<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="1496" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/1496?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T11:31:02+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="11398">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/10c3945bcb04e3d9c34fb0dc17aa863a.pdf</src>
      <authentication>eb9dfd124ba9a150c8d991761b1dbb11</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="5910">
                  <text>---.,.---~·-~· ~-·--- - .

OUR GlEN ERIC ·DRUGS

baskets

menace

'

Can Save You Money
Generic drugs con generally be purchased from the manufacturer at a lower cost than
brand names. Becoure they cost us· less, they cost you leas too. Ask your doctor about
generics. He is In the position to make the correct evaluation when prescribing the right
drug for your pqrticulor need. Ask our Pharmacist obout the price difference.
••

. . ... I'

• •

·days 'til
Christmas

ll'rade on Page 3

. , -";,.~'\ .k.

::.\ • •

~i~tw;~

•

·:• ·~!f~'l
-·
• •
• • J • •• • •

e.

2 LB. CHRISTMAS TIIS
•Red

·lio1.34, No.169
Copyrighted 184

•Happy Hoildoy

YOUICHOICI

Mini AM/FM/FM Stireo
Dual Cassette
Recorder

'129

tote . . . lerge

enough to deliver

WOOD BUTLER TABLE

Sampler

gre1t l ltreo sound
with _. speakers.
Complete dual

$399
TRAVEL SET
After Shave 2·114 Oz.
Cologne 2-1/4 Oz.

Talk about beauty, thll
2L~

11 it I Dr•" up vour

thlo lovely and

$7a9

.

cassette rec.ordl.ng
versatility In a comp1ct mini
atereo design. MicrOphone
mlxirlg Input l!lllowa voice
over an Jlrtady recorded
tepe without erasing the
origin II. Mualc Loc.tlon

1 Lb.

funootlo•no~

piece of furniture.

.,...
••
.. lver color
wUh black

Syolom (ML5-t) mokn llouy 10 lind 1heo11r1 of your
lrock on lny Clllette, Dual CIIHIII

IIIVOrllt

tranaporta filature euy puahbutton oper11ion and
allowa you to cuatomlze your ceaHttet. llltend

tlotonlng time and hove tun ptoyl~g · dloc Jockoy.

'399

t,

99
'149

~{IIiC) ----::~20_:_PA.:_GE_
~

,enttne

.. Pomer,9y-Middleport. Ohio, Tueaday•.December 11. 1984

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel stall Writer
Six families - four now in Pomeroy and two in
Salisbury Township- located In an area bounded by
Rutland St. and tpe fiood road may be annexed a~ a
part of Middleport.
.
Representing the six households at a flleetlng of
Middleport VIllage Colincll Monday night was Roger .
Manley. Manley said the residents get their mall
service through Middleport along with their fire and
emergency seovlces through Middleport VIllage.
They get no services from the subdivisions In which
they are located, he said, and feel they should betaken ,
In as a part of Middleport Village.
Councu Indicated there would be no problem with
this except the technicalities Involved. Mayor Fred
Hoffman said It Is his Impression the residents would
have to petition their particularly subdivisions Pomeroy and Salisbury Township - for permission
tobecomeapartofMiddleportasaflrststepandthen

Small enough to

THE ACTIVE MAN'S
GIFT SET

•

_j

Middleport VIllage CounCil would act on the request.
Mayor Hoffman will check out the proper steps to be
followed and advised Manley on the matter.
·

Air complaints
Lester Errett and Joe Jarrel representing
Consolidated Communications of Point Pleasant,
purchasers of 'Cableentertalnment, discussed complaints against the service of the company.
Errett explained theft of · equipment from the
company had occurred in August which had to be
replaced. Loss of the equipment and replacing caused
some problems with the cable television service, he
said.
Both Errett and Jarrel pointed out It Is Important
for residents having trouble with their seovlce to
telephone In their complaints !0992-6444. This number
Is a 24 hour answerlngseovlcea'nd the company needs
Information on problems In order to track them down
and correct them, the two sald.

Councilman Bob Gilmore said h~ still has problems
with h,ls picture quality and audoo a nd counctlman
Allen Lee King said there have been numerous
complaints about the service over the pas! few weeks.
The complaints carne from a wide area of the towit so
they cannot be pinpointed to one parti cular area , King
said. Mayor· Hoffman said that he had also received a
number of complaints from residents subscribing to
the service.
Again, the two company representatives urged th ai
residents call In their complaints so that problem s can
be checked out. Jarrel reported Consol idated
Communications has purchl!sed new test. equipment
which will be extrem ely -beneficial in bette('
monitoring the seovlce system. Both men stressed the
company Is a seovice oriented firm and \\1shcs 10
. provide good service for customers .
Errett said Consolidated Communications which
purchased the system only a few weeks ago has plans
to make
and add more c hannels to the

seovice and he hopes to present these plans in the near
future.
Meant ime , two representatives took the names and
addresses of village offi cia ls and wlll monitor their
cableseovice in an atlempt to see th~ t all is goi ng well
in the community.
'
Fire contracts approved
Counc il approved the report of Mayor Boffinan
s how ing receipts of $6,:il9.12 in fin('S a nd fees for the
month of November. Contracts for fire protection
services by the Middleport F ire Department for
Cheshire J'ownshlp and Cheshire Village were
a pproved. Cheshi re Town• hip will pay a n at fee of •
$4,650 a yea r plus $75 a call and Cheshire Village will
pay a fla t annua l fee of $2800 plu s $75 a call.
The third reading was given an ordin ance providing
an across the board pa y raise of .10 cents an hour to
employes of the town in 1985 a nd the ord inance was
adopted.
(Conlinued on page 61

Columbia Gas
offering free .
energy audits

-Conditions
hampering.
operations

.PHOTO ALBUM

e

With SilverStone®

Interior. Chef·

styled with sloped sides ... ldaol fo,.
frying and sauteing . Super· tough ,
SilverStone non ·stlck inta,.ior fo,.
easy cleaning. Durable aluminum to
heot quickly and evenly .

G.Od for thouoondo of
lights, tho Blc llghtor has
on adJuotable flam• and
in a11ort.d c~lors .

NORELCO

Clean Air 5000

SUPER SHOOTER

molt airborne

Full Feature Extension Phone
with Tone or Pulse.Dialing
fall, fun, MBy lo Ull8,
add the catered look
lo /lome .,terlalnlng

Joi110Amond

cream color .

W1ltmownt ldapt1rlnallolded

.... Price ••• , •••• , •... M7.M

Now 1n ext~n~lon phone with

• ......... • ••• ' ••• ' •• i " " · "
......
Mft.
'.
. .

true Tone or PuiM or comblna·

lion dialing. The Night BrlthtTN
ll;ht.cj keype~ mak11 cnallng In
Ult Clark euy. Juat enqugh light
11 cut to te~d lht keyt and not
tler11t you when you pick up
lhi t11ndMI. Euy to Will
mount, cowrt "" etandard
moctular well]ack comp"ttly
tor a neat appearance.
coriatructlon aM
'tutt neturaltound quality blc:ktd by GE'I Full Twa Vur
Warranty• and prompt national HMCI. !ICC reglttered .

convenient porta~lllty . ..
take to tho living room,
patio ... brow at tho offlcot

.......

• Clgltel clock with programmer

0

•••

0.

0 •••••••

*2.99'511
•••
• !-'?.
~(.li

~S.I

.......... Ofl,.,.....

• Ull with or without tlmtr
o CoffH brtwa directly Into
Oeter thermo $Irate
Coffel r•m•lnl "llrvlng not"
and tre1h for noura ·
.
• Thtrt'l no blttarn111

0.

Your C.t
After .....,.

""ned

• Bet timer to btgln brewing at
eny tlmt

0 0

•&amp;,'

~

PROlE

I

·. •: r(::.q,
; • ,,' 0,

'. \'......

0

beCIUit you don't rthtat
o Atmov1blti Wlttr Contelntr
o Cont•thlped ftitar baakei
dlrecta COtfll towerd center
of nner , , ...._., you money
by Ueing Mill COHII
• ~utomattc ehut·oft

111·01 Almond

two~

Phono frlendo art
durablo wolklo·tolkloo thatl!::ii
look 1un ltko real ~~
tepeJionoo. Portable and •

·WILD

$1699

eaay·to·u" : Batterl.. not

$2""'2 99 fl

.·THE ESSENCE OF AN$JAL AITRACTION
•usE IT BEFORE YOU STALK"

