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                  <text>losing streak ends

Judge's shooting

SeeSouthem~ QO Pqe 3

by Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP®
WHAT ARE
'lt?U
· DOING-';f

THAT COE5NT
. L.OOK 'LII&lt;E
A~ZA :

t'M

MAI&lt;INi A
PIZZA.

. StoryonPage&amp;

days 'til
Christmas

Bengals still in race
NFL WJ'!IIlUP oo Page 5

·-

.,

e . at y

Vo1.34. No.168
Copyrighted 1984

Arts, crafts show
Photo oo Page 12

.
enttne

-

Pomeroy-Middlepon. Ohio; Monday, December 10, 1984

2 Sectio_ns, 12 Pages
26 Cent1
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Search Underway for downed plane
ALWAY5 HAVE TO BE
A 5/MF&lt;J" AI...ECI&lt;,
C:ON 1T YOU~

I KNOWWHAT

YOLI'RE DOING-...
YOLJ'RE .MAI&lt;INq.
A 5NOW8ALL.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. (AP)
-State pollee and U.S. Coast Guard
officials used sonar equipment
today In an attempt to locate a plane
that three youths said plunged Into
the Ohio · River just below the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam. . ·
State PQ!Ice Cpl. K.R. Beckett
said today that the sonar was being
uSed to· determine if such a crash
had Indeed occurred. He said tiUlt If
the sonar detected a large object In
the river, grappllilg hookS would be
used In an attempt to raise lt.
The Eureka-areayouths reported
seeing a small, white, single-engine
plane fiy low .under a power llile
crossing the river· and then plunge
Into the water.
"It looked like It was trying to pull
up," one of the witnesses said last
tilght, "then It just seemed to stall
and nose-dive Into the river."
The youths- identified as James
V.Lucas,l3; TlmothyT. Nelson,14;
and, Mitty E . Dotson, 15- reported
the Incident to the Gallla County
Sheriff's Department shortly after 4
p.m. Sunday.
The youths said they heard a loud
"boom" when the plane struck the
water.

WELL, YOLI vU5T TALKED
YOLJR5EL.F O!.IT CF HAVI N~
PIZZA FOR L..IJN~.

MR. MENTM AND LITTLE MISS'M
WH\SPER
WHISPER
WHISPER

., ..

~~

"You know what It sounds Uke
when' 11 rUle goes off," one witness
said, "It was like that, otily about
three tlriles as lou&lt;j."
,
"They couldn't tell If Itexploded or.
If It was just big splash," said one
Gallla deputy. "They pretty much
had a ringside seat to lt."
The teenagers said the plane sank .
within seconds ·of Impact with the
water. Theysa!dtherewasnoflreor
smoke.
The three witnesses said they saw
no attempt by the plane's passengers tQ leave the craft.
"Ai the present time It's just a
rumor of a plane down," Alfordsald.
"We have no reports of any missing
planes and no wreckage." .
The search began on the s\irface
ami In the.air above the river shortly
after the Incident was reported
Sunday, according to ·a Masoh
County sheriff's deputy who asked
not to be named. He said diW!g
crews weren't sent In lmi)'ledlately
because Joe~ divers were not
equipped for the told weather.
"It takes special suits when it's
this cold, and the state pollee divers
who have them are scattered across

a

the state," the officer said.
The deputy said the youths
reported ~g a light plane fiy low
under a power llnecrosslng and then
plunge lnt6 the river.
"They couldn't telllfltexplodedor
I! It was just a big splash," said the
deputy. "They pretty much had a
ring!;lde seat to it."

A Gallia County Sheriff's Department helicopter crew searching
from the air reported seeing an all
slick and "bubblescomlngoutofthe
water" where the youths reported
the · plane went In, said Special
Deputy James Saunders.
In addition, a search boat dis- ·~
patched bY the U.S. Army Corps of
E~eers "hit sqmethlng when it
dropped Its chain, but couldn't hang
on to It," the officer said.
"At the present time It's just a
rumor of a plane down." said West
VIrginia. State Pollee trooper C.B.
Alford. :•we have no reports of any
missing planes and no wreckage."
"Of course, the t hing could have
been from K&lt;!lamazoo," he said.

SEARCH OPERATIONS HAMPERED - West
Virginia state Pollee and U.S. Coast Guard officials
were somewhat hampered by the weather this
morning as operations began to lind a pilwe thatthree

youths said plunged In the Ohio River Sunday
afternoon. The Incident reportedly occurred below the
Gallipolis Locks and Dam. The photo above WWllaken
as crews arrived Sunday night to begin searching the
river .

Negotiations near completion on pay raise bill

c
')
© 1984 Hargreaves and Sellers
Distributed by NEA.tnc.

WHAT DID

YOU SAY
TO HlM?•

J'UST
THREE

LITTLE
WORDS'

,.

'I L.OVE

you''&lt;&gt;•

NO!

CHOCOLATE

CHIP COOKIE!

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Negotiatlonsapparenlly
are nearly complete on a controversial pay raise bill,
and House Speaker Vern Riffe Jr . says he hopes to
bring It t9 a House floor vote Tuesday as the 115th
General Assembly nears final adjouhunent.
Chances for congressional redlsbicttng, however,
appear to be slim.
Riffe, D-New Boston, and Senate President Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown, said they hope to wrap up the
session ~Y Thursday or F)iday, although Riffe said It .
could be extended lntotheweekofDec.l7.
Rep. Patrick A. Sweeney, D Cleveland, whb heads a
finance committee which has been studying the pay
raise propoSal, said he expects the panel to complete its
work today.
Members of the Senate and House would get their
first pay hike since 1979. Meshel and Riffe have not
glv~n their blessing toanexactflgure, but one proposal

to ~e the annual base salruy from $22,500 to$35,1XXJ in
two Incremental steps Is being pushed In circles close
to the speaker.
Riffe Is on record ill support of a boost of at least

$10,1P}.
Aithough the Senate would have only a short time to
consider the blll, Sweeney said top leaders In both
parties In both chambers have been gtildlng the House
negotiations.
The blll also apparently. will Include unspecified
hikes fpr the governor and the other statewide elected
officials. The governor earns $65,00land the lieutenant
governor $35,1XXJ. The attorney .general, secretary of
state, auditor and treasurer each receive $50,1XXJ.
Sweeney said at week's end that the legislation
probably will provide IncreaSes of roughly 14 percent
for most of the elected county officials, . although
prosec~ tors and coroners -who say they are !Iylngto

"ca tch up" with the others on the pay scale- could
wind up with more sizeable boosts .
Hopes apparently have faded for action this year on
a blll redrawing Ohio's 21 congressional distr(cts to
comply with a federal court mandate for dJsbicts
more equal in population.
The three-judge federal court whJch ordered the
adjustments gave the Legislature until April 15, but
Riffe and Meshel said earlier that Democrats would
like to move during the current session because
Meshel will surrender the Senate majority to
Republicans when the next Legislature convenes Jan .
7.
Senate President-elect Paul Gillmor. R-Port
Cllnton, said last week that Republicans would go
along with a redlstrtcting blll this month If Democrats
would propose a non -partisan proposal that didn't seek
to give one party an advantage.

Riffe and Meshel appeared nowhere near making
such an agreement, and they even targeted lwo or
three dlstrtcts In central Ohio where they said they
would like to Incr ease Democratic strength.
In addition, Deniocrats control the Sena teat present
by a margin of only 17-16, and Sen. Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron; Is recovering lrom heart su rgery a nd is not
expected to return to Columbus until J anuary. Friends
sa id Ftiday tha t his recovery is proceedingbetterthan
even the sena tor expected.
Democrats had talked earlieraboul the possibility of
considering an Incom e tax cut this year to get the jump
on Republicans who have promised to put one through
the Sena te next year.
But uncertain revenue estimates and a deci sion last
week by the state Cont rolling Boa &lt;d lo increase
welfare benefits from a reserve fund rna)' have
squelched that issue.

Arson
probe
begins
'

16 people ·killed
~n ()hio highways
PRINTED IN CANADA

SNAKES TALES'M

by Sols

HAYING A

YOU e&gt;E:.i!
I HAVE ONE

CHRIS'rMAS

PAR,-YIHIS
YE:AR,5NAKE?

. ',

EVERY
YEAR!!

I'M 6E:ING
MOB,;!;,

SE.l-EeTIVE:

11-115 YEAR!!
)

By 'The Associated Press
Three double-fatality accidents
boosted Ohio weekend traffic death
toll to 16, the Highway Patrol says.
The toll lncliuled four pedestrians.
The patrol counted traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Frtday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
RAVENNA-CllffordH.Holden,
28, of Kent, and Jamie M. Brown, 8,
of RootStown, In a two-car collision
on a Portage County road.
VAN WERT- Bany L. Osting,
26, rio hometown avallable, In 'a .
· one-vehicle accident on a Van Wert
County road.
.
.DAYTON - · Wanda Whiteside,
42, Dayton, In a 'two-vehicle accident
on a Da:Yton city street.
CLEVELAND- George Kaleal,
88, Cleveland, a pedestrian struck on
a Cleveland city street.
·DAYTON - Jesse Brown, 72,
Dayton, In a one-vehicle accident on
a Dayton city street. ·
'
SA'roJU)AY
NORWALK - ·cathy L. Rogers,

23, and Jolynne Johnson, 23, bOth of
Wlllard,lna two-cw:collls!on on U.S.
20 In Huron County.
TOLEOO -Robert M. Rego, 54,
Toledo, In a car-truck accident on a.
Toledo city street.
SANDUSKY - Thomas A. Newman, 38, and Janis A. Newman, 38,
both of Woodville, In a two-car
collision.
IRONTON - Jobe Willis, 62,
South Point, a pedestrian struck
U.S. 52111 Lawrence County.
MARIE'ITA - William H. Ma- ·
· theny, 92, Waterford, a pedestrtan
struck on a Washington County
road.
CAMBRIDGE - Timothy · M.
Justice, 20, Brook Park, lli a
one-vehicle accident on Ohio 6ro In
Guernsey County.
NEWBURG HEIGIITS - Jesse
C. Dillon, 31, Cleveland, In a
one-vehicle accident on Newburgh
Heights city street.
CLEVELAND 'Robert A.
Kazee, 55, Cleveland, a pedestrian
struck on a Cleveland city street.

on

Four hurt in accident
Two women were admitted
·Sunday to veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment of InJuries
suffered In a OIHH!ar crash on U.S.
33, accordlilg to the Gallla-Melgs
pist of the state highway patrol.
Leona M. Llevlng,82,Minersvllle,
Is In stable Condition and under
~rvatlon for bruises. Patricia L.
. Fraley, 26, Glouster, suffered a
broken jaw and poulble lntl!mal
InJuries In tl)e accident and Is In
stable Condition, reported a holpltal

spokesperson.•-"
FraJeywaaapasaengeriDthecar,
the patrol sald.

ThepatrolsaidLeonaLievlngwas
oorthbound at 4:20 p.m. when she
reportedly went off the right side of
the road and came back onto the ·
road. Her vehicle then went to _the
left, struck a guard rall, went over
the guard rail and came to rest In a .
dltcti.
Also Injured were. two other
passengers- FJ;ieda B. Llevlng, ~.
and Frieda B. Utterback, 68, both of
Glouster. They were taken 1o
Veterans ·with Leona Llevlng and
Fn1ey by the Me1p EMS. Frieda
Llevlng and Utterback were both
trea.ted and rele&amp;aed for bruises.

.•

COATS PROJECI' - The Meigs C!luntY Ministerial.Association Is this week carrying out a ~ ·coals for
Jdtls" project for underprlvllesed dllldren 8.nd adults.
Residents' wishing. tD help are uked tD leave good, .
clean coals at colledloas polniB located a&amp; Kroger's,
MGM Fann City lllld Top of lhe &amp;airs In Pomeroy
and a&amp; Western Auto In Middleport. CotUs, along with
8CIII'Ves, gloves, caps. hal8 and blanllela, may 111so be

left at churches. Pictured from the left are association
represenliltlves, the ~v. Lee Mlller, general
chatnnan· Slsten Janet Rectenwald, church coordl' Rev. Mike Panglo, president
- -Nf the
nator;
association and Riv. David Mann, plac'l!mcnt
'
coordinator. The program wiD conclude Sunday, Dec.

.

IS.

Sites chosen for ·food distribution
'Dt~ 'Gallla-Melgs C.A.A. will be
distributing U.S.D.A. food commodIties on Tuesday begmnlng at 12
noon lit the following locations1
Meigs County - Tuppers Plains
Fire Station, Racine Fire Station
and the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
Gallla County -Mercerville Fire

Station, Bidwell Mt. Carmel · commodities. People ·picking up
food must provide proof of Income
Church, Guiding Hand School, and
a nd fall within the 150 percent
Gallla County Fairgrounds.
Income guideline.
Food may be picked up by others
Those people picking up food
for setilor citizens otily. Senior
are asked to bring
commodities
citizens are asked to send a signed
large
paper
bags
or small boxes for
note granting pennlsslon lor
canylng
foodstuffs.
another person to pick up their

The state fire marshal's a'rso n
investigator has been called in to
assist on the investigation of a firp
that burned the •esidence of the late
Mary Howell at P agetown on
Friday.
According to a repo11 issued by
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt. the Albany Fire Depart ment was called arou nd 10:30 p.m .
to Pagetown after being notified by a
passing m otorist. The Rutland Fire
D&lt;&gt;pt. tanker was a lso caU&lt;'d to Ihe
scene. but tllc one an d a hal f story
!ramP house was dest royPd by Ill~
fire .
On Saturday, thc ShC'riff's depart men I received infonTl ation that the
house had possibly been en tcred and
then set on fire to coverup the
brea king and entering.
In other ac lion. F ra nklin Uickens.
Route 3, Pomerov. r..ported Su nda:i
morning that 12 panes of glass had
been knocked out of the F aith
Fellowship Crusade for Christ
Church in Ant iqu it~· . On Sa 111rday
the department received a report
from Norm lln Neece. · Route 1,
Mldd lepo11 , that someone had cut
six strands of his fence , In
apparently an attempt · 10 steal
cattle.
Tom Karr reported lo the
departmenl Saru rday that approximately 25 gallons of gasllne were
stolen from trucks at the construction garage behind the Ska te-a·way
Rink on Route 7. Karr a lso said that
a week earlier, a locked cap was
ltnocked off one of the trucks and
about 70 gallons of gasoline were
stolen.
On Saturday night, the sheriff's
departmenl took a wreck report
Involving a deer and a car. Alfonzo
D. Sullivan, 50. Huntington, W. Va.,
was travellng·south on Roule 7 and
struck and killed a buck deer which
ran Into his path.

�Monday,D~ber10,

'page 2-The Deily SentineiPomef'Oy-Middleport. Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
.,
Pomeroy, Oblo .
.
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~

.

. S!m~ ...................-.-.I"T"E!!d'""'
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Assocl8.·
lion and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclatloli.
.
LETTERS OF OPINION tire we h.."Ome. They should be Jess than 300 words
lone. All letters are subj ect to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned leiters wUI be published. Letter s should be In
lood taste, addressing issue~, not persooalltles.

Brown preparing new
voter registration bill

Monday. ~-10.1984

The ·htimanities ______,. :____Ja_m_:_es_J_.K_i_lpa_t_·ric_k
WASHINGTON ~ We read so
much about the plight of our
elementary and secondary schools
- notably, this week, In Chicagothat It comes almost as a novelty to
read a report on our colleges and
universities instead. But It was a
most disturbing novelty that came
a few days ago from William J .
Benrtett, director of the . National
Endowment for the Hum3l)liles.
This was the thrust of his report:
College students, lor the most part,
are not learning the humanities
properly; and this Is partly because
our colleges are teaching the
humanities so poorly.' As a consequence, many of our best and
brightest young minds are setting
forth on their careers with no
· understanding ol where Western
civilization has been. How can they
know where to go?
By the humanities, we mean the

study of history, literature, phlllr
sophy, ethics and languages. Bennett's study group, on whom he
relied lor his report, was not
concerned with mathematics or
with the sciences. Members of the
group did not minimize the lmpor·
tance of these other disciplines; a
well-educated person of course
would have at least a nodding
acquaintance with the physical arid
natural sciences.
The group's Interest was confined
strictly to what used to be termed
'.'the liberal ariS." Members found
a condition approaching disaster.
Many of our Institutions of higher
learning, said Bennett, have lost a
clear sense of the Imparlance of the
humanities. The courses that once
constituted the very core of a
college curriculum now tend to be
assigned to second-rate professors
or to inexperienced instructors. In

roughly three out of !our Amerjcan
universities, a student can obtain a
bachelor's degree without ever
having studied European history •
American history or American
literature. In 1966 nearly 90 percent
of the Institutions required some
study of a foreign language; fewer
than hal! of them have such a
requlren\ent.today.
Why has this happened? Many
coll!!ge preslden\S and provosts
have suffered "a failure of netve
and faith." They have no clear
vision of the purpose of education,
which is not. merely to prepare
sl\ldents for a job tu to prepare
them for the total business ef living
tn the Western world. The purpose
is to prepare men and women to
grapple with life's enduring, funda·
mental questions :
"What Is justice? What should be
loved? What desetve~ to be de·

Secretary of State Shemxl Brown Is asking local election board officials
to assist him in preparing a bW to take some kinks out of Ohio's voter
registration laws.
There were no major problems statewide this fall, but newly liberalized
registration procedures did cause problems In at least two counties.
Volunteer registrars in Franklin and Summit.counties failed to turn In
the names of newly registered voters to county boards of election in time to....__, .
meet a statutory deadline of 30 days before the Nov. 6 election.
Iri both Instances, the disenfranchised registrants sought remedies In the
courts but wlih mixed results, and in neither case did the litigation lead to a
·
statewide solution to the problem.
The Franklln County case involved 50 signed-up voters whose names for
one reason or another did not make it to the official rolls.
County Common Pleas Judge Paul W. Martin acknowledged the need for
and the statutory existence of the JO.day deadline, but ordered that the
·
votes of the 50 persons be counted in the election.
An opposite result occurred In a decision by Surrunlt County Common
Pleas Judge Frank Bayer. .However, that case, which Involved 120voters.
came before him on Nov . 5, one day before the election.
Commenting on that case, Brown said "the timing ... made the suggested
provisional remedies unworkable because they would cause more
confusion than they would resolve under the facts of the case."
He said the two cases highlighted "some of the practical difficulties" in
carrying out laws which greatly increased the number of registration sites
and of volunteers authorized to register voters.
In the latest of Brown's newsletters to county election board members,
he asked tot "any suggestions regarding the cutoff of registrations, the
processing of registration forms, and the use and control of volunteer
registrars.''
He also said he will Issue an advisory with recommendations on how to
handle sending notices to new voters and how to enforce registration
deadlines.

fended? What Is courage? What Is
noble? · What Is base? Why do
civilizations nourish? Why do they.
decline?"
One who teaches at the university
level must have an advanced
degree. Too often, says Bennett, our
graduate schOols produce llar!'OW
specialists whose teaching is "lifeless, stilted and (l!ldestrian." Professors are more Interested In doing
research and publishing thelr papers than In teaching undergradu·
ates. Unless graduate schools
re-examine thelr priorities, "much
of our teaching wW remain mediocre and our ·students lndif1erent."
It is not surprising that the
back-of-the-hand treatment of hu·
manltles lnourcollegeshasslapped
our high schools as well. Bennett
net recently with 70 high school
student leaders, all of them excel·
lent students, coming from all over
the country. "When I asked how
many had HEARD of the Federal·
1st Papers, only seven raised their '
hands."
The situation is not hopeless- or
at least Bennett bravely professes
to believe It is not hopeless. fie cites
the shining example of Brooklyn
College, where every candidate for
· a bachelor's degree must take a
sequence of 10 core curses. The first
of these introduce students to
Homer, Sophocles, Herodotus,
Arlstophanes, Aristotle and Vergll. ·
St. Joseph's College In Indiana has
developed ·a similar curitculum of
sequential courses in the humanl·
ties through a four-year period.
Bennett's report, titled "To Reclaim a Legacy," runs to only 42
pages. Unlike most such reporiS, It
Is beautifully written. It is no
wonder that the author is widely
mentioned as a prospective secretary of education. This is a
gentleman who understands ex·
actly what Patrick Henry meant
200 years ago when Henry said that
he had but !lDe lamp to guide his
feet. "That Is the lamp of experience. I know of no way of judging
of the future but by the past."

A cure for the deficit ______Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n

Berry's World

" THIS IS IT!" Something I can play with for a
day' or two. then IGNORE FOREVER!"

.

Today in history
Today is Monday. Dec. 10, the 345th day ofl~ . There are 21 days left In
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
:On Dec. 10, 1898, a treaty was signed in Paris officially ending the
Spanish-American War. The agreement ceded the Philippines, Puerto
Jllco and Guam to the United States.
this date:
·
In 15~. Martin Luther publicly burned the papal bull, or edict,
demanding that he recant or face excommunication.
· In 1869, women were granted the light to vote in the WyonilngTenitory.
. In 1931, Jane Addams was named a co-recipient of the Nobel Peace
Prize. the first Amertcan woman so honored.
1950, Ralph C. Bunche was presented the Nobel P eace Prize, the first
bCack ,American to receive the award.
'In '1.958, the first domestic passenger jet flight took place In the United
States as a National Airlines Boeing 7fJ/ flew lll passengers and seven
crew members from New York to Miami In about 2~ hours.
In 1967, singer Otis Reddlhg died in the crash of his private plane In
Y[!sconsln. He was 26.
-In 1980, U.S. Rep. John W. JenretteJr.,D·S.C., resigned to halt expulsion
pfoceedlngs after his convictions of bribery and conspiracy In the Abscam
lrivestlgation. .
Ten years ago: Democratic Congressman Wilbur D. MWs of Arkansas
gave up the powerful chalnnanship of the House Ways and Means
· Canmlttee that he had held since 1958.
.
. :Five years ago: NBC television broadcast a videota(l!ld interview with
Marine Cpl. WWtam Gallegos, one of the hostages being held by Iran.
Giillegos said In the Interview that. none of the other hostages he had seen
W.re mistreated.
,
One year ago: Danuta Walesa, wife of Solidarity leader Lech Walesa,
accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on behalf of her husband In ceremonies In
OSlo. Walesa !eared that Polish authorities would have prevented his
return had he gone, to accept the award himself.
· Toclay's birthdays: Actress ))prothy Lamourls70. Actor Harold Gould Is
61. Actress Susan Dey Is 32.
Thought for today: "Take It easy, but take it."- Studs Terkel, author.

:On

,:rn

·'

speeches as a few anecdotes from
WASHINGTON - ·At the end of
his Index cards ended up a m8$Sive
President Reagan's second termif the federal government doesn't
study by 160 top business execu·
tlves, containing 2,478 proposals to
change its spending habits - the
typical family's share of the $2.5
cut waste ~ at a savings of $424
billion over three years.
trillion national debt will be $40,00&gt;.
One way or another, this debt
At first, politicians clambered
must be paid. Here are the bleak
aboard Grace's bandwagon and
alternatives: (1) Eachfamllycould
gave lip-servlee support to his
shell out · more taxes; (2) the
reforms . The Senate rushed
government could slash its servl·
through a resolution by a 93-to-1
ces; or (3) the Treasury could
vote endorsing many of his recom·
devalue our money and pay.off the
mendatlons. In the small print, of
debt In cheap dollars.
course, th_e l&gt;W added cautiously,
There Is a foUrth alternative,
"These specific recommendations
are not binding."
which the harried taxpayers might
prefer. Its basis is this: There Is so
~ust about everyone haDed Gra·
much waste In government pro·
ce's proposals until President Rea·
grams that if the misspelling and
gao Indicated he might actually be
mismanagement were eliminated,
serious about them. He began
the budget could be balanced
Issuing I' directives ordering the
without cutting legitimate benefits
bureaucrats to implement the
or raising taxes.
reforms that didn't need congres.
The idea Is not new; Ronald . sional approval. Now he has let It be
Reagan floated It back in 1976. What
known that he'll press congress to
Is new is the execution of the Idea by
adopt In rest of tbe proposals, give
a presidential commission of busl· or take a f!!\Y.
ness efficiency experts, established
In a sudden change of tune, many .
by President Reagan and headed
politicians have starled howling for
by industrialist J. Peter Grace.
Grace's scalp. The loudest hue and
What began In the G!pper's old

·..

1,1

Sen.

Grace Commission'S economies except for a proposal to close down
Ft. Monroe, va.
Even when there are no voters
defending waste or no sectional
pressure for preferential treatmerit, there are the bureaucrats.
Behind almost every lneftlclency,
there Is a covey of bureaucrats who
gain from Its continuance. Any
waste that Is eliminated wm reduce
their appropriations, so they will
fight fiercely for every last dollar.
And they are adept at hornswoggling Congress.
Footnote: For taxpayers whO
want to fight back, Peter Grace and
I invite you to join Citizens Against
Waste. This is a non-profit, nonpartisan, grass-roots organization
whose sole purpose Is to reduce
feder~l waste and staunch the
terrible financial drain. It neither
supports nor opposes government
programs, per se; It seeks only to
stop the misspending by the people
who administer the programs.
Write to Cltlzerui Against waste,
P.O. Box 100&gt;, Ben Franklin
Station, Washlngion, D.C. ,~- Or
call 1-800-USA-DEBT.

