<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14445" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14445?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-28T14:27:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45552">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/0291364c0a8d0873318373401b5f852f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dffdf2b7458eda2c3a24abeec9278ffb</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="45097">
                  <text>-.

....: .. ":. . :· ...

"·~·

,;.

Poge - 12- The Doily Sentinel

'82 inflation could be lowest in decade

Local briefs...
Board will organize Jan. I
The M~igs County Board of Educa tion has set its annual
organizational m~ ting for 9 a.m . on Jan. I with a regular session to
follow the m~ting.
The board has issued bus driver re t1lfira tes to Owen Nutter and
Elnora &amp;'mard. Eastern Local; Stanley Mitchell. Meigs Local;
Hilton Wolf~. Jr.. Southern Local. and OIVal Holter. BoardofM~nta l
R&lt;'tarda tion.
The board has also agrl'ed to terminate its agreement with the
State Dcpartmm t of Education for the multi·media sllldent lea rning
System which has been used as a part of the driver education
program in lh&lt;' county.

Athleti&lt;' boosters will meet
Eas t ~ rn Athletic Boos t~rs will m&lt;'et Wedn~sday, Dec. 22. at 7: 30

p.m. at

th~

high sc hool.

Extend time for book pickup
Th~

time has b&lt;'en extended to pickup copies of the 1883 Hardesty
and 1900 Larkin history reprints C. E. Blakeslee announced today.
Reprint s may ~ picked up at the Meigs County Museum
WednPsday and Thursday, Off. 22 and 23 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.

Christmas play slated Wednesday
A Christmas pia;•. "Why Chtistma s7 " will be presented at 7:30
p.m . Wedncsda\· at thP Ra cine Church of the Nazarene. The public
is indttXL

Veterans Memorial hospital notes
i\dmittrd .. Bianch~ Gibbs.
Lois A ll ~n. Ra r in ~.

Tuesday, December 21, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pom~roy;

Arnold Ptiddy. Rutland;

Discharged ··No n ~.

Squads answer eight calls
Eight calls wer~ answ~ red Monday and on Tuesday morning by
local units. the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reJX&gt;rt s.
Tu~sda v morning at 12:24 a.m .. the Tuppers Plains Unit took
Mat1ha Chevalier. Long Bottom. to St. Joseph Hospital in
Park~rsburg.
Monda,· ra lls included 9:13 a. m .. MiddieJX&gt;rl for
N~ lli~ Hanson. S. Fourt h St .. taken to Dr. James Conde's office;
10: a.m .. Rutland for Ida White. Harrisonville. taken to Vetera ns
Memorial Hospi tal; 1: 3.'i p.m .. MiddleJX&gt;rl. trea ted Edgar Florian as
his resid ~nre; .'i: lli p.m. Syracuse. Glen Cundiff taken to Pleasant
\'all~y Hospital; 7: II p.m .. Syracuse Unit . Suzanne Hubbard from
Maplewood Lak~ 10 V~t e rans Memorial; 8:11p.m .. Tuppers Pla ins
tr~ale&lt;l thret• persons involved in a Rout~ 7 auto accident. and 8:28
p.m. . thr Po m~ro,· Unit look Marvin Darst from the Eagles Club to
Vt'll 'rans M('morial.

:n

WASHINGTON !API - Consu·
mer prices rose a minuscule 0.1
percent in November, the smallest
gain since M arrh, the government
sa id today. Tumbling mortgage
interest
rates were largely
resJX&gt;nsible.
The new reJX&gt;rt meant that. for t he
year. inflation is running at a
modes t annual rate of 4.5 perrenl
and bolstered economists' predic·
lions that. for all of 1982, inflation
~auld be at its lowest in a decade.
Fuel oil and natural gas prices
jumped sharply last month while
food costs rose slightly, apparel
pri~es fell and medical care costs
posted fresh, substantial gains.
But today's Labor Department
r~JX&gt;rl sa id the biggest ~on tribut or
to the tiny overall in~rease in its
Consumer Price Index was the 0.2

percent decline In housing costs.
Mortgage interest rates fell 2.5
per~ent . the most since August 1980.
and the prices of homes themselves
rose a small 0.2 oercent:· · Home prices had surged 1.1
percent in October and mortgage
rates .tumbled 2.3 perr~nt. Overall,
housing costs in October rose 0.4
percent.
Economists attribute the lm·
proved inflation picture to the poor
economy, oil surplus and plentiful
haiVests.
U the 4.5 perrent ll·month rate
holds through Dffem ber, the full·
year gain would be the lowest since
the 3.4 perrent ofl971 and 1972.
Overall, las t month's 0.1 percent
seasonally adjusted Increase wa s
the economy 's best monthly show·
ing si n~e the 0.3 percent decline in

March. Consumer prices rose 0.5
percent In Octoberand0.2 percent In
September.
U prices rose for 12 months at
November's rate, the yearly gain
would be 0.8 percent. The annual

rose 4.6 percent.
With the wlnter heating season
beginning In much of the country,.
fuel oil prices rose a sharp 2.0
percent last month as natural gas
prices rose 1.8 percent.

rate reJX&gt;rted by the department Is r-p;;;;;;:;;w;irii;;~;p;;;;;;;;
based on a more precise calculation
of monthly changes than the figure
the department makes public.
The new reJX&gt;rt said that ,for the 12
months ending In November, prices

at General Hartinger Park. During
1~2 a new merry-go.round and
other small equipment was purchased with these funds.

All coin operated amusement
devices In the village are required
by village ordinance to be licensed
yearly. Cost of these licenses are
$50 for a juke box, $50 each for the
first three amusement machines,
and $25 each for each machine after
the first three.
These licenses are available at
the mayor's office Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m. untll 4 p.m.
Funds from these licenses are used
for the purchase of park equipment

.--------------i

BAROAJN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN

AU.

SEA~

11.00

ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $1.00

~ECEMBER 17 thru 2~
FRIDAY lhnl THURSDAY I

Special meet inp;

To t'nd

Voi .31 ,No. 163

gaghiott

Youth injured
in Gallia wreck
i\ Rt . l. LangS\·illr vout h wa s hurl
01 onP-ca r arcidC'nl in Ga llia

night. according to
thr r;·allia ·Meigs post of thr Ohio
H ighw&lt;.~~· Patrol.

Brf'nt A. Smith. :1. wa s 1rPa IC'd and
rrlea se&lt;l from Hoiw r Medical
Center for a IJrok••n collarbonr .
HC' was a passengrr in a \'C'hic:le
dri,·en bv .John H . Smit h. :n. Rt . l.
Langs,·iile. which lost control on a
sharp. snow ·covered turn on County
Rd . fi . two m iles north of U.S. :lo. at
10: H p.m .
Th&lt;· ,·rhiclr thl'n went off th~ left
sidr of the road. drov~ int o a ditch
and owrturne&lt;l. John Smith wa s not
inj ured in th~ acciden t. and his
vehicle wa s slighll;· damaged .

Raised Diamond Cluster
...Gives 0 l3igger Diomond Lool~
REG.
95
'391.00
1!4;~:~'

S279

SJ2495

WASHINGTON !API - The House has gone home for Christmas,
lea ving behind an exhausted Senate held hostage by a test of wills over a
proJX&gt;sed nickel·a-gallon boos t in the federal gasoline tax.
The House completed its last major act of the year Tuesday night voting 1lll-87 to send the compromise j obs-creating gasoline tax hike to the
Senate. Then it quit for the year.
But in the Senate. which has been haunted by the tax legislation
throughout the lame-duck session , conse!Vative Republicans immediately
mounted their third filibuster against the tax in ~rease theyopJX&gt;se, forring
another JX&gt;SI·midnlght session.
'\
Majority Leader Howard H . Baker Jr., R·Tenn .. vowed to bring the
measur~ to a final vote, but Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C .. was just as
steadfast in his determination to prevent that.
It was nearly 1 a.m. today when Baker and Helms agreed to take a vote
Thursday on r hoklng off debate, which would clear the way for final ·
congressional a~tio n on the measure. The Senate then recessed, until later
today when a pro fornna session wlll be held.
Congressional aides said Baker was pressing senators anxious to go
home for Christmas to stay in town to maintain a quorum when the vote to
cut of deba te is taken Thursday.
Democrats, meanwhile. pleaded for an end to the Republican jousting
and the "agonizing of this Congress."
Baker would not budge, telling the Senate: " I intend to go fmward with
this measure."
Helms would not budge.
"I want all senators to know !love them dearly. but I want all senators to
know I did not ~orn e to Washing1on to win a JX&gt;pularity ~o n test among my
fellow senators, " Helms said.
Weary senators had hoped they could follow the lead of the House and
adjourn after approving the .tax in~rease , raising the gasoline tax from 4
rents to 9 cents to finan~e $.'i.5 billion worth of highway. bridge and mass
transit repa ir jobs.
"I'm still convln~ed the wise thing for the Senate to do is reject this
measure one way or the other," said Heims, one of a small core of
CHRISTMAS FOR THE LESS FORTUNATE- Traditionally the
.COnseJVative Republicans who have filibustered the m easure off and on
Big Bend
B . Club, Inc. takes on the project of providing Christmas
for 10 days.
gilts and food for the less fortunate. Tuesday several of the members
Sen. Aian Simpson. R.Wyo., labeled Helms' action an "obdurate and
gathered at the Grange Hall on the IWck Springs fairgrounds to wrap
obnoxious performance" that amounted to an attempt to gam er favorable
and package In preparation for delivery later In the week . Guts for 21
headlines In North Carolina -an unusually sharp comment in a chamber
children were wrapped, food baskets were prepared for 12 families, and
where senatorial courtesy Is a way of life.
fndt baskets for 14 others. Members will also send fruit and candy to the
He predicted that the next time Helms tries to promote legislation of
Interest to his sta te. " There wlll be a phalanx of opposition."
When the lame-duck session began more than three weeks ago, it
appeared the gasoline tax m easure would clear easily. Baker and House
Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill Jr., D·Mass .. both endor sed it. President
Reagan also embraced it .
sa id the additional tax will have to
By JEFF GRt\BMEIER
But Helms called It " bad legislation at the wrong time presented in the
be collected about 18 months to
OVP
news
staff
wrong m anner ."
generate the revenue needed to
GALLIPOLIS
·
ll
's
o ffi~ i al now The compromise bill the House accepted was drafted earlier in the day
GaUia County r esidents will be build the addition.
by ci&gt;ngressional negotiators who hammered out the differences between
All hough Saunders said there is a
paying .5 1one-half 1 Derrent more
versions of the bill passed by the House and Senate.
"good
JX&gt;SSibility" opJX&gt;nents of the
sa
les
tax
for
goods
bought
in
the
In addition to the gasoline tax hike, gasohol would taxed at 4 cents a
tax will be able to place a
~ounty beginning Mar~h 1.
gallon.
The Gallia County ~ommiss ion· referendum on the Nov~ mber
ers voted unanimously Tuesday to ballot, he sa id the county ~a uld
cons! rue! the building pven if the tax
approve the measure. w hi~ h will
make JX&gt;SSible the construction of a is repealed before it genera tes the
An Ice-covered road was given as JX&gt;rted by the patrol Tuesday.
necessary funds.
$1.5 million courthouse addition.
Robert L. Snowden, 29, Rutland,
the cause of a one-vehicle accident
November would be the earliest a
The .5 per~ent in ~rease wlll add 00
was eastbound on County Rd. 7 at
on U.S. 33earlyTuesday.
referendum
could be put on the
cents to every $100 of mer~handise
6:30p.m. when his auto struck and
VIctoria A. Sla~k. 24. MiddleJX&gt;rl,
ballot. U ~ ili 7.e n s voted to repeal the
pur~ hased In the county.
kllled a deer, causing slight damage
was northbound , two·tenths of a
tax. state law prov ides it would still
.At a public meeting held shortly
to his pickup truck.
mile north of County Rd. 25. at 3a.m.
be ~ollected for 30 days after the
before the vote. severa l opJX&gt;nents
Troopers said David A. Bates, 18,
when she lost control of her vehicle
election.
of the tax hike said the commission·
Pomeroy. was eastbound on County
and struck a gaurd rail.
i\11 but about $200.&lt;XXJ of the funds
ers are taJ&gt;ing the action against the
Rd. 18 [Kingsbury Road) at 10: ~
Slight damage was listed to her
needed to construct the addition
wlll of the.people.
vehicle, according to the Gallia- p.m. when a deer came into the path
~au ld be ~o llected by the time the
According to the resolution
of his vehicle and was struck and
Melgs post of the state highway
tax would be repea led. Saund~rs
passed by the ~ommi ss ioners , the
kllled. His vehicle was also slightly
patrol.
sa
id .
new .5 tax will be in eff~ t only long
Two deer a~ciden ts were re- damaged.
In that event. the commissioners
enough to pay for con stru~l i on of a
said they would have to ~onsider
three-story addition to the ~ourt ·
borrowing money, selling bonds or
house to replace the wing destroyed
imposing some other tax to makeup
in the January 1981 fire.
the balance.
The basement and second floors
Saunders sa id " it's not that big of
wlll be built as shells and wlll not be
a deal " for the county to raise the
completed wlth money from the
addi tional $200,&lt;XXJ if necessary.
sales tax, the commissioners said.
"We feel we ra n finish the two
Commissioner James Saunders

REG.
'410.00
REG.
'191.00

NOW

20o/o

Icy roadway causes accident

LONG AND SHORT GOWNS AND ROBES.
PAJAMAS AND BABY DOLLS....
All AT ·

CHRISTMAS
OFF

SALE PRICES!!

WHY PAY MORE
CHARMS
CHAINS
CHARM HOLDERS
BRACELETS

REGaSTER
A
$500.00 DIAMOND RING'
TO BE GIVEN AWAY DEC. 24th. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
113 COURT ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2054

342 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS,OHIO
446,2691

SIZING

noors with money from one source
or another," he sa id .
Co nt ra~ t s for the court house
project will ~awarded D~ember
.10. the commissioners said.
The apparent low bids for the fi v~
contracts in the proj~t ~a rne in
$82,790 less than the arrhit ~t's
es tim a t ~

Because of this. the comm ission·
ers said they will be able to a~~~p l
bids to in~ lude items s u~h as
~o u11room seat ing and an eleva !'Or
in the project.
These and other items would not
have been in~ luded if bids wer e over
est imates, thr commissioners said .
Six persons were present for I he

public ht;a•ing on the sales tax
mcrease.
Count;• rt'sidrnl George Pope told
the com missioners he docs not like
how lh~;· d~ided to finanrt' a new
courthousE' wing.
" I don't think anybody's against
the ~ourthouse." Pope sa id . "It's
j ust the way you guys ar~ doing it.
" If you took a poll, mos t people
would say they are aga inst the tax
in~rmS(', but .1 ·ou are doing it
anywa;•," he said .
OpJX&gt;n~nt s also said the ~ommis·
sioners should hav~ planned for a
l~ss expensive ~ou rt housc and tried
to a llra~t mor~ local contractors to
bid for the project.

Housing costs push prices up
By The Associated PfL'ss
Higher housing costs helped push
up ~onsumer pri~es in the Cin~i n ·
nati area by 1..1 per~ent. while at the
other end of the state. in Cleveland .
food pri~es dropped slightly , the
U.S. Department of L abor reJX&gt;rls.
In November, Cleveland grocery
~osts fell 0.7 per~ent after inrreas·
ing by 0.8 per~ent the month before.
sa id William Rice, regional rom·

missioner for thr department's
Burea u of Labor Statist i ~s.
The overall price in~rease in
Cincinnat i was caused mainl.v by a

2.8 percent jump in housing costs
~tween
September and No·
v~mber. Ri~P sa id Tu ~sda;·. Hous.
ing cost s were up ~a uS(' of higher
home own~rsh i p costs :md fuel
~ h arges .

White Christmas hopes fade

MANY STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

ALL 14K GOLD 30%oFF

Carleton School for mentally retarded. Pausing for this photo were Etta
Will, Marlene WUson, Mary Madden, Unda Foster, Betty DID, Enna
Hendrix, Leona Krautter, Marie Thoma•. Maxine Jorcan, Mary
Brewer, Unda Jell and Margaret Wyatt. Others working on the
program of helping others have been Shirley Gibbs, Harry Thomas,
Harry Krautter, Ken Madden, Bob Lemley, and Ellen Johnson.

Gallia commissioners .increase sales tax

as your way to
say "Merry
Christmas"! Her
holiday wouldn't
be complete
without a
pretty sleep
gown or robe or
baby doll... ..
Choose a
few items....
to make her feel
extra special'

All
BULOVA, SEIKO
CARAVELlE, PULSAR
WATCHES

15 Cenh

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

c.

Coun~&gt;· ~1 o ndav

1/3CARAT
TOTAL

2 Sections, 14 Pag e'

Senate given
tax-hike ,bill

A suit for mom'' ' wa s filrd in Meigs County Common Pleas Court
bv Fat·mer's Ban·k and Sa ,·ings Co .. Pom~roy, against Dona ld C.
1\·a rd and Rebrrra Ward both of Pomeroy. Plain tiff seeks $8.327.40.

in

entinel

Cop.y righted 1982

INGELS
JEWELERS

Banks files money suit

1'(/.t:" I I

The Daily

Genuine emeralds . rubies
or sapphires with precious
diamonds set in 14 kt. gold .
Truly classic in design ...
color and diamonds say it all.

marriage~

Pagt' 10

Ronald Grady, Ra~Ine, Is a
resident of Pinecrest Nursing ·
Home. Christmas cards would be
appreciated. His address is 555
Jackson Pike Road, GalllJX&gt;lis, Ohio
45631.

0hgg[cg

Racine Legion Post 602 wlll hold a
special meeting Thursday at 6 p.m .
at the hall .
Government cheese will be dis·
tributed to all needy Legionaires of
the Post .

Point Plt·a~anl
hank mt·r~t'~

Property transfers

At Pinecrest

Amusement licenses expire Dec. 31
MlddleJX&gt;rt Mayor Fred Hoffman today Issued a reminder to
local businesses that amusement
machine licenses expire on Dec. 31.

Marauders, Eagles
beaten; Bobcats win

ICY ROADWAY AcdDENT-'Dieclrlverof.veblcle, Vlclorla

A. Slack, Mlddlepolt, eecaped IDJury eu1J -ru.~ay IIIOI'IIIDI wbea the
carllbe wu dr!WIIIIIid oa the kiJ I'OIIdwiQi aad "~" ODio • pllll'd
r111J oa Route SS, ..til of PCIIIIei'O)'. 'Die 8t.We llllbw&amp;l PaRol .
11n 1s'llllied the accident aad Ja&amp;e TuMclay ~a wreckerwu on
·the aceae to 1ft lbe baclu!ad of the car oft the pllll'd ralllllc·
(,

\"'

By The Associated Press
Hopes for a white Christmas are
fading as warnn wea ther has
·relllrned to Ohio and promises to
stay through Saturday. Unusually
warnn December weather is due
Thursday despite mostly cloudy
conditions and a threat of rain.
Theehance of rain Is the result of a
low pressure area moving out of the
northern Plains. The National
Weather Service said thlsstornn will
track across the northern Great
Lakes and probably will not
approach close enough to Ohio to
cause a serious threat of rain,
A second storm that is moving
onshore In, California will probably
arrive In tlme to m ake for a wet
Chlistmas, if not a white one. This
storm· will stay farther south and
coul!! bring a chance of rain for both
Chlistmas Eve and Chlistmas Day.
Temperatures will remain above
nornnal through Saturday and tum
colder about Sunday.

High pressure cleared skies over
most of the state overnight.
Temperatures dropped into the low
and mid 20s during the predawn
hours this morning. The only
~l oudlness still reJX&gt;rled was in
~x treme northeast Ohio, where
temperatures were In the upper 20s.
No measureable precipitation fell
overnight, but Youngstown re·
JX&gt;rted a trace of snow.
Meanwhile tod ay's weather
called for a cloudy night with a
chance of rain by morning. Lows
near45. Cloudy witha chanceofraln
Thursday. Highs between 50 and 55.
The chance of rain Is 40 perrent
tonight and 50 percent Thur~ay .
The extended outlook for Friday
through Sunday was a chance of
rain Friday and Saturday. Cloudy
Sunday. Highs In the 50s friday, the
mid 40s to the low 50s Saturday and
the upper 30s to the lower 40s
Sunday. Lows through the period in
the30s.

Board okays policies
Meeting in regular session Tuesday night , the Southern Local
School Distri~t Board of Educa tion approved a specia l educa tion
~omplia nre system as developed by the Southrast~m Ohio
Voluntary Education Coopera tive.
The system sets up JX&gt;licies and procedures for the ma n agem~nt
of the special educa tion program in the district w hi~h is mandatory.
The system was adopted uJX&gt;n the recommendation of Supt. Bobby
Ord .
The board also approved an intermittent ca theriw tion procedur~
JX&gt;llcy since there will be a sllldent who needs this setvic~. Debra Hill
was hired as a teacher's aide for the Portland EMR class and will
•
provide the cathertzation se!Vice.
The board set Jan. 'l:l as a parents-teacher s ronfercnr ~ day and
there will be no classes during that day. A temporary budget was
approved for 1983 and the annual organizational session was set for 8
p.m . on Jan. 4.
A resolution commending the JX&gt;lice seiVice provided b;· Racine
Village .for helping control traffic before and after ~lasses. A lfred
Lyons (s handling that servtre on behalf of the village.
Kevin Shepherd and Roger Spencer were added to the substllllte
teachers llst. Attending the meeting were board members Don
Smith, Dennie Evans, Charles Powell, Sue Grueser and Roger B.
Hill; Treasurer Dennie Hill and Suot. Ord.

�..

Wednesday, December 22, 1982

'Commentary

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pome roy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday , December 22, 1982

It's the guilt that matters

The Da il y Sentinel
Ill ( 'uurt ~lrt'l'\
l'n111t 'l" ll\ ,

Ohno

614-!ln-! 156
It I \ 0"11&lt;. 11 1o 1"111- I 'T EIH: ~T I IF ri ll-' MF U;,"\.. 1\1,\SO'\ ,\In : \

HOBERT 1.. WINGETI"
PAT WII ITEfiEAil

BOB fi OEFLICfl
r;o -cwntl \ l;tuotgt·r

Oil I.E ROTJJ(;EJJ. Jll.

\ \II- \ 1111· 11 nl 1 ho· ' "'" ta h'd" l'ro·"· Jni;Httl Hath l'ro·" -' ""' wttuu a ud tho·
\ tm •rto .111 '\o · tt \jl .t]K 'r l'ulil hli o r' '' ' '"'' l:lll nll

I I ' TrJ- . 11 ~ IIF !ll' l:\ 10\ an· o•..lo ·unwtl Thn , tJould ho· lo•,, than :100 ""nb l u n ~ . All
lo·tlt·r• a r•· 'u hJt'&lt;'l tu o·il•ttlll! :t 111l mu't lw ' 'l!.iwtl 14ilh nanw . ;1ddn·' ' anc l h•lt•ph un t•
numho·r \ u Ull,\ lj! IWtl ll'lkr' 14tlllw puhli, /wd l.dl•·r.. \ huult llw 111 J!uootl ta, lt•. addn•,sint
'' 'U'''· nul]k'r ... ma lll w, _

T ell it lil{e it

•
IS

" \\ 'h;l t 1 w; ull lor&lt; 'hri.-..rm;t'-, i.-.. fo r tnt&gt;m to c ur uut all the non sC'nSf' and
gi n · it to u..., ~~ r,dg ht. " sa irl riH ·..; ton 'UW nf'r in il small town nPar F lint. Mich .
"'Tt •ll it likt· i t i."." ht' s;u d
lit · \\";t' rl'!PrTing It 1 tiH' rq &gt;t ·;Itt "&lt;I prom isC's h~ · gon'rnmPnt ilnd privatC'
-.r't. ·tor t'i ·o n umi~ t s th. tt r H ·on· r~ was just around thf' cornPr - first
qu.rl"lt ·r . ...,, '( "tHld qua r It ·r. thin!. ltJu r th . .:.~nd now at Christma s thf' promiSC'
qj "I IJllt •Jilllt' Jlt ' \ f \"1',11"

·· ], ...., crw·l.·· ht· ~.lid ·· You " huuldrft gC't JX'oplf''s ho prs up likr that."
l llr nhwnri'll !tMJ. , t t"cHr lt ·...,,ion rard_,. mad(' h~ · thosf' w ho \irw thC'
t '{ "tJJltHl l \ . tllltJU )..! h 1111 · ...,,, ,, i...,til".tl miC'ros&lt;·oprs. and who tf'nd to rrff'r to
d i~tTt·p;.tll&lt;" i t ·~ a ... ~t.lti'-lic;ll ,tii( •IT; rtit Hl S. allhough thPi r stati sti cs rC'frr to
bt"illg"
lint · ,,, tilt · r.ll t ' ont ·" .. \llll'ri Co.\ . . Jr .. &lt;"h;lirm;..tn u l M f' rTill L .\·nr h
1-: nt ll tlllli("~ Inc.. told . 1 rnt·t·trng ,,] bus inPss tx·onomist sf'arlir r this m onth
tl1.11 ··tll t ·t·, . j..., lltl qu, -... 1itl!l til. tt t ilt· admini~tration and most othrrs who
. . uppo rll't.l Hl·.rg. lllt llllic .... inl"ludi n)..; nw. H"tH' Ioooptimi stiC' rPga rding t hf'
t ".ll"h n·..., tilh ol lilt· prot.:r:rm ·
Hut .Il l tt l t ht · llltH '&lt;t"lt ·r..., l!' "111 fo r T't. ' '~ ·" ' ing. &lt;1 nd rna kP good monf'.r at it.
·· TIH · "it.:n:tl . . til rt'&lt;"t l\ t ·r\· .m· nnt l"l ·,rll.Y fm gmf'nlal~ · at th is point.
l n ~ tt·.ttl. !llt '\ ,JJ "t ' j)i 'JY; t . . i\"1 ' ,tJHl inrpn·~:-.i\" t ' ... " s; rid Cox. ln ~ pi l f' of. hf'
..,.tid . · .t
glr)IJ/1l \
1 Jllt '( ll.t 1
l)l,t..... ,,·i th lll'a\~ · C'mp h ~l s i s on
Ulll 'll lplo\ rllt'lll "
1 "ll. l " t · :'vLrnltt !liln 11 rnl(..,
·· ~-: cun11 mi c
OIJSf'JYPr." a month!~ ·
puiJ\it ·.t1 itJn. t1f!t · 1 · ~ ttri . . mt,rllll th1· t ·r~; rt ; f'ncoura gPmPnl tlwt "YPS.
\ .it t.: Tni ,l . tllt·n· \rill hi.' .t l t 'l"tt\ "1'1"\ .·· It \\·ill!)(' app;m·nt b_
, · Jatf'\Vintf'ror
hUI1l dll

I I\ " PI IIl.L:. ll &lt;..,;1\"
\It ·.t n\\·hi It ·. ,Ill tht · ft trt ·r:~ ' r~ s; t_, .. tlu•n · "n"' sig-ns uf rN.'O\'C' ry . such as
in 11 h· .., ,, wf.\ m ;t rk t ·t. Hut il .... J."it ll"t'l!n L;1Cua rd ia. t hl' formt'r Nf'w York Cit~ ·

t '.I

"'I

rn.t\111" ...... tid &lt;~ Jl("( •: ·· Tickt 'r t; tpc a in 't spag hPtt i. .. You can ' t Pat it.
Th1· unt·mpltt\ t'&lt;l t "&lt;t nnot Pal it. c~ nd tl lf'n · &lt;ll"f' official\ \ mor(' than 12
n rrllittll t 1! 1ht ·m . Tilt · t'('t J!ltHll.\ in g t•nc·r;Jl i~ likt ·l.\ "10 impru,·C'. sa.vs M organ
( ;u. 1r ; tnt\ Tru " t . huT 1iw· unt '11"1plt J.\ ·nwn t r ;1tr sC'C'ms d&lt;&gt;SI inod to worsC'n .
Tht · 1·1 ,nt ' ·'"' 11f or ...;J n ·ng t lwning r-cu nom _
, .. mr;..tsur('(l h_
, . abstract
..,t.lil " lit ·..... .1nd .t \\lll"t'llllll-! t· mplu_
\"111t ·nt ..,i tua tiun. nwa sun'&lt;l b_
, . human
idl t •nt ·......... I" irt11lW hu r 11 11 ! uniqut·. :\ n•t·{'~Sitt !l , fnr onP thing, trncl s to
t· li miiJ;tlt• lilt' lt·., . . t prr)( luct i \ "t· \\ "ltl"k t ·l·.., :rncl\p;t\"t' thos(' who produrr thf'
mu...,t lor tht· dtJ\!,!1
HuT it . tho .1dd..., 1t 1 tht· di ~illu . . . ionm(·Jll uf thuS!.' w hu an•n't ab lr to
p. 1r 1it ·1pa It· in th t · n·n J\ t·n . , 1nrl it i~ 1ht .... t·. it would SC'C'm. \\"hOa rp most rrd
up 11·i th tht· nv• ·;tltil !ilrt'&lt; '&lt; Jsh 1Jf bt·tlt'r timf's. L ikt&gt; tllP Michigan
p1 t)]Jt"lt'lt11

Reagan will wait
11 rf'~i dt ·n t 1{, ·~ tg;t n ·...., n · , ·lt'&lt;"l i1 m t"amp;rig n will tw und&lt;'r W&lt;t\ long be' for&lt;'
llf' .1n no u ncr·~ H"hi'IIH·t 111· i~ .(!1 1ing 111 \)1 · ~~ candicbtf' !"or ~ ~ s('( ·ond tprm in
] ~ IK-.1. It ('; tn "t ht · ;tn_\ ulllt ·r wa _
\ ·.
H t ·dg.tn ~ urmn t "&lt;l up tht · n ·;~ ~un in .\ t·.tr·t ·nd intc• r YiP w ~:
If )H ' run . . . It~ 11 1\)t •Jl ]\ Ill~ J &lt;.., t.M. Jfl, t '\" t 'I\ 11111\"l' hP Ill; tkf'S \\"tJUid l &gt;t. ' SUSpl: '{'l O[
IJ4 llitic;ll mtJ ti\ ·,t t itJil
If IH · df'&lt; ·idt ·" .tg.tinq running .. md "'I.\"" ...,11. hi ~ pt. ·rsu;tsin· powrr w ou ld
bt · und1 ·rcut .
So n.1·:tg; Hl wil\ ,,." ir
./imm\ · (";~rt t 1 . tht · pw ... idt·n1 lkag;rn IJU~It'&lt; l in l~!Kll. did no t forma l !~ ·
.tfl !liJUill"·, . hi ... t".I!Hlid:u \ until ! ~'{ '. -1. 1~17.~1. notth;rt hi• didn"t sa~' and show
th;..tl llt ' \\·,1.., r unntll !..! JJ, .'d tx ·1·n c·; tmpa ig ning a ll .w ·a r . and thr
dlllloU!ll"('nli'JlT I\". I" tJilh .t lurmalit.\ .
.
.
.- \nnuunt ·t ·mt ·nh u . . u.tll\ :1n · ritual dt't · l ;tr&lt;t tl o n ~ of lht • obv ious. i\ modPrn
J.m·~i dl'n tLii ,·,tmp. l ign 1·, tnnut sp ring 10 l&gt;dng and actio n \l·ithout long
month ... " I pl.•nn1ng .t nd t~ I J.!. tll izatio n . That mpans thJt lhf' work mu st
tx•g ill lllt Jn l h~ ht'lt ll I· 1ht ·1 I · i" , I dt •('].1 !"t '( I ('i t ndid a It ', amJ JX'I"hilj)S lJ&lt;.fOrt' lhf'
pn ·~ iclr-nr h&lt;.~ ~ dt'( ·itlt·d 11 ll t ·tllt·r ht• will _1)1· onP. .

