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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

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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.
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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

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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

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

Fire causes heavy damages

Marriage license

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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

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. 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

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I Meet the Marauders I SVAC schools

Commentary
l1l Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON /UtEA

Alb ,..,_,._....,..., r'T"E!!!doo=o
lil!miii:.i
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ CoatroUer •

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ot The AMoclated Press, lnllll!d Dally Press Assodatlon and the Am-.rlcan Newspaper Publishers 'Assoolatlori.

LETrERs OF OPINION ar; welcome. They llhoul4 be leu 1UD see wont!!

. Jon~:. AJIIecters are subjed to edUin1 and must be stped wUh name, adtlress and
telephoae number. No uas.,ned letters wUI be publ ..laed. Letters should be ln
pod iaste, add"resslnc is!llies, not penona!Uies.

Brown, veterans clash
on press conference
Both sides seemed embarra~ after a supposedly non-partisan news
conference, to announce the participation of VIetnam veterans In the
current Ohio voter registration drive, was abruptly canceled.
· Secretary of State Sherrod Brown p~lled the plug on the pews conference
last week when he learned one of the spokesmen for the veterans'
statewide organization was going to be Eugene Watts.
'
Watts Is a Republican candidate for the Ohio Senate's 16th District,
where Republicans have mounted a major challenge against~- Michael
Schwarzwalder, D-Cohimbus. Democrats cogtrol the Senate 17-16, and the
seat Is considered crucial to both parties.
·. The secretaJy of state sald .that In his prellmlnary talks with the
· veterans, he had not seen or heard mention of Watts, wbo Is a VIetnam
veteran. Instead, he said he had beeil dealing with David Alstadt, executive
director of the VIetnam Veterans' state organization.
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David Shutt, Brown's press secretaJy, said his boss refused to appear
with Watts because he was convinced he showed up to try to gain p~bllc!ty
tor his Senate campaign.
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"He felt that he was belng'taken advantage of," Shutt sald, referring to
Brown, a Democrat.
Shutt acknowledged that Brown had shown up In the company of Rep.
: John D. Shivers, D-Salem, a candidate for re-election Nov. 6. "But he's not
: a local (Columbus area) candidate," Shun said.
• Alstadt (llsputed that Watts was oot Involved ln planning of the Vietnam
• veterans' registration drive, polntlilg out that Watts Is chairman of the
~ VIetnam Veterans Leadership Program.
• He said Watts' name appeared on letters !ient tD BroWn and to high
• schools around the state ln wlilch students are being Invited to participate
: In a good government essay contest.
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• Meanwhlle, Brown has gone ahead and sworn In some veterans as
• deputy registrars for the registration drive which ends on an Oct. 9 ·
: deadline. Shutt said he hopes veterans around the state will PI oceed with
~ :~ir plans to help.out. Shutt sald1 "We didn't want lt to tuin out that way."
:. • :AJ.stadt said he also hopes that the veterans wlll not have their
•::eGthusjasm cooled by the Columlxls spat But he saJd lhe statewide group
:_pn't plan to coon:llnate Jtll etJ'orts with Brown "In any way." ·

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Boosters express appreciation

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The Wahama Band Boosters
:: wish to express their appreciation
;; to those ·from Meigs County who
·~ stopped and contributed toward the
;. Band's trlP to Washington, D.C. at

the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge on
Saturday, Sept. 1. Due to your
donations, the trlp became closer to
reality.

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:~ Today
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in history

Today Is Wedn~Y. Sept. 19, the 263rd day of~- There are 103 days
:- left In the year.
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Today's highlight In history:
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Flfly years ago, on Sept. 19, 1934, Bruno Richard Hauptmann was
:; arrested In New York and charged with the .kidnap-murder of the
;; Lindbergh baby after some of the ransan money was found In his
r;I possession.
Hauptmann was subsequently
convicted of the crime and
.
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,•. executed.
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On this date:
· ; • -In 1777, American soldiers ln the Revolutionary War won the flrsi Battle
; -, of
SaFatoga
over the British.
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, ; -' In 1'183, Etienne Montgolfier launched a duck, a sheep and a rooster
; . aboard a hot-air balloon at Versailles ln France. They· were the first
:: animals to go aloft In a manmade craft. The start of the one-mUe Journey
' : was witnessed by King Louis XVI and Marte Antoinette.
;;
In 1796, President George ~asblngton published hls farewell addresS. In
; • It, the first chief executive of the United States advised, "Observe good
.; faith and justice toward ali ·natlons. Cultivate peace and hannony with
I~

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:: .. In 1863, the Civil War BattlE' of Chickamauga began, In which the
;; Confederate troops forced the Union sol~ back toward Chattanooga,

: Tenn.
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In 1881, the 20th President oftheUnltedStates,JamesA. Garfield,dledof
wounds Inflicted by an assassin 11.weeks earUer.
In 1928. the first "talking" cartoon- Walt Dlsne}''s "Steamboat WliUe,"
starring Mickey Mouse - premiered ln New York. ·
In 1955, President Juan Peron of Argentina was ousted after a revolt by
~army and the navy.
·
In 1959, Soviet leader Nlklta Khrushchev lost his temper durfni a visit to
~Angeles after being InfOrmed that for security reasons he wouldn't get
tO vlslt Disneyland.
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In 1900, Cuban leader Fidel C.a stro and his entouragt! angrUy checked out
·: of a New York· City hotel. Castro accused the hotel of unreasonable
:: financial dl!mands; the hotel maintained that Castro's party had made a
:· shambles of their rooms.
:;
In 1961, postman -Barney Hlll and his wife, Betty, of New .Hampshire
suffered a memory blackout whlle drtvlng borne. Later, uroer hypnosis,
:: the couple maintained they'd been abducted by allen beings, examined
aboard a spacecraft, then. released.
.
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·• Ten years ago: Former President RIChard M. Nixon was subpoenaed by
.. speclal prosecutor Leon Jaworski to appear at ~Watergate trial.
';
Five years ago: The United States, Israel and Egypt reached tentative
; : agreement for monitoring the lsl'l!eU-Egyptian peace pact In the Sinal
' desert.
•. · One year ago: A U.S. · delegate to the United Nations, Charles M.
Ucllensteln, suggested that any countries unhappy with baYing the UN
t; lOcated In the United States feel free to move It
:: • _Today's birthdays: JusUce Lewis Powellpf the Supreme Court Is 77.
~ i :JourniiUst Clition Daniells 72. Author WliUam Go{dlng Is 'll Actor David
~ - McCallum Is 51. Slnger-a:mgwrtter Paul Wllllams ls44. Actor Jeremy Irons
.;; IS 36. Actress Twiggy Is 35. Actor Kevin' Hooks Is '26.
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Thooghtfor today: "Men bate those to whom tbey have to lle." - VIctor·
·'• Hugo, French writer (002-1885).

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As the fourth week of action
unfolds for SVACscbools, two teams
remain unbeaten while two others
broke Into the w1n
last
Friday night.
Going Into this week's schedule,
North Gallla, the defending SVAC
champs and Harman Trace are still
unbeaten after three weeks: The
Pirates dumped undefeated Southell$!em, :D-8 last .Friday night
wh!Je Hannan Trace and Green
battled to a 24-24 tied. Southwestern
brokelntothewlncolumnwltha22-6
victory over Synunes Valley wh!Ie
Southern took a :;n.&amp; decision from
Ross-Huntington. In other nonleague affair, Kyger Creek posted
Its second victory of the season, 32-6
over Waterford whlle Fort Frye
stopped Eastern, 32-26.
Friday's schedule finds ·Portsmouth East, last season's champ In
the Scioto- valley League visiting
North Gallla; Eastern plays unbeaten Wahama; , ~yger Creek
faces the same situation against ·
Minford 8nd Southern plays at
Green.
Two games are schedUled Saturday - Southwestern travels to
Bnffaio, W.Va . and Hannan Trace
goes to Ironton St. Joe.
- At Cheshire, Coach Mel Coen's
Kyger Creek Bobcats wlll try to
avenge tast season's 18-14 loss

Breaching the wall__, ___w_il_liam........__F.......B........uc_kley_Jr.

The Dai_ly Sentinel

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At exactly the hour when New
Charles Colson was brietly lntro- . hlgh-swtnalng Washington lawyer. you114f, mlddlt--aged and elderly. To
Yoli&lt; Gov. Marto CUQmo appeared · duced by a visitor who remarked And tor over 10 yean be has each of them, Colaoa extended tbe
before his audience at Notre Dame
that he had first met Col9011in the devoted himself to the Jll'llblem.s of certlftcate and said, a smile on hla
to lay out more strings ot barbed
White House tn 1972, and had n01 prlsol\en, agitating for !undamen- }ace, "God bleu you."~ were
wire along the wall that he wishes
realized that, at the White HOUle at . tal reforms that would _dlatlngullh over 100 ·certl!lcatea banded out, to
would separate church and state, a . that time •. he was miJigllng wltl.J ~tween felons wbo threaten 10- over on~- third of the prison
black minister, the Rev. Matthew approximately the same density o1 . clety with violence and others wbo PQp~lation.
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Colson then spoke tor a half-hOur
Adams, began the proceedings at felons as at that moment at the are there merely to be pUIIlshf1d or
the Tl\conlc Correctional J:"aclllty In Taconic Correctional Fi!clllty. Dur- rebabiHtated.
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and recounted the altered view he
Bedford Hills, N.Y., which bousesa
lng those days Chuck ColD! !lpe'llf
CruciiiJ to an undentandlng ot had got of Ute while ln .prlson. And
few hundred embezzlers, drug' more ttme than perhaps any other Colsoil's mission Ia that prlsGaer!J he reminded his liJtenen tbat; In
merchants, thl~ves , armed human being :In the company o1 do RQt reform unless . they are theBlble,Jesus~~U~~TBntei!dtooaJy, •
robbers,. rapists and murderers. It Richard Nixon, pursuing political brought to look at llfe differently a single penon that ~~ cl'ay theY
was the culmination of a two-week ends. And Indeed, before tt was all tromhowtheyusedtodo,andthlsls would be jotnedJn paradlae- and
journey Into Christendom con- over, the president had been ousted, where God comes ln.
that )lad been to the tide! Who Jluila
ducted by 20oodd volunteers as.so- and 'Zl men were sent to jail.
A vol\lllteer ~ a hymn. The .on the cress beside bini atGolaotbiclated with the Prison Fellowship.
It was some ttme during hls Rev •. Alan Chambers, a senior . Chrtst. was Innocent olwronadOIII.
Approximately 150 of .the Inmates experience with jail that Colson assistant to Co!Jon. wbo had done the prisoners at Tacoidc ~ - ilot.
had signed up for the exercises, and decided - though It was not, he t1me in a penitentiary 1n Ohio tor
But, Col50ll said, ·a change ln the
today, the day of graduation, they Insists, his decision: He was robbing banks, read out the names way of looking on one's fellow metl
would receive certl!lcates of dlscl- dragged "kicking and screaming'' oltha9ewhohadpursuedtheco\ll'lll! · Is crucial to rebirth.. Collon had
pleshlp handed out bY the fellow- by Providence - to alter his life, of studies, and, one by one, up~
forced himself every night while at
ship's founder and president, who which had been that of a high-pay,
came: whites. blscks, Hispanics,
theprtsonhesodelestedtoprayfor
would then address the t;&gt;rlsoners.
the warden . ."!!omettmes I prayed
· • he would be traosterrecl." But there
grew In him a delennlnallon to love
his neighbor In !bought and deed,
and to the extent he taUed In ihlsand he would alwaYJ fall, up
against the highest standar&lt;ls - he
was a sinner. Addressing sinners.
Inside the walls ol. that penitentiary
· and outside Its wans.
,
At the end there was a joint
prayer, and bY the dozl!ns the·
prisonen SUITOuncled Colson and
the volunteers, ·sometimes volubly,
more often silently, to seek · out
cor)loral or lntelfectual touch With
sOmeone outside that prison Ute and
Its suspicion and contempt and
cyntctsm and violence.
,
The visitor tbought, on leaving
the premises: Great God! Is what ·
just happened constitutional?
These are public· tadUiles. The
guards standing about the meeting
room are on the publlc payroU.
Granted, the prisoners wbo had
signed up were volunteers, but ao Is
. lt pro~ that sChoolchildren wbo
Jn conlmon prayer be·volunteen,
under the normal dlrectlon of their
pareJ\ts, Wlll sonieone pile day hand
Chai1es Colson a summpns_ tor
enpgtng In unlawful actMty? It so,
the re-:enactment of the events In
Jei'usaiem 2,000 yean ago becomes
nearly letter perfect: ·

Corpo~ate
WASHINGTON- No one needs
to be reminded that the costs of
federally funded health care are
soaring Into the stratosphere. Many
companies that provide the equipment and ·services needed to treat
Medicare and Medlc;ald patients
charge top doUar whenever they
can get away Wtth lt.
To prevent this unconscionable
profiteering on the mlsecy of the
nation's sick and needy, tile
Department of Health and Human
Services has laid down certain
regulations Intended to keep. some
klnd of control over runaway costs.
One of these prohibits "sweetheart"
deals between health provlder5 and
subcontractors ·that Inflate the cost
of goods and services.
This Is the sto~t of a major health
provider's request tor ari exemption from the sweetheart 'Ileal rules
-; and Its·rejection by HHS after an
Investigation by the agency's Inspector general.

incest:.,.___--,-____,_-._.__.. ,·. .-~J_ac-:-k_Ande_
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The exemption was sought late going rate, and that a "substantial':
- The COI!lpany claimed that
last year by National Medical Care
part of the· company's business Is
Erika actually cbalied· NMC cHnInc . of Waltham, Mass., the
with unrelated flnns.
l~ an average of $21.93 less for
nation's largest provider ot IUeErika flunked both tests, accord- dialysis machine tuters than It did
sustalnlng kidney dlalysls treatIng to the auditors.
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to unrelated cllnl¢8. The IG rement. HHS auditors discovered
Data It submitted on 1981 sales Vlewed tout tuter models and founci
that one of the corporation's
shOWed that the comajmy did more that Erika had In fact chllfled
subsidiaries, Erika Inc., sold dialythan half Its busiDess outside the cllnlcs In the corporate family
sis supplies to another subsidiary,' corporate family. The HHS Investi- anywhere froin $38;11! to $83 more
the Artificial Kidney Center' ot
gators concluded that the correct per ruter, for an !!Jices&amp; profit of$1.3
Queens, N.Y., at prices from 22
figure was only !16 percent.
mUllon.
percent to . 56 percent above the
As for comp&amp;rable ~; the
- The company claimed Its
going rate.
·
auditors looked at Erika's charges cllnlcs P,llld only 8t centll more tor
As a result, the auditors ·found, . to Its parent . corporation's. 170 blood-line sets ·from Its Erika
Erika made $181,~ In excess
clinics and to other, unrelated subslc!bry; the auditOrs. found the
profits ln 1977 on that deal alone.
cllnlcs and concluded: "Contrary to markup avera,i!d $8.16, for an.
Erika also netted $4.3 million ln
NMC's assertlOas, sales to related excess profit of $271,693 on that
excess profits during 1981 trom
organizations were at generally Item.
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sales to Its corporate siblings,
higher prices than- sales to unreA spokesman told my a!ISOClate ·
according to the still-unreleased IG
lated orpnlzallons."
T"!!Y Cap&amp;l'Cio that thl! company
report.
NMC Vice President Timothy I. could not appeal the n!jectlon of tl.&lt;l
Under federal regulatiOns, such McFeeley III'aed HHS no( to release · ellemptloa request. '1'houg)l he
corporate Incest is permissible only
the lnformaUOn iathered by the conceded the audit was done
If the company can prove that the
InSpector general. It's ·easy to legally, ~ sald, "The problem Is ·
charges were "comparable" to the
understand the company's con- with the regulations themse!vei."
cern. For example:

Herrrre's Mary__-..-------:....~__..;..;..--:--· ;·. ..:. ~Lowe~::.:.:.u_;..:,w;.......:..;;~.:£e::..:.:.u
For months my wife has been discussing diets when In walks a
telling me that the ,real place to get frlend. One woman sticks her head
material for this column Js the out from under the dryer and
beauty shop. Since my scanty hair states, "I haven't seen you for a
would not survive even one per- . longtime, Angle. Yousurehavelost
manent, I finally sald, "All light, weight." "Yes, I have," replied
you write lt." So without further Angle. The ladY tn the next chair
comment and with apologies to Ed exclaimed really loud, "Lost
McMahon, herrrre's Mary.
weight, I)'IY fanny! She's still as,blg
as a cow alld eau Bite a bone. ~
I've been typing my husband's goes to Weight Watchers, ~ft118
column for so long, I just bope sane up on pork, ribs and everytlllngelle
of hls humor has rubbed oft on me. ln sight at the Fat Boy Barbecue."
Here are a few anecdotes collected
One very busy day a red-haired
over the 10 years we Hved ln lady walked Into the _shop to have a
Florida,
manicure, shampoo and set. She
There were two lad.les who were was a very attractive widow about
placed under hair dryers side-by- town so let's Uaten to what two old
side. Their conversation went Uke gossips· have to say about her.
this, "SHe sald she never puts "Ain't that the woman old man
anything on her halr. I remember Terry Is chasing?" "Yes. I heard
when lt was dark. Look at that his wUe Ia going to get rid ot him. All
blonde halr now. You can't tell me she wanu ts hili IIIOIII!Y-" The
that's not bleached," the firs~ lady red-head hearing all this and with a
saJd, as she pointed to. the bea~Jtlft­
bot temper to match h:!l' hair .
c!an who had just tiDished doing her retorted. "Y.ou two old wind-bliP
halr. '.'1 agree," answered the don't know wflat you're .talking
second woman, "and she also has about. Keep your moutha shut or
fake eyelashes ~ can't you tell?" you won't have any hair left IQflx."
The operator chuckles to henelf as
Then there was the aood cuato~ she starts to work on my hair.
mer, a llquor store manaaer'• wife,
Under two other dryers one wbo hac\ Imbibed too much. She
customer saJd, "If these Yankees came into the beauty 111ap wltb a
would stay where they belonl, f1uk fnm whiCh .r. Upl 'llppi'W
maybe we'd be able to buy ltuJ! wlleft lhe lbou&amp;ht 110 ...
cheaper. The stores al'DWIII here looldng. By tbe tlmt It wullertum,
chargt! tho8l! northerners hllh lhe could hardly lilt up, llllpt ......
prices and we have to pay the 111111!. and ended up on the lloar but tldl
I wish the Damn Yankees would go didn't dllcourap tll!t bleutlclan u
home." 11 0b, oh," tiE lady next to lheaat on ~floorwlthMn.~
her whispered loudly, "You toraet be!are her and completed ro111n1
MAYRY 18 one of them Yanlrees." her hair.
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Another day two wQihen were
One afternoon when there were
~

whipped up for her favorite cosmetologist. Of course, lhe bad to slip In
the puddle. The pie !lew out of her
hands and cocoiiUt
topplllg
went every wlilch way. The ceiUng
a
.tan blew so"me of the topping onto
·the top of a .patron'a (resbly 4IOne
hair-do, Wotta ll'll!ls Jhat. wal~
Incidentally, Mn. Jones Wasn't
overa.''
hurt but a good, pte wu wuted.
'' .
.
An l!lrlba!TIII8inll 111011'11!111 was
!jet a kick 011t ctthe UUJeold lady
w11en Mn. Smlt1l came to rna11e an wbo always talka to hetii!lf undlr
appolntmellt and had her Chihua- the hair dryer. I preter Ja)dng a
hua with her wbo deddecl to lnltillte nap .

dryers and gossip going as usual,

one

remarked to the one
~ to her, '"Did you go to Polly's
luncbeiin the .other ~ I wasn't
able to attend but heard she sure
put on SjA e&amp;d." "Yeh, but that
crap she called gounnet food
wasn·~ fit far a dog. I thintc she
llerved a bunch ot week-()id .left~

!::'";::=~~;:

looking coconut cream pte she had

cream

','N o, wonder women s~d
mucli time In be•uty abopl!"

so

'

Berrv.'s _
World.
'

column

'!

a :&gt;2 and 4-3.
The H!ghlanders are healthy with

Frank Cochran woo injured his
shoulder against the VIkings.
SWHS's"offmsewasledlnthatgame
by senior Steve Pelfrey and brothers, Jim and Tim Burnette. Jim
Burnette led all rushers with l2i
yards on 19 cames. Tim Burnette
had 51 . and Pelfrey added 41.
Defmslvely, Ben Boyd, Aildy Halslop, Jeff Burleson and Pelfrey had
good efforts.
F.ce SVC champs
North Gallta faces another challenge Friday night as Portsmouth
East, winner of the Scioto Valley
Conference a year .~go comes. to
VInton. The Tartans l~t 7.() to
Northwest last week following
victories r:111er 'Southwestern and
Ross-Huntington. P .E. Is led offensively by quarterback Tony Johnson who likes to unload the long
bomb. Hls top backs are Delbert
Dudult and fullback Gary Tindall.
The Pirates enter the contest with
a few bumps and brUises. Center Ed
Dople continues to be out with ail
Injury suffered last week In practice
and Tim Smith, a wingback on
off!!llse and defense back Is also a
lklubtful starter.
Mark Foreman andBrtan Hawks
provided the offense last week
against Southeastern whlle Chuck
Easter, Foreman and Bllly Harden

By KErl'il WISECUP
SALT LAKE CITY, Utah-"He
·' probably won't start this year, but
he'll play ~me. The coaching staff
thinks he'll develop Into a pretty
' good defensive back and really help
· us down the road."
Those were the words of ·university of Utah athletic director Bruce
Wondsbury on· ex-Meigs grtdder
·Bob Ashley, currently pla,y!ng his
first full season with the Utah Utes'
' football. team.
Ashley, ' son of Mr. and Mrs.
. Robert Ashley of Middleport, was
· one of Coach Charles Stobari's first
recruits when the newly-hired
'· Stobart left Toledo to take the reins
' at Utah In 1982.
Stobart, also a one-time resident
· of Middleport, originally signed
' Ashley as · a quarterback £nd
punter, where he played as a
· Marauder under Coach Charles
' Chancey. But destiny altered his
- patl1 at bbth positions.
' Ashley, a freshman In ellgtblllty,
, but a sophomore In the classroom,
· joined the school. at mid-semester
following his graduation at _Meigs.
' A fluke accident nearly
' Ashley'~ college career In spring
.practice the following year. ·
' Ashley slipped on the turf on the
." football field and severely twlste&lt;l
'- his knee. The knee was operated on
successtully, but Ashley was outfoi'
the year. He was red-shirted for the
entire
1983 season, thus giving the
,
· Metes Countlan an extra year to
· play. Ashley did dress for every
game that year, but was Ineligible
to play.
~
·
·· The sWitch to defense this year
came about due to the Injury plus
, Ashley would have been playing
_ behind one of top quariercacks In
· the country.
, · The Utes' signal-caller, Mark
. Stevens of New Jersey: was 12th ln '
' overall total offense last year whlle
leading Utah to the eighth top
. offense In the COillltry. Utah
, averaged 430 yards a IB!IIe wh!Ie
finishing with their second stralgbt
5-6 season.
Now strong Safety
Ashley, with top athletic quaUtles
stlll with him attet the illjury, was
assigned to strong safety In the
(lefenslve bacldleld. Like the quarterback on offense, the str0111
safety_ Is usually manned bY a
te~·s best athlete.

eoom

"Ashley Is playing behind a
pretty good defensive back, probably the top athleie on our team . .
Ashley wlll be used on special
teams and wOl see some otiJer
action, The coaches are excited
about hlm and deflnltely feel he'll
be a starter down the road," added
the Utah AD Woodsbury.
At 6-l. :m pound Ashley has
adill!d nearly 40 points tq his playing
weight at Meigs. The rlgld Utah
weight-llftlng program employed
by Stobart has Increased Ashley's

-

FISH SQUAll

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Wlfti . .IS-.... ... tUt
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Team .
WLTPOP
North GaUia ...................... 3 0 0 74 22

Hannan Trace ............. ..... . 2 0 1 84 36
Kyge&lt;Creek ............... ..... .. 2 1 0 69 ' 34
Eastern ,....... ............... .... ,] 2· 0 68 · 76

Southwestern .......... ,.......... ] ·2. 0 40 44
Southern ..•.... ........ ...• ... .. ... 1 2 0 JO . 48
Frkla:y•s Games

Portsmouth East B\.North Gallla: Minford
at Kyger Creek: SOuthern at Green and
Eastern at Wahama.

