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Kathleen Mantcke, president of the Citizens for
Better Schools In the Easlen\ Local District, said
S&lt;rOe ~ mEmbers of her group Weft! present for the ·
meeting whlcji was held In the high school cateterla.
She reported ~t questions were raised by board
men)bera, James caldwell, Susie Heines and Dale
MachJt aJllllll'l!lltly showing some dlflerence of
opinion on the transfel' &lt;:1 funds !rom one acoountlng
code to anoiJ!et' 81111 I!XpBidlng c)(special levy money.
Treasurer £:lolle Boeton, Manlclui said, ~
board members tlu!.t all &lt;:1 the transfers werepmpet:ly
handled.
'
_When noligreemntcouldbel'f?ached,ltwasdeclded

..

....................... .......
,
'699

·-- .
• .,_.,.,

·

.'

By KEVIN IO!JJ,y
'
· OVP staff WrMer
American Electric Power Corp. has assured lis at!lllated utliltles It has
an adequate supPly of coal belngstqckplled tor Its powl!l' ptantslncaseofa
strike by the United Mine Workers.
·
'l'ml Ayres, a spokesman for AEP headquarters In Clllurnbus, said the
COl poratlon Is looking toward a lllklay supply of coal by Sept. ll, the last
day of the CIIITE!Jlt contract between UMW 81111 the BlturniniJus Coal
Operators AS'JOCiatlon.
Ayres said the stockpile throughout the system by that date sbould be
12.6 million tom, less than th!! 131-day supply savro for the .1981 strike.
AEP has been conductlng weekly update! oo Its stockpltlng measures.
AsofSept.l3, a mk!IIYsuwiY representing ll,!el,700tonswasmhand for
alll9of AEP'scoal-fired plants, including JamesM. Gavin at Cheshlre81111
MrAIIIIalneer near New HaVet:l, W.Va.
•
Ayres saJd stockpltlng Is a standard procedufe when a work st~
appears Imminent.,
.
'
· Gavin 1s suwu~ primarily by S®~.Ohio Coal Ql. 's 'Meigs 1 81111 2
mines near WllkesVUie and Raccoon 3 mlne In V!l1ton County.
_The Meigs coall5 shipped to Gavin vta the 1!Hnlle conveyor line opened
10 years ago, while Raccoon's product has been sent there by rail. The
tracks from WllkesvUie were Improved by the Cltessle System In 1981.
Gavin bums approximately ID,flll tons of coal a day-at peOk times,
a~ to plant managerJ.W. "BID" Llzon. Durlngronnal pet lads, the
plant has a fiO.day reserve, he added.
Ayres saki AEP has fi!JIIfled Its two utilitieS In the area, Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. and Ohio ~;'ower Co., thatTeserves are on hand.
He declined comment Ibis morning on the poo;slblllty that miner layof!s
may 9CCW' If there Isn't a strike.
·
UMW otrtclals and lndustty analysts have pn!dlcted layoffs because of
stoclcplllng. More than 1m miners were laid off at Consoildat!on Coal Co.
mines near Mannington, W:Va., on Monday due to "poor max:ket
conditions," according-to Consolidation spokesmen.

.. GtW.I&gt;rt,. .... ihuopooiU..

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Village still awaits
grant notification
By NANCY YOA&lt;JIIAM

tie up metet:'S for e~t hours

that last night's meeting could not Ill! ahead until
mlnutes of the earlier session were approved.
Trip Ia jeopu'dy
Manlcke charges that because of the board's
decision to recess a number of Important ~on the
agenda'w®ld not be discussed with the fill emost Item
being permission tor' Future Fanners &lt;:1 America to
attend the three day Farm Science Revlewbelrigheld
In Colurnllus starting today. Without the board's
approval the gniup cannot make the trip, Manlcke
said.
"It Is unfortunate that once again the YCllllg people
of this district are ca\J8ht Ill the middle. I can only

sbice

..
- --,..,..,;

... .

\t

•'

1 hctlon, 10 P-• 26 Cento
A Multlmedlo Inc. N - -

why awmval tor this trip was leftr UI!tll the
night before," she COtiUilEIIted.
·
· As a result 0t the decision to recess, discussion and ,
action mother matters could not lakeplace, Manlcke
stated. Those Items Included reconunendatlons for
district Wide parents volunteer program made by
Manlcke's group; employment of personnel; requests by staff members to attend meeting;
'dlscusslon of the expenditure of lottery profits, and
dlscusslon oil the architect's reconunendatlons for
the propraYI new high school In the dlstrjct.
The tltth member of the board Is Dorset Larkins,
president.
wonder

a

Layoffs
bring reps

•

back to table
WASHINGI'ON (AP) -Stung!Ji
layoffs of Its members, lhl!
United Mine Worket's union Is
sending Its representatives l)ack tO
the blirgaJnlng table to negotiate a:
new labor contract with thesottcoat
~

lndu.s1ry.

.:;--

.y~ .·

With around OO,OXJ of Its )60,001
· ·non-retired members already ori'
layoff, the union was told MOnday
tlu!.t some 2:aJ mbiers were being
lhrown ®tofwork at twoConsollda·
lion Coal Co. Operations In West
VIrginia.

Joe Corcoran, a spokesman for
President Rlchard Tnunka,
said he could oot comment ltnnJe:
UMW

EXPANSION -A 1alp are8flUn S. 'DIIrdAw., to
McQare's Dairy l8le on ~~~~~Unger Plll'ltwiQo bM . _

bNtlftlied to )II'U\'Ide ..... wl ,....... lor llle

I

' II
t'wc md a drive tbroqb wlodDw. 'lbe Daily lllle

opu "'d by Mr. mdMn.Benme.IMcaure.Pidwed
.,.., • ._. "c•rWR"Ce&amp;oimnew.......,.area

t I m wblc:ll II belnl eq181 :led. 'lbe 1&gt;1...,1 ill 'folly Gilley.
ltD I llhehM I!II'WIIbefiiCiarpdtoJWO•IIIellallllle

$166,491 spent _on 60 homes
By IOIINFRIEi&gt;MAN

lions from anyone except senior
cltlmls.
"A fixed percentage of the homes
have to be senior citizens," Craw·
ford said. "Up until two years agu,
we had to go after sen1oc citizens to
get tbem to apply. Now, we are
. ftooded with applications each

OVP StaftWrtter
Community
Action Agency h!lS expended more
than haltof Its S."m,499allocatlon to
weatherize homes In Gallla and
Meigs Counties, · according to program director Roo Crawford.
Crawford said since AprU 1 the year."
agency has spent $166,491 to help
After a rocky beginning, the
winter-proof 60 homes. ''That In· program Is now funded on a regular
eludes adding Insulation, replacing basis by the State Department of
broken glass, minor furnace ~ Human Services and the United
· Sta,tesDepartrnentofEnergy. "Our
ups 81111 so forth."
The CAA Is allowed to spend up to funding had been shaky almost
$511! per home In the pmgt am f'llery year with different agencies
designed to benefit tow Income and
tuniung the prOgram," he said,
senlo~ citizen hotneS.
. "UI!tll ms, when the Department of
ResPonse to the program, Craw· · Energy started funding us."
ford said, h8s been so strong the
EUglbllltyfortheprogram,whlch
CAA has slqlped laking awlica· will weatherize 164 hotnel between
The

Gallla-~

April

1 and March 31, 19!5, Is
by family lnCOOle and
the number of persons living In the

detennlned

household aCCQI'dlng to CraWford.
· In Gallla CrA!nty,- Crawford said
the CAA will 1ry to tie the

weatherization program Into the
recently approved $8Xl,!OO housing
rehabilitation grant received !rom
the stale.
"We plan to tie the two In as much
as poo;slble," Crawford said. "Itwill
Increase the amount of money we
can spend on a single home and will
have the effect of doubllng the
benellt."
Crawford Said he expected the
-housing fehabllltaton pmgtam to
get undelway after Jan. 1, when the
project will go to bid to local
contractors.

SetAwtsadfWrker
thatwouidhurtbuslnessesandthelr
Altb:lligh oo otrlclal word 'las rustomers, but I have a service
cane from the state regarding the vehlcleandl'mlll!llerlllmespotfor
grantforthesewagesystemtoserve V'eQ' loag," he continued. He also
the Pizza Hut on Pomeroy's West explained that he charge! from the
Main St., plans for the system are tlmehe'leaveshlsstoreandbecause
nearly C!Xnplete and should be ofthetlmelnvolvedlncanylngtools
to and from his truck, his clients'
ready to send to EPA soon. ·
'Ibis lnfonnatlon was presented charges are higher.
at Monday's f'cmeroy Village
Cooncllagreedthatthewordlngor
ewncn meeting. ·
the ordinance was unclear and
. Mayor Richard Seyler noted, showed oo difference betWeell
"We'vereallyiii!Vet:'heardanythlng regular 81111 special parldlli per·
about the grant other than what we mits: Council decided tha~ !be
read In the papers.••
ordinance will be mod111ed to allow '
WASHINGI'ON (AP) - Ronald RA!agan and
State Rep. Jolynn lbrtet:' was sevlce vehicles to park at 811Y the
Walter
F. Mondale have settled on a presidential
lnstrumelltal In securing the grant · village meters.
debate format that pl'I!Vt:llts a direct confrontation
Seven substitute teachers were
money for the sewer addition Jlt.
Council also discussed problems
between the two candidates but opens both to lengthy
Pomeroy. She announced awroval
with seve-ral vUJage tire hydrants hired Monday night by the Southern
questioning by a four·pet:'SOII panel. '
of the grant recently.
and decided to replace the very Local Board of Education.
The League of Women Voters announced Monday
Named to the substitute list were
· FolkM&gt;Ing EPA approval and oldestofthehydrantswlthooesthat
that
two !JO.rnln\lte televised presidential debates
Jotm
G.
Baney,
Sandra
Cobb,
removed recently from along
ooce fUnding 15 recetvro, construe· , •
would
be held, on Sunday Oct. 71nLoulsvllle, Ky., and
caimen
Manuel,
Yonlece
MWer,
lion shrAild IYXM! ahead, aCcording Main Street wllell new water tines
on
Sunday
Oct 2llil Kansas City.
Jo1m
W.
Barcus,
Jr.,
Rebecca
to last night's discussion. ·
and 1\Ydrants were Installed.
·
A
third
matchup
between the two opposing vice
Edwards
and
Donna
Thompson.
.
It wa.S also reported that !IOU
A sewer PJ"•Uiem has also
presidential
ncmlnees,
George Bush and Geraldine A.
The ~ food seJ'\'Ire policy
sampling and coce clrlllinll5 belni developed b1 the Sugar Run area
Ferraro, will be held In Philadelphia on Oct 11, the
done •t a slip site on the Laurel when! flooding occurs and sewage statement was also approved by the
league said.
Street. Once the 10U 1;Ype 15 ·. backs upfollawlnghetlvyralns. The board. Food costs at Soutbern this
Public antiOIIIICE!Ilent of the debates followed
determined, an eng1neer1ng study matter Is to be cbecked rAil year wm be$1. for hmcltesatthe high
tough,
behind-the-scenes negotiations for nearly a
school
and
junior
high
and
40
cents
can beglll and an estlmalie can be Immediately.
•
between White House chief or staff James
month
reduced.Lwtdlesattheelernentary
made on repU'costs.
It waalllo IIQiied that the culvert
Baker
and Mondale campaign director James
schOols
will
be
$.90
and
40
cenls
. . . . . . problem lllred
elf Pleuant Rld&amp;e In the Spring
Johnson,
and their top aides.
reduced.
Breakfast
at
all
schools
Nick l..eoliard, owner of OhiO . Ave. 81'e8'has been repaln!d.
Under the format, Reagan and Mondale will face a
Vlllley Plllmblil&amp;' and Heetllla,
A • D lion waa also made that will be 00 cents. Milk will C9s1 :aJ
moderator 81111 four panelists, probably all journal·
~ With CQIIICU a gnlblent
tbeordlnancetokeepllvestackoutd cents.
Pennlsslon was granted to the · Isis, who will questloil the candidates In the first
with II)I8Cial· parking penni!&amp; "I town lie enforced llld tliatptoper:ty
debateontheeconomy81111otherdomestlclssues,and
ln!UU1'I!I'
to get an ad\lanoed di-aw
)l8ld $lSI for lwopeiTnltl tlutt.reil't OWIII!I'S 'shoUld be encouraged to
In
the secood 011 defense and foreign pollcy.
d$100.Cbl!rom
the
county
auditor.
\WI'th thepaperthe)"rewr1111a Clllf
improYe the appearances ol their
Mondale
had 900gb~ a mrmat under whlcli the
Approval
Wl8
alsO
given
fer
the
I Clll't p8l'k ~~!)'Where In the PIOIIf!!lYbllb'ewiDte!'.
.
candidates
woold
have questioned one ~titer. But
vt~~~~e." ll8ld Leon8rd. ·"I had a
·" n!loMion waa Plsaed toatxePt superinteildant. tl'eaii'I!l', MSist·
aide
Baker
said oo.
Reagan's
~ pa mit tlutt was JuaiiOOd the IIIIWIItl and rates u deter· ' ant treasurer and principals to
Campaigning In Dearborn, Mich. Monday, Mon·
lbrpal'ldlwablgthet10odWI11,buti -mined by the bullget cmmlsslon attend the Ohio School Board
dale said he had hoped.for as many as six debates but
Allloclallm SrA!theast Regional faR
lllldeilbld tlutt apertel pennll8 and autlb bed Ill"
ry tax levk!s
were IQOd ~ bt tuwn. I can and c:ertltY tbem to the county' JTatlug to be held September 71111 that two were "all that' we could get."'
imdenland not wanting a vehicle to auditor.
Atl!enS.

were

....................1ll.ft ••.... Aloe ................. : : : : :

.............. .. . . . . .. . , j ••• ,l . . . . . . .

t

. The )':astern Local School District Board of
Education n,et Iii an approxlma~ two bCillr regular
$E!SSion Moilday night llut accomplished ro~•.
because -members could not agree to approve the
nilnutes of the last session.
The session opened routinely with roll can and ·
prayer, but trooble developed when It cilme time to ·
approve the last minutes. A motion .to approve the
.. minutes was made by Board Member Rogier Gaul,
but It dled for the lack of a second. 'l1ie boarddiscussed the minutes at length, butunabletocometo .,
an agJ'Eier!l~t 011 approving tbem, rerelSed the ,.
'
meeting untU further notice. No date was set to
continue the session.

of

1111111!1 ~

;;

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuelday, September 18, 1984

'

'179 . ·-

Tho_,__IIINft....,
......,.,.

&amp;e.v • ......, •

0 •• •

.,

$21'

BRITE~ B

0

to niplac&lt;t.

$]49 -

ALW~YS READY AND CHARGED!

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

k. dry o1r ln - .~
·or
.....,,.

tmoll onclostd aroo. to.W.nitnt, -

•

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Pholat.

U ••
with
lelf loll enln g H ... NDI ·

$399

·--·
...,.._...
-··
·--

!

$599~

No. 3-RIO '

b loo d
preuure .
rtot
Stt! houope
neceuory . · Eo• y-lo -

No. 1225

1haurCif moN

·

T.........., In Gold TOollnti. Dtld ltou.... ,
"l'hoto Album" on Front Cover. Holclt All

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KIT.

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.__M..,..ic_lheeltMW.~~~~~u

ElfCTROIIIC
BLOOD PRESSURE

Regular
Lemon/ lime
Menthol
Coconut
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YOUII CHOi4

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GILLETTE
FOAMY SHAVE
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Form ofCalciwrr

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FOOT

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Power plaftts
have adequate
supply of coal

WITH 1000 STAPLES

~ICK

Choaie From
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Pboio, lltory 011 Plip 10

Vo1.34, No.110
Capy•IIJhttd 1884

89~ ·

(horacters on the ~.uc:tllty lunch k its

1984 farm festival

e· ~~ y .
•
Disagreenient disiuptS board actions

itllue ar llock ll)tc.

Plus

una ....,

.........

flag

'

VALUE I'At~

· .Fila to aile 12, Heavy
gauge aaay care
.¥11lyl. lrlthlly ~ol- '
orecl for aalety.

~ays

'Q,f, 6va.1ai-!See~Bob~'s!!!oo~~nm!=!~OII~~'7-------1

4

1111Mls. LUNCH KITS

.WHISTLING

River

'

Board hires
substitutes

dlately on the tayotrs at 1hEi
O'Donnell Mine near Mannington,.
W.Va., and the nearby NaUier
Preparation Plant.
At the Consol headquart.ers In
Pittsburgh, spokesman Paul M.
Kvederts, said :IMi employees were
. laid ott at the O'Donnell operation
and 14otlters were furloughed at the
Nalller Preparation Plant.
Kvederls attributed the layoffs to
poor market conditions.
Carroll Rogers, president of the
Fabmont, W.Va.·based UMW District 17, said he coUld only speculate
oo whether the layo!fs were causeil
by the large coal stockpiles p~
ently held byelectrlcutllltles,
,
"I don't have any proof of It otlH:ir
than there are large stockpiles otll
there.'' he said.
•
As bargaining teams !rom till!
UMW and the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association were gatltet:·
lng here for a resumption oi
lace-to-face negotiations following
one-day break on Monday, neither
management oor union spokesmen
would describe prospects for an
amicable contract settlement:
"It's still an option," Corcoran
said when asked whether the two
sides could ~each agreement on a _
tenlaUve contract settlement . In
time to avert a strike.
Various Industry analysts have
said that more layo!fs are likely regardless or whether a sb'lke Is
averted - because of the huge
stockpiles held by utili~ and the
factthatthlshasdampeneddernand
forcoal.
-

a

Dates ·set for .presidential debates ·
Of his thwarted effort for a direct laceoff, Morii:lale
said. "I think lt'sa partolthe presldenl'scandldacy lo
tty to get reelected by answering as few questlol\S as
poo;slble."
White HrAise ~uty press secretary Marlin
Fitzwater said Reagan "looks fmward to these
debates." "lie has sald !rom the beginning that he
supports the principal of debates and that presidential
candidate! shou\d (lebate the Issues," Fitzwater said.
At . a news conference In Washington, League
President Dorothy S. Ridings said the league had
originally proposed' a single moderator similar to the .
format used effectively by Mondale In a debate last
winter with DettlOCiatlc rival, Sen. Gary Hart of
Clllorado. during the New York ptimary campaign.
. The moderator then was Dan Rather of CBS News.
Reagan campaign negutlators Insisted on an
Indirect fonnat with panelists )l(l;lng the questions,
said.League President Dorothy S. Rldlngs at a news
wufennce In Washingtal.
Each of the panelists will ask either Reagan or
Mondale a qllelltlon. Once It has been answered, the
candidate will be asked a follow-up questjon. The
~ candidate will be ask£d the same question,
plus il folloW-up, after which both candidates will be
permitted . a rebuttal. Once the questioning has
fllllshed, Mondale and Reagan will deliver a closing
statement.

�Ohio

Dolphins top Bills 21-17 for third victory

Commenta•·y

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)Theemotlon that was missing in the
Buffalo Bills' previous two National
FootbillLeaguegameswasthere,
. but the result was the same.
"Bnttalnwas l1!lldy In play," said
Miami Dolphins Coach Don Shula.
''They dldiiQI resemble the team of
the past two weeks."
Except on thescoreboal'd, where
the Sills lost their third straight
pme Monday night 21·17, to a
Mlamlteamthathaswontheirflrst
threegames.
As has been the case In all three
Buffalo losses this
the l3111s
found themlelves behind quickly.
Miami , quarterilack Dan Marino
threw his elgth and ninth touchdown
pessesoltheyear In the gan'le'sflrst

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy. Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~

S!m~
~v

,..,...._,._-.-•...-r'W!e=·.

ROBERT L. WINGETI'

Publisher
PAT WHITEifEAD
Assistant Publlsher; ControUer

BOBHOEFUCH

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
A MEMBER ol The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Assoclutlon.

LET'l'ER.s OF OPINION are welcome. They shouid be leu tllan 380 words
lon&amp;. All letter's are subjecl &amp;o edlllDC and must be slped with ume, addr~• and
telephone number. No uMip~ letters wUI be published. LeUers should be In
1ood taste, addresslna: ls1!1Ue8, DOt peraonaUtles.

Regents ask funds·
for basic research
Ohio's colleges and universities will comp(&gt;te for a share of $60 mllllon In
baste research funds during the l!ei-1987 biennium if the Legislature
approves a new Board of Regents' budget request.
The research and technology chaUenl!" program Is the basis for the
board's "economic revitalization strategy" to retain existing companies
and attract new businesses.
Regents Chancellor Wllllam Coulter says the program woold be
· eoo1patlble with applied research the colleges and universities are c;loing In
conjunction with the Department of Development's Thomas Alva Edison
Partnership Program.
"The success of appUed research activity and future technological
deyelopments depends on basic research - the analysis and
~'(l'l'lpreflenslon of principles that translate Into ... new Industries and jobs,"
·
ac;rorotng to a regents· explana tlon of the program.
·Under the Edison program, to which the state has contributed more than
$22 million, Institutions receiving grants are required to cane up with a
prtvate Industry, company, or foundation which will match the state
mOney. The research and teclmology program would work much the same
Wl!Y.
'fhe Board of Regents Is proposing that over the next six _years, the state
should Invest a portion of higher education funding to partially match each
non-state dollar attracted by the Institutions for basic research and
technologl~al development.
"Tilrough a conunltment of publlc funds, the state will sjgnal to the .
nation that Ohio Is Investing ln Its own future, and at the same llmeattract
lnQ'easing amounts of private and federal funding to fuel conttoued
pfl!gi'eSS," the regents said.
The research and technology challenge Is the largest of a five-part
prOgram the regents have proposed to achieve "selective exceUence" at
the state-supported colleges and universities.
Others Include a series of Incentives for tmprovtng individual academic
programs, job training and other serillces on two-year campuses and
continuing an eminent scholars program which brings nationallyrecognized scholars Into professorships at Ohio Institutions of higher
learning.

Painful compromises
Some of the United States' biggest economic problems result from the
charitable desire to do " right," by the wish for perfection, by the notion that
nothing Is Impossible if you try.
BUt from another perspective, you might 5ay the problems are caused by
selftShly wanting the cake whUeeatlngit, by spending big while producing
small, by taking the benefits but not the obligations.
And, perhaps, by refusing to see the reality, as In health care, of the need
for painful compromises and that something less than the best Is all that
can be atforded, even it patients die.
'The decisions, and often the failure to race them, pervade society.
-Everyone is for a higher standard of Uvlng, but recent history suggestS
that not all are willing to work for it. Pay Increases, for Instance, can only
be at the expense of someone else. if productivity fails to rise
simultaneously.
At the risk of overslmpUfying, unless a bigger pie Is baked nobody can
take a bigger share without cutting into someone else's wedge.
Otten thought of as a blue-collar phenomenon, It Is hardly so. Witness, for
example, the executive bonuses handed out even when the company's
fortunes are down. Consider the lucrative pensions executives award
themselves.
Blue-collar raises not tied to higher productivity weaken a company and
leave It prey to comll';!litors, often from abroad. EX£'Cutlve bonuses when
perfonnance is down cheat stockholders of dividends.
-Most people today want to see that tbe elderly have financial security,
· but many people want It !!Ccompllshed by magic. Magic won't do the job;
money might. But Is there enough of It around?
In fact, ts it the role of government to guarantee people money in thetr
retirement? Or Is it the responslbillty of Individuals to provide for their own
ret:lrement, or at least most of it?
As pensions grow, the questions become more pertinent, but they
haven't been answered. According to Washington, the financing problems
of Social Secwity have been faced and conquered, but more dispassionate
observers disagree.
What has been done, say the latter, is to hand ott the burden of financing
to another generation, rather than paying noYi. ·
-For most people, a balanced budget Is desirable, but ho Is willing to .
risk the dangers of balancing it quickly? The dangers? Recession and
1ayotts; to name just two.
Budget deficitS have been with us now for two decades, but Congress,
presumably acting out the will of the people, has regularly added more
expenses to government by asking it to do more. The constituency for doing
tess appears to be smaller, even among those who Identify themselves as
conservative.
·
uwereally wanted to cut the deficit, says one professor, we can agree to
sit down and write checks to pay for the seiVIces we demand from
government. Around $2,00) or $3,1XXl per famlly would be fine.
U the costs aren 'I accepted, the option Is to compmnlse on quallly or
service: So far, Americans seem unwilling to aCCEpt that.