. .
Th;..tl work will lit · dtmt · In pm:-.:y. or 111 lilt· prr \'a('_\" of !110 \\ hl1r H ou s1•.
thruu g h m, ,_
...,t q J J'('{l un rrl l&lt;t ·.tgan j.&lt;., n ·ad.\ ' to sa_
, . go- o r ~ l a nda s idf' . I t
won· 1 a Jl ht · d t m 1· qu 11·11\ . It tt 1ht ·n · io.., ; 1n a(l\·a ntag(' 10 PJrl_,. sig n;..t ls I hat will
tt·ll th f' lkag;Hl l t·l Jt J]h !1 1 lw n·o.ul.\ · lfJJ" &lt;1 &lt;"ampaign .
Ttu · \\"hilt · I !t1U .'&gt; t · t rit d h 1 ...,t ·nd ~u ("h ; r sig na I with 1hP appoint mrnt of Se-n.
Paul \" . l.a:-.:;dt of .' \t ·\, td .•. l { t·~ t g ; tn ·..., do.&lt;.,.! · friend. as o\ ·l'ra ll boss of t h£'
Repuhli c: tn \dtiona l (·,,mmitt t'(' .
.
. .
.
·n1at wa ..., in ~otrt 1ht · r :1t ir 1!1otlt · \l "hf'll lornwr HP;tgiln po lrllcal a1de L y n
!\o fzig&lt;&gt;r ('tJ!l\ "t ·tH'(\" m1 •t ·I Ill i.! tJI J ~IHIJ rarnpa ignf'rs tu clisr uss pla ns for 198i .
'1\vPnt\ ul tht ·rn f"tJ nl1 ·t tH J,,n I )t'&lt; ·. l1. ctncl :\ofzigf' r sa id hf' would g iH• thr
pn·siriCnt ;1 n •fJ4 Jr 1 ''n thdr di ~t"u ss ion ~. .
.
nut 1ha1 opt. ·r; tlitJ/1 lc~t · kt·d .-.u nwthing Ill thP orr hPStratlon . Nofziger's
in \'it tJ 1ion lf'11(•J" suggt ·~I t "&lt; I 1h; 11 the RPaganill's had bcttC'r ge t toget h&lt;&gt;r now
lest offi ri; 1ls ti t '(\t tJ \ "it ·t · I 1 rt '"li lt ·n t ( ;!'&lt;JI"gl ' Bush takC' prPCC'dc ncC' in a nC'W
campaign .

I

Letter to editor

Dog poisonings:___ _ __

About two years ago. we received
a slx weeks old pup that we named
Luda. Four weeks later we pur·
c hased a Doberman pup. Casey.
.We would come to love them as
m e m bers of the fa m ily in the s hort
time we were allowed to have
the m .
You see three months ago, Casey
disappea r ed without a trace. Then
three days ago, Luda came home
sic k. He would lie there wit h his big
brown eyes asking for help a nd we
didn 't know wha t to do .. Jt was too
I te He had been poisoned. Wed! sday morning he died. That
afternoon we buried Luda. pu r son,
J ason, could not believe tha t Luda
was dead : all he would sa:'l' was

I

"why? why?"
Thu rsday evening Jason got off
the bus a nd went straight to Luda 's
grave. He came into the house,
tears streaming down his face a nd
asked "why?"
There a re c ruel a nd sick people in
the world. But to take their hatred
out on something that cannot fight
back is inhuma n.
I have found out tha t there have
been three other dogs poisoned In
my area a nd three others missing.
This Is no consola tion.
I wish the person responsible for
Luda's death could only feel the
grief that he has caused by thiS
cruel act. - Joyce QuUien, Syca- ·
more Grove, Racine a rea.

WASHINGTON - II looks as if
the Supreme Court may be about to
do so me th ing sensible about the
exclusionary rule, a nd if so, this wi ll
be a great and we lco me novelty ·for the court has do ne not hing
sens ible about the exclusionary
ru le in the past 68 years.
The heady aspect of a fog·
clearing at the hi gh court stems
from an order e nte red on Nov. 29. A
ma jority of the court asked for
reargument in the case of Ill inois
vs. Gates. which already had been
argued once on Oct. 13. The case
involves a couple of suspects who
were c harged wit h trafficki ng in
marijua na after pollee, acting on
an informan t's ti p, fou nd 3.10
po unds of marijuana In their
possession. The seized d rugs were
ruled Inadmissible as evidence for
wa nt of suffic ie nt "probable ca use"
to jus tify the police search.
In its Nov. 29 order. the Supreme
Court asked cou nsel to argue the
question whether the ru le should be
modi fied, so as. for exa mple. " not
to requ ire the exclusion of evidence
obta ined in the reasonable belief
that the sea rc h and seizure a t iss ue
was consiste nt wit h the Fourth
Amendme nt." Such a "reasonable
belie f" exception was reco m ·
mended last yea r by the Attorney
General's Task Force on Viole nt
Crime. II makes great good sense.
A word of background: Until
1914, the iss ue now at hand
apparently had not reached the
Supreme Court, but in Feblllary of
that yea r the court ruled on !he
appeal of Fre mon t Weeks from his
conviction for possession of lottery
ticket s. The fact s were appa lling.
Without the slightest effort to obtain
a warrant, federa l marsha ls broke
down thedoorof his Missou ri home.
rummaged throug h desks a nd
bureaus and seized every doc u·
me nt they could lay their ha nds on.
There was no pretense of au thor it y ,
probable ca use or anything else.
The cou r1, s hocked by the mar·
sha ls' conduct, unanimously held
that evidence so seized could not be
used aga inst the defenda nt a t trial.

Tha t was the begi nn ing of the
exc lusiona ry ru le.
Nearly 50 years la ter, in Mapp vs.
Ohio, the court exte nded its ru le to
criminal cases tried in state courts.
Si nce then it has been downhiU a ll
the way. Successive courts. in a
bewildering va riety of cases. have
so fou led up the exclusionary ru le
that no one - literally no one, on the
be nc h or in the bar or in the, law
sc hools - ca n say wit h any
ce rtaint y what evidence the rule
excludes.
In a recent address, Attorney
General Wi lliam Frenc h Smith
examined three cases involvi ng the
exclusion of evidence obtained by
police in challenged searches. In
the fi rs t case, 14 judges a t various
levels had passed on the matter:
seven fou nd the search lawfu l,
seve n lcund it unlawfu l. In the
second , H judges ruled the search

lawfu l. eight ruled 11 lawful. In the
third, 15 judges ru led one wa y, J.J
judges the ot her way .
The situation Is intole ra ble. in the
semiannual journal "Criminal Jus·
tice Ethics." Mic higa n's Professor
Ya le Kamisa r a nd Maryla nd 's
Attorney Genera l Stephen H. Sachs
recen tly argued in fa vor of leaving
the mess as it is. U.S. Circuit J udge
Ma lcolm Richard Wil key co n·
te nd ed flatly tha t "t he time has
come to abo lish the excl usio nary
rule." Frank G. Carrington. who
served as a mem ber of the Ta sk
Force on Violent Crime. argued for
the "reasonable belief" exception .
J udge Wi lkey had the best of it .
He made the threshold point that
the guilt of the accused has nothi ng
whateve r to do with the conduct of
the inves tigating officer. The inevit·
able result of some mec hanist ic

Trimble keeps
streak intact

}ames }. Kilpatrick
appllca tion of the exclusionary rule
is tha t demonstra bly guilty crimina ls go free. There IS no convincing
evide nce to prove tha t the rule
de te rs law enforcement officers,
but the re is a bunda nt evidence to
prove tha t hypertechnlcal citations
of the rule ma ke life miserable for
even the mos t responsible pollee.
Under the proposed doctrtnes of
"reasona ble belief," officers would
no t be set free to e mula te the
conduct of the Missour i marsha ls
who grossly violated the rig hts of
Fremont Weeks 68 yea rs ago. Such
conduct would still be puniSha ble
by disciplinary action a nd by
damage suits aga inst the offe ndi ng
cops. But at leas t a sensib le step
wou ld be taken towa rd convic ting
the palpabl y gu il ty, whic h Is one of
those thi ngs I had supposed the law
was a ll about.

By SCOTI' WOLFE
EAST MEIGS - In exciting, well-played high school baske tball
contest a t Eas!Alrn High School Tuesday e ve ning, the Trimble Tomcats
na rrowly escaped the claws of the hustling Eastern Eagles, 46-35.
The outsized Eagles kept pace with the towering Tomcats most of the
ga me, but a very bala nced Trimble offense that placed four men In
double-dlg!JS proved to be too much In the final stretch.
The non-league win boosts the Tfi.Valley Confe rence leader s to a perfect
7-0 ledger, while EHS dropped to ().6 overall a nd ().3 inside the SVAC.
Sharpshooting Ma rk E lchtenkam per led the double-figure qua rtet with
12 points, while Scott Ga tchell, Nelson Morris, a nd Greg Koons each netted
10 points for the visiting Tomcats.
David Dupler and Bria n Sayers rounded out the Tomca t scoring with
two points a piece. Junior Jimmy Newell aga in had a nother fine offensive
oullng to lead Easte rn with a game-high 13 points . Roger Bissell added
eight points.
Trimble broke the scoring Ice In the first pertod when lanky center Greg
Koons zipped a n Ins ide jumper a t the 7: 27 mark. Mome nts la ter after
working the ball a round Trimble's 1:3:1 zone, Roger Bissell saw daylight
a nd swished a short corner jumper to knot the score.
On the ensuing possession E HS controlled the boards on a m issed
Trimble shot, setting the stage for a Mike Collins' jum~r tha t gave
Easte rn Its only lead a t 4-2.
From the sta rt It was evident tha t Eastern was not going to be outclassed
by the fine Trimble team , as the Eagles played a tight defense a nd
excellent tra nsition game.
Two stra ight jumper s by Nelson Morris a nd Scott Galcheil, however,
regained the Trimble lead as the Tomcats never aga in looked back. When
the Initial period had ended the scoreboa rd reflected a 12-11 Trimble lead.
Offensively, both clubs played conservative, pa tient basketball that
resulted In a close, com petitive gam e. Although Eastern stayed within
three points In the second round Tr imble we nt up by five on a last second
jumper, 26-21.
At the ha lf Eastern 's Jimmy Newell had seven points, while th ree
opponents - Morris, Ec hstenka m per , a nd Koons - each had six points
a piece. Coach Dennis E ic hinger's Eagles flirted with Trimble's unbeaten
ra ting several times in the third fra m e, but could never come closer than
three points, despi te the opportunity to pull within one. Whe n a ll action had
e nded In the stanza Trtmble held Its lead a t 36-31.
The fourth qua rte r sta rted out on a high note for the Eagles as EHS
brought the crowd to life by scoring the first three tallies to pull close a t
36-33. E HS had the ball with 3: 27 1eft In the ga me, but a five second call son
turned the mom entum back towards the Tomcats. In a come back attempt
defensive press ure from the Tomcats forced some crucial E HS turnovers,
resulting In the 46-35 final.
Trimble shot a ne t-war ming 40 percent (20 of 491 fro m the floor a nd was
perfect a t the line canning slx of six.
Mea nwhile , E aste rn netted 17 of 54 a tte m pts for 32 percent, while hit ting
just one of four from the line .
Despite the height disadvantage the winners barely edged EHS 23-20 on
the ba ttle of the boards. Ga tchell led the winners with nine, while Bissell
had seven a nd Carpenter fi ve for the Eagles.
Both teams wer e whistled fo r eig ht fouls. Trimble had ~even assists, four
sta ls, a nd just six tu rnovers. E HS had eight assists, eight steals a nd 10
turnovers.
Trtmble's tale nted reserve squad claimed victory In the reserve contest
53-27 led by Donovan's 18 a nd Morrison 's 11.
Eastern plays Federal Hocking next T~esday .

Spared the exp..___e_n_s_e________J_a(_·k_A_nd_e_rs_
nn
WASfllNGTO N -

The taxpay·

ers came close to fu nding a
terror ist-tra ining ca mp in Virgi ni a

five years ago. They were spared
the expense only because the
ex-CIA age nt who pla nned the stunt
was n't getting a long with his wife.
This Is just one of the startli ng
revela tions that turned up during
a n exha ustice closed-door lnvesti·
ga t ion of re negade ex -CIA agent
Edwi n Wilson by the House lnt elli·
gence Committee. Wi lson has been
convicted of illegally su pplyi ng
weapons to agents of Li bya n
dicta tor Muammar Qaddafi.
Invest igators for the House commi tt ee interviewed more than 100
witnesses. All of them were
ass ured anonym it y a nd wa rned not

to speak to I he press.
T he committee's staff director,
Thomas La timer, seemed especially dete rm ined to keep my
assoc iate Dale Van Alta from
find ing out wha t the witnesses were
te lling the committee. Va n Alt a has
been investigating the Wilson
episode for more than two years.
To one witness, Lat imer said:
" I'll tell you our experience with
1Va n Alta 1. and I have never ta lked
with t hi mt . but people in the press
wi ll call up a nd they wi ll lie to you
a nd they wi ll say, well. I know you
are doing suc h-a nd -such a nd I know
somebody you can ta lk to. a nd they
are just fishi ng . ··
On one of his recent "fishing"
expeditions. Van Alta "ooked the

committee's secret transcripts,
from whic h the above quotes were
ta ken. The tra nscripts are replete
with a llegations aga inst Wilson
which have never before been
disclosed .
Wilson has been cha rged with
supplying a nd helpfng to run a
school for terrorists in Libya.
According to federal investigators.
the "supplies" provided to Qadda fi
incl uded explosives concealed In
eommon household Items like
ashtrays. Such terrorts t orga nlza·
!Ions as Italy's Red Brigade, the
Irish Republica n Army, Japa n's
Red Army a nd rad ical Palestini a n
groups are also believed to have
e nj oyed access to Wil so n' s
" ma teria ls. "

TRIMBLE (46) - Scott Gatchell 5--0-10; Nelson Morris 4·2-10; Mark Echslenkemper 4-4-12:
Davld Dupler 1.()..2; Brian Sayers 1.()..2; Greg Koons S-0-10. Totals 20-6-46.
EASTERN (35) - Mike O&gt;Uins 2-M: 11m Probert l ·M; Troy Gut hrie 2.()4; Roger BlsseU
4·0.8: Jim Newell 6-1·13: J ay Carpenter 1·0.2; David Gaull-0.2. Totah lH -35.
By quarters:
Trimble
l2 14 10 10-46
EaiiCem
II 10 10 4-35

Accord ing to the intelligencecommittee tra nscri pt , Wilson a l·
m os t got the .Justice Departme nt's
now-defunct Law Enforcem e nt Assista nce Administra tion to put up
the seed money for tra ining
terrorists a t his 3,000-acre , $5m lllion farm in Virginia's posh
horse country.
T he scheme collapsed whe n
Wilson a nd his wife had a fa lling·
out a nd he decided to drop his plan
to loca te the tra ining ca mp a t his
home in Virginia, knowledga ble
sources told my associa tes Van
Atta a nd Indy Badhwar.
When an ac tive-du ty CIA agent
was able to recru it Green Berets In
Fayett eville, N.C., to fly to Libya to
do th e tra ining there, Wilson
opened his sc hool in Tri poli. His

extraordinary

eve nts

w hich

oc-

curred almost six years ago.
Throug hout the Mid west a nd
Northeast. du ri ng the winte r of
1976-77, the high tem perature recorded her in Ind ia napo lis was
exact ly zero - a nd the low was
minus 20 degrees.
T he pipeline compa nies whi c h
tra nsport na tu ra l gas from the
Southeast a nd South west faced
their fifth consecuti ve year of
shortages a nd were a ble to deliver
less tha n three-fourths of the gas
sought by local gas utilities (also
known as distr ibution companies 1
throughout the nation.
Those severe gas shortages
fo rced the closing of thousands of
schools a nd factories. Approxima tely 500,000 workers were te mporarily jobless. Here In India na,
the governor declared a sta te of
emergency.
Determined to prevent a recurrence of those cala mitous circumstances, the Intersta te pipeline
compa nies signed long- term agree-

ments with !he producers of
nat ura l gas whi ch ass ured a more
relia ble supply In the fu ture but , in
effect, obligated the pipeline compa nies to buy gas a t a lmost any
price.
Those co m pa nies, whi ch act as
wholesalers or middle me n between
the prod ucers a nd the loca l distributors, have li ttle incentive to
control their cos ts beca use of the
scanda lous conditions unde r whic h
they are regula ted by the Federal
E ne rgy Regula tory Com m ission.
FERC proced ures a llow the
pi pelines to submit, every six
m onths, Purchased Gas Adjustm ent filings which a llow the m to
a utoma ticall y pass through to their
customers, the local utilities, the
cost Increases Im posed by the
prod ucers. Al though FERC has the
power to c hallenge those filings, It
seldom sc rutin izes a nd almost
never contests them.
The local utilities, in turn, have
a uthority In most states to a utoma tIcally pass along their higher costs
to their customers, In the form of
F uel Adjustment Cla use Increases.
At the end of the line Is the
ha pless consume r who Is faced with

a nonco m petitive situa tion in which
na tura l gas Is provided by only one
local utility compa ny a t a n uncontestable- a nd consta ntly risingPrice.
T he Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition, which examined ra te In·
creases submitted to FERC by 16
ma jor pipelines du ring the fourmonth period from July through
October of this year, estim a tes tha t
those price hikes will cost the
count ry's gas users a t least $2.3
billion this winter a lone. ,
Fa milies using na tu ral gas to
heat their homes currently are
paying $5.60 to $5.70 per thousa nd
cubic feet (Mcf) compared with
$1.06 per Mcf in 1973, $2.26 per Mcf
In 1977 a nd $4.56 per Mcf last yea r.
But the current round of Increases Is occurring whe n the
supply of natural gas Is plentiful
a nd ove ra ll dema nd Is declining down a bou t three percent from last
year, according to the Department
of E ne rgy.
The re Is, In fact, so much na tural
gas a va ila ble tha t ma ny wells ha ve
been te m pora rily capped a nd In
some areas excess gas Is being
"fla red" or burned off a t the

wellhead - yel the price continues
to esca late.
" P ipelines a re choking on gas
supply as their ma rkets shrink,"
says William V. Bell, senior vice
president of the India na Gas Co.
Inc., which serves India na polis,
"yet we have seen no relief nor
stabilit y in prices. "
Bell say his compa ny was
required to pay-52 percent m ore for
its gas s upplies In October 1982 tha n
In October 1981, a nd those soaring
prices were "entirely due to the
increases which have been passed
through by pipeline supplie rs."
T hose pipelines a re opera ted by
compa nies whose na mes are not
fa miliar to most consumers P a nha ndle Eas tern , Texas Easte rn, Texas Gas, Te nnessee Gas, E l
P aso, Columbia, Consolida ted,
Tra nsco a nd United.
By the na me of the producers who bea r the primary responsibilIty for ra tc hetlng up prices to
Increase thei r profi ts - a re quite
welll)ow.
According to the America n Petroleum Institute, the fi ve largest
firms in the field are: Mobil,
E xxon, TeJCaco, .Gulf a nd Shell.

DOONESBURY
~516H C.

n;4H,

\

Pirates obtain
outfield insurance

ALL HANDS - Trimble's Greg Koons (43) and Nelson Morris
provide a tight defense for Eastern' s Troy Guthrie during Tuesda y's
non-confer ence game at E astern. Trimble posted Its seventh straight
win, 46-35 behind Mark E chstenkamper's 12 points. Jim Ne well led
E astern with 13 points. Scott WoUe photos.

Tornadoettes win pair
By SCOTr WOLFE
RACI NE - The Southe rn Torna·
doeties' girls basket ba ll tea m
recently scored two more lmpr_esslve v ictories by defeating league
foe Not1h Gallla 77-28 a nd nonleague Trimble 6645.
T he two wins leave Coach
Connee E nslen's Tornadoettes with
a perfect 4·0 sla te.
P lra!Al Game
Agai nst North Gallia Amy Li ttlefield a nd Tonja Salser provided the
offe ns ive fireworks for the wi nners
as they paced the Tornadoettes
wi th 22 and 20 points respectively.
Southe rn bolted Into a healthy
25-7 first period lead , then vaulted
In to interm ission with a 45·16
advantage.
In the last two rounds the hustling
Southe rn belles didn 't slack off as
they continued to roll towards a
59-24 lead after three periods, the n
on to the 77-28 finals.
Besides Lit tlefield 's a nd Salser's
combined 42 point effort, Laren
Wolfe hit double figures with 12
points, Jenny Bentley added six,
Mic helle J ohnson six, Cindy Evans
five, J ulie Houdashelt fo ur, a nd Mel
Weese two.
T a na George led Nort h Ga llia
wi th 14, Michele George had 10, a nd
Mary Picke ns four.
Southe rn hit 38 of74 from the field
for a hot 51 percent a nd hit one of slx
a t the line. The winners collected 36
re bounds, led by Amy Littlefield
with nine a nd Cindy Evans' eight.

scoring with a game-high 26
markers. Littlefield added 24 In
a nother great effort. J a n Downs
a nd J ulie Kuhne led the Tom cats
wi th 12 points a piece, Serena
Morri so n a nd J oAnn a Ewing
tossed In seven each.
Southe rn held a slim 34-25 edge a t
the ha lf, but raced to a 54-34
advantage a t the end of the thi rd
stanza. SHS added 16 points In the
last round to post the 85-46 win a nd
its four th straight triumph.
The winners hit 27 of 65 from the
floor for 42 percent a nd 12 of 18 at
!he line for 67 percent. SHS had 38
rebounds led by Laren Wolfe and
Littlefield with 12 eac h.
Box score:
Southern -

Weese 2·2.6; Salser 114·26:

Littlefield 104·24: Wolf{' 2.0.2; Evans 2.Q-4;
Bentley 0-0..0: Johnson 0.2·2: Mic hael 1.{).2.

Total..'l 27-12-66.
Trimble- Jan Downs 6.0-12; Dupler 0.2·2:
Ewing J.l -7; Kuhne 5-2·12: Morris 4·2·10;

Oberhauser 0.2-2. Totals 1.8-1-45.
Score hy qwu1ers:

Southern

12 22 20 12-4;6

Trimble

16 9 9 11-45

NEW YORK (AP I - The New
York Ya nkees have traded
outflelder·first basema n Lee Maz·
zllll, whom they acq uired late last
season from the Texas Rangers, to
the P ittsburgh P ira tes.
" I didn't wa nt to leaveagaln," the
former New York Met said Tuesday
In reaction to the trade, which was to
be a nnounced a t a press conference
this evening in Pitts burgh. " I
wanted to be part of a wi nning team
in New York, bu t Pittsbu rgh's
pretty good. I'll just go the re a nd
bust my butt. "
The Yankees were to get four
unidentified minor leaguers for the
28-year-old former Me t. The players involved are not expected to be
of a ny Immediate help to the
Yankees.
" It has been in the works for a
couple of weeks now," said Mazzll·
li's agent Tony Atta nasio. "He
wanted to stay in New York wi th the
Ya~kees, but the prospects of
playing every day are better for him
with the Pirates."
Mazzilli. who hit .251 with 10 home
runs a nd 34 runs ba tt ed ln. bega n the
season on the roster of the Mets. He
lost his outfield job In spring
training, was sent to Texas and the n
came to the Yankees in excha nge
for shortstop Bucky Dent .
Mazzilli, who may be asked to
play cente rfield in view
of
P ittsburgh 's loss of Omar Moreno

through free ageny, still has two
years rema ining on a five-year
contract he signed with the Mets.

T hr Da il y Sen ti ne l
t USPS 145-!1101
A UlviHion of MuiUmedlK, Jnr.

Publt.sht•d t'Vt•ry Hfl t'rnoun, Mon&lt;Wy lhruu ~o: h
Frid1ty , Ill Court Strt•t•t , by l~ Ohio V~:~ ll t•y
Pubh.shml! fmnpany · Mulliuwditt , Jm· ..
Pmut•ruy. Ohw ;J5769 , 9!t2·21~ . St.'t.·ollll dlt.Mlf
posllt~t' J)It l t l

P oJllt'fll)' , Ohio.

111

Mcrnlx•r : Tht• Asso!.'iltlt'tl Prcli!i, Jnl1:1 rw.l 01:1i·
ly Press A ssoc· i~ttmn ~tnd l~ Amt!rinm
Nt•wsJll:lpcr Publisht'rs Assoc·1attun, N1:1tiONJ I
Ad vcrll sml! Rt'p r t'scn t Ht i v~. Bn• nha m
Nt&gt;WSJll:lpt.•r Sttl~s. 733 Th1rd Av~nut', Nt'W
Yurk, New York 10017 .
POSTMASTER : &amp;nt.J 1tddrcss l oTh~ Dltil y
Scntuwl , Ill Court St. . Pomeroy , Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRI PTION RATES
Hy Carrlt&gt;r or Molur Ruulr
0 Jli'Wt•t•k

. 11 .00

Ont• Month

. . ..... . . . 14.40

Oilt' Yt•;tr

.. . ... . . 1.\2.110
SINGLE COPY
PRICE."
. . . l lCc n b

tlt•stnnt.: lu pay tht• ear rkr
llth"itllt "t' tlil"t' t "\ Ill Tht• DHily

Sull..,rnht •rs nul
11111 .1 ft "HI II Itt

S.·nltnt ·l una 3. 6 ur 12 munlh basts . Crtodil
wtlllw 1.:11 en t "lt!Ttt'l" t'ih"h month.
Nu .~ ubsn1pl1un s by
w ht•r• · hu111t ' nt ITit'l"

tn11tl pt'I"1Tll lt t'ti m towns
St' f\' ll"t' IS avatl~tblt•.

MA IL SUBSCRI PTIONS
l nsid r Ohin

1.1 Wt·t•k.'
2fiWt••·k.'
:i2 W• •t·k.,

$H.IH

Oubitlt•Ohiu
l:J W,·o·k:-.

. . 127.30
$.51..ul
.... $15.21
129.&amp;1
sali .21

:!fl Wn · k ~

52 Wo·r·k ~

PIZZA SHACK
CLOSES AT 2 ON

CHRISTMAS EVE
CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY
OPEN DECEMBER 26TH FROM 9-11

LOUNGE
CLOSED AT 5:00 CHRISTMAS EVE
CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY AND
DECEMBER 26TH

MEIGS INN &amp; PIZZA SHACK
POMEROY

c 1982 Bob Ev1n1 FlnTII, Inc

BOB EVANS

Beat Tomklttens

In a more com petitive contest
with Trimble the Southe rn team
continued to domina te Its opponent
by ha nding the Tomcats a 66-45
loss .
The dy namic duo of Littlefield
a nd SalSer again carried the bulk of
tlie Southe rn attack, bu t this time It
was Salser who led Southern's

Behind natural gas __p_r_i_c_e_s___wt_·fe_fi~_1J_~~-;o_w_~t"_t7:_
~s
INDIANAPOLIS - To understa nd why the cost of na tu ra l gas
used as home hea ting fuel is
soaring at a phenomenal rate, it's
necessa ry to reca ll a se ries of

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Sports
briefs...
·"''"'tlay's ~ 1111rt ' In llril'f

llr ·nH·
.

r\ ....•.odah•d

TI::'Io.'S IS

I'Tt' '

\'OH W,\l.K Cunn. t,\ l 'o - M;trHtw
f\a1T ;11l1"1";' h.;1s IJ!~ · n r;1nkr'(l No. J
amon~-: 1mnw n tt•nnl '
Pf"IPs.~lunaL~ h1

T•·nni!&lt;.

1\l,t~; vln• ·

:' \; tl·tamtl. l. •rho r ap1Uil'(f 1:1 tillr'~ 1hls
\"Pa r. IJK"IIX I I n~ tht• Ftl•nrh flprn allll

\Vimhk~lon . di.~plm~·~ l "llrl~ l·:vPrt l.h•\"tl

In lhr· . mnu&lt;~ l r;mkln~:s . whl("h will IX'
puhllsh•-&lt;1 In 1hP ma~: lll/\('~ Ff'hruary Is
!'Ut • U. ol"d

SHORT JUMPER - Eastern's Mike CoUins (42 ) close 1o the
bucket puts the baD up for a two pointer against two Trimble defe nders
Including David Dupler (31) . Trimble won Its seventh In a row , 46-35.

