breaking with.
sobs as she recounted the incident .
"Were you afraid someone would
find your child?" Crow asked.
"Mom, mostly," Spencer replied.
Spencer said that she was afraid
someone was watching the mobile
home and hercarand would take the
child away.
"It was still mine, and I wanted to
take care of it." sb.e said.
Spencer also confirmed earlier
testimony to tb.e grand jury in which.
she had held up the baby after its
birth and checked to see if it was a
boy or girl. She also confirmed
earlier statements she placed the

child down , pushed up the driver's
seat and reached into tb.e glove
compartment to find tb.e pair of
scissors she used to cut the umbilical
cord.
Crow repeated a question posed to
Spencer in June by a ·grand juror.
The juror had asked her if b.er
motherwouldhavelrnown she'dhad
a baby If she entered the mobile
home and saw her , bloo:ly and part
of theumbilicalcord attacb.ed to her.
Spencer said her mother probably
would have come to that conclusion.
Earlier. Crow attempted to enter
into evidence Spencer's telephone
book as evidence. Defense attorney
Steven Story objected, and Judge
Charles H. Knight cleared the ju ry
fro(l'l tb.e courtroom to consult wit b.
attorneys and Paul Gerard, prosec·
utor's investigator.
Story objected on two reasons that the book wasn't relevant to the
proceedings and that Crow failed to
comply with discovery proceedings
by sharing the information about-the
book with Story.
Knight allowed t he book to be
entered, ovemJ!ing Story's objec.
lion to the discovery provision .
Knight asked Crow if b.e b.ad aUowed
Story to see the book, and Crow said
he believed Story had seen the book.
(Continued on page 121

u.s. troops returning from Grenada

FORTBRAGG,N.C. (AP)-The
return of 1,00l members of the 82nd
Airborne Division who "did the
fighting" 011 Grenada seven weeks
ago marks another step in the
relaxation of the U.S. grip on the
Caribbean island.
A welcoming ceremony for the
infantrymen was planned for today,
with an additional 700 troops due to
return to the United States later this
week, leaving a custodial force on
the island, officials said.
"The infantry soldiers, those who
did. the fighting, are coming back,''
saidJerrySteeiman,spokesmanfor
Fort Bragg, the 82nd Airborne's
home base.
The troops were due late In the
morning, said Sgt. Kenneth Pace,
duty officer for the 82nd Airborne,

·'

th~

earlytoday.
The precise time of arrival was
not certain, he said. "It's hard to
predict with mtutary airCraft -It's
not like civilian," he said.
The returning infantl)'tllen began
landlngonGrenada0ct.26,theday
after Anny Rangers and Marines
spearheaded the invasion.
The invasion, which President
Reagan said was to restore order
after a coup, overthrew the island's
Marxist government and to protect
about 1,lMXJ Americans there, many
of tthem medical students. He said
the leaders of neighboring islands
called lor U.S. help.
Nine C-141 transport planes were
to deliver the soldiers to the alrlield.
"Itshouldbeaprettygoodevent,"

•

Steelman said. ·.· we've asked
Air Force to prov1de good weather.
After landing, the troops were to
join their families at Fort Bragg,
adjacent to the a irfield .
The remaining 700 servicemen
will be rerurning home in smaller
groups Tuesday through Friday,
reducing the American presence on
Grenada to about 300 support
pers01mel who will remain lndefi·
nltely, Steelman said.
"Those who are left will be
performing civil duties,'' he said.
"They'll include mil.itary pollee,
signal corps units, public affairs
people· and workers in different
types of civutan projects."
Reagan had said he wanted t0
bring the U.S. troops home frorr.
Grenada by Christmas.
•

�Monday, December 12, 1983

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

Comment

Monday, December 12, 1983

By Associated Press

•

Are you ready?___:_______W_i_llia_m_F_. ._B_uc_kl_ey_f_r.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO l'JIE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

J

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

AMis~ant

BOB HOEFLICH

Publisher/ Controller

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

On the last day of November, the
president met with his secUJity
advisers and listened to a repon by
his scient:e adviser on what we are
pleased to call his Star Wars
progra m . You will recall that that
was the condescending designation
assigned to Mr. Reagan's call last
Mqrch to launch an antiballlstl•
shield systen\ designed to intercept
and destroy nuclear mlss!les that
otherwise would land on places like
Kansas City.

The proposal was treated with a situation.
Well, after six months' work,
combination of derision and dis·
•
severai!X'ints
were stressed at the
daln, sometimes both. There were
meeting
with
the
president.
those who said there Is no IX&gt;int in
The
ftrst
ts
that
destabilization
fooling around with anything so
not
worry
the
Soviet
Union at
does
obviously, so preo!X'sterously lm·
all
when
It
Is
engaged
in
it. The ·
IX&gt;Sslble to achieve. Others who said
deployment
of
Its
SS-20s
all
over
that embarkation on such a venture
Europe
was
nothing
If
not
destabll·
would cost us not only a great deal
lzlng. But It ts far from widely
of monty but also Incur a great risk,
In that It would "destabilize"- that known that at this very moment the
Is the killer word these days in the Soviet Union ts fiercely engaged in
nuclear locker room - the existing attempting to develop Its own

News Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should 1M&gt; less than 300 words
long. All letters are subj ect to f..dltlng and mu$1 be s igned with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be publis hed. Letters should be In
good la.•d e, addr essing l.'i!;U~" · nol penonalltlt"'' .
.
. , ., .....

Belittling the debt

,.-----...
,,

President Reagan has finally revealed the dirty little secret of hts 180
campaign: It really isn't possible to simultaneously slash federal taxes,
increase defense spending and balance the federal budget.
Throughout his successful campaign for the presidency, Reagan
Incessantly offered that tripartite commitment to the voters in return for
their SUPIX&gt;rl.
He stubbornly defended the scheme when it was ridiculed by
Republican rivals. John B. Anderson likened It to an optical illusion
achieved with mirrors, Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn .. characterized
lt as a " riverboat gamble," a nd George Bush de nigrated it as "voodoo

economiC$.

-

1

The growth of the federal deficit Is increasingly becoming a political
rather than an economic Issue, a phenomenon noted by former CEA
Chairman Her ben Stein wtittng In a newsletter published by the American
Enterprise Institute.
"Supporting or opposing deficits is now also a way of sup!X'rtlng or
op!X'slng Reagan, " says Stein, "and now people are more attached to their
views of Reagan than they are to their views of the deficit."
Although that observation is generally true, Feldstein's views about
the dangers inherent in the virtually unrestrained growth offederal deficits
are shared by a substantial number of Reagan supporters.
Included in that category are conservative economists and business
·executives, Republican members of Congress a nd even senior government
.officials such as Federal Reserve Board Chairman Paul A. Volcker and
Office of Management and Budget Director David A. Stockman.
Many of those RRagan loyalists are disturbed, for example, by the fact
:
that annual federa l deficits now are showing startling growth-not only In
absolute terms but also as a proportion of the country's gross national
product.
In 19'70, the defi cit was only 0.3 percent of GNP , a nd as recently as 19ffi It
was 2.3 percent of GNP. But last year It soared to6.0percent. This year it Is
expected to decline only slightly to 5.6 percent.
:
Outside the White House, there is virgual unanimity that high deficits
endanger sustained economic growth because the federal government's
voracious demand for mney to fund Its debt - now approaching$1.4 trtllton
and rising at a rate of approximately $200 billion yearly -will consume
much of the capital necessary for non-government growth.
"Competition for available funds would raise interest rates and curtail
investme nt ," says the Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. of New York, one of the
nation's most respected banks. "Housing, small business undertakings
. and the programs of states and localities would be disproportionately
affected, and Ihe risks of rene wed recession would be high."
: Reagan can summarily dismiss Feldstein, but eliminating (or even
reducing) the deficit cannot be readily accomplished - especially by a
president who refuses to even acknowledge the severity of the problem.
Noting that " there has always been a certain amount of shame and
guilt" about federal ·deficits which limited their size . in the past,
·conservative economist Stein Is especially disturbed by the president's
J:avaller attitude.
.
.
_ " We may be in the process of losing all Inhibitions about deficits," he
warns, "especially since the mos t conservative administration in the past
liO years Is engaged tn defending the largest deficits in history."

-.

Berry's World
... .

•'

... '\.,r··

'if

-

....

0

•

'

. .: .

0

0
D

"You should be up st the North Pole producing
more Csbbll(16 Patch Kids."

'

Bomb ticking
WASHINGTON -While bombs
are exploding In the Middle East, a
time bomb Is ticking in Argentina .
And It has nuclear ingredients.
The new Argentine president,
Raul Alfonsln, will face one of the
most im!X'rtant decisions of any
world leader during his six-year
term: whether Argentina will
produce the firSt Latin American
nuclear bomb.
Can the Argentines do It? They

sure can.
The most recent CIA report on
Argentina 's nuclear capabtltty,
classified "Secret," estimates that
the Argentine government could
have a bomb by the end of next year
If the project were given top
prtortty, and In three years wttbout
a crash program. By 1986, Argen·
tina will have all the necessary
m aterial and production facUlties
on Its own soil.
U.S. Intelligence agencies were
caught by surprise recently when
Adm. Carlos Castro Madero, longtime head of the Commtston
Naclonal de Energia Atomlca,
announced that the commission

•
ID

nuclear defense capabillty - a
"high-frontier" system, as It Is
sometimes called, the distinction
being that under SALT I, or most
Interpretations of It, expert~tal
work designed to provide a shield In
the atmosphere Is 110t forbidden,
whereas the deployment of antlbal·
listie missiles for the defense of
clUes in the air Immediately above
those cities Is limited to a single site.
Most scientists in Russia are
engaged ·In military or paramUItary enterprise. And tl!ousands of
Its best scientists and engineers are
struggling to develop a highfrontier defense. Against our of.
tense? No. Against our deterrent
system.
A second point. During the six
months of study, a sclentjfjc
community that a first washighly
skeptical about the feaslbutty of
· high-frontier technology has slowly
come around. This Is very far from
saying that the AmertcRn scientific
community felt an apple drop Its
head last summer and suddenly
perceived the law of gravity. Wbat
happened Is that the conviction has
grown that a start can be madewtth
a reasonable chance of success,
which start would lead to logical
step two, on to step three, · on
ultimately to fruition.
·
But even to start Is a slgntflcant
strategic proposal. Because just as
somewhere along the way many
months before we landed a man on
the moon It became clear that one
day we would accomplish just that,
so. with high frontier, an early
scientific breakthrough -let us say
In 1986 - might serve reasonably to
convince the Soviet Union that by
1992 we would have an effective
high frontier. The Impact of thaj
perception on our safety Is difficult•
to exaggerate.

oo

.......

....

·':1.:_.:..

'

...

:,:

'

In the ensuing years, Reagan has continued to rebuff detractors of his
plan - until chief presidential SIX&gt;kesman Larry Speakes recently
appeared before reporters at the White House and proclaimed that " the
lm!X'rtant part of our program is defense increase and tax reduction."
The notion of a balanced federal budget as a presidential prtortty,
Speakes suggested acidly, exists only in the Imagination of Martin F .
Feldstein, the embartled chairman of Reagan's Council of Economic
Advisers.
Feldstein may not hold that tltleforlongbecause he persists in not only
c~lling attention to the huge federal deficit but also in blaming Its size on
two components.of Reagan's 1980 ca mpaign pro!Jllse- reduced taxes and
Increased military spending.

.
·:~
...

Redskins scalp Cowboys; Browns upse'

Pameroy Middleport, a!lo

Argentna____Ja_c~_A_nd_e_rs_on_

had already developed the technology to make enriched uranium- a
crucial Ingredient In nuclear
weapons.
Alfonsin vowed during his eleclion campaign that If he discovered
the muttary was actually constructing a nuclear bomb, he would have
tt dismantled Immediately. Some
analysts suspect Castro Madero's
announcement was a last-minute
effort bY the outgoing military_
regime to undercut Alfonsin's
promise by generating public sup1
IX&gt;r1 for the nuclear effort.
From sources in Buenos Aires,
classified intelligence reports; and
CIA, State Department and congressional sources, my associates
Dale Van Alta and Lucette Lagnado pieced together the story of
Argentina's ambitious- and unsettling - hope of jotning the nuclear
club.
There are two ways to make a
bomb: with enrlched uranium or
plutonium. The CIA has been most
concerned about Argentina's plutonium program. Plutonium can be
manufactured by reprocessing the

fuel rods In nuclear reactors, and
Argentina already has two nuclear
IX&gt;Wer plants in operation. A third
will be finished bY 1987, a fourth is in .
the design stage, and two more are
planned. By the end of the century,
the country will have six nuclear
plants.
Argentina has refused to sign
either the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty or the Treaty
of Tlateloco, which bans nuclear
weapons in Latin America.
But so far, the Argentine nuclear
plants cannot be used to make
plutonium because the fuel rods are
Imported under contracts forbidding reprocessing Into plutonium. If
the Argentines decided to gn the
plutonium route, they would be
breaking the contracts and there
would be serious International
repercussions.
Even If they haven't been
secretly squirreling away plutonium for weapons - as some
sources suspect - the Argentines
will be able to reprocess fuel rods at
their Ezetza atomic plant by 1986,
giving them the ablltty to produce a

nuclear bomb without dependence
on foreign suppliers.
· Meanwhile, Adm. Castro Madero's announcement of Argentina's
enrtched-uranlum success constitutes an embarrassing fatlure by
U.S. Intelligence agencies. Only
three weeks before his statement,
one intelligence source stated posi·
lively that "the Argentines ca,n't
use enriched uranium for a bomb
because they don't have a program
for it."
Although most sources suggest ·
that Argentina has not sertously
been trying to butld a bomb but ts
pursuing Its nuclear energy program as a matter of prestl~;e, the
Reagan administration ts concerned at the posstblllty of a Latin
American nuclear power.
A secret Wbtte House directive
has ordered U.S. intelligence agenctes to "maintain close contact with
the Argentine nuclear program and
be alert to all IX&gt;SSible ways of
lnfiuencing Argentina to pursue a
course which would not lead It to the
point of developing a nuclear
explosives capablllty."

Robert Sullivan's death___. __·__L_ow_e_u__w__in£...:ge..:.:..tt
Robert A. Sullivan, 36, of Bel·
mont , Mass. is dead. He wasn't as
famous as President John F .
Kennedy or Elvis Presley, who also
died young, but his death caused
screaming headlines all over the
nation. Raben Sullivan had set a
dubious record of spending the
longest time under sentence of
death than anyone else In the
nation. After 10 years and 16 days
on death row, Robert Sulllvan was
electrocuted last week tn Florida.
. The State of Florida had no Idea
he would watt 10 years for execution
when It sentenced him to death in
19'73 for the shotgun slaying of
Donald Schmidt during a robbery of
a Homestead Howard Johnson's
restaurant of which Schmidt was
assistant manager. The take from
the robbery was $2,700 and an
accomplice of Sulllvan turned
state's evidence and testified
against hlm. According to news
reports, · Sullivan at ftrst admitted
his guilt but later refuted his
admission and since had stead·
lastly claimed Innocence during the
ttme hts case had been bounced
around In state and federal courts.
He was refused a hearing three
times by the U.S. Supreme Court
but had managed to stay alive
through the strategems of attor·
neys furnished by various \)rganlza·
tlons opposing the death penalty.
Even the Catholic Pope got Into the
act when he Instructed a F1ortda
bishop to intercede with Governor
Bob Graham for clemency.
Perhaps If the Flortda promtors could have looked Into the
future they would have handled the
Sullivan case differently. Afler all,
neither the condemned man nor his
victims were F1ortda native&amp; but
the state has spent enormous sums
of money to prosecute and keep
Suutvan over the 'last 10 years.

Every time an appeal was heard In
a state or federal court, It cost the
State of F1ortda good, hard cash to
defend their IX&gt;Sitlon that the state Is
bound by law to carry out the
sentence prescribed by a judge and
jury. Governor Bob Graham has
now signed 65 death warrants and
63 of them have been nulltfled bY the
courts and the legal strategies of out
of state lawyers. Sullivan's latest
attorney In his appeals battles over
the last three months has been
Steve Gey of Washington, D.C .
From what I have read of death
row at Florlda State Prison, I
assume II Is mre comfortable
quarters than those assigned other
prisoners. They have television, ·
books .and access to a law library.
Ted Bundy, another F1ortda visitor
from the State of Washington, law
sl:\ldent who was given the death
penalty lor killing two Flm1da State
students In their beds at a university dormitory and murdering a
Lake City school girl, ts one of the
207 men waiting execution there. If
the state Is as long executing Bundy
as Sullivan, he will be eligible tor a
law degree and may become a jall
house Clarence Darrow before he ts
finally strapped In the hot seat.'
Bundy Is suspected of ldliing about
100 women and girls between the
West Coast and Flortda. No doubt,
when his tum comes F1ortda
omctals will again be the targets of
a hysterlcal media blitz.
I have heard people the last lew
days saying that 10 years of
uncertainty was enough punish·
ment · lor Suillvan's crtrne. I
disagree. His victim did not have 10
minutes to fight for his llte while
Sullivan had 10 years. Sctunldt, his
wife and thnee chlldren had come to
F1ortda from Cincinnati and were
to have celebrated their 14th
wedding anniversary the evening

Sullivan beat him down with a tire
Iron and then finished hlm with a
shotgun blast in the back of the
head. There are two things about
the Sullivan case tbat smell bad to
me. Why should It take 10 years, or
even one year, to carry out the
proscribed . punishment and whY
should his accomplice be walking
the streets today, a free man? Laws
are passed to be enforced and II
there Is not the will or the Inclination
to enfor&lt;:e them, the law should be
changed. Prohibition and tbe present attempt to legally control
America's No. 2 cash crop, marljuana, are examples of unenforceable laws. The 55 miles per hous
speed limit on the freeways Is
another. Failure to enforce some

The long-awaited rematch between theWashing!on Redskins and
Dallas Cowboys turned into a real
yawner. Of course the samecan'tbe
said about the National Football
League playoff situation.
While the Redsklns won going
away from the Cowboys 31-10 In the
heralded battle of playoff-bound
teams Sunday, the playoff picture
still had plenty of suspense in It with
ju~ one week to go in the NFL' s
regular season.
The Denver Broncos were the
· only additional team to· actually
clinch a playoff spot Sunday when
they beat the Baltimore Colts 21-19
and earned a wild-card SIX&gt;! In the
American ConferenCe. The Broncos
joined three other AFC teams in the
playoffs - East Division champion
Miami, Central champion Pltts·
burgh and the West champion Los
Angeles Raiders.
Pittsburgh actually clinched at
least wild-card playoff berth with a
34·7 victory over the New York Jets
Saturday, then claimed the Central
champlqnshlp when Cleveland was
upset by Houston 34·2'1 Sunday.
Four teams with 8-7 records are
still In the hunt for the other AFC
wild-card berth - Buffalo, New
England, Cleveland and Seattle.
Among the four, Seattle has the
Inside track because of a better
conference record: The Seahawks,
who beat the New York Giants 17·12
Sunday, can ctinch a berth with just
a victory next week over NPW

a

TEMPERS FLARE -Washington Redsklns' quarierbBck Joe
Thelsmann yells at the Dallas defense alter he was sacked and his
helmet ripped .ort during second quarter play Sunday In lrvbtg,
Te&gt;:as. Cowboys' de lenders are Anthony Dlckel'!IOn (51) and Harvey
Martin (79). The Redsldns won 3J.10. (AP Laserphoto).

Waterford dumps
NG Pirates, 66-46
Double-figure scoring by Water·
lord dominated a non-league game
between the Wildcats and North
Gallla at WatertordSal:\lrday, as the
Wlldcats rolled to a 6046vlctory.
'That scoring advantage, recorded bYWaterlord'sBrettArnold,
Bob Dreyer and Keith Swingle, kept
the team only six polntsaheadofNG
during the first half. But foul trouble
and poor sbootlng at the foul tine
kept the Pirates from making any
headway afterward.
Eric Penick was high point man
for NG with 12, with the Pirates
coming on strong in the first quarter
to trail Waterford J.5.8 at the end of
thefrrstquarter.
·
NG began catching up with the
Wildcats, again behind 31-25 at the
halftime buzzer. Encouraged by the
small deficit, the Pirates began
applying pressure, but were
whistled 14 tlnoes by officials in the
latter half. NG was only able to sllik
twofree.throwsfortheremainderof
the game.
The Pirates also had 29 rebounds
· and 15 1:\lrnovers, while Waterford
had 42 rebounds. Aroold ted In
rebounding for the Wlldcats with 10,
while Penick had eight and Larry
Lee snatched seven.
Wa telford was also plagued with

WI-leN I

wa~9

waRPLaNeS

KiLLeD MY MOTtleR. FaTileR. I waNTeD ~lRaFeD MY UNCLe..
r waNTeD To
To KiLL DRu§e. 1 WaNTeD To Kil-L
Kill- PHaLaM;i~T~.
!§RaeLI&amp;. ·

SOliD OAK

NOR111 GAWA (.. ) - Blackburn H~ :
W. DiddlE" 1.0.2: Lee 4-4}8; Penick 6412;
Glassburn H-3; Smith J.()-2; Hawks 2·1·5: J .
Diddle 3-0-6. Tolali21-H6.