I

~~~~I
• ,. . . aw,
~~ -

e

SKY TALKERS
Wild musk noveltloo. Lucky tho Elophant
and Santa Boar, all with .375 oz. Cologno
Spray.
.
·

'349
~addt@kdd

1 Section, 10 Pages
26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New•p8per

Six fitmilies ·r~est annexation to Middleport

GE. Webrlns soocllhlnsslollfe.

@Ncjp&amp;®

at y

,.

school budget

@ltl&amp;ae·
MUSK FOR MEN

Two durable walkie talkloo with
eaty-to-u" volume knobs, talk twit·

POINT PLEASANT - The
search for an airplane that reportedly crashed into the Ohlo River
below the Gallipolis Locks and Dam
continued this morning as divers
went underWater to locate a
"foreign object" detected by sonar
equipment.
The search was called off around 3
p.m . Monday because of fog and
swift river currents and was
renewed at 10 a.m. today.
Officials were unable to lndentlfy
the object detected by sonar before
calling ott the search for the day.
Four divers . were scheduled to
search the waters near the Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co. plant at
Apple Grove, W.Va.,' where the
. plane is reported to have crashed.
State poUceCpL K.R. Becketts_ald
the equipment ls not capable of
measuring the size of the object, but
said It ''Is large enough that (the
sonar ) can plck it up distinctly."
State police, U.S.CoastGuardand
U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers .
searchers also dragged the river to
try to locate the aircraft, but
conditions prevented divers from
going Into the river, Beckett said.
"We probably won't dive untO the
morning because of weather and
light (vislbUity) conditions," he said
Monday night. "We'll dlve in the
morning If condlt!Qns allow."
Beckett also said there was a
"pretty good" current in the river,
which was hampering dragging
efforts .
.
A check by law enforcement with
airports in a 200-mtle area showed
that there were no aircraft missing
from those facilities . No missing
persons ·reports had been • fUed
either.
Spokesmen at the Gallia-Melgs
Regional Airport in GaUipolls, and
the Mason County Airport near
Point Pleasant, reported all alreraft
at those fields were on the ground.
Two aircraft had left Mason County
. Sunday, a spokesman said, but had
returned.
The crash was reported around 4
p.m . Sunday by three teenagers in
the Eureka area. The youths said
' they saw a low-flying craft near the
power line spanning the river fly
under the llne.lts engine reportedly
stalled and the craft nosedlved Into
the river, sinking within seconds of
hitting the water.

STILL SEARCHING - Dragging and diving operations were
scheduled lo reswne today In the Ohio River lor a plane heUeved lo he
down In the waler below theGaWpolls Locks and Darn. Three !eerfagers
reported seeing a small plane plunge into the river Sunday aftemoon.

Alt'-gb nothing has been found, sonar ll'!ed by the U.S. C.oa.t Guard
Indicates sometype of object is In the river. Bad weather conditions •
hampered Monday's operations.
·

State pay raise 6ill hits unexpected snag
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - A
controversial bill raising the pay of
the governor, state lawmakers,
local officials and others hit a snag
which threatened to preclude a
House floor vote on it today.
Leaders had agreed they would
try to send the measure to the Senate
as part of an informal agenda to
adjourn the Legislature late this
week.
But for .reasons not explained, the
proposal was kept in the House
Finance Committee after being
recommendEd for passage 14-6,
Instead of being returned as part of
the parliamentary process to the
rules committee for assignment to a.
floor vote.
There was speculation that House
Speaker Vern Riffe Jr., who Is
insisting the bill be bipartisan, was
dissatisfied with the amount of GOP
support It mustered In committee
and portends to muster In the House.
Riffe was not available for
comment.
All of the six nega tlve voles came
from Republicans. Two of the nine

GOP members, Reps. Thomas
Johnson of New Concord and
Thdmas Pottenger, Cincinnati,
voled for lt .
Assistant House Minority Leader
Waldo Bennett Rose, R·Lima, saki
fewer Republians are supporting
the measure than previously expected. But he said he had told Riffe
the GOP "will provide a smattering
of votes, enough to make it dearly ,
bipartisan."
Rose said he was unaware of the
reason for the delay which could put
off a vote until Wednesday or later.
Rose helped draft the blll which
was disclosed In detail Monday for
the first time. He, alongwlth.HouSf
Speaker Pro Tern Barney Quilter,
[).Toledo, made a joint presentation, describing the bill as bipartisan
and Indicating enough support for
passage. '
· '
The bill gives the gove~r a raise
from $ffi,&lt;nl to $85,&lt;nl a year .
Salaries of the attorney general,
secretary of state. treasurer and
auditor would he increased from
$500,000 to$70,00l, and the lieutenant

governor would have his pay raised
from $35,000 to an amount equal to
the speaker pro tern of the House.
who would earn $46,222 a year.
The measure also calls for
memhers of the Legislature to have
their base pay increased a t the slart
of new terms on Jan. 7from$22,500 a
year to $32.500. Their last ra ise was
in January 1979.
However, the measure contains
an increment in 1987 which would
further raise lawmakers' base pay
by an am ount - maybe 10 percent
- set by a Labor Department
economic indicator.
A 10 percent increase for House
m embers and senators in Hll7would
take their base pay to $35,750.
The blll eventually would double
salaries of the speaker and the
president of the Senate. Their pay
would go from $35,00) to $50,(00 In
1985 and $70,000 In 1987.
The bill calls generally for county
of!lclals ·to get increases of 14
percent Jan. 1 and an addltlonal14
percent in 1987 for prosecutors,
sheriffs and court clerks except for

thOse in lhe 12 largest-population
counties. Their pay could exCf't'd
those ~rcentages under a fmmula.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl
Lower-incom e custom ers of Col urn·
bia Gas of Ohio will be en I it led to free
energy audits of their hom('S and
follow.up counse!J,ng about wea ther izing them uhder a program
unveiled by the utility a nd commun ity groups today.
E nergy audits, without thesubse·
quem counsel ing, curre ntly are
availa ble to all customers at a cost of
$15.
P anlclpa nts in the new program ,
which w ill be available herP
immediate ly and in ot her areas
seoved by the utility early next year,
must have household Incomes below
the median county level to be
e ligi ble.
. In F ranklin County, for exam ple,
the med ian income is $27,125 for a
' fa mlly of fou r.
Maovln E . Whi te. chairman of the
giant utility , said Columbia will
provide $l25,1XXJ to start the program , lit which lO,OOJ fami lies are
expected to receive audits and
counseling du ring the two-year
initial phase.
White sa id coni rolling gas use and
weatherization mu sl play a role in a
long·lerm solution· lo bill payment
problems.
John T. Dempsey, executive
director of the Ohio Associa tion of
Communi ty Action Agenc\('S , said
participants in the program of
aud!ls and counseling will be giv~n a
free Inspection of their homes to
determine what needs to be donp to
reduce gas ust•.

chn·, coda buttan1 ond flexible
antenna1.

COLOONIIPIAY
3/1 oz.

Celeste questions use .of s~te funds to pay bills

APTIIIHAVI

39z.

UIP WITH
CAIDLE

'699

The fragrance that caplurto tho
spirit of you, Sand &amp; Sable 11
cla11lc boauoy gracM with o
mcdern oplrll. Vou'ff love the way
Ito florof oonsotlonollnaor- from
ounrloe through candlolttht 1

I~BJ ·II

..

.. •6oQ

I

NELSON'S DRUG STORE

a

'299

HOLLY hSE

.

;··'..
..

11·1&amp;1

NANCARROW'.$ PHARMACY .

'

'

~· ··.

proposed pay raise.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Gov.
"I think there Is serious question
Richard Celeste said he has serious
about using public money simply to
questions about using state money
make up a sbortfall In terms of the
to pay delinquent utility bOis for
utiUty company's operations," said
Individuals, especially for those
Celeste. "We also have a problem
Individuals who can afford to pay.
Celeste and · members of the · when It comes to determining
whether all of the bad debts a utility
Public UtUitles Commission ofOhio
company
~counters Is the result of
answered questions about utllilles,
people unable.to.pay their bUis, or In
the Home Energy Assistance Prosome cases, the result of people
gram and • the Percentage Of
simply unw1lllng to p&amp;y their bills.
Income Payment plan; which aid
"In those cases, I don't think that .
low-Income residents with utWty
the state or the state's taxpayers
bills, durtng a call-in radio program
should be obliged to step In and pay
Monday night.
One caller suggl!sted that state up," he said.
Columbia Gas of Ohio has asked .
lawmakers pay the delinquent bills
the
state to pay m111lonsof dollars In
Instead of giving themselves and
bills
run up by low-Income custo·
other state and. county ortlclals a

1111~

mers who now pay a percentage of
their monthly Income to retain ·
service. Columbia Gas said It will
also ask the PUCO to let It charge
regular-paytDg customers for the
unpaid bills already accumulated
under the state's extended payment
plan. Columbia Gas says the PIP
program has left It with more than
$18 million In unpaid accounts.
Another caller said he felt some
people were not getting enough help
with utility bllls.
"The problem with creating any •
kind of a program to provide energy
assistance Is where do you set the
cutoft," responded Celeste, "That's
what we've wrestled with over the
last few years when we SOI1 of

'

.

b;lcked Into moratoria · and then
found out that some of the peo'ple
who abused that were people who
could alford to pay their utility bills.
"And so what w e'vecomeupwith
Is a program that is designed to
address the needs of people with
particularly limited Incomes," he
said. "The Percentage-Of-Income
payment plan Is really geared to
reach a bit beyond HEAP."
Under HEAP, from 14 to 42
percent of an Individual's utility bUI
Is paid depending on the Individuals
Income. Under ihe PIP program,
low ·lncqme c ustome r s mak e
monthly payments of 15 percent of
their Income to avoid utility service
shutoffs.

-~

r

,...
SWORN IN - Jane Walton, Pomeroy, was sworn In Monday morning
by Mayor Richard Seyler w fW the unexpln,od te m1 of BUI SnouHer,
Pomeroy's clerk-treasurer who resigned in November. Walton, afonner
clerk-treasurer, served In that cap'aclty for twelve years under live
different mayors; Charlie Legar, Don ColliM, BUI Baronlck, DaleSmith,
and Clarence Andrews. Under Mayor Seyler, Walton hegins her sixth
lime an4 her thbteen year In olflce.

------;&gt;-----~~--~--~--~------~, -----------------------------~·~------~~--~------------~~--------------------·· ------------~~

�I.

)
r
Tueadey, December 11: 1984

COmmentary

Jumping tO CODCIUSiOnS ____

Ja_m_es_J:........,.K_i_lpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
romeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ............. ._...,.., ,...,...,.c:::~.....

tslffi~

~~

.

I

ROBERT L. WINGETt
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
As sis tan! Publisher / Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. Inland Dally Press Asso.ctallon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
•

LETTERS OF OPINION are we lcome. They shOuld be less than :llO words

long.

Al l lette~s

Page-2-Th&amp; Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio
Tueeday, December 11, 1984

are subject to edlllng and must be signed with name, address and

telephone number . No unsigned lett ers wUI be published . Le!l£&gt;rs should be In

good taste. address ing Issues. not personalities.

National drunk ·and
drugged drivers
awareness week

poachers." For thls crime, Time
WASIUNGTON - On Oct. 29
tlult ~ 59mehow had 'failed to
reported, Peters recently had
Time magazine carried a little
report. Young Peters, this re. Item, only two paragraphs long,
arrived at the federal prison In
spected researcher and Cub Scout
Leavenworth, Kan., there to begin
leader, wasn't found guQty. He
about the sad plight of Jeffrey
Peters. I am mlndlod to retell the ,serving an lll:month sentence.
pleaded guilty. This past SepI reacted to that sympathetic
story, partly, for the benefit of:my
tember he e11tered Into a plea
colleagues In the news business and · account as thousands of other
bargain with the U.S. attorney for
readerS must have reacted. The
partly for everyone else, because
the Western District of Missouri.
poor young teacher! The hanging
there Is a moral to it. We all can
· Peters &amp;grEed to testify for the
profit from moral instruction.
government 'In falconry cases of
judge! What a crut;J and unwar·
. This was the gist of the Piece as
ranted sentence! To put a Cub Scout
which lie has knowledge; he agreed
Time ran It: Peters was Identified
leader In prison for 18 months, just ' to surrender his propagation per·
as a high school biology teacher In
because he transported a bird
mlts and not ·to apply for such
Columbia, Mo., a Cub Scout leader,
across a state line without a permit,
permits again; _he agreed to forfeit
and "an Internationally respected
appeared to smaCk ot bureaucracy
aU the birds that last June were
researcher whose specialty Is birds
at Its worst. The Peters case struck
sel,zed under a search warrant from
me as a splepdld example of what
of prey." Two years ago, It
!Us home. ·He agreed to plead guilty
appeared from Time's account,
ails our system of criminal justice,
"to the charges contained In said
In which burglars go free whlle a
Peters neard that some hunters had
Information because I am guilty of
the crimes alleged therein."
trapped .a rare merlin falcon, and
w1ldllfe co~rvati()nlst goes to
prison. A column of outrage began
"he went to Utah to pick It up." But
) For its part; the government
agreed to drop prosecution of nine ·
he did not obtain a permit to ' to take shape In my mind.
The years teach us something. An other charges InvolVing the purtransport the rare bird across a
Inquiry to the Department of chaSe and possession of Illegally
state line, and as a result, "he was
Justice pi'Oduced some information
snared in a sting operation aimed at
obtained raptors, the m_aking of

.'

"I' ll never get picked up'' Is a common notion individuals have when
tjley get behind the -wheel of their car after having drunk to excess. In
lteneral terms, unfortunately, this has been true across the country. It's
estimated that there Is only one arrest for every 500 to 2,000 drunk drivers
on the road.· Giving further encouragement to those Who drive after
drinking excessively, is the feeling that "If I do get caught, there will be no
serious penalty!'
Drinking alcoholic beverages Is an accepted American practice and
some 80 percent admit to driving after drinklng. Fortunately, only seven
percent are considered to be "heavy" drinkers or the fatality rate would be
much higher in the United States. A startling figure came from one state
where a legislative committee was told by a representative of the State
Oflice of Highway Safety that 17 percent of the state's residents were
" heavy" drinkers, which means they averaged a quart of alcoholic
beverages each day'
·
Many repeat offenders are a menace on our highways, because some
states have laws that are top lenient and, In some instances, judicial
sente ncing IS inconsiste nt and varies with the temperament of the judge.
Lawyers defending a client involved in a drunk driving case frequently
make careful selection of the judge before whom they must present their
case. knowing the kinds of penalties each m e tes out. In Atlanta, Georgia,
this has been remedied , at least to a certain extent, by the inauguration bf a
"wheel system!' This provides for rotating DWI cases among three judges
so defense attorneys can no longer select the most lenient of the three.
Increased efforts to keep the drunk driver off the road In recent years
have had a degree of success, and the resulting statistics help to create a
wholesome public awareness of the problem. In January 1982, when an
airplane crashed in Washington, D.C., it took the lives of some 70 people.
· The entire country agonized over this tragic loss and investigations were
begun at once to determine wha t happened, so similar accidents could be
avoided in the future. In a' similar vein, but virtually unnoticed, about the
same numbe~; of people, 70, are killed each day on our highways in
alcohol-related collisions. Public attention a nd outrage is confined only to
the relatives of the 25,000 a nnua l victims.
Thanks to Increasingly widespread resentment toward the drunk
. driver, volunteer groups have sprung up from New York to California and
Maine to Mexico to reduce the human and economic carnage oh our
highways caused by drunk drivers.
These groups have influenced legislatures, and in recent years, state
lawmakers have responded w1th more stringent legislation affecting those
who drink and drive. To cite a few examples: Arizona approved a law that
eliminates plea-bargaining, requires a 24-hourjail sentence and a fin e of up
to $250 with possible suspension of driver's license for 90 days (the number
of arrests for drunk driving has. been cut In half); in Florida, new
legislation provides that the first time offende r shall provide 50 hours of
community service, a minimum fine of $250 and up to six months license
suspens ion; Kansas now provides for 48 hours in jail or 100 hours of
community service, with five days In jail for a second offense. A unique
aspect of the Kansas sit uation Is that the Jail Administrator may assign the
specific days a violator must serve to avoid the overcrowding that makes
ja il confinement a difficult penalty for judges In some states to assess.
Another area in which sta te legislatures are involved Is the legal
drinklng age. It varies across the nation from 18 in some states to 21ln
others. At the height of the Vietnam conflict , the philosophy prevailed In
some states that "If he's old enough to fight, he's old enough to drink" and
the legal drinking age was lowered to 18. In recent years, however, a
review of the data has caused some state legislatures to reverse this trend.
Alcohol-related collisions are the leading cause of death for young
Americans between 16 and 24 years of age. While they comprised only 22
pereent oft he licensed population, they are responsible for44percentof all .
nlghttlme fatal alcohol-related crashes.
.
In 1978, Michigan raised the drinking ~ge trom 18 to 21 and experienced
· adrop of 31 percent in the number of accidents Involving those In the 18 to 20
.age,group.
.
.
· ·Public Insistence on other legislative action is also paying dividends. In
-1981; at least 31 states considered legislation related to drinking and
·driving; 47 states require blood alcohol content tests on drivers kllled in
crashes; and an Increasing nUJpber of states impose more stringent
penalties on those who choose to drive after drinking to excess. The extent
to which this has helped Is rellected In figures that show arrests for drunk
driving have lncre~!sed from 561,000 in 1969 to 1.3 million in 1981. HQP~:fully,
this, will help to dispel the notion that "I won't get caught."
.
'1 f all phases of the programs designed to get the drunk driver off the
roads are implemented, our rewards w111 be great; many fewer serioos
tnju'r ies and lives lost, and a reduction In the annual $24 billion economic
cost to the Nation .

'Star VVars'

WASHlNGTON - Along w1th turn off by 1989.,..
The document Is unsigned and
defense of the flag, one of the goals
of the Heritage Foundation, the undated, though from the context It
conservative Washington think appears to have been written early
tank, has been to keep Henry this year.
Except tor the Kissinger referKlssinger out of publlc office.
Yet a mysterious document on ence, the memo is a convincingly
Heritage Foundation stationery autbentlc' statement of the Heritage
urges that the former secretary of Fmindatlon's view that the Soviets
state be recruited to sell the can't be trusted to abide by
Amertcan public on President arms-control agreements, and that
Reagan's "Star Wars" program.
U.S. security w1U ultimately depend
James Hackett, editor of the · on the a bllity to shoot down Soviet
foundation 's newsletter on national missiles in space.
It Is precisely because Kissinger
security, told my associate Donald
Is held responsible for detente and
Goldberg that the document did not
originate within the organization- the SALT agreements that he Is
stationery or no stationery. Klssln- anathema to the Heritage Foundager's office said he had not been tion. Yet onpagefiveofthemystery
approached by anyone to champion document, "Option One" for winning public support of the BMD plan
such a. program.
Yet there it is: a 10-page ·report
requires "a 'forceful personality'
titled, "A Propilsed Plan for Project
3pproach featuring activism prim·
arlly by one Individual of 'star'
on BMD (Ballistic Missile Defense)
quality,
specifically Henry
and Arms Control," w1th the stated
aim or "keeping the BMD program Kissinger."
alive In 1984 and ... Impossible to
And even the document's argu-

Cabbage patch
It wasn't meant to be that·way,
but Christmas has become a