Europe's Common Market Is steel-using Industries who stand to losing proposition all the way
at this point, not even trade chief
mad and is doing something about lose from a hike In thepriceofsteel. around.
Brock. He's backing the pipe and
it.
But no one seems to be listening tube embargo.
Brock asked: "Should we subsidize
·
The issue Is steel. In retaliation that one steelworker at the cost of ·
for the Reagan administration's ihe other workers?"
decision to bdn lmporiS of Euro·
Even where zealous foreign
pean tube and pipe Imports, the competition may be hurting paris
Europeans are abrogating a quota of the economy, trade benefits tbe
agreement with the United States economy as a whole. Not leaat in
and considering compensatory ac· creating jobs. A recent Brookings
tlon against U.S. exports to Europe. . Institution study, "Can America
Nasty business for the Atllantic Compete?" estimated that .foreign
allies. It probably won't come to a
trade crealed 281,00&gt; manufactur·
full-scale trade war, but whatever ing jobs In this country from 1973 to
accommodation may eventually be 1900.
'
worked out, damage wW have been
Another study details another
done.
·
aspect of protectionism. Consu·
Mostly to ourselves. That's the mers for World T,ra,d e, a
way it usually Is with- protection· Washington-based trady l~bby,
ism, even when the protector says protected products add bllllons ·
appears to have a case.
annually to the American cost of
In this one, Washington is acting living, in effect hitting a family of
because the Europeans have cap- four with a "hidden tax" of between
tured a considerably more of the $1,500 and $2,00&gt; a year.
U.S. pipe and tube market than the . · Take steel. In a single year
5.9 percent stipulated In ' the quota studied. thanks to protectionist
agreement. This has been to the measures consumers paid out an
detriment of U.S. producers and the additional $7.25 billion for products
purchased.
•
steelworkers they emplOy.
The figure for textiles and
But whatever the justftlcation apparel was $18.4 billion. For radio
and It Is very frequently jobs ..:.. for
protection, the price to the proand televislon equipment, $221
tected is ultimately too )llgh.
million. For sugar, $2.8 blllloh: for
. The point has been made many meat, $1.2 bWion. And even for tbe
. times by many experts on the
prosaic peanut, $200 mllllon.
problem.
·
.
The year was l9lll and the total
Earlier this year, U.S. .Trade was $58.5 billion. An updated figure
"Hey I work with Democrats, Republicans ~
Representative WUllam Brock obwould certainly be significantly
whatever.
I'm a sleaze consultant1"
'
higher.
served that for every steelworker
Reason says protectionism Is a
there are 10 other workers In

Bearcats stop Miami
By GEORGE STRODE
~ AP Sports Writer
Cincinnati's rebounding Bear·
cats, in just threegamesthisseason,
have rna tched their entire victory
total in Coach Tony Yates' .f!rst try
last winter at his alma mater.
" This Is a night for us to starl
rebuilding that Bearcat pride,"
Yates said after the 3.0 Bearcats
ouimuscled host Miami 8().n The
former NCAA champions were 3-25
in Yates' first head coaching
attempt In 1983-84.
Jerry Peirson, Miami's rookie
coach, saldofC!ncinnatl: "They had
a good game plan. They tooli it to us
underneath. The key factor was
their physical strength."
Myron Hughes' 24 points led
Cincinnati while Ron Harper's
24-potnt, ll·rebound performance
couldn 't save Miami from its first
defeat in three games this winter.
E lsewhere among Ohio's majors,
Ohio State and Akron remained In
the unbeaten ranks, the 3·0 Buck·
eyes winning at Connecticut 72-65
and the 2.0 Zips sending Ashland
home with a 69-57 defeat.
Brad Sellers scored 21 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds to help Ohio
State pull away from Connecticut.
Akron scored the first eight points
with James Merchant leading the
Zips with 19 points.
Dayton and Toledo, two of the
state's perennial basketball powers,
weren 't so fortunate.
The Flyers, 3-1, an NCAA
Tournament quarlerftnallst last
spring. couldn't handle unbeaten
Michigan's rebounding and 21

"

points from guard Antoine Joubert.
Sedr!c Toney came off the bench to
lead Dayton with 17 points.

Southern"s lead, scoring the first
By SCOTl' WOLFE
tw&lt;1 baskets of the half on goals lly
RACINE - Utll\zlng many win·
nlng chapters from past pertor- Todd Dee! and Hammahs . Inclden·
U\lly, that was the only blight spot
mances, the So)Ithem Tornadoes
wrote another triumphant chapter of the ha lf for North Gall!a as
Southern unveiled Its offensive
in the history books as It poSted a
Infantry, forcing the Pirates to walk
convincing 81-45 victory over the
!!)t; pl ank . Two goals by Kevin
North Gall!a Pirates.
Southern kept its home-winning Teaford and one each by Darin
Roush, Adams, and Jarrell took all
streak Intact with the win , howev'er,
remaining wind from the Pirate
It was not yet the state-winning
sails, the score 45·30. At the
streak record as earlier believed.
Southern's streak stands at 51 as conclusion of the period Sou them
Point Pleasant defeated Sou them led by 22 points at 54-32 . •
Southern 's fourth period effort
57 '51 on Feb. 17, 1979 In Racine . ·
was
just as Impressive as its third
Earlier, that game was thought to
pertod tactics as It outscored NG
have been played in Point Pleasant,
but a check through records shows 27-U .
Southern hit 32 of 67 for48percent
the first game on Dec. 19 was in Pint
and hit 17 of 26 from the line for 6.'i
and the latler In Racine.
Southern is now 1·2 and 1.0 Inside percent. North Gallia hit 14 of 53 for
the SVAC, while North Gallla a frtgtd 26 percent and canned 17 of
dropped to H and (). 1 Inside loop 28 from the charity circle.
Southern was outrebounded J6.
play.
Southern point guard Todd 31. Wayne Diddle grabbed 12
Adams was impressive from the caroms and Hammons eight. Dam.
startf. and despite getting in early
Roush had seven rebounds to lead'
foul 'i.-ouble, led all scorers with 21 Southern and Steve Teaford had
points. Senior forward Darin Roush stx.
Southern had 14 steals, led by
added ll points.
David Hanunons led the Pirates Kevin Teaford and Gilbride had 21
with 14 points while Paul Lee had turnovers, 13 assists a nd 21 fouls.
Scott Wickline had four assists. The
nine.
Southern grabbed the opening tip los~s had stx steals and turnovers.
and wasted no time getting on the
Coach Howie Caldwell's Uttle
· scoreboard. Adams drilled a short Tornadoes blasted the Pirates in
the reserve tilt 54-23. Kenny Turley
jumper giving Southern a
advan~ge. Following a
North tossed in 17 points and, Todd kimes
GaWa turnover, Southern picked up added eight. Todd Holstein paced
the pace and Adams again raced In the Pirates with eight and Doyle
for the score, drawing a foul and Callihan canned seven. ·
completing a three-point play. The '. Southern plays at Southwestern
Pirates missed another scortng Frtday.
Box score:
chan,ce, allowing Jay Bostick to can
an Inside jumper and gtve the
SOllniERN til I - Bostick 2·24 : Teaforn
2.:l4 : Tea ford ~-3-8 ; Roush 4- 3-11; WiCkline
Tornadoes a 7-0 lead.
A BARE TIP - North GaOia's Mike Kemper (33) and Soothem's
2-2-4; Gilbride 1-1-3; Adams 8-5-21: Harris
Steve Thaxton quietly put the 1·1·3: K. Grutser 2·2·6: JaJT{'U .1-3-9; S.
Kevin Teaford (41) go up lor a jump ball during third quarter action of
Plrates
on the board, then Bostick Grueser l-2-8. Totals :tl-11-81.
Saturday's SVAC battle between the two SVAC schools. Soathem
NORTH GALLI A (4li ) - Kemper 2+5:
added
another
jumper for South· Det&gt;l
snapped a two game losing streak, 8145.
1·1·3: Dlddl€ 044 : L...et&gt; 4·1·9: Thaxton
em. As the result of a hustling and 34-6: Hawks 1·2-4 : Hammons 3-S..H : Diddle
M ayo (}.0{1, 1'ot.ab 14-1745.
scrappy Tornado defense, Southern 0.0.0;
Scnrt' hy IJIUU"teni:
•
was whistled for many fi rst half Soutti(&gt;rn .. .... .
.. .. 19 16 19 27--81
fouls, which allowed the Pira tes to North Gal11a .. ....... ... ... .. ... 15. 9 7 14-45
TRIMBLE - Donoval Lent Jay Kline added 20 and 6-6 T. L.
pull close at the buzzer 19·15.
poured home 21 points as Trimble Bentley had 15.
Adams e nded the pertod with 11
N-Y had a 19-17 lead after one
raised Its unblemished record to 3-0
Lebanon results
markers.
here Saturday with a 79·71 win over period. but fell back 37 ·34 by
The second period was fairly
Nelsonville· York in a game make· ha lftime, and trailed 56-49 going
LEBANON . Ohio !AP I - Tup's
close, however, Southern was still
into the final eight minutes.
up from Friday night.
very much In command . With 3:55 . Falcon. driven by Bruce Riegle, rar
NEL'!ONVILL&amp; YORK t71) - Bullock
The Tomcat win knocked the
left in the frame and the score27·21, a sub· two-minute" mile in winning
12-6-ll Kline 8-4-W; Bentley 7-1-15; Wa lters
Buckeyes from a four-way tie for
Southern produced what could have the featured ninth race at Lebanon
l.Q-2; Bohyer 1-0-2; Persons 1.0.2. Total!!
first as Coach VIrgil Grandy's five :JHI-71.
been the decisive blow in the game Raceway Sa tu rday night .
TRIMBLE (79)- Gatcht&gt;l l-5-7 ; Morrlo•on
go to2·1 in loop play and 2·2 overall.
Tup 's Falcon, pacing the mile in
as
Steve Teaford , Kevi n Teaford,
7-5--19: Davis &amp;2 -14; Sayre 4-0-S; Len1 8-~21 :
The defending champs are 3-0 both Campbell ;.(1.10. Tolal-! 31-17-79.
Mark Jarrell. and Richard Gllbride 1:59 4-'i, paid $4. $3.f{J and $3 while
By quarters:
overall and in league action, tied
sank buckets to give the hosts a Bye Out. driven by Joe E ssig Jr ..
Nelsonville-York .•......... ,..... 19 15 15 ~ ........ 71
with Alexander and Belpre for top Trimble
J5.21
advantage. The half ended was second, paying $4.~ and $2.~
.......... ......... ........17 ro 19 2.1-7'9
Reserves - Trimble 51, N4:&gt;lsonvi ll £&gt;- York
with Lusty f ell a, driven by Mary
35-24.
•
spot.
39.
•
Tee Morrison chipped in 19 for
North Ga llta sli ced away at Coven, third. paying $3.20.
Trimble whi le Chuck Davis added , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - 14. Big and smooth Scott Gatchel
was held to only seven points.
, Sharp-:shoottng Ertan Bullock Jed
all scorers with 30 while teammate

t.O

Trimble posts third win, 79 71

"It was discouraging Michigan
grabbed so many rebounds," Day·
ton Coach Don Donoher said of the
Wolverines' 47·35 domination Of the
boatds.
Toiedo, 2-2, the pre-season Mid·
American Conference favorite, took
one of Its worst beatings ever in
Centennial Hall: Detroit's Titans
went home a 65-55 victor. The
winners sank nine straight field
goals for a 44-27 lead in the second
half. Jay Gast had 17 points for
Toledo.
"I'm disappointed in the way my
team played," said Toledo Coach
Bob Nichols. "I thoughtweshowed a
lack ofef1ort in going for loose !jails
ilnd rebounds. "
Keith Taylor's 21 ' points Jed
Bowling Green, 3-1, pastMalne55-53
In the consolation game of the
Carner Classic In Syracuse. Brian
Miller's two free throws in the final
seconds gave the Falcons a 55-51
edge.
Ohio University lost to . illinois·
Chicago In the championship game
of the McDonald's Classic in
Wichita, Kan. The Bobcats fell to 2-2
with the72-64loss. VIc Alexander led
Ohio with ~ points while four
players had 10 each- Eddie Hicks,
R1ck Scarberry, Paul Baron and
Eddie Washington.

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

.

Young Tomadoette
post 34-19 victory
ROCK SPRINGS - The ' South·
em Tornadoette junior high girls'
basketball team rolled to a 34-19
friumph over Meigs recently.
Southern took a 9-4 lead, then
rolled to a healthy 15-6 halftime
advantage. Rout!rig Meigs to a 25-8
third period score, Southern held on
for the 34·19 win .
Dawn Johnson led SHS with 13,
Debbie Greathouse added nine,
Crystal Hlll stx, Becky Evans four,,
and Becky Winebrenner two. For
Meigs, Wood had 13, Ewing four,
· and Taylor two.
I.eslle Dudding and Becky Evans
were credited with playing good
·defensive games, while Greathouse
grabbed nine rebounds .

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... alcohol isn't.
Join your local radio broadcasters
by supporting
National Drunk &amp; Drugged Driving

Awareness Week
December 9-15, 1984
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POMEROY, OH.

992·2054
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•VISA
eMASTERCHARGE

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Southem blasts
NG Pirates, 81-45

ROCK SPRINGS - Trt·Valley scoring, 19.0 In the TVC and 17.0
Conference cage action continues
overall. The 6-4 junior forward has
Tuesday with undefealed Trimble
topped Meigs In rebounding four
traveling to Meigs for an early
straight games and has been in
• critical league m&lt;\tch-up.
· double figures every time.
Elsewhere, front-running AlexCoach Greg Drummer's Maraud·
ander and Belpre (along with
ers bounced back from a b!tter&amp;i-62
Trimble) also take to the road as overtime loss to Nelsonvllle-York
the Spartans go to MWer and
last Tuesday with a 65-53 win over
. Belpre must pl!IY at Nelsonville·
Vinton County Friday.
York. Also, Federal-Hocking Is at
Other starters for tihe Marauders
Warren Local and Wellston goes to Include 6-4 senior Dave Fisher at
VInton County.
center, 6-2 5e!llor Jay Carpenter at ·
The Tomcat-Marauder encoun· . the other forward beside Chancey,
ter should take up J;(ght where the and 5-7 junior Brad Robinson and
two left off last year In two heated 5-9 junior Rick Wise at guards.
battles during the season. Trimble
Belpre's Robert Mlller leads the
won botih meetings, 79-63 at Meigs TVC scoring race after three games
and a double-overtime 70.69 win at with 73 for a 24.3 ppg. Miller has
Trimble. Trimble went on to post a
been consistent in TVC action with
17·1 TVC slate !or the games of 24, 24, and 25. Brtan
championship.
Bllckle (Alexander) , Brian Bullock
Thus far, Coach Tom Evans' (Nelsonville-York), and Jay Kline
crew has defeated Federal · (Nelsonville-York) are all tied for
Hocking 66-65, Miller 68-64, and second at 23.3 ppg. Meigs' Chan!'"Y
Nelsonville York 79-71. Trimble is seventh at 19.0 ppg.
holds down first place at 3-{) along
with Alexander and Belpre. Meigs
TVC c..., Scor1n1! ·~.&lt;aden
N...,. (School)
G Tp Avr.
Is tied for fourth at 2-1.
Robert Miller {Belpre) ............... 3 73 24.3
Trimble returns three starters Br..an BUckle (Alexander ) ......... 3 EB 23.3
from last year's sectional cham- Brtan Bullock (Nei. -York ) ...... :.. 3 69 23.3
Jay Kline (Nei. -York) .... ............J 00 23.3
pion and district runner-up .includ· Randy MatJack (Fed. -Hocklng) .. 3 63 21.0
!ng 6-4 Scott Gatchel, Donovan Lent Ke!th Roberts (Miller) ...... : ........3 58 19.3
Mike Chancey !Meigs) ..... ........ . 3 57 19.0
and Tee Morrison.
Donovan Lent (Trimble) ........... 3 51 17.0
Lent has paced Trimble in Chuck Davis (1i1mble) ..............3 49 16.3
scoring with a 17.0ppg. while Chuck Steve Hamon (Vinton Co.) .. ........3 47 15.7
Davis follows with a 16.3 ppg. Player Metp ladMddaal ........
G Tp Avg.
Morrison follows at 12.3 while Mike Chancey ........ .... .. .............4 68 17.0
Jay Carpenter ......................... 4 45 11.3
Gatchel has had his troubles .RJck
Wise ............................... 4 34 &amp;5
chalking up points with a 10.7 ppg. Dave Fisher .... ........ . ............... 4 'l7 6.8
The mobile Tomca t center and Brad Robinson .......... ... ... .... , ... , 4 24 6.0
Shawn Baker ........................... 4 1i! 4.5
returning all·TVC per1ormer has Clu1s Kennedy .... ... .... .... ... .. . .. 4 12 J.Q
managed only one field goaln two of Lee PoweU ............................. , 4 7 1.8
Rodd Harrlso11 ... ........... •... :..... . 4 5 1.3
Trimble's three games.
Parker Long ... .................. .... ... 2 2 1.0
Mike Chancey leads Meigs in Chris Shank ............................. 2 0 0.0

Berry's World

•

~

TVC cage action
resumes Tuesday

Price·of protection ____.;______n_on_G_.:;.ra::.::...iff

,.
.•

cry has come from the congress·
men who misappropriate our tax
money and the bureaucrats who
misspend It
You see, Congress caters to little
groups· of voters and contributors
who have glommed onto extra
benefits at the taxpayers' expense.
The congressmen are opposed to
waste, of course, as long as I( is in
someone else's preserve.
There are more than 12,00! post
offices, for example, that setve 100
people or less. But even 100 people
frlghten a congressman when
. there's no one on the other side. So
Congress won't let the Inefficient
. post offices be consolidated.
Take Rep. Gene Taylor, R·No.,
for instance. He's a staunch
consetvative and an Implacable foe
of government waste. But let
someone try to close one of the tiny
post .offices in his native Ozarks,
and he'll raise a howL
Of the 4,00&gt; military Installations
In the United States, only about 300
are really Deeded. But congress·
men have blocked the closing of any
of them since 1976.
Paul Trible,
R·Va., Is typicaL He favors the

1984

WMPO Radio
takes the lead and
thanks you for your cooperation/
"
.

STRALEY
RIPLEY, W. VA.

FOR THE BEST SERVICE
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�0

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Redmen

capture

RIO GRANDE - Behind the
Cll!tch play of senior co-captatos
Jerry Mowery and Dan Curry, the
RloGrandeCollege Redmenslipped
past West Virginia Tech, 77-70, In the
championship game of the the
second annual Clarence (Bevo)
Francis Q assic a t Lyne Center
Saturday night.
The victory left Rio's overall
mark a t 12.0 on the year and 47-3
over the past four years at Lyne
Center .
Vermlf Brothers Shine
The Ve rhoff brothers ·combined
for Rio Grande 's first eight points as
the Redmen jumped out to an early
8-4 lead. The explosive Tech offense
quickly bounced back behind the
guard-forward combination of An·
toine Scott a nd Sam Cooke to grab
the advantage, 19-14, at .the 8: 50
mark.

Monday. December 10. 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

second

annual

Arthur Culbreath pumped In a
advantage .mld,way through the
long-range jumper to Increase the
second half when Jerry Mowery
connected on a pair or free throws
West VIrginia quintet's margin to
25-18. The Redmen slowly Inched
after a technical foul had been called
their wa y back Into the game. With · on.the Tech bench.
2: 47 left, sophomore guard Mike
The Redmep, however, were
unable to put the Bears away as the
Smith connected on a 20-footer to
visitors roared back, behind the play
knot the count at 33-aU.
Floor director Jel'l)l Mowery
of Scott and Cooke to cut the margin
to 6().57 with 8: 52 left to play. ·
stole the ball a nd put It on the glass
The teams exchanged goals untll
with 11 seconds left In the half to put
Scott pulled Tech wtthln two, 7().Ql,
the Redmen on top, 35-33, just before
with a free throw at the 2:24 mark.
halftime. Culbreath then tossed In a
.
With
one minute left, West VIrginia
deep jumper at the buzzer to tie the
guard John Davts·inlssed the .r lm on
score once again.
an 18-foot jumper,. resulting In a
"I thought we played well in the
jump ball, which was awardOO to
first halt," stated Rio Grande
mentor John Lawhorn. "We didn't
Rio Grand&amp;
quit, or go away from our game plan
The Redmen then Iced the game
which shows a Jot of maturlty ."
down the stretch, connecting on stx
Redmen Up By Nine
out of seven free throws.
Rio Grande patiently worked for
"The key In the second hal1 was
the good shot and opened up a 00.51
our defense," commented Lawhorn. "They got some up-tempo

Bevo

Francis

baskets, but not a lot pf them.
Offensively, they just could not slop
DanCuny. GregVerhof1didasuper
job defensively on Scott. He had to
earn all the points he got.''
Balenred Seorlng Attack
Rio Grande had four players In
double figures. Joe Verhoff, who
started In pia- of ban""" up guard
~~
"'~·
·
Bob Shaw, connected on seven of 11
from thefleldandstxofsevenatthe ·.
foul Jtne for 20 points while Dan
Curry tossed In eight of 11 from the
floor and added a free throw for 17
markers.JerryMowerywasstxfor
stxfrom thefoulltne, Including four
clutch tosses within the final minute
of play, and finished with 16 ·
markers.
Greg Verhoff added 12 markers.
Scott and Cooke paced Tech In
scoring wtih 23 and · 19 points
respectively. Joe Verhoff led all
players In the rebound department

in

~

BIG NIGHT- Rio's Joe Verhoff (44) po~ In 00 markers as Rio
Grande College defeated West Vlrgtnta Tech,. 77-10, In the finals of the
second annual Bevo Francis Classic at Lyne Center Saturday night. The
victory left Rio Grande unbeaten In 12 slal1s this year. On right Is
Redman ace Dan Curry, who added 17 markers. Tech defenders are
Darryl Houston (50) and Mike Sulesky (12).

Box score.
WElT VIIIG!N!A ·n:cH C'lUl - Ron
Beatly 142: Mike Sulooky 1·2-4; Greg

RlOGRANDEC17J-JerryMowery~11i: .

The Daily Sentinel ·
14~)

A Division of Multimedia. Inc.

early

showdown Saturday

By DICK JOYCE
AP Sporis Writer
DePaul figures to be the next stiff
test for Georgetown, the nation's
top-ranked college basketball team.
Of course, thesamethlngwassald
about 20th-ranked Nevada-Las Vegas, which was blown away by
P a trick Ewing &amp; Co., 8246
Saturday.
Second-ranked DePaUl, like Georgetown, Is undefeated in five games
this season, and the two powerhouses meet next Saturday at the
Capital Centre In Landover, Md.
Each has a game before that
meeting.
Ewing, the 7-foot All-American
center for Georgetown's defending
national champions, has warned his
teammates: "Definitely we looking
for · improvement. If we don't
somewhere down the line, someone
will beat us."
.,
UNLV, the first Division I team
Georgetown faced this season,
crumbled just as easUy as the
Hoyas' previous patsies - HawaUHilo, Ha waii· Loa, Southern Connec·
tlcut and St. Leo - at the Capital
Centre. Including last season, it was
the Hoyas' 16th straight trtumph.

Ewing, with 16 points and 13
.rebounds, was his usual Imposing
self against the Runnln' Rebels, who
were flustered Into committing 32
turnovers. None of their players
scored double figures as Coach
Jerry Tarkanlan sutfered-hls worst
defe\lt since he came. to UNLV In
1973-74.
Bill Martin scored 17 points and
grabbed 11 rebounds and Michael
Jackson had 11 points and 12 assists
for Georgetown, which next plays
American University Wednesday
night.
Tarkanlan sald he d!dn 't know If
this season's Hoyas are as a good
last year's and added, "This Is a
great team. All IknowtS that we got
our butts kicked."
DePaul, which has a Wednesday
night date at Penn State, got 20
points apiece from Tyrone Corbin
and Dallas Comegys In a 95-83
victory over vtsltlng Notre Dame,
Scott Hicks scored 25 points In the
Fighting Irish's first loss after four
wtns.
"I was pleased wtth our offense,"
said DePaul's rookie coach Joey
Meyer. "but we have toslloreupour
defense. We're not going to shoot 60
percent In every game."

E ric Plunk and Tim Birtsas and
Around 3 p.rn ., a grimacing
minor-lea gue outfielder Stan ·Henderson stalked through the hotel
J avier .
lobby and out of the building.
On Wednesday night, the A's and
Less than 30 minutes later, the
Yankees 81\nounced that tiie sevendeal was announced.
player trade had been worked out
"They told me to be an actor:.:
but would not become official unless
Henderson said .
the Yankees reached agreement
Yankees owner George Stein·
\\1\h He nderson on a new contract.
brenner, known for his free spend·
"He would add a new dimension to · ingbut somewhat reluctant to spend
our team," Yankees General Man- this much for Henderson, visited
ager Clyde King said.
Houston briefly. He left without
The A's gave the Yankees48hours
directly taking part In the meetings,
to negotiate with Henderson and his , but kept In constant contact by
agent, Richard Bry, and they began
telephone.
talking that night at the hotel where
"Woody and I were guided by Mr.
the winter meetings were being
Steinbrenner's direction," King
assured .
held.
By 5 p.m. Friday, no agreement
A few minutes after the Henderhad been worked out. The A's
son trade was completed, L'le A's
granted a 24-hour extension; the
dealt reliever Bill Caudill to the
Yankees said they would know by
Toronto Blue Jays In exchange for
midnight.
. infielder Alfredo Griffin, outfielder
At 1 a .m., the two sides broke up.
bave Collins and cash.
Bry, King and Yankees Vice
Oakland made the trade after
President Woody Woodward reacquiring Howell, to be used as a
sumed talks Saturday morning and relieve r .
.
said the y would have a final decision
Saturday's flurry of activity came
well past the 5 p.m.
by noon.