Bronoos21, Colts 19

THURSDAY~

still take the division title by beating
Tampa Bay at home next Sunday.
The Lions were on a roll of three
straight victortes when they took the
opening kickoff and went to their
best offensive weapon and emotlonalleader- Sims.
The explosive runner, who had
rushed !ormorethan100yards in the
four previous games, exchanged
words with WtlltarnS after a &amp;-yard
gain. Following a motion penalty,
.Slins ran for 5 more yards and had
another verbal exchange with
WUllams. who drew a 15-yard
penalty for unsportsmanlike
conduct.
The Bengats defense, ranked the
best in theNFLgolngintothegame,
gave Sims little to cheer about.

r

While quarterbacks Eric Hipple and
Gary Danielson completed just 10 of
31 passes for 100 net yards passing,
Sims was held to under 100 yards,
ftnlshlng with 80 on ID carries;
He became another in a long line
of runners frustrated by the Bengal
defense,rankedsecondlntheleague
against the run. Nobody has rushed
lor 100 yards against Cinctnna tl this
season.
Cincinnati, 7-8, had to turn to its
defense after rolling up a 14-0lead on
the artlft~tal playing surface, slick
from a constant rain that made
footing and pass receiving difficult.
Fullback Pete Johnson ran 1 yard
tor a first -quarter touchdown and 2
yards for a second-quarter score en
routetohlssecondstralghtl(]().yard

Henry 2.(}4: Swingle 7..0.14; Campbell 2-5-5.
Tolal&amp; 31-+&lt;16.
Soon! by ...........
North GaJDa .......... ...,...........8 17 9 12-46
Waterford .................... .... .15 16 16 l9--ti6

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Powerboat driver, Stevenson killed
lAKE CUNNINGHAM, The Ba·
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of the powerboat racing championships at the Bahamas Grand Prix.
Stevenson, 36, was on the 15th lap
of a a)-lap race when his boat
became arrborn. He was thrown

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Stevenson, who has been racing
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He was racing for the Arcadian
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BOB AND KAREN BAKER, Swnner Road, were lucky 11118
deer l!le88011. They each landed a deer, both of them eight points.
Karen got her deer on the first day of the seascln and Bob landed his
on Friday. Tills was Karen's flrsi deer. The. couple have hunted
together for several years.

featuring ln·person

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WATERFORD (86) - Arnold 9-1·19; B.
Dreyer 7-3-17: Cramer 2-0-4. D. Dreyer 244;

Annual Christmas Sale
. WHeN I Wa§ 12 a

"We were down 24-6and we came
back and had a chance Ill take
control and we didn't," Browns
coach Sam Rutigliano said . "This ts
the last way we thought we would
losethlsgame. We've lost theabtltty
to control our own desttrty: The onlY
thing that stopped us today was

Seahawks 17, Giants 12
Rookie John Elway, sparkling
Dave
Krieg fired a pair of
against the team be wouldn't play
tor, !Ired ·three touchdown passes in first-half touchdown passes, each
set up bY turnovers, as Seattle
a furious fourth-quarter rally as
defeated the Giants.
Denver overcame a 19-0 deficit and
squeaked past Baltimore.
The victory Improved the Bron·
cos' record to9-6 and, coupled with a
Buffalo loss t.O San Francisco, put
them Into the NFL playoffs for the
first time since 1979.
·
Elway - the No. 1 draft choice of
the Colts who was traded to Denver
53! JACKSON PIIIE·RT.3S WEST
after he refused to play with
Phone 446·4524
Baltimore -completed one scoring
BARGAIN WATINE£5 So11T &amp; SUN
ALL SEA~ S l .OO
toss of 21 yards, then fired a pair of
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2.00
26-yard scoring strikes, the last
coming with only 44 seconds le(t in
the game, and giving the Broncos.
~MBER 9 thru1~
:RIDAY thru
the victory.

yards on
26 attempts.
Johnson
ended up with 118
•
r;:==========:;==========~~ game.

laws only breeds contempt lor all
laws!
. For the sake of maintaining their
reputation lor legal lmpartlallty,
the courts and the legal profession
should k~p a tighter rein on the
practices of prosecutors. They
should be limited in their practice of
plea bargaining which Is done dally
in almost every court In the land. To
allow one man to be executed while ·
his .accomplice ts· slapped on the
wrlst does not seem like lmparttal-lty to me. Judges who sentence a·
man to death should have the power
to set the execution date and limit
the time for appeals.
Then there would be no more 10
year watts!

WHeN rwa~s
I"'RTaR l'l GOT MY

The Redsklns, 13-2, will win the
NFC East title If they beat the Giants
next Saturday or If the Cowboys,
12-3, lose next Monday night to San
Franclsco.If the Cowboys and
Redsklns finish tied at 13-3, the
Cowboys would win based on a
better division record.

Oilers 34, Browns 27
Wide receiver Tlin Smith catlght
two touchdown passes, the second a
43-yarder, with 6:17 left to rally
Houston over Cleveland.The Oilers,
wbo hlew an early ~ lead,
completed thetr comeback with a
two-play, 65-yard drtve leading to
Smith's game-winning catch.

Bengal defense shines in 17-9 win

problemsatthecharlty line, sinking
only four ol 15 attempts for. 26
percent. NGwas39percent (21of53)
CINCJNNATl (AP) - Line·
from the floor, while It sank four of
backer Reggie Williams gavE'
five trtes on tree-throws for ffi
running back Bllly Sims a message
percent.
on the frrst play of the game Sunday
But Waterford was able to shoot
- the Cincinnati Bengats weren't
efficiently from the floor and racked
gnlng to hand the Detroit Lions a
up 19 points in the final stanza,
division title.
compared tothePirates'12. The loss
The stingy Bengals defense
placed NG's overall record at 1·3
turned Williams' suggestion Into
and1·1 within the SVAC.
·unpleasant fact for Sims and the
Other hlgh..lK!Orers lor NG were
Lions, who managed just three field
Lee and ktthony Blackburn, with
goals bY Ed Murray in Cinclnjlatt' s
eight each.
. 17-9 victory at rain-drenched RiverThe Pirates' reserves also suf·
front Stadium.
fered a 52·39 defeat at the hands of
The ' Lions, 8-7, could have
thejuniorWUdcatsquad.BIUYoung
ctinched !herr frrst dtvtslon cham·
was top scorer for Waterford with14
plonshlp since 1957 with a victory,
IX&gt;lnts, with Chris Campbell recordbut Instead saw the chance for an
ingniJ:lerebounds. ToddDeelledthe
NFC Central Division title elude
scoring for the Pirate reserve with
them for at least a week. Detroit can
12. Mike Kemper was leading
rebounder with 10.
NG returns to league action
Friday at Kyger Creek.

a

WHeN r wag, b
a GReNaDe

Rechldns3l, .C owboysl0 ·
JOE! Thetsmann thiew two touch·
down passes, John Riggins ran tor
two more and Washington's defense
shackled running back Tony Dor·
sett and vtctlmlzed quarterback
Danny White as the Redsldns seized
first place in the NFC East. The
Cowboys had won their earlier
meeting in Washington 31-30.

England and don't 1\eed help from
any other team.
Both Dallas and Washington have
already qualified at least as wild
cards In the National Conference
and one will go to the playoffs as
champion of the l\'FC East, depending on next " 'ek's results. The
Redsklns havP ~·J o beat the lowly
Giants next SaturJay at home to
qualify as the East winner, while the
Cowboys face San Francisco next ·
Monday night. The other three
berths will be next weekend.
The 49ers, New Orleans Satnts,
Detroit Uons, Los Angeles Rams
and Green Bay Packers remain tn
contention for those berths.
On Sunday, the 49ers beat Buffalo
23-10 and need only to beat Dallas
nextMondayntght to be assured of a
playoff berth; the Saints defeated
Philadelphia 20-17ln overtime; the
Lions lost to Cincinnati 17·9! the
Rams lost to New England 21·7 and
Green Bay has two games left,
including Tampa Bay Mon\lay
night.
Also, the Chicago Bears knocked
the Minnesota VIkings out of playoff
contention with a 19-13 victory and
St. Louts was ellminated from
mathematical contention despite a
34-24 victory over the Los Angeles
Raiders.
In a game involvtngtwoteamsout
oftheplayo!fplcl:\lre, San Diego took
a41-38vlctoryoverKansasClty. The
Dolphins beat Atlanta Saturday
31-24 In the weekend's only other
action.

•

'}ialtll 7'1tatlnacJI
t~/ OltitJ, !J11c.
North Second

Middleport

...

"

�Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, o-mber 12, 1983

Pom.roy Middleport, Ohio

Buckey~s

beaten;
Marshall wins

It career-high 36 points Saturday night
wasn't clear I! Tony Campbell was but the 6-foot4 guard seemed even
talking aboUt his own performance more proud of his defensive E!fort.
or bls team's, but the senior fmward
"Texas Chtsttan's Dennis Null
aptly described Ohio State's show- told me it was the best defensive job
Ing against Mlssouri.
anybody had done on him in
"This Is probably the worst game college," Evans said after unbeaten
I'Ver,'' the senior forward said after Marshall had whipped the Horned
the Buckeyes dropped a 64-53 Frogs 90-67 In the finals of the
college basketball game to the Marshall Memorial 1nvitatlonal
Tigers on Sunday.
Basketball Tournament.
Campbell, ohio siate' s AllEvans had held the hlgh-seorlng
American prospect, mactejust three Horned Frog to just nine points:
of 17 shOts from thef!elden route to a Nutt, a junior, had scored 20 the
10-polnt performance.
previous night.
As a team, Ohio'State made only
Evans got 36 points. eight re'17 of 56 field goal tries, was bounds (high'for the game) and two
outrebounded 47-33 and saw three assists as Marshall won Its fourth
players, Including Campbell, foul game without a loss Saturday night
out,
to take the tournament champion1be Buckeyes also got the ship. Evans also was credited with
expected bad news that Joe Con- four steals, two of which came
check, whostartedOhioState'sfirst during a 10-0 Marshall second half
three games- all victories- wlll be spurt that put the Herd out of reach.
academiCally inellglble the re- ·
MU Coach Rick Huckabay called
malnderottheseason.Concheck dld it a stellar performance,
not play Sunday.
Evans performance, coupled with
Mlssourl got 25 points from Friday night's 16 points and nine
Malcolm Thomas and ll from rebounds earned him the tournaPrince Bridges, who played well ment MVP award.lt was the second
despite an injured left ankle as the straight year he has been named the
Tigers Improved to S.J. Greg outstanding player of. the
Cavener also contributed 14 points.
tournament.
The loss came in the second road
Evans said he was determined to
game of the season for the play well for Huckabay, who was
Buckeyes, now 3-1. Ohio State was involved in a fracas with the New
behlnd26-21 at halftime, but kept the Hampshire coaches Frlday night.
During the ensuing confusion, as
game close until Thomas took
control.
pla)'l'rs from both benches milled
With Missouri holding a 43-38lead about, one of the New ~arnpshlre
In the second half, Thomas scored pla)'l'rs bumped into Huckabay.
seven points in a three-minute span
Evans and his Marshall teamto boost the Tigers to a 12-point lead. mates wlll be back in action
The Buckeyes were led by guard Tuesday evening, 'when Ohio WesRon Stokes with 12 points. Campbell leyan comes to Huntington.
Then, on Thursday, the Herd
and Keith Wesson added 10 apiece.
Meanwhlle, Marshall Universi- travels to Kentucky with long-tlrile
ty's LaVerne Evans scored a rival Morehead State.

Second half comeback
gives DePaul big win

Scoreboard ...
'
Football

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New Jeney
WASI\lnJfc.t

32~
~I

J.H J32

Milwau~

nJ l'!O

Atlanta
Det"rolt
Ck-.•elan.d

..

0
0
1
0
1

.86i SlO .110
Jill 46:! 318

7

.0

.533 :124 266

.~

7i

0

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Chicago ·

7

0

4617BI

"'""""'·

780.461~l'H

Tampa Bay

......

2 12

Sa n Frandsco
LA. Rams

9 6
8 7
f'll ~· Orleans
R 7
AUa111a
6 9
y.ctinched diVISiOn title
x.clinctMi'd playotl' .spot

0

:162 -

.739 -~

~
~

2
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7

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H 7
lD 12
10 12
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7

14

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9

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13 lO ·
u 11
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Kansas
10 11 ,.,.
Dallas
Utah

II

8

...
..,

-1~
3

'~

Oty

san AntoniO

28)

l'adlklf 6

.143 2ll 30
6Xl ~ 276
.533 335 J20
.533 295 311
.400 339 :m

.315

l'l&gt;rtland

15 8
ll 11
11 . 12
8 14
816

Sea !lie
Golden State
Pltoetlx

SanDiegti

•

"" •·

9 "
8 "

Hou!iiOfl
l.o5 Anp:oles

0
0
0
0

6

GB

W'D'IERN OONJIDtEN&lt;E

.333 :J:..l6 291
233 )Cj 315

8

5

11

...__

Indiana

343 321

Detroit
G1WT1 &amp;v

16

1.'\ 8
11 9
9 -12

Chk'ago

Cmb'al

8

--

M8II&gt;IN C&lt;lNFEIIENa!

2R5 279

:r7!

. ..... It
san
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0 .!i.\11.!6 ll."i
0 .46i l1l '182
0 . 1.\1 2'711 4&lt;10

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II· 7 0 .s.lJ
San Dl~
ii 9 0 All!
KaflS.IS City
~ , 10 0 .X\3
Na&amp;nal Cui &amp;k't
II ·IA&gt;nvf'r

..

.73.1

By 'Die Aeeool•'edl'reM
The DePaul Blue Demons are
now hoping their show plays well on

""" lU!lG&lt;1IAit -

PA

0

2 t:i

ltilldPJ,;

:r~&amp;

.J
7

ti 9
f61tnl

BaltitnOr£&gt;

Raidl!n

Nt'W En&amp;tanct 11 Seattle
Tampa 0.)1111 Dtotrott

F~ Leapt&gt;
AnwticMf~

N•lunal

.100 .fM
11
.!DJ 4
,(18

~~

.761 7
..1!38

~11G1mm

PHtsburgh ~. N~· York Jets 7
Miami 31, AUanta 24
._ S.nd-,y'• G...-Chlcaio 19. Minnesota 13
Houston :W, Oeveland '11

~eG.mm

;

\.:. Bostoo liM, Atlanta W1
San Antonio 125. WaslinRtoo 102

Clf&gt;veland 101. Odcago 95

San Frandsro 23, Buft'alo 10
Seat1k&gt; 17, N_. York Giants 12
Clnc1MBII 17, Detroit 9
New Orleans ')), Philadelphia 17, OT
San Diego 41 , Kansas City :II
New E ngland 21, Los Angek5 Rams 7
St. LouiS 34, Los Angeles RaldPrS 24
081\·er n . Baltimore 19:
Washington 31, Dalla'5 10
MondaY'• G.-n8!1
Greer~ Bay at Tampa Bay
Frldaz, Dec. II

New York Jets al Miami
Sall&amp;rliQ, Dec. 11
New York Giants at Washingt~M
Ctnclnnatl a1 MIMHOta
SUnday, Dee. 18
Denver at Kansas C1ty
Grfell Bay at Chicago
Los Angeles Rams al NE'W Orleans
Philadelphia at St, Louts
Pltts!Jurgh at Oevt!land
Buffalo at Atlanta
Houston at Ball:trnOre

KaAsas City 119, lndlana 103
Utah 128. Hw~too 121,
Phof'lllx 100, San DleiO 93
Dallas 126, Golda! State 123, OT

..._,,_

New Jersey

ttl. Denver til

Philadelphia 97, MUwaut.ee 87
San OkyJ UB, Dallas 116
Portland 104. GoldPn State 101
Seattle ~. Detrol11Jl
New York 100. Los Anketes 98

MondJI¥11GIDI•

No

gam~

..

scheduled
~sGame~

Boston at New Yock
AtlantBt at Washlng1:oo
Utah at Cleveland
MUwaukee at Chlci!IRO
Phomb: at HOO$ton

Detroit at Denver
New JCI'St'Y at GoldEn State
Seattle at Ptrtland

By The Bend
-

beat St. Mary's o!Texas 71-55; No.8
North carotlna State, 82-56 over
Hofstra; No.lOGeorgla·, which won
the Drake Classic by beating
Northern Iowa Ill-58 Saturday night
and Drake 93-59 Sunday night; No.
11 Maryland, 7lW1 over Duquesne,
and No. 19 Purdue, 1~50 over
Tampa.
On Sunday night, No.16St. John's
downed U.S. Intematlonal ~-

the road to Japan.
No. 13 DePaul overcame some
early jitters and a halftime deficit to
overtake third-ranked Georgetown
63-61 at borne Saturday night, just
one of several upsets to hit Top
'!Wenty teams during the weekend.
The Blue Demons left today for
Osaka, Japan, where they will take
Top Ten
part In a round·robln tournament
North carolina, playing before
with Alabama and Texas ').'ech later
32,235 tans at Syracuse's Carrier
this week.
Georgetown led by15pointslateln Dome, routed theOrangemen 87-64,
the first half and went Into the locker · the second straight year the Tar
room with a 38-28 advantage. Then Heels have hea'"'l Syracuse by that
DePaul managed to turn things score.
The Tar Heels, :&gt;-0, got 19 points
aroond.
from
Michael Jordan and 16 apiece
Kenny Patterson and backup
guard Tony Jackson each scored 15 · from Sam Perkins and Matt
points for DePaul, now :&gt;-0. Another Doherty.
Mel Turpin scored 25 points And
guard, Jerry McMillan, provided
the margin of victory with a pair of Jim Master had 23 for Kentucky, 3.0,
in Its big victory over Kansas.
foul shots.
Mississippi State's KevinHUdreth
After bls tree throws, the Hoyas
sank tWo free throwswlth12seconds
took the ball and ran the clock down
to the final five seconds before left to upset Memphis State, H.
Keith Lee, Memphis State's star
calling time out. Thompson said he
forward, drew his third personal
designed a play fpr freshman guard
foul midway through the first half
Reggie WUllarns because " he's a
and was held to 10 points.
gond one-on-one player." Williams
eventually missed an IS-foot shot
Oregon State went into its game
that would have tied it.
against
Iowa without three players,
Along with Georgetown, the
twoofthemstarters,
who are unable
weekend spelled trouble for No. 4
to
play
In
the
Beavers'
first six
Memphis State, which lost at home
games
because
they
violated
NCAA
to Mississippi State 50-49; No. 5
rules
by
selling
complimentary
Iowa, a 53-48 loSer to 18th-ranked
.
Oregon State; No. 7 UCLA, which game tickets.
But
Oregon
State,
2-1, raced to an
fell at home 65-liO to New Mexico;
8.Q
lead
and
never
trailed
in downing
No. 14 Wichita State, beaten by
Iowa,
3-2.
Oregon 75-«l; No. 15 Arkansas,
Houston Coach Guy Lewis Is
which lost to Nebraska 67-54; and
accustomed
to high-scnring e!forls
No. 20 Fresno State, which fell to
by
his
5-1
Cougars.
So his team's
BolseState60-52.
victory, led by Michael Young's 24
No. 1 North carolina and No. 2
points, did not particularly please
Kentucky each escaped the upset
bugwithlmpresslvevictorleson the him.
road. North Carolina routed host
Syracuse 87-64 and Kentucky
trounced Kansas 72-50. Other Top 20
L'J'he Daily Sentinel ~
winners were No. 6 Houston, which

POMEROY - Meigs County
Chapter 53, Disabled American
Veterans wW meet at 6: ill p.m .
Monday at the chapter home on
Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
.
SALISBURY - The annual
Chrlslmas program of the Sailsbury Elementary School wlll be
presented Monday at 7 p.m. The
pubilc Is invited to attend.
Rl.ITLAND - The Rutland
Elementary PTO meeting will
be held at 7 p.m. Monday at the
school. The Christmas program
will be presented by the kinder.garten and first grade. Refreshments will be served.

·
:

POMEROY- WomensAwdltary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will have a Christmas
party Monday at 6 p.m. at the
hospital cafeteria. Members are
to take a salad or dessert.
POMEROY - The Women's
Auxlliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will have a Christmas
party Monday at 6 p.m. in the
hospital cafeteria. Those attendIng are to take a salad or dessert.

Mondoy, Dec. 12

.

VInton COunty at Meigs (girls, vlirslty), 6

p.m.

meroy, Ohio.

Meigs at VInton County (treshman boys),
5:~

p.m.

1
Meigs at Belpre (seventh and eighth grade
boys), 5 p.m.
Nelsonvllle-York al Meigs (girls" seventh
and &lt;ighth). 5 p.m.
"'-day,n.c.L!
Melp at Trtmble (boys' varsity), 6 p.m .
"'-·Dec. 14
Federal-Hocking at Meigs (boys' 91!Ventb
and eighth), 5: :ll p.m.
Meigs

'

One Wee~ ............. ..... .. .............. $1.00

One Month ................................ $4.40
One Year ........................... , .... S52.80
SINGLEGOPY
PRICES
Dally ........... ............. ..... ..... 20 Cents

Dec. tl

Belpre at Meigs (boys' varsity), fi:ll p.m.

Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basls. Credit wUI be given carrier each

DALE HILL
FORD TRACTOR ·

month.
No SubscrtpUons by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service ls
available.

Your Farm

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
In•lde Ohio
13 Weeks ........................... .. ,... Sl4.0!1.
26 Weeks ................................. $27.30

· Equipment
BAGS 'IWO DEER- There will be plentyofvenlaonotew, !~teaks and
jerlrey on the table at the Osborn borne this winter. Gale Osbome,
Racine, using a bow and arrow bagged two deer, one In West Vlrglna
and the othe&lt; In Ohio. The nine point buck wblch dre88ed out at

approximately 180 pounds was killed at hill previous Jftldenee near
JloCtorn. The 11 pblnt deer was bagged In West VJrx1nia and
dreMed out at 186 pounds.