,

Sahmlay'sOarrws

..

SOuth'NEStem at Buttala. W.Va.

"'

Hannan Trace at Ironton Sl. Joe . and

r------o.......:---..;.....
1lOWNI NG-CHILDS.
-AND

MULLEN INSURANCE

Trophy not once but twice.
Fry's Hawkeyes wlll be trying to
stopByarswhenthetwoteamsrneet
In Columbus on Saturday. 'At his
weekly news conference Tuesday,
Fry said he thinks the Buckeye
junior Is a legitimate Helsman
Trophycandldate.
.
"I have never, never In my llfe
seen a comiJinattonofslzeandspeed
like this gily has," Fry sald.
''They're doing a real good jOb of
utlllzlng his abllltles.
"He can bum you deep 4oWD the
middle on a Dy pattern or he can run
r:Ner you or he can juke you and get
around you like Archie Giitttn used
to and then outrun yaa. 'lbey've got
him Usted at 232. I guarantee you
he'U weigh anywhere from 240 to

I

'

has been cnly "fair" so far this year.
"I think the Hetsman TrophY Is
won on the field," said Bruce, wbols
In his sixth seasonal Ohio Statesince
leaving Iowa State. "There's a lot of
'lfs' from here on ln."

113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381 992·2342 .;
'

'

FREE

'

.

Digital Desk Calendar Clock ::
With Each Pair" of 501 LEVI'S ·,
JUNIORS, MISSY &amp; MEN'S

250.''
Byars rushed for !I! yards on nine
carrieS In Iowa's 20-14 victory rNer
Ohio State last year before leaving
with an ankle Injury In the second
quarter. He Is averaging 164 yards
rushing In Ohio State's two games

.GOOD THRU SEPT. 22
WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

'•
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_

thiS season.
Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce,
· app&amp;rently trying to doWnplay
Byars' remarks atlout tbellelsman.
told reporters his star running blll:k

BOB ASHlEY

fl;;;;~::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~

WhUe at Meigs, Ashley led the
to majorascollege
level.
upper body
' SEOAL
In passing
a freshman
but was delayed much PI Qlll ess his
sophomore year due to the Meigs
teachers' strike that cancelled
football.
· Ashley returned to earn allSEOAL firSt team hOnors as · a
junior. Injuries hampered Ashley
his senior year, but the signal-caller
still managed to earn honorable
mention honors his final year at ·
Meigs. Ashley also played basketball where he owns the school's
all-time rebounding mark.
Ashley followed the footsteps of
hls lather, who was one ol.
Middleport High School's t6p alltime quarterbacks. The older Ashley, currently Meigs' track and golf
coach, signed to play with Marshall
In both football and basketball, but
a severe leg Injury In his first year
wiped out his playing career.
Utah, whiCh plays In the Western
Athletic Conference, will play at
Ohio Stadium In the 1986 season
against one of the countcy's top
teams, Oblo State. l\Bhley should be
a fllll·ttme player by that tlme.
, Thts RaSOR, the Utesopeaedwlth
a victory over Weber State, then
dropped a 42-40 heartbreaker to
Wuhlngton State, I! PAC-lO.scbool.
I...8st Saturday the Utes .battled
the Tenlll!!lllee Volunteers. On
Utah's final playing date (barring
bowl iames I, the Utes wlll take on
the country's current number eight
ranked team, Brigham Young. _
Brigham Youllli Is the defending
champion ol the WAC and annually
one Of the. country's best teams.
Ohio State met the Cougars In the
19112 Holiday Bowl with the Buckeyes playlrig awesome behind the
runntna ot Tim Spencer to post a
47-17 win.

SPECIAL Of THE WEEK

did a good job defensively.
Although Hannan Trace's game
against Green ended24-24 third year
maCh Brett Wilson feels both teams
played weD. "We were prepared ~o
stop Green's passing game but their
running attack hurt us," WilsOn
sald. .
··
This week, the Wildcats, 2-0-ltace
the Irontdn St. Joe Flyers on
Saturday night at Tank Stadium Jn
Ironton. St. Joe Is 2-1 after an
opening loss at Kyger Creek. in
order to win, Wllson believes his
team must contain running back
David Lutz and shutdown Rawllngs,
another back. "It ~bould be an
Interesting game, Wilson commented.
SVAC Slanclli.p

the exception of backup tackle

:Ex-Marauder plays
.:. strong safety at Utah ·.

...

,'

against what Coen calls a blg and
physical Falcon squad.
Minford dumped Portsmouth
Notre Dame last Friday night, ~­
The Falcons use an awesome
groundattackledbyBenCronlnand
Ray Hammonds. Cronin had two
touchdowJIS and 110 yards rushing
against theTltanswhlleHammonds
compUed 66 yards In 10 carries. The
Falcons took advantage of several
. Tlt,an l!listakes to buUd an early
lead against Notre Dame.
Two Bobcats returned to the
. starting lineup last Friday rilght to
he)p KC defeat the Wlldcals from
Waterford, 32~. Chuck Vogel wbo
missed the previous game against
Wahama, recorded a tine offensive
night with m yards I11Shfng whlle
Anthony Kitchen, a senior, contributed two pass Interceptions lnclud·
lng a ll yard TD return. Detensl\rely, Kitchen, Barry llllatlhews
and Brian Johnson were credited
with a good performance.
Bl8oas quick, tough
Southwestern coach Jack James
says he team also faces a 'quick and
tough owonent' 1n the Btsons trom
Buffalo this weekend. Buffalo uses a
slot I offmse and throws a lotc On
defense the Blsons are known to use

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) -Add
IowaCoachHaydenFrytothepmks
of the Keith Byars admiration
society.
Byars Is the 6-!oot-2, 232-pound
Ohio State tailback who ted the Blg
Tell Conference In rushing and
scoring last tall and who recently
said he wants to win the Helsman

Paul Wolfe
$-8, alpaand
Sophoi1WN e tadde

-.

'

'

face rugged foes Friday

Iowa coach admires OSU's Byars

. .'

"Oh, for ·-wn'a Mlcaal YGII'IW .not QOinl fO
aMd your ~tW!rlw ,.,_.AGAIN, are you 'I"

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wedneaday. Saptember 19. 1984

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AVE

SOME
,fUN
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�·----....... .
Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

I

From the Wild

.
By KEITH WOOD

Meigs County
.
Game Prolelllor
:. The 984 Ohio hunting seasons Is
·underway once again. Last Friday,
the squirrel season opened In OHio
and extends through Dec. 15.
Hunting hours
are one-ha lf hour
before sunrise to
one-half hour after sunset. The
dally bag limit Is
four and posses- "Y.;;..i~
slon limit Is eight
after the first day. According to
Keith Morrow, Assistant Wildlife
Management Supervisor for Wild·
life District Four, the mass crops
this year appear to be generally
good. Acorn crops are good, but
may be spotty In some areas with
lilckory and buckeye crops good
t!Jroughout most of the region.
• Reporis show that squirrels are
well Into · cutting hickory a nd
bUckeye at this time. Squirrel
population appears to be good In
most areas at the present time.
Heavy foliage may make. spotting
tile squirrel~ difficult. but this may
.be advantageous because the sql!lr·
~Is may have some problem
spotting you.
Hunters a re reminded that you
should continue your landownerfarmer relationship by getting
~tten permission to hunt on their
lauds. Throughout Ohio each year
we are continually seeing our
landowners posting their property
with NO HUNTING signs because .
someone didn't take a little time
and respect to get permission.
, It Is the law, so do workalongwlth
the landowner-farmers and treat
them with the .respect that they do
deserve for their continued support
It) hunting and trapping of Ohio.
Hunter Safety
• In further activities, the [?.aak
..yatton Club (Ken Amsbary chap-

I

ter) and Dlvtslon of Wildlife
recently con&lt;!ucted an Ohio Hunter
Safety course. The attendance of
young as well as adults was
overwhelming. The classes were
conducted by Ohio Hunter Safety
Instructors Joe and Greg Bailey
and me. Classes consisted of hunter
ethics, gun safety, shooting of the
.22 rifle, archery, miazleloader,
a nd personal safety In the outdoors.
This course was a great success and
hopefully a lifetime educational
experience for those Involved.

Nallonal Observance
In recognition of National HuntIng a nd Fishing Day, the lzaak
•Walton Club will be conducting a
day of various outdoor activities
Sunday, Sept. 22, with a number of
demonstrations and displays honorIng this day. National Hunting and
Fishing day Is set aside to the
sportsme!l to furthe r educate
youngsters In outdoor recreation.
The day's activities will begin
with _registration at 9 a.m. The
location Is the Royal Oak Park
north of Pomeroy off SR 7.
Instructions on Gun Safety and
Hunter Ethics will be provided by
the Division of Wildlife. Turkey
calling, fish filleting, Ice fishing,
trapping, canoeing, black powder,
archery, trap-shooting and reloadIng demonstrations will be conducted by club members, and other
groups or lildlvlduals who are
experts respectively In their field.
Trapper Course
A Trapper Education Course wUI
be ·conducted In Meigs County for
first time trappers. The course
covers trapping and wildlife man~gement, trappers'
responsiblll·
ties, trapping ethics, methods,
equipment and pelt preparation.
The location will be 11t the lzaak
Walton Farm near Chester Oct. 7
from noon to 6 p .m. Pre·
registration Is required so contact
John Hetzler at 378-6228.

'-

By Alloclated Prell8
It started as possible, then the
possible became probable. The
probable became obvioo,ls and the
obvious, at last, became certain.
The race that never was ended
Tuesday when the Detroit Tigers
shut out the Milwaukee Brewers 3-0
and won the American Leaglle's
Eastern Division. The 1!* Tigers,
with their record-breaking 35-5
stan, became the first team since .
the 1927 Yankees to leadtromwlreto
wire.
.
They turned the traditionally
dramatic AL East race Into a
summer- longwaltlnggam~. Only in
Its end was there any drama to the
story.
_
"Magic Number- Zero" blazed
Tiger Stadium's electronic scoreboard when Wtllle Hernandez
struck out Jim Sundberg to give
Detroit Its first division crown since
1972. .
.
Several hundred fans burst
through a line of stadium security
and Detroit pollee officers, Uterally
stealing bases and touching home
.
plate.
Players had begun sprinting from
the Tiger bullpen toward the &lt;logout
before the Inningended to escape the
Impending onslaught, tossing souvenir baseballs Into the stands as
!hey ran.
"This has been my No. 1 team as
far as I'm concerned," said Detroit
Manager Sparky Anderson, who
guided the Cincln!latl Reds to five
tltlesandtwoworldchamplonships.
None of the other AL scores

JACKSONVILLE - 'Du1ing a
non-league tri-match with Crooksville, Trimble, the Eastern- Eaglettes twice fell to defeat, dropping
their season record to 1-7.
Eastern first faced Crooksville
a nd got a great start behind seven
straight "aces" by senior server
Lea Anri Gaul, the score 7-0.

Major Hoople's

: Pigskin expert says
. OSU will edge Hawkeyes
&gt;

By Major Amoa B. Hoople

The Mlami Hurricanes-Florida
State aame il tou1• to pick. (Ab,

Ecad, friends! If you like show-

..

.. dow•IHte tbey come. Tbeleare Ute

,.

ool'- fooiiNIII
make for big winners -

ol

.. losen.

..
~

..
¥

:
•
•.
•
:
.~~

•
;

,

:
•
.,.
..
•
~
,.
'

fllllt!f l~lt

and bigger

Let's start with another one of our
famoUJ HOople Upset Specials.
Quarterbacks, as usual, will be the
cenler of attention In the Ohio StateIowa battle for control or the Big Ten.
Each team bas a sooct QB.
Mike Tomczak of Ohio State will be
seeing the first 1l11nificant acUon
since he broke bil right tee some four
montbs back. Tomczak is a well-seasoned vet who quickly should feel
right at home again. He will have
super runner Keith Byan (6-2, 230) to
luond off to in tbe tou1h apots.
Chuck Lon&amp; or Iowa is one of the
finest passers to come alq in yean.
In running back· par excellence Ronnie Harmon, he has Rood company.
So, In a same that won't be decided
until the last five minutes, we- kaff·
kaff! - give you the Buckeyes to
upset Iowa, 28·24 Har-rumph!
It will be an old-fashioned Western

:~~~:~:sk~rs ::v~~e ::eeR!e~~~~:
• meet the host UCLA Bruins. HUJker I·

• back Jeff Smith is a worthy successor
: to · Helsman winner Mike Rozier.
.. UCLA has an bls-tlme passer in 6-t ,
: 21 0-pound Steve Bono. h wUI be the
• acintlllaUng ground attack of tile
' Cornhuskers against the "big bombs"
: of Bono. Th Hoople huncb Is the
... infantry will win. Make it Nebraska,
.. - 3J-2t.ln a real thriller, Um·kumphl
.. The Georgia Bulldogs vs. the Clem; son Tigen is a contest grid e1pert1
-. consider with - hak-kaU - lrepida• tlon. Going head-to..bead, Clemson
; won 13-3 in '81 ; Georgia won 13·7 in
,.. '8% ; and they played t, a 16-16 stan• doll In '13. JoYe! They doo't come any
' cloaer than that.
: This year'! Georgia has the home.. field advantage. But ClemsOn has
• Mike Eppley. a left-hande4 passinB
: magician witb a hot record as a start• ill&amp; QB. The Hoople buacb is thai he
: will lead Clemson to a win, 28-22.
Har·rumph!

~ennedy,

Miami. Let me dl!U"'', dear rqclero,

to thank one and all for congratulatJou; ....w.d ........ ia

u.. -

a

~atrgrounds.

· The 55-year-old Flortdlan said
chest x-rays at Ohio State Unlver·
slty smwed Carl's Bird was 90
~cent cured of a two-month-old

.

reserve!. here-Monday evening.
Offense proved to be the name ot
the game as both teams recorded
high Yardage outputs and much

IJUSUe. Eastern's ~ Barber
· broke the scoring lee as he hauled
down a 65 yard louchoown pass
from quarterback Bryan nu,st.
purst ran In for the extra "points.
Kyger Creek came back on Its
next series lo tie the score at 8-8.
j\ctlon remained limited wltb each
team trading po!IIEIBioh before
readllng
Beginning the
fourth quarter Bryan Durst again
~nnected with his received Kevin
!'Aorrls for a 37 yard toUehdown
play. A Durst-to-Barber PAT pass
was ~uccesatui and the score was

.,_yd!rt.

har-rumph!) Tbe Hurri·
canes-SemiiiQies c:lalh It aolng to be a
beaa.ty with lana p111e1, hard running
and trkt plays. When the lut whiltle
blows, Florida State will have
lllunned the Miami HurrlcaneJ. FSU
will win a )1-14 aockor. Um-kumph!

Elsewhere, it's A•burn to top
Soulhern Millilalppl, U-10; BYU to
hang It on Hawaii, 35-lS; Air Foree lo
stop U.toh, )li-28; and ~ton College .
to beat Nortll Carolina, 11·20.
Now ao oa with my forecast:
Saturday, Sept. !2
Air ForcE' :15 Utah 2R
Arizona State- 31 SouthM'n Cal 21
Arkansas 22 Tulsa Jfl
Auburn 24 Sout~rn M l.sstsslppl 10
BowllnJl (il't'(ln :ll Miami { Ohio~ 17

BYU :J5 Hawaii 1.l
Boston Col~ 154 North Carolina !:1
Ca lifornia 14 On:&gt;gon 6
Cf'n tral Mlchl~an .'1' Wes!('f'n M\('hiRan 14

a('mson 711 GeorRta 22
Colgat(' 36 Lehigh 26
Cori'K'Il 26 Prtnreton 21
E:asl Carolina :JJ Ceorflla Souti'K'rn 11
F1orkta State.&gt; 31 Miami f F1orkta 1 ll
F'rf:tsno Statr 10 l.onJ? Beach Stal(l7
Grorl!la Treh :II Clladel 14
Hatvard 24 Columbia 14

seeond

Holy CI'O!Is 22 Massachus(&gt;fts 12
Indiana 17 Northwe!littrn 14

Iowa State 2R Texas A&amp;M 21
Illinois 26 Michigan State :X.

Kansas

~alP

17 TCU :1)

Kentucky :ri Tulane lJ
l.SU 32 Arl7.ona 14

•

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'11~-i1 .M6 13

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SPECIALS•••

L ...._ GB

New York '

81
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KaJw.u City tJICklan l41 11 CalilonU
tzatla lUI, Ul!
C1!wland clk'ltc~~ 10.MJ . at Seank'

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Mlsslsstppl StatE' 14 IAulslana Tech 10

4l.anAIIon 15-91, 1n1

Missouri 21 Mls~IMippi Stale L"i
Na"1' II Vtrginla 21 .

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Mlhn*" IT Tt:rulio. ·,n,

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URSDA. CHOICERBONELEtSS

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Lunch M·e-ats •• .1!·$}39

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Plnllt:a&amp;rJitl cMcWIDiaml lf).tOI at Chl-

YELLOW

~··
PNII·
delphia cCu1ton 12-71, 1n1
Cb'haad c'l'llbs HI at Atlanta
tMct&amp;ar11y 1-L-,1 , ID I
Mantl'fal 4~ f.141 IT ~ . l..oals
tCI:JI 8-J)J, 4111
1.a
~~ 3-71 at .. ~
tKMs~Pf'r 16-1), 4ft\
lin P'rlaWo tftol*alon 1·141 at San

nRO
NfiWlllltcli&amp;
Ymt cDrartlq 12·71 al

Onio.ns • • • • • • • • • • • • • .69'
3 LB. BAG

.u.-

'

,.....,.._

.

~t..,.lt.ll.tnl
.

...._ ..
s. , _ a t

BROUGHTON

~

IIIOillfiO

.
$}59
2o/o Milk • • • • • • • • • •

ld Aftll!ltllt ..... Ill
CldiNIH• AIIIMI.tR)

OnlV--

Manlrfrtlll • • ~ (h)

GALLON

. Transactions

_._
I'""IUL

I - . ....

of the Cincinnati Reds Tuesday Cannelo Martinez' lead-off single In
make Kennedy more contldent the sewnd oft slarlerJoe Price, 7-12,
about the Padres' playoff chances.
and gave Uravecky au the room he
Kennedy's 14th homer of the needed.
The victory reduced the Padres'
season brought the Padres a game
.
magic
numher to four with Houston
closerlothelrtlrstNatlonaJLeague
and flvewtlh Atlanta.
W~ championship. It followed

LANGUAGE • VOICE • STUTTERING
SPEECH DELAY • HEARING IMPAIRED

su DleiO

•

Jackson 46 WavNiy 22
Wahama 21 EastPrn 'a&gt;
13 Southern 12
Ironton St. Joe 12 Hannan Tral'l' 6
Minford :!l Ky...,- c..,.k t3
North Gallla 22 Ponsmouth East 6
Ashland 16 POrtsmouth 14
Buffalo 28 SouthWI'Stern 2'2

304-675-1244

'

.. L N . -

"*"'&lt;0

.13

PAMELA ADIINS1 M.A.

---·--

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

•

NNnONALLUIKII!
~--

Fairmont 7 Athens ll

Now Offering With Therapist

• •• •••

~ $··-1 - ~
-9 '. ·

Steak/Roast.
••••
.

•......,..o..

...

49¢

LB.

CIIO:ato&gt;
~·3 0
l&lt;oMu C1ly
10. Callt1mla
"'"""'
t
CloYeland a
Oakln~,-....2

PICKENS HARDWARE

'

FRESH PORK BUn .

\

BDitOa a Tcnalo :1 .
New Y011111: Bltlmlrf. 2

FURNACE FILTERS

MIXED

SUPERIOR

2
2~
'
•

6R

11-wot\, ~ ",'':'1io.m.

AND

LB.

-.•

srt 1i

"'. 81

TfXU 1,

15~

$}29

Ro:a·st • •••

Fryer Parts

-.v&lt;UMH~~:

LB.

'

,\

.,.... .....
-...--

Mempllls State a. ·a nctn natl 17
· Mich~an 'l1 Wisconsin 12

Ear, Nose and Throat Specialist

~ ch-uck

Majon

Cllltqo IBannlltfl' 12·101 It MlniiNGia

JOHN. A. WADE, M.D.

USDA CHOICr

-,

8altlrnore (lbkHdc;er J8.10) aT New
vcn 4eo.1ey a.t,, rn1

~a n

•

Scoreboard

'12-141, (ft)

Ironton 44

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES IN EFFECT THRU SAT., SEPT. -22', 1984·

Another Durst- to-Barber PA 'r
·Pushed the score to 24-8.
· Kyaer Creek, not to be denied,
still had hopes at gaining the victory
·with a late score, which'siood to be
the final, 24-16. The young EagleS
are coached by Don Elchlager.
Bryan Durst was commended lor
his cruCial passing pme as were .
receivers Morrts and Barber. .

With theaa Home

N.t.-aJka :n UCLA 24
Nevada-Las Vegas~ Wichita StatE' 14
Nevada·Reno :ti Bois(&gt; State 11
•
N9(1hern Dllno\s .f) Kent State :ll
Notl't' Dame l'i Colorado U
Ohlo Sl 2R lowo :II
· Ohio Untv 32 Eastern MIC'hiRan 7
Oklahoma 21 Baylor 10
Penn.&lt;iytvanla .1"\ l'lA11muuth :II
PlttsburRh :fi T£1mp\(' 7
Purdlw&gt; 32 Mlnrnota 21
Ritt 17 Lamar 14 ·
San Jose State '!T Stanford 21
South Carolina 31 Duke 21
SMl!' oMl North Texas Stat(' 22
Syrd&lt;:"US(&gt; 21 RutgPrs-18
TmnE"SseP 28 Anny 6
TPxas Tech :11 New Mexico 7
VandcrbUt :15 Kansas 14
Wake Forest 3.1 South Carolina Stall' 11
Washln~on 'Il Houston 17
Washington State 42 Ball Stall' 12
West Carolina · ]) VMI 7
W~t Virginia ID Maryland 17
Wyoming 21 ()r{'gon Slate I4
Yalo10 Brown 7
Frldoy'• H l p - G....,.
Gallipolis 22 Boyd County !ll
Pt. Pk&gt;aS&lt;~ n t 24 HurricarK" 12
Ripley 21 Huntt~on East 12
Coal Grove 24 WheE'Jcrsbur2 14
ChrSaprakC' 14 Fairland 6
Oak Hill 14 Symm&lt;S Valley 0
Rock Hill L1 SOuth Polnl 12
Mcl~ 24 WellsiM 12

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

touchdown pass to Kevin Morris,
IJI'
touctm,WP ot the ~Y­

ricana -

Football II a came of klcldll&amp;. _ .
inc and runninc. Tbf' AriJoaa StateSouthern CIJ game will feature Ule
fint two. In Lall Zendejas, Arizoria
State have one of the 1rutat kiekens
who .... booted a field coal. The
Trojans, meaawb.ile, .U.ve QB Sean
Salisbury 41redl•&amp; their attack (and
AII·Americo Unebacker Jock Del Rio,
too). Look for a down-to-the-wire finlab - with ArizonA State winding up
on top 30.21. Kafi-Kaff!

