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PilgJ

20-The Deily S$1tiMI

.

'

Moadey, December 24. 1984 ·

Pomeroy-Mkkll!port, Ohio

Study shows declining manufacturing employment in Ohio ·

WASHINGTON (AP) - A~
,aovemment snapshot ot Ohio s
manufacturers smvs that nearly

every major category ot Industry
recon:leddecllnlnglevelsotemployment between 1971 and 1982.

• •
T wo-car wreek mJures

Two Metgs County youths were ot a m11e west ot 0111o loll, Wbei1 w
admitted and· three people were apparently attempted · to pass
. treated and released at Veterans another eastbound vehicle. A west·
Memorial Hospital f(lllowtng a bound car driven by Linda Donahue
two-caracctdentonCountyRoad17 reportedlycameoverahlllcrestand
Sunday afternoon.
colllded with Sheets' veblcle.
Hospital offtctals sald Katrina . Botb cars. sustained heavy damDonahue, '18, Oblo 684, Pomeroy, · gage In the 5::11 p.m. lncldent and
was listed In satlsfactocy'condltlon Sheets was cited bY the patrol for
with a COIICIISSlon, fractured left Improper passing.
•ann and cuts. Jarred Sheets, 14,
A Reedsv11le man was .c ited by
32'100 Cottrill Road, Pomeroy, was 1
listed tn fair condition with a

AL'alrdlnl

to the 19112 Csn 11 ot
Manufactures, Ohlo )IOIIted a 17
· pet&lt;at di!cUne 1n ~

fj

·•

troope~'s

for failure 'to

empioymellt llurlng tile ftve.year
lnman~lndultrlellnl911'2,
period, led by Job ~ In t1Je · 00W1J from u lidlllca 1n lfTl. Tbe
machinery, rnet41 aDd lraDiporla- state- tile Dl olll3,CXXI joblln

tlonequlplpentflldutriiiB.

ve peop e

Budget cutting

·

tha~==-~

Jadultrles,
•
. Obkl'• percentage CJl, tota~ ·u.s. .
manutacturtng employmellt ·c~e-.. ·
the tl'llllpOI'Iatl equ1pme11t 81111 ' cllni!d from 6.79 pe~cent to 5.'1'8.

prlmary -

fabricated metal

perce11tdui1Dgtheper1od.

In the spotlight
I

SMUupset

;

C0111M1 r-;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;.;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Welllber llll Pawe 20

followlnga~araccldentonOhto

681 Saturday momtng.
Thomas Everett, 18, ll582 Bar lJ
Road, was westbound on 681 when
bereilm tedlyfeBasleep, wentottthe
leftsldeoftheroadandstruckatree.
Trmperssaldthe6:15a.m. accldellt
caused beavy damage Everett's
vehicle .

•

'

·Lotto payoffs
CLEVELAND (AP) -About$1.5
mtlllon will be spUt between the
·holders of two wlnnlng tickets from
Saturday's Ohio Lotto drawing,
9hJo Lottery officials say.
The wtnnlllg numbers were live,
nine, il, :11, 28 and 36. The jackpot
was $1,561,856.
The number of people holding
with four and five of the stx winning
numbers will be announced Mon·
day, lottery officials said.

SPORT SHOES
&amp;·DRESSY FLATS

WOMEN'S

Weather ·
Cloudy witb a chance of ratn
chahging to snow; low 15 to :W. On
Cbrlstmas, mostly sunny; hlghl!to
35. The chance of preclpltattori Is 50
percent tonight and near zero
Cbrlstmas.
Extended Oblo forecallt
Partly suMy Wednesday. Varta·
ble cloudiness with a chance of
smvers Thursday and Frtday.
Highs In tlie mid·:rls to mk140s
WedneSday, tnthe40sthursday·a nd
In the 40s to low 50s Friday. Lows In
the 2Ql Wednesday aild Thursday
and In themld·2Qltomld-:rlsFrlday

tnd lflfg WI

,,,, ,.,

ly CONNIES, CANDIES
DEXm&amp; 9 WEST

Hllllfi gou

AFTER CHRISTMAS
SALE

HOOD
&amp; DRESS

2

IOO~S

GROUP OF

CHILDREN'S

PRICE

TENNIS
· SHOES

BEGINS WEDNESDAY, DEC. 26.

STRIDE
RITE

~

HUSH
PUPPIES

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
Since about four-fifths of an taxpayers get a refund,
Alllloclated Pre!Jil Wrtter
there Is a strong Incentive to tlleweU In advance of the
Aprtl15 deadUne, the IRS points out.
·
WASIDNGTON (AP) - Uncle Sam's annual .
post·Chrlstmas greettng!l will start on their way today .
The bundles of 1!*14 forms have- been at mall
with the maUing of more than 92 million IncOme taX . distribution centers for sever;U days, but the Postal
forms.
'
,
·
. Service had Instructions not to begin delivering them
untU tnday.
·
·
·
. While it may seem Scrooge-llketqget·aremlnderof.
one or life's two tnevttables during the 'boUday season,
"It's traditional that we maU tbem oui the day after
the Internal Revenue Service says the perlnd rtght .
Christmas aiJd generally most taxpayers get them
after Christmas ts the best time to maU out tl)efm'ms.
some time In tbe week after Chrtstmas," said Larry
Iii that way, trui 92.4 million IRS packages don't get
Batdorf, an IRS spokesman.
caught up In the rila!Ung crush l;Jefore Christmas. But
While proposalS to scrap the current 1.1\X system In
· the forms are stW sent In time to give early-bird fliers
favor of a simplified taX With lower rates and fewer
. deductions will be botly debated In the new year. none
a head start on doing their 1984 returns.

MIDDLEPORT

SELECT JGROUP OF HOUSE SLIPPERS ·
SOCKS AND HANDBAGS

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

0

..............,1 1P•••·-~~-·:•~
1r·-------------.,.
·
.GREETI~GS

1

Thanks to each of you for the wonderful 1
I · personal and busine~s support you've gi· I
ven us In 1984. . .. .

I1
I
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We want to wiah you a
Very Merry Chrietmaa and a
Happy New Yeilr!

1

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and Bob Hoefllctt
108 High St.
Pomeroy

!

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·
.

OFFICIIS

Theodore T. RHCI, Jr., Prt~ident .
Paul E. lloes, Vice President
Roditr W. Hysell, Colhier
John P. Karschnilr, Asst. Vice Prt~ident
E~elyn G. Lanning, Asst. Cashier
Joan• Williams, Asst. Cashier
Addie W. Norris, Loa" Officer
Jean Werry, Asst. Cashier
lruce J. Reed, Asst. Cashier
Paul M. Reed, Controller

DIRECTORS

Theodore T. Rttd, Jr. Ferman Moore
Thereon Johnson
ltn H. Ewing
Leslie F. Fultz
Paul G. Eich
Richard (. Follrod
Fred R., Carsey
Fred W. Crow, Jr.

I

Che~ene,Jeyne,

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THE
PHOTO PLACE

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. Mine

ristrnas

I1

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By~ BR'l'SON HOD..:L
AMoclated Praa Wrtler ;
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) -The West VIrginia.
Coal Association says It's proud of an Industry fatality
reconl that's the second lowest tn history gotng Into
the last week o! the year, but a union olftclal says the
state Is rlpe for a bad rash of,accidents.
"We're going to have some bad fatalities If the state
and federal Inspectors don't get Into tbesll small
punch bole mines ·and start enforcing the law," sal~
Howanl Green, vice president of District 17 of the
United Mine Workers union..
·
As of Cluistmas Day, West VIrgin!~ coat operators
reported 16 fatalities In 1984; In 1983 the total was 13,

By 'lbe Aaaocb.ted p~
·
At least 20 people were .kill~ and
:II Injured tn holiday fires In seven .
, states, titcludlng an lniemo at an
Dllnots reilrement borne . that
claimed eight lives and three
ctu'fstmas tree-spawned blazes In
California and West VIrginia, authorltles said. ·
.
In other !Ires pn Thesda:y, two .
people died In a Baldwin, Mich.,
fosterhome; onepersonpertshed!n
a fire blamed on an elecirlcal
malfunction tn West Vlrgln1a; two
people were killed In a Telllii!SSel?
bouse!lre; twopeoplelostthelrllves
tn a Minneapolis suburb bouse fire;

DRESS SHOES
Auditions, Miller, Charm Step

1f2 PRICE
WOMEN'S &amp; MEN'S
MORGAN QUINN and ARMADILLOS

LOAFERS &amp; CASUALS

.,.,J

l/2 PRICE .

GROUP w0ME1h •&amp;cli1LD1tli·s

.

BOOTS ••••••••••••••••••••• 1/2 PRICE ·

or

p!.Jssoo

GROUP _MIN'S WEYENIEIG

DRESS SHOES •••••••••••• !~~..

$

1000

,

SLIPPERS ••••••••••••••••••• !:!~~ ....

$300

0

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Am Miller
U!lda .ytr
Danna Schmoll
D11na Kennldy
Christaphtr Y10uger
John Lonptrtth
Melinda Thomas

Pam Fortman
Iris Payne
Charlene Thamas
Sharon Michael

Dwight . "Pete" Hllley, Middleport, ts to be retried In Meigs County
Court Qn charges of assault and
resisting arrest, according to Car·
ami Crow, assistant Meigs County
prosecuting attorney.
Haley recently stood trial In Meigs
County Court on tholle chatges, ·
which stemmed from an Incident at ·
VeteranaMemortslHospltalonOct.
5 ot this year.
The original trial resulted In a

Stan Will
Gtorte Hicks
'

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•.t

0

n

Sl
ooo
SHOES ••••••••••••••••••••••• !!!~•.
•

.

MARGUERITETilt SHOES
"Tilt MI.... Shot Store In

POMIIOY OH.

•

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of the discussion wtll have any Impact on taXes due
this Aprtl.
In fact, taxpayers will notice few changes In the 1984
forms from those matled last year. The one change
wiih the biggest Impact - the final stage of the 1981
tax cuts - won't be apparent from looking at the
fonns at aU.
·
The cut, which averages about 5 percent below the
1983 taX rates, ts already built Into the tax tables and
tax·rate schedules that taxpayers will use to calculate
bow much they owe.
One change that will be noticed Involves Social
Security recipients, who for the first time may have to
pay taXes on part of tbeir benefit.&lt; .

'

•

In general, up to half of Social Security benefits will
be ta,xable If total Income exceeds $25,1nl for a single
person .o r S32,1XXJ for a couple flUng a joint return.
The IRS will be sending out about 53 million
"long-form" 1040 tax packages and about 39.4 million .
packages that Include both the 1040A "short form"
and the shonest form, the 1040EZ.
.
The.IRS satd more than 15 million people used tbe
1040EZ last year, which requires taxpayers to write
figures In printed boxes rather than filling In the usual
blank llnes. This Is a boon to the IRS. since It allows
the form to be checked by computers rather than
people.

predicted by
1, began stockplling early .In 1984. State coal · 1, 796 coal mine tnjurles, compal'E'd with 1,962 at the
production rose sharply, and so dtd ihe number of
same time last year and 2,934 for all of 1983.
mtne deaths. By the end of June, W~t VIrginia had ·
HamUton says a major contrtbutor to that
Improvement has ~ the use of comprehensive
reconled as many mine fatalities aaltdld In all of1983.
Since that time, there have been just three
safety programs, which call for a safety plan for
every nt1ne In tbe state. Another help, be says, has
fatalities, and tbere were none at all In November or
so far In December. the UMW and tbe BOOA reached · . been the use ·of automated tempilrary roof ·support
im agreement without a strike, and - starting In
systems (ATRS) on mine equipment. That machinery Is Intended to prevent roof falls, a problem lhat tit .
October - coal productlorr plummeted as ~nsumers
tbe past has been a major killer of miners.
·
began trying to burn off their supplies.
When It comes · to non-fatal accidents, figures
Green, who deals with safety Issues for the union's
largest dls~t. maintains that accidents have been
compiled by the state Department of Mines Indicate
"underreported," however:
that the number of lnjurtes ts likely to be lower than It
was In 1$83. As oftheendof August, West Vlrglnla had

. utor Michael MlHer Is designing the . releasing a pljsoner simply by
legislation to do it.
signing a paper.
Mille~ &amp;aY.S the proposed law
Ron Nichols, whose wtfp was
would preve~t a parQle officer from
kld!iapped, raped and shot to death

Middle llaclr"

Fa
'l1le

0

'and one man died In a rural
Columt&gt;tit. s.c:; house~; . ..
· The fire.In the nine-story Karcher
Rettrement.Hcitelln WaukeBIIn, m..
·that .also 'left 21 people bomelesa,
apparently was caused by · an
electricalproblemtnatallorsbopoo
the grotind floor, aulborttles said. ;
· "From wlu\i we can detenntne ·
. right · now; It appears to have
something to do wlth the wlrtng,"
sa(d fire Lt. Jim McGrain. "We
think It began In tbe dead SJ&gt;4Ce
.above a drop cetllng, and that tt
smoldered .for a long time. Wba·
tever started It was totally des·
Iroyed, we think.

.Middleport man faces retrial

EMPLOYEES

Ja Ann Crisp
Dottie Musser
Lois lurt
Sharon Smith
licharcl Stettler
Dotathy Amberger i
Cindy lrawn

GROUP CHILDREN'S SHOES

GROUP lADIES'

•

Clarence E . Smith, 32, ts.sen1ilg a . .
morethan10yearsago,tsangrythat and others 'who are convicted of
Ill-to 50-year term for kidnapping,. ·
one of the.four men convicted In his ·.violent assault.
wife's kllltng has been paroled and
Nichols' Wife, Jeanette, 45, was aggravated robbery and grand theft .
another Is eligible for release In 1!185.
abducted on May 9, 1974, as sbe In the Nichols killing. He ts eligible ·
"They're antmats, convicts, but . reported for work at St. Anthony for parole next year.
Also convicted In tbe c~ waa ·
notmen,''theColumbusmansaldof · Hospital. , Her bodY was found two
. the four. "They should never be . d4ys later. Before shil was shot to Eric MaUrice, 31. wbo was sentallowedtowalkthestreets811'aJn ." · &lt;Ieath; slie had · been . robbed , enced to 15 to 55· yean; for rape,
kidnapping, aggravated robbery
"Tiie building .w as buUt In the · Miller's proposal would require· tortured and raPe&lt;t .
19'.ns, butwedon'tknowhowoldthe . · stgnaturesoftheprosecutorand.the . · Jotm. W. Harris, 'n, and James and. grand theft. Maurice's !larole
wiring was . .From.what 1 saw, It . presldlngjudgebeforeaprlsonerts JeromeRoy$ter, .31,w~reconvlcted 11151 May 111ggered Nichols' efforts
· ·
didn't look Uke It was ""'iy old." .
paroled. If either refused to sign, a .of aggravated mun;Jer and sent- to change the parole laws.
"It was a mockery .of tbe legal
. The early morning fire- the paneloflOparoleboardmembers · encedtodlelntheelectricchalr.The
deaimest tn the county !nat least 10 · would h!lvetoreconsldertheparole. . , sentences were ch;mged to life In system," said Nichols, 55. '"I found
. years - swept Into tl\e lobby and,
Miller·said be favors limiting the . prison after the Ohio death penalty out Maurice was rut on parole when
I read lt In the newspaper.
sent ' dense smoke up an elevator · requirement to murderers, rapists was ruled unronst1tut19nal.
shaft; said Lake County Coroner
Bobby Richardson.
"The dead were found on the
bQUdlng's 'beth, seventh, eight and
ninth floors,'' Mrs. Richardson said.
"Tbe cause of death tor all appeared
to be snioke tnbalatlon."
Seven of the dead ranged In age
from 67 to 86 years old, and an .age
was not available on the eighih, sbe
saki.
.
Five of the stx tenants Injured,
alsO suttertng smokP Inhalation,
remained b0spltall1.ed In good
condition today, ofttctals said.
Temporary shelter for the homeless was established at a nearby
bote! In ·the conununity 40 miles
oorth of Chicago.
A St. Albans, W.Va., couple died
Tuesday when an apparent mal·
function tn Christmas tree llahts set
tbe bouse afire. A 9-year-old iJrl
viSiting the home wltb her parent.s"saw the Cbrtstmal tree ablaze and
WOke ber father 81111 Slster and fled
the !louR," said Kanawba County
Sherlfl's Deputy K.H. Savlllil.
"The house was pretty well
burned up by the time we got there,
said Lakewood Fire Chief Carl
Cobb. "We had to baut water to the
coW CIIB8'l'IUil - Mete ........ 11, .. be II : l.av, .... - ...... will: ll:llr ..._
&amp;1'1!8 because there ·aren't any
Cal .. S.C., ...._ I hlr ... Klldllr ..... lr
Nelli! ................ . . . . . . . . .. .
ltydranll. It was a good piece from
ps,ll. Til
111, . . . . . . . . , " .
thelf&amp;llon."
hw 1n1o ta: t
II Ill' 1 (AI' • ' " ' 1 ).
UIM Idled It 1rMt e1JM pee-. Pllltler llllil 1111

Christmas .blazes .c ause 20 deaths · ·.

WOMEN'S

n

and that was the lowest annual tally ~ miners killed
on the job sin&lt;le the sta~t1 started Jrenllng teronls .tn
lll!7. In 1982, there were 22 mtners killed, and In 1981,
the total was 33.
"I think contrary to wbat a number o!"people say,
the Industry bas maintained Its vigilance over safety
In the nitnes tn spite of tbe fact we've had Increased
production," said Chris Hamilton of the West VIrginia ·
Coal Association.
State records don't necessary support Hamilton's
statements, hoWever. Coal consumers, expecting that
the UMW would strike when Its contract with the
Bituminous· Coa) Operators Association expired Oct

•

Crime .victim's husband launches campaign against board

AT 9:00A.M.

.. .

PRIVATE
- Pic. 811 Bach walts ln the .Jooely .
Ralelgb-Durlwn Airport tenn1na1 Monday momtng, and thlnk8 ~ hill.
family tn Dayton, oido, where he would pop In unannounced holln later ·
on hts wtfe and Infant chllit. (AP La8erplioto) . ·

'

STARTS WEDNESDAY, DEC. 26th

GROUP LADIES'

•

fa~ity ·mcrease

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Colt,llllOOS mim has started a drlveto
reduce the power o! the state pilrole
board and Franklin CountY Prosec·

s3oo,PAII

I

Ho, ho, ho: it's mcome tax tiDle once agam

AND

ly..Nike
Con¥trse, Zips
and Kangaroos

.I

!

about
homeless people spent .were served more than a ton of
Cbrlstmas Eve and Cbrlstmas.
·turkey and trlnunlngs· at the Rei!
"GOd bless these people, God . Andrews Christmas Dinner, named
bless these people,'.' a grizzled ·, atterastateleglslatorwbostartedtt
FreddyJohils,64,saldofthetentclty · 40yearsagoasapartyfortheneedy.
organizers as he held a sandwich tn · Frle!!ds and relatives have carried
eacb hand. "This ts beaveri. to me." . ·on the tradition since Andrews'
·
· · death tn 19'77.
In Chicago, the Uttle Brotl)ets ot
the Poor luted the LaCanasta
Rita · Swiener spent · the day
Restaurant witb elderly diners tor . · distributing to .St. Louts' needy.
the tblrd annual Cbrlstmas.dinner . • children the•$2,500 In gifts sbe spent
given by owner Joe Garcia.
the year collecting. The psychology
"You look arowid, yoli See the professor has been pla:Ytng Santa's
faces, you know what Chrtstmas Is. . . helper since her college days,
for," Garcia said. "Srole 'If the$e . . spurred by her lOnely holiday.
people only see eacb other once a . seasons as a young girl In an.
year, and that's bere. Today, at ·orphanage . .
least, they have someone to talk to, · "It's really tun, although It does
someone to share with."
get a little bit overwhetmtng at
In OklaJtoma City, 6,1nl people times,'' she said.
•

bu~jury.MarkHaleyandLeonard

Bank

Fitzpatrick, al8o ot Middleport,
were also tried with ''Pete" HsJey at
lhlit time 81111 were bind guHty ot
charges before them and senlellced
by County Court Jud&amp;e Patrick ·
O'Brien.
Meanwblle, 10 lndlctmenll have·
lleen retumed by a Melp County
ll'8nd jury, 8CCOI'dlnC Ill,an entry
filed In Melp County Common

MemlM'r FDIC

· Owned

Pleas Court.
I

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· The entry noted that true bills
have been returned against Faye
Brevlck, al8o known as Faye
Steinmetz, tor grand theft; Doyle K.
Grounds and Karen R. Grounds,
trafflc~lntoodatan)pa; Clarence ·
Butcher, breaking and entering;
Dwatn Edward Helton, corruption
of a minor; Cbrlstlna Smith, two
counts of lreakJni 81111 entering;
Robert Lee Wllllama · and ~
Danlel Neal, brealdng81111ellterlng;
Gene G. '1"bornpaon aDd Brian
~. breaking 81111 l'l)tertng;
PbWlpBlackflrd, trafflcktngmfood

stampallllllll'8nd tbefl
'lliOie servln&amp; on tile 8l'and jury

were Estber L West,

Sally Lynn

Erwin. EUzabeth Templeton, Scott
R. ~pper•. I~JUY Ray O'Brien n,
Dorta WeD, Walter Jewell, Beulab
Cornellllllll 'nDnal BowaL Eliza·
betb 1'anpllltan ewd .. grand'
jUly fol'!llllll.

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By MARK BERNs
satd ~hroel!er's "gift of life" was
Aeioc!•"'d Preis Wrtter · . · tbe best p~t they could bave
Amertcans demonstrated their · bad.
.
· · "gOOd will toll)E.'I!" on Christmas by .. In Madlson, ·Wis., Marine Corps
glvtng freely ot time, money, food veteran ~F. ~.director
and clothing to the nation's needy .of the Wlaconatn .Yletnam Veterans
and. by sbartng wilb their famllles . Memorlill Projeet Inc., donned
tbe joy of the holidays.
·
· battle dress, Jefthlstamlly and stood
In Washington, President and vtgllln the statehouSe tn memory of
Mrs. Reagan spent Christmas Day ·.servlcetnet:~ llil.sslng from tile Viet·
atthe White Houseexclianglng gltts . nam War..
·
before a festive dlnDer, joined by
'Mrs.
o-~ •s : b ro
' !her, Dr. .
":lbe veterans should'
be
'"""'an
Rtcbard Davis, artd his family and · torgotten,"saldMiller,43. "Thewar
otllerguests. TheReagans'cblldrEn ·Shoulcl not be. forgotten. We don't
were IIQt on hahd this year.
want our children to get Involved In
. Artlflclal beart recipient William sucba·war."
Schroeder, hospltallzed In LouiS·
Vohmteers In Los Angeles rolled
vtlle, Ky.,' stncethetmplant a month . sbopplDg carts·piled witb donated
ago, spent Christmas Day viSiting clpthtng to two blut'-a.nd-whlte tents
with members of his family, who and a tepee ne.ictto'Cjty Hall, wbere

not

GROUP OF
MEN'S DRESS
SHOES,
SPORT SHOES
AND DEXTER

enttne

·'GOOd lrill' ·highlights holidaY

$EMI-ANNUAL
CLEARANCE
. STARTS 'WED.,DEC. 26-7 A.M.
HUSH PUPPIES

0

Mld~leport, Ohio, WedneiHiay, December 26.1

concussion.

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES '
CONNIE, FOOTWOII,
CANDIES AND

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According to hospll;ll officials,
Jennifer L. Sheets, !l, 32'100 Cottrill
Road, was treated and released for
scrapes. Linda R. Donahue, 22, and
Kenda Donahue, 16, both of Pome- ·
roy, were treated for cuts and
bruises 1espeectlvely.
:The Gallla·Melgs postoftheState ·
Highway Patrol said Jennifer .
Sheets was eastbound on 17, .
approximately one and stxth·tenths

I

·Partly cloudy

1

...

anrr

.,

�' .

''

Ill Cou.r t Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

~r:b

cs:m~ ~._-.-,..........,o:::::f,...,

~v
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFi.JCH
General Manager

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

Who

W88

SCRABBJ,.E, Va.- Compared to
the magulflcent nativity scene In
New York's Metropolitan Museum,
the little creche around .our Cluistmas tree Is no great sha~. Yet I
found myself the other evening
gazing at the tiny figure of the babe
In the manger with an overwhelm·
lng sense of curiosity and awe.
Who was he• The question has
haunted histortans and theologians
through all ages. Who was he?Iask
the question not as a priest or
mlnlster might ask it. Matters of
religious faith are off my beat. It Is
the who, what, where and when that

he? ,

James J. Kilpatrick

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

absorb q~y reverie.
history, before .or since, approaches
Thlrik of this Infant. He grew to be
the Influence of this child upon the
the man ln.whose
all the dates
course of mankind.
of hlstoty are divided. It Is the
Who was 'he? J was born a
. Christian calendar that cllroti!Cies
reporter; I cannot let the question
events B.C. and A.D. Nearly 2,tnl
go. That there was In fact a man
years after his de~th. the various . known .In his time as Jesus. the
Christian faiths number more than'' messiah, no longer Is much chala billion adherents around the
lenged. Wbatever else he may hllve
world. There are twice as many · been son of God, savior,
Christians as Musllms, twice .S
redeemer - hf was also mortlij.
many Christians as · Hindus.
Over the centuries skeptics bave
Throughout the Western world,
contended that Jesus Is the merest
ctlStom and law and codes ~ moral
legend, an elusive and Insubstantial
behavior reflect · the Judeo·
as King Arthur and his knights of
Christian ethic. No character in
the round table. The 36mlracles

name

are

TI.MBEPJ

'Boll weevils" are
alive and squinning ·

Study documents
effects of recession
A study by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics docUments that Ohio and
the Midwest were hit harder by the recent recession than the nation as a
whOle.
The !)hio AFL·CIO, In the latest publication of Its "News And Views,"
summarized the findings which showed, among other things, that one out
of every three jobs lost were In the Midwest.
It also sald that nearly half of the job losses were In manufacturing,
which Is critical to the region's eeonomy.
The report said that a total of 11.5 milllon workers aged 20 or older lost
their jobs from January, 1979 through January, 1~. but that of the total,
4.4 million had been In their jobs a year or less.
As a result, the study focused primarily on workers who had developed a
relatively firm attachment to their jobs and revealed that 5.1 million had
held their jobs a minimum of three years.
.
Of those 5.1 million whose jobs were abolished or became victims of plant
closings. 60 percent, or 3.1 •million were re-employed when surveyed In
Japuazy, 1984 although 45 percent were earning less than they did
prevlosuly.
Another 25 percent, or 1.3 mllllon, stlll were looking for work, while
700,&lt;XXJ had vanished from the labor force.
Among those who found new jobs, 360,&lt;XXJ of those who previously held
full-time jobs were In part-time jobs and earning less when surveyed at the
start of 1~.
.
The figures showed that while three-fifths of·the workers found new jobs
nationwide, only about half of those In the heavily·lndustriallzed Midwest
were able to do so.
.
Other facts gleaned from the federal study showed that almost one-third
of those whO lost their jobs had held them 10 years or longer, and that the
chances for finding new jobs dectined with advancing age. Seventy percent
of those In the 20-24 age group found new jobs, but only 41 percent of those
between the ages of 55 and 64 did so.

I

,__

:Today 'in history
'

.

Today Is Wednesday, Dec. 26, the 36lst day of 1~. There are five days
left In the year.
Today's highlight In history:
On Dec. 26, 1776, the Battle of Trenton was fought during the
Revolutionary War. Gen. George Waahlngton's troops capturi!d 1,(XK)
, Hessian aoldlers In a major defeat for the Brttlsh.
On this date;
In 1799, theGeorp'WphlngtonwaaeuloglzedbyCOionel Henry Lee, who
delerltied him as "first In war, tlr9t In peace, and first In the hearts of his

·a untrymen.''
In 1917, during World War!, the U.S. govenunent took over operation~
the nation's railroads.
'
.
.
In 1941, Winston ChurchiU became the first British prtme minister to
address a joint session of the U.S. Congress. Churchill warned that the Axis
. would "st~ at nothing."
. In 1944, In the Battle of the Bulge, the embattled u.s. 10lst Airborne
Division, surrounded by German forces In Belgium, was relieved by units
of the Fourth Armored Division.
·. In 19447, heavy snoW blanketed the Northeast. New YorkC!tywasburled
wider 25.8 Inches of snow In 16 hours, rompared with 20.9 Inches In the
Blizzard of '118. The same day, Los Angeles set a record hlgh temperature .
of &amp;I~.

·•

I

Jk
t

SCOl'll41d as the products

~

mau

hypnosis, or hailuclatlons, or lm- •
aginatlve witnesses. JesuS sonietlmes Is said to be a ldnd of pastepot , ·
flgure, put togetl.er In the Image of .
Moses with other stories, allusions
ahd parallels thrown ln. A babe In •
the bulrushes, a· babe In a manger; •
•
a cruel pharoah, a cru~He
·
parting of waters, a walk w
; •
tablets from Mount Sinal, a
from the mount. But wheJ! all the .
objections from scholars and ag·
nostlcs bave been considered, one
fact about J~us remains: He was.
He undeniably was.
"
Yetwhowashe?Weknowagreat !
deal about other towering figures :
who came before and after Christ~ ,;
Augustus, Tlberius, Callgula. We ,,
can study the lives of Vergll, •I
Horace, Ovid and Seneca. Plutarch :
and Eplctetus left tangible records '
behind. The last years of Pilate •:
seem to be the stuff of ghost stories,
but we know that a Pontius Pllate
was procurator of Judea atthetlme , ;
of the crucifixion. Herod the Great ·
was a real king.
Where Is a biography of the man
who Inspired the Chrllitian church?
During Christ's llfetlme, Matthew
tells us, "multitudes" of peaple
followed him. Word or his teaching
.spread everywhere. Jesus was a
troublemaker, an agitator, a revo·
lutlonary. He was news. Yet except
for a Oeetlng reference In Luke to
Christ's teaching in the temple at
12, we know nothing of the
formative years. AU Is surmise. At
ll Christ emerges .
I look at the tiny figure In the
straw-lined cradle and reOect upon
millenia! themes. In his name came
the Roman church and the Hetor·
matlon and the convulsions of '
history that were thus aroused.