rilgh :mare tor parents who feel they
must prov~ their undying love tor
their children. The only way some
fathers and mothers know how to do
It Is to provide them with the "In" .
toy of the year.
This was the case when Broadstreet came into my office perspirIng and shaking.
"Help me," he said.
"That's what I'm here for,'' I told
him gently. " What do you need?'!
"l have to get my hands on a
Cabbage Patch doll for my daughter this Christmas?"

"Are you crazy? If you need a
green card for an Illegal alien, I can
get you one. If you . want a
billion-dollar defense contract from
the Air Force, I can fix It for you. If
you'd like to go on tJle nex( space
shuttle flight; I'll get you a seat. But
where am I gqlng to find a Cabbage
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 11, the :wtith day of1984. There are 20 days left In
Patch doll in late December?" .
"You're my last resort. I've been
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
to every toy store on the East Coast,
On Dec. 11, 1936, Britain's King Edward VIII abdicated to marry an
I've advertised in tbe newspapers. I
American divorcee, Wallis Warfield Simpson. In a radio address, Edward
even tried to break into the Coleco
said, "I have found it Impossible to carry the heavy burdenofresponslb!Uty
toy factory In Connecticut. In all
and to discharge m y duties as King as I should wish to do, without the help
cases I came up empty. I can'tface
and support of the woman I love." George VI ascended to the throne.
my Jessica on Christmas morning
H there isn't a Cabbage Patch doll
On this date:
In 17'19, the first recorded sighting of the aurora bo~alis took place in · under the tree."
"A Jot of fathers wUI have the
Ne\.( England.
,
same problem ·this year," I told
In 1776, George Washington crossed the Delaware River, traveling !rom
near Trenton, N.J., to Pennsylvania.
him.
In 1872, America's first black govei1Xlr took oftlce as Pinckney Benton
"I don't care about other fathers.
Stewart Plnchback became acting governor of Louisiana.
AU I worry about is ~essica . It I
In 1941, Italy and Germany declared war on the United States.
. don't produce a Cabbage Patch doll
In 1946. John D. Rockefeller Jr. oftered to donate a six·block piece of
she'll never believe anything I say
again." He put his head In his
Manhattan real estate as the site for a ,United Nations headquarters.
hands. "I've failed as a parent."
In 1961, a U.S. aircraft carrier carrying Army helicopters arrived In
Saigon. It was the first direct American military support for South ·
"You're not a failure," I told
Broadstreet. "The system . has
: .VIetnam's battle against communlst guerrillas.

·T oday in history

salesnnan~

__________

J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n

ments in favor of Kissinger's
designation as . the foundation 's
white knight make a certain sense
-were It not for the organization's
longstanding, undisguised hostility
toward the 'man and all his works.
"Kissinger Is the primary architec\ of SALT, but Is on record as
very skeptical of Soviet behavior
and motivation," the document
states. "Reportedly, he Is eager to
· find a place in a second Reagan
administration.
"A privaie approach to l!lm,
stressing the high-risk, but extremely powerful case to be made
for BMD as arms control, and also
appealing to his self-Interest In
positioning himself for a new role In
amis control (unquestionably his
favorite subject) may pay off."
And the document makes plain
that the Soviets aren't the only ones
who can't be trusted. The memo
notes that " ihose pushing him as a
front man for a new BMD-arms
control policy will not be able to

control his agenda once he starts
moving."
The author evidently feels the
risk Is worth taking, as a sort of
pre-emptive strike against dlsar-.
m a ment supporters: "A primary
objective· Is to force a .drastic
reorientation of U.S. arms-mntrol
debate in such a way as to make It
politically risky for BMD opponents
to Invoke .alleged 'arms-control
arguments,' " the document states.
In the Byzantine byways of
Washington, speculation on the
.authorship of the mystery memo
ranges from soup to nuts. It may
have been the work of a closet
moderate .within the Heritage
Foundation, a dread "pragmatist"
trying to get .t he organization's
policy accepted at any cost
·or It may be a mole out of to
create mischief In the foundation,
or an outsider who managed to
swipe some foundation stationery.
It mlghteven be an elaborate prank
by some ·political Till Eulensplegel
with nothing better to do.

Fresno State stops Marshall

Mets obtain ·Carter;
Expos get 4 players

Kenny Cook added 13 points fer .
FRESNO, Calif. (AJ') - Senior
guard Mitch Arnold scored 18 points
Fresno, now 3-1, and Scott Barnes
to lead Fresno State to a Ei3-58victory hac! 11 points to go along with 13
over Marshall Monday night In a
rebounds.
non-conf!!fl!llce game.
Jeff Guthrie led Marshall, now3-3,
Arnold scored 12othls points In the , with 14 points and Epps finished with
first half as the Bulldogs~upa
12 points, 10 in the second half.
0

NEW YORK (AP) -GaryCarter
The :IJ.year-old Carter, who has
didn't have to think very long about played in seven All .Star Games In 10
whether he wanted tobeaNewYork seasons, Is believed to be the fourth
Met.
highest paid player major league
"I'm
thrlllAi ""'"t ·
l
·
?"
baseball
with an annual salary ot
. ::;::::T-:' """ can say.
said Carter,uWho had to give his $Umlll1on.
consent to a trade between the
Carter's salary Is belie\!ed to be a
Montreal Expos and the Mets, major reason he was traded. He
whiCh was completed Monday. "As signed an eight-year contract for$15
a llve-ancl-10 man (five years with
mlll1on before the l!ll2 season, an
one club and 10 years In the major . action that Charles Bronfman, the
leagues), I could have vetoed the
Expos' major owner and chl\lrrnan
deal. I didn't veto the deal. I'm well
of the board, later siild lie regretted.
aware of the Mets nucleus of nne
The deal was announced -In a
talent and I'm anxious to make a statement by the Mets, who quoied
conbibutionnextyear.
,
. ·General Manager Frank Cashen as
Montreal acquired Infielder Ru- saying: "To acquire a player of
ble Brooks; catcher Mike FitzgeCarter's caliber, you have to part
rald, a rookie starter for New York
with some talent, and that's what we
last season; outfielder Herm Windid, butyoureallycan'tmeasurethe
ningham, a hot prospect who spent
type of ·Imprint Gary Carter wUl
most of last year in the International
have on the Mets next year and for
League, and minor league pltcber
years to come." .
Floyd Youmans.
'Ibe Expos also expressed th¢r
The Mets finished second In the
satisfaction with the deal, which
National League East last year, 6¥.!
Casllen said was first discussed
games behind t~ Cubs. They cited
Friday at the baseball meetings In
catching and power hitting as the
Houston·.
two areas needing the most
The Mets also wUl have one of the
improvement.
league's highest payrolls, with three
In Carter, the M;ets have upplayers - ' George Foster at $2
graded both of those categories. A
m1lllon and Keith Hernandez at $1.6
superb, durable catcher, Carter tied
tnllllon are the others - pulling in
for the National League lead In runs
rnllUonalre's salaries.
batted In last season with Phlladel·
Carter figures to bat in the middle
phia's Mike Schmidt. He knocked In
of the \\fets lineup, surrounded by
100 runs In 1984, batting ·:294 with il
Hernandez, Foster and Darryl
home runs.
Strawberry.

Four finalists 1n line
for OU coaching post
By GEORGE STRODE
McElhaney expects the new
AP Spoli!I'Wrlter ·
· Bobcats' coach wUl be announced
Ohio University apparently Is later this week.
The Ohio athletic director said he
w1thin days of naming Its new
football coach, expected to come did not expect the coach's salary,
from a list of four flnallsts- Glen slightly more than $40,000 per year,
Mason, Oeve Bryant, Mike Kelly to be a stumbling block with ;my of
and Jim Chapman.
the the four finalists.
The quartet, In a series of
A!jcboolspokesmansaldMonday
lntennews on the A!hens, Ohio, was the final day for applying for the
campus, met with th~ school's position under equal.Qpportunlty
screening committee and oftlclals guidelines.
within the !a.St week. They were
The 3.'&gt;-year-old Mason, Ohio
selected from an original list of :ll State's offensive coordinator, and
applicants for the position, vacated Sryant, ;{1, a former Bobcats'
when the Mid-American Confer- . quarterback who now is the
ence member fired Brian Burke backfield coach ot the New England
befo~ the final 1984 game with Patriots, ha)le no bead coaching
Northern Ullnois.
experience.
Burke turned in a six-year record
Kelly, ;lG, has compiled a fourof 31-34-1 at Ohio, including a 4-6-1 year coaching record of 3.'&gt;-10 at
mark this fall.
Dayton, Including an NCAA Dlvrunnerup finish. In 1~,
Athletic Director Harold McEiha- lslon
ney met Monday with university Chapman, 49, took over a Case
President Charles Ping and Provost Western Resetve program that had
James Bruning to review the four
lost 23 straight games. Chapman
finalists.
has tumed5-3and!H teams:His 1984
McElhaney said the three leaders squad cap,t ured the firstNorth Coast
will meet again Wednesday before Conference championship.
reaching a final decision . .

m

35-20 halftime lead. Fresoo State led
by as many as :aJ pOints early In the
second half, but Marshall, led by
forward Robert Epps and gUard
Skip Henderson; rallied to cut the
lead to 4 points with 7:55 left In the
game.
The Bulldogs were able to put the
game away, hitting eight free
throws In tlv! fll)al two minutes.

responsible because the toy manufacturer dido 't produce enough
dolls for Christmas!'
"It's not just Jessica that I'm
worried about. Every night when I
come hotne my wife Deborah Is
waiting tor me at the door and she
hisses, 'Did you get one?' When I
shake my head I see nothing but
fear and loathing In her eyes."
"Does she say anything?"
"No, but I can read what's going
on in her head when we' re eating
dinner In silence. She's saying, 'I
could have married 100 successful
guys, and I had to choose one who
couldn't even provide his chUd with
a Cabbage Patch Kid! "
"You're just Imagining things," I
told him. "She's probably thinking,
'I wish I could share his pain.' "
"You don't know Deborah. Four
of her girlfriendS already have
Cabbage Patch dolls stashed In
their closets for Christmas. They
don't say It out loud, but Deborah
knows they pity her for having
manied beneath herself."
Broadstreet, If you don't get a
Cabbage Patch Kld for your
daughter, you're not going to be
accused of chtld abuse. Maybe It's
as good a time as any for Jessica to
learn that she can't have everything In Ute tibe asks for."
"Would you like to tell that to a
four-yearoQld girl on Cliristmas
morning?"
"I gullSS not. Are you sure you've
trl'ed every resource available?. I
read In thenewspapertlieotherday
that If you deposit $50,00&gt; for 10
years with the Old Faithful Savings
and Loan, they'll give you a
· Cabbage Patch Kid absolutely

r;:::::::::::::::::::;;;;

MEI'S-EXPOS - 'l1le New York Mets acquired Montreal AD-star

players. (AP he rphoto).
'

Your BEST Insurance .
Policy is a GOOD Agent

Raiders crush Lions
PONTIAC, Mich. (AP) - Just and I don't know what to expect,''
when the rest of the N'ltional Wflson said. "It's real tight now."
Football League thought It wds safe
to venture into the street, the Los . . - - - - - - - - - - - - ;
Angeles Raiders came swaggering
back to town wearing their playoff

fa~~defeqdingSu~rBowlcham-

pions used an awesome defense, Jed
by Bill Pickel, and big offensive
1 - a Raider trademark- by
pays

Marc Wilson, Cle Montgomery and
Jim Plunkett to crush the Detroit
Lions 24-3 Monday night.
The Raiders, given up for dead
after. losing some key players
through inJuries and dropplngthree
straight games last month, now are
riding a tour-game winning streak
and their 11-4 record in tbe AFC
west assul:es them a wildcard spot
in the playoffs.
And, lest 'you scoff, remember
that the Raiders rode a wlld'card
berth to the championship over
Philadelphia in Super Bowl XV.
Pickel, whohad3Y.JoftheRaiders'
eight sacks, led a defen5!! that shut
the Lions down at every turn.
Detroit finished w1th only 10 first
downs, 'E&gt;7 total yards and had two
passes intercepted.
"It was a good win because we
played hard," Raiders' Coach Tom

Flores
defense toplayed
well allsaid.
night."The
We wanted
play
well, win and stay healthy. Going
Into the playoffs, our biggest
concern Is to stay healthy."
Wilson, who completed 11 of 19 for
194 yards with two Interceptions
before leaving the game with back
spasms in the fourth quarter, tossed
a 12·yard TD pass to tight end Todd
Christensen In the second q~arter
and had a 72-yard bomb to Dokle
Williams that set up a :fl.yard Chris ·
Bahr field goal in the third quarter .
"I've never had these (spasms)

c0fORATS

....

KIDs
··

DO YOU H
AVE COATS;
GLOVES, CAPS AND
OTHER "WARM" ITEMS
YOU NO LONGER NEED
AND WOULD LIKE TO
SHARE WITH OTHERS
WHO NEED THEM....

WITH THEM AT
BARGAIN PRICES."

.

GENERAL .
TIRE
SALES
"Where the Rubb er
MeP i s I he

Ruad."

N. 2ND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

~q~••ru

PH. 992-7161

Our Service Never Ends!
At H&amp;R Black, we're open all year-round, 12 months a year, to
serve you. We can help you during 111d after tax season with:
•Tax preparation
•Estimated returns
•Tax Questions
•Reviewing and amending past returns
•Year-end tax p,lanning
•Audit assistance

BRING THOSE ITEMS
(CLEAN PlEASE)
TO YOUR CHURCH
01 TO

"WE'RE LOADED

lteto Auto

,_

.

·

ATTENTION
BARGAIN
HUNTERS/
•CHANGE-OVER
TIRES
. •USED Tl RES
*TRADE-IN TIRES

catAlher Gary Caner, left, In a five-player trade which sent Mets
Infielder Huble Brooks, rtght, to Momreal along with three other

Stop in and see us or call the office listed below. At H&amp;R Block,
, we don't disappear, after tax time.

Kroger-Pomeroy

MGM

· • .-Pomtroy
Top of the Stain-Pomeroy
Western Auto-Middleport

H&amp;R992-3795
BLOCK

Pomeroy,-OH.
618 E. Main .St.
S,..•orttl by Tbo Moigs County
1!-~===Mi:ni:'':"':ia:ll:":o:cia:to:.""===~-----=--------==========

.

Gifts of Quality

The Who~e Family Will
OPEN TILL 8 P;M. THRU CHRISTMAS

Zenith quality at
budget prices.
• Zenith Custom Series Color 'IV
• Zenith Smart Deck Video
Recorders

MODEL S2S42MIC

25-inch diagonal Transitional styled
console. Nutmeg Oak finish .

ONLY

d~II _____A_rt---'B'--uch_wa_ld

failed you. Jessica can't hold you

~

tJ,;~nts,

false sta
and complicity In
a coru;plracy to violate federal laws
having to do with preservation of
the merlin falcon.
The plea bargain was accompanIed by release of a long affidavit
prepared by Robert G. Leapley,
special agent for the Fish and
WUdllfe Service, recounting s0111e
o{ the evidence that ied to Peters'
arrest and conviction. The affidavit
explains one more element necessary for understanding of the case:
At the time he plea-bargained tor a
prison term of one year, Peters
already was on probation from a
six-month sentence imposed upon
him in 1981 for a previous falconry
offense. The court revoked his
probation and gave him the whole
18 mo,nths in prison.
In brief, Peters was not exactly
the blue-eyed Innocent of Time's
bleedlng·heart account. Reporte&lt;Uy
he Is an able and dedicated teacher,
but this was his second offense
under federal laws that were well
known to him. These laws have as
their purpose the preservation of
rare and beautiful birds - lllrds
that command prices from falconers ranging into many thousands of
dollars . .
And the moral? I would hang It
-large upon the wall of every
newsroom in the land: Audl
alteram partem! Hear the other
side' To the extent that those of us
In the news business fall to report
both sides of a controversial Issue,
we do our job poorly. The same
stricture applies hi family ·life and
in the office or factory also. It Is so
very ea5y, once our sympathies are
engaged, to leap to conclusions that
A is in the wrong and B Is in the
right, that C has behaved badly to
D, that black Is black and· white Is
white.
The passing years tend to
Improve one's eyesight.

The Daily Sentinei-Pave;-3

$55500

free!'
"All right ," I said. "I'll make one
"Isawthesamead. Tbeyranout call for you to the. White House.
of dolls the first day . Someone also ' They owe me a lot of favors ."
ran an advertisement for a $2
I rang up one of tbe president's
mUUon house in Georgetown, and
top golfers. When 1 hung up,
Broadstreet said, "What did he
said they'd throw in a Silver Cloud
Rolls·Royce and a Cabbage Patch · say?"
doll in the deal. They had to call out
"He told me to forget it. The
the pollee when 500 people showed
Reagans can't even get a Cabbage
up. I'm desperate. That's why I
Patch doll for their grandchildren."
came to you."

MODEL A1906W
Contemporary decorator-streamline design 19-inc h
diagonal Thble TV with Super Video
lUning .

ONLY

$32900

MODEL AI920W
19" diagonal Color TV with decoratorstreamline cabinel. Keyboard tuning .
Simulated Spanan W!lnut finish .

Santa Says:
''Give a gift
subscription to the ....
Daily Sentinel
It's a ·great way to say
Merry Christmas.''

Berry's World

ONLY

'
MODELAI3lOW
13-inch diagonal Slim-line
Portable Tv. Video Range
lUning . Simulated American
'Wilnut finish .

·•

.r

" ... and I need help with my ysar-end tax
planning/"

•

$37900
ONLY

'
A subscription to the' Dally Sentinel will convey your ' best w;lshes
every day of the week all year long.
'
·· Send the Dally Sentinel to your friends who have moved away, to
college students, or to friends and relatives away In the service.
Add the perfect gift to tbe top of your shopping list and call 992-2156
for more Information today.
· ·

4J92-!635

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY
OPEN nLL I P.M.

MIDDLEitOIT

�&lt;
0

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,.

·'

1he Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Tuesday. December 11,1984
Page-4

Courses offered at Nelsonville
for real estate,·mixology, real_ity
NELSONVILLE - Hocking preparation of a Federal Income
Technical College will be offering a Tax Return.
Real Estate Law emphasizes the
variety of spe~?lal Interest courses,
both credit and non-credit, winter · legal phase of realty transactions
quarter through the evening and from listing to closing of the escrow
continuing education division, ac- Is scheduled for 5: 30-8: 10 p.m.;
Fred Mong Instructor and with
cording to Bill Rothman, director.
Monday, evening offerings will Real Estate Practices and PractiInclude Outdoor Concepts, 5-7:30 ces I, 8: 10-10: 50 p.OI, as an
p.m .. which will focus on structur- Introduction to · real es)ate as a
ing outdoor programming. Taught business and profession ~Y lnstruc·
by Donna Szuby, the course would tor Lynn Jacoby. These cburses are
be of specific lntere~t to t«:'achers·or neces~ary to sit for the real estate
those associated with outdoor edu·. licensing exam.
Human Sexuality, 5:30-8:10 p.m.
cation or activities . . Automotive
Is
offered
by Dr. K. Deap Edwards.
Emission Controls, 6-9 p.m., both
Monday and Wednesday, will fea- The course includes a (XlSltlve and
ture Instruction on the newest, most · frank disCussion In human sexualup-t&lt;Hiate computer equipment Ity including the physiological
used for repairing emission control aspects. Dr. Wayne Kerns will offer
Reality Therapy, also 5: 30-8: 10
systems.
Oasses offered on Tuesday In- p.m. The course Includes methods
HEALTII FOOD - Dr. Charles Holzer of Holzer
Medical Center and Clinic, will be featured speaker al
the Malntance of Health session, WedJiesday, 1 p.m.,
at the Senior Citizen Center In Pomeroy. His topic will
be WcUness: Add Life to Your Years. tbere will also

percent blcrease over the nwnberquallfying as Benchmar.k Dams In
1983. Gold Benchmark Dam designation went to those cows which
qualified for the Benchmark Dam
Award and have ralsed.a minimum
of seven calves. This year 49 cows
achieved ·Gold Benchmark Dam
status.
Dr. Jim Gibb, APHA director of
education and research, said that
those cows which are Benchmark
Dams represent the reference point
of productivity by which all other

TUESDAY
RA~ NE-

Regular meeting,
7:30 p.m. Tuesday of Racine
Masonic Lqdge46l , F&amp;AM .Open
installation of officers; all masons and gu~sts invited.
RAONE- The annual Christmas party of the Racine Firem en
Ladies Auxiliary will' be held in
the firehouse an nex . 7 p.m
Tuesday. Firemen are invited to ·
the dinner. A business meeting
with e lection of officers will be
held follow ing the part y.

Columbus, are announcing the birth
of their third child, a daughteF,
Katherine Marie, born Dec. 7 at MI.
cannel West Hospital In Columbus.
The baby weighed eight pounds, 11
ounces.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Weber have two
sons, Benjamin, four, and Nathan,
three. Maternal grandpa,rents are
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Chezrier,
Columbus, and the paternal grand·
parents are Margaret Weber,
Rutland, and the late Vernon
Weber. Mrs. Marjorie Milhoan is
the paternal great-grandmother.

POMEROY - Aux iliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital will
have its annual holiday party
Tuesday a t 6 p.m. in the
cafeteria. The mea t will be
furni shed and those attending
