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                  <text>Pameroy--M~IepOrt,

Ohio

Wednesday, August 24, 1983

Worst drought in 4 7 years
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AI') - A
burley growing. Several Pulaski
summer drought that has crippled · County farmers, for example,
tobacco crops throughout Kentucky
plowed their crops under In tbe field
Is the worst In 47 years, according to
last week.
producer Jess Jones, . who says
Officials with the Federal Crop
Intense heat has stunted leaf growth
Insurance Corp.'s regional office In
on his farm to about half the usual
Nashville, Tenn. , have reported
size.
unusuaUy blgh requests for early
Jones, a 61-year-old Woodford
fjeld Inspections by Insurance
County grower, remembers the sun
adjusters, That, official$ said, Is a
was so relentless In 1936 that he had
clue that farmers aren't planning to
to help his father cover tobacco with
harvest undeveloped plants.
dirt to keep young plants from being
Denton Barron, of Somerset, Ky.,
baked.
Is among those growers. "Stuff like
Since then, he said Tuesday, the
that ain't even worth taking to the
summer of 19831s "the driest time I
barn," he said. "It wouldn't pay a
ever did see. It just flat got to us."
man to cull!."
Early projections by the Ken·
·under good weather conditions,
tucky Crop &amp; Livestock Reporting Barron's tobacco would have toService estimate the state's burley wered over the knee-high leaf he
·production this year at 360.8 million · destroyed laSt week. The burley
pounds, or 33 percent below last would haw earned more than
year's record total. Production $22,000. His
settlement
throughout .an eight-state burley will be $9.100, he said. That's less
region will be . about 559 ,mllllon than a good cl'dp would bring, but
pounds, or 31 percent below the 1982 betier than a total loss for a $317
crop,~Jfilcials said.
Insurance premium.
Much of the burley in central
.)'ones figures his tobacco troubles
Kentucky, tbe heart of the state's are common this year. .
tobacco belt, stopped growing and
"As far as I've been, It's short
began turning yellow In late July.
evecywhere," he said, adding that
Many burley growers have been he's seen only two "pretty decent
forced to harvest earlier than patches" within 15 m1Jei; of Ver·
planned because leaves weredrytng sallies, about 50 miles east of
up In the fields. Others have decided Louisville.
to scrap the harvest, one of the most
Another chte to poor conditions Is
expensive phases in labor-intensive lack of demand for f!eld workers.

Insurance

BAn CROI'- The sizzling heat which has struck
. lite nation for the past two and one haH months has
lltuDted the growth of corn and other crops. The corn
above Is a fine example of the drought which has

foUowed. In Ohio, Governqr J:Uchard Celeste has put
In a plea for federal assistance for severru Ohio
Counties. (AI' Laserphoto ).

·Governor seeks crop disaster aid
~.

By The Associated Press

The

unrelenting heat wave
scorching Midwestern crops could
cause more than two dozen Ohio
countlestobeaddedtoGov.R!chard
&lt;:;eleste's plea for federal agrlcultu' · ·
ral disaster aid; officials 5ay.
. Homer Carter,
chief statistician
.
fortheOhioCropReport!ngServlce,
said farmers report 90 percent of
fields are short of moisture, while 10
percent, principally In counties
. alqngrn
· Oh!l,.ake ~:!~ adnd ln -north ~t- ..
.... e _
O, I'!!PC:h·La equat.emosture

suwlleS.

·

1

"There are parts of Ohio that are
Just as bad as lndia,na and Illinois,"
5ald Ohio Agriculture Stabilization
and Conservation Service Committee Chalnnan Thomas McMillan.
• Recently, Indiana was given
agricultural disaster status, which
makes farmers there eligible fcir

emergency loans at 8 percent
interest to continue farming.
Corn and soybean yJelds in m any
parts of western, central and
southern Ohio have been reduced by ··
the slx:week ilrotigllt thtit tia5 tieen
inte!TIIpted only by Infrequent
thunderstorms .
Temperatures during August
have repeatedly soared into the 90s,
and durtng the weekend topped 100
ln-ht~~oca~\onshf h ' . in',:_
. e uouug , w c ISW0!1*' u"'
western Corn Belt, has cut the
nation's expected corn crop from 6
billion bushels to about5 billion.
Celeste last week asked for
disaster designations for Butler and
Hamilton Counties.
U.S. Agriculture Secretary John
Block has yet to act on the requests.
According to officials, other

:Meigs.County happenings .•.
:Deadline Thursday
. The deadline for the filing of
·petitions of candidacy for the Nov. 8
electkm Is 4 p.m. Thursday.
Candidates are flling for seats on
local and the county board of
education, township trustee and
clerk and villages besides of
Pomeroy and Middleport. Deadline
for registration for voting In the Nov.
election Is Oct.ll.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted--Douglas Grover, Mid·
dleport; Kltly Love, Middleport;
DeUa Cleland, Rutland.
Discharged--Vera Stewart, Ruth
Tillis, Milton Geary.

Check accident
The Gallla-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol reported a tw~ar
ac~ident occurred Tuesday at 1: 50
p.m. on County Road 28 In Chester
Township of Meigs County. ·
The accident involved vehicles
driven by Cynthia D. Whlte,18, Long
Bottom, and Caroly Y. Holley, 36,
Minersville.
White was traveling northbound
on 28 and Holley was traveling
southbound on 28. Both cars were
sideswiped and received moderate
damage.

Marriage license
A m arriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Kevin Harold King, 22, Columbus,
and Cathy Ann Hess, 20, Middleport.

Weather forecast

Emergency runs

Partly cloudy Thursday. Low
&amp;:&gt;-70. Winds southeasterly to south·
erly aroond 10 mph. P artly cloudy
Thursday. High 81).90.
Exlended Ohio Forecast
Friday lbrough Swtday:
Warm and humid on Friday with
a Ultle cooling on the weekend.
Chance of showers and thunder·
atonns Friday and Satunlay and
II'ICJ8I;Iy SUIIIIJ' Sunday. Lows In the
aJs to low 'lOs. Jnghs In the mid-80s to
mld-8011Frklay and mostly In the 80s
oo the weekend.

Five calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
E mergency Medical Service reports. At 5:23a.m., Tuppers Plains
went to Owl Hollow Road to treat
Estella Deem; at8:42a.m.,Rutland
went to Leading Creek Road for
Douglas Grover, laken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Ml\ldleport at
4:10 p.m. took Kitty Lowe, 971 S.
Second Ave., to Veterans Memor·
lal; Rutlfl\!t;;~ t 5:03p.m. took Della
Cleland, Dexter, to Vetera ns Memorial a nd Middleport at 11:41 p.m .
took Barbara Smith, Park St., to
Veterans Memorial.

'

Erin D. Foley

LeRoy E. Piersall of Mason; three

daughters, Mrs. Joseph "Betty"
Erin Danlelle Foley, 2, Coolville, Llsh, Mrs. Charles "La Vera"
died unexpectedly Tuesday at St. · Yeager both ol Mason; Anne
Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Piersall of Huntington; one brother,
Va .
Rondeau Ball Jr., Lebanon, Va.;
She was born In Parkersburg, a four sisters, Mrs. Eula Gibson,
daughter of Craig and Ruth Fowler Brtstle, Tenn.; Mrs. Kltly Thomp·
Foley. ·
son, Blountvllle, Tenn,; Mrs.
Besides her parents, she Is Evelyn Hobbs, Lebanon, Va.; Mrs.
survived by a sister, Dawn, at Edna Stump, Honaker, Va; seven
home; maternal grandparents, grandchildren and nine greatGeorge A. and Mary C. Fowler, grandchildren.
Coolville; paternal grandparents,
Funeral services will be Friday at
Wllllarn and Nancy Watson, Reeds- 1 p.m. at Foglesong Funeral home
ville, and pa te rnal great- with the Rev. Ben Stevens and the
grandmother, Estella Deem, Rev. Tally Hanna officiating.
Reedsville.
Burial will follow In Suncrest
Services will be held at the White Memorial Park In Point Pleasant
Funeral Home in Coo!vllle at 2 p.m. Friends may cau at the funeral
Thursday with the Rev. Duana home Thursday from &amp;-9 p.m.
Sydenstrtcker officiating. Burtal
Eastern Star services will be
will be in the Stewart Cemetery at conducted at 7 p.m . Thursday.
Hockingport. Friends may · call at
the funeral home anytime after 3
Lee Teegarden
p.m. today.
Lee E. Teegarden, Portsmouth,
La Vera B. Piersall
formerly of Meigs County, died
La Vera BaH PlersaU, 73, Mason, Monday at his residence . Services
died Tuesday evening at Veterans will be held at 1:00 p.m. Thursday
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy, at the W!ndei -Howland·Bryant
Ohio.
Funeral Horne In Portsmouth
Born Aprll 13, 1910 in Homker, where friends may call from 7 to 9
Alexander Rondeau and Mariah
Jestin
Harrts BaH.
Va. ,sbewasthedaughterofthe
late
She was a member of the Mason
United Methodist Chureh, Eastern
star and the Dorens Circle of the
Trinity United Methodist Cbureh in
Point Pleasant.
Survivors include her husband,

VIola

MICHAEL H. CHANCEY, M. D.
Wishes To Announce the Opening of His
Practice For

PEDIATRICS
Specializing-in Childhood and
Adolescent Medicine

PINNELL STREET, RIPLEY, WV
EHective August 14, 1983
TELEPHONE 372-5000

Hyllla Eblin
Lucille Ewing

.Plan squiJI'e dance'

-Notebooks
-Lunch Boxes
-Crayons
-Glue ·
;_Rulers

1

at y

.e nttne
2 S.Ctiam, 12Page•

20 Cent1
A Multimedia Inc. N•w•pap•r

Bernadette Anderson, clerk-treasurer Is to determine how much money was collectetllast year from
the tax. Reed will meet with Anderson to decide how
much of a monthly payment councll will be able to
make. A resolution to borrow the money wlll be dra w
up and and presented at the next meeting.

no

w

are

-Pads
-Tape
-Scissors

-Pencils
-Pens
-Notebooks
-Writing Tablets
-Filler Pa:.;;,per~~~=--

sign

Andrews

.

.

Complaint says
advance payment
unfair to rural
electric customers
()VI'ataff

Pi!QpJe using electrtclty in rural
reQlllred to
l11llJ&lt;e i!dvance payment for con·
struction costs wben obtaining
electric service, according to a
complaint filed by the Ohio office of
the Consumers' Counsel against
Colwnbus and the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. that was
sent to the Public Utillties Commission of Ohio.
The complaint charges that the
C&amp;SOE violated state rules and
company tariffs by requiring ad·
vance payment of construction
costs from customers seeking
serviCe in rural areas.
The complaint- filed on behaH of
.15 residents living In several rural
county areas Including Gallla and
Meigs - claims C&amp;SOE has
demanded advance payments from
the complaintants ranging from
$700 to more than $14,000 before the
company will provide service.
C&amp;SOE has purportedly used this
"up frOnt" money to erect utility
polEs, extend lines and establish
Power to the customer, according to
!he flied complaint
In the complaint, the OCC alleges
that this policy has prevented many
rural customers from obtaining
service -In one instance for as k&gt;ng
as a decade.
ByronMcCoyoi.Reedsville,oneof
the 15 tor whom the suit was filed-

areas should not be

Rate hike
application
received

said he has had his electrtclty
lnstJiled after paying the up-front
money for construction of the lines.
Even though he went ahead and
payedthemoney"upfront,"McCoy
said he Is still named In the suit
because he Is trying to get some of
the money lll!ck.
"What they're doing Is thievery,
and It's not good when the law does
notaDowthem todolt,"McCoysald.
PUCO rules and company regulations allow for residents In rural
sections of the company's servle!!
territory to get electrical power If
they agree to pay 1 percent of the
cost of' construction every month,
. aecordlng to the !Ued complaint.
Tbat payment plan Is called tbe
rural line extension (RLX) plan.
· 1be ace complaint slated the
electric utlllty falled to offer the
RLX plan to these rum! customers,
who either have gone without
electricity or have got ltafterpayJng
construction costs In advance.
Although he has received his
electric service after paYing an
undisclosed amount of money,
McCoy said, "I hope that any
infonnatlon I can provide can help
get these other people service."
McCoy added that "the amount I
payed 'up front' for my electrtc
service Is chlckenfeed compared to
the $4,00) to upwards of $15,000 that
some people are being asked to pay
for service instaUatlon."
(Continued ori page 12)

REPAINI'ING JOB Gary llltchcock of
GaJJia.Melp Regional Airport Inspects the painting
Job·done oo the 11011thwe8t approach to the alrpott by
J.A. Reke Co. of Eldorado, Ohio. Reke, ll8ted as an
experi In alrpon nmway Pamtlng, was e&gt;&lt;peeled to

finish work~. Touchup of nmway numbers and
directions Is part
repair work being done on the

or

15-ye&amp;Nlld faclllty. Runway repaving was done last
week and painting of hangars Is planned for
Septemher.

Speaker Riffe ·will campaign
Southern board okays against tax-slashing issues

Robin Southern
Juanita Spencer
Hazel Sprague
Cheryl Thomas
Greg Thomas
Wilma Tillis
Allee Trtpp
Larry Tucker
Lon Tucker
Linda Van Inwagen
Nancy Van Meter
Jackie Wagner
Kaye Walker
Violet Walker
Charles Warden
Shirley Wells
Anna Wlles
Lewis W!Uiarns
Carol Will
Sonya Wolfe
Peggy Wood
Margaret Wyatt

new salary schedules

•

Soothern'sLocaiDistrlctBoardof
Education Wednesday night approved a new salary schedule lor
teachers and non -certified
employes.
The base teaching salary was
Increased from $11,500 to $12.100 for
those having a bachelor's degree.
Non-certified employes will receive
a 5.2 pet:L'Etlt pay increase.
Abudget totaling~707,618.71lwas
approved for 191!4.
1be board, In other actiOn,
approved the following lunch pri·
Regular price at the high school
1IDd junior high Is $1; regular prlce
In the elementacy schools, 90 cents;
l'educed prices In all schools is 40
cents; regular price for breakfast In
all schooisjs 150 cenls; reduced price
all schools 1s 00 cents; ordering
!eperately mllk Is :¥&gt; cents, sand·
~ 70 cents, vegetable or desert
40 cents. frazlen novelties 25 cents,
chlpa 25 cents and cookies, five

ces:

Linda Young

•

AMERJCARE CENTER

·I

cent&amp;

•
•

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, August 25, 1983

By ERIC JENNINGS

The Standard Q(
&amp;cellence for
Rehabilitative
ffealth Care

•

the machines be billed on .the same date. Council will
A letter was received from Bank One, Pomeroy,
Fred Crow, village solicitor In regared to
contact
concerning the leasing of several parking meters at
drawing
up an ordinance In regard to the tax on
the corner of Qlurt and Second Streets. The meters,
Cable TV rates In Pomeroy will not Increase due to
·
amusement
machines. Funds received from the tax
acconllng to the letter will provide free parking lor
a 4-~ vote taken by Pornerny CouncU Wednesday
are
placed
in
the park fund .
bank customers. Councll will study the proposal.
night. Councll did not approve the second reading of
Don Ward, of the street department asked that a
an ordinance to Increase the rates.
Council receiveS $56 for the first three machines
caution light be installed at the Intersection of SR 7
Voting
were John Anderson, Larty Wehrung,
and $25 for every machine thereafter. They collect
and U.S. 33.
Bruce Reed and Bill Young. Casting the only yes vote
Airs complalat
$1,725 per year from the tax.
was Betty Baronlck.
Ward also noted that employes ol the street
Steven Craig, Pleasant Ridge, met with council
John Anderson brought up the Union Ave. project.
department have been hosing down the streets and
At the Aug. 1, meeting councll approved the first
concerning the poor conditon of a road going to his
It was noted that council. must come up with
reading by a 4·2 vote.
.
.. .
. working at the cemetery. He reported that the roads
home and .the fact that he does not. have city water.
.. percent rna telling funds , · · .... . . .
. .. . . .
&lt;1! the cemetery
in ~ condition.'
. ·
.
. · · "l'llvlilllProJeCI ,
· . .
·. 'Fhere .a re nlile re~;!dents living In the lireaaffeetedby
• . . A~rtling to lnformailim received .·from i&lt;lm · · ·
. It was also noted that a
Is needed to Indicate a
Upon receipt of a bid from the Shelly Company at
the road and water. Since thentis no city water, there
Shields, grant consultant, the village may use funds
curve on U. S. 33 near the 7·33 Carryout.
$33 per ton for 1,700 tons, councll stressed funds
are no fire hydrants. Ctalg said he would also like to
left over from the HUD sewage' grant
The condition of Wyllss Hill was also discussed.
received from the $5 permissive license tax will be
have fire protection.
Ward reported the road Is not passable. The hill
used to pay for the paving.
Regarding water extension, Bill Young reported
It was sugges\ed that' a contact be made with
slipped sometime ago and has not been used since.
Council discussed borrowing money io pay for the
that a study will be made of the area. It was suggested
Shields regarding the Union Ave. project, water
Ward Indicated no ftre vehicle could get to the area .
paving and paYing It back out of the money ~ved
that Reed Will who Is employe&lt;! by !he water
extension to_Nye Ave. !lnd Pleasant Rldg'e . .It. was ...
·.· ·· Amusement machine taX . _- ---- ..::~· - _stlgjleSed that'lllaybe, old.'"water' -lines·· could be ·: · .·
·-... . from tJJe·ltcense tAX. ~ . . . . • ,; .
. . . ~~ be eontac_le!l concerillhg- the water line ,: -: " _;-.
Harold· Btown diScussect the taX on a.irltisement ·
.g oing !Q the area..
· · · ·
. · ·
&gt; Councllinart Bnlce Reed ixlinl!ld ·;rut ·that the
repalced on Mulberry Heights. Anderson suggeSted
machines and suggested thai the tax be pro-rated and
· Mayor Clarence
permissive tax money would be tted up for the next
asked Don Wilrd to check
tha t application for funds be made through Ohio EPA
non refundable. He suggested that persons operating
seven to eight years.
the road and drains and see what the village could do.
to Improve the water lines.

---·

POMEROY HEALTH CARE CENTER

luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M.
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
lounge Open Daily 11 AM. T0 1 AM. (Closed sundays)
Come On Down - Give the New·Manager a Try.

Story, photo, P.l2

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel staff

Pooler

~

S!Qry, photo, P .5

Pomeroy's cable TV rates won't Increase

PLEASE JOIN US IN EXPRESSING OUR APPREOAliON
FOR THE DEDICAliON AND EXCELLENa OF OUR
NURSING HOME EMPLOYEES

Bonnie Jean Durst
Krista Eason

4-H fall roundup

•

Theodofli! T. Reed Jr., Meigs
County savings bonds chairman,
reported purehases of $6,700 In the
county of United States Savings
Bonds for June, 1~. Statewide
sales totaled $29,435,993.

-·u

Rainey one-hits Reds

Voi,32,No. 9•

Bonds purchased

Marilee McDade
Bettie McGuire
Pam McLa"...,'ln
Judie McNickle
Deborah Michael
MarUyn Miller
Dorothy Morrts
Ruby Mossman
Judy Musser
Dottle Nelson
Sondra Nelson
Maty O'Brlen
Michael Oller
Batbara Pooler
Deborah Price
Nancy Pullins
Frances Reed
Martha Reed
VIrginia Riffle
Wayne Sattet11eld
Yolan Satterfield
Nonna SeX90n
Jane Simpson

See Hoeflich's column P.6

Cop,ri,htod 1913

BACK-TO-SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

Darts Fisher
Debra Gaspers
Wand a Glbbs
Wen dy Glbbs
SaUy Gloeckner
Lin da Grover
Ernestine Hale
J o hn Harrtson .
Ellen Hatfield
Do ro th Y Hawk
Sharon Hensley
p a t HIndy
Michelle Hines
·
Marcla
Houdashelt
Nancy Hubbard
Roger H bba
u
rd
Pat Humphrey
Le
nona Hysell
Pam Jarrell
H ldi J
e
ones
Edrlcess Karr
Patsy Laudermllt
Connie Little

Unclaimed fair prizes

StQry on P. 4

e

r~th~ls~ev~e~n~ln~g. ;Am~~ong~t;he~survl;~vo;rs~~~~;;;~~~~~~~~~§~~~~~~~
are his wife,
Teegarden.

Marjorie Blake
Virginia Bland
MOdred Brooks
Doretta Brown
Helen Jane Brown
Deborah Buck
Florence Bumgardner
Candace Carleton
Frances Carleton
Betty Chevalier
Shelly Clark
Mary Coates
Sharon Cogar
Julia Combs
Belinda ConnoUy
Deborah Danner
Belinda Deem
Dorinda Deem
Tina Duffy

MEET ME AT THE MEIGS 'INN

•

getting tobacco jobs every day, he
said.
Hargus Sexton, warehouse managerforUnltedTobaccoWarehouse
Inc. at Lexington, said Tuesday the
quaUty of the burley brought to
market In 19!!3 won't be as high as
last year's crop. "It'll be about a 00
percent crop 1!1 weight''
Morrison Nelson, vice president
of Southwestern Tobacco Co. in
Lexington, wouldn't trY to guess
how 1983 prices might comparewit)!
last season's avera_ge of $182.47

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Area deaths

Drug, gambling warning

Lexington.
This year, however, there prooably are no more than 25 people

Mayors finish court cases

E.

BY APPOINTMENT

:m

counties that may request the
A square and round dance will be
dlsas ter .designation lnciJ~de :
heldattheLongBottomComrnunlty
Adams, Allen, Ashtabula, Auglalze,
Building Satunlay, Aug. Tl, from 8
Brown, C)Jampalgn, Clark, Colump.m. untll10;30p.m .
biana, Cralj'ford, Darl\e. Fayette,
Geauga, Hardin, Highland, ·. Hcx;'k-. ing, Uike, Logan, Madison, Mahoning, Miami , MOITOW, Plcka way,
Pike, Preble, Scioto, Shelby and
One defendant lorfel\t!d a bond tlngton, Pomeroy.
and six months probation,
Union.
At
and
four
otbers
were
fined
on
Pomeroy,
tour
deferulants
shopll1tlng.
McMillan said Ohio's soybeans
disorderly manner charges In the were fined and nine others forfeited
Forfeiting bonds were Gregory
could still be aided by cooler, wetter
court of Mldd!O{Xlrt Mayor Fred bonds in the court of PometOY Beach, Jackson, $48, speeding;
- ~eathel' .
. .
..
·Mllyoi' C.lilrence Andrews Tuesday . Samrriy Lewis, Florida. ~: Slllied·
,: McMillansailHarrnerslnFi'ank· · ·Hpffnian Tuesday.tilght
night
.
Daniel
T.
Talbott,
Portland,
Jng; nm ·Thomas, Pomeroy, $25,
lin, Madison, Union and T/ other
forfeited
a
$450
bond
posted
on
a
FlnedwereJarnesSrn!th,Raclne,
assault;
Lawremce Smith, Mason,
western and central Ohio counties
charge
of
driving
while
Intoxicated
$44
and
costs,
speeding;
Debbie
~;
Robert
Devvlns, Albany' $51;
are now aHowed to graze livestock
$25
and
costs
each
on
the
$63
and
costs,
and
fined
DaUey,
Northrup,
Alfred
Birchfield,
Middleport, $45,
on land that.h as been included In the
manner
charge
were
the
peace;
Ronald
Dal·
disorderly
disturbing
and
Ralph
Riggs.
Newport,
w;, au
USDA's payment-in-kind program.
WOllam
Williams,
Middleport;
Ce.
ley,
Northrup,
$213
and
costs,
pos\ed
on
speeding
charges,
and
Themovewasmadeatterthelackof
roid
Arnold,
Pomeroy;
·Steve
PoBarbara
dlsburbing
the
peace,
and
TomMoore,,Columbus,$63,explred
rainfall cut the growth of pasture
well, Middleport, and Dean ' Whit· Smith, Middleport, $2i3 and costs operator's license.
grass, McMillan said.

Machir
(Continued tram page 1)
Lavelle, Karl Snider, James
Wright, Jon! Jeffers, Kevin Sheppard, Roger Spencer, Michael
Boring, Donald Dudding, Valerie
Johnson Hans tl ne . Brenda
McGuire. !;&gt;avid Weber, Margaret
Lewis, Cheryl Miller,· Karen Pro.
bert, Susan Hannum, Lori Withee
and Betty Hutchinson , tec hers.
The board moved Into executive
session to discuss negotiations
which are underway with both
certified and non-certified personnel. Board members now ar e
James Caldwell, president; Bernard Shrtvers, vice president;
Dorsel Larkins, Roger Gaul and
Machlr.