Published every aft ernoon , Monday

In a Sunday game, thlrd·ranked
St. John's, 4-0, beat Rutgers 77-'ilas
Crhls Mulltn and Bill Wennlngton
scored 15 points apiece at East
Rutherford, N.J. The Redmen, who
posted one-point victories In their
past two starts, shot67percent from
the field and led by as much as Z7late
In the second half.
lnqtherTop20gamesSaturday,lt
wasNoADuke78,VIrglnla65; No.5
Memphis State 86, UCLA 70; No. 6
Louisville 76, sL Francis (Pa.) 63;
No. 7 Illinois 93, New Mexico State
55; No. 8 Southern Methodist 97,
Centenary79; No.10NorthCarollna
State 103, Western Carolina 67; No.
·11 ·I ndiana 81, Kentucky 68; No. 12
Syracuse 68, Lamar 58; Houston 81,
No. 13 Louisiana State 73; No. 14
VIrginia . Tech 1lll, ·South Caronna
State 65; No. 16 North Carolina 'irl,
Oral Roberts 65; No. 17 Oklahoma
115. Loyola·Chlcago 82; and No. 19
Kansas 84, Ablilne Christian 72.

through Fri day, 111 Court St. 1 y the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company! Mul·
tlmedia, Inc .. PomE'f!)Y. Oh(o 45769, h.
992-2156. Second class posta ge paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Q'11IERS
· Top Ten

A!Durham, N.C.,Diike,5-0, shook
off a Jaie rally by VIrginia In .an
Atlantic Coast Conference game.
Johnny Dawkins paced the Blue
Devlis wtth 23 points.

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SAN JUAN. Puerto Rico (AP) Handlers for new World Boxing
Council lea therweight champion
Azumah Nelson of Ghana say he
might be wtlltng to give Wilfreda
Gomez a rematch if the former
champion doesn't retire first.
"First of all, I want to bask In the
glory for 24 hOurs and then sit down
wtth Ring Craft Promotions, Inc., of
Ghana," manager Carl King said
Sunday. "Then we'll decide In which
direction we want to go. I want him
to defend the title three or four
times ."
Bill Prezant of New York,
Nelsrin'~ cornerman, said, · "We'd
gtve Gomez a rematch."
On Saturday night, Nelson
knocked out Gomez wtth a second
remaining In the 11th r ound to strip
the Puerto Rican of his WBC
featherweight crown.
But 28-year-old Gomez may have
fought his last professional fight. A
close associate, Ismael Sanchez,
said, "We'll talk later and decide
whether he shQuld retire.''

·=,··
•••. . .

.
•

.

00 YOU HAVE A CHRISTMAS
·WISH OR GREETING FOR
SOMEONE SPECIAL DURING
THIS YULETIDE SEASON?

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' .
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,

•

FLYING' BENGAL- Clncbmat! Bengals' Unebacker Jeff Schuh
( ii9) takes to the air 1111 he Intercepts a New OrletU18 Saints pass Sunday
!lftemoon In New OrieiiiiS, New Orleans Saints' Hohy Brener (811) and
Bengals' Glenn Carnerson (!Ill) are In Schuh's mght path. The Bengals
defeated the Saints 24-21. (AP Lllllerphoto).

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

,---------------------------t

Nelson wins
featherweight
title Saturday

6-().12;

Antoine Scott u -1-23; John Davis 142; Sam
Cooke 9-H9; Darryl Houston 142; sam
~~. 9-1-19;, Darryl Hooston 346. Nolo

(USPS

mathematical, wprld or the Na··
tiona! Foptball Leagile, the Wa·
shlngton Redsklns and St. Loots
Cardinals need wol'l)l about only
one thing. Victory next Sunday
, means a dlvtslon title and an
automatic playoff spot.
The Redsklns hold the upper hand
In the National Football Conference
East with a 1().5 record afterrallytng
Sunday for a ~28 victory over the
Dallas Cowboys. The Cardinals,
mean1fhlle, stoPJ)€1.1 the New York
Giants 31-21 to pull into tie with the
Giants and Cowboys at9-6.
Washington hosts St. Louis on
Sunday, and the winner wtll ctatm
the East title- Washington wtth a
better record, St. Louis by virtue of
the NFL 's tie-breaker procedure.
"We control our own destiny now
and that'~ what Is important," said
Washington quarterback Joe Theis·
mann, who railled his club from a
21-'i halftime defiCit at Dallas.
"We're In good shape now,"
added St. Louts Jtnebacker E.J.
Junior.
In other NFL action Sunday, Eric
Dlckersoo ran for 215 y'!f(ls to break
O.J. Simpson's single-season rush·
lng record as the Los Angeles Rams
enhanced their chances for a
wlld-card playoff berlp with a Z7·16
victory over Houston; Pittsburgh
stayed one game ahead tn the AFC
Central chase by beating Cleveland
23-20, whlle Cincinnati kept pace
wtth a 24-21 defeat of New Orleans:
Dan Marino llfted his season
touchdown-pass record. to 44 In
leading Miami's 35-17 victory over
Indianapolis; Denver pulled Into a
tie with Seattle In the AFCWestwith
a 16-13 verdict over San Dlegowhlle
Seattle was a 34-7 loser to Kansas
City; Green Bay edged Chicago
20-14; Philadelphia slapped New
England 27-17 to ellmlnate the

a

Alderson·B~ddus Invlta~onal.

Dan Curry 8-1-17; Greg Verooff 5-2·12: Mike
Smith 3-2-8; Bob Shaw 0.2-2; Joe Verho!f
7.&amp;:!1; Kent Woae 142. Tolalo 2&amp;-1&amp;-77.
HalfUme ICOI'e - Rio 35, Tecti li.

t~ meet

championship

In the often confusing, and very

The GAHS graduate was presb his high school
en ted a· P1aque Y
·
coach, Jim Osborne.
Th Redmen wtnretumtoactlon
Tues:;ay, Dec. 11, at Glenville State
College 1n West Vlrglnla. Rio
G d lmocked off the Pioneers
ran e
84-!ll t the
earlier this season.
• a
·

Arthur Culbreath

East

By 'lbe AMoclat.ed ...._

° Osbome p 1 esrl- Plaque

Yanks-A's complete Henderson deal
HOUSTON tAP) -lttookseveral
missed airplane flights , a few acting
lessons and several million dollars.
But the New York Yankees did
what they came here to do. They
finally n a il e d down Rickey
Henderson .
Three days after the trade was
conditionally made and almost a full
dav after baseball's winter meet·
In!is officia lly ended, the Yankees
completed a seven-player swap
Saturday that brought Henderson
·
from the Oak land A's.
He did not com e cheaply. Henderson . one or the best leadoff men In
baseball history , will be paid an
estimated $8.75 million for five
years, making him one of the
game's top five money-earners
·behind George Foster, Dave Win·
field. Mike Schmidt and Gary
Carter .
" It boiled down to business and
what was best for both ballclubs,"
Henderson sa id . " We felt I would be
better off in New York."
To get Henderson. an outfielder
who set the major-league record of
130 bases in 1982, plus minor-league
pitche r Bert Br adley and a reported
$200,00J, the Yankees gave up
pltcher J a y Howell, highly regarded
minor-league pitchers ·Jose Rijo,

NFC

KetthGoldstonofDyke.
Prtor to the championship con·
test GUPrtce fonnerGaillpoltsand
Rio ' Grande i:reat, became Rio's
'16th Inductee tnto the Rio Grande
C Uege Athletic Hall.Qf-Fame.

saunders 1..0.2;

Bengals
•
remam
•
mrace

The Daily Sentinel- Page 6

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Class!~amedfromTech,aswellas

wtth15.Cookehadnlnesnagsforthe
Bears.
.
The Redmen were 29 of 56 from
the floor for 52 percent and 19 of 23
from the llnefor83 percent.
The Bears connected on 33 of 67
attempts from the !tel&lt;! for 53
percent and . four of eight from the
foul circle 50 percent.
Rio Grande held the edcre on the
"
boards, 36-20.
In the~~arngw!e Dyke
~&lt;•
d
Collq;" came from behind to upen
Edward Waters College, 83-79.
Wlllle Hightower and Kteth Gold·
·ston each tailled 20 poiDts f()r Dyke.
Three Redman players were selected to the All-Tournament
Squad: Seniors Jerry Mowery and
ff
(lastyear'sMVP) and Greg Verho
were selected as well as Dan Curry,
whowasnamedMVPthlsyear.
Sam Cooke and Antoine Cooke

DePaul, Georgetown

Monday, December 10, 1984

· Pa trtotsfrom ri9yotf ~nslderatlon,
and Tampa Bay bested Atlanta 2.'1-'i.
ln$.aturdaygames, the New York
Jets ll!pped Buffalo 21-17 and San
FranciScoroutedMinnesota51-7.
Tontght!s game features the Los
Angeles Raiders at Detroit.
"This game was probably one of
theaU-tlmegutchecksthati'vebeen
part of," Washington Coach Joe
Glbqssaldafterthe&amp;!dsklns' third
straight victory over Dallas. "It
looked like It was wer about 10
different times."
It certatnly looked over at
halitlme, after Dallas' Danny White
had thrown three scoring passes to
glvethetowboys a 21-Glead.
Clll'dlnals 31, Giants 21
NeU Lomax was sacked ftve
times , but he nonetheless found time
to shred the New York secondary tor
:n&gt; yards and three touchdowns.
Lomax's third m throw, a fourth·
down toss to Roy Green that covered
35 yards, gave St. Louisa21·14Jead.
ButNewYorkstonnedhack to tie
It on Rob Carpenter's one-yard run.
St. Louis finally got the deciding
score on Ottls Anderson's 12-yard
sweep ofleft end wtth 12: 17left 1n ihe
game. Neil O'Donoghue's 34-yard
field goal with 4: 54 to play added
Insurance.
Rams 27, Oilers 16
Dickerson Increased his rushing
total to 2,0C!l yards, four more than
Simpson's 2,003 yards In 14 games 1n
1973. More Importantly, he scored
twice, moving the Rams within one
game of a wild-card playoff spot.
The Rams can clinch the No. 1
wlld-caro spot with a victory at San
Francisco on Friday.
Dickerson carried 27 for his 215
yards Sunday and seared on runs of
seven and stx yards.
steeters 23, BroWJl') 211
Gary Anderson's 34·yard field
goal wtth five seconds to go provided
Pittsburgh's margin of victory. But

o~ line

the celebratldn was tempered by the
knowledge the Steelers probably
mustbeatthedefendlngSuper Bowl
champlflnLosAngeles~dersnext
Sundaytogalnaptayoffspot.
If Pittsburgh loses, the CinCinnati
Bengalscan gain a tie for the Central
Division title with a victory over the
Buffalo Bills. And Cincinnati would
then advance to the playoffs
because of the NFL's tie-breaker
system.
Dolpldn8 35, Colts 17
Indianapolis held a 17-7 halftime
lead, but It was all Miami - a nd
Marino - aftet that. The second·
year pro from Pittsburgh led Miami
to Its 13th victory In 15 games with
scoring throws of two y11rds to Nat
Moore, twoyardstoBruceHardy, 25
yards to Jimmy Cefalo and seven
yards to Mark Clayton.
Marino's 44 m passes tied the
professional football record of44.set
this year by Jim Kelly of tpe United
States Football League's Houston
Gamblers.
Broncos 16, Chargers 13
Rich Karlls, wh9 missed lastsecond field goals In Denve r losses
th.e previous two weekends . connectedona28-yarderwith2 :ll!left to
give the Broncos a victory over San
Diego.
Karlls and San Diego 's Rolf
Benlrschke each kicked two field
goals In the first half before Denver
took a 13-6 thlrd·peliod lead on
Sammy Winder's fdur-yard · run.
San Diego tied It for the last time
after Winder fumbled at the Denver
4-yard Une. Ed Luther passed to
Buford McGee for the touchdown
early In the final period .
Chiefs :14, Seahawks 7 .,.
Bill Kenney threw for 312 yards
and two touchdowns and Kansas
City's aroused ·secondary inter·
cepted six Dave Kreig passes as the
Chiefs atoned for a 45-0 loss to Sea tt!e
earlier In the year . One oi the .thefts

Sunday

was returned 19 yards byllnebacke r
Scott Radec!c to give Kansas City a
17-7 lead early lnthe secondquarter.
Kenney made It 24-7 at the half
with a 26-yard strtke to Henry
M arshall.
Packers 20, Bean; 14
Rich Campbell , ·a third-string
q uarterback pressed into action
when Randy Wright was hurt , threw
a 43-yard scoring pass tD Phll Epps
with 34 seconds left as Green Bay
hurt Chicago's hopes for the
h om e-fi eld advantage In t he
p layoffs.
Walter Payton was heroic In
defeat, rushing for 175 yards and a
touchdown and passing two y ards to
M a tt Suhey on a halfback option for
a nother.
Eagles 27, Patriots 17
Quarterback Joe Pisarcik ran for
a pair of touc hdowns a nd Wilbert
Montgomery dashed 10 yards for
another as the Eagles e nded playoff :
aspirations for the Patriots. Plsar·
c ik's 16-yard scra mble set up
Mo11tgom ery's scoring run that
gave Phil ad elphia a 17-10edge with
54 seconds left In the first half.
Pisarcik's three-yard run following
a blocked punt killed a Patriot
com eback that had. reduced the
Eagle lead to 20-17.

Buccaneers 23, Falcons 6
J ames Wilder rushed for 125
yards and a touchdown and became
the seventh player in NFL history to
account for more tha n 2,00J offens ive yards in a season in helping
Tampa Bay to its fifth win. Wilder
h as 1.441 yards rushing and 625 on
pass receptions. Obed Aiirt kicked
fie ld goa ls of 30, 36 a nd 28 yards to
e ns ure Atlanta 's ninth-consecutive
Joss.

Cl 19841'-J. RE't'IJIIOLOSTOfiACCOCO.

•

By Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS - Ken Anderson got his first action in a month
Sunday and threw for 191 )lArds and
two touchdoWns to keep tt.e Cincinnati Bengals' National Footbal
League playoff hopes alive wtth a
24-21 victory over the New Orleans
Saints.
With the victory, Cincinnati
moved to 7-8 and stayed alive In the
champlo~h!p race in the AFC
Central. However, those hopes still
hinged on a victory next week at
home against Buffalo coupled wtth
a ,Pittsburgh loss.
Anderson, out three weeks with
an Injured shoulder, entered Sun·
day's game early In the second
quarter with the Bengals .hanging
onto a 3.0 lead from a 35-yard field
goal by Jtm Breech.
His first five-play series was
Ineffective, but he marched the
Bengals 78 yards for a touchdown
on their next possession- a Z7-yard
completion to running back James
Brooks. He was 7-8 for 51 yards
passing on that drive.
Five minutes later, he marched
tM Bengals 63 yards wtth seven
straight completions, capping them
with a 15·yard pass (o Stanford
Jennings.
Jennings got the Bengals' last.
touchdown on a one-yard run four
minutes Into the final quarter.
: The Saints scores came on two
passes from seldom-used reserve
quarterback Dave Wilson to tight
end Hable Brenner and a third to
wtde receiver Eugene Goodlow.

·..

Generic
Prices.
New

·Filter.

'

New

Ballesteros
pockets gold
SUN CITY, South Afrlca (AP)Severlano Ballesteros of Spain
pocketed gt&gt;lf's richest payoff,
~.OOJ, despite shooting his worst
round of the Mllllon·Dollar Gol1
Challenge;
~ Ballesteros {lnlshed the 72~hole
t6umament wtth a 2-over-par 74
Sunday at the 7,005-yard Gary ·
Player Country Club. . But It was
enough for him to capture . golf's
biggest payday for the thlrtl ttme.
'"I made very few mistakes," said
Ballesteros, who won the title last
year and In 1981. "I wish I could play
this way every week."
·
'J'he Spaniard finished with a total
or 279 after leading the tournament
tn each of the four rounds. His beSt
round was Saturday when he fired a

65.

ntTER LIGilfs

... . .

Also avallaHe In
Alter 1005 &amp; MenthoiiOOS.

•

llecOnd place and $150,(1Q went to

Nick Faldo of Britain, who shot ~ 72
Sul)day to finish at 285, "'hlle Lee
'ITevlno of the United States was
· third wtth a 286 total following a
closing 69. He recetved $1ffi,(IQ.
. ~'Seve undoubtedly Is the best
player In the world when he Is on his
game," South Africa's Dents Wat·
S(llsaidofthewtnner. "He'sgotalot
o!J wonderful moves In his swing. I
am trying to Imitate some of them.

14 ll'IJ.•"tar". 0.9 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method .

Warning, lhe Surgeon General ·Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Rich Taste.

. .. .

SAVE EVEN

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

----~

�•

-

. Monday. ~ber 10, 1984 .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

P'aa&amp;-•6-The Daily Sentinel

Friends shocked

..............1 project now.
majo undertaking
MILFORD, Ohio (N')- When
Mary Miller decided to deliver
Christmas baskets to the needy 30
years ago, she didn't expect her
generosity to grow into a major
project annually.
But as Christmas 1984 approaches, Mrs. Miller finds her
hOme crammed with presents,
clothes and food that will make the
season brighter f(lr hundreds of
families.
"I started with eight famtUes 30
years ago and last year I had 600
famllles come to me for help," she
said. "They need food, help with
electric shutoffs and medicine for
the elderly and the children."
Mrs. Miller, now a 68-year·old
grandmother of four, served as
welfare chairman for the Milford
School Dtstrkt in 19M. One of her
earliest deliveries to a needy family
left a deep impression.
"I'll never forget one house I went
to. The children were sleepingon the
floor, " she said. "I thought, wha t
should you do? Just give a basket
once a year? I went back to the
(Parent·Teacher Association) and
told them we should do more."
She's coilected toys, food and
Clothing for families in the southw·
est Ohio school district every year
since then, with requests for help
increasing dramatically.
Mrs. Miller draws from a fund
supplied by the Mtlford PTA to buy
clothes for children, but she relies on
donations and volunteers to fill other
requests. Even Milford students

Researchers say
more time needed
·f or cancer study

at judge's suicide ·

Cleland advances
in Jr. Olympics
Tracy Cleland, 16, son of Earl and
Je.an Cleland, formerly of Meigs
County. has advanced to the Grand
National .Junior Olympics competl·
tlon to be held at San Antonio, Texas,
on Dec. 15.
Tracy, a junior at Heritage Hills
High School In Lincoln City. Ind., ran
in the Evansville, Ind., 15-16 age
group competition for secttonals in
cross country racing. He placed
second thus -advancing tq the state
meet heldatHighland, Ind. There he
placed 11th advancing bim to
Region VI competition. Region VI
competition covel'S the top 15ineach
of six states. Tracy finished lOth in
that meet and now advances to the
Grand Nationals at.San Antonio.
He resides with his parents in
Chrisney, Ind. He is the grandson of
Mrs. Mae Cleland of Racine and A.
L. Phelps,Jr.,ofWestCo!umbla, W.
Va.

MONDAY
POMEROY - Heath United
Metbodlst WO!nen wtiJ meet
Monday, 7:30p.m .• at the horne
of Emma Kay Clatworthy with
Juanita Bachtel in chwge of the
program . Jean Ann Bra,dbury,
Ernlly Sprague, Maxine Philson
and Scotty Hayes wtU serve as
hostesses.
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
International Order of Job's .
Daughters. will meet at 7 p .,m.
Monday at the Middleport Masonic Temple. Council members ·
are to meet at 6:30p.m.
·RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will have its annual
Christmas dinner party at the
Crew's Steak House; Monday, at
6 p·. m. A business meeting and
program with a gift exchange
will be held at the home of Mrs.
Vernon . Weber following the
meeting.

RACINE - Reg\llar meeting,
7: 30 p .l)l. Tuesday of Racine
MasonlcLodge461,F&amp;AM.Open
installation of offieers; all rna·
sons and guests invited.

BURN VICfiM - Tiffany Wisecarver, two, of Dresden In photo
taken before she was badly burned in a lire In her bedro(lm Thursday.
JJer parents hope she can be transferred to a Boston hospital to undergo
a new test·tube skin grafting procedure. (AP Laserphoto) .

RAQNE- The annual Christ·
mas party of the Racine Firemen
Ladles Awciliary will be held in
the firehouse annex, 7· p.m
Tuesday. Firemen are invited to
the dinner. A business meeting
with election of officers w111 be
held following the party .•

Child's staius still uncertain
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The blaze.
status of a 2-year-old girl who
Vanesaldthere'sonlya10percent
suffered burns over88percentofher chance of survival for victims of
body remained upintheairaftershe such burns.
Her parents. Barry and Donna
developed complications that pre·
ventedher plannedtransfertodayto Wisecarver, hoped that the new
treatment a t would improve those
a Boston hospital..
Dr. Dennis Vane, chief resident In odds. ·
· pediatric surgery at Children's
Mrs. Wisecarver said her daugh·
Hospital. had hoped Tiffany Wise·
ter Is alert and can nod her head ·
carver of Dresden could be 'sent to when .spoken tO. "She's a fighter,"
the Shriner's Burn institute. She she said.
wastobeexamlnedtodeterrnlnethe
Earlier this year. the Shriner's
possible benefot of a new test-tube Institute introduced the test-tube
skin-grafting method. It involves
skin·graftlng procedure.
But a nursing supervisor at
taklngcellculturesfromsklnthatis
Children's . Hospital said Sunday
not burned and growing them in a
that the transfer would not occur
laboratoryintosheetsofskin.
today"becauseofserlouscomplica· , - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - tlonsfrom theburns.".Sheremained '
In critical condition .

--

POMEROY - AuxUiary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
have its annuat holiday par)Y
Tuesday at 6 p.m. in the
cafeteria. The
. meat will be

.

Model 501·:1:5F

Model TC-llG

POMEROY- Bosworthcouil-"
46, ~. and Pomeroy

·en

Chapter80.~. VVedneSday,7

..

Refrigerator

Mo6tl1 l M-800,

ALL

TtAII'GA-100,

SAll
PIICED

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

$75 011 ~ U- 1120

SSO on Modek RR-1010, RR-910, RR..10

Buy a qualifying Amana appliance shown above, get a U.S. Savings Bond
worth $100, $75 or $50 depending on the model you select. Hurry, offer
good between November 19 and December 31, 1984 only at participating
authorized Amana retai_iers. Regloler lo Win Amana Microwave
Stop in. Look for .the Amana Christmas Bonus Tags and Savel .

· INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY IN(.
992-263"5

MIDDLEPORT
THRU CHRISTMAS

t

What could ~sibly be better
than Shoneys All-you-care-toeat Breakfast Bar? How about
more items than ever before
at a great low price. Wake up
to breakfast at Shoney's.

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

Consumer Reports

Methanol makes higher octane fuel

By the EdltDn
of Conswner Report&amp;
'Adding methanol - · or wood
alcohol - to gasoline Is . an
inexpensive way to make a higheroctane motor fuel. That's because
methanol is cheaper to produce
than gasoline. Unleaded premium
fuel made with methanol may be a
few cents cheaper per gallon than
straight premium gasoline.
.
However, Consumer Reports'
editors say that the disadvantages
of a methanol·gasollne'blend could
far outweigh! any saving In price.
Several years ago, Arco ·iittroduced a · mixture called Oxinol gasollnEl mixed with a 5().50 blend of
methanold and t-butyl alcohol (the
methanol and !·butyl alcohol blend
together make
9.5 percent of the

•

fuel ).
Critics of the mixture claim that
such blends can cause hard start·
ing, stalling, lower fuel economy,
and potentially serious damage to
the fuel' system. However, Area
maintains that proper formulation
eliminates such drlveability
problems.
.
When pure methanol Is added to
gasoline, It can damage plastic,
rubber, and even m etal parts In the
fuel system. Pure methanol also
combined readily with water that
has condensed In the gasoline. The
corrosive mixttve can ·separate
from gasoline -lowering its octane
number - and settle to the bottom
of a car's gas tank.
Adding t-butyl alcohol helps the

MIDDLEPORT - ·The Mid·
dleport Amateur Gardeners wtU
meet at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Walter Crooks,' 8
p.m. Mrs. Dan Thomas and Mrs.
'Grace Pratt will be co-hostesses.
There wlll be a gift exchange.