are to take a covered dish. A $3
gift exchange will be held.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior Citizens will have
a blood pressure day from 10
a.m . until noon Tuesday with
Fcrndora Story. R.N .. in charge.
Everyone welcome.

---

RAONE - Regular meeting,
7: 30 p.m . Tuesday of Racine
Masonic Lodge461,F&amp;AM . Open
lnstalla ·on of officers; all m asons an guests invited.

..

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -Bosworthcoun'cil 46, R&amp;SM, and Pomeroy
Chapter !:ll, RAM, Wednesday, 7
p.m. at Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Work in the most excellent
master degree.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Lodge 363 F &amp; AM wUJ meet
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. to install
officers for the coming year.
Installing otflce1 will be R.W.
Daniel M. Evans, District Deputy Grand Master. Refreshments will be served.
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
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 wm be a gift exchange.

---4-H news-.- Thl' Mason Busy Bees &lt;J-H Club met
T'('(."('ntly at the Mason Squad Building. The
club sang "Wrst Virginia Boys and Girls" and
s&lt;Ifd the 4-1-1 pledg(l. E mtly Bumgardner read

de\•olions. Thl" SC&lt;'r eta ry's and treasurer's
r~rts werf' rea d. Emilr Bumgard?:r gave
a r&lt;'por1 allout
r!('(&gt;rs Training SChool.
Tracy DeWff&gt;s ~a"r a report atxJut thE'
Achit&gt;Vemem Ba nquf:'l _ As a money-making
policy the club decldf'd to SE'Il Pedestal
Ca ndl ~ . The club pl anned to have a
ChriStmas Parry Dec. 17, aft(lr the regular
meet i n~ . The club voted to ~vc a noatln the
O
.
f

Chr~linas Parade Dec. t7. The ciub
dis&lt;"Ussed the possibUIIJ' of going 1o JIM&gt;
Masquerade at Point Pleasant UbraJ1'.
Leader Pany Maynard gave OUI lht&gt; old
proJect books and passed out lhe 1985
calendars. The club sang "America The
Beautiful." The rheeting was adjourned.
~!reshmentswereservedbyBettyLakeand
MlcheUe
Grlrrun. Attending
meettngBetty
were
Em Uy Bumgardner,
Tracythe
DeWees,

Lake, Samantha Maynard. April Mllle.- and
leader, Pally Maynard. - Submitted by
Tracy DeWees.

WE PURCHASE 1ST &amp; 2ND MORTGAGES
AND LAND COf1TRACJ"S
Are you collecting payments on a real estate mortgage,
DUt would prefer to have a lump sum?
Let us show you how to convert all or part of your
mortgage into cash . For detiils, call today.

MIDDLEPORT - The Mid·
dleport Literary Club will meet
at2p.m. Wednesdayatthehome
of Mrs. Bernard Fultz, with Mrs.
Charles Gaskill to present the
Christmasprogram. Forrollcall
members are to have a Christ·
mas verse.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pre&lt;.'eptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet at 7:30
Thursday night at the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Saving5
and Loan Co.

Happenings
Bloodmobile
POMEROY- Next visit of the
Red Cross Bloodmobile to Meigs
County will on Dec. 26, Vernon
Nease, chairman, announced
today. He stressed a need for
donors due to the holiday season.
The bloodmobile will be at the
Senior Citizens Center that day
from 1 to5.' 30p.m .

Plus Rec:.appable Trade
MOUNTED FREE

POMEROY HOME and AUTO

600 E. Main St.

SINGLE COPY
PRICES
... 25 CE&gt;nts

Subscribers nQt df'slri n~ 1o pay the ca r·
rler may ;·e mit In advance dlre&lt;-t to
The Dally SenTinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. CrPd lt will be- glv&lt;&gt;n carrier tac h
month.

No subscrtpllons by mail permitted In
towns where home carrier st=&gt;rviC'f' Is

·

9412-2094

11

13 We('ks . ... ............. .. ... ..... . ... .. . $)4,S6

Send the Candle lamp ·· Bouquet
from your FTO®Florist.
· Rtmcrnotr a s~Ci.al time the
two or you sha.rt"d? You can make thit memory
1 f o r\'Ytr by puntn1 il on J Sptidelldrm . You an chOOK
from dottM of sty_les. and your sp«ial menage nn makl' l\ one
ofil kind . ComC' in today •nd pul your
Sp~id~ l Jd~nls From 17.95
k-c-linJI;S Into words.
~

~t4-o
e-m,

sPt·dIl

26 Weeks ..... ...... ... .... ... ............. $29.12

Mo~

52 Wee ks ........ .... .......... ..... ....... $58.21

13 Weeks .. .. .... .. .. ...................... $15.60
26 Weeks ....... .... .......... ............. S:ll.20
52 Weeks ......... ............. ............ $59.80

~(}9&gt;

RUT.LAND FURNITURE

1112 EAST MAIN

i 0/deor

Flori~!

POMEROY . OHIO •117eiJ

814/882 · 2844
Send your srectinp with special

~Jetreler.s

742-2211
RUTLAND1
See The Grate loy For Some Great Burs

FLORIST

".care.'~

212 E. Mltn, l'llnleroy

honored Mason
Harold Chase Rice, Route 1, Box
· 143, Rutland, has been awarded the
'designation of Knight of the York
Cross of Honour.
The honorary degree, high\!St In
the York Rite of Freemasonry, is
conferred only on those who have
held the highest office In each of the
bodies of the rite. Rice becomes one
of the comparative handful of about
400 of the over 4V. mUllon Freemasons In North America, the Philippines and Australia to qualify this
year. Membership is by Invitation
only.
Rice served as master of Harri-.
sonvWe Lodge of Masons In 1954;
high priest of Pomeroy Chapter,
Royal Arch Masons in 1982, master
of Boswoi:(h Council, Royal and
Select Masters in 1982, and commander· of the Ohio Valley Commandery, Knight Templar In 1983.
He was elected to membership in
Ohio Priory and his election
confirmed by Convent General of
the Order on Nov. 26. There are 68
Ptiories of the Order with a present
membership of ll,lm.

------Bazaar s e t - - - - - MIDDLEPORT - A holiday
bazaar will be held by Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, Thursday and Friday, 10a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple. Christmas gift Items and

SUITS &amp;
SPORT
COATS

Nown.n .

Kids Eat .r•~e,
at Ponderosa.

Every Tuesday .
and Wednesday

n~~~~'

•Amplifier-36 watts per channel .. - AM / FM Tuner - analog. LEO-indicator tuning •Cassetta Deck-Oolby• B &amp; C
stereo noise reduction •Turntable- DC belt· driva, semi-automatic •Spaakera-3-way ball reflex .

twice a week at
These days {amJI)on:/hd under eats free when
Ponderosa. Any child dull who buys a meal. hot dog
. f hamburger or
panied by an a
accomhe kids get their chotce oWJrlds Biggest, Best
T 'th french fr~es and the
along Wl ~ t "'
e of our terrific
Salad Bu e 'crown-ups ca~ order O::ats, or any other
·
·
familydel'
mght
SPf!.,._,derosa
dinner.
1111 1
· US
rvu
JCIO
ur kids start ge 1•
,
So when yo
ember our
tinghungry,rem · at 4·00
. family nights be~'ftclosing.
prtwnd go on un

I

IPOIMER&lt;)Y, OH.

.

$49 9 ~
10 Gallon

126 E. Main

High Performance Wet/Dry cleaning , w1th 1.25 HP moto1lor clean ing power. Includes hose with airtlow cont rol. e&lt;t. wands . nozzle,' squeegee shoe, rug shoe . and 4-wheel dolly. MMPBDD-10

VALLEY 'LUMBER
PH. 992-6611

Pomeroy, OH.

555 Park St.

BLACK &amp; DECKER

TIMEX

CAR LITE ......... $19 49
CAR VAC ~ •••• $16 99

Family Night

*ANNOUNCING•
OUR SHOWROOM

SRAND OPENINS

..

Comt
in and Register for
"
SONY Watchman TV
to be givtn away. 1$200
Retail

Volutl

TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

378-6158

., Tilt Pcisr omcr
1101111$1 Mlr...fri. 2-6

Steolc J)blner with Beverage
• T-&amp;»1~---" Sled Dinner
·BlgC,...,_wlth ~nner with BeverGge
• Rlkfe St~ I with Bew•.,e

• Fllh Vtrlue ,..etJ

.Systems from 'Sl695
Installed

. ON RT. 7 ·

specials,
t

.fUlls &amp;u~der 10 etll free ,

. . beer a~d wme.

$3.99
$3.99
$2.99

r

25 IN. CONSOLE
Starting At $555

.

'

"Complete Stock"

GRINDER ......... $2899

30°/o OFF

EBERSBACH .HARDWARE

VILLAGE PHARMACY

5" BENCH

'

k

Beoorage offerexclu~esJWCt. cted JUO'H• chopped bee stea . ·
Steak i&lt; u.s.n.A. mspe ~~-...._.-.
C!Jopped_._,.:. Pontffii'OMI - , · - ·
ar~~~"''11 ·
·

INGELS FURNITURE·
&amp; JEWELRY

SONY dealer

S.t. 11·6

WATCHES

(

DUST BUSTER ••• S29 69 INFLATOR ....... $20 65

$4.99

Middleport, OH.

C,esf Fo, Ch,igfmag

EMERGENCY LIGHT

SII.VI!RIIIIlD
SATI!U.I'Rl
!l'l'STEMS

$6 495

Wet/DIY Shop lac

PH. 992-2049

OPEN UNnL 8:30 EACH EVENING

·baked goods will be for sale and a
luncheon will be served both days
with vegetable soup and a v&amp;fiety of
·sandWiches from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
The public Is Invited.

6 Gallon

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

PH. 992-2181

Serving Mtigs, Gollia and Mason Counties

MECHANIC ~

by:
Johnny Carson
Palm Beach
Sewell
Hagger
and more....

•Tr•damerk of Dolby Llbor•toriel
1,
.. Amplifief power 35 wttl(both channN)20Hzto20t&lt;Hzat .02% THDintolohrm

MG_M FARM CITY INC.

Master

r-;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~

·~

Send a gift to warm the heart~'
Me rlin Ois·e n

Fsmilg. _

Mall Subscriptions
lm111de Ohio

·

OH.

At Christmas!!

Gilt
Fo, Thst
Hunte, In
The

One Ypar ... ....... ........ ..... ......... $57.20

Outside Ohio

Pomeroy,

Pe,le~t

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

.

22.50
21.50
22.50
23.50

Famous Brand ift••. ••

The

By Carrter or Motor Route
One Wpe k .. ........... ...................... $1.10
One Month ......................... ........ $4.80

a vallableo.

H7 -14
.Jil. ·.ll
H78-15
1711-1 5

For That Some-one Special''

45769.

Rutland man

DISHES ON DISPLAY

lr

hoose

21.~

Jil: ·.!.!.

AnORNEY ·AT·LAW
OFFICE HOURS 8:30-12 NOON
1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRV FRIDAY

to The Dally SentineL 11.1 Court St., Po·

The Meigs County Jayc~ are
again carrying out their annual
program to provjde holiday food
baskets and toys· for underprivileged families . Toys are to be left at
the Heritage House.ln Middleport or
at Hartley's Shqes In Pomeroy.
The Jaycees will have an application to be completed by residents
needing help and this will be
pubUshed In The Daily Sentinel In
the near future.

YOUR
AVAILABLE
COST
.M!:.U. ~1 '1.50
178-13 • 19.50
(78 ~ 13
19.50
(~-14
18.50
600-15
19.50
.!!.!.· ~ 19.50
F78-14
21.50

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

POSTMASTER: Seild address chan~

Applications sought

. SIZES

and Mrs. Everett. Ray

York 10017 .

Dally .............. ....... .

MUD and SNOW
RETREADS
'

greetings. 1 · .
It was noted that Meigs County
was third 1n partnership goal. The
national convention was announced
fori!B;atCinclnnatlwithallsalons
to lle assessed Sl per partner. A
dinner and Christmas party was
heldonthenlghtbeforethepouvior.
The department Ia marche willlle
heldatTI1fln,July26andZ7,ltwas
announced.

Davis, Melissa, Todd Johnson, home after deer. hunting. Mr. and
grandmother In the hospital 1n
Ailsa Baljter, Mr. and Mrs . Everett Mrs. Rus5ell also Visited her Akron while there.
Orlando, surprised his mother,
Ray Johnson, Audra., Jeff and Eric
Mrs. Helen Johnson ThanksgiVIng of Orlando, Fla. and Helen Johnson. rr;;;;;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l
morning to spend the holiday
Mr. and Mrs. Everett ·Ray
weekend. .
Johnson and family visited with
Nancy Hamm, also friends and
Mr. and Mrs. ·Everett Ray
Johnson and family of Orlando,
relatives In Columbus Friday then
returned home to Orlando, Fla.
Fla. were Thanksgiving dinner
Mt:s. LeslleFrank,SarahBeth,of
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Larry ,
Johnson, Gina, Thannee and Brady
Texas Road were Wednesday
of New Lima Road. Afternoon
visitors of Mrs. Eugene Hanning
yisltors were Helen Johnson, Bevand Gladys Tuckerman.
erly Roush, Rodney, Cheryul, Joey
Mr. and Mrs .. Donald\ Russell
105 EAST.,SECOND
and Beth of Pomeroy.
were weekend guests of !Mr. and
Thanksgiving evening guests of
Mrs. Tom Summerfleki, Candi,
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY
Mr. and Mrs. James W. Johnson
Wendy and Crystal of Medina. Mr.
992-6471
and Teresa were Mr. and Mrs. John' Summerfield accmpanled them
Mr.

Me.mbt&gt;r: The Assocla.tt&gt;d Prpss, Inland Dally Press Association and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
socla tlon. National AdvPrtlsing RepreSt"ntatlvP, Branham N(&gt;wspaper Sales,
· 733 Third Avrnur , NI:.'W Yor k, New

mE'foy, Ohio

mondson, chapeau departemental, .
had the opening with Mrs. Martl.n,
distinguished guest chairman, presentlng Dorothy Brady, new deml
chapeau Central Division.
Chapeau passes of Ohio. introduced Included Shirley W~. Mrs.
Brady, Elizabeth Gilbert, Joy
Bowman, Violet Alchholz. LucWe
Woodley, VIrginia Rahc, Doris
Stanrlff and Mrs. Martin. Joel
·Davis, Ohio's grand correspondent,

Johnso~, Audra, ,Jeff and Eric, of

Published eve-ry afti&gt;rnoon. Monda'y
th rough Frid ay, 111 Court St., y th@
Ohio Va li Py Publishing Company / l'y1ulllmedla, Inc . . Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, h.
992-2156. Second class poslaRP paid at
Pomeroy. Ohio.

Mr. and Mrs. Dennis •Weber,

Hospital. Pecans are stU! for sale by
the salon. Itwasnotedthatclothing;
stuffed toys, and additional food will
be purchased for the county's
children with resplratOJ11 diseases.
Areportwasglvenona'Thanksgivlng basket delivered to a n~
family.
Mrs . Hysell, Mrs. Hackett, Mrs.
Knapp and Mrs. Martin attended
the December PO!Ivior held over the

Wolf Pen community happenings

I\ 01\ltston of Multimedia, Inc:.

Weber birth

cows can be compared. They have
proven themselves to be efficient
producers. To qualify for the award,
each cow must have had at least
three calves, with weaning weights
for ali her calves recorded In the
APHA's guidelines program. Her
calves weaning ratios must also
rank her In the top 25 percent of her
owner's herd, she must have had her
first calf prior to turning 25 months
old, and have had an average
calving Interval no longer than 365
days.

POMEROY - The Winding
Trail Garden Club wll have a
Christmas dinner party at 6 p.m.
Wednesday. A potluck dlnrier
will be followed by the party and
gift exchange at the home of
Addalou Lewis.

the Eight and Forty, Meigs County'
Salon 710, was held at Trinity
Church Monday night.
Games were played with prizes
going to Marjorie Fetty, Eunl~
Brinker, Pearl Knapp and Oenlse
FICk. F1orence Richards read the •
Chrlstn'las story from Luke 2, and .
therewasanartlclebyMrs.Knapp,
"I Am Poised and Centered In
Christ."
•
A $15 donation was made to the

(USPS lf5-9110)

Calenri4r
MIDDLEPORT - A puppet
show . " Ann Grant and the Little
Lights, " will be presented at the
Middleport Public Library Tuesday at 7 p.m . The program will
include puppets, music and
stories, as well as balloons and
prizes. Ms. Grant and Darla
Burns, both graduates of the
Apostolic Bible Institute, have
been involved with puppets for
10 years. The public is invited to
a !lend.

E}jj~~!!!~ F._.o!!J'_ §~'! :J..'l!!.m~!.. ..m!e!i~... _

clude: Individual Taxation, 8: 10- r------====:-T;:::::;;::::;~;::;::::;:;:::;::::;
tO: 50 p.m. Ted Lynch, Instructor,
The Dally Sentinel
will proyide information relative to

be dl8cuMion of diet and health, by Susan Cheney,
R.D., on the rtllld. With Holzer and Ms. Cheney Is
Mary Harrlslon, R.N., coordiDalor of the sessions.
Sessions are llknonthly, and aredeslpedforthose 55.
and older. The pubUc Is Invited to aUend the session.

.Hereford group awards status
to cow belonging to Rutland rnan
James E. J.,ucas. Rutland, is the
owner of a (Xllled hereford cow
which has been awarded Benchm ark Dam status, and another cow
which has been named Gold
Benchmark Dam by the American
Polled Hereford Association.
The Association, headquartered
in Kansas City, Mo. recognized 684
elite cows for the Benchmark Dam
Award which goes to the breed's
. most efficient and consistent producers. This number reflects a 32

of counseUng and/ or helping lndi·
vtduals gain sutficient strength to
handle the stresses and problems of
life.
Mixology and Bar Management,
Thursday. 5: 30-8: 10 p.m·., Includes
both the 1baslcs of mixing dtlnks and
the management aspects which
emphasize cost control and pur·.
chasing. The course Is taught by
Greg Runevitcil and limited to 20
students.
Otiler Thursday classes Include
Land Title Searches, 5: 30-8: 10p.m.,
will focus on how to search out a
real estate title and Microcomputer
Operation and Programming, also
5: 30-8: 10 p .m. and limited to 25
students. Th~ emphasis Is on
mini-computers and BASIC Ian- ·
guage utUizlng a variety of business
and general application.

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

~DDLII'ORT
\

PH.992·2811
· 110 W. Main

Pomeroy,

Oh.

••.------------~--------~----

PH. 992-6669
N. 2nd Ava.
'

Middleport,

OH.

�•

,. •

-

4••

'"'

.

I

.

•. Tuesday, December 11, 1984

Congressman urges ·strict
enforcement of. DWI laws
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
congressman who wrote Ohio's
. d!'unken-drlvtng ' law says the
alarmlng nuinber of alcolrJt-related
traffic deaths probably Is responsible for the rising public outcry
against Intoxicated motorists.
"I think peOple are juSt tired of
putting up with the hom&gt;r that Is
occurring ... " Rep. ~chael DeWtne
'said Monday.
Calling it a " national Q-agedy,"
the Ohio Republlcan said many
people .nave ·been affected by
alcolrJI-related traffic accidents,
whether It Involves family, frienl;ls
or someone In their conununily.
"Everybody you talk to knows a
hom&gt;r story," said DeWine, a
former Greene County prosecutor.
' The drunken-drl\1ng bill written
by DeWine, a state senator at the
t:line; became law In Ohio In March
1983.
Last Th\lrsday, the Ohio Supreme
Court upheld the constltutionallty of
the portion of the st11tute th~t says a
motorist whose blood is 0.10 percent
alcohol or more Is legally
Intoxicated.
The offense carries a mandatory
72-hour jail sentence and a minimum 60-day drlver's license suspension. DeWine said the key to
·saving lives on the highway Is strict
enforcement of the law.

"That law Is only as good as the
p~tors and judges wlio are
enforcing It," he said.
Last June, CongreSs approved a
bUI requiring st;ltes to pass a
21-year-old drinking age or lose
some of their highway funds.
The bUI Includes an Incentive
program consisting of extra highway safety money for st11tes that
enact automatic jail terms and
Ucenfij! revocations, establish com· .
puterlzed traffic record·keeplng
systems and take steps against
those caught driving under the
Influence of drugs.
"We're trying .to gel tough like
everyone else Is," said Leo Skinner,
spokesman for the · Ohio Departmen! of Highway Safety. "We feel
!here are less drunk drivers on the
road because ofthe new law."
Sklnnersald 47 percent of the1,585
Ohio traffic deaths In 1983 stemmed
from alcoh61-related accidents.
That has dropped to46percent~far
this year, he said.
"Even 1 percent Is a lot," Skinner
said.
DeWine was tO. jOin other leglsla·
tors Monday night at the Lincoln
Memorlal to honor those killed In
alcobol·related traffic accidents.
Also expected at the candlelight
ceremony were Candy . Lightner,
founder of Mothers Against Drunk

Po~roy-Middleport, Ohio

Wanted To

B.u siness-Senrice8
GUN SHOOT

/
BISSELL
CO"STRUCTION

RACINE
FIRE DEPT•..

Driving; and Reps. Ml:haet
Barnes, D;Md., IWbert Uvlilgston,
RLa.,andC.W. Young.~-Fla .
MADD spokesWoman Sharon
Ingle said the ceremony was
designed to klclt off Drunken and ·
Drug OrMng . Week and remind
people of the dangers of driJiklng ..
and driving as the hOliday season
approach!!S.
In Columbus, Dagmar Celeste, .
wlfe of Gov. Richard Celeste, joined
MADD and traffic safety oftlclals Iii
a candlelight VIgil at the Statehouse.
About 50 people congregated on
Fountain Square In downtown
Cincinnati for acandlellgh\wallltoa
nearby church where victims of
drunken-driving acclclents were
remembered.
June Taylor, who organized the
f.WthWest Ohio chapter of Mothers
AgalnstDrunkDrlv!ng,saldsilehad
hoped for a larger crowd, but was
pleased because the gathering was
larger than at previous, slmUar
£!Vents.
Mrs. Taylor said there's been a
groWing awafllDess of the problems
of drunken driving.
"More and more, people are
beginning to realize that we all have
a stake In this," she saki. "It Isn't just
the victims; we're all In this
together. It'snotaneKclustveclub."
A slmUar vigil was held In
Cleveland.

Iathan luilding

EVERY
S~T. NIGHT
6:30 P.M. ·
Factory. Choke
12 G~uge shotguns
Only

. GlENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

REMEMBPt,ING :- James Watson. (right)

Buying Coins.
Antiques, Glassware, Furniture.
Stone Jars, Etc.

Cincinnati Monday nlgl¢.1beservlcewuOIM!ofllUIID'

receives a bug 1root Lisa Laange during a memOrial . ·taking place honorbtgvlctlmsof drunkdrtvlngrelated.
oocldents. (APLaserpltoto).
service at the Covenant-Firstl'resbyterlan Church In

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3/l.j /tfc

CINCINNATI (AP) - Deborah
Sanders was taking the bus to look
into a job training program Monday
moinlngwhenherQueenCityMetro
coach pulled to a stop !illd was
slammed hard In the rear by a
second bus.
"There was a loud Impact and I
went to the floor," Ms. Sanders said.
"I started screaming. I dldn 't know
what was happening.
.
"I should have stayed home In
passengers from the two Metro
buses treated at four local hospitals
and released Monday. Two other
passengers were admitted In good
condition at UnlvE:rslty Hospital
with a broken leg and a slight spine
frac,ture.
. The two drivers also were treated
and released, according to·hospital
spokesmen.
Mthough there were no serious
lnjurl~. passengers said therewere

Six

families~·~-----

Area deaths

r-;::========::::==;:====::;:=======:::=======:;-Th D 'J ' S · )