TherenormaHywouldbe600to700
laborers competing !or the
to 400
Jobs cutting and housing bllrley In
central Kentucky barns, said Cha·
rles Glass, with the state's Bureau
for Manpower Services office at

~------------~----------~ .

1be restgnat!on of Debra Hill as a
teacher's aid at Portland Eiemen-

tacy was accepted and Evelyn
Fom18n was hired to fill the post.
Kathleen Morris was hired as a
substitute bus driver and Raymond
E . Cook as substltuecustodlan.
It was agreed to place a telephone
In the office of Carl Wolfe, athletic
director and transportalon
supervisor.
Connie Enslen resigned as girts'
varsity basketball coach and HUton
Wolfe, Jr. was hired as her
replacement.
Substitute teachers hired were
Brenda McGutre, Deble Pickens,
Deble Foster, Greg Bailey, and
Karen Prover!. W1111am Hoback
was given a two year contract as
head bus mechanic.
1be board set thefll)ary for junior
high cheerleader advisor at$3))and
agreed to purchase neet Insurance
from Brogqun-Wamer Insurance.
Attelldlng were Denny Evans,
ptesldent, Olartes Pyles, vice
president, Sue Gnll!ll!l', David Hill
and Don Smith, board members,
Bailby Ord, llllpel'lntendent

Peanle Hill, treasure~'.

and

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Law·
makers might lower taxes on their
own If the economic recovecy Is
strong enough, says House Speaker
Vernal G. Rlt!e Jr., who plans to
campaign against tax-slashing ballot Issues.
Riffe, D-New BOston, mentioned
the posslbiUty Wednesday when
asked about a paJr of November
baUot proposals. .
One ballot Issue would repeal all of
this yem:' s tax hikes and tax relief.
Tbe other wwld make It more
~t for · la~ torn~

taxes by requiring a three-fHths
majority vote of both houses.
1be SPeaker is against both
Issues, which he said are being
bankrolled by the Republican
Party'sconservativerlghtwing.He
predlctedthatthestategovemment
will fallln!Q chaos If the Issues are

approved.
Cuts In aervlcellsuch as education

and mental bealth would be assured
If they pass, Riffe said.
· "I'm going to go statewlde"
worldng to defeat the Issues, he said.
Other Democratic House
members
who voted
for the tax,
.
' .

Including Rep. William E. Hinlg,
New Philadelphia, and Rep. Freder·
lck lileering, MonroevU!e, already
are stumping their districts In
defense of the tax hikes.
Riffe said that, although the
national economy has Improved,
the state has not felt significant
effects from it. "We're still not
getting the revenues we projected, "
he said.
But he said If the economy
continues its upward swing and
translates Into reductions in Ohio
unemployment and Increased state
revenues, he will push to lower
taxes.
By next Aprll or May, If there are
substantial gains In state revenues
"a (tax reduction) bill would come
out of this House so fast It would
make your head swim,'' Riffe said.
Tbe March 1, 90 percent income
tax Increase Is expected to produce
about $2 billion In additional
revenues In the current biennium,
which oogan July 1.
1be added revenues were offset In
part by the S650 mUllan In tax reilef
which Democratic Gov. Richard
CeleSte Included In his · biennial

budget and a $528 million deficit he
said was Inherited from the previous
administration.
Riffe said these and other facts
about the state's financial problems
have not
made clear to the
public.
He also was adamant In his
opposition to the baUot proposal
requiring a three-fifths majority to
approve tax changes. "lf those
Issues pass together, there Is going
to be chaos In state government," he
said.
Senate President Harry Meshel,
[).Youngstown, said earlier that he
felt the people should have the right
to vote on the taxes.
But he added he feels It Is up to the
schools, welfare groups, mental
health agencies and others who
benefit from the revenues to work
for the defeat of the ballot Issues.
. Celeste has said much the same,
Indicating be will keep a low profile
in an anti-repeal campaign being
put together by the Committee for
Ohio. That group Is a coalition of
education, labor and businesses
which Is expected to spend about$15

been

mUllan.

Columbia Gas of Ohio has flied a
notice of Intent for an Increase in
rates in four Southeastern Ohio
communities Including Pomeroy.
This was dlsckiSed at Wednesday's
bi-monthly meeting of Pomeroy
CouncU.
B!U Young reported Columbia
Gas Com(ll''lY had flied against ·
Pomeroy and three other
communities.
Columbia's statement read as
follows: "Notice of intent to fUe
application for an Increase In the
rates for the municipalities of
Harnden, Wellston, Pomeroy and
Rio Grande." Columbia Intends to
flleaunlformrntetobechargedand
collected In Columbia's Chillicothe
cllvlslon.
At last night's meeting Young
saldthe gas company contends it
does n()t have an application on !De
that Pomeroy joined the Coalition.
Young reported that solicitor
FredCrowhadsent!heordlnanceto
the PUCO. It was noted that the·
village Is In compliance.
·
Young also reported on bids he
had received for carpenter work to
the office area on the second floor
and adding air conditioning and a
beating system and Improving the
heating system on the first floor and
adding air conditioning to the first
floor.
A bid from Mitch Meadows,
Creative Contractors, for the renovation of the office area on the
second floor totaled $1,550. A bid
from Foreman and Abbott for air
conditioning and beating system on
the second floor totaled $4,900.
Another bid to Improve the heating
system on the first floor totaled
$4,100 plus $2,500 for adding an air
conditioner.
CouncU voted to hire Creative
Contractors with Betty Baronlck
voting no. No action was taken on too:
Foreman and Abbott bid.
.
Bruce Reed reported he had been
informed thattherocksiocatednear
the car wash painted orange are a
safety hazzard.
CouncU agreed to contact the
property owner who placed the
rocks there to have them removed:
within 10days. lfthepropertyowner
does not move, the rocks thevlliage·
will remove them and bill the
property owner.
Reed also reported officials are
trying to locate Amy Kingsland:
Jones regarding !he razing of her
building on Court Street that was
destroyed by !Ire recently.
Reed and other council members
compllmmted Pat O'Brien for his.
quick action in remodelinghlsortlce:
quarters damaged as a result of the
same fire.
Larry Wehrung !1!pOI'ted employes of the street and water
department want a pe!'!IOtl8l day ott
asallowedtheemployesoftltepollce
department. It was noted that if any.
employe of the street and water
department wants orr, he or lhe.
should contact the mayor,
•

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�Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

,.,..,., ;;lepolt, Ohio:

Commental!

Thunday, Auguit 25, 1983 .
&lt;

~edia

The Daily Sentinel

NEW YORK

Ill Court Street
Pome roy, Ohio
DEVM'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIG S-MASON AREA;

~,~
. . . . . . . .._. . . ,~=·qj
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publl.11her

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLI CH

Assistant Publlshe r{Controller

General

Ohio

Nobody wants to win NL East pennant

I

focus ____________________w_u_lw_m_A_._R_w_h_er

Has
Ronald Reagan gotten a fair press?
That question can probably never
be fully disentangled from Wa·
shlngton Post political reporter Lou
Cannon's immortal response : "i
think he' s had afatrerpress than he
deserves." But preliminary reports
on a study currently being con·
dueled by the Media Analysis
(NEA) -

Project at George Washington
University suggest that what Can·
non accidentally implled is substan·
!Ially closer to the truth than what
he was trying to say.
The Media Analysts Project Is
studying coverage of all "pollcy
news" by nine of the nation's major
news sources (the three network
evening ' news programs and the

three national newsmagazines ,
plus The New York Ttmes, The
Washington Post and The Wall
Street Journal) during the first
hundred days.of 1983. But even th1$
brief advance peek at the study and
its conclusions Is fasc!natlog.
Acconltng to the report's autbors
(Michael Robinson, Maura Clancey
and Usa Grant), all of whom are

~lan ager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR .
News Editor
.

A MEMBER of The AMOCiated Press, Inland Dail)' Press ,\.~iaUon and the
Amencan New!ipaper r.tbtl'ihen A.•••socll\tktn.

•

'.' ; :.~.:: : :;.

LEITERS OF OPINION art' welcomed. They shouJd be 1('5(; than 300 words long.
AU ~etten are •ubject to editing and must be signed wilh name. address and telephone
ntunber. No unslped letters wtU be publ1shed. UtteD shoold he In ~ U....te, addres-

............. nolpersonalkles.

.:Reagan's record
·With women
Whenever President Reagan's commitment to women is questioned, his
aicles quickly assert that he has appointed hundreds of women to various
posts.
However, 1n his own backyard - the White House staff- the situation
tSn't so rosy.
.
. .
. .
. . ..
the 93 highest ranking White Hou~ aJdes,:.15 are Women. .
.
· : Theh!ghE!StrahldiigWh!teiioiiseatdelscounselorEdwtnMeese'Ill, who .
Js 1n a category by himself.
After Meese there are three levels of commissioned White House
. employees.
• The top category, which comes with the title of assistant to the president,
• Includes 18 people. That Is 17 men and one women, Faith Ryan Whittlesey,
. - ·. ..
. ·
;· who heads the publlc liaison office.'.. :· . .
.,
These are the Jl':'OPle who are consldet'lld the presidi&gt;nf's Senior staff and
who have the most ·access to him and 'the most job ben~ftts.
This group Includes White House Chief of Staff James A. Baker In,
Deputy Chief of Staff Michael A. Deaver and National Security Adviser
WUllam Clark.
'
On the second rung of the hierarchy, those of the title deputy assistant to
: the president, there are 16 people.
,
WASHINGTON , - The United
. They Include 13 men and three women; Kama Mall, 1n media liaison,
States, once the colossus of high
: Pamela Turner, in legislative affairs, and Becky Dlln!op 1n presldentlai
technology now finds Its pre· personnel.
eminence threatened on all sides,
The third ca,tegory, those called special assistants to the president,
especially by the Japanese.
· Include 58 people, of whom 11 are women.
As I 've already reported, U.S.
Four of them are on Ms. Whittlesey's staff 1n public liaison; Judith
officials are convinCed that a
: Buckalew, Mary Jo Jacobi, Dee Ann Jepsen and Catalina Villalpando.
Japanese computer company, HI·
: The others are Margaret Tutwiler, executive assistant to Baker, Pamela
tach!, is behind a covert effort to
· Batley, deputy d1rector for publlc affairsi Shenie Cooksey, associate
wring high-tech secrets out of. IBM.
counsel; Ann Higgens, director of correspondence; Dodle Livingston,
These offtciats also believe that !be
d1rector of presidential messages; and Nancy Kennedy and Nancy Risque,
Japanese are determined to beboth 1n leslslatlve affairs.
come No. 1 1n the vital area of
The assistants to the president and deputy assistants are entitled to use
semiconductors.
the White House gym, tennis court, executive mess, and they get priortty
Some experts predict that semi·
for use of White Hoouse cars and the presidential box at the Kennedy
conductors- the ·~bulldtng blocks"
Center.
for a variety of sophisticated
However, only assistaDts to the president are entitled to attend dally staff e!«tronlc equipment - wliJ be as
meetings at the White House.
Important to the world economy
Special assistants are entitled to eat 1n a separate room 1n the White over the next few years as crude on
. House mess, and they may use White House cars for official business when
was 1n the 1970s. The country that
• they are not being used by those who outrank them.
takes the lead 1n semiconductors
· Even if Reagan's top aides have not yet focused on the munber of w1ll have an important advantage
· hlgh·ranklng women on the White House staff, they have realized that if
In computers, telecomunlcations,
Reagan Is going to close the gender gap more attention must be given to
robotics, aerospace and other
Issues that concern women.
"I think now there is much more attention being paid to women, and they
are much more sensitive to women's Issues," said one male assistant to the
president who did not wish to be identified.

By BRUCE LOWllT
AP Sport8 Writer
The National !.ague East appears to he turning Into !be race
nobody wants to win.
"This justgfves you an ldi;aofhow
much balance there Is In this
diviskln. 1We're losing, but so are
Philadelphia and Montreal and St.
Louts," Pltisburgh Manager Chuck
Tanner said Wednesday night after
- theP!rateswerebeatl!nforthesixth
time In seven games and stlll
remained within one-half game of
Orst place.
The Pirates' 1~ loss to Houston
permitted Phlladelphla to retain Its
slender division lead, even though
the Phlllles were stung 5-3 by San
Francisco. Second-place St. Louis
and third-place Montreal fared no
better, th!! Cardinals losing ll.J to
Atlanta to stay two games back and
, the Expos falllng 3-21n Los Angeles
tostay2\',igamesof!thepace. Inthe
other NL game, San Diego edged
New York 3-2.

also involved 1n the project, "Ronald Reagan has received dlspro,
portlonately critical 111111 ...,.!M
press from the national mi!dla ... ~o
matter how we counted, the results
came out the same: bad press for
Reagan and for hls
admlnistraUon."

As the authors point out, this
finding ts all the more Interesting
beCause lt 'directly contradicts
recent charges by both the Colum·
bla Journallsm Review and PBS'
Inside Story, among others, that
Reagan bas adroitly rendered the
media impotent.
But let the statistics speak for
themselves. The researchers ldentl·
fled just under a hundred "stol'ies"
(network cormnentar!es on fea·
tures more than two and one-half
minutes long) on pollcy Issues. Of
these, 46 mentioned Reagan. And of
the 46, two-thirds "were easlly
classified as expllcltly favorable or,
unta.vorable."
And just what do you suppose
were the proportions, pro and con?
"Twenty-seven pieces were dJ.
rectly negative toward Reagan,"
Exactly two were favorable.
Whafwas the actual won! count?
"Sti&gt;rles · In · whiCh Reagan was
treated faVorabiy iotaled s.~
words - a radio of 22 to one
negative." (Stories scored as "neu·
tral" totaled 5,00&gt; words.) ·
The authors warn that this may
. overstate the case a b!t. sin~.many ..
'of . the loDgeSt f"Jiture pi~ . .
conuillied · only one· or tWo clear
negative Inferences about Reagan.

. or

.High-tech rating ________Ja_ck_A---,nd_er_so_n
high-tech fields. ·
efforts 1n jotnt R&amp;D ventures. But
But the United States Is losing tts American companies rtsk governlead 1n this International competl·
ment prosecution - often Invest!·
tlon, whlle Japan Is coming on fast.
gated by rivals who are left out of a
joint venture.
The U.S. share of the world
high-tech market has declined by 15
How .I mportant Is the erosion of
percent 1n recent years - whtle
U.S. dominance in the high-tech
Japan's share has Increased 25 area? Trade Representative Btll
percerit.
Brock told my associate Michael
An Important reason for this Einstein: "There would be very
slippage can be found tn a serious fallout It we lost the
comparlsqn ol expenditures for computer race, if for no other
research and development over the reason than national security. You
past 20 years. Whtle U.S. R&amp;D bet your life we better be concerned
Investment bas declined by one- · about !t and start busting our rear
fifth, Japan's bas jumped by doing something."
one-third.
Upgrading the quality of U.S.
Another reason for America's technological education and relax·
Increasingly beleaguered position !ng antitrust enforcement are two
in hlgh·tech competition Is the of Brock's highest priorities. He
d!Herent attitude taken by !be U.S. explained that . current antitrust
and Japanese governments on laws do not explicitly rule out
antitrust enforcement. Japan en· cooperative research efforts, but
courages Its Industries to pool their the laws are fuzzy, so It's the better

part of dlsCretlon for U.S. compan·
tes to avoid such joint ventures
en.tlrely.
Besides computers and semlcon·
ductors, the U.S. lead Is being
challenged in ether high-tech areas
- again, mainly by the aggressive
Japanese. For example:
-Aircraft: Just a few years ago,
American manufacturers had 96
percent of commercial aircraft
onlers. by 1981, Airbus Industrtes, a
European corisortlum, had claimed
25 percent of the world market for
jet aircraft, and half of the new
orders for wide-body planes.
- Space: The United States Is
sllpplng faSt. The Japanese are
putting up satellites and developing
their own l~unch vehicles. France,
working with other European
countries, Is rapidly developing a
launch capability that w1ll Chat·
lenge the U.S. monopoly 1n communications satellites.

How do I look?.__~_____Ar_tB_uc_h_wa_ld

'

Berry's World

•

~ •

~~Mlby NEA , Irw;
~~r~b

" like if the strike meant NO TELEPHONE
SERVICE AT ALL - I mean It's like CONFRONTING ONE'S MORTALITY!"

Today in history
Today Is Thursday, Aug. 25, the 237th day of 1983. There are m days left
1n the year.

Today' s h!ghllght ln history:
On Aug. 25,1718, French immigrants foWldedNewOrleanslnLoulslana.
: On this date:
· In ll!83, a volcanic en~ptlon 1n the Dutch East Indies created tidal waves
that took about 36,1XXlllves.
In 19'll, the World War I Peace treaty between the United States and
Germany was slgDed In Berlin.
In l!Ni5, a massive avalanche roated down frml a glacier In the Swiss
,&lt;Ups. burying 101 people at a hydro-electi1c construction project.
: In 1972, China cast its first veto 1n the U.N. Security Councn - to bar
l:langladesh trom membership 1n the United Nations.
Ten years ago: the U.N. Security Councn voted to condemn Israel for
it called a "premeditated atr attack" on Lebanese villages .

:----------- - - -------·---- •

-- ~--

The recent lawsult concerning
"Please don't take it personally,
former Kansas City anchorwoman but don't you think you're a llttle too
Christine Craft, who was demoted . old to be a newspaperwoman?"
because her bosses allegedly didn't
"I'm 34."
llke the way sbe looked on
"Newpaper readers prefer to
television, points out once again the read stones by younger, more
problem of dellvertng the news to attractive reporters."
people by TV 'lls opposed to
"If this Is a gag, you got me at
newspapers.
the wrong time. I'm trying to check
Miss Craft maintained the TV out something with Henry
consultants .hired by the station Kisslnger."
decided that the audiences wanted
"Miss West, I'd prefer you not
a woman who was more attractive make that call untU you change
and gave them "warmth and your make-up. Let's see It we can
comfort" with their headlines. The get those wrlnkles out from under
station executives said it wasn't a your eyes befoJ;e you speak to
case of looks, but ratings, that made Henry."
them decide to demote her. Miss
"Now you've done it. If you don't
Craft sued for sexual dlscrtmlna· disappear 1n live seconds I'm going
tlon and won $500,001.
to dump this cup of coffee on that
I'm proud to say this could have yukky Palm Beach suit you're
never happened 1n the newspaper wearing."
business, because if the consultants
The publisher rushes by. "Hold It,
who work for TV companies had
anything to say about our looks, 96
percent of us would be alit of jobs.
I can just see a meQ!a consultant
going through the city room of an
American newspaper.
He says to the publisher wbo Is
escorting hiJ:n, ''Who wrote the lead
story on President Reagan this
morning?" .
"Susanna West. She's sitting over
there. Susanna Is our best reporter
and won the Pulitzer Prize for her
series on hunger 1n American last
·year."
"She's going to have to get a new
hairdo."
"Why 1s that?"
"The public doesn't like to read
front-page stones written by a
woman whose hair Isn't perfectly

Susanna, the

man Is only doing hls

job."

"Get him out of here before I drop
the 1~ budget on his skull."
The publfsher leads him away
and the consultant says, "She
doesn't seem to have the warmth it
takes to give the publlc the news
about Ronald Reagan. I would
replace her With someone your
readers could be more comfortable
with when they read about Chad.
Who is that woman over there atthe
water cooler'?''
"That's our science writer.
What's wrong with her?"
"She's wearing a pantsuit. Our
survey show readers are very
threatened by women .reporters
who wear pants."
"We gavt! up dress codes for
women reporters years ago."

- - - -.

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

·~

BEATS THE TJIR9W - Allllnta Braves' B~ .Buller lllldeslnto .
home ufetY as.Sl. Louis C~a!fl' clltc\ler ~Porter reaehe8 •o~ · .
' the throw In frOm center field~ Butler IICO~ when Dale MurpiQ&gt; hll a ·
sacrifice fly lo cealer. Cardinals' \Wile McGee's lhrol"' In was juot a bit
!ale. Atlanta won the game, 11-3. (AP Laaerpboto). ·

what this division has done the last
four years (three World Series
winners) .

"Everybody Is toogh and !here's
only 12 games from top to bottom 1n

the division. No otl'.er division Is like
that Chicago a 1d New York are
llfth and sixth &amp;.IJ'l tey might bave
the best bullpens 1n the division."
"You could say we're still really
lucky to beln It," said Pirates relief
ace Kent Tekulve. "You could say
wesbouldhavebeelloutofltbynow.
Butthere'sanothergametomo!TOW
and we just have to hope for the
best."
And third baseman Bill Madlock
predicted: "Anyteamthatwtnsflve
games!nthelastweekw!llprobably
w1n it."
GiaDts 5, Pblllle8 3
Steve Carlton ol the P~
struck out 10 batters 1n six !nnlngs.
But he finished with 10 sklkeouts and Joel Youngblood finished him
with a two-run homer 1n the bottom
of the ninth, boosting the Gtants to

Mike Madden pitched one-hit bali victory andhand!ngPhtladelphlalts
for six Innings - he left after giving sixth consecutive loss.
up Pittsburgh's second hlt, Dave
Carlton, who raised his all·tlme
Parker's two-run homer bt the strikeout total to 3,653, walked
seventh-andhltatwo-runsingleln Johnnie LeMaster on, four pitches
Houston's five-run fifth Inning. with one out 1n !be ninth and
Dickie Thon and Bill Doran eacli Youngblood hit the next pitch over
homered and Jerry Mumphrey and thertght-center field fence.
PhllGarnerhadtwodoublesaplece
Dodgers3,Expos2
1n theAstros' 16-hitassault.
Ken Landreaux's tle-brealdng
"Everybody's 1n It and there's a born!!!" 1n the bottom ot the eighth
lot of baSeball left/' sald Tanner. · 1nn!ng against vllll!lng Millltreal
. "one reason ' whY evecybody is ' stretched the Dodgers' winning
doing so poorly is there's so much streaktoelghtgamesandkeptthem

baJanee 1n this division. Just look

Atlania 1n the West.
"The Braves have heard our
footsteps," said Los Angeles Man·
ager Tom Lasorda. "Now maybe
they'll hear us breathing down their
back. We're playing as well as I've
seen thlsteamplayallseason. We're
getting timely hitting, the pitching
has been excellent and we're not
making mistakes like we were

within two games ol first-place

'

c

-·

'

'

'

•

'

CLEVELAND (AP)
The hitter 1n !be eighth tnnlng. Easterly
'Clevelandlndians'Nea!Heatonand pltched~two perfect 1nnlngs for his
the -Oakland A's Tim Conroy both third save.
Corrales said Sorensen "got off to
~· are ·23-year-&lt;&gt;ld left-banders, and
each pitched a flve-li!tter 1n the first a shaky start and then seemed to get
game of a twl·night double-header. . hls rbythm. He went on !rom~
• But Heaton, 94, says fine plays and was on top of his game."
TheA's took a 2.0lead In the third
behind him gave him the victory as
1nn!ng.
Rickey Henderson singled,
the Indians defeated the A's 1.0
stole
his
89th base of the season and
Wednesday. The Indians also took
. the second game, !1-2.
"I've been getting some breaks,"
said Heaton, who struckoutfour and
The Daily Sentinel
walked one whne pitching his third
, (USPS 14~900)
· complete game and second shutout.
A Dlvl!ilon Of Multimedia, Inc.
· 'He has a 1.29 earned run average 1n

' 351nnlngs.
· "Some of the guys made great
.. plays behind me and you've got to
·''haVe those plays made beh!ndyo\l,"
· HeatOn sald.
.
.
Indians Manager Pat Co!Tales
said Heatoit has a good arm and a
· ·good Idea about how to pitch.. "He
. wants to Jearn, listens and that's a
· good lnd!cation. There's room for
· improvement and I think he'll make
lt."
Loser Ttm Conroy, 6,6, allowed
only five hits, struck out seyen and
walked two.
A's Manager Steve Boros said
Conroy "pitched probably the best
. game he's pitched all year. We hlt
some balls good, but the people 1n
front of them made some fine plays.
But Heaton pitched weD and I'm
impressed with him."
Rookie Julio Franco opened the
fourth with a double, took third on
:Andre Thornton's stngle and scored
when Pat Tabler grounded Into a
double play.
In the second game, Lary
Sorensen and Jamie Easterly
combined on a seven· hitter and Ron
1fasseY doubled home the lead run 1n
: the fifth Inning.
· Sorensen, 7·9, yielded both .Oak·
land runs and an seven hlts before
belng)lfted after walldngtheleadotf

Published every afternoon, Monday
11lrough Frlday,ll1 Court Street , by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Company · Mul·
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B0 B

scored when Mike Davis doubled.
Davis took third. on Mike Heath's
Infield hlt and scored on Dwayne
Murphy's grounder.
aeveland tied the game 2·2 with
single runs 1n the third and fourth
Innings. They loaded !be bases 1n the
third on George Vukovich's single, a
walk and a hlt batsman before
Vulwvich scored on Franco's
grounder. TheY tied It 1n the fourth
on a walk and singles by Gorman
Thomas and Mike Flschlln.