We Reserve The Riaht To
Limit Q~a ntities

now 16-8.
' -Momenta latercamet~dectstve
' IICOTe ot t)le game, a 65 yard

after tbe Hoople System ...... the, er,
esteemed Hoople System - picked
Mlchlpn to upset tbe then·No. 1 Hur·

~~~;;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;~
Little Brown Jug
Speech and Language Therapy
raee set Thursday

• DELAWARE, Ohio (AP ) -Carl
•
Allen Is so encouraged with x-ray
results of his ailing Utile Brown Jug
($try, Carl's Bird, that he believes
the colt can win the middle jewel of
PJcing's Triple Crown Thursday.
· Allen sat In · a lounge chair
Tuesday near Carl's Bird stall and
tllked about the prospects of
Winning the $366,TI7 Jug at the
Delaware (O hio ) County

CHESHIRE - Eastern's Junior
vanity football teem ICOl'ed a 24-16
grid triumph over Kyger Creek's .

WillER COLD I

Dravecky pace 2-0 victory

CINCINNATI (AP) - Every
tlmeaSanDiegoPadresstarterhas
a good game In September, catcher
Terry Kennedy feels a little better
about October.
· Perfomiances like Dave Dra·
Vecky's three-hitter In 2-0 shutout

llu'Oat Infection•

troi&gt;ksvUie notched just one point
on Its next try before Eastern's
Krist! Gaddis gave EHS an 11-1
score. Eastern tallied just one more
point the rest of the game, falling to
defeat at the hands of a great
Crooksville comeback, 15-12. East·
ern dropped the second game 15-7.
Gaul paced Eastern with 11,
Gaddis added seven, and Beverly
Wigal one. Blooser and Pontious
had seven and six respectively lor
the winners.
Trimble's lightning quick floor
game caught Eastern's defense
standing as It claimed consecutive
15-6, 15-10 triumphs .
Senior Tara Guthrie led Eastern
with four points, while Gaddis,
Gaul, Wigal and Kristl Hawk each
added three.
Davis led the winners with 13
serving points.

Sentinel-Page

The

top KC,·24-16

Tuesday were very close. Kansas homer and the 28th by Harold r-;:::======::::::=~
City creamed California 10-0, Bai· Baines, who hit his fourth home run
ton crushed Toronto 10-3, New York In two nights.The homers erased a
The DaUy Sentinel
trounced Baltimore 10-2, Seattle 3-0 deficit and Minnesota catcher
(\JSPS 14:1-NO)
beat Cleveland 6-3, Oakland de- Tim Laudner's seventh-Inning
A DJvlaloa ot Multlmedlu, Inc.
feated Texas 5-2, and, In the night's throwlngen;or allowed Julio Cruz lo
Publish('(( every aht&gt;rnoon, Monday~
squeaker, Chicago beat Minnesota score the tie-breaking run.
through Friday. 111 Court St., y the
struck
out
six
and
did
not
Nelson
5-3.
Ohio VaiiPY PubUshlng Company t Mul·
tlmedla, Inc., Pomt;'roy. Ohio ~!'1769, h.
walk a batter. Of the 19 batters he
Royals 10, Anpl8 0
992·2156. Second class postage paid at,
faced,
he
retired
the
first
nine
and
Pat Sheridan drove In three runs
Pomeroy, Ohio.
·
and Steve Balboni and Buddy last nine consecutively.
Member: ThE&gt; A.ssoc lated Press. In ·
The White Sox, who beat the
Biancalana cracked two-run holand Dally Preu .Association and the'
AmPrlcan NewspaJ)('r Publishers As ··
mers while Dane Iorg added a Twins 7-3 Monday, had not won two
scicla.tlon , National Adv£&gt;rtlslng nel''·e·, 1
cons,ecutlve games since .'\ug. 6-7.
bases-€1Ilpty blow. Kansas City,
sentativ~. Branham Newspapc&gt;r
V anllea It, Ortolea 2
733 Third Avenue, · Nt'W York.
alone In first place for only the third
York 10017.
Mike Pagliarulo~slll"lllld slam and
day this season, has Its largest le;lll
Don Mattingly'~ two-run homer
of the year- two gaines.
~TM.l~ITER: ~nd address chan~
to The Daily Sentinel. Jll COUI1 St., Po"Our pitching has been good all ltlghllghted a seven-run New York
rnt'roy. Ohio 4!'17W.
ye&lt;U". We just haven't been scoring secondlnnlng,OscarGambleadded
SUBSCRIPTION RA~I!S
a sOlo shot to open the third as New
runs," Ba!bonl said.
By Catrrler or Motor Route
half,game
lri
front
of
York
moved
a
Brei Saberhagen, 9-10, Joe Beck·
ono Week ...... .... :...... ........... ....... $1.10
Battlmore Into third place In the
One .Month ....................... .. .. ...... $4.80.
with and Dan Qutsenberry pitched
One Year ................. ................ S!\7.20
East.
the Royals' fifth comb)lled shutout
SINGLE COPV
·
llllattlngly also hit his 40th double
PRICES
of the season, helped by five double
['ally ............ : ................. "~'. 25 Cents
of the season, tbemostlora Yankee
plays turned on the Angels. ·
slnceTonuny Heinrich hit 421n ~
Subscribers not d('sirlng to pay the car· •
Red Sox 10, BIU!! Jays 3
rler may rPmlt !n advancP direct to
Todd
Cruz,
normally
an
Infielder,
Dwight Evans slugged a pair of
ThP Daliy S&lt;&gt;ntl n(l\ on a :l , 6o r 12 month
pitched
a
perfect
bottom
of
the
two-run homers, Tony Annas and
basiS. Cr('dlt will bE&gt; ~ven carrier each
mnnlh.
Rich Gedman hit one each and Mike eighth lor Baltimore.
Mariners II, Indians 3
Easler added a solo clout. Annas'
No subscrlptlpns h}' m;~ll Pf'rmltled In ·
AJvlnDavis
ripped a double and a
towns 'wherf' homf' carrl('f service Is
homer ·was his major leagueavailable.
two-run triple and Phil Bradley
leading 39th. .Evans ran his total to
M11ll SuhRc:rl ptlon t~
29, while Easler hit his 24th and added a run-scoring double. Davis'
lnHide Ohio
two-out triple occured when CleveGedman his 22nd.
13 WN'kS ........ ........... ............ ... $14.56
26 \\'('('kS," ., .. ,, .......... ,., ........ ,, ., $29.]2\
The Blue Jays were officially land center fielder Joe Carter
~2 WIX'kS .................................. W!.24
.
unsuccesstully
ti-led
for
a
shoestring
eliminated from'the race before the
Ouhdde Ohio
conclusion of the game by the catch.
13 Wroks ................................. $15.60·
:!6 Wr&lt;'kS .................................. $31.20
Right-hander Mike Moore, 6-16,
Tigers' victory.
!tl w...ks ....... ....................... .... $59.110'
ended
a
personal
seven-game
losing
White Sox 5, Twins 3
'
' havP srrv l&lt;:"(' .Prob\('ms call. our_
H you
Gene Nelson, 3-5, threw six . streak. Moore, who gave up eight
servlcf' drsk at 9!12-2156tx&gt;rur&lt;' 6:00 P. ·
innings of one-hit relief lo gain the hits and a walk, held Cleveland · M. Monduy thru Frid ay.
victory, backed by Ron Kittle's 30th hitless for 4 2-31nnings.

Eastern gals lose two games

••

• Pieaio Proploet
•

Young Eagl~··· ...
~~~$~~~~e~~~~

Sparky's Tigers clinch AL East Di':isioq

Har·rumph!

:

Wednetdav. September 19. 1984

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BROUGHTON·

LOS AN&lt;lf:U&gt;I OODGI:RS-ftdllrfd

M"""'
BooPI. Jof - - Motlf\Y
Mora. Rail ~. and Mark er....

•

•••

:•
:

;

New Fruit Corners® Fn~it Bars i
Just changed the face of fruit forever. :
They're 100% natu~l . 100% delicious.
Made with mal fruit. Fruit Bars come in
grape, cherry, strawberry, and orang&amp;pineapple. Just give someone a Fruit Bar
:==:::;;:;::z::lo; and watch a bite
turn into a smile.

...._.

,

M-Apprvvtd tt. ft.?oc..allcllll d. thtllld., lnndllw to N~•

,__

~-

ARMOUR LUNCH MEAT

$.}
09
Cottage
.Treet ................ .
12

'

'

-

.

•

FOLGER'S INSJANT

.

$

FLAVORITE

9
9
$129
COff.ee ....... =2~ ••• 2 . Ice ·Cream ••••••••
'

;

V2 GALLON

I

THAJIII YOU CHERRY

TUNA

PIE· Fllllt4G

•

210z. ·

-'89(

Umit .3 Pltan

If Ita Fruit Cornerr. it's made from real fruit.

oz.

Ulllit ~hr.- Per 'Cut'-r

GMII Only AI Powtl'a

W1ter or 011

1.5 Oz. Can

59~

TIDE DETERGENT

i11 oz.$·6 29
OHer hplm

s.t~

Po'!~l'o

Sept. 22.

~UGAR

SLB.Bac$149 _
Limit Ono Per Cuslomor

Limit o .. '" CustO..er
. Goell Only At

.SHURFINE

m3

Good Only At Powoll's
Offor bpim Sot., Stpt. 22, 1914

�- - ------·-- ..