Y . e0t10e

PHONE 992-2156

15 Year's Experien·ce

IU-t!c

RADIATOR

place," said passenger Edward
Katoe, 74, aboard the second bus.
"When It hit, everything tore looSe. I
hit the floor, and seats came
dismantled all over the place."
Pollee said the two buses were
MinerSville man faces
traveling nohh on a city street just
before 10 a:m.· when the first bus
charges after accident
· stopped and the second slammed
John Imboden, 21, Minersville, into Its left rear end.
A Queen City spokeswoman said
was charged with reckless operathe
crash was under InvestigatiOn,
tion and leaving the scene folloWing
and
no cause had been determined.
an accident at 10: 38 p.m. Monday
night on East Main Street, However, pollee officer Ray Zoz
said the driver of the second bus,
Pomeroy.
Pomeroy pollee report thaI Im- Mbert Ward Jr., reported the
boden struck a utility pole near the accident occurred as hewasgolngto
old . water. works. The car ' was change lanes.
heavily damaged and had to be
Meets Thursday
towed. Pollee arrested imboden
The Rutland Lions Club will meet
after he walked Into the emergency
room at Veterans Memorial Hospi- at5: ~p.m. Thursday at the Rutland
talat2: 26a.m. wherehewastreated Clvlc Center. The meeting haur Is a
for minor injuries. He Is now change from tile previous schedule.
confined to the Meigs County Jail, All members are req11ested to he ·
present.
,
police report.

plaintiff, Leader Mortgage Com· A $99,490.82 judgment has been
pany, Cleveland. The suit was flied
approved In Meigs county Common
by Leader Mortgage against MIPleas Court by Judge 9harles
Knight. The judgment was given
chael D. Smith, Middleport, et al
In further action, a $3,760.76
favor of First Federal Savings and
Loan Association of Parkersburg,
judgment on an unpaid contract has
been awarded Ford Motor Credit
W.Va., plaintiff In an action flled
Company, Melvindale, Mich.,
against Larry D. and Lois A..Cutlip,
people Injured Monday when two metro bus collided Parkersburg, and Donald G. and
'IWO BUS CRASH- Pararn~cs remove ·one of:W
·near Eden Park In Cincinnati. (AP Laserpltolo).
Judith A. Metz, Mineral Wells,
W.Va. for nonpayment on a real
estate loan for property In Orange
Councilmen Dewey Horton and 'condition of County Road 3 near
Township.
Carl Horky were appointed to seiVe Hobson and the railroad crossing at
If the defendants do not pay the
on the volunteer fire department Hobson. Both situations are dangerjudgment, plus $14, 973.03 to Jul} Tl
dependents fund board for 1984.
ous council said. The road is In bad
Through the Golden Buckeye and$38.00perdaythereafter,withln
MayorHoffmanteportedthatthe condition due to hea\iy traffic and
Card, senior citizens of Meigs three days, the mortgage on said
Ohio Environmental Agency has the railroad crossing Is ·dangerous
In addttion to her mother.
_Betty Weed
County are able to make purchases property is to he foreclosed and the announced that improvements wlll due to work which has been done
survivors Include her husband,
have to be made In seWage there. ~.twas agreed to send a letter
Kenneth Cozart, Sandyville; two . at numerous stores and bl!stnesses property sold at public sale.
Mrs. Betty Weed. 64, Shaker sisters, Mrs. Sandy Mapson, Cham- at discount prices.
An entry confirming sale of real treatment facUlties by July 1, 1988 to the county commissioners asking
Heights, a frequent vlsltor of paign, Ill. and Mrs. Candy Cox,
Residents can secure the Golden estate' In Middleport !or $12,334.00 .and representatives of the agency .. that some help be provided. It was
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly Satur- Ravenswood; two brothers, Danny
Buckeye Cards lftheyare65yearsof has also been filed In Meigs County will rneetwlth Middleport officials reported, however, that the two
day at a Cleveland area hospital.
age or are disabled. The cards can Common Pleas Court. Thecourthas to see what, If any, Improvements problems are supposedly to be
Ray Proffitt, Martinsburg, Ind. and
Mrs. Weed Is adaughterofthelate Randy Ray Proffitt, Goosecreek,
be secured by contacting the Meigs also ordered distribution of the will have to be made to the handled by Conrail.
Frederick D. Groff and Mrs. Hazel S.C.; and a grandmother, Pearl Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry proceeds from that sale with $348.40 Middleport facility.
Councilman Gilmore Informed
Miller Groff, a (on:ner resident a nd Proffitt, Portland.
Heights, Pomeroy, 992·2161.
to be paid to the Meigs County Oerk
Council cancelled Its next regular council that he Is working .on the
also a frequent visitor to Pomeroy,
Meantime, center oftlclals today of Courts and$11,985.60tobepaldthe , meeting which would have taken establishment of an entertainment
Funeral seiVIces will be 2 p.m.
now of Shaker Heights.
extended
thanks to an \IPdatedlistof '
place on Dec. 24 and postponed that fund ordinance. CouncUman King
Thursday at the Portland Reorgan·Mrs. Groff Is a siSter to the late Mrs. ized Church of Jesus Christ ofLatter merchants who are now honoring
session until Jan. 7 and then
. will hold commended the stree
. t department
Edison Hobstetter.
the Golden Buckeye Card . The Crafts show set
Its regular meeting on Jan.14.
for taking eare of a drainage
Day Saints with Elder Evan Ervin
Besides her mother, Mrs. Weed is officiating.
group Includes:
The mayor said that a meeting is problem at the Intersection of Front
suiVived by a brother, FrederickM.
An arts and craft show will beheld to be held In Lancaster on Dec. W and Hudson Sts~. and he urged more
Rutland Furniture, Rutland; ElBurial will be In the Great Bend
Groff, Deerfield, Ill., and a daugh- Cemetery.
ber!elds, Pomeroy; ·Chapman's Thursday and Friday at the regarding to single project litter lighting at Pearl St., and Hartinger
. Tom's Shoe Re Pomeroy Health Care Center.
.
ter, Mrs. Anthony (Penny) WhittleFriends may call at the Straight- Shoes, Pomeroy•
·
grants and council authorized Parkway with the latter problem to
sey, who resides In Virginia,andttve Tucker Funeral Home, Ravens- pair, Pomeroy; Cash Bahr Clothi- Tables for those wishing to partlcl· Mayor Hoffman tD apply If such a .be studied by thestreetdepartrnent.
·
grandchildren. She was also pre- wood, from 2-9 p.m. on Wednesday. ers, Mlddleport : Tessle ds craft pate will be $5 a. day and thoSe grant appears feasible
for Klngalsoquestlonedthebrlefpatrol
ceded In death by her husband,
Shop, Racine; CraftyLadles,Pome- interested In maldng reservations Middleport.
reports which are being completed
Charles Weed six years ago.
roy; Fruth Pharmacy, Middleport; are to call Mary ~tes at !J92-li6(x;.
A discussion was held on the a!times by pollee officers.
SeiVices for the family will be held
Wednespay in Shaker Heights.
Burger Chef,
Pomeroy;Middleport;
Middleport
Restaurant,
Ennergencysquads Max's
BookStore,Mtcldleport; Middleport
e . at
answer .six calls·" · Qepartment Store, Middleport;
Mary Sheets
Meigs Tire Center, Pomeroy;
Or Wrih.Dailly Stntinel Clmilied Dept
Three-In-One Restaurant, PomeThe Meigs County Emergency
Former Meigs Countian, Mary
111 Co~tl St .. Pomt'10y, Ohio 457&amp;9
roy; Senior Citizen's Center, PomeMedical Service reports six calls on
Sheets, 85, Dayton, died Monday.
roy; Racine Department Store,
She was bo(n Sept. 24, 1899 In Monday.
Racine;
Top of the Stairs Beauty
.At 5:02a.m., Pomeroy was called
Letart Tpwnship, the daughter of
Shop,
Pomeroy;
· Marguerite's
EMiiil
115
George W. and Adellne Burri to the scene Of an auto accident on
.,,....,...... i .
Shoes,
Pomeroy;
Swisher
and
11 ·................
f:hM•I/It•rl IMar• nrn•r 1it,.
Highland
Church
Road
for
Terry
Pickens.
·
71-ft..UIIt . . .
1J
..,.••••
Lohse
Drugs,
Pomeroy;
K
and
c
flfllt~M'III•Irlt•l'hmll'
t•.u·ll•ll~·· ...
Hysell
who
was
taken
to
Veterans
.,
=~=-~. Survivors include a brother, Titus
Jewelers,
Pomeroy;
Kay's
Beauty
Memorial
Hospital.
The•
Tuppers
.
,
._..
'Pickens, Syracuse, and several
, _.._...,_
...............-..
Salon, Middleport; Clark'sJewelry, ·
., •.c...... I:...........
Plains unit was called' to Long
nieces and nephews.
·
:::~.!::..::-·
,,. _.._ ,
Pomeroy;
Jo's
Ceramics,
,
PomeBottom
at
8:53
a.m.
for
Leoria
In addition to her parents, Mrs.
,,_
roy; Tom Rue Motors, Middleport:
_..._
Sheets Was preceded In death by her Hensley to Veterans Memorial. At
_......,
K
and
G
Shake
Shop,
Tuppers
1:
43
p.m.,
Rutland
went
to
Meigs
husband, WU!iam · Sheets, two
Iff- . . . . .....
Plains;
Linda's
Lady
Fair,
Racine;
Mine
No.
2
for
Michael
Austin
to
brothers and three sisters.
McOure's Daley Bar, Ml,ddleport;
Graveside services will be Thurs- Holzer rviedlcal Center. Tuppers
New York Clothing House, Pome. day morning, · 11 a.m., at Letart Plains went to Reedsville at 6: lfl
roy;
Polly's VUiage Ceramics,
p.m . for Ma.rtha Bailey who was
Falls Cemetery.
Tuppers
Plains.
Frtends may call at Ewing treated but not transported. Racine
Public Notice
Public Notice
·Public Notice
·Public Notice
'
Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m was called to McKenzie Ridge Road'
at 6: 11 p.m. for Adrian Hubbard. to
Wednesday evening.
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
resp ec t to th P. chn ssrs ancl iJCKiy
Smrt board 0 1 edr 1c atron ·
Veterans Memorial. And ·ai 8:00
tv'\J' r!'J s Lr, cnl Boarrl
typr; ond wrtl st:ne t l1at the IJrr .!&gt;
PURCHASE OF
msr:rves thfl noht to wmve
Seeks divorce
p.m.; Tuppers Plains was called to
.
OJ fdii C/l[IOn
w hnn assryrniJI Ad and prrn r to
rr11{)fmilli 1rF!S. 1(1 ;tCCP,p( o r fOjACI
THREE SCHOOL BUSES
.J:nlf· W. uJI H~ r . Tr casurnr
the
TUppers
Plains
Elementary
FOR
f lehvr.ry comp ly wrth ~ I I sc hoo l
;mv .1nrl all or po rt!; of ony and
· Patricia P. Cozart
h / 1 Sorrlh fhud ·AvunuP.
David R. WeDs, Reedsville, has
all flrrls
r!!str ,ct spec rj rc.J irorl5. all safe ty
MEIGS LOCAL
School for Bobby Gordon who was
Mrl·ll, ·n&lt; rrt . Ohr o tJ 5?60
r
eg~1l
atton
s
and'
curm
n
t
0
!'
1
10
No
brd
s
can
IJP.
Wrth(h
:lwn
lor
BOARD
OF
EDUCATION
flied for a.divorce In Meigs County
IG 14 1 992 5fl'50
Mrs. Patricia Proffitt Cozart, :fi, treated but not ttanspo,rted.
SeJied nroposals w rll he Mr 111mum S tandJ rds lor Sr:hool . &lt;11 IP.J stthnty ~ 30 ) d ays il ft P.r tlln
Common Pleas Court aeatnst Ber• recervP.d
B11s Consmr c tr on of the Depart .
by the Board at
Sc herlui(.!d clos rng wne tor I' 11 27 . 117) 4 . 11 18 .
Sandyville, W.Va., died Monday
41 0
tha Helen Wells, aiBo ofReedsviJle, Educa tron ot the Merns Loca l rricn t ol Educntron pu rs~1 ar11 tn .rnq:rpt ol hrd5
evening at St. Joseph's Hospital,
on grounds of gross neglect of duty Sc hool Dr stn c t of Mrdrllepo rt , Sect1 Qn 451 1. 76 ol the Oll to
:parkersburg, following_ an extended
Ohro at the Treasr1r er s o(lrc e ' Revrsed Code and &lt;ill other
and extreme cruelty. An order has until
Veterans Memorial
12 00 noon on ThrJrSdAy.
. Illness.
rtrnen i prOVJ5rOI)S Of 1[1\JV
also been Issued by the court Jan11cuv 3 . 1985, :l nd at th;n pe Spec
tfr cat rons and rrv~ t ru_ c·
. Real Estate. General
BorntnMason,.W.Va.,shewasthe
restraining the defend8nt . from 'lime openerl by thP. TreFrsurer of Ir ons 10 b rdde·rs rnay b ff
AdmlssiOI!STerry
Hysell,
Pomedaughter of Harold L. Proffitt, and
disposing of any marital assets sau~ Boa rd. tabula tAd, nnd. · a obtamed at th e Off ice o f the
roy; Leona Hensley, Long Bottom;
repo rt th ereof mJdc tb Stllrl
Lula Bunner Proffitt, near Racine.
Trea surer . Mrdcllepnrt . Ohr o
M. L "Bud" Me H
pending a final divorce decree. ·
Winifred Marcinko,. Reedsvtlle;
Board at. rts nex t sched uled
A ce rtrf red c h ~c~ payable to
Broker-Auction Service
Mrs. Cozad was a member of the . John
Edward L La\ldennllt, Middle- meetrng_as pr&lt;MdP.rl by Ia..., t-or ... the Tl ffi3surer o f the above Of
Norman, Pomeroy; Early
'CheJYI Lemley,
Portland ReOrganized Church of
port,
has tued ·for dl\&gt;occe frorn thrr:)e ~3 ) 6 5 pa ssenp er sct10o l fidrJca tr on or a sa t r s j :-~c t ory brd
Roush, Racine; Adrian Hubbard,
Meigs
County Associ1ta
buses. accordrng 10 Sf-)eclfr caJesus christ of Latter Day Saints
executed bv the brci der
Lorena Laudermllt, also of MlddJe. tr ons o t sarrl boa rd o l bond
Racine; Rita Stobart, Pomeroy.
Phone 742·3171
&lt;JnJ the surety co mpany. 1n nn
and was a key punch ope~ator In
O~harges--Uia Strauss, Leona · port, also oil grounds of gross edu c. ilho n
arn ount eqtml to frve percent
- ~taprocesstng~rKa!serMumSApMate .:md 1ndeperi dent · 15%) of 1he brd· .shall hf1
neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Lleving.
brds wrll be rece1ven wrlh
num for 10 years.
suhrnrttcr.l wtih ·eaqtl hd

New Homes-htensive
Remodeling
Insurance Work
Cu1to.m Pole Bldgs. ·
&amp; Garaces
Roofinc .Work
·
· Aluminum·&amp;Vinyl Sidings
PH . 992-7583
or 992-2282

NO SUNDAY CALLS

some frlghteillngmoments after the
buses collided, sending them sprawling with bruises, .cuts and pulled
muscles.
"We were thrown .all aver the

against Gary L. Longenette, Long
Bottom. '
In a reciprocal , action for child
support filed bytheStateofiowaanii
Joyce VanBusklrk against IWbert
Hawley, Pomeroy, the defendant
has been 'found to be In arrear In
payments In the sum of $1,425.00.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

GREG RO~SH

949-2801

24 injured as buses collide

$99,490 judgmeni ordered ;by Knight

,...------:----:---..........- - - - - . Golden Buckeye
list is updated

949~2801

10/4/tfc

bed."
Ms. ·Sanders was one of W

•:

Custom Built
Homes and Siding
Blown In Insulation
" Free Estimates"

SER~ICE

We can repair and re. core radiators and
l!eater cores. We can
also. acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas .Tanks.

PAT HILl FORD
992-2,1 96

Middleport. Ohio
1· 13 -« c

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUA~TE~S FOR
•ZENITH

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON

REFRIGERATOR

We Hen AFill Tl•e
Shop Ttehnlcl••
on Dulf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985-3307

. . . ._
. ...
...
.
............
...
.
.........
.,

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

YOUNG'S

IN~ULATE NOW

'DOZER · B.e.CK~OE

WITH

'RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FJELD SERVICES
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

~ OWNERS- CORNING

FIBERGLAS

8co~o~I~e

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

Tr.
Fenders ....................... '70
81-84 Chevy Tr.
Fenders ...................... 110
S' IG.SIS Chevy lri .
Fenders ..................... 80
73·79 Ford Tr.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bed s. iron,
wooct. cupboard s, cha irs,
ches1S. baskets . dilhes .
stone )4HS, antiques, gold
and silver . Wr ite - M . O .
Miller. Rt.2 , Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 o• eall 614 · 992 ·
7760.

'" tile businesses who

Good Selection Of

have previously pbed
an all in the Southern
High School yearbook.

*Norwoy Spruce
*Scotch Pine
*White Pine
9 AJII. to 9 P.M. .Wlif&lt;iloys
1 P.M. to S P.M.~

1 Mile off Rt. 7 On

St. Rt. 143, Po111eroy
For Signs

·

· 11 / 30/ 1 m.o.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

far111 Equi~111ent
Parh &amp; Service

Any business 11r patra"s . · who 'wC)uld
like ta place an ad,
contact Donnie Dudding ai 949-2600.

Cautlry Gift-AUessa."ies
6th St., Syracu$e
' Monday-Saturday
10 AM-5 PM
CLOSED THURSDAY
()pen Sun., De&lt;. 9, 16, 23
i2-6 PM
Open By Appoinlmont

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work

.-Concreie work
eh,ctri~al

- Plumbing ai"ld

·

work

• \fre:e Estimatesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill
99~,6215

or 992-7314

Pomerov. Ohio

If You Need
Your House Cleaned
~eekly, call: ·

LEE CODNER
949-2030

12-31-1 mo.

: '-'-------,~--...l.l.l"'"-'

"W• Re111 F~t l.m "

Perfect Family· Gift
"Affordable ~
•Portable
0 Theropeudic
.
"Relaxing
·
"Indoor-Outdoor Use
•voor Round .Pleasure

Fenders :.. ..... , .

Fenders ..................... 110
Ford Rang;r
Tr. Fenders ...... ............. 98
72-8{} Dodge Tr.
Fenders ...................... 115

AUTO
St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 orth
Gallipolis, . hlo
'

7 l1

Pric~;·" "

iii!

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

-

BLACKWOOD
H.OME SPAS

I

Cl

~ licensed
X
z.

. ;.'\tu·~·ial/,ltroductor:v .

3 Announcements

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
1-13 tfn

Gun shoo• at Racine Gun
Club every Sunday, 1:00
p .m . Factory chocked guns
only.

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

12·6-1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
or
843-5424
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL -SAND
TOP SOIL-Fill DIRT

Roger .Hysell
GARAGE
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trans111ission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
J-l&amp;.J! c

' - - - - - - I O·B·IIc

r,,, &lt; I':

THE

1:.

COUNTRY \ '"""", lt'
ClUB
CHRISIMAS
~e
. SALE
.:~

Clubt ..................... ss.sso
Putters ................... 15.130
Bags...................... I.J1-130
Head Covers ........... 16.118
Gloves ......................•3-17
Balls ..................... 1).1 1.50
Shoes .................... 130-1 50
Grips Rtplactd .....IJ!-. S2 .50 ·

JOHN TE~FOID ''"o~~·

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

to 24'x36'

Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10 6 ttl

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

FIN AH You, Pllntlng W
Pluso

OUice Supp~es &amp; Fur"iture,
Wedding and Groduation Sto·
tionery, Magnetic Signs, Rubber Stamps, BUiinen forms,
Copy Servicu, Etc.

2ss Mil st. Middlopoo,
I 04 Mullerry Av. Pomeroy

992-3345

mfmef an
Counfl'g Cteff
$bow

2 Miles out Flatwoods Rd.
Off St. Rt. 1

Nov. 5-Dec. 8
Mon.,Fri, 9-9
Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1-5
Kim Nelson
992, 2903
Ruth Ann Taylor
992-3566

The Co.untry Loft
81FT SHOP
lc Now Open
Tues.-Wed.-Fri. -Sat.
&amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondays 10 to 8
Closed .Thursday
Owner: Sarah Fisher
End of Rt. 7

By Meigs High School
Turn lth, enttr Twp. 79, 1st
driveway on right.

11/30/1 mo

choice.

No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment
. BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK lEASING
Box. 326
PQmeroy, OH. 45769

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE

Far Trash Pickup ·
Service Call

-DUM? TRUCKS

-LO·BOVS

-TRENCHER
- WATER

· -SEWER

- GAS LINES

-SEPTIC SVSTEIIS

HOME LITE

CHAIN SAW

F•~fotg Sps~l1f1
ON SALE ARE
SUPER 2-14"
240-16"

240-18" .
#ISO

IIG. PIICI '319.95
Salt Price

S21995

MGM FARM
CITY,.
INC.
P'OMIIOY OliO

SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT

Call 614-992-6737

-BACKHOES

54 Misc. Merchandise

•Ranges
•Refri ge rators
. •Dryers •Freezer s

POMEROY

IUSINfSS-RfSIDENIIAL

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

..

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

.

IN MIDDLEPORT
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.
OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

for Faster' Service

I.ARtlE " f"fAI.lJOBf

PH. 992-2478

11 /23/ l mo. pd

MILLER

ELECTRIC
SERVICE.
For all your wirine .
needs; furnaces repair
serVice and installation.
Residential.
&amp; Commerci1l

Call 742-3195

. Or 992-5875

ROGER MANLEY -Owner
11-29-1 mo.

VETERINARY

Addreu&gt;- ----------------

P .M .

Male Doberman Pincher 10
give away . Friendly, ears
cropped . Call 61 4 · 985 3581 .

6 part Huskv. Doberman
puppies to give away . 8
weaks old . Call 614· 992 ·
7458 .

terrior
2499

female . 304 · 882 -

Lost and Found

Thursday 3 p.m.-S p.m.
Friday 1 p.m.- 2 p.m.
Saturday 10 o.m.-11 :30 a.m.

lost three fo ll hounds . 2
white and black spo11ed and
one brown and white . Ra -

14.
-_
-_
-_
-_15. __
t6. - - - - - -

SR 329
12/7/ 1 mo . pd.

26. - - - - - - - -

YES Open all Winter. Satur·

30.------

31.-----32
-_
- ,_
--_
-ll .. _
_
~.

35 9 Rt. 160. Call 446 7037 .
"

2'1. - - - - -

35

·I

The Dilily Sentinel
111 Chrt St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

1

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

days &amp; Sundays. Christmas

28. - - - - - -

Mail This Coupon with RemiH•nce

I
I

Found rabbi1 beagle. Cha rlel'ton Rd . Call Paul 304 ·
675-5699 .

savings on tools , electron lea, housewares, glassware.
anti collectabln. Atwaya
fresh baked gog ds and P,_roduce. Free treats for the
children . Gallipolis Flea
Marke1, former Thaler Ford
Building , next to Fruths , Rt.

i

l

i
·I
I ·I

.

Experienced house cleaning ,
good references . Call 446 4619 ..

W ill skin . cut and wrap deer.

M cDaniel Cust om Butcher ing . o pen s i• days a week ,
304- 88 2 -3224 .
Rent · A -Santa !! T en dollar
donatic;&gt;n, will go to Mid ·
dle ton Estates residen ts.
304' 675 -4673 ; 30 4-675 t 3 15 ; 614 -446 -2283; 304 675-4536 .
l e t us he lp you w11h your
Christmas present . Fer gu ·
son Uph ol stery. 304 · 675 5472 .

Financial

LOST : keys on key-ring w ith
leath&amp;f strap . $20 .00 re ·
ward . lost on Court 51 . or
Main St. in Pomeroy. Call
614-742 -2081 .

B

21. - - . . . . , . - - -

t2· - - - - - -

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

t

22.
23.

9. _ _ _ _ __

13. - - - - - -

·systems

I
I
I
I

------1

61.-----.------

10. _
-_
-_
-_
-_
-_11.

PDQ

17. ---:---:-~

24.
25.

8-------

18 Wanted to Do