'1

j

CIA drug traffickingo-·- - - - - : - - - - - J a__ck_A__
nd__
erso
__n
WASIDNGTON -A former CiA
agent, who Is under Indictment for
fraud and perjury, claims a
superior asked him to take part In a
CIA-sponsored drug-smuggling operation. The ex-agent, Ronald Ray
Rewald, told conndants that when
he declined, the CIA dropped the
matter.
Rewald'scharge Is the latest In a
spate of reports dating back to the
1970s that the CIA has been Involved
In International drug trafficking. It
also raised new questions about an
Australian hank scandal four years
ago that cost lhvestors millions of
•
dollars.
The Australian bank, Nugan
Hand Ltd., was run by former CIA
and U.S. militarY officers. It served
as a "laundry" for llllclt heroin and
arms syndicates, which It also
helped to finance. The bank col·
lapsed . following the apparent
suicide of Its co-founder, Australian
entrepreneur Frank Nugan In
January 19&amp;1.
Rewald's accusation of CIA drug
trafficking turned up In the course

a

of an Investigation hy my assoworld, offered Investors at least 15
ciates Dale Van Alta and Indy
percent return on their money · Badhwar Into the Hawaiian Investhigh for the 1970s. BBRD&amp;W had 16
ment firm tbat Rewald headed - · offices In various countries and Bishop, Baldwin, Rewald, Dll·
reflecting the higher Interest rate of
llngham &amp; Wong.
more recent years - offered
Rewals Insists that the CIA
Investors a generous !J percent
bankrolled his company and caused
return.
Its collaps,e, which, llke ·the bank,
Like Nugan Hand, Rewald's
cost Investors millions. The CIA bas
Investment firm was hip-deep ·in
acknowledged only low-level Involactive or retired CIA employees.
vement with BBRD&amp;W, arid cateMy staff has Identified at least 17
goricaUy denies any Involvement bt
BBRD&amp;W employees whO ·were'
the drug trade.
CIA agents, a dozen · other CIA
employees and officials who had
A business card of a former CIA
contact with the firm, plus a dozen
director was In Nugan's pocket
more CIA-related Individuals whO
when his body was found . His
Invest~!!) a total of atleast $890,00lln
partner, Michael Hand, and several
BBRD&amp;W.
members of the bank's board had
In fact, several sources close to
ties to th~ CIA. Yet the agency
the Rewald case have suggesti&gt;d
vehemently denied any connection
that his Honolulu lnvestll'1ent comwith the bank after I sent VanAtta
pany was being specifically
to Australia to Investigate reports of
groomed to take over Nugan
CIA ties.
Hand's role In CIA operations
The parallels between Nugan
throughout the Pacific basin. ReHand Ltd. and BBRD&amp;W are
wald told his attor~eys It was
striking. For example, Nugan
around 1980, when the Australian
Hand, with 22 offices around the
bank collai&gt;sed, that the CIA began

1 expanding

Its operations with hts
Ill-starred company. " The way we
set up our operation Is t)le way they
tNugan Hand) Bet up their opera·
lion,'' Rewald said. ·
·
It was In 1982, to the best Of ~
Rewald's recollection, that he was .
approached by a senior CIA official
and asked If he would help In a CIA
drug-smuggling operation. He re- ·
members being told that something · •
In Australia "had fallen through,"
and that BBRD&amp;W was " needed to
take over an operation that had
failed ...
When Rewald told the CIA official
.he had no one In his firm with
exper[ence _In drug operations, the
CIA .man contradicted him ahd ·
named a BBRD&amp;W employee who
had been a longtime CIA contract ·
agent active In Southeast Asia.
Rewald still declined the drug
assignment, and ."things were not
forced one me," he said.
Later in 1982, two CIA officials
flew .to Honolulu to purge the
COmJ?any's files of CIA references.

Cutting the budget ---,.----:-----W_illia_m_A_.R...:.:.us:.:.:.:h..:.:.er
NEW YORK (NEA) - To
the subject! ) But Mr. Reagan has
nobody's great surprise, the Demohardened his heart enough to ask
cratic Party's belated but noisy
why this country .must go deeper
roncern over the size o£ too fe(jeral
Into debt to provide free lunches,
deficit has drawn Its (ast breath,
not only for genuinely needy
now that the campaign Is over.
schoolchildren, but for children
President Reagan has proposed to
from wealthy or well-off ·families
cut domestic spending by $34 billion
perfectly capable of providing
In fiscal 1!8&gt;, with even larger cuts
nourishing lunches for their oWn
further down the line, and the
offspring. Must every llitle RockeDemocrats In Congress resemble a
feller be fed one meal a ·day at
football team hunke~ed down Its
public expense?
own five-yard line and determined
On the barricades there appears,
not to yield a ' single Inch.
at this stage of the game, not (as
Mr. Reagan's blue pencil has you might suppQse) a rolorful
slashed through a large number of Children's Army, equipped w)th
programs, from Medicare and signs reading, "DON'T MAKE US •
· revenue sharing to rail subsidies GO HUNGRY, MR. PRESIand farm price supports. Every one DENT!" but the National Milk
of these programs •. however, has Producers Federation. This outfit,
Influential beneficiaries who don't which Is the lobbying organization
propose to lose their subsidies for datry cooperatives, Is deeply
without a fight, and behind every · Interested In the school lunch
bloc of beneficiaries stand progi'am, not because Its members
members of Congress streteglcaUy are exceptlo118lly vulnerable to the
positioned to assist them In the charms of the young but because
struggle,
one out Of evecy three dollars spent
To be sure, the president has on food under the program goes to
every right to argue that h1s the dairy Industry ,I
overwhelming re-election carried
with It a powerful mandate to
Wbat's more, Tip O'Neill and his
reduce domestic expenditures. But
boys are on hand on Capitol Hill to
such a.lenerallzed mandate !soften · make very Sllre that nobQdy
helpless against a t!pECial lrlm1!Bt prevents America's milk producers
IIJ'[mly detennlned to protect Its from contlnuJni to turn out ll&amp;l!Y
own particular patch of turf. To products for our schoolchildren,
change the metapiiOI', the apeclal rich and poor alike. Rep. Leon
Interest II oftell able to acqulrl! and Panetta, J&gt;.Cant., chalnnart of the
maintain lbcallllr superiority over Subcommlltee on Nutrition Of the
the key beachhead.
Housee Agriculture Ccxnmtttee,
Take the school lunch program, says he sees ''nochance at aU" that
for example, Of course, It requles a Congress will approve any redilc·
pollUcal leader of tai- greater than tlon In the program.
average courage to tamper at all
And so It aoeJI. My brother
with this h!WI! Jli'Oiiram, which columnist Tom Wicker ' walls that
serves 23 mllllon scboolchl)dren.
President Reagan's "ax" Is "de·
(Just lmaglne what you will shortly capltatlng the elderly, children, the
be seeing on your favorite television · poorest among us, veterans, stu~ws shows, as producers warm to
dents, urban iranslt riders, small-

on

YORK (AP) For
Bentard King, a career-high 60polntpertonnancewasnothlngtobe
excited about.
"I'dratherhavescoredlOandwe
had won the game," King said
Tuellday night~. despite King's
hlib-poWel'ed- performance, the
New Yor1c Knlcks lost a 00-114
National Basketball Asaoclatlon
decision to the New Jersey Nels.
The point total was not only a
season high for the NBA this year,
but was the highest since April 9,
1978, when Denver'sDavldThompsonhad73andSanAn.t onlo'sGeorge
. Gervln631nseparategames.King's
60 points also broke the Knlcks' club
NEW

good. taste, ollddresslng ISsues, not personallties 1

(

Knicks drop 120-114 NBA battle to Nets
. JlrD:NBAPPOPOBT
AP llpwU Witter

LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be- less tha n 300 words
long; All letters are subject to editing and must be s igned with name, ad~ress and
telePhone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Letters should be In

They've been sprayed with political pesticide, but the "boll weevils" are
alive and squtrming.
"We're going to be a force to be heard," says Rep. Cl\arles Stenbolm,
O.Texas, who oo-founded the Conservative Democratic Forum In 1980.
The group of co;mgressmen was at its height In 1981 when It bucked the
Democratic Party leadership to back Presidetit Reagan's economic
proposals and earned Its nickname. But membership dwindled from 46 to
33 during the last Congress.
" ,Of the 13 that w~ lost, three retired from office, three ran for other
office, three SWitched parties, three were defeated and one just dropped
out," Stenbolm said.
· "As a group, the Congress Is right of center," says Rep. Buddy Roemer
of Louisiana, another boil weevil. "But within the Democratic Party, " he .
adds, "the numbers (of conservatives) are shrinking, not expanding."
.. Nevertheless, the group expects to recoup its lost mem\)ershipand make
some gabts In unofficial support during the upt;Omlng Congress. Roemer
estimates there wUl be a core of. about 70 House members backing boll
weevil positions.
"That's enough to win some votes in the House," he said.
.
After fading for two years, the Conservative Democratic Forum was
back In the headlines last month when, on behalf of conservative
Democrats, Stenholm threatened to challenge House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill Jr. oi Massachusetts for the leadership role.
Stenholm dropped out of the race after he said O'Ne ill promised
conservative Democrats "a place at the table." He says now Ills up to them
to get their share.
Roemer, who had set up the meeting between Stenholrn and O'Nelll,sald
he and Stenholm promised the speaker they would try to work within the
party first before seeking Republican support for an alternative budget.
Despite some talk about broadening the group's concerns to Include
defense and foreign policy Issues, the main focus remains centered on the
Wdget and the federal deficit.
Roemer said the conservative Democrats are advocating a reduction in
·federal spending, Including defense.
The boll weevils say they have been forced Into the role of mavericks by
p8rty leadership that has abandoned the nllddle of the road for the far left
lane.
Rep. Marvin Leath of Texas said that If the Democrati~ Party doesn't
give, conservatives may consider changing their afflUation .
"At some point In the future, ldon'tknow If that's four years, six years, 10
years, 15 years from now, people like myself who would Intend to stay In
politics actively would have to make a decision," he said.

.

~

Comment
The Daily Sentinel

The

business borrowers, the handicapped." We . have already seen
how Mr. Reagan proposes to
"decapitate" children, but take
another example from · Wicker's
list: veterans. Is there any earthly
reason why the government should
go stUI deeper Into debt to provide
free medicAl care for any veteran
for any Ulness or injury that "!8Y
ever befall him, no matter how
unrelated to his military service?

'

The gesture Is splendid, but is It
essential?
Mr. Reagan will need more help
thari merely the votes he received
on Nov. 6 If he Is to overcome the
massed resistance of current IJene.
!lclaries of federal largess to any '
serious effort to cut domestic
expenditures. With congressmen
home for the holidays, this Is an
especially good time to tell them io
stop trying to play Santa Claus all
year long. ·'

Berry's World

The prevlaua NBA hlib this Ransey.
season was !Ill by Goldell State'a
,.... JJe, ....,_ d8
:f'uMs Short. alao against the Nets.
Moles Malone scored 28 points
In the other NBA action Tuelday and Andrew Toney made two !ree
night, Philadelphia ·ecl&amp;ed Detroit
throwswlth~seconds remaining to
11»-Jal, Portland beat~ State lead Philadelphia over Detroit. . The
11)6.97 and Cleveland' stopped victory was the 76ers' 13th In their
Atlanta 10&amp;-106.
last 15 games and Improved their
With King ICOI'lng 40 of his points , i'ecord to 22-6.
In the first half, the Knlcks twice held
The S1x:ers tralled only In the first
leads of 16 points beffore tlnlahlng two minutes of the game, but had to
with a !i'-54 advantage at halftlme. hold oil the Pistons In the fourth
But Mlcheal Ray Richardson. who quarter.
scored 24 Of his 36 points -In the
Trt111 Blazel"8 106, WiUTion t'7
second half, rallied the Nets to their
Oyde Drexler SQ&gt;red 26 points,
flrstroadvkitoryatteretghtstralght collected ll rebounds and eight
losses.
assl$ts as Portland ended a sevenRichardson wasn't the only big game losing streak by beating
gun for the Nets, who also got T1 Golden State. ·

The vlctoey, Portland'Ji14th Ill 29
was COIItly as the B1azim

aames.

loltaU-starguardJlmPliXliOillnthe
tli'atquarterwithadlslocatedflnger .
on his left hand.
Cavallei"8Itl, Hawks ltl8

Phll Hubbard scored 2S points to
lead Cleveland over Atlanta. The
Cavaliers have won four of their last .
five games, but sttU have the worst
record In the league at G-20. The
Cavaliers, however, are 3-1 against
the Hawks.
TheHawksrallledtolead101·96on
Mike Glenn's jlimp shot with 6: 36
remalnlng. But John Bagley then
scored two baskets and Mel TUrpin
and Hubbard each added a basket to
give the Cavaliers a 1{)1-lOllead with
4:43 to go and they never trailed.

become Montreal's most dangerous
Chellos, Tom Kurvers , whO was the
everyone has been playing each
scorer.
"We
were
kind
of
short
on
best defenseman In college, Petr
other a lot. Of the 32 games we play
defense
before
but
Jacques'
system
Svoboda - who have fit In just
If your favorite National Hockey within the dlvlslon, we've probably
works
for
us.
And
we
have
afewnew
right."
League team Is In the Adams played halt Ofthem already. So you
guys on the team on defense- ChriS
Dlvlslon, you can't be blamed for see the teams heating up on each
scratching your head and wonder- other.
" But you also don't see teams
lng what's g1.1lng on.
11trew teams expected to chal· going out and sweeping a trip
BRIDGE CITY. Texas (AP) Shon said after riding Cherokee In .
1\'flge for the top spot In what has the through the Norris or the Smythe
While most children chewed on front of h\s hoUse as family, friends
.....,.,.. • . reputation as the NHL's toughest dlvtslons. You can go btto Calgary,
candy and plowed through plies of and well-wishers looked on.
dlvtslon - the Buffalo Sabres, Edmonton,Wlnnlpeg,St.Louls,and
wrapping paper Christmas Da
. y,
Boston Bruins and Quebec Nor· · comeupwithnopolnts."
8-year-{)ld Sbon Babineaux perched r------~---diques - have been mlred .around
The Canadlens have managed to
atop a dream come true.
the -~ mark. The Hartford · stay ahead of the competition The termlilally
leukemia
they led archrlval Quebec by nine
victim had wished liard for a pony,
Whalers, though they're not much
more lmproved than last season,
points entering tonight's games so hard that his wish reached the
AND
are In the playoff hunt , albeit the
by sticking to the conservative
ears of some big-hearted neighbors.
seasonlsn'tevenhalfWaycomplete.
system lnstaUed late last season by
And on chrlsttnas Eve, when Shoil
And the Montreal Canadielis, the Jacques Lemalrl! when he replaced
looked out his front door, a
club whlch has the rilost successful
Bob Berry asC08Ch.NomoreFlylng
10-year-{)ld horse peeped back.
and storied history In the sport, are Frenchmen wlio Intimidate the
"Mom, there's my horse," ex113 SECOND AVE.
the surprise leaders of the sector. , opposition by the sheer forceotthetr
clalmed Sbon, who was appropPOMEROY
"lt shows the league Is better attack. This club Is winning with
riately dressed for the holidays In a
SCORINGBIG-BenwdKing(90)oftheNewYorkKnlcks,left,
balanced than last year and de!enseandtlmelyscoring.
bright red shirt and red pants. 1n
CALL 992-3381
reaches high for the ball 88 he cometl .up ~~~~Jeff Tumer (311) and
everyone can beat everyone else,"
"Everything has worked outright
moments, he was atop his Christ992-2342
Michael Rlchanlsoa of the New Jersey Nell during 'IUesday night's
said Canadlens captain Bob Gainey.
for us, '' sald Mats Naslund, the swift
mas gift.
gllllll! at New York's Madison Square-;:..:...:G:.:arde:.:;:.::n.::...::&lt;AP=..:I::.:•::.:ee:.::rp::.;holo::.:..:..:.:.&gt;;_·---'-'A_s...,fo_r_th_e_s_tan_dlngs.....;._ln_oo_r_dl_vlsl_o_n_,__
fo_rw_ard
__
s_w_ed_e_n_w_bo_has_._ _·..:'l...:'ve..::...:a::l...:w.::ay'-'s'---w.:;an...:t...:ed...:....a_ho_rse...:....,'_'- ' - - - - - - - - - - - - -

By BARRY WIUIER
AP Sports Writer

Leukemia victim gets his wish

m

DOWNING-CHILDS

rtWEN INSURANCE

rrom
__

Houdeshell
says switch
'Isn't easy'

C1 1M4R.J . M'fNOLDI TOBACCO CO .

FINDLAY, Ohio (AP) - Jlm
Houdeshell has coached 420 victories In h1s three decades at Findlay
College so It was no pasy chore to
decide to switch careers within the
Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
school.
"I'll miss the association with the
players the most," said the 53-yearold Houdeshell, who will become the
chairman· of the school's pew
Division of Teacher Education In
January.
" II Is going to be different," he
said of his new assignment. "It Isn't
easy (tp step down), butatthesame
time I've kind of prepared myself
the last three or four years trying to
lead Into some things that might
develop. It wlU be a very drastic
change In lifestyle.
"It (the new position) will take a
great deal of time. Something had to
give so I thought It might be tlme for
someone else to coach basketball."
):ioudeshell, however, will retain
his position as Findlay's athletic
director.
"With thecomhlnatlonof14sports
and the merging of two divisions
(Health, Physical Education and
· Recreation and Education), there Is
. a good bit of work ahead of us.
Another aspect of teachereducaUon
Is that there Is going to be a need for
teachers In the next five years. We
would like to be Involved In meeting
that need, " he said.
During his career at Findlay,
Houdeshell has posted' 22 winning
seasons. His teams have appeared
In 15 N AlA District 22 playoffs and
made three trips to the national
tournament.

Generic
Prices.

tlLTER LICiflS

Fiker.
New
Rich Taste.

ALLGAMI!B

Team

W L I'
Ha nnan Tract' ....................... ..4-1-.Jli
Southern ............................ .4 2 344
Nonn .............................. .... 2 4 3!N
KyRer Creek ........................ ! 3 :116

•.

, 01'
264
'11i17

442

236
Eastern ............ ;.... ... .......... ! 3 ~ 315
SOUthwestern ..................... :.0 5 270 314
SVAC VJ\RSrt'V
Te""'
·W L I' 01'
southern .......:..................... 3 ·o 201 129
Hannaq Trace .... ., ............... 2 0 127 96
Eastern .... ........... ............... } 1 lD 135
North Gallla ............ ... ......... ! 2 187 :na
Kygeo- Creek ........................0 2 1111 UB
SOuthwestern ........ ...............0 2 105 136

rorAIJi

7
SVAC RESERVES
Team
W
Southem ........... .... .............. -1
Hannan Trace .....................2
SOuthwestern ...................... 1
North Gallla ..... , ..................1
Eastern ....... ................... .... 0

7 ar ar
L
0
0
1
2
2

~~rook ...... ............ , ...~ ;

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

r
1611

1117

Jl'ltda)''a....-:

Also available in
filter 1005 &amp; MenthoiiOOS.

92
II!

76 9lj
133 1M
Ill! IJI
Ill ' 102

• ·m

Eutorn at Federal·Hoclclnl
Holiday Tourno.....,t, at
Soutltwel1ern
Doc. I I - : '
I
Rou-Sool-- II Soutllel'll
Eastern at Watlama Tournament
GoUla a.mty

. ..
..

or

Hannan Trace II! Qak Hill 56
..,....., •• pms:
GaUia County Holl.day Tournament, at
Southwestern
Southern vs, Peebles, at OU
Battern at Wahama Tournament

"No, I'm NOT paying bills. I'm •till •ending out
CHRISTMAS CARDS."

polntJ and 14 rebowxla from Mike
Grntnsld and :M points from Kelvin

Natjonal Hockey League .shows better balance.

SVAC cage
standings

r-------~~--------~ ·.

reCord oU'/ 11!t by Riehle Guerin In
llll!9.

14 mg.,"tar", 0.9 mg. nicotine av. per cigarene by FTC method.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

: .. : :·.- :-·:·:·:· .··... ·· .. ·.·.·
.. ' . '

SAVE EVEN----

I

.I

'I
I
I

J

�December 21. 1884

Sentinel

Wedneldev. December 21. 1984
IWUl'&amp;W..

South rolls over
North team, 33-6
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) Tennessee's Faud Reve!Z said his
tour field goals In the 47th annual
Blue-Gray Classic shows he can
kick ll.ke a pro, whether the pros
want him or not.
. Ravelz's footwork and two touchdown receptions by Mlsslsslppl
Valley's Jerry Rice highlighted a
484-yard otrenstve showing tluit
gave the Southa33-6vlctoryoverthe
North Thesday.
Ravelz kicked field goals of 41, 43,
52 and 30 yards without using a tee
(or the first time In his career.
· Proklckersaren'tallowedtousea
~. and some college kickers were
never able to make the adjustment.
But Ravtez said his first try "really
helped my confidence."
. R.8velz has yet to hear anything
!rom professional scouts, but after
TUesday's kicking performance, he
said: "Even 1t I end up not being
good enough, It won't be the end of
rhy life."
Rice, the game's most valuable
player and a member of The
~lated Press Division I-AA
~-Amertca team, caught four
~ tor 101 yards, one a 00-yard
touchdown throw from Alabama
ha!tback Paul Ott Carruth.
The Gray, with Clemson's Mike
Eppley and Vanderbllt's Kurt Page
directing the offense, pounded out

NEW YORK (A}') - Terry
CununiJI&amp;a, who tM!!'IIim 28.3
points to heip MilWaukee will tour
g&amp;me!l - one ot them saddling tlle
Boston Celtlcs with their tint lane

I

Holiday

233 yards rushing and 251 yards

loa of the year - was named
National Bulf,etball Alaoclatlon
Player of the Week.
Cummings hit 46 ot 8lshots from
lhe field for a .!5Qipercentageand 21
od 25 frlm the foul Une, a JWOmark.
He also averaged nllle rebounds per
game and bad Uasslst.s.
MADRID, Spain (AP) - Real
Madrid of Spain · ctushed a New
Jersey all·~ team ~001\Jesday
to remain undefeated Ina three-day
International Christmas basketball

spo~ ·

passing, while the South defenderS
held the Blue offense to seven yo$rds
on the ground and 193 passing.
The game's leading rusher was
Alabama's Ricky Moore, . who
picked up l13 yards In 13 canies.
North CaroUna State's Joe Mclntosh, the workhorse ot the South
rushing attack with Z! canies,
added 78 yards.
The South took charge after
Brigham YOllllg's Lee Johnsa1
booted a 39-yard field goal toglvethe
Blues a ~ lead with 6: 34 left In the
first quarter.
Following an exchange ot punts,
Memphis State's Derrick Burroughs Intercepted a pass by
Pacl11c's Paul Berner and returned
It 54 yards for a !OUChdown. The
extra point by Revelz gave the Gray
a 7-3lead midway through the first
quarter.

briefs•••

tournament.

Real Madrid Is 1led with Selection ·
of the Soviet Union with 2-0 remrdl
following the second day ot play.
The .Soviet Unlop defeated Selection ot Yugoslavia 87-67.
Tbe tournament Is being held at
Real Madrid's Sporta Pavilion
before an estlmated crowd ot 5,(JX).
B()CI(EY
MONTREAL (AP) -Leftwlllger
Greg Gllhert, who scored ttve goals
and added two assists to spark the
New York Islanders to three
victories last week, has beel1 named
the Natlonal Hockey League's
payer of the week for lhe pedod
ending, Sunday, Dec. 23.
Gilbert, whO scored two gamewinning gual.s, edged superstar
Wa~e Gretzky ·of the Edmonton

Johnsonmadelt7-6witha~yard ·

Some
Going

Phil!ldclphla

Swtciay, Dee.Z3

Washlngl(ll.

N.Y. C lant~; 16.LA Rams 1J

NY Lslandt&gt;rs
Plll.sbUrgh

m

Conffftllot Snnlllnak

Sr-anle at Miami
N.Y. Gia~~ts at S;ln F'ranclsoo

MJwml

......... Doc. !II

Quebec
Buffakl

C'hlt;ago a1 WashingTon

Plfl.si)Jrgh at Ocn\ler
SWIIIMy, Jan . a
'l'lm8l lllfKI SM8 11IA
AFC Sc.&gt;mltlnal W~llC'J'S
NFC Scmlflna.J WJf\JI(Io;

Chicago
llolroll

SUper Bowl
AI Palo ..U.., C&amp;lll.
AFC Champion YS. NF'C Olamplon

.M6

15 14

lndlana

7 111

1m J~
.379 7Y,.
.2!6 10 ~
.2.'\1 II

~

13 14

San Antook&gt;
Utah
Ka~CIIy

10 16

LA Lakers

P'hoallx
)

'I
I'

--

13 16

13 16

LA. Clp~
Portland

Sf&gt;anl.-.
Golden 9aw

14 15

'

I

1.9114
l8 13 3
J!j 13
6
8 ~ 3

}(B

160

3

t}

167 102

421)'Jll!l
:n 170 1.36
:Ji 151 137
19 llti 191

30.
Balanced scoring was the.Iruiiii
factor In Meigs' win over Southern
as four players hit for nine or more
points. Oller and Howard led with 12
each while Baker and Decker
Cullums each had nine. Other
scorers for Meigs included Scott
Nelgler with live, Powell and

Cham!nadr 71 . Sa...tllern M('ltndi.St ro
Oklahoma 91. LoolsvUIL' 7l

Bowl at a glance
"'~y.l&gt;flo.•

~m1\t i\nahelm, Cdf,
luwa, 1).-t . J, ~·s. , 1'f."xas, 1·2·1. or Houstoo,
A p.m. 11'CS.Me1ro1
'l'hunlclay, Dec. n
IJhrrfJ Bowl
1\t MempiM, Tmn.
ArkMsas. 7-.1-1. vs. Auburn. R-.l or
l.ouiYana ~l td ~:', R-'l·l, 8:;1) p.m. (Katz\
Frtdl.y, Dec. %II
G - ,_,
1\t ·• •·kl«&lt;lwmr. Ft..
South C'arOilna, 10.1. vs. Okl&lt;thorrw
Slillt'. !1-2, R p.m. (ABC!
Sldurda)', Dtooe. ttl
fi-1 ,

·~
4~

.l\5

'
-

:1
5
5
~.
9~

__

TVC standings

Soothrrn
D&lt;~m• ·.

Ml'!hodlsl ,

8·2,

vs,

Warren Local ......... ,............2 6 5M 599
Miller ........ .. .......... .. ... .. ...... ) 7 385 493
Wellston ... ... . ............. ...... .... 0 7 429 510

Not rr

~ p . m. tMl'lro. ESPN1
JWI ofF~ Bewl

i ·t

""BlrmMplltl, AJ ..
WI.I;('On~ln ,

Vl. l(toft!Ul'kV, 8-J,

j .,l. ) ,

p.m. tTIJ.."i ;

TVCVARSITY

Jl

THm

·

.._,_,
·

Tt'Xas Chrlst lnn, fl...l. Vli. Wes r VIrginia.
7-1 , fl p.m. tESPN-Mizlou•
'J'\kottdiiiJ,.J... I
l'Uionn-1
AIDal•
1'C'1WS, 7·:.!·1. Swth£om Mr100d i;;1 , 8-2. or
llru 'ittll. h-4. \'S. Bof;tm Collq;:L', B--2, I: XI
p.m. tCIJSI

Amftba..._

----

BASI!II.UL

Warren Local ...................... 2 5 188
Miller ............ ... ................. .! 6 350

--~.._..

p.m. 1~'BC"t

KANSAS CITY CO~Ani'IOJ~
the roslpatlon d Pat McBr1ck&gt;. htod

AutJw n

Tr1mble ........... ..... .............. 3
Fed.·Hocklng ........... ... ..... .... 2
Nelsonvtue- York ................ .. .2
Miller ........ , ....... ....... .......2
WellSton ... ......... ....... ....... ....0

'

Tolalo
J;"rtday'a re~M~U:

or Loofsl.ma Sial!• ll-2·1

AleXAnder 88 Tr1mble 84 (2 ou
Melp 76 Warren Local 59

1\tHt..ll
Oklattcm.;, , 9-H ' "'· Washlnli:fon. 10.1 s
p. m. ~ NBCt
'

Mlz'JJOne trade and ntkl C'Olleh.

Loc~l

Belpre 51 VInton County ~
Federal Hoci!Jntl51 Miller :J1
!~•lionville- York !11 W.u.ton :i8
,..,...,. pme:
Alexandfor vs. Athens at OU

bowling

FrldaY•pme:

Middleport LlDICh r«x&gt;m ........................ 44
Smith·~lson Moton ........ ................. ..... 36
' Hlgli senes -CIIarlle VanMeter!«!, S!)E&lt;d

Pomero1 -~ r Earty Wtdn , , Mixed

........

Doe.IJ,.....

Eogl.. Club ... ........................... .......... ..77

No. 5 .... ......... ... ........................ ........... &amp;!'

R.....,u ij33;

:m:

SteVe Bachner

1811.
Team serta - Tony'• Carry-Out 1ill3.
Team game - Tony's Carry-Out 11'10.

and n.bble Plielpslll4.
Team series -Tony's CaiT)'·Out 1936.

Te!un

Elli)' "'

I

I

,

~

Mixed•

Doe.IJ, ...

.....

Eatllfl Club ..•.. .••.••••.•.•..••....•.••••. :, ........ 'l9

No. S ............. ......... ............ ..... ........ .. .. 10
Jim's Gull ....... ......... .................. .. .... ....62
Tony's Cany-Out .... .... ............ ..............S3

........

Middleport Luoch lloom ..... ................... 16
Smllh·Nellool Motorl ... .................... ...... 46
Hllh sertos - Jim Rawley 522; Teny
Setdenablo 519; Debt ~ 4118, Helen .
Pllelpl181.
HJclt game - :rJl, Helen 'Pholpo :m; Jln)
Hawley 1IBl. Tony s.tdonable 194.
•

'I'Hm

.

.....

~~: ~ ::: ::::::::::::: ::: ::::::::::: ::: : ::::::~

Jim's Gu~ ...................... ... .... ... .... ........ 48
Tony's Can-y-Oul ·.:: ................. ......... ..... '-1

244
'1£7
298
251
3211

262
:lXI
312
:Ill
1211

Lewis

each won two maiCia to pill ll1i!
Glrla 18 dlvlaloCI quarterflllall ~ lhe

and

Czechollovaklan-bom terudl cham·

plat Mart1na Navratllova were
cholen u iipOI taman and lpOI'IIwoman ottlleyear byAlloclated Press
8pot1S wrtten In Europe.
l..ewll clomlllated tlle track and
field ewnts at the summer Olympic
G&amp;me!l in Loa Angeles, winnlllg a
record-eqllallna tour gold medals.
By winning the French champion·
ahlplin JIDie, Navradlova became

Rolex lntematlonal

only the th1rd wmum player In
history to win the Grand Slam ~ttve vtctmes in the world's

Goldbet-g won his second-round
match trom Jetrrey Chiang

or

JUIIIDr

11111111

championlldpt at the Pa:tWullllli·
ton Tenata Academy.
~ya ellmlnatedCiui!Jtlw
Gll.lletJ ot Mendhaln, N.J:. ~. t&gt;O In
the aecond round. She waa allo
vtctor1ous in her third-round match
against · Relta Manokl or Stalerl
Island, N.Y., 2-6,6-2,6-4.
Bykova, ranl!ed leCOI1d behind
Mllvldakaya In the Soviet 18-yearold dMs!on, routed Shalev Sarlt of

Israel, 6-2. 6-1

I

UNBEUEVABLE
'

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LOWMI price nerl Huny-no men when

a-.,. 110M· 126:1017

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TWIN SIU

Auto-Magic® FM tuning. 14'Yf/channel, min. rm1,
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range, 2'/•" tweeter.
140:2041

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Complete diM ay.-n
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put8r. 121-3029

Reg. 381.115

[)e('ember ll, 1984

Standings .

FUlL SIZE

Team
Pts.
Roach' s Gun Shop ... ..... .... ...... ............... 92:
Fraternal Order of Eagles ............. .. ....... 78
Bill's Body Shop ........ ... .. ..................... . 76

1119.95

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SCT-4t by Realistic

Hysell's Used Cars ............. ... ..... ........... 70

RufUs Jewell 199; Terry Seidenabel and

Charles F. Sml1h 189.
High team series- Roach'sGunShop2417;
Hysell's Used Cars 2116: BUI's Body Shop
2370. •
High team gamr- Roach's Gun Shop 853
1140: H)'l!OII's Used Cars 1126.
•

PILLOW
ARM
SPECrAL

Ohio Valley Publis hing Companyt Mul·
tlmedla, Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, h.
992-2156. Se-con d class posta2r paid at
Pome-roy. Ohio.
Momtwr: The- Associated Press, In·
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American Newspaper Publi shers As·
soC'Ia llon, National Advertising Repre-

sentat iV€', Branham Ne-wspaper sates,
7:!3 Third Avf'nu(', Nf'w York, New
York 10017.