Trillo negotiating
CLEVELAND (API - Newly
acquired Clevela nd India ns second
baseman Ma nny Trillo wa nts a
contract running a t least untll1988,
his agent says.
"Th~ rumors a bout Ma nny
wa ntlng$1 million a year are false,"
said Trillo's agent, Da ve Lanfield.
" But we do want a contract tha t
would put hJm among .the top
· percentage of middle Infielders."
Trillo, 32, hasone more seasonle!t
on a contract that pays him$500,000.
He would become a free agentatthe
e nd of 1983 If the Indians fail to sign

hJm.

·

"Considering Manny 's age, we
want at least a five-or six-year
contract," Lanfleld said.
Trillo was acquired thiS month by
the Indians in a trade with
Philadelphia. Last year with the
Phlllles, Trillo hit .264with no home
runs. The three-time Gold Glove
winner also went a record 89
straight games without an error.
~

dtl.JilpN:IIu ..,.1'VIlll plat.'f'.

GREENHOUSE
Syracuse. OH.
Now Open For The
Christmas
Holiday Season
large selection of Poinsettias in Pots
and Hanging B.aakets. Christmas
Cactus, Violets, Foliage F»tants &amp;
Hanging Baskets. Candle arrangements, door wreathes, and cut
Christmas Trees. Now Taking Orders
for Grave Blankets.
Open Daily 9 to 5
Sunday 1 to 6
PH. 992-6776

DON't
Sometimes the choice of steak
you get at other restaurants is
really no choice at all. Because
those restaurants don't
sell choice cuts of meat.
So all you have to
choose from are the
standard cuts.
But at Bob Evans®
Steakhouse, our standards
are higher than just the
standard. So we make every
steak on our menu from only choice
cuts of delicious beef.
And while some restaurants use artificial tenderizers
on their meat, at Bob Evans, we never have to. Because
the cuts of beef we use are just naturally more tender.
So come on down to Bob Evans Steakhouse at
1530 Eastern Avenue in G311ipolis. ·~ause if you wa~t
a big, thick, mouth-watering steak, 1t's the best cho1ce
there is.

11ob&amp;vt.UtS
STEAKHOUSE

Bob Evans brings you back:
L-------------~--------------~
I,

'·•,

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

High School
cage scores
Uh\&lt;1 lllc h ...;, hoM&gt;I 11.01 \'' li&lt;L,kdhaJJ
11.1 ·n... \.,.,.,. . ,,~ , 't t ,..,,,.,

Pom

p

u .... n I t • l.o~ll~l I liP r\ I JUIII.I' -.:
\k oHrl F 1""''"n' loll, Ko ·nl I!&lt;&gt; N'Idt ~ .

\un .• ·,7 \1. u h&gt;n 1" ' .ol I• •
\n-..•!11.• .. 1 I~ ttld o,l

f!.,,,f.,n l

\\ ,,.no• • •

-d I r!

\11 .mu111 •• • 1\ o 111 \ .&gt;II•·• " ~·
hl11.1htol. o " ' l.o tu1 -.., l'o· ol' 1 ,

I.,,

l l l l .!l 'ol ·,I

Trailing 40-34 going Into the final
stanza, Coach Bob Caldwell's
Vinton County Vikings outscored
visiting Kyger Creek, 26-22, but fell
two short In losing a close
non-league encounter, 66-60 Tues·
day night. Kyger Creek, behind
double digit scoring provided by
seniors Jeff Moles, and guard Keith
Clark, and juniors, J . D. Bradbury
and Brent Love had bull! the lead
but had to come on llkegangbusters
to preserve the victory.
During the frantic fourth period,
Clark, Moles, and Roger Stroud
connected on key baskets while
Clark sank two clutch free throws
with just five seconds left. Two
attempts In tying the score by
Ramey failed.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

i ll lt•ll l '\iii IIi• ol'-lo·rll 1'1

-,

~·.nn1o"

Ill\ !tTl

I ~ ·, ., ln1 " •I " ' I h.oH ~ 111 ,;,
I~.!" ' '

In .II ~1 1 1. 1~ 1 ,J, 11 \1 \', 1 , ,,
1\. ·nj.&lt;lllln I •...:.on ·• •

I ~ lldonl .tUh -,

298 SECOND ST.

l~ tl,q~

•· 1'• •"-on-.·• ·
ll&lt; oo ·o~ 711 llnm"ll• I.~.
1\. ·ol.'&gt;h llo t.\ I .ol&lt;llrl.d II
1\1.1&lt; k 1!111 I ~ \. f '1\ ll ~lolllo

POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU DECEMBER 24, 1982

t .,

I Uo•omt .tll••li 71 F o,lkl • .llh t,!
1~•1\..uh ~

Hu .. -. 1.1 ,.,

H •\\11111.: 4;,i, 11 I&lt; • t1 .~:. 1 nd ..;pillll.! 1:
lh.u u ...,t 71. ·1\11n \ . Ill· • ' ·u
111 &gt;11\'-llllo·h,' l'l " "'lo. 11 .:
~
lh ll'-h :'' l~•lluo d 1 ,~
lluo O. , ' ' !'t . ul •·I llr•dc• 1• ,,, 17
I .olll l &gt;tidC• -;-, \ 1. t~l111' h '" ,;-,
• ·'"'J•I• ·II \lo·n• ,, 1.11 -, 1·' '"' ·lh ill• -,I
1 ,11\,ol \ \ wo ho"&gt;lo 1 ' "
ll.m ulh1!1 '[\q• '•I
i .• nl••·h l

Scores first victory

7 L 1\r•• •t..lwlfl •· I

' .. nl ••ll l,lill +.: ' ' '" l'hii,,.Jo lph1.o .1
I .o l11 "1l I ,j, 1111.11.. ·; , , '\.uuh \ ,Il l &gt;I I
' our •II lm • ~• n t,j \I.. non 1\uo h h·l ·,~
1 ololinc•··n ~ lt•dc•• l,olo ·.~

YOUNG MARAUDERS - The 1982-83 Meigs
Marauder seventh grade basketball team, 2-2, Is
shown above. Members Include, kneeling Jell to right,
manager Mike Jones, Eddie Baer, Joey Loving,
Steve CasseU, Mike Roush, Joey Snyder, Jason Rope,

I ,Il l I o;" \ ,llli Uo' /o

I .11lh11' ••I I ·, II" h t.. "~
l.llnt.,n :\1."'ll '' '

4 .. t .H'\1111 :~ .

l·, o] i, 1;: \\ 1! ·1.. 11 111 I' +
'"h. HIIJH&lt;•Il 1m. I ;, .mol \'.olio ·• t.'o
&lt;"h. I)CIIII

\\ , ~•• ·n 11~ '
t.~
ll udh..., ) , r· m \tl..o •n h•

I 'htlllnoi iN · +ol

I'm
I 111 I. •S.• IIo :--7 I ir1 ,\lo \1111'&gt;1.1 .'- t.;
o·m
l'uwoll:'-ol.l n,o n :o I'm
\\ o~inw
Hill'- •.!

0HI -.,, '·"''I

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

7 1 lf drnlil111l '•"

I .!I I 7)oi ( Ill I\ 1'~I ll .1 Il l : I

I Ill

''II .II'\""' ·.: 1\ t·lllll~l llfl t:
l ~+ j &lt;ll~l

&lt;'!o-1o·

r·h, ,,, :'.!.. 1•T
i lo·••
".0111 ~I

r,

1\

h -,·,

I ,,Jt,ro l•l.oll. • ' ·"

·~ umiH.on.o

I

~.1l

L tko ·"' " ' " '

$

ts

1 n""r'~"'

0:
I " I 1\111.:1.:'- 1' 1 I "I l k.orll 17
( ,,; 1'•' " '1-. ll,0\•·11 71 Lon&lt;d'-11'1 ,,1 " II'UI• ll!. o o/1 I "hiii i i iU~ l,t,l• ,,-

o,J I 1111&lt;&gt; I 111

1 , •UIPI I 11 '' I I•"

~1

I &lt;l' h• • '• •II "' I H t..m r.; \ '.oil '•I I (j'
~ -·11~ ·,~
\l..1••n r;, nm"1 '

4 on.oho•c.o

J).l

"'

)l,oi h •II •I \\ '' TH&lt; I.IIo ~ I
11,1
'-ll'lllli/1'- ·,,, 11.11 I II,Jill lui ·,7 l (f
lit Ton k
'-I I ·n Il oilo ' ' "'' ' I t
I~

1.11' .II t

\IT \ • 1 I~ 111 ' "'

.,

I~ lp t~ "

-.,, f, •1111 ....._ I l rd, , \'11 - IITII"I.tl1 -...
! I .oll!tofl ~ 1 1."1"11 o,)
I l'l o•l • -.,11,111 "1 l . ol;o ·ll• nl :'7
I ·•'11. ,1-.o '- ,_1\ \lo 111&lt;&gt;1 ·or
~ !11• ·'1''"

I

I '"" 'n •·I '-•" I ,,, ~ m I~
I :111.• -, \l.1!lllll tl .u d rnt: "
I ": 1.1 I ..rh ,-, Howko•\o ' 1••
I ''·' II -, k• ·• ,,,,n, '&gt;I
I U• "" • · \\ llu•uc hl " -., •I
I "&lt;1:1" II ~I

FRESH PORK BUTT

\j ,.,. . ,~ 1 \11• II

I·,, ,,, •

rT ... n•

I ,1 , !11"11' '• I

I•
I ,,.

,,,

I,, , ,,, I rw111

", \'.

·•

I

Ill·•'I

-1

1

r

l'•ll'"n h)

1

I·

~111+·11-1

! 'olo

'-~1'1l1 ·. !'h·Tn

I •' I· "

1
&gt;" I'.. ·.oll'-1111•
•:
I · l ' 1H • ~~~ I on I. ••' n 11
! ,..,. ·" ·' '-I 1\o nil• lrn "I I~"'"

I

·,.,

~

!I'• ,- II 10 .. •:&lt;1 ·,

ont.. ··•
,-~ o .. n
I . ' ,,,,.,
1,,, ' ''·"
• .rlrnout

\ln1 • ••I

1•, \,:,_,,,

I

I (• ,.. . .• "-.II" I

Ground Chuck~~~l

~'

""I '"

111 H11ir..:•·" "'l H
\• ... 1. 11.1 ••• I'\ 1 \ ·I

,,,._h, 11 •' \\ ili.o ll l'- hllll: ll

1 ,, "

no ·' ,. .. ,

I

"11

1

,ril"n I' '

I,., , nl· :0• ., I • +,.,• d '' '

1,,.... ..

...

Ground

," I .oh ,,. I'

TTI~I.r·.

J·

&lt;

LB

•• ·

I , 1'1o ,d ~. I "I'"' I'·" 1-. 1~

.... I••
I

,. ,.,

'

..- '·

39
,,

'.
'• "'• i
11. , r. l,,· .• ! I',
'.I , .:. 1
.., ·" :'
11 ·\ • ·ll• ·i· I .._,,,,·II ' ' I T. 1nl•u •·· I .. l._,., ,lo

flo ·:. ·

..;

11·•1··· .

,• • - ,,

• 11'1

1!11 I•'• ' 1· ·,11. II''-"
j t~

:t .II \ 1 I&gt; I '\

I•

),...,pi,·,

' , , '10 • II ,1 I '"\Ill ~I

IIH li.o1: \ ,;,. .,_ , ll ... o: ~ I I
lo•!!ot'-&lt; 11 I l)lo•l1 '•" V,oll'••fll• o 11 ·1,
fo:o·rtl&lt; •II llll lll ' ' ' ,• .oh.111 1 I I
kll' :.o!lll ,: I' L 1'1111&lt;1~ 1 Il l' I ~
l-••~ 1 111.111-. ',.,,,,,. ,n •·'- 'on I hl l'-11"11

,,-,

·,, II'!

l••lc•·n,.,n , ·,,, 1· , , ., ,,~~~.~,
I, , .... )11.1 \: I· 1 t lh lol 'I I 1-'.11! Ito I 1 1~

1o:

I ''" '"

I~ fl"'' • · \1• .u h.o .,..
I 1111. 1 I .1l h ••I -.,, \ J.LJ I '- ·,:
1.•11-:· &lt;ll 1-'ln o 1, ' \lll· •nd.o I 'lo·.oo 1 1" h II
l,•r.•Hl ~~~ 1.•• ,,uT'-"'1h1 11 '\\ 17
I J •l .!Ill I oi l hi I"" !10' ~1 \lo • t~: hl ' 'I I in

i l l ',}'

1&gt;11.1111 lo..n~· · I l'md l" I :
! '" ,..._, ;;, I o'l 'I I',,,, '"'"

ll.oll'\0·

! ~~ 1111111 L' ;.,·. -,, \\ lu io•••O. +.\
\!,,. "" I ,,,,, rv ··" H1;&gt;h·' ~~
\ (.i plo 11, i, ht' o: \ 1. 11110 hi ,7
\1 , L·" 1 II

1

o, j 0 I\ do

·,j

\1 '"'" ,· I I' l l• \~ . ' "" ··1
\I ,..,IJ."!' I tn ,• • ! j, ·. •
\I I ' ,j,, ··: I ' Ill . . ,.
\1 t • n. ,&lt;1 I'' l .. ,.t, • ,',l·•~o~l

-1 1

Lo~•

•n

\

Ito lll.o~•

•I

_.

\!1 I• 1, '' '"II •I I
\l•ld l•'•

11. Ill• •Ill I
II
&lt;11 \\.od o., dl ~I ll i nllt,.., ,, ., 7· •

\hd• ,.,_, "I \ml~, 'I 'to • I• d
\1 1,, 1our\ f,,l-.o -·: \l.1UI1 &lt;" o,:
\ \il l• oj l \lo ·~ . lndo I I'
\1 I• t~l " " 7'• l~ · 111o I ' n+11!1 -

WHITE OR RED

1

\ Ji'-'l"l fl.l\\.1 \

,j j

' •' 1

( 'lo lilt

\J , np • ·'.Ti l• ~~

\ l .opio •l"ll ·.- ,

\I I Ito ,, lh

\f ,: l··l d ·,:

•,I-

Gra pes...............~8;.69¢

'-'tJ ,i\\lloO '

'- , 1, ~- n I' I "l~o " ' .. • I I· '"' I• " :•
'\,o iiHil, ol 1'1. 11 711 , , .\\II •!I &gt;I
'-"'' l~ l'lo•tl II • 1\o ~ lo Ill 1'1~• ~
' · ~ · 1\ro n" n ·,1 \J.n•t • r 111
'- • " hi&gt;• V rll+ " ' ~·,,I I, lllllllT.:'- &lt;-!
'-•" 1.• .1•: '••11 1,• \ l ••11:. n1 " ·
\,, • I' 1 ,.,, '"' • 1\ •' lo 111 1\o '"'II ·,~

NU-MAID

I •~&gt;•! • n \ 1o 1-.. ni•' , :
.-. I 1• '"' "'I ·, ' &lt;fl
\d olll' '.(_' \!.olio IT• , ,, ., 1o'
, rl n T•I· •I 7' • r Jln,~r. • l I·,,;(, ,.,

Margarine...... :~~ ...39

' ' ··• ,,, k •• · •
'\. "1 11 I 1.l·

'-

,

'- ll"' ,,]t, •11 ,,..._ .\ l u lp. ll k o, \
'\o 1i"\l .o\lll "{, 1\
"-oio·m \ ••olhll• "''' '' ll

,.,

flh ·Thn oi l l,.,, u n 1 \•• • •k~wto '.1
I lid F oul 'I I 1-:.TII.,,• I ., Jkool .• f,
(l~ ·nt.llll-! 1 HI .\ It

li1l1 ·,1d ·,1

¢

llt,lll l-! ' ' :"'1 :\o•n'- l&lt;11l o/1
11!1 , 1~&lt; . • H ill'- ·~ •. I~ · !! '-' II~ ·.:

\'. oi l 71. /.it'll · T r.wr• 10,
!'.trm.• 11"1' '-.11no • '(1. Mr ·nr"'

DOZ.2f$}Medium Eggs ..

I ,,,_,

C tlhr olrt Ill

f'.u(Uol h7 f 'l1·\ o' /ll •rll 'fi lo IIIl o ·,:
!IPn " :-; Tlno11.o '1 1
l~• ·h~ .._ Toto. ( "' ''1-!' "1••" n ·t•
r, -r, •r•hUil: "prim! 7fl Stf\Jihl · l ~ '• ~
!'1 ·111~1 · 11 1 1 · til. l.il - ·111 ( 'o·nto ·r ·,7
11kl 'l1111 ·~: Hu nllll)..'liJII ·,,
f'ilf!Tl,l

!';ot r k ·k

,_,!,rnd '•1 . ... ot.l lh ll.mg1 I~
nort f ' ll rTI IJil jll. Tiffin (', TIII •t l 71
l~or 1~mo1u t l1 -~ /'rol \ 1il0 itT -,1

WAVERLY···With upset In mind,
the Meigs Marauders gave the
league-leading Waverly Tigers all
they could handle before falling
74-60 here Tuesday night.
"This was definately the best
league game we have played this
year. They grabbed too m any
offensive rebounds and we didn't
get enough. We tried hard under the
boards but were just too short," said
Meigs coach Greg Drummer.
With the win. the Tigers remain
atop the SEOAL standings with a 4-1
slate and jump to 5·2 overall. Meigs
stays winless in seven out ings, four
of them league.
Coach Willie Hobbs' fine senior
forward Jerry Miller led all scorers
with 26. Most of his dozen buckets
came from the outside. The Tigers
point guard Rob Lewis chipped in 15
while Jim Trimble added eight.
Four Marauders entered double
digits led by junior Nick Riggs' 16.
Senior Rick Edwards followed with
12 and seniors Rick Chancey and
Greg Taylor each had 10.
The difference came under the
boards where the Tigers outrebQunded the smaller Marauders
38-lg inclj.iding ~-6 on the offensive
end which enabled the Tigers 16
more shots from the field .
The Marauders, who had their
finest offensive showing of the
season, made a wann 26 of 51 for 51
percent and elghtof15 from the foul
line for 53 per cent.
Wa vely connected on 32 of 67 for48
per cent from the field and made 10
of 13 from the free throw line for Tl
per cent. Meigs had 15 turnovers
compared to Waverly's 12.
. Taylor led Meigs In rebounding
with seven while senior Bill Holcomb added five.
Waverly's
a!J.Ieague fullback Jim 'Truck'
Thom as led the winners with nine.
Waverly's league·leading r eserves stayed In first place with a
39-29 win over the little Marauder s.
Tackett led the winners with 15
while Breitenbach added 10.
Mike Chancey paced the little
Marauders with 10 and Rick Wise
added eight.
tartlng guard Scott
Meigs' ~
Gheen did ot play due to cracked
ribs. Coa h Mick Childs' little
Marauders d op to 2·5 overall and to
0-4\n theSE AL. Waverly is 4-1 in
league play.
Meigs made five of 14 from the
foul line compared to nine of 14 for
Waverly.
Meigs hits the road for the second
of five straight away games as they
travel to Athens next Tuesday.
MEIGS tOOl - Riggs n t6: Edwards
5-2--12; ChallCl'Y 5-0-10; Holcomb 1-24: Taylor
5-0-10; Evans 1-0-2; Pickens -2-04; Hudson
0.2·2 and KeMedy WO. Totalol ~.
WAVERLY (74) - Miller 12-2·26: Lewis
7-1-15; Trimble 34-10; Thomas 4.0.8; Brei-

GRADE A

l'o~inl

tenbach 2·1-5; Sharfenaker 2-04: Thompson
0.2-2: Preble 1.0·2 and Ferguson 1.0.2. Totals
S'.l-111-74.
· By qu.uien:
Meigs
10 13 18 I~
Waverly
12 20 22 20-14

p,.n~llliJUlll 11.11 &lt;il&lt;l. E .o!-&lt;to-rrl l'lk1 1~ 1
f(o ·, TI J.ifl · 7 I .\kn-rr C hl i' ''"" \1
IUllm.m hi. Sm ilhl' lllo- ·,1
Ri\l•r \ "i,..., ,,; l11hn f;l!·nn .,..
lf, (';o,Tall ' ftl :'\i'W ,\IIJ;"Ifll I I
Sd)l'lng Ill. ~ · rlln W R o-!if' l'\'1' 1-1
~ ·n,..-·; , E •it. Nurth~&lt;·ro! 'WI
stwkf•r 114-IJ:hl&lt;t "19. /Sormanrl\ "1~. OT

KNIVES

10°/o OFF

Chuck PuUins and Greg Rager. Standing left to right
are Kevin McQuire, Scott WIUiarns, Shawn Thaxton,
James Nonnan, Michael Bartnnnn, Billy Brothers,
Don Dorst, John Sisson, Roland Monis, Paul Milton,
and coach Ron Drexler.

Moles led all scorers with 23
points while Clark, Bradbury and
Love added 1 each.
. Moles had 13 points during the
fourth quarter while his counter·
part, Steve Hayes had 12 of his 22
points during that canto.
Mike Hammon was the only
other Viking to hlt double figures
with 10 points.
Kyger Cr eek sank 26 of 55 field
goal attempts for 47 percent and 10
of 17 at the foul lines. Vinton County
hit eight of 16 at the charity stripes.
KC collected 26 rebounds with

·····couPON·······• •

• ••••

:

• • •• •

RAVORITE NAV! OR

:

.
•
•
'

•

3g

SUGAR

~ 25LB. ~AG $299

'

Umit Three Per c11110mer
Good Only At Powell'a
Offer Explrea Dec:. 24. 1982

HYLAND OIUNK

_DOG FOOD

: PINTO BEANS
:limit 3 Please
¢
•2-LB BAG

:

•
•

····· ···- ·········~····

5LB.BAG

$}49

Urnlt One Per CultO!njw
Only At Powall'a

Umit One Per CUitomer

Good Only At Powall'a
Dec. 24, 1982
Offer

.&amp;Jqi.... Dec. 24, 1982

K\'GEB CREEK (621 -

I (HI.$).
By quartent:
Kyger Creek
VInton Count y

;

DR. GEORGIANA
BURNS

Monday-Friday

AND HAPPY NEW YEAR

I
I
I
I
I
I

TO All

MEIGS LOCAL BUS DRIVERS
FROM:
ROGER HOLMAN-Director
of Transportation
GARY KING-Mechanic
TERRY POWELL-Mechanic
WARMEST WISHES FOR THE
COMING YEAR .

TO EARN

CHECKING ONE and CHECKING TWO
customers will be interested in this new plan.
You can write as many checks and have as
many automatic transfers as you like with
your CHECKING THREE account and still
earn money market interest on all your funds.
And CHECKING THREE lets you consolidate
your investment funds into a single account
with a single monthly statement. It's available
January 5, but you can sign up now.
Both the Money Market Savings Plan
and CHECKING THREE require only a
$2,500 minimum deposi!, and your funds
are always insured by an agency of the
Federal government. Now you don't have to
keep your money in a money market fund
just to earn high interest, because we're
giving you two great reasons to put it back
in the bank ... the Money Market Savings
Plan and CHECKING THREE.
Stop by any BANK ONE office
for details.

MOW,
YOU CAM
PUT IT BACK IN
THE BANK.

The rale on 1he Money M811&lt;et Savings Plan
wilfbe 10"4 lor consumer accounts and 9%
lof business accounts. Future"rates paid
by BANK ONE will be competitive and will be
based on all money lund rates during 1he week,
Including 1he weekly Treasury bill rate.

BANK ONE .

'

BANK ONE OF POMEROY
POMEROY •RUTLAN[)oTUPPERS PLAINS
Member FDIC

CALL 676-1096

.... , .......

• .. q ..

~l

)

12 12 26--60

I

Pediatrica-Adolescent

Evening hoUI'II for
WOiklng moms on
Thurldly 6 to 9 P.M.

10

MERRY CHRISTMAS

MARKET

is aCc:epling new patients.
Office at
Plelllant Valley Hospital.
. 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

14 12 14 22-62

~~-~~-~--~~----,

A

There's never been an opportunity like this
for bank customers. New regulations now
allow BANK ONE to introduce two great
ways to eam money market rates on all
your checking and saVings funds.
The Money Market Savings Plan
is the best investment account available
at BANK ONE. It's for people who want to
eam the best return possible on short term
investment funds. You can make deposits
and withdrawals to your Money Market
Savings Plan at any BANK ONE office
and there are never any early withdrawal
penalties. You also receive a convenient
monthly statement so you always know
the status of your account.
For customers who want to write
checks and still earn money market rates,
BANK ONE is introducing the new
CHECKING THREE plan. It's the
most valuable money market account
BANK ONE offers. Even our

Clari&lt; 3~11:

Moles 10-3-23; Bradbury !&gt;-1-11; Love 5-1-11 ;
Stroud J.0.6; Tot.als !6--10-Q.
VINTON COUNTY !601 -Bolender 2.J.1:
DOOrlll 1-1·3: t.ammon ~· 10; Hayes 11..0.22;
Mace 4-0-8; ROOkl n 2-4-8; Ramey 1-0-2. To&amp;als

NOW
YOU DON'T HAVE
TO KEEP

For
~ ........ ·~

Sentinel- Page-S

Moles and Bradbury getting seven
each. Moles had seven assists. ·
Kyger Creek, 5-1, plays In the ·
GaUJa County Holiday Tournament
Dec. 27·28.
The Bobcat reserves lost their
first game' In six outings by 10
points. ,

.---10% Current Rate ---,

Shf-&gt;n;, Jrlo; th tll. F'runriN II
Shl·rld:T n ~~ - w Musklnw.r m .'WI

BUCK &amp; CASE

SANTA CRISTINA, Italy !API . Conradin Ca thom en of Switzerland,
scored his first ·ever World Cup
victory In a men'sdownhill ski race,
upsetting Austrians Erwin Resch
and Franz Klammer.
OSLO, Norway &lt;API - Berit
Aunli, who won three gold medals
and one silver medal in women's
races during the World Champion·
ships in Nordic skiing, has been
honored with Norway's two mos t
coveted sports awards for 1982.

Upset-minded Marauders fall
to pace-setting Waverly team

Round Steak ...·...199

: 1 I . tnhon l'oUIJII

f'hll'-1

The Da

Bobcats capture fifth victory

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

\k1' •n \J ,&lt;fl&lt; ll•"• l• ·o '»! II , , ollltll,!o ' 111
\kH•O '\ ,,.. \J..run ll " h Hl ' ''

\nlho~ll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

WE WILL BE QOSED CHRISTMAS DAY

E L

'1\ll..,. t:.._, ·., tt. ..... uL..

Wednesday, December 22, 1982

Wednesday, December 22, 1982

Ohio

'

w

I

�Wednesday, December 22, 1982

Page-6- The Daily Se ntinel

Ironton hands AHS
fifth defea~ 57-53

:OSU, Bearcats
•
•
·.post victories
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API
Crorg&lt;' Bla ney said il in jest. but you
couldn't blam~ the Holy Cross
bas kf'fball coac h if hP wprp S(' rious
following an HHO beating Tuesda y
ni ght at Ohio Stale .
·
Ohio Sta te, post ing its th ird
stra ig ht tri um ph for a '&gt;·2 r~cord.
uuls hot Hol.v Cross -1~ lo41i percent,
ou1rebou nci&lt;'d the Crusaders :w.:&gt;JJ
and com m itt('(l six fpwrr r rTors.
B l ane~' ·

howrvcr, wa sn' t ready to

stamp the Bur kl')'CS a s a lillc
contender in lhc Big Ten Confer·
r ncc. " I don'! think lhr)· ha ve lh r
ri ght combination of p&lt;'Oplt• ve l.
T hey'n• playi ng four ):[Ua rds. l 'hry
nccd IOsolidify lheir backcou t'l," he
said .
HOI.\· Cross. -1 - : ~. had nu unf&gt; to
mat ch lhr onc·lwo punch of Ohio
Stat e's Ton)' Ca mpbell a ncl Cra n
v·ille WaiiPrS. Campbell had 22
point~

and K rl'OOund s. \\'aitf'rs wa s

wu rth 17 {X&gt;ints and I re bounds.
Ohio Stille bmkt· open a close
game bv outsco ring Hol.v Cross 16·2
in thC' last thr('(' minute's of the fi r st
half and thr opening three m inu tes
of the s('('Oncl half. Thai made il
47-.10.
Blant•v lookcxl a! lh r spurt
anot her wa y . sa~ · in g: " In thr('('
minut es, we sc lf·dt's tnu·ttxl. Obv iously. Oh io St aIf•l1; 1d sunwt hing to
do wi t h tha1. It \ not il gcxxJ idea
t r;.' ing to ca tc h up H' lth ti lt ·m llf'rr."
Waiters. dri:lwing 1m.: O\ 'at ions
from his homrto\\'11 nuwd . stuffed
four baskets in thr fir:-. t ~'2 minutL•s

and ma tched h is c;~nwhigh , posted

surprised al the lanky senior's
offensive outbu rs ls.
"Gra nville has better streng lh in
his ha nds and a rms. He's Improved
his balance and footwork . They'rr
goi ng to have to gua rd him at the
goa l now when !hey play man-toma n defense," the OhioSta tecoarh
sa id.
Champ Coldboll. Holy Cross ' star
guard, pumped in 16 poi nts to lead
the C1usaders. Darren Maloney
added 14 for Ihe Ctusaders.
Mea nwh ile a t Rivertronl Coliseum,
r enter Dwig ht Jones hil a layup with
lhn'f' seconds lefl in regula tion to tie
the ga me, and lhe Uni vers it y of
Cincinnati ro nnecled on 11 of 13 free
throws in overtime to bea l Ma rsha ll
Uni versil y 88-Rl in a non-conference
basketba ll ga me Tuesday night.
J ones, with a team -high 15points,
made a layuplolie thel(a me77-77 in
regu la tion and cap a Cincinnat i
comeback . Cincinnati had tra iled
b)' 12 poi nls wilh 6'1, minules to play.
All of Cinr innali's points in the
ove rt ime period ca me from the foul
line. Michae l Willia ms sank a pair of
free throws, and guard Marty
Ca mpbell made three of four from
the foul line to give Cincinna ti an
82-79 1ead a l the two-minute m ark.
Marshall fell to 4·3, with a ll three
losses on the road, while Cincinnat i
improved 10 6·2.
Guard LaVe rne Eva ns pared
Marsha ll wit h a ga me-high 23
points. a nd renter Charli&lt;' Jones
added JR. Dwil(hl Jones and
Campbell 11ad 1:, apiece for
Cincinnati.

in his last ga mt •. \ 1ilh ·r is not

(;arvey beconnes
millionaire Padre
SN\

DIH;O ,,\l' t -

S!t·v·c

(;aJYl' ~ · .

hi :-. .l l1 h ll lJ 'llH b \ br ight l' l1('fl IJ.\ a fi \l' · .\ 'f'a r ( ·~ 1111 1,w 1\\'uri h a
possiblf• $'2 milliCJn ;1 ' t 'd l. \\'a nts to
rP(Al.\' tilt ' Sa n Dil'gu I 1adrps wi th a

pr•nna nl in l ~l
S h u rt l ~ ·

u«l

aft rr signing t tle guara n·
:)n.li m ill ion contra ct. the

fo rmPr I.os Angrll's Dodger first
prrodic tPd a Na tional
1.f •LJ):!"UP \\'(•Str rn Oi\·is io n til if' for
thf' ri sing PJclrp:-, inthf' "\'PI:O' . \ 'C'fY'
nPar fu tun ·...
During ttl(' nt·,,·.., conft' rPnrr
Tw·sda.'·· (" \uh 1'11·.., id1 ·nt Ba llard
~tllifJJ :-, , tj (i lilt ' j ~ .!d! I . .., !J&lt;! irJ ;1 ht ·~j\ \
prit·f· for l!l t · t • J !,~,r r l n 1 ' 1ii -.. . !Jr. hu t
(\!l lf'fl it "' , 1 I ,1 ,1 1 !j •I• -.. . ;;. l d\1' ]\ ·
wanting Stt ·\ (· top L t ~ · !•11 u.., ·

b.t seman

Part of Canl·y ·~ lucrati\T· pack·

age is reported ly being unde twril ·
ten bv· Ha)' Kroc, lhe ail ing
80-v·ear-olcl owner a nd founder of
~1cDon a ld 's fast food empire.
Calling it "!he mosl difficull
dff'isio n.. of his cr.HH' r . Garvey.

who ha ; ad mill('d hav·ing political
pl an~

t..J.h ·r hd-.{·h,_tll. &lt;.. J id

~ IJ\ · ing

in

Ca lifornia

wa s

a

major

consitlf'ra tion.