The theories sound plausible, but
SCRABBLE, Va. - The Associated Press reported the other day . the realities are something else.
that a community college 'tn The regional accent doesn't distract
Chattanooga, Tenn., Is otfertng a attention; It more olten commands
10-week course that Is truly subver· . attention. In my Ufetlme, owing to
slve, The alm Is to teach Sou- the bleaching lnfiuence of televitherners how to lose their Southern sion, American speech has gone
accents. This Is like asking old through a laundry. Most oltherolor
sailors to give up their slickers.
has been assiduously washed out,
The Instructor in charge of this and we are the poorer for the
heretical venture. Beverly Inman- experience.
Ebel, says that Southern accents
I may have told the tale before. I
are fine ln most situations, but In came to VIrginia In 1941, bringing
atfalrs of business the accent Is too with me the Oat accents of
mUd. ·People In business want to Oklahoma and Missouri. As
appear assertive, not easygoing. · sweetly as a gentle summer rain,
The accent, she says, tends to the distinctive syllables or the Old
distract non-Southerners, "who Domlnlon began to fall around my
orten think it's cute." Executives ears. ~lchmonders of that day !lid
should be made or sterner stuff. OQI say "about" as other folk say
"You wan! to have a voice that "about." They said something
doesn't stand out, so that people will approaching "abaott." A terrified
listen to what you are saying, not to neighbor once telephoned my wife.
how you are saying lt."
"Theah's a maoose," she cried, "a

'

Department suggesting that Khomeini was at the point of death.
There were even reorts that he had
died, but that the fact was being
kept secret while succession was
being decided.
Khomeini spiked these rumors by
making a few public appearances
in the last couple of weeks. Indeed,
Foggy Bottom sources told my
associate Lucette Lagnado that
Khomelnl's televised appearances .
were deliberately designed "to
dispel rumors that he Is dead."
His appearance a few weeks ago
rewarded the professional
Khomeini ·watcbers with one
nugget of speculative gold: AI·
though Khomelnt stood on his
balcony and smiled as usual, his
speech was read for him. The

as Cohn's Law on the Thickness eta
Southern Girl's Southern Accent. •
The postulate teaches us that the
thickness Increases by the square of
the cll.stance she travels north of the _,...
Mason-Dixon Une.
Carter had a certain tacdcal
genius. He loaded two buses full or
SOuthern ladles drawn from
Atlanta, · Savannah, Macon and
other such citadels or gentlllty, and
he transported them north to the
frozen sidewalks of Manchester,
Exeter and Keene. There they
accosted prospective voters: "Pah·
dun !11e. sub, b~t 111ay ah talk to you
jus' one ll'l ol' minnlt about Jimmy
Carter of Jawjuh?" The Yankees
could.-tJJii'lerstand barely one wo~
that feU from tile Ups of these
crinoline beauties, but they felt the
spell. Carter romped home a length.
ahead or Mo Udall and two lengths
ahead of Bl,rch Bayh. Tile rest Is
history.
·
There Isn't just one Southern
accent, of course. The accent In
Memphis (pronounced Mlmphls) Is
not the same accent the professor Is
!rylng to rout out of Clu\ttanooga. In • ;,
r.temphls they still believe that two
syllables generally are better than .
one, so that a housewife goes to the ,
grocery sto-ah, or more definitively :
to theA"yuh&amp;P-yuh. The accents of
East Texas and West Texas are
quite distinctive. In parts of SoU!h
Carolina you still hear vestiges of \
Eltzabetlu\n s~h.
· '
I love 'em all. Have you heard _,
Fred Gra)lam report the news on • ;
CBS? Everyone listens when F~ ,
Graham speaks. It's not just that '
he's a fine reporter; he's speaking .
pure North Carolina, and speech '
doesn't get much purer than that. If '
Fred ever got 10-l!ief!k educated out
of his accent, he'd be just one more
.,,
pear-shaped tone on the tube.
,Let's . hear It for variety! If ;,.
Bahstonlans will cling fiercely to hl
the broad "a," and Charlestonians :
will stick to .their sibilants, maybe ' !
thedentzensofSweetwater, Talxus, ,,.,,
will twang away forever. We don't '"
need courses In purgation. We'd be
better served by a few coutses In ; ••
coaxln' us back .to wheah we .wuh .•
befo' tet&gt;Vee.
-·

Jack Anderson ·'
••

ayatollah, who has never shirked joked that Khomelnl "could handle ··1\
his oratorical responsibilities, another wife," which suggests thi! ,.;
spoke not a word to the faithful.
problem isn't as serious as •
This anomaly lent some weight to reported.
.
'
reports in mid-July that Khomeinl
One thing Intelligence sources do
had sutfered a mild stroke. Lacking know Is that Kbomeini's heart ·&gt;
hard evidence, though, intelligence specialist has made several house· . l
experts lean toward the possibility calls to his famous patient In recent
that Khomelnl's summer ailment weeks. The visits 'a re relatively ·;
- If Indeed there was one - more
easy to log, becausethedoctormust ~'
likely was a heart attack.
cancel all his regul"' appointmentS ·.·'
Then, only last week, Khomeinl
when he Is summoned In Khomel• .. ,
addled professional Iran-watchers ni's side.
by making some personal appear·
But for all the suggestions of his • i
ances and meetin&amp; with a group of divinity, Khomelnl Is under no ·~
Western reporters.
. lllu51ons that he Is Immortal.
Secret intelligence reports assert Several months ago, he wrote a"'' ·
that.Khomelnl suffers from another secret will, to be opened only arter ' '
condition not uncommon for an
his death. It was widely believed ·• ·
8&lt;1-year-old man: severe prostate that the will named Khomelnl's ··
problems. But the ayatollah's choice of a successor.
personal physician has reportedly

Save our schools._..---______A_r_tB_uc-h_wa,__ld,:
When Gibbs first brought up the
subject I thought he was kidding.
But be was dead serious. "I have
the answer to our education
problem," he said.

million times faster than any
human student. It has a built-in
dictionary so it can't misspell a
word, and a chip which keeps It
from making any grammatical
"What's that? ..
errors. With robots Instead of )lve
"We replace students with robots students, national test scores would
in our schools ...
. go soaring, and we could once again
''Robots?!'
take pride ln the Amerlc&lt;,~n school
"I got the Idea from watching system."
Walter Cronkite's TV program on
"Do you think the school boards
robots replacing people In blue would go for enrolling robots?"
collar jobs. The robots' productivity
"Once they see what robots can
was much higher than the human do In the classroom, the board
workers', and companies were members would have no choice.
saving millions in Social Security, Robots 'don't eat, so the school
medical benefits and pensions. district would no longer have to
Walter prediced by 1990 every underwrite cafeteria costs. Robots
factory In America would be don't fight, so they would no longer
robotlzed."
have a security problem. And
"How do you apply the prtnclple robots can't get pregnant, so they
to schools?"
I won'l need student cpunselors. But
"Statistics show educational the big saving would be, since
standards are getting lower and robots all look alike, you wouldn't
lower. Students can't read or write have to bus them 20 miles from
and are getting dumber and their horne."
dumber. So If they can't cut It, we'll 1 "Would you have live teachers
enroll robots In their place."
Instructing the robots?"
"What would you teach the
"At the beginning. B'!t the beauty
robots?"
of r:obots Is that you can teach them
· "Artificial Intelligence. We'll to teach other robots. Once you
teach them the skills they need to
progriiJTl tbem as 'Master Robots,'
replace the manpower this country all a school would need Is one
so desperately needs."
systems manager to monitor what
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 18, the 262nd day of 1984. There are 10i days left
He pulled out a blueprint. "Look, was ' going on in the classrooms.
In the year.
I've designed the perfect robot When they see the savlnp that
Today's highlight in history:
student. It doesn't watch televl.slon,
could be made In ruMing a schoOl, a
OJj Sept. 18, 1793, President George Washington laid the COrnen!tone of ·
listen to rock music, smoke grass,
board would be out at Its mind not to
til!! Capitol building In Washlngton.
drink, and it never asks for a car
replace young people with a i-obot
.On this date;
when It becomes 16 yean old. I've student body."
In 1759, the french suiTendemt"Quebec to tl)e Brltis!J.
programmed It to do all Its
"Adults would go fol·tt ltlt meant
In 1769, the Boston Gazette reported on the first plano, a spinet with a
homework, and also keep Its room
lowering real estate taxes,'' I
three-to four-octave range, built by Jolm Harris.
clean."
admitted. "What about athletics at
In 1810, Chile declared Its Independence trom Spain.
"It looks pretty good," I admit·
the school? I can't see people
In 1800, Congress passed the FugitiVe Slave Act, whlcli pennltted · ted. "How does It do in math?"
coming out on Friday night to see
slaveowners to.reclalm slaves who had escaped Into otill.'!' states.
"It can solve a math problem a
robots playing football."
1
~

Today in history

niaOose In the haoose! "
I remember having to mall a
photographandseeklnghelp!roma
venerable Southern lady In our
newspaper library. "Dahlin'," she
said, "what you need IS a piece of
cyorrugated cyardbo'd."
It's aU gone now, the pretzeled
diphthongs and the lop-eared con»
nauts, and Professor Inman-Ebel to
the contrary notwithstanding, I
willingly would le!ld a campaign to
bring back the Southern accent. I
miss the cadence, the rounded
edges and the slewfoot suffixes of
Soulhern speech. Do some listeners
find ·It "cute" or "diStracting?" I
recall one Instance In which It was
remarkably effective.
~ W$8 In February 1976, when
Jlmmy Carter was running hard In
the New Hampshire primary. 1
should remind you of the tl'!'th
propounded by essayist David Cohn

·Khomeini's health
.WASlUNGTON - The aging
Ayatollah Khomeinl has been
reported to be on his deathbed at
least a dozen llmes sin~ he tpok
power In Iran more than Hve years
ago.
Now he has emerged once again
looking · hale and hearty arter a
fiurry of reports that he is alllng.
Intense speculation continueS In
Western intelUgence circles on the
state of Khoeminl's health- and on
which of several potential succes·
sors appears to be In the best
position to seize power when the
ayatollah finally dies.
Since Iran Is a closed society, the
experts' assessments remain only
speculation. But this much I can tell
you:
During the summer, reports
flowed regularly into the State

The

''I've thought about ·that. Each
school would still maintain enough
human students to maintain an
excelleht athletic program. Since
the kids won't be able to compete
Intellectually with robOts In the
claSSI'OQm, they could spent all
their time on the practice field and
we'll produce quality athletes, the
likes of whl~h this country has

never seen.11
· "What do you do with the millions "
of Uve students who are no\ ;
athletes?''
"They'll have to he retrained to
do something else. It's a waste .of
money to try to·educate them tt·!,
robots are going to take all their
jobs when the kids get out of

LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) _Having

A PASSING ~AME ·- Mllml Do1p1U 'P't ...abadl 0. Mar1ao
lhroWII n p - t1uJtDc tbe lint pertod of M_..,.a pme illllldflllo.
PnMdlng ~ lltlloJ FOiter. Mlanil'atM teudldownllntbe lint
qlllll'ter came Qll Marluo pua campletloDI. lAP LlllerpbDio ).

Coach, · officials
startled
•

Marshitll s ranke d
•
I
II
11 t h. In.· .· a~est po
.;.JJ'

HUNTINGI'ON, W.Va. (AP) - ·
MarshaU University, long a door·
mat of ~ footbiill and at one
ttmetheloslngestteaminthenatiQn, ·
Is ranked 11th In the latest NCAA
Division I ·AA ~ footbilll poll,
leaving school officials "startled''
and "Incredulous."
Marshall haS been struggling for ·
football resjle!:lablllty since 1964,
when the Thundering Herd enjoyed
a 7-3 record - 11$ last winning
season.
1

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MIAMI (AP)· - Chuck Muncie
Rlckey Young failed thetr
physicall last wtek 'with the Miami
DolphinS because cpcalne 800wed
up In their urble (eats, an offtclal .
with the National FootbaU League
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West Virginia, 3-0 after heating
VIrginia Tech 14-7, moved into the
Top Twenty for the first time this
season, as did Georgia, Hl, which
was Idle last weekend.

has "just about got the corner vtctoryaverLongBeachState.The
tw'ned." •
Bruins struggled~ an 18-15 victory
Marshall received 39 points In the · over San Diego State a week earner.
Top 'tWenty poll, two behind lOth
TheCornhuskersbaveneverwon
place finisher Tennessee State. lnfourtrlpsto.thestateofCallfornla.
Furman received 10 polllts, seven
Clemson, idle last .weekend,
ahead of second-place McN4!e¥ · remained No. 2 with 15 tlrs!·place
State.'
ballots and 1,1113 points. Texas
Since 1965, Marsball bas had defeated Auburn 35-27 and cllmbed
seven head football coaches, five from fourth to third with four
athletic dli'eclors and a combined first-pace votes and l,Oi6 points.

43-:JS5.2record.
The school was placed on NCAA

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I

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vlctoryoverWy&lt;mlngandsolldlfled
that position with a 38-7 triumph
over Minnesota, the Nebraska
Cornhuskers· will now take on
somebodytheirownslze.
The Huskers, whose next encoun·
ter 1s at No. 8 UCLA, Monday
became the first team this year to
~ atop the Associated Press
college football poll tor consecutiVe ·
weeks. They received 37 of 59
first-place votes and 1,151 of a
possible 1,00 polllts from a nationwide panel of sports writers and
sportscasters.

Durtng was
the Intervening
19 years, • of
probadoil
for a year andConference
kicked out · 16th.
Marshall
:P,~ on probation
the Mld·Amerlca
Miami which was tied with Iowa
bY !lie i4CAA; 'kr~ out of the after a university Investigation b1 for fifth
iast week, rallied to .
Mid-America Conference, Suffered . 1968 uncovered 144 violations of beat Purdue 28-17 and moved into
tl)rough •a stretch of 27 games
NCAA rules. '
·
fourthplarewltboneflrst·placevote
In:tm, lheHerdappearedtobeon and f111 points. Qhio 'State shut out
· without a win,' and saw its team and
coaching staff wiped out In an -Its way to rebdldlng a quality Washington State 44A) and vaulted
airplane crash.
football program when tragedy from nlnthtp fifth with 8Eil polii!S.
First-year coach Stan Parrish struck. Seventy-five people, lnclud·
Brigham Young rose !rom eighth
said he was "as shocked as anyone
lng the Marshall coaching staff, the to sixth with 817 points following a
else" when he heard of the ranking, ' athletlccllrectorand37.players,clled JS-15 trounctngofTWsa. Perm State
"I'm real' llappy for the kids," • when a charter airplane crashed at beat Iowa 20-17 and jumped from
Parrish said Monday night. "The Tri -State Airport outside 12thtoseventhwlth745polnts.
seniors have endured a lot of
Huntington. ·
Rrundlng out the Top Ten are
humillation "during their three
Theschoolflnlshedthel!lliBasthe Washington, with 718 points, and
seasonsbeforei)OW.It'sbeentough. NCAA Dlvlsloil I's worst football _ Bo6tonCollege,whlchalsowaslOth ·
"It's early In the~· and things team, winning 22 games and losing a week ago. The Eagles, Idle over
cerJ81n1Y will change. But! hope It's &amp;I during the decade. The Herd has the weekend. received 698 polllts.
a start."
enjoyed little more success In the
The Second' Ten consists of
TheThunderlng~ls3-0under
19!ll!l, compiling records of 2·8-1, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, South·
Parrish butfaces Its toughest game 2-9-0, 3-8and 4-7 under fonnerCoach ern Metoodlst, Iowa, Florida State,
oftheseasonSaturdaywbenltplays SonnyRanclle.
Michigan, Soothern . Ca~ West
SouthemConferencerlvalFunnan,
Marshall's success this season Vlrldnla.AubumandGeorgia.
No. lin 'the latest l'llllklnllsbas beEn built on the ann of junior
Sports Info~tton, Director Mac
quarterback Carl Fodor, who lrOke
Yates said he was "Incredulous" seven school records Saturda;Y In a
when lntonned of the Herd's 24-17wlnoverEastemMichlgan.
nr TqJ 1wsuy INmS 1n u~ "-ad·
ranking.
·
Fodor completed 29 of 49 for 389
alftl Pt.. c.dlfp bltbd !Dll wlftt lrst ·
"We11n1doubtedlysurprlsed, and ya.rdo! against, the HW'OIIS and was
plaff' votes " J)U'tnllftl!s. l9W rmrdl.
total polr\ts bUt'd C11 IHJ-ll-17-l&amp;-l'Hf-U.
ihatgoestor'thecoachtotheathletlc namedSootheJ'ncanterencePiayer
12- U -10.--s-&amp;7..,~2-1 and r•kM'Ies ~ lhf
dlrectordowntotllesportsinforma· oftheWeek. In three games, Fodor
tlolldlrectot," YatEs said. ·
has completed nearly 56 pen:ent of
1. ~(371
1,151 ]
2&lt;10
, Atl)letlc DirectOr Lynn Snyder his pass attempts for 963 yards and
1Ciemsm 115)
1.(13 ~
2&lt;10
].()&lt;)
l'l'exas (4)
UN6 · 4
said the poll Indicates tllat the Herd nine touchdowns.
... Ma.nl , F1... ttl
~I.()
lll705

\

tf GOtt\E.S 1b
"10l-111C.S Holt&gt; ~~'lstoN,

F8ning. out or the Top Twenty
were Pitt, which lost to Oklahoma
42-10, and Alabama, which bowed to
Georgia Teeh 16-6. Both are

eai'nfd the No. 1 ranking with a 42·7

-\
Wt\~N
.

with alotofbeartand lntens.lty."
Marino. whOse touchdown passes
to Duper, ClaytOn and Nat Moore.
accounted tor aU of Miami's
touchdowns, found the lnexpertenced Bills secondary an aU too
Inviting target. He finlshed the day
with 26 completions In 35 attempts
for 296 yards.
ltdldn'ttake a genlustoflgureout
what Sbula, ·with a hot Marino and
without a top-notch rusher because
or fullback Ancira Franklin's knee
lnjury,wasgolngtodo.
"WhenyouhaveaguyllkeMarlno
and your running game Is non·
exlstent,Iamnotthatstubbornthat
I won't go to the pass,'' he said.

Conthuskers solidify.
No. I college ranking

Muncies problem involves cocaine

Berry's World

HeledBuffaloooscorlngdrlvesof
79 and 9lyards laielntllegameand
had them mDVIng for the winning
score IB Dolphins territory when
wide receiver Byron Franklin
tumbled atter acatchwlthjustover
!lye minutes left In the game.
\'YollC!In'tmakemistakestoheat
run.
the Miami Dolphins," said Bills
CoachKaYSt.epbel1sonatteragame
"We've just been getting o1f to which saw Buffalo pena)lzed Dine
slow starts,'' said Bills wide t!meslor'IOyards. "We'vegottoget
receiver Julius Dawkins, who those mistakes corrected. That to
cal!glttthreepassesfor5lyardsand me lfas the big dlfferenre In the
a touchdown. "If we can just game."
.
combine our second halves with our · Still Stephensori at least disCoflrsthalves,wecanturnltaround." verec1 his team bas a
Once again, veteran quarterback
Ji1s team.
Joe FerguSon was the prime mover
on offense for the Bills.

year,

allo'«&lt;oom v...,.

school."

20mlnutestoMarkDuperandMark
ClaytOn.
TheBUlswereneverlnlastweek's
37-7losstoSt.Louis',butaswasthe
case against New England In the
season opener, Buffalo didn't con·
cede the game after the early blitz
and the Dolphins ended liP 09' the

'·

(52)
COMME~IAL CR..EDIT

ANANCiiAL NET'MJRK
.- Conuol

D.1.1o~

(Dmflo'ny

'19.9'o Annual Pomn~&gt;~t Rote
••18.9-J.Annual Perctntage Ra1e

. •

lh iretcoee your quntions tnd c011111nts-in printe or
publicly, tllroutlt this COIIIIIII.
·

I

·JAMIS SIMPSON
1/

•

.
Gallopolis: 358 Sc&lt;ond Ave., 446-1973. Pomt:llly: 125 E. Main St., 992-2171. Waverly: Ill ·E. Sc&lt;ond St., 947-2168.

JAMES BLOWER

,.,

.•

,.,
. - . . ·'

•''•

.
.·

'

�•

•

Ohio

·Meet the Marauders
.....

~

......

Oester,
Reds
give
I Padres early gift
CINCINNATI (AP) - San Diego
Padres ~er Dick WWiams
Isn't going to ask for IUI)'Ihlng thiS
~ - He tlgures he's already
received his gift.

The

Butch SlUes
&amp;-0, 190 pound
Senior guard

trtmmed

Padres

their

field when cen~ fielder Kevin
McReynolds, playing shallow, took ·
the Unenlll one hop and heaved It

'Ibn Colmer
pound

Sophomore tackle

Aewo!•W.._ Writer
A · few hours before Reggie
Jackson smashed his way Into
baseball history with his 500th home
run, Detroit edged closer to re-

Jolut LongKreth
&amp;-1, 215 pound
Senior tackle

Scott PuUim

..

WiitlngTigerh!staryeyclln-at
least a Ue for the American League
East title.
Seventeen years earlier to the
day, a 21-year-old Jackson made the
circuli at Anaheim 8tter his first
major-leagile home run.
. The only COII'Iplalnt a 38-,Year-old
Jackson had aboot his 500th hmler
was that It came with the score 7-0
and provided the California Angels'
only run In a 10-lloss Monday night
to the Kansas City Royals.
Combined wtth the Minnesota
Twins' 7-3loss to tbe Chicago White
Sox, the Royals' victory left them
akll1e atop the AL West for only the
second olgbt this season.

5-10, UO ,,und
Junior end

··w in puts Trojans
)thead of Tigers
• . • COLUMBUS, Ohio· (AP) - Cln·
·ctnnatl Moeller, Akron St. VIncent'-St. Ma ry and Mogadore held onto
:their leads today In The Associated
· Press' Ohio higll school football
ra tings.
All three leaders pushed their 1984
• records to 3-0.Q last week with easy
victories.
·
Moeller crushed Lancaster 35-7
andkepttheClassAAAleadwith281
. points, 91 points ahead of Fremont
- Ross, the new runner-up among the
: large schools. Akron Garfield,
~ second last week, took a 31-6 beating
· from · St. VIncent-St. Mary and
tumbled Into a tie for 21st place.
St. VIncent-St. Mary piled up 288
points for the top Class AA spill, 71
points more than second-ranked
• Elyria Catholic .
Mogadore, a 28-3 winner over
Penlsula Woodridge, remained
ahead of another Class A poU
champion, Newark Catholic. Mogadore had 249 points while Newark
Catholic collected 'll:l from a state
· panel of sport~ writers and
·: broadcasters.

San

AMDUCAN LE4GUE

EASJ' DIVIliON
WL PclGB
96 54 .610 84 66 .:160 12
fll
Ill
'18

~

.Ml

.«57 27*

.416 11*

.517 . ~0

C~llfomla

75

13

Oakland
Chlcajro
Srot11t&gt;

69

~

!!/!1
.4.J7

Ql
b1

81.

.4/ifi

..

1~

.53'1 151,.2
.52.1 171.-fl

00
71
Of'\'f'land
W 8l
Ml!waukre
m 87
WFm' DIVISION
Kansas CitY
71 Tl
MlnrK&gt;sota
76 13

I
I%
g
9

.om u

81

TE'XIlH
~
Sl .4.'1ti 12
x-cllnctmd lk&gt; for dtvlo;k:Jn !lilt•
Monda(~~&gt; Oamt'!l

Toronto 5. Elo.o.tm 4
Milwa ~

DMrott 1.

~

~·G-IDrawdcy 8-81 a t Clnctnnatl

/Pricfo 7-U I
PlnSbut"Rtl

By Thto ~ P"no.

x.[)(•trolt

Prep ratings
COLUMBUS. Otdo IAPI - H&lt;M' a panE'!

ot

sporU write'S Ud l:ll'CIMteuten rates
IIIah tdlool bJtbaU tMJII

aoo

u ,..

Allodatled ~ (wilh pla)Uf divisions
tl parentheees)

CIA88MA
lkMII - - - W..L.:l'PIL

l , Cln. Moeller (1 ~
2., Fremont RIB Ill
3. Centft"Vilko Ill
4. A•tmtwn Ftdl 111
!'i, O.yton Wayne (1)
6. Warm w. Rarv 111
7, l.akewdSt. Ed. (J )
8, Mentor U. CUL (I)

3
3
3
3
3

0
0
0
o
0

0
0
0
o
0

281
U0
189
115
149

3

0

0

131

3
2

0
0

0 1M
O. 89

0
0
0
](}

0
0
0

9, Yonptwn~ (01
3
lll, 1'Diml Smt1 fDI
3
·w, Wlntft'IVWr /Dl
3
Olhf'r ldblls ~~

ir

M
42
12
I'YIX'fo

Llmlll Serdor 23. ll. OKinnaD
~on 19. lfi, Tolecb Central Cath&gt;Uc

Pl*lll: ll,

11. 15, North Cailtm. lklover 16. 16 ftifo) ,
Cbclnnaft LoSollr. ~&lt;ott"""' FliiT·
mont and Ce1iW1 15. JJ. Yourwatown Ursullnt l3. 21 lbtl, WtSOike and AJcnJn Cartleid u. 2] (del, Clnctnnad Colerm and
Troy 10.
CIA88AA

, . _ - -- W.J..!I'I'Ia.
1.