Save•so 9911

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Published &lt;&gt;very afternoon, Monday
through Friday , 111 Cpurt St. , y the

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liv. Rm. Suite

POSTMASTER: 8(-nd address changes
to The Daily Sentinel, lll Court Sl., Po·

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'~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

'40 Off

High individual series- Jack. Peterson~;
Mike MOler 545; Rufus Jewell 519.
High Individual game- Jack Peterson 2.ll;

(USPS 115-HO)
A Division of Multimedia, lac .

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LAB·1.500 by ReaHstic

Shoemaker OIJ and Gas .. .......... ............. 44

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SUBSCRIPTION RAt:I!S
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NEW 5 P&lt;.
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Dally ..... ..... ................. ........ 25 Cents

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SubScribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advarice dlrercl to
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month.

.... '229.95

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No subsCriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier service 11
available.

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Are you. colltc:ting peyments on 1 real ..Ute mortu.,
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Tea m game - Middleport Lunch Room
710.
-

November !I, Jill

5
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AM/FM Stereo Receiver

:e, Ray

Marlene Wlloon IJI, Pal Canoo

Jlm'e GuU ...... .... .... ........ ........ .. ........ .... 51
Ton1'• Con-y-Out ........................ ... .......!53
Middleport Lunch Room .... ............ ........ 46
Smltii-Nelloo Millo~&gt; ..... ................. ...... .38
HIP - Joltn '!')'no&lt;! 512. Stove
Bachner ij33; Candy VanMetorl96. Carolyn
Bachner'492.
.
HJch game - St""" Bach,.... 200, Ray
Roach 191; Helen PlleiP\1187, Isabelle Cauch

Ear11 We&lt;l!leo4lay Mixed

MPip at Athens
Trlml&gt;le at Lotran
· Ealtern at Federal-Hocking
CroobvWe at MWer

4 298 32li

'IENNII
PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.
(AP)- TwoSovletwunea, Vletlaria
,MIMdlkaya and Natalia Byi!Dva,

May not be avallabte a1 allocat~. Cueette recorder ~xtra

Pat ea..... 516, Caroi)'JI Bachner

till.
111111 game Rl&gt;adh

»

(VIIWIIJ)

,_.,_,

' '11 Nl'lll'iJN!tl, !}-2, 7 p.m tABC I

Vlc-

'I'Hm

"-.!,

.

2 361 311
Meigs .. ... .. ................ .......... 4 3 383 383
VInton County ... .. ....... .......... 4 3 3.1J 3211

SuprBowl
i\t New Oritwvi

"""''
&lt;XlU.EGE
LOUISVIU.E-Namt'd Tc:m Ollvadol!l

TVC RESERVI!S

Atexa.- ...........................5

At ....... calt'.
Ohio SttJtt•. ~2. \No!, Sauthr-lit California
~

~I

WLP OP
Belpre .... ..... ........ .... ..... ......7 0 106 273
Warren Local ........... ....... .... 6 I 391 :ui

Team

"' Tempe, AltL

R-.1.

529

=on ..... .... .... ....... .~~-=~

UCLA . R-.1, \'S. Mlaml, Fla .. M-4, l :.ll
p.m. tNBCI

0 A KLAN 0 A'S...Re-slgned Br\ic(t.
Bochlt", flnt billltt'narl, to a one-yur ron·
tract .
S&lt;JC&lt;:m

558 452

2 41ii 402
2 462 4.11
2 472 458
2 s~ 463
Vinton Cou nty ...................... 3 4 «1 4.'l:l
Fed.·Hocklng .................. ... ..3 4 Ml 431

.. H - . .

H---

OP

Meigs ..... ...................... ...... 5
Belp.-. ................................5
Tr1mble ...................... .. ...... 5
NelsonvUie-York ........... ........ 5

Purd\ll', 7--1. vs. Vlr21nla. 7-2-2. .1 p.m.

Transactions

W L P

Alt&gt;xander ..... ..... .. ............. ..6 l

Monc&amp;.y, ON·. Sl
Peatfl Dow1
AIAU.ta

o('flSI

gges

Thlny w.na ot power for enjoying lUper eound
on the roedl PuMbutton preMia for five tiona. FM ligna! enr.nc.r. 112·1902

Local bowling

Nelsonville-York .................. ~ 3 568 531

, Fed.-Hocklng ........ ....... .... ....4 4 515 !104
VInton County ......... ...... ....... 3 6 518 :590

star

Cassette-Based Computer
System-Slashed 60%

Halt·
1:.15 Price

Sheets with four each, a nd Terry
Fields had one.
David McMillian was brilliant for
S9uthem despite .t he loss as the
young Tornado had 20 points . .
Shawn Diddle added 2, Chrls Stout
had seven, Todd Lisle and Brian
Weaver three each, and Mike Amos
and Chuck Buckley two each.

ALLG!IMES
Team
W L P OP
Alexander .................. .... ..... 6 I 558 1112
Belpre ....... ..... .......... ... .......6 2 526 4111!
Tr1mble .............................. 5 2 472 458
Meigs ......... ... .... ......... ........5 3 516 455

........

lndiMa at WashlnJ(1on
Dl&gt;!rolt at New Jl'nil'Y
. HOlSton at MllwBUkre
LA. Oipp!!'fll at Dallas
.
New Veri&lt; vs. Atlant a at N('W Orleans
S...n Antoolo at Df&gt;RV('f
Kansas Clry at Utah
lb!ton at Pnnlx
&amp;&gt;aftll' at L.A. Lalcm
'n11anday'11 Game~
Cl('\leiafld at Chicago
Portland at San AntMio
HOJston at Kansas Ory
Boston at L.A. Olpprr.l
Goldt&gt;n State ill Seattlf'

cmlstani football coach.
MOi"ll'CLAIR ST'ATE- Namrd
l&lt;r

17

CeUe&amp;e P"'dbeQ
..~1\H wnrr

W~IG.meN

I'

Winnipeg

126
121
151
lfO

a, n.e "-od.aaed Pre.

J Y.~

.448

.m

6 23

7

140
lJ lZl
~ 122
:E 117

]j

S
4
6

~'1\adar'•

3

...

9 19 .Jlt
'l'ue!ldaYI GIUT'MW
PhUadl'lphi a liB, ()(&gt;trctl ICB
Nf'W Ycrk ~. New Jersey lH
Q('VPiand liB. Atlanta I();
Portland 100. Goldt&gt;n Stn tf tfl

J

15
13
1B
18

MIDDLEPORT - The M~lgs
eighth grade boys eager bounced
back from a 47·43 Ibss to Federal·
Hocking to defeat Southern 5649 In
recent hardwooq action.__
Against F-H, Wes Howard led the
way with 15 points while Kevin
Oiler added 12. Other Meigs scorers
Included Matt , Baker with seven,
Jared Sheets six, and Todd Powell
three. S. Blrchwellled F-H with 17.
Coach Rusty Bookman's crew
could convert only nine of 28 tree
throws, that mainly responsible'for
their downfall while F -H made 15 of

CoUege scores

""
1111 -

19 10 .fll6
16 13 .562
14 1~ .m
14 15 .'lliJ

I:W
3l U6 lal

.15 Ill

No gartiH !lt'hedUJed

WE8TERN CONFERENCE
MJdwe1JI DtvWon
Denvt&gt;r
17 ll
.617 Hwslon
17 ll

Oollas

9

tot 140 112

. ,..,...,.. o.,._

.63.1 ..,.

15 \3

6

12 12

23

..187 C!lf.l

Chicago
Atlanta

....

6
5

No games sch«t\1100

Detro!!

CI('Yt•land

19 9
15 15

INNERSPIIfiG

Meigs eighth graders
bounce back with win

111
~ 112 135

t

Edroonton

.7116 1
3'i2 71/l
.UI 11 ¥,

18

us

MondaY• Gama

EAS1ERN OONPERENCE
!UIMdc DfvWon
W L Pet. GB
Z'l 5 .!fll -

ll

Tl

s

111

n m w

J

11
11 17

~

Vancouv..-

NaUonal BM.kelhall "-dadon
By Thr ~~'rea~

MJ]Wll UIW!&gt;

lS7 tJJ

...,....,.,_s

Ca lgary
1...a1 Angeles

NBA resull!l

Cftatral Dtvb!Aon
]9 lJ

~

.......

Tcronto

Sunday, Jan. Ill

New Jer.;ry
N('W York

43 14l

1

16
H
11
10

Si. """'
Ml"'""" a

22 6
\6 13
l2 17
l2 19

7

19 12
12 ts

Boston
14 15 5 lJ 122 116
Har1ford
12 15 4 :II IW Ll5
CAMPBELL OONPlll~CE

(()Ill~ (.'h.npioM~

Wa~; lllnli:'foo

18 10

u

Ran~
N.....,. Je~

Sacurday, Dee. II

W LT PtaGF GA
9 5 4J 142 96

19

.

Bavelaa eliminated Scott Lambdin of Doyll!lltown, Pa., 7-6, 6-2. He
won the first-set tiebreaker 7·3 _to
stop Lambdin, who earlier In the day
won a flnt-IUWid match frlm Song
HYIIJIII-Suk d. Soulh Korea, 6-0, 6-4.

COST

LOOKING FOR ROOM -The Blue llqllad'a Paul Lewis or Bolton
UnlvenHy, lookA for room as lila blocllel'll Chris Babyar (6t0) or Illinois
and Mark Shupe (46) of Arboaa state make room. 'l'be Blue squad lotlt
to lhe Gray learn 33--6 Tue!!day In lhe C7th t1111111al Blue-Gray Allltar
Claulc. (AP Laserphoto).

WAI..O OONFEKENCE

Wild c..nt Gamt~~
SMW'day, Dee 22
Sesttl&lt;' 13. L.A . Raiders 1

Bostcri
Phlladrlphla

__
_
-,

'cllarnpioaablpL

four major tennlllounllmlllta.

PRICE CUTS
14°/o to 6()0/o OFF

MAnRESS

N...W Hod!.ey ~.apt

16-yer dlvlllon latothethlrdfOUikiof
the RoleXInternatiOnaljunlortennls

BELOW

I

Nldio.W FOOihall LetCUe Pla)"DffB

TENNm
PORT WASHINGTON, N.Y.
(A,P) -Top-lledTU»Bavelu
ot G~ and bu1JHeeded Lome
Goldber8 ot Canida paced the Bays

lakl1l&amp; the

liiiSCEUANEOV8
LONDON CAP)- Ftrthesec:ond
COIII(!!:IIttve year, American track

CLE .

Lamps~.,....
· ~

FIRM

NFL playoffs

twoloM8.

Andover, Malll., 7-6, 6-1,
1ie1J1 E kel" 7-3.

LAMPS

field goal with 7: 57 lett In the first
ba!t, but the South responded by
moving 70 yards for Its second
touchdown. Page finished the 1().
play drlvewith a 14-yardtouchdown
pass to Rice.
Revelz kicked his first two field
goals In lhe third period for a m
South advantage and, after the
Carruth-Rtce touchdown, added
two more In the final pedod.

NHL results

Ollel'll flrtlleawBrd, GretzkyiCOI'l!d
tour pJI and IIM!D ' " ' " ' In lhe
four ps1a - In two vlcUrleB and

6 DAYS ONLY! HURRY!

Sale Ever
"EW HIDE-A-BEDS
.
SAY£
::t.95 $19995
suo

The Deily s.rtinei-P8ga 5

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'80

•
.. .. ...

2-Ch~

Realistic

u.

FM Intercom

�Weclnnlfey, Deaember 21. 1884

MI!Uell art. Ohio

The Deily Senti 1111-Pig

Pomeroy.,--Middlaport. Ohio

SMU upset by tiny
NAJA five in classic
HONOLULU (AP)- Charntnade
Coach Merv Lopes compares his
unlikely gtant-ldllers to a song that,
at le8st for the I'IIOO'II!flt, Is No. 1 on
the hit parade.
"Not too many peopii believe Ia
Cbamlnade, not )'l!ar in and year
out," Lopes said. "One upset and
then they tend to forget you, you
disappear from their memory: It's
like ~ hit song, So we just want to
keep on reminding them we are for
real.''
1
Chamlnade, a tiny NAIA school,
surfaced for the third Christmas in a
row to make believers of majoccollege basketball. After an upset of
then-12th ranked Loulsvtlle In the

~I round, the Sllverswords won
their own Western Airlines ChamlnadeBuketbaUCias8lconn-lay
. with a 71-70 stunner over fourthranked Soutllem Method1st,
"Every team Ia even when the
game starts,'' Lopes said. "I don't
let us put anybody on a pedestal. We
start side by side."
In 1982, Chamlnade shocked the&gt;
basketball world with an upset o1
then top-ranked VIrginia, then
followedayearlaterwlthanupeetol
Louisville. Bui
said the Wln
over previously unbeaten SMUmay
bavebeen the blgaest victory yet.
For a time Tuesday; It !rolled asH

nme·

r.oPes

I

lr · ~eorgetown

bmzer ~ beat Loulsvbllle 8'7.jiii Saturday,
Inbounded the bal1llelball ball to Keith Whitney wtlh
no time remaining. Whitney bll aconlmverslal20-fool
shot to give Chamlnade a victory over previously
Wlbealen Soutllern MethodiRI (AP Laserpholo).

remains top
team in poll

•

,.

~ Steelers

1

")"
.
'

-----

---·

-

PRICES IN EFFECT TH U SAT., DEC ..Z9, 1

New 'fear'• he
Dance 9 p.m. ta
I a.m. Nati-1
Guard Armory

s 99
Round Steak ••• 1
s S9

Sl5 Per Coaplt

I.Y.O.I.
Ticlcell IMJ bo
purdlaHol at Fruth
Phar"*J, or bJ
ceiling:
304-675-3l50 or
304-675-1393.

U••S.D.A. CHOI&lt;E

rewardfortheplayers, thefans,and
ByTIMUorl'A
the coaches," Fry said. "I'm not
AP Sport&amp; Writer
saying we're 'not trying to win ...
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) - Two
These kids are missing an opportunteams that suffered through poor
Couv••s ,.. ,"' -~..
Ity to be at hOme with their fanrllles
finishes In the regular football
for the holidays.
season are looking to the Inaugural
Freedom Bowl as an opportunity to r--'-~--------..1..------------+
erase some of the'bad memories.
The Texas I.ooghorn8, who lost
their final two games to finish 7-4-1,
meet the Iowa Hawkeyes, who went '
R.C. COLA
1-2-1 In their final fOur games and
I
l'lc.
ended up 7-3-1, meet tonight In the
16 eL
bowl game at Anaheim Stadium.
, , Sfg
Kickoff will be 5 p.m., PST.
, , , Sfg
Texas Coach Fred Akers wants
CIGARETTES
APPLES
LETTUCE
his team to enjoy Its trip to
California.
HD.
Lbs
¥1 Go!.
''It's a reward for a football
team," Akers said at a press
conternce. "Iwouldbeupsetlfallwe
lB.
did was comeoutand think about the
'
$
game. Wewouldmlssagreatdealof
SLICED
1.29 lB.
what a bowl really Is.
"We're a howl team. So you
BONELESS
SJ.19 lB.
generaU~ gave players who know
SUPERIOR
lB.
how to turn on and tum off. They
should know when business takes
STORE SLICED
S1.49lB• .
the place of pleasure."
Iowa Coach·Hayden Fry has his
All WHk
All Week
team thinking the same way.
LUNCH
CAKES
50 LB. UNCL
"We treat a bowl game as a

LB• .

........

'"' sc!.

OSU play~r
•
recovenng
from wounds

&amp; PIES

u:. SJ 39,......
· IIOUGHTON'S

2% MILK

$179

lEG. I 010

DR.· PEPPER
~:~ S1 1,......
9

4/Sl
IONUS&amp;

•

CHICKEN

T·highs

I.·w•1u.,,, ""'
BREAD

OZ.

2/89(

39&lt;

II.

GAY "90"

w''" ,,,,, l•"•

BREAD

GROUND BEEF

.

20 Oz.

69&lt;
-~---

R.C. COLA

,16 ...
$1'19
Oz.
P.D.

limit t
Ex~~o

Ctu,.n

U-11-14

Gal

IIOUGHTON'5

. UOtlqHTON'5

c- ,.,.

n-lt -14

Sausage •••••••• ~··

~--------------)
I
COUPON

G"' wu,.,•v O•lg

CRUNCH TWISTS

ICE MILK
u.:::. ~·t. $p9
c._ r.,. 2-11-14

U•.S. MO. 1 WHITE

GOCHI OniJ Powtll'1
Goad WtciMsday, Oec. 26, 1914

$169
2°/o Milk •••••••••
Lg. Eggs ...~'i...... 63 (

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS

GAl.

*FREE*
.

. BREAKFAST FOR J'WO AT .

SHONEY'S

Downey ••••••• ~!~~·
:

••
•••

. Call Collect (304) 773·5710

Point-Mason Auto Glass
...... w••••

•

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

•

MAXWEU HOUSE

COFFEE

3LI.$629

CAN

Omit 0.. , . , .._ ,
GMII CW, At Pewllt's
Gfftr b .... he. 29, 1914

I

I

•

I

o

•

I

.

IIUNT'S .

-

.

.•

•• • TOMATO JUICE
•
•• •
Limit 3
•• : 46 Oz.
Pltast
••
Ullllt , ... Clllt•
o
•

·~··· ~················

l.~

: .

'

: 69(
..

o.IIIIIIJ AI hwtll's

•9f!tr Ellflm he. It, 1914

.~6.o:

••••

Sherbet .............

.....COlTPON •••••
..... •'
.••••••
-

COnONELLE

TOILET TISSUE

99(

4 Roll
Pkg.

e
' •

~····~··········

POTATO CHIPS
7.iiz~z.

:

limit One Por Ctnt-r
Goetl Only AI hwtll' 1

'

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I.
I.

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I
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BAll JAR MUGS

. I

c-

Unlit OM hr
Goetl Ototy At .......
Offor bplm Doc. 29, 1tl4

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Goad Ollly ...
Goetl f.-,, he. 21, 1914

••••• COOP(fi''
• • •••••
•••• •
•• • • • •
•
PUREX DETERGENT
147

1·

59( l

mSY

ROSS

GAY 90'S BREAD

:,o.·39&lt;
a.
u.lt

hell

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11.3 9

·2/Sl,o.....

QUART

•

RUfFlES-lEG.

I
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Sl 39 .---------------

IIORDEN

9
7
1

•••
• ••••••
·····cou:pm-·······• .·····coull(W·······
'
.

•

. MERRY CHRISTMAS &amp; HAPPY NEW YEAR

I

Mince Pie
$

FABRIC SOFTENER ,

610/ Thnltg O•IIJ

L.------------- _J

CHERRY, PEACH, PUMPKIN or

·Crackers ••••·•••• ~~.

~-------------,-------------...I
COUPON

Goad 1'11un41er, Doc. 27, 1914

LLOYD HARRIS .

ZEST A

3/Sl ,

Limit 3 Per Customer ·

VALLEY BELL

II We Replace Your Windshield During The Month Of
December. We Will Not Be Undersold. Bring Your
Estimates To Us And We Will Meet Or Beat Any
Competition Wholesale .And Retail. When You Read
This Ad We Are As Close As Vour Telephone And Will
Come To Your Door With Free Mobile Service,
However II You Come To Our Shop For Windshield
Installation During December You Will Also Receive A
Free Decorative Door Mirror' Along With Your
Shoney's ncket.

Laserpholo)

IOz.

Potatoes ••••••••••

11.33

.I

KEEILER

10 LB. BAG

the Giants Into the NFC semifinal
against the 49ei's, whose 15-1 record
was the best ··- n " '

VINTAGE PUNTER- Even
lhOUih Chlcap Belin' J11111*er
Dave FJnzer ...-e.! oalr llllb Ia
lenni ol yards per Jdlld, lie II'U
llr8t bt Idcldng pwa lbat lulded
In an oppoaent's 20-yard line.
Bean'.coacll Mike Dllka - II
811 an bnportant faclllr Ia
Sunday's pme agalnlt llle
Wilmington Redsklns. (AP

\

BANANAS
3lbi.Sl

$149

HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED

89&lt;

69&lt;
2% MILK

Lunch Meat •••••••
LB.

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flO ZEN

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11.

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$419

FROZEN FlYERS

The total value of the double coupon may not excee4
'1.00. • Any manufecturar's coupon greater than
61 ¢ will be redeemed at
face velue only, • Only one
manufacturer's coupon nAtr tl ·
item. • The total value of the
double manufacturer's coupon cannot exceed thli '
purchase price of the item.
Money will not be refunded.
• This offer does not aot,lvl
to Powell ' s Super Ve1u
Coupons. free coupons, or
any competitor's coupons.
• This offer excludea cigarettes. or any other items
prohibited byb law. • Offer
is only good for products on
hand. NO Rainchecks. •
There ia a limit of 20 cou·
pons you may redeem .

ED

POTATOES

som

27, 28, 29 ·

Chuck Roast ••• · 1

PORK SHOULDER.............
PORK ROAST ...............
POLISH SAUSAGE ............ 99&lt;
LUNCH MEATS..........

All Wuk
PEPSI COLA

December :

11

3 29¢

10&lt;

Thursday ·
Friday
and
Saturday

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

Ground Beef ...... 99(

respect Broncos' defense ·

By 1be !U!Joclated Press
spent much of the last week drllllng
. Nobody In pro football appre- Denver on defending against the
'. clatesdefensemorethan Pittsburgh blitz. "The Steelers blltz a lot more
: · Coach Chuck Noll, who assembled than most people," Reeves said . .
: the Steel Curtain that produced four
Nobody, however, blitzes more
•· Steeler Super Bowl championships.
than the Chicago Bears, who led the
~ So Pittsburgh goes Into SundaY:s · league In rushing defense, total
;.. American Football Conference se- defense and set a rerord with 72
·• mltlnal game with proper respect
quarterback sacks. The Washing·: for the Denver Broncos, who
ton Redsklns: hoping for a third
: allowed only 241 points all season,
straight trip to the SuperBowi,must
~ second lowest in the National
control theBeardefendersaswellas
: Football League,
handle Walter Payton, the NFL's
Noll was not surprised that the alltlme rushing leader.
: wild-card victories ol the New York
Redskin Coach Joe Gibbs, analys::..Giants and Seattle Seahawks were
Ing the films, said Chicago's most
constructed by stifling defenses that
frequent defensive set had produced
~' simply shut down the LOs Angeles blitzes almost three.quarters of the
; Rams and Loa Angeles Raiders.
times they lined up In It "What
":. , "Detenle has been Important In scares you offensively Is that they
_ .champloathlp footbali games as
force things, " Gibbs said. "Their
- • Joogulcanremeq~ber,"Nollsald.
Interior rushers, nobody can block."
:. "Bi!fOreyoucanwln,youhavetonot
Blitzing, of course, has Its price. It
"" ·~-"
leaves the defensive secondary/ In
.. Denver didn't lose very fre- man-to-man coverage and againSt
- quently, dropping only three gaines ·the Redsklhs that can mean trouble
~ all season. And the opportunistic
with receivers llke Art Monk, who
" Bronco defenders scored eight broke the NFL single season record
' 'touchdowns after forcing fumbles wlth 106 catches this season.
' and picking off passes. Noll, a
The Bears thought they would be
·, connoisseur of defense, wassu!tably playing In San Francisco this
::Impressed.
weekend but the New York Giants
. . Bronco Coach Dan Reeves knows changed those plans when they
the Strelers' reputatiOn for being upset the Los Angeles Rams In the· ·
stingy with yards 1111d points and NFC wild-card game. That thrust

C~upons

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

.....

' : Georgetown, which survived a
lilslt to New Mexico's inhospitable
· ~me Court, remained ·the unanimous selecton as the No. 1 team In the
' Associated Press Top Twenty
• ·basketball poll for the second
I
• consecutive week.
I,
The Hoyas, defending national
champions, drew all 56 first-place
, votes and 1,120 points In nationwide
voting Tuesday by sports writers
and broadcasters; Georgetown eas~ Uy outpolled Duke, which remained
• second with 1,028 points.
Coach John Thompson's George-.
~· town team won two games last
week and for tlv&gt; first time In nine
, games this season, wound up with a
• victory margin less than 20 ponts .
1be Hoyas had to hold on against a
. , fl,u'lous second-hall rally to escape
~v
• New Mexico with a 69-61 triumph In
\ ·~
: Its first road game In the contlnen.....
,.._,
United States this season after
READY TO MAKE IUS MOVE -Oklahoma's Wayne Tisdale
• winning a pair of games in Hawaii.
gets set to make his move to the.basket as Louisville's Mal"k McSwain,
:
Duke extended Its perfect record
left, and BarTy Bumpter defend during llr8t baH action Tuesday In the
· through seven games wlth victories
Western Airlines Chamlnade Clas8lc played In Honolulu. Tisdale scored
• over Davidson and Northwestern.
28 points as Oklahoma won 00-'72. (AP Laserpholo).
Memphis State, with 997 points,
• . remained third after victories over
to Japan for victories over Arizona Kansas( Michlgan, North Carolina
• Kent State and Iowa.
State and Wichita State and the State , Indiana, Virginia Tech,
•
Soutlv&gt;m Methodist jumped two Sun-tory Ball title.
Oklahoma, Louisiana State, Louisi• positions to fourth, Improving to 9·0
llllnois, with 708 points, fell from ana Tech and Lou!svllle.
:: with three victories last week. That fourth to eighth after suffering Its
~ Included a nine-point decision over
second loss in 13 games, a 63-62
College ratings
•· Oklahoma In Hawaii. The Mus- decl~lon to Loyola, Ill . De Paul , 7-2,
; tangs had 968 points.
suffered the same fate, falling from
:
St. John's, Syracuse a nd North fifth to ninth with 511 points. The
' Carolina each moved up three Blue Dem ons fell to Western
•· places In tbe poll. The Redmen.
Michigan last week 65.64 before
~ eighth last week, received m
tallying for a 61-56 victory ove r
' polnls to take fifth place. St. John's
Northwest ern.
• won Its ooly game of the week - an
Georgia Tech, 6-1, rounded out
:: ~9 nationally televised victory
the Top Ten with 499 points. The
:- over UCLA - In improving to 6-1.
Syracuse, 6-0, and North Carol- Yellow Jackets had two easy
Ina, 7.0, received 743 and 722 points, victories during the week, a 38-polnt
respectively. The Orangemen won romp over North Carolina A&amp;T and
their only game last week, an 84·63 a 31-polnt decision over Augusta
rout of Utica, while the Tar Heels College.
The Second Ten Is Washington,
. ' ventured across !he Pacll!c Ocean

:..181

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Chamlnade's magic would ilnally _:Sil:.v_:e.::rs_:wo_;,rds~.------

Texas hopes to.
·make up ·for bad
memories ·~night ·
CELEBRATII'l'G A CHRISTMAS VICfORY - ·
Cllamlaade'• Mark Rodrigues sits oo top ollhe basket .
.,.. celebralell Ids learn's 71-70 victory over Souihern
~ M~ Ia the Western Airlines Chamlnade Classic
~ : ~ Day In Honolulu. W. Rodrlga"''• whose

Double
Manufacturer's

We Resern The Ri&amp;ht To
Limit Qu~ntities

falLSMUhelda70.ftlleadwhenCarl
Wright blocked a shot by Chamlnade's Mark Rodrigues with
seconds to go.
,
After a scramble, Wrlghtcameup
with the ball as the final second
ticked off the clock. But Wright's
foot was out of hounds and, because
the lluzzertuidn'tsounded, thegatne
offtclalsgaveChamlnadetheoppOrtunlty to try a final shot
That's all the chance Chaminade
needed. As the .buzzer soonded,
Keith WhitneY'S . 20-foot sh9i
bounced on the rim and fell through
forthewlnnfngpolnts. Itwasthellth
victocy in 15 games for the

7

hr Cat t
CW,At .....t
... 29, ltM

�Paga 8 The Deily Sentinel

From
ConsumerReporcs
By llle Edllora .
ol Comwner ReporU
With the party season well

underway, many people turn to
over-~unter pa!JI remedies to
deal with their holiday excesses.
Ordinary aspirin or ~tcetamlnophen
have been the traditional drugs
used to counter that aching head.
Recently a new painkiller Ibuprofen - has joined the battle.
In many respects, Ibuprofen, sold
under the brand names Advll and
Nuprin, works the way· same as
aspirin and acetomlnophen. lbu·
profen has been approved as a safe

Today's topic:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednudey. December 26, 1984 ··

Coping with headaches that follow holiday festivities
and effective over-the-counter drug
the U.S. Food and Drug
AdmiJIIstratton.
Studies Indicate that one tablet
containing ;!00 m!Ulgrams of lbu,
profen had about ·the samf' pain·
relieving effect as a 650 mlUlgram
dose of aspirin or acetaminophenthe amount that yoU'd normally get
In two standard aspirin tablets.
Like aspirin and acetaminophen,
Ibuprofen Is also effective In
reducing fecer.
However, Consumer ~ports'
medical consultants say that Ibuprofen Is much more effective than

by

either of the others for relief of
menstrual cramps.

A 400 mllllgram dole rt the drug

Is apparently IJlOre effective than

the old standbys at rellevlng
post-surgical dental pain and
sprains, according to the studies.
Ibuprofen Is more expensive !han
plain aspirin. The medical consultants say that It yOU have no health
reasons for avoiding aSpirin, a
generic or store brand typically
costs much less than the new drug
whlle still providing adequate pain
relief.
The medical consultants caution
that Ibuprofen Is not for everyone.

Wh1Je It can be used safely by most
healthy adults, Its use by some
people can be risky.

Undetected kidney lmpalnnellt and
hypertension often . ~ older
people; both problefn&amp; can be
aggravated by Ibuprofen.
.The medical consultants also
explain that It people .who are
allergic to aaplrin take Ibuprofen,
they risk the same symptoms
they'd face It they tool( aspirin. For
those people, acetaminophen
should be substituted.
· The medical consultants add
that, although people with arthritis
are the most likely customers for·
large amounts of aspirin or lbu·
profeo, theY shouldn't try to
diagnose or treat the disease

For Instance, Consumer Reports'
medical consultants say that If
you'rt' pregnant or over 60, you
should avoid products such as Aavll
or Nuprln unless you first check
with your physician. (The use of
any drug during pregnancy Including over-the-counter pain
remedies - can Involve a risk, and
medical advice ' sliould be sought
before taking any.•
People In their late ro. and older
shOuld also check with their doctors
about the use of such pain relievers.

By ROBERT BYRD

programs have a success rate of
about 3J percent, said Lunette
ATLANTA (AP) - Thell'nage Is a Hayes, vice president of Atlanta's
familiar one - · a benevolent · Literacy Action. And with an
volunteer tutor working pa!lently estimated one .out of four Souonoon-one, week after week, teach- therners functionally llllterate,
Ing a proud butllllterateadulthowto that's not enough to solve "an
read.
absolutely monumental problem,"
'!be problem, 5ays an Atlanta she said.
literacy organization, Is that too
A recent report of the Library of
often, II doesn't work.
Congress said one American adult
'1)lose traditional adult literacy In eight can't read books.