•

,,
'' ...

~~~~!:!;~~~1~9~._!1!98!14!..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~~~~~~~~0~h~io!,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __2The~Daily Sentinei- Page-7

''

Pom&amp;rov-Middlepon, Ohio

Page 6- The Dailv Sentinel

Gin ·
CERTIFICATE
·. 1r Eviryttay Low Prices ·

WIN SlOO
*4 Convenient Locations
*Weekly Specials
•~oney Saver Items

AT
1·9 '' COL0·
1
·
TV
... ·wEEKDAYS

WIN $100 FOODLAND GIFT
CERTIFICATE EACH WEEK
Foodland employees •nd
Immediate family not eli-

eible.

t

'

*WE WELCOME
•USDA Choice Meats
FEDERAl FOOD
*fender Fresh Produce STAMPS &amp; WIC

··wE SELL
MONEY ~
ORDERS

8 A.M. ·- 10 P.M.
·oPEN SUNDAY
10 A.M. - P.M.

'

•

ATHENS - Oblo University's
. Communlverslty ProVam Is otrer- ·.
lnl two dance ~w.es this fall: .
Dance Club and Introductory Clog·
glng Workshop.
Dance Club offers a great
evening out for couples. Partld·
pants have the chance to beCcme
fnQre comfortable · dancing with
their own partner and others whlle
learning new steps and rouiiDes for

BIG ·BEND',r,,: ;·
'

'

'. •.

'

'

FOODLAND~~
700 West Main St.
Pomeroy,. Ohio···
'

PI\. 9.92·2891

'

'

.'t........
.

cl~ses

planned at Ohio University

swln&amp;, fox trot, tango, polka, waltz, Bli11room from 7·8 p.m. for Berock, 111111 country western. Also, ginners, S-9 p.m. for lnterntedlates,
dance partieS !e&amp;turtng profes· and 9-10 p.m. for Advan&lt;;ed:The fee
slonal bands are an option.
Is $tO per coup!~.
Gerald Powell, the Instructor,
Introductory Clogging WorkShOp
teaches ballroom~anctng to adults will Include aU the basic moveseven nights a· ~k throughout . ments of Clogging, a dance style for

southeastern Ohio and West Vlrgl·
nia. The ~lass meets Mondays,
Sept, 17-Nov. ~. In Baker Center

Bluegrass and . Country music.
Participants wtU learn three of four
step routlnes and simple line
dances and circle mixer dances.

'

WINNERS

'

,,

MARK nLLIS

DRAWl NG. EVERY SATURDAY AT 8:00 P.M.

Clogging, dance

Wedneadey. September 19, 1984r
.
.

~-

TERESSA .CAMP

NEEO NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN· .NO PURCHASE REQUIRED.
GOOD ONLY AT BIG BEND FOODLAJID

WIN 1 9'' COLOR TV

DRAWING SATURDAY
OtTOIER 27 914

-~---------~-----------------1I
I.

ENTRY FO,RM

•

NAME---------------------------ADORES$ ___________________
PHONE - - - - , - - - , . - - - - - ' - - - - - " - - - - DRAWING EVERY SATURDAY AT 8:00 P.M .
BIG BEND FOODLAND ONLY

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
1
I
I

I

-----------I

DEf)IQ~~ED' WITH

FRESH PORK

MOUNTAIN BRAND

YOU IN MIND .. .

LOIN ROAST

$}39~:

JUMBO BOLOGNA

Ls.89¢

-

In the' service

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS .;. Betret,.
Health Club will meet Tbunday,
l: 15 p.m.,. at the borne of Mrs.
• ', •MlldredJacobs,LaureiCIHf. I
•!
··". f
• MIDDLEPORT - 1be ~
dleport Cl\lld ConseJ:Vatlbn
League~ meet'I'I)unday, 7: :JI
. p.m., ·a t tlle.Oido ~--otrl!:i!.
ca~. Wray, Dl8trict Pll!iddent.
' Wllllnstali' ilely 'cifftCers.' .. ·
'·

'

'

;.

SA'IURDAY : _

''

Natillaal
: hunting add $1!11 day, ~.'

'r

~

.

~. reloading.

flsbiDlt,

: trap ' ~. canoeing, 111111.
: •blaCk·power; open ID publl~.
·,·
: • MIDDLEPORT- Revelators
; ··of Albai:JY Will J11 e1ctt a musical•

, : : progratn at 7: :JI p.m. Satul'!laY·

· · • at Ash Street Fr!leWIIl Bap!W
: Church In Middleport; . ~KJlillc
; Invited.

$11

~·
Grandparents are Mrs. Dorotha
Neitzllng, Lincoln Hlll, Pomeroy,
111111 the laie Dick Neutzllrig, and Mr..
and Mrs. RDbert Crow, S}Tacuse.
Mr; 111111 Mrs. Crow have two other
chlldren, Meredith, five and James
Wesley, two.

· SUNDA:Y ·.' ·

.'

Ralph MWTayo(Roanoke, W.Va.
was a recent guest of Mr. an&lt;! Mrs.
Douglas Circle.
.

Mn. Ethel Orr of Chesier was a

anniversary ofthetacWty; IDIIrs
of the facWty, refrellbments, and
I, ''9Jtertainrnml; public lilvl1l&gt;d.
' : 'Ofllclal opening ci!temmy at 1
-:-

Staats

STI?,AJUs

HAITLEY SHOES
21 0 EAS1 MAIN

POMEROY

~rices

Effective Thru Sept. 23, 1984

Tomlin

Carmel area
'
· personal notes

Saturday guest of the Robert Lee
family.

~. .

t

pleted basic military servlce train·
lng at Fort Dlx, N.J.
Dul1ng the tralnlng,lheyrecelved
Instruction in drUl and ceremonies,
weapons, map reading, tactics,
rnWtary courtesy, military justice,
lint ald and Arnly history anti
traditions. .
Army National Guard Pvt. Mark
They are 1\oHchael L.Colllns,sonof
A. Staats, son of Raymond E. and
Nancy and qeorge M . . Collins,
Jarvls B. Staats of· Rural Route 2,
Reedsville; RobertT.Srutbern,son 'Leon, W. Va., has completed basic
of Robert Sruthern, Middleport, and training at Fort Dlx. N. J .
Ellle Sruthern, Clifton, W.Va.;
During the training, snments
Michael D. Stone, sOn of Renee M. received Instruction In artll and
StOne, Middleport, and Alexander ceremonies, weapons, map read·
Glllles, Jr., son of Alexander and lng, tactics, military courtesy,
. Rose Mary Gillies, HendersOn, · military justice, first aid, andAnny
W.Va.
history and traditions,

Alnnan Timothy D. Tomlin, son
of Sarah E. Jarrell of Rutland, has
been assigned to Keesler Air Force
Base, Miss., after completing Air
Force basic training.
During the six weekS at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special training In hyman
relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward

ACTIFED TABLETS
'

'

Nasel
DiCongtstanl
Antihistamine
1.2 TAILETS
lEG. S2.51

':

'

'

• p.m. .

.

I

; .,:

~

'

CLIFTON, W.Va: -

.•
~

~

ONLY

Vocal

• IKJbllc lnvl~.

... ~y~~&gt;~AJSI

r

.

'.
:Revival

.·

Clip. this a'd and Save $10.00

Unicap

.

OIILY

•'
.~ , , B!tADFORD - ~will be
: • Tevlval !lel"'ces at the Bradford

Any Lady's lOK Gold
High School Class Ring

·.. '· ·b..o&amp;A....o.
Olildl of Christ
~
® '
' _._..._
• ' i&gt;IIIIUII,Yo Sept, -. and.,._,_
&lt; through Sept. 28, .at 7 each
' : ,even~Dc· .Da~ Llllll, WIJI!am: ~IOWII. ky., WW be !be !ipellker.
; '!be chureh Ja loCated at the
' COI'IIIII" of County ,Jtoad' 5 and
; ltoute ~ 'l'he 11!11111!: 1B liiVII!!d.

$497

• •:

;.DAR memorial
'
: , LONG

2 oz.
lEG. 49'

I

•

Bal'I'OM -

I'

Mrs.
: Rdiert D. A.lbley, reaent of
: Relum JOnaJIIU Melli ,Chap• ter, Dauallten of tile Amerlclln
.Revolution, request• all
' mernben 111111 trlendli ID meet at
tile llad HJU Cemetay at I..Gnl
• Botbll
2 p.m. em 'SunMy, \
' !llpt. 23, for mamorlallei'Yicll
; ... tile late ·Mrs. ~ .
Ha)tiiiD. tile tonner
Wellll. -~~a fiiUIIer
1 I
who dial tw1 ~ Zlln
~. Fla., wis a manber of
' the~ DAR Oeialt-.

• Six beautiful styles to choose from
• Full lifetime warranty
• Prices include special options and
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• Over 200 activities to choose from
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R. JOHNS, LTD.
Offer Expires No~r 30, 1984

at

Cough· Syrup

59C

4

oz~NLY

'

-------- ·

Pharmacy

$7'77
.

, ' ..

CAUON

Ex ral/22/84

Cl!lrln ltlflt. R.Pll,
lonald lllnnlo' R.Ph.
·
.... """ Sat. 1:00 . .... .. 9 p.• •
SuM f0:30 1.111. to 12:30 p.11. 1nd 4 to I p....
PRESCRIPTION$
•
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Pomeroy, otL
Elli loin Sl

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CIGAIDTES
SWisher LohH Phlrti11CY

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$4.39

SWISHER LOHSE

LUUT 2

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COUPON
AU IIAJI:DS

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LIN

121/t Ill. I I 1111.

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COLOGNE

$3.39

NOTEBOOKS
•

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ADaTS I C_HUIEN

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30°/o OFF ·.,

WRIST
' . WATCHES

ATUNE SHAMPOO
01 CONDITIONER

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au Am

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COMPUTE STOCK

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REG.' $2.67

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YOU MUST BRING THIS AD
TO QUALIFY FOR THIS LOW PRICE

• •

·\.~ :Happenings ·..

$139 .

VISINE

.

inualc: by "Saved" at the.Chrlstiall ''Holiness 'fl!bemacle" Cllt· .
ton, w. Va., 7: :JI p.m. Sunday;

HULMANNS

Infant weighted six

POMEROY...:Open_houselto

:

Full
PCMIRd

Mr. and Mrs. James Crow,Rolte
3, fomaoy, are lliiiiWnclng the
blrt)1 or a daughter, Canie Ralee,
_bornMmdayatO'BiellessHospltal,

. 4 p.m. Sjmday at ~
• Health CareP!Dter, 36'1!19 &amp;ck
' 'Springs Road, ID mark ' flf!li

.

·: ' · ··

'

HOTDOGS

Crow
-bir.th. .
.

Eunle Brinker · and Betty Van
Meter attay!ed' the recctt Gainer
reunion hl!ld at the Community
Park near Hebron.

.~

RATH

Four area -res~ts have com·

pi•nds.UOUnces.lllldwas:llloches

, day, 9 a.m. to.3 p.m. at J!QYal
Oak Park by Ken Amsbai'Y
Chapter of Izaak Wahcn_League
• Of Amertl:a; no admission, free
; ' lurx:h and dool' P.rJzes. l'i\CIIIfll
; Includes .s\1!1/ Safety, lurkey
: c&amp;rung, mjidna. turkey c~.

an associate degrei! In applied
science through the Community
Coll~e of the Air Fo!'Ct!.
The airman will · now receive
specialized . Instruction ·In the
communications-electronics systems field.
·

Basic training

AtJiena. ·The

ROYAl. OAK · -

These aren'l just shoes for jeans .. .
these are shoes from Levl'se Shoes &amp;
BoOts. Designed for a sleek. updated
look that complements Ieday's jeans
and sportswear. The Kraion" rubber
boHom Is new, too. with the "high
tech" Influence of the 80's. Try on ·
today;'s Levl'se Shoes &amp; Boots.

�9 1 984

!!~~~ii~~~~~~raiiiBiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiii;iiii~.-.-~.--.==============~v~~~M~·~~~~~~~,7~·J~!!~
Slater birth , :•
. The Rev. and Mrs. WUUam
:
Slater, Jr. of Findley, ~tilt !
birth of a son, D}'lan Clarke, Sept. :If :
at a Findley mspttal. 'lbe haVf·!

ol 11M at the IarmEr ~
~ 111 r--.oy with leadler,
the late Rll!ph Sp eallel'. The
.IJ"OUP mdudee, lroat, fram left,
J - Weyawnlller, CJuirle8
· Dant, Euame Fllenbl!cll. CJia..
tie&amp; Melalwi, lllmuel Reubea,
Robert .Wolle, Paul BurcheU,
Mlloll SOOoll, Robert Brlcldes,
Alberi llelldrldul; --.1 row,
Edward Stark, ~ Doni,

WUUarn Slater, Middleport, ~ :
Mrs. Ruby Baker, Euclid.
;j

Wlllbum,EIIet'll S.Vace,Helep ,
Hhades, GordoQ M=q!r'n; lhH.

MOI'I'ts BoMer, lfuP &amp;w+
Ka&amp;hryn Werry, ~ , l'lem&gt;,

.

Mr.

Spc!ater, Robed 'Sidden, William l'eojjts . and JleiiUII4
Werry.

Riverview PTO
Teachers were introduced and
plans made for the annual harvest
festivalatiastweek'smeetingofthe
Riverview PTO held at the school.
• Grace Weber, principal, introduced Jay Wiersma, new developmental reading teacher, along with
the grade teachers, Doris Well,
first; Martie Baum, second; Patrtcia Shrivers, third; Fred Kessinger,
fow;th, and Gary Reed. fifth.
Parents attending were introduced
and the list of roommothers for the
school year were read by the
presideD!, Mary Newell. Others ·
presiding at the meeting were Pat
Martin, vice president; Betty Dill,
secretary; AngieMorris,treasurer.
The halves! festival was set for
Oct. 20. It was voted to renew
magazine subscriptions for the
school year. Refreshments were
served by the 1&gt;fficers. '

Rock Springs Grange

fiower as a part of the workshop.
Mrs. Stethem d,isplayed corn husk
dolls, madonnas, Christmas omaments and wreaths.
Mrs. Wallace Fetty ,presidM at
the meeting. For roll can members
gave tips on preparing for winter.
'Theverseofthemonthwasglvenby
Mrs. William Slater entitled "SeasonofAmber."'Thearticle"C!tlzens
Against Waste" by Jack Anderson .
was read by Mrs. Cam&gt;ll Swanson.
Mrs. Merri Amsbary was weicorned Into membership. The club
was invited to the open meeting of
the Chester Garden Club and the
Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts
on Oct. 3 at the Chester United
MethodistChw-ch. It was nOted that
Dr. Ray Swick, chalnnan of the
Blennerhassett IslandCanmlsslon,
will discuss the Blennerhassett
Historical Park.
Readatthemeetingwasanoteof
appreciatlonforworkandparticipalion in the Meigs County Fair flower
shows. 'lbefallcountymeetlngwas
announced for Oct. 8 at TrinitY
Chw-cb ani! the regional mtietlngfor
Oct. 17 at the Vinton County
cmununity buDding at McArthl!l'.
Also announced was a Japanesestyle flower arrangement class to he
held Oct. 6 at the Daughters of
Ainerlcan hall in Chester. Mrs.
Ralph Smltz of Parkersburg wUl he
theinstructor.
· ltwasnotedthatasuperlorratlng
wasgiv~thel983countyChrlstmas
Dowershow. Mr5.HarryMoorewor\
the door prize. A dessert course was
se!Ved by Mrs. Moore and Miss
Erma Smith. Mrs. Stethem and
Mrs. Betty Dean were guests.

New offlcers were elected at the ·
Thursday night meeting of the Rock
Springs Grange held atthe hall.
They are William Radford, mas·
ter; WUUam Grueser, overseer;
Louise Radford, lecturer; Roy
Holter, steward; Roy Grueser,
assistant streward; Opal Grueser,
lady assistl'ant steward;' Beuna
Grueser, chaplain; James Fry,
treasurer; FrancesGoeglein,secretary; Harold Blackston, gate
keeper; BarbaraFry,Cerea; Helen
Blackston, Pomona; Nancy Morris,
Flora,; Rollln Radford, executiVe
committee; Barbara Fry, women's
activities; Pat Holter, legislative
agent; JameS Fry, youth chair·
man; and Unda Broderick, junior
chairman.
Two candidates received the
Jean Frederick recently hosted a
obligation of the first and second meeting of the Past Councilors Club
degree. It was noted that the · ofChesterCouncll323, Daughters of
meetingswillnowstartat7:~p.m . America, at her home. Co-hootess
Barbara Fry announced the county was Esther Smith who served in the
contest winners - Sue Fry, first, absellce of her mother, Elizabeth
and Betty Conkle, second, in stuffed Hayes.
Betty Roush presided at the
toy; and Elrna Louks·, second in
afghan.
meetingopeningwithreadingofthe
Pat Holter gave the legislative FlrstPsa!m.TheLord'sPrayerand
report. Refreshments were served pledge to the flag were given in
by William and Louise Radford, unison. Officer's reports were given
Rollln and Nancy ·Radford, and by Thelma White, secretary, and
Homer Radford. A demonstration Ethel Orr, treasurer.
onCPRwasgivenbyOpaiGrueser.
Members answered roll call by
naming their favorite fall flower.
Poems were read by several
membrs; Goldie Frederick
a
A demonstration on making corn cUpping from a l9llt newspaper
husk roses was given by Melanie abouttheKenoarea. LeonaHi!nsley
Stethemattherecentmeetingotthe was reported confined to Veterans
Middleport Amateur Garcteners Memorial Hopsltai and a get-well
held at the home of Mrs, Ferman,
card was signed for her. Games
Moore.
were conducted by Mrs. Frederick
Mrs. Stet hem noted that the husks ,and Laura Mae Nice.
shOuld he bleached in a solution of
Refreshments were served by the
hal! water and half bleach, and Ibm hostesses. A door prize was won by
placed in 1- solution of dye and Opal Hollon.
detergent soap. Once the husks have
Others attending were Marcil~
obsorped the desired color, Ibm Keller, Margaret Tutf1e, Mary
they should he rinsed first in hOt Showalter, Cora Beegle, Enna
water than in cold before they are Cleland, Inzy Newell, Charlotte
put out to dry.
.
Grant, MacyK. Holter, Ada Bissell,
Each member made a ~rnhusk Mae McPeek, Lora Damewood,

Past Councilors

Amateur Gardeners

read

Mary Hayes, Sadie Trussell, and
guests, Sandra White, Esther
Smith, Leota Ferrell, Fern Moms,
and Margaret Amberger.

E""ange 'ine chapter
~•

Special recognition to the station
of Adah was given at last week's
meeting of Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order9ftheEasternStar,heldatthe
Middleport MaSonic Temple.
AdahsofhoththeGrandChapters
'of Ohio, Betty Bouts, Oak Hill, and
West VIrginia, Ann McNeeley,
Beckley, W.Va. were present and
introduced.
Thoseholdlngthestatlonthisyear
and recQgnlzed by Twila Childs,
worthy matron, and . James Clatworthy, worthy patron, were Janet
McDermitt, Mason Chapter, W.
Va.; Betty Jo Shaffer of Bethlehem
Chapter, w. Va.; Marjorie Rife,
Dlstrict24, WUkesvWeChapter, and
· Debbie Moore, Evan.,..Une Chanter. The CWTent
presEnted with African violets, gifts
or the worthy matron.
Mrs. Bouts commented on the
travels and duties of a grand offlcer
and gave a history of the station or
Adah. Also recognized were 14 past
Adahs attending.the meeting.
Other officers recognized were
Genevieve Klncflld, deputy grand
matronofDistrict23; NellleCasto,
deputyof,instruction, W.Va .; Golda
Reed; H,lrrisonvlllf1; Sharon Limberger, Belpre; Cormle Hesson,
Aurelius Chapter, Macksburg;
Martha Detty, District 24, Oak Hill;
Cathy McCulty of District 24.
Galllpolls; and Marjorie Cartwright, Mason, W.Va.; all worthy
matrons of their respective chapters; 1 Earl W. Owens, Belpre
Chapter; Dean Raney, Aurelius
Chapter of Mac!lsburg; Donald S.
Raney, Dlstrict24, Wtlkesville; and
Bob Reed, Harrisonville, worthy
patrons; Bob Kuhn and Bob Reed,
honored masons; June Scott, vice
president of District 25, Belpre;
MaryWoolleyofAmesvllleandSue
AnnWllhoitofWestVIrginia, grand
·pages.
Also introduced were 50-year
members, Adria Wllcox, Grace
French, and Mary Hughes, 50 year
members. Lee McComas was
presEnttid a 50 year pin by Mrs.
Chlds, and Mrs. Emma Kay
Clatworthy presented a 25-year pin
to Mary·Jane Wise.
The sunshine collection in the
amountofS33.41wasdonatedtothe
O.E.S.Grand chOir. Invitations
• were read from Belpre Chapter for

Adah.s we::e

.

Blake ·named
to honor group
'

David Blake;' 361m~ Blake Hill
Road, Pomeroy, has been naJ'Tied to
the F're/identlal Honor Society at
the DeVry InstltuteofTechnology in
. Columbus.
To be eligible for this hOnor.
students must have a cwnulatlve
grade point average of at least 3.5
out of four points after two terms of
study. Blake, a student in the
electronics engineering technolgy
program, has a four point grade
point average.
DeVry InstituteofTechnologyls a
part of the DeVry, Inc. network of 11
campuses which specialize in electronics technology and computer
information.
,-.•• _
...

J

J'rautJateJ

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.

Aluminum Fibered

ROOF CO~ TING
5 GALLON ·

$2 2 95 ·

.

aeolsterTO

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Steven T. Cremeans and Tina
Marie Smith, Tuppers Plains, are
announcing their engagellll!llt and
approaching marriage . . Wedding
plans are incomplete.

CO~YRIGHT

, . . . THE KROGER ~0. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY,, SEPT, It, T,HROUQH SATURDAY. SEPT . 22 . .
1. .. WE RESERVE TH~ RIGHT 19 LIMIT OUAN,ITIES. NONE "
SOLO TO OEALERS .

CALL TOLL FREE
1-8.00.. 62o4-4883

•

'

AIIWEIITIIIII ITEM POLICY
bch of If'.- ~-- ltern• '- requirMI 10 be rudl.., •v.~ble lor
. . in eec:h Kroger Store, exC!IPt ••~PKtfk:ally noted in thte ad . It we
do run out--of In ~illld item'" we will offer you your chok:e of a
com..,._.. ttem. wMn 1veil8ble. refllcdng .th• 1etne . .vinoc or •
raw.c.,.:k Which wltlemltle vou to pr.:rchaM the advertt.c:l it~ at 1~
edvertlud price within 30 daVI'- Only one vendor coupon will be

.ccepted

..

pet"

~-.

. '-'9A,

Kraoer A!ld
·wJEM-am
wvl't~tm

--

Buckeye
Swe.,.t8kn:.

jtem purchtled .

!

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TEA DAncE

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---"""5EPTEMBER 30,1984---4 Till10
Rueriallan
S15.00 Single
•
Only
!Wfet Dinner 6:00
S25.00 Couple ·
CAll 992·3629
Tickets Muit Be Picked Up By Sept. 29th
Limited' Numbt, of Tickets lwallaltle .

·~

')

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.

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STORE
Ptwnc 742 ? 1OD

n

PRICES UH:CTIVt THRU Sf1l SlPf

I

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IYH·1

SMOKED. PICNIC
HAMS •••• J~.....
.
., 89&lt;
'

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AlSO

'•

COOlS'S 4 TO 8 LB. AVG.
SMITHFIELD

.

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BOILED HAM •••••••••• ~•• ~•••••• ii.Sl. 99

•

SUPERIOR

NAME

',,

, ADDRESS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

I OZ. llirr SIIIGif 12 SUCID

AMUICAN PIO((!SfD

CHEESE ...............eJJi.. s1.29

•'

ILI.IAG .

I

Contest valid only at your Belpre, Marietta,
Gallipolis, Pomeroy &amp; Ironton .Kroger Stores.
Register at any of the above stores. Three dolls
per store yvill be given away each week, plus 1
winner: in. each store ·each week o.f. $100 in cash .
No purchase ne,cessa.ry,. enter as often as you like.
New drawing every week through Saturday,
October 27, 1984
·

YELLOW ONIONS,M•• ,.. a9c

3 DOZEN rACI •lANDAU

10 II. lAG IDAHO.

SMALU~GS '""""mi. $1.49

I~KING POTAT0£5 .. s2.79

C I T Y - - - - - - - - - - S T A T E - - - ZIP - - - - -

1ncash

.

.•

1 II. DAfT PAIIU

MARGARINE ..JIVAIJJA\.... 79'

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

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PHONENO . _____________________________

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.

Just drop your entry blank in the ,
Drawing Box of your nearest
participating Kroger Store or Maillt ·To:
BUCKEYE SWEEPSTAKES
THE KROGER C0 .-2007 E. 7th . ST .
PARKERSBURG, W. VA. 26101

I .

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1 Ll. TASTY IIRD

FRYING CHICKEN LIYERS ••••••• 79&lt;

U.. S.O.A. GRADE A

10'/r OZ. ABC CAMJIBELL'S

I~

•

YEGETA8LE SOUP •••••••• 2 CANs/69&lt;

..
''

46 OZ. DOLE

:··~.
•••

..

16 OZ. SUCED 01 HALVES ·

'

oz. GENEitiC

i' ,

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~Holly

Farms
Wh.-le Fryers

'

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JUMBO ·

· 13-oz.

BOUNT.Y·TOWELS ••••••••• ~.IPJ&amp; ••• 89~
·

CORNED. BEEF HASH ..... ~ •••• t1.09
'

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'JACK MACKERAL
......~ ••••••sm ••• 59.c
.
~

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Kroger
Evaporated Milk _

I

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INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES

Ivory Shampoo
or .Conditioner
11-oz.

••

·-

'•,

..

KOOl-AID ••••••••:••:••••••••••••• 6/89(

15 OZ. SWEEPSTAKE

00

41bs$f'

'

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15 OZ. CAN AIMQUR

Head

Sweet Potatoes
or Red Yams

..'

DEL MONTE SPINACH ••• ~.sfll. •• ~a9~

m3R

Cauliflower
WHITE

.

oz.

Fresh

Pound

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LAUNDRY DETERGENJ ~ ••wr~ S1.09

27

12-oz.

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PINEAPPLE JUICE •••••• .~•••• s~ S1.3 9
42

Armour.
Treat

.,

DEL MONTE PEACHES-•••••nA••• 89&lt;
MOBILE HOME

golds, trums, roees, dahlias.

For Four ·
Whole
Months

BIG RED BOLOGNA ·········"····89&lt;
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••• ll• ~1.29
·
d
name

FiveMelgsCountiansgraduated
from Ohio University at the end of
thesummerquarter.
They are Debra Keebaugh Buck,
Pomeroy, bachelor of science in
education, with high hOnors; Cllfford J. Kennedy, Pometay, bachelor of science in education with
honors; Frederick J . Blaettnar,
poi!eroy, bachelor of sclenci! in
education; CbarleneRuthGoeglein,
nearPomeroy, bachelor of arts, and
Step"-R
"''" . ·"
narner, Route 1, Shade,
bachelor of science in industrial
technology.

Inches long. six $horter pieces (If line
111A!tll!t1al. and six flowers, marl·

Descendants ot 11xmas Durst
and Mary Shirley Durst gathered at
the Racine Locks and Dan saturday
for a reunion.

.••

beheldatChesterhillonOct.13, 6: ~

p.m. beginning with a potluck
dinner; Teresa Chapter, Proctor. vllle,Sept. 14, aflinnightwlthBoillta
and CUff Edwards.
.lfhe cheer · committee reported
thatJackCrlsphllshadsurgeryand
is recuperating at home. Plans were
announced for a father and son
banquettoheheidonSept.29anda
public spaghetti dinner to he held on
oct. 20.
Linda Mayer was soloist for the
evening and sang " Great Is Thy
Faithfulness" accompanied by
Emma Kay Clatworthy at the
organ. The Kuhrt had the closing
prayer. Refreshments of cake,
mints, punch, nuts and coffee were
se,IVed from tables decorated with
oouquetsofyellowdalstes.

. ,

Tbaet enrolled 111'1!10 take two low
11M COJitalnerl, two Qeedle holden,
ellhtpleces oiJine material, 2$to~

'
R«qnl7ec! and presented IItts man, Sidney al)d Loulle Bauer.
wrt ~ Joliet, the o1delt man !laden, W.Va.; 1M H'll !11, x-;
•U•Kinr. ~llllnt.theoldelt Mlldrel1 Burae. Mlllwood; Clarice
wunea •lte!llllnr. Joey Sands, the and Rua.ll Joliet, Pont p!es==t; .
)'oUJIIIIt; Cllllter and Cleo1'81a · Becky Teaford, Pon&amp;uy; Rcarta
Dllrltwbotraveled the farthest, and and o.na Lewis; Cllflan; Cb1J11t,
Penny and Charla Burae,
~u 11111 l!emlce Roush, .the
Mlddlepott.
•
. ,
family with the most members
Herbert and Mary Roulll, Cblr•
pre~e~~t. Severll door prizes .were
lle, Peach, Travll, and 1'ylcm
abo awarded.
Mugrage; Ron, NanCy, MW!eeJIJIII.
A,~ were Chester and
GeotJ1a Durst of NUes; Ralpll and Mandy RusseH,Bernlceau-ll,td
Na&lt;ml Durst, Julie, Judy, and Mary Roush, Cindy and Joey !llm!IJ,
Durst, Galllpolis; Mary Ann Herd- Dorsey and Bess Panons, Racine.

,...

·PLUS
. Installation

Couple engaged

the Grand vis ita tlon of the worthy
grand matron, Jean Beck, and a
reception honoring the Grand Drill
Director l'vlarlene Logston on Oct.12
at. the Belpre Middle School. Also
announced was the district party to ·

•

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Lopn, cbarles .we~~; back.
Blly Bowea, Reimaa Wlllon,

Organization members gather for meetings

-

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* :91011d.

The Daily Sentinel- Page

ONtY $4 A MONTH

lklldllir, BeUy K"""""y,
·vtrpnla Seyfried, Audrey
Smltb, Jub Sauvace, Howard
PaUy

Billy DaW.,

Council and a ·ll'l(luate of the
lkellan4 School of Japa~~e~~e Flower
Arranging, W\11 he the teacher. Coet
for the inatruction Is S8 fdr two
arrangements, a slant and an

NOW RENT ·A
CUWGAN WATER
tONDITIONER

Evelyn Mayer, Jllll!t 'l'unlef, .
1Jarbara WUdennuth, . _
G.,_, Wlkna Silvera, Doria

Mri. RAipb A. ~ Plrlcerlburi. a maaler lud&amp;e In tbe National

Ohio

Durst family
has
reunion
••
,n.Racine

labmab

Flower
•
arrangmg
class set

another son, Jesse. two.
~ •
Grandparents are Mr. ·arut Md..:

Pomeroy-Middleport.

A flowe' ~ clus in tile upr1pt ltyle. '11le cl• 1
111'1!
Japeneee ltylewOl be held on Oct.6 - ~ toprdlll club msnben. u
tram 10 Ltl1' to 3 p.m. at the a.. .. ad!lcllllt lilterllt, more
Da\lihtera or America Hill, Chel- cw. wm be ctraad •
ter. It wu &amp;III1IIWlCed by Mri.. . AddltiDnal
~y bi ·
Bmdce Carpenter,. 001\tacl dlaJr. ' olql::::l- - · n..w - man tor the Melp County Garden ·
- .,-• ._...,. ,......., ·
•
Clubl AIIOCiatloll.
a xrl cbalrmlll1arMn. Carpen-

•

OW PHOTO - 'l1da !lied

photo llhowll ......... In the laD

Georae Kaulf,

Wedn11dlly, Septemtier 19. 1984

Kroger American
Cheese Food
12-oz.

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�1984

Your Libraries

Homebound books
If you have an illness or inf!rmlty
which prevents you !rom getUng
out and about Btrr you like ·to rea~.

the Meigs County Public Ubrary
bas the answer to your dllemma.
They provlde a homebound ser. vtce which wUI put the bOoks Pn your
borne with nothing more than a
phone can. So remember, folks, you
can get library servtce. The library

ts as ctose to you as your telephone,

·.

Cbap&amp;er,

OFFICERS ELECTEDHomemaken of America
.offlcen elected allhe reeent
t.h e group were, left to right,
Kim Stewan, president; Lois
secretary, front; and Carol
Hendrix, vice president; Beclcy Vance, treasurer; and Krls Sexton,
lleWIIpaper reporter and historian.

' &amp;'81 of the Melp·

F'llillrt! ·lfllmenlalaln

or America, a1 the ""apt-'• .,...m,

· nteet~nr al Melp Hlp Scllool were, left to ....... lru&amp;,.Gina Searllerry,

Mayrene '111omaa, Krlsia Rquib, PIID'Icla MeG_llee1 aad baek, Lois
EbUn, Penny Pridemore, Michele Folmer, P. .J. Smallwood. No&amp;
pictured Is Candy StaaiR.

4

G iveaway

Brown Chlhu•hua to give
twoy. Four mol)ths old. Ce ll
742-2171 .

.give
Whit•away.
opoyed

NEW-REPAIR

·AUTO &amp; TRUCK

.

Another reminder to those wttlt ·
overdue~- If you think you are
in a PICKLE wtth your library
because of overdue books. simply

CAU
446-4522
" We lent

Gutters
Downspouts
Guttera Cleaned

REPAIR .

Also TrGJIImission
PH. 992-.5682
oi' 992-7121

F~

1

Leu':

U-SAVE
AUTO
RENTAL

· P.einting
Storm Doors

. 8t Windows

·

Whhe ond ton collie to good
home, 304-11711-11118.
Born klttono, phone 30487S-4407.
FrM to good home, loving,
gentle, young molo dog.
Mlx-.1 breed, Pllrt. hound.
Coli 3 04· 875· 2208 ofter II

St. Rt. 160 North

. .

end~~~~~~;!;~;~~

Illata.
this yeor.
children.

R

WRIT.ESEL
ROOFING CO.

Roger Hysell

. GARAGE
Rt. uu-., Ohio

pm.

Galllpo!is,

'

1

8

PHO.NE 992-2156

~i

.l&amp;F
CONTRACTING

SERVI'CE
For all your wlri111
lllt4s; furnaces rtpair

Or Write Oailly Sentin.el Classifie.d Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

service and instillation.
ltesidtntial

&amp; Commercial

Ann mr ncr.1111: nts
1 -Card ofThanka (paid in advance)
2-ln Memory .
(paid in advance) .
3-Announceme~s

4-Givaeway
5 -HappyAds
&amp;· Lost and Found
7 -Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8 -Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
9 -Want ad to Buy

21-Buslneu Opportunity .
22-Moneyto Loan
23-Profeaaional Services ··

Rt•;;l [st&lt;tle
31-Homes for Sale
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farms for Sale
34-Busineu Buildings
3 &amp;· Lots &amp; Acreage
26. Real Eatate Wanted

Fmpluynll'lil

Public Notice

Public Notice

· The

Board of Tru stees o f
&amp;dford Towns h1p Will acce pt
bids o n a 1967 lntemattonal
Truck. as 1s. All b1ds must be
s-ea led and will be opened at 7
p.m . on Oct. 1. 1984 The
Boa rd reserves the nght to

Ofl e rs w11\ be recetved at the
IBw o ft1 ces ot Po rter &amp; Ltttle.
213 Ea st Ser.ond Street. Pome·
roy. Oh•o. unt;l 1 0 ·00 A.M o n
Fnday. Septi:!mber 21st. 198 4.

r ~1 ect

any and al l btdS Bt ds
should be ma1led 10 ED ITH

145 .

L-EAC H. CLERK . TR

POMEROY. OHIO 4576 9.

19) I 9. 26. 21C

lor the real estate owned by the
lat e Pe~rl L W,l hs m Letart,
Me1gs County. Oh10 Th1 s prop·
erty cons1sts of LOls 20. 2 1, 2 2
and 23m Burns Add1110n tGthe
Village of Leta rt . M 81gs Coun ty
Oh1o There are twa· res1denc es
s11uated on the p roperty The
sale 15 subtect to the appr oya l o f

AUTOMOTIVE SALES
&lt;me d. the area's leading dealers is now

Gailia County
Area Code 814
448..:Gallipolis
367.,.;Cheohire
388-Vinton
246-Rio Grande
2 56- Guyan Dist.
543-Arabia Dist.

Serv 1r.1~ s

1n

r~ght

to re1ect any offers 1s

81 -Home Improvement•
82-Piumbing Bt Heating
83-Excavating
84-Eitctricel &amp; Refrigeration
85-General Hauling
88-M .H. Repair
87-Upholotery

379 ~ Welnut

that esta te Thus the

reserved by the unders1gned
InQUires · may be made by

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE

Sale 1n the above entttled
act1on. I will offer for sale at
public auction. on the front
steps of the M e1gs County

M eigs. 1n the State of Oh1o. and
V1 llage of M iddleport ard
bounded and descr1 bed as

No rth L1ne of l o t 2 '74: thence S
~8 deg E 55 feel: thence 52

Court House in Pomeroy, 1n the

Beg1nn1ng for reference at
the Northeast corner of Out Lot

w

No

1 of Palmer's 'Addjtl on;
!hence N 38 deg. W 595.5 feel
to the Nonheasl corner of Lot
No. 211~ dl P. Jones Estate as

acres. morP. or' less.
.
Pro perly located : 80 3 1h
browneU Stroet. Middlepl, r l.

shown by Or1g1nal Plat 2. Page

app r a1.".ed a t
S1 1.500 and cannot bP. scld
for less than twO·thl rtis Of the

Corporation
Plaintiff

callmg'6 14.992-6689

1984. a1 10:00 o·clock A M .

·VS.

Edna Stober!, ot al
Delendont .
No. B4-CV•122

EthP.I Kauff man
Adm1nJ~il" a tnx of
the Estate of
Pearl L W1H1s.
Decea sed

day. the 6th day of OctOber

In pursuance ·of an Order of

the follow1ng descrtbed real
estate. Situate 1n t he Co unty o f
M e1gs and State of Oh10. and 1n
the .VIIIage o f M1ddJeport to·w1t
S1tuated 111 the

County

of

~--------~R~e-a~P~E~s~ta-t~e-G~e-ne-r-a7l--~----~

191 I 2. I 7 I 9. 31c

m the

M~GKEE

54 Misc . Merchandise

~

accepting applications for a salesperson.
No experience necessary.

Now Acceptin

SEND RESUME TO:

follows:

11 of M e1gs Cou nrv. Ohto. the
true place of begtn n 1ng :'thence

35 feet to the rtac~ of

beg1r.n 1ng.

con 1a1nm g

OhiO
Pr o pertv

0 064

M. L "Bud" McGHEE
Broker-Auction Service
Charyl Lemley,
Meias County Associate

.

Phone 742-3171

66 ACRES, lEDFORD TWP. MEIGS CO., OHIO
AND PERSONAL PROPERTY

Saturday, October 6, 1984
Beginning at 11 :00 A.M.
REAL ESTATE TO SELL AT 12:00 NOON
Louted 12 miles north of Pomsroy: 3 'h miles east of U.S.
Rt. 33: I mile south of St. Rt. 681 on Township RoadN247.
Sians will be posted ·

REAL ESTATE
Real esta1e consists of approximalely 66 acres wilh frontage
on both sides of Counly Road 247. 1mprovements consist of
3 room concrete block and frame structure with 2 enclosed
porches and bath; small barn, also 2 story lrame dwelling.
Some acreage cleare&lt;l. Mine rai rights have not been leased
and shall transfer with real estate..
TERMS &amp; COIIDITIOIIS: Property appraised al $30,950.00
and cannot be sold for' less than $24,760.00. Real estate
taxes pro-rated to date of closing. Ten Percent (10%) deposit
day of sale;. balance of purchase price due upon delivery ol
Administrator's de~d on or belore November 6. 1984. Possession given upon delivery of Adminislrator's deed. Any statement made day of sale shall take precedence over pnnled
matter.
NOTE : This acreage ~ a good investment opportunity as
there are several producing oil wells in the immediale area or
it could be made into a hunling lodge or retreat.

PERSONAL PROPERTY

$12,000.

,

King wood and coal heater; Holpoint refrigerato r; propane
gas heater; SN Ford lractor. needs repair; 2 bottom plow;
shallow well pump; cement mixer; 1968 Chevrolet pickup;
1950 Ford pickup; 53 Ford; 53 Chevrolet
Nbne of the above vehicles are in running condition at this
time. .

ESTATE OF RICHARD 0. SMITH

F"nklin 0. Smllh, Executor
F"nklin County Probate Court C." 1349594
• Joel ClmpbeP!, AltorRtY
SALE CONDUCTED BY
ROGER E. WilSON

HAL (STATE BROIIEIII AUCTIONEER
101 S. lain St. - lolldon, Olrio
•
P!lont: 614-152-1111

NEW LISTING - 5 acres in
Sutton Township. On hard
road, water and ·elec $10,500.
NEW LISTING

acres with a nice-'
ly constructed- concrete
block home 2~x30, 3 bedrooms, one bath, l2xl5
family room . Partially
carpated. fuel oi furnace
with facilities for woodburner . 12x15 b!ock stor-·
ace b.ui!dinc. 20x30 block
carage. Righi off Rt. 248.
country settin1. y, mile
east of Chester. Ohio.

Ho!Re

Nlllonal

·Bank in

Racine, 949-2210.

Aboo.« 13 .

RIVERVIEW -

Remodeled 6
rm.,one floor, 2 or 3 bedroom
home. Basement and 2

porches. ,

RAIK;H -

One level acre,

garage, 7 rm.
remodeled home with furnace,
woodburner and fiJI basei~M.
jJJOd dbl.

Only $32.500.

OUT - 73 acres more or less.

Fenced. Good sprin&amp; driled
well, 2 pond$ and . . . bid~

(2) . TWO STORY HOUSE
IN RACINE: Downstairs
equipped with kitchen,
living room, dinin1 room
and den: upstairs has two
bedrooms and one bath: .
house a) so has basement.
Lot size approx. 48'1308'.
Needs work.

If inleresttd contact THe

~

acres on 4 land 33 at Peach
Fork. All minerlll1 $15,000.

I) HOUSE PN 'cHESTER:

$11.000 ..,.. Smal 5 rm. lrame
llNr the store&amp; Bath and all

ooilties.

12 ACRES - At lanpwile ~
IS .'If. old ranch. 2 or 3
bedroofllll full basement ~
gas FA furnace. Just $31,500.
1

'

I

E . Mai1nW. .
POMEROY,O.

building. Home has been
remodeled. Everything in work·
ing condition, 3.4 bedllJoms,
living 1110m, kitct&lt;en, part

$30.000.

1-{ousl/•1!

i't:,J( /(jl/,

/.',

Wonte d to baby ait In my
home full or pert time,
behind Ordnance oc~ool,
roforencas, 304-1175·2784.

U. S. RT. 50 EA~T
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Autllorizad Jo!m De.-e,
flew Hoilud, Bush Hoa
Farm EqYipment
Dealer

"

I'Cirm Equipment

&amp;

Par!s

For your noXI- col Emmo
Bell. ouctlon-. licensed
end bonded Waot Virginia
ond Ohfo. 42BB177.
AUCTION, Grocery Auction
.,.._ wllolell!le priceo. Sot.
7 PM , Mt. Alto Auction
Houae.

Seryice

.mo. pd.

1 ] . fi r

•ZEIITH
•mVANlA

.

•SPEID QUEEN IAUNORY

••lBSON REFRIGERATOR
'· We Have A Full Tlmo
Shqp Technician
. on Duty

RI.DENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE ·

'

PAT HILL FORD

773-5839 or
773-5788

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

"fr• Estilutes"

lnsllllltion AYiileble
.

8/13/1 mo.

, ., J.tft

lOR
SIDING CO. ··

Ill I

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

We'd Hie lo intr&lt;&gt;duce YOII to

hPCt-A-C.sr. 1M 111adom way

New Ha--EittnsiYt

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

to drive tilt vohielt of yoor

lnsu-eWOR
Bldp.

Complete Gutter Complete Remodeling
Roofing of al TYJIM
Worked In home .,..
20yaan
''Free Estimates••

flo Down P1y11tnl

1.-delitl

,c.1t7J!!!:

Roafl!ii'l"oit

·.

AP111inH1 &amp; Vinyl Sldlnp
1 II YMrt Eaperlence
. -GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7683
or 992-2282

HOUSi~
'••

I

FREE ESTIMATES

CONSTRUCTION

..

220 I . Mein, ,_.,.,
PH. M2-6931

GAS LINES
WATER LINES
SEWAGE LINES

ROUSH

•••

FENCE &amp; SUPPlY

SERVICE

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

CHESTER-985-3307

ACCENT

DITCH WITCH

dtoitl .

Lolltf Monthly P1y111ent
BLAC~ON
NEW CAR &amp;

TRUCK LEASPNG
801, 326

ELONG

P-roy, OH. 45769
For Ftsltr Smict

,.--~1.843-5425

Call 614-992-6737

Wanted To Buy

$16,900.

bushes. trimmed. Frao ost•·
motes. Ctl 448-8078.

Woter · wotto, drilled &amp; oervlced. Free estlmotll . Cell
814-9B2-6008 or 814· 742·
3147.
fllldiiCidl

o-

Buainea
Wont-.! to buy used coot.&amp;
0
'ty
wood heoterw. Swoln Fuml- 1 _ _ _ _P_po_n_u_n_1_ __
tuN, 441-3t 119, 3rd, &amp; I '
Oliva St., Oollpolls, Oh.
I NOTICE I
Want-.!· Junk autos any THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
condition. CaU 814 -388- .USHING CO. recommondo
that you do buaineu with
9303.
people you know, end NOT
Good uaod omall refrigerator to oend monoy through tho
meN until you have lnvestl·
Mid smell love - · Cal illted
tho offering.
4411-14t4 morn. or ....
Coah paid for foncy Iron or
hel"'' iron bade. 11&amp;0 end
up for cilrtein Molgo Co.
ltone jllra.

Okt time cup--

board. cell 1 ·304 · 88~ 2711
COMPlETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . B-.lo, lr~tn.
wood, cupboerdo. chllrw.
cheatl, beaketa, dlah••·
stone l•ro. antiques, gold
and sliver. Wrlto · M. D .
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ofllo
46788 .. call 814-89277110. '
.

WI!I)IH·llconsed lnouronce
people. Ucenoed irlo ..ence
people stort ~eloping your
own •gency todeyo We ere

ono of Americo 's fostost
growing lifo lnauronco mer·
keilng -nl•atlons. Call
topr on appointment • inter·
view . Col 814·448·8856.

22 Monay to Loan
HOME LOANS FfXEO
RATES Below martcot rotos.
Fiaed conventional FHA ·
VA . Lelder Mortgage ,

Profasaiona!
Services

---lor-.

P._no Tuning end Repair.

Brunicerdi Muaic Co., 448·
0887. T-ntieth yeor of
qUIIWty 1ervice. lane De·
nlels. 1114-742-2961 .

Mmntv.

1111 r....u,

s,-,

'

Prim
Start At

31

.•

$1495

f11t ji It I',' :• I I t

3

9-4-1 mo.

flEW LISTING - Just oot of
town -Over 13 iiCieS of land;
IIJaal building suites, house
needs repair. A ~ buy at
$9,900.

.'.•VETEJUNARY

~.: hf'IIJDDLE PORT

PA~l'E •.&amp;IPOCI£Y. p.u.
; P~EACH

.•

. 'I I

.'

9·13-lfn

THU~!, EVE. 8-8

' PT.i!UWNT OFFICE

BUSPIIESS 8U!LDIII8 3,200 sq. It - 2hellad fiiOfiiS
first floor, baths, centr1l air.
Slu'aee on 2nd fDir and batli.
. Good location. $45,000.

=

e~rpet,

equpped kltl:hen,
woodburner, store buildinr.
and I patil. $36;90(L

,,

IIEALTOIS

SIALL ANIIAL HOURS

tneuti11ttesraisetlleto5tot

awooeror 'bitUminous cOli burning

stove. AKinGI~StOVtlsapprovecl_~~-~ . SAVE
llfeiYIIUmtl1tler.·AnellfVOUtoml)lfewvuu
·
1tovt1 ClrefliiiY, you·u cnoose tne.new
KlnGIIWOOCI StoVe. It'S loaded With features
thlt otntrl Offer OnlY II "Optional It
extrleoit."
.

'·

&lt;

•.

..: . .,. ;*

40o·
·

.

&amp;... w
·

1

'

l-:3:-A"=""n_n_a_u_nc_e_m_e_n_tl-:~~~-+----------

DIRECTIONS: South Ohio Rt. 7 - 8 Mllea '
' Below

Why Wait Till Winter to Remember
You Were Goin&amp; To Call Us?

htldQ 3 p.II.·S:·"'·
, ... ~., 1:30 p.ll.· p.ll.
WMftti4111 3 p.II.·S p.111.
Thwsday 3 p.11.-S p.111.
friday I p.II.·Z ·p.lll.
,_., 10 a.a-11:30 Llll.
· IA.af AIIIIAl' AID
SUKU\' IY API'OIIIT8UT

90 DAYS
SIMI AS CASII

your nome you nave 1 more pressing

neec1

•

:-, •. Ill!!'"

SWEEPER and -lng ma· 11 HalpWanted
chino repair, parts, and 1- - - - - - - - Mippllu.
Pick up 111d
delivery, Oovls Vocuum
MODELS
.
Cloa-. one holt milo up
AI 11•• Including children
GRd.
Cal
over ilge 1 . For catolog
814· 4411·0284.
typo oulgnmontl. Inter·
viewing In Columbuo tho
Control hunger ond lose
of Sept . 23 . For an
- . h t with- ohope lllet 1 ppolntmont call 412·8118 ·
piton end Hydrex Woter Pills 9192.
ot Fruth Phormocy, J-son 1-- " ' - - - - - - PIIIe.
mako 41%. Coli

i•s·iACKSON AYE.

I. NO .MONEY DOWN I

IlEAl POMEROY - Ill tel15
of level wound lor a bicfllder.)
. and yald. Plus 1 nrce 3
bedf110111 ranch llith new

Announcements

c..-

. ,., CliNIC

'

f

Galllpolla - Croii:Raciloon- Crk. Bridge
Turn RFght •nd Follow Signa.
·
. O~EN '7 DAYS ·n i.L. DARK

-~w.

'rV a '
ANCII
UUrUoo.• .,., ' ..
• •.,.. ..., ...... Ill •.• .)
·

Chimney
'' Care.

446-2062 ..
•complettt Chimney Clunlng .

"C•IIflld Chimney Aallnlng •

·Repair

*Experiaftced 1nd lnMnd .

loJIIcllt

CertlfW C"-Y ......

.J

PH. 441-,811
• .!

•

Cont~

Townhou••· lhure ., 1 - 4 ~
1971 Dodge Demon .

...... 'Pt'Pieiiliinf ....
&amp; Vicinity
. . ..•.........•••..•••..•..••.

'
Children. Adult ctot hea.
L.u..
""'"·
toyo, ho uoohold m 1oc.
8:30 AM to 1. W-.1 end
Thuro. Old Town end Toylor
R08d.• camp C o._.,..
-'- i

u"hol~1~;

Yard $ale. Ho
conceo, furn 1tuN, c~ _..,,
cloth••· mloc . Wod •Sot;
Sept . 1$· 22, 2431 .uncotn
1•
Ave .
•