Akm

v.-&amp;.

St.

3
3
3

2, Elyria Cath. IMJ
3. Sta~btnvdko !Dl
4, OnvUit IWI.
3
5, l..cudonvliiP (lV I
3
6, C... McN'k:tllt (ID I
3
7, 8fill!fontUie 1M l
3
8, 8fft W. llnll'h !IV)
3
9, Portamouth (IDI
3
II. Ironton Iilli
3
0ttw tet~oo~~. r"ft'l''WWe

tiD !
00:11B
0 0 217
0 0 182
Mry

0

0

161

0
0
0

0
0
0

0
0
0
10

LJl
llJl
89
75

0
0
'11
0
32
cr rml'l'

~w: ll,~. ~~ ~. U. DwomF~

Majors

TOronto
Bal!lmOr£1
N1ow York
Elo.-.ton

ln Class AAA, Centerville moved
up one spot to third place,
Austintown-Fitch two to fourth.
Dayton Wayne retained the flflh
position, Warren Western ReseiVe
was sixth, Lakewood St. Edward
seyenth, Mentor Lake Catholic
eighth, Youngstown Mooney ninth
and Toledo Scott and WlntersvUle, ·
tied for lOth.
Running third In Class AA was
Steubenville's Big Red, up from
fourth a week ago. Orrville advanced one spot to fourth and
Loudonville one to fifth. Cincinnati
McNicholas gained three positions
io.sixth, Bellefontalile was seventh,
Beloit West Branch eightl:l, Portsmouth ninth and Ironton lOth.
In Class A, McComb, the Division
V state playoH champion last fall,
again ranked third with Middletown
Fenwick fourth, Berlin Center
W~tern ReseiVe fifth, ClnclnnaU
CAPE sixth, Archhold and New
Philadelphia Tuscarawas Catholic
tied for seventh, McDonald ninth
and Canal Wlnch~ter lOth.

t'J'udor 9-111 at Chicago .'
tEckerslpY &amp;.71
Nl"'N Ycrk tTPtn'U 10.121 at PNla delphia 1Denny 7--6), IRf
LM Angeles C?tona 12-61 a t AUBnta·
!Smith 1-0\, tn\
1\&gt;IOntreal tS'nith U·l21 at St. LrullltAn·
dUJar 19-121. (nl
San Fra.ncbco t R.Dey (H)) a t Houston
t ~ 7-41 .t nl

w~.o.ne.

Plnsburgh at ~
New York at PhiladeJphla,

tnl

Ctlctnnad at Atlanta. tnt
Month!'al at St. Lwls, {n l
l...o!i AnjJI!Ies at HW8ton, tn l
San Francisco at San DleJlo, tn 1

Transactions
BU}TALQ ~Named

b

('ro.

Zler assislant coech.

MONTREAL CANADIENS-81101f-'d John
Chatxn, CRUE!'f', and Mark Hun ter, r1Rtlt ·
w blg, to two-year contraciS.

~11G111TJM

3
3
3

0
0
0

227
181

4. MF'nwck
!VI
5! CA. CAPE: fiV I

3 '0 0
3 0 0

119
l 1l

!VI 3
3

3
2
3

0
0
0

te9

1, Moplona IIVI
2. Nt"Wil111 Ca1tl&amp;c !VI
l. McComb tVI

7 NwPtlrl'lr.C'Ih.(VJ
9, McDonald !VI
JO,Canl Wnchslr lVI

N.lldoul Hcdq Lnpe

ChiCiijl() 1, Minrlf'Sola 3
Kan.~s CITy 10. · Callfornla I
SPan I£' :J, Ck&gt;v&lt;&gt;land t U Innings
Oakland 5. Tl'xas 3

CIAIIOA

6 BnCniW.R.
7, Ardlbald fVJ

HOaiEV

3

New York 12, BaltinYln:' 7

PtlUo :Ill. 13, PolaDd 1). 14 (tie), COlUmbUs
....... and L w - ........... ·~
CCI't-' ~ 17. 17 !U.t. B$re
and GIB MWI Hawb!n l6. 15, Cuat(MI"n
MSamt Eut 15. Jt, c.mc.~ CmtraJ CathoUc M. 2l fdel . JarnettCM'II Gremeview
and 8rl!lkovuiP Ll. 2l (del•. Olk Hllr1U and
West JE'ftenon 11. 25 Ulfl , Oewland
Bl!r!«tict....,. and !•~ .Kennfdy tn

0

o

0
0

RllllERVE CRAMP - JUdlnrta 11eoom1nr -.c~ ii*ift .... .,.__
Glbeaut of Pomeroy. Thll WJi1! Wend)"aflntyear 18 ,a~lftlle

0 1M
0
34
0 29
Qlrr tchools ~
... rJ'I(ft
PI*!IB: ll. Sarahsv!Ut Shenu\ooah 28. 12,
LucasvUJeo v~~ey 'Zl. 13. w~ m ••.
CoUN WMem Relftve 16. l5. Ctdarvm.
15. 16 triP), Delpms Jftlmon and Mid·
wle lrdlan Valltoy Nonh l l

MllwaukA&gt; tMcClul"i' 4-7 11 a t Dctroll

gone farther down tile line toward
home WhUe Waiting to see If the ball
was caught.

tD.Mat1lnC'"l 6-71 at

Balllmort&gt;

Nt"'A·

York tFontl-'001 7-111. rm
Chicago !Bums J.U\

at Mlnnt"SS(a
1Schrom 4-91 . 1n1
'
Kansa.s CUy (Sab£'rhagen S.lOl a t Call·
tornia !Slaton 7-71 , tnl
CI('V(IIand (Ujdur ().{)) at Seattle tMoort'
~16 1 ,

(nl

Tf?cas tTanBna L'). IJ J a t Oakland (Codi·
roliJ.-41 , tnl
W~s G amts

TPXa.~ at

Oakland
Mllwaulft at Dl'frolt, tn)
Ebston 111 'l'on:l1to, 1n1
BaJIJtror(l at New YOrk. tn l
Chicago at Minnesota, (m
Kansas Cl!y a t Cali fornia , tnl
Cll"\\&lt;'land 11t $eattk&gt;, tnl

NA110NAL 1...&amp;\GUE

,_

f:AST DIVIUON

WLPCLGI'

!KI ~ .ID&amp; 82 fll .5oU 9
New Yor11
11'17l..WI11
PhHadf'lph.la
78 71 1m 12
St lools
P..Jonrl"f'fll
1J 15 .4\11 16 ~
Ill Ill .&lt;13 25!&gt;
WP.SI' DIVIIION
San DleRO
83 ~ .!67 HOUSICII
15 ~ .500 8~
AtJanta
74 ~ .&amp;
9~
Los Angeles
73 77 .4R?' 10~
Chicago

Clncinnntl
San Fr~

&amp;1

62

871 • .a1 Zl~

B7

.416 2l

Monda)"J G~mm

Phlladrlphla 2. New York l

Los AnRefE's 9, Atlanta 0
San D.... 3. ClndMati 1 lJ ~­
HCllstoo S, San FranciiCO 3

FREE HEARING
TESTS SET

For Pomeroy Area
FREE ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. William Mattingly

·.THURSDAY
SEPT. 20. 1984
9:00 A.M. 'TIL
12:00 NOON

BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At:
MEIGS INN. POMEROY, OHIO
Anyone who has trouble hearing is welcome to have a hearing
test using modern electronic equi~J~Mnt to determine if his loss
is one w!lich may be helped. Some of the .caries of huringloss
will be explained and diagrams of how the ear worlls will be
shown.

We Also Service and Repair all Makes of Hearin&amp; Aids.
Batterie~ And Supplies For All Makes For Sale

IF YOU CANNOT COME IN CALL FOR AHOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE 614-992-3629

Ashley of Meigs UJUII'l
and Mrs..FrEd Rhodes and daughter, Donna, of Cottageville, W.Va.,
were In Marietta saturday to attend
the annual meeting ~ the Sons and

The Dally Sentinel

Published . ev.ery after noon, Monday

througtl Friday. Ill Court; St. , y the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company( MUI ·

tlmedla . Inc .. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769, h.
.992·2156. Second class pos1a&amp;:e paid at
Pom er oy, Ohi o.

Member: The Associated Press, In·
land Dally Pres s Association and lhe
America n NewspapPr Publisher• As·
soclatl on, N ~ tlon a J Adve'ttlstng Repre·
~en taltv e ,

Branham Newspaper Salel,

York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address chanAeS
tl'l The Dally SentinPI. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;J.

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1f you have- service proble ms call our

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SILVERBIU

SATEUITE
SYSTEIIS

1oo degree LNA

completely

WEDNESDAY
,.

MIDDLEPORT -

in~talled.

p.m., at the ten'lple. Work In the
FellowShip Degree. Refreshments wtil be seiVed and
members are ·urged to attend.

,

"

Rtm.AND .:.... Meigs coUnty
Flrernell's Association meeting

HOME SATELLITE

Sllverbird Satellite

• 7: .ll p.m. Wednesday at the

·378·6158
IHCiswlllo, Ohio

Rutland.Flre Station;

'

·1HURSDAY
ROO&lt; SPRINGS -

!ladle

ftattaelhaek

1

~ek &amp; COMPUTER
u
I
CENTERS

START

OUR NEW COLOR.

159!!
Cllltl Vllld Color Graplllcs w1t11
.Exciting 8111111 ElflciS llld Millie

-

• Wrlt8 Your Own Program• In the
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Mkki!e-

port Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wW meet
In special session Wednesday, 7

"R111111••61• P/11111
lw • $111.tl Dlt•"
TV SPECIALISTS

me -

Calendar

.$16.9500

games.

GWITH

. $peCial place In his heart.

Affirmation held

spun aluminum dish with
·The Janiel Reeeiver

bottom of the ninth Inning to delay
the Inevitable.
•
The victory· extmded Doyle
Alexander's wtnnlngstreaktoseven

Rich Gedman's second double ol
the game had given the Red SoX a 4-3
lead In the top of the ninth. Mtke
Easler earlier put the Red Sox
ahead 3-2 with his 23rd homer.

*SEPT.*.
· Special
8' COMMANDER

The vtciory c;ame exactly one
year after the White Sox clinched the
l!m division title.
Blue JaY$ 5, Ked Sox 4
Garth lorg slapped a two-run
single with the bases loaded In the

However, you can be assured that
Meigs County wW always have a

w

733 Third Avenue, New Yor k, New

Mall Subflc:rlptl...
Inside Ohio

SlaY$.
He feels that the trips back are
Just getting to be too much tor hlm.

Da~ta-softbe PloneerRtvermen
A, Bridge ot Friendship olgbt wW
. and toUred the Delta Queen while be held by District 25, Order of
there, Bob and Russell alao were · Eastern Sfa1', In Memorial A)ldltoamong the Invited giles~ to attend
rtum on the Ohio . Urilverslty
the du1slenlng of the Fred Way Jr., Campu$ this Saturday night.
fonneri.Y 1be J;Juckeye towboat.
Emma Clatwllrthy says that the
They attended thai event also.
evEIIIIs 110 called becaurlt bridges
the states ot Ohio and WeSt VIrginia
Meigs Countlans continue doing Into one event.
their good work.
,.
. 1be fl1eodshlp night wW begin
. AnOther crop of potatoes has been with a colree hour from 5:45 to 6: 45
taken to the M(lunlall\ Millston p.m. illlowed the observance at·
School at Grundy, 'Va. A, sizeable 7. Worthy matroos and worthy
donation was gl..,.m by Crestoo patroos ot l&gt;lstrlct 25 will be lxlstlng
Newland to add to the potatoes the affair. Meigs County wW he .
raised with the help of members of xep:esmted by four wortby mathe ~ Church of Christ and sane trons and four worthy patrons of
of the neighbors of EugEile Under- local chapters.
.
wood, always active with the
On ~y a churcti seiVlce wW
program to help the mlllslon schod. be staaal ey the district also In
The potato patch wu on the Edith Memorial Auditorium with an
Fon-est Famm and was financed Eslarl student from the dlstrlcl as
ey the Middleport Chw'ch of Christ. speaker. That service w1li be at9: .ll
1be yield was about Ml pounds.
a.m.
1be polatoes were COII'Iblned with
other ltemsrcollecled In the annual
Gerald Powell, Poma oy dance
drive for the schoo) and were taken teacher, Is Instructing In Ohio
to Grundy . by Underwood. his Untverslty's Cmtllllunlverslty Proda~ter, VIrginia, and Hartwell
gram this fall teaching the fox fro!·
Curd who provldi!d the truck.
tango, polka, walter, rock and
Thank$ to everyone who 11e1Ped- country western.
\
Dance parties are Ued lrito the
G. Harold Martin, prominent instruction "which will take place In
retired Fort Lauderdale attorney the Baker'Center Ballroom. How·
and former Meigs County resident, ever, taking part In those Is not
was a visitor bere over the required.
weekend.
called the tt1p a ''farewell
1be Rev. WUllam M.lddleswarth
one" - with lots of goodbyes. tells
and I believe he picked
Martin, Who Is 84, flew Into Ibis up from Victor Borge - that a
Columbus and then rented a car in smile Is tbe shorle$t distance
drive himself to Meigs cOunty for between two people. Gee-and I
I the weekend
thought !twas a straight Une. At an~
He's a fonner resident of Rock rate, do keep smiling...
.: Springs - one of the yoongest
· l!i'aduates of Porne) oy High School

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Romine-Bicker

.

1be arurual Romine and Bicker
reunion was held Labor Day
weeltmd at tbe American Legion
farm on BeaclJ Grove Road.
Attending were Charles and Tillie
Romine, Kattuyn, Joyce and Janet
Lambert, Jbmny and J!Jnlriy.
Lambert Jr., Rutland; Melvin,
Francis, Charles and Melvin RanIne Jr., Co)umbus; Clltford and
AUce PlaniZ. Pomeroy; EsUe
Hlckrilan, Art Sanders, Columbus;
Therese Bronosky, Mlldred and
George Blckar, Huntington, W.Va.
Robert, Leona, Jeffery and Crystal, Allee and Romine, Rick
R.orntne, Rose Romine, Lockborne:
Bill, Barb, ~y. Loretta, and
Billy Ranine J r. , Jenny Check,
Columbus: Kenneth, Lany,
nard, and Tina ~e. Dave,
Annette, and Clay Russell, Rutland;
Bob and Hazel Romine, Columbus;
Kim and A.J. Peters. Lancaster;
Ethel Shafer. Buckeye Lake, Edith
Lambert, Judy Snowden, Rutland;
EUeen, Charles and MliY Field,

In the Y ounplown llfl!ll tor a year
following 111'8du8tll;&gt;n and then went
to Flm1da w~W?re . he's been ever
~- However, he'$ loved making
retwn trlpB to the crunty and
~ to vlslt the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church dw1ng his

andru::and~­

w•

Melp t-H Pleasure Riders, ye&amp; she
~ l'il8el've c.lulnpbl
novice at &amp;he 4-H show at the Meigs CGunly Fair. She Is hnl!llnr lier f8lr
trophy l'n the above plloto. She Is the dqteer ol Donpa Wortonan ..

L21
1M

0
l
0
10

Family reunion held

-and recetved his law degJ ee from
Oblo State University. Hep11C11ced

1llree home runs by Harold
Baines provided all the runs needed
to lmockMinnesotaout oftlrst place
In the West. Baln~ hit solo pomers
In the first and flflh Innings and
whacked a two-run shot 400 feet to
rtght-center In the seventh to raise
his season total "to 27. ·

/h

'·'

tl)rough ou
towns?
Fantastic!

1984

Page 5

. r,

·-

~

Earlier in the night, a 7-3victory
Yu• eu 12,0rloles7
by the Tigers over the MUwaukee
Thede!endlngWorldChamplons,
Brewers clinched at least a tie 1n the eUmlnated earlier Monday by
East for Detroit. The Toronto Blue Detroit's victory, punctuated the
Jays rallied to wtn 5-4111 Boston and night by summderlng five eighth. keep the champagne on Ice 1n lnnlngrunsonDonj3aylor'stwo-run
Detroit for another n!ght.
·
single and Ken Griffey's three-run
In other-AL games, New York hoiner.
beat Baltimore 12-7, Oakland topped · The Orioles lost despite a grand
Texas :&gt;-3, and Seattle went 11 slam by Wayne Gross, and harely
Innings In downing Cleveland 3-2.
ooticed the Tiger victory,
Jackson's 22nd homer of the
RelleverJayHowell, 9-4,pltched 2
· season was one of Oply three hits 2-3 Innings for the victory. RQn
allowed In eight Inning$ by Kansas Guidry pitched the ninth, his first
CltystarterBudBiack,16-11.
appearance since Aug. 12. Oscar
Jackson became the 13th player In Gamble smashed his ninth homer
major league baseball hlstocy to hit for theYankees.
.
500career home runs. Eleven of the
Mar1Ders3. """ans%
otherS are In tile Hall otFameand
DarneUColeshitaflelder'scholce
the12th-WIIlleMcCovey-hasnot liner to left field In the llth lnnjng.
been reUred long enough to be Joe Carter fielded It and threw. to
second to force Steve Henderson,
ellglble for election.
Gary Berkowitz of Arulhelm, but Jack Perconte scored the
Calif., caught the baD and gave It to winning run.
.JacksOn. 1n exchange, Berkowitz
Trailing 2.() In the eighth, the
received a video recorder, a shirt lnd!WIS tied the game on Carter's
and a year's supply of cereal.
two-run, bases-loaded single.
· 'Diers 7, B1ewers 3
A's 5, Rangers 3
A solo horner ey Lance Parrish
Dave Kingman's 35th homer of
~. and~ grand slam ey Lou Whitaker the year,atwo-runblow, waspartof
keyed a six-run Detroit sixth as the a tie-breaklngthree-runslxthlnnlng
Tigers roared to victory. Another that sank Texas. It was the 377th or
Detroit win or anotber Toronto Joss Kingman's career, tying hlm with
wW admlnlstetthecoupdegraceto ex-TigerNonn Cash for 24th on the

the BlueWhite
Jays.
Solr: 7, Twins 3

Tu~v. ~amber18,

River ways .come alive

Ron Oester, the Reds' baserunner
on third, hesitated to make sure the
baD wasn't caught on theOy. Itwasa
C06tly delay.

Tigers clinch tie for AL East flag
By JONA'IHAN Vl1"l1

By The Bend

Beat of the/Bend

OOme.

number for cUnchlng the National
League West to five games Monday
night with a wlld3-2vlctory ova- the
. McReynolds' perfeCt throw beat
ClnclnnaU Reds In ll Innings that him to the plate, and catcherTeny
put WWiams In a thankful mood.
Kennedy - who also had started oif
"Chrlsbnas came early. Oh, the field - tagged Oester out for a
man," WWiams saki, reflecting on a forCe play. When Gossage, 10.6, got
bizarre lOth-Inning play that robbed Dave Parker to fly out to end the
Reds player-~ Pete Rose of threat, WUllams had his Chrlsbnas
an apparent game-winning single.
present.
With the score tied 2-2, the Reds
" Boy, !'can't beUeve lt. I can't
loaded the bases In the lOth off belleve It, winning that game after
reliever prose G&lt;E•agP. with one Roseslnglesto®ter butdoesn't get
out. Rose c:ame to bat and lined a the single," WU!tams said,. "It's a
fastball to center lleld
line-drive base hit to center !leld; I
The 7,7'1:8 fans In Riverfront . don't care where the outfield Is
Stadium wereonthelrfeetcelebrat· playing."
lngandGOssagewaswalklngotfthe
Oester agreed he should have

5-~, 210

-·-

••

The Daily Sentinel

.. Suzannah Eichinger, 15-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs..Charles
Elchlnaer. Columbus, was affirmed
ey baptism Into the Lutheran
Church Sunday. Attaxiing were her
grandmother, OpalEichlger, Laura
Jean El.chiDger. Don, Jan and
Tiffany ~. Chester. A
recEption was held at the Eichinger

home after her afflnnatlon.
I

To obrerve birthday

.

Mabel Pauley, Ollver St., Middleport, formerly of the Dexter area,
will observe her birthday Wednes·day. She is a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital and cards may
be sent to her there.

HONORED - llc!Wl aad Emma Aebley, the West V1rp.ia Slate
Graap ''Couple ~the Year' Wfft ........... at the recent Melp eciumy
Pomona Gnare meedn( held lit tile Bodl Sprlap haD. Alhle)'s, who
re8lde Jill Roell 8priDp Rolld, POIIK!I'O)', were luotrunlii!iltal Ill
orpnMna: the Melp Couaty Graaa:e Youth Ud active Ill tw. year's
adlvltles at the MelpCooay Fair. Bet. been a•bordlllatemaaler, a
junior IP'IIIIa:e leader, 8!ld P - . pl•niM, wldle •be baa been a
~ lleCI'\'.Wy," juniol; iraace leader, and II J,i I otly the
Pomona ltewlll'd Mr. aild Mn. Allllle)' are pldured here wllh Roberi
Heed, Melp Couuty P - Gl'llllpl ~. ceMer.

:aer-

History corrtpetition
at Ohio University ·
ATHENS - More than l l,OOJ
seniors from 500 Ohio high schools
will participate In the first round of
Ohio University's :)8th Annual
Amertcan History Contest
8
and 9 at their local schools.
The contest Is open ,to students
enrolled In the 12th year of an .
accredlted high school who have
studied American history or go.
vernment or comparable social
studies programs. The preliminary
test wW consist of Ill multiplechoice questions, with winners
announced late In October.
First round winners will be those
who receive the highest scores In
each county, all county scorers In the 99th percentile of scores for all
entrants or the second and third
highest se&lt;;&gt;re If In the 95th
percentile.
Winners will come to the Athens
campus as guests of Ohio Unlver-·
sity on Friday, Nov. 9, for the
cont~l's final round, a threequ~tlon essay examination.
The first prlze in the rontest Is
$100 In cash and a $1,917 full-tuition
Ohio University scpolarship. The

Oct:

scholarship Is renewable for up to
three years If the recipient maintalns a 3.3 grade point average (on a ·
4.0 scale).
second prtze Is $75 and a one-year
$1.001 scholarship. Third through
fifth prizes are $50 and one-year
$750 scholarships. Sixth and seventh prizes are $35 and $750
scholarship.
Eighth through lOth prize
winners receive $35. Eleventh
through 25th . receive honorable
mention certificates.
The stl,ldent with the highest
score In the preliminary round will
receive the Carl Gustavson Book
Award, named In honor of Dr. Carl
Gustavson, Distinguished ?roles. sor of History at OhiO University.
fuformation on the cont~t Is
available from high school guidance counselors or from Dr.
Marvin Fletcher, contest chalrman, Bentley Hall, Ohio Universlty, Athens, Ohio45701. The cont~t
Is sponsored by OhiO University's
College of ·Arts and Sciences,
Admissions Office and History
Department.

The rodeo will feature BreakAway Roping, Saddle Bronc riding,
Pole Bending, Calf Roping, Steer
Wrestling, Barrel Racing, Team
Roping, Goat Tying, and Bull
Riding. Events are for boys and
girls.
Tickets are now on sale from all
members of the Board of Directors
of the Big Brothers/Big Sisters of
Gallta·, Jackson, Meigs and Mason
Counties, who !lre co-sponsoring the
event: All pre-ticket sales proceeds
go to the Big Brother/Big Sister
Organization. Tickets are aiso
available at Charlie's and Com·
pany in Gallipolis and the LaSalle
Restaurant In GalUpolls.

~IE iiERMIIIIU~
FRIDAY thru THURSDAY !

Hayman reunion
ANTIQUITY - The descendants of the tate H.A. Fred
Hayman and Gamet F. Polk
Ha1 man will be held Sunday at
the home of their eldest son, C.E.
Hayman Sr., at Antiquulty. The
reunion will begin at 10. a.m. and
COntinue througlxlut the day.
There will bean dinner at noon
and a ballgame In the afternoon.
AD relaUv~ and friends of the
Hayman famtly are Invited to
attend. . C.E. Hayman Sr. will .
have charge of the business
meeting at 1: .ll p.m .

Yard sale
MIDDlEPORT- The United
PEnleC06tal Church will have a
y~saleSalllnlaytrom9a.m. to
3 p.m . Saturday at the church,
South Third St., Middleport.