614 ~

21. - - - - , . - - -

54 .. ~--,---_ _ _ __

-!c Room and board fo r elderly
$200 .00 per month . Als o
have personal core reasona ble. Call 614-992 -60 22 .

247-2541 .

19,-----20. _ _ _ __

1.
2.
3.

The· PRICE:
S129soo
!Plus Tax and Installation)

+ + + +' + + + + + ..__"""'

cine. lettn area, Call

These cash rates
include discount

Situations
Wanted

30 4 -882 -2374 . .

Nov. 29th . Call 614-256 1525 .

t8.

12

Will re1urn all meat. $25 .00 .

LOST: female Bollier fawn

( &gt;For Rent

BEST KEPT SECRET lN
4MERIC A · ·Army Nat ional
Guard. j oin and you have a
good patt ·time career -- good
benef i t s · · mon t hly
paycheek -- NO LAYOFFS .
304-675-3950 o• 1 -800542 · 3619 .

Shepherd to. farm home in
country. 304-675-3767 .

with white color. Los1 Thurs.

12-3-tfn

TRUCK D RIVERS needed
Minim~m experience . Call
513 -563 -9647.

Experienced mother w ants
to baby- sit in my ho m e. All
ages . Flexible h our s . Pome ory area . 614· 992 - 2739 .'

3305 JACKSON AV!.
SMAIL ANIMAl HOURS
Monday 3 p.m.· 5 p.m..
· Tu11~0Y 6:30 p.m.-1 p.m.
Wednesday 3 p.m .- 5 p.m.

LARGE ANfMAL5 AND
SURGERY BY APPOINTMENT

Cook want ed apply in per&gt;
son Hi-Way I nn , Kanauga
Oh .

Four adorable pups . need to
see to appreciate. 61 4 -446 .
0059 .

6

( )Wanted
( )For- Sale
( )AnnOuncement

Trainee if you
you will receive
S1 ,500 mo. while in sChool ·
$24,000 year after g.radua ·
tio n. Sales -Management ex perienc e helpful. Apply at
the Blue Fountain M otel,
Gallipolis. Thu rs . De c . 13th
between 1 -5PM . Ores;; ac·
cordingly , N o ph o nes
accepted .

3 part German Shepard . part

Phone-----------~-----

(2 Yr. Factor,y Warranty)

..

Puppies to give away : 4
female, 1 male. All black
witli whi1e markings on the
neck . Born Sep1 . 9 , 1984.
Have been wormed . Call
614-949-2112 alter 5 :00

3 half grown kit1ens. 304 ·
458-1517.

Name----------

CLINIC

The DisH: Commander 8' Spun Aluminum
The FEED: Chaparral Polarstor I
The RECEIVER: Dexcel DXP-11 00-01
AFC, ·Stereo, Cord Remote Control
Beit ~alue on the Market T~day

(614)-Evtnings

I
I
I
I
I
I

· Write your own ad and order .by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad bv phone when yOu get
1 results . Money not r@fundable .

DECEMBER PRICE .BUSTER

662-5311

9 puppies . Call 446 -0924.

-----------~---------~I

All Makes

NOW PICKING UP IN

992-3194

.,.~

Small female dog , mixed
breed. friendly . good with
children . Call after 6 , 4467137.

-:Washers •Dishwashers

TOWN &amp; COUN'IRY

"Out Butitrm It Built
011 $mie1"

2 female puppies; mixed

•LAND CLEARED
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE FOR DRIVEWAYS

985-3561

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE
AND

Mature Siamese. neutered.
declawed, r1eeds Senior Citi zen companionship . Call
446 - 4672 after 4pm .
Collie &amp; German Shephard .
Call 446 -9301 alter 4pm .

SER~ICE

AVON . earn big butks plus
S20 w orth Ot produ c1S . Call
446-3358.
~anager

TROMM EXCAVATING

11 / 26/ 1 mo.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE \
Wed like to introduce you to
Engage-A-Car, the modern way
to drive the "hicle of your

Phone
446-2062 .

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

and

Giveaway

Yellow tiger striped mo1her
cilt 81 tlittens . Call 446·
2B26.

PH. 742-2328 .

PARTS

tree

'
2 white puppies female
. 112
German Shepherd, ·% Doberman . Call after 5PM.
614-3&amp;7 -0243 .

11·8·tlc .

APPLIANCE

Christmas

qualify

Roy Bickle

KEN'S

Sales help Wan1ed Part -f u ll
1ime. Earn extra 5100 .00more per wk . Calt614 -286 2224 for interview .
'

Still time to sell Avon for
Christmas and receive su r·
prise gift offer . Call 446 21 sa·.

4

·Certified Chimney Swe~p

•Backhoe
*Dump Truck
•septic Systems
•coal &amp; limes111ne
*Bonded &amp; li,censed
Phone: 742-2225
or 742-2167
11 /JU I mo .

Help Wanted

1---------:-

llmbens

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

A.M.
CONSTRUCnON

11

For sale-Christmas Trees. 2

farm . Hanging Rock Rd .. Rt.
33 above Mason .

446-2062

~

Emplovmenl
Serv1ces

miles out on flatwoods Rd .
off St. Rt. 7 , BoK 359-7!;) .

Pick a fresh cut tree at

Chimney
Care

Buying daily gold. silver
coi ns, rings . jewelry , sterling
ware, old coins, large currency . To P/ prices . Ed . Bur·
kett Barber Shop . 2nd . Ave
Middleport . Oh . 614 -992 3476 .
- - - -- - -- -lc BUYI N G RAW FURS . Beef
and Deer Hides , Ginseng and
yellow root . . Selling trap ping su pplies . Wheat
ligh1s, night lights. George
Buckley . phone 614 -664 4761 , hours 12 · 9PM dailey .
Free standing fireplace. old
lumber or barn wood . 304 773 -5968 0' 882- 3188,

SWEEPER and sewing mac.,_ine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick ~P and
delivery , Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , o·n e half mile up
Georges Creek Rd .
Call
614-446-0294.

Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

9 13 lin

Announcemenls

Clinical Audiologist

,1 11121 1 mo.

tl n

PU Bumper\ .... ...... . 69.95
79-82 Chmlle Gnll s
Jl
Ford Ranger Gnll s ......... 71

Ford and Chevy Tail Gates

Computerized Hearing Air Seledion
Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

z

Call: 742-2407
1

Omni-Horizon 2 tlr. Of
4 dr. Fendm .... ..... ....... 75
Chevy &amp; F.ord

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

.

Will do all types of excavating, landscaping.
basements. sewaae systems. waler &amp; gas lines.
water well driliing and
service. trucking (limeslone &amp; dirt).

U-SA~E

I NG , S ilrE l&lt;'ep,.E'Sl' n l&lt;' f lllil!

11-21-1 mo

Pomeroy, OH.
Call 98S-38D5

· CALL
446-4522

t(

D-50 Dodge Tr.
Feaders .................. ... .. 62
76-82 Chevette
tar Fenders .................. 60
79-80 Moslang
Car Fenders ................. 60
81-84 Escort-Cynx

.. 59

Fenders .. .. .. .. ..

80-~ Ford Tr .

CAROLYN McCOY

' - - - = - - - -., ll -12-J 1110 ,

I· J ·fh

J . R.

I NSULATE YOUR ATTIC
OR WHOLE HOUSE

73-80 Chevy

BERRY BASKET

Wa11ted to buy used coal &amp;:
wood heaters . .Swain Furni·
ture. 446-3169. 3rd . &amp;
Ollva St .. Gellip olio, Oh .

FOR FREE ESTIMATE
PHONE POl NT PLEASANT, 304- 67S - 396.2

l ·IS-1

THANKS ·

Jim M ink Chav.-Oldo lne .
Bill Gene Johnson
446 -3672
.

Wanted : Wood or wood· &amp;:
coal burners. Must be Ash ley, King, Suburban , Atlan tic , or W~mderw ood . Also
want 10 buy ro1otillera . Call
614 -593-6835.

.,, ., ,.,,.,

JIM CLIFFORD

· Watch

Belpre. Oh io

C. R . NEWMAN, Presi den t

CHRISTMAS TREES
FOR SALE

claa'l uaed cera.

R ~ w Fur, Top, prices paid .
Lake Jackson Fin &amp; Fur . Oak
Hill. Oh . 614 -682- 7448.

'tlloMe 9nsu~atlQA 9~n .

.

RENT A CAR

TEAM
CLEAN

CARPENTER
SERVICE

_...._.........___
.....====

"

==...,----------r--------~

'

=

U-CI, tvAIMIIII:·~

We pey c81h for

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

PH. 992-7201

Sentinel-

The

I

Auction every Friday night a1
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of ·new

merchandiH

every

week .

, Conliomenta of new &amp; used
marchandiiMt atways wel comed. Rlchord Rtynoldo,
Auctioneer. Call 304· 275 -

1!_
3069.
_ _ _ _ __

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

21

Business
Opportunity

' NOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY PU.8 L.'IS HIN G CO . reco mmends
th at y ou do business with
people you know , and NOT
to send money 11'rrough the
mail until you have inveSti gated the offering .
~H E

EARN $4 .87 HR .: We need
assistance in evaluating ·and
respon ding to daily work
reports submitted by our
agents throughou1 the state.
No 9lllpariance necess&amp;ry ;
~aid to complet8 1raining .
Work a1 tiorne. For inforn1a ·
tion send self -addri:tssed ,
st(llmped envelope 9 %
inches l ong to AWGA. D ept . ! ,
E. Bo x 49204. Atlanta. GA ~
30359 .
" FARMER - BUSINESS
MAN " Open steel building
dealership high potential
pr~fits available pan time or
·tull time or full time iri your
To apply call . Wedgcor
-3200 ••t 2407 .

�Sentinel
22

Tuasdny, December 1 1. 1

Money to Loan

46

Furnished Room•

For rent Sl...,lng Rocmo
and light houoo kNping
raoma. ~rk Centr1l Hotel..
Coli 614-446-07&amp;8.

23

Furnished room. •126. Utili·
tiea, range, ref.. Share bath.
Men only. 91 II Sac .. Gollipollo. 448-4418 oltor 8 p.m .

Profe1aional
Services

46 Space for Rent

Plano Tuning end Repolr.
Brunicordl Mulic Co .• 448·
0887 . Twentieth yNr of
quality '""'ice. l.ono Do·
nlelo. 814-742-29111 .

Mobile home lot. e76 water
paid. 4th &amp; Neil. Galllpolio.
Call 446-3844 after 7PM .

Unwonted loclol or body

htllr'l Permanent. painteaa
,.moval by European Elec·

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33; North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call
614-992-7479 .

tronic Oepilatoi. Mory io
c.rtified In th.i l new compu~
tori zed digital •Y.otom : Call
today 1114-992, 6720. Top
of the Staira. full eervice

ulon.

49

Rental s

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

31

Homes for Sale

41

Remodeled 2 bedroom vinyled home. carpet(td, 2
acrea, 1'224 pound tobacco
Call 614· 246 ·

area . Call Kenneth Swain

446 - 3159 or 614·256 1562 evenings.

bargain price!! Call 614992-6941 .

2

6 minute drive from town,
located on At. 558 in Green
Townohip, 3 bdr .. LR, kit·
chen , family room. 1 1h bath .
842,000 . Call anytime 446 ·
9396 .

bedroom

houte,

fully

carpeted . $200 per mo . plus
utilities. Deposit l!!t referen-

ces. North of Cheshire on
old Rt . 7 , 446 - 9786
8:30AM to 4:00PM .
Eureka, nice 2 bdr. home.
large livingroom and kitchen. $226 par month,
deposit and reference required. Blackburn Realty.
446-0008 .

MUST SELL-in estate . 4
bedroom· older home, new
furnace and air condition,
needs redecorating, mid
20'1. Nicely decorated 2
bedroom home, carpeting,
woodburner, 1 2x24 co vered deck, nice y.ard. Must
see to appreciate. low 20 'a.
Call 614-992-7376 alter 6
PM or anytime week -ends .

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 .

Ranch atvle house in coun try. Three bedroom. 1¥2 bath
on 2 .39 acres. Must sell.
Call 614-986-4329.

Cheshire 3 bdr., 2 baths, dtp'
&amp; rof. Call614-367·7567or
803-781 -7895.

Mobile home in Gallipolis.
nice for senior citizens or
married couple with one
child. no pets. deposit and
references required. K 8a K
Mobile Homes. Inc ., 304875-3000.

44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity, has
one and two bedrooms, rent
staning at $163 for one
bedroom and 8198 per
month for two bedroom,
with 8200 depos~ located
near Foodland and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV
ant. Call 446·2746 or leave
message.
513 Third Avo . two-1 bdr.
apu. Starting 8136 to $165
mo . Water included, dep req .
Call 446-4222 between 9 &amp;

By owner 3 or 4 br house,
BUck stove, large garage, 6
years· old . 875.000. 304676-8366 .

3 bdr. 1 mi. from Hospital
$225 rent. 8200 dep. water
&amp; traoh paid . Call446-1354
after 5 .
·

Gallipolis Farry 6 year old
brick ranch. 4 car garage,
843,000.00. Phone 304·
675-6851 .

Nice 3 bdr. house. with 1 car · Nicely furnished modern
garage, 2 miles from hoapi· mobile t"lome in city .• 1 or 2
tel out 160 large yard &amp; adults only. Call 446-0338 .
garden . Will accept 2 child·
1 bdr apt ., 2 bdr apt. ,
ren . Call445-0157 .
$150-8260 . Call 304-675Furnished house, 3 bdr ., 29 7283 676-5104 or 675Neil Ave .. Gallipolis. t226 5386 .
plus utilties, references. Call 1-- - - - - - - - - 446 -4416 alto• 7PM .
Furniahed apt., next door to
---------~
. Ubrary, one · profellional
Newly ramodelod house. 2 • adult only. Call 446·0338 .
bdr, 1 full bath, lg . lurn.
kitc.,en. located in Middle- 2 bd.r. duplex ex . location in
port. Send resume to Daily town $250 mo . with a
Sentinel. P.O. Box 729 -V. lenced backyard . Call 446 ·
8293 alter 5PM .
Pomeroy. Oh 46769 .

2 br house. newly deco·
rated. 304-676-1090.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 614-446·
7274 .

2 bedroom duplex house,
downtown Pomeroy. Furn.
or unfurn . $226 .00 plus
utilitieo. Call614-992-2381
day or 614-992-8723 night .

Free satillite antenna with
purchase of new 1984
Double-wide. Call Kanauga
Mobilo Home Salas. 446 9662 .

Home in Racine. All electric .
$200.00 per month . Deposit and references raquired.
Call 614 -949-2849 .

All homes reduced for year
end Sale . Call Kanauga
Mobile Home Sales, 4469662 .

For sale or rant :. 3 bedroom
house with detached garage
on 34 acres. In Portland
area . Call after 6:30 pm
304-273·5272.

1969 New Yorker, 12•65, 2
bdr. partally furnished , can·
tral air , gas h.trnance ,
waaher -dryer . Call 61 4 ·
387-7611 .

Three bedroom house in
Middleport. call 614-9927356 .

Make an offer- Must selll
1971 12)(65 Torch 2· 3 bdr.
unfurniohed. Call 614 -4467132 .

Nice two bedroom in Eastern Sc.,ool District. Natural
Gas,TPC water and no pets.
8175 .00 plua dJ!poo~. Call
614-949·2801 . No Sunday
call s.

1972 1 2x60 Vintage. good
cond., 2 bdr., 1 % bath, new
furnance , fireplace with
blower• .good carpet, stove
refrig .• washer. dryer. win·
dow air cond .• drapes, some
furniture. outside building ,
Lot 97 Quail Creek . Call
446 -6592 or 614- 245 91592 .

Newly remodeled house for
rent in Chester, Ohio . Reduced rent for winter
months. Security deposit
and referencearequired. Call
1-866· 7404 or write Richard Frolt, 15105 Lake
Ave. No. 6 . Lakewood. Ohio
44107 .

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL: 86
Spring Brook 14•70. 3
bedroom, total electric , de·
luxe appliances, garden tub, 2 bedroom unfurnia.,ed
bay window . Only house , $176 .00 month . ·
812.950.00. 85 Rockford a100 .00 deposit. Second
14x70, 3 bedroom, 1 V:r Street. Naw Haven, 304both. total electric , sell _8_8_2_·_2_6_0_5_._ _ __ __
atoring atorma. plywood 1
floora. deluxe appliances. Houae 10 Decatur St., Point
Only e12,450.00. delivered Pleaoont. phone 304-676ond blocked. Blocko, vinyl _7_1_6_3_· - -- - -- - 1
underpinning and steps in· J br houae, bath,full baaecludod in price. USED:
1 2x80 or 12•70, 3 bod· mont. garago. available Dec .
26 . &amp;250. Rolorencos ond
room. Both real nice condi· deposit required. 304-675tlon. e6960 .00 ooch .
Gono'a Mobile Homeo. Inc., _1_o_9_o_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
1

R1. 177 and At. 2 Ravens· l- ' - - - - - -- - - -

wood . Call 1 -304 · 273 ·
Mobile Homes
151 311
·
for Rent
For aale: 1981 Kirkwood
1 4x70. 3 bedroom. 1 11&gt;
bllth. Wood atove. Redt~ced 2 bdr. trailer for rent, near
to f10,900.00. Coli 614' Mercerville. Call 446-3169
or 614 -2156 - 1662 otter
843-6244 .
5:30PM .
Schult 3 bedroom mobile
home. cantral air, sheet K • 12x60 2 bdr. on Clark
K No. 31. Call 304-875- Chapel Rd with a large yard.
children accepted. Coll446·
5417 otter 4:00 PM.
3697 or 446·0167.

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

36

Lots

&amp;

Acreage

Lotlor Nloln Mercerville, 3
trellor hookupa. electric. rurei wotor, septic tank ,
t8.000. Coli 8t4-266·
8118.

2 bdr. trailer rural water.
woodburnlng atove, pa"·
tlolly lumiohed. f100 clop ..
e126 rant. Coli 814-3792
80 .
1_ _ _ _7_
3 bdr'. troller lw1h' 2 blithe, In
Evergreen. Coil 1114-24119170.

--- -=----

Wonlod: omall acrNge lor
·
hom• alto. Clooo to pavod 2 bdr. mobile homo. Coli
rood. Rio Grande-Galllpolio _4_4_11_·_8_2_2_1_· - - - -- 1
oroo. Coll614-246 ·6239 .
60 ,12 trollot, 3 bdr .• 1'h
for rant. troller Iota, botho. Bulovlllo Addison Rd.
ond -ter fumlohod. Close lo AddovHio School. 8
sriloll chHdron accepted. mileo from Rt. 7. 114-317·
7473 ·
304-171-1078.

a.,....

.,

2 bedroom mobile home.
Natural gas heat. Racine
area. Coil 614-992-6858 .

3 bedroom , furnished ,
675 - 7263 675 · 5104 or . washer
and dryer. $200.00
675 -5386. .•
plus ~tilitieaand deposit. No
pots. Call 614-992-7479.
House to r rent in Mercerville

Owner must sell Middlepon
home Nowl Real c::ute. real

;/·

Houses for Rent

House for rent . Call 304·

allotment. city sCt'lools ,
$22. 600.
6296 .

Houaehold Good1

5.

3 rooms with priavte bat.,,
1st. lloor. Call 446-2215 .
1 bdr. partially · furnis.,ad .
$190 mo ., utilities piiid , $60
dep . 6 mo . lease, no children
and no pets. Call446-3667
after 6 .

4 room 8. bath, $126 mo.,
carpet, furnance , stove S.
refrig ., ref. 8t dep ., Adults
only. Call 446-1163.
New effiCiency apt . wit.,
garage , appliances furnished. washer-dryer. .,oo·
kup. Privata yard, 8210 mo.
includes · water. dep . re ·

qulrod. Call 446-7209 or
446-3287.
Furnished efficiency $145 ,
utilties pd. share bath . 807
2nd. Ave . Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 alter 7PM.
Riverside Apts.
Special rates for
Citizens. S130 . Equal Hous·
ing Opportunities . 614 992 -7721 .
Furnished 2 bedroom apt . in
Mi.d dleport . Adults, no pets,
security depoait. Call 614992 · 3874.
Nice lffflciancy apartment.
suitabl8 for one or two
people . Call304-773-5882 ,
Betty Mercer.
Furnished 2 bedroom apart·
mont In Racino. $126 .00
por month pluo $60 .00
dapoait. You pay utilitiea .
Call 614•949-2887.
Unfurnishad apartment for
rent In SyracuM. Call 814992-7689.

Merchanrl; se
51

Household Goods

·'

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St .. Gallipolio . New
8. used wood·coal stoVes, 6
pc wood LR ouite $399,
bunk beds $199, antron
recliners 899, used bedroom
suites, ranges. wringer
washero, &amp; shoeo. Call614446·31 59 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. c.,air. rocker, ottoman. 3 tables. (extra heavy),
$685. Sofas and Chairs
priced from· $285. to $895.
Tables. 850 and up to 6126.
Hida-a-beda,8390. and up
to $6&amp;0 .. aola beds 6146.
Recliners. $226. to 8375 ..
Lamps lrom 828. to 6126 .
pc. dinotteo from 81 09 .• to
436. 7 pc . $189 and up .
Wood table with six chairs
8.286 to 8745. Doole 8110
up to $225 . Hutcheo, e650.
Bunk bed complete with
manreaaea, $276. and up to
$395 . Beby bods, 8110 .
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, 868 .• firm, $68 .
and S78 .~ueen seta, 8195.
4 dr. ch sts. $49." 5 dr.
c.,eats,
9. Bed fram.as,
$20.and826 .. 10gun · Gun
cabinets. .$360 . Gas or
electric rang's $376. Baby
mattra11aa• .$25 &amp; $35, bed
lramoo $20, $25, &amp; S30,
king frame a 50 . Good selection of bedroom suites,
rockera. metal cabinets.
headboard• $38 &amp; up to
S65 .

54

Trade Center Kanauga ,
Ohio . Furniture outlet, Why
Pay Morel

Kitchen loblo &amp; choirs. Kirby
Claaslc &amp; all attachment•.
197B Hondo 760K. 1971
Opal Manta. children• riding
toys. Call 446-8080.
1983 ATC 3whoelorHonda,
••c. cond .• great Christmas
gilt. Call448-0109 alter 5.
Firewood for .sale- $25
pickup load; 836 delivered.
Call 256-8208. ·
Beautiful all wood coffee &amp;.
end tables. cabinet style.
6100 oet. Call 304-6751716.
One w.,ite orginal Cabl;lage
Patch Kid , long red hair,
886. Calf 448-4210 after 7 .
Snare drum with stand $76.
Robyn CB mobile or baae
860. portable ·P.A. with
mike $20, reclinar· rockef
yinyl-tan 820. Coli 446 0002.
Big 3 or 6 bdr. home built on
your lot $16,900 &amp; up. See
our model . Coll1 -614-888 ·
7311 .
- - - -- - - - · l cOak furniture, tables,chairs.
cupboardJ. pi!IJ safe. telephones. desk ~ also antiques
and glaisware . Oj»en Sundays. Conkel's Tuppers plains, Rt.7 .
Mobile home new parts and
doors. Inside, outside, stOrm
doors . trailer windows .
About 500 (priced to sell!
McArthur,O.,io. Route 1 .
·call 6~4-596 - 4282 .

Firewood. 820 .00 pick up
load . 830 .00 delivered .
304 -676- 2991 or 676·
6762 .
'

(Coal Doliverodl good lump
houae coaL 1 to 7 ton. call
Jim Lanier 676· 7397 or
304-675 -1247.
For sale or ;ant, stage
lighting system complete
with road casas. · 1 -304 676; 5370.

JO" elect. range $95, Ken·
more 30' gas range nice
8125, horveot gold gao
range $96 . and other "gas , --~------­
ranges to choooe lrom. GE SURPLUS DENIM iackete
washer $96, 4 others to $21 .00. Bibs$16 .00, cove choose from. Whirlpool ralls regular $22 .00. kida
washer &amp;. dryer 8246 . GE camouflage. army new field
single door refrig. like new jackets. all army field pack
$126. GE frost free refrig . acceasories. combat boots,
$126. wringer was.,er f65, Carhart clothing. Sam
Kenmore dishwasher $76 . Somerville's. East RavensSkoggs Appll•nceo, Upper wood. Fri. Sat, Sun. 1 :DORiver Rd. Gallipolio. 446- 7 :00 PM . (other dayo to
7398 .
Chri tmao 3:00-7:001 304675-3334.
Hickory Wind. 141 Butternut Ava. Old furnis.,ings . Firewood, ·delivered. 304collectibles and gifts. Sun- 671i· 2075.
day 1:00· 5:00. Mondeythru
Thursday 10:00-6:00.
Cabbage Patch type dolls.
304-676-6996 .
Pickens used furniture. 304676-6483 or 676·1460.
3 quilts. 1 crochated table
cloth, all lor f250.00 thio
RICK'S NEW AND USED weak . 304-675-6396 .
FURNITURE . Uaod ltovoo 1- - - -- - -- - - and refrigecatora. Compare Firewood $20 .00 piCkup
our prices. eave tod•y . load $30.00 delivered anyPhone 304-773-5430.
timo . Call304· 458-1728 .
Saara woodburner, 2 speed
fan $126 . 00 . Cuotom
drapes 7ft x 80in. Beat offer.
304-675-4444.

Lorge hand modo Cedar
Chooto and Doll Cradles.
phone 304-876· 1166.

..

Apartment for rent. 3 room a
ond bath. Fumlohod . Cell
614-992-11908.

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes, hOUHI. Pt. Pleaaant
and Gollipollo. 814-4488221 .
Furnlahed apartment down-~
town. no pete. one bedroom.
coli 304·11711-3788.

12 -n

54

63

Am-fm conaole atereo with
tape &amp; record ployor 860.
new 110 lb. borbellaet with
Incline bonch. •8&amp;. 304·
675-2838 .

Double Ragietered PalamlnO