He c llosp Sa n Diego over lhe
Chicago Cubs, Sa n Francisco
Gia nts, New York Yankees a nd
Houston As tros- with lheCubsand
Gia nts going down 10 I he wire in the
bidding war.
Carvey, a life time .301 hille r in 12
big league seasons. declined to say if
I he Padres' offer was thebeslone he
recieved.

Manager Dirk Williams, who
dirce led !he Padres 10 a fourth ·
pl ace fini sh in 1982, sa id lhe
Jcq uisition of Carvey automa ti·
ca ll y mov·es San Diego a nolch
hi gher and " lh rows us rig hl into a
contender's role."
' Williams sa id he tenta tively pla ns
to bat Carvey " third or fourth" in
the lineup, between Sixto Lezca no
a nd Terry Kennedy, I he Padres two
top power hillers.
He sa id lhe Padres were " in dire
need" of a slugging firs! baseman.
Carvey has averaged 21 home
runs a nd 98 runs balled in the last
nine seasons.

Hornets stun Wildcats
ern:.

r,fe fJ\ T - \' h ili ng Ha n·

nan T r CJ( t· !(.). JlH r&lt;l m the first half of
d nrJn lhJf:;U f· g&lt;Jmf· H·it hCualGrove,
ca m r· had: m th•· &lt;,~·crmd ha lf but
v.:r ·n · un...,tJlf· 111 &lt;., tr,p thr· Hornets '
pu ~ h lrJ

a 1 :~

-~

v.:in
Thr· los; pu l !he Wildca ts' record
a! i -:1 ov·r·rall a nd 1·2 within the
S\',\C.
Cu;ll r; J'H\' ( •, l('d h_
\ " :vi ike .Johnson
with

'2.' ~ [ &gt;4 1 1111 ~ .

hi&lt;J...,h-d their way to

19-!i lead h.v the end of the first
p&lt;•riod . Th&lt;' Wildcat s underwent a
suddr·n r;~ sr· of rmr shoo!ing for the
fir st t1;1lf. sink in ~=: rml \' fi \·r · nf :ts tries

a! lhf' ba sk&lt; ·!
· Thf' first half cndc'&lt;J wi th the
Homels leadi ng, .14·20. In lhe third
quartr ·r, however , !he Wildcats
ca mf' back a nd sco red 22 points,
thanks 10 agg ressive shooting by
Mike Rossiler, who had 12 points for
the ga me, a nd eight points each
from Daniel Bays a nd Robbie
Brumfie ld .
J eff Ba rnes. one of .Jenki ns'
consistent high sco re rs, ran into foul
trouble during the ga me a nd was
inactive for most of Ihe ga me.
The Wildca ts madr· !heir rome·
back primaril.v in shooting from 111e

noor , but the ir fi rst period troubles
returned in thefinalranto, with Coal
Grove outscoring Ihem by 17 points
for the wi n.
The Wildcats shoi 28 percenl from
the noor, sinking 21 of 7~ a tt empts,
while the Hornets were 41 percent
(29 of 701. From the chari ty line, fiT
was good for 12 of 22 tries (54
percent 1 a nd Coa l Grove recorded
Oil percenl on 15 of 29 allempiS.
With Alan Bailey contributing 10,
HT had 32 rebounds, 20 turnovers
a ncl1 2 assis ls.
In the reserve ga me , the junior
Wi ldcats we re downed, 47·22. Deke
Ba rnes had six for HT. while Chris
Mount dunked In 18 points for the
home effort.
HT is idle until Monday, when
they host Ihe Callia County Holiday
Tourna ment.
'
COAL GROVE t'l31 - Kelly 2.()4; Willis
3-0-6; Br)'ant 3-1·7: Johnson 9-~23; Duley

S-2-14: Miller J.-3-9; Stt&gt;Vens 3-0.6; Fulks0-2-2;
Murphy 0-2·2. 'l'ot.UI 28-15- 'TJ.
HANNAN TRACE lilA) -Rossiter 4+12;
Bays 448; J . Barnes 2-0-4; Brumfield 24-8;
Bailey J.-6.6: Randolph 3-3-9; Swain 1.0.2; D.

The Ironton Tigers carne from
behind twice Tuesday night to
defeat visiting Athens, 57-53, and
move Into second place In the
SEOAL standings.
Ryan Alnsworth broke a 4949
deadlock with 3: 34 remaining In the
contest when he drllled an 18-foot
jwnper that put the Tigers on top
for good, 5149.
This lead swelled to 57-51 before
the Bulldogs goaled to narrow the
final margin to 57-53.
Ainsworth led the Tigers, now
3-1, with 15 points. Mark Fields
added 13 and Tony Keith 10.
The BuUdogs, now 2-2, were
paced by Steve Bruning's 22 points
and 12 by Woody Mayle.
Each team hit 24 field goals but

Cage
Standings
HOT HANDS - Ohio State forward Tony CampbeU looks to shoot
against a sea of Holy Cross defenders' hands during game action
Tuesday night In Colwnbus. CampbeU led his team with 22 points as
they beat the Crusaders SHO. C:.mpbeU has been the high scorer for his
team aU year. (AP Laserphoto).

Oak Hill stops
Highlanders, 79-65
OAK HILL consecutive

yea r.

For the lhird
Southwestern

was outdista nced in lhe firsl quarter
here as the Oaks raptu red a 79·65
non-league win over the Hig hla nd·
ers Tuesday.
The fi rs t period ended 2.'). 11 in Oak
Hill's fa vor. While lhe Highlande rs
outscored the Oaks qua rt er-byquarter in the last lwo r a nl os. they
were un a ble to narrow the hosts'
marg in .
Mosl of the lead wa s caused bv
doublc-figut·e scoring bv nearlv

a nd wcre 75 percent on the foul line,
ca nning 19of 25 baskel s.There were
24 total rebou nds, nine of them
snatc hed by Mc Nea L The record
also shows 14 turnovers a nd three
asss ils.
Oak Hill was 53 percent on fie ld
goals 1:!3 of 62 1. while 72 percent on
free-throws (1 3 of 181. The prospec·
tive Ohio Valley Conference cham·
pions a lso had 32 rebounds, 11
turnovers and 14 assists.

SW's reserve a lso losta ti ghtl y·
pla)'Pd gam r to !he Oaks. 4o-:17.

~ o rm

Stc\'C' rclfrry was high scorer for

Persin's squad, led by .lohnn y
Harrison wit h 28 poinl s. Cra ig
Green scored 14, Jim Slone had 11
and !here we re 10 points each
contributed by Wendell French a nd
Shane McCoy.
" In Ihe second quarle r, we did gel
the ga me down, bul we didn 'l ma ke
lhe big play when we needed il, "
commented Highla nder Co&lt;tch
Lloyd Myers afterward .
SW did ha ve a good nigh! in
scoring, wilh Paul McNea l leading
wilh 22 points, Randy La)'lon
rack ing up Hi a nd Rogrr We lls

Ihe Highlanders wit h 12, while Mike
Bailey had 11. For Oak Hill, Mike
F is her look hig h man honors wilh
16.
The loss brings SW's overa ll
record to 4·2, while they rema in
undefeated in SVAC action. They
will return to hardwood play
Monda y in the Callia Coun ty
Holiday Tourna menl a t Hanna n
Trace.

mcmlx'r of

('VC'l:-·

C'o; Jch

ALLGAMFS
WLPOP
6 0 446 325
6 1 4'/'l 361

Waverly
Gallipolis

5 2 426 402
3 2 2!ri 263

Northwest
Alexa nder

5 3 475 405
3 3 383 396

Ironton

4 5 501 496

Jackson

3 4 416

Logan

3 4 417 407

Athens

3 5 478 507

WashlngiOn CH
Meigs

Tuesday's non-SEOAL results:
Fal rla nd 64 Northwest 63
MU\er 00 Alexander 47
Portsmouth 57 Mitflln 53
Loga n-Columbus South, ppnd
SEOAL VARSITI'
W L P

3 1 2.12 185
2 2 '01 214

Ironton
Gallipolis

Meigs
TOTALS

Trace

19 15 22 17-73
6 14 22 12-54

JOHN A. WADE, M.D.,' INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

4 1 174 147

3 I 200 174
3 1 163 154

Sco re b y quarters:
Oak Hill
SouthwesiC'rn

25 Z2 16 16--79
11 :Jl 17 17-65

Marauderette reserves win
EAST MEIGS - The Meigs wi n. Rhonda Haddox paced the
Marauders' reserves posled a 29-26 winners with 10 points, C. Delong
triumph over Easlern Monday had seven, Jody Harrison five,
evening In girls' high school Ruth Fry five a nd B. LotUs two.
Margaret Horner led Eastern
basketba ll action . Eastern Is now
wi th a game-high 13 points, Add
3-3 on the yea r .
In the first a nd third frames the Diddle had nine, a nd Jodi Barrintwo evenly m a tched dubs ma rched ger four. Diddle collected 10
baskels, but Meigs gained a one rebounds for Eastern, while Marpoinl adva nl age in lhe second garet Horn er had eight, Valerie
round lhen add ed lo it s winning Woods fou r , Tammy Capehar t
margins in th e last round to hold on three a nd Barringer two.
Eastern shot 40 percent from the
for the win.
Although Eas tern had a some- field a nd 55 percent from the line.
what difficult time with Meigs' ·Eastern 's next reserve tilt Is
sticky Press defense the score was January 5 a 1 Fort Frye.
knotted at 8-8 after the first fra me.
Meigs outscored E HS 3-2 in the
second period to take an 11-10
halftime lead. Both clubs played
head-to-head In the third fra me for
STEAK O
a 17-16 score.
HOUSE
Then in the finale Meigs picked
up the pace just enough for the 29-26

C"gftiGhl'{)

Score by quarters:
12 12 15 14-53

Ironton

11 15 18 13857

R eRI'Ve score: ironton 34. Athens 33.

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP 1- Johnny
Oates, a former major league
catcher who m anaged at NashvUle
last season, has been selected to
guide the Columbus Clippers, the
New York Yankees' Class AAA
minor league a ffiliate.
Oates, in his first managing
season, led Nashville, the Yankees'
Class AA !a nn club, to the
second-half pennant in the Southern
League and a spot In the post -season
playoffs.
He succeeds Frank Verdi, fired
by the Yankees after leading the
Clippers to a second-place finish in
the Internationa l League last
season.
Oates. 36, played 11 seasons In the
m a jors for the Baltimore Orioles,
Atlanta Braves, Philadelphia Phil·
lies, the Los Angeles Dodgers a nd
the Ya nkees.

'l'ran""'t·!lnn-.

n ,\..,.f:I\A.JJ.
1\.JH1·rk·an t .. ·a~ttw
TEXAS RANI ;J·: n.s.....: r nu!t--,1 r;1l Pur
r1.1m. flr-.1 hw..t:-man. '" lhr· S. •:tHk · M.trl
"'''' for Ron Mu.~ 'dm.m . t&gt;ildll•r .
S.\ 1'\
f~HYPI.

Nutklnal l .t•ii~M·
[)If-:(;() PADrU~&lt;.;-SIJ..'tll'd Sll'\ t'
fi rst t, ,.,.,man. w a fil'f'· ~'~'1 U 1-on