Rodeo benefit planned
The Ohio High School Rodeo
Assiictallon will sponsor a high
school rodeo ai the Bob Evans
Arena In Rio Grande on Saturday,
Sept. 22, and Sunday, Sept. 23. The
Saturday event wW begin at 7 p.m .
with the Sunday event to begin at 2
p.m .
High school s tudents, both boys ,
and girls, will be participating from
all over Ohio. To participate,
teenagers mus t be In grades nine
throUgh 12 and be a member of the
Ohio H i gh Sch o ol Rod eo
Association.
One Gallla County student, Paul
Sanders, will be partlclpatlng. Hels
a freshman at Gallia Academy
High School.

. Buckeye Lake; Steven Morris,
Groveport; amrt~.D mrum, and
Chari~ Morris Jr. Obetz; Teny,
Drema, 1beresa, and Mlssy ·F lesh·
man, Columbus.
Recognized and presented gifts
were Estle Hickman, the oldest
woman; George Bickar, the oldest
man; Crystal Romine, the youngest
girl; Charles Romine J r.. the
youngest boy.
Several other prizes we r e
awarded during the day's acMties.

-COMING SOON ! "All OF ME" · -

"EVIL THAT MEN DUE"

50°/o Off
EVERYTHING
IN OUR STORE

"2 WEEKS ONLY"
RUTLAND HANDWARE
"2 DOOIS DOWIII FIOM POST OFFICE"

Better

• Health ClubW!II meet Thursday,
: 1: 1ll p.m., at the home ot Mrs.
MOdred JacobS, Laurel CUff.
MIDDLEPORT - The Mld,,
dleport
Child ConservatiOn
., .
\ League wW meet Thursday, 7: .ll
• . p.m., at the Ohio Power omce.
· ; ' CathY Wray, District President,
; ': Wtlltnstall new otflcers.
'
~ ~.

1..::

·Happenings

·'

:.•'.• Homecoming
,
,.

I*
•
Compare CENTURYS 225 per carton

MlNERSVILLE - The MJ.
nenrvUle United Methodllbt
Chutch will oblerve its annual
llorneclmlni on Sunday with
_Sunday School at 9 a.m. and

.. worshlplleiVIceatlOa.m. There
• wW be a basket dinner at noon.
and entertabunenl In the after. • noon wW begin at 2 p.m .

to the 200 you get with other brands.
•I

:. Meeting cancelled

. ' POMEROY -

•

'

i : ..

::

:.

i'

il'
. '
j

1be Wednes·

I

day praya- meeting of the
• · Pomi!l&lt;&amp; Wesleyan Holiness
Chureb Is being cancell~ so that
Individuals may attend the
•I '• revival at the Plllnt Pleuant
, : Wesleyan Holiness Church. ·

•.

::. Prooram
set
:4
;c

' . . MJDD! &amp;:P()R1 - ~ Revel
lltan Will .. m nt a ll)llllcli
• PI\Ciilllat7:lDp.m.Stturdayat
' lbe Alii St. P'lillllll w BapHot

. • ChureblnMfddl'lpm.~publlc
,' II invited.

r
:' :

t:

I·

i'
• •I
'

I

l!

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

, I,
.! .
II •
·! '

'SMIIdon•agg ala~ti'MIIpricewa~~ottwr
notlonol200 ciglllllo

carton.,.,..,.""""-·

FUER: 15 11111·1af. t.1mg. ric~ino IV. Po' tio111111.by FTC method.

�•
'

PaGe 6-The Daily Sentinel

New ofllcers were elected at the

recent llll!l!tlng ot the JQIIy Home- .
makers Club held at tile borne ot

Mrs. Myrtle Evemian.
. .
Elected were Mrs. Gearldlile
l.oog, presideD!; Mrs- JUdY Gaona·
way, VIce pr,esldeat; Mrs. RUby
'Lambert_, secrelary-treasurer.

Plastic pOl bottles, old sheets, CQI!e.
labels; .aDd . cancelled .. post.,e

stamp; are stDl.beJni collected by ·
club members. Next project will be
·m al!lng lap robes for nursing 11cme
petleilts,Mn.HannaQueenwllliost
the Oct. 10 meeting.
'

Apple Grove UMW ·
Tbe ·UMW

-Rebecca Houser

Ashley Ann, Juley Ann Eblin

.·

Mr. . and Mrs. GregQry Eblln,

.t.allral CUtr Road, are ann&lt;l\IDClng
the birth of Identical !win daughters,
Aug. 14, at the Holzer Medical

·ce..ter.

They have heen named Ashley

~an, )VOO weighed four pounds, l3
~. andJuley Ann, four pounds,

' lll tlmces.

.

Maternal grandparent are Mr.
~ Mrs. WoodroW Mora, Chester,
. I!J!d Mr. · and Mrs. Steve Eblhl,
t,aurel Cliff Road. Great~tsareMrs.AitonaKarr,
~. and Mrs. Tina ·Jacobs,

Laurel eutr.

· Birth of the Eblin twins made an

1141ltlonal six great-grandchildren

tor Mrs. Altona Karr during 1984.
1be others are Garret Karr, son of
Mi-. and Mrs. Ray Karr; Whitney
~fai-r. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Torn
Karr; Brent Buckley, son ofMr. and
Mrs. BID Buckley; and Andy Mora,
8on of Mr. and Mrs. ~rge Mora.

Houser birth

a son, Cole Alan, born Sept. 8 at the
Holzer Medical Center. The Infant
weighed eight pounds , one ounce.
Paternal grandparmts are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Haggerty of
MkkllePQrt, and maternal grand·
parents are .Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Campbell, Gallloolls ..

Eblhl and Bob sha:wn Deem, Pam
Ash, Paula Justis, ~Ia HUI,
Robbie, Jason, andSherrteLawron.
Others presenting gifts to Amy were
Missy Rainey, Robert LaW$011, Sr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Smltb,Buckand

Osbourn birth '

BetyWllllsandsons,HazeiSprague,
and Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Powell.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Osborne
of Kotzebue, Alaska, announce the
birth of a son, Brian 'TI!omas. The

also carrted out the thel)'le.
Attending the party were HyWa

Melissa

Evans birthday

-

birth

Philathea Women
'

. 'l·Mary Ash and Joan Clark were

the' Phllathea Women met recently ·

~llstereMIItonandAnnabelle

flrnda•belt, Helen Reynolds, Mary
Allee Wayland, Carol Conroy, Terrt

Qlvls, ad Elwood Bowers.
Plans were made to serve the
Homellullders banquet on Oct. 16.
&lt;:bmmlttees named Were Regina
Swltt, Oyda Allensworth, Martha
Olllds, and Mrs. Riley, kitchen;
Bet;IY McKlnley, Phyllls' Baker,
Ciltby Cooper and Mary Ash, dining
room; Reva Beach, Francis Roush,
Mlldred
Hawley, and Grace Haw.
.

~ C::':!'~ctton was held at the

close of the ·meeting, Mrs. Van

Meter

and MIS. Beach served

riifreslunents.

Others attending
were Lula Mae Qul'.ley, Do"""""
• ~..,
Delcle J:"QI1h, Rose Rey~.Clara Conroy, Hlldred
!IIlii; Ella Mae Daughecy, Martha
l)aggerty, Eleanor Lohse, and Pam

J¥1Cer.

car.

~.a guert.

.

.

·

~ for the Octpher meet-

~

'will be Nora. Rice, Thelma

B_Oyer, PhyUis Baker, Eleanor .

collected.
The firemen thanked the ladles
for the new refrtgerator and for
their help at the fair and Labor Day
barbecue. Cards were ordered.
Clara Conroy invited the members
to her home for the Christmas
meeting In December. Refresh·
ments were served by Dorothy
Cashdollar, Opal Eichinger and
DIXIe Bealr to those ·named and
Opal Wickham, Paula Wood, Inzy
Newell, Betty Newell, Ethel Orr.

Syracuse .UMW
Ann Sauvage used " Your Church
dW
inMlsslo "
an
omeil
ns as the topic
(Qr the program at the recent
meeting of the Asbury United
Metmdtst Church, Syracuse, held
atthechurch.
She stressed the PQWer of prayer
and the hardships which the early
women had to overcome to become
missionaries. Observance \)f the
blcen~ thJs year was noted.Assisting in the program wereAprtl
Harmo Helen Teat0 rd
·
n,
·
• and Mary
Lisle. MaryCundlft, hostess, had the
splrltua\ lire poem and prayer.
lntheabsenceofOpalKIQI'S. Mrs.
Cundiff presided at themeetlng.She
read ."CUm bing Stairs" and gave a
edi tto
G
m ta n from
uldeposts tor
devotions. &lt;&gt;meers' reports were
given W\th
shutln calls being
noted. Mrs.Teatordshowedfllersoo
c!JstrlctmeetlngstobeheldthtsfaU.
Birth dates of member&amp; were noted
and cards wW be sent to each one.
The birthday of Irene Parker was

:m

noted.
The group VQted to sponsor the

ptogiamlobep~tedbyRonAsh
and JeiiQiter Sheets.

Auxiliary
.
A

new

member, Mary Hayes,
welcOmed by the Awdllary of
€hester at their meeting Wednes- .
~Y evening aUhe firehouse. 'The
n'ieettni opened with "The Lord's
Prayer" and the Pledge to the Flag.
'"Preildent Erma Oeland pre~- The secretary's rePQrt was
-'ven by Frances Hunt and the

was

~

.

- ...

• if

named were
Nelson,
Marcia Karr, and Donna Nelson, a ·

Jane

Walton, Ann Rupe, llOile Slssoo,
Robl1l1a O'Brt€!1, Pearl Welker,.
Nellie BroWn, Velma Rue, Donna

· PT. PLEASANT ()FFICE
3305 JACKSON AVE.

SMALL ANI MAL HOURS
Monlloy 3 p.m.-5 p.m.' ·
luesdoy 6:30 p.m.-8 p.m.
Wednesdly 3 p.m.· 5 p.m. .
Thursdoy 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
Ftidoy I p.m.-2 ·p.m.
· Sa1Urdly 10 o.m.-11:30 Lm.

·'
WE ARE YOUR SALEs
AND SERVICE .
.• HEADQUARTERS FOR .

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20

GARAGE

Spencer birthday
Klrt Spmcer, son of Dan and
Sheila Spencer, observed his third
birthdayonAug23wlthapartyathls
home.
Attending besides his parents and
sisters, Danlelle and Tiffany, were
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grover White and. Mr. and Mr.
Richard Spencer, Tim Spencer,
Synthla White, Serena White, Jeff,
Sonia, l'.Ukkl, and Jeffrey Circle,
Phil and Matthew Boyles.
Others presenting gifts to Klrt
were Eleanor Boyles and Mr. and
Mrs. Woodrow Fortney, greatgrandparepts, Myrtle Flanders,
Marilyn Wozniak, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Ballard, Brenda and David. .

add ress is Unknown. and he~
spou se. h'et rs·....-devisees. legatees. adm inistratorS. execUtors,
relics and assigns. if she is
deceased. all whose addresses
ace un known. take n6t1ce th at

on AuguSl 22nd. 1984. the
Vtnton Co1,1nty Nationa l Bank
filed a Complaint m the Common Pleas CoUrt of Meiqs
County. Oh 1o. w h•ch· was as'slgned Case No. 84-CV-227 .
dem anding that the Court
reQuire you to set up your
Interest if any. in the folloWtng
descnbed real estate or be
forever barred from doing so.
and fu rt.her demanding that title
to satd real es tafe b e quteted in
favor ol Plamt1 ff. and such
fu rthe r re lief. as is JUSt and
proper. The real estate is
descn bed as follows:
Situ ate tn the State of Ohio.
County of Me1gs and Village of
Midd leport: Situated in the
VtllagA ol . Middleport Meigs
· County, Oh10. Known · and
numbered on the rec;orded plat
of Marcus Bosworth Add it1on

new principal, Rick Martin, and the

Hemlock Grange

1

·

I'

lume 290. Page 939. M e•gs
Coun ty Deet.! Record s.
.
This publication is to be
published once a week for six
(6) consecutive weeks and 1s to
riotify the persons to be served
that he or s he 1s requ•red to
answer withtn twenty-etg ht j28J
days after the last publication
date. the last publication da ~e

being : October 2. 1984.

Said parties are reo uirP.tt tn
answer on ' or before the 30th
day of October. 1984. or the
demand of t Qe Complaint ·!nay
be _flra nted.

· ROSE and SIMM ONS
Atto rneys At Law
Jeff r,ey L. Sim mons
Tnal Counsel for Plaintiff
12 1 West Main Street

McArt11 ur. Ohio 45651
(61 41 596-5291
181 28: (9} 4. 11. 18, 25: (10}2.
6tc

NOrth Line of Lot 2'A thence 5

ing at Millfi eld. Ohio, with the
consent of Tresa Faye Kuhn.
residing at Langsville. Ohio.
mother of Joshua Ivan· Kuhn.

38 deg. E 55 feet the11ce 52
deg. E SO feet tllenfe N.38deg.
W 35 feet to the place of
beg•~n i ng. containing 0 .064

filed tn th1s Court

acres. more or less .

a Petitr on for

leave to adopt Joshua Ivan
Kuhn, ·a child. a"ge 21 months.

REPAIR . .

992-.5.682
·or 992-7}21

PH.

3124-tlt

( )WIII!Md

New Homes-hl,nsive
. .Remodeling
Insurance Woik

-

""

LINES

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992·

I

'

· '&amp; Garages

Roofing Work
·
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Years Experience

UTH.ITY

or 992-2282

MEIGS COUNTY
(9) 4 . 11 . 18. 19. 26. 5tc

II. - - - - - -

·

.3.

19, _ _ _ _ _ _...;.
20. - - - - ' - - - 21.
22.

ll· l·llt

4.

23; - - - - - - - -

t
2

.) ,

.
54 Misc. 'Merchandise
Public Notice
.
.
N011CE TO BIDDERS
FOR
SCHOOL FURNITURE
Sealed , bids will be received
in aCcordance with the taw until
twelve O'clock noon E.S.T, on

.

·CONSTRUCTION
. BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
CONCRETE WORK,
TRENCHER '
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; LIMESTONE
Cell For' Free Eltim\te

742-2167 or .
742-2225
9/17/1

M e1gs Local School DiStrict.
fli ed 1n this court unde( Oo.cket
Mi ddlepOI'"t. Ohio. for school
M No. 397 an authenticated furn iture. The bids wtll be
copy of letters of administration publiciy opened and read by
issued to her by the Jefferson the treasurer Immediately after
Dis tnct Court of , Jeffers o n
the t1n1e fer filing bids has
County, Ken tucky . ' Notice is exp1red. The bids shall be
further g1ven th at all creditors of t~bula ted and ieported by the
said est~te who desire to assert treasurer to th e boa rd a t 1ts next
thetr hens on the real estate of meet tng.
said decedent loCated in thi s
No btd shall ba cons idered
state shall present the1 r c!Bi ms. un less made on the forms
duly sworn to. to this co urt ava1lable .at the offi ce of the
w1thin six months after the fi!ing treasurer of ' thA board of
of said letters in this court or ~duca t10ri of th e 'Metgs Local
thetr said liens shall' forever be School Otstqct M1ddlePon.
deemed barred and cohteled. Oh10, wh1ch consists of au

~
"""-a·

6.

25; - - - - - - - -

'

7.

::16. _..______

~

a. ---'----211. _ __.....____

•
,10,
11.

29,

.._.__"!'""___

3(L _ _...__....;,__

'

· Dafvaild8nt

Wt' d liltt to i•troduce wou io
Enaqt·A·Car, t•• modern way :
to driwt tht wthiclt of your
choict.
.

No Down Poyment ·
Lowor Monthly Poyment

=======

i..i_ ·

J.l.
25. _ _...,....,..___

.,

We

SIDING CO. ·

"Beaatif11l. Custom
Built .Garages"
Call for free sidi"g es·

timates, 949-2801 or
949·2860

Cheryl L1mley,

Meias County Ass'oclote

Phone 742-3171

By order ,ol the board of
•Sc
.\f uca1ion of the Meigs Local

Now Acceptln

ROOfiNG CO.
NEW-REPAI.R
. G ""ars
Down.
pou t I
Gutters Cleaned
· Painting
Storm Doors
' s
&amp; Wl'ndow

'

hool Distnct

DITCH WITCH
SERVICE

.

F.REE ESTIMATES

773-5839 or
773-5788 .

8/13/1 mo.

S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-Addono ond remOdeling

- Rooft•a ond outtor work
- Concmo w- Plumbing and oioctr;coJ
work .
(Free Estimateo}

v, c, v·oUNG'. I'I'I'

SUPERIOR.
SlDING CO.

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Rem9(1oting
Roofing of a• Typoo
Worked In homo oroo
21l'years
"Free Eetlmetea•·

EUGENE LONG'

Ph. (614) 843·5425

9l13/2mo. d.

220 I. Mllln, .PwnWict

C.... alh'ily I• Our

PH. ·992.--6931

ACCENT ·

FENa &amp; SUPPLY

Sp-.lalt~·

MIDDLEPORT '
PLASTIC ARTS

'·,

New Holl•nd, Blsh Ho•
Form Equipment

&amp; Service

TROMM
EXCAVATING
•LAND CLEARED
. eSEPliC SYsTEMS.
,. -GRAVEL HAULED
Bonded &amp;

PH.

'

Insured

74~-2328
'

.3-5-lfc
, I

.,

Jane Wagner. Treasurer

SEND REsUME TO:
Point Pleasant Register

•· P. 0 . Sox .B-19
'

'

CALL
446-4522

160 North"

Galllpoli1;'

.

type aaaignlnants. Interviewing in Columbus the
week of Sept. 23. Fo• on

1

676-,8 104.

q•l ' ·

8 room brick houM/ ·th
ecrooland Qn Lourel Clift' IIi["
~1'-

821 ..500.00. Call
7686.

..

b~h and _full bua:mant. Total alec·, on extr•
Iorge lot. Moy be Nih)'
anytime, beoldl L01 Carl+
Out.- 804 2nd St.

·LOOKlNG FOR A GOOD
CUP OF CQFFEE1 CUT
YOUR COFFEE BIU IN
HALF WITH MOUNTAIN
RICH . LEARN ttOW: MON&gt;
DAY SEPTE'MBER 24,
7 :30PM. HOLIDAY INN.
GALLIPOLIS. ONE HOUR
:LEEMS1 ~
. CRO. FFFREEEE.. 5T~MA-,
E

~~~~~~E'UICE . AU ARE
Oun thoOt at Racine Gun

National ·Company needa
lOcal dia,rlutio~ for it's pro·

duct line. f1VAC end Electri·
Contractors or Sela1
Orginizotlons. Coli 1 -aoo241-03118 Ul. 23. ·
88bysitter needed p•rt time
in h'ening end every Tues·

doy ofternoon. Coli 992·
7403 and ook for ·Sondy.
Beby sitter preferably in my
home for 2 children 2Y:z end

I_,.

old, 3 to 8 doyo per
Club ewry Sundoy, 1:00
p.m. For:to;y chocked auno - 8:30 to 5:30. Aeleroncos. 30.4 -876-1576 ony
, , only.
time.L30
HELP WANTED SARAH
- ·Ambitious

cap-

FrM heovy inotol Christian
rock Ca..ette. - Wrfte Aez·

ofrecruftirog and traning
1

.....

group to rebuild

Seraoh COnventry in Meson,

Bond,P 0 Bo• 334 Cheohire, Gatlla. Meigs , Putnlim.
Oh 46820.
.Jac'-aon and Lawrence
COunty. EJtperience Party
'h lrloh Setter, 'AI Colle mole Plan hlllpfui. _For peraonatin·
bird dog?. ·Cell 814-388- tl'tview. Cell 304·6759811 . .
6182.

Whfte Gtrmon Shopherd to
give awoy. 3 -!'old. Been
-yod ond wormed. Hoo all
ohoto. ~H Gron~ Ch-ion
thlt yoor. 8..., •eiiOd with 6
children·
,.. Coli 949-2420.

12 . Situations
Wanted
.Customer~

for the Callico

Cup-rd. Rt. 180 &amp; Porter.
Houro: 1 0-8PM, Mon.-Sot.
Call 614-388-900B.

SWIIP

..

LQet and Found

.

~

.

Ellihound lost in cCioko
Go1~ Hf., Rutland orea. Block
with white fluffy
ond choln . ott·
~~7:;t8:2'.'"2Mo Nicki.
8

. Pu bile Sale
Auction

, a.

Sergio Valente, Even Pi-

cone, Cloirbomo, Membara

booement. new 24x24 ll!tti•

age.

Close downtoWn.-

ShoiNn · by appolntmetit:' .
304-875-4604.
- :"'

••
32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

•

•

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

~~~E~"~E~=~BsMg~_:-C,,

·

··

1989 2 bdr 12x60undooiiln,&lt;

Only • . Org~~nically Grown,

ning,

everythi_ng a,·t.~o_'

tu,._, grand opening. etc.

Low

Con · open 15 doyo. Mr.
ICHnon (3051878-3639.

Fairmont Storlighi 70xU 3
bdr., 1 'h both, r""igen&amp;tfllo~
range. exc. oond. Locott6 ~

Healthtu, 700 othon . 14,000 or boot offer. calt&gt;
17.900 to U4.000. Invon' 614-266-6813.
• ,..:.,
tory. airfare. trinlng. fix~ ·
:.L
1
payment ':'83

down

Johnson'• Mobile

Homft:~

Gollipolio. Qhlo. ni ,llijG?
8660 tox • . title, eaz3
down, 15.6% APR, 11.4:·
LOANS . FIXE,D. mo. for 120 moo. C'oll'~

HOME

RATES aelow market rates.

I

!!x.!~t~ '::t~ ~~.~~~.~~l~·

and underpinning. Call448·

4664 or 446-0236.

Pi11no Tuning ~nd Repair.
Brunicerdi Mulic Co., 448-' 1977 Klrk-od 14lc70 mel0&amp;87. Twontl.oth yeor of bile home. 3 bdra., walk -in
quality service.. y.ne · De· clooot. CA. ronge, &amp; rolrlg.
nitolo, 814· 742-2.961 .
redwood porch It under,Pin~
ning. Exc. cond. clean. Ciin

614-388-9787,

Real [:;laic
Homes for Sale

31
buy•l CoU 448~.
-------,---::-= qualified
.
- .,.,
9"h:% anumeble loan on 13 9608.
yr. old bri ck ran~h style
house. Secluded on 2.9
acres of aand. 3 BA, large
DR. nice kitchen. lar.ge
utility room . fireplace in
living room . $493 mo . payment. $3,750 down. Lo·
cated near Centerville. 379-

2803

otter 6 p . m .

weekdays.

·

2Bx42 (1178 oq.ft .} baot·
ment, and subfloor completed·. Located on 1 acre
plus lot, quiet c~untry, elect·
ric to house. Rural water

privecy, . near

Poyel

,

Pork, reduced to 869,

.

614-992-5420.

. l.ltr._\)t~

1981 Schultz' Ltd. :i

if'i'tf

3643.

6049.

Wiseman Reel, Estate, 446· . redwood porch. 304•1

.

3 bdr. house Getlipollo
School District. $16.900.
Cel14416·3617.
3 bdr. house. pool, AC.

3 bedroom house with atteched garage, automatic
opener. woodburnar, air
conditioner. SA. acre lot, land
contrect 10% int~re1t. Bull-

to live in end be •~mpanion
to an elderly lady. Call

fUrnished, $1 ,2 .000 unfur·
nished. Selling below ap-

378·8432.

prolaal price. Call Edward R.
Brown, 614-388·9087.

Rolorenceo ovolloblo. Coli
448-0390.

geroge. fireplace. loroi61
porch, 60ft. dock, ~ .

ovailebta . 810.000 Coli

ville Rd . --ti42,000. Call
Oponlng for oldorly in homo. 446-2624.
1~--~----Co11773-8423.
Nice clean old hoUse, 6
Mlddle-•god lody would like rooms in Vinton. $13.000

BabyaiHing in my home.

home: Family room · hai
20ft. of window• for P.•
toral vie!"', fini1hed dou!»tif;

bath, total alec. centf.,r..IM'
microwave, dlohloill\~
stove, refrig, underpkl .~
·

Free ootlmotea. Call 992- Co11614-992-6941 .
6040 or 949-2129.

Would llko to point troller
roots. Coli 614-266-1628.

7~..-L.-o-v-in_g__S
- t-ate. -._o_w_n-or-n\
.'
sell beautiful 3 · bodrootW

Y2 paFcent as•umeblltfy,'C

or rant. Call 676-6104.

home full or part time •
behind Ordner&lt;~ce 1chool.

..