Braves 11, Canilaals 3
In St. Louts, Phil Nlekroscattered
seven hits 1n seven 1nn1ngs and
doubled to spark a four· run third
1nn1ng that enabled Atlanta to snap
the Cardinals' six-game winning
streak. Gienn Hubbard and Rafael
Ramirez each homered and Terry
Harper and Randy Jolmson had
three hits apiece.
Padm! 3, Mets 2
Tim Lollar scal:te!"lld eight hits InS
2-3lnnlngs and tripled home a run as
· the Padres beatNewYorkand their ,

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earUer."

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MIDDLEPORT, OH.

ISears I

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·APPEARING

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colfted."

"You tell her. I'm not about to,"
the publlsher says.
"MiSs West. You wrote a very
good story this morning."
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"I'm a media consultant and I've
been hired to up ctrculation. Have
you ever thought about weartng
something a little more sexy than a
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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio State football players are being
warned to stay away trom gambling and drugs, two VIces that are
causing problems in the sports world.
Two FBI agents met with the OSU team Tuesday to warn them
about gambling and on Wednesday a drug expert talked to players
and coaches.
This season Isn't the first that OSU has called In outsiders to talk to
the team. But the talks took onmorelmportancethlsyearbecauseot
incidents in the past year.
During that time, former OSU quarterback Art Schlichter's
gami;JIIng problem carne out and the Nattonal Football League had
.
problems with cocaine.
"!always think It's good to have outsiders come in and talk about
these things," said OSU football Coach Earle Bruce. "I'm certainly
.
not an expert on drugs and alcohoUsm - as of yet."
In a meeting closed to reporters, the FBI agents warned players to
steer clear of those who approach them Inquiring about team injuries
and were told to report such contacts to coaches.
.
Dr. Joseph A. Pursch, who counsels the Los Angeles Rams of the
NFL was asked to talk to the players about drugs,
"Most universities do something Uke this, but there should be
more," he said.
·
Pursch who also met with coaches, said: "The coaches and
trainers ~ho are In dally touch with the players can detect alcohol and
drug abuse early and can physlcallydlagnosetheproblern. I told them
about the high rate of marijuana addiction because they see It as not
addicting. But It Is one of the most addicting drugs in the country," 1
"Cocaine Is the No. 1 addicting drug In terms ·of the dangers
produced," he said.
On another drug matter, the team doctor, Dr. Robert Murphy, said
he doesn't have any evidence that any OSU athlete has ever used
anabolic steroids. The drug Is the center of controversy at the Pan
American games.

NEW FALL [!ASHIQ~S
'

The Daily Sentinel- Page-S

Boxers suffered bad day in Pan Am _G ames

Players get warnings

·-

\

Thunday, 1\ugust 25, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

4 The Daily Sentinel

'

ARRIVING DAILY
WE HAVE THE NAME
BRAND AT 25% OFF
~, DEPARTMENT' STORE PRICES
REGISTER FRI., SAT., AND All
NEXT WEEK FORI OF 4 s2000 GIFT
CERTIFICATES TO BE GIVEN AWAY
ON SEPTEMBER 5TH.

CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) The cockiness of a U.S. boxing team
that had predicted a gold-medal
sweep In the IX Pan American
Games Is gone and so Is Its perfect
record.
Wednesday was a bad ·day
generally forthL· li.S. athletes In the
drug-marred g~meS, with the
boxing team &amp; ( e .op of the list of
dlsappolntrnen• .
There were no new revelaUons of
athletes using steroids or other
banned substances. But Jeff Mi·
chels of Chicago, who lost his gold
medal in the 243-pound welghtllfting
class when tests revealed he had
steroids in his system, learned he
would be banned tor a year. That

woWd eliminate him trom the l.lll4
Olympics, In which be Is one of the
best American welghtllftlng hopes.
After Paul Gonzalez of Los
Angeles ran the U.S boxing record to
12.j) with an easy irlctory that put
him In the. finals of the 100-pound
division, three u.s.boXers- two of
them world champiqns In their
weight classes - came crashing
doWn.
Oneworld~hamp,SteveMcCrory

of Detroit, lost 3-2 In the 1l2·pound
class because be could not counter
the inside flurries of Dominican
Laureano Ramirez, and another
champion, 119-poonder Floyd Fa·
vors of Capitol Heights, Md .. was
beaten 4·1 as he tried to knock out

Manuel VUchez ol Venezuela ..
The third American, 1.25-pounder
Bernard Gray of Boynton, Beach,
Fla., actually won with the judges
3-2, but was defeated by Santos
Cardona of Puerto Rico when a Jory
YO!ed 4-1 against him att.er the
referee~ him two points In
the third round.
Overall, theUnitedStateswonslx
gold medals Wednesday, three In
yachting by Jetf Lenhart ot Costa
Mesa Calif., who rnedalled in his
third ~tralghtPan Ampmes; Dave
Curtis of Marblehead, Mass. and
Peter Wright of Melrose Park, lli.
The others were in tennis, where
Gretchen Rush of Pittsburgh won
thewomen'ssingles,l~,IN. 7·5over
Gig! Fernandez of Puerto Rico; In

CENTRAL
Scioto River - Good for smal·
!mouth bass, rock bass and channel
catfish. Best trom Marlon County
downstream to Columbus.

SOUTHEAST
Ohio River - Fishing should
remain good through autumn. Bass

and crappie in tributary embay·
ments. Channel and flathead catfish
at night. Good sauger at dam
tallwaters.
L· ke. Rupert - This small lake
miar Harnden in. VInton county Is
good for largemouth bass and
northern pike. For pike, troll with
deep-diving lures or stllltlsh with
live minnows. Best bass fishing Is In'
shoreline areas near deepwater, at
morning or evening.

___

FRI. 9:30 TO 8:00

__.

pitch to l)lrn in the ninth. But Rainey
quickly retired Duane Walker on a
popup for tbe VIctory.
Walker had come closest to a hit
before Milner, cluqbing a drive to
right center in the fourth that was
snared by a sliding Mel Hall, the
center-fielder.
Mllt Pappas twirled the last
no-hitterlnWrlgleyFieldin1972,but
lost a pei1ecl game with -of course
-twooutslnthebottom oftheninth.
Raineydldn'truemlssinghlsdate
with Immortality,
"The pitch was the~ and Milner
was there and he got the base hit.
Hey, I'll take one hit over nine
Innings any day," said Rainey, who
had been touched up for 167 hits In
148lnnbigs along with a 4.18 ERA
before the game.
Rainey, bidding for the first
National League no·hitler since
1981, struck out tlve and walked two:
ALM08T A NO.IOTI'ER - Chklago Cube' C...ck Rainey hurls
Rainey led off the bottom of the
agaiMI
Cincinnati Reds Wednesday al Chicago's Wr!Jiey Field. Rainey
seventh and received a standing
a one-hitter, allowing the only hit In the ninth Inning with two
pitched
ovation from the 19,S81 fans. He
ouls. The Cubs won, iHl. (AP Laoe'l'hoto).
responded with his second hit of the
game, beating out an infield single
off Dave Concepcion's glove. Thad
Bosley followed with a single. Gary
Woodsplnch-ranforBosleyandtwo
RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) didn't want to take a chance on
outslater,Halldrllledadoubletolett
MlchaelDokeswiUdefendhisWorld rain," King said.
field, scoring both runners.
Boxing Association heayywelght
"We had been prepared to go
The game had been Scoreless unlll
title against Gerry Coetzee on Sept. a,head with ge(\ing the Rubber Bowl.
the siXth when . the ·Cubs reached : 23 at -the Coillieu!Ti,.. says ·bQx!ng · readytortheflght, bui rguess I\ Just ·
Marlo Soto, lHO, for a run. Leon
promoter Don King. ..
. dldn'tworkout," said Don Sabatino,
Durham led o!!f with a triple to
"IfMichae!Dokescontinuestobe theuntverslty'sdlrectoro!auxlllary
right-center and scored on a
heayywelght champion, every year services.
sacriflce!lybyKelthMoreland.
we're going to do a world heavy·
Dol\eS.witharecordof26wlns,no
,..._,...,....,....,....,.~...,.~~~~~~~~=====-,
weight fight In Ohio," King said.
losses and two draws, was not with
The Coliseum. an enclosed arena . King at -~ . media briefing to
_ Jlietween ' Cleve!~ ·and AJ(ron, · aru\Ounce ·the ·ioeailoil .of Do~·
. holds 21!,500 ·si&gt;eotators· (Or boxing, second tllli{deterise.
' · ·
King said Weditesday.
·
Coetzee, of South Africa, has a
for an undisclosed draft choices.
The promoter had considered 28-3-1 professional record.
Majors
HorY~~·~.r~·£~,':;':,'
Ro·
having
the light at the open ,
Dokes took the Ulle !rom Michael
AMERICAN I.EA.G UE
· E.Vfl' IHVIIHIN
"'""
35,1XXJ.seat Akron Rubber Bowl of Weaver last year. A rematch In May
W _L_ P&lt;t.OB
ThOmas, fullback a nd Davld Hardy, klck ·
the University of Akron.
ended in a draw .
"JAcKsoNVILLE
BU LLS-Signed
H
bl
that
Milwaukee
?2 . 53
.578 wn.
owever, a ca e company
King said he Is trying to arrange
Baltimore
'10 52
.574
'h
,,.,
· will televise the fight did not want It
for No. 4 ranking heavyweight Ttrn
M il Sl moo. , ,., , .,,,. '"""'"·
Detmt
'10 54
.56.'1 1%
Stockst !ll, "-'Ide receiver an d MlkeRo(lr\·
held in an open stadium.
Witherspoon to be on the fight card
Toronto
'10 56
.551i 2%
Nt&gt;w York
Ill 56
.Mil
3%
qu«&gt;. wide rece tver-quarlerback.
Dokes, of Akron, had sought a title next month. Witherspoon lost a
,
9)
65
.el 12
PITTSBUR GH MAULERS-An ·
defense in his hometown.
narrow decision In, May to World
54 73
.425 19 .
Oeve!and
naunced
WEST DIVISION
I heir nlcknam!;! will bPI he MauiNS .
King
said
the Collseum, located Box1ng Council champion Larry
Ollcago
'10 M
COLLEGE
AlR FORCE- Named Jordan Bowabout 15 miles DOrth 0 I Akron, Holm~ .
Kansas City
Ill 63

But that was about It , outside of an
Sl.jjg victory ~r Mexico that ran
the U.S. men's basketl)all ~rd to
2.0 In the final round. Leon Wood
of Cal State-Fullerton sparked a
spurt that put the game put of reach
In the first 10 minutes.
Overall, the United States maintained Its big lead In the medals race
with95golds and 201 total. Cuba was
second with 60 golds and 125 total
andCanadathtrdwithllgoldand96
total.

s-o,

The First 300 Seniors Who Have Their Portrait
Taken At Lear Photography
Will Be Entered For The Drawing

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AND

CHECK oR MONEY ORDER FEES

HONDA URBAN EXPRESS FROM BETZ HONDA OF GALLIPOliS

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PffOTOGRAPHY

DRUG CO.

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MIDDLEPORT, OH.

ASK ABOUT OUR SENIOR "OU T THE DOOR IN "B4"' T·SHIRTS

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Rat" pod tllru Au..,.e Z9.

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-~~~·
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NaaleuiP-baiiiAapt
CHICA.GO BEARs-AnnourK"ed the

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,

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~.7.1n. nneblcker, to the Tampa a.,..y
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fi.llblck, trom the New York
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draft choi&lt;E . Cut Herb Chrlllopllel'.
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LOS

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RA.MS-Ptac~

H rtndt rteetvtr and Mllie Lana -

GAUJPoUS:358SecondAve.,446·1973
POMEROY: 125 E. Main St.. 992·2171

=~lild.er oa ttltbltlrtd rewrv• lilt.

Ruettvated Hl!lll')' "WIIllanu. lkffll llve
t.erve 1t1t

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'Based on intertSt automatically credited monthly to our 8'11i Statement Savi~ Account.

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tJ. ~Leon f-21 . (n)
Atlda tMcMurtry 1.2-8) at St. l..ouil
iStuper 8-81. In I
~ games IC'IIcdUk'd

24-IlMB

Both Pieces Reg. 1890 ..................
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AUanta 11, St. LOlls 3
s.n IMesu 3, New York 2

10.77o/o 11.1SO/o 11.300/o 12.21o/o

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New York

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12-10)

Toronto !Stleb lJ.ll) at BaltlmOrt'
/Davis 10-11 1. tnl
Chleaeo !Bums 1-11 at Dctl'Ott tBer
81 guer 6-4). (nl
Friday' I Games
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Toronto at Detroit, tnl
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Texas at Kansas Oty, tnl
New York al California, tn )
Clev!!land at Seattll!, tnl
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CompuiN on •

Yovr "btro Tovch"
Flori1t Since 1957

151, 2, fl·n)

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10.52°/o 10.92%
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· eo.nputed•
witb Ml:aut Cftdked
. . . . . . . y.

r

"The·

Callllrnla (Jotrl ~10 ) at Mllwaula;rf.
tCanct::lttll.{l)
Texu tMatlack 2-l and Stewart t-01 at
J&lt;anau Ctty !Rai JW~~ttt 1-2 and Gul'll 10.