- .People in the news---.

Uteracy Action, a non-profit reading and wlitlng at a lOth erade
group teaching adult Atlantans to · level, according to p!'!!Sident Vern
read for 15 years, has Junked Its Pulling.
traditional one-on-one volunteer
'!be key Is In the approach.
program and substituted . a new
"IJllteracy among adults Is not
concept In group teaching.
primarily a reading problem,'' he
"We've got a very lllnovative · explained. "And the conventtoDal
thing ... something very special," approach of teaching traditional
she said. "We may have a real ·reading skills lsn'tgolngto solve the
solution."
problem."
Uteracy Action can take aclassof
Rather, he said, the problem is
llllterate adults and, In less than a that adults who cannot read have
year of twice-a-week, 90-mlnute spent their whole Uves thinking
sessions, have 80 percent of them differently from the majority of the ·

.
.
•

themselves.
,.
Joint palil can arise from several
disorders, Inadequate treatment
can lead to ln'everslble joint
damage. '!be large doses of either
aspirin or Ibuprofen needed for
proper treatment substantially In· •
creases the. 'risk of side effects. ••
Check with your doctor before •'
taking any pain reliever more than
occasionally.
Send your questions to: Consu· •'
mers Union, Box DCB, 256 Washington St., Mt. Vernon, NY 10553. ,
Volume of mall prohibits personal ·•
•
repUes:

J

'
'
(

"Our students do not process
Information Uke the rest of America
does," Ms. Hayes said.
Tbeldea behlndUteracy Action's
program, based on studies by
University of Georgia reading
professor James Dlnnan, Is that
Illiterate people ''have developed a
whole language pattern slightly out
of sync with standard language
patterns," Pulllng said.
·
For example, ~ said, al-

•
.,''

;;;;rwen what "hot" and "cold"

meanings.
.
A stove, then, Is certainly "hot," · ::

but when something Is described as
"hot stuff," that has nothing to do
with stoves - and comprehension
breaks down.
The problem, In other words, Is
not understanding wotds.

•.

•

Patients will pay more for luxury hospitt~:l
Suburban, which Is a mUch push-bu~n panel at their side.
Despite the extra cost, which Is not
.o\...te~ Pre!ll Writer
smaller hospital with 375 beds, Is
For privacy, all patients are covered by Insurance, the wing has
BETHESDA, Md. (AP) - Des· trying to emphasize an approach admitted and discharged from the ' been full since It apened and has a
plte skyrocketing hospital and that will make patlents not only feel special wing.
waiting list, Ms. Vethmeyersald.
health care costs, a community at home, but want to come back
Mary Jo Moms, a Bethesda
hospital In this affluent Washlnglon again, If the need arises.
resident being treated for a disc
suburb has discovered that some
Bettie Powell, the head nurse In problem, said the atmosphere has
PRE-INVENTORY
patients will pay a little extra tor a Suburban's new wing saki she and not only helped her recuperation,
WHITE -ELEPHANT SALE
lotmoreluxw-ytohelpeasethepaln her staff "provide the same ' but cheered her husband as well.
of their hospital stay.
high-quality health care that Is
" 'He doesn't like hospitals, but this
"We ·serve not only local rest- available throughout the hospital- place haschangedhisattltude," she'
dents, but also diplomats, foreign but we also try to provide the little said. ''Thlslssopleasant,noljustfor
EVERYTHING
visitors and corporate executives- extras to make people happy."
me, but also the people who visit,"
· ExCluding Guns &amp; Ammunition
real die-hards who want to keep
Mrs. Morris said.
NOW THRU JAN. 5, 1984
Mrs. Powell's new unit , set apart
working even though they areslckAll of this comes at a price, of
and we want to provide elegant and by snver-handled doors,looks as ltlt course. The cost ranges from S:ll to
private surroundings for them was Ufted directly out of an opulent $100 over the price of a private room
during their stay," said Beth hotel. Instead of scrubbed-down tile on a regular medlcal·surglcal fl,oor,
Vethmeyer, assistant director of walls and floors, lntertor decorators which Is set at $195 a day.
POMEROY, OH.
public relations for SuburbanHospl· used textured waUpaper and
tal. "'Ibis · came about mainly carpets of a delicate purple, With
because our patients have re- touchesofblueandturquolse. Water
quested it." ·
colors and prints adorn the walls.
To meet the special demandsoflts
With the avallabWty of new
community, the non·protlt hospital
antiseptics
and other medical
opened a Df~WlY·remodeled wing In
advances,
It
Is
possible to substitute
September ileslgned to cater to the
carpets
and
wallpaper
tor tile and
more discriminating, and admitlinoleum, Ms. Wlluneyer said.
tedly wealthier, patient.
'!be nurses' station Is In the center
Health officials from around the
!'HILLS U ~LC IIVL IIIHII SA I Of_C LU. JlJ84
country say such amenities and of the floor, with computers for
specialty services are springing up checking patient records and speSUI'EIIOI 9 to II ll. AVG.
SlKED•••. s2.49 lb.
as hospitals compete for patients cial wprk siatlons for tl)ephyslclans.
Special lamps, rather than neon,
and become more buslnessUke.
"All hospitals are being forced to diffuse the light.
SUPERIOR
SHREDDED •••• s2.19 lb.
'!be 13 rooms In the unit are all
respond to the different needs of
their communities," said Kathy private, some with conference
Tol!arskl, a spokeswoman for the rooms or suites attached so that
HOMEMADE
American Hospital Association. families can stay with the patient or
meetings
can
be
held
during
the
"It's dramatic, the changes some
are going through. Marketing has patient's stay.
All the furnishings, from the light
become a very Important part of a
purple upholstery to tne blondpol·
hospital's planning."
The Idea of special units for VIP !shed wood nlghtstands, dressers
patients Is a farnWaroneto hospitals and dining tables, were designed
23 Oz. lrotlflhton'S
New Grsuch as Cedars-Sinal Medical Cen· with hospital safety features In
Cottage
CAIIAGE ... 111-...... 29c
ter In Beverly Hills, Calif., which has mind, butalsoblendwlththeelegant
ChttSt ......r.tv.. $1.39
. had specially decorated rooms for decor.
s Lb. lag Whitt
1·U.. ... lotono!Ouorton
Several rooms have small kitIts patients since the mld-1970s.
GRAPEMargarine .....~.. 79c
'!be 1,00bed Cleveland Clinic, chenettes and extra-large ba·
FRUIT ......~111. .. $J ,S9
lr.rt 12 Oa, 16 !Ilea Proc.
Wl)rld-renowned for lisheart and throoms, decorated with beige
3-lb. lag Nlw~low
Swiss
cancer cllnlcs, has offered special porcelain fixtures and touched up
ONIONS .....,........69c
Cht111 ..........nl 1.89
VIP quarters for nearly 40 years, with monogrammed linens.
begln111ng with such stars as Mary
Pickford. The clinic converts reguA choice of gounnet dinner
lar rooms Into special suites, entrees - served with wine If the
furnished with antiques and fine physician allows - are provided,
II OZ. IANQUET oR· MORTON'S
rugs, for Its affluent guests or and are served with china, sllver
foreign dignitaries.
and crystal. The chetrroma popular
'!be demand began to boom In the Wnshlnglon restaurant bas outlined
1970s, and the cllnlc Is planning to the menu.
2 ll. ORE-IDA GOlDEN
add 22 additional prtvate suites In a
Breakfast trays are adorned with
new wing that wW open next a rosebud In a crystal vase. Patients
\GJL
September, according to · Frank are able to dlm the llghls, turn on the
television or adjust their bed from a
Weaver, dlrettor of public alfalrs.
17 OZ. ROYAl PRICE

1OO/o-50°/o OFF

'

Bulimia an epidemic, Fonda says
NEW YORK (AP)- Actress Jane Fondasaysshespent "23years

of agony" suffering from bullmla, repeatedly stuffing herself with
food and then vomiting, 15 to 3J times a day.
Ms. Fonda, ~7. a leader bi the physical fitness movement, said, "I
would literally empty a refrigerator. I spent most of every day either
. thinking.about food, shopping for It, or blnglng and purging. It's an
addiction like drugs or alcohol. And U Is tremerniously debWtatlng."
She said In an Interview In the January Issue of Cosmopolitan
magazine that bullmla "Is something I never talk about. Never. And
the only reason I'm doing so now Is that the disease has reached
epidemic proportions: :ll percent of American women are suffering
right now.
"Bullmla wW destroy their llves. I knOw."
Ms. Fonda said she suffered from bullmla from age 12 to l\ and
overcame It when she was pregnant with her second child, Troy,
because •'the choice was between being a good mother and wife and
being a bulimic."

Most memorable are those missed
NEW YORK (AP) -

Actor James Coco and Cosmopolitan
magazine edltoc Helen Gurley Brown say that among their most
memorable New Year's Eves are ones they missed.
"I rushed home a day early from tllmlng 'The Man In La Mancha'
In Italy to attend a very hot party given by my buddy Nell Simon,"
Coco said of his New Year's Eve In 1972.
"I was so excited by this party that I went out and bought a new
suit, which I carefully laldout'next tome whlle I toooka short nap to
recover from Jet lag," he told FamUy Weekly magazine. "Wouldn't
you know It, the next conscious moment I knew was 11 a.m. New
Year's Day. I'd missed the biggest party of the year."
Ms. Brown said her worst New Year's Eve was "when I was a
single girl and I'd bought yards of pink Oannel and white lace and
made several nightgowns tor seven straight hours so I didn't have to
deal with the fact that I was alone. I sewed right through the bells
ringing."

Personal material donated to BYU
PROVO, Utah (APJ - Actor Jimmy Stewart has donated
personal papers; films, photographs and movie posters spanning his
00 years In show business to Brigham Young University.
• . · · Stewart Is to appear Feb. 1 at the university for the start of a
· Weeklong event called "IDs Wonderful Lite: A Tribute To James
Stewart," said Sterling Albrecht, a librarian In the university's
Harold B. Lee Library.
The actor Is to receive an award and attend a screening of his
personal favorite rum, "It's a Wondedul Lite:·
"Stewart Is one of the all·tlme giants In the motion picture
Industry, and we are honored to have his papers In our coUectlon,''
saki ~ames D'Arc, curator of the llbracy'sArtsand Communications
Archives.

r-------------.J.._;________-'---:-

DEPARTMENT STORE
Plwrw 742-2 I 00

BONELESS HAMS ••••••'!~~ts:~JI:'J. 52.29

....,..
...•

.WITH NO PAYMENT .UNTIL 'FEBRU'A iY

..
•

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~-

CHARLOTI'E, N.C.

The first time palllletlgel'S on the
Piedmont Airlines tllght from Houston to Charlotte thought
sornethlng was unusual was when they beard sleigh bells over the
publlc addreu system. Then they caught gllm)lle of the pilot.
stehtng their Jet-propelled sleigh waa Bob Koontz, a Jolly,
white-bearded man dressed In a familiar red suit and bifocals.
''There just aren't enough reindeer to go around, 10 we let Santa
take them," Koontz said. "And In thl8 day orspl!ed and tecllnoloiY,
you have to be able to move fast. Alrplanee'are good i:lr that."
A Piedmont pilot for 22 yeara, Koontz volunteerl tor Clu1stmas
Eve duty so he can play Santa. Besides rln8lni llelllh bells. the
52-year-old gives children cookies, toys and ornaments from a large
plastic sack.

(AP) -

·

"I mlslled a year a whlle ago and It just didn't seem Uke
Chrlltrnas.'' he said. "Aaults are SOOiewhat taken aback, but IQds
are tlu1lled. A few years aao. one little boy ran up to me, hugm my
leg and laid, 'Tbanb fQr the b~. "'

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linl&lt;'d lldiiS, crui~ . ,_M radio. WSW radial
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INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••• J:l. S5.19

'8982.
1984 VOLKSWAGEN
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2 dr .. 4 cy l.. 111\r cond., tl('atf'r. r, :.Peed. PB.
hod)· side mnuldinP.s.. "WW roof- tlnled ~lass .
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t!unrd:\. hlK'kct sca t!\. rt'nr window dfffll(ler.
srnck NtJ ~- ·

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1985 FORD F-150

Dc!luxe Tutone. V·ll t&gt;nlil. 302. auto. !ran~ .. PS,
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Aat1Jile11. rear ~ tcp bumper. air cond .. AM
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lock mirrilrs. wheel cover!= sport, rusl
prooflnR . Swck No . S6W

•T2,907. 10
'11,(6'1.
1985 FORD RANGER

••

~10.85].10

'

•

r

114 W~l BaM-. Exoforer Pka A.. 4 cyl ..
nuto trans.• PS . RRW'el\. rear s t~p bumper.
brU:tht low m! mirrors StDCk No . SSil.

'9486. ••
••
1985 FORD F-150
•.

V-R&lt;'l'lg . m . auto. tran s .. PS. PH. looR widt
bt&lt;d. knitted vin.vl seal. RaUM~!ol . tinted ~lan .
whed cover!'i !IPDrt. ~·P2 15-75 R·15 !Ires.
Stock No .'i706

.,.'

••

•

~fi.68P

'10,316.
1985 FORD F-250

ficvl .. 4 s~d . PS. Pl\. lonRwid&lt;&gt; ,bed. rear
step hum per. aux rea r sprlnflS . tlnted ~tau ,
AM radio. stock No 5682
WAS
,
NOW

12,315.
'10,852.
.1984 FORD F-150

1

XLT f'luc .. 351 &lt;'OIL. 6100 UVW Pkll: .. ' ·• ton
pickup. auto. Iran ~ .. PS. PR. lo~ wide bed ,
llmi!ed !ollip reilr :u:l&lt;&gt;. lrniler towinA aKa..
Mmll(es. n!JU: step bumper chrome. auxilllry
fuel tank . tinted alas~ . Ull wh~l . AM ~ F'M
radio stereo. whee l c'ovt'r!ol sport. Prot~dlon
g:mup , Cnn\lcnicncf' Grot!p. Stoi:k No. 5181 .
WA!ol

..••
'·
•..

i
'•

..

NOW

113,547.
15,571.
1985 FORD F-250

1

o4x4 . 6

~1 ..

4 speed. PS , PI\ , lonR wick; bed;

M&amp;tW;~ . s lidinR rear

AM radio Stock

RlaM , rear step bumper ,

Nn . ~'i

W.\R

NOW

12.986.
'10,989. '
1985 FORD E-14
CARGO VAN

1

11

6.100 1.8. GVW . · ~ ton pickup, V·l . aut:o.
tranll .. PS . PO . gause•. au!lillary fuel tanlt ,

nlr cond .. li11ted alus. tilt wheel . WSW Li~ .
wl)rel cnvtl'!! ~port , radial tires. fixed !Ide
door a:lus. RxM rear door p;laM . Stock No .
!\8!12.
WAS

NOW

15,185.
13,148.
1985 FORD
BRONCO
Stork
56.17
1

1

Nn .

II

I

m•.

'10,300.
1
~a.1111 7,
13,900.
1984 LINCOLN
TOPAZ
CONTINENTAL MARl V.l l 1984 MERCURY
Rir c..Jnd .. 1\eatcr, IIIUln. lranll ..
\'.,. , olr rond . vinYl roor. healer. auto . 2 dr .. 4

1

C~J..

'·..

10 OL NISCAFE

NHW

emu! . vinyl . rfM1r'. 'healer. auto.
t'rn·~ .. ·PS , 1'0 . hodv 's\dc m()uldin~u . lihted
llMI~ . AM •P'M rodlo . WSW rndial 1\res.
wtl~l ,•m·t&lt;r!'. ~l ock No. ~WJ:t.

lnllrl

ALUMINUM FOIL •••••••••••••~o.x. '1.29 ,.,,.

.JUICES •••~••••••••••••••••••Ss-1'1. 3/S1.19

~10,085.

•

. \'.a. rtir

No,

II lfKH REYNOlDS

7 OZ. TIOPICANA

•

~f , ~ater .

\' .1\,

CORNED· BEEF •••••••••••••••••C.O.'l. S1.69

MIXED FRUIT ••••••••••••••••••~~ •••• 89&lt;

\\'AS

NUW

12 OL AIMOUR

CHUNKY CHICKEN ••••••••••••••••• 89C

P11. body ~ l&lt;lf' mouldings . tint erlJCIU!I. stereo
mirror~ . humper p. uard~ .
hul·ke1 seats.. rear win~~- df&gt;follRer. Stock
No. 4001

!apr. . rmnnl£'

18995.
19.18 ~PLYMOUTH ..
'9995. .
. .nir mnrl VOLARE
. . .. auto.
. . 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA
vinyl .
1

SAUERKRAUT ~ •••••••••••••••••••JJI.r••• 97&lt;

Can

C:TI tSilverl
2 rlr .. ~ ('YI.• il lr cond .. henlt'r . :'!speed trans ..

)

\\' ,\S

SOL SWANSON

746'7.

1

NOW

1984 V.W. RABBIT

$6 388. 00

Plus Any Applicable Taxes &amp; Fees

auto. trans .. PS. rear !lltp bumJ&gt;t:r, brillhi
law mt . mirrors. AM radio. ruSI proofinA .

1

NO. 4s.r.62 '
"' "~: · ';

V~SIC

POPCORN ••••.•••••••••••••••••• .a.•JL •••• S9&lt;

'

;·

~ow

TOilET TISSUE •••••••••••••••• r:~e 51.39

2 ll. GENEIIIC

·

.;7'595;.. . : . . . '7070.~1

~ rir ,. , t~Ntnri . n l' l,tl.. ·riir rond.: vmtl rOOf.
h~t1f('r . nut•J . trOn!-:. .. J&gt;lii . 'Pli. poWer windQ;...s ,'
' tirli«&lt;'J!ln~.,; Ill.! whft.l'. erUi!'if'. W~W rlidial
tirfi!'i _ ~tnck . ~o 4111~1.. ..: .' •. '

' 55995.

.

~i!:';c~~~~~n~~~!;i~!:c~i:s~~:· ,':~

rtr:.

· .

•u ,231:

. · · IABBIT . .

' :.!
~ (·yl., .hentt&gt;r. -l " :.l)('e:d. hod~· . side
m~Juldin~~:s. lll)tetl 11111~ . Stock No . ~:11~5 . •.

·., ·. ·, ··.

'

. 19i4 VOlkSWAGEN

8495.-

1

.,,. ,~

'

i'13.o41• ·

'

~499~.
W'S . • . '
.
' ~J,' .
. . . ·.~
. '3995.
1U95. ~ .
. Jl81:1.
·:USl:MERCURY:UNX · · .. l982·A-.c CONCORD
.~ ~r . : .~ 1':-IJ .. ·'tlt,nt('r.• ~ !I~.' .AM ·ra&lt;llo .

4 IOU PACK WHm ClOUD
32 OZ.

1984 FORD LTD

·)\C':lf{'r. il uln. trar" .. ~ .· Pit .,Ower windoW!!.
, Jlil.'A'r-r se:ll. Pl~'l'l' ~r IOl:kll. to:ly sldt&gt;
n'li)Uidina!l. linterl J:la!l!'i, tOt' w~l. trUillC.
' Mt'l -fi'M nadia. ~t~r~ ln~ . WSW fadlal tlrts . .

.scOCk Nn · ti-IOI'.o .

Delivered .

-1oa"
Wheelengine
Base
.
• PRICESINCJ.UDE
·4.
Cylinder
-Standard Transmission
t'REIGIITAPRF:P.
· Vinyt ~ Bench Seat
!il11Jt'K NJ. S67H 1
-Radial Tir..

stock No. 56A9.

1981 PONTIAC
BQNNEVU!E
nr.. :J7.fH1 mll~ . V-8. :tlr cOnd.. ,vinYI roof.

:!

FORD RANGER PICKUP

1985 FORD RANGER
11-4 Wheel baH. drlUXf' IUt&lt;lllt' peint. 6 CYI ..

DEMO'S

~hort

tmmper. llnll'd

m:::4!;,..1· ,· h~a'l ijf ..4 !'i~. f~ ; radial tire~ . ·

wtw-fl

YAMS •••••• ~····•••••••••••• ~ •••••••• J~•••• 79&lt;

17 OL DElMONTE CHMY

For Regular Service
or for Prices

1980 VOLKSWAGEN
PICKUP
!lprcrl .
wid&lt;' bed. rear step

WlthTo~.r

:!

FRENCH FRIES ................. 5·1.49

WE ARE LOCATED IN THE
ASHLAND BUILDING
ON ·ROUTE 124 IN MINERSVILLE

.'8995.

1973 FORD COURIER

••
. •.

8.8% APR .Financing is on dOW vehltles for U months wilh 17000
maximqm and 2.S~ down on approv~ credit through December on
all new 1984 cars and trucks In stock. Yhls means: a monthly
payment of $31.71 per $1000 borrowed. Rebates If any, Remain With
Selling ,D ealer.

NOW

$9995..

•'

TV DINNERS •••••••••••••••••••rJ.•••••• 99&lt;

Santa.pilots Piedmont flight

\\'.\R

,

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••• J~•• S1.2 9

DOXOL PROPANE
HAS MOVED INTO
A NEW LOCATION

I)UI'SftJIO Patkalllf' wlllll TOPPff

iiMml~~. li C}JI .. 4 speed, llS. P~ . lonp; Wldehed. rear step hum per. rail;.- whet-Is.
air ~nnct .. tinted Rlalis. A.M ·Ji'M radih ; radial tlte!'i. tuton~ paint . Stock No. 57111 .

'

BOILED HAM ....................~•• 51.9 7

BUCKEYE GAS PRODUCTS

8

'

OEM

.8%

Financing
· A.P.R. On All New
~. 1984. Cars And Trucks
No.w In Stockl

~:

..
•

SPECIAL
YEAR END
·SAVINGS
ON ALL

• NO DEALERS PLEASE • ·
SALE BEGINS DEC. 26th, AT 9:00 A.M. ENDS DEC~ 31st, 12 NOON.

'

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

Helen Gurley Brown

HURRY! HU.RRYI· HURRY!
First Come First Served ·Basis!

OVER
, 200·NEW
.AND .
PRE-OWNED
TO .CHOOSE
FROM

mean when he hears them, he may
"mlsflle" those words In his mind, ·,
andnever8S!10Clatethemwlthother .•
words or understand other .

By SUSANNE SCHAFER

James Gx:o

/

·~

thnn11h a non-reading person knows

population.

The Deily Sentinei-Pttgl 9

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.,

Group overhauls the way adults are taught to read

~ewlatedP.,. Writer

Wednu lli'f, Deoember 26.1984

15 .LINCOLN CONTININTAL
4 Llncolns Now In Stock More

Arriving.Dally, Order Yours

tran!'l .. rs . rn. power windnws. power Bell.
pow«&gt;r door lfM!kA. noor mala. hod~· !'ilde
mnuldlna11. hand\11'11 pkl .. linlfll Jllu. till
whot'l. crulf'C. AM -FM radio. 111~ tape.
WSW rnttial tlrC'!I . renmte mirron. Ctltltole.
huckol ~a(!' . aluminum wire I'IDQke wt1eel11 .
!'ilnrk Nfl. 4992

NOW

.'24,687.
'21,620.
1984 THUNDERBIRD
13,595.

1

1~ .

JlB. hod,v .1111cte mnuldln~t~. tinted RlaM,
l
AM-fM radio 1 ~('!'eo tape, WSW
llrE!'111 . wt1et!l co\ler!'i . stock No. 4115.

10,309.
'9lfr
1984 THUNDERBIRD ELAN
Blnck. V.ft. air cond.. hf-atf'r, aUio. traM ..
I'S. PB. powt"r '41ndows. PI)W~ !'MI. POWer
door locb. noor mat•. body sldt- mouldt"'l! ll.
diRital clnck. !lnted aiiM , till wheel. cruilt.
AM·f'M radln, Met"fftlape. WSW radlailllret.
whef'l covef!llllire. remol&lt;' 'm trron. console.
rrar wlndov,·
Stoct~ No. 41».

del.,...,.

STOP BY AND TEST DRIVE THE
CAR OF THE FUTURE

••1915 GOLF''

."••

�I

,••

..

,

Peg a 10-The Daily Sentinel

Portaoy-Middlaport, Ohio

.

10AM
•

•

,,

•

·,

FOODLAND

TOMATO JUICE
46 Oz.

Can

c

feat'llrl!l and optioN and COIItto!'
comblnatkN offered to makuure
OoanQ' E•t••• AP-t.
they all work ,ptoper!y.
Home Eooum1Jici/+B
It's Important to do this because
The holiday rush Is Ollel', and the .t lmeHmltformanyappllance
folks are now busy pJannlll&amp; New warranties If one year. And, by
Y:ear's celebrations and hav!Dg fun llSlng aD the appliance featureJ
with gifts received at Christmas. · ·you're Ukely to discOver any
This week 111ft appliances and toYs . problems or defeats quickly. U you
are In The Spotlight.
·
put off trying all the features, you
WuanewhomeaJli)Uanceunder mayloseanlmportantpartoiwhat
your 1 tree, In your kitchen or you- or the lliftalver-. Pjlldforlalllldl'y room this hollday season? the warranty.
.
One ImpOrtant first step. In enjoying
T~ gets Its full advantages you
that ~.appliance ts to send In the may have to go out of your way to
warranty card: ThiS Will give you test all the features. For example, If
the llllixlmum protection for use ot · you· received a new cooking
yow; new .$1ft
·or microwave, be sure to check the
. Wl\t!n !he holiday' seaosn ts OVfl',, timet controls ~or delayed cooking
slt down and study the owner "use and any other sopblstlcated fea·
and care" manual for any neW lures. on a new·wasblng machine,
home appliance
may bave . teat the different speeds, tei'npera·
recehied. Once you feel you know ture sedngs, and water levels. For
bow to operate the appllance- put clothes dryers, try out the different
It tllrough Its paj.'ell. Try out aU the control settings, time wntrol for
By Cyadlla 8. Olvert

range

you

PEELED

LARGE SHRIMP

. 31·35

1-Lb.

Ct.$699

I-

Box

Births, birthdays noted

. Ll.$ 169

IEEF STEW
ll.

$1 ·99

CAULIFLOWER

. .

Head

rnended for· chudren Under Eight
Years ot Age" does not mean that
every elgbt-year-dd Is mature
enough to use the toy. You muat
decldelfthecblldyouarebuylnglt
for, howeve!' old, can be truated·
with lt. It does mean that the toy
should not be given to any child
under eight years ot age, however
~u Toys
. "bright" he or she may seem.
In 1983, the Consumer Product
An Instruction bOoklet wiU come
Safely Cornmlaslon Issued safetY with the toy."lt wlll tell you how to
requirements for · electrical toys operatethetoyandpolntoutclearly
and other elect,rlcaUy operated
the dangers to he avoided. Read It
children's articles. These require- carefully. 1ben read It .With your
ments help asslire that these chlld.
children's products wiU he as safe
· Point out any wanilng labels on .
u can reasonably be expected the toy, explain why they are there,
wbl!n you buy them.
.
and stress how Important It ts that
All electrical products for child· .the directions be followed exactly. ·
ren have labels that tell you the Then use the toy a fe&gt;~o~ tlrnes
earlleet age at which most children · together to make sure your child ·
canusethemsafely. But remember understands how the toy ts to be
that Ulese are only guides.
uaed.
A \jtbel that says, "Not Recom·
Keep the Instruction booklet with

·

Shaun Gllldwell

Gladwell
Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Chevalier · · Sliaun Gladwell; .great-gi-andson
.ot SUD'\ner Road, Pomeroy, anof Mrs. TlM!resa Becker, Mlddlenounce the birth of their first chlld,
observed his seventh blrthilay
son, Adam Gordon, \lQrn Nov. 26 recently with ~ party given bY his
at the Camden Clark Hospital,
parents, Mr. : and Mrs. · Larry
Parllersburg, w~ va. lie weighed · · .Glaclwen, at· Cbuck E. Cheese's
sevenpuonds, threeouncesandwas · Pizza Time Theatre.
.
.
20 Inches long:
'l'hlrteen of his classmates )lnd
·Maternal grandparents are Mr. · friends attended the party. Sbaunts ·
and Mrs. VIrgO Windon, Ponwroy, . . a first grader
the Bedr~ City
and the maternal great- Schoolsl\ndlsthegr~!t,~ ,
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. ~.Gladwell, CGIUmbua, forFred l\. Smith, Pomeroy. Paternal mei'ly of Middleport.
'
grand!l!lrents are ~ late GOrdon
Chevalier and Betty Chevalier,

wrt.

a

il1

MEADOW GOLD

CHIP DIP

2 10•·$1
Tubs

_.t~

.

.

.....

. ;·

the toy or In a sate place where It
reach of younger chlldl·en .~
can be found easily.
. , ·
dlately after use.
Use common sense about super·
Only an adUlt oc · a resPQnslble
vision. /1. :12-year-dd ualng an &lt;&gt;!del' cblld should replaCe ~ . light
electric football game may need bulb or an electr1cal . toy'. It' Is,
Uttleornosupervlslon.Anlne-year- Important that the ~nt
old ustng a toy oven will need a .bulb be the proper wattage and:that
great deal.
the plug be disconnected wbeli the.
Be sure !be plug of an electrical
bulb Is changed.
toy rtts snugly lrito wall outlets or
11 any tqy Is so badly damliged.
extension cord. Tell them to come that It cannot be repaired, throw It
to you for helplftbey have difficulty away lmmedlately.
·
· ·
disconnecting the toy.
11 an electrical toy was ori your·
Keep Infants and toddlers away llift-glvlng Ust this year, help'·the ·
from where older children are
recipient learn to use It safely.
using an electrical toy.
A happy, healthy New Year. to
Electrical toys can become ex- you and your family .
tremely dangerous If they are
AU educational programs and
allowed to fall apart. Check regu- actiVIties conducted by tlie Ohio
larly for broken parts, frayed cords, Cooperative Extension Serylce are
and damage to compartments that
available to all potential clientele on
enclose Wiring. The older the toy , a OO!I-dlsciimlnatory basis Without
the more often you should check.
regard to use, color, national origin,
.Electrical !Dys should be put sex, handicap o r religious
away In a. dry storage area out of affiliation:

fluff dry, automatic temperature
abut ctr'and the llutomaUc moisture
coatrol shut off.
Nomatterw)\attheappUancethe
prlnclplelsthesame-cbeckltout
completely now before you foraet
aboUt lt. Get your money's worth
out the warranty paid for.
'lbe Sale Uae of

or

By Edwanl Schreck, D.O.
paired judgment. Five drink~;
have a cocktall at lucnh, I should
AMI••nt ProfeMOr
consumed over several hours In'
still count that alcohol consumption
of Family Medicine
crease a drlver's likelihood of when I go to a party at nJght?·
Ohio lJnlvenUy Calle,e
having an accident fourfold. Chan- · ' ANSWER: 11 you have a drink at
Olteopaddc Medicine
ces of an accident are 25 times lunchtime, your alcohOt' level may
QUESTION: How many drlnks greater than normal for the foolish . ·be safely below the legal limit for
does It take to get drunk?
driver who consumes 10 drinks In drtvtng a car, and you probably
won't feel the effects when you
It's alrnosttlrile to ring In the new the course of an evening's party.
year, when many . people will
A good, conservative rule of leave work. But the body takes
. • thumb Is that If you have had more several hours to eliminate even the
celebrate by at·
tending .p arties .
'
than one dr!Dk lor l!acb two hours
alcohol In one drlnk, so drinking
and raising a few
that you have been at a party, don't
more later In the day wlll add to the
drive. But each person must concentration In your blood remain·
toasts. Drinking; .
of course, Is ac- ~
monitor himself.
lng from noon. There's a cumulaceptable In our ~
Small people absorb alCohol tlve effect of Imbibing, even over a
society, but getfaster than large people because day's time.
ling drunk ts not. ..
they have less blood, which makes
QUESTION : What causes
'There Is absolutely no excuac for thealcoholconcentrationlevelsrlse hangovers?
drunken driving or abusive more quickly. Food In the stol)'Jach
ANSWER: Most alcoholic drinks
drunken behavior, and we aU need slows the rate of alcohol absorption , contain substances called congeners, which are added lor color and
to know our llmlts If we're going tD · as does drinking slowly.
drink.
It's Impossible to answer your · flavor . These combine With the
It takes the averagepersononeto .question With one number for all . amount ot alcohol to give a dralnk
. two hours to eliminate the slcoholln .ctreumstarices, but fGr most people. · . .Its "hangover potential.''
ajlfiierofdlstllledllquor,abottleo! two dJ:lnks a day ts a reasonable • · Br-andy, bourbon and red wines
beer, or a glass of wine. After three :. limit and more than that can ca1,1se Prod11Ce · the worst hangovers for
drinks, a person who weighS about . · Inebriation.
. most people, wblle gin and vodka
150 pounds shows noticeable lln· · . · QUESTION! Do you mean If r contain f~ congeners and are least

or

lEAN

'$NOW WHITE

. . 99&lt;

Pegl.