4 fomily yard life, 212
Camden Ave, Polrit Pleo·
sant, ocrOA
youth
center, Friend Sot..
·

from

Yard Soli, clothlng·oll olin
end lnfonto, glooaware.
220B N. Main St. T)i..... Fri.
Set.
f
·
7 fomily yard Nte. ·. Rt. 2,
North. 9 miles. ,Clothing.,.

houaaplanta, ,niac ·lt..,..a.

.:

Yord Sale. Bat, Dj&gt;t. 22,-··
B:OO tlll1. 2310 Mt; Yarno.,;
Ave.
· '
•
4 fomily yord Hil, S,ot, Be" '
~. • 29th"
2 300 Jofferoon Ave ,
'

22, roln dote

-·

------~~
.......
Yord Sole, Betty MWH.O..$

Ounhom Ro-.I.Loon'IThUraA
fri, Sat. Pool tlble, ~·~
deak1 oth• fumtture,

.,...

Garage Sele, Thuro, Fr!i.Sat.'
9:00 till 3:00. lal!lnd'. .
School, follow· algn•, lla~ .
brand jeons, • - · ·aillia'
rlum, rtdl~g m - . lots of
mite hema.
•
~

l4

Big yard Bale. Thuro. Fri.i,
Bat. 8 femllies. Flotrock, q
miles North Rt. 2 from Polnl'
Pleasant. Just post 0001(
Sheperd Church. Ftowet
pota, macramM auppllee.:
child -ters. fumltu,..
materiel, mlac.
~

f~§~~~~=~~=-~:;~~~;~~::~
31

Homes for Sa!ti

32 Mobi!e Homea
for Sale

I

'

Farm houae 6Yt ocrea. 71 - - - - - - - - ' - -- -i
rooma. Nth. uveral out Leaving &amp;tote, - - mu~
buildings. 1'2x50 house ooll ballutiful 3 -i'oonl.
troHor, located on Rt. 180, home. Family room hee·'
2Y, mi. fro~ Holrer Hoapl- ' 20ft.. ot window• for PB"!
tot. 126,000. Coli 446 · torol vi-. finished -b-;
· 488t.
g•regit, flreplece, 1:':~41
- - - - -- - - - -lcporch, &amp;Oft. deck. w
~
8 yro . old, 3 bednn , 2 batho, privocy, neor Royol Ollt
f•mlly room with wood P""' . ..clu..ct to *19,900. C
burner. Single car garage, on Yt perconteooumabllity. Col
8 flot ocreo with ltock-.1 814-992-11420.
:
pond . City wotor In 'Racine.
CoN 814-949-2841 .
For rwnt or - : 1 4X70
mobile homo, portlolly fur,
8 room brick houH. 1 I'J nfoh-.1, central ofr, Can be
acrn fond on Lourel Cliff Ad. - a t 874 High St. Mlddle*21 , 600 .00. Coli 992 · port ofter 4 :00p.m.
7881.
1.:...----:---:":'=
For rwnt or Hlo: 14X70
Hou1e for ••I• by oWner. mobile home. parttelly fur·
nicely .....odel•d two otory nlsh-.1, central air. Can be
houH, 7 rooma, 1 Nth, - n ot S74 High St.1
garege clo• to achool and Middleport otter 4 :00 p.m.
'
'
ahopplng. 263 Fifth St.
Mfddleport. Coil 814-992· 1981 Schultz
3 br 1}&gt;
306t .
both, totol aloe . control air,

u-.

For 1ale by owner 9 room
houM 3 bedrooms. 1 'Ia bath.

kitchen, dining room. living

room, 2 bedroom• upatairs.
1 bedroom dawn .Over en
acre. chain link fence 11
round 24 by 30 · block

building, 1 0 by 30 building
big gordon. full baoement·
.CaH 814-887•8848 after
3 c00 P.M. ciOJIO to Hill Top
SllfYice Station, Coolville,
Ohio.

microwave, dllhwashar,
atove. refrig. underpinning.

-ood porch. 304·S78·
8p49.
.
1983 Schultz llmh-.1 -.11•
lion. 14x70 with 7x1 1 ••·
Pllfldo. 3 bedroom, 1 I'J
bltho, oil alec, control lilt.
fireplace. extra lnaulatio..
built In otoreo. 304-411a11194.
.•

Ua-.1 moble home. 304762· 2228.
t.Nvlno l't•te, owner mult - - - - - - - - - - - - O· lc ~ .
ooll bHutlful 3 bedroom 4' wide mobile homo, uthomo. Family room has 20 ting on
•
ft . of windowa for panoral nice tot, rea.:ly to move inti.,
view. finished double gar- For rent with option to buy.
• •· firep ..ce, lerge porch. e226 . down. 1221. ~
80 tt . deck, woodo. privacy. month. 304· 782· 2228. •
ducod to a59,900.00 81'J
percent aa8Umabllity. C•ll
8 14-992-64:1;0.

32 Mobi!e Homes
for Sa!e

R1• II fsl.ili'

. PH. 742-9070

district Just $24.000.

3 Fomlly Electric stove,
winter clothing, houaehold,
pop machine, well acceuorift. Sept . 18· 20. 18 Ports·
mouth Ad.

Rumm1191 Sole

Houoo troller 10xllfl, tWo
IICres on Salt Creoll, oloc,
city woter and telephoM.
Con ba h-.1 aooly. Von H.
McCiaalury. Winfield, W.Va.
Phono 304-1188-2188.

33

Ferma for

8/ 13/ lln

Check Anti-FrHII,
Balta; .HoMs, Plug•

m·

Vord Sole 80 Locust St. 9-6 ,
Thurs .. Fri. Set. Sept. 20·
22. Kldo clothes. geloro,
dlahoa. mloc.

near Royal Oak Park. ,..

• FlvS Year Umlte&lt;l

A COUNTRY corJAIIE just fOf
I
2 bedrOCI!IIS. futt
nice lcll Be energy
e4ficient With lhe MIOdburner
a1so FA
heat Southern'

lng mtchlne. shooo. puneo.
winter coats.iockota.

~------------:- ·lc -

waif construction
features\\ 1ncn
Dolllr!llmlt8tl
llro chi,_ lOCI
S!Unly, ftiiVV

buf ,at

Htnry E.. Cleland,
Jr ................. 992-6191
Jasn Truntll ... :. 949-2&amp;60
Dottie Tllllttr ,, ,,992,5192
Jo HIU ............... 915-4466

Trl8
workromovolo.
wanted pruning,
topping,
hedg~.

Athens, collect 1114-592·
3061 .

Nice IOO'xlOO' lot and storage

basement' A ~

Would Wko to paint troler
roofo. Coll814-2118-1628 .

We pay eaah for lllte model
c leaR uted cars.
Jim Mink Chev . · Oid~ Inc.
8Ml
Johnoon
...... ,.72

shefl. Ults IIOftkaltv

NEW LISTING - Old 8 rm.

NEW USTIIIG - RemodEled 8
rm. frame at letart New battl
and kitchen, new carpeting,
basement and furnace. Asking

9/1711

. RADIATOR
'SERVICE

MEIGS COUNN

• AUtomatic draft

992-2259
NEW USTINa - $ync1111 -

house lor the handyman or
storaee. FuH basement" and 2
Ids next to the firehouse..Only

l · l l·llf

Picture framea, atereo. sew·

SALES &amp; SERVICE

742· 2167 or
. 742-2225

No. Sunday Calla·

Gor1191 Sole Bob McCor·
mlclc Rd. Thuro. &amp; Fri .
Clothes, ell oino. mloc.

BOGGS

DUMP

949-2860 .

of ihe sale.
•
·
' JAMES J. PROFFiti,
SHERIFP.

TEAFORD "'
1-(614)-992-3326

Cell For Frae Eltimate

cash or cert1f1ed check withi ~
th1rl y days o f the confirm ation

ou·mlng .

EXECUTOR'S PU8UC
AUCDON
OF

HEAOQUARlEIIS FOR

(Sl .OOQ) 1n cash or certified
check on day of sale. Balance 1il

. contrOl fOr even

218 E. 2nd St.
Phone

timates, ~9-2801 or

s•.

Insured

3-5-tfc

CONSTRUCTION

Call for free siding es-

Auction Every Tulsday
night, Pt. Pto.ssant, WVo
Auct. LOMie Nael, Youth
C-er Bldg.. (:emden 8t.
Call 81 4· 387-71 01 .

l =~==j~;T,;,;;===

• WlftlfYV duty double

Rea! Estate Genera!

Po in~ Pleosont, WV 25550

~hio

AN

,-The same model can be Installed
free-standing or as a
Insert

Listingt in Meigs Co.

&amp; Vicinity

HELP WANTED SARAH
COVENTR'V - Amblt louo Glgentlc 4 Fa mily Sat. Sept.
Oynon\lca ..... Person cop· 22. 8 -6 . 200 Glenn Orive,
- o f recruhlngond Ironing ocrou lr•m Alpine Mc&gt;lel.
1 ule• group to rebuild Jacklon Pike . Boya women•
Sarwh Conventrv In Maeon, clot hing. ligh1 fixturH . fu r·
Oolllo , Molga, Putnem , nituro, glasswort, oppllon·
Jackeon and Lawrence
---'
p _
ceo, toya.
County. E....,,..,.,. o.., 1 -~_,;::---:---:----.-:Pion helpful. For peroonolfn· 4 Fomil• Don't mloo t hio
tervlew. ·C•ll 304-8711 · one. UMd
'
ttema, Horne
112
1
·
Interior, plonto. clothing you
nomoi!. From Holz_, Hoop.
talc• 189 turn loft ot K..... (Or .
go to Bidwell) go to crou
Wanted
ro-.lo tum right an Bidwell·
Rodney, big form house·
right, olgna up. Hill• Wo•d•
Cuotomero for the Colllc:o NNI. SoPt. 19· 20.
Cupboerd. Rt. 180 &amp; Porter.
Hauroc 10-IPM, Mon.-Sot. Garogo
Fri &amp; Sot 9-11,
Caii814-388-900B.
Sept.21 -22, cor- of DHnie 111d Kriotle Or. ln Sunklst
Fomele roommoto ""ded oubdlvlslon.
for 3BR, 2 bath houn. Coli
_«_8_-9_4_7_2_.~------­ 3. 'Family Lo- Gorfl-.11
1
Thuro . &amp; Fri. Home Interior.
Experienced mother wiH do glaaaware. &amp; clothing.
bibyalttlng In my honte
avonlnqs . • weollonds. Call Garogo Safe, 608 Circle
Ave. acroaa from Spring
448-0009. ·.
Volley Shopping Center.
Tree trimming and romovel. Goll ., Ohio. Glrla 8 to IIX,
Free · oltimlteo. .Coli 992· boyojaono 32x32, lodleo 9a.
1040 or 949-21 29.
Good ochool clotheo, Iota of
nice t hlnga. don't mla Jhis
Oponlng for elderly in home. one. W-.1, Thurs. Fri. 9 -4 .
CtH 773-6423.
Porch Sole 40 Neil Ave ..
W-.1.-Sot. 9 -8. Dishes, clqthlng, toolo, ftoworo end loti
more.

PH. 742-2328

992·6215 .. 992-7314

Porn...or,

&amp;

Public Sile

&amp; Al!ction

9

Te rms: One tho usand d o llars

ENtiRE

Bonded

. V. C. YOUNG til

SIDING CO.

AIID SERVPCE

191 4. 11 . 18. 19. 26. 51C

IFrM Estimotn)

"Beautiful, Cu•tom
Built Garagea"

' H ·lh:

.HEAt·YO.UR ,\

P. 0 . Box B-19

· • 490 City Park AYI.
.
Co!•mbus. Ohio
Phone: 614-224-1339

deg E 80 feel: Ihence N38peg

•ecu.ie..

wO&lt;k

BACKHOE
TROCK
CONCRETE WORK
TRENCHER
SEPTIC TAIIK ·
COAL &amp; LIIESTON E

PARTS and SERVICE

appra1sed amou nt

Rea! Estate Genera!

Point Pleasant Register

•Drve" •Freuere .

Public Notice

S 52' W 80 feel follow.ng lhe

•

·~·

915-3561

I

Public Notice

above named Coun ty. on Satur-

BISSELL

·AI.Malces
•Wosh- •Diah-ohera
•AingH
. •Rofrigerotoro

Up to 15 words .. . One day insertion .......... 83.00
Up to 15 'words ... Three d~y insartion . .... ... 84.00
Up to 15 Words ... Six day insertion ........... 87.00
(Average 4 word, perllnal

Pub!lc Notice

General Moton Aa:optance

KEN'S
APPUANCE
SBVIa

WE ARE YOUII SAlES

Public Notice

The St.- of Ohio, Meigs
County.

· FOR FUTURE USE"

•LAND CLEARED
.SEPTIC SYSTEMS .
eGRAVEL HAULED

autt• work

- Plumbing end

992-7201

SIDING

675-Pt . Pleasant
45B .:. Leon
676- Apple Grove
773 - Mason
882 - New Haven
896 - Letart
937 - Buffalo

- tllooflng end

- Concrete work

IJoAiuminum

"CUT OUT .

MaaonCo., WV
Area Code 304

992-Middlepllrt
Pomeroy
986 - Cheater
343- Portland
2 47-;- Letart Falls
949 - Racina
742 - Rutland
' 687- Coolville

•

the Probate Court of Me1gs
Collnty OhtO, and 15 also
subtect to the appr oval of th e·
he1rs

Meigs County
AreeCode614

- AddoM Mel remadeling

Jill CLIFFORD
PM.

TROMM
EXCAVATING

"""rENTER
' SERVICE

'DOU:R · IACKHOE
'RECLAMAOON WORK
'OIL FIELD SERVICES
'DUMP TRUCK SERVICE
'CONCRETE WORK
'CUSTOM IUILT HOMES
' WATEII, OAI.
OIL UNEI

•

Classified pages cover ·the
following ·t elephone exchanges ...

71 ·Autoa forSa!e
72-Trucka for Sale
7'3-Vans &amp; 4\(VD
7 4-Motorcyclea
7 5· BoaII &amp; Motors
76-Auto Parte &amp; Accenories
77-Auto Repair
78-Camplng Equipment

L!VI~SIIli:k

81-Farm Equipment
52-Wanted to Buy
53-Livestock
· 54-Hey &amp; Grain
56· Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Public Notice

PU8UC NOTICE

,

lirlll Suppl11~s

&amp;

4 1-Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homasfor Rent
43-Farms for Rant
44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
4 6-Spece for Rent
4 7 -Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For Lease

1 1-HelpWanted
1 2-Situated Wanted
1 3-lnsuran~e
1 4 -Busineu Training
1 5-Schools
16 - Ra~ ' o. TV&amp; CB Repair
17-M
• llaneous
18-W_ ·"dToOo

PUBUC .
ANNOUNCEMENT

51-Household Goods
52-CB , TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54- Misc . Merchandise
55-Building Supplies
58-Pets for Sale ·
'57-Musical Instruments
sa.Fruits &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

Rr.nlal s

S!•rv1r.1:'

CHI 742-3195
Or 992-5875 .

I r 111~\fJIIrldil llll

Mert. htiiHII St:

Flll&lt;HlC I ~I

·· ·· ··Gii iifiJoiii.·········

~rno . L30

l,SCA Title I Fund.

Th.e ·. Daily Sentinel ·

Help Wanted

da:

•

dleport Library, 992·5713.
Also remember, your librarl.!s
offer a good selection of large print
bookS made ·possible through an

11

Boby ahtlr proferobly In my,
home for 2 children 2'h end&lt;
8 yun old. 3 I&lt;&gt; II
wtelt 8 :30 to 11:30. A .
n·
ceo. 304-871· 1 878 ony

we will arPve you a
PICKLE for everyone returned.
Pomeroy Ubrary Is tea~
story hour on Thursdays at 10 a.m.
Peggy Crane is serving as
storyteller.
Teachers, in pa811lng out assignments to the students, it would be
most helpful to the library staff, If
you could give ·us some advance
noijce. We could antic!pate the
students' needs better and offer 1r
better servtce.
j

Pomeroy Ubrary, 992·i5813 or Mid·

E!erfed M 1ep1

.Business Senices

return them and

ByRulhPowen
For 111e ~~t-•r e! •

RI!;PR.E8ENTA'I'IVE8

P011181oy- Middleport, Ohio

l

9-4-1 fill.

·Phone

446-2062

04.

men. ·cell

HALF WITH MOUNTAIN 1- --------------RICH . LEARN HOW: MaN- Wantu oxp...... lady for
bAY SEPT!M8ER 24. -rolstoro. Band roaumo
7:JOPioll. KOUOAY INN. to ' " " 1010 In oore of Tho
GAUIPOU8. ONE HOUR Oalllpolit Ooly Tribuna, 8211
8EMINAR. FRI!E SAM · 3rd. Avo., Gallpallo. Oh
PLEI : COFFEE , ~TEA. 4111131 .
GRANO! JUICE . AU Akl 1
--------:-WI!LCOMII
Position for port time blr·
tender ovoMabie. Exp. In
Gun ~~~- at RHine . Gu~ aervlng lunch and mix
Club ewrv l.,tlay, 1 ;00 drlnllo, professlonolllltitude
p.m. f'oatory oh""k-.1 guns ' • riottt op-nce required.
only ·
Inquire It Ohio Job lltrvlce.
Mr. Whitt, OaAfpolls, Oh.
Raalstura your chilli for
T-IJ'hln ,...., and point
n--.1 pan time
c' 11 rn laptanlber 22 end
1nd every TuM27 ""lnformollon col B14· day oftemoon. Cell 992HZ-&amp;tiZ.
7403 end alii for S11tdy.
ltpeolel Prloea: White'• Meial Datoolore, cell for lnfor·
motion 304-11S·Zt08.

Need babyaltter In by homo
for amoll child, roferen·
cea. CoR 814-992·28111 . '

Homes for Se!e

9'h" aaaumeble loan on 13
yr.. old bric:l&lt; ronch otyle
houM. Secluded on 2 .9
ocnos of lend. 3 811. Iorge
DR, nice kitchen, Iorge
utility room . Firepl- In
living room . •493 mo. pay·
mont. U . 7110 down. Lo·
cstld noor Centerville. 379 2803 otter 8 p . m.
-dayo.

NEW AND USEO MOBILE 212 acreferm on Pltfti.IM'Aun
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· Rd . Must Hll. Mov-.1 ~
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES. Arl•ono. Terms n110llebla.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS • Mineral rightsincfud-.1. Will
AT 38. PHONE 814-448· carry on alond contrtct. Co.
742 · 2852.
7274.
Fully furnished 6 lot on
Eastern Ave . Cell 441·
2320.

34

1 989 2 bdr 1 2x80 underpin-

10 yr. old 8 unit opartmont
complox, Wellston, Ohio. All

ning , everything goes,
U ,OOO or bast offer. Coil

814·2&amp;8-11813 .

3 bdr. houoe Gtlllpolls
School District. •18.900 .
Coil 448· 3617.

list looo t hen lt6,000 per
unit. Poal ible 2nd. mortgoge. Cell692·1189 Mon l:
Fri. 9·6. &amp;94-2874 ovo. &amp;

wk. ends .

Owner mult aell home now t
Well lnsulot-.1, fir4ploce,
storm windows. Middleport .
Coil 814-892-8941 .

,.

Lot for aale In Mercerville, '
trailer hookups. electric, n.i·
nl weter. septic .ten iC'f
IB,OOO. Coli 81 4 · 2611.'
8818 .

Nice cleon old hauao. 8
roomo In Vinton. 113,000
fumhhed, lt2,000 unfur·
nlohed. Baling below IP:
prolial price. Call Edword A.
BroWn, 814-38B-90B7.

..,

1·

36 Lots llo Acreage ·

3 bedroom houee with lilt·
ach-.1 garogo, outomotlc
opener, wood burner, air
conditioner. ~ aero lot. land
contrM1 10% lntereet. Bull·
villa Rd. •42.~. Cell
448-2124.

3 bdr.. 2 csrgar11•. 1 ecro
pluo flat lot. city ,ochools.
CoM 448-42t7 .

1 bdr . apts .• 4 furnished. off.

street parking . Reelderlt
manager over 11 ,400 mo.
income. Constent · weitinp

3 bdr. house. pool, AC .
flrepleces, Pt. Pleasant, 1116
or Nnt. Coll875-6104.

3 8R , 1 Y, bath, now tom fly
room, good location, gNat
terrna avolloblt. Cal 4488283.

Buslnasa
Buildings

88.1 acrita in Elmwood, WV.

1888 New Moon 2 bdr.
window, AC , ell now plumb·
lng. new beth room, fuel oil
tumance. ge1 cook atovt.

osklng ea.&amp;oo. can 4484282 or 304-526-4073 .

Free neturel ges, l'tocked
pond. would moko 1 belluti·
ful oetting for 1 home.
Pooslblo owner flnMiclrig at
8 pet. Only U .OOO doW!\,
R-.lucod t o U60. per ocro
for quick aell . 304· 8711&gt;
6640.
.:

••

�Sentinel
35

lots

They'll Do It Every Time

8i Acreage

1 .14 ac. 1-1 lot with
to.Mm111t, llec. • INitor.
l.oollled In OrMn Twp. Coli
441.· 3044.
1
'

CI.Oitii.I.A, TNe ~

1'1:1U" .

Smell

edulto only. Call 446-0338.

f or lelo: lporllmelle '

atove. ref. Rodn8y Village II,

t276 mo. Cell 448-4416
after 9 PM.

c.,, 3'11·1701 -lng1., •
-:---__,,.....,..~.,.......;:....;..., .
for llill'ft. ll..iwlnttNok·
cemper, IJII · - · link,
dlnllt 1111. loe box, oioep1
lour, uoed very little ooll
1114-tt2· 3711orl14-7422141 . '

1ne.oo. Coli 114-tll·
3811 .

Conn trumpet, with loother
81!.C. cond ~ *1 10·.
304-773-1821.

~IM ,

68

Fruit

8i Vegetables

.

•

'

Dunrovln Fruit Fe~m One
Special! Concord
orapea-pick you·r own .25
wee~

c:ent·. pound. w~ alao -hav8:

white a red wine gripea at
30 cento pound. Rod deli·
cious,

Melroa•.. grimea.
golden &amp; JanllthOf\ opplla.

Sr. Rt, 681 , S.E . of Albony,
Houra 1· 7 doily, Sat. &amp; Sun
10· 6. 614-898-8298. .

1974 Mercury Montego MX
J:d cond.. $2,200. Cell
48·176!1.
For ule or trade 19711
Dodft Colt trade, 1980
Dodfe . Aspen · good con d.
Coli 448• 7832. · .

2 bdr. houao. 48 Chillicothe
Rd. Will ace;ept children 8t
pets. Cell 446-0157.
Houae 5 rooms &amp; bath.

For aale or tr•dt cOu~h. chair
love eeet, 3tobl" very good
shape, uao.oo ·cell &amp;14949:3039. .

Located: 914 Third Ave.,
•166 mo .• 875 deposit . Cell
448-3870.
Houae for' rent 3 bedroom

2 houaea fo; rent and bar for ·

61

.F arm Equipmit 11t

Farm•ll Sup.fr A with cutti-

vatora. mowing machine 1t.
turning plow. Cell814· 258·
670 '.
'

J .D. 35 2 row.corn chopper
and forage wagOn. Call
614-266· 6889 ofter 6PM.
For rent with option to buy.
large 3 br houae aetting on
nice lot. ready to move into.
S260. month rent or 81,000
do·w n, owner financing . Bel~
ance ~t $312.49 per month.

304· 782-2228.
1. bad,room home good loca·
tton, $200 .00 month with
deposit. Afto1 12:00, 304675-8848; after 4 :30. 304·
676-7834.
'

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bedroom fully turn . oil
utilities paid aKcept for alae.
Convenient location. , Call
446· 8668.
12x60 . excellent condition.

adulta only. 1 below Eureka,

APARTMENTS, mobile
homes, houses. Pt . Plee1ant
and Gallipolla. 614· 446·
8221 .
Nice 1 unfurnished apart·
mont. 304-675· 2218 bo·
fore 6 p.m.

New Hollond,

55 Building

3 rooms and bath, refrigerator and stove furnished . Ref
and deposit . $225 .00
month. Phone 304-8761090,
.

Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
windowa, lintels. · etc.
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,
0 . Coli 814-246·6121 .

3 room unfurnished apanmant, newly carpeted. air
condition. S2~5 month, util·
itias paid, 304-676-3030 or

One' bedroom

aPt and f)'IObila homes for rant call

. Two bdr. mobile home,
completely furnished qn Bob

l\llcCormick Rd, Coli 446·
9869 . .
2 bdr mobile home . Call

448-0390.
rent .
Adulto, no peto, Call 814·
387-7743.
Mobile

home

fo·;

· Mobile home for rant .
Adulto, no peto. Call 61 4 ·
36J:· 7743. '

2 bedroom 12)(60 in Syra·
cuae . Available imme ~
diatoly. Call 992· 7034 or
992-7671 evenings .

Furnished Rooms

44

Apartment
for Rent

83

livestock

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rQoms. Park Central Hotel.

Call 614-446-0766 .
46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, Nonh of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
6 14-992· 7479,
Trailer lots, sewer an(l water
furnished,

small

Used Furniture -- dryers.
head boards, and 2 bedroom
suites. coal stove. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9;.m
to 5pm, Mon . thru Sat. ·

For aale ch~atnut mare,
excellont riding hOroo, wei(
dloclpline... lireot for youth
127&amp;.00. Jlloo. 18 mo. old
ch,~nut filly Arata;an cour·
tor ~orae mixed apiritod but
aweet natured ." Phone 814992 -3798 ot 614-742·

2143~

2'11 v••!·old
Hereford Bull.
honea and 1
876·3988.
84

Hay &amp; Grain

Good mixed gra11 hay · for

ule. CaM 949·2237.

Good quollty mixed . hoy,
81.80o bole. Coll949-3059
after 6:00P.M .'
Good mixed hay in barn.

.., .ao bole. 304-87&amp;-4800
or 882·3329.

1979 CamtrO•.. light blue

metollc. 360 . luto ,
12 . 7 0 o. 0 o, 3 o 4. 8 711·
3!!94. ·
·
·· ·

614-446-0322

54 Misc . Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Split· 96%
hardwoods. Sea1oned or
green. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614~

accepted . 304-875-1076

Merchandi se

1 970 Dodge ton
,lllglne. 4•Pd-lrllno .• 1
flat bod. tliOO. Cell 448·
9466.

.L.-••

1970 Chevy V. ton PU, 327
eng., auto. trenl. e260. Call
71
Auto,s for Sale
448 9458
·
'
1979 Ford F100, goad
TOP CASH poi!! for 'BO
conditiOn, *2 800 ·00· 304model and newer used cars. .876·1623.
·
·
Smith· 8ui~k·Pontioc. 1911
Eiotarn Aye., OoiHpoUI. Coli
81 4-4411·2282.
73 · Vans • 4.w.o.
1982 Call'!aro l-28 Indy
ftace Car E"itio.-.. t-top,
A. C.. A. T., low.'. mileage.
Serious inquiries: CaU 4467689 lifter 8 p.m.
1982 2
dr Ford Eocort; 4opd.
lm·fm, ' 3499•· 1 981 4dr
Chovy Che¥ette, auto, rodio
13199. 1978 2dr Dodge .
Aapon, Auto
outo. Sales
rodio Bui.Ville
t2199.
Jot'ln'l
Rd. Golipolla, Ohio. 4484782.
1973 Dodge Dan aport 340

c~.in. engine, crapra, ·aide

PIP81. Boae. ayatem, need a

body work, 1860. Cell 446·
7503 or 448·1178.

51 Household Goods

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers, r.efrigera · ·
to_rs, rang,s. Skaggs Ap- ·
phancea, Upper River Rd
beside Stone Crest Motel :
614-448· 7398.

-

'

-

CD Jeq 1

·1981 Hondo

ch ao.

now
chain •nd: .sproketa. ·new
bock li,re · 1400. Coli 246·
92'17 . .

F_...t
· .

~

Sura 31h horN
. pqwer mini
bli&lt;e; runo IJOOd 175. Coli
246·9277. ·. '
'

'

,;l

min.)

'

160

. .

I]) MOYIE; ' Slop ~ of
Anotl4r Kind' . . '
' ll) MOVIE: 'South Peclflc'

Cll

James Jacoby

Flipper

AulD

(J)

'84:

......

,..... ,Gnnd

fOiiU14e ·1

Prix from ......,, . . .
I]) • IJt filii Guy Souon