ONLY!
6-IlMB

/d#() .B~NK.f Hclf'6'.

~~~:~:":'"~"re~~·"~·~~~~~~~··~~~~~~~~t~ts1;~es~bo~t~h~Do~kes~an~d~H~om::e:Bo:x~~::::::::::::::::::~~

Oe.kland tMcCatiY t-61 at Cleveland

NATION.U. LEAGUE
EAST DIVEJON
W -1- Pl.t.OB

£ilfttllt'E
ANNIIAI. ftEIJ)

/l.fk

PH. 992-2644

iJerrcoat 0.11
Bolll:on tF.ck.erslfo)· 7·9' at Mlniii"SSta
(V\ola &amp;U)
hnle tBfanlfo 8-101 at New York

NO·

STORE
WIDE
ONE DAY

ti1

'l'llarldllr'• Gamet~

(Rawley

RUTLAND FURNITURES

!'6

Baltimore 7, Ttrortu 4, JO Innings
New Y&lt;H'k 6. Se.ttle 3
Minnesota 8, Boston 1
Detnit 5, Texas 2
C1eveland 1-4. Oaklancl (}2,
MUwaukec 1, C&amp;liromla 0. 14 lnn!ngs
Chicago f., Kansas CUy 3, 10 ln!OOP

'.

.

..

'

.till 10

fi1

Calllomla
MlnntMta

Seattle

.·"".

62

""""'

LEAR.

3-IlMB

keouts and allowed just !lve hits
Wednesday, leading Trenton past
Stevens Point 5-3.
A two-run single by catcher Ken
Lake padded Trenton's three-run
first Inning.
Rlghtfleldcr Larry Parker's four
RB!s allowed Rockpon to defeat
Janesvllle4-0.
While winning pitcher Brad Fella
Scattered six hits and retired 11
batters in suc-cession, Par·ker drove
home a run In the first Inning with a
groundout and hU a three-run homer.
In the sixth , breaking Janesville's:
24-game winning streak.

... .

CALL NOW FOR BEST APPOINTMENT TIMES

O&amp;kland

WHILE YOU'RE SHOPPING RUTLAND FURNITURE, .
THEY WILL WASH YOUR CAR ABSOLUTELY FREE.
e "NO OBLIGATION TO BUY"
e YOUR CAR WILL BE READY WHEN YOU LEAVE.

STEVENS POINT, Wis . (AP) Teams !rom Illinois, Indiana , Michlgan and Ohio emerged with
!Irst·rowid vlctorles Wednesday In
the doubl~limlnatlon Great Lakes
regional American Legion baseball
playolfs.
Today's schedule paired LevU town, Pa., against JanesvU!e, Wis.,
New Ulrn, Minn., against host
Stevens Point, Worthlngt.ort, .Ohio ,
against Rockport, Ind., and Allen
Park, Mich .. against Trenton, Ill .
The regional winner advances to
national playoffs Sept. I In Fargo.
N.D.
John Groennert pitched 14 strl·

Scoreboard ...

PA'f THE .FOLLOWING BILlS:
*Columbia Gas
*Columbus &amp; So. Ohio Electric
*Cable T. V.
*General Telephone

DUTTON .
STORE HOURS: 9:30A.M. TO 6:00P.M.

CIUCAGO (AP) - As far as
Chuck Rainey was concerned, be
''had no better stuff than any other
day- they were just hitting 'ern at
people."
That. one of the nonchalant
underslatementstypicalofbaseballese, translates to "Perfect Game,"
or ''No-Hitter," both of which were
conjured up by the Chicago Cub
rlght·hander against Cincinnati
before the spell was broken by a
clean base hit with two outs in the
bottom of the ninth.
Cub Manager Charlie Fox, no
newcomer to no-hitters, marve:ed
at Rainey's Ice-cool demeanor
under the heat o! pressure to
per!onn one of baseball's rarest
feats, but the29·year-olcjhurlerwas
really only worried Wednesday
ahout!inlshlngthegame,wonbythe
Cubs 3-0.
"My primary concern was theCG
(complete game, his first this
year)." said Rainey, 13·10. "I had
been kind of shaky In my last two
outings."
Not this time, as Rainey mowed
. down every Red batter through six
"Innings with a roller coaster ride of
sllders,slnkersandjarnmlngfast·
balls- and probably would have
done so for Tl outs If not for Red
rutllelder Eddie Milner.
· Milner popped,t!u• "Perfecto" by ··
.· drawing a walk . ori a 3-2 pticli
.opening the seventh, then slammed
the door on the no-hit bid with his
·single to center on Rainey's first

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS!
HONDA GIVE·AWAY!

AT

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

and 1n the women's 400-rneter
hurdles. where Judi Brown o! East
Lansing, MiCh., won In 56.\l!
seconds. a personall:lest.

Fishing prosects good this weekend
By The Associated l'rei8
The Division ofWildllfeoftheOhlo
Department of Natural Resources
says th~ are some of the good
places for fishing this weekend:

Legion baseball tourney begin~

Cubs' righthander
one-hits Cincinnati

cycUng, where David Grylls of San
Diego won the 4,®meter porsuit;

1/3

CHAIRS TOUP

· Rockers, lounges
Occa~ional, Recliners

OFF

FLOOR LAMPS

HIDE-A-BEDS

CHOICE OF TWO STYLES

.

ALL SOFA-SLEEPERS IN STOCK REDUCED

Lifestyle
CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE
GALLIPOLIS - "6·3045

OFF

BRASS

SIMMONS-STEARNS &amp; FOSTER
'

V2

REG. 199

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

Clearance
Sale

•FREE
DELIVERY
•FREE

$49

OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.M.
MON. &amp; FRI. TO 8 P.M.

PARKING

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IS OUR MAIN CONCERN

••

�1983

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

---Happenings-------------Triqity ice cream
social scheduled

Thursday, August 25, 1983

Page 6

.

Beat of the bend

Young man
begins .Navy
college study

Fair prizes1unclaimed
By BOB HOEI!'LICH
He was 93 and a goo(! citizen of the
"OVPSiafl
tO'Wll.
Cameo Coutures of Dallas, Tex ..
had a booth at the Meigs County
John Wiles of Pomeroy came
Fair and has ended up with a batch
across
a copy of "The Herald," the
of unclaimed
.
Pomeroy
High School newspaper In
The priz e
have been left
the 19.lls.
In the 1934 edltton found by WUes,
the Dabble
the late Cliff Rhodes who was
W. Main St.
superintendent, wrote an article
Pomeroy,
expressing his concern about stu·
can be claimed
dents traveling to ·school op
there. The
..
"wheels." Wheels In those days,
winners are Ellen Rife, Rul:~n•d;
Helen Blackston, Pomeroy; Doris however, meant btcycles and the
Holley, Racine; Sue Murphy, Ra- late Mr. Rhodes warned the
students to he careful. Admlnlstra·
cine; Susan Bauer, Long Bottom;
Belva Schuyler, Cheshire; Maida tors today have the same concern,
Long, Pomeroy; Janet HUI, RabutEdward
the wheels
have was
changed.
LeitwUer
an editor·
cine; Rosalie Kearns, Hartford;
Lynn Sexton, Langsvtlle; Jean tatwritertorthenewspaperandhe
Trussell, Long Bottom; Mary recmmended ambition and self.
McDaniels, Mason, W. Va. , and
confidence as the keys to success
Sharon Hensley, Dexter.
·
and the
story
by edition
Mary E.contained
Hennessy.a short
Bob Stivers headed the senior
The Rutland Emergency Medl· class,OlanGoodwtnthejunlorsand
cal Service Unit will be holding a CharlesSchornwaspresldentofthe
bean dinner, flea market, and bake sophomores. In the glee club
sale at the Rutland Civic Center activities, Mary Schaefer was
from 9.a.m. tp .4 p.~. onSa\Urday, .-. presjdent of . the GoJdento~~ with
Sept .3. You can he aJpa_rtiC.l)lant.ln · Betty Ward heading the Sllvertones ·
the flea market by"paying $5 for a and Sellm Blazewlcz, the Under·
table and can arrange this by tones. There was a trtbute to Tippy
calling Margl Bishop at 742-3V59.
Dye who was making It In Big Ten

'

·
football.
Barbara Stahl, who Is working
Editor of the Herald was Vlrglnla
help · Arnold with Sellm Blaze';"fcz and
towai'ds" raiSing " funds
Marvin·
Syracuse, ·· :;e- Manrtrig Seyfried.as as8lstants arid
rtously Injured In a dlvlrig accident Charles Graber was the sports
thls summer, reports that bus!- editor.
nesses and others have been quite
And the jumor department went
responsive.
like this:
A dance with proceeds to heneflt
"Jed Mees thinks that the bridge
Marvin will he held on Sept. 10, 8 on a vlolln Is there so the player can
p.m. to midnight, at the Rutland . get his music across."
ClvlcCenter,andBlletzkrlegwillbe
Well - keep cool and keep
the featured music. There will he smiling.
refreshments available and It Is
hoped that there wUI be wide
support of the event. Marvin still
remains a patient at Children's
Hospital In Columbus.
The Roush family reunion was
held recently at the hOme of Mr.
Pomeroy lost a gem of a resident
and Mrs. Albert Roush, Batley
In the death of Henry Reibel. Long
Run.
after many have retired and sit
Recognized were Albert Roush,
down. Mr. Reibel was on the move.
the oldest man; Mary Rose Roush,
Over the years he was quite active
Blacksvtlle, W. Va., the oldest
1n staging work for the musicals of
woman; Sarah Tennant, Blacks·
ttie Big Bend Minstrel Association.
vUie, the youngest girl; and Ryan
Roush, Grove .City, the youngest
boy; and Butch Roush, HyattsvUie,
the one whO traveled the farthest.
An old fashioned breakfast was
servedearlySundaymornlngandln
the afternoon, a cookout and plcnlc
dinner was held. Video pictures
were taken and shown later In the
day, along with tapes of gradua·
Uons, weddings and family
members.
Attending were Mary Rose

Te~ord,

t9'

United States Naval Academy. The
son of Darlene Bailey Emmitt of
Columbus and the grandson of Carl
and Dorothy Bailey, Pomeroy,
Emmitt earned admission to the U.
s. Naval Academy and was
Inducted JlllY 7.
Valedictorian of Columbus Whet·
stone High School 1983 graduating
class, he was a memher of the
NaUonal Honor Society and for two

James D. Emmitt

~ops
~ .'
1456 meets -

years was named to the Academic
HallofFame.Hewascaptalnofthe
football team and was presented
plaques for his leadership In sports
and also by Whetstone's combined
musicmusician.
organlzaUons as outstanding
vocal
A flv~year student of the German language, hewaspresldentol
theGermanCiubandalsopresldent
of the Youth Fellowship at. his
. church, .Overbrook
• . ·.
Midshipman Emmitt" has now
· completed his plebe summer trainlngwithhighranklngs. He has been
selected through aud!Uon to sing In
the Naval Academy Glee Club;

Joanne
the weekly
hest
loser
and Eads
Sherr!was
Darst,
the runner·
up at Tuesday's meeting of TOPS
OH 1456, Rutland. At last week's
meeting Mrs. Darst was the hest
loserwithJoannFettyasrunner-up.
.Those
lnjolnlngthegroup.
. may . atteild · the Oext" meeting,'
. Tuesday, 6p.m: at the RutlandClvic
Center.
·

lnter~ted

IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT

*LARRY D. KENNEDY DDS*
WILL BE ASSOCIAIED WITH HIM IN THE PRACTICE OF

GENERAL DENTISTRY

Beginning July 20

: Church film set
ZION - Youth of the Zion
Church of Christ will sponsor a
. film, "Kevin Can Walt" at 7: 00
· p.m. Sunday at the church. The
public Is Invited.

OFFICE HOURS WILL BE EXPANDED TO MONDAY THRU
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT.
Both Doctors Are Now Welcoming New Patients.
PHONE
_
992 6658
205 N. Second Ave.
Middleport, OH.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=====~

~sbyterian

Former resident
named Father
of the Year·
Former Meigs counuan Jim
Hellman was selected a father ofthe
year by the Wallowa County (Ore.)
CowbeUes organization.
He was nominated for the honor
by the Mother Ortman Assembly of
Rainbow Girls, a group with which
he served 'IS a father advisor and In
other capacities.
The son of a coal miner. HeUman
moved !rom Ohio to Oregon In
October 1948 and worked variously
for a grocery store, dairy company
and a furniture store, and retired In
l9lll as a soU conservation technl·

Roush, Mrs. Edna Rose Tennant,
daughters, ·Carolyn Lee and Sara
Lynn, Tina Kay Raber and daugh·
ter, Misty, an of BlacksvWe; Mrs.
Sue Tharp and Renee, and Kenny
Six, Pine Bank, Pa.; Christine
CUmberledge, Brave, Pa.; Evelyn
Roush and Ed Glazewakl Sr.,
Warren; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Roush. Susie, Dodger, and Ryan,
Grove City; Mr. and Mrs. Sonny
Roush, Chris, Jennifer and Denise,
Cleveland; Doug Roush, Reynoldsburg; Judy and Larry Flowers,
Pickerington; Joy, Dale, 'Sherriand
David, St. Albans; Butch Roush,
HyattsvUie; Mr. and Mrs. Kenny
Roush, Jason and Justin, Christy
Smith, Kim Eblin, Gerrt and Virgil
Parsons, Lanny and Becky Tyree
and son, and the hosts, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Roush.

· junlor.mid~·weightlioxlrig·cham·
ploilsh[i at ·'ihe Naval ·Academy,
defeating Joseph Cheneler of Peoria, Til. This event was held In
Halsey Field House during the
trad!Uonai Parents' Weekend, Aug,
12·14, 1n which his parents and sister
June attended. He has now started
his a"ademic year at the academy.

··:

A group slmUar to the Buckeye
Builders from Alabama known as

Rhodes part
of service
•
exerciSes
Sgt. Robert M. Rhodes, son of
Lucille and Robert G. Rhodes,
Racine, has participated In Global
Shield 33, an exercise Involving U.S.
Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps
units and elements of the Canadian
forces.
The exercise, coonllnated by the
Air Force Strategic Air Command,
was designed to enhance readiness
and the abillty of SAC to carry out
orders shOuld deterrence fall.
Rhodes Is with the410thBombard·
mentWingatK.I.SawyerAlrForce
Base, Mich. His wife, Sharon, Is the
daughter of Donald R. James of
Clifton, W.Va. Sgt. Rhodes is a1973
graduate of Southern High School,
Racine.

'\

PRIMARY

•

•

•

•

•

'

- ·- .

.

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
K__,.ttt Mc:C-.IIautta , R.Ph.

C...r ... RIHie, R.Pit.

ROilltciMIIf1lrtt. R. Pft.

Moft. ttwv Sat. I :DOe.m , IIOfp.m.
tunay lt:Jito 1:11 :W MMI nn ·'"·
... ms
PH. '

·

PRISCIIniONI
l . -a.

~,._....,¥ ltrvke
O..,.NJtMIHIIf

,...._.,,O,

..·.·. '
;

-.-•

-

TABLETS

CHARACTER

THEME
BOOKS

FILLER
PAPER
200 SHEETS

REMOTE CONTROL

99¢

' --:

PENS
3 PACK

TRADE IN

SALE
,

come a• pennanent group with a
goal of constructing one church

i

RCA COLOR

~-~R::EG:U~LAR SJ99.00

BIC
ERASABLE

REGULAR S749.00

50.00

$349

SALE

699

RCA SelectaVision
8-hour VCR with

TRADE-IN 100.00

SALE
WE OFfER ACOMPLETE
SERVICE DEPARTMENT

Picture Search and
10-day Electronic Timer

--------L-----===---===----------

RCA

XL-100
19"
d'

RCII Mo~l

~

•

•
•

•

99
2

$

~the kids to Ponderosa ill' &amp;ee
"Kid'sl:ugers and fiies."
You can pick up any meal on the
menu. Your kids 12 and under will eat
"Kid's buQiers and fries • absoktely
free. And ilon\ ~to~~

}001' coupons, ben.• ~can ~
take advantaQe ci our speoal 5aW'IIIS
on any Dllt meal.
But luty. Our &amp;ee meal deal is
only pxl ~ SqAembtt 22,
1983.
Sfilrt toJcing ~ofINs ~ling offer today
·
at any of lhae cna lomtions:

ncn==

$349

REGULAR $399 ·
TRADE-lN 50.00

REGULAR $99
TRADE
IN
$20

RCA
Blaclc &amp; White TV

12"

. •Savel lpace in your kitchen because it'a
compact.
•Goee elmo at anywhere - on a wall ' on a
shelf, in a corner·
•Perfect for •mall kitchens, rec . rooms,
dorma.
•Backed by 20 years of Litton quality and

• • Iiiii

cooking performance

Nobody knciws more about
microwave cO!Iking than Utton

SALE

No

$79

Paym~ts For

90 Days

WITH APPROVED CREDIT

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

Upper River Road
(Across from the Airport)

;: ..

VJT250

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

Wlllrlpool
Model LB3000XL Waaher ,
• New 24" DeSign 2000 ModE
• 2 Automatic Cycles:
REGULAR/HEAVY
and SHOAT
• New Oouble·Outy Super
SUAGILATOA• Agitator
delivers a shoner, taster
stroke tor hi9h-trequency
washing actoon
• 2 wash/rinse temps built
into the timer
• Self·Balancing Inner Basket
• Heavy·duty motor and
pump
• Automatic Self·leve11ng
· rear legs

In a photograph of the winners of
the pretty baby contest at the Meigs
County Fair, Lacy Mane Banks,
winner In the two yearcategorywas
held by Fonda Rapp rather than
Fonda Ruff.

......

.

''

WASHER .

:;RICE
'S
:~~~!~~RE~ ~:
&gt;. . .
..~~·~·~ . . .~-~~~ -:
•

EFFECTIVE TijRU MONDAY

FOR KINDERGARTEN
AND FIRST GRADE

Winner

See: :

•

25% OFF

Invited.

Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Nen and
family and Mrs. Evelyn Ingram o!
Columbus wUI spend the week here
and attend the Meigs County Fair.

will reopen Monday with more. :
: : unbeatable, unbelieveable, low prices.
·
you then.
::

•

MEN'S OR WOMEN'S

Luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. TO 2 P.M.
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
Lounge Open Daily 11 AM. TO 1 AM. (Closed Sundays)
Come On Down -Give the New Manager a Try.

NO TRADE-IN NEEDED

:. Wednesday thru Saturday:. :

•

LONG BOTTOM - A hymn
slngwW beheldat7p.m. Sunday
at the Mt. Olive Church, Long
Bottom, with the Unroe Family
to present music. The public Is

.

'

•..

Closed For Vacation .:

•

Hymn sing planned

MEET ME AT THE .MEIGS INN

·,,_

Pomeroy
First
Baptist
"Carpenters
for Southern
Christ" buUt
the r-ea_c_h_ye_ar_.
Church.
The Buckeye BuUders wUl he In
Wapakoneta !rom Sept. 2 through
Sept. S to construct a buUdlhg for
the Wapakoneta Southern Baptist
Church which ts"presently located
In a rental faclllty.
The Buckeye BuUders will be·

.NOtiCE

•

The Cre-

Saturday at the Belleville Locks
and Dam. Olnner wW be seiVed
at 11: ll a.m.

BASHAN - An lee cream
social Wm be held Friday at the
Bashan fire house. · Serving will
begin at 6: ll p.m. Besides
hOmemade Ice cream there will
be sandwiches, pies and soft
drinks. There wlll be mustc for
entertainment.

.. '•

.

r------------------:---:-:-:c:-'1

0

BELLEVILLE -

the

· ·.. .
'..
, · . .
Jwuiua· SaYre W'IS Uie top.!Qser ·
and Grace Welch, Carolyn Searls
and Kelley Hawkins tied for
runner-up at the Tuesday morning
SUndereUa class of Mason. The .
Wednesdday morning exercise
class wiU resume next week at 10
a.m. NewmembersinaycontactJo
AnnNewsomeforlnformatlon.

clan for thestate'ssollconservatlon
service.
•• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
Hellman has also been Involved ·
• • • • • •
with Boy Scout actlvlttes, 4-H, local
athletics and masonic
organizations.
Hellman and his wife Carol Uveon
an SJ.acre farm near Wallowa and
. have four children: Dr. Deborah
Rlghtmeler, a physician In Los
Angeles; Teresa Morrison, a medl· •
cal technologist 1n Walla WaUa,
Wash.; J. Eric Hellman, a radiological technOlogist In Baker, Ore.;
.
Andrea HeUman, a junior at the
University of Oregon; and Julie · : We
HeUman, a junior high student In
Enterprise, Ore.
"If you can be proud otwhat you
are and accept your responslb111tles
with your rights, then you're doing
an right,.. HeUman said of his
phi1060PIIY In raising children.
"I've always told my kids they
could do anything tbey wanted, as
loll&amp; as tbey did ft well," he added.
.
• • • • • • • •
•

Bashan ice cream
social slated

means reunion wW be held

. PLAZA!

·. ' .

Carmel community happenings
Those vlsltlng recently at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Circle were Ray Hamrick of
Eastwood. W. Va., Earl Hardin of
Weston, Va., Richard Ables of Bald
Knobs, Mr. and Mrs . Wald Mahban
of Portland, Ohio, Kathleen Bissell,
Tod and Jeremy, of Keno.
William Carelton of Racine was
at the home o! Eunle Brinker on
Sunday evening.
There were 46 present for Sunday
School on Aug. 14.

Cremeans reunion

OPEN EVENINGS TIL 9 P.M.
IN THE SILVER BRIDGE

Buckeye Builders to organize
Jim Heilman

POMEROY - Planned Par·
enthOod 1s now located In the
medtcal buUdlng on Mulberry
Heights across !rom Veterans
Memorlal Hospital.
The new office Is located
between the offices of Dr. John
Ridgway and Dr. James With·
erell. Relocation was necessary
due to the recent fire damage
Incurred 1n the former o!flce.

Office hours will be from 9 a.m.
to 5 p.m. Monday through
Friday.

Sl'ffidere11.a· ffi~tS also,Emmitt
selected for the Chapel Choir.
~ntly. won pleiJ!l .

Roush reunion at Bailey Run .

An organlza tiona! meeting of the
Buckeye BuUders was held recently at the Emanuel Baptist
Church In Jackson with the Rev.
Lamar O'Bryant as moderator.
Five churches of the Scioto
Valley Association were represented at the lnlttal meeting.
Attending from the Pomeroy
First Southern Baptist Church were
Hershel McOure, Duke Kennedy
and John Wllson.

Planned Parenthocxl
center relocates

POMEROY - Trlnlty OlUrch
of Pomeroy, Second and Lynn
St. will sponsor an lee cream
soclal Friday between the hours
of 4 and 8 p.m. Homemade lee
cream In flavors of chOcolate,
vanUJa, teinon, and fresh peach.
pie and cake will be served.
Advance orders for quarts of
Ice cream are being taken at
9!J2.37TI or ~ between 3
and 6 p.m. Wednesday and at the
church anytime 992-3172. Ice
cream can be picked up at the
church Thursday, 3 to 6 p.m. nd
Friday, 3 to 8: ll p.m. _

·R. CRAIG MATHEWS, DDS

. With hismusician
combinedand
talents
as a
scholar,
athlete,
James D. Emmitt Is bound to have
a lot of demands on his time at the

The

Ohio

•

,,

'

'

•

�•
.Page

8

The Daily

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Seventy-five residents reported to an American Red Cross
Bloodmobile at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday to
contrlbute fil pints ofbiOQd to the
Meigs blood program.
l'hlrty-four people gave replacement blood.
Debra Mora and Opal Grueser
became one gallon donors;
Linda Ha ley became a four
gallon donor and Charles Searls
became ~ 10 gallon donor.
Eleven persons were first lime
donors.
Nurses assisting were Ferndora Story and Beulah Ward and
Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Dr.
James Witherell were the physicians in charge.

67 pints
of blood
collected

Women of the Asbury Church
served the canteen. R.S.V.P.
personnel were In charge of
tables and chairs . and retired
senior citiZens working In vat·
ious capacities were Marton
Ehersbach, Thelma Dlll, Phil()mena Follrod, Herbert Shields,
Bernadine Meier and Jessie
Curtis. Making up the clerical
staff were Mary Nease, Jean
Nease, Emma K Clatworthy,
Virginia Buchanan, Erma
Roush, Peggy Harris, Mary
Morrow, Angela Sellers, Paul
McGulfe, Allee WoHe, Joyce
Hoback, Mace! Barton, Lula
Hampton, Vernon Neru;e and
Oval Diddle.
·

Donon by convn\arury rouded:
Ptlmerut-Nan('y ,Jeffers, Maxine Hetl.er.
Faye F. Cl.lti)rd, Ruth S. L)ICIU:, Anna M.

NalstetJer, Homer G. !Wner, Susanna Heck,
Klng, Delra J. Mora, Oplll M,
Gnll'Se", Jeff Obltl~. Joanne NC'W!Ome,
Blm.J~In Newsome, Maly Starcher. Mar·~ Y. Hams, Leo 1.. Vaua ban, DQnna 1...
Eyans, f.lennis Charles Qark, WW1am C.
Quickel, Ronald W. Hanning. Russell W.
Mtl(ll'(&gt;, PhyD.Is N. May, RIISSell E: Nltz.
Walt.f'l" R. «;:ouch, Gttotrrey_A. WJI!Ion, VlratJ

B&amp;dM-Ernes1 E . Spmii'r, Judy Spencer,
William Hoback, DOnx~Sa}n, PauiMarr.

FoMa G. R.app.
ee Kathy J. Cumrn1ngz.,
MOJT\'M·, Katt\}'Fry, Cathy Moore.
· CJw.illre-Olarles W. Searls.
. 8)1

K1m

Vou,

Carolyn

WSCollunbla, W. Va.-.awies M.Bums .
~reeoryStew8J1.MaryE . D:lvid·
~. Donna M. Davidson. Pegy A. Searles.
Reedtvlle-Deborall L. S&amp;n*n ; Mact&gt;l S.
Barl....
IA!Urt-&amp;unuel R. Bostrll.
Portllpd-Bonnlr lbio. '
P*l: f'leM.ai - Lyrnan Gl"f''f''tW.

BOGGS

Exlll!llded Oldo Foncaot
Saturdq lllroup Moaday:
Cbance of ......._ 01' .........,_.
.slonns Sa&amp;arday IUid Saada.v'
Sunny on MOIII!af. Very Wlll'llllllld

Admitted--Michael Smith, Pomeroy; Sara Smith, PoTT)I'fOy; Weltha
Bryson, .Pomeroy; Linley Hljrt,
Racine ; Clemen Edwards ,

Middleport.
Di$charged --Timothy Evans,
John Lyons ' IV, Benjamin Fields,
Clarence Lee, Lee Wood.

SALES &amp; SERVICE ;
U.S. AT. 50 t~ST
GUYSVILLE. OltiO
'Authorized John Deer,

launld !Wuntay, IJeeomiDC cooler
and le8s lunld SuDday and Mooday. Early momlng Iowa In the
mld-al8 to low,.. SatUrdiQ', In the
001 SuDday and In the rniHOI to low
001 Monday.·JIJ&amp;IM In the mlci-M!i to
low 901 Saturday, the 8ll!i Suaday
and lhe . upper 'lOs to mid Monday.

New Holllnd. Bush Hoc

custo:~LDING

•Custom Built Homes
•Viceroy Homes
From Canada
•Modular Homes
*Romodelina Jobs
*Pools

Wanted to buy U1ed. coal &amp;
wood heaters . Sw•ln Furni-

s.

36629 Rt. 7
Pomeroy

985·3365
7-28-1 mo. pd

l·ltfc

MINE RUN

Will pay good price for used

STRIP

• ,.mpofS. Call 814-4480176.

__ COAL

BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old
fumiture, gold, silver dol-

lera, wood ice

SERVICE CALLS

$3()0° A TON

742-2352

PH. 992-2280

Rovte 4, Pomii!OY

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

•water Pipe
•Gas Pipe
, •Regulators
•fittings

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

H. L.

Custom
Sawmill Work
'

ROOFING

*Planing
*Shop Work
*New Construction
*Remodeling

15 Years Experience
992-3987

. Phone:
Residence: 985-3837
Warehouse: 985-3509
8-4·lmo. !HI.
. '---------'-'--'

(Formerly Employed by
Lee Construction)

. All types of roof worl!, new
or repair, &amp;Utters and
downspouts, autter cleaning and painting, stonn
doors and windows.
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"
I

CARPENTRY
SERVICE
7-21-1 mo . P&lt;! .

,·

...

1 -Card of Thanks (paid in ad•ancal
(paid in od•ancel
2-ln Momoov

22-MoneytQ Loan

3-Announcements

23-Professional Services

.. 4.Gi•eaway
'·:6 .HoppyAds
· : 6•LoU lind Found
7-Yard Sale (paid in ad•ancel
8-Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wantad to Buy

21 ·- Business Opportunity

3 1·Homes for Sale
32-MoMe Homes for Sale ·
33-Farmslor Sale

51 -Household Goods
52-CB, TV llo Radio Equipment
53-Antiq~es
.
· 54-Mis~. Mercharidise .:
. · S5- Building S~pplieil .
56- Pets for Salo

3'4-Business Buildings

5 7-Music:al Instruments

5 B·Fr~its llo Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

71-AutosforSale
72-Trucks for Sale
73-Vanollo4WD
. o74-Petotorc:Yclal . .·· .•
· .75-iloats llo Motors
75-Auto Parts llo Accessories
77-Auto Repair
7B- C~mping Equipment

36-Lots &amp; Acreage
26-Real E

41 -Houses lor. Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rant
43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Runt
45-Furnished Rooms
46-Sppce for Rent
·47-Wantadto Rent ·
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For Lease

1 1-Help Wanted
1 2-Situated Wanted
·13-lnsurance
14,.BuSiness Training

t 5. Schools
1 6-Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair .
,17-MisciJIIBneous

18-Wanted To Do

.·

follow.ing telephone exchanl{('s ... .

- .· ..
·

Meigs County
Area Code 61 4

446-GaQipolis
3B7-Cheshioe
388- Vinton
245·.,,:Rio
de
256-Guyen Dist.
643- Arabia Dist.
379-Watnut

992-Middlllport
Pollllll'DV

61 -Farm Equipment
62-Wanted to Buy
63-liwestock
64-Hay llo Grain
6 5- Sued &amp; Fertilizer

81-Home tmp..,eman1s
82-Ptumbing 11o Heating
83-Eacavating
84-Eiectricat &amp; Ralrige&lt;ation
85-General Hauling
. 86-M .H. Repair
87- Upholsterv

985-Chest~ .

I

Mason.Co .•.wv
Area Code 304

Gallia County
Area Code 61 4

Gr..

.·.•

RADIATOR
SERVICE
• . We e&amp;!! .....- and reconi iadiritoiti and:ll!lli-

Classified pages cot•er the

67&amp;- Pt. Pleasant
468-t.,on
• 6?6-:Apple Grove .
7n-cMaf&lt;&gt;n ·
882.::: New Haven ·
895-Letart

o.·

343..; Portland
2.f7:_Latan Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland
667- Coolville

PAT HILL FORD
-992·2196

..

·MiddlePor( Ohio.'
· !, JJ.tfo

Crochet dtrecl1ons, cloth about
68 ". Use bedspread cotton.
smaller cloth in No. 30 cotton.
$2.50 for each pattern. Add
501 each pattern lor postage
and handliog . Se~ 14:
1'
Aliti Brooks CAlls
Raoder M1il

The

Daily Sentinel
Box 163, Old ChobU Sla., Nae
YO!\, NY 10113. Print lllme,
Add-, Zip, Plllom Number.
YOUR NEXT CRAFT is in oor NEW
1984 NEEDLECRAFT CATALOG .
Over 170 •aried deoigns. 3 free
patterns. Send $1.50
.U CRAFT IIOIJt(S. .$2.00 uch
AI 11aab Mid Cllalot-ld&lt;t 504
uch lor IIIDII ond hlndlin~

135-Dolls ., CIO!hes On P111da
134-14 ~ia Moc•ine ~ilts
133-FIIhoon llolnt ~i11iAI
132-Qoli~ OriJiOIIs

HOBSTETIER

130.s..t~rFIShJan.Sizes38-56

128-Enwlopt Pilch"""' Quills
127·Afthlns 'o' Dollies
126-ThriU, Cratty Flowers
125-Polll !!!Iiiii
124-Eisy Gifts 'n' Oru11ents
123-Stitth 'n' Pllth ~illl
122-StvH 'n' PuH ~ills .
120-CIOdtll Y01r Wardnobe
Ut-E., Ail al Flower C..:he!
11&amp;-NIU, Fifty Olilts
An arltilllle C..:het
113-C&lt;Inplet, Giu-&amp;a
109-Soe+lnit Ilillie li$sue incQ
105-lmllnt Crdet
101-Quih W CaiKtion I

us.r.,

REALTY
Geo.

s. Hobstettor, Jr.

Broker
Office: 992-5739

GET AWAY FROM IT ALL Extra neat cottaga One spacoos room with 2 sets of bunk
beds and other antique
lumrture. 200' deep br 125'
frontage on Oh~ River. As~ng
on~ .$7,000.
CREW ROAD -!behind Meigs
Fugroond~. Just look al this
b"eYel and you will say "yes".
4 bedrooms, formal dining
room. family room w/w'X»
burner andmuch morel! Selling
price $49,500.
Sl RT. 7 - Love~ L-sh~ped
brick home. 4 bedrooms. living
room has beautiful fireplaca 2
baths, 2 car garage. Situated on
1acra A real dream hom~! Call
now.

HELP WANTED
PART-TIME HELP
NEEDED IN THE
SYRACUSE AREA.
CONTACT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AT 992-215.6 OR 992-2155

7589

i,Aea E~~~
Add a look of elejance lo your
· table with lhis loyely cloth .
It's so-o-o easy to crochet in
lovely lacy ptneapples and shell
stitch patterns. Pattern 7589:

MOBILE HOllE 1974
Freedom, 2 bedrooms, !Zx65'
in excelll!llt condition. New
stCJm door, underpinnin&amp;
some furniture. Make ~s an
offer on this on~!!!

Cheryl Lemley. Assoc.
Phone ,742-317!
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phooa 742-3092

WHILE TH.EY LAST
OF

11 ONLY

FIREPLACE INSERTS

NAME

BR!~~~:=
~~~)LOW PRICE .
REGULAR STORE PRICE $995

(MFG. IN OHIO!

.

$5 50
.

APPROVED FOR BITUMINOUS COAL

Five Year
Limited

warranty

HI·Tampglus by
Coming.Qpllonal
acreen available.
boilerplate steel fire
chamber and sturdy,
heavy gauge steel
outer shell.
Ultrasonically tested
for leaks. ,

Automatic draft~''""~·-----.;
for even burning
oiWOOd.
.
Large. alllighl.
removable ashpan l o r - - - - - .
easy cleahlng.