I Family ~edicine Use common sense when drinking

iJi.D FASitloN

SMOKED ,
SAUSAGE

Wednulily. December 26. 1984

Send in -appliance warranties, check toys, before using

In the spotlight

BIG BEND FOODUND 10 All.-.7 P.M. .

OPEN NEW YEAR'S EVE TIU 10 P.M.

fhe Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wedna l'ey, December 26, 1984

likely to cause a hangover. Smok·
lng seems to .contribute to the
severity of the hangover for all
types of drlnks.
Hangovers occur because alcohol
Is a diuretic drug causing an
Increased rate of urination and
dehydration. You should try to
compensate for the loss of body
fluid by drinking as much1water as
you can after a drinking spree.
QUESTION: My friends disagree. Does coffee help sober a
person up?
ANSWER Any non-alcoholic
liquid helps to counteract the
diuretic effect of alcohol, and a mild
stimulant such as coffee, Which
contains cafleine, may compensate
to some extent for the depressand
effect of alcohol. But no drug can
speed the rate at which alcohol Is
removed from the bloodstream.
"Family Medicine': Is a weekly
column. To subtnlt questions, write
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio
University College ot OsteQpathlc
Medicine,' Grosvenor HaU, Atheris.

·Group·
J conducts
meetinJ!. . . ·. Laurel
Cliff
h~pperiings
· ..
•·
being read from Kattuyn Hysell for
·
.· ·
Attendance Dec. 9 at the Fr!e
. · Methodist Church was 100. TI!er.e
. her at the · time of her mother's
were 12 choir members present.
~rtanCllurch.
. . death.
'
.· Attendance ·at the. local church
Mts. ·'l'llornas Rue and Mrs.
Devotions from "These · Days" · Dec. 16 was 94. There were 12 choir
Dwight Wallace were hostesses for . were given by Mrs. Flaulliapton· . · members pre5ent. 'A special _song
the Chris~-~ which In: . • stall who also toolf the· least coli! : · was sung l!Y Mr. an~ MJ_"S . .B!&gt;b
eluded a gift ~JU.'IUU~andrefresh · ·collection and read an article on. · Barton. • .
rnents ol Ice cream, cookies, and
Mrs Robert Woodward . . · The . young people put on a

. . Adonatlonforaneedyprojectwas
made at the 'rue!ld&amp;Y night meeting
of Group 2 bet! ~t the Mlddlep!lrt

aflowersenther.Mrs.'oonLowery

thanked the group for a 'gift sent to

=Mrs~e:·s·ervednavld·Cum~:.

chrtstmas progt'am ·S.ind,ay even:·.
In g. A large crowd attended and the .
program was well received.· ·
Mrs. RuthDouglas, Atberu;.s(!ent
Saturday ·1\'fth her mather, Mrs.
· Emma Fox. ·
·

Mr . andMrs.PearlGilkeyylsl~
Dell~ Stahl. · ~

· recently wltn Mrs.
·
.

=~!i;:~~n~ . Al'11red
·. r~-11enings ·
·, . ..area.ha:p
Robbins graduateS uSAF (1ass

: p : a : : : •.
.
....
the study book, "Concern."
the meeting with a thank you letter .
·
.
·

. run

TENDIRIEST

. AMER. SINGlES

WIENERS

12 Oz.

Sl.49
'

~~~- 99&lt;

SUIISHINE
llOPICANA

ORANGE JUICE

0•-$1 59
(tn.

114

CHEEZ-ITS

...Oz.$129

16

Hannahs

Chancey
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Chancey,

Ashley Nicole Hannahs, daughter
of Chuck ani! Rhonda Hannahs,
recently observed her second
birthday.
A famlly party was held with a
Cabbage Patch -Kid cake and Ice
cream IJI!lllg served. Attending
were Bill and Mildred Hudson. VIc
and Mazie Hannahs, grandparents,
Paulette, Rodd and Trevor Han1·
son. Sending gifts and cards were
RQse Slssoll, Kathy Thorne, Stacie
Reed, and Norma Goodwin.

.

ByNEUJEPAKKER .
Sunday School attendance Dec. 2
'
was 35; churcn attendance, 19. On
Marine Corps Pte. Larry B. apprehension and restraint and . Dec.' 9 Sunday School attendance
Robblns, nephew of Jack L. earned credits toward an associate was 4G; church attendance, :ll.
Lambert of Rural Route 2 · and degree In applied science through
sunday School elections were
Brother of Erwin W. Blessing, both · the Community College of the Air heid Dec . 2. Teachers are Doris
of Point Pleasant, W.Va., has · Force. ·
Dillinger and Lori Ritchie for
~aduated from the U.S. Air Force
Robbins Is scheduled to serve at sunbeams; Susan Frash, Sharlene
law enforcement speclallst course E;l Toro Maline Corps Air Station, Dillinger, Primary; Charlotte Van
at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. Callf.
Meter, Marlene Donovan, Busy
He Is a 1983 graduate of Point Bees; Gertrude Robinson. Thelma
Graduates ot the course studied
,general law enforcement duties, Pleasant High School.
Henderson. Teenage; Dorothy Calaway, Florence sr.-ncer, Lloyd
tactics, weapons· training, physical

Soulsby

wm or

IBII!RIY.

Pi·

D. MICHAEL MULLEN

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL
$,,),, PEPSI
I PACK -Ill OZ.

$179 .

Officers of the Sunday School are
Kathy Watson and Tim Spencer,
secretary-treasurer; Lisa Burke,
Delanl Baker, roll call; Todd
Dillinger, Michael Frash, Bob

U'1it h A Sm il(•~·
lecattd In laciM, 011.

··.~l·rl'i ""

SNOW TIRES
ALL IN SIOCK SIILL ON SALE
-----~-------------------------

CLOSEOUT

ON FARM TIRES
SIZE

No. in Stock

PRICE

11.2x28
12.4x28
13.6x28
14.9x28

2
2
2
2

125.00
135.00
145.00
155.00

(Must Be Carried Out At These Prices)

FARM TUBES
11.2/12.4x28
13.6/14.9x28

2

17.50

TUCTOI

. AnOINIY·AI-UW

OFFICE HOURS'8:30-12 NOON

600 East Main St.
POMEROY
614-992·2094

1:00-4:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
106 EAST SECOND
ABOVE BANK ONE IN POMEROY

ttl-6417
I'

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

...-------------l.-----------

'Humphrey

••

Rlchai-d and Tim Spencer, ushers;
Gertrude Robinson, song leader;
Thelma Henderson, Dorothy Roblnson. Dorothy Calaway, flower
committee·

~~~~ritus~~n!rc~e~~~d;.ente

Christmas dinner given firemen

The annual Chi'lstmas dinner of Santa Claus. He visited with the
the Chester firemen and Auxiliary chlldrenandgaveasackofcandyto
was held recently at the nrehouse. each.
1
Door prizes were won by the
A baked ham and covered dish
d!Mer. was served to 62 members children arid a sack of candy was
and guests. The tables were given to each.
decorated In keeping with the
Door prizes were won by Clayton
season and a lighted tree under Allen, John ,Wickham, Hobart
whiCh 81fts were placed for the Ne\Vell, Raymond Werry, Ethel
·
children.
Orr, Frances Hun! and Carla
Before the meal, the blessing was Chevalier. Games were played with
·asked. by Linda WeD. The highlight several wiMin~ prizes.'
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Soulsby or r_::ot::_::the::;_:ev::.::.enlng:::.:!~w..::as:...::tbe~a::.rrl;.;:v.;.:a::.l..:o:..f------------~
Reedsville announce the birth of
their third child, a son, Patrlck
Steven,'Dec.14. The Infant weighed
10 pounds, elghiooncesand was22%
Inches long .
Mr. and Mrs. Soulsby have two
daughters, Tara, three, and
Mr.' and Mrs. C. Ed Humphrey Amanda, two. Maternal grandpar·
visited with Mr. and Mrs. John ents are Jim and Sandy Cowdery,
Lodwick at Westerville recently. Reedsville, and the paternal grand· Wblle there a dllmer was served In parents are James and Susie'
observance or Mrs. HiiJnphrey's Soulsby, Pomeroy. Maternal great·
birthday. Her birthday was also · grandparents are Mildred Wltlte ~
celebrated with a Cllnnl!r at the home HocklJJiport and Vir81nla Walton~
of her daughter and son-In-law, Mr. Reedsville. Paternal greatand Mrs. Gacy Walkef' and daugh· ~tsareMr. and Mrs. ,Jed
Pomeroy.
ter, Jennifer, Racine.
Pomeroy, are apnounclng the birth
o! their firSt chtld, a daughter,
Melinda Jo, Oct. 6, at O'Bleness
Hospital, Athens.
The Infant weighed seven pounds,
10 ounces and was 22 InChes long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. E. Ned Swindell, Shade,
and paternal granclpilrents are Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Chancey,~­
cuae. Matemal great-grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. HOWliJ'll SwlndeD,
Shade, and Mrs. Margery .Dooglas,
Albany . Paternal' great·
·grand!nothers ·are Mrs. Nancy
Chancey, Ripley, W. Va., and Mrs.
Marte Alnberger, Syracuse.

Brooks, Trtsha Burke, Ubrarlans;

'

•

,

I

�ALL ·

15 PITTS &amp;.
SECTIONALS
. SAVE

· Empire Furniture, Gallipolis, Ohio will be
· open 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Wednesday, Dec.
26tli, Thursday, Dec. 27th, Friday, Dec.
· 28th and Saturday, .Dec. 29th: Sunday,
DeC. 30th 1to 5 and Monday, Dec. 31st 8
to 5 because of being overstocked due to
not being able to open our Middleport
store yet. Over 200,000 dollars worth of
name brand merchandise has to be sold ·by
December 31st.- Look for the items marked
with the big M for Middleport overstock.
Talk to our sales people, if they can't deal
get Casby Jr., Skip or Lynn and they'll try to
. make your day. All dining room, living ·
room, bedroom, recliners, sectionals, end
tables, ·cocktail tables, mirrors, pictures,
open stock . bedroom and dini_ng room,
: sleep sofas, mattresses and box s·prings,
wall units, desks, curios, dinettes by Flex. steel, Stoneville, Kincaid, Benchcraft, Riverside, Bassett, Singer, Pulaski, Chatham
County, Charisma, Elite, Berkline, Ort,
· Bemco, Blacksmith Shop, Carolina.

·

lOO'S

OF DOLLARS

BEMCO POSTURE SERIES

MAfiRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS .
SAVE

6QOfoOFF
OVER 20

SLEEP SOFAS
SAVE UP TO

PICTURES &amp;
MIRRORS

. 1/2 OFF

DINETTES
· UP TO

1/2 OFF .

·$400
SAVE UP TO

BUY 1 LAMP
MATCHING ONE

70°/o

FREE

SAVE

20°/o
70°/o
TO

OVER 150

RECLINERS
STARTING AT

' .,., _

...

'

.$8888

...

r:. .
""'
... ...~·..
.
'· .
•'
'

....
&gt; •

....

OVER 25

.

DINNG ROOM SliTES

•10'

r: ·

I"

··~

•

.
.'

••r.

.

.•

•• .•

•

:..'
:••

•.
,.••
.
••

f'

.

.

...•

~

: ~ Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
' . That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

..

STARTING AT

$988 88

$222 22

REGULAR PRIUS

.

25 FLEXSTEEL ·

SOFAS
SAVE UP TO

s7oooo .
'

.

'

STARTING AT

OAK 300fo OFF
CHERRY 300fo OFF
MAPLE 400fo OFF

·8mg " far;' 0:6 mg nicotineav. per cigaretre.bv FTC method.

•

BEDROOM SUITES

KINCAID OPEN STOCK
DMii ROOM &amp;8EDROOM

'

!&gt;"

r··
.:: .
:r
··~--------~~~
··
----~
..

'•

,

.
....
..

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.

OVER 500

'

0 POl.. M-1... 19M

.v

I

'

�•

•

.

•

~RANGEVRLE,U~

(AP)-

Ohio

•

set

senr~ces

Cllrtst or Latter~ay Satntll wu to
lead part of the 9eiVIce scheduled
today'forthe26menand011ewoman,
said spokesman Don LeFevre.

One of the three top oftlclals of the
Mcnnon Church planned to lead a
mem«ta1 seiVIce for Z7 miners as
!hie fire that killed them In the
ceitrai Utah coal country continued
to llum, officials say.

Thembiers were trapped nearly a
week ago In a !Ire that Emecy
Mtntng Co. oftlctals say appears to
!lave been caused by an overheated
bearing In a conveyer.
The bodies of the victims

(iordon ' B. Hinckley, second
COIIIlselor of the three-man First
Presidency
of the ChurCh·of Jesus
'

....
....

re:

• .
mme

victims
RJchard Tnunka bad crttidzed the
mine's accident rate and the

maJned within the WUbel'f MlDe
todayatleraflare.upoftheflrelnthe

main tunnel and a methane gas
scare foroed a halt to flreflght1ng
ettc:aisonSunday.
Meanwhile, mine oftlclllls de-

productlo!lspeed-upalmedatanew
I'I!I.'Q'd.
But John Ward,

.

spokescman ror

UlahPower&amp;UghtCo.,whlchowns

fended the mine's safety record. the mine operated by the Emecy
They said It has Improved steadily · · MlntngQxp., said the mine's safety

since 19'19.
·
, United MlDe Workers president

record compared favorably with

"OIIIIOIIeot the comparlsoll$ that
·we've qup are we worse than any
other mineS," Ward said. "We're
elthel' at average or better."
He said safety problems were
IIUITII!I'INS 1n the earlyl.91lls beCause
Emery bad just taken over the·
mine' a opefetton tn 1979. He said the

company was expanding Its work

The o.lly .........

...?

11

1o IIIIIIY em-

force rapidly then,

ployees were IDexpetleucecl Since

then. the number of InJuries and

citations has dropped, he Mid.
. Earlier, Emery apoiiMman fto.

bert Henrie said the .CIIIIipmly
"doesn't have a perfect safety . ·
record, but It has a ·Iesponllble
safety record."·

others ln.the area.

•

..• ..
YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE WILL CLOSE MONDAY,
DECEMBER 31st. AT 9:00pm

OPEN NEW YEAR'S DAY

.

.

Tuesday, January 1st. 10:00am Til 7:00pm )
Re-Open Wednesday, January 2nd., At 7:00am And Reaume Nonnal Hours

COPYRIGHT 1984 : THE KROGER CO .
. ITEMS
AND
PRICES
GOOD
WEDNESDAY. DEC. 26. THROUGH
SATURDAY. DEC . 29, 1984. IN

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE ·
GRAIN FED BEEF

GALLIFIII.~ ANDPOMEROY STORES.

WE . RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES . NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS .
.
! --------------......
~

E~ing

Boneless Top '
Sirloin Steak ·

TOTAliAT11fACTIIIIIUMUTR

K~

YOU buy
at
il gu.rllm..lHfor
total 11tilfectioo
~-of
rMnuf.:tu~.
youyour
arw
not atilf!MI, KrCJglllr vwit rap.c:- your lltm with tM
Mme

tnand or a CDmJ:l'lrabfllbrllnd

Ot"

refund your pur·

chne priol .

White
Cabbage

Pound

$

Pound

.

88

SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOllARS
f

KROGER WELCOMES
FEDERAL FOOD
STAMPS

'

Avondale

2$

1-lb.

i:Kroger 6%
$
: ~ Egg Nog ·........ Y2-Gal

.Orange Juice

I

r

1985

12'-0z•

..-~.Chips ...............
'

LIMIT 4 ROLLS WITH COUPON

19

I
I
I·

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILY
12
OF

t•

COUI'OIIIIOOD lUI. DEC. 2l-IUfL JAil. 1.
IIIIJfCT TO APPUCAilf STAll II LOCAl TAIIQ

Smoked
.Jowls .............

$ 59

~: Potato

I
I
I

I

'

·.

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY, BUY A SE·
LECTED BEDDING BY BEMCO® QUALITY
MATIRESS AND WE'LL GIVE YOU THE
MATCHING BOX SPRING.

. AND SPICY

. Ballard's Farm
Pork Sausage

FROZEN

·s
lb .

SLICED LB . . . $1 .29

16-oz.

.•

Kroger

I

.I

White Bread

Kroger 2%
Lowfat Milk

FROZEN

.

.•

I LAMPS

Fox De Luxe

21J.oz.

.Pizzas

Gallon

,•

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREEl I

10-oz•

.

'

'•

.•.•

..•
.
'

·Gibson·

KROGER COST GUTTER COUPO N

.•.•
•

&lt;

Variety
Cheese Balls
Pound

$378

LARGE TRAY
SERVES 20-215

Jumbo
· Shrimp Tray
Each

..
'

McMitl RTI 7F9WM

REFRIGERATOR

REFRIGERATOR

1799.9$ W.T.
SMALL TRAY •
SERVES 12·18 PEOPLE

Pa~
Relish ray
E8llll

$ae•• *I&amp;••
'

Modll RT19F WM

Regular ·Price

}
IN STORES WITH DELl-BAKERIES
AVAILABLE 11om TIL 7pm DAilY

z

FREE BOXSPRING WITH EACH MATTRESS!

..
'.,

·~ HOT, MILO, SAGE
.

: G~lden Crown
.:Mixers .................. i-Ltr.
.

•

KROGER COST GUTTER COUPO "'
.

:; COUNTRY OVEN

•

MEDIUM' TRAY
SI!RVES 12-18 PEOPLE

Connoisaur's
Choice
'

Each

*~a··

$6,49·95

ileg•r Prlct

1699.96 W.T.

NAME YOUR
MERCHANDISE MUST

$59 99 5

Gibson
Mocltl RT14F1 WM •

REFRIGERATOR
Regular Price

'599.95 W.T.

$49995

SHOP AND COMPilE
4 DAYS ONLY

i
.I

�'" "'t · ·· ·

· · ' ' " ' .. · '

·'

...... ·-

.

. ~. · ~-

December 28, 1984 .

Artificial heart recipient has
Christmas meal with family
ByBIU.BEBG8'1BOM
Aaa ' t drr.Wrtter
J.,OUISvnLE, Ky. (API -After
spending Clu1stmaa 8UI'I'WIIded by

members or his family, Wtmam
Schroeder bepn Ids secOnd month
olllle with an artlfldal heart loOking
forward to "little things that are
CIUIIni up," his wife said.
'
About :1) relativeS joined the'
52-year-old rroin Jasper, I!\d, at
' H!D11an8 Hospital Audubon for a
private dinner !llld Christmas Mass
doctors said he wa,lld not have llved
to see without the mec~al heart.

"It weat very well," said~
Hutfnga, tedutlcal director of
H1111U1118 Heart Institute Interna·
tlonal. "It was great for Mr.
Schroeder."
It was another landmark In
Schroeder's recovery from the Nov.
2.'1 heart Implant and from three
small strokes Dec. 13 that left him
'SOOietlmes dlaplr!ted, with memory
l!lpses and ~ty In speUtng.
"We'regolngto.takeltctaybyctay,
but we have little thing~~ that are
mnlng up," Schroeder's wife
Margaret said at a Christmas ·Eve

news conferenCe.

"We llad 'lballltllllvln· we have

Clu1Btmaa," she sald, adcltn&amp; that

the scheduled March weddbli r1. a
son and the l!lq)eCted birth of a
ll'&amp;ndchlld are among the "little
things to look forward to."
Doctors were encouraged to see
'Schroeder, who "would not have
lasted the weekend allve" Without
the operation, " doing much, much
better as tar as the heart goes,'' said
Dr. WUUam C. DeVries.
DeVries said Monday the Implant
team Is loOking for new pro~pects,
though oo target date has been set
. lor another operation.

OSU study stresses impact
of smoking ·upon fetuses·"
CHRISTMAS TRAIN - llans Papke pi~ a

tram 011 one of the trackl! of the maaslve train di&lt;iplay
he lain .cliJirre of at the Clnclimatl Gas &amp; Electric Co.

The an,.tal CJulatmas ?exhibit dates lellMII u a Jolllt
ollerlug of oo.t.E and the Cbeslle System railroad.
(AP LaserphotAI J.

Christmas· means .· overseeing
·model · trains for.Ohio man
By JOliN NOlAN
"-oooalecl Pre!l8 Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - While
others think or Santa Claus at
· Ghrlstmastlme, Hans Papke regards the sei)S()n as a time for
shepherding a model train layout
that has become a Cincinnati
institution.
Papke, a ~year employee of
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co., says
his annual task of getting the trains
and accessories uncrated and into
operation in the lobby of CG&amp;E's
dOwntown headquarters has its
good and bad points.
Nonetheless, he is certain the
display affords CG&amp;E some valua·
ble publlc relations in an era when
utilltles have absorbed frequent
criticism over their power rates a nd
business practices.
"You don't get any complaints,"
Papke said of the spectators who
watch the trains. "You know, utlllty
companies aren't the most popular
things around."
CG&amp;E Inherited the job of setting
up and storing the train exhibit from
' employees of the ~ttmore &amp; Ohio
RaUroad, who created the display
and built the trains.
Papke, In charge of the utility's

displays a nd exhibits year-round,
personally Inherited responsibilities
for the Chrlstmastime train exhibit
In 1974. It dates to 1946 as a joint
offering of CG&amp;E and the Chessie
·
System railroad.
"It was just being in the right
place at the right time," Papke said.
"Sometimes you wonder whether
It's the right place."
Families with Utile children,
along with busloads of schoolchild·
ren, pour Into the CG&amp;E bulldlng's
lobby to view the ~by 47-foot train
display. CG&amp;E estimates that more
than 4 million people have seen the
exhibit since 1946.
These days, Papke figures that
perhaps 250,(XX)people a year see the
exhi bit , on display this season from
Nov. 23 thrqugh Dec. 31.
He arranges tohavetwocompany
employees on duty with the train
layout during operating hours. slx
days a week, to keep the trains
running.
"The only ttme you can really do
maintenance on the ttainls when it's
set up," he said. "Themalnthingis,
· keep it running. If you'·come here,
peopl~ want to see it running."
II takes three weeks for Papke and

the volunteers he recruits from
other CG&amp;E .departments to set up
the exhibit, which includes three
major track systems, working
traffic controls, a tuncttorililgenglne
roundhouse and landscaping.
This year'scenterpieceeonsislsof
11 wooden dollhouses, set In a
snowllkesetting. Papke and hiswHe
buUt the dollhouses within slx
weeks.
The trains and equipment are on
long-term loan to CG&amp;E from the
Chess!e System's Baltimore &amp; Ohio
RaUroad Museum In Baltltnore.
The layout and trains were bullt In
the 1940s by B&amp;O employees, and
part of the layout Is designed after
the pattern of the Chessle System's
Cumberland Division bt Maryland.
The equipment Includes a full fleet
of model steam locomotives, mod·
ern diesel engines and rolling stock,
Including boxcars and passenger
trains. Th!! tniins a recontrolled by a
switchboard designed like those in
real rallyards, and a working
control system of traffic llghts
directs the trains' speed. There are
more than 2,1XXl electtlcal connec·
ttons between the control box and
sections of platform and track.

, COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Re- '
suits of a new study stress the
Importance or aS!dng expectant
parents about their smoking habits
and of counsellng them about
smoking's effects on their child, an
Ohio State University researcher
says.
The study warns that non· .
smoking women and their Infants
heighten the risk of certa1n medical
problems by being around people
who smoke. The practice has
beconie commonly known as pas·
slve smoking and previous stud~
have llnked It to health problems.
Kathleen Stone, a protessor of
nursing at Ohio State University,
said her study Is the first publlshed
Information on the father's smoldng
habits In relation to colds and
pneumonia In Infants.
The' study found that pregnant ·
passive smokers had 10 times the
rate of abruptio placentae, an
uncommon condition In which the
placenta detaches tooearly from the
mother's uterine wan.
The condition can cause a
decrease in the amount of oxygen
reachingthefetus,placlngltatsome
risk and Sl.imetlmes requiring an
emergency Caesarean dellvery.
Statistics show that the condition
normally occurs about once every
150 births.
Ms. Stone also found that Infants
exposed to cigarette smoke have
more colds and cases of pneumonia
than chlldren not exposed to the
smoke.
Ms. Stone, who did the study with
graduate student Le"ah Kempton,
surveyed new mothers who 'dell·
. vered a cl\lld ·between August 1982
and January 1983 at the Ohio State
University Hospitals complex.
The chlldren were 6 monthS to 12 -

·. Detailed probe promised }ly
·city in plant explos~on's wake · Time
AKRON, Ohio lAP) - The
general's office ar~ cooperating
with the inqu iry, representatives of
possible role of a New Jersey waste
• haullng firm in multiple explosions
the agencies said.
Sawyer, during a news confer·
last week at Akron's Recycle
Energy System Plant is but one
ence Monday, said the New Jersey
aspect of a detaUed investigation
company is not the only focus of the
Into the cause, Akron Mayor Tom
city's investigation. He said ~5
Sawyer has said.
haulers known to have delivered
loads to the plant and every wori&lt;er
Blasts In the plant's trash tra115fer
tower and collection pit resulted in
who was there last Thursday were
three deaths and seven injuries last · being interviewed.
ThurSday. The plantburns garbage
TomHuth, a northeast Ohio trash
hauler, contacted city officials after
to heat boilers that produce steam
the explosions and told them he had
for about 1~ downtown buildings.
smelled lacquer thinner In a loa d of
The plant remains closed pending
· detennlnatlon of the extent of
sawdust brought In by a haullng
damage. The B. F. Goodrich Co. has
company from Jersey.
lieen providing steam since the
Workers in the plant reported
blasts.
smelling something Uke paint
• Pollee and fire investigators went
thinner or na ll polish In the hour
. to New Jersey this week to interview
before the first blast. One part of the
a waste hauler who dumped
plantwasevacuatedanddoorswere
• sawdust at the plant shortly before
opened for ventilation, but the
; tile explosions. The New Jersey building was not cleared.
: Oepartment of Envlronmental ProSawyer ldentHied the New Jersey
. t.ktlon and that state's attorney
firm at S&amp;W Co. of South Kearny. A

New Jersey telephone dlrectory
lists the firm's formal name as S&amp;W
Waste lnc.
. Therewasnoanswerat the firm's
number on Christmas Day,,and the
ide ntities of company officials could
not he Immediately determined so
they could be contacted.
Sawyer said S&amp;W was the only
· out-of-state hauler to dellver to the
plant. He said it has contracted with
the plant since March to dump
sawdust mixed with fragrances,
locomotive filtering products, ball·
bearing grinding oU, waste oll
sludges or synthetic lubricants. He
said all those items have proven to
be safe for the plant's burners.
Jim Staples, a spokesman for the
NewJerseyenvlronmentalagency,
said he was unaware of any other
New Jersey hauler going so far as
Akron io dump non-~OIIS
wastes. The Akron plant 1s not
llcensed to receive hazardous
materials.

:. _S urrogate mother figures
:in battle over legal custody
MIAMI (AP) - A childless
· Stamford, Conn., couple says their
rqundabout route to parenthOOJI
depends upon a surrogate mot~er in
. Ohio and a lenient Florida adoption
law.
The couples' longing for a cl\lld
has taken them to a Miami
·.· courtroom, where thelrlawyer has
asked that Everett Schenk Jr., 35, a
NewYorkCitybanker,bedeclared
the "natural and biological father"
:ot a child being carried by the Ohio
woman wt\owasartHiciallylnseml·
. nated wtth his sperm.
,
". Lawyer Noel Keane of Dearborn,
r.Jich., ~ld the petition was flfed In
Dade County Circuit Court because
.. FlorldB ' laws don't require resld·
: ency for the adoption of
Jtepehlldren.
"Florida state laws are more
~ive ror adoptions of this
11011," Keane said. Since 1976 Keane
IIUI'E111"1!111!nted57coupleswhopald
, feel at at least $7,5()0 to adopt
, children conceived In ·surrogate

months old.
The study Included · 216 non·
smokers,l73 active smokers and126
passive Smokers. Six of the passive
smokers. and only one or !he
non-smokers had · problems w.lth a
detaching placenta. The study
defined passive smokers as those
who did not smoke but regularly
wereexposedtothesmokeolothers,
such as the fathers of the chlldren.
Ms. Stone is not sure why her ·
study showed fewer cases of
abruptio .placentae In non-smoking

mothers than the norm of one in 150

births.
Ms. Stone was surprised that only .
three of the acllve smokers In the
study had a'fUptlo· placentae and ·
saldshedoesnotknowwhysolewof
the active smokers had the
condition.
Ms. Stone has been researching
the effects of cigarette smoldng on
the heart for slx years and Is
planning a larger study about the
effects· of passive smoking on
Infants.

Carel

of Thank1

NOnCE OF APPOINTMENT.
OF FIPUCIAAY

CARD OF THANKS
Tht family of Adelene
F11nce would like to
thank her many friends
that struated to help
her durina ·htr lenaHty
illness. To those who
tried to find food she
could eat, run errands,
h.eiP htr with her injections and other medical needs, watch over
her home and property
when she had to be
away. We are truly
irateful. The support
that her friends and
family gave lifted her
spirits.
· Mother would often
mention how much
she appreciated the
thouahtful deeds her
friends and neighbors
did for her, and we
wish to express our
appreciation for the
lovina · kindness ex· ·
tended to her.
Greg France and
Suzie France Roberts
.2

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Public Notice

Me1gs County Probate Court
On Au gust 7, 1 984 1n the

Case No. 2449 3. Charles Sian·
ley. Sr.. Bo• 91 . Ml Vernon.
Oh1Q 43050was aooo1n1ed f. .
e•ecutor ollheestaJeoiPeariE.
~tanley. oeceasea. late ol
269'h Mechanoc St.. Pomeroy.
Oh•o 45769. ·
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
By: Le na K. Nesselroad.
112126.3 1: f.JJ.J3tc Clerk

NEW USTiNG - 5 room
business building: Has ga~
elec. and city water. Will take
$6,500 lor quick sale.
IDNG BOTIOII ~ 2 level lots, 3 BRs. batlt, flue for a
woodburner . Now only
$22.000.