""'

LoRI

: WASHINGTON (AP) -"Retirement made me appreciate my
14Jent; it made me appreciate what
it took to be champion," says Sugar
Ray Leonard, who plans to be a
champion again.
·Saturday night, the 27-year-old
Leonard, who retired Nov. 9., 1982,
fl.\re. months after surgery for a
~ched retina, fought a six-round
exhibition at Andrews Air Force
Base, thenannouncedhewasendlng
his retlrment.
.
Leonard, who said has been
Wllrklng out for several months and
cteclded about two months ago to
~'~!tum to the rtng, said Sunday he
was told bY Dr. Ronald Michels, who
operated on the detached retina,
that the eye "Is excellent and I don't
see any problem with the retina.''
"I'm coming back for the challenge, not for the money, not for the
adulation," said Leonard, who was
undisputed welterweight champ$011 of the world, when he retired
with a 32-1 record. "It's for me."
No sooner, did Leonard announce
bls comeback, than he was asked
about fighting Marvelous Marvin
'

me

Hagler, the undisputed middleweight champion; Roberto Duran,
the World Boxing Association junior
middleweight champion, and Thomas Hearns, the World Boxing
Council' super welterweight
champion.
''HefoughtHearnsandDuranand
what has .he got to prove," GoQdy
Petronelli, trainer and co-manager
of Hagler, told ABC Radio Sporls
Sunday. Leonard lost the WBC
welterweight title to Duran then won
it back in the famous "no mas" fight,
and he beat Hearns for the
undisputed welterweight title.
"I think . his big cballenge Is
Marvin Hagler," said Petronelli.
But Leonard, wbo said wants to
fight every three months beginning
in February, said he wanted to have
a couple of 10-round lights then go
after the welterweight title.
Leonard last fought Feb. 15, 1!irl,
when he stopped Bruce Finch In the
third round of a tltledefenseatReno,
Nev. He was supposed to defend
against Roger Stafford at Buffalo
May 15, but five days before that
fight he underwent eye surgery.

FRUTH PHARMACY
OF OHIO, INC.

·': .H URs•.
0
N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT; OH
"SpeciQI Chrislm!tl Hours"

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

she asked him where he was going.
He told her he was going to see
some reporters.
"For what," she asked. The sbe
asked, "You're light, right?"
··well, sort or," sald Leonard.
"Shegavethatlook,"hesald, "but
she went along with lt."

Ohio cage scores
l*o CGIIep

........

-·-

Louisiana Tl'ch 75, Kent St. 66
Malone 11, Bantngton 38
Marlrtta M, Kenyon fl
MiamL ONo 72. x.vrr, otdo 53
Miettlgan Ill. Dayton fll
MYS!dngum 81, Bet~, W.Va. 6
q&gt;erlllt ~ .,...., ..

s.......,...• .._.

Mlssowi 64, OtUo St. 53

'

............. C!n'.

Anderson 64, Wllmlng!on 63
ftn.:lay lW. Earlham 94
No.

' tikli
Dlutrtoo 19, Sl . Francis. Ind. 10
Bowiinr Grem 91, Akrm 9l
C&amp;pttaJ 59, Jom carrou 56
CedaJvlUe 1M. Marlon 81
Central St. !H. Mlssow1 Baptl!lt 85
Defiance ll!i, Mlchlpn·Dearborn 58
Oenl~tm 75, Mt. Vernon Naz. 73 •

HridelbM'g 9.\ Otm DmllnicaJJ 11
Hiram Tl, Mount Union 72

Outalde Ohio

13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
26 Weeks ,,.,.............. ......... . $29 64

PomterY,Oh.

52 Weeks ............ ......... ...... :::::: $56:21
'• ·

AI

can you afford not to
borrow $10,000 now?

If you went up to S&amp;O.OOO or more,
why ... , your homt to get itl lmtud,

Homeowner Lo.n It 1ft A.P.R. (This
r•tt euar•nnd through December 31

•FIXED RATE.
(Your rltlland ~~'::!:j

_,_._

Owaz
'\
Ohio Northern 58. ~Na 57

'

Ult your tQUity M HCurity lnd ttt our

only!)

0. IN. N~ara til
~ 114, HIJI8dailo 81.
Toledo fB, Wlltcnberf 57
Wallh 2, Mt. Vamn BltJie o, fert!l.t
Wrigtlt St. 97, ,..,.. Mln 1!1
....... 0

NUmerous holiday donations
were made at the Wednesday night
meeting of the Amertcan Legion
Aux1llary of Feeney-Bennett Post
128, American Legion.
The Awdl1ary voted to send'$25 to
theChllllcothe VeteransHospltal for
the December party; $10 . to the
Salvation Army, $10 to the Lung
Association, $10to the Meigs County
Jaycees, $1i to the Middleport Fire
Department, $25 to the Middleport
Emergency Squail; $25 to the Gifts
'f or the Yanks Who Gave.
The unit also donated $25 to a
needy family
gave about a
hundred dollars worth of food Items
to the family.
A report was given 1:11 the party at
the Arcadia Nursing Horne with
aboUt 40 patients attending. Golng
from the unit were Becky 1'yree,

MONTHLY

Qhk,

am

not be subject to

• NO POINTS
• NO CALL

Just an old fashioned loan I

.,.

Theae 1nd olt• r~p~yment plans evelleble· Otter limited Call tod ,

REAL ESTATE

I

Three acres with a nicely constructed
concrete block home 26x60, 3 bedrooms, one bath, 12xl5 living room
and 24x24 family room. Partially
carpeted, fuel oil furnace with facilities for woodburner. 12x15 block
stora" buildin1. 20x30 block garage.
Right off Rt. 248, co-.ntry setting, ~
mile east of Chester, Ohio.

Home National Bank

Amounl

Monthl~

Fl,.nc.d

PIW1fttint

$ 7,500

$1i0.45
1157 83
$135.1:1

$10,000
$15,000

sm.a~

S210.1'1
$1110 .18

S380.110
S315 28

$270.21

Months
lo P1y

.

00

120

.
..

$11 ,427.00
113.240.i2

120

$17,664.28
521.&amp;21 .&amp;0

eo

120

A fellowship supper honorlng
three ot the oldest members of the
Appl.e Grove United Methodist

11s. z1~ .eo

$15,23$.80

Church Women was held recently at
the churcli and attended by 47

122.~ .00

J)l!l'IIOilS.

$26;481 .&amp;4

Scripture was read by memberS
the aqregatkln with aeveral
J¥)1!1111 aDd 1011111 being inclUded In
the pro&amp;raiiL There WIB apeclal
millie by Mr. 8lld Mrs. Dan
Hayman ancJ. Faltb, the Rev. and
Mn. Cart. and Mr. and Mrs. Dallas

or
446 4113

''

~------------------J_;
·'1.

,

Honored were Early Roush, Mrs.
Bertha Rolllnscm and Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe. Each was presented a pen
and a fla{m'. Prayer by the Rev.
James Clark Qlll!lled the rneetlna'.

Sl2.432 .40

' .

1312 Eastern Ave.
(Nekt Door to PizZI Hut)

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
Lodge 363, F &amp;AM will have
installation of new officers .Tuesday at 7 p.m.

Sonia Wayland, Etta WW, Erma
Hendrlcks, Nettle Hayes, Ethel
Hawk, Peggy Caton, Diana Jarvis
and Kathryn Metzger.
A thank you note was read from
thefamllyofFredaKrautterandthe
charter was draped In her honor. It
was noted that several Auxlllary
members attended the plaque
dejllcation honoring Ed Bennett and
Jimmy Stewart.
MaeLewlswaswetomed as anew
member. The door prize brought by
sOJua Wayland was won by Jean
GUmore. Etta WW presided at the
meeting with Jean Gllmore giving
the opening prayer. A sympathy
card was sent to Mr. and Mrs.
William Criner.
·A ham and turkey dinner for the
auxlllary members and the legionnaires preceded the meeting.

Apple.Grove UMW meeting held

Tot.. ot
Peymenla

eo

HARRISONVll.l.E The
Senior Citizens Club of Harrlsonvillewlll have blood pressure day
Tuesday from 10 a.m to noon.
Fernadora Story, R.N., will be
the nurse in charge. Plans have
been made for the club members
to have a holiday dinner on Dec.
16atlp.m.

Auxiliary makes donations

18

"""'"""'
.._ -~. Adrianro56
auo wesaeyan

949-2210

PH. 992-6491 or 992-31 06
,,

Whlle Leonard says he decided
two months ago to resume fighting,
he did not tell his wife, Juanita, who
has been against him coming back.
Sunday morning when he left a
hospital, where Juanita, w)lo Is
expected the couple' ssecondchlld In
June, Is recovering from a illness,

52 Weeks ........................... ... .'.. S."i1.48

992·2668

Retirement short, Leonard returns to ring wars

1

I

-Middleport Mayor Fred Hof- ·

frnan, in cooperation with the Ohio
DepartmentofHighwaySafety,has
designated Dec .11-17 as "Drunk and
Drugged Driving Awareness .
Week" and issued a proclamation.

Rl.ITLAND-Chapier17,0hio
Association of Public School
Employes, wUl have a holiday
party Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the
Rutland Elementary School. The
affair is for OAPSE m embers
and their families . TherPwWbea
$2 gift exchange.

are

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

,..,..,.,
15 (girls' varsity), 6 p.m.
1'rlrnb1e at ·
Meigs
Melgs at Tt1mble (tresbrnan boys), 5:55
p.m.
Fllday,

·

POSTMASTER: Send address to The
Dally Sentinel, 111-Court St., Pomeroy,
OhiO 45769.

and eighth), 5::ll p.m.

POMEROY -Annual Christ mas dinner party of the Shade
Vailey Council of Floral Arts will
be held Tuesday at the home of
Jennie Machir, 6: ill p.m. There
will be an exchange of homemade Christmas cards. Wrappings o.f gifts for exchange wUl be
judged.

• The Veterans Memorial Hospital
particle.
emergency department Is staffed
If the particle has not been
by a physician 24 hours a day.
washed out by this method the eye
However. when an eye Injury
can he flushed 'with water. If stU!
occurs Immediate action Is neces- unsuccessfill.._gentiy pul\ the lower
sary, because permanent damage eyeild doWn. If the particle can be
can occur.ln less than five minutes. seen, it can be lifted· out with a
The most dangerous eye Injury Is
moistened corner of a clean cloth. If
probably a chernlcal burn. Ev.en
the speck is not visible, check the
before calling the emergency deInside of the upper ild. This can be
partment flush the eye with cool
done by first holding the lashes gf
running water for about 10mlnutes.
the eyeild and pulling downward.
Hold the eye open so that all parts
Plaee a kitchen match or similar
covered by water. Let the water
object horizontally along the outflow from the Inside corner to tbe
side of the lid and flip the eyeild
outside corner so that the chemical
backward over the stick. The
does not get Into the.unaffected eye.
particle can be removed with a
Cover the Injured eye with'a pad
moistened corner of a ctoth. If the
of sterile gauze and baitdage In
particle stili remains, cover the eye
place. The victim should not rub his
and seek medical attention at your
eyes: Medl~al attention ~hould be · local emergency department.
sought Immediately.
All cuts to the eye can be very
The most C9mmon eye injury is a · serious and may lead to blindness.
foreign body In the eye. Always
Both eyes should be covered with
wash your hands before examining
sterile pads and bandaged Into
the eye. If a foreign body is sticking
place. Apply no pressure to the
injured eye.
Into the eye do not attempt to
remove lt.
Carefully cover both eyes with
The black-eye Is the result of a
clean compresSes and bandage
hard direct blow to the eye. Even
them into place so that the eyes will
though this may not look serious It
not move. Seek medical attention
should be checked by a medical
promptly. The victim should be
professional because there may be'
internal bleeding. Apply cold comkept lying on his back until medical
asststance ·Is available.
presses to the injured eye. Seek
If the foreign body is not sticking
medical attention Immediately.
Into the eyeball but simply restlilg
on the eyeball, gently pull the upper
If there Is any doubt as to
treatment, contact the Veterans
eyelid down over the lower eyelid
Memorial Hospital emergency dL~
and hold briefly. This caw;es tears
partment at 99'1-2104.
to flow which may wash out the

Member: The Associated Press, In land Dally Press Assoclaton and the
American Ne\1/spaper Putlltshers As·
sociatlon, National Advertlstng Representative, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10011.

at Federal-Hocking (girls' scvenlh

TIJESDAY

Tips on handling
•
• •
eye tnjury emergenctes

Published every atternoon, Monday
through F'rlda)-:, ll J. Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company. Multimedia, Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohto45769, 99'22156. Second class postage paid at Po-

Drunk, drugged
awareness week
proclaimed

Calendar

,
,

1983

Page-S

MONDAY

(USPS 145-IHIO)
A Division of Multimedia, lac.

Monday, December 12,

-

•

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

Meigs sports schedule

The Daily Sentinel

HW. Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell Norris, Tracy and
Ryan,Mr.andMrs.ArlHlll,Mr.and
Mrs. Roger Roush, Kim and Jenny,
Edith and Denise Manuel, Mr. and
Mrs. RUS!ll!il Roush, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Dorsey Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Pete ·

mayor stated that the
Middleport Pollee Department Is
presently participating In a
federally-funded Highway Safety ·
Program and Is especially con-·
cerned a.hout the hazards of
impaired driving and Its dangers to ·
local res.ldents.
The

HEAD START ·pROJECf - Meigs County Head
Start Center students have been working on home
, visit projects. Josh Starcher, 4. 1111d his mother GIDy

Starcher, left, work on a project while teacher
Patricia Mclntrye obsenoes.

Each year, more than 25,000
persons are killed In' alcohol-related
traffic accidents causing an estlmated$25 bWion In damage. Drunk
driving Is Ohlo'snumberone traffic
safety problem.

Head .Start program propels pre-schoolers
When we hear the word "culture, .. many
lis think of thing~
refined: a visit to the museum , a
play by Shakespeare, or a night at
the opera.
But to pre-schoolers enrolled in
the Gallla-Meigs Head Start Program, cultural enrichment can
mean a first trip to the dentist,
learning to pick up one's toys when
playtime Is over, trying a hand at
finger painting, or acting out " The
Three Little Pigs."
S.irnple as they may seem, these
kinds of activities are part of a total
plan to .give three to five-year old
children from lower Income famliles •nd children with handicaps the
needed "edge" to succeed In school
later on.
Head Start's combination of
social and educational experiences,
nuirltious meals, health and dental
care and parent involvement provides the key to this preschool
advantage; hence the name "Head
Start."
EstabHshed in 1965 under President Lyndon Johnson's administration the Head Start Program Is the
foremost early child development
program In the United States
serving 400,000 children nationwide.
Gallla-Meigs Head Start, a diviSion
of Woodland Centers Inc., serves
168 preschoolers at lt.s centers In
Gallipolis and Racine.
Head Start has had such a
documented success in preparing
children for school that, according
to Director Chris Zimmer, It Is one
of the few federal programs that Is
growing - an amazing vote of
confidence In this era of budget cuts
In social programs.
Because Meigs County is sparsely populated In m'a ny areas and
the Head Start families are geogra ~
phically spread out, Meigs Head
Start operates as a "home-based"
program, offering weekly home
visits to families as weil as a weekly
group experience for the children at
the Head Start Center on Third and
Vine Streets in Racine. The seven
teachers-home visitors visit 12
families each, and serve as
teachers to the same chlldren their
1
half-day at the center.
According to Janet Koblentz,
Meigs Head Start Coordinator, the
home-based program allows for a
focus on parents - a great benefit
since parents are of prime Importance in their . child's education.
Another benefit of a home-based

oi

4-H news notes

program Is the individualized atten- begun a project cutting a construetion each child received during the tlon paper turkey ~which he and his
weekly home visits. A partnership mother will finish during the week) ,
develops between parents and played with shapes, (Inserting
home visitors that works for the yellow plastic pieces Into their
respective holes in the toy), and
benefit of the whole family, Mrs.
worked with Ms. Mcintyre on
Koblentz said.
games
1n a "highlights" magazine.
A typical day at the Head Start
She
tells
Gilly she would like her to
Center Involves a home visitorwork
with
Josh on matching the
teacher 12 to 15 preschoolers, and
several parent volunteers. The day colors red and yellow at home this
begins for the preschoolers when week, and shares some Information
the teachers pick them up in the on health services and polson
blight red, rainbow-striped Hea,d control with her.
If the activities during the home
Start vans. Upon being greeted at
visits
and center sessions seem Uke
the center, the children lin~ up for
child's
lay, It's because they are.
roll call, then wash their hands for a
Head
Start
staff call this "lncldennutritious meal (breakfast for
tal
learrtlng,"
loosely structured
morning groups, lunch for after·
learnlng
activities
geared to the
noon .sessions). The children assist
In cleaning up after the meat, then
child's attention span and level of
development. "Children learn
brush their teeth.
The rest of the three-hour session through playing and experiencing,"
Mrs. Koblentz said.
Involves learning games, crafts and
Aside from this "child's play,"
activities, "large motor" or active
which develops social and learning
physical play, and group time. In
skills, Head Start children and their
which they talk or listen to a story.
Before leaving, they have a snack.
families receive a variety of
Lesson plans are prepared ahead of services equally Important to a
well-rounded childhood. Complete
time so activities wlll enhance
particular skills.
medical and dental screenings and
any needed treatment Is provided
The home visits, which generally
for
all enrolled chlldren. Other
last one to one-and-a-half hours
staples
of the program include field
(longer for families with two Head
Start preschoolers), can be illustrated with a visit by teacher-home
visitor Patricia Mcintyre to the
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
home of Josh Starcher, four years
Syracuse, OH. 992-5776
old. On this sunny fal~ morning Ms .
Now Open For The
Mcintyre drives ber car- which Is
Christmas Season
loaded with toys, puzzles, food
Large selection of potted Poin·
Items and other materials - to the
settias, hanging Potnsettia basStarcher home. Josh and his
kets, Christmas Cactus, Holly
mother, Gilly Starcher, tell her how
Trees, Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees.
they have been working this week
African Violets and foliage Plants.
on money, and on the colors green,
ALSO: Candle arrangements. candle
rings, door wreaths, grave blankets.
blue and red.
and c.emetery vases and wreaths.
Ms. Mclnf;yre starls out her home
OPEN: 9 to 5 Daily; I to 5 Sun . .
visits by paving the hcild put
together a puzzle. This gets them
warmed up for the other activities,
·she said. "We try to Involve the
whole famlly In the home visits."
After naming the colors of the
puzzle pieces for his mother and
putting ali the pieces In place, Josh
claps his hands, "I had a hard time
on that one," he says. The next
activity today Is a "nutritional
activity" - a Thanksgiving turkey
made from apples, raisins, currants, olives and toothpicks. ·
~- Mcintyre demonstrates how
the turkey Is made, and Josh
follows, placing the raisins and
currants on four toothpicks and
inserting these "tatlfeathers" Into
the apple.
Before the visit Is over, Josh has

trips, access to mental health and
handlc~pped s~rvices, special .
workshops for parents, a Polley
Council in which parents help make
program decisions, referral and
transportation to needed family
services .
Gallla-Meigs Head Start Director
Chris Zimmer stated that although
Head Start enjoys strong support In
the form of contributions from the
community, voiul)teers are needed
to spend time with the children or.
contribute their time In other ways.
For more information ahout the
Head Start Program, becoming a
volunteer or apply for enrollment in
the ' program, call Head Start
Offices located at Woodland Centers, 'Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy,

f"j992;:~2:1:92:.;;;;;::::::::::::::::=:j

SERVICE
Dependability
Peace of Mind
MARY C.
KEBLER, E.A.
Enrolled to
Practice
Before the
In lema/
R ez'cmue
Sert,ice

TRI-COUNTY
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
818 E. Moin St.
Pomeroy, 0 H.
H&amp;R Blocl&lt; Office' Location

PH . 992-3795

Shoneys BetterThan Ever
Breakfast and Fruit Bar

The Meigs 4·H Pleasure Riders met on Nov.

21 at St. Paul's Lu theran~Church In Pomeroy
With three advisors and eight members tn

attendance.
Rachael Downie. advisor, talked about the
club's trtps to Meredith Manor. the hayrtde at
Hunt's, and the club trtp to the dedication Of

~TTENTION!

names. Pastor MJddle5warth showed slides
on 4·H actlviHes from the talr from 1975 to
1983. - Jell Arnold, Report....

THE UN ROE FAMILY
RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER

The Eight~ Enoush 4-H aub met on Dec. 5
at the Chester United Methodist Church.
Eight members and two advisors attended.
The tnem- ...,bangod ltoinemade Cl!rl&gt;t·
maa gifts. Heather Flnla.w prmented a
demonstration on how to make C'hrlstmas
napkin tinp.

THURS., DEC. 15-8:00 P.M.

the new Ohio 4-H Center In Columbus. '
Committees were apPQlr11ed tor the Christmas party and the niembers exchanged

IN CONCERT

THE HINSONS
AND

Rutland, OH.

TICKETS $5.00

On Sale Now At Middlaport Book
Store and Rutland Bottli Gas in

Shields, at!r!ba Robinson, Clara
Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Hill, Deanle, Janie, . and Autumn,
Tamara Hayman, Robbie Clark,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush. Mrs.
Pearl Norrls, Mr. and Mrs. Wald
Hayman, Trlc1l Wolfe, VIckie
Ables. Scott Sb111k. EUeen Buck,
Emfy Roush, 8lld Mr. and Mrs.
H.enttel Norris and Clarent:le.
Mae Sal'lleBnt,

. 328 VIAND STREET
PT.. PLEASANT. W. VA.

. -

... . -

.

~

�•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 12, 1983

•

Castration of sex offenders raises legal, moral questtons

*MEIGS MARAUDERS
*EASTERN EAGLES
.