Duol, vonaole speed

blowert tor oven. flllerod

hell dlatrlbuclon.

50

DIPOSIT WILl
HOLD FOR 30-DAYS

DIRECTIONS ....
SOUTH ON OHIO AT. 7, 5 MII.ES 88.0W
TO RACXlOON CJIIBC-FOIIow Signa

· SALE STARTS 9 A.M. WED.

'

TILl

S OPLOCALLY
COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
· OFF IN MORE.WAYS THAN ONE!

I

..THE
TROPHY
KING

a, ihopplnaln your home' t~rtl you nve on
p1, the wear and tear on your car and avoid
the tward1 of hilhwar and tr.way
travelin&amp;. It PIIJI to ahop where you Uv.el

The Daily Sentinel
8.

Public Sale
S. Auction

8

SUN., AUG. 28-11:00 A.M.
FARM MACHINERY &amp;
INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT

On St. Rt. 377 Pen~svllle, Ohio, at the BILL JANES AUC·
·liON CO. This is a larae all day sale of aood equipment.
Take St. At. 60 South out of lanesville, Ohio to McConnelsville, then St. Rt. 78 West for 2\\ miles, tum square
left on to St. Rt. 377 for 6 miles to the BILLJANES FARMS.
Out of Mariena takl St. Rt. 60 North to Pennsville, on St.
Rt.. 377,. or from Athens take St. Rt 550 throucfl Ames·
ville, then St. Rt. 377 throu~ Chesterhill, to P111nsvilie.
Sellin&amp; farm machinery from 3 farms In Morpn County
and othars, will also be sellinc industrial equipment and
equipment from implement comp1nies. Due to park inc facilities, all equipment is bein' moved to the Bill Janes
firm in Pennsville. Ohio. This 1s alarce sale, many items
not listed, be on time.
.
INDUSTRIAL EQUIPMENT: 1972 - 350 Case dozer w/4 way
blade w/auto. 3 speed transmission; 1970 Case Davis
trencher (70 plus 4 w/back hoel. 12" bucket, 65 h.p. Wisconsin engine, on rubber; 1965 John Deere 2010 back hoe
w/18" back hoe bucket. front end loader; air compressor; air
tools; dnlls: impact wrenches; other tools; 1969 Ford f. 700
dump truck: low boy 20 ft. !railer.
FARM EQUIPMENT: 30 Cockshut tractor !diesel): WD Allis
Chalmers tractor; CA Allis Chalmers lractor WFE; Ford 6000
tractor (d1ese11: Cockshul tractor (gasj; 8 N Ford tractor
w/loader; Kubota L285 tractor; 6!0 Long lractor w/4 wheel
drive &amp; loader, 1'h yr. old 380 hrs.; 5 ft New Idea cutter 3 pt.;
6ft. Long cutter pull type: AC. 4 row planter; John Deere 4
row planter (wetj: John Deere 4 row planter (wet): John
; Deere hay baler; IH 4 bottom plows semi mount; New Idea
hay rake: Killbros 200 gravity wagon; utility bed; Oliver hay
crimper; 1964 Chevy 2ton cab and chassis good tires; 1979
Ford Ranger XLT camper special, automatic transmission, radio and heater, power steering and power brakes, air, low
miles; 1975 Cadillac 4 door sedan, runs good, needs body
work; 1968 Oliver traclor 1250: Ford 51\. 'bush· hor.
COMPLETE LINE OF FARM MACHINERY FROM ANOTHER
FARMER IN ·MORGAN COUNTY WHO HAS DISCONTINUED
FARMING DUE TO OTHER INTERESTS: 1976·460 Longtrac·
tor (diesel) w/634 hours, brush gwd, nose weights, ps, cold
weather kit, differential lock, aux. hydraulic kit, spin out
wheels, emergency hand brake; John Deere 6' bush hog;
John Deere 6' cultipacker: lnternationa 14" plows: Knight II
yd . cement mixer; 3 row marking out plows; Ford scoop 706;
6' d~c; utility dump box; utlity plafllrm carrier: heavy duty
boom Ford loader 7ll(never used); 8xl6 tift top trailer; 6' 250 gallon roller: 3" Homelite ps driven water pump; Letz
feed grinder; New Idea elec. corn sheller; 300 gallon fuel
tank and pump; John Deere hay and grain ' elevator 30 ft.;
Ford tractor 2000 • 4 cyL (gasj; heavy duty front end loader
for Ford or Ferguson.
MISCELLANEOUS FARM iTEMS: 200 usad siMI posts· 318' siMI ptes; 6-12' &amp; 14' wooden ptes; I roll Aed Brind
barb wira (new); hoa dividin&amp; ptes; 5x9 all siMI trailer·
7x12 tandem trailar a/racks; 75' used barn door trecki
200 pl. ps t1nk; 100 pl. pressure tank. Many other
111111. Bt on ttma as !Ills will be an all d1y sale.
TERMS: Cash or theck with P.OSitlve ID. Out of town
checks must hlvelotttr of crechtfrom ban !C. LMnch on pr•
•lses. Plenty of parkin&amp;. Own• .., the rltht to rljlct enr
or ell bids.
·
AUCTIONEER NOT£: This will b11n opportuniiy to buy
IOOd machinery II auction prieta. Bo·on tillit, very few .
small Hems to sell.
· Not Auponaible for Accidents or Loss.
BILL JAIES II CHAIIIE OF SAL£ · ·
AUCTIONEERS: IILL JMES I DUANE SMITH
BILL JANES I ASSOCIATES
PIIONE 614·557·3411

PHONE,

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
. Lone· Bottom, OH. 45743
. 98HI93 or 992-)067
·· ·

lt.10.Uc

*Buffet. etc.

WOOD

: 1 -,w\!9'-!~~·
-W.
'· .: .Vi••••. • .

Ia.

..

·

.,.,.., pd.

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PlEASANT, W._I/A.~
·-~n4 ... 7 ... 'J

3 si·~

Wt Print .AU!!In Anrtlina
On ALIRISTTnythin&amp;

AL TROMM'S .
BACKHOE
SERVICE
-Lowest Rates

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH,

PlAQUES ·
ENGRAVING

M.L.
CONTRACTING -

Public Sale
S. Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAl, AUG. 27-10:30 A.M.
.
LDGAN, OHIO
MACHINE SHOP EQUIPMENT
TOOLS &amp; INVENTORY
ACCESSORIES
In Lopn, Ohio, linl off Hunter Street Oil to North Wllnut for
three miles to 9155 North Walnut Ooellr flold, &amp;ivln&amp; up
1111Chint shop business and due to other Interests, will sail the
followlnt ~-:
Atlas Clausing lathe 220 volt single phase, 4 ft between centers,
variable speed drille, turrell tail stoc~ regular tail stock, productlnn
cnEs ~ida steady rest, follOw rest 3 jaw adjust true chuc~ 4 jaw
lace plate, 4 wwy pool tool.
Ammoo punch press w/cut off die, floor mode; 2 pipe vi;es; Wr&gt;
liam Parker &amp; Co. shllflel24 inch stroke, comp~ew/5hp mot!l' &amp;
llise; Cummings heavy duty 12 speed drill press bench model
w/stand; floor model drill press w/No. 3taper; aircompress!l'cap.
200 lbs.; large assortment ol vises an~ drill press, mach~ist, etc.;
24 inch hd. cylinder, a lot of drill bils for drill press, app.200 drill
bits; reamers and star dril5; wire stripper fbr model w/mottr, a
large asssortment of new eye bobs; large assatment of ll tlread
bolts.
Darton vertical horizontal !&gt;and saw; assortment of fan bells; 2saw
stand~ a lot of new drill bits; assortment of Woodruff key cutters;
Allen caps; several vi;es large and smal~ heavy dliy vises; bench
vises; Columbia \; hp 6 inch grinder floor model; Wiler floor model
pedestal !Iinder, 8 inch 3 phase; large welding table; large assai·
rnent of grinding wheels; \&lt; inch dril~ \; hp hand drilt assortment of
hydraulic pumps.
•
Brown &amp; Sharpe No. 2 horizontal mill w/Bridgeport M2 head lui
power feed, 3 phase; 5 ton hydraulic Arbor press; lloor model
grinder, metal pariS wall ca~net American engine lathe 71t center, quick change gear bo~. 3 &amp; 4 jaw chucks, 3 phase; small elec- .
!ric cylnder, alot of solid brass fittings; Brcwvn &amp;Sharpe No. 1I! he&gt;
rizontal milt 3 phase; a large assortment of mill cutters; Ammm
cytinder recondition tool2 13/16 to 5 in. bor~ air hammer chisels;
2 barrel pumps; Minute Man key wwy cutters set 3 phase convertor, will start up to 1 hp motor and will run equNalent of 50 hp used
very Iiiii~
Floor model Arbor press; tymoo drille 4 speed brake snoe
mach in~ pipe die set saw blades i&gt;r band saw: Walton tap extrac·
tor set bells and lacing; large assortment of cclamps; assortment
of hand looll; 2 oil heaters: metal cabinets; &amp;rease &amp;!Jns; assat.ment of weld~g rods !new cartons!; hydraulic jack !5ton hi.fo lwin
cylinder: anvi: B&amp;O drilt welding cart and lanks; 225 amp Linmln
portable welder; small po-table paint sprayer outfit over 30 hydraulic jacks.
•
Metal cabinet sheet of steel; come-alongs; log chains; large and
small pi_
pe wrenches; bo~ cutters; several paint sprwy gum; Ram •
hydraulic cyinder; 21ifts w/boomers (portj; winch for pidmp; alot
of anjje tron wlracks; channel11011; pipe; metal raclos w/shelves;
large assortment of machine bol1s, nuts. ell:.: bfass brazing rod;
sand blast spray 'gun; paint
3 large oi cans; asst. lathe
dogs; 4 new carbide !lind wheels; 20 new surtace grinding wl&gt;!e5;
2 tap and diesels; llfG busq a lot ol chisels; a I~ of soclie!N; a
lot of Allen wrenches; large :aps; screw dri;ers; h11111mers; tool
boxes; wirewheels; shin aMer; inside and outsile calipers; Cil',
bide tip cutters; Stirrett dill iK1icator; Stirrett microm. caliper 0-4
in.; Brcwvn &amp; Sharpe microm. l-4 in.; mach~&amp; clamps; asst. end
mills; telescope gauges; anlde end strai!!llt parallel tool ills; end
mtlls; ""'· files; tool maker an(lle vise; rethread dies 14-1 ~: se\o. tool
boxes; rope packing sev. elec.switch boxes; motors; rairoad jacks.
1974 fool l41Dn truck w/power steerina and power brakes, automatic transmissim, V8-318 engine, dual wheels, and 5111 whee\ 16
ft tandem trailer, &amp;DOSil neck, electrO: lnkes no be sold as one
unilj; 2 wheel portable tar Yfl&amp;llll: lllmernade International 6 cyl
buay; \; barrel1111Chllery oit barrel racks; 20 Kll!on red machin·
ery paint; 1975 Dodge f)icllup \!ton, automaic lrlnsrniss«Jn, power
sh!ering and power bnfces, ~idine rear window, 318 er~&amp;ine, rurs

reau-.

Pill.,.._

uhllOd
.
Tllillillt be a Iaiii. dlr lilt Ill
IIIII oqulpIMIII Ills in 1111111 Ill IIIII. l.IIIICII on the !lnnlllll. All
lllras 11111t be r-at in 7 to 10 din.
TERIS: Cllb or chert llftlj 1J011tM ID. Out Ill town ditcb
muat be ~eccnctlld 11r •1t111r o1 n11t a the 111n1e.
IJIOftl~ fur Acc*rita 1r LOll
BILL JANES I ASSOCIATES, 614-557-3411
DUM£ S'tiTH. Arlcllorl11r
LDCAII, OHIO 614-385-5791 .

lfot

lilf{~~
..
I. ~~~0~:,·

SAYRE
AND SON

*Tables &amp;·ChairS •·

*Comer Cupboards

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

$2.00.

REClAMATION

PUUINS

. YQUNG'S

4

~ Backhoaa

--ng

~Oump

-Trencher

-Wat•

- s-

-GuUnao

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Racine, OH .
8·J.tlt

Trudcs

~ Lo-lloy

(Free EstlmGtaa)

949-2293

PLUMBING aod
HEATING

~Dozen

-Addono and ......doling
and guiiO• w..t.
--Cot ...... work
-l'lu...... ancl
oleclrical w..t.

•Excavating
· •ponds
•sepHc Tanks
•Hauling ' . _ ·

JEWELL'S

EXCAVATING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

~ Septic

•

992-6030

8 wk. old kinana. Call
446-3627.

448-0924.

Minersville, OH.
8/19/1 mo. pd.

PH. 992-2478

. Black female kitten, approx.
3 mo. old. Houaa cat. Call
814-388-8618.

11-18·1 mo. pd.

Black S. whha kinen. Cell
446-7795.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR SERVICE
From tht Smallest Heater
Core to the Lareest Radiator.
Radiator SpKialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. hperience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.
Pomeroy, Oh.

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL

SIDING
"Siding
"Roofing
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
"Remodelinc
20 Years Experience
in Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

SERVICE

DECORATING

3 cute kittens . Call 446-

2615 .

CAK~

a.

7·5·2 mo. pd .

2·26·!1H

TERESA'S

For all your wiring 1
needs; furn•cas re-· ;
pair service and In- ;
stallation.
1
Residential
Commercial
Cell 742-3196

Call 843-5425

Ph. 992-2174

MILLER
ELECTRIC

3·7·tft .

2 female guinea piga with
water bottle. 614-992~
6624.

All OCcasion Cakes

Four kittens . Phone
676-3983.

'

"Licensed &amp; Inspected"

PH.

9~2-3047

TWO canaries.
3636.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

ROUSH
ALL STEEL &amp;
CONSTRUCTION .· POLE BULDINGS

New Homes - Extensive
Remodeling.
, o! nsurance Work
•C~stom Pole Bldas.
&amp; Gar~aes ·
' •Roofin&amp; Work
•
oAiuninum &amp; Vinyl Sidinas
15 Years bperienc'e
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583

Sizes start from 12'xl6'

1

UTILITY BUILDINGS I
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
' to 24'x36'
lnsulatd Doe Houses

:

· •. o. Ph.-614~3-~!~f

or 992~2282 1 J.I Htc

I

•. '

10·6-tfc

.:

'

Isears I

All Makes
•Welhers •Diahwaahera
R•ngea
•Retriger.tora
•D~arl •frHZ81'1
PARTS and SERVICE
. -.Ul!!.

ARROW FlASHING
SIGNS
FDA SALE OR RENT
~

'

If~~~

1-11

m]lty
u•d
2
Gomr!':
ClrS.

· .~

Rick Peanon Auctioneer
Service. Estate. Farm, An·
tique &amp;. liquidation ulaa.
Ucanood • bondad In Ohio •
wva . 304-773-5786 or
304-773-9t86.

I

Installed And
Warranted by Sears
For 5 Ye1rs.

ULTRA CLEAN
DRV FOAM EXTRACTION METHOD

:

CATALOG
MERCHAN'F

Gregg S. Patty Gibba-Owner1

PH. 992-2178 .

7-S·tltc

:~ala

Auction avery Tueaday
night. Pt. Pleaunt. WVa.
Auct. lonnie Neal. Farm,
houaehold. estate. etc . Call
814-387-7101 .

No Sunday Calla

:J.ll·tfe

.

a. Auct1on

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

'"Beautiful.' Custom
Buill Ga1111ts"
Call for free sidinaeslimates, 949-2801 or ,
949-2860.

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

8

, ... 8''

R..,.._tLottara

BISSELL
SIDiNG CO.

lost and Found

LOST: Racine area. red 6
year old Cocker Spaniel.
"lance .. . Reward . 614·
949-2326.

s.l·l· mo.

SIDING

"FREE. ESTIMATES"

6

'Huntin&amp; &amp; Fishing
License
·oo&amp; Supplies ·
Hrs,: Weekdays 10-6
· Sat &amp; Sun. 10-8
Closed Tues. &amp; Wed .

Vinyl It Aluminum
;

TWO kittens, to good home.
304-676-4528 after 6 p.m.

Tackle

985-3561

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Dh.

TUPPERS PlAINS, OH.
'Bows &amp; Accessories
'Guns &amp; Ammo.
"Liva Bait, Fishing

CARPET ANIJ UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
[IEEP CLEANED- SHORT DRYING TIME
USE SAME DAV- ANT1-RESOIL DmRGENTS
· COMMERCIAL. REBIDENTIAL
·~~r~,s~~~~:spot Rernovel Service
.*' 1•.
Clttnlnc
· "lnaur~nce Won Welcome"
Jamts Knlpt-.-273-5388
In RIMnswood
Rick Hovatter-992-2606
In llddl.,.rt
..:'~ "Frot Ellh111t11 On All Services"
u 1 "'·

1ha
Hanford
Community
Auction
•very Fri
. night at
Cent•. Truckloadl of new
merchandi• every week.
Conllgmonll of new and
uted merchllndfu elw1y1
,..!como. Richard Ro~nolds
Auction-. 276-3089.

9

.
'

.

Someone 10 live In with
elderly couple. Room, board
and Wages. Call between 9
&amp; 10a.m. orbetween5p ,m.
&amp; 7 p.m. 814-992-2241.

~•Ill

Wantad To Buy

We pay ce1h for late model
clean u ..d cars.
Jim Mink Chav.-Oido Inc.
8111 Gone Johnoon
44&amp;-3872

--- - -~ ---··· ·· ··-······- · ··-····

FO-UR .:. fam.iiY: ·va_rd . _ ~ale•. ~
ho·m a interior, good coats,
clothes, curtains, soem furniture, knick-knacks&amp;. misc.
8-3 :30, Wednesday. Thur,.dav 8a. Friday. 2218 Jeffer·
son Ave. Pt. Pleasant.
-----------

~· Grand~ ~~~~!~~y. ~t 2 ~~id'R'ai~

homa. Live in Middleport
oraa. Call 614-992-6349.
Will do babysitting in my

home. Racine area. ReferenCes. 6t4-949-2779.
Will care for elderly in our

home. tr•ined 8t a"pe·
rienced. LPN care given.
61 4·992-7314.

13

lnsuranca

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co . hea offered
aervicea for fire in•urance
coverage in Gellia County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property
c:overagea are avllilable to
m~~tat individual needs. Con·
tact Kall Burleaon. agent.
Phone 446-2921.
Are you paying to much for
your hospital~health inau·
ranee. Call Carroll
Snowden. 448-4290.

18 Wantad to Do
General Hauling and Trash
remove! Service. Reliable
and dependable. Call 4463169 between 9 and 6 .
·Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and dependable. For eatimate call
446-3t 69, 9 to 6.
Will do babyaitting in the
evonlngi. Call446-3231 .