TifURSDAY
POMEROY -The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet at 7: 30
Thursday night at the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings
and Loan Co.

gas In their cars. Check your
fuel be somewhat more tolerant of
owner's
manual to see what is
water. But Consumer Reports'
recommended for your.car.
editors say that yol! can:t always be
U you're now using a methanol
sure that a gasoline-alcohOl blend
blend, and you're not sure whether
has been mixed and stored prop·
It is appropriate for your car, the
erly.. Improperly mixed blends
editors suggest switching back to
could · cause poor driveablllty and
straight gasollne. And lf you 're not
damage a cffr's fuel system .
sure what's In a fuel , use a brand
Although Arco' s own quality
that you know Is methanol·free.
control may be above reproach, the
(For a special reprint of Consufuel is also suppltea to Jdbbers and
mers
Union's evaluation of car
wl&lt;olesalers who bien~ lt with other .
safety,
send $1 for ech copy to
brands of gasoline . the more
CONSUMERS,
P .O. Box 461, Radio
companies that handle the blend,
City
Statton
.
New
York, NY 10019.
the greater the c h ance for
Be
sure
to
ask
for
the reprint on
mistakes.
"
Which
cars
do
best
in crashes?")
The major car manufacturers
Send
your
questions
to: From
don't all agree on the use of
Consumer
Reports,
care
of this
m ethanol. Some manufacturers do
prohib.
newspaper
.
Volume
of
mail
not recommend the use of methanol
its personal r eplies.

~ta Sigma Phi

chapter holds meeting

The March of Dimes Mothers' the chapter Tuesday night at' the
March In MJddleport and Bradbury home of Mrs. A.R. Knight. The
wlll again this year be carried out couple's Christmas party " was
by the XI Gamma Mu Chapter of discussed 'and it was noted \hat the
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
: . m embers' gift exchange dinner
Plans for the march 'to be held In· party wUl be held at 7:30 p.m . on
January were inade a t a meeting of oec: 18 at Sebastians .

MiddleMIDDLEPORT port Lodge 363 F &amp; AM will meet ·
Wednesday at?: 30p.m. to install
officers for the . coming year. .
Installing officer will be R.W.
Daniel M. Evans, District Deputy Grand Master. Refreshments will be served.

-

happe~ings

Chester

invitation was given to
members from ethe Ohio Eta Phi
cha pter to ]oin In a dance at the
Senior Citizens Center Saturday
night. A cookie and candy'sale was
held a nd plans made for special
reme mbrance projects during the
holiday season. Carol Crow had the
cultural program. A birthday gift
was presented to Mrs. Knight.
Johanna Shuler and Dee Spencer
were hostesses.
·
An

Mrs. Opal Eichin,ger were Mr. and
By Clarice Allen
David Neuman, Gallon, and Jane' Mrs. Charles Eichinger and Susan·
Neumah, Columbus, vlsited re· nah . Miss Laura Eichinger, Colum·
cently with their ~andmother. bus , Mr. and Mrs . Don Eichinger
• Mrs. Ethel Orr . Mrs. Orr then and Tiffany, Tvppers Plains, and
Open
accompanied them to Raleigh, N.C. Mr. and Mrs . Dennis Eichinger,
·Jason Freeker
for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Krls and Michelle. local.
Poiruet~as · Po"od &amp; Hanging Bcpbtt
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen spent
Neuman.
Foliage Plants - Potted &amp; Hanging a.,.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of • the weekend In Westerville with Dr.
letts. Christmas (actu&lt;, African Violots.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul and B11ly Allen, Katie and Bobby .
Chr~tmos Trees, Wr.. tiK, Grave Blan·
Jason Frecker recently celeMrs. Lydia Berry and Mrs.
Mark were Mr. and Mrs . Rick Gaul
kots.
Candle Arrangements. Homemade .
brated his fifth. birthday at the ' and Audra, Pomeroy, David Gaul, Audrey Rowan . Belpre. were re·
Appte
Butter &amp; other novMties.
home of his parents, Rodney and
Athens, Mrs . Evelyn Gaul, Mr.' and cent visitors of Denzel Cleland .
Open Daily 9 to 5
. Moha Frecker, Peach Fol'k Road,
Mr. and Mrs . Roy Christy spent
Mrs. John Wickham, Mr. and Mrs.
Sun . 1
5
Pomeroy .
Warden Ours and Gwen Barton, • two weeks wilh Mr. and 'Mrs. Don
PHONE
992
·5776
A H. Man cake and other refresh· . local.
Matlack, Lake Worth, Fla,
ments were served. Attendlngwere
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clay . and ,--------~----'------:------­
Earl and Lelah Frecker, Uoyd and
children, Saline, Mich., were wee·
Eva King, Jason's grandparents.
kend guests of Mr. aild Mrs. Ronnie
and Ivan Carman, Brian King,
Clay. Todd and Suzanne.
Melanie Dillard, Phll King and
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beat,
Jason's sister. Amy F;'recker.
Pomeroy Route, were ·Thanksgiv·
Sending gifts were his great- · lng dinner guests "or Mr. and'Mrs.
grandparents, Ralph and Sadie
Kirk Chevalier and daughters.
Carl, and Brill King, Elizabeth
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Carman, Bob and Mildred Bowen,
Served with whipped potaloes, chicken
gravy . cole slaw . hot roll. butter &amp; coffee .
and Lila Carman.
Sorry. no substitutes except beverage with
Winners of door prizes at the
additional pric!.
Christmas open house of The Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy , were Kate J arrell,
Pomeroy; John Conley Jr., Middle·
PH . 992-5432
OH.
port; Ruth Moore. Pomeroy, and
Cindy Brown, P omeroy.

Hubbard's Greenhouse
NDw
FDt
Christmas $emn

Frecker birthday

to

$3.25

.Winners named

DofA

'

Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Roberi Sanders, Tuppers
Plains, and the paternal grandpar·
ent"s are Mr..and Mrs. Tommy
Simmons, Route 1. Mtddleport.' The
twins are the ftrst chlldreil for Mr.
and Mrs. stnunons.

A party In observance of the 78th
birthday anniversary of Mrs. Mae
Lynch, Langsville. was held recently at the Langsville Church
fellowship room .
.
A program on the church a ctivi· ·
ties ofMr,;. Lynch was given by Carl
Gorby, followed with comments of
tribute to her by those atdtendtng.
Refreshments were served.
Attending were Pastor and Mrs.
Robert Musser, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Musser and ohlldren, Hilda Carpen·
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby, Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Janey and children.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur. Musser,
Esther and SaUy Kennedy, Glenna
FettY, .Josephine Stiles, Mr. and
Mrs. Mae Lynch
Mrs. Lawrence carpenter, Joanna
Council, H;utlee Riebel, Beth.
Others presenting gifts to Mrs.
Lynch. ·granddaughter, &lt;Joshua
Lynch were Donna Mo~. Dorothy
Lynch, great·grandson, and J)e.
. Creech, and John· and Kathy
loresM. Surface, daughter·in·lawof
·
the hOnored guest.
· McGuire.

Roush birth _ _ _ _ _ _-:W•shen &amp; Dryen

Paga-7

p.m . at Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Work in the most excellent
master degree.

Lynch birthday

·MON-FRltillllAM
(Except Holidays)
AU~S

WEDNESDAY

,.

Twin sons were born Nov. 14 to
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Simmons,
Tuppers Plains. The Infants have
been namea Thomas and Tyler and
weighed five pounds, 13 ounces and
five pounds,15ounces. respectively. ·

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

Model

..

7: 30 p.m. Tuesday of Racine
Masonic Lodge46l;F&amp;AM. Open
installation of officers; all rna·
sons and guests Invited.

~

1
. -

Model' RCC·1010 &amp;.
l CR·700

'

Simmons announce-twin ·birth

CALL (614) 992-2104
....__.. _ _..,..(3.04) 675-1244

Top Freezer

HARRISONVll.LE - Harrt. sonvtne Senior Citizens w111 have
a blood pressure day from 10
a.m . untU noon Tueiday with
Ferndora Story, R.N., in charge."
Everyone welcome.

Mrs. Thomas T. Simmon, '1.'hcJmas and Tyler

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGI'ST

Ice ' N Water
l:efriserator

turnished and those attending
are to take a covered dish. A $3
gift exchange will be be1d:

I.

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Cooking Centers

I:rom

RACINE .- Regular meeting,

.

Monday, December 10, '1984

·-

TUESDAY ·

.

rhe Daily SeQtinel

The Bend

Calendar

JOHN ·A. WADE, M.D., Inc.

.

· "We don't know what good it does
the (cancerous) tumors to have this
protein- theyjusthaveit," said Ms.
Schumm.
The leader of the team, Thomas
E. Webb, professor of physiological
chemistry at the university and Its
Comprehensive Cancer Center,
said all the blood tests so far are
simply studies of the protein's
relia bility.
He sa id It could be fiveorsixyears
before the test is relia ble e nough to
gain Food and Drug Administration
approval.
, The 3M Co. believes the presence
of the prqtein can be developed into a
quick test for cancer that doesn't
need special equiprr ~nt. The com ·
pany. based in a suburb of St. Paul,
Minn ., ls trying to refine a method
for using the protein to spot the
disease.
Webb said doctors need some kind
of test tha t can root out all kinds of
cancers, not. just specific ones. They
need to be a ble to test pa tients who
have had cancerous growihs removed to see if all the malignancy is
gone, and they need to be able to
screen patients . whose disease
might not he advanced enough to be

-

CINCINNATI (AP) -Associates motel but parked their cars side-bysay they don't understand why side l¥he lot.
Municipal Judge Barry Isaacs,
Ms. Patton also had an S.year-old
known lor his friendliness and
daughter In her car, but the girl
qptlrnlsm; shot a 25-year~ld woman
wasn't injured. IsaliCS opened lire
and then turned the gun on himSelf.
with a .38-callber 1'£'Volver from the
"There is noway to explain this,"
driver's side of his car as Ms. Patton
said George Eyrich, alocaiRepubll·
was Standing by the door of her car,
can Party leader.
Carrelll said.
Isaacs, a R.epubllcan appointed to
A witness ~id the two had talked
the Hamilton CountY Municipal . for about 15 mlilutes before the
Couri bench in 1981, apparently .shot shooting.
.
and seriously wounded Beverly
"There are still a lot of unans·
Patton of Cincinnati ~te Saturday ~ered questiOns," Carre1ll said. ,
night In the parking loi o(a suburban
''Wedon'tknowwhyshewasgetttng
Columbia Township motel.
out of her car If they ,had already
Isaacs, 42, then apparently shot been talking. We don't know why he
himself once in the head, authorttles had the tiaby in his lap."
said. He was found dead in his car,
Isaacs was married with two
holding Ms. Patton's 6-month-old chlldren, ages 12 and 6.
·
unharmed daughter.
He grew up in Cincinnati and
Victor Carre1ll, chief deputy served in the U.S. Navy befqre
sheriff in Hamilton County, said getting his law degree. He taught
authorities didn't know what math in 'Cincinnati public schools
prompted lsaacs to shoot Ms.
and was a pubUc defender before
Patton three times, He said lsal)cs being appointed a Juvenile Courl
and Ms. Pattondidn'tcheck into the referee.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Peo· detected using current methods.
pie who fear they may have
Numerous proteins that are
undetected cancel' can' t expect produced by different kinds of
researchers at Ohio Stat.e Univer·
cancers have been isolated so far,
sity to provide them \\1lh an answer
but Ms. Schumm said the research
just yet .
team believes this is the first that is
Although the researchers think a
common to all cancers.
protein left behind in the blood once
"At least, it's there In all of the
cancerous cells invade the body
m a jor types of cancer we've tested
m ay one day become an early- so far," Ms. Schumm said.
warning system In the detection of
cancer. they say more study Is
The protein also is found in
needed.
embryonic tissue and the amniotic
They can't use the substance fluid of pregnant women, Webb
known as an oncofetal protein- as a
said.
Tiffany was burned when a fire
means of detecting cancer yet
Som e scientists believe that may
broke
out in her bedroom as she
because they remain unsure of its help explain why the protein is also
slept
Thursday.
Her bed and most of
relia bility. br. Dorothy Schumm.
··
present with cancer.
het'
bedroom
were
consumed by the
one of the researchers iJj the team,
said it's possible some conditions . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ , . . ,
might cause the protein to be
present when cancer is not, or vice

versa.

~By

I

have . donated canned goodS and
$2,500 cash for the cause.
"Holidays are eXtra special and
extra hard," she said. •'I assign the
needs of families to a church or
organization to provide the gifts,
Each 'chlld will receive three to four
gifts. The little ones get the toys and
then different organizations buy for
teen·agers."
In addition to presents, each
famtly gets a food llasket with a
turkeyandselecttonsfromthemore
than 3,llXl canned goods sorted and
stocked In the Miller basement by
her husband, Robert.
"We've got baskets in the basement, turkeys In the garage and toys
upstairs," Mrs. Miller said. "Soon
my house will look like Santa's
place. Next week I'll have lOwomen
come in, who've helped before, to
help me pack the baskets."
Just before Christmas, the MJUer
house ends up cluttered with gifts
and food for farnllies thaI. wiU stop
by.
.
" It takesaboutfivedaystomoveit
all out," she said. "Then it'll be a
month of 'ho, ho, hoing' in my sleep.
Maybe I'll rest on Christmas eve,
but I doubt it. Last Christmas eve, I
got a call about a family who lost
their house because of a fire." ·
She said she doesn 'tmind the hard
work and disruption.
"It doesn't deprive m e of any·
thing. I've received a lot more than I
have given," she said. " I think
there's something everyone can do
and they should do it."

.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

meets
recently

PRICES SLASHED ON
ROLL TOP DESKS!

Quarterly birthdays were ob, 'served at the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, held recently at the hall :
Members with bli1hdays were
seated a t a special table decorated
In blue and white with lighted
tapers and a gift at each place. A
decorated cake baked by Jo Ann
· Baum was used on th~e
honorees were Mae Spencer,
Esther Smith, Mary Hayes, ·AJta
Ballard. Ada Bissell, Thelma
White, Ada Morris, · Charlotte
Grant, Sandra White, Eileen Mar·
tin, Mae McPeek, Mary Showalter,
!nzy Newell. and Zelda Weber.
Plans W'ere made for a Christmas
supper on Dec. 18at6: 30p.rn. with a
program and gift exchange to
follow . Nomination and election of
the 1985.pfficers was conducted by
Betty Roush, deputy state councl·
lor. It was reported that Hattie
Frederick Is out of the hospital and
back to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center. Gaye Gaul remains lll.

Enh.llll\' dw

h ,:,IUI\

,,f l •' UI

h. • Jf'l~·

''uh '"ur ,h" '" ' ••1 .m d,.:.m rh

~11k.J Jc·,k b1 !)\11 l:. ~,h '' .1&lt;&lt; &lt;'111&lt; "-i 111rh br.l ''l'l,ll\'~1 h ,uJ\\ ,Ir!' .111J
fi rH,h,.J I l l 0\11\ 11\\ II n 1 Ill. I \!LI ,or , l p r1 &gt;Ill f I\ l h111•h l l1): ' j'Tt '• ,.._, 'h ' I 11'1,.11 &lt;
hMJtl\"'' ,'l td cltJr, tl~t li!\ . t~.Hn't rn:ul\ , -pdl, ,tnd ,f.llll•

A Colonial Desk at
an incredible value.
Savings that c m 't bt- bet~t art'
yours on c hi ~ colon i :::~l dou bl~:
r&gt;~:destal ''S" .::urve roll top Jesk .
This quality .::onstructt!\.1 dt'S k ha~
four ut ility drawers and two fi le
drawers {one lock mg ) and is avai lable in a pine engraved fim sh. Slit'

48x2l x42. Knee.hok opem ng 11:"

Only

'369.95

Refreshments were served by
Faye Kirkhart, Sadie Trussell,
Mary K -Holter, Margaret Tuttte,
and Doris Grueser. Attending the
meeting besides th()S(! named were
Octa Ward, Ethel Orr, Everett
Grant, Dorothy Ritchie, Lora
Damewood, Opal HoUon, Elizabeth
Hayes, Marcia ){eUer. Beulah
Maxey, Pauline .R idenour, Erma
Cleland, Eva Robson, Fern Morris ,
Goldie Fredet .~k and'lva Powe!l.

A Traditional
desk . Affordably priced.
tradin onall r sryled double
pedestal "S" t Uf\ 'C roll tor d..'sk 1s
a\'ail ahle m a beaunful engraved
pecan flnisf' that will add ro vour
ho me's docor. Combined quahrv
and savtngs makes rh1s Jesk w1t h
fo ur utiltrv drawers and t~·o fil e
drawers (o ne locking) a must fm
Th1s

Mr.andMrs.KennyRoush,Route Frank Coleman, and the maternal
4, Pomeroy, are announcirig the great uncle and _a unt are Mr. and
birth of their third chlld, Jeremy Mrs. Paul Tackett, all of Pinson
Allen, born Nov. 13 at the Holzer Fork,Ky. .
Medical Center. The infant weighed ..--.:_--.,----------,----------!
seven pounds, 12 0111\Cei and was 21
inches long. Mr. and Mrs. Roush
have ~o other children, Jason
Albert, five, and Justin Paul, three.'
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and MrS. Allier! Roush. Route 4,
Pomeroy, &lt;md the maternal grand·
ACNE. DISEASES. TUMORS S. CANCERS OF THE SKIN
mother Is Mrs. Myrtle Norman,
"Pinson Fork, Ky. Mllternal great·
(EAGLES BLD'~.)
grandparents are Mr. an(j Mrs.
. 'DR. RIDGWAY
OFFfCE.
POMEROY~
OH ..
,.
.
' ' '

home . Size 48x2lx42. Kn..,hole
'

n pcmn~;

.

Only

OFFICE RELOCATION

J.~.

..' l ..

'349. 9~
. 5 T~

WOOFTER, M.D., F.A.A.D.

· BOARD CERTIFIED DERMATOLOGIST

· WHERE: 224 E. Main St.

N· FURNITURE CO •

.

·WHEN: 2nd &amp; 4th Thursday Mornings
. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL: 992-3380
I

-

2ND STREET

:304 I 773 ·5592

MASON , W.VA .

... - - - -- ---.1

�-~ -

Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Dear Meg

By Meg Whitcomb

!zed, or vert and crtmlnal, hatred of

DEAR MEG- To the "B's," who
are concerned about their 13-yearold son who cam e home from camp
a girl-hater, you said this is a

women Is expressed In vecy real
ways throughout our lives -P.M.,

LIMA,omo.

DEAR P.M.- Let's hope the flip
side of women's liberation Is men's
liberation·- and the freedom to see
members of the opposite sex as
Individuals rather than stereotypes.
But I still say that the 13-year-old
who says "I hate girls" is as normal
as blueberry pie.
DEAR MEG - My husband and
I just g&lt;:&gt;t back from Spain, and we
fought aU the way home. Mayhe
you can dig up an answer for us.
We went to the buiWghts every
night of our vacation. Tom says
bulls can see r ed and that when the
matador waves a red cape at them ,
they become Infuriated. I say that
animals can't see colors and that
everything l ooks the same to them

worry. Girl-hating is only "natural "
in a society that has traditionally
downgraded women. Society denigrates women's Intelligence and
reil!forces the stereotype of the
incompetent woman. All of this Is a
step in the socialization that later
results In woman-hating. Some
claim that disliking girls (and
calling frown women stupid) Is an
Oedipal stage In sexual Identification . However, since girls do not
generally hate boys, perhaps something more Insidious is intended.
Shouldn't we stop perpetuating
the myth of the stupid female?
Whether subtle and institutional-

Chippewa Lake; Beatrice Bentz,
Lancaster; D rexel Hess, Orrville,
Prentice Hess, local.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost

Flora
Navy Sea man Delbert E. Flora
Ill, son of Lucy A. and Debert E.
Flora Jr of Souths1de, W Va. has
completed recruit training at Recrull Training Command, Naval
Training Center, San Diego.

Church Christmas progra~ will
be Dec. 16 at 7· 30 p .m Dorothy
Calaway and Lori Ritchie ar e
leaders.
Mr. and
. Mrs. Clarence Henderson were honor ed on their 45th
wedding anniversary by Mr. and
Mrs Bob Pullins, Michael and

DEAR AMIGOS
Save y our
bets.' I don' t have the answer, but
former New York University
animal psychologist, Thomas Jenkins has. He says experiments have
shown that anlmalsseethingsln the
same shades and colors as we see
them at dusk. And a former
bu!Wghter I know says It 's not the
red that makes the bull mad, but the
fact that the cape Is moving. Purple
pajamas would do the same. Now
please kiss and make up.
Write to Meg care of this
newspaper. She wlll personally
answer only letters that contain
self-addressed, stamped envelopes.
. Questions of general Interest wlll be
discussed In future columns.

The second sU!: weeks grading period honor
aUtheir subjects to be named to the roll were.
F'lrst grad('- John Card, Janna M anuel
Second grade - Grant Circle, Scott Grace,

~h~: E-:~:::~r~l:t :a:~:~

Beth Hysell . Kevin Ihle Shannon Morarll)',
Travts Mugrage, Kendra Norris, Courtney
Roush Jeremy Smi th
Thhd grade- Bet h Clark, Rachel Hensler,

to J am es E . Diddle, Right
of Way, Chester
Dennis E Sergent, Sandra K.
Sergent, SheJWood Collier, Beulah
Mae Collier. Wetzel Bailey Jr.,
Linda Bailey to James E . Diddle,
Right of Way, Salem.
Charles Goeglein, Maxine Goeglein, H Denzel Goeglem, Mabel

J£&gt;nnl Hill. Fll'ddie Matson , Rasch e! Rowe,
Brand! Mallorv. Michael Van M eter
FoUM h grade - Heather Hill, J uUe HUI.
NlkkJ Ihlc, 'l)son Mugrage, Eddie Sawyer s
Firth grade - Kellit&gt; E rvin. Chad Granen

RITn~ur

Andy Hill, J a~ Holter, Oavkl lhle, Robin
Manuel, Trevor Petrel. Jenny Varney
Six th grade- Jason Circle. J amxl Circle

Shannon Counts, Jenny Damron, John
Hoback. Mell.ssa Justis Co lin Maidens,
Norman Matson, Jennlfer SmHh, Angel

Snider, Jan Williams, Sh&lt;'IIY Winebrenner,

'

ca n' t t Clk r~ a~~o .t ~ or h1dP t hP t. lon
. Of praiS&lt;'S duPto Hravpn's Ki ng
All that COITI('S 11. 1th nC'w day da\\nlng,
And th e for1unr II \VIII bri ng
Pain to somr. and grief to otht&gt;I'S,
\\'hUE.' lu m any joy sublime
KnQY.'ing as I h(' da v p rogresses,
The c hancr Is th&lt;'re. -great height s to climb
By Ol(ln D Han tson, 39701 G&lt;lld Rid~&lt;' Rd .
Pomeroy

PO\tER DlSPLA YEO
leaves .!ilill wet ~A1th mornlng d&lt;'w,
Llkf' diamonds spat kif' t•vf&gt;rvu.ht•rt•
But soon ,..1th warmth of mor·ning sun,
Will disappear \o\e know not "hrJt•

And as' ruvs of Jlght, Ilk&lt;' fl n~crs reac h,
Thost&gt; rlarkt&gt;nrd corners hid from v!w.•
All God's creat ures wtl l stir agatn,
To sta rt another day anrw

And wtth th£' passi ng of the morning hours,
For some. "hat daylight has in S10rf'
11 not accompliShed y{lt t003y,
Whe n tomorrow com C'S, wi ll try once more
SOWING TODAY
PI E'C ious mr mcni~
Of things known
From seeds of kindness
We have sown
Are l asting thoughts
D:&gt;wn through th{l yt&gt;ars
of wh!ch
Have caused some tears.

some

those thoughts

A l~ ca n11o t

But fros t and wi nd have done thelf job.
And left bea u.ty yet to Sff'
•
Some t'cd , some brown. some a golden hue,
Can put a ralntx&gt;w muc h In shtlme.
Stil l some st ay their Vf'lvety gre£&gt;n.
And fall to th&lt;' ground thr sa mr The trPes, their branches all barren and
blt&gt;ak,
LikP gt.Jst s on a moon lig ht nlght
Will sl and throu~h winter m onth.c; ah(lad,
Ot'ckf'd with snQ\1., so clean and white
Ttl s p rin~ and the warmt h of su n and 1 aln,
Will chan,ge the fOrC'Sts so bare
Will b1 inj.! back ~aut y now lost to thl&gt; &lt;'YP,
Leavi ng on(', m an C'.tnnot compare

By Olen D Harrison, 39701 Gold RJdg{' Rd
Poml'tO)
God i\nswen Prayer
Time moves on wtth no regard
Days and months tum into years.

A

-··-··........
·--

Horton
Air National Guard David M .
f Dewey M . and
n of 285 S. Third
port, has graduated
alnlng at
r Force Ba , Texas.
e six weeks of training

The heart ls full, the mind is clear.
Desires wt&gt; let slip by,
But gl ad each day to serve a Lord,
Or let Him kno.,., we try

"fi:!~~

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF GRACE M .
JONES, DECEASED
Cue No. 24832 Dod!ort 12

Pao449
NOnCE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

H

Jones

Box

'534

Pomeroy Ohro 45 769. was
appo tnted Adrnn tstrator of the
estate of Grace M Jones

deceased

late of A 0

2

Pomeroy Ohro 45769
Robert E Buck

And as {lach day draws to a c~.
We pray a si mple prayer
To thank Him lor the things we have,
And the Ufe He lets us share.