•

child molester to a year In custody chemical castration sentence.
and five years of bl·weekly Depo·
Theo Mitchell, at1orney for one of
Provera Injections. He had faced a
the
South Carolina men, Michael
NEW YORK (AP) - Thecrlmels
maximum sentence of eight years.
rape. Tile sentence Is chemical
Last month, a judge in Anderson . Braxton. said he had filed an appeal
c$Stratlon. The Issue Is whether
S.C., gavethreeadmittedrapists the of his client's sentence and called it
judges who mete out such "eye for
choice of 30 years in prison, the "unfair and unconstitutional."
an eye" justice are overstepp!hg
maximum sentence. or castration • Some at1orneys say judges dis· .
penslng Depo·Provera might be
moral and constitutional bounds.
- either physical or chemical setting a dangerous precedent of
Search!hg for a means to effecwhlle on flve years' probation.
tively punish sex offenders, at least
In August, a San Antonio, Texas. shorter prison terms, or none at all .
Others express doubt that the
tl)ree judges have recently ordered
jury sentenced Joseph Frank
rapists and.chlld !llOlesters to take a
Smith, convicted on three counts of drug can "cure" sex offenders.
drug that causes "chemical
burglary with Intent to· commit Laurie Robinson, staff director of
castration."
·
rape, to 10 years' probation and the American Ba r Association's
The di-ug, Depo-Provera, defined hlm$iO,OOObecause he agreed · criminal justice section, noted that
Depo-Provera treated a symptom
creases'the male libido by suwressto take Depo-Provera durtng his
!hg the hormone testosterone, and
probation. He could have received but not a cause.
" U rape is a crime of violence and
patients lose the urge to corruni t
up to 99 years !h prison.
not
a crime of lust, what gocx!.wlll
sexual offenses, according to reSmith, who Is receiving regular
this
do?" she asked. "WUlthesemen
searchers. At regulated doses, It
Injections at the Biosexual Psychothen
go out and commit murder
cuts down men's sexual aggressivehormonal Clinic at Johns Hopkins
because
they can no longer rape?"
ness wlthou t making , them
University Hospital ln Baltimore,
or
the
three South Carolina
Impotent.
says the drug Is working.
rapists,
Braxton
has sald he may opt
nepo.Provera has been voluntar" It totally lowers your sex drive,"
Marl\ Wallace
for
castration,
ily used by sex offenders for a !least · said the :JO.year·old Smith. "You
Vaughn
that
he
would
serve the
15 years on an experimental basis, don't have one, which Is fine with
but In the past year, several judges me. That's what got me Into :xJ.year prison term. ~nd Roscoe
James Brown that he wanted to be
handed down unusually short or trouble."
probated sentences to be seJVed
While logic and law dictate that castrated.
While Brown did not specify
the punishment should flt the crime.
while taking the drug.
In February, amunlclpaljudge!h ~me legal experts question the whether he meant chemical or
Vista, Calif., sentenced a 61-year-old "eye for an eye" nature of the surgical castration, Hal Leslie,
•

By KIM MILLS
A8IOCiated Press Writer

'

*SOUTHERN TORNADOES
.

.PEOPLE"

'

MEIGS
vs.

Trimble - Away - Dec. 13
Belpre - Home- Dec. 16
Alexander - Away - Dec. 20

ltmbtr FDIC

-

Show's guest-grabbing tough business
By FRED IWl1IENBERG
AP Televl!lloo Writer
NEW YORK (AP) -Finding the
right guest for "Nightllne" can be
tough. But so can telling someone
who's just been flattered and cajoled
Into coming to the studio In the
middle of the night that time has run
out and he' sol! lhe show.
In the television business, guest·
dropp!hg Is called "dumping," and
that's something Tara Sonenshlne
and Stephen Lewis have to do.
They're associate producers, also
known as guest~grabbers, for ABC
News' "Nightllne."
Miss Sonenshlne said her job
Included be!hg "a detective to track
down people, a researcher to pore
over flies, a reporter to determine If
the guest will be any good, a
psychologist to convince the guest
that 'Nightllne'' Is more Important
than his dlnner·reservations, and a
travel agent to make sure the guest
gels there."
"And part masochist," added

EASTERN
. vs.

•

fiYIRAC:USE OFFICE
992-6333

RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

Southern - Away - Dec. 16
Watertown - Home - Dec. 20

·OHIO VALLE¥

SOUTHERN
vs.

y--·-o..rl

"W YH Woftt &lt;\ l't.MNr ...

Lewis.

Eastern - Home - Dec. 16
Miller - Away - Dec. 17

Lewis once booked a woman for a
pre-Halloween broadcast who was
going to warn viewers how to check
for doctored goodies. "She brought
in bags of candy and apples, and
prepared a whole presentation," he
said. "It was my first dwnp and It
was awfully cllfficult telling her. She
asked If she could use my office to
call everybody she had told to stay
up. I felt miserable."
At one time or another, science
writer Isaac Aslmov, Undersecretary of State Richard Hoibrooke and
Time magazine managing editor
Ray Cave have stayed up late for
nothing. "Most of them takeltwell,"
sald Lewis. "Most of them come
back." ~ Guest·grabblng Is an Important
arm of TV journalism, a long
tentacle seeking experts who wlll be
articulate and !hterestlng enough to
keep a show moving. Ted Koppel Is a
superb anchor, but he doesn't do
monologues . as ·well as Johnny

Carson.
Earlier this year, a man wired
with explOsives commandeered a
jet to Havana. "Nightllne" wanted
the· woman from the plane who
translated and negotiated for the
hijacker .
Miss Sonenshlne learn€d that she
was a Jamaican resort owner who
was visiting prep schools !h Connecticut with her kids. "I left messages
at every school, but we felt
defeated," Mlss Sonenshine sald.
•'Then she called collect. When she
started telling her story, · It was
·music to my ears. You knew she
Would sing on the air."
The woman was told to rent a car
and drive fast. "What direction is
New York City?" she asked.
"She got here and was a great
guest. Ted loved her," said Miss
Sonensh!ne. "She said the best part
of the hijack!hg was landing In the
Havana Airport because the Jord·
ache jeans thereweresocheap."

Provera as a contraceptive for two
"The legal problems raised by
South Carol!ha state prisons spokes·
man, said, "What Roscoe says decades; one !hjectlon of the drug thesetypesofcasesareenormous.''
doesn't matter because the case Is can prevent pregnancy for three said Leigh Belnen of the New Jersey
months. But the U.S. Food and Drug public defender's office.
under appeal.
Admlnlstratlonhasnvtapproved
Its
George Oleyer, chairman of the
"We're not going to do anything
use
In
this
country
ABA's
Criminal Justice Corrunit·
contraceptive
until we get a court order that
because
tests
Indicate
lt
can
cause
tee,
said
he thought such sentences
specifies what to do," Leslle said
cancer
In
laboratory
antmals.
might
be
unconstitutional.
ThurSilay. "We're treat!hg them as
j)epo-Provera's
only
FDAsancti"The
danger
area here Is that
.
If they're just regular Inmates
oned
uses
are
for
treat!hg
kidney
cruel
and
unusual
punishment may
serving 30years,..
Chemical castration does not cancer and endometriosis - the be !hvolved, as well as violating the
involve "cutting off" anything, abnormal growth of membranes In · right to privacy," he said.
or the approximately 70 men
the female reproductive system.
although Depo-Provera will cause a
However, "once a drug Is ap- currently attending the Hopkins
man's testes to shrink It slows or
stops th'elr functlon!hg. 'rile organs proved for anything, it can be used clinic, nearly half receive Depo- ·
return to normal when the drug Is for any other purpose If the Provera, most on a voluntary basis.
physician thinks that's In the best Only Smith and one other patient
stopped, researchers say.
The drug's side effects In men are' interest of hiS or her patient," said have been ordered by the courts to
similar to female menopause - hot Joe Galligan, a spokesman for receive Depo-Provera and they
may cease the Injections when they
flashes , high blood pressure, weight Upjohn.
But, , he added, Upjohn may and their doctors agree lt'sappropgain, nightmares, fatigue and, In
promote the drug only for the uses rlate, Berlin said .
some cases, circulatory problems.
,
The Hopkins clinic has existed
j)epo-Provera Is the trade name sanctioned by the FDA. . Researchersexperlmentlngwithother formally about 2'h years, although
for medroxyprogesterone acetate,
useS must get special government sexual offenders were treated there
an !hjectable form of the synthetic
permission.
earlier. Since 1979, when the staff
female hormone progestogen. It is
Some attorneys familiar with the began documenting its work, none
made by The Upjohn Co. In
cases In Texas and South Carolina of the 423 participants has corrunit·
Kalamazoo, Mich.
More than 11 million women in !lJ weresuiprlsed by the sentences and ted a violent sex offense such as
foreign ·countries have used Depo- said they doubted they would stand. rape, Berlin said.

as

Courthouse bugged by unwanted residents
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Hamilton County Courthouse Is home
for . a small army of un!hvited
residents that openly flout courtroom protocol.
The courthouse !h downtown
Cincinnati Is a favorite hangout for
hundreds and perhaps thousands of
cockroaches that defy judges to
break out the spray and swatters. ·
"They've been here as long as I
can ·remember," Mlke Campbell,
superintendent of county buildings,
said of the pesty Insects.
Authorities say they've spotted
the creep!hg bugs In nearly every
room on the first through fifth floor.;.
Regular spraying Is only a temporary setback to the creatl!res, which
act as U they have the run of the
building.
"You'll slide open the typewriter
drawer on a desk and there'll be
three roaches on it scattertng," said
Mark Schweikert, c ourt
administrator.
Schwelkert said he flicks the bugs
away, letting them 5crambl~ to the
.closest corner or crevice for
temporary shelter.

Common Pleas Judge Wllllam S.
Mathews said he has a p~lr of
cockroaches that regularly visit his
courtroom. One of them Is about two
inches long.
Through the years, Mathews has
nicknamed the bugs and has even
taken pictures of the uninvited
observers, which he calls "cute little

rascals."
"I have them trained to stand up
when I come In the room," Mathews
joked. "And they'll walk across my
desk and do other entertaining
things while I sit In meditation."
Campbell said officials have been
waging a battle against the bugs.
"We fumigate on a contract basis
four t!mes a year," Campbell said.
Officials blame the jail and jail
kitchen for attracting the bugs In the
building. The jail Is sprayed weekly,
and individual courtrooms get
treated whenever there are com·
plaints, Campbell said.
However, the InSects seem to be
able to stay one step ahead of the
exterminators. When top floors are
sprayed, the Insects retreat to the

basement. When the basement is
sprayed, they climb back to the top
floors.
The worst Infestation was unco.
vered about three years ago when a
wall In a courtroom was torn down.
Thousands of cockroaches were
discovered . Leaking water from the
kitchen above had turned the wall
Into a favorite spOt for the bugs,
which hid In cracks and soundproof
materiaL
"It's like a house burglary," said
Judge Norbert Nadel. "You catch
one and flnd out they did 50 houses. If
you see one roach, there's probably
50 you don 't see."
Schwelkert said the problem Isn't
as bad as it used to be. However,
Campbell doubts the bugs will ever
be elimlnated from the courthouse.
According to Campbell, the only
way to drive the bugs out is to close
the building for several months,
cover it with tarp and do some
heavy-duty fumigatitig. But that
option Would be expensive, he said.
"A couple of hundred thousand
dollars, easy," Campbell said.

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

Ser.vice notes
Col. Robert T. Briggs

III'C1'IUt 111 SIWII a•••

Marine Col. Robert T. Briggs, son
of Sarah J. Briggs of 133 Highland
St .. Rutland, has reported for duty
with the First Marine Aircraft
W!hg, Marine Co@S Air Station,
Futenma, on Okinawa.

·-c:..•-..
...,c..,.
..........
W

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, oliio

Pvt. John E. Sexton ]r.

Paau.,, 011.

Pvt. John E. Sexton Jr., son of
John E. and Kathy Sexton of
Langsville, has arrive() for duty at
Camp Casey, South Korea.
Sexion, a heavy construction
equipment operator with the SeCllnd Infantry Division, was previously assigned at Fort Leonard
Wood, Mo.
His Wife, Lynn, Is the daughter of
Dave Slater of Pomeroy.
The private Is a 1983 graduate of
Meigs High School, Pomeroy.

EWING

UNERll

•
Tornado Schedule

!

Dec. ,, Kyger Creek .. ................. .. Home
Dec. 16, Eastern ....................... ... ..HomE"
Dec. 17 ..... .......... .. ..... ............. .. at Miller
Dec . 21, Logan ........ .......................Home
Dec. 30 ............ .... .......... at Southwestern
Jan . J ..... , ................ ............ . at Wahama
Jan . 6... ...... ..... ............ .... a t Norlh Gallla
J an . 12 ......................... at Hannan Trace
Jan . 14, Ravenswood ..................... Home
Jan . 20, Sout hwestern .................... Home
J an . 27 ...... ..................... at Kyger Creek
Jan . 28, Wahama .................... .. ..... Home
Feb. :! ........................ ,........... at Eastern
Feb. 4 ........ .... ..... ~ ...... .a1 Ce.redo-Kenova
Feb. 10. North Gallla ..................... Home
Feb. 11, Huntington St. Joe ............ Home
Feb. 14.. .. ...... ... ....... ... .. ... at Ravenswood
f:eb. 17, Hannan Trace ...... ... .... ..... Home
HEAD COACH - CARL WOLFE
RESERVE COACH-HOWIE CALDWELL

Eutern S&lt;:hedule

Dfoc.,9, Hannan Trace .................... Away
Dec. 16, Southern ............ .. .. ........ ... Away
Dec. 20, Watertown ............. ....... .. .. Home
Dec. 27. Federal Hockine ............... Home
Dec. 29, HoUday Tournaments .. .... Wahama
Dec.ll, Holiday Tournaments ...... Wahama
Jan. 6, Southwestern ....... .. ......... .. .. Home

Jan. 13, North GalUa ...................... Home
.Tan.14, Wahama ............. .. .. .. ...... .. Home
Jan. 20. Kyger Creek ... .. ............ .... Home
Jan. 24. Ravenswood .. ....... .. ..... ...... Away
Jan. 27, Hannan Trace .... ... .... ........ Home
Jan. 31, Fort Frye, Away .. ..... ..... ... Away
Feb. 3, Southern ..... ......... .. ..... .. ..... Home
Feb. 10, Southwestern .................... Away
Feb. 11, Fort Frye ........... .............. Ho~
Feb. 14. Waterford .. .. ..... ......... ..... .. Away
Feb. 17. North Gallia .. ... .. .. ...... .. .... Away

HEAD COACH - DENNIS EICHINGER
RESERVE COACH-DON EICHINGER

Melp Basketball Scbedllle .

Dec. 6, NelsonvUle-York ...... ............. Home
IJec. 9, Vlnton .... .... ..... ... .......... ........Away
Dec. 13, Trimble .... .. ...... ... ..... ........ .. Away
Dec. 16. Belpre ............. ..... ....... .. .. .. Home
Dec. '!l, Alexander .............. .. ..... ...... Away
Dec. l:l. Warren .. .................. ......... . Horne
Jan. 6, Wellston ...... ... ........... .. ... ... .. .. Away
Jan. 10. Federal Hockln~o~ ............ , .. .. .. Away
Jan.l3. Miller ... .... ... ............. .. ........ Horne
Jan. 17, NelsonvlUe-York ................... Away
Jan . ~. VInton ........ ........... .. ... .. .... .. Home
Jan. 21, Wahama .............................Away
Jan. 24, Trimble ... ........ ................... Horne
Jan. '¥1, Belpre ..... ........ .. .................. AiNay
Jan. 31. Alexander ........................... Horne
Feb. 3, Warren ................................ Away
Feb. 10, WellJton ........................... .. Horne
Feb. 11, Wahama .......................... .. H01ne

Attends funeral

HEAD COACH- GREG DRUMMER
RESERVE COACH - MICK CHILDS

Personal note
, Mrs. Iva Johnson was recent
overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley E. Jotmso') and family.
Mrs. Elmer Bailey was recent
visitor of Mr. and Mrs. GuyS&amp;rgent
and family.
Peggy Mu~phy was Tuesday
I(IS!tor of Mrs. Joseph Evans and
family of Racine.
Summer Giles Is visiting her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clair

GUes. .

'I

.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Shafler and

family of KansaS spent a week with
his parems, Mr. and Mn. Earl
Shaffer and other relatives ..
I

.j

't

.I

�Page--8- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 12, 1983

Monday. December 12,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FBI collected sex gossip
under Hoover's leadership

SOVIET PROPAGANDA- Jack Power, owner
of the Pittsfield General SUire, says the kUling of
another local shopkeeper two months ago · is being
used by the Soviets as propaganda, The victim was of
Russian descent and her alleged killer may have

believed she was a Soviet spy, say officials. The ldUing
is the subject of an article that will appear in the
olllcial newspaper Of the Soviet Union. (AP
Laserphoto).

The documents were released
under aFreedomoflnformationAct
request by historian Athan Theoha·
ris of Marquette University In
Mtlwaukee.
Some of the InformatiOn is heavily
censored and more than 10,COOother
pages have heeD withheld altogether. The FBI cited national
securtty, personal prtvacy or other
grounds for keeping the matertal
under wraps.
..•
Among the matertal that was
released, memos summarize alleged sexual adventures of
Kennedy. The magazine says the
documents refer to Judith Campbell, who has said she Md an affair
with Kennedy wltile he was
president.
Other material provides a hearsay account of a supposed sexual

WASHINGTON (AP) - More
than 7,00! pages of documents from
the confidential files of J·. Edgar
Hoover confirm that the late FBI
director collected gossip on the sex
lives of some of the nation's top
political figures, according to U.S.
News &amp; World Rl&gt;pcrt.
•
Themagazine'sDec.19tssuesays
Hoover kept the documents In his
office durtng the nearly halt a
century in which he headed the FBI.
The files contain many unsubstantiated allegations about the prtvate
lives of former President Kennedy,
Eleanor Roosevelt, former Undersecretary of State Sumner Welles
and others.
The material also detatls how
Hoover drew on the defamatory
information to curry favor with
presidents and other officials.

and her husband, Said Hassan Russian descent
"I think that's a possibility that
Zadeh.
touched
him off but I know it's not
Authorttie~ said after Harvey's
·
indicative
of the way people feel,"
arrest that he may have been
said
Power,
who found Ms. Zelensreactlr!g to the bombing of a
. Marine barracks In Beliut, whi~h ky:sbody minutes after shewas shot
with,a .22 caliber handgun.
o,xurred a day before the Oct. 24
Harvey told pollee he drove to the
slaying. They now decline to
Pittsfield .Shop and Service store
comment on the case.
owned by Zaheh and Ms. Zelensky,
"I worked with him (Harvey), "
said Paul Eldredge of Pittsfield, "he ran inside, shot her and then fled. He
never said anything to me about her was apprehended the same day. •
"Most people feel as though
being a Soviet spy.''
Residents of this town of 400 were something snapped in the guy," said
confused and shocked by . the Power afier discussing the incident
slaying. The 29-year-old Harvey with residents. "It's difficult to feel
was well-liked. Some residents outrage at someone who flipped."
Zadeh said that whE!n the couple
question whether he really believed
~ .. her conveniences tore.
moved
to Pittsfield a year agt&gt; they
that Ms,.;.Zelimsky was a Soviet
. believed it was "the last place
· "He certainly believed atthe lime agent.
tl\at Russian activities were being·
"If there was 1,00J people, he. something like this would happen/ '
And while the prospect of a Soviet
done in (the) store," said Rulland would be the last I would pick to do
County Public Defender Peter such thing," said Eldredge, who story on the killing maybothersome
townspeople, there a,te others who ·
Montagne, who will represent · worked with Harvey at the Central
haven't given Soldatov's story a
Harvey when the case comes to trial
Vermont ou Co.
' early next year.
Ms. Zelensky also was popular second thought.
"He must be hard up for copy,"
Viktor Soldatov, a Sovief journal- and although her father came to the
said assistant town clerk Flora
ist based in New York, said he is United States from the Soviet Union,
wrttlng an article on the incident to her neighbors are convinced she Barton.
show that American~ have an was not a foreign agent
unfounded fear of the Soviet Union.
"I don't think anyone in town
Townspeople ridicule the notion really believed thai," said Kathy
.
.
that Ms. Zelensky. who was born in Gohl.
LAFF-A-DAY
the United States, was a foreign
"I have witnessed many acts of
agent. Many consider Ms. Zelensky
violence and .threats . of violence
·to he the victim of a man who against the Soviet people II! the
"snapped."
United States," Soldatov said In a
" I believe he watched too many telephone , interview trom New
movies on TV.'' Soldatov said .of York. "I believe maybe (this) Is one
Harvey, who has pleaded innocent of thern."
to charges of first-degree murder.
SoIda tov's opinions are dismissed
Soidatov has not visited Vermont,
in Pittsfield.
but has talked with reporters for
"They're just (J'ying to use it to
local newspaperswho have covered make the Soviet people think we're
the murder.
ali ba,d," said Keith Mills, a cook at
''What we're aclually · looklng
" It's just a propaganda ploy,"
the Pittsfield Inn.
for
is someone 25 to 30 years old
said Jack Power, owner· of the
PittSfield residents may be con- .
with
at least 40 years. exPittsfield General Store, located fused, but they take issue with any
perience."
across the street from the Shop and Interpretation that suggests they
Service store run by Ms. Zelensky harbor a grudge against people of
, .,... ... · -~----· ...... -

•1· 1;;2;

10% DISCOUNT

ON CHOCOlATE ORDERS tO
CHURCHES, SCHOOLS AND
ORGANIZATIONS

lNG FINALlY PAY OFF WITH TH-.T

PHONE 992-2156
Dt't.

SP£CIAL DEER, REWARD YOUR EF-

TROPHY ONLY

Ill Court Sl., Pomtroy, Ollio 41i7&amp;1

EACH MOUNT IS GIVEN . THE PER·

TI1E

GIVE You A PRIZE TROPHY THAT

TAXIDERMY

D£ER

AND

OTHER

GAME

and Carney

Jr~O~~~;~]i=~
t

liii1A 10.

SHOP RUTlAND. Ott.

PH . 742 -2226

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair llas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport, Ohio

AU STEEL &amp;

PO~E

BUILDINGS

Sizes Start From 12'Kl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
Br•hoppln1ln your home a~rea you save on
••· the wear and tear on your car and .void
the . hazards of hl1hway and • f~ay·
travelln1. It pays to shop where you lh1el

·

L

Tri-County
General
Welding
'
.

· Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew
PH. 742-2456
ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
White's Hill Road
Rutland, OH.
(1st Rd. left up
New Lima)

"'(

12/9/1 mo. pd.

POMEROY
LANDMARK
- - 614-992-2181

Real Estate General

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds
and
'
Savell
I
-ad
ttuS

Real Estate General

IIALIOI '

MIDDLEPORT - One lloor 2
bedri)Om home, bath, automatic gas heat and very
reasonable. 5% down.

Am. - II

furn~hed.

Near
store and schools in MiddlePOll Only $85,000 and THREE
UNITS i1 Pomerny. Walk to the
stores for just $18,500. Offer
weloomed.
RACINE - One lloor 1 room
home near schools and stores.
Also a 10 room 2!IDly with lots
of remodeling. Worlcshop
24x42 thll would mille a 2nd
home for only $26.500.