Bookkeeper. typiat, records,
payroll. 30 years experience.
Call 304· 876-3099.
Water hauling. Will dq cist·
erna OrCIISPOOII, 81.,·992 ·
6868.

~~~~i~~iii
~
~

21

0

Bu1inea1

·

pportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAUEV PUBLISHING CO. rocommondo
that you do bu1fne11 whh
people you know, and NOT
to Mnd money through the
mail until you have lnveatigatod tho oflarlng.
-

.
,.,

'

~======~======
21

Business
Opportunity

For lease. Auto Service
Center, Mason, WV, 3 bays,
2 hoists. excellent location,
successful business for over
30 years. available after
Aug. 9, 1983 . Call after 6
p.m.. 1-304-675 ·2982.

22 Money to Loan

31 Homes for Sale •'

'
Nice 2 BR houae, large
fenced In backyard . Utility
rm .. 2 furnace in city. Call
446-1431 or 446-1686.
located in Syrecuae·Near
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedtoom ' situated on one·
third acre lot. 824.600. or
will rent tor 8276 mo.
304-856-3934.

Sale by own8r -Ruatic h'llla.
HOME LOANS Low fixed Syracuse. 3 badrooma.· 2
rate. LeaderMongage. 77E . bathe, bi·level with PlltiO &amp;
State, Athens, Ohio . 1· 614· cover. 3x30 -2 car garage.
692-3061.
tB•t 2 bern. 6t 4-992-2987
.a fter 6 p.m.

1:;;=;::::;:=:;=::;=::::

23 Professional
WANTED• pert time music
Sarvices
leader for Congrt 111tional
Singing . Call 3•,4-675· 1-PI_A_N_O_T_U_N_I_"_'G_B_a-ck_t_o
66t9, 675-4216 or 675••
1640.
$chool Special 625 normal
tunlngs. August only .
Ward's Keyboard, 446 ·
4372.
12 Situations
Wanted
PIANO TUNING-LANE OA·
NIELS. Reliable so,.lco
since 1966 . Auociate of
Room, board and care for an Brunlcardi Music Co. Phone
elderly person in my home . 614-742-296t .
Roosoneblo. Coll982 -6022 .

304~ 676-

GOOD watch dog, small
mixed bread. mala. 9
months old, 304·4681657.

Arbaugh's Archery
&amp; Hunting Supply

KEN'S ,
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

304-

SEVEN pups, 6 malo, 1
female. 304-676-7430.

8-1 ·1 mil.

f

.

Will do babysitting in my

3 cats, 1 calico, 1 almost all
white, other brown. 614992-3980.

Wedding Cakes and

6.

National Guard is tookingfor
people to fill ita ranks. If you
7 puppies pan German are a high school senior or
Shephard·Nowegian Elk graduate and have no prior
Hounds. Call 614-388- 1ervice in the mHitary, the
Weat Virginia Army National
9602.
Guard may be the place for
6 puppies 3 montha old. To youl Earn good pay, · good
good home in country.~ Call , benifits, job training and
educational asaittance for
614-266-1702 anytima.
only fweekend a month and
2 female puppies. Call 446 - 16. days. each summer. For
more information call Sar·
8372 after 6.
gent Lutton at 304-676Collie puppiee. Call 446- 3960 or call toll free 1 ~BOO3619.
7752.
3 female kittens, 2 mother
cata to • good home. Call

Sy11ama

·· ·· ··_p f Piiiiis&amp;·.;-f ··· ·

Yard
348 .
·
lflid.-,\uQ, 26 ind .26 , 9AI\4 Mondoy · • · .Tue~dav ..· Big '
~;.:;·.,: :-. :_~.q;__~_o!' . ~~· . Ch~· . Iii" lPM . Girli · clothin~- 4 house· bace .of' Henderson
1· .....
· · · mos. to 5:X. Pra-tae·n clo- Post OfficEI.
- ·
1 ,...: Oh
lhing. Many ~isc. Items.
Dependable ba:l!ysiner CanYARD Sale, Friday&amp;. Satur·
tenary area . Call446· 0492. Yard Sale Saturday Aug 27. day, Auguat 26th &amp; 27!h. 9
Baby clothes, dishes, misc. a.m .-1168.Roush Or. , New
Seamstreas wanted. 614· items. 834 First Ave .. Galli - Haven, Clothes, toys, to«;JI&amp;.
992-8202 on Fri. only. 9 to polis. 9-6.
misc.

THE Weat Virginia Army

Giveaway •

•Experienc8d
•Reaooneble
•Wol1&lt; Guaranteed
JOB - BIG OR SMALL

lARGE OR SM,I\U JOBS

11 ·26·tlc

cuts.

NOTICE no trasapa11ing of
I ~ny kind on my property .
1\Johh Dalton, Ashton;W'.V.

8·22·1 mo. !XI.

4·ll-tk

WV . . Hair

Mondll!y-Frid~v •.

4:30 to 8:30 p.m.

TRAN&amp;FERS~l£TTERING

742-2328

:

26th&amp;. 27th.

-:-:--::--:--:--~--­

···-·--P-o'merov····'····

1 4 9 92

0

2 Family Yard Sale Evana
Heights . Fri. &amp; Set. Aug.

2 Family Yard Sale. Evans
Heights . Fri. &amp; Sat. Auguat
26th &amp; 27th .
10 Family Garage Sale Aug. - -- -----,----,----26-27, Fri. ·a.: Sat. 9-6 at
Lariat Dr . acro11 from Gallia
Fairgrounds on Rt . 35. Very
Middleport ,
good achool clothes for girls
&amp;. boys. Also infant to adult
&amp; Vicinity
clothing, jeweriy, dishes,
·-~---·
-·-········-·· ·-···-··
toys. Avon collectors items,
hand made items. 1torm· BIG YARO SALE-NORMAN
door. living room suite. WEBER ' S , Entrance to
children• tiding toys . Call Hickory lakes Campground.
448-3872 at Dennis. Also Rt .7 Tuppers Plaine. Saturday and Sunday. Aug. 27
jennylind 1wln bed.
ond 28. RAIN CANCELS.
Yard Sale At«~. 26 thru Sept.
6 . Clothaa. clocks, ·knick
knacks. spot light. Fairview
Evergreen Rd .
&amp; Vicinity

=.-~~&lt;:'_92.·6~00__ ~ _ • . _ • 1-li~u
..,~r . '." · -~~_ r"~~~
-.~';,::::~~-~~
LR.•~iti ·at6i

Aahton.

CUSTOM WORK - AIR BRUSH
CAPS
JACKETS
UNIFORMS
T-SHIRTS
TROPHIES
QUANTTTY SPECIAlS

Around • '
•DumpTnick
Service
SEPTIC TANKS ..
A SPECIALTY

Typing jobs. Typing to be
dona at home. Pan time or
fu.ll time . Call, including
evenings, 1 - 716-8426000. eKt. 7Bt2 .

~~;-s;.;s~~IF.~;
I _m_i_sc_._~------Garage Sale 9 to 6 .

•.

TERRY'S Berber Shop 'a t

CUSTOM PRINT
949-2358

Gallipolis on Lower GAr-

Mala or female full time or
part tlme . . No . e~perie171c8 · G
s 1 , Thur•i~~~~;
liailoons fQr. fl~rthd.IY8•.. Gt~~t neCeat:Bry : Call' ' 61-4 -367- ' -~ :.~~~:~:.~:;u_. • ~.·J:;;:..
'. :
Well, Anniviaraa,Ys; SW&amp;e- 0411:f6r ·appoiftt'ment .
·sr. 1&amp;0; 4 . mi. past ;,h
theans~ parties. , Call Bal- '
.
.
Rd . table, 4 swivel chairs,
loons &amp; Co:. 446-4313.
POSITION AVAILABLE Au·
(nice) sewing machine. cal!':'~~- 19, 1983 Teacher, binet 20' .girls bike, firt"
4 aeats. Sa_t., Aug . 27,
.
Hand School. ~utt place glass • screen. good
Cincinnati &amp; St. Louis 2:16 I hav8~aiic!_TeacherCartifiCa· clothes, bedspreads, drapes
game tie. Blue box seats. I tio~.~~!~_-:a~!:.:·
etc.

" . LET"RT MACHI"~~· SRO:.P
and engine ·repair. M·arvin
Flowers· 304.·896-3361.
Charlet Thomas-896-3622,
Jim Voung-304·882-3333.

IE UU!AWHHH/H/H!/NIIWIJMW&gt;IIIII&amp;IJWHJAt

or

PUBLIC AUCTION ,

CHAR~ES

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

·Trophy

f~~l!f;
/If Allin 1!Je WMTADJ

lflllllllllll/llllllf/ II! ;11111111181 -111111111

-

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SE~TIC· SY.ST£MS
•LIMESTONE
.
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION

OAK
FURNITURE . . ·

937 ~ Buffalo

Up1o 15words ... Dned..,insanion .......... $3.00
Up to 16 words ... Three dey i.._1ion ........ $4.00
Up to 15 Words ... Si• day insertion ...•..••..• $7.00
(Aver- 4 wordo per lineI

Real Estate General

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofina - Sidina -' Concrete ,
Patios - Sidewalks Nee Construction -,- . Re, '
modelinj!. ~ Custom Pole·
Barns.
·

CONTRACTING

tar C0181. We Can al10
acid boil and .00 out re- ,
diatonl. Wa alao repair
G111Tanlcs.

Manufacturers .

Lovely Tablecloth

J&amp;F

SWEEPER and Hwing ma·
chine repair, parta, and
supplies.
Pick ~P and
delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleiner. one half mile up
George's Creak Rd. Call
448-0294.
.

variOl(l
sizes, m isc . items . Rain
Yard Sale V:i mile.1 below cancels.

Aug. 26 till sell out. ·o.J'.
White Rd off Rt . 160 ~lie
from HMC. See signs . Sev·
erel folding chain &amp; church
pewa, t'a blas, clothes. &amp;
toys.

3 Announcements

Mw I andlw

---·- ·· ·-- ·-·· ············· · ·· iors school tlothea.

Buying dally gold. lllwer
coln1; rlnga, j~welry. 1tarting
·ware. old coina. .large cur·
rency. T.op pricea. Ed. Bur·
ken ~arber Shop. 2nd . Ava.
Middleport, oh. 814-992·
3476.
C'ish for broken air condi ·
tionera. 614·992-6810.

PHONE: 992-7816

or 949·3091'
,
J·IO·Hc

l mo. pd ./8/12

Grande . Acro11 from Mli·
!hone's Sohio . Girle &amp;. jun·

Wanted to buy. New, uaed&amp;
antique furniture . Will bpy 1
piece or c.ompleta hl;)u&amp;e·
holds. Also complete Aucti·
oneering 1erv~ce. Call Oaby
A. Martin 614·992·8370.

Remodelinc &amp; New Homes
"FREE ESTIMATES"

Call: 94fJ-226:J

&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sale Aug . 26 &amp; 28 .
9AM·5PM. Rt. 35 In Rio

field, Ext. Thurs. &amp; Fri, 26 &amp; Garag~ Sale 28th ~ 27th,
26 . lots of glaaiware , some 9·6 , Smith Rd. off BUievllle
Fenton, lots of nlc nacs, food Ad . Firat one this year.
processor, flower pots , wt . l-::-:-::--:--:-:-:--:-~:r
bench, barbecue grill. lawn Yard S•le Friday Aug.__!~·
chairs. jewelery, sleeping Baby clothes. misc . Items.
bag. bowling balls &amp;. shoea, 42 Mill Creek. 'Gallipolis. :
Avona, pots &amp; pans, clothes
6. tC)ys. dolls, a liffle bit of Yard SaleonKemperHollow
everyth!ng. · Home Interior . Rd. 1 mi . 9ft 160. Fri . • Sat.
Must see.
·
26 &amp; 27 . Furn .• chain uw&amp;

Oh. Or 992-7760.

PATRICK &amp; EUGENE
JOHNSON

Writesel .

11one

plete houaeholda. Write :
M .D. Millar. Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

-.

G&amp;W Plasti";S
and Supply

box&amp;~ ;

jars. •ntlquaa, etc.. Com-

2·23-t!c

~

.··

mobile homes, navel trailen

. ~ .~-

.J .

·- --··Gii rrll)oils... ······

... ..

·. ~

Wantad To Buy

'(ard Sales

washers, Dryers
Ranges, Refri&amp;efators
Air Conditioners
WE ALSO DO

LEONARD F. ERWIN
CONTRACTOR

Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

9

ture. 448-3189, 3rd. &amp;
Ollwo St., Gallipolis. Oh .

USED
APPLIANCES

;--------,

The Daily Sentinel

1 Card of Thanks

r----...---'--, lr----':=-':---...,..:: 1 . - - - - - - - ,

90-95.

Veterans Memorial

_,

"' Ohio

Business Services

Partly cloudy, warm and humid
tonight. Lowneari'O. Winds variable
less t11an 10 mph. Partly cloudy and
still hot and humid Friday. Hlgb

Jeffen.

Claren~ A.

K. Winlba, L)'llne D. Oliver, tkrolrty _J ,
QUver, K.eUJ Clelliwt, Jacqueline ~kles.
Jotftna Hywll, MillY A. SOn;len, Rotert A.
Bliffln81on. PauJ A. Rice, DennisJ. Gilmore,
Robert W. Col..:h.
. M16ill'pwt- An8l'1a Sellers, Andrea J.
Batl!y, Leafy Chasteen, Jf.I)'W v. Bartrum.
F'a~L. Wallace, Unda L. Haley, 'l'!mothyJ.
KJJig. Sarah J. Fowle!', Edward w. Durst.
RotEn Ffrs1, Pa_ll1cla k . Lopn, JUdith K.
Huntft', Florta J. Pe-avley, Raben C. Flshrr,
Dfobra~.
.

L.

25, 1983

Weather forecast

~J . WOUe.Jr.
~-Mary

..

Tho

Thunday, August 25, 1983

~""

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED- CARS,
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446-7572.
CLEAN USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'&amp; QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 36. PHONE 448-7274.

For nle by owner. 1981
Kingaly all electric mobile
homo, 14•70 whh 7x24
expando, 2 bdr., 1'112 beth,
Newty remodeled 2 story utility room, cantr•l air.
frame. 1 Vt bath. 3Y2 acres. fireplace. awning &amp; under- ·
city schoola , riverview . pinning. Reason for 1elllng
$32,000. Call 448-4222 muat relocate. Price
bet~ean 9 &amp;: 6.
820,000. Call 614-2455572.
'
4 bdr. ranch home, large LA,
full basement. with garage, 1978 Schulta 14•70. 2 bdr.,
·wood burner Included, city 2 bath, ex. cond.. total
schoola. 2 miles from toWn . electric, centi'•l air. aaaumaColi 446-0278. '
bleloan·wilh e1,000 ~~~&gt;wn,
can stay on rented lot.
Almoat new 4 rms 8a bath, French City Brokaring Str.•
low $20's. Coil 448-0924. vice. 446·9340.
In Middleport. newly ramo- t 979 Ste~ing 14x70, · 2
deled home with fireplace, bdr. r • total electric. centfal
posaible woodburner. cloae air. ex. cond .• can be left on
to schoola end shopping. rented lot. French City Bmk·
Call 814-992-894 t .
orlng Service, 446-9340.:
Extra nice houae on Rt. 664 t 979 14•80 Oakbrook. · 2
epprox. 3 mi. Eaat of Ponar. bdr
.. gas heat. fireplaqe,
Priced reduced. Shown by 1Ox20 redwood deck wtth
appointment only. 448- awning, frame underpin·
9340. 448-790t or 614- ning, with tie downa, 'lfiJy
256-8413.
good cond. Call 614-3&amp;;70658 after 6PM. If oo
By owner House with 2 answer
448-2929 .
•
acres more or la11, been
•
remodeled. orchard, 87 -ft. For sale 1967 Star "10bila
wall. f22 .000. Call 614- home. e1 .000 or best offer.
3B8·9063 .
Coli 446-3391 between
BAM-4:30PM .
2 acres of land. House·8. out
buildings. 826,000. 8111- New 24)(45 double wi~.
992-6808. St. Rt. 124 ei!Jctric, 3 bdr .. 2 batbl,
between Pomeroy &amp; $18 ,600. Kanauga Mobile
Rutland.
Home Silos, 448-9882. :
On 7th Ave; in Middleport. 12x68 . Vindale mobile
Big houoe whh new kitchen. home. 6' expando iivlng
6t4-992-8028 .
room, all electric whh wood
burning stove. large conA GOOD HOME FOR crete patio including 1 room
t3600. NICE 10•40, remodeled achool buildiAg
ELECTRIC HEAT. EXCEL- with wood burning stove.
LENT CONOITIOIII. HOO. carport &amp; wood atorage
DOWN. BALANCE FI - building on 2 acrea . HemNANCED. 38 PAYMENTS lock Grove, 814-948-3059
OF tt06.48 A I\'IONTH . after 6 tor mora info.
304·576-271 t . '·
USED Mobile Homoo, 30141981 Shultz, 2 bedroom. 578-2711.
excellent conditiori.Phone
304-87!1·6376.
1971 RICHARDSO;N
12x80. 3 bedroom, Hoi
OPEN HOUSE: dally 10 bath1,
expando on IIVi~g
o.m.-1 p.m. Sunday 1:00· room. carpet. w~shtr .•
3:00. Newly remodeled, dryer hook up. King wood
nice. quiet &amp; beautiful_I~~!· · burner. storm wlndo¥11.
tlon. lm'm!dla!! P•;s~~~~~: awnings, partially furnllhed,
Turn _off. At . ~5 i~
good condition. euoo .
aon,__~-~.' on Henderaon St. 304-675-8662.
Go away from the river, the
last housa on Handeraon St. t 2•60 MOBILE homo with
6 rooma with r•ew wall to amilll down paymeftt and
wall carpeting: Priced In IllUme
loan . CaQ 304·8111·UO'o.
3882 after 8:00 tHI 1,0:30.

31 Homes for Solo

"'

f

.,,

�..
10--The
33

Ohio

Sentinel

Farm• for S1le

They'll Do It Every Time

54 Misc . Merchendlae
firewood cut up alabl t1 &amp;
pickup load. C11! 814·2456804 .

Hou11 coal hauling. Call
614-388 -9&amp;12 .

Fo.- aale white Poodle. Call
448-0262.
.

Cuahmen golf cart charger &amp;
4 batteries. 1300. Gall 4463258.

NETHERLAND Dwarf robbito, S4 .00 each. 304· 6763963.

Call 614-256-6038 .
18 ' planer &amp; 8' Rockwell
uniplan e. Cell 614-245 9268.

ing available. Call446-8221

elt. Cond., 1120 . Call 446-

B272.

44

Apartment
for Rant

FIVE acraa with basement,

city water. Pt. Plea11nt, call Apartments !equal housing
304-773-6713 otter 7:00 opportunity) one bedroom
p.m.
rent ttarts at $167 per
. .
month. two bedroom ctart1
TWO large Iota in Twin at $193 . Depotit $200 (no
Cedar Addition, New Haven. petsl near Spring Valley
wv. 304-882-2467.
Cinema. Call 448-2746 or
leave mes1age.
within

Buffa-

lo.W.V. llmlto. on 18 milo
creak road •18,000. Contact Shirley Tucker, 1 114 mile
on Arbuckle .Creek.
,

...

'

.. ...... ......
........
........
51 Household Goods

on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central

air, *360 mo,. ooc ... dep . .lo
, . ref: Coll-4_46 ~ 31_76. · ':
8 room houae In country,

Cash tor broken air·
conditioner~ .
614 -992 6810.

$175. Coll876-6104.

Or. No

pets. Inquire at

Flrol lo Olivo St .. Golllpollo,
Oh.
Very nice 4 bdr. home In

K.C. dist. , 2 acres, Fla.

Firlt Ave., rivenpartment, 4
large room• &amp; bath. Call
446-1886.
Unfurnished 4 rooms &amp;
bath, no ehildren. no pets.
Coli 446-3437 or 4461637.

room, basement. free heat.

$300 mo. Call Wlaeman
Real Estate Agency. 4463643.

a

bdr. house on Rt. 160
$300 mo .. 8160 dep. Coli
304-676· 7746 or 614-246·
6344.

3 bedroom &amp; bath In Rutlond. 614-992-6868 .
For Rent, Possible land
contract. 4 bedroom farm
house with fence. pasture,
outbulldlngo . 216 · 789 ·
2620.
Three bedroom brick home
with large extre lot. loceted
just outside New Haven.
City water, centre! air end
heat plus fireplac;e . $300.
per month. Comp. fur nished. For more intonnatlon coli oftor 6 :00; 304·
676-3996.
TWO bedroom house. basement. clean condition. perkIng off the street, big yard,
phone 304-876-1301 .

1 bod room Apt. $196. mo.
incluCiing utilities. Equal
housing opportunity. Contact Village Manor Apu.
614-992-7787.
1 bedroom 1pt in Pt. Plea·
sant. 304-676 -6364 .
Furnithad one &amp; two bAIII
room apt . Mlddi8POit.
Adults, no pats. Mo"\tJ r.-ot
plu• 8100. aecurlty. 61'·
992-3874.
Apart,m enu. 304 .. 676 6648 .
APARTMENTS, mobile
hOmes, houses. Pt. Pleaaant
and Gallipolis. 614·446·
8221 .
ONE bedroom apanment.
t226 month, all utilitMta
poid, 304-676-2696. &gt;
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartment• now 1vailable to
elderly &amp; diaabled with an
income of leu than
$12,300. Renting lor ' 30
percent of adjuated incOme·
.Phone 304-676-8879.

42 Mobile Homos
for Rent

FURNISHED apartment,
adults, no pat1, phone 304676 -1463.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto·
man, 3 tablet, (extra heavy
by Frontier), eaas. Sofa,
chair and love..at. $27&amp;.
Sofaa Hd chaira priced from
'286 . to $896. Tobleo, $46
end up to e126. Hide-abeds , $440 . and up to
e12a .. Recllnera, e176. to
$360 .. Umpa from $28 . to
t71. 6 pc. dinette• from
199 .. to 1436. 7 pc .. 1189.
and up. Wood table with six
chairt *426, to 8746 . Desk
1110 up to f226. Hutcheo.
8660. and up, mapl9 or pine
llnloh. Bunk bed complete'
wtth mattr111n, 1260. and
up to U96. Baby bedo.
811 0 . Mattre11es or box
aprlngo. lull or twin, 168 .•
firm. 868. end 178 . Queen
11t1, 81915. 4 dr. cheats,
••2 . 6 dr1 cheat•. 864. Bed
fromoo. 120.ond U6 .• 10
gun • Gun cabinet•. 8360.,
dinette chairs t20 . and *26.
Ges or electric ranges, 1326
up to $375. Baby matreiMI,
$26&amp; e36.badlromaot20,
U5, &amp; UO. king fromo $60.
Good aelection of bedroom
•ultel , cedar cheus,
rockeu , metal cabinets,
aMvel rockers. ,
Used Furniture •· bookc..e,
ranuee. chaira, dlnnett sat,
wood table and chairs, dryers, refrlgeratora and TV' a. 3
mUea out Bulavllle Rd. Open
9am to 8pm. Mon . thru Fri. ,
9em to 6pm, Sat.
446-0322

2 bdr. trailer located on
,Upper River Rd . all utllltlet
paid except electric. Dep.
roq. Call 448-8668 .
46

57

Older drop-leaf table, 4
chairs. china clo1et. $176 .
Needs refiniahing . Matching
buffet • 76. roflnlahed. 614992-2420.
Wooden dinette set. 2
leaves. 4 chairs, $1 00.,
mattress for baby bed $20.
Both like new. 614·9922420.

Marlin Acouttic Guitar.
Heavy duty case, 1uperior
cond. After 7 p.m. coli
814-446-7221 ,
SELMER flute. 304-882·
2483.
ELECTRA Omega. L. P.
s8 76
tv 1o_. H. s_.c. Phone 3044 19 3
ELECTRIC guitar &amp; amp,
electric tuner, Wawa pedal ,
lighting syttem, 304-8756843.
.
58

Furnished Rooms

Peac;hal, yellow Freestone.
bring container. Pick your
own, $10 bU . Also corn.
tomaton. and lima beana .
Raynor's Peech Orchard, At .
7, Gallipolis.
Grapes-pick your own or buy
at · ula.l .-roQJ'I):' ~erta
D.unrovlti ·Frulr Farm. St~ At.
681 S . of Albeny, Oh .
1-898-6298. Ope 1 PM to
7PM .
Canning tomatoe1. Devil
farm. Pick your own. 814247-3263.
Canning tomato81. New
field . $4.00 bu . You pick.
Clifford Hlll.-247-2063.

Antique school desks .
$26.00 ooch . 814-949 3069.
Reese hitch with allacc•••ories for towing large camper.
$160. 614-949-3069 .

POTATOES tor Mlo, e16 .00
• 100 lb. Coli 304-8823273.

Pool table with acce11ories,
air conditioner, keroun
heater. Phone 304· 676·
2934.

Late modal John Deere A
tractor, axe. cond., very
good rubber with front end
loader, 2 bottom plow • 7ft.
mower. t1,360. Call 614388-8896.
LIME spreader bed, for
truck. phoo 304-882-2669.
WE at Siders Equipment ere
g~ing to start wholenling
Deutz tractors direct to the
farmers . Buy 1 new Deutil
tractor now for t1.000. to
S7.000. below dooloralnvo·
ice. For 1 price quota. call
Butch Siders or Mike Roush,
304-676-7421 today.
63

Livestock

Quality white face buR. 18
months old. 800· 900 lbo.
Out of r&amp;giatered cow. 814·
992-7201 .

1979 VW Rabbit, 4 opd .. oir
cond. , AM · FM ra'd io,
$2,99&amp;. John'a Auto Sale,
8ulovllle Rd. Coli 4464782. open 9 to 7.
1971 Montego 4 dr. ~ •dan ,
very good cond., new paint,
Utrl lnOW tires &amp; riml,
•1.000 . Call 614-3888896.
1973 Hondo Civic 4 cyi.. '4
tpd., 40 MPG, axe. cond .
•9oo. Coll441-8124.

46 Space for Rant

Furnl1hed upstlirt apt. 2
room• &amp; bath, clean, adutu
only, no pet1, ref . req. Call
441-1619.

.,76

M-'lle 1 or 2 -oom
mo. Coli 448-1167.
1·11 Monder·Frldoy.

82 Hondo Night Hawk.
t1 , 11SOO or best offer. Call
448-3108 .

75

82 CAMARO 27.000 ,
'8800. 79 Cudoos 45.000.
*58111 . 81 Cutleoo 31 ,000,
'7395. 76 Monte Corio
Southorn Cor, 12415. 76
Buick lei, Southern C•r.
$2395. Big Oool Auto Solao,
Rt . 2 • Jorlcho Rd. 304·
676-5486, 875-1789.

Boats end
Motors for Sale

78 Toylor lot boot, 460
Uncoln twin turbo. naada
ruddor, $3,000. Coli 4481192.

RON'S Television Service.

Large trailer lot on Addlaon
Bulovlllo Rd . Coll446-4265
or 446-4736.

THree duce manifold and
carb1 to fit 1mall block
chevrolet. Phone 304-882·
28114.
PARTS lor Chryolor, corbe•rator, _4 rima 16 inch, 2
atuddei:t snow tiro. full
pump, hub cap1 and more
*140.00 for oil. Phono
304·882-2958 otter 8 PM .
Auto
Auto Painting
Also mechanic

I~~~~~::~tu~n=o~u:po~~~~
etc. Coli

19711'11u. .r llrd . U .-700. ~~
614·149·28BO..

A nice home. can bl an oldar
one. mult have et IMet 8
roons, etc. Loceted in city of
Golllpollo, prtJforobly down· Umeot-. Sand. Grovel.
town. Excellent ctM'I will bt Delivered in M11on, Melg1,
given by mponollle ledy Gollilt or plch up et Rlchordo
ond 13 yooro old oon. Coli 1
_c.~_•_44_e_._,_7_8_11_
. _
441-11141 or 446-21141 or 1·
E·-•yn 11 Ooco,•o Ill $wNO Cooh Regloton,
tcon-·
· aloe. C.,ll-114· 317-0378.
AutaWint.-

_•_aon
__.

Btumbloo"

m

72

Report
.®Nowo
Ill iiJ Pooplo"o Court
fiiStorTrok
7:30 • CIJ Llo Dotector
CIJ Doblo Qllllo
Cll PKA Full Contlc1
Karate from Memphio. TN
Coverogo of the World Super Heavyweight Championlhip it pretented from
Memphio, TN. 190 min.)
(I) Good Nowa
(I)
(I) Family Feud
·(J) Buolnoaa Report ·. c
. ® You· Aliked For 11 . ..
illl Thlo Old Houoo
Ill iiJ NFL Pre-Seaoon
Footbell: Pltmbul'lh va.
Phllado.!Jihle
8:00 II Cil (I) Glmme A BrtJak
CIJ Philip Merlowo. Prlveto
Eye 'Nevada Gaa.' Marlowe
·~·~• the murderer: of a
~-tl me ' l~wy.,r.
··
rn1spy ·
(I) All In tho Family
(I) E_yo on Hollywood
[J] liD Mognum, P.l. A
waitress from Cleveland
hires Magnum to help her
gat permission to scatter
her father's ashes at Pearl
Harbor. (R) (60 min.)
(J) MOVIE: "Duck Soup'
illl Sneok Provlewo
fll MOVIE: "Taok Force•
8:30 . II CIJ (I) Momo•o Family
Mama and her family apj:!!lr on a game ahow. (R}
• W Major l.ooguo Baoobell:
Atlanta ot St. Loulo
(I) Too Clooe For Comfort
Muriel's photographic ••·
signment turns sour when
Henry interrupts her to
nurse baby Andrew. IR)
illl Hltch-hlkar'a Guida
9:00 II Cil (I) Hlllo Street Bluu
Thieves ateal the remains
of Renko's recently de·
Ceased father and Joyce·•
faith in justice turn• sour
'!i/&amp;in . (R) 160 min .l
CZJ MOVIE: 'H..rtacholl'
CZJ MOVIE: 'Prom Nlghr
Cil 700 Club Todey'o program faatural Gremmy
Award Winner, Amv Grant.
Cll Top Renk Boxlllil !rom
Loa Vegea, NV
Cll Rlllfgle Reggie 's wife
stages a wild birthday
party for Aeg~ie after he invites a businessman to djn.
nor. IR) [Ciooed Captioned)
(I) liD Simon &amp; Simon
The Simons are hired to
transport a dangerous
mental patient. IR) (60
min .)
illl Flicker• from Mootorpioce theatre· .... ·
9:30 (I) It Tekoa Two A hospital
patient holds Sam~ and
Molly hootage. IRI
(J) MOVIE: "Mre. Wlgga of
tho Cob~• Patoh'
10:00 II Cil W NBC Roporto
'Marvelous Machines ... Expendable People: Edwin
Newman reports on the ef·
feet that ever-improving
technology hao hod on
workers. (60 min.)
(I) 20/20
G CIJ liD Knot• Lending
Misunderttandinga disrupt
Ciji's album lounchlng . (R)
180 min.)
illl Newa
&amp;II INN Nowo
10:30 CIJ MOVIE: "Honk Williams:
Tho Show He Never Govo'
CIJ AFI ShowceM
Cil Stir Tlmo
(fi) Tony Brown'• Journal
1111 In Soorch ol....
11:00 11 CIJ Cll
Cll®
iiJ News
Cll MOVIE: "H.O.T.&amp;."
(J) MOVIE: 'Goln" to Town'
1111 Ben!!)' Hllrlhow
11 :30 II CIJ Cil Tonight Show
Cil Another Ufe
Cll llportJCentor
(I) TBS Evanlng News

BORN LOSER

I AM C.~RT/&gt;.IlJ MONSIEUR l"'llLIW1
~I l-ID IT QUITE DI'LUTABl.E::!

!

a

ANNIE
liEN LETS MM1E ·iiiic~
Deq~ERS. ! Tii' CI!OP
'Oll5TER5'LL &amp;E C~IN'
FOR TH' ~TICIDE ANY
MINUTE NQ'ij!

m

ALLEYOOP
YEAI-I.L.SHE WSiNT
Ll Kt= P.. ROMI&gt;.N
CP..NDLE!

,.

JIM"S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Fomarly Dewitt ' s
Plumbing. Coli 614-3870676.

GASOLINE ALLEY

I've been robbed!
They toolt.
cent

1-:;:::;:=;:===.:===
)·
83

EKcevating

a

DOZER WORK By Ted
Hanna, ponds. dltche1,
basements, ate. Call 446·
4907. Carter &amp;. Evans
Transportation.

1--------- Lonnie Boggs Excavating .
Dozer, b1clchoe. dumptruck .
Work by hour 1 or job. Call
446-7903.
Cat 216 ho8, dozers, crane.
loadera. dump truck . Call
614-448-1142 between
7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM .

WINNIE

Good-1 Excavating, beee- r
ment1. footer~. driveway•.
1eptic tanka. land1caping .
Call anytime 446 -4637,
James L. Davison, Jr .
owner.

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

J .A.R . Construction Co. ~
Wal·er lines. Footera, ·,.·
Drelno. All klndo of Ditching , ~- •
Rutland, Oh. 814-742 ... .~~
2903.
' -

Truck• for Sale
Cempl'lg
Equipment

Electrical
Ill Refrigeration

DON'T WORRY.
61RDIE, I'LL
HAVE THIS
READY JN

HOW COME YOU
DIDN'T CALL •OMAR
TENT/11AI&lt;ER." IN
COl:&lt; 5ULTATION?

STOP JOKING,
BIRDIE. YOU'LL
LOOK LOVELY• • .
AND YOU A~
ON THE·R16HT
TRACK WITH
YOUR DIE'T/

TIME FOR

'A/II'IT• !lE551fS
WEDDING.

mm

LOWEEZV

SAID

SHE'D. BE RIGHT
BACK 500111 AS
SHE STIRRED HER
BEANS--·

''•

"lntornetlonol Velvor
~ All In the Family
Ill iiJ Nlghtllno
•Gun1moke
11:45 Cll 2nd Annual Legllrtdary
Pooket Bllllarda Stora Thio
show features luther Lusitor vo . U.J . Puckett. (80
min .)
12:00 ID MOVIE: "The hal Uttlo
WhorehouoolnTex01'
Cil Bumo &amp; Allon

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER• . •
VICE . Call 614-367-7471
or 814-367-0691 .

(I) Cotll~·
(I) Nlghfllns
·-· ID MOVIE: "The Bell Man•
1213 0 . Cil (I) Late Night with

PEANUTS

Need 1omething h1uled
away or aomathlng moved?
We'll do h. Call 446-3169
betw.on 9 ond 5.

YOU 60 FIRST...

f I I f.,IJt.il I 4 i. ~~~ f

(f

tlltllii'''

,~(("\~~~~ ... ~(~Ill{ / \'
\'tt4.11Jtl ~~ "t.tc 'l;,t

I TJ.liNK
I 51-lOULD

1 • 111 ,, 1/

AAVE60NE ,t 11 1ttJ'"'
FIRST..
lfUIIrl

\'u'" ,,,, ,,,uti'""
'' "' .'· 'll''' 1 '

JIM8 WATER SERVICE . . ·
Coli Jim Lanier. 304-876- ·
7317.
.

t f I( tl

It t i l l lfl(fl I _till

,,,,.''t ill
tlrt\1(.(111

'''t•
II' I 'II
r,p
,,,, ''"''

1\(ltl(ttll/(\
(I

l-8=-=7=-""'u:-:-p""'h,....o..,.lst:-er_y_ _ ·:

•

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 he. A..... Oompollo.
446· 7833 or 446-1833.

a- zl"
•

•

m

(I) Boep
.
CJ [J] MOVIE:

SEWIN-G Machine repairs.
service. Authorized Singer
Seles &amp; S8nlica Sharpen :
Sciuon . Fabric Shop.
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
86

Yesterday's

·,

.
\

David Leltorman
·
hnny Show
(I) MOVIE: "hmaon end
Dellleh"
• ·IIJNew•
Miry Hartmen. Mary
Hartman
·12:411 Cil MOVIE: "Noohlratu.tha
VempyrtJ"
·
Cll
Auotrolllln
Ruloa

Footbell
1:00 CIJ ) Married J""n
Cll EnMrtaln-nl Tonight
\DCNN HMdllne Newt
1:30
ID NBC Newt
o-nltht
•

1

LIKE A
LAST WO~P.

•uo·

"[I X I I X I

r

(Answers tomorrow)

I Answer.
Jumbles :
Could

PL..USH DOWNY INDICT FPSSIL
be all that flgh1 er ever ticked-

HIS WOUNDS

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

A bad trump _split .
8· 2~8S

NORTH
+J742

•s2

.AKQ64

... .

+~K

WEST.· :

EAsT ·

• J 91.3
• J 10 9 8

+Q1095
.Q 10 8
• 7 52
10 9 3

·

+

+J87SI

SOUTH
+AK863
.AK76
t3 '
+Q62 .
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Nortb
1•
3•
s•
s•
Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Openihg lead:

Soutb
1+
4 NT
5 NT
6+

•J

By Oowald Jacoby

aild James Jacoby
An expert rubber bridge
player leadS dummy's seven
of spades at trick two and
Jets it ride alter East has
. followed with the five spot.
This safety play Is one of
those sure thmgs and guards
against the one chance in 20

..

~

-of fin_ding East wilh ail lour
trumps.
In match point duplicate
the expert realizes that
everyone will be in six or
seven and that the sa fety
P.lay .will give him a bottom
· if _trumps are. Z·2 or if Wes.t:
holds' 'th&lt;! singleton .' que&lt;m.For his second trick he will
play his ace of trumps, but
won't give up after West has
shown out.
He will realize that If East
bas lhe right distribution in
the side suits, the contract
can still be made. South will
strip Eases band and eventually force him to lead
away from his queen of
trumps. The key to this play
IS to come to a three-card
ending.
Let's watch it at work.
Take dummy~s ace and king
of clubs. Ruff a diamond.
Take your ace and king of
hearts and queen of clubs,
discarding a diamond from
dummy. Ruff a heart. Ruff a
diamond and lead your las t
heart, on which you disca rd
the last diamond from
dummy . E ast will have to
trump and lead away from
his queen.
Note that you ruffed
dummy 's lwo good diamonds to shorten yoUrself
and that the play succeeded
because East held three
cards in each side suit.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS

1 Pudding

1 Oregon city
2 Spanish ·
province
3 I can 't
imagine!
4 Yoko 5Rang
6Sharpened
7 High (mus.)
10 Follow
the trend
11 Uncut
12 Required
!&amp;Famous
film critic
19 Church part

ingredient
5 Tea variety
. 8 English

river
9 "Stalag 17"
star
13 Venetian
beach
14 Chant
15 Wapiti
16 Soul ( Fr.)

17Devoured
18 Kept up with

Yesterday's Answe r
23 Skin
(a nat. )
24 Ester
25 Pole
27 Wee dish
29· Hover

:10 Caesar
21 Unclosed,
to a poet
22 Hurl
22 Nucleus
23 Search
for water
28 Coupled
28 Different
%1 Dress part
28 Scottish
for village
Z9 Horse 's
foot bone
3% Persian
angel