Lena K Nesselroad
Clerk

112) 10 17 24 3tc
Public Notice
ORDINANCE
NO. 1149-84
An OrdinlfKlO to provide additional com-'ion for village
81!1~ for 1984.
Be rt o rdatned by the Councrl
ol the Vr llage of M rdd lepon as
follows
,

Sec. I. That for the year 1984
the Vrll age shall pay each
full trme employee rn the actrve
employment as of December
I 5 I 984 1n addrtron to all ot her
salary and fr1nge beneftts heret ofo re provtded the sum of One
Hundr e d Ftlty Do l l ars
(S 150 00) as add lttonal salary
Sec II. Th at be tt further
orda1ned that the Vrllage shall
pay each par \-lime employee 1n '
the act1ve employment as of
December 15 1984 tn add r
tton to all other salary and fnnge
beneftts heretofo re prov1ded
th e sum of Seventy-live Dollars
~ s 7 5 00) as addl! tonal sala ry
Sec. Ill. Th1 s Ordrnance shall
take effect and bern force from
and after the earltest date as

Pas sed the 26th day of
Novem ber 1984
Carl H o rky
Prestdent of

Counc rl
Attest

JOn Buck:

Clerk
11211017 2rc
Public Notice
Nonce OF
SAlE OF BONDS
BIDS wr ll be re

CPtVI~d

t)y ltlP Ur1rlf!1StQ ilf)c1
Trfl.r SLuf't ot thf' 13onrd o f
E f l ~t &lt;'. 11t ft n ot tllP M1w1s l ocJt

Printed Pattern

How He lets be an example,
To otlt(lrs along the way
To show the way to salvatiOn,

And tile joy ' twW bring eac:ll day.

And the prayers, for those that we love,
We know w\11 all come true.
Because H(l saktll we would ask,
There Is notl1lng He wouldn't do.

We'll try today
se«is to SOW
By Olen D Harrtson, ll701Gold RJdge Rd ,
Pomeroy
SEASON CHANGE
'Tis time of the year for leaves to tum,
Some reluctant to leave the tree

And If you dld the beSt you could,
With things you round at hand
Or cast aslde tram troubled mind
What you did not understand .
U these, and aU the problems faced,
W(l have kept within our stride.
There would be no doubt or quesUon,

But thai we had met a nd tried

- By Olen D Harrison, Pomeroy.

nme

and Effort
The thin~?:&gt; I 've always longed to do,
With time that's passing fast

Sees everything accomplished now
Each one could be the last
For time we know will never stop,

To help those things come true.
So huny up and don't get caught,
With so much more to do.

lloWeNeedHolp?
As we view a neighbor In d1stress,
What is It that we 00?
Aie we what he pictured us to be,
A friend that's tried and true?

And thOugh 'we're sometimes far away,

A chance to dlll from out ~ the put,
What mce to us wu real.

The feeling sill!

And

~

there.

For dlstance Jllllkes no dtfference,
When we're still so close In prayer

- By Olen D Harrison, Pomeroy

grov.•

N('W

With the coming of each day

Memories, Uke lewels In a tre8Bure chest,
Burled deep lR the sand to by
Are thoughts tmlle&lt;ldeil tn rur mind,
Wttl1a hope to re-Jive oome day.

Ufe'o Arnbllloa
A mind so clwded with troubles,

A heart so full of pain,
Makes one stop and wonder
U life was Uved in vain.
U through the pa&amp;'!llng of tllf' years,

You failed along the way.

But holll'!l you could do better

~

we could, tee... a tll'e1&lt;r thought,

I wonder how' we would feel?

To be able to have, to take port apln,
In things, time once cla1med were gone.
Wltl1 a qulckelllng of heart, and a fond ray of

rope.

Unlike memories. are thoughts dwelt upon.
We see them again, as they once were to us,
Or maybe change them a ~~ U we oould.
But Juditnl all olher!l, the way !hat l feel ,
Would you want to re-Uve them? I would.
- By Olen

D Harrison, Pomeroy.

centum

11 0%)

pP. r
I

Jnnum

1985 anrl

semmannually tllP.fi"Jtte r on thP.
1st day o f J tmP. ami thr.&gt; 1 st day
of December at e;Jch year and
m'!lltnnq S60 000 on De
c embP.r 1 o f ead1 yea r frarn
1986 IO 1990 lllCI USI\IP
Any one dr:srMq to rio so tnil\
pr~ " ~e nt a b1d or btflS l or SJtrl
bond s b. iSP.d upon thetr bt' JI
1ng J rlttiP.H'I\1 rdtr. ot tn !Arflst
lr orn l hat hPrPrn.::tbove SDf!Ct
ll e&lt;l prowiP.d th,1t whArP. .J
fracti onal ltli PrP:il r Ue rs btrl
~t r Ch lr ar tmn ~11::111 lw
OllP
ntflhth of om~ per u•ntr Hn ot .1
111ltlttpl P. lllP.ff\01
Bo th l)ll tKtprr( ilrt1 l ttlt Pr f's t rnl
sa 1rl ho nds are P•W.Jhll' lro m
rrnlrrnt tP.rl l .l xPS Prt tlCipdl u l
S&lt;:llrl honds rs pJyClble at thP
p t lllCtpdl u lfu;e o l th P paytntJ
.Jf)Cnt herernaftf'r natrHYi and
rnteresr tS payJhiP hy c h P.r; k
rnatiPd to the reqtstered ownr;r
tw thP hond r ~fJIS ! r&lt;Jr dllrl
trJn Si f! l rtqenl het Pina lt e r
l&lt;tl tWd Wt1hOIJ1 dt&gt;du '!t Oll lOt
1ny Pxchanqe co lh'l 11 011 o r
~~&gt;rvu P char qfl
Cnn tt;-. 1 Tru~!
COt np.::tn~
Muir!IPno rt
Oht o
will (lr.t ,1s r('~ts t rar tr. Jns fcr
aqf'nl hP,rem,l ltP.r n unt=&gt;d w1t11·
Ott! dP-Citrctt On lor Qny Px
C hdllr]f' coii PCI!tlll Of :if'I\IIC.('
t. h.tt(! O Cr.n tr 1l lrt t::i t Cor 11
nJnv Mr dd lr port O hto wil l o1c1
J'5 reqrw 11 tr , , n sh~ t aqf!n t .:tnd
tJ,tyltlq ,l'l ent lo r thiS tssue
Orn~tn o l rf!q ts lr J tton llll rl Slrh5f'
Qw)n t tr .lnslflrs wrll hA .1 t no
r.n::; t to the honrl holrlf!r
1 he SP bOil(fS ilfe IS!=;ur.&gt;rl for
thP. nurpnse of 'mprovflmfln ts
rtcmo var rons .1nct JC1 fl rti 0 11S 10
school 1.11 tlt ltPs 111rl pt uvr dmq
l'Yl lJ pmcn t
l rrrn tShl n'l::;
ond
';ttf1 ll llJ)IOV1° 11l Pn !S lllldf'l i.:l ll
tll Ortty fl l !Ill' qr~rlf:fi111CJW &lt;:; Oll hf'
S t~!l' ul Oh•o p.tf!tcul Hl v thP
Untlmm Oond lnw of the Ohrn
RI'Vt sml CoriA try VJr tue IJI thP.
lf"( ttii Sitf&gt; !WltOrt!y Vntf! Of thr.
"lr&gt;qors o f s&lt;1rrl school rlrstrtc t
,11 thP P. I P.t~ tton hrld on No
vP nll)(lr 6 1984 Jnrl pu r suam
10 n rr.so lu l to rl of satd bourci o f
l)d1JC1!10n dulv ado pted on
NovPmhr. r 20 1.9R4
ThP SP. bon d s w tll bP. awilrdml
to lhfl 11tdrler whose hrcl
pt nc htCf!5 thl' IOWf'St ne t tll fef f'SI
( o st
to thE'! hoa rd o f
Prlll( al to n ne t n)lflfP. ~ t c.os ! to
hP d•"IP.f m 1nerl by rlt&gt;duc l rnq
!lw dll iOtHi t ot nnt piAmrum
o f!N r d !ron• t he &lt;JQf)tff11liP.
amotlll t o t tn !PrAs! nnY. 1bl ~ on
thP..._ bon d s from thl' dJtP. o f thf!
!S§ IIfl :lS .1 b0Vf! St.:IIBS. 10 thP.
sP.vf!r,ll mrlltrrr tv rlatP.s .JI thr.
rnlr· spec 1fted tn the btd No hr rl
fo r l(·o;s than th P. pm v ahtf! o l all
rhr• hu nrls Qt! Prcrl ~P. r P hy plus

b~ S t S ) l ll th P. cl 11fl

Of

Oe l1very will be en tertatnP.&lt;I
ami thP tJrtht ts reservM ro
rc1( cl &lt;~nv and al! htd s If ear h o f
1wo or rno rf! btd s prorl t~CP.~ the
lowr:st n(l t tntercs! cost thP.
l)o nds may h n JwarrlP.d on s uc h
o ne o f saui hi do; ilS rs ch osen by
lot
Each brd mus t be acca moan
ter t lly cash a han k r ns htf'f s or
· offtna l s r: h0ck o r &lt;1 cr-&gt;rtlf 1Ar1
C~P. &lt; k
n o t riru wn upo n or
cen rf1P.d hy the hrrlr!Pr o r any
r.n rnbrna tt on thP.rftol !JiJYill)le
to thP order o f s;mt bo a•&lt;l ot
ec1ucnlron tn the arnoun l of onP.
pP. r c;P.ntum o f th e .Jrno u n l n l
bonds betnq c;old upon conrtt !ro n th:Jt 1i thP. t)l(l tS acr:G PtrYI
th ~ lf l'il SI IH"! fJ f S, tld lm,Hd Ol
ect 1tC.1110n wtll clcl tvP.r th e b on d s
tO th e SI JCCP.'&gt; Sf ul l urlt/Pr Wlthtn
th trl y (f,1ys from th r. dltl c o f sniP.
torp--' thPr wt th the usqal rle ltvP.ry
n.:~ w~rs no {lrbt trilgr! certd rr.ate
a nd n f'(HnpiAte Cf3 rTifred tr ans crr pt r tf the prnr:;r!P.dlnl) s show·
tnq th f! llonrls 10 h.:lvA l)f!l\ll
lt~ q(tlly tSS ited and the btrlc/ P. r
w1 11 rRCfl tve an d pay to r such
bond s as rnJV bP. tssr terl as
above set fo rt h SJt(l CJS h o r
r.hr.d or co m lm1atton the repi
to be returned promptl y at the
•equest o f th e success ful
htdder tl the bonds nnd tra ns ·
r rrpt s are no t dflltverect Wt th rn
th e It me speclft ed hrretn

sue

Re-JJvtnc- PMI

nenorntn&lt;Jt ton o f ~ 5 000 o r Jny
1r1tegri.ll multtp le therr.o l bear·
1nn tn terAst at th e rene of t en pfH

360 d.ty

Jason Sha in, Ch~ Stobar t, M atlhcw
Swartwout
Spec Ed - Michelle McDani(ll, Jerri
Richards
·

May we keep wr troubles to ourselves,
DJ our suffering deep inside.
Until our conscience, showing deep concern.
Lets oor CM'n ~lt trow we tried.
, - By Oleo D: Hfll'l'lson, Pomeroy.

prmctpa! nmount of S 300 000
(1&lt;~ted ':January 1 1985 n 11rl1
ber~d frorn 1 ttPtv~Hrl o f the

ilr:c r ttf!d tr t! HrP5! fwhtch tn tnr€s1
sh.rl l hn ( Oll\Pli i P.d
on a

Slxlh grack&gt;- J ol}&amp;:Bames, Thomas Hill ,

.

Otstrrct
County of
Metgs Oh to unttl 12 00 noon
at the then prevatlrnq local
standard trme 1n Oh10 on Wed nesday Dec em be r 19 1 98 4
a! whtr:h ttme and place the
brc1 s wrll be publtcly o p r:n~d
and r ead fo r th e pur c hase o f
Sc hool Improvement Bonds ot
satd board of educm ron m the

The \)o nd s wilt \)P dnlrvArP.&lt;I

lor payme nt Wt lht n the Strtt P. o l
Ohr o 10 the su ccP.sslul htdde ror

Lone seams shape a new lrt
and flow for the one dress that
can make a season Pure flatlety
tn crepe, lmen or a kMit- ptdure
tt rn whrte, black. a potent pastel.
Prrnted Patlern 4940· Mtsses
Sr ze~-8,

10, 12, 14, 1~. 18, 20
Stze 12 (bust 34) takes 3 118

1ards 45-mch labnc.

$2.75 hlr uch Plfln. Ad. sot
hlr . uch plltlllt Ill pclllap
attd lllntfllna. Settd 11:
An111 Adams Plltlms
Rudlr lloD

-t 3 l

The DaUy Sentinel

243 W.l 11 $~ In YR, NY
10011. Print tutiiE, ADOIUS,

ZIP, SIZE, ood Snll IIUIIBU.

NEW FALL-WifHER PATTERN
CATALOG for clever wome~ who
enjoy saVIng money as much as
weartng beautrlul clothes Over
JOO success styles, Free Pattern
Coupon Send $2 for Catalog

to c1 bank ch•s•anated by the
SUCCflSSftr1 b rdrl er at thP. C)(
pense of sa1d board ol educa ·
tr on und th e expen::;e o f Sl !Ch
deiMHY Wtll not be cons 1rl f! rHd
1n
det P. rmtnrng the htghASt
btdclr:H for th e bond s D e!IVfHy &lt;H
any o th t;n p lace shall be at the
request and e)(pense o f the
ptJrchnsR r Paymflnt l or the
bond s must be made by the
pt.t rcha se r m Federal funds o r
o the r lunds avarlahle lor rmme
dtate credtt on the d a te o f
delivery

THANKS

to the businesses who
him previously placed
an ad in the Southern
High 5&lt;hool yeailook.
Any bu'siness
trons ,who
like to
contad
at

or pawould

an ad,
Dud-

Perfect Family Gift
"Affordable
~
•Portable
0 Therapeudic
.
0 Relaxtng
"Indoor-Outdoor Use

Round Pltasure
"Specwllnrroductory

*Year

Prl('(' .' l"

BLACKWOOD
HOME SPAS

Pomeroy, OH.
Call 915-310~
11 / 121 1 mo

- Public Notice
provt d P. tnr tlr• ~ p !r 'l ttnfl 1 t thr
!Jond s w lu r h w tll II II'P ! '11111!-'d
thf"IP\)1\ lht ' I0XI 01'; ttrl 111111 0 \i
tn q Of)lllt Oil
It tS nn t tnlt, 10 11 1r1 !ha t
CUSIP ulf'nliLtt til t'" IHrm l)(' r&lt;;
'\vtll br Drut tN l l)tl 'ict td h&lt;llld ')
Thr lllt1'&gt; w ill 1&gt;1 (0/l&lt;., dt &gt; rt~d
,mrl .1r tf'tf ltnnn It d tTl•' • Hit ! n l
5.11d ()(l ,trd uf N l111 ,tl 111 0 11 \1)8
rl ti P n f &lt;; 1i•' 01 v\tlh tn ! h!f'l' 11)
dJys lhPr'• tll r t
Upurt lt ltllu ctl t Hl irt ' ll l Hty
nrosp&lt;'t trvr• htdcl&lt;'r tot thR

1
CHIISTMAS
SALE •
- 'Clubs....................... IS-ISO
Pullen ..:................ 15.130
Bags ...................... '11-'30
Head Covors .......: ••• '6-'11
GIOVII .......................•3-'7
lolls..................... •l -'1.50
5ftoes .................... I30-1SO
Grips ReplcJ&lt;ed ••..•t~.l2. 50

KEN'S

APPLIANCE
SER~ICE
98$-S561

All Mtlru

•Washers •Dishw~ahera
•Ranges
•Refrlgeretors
•Dryers •Freez..ers

JOHN TEAFOID

or

Will do all types of excavating, landscaping,
basements, sewage systems, water &amp; gas lines,
water well drilling and
se!Vice, trucking (limestone &amp; dirt).

843-5424

.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL . SAND
TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT
L - - - - - - - • 1 0 Bile

Call: 742-2407

12 6-1 mo

Ln1 il l
Sr.hool Q,strt c t
6/ 1 S Th1r d $1r(!P1
M tdrl iPpflf l Oh t() A 57 60

A.M.
CONSTRUCTION

Wo'd lrke to mtroduce you to
Engage-A- Car .'th~ modern way
to drtve the veh1cle of your

*Backhoe ·
*Dump Truck

ctlmce

No Down Payment .
Lower Monthly Payment

*Septic Systems
*Coal &amp; Limestone
*Bonded &amp; Licensed
Phone: 742-222S
or 742-2167

BLACKSTON
' NEW CAR &amp;
' TRUCK LEASING
. 801(, 326

Pomeroy, OH . 45769
For Faster Servtu

· Call 614-992-6737

1111211 mo

THE QUALITY

PRINT SHOP

Fot AD

THANK YOU

We wisl to extend our sincere
thlrtlts to 011r rtlllives. friends
lftd noi(ltbo,., for all thetr kindness II the time ot t~e dellh of
Joll1 V. Wippel (Vrc). OUI thanu
to 011r Pestor. Msct. Anthony Gi.,....,., Fllher Joltrl F. Wippel, Fethtr Poul Weirton, ond
llqr. GooriiJI R. Coyne, tor the
beeut~ulllfHf rmprossrvelunonl
SIMCO.

Thana olso to the Ewins Funnl Home, Mrs. Phylhs
Hodlll, orpnist, ltiCI Tom
Golll, tor hrs -ice. Also for
the buirt~ul florll ollllini!J,
muses. pnyers 111d cards. and
allllflo called, Df usisttd in any
WIJ.
Our appreciotlon ond thanks
to the mony oti&amp;hbor lodres
ond friends who prepared and
served lho delicious dinner.
Final~, wowrsh toutend our
deep patittrde to oar dear
friends lftd ntllltbot1, llf1o providtd tnnsprrrlltion lot Vte,
dunn&amp; the post few rnonlt!s
mokina rt pon1blo for him to en:
joy life IS USUit, until God called
him homo. Yourltindntls shall
nl'ltr be tor10Hert.
Sinettey,
The
family

54 Misc. Merchandise

HOM ELITE
CHAIN SAW
Ftefo'J ·$pieltfl
ON SALE AlE
SUPEI 2-14"

240-16"
240..:...18"
1150
lEG. PIKE SJ ...95

s. Prig $219''

MGM FARM
·CITY
INC.·
,.."d,, otilo

y,., Pllnflrlg W

Plus:
Offne · supphtl &amp; furnitvrt,
Wtdd•ng and Graduation Statlonl!ry, A\ag.fettc Signs, Rub·

Real Est8te General

l ;-------=:--=::-1

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Computerized Heanng Air Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

liSA M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
·417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

(free Ettimetes)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge shotauns
Only
'

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

992-6215 ., 992-7314

Middleport, Ohio
1·1lttc

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

10/4/tfc

TROMM EXCAVATING
•LAND CLEARED
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•UMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS

Buying Coins.
Antiques. Glassware. Furniture.
Ston-e Jars. Etc.

PH. 742-2328

949-2801

LOST. hmale Bo•er fown

with whitt color Loa Thur1 .

Lost three foJC hounds, 2

l i\IOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB -

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

YES Open all Wtnter. Saturdays 8t Sundaya .·Christmas
savings on tools. electron-

ice. housewares.

glasawere,
and collectables. Always
fresh baked •goods and produce Free treetl for the
children G•ll1polia Flea
M•rket, former Thaler Ford
Building, next to Froths, Rt

35 9 Rt. 160 Call 4467037
Auct1on every Friday nrght at
the Hartford Commun1ty
Center Truckload s of nriw
merchandiSe every week .
Con•igmentl of new &amp;: used
merchandise always wei·
comed . Richard Reynolds,
Auctioneer Call 304 -275 -

3069

WHEN THE MMY HOURS OF HUNT
lNG FINALlY PAY OFf WITH THAT
SPECIAL DEER. REWARD YOUR Ef

REMEMBER.
TRUST YOUR
TROPHY ONLY

FORTS WITH A QUALITY LIFE LIKE
SHOULOEA MOUNTATOUASTUOIO

TO A PROfESSIONAl
TAXID£RMIST BRING

EAOi MOUNT IS GIVEN tHE PER

,_...-=---~----t
li1E

SONALAmNnCJN rr D&lt;SEAVES ro
GIV£ YOU A PRIZE TlltmiY THAT
IASTFOAYEARSIINDY£ARS

SHOP

CALl. TO[M'1' FOR CURRENT•PRICfS
ON DEER AHO OTHER, GAME

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

Call 742-3195
Or 992-5875

TAXIDERMY

UJIIA RD
PH

BERRY BASKn

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- DOZERS

Waoted To Buy

6th St., Syracuse
Monday-Saturday
10 AM-5 PM
CLOSED THURSDAY

-SEWER

Open Son, Dec. 9, 16, 23
12-lr PM
Open By Appoin1ment

- GAS LINES

- SEPfiC SYSTEMS

lARGE 11 SMALl JOBS
PH. 992-2478

CAROlYN McCOY

1112311 mo pd

11 -21 · 1 mo

ltllllAND

TEAM
CLEAN

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION"

If You Need
Your House.Cieaned

Weekly, call:

Chimney
Care

1LEE CODN~R
949-2030

New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu;tQm Pole Bldgs .
&amp; Garages
Roofrng Work
Alummum &amp; Vinyl Srdtngs
15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH . 992-7583

NOW PICKING tl' IN

POMEROY
AND

MIDDLEPORT
"Ou' Botlnm It Built
011 Smles "

or 992 -2282

12-31-1 mo.

II I tit

BUSINESS-RESIDENTIAL

For Trash Pickup

•complete Chimney Cleaning
"Certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
"Experienced and Insured

· Phone
446-2062

Roy Bickle
Certtfied Chimney Sweep

IJ -8-tfc

Copy Stnius. £tc.
255 MiN St. Middleport
104 Mth-ry Aw. P-oy

992-3345

E . M•iin. .
POMEROY,O.

11126/ 1 mo

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR• SALE
•
Good Sefe&lt;tion Of

bedroom home can be yours
lor $22,500.00
Frnanc1ng

*Norway

ava1~bla

Spruce

ThiS home on a
l OOd slreei should be sold. 3
bedrooms, basement garage,
garden s!iace, mcely rem~
deled Reduced to )29,900 00.

l 24 tfc

I Mile' off Rt. 7 On
St. Rt. 143, Pomeroy
Watch For Signs

1113011 mo.

New, large recri!iltion room,

many features Call lor a showtog, $37,600.00

BOGGS

bEAUIFUL HOME Five
Poillb. Full basement, pabo &amp;
carport. 3 bedrooms and many
olhtr features in thiS brick
ranch Owner wanls to sell.

SALES" &amp; SERVICE
U. S RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

$57,900.00

\uthomed John Deere.
New Holland. hsh Hog
Farm Equrpment
Dealer

MIDDLEPORT - One ol tht
mcest slreels on Gravel Hill
ThiS home has one oltht mcest
ktchens yoo have seen. Woodburmn~ lireplace, basement
lront sitting porch. Ntce level
lot All lor only $27,500.00.

Far111 Equipment

Parts &amp; Ser~lce
1· J·tfc

N£1 LIMA ROAD -

FOR OTHERS IN THE FUTURE:
REALTORS

·Also TransMission
PM. 992-$682
or 992-71.21

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
'DOZER · BACKHOE
'RECLAMATION WORK

mtmt~tn

•

C11nttg C~tft
· . '$bow .

tuth•Ann Taylor

992-3S6

11. l

"Bud"
Broker-Auclloo
Cheryl Lemley,
llergs County AISCI(tllt

Phone 742-3171

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

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Ill l imo.

•

•

614 446•0294 .

weight, no counting celo·
ries. no starvation d1ets. no
excerc111ng. .Call anyttme
only if Interested in los1ng
wetght &amp;. feeling healthy

Call 446-3788
2061

I

results Money not refundable .

Hame

1

Addreu

I
1
I

o•

446 -

Gun shoot at Racine Gun
Club every Sunday , 1 00
p m. Factory chocked guns
only
For sale-Christmas Trees , 2
miles out on Flatwoods Rd.

off St. Rt 7. Bo• 35976 .

a fresh cut tree at

P1ck

lemberts Christmas tree
farm . Hangeng Rock Ad , At

' 4

PDQ

Middlepon, Oh 614-992 3476 .
- - - - - - - - -lc BUYING RAW FURS Beef
and Deer H cdes, Gmseng and
yellow root
Selling trappmg supplies
Wheat
ltghts, night lights George
Buckley , phone 614 · 664
4761 .hour.&amp; 12-9PM dallev
Free standing fireplace . old
lumber or barn woOd 3 0401

Systems

882-31B8

Help Wanted

Sales' help Wanted Part -full
time. Earn extra S 100 DOmore per wk Ca11614 · 286 2224 for inter.iew

+++++

662·5311
(6141-Evenings

) Announcement

I For Rent

1217/1 mo. pd
1

2. _ _ _ _ __

SHOCKEY,

D.V.M.