In Memoriam

II fAR POMEROY -Good one
ft()()( 5 rm. home. Full
basemen~ FA furnace, storm
doors and . windows. Plus
garage.
BARGAIN - 7 yr. ~d 2 story
business bldg: and extra lot
with 3 stories. w~ take less
t~an 1977 construction cost

54 Misc. Merchandise ·

."MERRY CHRISTMAS"

HParlqtHI!'tf?!s

CHAIN SAW
F11t11g Spul•l•

Do Candlewicking!

I may, I wish I rniJIII have the lint wish I wl8h lonJch' " U you Uve In
Texas City, Texas, near the refineries, lila .-Jble that Ihe lint liar you
mlcht see at nigbl, might be aleP the rellnery at Amaco 011 Co. Workers
In keeping with the hollday spirit, for the IM!COIId yelll' In a row, affixed
llg!Uintheshapeofastaratoplhenumbliroae~cracldngunlt/

( AP Laserphole ),

PHONE
992-2156
Of Writt Daltly Stfttiltl ClmHitd Dt•t.

C:l•ulflf"fl ,..,.,. nN'f't I ~t..

,,,,,fti'I,.Jt '"",... "... ,._
,..............

\llo .. t . . . . ... .., . ...._ ....,.... U

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

.Itl

""...........
.. ".,....·,·. ...............
.... ~.u.
.....- - ......
n.•

Public Notice

PIJBUC NOnCE

PROBATE COURT OF ..
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

NOnCE OF AI!PPINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

esnue of J ~?ss , c a W1 lson
deceased, late of 4.005 8

On December 13. 1984 .' m
th e Meigs Co unty Probate

Chnstv Rd .. Reedsvil le, Qh 1o,

ESTATE OF ERNEST GALE

NEWWN. DECEASED
c.. No. :M421 Docket .12

cember 27. 1984. at 7:00P M. Pogo 428

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF ADUCIARY

On July t 2. 1984.

on

the

County Probcite Court.

Case No. 2442 1. Mar1one
====-=====""
1Miller. At; 1 Bo&lt; 44. M1ddlepon.
NonCE PF APPOINTMENT Ohoo 45769 was appo1nted

(1 21 18. 26. 3 1 3tc

Ad m1n1stratrnc of the estate of
Ernest Gale Newlun. deceased.
late of Apnl 9. 1984, Be~ 12.
LO{lg Bottom . Ohio.
Rober! E. Buck.
Probate Judge

Bv Lena K.-Nesselroad.
Clerk

(1 21 19. 26. 3t . 3tc
•

].IS. I

'" "' . &gt;--.

..

RACINE
FlRE DEPT.!

I

Court Case No. 24639. Wil ham B. Ledl ia. 32960 S.R
124. Lang sv1 lle.' Oh,o 4 5741 ,
wa s appomted Executor of the
es tate of L1lhe B. Ledhe. de-

ceased. late ol 331 40. State
Ro ute 124. Langsv1lle. Oh10

4574 t.

Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad .

.11 21 t8. 26. 3113tc

Clerk

Public Notice
NOnCE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On· July 19. t 984. in

1~e

Me1gs County Probate Court.

Case No. 24463. Sherry Wil so n. 2256 W. 1 lth St .. ~5 .
Cleveland. Ohio '44 113. wes

•

''

appoin ted Ac! IT1 inl !tratri x of

..•

!hf:

Rabon E, S ue~
Probat s J ud ge

By l ena K Nesselr oa d.

(121 18.36. 31 3tc

Clerk

....... luiltllol
EVERY ·
SAT. NIGtlT
6i30 P.M.

Factory Choke·
12 Gauge shot1uns

Public Notice

---~-NOnce OF APPOINTMENT
OF FICDUCIARY

On May 15. 1984. 1n the

Me1gs Countv Probate Court
Case NO 24 433. Mary B uc~·
129 Mulbm ry AVA .. Pomeroy'
OhiO 45769. was OPPOinlec:f
Executn ~ of the es rar ~ of Fntz

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wirin&amp;
needs; furnaces repair
service and installatiOn.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3195

Buck. deceased. late ol 129 •
.Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy OhiO
45769.
.
Robert E.. Buck
Probate Judge
By; Lena, K. Nesselroa d
'
Clerk

RENT ·A CAR
CALL

(121 18. 26. 3113Jc

446·4522

"W• R•it F, Ln•"

U-SA~E

. AUTO
RENTtL
St. Rt. 160
o.m,.n.. ~··

ert~

The trait of candlewicking
adds counlry chaom to this quill.
Clas~c wreath and !lower
motif is bordered by ptin~ edaed
with ruffles. Use candlewickong
thread, embroide~ floss. Pattern
7163: tissue !Jansler ot motils:
g~ ilt about 75"x10l".
·
$2.75 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern for postase
and handling . Stnd to:
~let Btoob Crtfts
RtadtrMtll
. .:;. :. 7

The Daily Sentinel
lal 'IU, Old Chlllit Sta:, New
Yor*, NY 10113. Print N1mt,
Addres. Zl,, Plltlm Numbor.
CRAFTS·cralts 1 New '85
Need-(emlt Cataloc- knit s.
crochets. dolls. quilts. more.l freo
patterns_ @rinted inside. Send $2.
ALL CWT IIOCliiS. .$2.50 tadt
All . . . !IIMI Clllill Hd SOt
NCit fe! ......... l!andll•..
US.Doltl l Clcitltls 0. , . . .
134-14 Oulcl llld!ittl O.itll

uu..._ "- Oolltita
UI.Ud

I . . Qlllts

12M!IU 'n'

Ear fransftn

.

' ua.£...,. Plkhwort Quilts

IB

. IUUOI

121·Afllta 'rl Dollits
IH-11trifiJ Cnfll Flowlt1

125-1'1111 0.1111
124-EIIr lllltl 'n' Omlm1ttll

121·PIIIoll Slilof.Oih
117-EIIJ M II Nnltpalnl
lll·[IIJ M II Htl!pil CnltMt
101-Sft+llllt 1... liauelndl
107-11111111 Stwltla
105-1111111!1 fllltla!!
104-lttlllll ...., .
10J.15 Qlllts fe! Todly

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Holland , Bush Hoc
farm Equip11ent
Dealer

FarM E••lt•••t
Parts &amp; Setflce

BERRY BASKET
COIIItry Gift-Au Ill llrils

6th St., Syracun
Mlllllay-Sa!ny
10 AM-S PM
(lOSED 1JUISD&amp;Y
OpM Sun. Die. 9, 16, 23
12~6

PM

()pin ly AtiP i tlwwtl

CAROLYN McCOY

IJ.2J.l mo,

.

.

a:

*Whlt1 piM

"(UT OUT

FOR FmRE USE"

ICEN'S ·
APPLIANCE
SER~CE
985-S$61

All M••••

•Wethers •Dishwashers

M~GKEE

II. L. "Bid" McGHEE

Clttryl Ltllity
llip County Assoclltl

Phone 742-3171

-

·-•r

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-E601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis .. Ohio 45631
8-13 ttn

BISSELL

CONSTRUCTION

WITH
:::OWNERS-(;ORNI NG
FIBERGLAS

Custom Built
Homes and Siding

BIQwn .In Insulation
"Free Estimates"

Gltvts .......................'3-'7
'Iaiii...................... , ... 1.50
ShMt ....,_,_,,_,_,130-150
Grips loplaced .. ".fA..S2.50

8eoRoQtae £Jfolile .9nsuQatloa .9~tc.
Belpre. Oh; o

j .R, t( l NG. Sale Repre&amp;et.tative

C.R. NEWMA N, Prelldl!nf

.949-2801

• 1HlH5t-4

INSULATE YOUR ATTIC

'

~

OR WHOLE HOUSE

NO SUNDAY CALLS

JOHN YEAfOID "':'·

Tues.-Wtd.,Fri.-Sat.
&amp; Sun. 10 to S
Mondoys 1D to I
Closed Thursday

ow,.., Soroll Fidler
End of Rt. 7
ly Meigs High Schoal
Tum ltfl, "''" Twp. 19, ht
*i,.way on rlglft.
11/30/ 1 mo:

Will do all types of e•cavating, landscaping,
·basemsnts, siwaee systems, water &amp; ps lines,
water well drilling and ·
service, truckinl (limestone &amp; dirt).
Call: 7 42-2407
12·6·1 mo.

•Range•
•Refrigerators
•Dryere •Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

3/ 11/tfc

RfE,0'1ER
We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196 .
Middleport, Ohio

1·13-th:

FOR FREE ESTIMATE

..

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Ettimate~.l

BlACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Fister Service

Call 614·992-6737

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215" 99HSI4

,••.,1,, 0"•

or

843-5424

to the busii- who
have ..,., placed
the Southern
High School yearllook.

... :1:

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

Any business or patrons who would
like to place an ad,
contact Donnie Dudding at 949-2600.
'

11 - 1~· 1

iii:

Rt. l24,Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Tr••••l~tlo•

Ptl. 992-5682

or 992-7121 ·

TOWN &amp; COUNlRY

NOW PICM IF IN

IN MIDDlEPORT

Sizes Start Fro_m 12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Sizes from 6'K6' Up·
to 24'K36'
Insulated Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614·843-5191

CLINIC

IUSINESS-RESIDENnA1

-:loy 3 p.m.-1 p.m..
T....tor 6:30 p.m.·l p.m.

"011 8ftiWIII /1 8flfl
01 S11~lu"
for Trash Pickup
Service Call

992-3194
73-10 Cht•r Tr.
Fondors .........................l70
II·U Cht•J fr.
Ftlllitrs ..................... IJJO
SID-SIS Cht•r Tri.
Ftlllitrs .........................•lo
73-79 For~ Tr.
Jondort ,.......................tS9
10·14 FO&lt;d Tr.

The DISH: (OilliGIIer 8' $pwl Abnilun
The FEED: Chapau al Polanlor I
The RECEIVER: Dexcel DXP-11 00-01
AFC, Stereo, Card Remote Control

B11t ~alae on the Market Tday
(2 Yr.

Factory

Warranty)

The PRICE: S129soo
(Pi!" Tar and hnlallotionl

PDQ

Systems

rp)l ;

++++++++-#~
662-5311
(614)-Ennings

GUYSVIllE, OHIO
SR 329

12n11 mo. pd.

PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

MIDDLEPORT

ROGER MANlEY -Owntr
11-29-1 mo.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

· VETERINARY

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
PT. PLEASANT OfRCE

AND

DECEMBER PRICE BUSTER

I

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

POMEROY

Phone

446-2062
11-8-tlc

THANKS .

.

... .. . .

446-2062
Roy Bickle

.__ _ _ _ _ IO:S:Jii

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

Chimney
Care

Certified Chimney Sweep

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOl L-FILL Dl RT

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

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

·*Complete Chimney Cleaning
•certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
•Experienced ancj Insured

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

We'd like to introduce you to
fnr.lt·A·Car, the modern w1y

3305 JACKSON AVE.
SMALL ANIMAl HOURS

w.......t.,

3 p..... s p.m.

rh•rsHy 3 p.tn.•S p.m.

. Fri&lt;My 1 p.m.·2 p.m.
tO o.m.· 11 :30 a.m.
IAIGI ANIMAlS AND
SUIGUY IY APPOINTMENT
12·3·lln
Satur:loy

D· IO I!Otlgt Tr. .

llllllori ......................... l62
76-11 Cht,.tto
(or F.... n .................. l60
79-10 lllust•"!l
Cor Fo. .n ..................•6o
11 ·14 IKori·Cv••
F...,s .........................l49
Omnl-Hot'iJOn 2 clr• .,
4 • . ,...... ...............srs

,12·10
..,~.·;;:=,. .Tr.. . . . . . . . . . . .(horiT
.~:::s . . . . . .
79·11 Chtwtttt Grills.....•31
F..... .............. ........ l110

•6U5

o..lgo

F....s ...................... 1 t I 5 Forti · - Grilh ......... STS
F01d ond (htvy Toil Gotw
WHA!JY'~ AUTO PAm

10·6·ttc

,,,,,Cnlt
'"
c,.,,,,
!trow

2 Milts out Flatw...ts ld.
Off St. lt. 7

Nov.

S~Dec.

I

Mon.-Fri. 9-9

Sat. 9-5; Sun. 1·5
lim Nelson

992·2901

luth Alln T lor

These cash rates

include discount

TROMM EXCAVATING

LIMESTONE
HAULED
PH. 742-2328
I · 0·

C !Wanted

( )for 5ale
C )Announc.....-1
( )For Rent

17.------

19,-----lB. - - ' - - - - -

20.

21. - - - - - -

22.----23. - - - ' - - 25.
___
2~ .. -_
-_26. _ _ _ _ __

992-356
27. - - - - - . . . ,

HOME ·
. CONSTRUCnON

Real E1tate G•neral

Broar·AIICtlan Smit

~
%
z ,

9 AJII. '- 9 P.M. • .....,.
1 P.M. to 5 P.M. StNoys
1 Mlltoff If. 7 On
St. II. 143,
Wllfdt for SigN
11/30/1 mo.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

29.
_
_
21. -_
- -_
...
. ._ ,

54 Ml.c. Merchandln

'R,al**

co:ru.

*Scotch 'P IM

MEIGS
EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

7III IIIn

LONG BOTIOM - Neat 3
bedroom ranch with spacious'
fmaify room, knchen witlt
buift~n range and oven units,
separate dining area. Gas
forced air heat plus woodburner. 2 car garage, approx. I
mile wrtll garden space and
outbulding: Many otlter lea·

~·

1Z-31·1 mo.

a
z

*Norway Spruce

Or 992-5875

(Free

PH. 992·2478

NEW USTING - Middleport
- Aroomy 3 bedroom home
with several nice teatures.
Equipped k~cllen , insulated,
garage, patio, forced air gas
Ileal $22.500.

~

949-2030

1\e Coa•t11 Left
81FT SHOP
le Now Op ..

work

LARQE , $MAU. JOB$

992-2259

,,. A

LEE
CODNER
'

ClUI

Computerized Hearil~ Air Selection
Swim Molds · lnteipreting Service$

10/4/tfc '

- Concr•t• work
- Pll.!mblng 1nd elecnlc•l

-SEPTIC SYSTEMS

POMEROY,O.

.J . REALIORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992·6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 985-4466 • .J

If You Need
Your House Cleaned
Weeki y, C811 :

-GAS LINES

608
E .-Main

lures. $35.500.

AL

Gootl Sotoctietl Of

CHIISIIW
.1
SAlE
··
- 1
C...L ....- ..........., IS.IJlf
Pullen . M .. - . . . ..... ss.SJO
· - · -·-·--·...... Sli-S30
Htad Cortn.-... -.. 16.111

- AddoM •nd remodeling
- Roofing end gun•r work

- SEWER

MIDDLEPORT - Fantastic
home w~ gigantic lamily room
with a beautiful fireplace, large
living rool)t, 3 bedrooms, 2 ~
batlls, lull basemen~ oo
approx. 1 ac. ground. Wants
$69.000

Public Notice

Lena K. Nesselroad.
Cle rk

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

-WATER

REEDSVILLE - Extra nice 3
·bedroom home, hardwood
floor.;, knotty pine wal~ in
dining·family room. G&lt;!s hea~
new roof. level lot $32,000.

Public Notice

Ship, Me1gs County. Oh10.
Aob•n E. Buck.
Probata Jydge

CHESTER-985-3307

-TRENCHER

TUPPERS PlAINS - Keller
Ave. - ·Nice 3 bedroom home ·
with approximately I acre level
lot garage, wQI)dburner, all in
good condition. Financing avail·
afja $27,900.

Pljbllc Nollce

Adminisrraror of the estate of
Herman Andre-N Gru eser. ~ deceased : late of Bedford Town·

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

- BACKHOES
-DUIP TRUCKS
-LO-BOYS

MGM FARM
C!U,,.I~f·

••..-~..~·!".. _

45769. was appointed Spec,al

.......

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-DOZERS

'

·"=...·.-...............
··-

HoiiO'N React Pomeroy. Ohto

.GUN SHOOT

fOR S E

choice.

Sale Price $21995

-··-"'!"!~
·=
:u.:v=
.,,
.._..
......................

the Me1gs County Pro bate
Co urt. Case No . 24642 . Chns·
tina GrUeser. 40970 Grueser

rwe1 ...,
.
Rooflna ork
Alu1tl~u1t &amp; Vin~l Sidinp
16. Yea .. Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992 -2282
""'"'

TEAM
·(LEAN

to drive the vthiclt of your

#150
lEG. PRICE 5319.95

.,......
.........
..........
"'......

On December 13, i 984 . in

~nu~~~~W:-,o~'~~·-.

240-16"
240-18"

Ill to11rt st.. PHttrOr. Oltie 4S769

OF fiCUCIARY

We ... AFill Tl•e
Shp T••••lel••

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

ON SALE AlE
. SUPER 2-14"

The Daily Sentinel

P1,1bllc Notice

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY ·
•GIBSOI REFRIGERATOR

'DOZER - BACI&lt;HOE
'RECLAMATION WORK
"OIL FIELD SERVICES
"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
"COJ'ICRETE WORK
'CUSTOM IUJLT HOMES
•wATER. GAS S.
OIL LINES ·

Housmg

HOM ELITE

lltw H011111-EI1tfllivt
Remodelina

Only

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

NEAR TUPPERS PlAINS - 2
bedroom .trailer with 2 added
rooms. About one level acre.
$14,000.

Daughter: Linda Mayer
Sons: Ray and Paul Jr.

949-2801

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

TUPPERS PlAINS ..._ Like new
oiie floor, 3 BR, washer·dryer,
nice dimng w~ll ~ass doors
and carpeting:

In Loving Memory of
Paul M. Darnell Sr. on
December 26, his birth·

Buying Coins,
Antiques, Glassware, ·Furniture,
Stone J.ars, Etc.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

NO SUNDAY CAllS

POMEROY - 2 bedroom
home near tlte hospital. Hot
water Ilea~ lull basement and
double garage.

"STARUGtrrSTARBRIGtrr~Thefii'Miiarlseelonlchl,lwl!lb

However, this morning, bags
covering the meters were removed
and once more payment for parking
will he enforced.

'-"-=:--:;;,.,...-:-:-.,--- 1 Meigs

Ollk• luppliot &amp; Fwoitwo.
WHtling...,. Gntduotion Sto·
tl-y, Motntti&lt; llpo, ltollbor St-. loliMss '"'""•

11/23/1 mo. pd.

'~freed."

1121 26. ttc

Plus:

,_

GLENN'S
ANTIQUES &amp;
COINS

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(814)-992-3326

·: ~~~
Real Estate General

at th e Carleton Sohool for en
Execut1ve Sess1on.

,.....

IL....&amp;.

Real Estate·W,

seven months
since you passed away,
We !llink of you often thru
ush day.
For. you wert a very won ·
derful Dad,
That any three children
could ever have hid.
We have our love and mem·
ories forever.
Till .the diY comes when
. we're all toceiher. _

to pay .

There .w111 be a Spec1al
Meetmg of the Mental Retarda tio n /Deve lop mental Oisabi liIIBS Board on Thur$day. De -

r-... -

r... Afll....lhlo.l..

""••ay

614-992-2111

It's time for motorists to pay
parking meters in Pomeroy again.
For the past two weeks, through
the cooperation of Pomeroy VUJage
officials and the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce, parking meters were

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP .

I

TEAFORDflJ

17

~;::=======:;-r;:=======:.lr::=======::;-r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::-r:========r:========
CHRISTMAS TREES

2SS Ill St. m I I I
104 Mt•••Y Av.
992~ 3345
11/ 26/l'mo.

Real Estate General

The Deily Saltinei-P1111r

Business Senices

c.,, S.nins, Et&lt;.

It's been

"'t . .......
. . ...........
...
..._

.

1

day.

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

mothers with the natural fathers'
reason. I am being paid forthetltne
. sperm.
and troubleofbeingpiegnant."
· Schenk's wHe Sally has suffered
Mrs, Schenk sald she and Mrs.
three miscarriages in the past seven Pressle[ hl\ve a close relationship
years and twice failed to become and frequently talk by telephone.
"Shecouldhavefeltveryleftoutof
pregnant after In vitro fertilization.
After Interviewing two candi·
the whole priicess, l)eglected, not
dates for a surrogate mother, they
part of it a ll," said Mrs:" Pressler,
chosePeggyPressler,24,ofCanton,
who runs .a small cosmetics firm
Ohio. Both Mrs. Pressler and the
from her horne. " But she has stayed
Schenksdiscussedthesltuatlonlna
Involved tn it as much as she
story in Tuesday's Miami Herald
possibly could."
"lam carryingtheirbaby, butltls
TheSchenks Ira\.
Canton to
not my chlld," said Mrs. Pressler,
discuss the subjec, with the
who llves with her husband,
Presslers before choosing Mrs.
1
Stephen, and 3-year-old daughter
Pressler.
Taylor. "I am just keepingltfornlne . "She clearly knows thedllferet~Ce·
months. I give up all clabns to the
between emotion and biological
baby." '
parenting," Mrs. Schenk sald.
She said bearing the chlld Is
The Schenks decided against
"something I wanted to do. I am
private adoption because they
getting self-gratitl.cation. I was feared thechlld might suspect It had
adopted.
· been abandoned.
"But It feels good to know I can
''My child wU1 know all along: My
help ,50meone else," she told The twnmydldn'tworkandPeggy'sdid.
Miami Herald.
The chlld wW have a godmother, a'
nioughshe'll bepald$10,(XX), Mrs: real mother and a birthed mother,"
Pressler said money is "not the
Mrs. Schenk said.

Wednesday, Decembet 26, 1984

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

(_

Senire

Good used rtfllaerwtors.
Wllhtrl, drym, ps lnd
electric rtllllland lV 1111.

OPEN I TO 6

County Applilnce, Inc.
627 1111111 Avl.
. Golllpalls
446·1&amp;99
.

Chtallty ............
30Y... I....-e·

"' Itt! '" .... " "' ....
''" 1111-'•a.
DAVID D. O.DSTAFF
949-2061 ·
12/17 I mo

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

______

32. _ _ _ __
33. _ _ _ __

,.

:IS. _ _ _ _ __

�26, 1984 .•.

Ohio
KIT 'II' CAlLYU &lt;i1tr ~ W.......

51

~

-.
~

-mu

SWEEPER ond
mo·
chine repelr. Plrtl. ond
Mlpplleo.
Pick up ond
delivery. 01vil Vecuum
CIM-. one hlllf mile up
G - o c ..... Rd. Coli
81 ........oa9•.

.

O::s

. LOSE WEIGHT NOW. ASK
ME HOW. Thll fun • oooy
woy juot " otepo to loolng
-lght, no counting · "'lo·
riel. no ttllrvetion da.11. no
oxcerlolng. Col .,ytlmeonly
If lnt.,.olld In loolng welgi11
• -lng hllolthy. Coli ""'·
2081 or 4"8·3718.

Groon oofo ond chlllr, good
cond. 1711.00. 814-892·
81112 .

3 roomo with prfovtll both,
lot. - · Coli ""1·2218.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE
82 Olivo St.·, GoHipollo. N • uoed wood-cool
8
pc wood LR oullo 1389,
bunk bedo •198. ontron
rocllnon .... uoed bedroom
suites. rengea. Wringer
woohoro. • ohooo. Coft 8 14·
441·3159.

"When I told you to slow down I
didn't mean in paying yoiu-

Givuway

12

Situations
Wanted

Chriatlam lady to work or

6

1tay In my home without
poy. Mull bo oblo to drive.
Coll448· 1414.

Lost and Found

LOST: Two Gormon She·
phord pupo, Loot 101n ot
home on Nebo Ad . 3 mos.
old. Block • Ton . Reword
· .Upon return of doga. Call
Joon Horrio ot 814-379·
2702.
.
LOST Dolmotlon fomolo,
l1at ·...n vicinity Ordn1nce
School, notify 30"· 876·
. 4187 or 81'"·"48·91133.

8

Public: Sale
Auc:tion

a.

Auction every Fridey night at

the

Hertford

Community
Center. Trucldo•d• of new
merchllndloo ovory .- k.

Contlgmente of new • UMd
merchllndlae 1lwaya wei·
corned. Richerd Reynoldo.
AucllonHr. Coli 304-275·
3089.
NHd extra money? We buy
about 1nything of velue, no
junk, ploooo. Loon Floo
Morket. 304-468·11172.

9

41

21

Busine11
Opportunity

23 · Professional

We PlY cooh for loto model

Services

cl81n uNCI cere.

W1nted to buy uaed coel A
wood tM1t1r1. Sweln Furni·

ture, 448-3159, 3rd. •
Olivo St .. Gollipolio, Oh.
Row Fur. Top prlcoo pold.
Loko Jockoon Fin • Fur. Ook
Hill, Oh. 1114·11B2·7448.
Stllndlng timber. Coil 814·
388-9117 or 114·38B·
9908.

Plano Tuning and Repair;

Brunicordl Muoic Co .. 448·
0887. T-ntloth yoor of
quality eervlce. Lane Da~
nlola. 814-742·2981.
Unwonted foclol or body
h8ir7 Permanent, painle11

:11: I VI
11

. I':,

HalpWant~

Account Clerk II. Boiory
f10,140·f11,024 onnuo!ly
doPindlng on quollflcotlono.
Muot bo fomlllor with gon·
orol -ounllng prlnolpiH
ond doto procooolng oqulp-nt. Apply City BuDding,
1111 8oc011d A ...UI, before
Jonuorv 4, 18111. Equol
Employment Opportunity
tM·F·V·HI Employer. - 2 poeltlono It LoSollo Aoo·
touront. Cook·Chof ond
Soled Mokor-Diohwoohor.
Apply In PI'IOn only. 11:00·
11 :00 om. Mon ., Wed·
.. Thun .. ond Fri. Middleport,
Ohio. No phone coli ploooo.
IEBT KEPT SECRET IN
AMERICA .. Army Notlonol
Guord. Join ond you hovo o
good port-timo co'"r..g bonoflto ·· monthly
poychock.. NO LAYOFFS.
304·171·3980 or 1·800·
142·3111.
JOIN THE LEADER, Thll
Now AVON. Dromotic n ....,lngo pion, profeoolonol
now oeloo trolnlnt. moke up,
color onolyoil, unlimited
growth potontlol. Coli
nowto4-8711·1421 or304·
344.0724.
Help Wonted • reoldont
,.,...., end or rftllntlnenco couple or por- for
-~ 24 unit oldorfy oport·

H-.

oompl••· Rhror lond
. Plooe, N-·
Wilt
VIrginia. . . 1111 ....

to:

CaiOIIilll A-'oan Do•ol:c;
. mtnt Corpor•tlon, ll Cl
IDutll Fifth .._, Col-·
- · oahlo 41218.

HouH for rent in Mercervlle
oroo. Coli Kenneth ·Sweln
441·3189 or 814·258·
1552-nlnga.

2 bedroom houoo 42 Chilli·
cotho Rd, 1210 per mo.,
175 dop. Coli 446-3870 or
448·1340.

2 or 3 bedroom houMa In or
ne1r Pomeroy. Fumiahed or
unfurnlohlld. Aont ond utili·
tiH nogotloblo. Doy 814·
992·2381 , ovonlngo 614·
992·8723 .

Nice, redecorated 2·
· bedroom home In Pomeroy;
inoulotod, otove ond rofriger·
lltor provided, 1torm win·
dowo. •185.00 pluo ooi:ur·
ity depoolt . Sorry -- no
children or poto. Phone
814·992·11292 ovenlngo or

removal by European Etec-

Seturd1y1.

In SyracuH. ideal for cou·
plo. Cell 114-992-2441 of·
tor 8PM.

ulon.

1-::-::--:-:--'-...,---::-:3 1 Homes for Sale
Middleport homo. priced to
Hill And wo Meon Priced To
Sellll c .. 814·992-11941 .
Nice 2 bdr. homo on lorgolot
It 1508 Rldgo Rd, Rio
Or1nde . Neer campua .
Shown by oppointmont. Coli
114·882·7424. Priced to

ooll.
Remodeled 2 BA vlnylod
home, cerpeted, 2 ecre1,
1224 pound tobocco ollot·
mont. city ochoolo.
·~2.1100 . Coli 614· 245·
5281,

I lililll vIii I' ill

House for rent . Call 304675·7283 876·5104 or
175-6381.
.

tronic Oepilator. Mary 11
cenlfied in- tbia new computorlud digltol oylftom. Coli
todoy 114·892·8720. Top
of the Stair~. full nrvica

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS I·P:-I-:A_N_O-TU-N~IN_G_A_N_D_R_
E·
FURNITURE. Bedo. Iron. PAIR, Reduced rotooliinitod
wood, cupboordo. choiro,
che1t1, beaketa, diehes, time only. Ward' a Keyboard.
otono joro. ontiquoo, gold 304·875-11500 or 876 ·
_·_ _ _ _ _ __
ond oilvor. Wrlto·M.D . 1 _3 _B_24
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio , .
411789 or coli 114-992·
R1:al FsLili'
7780.
liuylng dolly gold. oilvor
col no, rlngo,j-olry. otorllng
-ro, old colno, Iorge cur·
rency. Top prlcoo. Ed. Bur·
kott Borbor Shop, 2nd. Avo.
Middleport, Oh. 81 4 ·992·
3478.
------·icBUYING RAW FURS . BHf
ond D11r Hldoo.Ginoong ond
yellow root . Selling·
tropplng aupplloo. Whllot
llghto. night llghto. George
Buckloy,phono 114·884·
4711.houro 12-9PM dolley.

Houses for Rent

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· Furnlohlld houoo, 3 bdr.. 29
LISHING co. recommend• Noll Avo .. Golllpollo. *225
thot you do buolnooo with pluo utHtloo, roforencoo. Coli
pooplo you know. end NOT L4_4_8_·_4_4_11_o_ft_o_r_7P_M_.- to Hnd money through the ,.Small 2 bdr. hou.. In
mall un.t il you have invetti· country. Coll448·0924.
gotod thll offering.
Smell houoelocotod ot 1701
Chellnut St. n 15 mo .. 176
22 Money to Loan
dep. CoM 446·3B70.

HOME OWNERS-Roflnonco
to low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpose. Le8der
Mortgogo Co., 614·692·
3061 .

In Southern School Dlotrlct.
Modi- A·fromo on 6
ocroo. Fully corpotod with
wood bumor. FHA. VA. or
convontlonolloon wMI buy it.
Own• moving out of atlte .
Aeklnt 135.000.00 or mo..
offer. Coli 814-843·11384.

3 br houoe, both, full bon·
ment, garage. avelleble Dec .
28. 1250. Roforencoo ond
dopoolt required. 304-1176·
1090.

42

Haines
for Rent

2 bdr. trailer for rent, near
Mercerville. Coli 441·3169
or 11 4-2118·115152 after
li :30PM .
Furnlahlld 2 bdr.. cloon,
qule1, cable. beeutlful river
v~w in Kenauga . Fo11era
Mobile Homo Pork . 441 ·
1802.
1 4x70 totol electric 3 bdr ..
fumiahed, plus waaher

a.

dryer on private lot, 10 min.
from town . t200 mo. plua
dopoolt ond utllitloo. Aof.
roq. Coli 814·2111·1383.
Troller for rent. locotod In
Gollipolio. Coli 441-4225.
2 bedroom mobile home.
Noturol goo hoot. Roclno
oroo. Con 814-992·11158.