'

bobysittlna in my home

Wonted to . baby olt In my

" •'\};

Big lot, 2 bdr .• clou tO· Rt. ·
35 Mifti- lh.opping fl~d
... olzer . La••• purcheM :to

evenin6a 8. weekends. Call 1..;.--~----448·0009 .
. Owner must sell home now I
Well · in1ulated, fireplace.
TriJe trimming and removal. storm windows. Middleport.

home. LPN cere given . 16
,yra. experience. CoiL 814992·7314.

GreentrH Acceptance. _Inc .

Fixed conventional FHA· Clll '1 -800-634' '!663. ·
VA . LI I d • r Mor i 9 • g • · !i19~7~2z:;;m;o~bil;;e~hhco;;m;;;a;):~~­
Athens. collect · 614-!192- 2SR, AC, Priced to Sell
3051.
·
446-71,71 or 44e-8288
tor llpm.
23 Professional ·
1
0
Services

fireplaces. Pt. Pleasant, sale

reloioncH, 304-876· 2784.
-Tu01doy
WVa
Youth 18 Wanted to Oo
St . .1-_;_'-----...--

For you! next ulo 01111 Enimo
B.oll, ou~-~ llconMd
Ond liOn- Woot VIrginia
ond Ohkl, t2"8177.
--------

'l!i

lTV M081LE HOME SAL~;
Own your own Jeon - 4 Mf . WEST, GAUIPO~I~~
Sportnveor, LodiooApporef, RT 35. PHONE 614·4:tli '
Combinetion, ~ccesaories, 7274.
·
""'i.'""
Large . Size atore. National
l
bfondo: Jordoche, Chic:, Lee: Fully lumished &amp; lot ' ~ '
Levi. Vanderbilt, lzod~ Ea: . ~32.'c;~" Ave. Call •!~t.•
prlt, · 8rlttilnie. Colvin Klein,

Experient;ed mother will do

Will cere for the elderly i11 o'ur

6

.

Bv owner 3 bedrooma, 1
bathe. living room, din
room, r•creetion room . Jll'

22 Money to Loan

and lOae Installation people needed
welghtwlth-shopediot for 'local dealer ot EAergy
pion ond Hydrex Wotor PHio Contrql oystemo. I!VAC or
o!octri!"'l OKp. helpful. Coli
P~:.;'h!"hill'1"oc:y,Jockoon 1-800-H4-334B ext . 31 ,

· U-SAVE
AUTO
st: 111.

Help Wanted

SWEEPER ond uwing mo- _9_1~9_2_
· ------~
qhine repoir. ports, ond Sell AVON moke 45u
. Coli.
711

''We lent For Leu"

RENTAL

'·

Polnt Pleasant, WV 25550 ·

"' ... .

RENT A ""n'

view. Call 614-44e-B855:

oppolntmont coli 412· 858·

Whlto ond ten collie to good
homo, 304-&amp;711·86&amp;9,
.
Barn kittena, phone 304676·4§07,
'

811011-mo.

Althoriztd John DHrt,

growing life in8urance marketing orgl!niz.tiona:. Call
fopr an eppointrnent&amp; inter· ·

'

Announcements·

'6 pu~pleo,' .call' 304·676·
6112 . .

· 1-J-rl(

one of the area'slead1J18 dealel'l is nO\Irl
acceptlng_apPucations for a ·saleaplll'BOII.
No eltpefience »ece''P ry.

[ :tqilll'/llt'lll
S1~r·1 ICI:o

3 pupo, 2 mole, 1 !lmole, 6 ' Female roommate needed
wlto old, port Ingle, 304- for 3BR. 2 bath house. Coli
i488-113(1. . . .
441·8472.

50 Riverview Dr.
Middleport, Oh.

1,1. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO ·

one of America's falteJt

MODELS
· All qeo Including children
over og6 1 . For i:otofog

Brown Chihuahua to give
owoy. Four month• old. Coli
742-217:1.

dROP HIES
*PLAQUES
*AWARDS

Wanted·llcensed Insurance
people. LicenHd in1urance
own agency today. We are

'.

MJpplie1.
Pick up ' and
delivery. Devis VaCuum ·448·336~ Cieener, ooe half mHe
·
G•rge1 Creek Rd.
Apt. MaintenenCt,.man . Call

..

Parts

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

3

also

recommends
you do busine11 with
people you know, ond NOT
to nnd money through the
mail unttl you have ·mveati·
gated the offering.

poople stort'doveloplng your

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

GAS LINES
WATER.UNES
SEWAGE LINES

Farm Equipm,nt .

621 South Third llvenue
Middlenort. Ohio 4 5760

core rad1ators lind
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radi1tors. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

lb . Ordlnory
Loool All

other

Announ c1~ 111 enl s

992-62.15 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Dtoltr

1 In Meigs Co.

smeller

can i'epl'ir and re-

WRITESEL

SALES &amp; SERVICE' .

.th e schedu led ' clo~uhg time for
rece1pt of th e bids.

..

;

PAl HILL FORD
992-2196
No Sunday Calls
Middlaport~
Ohio
.
3- 11 "t
1·13-H.
614-446-0294..
~;:::::;~~=~;::::~~=::::;;;:;;:;:;;;:::; Icontrol hunger

'

a~oo.oo

11

RADfATOR
SERVICE

BISSELL

t

GINSENG ROOT. Tap quolity ind aize greded, Hlected

8/ 13/ Hn ·

BOGGS

Service

' . ,·

Homes for Sale' -·

1'h otory In M01on, ,. 'f
bod1opms. living, dlnlig
room and kitchon. llltlni

!-!SHI~IG,!~O.

(614) 44.6-7619 or (6.14) 992·660f
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213.'
Gallipolis, Ohio ..45631
·

a. Aluminum

...

.
614-992-5650
steps of the Meogs C.ounty (914. 11 . 18. 25. 4tc
Cour1 House on Pomeroy, In Jhe
above named County, on Saturday. the 6th dav of October
1984.. at 10:00 o'clock A.M ..
the following described real
estate. ottuate. In the County ol
Meigs and State ol Ohio. and in

(I

F111anml

Ljcensed Clinical Audiolocist

992-6128

Broker-AIIt\ID~

31

614-992-6008 ,01' 614-'7423147. .

LISA M. KOCH. M.S,

F01 F11t11 Service

M. l. "Bud'' McGHEl

Do

Water wells. drilled &amp;. ser·
viced. Free estimatn. Call

)

Bob • Jean Gilmore

Call 614-992·6737

publi c auction. on the ·front

.12.
31. - - - - - - - ' 13.
32. _..;..._ _ _.......,_
14 ----~--· · 31.

18 Wanted to

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Co11puterized Hearing Aid Stlection ·
Dependable Hearing. Ai.d Service .

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
· 8o1, 325 ·

Pomero;, OH. 45769 .

responsobkl bid tor 1hos project
but res~rves the right to r~ect
any and all. 01 parts of any and
all bods. .
No bid may be withdrawn for
a period of so•tv (6 01 days after

I

·;·

SIDING

INTEREST£0 IN A
NEW VEHICLE

intends to accept the towes1

,

No. 14-CV-122
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in tho ·abO\Ie entitled
ac1ion. ·I will offer for sale at

·. Vinyl

mo.1pd .

off.;.~~ board · or education

·

~ 8tol.t. •II

.

843-5424 .,.
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP .&gt;UJL·n

BUI~DI{(GS

AM

MaryS. Russei i._ E~e·cut•·!:&lt;
September 26. 1984. a1 the
Estate of John Wayne
I. off1ce of the treasurer of the
late of 3 112 Cre ekside Onve. board of educat1on of the
Louisville . .Kentucky. 40222.

•. -------

-

$1495

10·&amp;-11c

Public Notice

1loo

Children, Adult olotheo.
bikn, tovs, houoehold mloc.
8:30 AM to ?. Wod •nd
Thuro. Old Town •nd'Toylor
Rood , Comp Conley . .

or

.

(9) 18. 25.(1012. 9. 26. 23. 6tc

~-

..

· ····· ···········~···········-

. WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
. 992-3410
' .

Racine,. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191

Common Pleas Court.
Probate Division ·
M t]'1gs County. Ohio

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL Elll'ATE
Tho ~ o1 Ohio, MIIIJI
County
·
·
Gonerll M - - . . . . . .

446-2062 .

I NOTICE ITHE OHIO VALLEY. PUB-

P&amp;S ~UILDINGS

Public No.t ice

..

······-· ·······---········· ~~~
Pt Pleasant - ·: '·
~Vicinity

room,

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doe Houses

Mei~ s County

NOtice ts hereby given
the 29t h day of August.

Care

New Chevy Truck.... .
FENDER .. :.... ,..... '76.95
DOORs.;.... :..... '149.95
H0005 ............ 1174.95
BUMPERS .......... '69.95
GRilL ........ ......... '42.50
R. SUPPORT ....... •84.95
TAIL 'GATE ., ....... '15.00
FORD FENDER .... '69.!'5
IUMPIR ............ '69.95
Allo Soma Car
Fendtl'l Available

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

GREG ·ROUSH
PH. 992-7583

JAMES J. PROFFITT
SHERIFF

C.. No. 24133
N011CE

·,

PH. 742-9070

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE aUILPING.S

obta1ned upon req uest at that

1 &gt;For Rn

"

m.:s a.

CuiiQ.m Pole Bldgs . ·

jltneysuwerwassetfor0ct.6atthe
~. · ftMIIThiSCGuiiGIIwllh R...lttl_
th~~~~~\M~'::!1•3:~~v!
first meeting of ·the Chester PTO
ceremomes, ~::~ ~~~~~~~
!
Tile Dilly ltllllnel
Meig;, In the State of Ohio. and
beldMondaynlghtat.theschool.
lng, tactics, .
co
· 111 Courllt.
in theVillage ofM iddlepartand
An qJen IDJsewas held prior to th . military justice, Dl'III w111, 'lllOAI'1~
.,....~roy, GIL 457"
~~~~ onif described ao
meeting with thelntroductlonO(the · . JdstOxy and traditions.
\)U!____________,.,...,,'!!!•~ ~.-{_1 Beginning for reference at

. ....

OIL

CONSTRUCTION

Ohio.
·
said .child to . Joshua Ivan
Property · appra1sed at
Doerfer. and that hean ng 9f Sl·L500. and cal)not be sold
said petlt10n and the exam ine - for less than two -thirds of the
tio n~ under oath. of all rarties in· appraised amouni.
interest who. may be present
Terms:. One thousand dollars
and to whom lawful notice has I $1.000~ in cash or Certified
been Qtven. Will be had b~fore check on .day of sale . Balance m
sai~ Coul'l at M e1gs County ~ash or cenified c heck within
Provate Court, Courthouse. thirty days of the cOpt1rmatton
POmeroy, Ohio on the 26th day of the sale:

17·· _ _ _ _;;__

basil: tr~ at Fort Dlx,
During the tr~, , studl!l)ll
~VI!!! instruction in drill

.

"WATER.

Robert E. Buck advertisements and notices. the
Probate Judge in s~ruc t1ons to btdders. specif1·
cations. and b1d forms. all of
-1914. 11 . 18. 3tc
wh1ch are ava1table And may ba,

( )For S.le
( )Annaunalment

• OOZEA , BACKHOE
"RECLAMAnON WORK
•OIL FIELD SE!tVfCES
. "DUMP TRUCK. SERVICE.
" CONCRETE WQAK
" CUSTOM BUILT HOMES ·

RO~SH

and fo r a change of the name of

or November. 1984 at I :30
p.m.
.

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Also Trans!pissio_n ·

Pro perty located : 8031/2
Browne!' .. Street M iddlepon.

wlni this
~ you get .

Phon•·---------

Chester PTO

Mary Ann Kuhn Ooerfer, resid -

Prices

Stort At

AUTO &amp;·TRUCK

You are hereby notified that 11 of Meigs County. Ohio. the
on the 12th day of Se ptem~r . tr&lt;J e place of beginning: thence
1984 Henry Junior Doerfor arid S 52" W· 80 feet foll ow ing the

of September. 1984
Robert E. Buck, ·Judge

Nom•·----~------------Add~~--~-----------­

5.

...._. rinown

,•

Rt. 124:Pomeroy Ohio

the Northeast corner of Out Lot
No. 1 oj Palmers Addit1on:
thence N 38 dog. W 595 5 feet
to the Northeast carne• of Lot
No. 2'1• of P. Jones Estate as
· bv Original Plat 2. Page

Witness my signature and the
sealof sat dCourtthiS 12-th day

· Wrl11!
Dl'
. coupon. Cancel . wuur ad by p111111e
, resul1s. -~.natre1..-1e.

"&lt;~~!l?'·!fed&gt;'l '\ i6:·
Deem of Racine, .has .•

DeemofPomeroy,and~ormanL.

Last Prior Conveyance:· Vo -

Curb Inflation
Pay .C:a.sh for
Claulfleds and
Savell Iman
your M"iot - cW-.

1

teachers being made. The · first
gradewontheroomrount.Meettngs
were changed to the first Monday or
each month starting in October. At
· the next meeting the sixth grade will
serve refreslunents.

Hemlock Grange met in regular
session Saturday night with Worthy
Master 7Jba l'.Hdklff presiding..
It was noted by Womeri's Actlvl·
ties Chatrrnan ·Helen Qutvey that
HemlQck Grange did well at the
Pomona judglngwlthAnn Lambert, ·
first in quUts; Jane Hazelton, first In
crocheted baby.sets; Rosalie Story,
. second in stuffed toys;' Ruth
Francis, second in pillows; Rosalie
StQxy, third In tote bags; Sara
Cullwns, third In guilts.
Ruth Francis gave the leg!slatlve
report on telepoone changes. Also,
the new fire extlngillshers are in
place and liew cabinets and sink
have heen lnsWled !rithebasernEIIt.
Rosalie Story had the lecture iMJur
with poems by Edgar Guest.
·Election of officers was held with I
thoseelectedincludlngwlthMastel',
Zlba Midkiff; Overseer, Stanford
Stockton; , Lecturer, Rosalie Story;
Steward, Robert Ree!l; Assistant
Steward, Wally Bradford; Chaplain, Murtel Bradford; Treasurer,
Leota Smith; Secretary' . Ruth
Francis; Gatekeeper, Oar€!lce
Story; Ceres, Margaret Hanning;
Pomona, Dorts Eastman; Flora,
Jessie White; Lady Assistant Steward, Gc&gt;lda Reed.
Hemlock Grange will visit
Gr&amp;nge in October.
. The grange closed In regUlar
form.

Beong Lot 189.

Wanted To Buy

Che&lt;:k Anti-Freeze,
!ieltl, H!!M'I, Pluga

lOR .

Roger Hysell
IJ!GAL NOTICE
ETHEL M. JONES. whose

9

·-· c~imney

,,,, ,.--...u, $'"'''

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

Catl 742·3195
· Or 992-5875

771- - - IU- Jt_H_
IM - Utoot

IJ!QAL N011CE
IN THE MAmR OF THE
ADOPTION OF JOSHUA
IVAN KUHN
TO: JERRY STONE, whwe

&amp;Vicinity
................ ·r·:···· ..... .

3 Family La.... Garfiodl
Thuro. &amp; Fri. Home Interior.
gl•-• ... &amp; clottilng.

·~·

7:00-7:00 Daily
Major &amp; Minor ..
·"Mechanicat Work

· SIDING CO.

. &amp; Commetcial

.... C .....

to Lower Pomeroy. now inco rpora ted Village of M iddleport.

You Were Going To Call Us?

-----·Gaiiipoiis.. -.. ----

9-4-1 mo.

' R.IDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Jones,

tn - I'L ....

morchimdiM wory wMk.
Conelgmonto ol now &amp; uHd
morchondiM olwoyi wolcomod. (llchord Roynoldo,
Auctioneer. Colt 304·2763069,

to Reine~ber

Why Wait.Till

Ope11

•

SERVICE

·guest.

.( .

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6·8

· Shop Tech,ni(iofl
on DUty

r-:;::=============================:::;-The Daily Sentinel

.
Army National Guard PVt. An·
th9ily W. J::lee!n, son of Janice M,

The annual fall camlval and

IN MIDDLEPORT ·
PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.M.

•SYlVANIA .

In c:om St .• ,._,, 0111o mn

bas •c
•
. ofAplilHannon.Attendlngbesldes ·Comp1etes
those
Chi-tstie

Lohse . and Mary Bailey with the • juntor girl scout troop at the request

VETERINARY
CLINIC

LANGSVIUE
GROCERY
&amp; GARAGE

Auction every Frldoynlghtot
the Hortlord Community
Center. ·Truckloed• of , new

•SPEED QU~U LAUNDRY
•GIBSON RtFRfGERATOR .
Wo Hav~ A Full Time

Or

(;roups gather for meetzngs
treasurer's report by Cleo Smith.
Committee reports were given and
mQney · for cards and dues were

&amp;

•ZENITH

Attending the llieetlng were
MaiW\ Mora, presklent, Clarice
Krautter, June Van Vi'anken,

Reports on fund raising projects
and VQJun~ seiVIce were gjven at
the Thiu'sday night meeting of the
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter ol.
Beta Slg!Jlll Phi SQrorlty held at the
Riverboat Rol:m ot the Olamond
Savings and Loan Co.
It was noted that $225 raised on a

. .

PHONE
992-2156
WI' Itt DllU, s..ttnll cl.sslllt• ~t:

•

f-.:

dessert.

Spencer birth ·

'

at the Middleport Church of Chrtst.
.· "lbe Phllathea song and The
Lord's Prayer opened the meeting
with Cvleen Van . Meter giving
dellottons. She included a reading,
~~HI;wne Canning, Its Rewards and
Ii)ellghts."
'·.Members answered roll call with
"school day remembrance.
),flldred RUey presided at the
J:tof!etlngwlthreports being given by
~ Roach, secretary; Farte
eote. treasurer, and Thelma Boyer,
flowers and· cards. Named on the

Beta Sigma Phi

8

Business Services

canmented

an.

The Daily

'

.
'
- ___,______'"T_________,___..;,__...;,__""''_________"'"'..:,,..._....,_~--.....j

raw

Infant weightdstx pounds, l5ounces
and was roincheslong.Hewas born
on Aug. 15 at the Kotzebue Cllnlc in
.Alaska.
· Maternal grandparents are Mr.
an Mrs. Kenneth Peterman, San-.
dusky, and the ~tern~ grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Osborne, Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Osborne have a
daughter, Jean Renee, five. Both
Mr:~ and Mrs. Osborne are are
affiliated with the school syStem in
Kotzebue.

entertained with a birthday party in
dfl!ihter, Rebecca Lynne, Aug. 6 at honor of daughter Jessica's seventh
the Pleasant Valley Hospital, Pont birthday. A Grumpy Bear cake and
Pleasant. She · weighed eight Ice cream were served to her·
PP,Imds.nouncesandwas2J.Inches · grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
long.
Beal, Mr. and Mrs. Roclhey ChevaMaternal grandparents are Mr. lier, Mrs. Linda Well, Heather and
all&lt;t Mrs. Arthur L Miller, White'' Leah, Mrs. Mary. DU!ard, Andrea
JJ.Ill Road, RuUand, and the paternal and Ertc. J essica received many
·grruq,arents are Mr. 'and Mrs. nice gifts.
~!Hooser, Culpepllef, Va.
, 'The new baby has two sisters,
Raynelle, two, and Sarah
E!Jzabeth, one, and a half-brother,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Evans
&amp;\1;hony Ryan Miller, 12.
,.
entertained recently in observance
of the 13th birthday · of their
H~ggerty
~ughter, Amy. ·The Care Bear
.Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Hag- thEme was carried out in the party
gerty, GaiiiPQIIs, formerly of Mid· decorations. Amy's cake, il gift to
dii!PQrt, are announcing the birth of .herfromJosephineandPauiSmlth,
.
.

J!!e!comm into membership when

was

Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Chevalier

lllir,th!? birth of. their !hlrd child, a

."

of the ApPle Grove
Church held Its annual picnic at the
Racine Lock and Dam picnic park
recently. Apple GroVl!.Church was
· the invited · guests. A carry-In
. basket !)Inner
served.
·. Attending were the Rev. and Mrs•
~r Grace, chlldren Ryan, Todd
and Scolti Mrs. Dolly Wolfe, Eileen
Buck, Early Roush, Erllth Manuel,
Herbert and Mary Roush, Roger

and Clu1sty Roush, children Kim . QuatprojectwWbelellttotheStatue
and Jenny, Dallas and Ilonna HUI. Liberty Reatoratlr;m Fund.
Dorsa and Bessie P8rscms, Dan .Members helped with the heart and.
and Faith }Jayman and Tamlira; . C8IICel' liooUm at !he Metp eomty
Falr, assisted with the~
Wald and Donna Hayman, _Leon
canteEn, and wcr!Jl!d at the-recent
and Lori HUI, c!Uidren Janie, Dean
heaiJb
at the Meigs Mult!PIItd
Jr. and Autumn, Art and Deblile
..
y.
Hill and, ValUe Darrell ahd JanHUI, .~Building.
BIIU Jo Gonbl, accompanied by
children Tracy and Ry1111 and
· Tr1cla W&lt;JHe.
her mother, was ~ttoreporton
Group wlogingw~ CQnducted by 11er tlXP!lleoi.e at Buc)teye Girls'
Dsn Hayman playing the guitar, . Slate; Ashland CQllfce, in June.
assts~ by hiS d4ughter, Tamara. · Mter heilu1na ber l'!!POI't. members .
(II t.he workshop In
A musical readlni "The Old Ditch ·
Digger" by Wald Hayman was
defnocracy and' Its . !nfluence oo
:YWtll. notl!lg their plan to contlmie
given, and a song by Faltll and
Tamara Hayman. 00811\g $0ng '!ipliiiOI1riga student totheproeram
aa they have dane fiD' many yeaia. \ .
was by
"Blest Be the Tie."
Nextmeet!niwtll b!1Sept. %7 at the
Riverboat l'Oil'll with eacb member
tO take a favorite low catoiiefoodor

Chevalier birthday

_. Fl:'ank and Terrte Mtller Houser,
LOng Street, RuUand, are announc-

-

Tuesday; September 18, 1984

Organizations· conduct business
Homeniakers ·

Eblin twins

•

1984

Births,

.

•

3 BR , 1 v.. bath. now family
.

----~---·lc-

8 yrs. old. 3 bedrm. 2 baths.
family room with wood
burner. Single car gerage. on
8 flat acrea with stocked
pond . City water in Racine.

Coli 614-949- 2841 .
'

Rutlend: 47 foot fron.taga lOt
&amp; 10 room houn ONLV

13999. Choopor then 1 uoed

car• Handyman'awlnter pro-

Babyolnlng in ·my home.
Call 216-394-8741
Monday trhu Soturdsy. Ex· ject.
porlenced. Rodney oleo. Cell eve• for info . nr
appointment.
.814·248-9207.
• c~-----'- 'lc ~ t -~------

.

1983 Schultz limh-.1 ., '!,
tion, 14•70 with 7k11
l
pondQ, 3 b!Kirocirjl, . ; !~ ·
baths. ell elec. centrlll "!'P •
fireplace. extra insuiit..,._
built in stereo. 31M·•••~

1594.

.- w

.

Used mobile homo. 30'*"
762-2226.
..
-:---:-:----:-;:---u •'
O·n;;
- , ..

. 4' wide mobile home, , ....
ting on
,
.,., ,, .

nice lot. reedy to movolnt6
For rent with option ta

bUf.

8226 . . down. 82215. !l'ill' .
month , 304· 782· 2228. _·~ .

1Ox I&amp;, wid
acres on Solt C-k. ....-;.

House trailer

city water and ttlephQ""'-

Con be hod .. oilY. VIr) !11:·
McCiookey; Wlnflold, W. Yri.'
Phone 304·888-2111. ''' • ~·
•
1973. 14•86, 2 bodrooffl .
trt

den .

extra

nlc f:

5&amp;,996 .00 . 1114-44-e•

I- ~,..',

0175 .

room. good location, great
terms available. Call 44~·

8293.

.

.

'

• f [• ~

34

8u1ineea

Buildinga .
10 yr. old 8 linh Opt~·
Wolloton, Ohio: ,
I bdr. opts .. 4 furnlthed,
street . parking. lie
cample~.

manager over t1,400
i
income. Conetent ~
list less ,th•n • 1 I,

unit. Posoltot• · 2nd
gege. Coil 892·11ei·
·
Fri. 9 -6, 694·2874 .... ••

wk . a,da.

•

�33

They'll Do It Every Time

Farms for Sala

212 acre t.rm on Parker Run

R.d . Muot Hll. Moved to
Arizona. Term• nego~ table.
r,Aineral rlghto Included. Will
carry on eland contract. Cell
742-28&amp;2.

64

lr----

Merchandise

I'J41N1'11!1r$'

a::IM'k.._WT-···~,

For ule fill dirt, and top eoil.
Coli Coli 814-258·1427.

NOT COl./(;••••

Fuel oil heatir *85 or b8st
offer. Coll .6 14·388· 8824.
Foil Yord Core Mulching,
_,......, lortlllzlng, liming. ro-dlng
• trenaplentlng. Also for
tale: cow manure a top toil.
Contact Bruce Davison ,
114-258-1427.

36 Lots lk ·Acraaga
lo~ for Mle in Mercerville, 3
tre•ler hookups, electric. ru·
rei water. eeptic tarJk.
•8.ooo . Coli &amp;14-266 8618 .

Commercial oven• elec.
lt8lnleu ,1tHI~ *25 apiece.
CeM 814·245·91145.

Building lot Neighborhood
Rd. a&amp;x160. •e.ooo. Call
448-3844 lfter 7PM .

lodl• coohmore co~t with
mink collar. exc. cond, 1iza
111.
Coii448-0212.

•n.

1.14 oc. level lot w~h
be~ement, elec. &amp; water.
locotod In Green Twp. Coli
448-3044.

5th wheel 40 ft. bo• tool,
troller, •1.200. Coli 4481759.

3 .64 A lend on Grohom
School Rd . Coli 448-4884
or 446·0236.

Regulation pool toblo •900.
Coli 448-17&amp;9.

luy now I oovol 1871.'
Pley-mor compor, Hlf con
: tolned, AC, goo furnonco, .
fully -lppod, 13,1iCJ!I. Coli ·.
.441-2297.
.

You build lto;_wiii24•4B
4 cor gorogo kit. f2,4111.
del. Coii1 · 114-B88-7311 .
0

•

HILLCRE.ST ·KENNELS
!loordlng oil bfoodo. Hooted
Indoor-outdoor fac~Utie1 .
AKC Doberman puppleo:
Stud Service. Colll14· 4411·
7795.

81

County ApplianCe , Inc .
Good uaad eppHancea and
TV ooto. Open BAM to 8PM .
Mon thru Sot. 448-1899,
~~~ 3rd. Ava. Gollipolio,
'---------1Electric boooboordwoll unito
11 varloue lizea, with tharmonata. *50 ·each . 1 carpet
bound exc. cond. rull It
gold, eeo. Co11448-8188 or
814-245-6860.
,

R~:ntals
Houaas for Rant
Small furnlohed houoe,
adulto only. Coll446· 0338 .
3 Bedroa:m tloutewithln city

!imto. t22&amp; lk utllltloo. Call
of;tor 6:00. 246-9846.
Unfurnished houae . .3 bdr.,

otove. ref. Rodney Village II,
•27&amp; mo. Call 446·4418
vlter 9 PM .
3 · bdr. houM deluxe Pt.