lral't
lniA • m:Ukmall.t·~~~ ·

COI.UMRl 'S C' I.IPPF:J !S-~. tml 1 1 .k1hn
1\l"fi, JI"' ffi.ln.IJ:I 'I

R.\."'KJ.:Tftt\1 J .
J\"atlunal Ra.-.kdhaU ,\~· latlon
OAJ.I A&lt;.; MA \ ' HUri'-&lt;.;- Wa hHI
l.lm 1l. ,.,.ntf' r·funl,ml.

~~~~~

CELEBRATE WITH US
NEW YEAR'S EVE
Music provided by
''FLIGIFr"
9p.m. to I a.m.
$25.00 per couple.
Includes party favors, free legal
beverage at midnight &amp; Breakfast Buffet. Pbone 87W2'18 for
reservations. 20 percent off on
room's rates New Year's Eve.

~gether.

Though Ron and I have been
married five years, M-ln-L calls me
"Jill" most of the time- and It Isn't
because she's absent-minded!
. When she Introduced our older
daughter she says, "This is a
stepgranddaughter, but my son
· iidopted her," then Ignores her.
The worst, however, is her
, lmpUcatlons that our baby Isn't
Ron's. She Insists he looks nothing

1 3 141 149

TOTALS
Tuesday's results:

Tonight's game:

Portsmouth at Western Hills

By Dale M. StoU
County Extensl\)11
Home Economist
Cheese is a great holiday gilt!

J

College
scores

IJAROAIN MATINEES SAr &amp; SUN
AU SEATS 12.00
ADIIIW/ON EVE"RY TUESO..Y $2.00

@OECEMBER 17 thru
Sl-on~

~

Au.~ l ln J"\&gt;a1 9i. Wilm lnJ:1un +h
0;1 r1 mou1h '" · Fl:.J . Soo rhf'm It!. fYr

fiurida !+'! . RlscayN' 1!
F'urman ICI. Augusw f(lll . j(l
· J . . N. ('arullna St .

~11

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Com1J13ndery No. 24 will meet at
· Meigs ,:County Infirmary Wednesday at 6:30p.m . The business
. meeting wW be held at the
· Pomeroy Masonic Temple at
· 7:30 p.m . A full fonn opening
. practice will beeld and
· members are to wear full
unlfonn.
MIDDLEPORT - Twin City
Shrinettes wiU meet Wednesday
·at 6: 30 p.m. at LaSaUe Restau. rant, Middleport, for Christmas
,dinner, then wiU go to the home
·of Mr. and Mrs. James Clat: worthy for a holiday party.
SYRACUSE -A play, "Why
Christmas" at 7:30 this evening
at Syracuse Church of the
Nazarene; public invited.

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

CHESTER- Chester Church
of the Nazarene will have ' Its
annual Christmas program at 7
p.m. Wednesday at the church.

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

DEAR HELEN:
We were Invited to a wedding
reception at Jl private clubhouse.
The bride's parents aren't hurting
for money. There were nice hors
d'oeuvres and non-alcoholic punch.
But to one side was - can you
Imagine? - a no-host bar where
guests paid for drinks! What's your
reaction? -NONPLUSSED
DEAR NON:
I wouldn't drtnk to that!
This reminds me of a long-gone
comedian (can anyone remember
his name?) whose trademark was,
"Come on over for a duck dinneryou bring the duck." - H.
PERSONAL to "Fighting It: "
Edith Wharton wrote, "There is no
such thing as old age; there is only
sorrow." Stay happy! -H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
In her colwnn If you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

OPEN HOUSE - LoreUa Beegle, lelt, and Mary
F . Baumgardner chat over cups of punch at an open
house held Tuesday afternoon at Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center. The center was packed for the

AU ages will participate In the
program which wUI Include a
play, "Why Jesus Came" with
recitations and singing. The
public Is invited.

11-IURSDAY
RACINE Post 602 wiU meet in
special session Thursday at 6
p.m . at the hall. Government
cheese wiU be distributed to aU
needy Legionnaires of the Post.
SYRACUSE - First Church
of God of Syracuse wiU have Its
annual Christmas program
Thursday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
church. The public is invited to
attend.
POMEROY - A play, "The
Prlce of a Calf" , will be
presented Thursday night at 7: 30
p.m. at Freedom Gospel Mission
located on Bashan and Silversville Road. The public is invited
to attend.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - A Christmas
program will be presented at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church on Christmas Eve at 7:30
p.m. The church is located on
Route 143, HarrisonvUie Road.
Rev. Earl Fields, pastor, invites
the public.

casseroles. It's a versatile gift and
pertect for that someone who has
"everything."
Here's a recipe for a yummy
cheese ball that is easy to make.
This cheese ball can be made in a
food processor or you can grate the
cheese by hand . It is a popular treat
with kids and adults.
Patty's Cheese Ball
1 pound cheddar cheese
1 small onion
'h to 'A cup mayonnaise
'h t. black pepper
'h t. cayenne
1 cup peanuts or pecans
Food Processor Directions: Cut
the cheese into strips a nd grate in
the processor. Remove. Put in a
chopping blade and chp the onion.
Add cheese, peanuts, mayonnaise
and seasonings. Blend thoroughly.
Remove and shape into a ball.
Wrap and chill. If you have extra
nuts you can chop them and roll the
baH In the chopped nuts. Makes 1%
pounds.
Hand-Made Directions: Grate
Cheese. Chop onion finely . Chop
peanuts. Combine all ingredients,
mixing well. Proceed as above.
How do you buy cheese? Many
stores now have a special cheese
sectlon. There Is a dazzling array of
cheeses! Some stores offer samples, too. If I cannot (lnd my son
when I'm shopping at the grocery
store, I can usually count on finding
him somewhere in the vicinity of
the free samples at the cheese
counter. Although he can't reach

the sample plates, he has pertected
the ''I'm so hungry" expression
and the clerks generally give him a
sample or two or three!
These free samples help the
customers get a n Idea of the
ziplness, mlldness, and otber fla·
vors of the cheeses. If there are no
samples, though, you'll have to
choose cheese by general category.
You can buy natura l cheese, with
varying degrees of sha rpness or
aging. Usually the more aging a
cheese has, the hig her the prtce.
Natural cheeses have special flavors and textures. If you would Uke
a copy of a guide to natural cheeses,
with explanations of each of their
flavors and other characteristlcs,
contact me at 992-6696 or write to
Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Pasteurized process cheeses are
popular at the holidays. these
include some smoked cheeses,
herbed or spiced cheese, pepperoni
or bacon cheeses, etc. American
cheese, the kind that com es sliced
and often packaged individually in
cellophane, Is the most popular
process cheese.
Pasteurized process cheese food
and spreads and cold pack cheese
and cheese foods are other types of
cheeses availa ble. Look at the label
to see what kinds of ingredients are
in the cheese.
If you are lucky enough to receive
a gift of cheese during the holidays,
you need to know how to care for
the cheese so that it will be good
ea ling for a long time.
Nearly au cheeses keep well in

Astrograph

AT
Point Pleasant

We Will Be
Close~ For The

Holidays
Dec. 23rd ··
Dec. 26th.

annual Christmas dinner - 200 reservations - and ·
for a program which foUowed . A feature or lbe ·
program was music for dancing by Francis Andrews
Band.

December 2S, 1982
You're a hard-working, responsible person. You rely upon yourself
Instead c1 Lady Luck. However, this coming year she may play a big
role In your a1falrs.
CAPRJJORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Family members are likely to have
a low kindling point today. Don't do anything which woukl cause sparks.
Be a peacemaker, not a provoker.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 3l-Feb. 19) Basically you're a forgiving person,
bUiloaay you could create mwiU by not excusing something another did
In the past. Let bygones be bygones.
PISCES (Feb. 3l-March 211) Have fun and enjoy yourself today, but
try to do It as Inexpensively as possible. 1111 costs you too much, you'D
have regrets later.
1
ARIES (March 21·AprB 19) You are very capable, but don't set
goals for yourself today when you know going b1 that the odds are
stacked against you. Be aware of your limitations.
TAURUS (April 3l-May 211) Persons who like you wiU try to be
helittil today, provided you don't demand that they do so. Let their aid
corlle ot their own volition.
GEMINI (May 21-Jilne 211) D!&gt;n'tlet your curiosity cause you to ask
prying questions today about something which a friend (refers to keep
secret. Respect his prtvacy.
·
CANCER (JUDe ft.July Z!) Persons who are Ukely to support you
b1 career matters today might oot have enough clout to help you
accomplish yo~~r alms. Seek strong teammates.
LEO (July ZS.A111. D) Co-workersniust be dealt with vety tacUully
today. If you come on too strong, you maycreateproblemswlilcherufd
have been easily avoided.
VIRGO (Alii. 06ept.D) Rather than takeonnewobllgadoosnow,
· It wiU provewlserto~k on ways'toputyourtlnanclalatfalrsln better

balance.
LIBRA (Sept. zs.od. 21) To avoid domestic nunbles today, skirt
Issues which simply Invite opposing positions. Neither c1 you Is likely to
give ln.
·
SOORPIO, (Oct 11-Nov. Z!) UncharactertsdcaUy, yoiJ might try to
take credit today for something another had a big hand In helping brblg
about. Share the spotUght.
.·
,;. _ · SAGrrrAIPUI (Nov.IS-Dec.ll) Avoid temptations today tltake
gambles on things where you could loae more than you ))ope to gain.
There are oo tree rides on the merry.go.rolllld.

~I

the refrigerator. After the cheese
has been opened, keep it In Its
original wra pper if possible. Cover
the cut surtaces tightly with waxed
paper, foil or plastic to prevent the
cu surtace from drying out. The cut
surtace can be wiped with a cloth
satura ted with vinegar to prevent
molding. The whole cheese can be
stored in an airtight container. A
couple of lumps of sugar in the
container will help keep mold from
accumulating. If mold does occur,
cut off the moldy portions a nd
discard them . The rest of the
cheese is OK to eat. Don't eat
cheese tha t Is mold y throughout
unless it's supposed to be that way
as In Blue Cheese. If the cheese
dries out, you can grate II and use in
casseroles.
Some cheeses can be frozen but
freezing Is not recommended for
most cheeses because they become
crumbly and mealy when frozen.
However, if your choice is throwing
the cheese away or freezing the
cheese, then I surely would freeze
11. Use the frozen cheese in
casseroles.
The following varieties can be
frozen satisfactorily in small pieces
(one pound or less, not more tha n
one inch thick) : Brick, Cheddar,
Edam, Gouda, Muenster, Pori du
Salut, Swiss, Provolone, Mozzarella, and Camembert. You can
also freeze small quantities of Blue,
Roquefort, and Gorgonzola for
salads or salad dressings, or other
uses where a crumbly texture Is

acceptable.
To freeze cheese, wrap cheeses
tightly, freeze quickly at 0 degrees
F . or below, a nd store nomorethan
six months. When ready to use,
thaw cheese slowly, preferably In
the refrigerator.
The following recipe uses cheddar cheese and Is a super meatless
dish. You can add small a mounts of
meats or other fla vorings If you
wish, though. It would be a great
Christmas Eve dish!
My Sister's
Cheddar Cheese Pte
10" baked pie shell
1 pound medium sharp cheddar
cheese
3 T. minced onion
3;4 tsp. salt
'14 tsp. dry mustard
3 tsp. Worcestershlre sauce
4 eggs
3-4 tomatoes, peeled, thinly sliced
Preheat oven to 325 degrees .
Heat cheese, onion, salt, mustard,
Worcestershire over low heat,
stirring until melted. In large bowl
beat eggs until foamy. Gradually
add cheese mixture, beating unW
smooth. Pour into pie shell. Bake at
325 degrees for 25 mnutes or untU
just set. Remove from oven.
Overlap tomato slices in wreaui.
Ga rnish with green peppers. Bake 5
more minutes.
For your free recipe for an
incredibly wonderful broccoli casserole using cheese, contact me at
992-6696 or write to Box 32
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
'

Meigs groups hold holiday meeting, plan events
Washlngion , draft registration, Salt
Arms Treaty viola tions, and fo reign
college
student enrollment in the
Rutland Nazarene junior girls
United States.
class had a Christmas party
It was decided to ma ke a dona lion
recently in the fellowship hall. The
to the Wa ldschmidt House nea r
group enjoyed caroling and then
returned to the hall for refresh- Cincinnati In memory of Nancy
Reed. The donation will be made a t
ments and a gift exchange.
the State Conference In March.
Attending were Mandl Black,
A get-well card was signed by the
Teresa Rathburn, Angie McDonald, Angie Black, Angie James, members for Mrs. Paul Eirh, past
Laurie Black, Roberta and Re- regent.
The progra m was presented by
becca Napper, and Amy Johnson,
and the teachers, Goldie Carson Mrs. Stephen J enkins who used
"Christmas Music" as her topic.
and Sharon Black.
She began with a reading from "I
Hear America Singing" by Hazel
Arnett, discussed early Christmas
Plans for the Diamond Jubllee
customs in various parts of the
luncheon to be held on March 19
country, and at the plano played a
were made during a meeting of
group of American folk song holiday
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
music a long with other carols by
Daughters of the American Revolu- ·American composers and authors.
tion held at the horne of Mrs. Vernon
She also played a group of English
Weber, Rutland.
Christmas carols. To conclude her
The luncheon will be held at the
program, Mrs. J enkins read about
Holiday Inn in Gallipolis. Mrs.
the changes in Christmas customs
Ronald Reynolds reported on the
as the country has grown older
workofhercommltteefortheevent.
along with customs of today.
During the meeting conducted by
Next meeting will be held at the
Mrs. Clyde Ingels, regent, delegates Racine Baptist Church on Jan. 14.
to the Continental Congress In
Following adjournment by Mrs.
Washington D.C. on Aprll17-23were
Ingels, Mrs. Clarence Struble,
selected. They are Mrs. Ingels, and · cbaplaln, gave the benediction.
Mrs. Reynolds. Alternates are Mrs.
Refreshments were served by
Robert D. Ashley and Mrs. George
Mrs. Weber and other hostesses,
Hackett Jr. Named as delegates to
Mrs. Jenkins, Mrs. Larry Wiley,
the state .conference were Mrs .. Mrs. Daniel Thomas, and Mrs.
Ingels, Mrs. Ashley, Mrs. Roger Lawrence Milhoan.
Luckeydoo, and Mrs. Reynolds.
Alternates are Mrs. Yost, Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs. Mark
A workshop on making holiday
Grueser, and Mrs. James O'Brien.
Mrs. Yost of the natloJIIIl defense wreaths highlighted a recent meet·
coinmlttee reported on several log of the Shade VaUey Council of
Floral Arts held at the home of
topics which Included a prayer for
Melanie Stethem.
aU times written by · George

Junior Class

FROM ALL OF US

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

:§

FRIDAY thru THURSCJAY I

( 'nlk&gt;(l • 1\a.•oiU'thall

FA'-IT
llnslun Coli !'-+. F'alr11f'lcl
Slanlulll ICI. Han·ani r.
SOl'111

POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Commandery 24 Knights Templar will meet Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. They will visit the
Infirmary at 6: 30 p.m. There
will be fuU form practice.

TUPPERS PLAINS

53t JACKSON PIKE-RT.3S WEST
Phone 446· 4524

Tht~v · .,

WEDNESDAY

ANN's

Washlngton CH, holiday tow-ney

You can create a spectal cheese
ball or spread, or give a chunk of
cheese. Cheese Is nutritious and
easy to use either as a snack or In

Calendar

BEGINNING DEC. 6
MONDAY-FRIDAY 9-6

Rl 7

ThlU"''day's game:
Logan a l Zanesvtlle
Dec. 28 games:
Meigs at Athens

(And look at the bright side:
Aren't you glad she lives a whole
state away?) - H.

A gift idea for that someone who has everything

Cake Decorating
Supplies

Ga U\polls 42 Jackson :rt
Ironton 34 Athens 33
Waverly lJ Meigs 29

like ber son, and "Where did he get
all that dark hair?" Then she
makes asides about how often Ron
is away at his truck-drtvlng job.
For a whUe she had him
suspicious - untU she puUed the
sa(Jle number on her other
daughter-In-law. I hear she wasn't
very nice to JIU either, but now she
glorifies her.
We live In adjoining states, but
she calls often and we visit quite a
lot. I've never talked back to her
and am always agreeable. (The
rest of the famUy Ukes me.)
This situation Is drtvlng me
frantic and I'm about to explode.
How can I change it or am I
overreacting, as Ron suspects? DESPERATE
DEAR DES:
I'd say you're underreactlng'
"Sweet and agreeable" may yet
drtve you to ulcers, while honest
confrontation could set limits for a
buOying mother-In-law.
Show her you can be an
adversary - though you'd prefer
being a friend. Who knows, she
might even respect you more for
speaking out.

·What's cookin'?

NEW HOLIDAY
HOURS

0 4 150 !87
· ~ 15 1165 1165

~I

I

TOTAL'l 24-9-57.

Tran"action1;
'1\w ~hl;\'·, S tx~r1 .~

By HELEN BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN:
My husband and I are very
happy with our " his, hers a nd our"
family. He adopted my daughter,
now eight, long before the baby w1s
born. ·His son divides Iits time
between us and the mother.
My problem is a mother-In-law
who has never accepted us. She
thinks If Ron and I hadn't got
married, ))e would have returned to
Jill, his first wife, then her
grandson wouldn't be "blighted by
a broken home." ActuaUy, he's a
happy, well-rounded kid. But his
parents actively dislike each other
- they could never make It

Thomas J.J-9; Tony Keith 5-0.10: Frank
McClellan 4-2·10: Ryan Ainsworth ft.J- lS.

2 2 138 151

Portsmouth at Watkins Memorial
Wellston at Jackson
Pt . Pleasant at Ripley tourney

Ca rr l -2-4: Pf'!fn•y 2·1·5. Totalo; 2:J.. I4-65.

.Some in-laws not made in heaven

ATHENS (53) - Steve Bruning U.0-22;
Woody Mayle H12; BID Flnnearty 2.()4;
Leon AUen 3-1-7; Brad Baker 1.0.2: Carl
Malheny 2.()4; Marc Whaley 1.0.2. TOI'AL'l
U-5-53.
IRONTON 1571 - Mark Fields 6-HJ; BUI

2 3 199 W3

-

I

tn5 1115

:L'J.. l:l--79 .

111e Hig hlanders shot 41i percent
fmm the floo r , s inking 23 of 49 trics.

242
232
270
273

Wavl'rly

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675-1244
'j

~

248
2.11
283
176

Logan
Ironton
Gallipolis
Jackson
Athens
Meigs

Office Hours by Appointment Only
'

15

The Tigers shot 48 percent, oh 24
of 50, whUe Athens was 24 of 57 for
42 percent.
Mark Fields pulled down eight of
Ironton's 'l1 rebounds while Bruning grabbed 13 of the 31 BuUdog
caroms.
The box score:

Alhens

Wednesday, December 22, 1982
pqge-7

Helen help us

seven.

GaUipoUs 70 Jackson 56
lronlon 57 Athens 53
Waverly 74 MPigs 60
SEOAL RESERVEl
TEAM
W L P OP

Score by quarters:
Hannan

2
2
3
4

Ironton converted nine of 17 free
throws while Athens was five of

Tuesday's resulls:

Ba rnes 2..0.5 . Totalt!l21-12-54.

Coal Grove

2
2
2
0

Athens
Logan
Jackson

Waverly at Logan
Gallipolis a t Ironton

cont r ibuting 1 ~.

OP

4 1 319 299

Q,\K HDL (19) - Green 54·14; M cCoy
5·0.10; Slon£' 4·3-Jl ; F'rench 5.{)·10: Harrison
12-4-28; Ha l£&gt; 1-24 : Raynor 1·0·2. Totals
SOUTIIWFSI'EitN (65) - Mc Nca16·10·2'l;
WC'lls 7- 1-15: Layton 7-2-16: Ba ke r 0-:l·.l H.

412

2 4 331 383
0 7 .m 460

TEAM
Waverly

By The Bend

Heads Clippers

TEAM
Wheelersburg
Portsmouth

The Daily Sentinel

DAR

Shade Valley

Mrs. Stethem conducted the
workshop displaying about a dozen
wrea thes which s he had made a nd
expla ining how each was made.
These included grapevine wreathes
decorated with various materials
including pine cones. sweet gum
balls, a nd cornhusk flowers: corn·
husk wreathes made by folding
bleached rornhusks in half and
attaching them to a styrofoam
fonn; sweetgum tree ba lls attached
to a wreathfonnanddecoratedwlth
glitler a nd sma ll figurines and other
ornamentation.
Materials were provided so that
each mem ber could make a wrea th
to take home.
During the business meeting il
was noted tha t Jackie Frost,
president, and Pat Holter, attended
the fall county meeting and that
Mrs. Holter, Betty Dean, Sheila
Curtis, and Alire Thompson, a I·
tended the Region 11 meeting held in
Athens.
Mrs. Holter reported that the club
received two awards at the regional
meeting, a superior rating on the
program book, And an excellent
rating on the publicity book. Janet
Koblentz received a regional and
state award for a slide she
submitted of a rose.
It was also noted that Mrs. Dean
had given a program on madonnas
at the fall meeting of Region I.
For the garden therapy program
with special education classes at
Chester, 'Mrs. Dean and Sheila
Curtis carried out a Halloween
theme.
Mrs. Diana KaiT hosted the
Christmas party for the club.

Ohio Eta Phi
The a nnua I gifl excha nge party of
the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority was held
Tuesday night al the home of Mrs.
Lois Kell y.
Dinner was served by the social
rommitlee. Ga mes were played
with prizes going to Dina C ryszka
a nd Cinda Harkless.
Members participated In an
ornam ent exchange. Brenda Hill,
president , was given a gift of
appreciation from the chapter as
was Mrs. Kelly, the sponsor.
Next meeting wil be on J a n. 11 at
7: 30 p.m at the Meigs Inn . Patty
Pickens a nd Darla Kelly are to have
the program a nd Palty Circle and
Lynn Crow, the refreshments.

Troop 239
Recruitment and activities were
discussed a t the recent meeting of
Langsville Boy Scout Troop 239 held
at the home of James Council, scout
master .
Patrol Leader Michael Anna-.
trout presided al the meeting. Fred ·
Scarberry, assistance scout mas-:
ter, was present. Meetings we re set :
for every Thursday of the month. In ·
October the scouts traveled to·
Htintlngton for a two-day hike from
Camp Arrowhead to Route 35.
The same evening a meeting of
the parents was held for organlza- ·
lion of the troop committee.
Officers were were Laura Denavalle, secretary; Beverly Rupe."
treasurer; Janet Creameans, ad~ · .
vancement, and Dian Molden '
reporter.
·
Next meeting of the committee
will be held Jan. 6.
•
:

..

�--·
. e_age.. .

Wednesday, December 22, 1982
8- Th e Daily Sen tin el

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
llt•'s ,\ Sa\'lour

~tll('times

Up's mor£• than " frt, •nd

Ht•'s a Saviour

Or praytng silently while OOwed on bended

WhO comes with eyes all aglow .
Softly and tenderly J esus came to us

From God to this world

He's more than a trk&gt;nd
H(''s a Saviour
He 's vours and He's mine
To have E'VeiTTlore
Hf''s more than a trk&gt;nd
He's a Savk&gt;ur
Glory to the Lord Jesus Christ -Barbara
James

·\ frif'nd to m nfldt• In
A S.l\'lo ur to tnrst

Ttll' Lord God Alml~ht~
Ul s judgmf'nts aff' jus t
He's moff' than .1 frk&gt;nd .
Hf''s a Saviour
How can HI' bf:&gt; less''
llC' s trulv much morf'
HC''s mort• than a frlf'nd
liP's a S.:1\1our

The sweetfl('SS of Chri stmas Is sharing
With family and friend s Thrre's the caring
Thr peacf' of Chrts tmas
Comes from within .
A gUt from our Saviour

And hw to all men

The MeaninK ol Christm as
The Spirit of Chrtstmas Is ~vlng ..
The Joy of Christmas Is living

Of s ummer bright days and warm winter
nights .
A nr(' aflame In a hearth

below.

Praise God. - Barbara James

There's a little bll of Heaven on earth.

",\ lJttJe Bit of Heaven
On Earth"
There's a ll«le bit or Heaven on earth
Which started at the time of Christ's birth
His IOVt&gt; Is better than silver or gold
His mercy has proved what It's worth
There's a little bit of Heaven on earth.
Thert''s a Uttle bit of Heaven on earth
In the bea utiful flowers and sparkling
streams

Ttw love of Christmas Is found In a child

The youth fellowship of Trinity
Congregational Church and Pomeroy United Methodist Church pres·
en ted a program Sunday evening at
the Methodist church.
Nath~n Baley gave the welcome
and Monte Hunter and Kim Burton
had recitations. The three then
joined to sing "Jingle Bells." Unqer
the direction of Mrs. Robert Buck.

There's a little bit of heaven on Parth .
A tittle child's smile, a mother's embrace
When happlnes..'&gt; and joy walk hand In hand,
And hearts afl' tilled up with mirth,
There's a little bit of Heaven on eart h.

~·~·a~·m~
II Jill

~ADS7

Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Cholr, under the direction of Mrs.
Fern Grimm, presented a Christ·
mas cantata entitled " Immanuel
Forever" Sunday evening.
Members of the choir are Goldie
Car son, Donna Grate, Hanna
Queen, Lena Napper, VIolet Grate,
Marlene Barrett, Julie Napper.
Wanda VIning, Tammy BlacK,
Irene Kennedy, Lydia Smith, BIU
Smith, Raymond Smith, Charles
Barrett , Keith Kennedy, and Jeff

OPEN REGULAR HOURS
TIL 6pm FRIDAY
DECEMBER 24th.
LOSED DECEMBER 25th.
CHRISTMAS DAY AND
CLOSED SUNDAY
DECEMBERAod26th.
'lo-G,.. lOft .. Doc. 21th AI

KROGER U.S.D.A. GRADE A
All SIZES

Young
Fresh Turkeys

Each of theM

~

lm~• Nonul Hom

Veterans Memorial Hospital' s
Urgent Care Center will be closed
Christmas and New Year's Day,
but will be open to serve Meigs
County family health care needs
the days after Christmas and New
Year's, Dec. 26 and Jan. 2, It was
announced today.
Located opposite the hospital In
the Medical Office Complex, the
VMH Urgent Care Center provides
reasonably priced weekend physl·
clan service to Meigs County
citizens without an appointment or
long wait. Its hours generally are 9
a. m. to 9 p.m . Saturdays and

•terns ••

reqwred to be relldily IVIMble 101' sale
., Neh Kroger StOfe, e•cept as
IPICrfically noted Ill thiS ld If we do
run out of tn ldvertiMd 1tem, we Will
y0u yOur choice of a complflb6e
nem. when avt~ . reflecting the
•me UVIngl 01' a ra•ncheck. wtuch Wl!l

otlll'

Alfred

1912 IN GAL LIPOLI S AND POMEROY STORE S

Alfred Sunday School attendance

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUAN ·
TITlES NONE SO LD TO DEALERS

Dec. 5 was 48; church attendance,
22. Dec. 12 Sunday School attend·
ance was 50; church attendance,

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES ,
MOUNTAIN DEW .

All GRINDS

Kroger
Cream Cheese

99

a$
-lb .

19. On these Sundays the Sunday
School elec ted offi ce r s and
teachers. Class teachers are preschool class. Doris Dillinger, Dorothy Calaway; primary, Sharlee
Dillinger, Ruth Brooks; Busy Bees,
Myrtle Flanders, Janice Pullins;
Willing Worker s, Bob Pullins.
Gert rude Robinson; young adult s,
Florence Ann Spencer, Lloyd Dll·
linger; adult, Nellie Parker, Rus·
sell Archer. Officers are secretary·
treasurer, Randy Dillinger, Lloyd
Brooks; roil call, llsa Burke,
T ammy Ca laway; librari ans,
Kenny Buckley. Tim Flanders Bob
Brooks; ushers, Richard and Tim
Spencer; flower committee, Flor·
ence Ann Spencer, Osie Mae
Follrod, Nina Robinson. Busy Bees

&lt;:~~~~

Diet Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

28

8

8-oz.
Pkg.

Can

Pak

PLUS DEPOSIT

lrio.
She will compete In the Symposium's nalional final s In St. Paul.
The live nalivily scene sponsored
Minn . in Augusl wllh glrls from 10
b1· arm churches and Pomeroy
olher slates.
Chamlx't of Commerce will con·
On Jan . 23. Gilmore will go 10 linue lhrough Thursday on the
Rolling Meadows, lll. for the Pomet'O\' parking lol slag&lt;' from lto
(" 1
their families were guests of Mrs.
Carson
•
o 1 lllt lfC
Showcase Compelilion where she :1and o10 Hp m.
Beverly
Baylor
,
accompanist
for
,._G:::.ri:.:m=m---ha:_d--a.:_p_a_rty:._
.
-----------------------:the choir, was assisted by Len
Sayre.
The cantata featured the entire
choir In sever al selections with
specials Including two solos, a duet,
a trio and a quartet.
Upon entering the sanctuary,
each cholrf' ""mber presented a
special person with a red carn ation.
After the program, the cholr and

Sundays.
The family health care facility
has proved to be a popular addition
since opening earlier this year,
according to VMH Administrator,
W. Scott Lucas. The weekend hours
enable area residents to consult
licensed doctors for whatever
reason at hours that suit patients
and don't require time off work.
Lucas stressed that the hospital' s
24·hour·a-day emergency room
will be In operation all day
Christmas and New Year's to
handle any situation s that arise on
the holidays.

Sunday School class are going
caroling Dec. 18. Alfred Church
Christmas Is Dec. 22 at 8 p.m .
VIsitors of Pearl Randolph were
Dorothy and Drexel Hess, Dalton;
Beatrice Bentz, Lancaster, and
Pren lice Hess. The women visited
their sister, Carrie Nlggemyer,
Kim es Co nva l esce nt Center,
Athens, and friends, Hazel Hawk,
Pomeroy Health Care; Ora Sin·
clair and Wilber Parker, local.
Maxine Yost. Lancaster Rt .,
visited Genevieve Guthrie. They
called on Flossie Story at Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
Alfred Livestock 4·H Oub held its
Christmas party and gift exchange
Dec. 12 at the hom&gt; of Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Burke, Lori, Randy and Scott.
Guests Included Lea Ann Robinson,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr. Tim
and Howle Dorst, Mickey Hoffman,
Theresa Courtney, Martha , Joe
and Wil Poole, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Douglas, Doug and Amy Carr . Lisa
Collins, Marcia Guess.

Half
Price

Savesgo

159

95

Reg . 249 .95

39!!

Includes Poker/Blackjack Cartridge

Reg .
79.95 Each

Great pnce·cut on year 'round fam1ly fun '
Powerful 16-bil microprocessor prov1des
best graphicS , color and sound effecls.
Uses lntellivtston • and Sears Super Vtdeo
Arcade'• cartridges Attaches to your TV
eaSily. #58-1 QQQ . TM Mattei Electroni CS

MEN'S JEANS
$1799

EXTRA LARGE 88 SIZE

California
Navel Oranges

SUPERTAPE' by Radto Shack

Beta L-500

AM/FM Stereo Phono Cassette System

Cut 27%

10~~h

Clarinette"'·90 by Reahsttc

Saves4o

Reg. 14.95

17995

VHS T- 120

Cut24%

129!h

Compact system's cassette
deck records directly off
rad1o, phono, or " hve" wtlh
optional mtkes Tuner has
edge·lit dial, FM·AFC, FM·
stereo indtcator Head·
phone Jack. #13· 1199

Reg . 16.95

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

c

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

"Road Emergency"
40-Channel CB System
TRC-411 by RealisltC00

Save
$20

Each
FLOR IDA ORANGES 5-LB. BAG ... $1 . 59

Each

At

Tangerines
OR 125 SIZE
Tangelos

Red or Golden
Delicious Apples

c

Springdale
2% Milk

48

$

$

28

Reg . 59.95

B3S~/o

Give highway security! Just attach
magnetic-mount antenna to car roof,
plug adapter into lighter socket Ch . 9
priority switch. #21-1505

Whole Virginia
Baked Ham

3995

Hold-Up™ LCD Game Watc

Reg. 99.95
IN YOUR KROGER DEll DEPT.
$ANPYMAC

Save 520 on Computer Backgammon
By Tandy~ Cut
s~~on )
33°/o
Test your skills, tmprove your game• Built·
in board , LCD pos1tion venftcation , elec·
Ironic " dice", 30 pips. #60-2 161 Baffe•vewa

7995
176 SIZE

Gtve two for the regular
pnce of one' 8" woofer,
tuned port, 2" tweeter.
19 x 103 /• x 7'12".
#40-4030

Video Cassette Sale

Reg. 219 .95

WRANGLER STRAIGHT LEG

EXTRA LARGE 138 SIZE
WASH IN GTON

1·
· ·
.lYe natiVIty Set tO
conclude Thursday

Meigs area correspondence

COPYRIGH T 1912
THE KROGER CO
ITEMS AND PRI CES GOO D SUNDAY
DEC " THROUGH FRIDA Y DEC 2A

Vac Pack
Kroger Coffee

Beth Ewing. Jim Carpenter, Jason
Carpenter, Kim Ewing, and Beth
Mayer, the pianist.
Carol singing and a liturgical
dance by Debbie Buck to the music
of "SIIenl Night " concluded lhe
program. The Rev. Robert McGee
gave the benediclion. During the
concluding social hour, cookies and
punch were served.

will dance with the trio In "Greased
Lightning." She will also be
performing the "Beer Barrel
Polka" with a group.
Gilmore has studied dance at
Kim Ka lla's Studio of Dance In
Lake Villa, [II. for six years.

Veterans limited holiday hours

entiOe y0u to purchlee lhe ~IMd
rtem II the ~ pnca Wllhln :Jl

lb.

Shannon Lyn Gilmore, seven·
year·old daughter of Joe and Linda
Gilmore, Walwm1h, Wis., and
granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Gardner Wehrung and Mr. and
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Pomeroy. took
a first place In Symposium Capell·
lion in Milwaukee on Nov. 7.
Shedancedajazz·acrodancein a

'Immanuel Forever' performed Sunday ;

YOUR FRIENDlY KROGER STORES

h~

Mrs. Robert McGee, and Mrs.
Donald Mayer, the play, "Tell Me
the Story of Jesus" was presented.
In the cast were Jennifer and Julie
Miller, Debbie Downie, Sherrie
Southworth, Lynn Slater, Nathan
Baloy, Leslie Carr, Julie Buck,
Jennifer Buck, Elizabeth Downie,
Chase Cleland, Michael Mayer,
Jennie Carpenter, Hank Cleland,

Off

1295
Reg. 19.95

Electrontc cops &amp; robbersl If you tnp
bank's alarm. you go to jail. Actton
sound . W1th batteries. #60·2173

AM/FM Portable

Portable Cassette Recorder

By Realistic

CTR·55 by RealistiC

Cut

Gal.

Each

Ctn.

For

The
•SOOPEI COST CmEIS
Everyday Low Prices on
pantry staple s. Sove 10% to
40% on Sooper Cost Cutters
co mpared to other brands
ot Kroger. (For some Sooper
Cost
Cutters
no
other
co mparable
brands
ore
stocked . ) Check the yellow
pn ce list of the over 400
Sooper Cost Cutter pantry
staples, only at Kroger .

Sentin~I-Page-9

Jazz-aero dance wins first place

Trinity youth present Sunday program

Eve!)' man's heart Is full of dreams

kneo

HP's a Saviour

Corner

H(' 's more than a trk&gt;nd .

The Hopes of Christmas are easily found
In a chult'h filled wit h people
Wht&gt;re Christ's words abound
Whelher's It the singing of a sweet melody .

Our Lord and Sa\11our
Hi s grace will abound .

HP's a Saviou r Bl£&gt;SsN and hoh
Knocking a! yo~r dt)()r
H(•s mon• than a frh•n&lt;l

Poet's

a friend can't Jx&gt; found

Wednesday, December 22, 1982

The Daily

Pomeroy- Middleport , Ohio

lb.

220/o

,.$U9

Perfect for taping memos. lectures.
"talking" letters. ButiHn mike, Auto-Level,
Auto-Stop. #14-1005 Baffenes e•tra

er Difference

Calculator With 4-Key Memory
EC-273 by Radio Shack

Save'S

•TOTAL SAmFACTIOIIIIAIAITEI
Everylh1ng you buy al Kroger IS guaranleed for your lolal salis·
fachan regardless of manufaclurer If you are not satisfied ,
Kroger will replace your ilem wilh the same brand or a compar·
able brand or refund you,r purchase pnce

•YAIIRY
In Every department . You can select from ~-~r 10,000 items and
over 200 kinds and cuts of meal, includinll. l.lmb, Veal, Fre~h
Seafood and 7 kinds of Ground Meat . You w'IQ:'I I ' find
I one of
the widest selections of fresh fruits and vegiij
1 plus a
Delicatessen, international foods sedlon, gaur
~n. diet
1'1 .
foods, institutional sizes and more.

2495

.

•COST CITTIIIIa.!
low price's on quality guaranteed products, day-in and day-oul.
Over 100 different items. Products with a name you can trust and
a quality grade you can count on . Products you can depend on
every day and priced as low or lo'wet than, "no name foods" . At
Kroger you know exactly what you're getting when yov buy .it ,
not when you open it. And each and every "Cost ~utter" Item is
· backed by Kroger's Total Satisfaction Guarantee.

..,,'

Our most popular
portable! "High 'n
wide" tuning dial,
tone switch, FM-AFC.
AC/battery operation.
1112-711 Batteries e•tra

400/o
Off

1195

Includes
Batteries and
Billfold

Ca~se~~~~~..,.;;:::
as

Reg. 19.95

Add up $8 in savings! Soft-touch keys for square -.....,,.-&lt;;r-,.;;
root, percent, sign-change. #65-683

.•
••
•
n

••
••

."

•..

,,,

-•

N

•

'"
• I•

........'"

••

•

.•

,,

�Pag e-

l

0-

Th e Daoly Se n ti n e l

acGrorgc
h Pa 1eel
Salis
L 1m
ley bun
Helt'n L im lc&gt;v lo
Galha Counly Rura l ll aleo Assn
Inc Salisbury
Richar d H S i e ~&lt; arl Benv Sie
wa 11 10 Ca lha Counl \ RUI al Waler
AS&gt; n
I nc
R ig hi of Way
Salisbury
Ga ll He1rm an 10 Ca lha Counly
Ru 1al Waleo Assn Inc R1ghl of
II av Sahsbur}
George&gt; W Kn app Benha H
Knapp 10 La1 rv E Hof fma n
1 PI esa K Hollman Porllor or Lot
66 Village of M iddlcporl
Robert 1 Sl ewa n
rma A
Slewa rt 10 RobPrl T Siewarl
pa1 c&gt;els Rulland

Tern Da\ L&lt;; to Gene A Da\ IS
parcel Rolla nd
Michael 0 Bn en L mda J
0 Bnen 10 Robert W Lcw 1s I sabel
Lewis Parc&gt;els Lelart
Charles W Ervm deceased 10
Margarel E Ervm Cer tifica te of
Transfer Pa1 eels Sc1p10
WesiVaco Corpo ratiOn 10 Blauser
Well Serv Inc R1ghl of Wa)
Me1gs
Shtrley A Carpenter 10 Spencer
Carpenter Lots 3 and 8 Racme
Bert ha Reibel deceased Her
berl Reibel deceased 10 Emma
Reibel Ogdm aff •dav11 Sa lisbu ry
James W Sul lie G1ella M Sullie
10 Hazel M Curt iS Par cel Olive
William Wayne Russelllo Shar on
C Russell Lo t 463 Pomeroy
Harry Swan I by h1s mark 1 El hel
Swan 10 Wilham R Roush llah
Roush par i of Lol 162 Lebanon
Diamond Savmgs and Loan Co
lo Randy R Riffle Robm A Riffl e
Lol Bedford
Norman Deem lo Gordon C
Pro ffit! , Freda M Proff ll l Lois I
and 3 Lebanon
Marlon Williams Frank W1ll1
ams to Her ald 0 11 and Gas Co
R1ghl of Way ScipiO
Joe N Say re Rosa lie G Sayre 10
Herald 0 11 and Ga s Co R1gh1 of
Way Scipio and Columbia
Carl Sayre Mart ha Sayre lo
Her ald 0 11 and Gas Co Right of
Way Sclp1o and Columbia
Sharon C Russell l o William
Wayne Russell Parcels Lebanon
and Chester
Davtd L Bumgard ner Shirley J
Bumgardner to Broce D Bum
gardner Cynthia Bumgardner 1
acre, Rutland
Margarel TIIU s deceased to
James B Tllu s Parcels Affld l or
Trans , Rutland
Sybil Ebersbach to Emma ~I
bel Ogdln , F rederick William
Russell, Par cels Sahsbu ry
Emma Rei bPI Ogdln to Sybil
E bersbach, Parcels Salisbury
Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development of Washington, D C
to Charles David Jeffer s, Brenda
Kay Jeff ers, 35 acre, Rutland
Village
l
Kathryn L ·~re , Edward G
M oore to E dward G Moore,
Kathryn L Moore, !JJY., acres,
Salisbury
Daisy Schuler to Pa ul M
Schuler, Lot, Pomeroy
Eldon R Kraeuter to Paul E
Black, Lot 5, Sutton
Clarence E Randolph, Sr , Ale
tha M Randolph to Clareoce E
Randolph, Sr , Aletha M Ran
dolph, Parcels, Bedilrd
Lawrence Lee, Cor a Lee to Wes1
Gr owth Pet Inc., Right of Way,
Scipio

Drstr rrt

R rght of

responded
The public response has been
said Eleanor
great th1s year
Kelcham dlrector of Voluntary
Action Cente1 m Toledo A lot of
groupsare laklng part thlsyear that
never d1d before There 1s real
communlly sp1r il being shown
People are seemg there 1s a rea l
need
M1 s Kll cham Said Toledo s
Chnstmas Cleanng Bur eau Will
supply about 700 more food baskets
lh1s year than last Even so
dona11ons are not meetmg all or the
9 500 1eq uests 101 food from needy
families mlhe area
The Salvation Anmy m Toledo 1s
d1stn butmg 5 (XXl baskets of food
thiS week and the city s Voluntecl"s
of Amen ca IS passing out another
2 (XXl food baskets

COLUMBUS Ohoo !API - Tis
lhe season 10 bP chantable and
chat Il les SU I OhiOans al P respond
mg 10 c&lt;~ lls lo1 help l h1s Chn sl mas

F1 anklln E1nesl Shcllz Bcrlha
Shell z lo LNd1ng Creek Consc 1
vancy DISII ICI R1 ghl or Way
Columbia
Da\ld W Llc11 ell\ n Ja ne E
I lc11clvn lo Lead mg C1eek Conse1
\dllC\

Wav

Columbkl
\Veslev He1 11Ck Velma M Hc1
11ck 10 Leadmg C1c&gt;ek ConservancY
DISIIICI Righi or Wav Sa llSbUl y
Lave&gt; In W Jm dan Mary K
Jordan to Lc&gt;admg Creek Conse1
va ncv DISi llcl R1gh1 or Way
Columbia
Dan J 01 ddn K n11 Jordan to
I eadmg Cl cek Consel"va ncy D1s
lnrl H1gh1 of Wa) Columbia
Roland R Sielhem T1ess1e
Siethem 10 Holand R Stel hem
r1 esSie Stelhem PI Lol l22 Olive
Da v1d L Hoss Betty I Hoss to
Ga ll 1a Counl v R01 al Wale• Assn
Inc R1ghl of Way Salisbury
Leslie Wh•llmglon Yvonne Whil
lmglon lo Ca lha County Rural
Wal el Assn Inc R1ghl of Way
Sa lisbUI"V
Ca lha Counl y R01 al Water
Assn Inc Sa llsbUI y
HeI sheI Wears deceased Car11c
M Wears Aflldavll Rulland
John B Shule1 B1 enda Shule1 lo
F'1 ankhn Rea l Esl ale Co Part Lol

Pomerov

Funds received
Slalc Aud1101 TI10mas E Fe1gu
son 1eport ed l he Decembe1 d1s1n
bullon of $8 488 337 21 In local,
govern men I lund money to Ohio s
88 coun11es and l o 442 c1t1es and
VI llages levymg local mcome !axes
Me1gs Countv s po111on was $18 750

season
1 hough I he IOlumcol donallonSls
up some g1oops Slill can I make
' nds meel
Onp Cleveland ,1gencv has so
nldllV Calls 101 help li S sl aff put off
hollctav vaca llons 10 handle lhe
11 01k l he Sa lla l1on A 1my has
mo1c oilers or hc&gt;lp than starr lo
&lt;Ollf'CI donal IOnS
Aul omob1le wo1keos "ho a1 e laid
off I hell JObs m cenll a!OhiOSCI up a
I halli V dil\ P IO l ake Ca l (' Of !hell