14 x 70 throe bedroom with
Iorge yord. •1ee.oo month
pluo dopoelt ond utQhloo.
One child. Coli 814·8811·
4387.

For oolo by o - . Owner
will flnonco thll down PlY·
mont. U4.000. Coil 814;
742·2843.
-------·leFor oolo or loooo·8 room
houooln Rooo HHI, Pomeroy.
1114·871·2813.

2 br houoo. n-IY docoroted. 304-875·1090.

morrlld couple With child, no ""'"· dopotit ond
nforoncoo required. K • K
Mobile Hornoo. Inc .. 304·
875-3000.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW AND USED MDIILE
HOMEI KEIIEL'I QUAL·
1TY MOBILE HOME 8A.LEI,
4 MI. WEST, GAWPDUI,
RT 311 . PHONE 114·""1·
7274.

Nice efficiency epar1ment,

2 . one bedroom apt1, carpeted. totol electric, depooit
required. Cell 814-992 ·
2094.

APARTMENTS. mobile
homoo, houooo. Pt. Ploeoont
ond Golllpollo. 514-448·
8221 ."
In Mlddlopon, 2 bedroom
fumlohed opt, 1 child. 1·
304·882·2686 .

45

1 2x85 Mobile Homo, complotoly fumlohed ond lit up
for lmmedloto occu~N~~Ion.
304-1711·13111 oft• II PM.

Furnished Rooms

For riint Sleeping Rooma
end light houoo kooplng
rooms. Park Cantril Hotel.
Coli 814-448-0766.

Furnlohed room, $1215. Utili·
tiea, range, ref. Shire bath ,
N!on only. 819 Soc .. Golllpo·
llo. 446·4418 ofter 8 p.m.

35

Lob •

Ac:raage

54 .Misc.

Merchandise

Knauff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwooda. Seaaoned or
gr~en. You pick up or WI
deliver. HEAP vender. 61A·
266·6246 .

Space for Rent

Mobile homo lot, $78 wotor
pold, 4th • Noll, Gollipollo.
Coli 446·3844 oftor 7PM.

Firewood c;ut up alaba. 816
PU lood. Lorgor loodo dell ·
vered. Call for prices. 814246-6804.

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33, Nonh of
Pomeroy. Lorge loto. Coli
814·992· 7479.

Big 3 or II bdr. homo built on
your lot •18.900 • up. Soo
our model. Coii1 · 614· B88·
7311 .

49

Singer sewing machine for
sale, golden touch and aew.
Coli 614· 388·8598, llko
new.

For Leaee

Apt. for lease, overlooking

city park. LR. kitchen, stove,
rofrlg .. dining oroo, 2 bdr..
both, •190 mo. pluo utili·
tieo. Coil PJ' 448' 1819.
'

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

Driveway atone hauled and
opreod. Cell l. Poul Monin
614· 2118· 6776 or Dovld
Mertln 814·268· 1228:

.

Flatbeda. Trip L1111 or
Leooe. 269-2306. Ohio
Woto 800· 282·2886. Inter·
IIIII Weto B00-8311· 7413.

Me rc h anrl1 s1:

.Household Goods

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Waahen. drye,,, refrlgera·
toro, rongoo. Sko9111 AP·
pliancea_, l)ppar River Rd.
booido Stone Croat Motel.
614-446· 7398.
"
County Appliance, Inc .
Good uood opplloncoo end
TV ooto. OPin BAM to 6PM.
Mon thru Sot. 441· 11199.
627 3rd. Ave. Golllpollo
'
OH.
Valley Furniture, new &amp;:
uood. Lorge ooctlon of qual·
ity furniture . 1216 Eastern
Avo .. Gollipollo.

Sot of weight bunk bedo.
8715 • color TV CORIOII •·
needa minor repalra 840.
Cell 614·246·9489 oftor 4.
.Auto wooher .... five othor
waa hera to choo• from.
Goo otove 1711- 2 othoro to
chooM from, electric range
t95· 2 others to choose
from. Refrlg. 1911. oldo by
lib do, nfrlg. •.1 11, wood·
urn1ng otovo 9 5. Moytog
wringer woohor f 76.
Sklggo Appllonclo, Upper
River Rd . 4411·739B.
Plckono ulld furniture. 304·
1711-8483 or 1175-1450.

'

E88Q MOYii$ VP ~
SOStowt.Y ON THE
~-oiiT t.l/11&amp; ....

W~DIItiESDA y

.·

1312&amp;/84

' ..

. 8 :00

mDr. Who

Sigler gaa heat stove. Call
446-2 106.
Flrilwood for sale $26
pickup lood. f36 delivered .
Coll814·261·8208.
Stokermatic stovea and
stoker furnancea. Jack hagorty, Rodcliff, Oh. 814-889·
3462 .
7K17 white awning for 1111
like new. Cell 81 4· 387:
7488.

Porekoto •10 to •13. Cock·
otlolo UO, love blrdl flO 1
Plir, flnchoo t5, ullriilht
plono •18.11. Coil 814~9811·
4212 •

Buck otovo. 2yro. old. 8426 .
Cell448·8221.
Firewood for aale. 90%
herdwood. Col448-1287.

8 :30

Orlglnol Coloco Cobboge
Pitch Preomlo doll •115.00.
One Cobbogo Potch Kooooo
enlmol $150.00. 304-882·
2904.
.
ARMY SURPLUS. Som
Somorvlllo'o, Eoot of Ro·
vanawood 7 milea fold
Route 211 N- ERA, OPin
Frl, Sot, Sun 1:00· 'l:OO. Coli
In ordor 304-875·3334.

Stokartnatlc Stoves end
Stoker Furnaces. Jock Hag·
orty. Aedcllff. Ohio. li14·
889-3482.

Cor 111t t26. 304·8711·
4087.

66

Building .Supplies

Rough Cut Lumber, ook,
poplor. ond pine. 2x4'o.
2xl'o, 1x8'o, 1 xl't. Ao·
oorted longtho . Coli Hog11
end Zuopon Moterlolo
co .. lnc . 773-11·11114,
doytlme.
Now open for buolneoo,
Mountoln Stoto Block, Rt.
33, N- Hoven. Comploto
mooonrv ouppHeo. "". B".
12" block. Delivery oorvlci.
Phone doy 30..·882·2222.
evening 882·3239.

56

Pats for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boordlng oil breedo. Hooted
lndoor·outdoor facilltlaa.
AKC Dobormon pupploo:
Stud Sorvlco. Coli I 14· 448·
7795.

Brlarpatch Kennela Prof••·
oionol All·broed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facllitiH. Englloh Cockor Spo·
nlel pupploo. COli II 14· 3B8·
9790.

Drog011wynd COttory Ken·
nel. CFA Hlmoleyon, Porolon
ond Siomooo klttono. AKC
Chow pupploo. Coli 8 14·
""8· 3844 oftor 7.
CHRISTMAS Pupploo, AKC
roglotored Cocker Bponlo...
buff In color. n 21. Exool·
lent Chrlllmeo gift. Ceil
814·388-97115.
Form Doluxopuppleowotch·
dogo. hog • cottlo hordoro,
hunt coono • hogo, Coto·

houoobrokon. Good with
children. 1 moil ond 1
femole. Coli 814·892·
2388.
AKC roglltllred. Biook fo·
melo Mlnoture poodlo, 11will! children,
houoo
trolned, 7 yooro
heolth. 1111.00. Coli 14·
112·5207
'
.

AmMioon Pit lull T - r
pploo.6-oolci, UKC
Ribbon Bred. 30...
I I 2132 or 112·2374. .

Apartment
for Rant

JACKSON EITATEI
APARTMENTI CEquol
Houolna Oowturrity) ....
one and twO ltedroonte, rent
otortlng It f183 for bedroom ond •111 por
month for boclroom.
with 1200 dopoolt , _
illlr foodontl 11141
Volley Plue, - ' ond TV
..t. eo11 4441-2741 or,....
inlooogo.

.prfn.

Reg. Quarter horae weanling
fUiy, dark chestnut, blaza
face, hlcih hind whlte10cka,
o~ow or roclng quollty prooPICt •8oo or trodo. Coli
814-379·2683 .
-:::--------·lcForoolo.oovonmo.oldcolt.
$160.00. Coli 614·986·
3891 .
Horseman Corral, 2413
Jackaon Ave, Point Plea·
unt. Horae and barn equipment. Veterinarian auppli11
end grooming aide.

AKC lhotlond Shoop Dog
puPI tMinl. COiiol ooblo ond
- · Hod oH ohoto. 304·
411·1011.

64

Hay

&amp;

Grein

Lorge round boloo of hoy •20
·eoch . Coll448·10152oftor6.

lr onsp or !.JIIilll
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH poid for '80
model snd newer u1ed cars.
Smith Bulck·Pontloc, 1911
Eootern Ave .. Golllpollo. Cell
81 4·448-2282.
77 Pontloc Grond Prix 301'
olr, PS/PB, good condition.
One owner. •1250. Coli
after ll~M. 441·0137 .
1958 Chevy 2811 2 dr.
Sedan. naada re~torlng,
f496. 1976 Comoro, 6 cyl ..
outo trano, •1.000. Call
448-B113 or 4411·8201.
1966 Chllvy Bololr 12815.
en gino • body In good con d.
Coil 4411· 76to, fedtomp
1968 Chllvy Bololr 1296
on gino • body In IIOod oond:
Cell 448·7813 oftor 4PM .·
Dune Bu1111y hoo VW engine
good fromo, roll boro, rool
fun mochlno. Mull 1111,
'3911. CoR 4411·4225.
B3 Dodge Omnl 4 dr.. 4
opd .. AM·FM CIIIOttl, do·
luxo lnuorlor. Coil 814·241·
91811 or 245-8410.
1878 Monto Corio. PS. olr,
cruloo, 71,000 mlloo. Coli
814- 2411· 88811 on 2411·
9480.
1874 Muotong -P8, AM·FM
cooootto. low mi., n - bot·
tory. CoH 814· 245·11489
oftor 4 .
1978 D....... A"C. Runo
-good. Body·ruff.
oodcor. .480.00. Col 814992· 73114 ovonlngo.
1871 Vogo G.T. with lun
R f COl p
"oo ·
1'11111'1 Glroloml ot
•14-CI92 ·l?el.
1882 Chivy C h - . Lon
ihon 11,000 mllu •
13100.00. COli 114·8811·
3
__19
___1_.- - - - - ' - -

1

1971 V.W. Super Boodo. 4
oyllndor, 4 opood, AM FM
Storo " ' - · olr lhook.
Vory 100d oondltlon.
11311.00. 1877 Gronodo,
302onglne, outo.,
P.S., P.l .. olr. .791.00.
1871 L.T.O .. 4 door. 381
entlno, tuto•. P.I.,P.I., olr.
17111.00. Coli et4•387·
77110.

a

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spoutingi NQW' lnttalllng rubber
roofs. 30 year~ experience.
specializing in built up roof.
Coii814· 388·9B57.
H Sa S Home Improvements
vinyl l aluminum siding, ,
roofing, ... ml111 gutters, •
storm windows, · overhang.

Heaven Jonathan and Mark
set out to help a voung as piring bo)(er and a group of
senior citizens deal with a vi·
dous neighborhood gang.

1

[60 min.l
CIJ Flippor
(]) MOVIE: 'All in a Night's
Work'
IIJ Gl iJ2I Fall Guy tCCI

Coll814·367-0409·or 614· ~
387-724!1.
'
_ _ _B_A_S_E~M-E_N_T_ _ _ ,..

1

I

WATERPROOFING
:j:
Unconditional lifetime gua- ..::••
, rantee . Local reference a
furniahed. free estimates.
Coli collect 1-614-237·
04B8, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
•
R o •g oro B 1 1 am e n t , •
Wetorprooflng.
•
__
_;__ __::...____ ,,.

1n'l'-t"

Mu1loal
ln1trument1

Old Oormon vlollrl, very
nloe, •100.00 • . Flat top
ultor with ..... like new,
71 .00 . Coli 114·848·
2801.

l

1871 M. .wy Cou_.11r XR7
PI, ,., AC, AM·PM, 114:
448-21111.

Col~ . Howie and Jody are in

Hong Kong doing stunts for
a James Bond movie and
tracking down a bail jumper
who has been accused of
killing a Chinese national and
stealing prk:oless artifacts .
tRI [60 min.)
Q (]) ®l Charles in Charge
II) A Christmas Memory
(CC} This story. written and
narrated by the late Truman
Capote, recalls his childhood and a special relationship of his that· revolved
around Christmas . (60 min .)
® Charlie Muffin
~ Freedom Bowl CoUege
Football: Iowa vo. T exaa
IMA~l MOVIE: 'Mountain
Men'
8 :30 (]) NFL'I Greatest Mo·
menta 1977 World Cham·
pion Dallas Cowboys and
1978 World Champion
Pittsburgh Steelers High·
lights. 160 min.I
Q II)® E/R
9:00 D (]) (!) Facto of life CCCI
Mrs. Garrett and the girls reminisce about their summer

"!·

Roofing. guttering, aiding.
J31umblng, carpentry work
and concrete work. Free , ~:
eotimoteo. Cell 446 ·3 171 . • :•
Iron Horoo Bulidero. Farm •
Commercial Polo Bldg o.
614 - 332 - 9745 Collect .
Winter opl.: 30X40X9 with
16' track door ft. man door:
86236 erected.

...

..

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola . 'Ouaur , and
houoo cello. Coli 304-676·
239B or 614· 448-2464 .

GASOLINE ALLEY

'

RINGLES 'S SERVICE, experienced carpenter, electrl·
clan, maaon, painter, roof·
ing (including hot tar
oppllcotionl 304-876-20B8
or 676·7388.

Where did

The qifts Mr. Booale oave
u' cost at least five
hundred ...-rr-dollars,

Fetty TrM Trimming. stump
removel . Cell 304 ·67e·
1331.

hegettne
money?

Slim!

vacations. (R)

CIJ 700 Club

II) Q) ~ MOVIE : 'Malibu'
Pan 1 (CCI
llJ II) ®l MOVIE : 'Fast
Times at Ridgemont High'
[]) Store CCC) The world of
Neiman-Marcus is explored

Rotory or cable tool drilling.
Molt wells completed same
day. Pump Ales end aarvicoo. 304-B96-3802 .
Absten Home Improvement
Specialitt, new homes. additions, roofing, aiding, con crete, dry wall . 304-468·
1585,

82

by me~n.s of sales meetings .
advertiSing strategies. personnel practices and marketing strategies. (60 min.)

WINNIE

IHBOl MOVIE: 'Glitter
Dome' tCCI
9:30 II C1J ffi It's Your Move
Mau Burton. a precocious
14-year-old,
meets
his
march· in a struggling writer
living across the hall . (A)
(!) Boxing Special: Heavyweight Bouts Jerry Cooney
vs. George Chaplin and Wol·

Plumbing
Heating

a.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANQ HEATING
Co!. Founh end Pine
qolllpolio, Ohio
Phone 61 4-446-3B88 or
814-448·4477

ford ·scypion vs. Murray

JIM'S PLUMBING S. HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 366, Galli·
polio. Coli 614·367-01176.

83

BARNEY

,.'

•'•

EJtcavating

·'· '
Good-1 Excavating, baaaments. footera, driveways,
aeptic tanka, landscaping .
Coli onytlme 814 - 446 41137, Jomeo L. Devioon, Jr .
owner.

84 .

a.

'
;.
••
"

WASTATER A

GOOO BOY WHILE
I: .WAS GONE ,
PAW?

VEP··

HE

WORKED ON
HIS COLORIN'
BOOK ALL
MORNIN'

NOW HE'S ON

BREAK

Bueineaa'

10:30

'·•.

liZ Nowo

:::;;==:::;==~========~
.
·~:d

85
__________
,.,...
General Hauling , .

"".

ii-I "

James Soya Water Service.-....·
Aloo poole filled. Coli 814trf
2118-1 1 41 or 814 "448 •
1 176 or 614·""8· 7911 . •"'·

,,f

•. t·

Kon'o Wotor Service . Welle ~:
cleterna, pools filled . Phon · • ·
814-387-0623 or 814-387· ·
7741 night or dey .
and ~­

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 113 Boo. Ave .. Golllpollo
1114-441-7833or814·446:
1833.
•
.

::

"
'
'·

.,.'
,.
•,
:•

'·

''

CIJ Conversation w/Fred
Lewlo
(fi) International Edition

11 :oo 11m IIl m a IIl ®J GI

SEWING Machine repolro, • •
Mrvice. Authoriz:ed Singer
Soleo • Service Sharpen
Scl11ora. Fabric Shop· ~~
Pomeroy, 614·992-22B4. ··-!'

87

at the hospital. tRI 160 min .l
ril MOVIE: 'Legend of
Custer'
[]) Harry Chllpln
In
Concert
® Newswatch
IMAKl
MOVIE:
'Risky

LONG

----------------~~ ,•,•

WiH haul coal. und
grovel, 304-4118 · 1568.

has a dream involving Peter
.White when they all participate in a dream experiment

..••

E lec:trit:a 1
Refrigeration

.

Southerland. (90 min .)
10:00 II Cil (!) St. Eioowhere
·
Ehrlich dreams of being cap ~
tured by a group of lusty
Amazon women, Luther
dreams of ZZ Top and Jack

HIS LUNCH

'•

-doOr.
57

J

Services

Liveatoc:k

8 yr. old Polomlno gelding,
1300. Coil 61'4-286-848B .

Building Motorfolo
Block, brick, •-•• plpoo,
wlndowe. lintels, ate .
Cioudo Wlntoro. Rio Orondo.
0. Coli 814-248·11121.

Wood splitter with tractor
hitch and h0111 for tractor
hydroullc . Cell 614·387·
7727.

Mobile home new porto ond
dooro. lnoldo, outoldo,llorm
dooro. troller wlndowo .
About 1100 I priced to 10111
McArthur,Ohlo, Route • 1 ,
Coli 614·1198·UB 2 .

63 .

Firewood, all hard woods
oplit, delivered ond llockod
.38.00. 304-676-8773.

Judy Teylor Grooming. Cell
814-387·7220.

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

•

Wo would like to thonk our
cuatornera for a vary good
yoor with big yoor-end dlocounte on all new and UHd
farm equipment and chain
- • I n otock. Sldoro Equip·
ment, Henderson, W . Va .•
304-675-7421 .

II (]) ffi

NBC News
(l) Rifl"'""n
(]) Mazdo Sportolook
(]) Coroi Burnett
(]) G ClZ ABC News tCCI
liJ (]) ® CBS Newo
())
Nightly
Buoiness
Report
® Body Electric
.
Ill One Dey at a Time
IMAJtl MOVIE: 'They Call
Me Bruce?'
7:00 ·II (]) PM Magazine
CIJ Here Come the Brides
(]) SportaConter
(]) Gomer Pyle
Cil Ql ClZ Entertainment
Tonight
(!) Wheel of Fortune
liJ (]) Wheel of Fortune
[]) ® · MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
®I Newo
fi) Jeffersono
7:30 II C1J Tic Toe Dough
(]) Bodybuilding: 1 984
Mr. Universe Competition
from Loa Vesao, NV
(]) Andy Griffith
CII D ()) Fomily Feud
(I) Jeopardy
®I Wheel of Fortune
ClZ New Name That
Tune
f11 WKAP in Cinclnnotl
IHBOl MOVIE: 'Two of a
Kind'
8:00 II C1J ffi Highway to

Motors Homes
. • Campers

For Sale: 1 968 Banner
camper, tleepa 8 , aelfcontalnad, good ~ondltlon :
•1.1100. Coli 814·268 ·
1845 or 814·256·887B.

69 ' For Sale or Trade
Cockltlolo •3o.oo. Love l - - - -- - - - - lllrdo 1110-9.0 o polr. Flnchllo
•11 . 00 . Upright plono
f1 118.00. Cell 814-98R. For Ale or rent, thrH
bedroom ho4oe with both
u
4212.•e,b2;fclor73
and C81rport on large lot in
Rutlond. •160.00 month or
For Sale: One third acre In 111 ,8110.00. Might con·
Middleport. Coli 1114·992· llder mJce mobile home on
8530. Zenith oteroo tcon- trodo or termo. Coli 114·
oolel liken-. ·
742· 2480 or 114·742·
2512, except Sundoy.
Firewood. $20.00 pick up
lood, 130 .00 dollvorod .
304 ·876 · 2991 or 875·
I .IIIII ~ 111111111'.,
8782.
!; l. Vi'\ I Ill'
tCool Dellvorodl good lump
houoo cool 1 to 1 ton. coli
Jim Lenior 875· 7397 or
304-8711-1247.
61 Farm Equipment

3x4 ft .. gold framed mirror.
Coll614·266·1768.
.

u d · b 11
I I Pin • mochlneotond·
ord oize, $150 . Cell 446·
4617
448 9278
or
"
·
·lcOak furniture. tlblee,ohalra.
cupboorda, pie oofo, tole·
phonea, de•. also antlq~s
and giiiiWire. Open Sun·
doyo. Conkol'o Tupporo ·
plolno, Rt.7 .

Oruma 9 pc. aet Tame. exc.
cond. Coii4411·375B.

1---------Perokot•• 1 0.00to•13.00.

1-::--:-------6 Coloco Cobboge Potch
Preemie dolls and 1 regular.
N- U6 eoch. Coli 446·
20B7 or 448·4348.

78

I NAKTE I

••

[XJ

PEANJ,JTS

:Dear SWeetheart,

. I haven't seen you
m a Jonq while.

Are you still
the same?

I am sendinq you

my latest pl)otilgraph .

If you aren't as

cute as you used to
be, send It back.

CIJ Bill Cosby Show
(]) Flutle: Uttlo Big Mon
[]) Ded' I Army
® To So Announced
Ill SonnY Hill Show
(HBOI Not N..,.o..uy 1hll
Yoor In R!IView The 'Not
Neceasarity the News' team
recalls the major events of
19B4.
11 :30 8 Cil CD Boot of Canon
Tonight'&amp; guests are Mel
Brooks and Tari Garr. IRI t60
mln .l
(1) Blst of Grl&gt;Ucho
ill &amp;ponsContor
()) WKRP In Cincinnotl
a(() Mognum P.l . A case
of industrial eeptonage reveolo divided loyoltiea whon
Magnum ta hired to inveltigilte tho th8h of veluable
codes Stolen from 1 compUter mognote .. IRI 160 min .)
()) Lotonlght Amorlca
®Text
(ft)lnuomationol Edition
rD Nlghtllno
• Twilight. Zone
IHBOI MOVIE: '10 to
Midnight'

e

~

.'
WHAT THAT
l7EAFENIN6 NOI~E

tur~s the duo's '608 classics
plus some of their recent
solo hits.

':t'

Musical
lnstrum
. enta

...'

IHBOI Simon IWiirGorfunk.,l: Thll Concert In Control
Pork This 198 1 reunion lea·

!

==---------'
' •.} ..
76
Boats and
Motors for Sale
~.;,
- - - = - - - - ..

57

..• .·s.

® •

® 3-2, 1, Conuoct tCC)
Ill Diff'ront Strok"

1:
---------- ...
-~

Misc. Merchandise

())

()) Lucy Show

1979 CJ-5 Golden Eagle, • ·.PS, PB. loaded. Cell 448· •.''
0848 after &amp;PM .

54

(l) ()) (!) •

ill Hot Potato

1978 Chevrolet Scottodolo, ' ,
4x4, PIS, PB. auto. new tires. . •
lock out hub1, exc. cond.,
511,000 mi. Cell 614·387·
71140.
~ "

•

•1&gt;

(DNewt

LJ'
r ,1'

______.:.____

...--

EVENING

1874 Ford 2 ton Truck with ..,
log bunko, long wheel bell. •
good cond. Cell 814·3B8· ,.,,.
9387.

old.,-

2 br mobile home fumlohed,
1 child. no pota. Cloon
condition. Now Hoven.
•180. por 'month. 304-112·
2411 .

44

....'.
•"tl

Ir==========1::::::::::::;::;:::;:::~ houlo
X Englloh. Coli 814·
379·21113.
-::::::-::-:-:------They'll Do It Every Time
AKC Mlnloture Sohnouzort
born 1 0-02·14 . Noorly

Schultz 11172 85•12 with

tlh Out wll ooll Pl'l:liy furnlohed or -'loblo on
prlco, 304-1711~117. ·

UMd Furniture -- electric
fireplace. 6 pc. dinette, head
boordo, and 2 bedroom
oulteo. 3 mlleo out Bulovlllo
Rd . Opon 9omto5pm. Mon.
thru Set.
814-448-0322

liniestone, Sind. Oravel.
Pick up at Richards Ill Son.
Cell 446-7786.

51

12•60, two bedroom. qulot
1ocotlon, portlolly fumlohlld.
•100 .00 depoolt. 11711.00
por month. Coli 114-992·
1834 oftorii:OO pm.
•
Mobile ~- In GoHipollo,
nlco for oonlor cltlzono or

Gollipollo Forry 8 yoor old
brick rench. ,&amp; c1r prage,
•43,000.00. Phone 304·
178·1881.

Fumlohlld 2 bedroom opt. In
Middloport. Aduito, no ""'"·
oocurlty dopoolt. Coli 814·
992·3874.

autt.ble for one or two
pooplo. Coll304· 773-8882,
Betty More or.

Rt·rr l .11 s

Room ond boord for oldorly;
oloo oiHping rooma. Cell
814·982·8022.

f lll.IIIC I.il

a. Ac:ruge

Lots

Spocoo for ront, troller loto,
•wer end water furniahed .
Smell children occopted.
304·876·1 076.

-=-------···-

Wanted To Buy

Jim Mink Chov.-Oido Inc.
Bill Gone Johnoon
""8· 3172

36

'
•

1 boot ond troller for oole. • ·
.
•·
.,411.- f~~;.;:;;;::~~~;::_::~;~::~~~ -Coll814·268·1661
- - - - - - - - -; "

medical bills."
St. Bernlrd to 1 good
country homo. Slllrley, Rt.
1, Box 59, Apple Grove, W.
Vo .

Televi8ion
Viewing

1988 GMC pickup 1226. •·
Coli 814·3117· 01132 .
. ;

11-.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, choir, rocker, ottomen, 3 tlbiH,(oxtro hlovy),
•11111. Sofoo ond cholro
priced from 1285. to •sa&amp;.
Tobloo, UOondupto•128.
Hldo·o·bedo;l390. ond up
Rocllnoro, 12211. to 13715..
Lompo
from
*21.
to 1125.
to teso
.. oof•
bed•
pc. dlnottoo from •1011 .. to
4315. 7 pc. •119 ond up.
Wood table with oix chlllro
f2B5 to f746. Doli&lt; •110
up ,t o 12211. Hutclloo, •IiilO.
Bunk bed comploto with
tt
.278
me rooooa,
·end up to
•396. Boby bldo, t110.
Matt,.••• or box aprtngs,
full or twin, •58., firm, •18.
ond 178. Ouoon ooto. •195.
4 dr. chooto, u 8 . 15 dr.
chooto. •as. Bed fromeo
120 d 125 10
'
.on
"
gun· Gun
coblnoto, $350. Goo or
electric rongoo 1376. Boby
mettrooooo, $25 • 835, bod
fromoo 120, f26. • no.
king fromo $110. Good oeioction of bedrOOm auitea~
rocker~. metal cabineta.
hoedboordo $38 • up to
$86.
'

..,;
.,·.

Trucks for Sale

197B ChiVY Luv, outo.
rodlo, topper, •1999 .
John"o Auto Sol... Bulovillo
Rd. Gellpollo. 446·4782 .

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE . Uoed otoveo
ond refrlgerotoro. ComPiro
our prices. save today.
Phone J04. 773·11430.

Fumlohed opt .. next door to
Ubrory, ono profeoolonol
edult Ollly. C.ll 441·0338.

Furni1hed efficiency. •145,
.utlltloo pd. ehore both. 807
2nd. AV.. Golllpollo. Coil
4411·""18 oftor1PM.
'
Now offlclonoy opt. with
gar1g1, epplfance• fur·
nlah~ . washer-drye~ hookup. Prlvote yord, 1210 mo.
lriclude1 water, dep. re•
qulrod. Coli 448·7209 or
448-3287.

Gun ohoot 11 Recine Gun
Club every Sundoy, 1:00
p.m. Foctory chocked guno
only.

4

1 bdr Opt.. 2 bdr ept ..
•1110·1210. Call 304·11711·
7213 875· 11104 or 175·
11318.

72

19

The Daily

Ohio

WAS A FO~M OF.

.,BROBREt
Mswer: "K
Vesterdav 'a

I

I I )-( I I I I XI t
I " ' - ' tomorrow)

Jumb'es: LOWLY TRILL NETHER INDUCT
Answer : A ·scratch pad Is for people who haVe this at ·

'

odd times and placesTHE ITCH TO WAITE

,.

.,."

.
~

, - - - - N -"''
'R_T_H-----.

The bidding
holds the clue

...

12·26-81

+J 6
.A91
t K712

,,"

+to 53 2
By Jameo Jacoby
WEST
EAST
"How often will five outstanding
+A
10 8 3
+I
cards in a suit be divided 3· 21" the
.Q 107
• J 8 53
professor asked. The student answer·
tQJ10 9a
tA
ed, ''Sixty-eight percent of the time."
+Q971
+K J 8 6
The student was right, but we must
SOUTH
admire the player who lets the bid·
+KQ 9752
ding guide him to those 32 out of 100
.K 62
times when the less likely distribu·
• 8 63
!ions take place.
· .
+A
South found himself in three
Vulnerable: Both
spades. He ducked the Ol!"ning lead
Dealer: East
and was gratified that East had to
win the ace. Back came a club, won
Welt
Nortb Ea11
by South's ace. Declarer led a spade
24
Pass
Pass
to the jack, which held, and ruffed a
Pass
Pass
3+
club in his hand.
.,
PaS!
Pass
3+
Declarer was about to play the
Pass
spade king when be stopped to consid·
er the bidding. East had opened the
,.
Opening lead: +Q
bidding with one club, and his partner
had raised to two clubs. Since West ~--------------~
would not have raised clubs without
four, East also must have four clubs.
As for diamonds, East had only one the ace. Left were eight cards in
spades and hearts, If East had been heartS .
dealt five hearts, he would have
Baci·ing that judgment to the hilt "
opened the bidding with one heart declarer played to the heart
rather than one .club. And so the lnes· dummy and played back a low ace
~
capable co_ncluston was that East had I When Eut played the eigbt, he~~ -:
otarted wtth four spades and four fthe nine to make his contract. pu
,

--

••

•

-

!ft •

..-.

·~

' •' .

dl-..,.tt'

••

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·"

..

THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 38 Inhabit
1 So. Afr. 39 ''Beautiful

by

',.

lox

40 Actress
Susan
41 English
river

5 Child

of Loki

8 Gait
9 Malt
vinegar
DOWN
13 Icelandic !Woe
is me!
Yeslerd!tv's Answer
measure
14 Restore
2 Compact
10 Just
27 Andy Hardy
15 Sot Lal.l 3 The
dandy!
portrayer
16 Soak
Moluccas 11 Fly
29 Unrefined
17 Nest
4 Poetical
12 Blush
30 Get in
18 Ala low
16 Whirl
shape
adverb
pitch
5 M~n 's
19 Pa. city 34 Hautboy
20 Move
22 A Hart
36 Get
name
restlessly 6 Sad verse 23 Large cup
21 Crocus
7 Bulgarian Z4 Lofty
22 Boundary
.,c:.:o:.;;in;....,......,,.-=25 Falrr-rr-w23 Shallow
container
25 "Sun·

••

.. ·-•

. ".'
'

..