, ....... Colt. Howie ,Jody'a -.:h fO( 1 $3 miF
lion VNIU!II IMdo them on •
~thrOugh.• hqlei
Whora lha loot.ia hidden.·ceo

ANNIE

min.l

.

.

·

•

(() !It MOYIE: 'The
Caww;' 'ltwl'
(()®Child ........ Abar.
-wt.t Your anAua
ShDultl ~ NoEuy An-

..... - A Ptog~an for Junior Senior High .
School.' The Miwwopollo 1lo.ilion ~. eli- by
tl•opiot Cordtllo Kent. chmlliaa ..,. Ul ....... ilfdl't8bla.
somitil •..-~ . . .
tiona ad 1 I atbi encount•
end woyo to ·cope with
thom. C60 min. I[Ooeod

•

''

MOVIE:'Nuntllor

1E 700.Club &lt;II

9 :00

IIJIIJIIO!!I

+.uz

o,;..

J......,

20111 c - y.. with . .
Bil ·Moydla ,...,... the

rapid chenges oflha 1960'i

-hoe ......
much to
.,..
Clliture
foraed
IOQIIpt In

ceo min.)

[Ooeod Coptiollld)
1:30 ([J lnuwtlc 1 a: en-d-.
1ng n r twe Thia opoor
tlighlightl in¥HtigotiYe ...
pona end ._tara. , ·
(!I I'KA Ful Contact
Kerete from ..... Chealtt.
LA Gena McCGmb vs. OW.
.ill • . !Hound 'bout for
tlli U.S. Light Midil noiylll
. ChempioniiWp. ISO "*'·l

~ beart dilleardo. When Soutb

Coli anytime 114·44&amp;:
41137, Jomeo L. Oovlion, Jr.

®

:c.,
,._

, , :00 • (I) (() •

Judy Toylor Grooming. Cell
814· 387-7220.

mer

proved, pl11tic ae~ptic tanka
pl11tic culven. metal cui:

12 fl. Meyoro Aluminum
boot with II HP ·G:hryil..motor; ' Mlnn·Koto ..octrlc
Ill traiNng motor; Boot
trllller, 614-742-~1211.

varto. RON EVANS ENTER ·
PRISES. Jackaon. Oh 814·
288-5930.

For 1111 ·guerna,ey mlk cow!
goad fomly mllk cow wry ' .
gontlo.coll .1 14·742-3044.

·IS MO\IIN'
1\N',JUMPIN'

lODAV

......,HIIIII.w '

outcry
..,_

Tonight' s

It Andress

8i

'

'•.

12:00

I=

·t:'

•
CRYPTOQVOI'E

MOVIE: •. . , _

Theloq~lll'

1

M NOT A
FAILURE AHf MORE?
1

Upholaterv.

NO, SIR, I POHT KNOW

~OW A DESK

cAN

SHORE WllilouT ME IN IT

·~

· OFC
, FHI

II:

1 :00 (J)IM.m.dJoMI
()) Et•lllliwl*lt Tonight

1 :Jil

•
' 'i'

Till STAtE
I,IPHOLITERV IHOI'
1113 IM. ~vo.. Go..,.,. . .. •
114-441·7133 orll'4·448· ·;
1133..
.
'

(J) ESPN'o Horae lloclng
Wttltly

I

\

(

'

OFC

CTUCI, (;RC GY

MGWPT
PHQUF-

OFC FCliWO HIQRTCW .- EZWUZRZH

•

MGGPY
.
Ystenlay'&amp; Ctyploquote: IF I TOLD YOU HOW I REALLY FELT ABOUT YOU IT WOULD PROBABLY SOUND
LIKE A MEJ)IEY OF ~CHES FROM POPULAR
SONGS.- BERNARD SLADE

.

CI)N.-/SignOft

C) 1914 King F"tu'," S,.-ndlc•t.-1Inc

'·

.

OMG

GY

,,

.

()) MOVIE: 'Nw ghty
w.-r
()) ' - Ttl.t lob

'

'XCHQOA

OCW, GRC GY HRUQZIF , KQOOZRU

.()ICNN II I I111M N.• Willi. Wid Wtot
1:11 ()) unvu:: 'Stiw &amp;1 on
1M R;,;""T
. .

,. •'
Plona for oale. Cell 892·
8764 .

· apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are an
hlnta. Each day the code letters are different.

(() Solid Oald Hha

JIMI WA.TEII IERVICE.1
CoH Jlr,ri Lonler, 304-171•
7317.'
.

1 BR apt, convenient loci·

One .etter stands fOr another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X lor the tw.o o•s; etc. Single letters,

on Woodl ve. U.J. Puckett.

~~

..

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

-160 min.)

12:411 (() MOYIE:

'

,.

ileight
DAILY CRYPI'OQVOTES-Here'a boW lo work It;

(I) Jllcll ......, 8liaw
(!13nl Annulll ......... ,
PocUt: BIT' de S1n Rob-

(I)

.. .

. film
II Electra's

highllght

Big Fix'
(I) llurt4 • Allen
(!I.,.. Sportsl.ook

•

.

r'

&amp;!Allan

•au_. , • .

Ken'o Woter Service. Wlllo,
cloteri!O. JIOOio llllod. Phone
317·0U3 or 317· 7741
nigh! or d1y.
·

.•

Indian ·

UOpera

12:30 • (I) CD Ule N~ with
o.vldlat......... .

Jiim'eo loyo Wetor ltrvlco.
Aloo -Ia filled . Cell 114·
288·1141 or 8i4-441·
1171 or 114·441·781 1.

-.

covertnc

(() Nlghdlla
C11 MOVIE: 'FrtnOY'
• til Eye on HollyWood

Oenerlll Hauling r

entrance !II Quote

lbe•Orlglnate

()I Nlglldlla

•

You-"

• -belt
31 Keresan

DAce~

· CII......,Mihr

·,

Things

Z'IFall
or spring

(() ..,........ Anwlce

·,

-.

brother

CRI ceo min.l

. :8:14=··~_e~
.z~.-z:z;s4:.: l •....
-P;omet;::ov:;
--;

87

,

num joins a pro fOotball
teom in b oiuing to pro111ct
his friend from In OSHSsin.

a

811·

c•t•

(J) WKRP In ClnclmMI
• (() Megnum P.l. Mog·

D.A.Booton excovetlng, ·
complllt• do1er ond dump
truck oorvl-. Cell 887- '
8128 or 378-i288.
·
Eleqtrlcal
Refrigeration

I]) CD Tcinight . . _
1!11 lha

C!IS. tate •tiw

..

r

counter

; .=rorL.:!"in-l

KING

'

It Berlin

(() Dtd'o Amry

GOOOY··I'Ll
JUMP VOUR

•

member

Z'lllb'aine
legislature
28 Calorie

CDN~N!Mr

PAW SHORE

-41'111---.)

wills

!II Wlate SlliiCe 11 Mine

(() Cll. ()I

R.-llw

.1 1 :30 •

-.

U Beyllnd belp I Macbo guys
17 VeCII'Il'OOP 1 Mouths .
Answer
frim 1&amp;
(anat.) a Paste
!II Type
JJ Snuggery
8 Jllilisb Z1 Wllldpipe
ri gri!SS
It princess ZZ Valentine 31 Big game
standttill 11 British
symbol .33 Fake
• Ezertion
tradition 23 Collection U Lacerated
Zf Illy
14 Stock
ri fads 3S Lamb's
:5 English
excbange Zf ''All the
pen name

(I) MOVIE: 'Biwd I 11'
(I) llulrtel' h In Concwt
()) Anotlltr Life
(!I
ESPN'i
Rtngoldo

83

Delller: North
West N- Beel

tBeDow
DmfN
5 "For-the '1 Remainder
BeD Tolls" 2 Polpourri
t Diff--.t
s Reganling
It Afghan city 4 OJd.time
1Z Ulcatiotl
dance
U Aniwa iM 5 BJanch

" - · Don't Ttayr
Cor¥11 • w....

t;~wner .

•···

Vuluerable: North-Soutb

·' lty THOMAS' JOSEPH
ACROSS . 43 Substllnce

on tt.

(J) .......
.
(I) MOVIE: 'They Shoot

tQ7

dlsf!M l, t t '

. ®~
'
. . . dlflldentt0:30 (I) lioe Amwla

Go~- 1 Excevotlng, boo..., · '

•Axn

FOR REI FA!!F WEDNESDAY, !!FPl'EMBER It, lilt

"'*'

menta. foot••· drivewaylo·~
HptJc tanlta, landsceplng: ;

SOUTH
· +AJIOUU

led

t

In NtW York lntarnotionlly
known
photojoumeliats
Grey Divis Claudio London lilt out to diiiCOV8r who
is IRUideliiog the moot eligible single
in Now york.

..

+UH

+KQIOUS

•'

Clmdt An ex.ftgh ochool

Line

.Jt064
tiOIS
+1141

•
'

L--v_,..,....._•_._'_

10:00 .I])~ St. P11...,_
(I) a-t ..... In 1M lhlt

WINNIE

+u

a beart. .A dii!IMJDd .
pls,.t from dlunmy, woa by the ,

-his edclaac•n
"""""""'
lha gill. of
fantas6es
• (() Cll t.or-. end.,.,..

-

EAST
+ .7'
. • Q5

.WEST

dl8canliD&amp;

u

.· ......:.

())~-County

•

to Eut'a ue, dummy ·plsyitt&amp; low.
:14&gt;
It
:14&gt;
Soatb lnlmped tile tiDe of clubs
P- ZNT PUI
~ . . . . dummy wltb. opade
PPUI S&gt;t
Pue P. . PUI
Uld pla)ed • Wid nMIIIII of ~''-"'·
tile dla!IMJDd - esme up, the band
_... be - · Sach wu DOt to be.
"'-•· lea~ • 3
Eut pls,.ttbe jacllof d!amOada, aac1
_ _ __. •.
tile eotltltld wu eveatltally dowD one
....... Mart trict luld to be loll
,
Tbe a, to IlK c s 1e 111111c tile ace . the queen of diamolldl, be can plsy
of clllba 'a t the rl&amp;bt tltoe. That 11 aot· uotber spade to dummy aad cub lbe v
at tile flnt ~ l:ledarer IIIIOald play club ace, throwing bla -.11 di•mied ' .'
low fnlm dummy aJid trump the He returns to bla band by 111ffiD&amp; a ~
opee!111 J.-.. He DOW pliys a spade to clllb or a dlamoDd 81111 plaJI lila A·lt·S , •
tile . . - aad 1 low diUnooil. Eut of hearts. West wiDe tbe tbinl heart ~
~
!Dalt' . olha wile both tbe dla· btlt South will be able to. .....;....
-....,. bla ".·
!IM!Dd......
aDd
lbe
dab
aee
wlii
nrn. fourth heart In dummy aad lliUe tbe '
-..
,... ... contract.
. . ..
ifH

. . . . . "Oionge, Change.'

c«o min.I

f.lt-M

tK862

Solitb blew ~ about plao· :
aiDt tile · pliy at trlclt - · He COUld ·
..e alleart ' - - aDd 1 dla!IMJDd IORr.
Howe•er, Eut lied bid two clabe 8Dd
'!IIDtdd llold tbe d!emoed Ke U part
of Ide ftlt8 for tbat overcall. U Eut
luld fnw tbu foar dla!IM!!IdO wltb
tile - . tile a.tnd C!Gilld be made.
Ov tboillblftd dedarer woa tile club

-

w Clll w.a. "'-"" .,.

-ao ahcrt. time.

•nz

NORTH
+KQI

~ - ' aDOiber d!•!IM!Dd wu

CPREMIEREI

•

The timing
is crucial

ace,

c....-

tionodl

ALLEY OOP

BHULAW'S Plumbing ond
Halting, 211 Sixth ·St ..
Point Pleonnt, W.·Ve . 304·
67.11·5420. Uco~oed ·~.i·
in1.,red.
.
· '
Exctvating

Noma. ThM

mqtarcycle. ~t.

JIM'S PLUMBING 6 HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 3611, Oolll.
polio. Cill 814·38~·0678.

.

\

tAnlw!irl k:wnouuw)

I]) (!) lllgh_., to
......., · CPREMIEREI A
young vvn-t Ia hired to
help rohobilitot• • stAir high
school athlete~ in.l

WANTED: Monull • tHttng . SEWING . Mlohlnt repoiro: "'
bO• for Dodge 4•4. 72 lhru oervlo1. ·AuthilriNd Slnt'l :
77. Coli 304-171-3481
Bervlco Sho;po~ ·
Sileo
from 8:30 to 4:30.
•
Scluoro. fobrlc lhop: • ,

'

I l I 1 XJ

• WKIIP In Cll... o.tl

CARTER:S PLUMBING
. AND HEATING
~or. Fourth ond lllne
·
Gellpoli•. Phlo •
Phone 11'4 ·448··3888 or ·
814·441·4477 .

1871 Cordovl n - trano·
million. 304·41111',130.

I

rI

'Ti-116.

8 ;00 •

r~Y~· =i~~~~;;:==-

B4

tio11. no peti. ae·c urity depoolt. Cell 448·2066.

5A~L.Y

Yesterdly'a l Jumblts:TROTH F(_)LIO_ IGUANA TUMUL.T
·
Answef; 'The lmprnslon made on one whQ'a been In
the Navy might be.quite lasting-A TATT~

F......,

• IJt New
T.-

4

.R.mott.lig interior and exte19:79 Ft&gt;rd Brqnco Ronger' rior. F- eotlmoteo. 304· ,
XLT. air, AM·FM. Call 44il- 896·34211 or 881-331.4.
2177.
Sulldlni ·remadi.ling. ,.Polr·
ing, coH collect 1-304·8371974 CJ6,. good tireo, now
top, 'body good , 11100. 2928.
304-876·1782 lifter l . pm. ·
Seturdoy 304·676-1849 ell 82
Pluml!ing
do
·
8i He11ting

HILLCREST KENNEL's
Boarding ell bleodo. Hoetu_
indoor- outdoor facilitie• .
AKC Doberman puppiea:
Stud Service. Cell614·448·
77.9 5.

oional All·br•d grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding focllitloo. Englloh Cocker Spa·
niel puppilio. Coli 814· 388·
9790.

.

111Bnn'M":

ely

rr's IIIOT w!!:ces-

~
· ~~~~~~

Pmr.,....,_: "t

Clo•••d .t Atlonll ·

I]) . I ] )

fatty , _ Trlmml!ta. etump
removal. Call 304·871·
1 3.3 1 .
;.,. ·
'
RINOLES'S SERVICE. ••· .' • :
porlencod corpent..-; electrl·
c::~an. me110n, pliriter. roof·
ing Cincluding hot tor
oppllcet!onl 304-176· 2088· ·
or 871·4110.
Rotary or coble tool drUIIng.
Moot wello completed aome
dey. Pump ..leo ond torvl·
.... 304-!191·3802. .
'

·Pets ' for Sale

·Briarpatch Kelllnela Profea-

Plastic cisterna state ap-

'

.83

limestone. s,nd, Gravel.
Delivered in ~aaon; Meigl,
Gallia ·o r pick up at Richards

• Son. Call 448· 7785.

(1) ....... 1

8A8EMENT
1;;=~=;:::~:::;:=:.::::
WA.TEI!PROOI;ING · '
·Unoonditlonelllfellmo gue·
72
Trucks for Sale
· ront•. ~ocel reference•
·furnilihlld. Free ettlmotaa.
1950 C.hevv PU good cond ..
Cell. cOitoct 1·814-237;
1800. Coli 814·21&amp;·8248 .
041•• 8 o.m. to II p.m. .'
Rogere Basement
11178 Chevy luv. , 4opd, Wotorprooflng.
topper, radio U798. John'• ·
..
.
Auto · Soleo BulovHie Rd.
Galllpolla. Ohio. 448-4782. OENE ' I DEEP STEAM •
CARPeT - CLEAN.
'
l
cotchgual'd·water extr1c•
1983 ,
Renger with tion,
d_.dorloero. FREE ea1~ ..
camper top, PS. PB, AC, mataa.
Rn1onable racea:
14.000 mi . lmmoculote- O.noi Sniith,
992,8309.
cond. Cell 61 4· 2.1 8-8753.
RON'S Toleviolon Servl..,.
1982 Ford F· 1 00
Bpoclollolng ln , Z8rllth and
mllea, 3 aPd .. power - · Ou•zar, tand
lng. eliding reer gleu. AM· MotorOla.
houoo colla. CoN 304·1178FM couotte, *8.800. Coli 2388
or 1114-448-24114. '
448·9634.
'
'. .

d•y 304-882·2222.
evenong 882-3239.

256-8245.

children

A " "'
. SI"ASE. " 1!1-UT

Miami Dol!ma.

H II; I Home bnprovement8
vin_yl ol..ng, roofing, room
odditlori, itorm windcwa.
etono. Col 114, 387·04.119
or 814· 387-7244.

'79 Pinto Run AbOut .;,lth
new motor. •1 .-400.00 .
304· 67&amp;-3479. '

Pho~e

56

MO. ·

....., NFL"a C&gt;rultlt Momonu "'"""'" highlighta of
, thO 1972 Wortd Chanipion

PAINTING· int..lor .ond o•·
tonor, pluinbhlli. · roofing;
oomo ,.....,..lng. 201yri.
axp. C1ll 814·388' 9882. ·

Autos for

33, Now Haven. Complete
maaonry supplie,, 4"~ au~
· ·· ·· - --·--~ - ··· -

NewS

(!I Nfl'a OoMtwl

"

Cll Whttl of Fortune

'

12 .. biQck. Deliv.-rv service.

45

992-7479.
2 br unfurniah8d Camp
Conley, 8150. mo. 304•
876·1371 or 675-3812.
'

2 N- HoUonil 8 ton oMage
wagon t3600. eech; 1oupor
717 Chopper n 600.; 1
oupor 23 Blower 1500. Cell
John Gerlach 304-676.
6253 . .

''

FI6HIN6 MAY 1!5S:

r:uccoRI
) I I ()

7:30 • I])
'fee Dough
I]) NOt NICIII~ the

· ln.ro!ll"a rubbo&lt; ·
ynn e~perltncw.
In built up roof.- •

Now open for · buaineu,
Mountain S1ate Block, Rt.

304· 876-.3 000 or 61 4 · 446·
0682.

Threo bedroom, 12 by 86.
air condition. waaher. dryer,
furnished t200.00plusdep·
oait and utilities. Call 614·

IUM&lt; 717

Coll1·304-474·.3317.

You build it or we will24x48
4 cor garage kit, 12,496,
del. Caii1·814·8B8·7311 .

876-3431.

referencea &amp; dap. 81.40 mo.

Call 614-643·2644 or 614843·2916. .

S~:~pplies

1

corn. •nd g~111
head. P.T.O., fox bl'o wer.

chopper,

.............
Jic

'

•

INAHZJGj
() (

.

!ll•r•o~m Roofing • spoUt;. •:

Tr .lllsport.;ll on

aale or leaJe with option to
buy. 304-675· 6720.

~"':..of

Fortune
.(()WIIItlofFciitune
I]) Clll MKNei!Lellrlr
Neullhour
CIINeww·

.::.
··

F t r l1' ' ll 11 11 11 t' :-.
&lt;'. liV1'01 ,,

home. unfurnished, fUei oil

furnace , Cell 814· 992'
6183.

()I 'l!:..11io•••rt

(I) •

.' ...
----:-----.,-'-~. :~:

plum a ~ . honey,

aorghum anCI apple butter.
Sr, Rt. 881, S.E. of Albony
Houro 1·7 doUy, Soi. &amp; Su~
10.6. 814·898·1298.

~=~1M8rldto

Home
lmpro.,.menta

Dunrovlft Fruit Farrri Merrote, Jom~thlln. Mclntoch,
""d' Grlmo opplft. Cdil-d

I IJ
·=-..:::::=-I TOCET
I
1 .· r J
()

· 7 :00 .I]) PM l' 11 .,.

1872 Tre¥81 Mite CemM&lt;. : :
81Hpl 8 . ·Ntodo ""'"' re- •
pair. nso.oo, Coli 887·
3402.

Rod roapborrlo 0. Toylb~o
!larry Potch. Coll448·8892 .

grape1.

9/19/84
Mf!!NG

0!!-m, ••· ooncf, · •100. ;

Monln D-31 guitar with
Coli. 11 ,200.00. 304-773' '
, 1887.

Unfurniohed houee. 3 bdr .,

Television
Viewing

7t .Motort Homae

Conn 11to ··•••PhOne

· Franklin wood burner
rnodol 28 SW 3li7 11
borrel. tunod octlcin, pockmyor gripa. Roao 26 ln . ·10
opMd bike. Coli 61 4·3889811 .

furnished ·house.

KIT 'N' CAIIL YU ~...,Wright

Ml!afcll
lnltr11rnenta

UMd boild lnotrumonta for
1010, fronk'o l'own lhop,
430 Ind. A,... GoiHpollo,
441·0140.
'

Far ule RCA vldoo dloa
ployor, oxoollent condition,
I 1 so. Coli 4!41·1711.

Housee for Rent

The Daily Ser1till4!11- PBG18-13

Wedneaday. Septeruber 19, 1984
• CamPtrt

'74' Fontolno ftotbod troller,
ollie kit, cholni. ond blndora.
Coli 114· 378-zne.

~7tllf.

!'/flfoNOIIIo/CE$

117

64 M jac . Merchandise

ill: III d 1:;

41

September 19,1

Ohio

.,
'

'

�.

.

1984

'

.......,tist Buckeye Builders
busy this week in Middleport
ByCIIARIENE HOEFt.ICH
Senllnel Staff Writer
Where can_you find men who will
rome to a town they've never seen
before, do construction work from
daylight to dark, and pay $10 a day
for the privilege?
You 'II find them In Middleport this
week!
Tile Baptist Buckeye Builders, a
grwp of 18 volunteers from across
Ohki with one from Indiana, are
here to put a new roof and siding on

the Hope Baptist Chapel on Grant
Street.

As· members of churches of the
Sout()em Baptist Convention, these

men give their spare tlme and
vacations !or home mission projects
-such as the work they're doing on
the old Howell homeplace In
Middleport which was converted
several years ago Into a church.
While the Carpenters for Christ
from the big Southern Baptist
Churches of the south have been
coming Into Ohio f9r many years
.constructing and renovating build·
ings, the Buckeye Builders have
only been organized for a couple of

Mayor's court

.·

Thirteen defendants forfeited
bonds In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday
night.
Tiley are Carolyn Lawrence,
Scott Depot, W. Va., $52; Robert
Ebert, Ne\1.' York City, $49; Connie
Aldridge, Racine, $53; Eric Lilly,
VIenna, W.Va., $50; Roger Hysell,
Pomeroy, ~; Frank Howrylak,
Crosslanes, W. Va·., $43; James
Gress, Letart, W. Va., $49; James
Drehel, Mlddleport,.$49; Charles S.
Chancey, syracuse, $47, ·all on
speeding charges; Richard Reuter,
Pomeroy, $375, driving while Intoxicated; Peggy Erwin, Racine, $63,
stop sign violation, and John
Thompson, Gahanna·,$43, illegal left
tum; Nicholas Leonard, Pomeroy,
$63, !allure to register vehicle.
Fined were charles Roush, New
Haven, $10 and costs, traftlc light
violation; Paul Brannon, Tuppers
Plains, $10'and costs, u-tum; !Vfark
Hood, Middleport, $63 and costs,
traffic fight . violation; wnnam
Landers, J[., Pomeroy, $63 and
costs. operatlngmotorvehiclewhile
under suspension; Marvin Wise,
Parkersburg, $63 and costs, traffic
light violation; VIrginia Hess,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, traffic light

violation.
Transferred to county court on a
traffic llght vlolattonwas the case of
Laura Van Meter, Pomeroy.

EJnergencysquads
answer seven calls
Seyen calls were answered by

local units Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service reports.
Tuppers Plains at 8:56 a.m. took
Louise Heines from the Chester
area to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg; Pomeroy at9: 51 a.m.
took Corrine Hager, Condor St., to
· Veteran ~ Memoria.!' Hospital;
TuPP'i'rs Plains at 11: 53 a .m.
answered a vehicle fire at Hlckocy
Lakes; Racine at 6: 11 p.m. took
.Charles Qeem, Cannel Road, to
Veterans Memorial; Tuppers
· Plains at 6:41p.m. took Mike Wolfe
from the firehouse to St. Joseph
HosptaU; Racine at 7: 19 p.m. took
Thomas Klein to Veterans Memor·
lal, and Middleport at 8:07p.m. was
called for Pam Shields, Coal and
Front Sts., with no transportation
being required.

New onlinance begins
Oct. I in Racine
The Racine BQ;;\rd of Public
Affairs reminds residents served by
the Racine Water Department that
beginning with the Oct. 1 billing, a
new ordinance regarding nonpaymentofblllswill take effect. The
new ordinance provides that any
coosumer falling to pay the Water
bill lor service provided for •one
three-month unmetered billing pe.
rlod shall have the water service
tennlnated If the bill Is not paid
within 48 hours after receipts for a
written notice of temtinatlon. Bills
, are due and payable on the 15th of
.' the month.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Charles Stewart, Cheshire; Cathy Carleton, Racine;
Corrine Hager, Pomeroy; Walter
Kennedy, Pomeroy; Charles Deem,
Racine.
Discharged- Robert Roush, Harold Davis, Dwight Burian, Clarence McDaniel, Leona Karr, Harold
Brannon, Laura Krebs.

Revival planned
The Red Brush Church of Christ

on the Bashan Road will have a five
night gospel meeting beginning
Thursday and running through
Sept. 24 at 7: .ll each evening. Guy
MaUory of Winter Haven, W. Va.,
w1ll be the speaker. The publiC Is
Invited to attend.

·Thursday meeting
The Meigs County Humane
Society will ·meet at 7:.ll p.m.
. Thursday at the LaSaUe Hotel
meeting room.

Paul Clark whowasrecentlyflned
in Meigs County Court ls .the Paul
Clark who resides at 740 High St., 1n
Middleport:
.

Daniel J. Hindy

Thlslsthesecond summerand the
second project for the Scioto Valley
group of the Builders.
Several members of the Pomeroy
Southern Baptist Church have
pttch!"d In to help as has the pastor of
the chapel, the Rev. James Butcher
of Wellston, and 5E!Veral of the
congregation. .
The Rev. LamarO'Bryant, pastor
of the $baron Baptist Church;
Ironton; is superintendent orthe job,
The $10 a day which the men pay
goes toward buying fOOd. Sonny
McClure of the Pomeroy Church ls
· cook for the group and they're all
bunking at the McClure farm on
Skinner Road. Lunch ~ SE!!Ved atthe
job site with VIrginia Whltfletd of
Carthage Ind., wife of the one of the
workers, lending a hand In the
preparation.
'

ON Wfi'JI THE ROOF - Volunteers In the Baptist

goes ~P-'___

(Continued from page 1)

FAfi'IIFULINMJSSIONWORK-'I.blslstheslxlhchurchlhlsyear
that retired James Whitfield of Carthage, Ind. has worked on. I&amp;
expertise In the COII!Itnlctloolleld has made him an Invaluable volunteer
for the llaptl8t Buckeye BuDders: He and Ills Wife, VIrginia, who helps

wllhlheUghterchores, wiDbeleavlngforY~~~~~Q,Arizonane1dmonthfor

'

' ·•

Strong economic stand pushed
Hocking Glass to buDd a new
plastics plant out of Ohio as an
example ot businesses discoUraged
by the tax structure.
· MtS. Sheets · also asked the
committee to commit Itself to coal
mining and research, and· to
recognize small business and tourisrfl as vital to the economic picture
of southeastern Ohio.
The platform committee Is expected to adopt many of thl!
suggestions heard In testimony.

Deddlng factor
According to the Commissioners,
feasibility would appear to be the
deciding factor. FeaSibility was
explained as administrative capability. In the opinion of the review
board, C.A.A. could not effectlvly
administer both programs. It was
also stated during the meeting that
the board finally decided on GaUia
simply because the CA.A. office Is
there.
Atthattlme, lt was pointed out by
the Commissioners that C.A.A.
serves Meigs and GaDia equally and
that a score of 2.5 on feasibility for
both counties would have seemed
appropriate. If that had been the
case, Meigs would have received the
grant, not Gallla.

CommlssloJl!!fS

Indicate they

· want to make It clear to the pt:bllc
that they are happy that GaBia
received Its grant, but that the
rejection of Meigs' grant does not