Housmg
He,u/quar tt:rs

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
I y, M. East of Pacevllle
On Township Rd. 141
We· Specialize
in Aluminum Only

' wr i~ vou.- own
arld order bY mall with
coupon. Cancel your ad by phcine when VOU get
, results. Money not refundable.

601
E. Main

POMEROY,O..
992-2259

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

985-3561
All Makes

•WasherS •Di1hwashers
•Ranges

PH. 992-3466

1011912 mo. pd

Addr,e·~----------------

GRAVEL
HAULED

Phone ____________________

AL TROMM

742-2328
10/20/t.Ln.

• 21

NEW LISTING - Racine approximatiey 3 acre lot with
an utilities Septic, electric, gas,
water. Approximately 230' road
frontage on St. Rll24.1deal for
mot;le home or building site.
$10,500.00

I )Wanted
I )For Sate

( ) Announcement
f ' For Rent

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

I
I
I

1
-_
- -_
-20. 9
_,
_
_-

PRICE REDUCED - New
Uma Road - Owner has
substanbally reduced the prica
on this b1~evel home. A 4 ·
bedroom home with luxury
items, such as central vacuum,
intercom system, buit-in AMFM 8 track. family room with
firepl~ on approximatly 47
acres with woodshed, large
barn, chicken house. Th~ is a
real buy lor yoti, nyou want
space and comfort

2
--_
-22. 1
_._
_
_-

23.-----24.------

••5.

6.
8.
9. _ _ _ __

tO.

n . _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ _ __
13.

REALTORS

1A.

G.I99HI91

15.
16•

Henly E. Cleland, Jr.

.leln Tru111U !149-2660

· Dottlt Ttlnll' 992-5692
, Jo Hill 915-44&amp;6

the Rood
FULL OR PART-TIME
Tuition Assiston&lt;e AVIIIabfe
Job Ptacom111t Assistance

28.
29. _....___,_ _

32. _____ I
32.=====
34.

35, - , . . - - - - - - -

Mall This CGupon wltll Rtmlftlnce

I

I
I
I

I

AW L--~---~~~~~~--~--.J
Tilt DaUy 5111111111

111 Courtlt.

(

·

Unormploy_ed Or laid 0111 ·

Trdin on

2&lt;1. _ _....,;._ __
71. _ _ _...;,.._

30. _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ _ __

Train To Drive
Tractor Trailers

TRACTOR TRAILER

25. _ _ _ __

7.

Business
, Opportunity

Man
&amp;
Women
Learn to Drive .4

1. - - ' - - - - - - - -

2.
3.

I

I

'Hauling

949-2293
Racine, OH.

WMkday or Wttbncf lroinlnc
KHtl youo prollftt loll •hllo
you train. Approved for tbo
trainioc of Vottrans.
ATTEND FREE SEMINAR
TuO.dov. o ... u. 1813
3:30p.m: • 7 :30p.m.
Moigolnn

121Yr loot Moln

,........,,ohio

ITA Sdloof -ion's Office
114 Church St.

Jaclsoo, Ollio 4!140

ITA Scllooi I. T. SIT£

445 Slade In ROlli
Jlfltttoo, Ollio 43112

...t

118 IJ.O,_tlll7·1

Chester, OH. .
Open Wed .. Fri .. Sat. Niles
7:30 to 10:00
Available for private parties Mon .. Tues., Thurs.
Niles, Sat. or Sun. Afternoon.
THANKSGIVING PARTY
FRI., NOV. 18
CHRISTMAS PARTY
FRI., DEC. 16
PH. 985-3929
or 985-9996
• 11-14-1 mo.

Discover Engage-A-Car, the
modem answer to 'soaring
new car prices! Drive thevehicfe of your choice ... any
make and model. No down
payment Lower . monthly
payments. Read all about it.
Send for Free Booklet L-16.
Bob Blackston, an authorized independent EngageA-Car Broker. Box 326, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster information7
Call 614-992-6737

DAnY PICK UP SERVICE
BY·
.r U.P.S. - PUROLATOR ~

"~DOOR TO DOOR i
-t,o~

P•RCEl PRIORITY SHIPMENTS
FOR lESS IH.N U. S. MAll
SAVE 10% 10 50% •No IIORE

COT &amp;- WRAPPED

$5.00 EXTRA

FOR SKINNING
PH. 949-2734
Maplewood Lake

BRING 'YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:

POMEROY
PARCEL SERVICE
618 Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh."'
~"'"'~located in H&amp;R "o"~
.,.o Block Buildina

_······-·"-'•'
.....................
........ . . .
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing mechine repair, p•rta. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner; one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Jhl

lli 1

STRIP
COAL

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

$3QOO
PH.

992-2280
2-23-tfc

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

Sandlin's Pool Room. 92
Olive St .. Gallipolis, Ot)io.

Open daily

2 :OOPM til

Midnight.

Gun shoOt Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p .m. Factory choked guns
only . .
Vacancy: Julia's Personal
Home. Formerly
Mercer Canvalesence
Home. 1 8 years experience.

Clifton.
5873.

w. V.

304 -773-

Racine Gun ChJb dues are
due. 825.00. Must be paid

byJon.1.19B4.

4
Chest

of

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route I
·
· Long Bottom,. OH. 45743
· 985·4193 or 992·3067
12-20-tfc

RACINE
FIRE DEPT_
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAT_ NIGHT

Factory Choke
Shotguns
Only

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
''Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free siding estimatesA 949-2801 or

949-28o0

No Sunday Calls

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-Extensive
Remodel inc
Insurance Work
Custo.m Pole Bides.
&amp; Garaces
Roolinc Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
16 Vearo hperience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tlc

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
'Lowest Rates
Around
'Dump Truck
Service

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328 4-21 -Hc

Roger Hysell

GARAGE
Rt. 124,Pomeror

O~lo

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

YOUNG'S

PROFESSIONAL

SERVICE
-Addons end remodeling
- Roofing end gut1er work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and ektctric1l
' work
~Free Eatimatea)

REDUCED WINTER RATES

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

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

-Dows
-Backhou
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water

FLOOR SANDING
and REFINISHING
Keep That Natural
Look In Your Homl).

CALL

378-6349
11-17 I mo.
Bring This Coupon In

For 10% Off
Any Service
Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday

-Sower
-GIS lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH, 992-2725

12 12· 1 )nO.· pd ,

BOGGS
SALES &amp; S£RVICE
U. S..RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hoc ·
hrm Equip11ent
Dealer ·
Farm Equipment
Parll &amp; Service
J-3-rlc

USED
APPLIANCES·
Washers, Dryers

Ranges. Refriprators
Air Conditioners

PH. 992·5682

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

or 992~7121

742·2362

3-24-tlc .

BISSELL FLOORS

CARPENTER

Route 4, Pa1111roy

MILLS'
ELECTRIC
RESIDENTIAL~New

and re-wiring
COMMERCIAL &amp;
INDUSTRIAL
All Work Guaranteed

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

B A BEAUTY SHOP

"Holiday Speciati•
Shampoo - Haircut
Blow Dry

'7.00
Call 949· 2320

Ask for Tina Pierce

Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.

""·

taro. 446-3169, 3rd. Ill
OliVe St .• Gallipolia. Oh .
Used mobile. homes end
truck campers. Call 446-

0176 .
Wanted to lease tObacco

poundego for 1983. Call
448· 7838 alter 6PM.
Indian Artifacts all kinds. Air
impact wrenches. FibergiiiSi
baas boat B. motor, 1 &amp;-18ft.
Submersible pump. Call

448-4298.
Wanted to buy. New, uaed 8a
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete househo'lda. Also complete Aucti oneering service. Cell Oaby

A. Mortln 614-992 -6370.
Buying daily gold. silver
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware,. qld coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave.

Middleport. oh . 614-9923476.
Raw For Buyer. Beef 8t Dear
Hides·Oinseng, . Trapping
Supplies. George Buckley,

THE

Cigarette Distributorship .
Instant _cash flowl We are a
Bonded national firm expanding into the ar,a . If you
are seeking a aecure buaine.. opportulnty .' We pro vide all retail locations and
all necessary training. Full or
'Part time. Investment from
$2.000 . 00. Winston -

Salam- Kools. 1-800-2412268.
Stripping Furni1ure &amp; Metal.
Instant cUh flow I First· time
in thil area. OUr expert staff
has many years of expe·
rience Q~nd has set up restpration canters ~hrou'ghout
~he , U.S . and Europe. We
furni~hed equipment. chemicals, supplies, and an exten sive treining.course at one of
our' successful centers nearest you . Total · coa.t J

$32,500.00 'Bonded' Call
Toll Free; 1800) ' 241 -2269
or write for moro info: U .S.

Stripping,

Cigarette or VIDEO Distributorship. RoUtes available .
We provide rnoney for ek.·
pension, all locations, train ing &amp; e BONDED staff to
assist you in, setting up your
own part or full time business. From $3,600.00.
Winston-Salem-Kools. 1-

pump . Cetl614-446-4298.

11

GA 30339.

800-241-2268 .

Help Wanted

Laundrymat and Business
· building for sale . Apapi'oved
AVON There are 2 ways to sewage System. In TUppers make moiley with AVON. plains, Oh. 614 -667- 3551.
Call for information. Call

446-3358 ,
Telephone Supervisor pantime (Jan.-Apr.) to oversee
home telephone canvassers.
No aelling. Send name,
address. phone and telephone experience to Mrs.
Jester, P.Q. bok. 32462,
Columbus, Oh 43232 by
December 16th.

Lincoln Hilt,

10· wee.k old puppy . 3!14675-7322.
1 Y2 yrs. old, half Buaett and
half Beagle. Phone · 304-

773-6540.

6

Lost and Found

LOST: Brown 8a white beagle lost in the vicinity of
Sand Hill Cemetery around

H.S.

16141

FOUND- black retriever
puppy, 3 months old. Cut

tail. Colt 992-3669.
Lost nylon brownish trifold
wallet in or around K-Mart or
Heck a. Large sum of money.
No 10. Desperately needed.
Reward. 614-992-3822.

22 Money to Loan
HOME

Verd Sale

------ -Pt -Pieasirit"---&amp;Vicinity
3 Family Garage Sale. Tues.
and Wed., Dec . 13th and
14th. 9-7. New toys and
clothes, lots of misc. Heated
garage. Gallipolis Fe;ry.
across from Stauffer.

8

Public Sale
8t Auction

Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg., Camden St.

614-367-7101.
Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm, Antique &amp;. liquidation aalea.
Licensed'&amp;. bonded in Ohio &amp;

WVe. 304-773-67B6 or
304-773,9186.
A~ction

every Fri. night at
the
Hertford Communi~
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandl• every week .
Consigments of new and
u•d merchandiae always
welcome. Richard Reynolds

Auctioneer. 304-2753089.
. ,.,.t.Alto auction ovorv Sat.
r\ight. 6 p.m. Stortlng

Jackson Geneal Hospital,
Ripley, W. Va . has an
opening for a temporary
medical technologist, .N .T.
or Medical laboratory Technician, M.L.T . Hospital
offers an organized atmosphere thttt maintains present
working conditions. Interested persons may contact
Personnel Depanment M'onltay thru Friday between a

until after Chrlatm11. Emma
Belt Auctioneer. 30C-C28·

Athens, 1-800-341-6664

23

Library Assistant. Mason
County ~ublic Library. Crea·
tive person to continuaexpand children's programming; provide reader
service; support general library policies. Work full time
with one evening and rotat·
ing Saturdays. Undergradu·
ate degree preferable- Expe·
rtence with children
required. Artistic ability required. Salary negotiable.
Send lener of application 10:
Maaon County Public Library, Sharon M. Stone, 6th
and Viand Streets. Point

Pfeasent. WV 26550 . Appli·
17. 1983.
Baby sitter in my
M~H'i. thru Fri. Cays.
BoA P.9 in care
Register, 200 Main

home.
Inquire
Pt . Pl.
St . Pt.

housoholdt. Write M.D .
Mitior, Rt. 4; Pomeroy, Oh
46789 or 814-9112-7780.
Turn your guns Jnto Chrllt·

mu money. Coli 61C-9C9·
. 24B&amp;.

prices·regular tunings discounts to Senior Citizens.
Churches&amp;. schools. Ward's

1977 Trailer with lot for

salo . Call 614-266-6618. ·
1972 mobile home with 1 Y2
acres and outbuilding. Call

446-0063.
2 bdr . trailer, partially furnished, lots of closet end
kitchen cabinet space. good
cond. Shown by appointment . only $2.100 . Call
6.1 4-446· 3007 between

10AM-7PM .
4 bdr, ' s 14JII:86, plus

12JII:~0

room. central air, storage
building, porch &amp; awning,
corner lot, Quail Creek.
French City Brokerag~ Ser-

vice. 446-9340.
ATIENTION-Would you like
to invest your money in a
new Holly Park ·for the price
of a used home. This home is
not new but you can't tell by
looking. All ready set up in e
nice park at Gallipolis. A·
12x65 Holly Park with 5~~t10
tip out in living room. Has a
50 ft. patio cover, 2 sets of
steps, nice furnishings, central a.c., wa·sher and dryer,
skirted~. ready to 9ccupy. All
of this for $12.900 . Finarrcing available, low down
payment. low monthly ·pay ment. ftor information call

614-992-7034 or 61 4 - ~92 6284. ,.
ATTENTION-Do you need to
move into a nice mobile
home without the hassle -nf
set·up. We have a 1979
Freedom 14~~t70 deluk.
model on a lot in Country
Mobile Home Perk. This
home has a front diningroom
with wooden bow windpw,
a circular kitchen with lots of
cabinets. 2 bedrooms. large
luKury bath with a gar'den
tub. Price of $12.500 . in·
eludes metal building, patio
cover. steps end washer end
dryer. everything in tip· top
condi!ion -and ready to live .
in. For information call614·

992-7034 or 614-9926284.
1977 Schult

1 4x70,

48k 1 00 lot, underpinn&amp;d
porch with awning, · 3
bedrms . 1 h bath, new
carpet. storage bui'ld. Call

992-7467 or 742 -3154.
1976 14x70 trailer. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, large kitchen,

31

Homes for Sale

4 bdr. ranch hom~. large LR .
full basament , with garage.
wood burner includect. city
schools, 2 miles from town .

810.000. 304-773-5023 .
1981 14x70, Shultz limited
mobile home, microwave,
dishwasher, central air, un·
derpenning, three bed ·
rooms, 1% baths; ek.cellant
condition, $15,500 . Call

12

304-675-6049 altar 5 p.m.

3 bdr. all brick ranch . Full
basement attached 2 car
garage; .8 acres, close to
hospital. Call 446· 7838 af.
tar 5PM.
Owner 'Must SBII Home!
Unb81ieveble price I Law utilities! buy it now I Middleport.

Cat1614·992-6941 .
Ranch on 6 acres, beautiful
setting with 1all pines
around the house. Spacious
livingroom which overlooks
the pond. 4 bedrooms. utility rOom and kitchen has a
bUilt-in range . Assume paymanta with a small down

payment. $58,900.
446-3175.

Pl. WV.

Coli

Situations
Wanted

3 BR, new iJrick home, land
contract. 446-0722.

Private rest home for elderly,
handicapped, DA, Crown

LOcated in Syracuse-Near
school &amp;. swimming poOl. 3
bedroom situated on one ·
third acre lot. Price reduced
$23.600. or will rent for

City area . Cali 614-2566608.
Will care for the elderly in my
home. Lots of references.
Men or women. Call 667-

3402.
Will care for elderly person in
our home. LPN care given.
16 years eJ~~:perierice.Call

$240 mo. 304-855, 3934.
---------tc1 mila above Chestaf on
SR.7. Brick home on 1·ecre
lot 6 year old quality built
home. Large living room
with fireplace. 4 bedrooms,
dining room, 2 baths. Price$66.000. 20 minutes from

614·992· 7314.

8etpra. 304-773-5421 or
304· 773-6319.

framing, remodeling, roof·
ing, siding, concrete work,

6 rooms and bath in Coun -

etc. Call
1688.

Bud,

304-468-

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER tnaurance: Co. has offered
Hrvicea for fire insurance
coverage in Gallia County
for almost a can1ury. Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Conoct Hoify Plt~hlord. egont.

•

ond dtpOO\dOb)o. Celt 448·
3169 between 9 ond 6.
Carpentry work remodeling,

pointing Ill roofing . Can
fumiehed reference•. expe-

rienced. Cell 446-2787.
Ught dozer work • Ianda·
caplng. Kotallc Lendacap-

lng. Coli 448-3100.

'69 Schuhz mobile home.
central air, $3,800-00 as is.

304-676-6448 or 304-895 3472.
14x70 Schultz two bed rOoms, bath and 34, ready to
move into. K&amp;.K Mobile
Home Park.

1970 Hotly Park. 12.&amp;6.
$6,500. or beat.reesoneble
offer. Must sell. 304-675-

362B.

33

Farms for Sale

68 acres on Bulaville-Porter
Co . Ad . 3 . Old farm house
for sale by owner. asking
$55,000. Interested party
please call 446·7247 or

513-293-7270 .
77 acre farm and 83 acre
farm . Will sell ••parate or
together. 1,250 lb. tobacco
base, dr:lled well. 2 car
garagli, some timber &amp;.
minerals. Mercerville area .

Niday Rd. Call 614-659-

246o .

35 Lo1s &amp; Acreage

f66,000. 304-676 -6047 .

36 acres at Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd. Owner financirig available. Call446 · 8221
after 6 weekdays.

Tri·level. excellent condition. 166.000, 8'112 assumable loan, 111,000 down.

36 Acres. h mile ·from
hospital. Farm land or deval·
opment, level. $37, 500 .

Lincoln Avenue. 7 years old.

13

USED MOBILE HOI)oiE .
PHONE 304-576-2711 .

try. 614-742-2642.
3 bedroom. largo lot. 2606

Generel Hauling and Tra1h
removal Service. Reliable

BRASS old

Lower

$6900. Calf 446-0176.

3 bdr., Bath. Eat-in kitchen.
Oiningroom. Carpet. Large . Mobile Home Moving, Li lot. Large basement, car- censed and Insured . Free
port. Only $14.900. last Estimates $100 . per hoOkhouse away from River on up minimum. Phone 304Henderson St.. Henderson. 576-271 1 or 576-2866 .
WV. Phone number in yard.

9

BEDS·IRON,

PIANO TUNING

1976. 12~70. total electric:,
3 BR, 2 baths. ex. cond.

Employer.

8177. WVa.llc. No. C29·BC.

Furniture, gold, all\ler dol·
lara, wood Ice boxes, ltone
jars, antiqUes. etc. Comptete

Professional
Services

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL- .
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
C. MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35. PHONE 446-7274 .

Call 446·0276.

18 Wanted to Do

Want&amp;Q To Buy

FIXED

2

.m. and 4 p.m. at 304-3722731. Equal Opportunity

IHaon. No more
coneignmantl will be taken ·Phone 448·1427.
Chriatma•

LOANS

RATES 12V2% purchase Qr
refinance, 11 'I•% adjustable
rate. Leader Mortgage,

Keyboard. 304' 675-3824 .

LABORATORY

cation deadline: December

7

1775 Tho E•-

Indian artifacts, Air impact
wrenches. Fiberglass bass
boat 16-16 ft., Submersible

rleton School. 992-6683 . .

Puppies to good home . .,6
weeks old. Mother is regiaten;td basset ho.und, father
unknown. 614·992-3006
after 4 p.m. in Middleport.

O~I~O~.fLEL~V

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people you knoW. and N6T
io Mild money through the
rneil until yo~ have irwesti·
gated the offering.
'

change, .S uit• 600. Atlanta,

Male dog, 6 month&amp; old, %
sheph&amp;Jd, % collie. To good
.

TRI-STATE · MOBILE
HOMES . USED , CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
PUB· ' ~i-~~-7 UR PRICES CALL

At. 2, Athans, Oh. Phone
814-664-4761. 1-9 Dally.

Account Clerk I, Bookkeeping and other clerical duties.
Immediate opening. Ca -

6:30 P_M_

12 Gauge

Wantad to buy uaed coal &amp;:
Wood heaters. Swain Furnl·

drawers, poor
condition. Call 446-9301.

1 23

Bu1lne11
Opportunity

448-3872

3087 altar SPM.

home.

GUN SHOOT

for Sale
21

BHI Gene John1on

Good reliable baby sitter
needed BAM to 4PM weekdays. Ref. reiq. Call 446·

Giveaway

Pomeroy, Oh.

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof"
ing - Siding - Concr.ete
Palios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodelin&amp; - Custom Pole
Barns.

32 Mobile Homes

446-0294.

Kyger Croak
446-4736.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

.,_

Care

4-5-tlc

DEER
PROCESSED
$2500

DEL1·VERY ~.t

11 12/lfn

PARTS and SERVICE

3-11 -tic

NEW LISTING - Have you
been lookilg for a mini farm
that is affordable&gt; This approximately 4 acre property has a
nice 3 beroom house wrth full
basement 2 garages, a barn,
corn crib, storage hed, nice
garden space. Well maintained
property for on~ $23,500.00.

•Excavating
•ponds
•septic Tanks

.•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freez,rs

Name·~·----------~------

NEW LISTING -A home with
llairt In town- con~enienl Nice
3 beroom home, 2 baths, 2
l11eplaces, one wrth insert
flllli~ room, gas I.a. heat wrth
woodoorner add on. Nice
k~chen with bui~·in units.
garage, full ba5e111ent on 2lots.
Nica back yard. $64,900.00.

M.l.
CONTRACT! NG
RECAMATION

MINE

742-2789 or
742-2515

A(k 13~ ' ~

273·3407

10-6-tlc

1-1 3-tfc

$289 95
7327

DEPOSITORY

12/1/ 1 mo. pd.

Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

10112/2 ~·· pd

STARTING AT

WOODS - In the country
living and hufl(in&amp; Build your
own hom~

'

~ATTENTION IT DESERVES TO

nYout Place or Mine~'

MICROWAVE
OVENS

POMEROY - Hoi water heat
dining room, mod. IVtthen with
range, refrigerator, full basement and storm 'windows.
Mking $39,COO.