Pi8ooont. 3 bdr. houoe &amp;0
ocreo Eurei&lt;o, Oh . Call 8766104.
N~ly painted 6 rm. 2 bdr.
home. Quiet strMt llii:C&amp;IIent

n'!lghborhood. Ref. lk depolft required. Call Richard
!;~rter 446-1370 ofter &amp;:00.

4 bdr. home, full beoement,
central olr. hoot
pump. 11 mlloo from city.
GoRio Co. Sch . dloi. Ref. lk
dep; required. Coli 814268-1929 or 448-32&amp;2;
fl~lace.

lar410 4 bdr.• 2 bath houoe.
AC. gar., baamt. Near down-

town Pomeroy, •360 mo.
pluo dopoolt . Coli 448 0,18.
For Rent· large 3 BR hoi.JM,

Boogie pupo, 820. Coll448·
0373.
.

'74' Fontaine flatbed trailer,
lido kit. cholno, ond blndoro.
Coll814-379-2776.

CFA Porolon klttono. o•c.
ptdigroo ond blood lino. Coil
441-9477.

4 bdr., 2 both. family
room-fireplace. central air, 2
car g1rage •. in Tar• in A deli·
son . Call 814-387-74&amp;4
after&amp;.

Newly redeCorated, 1 bed·
room, portlolly furniohod.
122&amp;. Dopooit required. Call
614 -992 -6319 or 992·
2815.
-::---------lc-

. SWAIN
AUCTION lk FURNITURE
82 Olivo St .. Golllpolio. New
lk uiedwoodlkcoolotoveo.
6 piece wood living room
ouHo with 8 inch flot ormo

1

21h yr. old Shotlond Shwpdog. opoy.d. Coil 814-3889911 .
.

Franklin· woodbu~n8r 8.
model 28 SW 367 8 in.
barrel, tuned action, peckmYor grlpo . Rooo 26 ln. 10
opHcl bike. Coli 814-3889911 . .
- - - - - - - -·lcOalc furniture, tablea.chalre.
cupboordo, pie oofe. tolophonu, duk, alao sntiquee
and glataware. Open Sundays. Conkel't Tuppers,
plolno, Rt. 7.

2 boogie dogo, 1 mole-end 1
female for sale. · 1 y81r o'ld .
e4o.oo ooch with 'dog- 83
L'1 st k
houooo. Colofter6:00p.m. 1 ~...:....
__
v_e__
oc____
986-4180.
•
• ,.