seem to be on the up and up.
·
Said jones,"The state's gut~ ,
lines for these programs are good.
Let's go by them."
Said Kohlentz, "When a decision
Is made' before all the data Is In,
someone has to ask a question." .
Said Roush, "I think evecythlng
wascutanddrledbeforeweevengol'
fu Columbus. It seems to me that ·
those people thought they'd justify
.their decision and we'd just shrug
our shoulders and walk out."
Commissioners say they hope this
Is not the end of the ronfllct lind that
they fully Intend to contact Coil·
gresiman Clarence Miller'sotllceto
make him aware of the entire
matter,

A ~l!Jcky inan was killed and ·said Thursday morning one of
Pcrier's passengers, MonDa J.
two passengers from Galllpolls
Taylor,
'rl, CourtSt,GalllpoJis, was'
.were Injured In a single-ear accident·
In
fair
condition In the hospital's
on Nelihborhood ROad Wednesday
Intensive
care. unit. She Is beliig
evening.
.
Killed was Chatles E. Porter, :ll, •!Nated tor a broken ~ leg, lJroken
Flatwoods.'Il)eGallla-Melgs post of pelvis, Cuts and brulles according to
·· .
the state highway patrol said Porte!' lllspltal omctaJs.
Porter's other passenger, Rae ·
was sOuthbound at 6 p.m. approxl·
tnately one and three-tenths miles .C8ldwell, 29, Rt. 2, C'.aJIIpolls, was
· sruth of Ohio 141, whm he !Nated fo[ multiple trauma and
reportedly lost control d. his car In a released otrlclals said.
Meanwhlle, a Galllpolls WUnail
Cuive, struck an Elllbanl!rti!!nt, a
wascltedbytbeGaiba-Melgspostol
rock and overfurned.
Porter wa, transported to Holzer · the state hlgliway patrol following a
Medical Cenle[ and transfen'ed to twocar accident on Ohio 100
Sallit Mary's Hospital In Hunting· Wedliesday afternoon.
The patrol said cars driven by
ton, w.vt~herehedledaccordlng
VIvian
R. Conley, 32, Rt 4,
·to a
t Mary:s nursing
Gallipolis,
and VIrginia E. Bui'ger,
supervisor.
59, Rt. 4, Galllpolls, were northHolzer Medical Center orncials bound on 100. Burger stopped In
·'
'
traffic and the patrol said Conley
could not stop In time and struck
Burgerfrqfll behlndat3; lip.m. The

r------:=================

causro

'

Weather
forecast
•

-

/
The

winning number drawn Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "TI:e Number," was 836.
In · the " Pick 4" game, played
: Monday through Friday, the win·
nlng number was 6437.

. :-i ').-' .I .

, . ..

SINCE ISSS

I

"~ '

~ -··

1'. '" "' ,, I ""'

I . , ,,

' · I I " ' ' ' "~

ment of

Scnsonnily AC1ttJ Ste d Ftqures
Source . Commetce Dep.Jttment

'

HURRY

HOUSING sTAR'IS -

llllld

IN

I'M8

AND ·GET ONE FOR

m1111o11 11111111,

LEE ETHRIDGE

I

The two

u.e

I

•phutd).

. Its lowest ratestnce December,1982.
In other ecoiiOinlc deYelopnents,
Ainerlcans' personal Intune In
Auaust posted the smallest p1n m
three mooths while new llrmlng
construction plunged 12.8 petl'ellt,
the penuuent said Wednesday, as
the emnmry gave further signs or a
rapid slclwcbm.
.
The new reports sent many
. economists SCIU"p'lng to revise their
predlctkxis fo[ emnomlc growlhfo[
the ll!SI d. but the Reagan
.administratiOn said It was stiCking

WASHINGI'ON (AP) -Contract
The Intense contract talks came
negotiators tor the mine W&lt;rkers as the UMW dn!w clole to an
and tbesoftcoallndllsteycontlnuelo lnfonnal d :Dine lor lcbiiMng an
-reb tor a. settlement amid IIIPI!I!ment In~ to·avertastrlke
lndlcatlonl the unloll Is lll!8l'!n&amp; and u IIIXUt'S reported that union
acme tough declllnnl.
,
I ':leni ll'orn Ure VVIoul field
' The bllrpln1ng ~ tor the dlatllo.11 had been called toWashing·united Mine Workers or America ton for COIIIUitatiana.
and tbe Bituminous Coal ()perall!n
The contract between the Ullloll
AlloclatiOO met tlirrugJi much or and the BOlA cloetln't expire until
.the diY Wednesilay before ~­ Oct. 1, but • tentative 1111 eemeat
l;na talks late In the evening.
WOUld haW to be reached todQy to
'
.
pemrlt tlmetill' nmk-and-llleratlll- .
De11J1b O'Neil, a lpDkeBiban flir calion by the uilbl, whldl has mthe ,
~ bv'trmy JrOUP, uld It was put Nllilld to wcdc Without • ..
Ulll!lrtalD wbelhlr the two llltll!l I.'OII(rlctattne.
-'II return to the barplnlnltallle
AUMW IWI'Ile, wtro lpOiae 01i the'
!lldiYLUidltloii that he not be ldellttfled,

..

POMEROY

u.s ,

'

~

423·6300

'

Middleport VIllage ........g

IUbiiMIIIOii

011

llartiDpr J&gt;aaokway. WorlrftB of the

paenl coatractor, Greg Rouoh, as shown' at labor 011
oae of Ute liorneL

Middleport's home
package different
By BOB HODUCH
SenHneJ S&amp;afl Writer
Wliue securing a new ~ Is a major problem
across the nation due 1o rocketing construction costs,
high down payments, and other !actors, Middleport
Village has an outstanding uew home package for

For example, the purchaser may select a twobedroooi model, the cost being $32,000, but about
$10,000 Is deducted from the top of the cost and the ·
buyer Will pay only $22,001 for .the new house. Cost of a
$42.000 lariler home would be $32,000.
Individuals purchasing In the new section - whlf;h
will be adequate for some 18 new houses - arrange
their own flnandng. However, Central Trust Co. of
Middleport Is handling financing on these homes with
no ~ payment ·required. Most lots .fo[ ~ .new
houses are to be 50 by Ill with some a little llirger.
Through the program, the Middleport Housing
Corporation will establish a revolving housing fund
which can be used to Invest In the construction or
addlttonltl new homes. Once a home In the new
sutHllvlslon Is complete then the lending agency turn!J
over the entire purchase price to the corporation to
put Into the revolving fund. ·
Another encouraging factor - and this situation oot
only Involves purchasers of new. homes In the
subdivision but any buDder of a new home In ~
cunmunlty -Is the real estate tax picture.
Middleport Council some months ago establlshed
Middleport as a tax abatement district. Through the
establishment of such a district, the new home owner
Is t!lCelllpl from paying real estate taxes on till!
property for 15 years. That, In Itself, Is the saving of

accident resulted In light damage to
~.
.
both vehicles and Conley was cited
In
l!l81,
through HOusing and Urban Developnent
for assured clear distance.
grants, Middleport VUlage purchased ap)rOXImately
No Injuries were reported In a
five acres on Hartinger Parkway. Since that time, the
. two-car collJson at the Intersection
acreage, once a gravel pit area, pas been !llled bY the
or Ohio 100 and Ohio 554. The patroi Holley
Brothers Construction Co.
·
said Cindy L. Halley, 21, Rt. .1. ..
More recently, Hemlock Pipeline of Racine
Gallipolis, was westbound on .554
Installed streets, water l!Jid sewer lines In the housing
lind Charles G. McMlllln, 29, Rt. 1,
subdivision.
'lbese ,services were also provided
VlnkiJt, was northbound on 100,
through HUD grants.
.
.
.
whm Halley reportedly pulled into
Today, five homesareunderoonstructlon under the
the path ol McMunn. Halley was
supervision
of Greg Rrush as the general contractOr.
cited for failure to yield the right of
Include Foreman and Abbott,
Sub-contractors
way following the 8 a.m. Incident.
Middleport,
on
air conditioning and heating, and
A 7: 45 a.m. accident on Ohio 7
Miller EJiectric Co. on the electrical Installations.
caused moderate damage to tw9
The new Middleport Housing Corp1radon Is
cars according to the patrol.
offering
the home purchaser tour designs !rom which
Clarence Randolph Jr., l'i, Racine,
to select with the price being set. Devla11on fr&lt;wn the
was- northbound on 7, according to
!)rice comes, however, If the purchaser
stated
the patrol, when a car driven by Joel
changes
c. Trw!, 38, Cheshire, reportedly selected. the plans or adds features to the horne
entered 7 from a private drive and
There Is subsidy money provided for labor..,. much many, many dollars - especially so on new property:
struck~dolph's car.Nolnjuresor
The five houses under construction In the
to the advantage of the purchaser. As a result the
cltailons were reported by the
purchaser gets a really good deal on tbe new house. subdivision are expected to be completed by Dec. 1,
patrol.

product, the broadest measw-e of a pronounced slowdown fr&lt;wn the string of weilker business statistiCs
the nation's emnomlc health. was • 10.1 percent pacesetln the first three released In recent weeks. Some
increasing at an annual rate or 3.6 months of the year and the 7.1 economists had feared the drop
percent fr·om July through· percent revised estimate for the would be more pronounced, predict.
Septanber.
period fr&lt;wn April through june.
lngtheGNPratecoulddip as low as2
The report showed that Amerl· .. That preDmlnary estimate for
The slowing or economic growth percent.
canswerealsonotaseagertospend \ grOwtnlnthecurrentquartermarks had been widely expected, given a
Themoremoderategrowthraleis
their earnings. Personal con.sumpwelcomed by most economists as a
tton spending rose by only 0.1
slgnill that the recovery from. the
!)el'91!ltt, matching the meager·
1981-82 recession can be sustained
Increase or July. Early 1n the year,
without kicking up Inflationary
. LOGAN, Ohio (AP)- Attorneys · and her !lance, Todd
$pending grew as much as 1.8
. Schultz, 19, In pressures.
for convicted murderer Dale N. October 1982. Johnston has bten
Indeed, the latest report conpaa:ut In a single month.
JOhnston have asked Hocking sentenced to death.
,
·
talned
good news on the inflation
Meanwhile, the U.S. economy has County Common Pleas Court to
The
list
of
wltqesses
Includes
front.
An
Index of prices tied to the
slowed dramaticallY fr&lt;wn Its brea- subpoena 57 witnesses for a hearing
Hocking
County
Proseculor
Chrfs
GNP
declined
for the secoiad
kneck pace of the first half of the · Friday on a possible retrial.
Veldt.
consecutive quarter. Thelndexi'QSe
year, but lnllatlon has edged down
The hearing, scheduled here for 9
Thompson, former pollee chief at at an annual rate of 2.9 percent 1n the
also, the government reported a.m., Is on a defense motion lor a
lnday. .
Logan, headed the murder probe .third quarter, down from a 3.3
new trial for Johnston, 51, who was whileworklngasaspeclallnvesttga- percent pace In the second Quarter
The O::mmeroe ~t re-' convicted Jan. 28ln theslayingofhls
tor for Veldt.
· and a 4.4 percent rate In the flr.st
ported that the gross national
stepdaughter, Annette Cooper, 18,
quarter.

57 subpoenaed for hearing

Union nears tough decisions

I

BELPRE. OHIO 457.

a drop ell

. Jll!l-•*· (API a

any Playtex bra or
~rirdle at our regular price
ana you can buy the
second one of eq~al value
for Yz price.

'l1ie

Cal••••
oe Deplu1mea&amp;
ho11111B1 ce..tructloa wu
••ned In Auault ll&amp;ate-U!Jb'
IIIQulted an....a
ol Ul

I81h1ncl Poll Off•ctl

OOLVILL£. OHIO 4572:&gt;

Cmunerce.

moothty declines left construction at

125 ~£E STREET

5th STREET

I'R(NECl' UNDERWAY- F1ve hlimM are UDder

COIII!IIructlou at Ute -

WASHINGTON (AP) - New by earlier forecasts.
home construction felll2.8 percent
The Commerce Department said
In August to 1.M million units,
Aqlerlcans' perscna1 Income rose
folbvlng a drop of 6.1 paceut In . 0.5 pau:ut In August, the smallest
July, according to the U.S. Depart- gain Since May.
,

... ' ......
· ··· 11·\-,··...

,.,.,,.,,..

··l/2 PRICE
y;-~~

federal grant under which the
center has operated for the past
eight years has run out. Grants or
this type are no longer available
since President Reagan deemed,
soon after laking o1flce, that federal
human services monies should go
Into each state block grant program
with each state directly responsible
for dividing the montes,
In the past, 90 percent.of funding
romlng into the 648 Board was
federa1. It Will now end up that only
~ to 25 percent or funding wm be
federal. Orebaugh also explained
that Title XXmoneytothe648Board
has also been reduced fr&lt;wn $700~
to $900,001 a year to $400,001 or less.
''There Is less money available In
tbe whole system today and even
less expected nest year.'' Orebaugh
said. Nlebm added, "As funds
continue to dwindle, more cutbacks
Will be forthcoming."
.
To date, most cutbacks have been
In , clerical positions, Orebaugh
reports. · However, the cutbacks
mean that fewer clients Will be
served.
(Continued on page 14) ·

New home construction declines again

/

THURSDAY SPECIAL
BUY ONE .~x·

FRIEND
WHITE-ETHRIDGE

2 Sactlono, I 6 Pog• 25 c.m.
A Muhimedla Inc. N - -

'

Ohio lottery winner
(AP)

entlne

. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September ,20, 1984

'Kentuckian killed in Gallia accident

until ~tember 19, 1!:«1. She alleges
that at that time, she was illegally
terminated from her job by Bailey.
Williams Is asking lor a judge- ·
ment· of $25,000 for the emotional
distress the loss of employment has
andfor$7,899,84ln lost wages
since her tennlnatlon.

CLEVELAND

•

y

,ByNANcYYOACHAM
1\oD Is ldentfl:al to that oUflilzer's,
· S&amp;,.ba 8t.fl Writer
P~t Valley or any other health
' Because or the loss of aJllli'OX\- care facility In that a prime
Mate'Iy $500,000 In funding for the determlnate In statflng Is the ·
,Dew fiscal year which began July 1,
number or first PllriY payers.
Woildlan!l Centers Inc. Is cutting
"We cOntract With tbe &amp;lll!oard
bad( oo support staff and therapists
for govenunent subsldbed funding
· . In Its mental healtll programs for and because that board has less
Gal)la, Jackson and Meigs Counties. . 10011ey with which to WOJ1c, we have
· Ellecutlve Director Dr. Bernard to bring our starr In line with that
Nlehm said, "With less fundtng we . subsidy money. ~ · Orebaugh
have no choice, but to cut back on continued.
pers&lt;&gt;nneJ.,"
We do not question the detennl·
The majority of tundJng to setve nations or the 648 Board. They have
cUents, 9J percent or which fall Into · cut back In their own operating
the needy category, comes through
budget In an effort to provide more
the 648 Mental Health Board from
money for client care," Nlelunsald.
federal block grants, Title XX state
County tax levies also provide
monies and State Department of moneyfo[mentaJhNithcare,butat
· Health matching funds.
the present time, there are no tax
In comparison, only ~pet q:~rt or levies operating In any or tbe three
. Woodland clients are first party counties. A levy was passed In
clients, .those who pay for .services Meigs, but the County Cdnmlsslonrendered on tbe spot, or third par1y ers chose last year not to collect
cUents, those Jiavlng sometype of those fUnds since Gallla and
Insurance or medicare coverage.
Jackson did not have similar~.
thetefore would not Ill! contributing '
.
Ure other care facilities
.
· According to Woodland Centers' tntheagency. "
Assodate Director ~alcolm dre- ·
Graat hal expired .·
, baugh, "Woodland Centers'. operaOreba~h explained that the

Fonner employe su~s county
A suit has been fUed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Betty Jane Wllllams, Pomeroy,
against Meigs County Commissioners David Koblentz, Rlchatd Jones
and Manning Roush, and against
Sharon Batley, Superintendent of
the Meigs County Home.
In her suit, Williams 5ays she was
employed at the home, which falls
under the responslbllty of toe
commissioners, from July .5, 1982

See report 011 Pap 8

Cutbacks.result
t~om funding.loss

Buckey!! BuDders, Scioto ValleY gnJUp, work oo Ute
tlllW roof of the Hope'Baptlst Chapel.

Commission-~--:-------

Home.

'I

. Copyo lglltod 1884

AlZheimer's disease

·

.e

. Vot.34; No.112

.

Dve montlis' volunteer work there.

.

S&amp;ortel. 011 Pqe 3

(Continued from page 1)
brummer were given professional
coverage for the district, board leave to attend the NJKE Championmembers, administrators, nurses ship Clinic In Cleveland, ~t. 28-3:).
and volunteers. · Transportation The board passed a resolution
agreements for students with Ed proclalmlng 1984-lfj as the "Year or
Baer and Mrs. Robert Eads were You and OhiO Schools...Partriers'
renews. A special meet(Jig was Building Excellence" ,Jn cooperapianned for October to update and tion with the Ohio Department of
revise board policies.
Education. All boai:d members,'
Deborah Grueserwas named as a Qlck Vaughan, Larry Powell; Bali
substitute bus driver for this school Barton Bob Snowden and Arland
.
year and Mlck Childs and Greg Klng, were present for the meeting.

A FRIEND WHEN YOU
NEED A

667·3110

Story !Ill Page '7

Local grid roundups

Tuit~on

Funeral services for Daniel
JOISePb Hlndy, 41, San Juan,
Capistrano, Calif., who died Sept. 10
at Long Beach, Calif., wlllbeheldat
1 p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Mr.Hindy,whowasamanagerof
the Avco Corp., was born In
GaDipolls, a son of the late Cass
Hlndy and VIrginia Hindy, Middleport, who survives.
Surviving alSo are his wile , Diane
Hlndy; three daughters, Danlelle,
· Beth Ann and BEcky, and a brother,
David Hlndy o!Ma8on, W. Va.
Officiating at services Will be the
.Rev. George Hoschar. i3uriat will be
In Kirkland Memortal Cemetery,
Frlends may call at the funeral ·
b:Jme from 7 to 9 Thursday and on
Frlday until time or services.

See letter 011 Pap 2

'

Seeks annulment

An annulment of marriage on
behalf of Dawn Gayette Wllllams, a
minor, by her mother. VIrginia I.
Thomas, Pomeroy, has also. been
requested. Thomas Is asking that
the marriage of her daughter to
William Thomas Wllllams, In care
of Betty Jean Reed, 'l'\lppers Pialrls,
be annulled since her daughter was
not of legal a~ and did not have her
mother's consent.

New crime victim law

yeat'$.

Pomeroy attorney Jennifer L.
Sheets, testifying before the Ohio
Republican Party Platform Com·
Meets Thursday
·The Meigs County Democratic mlttee In Columb\15 Monday, urg!"d
Executive Conunlttee will meet at the party to adopt a strong stand on
7: :ll p.m. Thursday at Cai'penters' · economic development In the state.
Mrs. Sheets, GOP candidate for
Hall, E. Main St., Pomeroy. AD
the
94th House District comprising
lnteres)ed Democrats are \RVIted.
GaDia, Meigs and Athens counties,
Racine Post 600, American Le- said the state's business climate "Is
gion, Will meet at the post home at suffering under the excessive taxing
of the Celeste administration.''
7: .ll p.m. Thursday.
She cited a decls:On by Anchor

High St. resident

Area deaths

Qualified candidate

Five defendants forfeited bonds
and three. others were fined In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night. .
Forfeiting were Robert D. &lt;;:line,
Marietta, $450, driving while lntaxl·
cated, and $50, left of center;
Delores M. Summers, Pomeroy,
$450, driving while Intoxicated;
Parlin E . Jewell, Clearwater, Fla.,
$450, driving while Intoxicated, and
$50, running a red light; Delbert W.
Fridley, Pomeroy, $450 reckless
operation, and $50, left of center;
John C. Ellis, Pomeroy, '$75,
permitting an Ulillcensed driver to
operate his vehicle.
Fined were Rick A. Priddy,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, driving
while under suspension, and $425
and three days In jaU, driving while
Intoxicated; Forrest W. Ramsey,
Cheshire, $425and threeqays In jall,
driving while Intoxicated, and $100
and costs, driving while under
suspension; James P. McOoud,
Middleport, $425 and three days In
jail, driving while Intoxicated.

Meigs County happenings••.

'

. '

.

said otllcers who once made up the
UMW's' now-defunct "bargaining
council" had been called to Wa·
slalngtonoo Wednesday.
Tht:lie otrlclals - presidents and
International executive board
members t1ttn eacholtheunloir's21
political 111bdlyl,slons .:.. were to
meet 'I1Iuraday evening, the source

Said.
A news blackout on the negotla·
tkxis has been agreed to by UMW
President Richard Trumka and
Qmclldatlon Coal Co. chief execulive CJI!lcer Bobby R. ~ chief
11111011a111r for tbe BCOI\; which
t$1

Iii :ll majcr eastern and

AW"I•chlan coal companies.

Columbus mayor will addres8
GOP fund raiser Sept. 25th . .
Dana G. Rinehart, Mayor of
Columbus and tonnerly of Meigs
County, Wllibethefeaturedspeaker
at a Meigs County Republican
Party fund raiser to be held
Tuesday, Sept. 25 beginning at 6: .ll
p.m., at the Royal Oak Park
Recreation Center.
Thefundralserlsbelngsponsored
by the Meigs County Republican
Executive Conunlttee. A social
half·hour Will begin at 6 p.m.
preceedlng the dinner. Tickets for
the affair are
per person and
may be obtained from any Republfcan olflce holder.

m

In announcing the fund raiser,
Republican Party. Chairman Rich
. Jones stated, "We are pleased ·io
have a man of the caliber of Mayor
Rinehart as our featured speaker.
Not only Is he the mayor of our
capital city of Columbus but Is alsO
one of the riSing young stars In ·the
·Republican ·party. In addition,
Mayor Rinehart has roots In Meigs
County, having lived In the Tuppers
Plains area for a number of years as
a young man. I hope that au people
Interested in the R.epubUcan Party
will makeevecy etfort to attend and
(Continued on page 12)
'

•

r.

'

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