(

FORTS WITH A Q!JAL1T't', l1FE ·UKE "'
SHOULDER MOUN'T AT OUR STUDIO. P

54 Misc. Merchandise

1 Mile Off Rt. 7
On St. Rt 143

PARCEL SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

We poy cooh for lite modot
cl••n uMd car1.
Jim Mink Chov.- Otd• Inc.

SAVE

Pomeroy, Oh.

SKATE-A-WAY

BUYING

· 1 mile below 2nd Ka~er
Entrance at 102 Carney
Dr., Corner of .St. Rt. 2

11215. 12. 19. 31c

MINERSVIllE - Large horne
w~h furnace, bath. 3bedrooms
and 4.77 acres. $28,000 and
s~ room frame with balf\
natural gas heat for on~
$6,500.
.

'

I

378-6165

RUTlAND - 6 homes available her~ One and two stories.
$12,500 up. Some modern.

was on duty S..c~q morning wllen he
reported 111 anunonla leak to llle lire departrnenl. He

Mason, WV

[304) 773-5710 - 773-5118

REMEMBER,
TRUST YOUR

and handling . Send to: 13Z·Quilt Oriai••
Alico Broob Crafts
13Udd a Block Quilts
Reador Mail
129-Quicll 'n' U., Tlllllfers
1211-(IIVIIapt Plkflwcwt Quills
The Daily Sentinel
126-Thriftr Crattr Flolnrs
iloa 163, Old Che!sea Sta., Now 125-Patal Quilll
YO!ll, NY 10113. Print NIIIHI,
121·P~Iolr Show.Oib
AddiiSl, Zip, Plllern Numbol. . 1111-CIGchtt with Sq....
YOUR NEXT CRAfT is in our NEW
117-Eay Art ot lliltflaptint
1984 NEEOLECRAFICAIALOG
114-C.O.plela Af&amp;Mns
Over I 70 vaned designs. 3 free
112·Prill Altflans
patterns. Send $1.50.
lli·EaJ Art aUiairpin Clochlt
All CRAFT IIOOICS..$2.00 each
13Sow+Knk (lillie tlslut Incl)
All lloab and Clllklt-add 50$ .. 107-lnstant Sowiftl
·
oac:h for pos~~p ana h.,dfina.
106-insllnt Fosll""135-Dalb &amp; Clalhos On Parade
104-lnstanl lhner
103-15 Qullb far Today
134-14 Quick Machint Quilb
13Hash1011 lforno Quiftina

HOTPOINT

3-7clf

CHRISTMAS
TREES
FOR SALE ·

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

Rt. 33

East Main St,
Pomero OH.

'"-

Truck Ch ass1s 65.852 miles.
We resRrvA rhe: nght to accept
or reJP,Ct any or all b1ds . Mad
b1ds to John Sm11h of Reedsr
v1 lle: Oh. Call 378-63 5.8 or

PHONE JIM CLIFFORD

992-7201

51~

"-~

SEAL£0 BIDS
Par sale 19 71 Dodg e

WORK

BONO!D.&amp; WORK .GUU!NIEEO

DEER HIDES, BEEF
HIDES, RAW FUR,
GINSENG &amp; OTHER
ROOTS

........
_
..........
.....
··-

Public Notice

•CONCR~TE

Jo.,£ NOW IN

Radio Dispatched

HO ' Mon.-F;;,
8:00 to 5o00

OHIO VALLEY
BULK FOOD

....:::::
...........

NEW LISTING - Exc~lent 3
bedroom older home with 2\?
baths. Hot water heat,
carpeting

· ware._,

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•UMESTPNE
•W~ TEA, GAS and
SEWER liNES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
•LANd' CLEARING

t:lnul/1,.,1 llffJI'II ""'"' rl!tt
Jullntl'/n-lrll•l•hutlf! ...tm.HJI'"• -·

Looks So Fabulous!

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

•DOZER

---.;...

uwe Want And, Appreciate Your Business"··
Free Estimates
.
.

ON

NEW LISTING - I floor, 3
bedroom ranch with bath, new
FA lurnance, insulated and on
large level lot on 124 below
Middleport

Tell &amp;he building before the downtown lltnlcture
exploded &amp;haltering windows and brlclrs. Mlraculowlly, no oae wuln,lured. (AJ' l•serphoCo).

VPoint
• Mason
Auto Glass

CALL TODAY FOR CURRENT PRICES

Phone
1-(614)-992·332S

Melvin Machan,

~

LAST FOR YEARS AND YEARS.

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 [.2nd 51.

MIRACULOUS ESCAPE -

....

When You Need Glass You 'Need Us ... We Can .Handle
Your Every Glass Need!

Dr Write Dlilly Sentilld Cllssifild

_EAFORD(B

· m.......,111ce 111pervllor lor &amp;he Borden's lee Cream

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

WHE.N THE MANY HOURS Of HUNT·

You'll love the fabulous look of
this easy-crochet top~
Crochet this texture-stnped
jacket with lacr pineapple
borders from the neck down. all
i~ one piece of 3-ply baby yarn. '
It's a real beauty' Pattern 7327:
Misses Si~es 8-10: 12-14 incl.
$2.50 lor each pattern. Add
501 each pattern for .postage

9

----------r----------r-------....;---r---------ii=;;:~~~~~~~d

Sunday's Ad
Should Have Read

u.s.

The Daily Sentinei-Page--9

Business Services·

liaison between President Roosevelt' s wlte Eleanor and Anny Sgt.
JoSeph P. Lash. The magazine says
the documents show that President
Roosevelt dismembered the Army's CoUnter-Intelligence Corps In
1943 after It allegedly spied on Mrs.
Roosevelt's sex lite.

. Vermont ·shopkeeper's death
sparks interest from USSR
PriTSFIELD. Vt. (APl - A
· Violent death Is a rare occurrence in
this central Vermont town. which is
. so small that it doesn't even h~ve a
police station.
But the · killing of a local
shopkeeper has not only made front
·pages in Vermont, it is now the
· subject · of a story planned for
Izvestia, the Soviet Union's official
government newspaper.
. Soviet interest in the case peaked
· after local newspapers reported
. that William Harvey, the man
·arrested for the slaying of 31-yearoid Tania Zelensky, who is of
RuSsian descent, thought she was
, conducting espionage activities in

Pomeroy-Middlepor1, Ohio

Phone 304·875- 1529 alter
6 p.m:
By owner, 1211 Main. Six
room brick, . basement, fir·
place, new furnace . Re-

duced .to 145,000. 304878-2381.

"LOT"

269

Lincoln

Hill .

614-992-3297 . .

41

Houses for Rent

3 mlfeo from Chioltend. Fla.,
on good road-- 1A acre fenced
lot, 12K80 mobile home
with 12x24 addition. Large
screened back porch, patio,
and adjoining laundry build·
ing. Metal . Utility building
with ceme,nt floor. lnex·
heusteble water aupply. Livingroom, dlnnlngroom, two
bedrooma, kttchen and bath.

All

completely rumiohed.

Gas furnace and air condi·
tloning. Priced tOr quick

sate. UO,OOO. Write or cell,
wRI finance part- lowell
Wingett, Rt. 2·Bo• 4116,

Chltllond, Fla . 32828. 180C·C83-C078 .

Two •tory house. 4 bdr .,

f260 per mo . $250 dop .
raq. Cell 446-4222. 9:30·
5:00.
.

e

t276 plus utilities. Avail,
now, 2 bdr ., LR. new kit., 8e
bath. large fenced yard,
new carpet, 666 or 6158 3rd.
A\le., GallipoliJ, Call '"6-

2467 or 448-0332.
Cabin on Raccoon Creek 2
bdr., atove &amp; refrigerator.
large fireplace $236 mo ..
leaae required. Call 446-

0083 or 446-0796 .

�10--T.he Daily Sentinel

.Pas•
41

Hou1a1 for Rant

54 Ml1c. Merchandl1e

They'll Do It Every Time

2 bdr. hou• on St. Rt. 7 .
Coil 814-ZII-8820 .

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered. 12"-22 .. atocked

3 bdr. houM, 1YJ bath, CION
to ahopping pl1u and hoapl·
tel. no pete, depoalt &amp; ref.
required . Coil 814- 245 1138.

in yard . HEAP vender ,
prompt dollvory. 814-2688248.

New. unfurn., 2 bedroom
twln·•ngle . lnclud .. equipt.
kitchen, utility. cerport,
.-torage room, lerge lot with
prden epa~. centr1l elr.
ties. C1U 446-A477 or 446·
3888 .

Building material•
black, brick. aewer pipea,
windowt , linteh , etc .
Cleude Wintera, Rio Gl'lnde,

266-6689.

persona. ·1dult1 only deposit
ref. required. Coli 448-

Firewood slabs for sele. 116

a

In town 3 or 4 bdr. houHon

ei rewood delivered . 136

Olive St., GeUipolia.
One bdr. houM in Thurman
•126 mo. 3 bdr. completely
remodeled farm houH, with
garden space $226 ma.
Both ret. &amp; dap . Call 614-

pickup load. 10 loods f300 .
Coli 614-268-1427.

1--------=---..,.-----------1
44

246-6204 .

51

Apartment
for Rent

3 bdr. home. 2 baths · in

Gallipolis. 1360 mo .. depotit required. Cell after ~ .

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

446-0181 .

446-0338 .
3 bedroom home, modern

kitchen. 1 Y.:z baths, insu·
lated, in Middleport. $250 .

Furnished apts. 1 -4 rm. &amp;
bath up. Clean, no pets,
adults only. Ref . raq . Call

month. 614-992-2676 .

446-1519.

2 bedroom· house, unfur·
niahed. close to General
Hanlnger Park in Middleport. 614-992-3467.

3 or 4 room unfurnithed apt.
utilities paid, adults only, no
pets. Call 446-3437.

2 bedroom house, garage,
unfurniahed. Salam St. in
Rutland. ·8176 . fl'Onth . 614-

Completely furn ished ,
newly decorated, 3 rooms
and beth. 468 Second Ave ..
adults, $190 mo. plus d~p ­

742-2378 .

ooit . Call 614-446-2236 or
6 t 4-446 -2681 .

3 Bedroom houae, b~ yard.
carport, quiet atreet. G1 50
mo. Reference requir.-.d.
742-2480.

1 Big furnished room, eff.
apt . with beth in Rio Grande.
All utilities paid. 446 -0157.

2 bedrooms, . living room.
kitchen, bath, 1v room, "h
basement. Good lcoation.
Aher 5 p . m ., 304-675 -

JACKSON ESTATE
APARTMENTS (Equal

Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms, rent
starting at 8157 for one
bedroom and 1193 p.e r
month for two bedroom,
with 8200 deposit located
near Foodlend end Spring
Valley PlaZa. pool and TV
an~. Call 446-2746 or leave
message.

4265 .

6 room home. bend area.
basement, nice lot. $1 76 .
month . 304 - 675 - 5640 .
o. 882 ·

Very nice 3 bedroom home
whh Iota of extras . Country
kitchen, family room. 2
fireplaces. 2 baths, base-

$399. bunk bed1 complete
with bunkiea $199, 2 piece
antron livingroom tultel
8199, antron recliner~ ess.
other reclinert e8o. maple
dinette sets *179, box
springs 81 mettre11 twin or
full t100 1et reguJar.firm
$120. maple dinette chaira
a36. w11h atandt 134.
maple rockera a59, 7 piece
chrome dinette set •149. 5
piece dinene n1 199, used
bedroom suites, refrigerators. ranges, chelt, dre11era.
wringer washers, TV's, dryers. &amp; shoea. Call 446·
3169 .

3 bedroom duplex. full base·
ment. nice yard, 3 room
unfurnithed apartment. utilitlas paid, 304- 676 ~ 3030 or
304-676-3431 .

3 bedroom apt. St. R1. 141,
city achool district. Call
446-4940 after 6PM .

1 bdr. unfurnished apt., no
pets. call 814 -446-3617 .
1· bd•. apt. Call 446-0390 .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

BR Apt ., S129 mo.
Utilities partially furnished ,
kitchen furnished . 676·

2

6104.

12x80 2 bdr. modern fur niahed trailer, convenient
location. Upper River Rd .
depoel1 req . Call 614 -446-

Attic Apanment. furnished ,
S175 utilitiAs pd. Man only.
Share bath . 919 2nd Ave.,
Gallipolis. 446-4418 after 7

8668 .

p.m.

Nlcly fumi1had modern mo·
bile home, in city. 1 or 2

Furnished Apt ., 1 BR. $235,
utll&gt;tios pd . Adults. 243

aduho only. Call 446 -0338.

or

trees. Large blue sprUce &amp;:
lerge scotch pine. All area
churche1 discount. Acro11
from Highway Oil on Eaatern
Ave., Gellipolie. ~od blesa
you .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sofa. chair. rocker, otto·
man, 3 tables, rextra heavy
by Frontier). eaa&amp;. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $276.
Sofaa and chairs priced from
1286. to 1896. Tebles, t45
end up to e126 . Hide-a bodo. $440.

Used

$626. , Recliners, 8175. to
1376., Lampl from $28. to
t76.5 pc. dinette• from
t99 .. to 435. 7 pc . f189

up to t396.

a1 10.

Boby beds,

J -20

Ditch

Witch

trencher Fredericktown,
Ohio . Coli 1-814-6947842 .

Firewood 136 PU load. 5
load• 8160 . 10 loodot2110.

Hardwood, delivered. Call

and up to

614-256-8836 ofter 6PM .

27' mens1 0 speed bike Free
Spirit $76. Call 446-1 642.
txt. 380, 8 -4:30.

House coal for sale. Pickup
or doliverod. Catl446-9200,
after 4 call 446-7650.

f42. 6 dr. choots. f54 . Bad

frames , 120.and 126 .• 10
gun · Gun cabinets, $360 .
Gas or electric rangea $375.
Baby manreuaa. e25 &amp;
$36, bed frames 120. 125,
Sa 130, king frame 160.
Good selection of bedroom
IUitel. cedar chests.
rockers. metal cabinets ,
swivel rockers.
Uaad Furniture ·- bookcase.
ranges. chairs. dryers, refrigeratersand TV's. 3mUes
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 8pm, Mon . thru Fri .. 9am
to 6pm. Sat.
446 -0322

9760.

3 Bedroom .trailer for rant .
448-3371 or 446-0722 .

448-7398 .

12x80 h . 2 bedroom mobile
home. Appro• . 6 miles from
Pomeroy or Middleport . Cell

3B8-9044.

Antiques. oak furniture re·
production, misc. items. Uee
our Christmas layaway pl,.n.
Conkel1, Tuppefl Plains.
U.S.A . Made denim 1urplua,

3334.

Dolls like the Cabbage

Furnished Rooms Used one year woodburner · Patch, home made fully

45

f200. Cotl614-446-7619 .

992-6868 .

For rent Sleeping Room•
end light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

2 bedroom mobile home.
only . 614-992 ·

Call 446-0766 .

2 bedroom trailer. furnished,
dapoait required . No pets.

52

CB.TV. Radio
Equipment

..

C. B. Equipment, Golden Eagle Mork IV S.S.B.

Furniahed office for rent.
Close to city building and

Apartment ·
for Rent

court house. Call 446-0866
deyo, f126 . mo .

_______.__J__,
Furniahed apt. for rlnt in

large privata mobile home
lot in Centenary . Call 488-

Syrocuoe. 61 4-992 f 689
alter 8PM .

4063 .

RMiroido Aptl. Middleport.

Oak

Mark IX extra channela. Oak
Martt IX extra channela. Oak
X extra channels SSB . Cobre
1 OOOGTL . MORE.
578-2804 .

53

304-

Antiques

LarOe trailer lot on BulavillaAddison Rd. Coll448-4738
or 614-387-0232 .

992-7721.

COUNTRY MC'BILE Homo

2 bedroom furnished Apt.

Partt, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call • 54 Misc. Merchandise

Hoosier cupboard ax. cond.
Coli 446-3946, ova's.

992-7479.

Trailer apace for amall
trailer. suitable for 1 or 2
adults. Lot nonhof Rawlings
Coats Funeral Home. Call

114-992-3324.

Newly decorated aemifumiahed 1 bedroom apart·
ment. Second floor of Coata

Ceramic Chrlttmaa treee.
Nativity seta II etc. 304871-2602.

Uaed wether. dryer, a1ovea,
refrigeretor, 30 day warranty. One Baklwin organ,
double keyboard. J6:S Pawn
Shop. 314 Moin St. Pt.
Pleannt.
10 ft. llum. boat e160.00.

Special rates for Senior
Chlzena. t130 . EqueiHous·
lng Opportunitlea. 614 -

e.180. month plu1 utilltiet
and deposit. Overlooking
Ohio river in Minersville.

dretHd, several to choose
from and can be ordered.
$215 .00. Four piecls of each
piece of the Cape COd Avon
collection 117&amp;. Phona
304-878-8081 anytime.

46 Space for Rent

814-992-2749 .

For sale gravci blanketa. Cell
814-949-3037.

Dragonwynd Cattery.
Kennels. AKC Chow puppin. CFA Himalayan. Persian and Siamese kittena.
Coli 446-3844 ofter 6.

'"'

58

Pets for Sale

AKC Roglotorad Poodle pup-

pin. Dep. will hold for
Christmas. Cell 446-0867.
JACK 'S TROPICAL FISH

57

18.

·Apartments .

Equipment
for Rant

304 -876 -

4 pc. Slingerland drum tet
and 3 roto-tom1. cymbals,

Coil

446-0198 . Xmu

614-256-1182.

Swordtail's 2- .99, Rod Weg
Ptaty•o .69 eo., Botto'o 1.90
eo.. blk. Molly'o 2-.99.

Freahwater Stingray 44.00,
Snoflake Moray eel's (freahwatar} e12.00 ea. FREE
Mystery Snail With Each
Purch..a. Pearl Cockatiel•
86.99 -9 .99, baby Poro -

knt'• 9.99 , aduh Parakeet•
e7.99, female Canary•a
8 .99 , 66 gal combo aqua•ium 8139.96 (only 21, 48

JACK•S TROPICAL FISH.
UKC

Reg. Esl&lt;imo Spitz

male puppy, 7 mo. old. Had
shots &amp;wormed. Call 44&amp;7230.

Male Cockatoo bird 1 yr. old,
jua1 a1arting to talk eeo. Call
814-388-9763.

Australian Blue HHiar puppioo. Call 814-288-1336.

Regietered AKC minature
Daschund, black and run.
Born Nov.9 . Ready for
Chriatmas. Alao Fawn Dob·
arman puppiet. 304-863·

63

Livestock

EXLINE SADDLE SHOP 2

ini. North of Jackaon on St .
Rt 93 beoide 93 Auto Solos.
Chrl1t:m11 Sale. Youth a how
oacldlo ......

halcfttella aave I I
leather ehow hetter with
oilvor f47 .80

all grooming Item aeve I •
814-286-8522 .
For

oolo

Rog.

raady lor Chrlotmos. 814992-2807.

Nice .beegle pup, 8 weeki
old. Male and female frorn
good rabbit dog. Nice
Chriotmoo gift . 814-7422621.

Chihuahua

dog~One

8622.

whhe mane end tail. Will
make big hor... 614-742 2131 or 814-949-2331 otter I p.m.

64

Hay

Storogo et b&lt;&gt;lh Coolville
and Rutond. Gobel Anguo
Form, Coolville. 814·1173B38.

-

'

71

'

TH!IT THE
i'&gt;NOWLEDGE

LIEG{)()RNitH{T
11'1 OUR CELLS-

MEMORY'~

RINGLE•s SERVICE expe-

~AND Mfl. ~UNE
CLAIMS To HAVE
DEVISE~ A
14ETHOD OF
REl.EilfiiNti

304 -676 -2088
4560.

::IOU. I'M ONE OF MR.
RUNE'G

Ill

.

- - - -- - - 4
1980 F160. 4x4 custom
302. 48.000 mileo, f4, 700.
304-773-5167 or 7736978 .

73

· Vans

8t

4 W.O.

Plumbing

Soon as
he qit a
new house
·built!

Uaed h..ter1, -*:trlc and

RIVERS TOWER .

Apartments now evelleble to

a

d:iblod whh on

51 Household Good•

112,300. R lng lor 30
perc~ of adjuated income.Phono 304-e?l-8879.

Roll top dnk, flot top desl&lt;

lncoml

ess

than

Smoll lurnlohod ond 2 bed-

room unfurnlehed •pert·
menta. Point PtHunt eree.
304-1711: 1

318

·

with chtlr, htnd made gun
cebinet, end Ublu. coffH
toble, choot ond nlghlotond.
304-878-7412.
For 10le 30 ln. 11111 range

Furnlahed •p•rtment. 1,
- k Conoe'n Volley Bkl
J
ory
2 nd
Rooorl.
onu ·
Jej4-171-4412.
.J

louo mouo of woohoro a
dryoro 170 up. AM nl..
...-Hd. Hupp'o Appllon011 Olouwore. Corner Rt •.

'L'de •
Wwdge~bi*lll,nO:u

141
~

4-8711·2072.

green. 2·12 cu;ft. ref .. var-

a

a

a

•

Rl. 7 , 448·8033,

_
1181
1.....
_.:.:.:.:"..__
-._ _____

1

IUto.,

ING. Fomerly Dewitt ' s .
614-3679:30

Excavating

DOZER

WORK

By •Tod

4907 .

Carter

&amp;

Eveno

Transponation .

7 :00AM &amp; 6;00PM.

1

anytime 446-4537 ,

Davlaon,

1

84

8t

Oh.

Jr .

814-742-

Electrical
Refrigeration

BARNEY

Oueily Service on all major
brand epplillncae. Also ••- ·
teet used appliancet on sale.'

1177 Plymouth -

1 ... of ea• logl for fire
ploco. 1 - · old. t91.88.
leu thon holf price. 814742-2211 or oftor 8 pm
1114-982-5320.