1----------

·1----------

1-- - - - - ----

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

1---- - - - - - -

2 bclr mobile homo. Coli
448-0380.
Trollerloto, -or ond water
furnlohtd. omoll children
Mobile home for rent. OCCoptOd. 304-676-1078
Aduito, no peto. Coli 8 14·
387-7743.
~~~li.h.trlllisl~
Mobile home for rent.
Adulto. no peto . Coli 814·
317-7743.
.
61 Hou..,Oid Goqda
14X70 unlumlohod, 3 bod·
room, Iorge yord. •186.00 Moving Nle. fUrniture, misc.
por month pluo utHitleo ond
304-875-8050.
dlpa.lt. Coli 8811-4387.
2 bodroom 12X69 In Syro · King olio wot.,- bed, dlnotto
cu•• · Avolloble lmme· glooo toblo ond · cholro,
illatelv. con 882-7034 or couch. After 12:00, 304876·1848; oftor 4:30. 304992-1871 ovonlngo.
875-71134.

Good worll ponloo. Coli otter
4 :00PM. 4411· 7992.

Musical
WINTER IS COMING! Pre- &amp;7 .
pare your mobile hom• while
Instruments
it's still w•rm outalde.
!&lt;lngobury Horne Soleo ot Conn trumpet. with leather
900 Eoot Moln ·St. io in tho case. axe. cond. 8150.
old bookmobile building ot 304-773-6626.
.
upper hght in Pomeroy. We
have furnace parta, filters.
kerotene heatera. electric 58
Fruit
heater~. water heaters and
.
&amp;
Vegetables
elemenu. heat tapas. nontoxic antifreeze, roof coating, under pinning, awninga
and
covers, window Red raspberries. Taylor~
end operatore, win- Berry Patch. Coll448-8892.
end doara, faucets·
Dunrovin Fruit Far~ Mel- .
items. rose. Jonathan, Mclntoch,
Coli
and Grima' apples. Concord
gropeo, plumo, honey,
For Sale, Roeoo Hitch for sorghum ond apple butter.
1979 or 1980 Forcl. call Sr. Rt. 681. S.E . ofAibony,
Houri 1-7 daily,. Sat. &amp; Sun
814·992· 87&amp;8 oltor &amp;:00.
10-6. 614-698-!1298.
Foroolocolonioldlningroom
tabla with 2 axtanaions,2
&amp;9 For ~ala or Trade
meater chairs and 4 aide
cholro excellent condition.
Baldwin argon with double
key board ond muoicoloc· 1974 Mercury Montogo MX
companiments. 28 inch 3 good cond., $2,200. Coli
oPHdglrloblcycle77Vogo8 448-1769.

Furnished
2 bedroomAdulto,
apart- , ::~~;~:~:b,~u:n:~k:~b;ed~;•:c~omplete
slide
in truck
(will
manto
In Middleport.
et99, 2 piece ft.
trodl
camper
forcamper
anything
of For U!le or trade 1978
aultea ~ual veluel ca!l 114·992· Dodge Colt trodo, ' 19BO
2 bel&lt;. houH. 4B ChHIIcothe no pelt, security deposit.
199, 8384.
Ad. Will occept chlld&lt;en ·lk Coll814· 992-3874.
Dodge Aopon .good cond.
mapfti
· peto. Call 448·01 &amp;7.
Coli 448-7832.
·
1 a 2 . bedroom .,tu~nllhed
seta 81
. bo• King wood and coal circuli·
menreas twin or tor with blower for sale. Two
Houee 6 rooms &amp; blth. IPtl for rent. Call61'4-992lit regular-firm yura old. Excellent condilocated: 914 Third Ave .. 6434 or 992·5914 or 304r mn SL•PI•I•I'~.
•120. mo111o dinette cholro tlon. 1300,00 . Coli 992•1 &amp;&amp; mo .. .,5 depoolt . Call 882·2688.
135,
wooh
otondo
$34,
&amp;B34
ofter
&amp;
prn.
448-3870.
II. L1 vt~sLod
2 bedroom apanment for moplo rockero $59, 7 piece ·
2 houaet for rent end bar for ' rent $280.00 per month . chrome dinette 111 *149, 5 Sturdy, uMct whae,l chair
sale or leaN with option to Utilitloo Included. Coli 773- place dinette ut *99, used wanted to ~uy. Reasonable.
6423.
bedroom , oultoo, refrlgoro· Coli (8141985-4394 be- 81 Farm · Equipment
buy. 304-6711-8720.
tore, range•. ch~~tet, dre11era, twHn 5 and 10 o'clock p.m.
Sale or rent, 9 rooma. I room unfurnithed apart· wringer washers, TV'1, dryFormoll Super A w~h cultl·
booemont, 144 Pork Drive, mont for rent. Coli 992· oro. lk ohooo. Call614-448- One cobbogo patch doll for vatora.
mowing machine &amp;
oololn box with birth cortlfl· turning plow.
referencn and deposit. Rent 6434, 992-&amp;914. or 1-304· 3169.
Coll614-258·
$328 .00. 304-175-2886 882·2588.
ceto ond adoption poporo. 6701.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Phone 949-2477.
ofter II PM .
APARTMEN.TS . mobile Solo, choir, rockor. ottoSmell 2 br located In Comp home•. houooo. Pt . Ploooont mon, 3 tobleo, (oxtro haovy), ·Firewood 020.00 ·l!ickup New Holland forego equiConley. t140. month. 304- ond Golllpollo. '814-448- •ea6. Solo, choir ond love- load: •30.00 delivered . p.lntareot free flnonclng un·
822-1 .
ooot. 1276. Soloo ond chol;o 304-875-2911 or 304-876- til Sept. 1, 118&amp;, now ond
1711-3812 or 175-1371 .
uold: Grinder mlkero •
priced from U85. to •896·. 8782.
monuro opreodlro, lntoroot
For rent with option to buy, Nice 1 unfumlohtd opert- Tobleo, U0ondupto•t25.
l•ue. 3 br houM aettlng on mont. 304-875-2218 be· Hlde-o-bodo.f390. ond up Firewood, 120 iood, UO free until 4 -1-88. AH Nto •1160., oofo btdo 1146, dllivered. coli ofter 6, 304- Hollond hey tool~. lntoroot
nice lot, ready to move Into. foro 8 p.m. ·
free ·until 7-1· 88; 1-Usad
Roclinero. •286. to U75., 458-1728.
UIIO. month rent or•1 .000
model 711 Now Holond
doWn, owner financing. Bal- 3 roomo ond both, rotrlgert·· lompo from U8.. to •1211.
ance ot U12 .49 "''month. tor and stove furnis~ed. Ref pc. dinenes from *109.• to· furnace blower with motor, .chopper wid• o• row head,
ond depoolt . •225.00 435. 7 pc . .• 189 ond up, double droln oink with fix· oneuoodGohlblawor$810,
304· 782-2228.
month. Phone 304·1175· Wood toblo with olx cheiro tureo, 2 goo hot plateo.
u~d oupor 717 N.
121111 to e746. l)ook •110 304-1178-1415.
.•
Hollond chopper with ono
1 bedroor:n home good loca- 1090.
up to U25. Hutchoo. •&amp;60.
row hoac! •teoo. 2-usad
tion, UOO.OO month wHh
•dopoolt. After 12:00, 304- 3 room unfurnlohed oport• Bunk bod comploto with Sot of Golf lrono. Wiloon Cobey forl!l• bcntoo wMh
8711-11848; oftor 4:30, 304- mont, ·newly carpeted, olr manreaMI. *275. andupto X-31, 2 thru PW • putter. tandem a•ei running gear1,
exc . cond. Coli on prloo. 4
876· 7834.
condition, t22&amp; month. utll· 1395. 9oby bedo, •no. 304-8711·1 872.
u11d New Idea oom ptc*ara
itioo pold, 304-676-3030 or Mattre111s or box springs.
full or twin, U8 .. firm. f&amp;B. Cobbogo Patch doll. now in from $700. to U600. N876· 3431 .
ond •78. Quoon oeto. 1195. box. 304·871-2501.
ond uood Grovety boxu.
42 Mobile Homes
4
'dr.
chooto,
·
142.
&amp;
dr.
Chock
with uo on tho 2'h
for Rent
46 Furnished Rooms · cheoto, •54 . Bed fromoo, Moytog dlohwooher. Conn pet. lntoroot loooo on NUO.ond U6.;10gun - Gun trombone. 4 -15" Crogoro Form Equipment. Wo hove
$350. Goo or ond)Wotlreo. Coll304·882· groot doolo on Now Alllo
coblnoto,
2 bedroom fully turn. all For rent Sleoplng Roomo eloctric rongoo
U75. Boby 2246.
Cholmero Troctoro ond
utilltleo pold except for eloc. and light houoo keeping mottro-o. 125 e. Ul. bod
Gloonor Comblnoo. Koofori
Convenient location. ·Call rooms. Partl Central Hotel. fremoo UO, Ull, • • 30. Qullto, 1109 Flrot St. Point Service
Center, 304-89&amp;448-88&amp;8.
Call 814-448-07&amp;8.
king fro me •eo. Good oolec- Ploooont. 304-67&amp;-8198. . 3B74, Pt. PlooHnt . Ripley
tlon of bedroom oulioo.
Rd. St. Rt. 8.7 or loon, WV..
12x80 excellent condition, 1:4:;8:S;======== rockere. ·metal cabineta, L____
odulto only, 1 below EuroWa. 1_ _ -:-p~a_c_a~
· f_o_r_R_a..,.n_t_ _ hoodboordo 138 • up to
roforoncoo lk dop. •140 mo. 1
U6 .
'
Coil 814-843-2844 or 814- ,
, OUIIIO-HOUIIillwllhMatorHnplo®
····-··------·--643-2918.
UHd Furniture -· dryera, ·;..d
TV'o. 3 mlloo out Bulovllle
Rd . Opon 9om to 8pm, Mon.
thru Fri .. 9om to llpm, Sot.
814-441-0322

r

For Solo Ull . M.F. dleHI
tractor In oxcollont condition
14800. For oole 1010 John
Doore boclthoe endlooder
•8500. For oolo lntornotlonolgrlndor·ml•or •t800.
Coli 114·192-7401 .

2 111- Holland 8 ton ollogo
wogon $3500. ooch; 1 ouper
717 Chopper U800.; 1
oupor 23 Blower • 500. Coli
John . Gorl~ch 304· 875·
&amp;2113.

2 AKC raglo,_,od, nlole,
Be~gle pupa ilnd Beaglea for
stud •rvice. Davia Hill Top
Kennolo, 304-678-2394.

...:====:.J::;::;::::;::::::;::::;:J

Um.!otono, Sond, Grovel.
D-ooed In Mooon Molgo
Gollle or pick up ot Rlohonh
1k Son. CoH 448-7781i.
Plootlc clotomo otate opPIOVId. pleotlc ooptlc - ·
pleotlc culvert, rnoto1 cui:
verto, RON EVANIINTERPRISE8, Jecbon,. Oh e1 4288·6130.

o.v

. r ·. !JO
. • One
at • nmo
• (J) PM Megetlno
!Ji H...
llrldoa

j

•.•!.iorlmC:e;

com. ""

1983 Z28 Cemero, ' 3700
mlloo. loodtd. ooml lo•-·
Phone 304-176. 71181.

PAINTING· Interior ond exterior. plumbing, roofing,
10me remodeling. 20 . vn. ~ t
exp. Cell 814-388·98&amp;2, • •

78 Cotollno, 311,000 mllea
U500. Exc. Cond. 304·
773-11148.

'79 Ford LTO. 302.1ooded.
304-11711-2010.
.

... I'LL ~A LOOK. MIF 'MSRI;
IS A~ aJT' 'Til81l; N1D '()I) l.CQ::
AAD COI'T SlOG Ali~EJODI(...

a S Home lmprOvemlnta ·~ ~~

vinyl aiding, roofing. room ,_
oddltlon, otorm wlndowo,
otono. Call 114· 387·0409 t
or 114-387-7244.
·
;

7:30

t

Beaement

1979 Cougar XR7, 45,000.
AM· FM 8 trock, 302onvlne. · GENE'S DEEP STEAM ,
olr, PS, Pl. 11. 6 mpg,f
CARPET CLEAN,
304-8711-2228.
acotchg~t~erd-weter e~etrec .
1871 El Comlno VB, 53,000 tlon, dl0dorl1oro. FREEootl·
mlloo, new point, 304-1711- m1t11. R.. sorlat;t~e retaa.
Gone Smith; 982·8308.
7438 lftor 6:00.

1812 Comero Z-28 Indy
Poco Cor Edition, t-top,
A.C.,' A.T.. low mM..go.
Serlouo lnqulrloo. CoR 441·
7189 lfter e p.m.
'
1183 Manto Corio, tilt ot-lng, cruiH .control, ACm
AM·FM cooootto. t7.&amp;00.
Coli 448-8318.
1971 TrlumpTR·Ioonllortl·
blo, 54,400 mMn/ good
condition. ne,w top. trane.
robulh lou than 1100 rnlloo
ego, - o oomo body I
lntorlorworll. Coli 114·2411·
12118.
.
1982 2drFordE-.t, 4opd,
am-fm, 134ft, 1881 4dr
Chevy Chlv-. auto, rodlo
*3111, 1178 2dr Dodge
Ao ...... auto, rtdio •2111.
John'o Auto loloo 8ulavlllo
Rd. Gollpollo. Ohio. 448·
4782.
,
:::-:=-::--~----­
'1173
Dort ~~ 340
cu. ln. •
ne, cregef., lfde
plpoo, · - oyotom, nHdo
bqdy worll,
Cell448?803 or 448· 1871.

D=

•aeo.

1110
U.IOO.
11128.

74

Motorcycles

1881 Hondo' CA 80, ncholn ond ,aproketo. nbeclt tiro •4oo. ce11 2411277.
S..ra 3'h horH p o - mini
bike. runo good •78. Coli
24d·9277.
4 whool !luzukl Quod 110.
llko
uotd 3 mo .. 1571
firm. Col 441-7800.

n-.

1111 Hondo CRIIO, good
cond. •460. 104-773-11887
lfterii:OO.
1114 Hondo 8hodow 760, 2
holmoto, 1100 rnllu. Coli
lftor II, 304-8711-11817.

e 1)1 N- Neme Thot
T!IM
e WKAP In Cincinnati

•

..

Good·1 Excovotlng, boN· . •
menta, foot•a: drlveweya, ... '.
ooptie tlnlio. londocaping. •
Coli enytlmo 114· 441- .4
41137, Jo-ol. DIIYioon, Jr. ·-II.
owner. .
' •

.......~on 814·742-3044.

Bo•t• •nd
M otora for S•le

84

8o

Elactrlcal
R afrigar•tion

(I) MOVIE:

Nemec! Doolro'

An o-tx.doned doctor
lrios to cope with the normal
chaos of a hospital ..,_.
11""9' room.

A.L LEYOOP

!II liD Child ........ ~:

'Whet Your Children Should
Know: A Program for Kin·
dorgorten Through
3rd
Grode.' Mory Elan Stone,
Director of King County
Rope Rellof, apeoko with.
young childton about 'good'
""" 'bed' touching end copIng strotogiea ·tor theoe situatiOns. 130 min.! ICiosod
Gop_ I
MOVIE: 'Coltan
. -.
tD Heltem'
8 :30 - (f) (ft) Child ........ AbuM:
'Whet y.,... Children Should
Know: ·A P1ogoan lor 4th
lhrough 7th. Grode.' In this
program, Mory Elan Stone
-odopta the good/bod touch
frameworl&lt; to e&gt;qllore the
problorno of bobyalttero and
sex-role oteraotypOs. (30 .
min.i(Cios8d Coptionod]
'( II M"A"S"H Flnelo Tho
Korean conflict is aver end
signals the end of the w•·
lime carwrs of the people of
the 40771h Mobile Army
Surgical Hoopitof . (R) (2 hrs ..
30 min.l
9:00
Cll CD H (f) 700 Club
(II~ Bouto oftlttt 80's
Roberto Ouron vs. Sugar
Ray leonard (Montreal.
June, 19801. (60 min.l
(f) •
()I Peper Dolls
(PREMIERE!
'(f) Prv Fto4hll: A Small

"
I

I

e

GASOLINE ALLEY

J
I

•

l

I

I

!

n

•J

WINNIE
IF' WINNIE

Town

THINKS SHE
CAN 16MORE
MI. I'LL

A Televloion
Ht.IDiy 'TheEndolthe Tunnel (1973·1976).' On April
30. 1975. North Viet·
namese tenks smashed in1o
Soigon, end the long Wl/1
ended with South Vietnam's
surrender. (RI (80 min.!
[Closed Ceptioned)
9 :30 liD Congr08o: We the

FJ)( HE~/

People

10:00 (I) Ewrty Bt odows Rounlon

-...

SNUFFV
RN'lOWEEZV
AIN'T 601' NO

MANNERS

DON'T THEY,
KNOW IT AINT

111711 Cordovo t!lno·
mloolon. 304-411·1110,

AT All

o.v·
liD M81dng

,CJ - 18

SNAKE!!

JIMI WATER . II!RYICE.
Cell Jim Lonlor. 304-871- • '

1172 ToyoUt noecto trono,
hoo oxtro .....,., UOO or
liNt offer, Coli 114·17114JO.
.

-

77 ,

Au1o Repair

lofv Womer T-10 4 ....
...... 2-3110 ......
lloth worll, 184 Chevy
tord ......
lleed,
CoN 114-181·1811.

z-aoz

7:d7,

'

•

I

_______________
U pheilatery

87

II

'•

••

;•

.~

.~

·'

TRIITATE
' ..
UPHOLITIRY IHO~
~
I 111 ~. A,..., Gelllpoli_: ''
I14-448-78330tl14-448• ~
1133.
-··

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

-·:·
."

•

of M-*lncl

'Survival of tho Species.'
Richard
Anthropologist
leakey loolts ot the nature
of our species and examines
the laaaons our past can
toech us. (RI (60 min.!
~sed Captlonecl]
11:oo •

~. •

New.

ell Gte C1t

(I) Coming Alb octlona
(I) Anoihor Ufto
(II NFL's ....... loo'o Tho
Man Who Played The Game.
(I) ~OIIIhor
(f) o.d"o lonny

liD 011 Klngdomo 'The Pe-

'

11io GM dleMI eng~no
1812 Ford EXP 112,000' oomplou hoo orooltod
mloo, U,OOO. Col· 441-• hMdo. ooH lftor I PM
304-17&amp;-1113. .
3831.

This opec:ial

elndepor-otN1 0:30 (I) llpeclel
.
(f) MOYIE: ' The Third

TO POINT?

~

Jomeo lloyo WoiOI' 'lorvloo. 1
Aleo paola filled. cen 114-. t
211 -1141 or 814-441- • '
11?11., 114·448-7911 .
•

c-t

was taped 111 london's
Royel Albert Halt
(I) MOVIE: '.hiooe , _ .
(II .3rd Annuof Loge"'*"
PocketBII... clsSUrson Woods vs. U.J. Puckett.
(60 min.l
(f) Meldng of Monldnd
(fil NeltdWI&amp;tda

PERLITE

"•

1173 'ord ltOOplokupfor
porto, 304-1711-2218.

Sport

liD Vietl111n:

'

Genar•l Hauling

eon-

e

I

I

Bll

.
.'A s-tr:or

(I) MOVIE: 'Dt•oule'
(I) Oentlo Bon
(f)
•
1)1
Tine'•
Compeny When Janet geiO
married, Toni movn to Howlii and Jilek sherel .on
oponmant with Vlcl&lt;y. (60
min.l [CioHd Coptionodl
8 (I) tiD EIR (PREMIERE)

• ,.
'

8EWING Mochlno ropo~o. ••
12 lt. Mevero Aluminum '"tvlco. AutHorized Singer •
boot with I HP Chrvoler leloo lk 8orvlco Bholpon ,
motor; Mlnn-Koto oloctrlc 8cl11ora.. Fabric Shop, '\811 trollng motor; · loot Pomeroy. 814·912-2284.
~
trellor.
.
Goad qu..,.Y ml•ed hoy, ;
• 1.80. bole. Coll94g·30&amp;9 • '
71
Au1o Parts
- I:OOP.M.
£
8o Accenorlaa

(1) A T_, Seo.aon

P1anieee.

J:A ..,.tonatructlon Co.Ru·
'lond, Oh,814·741-210S! ,
9o-to. Footoro, Con-~ ~
work. l•ckhoe'a • ..&amp; Dltchor, Dump .

For oolo guernHy milk cow.
good fomlly milk cow v.ry

C1J

11:00 •

DoHr W- by Tad Honno. •
Dltchlo, pOndo, roodo, lend ,:
cleorlng, etc. Coli Motor Cor '
llrokero, 448;81182. l

•·
D.A.Iooton oxoovotlng, ' ::
complete dollir •nd dump '·
'71 Htifi• XAIIOO motorcy· trucll oervlcoo. Coli 117- ,.
cle, oxc running bond, 8828., 378·8288.
.4110.00. 304-1711-7181. 1;:;:::::;;:=;::::;=== ;:
715

BEFOG UNSAID MAGNUM
.,._.,: From.tht sur~ c:1m1 the11 words .I

"GO, NURSE!"

'

..

e

;·:1

TOP CASH pold for '80
model •nd newer ueed cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eootorn Ave., Golllpollo. Coli
814·448-2282.
.

~DIIOiiUW •

~' DRAMA

Ynlorday'ol

e Cll Tic Toe Douuh
(II · PKA FuM . eo.-

ffi""-dy
Gl Whool of,__

'78 Chr'yolor, - " cond,
runo good. 304-875~402.

l----------

e .hiHwoono

Bantamweight Championship. (90 nin.)
(I) M-Jor ' argue Pw rMM:
Loe Angoloo • A. . . .
(f)
(f) Fontlly Foucl

lo

\

~tlylho

PEAJ'iUTS
iHE KIDS CALL IT lllE
'' SHORIH6 61105T~'...

HO ONE liiAHTs TO 60

IN'ID 'TilE &amp;u1LDIH6...

trodollar Cooot.' Tonight's
program loolto at the coun·
trioo, tho citleo end tho so,
cletiaa that hove omergecl in
tho ·Persian GiJif after the
ropid Input of petrodoAors.
(Ri (80 mln.l [Closed CaptiOned]
Benny_ Hill 11'11 :30 8 C1J (1) Tonlglrt 11'Tonlght'o guoot Is Chor1es.
Noioon Reilly. (80 mih.J
(f) MOYIE: 'Eddie Matcon•• Run'
(I) Beet ol Grouc:lto

e

(II~

(f) WKAP In Cincinnati

• (J) &lt;Ill Com; lg I '84
Den -hooto thisloolt ot
the letoot newo on the prasidontlof compoign troll .

.

-

. -·

A'rdiooone,
VI . Felipe Garcill in ~ 12•
round bout for the World

.

Rogere

__
_
· .. lUll•

"""' ............. -

K..- .E -

.

Waterproofing.

()

J I I

L.ASTIN\S,~
_ _ .... _ _ 10

New8houf

&lt;l!tN_.

BAIEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifatlmo guo· •I
.r.,tee. Local referenou
l
lurnl-. FrH ootlmotoo.
t
CoA collect 1-814-237·
!
0488, 9 o.m. to II p.m. · •

1980 Old Cutlooo Supremo
V-8, PO, PB , AM·FM oteroo,
304-818·3860 oltor ·II:OO.

WHO'&amp;SIIN

IJAW N\leHT

TOIIIght
(1) Whool ol , _ _
• (I) Wheel ol , _
(f) (ft) ~Neii/IAhrw

BORN LOSER

~·

'

H

I I (

~~
(f) •
1)1 Entertai-

Autos foi Sale

1878 Ford LTD. Con doll.
Coli 181' 4119,

IMmSe~ON MACIE

liD Anoe.ico Worko

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

1112 ........., Lyna 3 d&lt;.
HI, olr, ounioof, 4 opol.. ...,
defr011 . Cell 114·311·
H11.

I'

71

IGIANAUj

Aopoot

·~

J!

1177 Dlldgo A-. olont 8,
4 "-· low mil-. ono
- · _ , lftor
cloon.6 . Col
e14·211·1132

Knouff Fir-ODd Split· 95"
honfwoodo. Soooonect or
gr-. You pick up or deliver. HEAP vendOr. 814258·8245.
.

e

•
'

()

II I

quiTE

(f) • 1)1 ABC New.
(I) &lt;Ill CIS New.
(f)
Nightly
Buoi-

1878 Oido 98 Regency, 4
2 yr. old Rog. Belgium otud door, fully equipped. tent
or will conoldlr trodo for. t!lllor pull behind. lind 2 Fetty T- Trimming, otump "
otock troilor. Coll4411-77911. acrea more or leu. 304- romovol
. Coli 304·87687&amp;-3&amp;70. '
1331 .
• .
2 .White pulling ponyo w~h
•,.
homooo, rido ond pull good. '79 Monte Corio . RINGL~s·s · SERVICE. ex· "
12.500.00. 304-1711•1400. con 245-9277.
perianced carpenter. alectri·
7472.
clan, m.a tort. painter, roof2 good riding pony' 1, 1
Ing (Including hot tor '
brown, · 1 oPoiied. w~h
appllcotionl
304-876-2088 -:"";
ooddleo •~oo. ooch. Coil 72 TruCkl for Sale·
or 1711-411110. ,
.. •
'
•· I
2411-8277.
1-~-----Chevy PU good cond.. Rotary 0.. coble tool drilling. •· ;
For "ille cheatnut mare.
Coll814-268-8248. Moot w•o completoi!Hmo , ~
oxcollent riding horoo, woll
doy. Pump Hloo ond oorvl· , , .
dloclpllned, grNt for youth 1879 Chevy luv, 4opd, coo. 304-895·3B02.
· ,.
$276.00. Alto. 11 mo. old topper, redlo "t 27119.John'ol-:----------'. , ::,
chootnut filly Arobion cour· Auto Soloo BulevHio Ad. Aomodollglntorior-oxtt- • ,,. ,
tor horao mixed oplrlted but GoNipollo, Ohio. 446-4782·. .rlor. F - ootlmetoo. 30f: : ·,;::
owoot not11_rod. Phone 814·
885-34211 or 895-3384. "' :••
912-3.798 ot 814-742 - 1883 Ford Aonger ·w~h - - - - - - - l .---f'
· .,.
2143.
COIIIfllf top. PS, Pll, AC, Building remodoUng, rapolr-,, ' "~
- - - - - - - - - - 14,000 mi. lmmiculoto lng, coli collei:t 1-304-9372'12 year-old ' Regietared cond. Coill14-2118-87~.
2821. .
'
. 'lfl" ,l j
Hertford Bull, 2 gliding
horaoo ond 1 mo!l: 304· 1179 Fore! F100. good
condition, $2800.00. 304- 82
876-3988.
Plumbing
875-11!2bfo,b2. fclor54
8o
Heating
&amp;yoor old Tonne- Wolker
Appol- more, bred tho- Fronldln froo otondlng fire•
.
robred next suminer. gentle; ploc• . Phone 304·17&amp;304-171&gt;-8761'.
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
3814;
~NO HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond' Plno
•
84 Hay 8o Grain
G..,ipollo. Ohio
73 Vane&amp; 4 W.O.
Phone 814-446-3888 or...t
814-448-4477 .
' ..
Good mixed pooo hoy lao 1982 Chevrolet pick Up, 4 -J-IM_'_S_P-LU-M--BI_N_G-.--H-EA_T_· \
oolo. Coli 941·2237.
whHI drive, 3011 otondord.
lNG . Rt. 1, Bo• 31111, GoiH· ;
304-578-2119.
'
polio. Call 814-387-0676.
Good mixed hey In born.
.1 .50 bolo. 304-875-4500 1174 CJ6, good tlroe, • - ~~~~~--------- ' '
or 882-3329.
top, body good .1600. SHULAW'S Plumbing ond ' ,
304·11711·11112 lfter II pm . Hooting, 211 Slkth St.. •
Polnl Ploooont, W. Vo. 304· · ·
Solu!doy ~04·875·1849 oil 87&amp;·6420.
Ucenood end • '
dly.
inaured.
' 1879 lntorotlonel Sco~t.
'·
Excavating
71 • Autos for Sale· good tlrao, oxc running 83
cond, no ruot, looko. good.
coll 304:8711· 8'773.

1177 M-.y Couger whlto
wlth gold 1 - r . AC. AM'
FM, 1'8, P8, . cloon, good
cond. Cell 114-2411•8114.

64 Miac. Merchandise

ro RiRIImitn

Morcum Roofing I Spout· ,
lng. N- lnotolllng rubber ;
roofl. 30 .,..,.

1-I~=====:::::;:;::;::========:.J

Chain saw• eharpened,
11me d8y .-rvlce gueran·
tood or we ohor)MII ~ froo.
Sldoro Equipment. 304·
875-7421 .

Doohund. 304-878-2032.

~·

- - - - - - :•~

., _.,,.....

For aele RCA video disc
player, excellent condition,
e1&amp;0. Coli 448-9758. ·

1·~5~~~~nd~:w:o:x~oo:o:n~d

in town, ne1r •c:hools, 1 1/J
bath, fireplace, appliances,
fenced In yard. •326 mo.
plus ncur~y depoeiL Call
388·8248.

Bu.ainll~ building. Office
space. 2 bdr., upstalre 1pt.
Garage for repair or body
work. Coli 441· 7572 or
448-2980.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
Houaing Opportunity! hoo
one and two bedrooms, rent
otortlng ot .1163 for one
bedroom and 8198 per
month tor two bedroom,
with 8200 depoait located
neor Foodlond ond Spring
Volley Piozo, pool and TV
ont. Coil 446-2746 or leovo
message.
Good GE waaher-dryer set
8250. Whirlpool woohor
Furnilhed efficiency •1415 *76, 4 othlf' weshlr8 to
utilties paid. aingle. share chooae from. 30 in' aa•
both. 607 2nd. Avo., Geili· rongo 195. 38 In' goo rongo
polio. Coli 446-4418 oftor •ea. Moytog wringer •as.
9PM.
1
Kenmore dryer .*71. small
Whirlpool rofrlgoretor U5.
Fumlohod apt.. 2 roomo lk Skoggo Applionceo • Upper
bath, clean, no pets, adults Rlvor Rd .. 448-7398.
only Depoait a. reference
required . Coil 814·441- Early Amerian couc:h •
choir, good cond. Coll814·
1&amp;19.
388-8794.
Furnlahed efficiency. $186
mo., utilitieo pd. 920 4th Atlanta homeateader coal6
Avo., Gollipolio. Coli 446- wood burnw, reel good.
cond .. t200. Rollowoy bed
4.4 18 olter 9 PM.
a. mottraoo •to. Coli 6141 BA apt, conyeniant ·toca- 388-9008,
tion. no pets. iecurity depWasher, electric dryer, reosit. Coil 448-2088.
frigerator . Corbin end
For leaH overlooking, city Snyder Furniture. 446·
pork, 2 bdr.. LR. fully 1171 .
equipped kitchen, dining
area. unfumi1hed, *180mo. Piano for oole. Call 992Coli PJ'a, 448-1819 or 87&amp;4.
446 -4426.
Pickens uaed furniture. 304~
2 bdr. epts. utiltles ~rt paid,
newly decorated. Cell 675- 875·8483·or 875-1460.
Eloc cook siovo $16.00,
&amp;104.
~oedo oome work. 304·678Rivorolde Apto. Middleport. ,_2_8_19-------Special ratea for Senior 1
Citizeno. $130. Equal Houo- Blue velour living ;oom
ing Opportunitiee . 614- couch, excellent condition.
992-7721. · ·
·
304-876-2062.
· ·

AKC Doberman pupo •so.
Coli 446 -7795.

Woodcuttera. Must have
oow. UOO to U&amp;O per
woek. Cell 814· 268-6689
oftor 8PM.

.Soep
.
11:30 • (J) (1) NBC N_.
(J) MOYIE: 'King of the

~~.=Look

Homa
lmpiovamenta

·~-

ILFOO

(J) Dr. Who
liD Voyego of tho Mimi

.

r .. )

I I

1)1

(J) lucy Show

S,i'Jit:I'S

J .D. 311 2 row corn chopper
ond fcirogo woeon. Coli
814-2118·8181 iftor IPM ,

tiD •

(1) Newo/S.-.JWOIIIhor

.,

,-81 F
E
.
____
a_rm
__q-;-u-'lp
..:m_a_n_t

(J)

(I)Hot,_

For oolo 8 ft. fl-wing truok :.
camper, gas 1tove, at~
dlnot oet, leo box, oloopo
lour, uotd very llttlo coli
114-892-3718 or 814·7422143.

____.:.:. :._____ '-=-:--=--:::--:---28 in. Ouaz1r TV deluxe
conoolo. like now, e260.
Coil 814-258-6763.

EVEN•Ni
11:00 • (J) (J) •
N-

FO! Bolo : Sporumono
Droom. ox. c -.. · 1700. '
Coli 379· 2701 ovonlngo. . '

0

Pats for Sala

O!lgonwynd. Cattery Kennola. AKC Chow pupploo,
&amp;lamaee kittens, ntw litters
CFA Himoleyon ond Perolon
kittens. Coii814-448-3B44
alter 8.

. . ~!_1_8(.84

-----~ -

Now open for bulineu.
Mountain State Block, At.
33, N- Ho...,. Complete
m..onry suppllee. 4", 8 ".
12" block. Dollvory oorvlae.
Phono doy 304-8U·2222,
evening 882-3238.

Briarpatch Kennel• Profee~
oionol All-brwcl grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boordlng fo ·
cilltioo. Englioh Cocltor Spe niol puppleo. Coli 814-381·
9790.

Television
-Viewing

79 Motors Homaa
8o Campara

Building Materiels
l)loek, brick. oower plpeo,
w in dow•·· lintela, etc .
Claude Wlntero, Rio Gronde,
.0 . Coli 814-2411·11121.

Juc;ty Taylor Grooming. Call
614-387-7220.

Onow hide-a-bed couch oxc.
Cond . •so end some nlltc;
for oolo. Coil 448·81 14.

DICK TRACY

KIT 'N' CARL YU 1!ibr 1MrJ Wrltht

6&amp; Building Suppllaa

68

18. 1984

Tuetlily. September 18, 1984

Ohio

r----------~------------~-~
~•.
NORTH
f.IHt

If you got It,
keep q~iet

..

.AK7S

•u7

.KQIO

+us
WEST
.Qiot
.QJ108

By J11111e1 J..,..y

EA8T

•·

•Ju&amp;
..
.JHUI
uu
' +Ju
.1072
sovm

."

When you're boldlnJ very bed\
' ·..
cards, It II a comfortable feelia&amp; to
~tJve tbe oppoaenll bid to lilt In • suit 1
Ill wblcb you have Q-.J·lo-8. Although
you will uaaaiiJ 1181 tile ccilltract, don't
.AUUI
•
doable. Two bad lblllp con bappea.
Flnt, tbe cootrect may be (Ol'lected
+AKQ5
to lilt no-trump, wblch mllbl be
'
Vulnerable: Neither
Ullbeatalll!". Secaad, )'OW' double may
Dealer: South
ca- tbe declerer to play just carefully emap to mate tile CODtract. .
Nor~!~ Eut
Soat.b won tbe d l • - ' ace and led :
a beut toward dammy'a K-1-7. West :
Puo
Puo
.
p. .
p. .
split Ilia Q-J-10 and dummy's kiDc 1
woo. A diamond wu ~ped and the .
Puo
Puo
p,_
A·K-Q of elabe were cubed. South ·
Db!.
thai led a apade to dummy's ace and ,
trumped IUIOtber dl•mond He led .
Opening le.od: ••
enot'"" apade to tbe kiDc IJid ruffed L..-....:._..:;..
_ _ _ _ _--1 "
tbe tblrd spade In IIIII baDd. 'lbla left
Sotltb with A-4 of burblllld the five
., ~,·of clabe, Weat with tile Q-J-1 of bearts
,
and dummy with tbe 11-7 of~ IJid. cent of tbe Ume, IJid oo at rubber
o ....U spade. N- South's play of bridge It il reuooable for Soatb to •
'tbe five of clube left West belpl- · play toward the K·l In dtuamy 11111•
·beca- be j:Otlld not tate more than · limply cover tbe eJ&amp;bt. lltltlf you 11'1!
one IrkS.
today'a rub doubler, Ilk yoanelf::·
Witllout tbe double, declarer ati1l "Would declerer really do tllat If l
ml&amp;bt
have made tbe ccilltract. West dido'! double tbe cootroct!"
•·
will bold all four burbl about 5 per_.,.... _ _ _ _!
,.

....A

,.

..

...

...

dl~,ar•"tr
by THOMAS JOSEPH

."

a Actress

ACROIIS

Daly
5JBIIfan
DOWN
I Slligltress I Nobleman
O'DIIy
zLiqueur
11 Give a
flavoring
speecb
i Settle
U Part of
a tiff
utalr
4 Hot time
14 God,
in Paris
Yesteiday'sAnswer
tbe creator 5 Celestial
1li Alan Ladd
body
Z11 West Indies 30 More Ironic
film
IMacaw
bird
310fa
11 Link
1 Fascinale,Z3 Indigo
Great Lake
11 Go wrong
u a
plant
It Actress
blind dale U Negligent
Keaton
U Least
unkempt I Highway Zli lago's wife 3'1 School
11 Mouths
branch • Deli item
group
(Lal)
U Panic
!I Canadian 31 Formic
a SWidard 12 Task
province
acid
aPt ently n Doctrine
(abbr.)
source
u SangtdresB
1Cook

Helen
ZIBergen's
Mortimer

1..-l-+-+-

.,

. ..
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J.

I'•

..
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..

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.

3'1 TV'award
Zl Country
(Span.)

ZIFIIITOW
31Cotpulent
DSort 3a Inlet (Sp.) h.-1-+-+~

35 Late

OniaaiS
30Basso

Cesare
38Crue

a Fry gently b-lH--+-+-

'·

41 So. Arner.

Indian

a Average
. DAILY CRYvroQuOTES- Here'a how to work It: .
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for lhe three L's, X for the two ~·s, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, !he length and fonnatioo of the words are all
hlnla. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOOES

RS

I HK 0

R

·BZ ·NKKW
JHPKO
N

WHP

SZKI

NTHPI

EBHTNTKW

QZOKZW

HS

.

M HJ

WHP

R

Rl

XHPDO

KRYZ

AKRAMZX

SBHQ

EHEPKNB XHDLX. - TZBDNBO XKNOZ
. Yeatenlay'a Cryptoquille:THERE IS NO ROOM FORSE·
COND PLACE; THERE'S ONLY ONE PLACE, AND
· THAT'SFIRST.- VINCEWMBARDI
I

I

..

�Page

10-The

Sentinel

Ohio

Bob Evans Farm Festival set Oct. 12-14
Ji'lles of 'golden wheat In a wagon .
are hand-threshed Into grain for
making loaves of bread. A whirring
grlsbnUJ grtnds fresh cornmeal In a .
barn nearby wiiUe ripe apples' -elng ·
pressed for elder send a pungent
aroma Into the crisp autumn air.
Painting a picture of old-time
farm ute, these are just a few of the
sights, sounds and smeUs that Invite
yo\1 to return to an earlier time at
the Bob'Evans Farm Festival, Oct.
12-14. Located along Route351n the
rolling hUis of southeastern Ohio,
the l ,l(XJ-acre Bob Evans Farm has
hosted the festival for 15 years. .
· Early America unfolds before the
visitor's eyes as 126 practiced
artisans trai)S!orm raw materials ·
Into finished products. For the
three-day weekend, crattspersons
set up shop, decorating With stalks
of golden grain, pumpkins and
other taU fare, as well as the tools,
Instruments and wares of a differ·
ent era.
In one of several el&lt;hlblt areas,
visitors can watch as colorful
fragments of cloth are carefully
woven together to form a ~-q~ely

patterned quilt. Seated nearby at a
small spinning wheel, the spinner
moves the treadle bY foot, spinning
fibre Into long, even thread.
VIsitors can wander through
more eJ&lt;tenslve outdoor l!lsplays
such as the steam powered saw·
miD, cornmeal grinding mill and
llo~awn sorghum miD. With
the only power provided by a horse,
ripe sorghum stalks are squeezed
Into juice, Reaching a vat by a thin
drain, the sorghum Is then boDed
with equipment such as the early
settlers used.
It's almost like a Jive history
lesson for young and old alike,
delving Into the very fabric of what
Early America was all about. The
peWterer, just llke all other art!·
sans, .Is authentically dressed. He
not only knows his trade Inside out, .
but Is qulte conversant on the topic
of Early America. WilDe watching
molten pewter heated over char·
coa~ the visitor may even learn a
few facts about the American War
For Independence.
Although autumn was a tbne of

Local briefs... Chester Council meets tonight
Chester Councu 323, Daughters of America, will meet at 8 tills
evening to practice for Inspection and to observe quarterly birthdays.

VMH admissions, discharges
Admltted..VInton Smith, Hartford, W.Va. ; Andy Cross, Racine;
Garcia Adams, Long Bottom; Bernard Ralrden, Hartford. .
Discharged ..Donald Eblin, !Jessie Patterson, Robert Hatfield.

Emergency squads kept busy
Five calls were answered by local units Monday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 8: 47 a.m., the Racine Fire Department went to a car fire on
Hoback Road; Racine at 12: 38 p.m. went to Main St. for Travis
ChUdress. to Veterans Memorial; Racine at 7:54 p.m. to Southern
High School for Scott Kiser, to Veterans Memorial; Syracuse,10;00
p.m. to Sixth St. for Charles Cook, to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Mld!Jleport at 10:45 p.m. to Hobson for Charles Stewart, to Veterans
Memorial.

Homemakers to resume meetings
The Third Wednesday Homemakers Club will resume Its fall
meetings Wednesday morning at 10 a.m. at the MWIIclpal Building,
Officers
Ada Titus, president; Ebna Louks, vice presld!?nt;
Margaret ·aauey, second vice president; Delores Whitlock,
secretary; Sara Ropush, assistant secretary; Unda Ferrell,
treasurer; Goldie Radcliff, assistant treasurer; Janice Lawson,
reporter.Apotlucklunchwlllbeservedatnoonandtheyearbookswlll
be completed In the afternoon. .

are

Business people to be horwred
Seven southeastern Ohio businesSmen and wanen wW be honored
by Area 24 of the Private Industry CouncU at a dinner set for Sept 27
at Rio Grande College and Community College.
Guest speaker for the dinner will be JoanA. Hammond, director of
Ohio Job Training Partnership Act programs.
Awards will be presented to recognize seven regional businesses'
Involvement with JTPA programs.
Nominated tor awards are Joe Mortellaro of McDonald's
Restaurant, New Leldngton; Barbara Mullins, manager of
Monticello VIllage Apartments, Athens; Jeffrey McDaniel,
administrator of Pomeroy Health Care Center; John Sipple,
manager of Captain D's Restaurant, Gallipolis; Larry Murdock,
manager of McArthur Lumber &amp; Post Co.; Bryant Sparks of
Columbus Parcel System, Ironton; and Marcia Myers, personnel
manager at Carborundum Grinding Wheel Co., Logan.

Orientation session planned ·
An orientation meeting tor participants In the annual Southeast
Ohio Junior Miss, Inc., schOlarship pageant will be held at 7: ~p.m.
Thursday at Trinity Church In Pomeroy.
TheflnalsfortheprogramhavebeensetforOct.27atSouthernHlgh
School.
All Interested high school senior girls of Meigs County are Invited to
attend Thursdaynlgllt'smeetlng. Thoseunabletoattend are asked to
contactSoutheast0hloJunlorMiss,lnc., P.O.Bol&lt;1M,Puneroy,Ohlo

!15700.

A Jeep owned bY aRt. 2, Racine, man sustained heavy damage as
the result of a fire Monday.
The Gallla·Meigs post of the state highway patrol said 28-year-old
Harry Shain was westbound on Lel!anon Township 132,
approximately one-1\alf mUe west of Ohio 124, when the engine of his
vehicle caught tire.
Shain was not Injured In the Incident according to the patrol.

Divorces sought

A marriage license has been
jsSUed In the Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald Ray Edmonds, 28.
Glenwood and I.Jnda Damell5mlth,
19, Langsville.

Meets Wednesday
TlleSyracuseNazareneWomen's
Mlssklnary Society wW meet at 7
p.m. Wed11esday.

••

Thsn~

Becomes strong safety

Area service news

See &amp;·Manwder atory 011

SeePap7

Paae a

Hunting season hegins

See phollos, atory oo Page 10

...

•

Three separate cases fUed by
MUes Homes Division of Ins1lco
Corporation aga!nst VIctor Counts,
Sr., et al, have bi!en heard In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Judge Charles Knight.
Each case SUms from the default
of mortgage payments on two
homes on property In Sutton
Township. AR;Iralsers were appointed by the Judge to examine the
premlsesandmakeadetermlnatlon
as to value. Following tills action,
Judge KDlgllt has decided two
Judglefpents against Counts totaling

, Vol.34, No. H 1
Copyrip!:tod 1884

• Wed
'
Pomeroy;Mlddleport, Oh
.. 10,
nelday;- September19,1984

POhER"SWREEI,-st•m•caaolcUalblonedpOuerswbeei,Jim
•'e
hand norC!ca wNJe
pravldla&amp; Wplwer lo lhe potler's wheel dtu1al tile lSib - a ! Bob '
Ev... Fllrm.Fell&amp;lvalla U83. 'l'ldl!year'sevmUnpoiiJOI'edOd. lt-14. '
Belllsjul!t- of Ul adl- wbowll...........,okWallblanedcraftll
at tile lec!dYal beld lit lbe Bob Evw. Fann Ia IUD Grande.'
Bell, llaauveriea, Oblo, lldllfuiJy

r-'----------"-:-__..;.....;._,_.;.......-._ _ _ _ _ ____..

were

Mortgages on the homes are to be
foreclosed and lll'l'llllg8IIEts for a
public sale to· he made unless the
judgements . are paid to Miles

Appelllllled
An appeal has been !Ued In
Common Pleas by Norman Neece,

AlthOugh It has been decided by
Judge Knight that James W. Suttle
Is entitled to partition of the oU and
gas underlying certain property In
Lebanon 'I'own!lhlp, thecaseflledby
Suttle against West VIrginia Pulp
and Paper Company, et al has been
continued.
A motion for a summary Juc:lgement has been granted In the case
fUed by Earle D. Schultz and
Marybelle D. Schultz against MarY
Jane Talbott, adm., et al. Bryail
Talbott, Kyle Talbott and Thresa
.Talbott were dismissed as defend•
ants In the case.
n
Because'Judge Knight served as
couosel for Paul R. Steinmetz, Sr.
prior to .hls becomlni judge, he has

'

Coal Company, Lancaster, Jrunes
L. l't:Sytleld, administrator of the
Bw"eau ofWorker'sCanpmsatlon,
Columbus, and The . Industrial
Commission of Ohio, Columbus.
Neece was allegedly Injured In a
work related lncl,dent on August6,
1!8l. At that time, the Industrial
Commission allowed for the !rae·
lure of a rib but dl!saiJowed for
arthritis In the lower back which Is
alll!gro to have qeen Cl!used by tile
llijury. Neece Is appealing tills
decision.
.
·Dannie w. Jacks, Chester, has
filed for a divorce from Carla H.

.

Four marriages were also erlded

Ohio lonery winners

(NO UMIT)

&gt;

. EXTRA LEAN-BONELESS .

•

PORK ROAST•••••• ~~
FlESH - LEAN

PORK

Ll' ,
STEAK ••••••••••• ~ •••

$ 119

'

' ·

99 (
Sl 09

All

Wlflc

Meets Thursday

VAWY

The Rock Springs Better Health
Club will meet at 1: 1!5 p.m.
Thursday at the tone of Mrs.
Clifford Jacobs, Laurel CUff.

IELL

aRouoHToN·s

$25,cro

·

STORE SLKED

LUNCH MEAT ........\!~...

$ 149

su.cro

$."1l,cro

ICE MILK ••••••••• !l.~~L. $119

' ILK .••••••••• $J69
M

\

The Meigs Band Boosten greatly appred·
ate the support and donations of it'
....bers and the following businesses:
•BANK ONE
,
•BROWN'S FIRE AND SAFETY EQUIPMENT
•BURGER CHEF
•C.K. SUPERMARKET
•FRUTH'S PHARMACY
•H&amp;R BLOCK
•NELSON'S DRUG STORE'
*R.C. BOTTLING CO.
_
•SIMMONS OLDS.·CAD.-CHEVY, INC.
PLUS EVERYONE W~ll PATRONIZED OUR
BOOTH AT THE FAIR

conAGE CHEESE. •••••••••••••
~~~!;.'!~••••••. s129
. .
$139