O\\ n \\ or st cw.;rs Response was so
goea l lhal some&gt; conlnbut10ns w111
help \\ 01 kelS ),ud off In othel
mdust r rrs
Mm e lhdn ~ (XXl n&lt;'E'dy fa milies m
and a1ound I oledo w1ll be assured of
ChilS! mas dmne• because or chant
dbleg10ups 1he1e But contnbut 1ons
a 1en 1 sulflc1enl 10 help perhaps
1 iOO ol het fam ilies Ill need
Robeol Kammsk1 a Sa lva tion
Arm\ pr oductron suJX&gt;r-vrsor m
Cleveland savs contnbut 1ons !h iS
season are tcr r rftc
Wen bookedclea rt o the fl rstol
I he 1 e&lt;1 1 on our pickups he said
I 1 e h.td 11 Irucks on the 1oad I
11 ould say 11 s up about 50 to 60
JX' t coni from last yca1
F.1 cry lhmg IS up I he need IS up
and I he g11 mg IS up said Fran
Haskms of lhe L uther dn Soc1al
Se-n 1ccs cenl cr m Columbus This
commuml\ has been lantasllc m
1espond mg
Lulhe1an Socw l Se11vces ope1
&lt;.~IPs food pa nt nC's vea r r ound and
Will help oboul 1:i0 (XXl mdlviduals
I hiS 11 "' up by nea rly one third

Franklin County Childrens Servl
res m Columbus a tax supported
agency servmg 5 (XXl children
lumts pnva te fund ra tsmg toChrisl
mas so 11can prov1de seasonal gifts

Kids submit a ' wish list' to the
agency which seeks donors to buy
the gilts
'We have seen about a 65 percent
Increase m the number of children
requesting gifts
said George
Biggs, direc tor of volunteer serv1
ces for I he agency He said donoos
are up from less than 1,400 m l !ll1 to
around 2 (XXl this year
Biggs blamed lhe mcrease m
requests on the state of the nallon s
econom y but sa 1d ' There are still a
lot of very good hear ted people who
are still working They understand
how fortunate they are They know
11 could happen lo them very
eas1Iy
Mem bers of the United Auto
Worker s Local 969 who are laid off
from a Genera l Motors plant m
Columbus collected over 1,lXXl
pounds of food and $934 to help fellow
worker s who exhausted all sources
or mcome
Local President Howard Boyer
Said the money would be used to bu•
chickens to add to

St Stephens Community House
operales food pa nlr les Ill northeast
Columbus which spokesm an John
Maloney ca lls one of the highest
poverty areas In OhiObecause most
of the residents are unskilled
We w11I take care of well over
1 (XXl families this season,' Maloney
sa id
We already have l ,o:Il
applicants and probably wtll get
another 150-:nl by Christmas '
In Noember he said thecommun
1ty house assisted
families
com pared to 91 who sought help In
November 1!lll
The agency provides food and
other emergency services and th iS
season has accepled toys from
donors

:m

11 21 22 29 2tc

J

Co d o t f hon- • IP"'d "oo • o .. &lt;o
lp o d "'""'" co

l

.t.Mo~nc""''"

"Mem""'

• a . .. ... ,

•

2I

I l01 O&lt;'d f o~n&lt;l
1 Yo d S o o po d n od•on co
8 Pubch o

-

,,_

tWo..,.., o l u,

ll o pW o ~

1 h1s vca 1 has seen bv la1 I he
mosl s1gnif1can1 JUmp she sa1d
bul l he c o mm unll y ha s

l

e.,, ,..., OppO•hft o
So"'"'''

22 Mo,..., ~ lnon
2 ) P o!ou ono

5 HOjlh A d o

l l
l1

.....-....

!&gt; I Ho.&lt;ool&lt;l oi ~Oe&gt;o•o
fr2C B f \II. Ao do&lt;~lq
~l
qu oo

.t. nr

pmon

rromoor ... s oo

r.e

, . . .... p . . . .

M ob~o

61 M ooc:o '" '

ll omu r.,.. So o
So o
J • ~~ ......... ~ d " 110
)5 lo o&amp; il. t . . u•
J I II .. Eoro oWoftod
l )fo on o r~

• 1 M ollolo 110M oo roo ll oo&gt;
41 h

oct

""'on&lt;~

' ~' '"
' ~" "' """~
1
SchoOlo
11 Aodo IV I. C 8A~po
17 M oc o on oowo
1 1 Wo no d i ~ On

"'' 'o "•"
•• • .,. mon ro Reo&gt;
(
'
(
•

5 f un obd ll oom•
I 5poe&lt;olo lloo&gt; r
1 Wonood n ll ono
8 (Q&lt;o pmon lo R~n
(9
l ooto

Gas

ro

H to! o "'"'" ••
15 .... 1 I. Moo 1

Po

d o h o
mo n o

r. e'f o Solon
• • "·~·
""•
59
ToM

6] l veo DC I

8J ( covo ng

e~S. •d '' •

•

no

PROBATE COURT OF
lo!EIGS COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF ETHEL SWAN
DECEASED
Case No 23955
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

DAN'S BOOT SHOP
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Open Evenings 'Til Christmas

...

,~ ~ ~--~~~-~=~--~-~~~~~-~

~ WOOD ROCKERS

~

~

W

~:;~;;"'

~u WOOD ROCKERS
I!!
STARTING AT
U

!« :~':"~!=·~~~"t"!:'..oiKiay•

~

~

~

$7995

tl:!

~M

u

U:
~

tl:!
U

M

~
~
U
t1:!

Ji

LIVE-EASY

« LOUNGING AT

II!
I(

W
W COMFORTABLESAVINGS
W

w

I!!

~

W

$14 gg5

II!

u:
W

INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY

U

Wi

106 N 2ND AVE
992-2635

§

!
«

=

~

MIDDLEPORT :l(

=

6~:~\Ev~~;~~~~'rv.ce

W 53L~~s ~:ra~o~ryear

II!
ifis:::&lt; i&lt;::1
'!&lt;:! =~&lt;:&lt; ~ 11:¥ 1&lt;0( 1\Q:
~ ~ !;0¥ ~ ~
r. g::a; == ~I!
-----------------------------~

==

oe;,a"~~:me

n

A oo Cod o I U

4 • • Code l 0 4

991

,,. ,.,

M dd op""
Pomo""

Cl&gt;o o h ~o

v .... o..

IU

Cr.otr•

~ oOond~

0"''" 0 o

JU
1U
9 49

p., lo~d
l o o fo o

IU

)1'

o\ oboO o
Wo "" '

81 M HI'I•~"'

Up o
l)p oo

"·-·

l oon

APING o ..

11)

Mo0&lt;1n
fllllo.., H o vo~

.. . . ....

IU
l tl

11 "'\oM

ll7

the period of Two (21 Yea,.
from and after the effectrve
date of thtt ord1nance
BE rr ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF MIDDLEPORT OHIO
SEC TION

That

for

the

lo ..,,
l u llo lcl

~~

" 00
" 00
"00

WO&gt;tdo

I~*"

d&gt;

1 7U pM o o•

Public Nottce

Pubhc Nottce

o f the Oh o Gross Rece pts Tax
and are sub1ect 10 decrease or
- ,-,•c.J rncrease •n accordance wrth
the Gas Cost Recovery Prov
sro ns o f the Company s Rules
·---,_-J.._J.::=Jjj i and Requlatrons on frle w rt h
the Publ c Utd Ires Co mmrss on
o f Oh• o
SECTION 2 That •t rs ex
pres sty co ndr l ro ned the serv ce
~~ -- _ _
to be rendered by sard
I hke YOU You r e not JUSt Company •ts successors or
ass•gns pur sua n t to thrs ordr
nothe r pretty f ace•
nance shall be prrmarr ly for
domestrc and commerc•al pur
Public Not1ce
poses and tha t servr ce shall not
be extended to o ther consu
addrtrona l srx dollars {S6 001 mers ol d•fferent cl asses un trl
per mon th for each year o f
after atl rea so nable req urre
consecutrve lu ll t•me servrce
men ts for domestrc and com
wrth the VIllage
mercral purposes are fully met
SEC X\11 Tha t vrllage coun cr!
and th s provrsron shall be
shall d eterm ne wh rch em
b ndrng upon sad Co mpany
Ployees ar e ctassrfred as lull
rts successors or assrgns
trme emplayees
durrng each mo nth o f each
SEC XIV Th s Ordnance
year but du rr ng any mo nth or
shall take effect and be rn force
year su brec t to the 1oregotng
from and alt er January 1 1983
lrmr tatr ons and aher com
Passes the 13th day o f
plrance wr th the forego1ng
December 198 2
provrsrons gas may be del•
Att es t
vered to any o ther consu mer
Jon Buck
and addl! ona classes of co n
Cterk
sumers at suc h trmes and
Carl Horky
under such condrtr on s and lor
Pr esrden t o f
such rates as may b e ag reed
Cou n o l
upon between the Company
and su ch c ust o mers or
1121 22 29 2ic
consumers
SECTION 3 The term s and
Public Not1ce
cond rtrons o l the sefVrce to be
rendered shall conl orm wrth
and be su brectto the Rules and
ORDINANCE
Regufatrons for fur mshrng g as
NO 531
servrce o f the Co mpany on hie
Frxrng and regul at rng the
w rt h and app roved by the
prrce that may be c harged by
Pubfr c Ut rfll res Com mrsston o f
Co lum b ra Gas of Ohr o Inc ti S
Ohto
successors or ass•gns lor gas
SECTION 4 Thai ihe gas
to the Vrllage o f Pomeroy Oh1o
furntshed or delrvered pursua nt
and to rts rn habrt ant s for the
to Jh e terms o f thrs o rdrnance
per rod o f One ( 1) Yea rf rom and
by the sard Com pany shall
after b1lls rendered Untt 1
have an average hea trog value
January 10 1983
o f 1 000 Brr tr sh th erm al unrts
1

BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILlAGE OF
POMEROY OHIO
SECTION I Thai loo lhe

per•od o f One 11) Year from and
after brll s rendered Unrt 1
Janua ry 10 1983 the ma••
m um p rrce wh rch Columb ta
Gas of Ohto Inc rts successors
o r ass •gn s shall be perm rtted to
e,harge lor and the mrnrmum
prrce at w h rc h rt or they shall be
req w ed to lurnt sh gas to the
Vrllage o f Pomeroy Oh ro !Mu
n tcr pa lr ty) and to rts tnhab rl
an ts sh all be and the same rs
hereby frxed for each rndrv1dua l
consumer as follows
A Cu stomer Cha rge of
S4 00 pe r meter per month
regardless o f gas consu med
and 1 1 5 8 3c per 100 cubrc
feet per meter per month tor
all gas consumed
A Customer Charge for
eac h customer each month o f
Four D ollars ($ 4 00) shall be
made If servr ce u nder lhrs rate
sc hedu le rs drscontrnued at the
request of c u sto mer !he Com
p any sha ll not be under any
obhgat ro n to resume s erv~ce to
the sa me c ustomer o n the
same premrses unttf the custo
mer ha s made payment of an
amount equal to the Customer
Charge for eac h month o f the
rnterven rng penod but not to
exceed srx (6 ) months
The above rate excludes gas
c osts and the Ohto Gro ss

Recerpts Tax All btlls rendered
p ursuant to th•s ordrnanc e shall
b e ad1u sted to reflec t the effec t

per cubrc toot lor any consecu
trve twelve I 12) mon th penod
subJeCt to a va rr ance of not
more than lrve (5) percent
upward or d ownward
SECTION 5 That any ordr
na nce or resolutron or part o f
an ordrnance o r resol utron
rnconsrstent herew1 th rs 10 the
ext ent o f suc h rnco nsrstency
hereby repealed
SECTION 6 Tha t should any
sectron or part o f a sectron or
provrsron o f a sect ron of th1s
ordmance be dec lared vord the
remarnde r o f thr s ord rnance
shall not be affected thereby
SECTIO N 7 Thrs ra te rs the
u ndorm ra te negotiated l or
mem bers of the Gas Rate
Coafr tron pursu anl. to SectiOn

4909 34 and 743 28 0 A C
SEC TION 8 lt rshereby lound
and determ rned th at a\1 forma l
ac trons o f thrs Co unc tl concern
rng and relatrng to the passage
of thrs ordrnance were adopted
rn ar'l open meettng o f the
Counctf and that a\1 d efrhera
Irons of th rs Cou nc1f and any oJ
rts co mmrttees whr c h resu lted
rn such forma l actrons were rn
meetrngs open to the pubfrc ,,
complta nce Wtth all legal re
qut rements of th e Vrllage of
Pomeroy Oh1o

lI

l
l

Wrrte your own ad a nd order b y marl w rth thrs
coupon Cance l your a d by phon e w h en you g e t
r esults M oney n o t r e fundabl e

Name _____________________

Address--- --- - - - - -

These cash r a tes
tnc lude d rsc ount

! Wanted
I For Sale
)Announ ce m ent

1For Rent

2
3
4

5
6

7
8
9
10
11
12
IJ

JO
31
32

14 - - - - 15 --- - - -- - - 16

11 2122 29 2ic

JJ
34
35

Mall This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy,

Oh. 45769

._--------·-··-·.-----------

Oho

SECTION 4 That the qas
!urn Shf'd or del vered pursuan t
to th e terms o f th s ordrnance
bv the sard Co mpany shall

2

In Memonam

ent smile
W1th ~dne ss we recall you
had a kmdly word lor each
and died beloved by all the
v01 ce IS mute and shll the
heart that loved us
Well and true Ah b11ter as
the tnal to part from one as
good as you
You are not lorgotten loved
one nor will you ever be as
long as life and memooy
last we will remember thee
We miss you now our
hearts are sore as t1me
goes by
We m1ss you more your
lovmg sm1le your gentle
lace no one can ever l1ll
your vacant place
Sadly m1ssed by your w1le
Ruth Sm1th and children
Dorothy Maoy Kenneth ,
M1ke grandchi ldren
Brenda Donna Ke~th K1m
beoy
We also remember Lew1s on
hiS birthday November 3
1982 We love you and
m1ss you very very much
and always will

Pubhc Not1ce

h 1vr an aver 1qe hea t niJ vlllue
at 1 000 Brrtrsh thermal un IS
pPr cuboc foot tor any cons~cu
t vf' twPtve ( 121 month PC' on
sub1ect to 1 ~ 11 a 1ee o t not
more th em t ve 15) O('I C'Pnt
upwa 0 o d ow nw 1r c1
SECTION 5 In tht&gt; Pvrnt thP
State o t Oh o or the M un c pal
tv shol lcJ herp 1ftr mposf' a
Ia• upon the Comoanv tha t s
now now rn(lrJSf'lt or st1ould
hfllf':ll tPr n ( PllSfl tht&gt; a t~~ ot
1 1V I 1• l'h\ rT"lpOSf'd lO On thf'
CClPl p,w v JhOvfl thP ta• ratr
no w P• Sl nq o thPr than thf'
fa ll Or t) rQ[Jf't!V I S!Pd 1"'1 ]hf'
IP tt P&lt;;f l!f' fl • lr &lt;;t Hlr1d u pl ( liP
tht&gt;r thP I liPS p t'SCI br"d n
Srn on 1 sha tJP ncrP&lt;JSed to
tht~ P• tPnt nPCPSS1ry to rom
pPn s e~tP thP Comp rmy tor thr
'C
1St 1 cost du to suc h
r f'w t1x or htQhPr t)JC ralf' Thrs
shat hi rlo nr n th C' follow nq
ma nr
fall! lhP npw taK o r h qhf'r tllx
rate s romouted 1n ci rect
P 11 or to qas solrl o r 1Pvflnues
rP \ flr vr&lt;l lor the salE' o t CJas the
rates set lorth herr n shall be
art u'itt&gt;d 10 thf' ex tPn t neces
sary to rf'comoPnsr thP Com
panv tor the amount thrreo t
1\)l lt the li P ..... tax Qr h rqhfl tax
r atr s not relatf'd d rectly tO a as
sotrl or to 1evenues rece•vPd tor
the salr ot qas tht&gt;n the to t il l
d ol ar Pltrr t thrrPol upon the
cost ol sPrvrnq flilS by the
Co noany n thP Mun c OJI ty
shall be determ ned based
upon ooerat ons o t the Cum
pany n th P Mun c pal ty rjurrng
thP most rPcen t y ava table
twelve month per rod endrng on
the las t day at the Decembe r
precf'd ng thP ptf ect ve da te of
the new ta11 or hrgher taK rate
the ro ta dollars so computed
shall then be d vrded by th e
to tal sales made to the tvoes of
customer s cove ed bv th s
ord•nance dur rnq t hP sa me
twelve month oerrod and the
rat es prescr bed here n sh.;tl bP
corres pondrnqlv lld 1us tect
The adrustment o f thP rates
presc r bed n th s Ord narKc as
orov ded ' su bplraqra ohs lal
and fbi above shall he made by
ound ng the ma themat c at re
suit of the compu tat ons so
orescrrbed 10 the neatf'St onf'
auartt'r Cf'n t I ~ cenn per one
thot sand cub c fr et
The ad,ustPd rate shJII bf'
placed n efiPct anr1 shall apoty
10 all nP te read nqs orcl rr nq
on anrt alt rr rhe Pflect ve datf'
o t tnP statu te Ofdrnancp or
esolt t on n St iln t to wh ch
the new ta&gt;.: or nr rPaSf'r1 tax
ratf' rs trnoo sf'd
W r !lf' n not f ca tron ot thf&gt;
adtustmPn t shall hf' sent to the
Clerk. n t Counc I o f the M unrcr
oa tv )S ct r ~ y as pass ble
aftPr thf' flllPr t o l thf&gt; new ta11 or
h rQhPr ta ~ ratP can bf'
dPI E'rm nP(i
SEC TI ON G That any o rd
nancP 0 1 ffl &lt;;nlut on or nan at
an orr! n;Jil(' f' n rP.SOiut on
ncons strrH ilf' ew th s to th r
e•te nt o t st c h n cons rstencv
herrby rPflPC~ I r&gt;r1
SECTION 7 lhat sh OL id ilny
sect n or p(lrt a t 1 sen on or
o ov son o t 1 Sf'Ct on o t th s
o rd na 1ce be dec Hr&gt;d vo d rhe
rf!ma ndrr o t Thrc:: 01d nance
shill! no r hP alfPctr&gt;d t~er ebv
SEC T ON 8 Th at commr rd
rnq wrth thf' pfff'CI•ve ciiltC' of
th s Old ln(lnce and cant nurnrt
therea fter for a per o d at Two
121 Year s and no longer
Cotumb•a Gas a t Ohro Inc
shall I 1 n sh w tho u\ charge
uo to 1 700 Met annually to be
used for mun c•pa! purposes rn
la crlt PS ownrd and opp ated
by the V•llaqr o t M ddteport
Oh o After thf' exorr at on ot
SJ d Two t2l Year oe odo r n

the event more tha 1 1 700 Md
s used n any twelve month
oenod the VrllagP a t Middle
port Oh o w II Day for all gas
consumed by 1 at the ra te as

~~·~~~~~.'"

Sectoon I ol th•S

SEC TI ON 9 lhat th•s ord r
nance shall becomP elfechve at
rhe earl est date attowe(l by law
or upon the e11p ra tron ol the

r u .. ent

o•d•nance wh•cheve•
''lie slate&lt; p ov ded howeve•
that ths o rOnance sha l have
no Ioree or r i1 Pct whatsoever
\ ntess wr 11 en acceptance o f
ths o rdrnan cp s I led by th e
Companv wth the Cterk. o f

Co,nc 1 ol th e Vdlage ol
M ddlepon Oh o p o to th e
I om th e date th s ord nancf' rs
passed
rxp11a t•on of thrny 1301 days

t::::::=======;T;==:::::;:;;::;::::-~:T;=========::;

Jon Buc k.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

F rd Hollm an

MAYOR
112122 29 2 tr

Real Estat e- G ene ral
OPPORTUNITY
KNOCKING
With thts 149 acre Rutland
farm Anx1ous to sell has
pnced accordmgly Includes rural home barn
garage, mmerals and
much more If y~ ) !ave
Interest m a good ~ntry
farm or m1nerals don't
pass up your opportumty
Call R C S Realtors
I 614-593-5571 or 9926312

St R:t 124Pomeroy OH

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

VIRGIl B SR
216 E 2nd St
Phone
1-(614) 992 3325
NEW liSTING - 16 aCies ol
leased m.nerals ol and gas
wei~ near F1ve 10om older
home neai Rutland lor only

$22 500 00
liKE NEW - You can really
apprec~ale lh1s lovely game
room w1Ih a woodburn1ng
l1 replace 3 bedrooms ma ~e r
enormous 2to baths equipped
krrchen copper plumbm&amp;
central heat and a~r 2 cai
garage on landscaped lot
NEW HOME SITES - 66aCies
ol lhem or alarmcan be you1s
w1lh all m1n e~a ls and mostly
lenced 15 mmules lo town

Housing
Headquarters

FOR SALE

••

Res tdent tal

Guaranteed

&amp; Comm er c i a l
Call 74 2 31

PH JIM CUFFORD

992 7201

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sues start from 12 x1 6

AND HOME MAINTENANCE
oRooltng of all lypes

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Stze s from 6 x6 Up

Resrdentlal &amp;

lo 24 x36

Co mm e~tral

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
7 14 "'

Insulated Dog Houses

0

Remodelrn&amp;

0

Siomo Wtndows &amp; Dooos
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Years h penence
TOM HOSKINS
Ph 742 2834
01 949-2 160 10125/UC

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl 3 Box 54
Ractne Oh
Ph 614 843 259 1

10 6 lie

YOUNG'S

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
u s Rt so East
Gu vsv 111 e Oh1 o

Authonz ed J ohn Dee r e
New Holl and, Bu sh Hog

Farm E qutpm ent

Dea ler
Farm E quopm ent
Parts &amp;Serv•ce

SKATE-A-WAY
SCHEDULE
Wed Fn Sat Nights
7 30 to 10 00
Sunday 2 00 l o 4 30
Open Chm tmas Eve
Cl osed Chnstm as
Open New Year s Eve
7 301 230
Open New Year s
Avatlab le lor Prtvate Pa rt res

Ph 985 3929 oo 985 9996
12 I I mo

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Coie to the IJI!gest Rad ~ator
Rad~ator Spec ~ali st

NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs Expenence

Pomeroy Oh
Ph 992 2174

Vonyl &amp; Alumonum
SIDING

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and rem odehng
- Rooftng and gutter work
- Concrete wort&lt;
- Plumb1ng and

electnca! w orit
(Free Estim ates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992 62 15 or 992 7314

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Bea uftful Custom
But It Ga r ages
Ca ll fo r fr ee s 1d 1ng
e strm ate s

94 9 2801

949 2860
N o Sund ay Ca ll s

G&amp;W
PLASTICS
&amp; SUPPLY
•ORANGE GAS PIPE
•BLACK GAS PIPE
•REGULATORS

DELIVERY
PH 985-3892
or 985-3837

12 10 I mo pd

General

long Bonom OH 45743
985 4193 or 992 3067
12

20rtc

POMEROY, OHIO

PH.992-2259
PRICE REDUCED - St Rt 33 approll mal~y I 'h acre level ~t
Wllh 3 bedroom house c ha~n hnk lence garden spaced ra nge rei
good condition Now only $26 000 00
FRONT ST - MIDDLEPORT -A beaulllulvlewol nve!lromyour
own Iron! porch Remodeled 4 bedroom home !~replace ~1d10g
doo~ Io la1ge deck Basement carpebng llce level lot

$45 000 00
POMEROY - Convemenl to schools stores. churches' 4 5
bedroom I 'h slooy house wrth new carpelmg, mce kitchen w1th
dishwasher rall(!e Utihty room porches N1ce home good pnce

•BLOWN
INSULATION
•SIDING
•ROOFING
•NEW
CONSTRUCTION
PH 949-2182
or 949-3055
12 13 1 mo

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

DOZER
BACKHOE
LOWBOY

- la.Boy
-Trencher
- Water
-Sewer
-Gas lmes
- Sept1c Systems
lARGE or SMAl l JOBS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

CALL 992-2903
AFTER 5 P.M.

PH 992 2478

122 I mo

12 10 I mo d

MOUNTAINEER
'MJODWORKS
Rl t Bo x 2n
RAVEN SWOO 0 WV
304 273 3660

SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALL Al
Ph. 742-2328

We Are N ow Open
W II s Made 01 Wood

We Can Make h
•Toys •Furntture
• Bu rldtn g Prod ucts
•C ustom or Spe&lt;: ralrze d
Orde rs Welco me
Come &amp; SO! Whal We Have To
Offer Croos til! Ravenswood

Bo t~ lo Sl Rt 56 (I Block
from Crty lt mtts- Across From
Double Nultel
Ill 2911 mo

1131mo

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Bnng Thi S Ad
Good For
15% OFF
ON PERMANENTS
Mon lues Wed
Now lhru Dec 31
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N 2nd
Middleport OH
PH 992 2725

Chester Oh1o
Ph 985 4269 or 985-4382
Dewayne WrNtams
&amp; Scottie SITVth
All makes and models

W e Honor Golden Buckeye
cards EKcept on Perm

Antenna lnstallatc n
Hou se calls and shop

Spectals

II &amp;I

Krtchen Cabtnets - Roofmg - Sldtng - Concrete
Pat1os - Stdewalks New Construct1on - Re
modeling - Custom Pole

Route 1

608 E. MAIN

S

TRUCK &amp; AUTO
NEW &amp; USED
HARlEY DAVIDSON PARTS
CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
CHROME PRIMARYS
Rec '107 so
NOW 187 50
Complele k1cker Assembly
Rea '189 95
NOW 1 147 50
luther Vests
Rea 1149 95
NOW 179 95-189 95
Horley Jewelry Harley P10 s
Ree- 13 95 16 95
NOW 2115 00
leather Hats T Sh1rts Acces
sorlts &amp; much more
Hrs 9 5
Closed Sun &amp; lion
B•chcrove Rd
Rutland OhiO

128 1mopd

II'()

'lf1AQWR SHill HAl&amp;

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes - extenstve
remodeling
•[lectnc M&gt;rk
.Custom Pole Bldgs
&amp; Gaoages
eRooftng Work
trAiummum &amp; Vrnyl Srdrngs
15 Years Expenence

GREG ROUSH
PH 992 7583
or 992 2282

1

Card of Thanks

I w ould lik e to t hank all my
cu st o m er s f o r t he many g 1ft s
t h e y h av e g•ven m e and f or
bem g su c h mce peop le
M erry C hnstm as Rose &amp;
Bryant V o un g

3 Anno un cements
11 11 He

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT
Bashan BUIIdtng
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

6.30 P.M
FRYE

1

CONTRACTING

-Dozers
- Backhoes
- Dump Trucks

servtee ava tLable
12 3 1 mo orl

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofrng &amp; Srdrng Co.

or

3 11 ff c

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

rtc

Barns

REALTORS

:
., •

Wortdnsured and

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

•Gutters
•DownspoU1s
•New or Repair
•Pamtmg

WINTER - W1ll be easy mlh1s
mce olde1 home 1n M1dd~po rt
New ca~pelln &amp; pamt and
paneling QUlel locab on on
gravel h1ll Now only $21SOO

$5300000

•

sewer hookup

r.==========:r.===~====I0=7=r:tc:r.=======~~~

2 26

MINIFARM - Great lor horses! Aprox1mately 10 acres ol rolling
land with ranch type 3 bedroom home Basement, pond Secluded

~
"' t;

n ee d s,
furn aces
r epatr se rV ICe and
mstall atton

odump truck SOfVIC&lt;J

or 992-71 21
3 24 li e

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

BUY NOW WHILE YOU CAN
AND PROPERTY IS
REASONABU

Olllct

F or all you r wmng

eseed•ngand reclaimtng
•Racntand Syracuse

Al so Transmi SS IOn
PH 992 5682

NEW YEAR S HOME - Buy
now and move nghl 1n 8
100ms and large gard en or
playground In Rutland above
h1gh wate1 neai school

lh ~

$36900 00

•'•

ooeptiesys18ms

11

COLD WEATHER - W1ll nol
bother you 1n lh1s mce 7 room
modern ty pe home Has 2
balhs hoi waler heal cenlral
a~r lull basement mce carpel
m&amp; garage and neal yard

Henry E. C!e~nd. Jr , GRI
Dottie
Turner ..................... .
Jean Trussell

eexcavat nlQ

Pomeroy Ohro

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION - 3 bedroom double wxle ~tuated on
approxm~ately I acre lot Full basemen( 2 balh~ shingle 1001
range, dishwasher wood burner and Franklin fireplace Pretty'

~':·

edozer

1 J ti c

OVER I ACRE - F1ve Pis
N1ce 2 bedroom mob1le
home and ga~age large
garden spol Sale lor chllden
and pels $26 500

Real Estate

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

ebackhoe

H. L WRITESEL

CLERK

RIGGSCREST - A house to be proud ol' 3 bedroom ~a nch on
approx1matly 2 acres snualed al end ol slreet for pnvacy Large
lamiy room 2 balhs separate d1nette area plus lormal d1nmg
room Includes 24 loot above ground pool $55 000 00

••

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

ROOFING

December 13 1982

ATIEST

11

Business Senrices

a~e a

54 M1sc Merchandise

BY SEALED BIDS
1979 Chevy 4 dr Formerly
Highway Patrol Car Good
condotoon all over Can be
mspected by contactmg
Rutland Police Dept or
Jeroy Black Rutland OH
Sealed b1ds w•ll be rece1ved
by the Clerk s Off1ce until
Jan 4 1983 at 7 00 p m
when they Will be opened
Rutland Villa&amp;e Counc1l
reserves the neht to re1ect
any or all b1ds Ma1l or or
hand sealed b1ds to Vernon
Weber Clerk Rutland V1l
age Rutland OH
Very N1ce - Must see to
appreciate Reason for sel
ling Village has purchased
a newer model cru1ser

Th e Da1ly Se ntme i - Page -

$27500 00

•

MAY

SEC TION 3 The terms and
cond trans o f the servrce to be
rendered shall con f11m w •th
and bP sub1ect to the Ru les and
Requlatrons lor furnrsh nq gas
servrCf' of the Company a 1 t te
w•th and approved by the
Publ c Utrlr t es Comm•ss on o f

Public Notoce

19

20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29

q

Clarenc e Andr

17

18

1

nance shall becom e ellectrv8
wtl h br \\s rendered on and after •
Ja n ua~ 10 19 8 3 o r u p o n t~e
exptratron of the c urrent ord 1-r
nance wtuchever d ate 1s late{
p rovtded however that t ~ 1 s
ord1nance shall have no force •
of effect w hat soever unlesa
wnn en accept ance of thrs
ordmance rs flied by thi
Company wnh the Clerk of
Councr l o f the Vr llage
Pomeroy Oh ro prtor to the •
ex p ~rat to n of th rrty (3 0) da~
from the d ate thr s ord1nance is
passed
.l

Affi ST
Ellen J Roug ht

&lt;:. h:~ l o t be ,nctf'r 1ry ob qa
I n n trJ rsume sf&gt;r.., r e to th e
s ImP l ustomrr on t hP same
n 1 rn '\f'S un t the c ustomer
h J&lt;;
na de paymf'nt o t an
lnlQunt P.Qttal to thP m nrmum
1 on thly c ha qr, tor f'llCh month
11 thr ntervenrnq per o d bu t
not to eKCPN1 s•• !61 months
The abovP rat es f'KCit df! qa s
costs and thr Oh o Gross
RecP ots Ta" All brd s rrndered
n ro:; 1n1 to th c, ord r ance sh all
bP l dtuSIPO 1(1 rl'l PC! l hP ettec t
a t the Oh ro Gr ss RN.r DIS Tax
Jnd art Sub lt I 10 C
iP('IPase 0
ncrPJ Sf' n Kt orr1a 1c-p w th
thP Gas Cost Rpcover.,. PrQ\I r
so n ot 1 • Company s Rules
)n 1 Rr"'q
Jl ons or 1 e wr th
t"f' P l b lr Ut lrt f'S Commrssron
t Oh o Co mll1 ss on r
SEC T ON 2 Th e~ t t s P •
1 resst v n ndr t onpd t nP servrce
tJ h
~"' derf•cl hv sud Com
1 11y
" suc r P&lt;;sors or ass qns
nu rst. 11 to th '&gt; or cJ rnancP shall
hf' pr nJrr!y to r rlUmPSI c lind
on fl c a Pt DOSt c; md that
Sl"r\ c shall no t be rxtended to
othPr t onsumrrs ot rt fterent
r ~ss• c un t alt er al
asona
b te recw rements tor domest r
1nrl co mmpr c al purpo sPs are
I 1 ly nP.t and th s p rov son
shall he b nd nq upon sad
(OfT'JI)Jny IS SUCCPSSOIS Qr
~ss 11 15 d r nq Pach mon th o t
tach vPar bt t dt r nq any
monrh or year subrPCI 10 the
fo cqo nq I m tat ons and aft er
campi ance ~Mth the loreao ng
provrsro ns qas may bP delt
ve red to any o thPr consume r
and add 1 onal classes of con
sumf'rS at such trmes and
under suc h con d t ons an d for
such ra tes a::. mav be agreed
uoon between the Company
and such consume r or
consumers

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I

SEC TION 9 Thai lh&lt;S or~\

PASSED
Dec 6 19B2

per Od ot One 11\ Yea !r om and
alter the t'IIPctrvf' datf' ot th 5
Ordrnance the ma 11 rmum l)rrce
wh ch Col mb s Gas o f Oh o
Inc
&amp; IS SUCCf'SSO rS 01
assrqns Shall be oerm !l ed to
r hargr h')r and the m nrmum
P rce lt wh c h 1 or thPy shall be
reqlll reci to lurnrsh f1JS to the
V llaqe nf M dd epon Oh 0
!M un C p;JI Tyl and 10 IS rl hab
rtants Shl ll bP and thf' samf' 1s
hf'rebv I •fld for each n(j v nual
ronsurr r liS tallows
Four and nmetv I ve hun
d rdths Crn ts t4 95 1OOths
crn tc.l OP { ne h und ed 11001
Cubrc lf'f'! tor tO,t&gt; tu 'it 500
r ubrc tpn usP.rt th ouqh each
nrtr&gt; eao month
S "-lf'rr Lt nrt t "' hundred
SP\e '1 1't' r...... o th o JSJnd t hs
Cfln ts 116 572 1000 ce ts l
ppr one hunclrNt t 1OOt c ubrc
IPPt tor all n ..., .., ~ f'SS o t 500
Ct brc tP.ct user! throt qh eac h
meter ea ch month
A M rnornum Cha rqp lor Pilch
custorn Pr each mont h ot rFou
Dollars anrt Nrne tv t vP Cen ts
!5 4 95) shall be madf' If
servrc f' t nder th s ate schf'Ctule
s d scon trnued at the equest
a t customPr
the Company
sh01 I not tJr t ncter any ob i ga
Iron to resume ser111ce to the
samf' customer on thP same
prpm Sf'S 1n t the custo mer
has made payment ot an
amount PQual to the mrnrmum
mor thly c ha qe to each month
o f the ntervP.n•nQ perrod bu t
not to exc eed sr• (6) mon ths
Fr om and aft er the exp ra t•on
o t the atoresa•d One ! 11 Year
per rod and tor a fu n her pertod
at One 111 Year thereafter as
tot ow s
Four ann nrnth fr ve hun
dn.•d th s CPnts 14 95 100
cent s) ppr one h undred !1 001
cu brc feet for the l rrst 500
cubrc feet used thr ough each
meter each mon th
Erghteen and three hundred
seven t y t w o th ousand th s
Cen ts !18 372 1000 ce nts!
per one hundred 11 001 cub rc
!Pet for all n e11cess a t 500
c b• c lef! t used thr ouq h each
mrter each mon th
A Mrn mum Charqe tor each
c ustorr er e e~ c h mnth at Fou r
Dollars and N•nPty I vP Cen ts
fS4 951 shall br made If
smv ce u1 &lt;ler th s r 1te sc hedule
•s d scon t•nuf'ci ill rhe request
o t c-ustomer
th f' Company

Public Notoce

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

,,
•

1

Ill Coo •"•

84 lie&lt; "' ' I. Rot "' o un
es Gon.,oj Ho u no

4N

IH

fo

record keep nq ho u ty em
ployees be emp loyed at a
maKrmum o t 3 5 hou rs per
week e)(cep t lor an Pmergency
that shal arr se sard eme rg ency
o f extra hou rs to be approved
by Councrl
SEC Il l The foll ow ng are
On Dccmn ber 3 1982 •nthe herPby dPclased as legal hoi•
days tor the em p loyees o f the
Mt JS County Probate Cou rt
V age of Mrddtoo on New
C::J~ fl No 23955 Ma)( nc Pr ce
Years Day Memorral Day
Route 1 Po f! land
Oh•o
Independence Day l abor Oav
45 7 70 was appo• nted Adm r
Thanksqr vrng Day Chr stmas
1s t Jtr x o1 the es tate o f Ethel
Dav Employees b rrthday Vete
Swan deceased late o t Route
1 Pont :md Ohto
rctns Dav
SEC IV Th at sad saa r es wr I
Raben E Buck
be •n ell ect on and after
Proba tP Judge
Janu&lt;Jry 1 1983
Clerk
I 121 8 5 22 3tc
SEC
V
Each fu ll t me
Prrp\oyre o f the Vr \\age shall be
cnt Tied to srck. leave rn the
trrount o f one and one fou nh
( 1 /4 ~ days p er month and shall
be en trtiOO to accrue sard leave
up to o n e hundr ed t\i\o€ntv
f1201 &lt;fays
An Ordinanat to establish
SEC V I Each full t• me
V1llage Jobs and Wage Rates
emp oyee o f the V llag e nclud
nq fu\1 t me hou rly rate ern
ployees shal t be entrtled du 11ng
Be it ordamed by the Counal
each year alt er the lrr st year to
ofthe vouogeofMiddleport••
!'I\() weeks vac at on exdudrn g
follows
legal holrrJays w rth pay Em
ployees wrth fifteen or more
Sec I That lhe lollow•ng
wage sea e rs herOOy adopted
yea rs se rvr ce shall be entr tled to
lor emplOyees o f the Vrflage of
three v.eeks vacatron w •th pay
M ddleport
each year
Ch et o f Police 5 1 017 00 per
SEC VU Each employee a t
month
the Vr\\age ent rtled to vaca hon
Reg ular Patrolman
shall use t he vacat•on trme rn
Ove' I yea&lt; ol serv&lt;ce $4 7 4 yea of en trt tement 0 1 shall be
per hour
p atd for any unused port •on o f
less th an 1 year of servrce
vacat on at the11 prevarhng
s4 52 oe' hou'
wage rate at th e tr me o f
Part trme patrolman 54 52
payment lf at the end of any
year any suc h employee has
nauolman lproba
accrued any un u sed vaca t on
t onary) S4 09 per hour
hme the Cler k shall make
payment to the employee for
S4 0 1 suc h unused t rme w rth n thrrty
~~ur
days 130) after the end ot the
vacation yea r VacatiOn trme
ol servoce
shall mean eac h 12 mon ths
Pool and Par k D11ecto r
pe11od fo flowmg the frrst l ull
year o f employment
s45ooo oe• mon lh
Lrfegua rds 52 50 per hou r
SEC VI\\
Th at a group
Secrelary 10 Mavor S441 00 hosprtal and medrcal rnsurance
pe&lt; monl h
p lan be prO\IIded for all full trme
errployees of t he V Itage o f
Ex tra Clercal Help 5442
oor hour
M ddfeport who el ect rn wnt
Clerk Cem etery Tru stees
mg to part ropa te rn th e same
51 20 00 per m on th
and that the premtum therefore
Volunteer F11 eman 538 00
be pard 0{ 1he Vrllage up to the
p er year
armun r o f the premrum qu oted
Coun c I S8 00 per meetrng
!o r the p resen t cont ract
1241
SEC IX Th at all tuft trme
Pres1dent of Counctl S 10 00
employees destrrng to partrcr
pf!r meet rng (2 4 )
pate ..., the p lan sh all frle an
Board of Publ1c Alf a•rs
elect ron w1th th e Cle rk w t h n
54 00 per meet rng
2)
ten d ays ( 10 ~ after the effec!lve
Clerk Board o f Public Affarr s
date of th ts ordrnance
S694 00 per month
SEC X Th at salar ed em
Drspatcher
Sl 75 00 per
ployees who d o not elec t to
month
partrcrp ate be p ard an ex tra
Clerk Water Dep artment
S50 00 per mon th tn a&lt;l dr tron
less than 6 mont hs ser.,.,ce
to the p resen t sa lary schedule
S558 00 per mon th
and those empl oyees pard on
Clerk W ater D epart ment
an hou rly basts who do no t
ov er 6 mo n t h s servrce
elect to part rc1p ate tn the
S666 00 per mon lh
rnsurance plan be pard an
W ater and Sewage Su pt
addr tro nal 30 cent s p er hou r
S5 20 per hour
My erT'ployee may at any lime
( 1'h li mes over 40 hour s)
elect to w rthdraw from the plan
S7 80 per hour
and rn such event suc h elec tron
Water and Sewage Ass t
fo r w rthdrawat sh all hkB'Nrse
Sup! S4 27 per hour
be fried rn w rrllng wrth the Clerk
M eter Reader S4 24 pe r
Any employee 'A'ho elects no t to
hour
p art iCi pate m t he plan may ftle a
Water and Sew age Dept
subsequent electron to partrc 1
Extra Help
pate and rf acceptabl e to the
Over 1 year o f serviCe S4 0 1
1n suran ce cm p any on a no n
per hOl
ra ted basts then su ch Elm
Less
an 1 ye ar of servtc e
ployee mcry beco me a par!lc t
$3 3 5 per hour
pan t tn the plan
Upo n
M echan rc S4 8 6 per hour
p art tetpatton tn the plan the
Ce met efV
add1 ttonal compensatron sh all
Over 1 year servtce S4 0 1
be cancelled Lrkewrse any
per hour
errployee who part 1crpates tn
Less than 1 year servtc e
the pi N~ m ay fil e an electron to
S3 35 p er hou r
withdraw from th e plan m
Refref Dtspatc her S3 82 per
whrc h event ht s wages or
hou r
salary as t he c ase may be shall
Swtmmrng Instru ctor 53 50
b e adjusted as proVI d ed tn t h1s
per ho ur
parag raph
Cus to d tan
S6 0 00 pe r
SEC XI All Ordonances tn
mo nth
con flict With th rs Ordman ce are
Of f rce o f Com muntty
h ereby rep ealed
Deve lopment
SEC XII Th ai all lull lima
Executtve Secretary $4 20
hourly pers&gt; nn el shall be pard
per hour
an add ttto nah three cents (3
(All extra h ours fo r hourly cents) p er hour for each year o f
e fll)loyees w rll be at the ho urly
consecutrve full ttme servrce
ra te)
w rth lhe Vollage ol Mtddlaport
SEC II That secretanal
and Ihal all lull b me salary
c lencal and or bookkeepmg
p ersonnel sh all b e pard an

!

SALE PRICED

.,."'"' c.... ~ •

JU
UJ

I I Hn mo Imp ovo.,..n o

'

Go lpn o

1 /w rll ' '
llhoonCo WV

2 0~

lll

II l •mfqu'l'"'~"
62 W"" 0&lt;1 o l"'

&amp;•H a.&amp;Oo"

Goi .. Cown"'
/1. u Cocto 11 4
401
111

,,,

'~''

t/1

11 Au o Aopo
18 Comp.,q f qu pmu

-

Inc

SUC08110r1 or aaegns for gas
10 tho V~loge of Moddloport
Ohio and to itltnhabitants for

1 / o •I • 1/ "1:''

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

11P iu m~n~ lo llu

ORDINANCE
NO 1125 82
that may be charged by
Columbia
of Ohoo
its

II Au ro o
S olO
1 ... ~,, .,. S o o
7l Yon o• 4 WO

n

fr 4Mo&lt; M oo~' ""'"
55 l u~ d nt Supp ""

......

12S o ~ o od Wo ~ o d

SELLING AT LAST YEAR'S PRICES

Public Notoce

F1XJng and regulating the pnce

- .. --

........

~""llll

II

WORK CLOTHES

Be •t Ofda•ned by the Coun ot
o f the V1llage of Middl eport as
tallo ws
Sec I That fo r the vear 1 98 2
tne Vrllage shall pay each
It II 1 me employee n th e a ct ve
erro loymenr as o f December
15 1982 rn add rtron to all
o ther salary and fnn ge ben pf rs
11ereto fore orovrded the sum o f
One
Hu n dred Dollar s
15 100 00) as addrt on at sa lary
SEC II Bert funh er o rdarned
that the V !!age shall pay each
oa rt ome employee
n 1t e
actrve emp!ovmenr as o f DP
c ember 15 198 2 rn addrtl() n to
a I other salary and lr n ew
benelrts heremtore provrded
the sum o f Frfty D ollars
15 50 001 as add t rona salary
Sec Il l Thr s Ordmance shall
take ellect and be rn Ioree fr om
and alter the ear lres t date ;JS
orovrded by law
Passed the 13th dav o t
December 198 2
An est
Jon Buck
Cl erk
Carl Hafley
Pr esrden t ol
Couno l

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnte
Senltnel etass1fttd Dept

Pome roy- Middleport, Oh1o

Public Not1ce

ORDINANCE
NO 112482
An Ordin.,co 1D pr&lt;Mde
addit:MJnal oo"'*"eton for
VIllage omplove- for 19 82

D11lly
Ill Court St Pomeroy Oh1o 45769

OVC' I l ~ls t y('a J

CARHART BROWN DUCK

Public Nottce

mcome

The Daily Sentinel

Public Notoce

~~

Wednesday, December 22 , 1982

food baskets being dlstti buted
for Christmas
' We re looking for the worst
cases where the family has no
income at all Boyer said " In this
local we\ e got close to 2,(XXJ
currently on layoff and about 960
who are ou1 of all sources of

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ---,--,---- - - -- 1- -- - - - - - --

I

Middleport, Ohio

Ohioans respond to calls for charity

Meigs County
property transfers
Les1e1 Shoemake• V1ola Silo
emake1 lo Ken Tt ak R1ghl or Wav
Rulland
LeSie t Shocmakeo Viola Sho
emakei 10 Ken 11 ak R1ghl or W"'
Rulla nd
\ '1ole1 MIIIN Donald H Mi lle•
RobPrt E MIIIN Judv M111e1 10
Ken T1ak R1gh1 of Way Rulland
Wilbur McClam 10 lames E
Diddle Righi of Wav Lc1a1 1
Harvey R Lea mond Ann a M
I oamond IO James
E Diddle
ghl of Way Leiarl
Robert D Housh L vnell a Jo
Roush lo Columbus and Soulhc&gt;rn
Eascmenl
Ohio E lec lllC Co
Chesl er
Meigs Count\ CommlSslOne• s
Me1gs Counly Engmee1s 10 Ca lha
Coun ty Rural Wale,. Ass n Inc
Righi of Way Me1gs
S•l ve1 Fun F 1ce" 111 Ba pllsl
Church lo Ca lha Counl v RUI al
Wa 1e1 Ass Inc Sa llsbu1v
Paul Sie" ail 10 Calha Counlv
Ru1 al Wa1e1 Ass n Inc Sa lisbu ry
John Sheels 10 Calha Counlv
Rut al Wa1e1 Assn Inc Sa lisbu ry
Chm les K Si ewarl Ve ra L
S1ewa11 to Ca lha Counl ) Rura l
Waler Assn Inc R1ghl of Wav
Sa lisbury
Dav1d L Ross Belly I Ross 10
Ca lha Counll R01 al Wa 1e1 Assn
Inc Rtghl of Wav Sa llsburv
Ernesl M Cale J1 10 Columbus
and Soulhelll Oh1o Elerlnc Co
Easemenl Ches1c1
G Blanche&gt; Edwa1 ds lo Ga llla
Coun ty Ru l"a l Wale1 Assn Inc
Sa hsbun
Cenl rPx Oi l Co 10 Si ral a Corp
Assign of R1ghl of Wav Bedford
Monl Va nce Joyce Va nce&gt; 10
Eugene F Anspach Jud\ Ansp-

Pomeroy

Wedn esday, December 22, 1982

SW EEP ER and sew mg m a
chme rep atr
pa r1 s
and
supplies
P1~k- up and
d e h ve r y
D av ts V ac u u rn
C ~a n e r on e h alf mtl e u p
Geo rges C reek Ad
Ca ll

446 029 4
Gun

sh oo t

Rac m e

Gu n

Club Eve ry Sund ay st art.n g
1 p m Fac t o ry cho ked guns
o nly
R acme Gun C lub d u es are
du e S2 5 00 Mu st be pa1d

bef ore J an 1 1983

Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only.

11-26-1 mo.

RENT A SANTA 614 992
68 29 or 614 949 2633
REWARD OF 100 00 to
anyo n e wh o kn o w s who
sh o t 2 goat s on the Jr m
lu cas farm Saturd a y

Dec 11 614 742 2753
'CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

•Wathen •D•h
waahers•Ranges

•RofrigeratOB
eQryers •Freezers

4-5 rtc

PARTS.and SERVICE

Shootmg m at c h es cancelled
Dec 25 and Jan 1 Ra ctne
Volunteer F1r e D ept W 111
rea um e J an 8 th
Bauer s Barber Shop w111 be
ope n Thu rsday the 23rd and

closed

the 25th

Merry

Chn st m as

4

Goveaway

Blu 1sh
cat

gray and white tom
mak e moe Chnltmas

poe sent 304 675 5019

'

�Page

4

12

The Daily Sen one

They'll Do It Every Time

Giveaway

ANY

PERSON

c~E
WAS
TOU611 ···

who has

THE CUISS
KIIOCKS THeil&lt;
TEACHcl&lt;
WNO ! S O#

anything to give away and
doe s not off er or at te mpt to
o ffer any o ther thing f or sale
column . There will be no
c harge to the adverti ser .
Beautiful bl ack and w hite

fe male h ou se cat . Pho ne

446 ·0857.

·.~ .· .

THE Y GET A SIIBSTITt.ITE ·· ·

NOW t:!STcl'l TO 'EM ····

lost and Found

) ,
)

7'-" fC

C.D.BAow
[ ': G STAY IN
39&lt;l&lt;&gt;OKTON "'··

!!REIITWOOo. • ·•·

2 bdr . fully furnished , adults

.r.

'

~ .

~t
,1!\&lt;;§.._

•
ft,
£~j,L~ •
~·

-::;!

T

S100 REWARO 'I ! For the

. .. . @r~~~~(~
'

_

'J!j •
"TJJ

- LI

:~ ~

J \l
~~~';
--·~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~