33 Unc!IIISCilousf;-z+-+-1M River (Sp.)
35 Typestyle r.
37 Italian city
38 Covered
with
bristles
. 39 - of March
tll Gennan
article
n Optimistic

30 Baptism
and others
31 Boisterous
38 Israeli
airport
37 Ventilate

"-,..-1-+-

m-1-+-+-+-1-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how to work it :
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter simply •lands lor another. In thi s sample A 1a
used lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlero
apt111trophes, the length and formation of the words a re ali
hints. Each day the code letlers are differ e nt .
CRYPTOQUOTES

UTUBL
V E HI

IMH

AYW

JHB

vu

XGDZ

YD

MU

ZMU
YD

PD

DZBPSUD

BPOMZ

OHHF

y

YW

y,

A G D Z.
YWTPE

MYAAUB ~ - X. 0 ,

MHEEYWF

Yeatenlly'a Cryploquote: RIGHT IS THE ETERNAL SUN:
THE WORLD CANNOT DELAY ITS COMING.-WENDElL ·

PHlLLlPS

.

'

-~"dlaf.~

Cil Jaok

e

ID~rA N&gt;iAT,IC

Now arrange lhe d rcled lenars to
form the surprise dnswar, as
gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here:

(I) Entortalnment Tonight
(I) Charllo"o Angola
(I) Tic Toe Dough
(J) illl MecNeii-Lehror

CARTER"S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 4464477

84

47 Wanted to Rent

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

IGLERCYj

Cil Burno &amp; Allen
Cll SportaConter
CIJ G-n Acreo

•,
I

F 6 K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. C~II6J:6-1331 .
•.
RINiRE"S . SERVICE ' expe·
rienced roofing, including
hot tar application, carpenter. electrician. mason .. Cell
304-676-2088 or 676·
4680.

0

Cil MOVIE: The Runnor

I

Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Qunar, end
haute calls. Call 576-2398
or 448-2464.

I I t

illl Ovor Eoay
7:00 IIID PM Mogorlne

1978 Flberlorm 16ft. with
1980 90 r..rcury motor
with power prop, 1981
troller. Coli 992·2987 aft..- 1~:-:--------- ' ·
&amp;PM .
Meigs E~cavating . Bulldozer ·~
&amp; backhoe Mt'Vica. a•••• .,
15FT. trl-huM. oofoty oqulp- menla, footers,land•caplng. -~
mant, runo good. 304'876- driveways, farm pond1. "'.J
6397.
814-742 -2407or614-742&lt; "'
2068.
.
1973 7 H. P Clinton Out· 1 - - - - -- -- - board motor, good as new BACKHOE. dozer, dump
wfth 911 tank. Phone 304- truck. licensed septic tyt6711·3471 .
tem Installment • repair,
304-676-7566.

Trailer lot located on
Addison-Bulavilla Rd .
Adulto only. Call 614· 317·
7438.

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apartments Utilties panly furn .•
apartment• available now.
•200 par mo. A· One Real
E1tates, Carol Yeager, Reeltor. Call 304-876-6104 or
. 304-6711· 7386.
t

Marcum Roofing • Spout-~~:
ing. 30 yeare experience. · ·
ilpecializing in built up roof." ·
Cell 614-388 -9867.
- - - - - - -- ·
Interior- Exterior painting . :
Have good references for .
barn roofs. By tha hour or '
job. 614-949-2488.

1974. Hondo 360. 1.400
actual mllao. Coli 614-3889766.

1982 Comoro $7,000,
27,000 fi!IIOI. 304-882·
2461.

Apartment
for Rant

Fumlohed opt. 1 bdr. e195,
wotor 1o oloc. pold 7 Nail
Avo. Golllpollo. 448-4416
eftor 7 p.m .

DAWN~

rJ

'ICOAMISj

(I) Father Knowo hll
(I) Ill ilJI ABC Newo
CJ (I) liD CB!I Nowo
(J) Dr. Who

THE ~ET AT THE
CRACK O F

:;;:::::::;;:=:=::::::::=':

89 Roadrunner needs minor
npalr, no rult, 2 mllea out
Clork Chopol . Coli 446· . 1983 ATC 200X throe
wheeler, excellent condi9361.
tion , 11,300. Coli 446·
Sharp 1975 1m polo Chov. 7991 .
AC, PS, PB, 2 dr .• new paint,
excel. engine. $1 ,396 firm . 1974 Hondo Choppor 30 in.
over front end. CB 7&amp;0 F.
Call 446-2123.
Coli 614-949-2737.
1978 Cbev. Novo 4 dr .. AT,
PS. PB, air, one owner. Call 1974 CJ5 Jeop. Mog
w;haels. lOw mileage. ~lue
614-379·2671 .
with black top. Good cond.
79 Muttang turbo charge, 614-992·6016.
good cond. Coli 446-7284.
19&amp;8 HARLE:V SpOrlter.
1965 Chovrolot Chovollo. 2 naodo work . 304-676dr., Mdan.l cyl., auto tran1, 8397.
63.000 octuol mlloo. Coli
1879 Hondo Howk 400.
446-3277.
exc . cond. 304-676-6773.
73 Comoro LT. V-8. AT. PS,
radio, runs good, n88da 1980 Hondo CR 80. vary
point, U95. Coli 446-8879 good condition. coli 304·
175-7132 oftor 6 PM .
attar 6:00.

2 bedroom fumi1hed , e.c., 1
child. no pets. New Haven.
304-882-2466. .
44

WHAT ABOUT TH&amp;
MOVJ~ At.r ~~IN ' 0!&lt;1

Home
Improvements

STULY
1

liD Hlth Feother
Ill Wild. Wild West
8 :30 II Cil Cil NBC Newt
Cil Love Thot Bob
Cll Bill Dance Outdoors

PAINTING - intarior and : ·
exterior, plumbing, roofing, · · :
some remodeling. 20 yrt. :"
OKp. Call 614·388·9662 .

82

MOVIE: "Time BendiU

(I) I DrtJim of Joonnle
(J) Roadlng Rainbow

VITAMIN FLINTHI!'AFI'T

1:

1975 Corvotto, 59,000
miloo, v .a.c .• T-Top. AMFM Couono, A·C,P·S ,P-8 ,
tlntod glooo.
304-5712919.

'

CIJ

1880 AMC Eoglo Umlted
auto. tran1. , PS, PB. AC, Get your carpet in 1hip ·
POL, AM · FM ca11ette. shape. Water removal. FREE · :
ell,300. Call after 6, 446· ESTIMATES, FURNITURE,: ·
8050.
-CLEAN IlliG- CAPTAI N"''
STE~~R. 1!14·446·2107.: ~ :
, 979 Ford Bronco 4x4
Rancher modal. AM-FM E &amp; R Tree Service, fully : :
casaette, AC, 15,400. Call insured, free e1tlmatea .' ·
after 4PM. 448-4787 . .
:~:~~ . 814-36 7 -0636, calt.~ .
1979 )oop CJ -7 Renegodo -:S_E_A_M_L_E_S_S_G_U_TT
__E_R_S. 0-n'""".i ~ .
power lteering. tilt wheel.
hardtop, quadra trac, euto- piece custom fit your home. ·~
metlc tranaml•ion, 80,000 Guaranteed. Advanced Gut-' ·
mlle1. Excellent condition. tor, IDoy 614·692·4066,f
Coli 446· 7196 or 446· !night 614-6B8·8206 .)
·;
9364. Aoldng t4,998. Will
consider offer.
Roofing and CarpentrY.
wortt, general repairs, call ~ ·
Anthony Williamson. 614- , :
367-0194.
•
74 Motorcycles

1979 Fairmont Ford llationwagon. auto., real clean,
$2,9915 . John's Auto . Sele,
Bulovlllo Rd." Coli 4464782. open 9 to 7 .

four ordinary worda.

CIJ 'Tic Too Dough

Water_-Wella. Commercial
and . n·omntic. len ·hoi• .
Pumps Salei Bnd ·Service·,
304-896-3802 ."

1976 Dodge A1pen station·
wagon . Call 614-388·
9766.

Palamino &amp; · mare foal 6
old. $900. 814-992·
2713.

Sleeping rooms for retired
man . . e110. iN~h board
$20.0.;..Jll!r month . No
drinkers. 614 -992-6022 .

,·
., . ·Autos for Sale . . 1978 FOliO F 260 pickup,.
38.0, olltomotlc. SBOO. ·30~·882-20'1 2. .
TOP CAilW .poid for Iota
model uMd carl. Smith 1978 CHEVY Lw pickup
Bulck-Pontioc, 1911 East· truck, ex;cellent condition,
ern Ava. . Gallipoli1. ~ - automatic drN•~ topper, low
mileage, sharp. 304-6752282.
1460.

1978 FO~D Granada ,
8660. 1971 Hondo 176.
e3oo. 10ft. aluminum boat,
$76. Phone 304-876-4188.

ATAR I Sy1tem, include I
dult cover, cartridge rack &amp;
3 cartridges . 304-6764607.

1962 Chovy Plcl&lt;up, good
condition, mult tee to apprecloted. Phone 304-676·
2819.

·~

19.7 4 Plymouth Duoter.
alent ~ engine; 3 spd. trent,
runo good. llttlo ru11. tSOO.
Coll446·8124.

BOLIN 8 HP riding mower.
Weltern Auto mower. 7 HP.
304-676-6182.

1967 DODGE 0200 1A ton
dual whoolo, good cond..
ftatbed.coll304· 675·12481982 CHEVY 8 . 10_ V-&amp;, 4
opood, 304-882-2704 .
1880 pickup bed , 8 ft..
304-876-3237.

... .. .
-·.-...... ······
. ......

FRUIT JARS FOR SALE .
QUARTS AND PINTS . 2473104.

CEMENTpicnictablel, 304·
676-6162 .

Trucks for Sale

71

VEUOW freestone canning
peaches noW available, rMa~
onable prices. Plea• bring
your own buthel container•.
14th year of oorvlng tho
area. Bob~s Market, Maton,
304-773-6721 . Opon 7
doyo, till dr rk.

EXTRA good top soil delivered. 304-676-7771 .

7- 2

Hay &amp; Grein

GRAIN atorage for rent:
4,000 to 40,000 buohol
capacity. Aloo drying avollo·
ble. Morgan Woodlawn
F.rm Rt 36 Pliny 304 ·
· or 876-2276.
•
'
875· 1288

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

WHka

2 bedroom trailer . Furnished . No pets . Deposit
roquired. 814-992-2749.

64

Unacrambfe these four Jumbles.
one ..tter lo each squere. to toFm

a:OO •ilJI CIJ
Cll m m CIJ ® m
Newa

STUCCO PLASTERING . textured ceiling~ comm•ciel and retldantial, free •
el11mo'"· Coli 814-268- : ·
1182.
...

1----------.,.----------;

byHonri AmoldandBobLoo

EVENING

Cl OW!&gt; THE GAP.

81

ltfll)~. \oft ID'il 1ja TJ1ATSCIWIIBLEOWORD GAME

8/26/83

28' camper. a.c. and all the
extras. Good cond. Prh:ed to
soli. 614-986· 3988.

PURSe.

Sentinei- Page--11

Qi) ~ ~~ "

THURSDAY

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Musical
Instruments

Super Chix 2 year old
gelding, trained. Elllclptional 1how pro1pect. Call
614-992-2488 dayo lo loto
avening1.

2 bdr. mobile home. Call
446-03BO.

3 bedroom furnilhed . A.C.,
cloon, quiet. yard. 1 child.
Above New Haven, Rt. 33.
&amp;186. por month. 304· 8822466.

l'lllf ~t&gt;.!.W.
AU.. I I-lAD I o
tx&gt; WAS "[;p
CJoleR YouR

The

Television
Viewing

Camping
Equipment

SLIDE In compor. 8 ft
covered utllltie trailer. wtth
Ben Franklin 1tove. Phone ·
304-876-2918.

RAT Terrier puppies, 304·
676-1606.

Holttein bull calf. Call 814266-6316.

Extre nice 2 bdr. mobile
home. Located 2Y.:t mi. from
Golllpollo on Rt. 688. Aduho
only. Coli 446-2300.

Aclulto only. 2 bedroom
mobile home. Air cond.,
depo1ft and referanc• raquiNd. Utllltloo lncludod.
614-992·3847 otter 6 p.m.
2 mlln out on SR 143 from
Rt.7.

-...:..- - - . . ,

TWO AKC Shih Tzu puppleo,
8 weeks old . Alto Stud
service for Shih Tzu. 304·
676-4462.

Baby Stroller Phone 304676-4087.

Centenary: 2 bedroom,
fum ., private. 8180. Eureka:
1 bedroom, fum ., riverfront;
$100. Ref. &amp; dep. 1 -614643-2644.

2 bedroom mobile home in
Rocino. 614-387-0288.

New Oak Furniture. tablel,
chairs, cupboarda. pie safe,
dry 1inkl. Paul Conkel•
Antique•. Tuppert Plaint.

Freezer .,ale. Chatt models.
6 cu. ft. $236.96; 8 cu . ft .
$286 . 96 : 16 cu . ft .
$366 . 96: 20 ¢u. ft .
*418 . 96 : 26 au. ft .
t472.96 . Spacial: 16 cu. ft .
e326.96 . l:'omarpy._ J.artdmerk, 614'992-2181·, ·

4 bdr. hou• 6 acrea of land

Sheppard Sal&amp;a &amp; Services.

Microwave electric range,
exc. cond. Coli 446 -1670 .

SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE 260 gallon fuel or gatolinit
82 Olive St., Gellipolit. 6 tank on 6 foot stend . e1&amp;0.
piece wood living room suite or
batt offer. 1 O"x 1 6 ' all
with 8 inch flat arms •399, aluminum awning . $350.
bunk beds complete with 614-992-2806.
bunkie• *199, 2 piece antron livingroom suites $199, REPOSSESSED Slgnl No·
antron recliners $99, other thing downl Take over payreclinert t80, maple dinette ments $58. monthly. 4'x8 '
sets $179. love seat• $70, "athing arrow sign . New
$260,
. bulbs, l,ttars. H~le Signs.
Call FREE 1'·800-626-7446
an'y1ima.
· ··

41 . Houses for Rant

Newly redecorated 3 or 4
bedr. house on Riverview

-

78

lg . AKC Graat Dane pupa

Upright 8111, like new, exc.
cond. Coli 446-7284.

Five Iota

by Larry Wrlgnt

Profenional style turntable,

after 6 weekdays.

Ohio

DICK TRACY
KIT 'N' CARLYLE r•
.--- -- - - - - - --

AKC Reglotorod Poodle pupPial, 1110 adult dogs. Cell
446-0857.
Firlt deworming, dm . injec tion. du claw• removed,
1250. Coli 304-712-2431 .

Boby bed In good cond .. and

35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Wat1on Rd. Owner finan c·

Pats for Sale

Wood table with 4 chalrt
• 76, end table &amp; coffee
toblo $60. Coli oftor 4PM .
446·4 787.

20 HP 2 cycle Kohler engine.

35 Lots Ill Acreage

66

25, 1983

lhullday, August 25, 1983:

.

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Coinplaint says __

4-H fall round_up, Sept.

(Co_nun_ued_fr_om...;pa.:::ge:...:1):.___ _ _ __

Having personally contacted the
said hewastoldthatthePUCOcould
PUCO last year questioning the
do nothing about the situation.
However, the OCC began getting
legality of c&amp;SOE's attempt to
collect " up front " money from tl Involved In the case.
potential rural customers, McCoy
The filed complaint asked for the

Jackie Gibbs, 29, Letart, W. Va., is
charged with driving while lntoxl·
cated after an accident on Union
Ave ..• and the hospital access road
Wednesday afternoon.
Pomeroy Pollee said Gibbs,
driving a truck, hit the rear of a car
driven by Cillford Plantz, Middleport. Medium damages were Incurred to both vehicles.
Pollee said tha t Gibbs had
harassed a woman drlvtng another
car · and · had struck her vehicle
several times. She called pollee
after seeing Gibbs hit tllePlanlzcar.
Meanwhile, the Gallla-Melgs post
of the State Highway Patrol
reporled a two-vehicle accident
Involving cars drlven by Kandyce A.
Yochem, 23, Pomeroy, and Jackie
M. Gibbs, 29, Letart, W.Va.,

Emergency runs

occurred at 1: 50 p.m. Wednesday at
thetntersectlonof0hlol24and0hio

7~~~unty.
·

oc

Ten lucky 4-H'ers will receive the
Quarter horse weanllogs ot their
dreams during the 4-H Fall Roundup, Sept. 9-11, at the Bob Evans
farm near Rio Grande.
One winner was .selected from
Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, nunots,
Delaware, Georgia, Maryland ,
Michigan, Pennsylvania and MISsourl to receive a colt on the basis at
personal accomplishments,
achievements of 4-H, community
Involvement and their abillty to
take care of the horse.
"Many kids dream about owning
a horse and I wanted youngsters to
have the opportunity. There are a
lot of lessons to he learned from
horses, and Quarter horses are one
V: the best breeds •·
"' learn from,"
said _Bob Evans, president and
founder of the m!dwes1eJ'II sausage
and restaurant company. Since
1977 Bob Evans has awarded 83
registered ·Quarter horses to de·
serving youth. .

PUCO to rEQuire c&amp;SOE to Inform
rural customers of the RLX plan,
andtool!ertheplanunl!orrnly.
The ccomplatntents
also
are
funds f
barges
king
0
:'
';::
~ ove";d til
ue cus mers w 0 pa
· e
company In advance. McCoy 15 one
of the people seeking reln'lburse'
ment from the overcharges.

Charged with DWI

Fourcallswereansweredbylocal
units Wednesday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service report At 2 20
s.
: p.m .. Ra c1ne took
Everta Jeffers, county road·JS, 10
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ru!land at 2: 39 p.m . took Randy
Cooper from Meigs Mine 1 to
O'Bieness H ospital In Athens;
Pomeroy at 4: 33 p.m. took Grace
Glaze, former Route 33, to Holzer
Medical Center and at lO: 00 p.m.,
syracuse took Mae Sprouse,
Syracuse, In Veterans Memortal.

m s vehicle was stopped

be~G'::abscaron124when Glbbs'

Thunday, A119ust 25, 1983

With visions and plans for their

new foal churning In their head,
each wl1tnerwllltravelhundredsat
mlles with parents, siSters, brothers and state 4-H officials for the
three-day weekend that will culm!nate with the actual roundup of the
young horses early Saturday
moi'n!ng.
After spending Frlday night
under the stars at a campsite
nestled In the hills o!the1,100-acre
Bob Evans Farm the winners will
rlse before the crack of dawn to
prepare' for the roundup.
Mounted on horses In the farm's
open pastures, the 4-H'ers will
assiSt a hindlul of wranglers In
rounding up their colts. They will
r lde around the horses, f o rm1ng
barriers and performing 8 serles of
other moves called out by
wranglers, until they arrive at the
corra1 where the weanllngs will be
cut away tram the rest at the herd.
Once Inside the corral, the

9~11

. moment each anxious winner has
awaited wll arrive. One by one, the
weanllogs will pass through the
chutes by random and greeted by a
very excited new owner.
Near the roundup site, more than
50 Ohio 4-H'ers will hit the tails on
the Bob Evans Farm Sept. 10, for
Ohio's seventh annual4·H Compel!·
live Trallrlde. The lratnbig, condltlonlng and endurance of each
horse will be challenged over a
rough and hllly, 20-mlle course,
with a four-hour. and '"minute
,.,.
completion time allowed.

Sufficient money Is available for such as vertical mine shafts that
reclamation work through 1992 have not been covered. The second
when a re-authorization of money priority area concerns ltselfwlth the
spent on such projects Is made, an adverse effect- such as floodingQhlo environmental scientist told abandoned .strlp . rn!nes have. on
. .Rutland To.wnship·irusli!es.
sum&gt;und!ng areas:· · . . ...
In
special meeting, Mitch
Money utiliZed to complete rectaFarley of the sta~ department of tnaUon projects on public and
natural resources' reclamation dlv- private lands affected by strip and
!s!on discussed laws, taxes and surface mining prlor to April 10,
prlorltles on reclamation work.
1972. A severance tax Is Imposed on
Farley said the first priority active strlp and surface mine
.., . _, covers_ al'!!as of: e?rtreme danger, : .operators..thate'llract C98], _F:arley
· . . .·
·
.
· • ~ ·_. .· ·--, sata . ." · :, ......· · .... · :.:. :_

Meets tonight
Twlli City Shrloettes will meet at
6:30p.m. tonight at the homeofMrs.
Dwight Logan for a picnic and
meeting. Members are to take a
covered dish and their own table
service.

:

.

New

'

Goodness

.t

0
S

Corduroy,:J~~s .

..

'··-

(

Black, brown, grey, burgundy, navy

0

Special Introductory Prices
'$8.99* soft cup style in white or beige
e $9.99*lighdy lined style in white or beige
.
and underwire style in white only.
plus Money Back Guarantee from Playtex•

?

and tan.

·

ONLY

(Money Back Guarantee offer ends De!;ember 24. 1983;
see package flap for details).

Maniage license

$}588

• Suaated Retail

A marriage license was ISsued 1n
MelgsCountyProbateCourtiDScotl
Allen Hill, 20, Pomeroy and Rochelle McDaniel, 19, Pomeroy.

8

A

c

LADIES'

HOMEOWNERS, BENEFICIAL:S
TRIPLE-A CHECKING GIVES YOU

NOW FOR IMPORTANT THINGS THAT NEED DO!NG NOW.

8

A

c

K

T
0
MONEY TO USE

Uniform ·Sale
Misses and half size uniform
dresses and pant suits. 100% polyester and poly/cotton blends.
Also included in this sale are separate skirts, pastel tops, lao
coats and pants.

Western tlelts, jeans tlelts
and dress tlelts.

Reg. '5.59 3-pack
Reg. '7.59 3-pack
Reg. '8.49 3-pack
Reg. ss.99 3-pack

TRIPLE· A CHECKING GIVES YOU CASH TO USE NOW

PWS

ACCESS TO ADDITIONAL MONEY ANYTIME, ANYWHERE
SIMPLY BY WRITING A CHECK.

BOYS' CORDS
Wrangler quality. Regular slim
and husky in sizes 8 to Hi. Student s1zes 26 to 30 waist.
Black, brolj'n, grey, navy and
mocha.
·

Reg. H5.95 .. Sale '12.79
Reg. Sl8.95 .. Sale '15.19
Reg. '21.95 .. Sale '17.59

SALE

Junior J~Jt~ n~~~

SALE

Boys' Tops

GIRLS' FALL

, Sizes 6 mos. to 24 mos .• 2 to
- 4, 4 to 7.

u

pockets included. All back-toschool sale priced.

WITH BENERCIAL:S TRIPLE·A

SALE

Sweaters, flannel shirts, velours, dress shirts and knits.
All new.colors and styles.

Wrangler, Lee aoo Stuffed Shirt
denim jeans in junior sizes 1 to
15. Pine stripes, baggies and
basics. Lee Pre-Teen basic, 5

now that's D Beneficiar

Rae. '4.75 ...... Sale 13 79 /
Rae. 18.50 ......Sale '6:79
Rae. 112.00 .....Sale '9.59

CHECKS
[Q] Beneficial"
BENEFICIAL OFFICES NEAR YOU o

New Fall styles and colors for
back-to-school.

Pinafores, sa~or styles, smocks
and jumpers. Sizes NB to 24
mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 1 tc 14.

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

-

., ___

H
0
0
l

,..QJ,.,..., a.-eo

'.

•
-~

•

lcaa:ux:

..

1-0

V!uzoo .... e~p 1' Fl~fo!f -.e"'l)l1 J• tlcaa:u..

Evans, Shirley A. JohnSOn, for
clerk.
Letart-HarryC. HW, Herschel D.
Noms, Christopher Tod Wolfe, for
trustee; Joyce M. White, June H.
Wickersham. for clerk.
Olive--Francis H. Andrew, Sol S.
Bigley, Clifford Longenette, Chester
Wells, !or trustee; Barbara Al111
Hannum, VIrginia A. Newlun, for
clerk.
Orange--Edgar J . Pullins, Wilbur
E. Robinson, trustee; Nina R.
Robinson for clerk.
Rutland--Leo B. Morris, Charles
E. R!fe, !or trustee; Edna M. Swick
for clerk.
Salem--Hobert Beaver, John F.
Colwell, Walter F. Garnes, Ralph F.
Moore, Richard L. Larnberl, for
trustee; Bonnie G. Scott for clerk.
Salisbury--Denver G. Hysell, Robert Lee Mash, Charles H. Barlels,
tor trustee; Hkhard B. Bailey,
Wanda L. Eblin, for clerk.
Sutton-Roy E. Armes, Delbert A.
Smith, for trustee; PaulS. Moore for
clerk.
InSclp!oTownshlptberewillbeno
race. Donald H. Whver Is the only
candidate for IJ'Ustee and Betty J .
BIShop IS the only candidate for
clerk.

NEW ROOF- This truck wllh a bucket Uft Is being used to tear o1!
the old rool o1 the olllces of Pomeroy Altomey Palrlck O'Brien and put a
new root on the structure. The O'Brten buDding was extensively

damaged by the Au&amp;. 14 lire which occulTed ai lhe Amy Kingsland
Jones balldlar on Court St. The O'Brien offices front on W. Main St.
Meantime, two Pomeroy leeoagert1 ba'l'e beea given six months
oentencJes on arson cbarp8 as a result ol. tbe lire.

School board races top election issues
Filing !or tllose posts were Daniel the Incumbent, and Kenneth H.
Sayre and Ben E . Petrel, both Cundiff filed for the post.
Incumbents, and Lawrence R.
Janice Lawson, Incumbent, was
,,oJ!e.MargteA. Wol!eandD.Gene the only candidate In !De for
clerk-treasurer oftha) v!llage . .
Lyons Died for the clerk's post.
SyracuseVIllagehasashortageof
Rulland has only a clerk·
council candidates. Twoseatsareto · treasurer race where Brenda s.
be !Wed on councU at the Nov. 8 Weber and Deborah Black Gilmore
election. However, Incumbents, !lied for the post. John L. Miller,
John Bentley and Mrs. KathrYn Incumbent, was the only candidate
Crow, did not f!le and no other tofiletorthemayor'sposltlonandon
residents tiled for the seats. A race councU with two to be elected, ·
for mayor will take place in Warren G. Black and Larry D.
Syracuse, however. Eber Pickens, Edwards are the only candidates.

Labor leader says President
not 'champion for education'

Farmers' union joins
anti-tax repeal effort

DRESSES

s
c

..

School board races will highlight
In the Southern Local School
the November General Election
Distrlct two full terms and one
ballot In all three of Meigs County's
unexpired term are open this year.
local school districts.
FUingforthefulltermwereCharles
At yesterday's 4 p.m. deadline for
F. pyles and Don P. Smith, both
filing by candidates with the Meigs
Incumbents, while Joseph ..
County Board of Elecllons, It was
E .Thoren, Jr. David Lee Hill,
Indicated that the Meigs County
incwnbent, filed for the unexpired
Board of Education Is the only board
ierm.
without a contest.
In Racine VIllage, Charles F.
For the county board with two full
pyles, Incumbent, was the only
and one unexpired term to be Oiled,
incumbent to file tor mayor. Two
Harold Roush and Oris Smith,
council members are to be elected.
Incumbents, are the full term
candidates and OriS Smith, lncwn·
bent, Is the only candidate for the
unexpired term.
Six candidates filed for three seats
on the Eastern Local board.
Candidates Include Roger C. Gaul,
Incumbent; James R. Smith, David
L. Chadwell, Carolyn Sue Heines,
Tilomas A. Caspers and Incumbent
WASHINGTON (AP) - PresiJimmy c. Caldwell.
dent Reagan may be portraying
In the Meigs Local Dlstrlct there hlmself as a champion of education,
are also six candidates tor the three but therecordshowshe"!s the most
seats to be fWecl. They are Larry anti-education president this counPowell. Robert Snowden and Rl· try ever had," a labor leader says.
chard w. Vaughan, Incumbents,
"Back In the sprlng, Education
and Harold D. Graham, Charles E. . Secretary T.H. Bell was quoted as
Jones and Roy R. Vaughan.
saying, 'Anybody lluit says the
president IS anti-education and
against learning just hasn't looked
at the record,"' said Kenneth T.
Blaylock, president of the AFLCIO's Public Employee
Department.
"Since that time, we have taken a
long, hard look at President
Reagan's eduCation budgets. In
&lt;XlLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The the union's executive comm!ttee
light of his budget cuts, plus Mr.
Ohio Farmers Union Is joining voted unanimously to oppose the
Reagan's attempts to dismantle the
opponents of tax repeal, and the Issues.
''Farmersandruralcomnnuntt!es
U.S. Department of Education, we
Ohio Council of Retail Merchants,
can
only conclude that he !s the most
stand
to
lole
not
only
the
gains
of.
the
.
which opposes repeal, admits Its
recent
legislation,
but
also
Improveanti-education
president tb!.S counmembers are not unanimous on the
ments
made
In
past
years
in
try
has
ever
had,"
Blaylock said
ISsue.
Thursday.
The farmers union said ThursdaY equalizing the unfair real estate tax
Blaylock spoke at a news confer!
It Is joining the Committee for Ohto burdens pushed on farmers," said
enceatwhlchanAFL.c!Oreporton
to fllht tax Issues expected on the • the union's executive director,
Charles Nash.
two educatiOn Pl'Oif8ITIS - the
NIM!mber ballot.
Elsewhere, a Merchants For
SO&lt;!alled Chapter 1 program, which
· ~ 2 would rEquire a threeprovides aid to educationalb' cllsadflfthl lellslatM! vote to Impose Repeal Committee etnt!l gee! with a
vantaged low-Income chlldren, and
taxa laue 3 would repeal a 90 spokesman saying Ita ranks Include
Vocational and Adult Educationmembers of the Council of Retail
perueutlncome tax boost.
was
released.
.
Mercbanta.
"We will be working actively to
saldhewouldcommenton
the
Bell
The
councll,
a
leader
In
the
lnbm Oblo tarmen about all of the
report
at
a
news
Clllll'erence
today.
catnpilgn to retaln·Ohlo'sl9lrl tax
elfeds of. these two ia8ues which
"I have not had the opportunity to .
tllraten t.armen." said Vlrtlil locrell!l, l8ld the statewide
study
the AFL.c!O report bldetall,''
group'spo.ttloruept
=tathatof90
·
Thtlt!piOII. piE!IIdeul of the 10,®
be
said
Thursday. "However, there
manller lllateol'pll!zatlon. He said percen~ot Ita members.

c.

Rea. 115.00 ... Sale '11.99

YOU PAY INTEREST ONLY FOR THE MONEY USED.
YOU MAY NEVER HAVE TO APPLY FOR A LOAN AGA!N.

West Benei•Cial Finance. Inc.
GAlliPOLIS- 416 Second Ave . ............................................ 446-2765
POMEROV-300 W. Second ....................................................... 992·2111

Races for one trustee post and for
the clerk's position will lake part In
11 of Meigs County'sl2 townships at
the Nov. 8 election.
This was revealed at the deadline
for candidate fll1ng with the Meigs
County l3oilrd of Elections at 4 p.m.
Thursday.
In each of the townships with the
exception of Lebanon, one trustee
- and the clerk will be elected this fall.
In Lebanon Twp., two trustees will
be elected due to an unexpired term
to ... t!lled as well as the clerk.
Candidates In each township
Include:
.
Bedford--Stanford Stocldon, Ronald L. Wood. for trustee; Jane M.
Brymyer and Brenda A. Roush, !or
clerk.
Chester--Victor A. Bahr, Bernard
D. Gilkey, George A. Wolfe, Gary
Lynn Nelson, for trustee; B.
Darlene Newell, William Michael
Will, Elmer G. Young, for clerk.
Columbia--JimmY
Haning,
Gly F. JohnSOn, Wllllam R.
LaWIO!l, Gordon N. Perry, VIctor
Pl!rry, tor trustee; Gloria Hut!on,
for clerk.
Lebanon- E!sonR.Dalley,Morrls
E. Teaford, tor full term; Guy A:
Rose, for unexpired term; Linda C.

SALE

......Sale '4.19
......Sale S5.69
......Sale '6.38
...... Sale '7.49

.

Township races
set for November

·,

25% OFF SALE

2 Set-lions, 14 Pagft
20 C:.nh
A Multimedi a Inc. New~pe~per

Pomeroy-MiddlejM»rt, Ohio, Friday, August 26, 1983

1983

.

Reg. '2.50 ....... Sale s1.99
Reg. '5.50 ....... Sale S4.39
Reg. '8.00 ....... Sale ss.39
Reg. '11.50 ..... Sale '9.19

Reg. Sl2.00 ........ Sale '9.59
Reg. '16.00 ...... Sale '12. 79
Reg. S22.00 ...... Sale '17.59
Reg. S29.00. ...... Sale '23.19

enttne

!fre.gutted Pomeroy bulld!ng, but has not yet beenabletoreach the owner,
VDiage Fire Chlef Charles Legar said this morning.
Legar said slate Investigators examined the Court Street structure last
week and will probably order the building be destroyed within 30 days.
However no formal order has yet been Issued.
· :._ -·,. 11te V!Jlage lias cons'lc;tered deUveQilg lts.owp· tea,rdOwn tulllig, but the
,. · chief said it will walt to see I! the state takes action.
.
.
. TwoPomerey teenagers
found guilty of sett!ngtheAug'14tlrewhich
destroyed the abandoned building and damaged an adjoining structure.
Since then, omclals have trled to speak with the owner of the building,
Amy Kingsland Jones of Jackson.
Legar said he has telephoned Jones' home several times unsuccessfully.
.AstateflrelnvestlgatorwhollvesloJacksonhasapparentlynotreachedher
elt)ler, he said.
.
If she cannot be located, the village COUJICil could rule the building Is a
saltey hazard and have It torn down, he said.
However, the buDding hils been Inspected and there Is "not much danger
·o! it falling down," according to Legar.
The chief said a fire department llidder truck removed some loose bricks
from the building Thursday. The sidewalk In front of the building has also
been closed to prated pedestrians.
A structural englnner will have to survey the building before It Is torn
down, he said, because it apparently shares common walls with adjoining
structures.
TheabandonedCour!StreetbulldlngcaughttlreaboutlOp.m.Aug.Hand
was brought under control by the next morning. It was listed as a total lost.
An adjoining building housing • attorney Patrick O'Brien and Family
Planning received extensive tire and water damage.
family Planning has temporarUy moved to the Meigs Medical Complex
on Mulberry Heights while repairs are made at ita building.

BELTS

Back-To-School savings on Hanes
men's and tloys' briefs, T-shirts, A·
sh1rts and boxer shorts.

'

T
0

MEN'S AND BOYS'

Hanes®

PLUS PERSONALIZED BANK CHECKS TO USE ANYTIME
FOR HOME IMPROVEMENT, VACATION, OR BUSINESS.

now that's a

K

SALE

at y

•

were

Men's Wrangler cords in waist sizes
29 to 42. Regular fit -straight leg.
75% cotton · 25% polyester.

an exclusive fittin11Yitem that'• 10 unique
a
patent pending! Thne poetlf bru...., proportioned
eopeciaUy for Nearly A, Perfeedy A
and Nearly B cup women.

H

';:

MEN'S

it Fits~
~~ely new deli!'Atel~~~ru d~~~it bas
;Sth

K

•