mare. gentle . Coll614 · 288·
6622 .

Building Supplies

Building Motorrlo lo
Block. brick, sewer pipes.
windows, lintels, etc .
Claude Wh1ter1. Rio Grande,
0 . Call814-245-6121 .
Rough Cut lumber, oak.
poplar, and plno. 2x4's.
2x8 ' e. 1x8'e, "' 1xB'a. Aa·
aortod longtha. Coli Hogg
and Zuspa 'n Materials
Co ., lnc. 773 - 5664 ,
davtime.
Now open for business.
Mountain State Block, Rt.
33 , New Haven. Complete
mesonry oupplleo, 4 ' ", a··,
1 2"" block. Delivery oorvice.
Phone doy 304-882-2222.
evening 882-3239.

56

HILLCRE'ST KE'NNELS
Boarding all breede. Haated
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Coll614-446•
77116 .
Judy· Taylor Grooming . Call
614-367-7220.
Bri8rpatch Kennels Professional An -bread grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilitiea. Engliah Cocker Spaniel puppieo. Coil 814-38897110 .
Dr,gonwvnd Cattery Ken nel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Sil!mOIB' kittens. AKC
Chow puppioo. Coli 614 446-3844 alter 7 .

CHRISTMAS Puppioo, AKC
regiaterad Cocker Spaniels ,
buff in color. 8125 . Excellent Christmas gih. Call
614-388-9755.
Pit Bull pupa, red-rad noae. 1
lomalo. 3 maloo . Coli 446 4043.

COLLIE 10 week old mole
with large new dog house.
Muot ooll 812&amp; . Call 446 2164.
ABDA &amp; UKC Rogloterad
American Pit Bull pups . Sire
is Chaate.en' a Butch, ready
for Chriatmans . Call 814379-2469.
AKC Toy Poodle party color.
Call 446·1 609 .
One ri1iniature Dachshund 8
woeks old lemolo f75 . Call
446-0044.
Chriatm11 puppiea-AKC
regiatered Cocker Spaniels.
Buff color. $126 .00. Call
614-992-6822 .
Brittany Spaniel puppies
AKC regiatorod. Born 1 020-84. Coli 614-867-8427
alter 8PM.
Chriatmas puppies for U1e.
AKC regloterod Cocker Spo niela. G~ houoe poto. Call
814-992-&amp;623 otter 3:30.

10 gollono aot up, 824.00;
10 gallono tank. f7.99;
medium angel floh. 83.99;
20 gallon long. · Tho Fio~
Tonk 2413 Jockoon Avo. Pt.
Pleaoont. 304-876-2063.

Yellow lutino Cockatlela
b i rds, phone 304 -8 75 2635 .

--~ Parakeets. bebiea. all colors,

now cogoo. Hold for Chlrstmao. 304-675-6030 alter
6:00 end wookondo .
Pokingelt okc white tnolo
puppy. wormed &amp; ehote.
304-87&amp;-11030 .

67
lnltrumanta
Gold O&amp;~lbranNn spinet piano, rool good cond. e800.
Coli 114-3117-0888.

BALDWIN ORGAN, "Fun
Mochlno" 82,700.00. Or·
gon with equivalent IMturN
aella for more than
u.ooo.oo . 304-1711·
29111.

Uvestock

Double Ragistered Bucks·
kin, Quarter gelding $460.
Call "14-286-8622 .

1 8' Jayco camper AC. awn·
ing, TV antenna. alaepa 8 ,
like now. Call 614· 268·
1141 .
24 ft. self contained camping trailer. Call 614 -251·
1291 .

f~/_1 _1/~4
EVENING

l :oo u m CIJ m o
(j) News

81

Aggre11ive Duroc bo.ara.
aatisflctlon guaranteed.
Roger Bonlty, Sabina. · Oh .
613-584-2398.

3 bred Gllta and 0!'1e boar
hog. 304-896 -3319 .
Sowa and Boar. good quality
breeding otock, 40 cents lb .
304-676-7241 .

.64

Hay

8t

Grain

Corn for ula . Now picking .
Bumgarner Dairy. Letart.
wv. 304-882-2066 .

Tra nsportation
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid lor '80
model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eaotorn Ava.. Gallipolis. Call
614 -446-2282.

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

1976 Ford Granada. 6 cyl .•
auto. PS, 2 dr., radial tires.
new battery. 8900. Call
614-388-9334 alter 6PM .

Or. Who
® 3 -2-1, Contacl(CCI
fl) Diff'rant Strokes
[MAXI
SCTV :
Second
~omi ng . The laughs con·
t1nue With specially·edit ed
enco res fea turing the best
sketches of th e satirical ser·

CAPTAIN E ASY
cOOK , I'LC &gt;'101&lt;1&lt; WITH
ANY.ODV JU ~T A~ LON /;
AS TH5V i"&gt;TAV OUT OF MV
WAV W~EN THii GOING ·

CD Rifleman .
(!) Maido Sportslooi&lt;.
(I) Carol Burnett
Cil Gl ~ A8C News !CCI
Ill CIJ ® CBS News
Cil Nightly Business
Repon
liD Body Electric
g One Day at a Time·
IMAXI
MOVIE:
'Great

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 veara experi.-.ce.
apecializing In built up roof.
Caii614· 38B·9B67 .
H &amp; S Home Improvements
vinyl • ·· aluminum siding.
roofing, seamless guttera.
storm windows. overhang.
Call614·387-0409 or 814387-7244.

Carpet · Carpet - Carpet .
Thinking of new carpet or
any floor coverings? Call us
first . Free in home viewing,
new market plan mea111
better carpet-leas money.
All installation guarantee.
In formation -appointment,
Mullins Floor Covering,
614·286· 2224.

'BO Monte Carlo Landau,
VB.auto,PB, PS,AC, AM.
rear defroster, tilt, 304· 675 6288 .

1979 Oldo Cutluo Su·
preme, low mileage. like
now, call alter 6 :00, 304·
675-2369 .
1981 AMC Spirit delu ... 4
cyl . a. c. am-fm stereo, new
tires. exc . cond. Must sell.
304-882-3370.

72

Trucks for Sale

1978 Dodgo D150. 318
engine. 4 apead overdrive,
power steering and braklia.
t2,000 with slide in 8'
camper. e1760 with out .
Coli 614-245-6271 alter 6
or deytime on weekends .
Chriotmu Special 1984
Mozdo 5 opd .. ,AM -FM tape.
wlro rims, lied liner, 84,895 .
John'o Auto Soloo. 4464782 .
1978 Chevrolet 'A ton
8796. olao 1973 Ford PU
85911. Coil 448-8113 or
446-8201 .
1873 Ford F-260 4•4 truck
mechancielly good cond .•
8800. Coli 446-32152 .
1878 Ford pick -up with
topper. A-1 condition . Now
point, candy apple rod . Au·
tomotlc . e1800 .00. Coli
1114-992·3194
1989 C-10 Chevey Pick -up
trucll. 307, auto.. good
condition. no rust, with fiber
glaaa Lincoln topper .
87911.00. Coli 814 · 2471 972 Ford F260 4 wheel
drive, 4 apood V-8, now
point. f1 eoo . ao4-875·
78211.
'711 Chevrolet Choyonno
pick up e1 .100.00 or boot
ollar. '70 Ford pickup. 30411711-2372.

. F~T LArer&lt;!

'lbU BOY ION

ANNI E
C'N 1 6ET
YOU 60ME
COCOA OR

ALL QUIET... I\ND ABNER
YET.,. MAYBE l CAN
5NEAK IN A PNOIYE CI!I..L TO
MY CLIEN76 ...

BAC~

GOME THI ~ :

J'AKE?

.

ALL EY OOP
IF THAI G t..NG IS ~F TER
US, 'THE N OUR WORK. H ERE
IS FINISHED, FU C H IN :

BEFORE

WE GO , WE

HAVE A MATTER

OF UNFINISHED
BUSINESS TO
SETILE !

T

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motor ola , D&amp;~azar. a'ld
house calls. Coli 304-578·
2398 or 614-446-2464 .

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat wells completed same
day. Pump sales and ~arvi ­
ces. 304·895 ·3802 .

82

Plumbing
8t Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolio; Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or
814-446-4477

---

Okayr Fold
up that

O 'Cll G'QJ 'Twas the Night
Before Christmas The citizens of Junctionville fear
that Santa will not show up
for Christmas when they
find thai hi s feeling s have
been hurt by an unsigned let·
ter to the edi tor denouncing
him . IAI
Ill (121 Who' s the Boss?
(CCI
fl) Juggler of Notre Dame
9:00 D Cil CIJ Riptide
Ill 700 Club
Ill Cll ®l MOVIE: 'Camille'
Cil Gil Frontline [CCI 'Red
Star Over Khyber.' The So·
vi et inva sion of Afghan istan
fiv e years ago and the fighting that has been going on
the re since is eMamincd . (60
min.)
Ill
~
Glitter
(CCI
(RETURN! Sam and Kal e's
sto ry on a visiting Russian
ba llet compa ny becomes a
bloc kbu st er af ter a troupe
m ember defects -.nd Chip
and Ang ela's ro mance is o n
the rocks when a pretty new
employee arrives. !60 min.)
9 :30 C!J Super Bouts olthe 70' s
Jo hn Tate vs. Gerry Coetzee
(Pretoria. South Africa. Octob er. 19791. 160 min .J
fl) On and' Off Camara
10:00 D
CIJ ClJ Remington
Steele Two singing tel egram girls , thought to have
w itnes sed a murder , are
forc ed to hide out in Laura' s
apartment as a means of
prote.ction . (60 min.)
III 8) ~ Paper Dolls (CCI
l au rie is shocked '!o find her
mother dining with Jak e Larne r and Racine and Wes ley
team up in order to sabot age
Tempus Spo n s w ear. (60
min .)
Ill Statewide
Gil Newswatch
fl) Independent News
IHBOI Hilchhiker · Face to
8:30

bed and
trund le
it back
into our

apartmentr

WI NN IE
YOU'RE A GUTSY
TO RAISE A CHILD

DARit~N ALONE ~ _.....DiSDiVNE:D

I MOVED WESt
GOT A JOa, AND
I'M DOING THE

ElfST I CAN.

Dozer Work by Ted Hanna.
Ditches. ponds, roads. land
clearing, etc. Call Motor Car
Brokers. 446-6692 .

E lectrica I
Refrigeration

Face

SEWING Machine ropalro
H .r vice. Authorized Singe;
B•les &amp; Service Sharpen
Scinon . Fabric Shop.
Pomoroy. 614-992-2284.

IN IHE NEX:I

85

A ME66A6E!!

General Hauling

1HAIMU61

BE: MYPAL-6
CEW..~YlNG
IOGIVEME

James Boys Water Service.
Aloo poolo filled . Coli 814266 - 1141 or 814 -446 1176 or 614 ·446-7911.
Ken's Water Service. W~ll ,
cisterns, pool a filled . Phone
81 4-387-0623 or 614·31177741 night or doy.

TI N~ LITTLE PLA'IE~5

WITH TIN~ LITTLE STICKS...
Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sac. Avo., GoNIPOIIe
814·4411-7831 or &amp;14-4411 '
1833.
.

I

t
I I I X)

INAUVEE

WH IL.E 5 HE WAS
GE TI INc&amp;A FA&lt;:E FUL.

OF MU I:' 5H E WA S
A L5 0 6 E7TIN5 iHIS.

I (]
IJ I

tSLIMAD

Yesterda•,.-s

I

Now arrange the cirded lenars to
form the surprise answer, 11 tug·
gested by the above cartoon

(A.nawera tomorrow)
AWARD SPEEDY ENGINE
Answer· Whal the ch urc h stur:ton minds
- HI S KEYS &amp; PEWS

Jumbles: WH ISK

·IIIDGEJames Jacoby

...

Loose goose
· gets goose ·egg

NORTH

12-11·84

9 A 9 53
t QJ 10 87

By James Jacoby
The gospel that bridge experts ar e
spreading these days is that you
should bid loose as a goose when
you're not vulnerable and the oppo·
nents are . That maxim can be carried
to absurd ex tremes as attested to by
this deal from lhe 1979 World Championship in Ri o de Janeiro. West Ishall
we call him the goose•) made a wea k
jump overcall of two hear ts. The
four -heart . cue- bid b y North
announced first-round heart control
and 'excellenl diamond support. At his
next opportunity, he bid five clubs, !
another cue-bid. When South bid only ,
five diamonds, North contented hi m· .
self with six.
East doubled, hoping for a heart
lead, but West elected a spade.
Declarer trumped, played a diamond I
to bls king, trumped another spade •.
and cashed the diamond queen , West
showing ou(. Next a club was played
to the queen and the last spade was
trumped in dummy. Now came the
ace of clubs, the king of clubs (South
throwing a heart), and the last club
(South trumping in his handl. The dia·
mond ace puiled East's tooth (his last
trump), an.d th en a low heart was
played. When West put in the 10, he

+ AK 8 2

•...

WEST
. 982
9 KJ 1062

EAST

t A K J6543

t 3

• 962

+ J975

+6 43
SOUTH
• Q 10 7

9 Q874
t A K 54
+Q 10
Vul n era ble: North-Sout h
Dealer: South
Wes t

Nortb

East

Soutb

2Pass
.

49

,.

It
Obi.

~

Pass

Pass
Pass

6t
Pass

Obi.

,.

Pass

Ope ni ng lead: + 2

L---------'----J
was allow ed to hold the trick . West
now had t o play a way from the king
and South made his slam . .
. A li ttle postscript to this tragic
Jump overcall : At the other table
West k ept quiet and was rewarded
when his f riendly opponents r eached

stx hearts.

[HBOI
MOVIE:
'Best
Friend$'
[MAXI MOVIE: ' North to
Alaska'

Good- 1 Ex:caveting, baae~en~a. footers. drivewaya,
IBphc tanks, landaCiping.
Call anytime 614 -4464637. Jamea L. Davison, Jr.
owner.

8t

m

GASO LI NE AL LEY

Excavating

84

I K' I

(CCJ

Stokermatic · 1tove and
stoker furnances. 20 atovea,
6 stoker furnances in stock
also need dealer for Gallia
County.

87

~l{j')
___ _I t )

fl) Uttle Drummer Boy

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1. Box 355, Galli·
polio. Call 614-367-0576.

83

NO LON6EI1 ANY OO!JIH
IN MY MIND THAT 118N~fl PLIJioll'l
IS THE Ml\l'i THE Y HIRECI lflf
TO FINI7/ ...

l JU5T 1'/~ I .
DIDN'T FEEL LIME
SUCH A HilT/.;,

Roofing, guttering, siding.
plumbing , carpentry work
and concrete work. Free
estimatoo. Call 446-3171 .

RINGLES'S SERVICE. OX·
periencad carpenter. alectrlciin, mason, painter. roofi ng (including hot tar
application! 304-675-2088
or 676 -7368 .

..

IT'? ~IO;J

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references
furniahed . Free eltimates.
Coil colloct1 -814-2370488, 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
Rogers Beaement
Waterproofing .

1968 Mustang make offer .
Also 1977 Mercury $595 .
1977 Cutloso S. 81 ,100 .
Call 446-8113 or 446·
8201.

1978Ford Fiaota, 4cylinder,
4 opeod with lront wheel
drive. 8995 .00 . 1979 LTD
tWo door. 302 engine; auto.
PS. V -top, AM FM Stero
tape. $2995 .00. Call 614 ·
367-7760 .

BORN LOSER

Adventure '
7:00 D C2J PM Magazine
CD Here Come the Brides
(!) SlionsCenter
·
(I) Gomer Pyle
CIJ Ill ~ Entertainment
Tonight
CIJ Wheel of Fortune
Ill CIJ Wheel of Fortune
Cil @ MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
@I News
fl) Jeffersons
IHBO) Minors A girl uses
scientific theory to cOok up a
technique
new
pitching
whi ch should b oost her
friend
into
the major
Jeagues.
.
7:30 0 Cil Tic Tac Dough
· (!) Top Rank Boxing
(I) Andy Griffith
&lt;Il 0 ([) Family Feud
Jeopardy
® Wheel ot Fortune
81 ~ 'New Name That
Tune
fll WKRP In Cincinnati
8:00 II Cil (I) A-Team Murdock
tak es over B.A . ·s duties and
poses as a hot new dress
des ig ner in ord er to pursue a
· mobster who has abducted
Face 's girlfrte nd. a high fashion model. 160 min.)
CD Gentle Ben
[]J
MOVIE:
'Three
Hundred Miles for Ste·
phanie '
·
[)) College Basketball :
Ohio State at Maryland .
0 III ®l Frosty the
Snowman
Frosty
the
Sno wman se ts off for the
No rth Pole in order to es·
cape melting and find s ad·
ven tur e along th e w ay. (R)
Cll Gil Nova ICC) ·Acid
Rain .' W est Germany , the
mid -A11antic s tates and New
Eng land are eMplored in or·
der to shed some light on
th e controversy surrounding
th e issue of acid rain. (6 0
m in .)
Ill Cl2l Three 's A Crowd

.

.,_,

165.

Home
Improvements

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 30'4 -676 1331.

1983 Chevette Scooter 4
apeed. excellent condition,
83.800 . · Call 61 4· 3889634 alter 5:00PM.

I

6:30 0 Cil (1) NBC News

G&amp;TS TOU&amp;H .

I

Christmoo Special 1981
Chevette, auto, radio, 1 owner, 83,196 . John'aAuto
Sales. 446-4782.

1 970 Chevrolet. new tires &amp;
brak8s. good traRaportation,
e325. Coll614-245-9616.

CIJ llll •

'ft.j'}I)N} fi)ft fi' THAT SCAAIQL~ WOAD GAME
~ I.Y ~~ ·
byHonriAmold ond BoOLoo

I]) Hot Pototo
I]) lucy Show

c.DM.f:/5 AFTER

Serv;ces

Polled Chorloio bull bull
registered. George Woodward. 614-379-2697. ·

Pats for Sale

In Mlddiopon. 2 bodrocm
lurnloh.,t apt, 1 child. 1·
304-882-2&amp;118 . .
No nont till Jon. 1. wonted
rHponolblo poraono for two
bedroom apartment, ucel·
lenl condition. Mt. Vornon
Avonuo. 304-8711-19112.

I .1r111 SIIJJIIIII:s
&amp; L;v;:s tuck

Misc. Merchandise

Soft aculptured Cobboge
type dollo. 304· 676 ·401 4 .

55

unocr..- .~ lour J umbiOo,
one letter to each square, to form
four oo:linary words.

1980 Honda etc 70, e450.
304-675· 7860.

--

Mole Boogie, 9 montho old.
850.00. 304-89&amp;-3881 .

One bedroom apartment
unfurnia.,ed . Adult• only
and no poto. One bedroom
furniahed apartment adults
only and no pete. For both
apartments call 814· 992- t------:--:---~------2807.
.Two bedroom furniahed
apart manta. Call 814-9925434 or 614-992·6914 or
304-882-2668.

Used Honda 3 wheeler,
ATCno . 2 yrs old. In ox.
cond .• Paul Carr. Cheater.
OH . Call &amp;;4-985-3638 .

Umeatone. Sand. Gravel.
Pick up at Rlchordo &amp; Son.
Call446 -7786 .

Television
Viewing

Motorcycles

1983 CR80 Honda •3715
firm. Call 446-1288.

1- - -- -- - --

C.,rtatmaa ttee cut your own
all ohopel &amp; alzeo, a5.QO.
Call 614-379-2686.

'

4 W .O.

Cil

74

Knaufl Firewood Split- 96%
hardwood•· Seasoned or
gr•n. You pick up .or we
deliver. HEAP vander. 6 34·
2158-6245 .

New Lincoln Wilder, idealark
260 ACDC. single phaoe.
nover uood. 8600. Coll4464422 .

8t

1978 Ford Ranger XLT. 4•4.
AC. duel tonko, carpt and
more $3,600.00 or beat
offer. 304-896 -3472 or
896-3967.

Misc. Merchandiae

Firewood cut up olabo. 815
PU load. Larger loedo dellv8red. Call for prices, 61 4246-6804.

Van1

1986 4x4 JHp Wogonlo"' mlloa. 1971 Valko·
wagon BuQwlth new motor.
· Coil between 4 &amp; 6. Coli
448-7842 .

Couch good cond. off-while
nylon. velvet covwlng. fte•·
otoele oprings. 304-876·
11472.

Used Furniture •· electric
fireplace. 6 pc . dinette. head
boards. and 2 bedroom
suites. 3 miles out Bulaville
Rd. Open 9am to 6pm, Mon. For Saie: New 4x8 pool
thru Sat.
table. 3 piece inch sl.ate.
614-446-0322
· 61200.00. Call 614-992 6304 .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigera - Typewriter Royal oHice size
tors. ranges . Skaggs Ap· 840 .00. Table podeotal 3
pliancea, Upper River Rd. inch square formica top
beside Stone Crest Mo·t el . 820 . 00 . Call 614-992614-446-7398.
3921 .
County Appliance, Inc.
Good used appliances and
TV seto. Open BAM to &amp;PM .
Mon thru Sat. 446-1699,
627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolio,
OH.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Lllrrr Wright

Couch ol!d chalr.' 304-6711·
6376.
.

Will cut. and deliver f ire·
wood. Call268: 1528 .
·

Estate

He&lt;JI

For Lease

.6 1

73

'

• 1984

·: o

0

IMAXI MOVIE: ' Dressed to
Kill '
1 0 :30 CD Celebrity Chefs
C!J Super Bouts of the 80's
Mike Weaver vs. John Tate
(K no.ville. March, 19801 .
(60 min.J
(I) MOVIE : "Run for tho
Sun·
CIJ Adam Smith 's Money
World
Gil Congress: We/ People
ICCI
fj) Soap
[HBOI First and Ten A se•y
socia~t e wins her husband 's
football teem in a divorce
settlement .

11:oo u rn oo m o III® GJ
!D) Newo

Cil

Bill Cosby Show
Ill Dod's Army
Gil Congress: We/ People
!CCI
1!111 Benny Hill Show
iHBOI MOVIE: ' My Tutor'
1 1 :30 D Cil (1) Tonight Show
Tonight's guest is Johnny
Mathis. (60 min .J

•61~.,..-.,t~
by tHOMAS JOSEP'H
U Advantage

ACROSS

t2 Type size

I Rabbit
5 Bengal
orbent
10 Along
in y ears
11 Merited
13 Be
destined
15 Chemistry
suffix
II Poem
17 Tenth
of a sen
18 Expiated
20 Chinese
lake
21 French
shooting
match
22Party

23 Funda-

43 Regard
DOWN
1 Sound .
of mirth

zGuam's
capital

3 Construct
with
sandbags
4 Dutch
corrunune
5 Sex ;
c lass
6 E r adicated
7 Skill
8 Short
dr ink
9 Arranged
in se r ies

Yesterday 's Answer

ll

12 Repudiates 25 Attacking
14 Column
26 Leader
st yle
28 Mud
19 Of the ear 30 Perfwne
22 Nourish- 31 Wea r
ment

23 Take
courage

24 Ancient
Asian
country

away

32 Pasture
36 Detail
38 Aunt
i Sp. J

39 Corrununist

m ental

26 Gists
27 " The •
Red"
26 Japanese
measure

29 Soul
(Fr. )

3D Pitcher's
pitch

3.'1 Man's
nickname

34 Prompt

35 Italian
TV-Radio
network ·
37 Show of
solidarity
40 Languishing
DAILYCRVPTOQU01'FS - Here's how lowork i l :

II

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGF EJ. LOW
One letter stands for another. I n this sample A is used
for the three L 's, X for the two O's , etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hinls . Eac h day the c ode letters are different.
CRYPTOQU01'ES

IV

D

ICKH U

J S H VN C M
G p' N I _

PNH

v up

I'v n

J

N C

ANI

J

I VKO U

J

12·11

J M

I UOO

0 J D M

MHJPQ M
W JCZUC

J P

K

,Q N
.1 M G
UBB

RJHKUP H OD

FSCBOJC KTU M

VU C .
V . O . Z UPAGUP
Yesterday's Cryploquote : THINGS HAVE NE VER
BEEN MORE LIKE THE WAY TilEY ARE TODAY IN
IUSTORY.-'- DWIGHTDAVID E ISENHOWER

�10-The

State board approves record budget
COF-UMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A m!nlmumamountthateach~trlct
record $5.9 billion, two-year budget
receives from $1,M.'l per student In
request for the state's public schools 1985 to $2,lm In lll86 and $2,231' In
- Including a boost In per-student 1987.
aid and a raise In mlnlmum teacher
Included In the budget request Is
salarles - hasbeenapprovedbythe an$83mll!Jonlncreaselnvocatlonal
Ohio Board of Education.
education, from $422 million to $.'iffi
The proposal, covering spending miJIIon, and a $78mll!Jon Increase In
during the fiscal biennium which
aid for disadvantaged pupils, from
begins July 1,1985, now goes to Gov. $302mllllon to$381mllllon.
Richard Celeste and the General
State Superintendent of Public
Assembly.
Instruction Franklin B. Walter also
Under the board recommenda- has asked for the following new
progratrls:
tlon, the largest 111crease would be
-An additional $310 miJIIC]n to
for basic foilndation aid, which
wollldjumpfrom$2.8billlonfor1984
require a full, flve-hour-per-d.a y
kindergarten·that would be manda·
and 1!85 to $3.4 bllllon for 1986 and
1987. The state Eo:Jucatlon Depart· tory for public school children.
ment said It wants the extra money · School dlstrlcls currently are requlred to offer optional half-day
malnly for 1 teacher salartes and
Increases In the minimum foundakindergarten.
lion aid amount per student that
-$1.5 million annually for
each dlstrlctrecelves.
summer Institutes at stateMinimum teacher salaries would supported universities for gifted
go from $12,700 In 1!!!fi to $13,700 In
highschoolsophomoresandjunlors.
lll86 and $14,!m In 1987.
-$12 mll!Jon a year for educaThe state also would raise the tionalexcellencegrantsfordlstrlcts

Christmas basket application
MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES
CHRISTMAS FOOD BASKET APPLICATION
Full Name .. . ..... . ..... . _. .. .. . ..... .... . .. • . . .. . . . ..

;,,;,-, ,

with Innovative educational
programs.
.
' ~ miJIIon annually for tuition- .
free summer schools for remedial
Instruction.
-$10 mll!Jon a year, to be
matcbed equally by school dlstrlcts,
for state-funded asbestos removal In
some school bulldll!gs.
The$5.9bUllon "wollld allow us to
maintain the p~ we have
made,"G.RobertBowers,asslstant
state school superlndent, said Monday. "It also would take care of
lnfiatlonary growth." .
The Increase, If approved by
Celeste and the Legislature, would