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

off 160. Call
9170 .

614 -246·

12x60 2 bdr. $200 mo ..
S100 dep .. gas &amp; water
furnished , no pets . Call after

5. 446 -4745 .

G e rman Shephard m i x
Black with white breast
Bald Run Rd . area . Ans w ers
to Re x. Call Dori s Woodyard

at 614 -992 -551 9 or 614·
992 -3652 .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

WVa State Champ1o n Au c tio neer Ri ck Pearso n . Est a tes .
antiques , farm , hou seh old s.
Li ce nsed Ohio-WV a. 304 -

773 -5785
9185 .

or

304 · 773 ·

11

Help Wanted

31 HomesforSale

Individual needed 24 hours
per week to provide he alth
e du c ati o n - health r e lat e d
servi ces for publi c ag enc y .
Sh o uld have degr ee in
health relat ed field and -o r
revelant experience . Send
resume to Box 722 . Pome ·
roy , Ohio 45769 by De ce mber 29 . 1982 . An equal
opportunity employer .

12

Situations
Wanted

House for sale ... n land
contract . Cheshire. Oh . 7
rms . , basement . garage .
workshop , ga s furnan ce .

614 -388 -8276 .
For sale - Repossessed
house. 3 bd .rooms, all refin ·
ished . n e w carpeting
through out . Sits on 3 acres .
Located on Bashan Rd .
Ex cellent terms to right
party . Price reduced to
$30,000 . 30 year financing
available . Contact Bank One
of Pom eroy . 614 -992 ·

14 x 70 total electric, 1%
baths. central air, large
country lot behind New
Haven . $226 . per month
plus deposrt and references .

Addison
RdAt
. in
, Oh .
Y2 mile off
. 7Addison
on Bulaville·

Call 614 -388 ·9755 altar 6

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

304 -676 -6277 .

Cleland Raalty 992 -2259.
Apartment
for Rent

merchandise every w eek .
Con sigm ents of new and
u sed m erchandis e alw ays
w elc om e. Richard Reyn olds
Auction ee r . 275 -3 069
Pr o fess ion a l Au c tion ee r
Se rvi ce . Over 30years ew. pe rience in new . used and
antique furitur e . Li ce nsed t o
auction Real Estate . aut os .
farm equip .. hou seho ld. bu sn ess. ca ttle . liquidatio n s &amp;
antique s of all types. O sby
A .M artin &amp; Rodney H o w ery .

614 -992 -6370 .
9

Wanted To Buy

WAN TEO TO BUY Old furni ·
ture and Antique o; of all
kinds. c all Kenneth Swain .
446 -3159 or 256 - 1967 in
th e eveni ng s.
Bu ying Go ld, Sil ver. Plati num . old c oin s. sc rap ring s
&amp; silverwar e. Daily qu o u:: s
availa bl e. Also coin s &amp; coin
supplies for sale . Spring
Vall ey Tradin g Co ., Spring
Vall ey Plaz a. 446 -80 25 or

446·80 26.
W e pay ce sh for la te m o del
cleen used car s.
Fr en chtown Car Co
Bill Gene J o hn so n

446 -0069
Wanted to buy Square Dan cin g outfit s. All size s. m en 's
and w o m en ' s · Call 446 -

Furnished 3 r . private bath .
Will do babysitting New
Year s ni g ht. Call 614 -992 53 2 7 m o rnings .

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

Will c ar e for elderly in my
hom e o r yo urs . 614 -843 -

675 · 1542.

4831.

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

13

heat . 304 -675 -6804 .

Insurance

SANDY AND SEAVER In·
suran ce Co . ha s offered
se rvi ce s f or fir e in suran ce
cov erag e in Gallia County
for almost a century . Farm.
home and personal property
c overage s are available to
meet indiv idual needs . Con ·
tact Eug ene Holley. agent.
Pho ne 388 -8690 .
Are you paying too mu c h for
your hospital -health in su ·
ran ee . Call Carroll
Snowden . 446 -4290 .

15

Schools
Instruction

Kar ate th e ultimat e in self
def ence all private les sons.
M en . w omen. &amp; children .
In stru ction thru black belt
Al so availabl e Karate uni·
forms pu ching and kicking
bags , and protective equip ·
m ent . Jerry Lowery &amp; As so·
ci ates Karate Studio. 143
Burlington Ad .. Jackson .

Oh . Call 61 4-286· 3074 or
61 4· 384 -6160 .

4537 .
BEDS -IRON. BRASS . old
fumiture. gold. silver dol lars, wood ice bo xes. st o ne
jars. antique s. etc .. Com plete hous ehold s . Writ e :
M .D . Miller. Rt . 4 . Pom eroy .

Oh Or 992 -7760 .
Gold. silv er. sterling , jewelry , ring s, old co in s &amp;
curr ency . Ed Burk ett Barber
Shop . Middleport . 992 -

3476 .
N o Item to Large or to Small .
Will buy o ne pie ce or co m plete hou sehold . N ew . u sed.
or antique furnitu re . 614 -

992 -6370 .

18 Wanted to Do

Gener al Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 446 -

3159 alter 6PM 256 -1967.
Nursing in private home .
D aytime only i n Gallipolis or
Pt . Pleasant . Will give ref . if
required . Call 458 -1818 .
Special Window Tinting .
Auto . r esidential. commer·
cial &amp; A .V . windows . Free
estimates . 446 -3100 or
446 - 7122 . Kotalic
Landscaping .

Guns -Turn unwanted gun s
into instant cash for Christ mas. Call Cap co 614 -949 2485 , Rac ine, Oh .

FlrtHnslal
22 Money to loan

lrttpi9Vffi8Rt
leFVI68ti

11

Help Wanted

Need baby sitter for 2 yr . old .
Must have reference s. Call

1981 Governor 14~~:60 , 2
bedroom with rool -out . In cludes air cond . . underpin·
ning and 2 buildings ,

S14.000 . Call 446 -2062 .

C ontract driv er for handi ·
c apped student . Need
chauffeur license , insu rance . safety inspected car .
For information contact Dan
Morris. Superintend e nt
Meigs Local. 614 -992 -

2153 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USEO · CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 -7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS ,
RT 35. PHONE 446· 7274.
For sale or rent 12x60
mobile home, gas heat. rural
water. close to town . availa ·
ble Jan . 1st . Call446 - 1240 .
12x60 at Quail Creek . Many
ni ce extras . playground ,
pool. low down payment .
assume loan . Call 614 -245·

9378 .
USED MOBILE
576 -2711 .

HOME .

only 1 - 800 - 341 - 6554 ,
WVa . 614 -592 · 3061
23

Professional
Services

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping &amp; tax service
for all types of businesses .

35 Ac . at Rodney on W .T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ ·
ing available . 446 -8221 .
Two acre lots-150 ft . road
frontage, city water, behind

84 Lumber. Call 304 -676·
6873 or 675 · 3618 .
36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted : Farm of 100to 150
Acres . rolling land . Reply to
Box 6000 . in c -o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825 3rd Ave ..
Gallipolis 45631 .

41

Houses for Rent

Call Bill Ward for appoint ·
ment . Ward ' s Keyboard .

446 ·4372 .
PIANO TUNING-Lane Da ·
niels, assoc . of Brunicardi
Music Co .- Cunninghan's of
Athens . 614-742 -2961 or

3~19.
Bertenden.

Coetuml re -

quired, Anchora Club. 320
Meln St. 304-875-9759.

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

446· 2129 .
POMEROY- 2 bedroom unfurnished apt ., S160 . 2
bedroom house $186 . Dep -

or

304·

New 1 bd .room Apt . in
Middleport . F.umished with
utilities paid . Deposit and
references required . 614-

992 -3190.
Pomeroy Cliffs . 1 bedroom
apartment for handicapped
or elderly . Carpet, laundry
facilities , air conditioning,
garbage disposal, applian ces . 246 Union Ave . 614 ·
Equal Opportunity Housing.
Apartments .

304 - 676 -

6548 .
APARTMENTS, mobile

2 bdr . &amp; bath , 1 mile beloW
Eureka on St Rt 7. $150 per
mo . plus Oep. Call 1-614·

Furnished 3 bdr . house
S160 mo. plus deposit. Call

446-0469 alter 5.

614-446·

TWO bedroom apartment in

Wanted to rent . TObacco
allotment in Meigs_ Co . for
Wanted : 4 or 6 room house
in country . Prefer furnished .
Approximately $126 . to
$150 . month. Single per·
son . 614 -992 -5416 .

I !~~~~~~~~~~
51 Household Goods

polis . King coal &amp; wood
heaters with fan 8469 . set
box spring &amp; amattress
$100. firm $120. sofa ·
loveseat &amp; chair $199. love
seats $70, new coal &amp; wood
heaters as low as $399 with
blowers, used coal &amp; wood
heaters, new dinet sets $76
&amp; up, refrigerators. ranges,
bunk beds complete $170 .
bunkies mattresses $40,
chests, dressers, TV ' s. Call

446-3169 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
· washers. dryers. refrigera ·
tors , ranges . Skaggs Ap·
pliances. Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.

446 -7398 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker. otto·
man. 3 tables, (extra heavy
by Frontier) . 8686 . Sofa.
chair and loveseat. $276 .
Sofas and chairs priced from

$285 . to $896 . Tables, 646
and up to $126. Hide· a·
beds,$440 . and up to
$626 ., Recliners . $176 . to
$350 ., lamps from $28 . to
$75 . 5 pc. dinettes from

$99 .. to 6435 . 7 pc., $1B9 .
and up. Wood table with six
chairs $426 . to $746. Desk

$110 up to &amp;225 . Hutchas.
8560 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $260 . and

up to $396 .

Baby bods,

8110 . Mattresses or boK
springs, full or twin, $68 .,
firm, $68 . and $78 . Queen
sets, $196 . 4 dr. chests.

$42. 6 dr. chests. 664. Bed
frames. S20.and $25 ., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, $360.,
dinette chairs &amp;20. and $26 .
Gas or electric ranges. $326

up to S376 . Baby rna tresses. S26 l!o 636. bod
lramas &amp;20. $26, &amp; UO.
king frame $60 . Good selec tion of bedroom suites .
cedar chests. rockers. metal
cabinets, swNel rockers.
Used Furniture •· bookcase.
ranges. chairs. end tables.
washers, dryers. refrigerators and TV's . 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to
6pm. Mon . thru Fri., 9am to

6pm. Sat.
446-0322
USED

for rent.
1 bedroom,
$180 .00 Call Automotive

Supply, 8· 6 . 304-676 ·
2218. 676-6763.
OWNER is seeking amall
quiet family or single for 4
room apartment . Carpeted.
newly painted, excellent
condition &amp; neighborhood,
rent reduced . Priced on
inspection . Phone 304-676-

1962.

1-61 4 -256 ·

errals . Gift Certificates. new
hours . By appointment.

304·676 -6234.

31 Homes for Sale
Price

reduced.

over

$1 0. 000 . Now offered by
owner, benefits thats mutt
be seen to appreciate. 1A mi.
from town. large atone
fireplace, 3 bdr., nice quiet
neighborhood. beautiful
backyard . Will consider rent-

ing. Now In low 40's. CoH
446 -2048 after 6PM .
2 bedroom frame houee
wrth basement in the Village
of Vinton . Priced in mid

20' s. Call 614-388-8419.