THURS. EVE. 6-8
3305 JACIGON AVE.
SAW.l AIIMAL HOUitS

Fritlay 1 p.m.-2 p.m.
Satwtlay 10 a.ll.-1t.JO a.m.
-LAIG£ AIIMALS AND
SUIGIIY IY APPOINTIIIIINT
12-3-tfn

Mongage
3051

23

AVON , earn b1g bucks plus

$20 wortl'l of product s Call
446 -3358

Professional
Services

Pu.no Tumng and Repair
Brunica rdc Muscc Co . 446
0687 Twent~eth year of
quality service Lane Da ·

mels. 614 -742 -2951
Unwanted facial or body
ha1r? Perman ent, painless
removal by European Elec tromc Depilato r . Mary rs
certified 1n th1s new compu ·
tertzed dig1tal system Call

today 614-992 -6720

3. _ _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _;..__

5
6.

PIANO TUNIN G AND RE PAIR Redu ced rates hm1ted
t1me only Wa rd ' s Keyboard.._

304-675 - 5500
3824

25.

7.

26.

B. - - - - - , - - 9.
tO.

11.
12.

5PM ,

'

Long ~ haired kittens to give
away 1 gray and 3 White.

Coll614-985-4120.

r5
16

3-4
35.' - - - - - -

4
female, 1 mole. All block
with white martdnga on the
neck . Bom Sept. 9 , 1984.
H•ve been wormed Call
614-949-2112 after 6 00
P.M
Half grown kitten , Angora

Real Estate

1972 12x60 VIntage, good
cond . 2 bdr , 1 v, bath. new
furnance . f~replace With
blower good carpet , stove
refr1g ., washer . dryer, w1n
dow air cond . drapes. some
furniture. outs1de burldtng ,
lot 97 Quail Creek Call

446- 6592
9692 .

or 614 - 245 -

SECRET IN

12

Situations
Wanted

oheep, oil female . 304-8822335
homo . 304-8B2 -3672.

I
I

I

Fo r Sale on land Contract 3
bdr house o n Old Rt 160 at
Evergreen , 2 m1 from hospital
budt new 1975 ,
S 37 .500 Will sell on land
cont rac t $285 mo pay

ments Call446 -0157
Remodeled 2 bedroom Vt ·
nyted home, carpeted, 2
acres. 1224 pound tobacco
allotment , c1ty schools

$22 . 500
5296 .

Coli 614 -245 -

Owner must sell Mrddleport
home Now' Real cu te real
bargarn prtce tl Call 614 -

992-6941
5 mmute drive from town ,
l ocate d on Rt 558 m Green
Town sh1p , 3 bdr lR , krt
chen , famrly room , 1 y, bath
S42 000 Call anyt1me 446

' 3 half grown klttene. 304·
4118-1517.

Call 614 992 7376 after 6
PM or anytime w eek -ends
Ranc h sty le house tn coun Must sell

Cell 614 985-4329

675 -6365
acres lend Bud Ch11tt tn

304

call 304-675-3747 or 675 1840 alto' 5 PM
Gathpohs Ferry 6 year old
brrck ranch . 4 car garage ,

543 .000 00
675-6851

Phone 304 -

For sale or rent wrth option
to buy, 2lllr Bellemead low
utllittes 304 675 4174 or

675 -4072

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S Q'UAL
lTV MOBILE HOM E SALES
4 Ml WEST , GALLIPOLIS
AT 35 PHONE 614 -446
7274 .
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 85
Spnng B rook 14J~t70 , 3
bedroom total electrrc de luJ~te appliances, garden tub ,
bay wtndow
Only

18

S12 ,950 00 86 Rockfo'd
14•70 3 bedroom , 1%

Wanted to Do

Expertenced house cleantn g.

good reference s Cell 446·
4619
Exptmenced motl'ler wants
to baby -11t 1n my home All
eges Flexible hours. Pome·
0'V Olea 614-992 -2739

Will ret urn all meat $25 00.
304-B82·2374.
mg. open SIX days a week ,
304-B82-3224

Rent· A-Sentolt Ten dollar
donotlon, will go to Middleton

Four ldoreble pup1, need to
see to appreciate. 614 -446·

0059 .

MUST SEll· rn es tate 4
bedroom olde r home, new
furnace and arr co ndlt ton .
needs redecoratmg , mtd
20 's Nrcely decorated 2
bedr oom ho me , carpet ing ,
wood burner 1 2x2 4 co vered deck , nrce yard M ust
see to apprec1ate low ~o · s

ble Call 614 -992-6022

McDaniel Cuatom Butcher2 female kittens to good

Tht 10.ily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Homes for Sale

-I c-

Room and board for elderly
$200 00 per month Also
heve personal care reason&amp; ·

W1ll slun, cut and wrep deer

Free puppi,s. part collie and

--1:

31

Bnck home contatntng 8
rooms. 2 batl'ls central a1r.
f ully carpeted. located 1
mrle from Henderson . 1 53
acres. new bnck b01ldcng ,
ccty water and natural gas .

304-67&amp;-6349 ,

Mall This Coupon with Remittance

675 -

Call 446-7353 .

puppies to give awey

29------

14.

&amp;. German Shephard

Call 446-9391 after 4pm.

27. - - - - - - ,

30.
31
32
33

t3.

Collie

28. _ _ _ _ __

0'

Ro od S6 000 00
675 ·4464

paycheck -- NO LAYOFFS
304-676-3950 0' 1-800642 -3619 .

after

2 female puppies, muc.ed

24.

Top

of the Stairs . full serv1ce
salon

4 V:~

Yellow tiger striped mother
011
kinens. Call 446-

Call

446 -4672 after 4pm.

20.
21.
22.
23.

614 -592 -

Babysitter 10 mv home or
Gallipolis area 7·00-4 00
daily Preferably older lad y

614-367-0243 .

f7

18
19,

Co.

By owner 3 or 4 br house ,
Buck stove. large garage , 5
years old $75 .000 304 .

AMERICA -- Army Natrona!
Guard Jo1n and you have a
good part- trme career .. good
benefits -- monthly

Mature Siamese, neutarad,
declewed, needs Sent or Citi zen compamonship Call

I Wanted
IFo• Sate

E.

HOM E OWNERS -Refinance
to low fuced ra'e Use equity
ior any purpose . leader

2166

TRUCK DRIVERS needed
Call
513 -663 9647

a.

IN-MIDDLEPORT

Money to Loan

on 2 39 acres

2B26.

CLINIC

22

Still time to sell Avon for
Christmas and receive surprrse g1ft offer Cell 446 ·

Minimum expenence

Giveaway

erman

VETERINARY

303-759-3200 ... 2407

try Three bedroom , 1% bath

ME HOW The fun &amp; easy
way JUSt 4 steps to losmg

Wnte your own ad and orr..c-. by mail With this J
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get I

614 -992 -

Buymg da1ly gold , s1lver
coms. rtngs , Jewelry, sterling
ware. old cam s large Cur
rency Top prices Ed Bur kett Barber Shop. 2nd Ave

BEST KEPT

MMRy 3 JO.Ot.-5 p.m..
luM&lt;Iay 6130 p.m.-1 p.m.
w.~~o ..day 3 p.m.-! p.m
Thunlloy 3 p.m.-! p.m.

wp. 79, lit

delivery , Davts Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m1le up
Georges Creek Rd
Call

2 white puppies female , h
German S"eptlerd , Yz Dob-

Tues.- Wed.- Fri.-Sat.
&amp; Sun. 10 to 5
Mondays I 0 ta I
Closed.Thursday

Turn left, tnttr

SWEEPER and sew1ng ma·
c hine repatr. parts. and
supplies.
Ptck up and

(Plus Tax and lnstallationl

PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

• i,.woy "' rltl!l. 30

45769 o• call
7760

Announcements

LOSE WEIGHT NOW ASK

The PRICE: S129soo

The Cou•try Loft
• 81FT SHOP
-- II Mow Ote•

ly Meigs Hl'h School

wood . cupboards , chaus ,
chests baskets . dt shes ,
stone Jars, antiques, gold
and silver
Wnte · M D
Miller . Rt 2, Pomeroy, Ohro

Empl oyme nt
Se rv1 ces

33 above Mason

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY

area To apply call Wedgco r

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beds, ~ron .

11

3111 / tlc

(2 Yr. Factory Warranty)

PAUL

OWnor: Sara~ Flollor
(nd af Rt. 7

Wanted . Wood or wood &amp;
coal burners Must be Asl'l ·
ley, K1ng, Suburban, Atlan ·
t1c . or Wonderwood Also
want to buy rototillers Call

"' FARMER - BUSINESS
MAN " Open steel bulldlniJ
dealership high potent•al
profits available pert tune or
full time or full time in your

9396

NO SUNDAY CALLS

But Value on the Market Todaf

OPEN EACH

61 ..HI·III1

Hrll , Oh 614-682 744B

773-5968

3

V I n

DECEMBER PRICE BUSTER

9-9

Kim lilelsdn
992-2903

Henry E. Cleland. Jr .
GRI 992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jo Hill 9BS-4466

Raw Fur. Top prtces PBid
lake Jackson Frn &amp;. Fur Oak

Announc ement s

949-2801

CHESTER-985-3307

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 9~2-7201 J I~ t

ROGER M4NlfY -Owner
11-29-1 mo

"Free Estimates"

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

OIL LINES

1be DISH: Commander I' Spun Alllltinum
1be FEED: Chaparral Polarstor I
1be RECEMR: Dexcel DXP-11 00·0 1
AFC, Stereo, Cord Remote Control

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood l'leaters . Swatn Furni ture. 446 -3159 , 3rd &amp;
Ohve St , Gallrpohs, Oh

Blown In InsulatiOn

We Hm Afill Tliu
Shp Tuhalelu
•• hlr

'CONCRETE WORK
' CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER. GAS &amp;

992-3194

Custom Built
Homes and Siding

•DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

Nov. 5-Dec. 8
Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-5

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION

•OIL FIELD SERVICES

2 Miles out Flatwoods Rd.
Oil St. II. 7
Mon.-Fri.

Service Call

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

9 A.M. to 9 P.M. W.... doys
I P.M. to S P.M. Sundays

RUTlAND AREA - In the
- Really mce larm
house on 3 acres with IXllldJng,

,l'IIMKS FOR COMING TO
OUR OPEN HOUSE. WATC~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR·

*Scotch Pine
*White Pine.

POMEROY -

$44,90000

GARAGE

Rt. 124. Pomeroy Ohio

992-2259
N£1 LISTING - l.etart - 2
story home wfth basement &amp;
tomato field. Over 2 acres of
lxrttotn land IItts 6 room, 3

ranch type hoose IS 1n
coodition &amp; the lam~y room IS
crJl.'J and mce. 3 bedrooms &amp;
mce yard area lor the kids You
must see to apprecrate.

Roger Hysell

446 -3672

LISHING CO . recommends
that you do bus•nua with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
ma il until yr;:~u ha~o~e invetti·
gated the offer1ng .

614 -593-6835

74lt ·2 22~

Why Wait Till Winter To Remember
' "You Were Going To Call Us?

We pay cash fo r tate model
clean used cars
J1m Mtnk Chev -Oids Inc.
8111 Gene Johnson

(OIJ!try Gift-Aaessories

- BACKHOES
-DUMP TRUCKS
- LO-BOYS
- TRENCHER
- WATER

Business
Opportur:~ity

9

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

21

Nov. 29th. Coli 814-2561625 .
white and btack apotted and
one brown end wtute Ra cine, Letart •rea Cell 614247-2541 .
'

8-13

ber Stomps, lus1ntss Forms,

[ 11126 [12 ! 3 10 3tc
Card of Thanks

- Piumbrng and electrical
work

RACINE
FIRE DEPJ,,
lashon luil4ing

446-2062

!614r 992 2 15,3

1

z

- Concrete work

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

IMPROVEMf NT BONDS

Mt~ tq.:;;

:1:

- Roofing and gunar work

•

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

Pe•my, Ohio

JUST CALL!
992-3410

w• ll furn tsh 1r1y tthtlPitl"tl tnf()r
rn;won ;liHlll t !Il l' sc hool d1S1f tCI
,1 nrl ttS lnl,l l1&lt; P '&gt; wh11.h mav h f'
f{l;l S(l !l.1 1)1fl ri&gt;qUP!&gt;tN ! hut ll(l
of ft( ta l ::i ln! •tnr:n t or 'i lllttltir
rf OC: Uill ' Ill VO.t ll j)('t JH OVI(j(' rf
8triS shOtJit l IJ f• Sf',11Prl lrtd
r&gt;tHlors(ld 81D FOR SC HOOL

B(l:'Hd o f Edut..:1hon

z

i
~

- Actdon• and remodeling

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

hOtHi t; s ,l trl lltJ it t l ol PfltH; tJ IIOi l

J,mf' W.tflrl t~ ! f m. Jsu ret

a..O't·

Cl

CARPENTER
SERVICE

GUN SHOOT

F rnan c 1al

Lost and Found

PARTS and SERVICE

No cond1ttonal bt ds will be
rer.erved
The approvmg opt nton ol
Pec k Shatter &amp; W tllram s attar
neys o f Cmc1nnat1 Ohro who
have prepared and supervrsed
the proceedtngs for the bonds
w tfl be lurntshed to the success·
fut brdder at such bidd er s
expen se as a term o f sa te The
board of edu c at1 o n will pay and

THE • •
CLUB

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

RADIATOR
SERVICE

YOUNG'S

.62

AUTO PARTS

COUNTRY · -.f.~~

School

pay,tblo June

Proba te Judge

SEl~.LF O

-Business Services

Public Notice

Public Notice

All Fit and Flow!

Or do we look the other way ,
And sUently pass bn by"'
Tblnklng that the help we'd give,
Wasn'f even worth a try

Racine, Oh.

........ fVIIICII--

Mayla Yoachzrm
L ETART FALLS _: ThP Sf;'COnd sb Wl'eks
grading JX&gt;rlod honor 1'011 at the I..euu1 Fails
Element ary has bf'en announct'd M akin~ a
grade of B or atJJvf' In alltheb subjPC'ts to IX&gt;
named to th(' roll wer£&gt;
First ~1adr- The r e wil llx-no OO nm roi l rm
1h£&gt; first grad&lt;'
Second gradr - Sabnnu Congo Corrv Htll ,
J ust in Hill, TraC'V Pttke11 Br,tnd) Rous h,
Shannon Staats
Third grade - Ba r1 Swartwout
Fourlh grade - Nicki &amp;&gt;egl(l, Sh01 ry
Coop&lt;&gt;1, CorC'y Rowe Dan-ell SaYt"t'. Kyle
Wickllnf'
Fifth gntd&lt;' - Carr!£&gt; Gloeckner, J ody
Hayes, Dawn Shuler Jamcs Walls

P&amp;S BUILD! NGS

.... .. ...., . .. .. '70

81-84 Chevy Tr~
Fendors ,
.. ......... 110
car
............ . 60
S-10-S15 Chevy 1ri.
79-80 Mustong
Fenders ............ 80
Cit Fenders .. ......... . 60
73·79 Ford Tr
81-84 Escort-C,nx
Fenders .. ............. .. 59
Fendors .................. 49
80·84 Ford Tr
Omni-Homon 2 dr or
Fenders ............. 110
4 dr. Fenders ......... 75
Ford Ran8e'r
C~evy &amp; Ford
Tr. Fendors ......... . 98
PU Bumpers
. 69 95
72-80 Dodae Tr
79-82 Chevette Grrlls ,.. .... 38
Fenders .. .. ...,.. ........ 115
Ford Rln&amp;er Grills
.. 75
Ford and Chevy Totl Gates

10 ti tic

provrded by law

Judith Ellen Codner, Betty J ano
Codner et al to James E. Diddle,
Right of Way, Lebanon.
Robert G. Pickett, Eloise M.
Pickell to James E. Diddle, Right
of Way, Bedford.
D enver G . H ysell, Frances E
Hysell to Gary F . Hysell, .2\l acre,
Salisbury.
Ralph F. Neigler Jr., Edna
Neigler to Ralph F Neigler Jr.,
Edna L. Nelgler, Lot 279, Sulton.

_
__
.,.,..••-',._
_____
_..........
. ......
..._.,

_

Ph. 614-843-5191

Court Case No 24632 Wil -

A 1984 graduate of Point Pleasant
High School, Point Pleasant, he
joined the Navy In August, 1984.

_
....
.-. .. ..

12'd6'
UTILITY -BUILDINGS
Sizes ·from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x3'6'
Insulated Dog Houses

Stm Stan From

,,,,.,,Atmttt ~.r~~..,... ...

'1""'-,.......

ltam

vi slteQ Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and Genevieve Guthrie, Lancaster
Rt.. duri ng the Thanksgiving
holiday

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

l•u!fi..J ~N nuw I ArP

f•-'l•t~~&lt;l"l

6

---------------------r--------------------~::~::::~::~~~~~~-=~-=~~_:_::;~~r::.~---------------,---------------------4

.,_

~mile

still shows upon a face,
That has felt the sting of tear s

Clnsitltd Otpt

,

Poet's corner

MORNIN G SPLE NJ)()K
'lea vl'S still wrt from rr('('nt 1 am
Llkt• dl.tmonds spat kiP m mmnlng sun
Showi ng .111 tn g~-ea t f&gt;S I spl.-ndol
That a ncv. da) ha s begu n
WITh first r avs of e,trl v sunl tghl
From t hf' skv of purt&gt;St bluP
Provinj.! nov. tx&gt;vond a doubt
That p.mthl\ pou.E'r ca n 1 dim Thl' \ 1&lt;'11..

Bu L as

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

On December 4th 1984 rn
the Mergs County Probate

Honor rolls announced
roll ctl thE' Racine ElPmf'nla rysclv:Jol hasbePn
aniiounced M aking a grade of 8 or above ain

··... ....,....

f

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The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Business Senrices

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrttt
Stnttntl

MIAMI, FLA.

Meigs County land transfer,s
Secretary of Housmg and Urban
Development to Mary 0 M ullens,
Clint G. Mullens,.Lot 1114, Pom er oy
Village.
Gary T. Terry, Marcie M . T erry
to Gertrude M . Swartz. Lots 56 and
57, Middleport Village
Freda Wells, W M. Wells to
William Foster Wells. Deborah
M ane Wells. Re-R ecord Olive
P eggy A Plait to Larry A. Platt,
Parcel, Columbia.
Donald C. Roush , Diane E Rou sh

S~ntinel

01111,

military subjects designed to prepare h1m for further academ1c an d
Roberta. The visitors brought ice . on-the-job training In one of the
studied the Air Force
cream and cake.
Navy's 85 basic field s.
n, organization and customs
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swartz and
and received special training In
Nina Robinson spent Thanksgiving
'' human relations.
Flora's studies included seamanlnaddltlon,alrmenwhocomplete
wi\h Mr. and Mrs. Ge ra ld Swartz,
Reno.
sh1p, close order dnll, Naval history
basic training earn credits toward
Ronnie Poole, Conroe, Texas,
and first aid Personnel who
an associate degree through the
vts1ted hiS brother, Joe Poole and complete this course of instruc tion Community College of the Air
family, Nov. 29.Dec. 2.
are eligible for three hoEurds of
Force.
Guests of P earl and Donald
coltege credit In Phys1ca 1
ucaHe received an associate degree
Randolph were Dorothy Dvecher,
lion and H ygiene
In 1!ll2 from Rlo·prande College.

Goeglein, Avery Goegleln, Helene
·Goegleln, Albert Goegleln to James
E. D iddle, Right of Way , Chester
T. H. Associates, by Agent,
Robert C. Oliver, Estate, by Agent,
to J ames E. Diddle, R1ght of Way,
Chester .
Jennett E. Roberts to James E.
D tddle, Right of Way, Olive. ·
George A. Wolf, Helen Wolf to
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.

Monday, December 10. 1984

Please tell us who's right. We're
betting on you .
AMIGOS,

·
Fl
·g h t-week tra JnDurmg
· ora ,s e1
ing cycle, he studied general

Kathryn Price to Ralph Edward
DuVall, Barbara M. DuVall, 1 acre,
Lebanon.
William Wellborn, et al, to Adm.
of Veterans Affairs, Sheriff's deed,
Cheste r .

---

Ill CG1ttt St Powrov. Ollto 45769

--In the service--

9.

~___.__

Monday'. December 10. '1984

The Daily

Alfred community happenings
Sunday School attendance Nov.
18 was 43; church attendance, 33.
On Nov. 25 Sunday School attendance was 41; church attendance, 29.
Alfred Youth accepted the invitation of Pomeroy Youth to view films
on Nov 18.
'l
Church VISitors w ere Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Weber and children,
Eagle Ridge.
Young Adults are sponsoring a
ChristmasdinnerafterchurchDec.

--

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

This 'girl-hating' normal?

Hnormal" phenomenon and not to

... -

Eahtes

resident&amp; .

304-676-4673; 304-6761316, 614-446-2283 , 304676-4536 .

bath . total etectnc , self
stor tn g storms. plywood
floors , deluxe appliances
Only s 12.450 00 , delivered
and blocked Blocks. v inyl
unde rprnntng and st eps tn ·
el u d ed in price USED

12•60 or 1200 , 3 bed room Both real n1 ce co ndi ·
t1on , $ 5950 00 eac h
Gene's Mobile Hom es. Inc ,
Rt . 177 and At . 2 Ravens·
wood
Call 1 - 304 - 273 -

5135
For s-a le 1981 Kirkwoo d
14.. 70 , 3 bedroom , 1 %
ba th. Wood stove Redu ce d

to 810 ,900 00 . Call ' 614B43-5244
Schult 3 bedroom mobile
home, central air, shed. K &amp;

K No 31 Coli 304 -675 5417 after 4 :00PM .
------~.

,.

�. Page-10-The Daily S~nel
32

They'll Do It Every Time .

Mobile Homes
for Sale
cond.. new . carpet.

IIOVO

&amp; refrig . $4,900. Coli

44~-8038 .

1973

Rosem·o nt

2

bdr.

14x65. excellent condition.

Don't miasthia one. $5,900.
Coil 614-446-0175 .
Free satillite antenna with
purchase of new 1984
Double-wide. Call Kanauga
Mobile Hom.- Sales. 446-

9662 .
All homes reduced for year
end Sale . Call Kanau'ga
Mobile Home Sales. 4469662 .

1969 New Yorker. 12x66, 2
bdr . partally furnished . can Hal air , gas furnance .

washer -dryer.
367 -7611 .

Call 614 -

Make an o1fer· Must sell!
1971 12X65 Torch 2 · 3 bdr.
7132
.
unfurnished
. Call 614-446·

•::;:::::::::c::~==::;=:::::=33

Farms for

8 66.

42

37 acre farm on Gallia
County Road 218 . 8 room

house, land, ba ·rn , out build ·
ing and large tobaCco base.
920,000 cash or can be
bought on land contract .
Call 614 -742-2170 .

35

Lots

&amp; Acreage

Lot for sale in Mercerville. 3
trailer hookups. electric, ru ral water . septic tank .
58 ,000 . Call 614 -256 6618 .
Wanted : small acreege for
home site . Close to paved
road . R;o Grande-Gallipolis
area . Call 614-245-5239 .
Spaces for rent, trailer lots,
sewsr and water furnisl1ed .
Smell children accepted .
304-675-1076 .

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

House 1or rent . Cell 304 675 -7263 675 -5104 or
675-53B6 .
House for rent in Mercerville
area. Call Kenneth Swain
614-256 -1552 evenings .
2 bedroom house, fully
carpeted . $200 per mo. pl-..s
· utilities . Deposit &amp; re1eren ces . North of Cheshire on
ol d Rt . 7, 446 - 97B6
8;30AM to 4;00PM .

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. trailer for rent, near
Mercerville. Call 61 4 -256·
1552 eftor 5 ;30PM .
Furnished 2 bdr .. . clean ,
quiet, cable, beautiful river
view, Kanauga . Foster Mo·
bile Home Perk. Call 446 1602.
12x55 trailer for rent in
Kyger Creek School dist .
5100 dep .. S160 mo. coli
446-4006 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity) has·
one and two bedrooms. rent
starting at $ 163 for one
bedroom and $198 per
month for two bedroom,
with $200 deposit located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley F»laza, pool and TV
ant. Coli 446-2745 or leave
message .

2 bdr. mobile home, 1urnished for rent at Bidwell.
CaH 446 -9669 .
3 bdr . trailer iwth 2 baths, in
Evergreen . Call ~14 · 2459170 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Natural gas heat. Racine
area . Call 614-992-585B .
2 bedroom trailer above
Kawasaki shop in Pomeroy .
Fully furnished . Call 614 ·
992 -7314 or 614 -992 · 6215
3 bedroom, furnished .
washer and dryer: $200.00
plus utilities and deposit . No
pets. Coli 614-992 -7479 .

1 bdr. apt. comple1ely furnished, c8rpeted. all electric.
458 2nd . Ave .. adults. ref. &amp;
sec . dep. , 8196 mo. Call
446-2236 or 446·25B1 .
2 bdr. duplex ex . location in
town $260 mo. with a
fenced backyard . Call 4468293 after 5PM.
3 rooms with priavte beth,
1st. floor. Coli 446-2215 .
1 bdr. partially furnished,
$190 mo .. utilities paid, $50
dep. 6 mo . lease, no children
and no pets. Call446-3667
after 6.

45

2 bedroom 1urnish8d trailer
for rent . Adults only and no
pets. Call 61'4,949-2946 .

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614-446-0766.

Homes for rent, lease, lease
with option to buy or land
contract . Two or three bed ·
room starting at $200 per
month . Blackburn Realty ,
446-0008 .