be $1.1 bllllon higher than the
spendlngflgureforthecurrentflscal
period. Schools received $3.8 bllllon
In the 1981-1983 fiscal biennium.
Celeste Is expected to submit his
overall budgetforthenextbiennlum
to the Legislature In late January or
early February.
In other acUon Monday, the
board:
-Approved standards for certifyIng pre-kindergarten teachers, Including course and hour requirements. Certification, however,
remains optloil'!l for schools that
operate pre-kindergarten programs. Theboardleftthequestlonof
certification of holders of two-year,
associate degrees to the
Legislature.

bact Address . . . . .. . .. ... ..... . . . .......... . . . .. . . . . -

(( J(ol'·' · ~¥rt

I

Number of People in Family . .. . ... . .. .. ......... . .. . . . . .

.

Number of People in Household ..................... .. ... .

EGGS

Type of ln&lt;ome: (list amount and s0ur&lt;o, food stamps, etc.)

Hade

FRESH

STUFFED
ANIMAL

14

"Ntecl Not Be
Present To Win"
Drawing Dec. 17

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning n~mber drawn Monday
Nflw Open ht
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
SISm
game, "The Number, " was 941. In
Pointelliao - Pottod &amp; Hanging Bcnlcet~
the "Pick 4" game, the winning
Folioge Planto • Pottod &amp; Hanging BasOPEN EVERY DAY
number was &lt;m3.
keto, Chriotmoo Cactus, Alri:an Violet~
TILL 8 P.M.
The lottery reported earnings
Christmas Trees, Wreaths, Gra" BlanMonday of $772,790.fil from wagerkets, Candle Arrangements, Homemade
OPEN SUNDAY, DEC. 23
lngon "The Number." The earnings
Apple Butter &amp; other naveltie~
11:00-6:00
came on sales of $1,305,161, while
Open Daily 9 to 5
holders of winning tickets are
Sun. 1 to 5
@lal)t/lr/
entitled to share $532,370.50.
· PHONE 992-5776
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $176,193.50. Holders of 1----:---~---,------.J.----------:-''---"i
winning tickets are entitled to 45
••_~-$0~~~~ ~-$
.
·~
percent, or $79,420. A winning $1
.
straight ticket earns $9,672. A
winning $1 boxed ticket earns $!l)6.
~

WaJJ

l~JMC&amp;~~T

Polarot•d·

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL
Sp•eltl

PEPSI·

(
99

Polaroid OneStep 600.
The ideal gift camere..

WE STOCK A
COMPLETE LINE OF
KODAK AND
POLAROID CAMERAS
&amp; FILM

$.6
'

I

:...

i

I

J

'

~
I

Dop.

- sHERBET

th

MAKES 2 QTS.

·aFOR$100
All 16 OZ.

BREAD

2/89&lt;

I~--------------,
C-1
PREMIUM
&lt;-K I

l
~

CANDY

I
I

I

ICE CREAM
tf2 GAL.

$139

GENERIC QT.

:I

KOSHER DILL PICKLES

S1 09

J

(LB.

i

--------------T----~----------~rr------------·-·-·
C-1
VALLEY BELL
C·l
(-I
R.C. COLA &amp; (-1 I C-l UNCLASSIFIED (-1

LO&lt;attd In Racine, OH.

I

2% MILK
GAL

WHAT IS INVOLVED IN FUNERAL COSTS?
There are 1eneral!y six funeral expenses which can be in·
curred: I) professional services of tha funeral director
and his staff; 2) use of the funeral home facilities and
equipment; 3) burial and funeral merchandise such as a
cuktt and burial vault; 4) cemetery plot; 5) monument or
crave marker; 6) miscellaneous eapenses such as ceme·
tery plot openinaand closln&amp;, flowers, obituary notices,
clery and music aratuitlu, certified copies of death certificate and tax (for your onvenience we will pay these fliscellaneous ite11s for you as 1 part of our Service Plus ... )
Some of these expenditures are optional. Most of them
have a wide price ranae to mett each family's nHds .. You
will not find any undue Influence exerted for exorbrtant
funeral costs by funeral directors in this SIIViet aru. We
- and most funtnl directors we know- prefer that the
funenl expenses be appropriatl for uc• familw nrved.
We spend 11uch time with uch family to maknure thalli!
arranpments and decisions will bnt suit their own intllt'·
ests.

9l-'"'fJ- rt'Mh-!!1~11

We'd bi'&amp;ltd to ~iscuss this in complete detail. showinc
-you the nnps in priclna. Stop by or 'hone ul.

"Service Plus .. Attention to Det4il"

ffanet&lt;a/.Yfome,

JAMES SIMPSON
----~,

-

BILL BLOWER

$159

1

Li.Ot 1

l

UPPER 10

POTATOES

l u~~~ $129 ---t-_
! $349
5011.

U.Otl

~?!~':,.~~~.}!:~~!.._-+-.!~"'!'-Ex,!'~·~!;~~!
I
PINTO BEANS
I &lt;·I .
GENERIC
l
SPAGHETTI
411
lAG
( Unitt I
SllJCE

99

I

(oupon bpiris 12-15-84

32 OZ.

79.(

Unt 1

~upen bp1res 12-1 S-84

(-1

Unt t

WHOLE FROZEN

I.

l · CHICKEN &amp; PARTS
:
I·

.39&lt;

(~:,.nbplres 12-lS·I~.Ot 4

c-• ----r---... --:~J.--~!.~ftJ~!!!~!:U~i--ll!:~.

I

e-ll

DOUBLE COUPONS UP TO 50 1 - 51 • TO 99 1 REDEEMED FOR $1.00
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY -DOUBLE COUPONS -MANUFACTURERS ONLY
$1.00 AND OVER REDEEMED FOR FACE VALUE
Priea -=ffective thru Saturday, Dec. 1_6, 1984

SUPERMARKET ~"J~~~;::;~.,.. ,~

"FREE PARKING"
OPEN DAILY &amp; SUNDAY- 9 U.' to 9 P.l:
"No Sales To Dealers" We Reserve· the Ri1ht to limit Quanljties and Correct Printin&amp; Errors
Not
for·
Errors - We Accept Food Stamps and "WIC" Coupons

last week that he would make cuts in
the military buildup. and White
House budget director David A.
Stockman has drafted a plan that
would trim roughly $8 billion by
freezing most programs within the
Pentagon without affecting major
weapons systems such as the MX
missile.
During a meeting Monday with
Reagan, Weinberger simply outlined the prE'vious increases the
Pentagon has requested. However,
Weinberger reportedly has hinted at
some flexibility in private meetings

with congressional Republicans .
Publicly, however, Pentagon off!·
cials are not budging.
The Defense Department's chief
s pokesman, Mithael I. Burch. was
a sked Tuesday whether an agree·
ment in principle had been reached
to reduce the Pentagon 's request.
" ! wouldn't go that far, " he
replied,' adding, · "I would just
emphasize ... that no decisions were
made at any of the meetings he's
(Weinberger) atiE'nded . Thebudgel
is still in ils formative stage.

time, as opposed to other elected officials whO may
not get them during their current terms. The other
elected officials begin new terms In January, and
their raises would take ef!ecl then.
Meshel's comments came late 1)lesday as the
House officially scheduled the pay bill for a vote this
afternoon . The proposal was delayed lor a day until
Riffe assured himself that enough minority Republlcans would support the bill to give it a bipartisan
navor.
The Democratic leaders had hoped to end 1984
business this week. But Meshel. whose amendments
could send the bill to a conference committee for
further debate, said hE' thinks the session may be
extended into the week of Dec. 16.
"We're looking at one or two more days next week,"

Pomeroy .restaurant
changes name, decor

HAM. DILL SLICES

One with $1 o.oo additi-1 I
: purchasttxdudint alll6 az. ,op. I
~ __ .£'!!1'.2!'.l'!£.i!!s_!~l!'!! __

87

69&lt;

DRINK MIX

99&lt;.

25

Cent~

A Multim ed ia Inc . Newspaper

Inspected the seat found Tuesday said the airplane
probably suffered "extensive damage" and probably
broke Into several pieces, Beckett said.
Three Gallla County teenagers rejxJrted seeing an
airplane plunge into the Ohio River downstream from
the Gaillpolls Locks and Dam on Sunday. But there
have been no reports of missing planes, and until
Tuesday no wreckage had been found .
ThE' seat was found about a mile downstream from
where the youths said the plane crashed, Beckett said.
The river current , estimated at five to six knots ; was
hampering efforts to locate thE' craft, which FAA
Inspectors said probably was a single-engine plane, he
said.
Crews from state police, U.S. Coast Guard, U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers and rescue squads located a
large object Monday using sonar, but It had moved by
Tuesday morning.
"We felt the odds were rea l good that the object was
the main part of the airplane," Beckett said. "But we
haven't been able to relocate lt."
Beckett said late Tuesday afternoon that divers
were exploring another object, about four teet tall, but
he said the rlvercurren t was making it difficult to keep
the boat anchored .
More sophisticated equipment is being brought in
from Louisville, Ky ., and will provide a printout of the
river bottom's contour, Beckett said.
"It will make the s ea rch broader and quicker," he
said.

alLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Senate-House differences on a controversial pay hike bill could result In an
e~tension of the current lame-duck legislative session
to the brink of the Christmas holiday.
Senate President Harry Meshel, D·YoungstoWn,
said Tuesday that he wants to make some major
additions to the measure which Increases the pay of
the governor and stalE' lawmakers along with other
state and county officials.
Meshel said he thinks that all of Ohio's judges
should be included, along with members of election,
school and township trustee boards "who haven't had
a raise In several years ."
Under the guidance of Speaker Vern Riffe Jr.,
D-Nl'W Boston, the House consciously excluded
judges, nolin~ that they can receive pay raises at any

WYLER'S

BARBECUE

2 Sec tions , 14 Pages

SOPJm;TICATED EQUIPMENT COMING More SOphisticated equlpmml is being brought in
from LouisvDle, Ky., to provide a printout of the river
bottom~s~'OIIIour, as tbesearchcontinues for a missing
aircraft which three teenagers said plunged In the Ohlo

River Sunday below the Gallipolis Locks and Dam .
Nothing was found Monday hut a seat was puUed from
the river TUesday about a mile down•tream from
where the plane r eportedly entered th~ water .

Pay hike differences could extend session

DISTILLED OR
SPRING WATER
GAL.

en tine

•

$129

4 oz.

SWEET SUE

oz.

$119

PORK RINDS
BBQ &amp; REG.

1
I
I

"WIC"
COUPONS

10 112

$139

BARBIES

WE ACCEPT

SLICES

TONIGHT
6:00 TO 7:30 ~

'It GAL

Sl 09

2 UTER

WASHINGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan is turning his atten.Uon
to the huge military budget as he
looks for ways to cu tfederaldeficlts,
even as Senate Republican leaders
renl'W their suggestion for a freeze
In tM Social Security cost-of-living
benefit.
Reagan was meeting at the White
House today with Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger for a
review of the Pentagon budget. It
was their second meeting of the
week on military spending.
The president seemed to signal

BUTTERMILK

~

aty

SS freeze proposed

oz. $149

24

$269 Unci. I~

SO LB.

$1 09

COTTAGE CHEESE

'h GAL

C-K .

$] 69

ORANGE

~

GAL.

tf2

COKE

OF ALL KINDS

·it

VIT. D MILK

L--------------~

BULK CANDY

Only

C-K

$169

GAL.

ICE MILK

·
I One with $10.00 additional
I purchasttxduding all 16 or. Pop.
Coupon Expires 12-15-84
I

BROUGHTON'S

MINCE MEAT
28 oz.
$289

··snl'iiiJ( Jl'l ith A S miiP"

,----'""'"'

2% MILK

FOR

BORDEN~s

$179

-

VAllEY IELL &amp; BROUGHTON'S

00
4
Sl
.
r-----..
----.-----

WE HAVE

SANTA CLAUS

All Week

PIES &amp; CAKES
1

Sl oo'

3 LIS. 79C

LUNCH

Dop.

AIR FRESHENER
8 oz. Sl 4 9 EACH

8 PACK -16 OZ.

(114) 1112-5141
MIDOUI'OIIT• OHIO,

. Pluo

111.

PIGS.

APPLES

!,. __c!u~!,~,!•,:~-~:!':.. __ 1

ALL FLAVORS

*One Button Simplicity.
*Sharp, Clt~ar Pictures from
4' to infinity.
*Infrared Sensing Exposure
Program
·

BRING THE KIDS
TO SEE

.

...

All WB~k
R.C. COLA
16 oz. S1 39 ""'

WIZARD CH~ISTMAS

1ft GAL. .

Tonight. clear this evening but
clouding over by morning. Low
around 40. Wednesday. mostly
cloudy. High In the mid-50s. The
chance of precipitation is near zero
percent tonight and 20 percent
Wednesday.
Extended Forecast
Thursday through Samrday:
Fair on Thom;day 1111d Samroay.
Chance of ra1n or siiOW Friday.
IDghs mostly In tbe 40s Thursday
and mld-:1&amp; to mlcHOs Friday and
Saturday. Lows in the OOs.

59&lt; LB.

(LB.

GEM FLAVORS
CREME SODA ,-------:-------c:r-•
l
DOUBLE COLA l &lt;-K SUGAR
$119
:
DR. PEPPER :
: One with $10.00 ..tditional I
8 PACK-16 OZ.
I purchaH mluding all 16 or. Pop. I

ONESTEP 600 CAMERA

U7eatherforecast

3

See Hoefilch's colwnn on Page IO

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 12, 1984

From Associated Pre8s
QVP Staff R,eports
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . -Authorities- who
confirmed this morning that a plane has been reported
missing out of Port Columbus -are continuing their
search of the Ohio River following the discovery of an
a irplane seat near where three teen-agers said they
saw an aircraft crash Into the water three days ago.
A spokesman for thE' West VIrginia State Pollee
detachment in Point Pleasant said the plane missing
from Port Columbus, a white single-engine aircraft, fit
the same general description as the plane three Gailla
County teenagers said they saw plunge Into the Ohio
River below the Galllpolls Locks and Dam on Sunday.
The spokesman S~~ld no debris, other than the airplane
·
seat, has been spotted by searchers.
Authorities have been unable to locate a flight plan,
thE' swkesman added. However, pqllce have talked
with friends of the pilot of the missing craft. The
spokesman said the pilot's friends said a "circuit"
flight had been planned. Part of that circuit, the
spokesman said, was to have tak!'n the plane over the
Ohio River at Gallipolis.
The search was called off at duskTUesday and was to
resume at dawn today, state police said.
"Up until noon there was some concern that there
was an airplane, " state pollee Cpl. K.R. Beckett said
Tuesday. "Now there's no question In anybody's mind
that there is an airplane."
Federal Aviation Administration Inspectors who

CARROTS :

.•

TONIGHT ONLY

1L

3 LIS. 69C

TOMATOES

Hee Haw appearance

Plane said· missing;
search team· finds seat

ONOINS

LIS.

•

e

Vol.34, No.170
Copyrighted 1984

IDAHO POTATOES
10la.S1.69 /

4 Sl

days 'til
Christmas

(

,-

BANANAS

Cabbage

All Week

NOW

Ch,ittmlf

6

GROUND BEEF ....~\'1111Jillll\!f1'J •• 79&lt; LB.

REGISTER TO WIN
AN EXTRA LARGE

See Fllffllly Medicine on Page 8

Story on Page 3

·poRK ·Bun ROAST
LB..
. ...................... s1.09
$ .
NO WASTE
BUCKET STEAK •••••• ~..................... 1.99 LB.
BEEF CUBE STEAK ........................................ $2.29 LB.

Porn•;roy

Page 2

GIOUND SEVIR~L TIMES DAILY

FROZEN
FREsH-BONELEss

Bald spots

Marauders defeated

"

U.S.D.A. Choice Boneless ENGLISH ROAST •••••••••••••• .... • 1.69 LB.
. ...............................
-'"-'
$1.1
' 9 LB.
FRESH-SLICED
PORK STEAK

•

25°/o
OFF

t6I Or.

(

$

TRAVEL &amp; WALl STYLES

Hubbard's Greenhouse

$229

49
CH'iiCimiOAST ••• $1

CLOCKS

Lottery winners

See

PEPSI FlEE

GROUND BEEF

BULOVA

Only applications sent by mail will be honored. The Jaycns request tliat no member of the organization is contacted' by telePhone. Deadline for applications is Saturday, Dec. IS.

,,,

16 Or.

'Hot Dog Sauce
oz.

Poinsetta

Prrce1 In Effe&lt;l 5 PM. tu 8 PM.

Send completed application to Meigs County Jaycns, P. 0. Box
603, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

""'"'
• '"'k c

,,

Sll.

,.,

Critic
answered
JeUers on'

Daublt Cola

39(
,.,, ,,

49(

9&lt;

TUESDAY NIGHT
SPECIAL

Number of Children .. . ... . ... . ... . ... . .. . ....... . ..... .

· Toilet Tissue

FLOUI

SUGAR

htllf!fll
(

9&lt;

DOL

,,, ,,

,,,,

,,

•
•'

PomeroyBurgerChefwillsoonbe
known as "Pleasers" as extensive
remodeling and redecorating is
continued at the Pomeroy eating
establishment.
Jim Hill, manager, speaking at
Tuesday's meeting of the Pomeroy
Area Chamber of Coll)ffierce, said
changes at tberestaurant are hOped
tobecompletedbyDec.20oratleast
by tbe first of the year.
The number of employees at the
Pomeroy business has Increased
from30to40w!th10moreemployees
expected to be hired 'by the time
remodeling Is finished.
Pleasers will offer much the same
menu as Burger Chef, with several
new Items for the offing. Ice cream
by the dip will also be featured.
Hill Is to be in Charleston next
week to open a Pleasers in that area.
· .Pomeroy's Pleasers will open
next, with Ravenswood, Point
Pleasant, and Summersville,
W.Va., also former Burger Chef's,
to follow Soon after.
"We would like to see other fast
food restaurants open up In Pomeroy," said Hill. "We think It would be
good for our business and good tor
·
the town."
Ron Ash, chamller president,
reported that the Christmas lights In
Pomeroy are now up and that free
~

Bu) he stopped shor1 of sa)'ing he will sign the
m easure beca use. " I ha\•en't had a cha nc&lt;' to study
it. ..
Meshei said there were enough votes in I he Senate
to pass the bill with "a good balance of iDemocralic
and Republican 1 , ·otes."
Bu l he said he wa nts to expand the bill, &lt;'Specially
for judges whom he sa id deserve more pay . He said
Ohio should set judicial sa lary levels "which will
attract br ighl, lalenrl'd younger people who will slay
in the system."
The Senate leader said he was ha,·in g judicial
salaries "looked int o." a long with the p&lt;&gt;r-diem
allowa nces fX'rmilled b) the slate for mem bers of
election. school boa rd and township trust"' boar ds.

Postal rate
•
Increase
set

'·

parking for shoppers began
Monday.
Pomeroy boy scouts wlll be
covering meters Wednesday evenlng. Joe Clark, Pomeroy businessman, advises merchants to cover
any meters that might inadvertantly be missed.
Clark, president of the Bend Area
Merchants Association, also reported that stores will now be open
tlllSp.m.MondaythroughSaturday
and untll6 p.m. on Sunday Dec. 23.
Elberfelds will be open untll8 p.m.
on Dec. 23.
Clark also extended an Invitation
to chamber members and any other
Individuals, to come to a "gettogether" at the Meigs Inn on Dec.
23, sponsored by the Merchants
Association. Cost,per person will be
$5.
The proposed addition of wooden
or metal steps to the parking lot
stage was dlscussecl. Although cost
estimates' for the project had
already been obtain\!(!, It was
decldedthatconcretestepswouldbe
more apprOprlaie. A check will be
made 011 getting labor and perhaps,
some of the materials donated.
Since It Is hoped .that groups of
carolerswlllsingonthestagedurlng
the holiday season, It was suggested
(Continued on page 14)
~

he said.
Meanwhile, Democratic Gov. Richard Celeste
confirml'd hE' requested that the governor's sala ry not
be increased from $65,00! to $100,00). as origina lly
proposed.
Instead , the bill proposes that Celeste , or his
successor if he is not re-elected In 1986, would be paid
$85,00!. The governor said he asked for the reduction
out of "a sense of propoJ1iona lity ."
With regard to the proposed Increase from $22,500 to
$32,500 for legisla tors next year. and a boost of up to10
percent more in 1986, Celeste said in part, "I believe
that m embers of the Gene ra l Assembly earn thei r
pay. I think most people bellE've they get paid fo r
expenses down here and don't realize what's involved
in the cost of maintaining two homes."

t\EW YORK (AP : - The cos1of a
fi rSI ·class stamp will increase lo 22
cenl s next year and lherP will be
plice boosts in othe-r JX)Stal S€'IYic(lS
for ihe firs I 1irne in m m.- than two
, ·ears. according 10 rctXH1s publis hed toda)·.
According to The 7\ew York
Times. the incr0ases were a pprO\;f'Cl

• •

··'.

'

. : (''
'

'-·

~

I

..t·

'.:

'"

..... ' . 1

TOYS FOR TOTS - SWfled toys made by Melp
County Grange members for the National Granp'l'oy

L'0111e81 were presented to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for hnlpltallud children Tue8day afternoon,
'The Falrlleld Processing CompiUIJ' s~ the
conieS! and all of the toys were !!tufted with po1y1111
made by the compiUIJ'. Members of Bock Sprtnp,
Star, Hemlock, COOunbla, llarrlsonvllle, and Racine

Granges parilclpated l!t the program, and there to
preee~~l the toys were from the left, Bridgett Vaughan,
~Crippert,Columbla; TeresaCoWns,R.N. who
acrepled the toys on behalf of the hospital; Bemlce
Mldklll, Star Grange, with Eric Montgomery,
.Barbara Fry, Bock Springs, and Ruby Lambert, Star
Grange.

•

•

TuesdaY at a closed m('('fing of I he
United Sta 1es Posta l SPIYi cr board
and will be made public todav. The
Repository of Canton. Ohio. !&lt;'·
ported rhat the r·a t&lt;'S would take
eff('(' t on Fe l). 17 .
The Repo~i lo n sa id th&lt;' vote in
favor of the- inc rease was ~· 2. with
board ml'mbcrs Peter Voss of
Canlon and Rulh PetPrs of Alexandria. Va .. di";Pnting . 1\,·o smrs on
the nine- member boa rd arc,·acani.
&amp; sides ra ising I he cost of
firsl-class m aiL the' Times said the
nine-membf&gt;r board has also decided to raise the cost of postcards
from 13 cents to H Cf'nt s: raise the
prlce of third-cl ass bulk m a ll by 13
percenl ; and raise the rates for
magazines a n9 n ew~paper s by 14
percent.
The boar d' also dL'CidL'd to g ive a
larger discount for bulk m a il sorted
by ZIP code. the Times sa id .
The increase!' would be t.hP first in
postal ra tes since November 1981 ,
when the cost of a firsl-class s tamp
went to 20 cents from 18 cents.
,\

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="218">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2808">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="5912">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="5911">
              <text>December 11, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="355">
      <name>cozart</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="107">
      <name>sheets</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2223">
      <name>weed</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