440

JUGHAID TELLS ME
HE WAS TARDY THIS
MORNIN' BECAUSE
VOU FERGOT
TO WAKE
HIM UP

THAT'S RIGHT,
. MISS PRUNELLY

engine tome new parte. 1
111 raton with beortneo lor
.... l'ord. 1 h - •
comb lor - . . Motoro.
Colll14-379·2,1tl2.
'

w........,.

N- 1113 VW CITI, 4,000
AM·FM
c IIIIo I opold. M- ooll.
t7800. 114·112·3112.

m...

Antlq"" ook kllcllen oablnot,
rellnloMd, olog glou top of
door1. ftoUr bin. twlng out
oupr lor, ortg. oploe lorw.
poroofln wort&lt; ourflloe. onllquo oekloe box. 814-"2·
3079.

. Clwlet- '"'· 114-141·

Dried - -· dellve&lt;od.
l.•c_._n_30_4-_8_7_1·_777_1_._ _

1171 l'ortl P Z80 I~ bed.
.814-742-ZIH. , _

wh......10ll:
Hondo

Red 200, 3
1.271.00. lou
thon
mileo .... " - ·
304-171·2072.

·'

..

Water hauling, F11t Service.
low rotoo. Coil 814-266 1743.

PEANUTS

'

-:J-:1M-:-5-W_A_T:-E-R_S_E_R
_V
_t_C_E.': :

7&amp;

Baatland
Motora for Sale

Coli Jim Lonlor, 304·875-,

7397.

.

.'
i l

II

11?4 C.m11r0, - o .• P.l.;

~

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE . Coli 814-387-7471
or 614-387-0691 .

P.l.. A.C., ltn•fM ~.
low mllego, like · Greet

1I ft. leniDn llbedeeo boot
end ....... 814-112-32117.

2111.

Lote -

tully equipped
beu - . 11 ft. Hydro·
IDortl, 80 HP .._.,ry
Motor. 304-171-18111 .

1 ~a~7=-~u~h~~~----~.:
P o atery

I JUS1
FINISHED
READIN6
''TREASURE
ISLAND;'

THAT'S WHAT YOU "
5!-IOULD OO ... WRITE /X.
STOR'( ABOUT PIRATES .. .

1 Long John Beagle
I

1

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 113 Bee. Avo.. l'lolllpollo.
448-7133 '" 448-1133.

e

R

i

®

Newhart Dick's

I

Legoon·
(!) FIS World Cup Skiing :
Men's DownhUI Coverage
of this skiing event is presented from Schladming ,
Austria. (60 min .}
fl) CIJ IIll Emerald Point
N.A.S. Admiral Mallory
comforts Maggie as the
Navy conducts a formal
burial service for the remains of Captain Martin
Fa ..aiL (60 min.!
10:30 Cil All-Now Unexpurgated
Benny Hill An all-new collection
of
comedy
sketches. songs and sexy
dancers is presented .
Ill Shirley &amp; Pat Boone
FJIINN News
1 1:oo
CIJ
® ® (l])
News
Ill Another life
C!l SportaCenter
Cil TBS Evening Nows
CIJ Dr. Who
FJI\Bonnv Hill Show
11 :15 @ ESPN•o SidoLiii0.--1 1:30 IJ t:IJ·m Tonight Show
Cil MOVIE : •still of" the
Nlghr'
Ill Dobie Gillis
Cil Cotllno
11J CIJ Hart to Hart Jennifer's writing ass ignment
about the world of high fashion places her life in dan~·· (Ri (80 min.!
IJ) Letenlght Amerlco
lD M•A•S•H
81 Twilight Zone
1 1:46 CIJ MOVIE: 'MacArthur
C!l NCAA Dlvlolon I Soccer
Chemplonohlp from Fort
leudenlolo, FL
12:00 Cll Bume a Allon
Cil MOVIE: 'Freud'
Ill .. I)}) Newo
liD MOVIE: 'Serpico'
Thlcko of the Night
12:30 II CIJ ill Lito Night with
pavld Lotio~""'"
Cll Jack Benny ShOw
Ill Ill (!21 Nlghtllno
Cl CIJ Columbo

e

1177 Hondo Oddoooey. n 304-871-1134.

11)

aneinpt to finish a book assignment becomes frustrated by several th ings .
10:00 (I) MOVIE: 'Tho Blue

Cat 215 hoe, dozer~, crane,
loaders. dump truck. Call
814-446- 1142 between
Good-1 E•cavating, b..e.
mentt, footers, drivawaye,
aeptic tanka, landaCiping.

Cil Not Neoesaarily tho

0

WINNIE

•

,.

East

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: +K

ma

should h.ave taken one of
them, bu t he was so happy
with his doubled contract
thai he relaxed and found a
way to get himself set."
Oswald: "The play started
with South rufflng the second diamond and promptly
cashing his ace and king of
Crumps. West showed out
and South paused for station
identification, or at least lor
thought Then he Jed a club
to dummy's jack and Easrs
ace."
J im: '·East, who had
regretted his brash double
when he saw the dummy,
redeemed himself by coming up with the only defensive play that would defeat
declarer. He saw that his
only hope was to find his
partner with the spade jack
so he led a spade. He chose
the 10. but any spade was a
winner.''

0 Ill IIll Dr. Seusa Spacial

Year in Review 1983 news
is the focus of this retros·
pact.
(2) George Stevena 'Great
Moments In American
Film.'

'

Hanna, ponds, ditches, •
basements. etc. Call 448-

85
tlno. good oond. fli78 .

u••· from f10. to UO. All
olzeo. Coll814-992-8848.

3+
Obi.

Pfeiffer locks horns with a
patient who has no apparent a ilments.
([l [D Great PerformanCes
'Callas: An International
Celebration .' Some of opera's most . famous stars
join together to honor the
memory of one of the
wor'ld's greatest . divas.
Maria Cell as. (2 hr!i .~

Pomeroy. 992-2284 .

TWIN

Pass

0 CIJ ® AfterMASH Dr.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT-

83

+76
.AKQ985
tJ
+76 53

Pass
Pass
Pass

Down .' Richard

Green Bay at Tampa Bay

Phone 446-3888 or 446 4477

SOl•TH

2t

yond his grasp. (AI
f.D MOVIE: 'Tho Man in tho
Santa Claus Sulf
9;00 0 Cil !I) MOVIE: •little

Cor. Fourth end .Pine

~K 10 4

,.

Houses moved or raised, '
baSements dug beneth '
houses, free estimates,
House Movers. Inc . 304-

&amp; Heating

+ Q 10 2
.JI06 3
• Q 10 52
+AS

;~ 9 4

Nortb

,

STEAMER. Water removal,
furniture cleaning, free es11· -

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

' EAST

1 ~' EST

lwest

Pelicula: 'EI Amor
Empiezo a Medionoche'

8 :30

matu. 304-176 -2296.

t84
+QJ 92

mas . (RI

fll

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN ,.

Call

•o

!vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

' How the Grinch Stole
Christmas .' The Grinch,
tries to steal Christmas
from the town of Whoville
only to discover that the
spirit of the season is be-

Plumbing.
0676 .

+AK8 53

Charlie Brown

ence of modern man. (60
min.). [Closed Captioned]

ALI:EY OOP'

12·12-83

Christmas Charlie Brown
and the rest of the Peanuts
gang begin to search for
the true meaning of Christ'Settling

your carpet SHIP • '

GET

NORTH

tAK9 763

Leakey · traces the emerg-

SEWING Machine repairs,
IINice. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen ,
Sciuora . Fabric Shop,

ontlquing. f138. 814-9922911 .

a Rose

Cll (l]) Making of Mankind

to•. (Day 614 -6 92 - ~066 , )
(night 614 -698-8206 .1

57,000 oct. mlloo. 304178-2372.
Motorcycles

HAPPEN

make his nine tricks and he

Ill Ill CGl Thars lncradlblol

or 876 -

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One .

Rutland,
2903.

71 Dodge van. One owner.
Same •• new, new tirea,

(Answers tomorrow)

CELERY

Sloppy play

([) Salvation Army: Blood

J.A.R. Conatructlon Co .
Water l.lnes. Footers,
Draine. AU kinds of Ditching .

1980 Ford Pinto runobout.
21.000 mlleo, IX.
oond.. f2.800 . Coli 81-4·
448· 7383 or 448·3318.

Novor

I Spy

and Fire
fl) CIJ ®

piece cuttom fit your home .
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut· :

Call

AKC Regietered male Beegle. 211a YNrl old. f48.
814-992-8116 .

Urge nativity Mt. 18 piece,
Ivory, tatin, Brazilian walnut

You

•1

(]} Christmas Gold

~NOWLEOOE~

304-896-3802 .

Jamea L.
owner.

Point PlooNnt. 304-8766683.

MOVIE:

PrOmised
Garden•

OTHe'R PUPILS.

304-676-3388.

Auto1 for Sale

Rettaurant equipment. Ma- ·
jor H•nry, 120 Viand St ..

CIJ

Water Wells . Commercial ',
end Domestic. Test holn ...
Pump• Sales and Service .,

19 78 Ford F-100. 4x4 pick-

CoH 614-448-4013.

7mm dresoed 1160.00. SoIOVllo pump 12p. e100.00.
Jennings compound bow.
dreoood 1126.00. Whltetoll
Hunte&lt; dro11od n00.00.
304-878-22B1 .

l.lghr

I'M 50AflY IF I STARTLED

rienced roofing, inclu.ding
hot tar application. carpen ter, electrician. mason. Call

882-3242 . .

will trade for pickup truck .

~

....,.,,__

removal. Cell675-1331.

1974 F 260 3 quarter ton
flat bedtruck. Extra good
condhlon. Hat canle racks.

'
1978 Jeep 4x4, e•. cond., or

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

ON(! I'&gt;NOW5 EVER~
TH/Nq, CALL 5 IT
'UNIVERSAL

- euT

82

304-875-7412 .

mlx-.1 griiU '-gume hey.

EVERY-

lll700 Club
Cil Ace Awards
I]) Ill (!21 NFL Football:

dual wheals, cattle racke.

Vary nice TI'!'Othy hoy lor
Hit. Lerve heovy bolea. Aloo

IIMZ!Nii EH? RUNE
CLAIM$ THAT

or 448-3731 .

'7&amp; Jaep e•cellant condition. '78 Luv truck. V8 convenion, blazer whnla, roll
bar, luto. trai11miasion.

UP

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

IJ til Boone
CIJ MOVIE: •Blinded by the

House on the Prairie; Look
Back to Yesterday'

U•d trucko. 1967 Dodge
0200. '.4 ton. flat bed, V-8.

a. Grain ·

8:00

676-2711.

up truck. Good condition.
874 Plum St. Middleport.

xr J

BRIDGE

Tao Dough

miles, ~~:~uippad .
Price to 1111. Clol 446-801 6

614-992-6163.

Belglon colt. Fooled 6-2882. Regiotorod, blonde with

year

old . Fomole. f60 . 814-7422322.

Chootnut

Quarter harM mare. Big
Sorrel gelding 4 whlteatock·
inga, white blaze fece.
Simca ahow &amp;addle with
breaat atrap. "614-288-

1982 F-1 00 Ford pickup.

PRONE

I

Why neJC.t ye!!-r is a gooY, year for kanga roos

Jeffersons

0 CIJ Tic

Tonight
One Day at a Time

F 8t K Tree Trimming, stump

'='="=======o:==::=;=

16,000

I Arlswer :

fJJ

houoe calls. Call 676-2398
or 446-2464.
·

1970 Ford 302 VB,
fiOO.OO . Call 614-4462082.

a

Saturday's

r I I Jr I xI

Jumbles. AGATE

® Wheel of Fortuna
0)
CIZl
Entertainment

Phone 304-468- 1932.

1 980 VW dleool pickup,
f2.880 . 1980 Toyota
Pickup 12,860. 1979 Ford
Pickup 12,860 . 1980
Dodge D-80 Sport pickup.
f3.300. B D Motors. Hwy
160. 4 ,mi. N of Holzer
Hospltel . Cal 446-7322.

Answer:

STA~ MUMMY IN
PINCH HITTE~.

Now arrange the cir~led letters to r
form the surprise.answer, as suggested by the above canoon.

Ill 0 ()) Family Feud

Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola , Ouazar , and ..

'73 Elcamino SS. 454 engine, run• good, $1,600.

814-446-7519.

AS

j
K

I)

w .... WHEN 'TI-leY PUT

- IT' S " LEAP" YEAR

in,g presents a 10-round
Lightweigh1 bout featuring
Juan Arroyo vs. Clay Davis .
(]) Hogan's Heroes

RON ' S Television Service.

carrier trailer, 2 exle, hydra-

949-2127.

I [

CIJ Froggle Rock

Call 614!388-9857.

dullc brokos. 8.000 lb.
wolghl copecity, f2.495.
61 Farm ~qulpment Only ot John's Auto Soles.
---"'-....::.---:-::-~ 1 Bulovllla Rd. Golllpollo, Oh.
Moseey-Forguoon 86 diooel Call 44b ·47B2.

8378 .

Registered male Cocker
Spaniel, mele Schnauzer,
and pood .. puppiee. Poodht1

1989 Muotang coupe, 302

tractor with Ford indultrlal
end-loader 83,000 or 1974 ChiVY pickup Y~ ton,
e2,200 without loader. Cal 360 3 opd .. good cond. Cell

·g
. 7:30

Marcum Roofing 8t Spout•
lng. 30 yean experience,
specializi~g in built up rOof.

Sportoter; 1 9711 Cornaro dirt I
trockrococor,newmotorlor 72
Trucks for Sale
oale or trado. 304-676 · 1 - - - - - - - - - : =
7346 .
Chrlotmao Spoclalo- 1979
- - - - - - " - - - - . . . ,,. Fard Courier PU. 4 spd ., 4
cyl .. f2,696 . 1982 cor
' '.
'
.......
.'

- ...·
-.... -

GAME
I

®News
IIIID People's Court

PLASTERING - Now and

picked and dropo. auto., P.S .• 'aircond. $800.
golden Deliciout, Red Dell- or best offer. 304-576cioue, Rome Bnutiet. and 2174 .

Davidaon

I

tERRTAY

@ Top Rank Boxing from
Miami, FL Top Rank Box-

hand

1976 Harley

OJ

I ""---"'

CIJ Entertainment Tonigkt
CZl Charlia•a Angels
0 Cll ·Wheol of Fortune
Cll (l]) MacNoii/ Lahror

Home
Improvements

Fruit
1976 Grand Prix. good
S. Vegetables • , ohape, new tires, $1.900.
- - - - - - - - - - - ' " 304-676-362B.

For Sale or Trade

~PTLY

@ SportaCentor
([j Carol Burnett

C.fo.l.l'T WE ~1\V!; ALITII..E VARI~~ ~
WH'I IS rr ALI/JA'IS aALQ.l AIJD W?S,
I3ALDtJ AI.JO
Eti17"?

58

8-.99, Foncy Guppy·a f1 .99

pair, Comet goldfish 8- .99,
Reg . Zebra Dania's 2-1 .10,
Neqn Tetra't .98 ea., Gr. .n

Cil Alias Smith and Jones

~~r)"'--L--"t&gt;o..LJJ

Newshour

repair commercial and residential, frn estimates. Call

59

(l]) Specu
f.D Buck Rogers
6:30 ·II Cil CZJ NBC News
Ill Rifleman
ClJ Ill (!21 ABC Nowa
0 C1J iill CBS Newo
Cll Buolnaaa Report
(l]) Ova( Eosy
7:00 IJ CIJ PM Magazine

BORN LOSER

a

Wine S-. Coil 446-8598
or 614-379-2303 .

Cll Specoo

$1,800. 304-773 -6157 or
773-6978 .

hordwore &amp; ceoeo. S400 . ..:.30_4_
-6_7_6_-8
_ _._ _-::-::-:-:
1
Camero
306 , 67,000
Coli 448-2836.
1977
milet,
air,
automatic.
PS,
Uoed Story Clork plano In
good cond. Coll448-471 7. PB. AM-FM. caaette,. ralley
wheoll, $2, 100. 304-6764181 .

74

ond Golllpollo. 814-4461221 .

pea.

TH1'7 WAY! I HEAR
'70UND ... THE~E''
ANOI'HE~ ONe
OF THEM! .

Under the

Sun'
Cl) New Treasure Hunt
(I) Little House on the
Prairie

1972 Mountaineer, 19Y.z
foot, self contained, shower,

1978 Ford ' Pinto station
wagon, good condition .
930

I

homee, houaae. Pt. Ple11ent

no

WO~~y,

·you.--' 0 -..,-' -

Coil Elliot l,lppllonceo. 70
Pino St ., 448-3733.

APARTMENTS. mobile

elderly

DON'T

878-6182.

6648 .

'

CIJ MOVIE: 'Evil

CAPTAIN EASY

lhort bod pickup f76. 304676-7322.

6bildlng. Suhoble for 1 or 2
48

Pop singer Barbera Man·
drell performs at the Tennessee Performing Arts
Center in Nashville.

1979 La Sa bra. low mileage,
1974 Rivera. Phone 304-

Musical
Instruments

(]

ledy loa Champ Country/

Six foot Coleman trailer with
cover 1300. Topper for

Autos for Sele

UKC Reg. TrMing W•lkor• '1961 Ford Falcon. 8 cyl.,
lomolo. 1 0 months old. f78 . auto., runo good. body good.
Colt 614-245-9678 .
goos tires. 1750. 8431244.

R1. 160 Evergreen Pet Shop.
Spec.·, Common Guppy't

71

992 -2810.

edulte. Inquire et epartmant

CIJ tiD 111
1D Nowa
Cil Barbara Mandrell " The

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

.Jm
f.llllfAff

~~::::~~~=~~:::~~·~-~~,.~·~·'";·~'"~"'~'~"~·~··~··~"~
'

Applea from German Ridge

Repossessed sewing ma- gal combo aquarium
et20.95 !only 2), 15% off
chine• by White free-arm. other
equar. 't (limited
zig -zag, etc. balance $96 or
supply}.
Many more ape$8 per weak . Call 446- clolo . Hro
. 1 O:OOAM9301 .
8 :00PM, Mon.-Sat .. Sun
Ody11ey 2 with extra car- 2:00-8:00PM . Now Bolttridge, $60 . 16141 446- water Shipment Juat Arrived . All fish ere guaran7434.
teed. If low prices&amp;: quality
is your Xmas wi1h then get
8 Ft. pool tabla with balls your
pets &amp; auppllea at
and two s1ickl. $1 00. (6 1 4}

jackets, bibs, coveralls, intu ·
lated coveralls S27. 60,
army clothing bootl. all ti1e1 .
614-992 -7787.
rubber boou ; regular ~
GOOOUSED APPLIANCES in1ulated. Sam Sovarllle'a,
Furnithed apt. Middleport, Waahera, dryers, refrigera- East Ravenswood. Open
adults, no pets , month rent tora. renge1. Skaggs Ap· 1:00-7:00pm, Fri, .Sat, Sun.
plus e100 security 992- pliancet, Upper River Rd. Other daya after 3:00pm
3874.
beside Stone Cr..t Motel. until Chris1m11. 304-876·

3 bdr . 1% baths, newly
remodeled. Clo&amp;e to town &amp;
shopping. Call 614-388 -

Pets for Sale

baby f39.99 aa., Foncy
8 pc. of Bamboo furniture hamstera
.99, Guinea pig•
suitable for den t626 . 1

MattresMt or box mobile home axle and two
springt, full or twin, 168 .. wheels complete, new
firm , 868. and $78. Queen 1160. 1 couch and chair
sets, $196 . 4 dr. cheats. .f78. Call814-266-6244.

Jackson Pike, Gallipolis .
446-4418 after 7 p.m.
TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis, 446-1699.
1 bed room Apt . 8198. mo. Spin washers, gat &amp; electric
including utilities . Equal dryers, auto washera, gat a.
housing opportunity. Con- electric rangea, refrigera tact Village Manor Ap1t. tors. TV sets.

Houte trailer adults only, no
pats. 322 Third Ava., Galli-

Delbert &amp; Bob lewoon's
Chrittmat traee. 6' to 1 2'

.

and up. Wood table with si•
1 room $60 week for 1 chairt 1425 to S746 . Deak
parson . 870 week for 2 t110 up to $225. Hutcheo,
parsons. 1 room with water· $15150. and up, maple or pine
bed $30 o night. Call 446 - fini1h. Bunk bed complete
2601 .
with mattresses, $260. end

ment. 304-676-6640, 304882 -2406 or 304 -8822447 .

56

p.

rJ r

e:oo e CIJ til m a

JOEY. I 'LL NEVER
l.ET THEM HUI&lt;.T

One 221n. ~~;481n. triple dome
transparent akylight, new in

TIIATScRAMILEDWORDOAME
~ ~ ~~.~.!!h
byH0 nn,Amoldond8oblee

EVENING

Billy Lee's Tires and Battery
Sales. New and. uHd tires,
alto. tire repairs. 1803' Jefter•on Ave. Point. Pleaaent.

79

11

'i}fl~ruffi;}l} ~

12/12/83

304-876-5406 .

ADD-ON j oodburning fur .
nace. auto. controls, weter
heater included . Never u1ed. HILLCREST KENNELS
$690. Ph. 6l4-258-1216.
Bording ell br,ads. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
New 1983 Nalco Sewing
Doberman puppies: Stud
Machinu . Free erm. 15. Sarvlce.
Call 446· 7796 .
atretch stitchet. 10 deaign
stitches, blind hem ~ mend· Judy Taylor Grooming. Cell
ing stitch, monograms, dial· 6 I 4-367-7220.
'
a-metlc bunon holer. Sews
on denim material. Regular. Brierpatch Kennels Profeaprice 8635 .96 . Now only tional AU-brHd grooming.
e229. Over ttocked. Must Indoor-outdoor boarding fa·
oell by Jan. 31, 26 year
cilltiet. English Cocker Spa·
factory warranty. Call 614- nlol
puppies. Coli 814-388385-4536. Free Delivery.
9790.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .• Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood &amp; coal atovea,
6 piece wood living room
suite with 6 inch flat arms

Television
Viewing

9684,

shop. f1 .696. Col 1-614886-7311 .