12x65 mobile home with
tip-out, 2 bedrooms, fur nished with washer and
dryer, $200 plus utilities,
water and garbage fur nished. 304-675-5051 .

Furnish8d room. $126. Utili·
ties·, range. rei. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Soc .. Gallipo·
lis . 446-4416 after 8 p.m.

Cheshire 3 bdr., 2 baths, dep
&amp; ref . Call614-367-7567 or
803 -781 -7895 .

Mobile home in Gallipolis,
nice for senior citizens or
married couple with one
child, no pets, depoait and
re1erences reqlli}ed. K &amp; K
· Mobile Homes, Inc., 304675-3000 .

, 3 bdr. 1 mi . from Hospital
$225 rent . $200 dep. water
&amp; trash paid . Call446 -1354
after 5 .
Nice 3 bdr . house, with 1 car
garage. 2 miles 1rom hospital out 160 large yard &amp;
garden . Will accept 2 children . Coil 446-0157 .
Newly remod,eled house, 2
bdr, 1 full bath , lg . furn .
kitchen, located in Middle port. Send resume to Daily
Sentinel . P.O. Box 729 -V.
Pomeroy. Oh 45769 .
2 bedroom duplex house,
downtown F»omeroy . Furn .
or unfurn . $225 .00 plus
utilities. Ca11614-992-2381
day or 614 - 992 - 672~ night.
Home in Racine. All electric .
8200 .00 per month . Deposit and re1erences required .
Call614-949 -2849 .
For sale or rent: 3 bedroom
house with detached garage
on 34 acres. In Portland
area. Call after 5 :30 pm
304-273-5272 .
Three bedroom house in
Middleport. call 614-9927356 .
•
Nice two bedroom. in Eastern School District. Natural
Gea,TPC water end no pets.
8175 .00 plus deposit. Call
614-949 -2801 . No Sunday
calla.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Brookside Apartments 1
bdr . laundry, water-trash
paid, no pets. $217 mo. plus
dop . Call446-3474 after 4 .
4 room &amp; bath, $125 mo .,
carpet. furnance. stove &amp;
refrig ., re1 . &amp; dep ., Adults
only. Coli 446 -1163.
Riverside Apts. Middleport .
Special rates 1or Senior
Citizens . $ 130 . Equal Housing Opportunities . 614 992-7721.
Furnished 2 bedroom apt. in
Middlepbrt . Adults. no pets.
security depos it . Call 614992-3874 .
Nice ef1iciancy apsrtment.
sUitable for one or two
people. Call '3 04-773-5882,
Betty Mercer .
Furnished 2 bedroom apartment in Racine. $126.00
per month plus $50.00
deposit. You pay utilities .
Call 614-949-2887 .

Furnished Rooms

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, $75 water
paid. 4th &amp; Neil. Gallipolis.
Call446 -3844 alter 7PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
614-992-7479 .

49

For lease

Apt . for lease. overlooking
city park. LA , kitchen, stove.
refrig., dining area. 2 bdr ..
bath. $190 mo . plus utilities . Call PJ' 446 · 1B19.

Merchandise
51

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olivo St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood-coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR suite $399 ,
bunk beds $199, antron
recliners $99. used bedroom
suites. ranges, wringer
washers, &amp; shoes. Call614:
446-3169.

Unfurnished apar1ment 1or
ren1 in .Syracuse. Call 614 992-7689 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigerators, ranges. Skaggs Appliances, Upper River Rd .
beside Stone Crest Motel.
614-446-7398.

County Appliance, Inc .
Good used appliances and
TV sets . Open BAM to 6PM .
Mon thru Sat. 446-1699.
627 3rd . Avo. Gallipolis.
OH.

In Middleport. 2 bedroom
fu rnis hed apt, 1 child, 1 304-8B2 -2 566."

No rent till Jan. 1, wanted
re1ponaible peraon1 for two
Houu 10 Decatur St .. Point . ·bedroom apertmtnt, ••c•l·
Pteount, phone 304-875lent condition. Mt. Vwnon
7183.
Avenue, 304-876-1982.

1983 XR100 Honda $700 .
Table tenniS set $60 . Both
exc . cond . 304-BB2-2695 .

_S et gold wedding r~ngs 3A
car,t, appraised value
$1100 . Will sell for 8360 .
304-676"2551 .

3 qUilts, 1 crocheted table
cloth, all for $250 .00 this
week . 304-675-5396 .
Firewood $20.00 pickup
load $30.00 delivered anytime . Call 304-46B- 1728.
Large hand made Cedar
Chest and Doll Cradle,
phone 304-675-1165.
Brand new 3 speed bicycle,
304-675 -3159 after 6 p.m.
Firewood, $20.00 pick up
lood. $30.00 delivered .
304-675 -2991 or 676 ·
6762.

64 Miac. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. Seeeaned or
green , You pick ·uP or we
dollvar. HEAP vendor. 614266·6246 .

74

Firewood cut up elabs. e16
PU load. ~rgor loodo delivered. Call for prices. 814246-6804.

New Lincoln Wilder.ldaallrk
250 · ACDC. single phose.
never used, $&amp;00 . Ct114464422 .
.
.
..

Kitchen table 8a chairs, Kirby
Classic &amp; all att•chmants,
1978 Hondo 750K. 1971
Opal Manta, childrens riding
toys. Call 446-SOBO.
Browning auto 6 Bel. 20 ga ..
28.' VR $600, H &amp; R 10 ga.
single bbl $BO. Call 446·
7019.
Ruger M -77 270 UL. NIB
$460. Gibson freezer·refrig .
coppertone 8200. Call 4467019 . .
1983ATC 3wheelorHonda.
oxc . cond .. great Christmao
gilt. Cell 446-0109 alter 6.

Firewood for · sale· $25
pickup load; $35 delivered .
Call 256-6208 :
Beauti1ul all wood coffee &amp;.
and tables. cabinet style,
$100 sot. Call 304-8751715.
-~-------lc-

Oak 1urniture, tables,chairs,
cupboards, pie safe. telephones, desk. alto antiques
and glassware. Open Sundays. Conkel's Tuppersplains, Rt.7 .

A

For Sale : New 4x8 pool
tabl.e. 3 piece inch alate.
81200.00. Call 614-9926304.
Typewfiter Royal offiCe aila
840 .00. Tobie podeatal 3
inch square formiCa top
S20.00 . Call 614-9923921 .

3 air conditioners for ·aala,
18.000 btu. 875. each.
304-675 -.1266.

house coal 1 to 1 ton . coli 5!i Building Supplies
Jim Lanier 675-7397 o r ' - - - - - -- - -- 304·676-1 247.
'

For sale or rent, stage
lighting system complete
with road cases . 1 -304·
675-5370.
SURPLUS DENIM jackets
S21 .00. Bibs $16 .00, covereUs regular $22 .00, kids
camouflage, army new field
jackets, all army field pack
accessories. combat boots.
Carhart clothing . Sam
Somerville's. East Ravens."
wood. Fri, Sat, Sun, 1 :007 ;00 PM . lothar days to
Christmas 3:00-7;00) 304675-3334 . '
Firewood, delivered . 304675-2075 .
Cabbage Patch type dolls,
304-675-5995 .

Building Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
windows. lintels, etc.
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
0 . Coll614·245-6121_. I
Rough Cut Lumber. oak,
poplar, and pine. 2x4's,
2xB 's, 1 x6's, 1 x8's. As·
sorted l'ngtho. Call Hogg
and Zuspan Materials
Co .. lnc . 773-5554,
daytime.
Now open 1or buainasa,
Mountain State ·Block. At.
33, New Haven . Complete
masonry supplies. 4", 8".
1 2" block . Delivery service.
Phone day 304-882-2222.
evening 882-3239.

56

Pets for Sale

Brittany Spaniel puppies
AKC registered. Born 1020-84. Call 614-667-6427
-otter 6PM.
10 gallons sot up, 824.00:
1 0 gallons tonk, $7.99;
medium angel fish, 13.99;
20 gallon long. The Fiah
Tank 2413 Jackton Ava. Pt.
.Pleasant. 304-676-2063.

Tr an spuri ali 11 11

Pets for Sale

71
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breads. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities .
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Sarvice. Coll614-4467795.
~udy

Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

Briarpetch Kennels -Professional All-breed grooming.
lndoor·outdoor, boarding facilities . Englloh Cocker Sponiol puppioo. Caii614-3B89 7 90
_
_ _ _ _·- - - - - - - 1Dragonwynd
Cattery Kennel. CFA Himalayan, Penian
end Siamese kittena. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 814446-3B44 after 7 .
CHRISTMAS. PPuppias.
AKC registered Cocker Sponiela;. buff in color. Terms
availible for good homes.
Excellent Christmas gift.
Call 814-388-9766 after
7PM .

Pi1 Bull pups, red-red nasa, 1
female, 3 males. Call 4464043 .

Mobile home new parts and COLLIE 10 week old malo
doors. Inside, outside, storm with large new dog house.
doors. tra'iler windows . Must sell $126. Cell 446About 600 !priced to sell) 2164.
McArthur,Ohio. Route 1.
Call 614-696-4282.
ABDA . &amp; UKC Registered
American
Pit Bull pups . Sire
30 inch Sun Ray gas range. is Chasteen*•
Butch, reedy
$79.99 . May be 1een at
for
Christmans.
Cell 614Dan's in Middleport or call 379·2469.
614-992-3684. '
For sale : Size 1 4 ladies
cashmere light green coat,
large mink collar. Same &amp;a
new. Coli 614-9B5-3944.

Used refrigerator frost free ,
coppertone. Call 614-38771.87.
Nice hido-o-woy bed f160,
ches1 of drawen *46,
dlnotto ut t66.- Call 4463224 .

8 :00

•

AKC Toy Poodle party color.
Coll448-1609.
One miniature Dachshund B
weeks ofd female $76. Coli
44§-0044.
AKC registered German
Shepherd pupa, 876.00.
Call 614-986-3849.
Christmas ~ puppies·AKC
regis1ered Cocker Spaniels.
BuH color. $125.00 . Coli
614-992-6822 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Gold Gulbransen spinet piano. real good cond. $600.
Call 614-367-0688.
SALDWIN ORGAN, "fun
Machine" $2,700.00. Or·
gon withequivalen~laotures
sella for more than
84,ooo.oo. 304-6762965.

TOP CASH paid for 'BO
modal and newer used cars.
Smith Bui~-Pontiac, 1911·
Eaotem Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
814-446-2282.

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301'
good condition. Call after
5PM, 446·0137.

@I Diff'rent Strokes
{MAX] MOVIE : 'Sounder'
6:30 0 (l) CD NBC News
(]) Rifleman
CD Mazda Sportslook
CII Carol Burnett
(J) • (j}) ABC News ICCJ
0 (I) ijpl CBS News
(J)
Noghtly
Business
Report
liD Body Electric
fj) One Day at a Time
7:00
(f) PM Magazine
(I) Here Come the Bride&amp;
CD SportaCenter
CD Gomer Pyle
(J) fl) (j}) Entertainment
Tonight
CD Wheel of Fortune
U (J) Wheel of Fortune
(J) ® MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour

CAPTAIN EASY

1976 Lincoln town car 4dr.,
$1.BOO. Call 446-3B24.

'73 Nova. good cond,
8400 . 00 . Gas furnace
$75.00. 403 locust St.
Henderson; W. Va.
1979 Oldo Cutlau Supreme. low mileage. like
now, call alter 6:00, 304676-2369.
1965 !)TO. 3o'4-676-4072.
1900.00.
·

r-----------------73 Muatang. a-c. om-fm; B

Chrlotmos . Special 1984
Mazda 6 opd., AM-FM tape.
Apples bushel 86.00; fruits. wire rirhs, bed liner. *4.8915.
vegetables. produce. Candy John's Auto Soles. 446and nut1 . Jack's Fruit 47B2.
Market, At. 36. Henderson.
1978 Chevrolet 'A ton
f796, aloo 1973 Ford PU
69 For Sale or Trade $595.
Call 446•8113 or
446-B201 .
Dna beef, 2 hogo. Contact 1978 Ford pick-up with
Charles Ma1ters. Mill Creek topper. A·1 conl:lition. New
Rd.
paint. candy apple red. Au·
tomotic. $1 '8 00.00. Coli
614-992-3194
Foirtll Supp ll l! ~
1989 C-10 Chovoy Pick-up
&amp; l IVC S!ock
truck. 307. auto.. good
condition, no rult, with fiber
gla1s Lincoln topper .
63
Livestock
t796.00. Call 614-2474292.
'

Pollld Chtriois bull bull 1972 Ford F260 4 whool
roglstorld. Goorgo Wood- drive, 4 spood V-B. • word, 814-379·2597.
point. *1600. 304-11767829.
AggreHive Duroc ~"· l - - - - - - - -- - - •atilfactlon guaranteed, '76 Chevrolet _Cheyenne '
Roger Bonlty, Sabina, Oh. pick up f1,800.00 or bolt
&amp;13-884-2398.
·
off... '?0 Ford pickup. 304&amp;78-2372.
3 bred Ollto ond ono boor '-:;;:=:;:=~;=;:::;;::;::.
hog. 304-895·3319.
1
73 Vana 8o 4·W.D.
Sowa ond Soar, good quollty
broodlng stock, 40 canto lb. 1986 4x4 Joop Wogonoor
304-87&amp;-7241.
low mlloo, 1971 VolksI•
wagon lug with new moUJr,
Coli betwoon 4 &amp; 6 . Coli
64 Hay 8o Grain
448-7842.

l-----------

wv.

'lou

RU!IIIIAN MISSILE!O
llf cur.A.

,,

~ News

1978 OMC1 4WD, ohort
bod. 12200.00. Coli otter
8:00pm, 814-882-3992.

fl) Jefferscfns
[HBOI Braingames Word
scrambles, number puzzlers
and history and my stery
game s are all here to tease
your brain
7 ;30 0 (l) Tic Tac Dough
(!) NFL's Greatest Moments 1983 LoS Angeles
Raiders Highlights .
(f) Andy Griffith
(I) U III Family Feud
CD Jeopardy .
~ Wheel of Fortune
Gl @) New Name That
Tune
fjl WKRP in Cincinnati
IHIIO] Fraggle Rock
'
CD CD Mickey's
8 :00 0
Christmas Carol
CI) Cisco Kid
(!) Monday Night MatchUp los Angeles Raider s at
'Detroit Lions . (30 min.)
(I) Nobel Prize Ceremonies This program provides
exclusive coverage of the
prestigious
ceremonies
from Sweden with close ·up
views of the 1 1984 Nobel
Prize winner s as they recei ve the world's most
highly regarded award. (2
hrs.J ·
(J) 8 ® NFL Football: los
Angeles Raiders at Detroit
0 Cil ~ Scarecrow and
Mrs. King•
® liD Wonderworks !CCI
'Box of Delights .· First of 3
parts . A young boy' s train
ride t,ome from boarding
school leads him into an ex·
c1ting world of adventure
and fantasy ~ (60 min.)
fl) MOVIE: 'We're No
Angels'
IHBOl MOVIE: 'Melanie'
[MAXI
SCTV:
Second
Coming The laughs cont ~nue Wilh specially -edited
encores featuring th e bes t
sk etch es of the satirical se r ~
ies .
8:30 (I). NFL's Superstars The
Men Who Played the Game .
IMAXl
Album , Flash:
Culture Club
9:00 0 (f) CI1 MOVIE: 'Tho Sun
Also Rises' Conclusion
(]) 700 Club
00 Auto Racing: World
Endurance - SCCA Super
Vees
0 Cil ®l Kate &amp; Allie
(]) Christmas at Pops
CID American Playhouse
(CCI 'Soloman Northup's
Odyssey.' The plight of Soloman Northup . who was
kidnapped and sold into
s lavery in mid· nineteenth
c entury Louisiana is dramatized . Avery Brooks. Mas on
Adams , :iohn Saxon . 12 hrs.)
IMAXl MOVIE : 'The Ritz'
9 :30 0 CII ®l Newhall. Dick
finds out who his fnends
really are when he is hit with
a plagiarism suit.
10:00 @ Billiards; Trick Shots
Th is program prese nts trick
shots from the 3rd Annual
Legendary Pock et Billiards
Stars Tournament .
(I) MOVIE: ' Th• Killers'
0 CII @ Cagney and
Lacey Chri s and Dory 's rela·
tionship is on shaky ground
after Dory 's sponsor in th e
drug rehabilitation program
is picked up during a bust.
160 min.)
CIJ To Be Announced
fl)lndependent News
IHBOl MOVIE; 'A Night in
Heaven' 1
10:30 ffi Together: Boones
(!) 3rd Annual legendary
Pocket Billiards Stars Robert Woods vs. Lucher Lassi·
ter. ·160 min .)
fll Soap
IMAXi MOVIE: "Humangous'

24 ft. self coritained camping trailer. Call 614-266·
1291.

Services
Home
.
Improvements

Marcum Roofing &amp;. Spouting. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 years 18xperience,
specializing in built up ,roof.
Call 614-388-9667.

. 1'1 ~EN WILL TAFFY THEY'I'1E 6EIHQ
APPLETON BE
PHEPAAEI7
5EF!VEI7 WITH THE
HOI'/, MAS.
PAPEF!G, PIHCHLY?
lENCE!

RINGLES 'S SERVICE. ax·
perienced carpenter. electrician, maaon, painter. roofing (including hot tar
application) 304-675-20BB
or 676-738B .

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Molt wells completed same
day. Pump salea and llrvicea. 304·896·3B02.

82

Plumbing
Heating

l!r.

\Vi!NNIE

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
· Gallipolia. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3B88 or
814-446-4477
JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1, Bo• 366. Gallipolis. Call 814-387-0678.

Stokermat'ic stove and
stoker furnilnces. 20 atovea,
8 IItaker furnancea in stock
alao need dealer for OaUia
County.

83

BARNEY

Excavating

' .

THINK I'~L
PUT IN FOR A
TRANSFER

I

Good-1 E•cavating, , base- '
men1s. footers, driveway1.
septic tanks, land1caplng.
Call onytime 614-4464&amp;37, Jomool. Davison, Jr.
owner.
Dozer Work by Ted Hanni.
Ditches, ponda, road•. land
clearing. etc. Call Motor Car
Brokaro. 4'4 6-8692.

11 :00

84

f&lt;

Electrical
Refrigeration '

SEWING M•chine r~~palrs,
nrvlce. Authorized Singer
Solea &amp; Service Shorpon
Sclssoro. Fobrlc Shop .
Pomeroy. 814 ·992-2284.

86

SNAK~!!
·i

0
•

0

•

•

Ken'a Wotor Sorvlee. Wells, · '
clstoms, pools flUid. Phone
614-317-0823 or 814-3177741 night or dey.

87

0

General Hauling

Jalnea Boy• Water Service.
Also poolo filled. Call 814·
266·1141 or 614-4481176 or 814-448-7911.

DOES SANTA CLAUs

ATilLE OR A RANI(

''
'

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 110. Avo .. Oolllpollo.
614-441-7133 or114-448·
1833 . .

Y.

D

rn ® CD 0

III~

•

'

'

I

I DONT KNOW .. IVE.
NEVER THOU611T MOUT 11'..

1

I LL .PUT DOWN

LIEUTENANT COLONEL

Gl

@) News
(]) Bill Cosby Show
liD Newswotch
fll Benny Hill Show
11 :30 0 (l) CD Best of Carson
· Tonight's guests are Steve
Landesburg , Sandra Bernhard and Jose Feliciano . (R)
160 mjr -1
I]) Be'trt of Groucho
00 Spo"sCenter
(j) Soe~'
0 (I) Simon &amp; Simon R1ck
and A.J. are hired to 1rack
down a trained dolphin that
has been kidnapped and will
likely die from loneliness . IAI
160 min .)
liG Taxi
• (j) Nightlina
• Twilight
IHSO] Video Jukebox
12:00 (]) Bums &amp; Allen
CD Mazda Spoouloolc
CD MOVIE: 'The Bed Seed'
(I) Nightline
CIJ Dad'a Army
® MOVIE: 'Going Home'
G) (j) News
I!UGunamoke
IHBO] MOVIE : . 'Kiss Me
Goodbye'
12:15 IMAX] MOVIE: 'Mountain
Men'

Zone

PEANUTS

'

Upholstery _

--I OARAW
I KJ
XJ I

W ~Ai

i HE. CHU~CH
SE XTON M INI'S .

Now arrange the circled leners to
torm the s urpriS«~ answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

·o

Chriatmas Special 1981 ·
Chevette, auto, radio. 1owner. 83,195. John's Auto
H I S Home Improvements
Soles. 446 : 4782.
virwl a. •luminum aiding.
roofing. seamless gutters,
1968 Mustang make offer.
a1orm windows. overhang.
Also 1977 Mercury $696.
Csll614-367-0409 or 6141977 Cutlass S. $1 ,100.
367-7244.
Call 446-8113 or 446B201.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
1970 Chevrolet. new tires~
Uncondltlonalll1etima gua·
brakes, good transportation,
rantee. Local referencaa
8326. Call 614-245 -9516 .
furnished . Free estimates.
Call collect 1-814-2371978Ford Fiesta, 4 cylinder.
048B; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
4 speed ·with ·front wheel
Roger• Basement
drive. &amp;995 .00. 1979 LTD
Waterproofing.
two door. 302 engine, auto,
PS. V·top. AM FM Stero
Carpet - C arpet-Cerpet.
tope. $2996.00. Coli 614Tfllnklng of new carpet or
367-7750.
any floor coverlnga? Call Ul
first. Free in home viewing,
1984 Chovette. AC. AM·FM
new market plan means
radio, 4 speed, still under
better carpet-less money.
warranty. 304: 676 -2663
All installation guarantee.
after 6 PM .
Information -appointment,
M ullln1 Floor Covering,
'80 Monte Carlo Landau, 614-2B6 -2224.
VB, auto, PB, P~. AC, AM,
rear da1roster, tilt, 304-676·
RON'S Tetevilion Service.
6ZB6.
Specializing · .In Zenith end
Motorola, Ouazar. and
'79 Chevrolet El Camino.
house calls. Coli 304-676Royol · Knight SS. loaded
2398 or 614-446-2464.
with extras. 67,000 miles,
84, 700.00. Phone 304·
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
676-4230 during day 304·
removal. Coli 304 -875 675-4B63 in ovoninga.
1331 .

track, $310. 304 -676 FREE CALL COULD SAVE 2881 .
YOU MONEY! Find on exciting mu1ical gift at the lowest 1979 Ford Fiesta for sale by
price. Guitar, electronic key- owner. 304-676-4800.
board, drum•. any inatru·
ment or accessory. Pianos -'-1 ~--=---:---:--:=--:---'
ond organ• by Baldwin. "72
T
·Kimboll. Kawai and Chlckor·
rucks for Sale
ing. Check with u1 before
you buy. In W . .Va. call 1978 Dodge 0160, 318
1 - 800-642-3446 other engine. 4 speed overdrive.
power steering and brake•.
statea 1-B00-624-3498.
t2.000 with sllda in 8'
camper, $1760 with out.
Call 614-246-6271 alter 6
58
Fruit
or
daytime on waekends. "'
&amp; Vegetables

Corn f_o r ula. Now plclclng.
Bumgomor Dolry. l.etlrt,
304-882-2088.

NOW I ltiMiM8Eit

~ou. MRS.. ~u•v.
W~I!E WITH Ml' WKE"'
I IOXPO~ED THO!OE

18' Jayco camper AC. awn·
ing, TV antenna, sleep• 8,
like new . Call 614-2561141.

81

I.,,...___
I I _D

Cll Dr. Who
liD 3 -2 -1. Contact ICC)

Motors Home•
8o Campers

1976 Camaro good condldon. 82,100. Coli otter
6PM, 614-266-6450.
1978 Ford Granada, 6. cyl ..
auto, PS, 2 dr., radia1 1tires.
now battery. $900. Call
614-388-9334 oftor 8PM.

CllliHII

CD Lucy Show

1978 Su1uki RM 80
$176.00. Good Christmas

79

a(jJ Newo
CI&gt; Cll CD D
(]) Hot.._o

Used Honda 3 wheeler,
ATC110, 2 yrs old. In ex.
cond .• P•ul Carr, Chester,
OH. Call 614-9B6-3538 .

Autos for·

Double Registered Bucks- 1978 Dodge true~ stopsldo
kin, Ouorter gelding t4&amp;0. short!&gt;ed. Good condition.
Call 614-288-6622.
. f2 . 700. 304-67&amp;-4072.
30" elect. range $96. Kon·
more 30' gas range nice
t125. horvoll gold gas
range $95. and other gaa
rangea 10 choose from . GE
Wllher e96, 4 othere to
choose from. Whirlpool
waohor. &amp; dryer t246, GE
singhl door refrig. like new
$126, GE frost free refrig •.
1126, wringer waaher *86, :
Kenmore di1hwa1her '76.
Skaggs Appllonces, Upper
River Rd. Gtlllpolla. 448·
7398.

EVENING

Motorcycles

1~~~;;;;~;;::;r,:;;;;;;;;;;c;·"'~~:":'· ;"'~ .:g_itt_._3_0_4_·8_7_67 ·_4_o7_2_._ __

r56

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Atnoklencl Bob Lee

12/10184

1961 K E 100 KaWIHkl.
900 milea. E.collant condl·
lion. t450.00. Call 814992-6660 during day ond
614-992 -3617 iri evenings.