2°/~ MILK 29C

DR. PEPPER or 1/16 Oz.
GEM COLA PRODUCTS

Ont Galltn With ERIJ Putcl!aN of $30

Grocery Order, bcllllllng All 16 Oz:
Pop.

(

69 (
Pli11 Dep•.

. One With Each Purchase of
2 Boxes of Cer•l

PIKIS iPnmVI TIIU SAIUlDAY, Sl". 12, 1914

• SUPERMARKET ~·~~J.:~

.' . .. "FREE PARKING• ..
OPEN DAILY-&amp; SUNDAY~ 9 U. to 9 P.M.
No Sales To DMiers It ltltrvt tht Rllllt to limit Quntltlts and Correct Prlnti111 Errors
Not Responsible for TJPOIJiphical Errors - Wt Acc1Jt Food
llld ''WIC"

'

'

I·

on

Tuition rates go up at Meigs

pay

,,

.

$14,11Xl for buJidlng repair; Orange
Fire Dept., $58.001 for a fire truck;
Lebanon TlM'nshiP, S7,!lXJ.90 for
road paving; Fuuaoy village,
$32.«ro tor sewer extension; Racine
. APBQUATE SUPPLY - 'l1le llttrt .,..;,. of the above. Amertaul EJecaic Power Col'p.ls lllockpllog
village, S26,cro tor a rescue truck;
JS.n1ae conveyor bell frum the M e l p - _,q~~ex coal a&amp; all9 of ltllllOIII-Ibed plallltllll caae of a 8&amp;rlke
Basllan Fire Dept., ~.em for a fire
to lhe James M. Gavin power plant lltCbatbbels seen by the United l\llne Workenl Oct. • L
tnldt; and the county cmunlsslon·
ers, soo.cro to repair slip on access
road from UnlOn Ave. to the
Multlpwpose Center.
It wW be revealed at Friday's
bearing which applications will be
·9l!llt to the state tor furlber
By BOB BOEFUCII
James Carpe!!ter Indicated he Is. Shirley Priddy was name cafeteria
coaidderatla!. If problems arise, the
See1!ne!Slall Wrtler
meeting with buUdlng principals to supervisor of the district for the
state thea has tbeoptlcinofreturntnil
State residency tuition rates In the
determine bow the money wW be · current school year effective Oct. I.
applications to the county. The ·. Meigs Local School District have
spent and plans were made for
The board appointed Timothy D.
cowrty then has ~days 1n which to Increased about $14 il month tills
boardmembersandadmlnlstrators Faulli, a non-certified person, as a
c:xua:t the problems and resulmlt yeat, board treasurer Jane Wagner
to attend PrO, PI'A and other group junior high foot hall coach pending
the applicaton.
,
l'l'JlOrled when the Meigs Local
meetings io explain the Issue before certttlcatlon of CPR and sports
Qmmlssloners yesletday met Board of Education met In regular
the election. If tile h!ue p
, II medicine, and Rick Edwards, also
with Bob First of the Soil and Water session In MlddJeP.ort Tuesday
wDI pnMde lliO,aJUw the dlliR'Id non-certified, as an assistant varsity
Ccmae!vatla! District to discuss night.
at.., -1uea. u
u.e-ne · football coach for tills year. Joan
upamllic see1toa projects Within
In·state ., students who are rem1011111 oflllxfllwiD be...tJectedbul Corder was named head teacher at
the county. one projEct InVolves qulred to pay tuition lees will be themoneywllhaveloiJi,!lellttolhe the BradburY School and Nancy
· ll!l!dlng the new landfill, the other paylng$787.29tlllsyearcornparedto
ObloDepadml!lltofEducalioll: The White was named head teacher at
1nw1ves about 20 acres of road $063.63 last year, Wagner said. An board ·approved pay.ment to Peck, the Harrisonville School for the
bit.nlal along sevt'!ral county 1\ftd· outofstatestudentattendlngclasses Shatter and Williams for preparing current school year with · the
toWnship roads. 11 was decided that. In the Meigs Local District will have
the bond Issue paperwork.
supplemental pay to be $,"00 each.
lettel'
slnlld
be
sent
to
each.
to
pay
$1961thls
year
compared
to
The
board
agreed
to
change
a
Given professional leave were
11
township to detennlne wlletbii or the out of state tee of $1678.43 last Polley concerning ·substitute · Martha Venart and John Redovlan,
not they want to be Included 1n the year. Tultlonratesofthedlstrtc;tare teachers. The present policy proguidance counselors, to attend the
bid padlage for . the seeding. set by · the Ohio Department of vldes that a su'bstltute teacher All OhiQ Conference for School
!!!pirate bids wm ' be let tor the Education. There are oow five ' receives regular
rather than
Counselors on Nav. 5 and 6 In
landfill and the roads.
·registered In-state tuitiQn students substitute pay after the 21st day on Columbus; Ron Logan,.OWE; Suzy
It Wa.s allJo reported at the andlllnefromOUtofthestate.,
the Job, bUt reverts back to
Carpenter, MAJT; Tom Werry,
!llel!tlll&amp; that Columbia TIMmshlp
Mrs. Wagner also reported that · substitute pay If he or she becomes auto mechanics; Kenneth Eblin,
'l'rulllees have Qlleted to sell the diStrict thiS year has $93.786.00 111 and must be off. The chai!ge welding; Kay Proffitt, costrnetol·
Township Road 11 to the county.
for the disadvantaged pupil person·
provides that the substltu~ teacher ogy, and Dale Harrj.&lt;;on, electronics
Commissioner David Kobleotz Md nel fund. In previous years, the cmljlietlng the 21st day would go to to attend the Ohio VocatiolU!l
CcluntyEnlloeerPIIII Roberts plan j)I'Ogl'amhasprovldedlortheentlre regularpayandwouldbecarrledon Convention In Dayon tills wee~.
toYillt theBI'I!IL
salary and fringe benefits for ~ · the regular pay schedule should he
Teachers will altel1l3te years In .
Gradl!rworkandseallogofsane school nurse. However, tills year; or she .have to be allsent due to
attendlilg that convention, accoi'd·
1'1*11 Is IIIIo c.'OIItlnulng reporled the program wiD provide money for Illness.
lng to a decisiOn reached last nlghl.
CCIImty Crew SUpeMsor Ted
m&amp;Y one-half of the nurse's salary.
Named~ llll'm l r
· Jeanne Bowen, Carla Saelens,
Wlnll!l'. nie llDIIIIIy bJgbway c:Je.
Ohe Jl1rary aide wW be dlupped bY
John Arnott was named guidanre
Suzann!! Weaver, .l3arbara Rostad
p111meat plaDIID beaiD work tills the program also and payment for counSelor at the Meigs Junior High and Mary Haggerty were autboWIIIk 111 OouD;y ftDid :In
· that employe wW have to be School replacing Tim Flesher, who rlzed to attend an Oct. 26 workshop
Al'ldutbl,...~ . l~toupckte
abiotbedbythedlstrlcl.
res&amp;IMdreceotly.Supt. Morrlssald
lnMarletta.
·
tlle~l'l!lollltlonbylheccmrnla·
Bollllllllue"""' · d
thattow'peoplewereeUglblefortlle
The board renewed the Ohio
stonen ·to llllpptll't the p~oposed .
At last night's meeting the board post, but · th&lt;lt only Alrott had
School Dlstrlct Liability Insurance
Roule 33 aca!ll road from the . dlscuSaed the ujlCOilllng OO:.tax applied. Jeannie Slawler, ValerleJ. Polley with the R.epubUc·Franklin
RavensWood BrkiRe to Rock
$.'D),(li) bond tssue to be voted on In Hanstlne and Farte Kennedy were
Insurance Co. provldlog basic
SIJrlnp.
the district on Nov. 6. Asst. Supt. added to the substitute teacher Jist.
(Continued on page 14)

I&amp;...,

GALLON

1116 01.
..
-pEPSI
THURs. ONLY
- Co' LA •••••••••••••••••••••
!.~~r:e~·.tt ••••••
.
HEINER'S . BONUS BUY BREAD........~~.~~~!~~. 3f$.119
· LUNCH CAIES..... 3 FOR Sl 00 LUNCH PIES.~ ...4 FOR Sl 00
CABBAGE •••••••••••••••••••••••~.!!~•••••• 15c

You Fo1

tor

$294.177.90. 'I'IIo9e app1y1ng
The .last hear!Jig on block grant
grants were Scipio Township,
~ appllcatlotl ~r fiscal year 1984 wW
for a volunteel' tire dept.
be held Friday, 10:31 ·a.m., at the
!llfiiPl'l' truck; Meigs County Ex·
courthouse the Meigs County Com·
tension omce, $16,7«1 for a nutt1tfon
missioners anJIOUIIl'l'd Thesday
education program: Mlddleport
afternoon.
village,
for and air supply
BuckeyeHUisrepresentatlveTim
system forthe.flredepartment to be
Knopp will be In Meigs County
used county-wide;
for Jm·
Thursday to compare each lappllcli·
tlon with the guidelines and deter·· · chase and renavatla! of the the
depot; Letart.Townshlp, $2),537 tor
mine which are ellg!ble and should
I
road paving; PlanDloa ('.ommfs.
be sent to the state.
slon, S3.00ltor anlllcMtrlalclevelq)Twelve application$ have been
ment ~ PuawsU)' EMS,
!ulmltted tor the proei'am ,...moa

I/160Z.
Plus Dep. &amp; Tax

2010
/t

20,cro

·

RC COLA •••••••••• Sl 49

HouoHTON'S

are

·,Final block grant·he¢ng set

I

Exteaded Forecaa&amp;

y,,,
$uppi1f
At Tht Fsl1/

·

GROUND BEEF ••••~.

Generally clear toolgllt. Low near
!Xl. Light sootherly winds. Mostly
sunny Wednesday. High around 75.
Chance of rain 10 percent tonight
and Wednesday.

,.

an

Ohio.

Wealher forecast

.

·according

stepped&amp;MmlrQmthecasebroug~ r--------------~---L--------~----------------------------~

FRESH

were

tw

Jacks,~.

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Monday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "'The Number," was 706.
In the "Pick 4" game, played
Monday through Friday, the win·
nlng number was 01'18.

Under quaJliy Indicators, both counties flnlsbed
evenly with a sub-total of 4.17
·
Under program Impact, both coWitles were again
scored evenly untU the last subtopic. Under the
su!ltoplc of feasibility Meigs scored 0 wiiUe GaiDa

By'REBJ!XX;A.JON£§
· suppJy-andhOpes,toincreasethat
to buy coal.
Aeoo!e'ed ...,.. Writer
. to 11!5 days bY the end of the month,
If a strike does cause the state's
As the Oct. 1 deadline for a new said company spokesman Tcm
&lt;M!'I'Il!l coal l'elle!Ve5 to shrink, in
.c ontract agJ:'eErnel'lt betWeen the ·Ayres.
,
energy 'emergmcy woold not be
major national coal coJIIP8II(es and
AYres salds~ln'caseofa declared untU those reserves had
the United Mine' Workers nears, all work stoppage UMW Ia standard
decreased to the «J.day level,
of Ohio's electric cOmpanies are )ll'ocedure.
'
.
Bratmlclrweller said. At that point,
well-stocked with reserve coiU,
1be James M. (;avln plant at COIII!IIIIerl woold be asked to reduce
to a Stateofllclal.
Clll!llhlre, fed by Southern Ojllo COal • non-priority use of electricity
Elec!rlc cornpantes
required · Co.'s Meigs Mines complex, bums
voluntlir!Jy.
torejlortthelrcoaistockpllelevefsto apprGldlr18fW
toni! of coal
Included In the d!!tiidtlon of
the •tate bl tile event an eilergy ' per day at peak times. The P!ant
"prlori!Y" uses -&amp; n:sldmtlal,
ei'i1i!r gt;ilcy muat ~ decliu'ed.
normally has a reser;e lastmg Iii Mlpttal, foOd storage, fire and
:Electric companies report a daya, accordll)l to J.W. ·~Bill"
pollee use 8lld - . y production,
Braunldnft!laelaald.
.
minimUm of
8l:day stockpile, Ll2on, plant~ . .
If .coal st!M'Icj4Jes reach a 25-day
andSOOiehavelnexcessofaliDday
Cleveland Electric IllumiDating
leYel, the YObmtary cutback woold
supply of coal. This tar exceeds the Co. bas an ll}to !lklay supply.
50-to OO&lt;Iay reserve lJ10SI electric - Tolecto Edison reportS a 100-to· be!Dne mandatoey, BraiiiiBCh·
companies rootlnw have on hand.
1ffi.day stockpile of coal,. Dayton welger 'said, and COIL'IUJilei"S woold
Leading the coal reserves ts Powe!' &amp;: Llaht 1s nearing a·lOOday be required to cut back their
eleclilclty use by Z&gt; petceut. At the
American Electric Power, whlcll supply and Cincinnati Gas &amp;
awns 19 coal-fired. plan~ fnm
Electric has a resetve of 90 to 95 ~ level, JlllD1Il'kriiY use would
be· cut by 50 per cent, and If coal
VIrginia to Indiana, Including tholle days.
of subsidiary Coluinbus &amp; Southern
WUklns Is optlnilsttc that even In IeYels reached )ust a ],!)-day supply,
the event of a strike, electric all non-priority use would be
Ohio Electric Co. It has U.9 mllllon
tons In reserve- about a 11&amp;day cornpanleswouldcontlnue,tobliable discontinued, he said.

Middleport against Southern Ohio

against Stelmnetz by the State of

Maniapsend

2&amp; Centa

.Coal supplies adequate
at most power plants .

to Lorraine Garciler.

.

Cornml.ssloners also released the application

2 hctlona, 14 P-•

AMu!timedialnc.New'e""' .

review results · of both Meigs and Gauta Counties.
C.A.A. prepared the grant applications tor both
counties with Identical wording, but dltferent county
statlst)cs. Meigs ootwelghed Gallla ID SOOieStatlstical
areas, Gallla outweighed Meigs bl others. GaJJia was
scored 5.
.
funded, Meigs was not.
The final totals came to 16.22 for Meigs and 18.34 for ·
The application review results for both eouilttes
Gallla.
Commissioners raised many questions after seeing .
were explained to the CommlasJoners on Friday by
.the
review results, norte of which they felt were
·
the Dept. of Deveqmmt representatives but tbese
adequately
answered.
results and the ensuing dlscusslon st!U did not give ·
They were given no explanation why a ~
credence to the state's decision according to the .
Coolmfssloners.
decision was made before the~ clearinghOuse
revieW came from Buckeye Hills.
·
Three topics were considered bY the nJne.mernber
They were given no explanation as to why bolh
State Review Board Whleh Kelle!' headed; distress
grantswereconslderedeven,aswasstateddurlngthe
factors, quality Jndlcators and program bnpact with
meeting, and yet GaJJia came In Uth while Meigs
each having sub-topics.
,
came In 34th In relation to the other applications that
Meigs outweighed Gallla In distress factors with
were oonsldered.
(Continued oq., page 14)
subtotals of 6.29 to-5.91

a

'*

CGOI''

·

an

..... 8&amp;111 Wiler

:·By

restored. Brenda Kay Hood 8nd
Steve Hood
granted a dlssolu·
t1on and Brenda Hood's malden
name of MIIIT8y was restored.
Connie L. Carl!llJo and Anthony E.
Canlllki were also granted a
disSolution and Connie Cardlllo's
malden name of Hatley was
restmn Also dlssolviDg their
.m arriage were Terry Ray Glll'dnE:r
and Lorraine j{ay Gardner. The
malden name of Davis was restored

$100,a!8.88.

~es.

to reverse the state's decision .on .the rehabilitation '·
grant. We were able. to put forth
8rgument on
bellaif of Meigs Coonty that the state Cook~ 001
Meigs County cmunlsalonen beUeve IIIey "won the
dispute.
battle, butlolt the war to bureaucrats", followiJiglast
Its ()WII admission, Meigs County's application
Frlday's meetfnt In Columbus to~ the COU!1IY'B
·was as good as SOOie of tholle that
aPPfO\Ied.
i'ece!Jt!y rejected commlinlty developnellt block
IIow!!ver K wu· the·state's position that the C.A.A.
grant application.
·
could not admlnlll.er both,programs. We also dispute
Commlsaloners David Koblentz, Richard Jones
tills
the C.A.A. has an excellent record ID
and Manning Roosh met tor two hours with Deputy ·
admlnllterlng
state ' ~. This was also
Director of Community DeYelopment Mamie Shaul; '
admitted
by
the
RepresentatiVe Boliter.
Local Government Llalon O!flcer Bob Johnscli and
'"!be Board of County Commissioners continue to
Housing s~ Hal Keller, all tept: ertlltlves of
believe that Meigs County and Its people were
the !)hlo Ql!partment of , llevelopnetit. State
wronged In tills decision. We are writing to Rep.
~tat1ve JoJynn Boliter and Gallla·Meigs
13(111ter, jYho heard the total dJscusslon on Friday ano
Canmunlty Action Agency Director Sidney EdwardS
asking that shEi take whatever steps necess8ry that
alsO attended tluit sesslori. ,
decisions
such as these are 001-made In the future and
'Matemeat releaeed
The Commlsslciners released tills statement • to try and delamlilewhether anything can be dorieto
reverse the declsiQn already made tills year."
Tuesday:
"We are eJ&lt;tremely disappointed they were Unable
~

In Cmunon Pleas Court. Barbara
Jane Holbrook was granted a
divorce fnm Cecil HolbroQk, Jr. on
a gross neglect charge and her
.maJden name of Pooler was

•

a1 y enttne
Coinmission ·wins battle,· lOse~ war

e

B)' NANcY YOA(IIIAM

Judge Knightorders
$169,058 judgmeJ!!~
in three court cases

Volunteer builders

From llle Wild 011 P~&amp;e t

•

the upper 'lila to mid 'lr Lon
pnenlly Ill lbe liOI.

Fire causes heavy damages

Marriage license

·

variety of other entertainers.
Amidst the colorful Ohio fall
foUage, the continuous country
music, Ianning demonstrations,
COWitry contests and old-fashiOned
el&lt;hlblts combine to recreate the
good "old days. It's beca\1!14! of the
candlemaker, the blacksmith, the
weaver and hundreds of other
artisans who pool their talents th&lt;ll
an bnportant period In our history ·
will be perpetuated Qct.l2·14 at the
14th Annual Bob Evans Farm
Festival.
A $2 per-car admission tee Is the
only charp .for a daylong ylslt to
the Farm Festival. Campers may
spend the weekend and enjoy
evening boedowtl$ for a $lO fee
which Includes . admission. For
more. Information or a free brochure write or call the Bob Evans
Farm, Bol&lt; 330, Rio Grande, Ohio
45674, 614-~!53M.

'l1llindaJ tt.wpS•' Jdq.
Fair ........ tile perlod.JIIaha Ill

{

. New cases flied In Meigs County
Coounon Pleas Court Include a
reciprocal support
action by
Marsha Payne, Nitro, W. Va.,
(18"alnst ThOmas Edward Payne,
Riltland. and two divorces.
Len Capehart, Middleport, has
ftled for a divorce from Wayne
Capehart, Pomeroy, on the grounds
of gross neglect of duty andexlreme
eruelty. Kathy A. Jacks, Pomeroy,
baS tiled for a divorce trom Joseph
Jacks, Erlanger, Kentucky; also on
the grounds of gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty.

frenzied activity for Early Ameri·
cans as they ~Y prepared for the
long cole! months ahead, there will
st!U tun to be had, ~Y during
the rau h.arv1!st festival. Some of the
o)cl,.tlme country contests rellved
dUring . the Bob Evans Farm
Festival are hoe caJUng, cow chip
throwing, tob8cco spitting, corn
sheUing and championship horseshoe pitching.
Gentle sounds of fiddles, mandol·
Ins, banjos and other country
Instruments c:reate a llgllthearted
mOod at the festival.
Continuous country and bluegrass pertorm311Ce8 from two
outdoor stages will feature Colorado Country Music HaU of Fame
Inductee David · ~hner; . "The
Banjo Man From Turkey Creek,"
. Ebner Bird; the f'ee Wee Pickers,
one of America's youngest protesslonal bluegrass groups and a

,,

. I

I,

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