Call 614-248-6267 ofter 5.

Household Goods

DICK TRACY

Muncie 4 apd . trana. M • T
big block valVe covers. front
' " ' Chevy truck brown,
bucket aeett &amp; coneole for
Chevy truck, Chevy truck
parts Vz ton frame rotersraar end etc . Chevy Suburban parts. Cell 814-388 ·

Why weit7 Build your own
24ftx32ft. garage or work-

lhe Daily

Ohio

Auto Parts
Accessories

160.00, Poul Tope 4480814 . .

0 . Coli 614-246-6121 .

8inx 1 21nx 12ft. 304-875box. Ten railroad bridge 1iea,
Washer. lawn mower, stero. 7412.
refrigerator S. train lay-out .

•

a.

12, 1983

2 Dodge 1now tires &amp; rima.
Complete E-78x14,

ton . Coll614-266- 1427.

pets. Inquire et Shepherds
Salel &amp; Service1, First &amp;.

44

;.:::~:...:~~--_..;----------,

Limestone delivered. 11Q a

Riverview Dr .• very nice. no

Adulto
2698.

76

pickup load. Coli 814-2466804.

3384.

pallo. Coli 446-3748
614-266-1903.

by Larry Wright

whh firebrick U25 . ..ch.
304-871 - 1578 or 676 7896.

&amp; Son. C1II 446-1785.

ment, auitabla for 1 or 2

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

O.c11Mar

New wood burning •tOWI

55 Building Suppllea

Firewood. Pickup or deli·vared dump truck. Cell814·

House tor rent garage, b.lae-

54 Miac. Marchendiae

Ume1tone. Sand, Greve!.
Delivered in Meson, Meigs,
Gellia or pick up at Richerd a
Oek tabl'"'s &amp; cheira, corner
cupborr. '· t- .1ffets &amp; etc.
Wood World, 2508 Grand
Central Ave .. Vienna. WV.

U80 pluo depoolt &amp; utili-

304-882 -2406
2447 .

Mauday,

Pon HII'OY Middleport, Ohio

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Oswald: "East's bidding
was of tbe school that bids a
little more than his cards
warrant and then doubles
the opponent who is nasty
enough to bid on against
him.' 1

Jim: "There are any num. ber of ways for South to

Oswald: "South won in
dummy, but could find no
better way to get to his hand
than Co cash the other top
spade and ruff a spade. This
left him with the Q-9 of
trumps to East's J-10."
Jim: "South led a club, but
West took his king and
played a diamond. South
wound up with six trumps,

two spades and a minus

score since he couJd never
get a club trick ."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

~oHM_,,..,
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

7 Constel·

1 Uke
certain legs

lation

8 "I -to

. &amp; Anc. Rom.

the Trees"
9 Holm
10 Inert gas
14 Role for

language

11 Revere
I; Excise
"Pagliacci"
Tebaldi
composer
19 "The -

15 Shrewmouse of Rome"
16 Falsify
211 European
11 Author
Kesey
18 Type of
frying pan

21 Layer
23 Domicile

2'1 Senseless
28 "Boys" of
bookfmne

Yesterda_y's Answer
river
28 Historic
34 First-rate
21 Turned on
period
35Jar
22 "-Wed· 28Backup
38 Land minus
nesday"
30 Chipped in
a shah
Z4 Make too 32 Pitcher 's
39 " Georgia on
much of
nickname
My-"
Z5 Sea
3-1 Do the
41 Swamp
(Fr.)
crawl
42 Collide
~~~~~~-

29 English
river
30Types

·s1 Drool
33 -Paulo

30 Dusk
37 Edge
4ll " Jewels of
the Mad(mna"

composer

43 Cove
44 Lucifer
45 Late labor
leader

b-+-+~f-+--

46 Correct
DOWN
1 Bundle
2 Gei'IIllin river 1

3 Forester
4 Sea bird

"'+-+-t-+--

r:

5Saynay
6 Reception

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's
II

how

to work il:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A 11:
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the lenglh and formation of the words ·are all
hints. Eoch day the code letters ue dllferent.
CllYPTOQUOTES
ALKTFCG ,

CYT

RMCSFMD

D W Z T,
OSC

QYTR

WP

ITMPS~' TX

OG

.\SF A L P T

L

J F T MC

. SRDWIWCTX

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QTMDCY, ·

Q1MDCY

WP ·

J F T MC

ALKTFCG. - TAWVSFSP
Yesleulotj'l C.tptuqaote : .EVERY DAY IS A LI'1'I'1E LIFE :
AND OUR WHOLE LIFE IS BUT A DAY·

REPEATED.-ANONY

.

�Paga

12-The Daily Sentinel

SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEL

Ponieroy-Middleport, Ohio

Secondary mortgages could
hold key in housing industry
By WUISE COOK
agency, which had been Umited to
A8S()C!•ted Press WriU!r
Federal Housing Authortty and
Your chance of buying a house In
Veterans Admlnistra lion loans, was
the next 10 years could depend on a
authorized to buy conventional
changing and complicated part of
mortgages as well.
the financial world called the
At the same time, the Govern·
secondary mortgage market.
ment National Mortgage Associa·
Investors in the market help
tion or Ginnie Mae was formed so
provide money for mortgages; they
the government could~control
can't solve all the housing problems
over the liquidity of
· and VA
o! the future, but they can help.
loans, Kane said. ·
·
The secondary market goes back
to the post-Depression era when the
Ginnie Mae didn't buy loans. It
Roosevelt admlnistrailon was try- • guaranteed them.
Ing to encourage long-tl'rm housing
Kane explained: Suppose savings
loans to prevent repetition or the
and loan "A" In Callfornia has
forecloslli'es that had swept the
plenty of money available but low
country. The problem was the flow
loan demand. S&amp;L "B" In Florida.
of money. "The banking Industry
has high demand and low liquidity.
was stW In turmoil, " said Howard
"B" would like to sell its loans to
Kane or the u.s. League of Savings
"A." Bui there are legal hurdles
Institutions.
involved.
In 1938, the Federal National
"Ginnie Mae said, 'We'll take
Mortgage Association, Fannie Mae.
those FHA and VA loans you have ...
was founded. The agency bought
We'll take a look ... to see If they're
mortgages from lenders who then
good lilans. If they are, we'll issue a
made new loans. The lenders
certificate which says that you may
continued to collect the mortgage
issue securities which are backed by
payments, which were forwarded to
those loans and those securities wW
Fannie Mae, which, in turn, made
be guaranteed by the U.S. govern·
more loans.
ment.. .' "
In the late 1960s the government
The mortgage repayments got worried about how many
principal and Interest -went to the
mortgages it owned. Fannie Mae securities buyers. There was stW a
was turned over to prtvate shareneed, however, for a broader
holders, although the government market for conventional loans,
kept a hand on the reins. Soon, the Kane said. Enter yet another

a

Area deaths
Mary V. Langhem

Nellie Lyons
Nellie Lyons, 83 of Torch, died
Satunday after an extended illness
at the home of her son, Wayne.

Born at Mineral, she was the
daughter of the late Jessie and Mary
Allee Sickles Ely. She had _!!y.e&lt;t_ln
Torch for t)le past 50 years, and for
the past· several years resided with
her son and I] is family .
She is survived by her son, Wayne,
a daughter, Madtne Pendegralt,Mt.
Holmes, Idaho; two brothers,
· Ernest Ely and Wilbur Ely, Min·
eral; two sisters, Allee Ellis of
Zaleski, and Edith Lyons. Albany,
five grandchildren, three great·
grandchildren.
She was pneceded in death by her
husband, Jacob, a son, Charles, and
. two sisters, Mildred and Gertrude.
Funeral services wW be held at
theWhlteFuneral}lomelnCoolville
a:t2 p.mTuesday. The Rev. Stephen
Fuchs wW officiate and burial wlll
be In the New Marshfield Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Monday from 7 to 9 p.m .

Mary Virginia Langhern, 65, of

815 South Blackstone, Jackson,
Mich., former Meigs County res!·
dent, died Sunday at the Jackson
Osteopathic Hospital.
8of11 ln SyraC)Ise she was the
daughter of the late Leslie Hubbard
and Mary Hendricks Hubbard.
She is survived by her husband,
Harold Eugene Langhern, four
sons, David WWlam Molden, Jr.,
Daniel Clinton Molden, Daniel H.
Rlce and John D. Rlce; three
daughters, Marcia Louise Ball,
Mildred June Patterson, and Vivian
E. Childs; a sister, Mildred Pierce;
two brothers, Carl and Orts Hubbard, 14 grandchldren, several
nleces and nephews.
Besides her parents ~he was
preceded In deatl] by a son, James
R. Rice, two sisters and three
brothers.
.Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m Thursday at the EwlngFunerai
Home. The Rev. Robert Stewart
will offlciateal!d burial will be in the
Letart Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime after 7
p.m on Tuesday.

Squads have busy weekend
It was ·a busy weekend for units of
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service which responded to
15 calls.
On Saturday at 10:11 a.m. the
Pomeroy unit went to Long Hollow
Road for Lola Roberts who was
iaken to Holzer Medical Center, at
12: 18 a.m . the Pomeroy unit went to
Jack's Club for WUliam Morrts who
was transported to Veterans Mern·
orial Hopsital: at 12:43, the Rutland
unit took Ricky Johnson from his
Main Street residence to the Holzer
Medical Center.
At 1:35 p.m . the Tuppers Plains
squad was called to the Clarence
Causey home atCooivUie buthewas
not transported; 6: 01 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit went to 124 Union
Ave., for Peggy Houdashelt, who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center; at 10:25 p.m. the Racine
squad went to the James Tucker
resident on State Route 124 and took

I

Saturday Admissions: Clarence
Wickline, Racine; Larry Eakins,
Pomeroy, Robert Knotts, VInton.
· Satuday Discharged: Elsie Cross,
Roy Frye, Larry Snyder, Sybil
Green, Floyd Reynolds.
: Sunday Admissions: Linda Cozart, Pomeroy; Della O'Brien,
Racine; Dwight Sprague, Dexter.
: Sunday l)lscharges: Ernest New·
)un, Jacob Schuler, David Ralrden,
;and Mary Eden.
: HOLZERMEDICALCENTER

.
DISCHABGES: DEC. 9
· WUllam Ashburn, Ford Bolen,
Marlin Brown, Theresa Bryant,
WUllam Cochran, Mrs. Charles
:cokef and daughter, KimberlY Cox,
·Mrs. Don Denny and daughter,

EmU Eynon. Leona FalrchUd. Fred

George, Opal Grueser, Mrs. Ken·
· neth Gump and daughter, Fern
Htvely, Judy Hutchinson, Mildred
lble, BethJellers. JolmKelly, Helen
f&lt;lnlel, Juanita Love, Barbara

-

On Sunday the Pomeroy unit
responded tocallsat3:04p.m. to the
New Street residence of Kathryn
Diles who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospltat at 9:01 p.m. to
the same residence with Ms. DUes
being then taken to the Holzer
Medical Center. The Racine squad
at 6: 02 p.m. went to the Blind Hollow
residence of Judy McNeeley who
was taken to the Holzer MediCal
Center; Rutland unit went to the
Main Street residence of Rlck
Johnson at 8:43 p.m. and he was
taken to Holzer; the Rutland squad
at 7: 35 p.m. to Township Road 'Sri
for Dwight Sprague who was .taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; arid
theTUpperPlatnssquadat7:00p.m.
to ReedsvWe for Ernest Ruth who
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital.

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial

'

him to Veterans; at 8: 25 p.m. the
Rutland squad went to the Raccoon
Valley !or Sara Wheeler who was
taken to the Holzer Medical ~ter.

Magneson, Ruth McCormick, LWle
McElhaney, Wllllam McGinnis,'
Mrs. Alan Meadows and son,
Clayton MWer, Terry Miller, Mrs.
Clyde Pierce and daughter, Tammi
Priddy, Jan Ratc!Uf, Lucille Reynolds, Walter RichesSon, George
Roberts, Henry Rolley Jr .. Harriet
Sesher, Mary Wayland, Drusie
White.
BIRiiiS
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Franklin,
daughter, GalllpoBs; Mr. and Mrs.
PhWip Goodnite, son, Point Plea·
sant; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Martin,
son, Bidwell; Mr. 8Jid Mrs. Marlin
Mooney, daugther, Galllpolis.

DJICIIARGES: DEC.lO
Daniel Allen, Owen Denney' Kelly

Ervin, Viola Hensoo, Ellen Knapp,
Woodrow Kuhn, Mae Lewis, Judy
McNeely, Henry Ple!w, Winifred
Racer, Guy Russell, AItie Saultz.
Roy Stormf, Gary Watson.

BIR1'H
Mr. and Mrs. John Morgan. son;
Jackson.

govenunent agency: the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation
or Freddie Mac . Freddie Mac
bought conventional mortgages
from lenders and issued securities
called participation certificates for
sale to investors.
Ginnie Mae and Freddie Mac
"worked extremely well throughout
the '70s," Kane said. But tate in the
decade many people saw a need to
attract more money to housing.
Pension funds and Insurance
companies, while. investing some
money in mortgages, always preferred corporate bonds. They not
only wanted a fixed rate of interest,
but also an Investment that would be
repaid over a fixed number of years.
As mortgage rates started to
fluctuate, so did mortgage repay·
ments. People who got loans when
rates were high would refinance
when rates went qown. Buyers of
mortgilge-ljnked securities were
repaid ahead of time. They had no
guarantee how long their invest·
men! would last.
A new, bond-llke security with a
guaranteed repayment length was
developed for Freddie Mac. It is
called the collateralized mortgage
obllgation, comes in_,three maturi·
ties and shifts the reinvestment risk
to Freddie Mac. The first $1 bUlion
worth were sold In June. Some
Investment bankers now are issuing
their own.

Defendant's
(Continued from page 1)
The jury returned to the cour·
troom and Crow resumed his
questioning. SpenL'er revealed she
had moved away from home In
December 1981 after graduation
from Gallipolis Business College
and finding a job at Racine Home
National Bank.
She lestlfled that during that time,
she'd dated and admitted she'd
fallen In love with a Scott mentioned
in her diary.
Spencer said the child was
conceived on Aug. 17, 1982. Crow
then asked her~ sheronltnued
dating Scott after the conception.
Her voice breaking, Spencer
replied, "After I became pregnant,
he never called anymore."
Steven Story, attorney for Ms.
Spencer during questioning, produced state exhibit 4, a blackened
Item, which he asked Spencer if she
recognized as a sanitary napkin.
She replied negatively.
Ms. Spencer testified that she did
not remember everything that
happened the night of the birth and
could not remember wiping ller
hands or what her panties were put.
She panties were a part of the
evidence admitted this morning.
In redress Crow asked Ms.
Spencer about her diary getting her
to admit that she made no negative
comments In the diary about her
mother because she feared her
mother would read them. She did
admit, however, oa making entries
In the diary In regard to her
pregnancy.

f SILE STARTS TODAY
. loH .,. . . . . . .~ ... 11, 1113

•111 •••Htln ~~~. . . . . rlpta rnene~. We art 11cit re~ponalblt for

""~~"''hloll errin. hi'I'J lo Dealen.

KIDNAPPING THWARTED- Savannah pollee • another man identified as Michael Lewis Nj!W!!Ome,
22, were aitempllng.to abduct John Mlc)Jael Paulson
Dec. 11 wb!&gt;n Paulson thwaried the effori. (AP
early
Gulfstream Aerospace President, Allen Paulson, shot
and ldlled Timothy Payton Curtis, 22. Curtis and Laserphoto).
detectives Investigate the scene where the son of

ELECTROIIC
IUSICIL SIURFS

.GREAT '~

Kidnapping scheme results in killing

SHAKES
multi-purpose ·

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) -Two Michael Lewis Newsome, who about two weeks ago. His father,
whose companY manufactures ex·
young lumber workers armed with worked with Curtis at a lumbermlli
ecutive
jets, had been in the news
cap guns set out to make $1 million in neighboring Bryan County.
recently
because of expansion at
by holding an Industrialist's son for
Newsome, who was being held
.
Guifstream
and contributions he
ransom, but the plot backfired when without bond today in the Chatham
had made to colleges.
the intended victim drew a real gun County Jail on a charge of
"This, I think, is what really gave
and kllled one of his assailants, attempted kidnapping, Confirmed
the young boys the idea of abducltng
pollee said.
that he and CurtiS had discussed an
Mike Paulson," Scott said.'
The plot by a pair of 22-year-olds abduction, Scott said.
Scott said the flunilles of Curtis
with no criminal records "just
On Paulson's front porch, police
and Newsome "seem to be nice,
started out as shop talk,'' Detective found a cassette tape that contained
Robert Scott sald Sunday. ''They got "a ran,som demand in excess of $1 · community-minded people."
Curtis, ail ex-Marine, "had never
to kidding and carrying on about million," he said.
doing a kidnapping, and then they_
Scott said authorities belleve been in trouble aU his Ufe," said hls
uncle, Albert Brown.
just talked themselves into taking it Paulson was chosen as the target
seriously."
John Michael Paulson, the 7,&amp;.
year-old son of Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. President Allen E.
Paulson, was returning to his
Savannah home shortly after mid·
night Sunday when two men
approached, pulled out what appeared to be a real handgun and
demanded the keys to Paulson's
pickup truck, Scott said.
Reaching into his breast pocket,
Paulson instead drew a .~allber
derringer and fired two shots, killing
Timothy Payton Curtis, Scott said.
On Curtis' body was a $2.87 cap gun
that closely resembled a "Saturday
Night Special" handgun, the detec·
live said.
Theotherman, whoaisocarrieda
toy gun, fled uninjured, Scott said.
By sunrtse, police had arrested

Papa
Smurf .

massage cushion
bv WARt

lishtd

M1de in USA

No. 4795 .

Ploy• B )(mal Corol1 . Ce~nd l• TwlnKI•• on and off to ev•l)' not• .
u ... 9 Voir tottery . lo!T•ry Not lr1ci!Jded .

YOUR CHOICE

Refreah and Invigorate tired, aching fftt.

Great lor logo, thighs, neck and ohoulden. Slip
your feet Into the pouch slot1, st~h out and
relax. Great Shoket dry mo•oa;• doet the job
without any watery me11 to clean up. Thick
ur~ut

lux·

foam padding and durable vinyl cover

for compl .. t comfort. Convenient on·off twitch
built Into control cord.

8 n. K.D.
'

FOLD-AWAY SCOTCH
Popularly priced, yet
having all the K.D.
Fold·Awoy features -:-

" sturdy 1teel pole with
folding hinges, ont·
piece top with pine

n..dle1 twisted Into
the center rod, and one
time assembly. Flame

· retardant , ol course ,
and complete with stur·
dy stand.
1.0. ~~

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'

Sc:ok:h Pin.

saara
ANNO-UNCES

. .

Patrol checks
two accidents

Christmas OrdersMay Be Placed ·
As Late As
December 19, 1983.

The Gallia·Meigs post of the state
highway patrol cited Phlllip R.
Montgomery, 30, Bremen, for
!allure to control in a .one-vehicie
accident Sunday.
The patrol said Montgomery was
eastbound on Ohio 124 at 3:40a.m.
and was unable to stop at the
intersection at Ohio 7. A trailer he
was hauling on his van jackknifed
and his vehicle was severely
damaged.
A vehiCle driven by Robert L.

W~Ht;

4-ln·1 contour

back massager
HIEAT,.HEAT

ot ,...,, IM;II!J

U.. II "' I ll W!IIIIJ~I POIIlhOfl

....

-Ne. 41XI

;y.
• ' =..-..;:;..
~I .,,., ""

licenses In Meigs County Probate

N. 2nd Ave.

29, Ra·
ctne, and Rebecca Lynn Allen, al,
Antblllly Gall Bradford,

GIEGG &amp;PAm GIBBS

PH~. (Ohio) 992-2178'

2, and VIctoria Lynn Brooks, 'II,
Racine.

c:ontr ll'l O•r

"" .. ~oi1 1'J ing n U.. ll ot
home, or 1 1 ll&gt;t o!llca

Court Friday were Robert T.
Calhoun, Jr., 35, Route 1, Rutland,
and Sarah Catherine McGrew, 'II,

Fred Miller, Jr., 28, Racine, Route

~~·

S.~ IOt Sw t!Ch IHI~- ;·•·•~· \ " &lt;lol l
Ml!i"'l lOt M-.1 Only, HHI.
M.. ...-. ' "'-UQII Ollly O..t.t.ll
ott,..; H.. 'llftyt , _, "'"' 1111
~- Ol brown IM!Mt

Making appUcatlon tor marriage

Middleport.

n«.

' ' - lltell lo 1~ ne h,.al curveluft

Marriage licenses

Route 1, Rutland.
Philip Joseph Custer, 38, Middleport, and Patricia Lee Craig, 25,

a MASSAGE, M"SSA'GE

Applr tl'loi&gt;Hndl ot tootr&gt;lne. mou ag ong
1\rvlln IV lVII I I&gt;Kt ,
ar&gt;d 1~ 1 &lt;11 &lt;
muociU. F'-• &lt;la•iGn a llo• o m1101gtr 10

ON WAREHOUSE IN STOCK ITEMS

McWllliams, 22, Marysvllie, was
moderately damaged after it
crashed on U.S. 33 at 12:48 p.m.
Saturday.
' The patrol said McWllliams was
northbound wheri he reportedly lost
control, wento!fthei'lghtsideofthe
road and stnlck a mailbox and tree.
The driver said he swerved to avoid
something that was tn the road.

NEW!

'

::::t:- '

Cltlhil)l"lld

::_ •'

hHclfnl

--

____ .._.._.

AUTHORIZED
CATALOG
MERCHANT

Botllo '"" . . . . . . . . . . . by
plor!n&amp;IOIR-- - N t , ...

- • I Apo - ' - 2-4 J&gt;loJOn.

'26''

Va.) 773-9577

HOURS:

Racine.

'

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                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="43652">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="43651">
              <text>December 12, 1983</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="6394">
      <name>ely</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="259">
      <name>hubbard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7284">
      <name>langhern</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