Will cut and deliver firewood . Call 266-1&amp;28.

Call 614-379-25B5 .
Small buck s~ove 2 yrs. old,
$426. Call 446-B221 .

Television
Viewing

1981 Yomeho 50$360. Coli
448-0336.

Top Soil and fill dirt and
landscaping. Call 614-2&amp;6·
1427.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Ohio

DICK TRACY

&amp; 4 W.O.

1976 Ford RongorXLT. 4•4.
AC. duel tonics, corpt •nd
mora f3.II00.00 or bell
oHor. 304-895-34 72 or
89&amp;-3907 .

Limestone. Sand. Gravel.
Pick up at Richardo &amp; Son.
Call 448-7785 .

Chriatmastreecutyourown
ell ohapea &amp; olzas, $6 .00.

Vans

Moodily, December 10, 1984

1970 Joop truck, 4 whool
'drhto. good ond, 304-6768930.

------------------'
(Coal Delivered) good lump I~~~=====~====
Model M 14. Bell Saw; saw
mill 40 in blade, 2 yrs old ,
52 , 000 . 00 . 304 - 6757758 .

73

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®b .,Lirry Wright

Double Rogioterod Palomino 1977 F 150, Ford pickup,
more, gontlo. Coli 814-286- VB outo, runa good. body
8522.
good, 304-876·&amp;822 .

One bedroom apartment
unfurni1hed . . Adults only
and ·no pets . One bedroom
1urnished apartment adults
on!y and 'no pets . For both
apartments call 614-992 2.8 07.

Newly remodeled house 1or
renl in Chester. Ohio.. Re. duce d rent f or wmter -~---------monthl. Security deposit Two bedroom 1urnished
and references required. Call apartments. can 614-9921-B86-7404 or write Ri - 5434 or 614-992-5914 or
chard Froot, 16105 Lake
304-8B2·2566 .
Ave. No. 8, Lakewood, Ohio
44107.
APARTMENTS, mobile
homes. houses. Pt. Pleasant
Two bedroom, kitchen with
ond Gallipolis. 814 -446·
dlshweaher, · dining room. B221.
large living room. full basew
ment . central air - heat.
Furniahed apartment down·
fenced bock yard, $260.00,
town, no pet1, one bedroom,
304-875-3798 .
coli 304-676-378B.
2 bedroom unfurnished
house . $ 175 .0 0 m ont h.
8100.00 deposit. Second
Street. _New Haven. 304B82-2606.

Used F~-;~i;~-,~ --~~--electric
fireplace. 5 pc. dinette, head
boards, and 2 bedr~om
suites. 3 miles out Bulevilla
Rd. Open Bam to 6pm, Mon .
thru Sat.
614-446-0322

613 Third Ave. two -1 bdr.
Mobile home with large apts, Starting $135 to $165
mo. Water included. dep req.
added on room . Coal or
wood burning stove. unfur- Call 446-4222 between 9 &amp; Trade . Center Kanauga .
Ohio . Furniture outlet , Why
nished . 3 mobile home lots 5 .
Pay Morel
for rent. References. Call
614-256 -1293.
. Nicely furnished modern
mobile home In city .. ~ or 2 Hickory Wind. 141 ButterOld 1urnishings.
1 2x60 2;. bdr. · on Clark adults only. Call 446-0338. nut
1 ~c&gt;llecct_i'!_le~ and gilts. SunChapel Rd with a large yard,
children accepted. Call446 - 1 bdr opt.. 2 bdr apt .. day 1 :00 ~ 5 : 00 . Mondaythru
$150-$260. Call 304-675- Thursday 10:00-5;00 .
3697 or 446-0157.
7263 675-5104 or 6752 bdr . trailer rural water, 6386 .
54 Misc . Merchandise
woodburning stove, parFurnished apt .. next door to
tially furnished, $100 dep ..
S125 rent . Call 614-379- library, orle professional Re1rigerator $125.; Stove
adult only. Call 446-033B.
2607.
$30. 304-675-2B81 .

Eureka. nice 2 bdr. 11ome.
large livingroom and kitchen, $225 per month .
deposit anCf reference re quired . Blackburn Realty,
446 -0008 .

3 bdr . house in Gallipolis
referen c e required . Call
446 -7948 after 5PM .

Household Goods

$38 cabinets,
&amp; up to
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§~ headboards
rockers. metal

Sale

U-Build -it . 3 bdr . Wilderness
Home Kit . $6,995 . New
model ·open . Call 1-614 886-7311.

61

LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair. rocker. ottom•n. 3 tables, (extra heavy),
'686. Soloa and chaire
pricld from t28&amp;. to U95.
Tableo. t60 end up to t126 .
Hlde-o-beds,$390. and up
to f560 .. solo beda $146 .
Recliners, $226. to t376.,
~mpo from •2B. to $125.
pc. dinettu from $1 09., tci
436. 7 pc . $189 and up.
Wood tlble with aix chair•
$286 to t746. Desk $110
up to $225. Hutches, $660 .
Bunk bed complete with
manre11••· $276. and up to
$395 . Baby beda: $110 .
Manresses Qr box &amp;~pringa,
full or twin. $58 .. firm . 86B .
and $78 . Quean oats, $195 .
4 dr. chests, 849 , 5 dr .
chests, e69. Bed frames .
$2(l.and $25., 10 gun - Gun
cabinets, $360; Gas or
electric ranges $376 . Baby
mattrouos. $26 &amp; $36. bed
framea s2o: 826. &amp; 830,
kingframe$50. Goodaalec·
tion of bedroom suites,

1971 2 bdr .• 12&gt;66. cleon.
good

Monday, December 10, 1984

Pomeroy-MiddleP!)rt, Ohio .

Answerhere : HIS(

X X X) &amp;( 11 X)
(Answers tomorrow)

Saturday's \ Jumbles' OPIUM STOKE BUTION ACTU AL
Answer: What pinu p g1rls sometimes areSTUCK-UP
Join thl J umbll Lovltfl fin Ch.llliiiCI r ~eel ve si.-; elght·word Su poe r J umbl" •w•ry
month . FDf t r11 nmpl" write to : Jumb l• Lov •r~ l!!',n Club, c/o lhl1 new1p1~r .

P.O. Iox 101. Palmyra, N.J . 0&amp;085.

IlliDGE

James .tacoby

Wise men know
frientl and foe

NORTH
• 87 6 2

12- 10-84

9 A
t K76 3
+K J 9 8
EAST
WEST
+A 10 3
• J 5
.K Q9 3
. 10 8 7 6 51
• \09
tA
+Q 7 6 3
+A 10 5 4

By James Jacoby
What are the qualities that make a
great bridge partnership? I can't
name them all, but hig~ on the List
.would be knowing each other's tendencies, in both the bidding and the
play .

SOUTH
+K Q 9 4

Today's defenders were Eric Mur-

•J 2

ray sitting West and Sammy Ketiela
sitting East. Their opposing declarer
was Paul Soloway . All were competing in an international team event in
Argentina some years ago .
You see the diagramed bidding.
Now for the play . After the ace of diamonds lead, Murray shifted to the
heart eight, :1 card ·which from East' s
ppint of view was unusually high .
After winning with the ace, declarer
played a spade from dummy .
Kehela thought it unlikely tha t his
partner would lead the diamond ace

tQJ8 5 4 2

+2

Vu l nerable: Neither
Dealer: East

,.

,.

WeSt

Nortb

East

Pa ss
Pass

DbL
Pass
Pass

RedbL
Obi.

Soutb

Pass

4+

Pass

O penin~ lead: tA

unless it was a singleton . In addition,
partner's second Lead of a high heart
(the eight} rather than a low one sug·
gested that he wanted to trump a
diamond. Furthermore , it was well
known that internationalist Soloway
enjoyed surprising his opponents.
What could be more surprising than
to have a six-card side suit

(diamonds} lurking in the bushes'
Kehela w ent right up with the spade
· ace and gav e a diamond ruff to West .
whose club ace set the contract .
Kehela knew his partner and his
opponent.

~tf·~·~
.by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS 42 Rockfish
DOWN
I Subdue
5 Went by 1 Russian
cosmonaut
car
9 Loved one 2 Turkish
city
10 Feel
remorse 3 Low I.Q.
holder
12 Pastry
4 Porker
13 Within
5 French
14 Yoko annuity
11
IS Dracula 's
6
Jupiter
's
form :
m other
IS
16 In favor
17 Mystery 7 Wor shiped 18
21
as
writer
a g od
22
19 Wrath
8 Stand
23
20 'Useless
behind
fragment
10 In good
21 Outdo
24
22 Pulverize spiril'l
25 Racine
drama
26 Come-on
27 Chinese
pagoda
28 Work unit
29 Crease
33 Peer Gvrtt'sl'
mother
34 Anc . Heb.
measure
35 Veto
36 Poem
38 Jargon
39 Repeat
perform-

Yesterday 's Answer
Cyli n·
drical
Avia n
Cook ed
Frij ol e
Gratify
" They' r e
playin g

"

25 Princi pal
27 Overused
29 In wh&lt;lt
place '

30 Blackguard

31 Cambnc .
e.g.

32 Surplus
37 And not

Impor tance 38 Aut o

ance
tO Asse ver ate
U Circular
motion
j;_ ,_
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here' s how lo work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands f or another. I n this sample A is used
lor the three L 's, X f or the two O's, et c. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of th e w ords are all
hints. Each day the c ode letters are differ ent.
.
CRYPTOQUOTES
12-10
ZYVXJG
STOP

YD C P

uv w p
Z T L D 'F

DOP

LAVJYZ

· XP C PO
ZYP

vx

LD C VI.

ADF

MPPX
Z YPF

Y V GZ T O F . PVGPXYTAPO

'
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : AS A R ULE

PEOPLE

ARE

AFRAID OF TRUTH. EACH TRUTH WE DISCOVER IN
NATURE OR SOCIAL• IJFE DESTROYS THE CRUTCHES ON WIDCH WE USED 'rO LEAN . - ERNST

TOLLER

�Mondav~ December'1o. 1984

Page--12-The Oaily Sentinel

Emergency squads ~ept busy

Area deaths
Michael Johnson

Miss Nelson was born May 10,
1928, In Rutland, a daughter of the

Michael Johnson, Fork Smtih,
Ark., formerly of Mason, died
Sunday at Fort Smith.
He was the son of the late George
Johnson, Mason.
Survivors are his wlfe, Barbara
Johnson, Fork Smith; his mother,
Frances JohnSOn, Mason; one son,
Richard Johnson, at home; two
daughters, Amber Dawn and Patsy
Renee Johnson, at . home; three
sisters, Bonnie Johnson, Mason,
CheUa Roush, Rockfol1!, Ill. and
Mary Richmond, Rutland, Ohio;
five brothers, George Johnson,
Atlanta, Ga., James Johnson,
Kirksville, N.C., Charles Johnson,
Fork Smith, Richard Johnson, Mo.,
Edward Johnson, Hemlock Grove,
Ohio.
Flmeral services will be Wednes·
day, 10a.m. atCox'sFuneralHome,
Clarksville, Ark.

late Herbert M. and Mary Ethel
Russell Nelson.
She was a member of the Rutland
Church of Christ.
Surviving are a sister, Doris
Thomas, Rutland; two nieces, Mrs.
Charles (Dee) Easter, Galena, and
Mrs. Roger (Kathy) Schultz, Columbus, and four great nieces:
Setvlces will be held . at 2 p.m .
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Mr. Eugene Underwood
officiating. Burial will be In Riverview Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 1 to 3 and 7 to 9 p.m.
today.

James H. Pore, Sr.
James H. Pore, Sr., 65, Route 1,
West Columbia, died at 7: re p.m.
Saturday In Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Oct. 7, 1919, In Putnam
County, he was the son of the late
Harless and Elizabeth Roach Pore.
He was a captain for the Ohio
Rive!' Company, White ·Brothers
and M&amp;G TO"{ing. He was a'
member of the Church of Christ in
Henderson, the FOP Tu·Endie-Wei
Lodge 102, and the West Virginia
.
Sherlff's A~oclation.
·Surviving are one daughters,
Mrs. Shirley Bartles, Troy, Ind.;
two sons, James Pore Jr., New·
burgh, Ind., and Michael Pore,
Chester; two sisters, Mrs . Kathryn
Miller, Point Pleasant, and Francis
Scarberry, Gallipolis Ferry; one
brother, Charles Pore, Murrays·
v1lle; and six grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by one
brother.
Funeral services Will be at 2: 30
p.m. Tuesday In the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with Minister Eu·
gene Zopp officiating. Buri?l wUI
follow In Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 6 p.m. Monday.

Adelene France
Adelene France, 69, Rutland,
ddfed Saturday at Kettering Medf·
cal Center, Kettering, Ohio.
Born April 17, 1915 in Harrisonv1lle, shewas the daughterofthelate
William Howard and Osie Hysell
Howell.
A member of the Seventh Day
· Adventist Church, Pomeroy, she is
surv1ved by a daughter, Suzanne
Roberts, Moore, Okla.; a son, Greg
France, Osan Alr Force Base,
Korea; a grandchild and a great
grandchild.
Married to Walter W. France in
September 1940, Mrs. France was
preceded in death by her husband in
-June 1!1l2.
She was also pXeeeded In death by
a sister, Helen Black; and a brother,
Bernard Howell.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m.
Wednesday morning at Hunter
Funeral Home in Rutland. Pastor
Michael Pionkowskl will officiate.
Burial will be In Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at' the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m . and 7-9 p.m . on
Tuesday.

Helen May Nelson
Helen May Nelson, 56, Clifton, W.
va., formerly of Rutland, was dead
upon arrival a t Pleasant Valley
Hospital Saturday.

Four calls were answered on Pomeroy Health Care Center at6: 58
Saturday and five on Sl,lnday by a.m. and took Faye Dunlavy to
Units of the Meigs County Emer- Veterans Memorial. At 9: ll! a.m., ·
goency Medical Service.
Pomeroy went to Abbott Rd. for
At 6: 59 a .m. Saturday, Rutland Trecie Abbott to Holzer Medlcal
.. went to Salem St. for Ida Young to · Center. Pomeroy squads one and
Veterans Memorial. At 7:03 p.m., four were called to the 5cene of 811
Pomeroywimtto317CondorSt.fora auto accident on State Route 33 at
structure flre !ftlt the call was Enterprise and transported Patrl·
cancelled. Pilmeroy was called to cia Fraley, Leona Lelvlng and
thesceneofanautoaecidentonEast Fneda Le!v!ngto Veterans MemorMaln St. at·7:09p.m. Homer Smith tal. At 4: ~p.m., Pomeroy squad 33
.was treated at the scene but not was called to \hesameal!toaccldent
transported. And Mlildleport trans- to · assist In transporting Beulah
ported June Kloes from her Middle- Lelving to the hospital. And at 6: ~
port residence to Veterans Memor- p.m., Middleport took Mable Brace
tal atlO: 14 p.m.
· from the ftrestation to Veterans
On Sunday, Pomeroy went to the Memorial .

Good through December 16, 1984
While quantities last ... Quantity rights reserved. We
are not responsible for typagrophic.al errors. Sorry
'
No Dealers.

c:'~.o~i

Faye Roush Dunlavy
· Mrs. Faye Roush Dunlavy, a
resident of the Pomeroy Health
Care Center for the past year, died
SUJ!day at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Retired from employment at the
Columbus Army Depot, Mrs. Dun·
lavy was born In Meigs County, a
daughter of the late Philson and
Alvira Webster Roush.
She was a _member of Heath
United Methodist Church in Middleport; a member of the Women's
Christian Temperance Union, a
member of the Y.W.C.A., Columbus, and the Meigs County Senior
Citizens. She had resided In Columbus for4me60yearsofher life.
Surviving are a dal1ghter, Mrs.
George (Grace) Warner,Pomeroy;
three grandchildren, Mrs. JamesJ;.
(Margie) Proffitt, Pomeroy; Rl- ·
chard Warner, Parkersburg, W.
Va., andGordonWarner,Pomeroy;
two great-grandchildren; a sister,
Mrs. Hanson (Eima) Holter, near
Minersville, and several nieces and
nephews.
Preceding her In death In addition
to her parents were a sister, Mrs.
Charles (Irma) Ihle and an infant
son.
ServiCes will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing Funer~l
Home with the Rev. Robert Robinson officiating. Burial wUI be In the
Carmel Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime on
Tuesday.

SILE STARTS TODAY

TAPES

·

AN IDEAL STOCKING STUFFER
SHOW PLANNED - Mrs, Lois Paul~y, general chalnnan of the
Meigs Counly Arts 1111d Cndts Show and Sale held IU the Sall!lbury
Elementary School Saturday and Sunday, holds thlll 11111!8ual replica of a
buck saw which features a palnling. 'Die event, whlcll is expected to he
1111 annual affair, was wen attended by the public both days and there
were some 30 exhibitors on hand. 'Die audltAirlwn of the school plus
several rooms were nlieded to ltoiiSe the many displays. 'The weather
cooperated both days wllh wanner, fair days to encourage attendance.

Reagan may consider
military spending cuts

WASinNGTON (AP) - Having
overall $42 bililon goal.
given preliminary approval to
Decisions on the Pentag01;1 budget
nearly $31 billion In domestic were delayed ' last week while
spending cuts, President Reagan Defense Secretary Caspar Wein·
shlfls his focus to the Pentagon this berger was out of the country
week and is expected to consider a meeting with allied defense minisplan that would virtually freeze his ters and other foreign officials.
Some admlnlstrat!oll officials
planned military buildup.
Budget Dlrector David A. Stock- have argued against paring the
man .has been drafting recommen- mUitary buildup now, saying It
datlons to hold most military would weaken the U.S. position in
, spending programs to current upcoming arms control talks with
levels, according to sources who the Soviet Union.
However, Stockman's plan would
spoke only if not quoted by name.
They said such a freeze would retain planned Increases In major
produce about $8 billion in savings weapons programs, including the
next year.
controversial MX nuclear missile.
Reagan has set a goal of holding
Republican congressional lead·
total federal spending at current ers have told tbe president that his
levels for the 1986 fiscal year that hopes for another round of slgl)lfl·
begins Oct.l. To do that will take$42 · cant budget reductions will fail in
billion in savings next year.
· Congress Unless the Pentagon also
"We know that trs Important takes a share of the cuts.
CLEVELAND (AP) The across tbe hoard to see that
The decisions on military spend·
jackpot from the latest "Ohio Lotto"
everyone participates In trying to lng come as Reagan and his senior
drawing will be shared by the
achieve this freeze," Reagan said aides try to build congressional
holders of nine winning tickets, Ohio
last week, leaving the door open for support for the president's ambiLottery officials say.
reductlons In military spending.
tious deficit-reduction effort to
The amount each ticketholderwUI
The president ordered his Cabinet freeze, reduce or eliminate almost
receive will be announced today.
last week to come up with $33.6 all domestic federal programs.
In the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto"
billion in domestic spending cuts.
Reagan has tentatively agreed on
drawing, t)le six winning numbers
Another $8 billion In military a broad program that Includes
were 6, 9, 21, Tl, 33 and 39.
spending savings would meet the drast!cstepssuchasa5percentpay
The winning number drawn
cut fodederal workers, reductions
Saturday night in the Ohio Lottery's Firefighter has wreck
1n welfare programs, elimination of
daily game, "The Number," was
en
route
to
battle
blaze
the Smau Business Administration,
368. The lottery reported earnings of
cuts In federal grants to local
$854,688. from wagering on "The
Pomeroy fireman Homer Smith, .governments and s!gnlf!cant reducNumber."
309
Mulberry, was involved in an tions In farm price-support
· The' earnings came on sales of
auto
accident Saturday evening programs.
$1,513,759.50, while holders of winemuute
to answer a flre call.
while
ning tickets are entitled to share
At
approximately
7:09 p .m ., Veterans Memorial
$659,071.50.
Smith was traveling east on East
Main with a red light on topofhiscar
Saturday admlss~ons--Belva
and his emergency flashers on. Pierce, Rutland; Allen Eichinger,
Smith attempted to pass a car Pomeroy; Ida Young, Rutland;
driven by Marvin Craig, WUils Hill. June Kloes, Middleport.
Craig did not see the passing vehicle
Saturday discharges--Clifford
and made a left hand turn Into Kauff, Charles Beegle.
Smith.
Sunday admlsslons, -Patr!cla
Each car sustained about $150 Fraley, Glouster; Leona Lleving,
worth of damages.
Minersville; Mabel Brace, Racine. .
Craig was cited for DWI by
Sunday discharges--Betty Taylor,
Pomeroy Pollee.
Lucille Cundiff.

Nine share jackpot

$1 19
90 MIN. Sl '49
60 MIN.

,.

SWEET·1-CRUICHY
PEAIUTS

IN PERSON .,
AT UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
870 SO.- THIRD - MIDDLPOU

BRING THE KIDS TO
SEE SANTA CLAUS
TO~IGHT 6:00 TO 7:30
' .. OPEN NIGHTLY
·
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60 ·

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F1111

~
rll .
·t+l

MINI BOOK LIGHT

-.==i

a

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places , and atilt have
encu;h reading light ... not
disJurbing these around
you I Simply •lido tho
reading material under the
metal clip. Great for home
and travel . It's lightweight
too I P~wered by 3 AA bat·
terles . (not included). it
folds to a mere 7" long.

KODAK
DISC
3100 CAMERA

CompuScan weighing ayttem c(!m·
putes weight electronically. Easy-to·
read ditploy. "Zero A.djuttment"
feature.

r

~-~~

I Compr~ct 4'11'' ciLJII·purpote

MONDAY, DEC. 1Oth
TUESDAY, DEC. llth

~gn.

IDS-3

WINDSHIELD
WASHER FLUID

1 lncludlltrlvelclipand
mounting brr.c:lltt.
• A.dVInced IOiiciiUit
rt!IIDIIIty.

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Beginning at 9:30 a.m'. each day
TENDER

battery IIQnal ,

Ill db hom.

Winter Formula
1 Gal.

ltneiUiloij"""'

BONELESS

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RIB EYE &amp; SIRLOIN FILET

lh&lt;U.S.A.

'8''
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1
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EACH

MIDGET LIGHT

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Paper or Foil

By The Box Frozen
4 '/, oz. ea./15 Per Box
$14.85 Box- No Lim it
Tender &amp; Delicious

YOU. CHOICI

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Choa11e from Clear or
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YOUR CHOICI

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USE YOUR
SEARS CHA RGE

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lootner Trl·folds at a special
once·o·yeor sale price. Your
cnalce of supor-solt leatnero
In ttveral moaculln• shodee.
All oro attractive!~ gift bo•ed.

Trimmed to
Restaurant
~pacification s

10 LIGHT

8" ANiiEL TREE TOP

Smart. popular ctleckbock dutch
at a once·a·yeor tole price. HQI
· removable checkbook caae, out·
tide coin pocket , pen, plua
pockets for cords, pnotos , and
cash. LuMurloua, top· grain leather
In fashion colora. Attractively gift
bo•ed.
r

DECOR NOEL
ICICLES

6 1/2 FJ.

The upowepl Bavarian
Qulk·A· Tree features
5 ·~ -Inch wide branch••
for a different leak In a
moderately priced tree.
Flame r1tardanf and
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11
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AUTHORIZED CATALOG ME.RCHANT

18 ln. Long

ONLY

HOURS: MO" .·Tues ,·Wtd.·Fri ..
9:30 to 5:90

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Sat. 9:30 to 2:00 ,---:--

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.ears

' l'' ...
1;s

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2 Oz. Package
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79~
21!2" SATIN
ORIIIEITS

GREGG &amp; PATTY GIBBS
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

ANGEL HAIR

1000 Strands

CHRISTMAS TREE

B

~-

AI

&gt;!"...:.t;;ll

This Mini Book Light will
gl"'e you proper and con ·
centratlld light just wl'lere
you need It while reading
or taking note1 . That
means you can curl up
anywhel't, even dlml)' lit

'1

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DIBITIL SCALE

• NO INITAI.UT10N R!OUtAm
when triiVeling· juat hang on door.
• ~YTOIIIOUNTtlncmo.

'PH . (Ohio) 992-217"8
(W. Va .) 773-9577

SPE.CIAL GUEST: EVANGELIST DARLA BURNS
DEC. 16 - 6:00 P.M.

•I ••

YOUR CHOICI

~~1j

.-G-~CXO~~'e.$~\Jl

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DEC. 13 &amp; 14 (Thurs. &amp; Fri.)
'AND DEC. 16 - 10:00

Choose from Tuna
Tuna Chicken, Liver &amp;
Chicken , Turkey &amp; Giblet
Hearty Stew.

Mill STAY
DO&amp; FOOD

100z.

Great Buys on
Sea Food,
Steaks And
Other Specialties

LIGHTS

CIT FOOD

The items and prices in our Santo on a Budget Christmas
Catalog ore in effect through Dec . 24th, 1984. While quan tities lost.

-{~!':~

Weather forecast

IDS

LUDEI'I
.STOVE TOP
OOYERED
STUFFIIIIII CIOOOUTE
CHERRIES
'

Unllllre•k•lllle
1a.Count

'1''

STICK-ON
BOWS

-==•

~
a-. . . . .

~~.J;

!-'-!f

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