~~~~~E.!~~~w;

,.

. REG.-sl9.95

"Thank

a
A
c

Ice cream social

..

..

P.7

Teardown
:O rder is

FRIDAY, AUGUST 26-- SATURDAY, AUGUST 27

Friday preview
An Ice cream social will be held
Friday at the Bashantlrehousewlth
serving to begin ·at 6:30. Sand·
wlches, pies and soft drinks will also
be sold.
There wlll be
entertainment.

C.,.,~ehtod

•

a

Meigs wW hoot a football preview
bepm!ng at 7 p.m. Friday at
Marauder Stadlwn In Pomeroy.
Atliens will play VInton Counly In
the first scrimmage while Meigs
battle! Frontier In lbe serond.

Yoi .32,No.95

L

' .

StoryonP. 5

e

0
0

. ·.·

PoernonP. 4

What's cooking? P .6

s

Reclamation money available

County court cases
Weekly sermonette

ve c e
eked up and struck
Yochem's
hi
three tim
y h , ve ce
es.
G~bbs~ shicarhadUghtdamageand
sto lngve cle continued on without
FollOwing the trallrlde, the colt
PP wiMers and trallrlde participants
Llghtdamageswereincurred
to a
will attend a late afternoon horse'
drl
car
ven by Sharon F . Johnson,
cllnlc, a picnic dinner and country
music program. Awards Will be
Racine, on Malo St., at 3:13. a .m.
presented to the overall wlnaers r1 ·
Thursday after the vehicle hit a
parking meter which had been
the com"""t!ve
trallrlde and also
"""
thrown
p ll onto the street.
for best horsemanship, sportsman·· ·
o cesaldJohnsondldnotseethe
ship a11d conditioning.
·
me~r. They arrested Da~d Slg- r---------~~--------~~~~~~--~--------~~~~~~~~~~:_~::~:===::~----~
man, Middleport, on charges of ~~&amp;;;It
disturbing the peace, disorderly
r'
-·
•IDCI:UX: 1-0 IAUZ00-'·~";jl Fe~ ?.(i9M,\)1 ::lJ [8CDCI:U¥ t-0
(
conduct and !or placing !njurlous
material on a highway.
H

e

Ode to Johnny Bench

~~---------7~------~-------------~

are certain portions, as reported
Initially by the press, that demand
comment because theY simply are
not true." He did not elaborate.
All)ert Shanker, president ot the
American Federatloo of Teachers,
said the report shows tllat lor 1982,
Reagan sought a 25 percent reduc-

tlon from 1981 service levels In ihe
Chapter 1 programs and was
granted an 18 pen:ent cut by
eon,ress. In 1983, he said, Reagan
sought a 48 percent reduction, and
was granted 19 percent. Fot 1984,
Reagan IS seeking a 26 percent cut,
Shanker said.

Porter man drowning victim
A Porter man was the lhlrd
drowning victim of the summer as
he apparently fell Into a alstena
either Thunday or early Friday
rnomJng off Floyd Clark Road
outside of Bidwell.
The body ot40-year-old James P .
(ieer was found In the slstern at 2: 09
a.m. by thesherlffsdepartment.
Geer, Who lived with his mother
Wilma Geer, was dropped off at
Porter Road by somebody at 1:30
p.m. Thursday, according to Sherlff
Investigator Carl Langford.
"The drowning occurred anytime
between 1:30 p.m. Thursday aand
2::09 a.m. Friday," Langford said.
Langford said Geerwas bomwlth
pltyslcal detects and would not have
had the pllyslcal capability r1
getting out d the w.ner.
Geer had ,regularly walked
around various places In the county
co11ect1na cau that be aold to make .
a little money on the side.
Lalllford laid he bell~ed that

\1'

Geer was most likely going through
the debriS In the sistern, when he fell
into the water and drowned.
Greer (lrobably couldn't ~ll
whether It was just water or there
was merely trash In the slstern,
Langford said.
"If he did slip Into thewater;there
was nothing to catch a hold of - he
had to go In," Langford added .
The sherltf's department estimated that the water was five to six
·feet deep in the ststern.
One of the deputies lnvestlga t!ng
the Incident said the slstern appeared to be stJlld debris before the
waterwaspumpedfromthests~rn.

Langtordsaldthesherltf'sdepartment was toldat8: 56 p.m. Thursday
!bat Geerwas mlssblg.
The sherlff's department Is stUI
Investigating the drowning. Gallla
County coroner Donald Wareltlme
will make his rullitg "early next
week."

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