Pets for Sale

Great Christmas gift . AKC
Miniature Schnauzer puppies . Only 2 males left, 7
weeks old . Priced reduced to
$126 . excellent childs pet .

Would you like a cute Cocker
Spaniel puppy for Christmas? AKC blonde Cocker
Spaniel puppies $150 . Have
been wormed and had all

WOOD AND COAL stovaa
by Blue Ridge and lilly. Free
standing stoves and fire·
place inserts. Swisher Implement, Upper River Rd .,
Gallipolis .

FURNITURE .

lika

1171 .
Whirlpool washer 1 white &amp;
1 coppertone S90 ea. Hot·
point dryer $76, apartment
dryer $90. 30 days guaran-

tee. Call 614-268·1 207.

IT wA'7 SPLASH
COL.A wHO PUT
YOU UP TO IT.
RI6HH

W.O.

special price on 1982· mod·
els . While they last. Swisher
Implement, Upper River

Rd., Gallipolis. OH .
Firewood. dry wood. split,
stacked and delivered for
$30 .00 a large load. Call

anytima 446· 7993 .
7ft . locust post and custom
cut firewood . Call 446-

1203 or 446· 381 6.
Slabs cut -up $16 full length
$1 0 PU load. round wood,
large truck load. Call 614 -

246 · 6804.

Kenmore

cu.lt.
auto

exc .

cond .

loaded. $5 ,000. 304-676·
3476 .

Free standing fireplaces inserts, mobile home and
fumance ad-ons . Jividen ' s
Farm Equipment . Call 446 ·

1675.
Minolta camera SRT-200.
Case &amp; strap. 50 mm lens,
set of close up lens. 2x
converter . Flash , $200 ..
exc . cond . Call 614-388 ·
Firewood, $35 . truck load .
$65 . a cord . Split and

deliverad . 61 4-B43-3603 .
Firewood delivered $60 . a
cord . Coal delivered $45 .
ton . Call Tom Hoskins 614-

949·2160 or 614-742 ·
2834.
For Sala · CHRISTMAS
TREES . One mile off At.7 by
pass on St.Rt . 143, Pome·
roy. Reasonably priced.
Oak furniture, lots of misc.
items. ideal for Christmas.
reasonably priced . open
Sundays. Conkels Furniture,
Tupp"ersplains.
Bass boat 2 yrs . old. Must
see to appreciate. Clipper
Masonry saw . Over 2.000
good clean used antique

brick . 614 -992 -2806 . El·
don Walburn .
Sears 12 in. Radial arm saw .
New set plane blades. 6300 .

614-992· 2013.
ARMY liald jackets $36. up,
14 oz. demim jeans $10 .,
lined jackets $13 , Sam
Somerville's Army Surplus,
New Era, East Ravenswood,
old Rt. 21. Open evenings

Motorcycles

bath

Registered

1974 Yamaha Enduro dirt

bike. 2.900 miles. Call458.1997.

468-1997.

Poodle

p .m . Friday, Saturday &amp;
Sunday). Call in orders 304-

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

SELF defrosting refrigera -

tor, 304-675-1044.

~ALLET.

pup. 304 -BB2-3672 .
Canaries

I

$26 . pair . 304 ·

58

Building materials block.
brick, sewer pipes. windows, lintels. etc. Cla ·1de
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .... all

81

STUCCO
Fitzpatrick Orchards . Plenty
of nice apples for your
Christmas baskets, several
varieties for all your uses. ·
Visit our orchards on S.R.

689 . 614 -669· 3785 .

(R) (60 min.)
Real People Tonighfs

program features a visit to
a toy manufacturers ' convention . skateboarding on
the snow and children

learning 10 ski. (R) (60 min .)
0 (I) (jJ Seven Bridoa for

PLASTERING

Seven Brothers

1182.

Cll II]I Kennedy Cantor
Tonight ·christmas at Ken·

PAINTING · interior and
e~~:terior , plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling . 20 yrs .

nedy Center with Leontyne
Price .' An evening of music
and songs featuring soprano Leontyne Price is

AI.I.EY OOP

exp. Call 614 -388· 9662 .

61 Farm Equipment
- - -- - -- - · lc New Holland 488 Haybin8,
268 rake. both like new .

614 -949 -2059 Evenings af·

Call 446 -2107.

Whole shell corn for Dec .
$6 . per 100 lbs. with sacks
$6 . pre sacked . Morgan's
Wo-odlawn Farm, Pliny Rt .

United Crafts . Roofing,
spouting, siding and storm
windows . No job too large or
too small . Osby A . Martin,
Rodney Howery. 614-992-

35 . 304-675 -2275 .

partner.
[Closed
Cap·
tioned]
0 I]) (jJ MOVIE: 'Love at
Firat Bite'
Cll 1I11 In Performance at
tho Whlto House Beverly

"

21 mo . old Reg . Quarter
horse gelding sired by Super

Chix. Calt446 -3413 .
3 calves ready for butcher·
ing. Between 400-600 lb.

house calls . Call 676 -2398
or 446 -2454 .
F &amp; K Tree Trimming, stump

removal. Call675 -1331.

Call 614·266·6639.

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·

Registered Quarter Horse.
Also grade. Saddles, bridles.
winter horse blankets . West ·

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

ern boots . 61 4 -69B· 3290.

0

304 -676 · 2088 or 676·
4660.

Tranepur cadvn

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

Autos for Sale

THOUGHT I'D LEND
YOU A e&gt;IT OF

304-895 -3802.

76 Granada Chia ex. nice,
mid size car. 62 , 600 . Call

82

MORAL SUPPORT...

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

446 -9380 .
1976 Mustang 6 cyl . and a

1976 Yamaha AD 200
4,302 mi . Will sell both
$1,200. Call446 -4213,ask

Phone 446-3888 or 446;
4477
United Craft Plumbing and
heating service . No job to
large or to small. Oaby
A.Martin, Rodney Howery.

spd ., air, PS .. PB, rear
window defrost &amp; wiper,

AM-FM S-trock. Call 446·
0499, ask for Phil.

Phone 614-992-6370.

Lieutenant's Woman'

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,

I SHORE AM GLAD I
DON'T HAVE A
BUNCH OF BROTHERS
: AN' 01: SISTERS

I.

J

I
:1

i

Pomeroy. 992-22B4.

85

General Hauling .

I~;..J

otock.
JEEPS, CARS, TRUCKS
under , 100 ova liable at
locel gov't eelea in your area.

Racine. 614 -992-6868 .
HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boording oil breodo. AKC
Reg. Dobermono pupo end
Dobermon Stud Service.
Colt 448-7785.

Dopooit required. 614·992·
3090.
3 bedroom. family room,
neer achools and hospital.
deposit and reference re-

POODLE GROOMING. Colt
Judy Toylor 11 814-3677220.

quired, 1300 month. Call
304-676-4338.

adultl, no pate: 304-675·
1463.

\

directory on . how to pur-

away or something moved?

chooe. 24 hro.

Wa'll do it. Coll446-3159or
614-256-1987 oflor 8.

79 CHEVROLET. 4 door,
·n•w tlree. ciNn, A-1 condi-

tion, 40,000 mlloo, phone
304-878-3445 oflor 6 p.m.
1974 Flreblrd. t860. 304·
878-1117.
1977· REI:' Buick Rogel,
T·top, 2 n .•w tlroo, body
excellent condition. 304·
878-1799.

AKC Reg. Chow Chow
puppleo for oete; t250: Coli
288-1271.

1978 NOVA, good wOJii
cer, t800. cell ofl0r 8 p:m.
. 304-875-1185.

•

Furnished 4 room I;C)ttage.

Need

.~!' _C,.HcnT
AKC Chow pupCF_A. Hlmoloyen, Perend Stem•• kllteno.
448-3844 eflor 4PM.

'n

TWO bedroom furnlohed,
Now Hoven, 304·882 ·
j!466.

Coli lrofundeblo) 1-714·
889-0241 ext. 1 855 for
·

~

JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE. Call 614-367-7471
or 614-367-0691.
oomathlng

~L-~~

houlod

JIMS Wotor s·ervlco. - Call
Jim Lanier, 30'1·876-73!1.7 .

87

Upl!olstafy

12:00 Cil Burna l!o Allan
(I) ESPN SportaCantor
I]) Nlghtllna
(jJ MOVIE: 'The Defection
of Slmoa Kudlrka'
GI!I21 Laat Word
12:30-U (]) CIJ La to N lght with
Devld Louermon
(]) MOVIE: 'A Christmas
Carol'
Cil Jock Benny Show
(I)
NCAA
Basketball:
O.Poul ot Purdue
I]) Lall Word
GIIl MOVIE: 'The Quolity
of Morey'
Cll Captioned ABC Nowa
1:00 Cill Morrlod Joan

BARNEY

1977 Chevrolet Caprice
wagon.
serial No .

84

10:00 U (]) Cil Quincy
(]) MOVIE: 'Don't Cry, lfs
Only Thundo(
(I)
NCAA
Bosketball:
Minnesota at Jacksonville
Cil TBS Evening Nowa
I]) Cll!I21 Dynasty
Cll Christmas Songs
1I11 Nawawatch
10:30 (]) AFI Showcaoe
Cil Star Time
1I11 Guitar
11 :00 II (]) Nowacanter
(]) MOVIE: '&lt;;haech and
Chong'l Nice Dreemo'
Cil All In the Family
til GIIl GilD News
CIJ Nowa/Sporta/Waother
(jJ Eyowltnou News
II]I Sign OH
11:30 II (]) Cil Tonight Show
Cil Another Life
Cil MOVIE: 'And Then
I]) Bonny Hill Show
Q I]) Hart to Hart
(I) PBS Late Night
(jJ All In tho Family
GI!I21 Nlghtline
1 t :46 (]) MOVIE: 'Tho French

Cor . Fourth and Pine

78 Dodge Omni 4 dr., 4

CIJ Family Ties Elyse learns

There Were None'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

!!
0

GI!I21 Newt

lHIS IS WHAT 6ET5
TIIEIR ATTENTJO~ .. WHEN

THEY SEE TilE WREATil ON

..

Cll~nOH

~--~-

YOUR D06'S NOSE, THE'r'

CAN'T RESIST 8UVIN6!

1

1M NOT SATISFIED,
lo!OWEVER .. I lHINK WE
CAN PO EVEN-SETTER ...

1:30 G
(])
NBC
Nowo
Overnight
Cil My Llt1le Margie
(I) MOVIE: 'Boll Out at
43,000 FMI'
I]) Sign OH
Cil Newo/Sign OH
m!I21CNN Headline N-1
1:48 I}) MOVIE: 'Ohl Heavenly
Dog'
2:00 (])MOVIE: 'The Oetherlng •
Part II'
Cil Bachelor Father
•
(J) liD CBS N-a
Nlghtwatab •
2:30 • ![I Sign Off
Cll Ute of Riley
(I) EIPN llportsCant.r
3:00 Cil 700 Club
(I) MOVIE: 'Four Daugh-

!!!J:__

..

JOLLY

CHAFF

DECOOE

PESTLE

fre,ezor was lef1 with - COLD CASH
JurnbM Book No. 19, containing t10 punles, It avallableiOf $1 .95 poslplkt
from Jumr»t, clo this new1paper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848. Include your

ntme, tddrna, zlp code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooka.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

When not to use Gerber
NORTH

12·22·82

+Q9 52
.KQ3

t K4
+AK92

WFST

EAST
• 10

eA6

.J74
.9 6 52
t96532
• Q J 10 8
+J86 5
• 10 7 4
SOUTH
+KJ8711
• A 10 8
t A7
+Q3

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
4 West

Nortb
I NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

4+
5t
Pass

East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Soutb
3+
4 NT

6+

Opening lead: +Q

By Oswald Jacoby
and Jame1 Jacoby
As stated in earlier arti·
cles it is best to use Gerber
sparingly. For instance, if
South responded with a
Gerber lour clubs, he would

not learn as much about
today's hand. He wants to
know about aces, but he also
wants to know about his
partner's spade holding.
So South responds t~ree
spades. North has a 17 -point
no-trump and very good help
lor spades. He shows this i&gt;y
bidding lour clubs.
This !our-club call is nei·
ther Gerber nor an attempt
to show a long club suit.
Instead, it tells South that if
South wants to bid six
spades, North has the ace of
clubs and interest in spades.
Now South bids a Black·
wood lour no-trump. He
wants to lind out how many
aces North holds. Should
North show two aces, South
would continue with five notrump to suggest grand slam
possibilities. As it is, North
shows one ace and South
bids the lay-down spade
slam.
It would have been possi·
ble but less enlightening to
get to the slam using
Gerber. South could respond
lour clubs. North would bid
four hearts to show one ace
and now South could bid live
spades to tell North to go on
to six with good help lor
spades.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~~by THOMAS JOSEPH

Cil NCAA Season Wrap-Up

that her attitudes toward
teenage
sexuality
are
~ared to 'other' children .

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

I Jumbles

Answer : What the guy who hid his wallet in the

min.)

614-992 -6370.

livestock

I ) "[IJ
(Answers tomorrow )

YaSierday·s

by young artists. (R) (80
9:30

"r I

Print answer here:

Sills hosts this Christma::.
special with performances

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

1- - - - - --,,.----

71

ren gets a marriage proposal from her jogging

6370.

NEW Ideal No. 7 corn
picker. good condition, 304 ·
676-3024 .

Now arrange the circfed letters to
lorm the surprise answer. as sug gested by the above canoon

(I) Cll 1I21 Fall Guy Colt
politician husband. (R) (60
min.)
Cil Facts of Life Mrs. Gar·

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

ter 7 p.m.

63

t
II I J

1/0 ..

P ICN I C

Cil 700 Club

helps a former girlfriend
who is trying to escape her

Call614· 388 -9857 .

WHAi iH05E
ANi5 AT "THE

IGEAVAS

prasented. (80 min .)
9:00

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

It LluHICYiik

llpolia, Oh. GMAC reserves
the right to withdraw the
vehicle from the sale. General Motors Acceptance
Corporation.

near

8E HERE •.•

IF\ hill

te~~:tured ceilings commercial and residential. free
estimates . Call 614-266·

January 6. 1 983 at 1 1 :00 at
Gallipolis, Motor Sales. Gal·

$110, white 22 cu.ft. oide
by side refrig., $260. Ali 3
like new, A-1 ohape. Cali
446-8181 .

Monkey Jake poses as a
scientist to infiltrate a Ger·
man island encampment.

WALLET MUST

Home
Improvements

Fruit

sold for cash at public sale

washer

IT ON THE TABLE ...

KNEll T~T
l'f10EVER IT WAG
THAT RETURHE() lilY

•.50 I

&amp; Vegetables

1N36L7S219711, will ba

$226,

50- SEEIN(J

-AL50, THE 61100ND 'IIA5
SOGQY FROM THE RAIN
LAGT NlliHT. ANO 1 COOLD
5EE FOOT 5TEPG 6011/G IN
• euT NONE COMING OUT••

8

Cil

895-3972 .

for Rick .

55 Building Supplies

OH, 1 THINK l CAN
F16URE IT OUT. l KNEW
THAT l'O LOST IIY

1981 400 Kawasaki , very

good cond . $500 .00 . 246·
9558 .

676-3334.

676·1714.

Q

446 -2821 .

AKC Registered Silver Miniature poodles, $125, each ,
ready in week after Christ mas, $50 deposit holds pup
for you . Has had shots ,
wormed and tails cut, veteri·
nary record accompanies

Haven West Virginia. Over
20 lest expensive cart· In

3 bedrooms, new paint.
Carpet in living room, 2
bedrooms, bath and hall.

ALWA"" AF~D MV WIF~
WILL bET ME:

1976 Suzuki 550 has beeli
reeked. make offer . Call

AKC Registered white German Shephard for stud
service. call304 -773 -5184 .

till Chriatmas, (1 :00-7:00

3981 .
an

Q

0

shots. Cali 614·388-9755

9364.

4 room house . Preferably
adults. no pets. 614-992rooms

I}) MOVIE: 'A Chrlatmao
Caror
Cil MOVIE: 'Flight to Mara·
(I) Pick Tho Proa
(I) Bob Newhart Show
(I) GilD ABC Nowa
D (I) (jJ CBS News
Cll Dr. Who
1I11 Over Eooy
7:00 II (]) P.M. Magazine
(I) 1982 Sportswoman/
Veer
(I) Gomor Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonlght
Cil Chorllo'a Angels
Cl (I) Tic Tac Dough
Cll 1I11 MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
(jJ ~owltnou News
81 ll2l People's Court
7:30 II(]) (jJ You Asked For It
I}) MOYIE: 'Olivo(
(I) ESPN SportaCanter
(I) An~ GriHith
(I) Cl {I) Family Feud
Cll Buolnooa Report
1I11 Hitch Hlkora Guido/
Golal&lt;'(
81 !D Entertainment
Tonlll_ht
8:00 II (]) NCAA Basketball:
Kentucky ot Indiana
I}) MOVIE: 'Homo from tho
Hill'
Clll Spy
(I)
NCAA
Baaketball:
DePaul at Purdue
(I) Hall OH To Country
(I) GI!I21 Totes of the Gold

BORN LOSER
0

liD ~ewltneu Nowo
G C2J CIJ NBC Newt

meal.

4 Wheel Drive , 1978 Ford

HARTS Used Cars, Naw

6

PHILIPP1Ne'7. wt= W!O-RE FILMINCI
THE GEGUSL TO "KRAt&lt;ATOA
EA'7T Of JAVA.' THi7 SUPPOSEDLY DOCILE DOLPHIN-

78 Ford F-250. auto, PS.
PB. 46.000 mi .. toppar. Call
614 -379 -2419, after 6:30
614 -256-6681 .

74

rJ

1

I}) SRO: Rod Skelton·
Freddy the Freeloader
Freddy plans hie holiday

I ReMEMBeR OIJCE IN THE

Cell

446 · 4680 . Deposit

after 6PM .

WOODBURNING STOVES

GE harvest gold side by side

19

I 'LL ALL. RI6HTJUH JIM DANDY.
rve HAD wOR ~ e­
JOLT5 THAIJ THAT
BSFORS.

TROYBILT TILLERS . now a puppy. Phone 446-0857 .

614-246·6121 .
relrig ..

Cali

AKC

Couch and recliner chair,
good condition, Phone 304-

new cannonball bed, queen
Mason. 304-676 -1462 af· mattress and box springs,
ter 6 p.m .
complete twin size outfit,
sofa bed, living rm. tables
TWO bedroom apartment in and refrigerator. Corbin and
Henderson, 304-675· 1972. Snyder Furniture, 446-

UNFURNISHED apartmant

Wood burning add on fur·
nance. Still in factory crate,

614 -992 -2082.

moy quotWy lor a S1 ,500

lco. Good Poy - Good
Trelnlng-Good Benefits. The
Weal Vlrg_lnl~-~a1ionol
Guerd lo_.
loy -i&gt;Ort
time jobl Cell Sergeant
Lut1on 304-875-3960 or
toll free In WV 1-800-642·

·I

5 Room house. 928 First
Ave ., Gallipolis. Phone 446 3945 after 5 p .m .

8eellwcwtv

*'"•
Supply, Clorlcop, Elactron-

Call 446 -441 6 alter 7PM .

and Gallipolis .
8221 .

lihnnals

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR

Virginia National I -~--------­
help . If you are a
Senior in High
a Graduate, you

r..

Furnished apt .. $226 utili ·
ties paid. 1 bdr .. 243 Jack·
son Pike , Gallipolis. adults .

992· 7772 8 a.m . to 3 p.m .

643-291&amp;.

A .M.A. Approved. Dr . Ref·

bonut or up to $4 ,000
college tuition eniatance ,
piUJ you will have a secure
rt time job after training .
1m
In Maintenance,

S190 mo ., $60 dep . Call
446 · 1340 or 446 -3870.

1 bd .room furnished Apt .

Carol Neal 446·3862

614·992 ·2645 .

The Welt
Guard can
Junior or
School or

For rent furnished 3 rm . apt .,
upstairs . utilities paid ,
adults only , 94 locust St ..

614 -992-5434
882· 2666.

Small furnished house. 1 or
2 adults only . Call 446·

p E A M A N E NT
HAIR
REMOVAL Professional
Electrolysis Center. Inc .•

help with college axpensesl

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

osit $100. Call 614 -992·
2288 .

35 lots &amp; Acreage

HOME LOANS 12 % fixed
rate. Leader Mortgage, Ohio

WANTED : Someone to live
in , share expenses . light
housework . M.an in wheel
chair . Equal opportunity .
. NEED !XTRA MONEY or

2 bdr . unfurnished apt . in
Crown City . Call 614-266 ·

54 Misc. Merchandise

56

Caii446 -140B.

to Rent

8:30

~===========r~=~=~=;_:::· ~.,~~~,.~,~
~-14_4_6_·0_5_15
_.- - -- --

47 Wanted

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St .• Galli·

Gallipolis. 446 -4416 after 7
p .m .

•

holds .

Realtor. Call 304 -675 ·
6104 or 675· 63B6 .
pd.. 3 bdr .. 1 31 4th Ave ,

ll · '-L..

-

GYLUL

(I)·~·ID News

van , air. auto . good tires ,
$2 , 660 . Call 446 -4564 .

For sale lump coal &amp; firewood. Zinn Coal Co., Inc.

1----------

Furnished apt ., $185. water

4

"~-=-· - -

Cil Newt/Spo!U/Weethor

1976 Ford 1 2 pas sanger

5 p.m .

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

6620 .

0338 .

peopla . Call 61 4 -843 ·
2982 . 614 -388 ·9045 . 614·
992 -3690.

2215 .

homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant

614 -245 -9464 .
HAVE FUN paying your
Holiday bills. Sell Avon and
earn good $$$ , meet nice

Ref . 2nd
preferred
446 ·.
845
. Ave... Call
Gallipolis

w

Vans &amp;

I LUSK'B

G (]) NewiC8ntor
Cil Tlo Too Dough

CIJII]I Powerhouoe

Ju-.

Unocrlmblo-

lour
one loi1ar 10 ooch oquaro, to loon
lour ordinary wonla.

(I) Ski Sohool
(I) Carol Sumel1

992 -6316.

$460 . Call
1216.

1983. 614-992·7584.

2133 .
Auc tion every Fri . ni ght at
th e Hartford Co mmunity
Center. Tru ckload s o f new

Phone 304· 773·6654 daily

8:00

1971 Ford 3/4 ton . 67,000
actual miles. $400 . 614-

73

1tltllrut ID'il ~THAT SCRAIIIILED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~·
byHonriAmoldoncl Bob Lao

EVENING

standard ,

options.

Phone 304 -773-6440 altar

Secluded, mini farm, all
fenced. remodel farm home.
wrth 4 bedr ., $300 per mo.

wit~

PU

cyl.,

Park, Route 33, North of

or for evening appointment

43 Farms for Rent

6

1978 Jeep CJ ·5 Renegade
6 cyl .. 3 spd .. new top, ali

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

WEDNESDAY

12/22/82

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pomeroy
992
-7479. . Large lots. Call

Television
Viewing

$1 ,760. Call446 -2062 .

l _j
mick Rd . Call446 -3617 .

TRACY

19 75 Datsun pick up
62 ,000 miles , good copd ~ .

46 Space for Rent

3 bedroom trailer for rent .
$150 a month plus utilities.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

good cond . Call 614-367·
0467.

Sleepii'lg room $126. utili·
ties paid, range &amp; ref rig .•
share bath . Men only , 919
2nd . AVe .. Galipolis. Call

Mobile home space Cross·
roads Pard on Bob McCor-

Oodge

topper.

1

Motel. Call 446 -2601 .

(304)882 · 2896 evenings.

44

1 978

MtJr CATS 1

Weekly rates. one person
$60 . 2 people $70 . Circle ' s

DICK

22, 198~

7697 onytime .

ioWARt&gt; *fil;'

Furnished Rooms

Trucks for Sale

De~embe!

to $1 ,200 firm . Call 446·

eARTII1 6Cl?D WiU..

Call 446 -0957.

72

Wednesday,

1978 Dodge power wagon,
4 -WD . rough body, mechen·
ically sound . 318 with 2
barrel!. auto trans. $2,000

see? R;6~r
·n-1eRe ;r c.AY'.&gt;,
"PeAce oN

446 -4416 alter 7PM .

p .m .

LOST - Bord a r Co ll ie ·

by
Wright
r-------~==~----,

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

45

L~rry

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ' "

Apartment
for Rent

only . Call 446 -4110 .

l::l'
~·~;g~~~l
f~'

LINIO! WAU&lt;!

roN'T IWN!

~

446 -9513 .

446 -4249 .

~~~

&amp;

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

614 -643 -2644 .

ANO~!? ~~~~~~~ ..

LOST: On e - 1 1 00 x22 radial tire &amp; wh ee l bet ween
Rodney &amp; Oak Hill. Rew ard .

Tartan
. Call Barbar
a Ab
s ate
City Limits
or Th
e elBlu

.

. _. . ., .

QUI£,1! 111ATS

return of lad ies whit e go ld
dinn er ring w ith sm all dia monds . Lost D ec . 14th at

.

c., . .

\

for Rent

SCI'&amp;

.

44

42 Mobile Homes

~
-·
ALWAY'S

r

~~: ~

f. '

wat ch dog . 614 -992 -7811 .

6

wASN'T A

~~·

;~-r~1

1f2 year old male do g . PP! rt
Lab . &amp; part Retrieve r. Good

MISSI'U1.6F&lt;

601?17
TEACHEJZ··

I

~~:1

may pla ce an ad in thi s

Wednesday, December 22, 1982

,, Ohio

ACROSS
1 Girl's name
5 Donny's
sibling
10 Repute
11 Hold
membership
12 Chrisbnas
treat
U Slippery
customer
15 Great Barrier
Island
16 Faculties
17 Upset
20 Free from care
23 Endorsement
24 Yule song
26 Besides
27 Bullet
28 - standstill
29 Arizona

7 Vive le 8 " No room
at the - "
9 Incite
11 Ice cream
flavor
13 Equanimity
16 Distaff gob
17 Cash box
18 Holm
19 Ago
20 On naval
maneuvers
21 Gawain's
combat
22 Wagner
role
23 Soft palates

Yesterday's Answer 1 ·
25 Stupefy,
33 Sicilian
as with
hot spot
drink
34 Siphon
29 Baseball
35 Japanese
great
name
30 Begone!
36 High places
31 With feet
(abbr.)
covered
37 "The Windy
32 Ireland
City"

city

30 Maine
River
31 Catch on?
34 Dickens'
character
38 Realize
39 Noisemaker
40 Pillars
41 Conception

DOWN
!Run
2 Not working
3 Spirit
4 Empower
· 5 Ancient
Asians

6 Alan-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
II

how

to work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. Single !etten.
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the words are aU
hintl. Each day the code !etten are different.

CBYPTOQUOTES

cw

BGTW

CQZ
-

CGK

VZXRXK

IQJYDLYGYU

AZJ

HNDQWD

LQ W
HGDL

UWDLWXX

BGU

N D.

VZEWW

Yesterday's CrypleqDOte: WITH ME, POETRY HAS NOT
BEEN APURPOSE BUT APASSION.-EDGARAU..AN POE

,,

·.

�.'

Page- 14 - The Da il y Se nt ine l
r----

),.

~

. ..,.,

. ,

' ".

..

•.•:

Wedn esday, December 22, 1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Oh io

Local briefs---- Citizens Bank merger announced today

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

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

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

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

I

... ' .. .

Area deaths

I

Nina T ht'iss

Kt•nnt'th Bin·hfield

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

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

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

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

~

Ern e.~tin e

Brorm

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

INSULATED WORK BOOTS
BY CHIPPEWA, SHEBOYGAN and REDWING

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

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

First Huntington National.
i

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

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

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

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

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

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

'

1

Christmas Sale Prices
Furniture Dept.
-

All CHAIRS
LIVING ROOM SUITES
CEDAR CHESTS
BEAN BAG CHAIRS
CARD TABLE SETS
GUN CABINETS
GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
DESKS

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

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

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

Christmas Sale

Christmas Sale Prices

,~~~~~~ ~~ ~ ~~~~ ~~ ~ ~~~~~~~

1

From the Staff of the

I
I

- services for you and your family throughout the year

IWCOMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER

II -CALL OR VISITI Multipurpose Health Facility

!• lulbenY Heiglrts

I

I

~

I

I

~

w·

I

'~-Misses

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

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

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

,. . . . . .

~

I
I
I
I

I!CII~-~~~~~-~~~~--I!CII-1

SHOP UNTIL
8:0() ON WEDNESDAY
AND THURSDAY

'

7J

~

.

'

~.

' -~.

...

~;

...

-·

Eastern holds
National Honor
Society induction

~

·~

-

-

l'agt· I :1

Pagt' 8

.

The Daily

entinel
1 Sec t ions , 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohhio, Thursda , December 23 1982

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

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

FREE
PARKING
IN

POMEROY

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

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

a

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

m

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

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

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

)

j)

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

uatroclous."

u

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

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

1SCents

A Multimedia Inc Newspaper

Senate's federal gas tax ordeal nears end

Women's Wear JEWELRY DEPT Home Furnish·

II SEASON'S GREETINGS

....

•

. .

Voi .31 ,No .164
Copyrighted 198'2

Christmas Sale Prices
JUNIOR WEAR

Christmas Sale Prices

,.

.;

-

Pagt' 3

PH. 992-6342
317 N. 2nd
Middleport

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

Southern bombs
W ahama, 90-56

.

.j ~,'

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

648 report
presented
to director

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

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

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

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

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

the301!Sundayandthemldtotlpper
00s Monday.,

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

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

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

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="216">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <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="2806">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <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="45099">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <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="45098">
              <text>December 22, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1820">
      <name>birchfield</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="262">
      <name>brown</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="163">
      <name>gibbs</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2804">
      <name>soulsby</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="581">
      <name>theiss</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3996">
      <name>tripp</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