......
...

flower"
star
26 She (Fr.)
27 Coarse
!iie
26 Brazilian
tree
29 Under·
gannenl
31 Sib
3% Writer
Serling
· 33 Nigerian
35 Football

..''•,

.
' ..
..
..·'
. ...

'

term
37 Strike·

breaker

DAILYCRVPI'OQUOI'mi-Here'• bow to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

'

.
i

One lettenlaitds for another. In this sample A is used
ror the Uiree ' L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
aposlnlphes, the le~ and formation of the words are ali
hints. Each~_!'_!hecode letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

12-:lfl

~

NETBV, EJTPCMA

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TCPV BV E GCW
TBAPNA
EVX

XAZBAX

XBX

VCU

EGWAP'M
TANCJA

GEl.

SPAM·

NGB Z UCV
Z E. X B J E V
Cryptoquote: MAY YOU HAVE PEACE
WVE AND CONTENTMENT AND MAY THESE RU':
PLE t'ROM YOU TO mE REST OF TIIE WORI.D. YOUR PUZZlE FRIENDS.

B X A V U. Y~e~tenlay'a

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'

Plge 20-The Daily s.,tinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

. Louise Hawkins, 82, died Tuesday
· .a t the Pcmeroy Health Care Care

.

Cente~.

A housewife, Mrs. Hawkins was
bOrn in Meigs County on Nov. 13,
l902. a daughter of William and
Sophia Rlzlng Reuter.
She Is SWVIVed by nieces, Veda
Davis ot Pomeroy, Lucille Buley of
Detroit, Mich., and several other
nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Homer, ln 1m.
Mrs. Hawkins was a member of
the Bradford Chwch of Christ, the
Ladles Awdllary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, American Legion, and the
Awdillary of Chapter 52, Disabled ·
American Veterans, Poomeroy.
SeiVIces wW be held at 1 p.m.
Friday Iii Ewing Funeral Home.
with Mr. Mark Seevers o!tlclatlng.
Burial will be In Riverview Cemetery. Friends maycaU atthetuneral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thursday.

Gladys I. Brooks
Mrs. Gladys L Brooks, 73,
Coolville, formerly of Uttle HockIng, dl~ Tuesday at St. Jo,o;eph's
Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va.,
following an extended Illness.
Mrs. Brooks was born at St.
Marys, w.va.,adaughterofthelate
George and Dorothy Smith William·
son. ShewasamemberoftheUnlted
Methodist Church at Paxton, Neb.
Surviving are a won, William
Hanley Brooks of Rollins, Wyo.; a
daughter. Mrs. Robert (Barbara)
:Minerd of Guysville; a brother,
Chalmer wnnamson of Columbus;
and a granddaughter, Jennifer
· Shaffer of North Platt, Neb.
.Graveside services wW be held at
1 p.m. Thursday In Rockland
Cemetery In Belpre. Friends may
-caB at the White-Ethridge Funeral
Home, 125 Lee St., Bel!Jre. anytime
after 7 tonight and until time of the
services on Thursday.

Ora G. Rice

Winners In the Mlddleport hmle

IJChtlng

. ...
· ,: .

..

Bronwyn Thomas, VIne Street,
first; Fred HOffman, SOuth Fourth,
secon¢ Tom Rousli, Elm Street,
third; and Gary Ellis, Page Street,
hooorablementioo.
In the overall decorations category,ll!Sidenceswlnnlngweretholle
of Garge W. Hackett. Seventh
Street, first; Robert Fisher, North
Third, second, and Kenneth Cooke
Grant Street, third, with hooora~
mention tD Delmar Hawley Beech
SIItet, J .W. Mourning, ~th Se. cond, and Wayne Jones, Hysell
Street.
The door and window category
winners were Harold Teaford,
Falrlane Drive, flrst; Arthur
StraUS$, South Third, second; and
Henry Clatworthy, South Third,
third, with honorable mention to
VIrginia Buchanan, Ash Street and
Paul Cl\adwell, F1sher Street. .
Judges for the contest were Mrs.
Addaloo Lewis and Mrs. Ruth
Moore of the Pomeroy Winding
Trail Garden Club. Theyweretaken
. the town Friday night
on a tour of
after meeting at the home of Helen
Sauer, and then returned to the
LaSalle Restaurant for a dessert

Infant Schultz
Al1Mn Wayne Schultz, Infant son
of James and Vicki Withrow
Schultz, Hockingport, died Monday
morning In Camden-Clark Memor·
lal Hospital, Parkersburg. W.Va.
Survivors, In addition to his
parents, Include a maternal grandmother, Carol Withrow of Utile
Hocking; a paternal grandmother,
Nancy Schultz of Hockingport; a
brother, David; and a sister, Kelly.
Graveside services were conducted at 3 p.m. today In Stewart
Cemetery, Hockingport. The Rev.
Eric Starr o!tlciated. Arrangements were by White Funeral
Home, Coolville.

•'•

1•. h . I ' \

. ...~)il&gt;. :''\,.' '

.

I..'

·- /1

r1'
r ' '
.
I \,i.'·'':;
,,

Olilo extended foreca&amp;t

Sulton truslees meel
The final 1984 meeting of SUtton
Township Trustees has been set for
Monday, DEc. 31, at 1 p.m. at the
Syracuse Municipal Building.

DEc. 29 at &amp;:~ p.m., Chester
Bowhunter'sandArcheryCiubwlll

=~ ::::r!_!~!ta"ft~t:

•

EMS um·l8 onQwer
wa&amp;Q

Six calls were ~red Monday
and two calls were BDBwered
Tuesday by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical
Service.
On Monday, at 5:15a.m., Middleport went tD Balley's Run Road for
BeckyTyreetoVeteransMemoclal.
At 10: 15 a.m., J\ippers Plains went
to Ohio 681 for Mary Barringer to
Camden·Ciark.
AtRoa
1: 17 p.m., Racine went to Will
Run
dforFrancesHawthorneto
Pleasant Valley. At 1: 15 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains was called to Rice

calls

Mlddleport, et al., has been flied In
Meigs County. Said property' has •:
been purchased by Capital Finan- :
clal Se!vlces, Pomeroy, , doing ;
buslnessasBeneflcljilMortgageQ&gt;. '
of Ohio, for the sum of$12,888.!1!. :

Coonhunlers meelins

\'delgs County Coonhunters Association wW meet at the clubhouse on
Snowball Hill, · Friday, 6: ~ p.m. '
Refreslunents will be seiVe.;~ .
•

Lions lo meel

:

The Rutland Lions Club wW meet '
at 7 p.m. thursday at the Rutland ',
Civic Center.

'

~~I

Ill

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
Our entire stock of ladies' winter

SHIRT SALE

S1ls

$63~0 53519
ENTIRE STOCK

BOYS

SHIRTS

Ssle p,l~ed ·
Knits · flannels • sport shirts.
Solids and plaid patterns.

Boys $9.95 Shirts :....... $7,90
Boys $11.95 Shirts ...... $8.90 .
Boys $14.95 Shirts .... $11.20

COORDINATE OUTmS

KNIT SHIRTS

AND COORDINATING

CASUAL PANTS
Sizes S, M, Land XL in sweat shirt
looks. Sateens and poly cotton
twills.

Reg. S29.95 ... Sale 523.95
Reg. S22.95 ... Sale 518.35
Reg. S19.95 ... Sale 515.95
Reg. S14.95 ... Sale S11.95

$

16.95 PaiiiS,; .... W, $12.70
$15.95 P&amp;IIS...... We $11.90
S14.95·Tops ....... We $11.20
S21.95 Tops ....... We S17.55
516.95 Tops ...... Sale $12.70'

S12.95 Slirts ... S1G.35
. $14.95 Slirts ... S11.95
S16.95 Shif.ts ... f13.55
.•19.95 .Siirts ... $15,95

LEFTOVER SALE

CHILDREN'S

TOOL SETS
8-in. adj'ustable wrench, 6-in.
slip joint plier. Chrome plated.

*Fuller 6 Pc.

Reg. 111.00 ..... Salt 115,30
Reg. $26.00 ..... Salt 122.10
Reg. S34.00 ..... Salt 12UO
143,00 ..... Salt 136.55

(ombination Wrench Set

3/8-in. thru 11116-in. open
and heK end wrenches. Drop
forged, chromem plated.
.

Ss/1 p,loe~l

*Fuller Plier Set
8-in. slip joint plier, 10-in. ton·
gue and groove plier. Chrome
plated with vinyl grips.

WINTER
JACKETS

S1119TO
S3279

JU.NIOR BLOUSES
Big tops, striped shirts, plaid shirts
and solid shirts. Junior sizes S, M, L

Reg. 525.00 ........ S19.99
REg. $28.00 ...... $22.39
Reg. $33.00 louin ... S26.39
Reg. ~37.00 Blou111 ... S29.S9

Certific'.ate winners
Winners of $5 gift certificates
awarded as a hollday promotion by
Tq1 of tile Stall's went to Edith
Reller, Pometoy; Tammy Adkins,
Racine; Anna Baxter, Pomeroy,
and Janice Weber, Chester.
.

.

Veteran&amp; Memorial
Mond8y admissions - Pearlle
JeweU, Middleport.

.

Mooclay discharges - . Jarred
Sheets, Truman Prlcldy. Michael
Kennedy, ChriStina Weaver.
Tuelday admllllorill - Daisy
Sayre, Racine; Katherine Klein,

Puuaoy.
Tue1c1ay

dllchai&amp;8 -

ADdeiiOil, Betsy TurleY-

Wilma

MEN'S FLANNEL

SALE - GIRLS'

SPORTSWEAR SALE

WORK SHIRTS

PANTS &amp; TOPS

Famous quality Devon blouses, knit tops,
skirts, blazers, vests, l·ackets and joggmg
sets. C9mplete range o petite, misses and
extra s1zes.

Sizes s, M L, XL plus big and tails
up to s1ze ~0. Smart patterns. Long
tails, two flap pockets.
,

Reg. s17.00 Devon

S15.95 Flannel

Sportswear ...;..Sale SJ7 .59

Shirts ............. s11.41
S17.95 flannef
Shirts ............. S12.88

Reg. S34.00 Devon

S19.95 Flinntl

Sportswear ...... Sale S2 7.19

Shirts ............. s14.38

Reg. !41.00 Devon

121.9 5 Flannel.

Sportswear ...... Sale 513.59
Reg. S2_2 .00 Devon

1

Sportswear ...... Sale 531.39

THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5:00
FRIDAY 9:30 TO 1:00
SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5:00

-~
.... . ,
.

~\.,.
~'fJ'~

"t.,f1.

Shirts ............. Si 5.88
'

.

at ,y

enttne

&gt;

25 Cents

wins release &amp;om 'state penetentiary

POINT PLEASANT ,... The West VIrginia
Department of Corrections has approved the release
from · priSOn of John Lewis' Young, previously
convicted by two juries .for the Nqyeinber 197~
murder of a Mason, W.Va .. woman.
Young, who was serving a termofflveto23yearsthe penalty for second-degree murder- In the West
~lrglnla: Penet~tlary at MoundsVUJe, will be
released DEc. 30.
John Massie, records clerk at the penetentlary,
conflrined that Young Is ID be released due to "prison
good beha,~or time."
·

The state's "good behavior time'' law aUotted for
the deduction of days off Young's sentence as
eompensatlon for time served, Massie said. "Good
time" Is based on !jUCh factors as work In prison and
misconduct t't'pOrts; according to Massie, who added
that Young had no misconduct reports )"hlle at
Mound5vllle. Young was permitted one day off his
, prison sentence for elJI:h day seiVed at the state
prison, Massie said.
An additional one day off was given for four hours of
overtime based on a 40-hour work week, he added.

Young, 40, of Mason,
was convicted of
second-degree murder In Wood Co_unty Circuit Court
In November 1977 for the Nov. ll, lln6 stabbing death
of 58-year-old Mason resident Mary L. Berry at her
residence. Authorities discovered she had been
murdered the following day.
An habitual criminal hearing, based on Young's '
1970 conviction for artl\ed robbery, was held after that
trial and anotherflveyears was added to his sentence.
But after the hearing, a federal district court set aside
Young's conviction. A retrial was held In Mason

Meigs·· man faces
10-year sentence
A Meigs Coonty man has been
sentenced to a 10-year prison term
for the Aug. 22 armed robbery of an
Athens branch bank.
,James Stitt, 35, Pomeroy, received the sentence In U.S. Dls!rlct
Court In Wichita, Kan., where he has
been held by local author!Ues since
his arrest on Aug. 30.
Stitt, who was also reportedly
sought by Gallla County authorities
for a grand theft charge, was taken
Into custody at the ilmeforallegedly
robbing a bank In Burllnglon, Colo.,
and. for driVIng an allegedly stolen
· car.
AthenS Pollee Chief Ted Jones
confirmed at the time of Stitt's
arrest that Stitt was being considered as a suspect In the robbery of
the Richland A,venue branch of
Bank One of Athens. An area law
enforcement agency had sugge~ted
Stitt as a possible suspect to Jones,
the chief said, and a car resembling

1 ::ieellon, 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. - -

Condemned man:
'Electric chair
don't worry me'

one seen near the scene of the
robbery was found In Chillicothe the
day after the robbery.
At the time of his arrest, Sdtt was
reportt:dJy driving a car stolen In
Las Vegas, Ney.
The district court also gave Stitt a
five-year jall sentence for transport·
lngastolen vehicle, but thesentence
was suspended, a court clerk said.
Stitt entered guilty· pleas to both
crimes, the clerk added.
The:Bank One branch was robbed
by a man who reportedly showed a
gun to a teller and ordered the teller
to place cash In a fast food
restaurant bag. Stitt told Kansas
State Pollee upon his arrest he was
not Involved In the Bank One
robbery .
Stitt was charged with grand theft
by the Gallla County Sheriff's
Department on Aug. 14, according
to Gallipolis MWilclpal Court

records.

••

s~gns

County In December 1931.
Although that jury found Yoong guilty of
first -degree murder, the court ruled that he could only
be sentenced on the second-deg• ee murder charge.
Last July, the West VIrginia Supreme Court of
Appeals granted a motion from Mason County •
Prosecuting Attorney Damon B. Morgan Jr.,
allowing Yoong to be tried as an habitual ct'trnlnal.
Had Yoong denied being the same person convicted
for the robbery. Morgan sald It would have been
· necessary lo try ,him on the habitual criminal act.

EXECU'l10N NEARS- RGbei1 Lee WIIISe twa.IMP"''J during

le!ttimo!tY al his clemency hetutn11 at the lllale prtooa at Anpla, La. Ia
November. WWle's requet!i&amp; to rommute his death !lelilence was denied
and his executloa dale was 111!1 for early Friday momn11. WIBle Wllll
convicted lor the murder of Faith Hathaway, wllll her plll'ellls

seheduled to be~- (AP Laserphoto).

ANGOLA, La. (AP) -The man .
who wlred Louisiana's electrtc chair
while Imprisoned for aggravated
battery says his son deseiVes to dle
In It If he raped and murdered a
teen-ager, and the victim's father
says he woold like to pull the switch.
Robert Lee Willie, 26,15 scheduled
to die early Friday for the 198) rape
and murder of Faith Hathaway, 18,
of Mandeville.
Willie, who has been found guilty
of three unrelate(! murders but
claims an accomplice was responsl·
ble for each, says he has no regrets
about his Ufe and expected he would
become a terrorist!! freed.
"Electric chair don't worry me,
man. lhavea lotofpride. Idon'trun
from nothln11::' said Willie.
Willie's attorney, Ronald Tabak,
said his cllent'sonly hope appeared
to be Gov. Edwin Edwards, who
earller turned down a request for a
reprieve and who has refused to
meet with Tabak. ·
In a telephone lntelVIew from his
New York office, Tabak said
something might develop that the
guvernor or the courts would
consider grounds for a reprieve.
Asked what that might be, he
replied, "Nothing I can comment
on."

Meanwhile, Willie's father. John

Kelton Willie Jr., said he could not
understand the murder of Miss
Hathaway, and said If son committed It he deselVes to dle.
"If a man did me wrong, I'd have
no.i:&gt;roblem with killing him like I'd
ldll that chicken out there," said
WUlie, who wired the electric chair
before his release from the Louisiana State Penitentiary In October
1933."But I could never do anything
to a hurt a woman, a child or a young
person."
Willie, 53, has llved with his
94-year-old father, Kelton Willie,
near Covington since his release
from prison after seiVIng 10 years
for aggravated battery. He also has
seiVed time for manslaughter,
cattle theft and aggravated battery.
· The elder Willie said he will not
attend the eXeCUtion. •
"I'll go to bed at abOut 9 o'clock. I
can't help him In any way. ... Only
the man upstairs ·can help him
oow," he said.
But Vernon and Elizabeth Harvey, Miss Hathaway's stepfather ·
and mother, were granted pennts.
slon to witness Wlllle's death .
HaiVey said Wednesday he would
have preferred to throw the switch
himself but wolild be satisfied to
"see the smoke fly off his body and I
know he's dead."

•

state pay mcrease legislation

$f,O,TI5. The lieutenant goveroor's pay, however, will
Increase from $35,1XX1 to $42,882 annually.
Base pay of members of the Senate and House,
effective Jan. 1, will be hiked from $22,500 a year to
~.152.

Legislative leaders and various committee chair·
men wilt get Increments boosting their total
comppensation to a range of $32,835 to $47,&lt;XXI. The ·
speaker of the House and president of the Senate•wUI
get the highest amounts.
Most county officials will get Increases of 5 percent
In 1985 and 5 percent In 1937.
Also approved by Celeste was an lnunedlately
effective emergency bill assuring Industrial taxpayers Of a 1 pereent decline next year In the property tax
rate for Inventories and equipment.
· That measure, part of an act that also extends and
coordinates federal-state tax credits on gasohol, will
drop the SCX'alled tangible personal property rate

from 34 percent to 33 percent of assessed value.
The drop was to have taken place In 1985 under a
10-year plan to decrease the rate tci 25 percent. That
did not occur because a revenue growth factor In the
state's 198.'! tax reform law was not triggered.
Among the measures approved by the governor
was one which will help !f!cal offlclals batt and prevent
child abuse and child neglect.
The other new laws deal with a wide range of
subjects. from auto theft to electronic dt&gt;vlces that
control pedestrian !raffle.
Under the child abuse and neglect bill, sponsored hy
Rep. Paul Jones, D-RaveiU\a, a Chlldrens Trust Fund
Speelal Account will be created, using Increases In
fees charged for various seiVIces by the Department
of Health.
The biU adds $2 each to the fees for copies of birth
and death certificates, an additional fee of $10 for
flllng for divorce or marriage dissolutions, and an

extra rT for marriage certificates.
. A 13-member ·b oard wUI be created to approve
grants for local programs that Include public
awareness, prenatal care and child abuse education.
Jones' bill became law Immediately.
All of the other measures will take effect March 28,
Including a proposal by Rep. Michael Stlnzlano,
D-COlwnbus, which he said will close most legal
loopholes that Impede the enforcement of auto theft
statutes.
He said most of the changes wW speed the
prosecution of defendants and seek to ellmlnate the
circulation of fraudulent titles and other documents.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, [).Hebron, sponsored a new
law which permlts the use of graphics, such as an
outsretched palm, to regulate pedestrian flow In
crosswalks.

Several of the other new laws deal with land sales
and bookkeeping matters.
•

State EPA . director resigns

Corduror i••ns, denim je1ns in
stripes 1nd chech. twill sl1cks.
Knit tops 1nd blouses. Nice as·
· · · •·
sortment of · styls 1nd colors. l 1
Complete r11111 of little &amp;iris ., '

sizes.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 27, 1984

A!i80Clated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. Richard Celeste
has signed almost two dozen bUis Into law, giving pay
hikes to state and local elected o!tlclals and providing
a tax break for Industry.
However, he vetoed as "Inappropriate" Wednesday
a sectlQil of the pay bill which carried a 1987 salary
boost for the governor from $65,1XMJ to $'79,1m a year.
Celeste said earlier he would veto any Increase In
the governor's salary and that his veto "fulfills that
commitment."
The governor, who acted on the eve of his departure
for next Tuesday's Rose Bowl football game, let stand
without cortunent the salary boosts of the other
statewide officials, elected county officials ~d
judges.
·
,
The other state o!tlcials, starting in 1937, will get
their pay. boosted from the current $50,&lt;XXI a year to

$sis'''~''
.g,,,

DEVON

Vo1 .34. No.180
Copyrighted 1984

Young

•

e

\

· By ROBERT E . MUJ.ER

Boys sizes 8 to 20. Men's S M
L, XL and XXL. Excellent setec:
lion of styles and colors.

SPORTSWEAR

- s., ,,,.

8Mry on Paget

Celeste

(

MEN'S AND BOYS'

MISSES
WRANGLER ·

.

Bloodmobile visit

preview

State Rep. JolyM Boster anooun· control and resolllng.
ces that funding was approved this
l3oster said that the work under
week for the 75-acre PagevUie II the contract will be comt:!'eted by
strip mine reclamation projeCt In Aug ..ll, 1987.
Scipio Township.
·
The federal special revenue funds
The funds will enable the Soil werereleasedthlsweekbytheOhio
Copservatlon SeiVIce to perform . Controlling Board. The Pagevllle II
final design, construction, lnspec· , project and a similar reclamation ·
tion and contract administration at
project In Jefferson County were
the Scipio site. Plans will be approved for approximately
prepared for grading, drainage $628,1m by the controlling board.

Alter Christmas Sale prices
on children's ,winter coats
and snowsuits. Most are
machine washable.

*Fuller Wrench &amp;·Plier Set

Blouses, knit tops, pants, sweat·
ers, vests, striped jeans, cords
and dress slacks.
MiiHI Silts: S, M. LaiMI 6 to 20.
REG. S14.00 to 141.00

Basket~all

Pageville project funded

WINTER COATS
&amp; SNOWSUITS

LEFTOVER SALE

MEN'S

Vests · hooded J·ackets and matching
casual pants. Ma e by Wrangler. Sateen
and corduroy.

This sale includes all of our
men's Van Heusen dress
shirts · knit shirts · sport
shirts · quilt lined flannels.

-Long Gowns and lobts
-Nite Shirts
.
-Waltz Length Gowns
and Robts
-Pajamas
REG. sa.oo to s44.00

I

BOYS SIZES 8 TO 20

Trustees meeting
Scipio Township Trustees wW
meet at 7 p.m. Friday at the
township hall In Pagevllle to
COO\plete 1984 business.

•

tlil!re wu never any mention of

Interest However, the total C011t
(lri!atly l!lU.Iel!$d the total Itated In J
the~andtlieplalntUflallege ~
that IIIey were mla)ed and that the · ·
cm1paey f~ tepteaented tile

estatebekllglngtoRa~Justls, :

Run Roo4 for Nom .Rice to
Camden-Clark. A:t 7:26 p.m., ihe
MiddlepOrt Fire Department was
called to the scene of an auto
accident on Ohio 7 at Hobson. No
lnjurie!il were Usted. And at 11:39
p.m., Middleport's tire department
responded to a call from383Ash St.
for a possible water heater blow out.
At 12: 15 p.m. Christmas day, tile
Racine Wilt was called to Portland
for Mary Kearns to Veterans
Memorial . And at 2: 59 p.m.,
Tuppers Plains was called to the
UdaEnnettresldence.However,oo
, transport was made.

Holiday visitors

1

suit:

.. ,..~~.,.
Indoor r~. located at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembley Camp~;!.,..~ttend. All members
. """
.

sleepwear is included in this sale!

· ·seeoad 1J11!De of the evening wiU he
. -Alexander agaliUit Athens, beglnmngattp.m.
. EMtem wiD also be playing
111unday evftlblgas tliey take part
In the Holiday Too!'nament at
Waluuna, IJecbmlng at 8:30p.m.

Fair and mild Friday. Turning
colder Saturday with rain changing
to snow oorth. Rain or snow ending ·
Sunday. Highs In the 50s to low 00s
Frlday, ln tile :Jls north and 40s south
Saturday and In the :Jls Sunday.
Lows In the:JlsFriday and Saturday
and In the mid-teens to the mid·20s
SUnday.

Presentation set

Blllned. Accordlna to the plaJntlfts,

In the amount Of lost wages, and a . tenns of the agreement.
,
trtal by jwy.
Alao In Meigs County CClmmoil ,
The plaintiffs allege that on Pleas Court. Judge Charles Knlaht ~
March 29 of this year, they were hu n!lidered two judgmenta In•·
contactedbyphonebythedefendant favorofRKEFederalCredltUnloli, ~
and· asked If they would be Ravenswood, W.Va. Ajuclgmentllf :
lnleii!I!Jted In ha~ vinyl siding ~,M9S7 hu been awatded In a
tnstalled at their home.
I'Ued .by RKE against Charles E. ,
lnstallatlonoftbesldlligbeganoo Cole, Wadsworth. A $3,261.63 judg·
Aprll4 and a contract which stated ment has been awarded In a suit
an~ that 'the total C08t for . against Jessie J . Saunders, ·
tnstanauon would be S5,axl was Gallipolis.
.
;
SIX.
Anentryconf!rmlngasaleofreal :

MIN'S

a :hllh IICIIIH!I double header at the
: ~ c.nter In Athens.'lbe

On Thursday, partly cloudy; high In
the low 50s. The chimce · of
precipitation Is aJ percent tonight
and Thursday.

burg, aalllng for _,,lXXI In punitive
dama&amp;el; eoliipensaloly damages

UDIES'

'; ""', . '

. ."·· Southem wiU be phoylng Peebles
'lbunday-at 7 p.m. In the llrst halt of

Partly cloudy tonight; tempera-

Donald A. Hlu'llma and Edna
·------ · · _ !OII.bolhoffuJJetoy,
have tiled suit In Meigs County
Cmunon Pleas Coort agalnlt Ac·
cent BuiJden Co. Inc., ReyDolds-

------@· .

.

tures nearly steady In the mld-405.

·

On the commlttee tor the Ama·
teur Gardeners were Mn. Sauer.
chalnnan, Martha Slater, Meni
Amsbary, Laurette Lee, Gladys
CumJngsandKatleSW81110n.
Middleport Garden Club
rnembersjolnlngtheothersforthe
desseft were Nellie Zerkle, Jean
Moore and Katliiyn Hysell.

... ...·.,\~
. .. CH

,.

Weather

C0111'91!.

McCarthy noted

I

•

.. · .. ·Sopthem plays
·~n Thursday
·· ·

contest were announced
today by the MJddlepnrt Amateur
Gardeners and Mlddleport Garden
Club, sponsars of the annual event.'
In the reltgloos categoly tile
winning residences were tiiOie of

ren; and a great-great-grandchild.
In Qlltlon to her panlllls, she was
preceded In death by her husband,
Russell Rice; two sons, Cecil Rice
. and Gerald Rice; a ~dsim .
Benjamin Rice;•and twos.lstersand
two brothers.
SeJVices wiU be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday In Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home, with Rev.
David Mann officiating. Burial Will
be In Gravel Hill Cemetery,
Cheshire. Friends may can at the
tuneral home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m. Friday.

~

· .Ora G. Rl~. 97, died Christmas
·Day at the Pomerr Health Care
· Center.
' A former resldt&gt; .l of Middleport,
.she was tile daug· .ter of George W.
8nd Mary·See Nr .ckles.
· .- SlirY!vors lnr.Jude a son, Gene
·Wee .of· St. Petersburg, Fla.; 10
grandclllldren; 19 great grandchild·

I oan;ag; suit filed in coul1 ';

Home ~ling contest winners

Area deaths
Louise Hawkins

Wednntly, December 26, 1984:

....

. 11,,,,••'
li
':'30:::0

COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl -Gov.
Richard Celeste has accepted "with
regret" the resignation of Robert H.
Maynard as director of the Ohio
Environmental Protection Agency.
Maynard has held the state post
since January 1983 and was an Initial
member of the first-term governor's cabinet.
·
The 47·year-old Dayton attorney
advised the governor .In a letter
Wednesday that he will leave on
Jan. ll to return toprlvatepractlce.
In a prepared statement, Celeste
said: "I deeply appreciate the work
Director Maynard has begun In
rebulldlngtheEPAandlnhelplngto
re--esta!&gt;llsh the a,gency as a force for
proteCting Ohioans while being fair
with Ohio lndustJ:Y.''
Ronl!ld Good, a lobbyist for the
Ohtochapterof the Sierra Club, said
although the envlrotmll'tltal group
occasionally was at odds with
Maynatd, the relatlolilhlp wu an
Improvement from the adn'ilnsfra·
t1on Ot former Gov. James A.

Rhodes.

"We've had our dlflerencea with

Director Maynard on professional
judgment Issues," Good said Wednesday night. "But It's ·been a big
turn away from the antlenvtronmenu days of the Jim
Rhodes era ' lth James McEvoy
and Ned Wlll1 ms. We're not llvtng
In t1101e dark t 1ys anymore."
Celeste satd he knows why
Maynard would want to return to the
private sector.
·
"Once again, I unde1'5tand the
lure of the private &amp;ector and ther
difficulty state government has In
competing for capable peopl!! for
major policy positions," the gover-

oorsald.

·

Maynard tormerty was a special
&amp;~~lstant lO the 10Ucltor of the U.S.
Interior J)ep4lrlmellt, an attorney
with the U,S. Justice Pepartment,
and head of the eiJet'IIY law
department of the Dayton laW firm
Of Smfth A: !lhllckne. niere was oo
b~tt~-tlate word u to hlsiiiiCeSIOI'
at Olilo EPA.
,
Good said the Sierra Club, which
bacla!d Celeste's election bid, hopes

to have Input In that selection.
"I think the most Important thing
Is to look to the future," Good said.
"We want to c6ntlnue to have an
open door With the.Ohio EPA and
voice praise and criticism of the new
director. We ~ we will be
working with the governor In finding
the type of person the envlromnental community woulilllke to see."
In the governor's statement,
Maynard was quoted as saying: "I
leave with mixed feelings. I have
enjoyed my experience at the EPA
and I hope. to help the governor
accomplish a smooth' traJilltlon at
the agency.
"He hu my full support lnallofhls
· efforts to make Ohio a national
leader In many areas, Including
environmental protection. •'
Celeste listed as among May- ·
nard's "many accomplishments"
the Initiation iDd pawee of Ohio's
new hazardous wute ta:w and the
EPA's stroaa enforcement of that
statute at the state's hazardous
wuteslts.

•

Po\rmJINED WALKWo\Y., ~ Wlilllla _. II'AI.
G...... llilre a llrollhroqli a pUIIlnd Wllllnn.f at
a MWb'
INCtoed pan~ the Plwer G..tt~e
liellllqllllri«s Ia andlma&amp;l Wed! ••, .a-. Ed

'*

a

,,..,1 :7 . . . .

lla ......•nploJeeolllletwa II
llvlnl Ia Part a.rtae&amp;e, l'la. 'l1ie)'

....., membel'l.

(o\1' •

a .,..._).
I

wwe 11 ltl 1 ' ·
.

l

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